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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May :14,

'

aoo4:
"

Howard, Magic look to avoid meltdown in Game ~
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Dwight Howard wants the
~~~~~ IJ!Ore. Stan Van Gundy
ts telhng fans not to panic,
and some Orlando Magic
players think their series
with Boston should already
be over.
Orlando seems to be teetering
on
a · Magic
Meltdown.
Howard met with Van
Gundy and apologized
Wednesday - but did not
retract his statements after ·publicly challenging
the coach's strategy in their
. Game 5 collapse . The
· Magic center even ·added
anoiher bOld comment as
the Celtics look to close out
Orlando . in Game 6
Thursday and move on to
the Eastern Conference
finals.
"We can't give up hope.''
Howard sai'd Wednesday.
"We're in this series to win
it. We are going to win ihis

series .H
That will take quite a
turnaround.
It was the second time
during these playoffs
Howard has questioned
why the Magic coach doesn't run more of the offense
through him, with the latest
being the loudest and most
direct. The two met privately Wednesday before the
team's film session and said
they resolved their differences_
"Getting the ball shouldn't be a big issue for me,"
Howard said. "There 's
more ways to dominate the
game than scoring. Me and
coach, we talked about that.
I just can' t let my frustrations get to the point where
I'll say anything ."
Howard's
comments
come in a season where
Shaquille O' Neal criticized
Van Gundy; his former
coach with the Miami Heat.

O'Neal , who openly complained- about coaching
decisions
following
Miami's Game 7 loss to
Detroit in the 2005 Eastern
Conference finals, went as
far as calling Van Gundy a
"master of panic" and a
"frontrunner" after the
Magic coach
insisted
O'Neal flopped in a game
in March .
Howard 's comments have
caused enough uproar in
Orlando that Van Gundy
even suggested -Wednesday
that any Magic fans starting
to panic need to keep their
.
cool.
"If you 're an Orlando fan
and you consider a loss like
that on Boston's home
court humiliating , it probably speaks more to the fact
.that you haven't seen
enough playoff series
around here in a long time,"
Van Gundy saicj. "That kind
of panic wouldn't exist in

Class of 2009 edition

••
the · think 10 shots, I don l

cities that are used to havAnd
watching
ing teams in tough playoff Magic's infighting can only
series year after year after be more satisfying.
year."
"Are we inside their
The Celtics have to feel heads?" Davis asked. "It's
confident.
still a series. We've got to
The defending champions go into their house where
took Game 4 on a jumper they 'II be fighting for their
by Glen "Big Baby" Davis. lives."
·
as time ellpired, rallied in
Or)andp's problems all
Game 5 despite struggling seem to revolve around
for most of the night and Howard .
have the Magic on the brink
He didn't take a shot after
of elimination. Boston is hitting a running.hook with
32-0 when ii takes a 3-2 6:50 rem11ining. He.finished
lead in a best·of-seven with 12 t)oints on just 10
series.
shots, with few touches )ate
"Are we fortunate to be i:O the game. Then he. fired
ahead in this series? Yes," off at V~ Gundy's strategy
Celtics forward Brian . afterward.
.
Scalabrine. "Like Kevin
"I will say it's tough to
Garnett says, 'We make our win when all season long
own luck here in Boston."' . you play in-side out and you
The Celtics failed to close trust one of the people that
out the Chicago Bulls in got you off to a good seaGame 6 in their fltSt-round son," Howard said after
series, a triple-overtime Game 5. "I ihink I'm ~apliepic . The Celtics are 17-3 ble of scoring in the post,
in Games 7s at home.
so you know, I just don't

wanda say it's all aboq!;
offense. You gotta domt•
.nant player, let him ~
dominant."
:
Van Gundy did not talA
the comments lightly.
~
He insisted that Howaril
needs to be more adamadt
about demanding the baD
with his . play and woula
like to see his center mail#
lain a high effort. WhiJ&amp;!
Van Gundy said he doesll,:t
let criticism bother him, Ill
admitted he would like t,!l
keep thos\1, difference.
internal.
.
. .;
·"Would you rather he did:
n'i say those thing4
Absolutely," Van Gundf,
said. "At the same time, -~
" ·
some ways you'd be disa
pointed that tltere wasn
any frustration after (Gat~
5). Now yoh got to put
frustration away and coat~:
nel it ·in s1,1ch a way ·.
you'll be ready to play."

•
~

Printed on 100%
Rr&lt;ycl&lt;d Newsprint~·

·SPORTS
•• Tournament roundup.
SeePilgeBl

'

[!j

'fJt;rJ

.

.

charged with ljggravated
SREEOOMYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM
robbery.
The two were arrested
· ALBANY - An Albany · after usi11g a debit card
mail and woman appeared . allegedly stolen from the
in Meigs County Court victim, Winfield Hardiman
Thursday, charged in the of Darst Road. Hardiman's
burglary and murder of a body ·. was . found by aliColumbia Township man acquainiance just outside
last weekend.
his home early Saturday.
Trinity "Ty" Whitcraft, The acquaintance had
29, and Nichol Lafleur, 2J, become concerned after not
boih of Albany, appeared hearing from Hardiman. for
befQre ~udge Steven L. . more ihan 24 hours. .
Story. Whitcraft is charged
Whitcraft and Lafleur
with . murder; Lafleur . is were arrested in the. early

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morning
hours
on
Thursday.
Whitcraft
l!Ppeared . with Pomeroy
attorney Charles Knight,
· who said he was representing Wh!tcraft at his initial
appearance only, pending
appointment of counsel. .
Whitcraft's bond was set
at
$500 ,000 '
cash.
Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen Williams said
Whitcraft has a previous
escape conviction.·
Lafleur's bond was set at
$250,000 cash. Attorney

Christopher Tenoglia will
be appointed to represent
her.
A preliminary hearing
was set on the charge
against Whitcraft , for May
22, alt.hough .the case may
be considered by the grand
jury
before
then .
Defendants in felony cases
in County Court cannot
plead to the charges. Story,
by law, can only set bond.·
According to the state
of
Criminal
Bureau
Identification
and

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BY BETH SERGENT

SR5, Pre-Runner 2WD, 16,000 .Low
Miles, Loca_
l Owner. Super Cleanl

BSERGENTfMYDAILrSENfiNEL.COM:
.•

2009 Pontiac Torrent FWD
White with Taupe.lnterior,
9,700 Low Miles. $18,900

2007

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Crimson Red.with Ebony Leather. ·
Only 20,,000 Miles, Power Sunroof,
Power Lumbar Support,
. 6 CD Changer.
·
One of the Nicest We've Hadl
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2007 Buick Lucama CXL
Only.20,000 Miles, Factory Officials
Demo, Black with Leather Interior,
6 Passenger. $19;900

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ExplosiVI!

2005 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Only 27,000 Low Miles, Red with
Sunroof and Leather Interior.
Expect Qualltyl

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.

Photo courtHy of Ruthle·Graliam

ignite to bring down the West Virginia piece of the old Pomeroy Mason Bridge yesterday morning. Next
·
·

up is the Ohio piece followed by the two remaining piers. .·
.
.
WHO meets on
; production of swine flu ·
• vaccine.. See Page A3
· • Ohio lawmaker, war
· vet eyeing treasurer bid.
See. Page A3.
· • International minlsiries
coming to area May
River for 1roughly · 48-72 hours,
BY BETH SERGENT
. 17·23. .See Page AS . BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
depending on the weather.. Unlik6)
when .th.e center span was imploded
• • Just in time for Mothe(s
MASON, W.Va. - Walls. and win- last monih. ODOT was not required to
:Day. See Page A6
dows were rattling yesterday mornmg close the river channel, affecting no
:• A Hunger For More.
in the Bend Area when the West river traffic. The United States Anny
Virginia
piece of. the old Pomeroy Corps of Engineers was als,o on the
.See Page Ali
Mason Bridge was imploded over the seen~ yesterday to ensu.re no stray
Ohio River, tl:oing out with a most def- debns would hmder nver traffic after

-wilb

!

Another bridge piece goes down

2006 Chevrolet ·Impala LS
Only 16,000 Miles, LT Blue,
Affordable. $12,900

. 2006 Chevrolet Equinox

follqwed by actually setting the
charges. ·
ODOT has said once the West
Virginia side was imploded, it could
take up. to six weeks to complete the
remaining removal work, including
takinjl down the Ohio side and both
remaming piers with ellplosi~es. As
· for those pters, Rose said it will take
weeks to .drill ihe holes where the
charges will rest. The charges will
then be set to cause the piers to fall
inite "bang.'~'
the implosion.
toward the river banks . The piers will
. As for the rumor that something had . As for wh~t goes neJtt, Rose said be drilled and "shot" t\\(O feet below
_went wrong with the ex~losion, the the Ohio side of the old bridge now the river-bottom.
Ohio Department of Transportation has . the target on. its back though · As a safety precaution for motorists,
flatly demes it and said the only prob· ODOT has yet to release a date for • the Bridge of Honor was closed for a
!em had been ihe weather delaying the that event. Rose said -it will take brief period yesterday morning just
explosion by about an hour.
about three to five days to do pre- before and during detonation but
Yesterday, Pavid Rose, spokespe~­ burning on the qhio J?ie~e which is a reopened shortly afterwards. Sandb~gs
son for ODOT District 10;- said sal- method of cuttmg sltts m the metal were once agam placed on explostve
vage crews wil) continue to pun the that guide where the explosive charges facing the new bridge to prepieces of the old bridge from ihe Ohio charges wlll
This will then .be vent shrapnel damage.

.

FWD, Salsa Red and
Only 8,000 Actuaf ·Mflesl .

WEATHER

2006 GIIIIC Yukon Denali

Investigation, investigators
believe Whitcraft and
·Lafleur intended to rob
Hardiman . An autopsy
detennined that Hardiman
died of blunt force trauma·.
Whitcraft and Lafleur
we.re identified as suspects
after a debit card belonging
to Hardiman was used multiple times in the Albany
area after his death,. BCI
said Thursday. The agency
· has , been handling investigat ion of ihe case·at request
of Sheriff Robert Beegle.

London
Pool to
open-with
free swim·

2008 Tahoe L TZ ·

.

. ..

J. REED

BY BRIAN

Linebacker Jason Taylor rejoins Dolphins
MIAMI (AP)
Jason blood drained from his calf
Taylor's newest step has him a!id . a second proc~uure a
back where he started. The monih later.
dancing ·linebacker signed a The calf injury hampered
$1.5 million, one-year con- Taylor much of the season ,
tract Wednesday with the and he struggled to fit into a
Miami 't&gt;olphins.
defensive scheme ihat gave
Taylor played his first II him less freedom titan he had
seasons wiih Miami before wiih ihe Dolphins. He had '
being traded a year ago 'to·ihe only 3 112 sacks for the
Washington Redskins - a Redskins, his fewest since
fallout from his stint on .ihe 1999.
TV show "Dancing With ·the
The Dolphins mounted litStars." He was released by tle pass rush last season aside
Washington in March after from outside linebacker Joey
one injury-plagued season.
Porter, who led the AFC wiih
The New England Patriots 17 1/2 sacks. Taylor's 120
courted the 34-year-old 1/2 career sacks are the most
Taylor in recent weeks, but among active players, and he
he wanted to return to Souih could line up opposite Porter
Florida, where he still lives. this year.
He will make $1.1 mill ion in
Parce!ls didn't ~e a pass
base salary and $400,000 in rusher m ihe Apnl draft, a
easy to reach incentives :
signal he was open to a
"My heart has always been reunion with Taylor. "(he
.
AP photo
in Mtami, and so I'm truly Dolphins declined to comellcited to call mrself a ment Wednesday beyond In this Oct. 12, 2008, file photo, Washington Redskins linebacker Jason Taylor sits on the bench during an NFL foot•
Dolphin once again,' Taylor confmning ihe deal.
said in a statement. "I was
A third-round draft pick in ball game against the St. Louis Rams in Landover, Md.
presented wiih a number of 1997, Taylor started as a Taylor signed a $1.5 million, one-year contract on
different opportunities, but in rookie and became one of the Wednesday, w~h the Miami Dolphins, his agent said. Taylor
ihe end the combination of most popular players in played his first 11 seasons with Miami befote being traded
this being ihe best situation Dolphins history. He started a a year ago to the Washington Redskins. He was released
for my family, my love-for foundation that has been by Washington in March after one injury-plagued season.
.
this community and my active in raising money for
returns
for
touchdowns
(5),
two
passes
and
retuined boih
tremendous loyalty to a great South Florida children, and
organization made- this an in 2007 he was chosen NFL defensive touchdowns (8) for scores. But he endured
and interceptions ~y a defen- five _coaching changes in
easy decision."
Man of the Year.
sive
lineman (7).
Miami, hasn't made the postTaylor made the Pro Bowl
Taylor holds Dolphins
.
Taylor
enjoyed
his
best
season since 2001 and says
six times with ·Miami and career records for consecuwas NFL Defensive l&gt;laye~ of th:e. gameS' started (130), year in 2006, when he had 13 l)e would trade every award
ihe Year in 2006.
· sacks (117), opponents' fum- 1/2 sacks, forced I 0 fumbles, and sack for a c;hance io play ·
The Redskins · released ble recoveries (26), fumble recovered two, intercepted in ihe Super Bowl.
Taylor after he turned down a
chance to play another sea- · ·
son with them for $8.5 million. Taylor didn't like being
away from his wife and ihree
children · last season and
wanted to rejoin ihe ~lphins
regardless of how much
money they offered, said his
agent, Gary Wichard.
"Jason told me, 'Tell the
Dolphins whatever fits iheir
budget, I'm ready to play,"'
Wichard said. "There were
no . negotiations. It was
always going to be Miami."
Clasalfleda
Wichard said he also
turned down a coupre of
~ . Place a newspaper ad
movie offers because Taylor
PhlcG an on line ad
dido 'I want to be away from
.
his family. Taylor has been
plotting a Hollywood career
Since joining ihe Dolphins as
a rookie in 1997, and he envisions himself in ihe kind of
action roles that made
Dwayne
"The
Rock"
Johnson a movie star.
"Dancing Wiih the Stars"
intensified Taylor's celebrity
last year but soured his relaSave time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
tionship wiih new Dolphins .
boss Sill Parcells, who
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
fumed ihat Taylor was in
Hollywood rather than
to place your ad. .
spending ihe offseason working out with teammates. In
response, Taylor accused
Parcells of giving him the
t/
convenienc~
silent treatment.
t/
The soap opera ended last
July with Parcells trading
Taylor for a pair of draft
t/
picks, but ihe nyo have since
patched up therr nft. Taylor
t/
raves about coach Tony
Sparano, whO in his first seat/
son led the Dolphins to the
AFC East title and ended the
team's six-season playoff
drought.
While
ihe
Dolphins
enjoyed a turnaround in
2008, Taylor struggled to
stay healthy after missing
OJ!IY fO!'f ~ames in II years
Wlih Miattu.
'
He sprained his knee during ihe Redskins' preseason
and hurt his calf in a win over
Arizona on. Sept. 21. Taylor
required an operation to have

United in prayer, As

.Inside Today~ Sentinel ,

White with Taupe Leather, Top of the
.Line Model, Sunroof, DVD Player,
BOSE Navigation Radio
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System with XM.
·

2006-Chevrolet Silverado
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Perfect for Towing! 36,000 Miles, ·
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·SYRACUSE - London
Pool, Meigs County's only .
public swimming pool. wm·
open · at noon on May 23
with a free day of swim- .
milig. '.
.
Ope!lilig day will also
feature musical sets by the
prpgre~siv~ , Christian alter!lative group Under Autumn
at 12:30 p.m. and 3:30p.m.
This year the London
Pool will be open from
noon_-5 ·p.m .. MondayS.aturday and 1-5 p.m. on
Sunday. Despite the hours
basically staying ihe same,
the price of admission has
raised this year. As recommended by Pool Committee .
Member Joy Bentley and .
approved by Syracuse
Council, the following price
changes will be in affect:
Daily admission has been
increased by 25 cents per
person over last year, chargmg . $2.25 for students,
$3.25 for adults (18 and.
over), $2.25 for seniors (55
years and older).
·
Season _passes also raised
going from $40 for an indi- ·
vidual pass to $50, $120 for
a family pass to $130 (limit
to immediate family of
five), $170 for a business
pass to $180 (limit five individuals per day). Rental fees
went from· $60 ~r hour to
$70 per hour wt th a minimum of two hour rental.
There is a chat¥e of $40 for
large pool parttes (151 -200
persons) ihat will require
additional . lifeguards .
Concession prices are to
remain largely the same as
last year.
·

Please see Pool. AS

flowers

Datalls on Page A2

.

2005 Cadillac Escalade
Black with Taupe Leather, Very Well
Cared For, BOSE Navigation Radio
System, Sunroof, 39,000 Miles.

2006'8uick Terraza Van
Boy! Talk About A Clean Vehicle.
Shows Vety Little Wear.

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SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A2
Calendars
A.2
Classifieds
Bs-6
~mics
~

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INDEX .

Editorials
•.
.Faith
•
NASCAR
•
Sports
•
Weather

87

A4
Afr7

88
8 Section

~ 2009 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.
'

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Kimberly Swisher

Calee Reeves

Meigs names valedictorians, salutatorian
BY 6:HARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.QOM

POMEROY ~ Amber
Hockman and Kimberly
Swisher are co-valedictorians and Calee Reeves is
salutatorian of the Meigs
High School graduating
class of 2009.
The ihrec; will be speakers

•

at graduation ceremonies to ·
be held at ·8 p.m . on May 22
in the Larry R. Morrison
gymnasium.
Hockman is the daughter
of Teri Hockman of
Middleport and . the late
Dennis Hockman . She will
be aitendilig Muskingum
College in the fall , where
she will pursue a double

'

major in accounting and
business or a triple major in
accounting , business and
finance.
.
Chllrltlne Hoelllclllphoto
She is a member of the
Pomeroy
Waterworks
Park
took
on
a
new look this week
National Honor Society and
president of ihe Fellowship when a dozen or so high school students planted flowers
of Christian Students. Her around the monuments. H~re from the left Richie White
other school activities Michelle Haley, Stephanie Lewis and Terry l.,ambert pre:
pare and plant one of the beds.The project was under the
Please see Melp; Al
,supervision of Rick Weisenmuller and Stacy Qodson.

.
.

...., ,.

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•

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\

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

AND MAI'ICY SUGAR

. Dear Annie: I have .been
married for two years to a
"mama's boy" and I hate it.
Every time we have an
argumenl. he calls his mother, asks her to. come to our
house to help and insists
that I talk to her.
. At first.! told him I didn 't
like that he always brings
his mother into our relationship problems. He obviously didn't care because it
keeps happening. So, like
an adu It, I talked to my
mother-in-law, who I love
dearly. She is a great moth. er-in -law. She said she
understands how I feel, but
again, it keeps happening.
Every fight we have , she
1 comes inside my house to
mediate. I don 't know what
to do. My husband and 1 are
almost 30, and he acts like a
child. And my mother-inlaw does everything he
asks.- Love and Hate
Dear Love and Hate:
This dvnamic between
mother and child has been
going on for ·nearly · 30
years. and it will take time
to change. especially when
neither of them understands
the .Problem. It helps that
yo ur mother-in~law ts

Public meetings

•·great." Tell her very time,.my sister is very nega- case, ignore him. And if she
explicitly that when she tive toward me and says chooses not to come, so be
comes over every time you unkind things about me to h.
.
have an argument, it under- others in our community. I
Dear Annie: I, too, have
mines your marriage. Say want to get li'ast this and been at war with ladies '
tliat you love her and her invite my SISter to the jeans manufacturers. rm 74
son loves lier, but married memorial, but I don't want and live in a mountainous
couples must resolve their tier
husband
there. hunting and fishing commuown problems.
Unfortunately, my sister nity. Jeans are 90 percent of
Make it clear that the next never goes anywhere with- my wardrobe, but the ones
time your husband asks her out him. She keeps him on a that sit below the waist
to c9me over and intervene, tight leash because he has a make me look like the ·
you expect her to say "no." wandering eye.
Michelin Man.
Tell her you know it will be · This man has caused our
Tell "Not an Old
difficult for her, but you will family a great deal of pain Granny" to go to the nearbe very appreciative. Theil and ripped apart my rela- est farm su~ply store and
inform your husband if he tionship with my sister, as try on men s Jeans. They ·
doesn ' t
stop · calling well as her relationship with have slim fit, regular fit,
Mommy every time you our mother. At the end of relaxed fit, full cut, rodeo
disagree, the two of you will , her life, Mom was · very cut, etc .. in multiple brands
need to see a counselor to depressed about the situa- and all lengths. Plus, they
save your marriage.
tion but felt heipless to are cheaper than most
Dear Annie: My mother . straighten things out.! don't . women's jeans. - Old
died last year, and I want to think she would want this But Still Active
have a memorial to honor son-in-law at her memorial.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
her life. The problem is the What should I do? -'- ten by Kathy Mitchell and
guest list. When I was a Jennifer
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
child, my sister's husband
Dear Jennifer: Unless tors of the Ann Landers
sexually abused me for your sister leaves her hus- column. Please e-mail your
several years. My sister band, she is unlikely to ever questions to anniesmailknows because she read address the abuse. That . boxcomcast.net, or write
my diary and then burned doesn't mean, however, that to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
it. She has stayed with this you should welcome your Box 118190, Chicago, IL
man ! even though he has abuser. Ask . your sister to . 60611. To find out more
had ~everal affairs.
come to the memorial and about Annie's Mailbox,
I've sent letters to my sis. tell her point-blank that it and read features liy other
ter and her husband several would be inappropriate for Creators Syndical£ writers
times, asking that we open- her husband to attend and and cartoonists, visit the
ly discuss this. but neither he is not invited. She may Creators Syndicate Web
has responded.ln the mean- bring him anyway, in which page at www.creators.com . .

Family Medicine

Friday, May 15, 2009

Community Calendar

·Husband needs to.cut maternal ties
BY KATHY MITCHELL

PageA2

Monday, May 18
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission meets
at 8 a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy.
RACINE Southern
Local Bo.ard of . Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
Southern High School,
media room.
LETART FALLS
Letart Towuship Trust:\,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, May 20 .
SHADE
Bedford
Township Trustees, special
meeting, discuss concerns
relating to fire coverage for
township, 7 p:m., town hall. ·

Clubs and
organizations

Association, 7:30 p.m.,
Syracuse fire station. Final
meeting before summer
·
break.
Thursday, May 21
POMEROY Meigs
County American Cancer
Society. Advisory Board,
regular meeting, noon;
basement room of Pomeroy 1
Library, lunch provided, '
. RSVP with Courtney Sim at
992-6()26, ext. 24.
MASON, W.Va. - Meigs
County Retired Teachers,
luncheon, noon, Riverside ·
Golf Course Clubhouse ,
local history speaker, gospel
trio, members invited to
· bring guests.

Church events

S!lturday, May 16
MIDDLEPORT
Screening of motion pic...
,ure, "F.treproo f"
, 6 p.m.,
Friday, May 15
Hope Baptist Church, for
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville O.E.S annual adults only who are married
inspection, 7:30 p.m. at the or planning to be married.
hall. Refreshments :'.
Free to the public. Call 992~
Saturday; May 16 ·
2197 for information.
RACINE
Brooks
Sunday, May 17
·
Grant Camp of the Sons of
ROCK · SPRINGS
.
the Union Veterans of .the Rock
Springs .· United
Civil War and Major Daniel. Methodist Church, spiritual
McCook Circle of the renewal service, 6:30 p.m.;
Ladies of the ·Grand Army today-Thesday, singihg and
of the Republic, annual revival!style message by ·
Memorial Day service at Rev. Fred Adkins.
Star Mill Park in Racine, II
a:m. Guest speaker, also
announcement of winners in
the third annual Memorial
Saturday, May 23
Day essay contest with
MIDDLEPORT
,
essays to be read. Picnic
Feeney-Bennett Post 12~;
lunch to follow.
American Legion baseball
SALEM CENTER
team
tryouts, 3 p.m:
Star Grange #778 and Star
Saturday
and Sunday: ·
information in this column Junior Grange #878 Fun
· is provided as an educa- Night and potluck supper. Meigs High School. Rain or,
•·
tional service only. It does Dmner at .6:30 . p.m., Fun shine.
•
not repli:lc11 the/'udgm~n,t of Night ·to follow. · Open to
your persona phystctan, members and the public.
who should be relied on to
Monday, May 18
.diagnose and recommend
Tuesday, May 19 .
RACINE - Chapter 186
treatmen( for any medical of Eastern Star, 6:30 p.m.,
POMEROY MeiM
·conditions. Past columns refreshments.
.
County Board of Electiom1
are available online at
Wednesday,May 20 · will conduct official couni
ww·w .familyme·d icine.
SYRACUSE . - Meigs of May 5 special election
news.org.
·
County .
· Firefighters ballots, 10:30 a.m.
·

this, scabies often does
Some physicians choose
to treat the entire .family
spread within a family ..
You cannot get scabies since this. condition spread&amp;
from a.dog or cat. The mites easily. The itchiJ!g cal! perthat cause mange in dogs sist for several· weeks after
cannot live on human skin. the treatment has begun to
Although the mites . that work.
Over-the-counter
cause scabies in · humans antihistamines cao help
are, themselves, too small to relieve the di~comfon.
be seen by the .naked eye,
Since mites can live out·
their burrowing creates visi- side of the body for a few
ble, red bumps and blisters d.ays, clean your bed .linens,
on the skin. These typically including the bedspread. and
appear in skin folds , such as dust ruffle; .rewash clothes
on knees, elbows, belly but- that have not been wi!Shed in ·
tons and betWeen fingers.
hot warer and dried on high
In children , the burrows · heat; and use an environmen' · ·
sometimes appear on the tal disinfectant on commonly
face or scalp, but this rarely used furniture to help eradioccurs in adults. The eggs cate the mites from your
of the scabies mite typically home. Sometimes you need
. hatch within three weeks, to put toys and other nonand the severe itching is washable items in a sealed
your body's reaction to the plastic ba~ for about two
mites burrowing and egg- weeks to kill off the mites.
laying. Be aware that excesScabies spread easily and
sive scratching can lead to can . become quite uncomsecondary skin infections, fortable, but they also are
which can complicate the easily cured. Most imporcondition.
tantly, a diagnosis of scabies
The good news is that sca- does not indicate unby.gienbies is easily treated. Once ic habits or surroundings. .
the diagnosis is made Family Medicine® is a
either by a simple examini- weekly column. To submit
nation of the skirt or by questions, write to Martha
scraping the skin and Con- A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
firming the presence of eggs Ohio University College of
- treatment is straightfor- Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
ward. Your doctor will pre- Box 110, At/lens, Ohio
scribe lotion or cream and, 45701, or via e-mail to
pos~ibly, anti-itch oral med- readerquestions@ familytcattons.
medicinenews.org. Medical

, Youth events

Other events

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Sunday, May 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
·
·
·

I. We hold you in our thoughts; and memories forever.
2. May God cradle you in His atms. now and forever.

3. Forever missed, never forgotten. May God hold you in the palm of

Hishand. .
July 10, 1861-May 5, 1&amp;80

heavenly glory.
6. Your cott111ge and bravery still inspire us all, and the memmyof your

guide you and
;Protect you
throughout time.

Sunday
night .. .Partly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
clearing. Lows around 40.
Monday and Monday
nlght .. .Mostly clear. Highs
in the upper 60s. Lows 'in
the lower 40s.
Tuesday
through
Wednesday.. .Mostly clear.
Highs •in the upper 70s.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Wednesday night and
Thursday.. .Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s. Highs
around 80.
·

smile fills us with JOY and laughter.
7. Though out of sight, yoo'll forever be in my hean and mind.
8. The days may come and go. but the times we shared wilt always remaip.
9.May God'• angels guide you and protect you throughout time.
10. Yoo were a light in our life that bums forever in our hearts.

-5.69
3.18
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;14.50

.

Ohto Valley Bote Corp. (NAS.

•

51.53
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12. Yoo min our thoughts and prayel'l liom morning to night and from
year to yesr.

family

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECLU WAY,
SEND $8.•50 PER LIS~NG • $15 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to

..

l

lll Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 12 Noon

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Dally ltock reports are·the 4
p.m. ET ctoalng quotes of Iran•
acttona for May 14, 2009, provld·
ed by Edward Jones llnanctal
advloora Isaac Milts In Gattlpotls
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Ptaoant at
(304) 674-0174. Member .StPC.

I
------------------------------------,
.
I
Please publish my tributdri the special Memory Page on Sunday, May 24th.

I
I
I
I

of deceased

INurnber of selected verse

To see more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
W\vw.mydailysentinel.com
You can order reprints and
photo gifts of your favorite
photos there·too.
. ..

Southern reunion set

Ohio lawmaker, war
Yet eyeing treasurer bid

WASHINGTON (AP) President Barack Obama
This.week Syracuse Maintenance Supervisors Larry Fields
will restart Bush-era mili(background) was busy cleaning the London Poor and turn- tary tribunals for a small
ing on the water in.anticipation of opening day on May 23. number of Guanta'namo
The village Is once again treating pool goers to a free ·day detainees, reviving a fierceof swimming on opening day. .
ly .disputed trial system .he
. once denounced but with
new legal proteciions for
from Page At
terror suspects, U.S. officials
said Thursday ..
For those wishing to on
·Tuesday
and
Obama
suspended the tribook the London Pool for Wednesday and 6-8 p.m.
bunals
within
hours of takparties or for an~ other on Friday. After next week,
ing
office
in
January,
orderquestions, the pool s phone call during normal pool
will be turned on begin· hours. The telephone num-. ing a review but stopping
short
of
aband9ning
ning
Monday.
Pool ber'is 992-5418.
President
George
W. Bush's
The village of Syracuse
Manager Heather Smith..
of
prosecuting
susstrategy.
will be available for ques- started filling the pool on
pected
terrorists.
tions or for those wishing Wednesday, giving it some
The military trials will
to purchase passes or book time to warm up before
.
remain
frozen for another clear Thursday what they
parties from 10 a.m. - ~ Memorial Day Weekend
four.
months
as the adt'ninis- could include. The two
·
p.m. on Monday, 5-7 p.m. anives. ·
tration adjusts th6legal sys- senior administration offitem that is expected to try cials spoke on condition of
fewer than 20 of the 241 anonymity because Obama
Page At··
detainees at the U.S. naval had not yet announced the
detention
center
at changes.
include
the
Foreign · Honors PTo~. She will Guantanamo Bay, &lt;;uba.
The tribunal system - set
Language Club, yearbook pursue a maJor in Evolution, Thirteen detainees- includ.- up after the military began
committee, and perfor- Ecology, and Organismal ing five charged with helping sweeping detainees off the
. orchestrate the Sept. II, battlefields of Afghanistan in
mance in the drama club Biology (Pre·Med).
production of "Grease."
Reeves, daughter of 2001, attacks - are already late 2001 - has been under
As · a member of the · Bryan and Susan Reeves of in the tribunal system. · • repeated challenges . from
Middleport Church of Pomeroy, has been selected
The changes to the system human rights and legal 'orgaChrist, she is active with for admission .to Ohio were to be announced Friday. nizations because it denied
Student University's College of Arts Two senior administration defendants !llany of the
Aftershock
Ministty, artd has participat- and Sciences where. she will officials outlined several of 'gh the
ld be
ed
y wou ·
grant
ed in numerous church major in chemistry in the. the rules changes, which will nin a IS
civilian courtroom.
activities and outings, her . scholars program . She has be carried out by executive
In a statement late
favorites being the 30-hour received a four-year full authority, to The Associated
·
·
famine, a mission trip to tuition Gateway Excellence Press ori Thursday night. Thursday, · Sen. Lindsey
Graham, R-S .C., called
She
has They include:
·
New Orle\IDS, and a cheer- Scholar.ship.
Obama 's
decision
to
• ResTrictions on hearsay
leading advisor for Upward already completed four
quarter hours from Ohio evidence that can be used in revamp and restart the triBasketball.
. Swisher is the daughter of University for · American court against.the detainees. bunals · a step toward
• A ban on all evidence strengthening U.S. detenWilliam
and
Sandra .Sign Language, and five
hours · from obtained through cruet tion policies that have·been
Swisher of Middleport. At quaite(
State inhuman or degrading treat- derided worldwide.
Meigs High she was on both Washington
"I continue to believe it is
the varsity cross country Community College m fnent. This would include
in
our own national security
trigonometry.
statements
given
from
and varsity track and field
interests
to separate ourAt Meigs . High she has detainees who were subjectteam all four years. She was
selves
from
the past proba member of the Spanish marched with the Meigs ed to waterboarding, a form
of
Guantanamo,"
said
lems
Foreign Language Club her Marauder Band all four of simulated drowning.
Graham,
who·
has
been
• Giving detainees greater
ninth and tenth grade year years, been in the concert
and
pep
bands,
and
the
Big
leeway
in choosing their working with the adminisand was inducted into the
tration on issues .related to
National Hooor Society her Bend . Community Band . own military counsel.
detainees.
"I agree with the
junior year. She attended· For. two years she was
• Protecting detainees
president
and
our military
Buckeye Girls State the selected for the District 17 Who refuse to testify from
summer of her junior year honors band . She is a mem- .legal sanctions or other commanders that now is the
time to start over and
and was a Southeast Ohio's ber of the National Honor court prejudices.
strengthen
our detention
Society and since entering
The White House may
Regional Scholar in 2008.
policies.
I
applaud
the presKimberly will be attend- school has qualified · for seek additional changes to
ing The Ohio State Meigs County Academic the military commissions ident's actiops today."
Yet the move by the new
University this fall where Excellence Awards every . law over the next 120 days,
but it was not immediately Democratic president is cershe was accepted into the year since fourth grade:

Meigs rrom

II. May God's graces shine over you for all time.

Alw1111 in oar hearts,
John and Mona Andrews aild

Local Stocks

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.

4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared together.My prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
5.The days we shared were sweet. I long to see you again in God's

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
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Volunteers needed

ago to guarantee them pandemic vaccines as soon as
they 're available.
As of Thursday, at least
33 countries reported more
than 6,600 cases of swine
flu worldwide, with 69
deaths. The figures are
based on talli!'s provided by
national · governments and
WHO. According to the
global body's pandemic
alert level, the world is at
phase 5 ..:.. out of a possible
6 - meaning that a global
outbreak is "imminent." ·
"It's
a
no-brainer; ·
Fedson said of the decision
to make swine flu vaccine.
"All that's being discussed
now is the details of how to
make sure. you have enough
seasonal flu vaccine and the
logistics . of making the
switch to HlNI vaccine
production .".
· While the vaccine question hangs in the air, WHO
has given Indian pharma,
·ceuticals giant Cipla the
medical go-aliead to pro,
duce a generic version of
the anti-viral medication
Tamiflu. The drug, also
known as oseltamivir, is one
of two anti-virals shown to
work againSt swine flu.
·
WHO said Cipla's generic
version was as effective as ·
the original made by Swiss
firm Roche HoldingAG and
would hopefl!lly make the
drug more accessible to '
· .
·
poor countries,
North America has· been
the hardest-hit continent ,
The United States has
reported 3,352 laboratoryconfirmed cases of swine
flu, including three deaths.
Mexico has 2,656 cases and
64 deaths, while Canada haS
3~9 cases with one death,
according to WHO ftg~n:s.
Mexico confimied . 3H
more ·cases · Thursday
including four more deaths:
but Health Secretary Jost)
Angel Cordova said the. ne'-':
cases show the virus is
appearing . less de!ldly:
Mexico's swine flu deaths
now represent 2.4 percent of
its confirmed cases, he said.
Spain · and Britain have
the most cases in Europe., at
100 and 78 respectively. ;
In Central America, Costa
Rica has ejght cases and one
death and Panama has 29
cases.

•

J[)at1e of binh

1

Date of passing

•

I
thone-----------------

1

Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SENTINEL

L-.•-------..

"· ... ... .

.... .
-

.... ... .......

-. ,, .·-

•

In this photo,
reviewed by .
the U.S. mili- ·
tary, the exer- ·
cise yard at ·
Guantanamo'
s Camp4
detention
faci!Hy is pic- ·
tured before ·
dawn, at
Guantanamo ·
Bay U.S.
Naval Base,
Cuba,
Thursday.

· Pool

II you wish, seled one of the following FREE verses below to
accompany your tribute.

.

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Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

GENEVA (AP) - As
swine flu cases topped
6.600 worldwide, vaccine
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department makers and other experts
',viii hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m. met Thursday at the World
Health Organization to dis~nd 1-3 p.m. Tuesday.
cuss the tough decisions
that must be made quickly
to fight the evolving virus.
Pharmaceutical compa·. POMEROY - Flats of flowers donated by Bob's Market nies are ready to begin makwill be planted in downtown Pomeroy beginning at 10 a.m. ing. a swine flu vaccine 1
Saturday.
but as the virus may mutate,
Planting flowers downtown is one of the Pomeroy questions abound: How
Merchants Association's beautification projects. Merchants
and' community volunteers are needed to assist with the much should be produ«ed?
How will it· be distributed?
plantings.
Who should get it?
The expert group's recommendations will be
passed to WHO Director· R,ACINE - The Southern High.School Class of 1989'~ General Margaret Chan,
20tlt Reunion will be held at 7 p.m., May 22 at the who is expecied to issue
Syracuse Community Center. Bnng own snacks and advice to vaccine manufacrefreshments. Call Sarah Philson-Piazza at 561-644-3084 turers and the World Health
or sjpiazza70@yahoo.com, or Melanie Van Meter Quillen Assembly next week.
at 949-2121.
· · .·· .
. WHO's .flu chief said the
· meeting of industty representatives and independent
experts sought to answer
questions including when to
·
recommend to manufacturAPpho!O
ers that they switch from a Filipino ~actors wearing protective suits work on test sam' . COLUMBUS (AP) ers about a possible seasonal vaccine to one that ples for the swine flu virus inside the biosafety level 3 laboState lawmak~r and Iraqi statewide run and plans to works against the pandemi~ ratory at the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine In sub·
..
war vete~n Josh Mandel decide soon. He says he strain.
urban Alabang, south of Manila, Philippines on Thursday.
"No
big
decisiohs,
no
says he is nearing a final has been strongly encourDespite
being a swine flu-free country, health officials have
announcements,"
Keiji
decision on ' whether to run aged.
.
Issued
guidelines
for public gatherings to block the entry or
for state treasurer in 20 I0.
State Treasurer Kevin Fukuda told reporters after · spread of the Influenza A (HlNl) virus into the country.
At 31, the two-terin state Boyce, a Democrat, was the meeting. "These are
representative from north· appoi.nted to the office in · enormously · complicated - but they cannot make
The · U .S. Centers for
east Ohio is the youngest December by Gov. Ted questions, and they are not massive quantities of both Disease
Control
and
Republican in the Ohio Strickland. He has indicat- · something that anyone can because that exceeds manu- Prevention is currently
House.
·
ed he plans to run for the make in a single meeting." · facturing capacity.
working on a "seed stock"
But some feel the main
. ·
"What is really going to to make the vaccine, which
Mandel said Thursday he job in 2010.
has been traveling the state
Mandel has done two decision has already been be wrestled with is that sea- should be ready in the next
talking . With business, tours of duty in Iraq with the made.
·
sonal influenza itself has a couple ofweeks. That will
"It's a foregone conclu- significant impact on pen- be distributed to manufaccommunity and party lead- U.S . Marines.
sion," said David Fedson, a pie," said Fukuda. "This is turers worldwide so they
vaccines expert and former an infection which is esti- can start producing the
professor of medicine at the mated to kill some hundreds vaccine.
University of Virginia . "If of thousands of people each
Until vaccine manufacturwe don't invest in an HlNl year around the world, so ers get the seed stock, they
(swine flu) vaccine, then there is a real trade-off if won't know how many
possibly we could ha,ve a you just say we're going to doses of ·vaccine they can
reappearance of this virus in . stop making that vaccine."
make or how long that
a mild, moderate, or cataAt the moment; health would take. Sanofi Pasteur,
strophic form and we would officials aren't sure how the world's biggest vaccine
have absolutely nothing."
deadly swine flu is, and producer, said Thursday it is
Most flu vaccine compa- whether they will need more waiting for the green light
nies can only make one vac- seasonal flu vaccine or from WHO before it starts
cine at a· time: seasonal flu swine flu vaccine. And if the making swine flu· vaccine.
vaccine or pandemic vaccine. swine flu mutates, scientists
WHO is also negotiating
Production takes months and · aren't sure how effective a with vaccine producers like
it is impossible to switch vaccine made now from the GlaxoSrnithKiine PLC to
halfway through if health current strain will remain.
save some of their swine flu
WHO eslimates that up to vaccine for poorer nations. ·
officials make a ·mistake.
Vaccine m!lker5 ean make 2 billion doses of swine flu Many rich nations like
limited · amounts qf both vaccine could be produced Britain,. Canada, Denmark,
seasonal flu vaccine and every year, though the first France, Switzerland and the
pandemic
vaccine
batches wouldn't be avail- United States signed deals
though not at the same time able for.four to six months. with. vaccine makers years

Beth Sergenl/photo

May God's angels

chance of thunderstorms.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 70 pe~­
cent.
Saturday nlght.. .Showers
likely with a chance of thunderstonns. Lows in the .mid
50s. West winds around 10
mph. Chance ofrain 70 percent.
Sunday...Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the mid
60s.

WHO meets on production of sbe flu vaccine

Local Briefs

Obama to revive terror tribunals, with more rights:

Local Weather
Frlday...Mostly sunny. A
slight chance of showers in
the afternoon. Highs in the
lower 80s. Northeast winds
around 5 mph ...Becoming
southeast around 5 mph in
the afternoon. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
·
Friday nlght ...Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Lows
around 60. South winds
around 5 mph. ·
· Saturday••.Mostly cloudy
with showers lik:ely with a

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Immunization clinic

Scabies easy to spread, but easy to treat ·
Question: Recently I was
diagnosed with scabies. 1
was horrified. ! am a clean
person; my home is clean,
and I bathe daily./ work in
the health care industry,
and my doctor says I might
have gotten this from
someone else who has this
condition. Someone else
told me I might have gotten
this from my dog. Please
help! I need more information, because I don't want
to get tllis again.
Answer: Scabies is .a reiali vely common
and
extremely itchy skin condition. The overwhelming
itchiness, which is mild in
ihe beginning and intensifies over time, is often
worse at night and can disrupt or prevent sleep. This is
the most intense symptom
associated with scabies and
the one that most often
brings people to the doctor's
·
office.
Scabies is caused hy a tiny
mite, Sarcoptes ' scabiei about one-third millimeter
long - that ·burrows .under
the skin and lays e~gs there.
Scabies is contagiOus, but
only through direct touch. It
is passed through direct
physical contact, such as a
hug, with an infected individual. It can also be spread
through contaminated bedding or clothing. Because of

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 15, 2009

..

•

~

. ·'

-

•

'

'-'

. .
~

APphoto

tain to face criticism from
liberal groups, already stung
by his decision Wednesday
to try to block the courtordered release of photos
showing U.S. troops abusing prisoners in Iraq and
Afghanistan. That decision
marked a reversal of his earlier stand on making . the
photos public.
"It's disappointing that
Obama is seeking to revive
rather than end. this failed
experiment," .said Jonathan
Hafetz, a national security
attorney at the American
Civil
Liberties · Union.
"There's no ·detainee at
Guantanamo who cannot be
tried and shouldn't be tried
· h
, d
t e regu 1ar •e era1 courts
system. Even with the proposed modifications. this
will not cure the commissions or provide them with
· legitimacy. This is perpetualin~ the Bush administration's
mtsgulded detention policy."
. Critics of the Guantanamo

In ·

commissions,
including
Obama as a senator in 2006 ~
called them a violation ot
U.S. Ia w because of the lim~
its·on detainees' legal rights.
. Pushed by Bush, Congress
created the current tribunal
system in 2006 after scrap"
ping an earlier version that
gave deta,inees additional
•
rights.
Obama voted for the earli.
er version of the tribunals
plan that also had the support
of
four
moderate
Republicans on the Senate
Armed Sel'\'ices Committ~:
But he opposed the system
that .Congress ultimateir, ·
approved, calling it"sloppy.'
"We have rushed through
a bill that stands a good
chance of being challenged
once again in the Supreme
Court," Obama said in a
Sept. 28, 2006, speech on
the Senate floor. "This is not
how a serious administra~
tion would approach the
problem of terrorism."

Sumli:l' School &amp; Morning Worship .10:30 AM
SuruiDy Evtlling Service 6:00PM
WtdMadtly Erelling 7:00PM- Teen Clasa 6:00PM
SR 143 Pomtff!y,OH ·Dr. James R.Acrti,St'.PIUIOr

'

.

�/

\

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

AND MAI'ICY SUGAR

. Dear Annie: I have .been
married for two years to a
"mama's boy" and I hate it.
Every time we have an
argumenl. he calls his mother, asks her to. come to our
house to help and insists
that I talk to her.
. At first.! told him I didn 't
like that he always brings
his mother into our relationship problems. He obviously didn't care because it
keeps happening. So, like
an adu It, I talked to my
mother-in-law, who I love
dearly. She is a great moth. er-in -law. She said she
understands how I feel, but
again, it keeps happening.
Every fight we have , she
1 comes inside my house to
mediate. I don 't know what
to do. My husband and 1 are
almost 30, and he acts like a
child. And my mother-inlaw does everything he
asks.- Love and Hate
Dear Love and Hate:
This dvnamic between
mother and child has been
going on for ·nearly · 30
years. and it will take time
to change. especially when
neither of them understands
the .Problem. It helps that
yo ur mother-in~law ts

Public meetings

•·great." Tell her very time,.my sister is very nega- case, ignore him. And if she
explicitly that when she tive toward me and says chooses not to come, so be
comes over every time you unkind things about me to h.
.
have an argument, it under- others in our community. I
Dear Annie: I, too, have
mines your marriage. Say want to get li'ast this and been at war with ladies '
tliat you love her and her invite my SISter to the jeans manufacturers. rm 74
son loves lier, but married memorial, but I don't want and live in a mountainous
couples must resolve their tier
husband
there. hunting and fishing commuown problems.
Unfortunately, my sister nity. Jeans are 90 percent of
Make it clear that the next never goes anywhere with- my wardrobe, but the ones
time your husband asks her out him. She keeps him on a that sit below the waist
to c9me over and intervene, tight leash because he has a make me look like the ·
you expect her to say "no." wandering eye.
Michelin Man.
Tell her you know it will be · This man has caused our
Tell "Not an Old
difficult for her, but you will family a great deal of pain Granny" to go to the nearbe very appreciative. Theil and ripped apart my rela- est farm su~ply store and
inform your husband if he tionship with my sister, as try on men s Jeans. They ·
doesn ' t
stop · calling well as her relationship with have slim fit, regular fit,
Mommy every time you our mother. At the end of relaxed fit, full cut, rodeo
disagree, the two of you will , her life, Mom was · very cut, etc .. in multiple brands
need to see a counselor to depressed about the situa- and all lengths. Plus, they
save your marriage.
tion but felt heipless to are cheaper than most
Dear Annie: My mother . straighten things out.! don't . women's jeans. - Old
died last year, and I want to think she would want this But Still Active
have a memorial to honor son-in-law at her memorial.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
her life. The problem is the What should I do? -'- ten by Kathy Mitchell and
guest list. When I was a Jennifer
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
child, my sister's husband
Dear Jennifer: Unless tors of the Ann Landers
sexually abused me for your sister leaves her hus- column. Please e-mail your
several years. My sister band, she is unlikely to ever questions to anniesmailknows because she read address the abuse. That . boxcomcast.net, or write
my diary and then burned doesn't mean, however, that to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
it. She has stayed with this you should welcome your Box 118190, Chicago, IL
man ! even though he has abuser. Ask . your sister to . 60611. To find out more
had ~everal affairs.
come to the memorial and about Annie's Mailbox,
I've sent letters to my sis. tell her point-blank that it and read features liy other
ter and her husband several would be inappropriate for Creators Syndical£ writers
times, asking that we open- her husband to attend and and cartoonists, visit the
ly discuss this. but neither he is not invited. She may Creators Syndicate Web
has responded.ln the mean- bring him anyway, in which page at www.creators.com . .

Family Medicine

Friday, May 15, 2009

Community Calendar

·Husband needs to.cut maternal ties
BY KATHY MITCHELL

PageA2

Monday, May 18
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission meets
at 8 a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy.
RACINE Southern
Local Bo.ard of . Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
Southern High School,
media room.
LETART FALLS
Letart Towuship Trust:\,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, May 20 .
SHADE
Bedford
Township Trustees, special
meeting, discuss concerns
relating to fire coverage for
township, 7 p:m., town hall. ·

Clubs and
organizations

Association, 7:30 p.m.,
Syracuse fire station. Final
meeting before summer
·
break.
Thursday, May 21
POMEROY Meigs
County American Cancer
Society. Advisory Board,
regular meeting, noon;
basement room of Pomeroy 1
Library, lunch provided, '
. RSVP with Courtney Sim at
992-6()26, ext. 24.
MASON, W.Va. - Meigs
County Retired Teachers,
luncheon, noon, Riverside ·
Golf Course Clubhouse ,
local history speaker, gospel
trio, members invited to
· bring guests.

Church events

S!lturday, May 16
MIDDLEPORT
Screening of motion pic...
,ure, "F.treproo f"
, 6 p.m.,
Friday, May 15
Hope Baptist Church, for
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville O.E.S annual adults only who are married
inspection, 7:30 p.m. at the or planning to be married.
hall. Refreshments :'.
Free to the public. Call 992~
Saturday; May 16 ·
2197 for information.
RACINE
Brooks
Sunday, May 17
·
Grant Camp of the Sons of
ROCK · SPRINGS
.
the Union Veterans of .the Rock
Springs .· United
Civil War and Major Daniel. Methodist Church, spiritual
McCook Circle of the renewal service, 6:30 p.m.;
Ladies of the ·Grand Army today-Thesday, singihg and
of the Republic, annual revival!style message by ·
Memorial Day service at Rev. Fred Adkins.
Star Mill Park in Racine, II
a:m. Guest speaker, also
announcement of winners in
the third annual Memorial
Saturday, May 23
Day essay contest with
MIDDLEPORT
,
essays to be read. Picnic
Feeney-Bennett Post 12~;
lunch to follow.
American Legion baseball
SALEM CENTER
team
tryouts, 3 p.m:
Star Grange #778 and Star
Saturday
and Sunday: ·
information in this column Junior Grange #878 Fun
· is provided as an educa- Night and potluck supper. Meigs High School. Rain or,
•·
tional service only. It does Dmner at .6:30 . p.m., Fun shine.
•
not repli:lc11 the/'udgm~n,t of Night ·to follow. · Open to
your persona phystctan, members and the public.
who should be relied on to
Monday, May 18
.diagnose and recommend
Tuesday, May 19 .
RACINE - Chapter 186
treatmen( for any medical of Eastern Star, 6:30 p.m.,
POMEROY MeiM
·conditions. Past columns refreshments.
.
County Board of Electiom1
are available online at
Wednesday,May 20 · will conduct official couni
ww·w .familyme·d icine.
SYRACUSE . - Meigs of May 5 special election
news.org.
·
County .
· Firefighters ballots, 10:30 a.m.
·

this, scabies often does
Some physicians choose
to treat the entire .family
spread within a family ..
You cannot get scabies since this. condition spread&amp;
from a.dog or cat. The mites easily. The itchiJ!g cal! perthat cause mange in dogs sist for several· weeks after
cannot live on human skin. the treatment has begun to
Although the mites . that work.
Over-the-counter
cause scabies in · humans antihistamines cao help
are, themselves, too small to relieve the di~comfon.
be seen by the .naked eye,
Since mites can live out·
their burrowing creates visi- side of the body for a few
ble, red bumps and blisters d.ays, clean your bed .linens,
on the skin. These typically including the bedspread. and
appear in skin folds , such as dust ruffle; .rewash clothes
on knees, elbows, belly but- that have not been wi!Shed in ·
tons and betWeen fingers.
hot warer and dried on high
In children , the burrows · heat; and use an environmen' · ·
sometimes appear on the tal disinfectant on commonly
face or scalp, but this rarely used furniture to help eradioccurs in adults. The eggs cate the mites from your
of the scabies mite typically home. Sometimes you need
. hatch within three weeks, to put toys and other nonand the severe itching is washable items in a sealed
your body's reaction to the plastic ba~ for about two
mites burrowing and egg- weeks to kill off the mites.
laying. Be aware that excesScabies spread easily and
sive scratching can lead to can . become quite uncomsecondary skin infections, fortable, but they also are
which can complicate the easily cured. Most imporcondition.
tantly, a diagnosis of scabies
The good news is that sca- does not indicate unby.gienbies is easily treated. Once ic habits or surroundings. .
the diagnosis is made Family Medicine® is a
either by a simple examini- weekly column. To submit
nation of the skirt or by questions, write to Martha
scraping the skin and Con- A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
firming the presence of eggs Ohio University College of
- treatment is straightfor- Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
ward. Your doctor will pre- Box 110, At/lens, Ohio
scribe lotion or cream and, 45701, or via e-mail to
pos~ibly, anti-itch oral med- readerquestions@ familytcattons.
medicinenews.org. Medical

, Youth events

Other events

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Sunday, May 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
·
·
·

I. We hold you in our thoughts; and memories forever.
2. May God cradle you in His atms. now and forever.

3. Forever missed, never forgotten. May God hold you in the palm of

Hishand. .
July 10, 1861-May 5, 1&amp;80

heavenly glory.
6. Your cott111ge and bravery still inspire us all, and the memmyof your

guide you and
;Protect you
throughout time.

Sunday
night .. .Partly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
clearing. Lows around 40.
Monday and Monday
nlght .. .Mostly clear. Highs
in the upper 60s. Lows 'in
the lower 40s.
Tuesday
through
Wednesday.. .Mostly clear.
Highs •in the upper 70s.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Wednesday night and
Thursday.. .Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s. Highs
around 80.
·

smile fills us with JOY and laughter.
7. Though out of sight, yoo'll forever be in my hean and mind.
8. The days may come and go. but the times we shared wilt always remaip.
9.May God'• angels guide you and protect you throughout time.
10. Yoo were a light in our life that bums forever in our hearts.

-5.69
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;14.50

.

Ohto Valley Bote Corp. (NAS.

•

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12. Yoo min our thoughts and prayel'l liom morning to night and from
year to yesr.

family

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECLU WAY,
SEND $8.•50 PER LIS~NG • $15 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to

..

l

lll Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 12 Noon

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Dally ltock reports are·the 4
p.m. ET ctoalng quotes of Iran•
acttona for May 14, 2009, provld·
ed by Edward Jones llnanctal
advloora Isaac Milts In Gattlpotls
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Ptaoant at
(304) 674-0174. Member .StPC.

I
------------------------------------,
.
I
Please publish my tributdri the special Memory Page on Sunday, May 24th.

I
I
I
I

of deceased

INurnber of selected verse

To see more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
W\vw.mydailysentinel.com
You can order reprints and
photo gifts of your favorite
photos there·too.
. ..

Southern reunion set

Ohio lawmaker, war
Yet eyeing treasurer bid

WASHINGTON (AP) President Barack Obama
This.week Syracuse Maintenance Supervisors Larry Fields
will restart Bush-era mili(background) was busy cleaning the London Poor and turn- tary tribunals for a small
ing on the water in.anticipation of opening day on May 23. number of Guanta'namo
The village Is once again treating pool goers to a free ·day detainees, reviving a fierceof swimming on opening day. .
ly .disputed trial system .he
. once denounced but with
new legal proteciions for
from Page At
terror suspects, U.S. officials
said Thursday ..
For those wishing to on
·Tuesday
and
Obama
suspended the tribook the London Pool for Wednesday and 6-8 p.m.
bunals
within
hours of takparties or for an~ other on Friday. After next week,
ing
office
in
January,
orderquestions, the pool s phone call during normal pool
will be turned on begin· hours. The telephone num-. ing a review but stopping
short
of
aband9ning
ning
Monday.
Pool ber'is 992-5418.
President
George
W. Bush's
The village of Syracuse
Manager Heather Smith..
of
prosecuting
susstrategy.
will be available for ques- started filling the pool on
pected
terrorists.
tions or for those wishing Wednesday, giving it some
The military trials will
to purchase passes or book time to warm up before
.
remain
frozen for another clear Thursday what they
parties from 10 a.m. - ~ Memorial Day Weekend
four.
months
as the adt'ninis- could include. The two
·
p.m. on Monday, 5-7 p.m. anives. ·
tration adjusts th6legal sys- senior administration offitem that is expected to try cials spoke on condition of
fewer than 20 of the 241 anonymity because Obama
Page At··
detainees at the U.S. naval had not yet announced the
detention
center
at changes.
include
the
Foreign · Honors PTo~. She will Guantanamo Bay, &lt;;uba.
The tribunal system - set
Language Club, yearbook pursue a maJor in Evolution, Thirteen detainees- includ.- up after the military began
committee, and perfor- Ecology, and Organismal ing five charged with helping sweeping detainees off the
. orchestrate the Sept. II, battlefields of Afghanistan in
mance in the drama club Biology (Pre·Med).
production of "Grease."
Reeves, daughter of 2001, attacks - are already late 2001 - has been under
As · a member of the · Bryan and Susan Reeves of in the tribunal system. · • repeated challenges . from
Middleport Church of Pomeroy, has been selected
The changes to the system human rights and legal 'orgaChrist, she is active with for admission .to Ohio were to be announced Friday. nizations because it denied
Student University's College of Arts Two senior administration defendants !llany of the
Aftershock
Ministty, artd has participat- and Sciences where. she will officials outlined several of 'gh the
ld be
ed
y wou ·
grant
ed in numerous church major in chemistry in the. the rules changes, which will nin a IS
civilian courtroom.
activities and outings, her . scholars program . She has be carried out by executive
In a statement late
favorites being the 30-hour received a four-year full authority, to The Associated
·
·
famine, a mission trip to tuition Gateway Excellence Press ori Thursday night. Thursday, · Sen. Lindsey
Graham, R-S .C., called
She
has They include:
·
New Orle\IDS, and a cheer- Scholar.ship.
Obama 's
decision
to
• ResTrictions on hearsay
leading advisor for Upward already completed four
quarter hours from Ohio evidence that can be used in revamp and restart the triBasketball.
. Swisher is the daughter of University for · American court against.the detainees. bunals · a step toward
• A ban on all evidence strengthening U.S. detenWilliam
and
Sandra .Sign Language, and five
hours · from obtained through cruet tion policies that have·been
Swisher of Middleport. At quaite(
State inhuman or degrading treat- derided worldwide.
Meigs High she was on both Washington
"I continue to believe it is
the varsity cross country Community College m fnent. This would include
in
our own national security
trigonometry.
statements
given
from
and varsity track and field
interests
to separate ourAt Meigs . High she has detainees who were subjectteam all four years. She was
selves
from
the past proba member of the Spanish marched with the Meigs ed to waterboarding, a form
of
Guantanamo,"
said
lems
Foreign Language Club her Marauder Band all four of simulated drowning.
Graham,
who·
has
been
• Giving detainees greater
ninth and tenth grade year years, been in the concert
and
pep
bands,
and
the
Big
leeway
in choosing their working with the adminisand was inducted into the
tration on issues .related to
National Hooor Society her Bend . Community Band . own military counsel.
detainees.
"I agree with the
junior year. She attended· For. two years she was
• Protecting detainees
president
and
our military
Buckeye Girls State the selected for the District 17 Who refuse to testify from
summer of her junior year honors band . She is a mem- .legal sanctions or other commanders that now is the
time to start over and
and was a Southeast Ohio's ber of the National Honor court prejudices.
strengthen
our detention
Society and since entering
The White House may
Regional Scholar in 2008.
policies.
I
applaud
the presKimberly will be attend- school has qualified · for seek additional changes to
ing The Ohio State Meigs County Academic the military commissions ident's actiops today."
Yet the move by the new
University this fall where Excellence Awards every . law over the next 120 days,
but it was not immediately Democratic president is cershe was accepted into the year since fourth grade:

Meigs rrom

II. May God's graces shine over you for all time.

Alw1111 in oar hearts,
John and Mona Andrews aild

Local Stocks

Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.52
Charming Shope (NASDAQ) -

.

4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared together.My prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
5.The days we shared were sweet. I long to see you again in God's

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
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Volunteers needed

ago to guarantee them pandemic vaccines as soon as
they 're available.
As of Thursday, at least
33 countries reported more
than 6,600 cases of swine
flu worldwide, with 69
deaths. The figures are
based on talli!'s provided by
national · governments and
WHO. According to the
global body's pandemic
alert level, the world is at
phase 5 ..:.. out of a possible
6 - meaning that a global
outbreak is "imminent." ·
"It's
a
no-brainer; ·
Fedson said of the decision
to make swine flu vaccine.
"All that's being discussed
now is the details of how to
make sure. you have enough
seasonal flu vaccine and the
logistics . of making the
switch to HlNI vaccine
production .".
· While the vaccine question hangs in the air, WHO
has given Indian pharma,
·ceuticals giant Cipla the
medical go-aliead to pro,
duce a generic version of
the anti-viral medication
Tamiflu. The drug, also
known as oseltamivir, is one
of two anti-virals shown to
work againSt swine flu.
·
WHO said Cipla's generic
version was as effective as ·
the original made by Swiss
firm Roche HoldingAG and
would hopefl!lly make the
drug more accessible to '
· .
·
poor countries,
North America has· been
the hardest-hit continent ,
The United States has
reported 3,352 laboratoryconfirmed cases of swine
flu, including three deaths.
Mexico has 2,656 cases and
64 deaths, while Canada haS
3~9 cases with one death,
according to WHO ftg~n:s.
Mexico confimied . 3H
more ·cases · Thursday
including four more deaths:
but Health Secretary Jost)
Angel Cordova said the. ne'-':
cases show the virus is
appearing . less de!ldly:
Mexico's swine flu deaths
now represent 2.4 percent of
its confirmed cases, he said.
Spain · and Britain have
the most cases in Europe., at
100 and 78 respectively. ;
In Central America, Costa
Rica has ejght cases and one
death and Panama has 29
cases.

•

J[)at1e of binh

1

Date of passing

•

I
thone-----------------

1

Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SENTINEL

L-.•-------..

"· ... ... .

.... .
-

.... ... .......

-. ,, .·-

•

In this photo,
reviewed by .
the U.S. mili- ·
tary, the exer- ·
cise yard at ·
Guantanamo'
s Camp4
detention
faci!Hy is pic- ·
tured before ·
dawn, at
Guantanamo ·
Bay U.S.
Naval Base,
Cuba,
Thursday.

· Pool

II you wish, seled one of the following FREE verses below to
accompany your tribute.

.

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BorgWarner (NYSE) - 27.53
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

GENEVA (AP) - As
swine flu cases topped
6.600 worldwide, vaccine
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department makers and other experts
',viii hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m. met Thursday at the World
Health Organization to dis~nd 1-3 p.m. Tuesday.
cuss the tough decisions
that must be made quickly
to fight the evolving virus.
Pharmaceutical compa·. POMEROY - Flats of flowers donated by Bob's Market nies are ready to begin makwill be planted in downtown Pomeroy beginning at 10 a.m. ing. a swine flu vaccine 1
Saturday.
but as the virus may mutate,
Planting flowers downtown is one of the Pomeroy questions abound: How
Merchants Association's beautification projects. Merchants
and' community volunteers are needed to assist with the much should be produ«ed?
How will it· be distributed?
plantings.
Who should get it?
The expert group's recommendations will be
passed to WHO Director· R,ACINE - The Southern High.School Class of 1989'~ General Margaret Chan,
20tlt Reunion will be held at 7 p.m., May 22 at the who is expecied to issue
Syracuse Community Center. Bnng own snacks and advice to vaccine manufacrefreshments. Call Sarah Philson-Piazza at 561-644-3084 turers and the World Health
or sjpiazza70@yahoo.com, or Melanie Van Meter Quillen Assembly next week.
at 949-2121.
· · .·· .
. WHO's .flu chief said the
· meeting of industty representatives and independent
experts sought to answer
questions including when to
·
recommend to manufacturAPpho!O
ers that they switch from a Filipino ~actors wearing protective suits work on test sam' . COLUMBUS (AP) ers about a possible seasonal vaccine to one that ples for the swine flu virus inside the biosafety level 3 laboState lawmak~r and Iraqi statewide run and plans to works against the pandemi~ ratory at the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine In sub·
..
war vete~n Josh Mandel decide soon. He says he strain.
urban Alabang, south of Manila, Philippines on Thursday.
"No
big
decisiohs,
no
says he is nearing a final has been strongly encourDespite
being a swine flu-free country, health officials have
announcements,"
Keiji
decision on ' whether to run aged.
.
Issued
guidelines
for public gatherings to block the entry or
for state treasurer in 20 I0.
State Treasurer Kevin Fukuda told reporters after · spread of the Influenza A (HlNl) virus into the country.
At 31, the two-terin state Boyce, a Democrat, was the meeting. "These are
representative from north· appoi.nted to the office in · enormously · complicated - but they cannot make
The · U .S. Centers for
east Ohio is the youngest December by Gov. Ted questions, and they are not massive quantities of both Disease
Control
and
Republican in the Ohio Strickland. He has indicat- · something that anyone can because that exceeds manu- Prevention is currently
House.
·
ed he plans to run for the make in a single meeting." · facturing capacity.
working on a "seed stock"
But some feel the main
. ·
"What is really going to to make the vaccine, which
Mandel said Thursday he job in 2010.
has been traveling the state
Mandel has done two decision has already been be wrestled with is that sea- should be ready in the next
talking . With business, tours of duty in Iraq with the made.
·
sonal influenza itself has a couple ofweeks. That will
"It's a foregone conclu- significant impact on pen- be distributed to manufaccommunity and party lead- U.S . Marines.
sion," said David Fedson, a pie," said Fukuda. "This is turers worldwide so they
vaccines expert and former an infection which is esti- can start producing the
professor of medicine at the mated to kill some hundreds vaccine.
University of Virginia . "If of thousands of people each
Until vaccine manufacturwe don't invest in an HlNl year around the world, so ers get the seed stock, they
(swine flu) vaccine, then there is a real trade-off if won't know how many
possibly we could ha,ve a you just say we're going to doses of ·vaccine they can
reappearance of this virus in . stop making that vaccine."
make or how long that
a mild, moderate, or cataAt the moment; health would take. Sanofi Pasteur,
strophic form and we would officials aren't sure how the world's biggest vaccine
have absolutely nothing."
deadly swine flu is, and producer, said Thursday it is
Most flu vaccine compa- whether they will need more waiting for the green light
nies can only make one vac- seasonal flu vaccine or from WHO before it starts
cine at a· time: seasonal flu swine flu vaccine. And if the making swine flu· vaccine.
vaccine or pandemic vaccine. swine flu mutates, scientists
WHO is also negotiating
Production takes months and · aren't sure how effective a with vaccine producers like
it is impossible to switch vaccine made now from the GlaxoSrnithKiine PLC to
halfway through if health current strain will remain.
save some of their swine flu
WHO eslimates that up to vaccine for poorer nations. ·
officials make a ·mistake.
Vaccine m!lker5 ean make 2 billion doses of swine flu Many rich nations like
limited · amounts qf both vaccine could be produced Britain,. Canada, Denmark,
seasonal flu vaccine and every year, though the first France, Switzerland and the
pandemic
vaccine
batches wouldn't be avail- United States signed deals
though not at the same time able for.four to six months. with. vaccine makers years

Beth Sergenl/photo

May God's angels

chance of thunderstorms.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 70 pe~­
cent.
Saturday nlght.. .Showers
likely with a chance of thunderstonns. Lows in the .mid
50s. West winds around 10
mph. Chance ofrain 70 percent.
Sunday...Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the mid
60s.

WHO meets on production of sbe flu vaccine

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Obama to revive terror tribunals, with more rights:

Local Weather
Frlday...Mostly sunny. A
slight chance of showers in
the afternoon. Highs in the
lower 80s. Northeast winds
around 5 mph ...Becoming
southeast around 5 mph in
the afternoon. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
·
Friday nlght ...Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Lows
around 60. South winds
around 5 mph. ·
· Saturday••.Mostly cloudy
with showers lik:ely with a

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Immunization clinic

Scabies easy to spread, but easy to treat ·
Question: Recently I was
diagnosed with scabies. 1
was horrified. ! am a clean
person; my home is clean,
and I bathe daily./ work in
the health care industry,
and my doctor says I might
have gotten this from
someone else who has this
condition. Someone else
told me I might have gotten
this from my dog. Please
help! I need more information, because I don't want
to get tllis again.
Answer: Scabies is .a reiali vely common
and
extremely itchy skin condition. The overwhelming
itchiness, which is mild in
ihe beginning and intensifies over time, is often
worse at night and can disrupt or prevent sleep. This is
the most intense symptom
associated with scabies and
the one that most often
brings people to the doctor's
·
office.
Scabies is caused hy a tiny
mite, Sarcoptes ' scabiei about one-third millimeter
long - that ·burrows .under
the skin and lays e~gs there.
Scabies is contagiOus, but
only through direct touch. It
is passed through direct
physical contact, such as a
hug, with an infected individual. It can also be spread
through contaminated bedding or clothing. Because of

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 15, 2009

..

•

~

. ·'

-

•

'

'-'

. .
~

APphoto

tain to face criticism from
liberal groups, already stung
by his decision Wednesday
to try to block the courtordered release of photos
showing U.S. troops abusing prisoners in Iraq and
Afghanistan. That decision
marked a reversal of his earlier stand on making . the
photos public.
"It's disappointing that
Obama is seeking to revive
rather than end. this failed
experiment," .said Jonathan
Hafetz, a national security
attorney at the American
Civil
Liberties · Union.
"There's no ·detainee at
Guantanamo who cannot be
tried and shouldn't be tried
· h
, d
t e regu 1ar •e era1 courts
system. Even with the proposed modifications. this
will not cure the commissions or provide them with
· legitimacy. This is perpetualin~ the Bush administration's
mtsgulded detention policy."
. Critics of the Guantanamo

In ·

commissions,
including
Obama as a senator in 2006 ~
called them a violation ot
U.S. Ia w because of the lim~
its·on detainees' legal rights.
. Pushed by Bush, Congress
created the current tribunal
system in 2006 after scrap"
ping an earlier version that
gave deta,inees additional
•
rights.
Obama voted for the earli.
er version of the tribunals
plan that also had the support
of
four
moderate
Republicans on the Senate
Armed Sel'\'ices Committ~:
But he opposed the system
that .Congress ultimateir, ·
approved, calling it"sloppy.'
"We have rushed through
a bill that stands a good
chance of being challenged
once again in the Supreme
Court," Obama said in a
Sept. 28, 2006, speech on
the Senate floor. "This is not
how a serious administra~
tion would approach the
problem of terrorism."

Sumli:l' School &amp; Morning Worship .10:30 AM
SuruiDy Evtlling Service 6:00PM
WtdMadtly Erelling 7:00PM- Teen Clasa 6:00PM
SR 143 Pomtff!y,OH ·Dr. James R.Acrti,St'.PIUIOr

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

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www.mydallysentlnel.com ·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich ·
Publisher

I
I

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law rupe.cting an .
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
: of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
· the GIJvernment for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S, Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
· Today is Friday, May 15 , the !35th day of 2009. There
are 230 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On May 15, 1911, the U.~.
Supreme Court ordered the breakup of Standard Oil Co ..
ruling it was a monopoly in violation of the Sherman
· AntitQJst Act.
.
On this date: In 1859, Nobel Prize-winning physicist ·
Pierre Curie was born in Paris.
. ·
In I ~9. actor James Mason w~ born in Huddersfield,
Yorkshue, England:
·
In 1929, a fire af the Cleveland Clinic claimed 1231ives.
In 1930, registered nurse Ellen Church, the first airline
stewardess, went on duty aboard an Oakland-to-Chicago
flight operated by Boeing Air Transport (a forerunner of
United Airlines).
In 1942, wartime gasoline rationing went into effect in 17
Eastern states, limiting sales to three gallons a week for
nonessential vehicles.
·
In 1948, hours after declaring its independence, the new
state of Israel was attacked by Transjordan, Egypt, Syria;
Iraq IUld Lebanon.
In 1963, astronaut L. Gordon Cooper blasted off aboard
Faith 7 on the final mission of the Project Mercury spac·e.
pi:Qgram.
In 1969, Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas resigned
amid a controversy over his past legal fees.
. In 1972, George C. Wallace was shot by Arthur Bremer
and left paralyzed while campaigning in Laurel, Md., for
the Democratic p'residential nomination.
·
In 1975, U.S. forces invaded the Cambodian island of
Koh Tang and recaptured the American merchant ship
Mayaguez. (All 40 crew members had already been
released safely by Cambodia; some 40 U.S. servicemen
were killed in the operation.)
Ten years ago: Russian President Boris Yeltsin triumphed
over his Communist foes, surviving an impeachment vote
in the Russian parliament. Charismatic won the Pteakness,
finishing I 112 lengths ahead of Menifee.
·
·
Five years ago: A 40-ton steel girder dropped from a freeway overpass construction site into morning traffic in
Golden, Colo., crushing one car and killing a family of
three. Col. Robert Morgan , commander of the famed
Memphis Belle B-17 bomber that flew combat missions
over Europe during World War U, died in Asheville, N.C.,
at 'age 85. KentuckY Derby wiriner Smarty Jones posted a
record 11 II~ lerigth victory in the Preak.ness (however, the
horse failed to win the Belmont Stakes).
· One year ago: President George W. Bush, addressing the
Israeli Knesset. gently urged Mideast leaders to "make the
hard choices necessary for peace'' and condemned what he
called "the false comfort of appeasement.'' California's
Supreme Court declared gay couples in the state could
marry - a victory for the gay rights movement that was
overturned by the passalle of Proposition 8 the following
November, Emmy-winrung composer Alexander "Sandy"
Courage, who created the otherworldly theme for the original "Star Trek" TV series, died in Los Angeles at age 88.
Thought for Today: "Vice is most dangerous when it puts
on the gaib of virtue." - Danish pro':'erb.
·
.

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. unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In
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thanks to organizatioi!S and individuals will not be accept. ed for publication.

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Friday, May 15,2009

One womans plea to Notre Dame

The Daily Sentinel
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"------+------------------1,

The women's-clinic nurse
confinned that Lacy Dodd
was pregnant and then told
her not to worry because
she had "other options."
That wasn't the kind of
reassurance Dodd wanted,
as a University of Notre
D4me senior weeks away
from graduation. •When she.
returned to campus, Dodd
headed straight to Notre
Dame's grotto ·- a small
cave modeled after the
famous Marian shrine in
Lourdes, France.
"I knew this: No amount
of shame or embarrassment
would ever lead me to get
rid of my baby. Of all
women, Our Lady could
surely feel· pity for an
unplanned
pregnancy,"
wrote Dodd in an essay
aimed at the Rev .. John
Jenkins, the uni'llersity's
president. The text was
posted online by the journal
First Things.
"In my hour of rieed, on
my knees, I asked Mary for
courage and strength. And
she did not disappoint," she
added. "My boyfriend was a
different story. He was also
a Notre Dame senior. When
I told him that be was to he
a father, he tried to pressure
me into having an abortion.
... 'All that talk about abortion is just dining-room
talk,' he said."
Family and friends stood
by Dodd"s side. Today, a
decade later, she is a single
mother and her daughter's
name is Mary. Dodd serves
on the board of Rool!J at the

Terry
Mattingly

Inn , an organization working to·. build an on-campus
facility for pregnant ·unwed
students at Belmont Abbey
College, near Charlotte,
N.C.
The timing of Dodd's essay
"Notre . Dame, My
Mother" - is, of course.
linked to her alma mater's
decision to invite President
Obama to deliver its midMay commencement address
and to receive an honorary
doctor of laws degree.
Throughout his political
career, Obama bas ·opposed
all restrictions on abortion
rights , even in late-term
procedures. But he !Jas also
reached out to Catholic and
evangelical voters by pledging to help lessen the need
for abortions , through governmenl efforts to aid needy
mothers and their children. .
Catholic traditionalists
and many Notre Dame
alumni argue that honoring
Obama in this way violates
a 2004 U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops policy that
said: "The Cathohc community and Catholic institulions should not honor those
who act in ' defiance of our
fundamental moral princi-

pies. They should not be face crisis pregnancies, and
given awards. honors or some young women there
platforms which would sug- are convinced that theY,
gest support . for their mu&gt;l have abortions in
actions."
order t\&gt; stay in school.
,
Three years later. the
While others focus on the
bishops underlined · the political implications ot
importance of this .issue, honoring Obama, Dodd sai4
arguing that the "direct and she worries about th~
intentional destruction of impact of this · symboli"
innocent human life is event on women in ·the com~
always wrong and is not·J·ust mencement audience
whd
.
one issue among many."
are wrestling wath the sam~
However, a recent . online issue she faced ·10 year&amp;
count ·found that only 66 ago. . .
;
. bishop&gt;. out of 195 dioceses
Thus, she ended her essa)!
nabtionwide, have . issu edf . wi_th thihs quetrestion to t~~
pu lie comments cnllca1 o · pnest w o cu · nt1y 1eawo;
Notre Dame's decision. So Notre Dame: "Who draws
far. the Vatican has support from your decisio~
remained silent on the issue. to honor President Obam"
Meanwhile. a Pew Forum - the young, · pregnan~
on Religion &amp; PubliF Life Notre Dame woman sitting
poll found that 50 percent of in thai graduating class whd
American
Catholics wants desperately to keep
approve of Notre Dame's her baby, or the Notre Dame
decision to "invite" Obama, man who believes that the
while. 28 percent . disap- Catholic teaching oil the
prove: However. only 37 intrinsic evil of abortion is
percent of white, non- just dining-room talk?"
·
Hispanic Catholics ·who
These kinds of influences
attend Mass weekly agreed make a differepce, said
with the Notre Dame deci- Dodd.
sion, compared with 56 per"]think that Notre Dame
·cent of those less active in needs to be in the lead whep
the church. This parallels it comes to supporting
the fact that 61 percent of woml!n who face unplanned
these "attend less often" pregnancies," she s.aid.
Catholics support abortion "Notre Dame needs to he on
rights in all or most cases, their side - always."
.
as opposed to 30. perceqt of
(Terry Mattingly is ilirecthe
"attend
weekly" tor of the Washington
Catholics.
Journalism Center at the.
Alumni and current stu- Council . for Christian.
dents know that these kinds Colleges and Universities
of. divisions also exist at and .
lea{is
the.
Notre Dame, said Dodd. GetRe/igion.org project to
Notre Dame students also studyreligion .p ndthenews),
.'

WHEN I WAS ·

'IOURA6E, I HAD
. IT MUCH EASIER.

;the
. Daily Sentinel
.

FAITH. FAMILY

f{J.nitei in yrayer

Page As
Friday, May 15, 2009

International
ministries coming·
to area May 17-23

LETART, W.Va. - May 17-23,' eaeh evening at 7 at the
Maranatba Cornerstone Church, just off Sandhill Road out. side Point Pleasant in ,Letart, a campmeeting will be held featuring the international ministries of Rabbi Jack Zimmerman
of Jewish Voice Ministries International, Dr. Ron Phillips of
Abba's llouse at Central Baptist Church and Evangetist
Robert Harris of the Robert Harris Evangetistic Association.
The theme of this year's conference is "A Second Touch ."
During this conference, come expecting nothing less than
the miraculous. We are expecting nothing less than to see
and ell;perience . ihe soul .saving, encouraging, healing,
restoring and delivering power of God on display.
Each night· there will a time of worship featuring the
music ministry of J.D. and Nicole Stewart, the Maranatha
Church Choir, and a variety of local singers. Maranatha is
only a.20- 30 minute drive from a variety of points including Point Pleasant, Ripley, Ravenswood and also New
Haven, Mason, Gallipofis, or even Pomeroy. .
For more information, visit online at www.maranatha_
Submitted photo cornerstonechurch.org.
The Clouds broke and the sun made a temporary appea(S.nce as South Gallia f'ellowship of Christian !l,thleies celebratPastor Ron Phillips was called as pastor of Central
ed National Day of Prayer ori May 7. Nearly 70 students and staff members gather~d in front of .the schC&gt;Ql during lunch Baptist
Church in 1979, and led his church in a dyna!nic
for a prayer. Prayer was led by senior FCA.member Jacob Watson.
journey of spiritual awakening.
·
Through the years, the ministry has.experienced the birth ·
and growth of many new outreaches and completed several building projects including the beautiful new Worship
Center and International Outreach facility. But most impor,
tantly, the church has exploded into new .realms of renewal
and spirit-filled ministry, and has become known as Abba's
House, a place where all are welcomed with the Heavenly
Father's embrace.
Phillips is a noted author of 17 books, and is well known
Bv ERIC GORSKI
their politics or ideological including ·the lives of our
But it is not black and white as an anointed conference and revival speaker, as .well as a
liP REliGION I'!RtTER
·leanings? · How do you enemies," Gushee said. "It's in determining when interro- Christian broadcasting veteran through his int!)mational
untangle those factoa:s from also insufficiently ro,mmit- galion tactics cross the line to television program and radio'broadcasts.
' Among evangelical lead- . each otlter?
.
ted to the peacemaking un)ust torture, Pavlischek
The Rev. Robert Harris was born in Piedmont, N.C. He
ers; debate over the use of
Pew.officials later updat- teachings of Jesus and the . saad. He said while evidence was raised on a farrn, quit school imd joined the Manne
harsh irlterrogation tech- ed the analysis to emphasize example of Jesus . as one exists that- water-boarding Corps in 1952. He graduated from high school and attend"
diques against suspected that religion "is only one of who did not resort to vio- might be out of line, "it's a ed John Wesley College in Greensboro, N.C.
,
terrorists has prompted many factors" - and that le~ce or cruelty to accom- hard c~l." Similarly, sleep
Hams received his BA. degree in history f~om Pembroke
introspection about faith, political party and ideology · phsh any of has goals and depnvanon can also l)e used State University in Pembroke, N.C. He was received into the
ethics, the Golden Rule, just are. much better predictors instead suffered violence to extremes and cross the line, Western North Carolina Annual Conference in 1971. He is a
wars, 1ack Bauer and Jesus. . of opinions on torture than instead of inflicting it."
but not always.
full-time general evan~elist of the United Methodi~l Church .
A riumber of · evangelical religion and most other
Gary · Bauer, a former . Richard Land, president
Harris hag led his d1strict several times in the number of
leaders have made oppogi- demographic factors. At the Republican
presidential of the Ethics and Religious people received on p~ofession of faith , He was recognized
tion to torture without excep- . same time, the report noted, . can&lt;\idate .affiliated with Liberty Commission of the by the Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference of the
lions a moral cause over the religion itself Cjlll p'lay a several · Christian ... right ·Southern ·
Baptist United Methodist Church for having the highest percentage
past three years, part of a strong role in shaping parti- groups over the years, said Convention, the nation's on profession of faith in the Western North Carolina ·
broadening of the move- sanship and ideology. ·
the discussion should not largest evangelical church Conference in 198.2.
.
ment's agenda beyond tradi"My experience is that. pea- come down to "Would Jesus bOdy, revealed this month
Harris has and continues to lead teams ontQ the mission
tiona[ culture war issues. pie who !ll'C cornfottable sup- torture?"
that he believes water- fields where a multitude of churches, schools and orphanOthers in the · movement, porting torture support it
"There are a lot of things boarding is torture and ages have been built as well as thousands of salvations and .
including many Christian because they think it's goin'g Jesus .wouldn't do because nev.er justifie~. He said part miraculous healings.
right leaders, have largely to produce information our he's the son of Goo," he · of his conclusion is based
JVMI's staff evangelist, Jack Zimmerman, is an ordained
resisted or stayed silent.
countiy needs," said the Rev. said. "I can't imagine Jesus on his belief that it's "very Christian pastor and a Messianic Jewish rabbi. He was forKillmer,
a being a Marine or a police- likely to cause . permanent merly a standup comedian and bas. an engaging wit and
· Now, President Barack Richard.
Obama's release of Bush Presbyterian Church (U.S .A.) man or a bank president, for psychological damage."
dynamic speaking style.
·
.
.
administration memos justi- .minister and executive direc- that matter. The more
"It seems to me once you
His deep understanding of the Hebrew roots of the
fying harsh interrogation tor of the interfaith National appropriate question is, accept the 'end justifies the. Cl!ristian faith make him a valuable teacher of the Word.
techniques and a new poll Religious.Campaign Against . 'What i$ a follower of Jesus means' argiunent, then you He is an award winning reporter; radio and television host
showing white evangelicals Torture, · which formed in permitted to do?'"
have taken a step onto a and has tau~ht Bible classes throughout the U.S. and at themore s~pathetic to torture 2006. 'T don't think they
Bauer said th~ answer is very steep and . slippery ological umversities in ~ussia and Ukraine.
.
have lea,ders taking stock of would shy away from use of "it depends" - but the slope. to datk a":d dangerous
whether evangelical opinion the word 'torture."'
moral equation changes place," Land srud.
bas shifted on the top1c.
"During · the last eight when the suspect is not a
He emphasized that
. "I have said before that years, people have been soldier captured on a batlle- · Christian tenets that guide
torture is like a bone caught conceme4 about this ticking field but a terrorist who may the debate - including the
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) .- The Southern Baptist
in our throat -'-- we can't time bomb thing and Jack have knowledge of an Golden Rule, or "Do unto Theolo~ical Seminary . is folding its decades-old music
. swallow il and we can't spit Bauer and '24' and all that," impending attack. He said others as you would have school mto another school because of the sluggish econoit oui," said David Gushee, said Killmer, referring to he does not consider water- them do unto you" - can my and waning ~pularity with students. ·
·
a professor . of Christian the TV drama in which the boarding - a form of inter- be applied differently. He The seminary s School of Church, Music and Worship has
eth1cs at Mercer University protagonist takes a by-any- rogation that simulates said that while . terrorist.s . trained thousands of choir directors, organists and other
in Atlanta and president of means-necessary approach drowning :.... to be torture.
should not be "mistreated," church worship leaders .for 65 years. But it will no longer
"I think if we believe the neither do they de.serve pro- be a freestanding .school:
Evangelicals ·for Human to extracting . mformation
Rights. "I think we're still from terror suspects:
person we hl!ve can give us tections afforded prisoners
Seminary President Albert Mohler said the recession
there."
Among
evangelicals, mfonnation to stop thou- of war by the . Geneva forced a sooner merger of the school after the seminary laid
The poll dam from a survey Gushee has been a leading santls of Americans from Convention..
off 35 non-faculty workers earlier this year.
.
of 742 U.S. adults teleased anti-torture advocate. He led being killed, it would be
Land said some harsh
But Mohler said the trend of churches moving to guitars
April 29 by the Pew Forum the effort to draft, in 2006, morally suspect to not use interrogation techniques and praise choruses has eroded the school's entrants over
(lD Religion and Public Life . "An Evangelical Declaration 'harsh tactics to get that such · as slapping witb an several years.
.
·
found 62 percent of white Against Torture: Protecting information," Bauer said.
open ·hand - can be moralThe music school's enrollment of 167 students is down
evangelical Protestants said Human Rights in an Age of
Under Christianity's just- IY permissible.
.
from a peak 20 years ago of 539.
torture of a suspected terrorist Terror." The document, war tradition, recognized
David Neff, editor of
"What we've been looking at is a major sea change in
could be often or sometimes which has 250 signatures, political authorities have the Christianity Today magazine music in the larger culture, music in our churches and the
j11stified . to obtain important renounced torture and "cruel, responsibility to protect the and chainnan of the board of role of our seminary in meeting those needs," Mohler said.'
infonnation.
inhuman, and degrading innocent from grave barrn, the National Association of
The school is moving into the a new School of Church
BycoJitrast, 51 percent of treatment of detainees." .
said Keith · Pavlischek, a Evangelicals.
which · Ministries, so it can · he combined with the School of
white .
non-HispaniC
Last fall, a poll commis- senior fellow at th.e Ethics endorsed the evangelical Leadership and Church Ministry, which has taught future
Catholics, 46 percent of sioned by Fruth in Public .and Public ·Policy Center, declaration against torture, education ministers, youth leaders and other specialized
white mainline Protestants ·. Life and Mercer Un,iversity evangelical scholar and said tQrture is not a subject ministries.
and 40 percent of the reli- found that 44 percent of retired Marine colonel.
preached at most evangelical
giously. unaffiliated held white Southern evangelicals
That means not just lives churches. So white evangelithat posallon.
rely on life experience and that would he lost in an cal support for torture is
· Those who attend reli- common sense to form attack, but the justice, order more likely rooted in their ·
gious services at least once opinions on torture. By con-- and peace of the broader strong
allegiance
the
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two of 52 Roman Catholic
a week were. more likely trast, 28 percent said they international community at Republican Party.
parishes
ordered closed by Cleveland's bishop J:!ave won .~
than those who rarely ·or relied on Christian teach- risk from terrorism , said
"There. is a sense of, 'We
reversal
and
will stay open.
neyer attend to say torture is · ings or beliefs.
·,
Pavlischek,'a member of the trust thls administration that
·The
reprieves
were announced at ·St. Ignatius of Antioch
~ometimes or often justified
Even so, Gushee said he Presby~tian Church in was leading us through this
in that scenario - 54 per- senses a "deep moral, spiri- Amen~ a. '. a conservative difficult time post-911, and if and St. Colman churches in Cleveland. The diocese said
cent to 42percent.
tual and theologicaJ prob- denommat!On.
they say we have to do thas, Bishop Richard Lennon's review of appeals is now comThe findmgs immediately lem" in evangelical support
If authorities believe a · chances ate that sometiines . pleted, so the remaining parishes on the shutdown list will
be closed or merged over the next year due to .declining
prompted questions for for torture.
detainee has information · it's necessary,"' Neff said.
·
•
·
evangelicals: How exactly
"There is a version of about an imminent attack,
He added: "It think it is .congregations, finances and priests.
·
The
two
spared
parishes
challenged
tlleir
alosure
orders
.
did poll participants defme Christianity in America that it's morally acceptable to extre~ly ilnportant for the
and
said
they
had
stable
finances
and
provided
important
torture, smce the survey did I thin~ is not . adeql!ately use coercion, inflict pain, U.S. government, for our
not? Did evangelicl\ls reach cornmatted to the B1ble's cauSe discomfort and use own security, to operate as social services in low-income neighborhoods of Cleveland;
The eight-county diocese currently has 224 parishes serv~
their conclusions because of teachings about the sacred- force in .an attempt to pre- ethically as possible, because
ing about 766,000 Catholics.
lheir religious beliefs, or ness of every human life, ·· vent the attack, he said.
what we sow, we reap."

·Toi·LtJre debate proinpts
evangeliCal soul~searching

Music school to

The Reagan legacy is the man himself

SANTA
BARBARA,
the president could have
But what specific policy
Calif. - You drive up a
· built a new home, perhaps proposal would Reagan
steep, rough and winding
an' impressive mm\urn~nt to · embrace today to deal with .
road to reach Ronald
himself, · with fabulous skyrocketing
healthcar~
Reagan's ranch in the Santa
views of the Pacific to the costs'? The credit crunch?
Ynez mountains. For eight
west and the valley to the ·Immigration? No one can
Byron
years, 1981 to 1989; . this
east. Instead , Reagan pre- really say.
York
place qorth of Santa
ferred the little house by the
Perhaps it would be mor~
Barbara was the Western
meadow.
instructive to look at the
White House. Reagan spent
Walking around the man himself. Over a lifenearly a year of his time in
ranch, you can't help think- time of thought and study
office here . Now, what he chairs upholstered · in an ing ·about the current ~ he was 69 when he
called Rancho del Cielo is orange-and-brown patch- Republican Party and its bec.aine
president
·
pretty much deserted:
Reagan
developed
a
set
of
work pattern that could relationship to Reagan . One
But the ranch, tended by a have come out of any mid- feeling the ranch produces core principles that guided
lone caretaker, is still much die-class American den Of - nearly forces on you -.,- whatever he did. To those;
like it was wheri Reagan the 1970s. Western art is the realization that the core principles - liberty,
was alive. It's not open to bangs on the walls.
19'80s were a long time ago. free enterprise, American
the public; these days, the · The bedroom is small and When Reagan took office, exceptionallsm ""' he added
old adobe house and 688 plain, with what looks like the top income tax rate was his own personal qualities,
surrounding acres are an old Ethan Allen chest 70 percent. The Cold War · He was a serious reader, a
owned and carefully main- and .two bedside tables that had entered one of its most self-improver, decidedly
tained by the ~onse rvative had to be turned sideways dangerous phas~s. ·
non-cynical, avowedly non"
Young
America's becau se the room· wasn't
By the end of his adminis- Washington and deeply
Found~tion.
The group wide enough to fit .the'm. tration, Reagan had reduced patriotic. A gift for commu- ·.
doesn't have the staff or Reagan's nearby bathroom , that confascatory 70 percent nicati_ng made those qualiresources to conduct public has a modulur shower and a tax rate 10 28 percent. And ties mstantly recognizabl~
tours, but they were k.ind toilet squeezed in a tiny he won the Cold War. Most to the American public.
!
enough to take me on a visit nook .
Jlresidents don't leave much . As you walk around the
one afternoon last week.
Any budget hotel down to remember them by. old ranch, and see the pri~
The first thing that comes the road has more comfort- Reagan has two great .!ega- vate spaces where .he spent
to mind as you approach the able
so much time, you realiz~
accommodations. cies.
·
house is how modest it is. Reagan , who with his wife
But what does i1 mean for perhaps more than ever
The main part of the build- was pilloried for having a Amenca today? Certamly before that it was Reagan'$
. ing ·was constructed in plutocrat's taste, in fact low taxes and a strong character that made his tri'
1871. Even after Reagan enjoyed a level of simplicity . national ~ef~nse remain umphs ·possible .
Fo(
added a couple of rooms beyond what most vacation- bedrock prmcaples for con- Republicans, coherent posi•
when he bought it in 1975, ing Americans would servative Republicans : And tions on today's polic~
the whole · house measured accept.
when Democrats argue, as debates will emerge in time:
about I ,500 square feet.
The house is nestled on Sen . Charles Schun1er did The tougher question i~
The·floors are covered in · the edge of a mountainside recently, that the Reaganite where they will find a
a brick-patterned linoleum. meadow;
It's idyllic, "traditional-values kind of leader like Ronald Reagarl
("He Ia1d it himself," my but it you drive about five arguments and strong for- ag'!in.
:
.d II
) Th f . minutes away, you'll find eign policy. all that is over"
.
(Byron
York
is
chief
poUt~
gua e te s me.
e urm ture is plain and comfort- another spot on the proper- - well, someday they teal correspondent for The
Washington Examiner).
:
able; there are a couple of ty, at the top of a hill, where. might discover otherwise.

merge~

.2 churc~es to stay open

�OPINION

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Charlene Hoeflich
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Congress shall make no law rupe.cting an .
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
: of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
· the GIJvernment for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S, Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
· Today is Friday, May 15 , the !35th day of 2009. There
are 230 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On May 15, 1911, the U.~.
Supreme Court ordered the breakup of Standard Oil Co ..
ruling it was a monopoly in violation of the Sherman
· AntitQJst Act.
.
On this date: In 1859, Nobel Prize-winning physicist ·
Pierre Curie was born in Paris.
. ·
In I ~9. actor James Mason w~ born in Huddersfield,
Yorkshue, England:
·
In 1929, a fire af the Cleveland Clinic claimed 1231ives.
In 1930, registered nurse Ellen Church, the first airline
stewardess, went on duty aboard an Oakland-to-Chicago
flight operated by Boeing Air Transport (a forerunner of
United Airlines).
In 1942, wartime gasoline rationing went into effect in 17
Eastern states, limiting sales to three gallons a week for
nonessential vehicles.
·
In 1948, hours after declaring its independence, the new
state of Israel was attacked by Transjordan, Egypt, Syria;
Iraq IUld Lebanon.
In 1963, astronaut L. Gordon Cooper blasted off aboard
Faith 7 on the final mission of the Project Mercury spac·e.
pi:Qgram.
In 1969, Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas resigned
amid a controversy over his past legal fees.
. In 1972, George C. Wallace was shot by Arthur Bremer
and left paralyzed while campaigning in Laurel, Md., for
the Democratic p'residential nomination.
·
In 1975, U.S. forces invaded the Cambodian island of
Koh Tang and recaptured the American merchant ship
Mayaguez. (All 40 crew members had already been
released safely by Cambodia; some 40 U.S. servicemen
were killed in the operation.)
Ten years ago: Russian President Boris Yeltsin triumphed
over his Communist foes, surviving an impeachment vote
in the Russian parliament. Charismatic won the Pteakness,
finishing I 112 lengths ahead of Menifee.
·
·
Five years ago: A 40-ton steel girder dropped from a freeway overpass construction site into morning traffic in
Golden, Colo., crushing one car and killing a family of
three. Col. Robert Morgan , commander of the famed
Memphis Belle B-17 bomber that flew combat missions
over Europe during World War U, died in Asheville, N.C.,
at 'age 85. KentuckY Derby wiriner Smarty Jones posted a
record 11 II~ lerigth victory in the Preak.ness (however, the
horse failed to win the Belmont Stakes).
· One year ago: President George W. Bush, addressing the
Israeli Knesset. gently urged Mideast leaders to "make the
hard choices necessary for peace'' and condemned what he
called "the false comfort of appeasement.'' California's
Supreme Court declared gay couples in the state could
marry - a victory for the gay rights movement that was
overturned by the passalle of Proposition 8 the following
November, Emmy-winrung composer Alexander "Sandy"
Courage, who created the otherworldly theme for the original "Star Trek" TV series, died in Los Angeles at age 88.
Thought for Today: "Vice is most dangerous when it puts
on the gaib of virtue." - Danish pro':'erb.
·
.

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Friday, May 15,2009

One womans plea to Notre Dame

The Daily Sentinel
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"------+------------------1,

The women's-clinic nurse
confinned that Lacy Dodd
was pregnant and then told
her not to worry because
she had "other options."
That wasn't the kind of
reassurance Dodd wanted,
as a University of Notre
D4me senior weeks away
from graduation. •When she.
returned to campus, Dodd
headed straight to Notre
Dame's grotto ·- a small
cave modeled after the
famous Marian shrine in
Lourdes, France.
"I knew this: No amount
of shame or embarrassment
would ever lead me to get
rid of my baby. Of all
women, Our Lady could
surely feel· pity for an
unplanned
pregnancy,"
wrote Dodd in an essay
aimed at the Rev .. John
Jenkins, the uni'llersity's
president. The text was
posted online by the journal
First Things.
"In my hour of rieed, on
my knees, I asked Mary for
courage and strength. And
she did not disappoint," she
added. "My boyfriend was a
different story. He was also
a Notre Dame senior. When
I told him that be was to he
a father, he tried to pressure
me into having an abortion.
... 'All that talk about abortion is just dining-room
talk,' he said."
Family and friends stood
by Dodd"s side. Today, a
decade later, she is a single
mother and her daughter's
name is Mary. Dodd serves
on the board of Rool!J at the

Terry
Mattingly

Inn , an organization working to·. build an on-campus
facility for pregnant ·unwed
students at Belmont Abbey
College, near Charlotte,
N.C.
The timing of Dodd's essay
"Notre . Dame, My
Mother" - is, of course.
linked to her alma mater's
decision to invite President
Obama to deliver its midMay commencement address
and to receive an honorary
doctor of laws degree.
Throughout his political
career, Obama bas ·opposed
all restrictions on abortion
rights , even in late-term
procedures. But he !Jas also
reached out to Catholic and
evangelical voters by pledging to help lessen the need
for abortions , through governmenl efforts to aid needy
mothers and their children. .
Catholic traditionalists
and many Notre Dame
alumni argue that honoring
Obama in this way violates
a 2004 U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops policy that
said: "The Cathohc community and Catholic institulions should not honor those
who act in ' defiance of our
fundamental moral princi-

pies. They should not be face crisis pregnancies, and
given awards. honors or some young women there
platforms which would sug- are convinced that theY,
gest support . for their mu&gt;l have abortions in
actions."
order t\&gt; stay in school.
,
Three years later. the
While others focus on the
bishops underlined · the political implications ot
importance of this .issue, honoring Obama, Dodd sai4
arguing that the "direct and she worries about th~
intentional destruction of impact of this · symboli"
innocent human life is event on women in ·the com~
always wrong and is not·J·ust mencement audience
whd
.
one issue among many."
are wrestling wath the sam~
However, a recent . online issue she faced ·10 year&amp;
count ·found that only 66 ago. . .
;
. bishop&gt;. out of 195 dioceses
Thus, she ended her essa)!
nabtionwide, have . issu edf . wi_th thihs quetrestion to t~~
pu lie comments cnllca1 o · pnest w o cu · nt1y 1eawo;
Notre Dame's decision. So Notre Dame: "Who draws
far. the Vatican has support from your decisio~
remained silent on the issue. to honor President Obam"
Meanwhile. a Pew Forum - the young, · pregnan~
on Religion &amp; PubliF Life Notre Dame woman sitting
poll found that 50 percent of in thai graduating class whd
American
Catholics wants desperately to keep
approve of Notre Dame's her baby, or the Notre Dame
decision to "invite" Obama, man who believes that the
while. 28 percent . disap- Catholic teaching oil the
prove: However. only 37 intrinsic evil of abortion is
percent of white, non- just dining-room talk?"
·
Hispanic Catholics ·who
These kinds of influences
attend Mass weekly agreed make a differepce, said
with the Notre Dame deci- Dodd.
sion, compared with 56 per"]think that Notre Dame
·cent of those less active in needs to be in the lead whep
the church. This parallels it comes to supporting
the fact that 61 percent of woml!n who face unplanned
these "attend less often" pregnancies," she s.aid.
Catholics support abortion "Notre Dame needs to he on
rights in all or most cases, their side - always."
.
as opposed to 30. perceqt of
(Terry Mattingly is ilirecthe
"attend
weekly" tor of the Washington
Catholics.
Journalism Center at the.
Alumni and current stu- Council . for Christian.
dents know that these kinds Colleges and Universities
of. divisions also exist at and .
lea{is
the.
Notre Dame, said Dodd. GetRe/igion.org project to
Notre Dame students also studyreligion .p ndthenews),
.'

WHEN I WAS ·

'IOURA6E, I HAD
. IT MUCH EASIER.

;the
. Daily Sentinel
.

FAITH. FAMILY

f{J.nitei in yrayer

Page As
Friday, May 15, 2009

International
ministries coming·
to area May 17-23

LETART, W.Va. - May 17-23,' eaeh evening at 7 at the
Maranatba Cornerstone Church, just off Sandhill Road out. side Point Pleasant in ,Letart, a campmeeting will be held featuring the international ministries of Rabbi Jack Zimmerman
of Jewish Voice Ministries International, Dr. Ron Phillips of
Abba's llouse at Central Baptist Church and Evangetist
Robert Harris of the Robert Harris Evangetistic Association.
The theme of this year's conference is "A Second Touch ."
During this conference, come expecting nothing less than
the miraculous. We are expecting nothing less than to see
and ell;perience . ihe soul .saving, encouraging, healing,
restoring and delivering power of God on display.
Each night· there will a time of worship featuring the
music ministry of J.D. and Nicole Stewart, the Maranatha
Church Choir, and a variety of local singers. Maranatha is
only a.20- 30 minute drive from a variety of points including Point Pleasant, Ripley, Ravenswood and also New
Haven, Mason, Gallipofis, or even Pomeroy. .
For more information, visit online at www.maranatha_
Submitted photo cornerstonechurch.org.
The Clouds broke and the sun made a temporary appea(S.nce as South Gallia f'ellowship of Christian !l,thleies celebratPastor Ron Phillips was called as pastor of Central
ed National Day of Prayer ori May 7. Nearly 70 students and staff members gather~d in front of .the schC&gt;Ql during lunch Baptist
Church in 1979, and led his church in a dyna!nic
for a prayer. Prayer was led by senior FCA.member Jacob Watson.
journey of spiritual awakening.
·
Through the years, the ministry has.experienced the birth ·
and growth of many new outreaches and completed several building projects including the beautiful new Worship
Center and International Outreach facility. But most impor,
tantly, the church has exploded into new .realms of renewal
and spirit-filled ministry, and has become known as Abba's
House, a place where all are welcomed with the Heavenly
Father's embrace.
Phillips is a noted author of 17 books, and is well known
Bv ERIC GORSKI
their politics or ideological including ·the lives of our
But it is not black and white as an anointed conference and revival speaker, as .well as a
liP REliGION I'!RtTER
·leanings? · How do you enemies," Gushee said. "It's in determining when interro- Christian broadcasting veteran through his int!)mational
untangle those factoa:s from also insufficiently ro,mmit- galion tactics cross the line to television program and radio'broadcasts.
' Among evangelical lead- . each otlter?
.
ted to the peacemaking un)ust torture, Pavlischek
The Rev. Robert Harris was born in Piedmont, N.C. He
ers; debate over the use of
Pew.officials later updat- teachings of Jesus and the . saad. He said while evidence was raised on a farrn, quit school imd joined the Manne
harsh irlterrogation tech- ed the analysis to emphasize example of Jesus . as one exists that- water-boarding Corps in 1952. He graduated from high school and attend"
diques against suspected that religion "is only one of who did not resort to vio- might be out of line, "it's a ed John Wesley College in Greensboro, N.C.
,
terrorists has prompted many factors" - and that le~ce or cruelty to accom- hard c~l." Similarly, sleep
Hams received his BA. degree in history f~om Pembroke
introspection about faith, political party and ideology · phsh any of has goals and depnvanon can also l)e used State University in Pembroke, N.C. He was received into the
ethics, the Golden Rule, just are. much better predictors instead suffered violence to extremes and cross the line, Western North Carolina Annual Conference in 1971. He is a
wars, 1ack Bauer and Jesus. . of opinions on torture than instead of inflicting it."
but not always.
full-time general evan~elist of the United Methodi~l Church .
A riumber of · evangelical religion and most other
Gary · Bauer, a former . Richard Land, president
Harris hag led his d1strict several times in the number of
leaders have made oppogi- demographic factors. At the Republican
presidential of the Ethics and Religious people received on p~ofession of faith , He was recognized
tion to torture without excep- . same time, the report noted, . can&lt;\idate .affiliated with Liberty Commission of the by the Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference of the
lions a moral cause over the religion itself Cjlll p'lay a several · Christian ... right ·Southern ·
Baptist United Methodist Church for having the highest percentage
past three years, part of a strong role in shaping parti- groups over the years, said Convention, the nation's on profession of faith in the Western North Carolina ·
broadening of the move- sanship and ideology. ·
the discussion should not largest evangelical church Conference in 198.2.
.
ment's agenda beyond tradi"My experience is that. pea- come down to "Would Jesus bOdy, revealed this month
Harris has and continues to lead teams ontQ the mission
tiona[ culture war issues. pie who !ll'C cornfottable sup- torture?"
that he believes water- fields where a multitude of churches, schools and orphanOthers in the · movement, porting torture support it
"There are a lot of things boarding is torture and ages have been built as well as thousands of salvations and .
including many Christian because they think it's goin'g Jesus .wouldn't do because nev.er justifie~. He said part miraculous healings.
right leaders, have largely to produce information our he's the son of Goo," he · of his conclusion is based
JVMI's staff evangelist, Jack Zimmerman, is an ordained
resisted or stayed silent.
countiy needs," said the Rev. said. "I can't imagine Jesus on his belief that it's "very Christian pastor and a Messianic Jewish rabbi. He was forKillmer,
a being a Marine or a police- likely to cause . permanent merly a standup comedian and bas. an engaging wit and
· Now, President Barack Richard.
Obama's release of Bush Presbyterian Church (U.S .A.) man or a bank president, for psychological damage."
dynamic speaking style.
·
.
.
administration memos justi- .minister and executive direc- that matter. The more
"It seems to me once you
His deep understanding of the Hebrew roots of the
fying harsh interrogation tor of the interfaith National appropriate question is, accept the 'end justifies the. Cl!ristian faith make him a valuable teacher of the Word.
techniques and a new poll Religious.Campaign Against . 'What i$ a follower of Jesus means' argiunent, then you He is an award winning reporter; radio and television host
showing white evangelicals Torture, · which formed in permitted to do?'"
have taken a step onto a and has tau~ht Bible classes throughout the U.S. and at themore s~pathetic to torture 2006. 'T don't think they
Bauer said th~ answer is very steep and . slippery ological umversities in ~ussia and Ukraine.
.
have lea,ders taking stock of would shy away from use of "it depends" - but the slope. to datk a":d dangerous
whether evangelical opinion the word 'torture."'
moral equation changes place," Land srud.
bas shifted on the top1c.
"During · the last eight when the suspect is not a
He emphasized that
. "I have said before that years, people have been soldier captured on a batlle- · Christian tenets that guide
torture is like a bone caught conceme4 about this ticking field but a terrorist who may the debate - including the
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) .- The Southern Baptist
in our throat -'-- we can't time bomb thing and Jack have knowledge of an Golden Rule, or "Do unto Theolo~ical Seminary . is folding its decades-old music
. swallow il and we can't spit Bauer and '24' and all that," impending attack. He said others as you would have school mto another school because of the sluggish econoit oui," said David Gushee, said Killmer, referring to he does not consider water- them do unto you" - can my and waning ~pularity with students. ·
·
a professor . of Christian the TV drama in which the boarding - a form of inter- be applied differently. He The seminary s School of Church, Music and Worship has
eth1cs at Mercer University protagonist takes a by-any- rogation that simulates said that while . terrorist.s . trained thousands of choir directors, organists and other
in Atlanta and president of means-necessary approach drowning :.... to be torture.
should not be "mistreated," church worship leaders .for 65 years. But it will no longer
"I think if we believe the neither do they de.serve pro- be a freestanding .school:
Evangelicals ·for Human to extracting . mformation
Rights. "I think we're still from terror suspects:
person we hl!ve can give us tections afforded prisoners
Seminary President Albert Mohler said the recession
there."
Among
evangelicals, mfonnation to stop thou- of war by the . Geneva forced a sooner merger of the school after the seminary laid
The poll dam from a survey Gushee has been a leading santls of Americans from Convention..
off 35 non-faculty workers earlier this year.
.
of 742 U.S. adults teleased anti-torture advocate. He led being killed, it would be
Land said some harsh
But Mohler said the trend of churches moving to guitars
April 29 by the Pew Forum the effort to draft, in 2006, morally suspect to not use interrogation techniques and praise choruses has eroded the school's entrants over
(lD Religion and Public Life . "An Evangelical Declaration 'harsh tactics to get that such · as slapping witb an several years.
.
·
found 62 percent of white Against Torture: Protecting information," Bauer said.
open ·hand - can be moralThe music school's enrollment of 167 students is down
evangelical Protestants said Human Rights in an Age of
Under Christianity's just- IY permissible.
.
from a peak 20 years ago of 539.
torture of a suspected terrorist Terror." The document, war tradition, recognized
David Neff, editor of
"What we've been looking at is a major sea change in
could be often or sometimes which has 250 signatures, political authorities have the Christianity Today magazine music in the larger culture, music in our churches and the
j11stified . to obtain important renounced torture and "cruel, responsibility to protect the and chainnan of the board of role of our seminary in meeting those needs," Mohler said.'
infonnation.
inhuman, and degrading innocent from grave barrn, the National Association of
The school is moving into the a new School of Church
BycoJitrast, 51 percent of treatment of detainees." .
said Keith · Pavlischek, a Evangelicals.
which · Ministries, so it can · he combined with the School of
white .
non-HispaniC
Last fall, a poll commis- senior fellow at th.e Ethics endorsed the evangelical Leadership and Church Ministry, which has taught future
Catholics, 46 percent of sioned by Fruth in Public .and Public ·Policy Center, declaration against torture, education ministers, youth leaders and other specialized
white mainline Protestants ·. Life and Mercer Un,iversity evangelical scholar and said tQrture is not a subject ministries.
and 40 percent of the reli- found that 44 percent of retired Marine colonel.
preached at most evangelical
giously. unaffiliated held white Southern evangelicals
That means not just lives churches. So white evangelithat posallon.
rely on life experience and that would he lost in an cal support for torture is
· Those who attend reli- common sense to form attack, but the justice, order more likely rooted in their ·
gious services at least once opinions on torture. By con-- and peace of the broader strong
allegiance
the
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two of 52 Roman Catholic
a week were. more likely trast, 28 percent said they international community at Republican Party.
parishes
ordered closed by Cleveland's bishop J:!ave won .~
than those who rarely ·or relied on Christian teach- risk from terrorism , said
"There. is a sense of, 'We
reversal
and
will stay open.
neyer attend to say torture is · ings or beliefs.
·,
Pavlischek,'a member of the trust thls administration that
·The
reprieves
were announced at ·St. Ignatius of Antioch
~ometimes or often justified
Even so, Gushee said he Presby~tian Church in was leading us through this
in that scenario - 54 per- senses a "deep moral, spiri- Amen~ a. '. a conservative difficult time post-911, and if and St. Colman churches in Cleveland. The diocese said
cent to 42percent.
tual and theologicaJ prob- denommat!On.
they say we have to do thas, Bishop Richard Lennon's review of appeals is now comThe findmgs immediately lem" in evangelical support
If authorities believe a · chances ate that sometiines . pleted, so the remaining parishes on the shutdown list will
be closed or merged over the next year due to .declining
prompted questions for for torture.
detainee has information · it's necessary,"' Neff said.
·
•
·
evangelicals: How exactly
"There is a version of about an imminent attack,
He added: "It think it is .congregations, finances and priests.
·
The
two
spared
parishes
challenged
tlleir
alosure
orders
.
did poll participants defme Christianity in America that it's morally acceptable to extre~ly ilnportant for the
and
said
they
had
stable
finances
and
provided
important
torture, smce the survey did I thin~ is not . adeql!ately use coercion, inflict pain, U.S. government, for our
not? Did evangelicl\ls reach cornmatted to the B1ble's cauSe discomfort and use own security, to operate as social services in low-income neighborhoods of Cleveland;
The eight-county diocese currently has 224 parishes serv~
their conclusions because of teachings about the sacred- force in .an attempt to pre- ethically as possible, because
ing about 766,000 Catholics.
lheir religious beliefs, or ness of every human life, ·· vent the attack, he said.
what we sow, we reap."

·Toi·LtJre debate proinpts
evangeliCal soul~searching

Music school to

The Reagan legacy is the man himself

SANTA
BARBARA,
the president could have
But what specific policy
Calif. - You drive up a
· built a new home, perhaps proposal would Reagan
steep, rough and winding
an' impressive mm\urn~nt to · embrace today to deal with .
road to reach Ronald
himself, · with fabulous skyrocketing
healthcar~
Reagan's ranch in the Santa
views of the Pacific to the costs'? The credit crunch?
Ynez mountains. For eight
west and the valley to the ·Immigration? No one can
Byron
years, 1981 to 1989; . this
east. Instead , Reagan pre- really say.
York
place qorth of Santa
ferred the little house by the
Perhaps it would be mor~
Barbara was the Western
meadow.
instructive to look at the
White House. Reagan spent
Walking around the man himself. Over a lifenearly a year of his time in
ranch, you can't help think- time of thought and study
office here . Now, what he chairs upholstered · in an ing ·about the current ~ he was 69 when he
called Rancho del Cielo is orange-and-brown patch- Republican Party and its bec.aine
president
·
pretty much deserted:
Reagan
developed
a
set
of
work pattern that could relationship to Reagan . One
But the ranch, tended by a have come out of any mid- feeling the ranch produces core principles that guided
lone caretaker, is still much die-class American den Of - nearly forces on you -.,- whatever he did. To those;
like it was wheri Reagan the 1970s. Western art is the realization that the core principles - liberty,
was alive. It's not open to bangs on the walls.
19'80s were a long time ago. free enterprise, American
the public; these days, the · The bedroom is small and When Reagan took office, exceptionallsm ""' he added
old adobe house and 688 plain, with what looks like the top income tax rate was his own personal qualities,
surrounding acres are an old Ethan Allen chest 70 percent. The Cold War · He was a serious reader, a
owned and carefully main- and .two bedside tables that had entered one of its most self-improver, decidedly
tained by the ~onse rvative had to be turned sideways dangerous phas~s. ·
non-cynical, avowedly non"
Young
America's becau se the room· wasn't
By the end of his adminis- Washington and deeply
Found~tion.
The group wide enough to fit .the'm. tration, Reagan had reduced patriotic. A gift for commu- ·.
doesn't have the staff or Reagan's nearby bathroom , that confascatory 70 percent nicati_ng made those qualiresources to conduct public has a modulur shower and a tax rate 10 28 percent. And ties mstantly recognizabl~
tours, but they were k.ind toilet squeezed in a tiny he won the Cold War. Most to the American public.
!
enough to take me on a visit nook .
Jlresidents don't leave much . As you walk around the
one afternoon last week.
Any budget hotel down to remember them by. old ranch, and see the pri~
The first thing that comes the road has more comfort- Reagan has two great .!ega- vate spaces where .he spent
to mind as you approach the able
so much time, you realiz~
accommodations. cies.
·
house is how modest it is. Reagan , who with his wife
But what does i1 mean for perhaps more than ever
The main part of the build- was pilloried for having a Amenca today? Certamly before that it was Reagan'$
. ing ·was constructed in plutocrat's taste, in fact low taxes and a strong character that made his tri'
1871. Even after Reagan enjoyed a level of simplicity . national ~ef~nse remain umphs ·possible .
Fo(
added a couple of rooms beyond what most vacation- bedrock prmcaples for con- Republicans, coherent posi•
when he bought it in 1975, ing Americans would servative Republicans : And tions on today's polic~
the whole · house measured accept.
when Democrats argue, as debates will emerge in time:
about I ,500 square feet.
The house is nestled on Sen . Charles Schun1er did The tougher question i~
The·floors are covered in · the edge of a mountainside recently, that the Reaganite where they will find a
a brick-patterned linoleum. meadow;
It's idyllic, "traditional-values kind of leader like Ronald Reagarl
("He Ia1d it himself," my but it you drive about five arguments and strong for- ag'!in.
:
.d II
) Th f . minutes away, you'll find eign policy. all that is over"
.
(Byron
York
is
chief
poUt~
gua e te s me.
e urm ture is plain and comfort- another spot on the proper- - well, someday they teal correspondent for The
Washington Examiner).
:
able; there are a couple of ty, at the top of a hill, where. might discover otherwise.

merge~

.2 churc~es to stay open

�Page A&amp;

FAITH • VALUES
Just in time for Mother's Day .- A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 15, 2009

!hi, we~k. an article about
than just the best contexHor
Five · years ago, when my
,,,.:hahuod caught my
raising kids. I also see it as a family aod I had an opportuallclltll•n . Maybe il"s because
retlection of God's desire for nity for a little bit of vacation,
" ,. 1u, t tin ished celebrating
us to be in a specific type of we elected to spend three
\l niha·, Day last Sunday,
Pastor
relationship with one anoth- days in Chincoteague, Va. We
"'·'"''' it\ because the artier. In a way . t.hat I cannot . did so in part because we had
ck tmficates that American
Kerry
adequately explain, marriage never been to the beach as a
.x,et)
has
radically
Wood
is God's idea; and it some- · family, but also because we
,·han~e d .its expectations of
how reflects the relationship deemed that Chincoteague
n,,,thcrhood and fatherhood.
betwee.n God and us. Several was a tad 'bit more family
In figures released by the
times in the Gospels; Jesus friendly than some of the high
l S National Center for
makes an analogy between paced ''tOuristy" beaches that
Health Statistics, · four of child's natural parent.
God's kingdom illld the bride often feature ppce-go_uging
c'1cry 10 babies born in 2007
Wiih so many homes made and groom. Jesus is the vendors or attraltt vac;ruoners
1.1crc born to single women. up of divorced adults remar- groom, and those who foi- who are into haiq-partying.
l" babies born to moms rying other divorced adults, low him an; his bride. In the
Chincoteague was also the
between ages 20 and 24, the our vocabulary changed. No 'book of Revelation, the featured location of the story,
number of babies born out of longer ' called "broken" church is deScribed as the Misty of Chincoteague, by
" cdlock increased to 6 of homes, such households bride of Christ, "beautifully Marguerite Henry, and had
c1ery 10. Sixty percent of became "blended families." adorned" in Rev. 21:2.
the added bonuses of being
babies hom to a mom in her Today's 20 and 30-year olds
Genesis 2 is seen as the between the national wildlife
c.trly 20s - more than half. are the product of that theological foundation. for preserve on Assateague
- are going home to house- ·change. Often miserable in marriage
when
God Island, and NASA's origmal
holds without the traditional their blended families, those announces, "It is not good for headquarters on Wallops
dual -parents-united-in-mar- kids vowed that they would the mari to be alone, I will Island. Thus, these islands
riage structure.
not repeat their parent's (and make a helper for him. (Gen provided plenry (or our famiThe article's sociologists step-parent's) mistakes. If . 2:18) And so God created ly to do and see during our
t;md perhaps the writer of marnage is so miserable, woman out of the man, and brief stay while still allowing
the article 1tse It) seemed to their logic goes, then let's "for this reason, man will . us a peaceful atmosphere for
he gushing over the finding. · throw away marriage com- leave his father and mother resting emotionally and spir·
Here 's how the story con- pletely and just live together. and be united with his wife, itually.
eludes:
. And so we are now in an and they will become one , The two mornings we were
there we went out early to the
--some experts said the era when parenting and mar- flesh." (Gen 2:24).
trend represents positive riage are no longer linked
My older daughter will beach aod enjoyed the sun as
changes for some women together. I know that there turn 20 later this year. I pray it slowly rose above the east- women are less likely to are many people - proba- that she does not join the em horizon. The cool breezes
he shunned if they have bly includmg that professor statistical · majority and and the gentle sounds of the·
children by themselves or to from Wellesley College choose to have a baby with· ocean waves rolling up on to
be forced to give their chil- who consider this a good ou't first laying the founr,la- the beach greeted us . soothdren up for ar,loption.
thing. Don't count me as one tion of Biblically oriented ingly as we walked bare--·We' ve seen a transfor- of them.lthink this is a very marriage. I wantthe best for footed on the wet sand, look· marion of. social norms;'· sad development in oursoc1- her - God's · absolute best ing for seashells, our children
, aid Rosanna Henz, a pro- ety; and time will only tell - and not what our society laughing every so often
fcssor of sociology at what the results of it are in seems to have seitled on as· when the ocean water would
Wellesley College. 'Women the long term. ·
adequate or · easier. If we lap at their feet..
On the first morning,
can have children on their
Yes, the 1950ish ideal por- · want God's absolute best,
own and it's not .going to !rayed by ''Leave it to . we must cooperate with while our kids were distractdestroy your employment Beaver" and "Ozzie and God to make tt happen. It ed, my wife and I "wrote"
and it'.s not going to mean Haniet" are probably nostal- takes work: dedication, their names in the wet sand
that you 'II be made a pariah gic wishful-thipking of a commitment, patience, and with our feet Then, when
by the community."'
time that never really exist- especially forgiveness.
they turned and saw what we
Until recently (say the last ed, but I am still convinced
And the good news is this: had done, they smiled happi30 years or so), the concept that the best context for even when we blow it, God ly as they-were reminded of
of the two-parent household child-rearing is a home in can take our mistakes and · bow special they are to us.'
After awhile, we became
- a mother and father mar- which a man and woman ·turn them into a new best. So
ricJ to one another with chil- make a lifelong commitment even if you ARE one of the hungry and decided to go and
dren born from that marriage to one another, and they six in ten, God won't shun get breakfast, leaving behind
- was commonly reco~- ·bring children into the world you. And neither will L But their names on the edge of the
nized as. the best context m from that commitment.
carefully, prayerfully, con- restless ocean. We had our
which children could be
Other studies, which often sider what ts best for you and breakfast and then went
raised. Unfortunately, that don't receive much publici- your child for the long term. exploring (by minivan) the
preserve
on
best context was sometimes ty, have shown that the tradi- And if you are not already a an1mal
the fa~ade behind which tiona! marriage continues to · parent, please carefully, · Assateague Island where over
much ugliness was con- be the most conducive envi- prayerfully, .consider your one hundred wild ponies still
tained . Spousal .abuse, ronrnent for _successfully actions and attitudes before live just as they did in the
incest, alcoholism and drug raising children. For exam" they lead you to parenthood. 1940s when Marguerite
addiction were all kept out of pie, the majority of children
Every home - even the Henry wrote her book. Then,
view behind the two-parent whose parents do not get or traditional mother-father· after lunch, we changed our
family pretext. of perfection. stay manied experience at married-for-life one - is a clothes and went back to the
· As our society grew least one year (Often more) broken home. But God is beach. Our two youngest sons
increasingly suspicious of of poverty. Boys whose par- here to fix them. Will you ·wondered if their names
might still be there (although
institutionalism in all its ents divorced or never mar- let Him fix yours?
forms (remember the say- ried, are two to three times
(Kerry Wood is now asso- we had assured them that they
ing, "never trust anyone more likely to end up in jail ciate pastor at Grace would not be). Of course,
over 40"?). the institution of . as adults. Finally, children United Methodist Church their names were long gone,
marriage also began to fal-· whose parents get and stay in Perrysburg, Ohio after ~ashed away by wind and
ter. Divorce rates skyrocket- married are healthier and serving Racine United wave, and trampled under the
ed, and so by the late 1970s, ·much less likely to suffer Methodist Church for feet of beach goers who had
a majority of · children in mental illness, including three years. He can be since arrived on the scene.
America grow up in a norne depression and teen suicide. reached through his web- · But that mattered. little to
in which at least one
As a Christian, I see mar- . site:
http://pursueholi- them for the beach wasn't the
parenta1 figure was NOT the riage as something more ness.blogspot.com.)
only place where we had writ-

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Mile Hill Rd ..

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·r

aa.-ro..WWBapllot
Salem St., Panor: Ed Barney , Sunday
SchMI - 10 a.m., E"enina • 7 p.m.•
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Church of JHW Cbritt Apoetolk:
VanZandJ and Wlnt Rd., Putor: James

"Shout for joy, 0 heavens;
rejoice, 0 earth; burst into
song, 0 mountains! For the
LORD comforts His people
and will have compass1on
Pastor
on His afflicted ones. But
Thom
Zion said, 'The LORD has ·
~ollohan forsaken me, the LORD has
forgotten rne.' Can a mother
forget the baby at her _breast'
and have no compasston on
· the child she has borne?
ten their names. Daily kind- · Though she may forget, I .
.nesses and enc&lt;iuragements will not forget you! See, I
let them know that each of have engraved you on !J1e .
them h;is their name indelibly palms of My hands" (lsruah
etched into our hearts. So also 49: 13-16a NIV).
Though this prophecy was,
has the entrusting of responsiwritten
hundreds of years
bility to them and .the
before
Jesus'
crucifixion, it
accountability that we require
of them show them that they was a clear clarion call of
are neither a mere · "hobby" .the rnagQitude of God's love
nor \mrdensome "duty" to us . for you and for me. A pen is
Even the boundaries that we not used to write your name
set for them remind them that upon His flesh, but the cold
we are more than passive and cruel nails of the execuobservers of their growing up, tioner's cross m.ark you as
but are active Jl!111icipants as God's own upon His Son's
mentors, !rovtders. encour- own hands. Jesus' blood is
agers, an guardians (physi- the permanent ink that has
the power to .grant you a
cally 1\ND spiritually).
Although their parents place of eternal acceptance
aren't perfect. they sense m the presence of the Father.
that they are loved and can
Just think! Once your
find comfort , in knowing name has been written upon
that neither the waves nor His hand, no matter what
winds of circumstances, or paths your life may lead you,
even the comings and no matter what dark and
goings of people throughout doubtful moments may
life can alter that-love.
come your way, when your
But there is a far greater eyes open in glory and your
love than ours ai work in $piritual eyes focus upon the
their lives. It is a love that is Savior, you will see your
accessible to anyone whose name wntten upon His hand; ·
heart would soften enough you will see that the love of
to believe and receive it. It is God is more than words.
a love that,does not grow old
This is a time in which
or weak no matter how many people are placing their
much time passes. It does. · trust in persons and things
not wash away even though that will not, in the end, stand
a thousand years pass by. It the test of time. To place your
certainly is not at the mercy faith in something that will
of winds of change or waves not last dooms you to disapof whim. It is .a love so pow- pointment and utter ruin. But
erful and so enduring that don't squander your opportu·
even though you might feel nity to begin the adventure of
lost in the throngs of the walking with God and knowhuman race, one among half ing for certain that your etera, dozen billion jleople cur- nity is secured. Tum to Jesus
rently alive or in the count-. today. Let Him be both Lord
less generations since our and Savior of your life!
world began, you are sin"To all who receive Him,
gled out to be set free from to those who believe in flis
bonds of sin, fear, and hope- name, He gives the right to
lessness if only you will tutn · become the children of God
to Him and rest in that love. - born not of natural
I am happy to report that descent, nor of human deci·
our God does not simply sion or a husband's will, but
Write our mimes in the wet born of God" (from John
sands of the seashore, nor I: 12-13).
even upon granite obelisks
(Thom .MoUolla11 and his
that finally succumb to the family ha~~e ministered in
relentless march of time as southern Ohio the past 13·
eons slowly wear them down. 112 years a11d is the author ot,
Those whose hearts yield to "The Fairy Tale ·Pal'!lhllls.'
the savin~ love of GOd as He is tfw pastor ofPaihway
revealed m His Son, Jesus Commumty Church and
Christ, will find their names lllllY be reached for . com· Written upon something that mellts or questions by e-mail
is truly imperishable, subject aJ pastorthom@paihwaygalto neithi'r "chance" nor lipolis.com).
"change" of mind.
COPYRIGHT &lt;I&gt; 2009, THOM MOLLOHAN

M~.

Sunday Sehoul - 10:30 · a.m.,

-

Evcnioi - 7:30p.m.

FlntBapllotChurdl " - · wv
(lodepeodem Bop&lt;iSI)
SR 6~2 ud Andenoo St. Putor: R.oben
Crady, Suf!day school 10 am, Momln&amp;
church_ll am. Sunday ~venin a: 6 pm. Wed.
Sible Study 1 pm

Eouauoul.paiiDII&lt;Ta-lnc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rulland,
Sel'\'ioet: sun 10:00 a.m. &amp;. 7:3{) p.m.,
"Thun .7:00p.m.,Put« Matey R. Hutton

.

.

Catholic

.

.

SomdH-CotloollcCbwdl
161 Mulberry lt.ve., Pomeroy, ~~898,
Putor: ·Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sac. Con.
4:45-5:15p.m.: Man- 5:30 p.m .. Sun.
Con. ~8 :45-9 : 1~ a.m., Sua. Mlls • 9:30
a.nt .• Daily Mus- 8:30a.m.

Assembly of God ·
Llbtrty _ , o f God
P.O .. Bu,; 467, Dudd.in&amp; Lane. M1Mnl.
W.Va., Pastor: Neil Tennant•. Sunday
Scrvk:t1- 10:00 a.m. and' p.m.

Church of Christ

· .·· . Baptist

w...-c-ofC-33226 Children'• Home Rd. Pomeroy, OH
Contact 7!W·441-1296 Sunday morning
10:00 , Sun morning Bible ltUd)l ;
following . wo:rlhip , Sua. eve 6:00 Pill·
Wed biblt swdy 1 p_m

· hjm11t Preewlll Boptlol Cbut&lt;b
p-awr: Floyd Rou ,Sunday Sclklol9:30 to
l0:30 101, Wonhip MrVb:e 1();30 10 i 1:00
am. Wed. pRaebins 6 pm

.Carpenlt&lt; ln4.,.ndoat Boptht Cllordl
Sunday School • 9:30am, Preachittl
:st"rvice IO:JOam. Ev~ning . Service
7:00pm~ W~sday 8ible Study 7~00 pm,

Heml«t GMt Chriltllo CltuKb
Minister: Larty Brown, Wonhip • 9:30
. a.m. Sbnday School - 10! 30 a.m., Bible
Study. 7 p,m.

Pa~10r:

Cbeshlfe Baptist Church
Pastor: Steve little, 740-Mi?-780 I, H.

~

740-992-7S42, C. 74()..645 - 2~27 , Sunday
School: 9;30 am, Morning Wonhip: 10:30
am, Youth ~ Bible Buddits 6:30 prn,
\:hoir practice 7:30; SpecU.l day~ of month
I. Ladies of Gr~e 1 pm 2nd M1.mda)·. 2.
Men's Fellowship 7 pin 3rd Tiles.

'

1hipe Baptbt Chu«h (Souihemi
570 Grant Sr., Middleport, Su11day school
·. 9:30a.m., Worship~ ll .a.m'. and 6 p.m.,
WednesdaY SUvice. 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
E!llis

Rutland Flnt'Baptlsl Cbun:h
Sunday School • ·9:30. a.m. , Worship ~
I0:45a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptfll
Pulor Jon Broc:lert,_· Ea1t Main S1.,
SUIIday Scb. ~: 30 am, Worship 10:30 am

Flnt SQulbtrn lllptlel
4187'2 Pomeroy Pike, Sund~y School •
9:30a.m.• Worsh.ip . 9:45a,m &amp; 7:00p.m.,
W~e~~day Services . 7:00p.m.
·

'

.

Pint B,pdd Chureb
Pastor: Bilfy Zu1pan6th and Palmer St .,
Midd\epo11. Sunday SchOol ·9:15a.m:,
' Worship_ ·· 10:15 ~:~.m .. 7:00 p.m.,
Wedlies&amp;y $CrvJ~e- 7:00p.m.

ltadne.J?Int Bap~1t
Pastor: Ryin Eaton,. pastor , Sunday
School·- 9:30a.m., Worship· .10:40 un.,
' 6:00 p.m.. WednesdaY Servkel • 7:00
p.m.

.SOwer Run Baptlllt
Pastor: John Swanson, Sunday Sehoul ·
IOil.m .• Worihlp . II a.m. , 7:00p.m.
,Wednesday Serv!ct1- 7:00p .m.

Mt·. Union Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School·
9:45 a.m., Evening • 6:30 p.m..
Wcdfteiday Service• • 6:~p.m.
. ittthlehem Baptht Church
O~at

'

Bend, Route 124, Rtcine, OH,
Ptlitor: , Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday Worship.· \0:30a.m. ,; Wednesday
Bible Study· 7:00p.m.
.
Old llelbeUioeWW. Bopt~t Clwo&lt;h
28601 St. R1. 7, Mlddlcpon. Sunday ·
Service • 10 a.l'(l., 6:00 p.m., Tl.le&amp;day
StrYice• -6:00
·

HIIIJide Baptist Chur.;h
St. Rt. 143 just Qrf Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R. AJ:ree. Sr.. Sunday · Unified
Ser\oice, Worship • 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.,·.
W~esd.ay Services.7 p.m.

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

VIctory Bllptld ltulependent
..525-N. 2nd St. Middlepotl, Pastor: James
Keeaee, Worship • IOa.m. , 7 p.m..
WedDeiday SeJilices • ~ pm.

e:

The Virtue of Chastity

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Chastity unfortunately doesn 't get rn uch respect
these days. Rather it is treated like a relic
from a bygone era, a quaint but
antiquated virtue, and one that is
scarcely relevant in an era in which we
have more modern attitudes about
sexuality and ou r bodies. We may even
hesitate to use the word "chastity,"
fearing that we will be considered
prudish . Bu~ have we not lost
something important in these
unchaste times? Have we not lost
something . important in . these
unchaste times? Have we not lost
the essential spiritual lesson behind the
virtue of chastity! Indeed, we seem to
have forgotten that lust and a desire for the
things of the f!es l\ are really th e root of much oi our
suffe ring. and the root of · a grand illusion . The
pleas ures of the flesh are intense but momentary, and
their fleeting natu re should serve as a reminder that the physical itself is only
· a tempo rary state ofexistence. The pleasu res of the body are actually a
manifestation of an illusion, both in the importance we place on them, and
also insofar as they tend Ia cause us to overly .identify our bodies with OW
sel ves. In addition, we can leam someth ing important by being chaste: That ··
desire is the root. of (Tlu~h of our suffering, and that if we can overcome our
desires, We can thereby trans.,.,nd our sufu!ring. Finally, we should remember
that the spirit of chastity e&gt;rtends to all of our body, including even our eyes
and ultimately our mi nd. The eyes e110ke desire, and in that, (hey are aptto
be unchaste.

So when the WOtllall saw that the 11ft wa1 pod for food, and tliat
I wa• a delaht to the eyes, illld llat lie tree wu to be de*ed to
mab one whe, ... took Ill Its fruit and ate; and ..e abo pe
liORie to her hullland, illld he ate.
•
R.S.V. Cenet11 3:5-7

••

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

209 Third St.

flaclne, OH

• 740-949·2210
We'Ve Got It!

Folth Bap41o1Chureb
Rti.ltoad St., Muon, Sunday Sdiool • JQ
· a.m .. Worship - ll a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -'7 p.m. .

Short &amp; Long Term&amp;
Respite Care • Rehab Services
Available
www.onrbrookrehabtlltationcenter.com
Page Street

Fotelt Run.BipUtt• Pemeroy
Re.... JosePh Woods. Sunday School · 10
a.m., Worship · 11 :30 un ,

(740)

Warm Friendly
Atmosp1rrrt!

r.

Hours

Mt. Mariob Boptltt
Fourth.- Main S1., Mlddlepof:t. Sun_day
Scbool · 9:30.a.m., Worship- 1"0:4~ a.m.
Pastor: Rev. Mlc)\le~ A~mpson, Sr.

6am · 8pm

:Mil{it's ~estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily

. .llqulty Bapdot
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10:4~ a.m .• Sunday Evenina • 6:00p.m.,

. Ifom• Cooked Mrals &amp; Doily SptciD/s

Open 7 days a week
740-99 ·7713

Pomeroy Church otCIIrilt
212 W. Main St. . Sunday School · 9:30
~ . m ., Worship· 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wedneflday Services - 7 p.ril .

Pomeror·Watlkle ChUfth ei"Cltrllt
33226 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
School- II a.m., Worship · !Oa.m., 6 P · ~ ·
Wednesday Serv.~s • 7 p.m.
Mld.U.port cb...b of ChriS!
and Main, Pastor: AI Hat111on,
Childrtns Director; Sharon Sayr~ . Teen
Dim:tor~ Dodger Vaujhan, Su.nday School
· 9:30a.m .• Worship- 8:1.5, 10:30 a.m.,.7
p.m., Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
~th

Keno Clnln:• or Chrtlt
Woribip · 9:30 a.m., Sunday School •
10:30 a.m., PastOr-Jeffrey Wallace, 1st" and
3rd Sunday

· Barw11bow Rldce C~rt:· of Chrllt
Pasmr:B~e Terry, Sunday S\:llool-9:30
a.m. - ·
Wo"hlp . 10:30 a.m.. 6 :·30 p.m.
Wednesday Se.t\'lces ·6:30p.m.

'-"llw. Puror: Jlmes

Sauttfietd, SIUiday Scbool •• 9 :4~ a.m.,
ev~· • 6 p,tq,. WedGn4ay Service• • 7
p.m.
P111or: Sha~ M. BawlitiJ. Sunday
Worship • 10 4.m., 6 p.m.. W~y
SmM:ff. 7 p.m ..

8yncuN Fin!~ of God
Apple and Sccood Sb ., Putor: Rtv. D~.,. id
Ru,.,u, Sundly School and Worship- to
un. Evenitl&amp; · Service•- 6:30 p.m.,
Wednetday Service• · 6:30 pJI..

Church rAGed oiP:o&amp;-L;
OJ;While Rd. off Sl. R.t. UiO, PQtor: PJ .
Cblpmlm. S-y School • 10 a.m.•
Wonllip -. 11 a.m., Wedaetdly Servlct•:. 7
p.m.

. Congregational
. 1i1ai!J

Episcopal

Holiness
C..-nunll.y Church
Pastor: Strit 'TOmek. Main StretJ:o
Ru1iand. Sunday Wonbip--10:00 · a.m.,
Sunday Senilce-ip.m.

'

Coluey Pll1rlm Chapel
tiatrisonville . Road, Pastor: Charles
McK~n:r.ie, Sunday School 9:30 u.m..
Worship • II a.ftt., 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service · 7:00p.m.

RoteofSboron HQ(I-Cbunb
Leadln&amp; Creek Rd .. Rutland. Putor: Rev.
Dewey Kina. Sunday .schooi- 9;30 i.IJ! ..
. Sunday w~lp · 7 p.m.. !JWnesday
pm~r ~ins- 7 p.m.
P!De.Grove Blb~-HollMM Cburc~
112 mile off Rt. 325; Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manic)-, Sunday Sdaool • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship. · 10;)0 a.m., 6~ p.m.,
Wednesday Sel'\·ice - 7:00p.m.
· We*)'an Btbte Hollneaa Church
75· Pearl St., MiddlepOit. Pasror: Doug
CQX, Suf¥iay Stho&lt;ll : 10 a.m. Wonhip 10:45 p.m.. Suntlay Eve : 6:00 p.rn.,
Wednellda)· Service • 7:00 p.m. .
Hysell Rua Comm_u·nily C~urth
Paslor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
-9:30a.m ., Worship· 10:45 a:m., 1 p.m..
Thu~y Jliblc Study.end .You~- 7 p.m.

i.aum Clld' Frft Metho41R Church
Putor: Ol~n McCiuna. Sunday SdiOOI •
9:30 a.m. ,.Worship ·. 10:39 a.m. al)d Ci
p.m. •Wed.neSday Service - HlO p.m.

· BradiMI'i'y Chureh of.Chrbt
~inister: Tom Runyon, 39358 Bradbury
. Road, Middle~. Sund.ay School· 9:30'

Tbe Cburch of Jetus
Christ oi'LIIIIIer·O.y SaiRtl .
S!. R1. 160. 446-624.7 (lr ·446·7486.
Sunday Schooi 10:20-11 a.m., Relief
SodetyiPriesrbood II :05-12:00 noun.
Sacrament · Service 9. 10:15 a.m.,
Homemakini meeting, htThurs .• 7 p.m.

Worehip- 10:30 am.
Rutland Church ofCIIrl1t
Sunday School · 9:30a.m., Worship and
Communion • 10:30 a.m., · Du~td
Wiseman, Minlsler
Br~dtotd

Chukb or Chrlll

Comer of St. Rt . 124 &amp;: Brlldb!IJ'Y "Rd .,
Mini~ter: Duug Shamblin, You.th Minister:
Bill Ambcrpt. Sunday Scboo1· 9:3() a.m,
Worship • 8:00 a.m., 10:30 .a.m•.• 7:00
p.m.,Wednellday Servi"a;s. • 7:00p.m-,

Hkkory Hilla Church efChrtat
Tuppers Plains, Pastor Mike Moore, Bible
clau. 9 a.m. SuiKiay; worship 10 a.m.
Suilday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

Reedsville Churdl otcbrl..
Pastor: Jack Colgro\'C, Sunday School :
9:30 a.m., Worship Service: 10:30 a·.m..
Bible Study, Wednesday,'6:30p.m.
llntcr Churdl of Cbrlot·
Sunday school9:30 un .. Sunday,Worship
· !0:30a.m.
The Churtl\ orCiuilt of Pomtroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, i"'nplist:
Oennil Sargent, Sunday Bible .S.rud)l -·
· 9:30a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m . .od 6':30 "
p.m.. Wc~'sday Bibie Study - 7

P.m.

Christian Union

Pas1nr: Bob Robinson, Sunday School· 10
a.m .. Wonhip · 9 a.m.

New Hope Cburdl
Old American LeJion.HalJ,
Fourth Ave., Middleport, SuBday 5 p.m.
S)'nCUJt Community Chun:h
24&amp;J"Second St., SyracUSe, OH
Sun. Scbool 10 am, Sundy night 6:3{) pm
Paslor: Joe Owinn

Hooth (Mlddlepm)
Pastur: Brian Dunham, Sunday School ·.
9:30a.m., Woohip · li :OOa.m.

(full GOipfl Chan:b) HarriSonville.
P11ton: Bob and Kay Manhall,
Thm . 7 p.m.

Mlntnvllle

A111uta;a Grttt COIDIIIUaily Churtb
Putor.Wayne Duolap, Statt Rt 681 ,
Tu.ppe~ PliinJ, Sun. Wonhip: 10 am &amp;:
. 6:30pm.. Wed. Bible Stuti~ 7:00p.m.

Pa51or: Oewaync: Suml~r. s 'unday ~hoot •

Run

Pas1or: Bob RobinJOn, Sunda~ School - 9
a:m ., Worship r 10 a.m.
I

Ptarl Chapel
S\lndliy School · 9 a.ri1 .. Worship · -10 a.m.

Pomero)'
Pas10r: Brian Dunham. Worship ·
a.m .. Sunday Sd100l- 10:4-S.a.m.

. Latter-Day Saints

Lutheran
St. John Luthenn Churth
Pine Oro~e. Wurr;hip ' 9:00a.m .. Sunday
School· 10:00 a.m. Pastor.

Our ~"·toar Luthfran Church
Walnut and Henry Srs .. Ra.,.enswood.
W:Va., Pastot: Da.,.id Rll~!lt!fl, Sunday'
Schuol- 10:00 a.m .. Worship · ·11 a.m

St. Paul Lutheran Cburth
Comer Sycamlll1l &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,
Sun. School · 9:4.5 a.m .. Wocs_hlp- II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Wonllip.• II a.m. Pastor: R,ic.hard Nease
Bechtel United Mtthodhl
New Haven, Richard Nease, PllUor,
Sundny wors~ip 9:30 a.m. 'l'ues . 6:30
prayer and Bible St\ldy.

Mt. Olive Uaittd Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville. Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, SUnday School-.9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m., Thursday
SFVicos .. 7 p.m.

Melp Cooperative hrlsb
Nonheut th1ster. Alfred, Pastor: Jim
Corbin. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m..
WorShip · II a.m.•6:30 p.m.

Hll'lllri cl..,.b of Clu1ot In
Chrtldan Ua.loa
Hll'lfOrd, W.Va., Pastor: Mike PuWtt,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m •• Wonbip ·- . · Pallor: lim Corbitt, WoNbip - 9 a.m.,
10:30 a.m., 7:00 p."m .• WedM~
SuDdaY $(:hool - 10 a.m. ·, Thursc\ay
Servicu- 7:00p.m. •
Services- 7 p.m.

c-r

· Church of God

Pa~tur :

9 : 2~

Cummualty ot Chrilt
Pon!and:Radnc: Rd .. Pastor: Jiffi Proffitt.
Sunday School · 9;30 a.m.. Wors~ip. •
10:30 a.m., Wednesday Ser...iccs · 7:00
p.m.

llock Sprinp
Dewayne Stutler, Sunday SohOOI •

9:00 ~ . m. , Worship , · 10 a.m ., Youth
Fellowship. Sunday · 6 p.m. Eaily Sunday
worship 8 am Jenni DLiohwn

Bethel W~lp C~tu

39782 Sr. Rt. 7, 2 miles south ofTuppen,
· PltHns. OH. Non-denomiftation.aJ wjth
Contemporary Praise &amp; Wonhip. Pastor
Rob B•bcr. AQOC. Pntor K@l"Yn Davis.
Youth Dit"tclor Betty Fulks . Sunday
services: 10 un Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Classes, Wed &amp; Thur niJht ~ife
Group~ ai 7 pm. Thurft momin&amp; ladies'
Life Group at tO. Outer Llmitl Youth Life
Group on W"". ev~ni~~&amp; from 6:30 to 8:30.
Vlsi1 ua online at www.bethelwc.pra.

Rutland
Pi!itOr: John Chapman, Suliday School ·
9:30a.m., Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., Thursday
Servi~e8 · 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday
School .; 10: ·15 a.m.. Wofllhip · 9;\5 ·i .m..
. Bible S1u4y ~ Monday {:00 pm
Srunnllle
Sunday School • 10 a.m., Worship· 9 am.

398 Aib St .. MiBIJ1epon-rastora Marl:
Morrow &amp; Rodney Walker Sunday.
Schwl - 9:30 a.m;, Momins Wo11hip •
IO:Xi a.m. &amp; 7:00pm. Wcdn~ S~i¢e

PU10r:· John Oil more, Sunday·School • 10

a.m., Worship • 9 a.m., Wednesday
· ·

·

. 7!1:10 p.in., You.th Ser...ict· 7:qJ _p.m.

Carm.ti•Suuon
Carmel &amp; Bashlln Rds. Racine, Ohio,
Paslor: John Gilmore, Sunday SchOOl ·
. ?:45 ·a.ff! .-. Worship · 11 :00 ~ . m . ,. Bible
Study W~. 7;30 p.m.
.

Appe Lire Center
~Full-Gospel Church". Pastors luhn &amp;.
Pitt~ Wade; 603 Second A.ve. Ma5011, 713·
5017. Sen-ice !IlTie; Sunday IO:lO a.m .,
Wednesday 7 pm

Mo~nln1SIIr

Ab~mdant Grift
923 S. Thin! St., Middleport. Pastor Teresa
Davis, Sunday st!rvice , 10 a.m..
Wednesday ServiQe, 7 pm.

Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday Sr;:hool · II
a;m., Worship· 10 ~.m.

Eat Leta.rl
Paslor: DiU MarahaU Sun.day School •
9a.m .. Worship. - 10 'a.m.• lsi S1mday
every month evenina Ser.,.ice 7:00 p .m.;
Wedn11~d~y • 7 p.m.
·

r-..c..pe~Mlut&lt;m

Bald KDOh. on Co. Rd. 31. Paitor: Re ....
Ro1er Willford , Sunday School • 9:30.
a.m. Wonhip- 7 p.m.
Wblte'J Cbaptl Wttleylm
Coolville Road , Pastor: Re\0:. Charlei
Manindale, Sunday s,bool • 9:30 a.m., .
WMhlp - 10:30 a.m.• Wednesday Ser~ice: J
• 7 p.m .
.
Falnitw llblt Churdt
Letan , W.Va. Rt. I , Pastor: Brian May.
Sunday ~hool · 9:30a.m., Wonhip - 7:00
p.m .• Wednesday Bible Sludy - 7:00p.m
F~tll ftlowoblp Cruoode lor Chml
Pastor: Rev. fraritlin Dickens. ~rv lce :
Friday, ? p.m.

clivii'J Blb&amp;e Cburth
Pomeroy Pjkc, Co. Rd .• Pastor: Rev.
Blackwood, Sundar School • 9:3U a.m.,
WorShip 10:30 a .m.• 7:30 p.m., '
Wedll:«ddy Se:tvice - 7:30p.m.
Stiversrille eemmUnll)' Chllrdl
Sunday School 10:00 im, Sunday Worship '
11:00 am. Wednesday 7:00 "pm Pastor.
Bryan&amp;. MiRy Dailey

Rt:Jolclltl Life Church
500 N. 2nd A.,.e .. Middleport , Putor:
Mikt Foreman, Pasmt t!merilu5 Lawrtnce
FOKman, Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Service•.· 7 p.m,

cunon Tabetr&amp;*te Churtb
Clifto!l. W.Va .. Sunday Sth~ • 10 a.m., .
Wo11hip . 7. p.m.. Wedncf4ay ServicC · 7 ,
p.m.
The Ark Chun:h
3173 George'i Qree.k Road, Oalllpolit. OH :·
Patlor: Jamie Wiremiln, Sunday ScJ;Vic:el •. ·
10:30 a.m. Wedneo;day -7 p.m. ThiUida)r '
Prayer &amp; Praise at 0 pm. Clas!C:A for all ·
agn ev~ry Sunday &amp;. Wednelday. ·
www.lheark.chun;h .nel
Full Gospel Cburtb
of the Llvln1 SaYlor
Rt.338, Antiquity, Pastor: Jesse Morri1, :
Se,...icd: Saturday2iOO p.m.

.'·Stud, 7 pm

Thwnship Rd .• -468C. Sunday School· 9 ,
· a.m, Wor~hip · IQ a.m .. Wedne!lday
. Services • 10 ta.m.
Hocklnaport C~un:h

Houit of Healina Mtn.IJUin:.
Sl. Rt.ll4 i,oopvlllt, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pasto11 Robert &amp; Roberti
Musser. Sunday Sc.hool 9;)0 •m, ,
Worship 10:30 _am - 7:00 pm. ,Wed.
Sel'\'icc HIO pm

Hllfrhony!Ut Communit1 Ch"n:b
Theron Durbam., Sunday ~ 9:30
· . a.m.~7 .p.tn.,WedQel.dl~-7~.m : .,
P~Jtqr:

Ttam J~ Minls&amp;rlm
'Meeting j33 Mechanic Sa"ee1, Pomeroy,
· OH . Putor Eddle Baer; StiVice every
Sunday lO:OO a.m

a.m., WollhiP • 10 : ~ a.rfl ., Pastpr Phillip
lltll
Thrth Church

Co. Rd. 63, Sunday 'School · 9:30a.m ..
· W&lt;Jnhlp · 'l.0:30 a.m.

Bailey Run R0a4,. Putor~ Rev. Emmcn
· Rawson , Sunday· Bv·enlna · 7 . p.m :,
Thilnday SorVice • 7 p.ni.

Haztl Cc:.mmufttt)' CbwU.:
Off Rt. 124. Putor: EdSel Han, Sunda~
St~l. 9:30a.m., W~nhip · 10:30 a.m.,
7:30p.m.

Nazarene

Point Rock Church of the Nuartn~
Route 689, Albany. Rev. Uoyd Grilrun,
pastor. ·Sunday Sl:hool 10 am: wot11.slp
· Krvict 11
enning Krvice 7 pm. Wed.
prayer meeting 7 pm

. Dytovll~ Commuai!J Churdl
Sunday Schoo( . 9:30 a.m.. Worship •
10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.. .

am.

Motoe Choptl Clnod&lt;
Sunday •c~l - 10 am., Worship. - 11
am .. Wed~y se~ ·1 p.m.

Mktdltport Ch~ of lilt Naunne
Putot: Leonml Po'fiOll, Sunday School •
~:30 1.m.,Worship- 10:30 1.m., 6:30 pJll.,
Wcdnwlay Services· 7 p.m.,

· F~tll Gotpol Cll""b
Lon&amp; Bonom·, Sunday SC:tOOI· 9:30a.m..

Roodovllle ftltoWtlllp
Chu.rc:h of d. Nu.arcne, Pasto~: Russell
Canon. , Sunday Sl;bool • 9:30 a:m.,
Wo!&gt;hlp- 10'4S om .. 7 pm .. W,......,

. Pentecostal·

F~th Volley lfobomoek Churclt

Syr.,..e Mlllloll
1411 Bridjtman St .. Syracuse, Pastor •
R()y Pu1or, Sunday School ,• ,10 a.m,·
Bvening - 6 p.m.. Wednesday SCII"\'ite • 1
p.m.

Kaihryi"l Wiley. Sunday School • 9;30

SyncuNc-. of theN...-

' Restoration ChrbUaa FeUewstdp
9365 HOoper R.Qad, Ath&amp;ns, Putor: ·
1Aiinie Cortr~; SundaY Worship to:Oo am.
Wednesday! 7 pm

fel1owship sc!Vice 1 p.m.

• Bttbel Churtb

PaiiiOr Mike Adkins, Sundl.f.School - 9;30

. HobWI Chrtstlan Fellow1hlp Chu1d1
. Pastor: Herschel Whit~. SUnday School·
10 am, Sumlay Cbu.rch service"· 6:30pm
Wednesdai 1. pm

Middleport CommUnity Churc•
575 Pearl St.."MidCIJcport , Pastor: Sam
Anderson. Sundly Sc:hQol 10 a.m.•
Evenl.na ·• 7:!0 p.m. , ~nt5day Sct11ict •
7:30p.m.
.

Coolville United MedtodlstParilb
Paslot: Helen Kline, Coolville Churth,
Main &amp; Fifth S1., Sun. School · 10 a.m..
Wonbip. 9 a.m.. 'T\Jes. Se.rviec~ · ·7 p.m. ·

.

S.tt:m €Ommaoll)' Chun:ll
· Bacli" ofw.;st CoiU"mbia, W.Va.om. Lie.,. ina ·
Ro&amp;d; Pastor: Cha; lc:s Roush (304) 615·
22R8. Sunday S~hool 9:30. am. S~nday .'
evening §ervice 7:00 pm. Bibly Study
"WedR.e,day service 7:00pm

··. Foltb t\dJ Goljoel CbU...
.i.ona Bottom, PuiQr: Steve Reed. Sunday
Schwl . 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
and 1 P.m:.Wcd~csday - 7 p.m., Friday·

Radri.e
Pastor: ·Rev. William Marshall, Suriday ·
~l)ool • 10 a.m., Worship, · 1"1
a.m .Wedn~sday Services 6 pm; Thur Bible

-7-,.n.
.Servloet
·;·

pm .

. Ash Street Churth

Detban.y

Servlcts- to a.m.

·

0uJ1 Chrl~an Fellowthip
(Noo-denominatlonal fellowship)
.Meeting in the Me:iJ' Middle Sc_hool .
Cl(eteria PUtor: Chris Stewart
10:00 am • Noon Sunday; Informal
Worship. Children's minimy

N"' llqloolup Cbjlrdl

Wednesday pray~r tc:rvice • 7 p.m.

·1\tppen Plata Church of Clarlt~
lnstnlmental, Wotth"ip Service • 9 a.m.,
Communion · 10 !l.m., Sunda)l SchOOl •
10:1.5a.m.. Youtb· ~:30 pm Sunday, Dible.
Study Wednesday 7 pm

a.m.

· Other Churches

Flatw-

"'·

3lOS7 State Route 325.' L..angsv!Je. Pastor.
Brian Bailey. SuDChy K:hool • 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 .p.m.,

Zion Cburch of Chrllt
. Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RLI49),
Pa~tor:· Ropr Wat&amp;On, Sun~y School ·
9:30 s.m., Worship -. 10:30 a.m:. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Setvice~ • 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:4S a.m., Wotlhifl • II
a.m.. Wtdnetday Strricts . 7:30 p,m.

Fnm~t

Carldoa lal#!ltoomll!ldoool Cb ....
Kin11bury Road, Pastor: Robtn Vuot,
Sunday School · 9 30 a.m . · Wonhip
. Service 10:30 a.m.. Evening Service 6

CbooWOiodlll( 1M N...._
Pucor: Rev. Curtis Randolph , Sunday
School- 9:30 a.m .. Wootup • IO:lO a.m.,
SuMay eveDillj 6 pm
llutload Cburdl of the~~­
Putor: Oeorae S1adler. Sunday School •
9:30 a.m .• Wonhip .· 10:~0 a.m., 6:30
p.m.•Wcd.neJdaY' Service• ·1 p.m.

A New Bf&amp;llullBI

c -·EploNpol Choreb .
32t! . E. Main S1 .. Pomeroy.
Holy
Eucharist I I :34la.m. Sunday &amp; ~ :30 pm .
W~. Rev. Lealie Fltrnmlna:

· . Panvlllt Hollneu Cburth

. Pomeroy Cbu.rdl oftbe Nuartne
Jlll Lavender, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. and 6
pm .. Wedfltlday Service•· ~p .m .
P~ttor :

Asbury (S)TIItuse), Pa~!Of : Bob RobiD.10n,

a....b .

Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastor. , .Worlkip 10:25

......

J.onaBo.Sunda} School • · 9:30 a.m.• Wmhip ·
!0:30 a.m.
Reecbvllle
Worship - 9:30 a.m., SuDdly School •
lO:JO a.m, Fint Sunday of Month • 7:00
p.m. service
Thppm Plalu Sl. hal
Pattor: Jim Corbin. Sundly SChool. • 9
a.m.. WMhip- 10 a.m .. 1\lelday Scrvket
- 1:30 p.m.·
Ctatral Oulkr

10 a.m .. Wonbip · II am.

hltor· Jlt.... Tom Johnson, Second &amp;

Sihet Rtdae· Putor Um1a Damewood,
Sunday School · 9 11 m , Wollbip Strvice
lOam. :Z.nd and 41h Sunday

a.m., Wonhip · .10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
WedneW.)' Ser\'icn · 7 p,m.

Pu1or: Den~:il Null, Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Worsblp • 10:45 a.m.. 7:30 p.m.,
We4nesday 1:30 p.m.

~

· Ptolc&lt;GIIoll-mbly
PU!Qr: St. Rt. -124. Racine. ThJnado Rd. ·
·Sunday School . 10 a.1 ... , Evening · 7
p.m., . Wcdneflday:Servl~~ · 7 p.m.

· Presbyterian

HarriJOn~llle Pftsb)'teria Churcb.
Pastor: Robert Manhall, Worship- 9:00
a.m. Sunday

Middleport l'r&lt;tbyte....,
Pu1or: James Snyder, Sunday School 10
a.m.• .wo~hip &amp;erwice lllttl.

Seventh-Day Adventist ·
Seveath•D.y !ld,·eildlt
.
Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy. Sa!urday
Serwlees: Sabbath. -Schoql . • l p.m ..
w0rihip-3p.m.

United Brethren .
Mt. Hert11011 UDikd Bretlarta
Ia Cbrllt a.trdl
Tens Community 36411 Wi10kham Rd.
Pu1or. Peter Manindale. Sunday ~hool· .
9:30 un.• Worship • "10:30 •.m .. 7:00
p.m., ' Wednuda~ Services • 7:00· p.m.
Youlh aroup meetina 2nd a; 4-lh Sundays .

7p.m.

Edla VDltod - - bo Cllrt.
. Slate Rou1e 124, bety.oeen Reedsville .t
33045 Hilllld Road. "Polnetoy, Pastor. ioy
. Hwkl~~&amp;port, Sunl1ay School • 10 un.,
Hunter. Sunday Sebool· to a.m.. Evenlq
Sunday Worship· li:OOa.m. Wednesday
7:!0 p.m.. TUesday. nun. -7::Kl p.m .

.

r.n "-1 LIP-

South lltthel C - l y Cburdl

~

Hills Self Storage
29870 Bashan Rd.
· Racine, OH

740·949·2217
Sizes available.Sx10 to 10 x 20

The Appliance man
74()..985-3561
992·1550
Sales • Sarvlce • Parte
All Makes ·
Ken and Adam Youn

•

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE
Pmcrtptlon Ph. 992•2955

112 £oat Moln Slrlel• Pomeroy, OM

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
tOO N. Seoond St: ·Middleport, OH
7411-992-6128

~­

"'-2Y

•

••

Pomero Ohio 45769-()683

IF:ather in heaven."
Matthew S:l

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�Page A&amp;

FAITH • VALUES
Just in time for Mother's Day .- A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 15, 2009

!hi, we~k. an article about
than just the best contexHor
Five · years ago, when my
,,,.:hahuod caught my
raising kids. I also see it as a family aod I had an opportuallclltll•n . Maybe il"s because
retlection of God's desire for nity for a little bit of vacation,
" ,. 1u, t tin ished celebrating
us to be in a specific type of we elected to spend three
\l niha·, Day last Sunday,
Pastor
relationship with one anoth- days in Chincoteague, Va. We
"'·'"''' it\ because the artier. In a way . t.hat I cannot . did so in part because we had
ck tmficates that American
Kerry
adequately explain, marriage never been to the beach as a
.x,et)
has
radically
Wood
is God's idea; and it some- · family, but also because we
,·han~e d .its expectations of
how reflects the relationship deemed that Chincoteague
n,,,thcrhood and fatherhood.
betwee.n God and us. Several was a tad 'bit more family
In figures released by the
times in the Gospels; Jesus friendly than some of the high
l S National Center for
makes an analogy between paced ''tOuristy" beaches that
Health Statistics, · four of child's natural parent.
God's kingdom illld the bride often feature ppce-go_uging
c'1cry 10 babies born in 2007
Wiih so many homes made and groom. Jesus is the vendors or attraltt vac;ruoners
1.1crc born to single women. up of divorced adults remar- groom, and those who foi- who are into haiq-partying.
l" babies born to moms rying other divorced adults, low him an; his bride. In the
Chincoteague was also the
between ages 20 and 24, the our vocabulary changed. No 'book of Revelation, the featured location of the story,
number of babies born out of longer ' called "broken" church is deScribed as the Misty of Chincoteague, by
" cdlock increased to 6 of homes, such households bride of Christ, "beautifully Marguerite Henry, and had
c1ery 10. Sixty percent of became "blended families." adorned" in Rev. 21:2.
the added bonuses of being
babies hom to a mom in her Today's 20 and 30-year olds
Genesis 2 is seen as the between the national wildlife
c.trly 20s - more than half. are the product of that theological foundation. for preserve on Assateague
- are going home to house- ·change. Often miserable in marriage
when
God Island, and NASA's origmal
holds without the traditional their blended families, those announces, "It is not good for headquarters on Wallops
dual -parents-united-in-mar- kids vowed that they would the mari to be alone, I will Island. Thus, these islands
riage structure.
not repeat their parent's (and make a helper for him. (Gen provided plenry (or our famiThe article's sociologists step-parent's) mistakes. If . 2:18) And so God created ly to do and see during our
t;md perhaps the writer of marnage is so miserable, woman out of the man, and brief stay while still allowing
the article 1tse It) seemed to their logic goes, then let's "for this reason, man will . us a peaceful atmosphere for
he gushing over the finding. · throw away marriage com- leave his father and mother resting emotionally and spir·
Here 's how the story con- pletely and just live together. and be united with his wife, itually.
eludes:
. And so we are now in an and they will become one , The two mornings we were
there we went out early to the
--some experts said the era when parenting and mar- flesh." (Gen 2:24).
trend represents positive riage are no longer linked
My older daughter will beach aod enjoyed the sun as
changes for some women together. I know that there turn 20 later this year. I pray it slowly rose above the east- women are less likely to are many people - proba- that she does not join the em horizon. The cool breezes
he shunned if they have bly includmg that professor statistical · majority and and the gentle sounds of the·
children by themselves or to from Wellesley College choose to have a baby with· ocean waves rolling up on to
be forced to give their chil- who consider this a good ou't first laying the founr,la- the beach greeted us . soothdren up for ar,loption.
thing. Don't count me as one tion of Biblically oriented ingly as we walked bare--·We' ve seen a transfor- of them.lthink this is a very marriage. I wantthe best for footed on the wet sand, look· marion of. social norms;'· sad development in oursoc1- her - God's · absolute best ing for seashells, our children
, aid Rosanna Henz, a pro- ety; and time will only tell - and not what our society laughing every so often
fcssor of sociology at what the results of it are in seems to have seitled on as· when the ocean water would
Wellesley College. 'Women the long term. ·
adequate or · easier. If we lap at their feet..
On the first morning,
can have children on their
Yes, the 1950ish ideal por- · want God's absolute best,
own and it's not .going to !rayed by ''Leave it to . we must cooperate with while our kids were distractdestroy your employment Beaver" and "Ozzie and God to make tt happen. It ed, my wife and I "wrote"
and it'.s not going to mean Haniet" are probably nostal- takes work: dedication, their names in the wet sand
that you 'II be made a pariah gic wishful-thipking of a commitment, patience, and with our feet Then, when
by the community."'
time that never really exist- especially forgiveness.
they turned and saw what we
Until recently (say the last ed, but I am still convinced
And the good news is this: had done, they smiled happi30 years or so), the concept that the best context for even when we blow it, God ly as they-were reminded of
of the two-parent household child-rearing is a home in can take our mistakes and · bow special they are to us.'
After awhile, we became
- a mother and father mar- which a man and woman ·turn them into a new best. So
ricJ to one another with chil- make a lifelong commitment even if you ARE one of the hungry and decided to go and
dren born from that marriage to one another, and they six in ten, God won't shun get breakfast, leaving behind
- was commonly reco~- ·bring children into the world you. And neither will L But their names on the edge of the
nized as. the best context m from that commitment.
carefully, prayerfully, con- restless ocean. We had our
which children could be
Other studies, which often sider what ts best for you and breakfast and then went
raised. Unfortunately, that don't receive much publici- your child for the long term. exploring (by minivan) the
preserve
on
best context was sometimes ty, have shown that the tradi- And if you are not already a an1mal
the fa~ade behind which tiona! marriage continues to · parent, please carefully, · Assateague Island where over
much ugliness was con- be the most conducive envi- prayerfully, .consider your one hundred wild ponies still
tained . Spousal .abuse, ronrnent for _successfully actions and attitudes before live just as they did in the
incest, alcoholism and drug raising children. For exam" they lead you to parenthood. 1940s when Marguerite
addiction were all kept out of pie, the majority of children
Every home - even the Henry wrote her book. Then,
view behind the two-parent whose parents do not get or traditional mother-father· after lunch, we changed our
family pretext. of perfection. stay manied experience at married-for-life one - is a clothes and went back to the
· As our society grew least one year (Often more) broken home. But God is beach. Our two youngest sons
increasingly suspicious of of poverty. Boys whose par- here to fix them. Will you ·wondered if their names
might still be there (although
institutionalism in all its ents divorced or never mar- let Him fix yours?
forms (remember the say- ried, are two to three times
(Kerry Wood is now asso- we had assured them that they
ing, "never trust anyone more likely to end up in jail ciate pastor at Grace would not be). Of course,
over 40"?). the institution of . as adults. Finally, children United Methodist Church their names were long gone,
marriage also began to fal-· whose parents get and stay in Perrysburg, Ohio after ~ashed away by wind and
ter. Divorce rates skyrocket- married are healthier and serving Racine United wave, and trampled under the
ed, and so by the late 1970s, ·much less likely to suffer Methodist Church for feet of beach goers who had
a majority of · children in mental illness, including three years. He can be since arrived on the scene.
America grow up in a norne depression and teen suicide. reached through his web- · But that mattered. little to
in which at least one
As a Christian, I see mar- . site:
http://pursueholi- them for the beach wasn't the
parenta1 figure was NOT the riage as something more ness.blogspot.com.)
only place where we had writ-

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aa.-ro..WWBapllot
Salem St., Panor: Ed Barney , Sunday
SchMI - 10 a.m., E"enina • 7 p.m.•
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Church of JHW Cbritt Apoetolk:
VanZandJ and Wlnt Rd., Putor: James

"Shout for joy, 0 heavens;
rejoice, 0 earth; burst into
song, 0 mountains! For the
LORD comforts His people
and will have compass1on
Pastor
on His afflicted ones. But
Thom
Zion said, 'The LORD has ·
~ollohan forsaken me, the LORD has
forgotten rne.' Can a mother
forget the baby at her _breast'
and have no compasston on
· the child she has borne?
ten their names. Daily kind- · Though she may forget, I .
.nesses and enc&lt;iuragements will not forget you! See, I
let them know that each of have engraved you on !J1e .
them h;is their name indelibly palms of My hands" (lsruah
etched into our hearts. So also 49: 13-16a NIV).
Though this prophecy was,
has the entrusting of responsiwritten
hundreds of years
bility to them and .the
before
Jesus'
crucifixion, it
accountability that we require
of them show them that they was a clear clarion call of
are neither a mere · "hobby" .the rnagQitude of God's love
nor \mrdensome "duty" to us . for you and for me. A pen is
Even the boundaries that we not used to write your name
set for them remind them that upon His flesh, but the cold
we are more than passive and cruel nails of the execuobservers of their growing up, tioner's cross m.ark you as
but are active Jl!111icipants as God's own upon His Son's
mentors, !rovtders. encour- own hands. Jesus' blood is
agers, an guardians (physi- the permanent ink that has
the power to .grant you a
cally 1\ND spiritually).
Although their parents place of eternal acceptance
aren't perfect. they sense m the presence of the Father.
that they are loved and can
Just think! Once your
find comfort , in knowing name has been written upon
that neither the waves nor His hand, no matter what
winds of circumstances, or paths your life may lead you,
even the comings and no matter what dark and
goings of people throughout doubtful moments may
life can alter that-love.
come your way, when your
But there is a far greater eyes open in glory and your
love than ours ai work in $piritual eyes focus upon the
their lives. It is a love that is Savior, you will see your
accessible to anyone whose name wntten upon His hand; ·
heart would soften enough you will see that the love of
to believe and receive it. It is God is more than words.
a love that,does not grow old
This is a time in which
or weak no matter how many people are placing their
much time passes. It does. · trust in persons and things
not wash away even though that will not, in the end, stand
a thousand years pass by. It the test of time. To place your
certainly is not at the mercy faith in something that will
of winds of change or waves not last dooms you to disapof whim. It is .a love so pow- pointment and utter ruin. But
erful and so enduring that don't squander your opportu·
even though you might feel nity to begin the adventure of
lost in the throngs of the walking with God and knowhuman race, one among half ing for certain that your etera, dozen billion jleople cur- nity is secured. Tum to Jesus
rently alive or in the count-. today. Let Him be both Lord
less generations since our and Savior of your life!
world began, you are sin"To all who receive Him,
gled out to be set free from to those who believe in flis
bonds of sin, fear, and hope- name, He gives the right to
lessness if only you will tutn · become the children of God
to Him and rest in that love. - born not of natural
I am happy to report that descent, nor of human deci·
our God does not simply sion or a husband's will, but
Write our mimes in the wet born of God" (from John
sands of the seashore, nor I: 12-13).
even upon granite obelisks
(Thom .MoUolla11 and his
that finally succumb to the family ha~~e ministered in
relentless march of time as southern Ohio the past 13·
eons slowly wear them down. 112 years a11d is the author ot,
Those whose hearts yield to "The Fairy Tale ·Pal'!lhllls.'
the savin~ love of GOd as He is tfw pastor ofPaihway
revealed m His Son, Jesus Commumty Church and
Christ, will find their names lllllY be reached for . com· Written upon something that mellts or questions by e-mail
is truly imperishable, subject aJ pastorthom@paihwaygalto neithi'r "chance" nor lipolis.com).
"change" of mind.
COPYRIGHT &lt;I&gt; 2009, THOM MOLLOHAN

M~.

Sunday Sehoul - 10:30 · a.m.,

-

Evcnioi - 7:30p.m.

FlntBapllotChurdl " - · wv
(lodepeodem Bop&lt;iSI)
SR 6~2 ud Andenoo St. Putor: R.oben
Crady, Suf!day school 10 am, Momln&amp;
church_ll am. Sunday ~venin a: 6 pm. Wed.
Sible Study 1 pm

Eouauoul.paiiDII&lt;Ta-lnc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rulland,
Sel'\'ioet: sun 10:00 a.m. &amp;. 7:3{) p.m.,
"Thun .7:00p.m.,Put« Matey R. Hutton

.

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Catholic

.

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SomdH-CotloollcCbwdl
161 Mulberry lt.ve., Pomeroy, ~~898,
Putor: ·Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sac. Con.
4:45-5:15p.m.: Man- 5:30 p.m .. Sun.
Con. ~8 :45-9 : 1~ a.m., Sua. Mlls • 9:30
a.nt .• Daily Mus- 8:30a.m.

Assembly of God ·
Llbtrty _ , o f God
P.O .. Bu,; 467, Dudd.in&amp; Lane. M1Mnl.
W.Va., Pastor: Neil Tennant•. Sunday
Scrvk:t1- 10:00 a.m. and' p.m.

Church of Christ

· .·· . Baptist

w...-c-ofC-33226 Children'• Home Rd. Pomeroy, OH
Contact 7!W·441-1296 Sunday morning
10:00 , Sun morning Bible ltUd)l ;
following . wo:rlhip , Sua. eve 6:00 Pill·
Wed biblt swdy 1 p_m

· hjm11t Preewlll Boptlol Cbut&lt;b
p-awr: Floyd Rou ,Sunday Sclklol9:30 to
l0:30 101, Wonhip MrVb:e 1();30 10 i 1:00
am. Wed. pRaebins 6 pm

.Carpenlt&lt; ln4.,.ndoat Boptht Cllordl
Sunday School • 9:30am, Preachittl
:st"rvice IO:JOam. Ev~ning . Service
7:00pm~ W~sday 8ible Study 7~00 pm,

Heml«t GMt Chriltllo CltuKb
Minister: Larty Brown, Wonhip • 9:30
. a.m. Sbnday School - 10! 30 a.m., Bible
Study. 7 p,m.

Pa~10r:

Cbeshlfe Baptist Church
Pastor: Steve little, 740-Mi?-780 I, H.

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740-992-7S42, C. 74()..645 - 2~27 , Sunday
School: 9;30 am, Morning Wonhip: 10:30
am, Youth ~ Bible Buddits 6:30 prn,
\:hoir practice 7:30; SpecU.l day~ of month
I. Ladies of Gr~e 1 pm 2nd M1.mda)·. 2.
Men's Fellowship 7 pin 3rd Tiles.

'

1hipe Baptbt Chu«h (Souihemi
570 Grant Sr., Middleport, Su11day school
·. 9:30a.m., Worship~ ll .a.m'. and 6 p.m.,
WednesdaY SUvice. 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
E!llis

Rutland Flnt'Baptlsl Cbun:h
Sunday School • ·9:30. a.m. , Worship ~
I0:45a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptfll
Pulor Jon Broc:lert,_· Ea1t Main S1.,
SUIIday Scb. ~: 30 am, Worship 10:30 am

Flnt SQulbtrn lllptlel
4187'2 Pomeroy Pike, Sund~y School •
9:30a.m.• Worsh.ip . 9:45a,m &amp; 7:00p.m.,
W~e~~day Services . 7:00p.m.
·

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Pint B,pdd Chureb
Pastor: Bilfy Zu1pan6th and Palmer St .,
Midd\epo11. Sunday SchOol ·9:15a.m:,
' Worship_ ·· 10:15 ~:~.m .. 7:00 p.m.,
Wedlies&amp;y $CrvJ~e- 7:00p.m.

ltadne.J?Int Bap~1t
Pastor: Ryin Eaton,. pastor , Sunday
School·- 9:30a.m., Worship· .10:40 un.,
' 6:00 p.m.. WednesdaY Servkel • 7:00
p.m.

.SOwer Run Baptlllt
Pastor: John Swanson, Sunday Sehoul ·
IOil.m .• Worihlp . II a.m. , 7:00p.m.
,Wednesday Serv!ct1- 7:00p .m.

Mt·. Union Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School·
9:45 a.m., Evening • 6:30 p.m..
Wcdfteiday Service• • 6:~p.m.
. ittthlehem Baptht Church
O~at

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Bend, Route 124, Rtcine, OH,
Ptlitor: , Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday Worship.· \0:30a.m. ,; Wednesday
Bible Study· 7:00p.m.
.
Old llelbeUioeWW. Bopt~t Clwo&lt;h
28601 St. R1. 7, Mlddlcpon. Sunday ·
Service • 10 a.l'(l., 6:00 p.m., Tl.le&amp;day
StrYice• -6:00
·

HIIIJide Baptist Chur.;h
St. Rt. 143 just Qrf Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R. AJ:ree. Sr.. Sunday · Unified
Ser\oice, Worship • 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.,·.
W~esd.ay Services.7 p.m.

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

VIctory Bllptld ltulependent
..525-N. 2nd St. Middlepotl, Pastor: James
Keeaee, Worship • IOa.m. , 7 p.m..
WedDeiday SeJilices • ~ pm.

e:

The Virtue of Chastity

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Chastity unfortunately doesn 't get rn uch respect
these days. Rather it is treated like a relic
from a bygone era, a quaint but
antiquated virtue, and one that is
scarcely relevant in an era in which we
have more modern attitudes about
sexuality and ou r bodies. We may even
hesitate to use the word "chastity,"
fearing that we will be considered
prudish . Bu~ have we not lost
something important in these
unchaste times? Have we not lost
something . important in . these
unchaste times? Have we not lost
the essential spiritual lesson behind the
virtue of chastity! Indeed, we seem to
have forgotten that lust and a desire for the
things of the f!es l\ are really th e root of much oi our
suffe ring. and the root of · a grand illusion . The
pleas ures of the flesh are intense but momentary, and
their fleeting natu re should serve as a reminder that the physical itself is only
· a tempo rary state ofexistence. The pleasu res of the body are actually a
manifestation of an illusion, both in the importance we place on them, and
also insofar as they tend Ia cause us to overly .identify our bodies with OW
sel ves. In addition, we can leam someth ing important by being chaste: That ··
desire is the root. of (Tlu~h of our suffering, and that if we can overcome our
desires, We can thereby trans.,.,nd our sufu!ring. Finally, we should remember
that the spirit of chastity e&gt;rtends to all of our body, including even our eyes
and ultimately our mi nd. The eyes e110ke desire, and in that, (hey are aptto
be unchaste.

So when the WOtllall saw that the 11ft wa1 pod for food, and tliat
I wa• a delaht to the eyes, illld llat lie tree wu to be de*ed to
mab one whe, ... took Ill Its fruit and ate; and ..e abo pe
liORie to her hullland, illld he ate.
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R.S.V. Cenet11 3:5-7

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

209 Third St.

flaclne, OH

• 740-949·2210
We'Ve Got It!

Folth Bap41o1Chureb
Rti.ltoad St., Muon, Sunday Sdiool • JQ
· a.m .. Worship - ll a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -'7 p.m. .

Short &amp; Long Term&amp;
Respite Care • Rehab Services
Available
www.onrbrookrehabtlltationcenter.com
Page Street

Fotelt Run.BipUtt• Pemeroy
Re.... JosePh Woods. Sunday School · 10
a.m., Worship · 11 :30 un ,

(740)

Warm Friendly
Atmosp1rrrt!

r.

Hours

Mt. Mariob Boptltt
Fourth.- Main S1., Mlddlepof:t. Sun_day
Scbool · 9:30.a.m., Worship- 1"0:4~ a.m.
Pastor: Rev. Mlc)\le~ A~mpson, Sr.

6am · 8pm

:Mil{it's ~estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily

. .llqulty Bapdot
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10:4~ a.m .• Sunday Evenina • 6:00p.m.,

. Ifom• Cooked Mrals &amp; Doily SptciD/s

Open 7 days a week
740-99 ·7713

Pomeroy Church otCIIrilt
212 W. Main St. . Sunday School · 9:30
~ . m ., Worship· 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wedneflday Services - 7 p.ril .

Pomeror·Watlkle ChUfth ei"Cltrllt
33226 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
School- II a.m., Worship · !Oa.m., 6 P · ~ ·
Wednesday Serv.~s • 7 p.m.
Mld.U.port cb...b of ChriS!
and Main, Pastor: AI Hat111on,
Childrtns Director; Sharon Sayr~ . Teen
Dim:tor~ Dodger Vaujhan, Su.nday School
· 9:30a.m .• Worship- 8:1.5, 10:30 a.m.,.7
p.m., Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
~th

Keno Clnln:• or Chrtlt
Woribip · 9:30 a.m., Sunday School •
10:30 a.m., PastOr-Jeffrey Wallace, 1st" and
3rd Sunday

· Barw11bow Rldce C~rt:· of Chrllt
Pasmr:B~e Terry, Sunday S\:llool-9:30
a.m. - ·
Wo"hlp . 10:30 a.m.. 6 :·30 p.m.
Wednesday Se.t\'lces ·6:30p.m.

'-"llw. Puror: Jlmes

Sauttfietd, SIUiday Scbool •• 9 :4~ a.m.,
ev~· • 6 p,tq,. WedGn4ay Service• • 7
p.m.
P111or: Sha~ M. BawlitiJ. Sunday
Worship • 10 4.m., 6 p.m.. W~y
SmM:ff. 7 p.m ..

8yncuN Fin!~ of God
Apple and Sccood Sb ., Putor: Rtv. D~.,. id
Ru,.,u, Sundly School and Worship- to
un. Evenitl&amp; · Service•- 6:30 p.m.,
Wednetday Service• · 6:30 pJI..

Church rAGed oiP:o&amp;-L;
OJ;While Rd. off Sl. R.t. UiO, PQtor: PJ .
Cblpmlm. S-y School • 10 a.m.•
Wonllip -. 11 a.m., Wedaetdly Servlct•:. 7
p.m.

. Congregational
. 1i1ai!J

Episcopal

Holiness
C..-nunll.y Church
Pastor: Strit 'TOmek. Main StretJ:o
Ru1iand. Sunday Wonbip--10:00 · a.m.,
Sunday Senilce-ip.m.

'

Coluey Pll1rlm Chapel
tiatrisonville . Road, Pastor: Charles
McK~n:r.ie, Sunday School 9:30 u.m..
Worship • II a.ftt., 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service · 7:00p.m.

RoteofSboron HQ(I-Cbunb
Leadln&amp; Creek Rd .. Rutland. Putor: Rev.
Dewey Kina. Sunday .schooi- 9;30 i.IJ! ..
. Sunday w~lp · 7 p.m.. !JWnesday
pm~r ~ins- 7 p.m.
P!De.Grove Blb~-HollMM Cburc~
112 mile off Rt. 325; Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manic)-, Sunday Sdaool • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship. · 10;)0 a.m., 6~ p.m.,
Wednesday Sel'\·ice - 7:00p.m.
· We*)'an Btbte Hollneaa Church
75· Pearl St., MiddlepOit. Pasror: Doug
CQX, Suf¥iay Stho&lt;ll : 10 a.m. Wonhip 10:45 p.m.. Suntlay Eve : 6:00 p.rn.,
Wednellda)· Service • 7:00 p.m. .
Hysell Rua Comm_u·nily C~urth
Paslor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
-9:30a.m ., Worship· 10:45 a:m., 1 p.m..
Thu~y Jliblc Study.end .You~- 7 p.m.

i.aum Clld' Frft Metho41R Church
Putor: Ol~n McCiuna. Sunday SdiOOI •
9:30 a.m. ,.Worship ·. 10:39 a.m. al)d Ci
p.m. •Wed.neSday Service - HlO p.m.

· BradiMI'i'y Chureh of.Chrbt
~inister: Tom Runyon, 39358 Bradbury
. Road, Middle~. Sund.ay School· 9:30'

Tbe Cburch of Jetus
Christ oi'LIIIIIer·O.y SaiRtl .
S!. R1. 160. 446-624.7 (lr ·446·7486.
Sunday Schooi 10:20-11 a.m., Relief
SodetyiPriesrbood II :05-12:00 noun.
Sacrament · Service 9. 10:15 a.m.,
Homemakini meeting, htThurs .• 7 p.m.

Worehip- 10:30 am.
Rutland Church ofCIIrl1t
Sunday School · 9:30a.m., Worship and
Communion • 10:30 a.m., · Du~td
Wiseman, Minlsler
Br~dtotd

Chukb or Chrlll

Comer of St. Rt . 124 &amp;: Brlldb!IJ'Y "Rd .,
Mini~ter: Duug Shamblin, You.th Minister:
Bill Ambcrpt. Sunday Scboo1· 9:3() a.m,
Worship • 8:00 a.m., 10:30 .a.m•.• 7:00
p.m.,Wednellday Servi"a;s. • 7:00p.m-,

Hkkory Hilla Church efChrtat
Tuppers Plains, Pastor Mike Moore, Bible
clau. 9 a.m. SuiKiay; worship 10 a.m.
Suilday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

Reedsville Churdl otcbrl..
Pastor: Jack Colgro\'C, Sunday School :
9:30 a.m., Worship Service: 10:30 a·.m..
Bible Study, Wednesday,'6:30p.m.
llntcr Churdl of Cbrlot·
Sunday school9:30 un .. Sunday,Worship
· !0:30a.m.
The Churtl\ orCiuilt of Pomtroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, i"'nplist:
Oennil Sargent, Sunday Bible .S.rud)l -·
· 9:30a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m . .od 6':30 "
p.m.. Wc~'sday Bibie Study - 7

P.m.

Christian Union

Pas1nr: Bob Robinson, Sunday School· 10
a.m .. Wonhip · 9 a.m.

New Hope Cburdl
Old American LeJion.HalJ,
Fourth Ave., Middleport, SuBday 5 p.m.
S)'nCUJt Community Chun:h
24&amp;J"Second St., SyracUSe, OH
Sun. Scbool 10 am, Sundy night 6:3{) pm
Paslor: Joe Owinn

Hooth (Mlddlepm)
Pastur: Brian Dunham, Sunday School ·.
9:30a.m., Woohip · li :OOa.m.

(full GOipfl Chan:b) HarriSonville.
P11ton: Bob and Kay Manhall,
Thm . 7 p.m.

Mlntnvllle

A111uta;a Grttt COIDIIIUaily Churtb
Putor.Wayne Duolap, Statt Rt 681 ,
Tu.ppe~ PliinJ, Sun. Wonhip: 10 am &amp;:
. 6:30pm.. Wed. Bible Stuti~ 7:00p.m.

Pa51or: Oewaync: Suml~r. s 'unday ~hoot •

Run

Pas1or: Bob RobinJOn, Sunda~ School - 9
a:m ., Worship r 10 a.m.
I

Ptarl Chapel
S\lndliy School · 9 a.ri1 .. Worship · -10 a.m.

Pomero)'
Pas10r: Brian Dunham. Worship ·
a.m .. Sunday Sd100l- 10:4-S.a.m.

. Latter-Day Saints

Lutheran
St. John Luthenn Churth
Pine Oro~e. Wurr;hip ' 9:00a.m .. Sunday
School· 10:00 a.m. Pastor.

Our ~"·toar Luthfran Church
Walnut and Henry Srs .. Ra.,.enswood.
W:Va., Pastot: Da.,.id Rll~!lt!fl, Sunday'
Schuol- 10:00 a.m .. Worship · ·11 a.m

St. Paul Lutheran Cburth
Comer Sycamlll1l &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,
Sun. School · 9:4.5 a.m .. Wocs_hlp- II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Wonllip.• II a.m. Pastor: R,ic.hard Nease
Bechtel United Mtthodhl
New Haven, Richard Nease, PllUor,
Sundny wors~ip 9:30 a.m. 'l'ues . 6:30
prayer and Bible St\ldy.

Mt. Olive Uaittd Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville. Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, SUnday School-.9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m., Thursday
SFVicos .. 7 p.m.

Melp Cooperative hrlsb
Nonheut th1ster. Alfred, Pastor: Jim
Corbin. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m..
WorShip · II a.m.•6:30 p.m.

Hll'lllri cl..,.b of Clu1ot In
Chrtldan Ua.loa
Hll'lfOrd, W.Va., Pastor: Mike PuWtt,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m •• Wonbip ·- . · Pallor: lim Corbitt, WoNbip - 9 a.m.,
10:30 a.m., 7:00 p."m .• WedM~
SuDdaY $(:hool - 10 a.m. ·, Thursc\ay
Servicu- 7:00p.m. •
Services- 7 p.m.

c-r

· Church of God

Pa~tur :

9 : 2~

Cummualty ot Chrilt
Pon!and:Radnc: Rd .. Pastor: Jiffi Proffitt.
Sunday School · 9;30 a.m.. Wors~ip. •
10:30 a.m., Wednesday Ser...iccs · 7:00
p.m.

llock Sprinp
Dewayne Stutler, Sunday SohOOI •

9:00 ~ . m. , Worship , · 10 a.m ., Youth
Fellowship. Sunday · 6 p.m. Eaily Sunday
worship 8 am Jenni DLiohwn

Bethel W~lp C~tu

39782 Sr. Rt. 7, 2 miles south ofTuppen,
· PltHns. OH. Non-denomiftation.aJ wjth
Contemporary Praise &amp; Wonhip. Pastor
Rob B•bcr. AQOC. Pntor K@l"Yn Davis.
Youth Dit"tclor Betty Fulks . Sunday
services: 10 un Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Classes, Wed &amp; Thur niJht ~ife
Group~ ai 7 pm. Thurft momin&amp; ladies'
Life Group at tO. Outer Llmitl Youth Life
Group on W"". ev~ni~~&amp; from 6:30 to 8:30.
Vlsi1 ua online at www.bethelwc.pra.

Rutland
Pi!itOr: John Chapman, Suliday School ·
9:30a.m., Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., Thursday
Servi~e8 · 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday
School .; 10: ·15 a.m.. Wofllhip · 9;\5 ·i .m..
. Bible S1u4y ~ Monday {:00 pm
Srunnllle
Sunday School • 10 a.m., Worship· 9 am.

398 Aib St .. MiBIJ1epon-rastora Marl:
Morrow &amp; Rodney Walker Sunday.
Schwl - 9:30 a.m;, Momins Wo11hip •
IO:Xi a.m. &amp; 7:00pm. Wcdn~ S~i¢e

PU10r:· John Oil more, Sunday·School • 10

a.m., Worship • 9 a.m., Wednesday
· ·

·

. 7!1:10 p.in., You.th Ser...ict· 7:qJ _p.m.

Carm.ti•Suuon
Carmel &amp; Bashlln Rds. Racine, Ohio,
Paslor: John Gilmore, Sunday SchOOl ·
. ?:45 ·a.ff! .-. Worship · 11 :00 ~ . m . ,. Bible
Study W~. 7;30 p.m.
.

Appe Lire Center
~Full-Gospel Church". Pastors luhn &amp;.
Pitt~ Wade; 603 Second A.ve. Ma5011, 713·
5017. Sen-ice !IlTie; Sunday IO:lO a.m .,
Wednesday 7 pm

Mo~nln1SIIr

Ab~mdant Grift
923 S. Thin! St., Middleport. Pastor Teresa
Davis, Sunday st!rvice , 10 a.m..
Wednesday ServiQe, 7 pm.

Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday Sr;:hool · II
a;m., Worship· 10 ~.m.

Eat Leta.rl
Paslor: DiU MarahaU Sun.day School •
9a.m .. Worship. - 10 'a.m.• lsi S1mday
every month evenina Ser.,.ice 7:00 p .m.;
Wedn11~d~y • 7 p.m.
·

r-..c..pe~Mlut&lt;m

Bald KDOh. on Co. Rd. 31. Paitor: Re ....
Ro1er Willford , Sunday School • 9:30.
a.m. Wonhip- 7 p.m.
Wblte'J Cbaptl Wttleylm
Coolville Road , Pastor: Re\0:. Charlei
Manindale, Sunday s,bool • 9:30 a.m., .
WMhlp - 10:30 a.m.• Wednesday Ser~ice: J
• 7 p.m .
.
Falnitw llblt Churdt
Letan , W.Va. Rt. I , Pastor: Brian May.
Sunday ~hool · 9:30a.m., Wonhip - 7:00
p.m .• Wednesday Bible Sludy - 7:00p.m
F~tll ftlowoblp Cruoode lor Chml
Pastor: Rev. fraritlin Dickens. ~rv lce :
Friday, ? p.m.

clivii'J Blb&amp;e Cburth
Pomeroy Pjkc, Co. Rd .• Pastor: Rev.
Blackwood, Sundar School • 9:3U a.m.,
WorShip 10:30 a .m.• 7:30 p.m., '
Wedll:«ddy Se:tvice - 7:30p.m.
Stiversrille eemmUnll)' Chllrdl
Sunday School 10:00 im, Sunday Worship '
11:00 am. Wednesday 7:00 "pm Pastor.
Bryan&amp;. MiRy Dailey

Rt:Jolclltl Life Church
500 N. 2nd A.,.e .. Middleport , Putor:
Mikt Foreman, Pasmt t!merilu5 Lawrtnce
FOKman, Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Service•.· 7 p.m,

cunon Tabetr&amp;*te Churtb
Clifto!l. W.Va .. Sunday Sth~ • 10 a.m., .
Wo11hip . 7. p.m.. Wedncf4ay ServicC · 7 ,
p.m.
The Ark Chun:h
3173 George'i Qree.k Road, Oalllpolit. OH :·
Patlor: Jamie Wiremiln, Sunday ScJ;Vic:el •. ·
10:30 a.m. Wedneo;day -7 p.m. ThiUida)r '
Prayer &amp; Praise at 0 pm. Clas!C:A for all ·
agn ev~ry Sunday &amp;. Wednelday. ·
www.lheark.chun;h .nel
Full Gospel Cburtb
of the Llvln1 SaYlor
Rt.338, Antiquity, Pastor: Jesse Morri1, :
Se,...icd: Saturday2iOO p.m.

.'·Stud, 7 pm

Thwnship Rd .• -468C. Sunday School· 9 ,
· a.m, Wor~hip · IQ a.m .. Wedne!lday
. Services • 10 ta.m.
Hocklnaport C~un:h

Houit of Healina Mtn.IJUin:.
Sl. Rt.ll4 i,oopvlllt, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pasto11 Robert &amp; Roberti
Musser. Sunday Sc.hool 9;)0 •m, ,
Worship 10:30 _am - 7:00 pm. ,Wed.
Sel'\'icc HIO pm

Hllfrhony!Ut Communit1 Ch"n:b
Theron Durbam., Sunday ~ 9:30
· . a.m.~7 .p.tn.,WedQel.dl~-7~.m : .,
P~Jtqr:

Ttam J~ Minls&amp;rlm
'Meeting j33 Mechanic Sa"ee1, Pomeroy,
· OH . Putor Eddle Baer; StiVice every
Sunday lO:OO a.m

a.m., WollhiP • 10 : ~ a.rfl ., Pastpr Phillip
lltll
Thrth Church

Co. Rd. 63, Sunday 'School · 9:30a.m ..
· W&lt;Jnhlp · 'l.0:30 a.m.

Bailey Run R0a4,. Putor~ Rev. Emmcn
· Rawson , Sunday· Bv·enlna · 7 . p.m :,
Thilnday SorVice • 7 p.ni.

Haztl Cc:.mmufttt)' CbwU.:
Off Rt. 124. Putor: EdSel Han, Sunda~
St~l. 9:30a.m., W~nhip · 10:30 a.m.,
7:30p.m.

Nazarene

Point Rock Church of the Nuartn~
Route 689, Albany. Rev. Uoyd Grilrun,
pastor. ·Sunday Sl:hool 10 am: wot11.slp
· Krvict 11
enning Krvice 7 pm. Wed.
prayer meeting 7 pm

. Dytovll~ Commuai!J Churdl
Sunday Schoo( . 9:30 a.m.. Worship •
10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.. .

am.

Motoe Choptl Clnod&lt;
Sunday •c~l - 10 am., Worship. - 11
am .. Wed~y se~ ·1 p.m.

Mktdltport Ch~ of lilt Naunne
Putot: Leonml Po'fiOll, Sunday School •
~:30 1.m.,Worship- 10:30 1.m., 6:30 pJll.,
Wcdnwlay Services· 7 p.m.,

· F~tll Gotpol Cll""b
Lon&amp; Bonom·, Sunday SC:tOOI· 9:30a.m..

Roodovllle ftltoWtlllp
Chu.rc:h of d. Nu.arcne, Pasto~: Russell
Canon. , Sunday Sl;bool • 9:30 a:m.,
Wo!&gt;hlp- 10'4S om .. 7 pm .. W,......,

. Pentecostal·

F~th Volley lfobomoek Churclt

Syr.,..e Mlllloll
1411 Bridjtman St .. Syracuse, Pastor •
R()y Pu1or, Sunday School ,• ,10 a.m,·
Bvening - 6 p.m.. Wednesday SCII"\'ite • 1
p.m.

Kaihryi"l Wiley. Sunday School • 9;30

SyncuNc-. of theN...-

' Restoration ChrbUaa FeUewstdp
9365 HOoper R.Qad, Ath&amp;ns, Putor: ·
1Aiinie Cortr~; SundaY Worship to:Oo am.
Wednesday! 7 pm

fel1owship sc!Vice 1 p.m.

• Bttbel Churtb

PaiiiOr Mike Adkins, Sundl.f.School - 9;30

. HobWI Chrtstlan Fellow1hlp Chu1d1
. Pastor: Herschel Whit~. SUnday School·
10 am, Sumlay Cbu.rch service"· 6:30pm
Wednesdai 1. pm

Middleport CommUnity Churc•
575 Pearl St.."MidCIJcport , Pastor: Sam
Anderson. Sundly Sc:hQol 10 a.m.•
Evenl.na ·• 7:!0 p.m. , ~nt5day Sct11ict •
7:30p.m.
.

Coolville United MedtodlstParilb
Paslot: Helen Kline, Coolville Churth,
Main &amp; Fifth S1., Sun. School · 10 a.m..
Wonbip. 9 a.m.. 'T\Jes. Se.rviec~ · ·7 p.m. ·

.

S.tt:m €Ommaoll)' Chun:ll
· Bacli" ofw.;st CoiU"mbia, W.Va.om. Lie.,. ina ·
Ro&amp;d; Pastor: Cha; lc:s Roush (304) 615·
22R8. Sunday S~hool 9:30. am. S~nday .'
evening §ervice 7:00 pm. Bibly Study
"WedR.e,day service 7:00pm

··. Foltb t\dJ Goljoel CbU...
.i.ona Bottom, PuiQr: Steve Reed. Sunday
Schwl . 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
and 1 P.m:.Wcd~csday - 7 p.m., Friday·

Radri.e
Pastor: ·Rev. William Marshall, Suriday ·
~l)ool • 10 a.m., Worship, · 1"1
a.m .Wedn~sday Services 6 pm; Thur Bible

-7-,.n.
.Servloet
·;·

pm .

. Ash Street Churth

Detban.y

Servlcts- to a.m.

·

0uJ1 Chrl~an Fellowthip
(Noo-denominatlonal fellowship)
.Meeting in the Me:iJ' Middle Sc_hool .
Cl(eteria PUtor: Chris Stewart
10:00 am • Noon Sunday; Informal
Worship. Children's minimy

N"' llqloolup Cbjlrdl

Wednesday pray~r tc:rvice • 7 p.m.

·1\tppen Plata Church of Clarlt~
lnstnlmental, Wotth"ip Service • 9 a.m.,
Communion · 10 !l.m., Sunda)l SchOOl •
10:1.5a.m.. Youtb· ~:30 pm Sunday, Dible.
Study Wednesday 7 pm

a.m.

· Other Churches

Flatw-

"'·

3lOS7 State Route 325.' L..angsv!Je. Pastor.
Brian Bailey. SuDChy K:hool • 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 .p.m.,

Zion Cburch of Chrllt
. Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RLI49),
Pa~tor:· Ropr Wat&amp;On, Sun~y School ·
9:30 s.m., Worship -. 10:30 a.m:. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Setvice~ • 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:4S a.m., Wotlhifl • II
a.m.. Wtdnetday Strricts . 7:30 p,m.

Fnm~t

Carldoa lal#!ltoomll!ldoool Cb ....
Kin11bury Road, Pastor: Robtn Vuot,
Sunday School · 9 30 a.m . · Wonhip
. Service 10:30 a.m.. Evening Service 6

CbooWOiodlll( 1M N...._
Pucor: Rev. Curtis Randolph , Sunday
School- 9:30 a.m .. Wootup • IO:lO a.m.,
SuMay eveDillj 6 pm
llutload Cburdl of the~~­
Putor: Oeorae S1adler. Sunday School •
9:30 a.m .• Wonhip .· 10:~0 a.m., 6:30
p.m.•Wcd.neJdaY' Service• ·1 p.m.

A New Bf&amp;llullBI

c -·EploNpol Choreb .
32t! . E. Main S1 .. Pomeroy.
Holy
Eucharist I I :34la.m. Sunday &amp; ~ :30 pm .
W~. Rev. Lealie Fltrnmlna:

· . Panvlllt Hollneu Cburth

. Pomeroy Cbu.rdl oftbe Nuartne
Jlll Lavender, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. and 6
pm .. Wedfltlday Service•· ~p .m .
P~ttor :

Asbury (S)TIItuse), Pa~!Of : Bob RobiD.10n,

a....b .

Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastor. , .Worlkip 10:25

......

J.onaBo.Sunda} School • · 9:30 a.m.• Wmhip ·
!0:30 a.m.
Reecbvllle
Worship - 9:30 a.m., SuDdly School •
lO:JO a.m, Fint Sunday of Month • 7:00
p.m. service
Thppm Plalu Sl. hal
Pattor: Jim Corbin. Sundly SChool. • 9
a.m.. WMhip- 10 a.m .. 1\lelday Scrvket
- 1:30 p.m.·
Ctatral Oulkr

10 a.m .. Wonbip · II am.

hltor· Jlt.... Tom Johnson, Second &amp;

Sihet Rtdae· Putor Um1a Damewood,
Sunday School · 9 11 m , Wollbip Strvice
lOam. :Z.nd and 41h Sunday

a.m., Wonhip · .10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
WedneW.)' Ser\'icn · 7 p,m.

Pu1or: Den~:il Null, Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Worsblp • 10:45 a.m.. 7:30 p.m.,
We4nesday 1:30 p.m.

~

· Ptolc&lt;GIIoll-mbly
PU!Qr: St. Rt. -124. Racine. ThJnado Rd. ·
·Sunday School . 10 a.1 ... , Evening · 7
p.m., . Wcdneflday:Servl~~ · 7 p.m.

· Presbyterian

HarriJOn~llle Pftsb)'teria Churcb.
Pastor: Robert Manhall, Worship- 9:00
a.m. Sunday

Middleport l'r&lt;tbyte....,
Pu1or: James Snyder, Sunday School 10
a.m.• .wo~hip &amp;erwice lllttl.

Seventh-Day Adventist ·
Seveath•D.y !ld,·eildlt
.
Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy. Sa!urday
Serwlees: Sabbath. -Schoql . • l p.m ..
w0rihip-3p.m.

United Brethren .
Mt. Hert11011 UDikd Bretlarta
Ia Cbrllt a.trdl
Tens Community 36411 Wi10kham Rd.
Pu1or. Peter Manindale. Sunday ~hool· .
9:30 un.• Worship • "10:30 •.m .. 7:00
p.m., ' Wednuda~ Services • 7:00· p.m.
Youlh aroup meetina 2nd a; 4-lh Sundays .

7p.m.

Edla VDltod - - bo Cllrt.
. Slate Rou1e 124, bety.oeen Reedsville .t
33045 Hilllld Road. "Polnetoy, Pastor. ioy
. Hwkl~~&amp;port, Sunl1ay School • 10 un.,
Hunter. Sunday Sebool· to a.m.. Evenlq
Sunday Worship· li:OOa.m. Wednesday
7:!0 p.m.. TUesday. nun. -7::Kl p.m .

.

r.n "-1 LIP-

South lltthel C - l y Cburdl

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· Racine, OH

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74()..985-3561
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juneral Jtlome

that they may see
IB'""' works and . glorify

"*•

I

P.O. Box683

your light so shine bef&lt;&gt;re I

~

...•

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 99l.Jl79

~

...a.
.
••

. MEIGS FAMILY EYECAAE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

•

?ed41dfrcth'1 ~

Bopdol Cbun:b

RJVtnlwood, WV, Su.ndly SeboollO am·
, Mornina wonbip 11 am Bveatna • 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 pm.

IJ... v.u.,
IUver Valley Apostolic Worship Center,
873 S. 3rd Ave., Middleport, Rev.
MkhJel Bradford, PUtot, Sunday, 10:30
a.m. tun 6:30 prayer, Wed . 7 pm Bible
SNdy

1·

r

' The Dally Sentl"'l • Pap A7

.

.

WORSIHP GOD THIS WEEK

•

·

r

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, May 15,2009

ENCIF.S h&gt;c.

Financial

Se&lt;vices

Quickel
'
...

be d~ne unto you.
.
John 15:7

INS0RANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main

PHARMACY

We Fill Doctors'

~
Prescriptions
lhe)(Otl&lt;m. sonJ~hn 3; 16
130
Pomeroy
.~~
,..,.,,.roy '@!!" . 992·2955

White Funeral Home "For God so loved the
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep ·
my conscience clear before
Since 1858
world that he gave his one
in hetPt; for: they God and man."
9 Fifth Street
and only Son ..."
shall see God•
Acts 24:
Coolville, Ohio
· • John 3:16
740-667-3110

•.
.....

·~-

.

God so loved the world
he gave his only

Matthew5:8

-.w. "'fiunily kip
p-• !fi'WTfiunilJ"

Suppression • Extinguisflen; • Sprinklers

• S«~ti~

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Fax:

for thee: for mY

strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9
Office Service &amp;Supply
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
.MiddlepOrt, OH

992-6376

�•

Friday, May 15, 2009

Page AS

.

Inside .

The Daily Sentinel

Rockets force Game, 7, Page B:Z

Magic fU~U Game 7' Page 83
shows a
•
ofthe
: bridgllllllkna

Bengals on liDO, Page B4

apar1MCOI~

Friday, May 15, 2009

before it
contact will!
Ohio Rinl:

·Eastern·wins fifth
straight sectional

t

•

.•.
•

their seventh sectional
championship since the tum
of the millemum .
. TUPPERS PLAINS - . It's been an eventful week
For the fifth consecutive forthe Eagles, who had reapostseason, Eastern baseball · son to celebrate after each of
ts headed to the Division IV their three games this week.
district tournament lifter The Eagles claimed the .
PoSting a Convincing 11-1, TVC Hocking title outright
six-inning victory over visit- oil Monday with 'II win ovet
ing Oak 1Hill in a Sectional Trimble, then completed
final mJUchup in · Meigs their league season unbeaten
County. ·
· ·
· Wehnes¢ly by mimhandling
The Eagles (19-5,) never Waterfom to finish 10-0. in
trailed in the contest, jump- conference·.
ing out to a 3-1 advantage
And though Eastern may
after four complete before have been a little emotionalexploding for seven runs in ly-drained coming into the
the bottom of the fifth for a sectional title game, the
Commanding 10-1 cushion. hosts finally found their
Bryan WaHe,...photo
EHS tacked on the final run groove against the eighthin the sixth, allowing the
·
Members of the Eastern baseball team pose for a picture alter.winning the program's filth cons~utive Division .IV sectop-seeded hosts to capture Ple1se ' " EaSteni, 8~
tional champlonsbip during Thursday night's 11-1 victory over Oak Hill at Tuppers Plains.
·
.
, '.
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM

.

.•

.,

"
•

~

••

Salvage mws ~I what's left of the old bridge out of the Ohio Rivet The explosion halted riYtr
trafllc before and during the detonation though the channel reopened shortly lflltwards.

•.

..

.

'

·..

•

Tornadoes win third
straight sectional crown _'·
Bv Scon WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

'·

RACINE - · Some things
never change.
For the third straight year,
the Southern Tornadoes
have claimed a sectional
championship. The third
round for Coach Ryan
Lemley's crew came · as a
result a 7'2 victory over the
Pike · Eastern
Eagles
Thursday night at Star Mill
Park in the boys' varsity
baseball
Sectional
· Championship game. · ·
As a result of the champi.~~~J~;~t~win, Southern earns
"' .
"':iii·~'lh'~ • DiStrict
Tolimament next Thursday
I Anna Jellllll$1,lla
at 5 p.m. at Valley High
Members of the Southern baseball team pose for a picture during this preseason file photo taken in March at Charles W. School · in
Lucasville.
Hayman Gymnasium In Racine. The Tornadoes
their third ()()nsecutfve Division IV sectional title ThurSday night dur- Southern .will play Paint
Ing a 7·2 victory ov~r Pike Eastern.
·
·
Valley. Stiould both teams

wan

20081111*
EnGineCIL

LocAL ScHEDULE

AWO, L.elllh•,
Healed
MBRP:S4&amp;,oa

Be..._

fot.tEAOY - A c&lt; upcamoli """
achool VIJ'IIIy aportlng .-..nil lnYOMng INms
fi'Otn CWII. And Mligl r.tllriUet..

Eddq..llu.J6

.

2001

. CIIIIICSTS
Loadtd, Chrani...

$20,(100 OFF MSRP.

..
'll'ICk ond Field
Melgs, Eastem at1 Nelsonvl,ll&amp;· York
(TVC), 4 p.m. ·
·
·

IIOII'GniiiC

2008hntllc
Tomlnt

IIGT
SUnroof,

Very Nice Cer.

.

2008ChWJ

HHRLT

. Poww Sell, AUoy

FWD, Nlcellohlcle,

Whe'!le,11K MN..,

L~.

VeryNlcel

fli''"
Valley 'I' South Point (OVC), 4:30
p:m.
,
.
Billl&gt;all
r.!arlettll at Gatjta Aca&lt;lemy (SEOAL

DOC continuatiOn). 5 p,m.
· RavenSWOOd It Point Pleasant. 5 p.m.
Buffalo at Waharrta, 5 p.m.

YHri'IIDI $1

......

SOUth Gaftla at Symmet V""oy. 1 p.m.
Athena at Gallla Academy, ! ,p.m.
'll1lck ond Flold
Gallla Academy af LOgan (SEPAL), 10

ChromeWhe..e,

Loeded.

-Sotlboll
· ..., 18 .

SOuthern at Eastern, 1 p.m.

a:m.

.,,. . s,
NIOICer,

'

Lo\VMII"".

Whiteoak 111 Eaatem at flto.Gq~Octe. 6
p.m.
.
Paint Volley liS .Southem .at t.ucuvtlte
Valley, 5 p.m. .

2001 0111 r•l• PT
cruller

AlnXE

30MPO.
W.$13,885

Aulo., Locenrede.
Wee$8.885.

•

GA te,.nis sends ·
three to districts
•

....,
Wll U'tr

Spring le heN, 4114,

LowMIIee.
.W •$14,995

. . $1

~--.
.COIIIII
LMiher,

8uuoclf, Loeded.

Dealership· not responsible for ml•prlnts.
Photo• for Illustration .p urpo•e only.

. CHEVROLET • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC
308 East Main •1·740·992·6614 or 1-800-837-1094 • Pomeroy, OH
·

11-6; S.t.

12-4 •

Senke 11-1.• Closed Sun•y

III.C ,t;;;;..........

STAFF REPORT .
MOSSPOR'rSO M't'OAILVSENTtNEL.COM

PORTSMOUTH . •
Gallia Acade[Jiy tennis had
three players qualify for disOict play this week at the
~009 Division II sectional
tournament in Scioto
County. ·
: The Blue Devils - who
Sent two to disiricts, a~ y.ear
ggo - have repeat performers in senior Quinton Nibert
and junior Jordan Cornwell
in doubles, while senior
~amal D.ayal will be mov·
jpg on for the first time in
~ingles play. .
.
: The trio will resume
action next Friday and
Saturday at Columbus
t.cademy High SchooL
• Josh Jackson (2 wins} and
tim Huffman (I ) failed to
advance in sil\gles competitions, while the duo of
·Mollie Blake and Cody
Billings (2.) also came up
short in doubles competition .
: Jackson, Huffman, Blake
l)lld Billings were all eliminated by seeded (top-four)

Point avenges Red Devils in.tive
Friday !light.
Knights.
.
· Amidst the backdrop of ·
Point Pleasant played' it
Point's catchy .and colorful cool in the third inning,
POINT PLEASANT - musical soundtrack, the holding the visiting oppoRevenge is a dish best Black Knights took to the nent while maintaimng
served in five innings..
field with a. fire in their their five-run lead over
At least that was ·· the eyes that let the Red Devils Ravenswood.
stance that the Black know that they meant bus.iAn(Jther explosion . of
Knights ·iook Thursday ness. That business hnp- runs occurred in the fourth
night as they faced section- pened to be the business of inning in which the Black
al opponent Ravenswood scoring. In that first inning Knights continued to pad
after falling to them 7-S.the the . Black Knights racked their .lead over the Red
Devils
night before. With tlieit
A si~gle run sealed the
second tournament game up five runs and felt the
moving back home, the sting
of · two
·by deal for Point Pleasant in
boys of Point Pleasant Ravenswood who made the bottom of ·the fifth
made sure to let the Red their only two runs of th~ inning, totalling . Point's
Devis .know whos.e turf · game.
. . .
runs to 12, initiating a
they wert on, . In a fiveThe second •nmng was mercy rule that finalized
inning 12-2 contest, the marked by. another patr of. the game at five innings.
Black Knights clinche&lt;l runs.by Pomt Pleasant who
The big win for the Black
victory over Ravenswood, cont~nued to hold .the Red .Knights was a . definite
settjng the stage for a final Devils from makmg any team effort. .
·
match-up between the two kmd of bum to the Blaok
With solid pitching by
Tyson Jones and the offensive movement made by
the rest of the squad, the
arsenal that Point Pleasant
brought . to Thqrsday's
' game was too mvcli for
··
Ravenswood.·
Going down the list .of
Point's contributors: D.W.
.Herdman went 2 for 4 with
an . RBI; . Philip Allen
knock.ed out a single; .Eric
Veith.went I for 3 and hit a
double; Titus Russell went
2 for .3 with a double and
two RBis; Clay Krebs w.ent
2 for 2 with a triple and,
two RBis; Justin Weaver
went I for 4 with two
RBis; B.J. Lloyd had '!hit
and an RBI; and Brock
McClung went 2 for 2 with
three RBis.
With such an extensiVe
team effort the Black
Knights'
third
game
·against
Ravenswood,
Friday at 5:30p.m., should
be a good one.
BY

ANNA JESSMER

·

Moss•oRTSOMYDA~YSIONTINELCoM

POINT PLEASANT 12,

RAVENSWOOD 2

Anna Jenmerlphoto

Point Pleasant starter Tyson Jo,t~es ckllivers a pitch during
Thursday
night's Class AA sectional baseball game against
. No other infonnation was
Ravenswood at Point Fleasant. •
·
tiv~able at presstime.

t'eams.

win, Southern would play ·
Eastern (Meigs) in the first ·
round of the Regional tour- ..
ney.
Southern took a 2-0 lead
after Southern · starter.
Michael Manuel sat down
Beaver Eastern in the top of ,
· the first. Manuel was playing his first game back since ,
suffering an ankle sprain last
Friday. Wrapped and with .
little movement in the::
swollen joint, f'4anueJ persevered to claim the 'big
Southern win.
Southe.rn's
J.D.
Whittington .started .· the
Tomadd'r~IIy:w\th a \e.ad-otl .!
i:louble. DeSigt\tie&lt;l~' 1\itt~i ..
Brad Brown followed with ,
an RBI single, and then pro- ·
ceeded to steal second and ;
•
.
PleiH ... Southeta.l2 .

~

'

R'SwOod

200 00

-

POint

520 41

-

.

244
1Z H! 2

RAVENSWOOD: Luke Cortey, Joel
Miller (3), Eritll Riddle (4); O.W, Mohon. .
POINT PLEASANT: l\Json Jones; B.J.
l.loyd.
WP- Jones: LP '"~· Cortey.

Kant Senbornleubmltted phOto

South Gallia's B.J. Stanley, left, cannot come up with a
catch as a Symmes Valley baserunner &amp;lides into second
base during Thursday night's Division IV sectional baseball
final in Aid.
· .
.
.

Vikings end Rebels' season
STAFF REPORT
WOSSPORTSOMVOA.ILVSENTINEL.COM

AID - South_Gailja baseball's best season in school
history came to quick halt
Thursday night against host
Symmes Valley during an
11-1, five-inning setback in
a Division IV sectional final
contest in Lawrence County.
The
seventh-seeded
Rebels (9-7) ~ just three
days after winning their
first-ever home.· playoff
game - appeared to be
headed in another positive
direction against the secondseeded Vikings after posting
a .I..Q lead a half-inning in,
but SVHS countered with II
consecutive runs through
four frames to wrap up the
mercy-rule decision.
The Vikings produced
only one more hit (8) than
the guests, but five of those
eight safeties left the yard.
Symmes Valley also had
five different players hit

a

each · of those .home runs,
with three of those cqmitig
in the fourth inning. The
Rebels also committed the
only four ettors in th'e contest.
SGHS took its only lead in
the first as Zach Haislop led
the way with•a single, then
stole both second and third
to get into scoring position.
Cory Haner delivered a
bloop single, allowing
Haislop to SC()re for a 1-0
advantage.
That leiid, however, would
be short-lived as Tyler
Easthom and Robbie Powell'
reached on errors. Both later ·
scored on a Cody Bland single to make it a 2-1 game.
Jeremy Hatfield followed
with a two-run ·homer, making .it a 4-1 contest.
The score stayed that way
until the third, when an error
and a walk allowed Luke
Taylor and Ethan. Wilson to

Pl....... Rebels, 12

�•

Friday, May 15, 2009

Page AS

.

Inside .

The Daily Sentinel

Rockets force Game, 7, Page B:Z

Magic fU~U Game 7' Page 83
shows a
•
ofthe
: bridgllllllkna

Bengals on liDO, Page B4

apar1MCOI~

Friday, May 15, 2009

before it
contact will!
Ohio Rinl:

·Eastern·wins fifth
straight sectional

t

•

.•.
•

their seventh sectional
championship since the tum
of the millemum .
. TUPPERS PLAINS - . It's been an eventful week
For the fifth consecutive forthe Eagles, who had reapostseason, Eastern baseball · son to celebrate after each of
ts headed to the Division IV their three games this week.
district tournament lifter The Eagles claimed the .
PoSting a Convincing 11-1, TVC Hocking title outright
six-inning victory over visit- oil Monday with 'II win ovet
ing Oak 1Hill in a Sectional Trimble, then completed
final mJUchup in · Meigs their league season unbeaten
County. ·
· ·
· Wehnes¢ly by mimhandling
The Eagles (19-5,) never Waterfom to finish 10-0. in
trailed in the contest, jump- conference·.
ing out to a 3-1 advantage
And though Eastern may
after four complete before have been a little emotionalexploding for seven runs in ly-drained coming into the
the bottom of the fifth for a sectional title game, the
Commanding 10-1 cushion. hosts finally found their
Bryan WaHe,...photo
EHS tacked on the final run groove against the eighthin the sixth, allowing the
·
Members of the Eastern baseball team pose for a picture alter.winning the program's filth cons~utive Division .IV sectop-seeded hosts to capture Ple1se ' " EaSteni, 8~
tional champlonsbip during Thursday night's 11-1 victory over Oak Hill at Tuppers Plains.
·
.
, '.
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM

.

.•

.,

"
•

~

••

Salvage mws ~I what's left of the old bridge out of the Ohio Rivet The explosion halted riYtr
trafllc before and during the detonation though the channel reopened shortly lflltwards.

•.

..

.

'

·..

•

Tornadoes win third
straight sectional crown _'·
Bv Scon WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

'·

RACINE - · Some things
never change.
For the third straight year,
the Southern Tornadoes
have claimed a sectional
championship. The third
round for Coach Ryan
Lemley's crew came · as a
result a 7'2 victory over the
Pike · Eastern
Eagles
Thursday night at Star Mill
Park in the boys' varsity
baseball
Sectional
· Championship game. · ·
As a result of the champi.~~~J~;~t~win, Southern earns
"' .
"':iii·~'lh'~ • DiStrict
Tolimament next Thursday
I Anna Jellllll$1,lla
at 5 p.m. at Valley High
Members of the Southern baseball team pose for a picture during this preseason file photo taken in March at Charles W. School · in
Lucasville.
Hayman Gymnasium In Racine. The Tornadoes
their third ()()nsecutfve Division IV sectional title ThurSday night dur- Southern .will play Paint
Ing a 7·2 victory ov~r Pike Eastern.
·
·
Valley. Stiould both teams

wan

20081111*
EnGineCIL

LocAL ScHEDULE

AWO, L.elllh•,
Healed
MBRP:S4&amp;,oa

Be..._

fot.tEAOY - A c&lt; upcamoli """
achool VIJ'IIIy aportlng .-..nil lnYOMng INms
fi'Otn CWII. And Mligl r.tllriUet..

Eddq..llu.J6

.

2001

. CIIIIICSTS
Loadtd, Chrani...

$20,(100 OFF MSRP.

..
'll'ICk ond Field
Melgs, Eastem at1 Nelsonvl,ll&amp;· York
(TVC), 4 p.m. ·
·
·

IIOII'GniiiC

2008hntllc
Tomlnt

IIGT
SUnroof,

Very Nice Cer.

.

2008ChWJ

HHRLT

. Poww Sell, AUoy

FWD, Nlcellohlcle,

Whe'!le,11K MN..,

L~.

VeryNlcel

fli''"
Valley 'I' South Point (OVC), 4:30
p:m.
,
.
Billl&gt;all
r.!arlettll at Gatjta Aca&lt;lemy (SEOAL

DOC continuatiOn). 5 p,m.
· RavenSWOOd It Point Pleasant. 5 p.m.
Buffalo at Waharrta, 5 p.m.

YHri'IIDI $1

......

SOUth Gaftla at Symmet V""oy. 1 p.m.
Athena at Gallla Academy, ! ,p.m.
'll1lck ond Flold
Gallla Academy af LOgan (SEPAL), 10

ChromeWhe..e,

Loeded.

-Sotlboll
· ..., 18 .

SOuthern at Eastern, 1 p.m.

a:m.

.,,. . s,
NIOICer,

'

Lo\VMII"".

Whiteoak 111 Eaatem at flto.Gq~Octe. 6
p.m.
.
Paint Volley liS .Southem .at t.ucuvtlte
Valley, 5 p.m. .

2001 0111 r•l• PT
cruller

AlnXE

30MPO.
W.$13,885

Aulo., Locenrede.
Wee$8.885.

•

GA te,.nis sends ·
three to districts
•

....,
Wll U'tr

Spring le heN, 4114,

LowMIIee.
.W •$14,995

. . $1

~--.
.COIIIII
LMiher,

8uuoclf, Loeded.

Dealership· not responsible for ml•prlnts.
Photo• for Illustration .p urpo•e only.

. CHEVROLET • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC
308 East Main •1·740·992·6614 or 1-800-837-1094 • Pomeroy, OH
·

11-6; S.t.

12-4 •

Senke 11-1.• Closed Sun•y

III.C ,t;;;;..........

STAFF REPORT .
MOSSPOR'rSO M't'OAILVSENTtNEL.COM

PORTSMOUTH . •
Gallia Acade[Jiy tennis had
three players qualify for disOict play this week at the
~009 Division II sectional
tournament in Scioto
County. ·
: The Blue Devils - who
Sent two to disiricts, a~ y.ear
ggo - have repeat performers in senior Quinton Nibert
and junior Jordan Cornwell
in doubles, while senior
~amal D.ayal will be mov·
jpg on for the first time in
~ingles play. .
.
: The trio will resume
action next Friday and
Saturday at Columbus
t.cademy High SchooL
• Josh Jackson (2 wins} and
tim Huffman (I ) failed to
advance in sil\gles competitions, while the duo of
·Mollie Blake and Cody
Billings (2.) also came up
short in doubles competition .
: Jackson, Huffman, Blake
l)lld Billings were all eliminated by seeded (top-four)

Point avenges Red Devils in.tive
Friday !light.
Knights.
.
· Amidst the backdrop of ·
Point Pleasant played' it
Point's catchy .and colorful cool in the third inning,
POINT PLEASANT - musical soundtrack, the holding the visiting oppoRevenge is a dish best Black Knights took to the nent while maintaimng
served in five innings..
field with a. fire in their their five-run lead over
At least that was ·· the eyes that let the Red Devils Ravenswood.
stance that the Black know that they meant bus.iAn(Jther explosion . of
Knights ·iook Thursday ness. That business hnp- runs occurred in the fourth
night as they faced section- pened to be the business of inning in which the Black
al opponent Ravenswood scoring. In that first inning Knights continued to pad
after falling to them 7-S.the the . Black Knights racked their .lead over the Red
Devils
night before. With tlieit
A si~gle run sealed the
second tournament game up five runs and felt the
moving back home, the sting
of · two
·by deal for Point Pleasant in
boys of Point Pleasant Ravenswood who made the bottom of ·the fifth
made sure to let the Red their only two runs of th~ inning, totalling . Point's
Devis .know whos.e turf · game.
. . .
runs to 12, initiating a
they wert on, . In a fiveThe second •nmng was mercy rule that finalized
inning 12-2 contest, the marked by. another patr of. the game at five innings.
Black Knights clinche&lt;l runs.by Pomt Pleasant who
The big win for the Black
victory over Ravenswood, cont~nued to hold .the Red .Knights was a . definite
settjng the stage for a final Devils from makmg any team effort. .
·
match-up between the two kmd of bum to the Blaok
With solid pitching by
Tyson Jones and the offensive movement made by
the rest of the squad, the
arsenal that Point Pleasant
brought . to Thqrsday's
' game was too mvcli for
··
Ravenswood.·
Going down the list .of
Point's contributors: D.W.
.Herdman went 2 for 4 with
an . RBI; . Philip Allen
knock.ed out a single; .Eric
Veith.went I for 3 and hit a
double; Titus Russell went
2 for .3 with a double and
two RBis; Clay Krebs w.ent
2 for 2 with a triple and,
two RBis; Justin Weaver
went I for 4 with two
RBis; B.J. Lloyd had '!hit
and an RBI; and Brock
McClung went 2 for 2 with
three RBis.
With such an extensiVe
team effort the Black
Knights'
third
game
·against
Ravenswood,
Friday at 5:30p.m., should
be a good one.
BY

ANNA JESSMER

·

Moss•oRTSOMYDA~YSIONTINELCoM

POINT PLEASANT 12,

RAVENSWOOD 2

Anna Jenmerlphoto

Point Pleasant starter Tyson Jo,t~es ckllivers a pitch during
Thursday
night's Class AA sectional baseball game against
. No other infonnation was
Ravenswood at Point Fleasant. •
·
tiv~able at presstime.

t'eams.

win, Southern would play ·
Eastern (Meigs) in the first ·
round of the Regional tour- ..
ney.
Southern took a 2-0 lead
after Southern · starter.
Michael Manuel sat down
Beaver Eastern in the top of ,
· the first. Manuel was playing his first game back since ,
suffering an ankle sprain last
Friday. Wrapped and with .
little movement in the::
swollen joint, f'4anueJ persevered to claim the 'big
Southern win.
Southe.rn's
J.D.
Whittington .started .· the
Tomadd'r~IIy:w\th a \e.ad-otl .!
i:louble. DeSigt\tie&lt;l~' 1\itt~i ..
Brad Brown followed with ,
an RBI single, and then pro- ·
ceeded to steal second and ;
•
.
PleiH ... Southeta.l2 .

~

'

R'SwOod

200 00

-

POint

520 41

-

.

244
1Z H! 2

RAVENSWOOD: Luke Cortey, Joel
Miller (3), Eritll Riddle (4); O.W, Mohon. .
POINT PLEASANT: l\Json Jones; B.J.
l.loyd.
WP- Jones: LP '"~· Cortey.

Kant Senbornleubmltted phOto

South Gallia's B.J. Stanley, left, cannot come up with a
catch as a Symmes Valley baserunner &amp;lides into second
base during Thursday night's Division IV sectional baseball
final in Aid.
· .
.
.

Vikings end Rebels' season
STAFF REPORT
WOSSPORTSOMVOA.ILVSENTINEL.COM

AID - South_Gailja baseball's best season in school
history came to quick halt
Thursday night against host
Symmes Valley during an
11-1, five-inning setback in
a Division IV sectional final
contest in Lawrence County.
The
seventh-seeded
Rebels (9-7) ~ just three
days after winning their
first-ever home.· playoff
game - appeared to be
headed in another positive
direction against the secondseeded Vikings after posting
a .I..Q lead a half-inning in,
but SVHS countered with II
consecutive runs through
four frames to wrap up the
mercy-rule decision.
The Vikings produced
only one more hit (8) than
the guests, but five of those
eight safeties left the yard.
Symmes Valley also had
five different players hit

a

each · of those .home runs,
with three of those cqmitig
in the fourth inning. The
Rebels also committed the
only four ettors in th'e contest.
SGHS took its only lead in
the first as Zach Haislop led
the way with•a single, then
stole both second and third
to get into scoring position.
Cory Haner delivered a
bloop single, allowing
Haislop to SC()re for a 1-0
advantage.
That leiid, however, would
be short-lived as Tyler
Easthom and Robbie Powell'
reached on errors. Both later ·
scored on a Cody Bland single to make it a 2-1 game.
Jeremy Hatfield followed
with a two-run ·homer, making .it a 4-1 contest.
The score stayed that way
until the third, when an error
and a walk allowed Luke
Taylor and Ethan. Wilson to

Pl....... Rebels, 12

�Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

I

Rockets force Game 7 with 95-80 win over Lakers
HOL'STON (APJ - The
Houston Rockets came up
"ith one ~ore stunning viclory to set up a final showJ,m n with the Los Angeles
Aaron Brooks scored 26
pmnl&gt;. Luis Scola added 24
poincs and 12 rebounds, and
che scrappy. undermanned
Rockers pushed the to{',eeded Lakers to the brink m
cheir Western Conference
'emifinal series with a 95-80
win in Game 6 on Thursday
nighc.
·
Re;,erve Carl Landry
scored 15 as the Rockets
buill another huge lead in
che firs! half, then fought off
a Laker&gt; rally to force Game
7 on Sunday at the Staples
Cenler.
·
• Kobe Bryant scored 32
and Pau Gasol added 14 for
.Los Angeles, which lost for
only the third time in the last ·
18 games when it has a
chaQce to close out a series.
The Lakers have one more .
·
AP photo
opportunity to finish , off Houston Rockets forward Ron Artest (96) celebrates after the Rockets beat the Los
Houston, but they probably Angeles Lakers 9Q-85 in Game 6 of their NBA Western conference playoff basketball
didn't expect to need it, series.in Houston on Thursday.
.
·
three games after Yao Ming his head as he stormed off make some shots. We only five in Game 5.
exited the series with a bro- the court. The Rockel~ led toughed it out in the fourth
Von Wafer, averaging only
ken left foot.
52-36 at the break - one quarter," Brooks said.
6.6 points in the series; sank
"We still have no chance," basket shy of the halftime . The Lal&amp;rs outrebounded a 3 with 5:51 left in the half
Brooks said with a huge score in Game 4.
Houston 45 -39. but the to puc Houston ahead 42-25
smile. "We' ll keep playing,
On Sunday, Houston Rockers scored 40 points in and force Lakers coach Phil
though."
stretched its lead to 29 and the paint and held Los Jackson to use a timeout.
The winner will play the cruised to a 99-87 win . this Angeles to 36 percent shootBut Houston stayed in
Denver Nuggets, who fin· time, the Lakers made a ing (30-for-84) . The Lakers control and Bryant's frustraished off Dallas on game of it, opening the sec- went only 5-for-23 from 3- tion boiled over near the 2·
Wednesday night and now ond half with a 16-2 spurt. point range.
minute mark.
have a few extra days to rest.
But Landry converted a Houston opened the game
With Artest · blanketing
Ron Artest pumped his fist three-point play to break the with a 17-I burst, electrify- him near midcourt , Bryant
and Scola embraced Brooks · Lakers' momentum and ing another ·red-clad capaci- appeared to shove Artest and
near midcourt as the final Brooks. sank a 3-pointer to ty crowd at the Toyota earned a technical foul. The
.
·
buzzer sounded and the help . Houston rebuild its Center.
temperamental Artest, ejectLakers walked off the court lead.
Bryant made the Lakers' ed from Games 2 and 3. ran
with their heads down.
The Rockets hit their last first field goal near tbe 6- away to avoid a confrontaLos Angeles won Game 5 eight shots in the third quar- minute ·mark, but Scola put tion and Brooks sank the
by 40 points, matching ter and took a 75·65 lead to fn another short jumper to free throw for a 47-31
Houston's worst playoff the fourth. Landry drove make it 19-3 ...;. one point Houston lead.
loss.
down the lane for a one- better than Houston's open- . Notes: The Rockets have .
The Rockets came out handed dunk with 6:56 ieft ing run in Game 4.
. won 11 of theit last 12 home
dominant instead of demor- to put Houston up 81-71 and . Attest got a nice pass from games .... The learn winning
alized on Thursday night. Bryant checked in after a Chuck Hayes· and muscled after the first quarter bas
. They put cogether a near car- long rest.
inside for a layup to make it won all 12 of Houston's
bon copy of the first half of
But Bryant missed four of 21-3. The Lakers missed 14 postseason games. .. . Artest
Game 4, when they seemed his next six shots and of 20 shots in the quarter and missed Thursday morning's
to hit every open shot, Brooks scored eight points trailed 27-15.
·
·
shootaround with ao illness,
smothered the Lakers on over the next five minutes to
Shane Battier and Artest but Houston coach Rick
defense and built an 18- secure anothet surprise over sank 3-pointers early in the Adelman said an hour b¢fore
point halftime lead.
the Western Conference 's second quarter, another gOOd the game that ATtest fett fine.
Bryant missed a halfcourt top seed.
sign . for Houston ; The ... The Lakers are 30-4 all·
' shot at the halftime buzzer in
"We got active again ·Rockets ·made 10 3-pointers time in seven-game series
this one and angrily shook against Kobe. He's going to in their Game 4 victory, but when they have a 3-2 lead.

Board advocates dumping UND nickname, logo
DICKINSON, N.D. (AP) for at least 30 years .
'- Noith Dakota's Board
However, tribal officials
of Higher Education has say that possibility · is
agreed to · drop the remote . Unless the · name
University
of
North and logo receive tri·bal
Dakota's Fightin~ Sioux endor.sement, they will be
nrckname and lndtan h~ad retired for good on Aug. J,
logo, a move intended to 2010.
·
resolve · a decades-long
The board, which met
campus dispute about Thursday . at . Dickinson
whether the name demeans
State University, voted 8-0
American Indians.
The name and logo, to retire the logo and nickwhich is a profile of an name . UNO President
American Indian man with Robert Kelley began mak"feathers and streaks of ing plans for replacements.
paint on his face, could still
"This has been a longbe saved if North Dakota's standing tradition at UNO ,
Standing Rock and Spirit and !think the board action
Lake Si.oux tribes agree by . now instructs the universiOct. I to give the universi- ty to develop pew tradity permission to use them tions ," he said . ·

fromPageBl

•

,

third. Jordan Taylor then
ripped an RBI single before
a pop-up and a 'run-down
off Dustin Salseris single
ended the inning.
In the second Southern
pick~;d right up where it
left off. With one out,
Taylor Deem singied and
stole second. After another
put-out Brad Brown gained
his second of three hits, an
RBI double to put
Southern up by another
marker on the board. 3-0.
Southern added another
run in the third . Chris
Holter walked and stole
second, then scored on a
Dustin . Sal ser si ngle .
Eascern pitching struggled
co keep the hard-hitting
Tornadoes at bay. ·
The Tornado offense
concinued its gradual
ex plosion adding three
more runs in the fourth.
Deem pounded his second
&gt;ing le, slole second, and
advanced on a Whittington
&gt;ingle. An error aliowed
Deem to score and
Whitti ngton to advance to
'econd. Brown singled and
stole second as yet another
error scored Whiuington
and advanced Brown to
chird . A single by Jof~Jon .

Friday, May tS, 2009

.

Sgorts Shorts

Taylor ~nd another ensuing
error pushed Brown across
the plate for a 7-0 SHS
lead.
Manuel cruised through
the first four innings. but in
the fiftl\ the Eagles migrat. ed around the base paths
for their first run. Devin
Swiggett singled imd
advanced on an error, Nate
Deweese singled and a 6-3
ground out by Adam
Conley scored the Eaglesf
first run , the score 7- 1.
Manuel struck out the last
batter of the inning with a .
strong finish .
•
An inning later, Eagle .
Caleb Watkins walked,
advanced on an error and
scored on an overthrow
following a Tim Cox sin·
gle , "the score 7-2 .
Southern managed to get
through the seventh without incident and the hoses
s ur~ed on to claim the
exctting 7-2 win.
.
Manuel picked up .lhe
complete game win with
six strikeouts and six
walks. Eastern pitching
(Qevin Swiggett and Bryan
Osborne) combined fo r·
five strikeouts and had five
walks . Eastern committed
seven errors. Southern had
four errors.
Southern hitters were
Brad Brown with a double
and two singles. Dusti n
Salser with three singles,
Taylor Deem two singles.

KALiDA (AP) - The winningest high school boys basketball coach in Ohio has been kept on by a 54'hool board
that had hinted it wanted him to retire .
Wednesday night's decision means 75-year-old Dick
Kortokrax will have at least one more year at Kalida (kuhLY' -duh) High School in northwest Ohio.
Two years ago, he was diagnosed with bladder cancer
and agreed to leave after the 2008-00 season. But his health
improved and. his team made it to the siate title game this
year, so Kortokrax asked to stay. However, the school
board chose to interview other candidates.
·
In the end, school officials opted to give KortOkrax a
new, one-year contract, not the three years he had asked for.
He has won 785 game~ during his 49-year career.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - Greg Paulus is returning
home to Syracuse to play football .
,
The former Duke point guard says he's enrolling in grad~
uate school at Syracuse and will .try to makeacomebackiJ! .
football for the Orange:
.
The decision.announced Thursday ends a month of spec;
ulation whether,the one-time star high school quanerbac~
from Syracuse would resume his football career.
He worked out for !he Green Bay Packers in April.
acknowledged meeting with · Michigan coach Riel!
Rodriguez about playing for the Wol.verines, and also visit~
ed Nebraska.
The three-year starting guard graduated from Duke earli~
er this month. He has one·season of eligibility remaining
and oan play immediately if he receives a waiver from the
NCAA.
.
.

.Glenville St. hires women's coach ·
•

GLENVILLE, W.Va. (AP) - Glenville State has hired
Bunky Harkleroad as its new women's basketball coach. ~
Harkleroad's hiring was announced Thursday. He com- •
piled a 168-93 record in nine seasons as head coach al
B~rea College in Kentucky, i1_1cluding five straight se.ason~
with 20 or more wins. ·
· ·
· ·
Harkleroad replaces Dennis Fitzpatrick, who resigned
last month after compiling a 27-31 record in two seasons, .
worked two inni~gs of relief
and allowed seven runs ;
Both hurlers are the lone
.seniors on the squad.
'
Bland .and Ethan Wilson
led the hosts with two hit&amp;
apiece. Powell was the
winning pitcher of record 1
allo'Ning only one wall&lt;i
over five innings while
striking out six.
SYMMES VALLEY 11 ,
SOUTH GALLIA 1
SGa!lla
S.Val!ey

100 00

-

I 74

403 ·.4x

-

11 8 o

SOUTH GALLIA (!H): Zach Halsiop,
B.J. Stanley and Corv Haner.
SYMMES VALLEY (n/o): Aobbl~
Powell and Cody Bland.
·

WP - Powell: LP - Halstop.
HR: SV- Robbie Powell, COdy Blond:
Jeremy Halflelcl, Ethan Wilson, DuStin
Wilson.

District Tournament next
Thursday at 5 p.!p.

SOuthern

000 011 o '· 2t1 300 x -

257
712 4

WP - -Michael Manual; LP- Devin
SwiggoH.

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

agalnst ·~·-·:1111
Oak Hill at

••.

Tuppers
Plains.

l ""'' l!.'»

Kyle
Connery

-

Bry11n

l pholo

in the second as Ben · Roof, · Trevor Walls ,
Buckley started a two-out Garnett Fulk , Dylan .Lewis
rally by being hit by a and Griffin Hale each had a
pitch , with Jacob Parker hit for the Oaks in the losfromPageBl
coming in as his pinch-run- ing cause.
d d 0
3 9 and ner. Christian Amsbary folPierce was . the winning
)
·see
e
ak.s
(
-l
lowed
with
a
double,
then
pitcher
of record, allowing
never looked back.
.
Tyler
Hendrix
was
hit
by
a
five
hits
and four walks
Ninth-year coach Brian
Bowen _ who ricked up pitch to load the bases with over six innings while fanhis sixth sectiona crown as two out.
ning" nine. Walls took the
EHS skipper ~ was conBra.nnon followed with a loss for Oak Hill , surrencernoo that his troops may single that allowed both dering JO runs , eight hits
be a little flat because of all Parker and. Amsbary to and three walks over 4.2
of the emotions that went cross the plate for a 3-0 innings .of work while
into this week, not to men- cushion after two com- striking out two. Fulk
.
.
worked two-thirds of an
tion that the Eagles are plete.
~iming for much more than
The score remained that · inning of relief, surrender· al ·
way until the top of the ing three pits. a walk and a.
Just a sectton . Itt 1e.
. fourth, when the · Oaks rnn.while striking out zero.
Besides Whiteoak. the
But • as he put it; these made their lone . offensive
guys know what time of
·
year it is and they all want charge of the night. With other teams that will be in
to be part of a third consec- one away, Andy Roof sin- the district tournament
utive trip to the regionals. gled and advanced ro sec- bracket are second-seeded
And
they
responded ond after a walk to Joey Paint Valley and third~ccordingly. .
Maynard one batter later.
seeded Southern. The
"Sectional games are
Eastern recorded another Eastern-Whiteoak
and
always a little tough for us out for two away, but a P;~int Valley-Southern winfor some reason. We've .. w(ld Pi.tcb allowed Roof to ners will.play in the district
had a lot of success in sec- score and make it a 3-1 final on Saturday, May 23,
tionals and 1 honestly contest. The guests never at Lucasville Valley High
believe·that we just get up came closer the rest of the School at 1 p.m.
·
. for the district tournament . way.
.
Both the Eagles and SH:S
a lot more than these, so we
The Eagles countered in are two-time reigning dis~
had to make sure to stay a big way an inning and a trict champions who will
focused and play our best half later, sending II hit- be playing in this. same disgame tonight," . Bowen ters to the plate in the bot- trier draw, so nothing will
tommented. "Oak Hill did tom of the fifth - which be easy about getting back
a really good job tonight, yielded seven runs on three to regionals . Bowen, howespecially . e~rly on, of hits, two walk~ and all ever, plans on doing a lot of
majdng some plays to keep three Oak Hill errors. After ·wor)l; before next week to
things interesting, but I the outburst, the hosts were get . this team ready . for
really liked the way we firmly in control with a 10- another title run .
responded as the night pro- I edge.
.
"I think we 're headed in
· gressed. I'm really excited
EHS concluded things in the right direclion, but I'm
to see the kids play the way its half of the sixth, as really glad that we have a
!hey did tonight."
·
back-to-back leadoff sin- wee!.&lt; to practice to get
Eastern, which played gles. from Zach Hendnx ready for districts ," Bowen
error-free and produced II . and Andrew ~enedum ga~e said. "There are some
hits in the tnumph will the hosts a patr of potential things that we definitely
. take on fourth-s~eded scoring threats. OHHS need to work on to get betWhiteoak in the district recorded an out, bUI a walk ter."
semis on Thursday at the . to Buckley in the next atEastern won sectional
University of Rio Grande bat loaded .the bases.
. .. title this decade in 2000 ,
at 5 p.m. Whiieoak defeat- · Amsbary _camh.e up W!th · 2002; 2005, 2006.. 2007:,
ed fifth-seeded Green by a the game-c 1me mg he~mcs 2008 and now 2009 . .
6-l count Thursday in o_ne batter later, knockmg a Eastern has also won disanother, sectional final.
· smgle to ·nght-center and tricts titles over that span in
The hosts wasted little allowing Hendrix to score 2002. 2005, 2007 and
iime getting on the score- f?r the mercy-rule conclu- 2008. All four of chose
board, plating a.run in their sum.
regional berths are under
first at-bat. Nick Brannon
Benedum led the hosts Bowen:
was issued a one-out walk, with three hits, futlowed by
then Brannon stole both Amsbary, Brannon and
EASTERN 11, OAK HILL 1
·second and third to get into Titu~ Pie_rce w\th two
scoring position. Derek safettes apt~e. Gnffin and ~:,:~ ~~ ~W
:,5 1~ 0
Griffin followed with a Zach Hendnx also had a hit
~acrifice fly to center, apiece in the ··tiiumph . ·. OAKHiLL ·{3·19)• Trevorwan~.Garret1 .
~
Fuik {5) and Andy Roof.
~llowing Brannon. to score Brannon and · Benedum
EASTERN (19·5): Titus Pierce and
{or a 1-0 advantage.
both led the offense with . Derek Gtiffin.
~Eastern added to its lead three RBls.
· WP-Pierce; LP - Weils.

Eastern

APphoto

Magic top Celtics 83-75,
force Game 7 in ·Boston
ORLANDO, Aa. (AP) - with 19 points; 16 rebounds
Dwight Howard demanded and six ·assists, and Paul
the ball, and delivered when Pierce scored J7 for the
the Orlando Magic gave it to Celtics, who led by 10
him.
·
points in the second half
Now he needs to back it before falling apart . Game 7
up, one inore time.
is Sunday in Boston.
Howard had 23 points and
The Celtics alsb failed to
22 rebounds after challeng- close out the Chicago Bulls
ing Stan Van Gundy's in Game 6 of their firstcoaching strategy, and the round series, a triple-overMagic beat the Boston time epic. Boston will now
Celtics 83-75 on Thursday go the distance in its ftrst
night to force a · decisive two series for the second
Game 7.
straight year.
"I just tried to be me," The two . days off before
Howard .said. "I just have to Game 7 should give an
go out there and play and not older, worn out Boston team
worry about nothing."
a cbance to rest its tired legs.
And what did he learn It's still not enough for
from his comments?
Rivers.
.
"Biggest lesson?" Howard "I would take a week off
said. "Keep my mouth and do it like the Super
shut." . ·
Bowl," Rivers joked. "That
Rashard Lewis ha:d 20 · would be .terrific. But that's
points, and Hedo Turkoglu not going to happen."
made a 3-pointer to high- Boston had chances . .
light an 11-2 run to close the
The Celtics held the
game for the Magic, who · Magic scoreless for more
haven't made it to the con- than five minutes to swt the
ference finals since ·1996. third quarter, building a 10But it was Howard who the point lead on a jumper by
Magic leaned on after he Glen "Big Baby" Davis. But
called out Van Gundy for not Howard led the Magic ba~k.
'getting the ball enough in . with a backspin alley-pop
Game 5.
·
from Turkoglu that high" 1 guess Dwight Howard lighted a spurt to end the
was right," Celtics coach third quarter. Orlando took
Doc Rivers s~id. "My gosh. its first lead with 8:38
He was unbelievable.''
remaining 'in the fourth.
Rajon Rondo finished
Pierce ·hit three straight

jumpers to give Boston a 73c
72 lead with about four min"
utes to play. but the Celtics
were done in by their 3-f()rc
18 shooting from 3-point
range and 19 turnovers. Ray
Allen missed all seven
attempts from behind the

arc.

.

"The offense definitely
struggled," Pierce said. "Btit
we still played enough
defense to win.the game . Wc;
turned the ball over too
.much."
Howard blamed Van
Gundy for not getting the
ball.more afcer the Magic'~
Game 5 collapse, when they
blew a 14-point lead in the
fourth quarter.
·
"You ve got a dominant
player, lel him be domi·
nant," Howard said.
He came out trying to ·
back up his strong words.
Howard scored the first
eight points of the game for
the Magic, including a pair
of dunks that pumped some
life into the home croWd. He
finished 9-for-1.6 shooting.
.. The Celtics were again the
scrappier team for most of
the night. diving for loose
balls and outmuscling the
Magic for rebounds. Pierce's
layup capped a 13-2 run that
pushed Boston's lead to 31·
22 early in lhe second quarter.

Claulfleda
~

lf Plac."' ~n online

PlaGe .. newspaper ad

;

SOUTHERN 7, PIKE EASTERN 2

Beaver

· scoring In
the fifth
. inning of
Thursday
.night's 0-4
, sectional
final

=

J.O. Whittington a double Lucasville Valley in the

and single, and Jordon
.
Taylor two singles:
Devin Swiggett had two
singles for Eastern, Nate
Deweese a single, Bryan
Osborne a single, and Tim
Cox a single.
Southern
plays
at

: (24) alter

Is also
piciured.

Paulus to try QB at Syracuse

Board member Grant said the issue would be left · reach safely, then Dustin
Shaft, who is chairman of a to.the campus, and jokingly Wilson uncorked a threecommittee that has been suggested "Moose". as a run blast for a 7-1 edge.
studying the issue; said the new nickname. Kelley said . Powell and Bland hit
move may help UND's a transition team will be back-to-back homers to lead
likely application to join appointed to oversee the off the fourth, and Ethan
the Summit League, an II· process.
·
Wilson cranked a two-run
member NCAA Divi~ion I "What this permits the blast to wrap up the 10.-run
conference that is seeking a University of North Dakota . outcome.
Haner and Heath White
12th school.
to do is to start·a marketing
Tom Douple, the Summit initiative," Kelley said. led South Gallia with two
.League's .commissioner, ."Over time , ·1 think we hits each, followed by
has said the University of would see enhancement of Halslop. BJ. Stanley and
North Dakota won't be our revenue structure for Brandon Harrison with one .
considered for membership athletic programs. I think safety apiece. Haislop startas long ·as the nickname we would see the enhance- ed and lasted two innings,
and logo dispute festered. ment of fan interest."
aiiQwing four runs in the
The education board's · UND sports teams have losing decison. Stanley
action does nol suggest any been known as the Fighting
blueprint for UND to fol- Sioux since J930 , when the
replaced
low in choosing a new moniker
nickname and logo. Smith Flickertails.
·

Boston
Celtics
guard Paul
Pierce (34)
and Ortando
Magic center Dwight
Howard (12)
battle for
rebound as
M&lt;tgic forward
Rashard
Lewis (9)
and Celtics
center
Kendrick
Perkins (43)'
assist dur- ·
ing the first
half of .a
second·
round NBA
playoff bas· ·
· ketball
game·in
Ortando,
Fla., on
Thur5Qay.

(7)

CINCINNATI (AP) - Former President Bill Clinton
will be the keynote SJ!':aker at an MLB awards luncheon
before this year's Civd Rights Game.
·
·
Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig cited Clinton's record
of promoting civil rights in an announcement Thursday for ·
the June 20 Beacon Awards event.
.
· Muhammad Ali, Bill Cosby and Henry Aaron have been
chosen by Major League Baseball for this year's awards,
part of a tribute to those who have fought for civil rights.
This will be the first time the game is played as part of
the regular season. The Cincinnati Reds will host the
Chicago White Sox.
The ¥arne originated in Memphis. Tenn ., in 2007 as aJi
exhibition.
·
·

fromPageBl

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Zach
Hendrix

Clinton to keynote MLB luncheon

Rebels

I
I

Eastern's
Trtus
Pierce,
right, congratulates

Kortokrax gets another year

Lak~n..

Southern

Friday, M~y 15,2009

For Info Call; DaveOoelfar at

74(1.992..0028

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· InJun~
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Pomeroy Dally Sentine~
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I

Rockets force Game 7 with 95-80 win over Lakers
HOL'STON (APJ - The
Houston Rockets came up
"ith one ~ore stunning viclory to set up a final showJ,m n with the Los Angeles
Aaron Brooks scored 26
pmnl&gt;. Luis Scola added 24
poincs and 12 rebounds, and
che scrappy. undermanned
Rockers pushed the to{',eeded Lakers to the brink m
cheir Western Conference
'emifinal series with a 95-80
win in Game 6 on Thursday
nighc.
·
Re;,erve Carl Landry
scored 15 as the Rockets
buill another huge lead in
che firs! half, then fought off
a Laker&gt; rally to force Game
7 on Sunday at the Staples
Cenler.
·
• Kobe Bryant scored 32
and Pau Gasol added 14 for
.Los Angeles, which lost for
only the third time in the last ·
18 games when it has a
chaQce to close out a series.
The Lakers have one more .
·
AP photo
opportunity to finish , off Houston Rockets forward Ron Artest (96) celebrates after the Rockets beat the Los
Houston, but they probably Angeles Lakers 9Q-85 in Game 6 of their NBA Western conference playoff basketball
didn't expect to need it, series.in Houston on Thursday.
.
·
three games after Yao Ming his head as he stormed off make some shots. We only five in Game 5.
exited the series with a bro- the court. The Rockel~ led toughed it out in the fourth
Von Wafer, averaging only
ken left foot.
52-36 at the break - one quarter," Brooks said.
6.6 points in the series; sank
"We still have no chance," basket shy of the halftime . The Lal&amp;rs outrebounded a 3 with 5:51 left in the half
Brooks said with a huge score in Game 4.
Houston 45 -39. but the to puc Houston ahead 42-25
smile. "We' ll keep playing,
On Sunday, Houston Rockers scored 40 points in and force Lakers coach Phil
though."
stretched its lead to 29 and the paint and held Los Jackson to use a timeout.
The winner will play the cruised to a 99-87 win . this Angeles to 36 percent shootBut Houston stayed in
Denver Nuggets, who fin· time, the Lakers made a ing (30-for-84) . The Lakers control and Bryant's frustraished off Dallas on game of it, opening the sec- went only 5-for-23 from 3- tion boiled over near the 2·
Wednesday night and now ond half with a 16-2 spurt. point range.
minute mark.
have a few extra days to rest.
But Landry converted a Houston opened the game
With Artest · blanketing
Ron Artest pumped his fist three-point play to break the with a 17-I burst, electrify- him near midcourt , Bryant
and Scola embraced Brooks · Lakers' momentum and ing another ·red-clad capaci- appeared to shove Artest and
near midcourt as the final Brooks. sank a 3-pointer to ty crowd at the Toyota earned a technical foul. The
.
·
buzzer sounded and the help . Houston rebuild its Center.
temperamental Artest, ejectLakers walked off the court lead.
Bryant made the Lakers' ed from Games 2 and 3. ran
with their heads down.
The Rockets hit their last first field goal near tbe 6- away to avoid a confrontaLos Angeles won Game 5 eight shots in the third quar- minute ·mark, but Scola put tion and Brooks sank the
by 40 points, matching ter and took a 75·65 lead to fn another short jumper to free throw for a 47-31
Houston's worst playoff the fourth. Landry drove make it 19-3 ...;. one point Houston lead.
loss.
down the lane for a one- better than Houston's open- . Notes: The Rockets have .
The Rockets came out handed dunk with 6:56 ieft ing run in Game 4.
. won 11 of theit last 12 home
dominant instead of demor- to put Houston up 81-71 and . Attest got a nice pass from games .... The learn winning
alized on Thursday night. Bryant checked in after a Chuck Hayes· and muscled after the first quarter bas
. They put cogether a near car- long rest.
inside for a layup to make it won all 12 of Houston's
bon copy of the first half of
But Bryant missed four of 21-3. The Lakers missed 14 postseason games. .. . Artest
Game 4, when they seemed his next six shots and of 20 shots in the quarter and missed Thursday morning's
to hit every open shot, Brooks scored eight points trailed 27-15.
·
·
shootaround with ao illness,
smothered the Lakers on over the next five minutes to
Shane Battier and Artest but Houston coach Rick
defense and built an 18- secure anothet surprise over sank 3-pointers early in the Adelman said an hour b¢fore
point halftime lead.
the Western Conference 's second quarter, another gOOd the game that ATtest fett fine.
Bryant missed a halfcourt top seed.
sign . for Houston ; The ... The Lakers are 30-4 all·
' shot at the halftime buzzer in
"We got active again ·Rockets ·made 10 3-pointers time in seven-game series
this one and angrily shook against Kobe. He's going to in their Game 4 victory, but when they have a 3-2 lead.

Board advocates dumping UND nickname, logo
DICKINSON, N.D. (AP) for at least 30 years .
'- Noith Dakota's Board
However, tribal officials
of Higher Education has say that possibility · is
agreed to · drop the remote . Unless the · name
University
of
North and logo receive tri·bal
Dakota's Fightin~ Sioux endor.sement, they will be
nrckname and lndtan h~ad retired for good on Aug. J,
logo, a move intended to 2010.
·
resolve · a decades-long
The board, which met
campus dispute about Thursday . at . Dickinson
whether the name demeans
State University, voted 8-0
American Indians.
The name and logo, to retire the logo and nickwhich is a profile of an name . UNO President
American Indian man with Robert Kelley began mak"feathers and streaks of ing plans for replacements.
paint on his face, could still
"This has been a longbe saved if North Dakota's standing tradition at UNO ,
Standing Rock and Spirit and !think the board action
Lake Si.oux tribes agree by . now instructs the universiOct. I to give the universi- ty to develop pew tradity permission to use them tions ," he said . ·

fromPageBl

•

,

third. Jordan Taylor then
ripped an RBI single before
a pop-up and a 'run-down
off Dustin Salseris single
ended the inning.
In the second Southern
pick~;d right up where it
left off. With one out,
Taylor Deem singied and
stole second. After another
put-out Brad Brown gained
his second of three hits, an
RBI double to put
Southern up by another
marker on the board. 3-0.
Southern added another
run in the third . Chris
Holter walked and stole
second, then scored on a
Dustin . Sal ser si ngle .
Eascern pitching struggled
co keep the hard-hitting
Tornadoes at bay. ·
The Tornado offense
concinued its gradual
ex plosion adding three
more runs in the fourth.
Deem pounded his second
&gt;ing le, slole second, and
advanced on a Whittington
&gt;ingle. An error aliowed
Deem to score and
Whitti ngton to advance to
'econd. Brown singled and
stole second as yet another
error scored Whiuington
and advanced Brown to
chird . A single by Jof~Jon .

Friday, May tS, 2009

.

Sgorts Shorts

Taylor ~nd another ensuing
error pushed Brown across
the plate for a 7-0 SHS
lead.
Manuel cruised through
the first four innings. but in
the fiftl\ the Eagles migrat. ed around the base paths
for their first run. Devin
Swiggett singled imd
advanced on an error, Nate
Deweese singled and a 6-3
ground out by Adam
Conley scored the Eaglesf
first run , the score 7- 1.
Manuel struck out the last
batter of the inning with a .
strong finish .
•
An inning later, Eagle .
Caleb Watkins walked,
advanced on an error and
scored on an overthrow
following a Tim Cox sin·
gle , "the score 7-2 .
Southern managed to get
through the seventh without incident and the hoses
s ur~ed on to claim the
exctting 7-2 win.
.
Manuel picked up .lhe
complete game win with
six strikeouts and six
walks. Eastern pitching
(Qevin Swiggett and Bryan
Osborne) combined fo r·
five strikeouts and had five
walks . Eastern committed
seven errors. Southern had
four errors.
Southern hitters were
Brad Brown with a double
and two singles. Dusti n
Salser with three singles,
Taylor Deem two singles.

KALiDA (AP) - The winningest high school boys basketball coach in Ohio has been kept on by a 54'hool board
that had hinted it wanted him to retire .
Wednesday night's decision means 75-year-old Dick
Kortokrax will have at least one more year at Kalida (kuhLY' -duh) High School in northwest Ohio.
Two years ago, he was diagnosed with bladder cancer
and agreed to leave after the 2008-00 season. But his health
improved and. his team made it to the siate title game this
year, so Kortokrax asked to stay. However, the school
board chose to interview other candidates.
·
In the end, school officials opted to give KortOkrax a
new, one-year contract, not the three years he had asked for.
He has won 785 game~ during his 49-year career.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - Greg Paulus is returning
home to Syracuse to play football .
,
The former Duke point guard says he's enrolling in grad~
uate school at Syracuse and will .try to makeacomebackiJ! .
football for the Orange:
.
The decision.announced Thursday ends a month of spec;
ulation whether,the one-time star high school quanerbac~
from Syracuse would resume his football career.
He worked out for !he Green Bay Packers in April.
acknowledged meeting with · Michigan coach Riel!
Rodriguez about playing for the Wol.verines, and also visit~
ed Nebraska.
The three-year starting guard graduated from Duke earli~
er this month. He has one·season of eligibility remaining
and oan play immediately if he receives a waiver from the
NCAA.
.
.

.Glenville St. hires women's coach ·
•

GLENVILLE, W.Va. (AP) - Glenville State has hired
Bunky Harkleroad as its new women's basketball coach. ~
Harkleroad's hiring was announced Thursday. He com- •
piled a 168-93 record in nine seasons as head coach al
B~rea College in Kentucky, i1_1cluding five straight se.ason~
with 20 or more wins. ·
· ·
· ·
Harkleroad replaces Dennis Fitzpatrick, who resigned
last month after compiling a 27-31 record in two seasons, .
worked two inni~gs of relief
and allowed seven runs ;
Both hurlers are the lone
.seniors on the squad.
'
Bland .and Ethan Wilson
led the hosts with two hit&amp;
apiece. Powell was the
winning pitcher of record 1
allo'Ning only one wall&lt;i
over five innings while
striking out six.
SYMMES VALLEY 11 ,
SOUTH GALLIA 1
SGa!lla
S.Val!ey

100 00

-

I 74

403 ·.4x

-

11 8 o

SOUTH GALLIA (!H): Zach Halsiop,
B.J. Stanley and Corv Haner.
SYMMES VALLEY (n/o): Aobbl~
Powell and Cody Bland.
·

WP - Powell: LP - Halstop.
HR: SV- Robbie Powell, COdy Blond:
Jeremy Halflelcl, Ethan Wilson, DuStin
Wilson.

District Tournament next
Thursday at 5 p.!p.

SOuthern

000 011 o '· 2t1 300 x -

257
712 4

WP - -Michael Manual; LP- Devin
SwiggoH.

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

agalnst ·~·-·:1111
Oak Hill at

••.

Tuppers
Plains.

l ""'' l!.'»

Kyle
Connery

-

Bry11n

l pholo

in the second as Ben · Roof, · Trevor Walls ,
Buckley started a two-out Garnett Fulk , Dylan .Lewis
rally by being hit by a and Griffin Hale each had a
pitch , with Jacob Parker hit for the Oaks in the losfromPageBl
coming in as his pinch-run- ing cause.
d d 0
3 9 and ner. Christian Amsbary folPierce was . the winning
)
·see
e
ak.s
(
-l
lowed
with
a
double,
then
pitcher
of record, allowing
never looked back.
.
Tyler
Hendrix
was
hit
by
a
five
hits
and four walks
Ninth-year coach Brian
Bowen _ who ricked up pitch to load the bases with over six innings while fanhis sixth sectiona crown as two out.
ning" nine. Walls took the
EHS skipper ~ was conBra.nnon followed with a loss for Oak Hill , surrencernoo that his troops may single that allowed both dering JO runs , eight hits
be a little flat because of all Parker and. Amsbary to and three walks over 4.2
of the emotions that went cross the plate for a 3-0 innings .of work while
into this week, not to men- cushion after two com- striking out two. Fulk
.
.
worked two-thirds of an
tion that the Eagles are plete.
~iming for much more than
The score remained that · inning of relief, surrender· al ·
way until the top of the ing three pits. a walk and a.
Just a sectton . Itt 1e.
. fourth, when the · Oaks rnn.while striking out zero.
Besides Whiteoak. the
But • as he put it; these made their lone . offensive
guys know what time of
·
year it is and they all want charge of the night. With other teams that will be in
to be part of a third consec- one away, Andy Roof sin- the district tournament
utive trip to the regionals. gled and advanced ro sec- bracket are second-seeded
And
they
responded ond after a walk to Joey Paint Valley and third~ccordingly. .
Maynard one batter later.
seeded Southern. The
"Sectional games are
Eastern recorded another Eastern-Whiteoak
and
always a little tough for us out for two away, but a P;~int Valley-Southern winfor some reason. We've .. w(ld Pi.tcb allowed Roof to ners will.play in the district
had a lot of success in sec- score and make it a 3-1 final on Saturday, May 23,
tionals and 1 honestly contest. The guests never at Lucasville Valley High
believe·that we just get up came closer the rest of the School at 1 p.m.
·
. for the district tournament . way.
.
Both the Eagles and SH:S
a lot more than these, so we
The Eagles countered in are two-time reigning dis~
had to make sure to stay a big way an inning and a trict champions who will
focused and play our best half later, sending II hit- be playing in this. same disgame tonight," . Bowen ters to the plate in the bot- trier draw, so nothing will
tommented. "Oak Hill did tom of the fifth - which be easy about getting back
a really good job tonight, yielded seven runs on three to regionals . Bowen, howespecially . e~rly on, of hits, two walk~ and all ever, plans on doing a lot of
majdng some plays to keep three Oak Hill errors. After ·wor)l; before next week to
things interesting, but I the outburst, the hosts were get . this team ready . for
really liked the way we firmly in control with a 10- another title run .
responded as the night pro- I edge.
.
"I think we 're headed in
· gressed. I'm really excited
EHS concluded things in the right direclion, but I'm
to see the kids play the way its half of the sixth, as really glad that we have a
!hey did tonight."
·
back-to-back leadoff sin- wee!.&lt; to practice to get
Eastern, which played gles. from Zach Hendnx ready for districts ," Bowen
error-free and produced II . and Andrew ~enedum ga~e said. "There are some
hits in the tnumph will the hosts a patr of potential things that we definitely
. take on fourth-s~eded scoring threats. OHHS need to work on to get betWhiteoak in the district recorded an out, bUI a walk ter."
semis on Thursday at the . to Buckley in the next atEastern won sectional
University of Rio Grande bat loaded .the bases.
. .. title this decade in 2000 ,
at 5 p.m. Whiieoak defeat- · Amsbary _camh.e up W!th · 2002; 2005, 2006.. 2007:,
ed fifth-seeded Green by a the game-c 1me mg he~mcs 2008 and now 2009 . .
6-l count Thursday in o_ne batter later, knockmg a Eastern has also won disanother, sectional final.
· smgle to ·nght-center and tricts titles over that span in
The hosts wasted little allowing Hendrix to score 2002. 2005, 2007 and
iime getting on the score- f?r the mercy-rule conclu- 2008. All four of chose
board, plating a.run in their sum.
regional berths are under
first at-bat. Nick Brannon
Benedum led the hosts Bowen:
was issued a one-out walk, with three hits, futlowed by
then Brannon stole both Amsbary, Brannon and
EASTERN 11, OAK HILL 1
·second and third to get into Titu~ Pie_rce w\th two
scoring position. Derek safettes apt~e. Gnffin and ~:,:~ ~~ ~W
:,5 1~ 0
Griffin followed with a Zach Hendnx also had a hit
~acrifice fly to center, apiece in the ··tiiumph . ·. OAKHiLL ·{3·19)• Trevorwan~.Garret1 .
~
Fuik {5) and Andy Roof.
~llowing Brannon. to score Brannon and · Benedum
EASTERN (19·5): Titus Pierce and
{or a 1-0 advantage.
both led the offense with . Derek Gtiffin.
~Eastern added to its lead three RBls.
· WP-Pierce; LP - Weils.

Eastern

APphoto

Magic top Celtics 83-75,
force Game 7 in ·Boston
ORLANDO, Aa. (AP) - with 19 points; 16 rebounds
Dwight Howard demanded and six ·assists, and Paul
the ball, and delivered when Pierce scored J7 for the
the Orlando Magic gave it to Celtics, who led by 10
him.
·
points in the second half
Now he needs to back it before falling apart . Game 7
up, one inore time.
is Sunday in Boston.
Howard had 23 points and
The Celtics alsb failed to
22 rebounds after challeng- close out the Chicago Bulls
ing Stan Van Gundy's in Game 6 of their firstcoaching strategy, and the round series, a triple-overMagic beat the Boston time epic. Boston will now
Celtics 83-75 on Thursday go the distance in its ftrst
night to force a · decisive two series for the second
Game 7.
straight year.
"I just tried to be me," The two . days off before
Howard .said. "I just have to Game 7 should give an
go out there and play and not older, worn out Boston team
worry about nothing."
a cbance to rest its tired legs.
And what did he learn It's still not enough for
from his comments?
Rivers.
.
"Biggest lesson?" Howard "I would take a week off
said. "Keep my mouth and do it like the Super
shut." . ·
Bowl," Rivers joked. "That
Rashard Lewis ha:d 20 · would be .terrific. But that's
points, and Hedo Turkoglu not going to happen."
made a 3-pointer to high- Boston had chances . .
light an 11-2 run to close the
The Celtics held the
game for the Magic, who · Magic scoreless for more
haven't made it to the con- than five minutes to swt the
ference finals since ·1996. third quarter, building a 10But it was Howard who the point lead on a jumper by
Magic leaned on after he Glen "Big Baby" Davis. But
called out Van Gundy for not Howard led the Magic ba~k.
'getting the ball enough in . with a backspin alley-pop
Game 5.
·
from Turkoglu that high" 1 guess Dwight Howard lighted a spurt to end the
was right," Celtics coach third quarter. Orlando took
Doc Rivers s~id. "My gosh. its first lead with 8:38
He was unbelievable.''
remaining 'in the fourth.
Rajon Rondo finished
Pierce ·hit three straight

jumpers to give Boston a 73c
72 lead with about four min"
utes to play. but the Celtics
were done in by their 3-f()rc
18 shooting from 3-point
range and 19 turnovers. Ray
Allen missed all seven
attempts from behind the

arc.

.

"The offense definitely
struggled," Pierce said. "Btit
we still played enough
defense to win.the game . Wc;
turned the ball over too
.much."
Howard blamed Van
Gundy for not getting the
ball.more afcer the Magic'~
Game 5 collapse, when they
blew a 14-point lead in the
fourth quarter.
·
"You ve got a dominant
player, lel him be domi·
nant," Howard said.
He came out trying to ·
back up his strong words.
Howard scored the first
eight points of the game for
the Magic, including a pair
of dunks that pumped some
life into the home croWd. He
finished 9-for-1.6 shooting.
.. The Celtics were again the
scrappier team for most of
the night. diving for loose
balls and outmuscling the
Magic for rebounds. Pierce's
layup capped a 13-2 run that
pushed Boston's lead to 31·
22 early in lhe second quarter.

Claulfleda
~

lf Plac."' ~n online

PlaGe .. newspaper ad

;

SOUTHERN 7, PIKE EASTERN 2

Beaver

· scoring In
the fifth
. inning of
Thursday
.night's 0-4
, sectional
final

=

J.O. Whittington a double Lucasville Valley in the

and single, and Jordon
.
Taylor two singles:
Devin Swiggett had two
singles for Eastern, Nate
Deweese a single, Bryan
Osborne a single, and Tim
Cox a single.
Southern
plays
at

: (24) alter

Is also
piciured.

Paulus to try QB at Syracuse

Board member Grant said the issue would be left · reach safely, then Dustin
Shaft, who is chairman of a to.the campus, and jokingly Wilson uncorked a threecommittee that has been suggested "Moose". as a run blast for a 7-1 edge.
studying the issue; said the new nickname. Kelley said . Powell and Bland hit
move may help UND's a transition team will be back-to-back homers to lead
likely application to join appointed to oversee the off the fourth, and Ethan
the Summit League, an II· process.
·
Wilson cranked a two-run
member NCAA Divi~ion I "What this permits the blast to wrap up the 10.-run
conference that is seeking a University of North Dakota . outcome.
Haner and Heath White
12th school.
to do is to start·a marketing
Tom Douple, the Summit initiative," Kelley said. led South Gallia with two
.League's .commissioner, ."Over time , ·1 think we hits each, followed by
has said the University of would see enhancement of Halslop. BJ. Stanley and
North Dakota won't be our revenue structure for Brandon Harrison with one .
considered for membership athletic programs. I think safety apiece. Haislop startas long ·as the nickname we would see the enhance- ed and lasted two innings,
and logo dispute festered. ment of fan interest."
aiiQwing four runs in the
The education board's · UND sports teams have losing decison. Stanley
action does nol suggest any been known as the Fighting
blueprint for UND to fol- Sioux since J930 , when the
replaced
low in choosing a new moniker
nickname and logo. Smith Flickertails.
·

Boston
Celtics
guard Paul
Pierce (34)
and Ortando
Magic center Dwight
Howard (12)
battle for
rebound as
M&lt;tgic forward
Rashard
Lewis (9)
and Celtics
center
Kendrick
Perkins (43)'
assist dur- ·
ing the first
half of .a
second·
round NBA
playoff bas· ·
· ketball
game·in
Ortando,
Fla., on
Thur5Qay.

(7)

CINCINNATI (AP) - Former President Bill Clinton
will be the keynote SJ!':aker at an MLB awards luncheon
before this year's Civd Rights Game.
·
·
Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig cited Clinton's record
of promoting civil rights in an announcement Thursday for ·
the June 20 Beacon Awards event.
.
· Muhammad Ali, Bill Cosby and Henry Aaron have been
chosen by Major League Baseball for this year's awards,
part of a tribute to those who have fought for civil rights.
This will be the first time the game is played as part of
the regular season. The Cincinnati Reds will host the
Chicago White Sox.
The ¥arne originated in Memphis. Tenn ., in 2007 as aJi
exhibition.
·
·

fromPageBl

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Zach
Hendrix

Clinton to keynote MLB luncheon

Rebels

I
I

Eastern's
Trtus
Pierce,
right, congratulates

Kortokrax gets another year

Lak~n..

Southern

Friday, M~y 15,2009

For Info Call; DaveOoelfar at

74(1.992..0028

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· InJun~
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Friday, May 15, 2009

Frida~May15,2009

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1!Cribune- Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Star-crossed Bengals.will soon become HBO sta1-s
CINCINNATI (AP) The star-crossed Bengals are
about _to beconle HBO's latest stars.
The . cable channel and
NR. F1lms chose one of the
least successful and most
dysfunctiOnal teams of the
past 18 years for its next
" Hard Knocks" training
camp series.
. "We just think there's an
mterestmg m1x of personalities," NFL Films president
Steve Sabol said Thursday.
It will be very personalitydriven, given the team's lack
of success and national profile. The Bengals (4-11 - 1)
were so uninteresting to the
NR.'s schedule makers that
they got no prime-time
games this season.
·
HBO wasn't put off. Even
though the Bengals have had
o_n ly one winning record
smce 1991, they could provide some interesting subplots for the five-episode
program that begins Aug : 12
and airs each week:
-Will camera-shy owner
Mike Brown let down his
guard and provide glimpse
of how_he runs the team?
- W11l HBO have to
change the name of the prograin from "Hard Knocks"
to "Chad Talks ... And Talks
... And Talks ... "? .
-Can coach Marvin

Lewis use the e11posure to
resurrect
the
Bengals'
image?
"Your exposure is based
on you bemg successful,"
Lewis said. "If you're not
successful, you get no exposure.ri
Lewis was the point man
in getting t~e Bengals a few
rare hours 1n the ~able. TV
schedule. NJ:'L F1lms had
approached h1m about dmng
"f{ard Knocks" in the past,
but he tu"!ed, it . dow.n
because he dtdn t thmk his
team w!'S mature enough to
handle Jt.
.
.
Now, he thinks It can.
The Bengals went through
a stretch of 10 players arrested dunng a 14-month span
from April 2006 to June
2007. They've weeded out
most of the offenders,
though Brown decided to
bring back receiver Chris
Hepry after his fifth arrest.
Henry has one more year left
on his contract, and could be
one of the players followed
during camp.
The HBO appearance
could help to change. the
• Ben~als' national profile ,
prov1ded the players stay out
of trouble .
"Once we're broadcasting
to 50 states and 30 million
subscribrrs have access to
this, the Cincinnati Bengals

AP source: Mayfield's.
positive test not for steroids
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- A day after learning
'Jeremy Mayfield failed a
drug ·test for something
other than a performanceenhancer,
NASCAR
alfowed him to drive a race
car at Darlington Speedway
at speeds up to 173 mph.
.
A person familiar with the
test results told The
Associated
Press
on
lhursday that Mayfield's
jx)sitive test was not for a
performance-enhancing
drug. The person spoke on
condition of anonymit~
because NASCAR wont
reveal what banned substance was found in the ranilom test, which ultimately
tesulted in Mayfield's indefi.nite suspension.
NASCAR officials previously announced the drug
violation was not alcoholrelated, and the administrator of its drug testing program
has
dismissed
Mayfield's explanation that
the positive result came
from a mix of a prescription
with · an over-the-counter
medicine.
Under tlje . sport's toughened policy, that leaves the
possibility . that Mayfield
tested positive for abuse of a
prescnption drug, narcotics
or controlled substances,
such as cocaine, marijuana
or methamphetamine.
Because Mayfield · challenged the initial positive
finding, as allowed . under
NASCAR's drug policy, the
series did not take disciplin~ action until his bac;kup
"B' sample also tested pos1tive. That's why Mayfield
wasn't barred from panicipaling in two practice sessions and qualit'ying session
May 8 ut Darlington.
"There are limitations as
to how quickly the process
can be brought to conclusion," said Dr. David Black,
the
administrator
for
NASCAR 's
drug-testing
program . . "The l?ractical
reahty is there is gomg to be
a delay. In an ideal world, if
the world were perfect and
there_was a possibility of an
instant answer, we'd be able
to take immediate action."
M11yfield was first told on
May 5 that he had failed a
random drug test and was
asked · to explain why he
might have tested positive,
according to an outline of
NASCAR's procedures provided by Black, CEO of
Aegis Sciences Corp. in
Nashville, Tenn., which runs
the testing program. .
After Aegis investigated
Majfield 's explanation and
rejected it, Black's office
. told NASCAR officials on
May 7 about the positive
test.
On May 8. Mayfield
'showed up at Darlington .
ready to get on the track, and
asked for his backup "B"
sample to be tested.
NASCAR put a rush on the
lab order to learn the results
before the Southern 500 on

'

May 9.
While
they
waited.
Mayfield took part in two
practice sessions with other
cars on the track alongside
him.
Black would not speculate
if allowing Mayfield on the
track put Mayfield or the·
Other dnvers m danger.
"We didn't collect a sampie that day on the individual, so I can't predict without the test result, to know if
the person had consumed
the drug of concern," Black
said .
.
· ·
. Mayfield ran 16 laps ·in
the first session, 23 laps in
the second and hit a top
speed of 173.577 mph.
Mayfield later ran two qualifying laps alone on the
track but failed to qualify for
Saturday night's race.
"Certainly we were in
contact with Jeremy that
day, and there was no physical reason to believe he
couldn't
perform,"
NASCAR
spokesman
Ramsey Poston said. "Dr.
Black's team had a rush
order to ~et us the results.
They
hterally worked
through the m~ht so we
would know the B" sample
before Saturday night's
race."
NASCAR finds itself in a
unique position in its first
season under the toughened
drug pOlicy. While other
major sports leagues must
focus on the effects of performance-enhancing drugs
on their traditions and
records, the abuse of recreational drugs and the altered
states they create can present an imminent danger in
NASCAR, . where 43 cars
are on the track at once, raeing at high speeds in 3,400pound cars.
. "It's · unique in the much
gfeater potential of life-anddeath," said Dr. Gary
Wadler, who leads the committee that determines the
banned substances list for
the World Anti-Doping
Agency.
Using . banned substances
can be dangerous to competitors in other sports what if in football, the entire
offensive line is on steroids
and none of the defensive
linemen are?
But in auro .racing, Wadler
said, "it's a different order of
magnitude." So he believes
NASCAR would be justified to make its rules even
stricter than those in other
sports.
"Therefore you have to go
the extra mile to fully proteet the innocent," he sa1d.
Black said NASCAR's
policy leaves a window for
an individual to protest" the
initial failure of a sample
and takes into account the
possibility of a false posi.
tive. Because Mayfield
offered an explanation for
his positive result. it had to
be investigated and di smissed before his " B" sample was tested.

will take on a more national
scope," HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg said.
" We've seen that."
The program first aired in
200 ~ · and featured the
Balumore Ravens, who
were coming off their Super
Bowl season. Lewis was the
deXensive coordi~~i.or.
Hard Knocks followed
'the Dallas Cowboys m 2002,
was gone for five years, then
re~ed with K..ansas City's
trammg camp 1\J 2007. It
returned to Dallas last year,
where
rece1ver Terrell
Owe_ns got much of the camera time. .
NFI;- F1l~s can count on
~pendmg 11me With another
flam~yant
recetver,
although it will be interest•
ing to see what Chad Ocho
Cinco does in the spotlight.
After failing to get the team
to trade him last year, he
kept a low profile during the
season - a pleasing development ro Lewis.
Now, his love of the spotlight will be tested. ·
"Ocho Cinco will be in
this show. don 't worry about
·that," Greenburg said.
Brown's role Will be perhaps the most interesting.
"Hard Knocks" puts cameras and microphones in
meeting rooms. to watch how
team executives ll)ake deci-

sions on players.
Brown runs the team and
functions as its de facto genera! manager, making all the
important decisions during
the last 18 years. He also
shies away from the media,
especially television cameras. He agreed to Jet the
team participate in the HBO
show, but Brown dido ' t
attend a news conference on
Thursday announcing it
"That's something ~e'll
learn in the first week, how
involved Mike is," Sabol
said . . "And to whatever
extent , he'll be covered." ·
Lewis, who has two years
left on his contract will be a
f 1 . 1G
~a IX? 10 · reen urg com
pared hm~ to a movie star two movie s tars, no less when _de;cnbmg what mteres!;s htn; about th&lt;: Bengals.
You ve got ~hke Brown
- Paul Bro~n s son.- a
franchtse that s rooted m th~
htstory of. t~e . _NFL, ·
Greenburg sa1d._ You ve got
a Denzel Washmgton-s) r c ~·
Tom Hanks leader for this
football team. who \chans,
malic and I thmk g1ves us
the presence that we need at
the top.''
Lewi s barely cracked a
smile over the remark.
"There's a story to tell
here," Greenburg said . .

b

'

'

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~ter

In One Week With Us
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(304) G75·1333

.

•

Mowyouccinhovebordersonclgrophlcs
~
oddedlovourdosslfledods
.r.;L
m
Borclers$3.00/perod
1M

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

AP photo

Cincinnati Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis is shown on
the monitor of a video camera while speaking at a news
coference, Thursday, at the NFL football team's stadium in
Cincinnati. HBO Sports, NFL Films and· the Bengals
announced the Bengals will be_the subject of HBO's•Hard
Knocks reality series featuring the Bengals at training camp
this season.
· ·

HOW

Graphics SOC for small
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m
WRUE AN AD
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To Help Get RMpon.....

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tor,.....,..,. tht

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opp~~oo.

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....,.......,;;.....,......,......... KIT &amp; CARLYLE

FRID YTELEVI I N UIDE

.li)(J

OhiO 'Iaiiey
Publishingthe rlght to edit,
reject or Clnctlany
lid 111111y tlmt. .
Enors Must
~epo&lt;lld

on the
I

of
t)le

apace DCCUFiie41
lhi a110r 11114
ftm lniOllton.
not be Hable

IGM or txptmllj
multi from

All

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Found- Black Lab no col·
~r
on Saridtllft Ad
:304-ee!!75.,·1;;7!!42iii.""'""'""'" care.
~

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
cllllcl Contact lhe Ohio Dl'li•
Summer run of slon ot Financial lnstitu~nned
actMiies. Cal lions Offlte ot Consumer

~

740-387·0536
11\fervlew. ,

~~!!-N~·~·';:;';;'~~

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY·
PUBLISHING CO. roc- . H-.t..,.,.....thai you dO
business · wHh ~le you Small t)orhe 'repair, brush
know, and NOT ta send cunlng &amp; .lawn 881VIce.
mOney· through the mall Free Est. .20 yrs e•
until you have investigal· (740) 446-3682
lng the offering.
Bl...,.nl
.Walorpiaatlng
Uncondit~Qnalllfetlme

have been
· plat:ed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Qally Tribune
must bi picked
wHhln 30 days.
Any ·pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

Real

:

5

Sc&lt;k"

~==

P..ll.'ods
..
olo

"' to
pt
Fun lo\'iJl$.. financially ~c·
cure mamtd couple "i1h
nuturing home await' your
prmous · baby. e..,.• .,,
patd.
Ktm · &amp;_ Ruu
@i- 88_8•272·11420 www.oundop110npror11e.:om

guarantee. Local refer·
enc:es furnished. Estab-

from

Call

Wanted: t-4ouses to clean
&amp; yards to mow, will
clear out hills &amp; · creek
-beds. Wilt also remove
brush.
mferences
cau

lulinOu

Yard

•

TURNED DOWN ON

.

Call740-441·0833

FI.a Marbtl

Announ . .mom. .......................................... 200
"etrt~/Annl-ry.................................. 205
: H•
dll .....................................................210
~ Loot Found ............................... :............... 215

CKC S1b annual CVS PhantiiCY
mkt/yard lillie lirinl
1 long haired 5350 1st yountuff
,
Shots
&amp;
... - - •
.....,. ...ICN . Sal. May 30 8·1 also a(C:cpt'388-8445 or 645-23!16 ing items 10 ..u lor Relay
mey leave message.
For Lite '1l-100 hoolhs'.

•

~!""'--:-:--:. Fu-'"lnt miniature,., stallion CKC
rag'lstsred
male . -;;;;;;;;.;.;;o~.,..·~·--..;·
$200090. 256·1233
Yorkle,
$150,
-podestal OR table.
2
-----.-...........~ 740·98~3852
WI 6 chair$. White pact.
Boar goats tor ssl&amp;.
~-~--:~-:babies .(1 female
Free- 2 female, 1 male
!!!con!!!
. ,.·
males), 4 a"·lts all to: kitten,
a
\VkS - old,
.,..
male. 740·25&amp;6361
740.742·2713 a«er Spm
..._,..../Hunt
&amp; Sport
• •~1
p

·Lg.

~:

~P•DI-'l:,':,.n"~'a:"'l.o
....:~-~-~~.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~220350
.....................................................

::
•

"-rv·-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -.. . .

... ................................................... 32 35
00

~!"~_. ~

~ A:CIIance S.rvlce ........................... -:······· .. 302
' AB lomldlD11;t,'!:,.. ::;.··l·o·······.... ·······:··•········......... ,.33~
~
u ng .... •••
................................... ..... uv
•' Butlneea ..................................................:... 308
Calering .... :.......................................... ......... 310
c Chii.Widerly Ca,. .............. .,................. ,..... 312
. ' Compulera ...................... ............................. 314
• Contractoro .................................................. 318
"" Oomeatlc.!Janltorlal ....................~............. ~31&amp;
, Electrical ........ ,................................- ........... 320
. Flnanclol ....................................................... 322
'· Heahh ..... :..................................................... 32e
Hallllng &amp; Coolln_g ........ :...........- ................. 328
.: ·Home lmpro-lo 330
.
·

t

Aecre•tlon•l Vehlclea ............................... 1000
ATV •..•. :....................................................... 1001
lllcyclea ............, ......................................... 1010
lloeU/Accn.oriH .................................... 1016
campot/RVio &amp; Trallero ... :......................... 1020 .

1111.~~::::::·.:::·.::::::~:-:::::::::::::::·:,::::::::::: :1~

e;l:c-"',
..•.
"•' o
y ............................................... ~utoutomAoti~I/L·············.--··--······ ....................... 20110
~
an- eaoe..................................... 20011 •
,Autal .......................................................... 2010

Ccl•_!!l_':_l~llqllt-du
..1...1·...1:._.......................... ~
O•nn,..-..,.a n 1 r a ..........,......................v.u

Parte &amp; Accea10r1N;................................. 2021
SPorto Utlllty .............................................. 2030
Trucka ......................................................... 20311 .
utllltyTral- ............................................ 20*1
- · ·····'··................................................... 20U
Want to buy ....................................:~.......... 2080
ANI Eataltl S.tea ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plole ...................... ...: ................ 300$
commerc:lol ..................................- ............ 3010 '
Condomtnluma .......................................... 3015
For Bole by Ownor........, ....... ;_.................. 3020

~. t'::n~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :=;!::.~::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

• Muai0/DIInco1Qnomo: ......................... ,..... .,.. 338
.~ Other ServlCoa .........: ............... - ...... ;....:....... 338
&gt; PlumblntJIEIOCirlcal ...........:......................... 3otO

Lo1o .....................:...................................... 3031
Wo~l1o buy ................................................ 3040
Real Eo1olo Ron1AIIa.;................................. 3500

', Profeallanal Servtcee. ................................. 3.t2
' Reptlre......................................................... 344

· Roof~ .........:............................................. 348
. ~ . . .··u··...~.···D····......................................... a.&amp;350

Aplrtmenta!Townhou. .a ................. - ...... 3505
Commercle1 ................................................:3510
Con&lt;lomlnlumo .......................................... 351S
!i!!l~(!clor,..Rgeno)t ......~................................. 33552205

Trav.Wnten.lnment ............................. ~ .... 352
Ftnanclal ..................................... " ................ 400

Storage., .......................... ............................3535
Want .t o Rent .............................................. l$40

'"N"

" .....,,. ......,, .................,,,,,._....

~·-

~

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

FlnancloiSOrvlceo ....•.., ................ ............... 405 · Mtinufecturod Houalng ....................... ...... 4000
· 1nouronco ...............................- ................... 410 . t.ota................ ,............................................4005
~neytoLen&lt;J ............................................. 415 Movero ........, ................................:.. ............4010
Educo~on ..................................................... SOO Ronlolo ....................................................... 4015
. Bualnen &amp; Triode SChool ........................... 505 SaiH .............................. ., ........................... '\020
lnokucll0n &amp; Trolnlng ..................... :........... !;IO SUpplloo ....... ................................. _ ......... .. 4025

: =::;i;:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
Anlniolo ........................................................ 600

:.,~~·P~:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

~nlmal Supplleo .......................................... 805
HorM0 ..........................................................810
, Llvaetock.....................,_......................- ......615
' "-!a ............................................. ,................. ~20
, W.nt to bu~ ..................- ..............................825

Reaort Proporty lor .... ........................... 5025
Rnort Proporty lor Nnt.. .............- .......... 5050
-Employmon1 ...............................................SOOO
Ac.countlng/Fin~nc.. I ................................&amp;002
Admlnlatrollvoo'Prolnolonol.....................6004
CellhlerJCterk ...............................~ ............$006

,. Agrtcultu.............·......................................... 700

ChlldiEiderty

C•re ..................................... 8008

~::an~~=~:::-:::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::~~ g::;~~r:.~tiOn:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::~~

· Hay,Feed.Seed.Oraln ............................... 715
Hunting a Land ...... , .................................... 120

wanttobuy........................................,......... m .
Mwchandloo ................................................ eoo
Antlquoa.:.............,.......................................!"'1o
Appltance ............................................_ ....... •

· Auctlona.,.......................................... - ......... 811

. Sars~•tn BaH.m ent .......................................$20Collectlbl..................................................... 925
computera .......................... ......................... l30

EqulpmenliBuiJPIIoo.......................- ..........1135

Orlven~&amp;Oetlvery ..................................... 601.t
Edue~~tlon ...................................................6016

Eloctrica1Piumblng ............................. :.....8018
~oy.,.n1Agenclea ..............................6020
~~~'!:""1 ............................................ 80802224
~ ......................... _......................

Govwm~ a Feca.r.l Jok ....................6026
Htllp anWdo- Generar ..........................,....... 6028
Law Enforcement ......................................6030
...lntaM~meatlc ............................. 6032Monogemeni/SUporvlaory .-•..•.•••••.•........•.. 8034

~= ~~:!:WiOOdiiia;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=: =::::~".".::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::

Fumlture ...................................................... 150
H-y!Hunt &amp; Spor1 .................................... 955
Kld'i Corner .......................................... ....... 9fl0
MlocolloMm~a......._.....................................IIIS
Wantto buy ..........1. ......................................I!Q
YorriSalo ........................................._._, ......175

Muoloei ....................................................... 604D
Port·n,..TampororJ;oo ............................. 6042
llooiAiuroniA! ............................................... S&lt;M4
Slllea ............................ ,..............................-a

Technle~~l Tradea ....................................... &amp;OSo

ToxUiooiFoctory .......................... ., ............. 8052

black,

~d~~0~'";
00 2~~ts~·0;;;344;,Ex!!!c!!!.

ready

go,

to

(740)742·241j6 a«er 5pm

GUN SHOW &amp; SALE •

~~~~n~HFa~rg~~~~g.

$alo

1 and 2 bedroom apte ..

14 Circle Dr. Combining

Dachshunds

·r· ----------::-:--:-:::-=:-::::::::::--::-::==:::----:-------, ~--~~-~•
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Free· adOrable kittens.
: Legate .............. ,....,...............,.......................100

calion olooe to majOr
medic&amp;l
faciHties, .
phannaclet. grocery
Stora ... just minutes
away tram other maJor·
shopping h the area.
Honoyaucllle Hilla
Aplrtmonll
26tl Colonial Drtve •113
Bidwell. OhiO 45614
. 740-446·3344
Office Hours M. W. F
"9AM·5PM

"''llilil~!il'!!""!""..... 16 ft 11altled 1raller ten- tumlshed
and
unlur~
dem.
a&gt;cle
$1SOO. nlsh~ and ho ses In
Huge Multi Family yard. 388-Q32.0 Of MS-8303
vu,
u
sale may 15-16 from .9-4 .
Pomeroy and Mtddlepon~

'!11'

I

reg. 5 short haired $300 flea

PUMPING
OH and .....,...;·.;Uii;'.iimtii;od&lt;Oi
. iii..;;;;;;;;;

Meson Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
Ott
'00.§-W§P
,
Busy Bee Cleaning
hom• or offiCe windows,
floors &amp;
kitchen apptl·
ancos
call
_ .
.
740 446 2262

'1··

free kittens ~rt Pers•an.

Mlnl

SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No.Fee UnleSS Wa Winl
1-800-582-3345

sport

ntnce, quiet countr.y Jo.

. 2 door, 142,000 mi.
'$5500. Call339·9559
04 Dodge S1ra1Us 95,000
ml air crui~. power windows, runs great · $3500
080.
256·9031
or
25.6-1233
98 Chevy Blazer ZA·2LS.
4K4,2 dr. ,new tires, fresh
luna · up 52200. 080
304·61l2·8247.

02009

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CdlogoO and Sohoola12748

SEPTIC
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1-800-214-0452
galllpOIIIcareeroollege.ew

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02 Explorer

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Accredited Member Ace red~·

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Property Curren~y rent·
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(Careert ·Close ro Home)
Call TOday! 7'*446-4367

miles

2004 Honda CI'IIC LX 4
cyt, 5 . sp.
34mpg,
108.000 miles $7800.00
304-576-3353.

Valley

i;;;;;illl~o~lll~po;iil~lo~c"'aretr""'"'""'

Vinlgo

80

laundry facility, 24 hr
emergency mainte·

- llshed 1975. can 24 Hrs.
740-446-o870, Rogers
BaserT)ent Waterproa!!ng.

.Pot
c,..,allons.
740-446·3745

Yamaha

$50.00 rent, muat ·
move In by June 1tl.

-----

announcement

the . Ohio

2007
250.

2tJtir;

nance your home or obtelli a loan. BEWARE ot
reques1S tor any largo
advance paymeniS ot
fees or Insurance. call
the Office of consumer
Afflara
toll
fr~e
at
l-800-278-ooo3 lo . leam
If 1h8 mortgage broker Of
lender Is propeily · 1&gt;
censed. (This ls a public

Service

r"':;i;;;;ifnji;;i\i;;

- ~6006.

an Affairs BEFORE you roll·

lor .

. Townhouoei

2003 KX65 Ilk&amp; new, rid·
den vety little $1100. Call
7-10-+46-6865

M0M7Te~

=~=

TURD YTELEVI I N UIDE

albt

q ._ ......... thM: r-.MI frOm tht PIIIIIICIIIIOn 0t Ollilelon 01 MIIIW*I'

•

!"'--~~-~ Sat &amp; Sun May 16&amp;17

Free puppies, 8 weeks, ~m $4
6'tbls $25.
Bolder Cotlle/Golllon Ae· 740-61l7-04\2.

(t~:"o")~•9·2052

householdo. Dishes. lin·

~ 101 ~ ~:.. m~=~ ~(7,;::40~)99::;;2·;:29:2;2~---

Oooru Rake $1200 or Hot · Tilb Ollllol, Top
purchase
all .. tor Quality, Frto Dollvtry,
,SOOO.
40-4
Save 50%. nkl Tilbo.
7
46 •93113
514
806-326-0177
""ee"'~"'.--~INT""E""G~R~IT~Y. Riding Lawn M&lt;lwer like ·
KlE""R BUI' "J ,
new.
Ask
lor
Jr.
'"'
•
740-256·1102
VALLEY '

STOCK
LOAD

HOASE/UVE·
TRAILERS,

MAX

EQUIP "
TRA ERS.
MENT
IL
•
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION

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:t8

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

For sale Massey FerguP
135

son 3 cyt
· elkins
dleoel304-ll7s.7216.

!'""--~-.-':"\""'

1

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Balh

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call675·6679

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'l"
mes.un y .. Mnon.. ""
dwn.IS yrs. at tl% for lis1.
800-620-4946ex T461.
~A soapmtse. 6Uimlllllei.1srompd~or
....
.
3 bedroom, 2 lull ba111, appliances
avail.
2300 aq. n. many lm· $400/m0
•
dep.
••

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provements,

1.oo

aCJes 74()-418--5288

or,

AmCrosla.

$125.000 9811·8130
304-4175-4995
. ~'::""~::::':':'::""":"~
38A 2 balh 5349 per NOW LEASING Jordan·
Landing. 2 &amp; 3BR Avail·

~;:~:;,1h;;.:;-..o:•ts;;;~$4~51l/m~o

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3

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d PQ$It R 1
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1
0
8
·
orenco Elec1ric 304-674-Q023 or
PUS
required. 740-4-16-3870
304·617·9986
.

·

Great
Deal
ask~g
5225 000 for 8 300K N. 3rd Ave .. in: Mkktle· ·
hom~. 3500 Sq. Fl. Big pon, 1 br. lumiShed apj.•:

lOria&amp;

garaga.

wrap

a"round ref. &amp; dep.,

no

pats:

porch, on 25 acres. 10 740-992..0165 _

B

•

minutes below GallipoliS. ....UUIUI a .... ·It JHi.·
Bl Oak Kllchen to miJcll
·
..,._

uy

Cclmpan/RVs&amp;
g
·tt
At&gt;oolule Top Dollar· sll·
Troilen
to list buo
to 18 8l
ver/gold
coins.
any ~:::"'~~~;;;;;;;::~ 741l-6-15·5928
10K/14K/18K gold jew· i992 SOUthwind 30 ft House lor sale by owner
olry, dental gold" pre Motor
Homo,lul~
soli in Camp Conley, Pl

aon - . _ 52 WH1wOOd Dr.. from $365 1o
$560.
740-44&amp;-2588,
Equal Housing Qppor1u·
nity. This lnotlMm 18 an

conlllned
454 Chevy Ple...nt. wv 675-6495
motor /&gt;JC
power gan· or 740-368-8751 ·
orator, ewnlng. aSking 4 Bed. 2 Bath! Ol1ly
$8400. 256-6346
$25,000.
lor
listings
~~~~~~~ 500·620.4946 ex A019
2007 Used t9 ft. Shadow Doubltwidt for s;Ue in HartCruiser travel trailer
ford. 3br .2Qa. oak &amp;. c-c:·

Equal CJPporjunWy .. Proo
vider and Employor.

1935
US
currency,
prooVm~l
sots.
clil·
$3999. VIEWLEAOUR EEN- monds, MTS · Coin Shop.
TIRE TRAI
INV N· 151 2nd Avenue. GaHITORY AT
WWW.CAAMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
740-446-3&amp;25.

'""'""'""'""'"""!!!!!!!!!!!!! .

•
•
a-18fts, . gam as,
·~~· .
2br. I lf2 ba. new kltctld\
era ,
~~·S
'""
floor frid&amp;:/Ro\'e fW'Jl , ulil.
)awalry,clo1111ng
"punies,
for Sale 1y Ownar
induded
gnoat I0&lt;01ion
.......... Ill "C
h '" . .7' '"••
-~sa n"
For Sal by
. :--··-:-::7 6 _w~'""'~::o~::-.::~:-:
~:---~~~~
. "1
•·m· CONVENIENTLY
LoDishes· kitchen !lema· acres ·w
·- C
D
AFFORD-'
llnena- .....,,,.._ glass· 50'K120', plue 60'li2D' at· ABI.ATEEI T.,.!house apart·
~-'""'..
he
........ 11
w~· , knl~·knacks. .2
d~a~, Y:U:~ menta, and/or small
~M~ont
~r- Frl..sAt cedlr . aiding hldde~ 1 ~ houses for . rent. · Call
5 ay 15- 1
lhe ~nea, S~rtng V~lley .740.441-1 111 for appll·
·ahlo. calion &amp; Information.
7 houses on wntow 8rea-Gal11polts,
3bl 2 ·ba111 LR DR FR
Creek Ad (behnil Alllga_.
•
•
•
•
·
ELLM. VIEW APTS ,
In k«
1or Jacks) cloth&amp;s, ...,..~
~r· eal
• · ac-ed · 2&amp;36A and ' up. Cenlral..
8T· 14• 9ins &amp; Jr. gins, porch, glass sun .porch, 4 JJr. WID hookup, hlnl!ll~
womens 18. acruba. klds decks. hoi 1ub, 2 car ga- pays electric. EHO Elni
1
toys, houseflold item&amp;, ~sr· heat ~~~P ~ ~s, VIew
~0
lumlture,
AC
wold&lt;!r,
• gas
s, reo r, (304)882-3017
·•
toot. May15&amp; 16
storage blclg. Cell tor dl·
,
rections.
740-441·9531 Twin Rivers Tower, Is acCommunity ylnl sale. or call 74()-441-5239 or cep~ng appllca11oria ior

mix. ..
Aeml•t••n·gt·on-ril·.l•ed--b1-100-l,
can ,e,er
arre .
·•
,.......- - . . - -.... scope, $550' Highpoint tor Jacks. rain or shins
Free 2 yr old female Hi· 45 acp
$150. Knight
malayan cat, . declawed, Oisc
50
cal
$300. May , 16t11 9-7, May 17th
·liner
t(alned ~4~;,;·2~";;,1~9;,.,.,,.. 9·12, St . AI 7 Tuppers
.,..
PI ~
1 cance 18
a..s, ran
MJ.callaneous
May 15 &amp; 16 &amp;t 28 Lucky
.
JetAorallon Molora
St nex1 1o G&amp;G grocery
rapalrad, new a robuiR In AdOison. Baby/Adutt
~fi h"
In ltOC"k. Clill Ron
c 1OuK:lS,
too1s,
IS mg
Evano l.aG0-537-9528 equip. mise
1456 John D&lt;Kiro Baler
~~~':':"'""'!':"':~
Firm · Exc. cond, FreeHuber-around Yard Sale May 16, 2625
58500
aleolr~
cllair, Lir&lt;Oin Ave P1 P-nt
~

aeourlty de.,O.n required,
no pete. 740·992·2218
'

polis 446.2842

l;;,;;;;;;!;;!!,,!!!!!!!
Yard Salt

w'

2 fam sale Fri 5.115 &amp; Sat
5Jt6 100 Head Ad. Vin·
ton SA 160 at~nrox 3 mi
pa.;. inlersecl;;;; ~~ SR
55o1 1Um (R) on Thompson Ad. first (l) is Hea~
(R)

Have you Priced a John
Dee
18tely? y.00•11 be Ad. 1st driveway on

:"'~---~.;..-~.

For IOiiS8' large atlrar&gt;
ttve 3 bedroom, unfur·
nlshed 2nd floor &amp;pl." LA
overlooks . City Park. In
Gallpolls. Utllilles- not ln-..

Queen bed up front U~t I-amie noonng. lmony pine eluded. No pets allowed~
weight, root mount AJC cti)mgs. 1 'ar gar.ne•· h~•• References requlrect, Sa-.
Un~ .
gas
lumace, pump
113 ac~e asking ......a...
ul"'ft-...
AMIFMICDIDVD
pteyer. •16~
-s~ooo~JO&lt;~-~··~l~-J~'IO:i:l.!:!:~ 1 ~"'""'"':r
JV &amp; anlonne, micro· ~
416- 3936 . or
ooll
wave over 2 burner gas
. "1-5539
~ top
Lg mtl out
~

C'; 1'

n............

. ·-···
;;;~===~~ ::":::~:"':':~~~~
re
Signs posled from 4 way awning. Astung $6500.
Grectoua Uvlng 1-~ 2.
surprised! . Chel:)jc out our stop at 554 &amp; 160. 256-1738
Bedroom Aptf. et VtlfBge
/
used
mveotory
at Boys/girts clothe&amp;, toys
.
~nor
and Rlvaraide:
~artrrrMII/
www.CAREO.com.
Car- lltlk&gt; to teen, lo1s or AV Service at · carm~
Apl&amp;. In Middlepon, lrorri
Townho•-.

mlctleel
74o-446-2412

Equipment mile.
b&lt;!dding set

snHL Seles &amp; Service
Now ~va"~able 11 Carmo·
chael
.
Equipment
740-446·24121
I

baby ch&amp;el
740-441&gt;3825

3- family Yard Sale May RV
15&amp;16 216 &amp; 218 N. Sarvice
Park

9am-?

OR.

~1

Pt. Pleaaant Tralleni
740-446-3826

Trailers

Modem

IBR apt

$327

· 10

Cell 740-992-5064.

7~90
~~=~--:~

. $592 '
Equal

Housing Oppoo1unjty.

Cerm-et 2BA APT.Ciose lo Hoi· ISland View Motel

has

zer ~ on SR 160 vacancies · ~-00/Nighl

CIA.-(740) 441-0194

.

.740-44fi.0406

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyse.n tinel.com'

Friday, May 15, 2009

Frida~May15,2009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

1!Cribune- Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Star-crossed Bengals.will soon become HBO sta1-s
CINCINNATI (AP) The star-crossed Bengals are
about _to beconle HBO's latest stars.
The . cable channel and
NR. F1lms chose one of the
least successful and most
dysfunctiOnal teams of the
past 18 years for its next
" Hard Knocks" training
camp series.
. "We just think there's an
mterestmg m1x of personalities," NFL Films president
Steve Sabol said Thursday.
It will be very personalitydriven, given the team's lack
of success and national profile. The Bengals (4-11 - 1)
were so uninteresting to the
NR.'s schedule makers that
they got no prime-time
games this season.
·
HBO wasn't put off. Even
though the Bengals have had
o_n ly one winning record
smce 1991, they could provide some interesting subplots for the five-episode
program that begins Aug : 12
and airs each week:
-Will camera-shy owner
Mike Brown let down his
guard and provide glimpse
of how_he runs the team?
- W11l HBO have to
change the name of the prograin from "Hard Knocks"
to "Chad Talks ... And Talks
... And Talks ... "? .
-Can coach Marvin

Lewis use the e11posure to
resurrect
the
Bengals'
image?
"Your exposure is based
on you bemg successful,"
Lewis said. "If you're not
successful, you get no exposure.ri
Lewis was the point man
in getting t~e Bengals a few
rare hours 1n the ~able. TV
schedule. NJ:'L F1lms had
approached h1m about dmng
"f{ard Knocks" in the past,
but he tu"!ed, it . dow.n
because he dtdn t thmk his
team w!'S mature enough to
handle Jt.
.
.
Now, he thinks It can.
The Bengals went through
a stretch of 10 players arrested dunng a 14-month span
from April 2006 to June
2007. They've weeded out
most of the offenders,
though Brown decided to
bring back receiver Chris
Hepry after his fifth arrest.
Henry has one more year left
on his contract, and could be
one of the players followed
during camp.
The HBO appearance
could help to change. the
• Ben~als' national profile ,
prov1ded the players stay out
of trouble .
"Once we're broadcasting
to 50 states and 30 million
subscribrrs have access to
this, the Cincinnati Bengals

AP source: Mayfield's.
positive test not for steroids
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- A day after learning
'Jeremy Mayfield failed a
drug ·test for something
other than a performanceenhancer,
NASCAR
alfowed him to drive a race
car at Darlington Speedway
at speeds up to 173 mph.
.
A person familiar with the
test results told The
Associated
Press
on
lhursday that Mayfield's
jx)sitive test was not for a
performance-enhancing
drug. The person spoke on
condition of anonymit~
because NASCAR wont
reveal what banned substance was found in the ranilom test, which ultimately
tesulted in Mayfield's indefi.nite suspension.
NASCAR officials previously announced the drug
violation was not alcoholrelated, and the administrator of its drug testing program
has
dismissed
Mayfield's explanation that
the positive result came
from a mix of a prescription
with · an over-the-counter
medicine.
Under tlje . sport's toughened policy, that leaves the
possibility . that Mayfield
tested positive for abuse of a
prescnption drug, narcotics
or controlled substances,
such as cocaine, marijuana
or methamphetamine.
Because Mayfield · challenged the initial positive
finding, as allowed . under
NASCAR's drug policy, the
series did not take disciplin~ action until his bac;kup
"B' sample also tested pos1tive. That's why Mayfield
wasn't barred from panicipaling in two practice sessions and qualit'ying session
May 8 ut Darlington.
"There are limitations as
to how quickly the process
can be brought to conclusion," said Dr. David Black,
the
administrator
for
NASCAR 's
drug-testing
program . . "The l?ractical
reahty is there is gomg to be
a delay. In an ideal world, if
the world were perfect and
there_was a possibility of an
instant answer, we'd be able
to take immediate action."
M11yfield was first told on
May 5 that he had failed a
random drug test and was
asked · to explain why he
might have tested positive,
according to an outline of
NASCAR's procedures provided by Black, CEO of
Aegis Sciences Corp. in
Nashville, Tenn., which runs
the testing program. .
After Aegis investigated
Majfield 's explanation and
rejected it, Black's office
. told NASCAR officials on
May 7 about the positive
test.
On May 8. Mayfield
'showed up at Darlington .
ready to get on the track, and
asked for his backup "B"
sample to be tested.
NASCAR put a rush on the
lab order to learn the results
before the Southern 500 on

'

May 9.
While
they
waited.
Mayfield took part in two
practice sessions with other
cars on the track alongside
him.
Black would not speculate
if allowing Mayfield on the
track put Mayfield or the·
Other dnvers m danger.
"We didn't collect a sampie that day on the individual, so I can't predict without the test result, to know if
the person had consumed
the drug of concern," Black
said .
.
· ·
. Mayfield ran 16 laps ·in
the first session, 23 laps in
the second and hit a top
speed of 173.577 mph.
Mayfield later ran two qualifying laps alone on the
track but failed to qualify for
Saturday night's race.
"Certainly we were in
contact with Jeremy that
day, and there was no physical reason to believe he
couldn't
perform,"
NASCAR
spokesman
Ramsey Poston said. "Dr.
Black's team had a rush
order to ~et us the results.
They
hterally worked
through the m~ht so we
would know the B" sample
before Saturday night's
race."
NASCAR finds itself in a
unique position in its first
season under the toughened
drug pOlicy. While other
major sports leagues must
focus on the effects of performance-enhancing drugs
on their traditions and
records, the abuse of recreational drugs and the altered
states they create can present an imminent danger in
NASCAR, . where 43 cars
are on the track at once, raeing at high speeds in 3,400pound cars.
. "It's · unique in the much
gfeater potential of life-anddeath," said Dr. Gary
Wadler, who leads the committee that determines the
banned substances list for
the World Anti-Doping
Agency.
Using . banned substances
can be dangerous to competitors in other sports what if in football, the entire
offensive line is on steroids
and none of the defensive
linemen are?
But in auro .racing, Wadler
said, "it's a different order of
magnitude." So he believes
NASCAR would be justified to make its rules even
stricter than those in other
sports.
"Therefore you have to go
the extra mile to fully proteet the innocent," he sa1d.
Black said NASCAR's
policy leaves a window for
an individual to protest" the
initial failure of a sample
and takes into account the
possibility of a false posi.
tive. Because Mayfield
offered an explanation for
his positive result. it had to
be investigated and di smissed before his " B" sample was tested.

will take on a more national
scope," HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg said.
" We've seen that."
The program first aired in
200 ~ · and featured the
Balumore Ravens, who
were coming off their Super
Bowl season. Lewis was the
deXensive coordi~~i.or.
Hard Knocks followed
'the Dallas Cowboys m 2002,
was gone for five years, then
re~ed with K..ansas City's
trammg camp 1\J 2007. It
returned to Dallas last year,
where
rece1ver Terrell
Owe_ns got much of the camera time. .
NFI;- F1l~s can count on
~pendmg 11me With another
flam~yant
recetver,
although it will be interest•
ing to see what Chad Ocho
Cinco does in the spotlight.
After failing to get the team
to trade him last year, he
kept a low profile during the
season - a pleasing development ro Lewis.
Now, his love of the spotlight will be tested. ·
"Ocho Cinco will be in
this show. don 't worry about
·that," Greenburg said.
Brown's role Will be perhaps the most interesting.
"Hard Knocks" puts cameras and microphones in
meeting rooms. to watch how
team executives ll)ake deci-

sions on players.
Brown runs the team and
functions as its de facto genera! manager, making all the
important decisions during
the last 18 years. He also
shies away from the media,
especially television cameras. He agreed to Jet the
team participate in the HBO
show, but Brown dido ' t
attend a news conference on
Thursday announcing it
"That's something ~e'll
learn in the first week, how
involved Mike is," Sabol
said . . "And to whatever
extent , he'll be covered." ·
Lewis, who has two years
left on his contract will be a
f 1 . 1G
~a IX? 10 · reen urg com
pared hm~ to a movie star two movie s tars, no less when _de;cnbmg what mteres!;s htn; about th&lt;: Bengals.
You ve got ~hke Brown
- Paul Bro~n s son.- a
franchtse that s rooted m th~
htstory of. t~e . _NFL, ·
Greenburg sa1d._ You ve got
a Denzel Washmgton-s) r c ~·
Tom Hanks leader for this
football team. who \chans,
malic and I thmk g1ves us
the presence that we need at
the top.''
Lewi s barely cracked a
smile over the remark.
"There's a story to tell
here," Greenburg said . .

b

'

'

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.

•

Mowyouccinhovebordersonclgrophlcs
~
oddedlovourdosslfledods
.r.;L
m
Borclers$3.00/perod
1M

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

AP photo

Cincinnati Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis is shown on
the monitor of a video camera while speaking at a news
coference, Thursday, at the NFL football team's stadium in
Cincinnati. HBO Sports, NFL Films and· the Bengals
announced the Bengals will be_the subject of HBO's•Hard
Knocks reality series featuring the Bengals at training camp
this season.
· ·

HOW

Graphics SOC for small
$1.00forlorQe

m
WRUE AN AD
5uccrrrful M•

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....,.......,;;.....,......,......... KIT &amp; CARLYLE

FRID YTELEVI I N UIDE

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OhiO 'Iaiiey
Publishingthe rlght to edit,
reject or Clnctlany
lid 111111y tlmt. .
Enors Must
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not be Hable

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Found- Black Lab no col·
~r
on Saridtllft Ad
:304-ee!!75.,·1;;7!!42iii.""'""'""'" care.
~

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
cllllcl Contact lhe Ohio Dl'li•
Summer run of slon ot Financial lnstitu~nned
actMiies. Cal lions Offlte ot Consumer

~

740-387·0536
11\fervlew. ,

~~!!-N~·~·';:;';;'~~

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY·
PUBLISHING CO. roc- . H-.t..,.,.....thai you dO
business · wHh ~le you Small t)orhe 'repair, brush
know, and NOT ta send cunlng &amp; .lawn 881VIce.
mOney· through the mall Free Est. .20 yrs e•
until you have investigal· (740) 446-3682
lng the offering.
Bl...,.nl
.Walorpiaatlng
Uncondit~Qnalllfetlme

have been
· plat:ed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Qally Tribune
must bi picked
wHhln 30 days.
Any ·pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

Real

:

5

Sc&lt;k"

~==

P..ll.'ods
..
olo

"' to
pt
Fun lo\'iJl$.. financially ~c·
cure mamtd couple "i1h
nuturing home await' your
prmous · baby. e..,.• .,,
patd.
Ktm · &amp;_ Ruu
@i- 88_8•272·11420 www.oundop110npror11e.:om

guarantee. Local refer·
enc:es furnished. Estab-

from

Call

Wanted: t-4ouses to clean
&amp; yards to mow, will
clear out hills &amp; · creek
-beds. Wilt also remove
brush.
mferences
cau

lulinOu

Yard

•

TURNED DOWN ON

.

Call740-441·0833

FI.a Marbtl

Announ . .mom. .......................................... 200
"etrt~/Annl-ry.................................. 205
: H•
dll .....................................................210
~ Loot Found ............................... :............... 215

CKC S1b annual CVS PhantiiCY
mkt/yard lillie lirinl
1 long haired 5350 1st yountuff
,
Shots
&amp;
... - - •
.....,. ...ICN . Sal. May 30 8·1 also a(C:cpt'388-8445 or 645-23!16 ing items 10 ..u lor Relay
mey leave message.
For Lite '1l-100 hoolhs'.

•

~!""'--:-:--:. Fu-'"lnt miniature,., stallion CKC
rag'lstsred
male . -;;;;;;;;.;.;;o~.,..·~·--..;·
$200090. 256·1233
Yorkle,
$150,
-podestal OR table.
2
-----.-...........~ 740·98~3852
WI 6 chair$. White pact.
Boar goats tor ssl&amp;.
~-~--:~-:babies .(1 female
Free- 2 female, 1 male
!!!con!!!
. ,.·
males), 4 a"·lts all to: kitten,
a
\VkS - old,
.,..
male. 740·25&amp;6361
740.742·2713 a«er Spm
..._,..../Hunt
&amp; Sport
• •~1
p

·Lg.

~:

~P•DI-'l:,':,.n"~'a:"'l.o
....:~-~-~~.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~220350
.....................................................

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•

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... ................................................... 32 35
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~ A:CIIance S.rvlce ........................... -:······· .. 302
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................................... ..... uv
•' Butlneea ..................................................:... 308
Calering .... :.......................................... ......... 310
c Chii.Widerly Ca,. .............. .,................. ,..... 312
. ' Compulera ...................... ............................. 314
• Contractoro .................................................. 318
"" Oomeatlc.!Janltorlal ....................~............. ~31&amp;
, Electrical ........ ,................................- ........... 320
. Flnanclol ....................................................... 322
'· Heahh ..... :..................................................... 32e
Hallllng &amp; Coolln_g ........ :...........- ................. 328
.: ·Home lmpro-lo 330
.
·

t

Aecre•tlon•l Vehlclea ............................... 1000
ATV •..•. :....................................................... 1001
lllcyclea ............, ......................................... 1010
lloeU/Accn.oriH .................................... 1016
campot/RVio &amp; Trallero ... :......................... 1020 .

1111.~~::::::·.:::·.::::::~:-:::::::::::::::·:,::::::::::: :1~

e;l:c-"',
..•.
"•' o
y ............................................... ~utoutomAoti~I/L·············.--··--······ ....................... 20110
~
an- eaoe..................................... 20011 •
,Autal .......................................................... 2010

Ccl•_!!l_':_l~llqllt-du
..1...1·...1:._.......................... ~
O•nn,..-..,.a n 1 r a ..........,......................v.u

Parte &amp; Accea10r1N;................................. 2021
SPorto Utlllty .............................................. 2030
Trucka ......................................................... 20311 .
utllltyTral- ............................................ 20*1
- · ·····'··................................................... 20U
Want to buy ....................................:~.......... 2080
ANI Eataltl S.tea ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plole ...................... ...: ................ 300$
commerc:lol ..................................- ............ 3010 '
Condomtnluma .......................................... 3015
For Bole by Ownor........, ....... ;_.................. 3020

~. t'::n~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :=;!::.~::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

• Muai0/DIInco1Qnomo: ......................... ,..... .,.. 338
.~ Other ServlCoa .........: ............... - ...... ;....:....... 338
&gt; PlumblntJIEIOCirlcal ...........:......................... 3otO

Lo1o .....................:...................................... 3031
Wo~l1o buy ................................................ 3040
Real Eo1olo Ron1AIIa.;................................. 3500

', Profeallanal Servtcee. ................................. 3.t2
' Reptlre......................................................... 344

· Roof~ .........:............................................. 348
. ~ . . .··u··...~.···D····......................................... a.&amp;350

Aplrtmenta!Townhou. .a ................. - ...... 3505
Commercle1 ................................................:3510
Con&lt;lomlnlumo .......................................... 351S
!i!!l~(!clor,..Rgeno)t ......~................................. 33552205

Trav.Wnten.lnment ............................. ~ .... 352
Ftnanclal ..................................... " ................ 400

Storage., .......................... ............................3535
Want .t o Rent .............................................. l$40

'"N"

" .....,,. ......,, .................,,,,,._....

~·-

~

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

FlnancloiSOrvlceo ....•.., ................ ............... 405 · Mtinufecturod Houalng ....................... ...... 4000
· 1nouronco ...............................- ................... 410 . t.ota................ ,............................................4005
~neytoLen&lt;J ............................................. 415 Movero ........, ................................:.. ............4010
Educo~on ..................................................... SOO Ronlolo ....................................................... 4015
. Bualnen &amp; Triode SChool ........................... 505 SaiH .............................. ., ........................... '\020
lnokucll0n &amp; Trolnlng ..................... :........... !;IO SUpplloo ....... ................................. _ ......... .. 4025

: =::;i;:::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
Anlniolo ........................................................ 600

:.,~~·P~:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

~nlmal Supplleo .......................................... 805
HorM0 ..........................................................810
, Llvaetock.....................,_......................- ......615
' "-!a ............................................. ,................. ~20
, W.nt to bu~ ..................- ..............................825

Reaort Proporty lor .... ........................... 5025
Rnort Proporty lor Nnt.. .............- .......... 5050
-Employmon1 ...............................................SOOO
Ac.countlng/Fin~nc.. I ................................&amp;002
Admlnlatrollvoo'Prolnolonol.....................6004
CellhlerJCterk ...............................~ ............$006

,. Agrtcultu.............·......................................... 700

ChlldiEiderty

C•re ..................................... 8008

~::an~~=~:::-:::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::~~ g::;~~r:.~tiOn:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::~~

· Hay,Feed.Seed.Oraln ............................... 715
Hunting a Land ...... , .................................... 120

wanttobuy........................................,......... m .
Mwchandloo ................................................ eoo
Antlquoa.:.............,.......................................!"'1o
Appltance ............................................_ ....... •

· Auctlona.,.......................................... - ......... 811

. Sars~•tn BaH.m ent .......................................$20Collectlbl..................................................... 925
computera .......................... ......................... l30

EqulpmenliBuiJPIIoo.......................- ..........1135

Orlven~&amp;Oetlvery ..................................... 601.t
Edue~~tlon ...................................................6016

Eloctrica1Piumblng ............................. :.....8018
~oy.,.n1Agenclea ..............................6020
~~~'!:""1 ............................................ 80802224
~ ......................... _......................

Govwm~ a Feca.r.l Jok ....................6026
Htllp anWdo- Generar ..........................,....... 6028
Law Enforcement ......................................6030
...lntaM~meatlc ............................. 6032Monogemeni/SUporvlaory .-•..•.•••••.•........•.. 8034

~= ~~:!:WiOOdiiia;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=: =::::~".".::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::

Fumlture ...................................................... 150
H-y!Hunt &amp; Spor1 .................................... 955
Kld'i Corner .......................................... ....... 9fl0
MlocolloMm~a......._.....................................IIIS
Wantto buy ..........1. ......................................I!Q
YorriSalo ........................................._._, ......175

Muoloei ....................................................... 604D
Port·n,..TampororJ;oo ............................. 6042
llooiAiuroniA! ............................................... S&lt;M4
Slllea ............................ ,..............................-a

Technle~~l Tradea ....................................... &amp;OSo

ToxUiooiFoctory .......................... ., ............. 8052

black,

~d~~0~'";
00 2~~ts~·0;;;344;,Ex!!!c!!!.

ready

go,

to

(740)742·241j6 a«er 5pm

GUN SHOW &amp; SALE •

~~~~n~HFa~rg~~~~g.

$alo

1 and 2 bedroom apte ..

14 Circle Dr. Combining

Dachshunds

·r· ----------::-:--:-:::-=:-::::::::::--::-::==:::----:-------, ~--~~-~•
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Free· adOrable kittens.
: Legate .............. ,....,...............,.......................100

calion olooe to majOr
medic&amp;l
faciHties, .
phannaclet. grocery
Stora ... just minutes
away tram other maJor·
shopping h the area.
Honoyaucllle Hilla
Aplrtmonll
26tl Colonial Drtve •113
Bidwell. OhiO 45614
. 740-446·3344
Office Hours M. W. F
"9AM·5PM

"''llilil~!il'!!""!""..... 16 ft 11altled 1raller ten- tumlshed
and
unlur~
dem.
a&gt;cle
$1SOO. nlsh~ and ho ses In
Huge Multi Family yard. 388-Q32.0 Of MS-8303
vu,
u
sale may 15-16 from .9-4 .
Pomeroy and Mtddlepon~

'!11'

I

reg. 5 short haired $300 flea

PUMPING
OH and .....,...;·.;Uii;'.iimtii;od&lt;Oi
. iii..;;;;;;;;;

Meson Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
Ott
'00.§-W§P
,
Busy Bee Cleaning
hom• or offiCe windows,
floors &amp;
kitchen apptl·
ancos
call
_ .
.
740 446 2262

'1··

free kittens ~rt Pers•an.

Mlnl

SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No.Fee UnleSS Wa Winl
1-800-582-3345

sport

ntnce, quiet countr.y Jo.

. 2 door, 142,000 mi.
'$5500. Call339·9559
04 Dodge S1ra1Us 95,000
ml air crui~. power windows, runs great · $3500
080.
256·9031
or
25.6-1233
98 Chevy Blazer ZA·2LS.
4K4,2 dr. ,new tires, fresh
luna · up 52200. 080
304·61l2·8247.

02009

':lOti

ingCOW!CIItorJndependtnl
CdlogoO and Sohoola12748

SEPTIC
GaHia , Co.

www.comlc•.com

1-800-214-0452
galllpOIIIcareeroollege.ew

cious floor ptans, r~
&amp; townhome s1yle 1~­
lng, playground &amp; bas·
ketbal court, on•lte

:, , l"' ..

02 Explorer

&amp; Trach

Accredited Member Ace red~·

Rural Development
Property Curren~y rent·
ing 1 &amp; 2 BA units Spa-

·. tan leather interior. 4WD,

Schciol

. COllltJe
(Careert ·Close ro Home)
Call TOday! 7'*446-4367

miles

2004 Honda CI'IIC LX 4
cyt, 5 . sp.
34mpg,
108.000 miles $7800.00
304-576-3353.

Valley

i;;;;;illl~o~lll~po;iil~lo~c"'aretr""'"'""'

Vinlgo

80

laundry facility, 24 hr
emergency mainte·

- llshed 1975. can 24 Hrs.
740-446-o870, Rogers
BaserT)ent Waterproa!!ng.

.Pot
c,..,allons.
740-446·3745

Yamaha

$50.00 rent, muat ·
move In by June 1tl.

-----

announcement

the . Ohio

2007
250.

2tJtir;

nance your home or obtelli a loan. BEWARE ot
reques1S tor any largo
advance paymeniS ot
fees or Insurance. call
the Office of consumer
Afflara
toll
fr~e
at
l-800-278-ooo3 lo . leam
If 1h8 mortgage broker Of
lender Is propeily · 1&gt;
censed. (This ls a public

Service

r"':;i;;;;ifnji;;i\i;;

- ~6006.

an Affairs BEFORE you roll·

lor .

. Townhouoei

2003 KX65 Ilk&amp; new, rid·
den vety little $1100. Call
7-10-+46-6865

M0M7Te~

=~=

TURD YTELEVI I N UIDE

albt

q ._ ......... thM: r-.MI frOm tht PIIIIIICIIIIOn 0t Ollilelon 01 MIIIW*I'

•

!"'--~~-~ Sat &amp; Sun May 16&amp;17

Free puppies, 8 weeks, ~m $4
6'tbls $25.
Bolder Cotlle/Golllon Ae· 740-61l7-04\2.

(t~:"o")~•9·2052

householdo. Dishes. lin·

~ 101 ~ ~:.. m~=~ ~(7,;::40~)99::;;2·;:29:2;2~---

Oooru Rake $1200 or Hot · Tilb Ollllol, Top
purchase
all .. tor Quality, Frto Dollvtry,
,SOOO.
40-4
Save 50%. nkl Tilbo.
7
46 •93113
514
806-326-0177
""ee"'~"'.--~INT""E""G~R~IT~Y. Riding Lawn M&lt;lwer like ·
KlE""R BUI' "J ,
new.
Ask
lor
Jr.
'"'
•
740-256·1102
VALLEY '

STOCK
LOAD

HOASE/UVE·
TRAILERS,

MAX

EQUIP "
TRA ERS.
MENT
IL
•
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION

~~~~~icK FLA:E~

Wriii'A

T

0

hO"::"'

:t8

.

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

For sale Massey FerguP
135

son 3 cyt
· elkins
dleoel304-ll7s.7216.

!'""--~-.-':"\""'

1

2

~ C~~~~ :hln~ile~n~:: : :.W; t;,; o·;;,~;,;,v;,;~;;;~;;;l~;,;;r,.plco""'a"'l"" wslsd~~ ~~BAtor
~~!!1·
•
..,... ..... .

8-12

·

Borth/ Am

~

3

·~·

Heu,.. For Sale
Balh

BCd.l

lor tho ilt')orlyldissblild.:
call675·6679

HUD

•

,J.I 199'
'l"
mes.un y .. Mnon.. ""
dwn.IS yrs. at tl% for lis1.
800-620-4946ex T461.
~A soapmtse. 6Uimlllllei.1srompd~or
....
.
3 bedroom, 2 lull ba111, appliances
avail.
2300 aq. n. many lm· $400/m0
•
dep.
••

ho

provements,

1.oo

aCJes 74()-418--5288

or,

AmCrosla.

$125.000 9811·8130
304-4175-4995
. ~'::""~::::':':'::""":"~
38A 2 balh 5349 per NOW LEASING Jordan·
Landing. 2 &amp; 3BR Avail·

~;:~:;,1h;;.:;-..o:•ts;;;~$4~51l/m~o

~ois.

3

abla No
· Tenanl
d PQ$It R 1
ResPonsible tor Rent &amp;
1
0
8
·
orenco Elec1ric 304-674-Q023 or
PUS
required. 740-4-16-3870
304·617·9986
.

·

Great
Deal
ask~g
5225 000 for 8 300K N. 3rd Ave .. in: Mkktle· ·
hom~. 3500 Sq. Fl. Big pon, 1 br. lumiShed apj.•:

lOria&amp;

garaga.

wrap

a"round ref. &amp; dep.,

no

pats:

porch, on 25 acres. 10 740-992..0165 _

B

•

minutes below GallipoliS. ....UUIUI a .... ·It JHi.·
Bl Oak Kllchen to miJcll
·
..,._

uy

Cclmpan/RVs&amp;
g
·tt
At&gt;oolule Top Dollar· sll·
Troilen
to list buo
to 18 8l
ver/gold
coins.
any ~:::"'~~~;;;;;;;::~ 741l-6-15·5928
10K/14K/18K gold jew· i992 SOUthwind 30 ft House lor sale by owner
olry, dental gold" pre Motor
Homo,lul~
soli in Camp Conley, Pl

aon - . _ 52 WH1wOOd Dr.. from $365 1o
$560.
740-44&amp;-2588,
Equal Housing Qppor1u·
nity. This lnotlMm 18 an

conlllned
454 Chevy Ple...nt. wv 675-6495
motor /&gt;JC
power gan· or 740-368-8751 ·
orator, ewnlng. aSking 4 Bed. 2 Bath! Ol1ly
$8400. 256-6346
$25,000.
lor
listings
~~~~~~~ 500·620.4946 ex A019
2007 Used t9 ft. Shadow Doubltwidt for s;Ue in HartCruiser travel trailer
ford. 3br .2Qa. oak &amp;. c-c:·

Equal CJPporjunWy .. Proo
vider and Employor.

1935
US
currency,
prooVm~l
sots.
clil·
$3999. VIEWLEAOUR EEN- monds, MTS · Coin Shop.
TIRE TRAI
INV N· 151 2nd Avenue. GaHITORY AT
WWW.CAAMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
740-446-3&amp;25.

'""'""'""'""'"""!!!!!!!!!!!!! .

•
•
a-18fts, . gam as,
·~~· .
2br. I lf2 ba. new kltctld\
era ,
~~·S
'""
floor frid&amp;:/Ro\'e fW'Jl , ulil.
)awalry,clo1111ng
"punies,
for Sale 1y Ownar
induded
gnoat I0&lt;01ion
.......... Ill "C
h '" . .7' '"••
-~sa n"
For Sal by
. :--··-:-::7 6 _w~'""'~::o~::-.::~:-:
~:---~~~~
. "1
•·m· CONVENIENTLY
LoDishes· kitchen !lema· acres ·w
·- C
D
AFFORD-'
llnena- .....,,,.._ glass· 50'K120', plue 60'li2D' at· ABI.ATEEI T.,.!house apart·
~-'""'..
he
........ 11
w~· , knl~·knacks. .2
d~a~, Y:U:~ menta, and/or small
~M~ont
~r- Frl..sAt cedlr . aiding hldde~ 1 ~ houses for . rent. · Call
5 ay 15- 1
lhe ~nea, S~rtng V~lley .740.441-1 111 for appll·
·ahlo. calion &amp; Information.
7 houses on wntow 8rea-Gal11polts,
3bl 2 ·ba111 LR DR FR
Creek Ad (behnil Alllga_.
•
•
•
•
·
ELLM. VIEW APTS ,
In k«
1or Jacks) cloth&amp;s, ...,..~
~r· eal
• · ac-ed · 2&amp;36A and ' up. Cenlral..
8T· 14• 9ins &amp; Jr. gins, porch, glass sun .porch, 4 JJr. WID hookup, hlnl!ll~
womens 18. acruba. klds decks. hoi 1ub, 2 car ga- pays electric. EHO Elni
1
toys, houseflold item&amp;, ~sr· heat ~~~P ~ ~s, VIew
~0
lumlture,
AC
wold&lt;!r,
• gas
s, reo r, (304)882-3017
·•
toot. May15&amp; 16
storage blclg. Cell tor dl·
,
rections.
740-441·9531 Twin Rivers Tower, Is acCommunity ylnl sale. or call 74()-441-5239 or cep~ng appllca11oria ior

mix. ..
Aeml•t••n·gt·on-ril·.l•ed--b1-100-l,
can ,e,er
arre .
·•
,.......- - . . - -.... scope, $550' Highpoint tor Jacks. rain or shins
Free 2 yr old female Hi· 45 acp
$150. Knight
malayan cat, . declawed, Oisc
50
cal
$300. May , 16t11 9-7, May 17th
·liner
t(alned ~4~;,;·2~";;,1~9;,.,.,,.. 9·12, St . AI 7 Tuppers
.,..
PI ~
1 cance 18
a..s, ran
MJ.callaneous
May 15 &amp; 16 &amp;t 28 Lucky
.
JetAorallon Molora
St nex1 1o G&amp;G grocery
rapalrad, new a robuiR In AdOison. Baby/Adutt
~fi h"
In ltOC"k. Clill Ron
c 1OuK:lS,
too1s,
IS mg
Evano l.aG0-537-9528 equip. mise
1456 John D&lt;Kiro Baler
~~~':':"'""'!':"':~
Firm · Exc. cond, FreeHuber-around Yard Sale May 16, 2625
58500
aleolr~
cllair, Lir&lt;Oin Ave P1 P-nt
~

aeourlty de.,O.n required,
no pete. 740·992·2218
'

polis 446.2842

l;;,;;;;;;!;;!!,,!!!!!!!
Yard Salt

w'

2 fam sale Fri 5.115 &amp; Sat
5Jt6 100 Head Ad. Vin·
ton SA 160 at~nrox 3 mi
pa.;. inlersecl;;;; ~~ SR
55o1 1Um (R) on Thompson Ad. first (l) is Hea~
(R)

Have you Priced a John
Dee
18tely? y.00•11 be Ad. 1st driveway on

:"'~---~.;..-~.

For IOiiS8' large atlrar&gt;
ttve 3 bedroom, unfur·
nlshed 2nd floor &amp;pl." LA
overlooks . City Park. In
Gallpolls. Utllilles- not ln-..

Queen bed up front U~t I-amie noonng. lmony pine eluded. No pets allowed~
weight, root mount AJC cti)mgs. 1 'ar gar.ne•· h~•• References requlrect, Sa-.
Un~ .
gas
lumace, pump
113 ac~e asking ......a...
ul"'ft-...
AMIFMICDIDVD
pteyer. •16~
-s~ooo~JO&lt;~-~··~l~-J~'IO:i:l.!:!:~ 1 ~"'""'"':r
JV &amp; anlonne, micro· ~
416- 3936 . or
ooll
wave over 2 burner gas
. "1-5539
~ top
Lg mtl out
~

C'; 1'

n............

. ·-···
;;;~===~~ ::":::~:"':':~~~~
re
Signs posled from 4 way awning. Astung $6500.
Grectoua Uvlng 1-~ 2.
surprised! . Chel:)jc out our stop at 554 &amp; 160. 256-1738
Bedroom Aptf. et VtlfBge
/
used
mveotory
at Boys/girts clothe&amp;, toys
.
~nor
and Rlvaraide:
~artrrrMII/
www.CAREO.com.
Car- lltlk&gt; to teen, lo1s or AV Service at · carm~
Apl&amp;. In Middlepon, lrorri
Townho•-.

mlctleel
74o-446-2412

Equipment mile.
b&lt;!dding set

snHL Seles &amp; Service
Now ~va"~able 11 Carmo·
chael
.
Equipment
740-446·24121
I

baby ch&amp;el
740-441&gt;3825

3- family Yard Sale May RV
15&amp;16 216 &amp; 218 N. Sarvice
Park

9am-?

OR.

~1

Pt. Pleaaant Tralleni
740-446-3826

Trailers

Modem

IBR apt

$327

· 10

Cell 740-992-5064.

7~90
~~=~--:~

. $592 '
Equal

Housing Oppoo1unjty.

Cerm-et 2BA APT.Ciose lo Hoi· ISland View Motel

has

zer ~ on SR 160 vacancies · ~-00/Nighl

CIA.-(740) 441-0194

.

.740-44fi.0406

�I

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Apatu.... ~
Townhou.o

I

Friday, May 1,5, 2009

1www.myclally18ntlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

'

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

--=;;~~;;..;;;;;;; For rent T6xEIO 2br. re·
Pleasant Valley Apart· 1ndg. &amp; slove included,
ments IS now taklrig ap- •big lawn in GlenWOOd
~lionS fpr 2SR, 3BR WV $400.00 a mon.
""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"

Sales

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~==•
Country liv1ng 3, 4, &amp; 5
bedrooms. Owner will fi.
nance Call lOday for pre-

Co1.mtry living- 3-5BA,
2-3 BA oo pmpef!y.
Many floof plans! Easy
Financing! We own the
seconctlthird bank.
Call
today!

l!oor

apt

3

bath
. s,

area.
month. CaK

S900

BR.

2

Iaundry
per

440-2325 or 446-4425

Cammeroial
Ofllcel
WarehousWStorage
Great location 749 Third
Ave.. Gallipolis!
$399/month for 1800
sqlt Build~t negotiable
Cat! Wayne
404-456-3802

Condom ·
-. ..~~~;in;i...,.~;;;;;;;;
River front 3br · 2 full
baths, basement, water
and sewer pd. Central

AC . $600

sao. dep. $600

rent. ]40-446-34Bi

$_19Q/mo! · 4 bed.

2 bath.

Bank R epo~ (o'i % down. 15
~e;~r,. !\'-} APRI fo r liStings

800·6Xl-49_.6 ~~ R027
home 1 car garage
w/ river frontage located
ir1
New Haven
WV
304-934·7462
or
~br.

304-573-6334 .
2
bedroom

$350/mo
$350/dep water · &amp; trash
paid. Pets with writing
permission.
· Phone
740-245-5671
5 room house at -44 Olive
St. Has stovetrefridge.
$425/rent plus deposit,
No pets. 446·3945

4000

Manufac tu•e d
Hous1ng

;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

. Rental•

,_='-';.;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
2 Br· water and trash . in-

• K J 82
• Q9&amp;62
• 9 7

• A 10 3

• AI
South
•

•

position
with
Accountant:

~~~:;~::~~~=~~=~";;~===~~~

busy
acFull-time

counting o1f~• in Galipo- Help

Wam.d. Gontral

~

and e.perience required . need

~

contractors App818Chlen Tlre Prod-

to make Pharma- ucts, Inc.

Must have good organ· ·
izational skills and the
ability to work independenrty with strong anention Ia detail. Please
send resume and references 1o
gaJiipolisaccountant@

ceutical deliveries in Gal·
lipolis and Manetta re·
glon. Independent contractors wm drive there
own vehk:le. Must be
able to pass drug screen,
background check &amp; mb·
tor vehicle chad~:. Must.
gmail.com
be flexible to m3ke deliv.or mail to ClA 101 , PO eries in the evenings &amp;
Box 469, · Gallipolis. OH weekends. This is a
45631
great
opportunity
lot
to
ke
l
""'""""""""'""'"""""',;'someone
ma
ex ra

education

-="""'~~'---

'ncome.
cnsli

Please

or . email

c;ris!le@ prioritydispatch.c
VACANCV: H.S. SCI·
om
ENCE INSTRUCTOR
VB iid Ohio Science qertiticati on required. CON· :!:A~N.·L~PN~
. ~&amp;~H~H~A0:3~
92~Sil·

TACT;

ver
aridge
Plaza.
Gattia·Jackson-VInton
740·446·3606
JVSD (740) 245·5334,
El&lt;t. 201 _EEO
Rehabilitation
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' Overbrook
Hofp Won!MI· Gontral Cent~r is currently seek·
"-iioi.ii;;i;;~;i;;;;;;.;;;i;;;ii; ing a beautician to work
in the facility's beauty sa·
Deliveryf\o\larehouse per- !on. Candidates should
son needed, full time, im- possess · a valid Ohio
mediate opening, musl Managing Casmetoloigist
have good driving · re· License . Salary is based
caret App!y·lifeslyle FUr· on
com mission.
Internilure 856 Tflird Ave . ested candictates should
GalliPolis, 9:30·5:00 No fill out an application at
Pl'1oneCalts
333 Page Street. ·Middle·
port, Ohio. Overbrook
. , . . . - - - - - - Cenler participates in the
Sales rep needed to sell drug free Workplace ProCable TV &amp; related serv· . gram.
Ices In the Pt. Pleasant.
GallipoliS areas. Sales ==~":'"~~.exp.
preferred.
Paid AVON! All Areas! To Buy
training. Great Earning Of Sell Shlrley Spears

'luded. No pets. At Johnson 's MatHie Home Park.
Caii 740·+645·0S06
Potential. 304-476-2159.

304·675-1429

Are you

Conservative?

groups.
1

1

Hiring ALL Shifts
1 Weekly Pay &amp;
Bonuses
1 Onsite Doctor

Complete Benefils
Package

-1 FREE NRA
membership

Call NOW to schedule
your lntervlewl
1-888-IMC·PAYU
Ext 2311
Apply online:
hhp11obt.lnloclolon.col!l

Don11DISS IbiS
OPPOrtunity II reach
over 11.000 holies
~alltpolis

ilBatlp m:rtbune
.t)otnt Jleasant laegtster
and Daily Sentinel

Health care Edidta
10 be publlshell
MIJ22,2009
Hurry, UIDIIS
running 1011
.

Ad Deadline is

11118,2009

Painting
Patio and Porch

740-367--«1544
F - Estimates
740-367.0536

Hours
7:00am·· 8:00pm

S&amp;L
Trucking

BANKS

•

eluding the enhancement

Equal Opportunl1y
ployer

Modic•lictO
Service Technician
lion a.ailable lor

hydraul~s.

and

Dump Truck
Service
We Haul Gravel,
Limestone. ·Coal,
Compost, Top Soil
Call Walt or Sandy

740-992-3220
or 7400-591-3726

ell

co.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commordal•
Residential
•FreeEstl(740) 992-50011

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

15

Cu~m

Home Building
Steel Frame Buildings

TOPAY'S

Building, Remodeling
www banbcdb.com ·

EsUma1es. 20yn E&gt;&lt;p.
74044t-9J87

/ Of A IAILptJT1

~

. Harfrood hblnetry Alld FurJIHiiie

Aepo~lr

Seamless Guttere
Roo1ing, Siding, Gutters
lnsurud &amp; EJOOded

Center &amp;
Teti.i Auto
Tr.,..,.l..lon

u

1 LOST EV'RY PENNY

kALt&amp;i...,.

1 HAD IN THAT CARD ·
GAME !! ELVtNE'&lt;'S

GONNA .
KILL
ME !!

740-653-9657

Ia rour check
engine light on? .
Come....,elt
ac1111nedforfne
OHerl

---

;::
CUTIING EDGE
LAWN CARE

'"

C'M0~1 LUI&lt;EV, I'LL
HALP 'I'A PICK SOMe
FLOWERS !!

YEP .••

OR YORE

FUN&amp;AAL!!

Commerdal &amp;
Residential
Free Estimates
• Lawn Maiptenance
• Landscaping
• Power Washing
S th C 1
e
ar eton
· (740) 517·5432

THE BORN LOSER
.

.

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019
Owners:
Jon van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Salesperson
Needed:
Exp9rience in building
matertals required. ApP11
in person. Thomas Do It
Center, Gallipolis Joca·

tlon. ·

Nata's -.
I I88
Service

I""'mt OLI&gt; AAN. I~ QUITE. ""'
€:~ Wlil-\ 1-\l~f",

Cell: 740-418-5047

email:

~~~T

,

'"You WOI"'T Fl~t&gt; ~MOU

"""~

I'"'AAI&gt; Tl-l~i'~~'T J~J~i fo\'(

"""~

=~g&gt;'T~ ~ OPII-l10N..~.~~~50, 'TOO!

l-It 1

jrshadfrm@aol.com •

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows

•Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Add!llona

ow...:

James KefiH_II
742·2332

Frtsh North Carolina

SHRIMP
(740) 742-2563
yti'Ji, ne~r froun, htadl o•

$10 per lb Cash only

~==j' ~L...-J...l::~t:=Dif·

Pnlr IS required in ndv1111c-t
Shipments arrive ~vtry

other Frida

CaD: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
· For: • Room Additions • Patios
• Porches • Qec'ks·• Garages • Horse Barns •
Vinyl &amp; Wood Siding.• Roofing • Chain Link &amp;
Wood Fencing &amp; General Home M~inlenance

a.m., ·a public sale will
be held at 211 W. Second St., Pomeroy,
Ohio. Tho Fannare
Bank and Savings
Company Ia Mlllng for
cash In hand or cart\·
fled check the follow·
lng collateral:
1996 Chev Blazar
1GNOT13WOT2279612
2005 Honda Clvtc
1HGES1638SL003968
The Fannero Bank and
Savlnga
Company,

Pomeroy, Ohio, r•
the right to bid
at thla sale, and to
wHhdaw the above col·
lateral prior to 1111.
serve~

Further, The Farmera
Bonk end Savlnga

Company,....... the
right to reject any or all
bids aubmltted.
The abOn d•scrlbed
collataral wilt be oold
"aa l•where Ia", with

tlon, or for an appointment to Inspect
collateral, prior to sale
date contlict Cyndle or
Ken at 992·2136.

OOISIRUmON
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

LIMITED SEATS AVAILABLE
Payment due at time of
reservation ,
Coach leaves PVH lower level
parking lot at 8 a.m.
Coach returns at aPJlrO:KhrlaiEIIy
10:30 p,m.
Please call
PVH Communlly Relations
to reserve a seat,
(304) 675-4340, EKt. 1326

BAOANCE
AEROBICS
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center
Beginning Tuesday, May 19
Tuesday evenings ( 7 p.m.)
Thursday evenings ( 5 p.m.)
$6/class
Instructor: Ashley Hackney
For more information,
(304) 675-7222

J40-992-1m
I '''

Slop &amp; Compare

IS THAT WHnOU .

• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• De&lt;ks • Additions
•Electrical
·,Plumbing
• Pole Barns

COME. SIR BILLIAM

STOPPED MAKING FUN
OF LIVE·ACTION ROLE·
PLAYING VlofOS ON

BAGiiENG€, GI&lt;AB
YOUII PADDED

CAt-IYOU
B111NG ME

WEMIGiiTOO
BArTL£

SWSHEEl
(

SABI2E SO THAT

YOUTUilE~

BACK A

AT THE

SOCCER

I
SIOIY"
, compooer

=-

"II mtf"'

;:a~ 32
~=.!till
Oonrit'o
"doni"

52

=

undlr lllnl

34 Stuh tho
btga

• ComiCII

38 0!11 of two

'-.__) "

1

WHAT A loiORRieL.E

29 Years 1!1tperleotce'

~y

::::

o:~mb~':.J~ ~
fllur llmpl6 word&amp;

1 0 XES T

Il'l i'flll
P L· r o s

Make

every effort no~ to · acclctenlt;lly reveal
something tOld to you In confide~. or
that longtime friendship m'tght never be
tM same. Wa1eh whAt cOm11 out Of your

·

,

(S.pt 23·Clc1- 23) - 9ooAu18

you rarely take any .klrtd of game teri·
ousrv. you might be templed to bend the

rules jUst to keep things competitive and
tun. However, your competitor tan'! likely
to f1!H ttllnga that way.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -It's apt to
be a bad move to make a commitment
that you have no Intention at keeping. It
dOesn't matt!lr how valid the reason It;
only tha.t If you dOn't honar 11, thing• wilt

_SCRAM·LBTS ANSWERS 5114/09'

Tnlism - Heave -" Crown - Burial · MINIATURB
One colleague to another, "I hear our bilsinetl$ is so
bsd'that the big shot's have to play MINIATURE
ARLO&amp;JANIS

piUs,' you niay Mn want to· RCJII:·
.pone oa.ttlng It flxec;l by a professional to
another day.
::;;;;...,_ _;_;,.....,;;.;....J CAPRICORN .(Oec. 22~an . 19) - There
are no guarantees thlil: you wiD have a
good time regardless of company and
money spent It you don't nt01lve e)Cact·
ly what you thought you should. take It In

r;:;:;-;:;:;;:;;;)T,"N:;;"":rt;;.:;:;;:;'I:-J

NIC$HTMARE!

· David Lewis :

r::~=' S(Q~~-&lt;Zt.~s·
-d CLAV II. PCILIN

_. . .

SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec. ' 21) MtllakH are Ukely, so It ml~t t141 amart
no1 to try to fix an expensMt Item your· .

YEOL£

H. '

PREViOUS SOLUTION: "I can't change !he dlrec1\on of the wine!. bull can _
adlua! my aallsto always reach my dsa!lnatlon_• • Jimmy Dean ·
.

no1 gowen.

FIEI.DS
BEHIND

I I II l'1 I I\ I I&lt; I I I
( (1\, fill ( II (I\
Concrete Removal ,

stride.
AQUARIUS

(Jan. 20.Feb. 19) - Unless
you are totally committed to your
endeavor, regar.dle&amp;B of Ita importance,

740-992·6971 :

the results could be sketchy. You have
t.. ability to .d o so. but you might not

Insured

have the COf'ICJntratlon.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mon:ll 20) - You.,.
' gtftiKI wtlh accurate hunchea and per·
ceptlooa, but th is might not be a good
time to p)aoe much lmpo!'tlnce In any of
o..;;-,.-.t them. Place all your faith In logical, prov·
abte lili8888IT!elnts.

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
•Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Ra[es
*Insured ·
*Experienced

·

GEMINI (May 21·June :iZO) -

LIBRA

.J

Free Estimatts

and Replacement
n -·

re,.atde.

precedence.

Free Estimate ~

Replacement
Windows and
VInyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563

35
fngt!llnto
37 lAnd In .

:It Mil
31 Toyolllock

~- 19 form

ducer or a dever rdonallzer. Don't make
excuSes why the t•tter Jhoutd take

I'M HESITANT TO
CIIITICIZE BECAUSE
ALL TOO OFTEN I END UP
BEING GUILTY OF WHAT
I'M CRITICAL OF.

NCJt affiliated witb Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; RemlXh:ling

ROBERT
BISSELL

-

uo.-·•

ftom hio ·10nge01 su~. Sou1l1 1lktS 1he 1rid&lt; (perhaps w~1 a decep11ie ~ng) and
B11act&lt;l dubo. When W!IS11o In with hil
.
by LUll ClllllpOI
ace, he ahtxJ(d oee 1he MINty of continuCeilbll!r ~ CIWIIDII~ lfl Cfllted !IMI Qllllllkl'll by llmcM ptelllll. put IIICt PfiiOI'It. •
Ing with helilla. Evan Wat trick 008 Sou1h
,
,
. EICtllerttr ln #11 dptllf lllfldiiGir anolil&amp;r.
,
captured Eaa1~ 10 with hll ~ng.
Today'o r:iuo: f squill M
weal should reellzo1hil1 dodarer has 11
leat nlno11ick1 reedy 1o 111n: 1WO h.. rtl. "GJY VLZBL. SL sc · DJT., PFLC GJY
two diamOnda, 10&lt;11 CU.. and olthar 008
IPodt or a tltl~ diamond. The only T J C 'P V L Z B L 9 L H C G I J W L H C·T
cl1ance 1s 1o shlf1 10 .spades. And by
leading the apade two, Wll1 lo 1e1Hng N F L·C G J Y F H 9 L H VB 0 A W J V Z L E, •
Eaof1he1 be Is trying to i:Uh 1r1cklln 1tt11
ault, that 11e t1oes not warn Eaot 1o win GJY AWHO HCONHO."
HZHBC
and awttch back 10 lleartl. (W Wll1wan1·
eel Eaot 1o win 1he apado shift end reve~ TLZJC

moUth. . .
CANCER (June 2' -July 22) ..:.. Be wary
ot doing buaiM ... With a peraon WhoM
reputa1ion It •UIPfCl Make aura lhlt all
agraemanta , 1re put In wrftlng 1nd
signed; don't depend on any 'kind of ver·
bal promises..
·
LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22~- Oon't be unduly influenced by someone with a disreputable history, no maner how enchanting
the peraon. 11. This Individual could be a
master at leading otnere astray.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Your mind
rs· as eharp. as a razor, b:l,ll Its worklnga

pow and BOY

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bot1om, OH

25+ yean experience

atatue
1 FOA'o mom 22 llpolw

Nothing. T1tis means 1hat ff you lead a
low card in suit, you promise a11eas1
one honor in tha1 suit. Wrttoo1 an honor,
lead hi9fl- (Whon you havo a waak su~.
lead 1he higheS1 earn - lop 01 nothing
- 'Nhen the tOp two are touching;,fOf
example, 1he oiglrt kom 8-7·5-4. Bu1
lead 1tie se&lt;:ond-highest ll11en t1iO lop
two are not touching; for examp(S, the
...., lrom 9-Hl·3-)
This ·rute• applies not only at trick one
btJI·also 111'oughOUI the play 1111en a su~
is broken by a defender. This cleat is an
example. How ahoukJ 1he defense proceed agalnS1 three ,..,.1rufT"4! by Sou111?
The auction is simple and quantftative.
Remember. in answer 1o one no-trump,
r_...,r not ohow • flve-oartf
minor In a balanced hand unless tie 'ls
thlnklng Blloo1a slam.
Wes1 leads 1he heart six, 1ourth-highest

could ·either be· thai of an lrwenUve pro-

MIKE W. MIICIM. OWNU

Lunch &amp; Dinner
Only $130/person
Cash, check and-credit cards
accepted

All pus ·

tlal

Cell : 740-416-1834

given that on Saturday,
May 16, 2009 at 10:00

Eoot

3 NT

'TAURUS (AP!ll 20-Moy 20) - Atil.ough
·you enjoy competllh{e sportt, your ego
might nOf be ·ablt to lianctre lolling too
~II. You won''t · ~etnrlty let othert
know, but that slow bum wMI eventually
place you In a tout mood.

· ON THE DESW..TELL
I-IlM l-IE CAN BE M'r' D06

ALL TASTINGS INCLUDED,

Norlll

Pal!

Unteu your ObJectives areol4rtfled In the
year ahead, You are likely _to wute mo111
time pursuing hof1ow v.lcloi1M. tn order
not fJ) Witte Ya!Uibfe tliM, focul on
_ _,I ol ~ ll'lri! olfor , . . - ,.

740-985-4141

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Ia heraby

w..t

!.NT

Soturday. May 11, !1001
ByBomlco-0101

WHAT YO{):RI
STYLE. ••

Public Notice

South

20 God*n'o

_ ubrl_!l...k
33 .--

28 Audit-

-~!!'!.

WRITE TO '(OUR IIROTIIER '

Friday, July 17, 2009
l.lCihart,ared Coach Tra1~spoortatlon
to Four Ohio Wineries,

K 7 5!

DOWN

11 ;::.. 39 ::.:..... ...
11 Fotaful data 41 Cady

. lnlclc
2 Typo of btd
producer U 110-hum
3 Veld
23 Movlo .
45 ~
rentatnoed44Uaea
4 Ptayw'a liP 24 "En garde"
,.,..:tud*
5- K
-pon
47 , _ Dllm
(ltnprGVI") 2e E~
olle
8 tv•s Tonan 2e Doolgnar 44 Drop
7 Roallng
lebol
49 Alia"

22 T-mon

23 ODJitll II
2e Her!llndo

~Astro- ·

Anlri.~l!&gt;i

OHIO WINERIES TOUR

....v

to hearta, he would lead a high apede

J&amp;L
Construction

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!! .

21 llanriild bug

Qt&amp;

spot; noi his low111.)

.------....,

Tree removal, planting,
lawn care, and·au your
landscaping needs.
Residential and Commercial
Fully

Stillugly

-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

IOIU

740-985-4384

1:.,

a

.,c_..,

Limited Time

1t

36 Lotnncl

Yesterday I mentioned the acronym
Boston: Bo11orh ol Sorne1hing, Tot) 01

~=~~~~~~~~J~e~ff~S~te~th~e~m~~
(740).517-6883
&amp;

no expressed or Implied warranty given.
For further lnlorma·

i:J.~~~:J5~~~~::1
~RIZZWELLS
Ill em-lEI\ ~W~,

References Available!
Call Gary Slanley @

A fEW M\"Ul'E~ or 'I'EAC£
\!I~I&lt;E OUT \dJI...'/ •.

ARIES (Maf';:h 21 ·Aprll 19) - ·If ycur

aOclal companions are al! big •~nders,
that lat wallet you're carrying around
could gellhlnoer. e. sinarl, and try not to
matth them dollar lor d911ar.

,.tol\fU'?I:ll-l ~\l'i'it.O ~Ef"o~£ Dl~o~OE~ 'I SOUP TO NUTZ
WA~ QU\~\&lt;-\;'f
.
~t:'7~'C.t&gt;

740-591-8044
Please leave messa e

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Dec:ks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
~VnO-lO%.t

Cell740 &lt;lHi 2960

llO

9~12

0730

- --•

ANY atANa

Experl-

Sol..

(5) 13, 14,15

Ttf~

Rick Johnson-Owner

Guttering

"' &amp; 3

It is the same
in the middle

WE COtv'E IJVTo~
THIS WoflLP
WITH WOTHIN'G
AN'P WE /..EAVE
WITH
...... WOTHIN'G

· General repair

Service

c....,... Tire

• 10 7 3
t to a s 1 2

Opening lead: • .6 : '

Gallipolis, OU 45631
Insured. Free:

Now Selling:
• Ford &amp; Molorcraft
Parts • Engines,
EmTransfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
'Afrermarkel
Replacement Sheet
pool- MOlal &amp; Co.mplne:nls.l
diesel

ence
necessary.
Health/Relirement
BenefitS. Fax resume to
74().446-9104 or e-mail
toLLCCICAREQCOM

No

We Haul
Umestone- Gravel
. Dirt· Ac·Ume
74D-98!5·4422_

CONSTRUCTION

,_..

otngar
56 Umb'o olio
18 TtKUp port 57 Aaefttlon
17 Looldngtor ·
10 WorkOut

Dealer: South
. Vulnerable: Both

Johnson's 'free

GRAND OPENING

via OU1Ilound calling and

in11uential political
leaders and interest

Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
VInyl Siding &amp;

• E•ecule business development. Strategies, in·

community oUireach prog·rams in the branch market area
The preferred candidate
is a· business profes·
sional who is self-mot1·
vated and committed to
working effectively wltl'1
senior management, the
Board ot Directors and
employees under his/her
management.
Salai'/
commensurate witl'1 experience.
To apply. sent tetter of
interest 'and resume to:
,lender Position, PO Box
4847, -A1hens, Oh 45701
by Friday May 15, 2009.

conservative causes,

We do drivi!WI(ays

r----;.....--,

Talk with o1her
consei'Vative values.
Also raise funds for

semce .

• Facilitate the openilg
of new deposit aecounbi

Americans 10 promote

'T
ISS
IT!

•
&lt;r

it

institution

of customer relationships

;--------------------~
~

'

· Flnanda"l

Athens County seeks experienceq lender manager. Primary respoosi bilities include:
• Supervise and manage
all branch operations, in·
ance and paid vacations eluding supeNisiOn anti
are
also
available. coaching for fOur emPlease apply In person. ptoyees
Located at 426 Viand St. • Make and service mort·
in downtown Pt Pleas- gage, commercial, and
ant
installment loans

Roberts.

13-794-3154

! :"'~S.~u~po:•;mo.;-~y~'=.-

Is curreotJy seeking an
Inside retail sales person
for our Pt. Pleasant . WV
location. E)Cperience pre!erred, job benefirs in·
dude -401 k, health insur·

conract

•

"••a•-/

lftiP Wanlod. General

lis for immediate empk)y- '""!"'-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;.;;i;;; ~....~~~~'"='"'-

ment. Accounting degree Independent

Room

R.L HOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck

component

=
=

Flow"

• AKJ
• QJ 3

.,=888;;;;;.·,;;56;;5;.;-o;.;,16;;,;7__...,

::

HCIUJOIForRonl

Erlot

Local Contractor

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

50~~1 FaN fruH
53 Wh~

55 Kuwa~t

15 "Orinoco

w..t

Additions ·

n6ect lo own your dream
home. Ca NNow!
Freedom Homes

uC:ftgilt
4e Ribbon trim

. 14 Dlv1"1 111111 54 Totality

Drywall,
Remodeling, Room

Tara
TownhQuse
Apa rtments - 2BR, ~ .5
bath. back patio, poot,
playground, (trash, sewage,
water
pel,)
S425/rent.
$425/sec.
dep. can 740-645-859:9

f311tn1Jtrry
. rt¥11

-Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows;
Electric, Plumbing,

Gallipolis City Park and :::;:~;;,.;;;.;;;._ __
Rrver.
l A
den. lrg.
"The Proctorville
Difference"
Krtchen-dinrng area with
all new appliances &amp;
$ 1 and a deed is all you

cupboa rds.

membor

43 GrU&amp;ytl•

couoln
f2 FltiUMlJIIn

'Roofing, Sldl!lg,

overlooking 866·21 5-5n4

*I ~.J:'Y

42 SorMy

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

qualtficatJQn,

(86$)21 5-5n 4

Spaciou.s

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

&amp; 4BA HUO Subsk:l!led 304-812·721 4.

Apartmems. Appficahons
are
taken
Monday
through
Fnday. . from
9em lpm _ Ofttee IS ~
cated at 11 51 Evergreen
Dnve
P01m
Pleasant,
WV 304·675·5806

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

_______ _____

__:

_____________________________

I

�I

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Apatu.... ~
Townhou.o

I

Friday, May 1,5, 2009

1www.myclally18ntlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

'

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

--=;;~~;;..;;;;;;; For rent T6xEIO 2br. re·
Pleasant Valley Apart· 1ndg. &amp; slove included,
ments IS now taklrig ap- •big lawn in GlenWOOd
~lionS fpr 2SR, 3BR WV $400.00 a mon.
""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"

Sales

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~==•
Country liv1ng 3, 4, &amp; 5
bedrooms. Owner will fi.
nance Call lOday for pre-

Co1.mtry living- 3-5BA,
2-3 BA oo pmpef!y.
Many floof plans! Easy
Financing! We own the
seconctlthird bank.
Call
today!

l!oor

apt

3

bath
. s,

area.
month. CaK

S900

BR.

2

Iaundry
per

440-2325 or 446-4425

Cammeroial
Ofllcel
WarehousWStorage
Great location 749 Third
Ave.. Gallipolis!
$399/month for 1800
sqlt Build~t negotiable
Cat! Wayne
404-456-3802

Condom ·
-. ..~~~;in;i...,.~;;;;;;;;
River front 3br · 2 full
baths, basement, water
and sewer pd. Central

AC . $600

sao. dep. $600

rent. ]40-446-34Bi

$_19Q/mo! · 4 bed.

2 bath.

Bank R epo~ (o'i % down. 15
~e;~r,. !\'-} APRI fo r liStings

800·6Xl-49_.6 ~~ R027
home 1 car garage
w/ river frontage located
ir1
New Haven
WV
304-934·7462
or
~br.

304-573-6334 .
2
bedroom

$350/mo
$350/dep water · &amp; trash
paid. Pets with writing
permission.
· Phone
740-245-5671
5 room house at -44 Olive
St. Has stovetrefridge.
$425/rent plus deposit,
No pets. 446·3945

4000

Manufac tu•e d
Hous1ng

;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

. Rental•

,_='-';.;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
2 Br· water and trash . in-

• K J 82
• Q9&amp;62
• 9 7

• A 10 3

• AI
South
•

•

position
with
Accountant:

~~~:;~::~~~=~~=~";;~===~~~

busy
acFull-time

counting o1f~• in Galipo- Help

Wam.d. Gontral

~

and e.perience required . need

~

contractors App818Chlen Tlre Prod-

to make Pharma- ucts, Inc.

Must have good organ· ·
izational skills and the
ability to work independenrty with strong anention Ia detail. Please
send resume and references 1o
gaJiipolisaccountant@

ceutical deliveries in Gal·
lipolis and Manetta re·
glon. Independent contractors wm drive there
own vehk:le. Must be
able to pass drug screen,
background check &amp; mb·
tor vehicle chad~:. Must.
gmail.com
be flexible to m3ke deliv.or mail to ClA 101 , PO eries in the evenings &amp;
Box 469, · Gallipolis. OH weekends. This is a
45631
great
opportunity
lot
to
ke
l
""'""""""""'""'"""""',;'someone
ma
ex ra

education

-="""'~~'---

'ncome.
cnsli

Please

or . email

c;ris!le@ prioritydispatch.c
VACANCV: H.S. SCI·
om
ENCE INSTRUCTOR
VB iid Ohio Science qertiticati on required. CON· :!:A~N.·L~PN~
. ~&amp;~H~H~A0:3~
92~Sil·

TACT;

ver
aridge
Plaza.
Gattia·Jackson-VInton
740·446·3606
JVSD (740) 245·5334,
El&lt;t. 201 _EEO
Rehabilitation
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' Overbrook
Hofp Won!MI· Gontral Cent~r is currently seek·
"-iioi.ii;;i;;~;i;;;;;;.;;;i;;;ii; ing a beautician to work
in the facility's beauty sa·
Deliveryf\o\larehouse per- !on. Candidates should
son needed, full time, im- possess · a valid Ohio
mediate opening, musl Managing Casmetoloigist
have good driving · re· License . Salary is based
caret App!y·lifeslyle FUr· on
com mission.
Internilure 856 Tflird Ave . ested candictates should
GalliPolis, 9:30·5:00 No fill out an application at
Pl'1oneCalts
333 Page Street. ·Middle·
port, Ohio. Overbrook
. , . . . - - - - - - Cenler participates in the
Sales rep needed to sell drug free Workplace ProCable TV &amp; related serv· . gram.
Ices In the Pt. Pleasant.
GallipoliS areas. Sales ==~":'"~~.exp.
preferred.
Paid AVON! All Areas! To Buy
training. Great Earning Of Sell Shlrley Spears

'luded. No pets. At Johnson 's MatHie Home Park.
Caii 740·+645·0S06
Potential. 304-476-2159.

304·675-1429

Are you

Conservative?

groups.
1

1

Hiring ALL Shifts
1 Weekly Pay &amp;
Bonuses
1 Onsite Doctor

Complete Benefils
Package

-1 FREE NRA
membership

Call NOW to schedule
your lntervlewl
1-888-IMC·PAYU
Ext 2311
Apply online:
hhp11obt.lnloclolon.col!l

Don11DISS IbiS
OPPOrtunity II reach
over 11.000 holies
~alltpolis

ilBatlp m:rtbune
.t)otnt Jleasant laegtster
and Daily Sentinel

Health care Edidta
10 be publlshell
MIJ22,2009
Hurry, UIDIIS
running 1011
.

Ad Deadline is

11118,2009

Painting
Patio and Porch

740-367--«1544
F - Estimates
740-367.0536

Hours
7:00am·· 8:00pm

S&amp;L
Trucking

BANKS

•

eluding the enhancement

Equal Opportunl1y
ployer

Modic•lictO
Service Technician
lion a.ailable lor

hydraul~s.

and

Dump Truck
Service
We Haul Gravel,
Limestone. ·Coal,
Compost, Top Soil
Call Walt or Sandy

740-992-3220
or 7400-591-3726

ell

co.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commordal•
Residential
•FreeEstl(740) 992-50011

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

15

Cu~m

Home Building
Steel Frame Buildings

TOPAY'S

Building, Remodeling
www banbcdb.com ·

EsUma1es. 20yn E&gt;&lt;p.
74044t-9J87

/ Of A IAILptJT1

~

. Harfrood hblnetry Alld FurJIHiiie

Aepo~lr

Seamless Guttere
Roo1ing, Siding, Gutters
lnsurud &amp; EJOOded

Center &amp;
Teti.i Auto
Tr.,..,.l..lon

u

1 LOST EV'RY PENNY

kALt&amp;i...,.

1 HAD IN THAT CARD ·
GAME !! ELVtNE'&lt;'S

GONNA .
KILL
ME !!

740-653-9657

Ia rour check
engine light on? .
Come....,elt
ac1111nedforfne
OHerl

---

;::
CUTIING EDGE
LAWN CARE

'"

C'M0~1 LUI&lt;EV, I'LL
HALP 'I'A PICK SOMe
FLOWERS !!

YEP .••

OR YORE

FUN&amp;AAL!!

Commerdal &amp;
Residential
Free Estimates
• Lawn Maiptenance
• Landscaping
• Power Washing
S th C 1
e
ar eton
· (740) 517·5432

THE BORN LOSER
.

.

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019
Owners:
Jon van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Salesperson
Needed:
Exp9rience in building
matertals required. ApP11
in person. Thomas Do It
Center, Gallipolis Joca·

tlon. ·

Nata's -.
I I88
Service

I""'mt OLI&gt; AAN. I~ QUITE. ""'
€:~ Wlil-\ 1-\l~f",

Cell: 740-418-5047

email:

~~~T

,

'"You WOI"'T Fl~t&gt; ~MOU

"""~

I'"'AAI&gt; Tl-l~i'~~'T J~J~i fo\'(

"""~

=~g&gt;'T~ ~ OPII-l10N..~.~~~50, 'TOO!

l-It 1

jrshadfrm@aol.com •

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows

•Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Add!llona

ow...:

James KefiH_II
742·2332

Frtsh North Carolina

SHRIMP
(740) 742-2563
yti'Ji, ne~r froun, htadl o•

$10 per lb Cash only

~==j' ~L...-J...l::~t:=Dif·

Pnlr IS required in ndv1111c-t
Shipments arrive ~vtry

other Frida

CaD: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
· For: • Room Additions • Patios
• Porches • Qec'ks·• Garages • Horse Barns •
Vinyl &amp; Wood Siding.• Roofing • Chain Link &amp;
Wood Fencing &amp; General Home M~inlenance

a.m., ·a public sale will
be held at 211 W. Second St., Pomeroy,
Ohio. Tho Fannare
Bank and Savings
Company Ia Mlllng for
cash In hand or cart\·
fled check the follow·
lng collateral:
1996 Chev Blazar
1GNOT13WOT2279612
2005 Honda Clvtc
1HGES1638SL003968
The Fannero Bank and
Savlnga
Company,

Pomeroy, Ohio, r•
the right to bid
at thla sale, and to
wHhdaw the above col·
lateral prior to 1111.
serve~

Further, The Farmera
Bonk end Savlnga

Company,....... the
right to reject any or all
bids aubmltted.
The abOn d•scrlbed
collataral wilt be oold
"aa l•where Ia", with

tlon, or for an appointment to Inspect
collateral, prior to sale
date contlict Cyndle or
Ken at 992·2136.

OOISIRUmON
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

LIMITED SEATS AVAILABLE
Payment due at time of
reservation ,
Coach leaves PVH lower level
parking lot at 8 a.m.
Coach returns at aPJlrO:KhrlaiEIIy
10:30 p,m.
Please call
PVH Communlly Relations
to reserve a seat,
(304) 675-4340, EKt. 1326

BAOANCE
AEROBICS
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center
Beginning Tuesday, May 19
Tuesday evenings ( 7 p.m.)
Thursday evenings ( 5 p.m.)
$6/class
Instructor: Ashley Hackney
For more information,
(304) 675-7222

J40-992-1m
I '''

Slop &amp; Compare

IS THAT WHnOU .

• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• De&lt;ks • Additions
•Electrical
·,Plumbing
• Pole Barns

COME. SIR BILLIAM

STOPPED MAKING FUN
OF LIVE·ACTION ROLE·
PLAYING VlofOS ON

BAGiiENG€, GI&lt;AB
YOUII PADDED

CAt-IYOU
B111NG ME

WEMIGiiTOO
BArTL£

SWSHEEl
(

SABI2E SO THAT

YOUTUilE~

BACK A

AT THE

SOCCER

I
SIOIY"
, compooer

=-

"II mtf"'

;:a~ 32
~=.!till
Oonrit'o
"doni"

52

=

undlr lllnl

34 Stuh tho
btga

• ComiCII

38 0!11 of two

'-.__) "

1

WHAT A loiORRieL.E

29 Years 1!1tperleotce'

~y

::::

o:~mb~':.J~ ~
fllur llmpl6 word&amp;

1 0 XES T

Il'l i'flll
P L· r o s

Make

every effort no~ to · acclctenlt;lly reveal
something tOld to you In confide~. or
that longtime friendship m'tght never be
tM same. Wa1eh whAt cOm11 out Of your

·

,

(S.pt 23·Clc1- 23) - 9ooAu18

you rarely take any .klrtd of game teri·
ousrv. you might be templed to bend the

rules jUst to keep things competitive and
tun. However, your competitor tan'! likely
to f1!H ttllnga that way.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -It's apt to
be a bad move to make a commitment
that you have no Intention at keeping. It
dOesn't matt!lr how valid the reason It;
only tha.t If you dOn't honar 11, thing• wilt

_SCRAM·LBTS ANSWERS 5114/09'

Tnlism - Heave -" Crown - Burial · MINIATURB
One colleague to another, "I hear our bilsinetl$ is so
bsd'that the big shot's have to play MINIATURE
ARLO&amp;JANIS

piUs,' you niay Mn want to· RCJII:·
.pone oa.ttlng It flxec;l by a professional to
another day.
::;;;;...,_ _;_;,.....,;;.;....J CAPRICORN .(Oec. 22~an . 19) - There
are no guarantees thlil: you wiD have a
good time regardless of company and
money spent It you don't nt01lve e)Cact·
ly what you thought you should. take It In

r;:;:;-;:;:;;:;;;)T,"N:;;"":rt;;.:;:;;:;'I:-J

NIC$HTMARE!

· David Lewis :

r::~=' S(Q~~-&lt;Zt.~s·
-d CLAV II. PCILIN

_. . .

SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec. ' 21) MtllakH are Ukely, so It ml~t t141 amart
no1 to try to fix an expensMt Item your· .

YEOL£

H. '

PREViOUS SOLUTION: "I can't change !he dlrec1\on of the wine!. bull can _
adlua! my aallsto always reach my dsa!lnatlon_• • Jimmy Dean ·
.

no1 gowen.

FIEI.DS
BEHIND

I I II l'1 I I\ I I&lt; I I I
( (1\, fill ( II (I\
Concrete Removal ,

stride.
AQUARIUS

(Jan. 20.Feb. 19) - Unless
you are totally committed to your
endeavor, regar.dle&amp;B of Ita importance,

740-992·6971 :

the results could be sketchy. You have
t.. ability to .d o so. but you might not

Insured

have the COf'ICJntratlon.
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mon:ll 20) - You.,.
' gtftiKI wtlh accurate hunchea and per·
ceptlooa, but th is might not be a good
time to p)aoe much lmpo!'tlnce In any of
o..;;-,.-.t them. Place all your faith In logical, prov·
abte lili8888IT!elnts.

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
•Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Ra[es
*Insured ·
*Experienced

·

GEMINI (May 21·June :iZO) -

LIBRA

.J

Free Estimatts

and Replacement
n -·

re,.atde.

precedence.

Free Estimate ~

Replacement
Windows and
VInyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563

35
fngt!llnto
37 lAnd In .

:It Mil
31 Toyolllock

~- 19 form

ducer or a dever rdonallzer. Don't make
excuSes why the t•tter Jhoutd take

I'M HESITANT TO
CIIITICIZE BECAUSE
ALL TOO OFTEN I END UP
BEING GUILTY OF WHAT
I'M CRITICAL OF.

NCJt affiliated witb Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; RemlXh:ling

ROBERT
BISSELL

-

uo.-·•

ftom hio ·10nge01 su~. Sou1l1 1lktS 1he 1rid&lt; (perhaps w~1 a decep11ie ~ng) and
B11act&lt;l dubo. When W!IS11o In with hil
.
by LUll ClllllpOI
ace, he ahtxJ(d oee 1he MINty of continuCeilbll!r ~ CIWIIDII~ lfl Cfllted !IMI Qllllllkl'll by llmcM ptelllll. put IIICt PfiiOI'It. •
Ing with helilla. Evan Wat trick 008 Sou1h
,
,
. EICtllerttr ln #11 dptllf lllfldiiGir anolil&amp;r.
,
captured Eaa1~ 10 with hll ~ng.
Today'o r:iuo: f squill M
weal should reellzo1hil1 dodarer has 11
leat nlno11ick1 reedy 1o 111n: 1WO h.. rtl. "GJY VLZBL. SL sc · DJT., PFLC GJY
two diamOnda, 10&lt;11 CU.. and olthar 008
IPodt or a tltl~ diamond. The only T J C 'P V L Z B L 9 L H C G I J W L H C·T
cl1ance 1s 1o shlf1 10 .spades. And by
leading the apade two, Wll1 lo 1e1Hng N F L·C G J Y F H 9 L H VB 0 A W J V Z L E, •
Eaof1he1 be Is trying to i:Uh 1r1cklln 1tt11
ault, that 11e t1oes not warn Eaot 1o win GJY AWHO HCONHO."
HZHBC
and awttch back 10 lleartl. (W Wll1wan1·
eel Eaot 1o win 1he apado shift end reve~ TLZJC

moUth. . .
CANCER (June 2' -July 22) ..:.. Be wary
ot doing buaiM ... With a peraon WhoM
reputa1ion It •UIPfCl Make aura lhlt all
agraemanta , 1re put In wrftlng 1nd
signed; don't depend on any 'kind of ver·
bal promises..
·
LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22~- Oon't be unduly influenced by someone with a disreputable history, no maner how enchanting
the peraon. 11. This Individual could be a
master at leading otnere astray.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Your mind
rs· as eharp. as a razor, b:l,ll Its worklnga

pow and BOY

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bot1om, OH

25+ yean experience

atatue
1 FOA'o mom 22 llpolw

Nothing. T1tis means 1hat ff you lead a
low card in suit, you promise a11eas1
one honor in tha1 suit. Wrttoo1 an honor,
lead hi9fl- (Whon you havo a waak su~.
lead 1he higheS1 earn - lop 01 nothing
- 'Nhen the tOp two are touching;,fOf
example, 1he oiglrt kom 8-7·5-4. Bu1
lead 1tie se&lt;:ond-highest ll11en t1iO lop
two are not touching; for examp(S, the
...., lrom 9-Hl·3-)
This ·rute• applies not only at trick one
btJI·also 111'oughOUI the play 1111en a su~
is broken by a defender. This cleat is an
example. How ahoukJ 1he defense proceed agalnS1 three ,..,.1rufT"4! by Sou111?
The auction is simple and quantftative.
Remember. in answer 1o one no-trump,
r_...,r not ohow • flve-oartf
minor In a balanced hand unless tie 'ls
thlnklng Blloo1a slam.
Wes1 leads 1he heart six, 1ourth-highest

could ·either be· thai of an lrwenUve pro-

MIKE W. MIICIM. OWNU

Lunch &amp; Dinner
Only $130/person
Cash, check and-credit cards
accepted

All pus ·

tlal

Cell : 740-416-1834

given that on Saturday,
May 16, 2009 at 10:00

Eoot

3 NT

'TAURUS (AP!ll 20-Moy 20) - Atil.ough
·you enjoy competllh{e sportt, your ego
might nOf be ·ablt to lianctre lolling too
~II. You won''t · ~etnrlty let othert
know, but that slow bum wMI eventually
place you In a tout mood.

· ON THE DESW..TELL
I-IlM l-IE CAN BE M'r' D06

ALL TASTINGS INCLUDED,

Norlll

Pal!

Unteu your ObJectives areol4rtfled In the
year ahead, You are likely _to wute mo111
time pursuing hof1ow v.lcloi1M. tn order
not fJ) Witte Ya!Uibfe tliM, focul on
_ _,I ol ~ ll'lri! olfor , . . - ,.

740-985-4141

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Ia heraby

w..t

!.NT

Soturday. May 11, !1001
ByBomlco-0101

WHAT YO{):RI
STYLE. ••

Public Notice

South

20 God*n'o

_ ubrl_!l...k
33 .--

28 Audit-

-~!!'!.

WRITE TO '(OUR IIROTIIER '

Friday, July 17, 2009
l.lCihart,ared Coach Tra1~spoortatlon
to Four Ohio Wineries,

K 7 5!

DOWN

11 ;::.. 39 ::.:..... ...
11 Fotaful data 41 Cady

. lnlclc
2 Typo of btd
producer U 110-hum
3 Veld
23 Movlo .
45 ~
rentatnoed44Uaea
4 Ptayw'a liP 24 "En garde"
,.,..:tud*
5- K
-pon
47 , _ Dllm
(ltnprGVI") 2e E~
olle
8 tv•s Tonan 2e Doolgnar 44 Drop
7 Roallng
lebol
49 Alia"

22 T-mon

23 ODJitll II
2e Her!llndo

~Astro- ·

Anlri.~l!&gt;i

OHIO WINERIES TOUR

....v

to hearta, he would lead a high apede

J&amp;L
Construction

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!! .

21 llanriild bug

Qt&amp;

spot; noi his low111.)

.------....,

Tree removal, planting,
lawn care, and·au your
landscaping needs.
Residential and Commercial
Fully

Stillugly

-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

IOIU

740-985-4384

1:.,

a

.,c_..,

Limited Time

1t

36 Lotnncl

Yesterday I mentioned the acronym
Boston: Bo11orh ol Sorne1hing, Tot) 01

~=~~~~~~~~J~e~ff~S~te~th~e~m~~
(740).517-6883
&amp;

no expressed or Implied warranty given.
For further lnlorma·

i:J.~~~:J5~~~~::1
~RIZZWELLS
Ill em-lEI\ ~W~,

References Available!
Call Gary Slanley @

A fEW M\"Ul'E~ or 'I'EAC£
\!I~I&lt;E OUT \dJI...'/ •.

ARIES (Maf';:h 21 ·Aprll 19) - ·If ycur

aOclal companions are al! big •~nders,
that lat wallet you're carrying around
could gellhlnoer. e. sinarl, and try not to
matth them dollar lor d911ar.

,.tol\fU'?I:ll-l ~\l'i'it.O ~Ef"o~£ Dl~o~OE~ 'I SOUP TO NUTZ
WA~ QU\~\&lt;-\;'f
.
~t:'7~'C.t&gt;

740-591-8044
Please leave messa e

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Dec:ks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
~VnO-lO%.t

Cell740 &lt;lHi 2960

llO

9~12

0730

- --•

ANY atANa

Experl-

Sol..

(5) 13, 14,15

Ttf~

Rick Johnson-Owner

Guttering

"' &amp; 3

It is the same
in the middle

WE COtv'E IJVTo~
THIS WoflLP
WITH WOTHIN'G
AN'P WE /..EAVE
WITH
...... WOTHIN'G

· General repair

Service

c....,... Tire

• 10 7 3
t to a s 1 2

Opening lead: • .6 : '

Gallipolis, OU 45631
Insured. Free:

Now Selling:
• Ford &amp; Molorcraft
Parts • Engines,
EmTransfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
'Afrermarkel
Replacement Sheet
pool- MOlal &amp; Co.mplne:nls.l
diesel

ence
necessary.
Health/Relirement
BenefitS. Fax resume to
74().446-9104 or e-mail
toLLCCICAREQCOM

No

We Haul
Umestone- Gravel
. Dirt· Ac·Ume
74D-98!5·4422_

CONSTRUCTION

,_..

otngar
56 Umb'o olio
18 TtKUp port 57 Aaefttlon
17 Looldngtor ·
10 WorkOut

Dealer: South
. Vulnerable: Both

Johnson's 'free

GRAND OPENING

via OU1Ilound calling and

in11uential political
leaders and interest

Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
VInyl Siding &amp;

• E•ecule business development. Strategies, in·

community oUireach prog·rams in the branch market area
The preferred candidate
is a· business profes·
sional who is self-mot1·
vated and committed to
working effectively wltl'1
senior management, the
Board ot Directors and
employees under his/her
management.
Salai'/
commensurate witl'1 experience.
To apply. sent tetter of
interest 'and resume to:
,lender Position, PO Box
4847, -A1hens, Oh 45701
by Friday May 15, 2009.

conservative causes,

We do drivi!WI(ays

r----;.....--,

Talk with o1her
consei'Vative values.
Also raise funds for

semce .

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~

'

· Flnanda"l

Athens County seeks experienceq lender manager. Primary respoosi bilities include:
• Supervise and manage
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Located at 426 Viand St. • Make and service mort·
in downtown Pt Pleas- gage, commercial, and
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Roberts.

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Inside retail sales person
for our Pt. Pleasant . WV
location. E)Cperience pre!erred, job benefirs in·
dude -401 k, health insur·

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NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

_______ _____

__:

_____________________________

I

�Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

.,.-;.+.,-..
t 't- I

www.mydailysentinei.com

1

Friday, May 15, 2009 .

• "you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538.,

cam;m,Miacb'

Sprint Cup
• bee: Sprint AI~Star Challenge
• wt..: Lowe's Motor SpeedwtlfER!Cod. N.C. (1.5 mi.).
100 Ia / 150 miles.
• .

· Satur~. May 16.

• a..t ,_.. whllr.

:': ·l'nlclllerles .
.:!' l't.C. EIU:atlon Lottery
~
- '1""'
._: AN,
:"""

p.m.,·.

.

:· !1id!ly, May 15
"'"'

~-

..;

, ·1-ttiuiu•ri,'JillJd~HiJ
·r.
. •·'' .

-

:1. $Uifaoehas~t0hurt

:o.

., 11&gt; ll1e oombil\allon of an unwieldy
; car.and' relati\j;ly new tliiCI!

·~

the racing at ooe ofNASCAR's·

.;..;._p at IJlld!S, DarlingtOn Raee-

:'f'ifi!li. PaSsI~ at the front of the
:;.~pa.;te was almost xlstent in
n. o n e

p-)1!!! Soothem 500. ·

••.; -.. Mark Martin won at Darlington
only the second time at the
Sprint Cup IMI. The flrst was
• ~ nearly 16 years ago.
.
· :ell&gt; 'JI)is Is th~ first Ume in a
-~:· ~nm'Martin has won •
. ; more than once in.a single sea- ·
. son. He has 37 career victories.
: Only 16 drivers in history have
c. won 1110re. Martin is riow Ued
• with the late Bobby Isaac, the
: •1970 Grand National {now Cup ·
~ . champion.
• The indefinite suspensions
issued to driver Jeremy Ma~
· field and two crew members
came as a shock. NASCAR of·
' ficials banished them based
on the results of random drug
tests.
.
: • 1'houg)l Mll)1leld's suspension ·
: was anlicJunced shortly before the
running of the Southam 500, ~
: · had no direct effect on the event
because Mayfiekj had failed 10
.make the field a day earlier.
• 11&gt; Darlington is unique because
• of its history and the egg shape
'· ;. of the surface. The next two
~· races, one ui1offjclal, are at
'- · Lowe's Motor Speedway.
11&gt; The Sprint All-Star Ra.ce Is a
' seg,Mnted series of sprints.
• The Coca-Cola 600 is the
: longest race of ~ kind in the
• world.
.: I&gt; The lop saven finishers In the . .
•· Southern 500 all drM Chemllets.
•. 11&gt;ln terms of there being visible
clumps of empty seats, no race
· · this year has been a sellout,
t · : thOughlhey were declared at
;: Daytona and Bristol. II was (he
• same story at Darlington. II
::;. was a good crowd, perhaps im- ·
;:; presslve even in view of the
:;: sagging economy, but not a
• sellout.
:: 11&gt;lri the final ha~ of the South•· · em 500. lh&lt;ire were no full: speed passes for the lead. Mar·
• tin's victory was a triumph of
::. track position, which seems In: · creaslngly common.

isey

Kahne, Dodge.
•ronn.t: Four segments, in descend'ngorder
50 20 20arv1
1
:
• '
10 lape. Only greer&gt;llag
laps ,count in the final segment field
composed of wiMing drivers and
car owners from the 2008{)9
seasons, acUve Champions from
lhe pest 10 years and 1~
winners of the event. The top
two finishers in an Introductory
event. The Sprint, w~l transfer
. into the AI~Star field, afong with

one dri'ler selected via.fan vote.
•LIIIrace: Mark Martin man-

::'~"!t~~~~~
••- •
... and that's the ~ the race
was won. That was lap 322 out

of 367. "This was unbeliewble; · 1 bee: Carquest Auto
Parts 300
said Martin. "We had a strong
IW...: Lowe~ Mo!oc
car, but llle'lj!t' expected to will.
... P~ strategy put us in position
~.~. N.C. {1.5
to pull ~ ott: In the closing laps,
IIi.), 200 laPS/D:I "'les.
Jimmie Johnson gave a mighty , · I""*': Saturday, M~
effort, but in the end, the winner
23.
of the past three Cup champiit Lilt ,.n whllr. Kyle
onshipscouldn'tpullofflhat
Busch, Toyota. ·
which, on this ni""'.
"'" was humatl' · 1 (lualfl)tc -.1: Jimmie
ly impossible: l)aSS somebody.
Johnson, CheVrolet,
The much-mourned Southern
187.735 mpll, Oct. 14,
500 returned - wrong time ol
2005.
year, but uue restored - and
1 Rice -.1: Mark Marwas a wondrously competiuve
tin, Ford, 155.799 mph,
race ... on pltroad. To par&amp;
May 2~. 1996.
· pllrase the late Vince Lomberdi,
• Lilt,_, Matt Kenseth,
whOse reflections v.ere in reference to winning: Track position · in a Ford, captured the Diamo_
nd Hi11200 at Darlingwasn't everything. tt was the
only thing. It was a battle of sur· ton Racei\W. giving him 25
vival. There were so many caucareer victories in the series.
Tire failure prevented
tlon nags {17), NASCAR could've
Kyle Busch from having a
been handing out "luclri kenI nels •
shot at a fourth victory this
·
year.

n

1 bee: North Carolina EducaUon Lottely 200
• wt..: Lowe's Motor
Speedway, Concqrd,.N.C.
(1.5 mi.), 134 laj)S/201
miles.
.
• When: friday, MaY 15.
I

a..t,.... winner: Matt

Crafton, Cllewolet.
I!!' Ql llf'tlll -.1: Mike
Skinner. Toyota. 183.051
mph·. May 19, 2005.
• bee IICOid: Kyle Busch,
Chevrolet.124.845 mph,
May 19. 2006. ·
I Lilt liCe: Toyota driver
Mike Skinner drove to victory, giVing Randy Moss
his first victory as a
NASCAR owner, in a race
begun on Saturday and
completed on Monday
(April 27), due to weather
conditions, at Kansas
Speedway. .

(

~.... fOr

t:

JUAN PABLO MONTOYA

E
R

Blflle

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The Roush Fenway teammates
tangled on the 284th lap at Darling·
ton. Biffle. who led more laps {117)
than any other driver, wound up
eighth: Edwards limped across the
finish line 32nd, ' Greg (Biffle) just
gotinto the beck of me and got my
Fusion in the wall there; said Ed- •
wards. "It's too bad.' Biffle said he
didn't think his Ford touched Ed- . ,
wards'. ·
•
NdCAR This Week'l Montll . ,
. Dutten iJvee hll take: "T~ere. was . :,
harm but no foul, atleast notan In- •
tentional.one. Hwas just one Of
:'•
them racln' deals."
•

r •

• \\llo'tmtKevin Harvlck
hasn't finished
better than 11th
since-the fourth
nice of the season ... Carl Eelwards' _pall!
three finishes:
24th, 26th and
32nd.

•

:tt&amp;f.iY.Mn ~'~iMJ

•'

:

II tile diMr tiiUIIIIJIGiolllm :

on E ullllciJnlll?

.

.

.

. .

Joll.nC.lark I NASCAR This Week

JUI!I hblo MOiiiUJi Is .currently 141111n Ute Sprl~ Cup Standings. 118 bas lllree top-10 flniJIIH on llltl..-alln• ; .·

.

o·e

J

m roveme
'

rJ

.. \\llo't hOtMark Martin b&lt;icame the sea- ·
son's second
multiple winner.
...Tony Stewart
has been fourth
or better In five
out of tile past
six races

...

•
•

•

.....

s
u
s

Qrqlllflle
VI, Clrf EdW. .

l

..

v

No. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET

SPRINT CUP

Montoya 14th in standings after offseason changes
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

DARLINGTON, S.C.- The new season brought changes for Juan Pablo
Montoya.
The owners of his No. 42 car, Chip
Ganassi and Felix Sabates, merged
their operation with Dale Earnliardt
Inc., creating, along with Teresa Earnhardt, Earnhardt Ganassi Racing with
Felix Sabates. This, in turn, changed.
the make of Montoya's car from
Dodge to Chevrolet.
·
Improvement, so far, bas been mod·
est. Montoya's teammate, Martin
Truex Jr., is 19th in the Sprint Cup
points standings. Montoya is 14th. To
make the Chase, Montoya must finish
the regular season in the top 12. He's

only 16 points behind ihe current occupant of 12th place, Carl Edwards.
Montoya, a driver of international
renown, is in his third Sprint Cup season. His lone Cup victory occurred on
June 24, 2007, at lnfineon Raceway in
Sonoma, Calif. Montoya was
Raybestos Rookie of the Year, but he
· already had victories in the Indianapolis 500 and the Grand Prix of Monaco
·on his resuine. Now, at 33, he is completely focused on becoming a championship contender in stock cars.
"We know where we need to go," he
said. "We know what we need to
acltieve. I think there are a lot of
things in the pipeline that are going to
make us alittle bit better every week.
As long as we · keep finding little
things, we'll be fine.
"You've got to keep 'finding per-

formance. You cannot sit and hope you
· are going to run well. We're (not) doing that. We have good ideas of things
we need to do al)d it's just a matter of
.time to see what happens."
Montoya, from Bogota, Colombia,.
bas three top-10 finishes so far. Sur·
p~isingly, two have b.een on short
tracks. He won his first pole at Tal·
ladega S~perspeedway ori April 24. He ·
thinks he'll be in victory lane again
soon but recognizes the importance of
consistency in making the Chase.
"That's the key to making the Chase,
. and we know that," he said. "A lot
went into putting these teams tOgether.... Phoenix (ApriUS) was the first
step towards getting everybody on the
same page.
"Truex was competitive. I was competitive. It's exciting."

_;

NASCAR This,Week welcomes let- ..
tets to the edffor, but please be aware ·
il)at we have room fOr only a few each ;
wef1k. We'll do our best to select the ;
best, but individual replies are impos- •
slble·due to the bulk of mal~ received. ·,
'Please do not send stampeo and self- ;
addressed envelopes with your lette~
which should be addressed to:
NASCAR This Week

The Gaston Gazette .
P.O. Box 1538 ·
Gastonia, N.C. 28053

Dear NASCAR lhll Week,

'

Since Mr. {Rick) Hendrick thought :
getting rid of Kyle·Busch lor Dale
'
{Earnhardt) Jr. {dumb move) was a
good idea, then I have a suggestion
(or him to complete a really super :
· team. Replace Jeff Gordon with Rol&gt;- •.
by Gordon and Jimmie Johnson with
Michael Waltrip.
.
I have been listening to all of you '
say what ,Is wrong ~h Dale Jr. so far :
this year, and norie of you tell the truth '
that ~·s not the crew chief, not the
race team, but the driver. I know you ·
Junior {ans don't like hearing the
truth, but get over it. Dale Jr. never
has (beenl and never will be champ(on .
in the Sprint Cup Selies. He would
probebly do OK in the Nationwide Se- ·
· nes.
·
·
Last thing: Let Mark Martin go be- ;
cause he sure doesn't belong in this '
'•
group of •wannabes:
•
Ricky Smltll •
Odessa, Texas:
. U's harrl to include Jimmie John-

son and Jeff Gordon, who bel\\ffn

,
tl!em have wen seven championships, ,
in a group of 'wannabes,"

.

'

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                  <text>Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel&#13;
&#13;
.,.-;.+.,-..&#13;
t 't- I&#13;
&#13;
www.mydailysentinei.com&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009 .&#13;
&#13;
• "you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538.,&#13;
&#13;
cam;m,Miacb'&#13;
&#13;
Sprint Cup&#13;
• bee: Sprint AI~Star Challenge&#13;
• wt..: Lowe's Motor SpeedwtlfER!Cod. N.C. (1.5 mi.).&#13;
100 Ia / 150 miles.&#13;
• .&#13;
&#13;
· Satur~. May 16.&#13;
&#13;
• a..t ,_.. whllr.&#13;
&#13;
:': ·l'nlclllerles .&#13;
.:!' l't.C. EIU:atlon Lottery&#13;
~&#13;
- '1""'&#13;
._: AN,&#13;
:"""&#13;
&#13;
p.m.,·.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
:· !1id!ly, May 15&#13;
"'"'&#13;
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~-&#13;
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..;&#13;
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, ·1-ttiuiu•ri,'JillJd~HiJ&#13;
·r.&#13;
. •·'' .&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
:1. $Uifaoehas~t0hurt&#13;
&#13;
:o.&#13;
&#13;
., 11&gt; ll1e oombil\allon of an unwieldy&#13;
; car.and' relati\j;ly new tliiCI!&#13;
&#13;
·~&#13;
&#13;
the racing at ooe ofNASCAR's·&#13;
&#13;
.;..;._p at IJlld!S, DarlingtOn Raee-&#13;
&#13;
:'f'ifi!li. PaSsI~ at the front of the&#13;
:;.~pa.;te was almost xlstent in&#13;
n. o n e&#13;
&#13;
p-)1!!! Soothem 500. ·&#13;
&#13;
••.; -.. Mark Martin won at Darlington&#13;
only the second time at the&#13;
Sprint Cup IMI. The flrst was&#13;
• ~ nearly 16 years ago.&#13;
.&#13;
· :ell&gt; 'JI)is Is th~ first Ume in a&#13;
-~:· ~nm'Martin has won •&#13;
. ; more than once in.a single sea- ·&#13;
. son. He has 37 career victories.&#13;
: Only 16 drivers in history have&#13;
c. won 1110re. Martin is riow Ued&#13;
• with the late Bobby Isaac, the&#13;
: •1970 Grand National {now Cup ·&#13;
~ . champion.&#13;
• The indefinite suspensions&#13;
issued to driver Jeremy Ma~&#13;
· field and two crew members&#13;
came as a shock. NASCAR of·&#13;
' ficials banished them based&#13;
on the results of random drug&#13;
tests.&#13;
.&#13;
: • 1'houg)l Mll)1leld's suspension ·&#13;
: was anlicJunced shortly before the&#13;
running of the Southam 500, ~&#13;
: · had no direct effect on the event&#13;
because Mayfiekj had failed 10&#13;
.make the field a day earlier.&#13;
• 11&gt; Darlington is unique because&#13;
• of its history and the egg shape&#13;
'· ;. of the surface. The next two&#13;
~· races, one ui1offjclal, are at&#13;
'- · Lowe's Motor Speedway.&#13;
11&gt; The Sprint All-Star Ra.ce Is a&#13;
' seg,Mnted series of sprints.&#13;
• The Coca-Cola 600 is the&#13;
: longest race of ~ kind in the&#13;
• world.&#13;
.: I&gt; The lop saven finishers In the . .&#13;
•· Southern 500 all drM Chemllets.&#13;
•. 11&gt;ln terms of there being visible&#13;
clumps of empty seats, no race&#13;
· · this year has been a sellout,&#13;
t · : thOughlhey were declared at&#13;
;: Daytona and Bristol. II was (he&#13;
• same story at Darlington. II&#13;
::;. was a good crowd, perhaps im- ·&#13;
;:; presslve even in view of the&#13;
:;: sagging economy, but not a&#13;
• sellout.&#13;
:: 11&gt;lri the final ha~ of the South•· · em 500. lh&lt;ire were no full: speed passes for the lead. Mar·&#13;
• tin's victory was a triumph of&#13;
::. track position, which seems In: · creaslngly common.&#13;
&#13;
isey&#13;
&#13;
Kahne, Dodge.&#13;
•ronn.t: Four segments, in descend'ngorder&#13;
50 20 20arv1&#13;
1&#13;
:&#13;
• '&#13;
10 lape. Only greer&gt;llag&#13;
laps ,count in the final segment field&#13;
composed of wiMing drivers and&#13;
car owners from the 2008{)9&#13;
seasons, acUve Champions from&#13;
lhe pest 10 years and 1~&#13;
winners of the event. The top&#13;
two finishers in an Introductory&#13;
event. The Sprint, w~l transfer&#13;
. into the AI~Star field, afong with&#13;
&#13;
one dri'ler selected via.fan vote.&#13;
•LIIIrace: Mark Martin man-&#13;
&#13;
::'~"!t~~~~~&#13;
••- •&#13;
... and that's the ~ the race&#13;
was won. That was lap 322 out&#13;
&#13;
of 367. "This was unbeliewble; · 1 bee: Carquest Auto&#13;
Parts 300&#13;
said Martin. "We had a strong&#13;
IW...: Lowe~ Mo!oc&#13;
car, but llle'lj!t' expected to will.&#13;
... P~ strategy put us in position&#13;
~.~. N.C. {1.5&#13;
to pull ~ ott: In the closing laps,&#13;
IIi.), 200 laPS/D:I "'les.&#13;
Jimmie Johnson gave a mighty , · I""*': Saturday, M~&#13;
effort, but in the end, the winner&#13;
23.&#13;
of the past three Cup champiit Lilt ,.n whllr. Kyle&#13;
onshipscouldn'tpullofflhat&#13;
Busch, Toyota. ·&#13;
which, on this ni""'.&#13;
"'" was humatl' · 1 (lualfl)tc -.1: Jimmie&#13;
ly impossible: l)aSS somebody.&#13;
Johnson, CheVrolet,&#13;
The much-mourned Southern&#13;
187.735 mpll, Oct. 14,&#13;
500 returned - wrong time ol&#13;
2005.&#13;
year, but uue restored - and&#13;
1 Rice -.1: Mark Marwas a wondrously competiuve&#13;
tin, Ford, 155.799 mph,&#13;
race ... on pltroad. To par&amp;&#13;
May 2~. 1996.&#13;
· pllrase the late Vince Lomberdi,&#13;
• Lilt,_, Matt Kenseth,&#13;
whOse reflections v.ere in reference to winning: Track position · in a Ford, captured the Diamo_&#13;
nd Hi11200 at Darlingwasn't everything. tt was the&#13;
only thing. It was a battle of sur· ton Racei\W. giving him 25&#13;
vival. There were so many caucareer victories in the series.&#13;
Tire failure prevented&#13;
tlon nags {17), NASCAR could've&#13;
Kyle Busch from having a&#13;
been handing out "luclri kenI nels •&#13;
shot at a fourth victory this&#13;
·&#13;
year.&#13;
&#13;
n&#13;
&#13;
1 bee: North Carolina EducaUon Lottely 200&#13;
• wt..: Lowe's Motor&#13;
Speedway, Concqrd,.N.C.&#13;
(1.5 mi.), 134 laj)S/201&#13;
miles.&#13;
.&#13;
• When: friday, MaY 15.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
a..t,.... winner: Matt&#13;
&#13;
Crafton, Cllewolet.&#13;
I!!' Ql llf'tlll -.1: Mike&#13;
Skinner. Toyota. 183.051&#13;
mph·. May 19, 2005.&#13;
• bee IICOid: Kyle Busch,&#13;
Chevrolet.124.845 mph,&#13;
May 19. 2006. ·&#13;
I Lilt liCe: Toyota driver&#13;
Mike Skinner drove to victory, giVing Randy Moss&#13;
his first victory as a&#13;
NASCAR owner, in a race&#13;
begun on Saturday and&#13;
completed on Monday&#13;
(April 27), due to weather&#13;
conditions, at Kansas&#13;
Speedway. .&#13;
&#13;
(&#13;
&#13;
~.... fOr&#13;
&#13;
t:&#13;
&#13;
JUAN PABLO MONTOYA&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
Blflle&#13;
&#13;
~~&#13;
· J JrJ.···:~.··.&#13;
...~ .c' .J&#13;
?' ~-- •· •. ~&#13;
.,.... .&#13;
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'&#13;
&#13;
'· .·&lt;" ,.~/.J:.rJ. ..... :.-&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
"'&#13;
&#13;
The Roush Fenway teammates&#13;
tangled on the 284th lap at Darling·&#13;
ton. Biffle. who led more laps {117)&#13;
than any other driver, wound up&#13;
eighth: Edwards limped across the&#13;
finish line 32nd, ' Greg (Biffle) just&#13;
gotinto the beck of me and got my&#13;
Fusion in the wall there; said Ed- •&#13;
wards. "It's too bad.' Biffle said he&#13;
didn't think his Ford touched Ed- . ,&#13;
wards'. ·&#13;
•&#13;
NdCAR This Week'l Montll . ,&#13;
. Dutten iJvee hll take: "T~ere. was . :,&#13;
harm but no foul, atleast notan In- •&#13;
tentional.one. Hwas just one Of&#13;
:'•&#13;
them racln' deals."&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
r •&#13;
&#13;
• \\llo'tmtKevin Harvlck&#13;
hasn't finished&#13;
better than 11th&#13;
since-the fourth&#13;
nice of the season ... Carl Eelwards' _pall!&#13;
three finishes:&#13;
24th, 26th and&#13;
32nd.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
:tt&amp;f.iY.Mn ~'~iMJ&#13;
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•'&#13;
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&#13;
.&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
. .&#13;
&#13;
Joll.nC.lark I NASCAR This Week&#13;
&#13;
JUI!I hblo MOiiiUJi Is .currently 141111n Ute Sprl~ Cup Standings. 118 bas lllree top-10 flniJIIH on llltl..-alln• ; .·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
o·e&#13;
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J&#13;
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m roveme&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
rJ&#13;
&#13;
.. \\llo't hOtMark Martin b&lt;icame the sea- ·&#13;
son's second&#13;
multiple winner.&#13;
...Tony Stewart&#13;
has been fourth&#13;
or better In five&#13;
out of tile past&#13;
six races&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
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•&#13;
•&#13;
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•&#13;
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.....&#13;
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s&#13;
u&#13;
s&#13;
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Qrqlllflle&#13;
VI, Clrf EdW. .&#13;
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v&#13;
&#13;
No. 42 TARGET CHEVROLET&#13;
&#13;
SPRINT CUP&#13;
&#13;
Montoya 14th in standings after offseason changes&#13;
By Monte Dutton&#13;
NASCAR This Week&#13;
&#13;
DARLINGTON, S.C.- The new season brought changes for Juan Pablo&#13;
Montoya.&#13;
The owners of his No. 42 car, Chip&#13;
Ganassi and Felix Sabates, merged&#13;
their operation with Dale Earnliardt&#13;
Inc., creating, along with Teresa Earnhardt, Earnhardt Ganassi Racing with&#13;
Felix Sabates. This, in turn, changed.&#13;
the make of Montoya's car from&#13;
Dodge to Chevrolet.&#13;
·&#13;
Improvement, so far, bas been mod·&#13;
est. Montoya's teammate, Martin&#13;
Truex Jr., is 19th in the Sprint Cup&#13;
points standings. Montoya is 14th. To&#13;
make the Chase, Montoya must finish&#13;
the regular season in the top 12. He's&#13;
&#13;
only 16 points behind ihe current occupant of 12th place, Carl Edwards.&#13;
Montoya, a driver of international&#13;
renown, is in his third Sprint Cup season. His lone Cup victory occurred on&#13;
June 24, 2007, at lnfineon Raceway in&#13;
Sonoma, Calif. Montoya was&#13;
Raybestos Rookie of the Year, but he&#13;
· already had victories in the Indianapolis 500 and the Grand Prix of Monaco&#13;
·on his resuine. Now, at 33, he is completely focused on becoming a championship contender in stock cars.&#13;
"We know where we need to go," he&#13;
said. "We know what we need to&#13;
acltieve. I think there are a lot of&#13;
things in the pipeline that are going to&#13;
make us alittle bit better every week.&#13;
As long as we · keep finding little&#13;
things, we'll be fine.&#13;
"You've got to keep 'finding per-&#13;
&#13;
formance. You cannot sit and hope you&#13;
· are going to run well. We're (not) doing that. We have good ideas of things&#13;
we need to do al)d it's just a matter of&#13;
.time to see what happens."&#13;
Montoya, from Bogota, Colombia,.&#13;
bas three top-10 finishes so far. Sur·&#13;
p~isingly, two have b.een on short&#13;
tracks. He won his first pole at Tal·&#13;
ladega S~perspeedway ori April 24. He ·&#13;
thinks he'll be in victory lane again&#13;
soon but recognizes the importance of&#13;
consistency in making the Chase.&#13;
"That's the key to making the Chase,&#13;
. and we know that," he said. "A lot&#13;
went into putting these teams tOgether.... Phoenix (ApriUS) was the first&#13;
step towards getting everybody on the&#13;
same page.&#13;
"Truex was competitive. I was competitive. It's exciting."&#13;
&#13;
_;&#13;
&#13;
NASCAR This,Week welcomes let- ..&#13;
tets to the edffor, but please be aware ·&#13;
il)at we have room fOr only a few each ;&#13;
wef1k. We'll do our best to select the ;&#13;
best, but individual replies are impos- •&#13;
slble·due to the bulk of mal~ received. ·,&#13;
'Please do not send stampeo and self- ;&#13;
addressed envelopes with your lette~&#13;
which should be addressed to:&#13;
NASCAR This Week&#13;
&#13;
The Gaston Gazette .&#13;
P.O. Box 1538 ·&#13;
Gastonia, N.C. 28053&#13;
&#13;
Dear NASCAR lhll Week,&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Since Mr. {Rick) Hendrick thought :&#13;
getting rid of Kyle·Busch lor Dale&#13;
'&#13;
{Earnhardt) Jr. {dumb move) was a&#13;
good idea, then I have a suggestion&#13;
(or him to complete a really super :&#13;
· team. Replace Jeff Gordon with Rol&gt;- •.&#13;
by Gordon and Jimmie Johnson with&#13;
Michael Waltrip.&#13;
.&#13;
I have been listening to all of you '&#13;
say what ,Is wrong ~h Dale Jr. so far :&#13;
this year, and norie of you tell the truth '&#13;
that ~·s not the crew chief, not the&#13;
race team, but the driver. I know you ·&#13;
Junior {ans don't like hearing the&#13;
truth, but get over it. Dale Jr. never&#13;
has (beenl and never will be champ(on .&#13;
in the Sprint Cup Selies. He would&#13;
probebly do OK in the Nationwide Se- ·&#13;
· nes.&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
Last thing: Let Mark Martin go be- ;&#13;
cause he sure doesn't belong in this '&#13;
'•&#13;
group of •wannabes:&#13;
•&#13;
Ricky Smltll •&#13;
Odessa, Texas:&#13;
. U's harrl to include Jimmie John-&#13;
&#13;
son and Jeff Gordon, who bel\\ffn&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
tl!em have wen seven championships, ,&#13;
in a group of 'wannabes,"&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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'&#13;
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�---------~-&#13;
&#13;
Pagel •&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
.&#13;
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.&#13;
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...&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May&#13;
&#13;
ts,iooo.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.Class·of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May IS, 2009&#13;
&#13;
• Page 3&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Metgs ·graduation Set&#13;
;&#13;
&#13;
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH&#13;
&#13;
~-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM&#13;
&#13;
POMEROY - The 41st&#13;
annual commencement of&#13;
Meigs High School will take&#13;
plac~ at 8 p.m. on Friday, May&#13;
22, m the Larry R. Morrison&#13;
Gymnasium .&#13;
. ·&#13;
. In tlleir maroon and gold .&#13;
gowns the graduates will enter&#13;
th.e auditorium to "Pomp and&#13;
C.r~umstance" played by the&#13;
Me1gs Marauder Band directed&#13;
by Toney Dingess.&#13;
Following .t~e processional&#13;
the program, wdl open with the&#13;
Nati~nal Anthem, the plMge of&#13;
all~g1ance&#13;
led by Aaron&#13;
Ohphant, and the invocation by&#13;
, Mason Dale Metts~ James&#13;
Ernie Welsh, president of the&#13;
senior .class, will give the welcome and handling introductions .will be Zachary Selden&#13;
Story, treasurer. The band will&#13;
play ''Not Afraid to Dream" by&#13;
Brian Balmages.&#13;
.&#13;
Valedictorians&#13;
Amber&#13;
A~kman&#13;
apd&#13;
Kimberly&#13;
Sw1sher, and salutatorian Calee&#13;
Reeves will deliver commencement addresses. Other honorarians making the "Top 10" list&#13;
and .seated ~m the s~ge will be&#13;
Cec1l Bohn, Jenmfer Fife ,&#13;
Amanda Gilkey. Lian Hoffman.&#13;
Morgan Lentes, Lydic Jahnna.&#13;
and Caitlin Swartz.&#13;
·&#13;
Meigs High School Principa.l&#13;
Steve Ohlinger will present the&#13;
class and Scott Walton . ,presi,&#13;
dent of the Meigs Local Board&#13;
10"&#13;
Meigs High.School Class o; 2009 will be&#13;
recogliltion at the&#13;
o~ Education , will present lhe The&#13;
diplomas as Kerri Anne May 22 1n th&amp;la~ry ~- Momson .gymnas1u~. They ~re le~ to right, front, Kimbeny SWisher, Amber Hockman, valediCtorians;.Calee&#13;
VanReeth reads the names of Reeves, salutatonan, and back, ~ahntla Lydic, Jennifer Fife, Morgan Lentes, Cecil Bolin, lian Hoffman and Amanda Gilkey Caitlin&#13;
the 154 gmduates.&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
· ·&#13;
·&#13;
S wartz was not ~resent for the piCture.&#13;
Following the presentation of&#13;
diplomas . Crockett McKay Bonnett, Virginia Madeline Jo Edwards, ~hannon Rae Lian Man'ssa Hoffiman. Jess1·ca L'fi B&#13;
Crow v·ce&#13;
'd&#13;
f ·&#13;
B · kl c • AI Ca&#13;
~&#13;
1 e, ranigan Christine Lone,&#13;
· •&#13;
pres1 ent o the&#13;
nc es, raJg an 1pehart, EUiott, Taylor Racllelle Elliott, Marie Holliday, Matthew Jacob&#13;
class, w.illlead in the symbol of Patrick 1'Yier Carey, Joshua James Thomas Evans, Emily Hosken, Lucreshia . Crystelle&#13;
Rachelle Longstreth,&#13;
graduation and the recessitmal · David Cleland, Jaerianne ·Loren Fields, Jannifer Ann Fife, How;nd, Sarah Jane. Hubbard&#13;
a nna Marie Lydic, Stacy&#13;
will begin to music by the Nichole Colley, BrittaJiy Mae· Joshua . Scott&#13;
Frederick, . Benjamin Wade . Hudson: Morgan Macomber, Alysia&#13;
· Collins, Skylar Scott Compton, Sbawn~y . Delyne Antionette Corey Wayne Hutton, Lilly ~~WI\&#13;
Masters,&#13;
Ashley&#13;
band.&#13;
While a few of .the seniors Cody Allen Cook, Crockett Games, Holley Nicole Geary, Ann Jacl,ts, Patricia Joann ·. !Chelle Mayes, Courtney&#13;
have y~t to complete require- McKay Crow, .· Alexandria Adam Jordan George, Kayla Johnson&#13;
Wilson ;&#13;
Raven Ashlyne Mayes. ·&#13;
ments&#13;
lor&#13;
graduation&#13;
a&#13;
tentaNicole&#13;
Collums,&#13;
Brittany&#13;
L:yn&#13;
Gheen,&#13;
·taura&#13;
Beth&#13;
Gheen,&#13;
Sh&#13;
ll&#13;
J&#13;
h&#13;
f&#13;
ed •&#13;
awnte e o nson, Whittney MRo~rt&#13;
C&#13;
S Michael-Joseph&#13;
. I'&#13;
IVe&#13;
.&#13;
~~~&#13;
o&#13;
!lpprov&#13;
seniorS&#13;
to&#13;
Nicole&#13;
Cundiff:.&#13;
.&#13;
Amanda&#13;
Nicole&#13;
Gilkey,&#13;
Dawn&#13;
Johnson,&#13;
Alexandn&#13;
'a&#13;
c&#13;
.&#13;
arty,&#13;
amantha. Wendy&#13;
t&#13;
artJclpate m the exercises is as&#13;
Deanna&#13;
Man'e Cund 1'tf, Amanda Lynn G~&#13;
........ , Robert Marie Fae Jones, Clinton Ross Mane McDonald, David Lee&#13;
Chelsea Lynn Davis, Le'Anna Nicholas Grover, Mary Marie Kennedy, . Morgan Strauss McGinnis, Jared William&#13;
II&#13;
fco N?whs:l&#13;
K ICAo K~y ~ndRrus. La.cee Ruebel&#13;
Davis,&#13;
Nathaniel Haggy, Noah Nazar Hajivandi, Kennedy. Christopher Richard McKinney, Maria&#13;
Lynn&#13;
ay rms, amle ae Bailey. Kenton Davis, Olivia Rose Christian Nicole Haley. Charles Thomas Kimes, Thomas Shane Meadows ,&#13;
Tela&#13;
Kayla&#13;
~yatt tbMBarshall ABahll . William Davis. David Lee Day, Kenneth Brandon Hanning, Larry Klein, Heather Noel Lascel1es, Cheyenne Meloy, Mason Dale&#13;
enne&#13;
arcus. s 1ey Nicole Bryan DeLong, Henry George Thoma..~ Hess. Gabriel Stephan Cara Lyn Lawless, Stephanie Metts, Shayna Rae Morgan .&#13;
Be.ll. Caleb _Dwight Bevan . Doerfer.&#13;
Steph.anie&#13;
Lynn l)tler Hill.&#13;
·&#13;
Nicole Lawson, Bethany Dawn Jason Daniel Morris, Joshua&#13;
Bnt!any . M1chelle . Blac~ . Donaldson , Destmy Rochelle&#13;
Steven Matthew Hoalcraft, Lee, Morgan Kerry Lentes , Michael Morris, Carl Thomas&#13;
Adr~an NJC.?Je ' Bohn . Ceql , ' Dotson, Matth.ew Lee Dunkle AmJ:!er Renee Hockman C;Utlin Taylor Lesll·e, Joshua Murnahan , Jr., Jami Renee&#13;
llli.!li$; 7&#13;
Clayton Bolm . C\ad Michael Hailey Marie Ebersbach. Caitli~ · Hannah Kathieen Hoffman :' Michael Lewis, Ash ey Nicole · · Ple•se&#13;
&#13;
"T~ achiev~rs in~&#13;
&#13;
.giv~ s~al&#13;
&#13;
graduatio~=~&#13;
&#13;
f~ssa&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
• Pictured are this .&#13;
yea(s academic&#13;
honorees from&#13;
. Southern High&#13;
Sc:hool (from left)&#13;
·Chris Holter,&#13;
.samantha&#13;
Patterson,&#13;
Che lsea Pape,&#13;
Jaime Warne r&#13;
(salutatorian),&#13;
Emma Hunter&#13;
(valedictorian),&#13;
Kyle Goode,&#13;
' Rashell Boso.&#13;
Brody Flint. Not&#13;
pictured Bryan&#13;
Harrii, Tosha&#13;
Jones, Andrew&#13;
Hoover.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
aeth Sergeritlphoto&#13;
&#13;
·55.TO GRADUATE FROM SO&#13;
contains equivalent content,&#13;
earn at least four units. of sciBSERGENTOMYOAILYSENT1NELCOM&#13;
ence including one unit of&#13;
RACINE - At 8 p.m. on physics and one unit of chemSunday, 55 graduates from ·1stry, four units of social studSouthern High School will ies, three units of one foreign&#13;
. n;ceive their diplomas during language or two units each of&#13;
the school's annual commence- two foreign languages; one&#13;
ment ceremony inside the unit of fine·,arts, mallttain an&#13;
Hayman overall high school grade&#13;
Charles&#13;
W.&#13;
Gymnasium.&#13;
point average of at least 3.5 on&#13;
This year Southern has II a four-wint scale up to the last&#13;
academiC 1:\onorees who were grading period of the senior&#13;
chosen based on criteria deter· year, or, obtain a composite&#13;
mined&#13;
by&#13;
the&#13;
Ohio score of 27 on the American&#13;
Department of Education . . college test's ACT assessment&#13;
Each honoree had to meet (excluding the optional writseven of the following criteria: ing test) or a combined score&#13;
four unit:; of English, at least of 1210 on the College&#13;
four umts of mathematics Board's SAT verbal and mathwhich includes algebra I and ematics sections (excluding&#13;
II, geometry and another high- the required writing section).&#13;
er level course or a four-year&#13;
This year's . honorees are&#13;
sequence ·of !fqlf~Ses which, : ,~mma Hunter (yaledictorian)&#13;
&#13;
Bv Bent SERGENT&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
of Racine, daughter of Doug&#13;
and Tonja Hunter; Jaime&#13;
Warner (salutatorian) of&#13;
Syracuse, daughter of Mike&#13;
and Darlene Warner: Bryan&#13;
Harris of Racine, son of Paul&#13;
and Kris Harris; Tosha Jones&#13;
of Racine, daughter of Roger&#13;
Jones and Aamna Khan; Chris&#13;
Holter of Racine, son of&#13;
Stanley and Tanya Holter;&#13;
Samantha&#13;
Patterson . of&#13;
Syracuse , daughter of Tim&#13;
Patterson and Barb Johnson;&#13;
Chelsea Pape of Portland ,&#13;
daughter of Allen and Kelly&#13;
Pape and Carol Pape; Kyle&#13;
Goode of Racine, son of&#13;
Susan Goode and Jeff Hayes;&#13;
Rasbell Boso of Portland ,&#13;
daughter of Teresa Barber and&#13;
Tom Boso; Brody Flint of&#13;
Racine , son of Mark •and&#13;
Angela Flint, Andrew John&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Hoover of Syracuse. son of&#13;
Jaye Ord. ·&#13;
A complete list of the Class&#13;
of 2009 is as follows: Tam&#13;
Lacey Amott, Zachary Gage&#13;
Ash, Ryan Lain Beegle, Ryan&#13;
Lee Beegle, Laura Ann Rashell&#13;
Boso, John Christopher Brauer,&#13;
Bradley Joseph Brown, Taylor&#13;
Nash Burge, James Alexander&#13;
Carnahan , Merri Kathleen&#13;
Collins,&#13;
Kevin&#13;
Lemuel&#13;
Coppick , 'ritranie Nacheal&#13;
Deem, Beau Royce Diddle ,&#13;
Luke&#13;
Nathaniel&#13;
Dillard ,&#13;
Marvin Nelson· Eddy, Ill ,&#13;
Michael H. Flinn . Brody&#13;
Everett Flint , Kyle Levi&#13;
Goode, Bryan Scott Harris,&#13;
Alex David Hawley, Hannah&#13;
Marie Hawley, Dax Sullivan&#13;
Holman, Chnstopher William&#13;
Holter, Andrew John Hoover.&#13;
BQan Li:e Hunt, Emma Lee&#13;
&#13;
'.&#13;
&#13;
Hunter, Dustyn James Johnson;&#13;
Michael William Brown, Tosha&#13;
Irene Jones, Jerry Edward&#13;
Justis, Steven Douglas Loane,&#13;
Ryan&#13;
Weslie&#13;
Lunsford,&#13;
Brittney Jayde Meldau , James&#13;
Nathaniel Moss, Kara Nichole&#13;
Myers, Chelsea Ann Pape ,&#13;
Samantha Jane Patterson , Eric&#13;
Wayne Perry; Jordan Douglas&#13;
Pickens, Thomas Charles&#13;
Justin Porter. Paul James&#13;
Powell , April Nicore Richlllds,&#13;
Brooke Leshae Gabritsch,&#13;
Roben Weston Robens, Jenna&#13;
Leigh Simpson, Jaime Renee&#13;
Warner.&#13;
James&#13;
Dean&#13;
Whittington , John Warren&#13;
Wilcox, Ronald Wayne Wilson,&#13;
Thaddeus&#13;
James&#13;
Wolfe,&#13;
Charles Hansel Cook, Tabetha&#13;
Renee Storms, Gfilnl Christian&#13;
Phillips, Ashley Nicole Krider.&#13;
Chate,n,ce T. Wolfe. . ,&#13;
&#13;
�---------~-&#13;
&#13;
Pagel •&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May&#13;
&#13;
ts,iooo.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.Class·of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May IS, 2009&#13;
&#13;
• Page 3&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Metgs ·graduation Set&#13;
;&#13;
&#13;
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH&#13;
&#13;
~-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM&#13;
&#13;
POMEROY - The 41st&#13;
annual commencement of&#13;
Meigs High School will take&#13;
plac~ at 8 p.m. on Friday, May&#13;
22, m the Larry R. Morrison&#13;
Gymnasium .&#13;
. ·&#13;
. In tlleir maroon and gold .&#13;
gowns the graduates will enter&#13;
th.e auditorium to "Pomp and&#13;
C.r~umstance" played by the&#13;
Me1gs Marauder Band directed&#13;
by Toney Dingess.&#13;
Following .t~e processional&#13;
the program, wdl open with the&#13;
Nati~nal Anthem, the plMge of&#13;
all~g1ance&#13;
led by Aaron&#13;
Ohphant, and the invocation by&#13;
, Mason Dale Metts~ James&#13;
Ernie Welsh, president of the&#13;
senior .class, will give the welcome and handling introductions .will be Zachary Selden&#13;
Story, treasurer. The band will&#13;
play ''Not Afraid to Dream" by&#13;
Brian Balmages.&#13;
.&#13;
Valedictorians&#13;
Amber&#13;
A~kman&#13;
apd&#13;
Kimberly&#13;
Sw1sher, and salutatorian Calee&#13;
Reeves will deliver commencement addresses. Other honorarians making the "Top 10" list&#13;
and .seated ~m the s~ge will be&#13;
Cec1l Bohn, Jenmfer Fife ,&#13;
Amanda Gilkey. Lian Hoffman.&#13;
Morgan Lentes, Lydic Jahnna.&#13;
and Caitlin Swartz.&#13;
·&#13;
Meigs High School Principa.l&#13;
Steve Ohlinger will present the&#13;
class and Scott Walton . ,presi,&#13;
dent of the Meigs Local Board&#13;
10"&#13;
Meigs High.School Class o; 2009 will be&#13;
recogliltion at the&#13;
o~ Education , will present lhe The&#13;
diplomas as Kerri Anne May 22 1n th&amp;la~ry ~- Momson .gymnas1u~. They ~re le~ to right, front, Kimbeny SWisher, Amber Hockman, valediCtorians;.Calee&#13;
VanReeth reads the names of Reeves, salutatonan, and back, ~ahntla Lydic, Jennifer Fife, Morgan Lentes, Cecil Bolin, lian Hoffman and Amanda Gilkey Caitlin&#13;
the 154 gmduates.&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
· ·&#13;
·&#13;
S wartz was not ~resent for the piCture.&#13;
Following the presentation of&#13;
diplomas . Crockett McKay Bonnett, Virginia Madeline Jo Edwards, ~hannon Rae Lian Man'ssa Hoffiman. Jess1·ca L'fi B&#13;
Crow v·ce&#13;
'd&#13;
f ·&#13;
B · kl c • AI Ca&#13;
~&#13;
1 e, ranigan Christine Lone,&#13;
· •&#13;
pres1 ent o the&#13;
nc es, raJg an 1pehart, EUiott, Taylor Racllelle Elliott, Marie Holliday, Matthew Jacob&#13;
class, w.illlead in the symbol of Patrick 1'Yier Carey, Joshua James Thomas Evans, Emily Hosken, Lucreshia . Crystelle&#13;
Rachelle Longstreth,&#13;
graduation and the recessitmal · David Cleland, Jaerianne ·Loren Fields, Jannifer Ann Fife, How;nd, Sarah Jane. Hubbard&#13;
a nna Marie Lydic, Stacy&#13;
will begin to music by the Nichole Colley, BrittaJiy Mae· Joshua . Scott&#13;
Frederick, . Benjamin Wade . Hudson: Morgan Macomber, Alysia&#13;
· Collins, Skylar Scott Compton, Sbawn~y . Delyne Antionette Corey Wayne Hutton, Lilly ~~WI\&#13;
Masters,&#13;
Ashley&#13;
band.&#13;
While a few of .the seniors Cody Allen Cook, Crockett Games, Holley Nicole Geary, Ann Jacl,ts, Patricia Joann ·. !Chelle Mayes, Courtney&#13;
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·Chris Holter,&#13;
.samantha&#13;
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Che lsea Pape,&#13;
Jaime Warne r&#13;
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Emma Hunter&#13;
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Kyle Goode,&#13;
' Rashell Boso.&#13;
Brody Flint. Not&#13;
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RACINE - At 8 p.m. on physics and one unit of chemSunday, 55 graduates from ·1stry, four units of social studSouthern High School will ies, three units of one foreign&#13;
. n;ceive their diplomas during language or two units each of&#13;
the school's annual commence- two foreign languages; one&#13;
ment ceremony inside the unit of fine·,arts, mallttain an&#13;
Hayman overall high school grade&#13;
Charles&#13;
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point average of at least 3.5 on&#13;
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academiC 1:\onorees who were grading period of the senior&#13;
chosen based on criteria deter· year, or, obtain a composite&#13;
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by&#13;
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Ohio score of 27 on the American&#13;
Department of Education . . college test's ACT assessment&#13;
Each honoree had to meet (excluding the optional writseven of the following criteria: ing test) or a combined score&#13;
four unit:; of English, at least of 1210 on the College&#13;
four umts of mathematics Board's SAT verbal and mathwhich includes algebra I and ematics sections (excluding&#13;
II, geometry and another high- the required writing section).&#13;
er level course or a four-year&#13;
This year's . honorees are&#13;
sequence ·of !fqlf~Ses which, : ,~mma Hunter (yaledictorian)&#13;
&#13;
Bv Bent SERGENT&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
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of Racine, daughter of Doug&#13;
and Tonja Hunter; Jaime&#13;
Warner (salutatorian) of&#13;
Syracuse, daughter of Mike&#13;
and Darlene Warner: Bryan&#13;
Harris of Racine, son of Paul&#13;
and Kris Harris; Tosha Jones&#13;
of Racine, daughter of Roger&#13;
Jones and Aamna Khan; Chris&#13;
Holter of Racine, son of&#13;
Stanley and Tanya Holter;&#13;
Samantha&#13;
Patterson . of&#13;
Syracuse , daughter of Tim&#13;
Patterson and Barb Johnson;&#13;
Chelsea Pape of Portland ,&#13;
daughter of Allen and Kelly&#13;
Pape and Carol Pape; Kyle&#13;
Goode of Racine, son of&#13;
Susan Goode and Jeff Hayes;&#13;
Rasbell Boso of Portland ,&#13;
daughter of Teresa Barber and&#13;
Tom Boso; Brody Flint of&#13;
Racine , son of Mark •and&#13;
Angela Flint, Andrew John&#13;
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Hoover of Syracuse. son of&#13;
Jaye Ord. ·&#13;
A complete list of the Class&#13;
of 2009 is as follows: Tam&#13;
Lacey Amott, Zachary Gage&#13;
Ash, Ryan Lain Beegle, Ryan&#13;
Lee Beegle, Laura Ann Rashell&#13;
Boso, John Christopher Brauer,&#13;
Bradley Joseph Brown, Taylor&#13;
Nash Burge, James Alexander&#13;
Carnahan , Merri Kathleen&#13;
Collins,&#13;
Kevin&#13;
Lemuel&#13;
Coppick , 'ritranie Nacheal&#13;
Deem, Beau Royce Diddle ,&#13;
Luke&#13;
Nathaniel&#13;
Dillard ,&#13;
Marvin Nelson· Eddy, Ill ,&#13;
Michael H. Flinn . Brody&#13;
Everett Flint , Kyle Levi&#13;
Goode, Bryan Scott Harris,&#13;
Alex David Hawley, Hannah&#13;
Marie Hawley, Dax Sullivan&#13;
Holman, Chnstopher William&#13;
Holter, Andrew John Hoover.&#13;
BQan Li:e Hunt, Emma Lee&#13;
&#13;
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Hunter, Dustyn James Johnson;&#13;
Michael William Brown, Tosha&#13;
Irene Jones, Jerry Edward&#13;
Justis, Steven Douglas Loane,&#13;
Ryan&#13;
Weslie&#13;
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Brittney Jayde Meldau , James&#13;
Nathaniel Moss, Kara Nichole&#13;
Myers, Chelsea Ann Pape ,&#13;
Samantha Jane Patterson , Eric&#13;
Wayne Perry; Jordan Douglas&#13;
Pickens, Thomas Charles&#13;
Justin Porter. Paul James&#13;
Powell , April Nicore Richlllds,&#13;
Brooke Leshae Gabritsch,&#13;
Roben Weston Robens, Jenna&#13;
Leigh Simpson, Jaime Renee&#13;
Warner.&#13;
James&#13;
Dean&#13;
Whittington , John Warren&#13;
Wilcox, Ronald Wayne Wilson,&#13;
Thaddeus&#13;
James&#13;
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Charles Hansel Cook, Tabetha&#13;
Renee Storms, Gfilnl Christian&#13;
Phillips, Ashley Nicole Krider.&#13;
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Sargent and Tina Drake will&#13;
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valedictorian and salutatorian&#13;
of the graduating class of&#13;
Eastern High SchooL&#13;
The school's 51st-annual&#13;
commencement exercises will&#13;
be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in the&#13;
school auditorium. In addition&#13;
to speeches by the top students, .&#13;
the Eastern High Scho9l Band&#13;
will perform.&#13;
Sargent is the son 'of&#13;
Charles and Cathey Sargent&#13;
and Drake is the daughter of&#13;
Thomas and Debra Drake of&#13;
Racine. Sargent said his college plans are incomplete.&#13;
Drake will attend The Ohio&#13;
State University to study agribusiness . .&#13;
"The class's Top 10 scholars&#13;
will be announced Friday at the&#13;
school's senior awards assembly, in keeping with school tradition.&#13;
The 55 members of the graduating class are: Keith Gordon&#13;
Aeiker. Tasha Nicole Barber,&#13;
Danielle Nicole Barnhart,&#13;
Matthew Nicholas Barringer,&#13;
Dwight Ethan Beaumont,&#13;
Sarah Kay Bentz, Hope Dawn&#13;
Bland, Heather Ann Brooks.&#13;
Benjamin Neal Buckley ,&#13;
Morgan Lynn Burt , Zachary&#13;
Stephen Carson , Brittany&#13;
Nicole Casto , Hannah Marie&#13;
Cozart, Melvin James Dailey.&#13;
Brandon Douglas Daugherty,&#13;
Tina ·Marie Drake, Rhonda&#13;
Marie&#13;
Durham , William ,&#13;
Action Charles Facemyer,&#13;
Derek Robert Griffin, ~obert&#13;
Casey Hannum, William&#13;
&#13;
Ben Buckley&#13;
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·Bl"IHany Casto&#13;
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Hannah .Cozart&#13;
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Tina Drake&#13;
&#13;
Todd Kittle (TJ)&#13;
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N~talie Mcintyre·&#13;
&#13;
Morgan Powell&#13;
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Kaytee Milam ·&#13;
&#13;
CaytaScyoe&#13;
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Emily Welch&#13;
&#13;
Samantha Welch&#13;
&#13;
· . Zach Carson&#13;
&#13;
Derek Griffin&#13;
&#13;
Kyle Sargent and Tina Drake&#13;
Cody Hannum.&#13;
Katelyn Marie Haught,&#13;
Zachary Dwayne Hendrix ,&#13;
Joshua Arnold Hupp, Allen&#13;
Cody Hysell, Carly Richell&#13;
Kimes. Jordan Bmdley Kimes ,&#13;
Jacob Tadd Kittle, Travis Lee&#13;
&#13;
Koenig,&#13;
Amanda&#13;
Marie&#13;
Larkins , Jeremy Todd Lee,&#13;
Tesla Rachelle Maynard ,&#13;
Danielle Natalie Mcintyre ,&#13;
Kaylee&#13;
Lynn&#13;
Milam,&#13;
Christopher Allen Minerd,&#13;
Kayla Sue Mollohan.&#13;
&#13;
Aaron Douglas Moore ,&#13;
Zachary Michael Moore,&#13;
Alyssa Lynn- Newland, James&#13;
Morgan Powell, Anthony&#13;
Richard Putman. Dale Michael&#13;
Riffle , Jared Brett Rose, Micah&#13;
James Russell, Kyle Willi~&#13;
&#13;
Sargent,&#13;
Marie . Katlyn&#13;
Sauvage, Cayla Nicole Scyoc,&#13;
Chelsie Renee Smith, Tresa&#13;
Rae Swatzel, Emily Suzanne&#13;
Welch, Amber Jo White; Katie&#13;
Ann Wilfong, Coel Michael&#13;
Williams.&#13;
&#13;
to the&#13;
·~&#13;
To Our 2009 Graduates"&#13;
&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
CarlyKimes&#13;
Heather Brooks&#13;
Olivia Davis&#13;
Catie Wolfe&#13;
Josh Frederick&#13;
&#13;
Class ol 'Z009&#13;
BAUM LUMBER&#13;
&#13;
550 E. Main Street • Pomeroy, OH&#13;
740-992..0013&#13;
&#13;
CHESTER&#13;
985~3301 ... ..&#13;
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Class .of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Fritbty, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
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Sargent, Drake are •Eastern ~op graduates&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
TUPPERS, PLAINS -Kyle&#13;
Sargent and Tina Drake will&#13;
address their classmates as&#13;
valedictorian and salutatorian&#13;
of the graduating class of&#13;
Eastern High SchooL&#13;
The school's 51st-annual&#13;
commencement exercises will&#13;
be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in the&#13;
school auditorium. In addition&#13;
to speeches by the top students, .&#13;
the Eastern High Scho9l Band&#13;
will perform.&#13;
Sargent is the son 'of&#13;
Charles and Cathey Sargent&#13;
and Drake is the daughter of&#13;
Thomas and Debra Drake of&#13;
Racine. Sargent said his college plans are incomplete.&#13;
Drake will attend The Ohio&#13;
State University to study agribusiness . .&#13;
"The class's Top 10 scholars&#13;
will be announced Friday at the&#13;
school's senior awards assembly, in keeping with school tradition.&#13;
The 55 members of the graduating class are: Keith Gordon&#13;
Aeiker. Tasha Nicole Barber,&#13;
Danielle Nicole Barnhart,&#13;
Matthew Nicholas Barringer,&#13;
Dwight Ethan Beaumont,&#13;
Sarah Kay Bentz, Hope Dawn&#13;
Bland, Heather Ann Brooks.&#13;
Benjamin Neal Buckley ,&#13;
Morgan Lynn Burt , Zachary&#13;
Stephen Carson , Brittany&#13;
Nicole Casto , Hannah Marie&#13;
Cozart, Melvin James Dailey.&#13;
Brandon Douglas Daugherty,&#13;
Tina ·Marie Drake, Rhonda&#13;
Marie&#13;
Durham , William ,&#13;
Action Charles Facemyer,&#13;
Derek Robert Griffin, ~obert&#13;
Casey Hannum, William&#13;
&#13;
Ben Buckley&#13;
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·Bl"IHany Casto&#13;
&#13;
Hannah .Cozart&#13;
&#13;
Tina Drake&#13;
&#13;
Todd Kittle (TJ)&#13;
&#13;
N~talie Mcintyre·&#13;
&#13;
Morgan Powell&#13;
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Kaytee Milam ·&#13;
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CaytaScyoe&#13;
&#13;
Emily Welch&#13;
&#13;
Samantha Welch&#13;
&#13;
· . Zach Carson&#13;
&#13;
Derek Griffin&#13;
&#13;
Kyle Sargent and Tina Drake&#13;
Cody Hannum.&#13;
Katelyn Marie Haught,&#13;
Zachary Dwayne Hendrix ,&#13;
Joshua Arnold Hupp, Allen&#13;
Cody Hysell, Carly Richell&#13;
Kimes. Jordan Bmdley Kimes ,&#13;
Jacob Tadd Kittle, Travis Lee&#13;
&#13;
Koenig,&#13;
Amanda&#13;
Marie&#13;
Larkins , Jeremy Todd Lee,&#13;
Tesla Rachelle Maynard ,&#13;
Danielle Natalie Mcintyre ,&#13;
Kaylee&#13;
Lynn&#13;
Milam,&#13;
Christopher Allen Minerd,&#13;
Kayla Sue Mollohan.&#13;
&#13;
Aaron Douglas Moore ,&#13;
Zachary Michael Moore,&#13;
Alyssa Lynn- Newland, James&#13;
Morgan Powell, Anthony&#13;
Richard Putman. Dale Michael&#13;
Riffle , Jared Brett Rose, Micah&#13;
James Russell, Kyle Willi~&#13;
&#13;
Sargent,&#13;
Marie . Katlyn&#13;
Sauvage, Cayla Nicole Scyoc,&#13;
Chelsie Renee Smith, Tresa&#13;
Rae Swatzel, Emily Suzanne&#13;
Welch, Amber Jo White; Katie&#13;
Ann Wilfong, Coel Michael&#13;
Williams.&#13;
&#13;
to the&#13;
·~&#13;
To Our 2009 Graduates"&#13;
&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
CarlyKimes&#13;
Heather Brooks&#13;
Olivia Davis&#13;
Catie Wolfe&#13;
Josh Frederick&#13;
&#13;
Class ol 'Z009&#13;
BAUM LUMBER&#13;
&#13;
550 E. Main Street • Pomeroy, OH&#13;
740-992..0013&#13;
&#13;
CHESTER&#13;
985~3301 ... ..&#13;
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Page 6 •&#13;
&#13;
Friday, M"y 15, 2009&#13;
Class of 2009 ·&#13;
SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL . 2009 GRADUATES&#13;
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Friday, Ml\Y 15, 2009&#13;
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Patterson 1 Kenneth Charles Ruby Renae Richmond, Vahsha&#13;
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Friday, M"y 15, 2009&#13;
Class of 2009 ·&#13;
SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL . 2009 GRADUATES&#13;
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Friday, May 15,2009&#13;
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·Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
• Page 9&#13;
&#13;
MEIGS .HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRADUATES&#13;
&#13;
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··Graduation ·Day&#13;
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MirkoAmico&#13;
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Nicole Andrus&#13;
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Jamie Bailey&#13;
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Ashley Bell&#13;
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Caleb Bevan&#13;
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Brittany Black&#13;
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Adrian Bolin&#13;
Located on Route 7 and 50&#13;
Coolville, Ohio&#13;
740·6~7-6100 (Store)&#13;
740-667-6101 (Restaurimt)&#13;
Hours: Store-7 Days a Week&#13;
24Hours&#13;
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Chad Bonnett&#13;
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Craig·Capehart&#13;
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C~ THE EARTH&#13;
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SPEaA• ISTS!&#13;
&#13;
Patrick Carey ·&#13;
&#13;
We do everything.from&#13;
the original excavation&#13;
to the final grading! .&#13;
&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
·Grad's!&#13;
&#13;
.3&#13;
&#13;
Located on State Route 7 •&#13;
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Tuppers Plains&#13;
740-667-0771&#13;
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OFFICE: 740-949-2493&#13;
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HOME: 740-949-2305&#13;
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Hours are 7 Days a Week 6:00a.m. to 10:00 p.m.&#13;
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Friday, May 15,2009&#13;
&#13;
·Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
• Page 9&#13;
&#13;
MEIGS .HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRADUATES&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
PPY ..&#13;
··Graduation ·Day&#13;
&#13;
MirkoAmico&#13;
&#13;
Nicole Andrus&#13;
&#13;
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Jamie Bailey&#13;
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Brittany Black&#13;
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Adrian Bolin&#13;
Located on Route 7 and 50&#13;
Coolville, Ohio&#13;
740·6~7-6100 (Store)&#13;
740-667-6101 (Restaurimt)&#13;
Hours: Store-7 Days a Week&#13;
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48411 Morning Star Rd., Racine, Ohio&#13;
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Clay Bolin&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
C~ THE EARTH&#13;
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SPEaA• ISTS!&#13;
&#13;
Patrick Carey ·&#13;
&#13;
We do everything.from&#13;
the original excavation&#13;
to the final grading! .&#13;
&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
·Grad's!&#13;
&#13;
.3&#13;
&#13;
Located on State Route 7 •&#13;
&#13;
Tuppers Plains&#13;
740-667-0771&#13;
&#13;
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Hours are 7 Days a Week 6:00a.m. to 10:00 p.m.&#13;
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Friday, May 15, 2009 ·&#13;
&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL . 2009 GRADUATES .&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
• Page 11&#13;
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Congratulations&#13;
·Class of2009 ·&#13;
.&#13;
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&#13;
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106 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport, OH • 740-992-2825&#13;
&#13;
Enjoy the convenience of our&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.Curbside Carry out&#13;
&#13;
. Call Ahead - We'll Have It Ready To Go!&#13;
. (304) 773-6112&#13;
20 Mal~ard t.ane • Mason, WV 25260&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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THE FABRIC SHOP&#13;
. . Quilt Fabrics-Notions&#13;
TUXEDO RENTALS&#13;
· Machine Quilting ·&#13;
&#13;
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Emily Fields&#13;
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992-3671&#13;
Pomeroy, Ohio&#13;
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CONGRATULATIONS ··&#13;
TO THE CLASS OF 2009 .&#13;
Adrian Bolin ·&#13;
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had Bonnett&#13;
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&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009 ·&#13;
&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL . 2009 GRADUATES .&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
• Page 11&#13;
&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
·Class of2009 ·&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
KI.NG HARDWARE ·.·&#13;
&#13;
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Deanna Cundiff&#13;
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Chelsea Davis&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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Nathaniel Davis&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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&#13;
Bryan Delong&#13;
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Henry Doerfer&#13;
&#13;
S.t ephanie&#13;
Donaldson&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
106 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport, OH • 740-992-2825&#13;
&#13;
Enjoy the convenience of our&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.Curbside Carry out&#13;
&#13;
. Call Ahead - We'll Have It Ready To Go!&#13;
. (304) 773-6112&#13;
20 Mal~ard t.ane • Mason, WV 25260&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
THE FABRIC SHOP&#13;
. . Quilt Fabrics-Notions&#13;
TUXEDO RENTALS&#13;
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&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
·[ . 's .&#13;
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Matthew Dunkle&#13;
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Hailey Ebersbach&#13;
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.,....r_ _,&#13;
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Emily Fields&#13;
&#13;
992-3671&#13;
Pomeroy, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS ··&#13;
TO THE CLASS OF 2009 .&#13;
Adrian Bolin ·&#13;
· Clay Bolin&#13;
had Bonnett&#13;
Cat~e ~olfe· 100 N. 2nd St.&#13;
Ernze Welsh Middleport, oil&#13;
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Page 12 • ·&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRAOUATES.&#13;
&#13;
Amanda Gilkey&#13;
&#13;
.'&#13;
&#13;
· Amanda Goode&#13;
&#13;
MaryHaggy&#13;
&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
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Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
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• Page 13&#13;
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J&#13;
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Page 12 • ·&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRAOUATES.&#13;
&#13;
Amanda Gilkey&#13;
&#13;
.'&#13;
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· Amanda Goode&#13;
&#13;
MaryHaggy&#13;
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Class of 2009&#13;
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Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
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• Page 13&#13;
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.MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRADUATES ·.&#13;
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Morgan Kennedy&#13;
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Amanda Larkins&#13;
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Class of 2009·&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
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• Page 15&#13;
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'.&#13;
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.MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRADUATES ·.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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.&#13;
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.. Ctlngralulalit~m&#13;
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Christopher&#13;
Kimes&#13;
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Morgan Kennedy&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Klein&#13;
&#13;
Amanda Larkins&#13;
&#13;
HeatherLascelles&#13;
&#13;
We A.r e .Proll;d .OfYou!&#13;
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. ., . Sat. 8am-Spm. Closed Sunday&#13;
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112 E~ Main Pomeroy&#13;
· Stephanie&#13;
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Cora Lawless&#13;
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.Bethany Lee ·&#13;
&#13;
. Megan Lentes&#13;
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992-2955&#13;
&#13;
North 2nd .Avenu~&#13;
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Middleport, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
·· Caitlin Leslie&#13;
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We'll be there!&#13;
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agent'. we' ll be. rhcr.: the day you&#13;
&lt;.:on1c: it) for a qu&lt;&gt;tc:: •••&#13;
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Page 16 •&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRADUATES·· .&#13;
•&#13;
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.&#13;
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,&#13;
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• Page 17&#13;
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&#13;
•&#13;
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t.·&#13;
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..&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
·coNGRATULATIONS&#13;
~u::·K·. WiSe • Keith Aeiker • Samantha Patterson ·&#13;
&#13;
·TNT:PIT·STOP&#13;
&#13;
CONVENIENCE STORES ·&#13;
&#13;
SUNOCO&#13;
. M~HON . MARATf\ON&#13;
SUNoCO •&#13;
St._ Roufe t . State Route 'Z · Stafe Route 124&#13;
2nd Ave~&#13;
Mlddtuon. Oft&#13;
Cbeater. Oft ·· . sw--.uJC.; . .•. Mlddleitort.&#13;
992"8200..· · ·· 985·3350&#13;
.&#13;
99Z•339t&#13;
&#13;
Tela Meloy&#13;
&#13;
Mason Metts&#13;
&#13;
Shayna Morgan&#13;
&#13;
St. Rt. 248, Chester, OH&#13;
&#13;
. 740-985-3857 ..&#13;
&#13;
Jason Morris&#13;
&#13;
Ridenour's Gas Se.rvice&#13;
&#13;
Best&#13;
of&#13;
Luck&#13;
"&#13;
.C lass. of 2009!&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
MARGIE .J. ·LAWSON, D.D.S..&#13;
&#13;
Bulk &amp; Bottled&#13;
Home•Fann&#13;
Industry • ·Repair&#13;
Sales aod Service&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
106 Tyr~e Blvd. • :Rac:lne, Ohio&#13;
.&#13;
740-949-2575&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
• ·&#13;
JamiMyers&#13;
&#13;
Lindsey Myers&#13;
&#13;
Doug Noel&#13;
&#13;
Jade Nutter&#13;
&#13;
·Andrew O'Bryant&#13;
&#13;
(740) 985-3307 • P.O. Box 55, Chester, OH&#13;
&#13;
.McDonalds&#13;
423 W. Main St.&#13;
&#13;
~omeroyJ&#13;
&#13;
OH&#13;
&#13;
7 40-992·5600\ .&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
YQu've nu.uk Qur CQmmunity proud, not just jQr&#13;
yQur accQmplishments in the classrQom,&#13;
but everywhere. Thank you and good luck.&#13;
&#13;
April Oiler&#13;
&#13;
Aaron Oliphant&#13;
&#13;
Rebecca Owen&#13;
&#13;
Brittany Parsons&#13;
&#13;
Alexandria&#13;
Patterson .&#13;
&#13;
Melissa· Thomas&#13;
Zach, .·&#13;
·&#13;
We /Qve yQU and are so very proud of&#13;
May all your-dreams come true!&#13;
LQve, ·&#13;
·&#13;
MQm, Dad, Tyler &amp; Ally&#13;
&#13;
• •&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
. .&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Patterson .&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Kenneth PaY.,e .&#13;
&#13;
·Erin Perkins&#13;
&#13;
Samantha Pridemore&#13;
&#13;
Jesse Pullins&#13;
&#13;
�'&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Page 16 •&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRADUATES·· .&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
• ,&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009 ·&#13;
. ..&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
• Page 17&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
t.·&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
r·&#13;
&#13;
·coNGRATULATIONS&#13;
~u::·K·. WiSe • Keith Aeiker • Samantha Patterson ·&#13;
&#13;
·TNT:PIT·STOP&#13;
&#13;
CONVENIENCE STORES ·&#13;
&#13;
SUNOCO&#13;
. M~HON . MARATf\ON&#13;
SUNoCO •&#13;
St._ Roufe t . State Route 'Z · Stafe Route 124&#13;
2nd Ave~&#13;
Mlddtuon. Oft&#13;
Cbeater. Oft ·· . sw--.uJC.; . .•. Mlddleitort.&#13;
992"8200..· · ·· 985·3350&#13;
.&#13;
99Z•339t&#13;
&#13;
Tela Meloy&#13;
&#13;
Mason Metts&#13;
&#13;
Shayna Morgan&#13;
&#13;
St. Rt. 248, Chester, OH&#13;
&#13;
. 740-985-3857 ..&#13;
&#13;
Jason Morris&#13;
&#13;
Ridenour's Gas Se.rvice&#13;
&#13;
Best&#13;
of&#13;
Luck&#13;
"&#13;
.C lass. of 2009!&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
MARGIE .J. ·LAWSON, D.D.S..&#13;
&#13;
Bulk &amp; Bottled&#13;
Home•Fann&#13;
Industry • ·Repair&#13;
Sales aod Service&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
106 Tyr~e Blvd. • :Rac:lne, Ohio&#13;
.&#13;
740-949-2575&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
• ·&#13;
JamiMyers&#13;
&#13;
Lindsey Myers&#13;
&#13;
Doug Noel&#13;
&#13;
Jade Nutter&#13;
&#13;
·Andrew O'Bryant&#13;
&#13;
(740) 985-3307 • P.O. Box 55, Chester, OH&#13;
&#13;
.McDonalds&#13;
423 W. Main St.&#13;
&#13;
~omeroyJ&#13;
&#13;
OH&#13;
&#13;
7 40-992·5600\ .&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
YQu've nu.uk Qur CQmmunity proud, not just jQr&#13;
yQur accQmplishments in the classrQom,&#13;
but everywhere. Thank you and good luck.&#13;
&#13;
April Oiler&#13;
&#13;
Aaron Oliphant&#13;
&#13;
Rebecca Owen&#13;
&#13;
Brittany Parsons&#13;
&#13;
Alexandria&#13;
Patterson .&#13;
&#13;
Melissa· Thomas&#13;
Zach, .·&#13;
·&#13;
We /Qve yQU and are so very proud of&#13;
May all your-dreams come true!&#13;
LQve, ·&#13;
·&#13;
MQm, Dad, Tyler &amp; Ally&#13;
&#13;
• •&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
. .&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Patterson .&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Kenneth PaY.,e .&#13;
&#13;
·Erin Perkins&#13;
&#13;
Samantha Pridemore&#13;
&#13;
Jesse Pullins&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Page 18 •&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, l009&#13;
&#13;
.... .&#13;
&#13;
...,&#13;
&#13;
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRADUATES&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Ontna Quillen&#13;
&#13;
Colee Reeves&#13;
&#13;
Randall Reeves&#13;
&#13;
Richard Reuter ·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Jessamyn&#13;
Reynolds&#13;
&#13;
(MS) -~- With graduation on . on a budget before. If a student&#13;
the horiion, tnany high school will not .be working and their&#13;
seniors are anxiously antici~ parents will ·be sending them&#13;
pating their exodus from Mom money during the semester, it's&#13;
and Dati's house· to the. less best to work out a payment&#13;
restrictive dorms of their col- schedule (once per semester,&#13;
leges of choice. Visions of par- 0 nce per month, · bi-monthly,&#13;
ties, hite school nights spent etc.) and stick to it. Parents&#13;
hanging out· with friends, and should avoid the temptation of&#13;
no Mom .and Dad to check in . bailing kids out if they've spent&#13;
on th~J;ll po~ylate the dre~s their .allottt:4 money too quickof many a high .S&lt;:hool semot ly, just like . students . should&#13;
as gt!lduationdraws closer and avoid the temptation of spend- ·&#13;
closer.&#13;
..&#13;
.&#13;
.. .&#13;
ing the mo~ey too fast. .&#13;
But ·as exc1tmg as begmnmg&#13;
Parents should also discuss&#13;
college can be, it can also credit cards with their children&#13;
prove difficult in a number of before the kids head off to&#13;
ways if soon-to-be freshmen · school. College campuses are&#13;
~en 't prepared for what may notorious breeding grounds for&#13;
he ahead. Parents and college- credit card solicitation. Kids·&#13;
bound kids ~ike sho.uld discuss who don't fully understand the&#13;
the . followmg . top1cs before concept of credit can, and often&#13;
partmg ways thts fall.&#13;
do, find themselves in deep&#13;
financial trouble because of&#13;
credit cards. If a student has his&#13;
or her own cell phone (and who&#13;
·It seems that no matter how doesn't these days?), let_.YOUr .&#13;
much money kids head off to son .o~ dllughter begin paying&#13;
col.le$e with •.it's 11ever enough. for It m the months before he&#13;
Th1s 1s espectally true of enter- leaves for college: This should&#13;
ing freshmen, who have more help get 'him or her acclimated&#13;
than likely never faced living tO paying bills, and the impor-&#13;
&#13;
·Finances&#13;
&#13;
Brian Rice&#13;
&#13;
Renee Richmond&#13;
&#13;
Valisha Richmond&#13;
&#13;
Sar:-ah Roach&#13;
&#13;
Denzil Roberts&#13;
&#13;
Class of- 2009&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
• Page 19&#13;
&#13;
Helping neW bigh schoolgrads understand what Des ahead ·&#13;
&#13;
. '&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
tance of paying them on ti111e,&#13;
before heading off to school.&#13;
&#13;
Academics&#13;
Understandably, most students start off struggling in the&#13;
academic department. This&#13;
often has nothing to do with the&#13;
course load. Instead, it'~ typically tl)e . product . 6f ~tudents&#13;
being overwhelmed · by their&#13;
newfound freedom, resulting in&#13;
studies sliding down their priority list&#13;
Incoming freshmen should&#13;
recognize that, while struggling to adapt to a new course&#13;
load and new environment is to&#13;
be expected, it's not an excuse&#13;
for . a p(olonged academic&#13;
struggle. The point of going to&#13;
college is an education first&#13;
and foremost. GoCollege.com,&#13;
an online resource for collegebound •students, recommends&#13;
developing a diligent and COil·&#13;
sistent system of study .habits&#13;
to avoid digging an early acadernie hole. This can involve&#13;
study groups, brief study periods after each class to make&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
i'&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
sure yo!! understand all materi- to do the rest of their lives, and&#13;
als, or a nUJllber of things that part of college ,.is preparing&#13;
might work for each individ- · them to do just that. Parents&#13;
ual. But·tbe main thing is to be should make students aware&#13;
consistent in your study that academics are important,&#13;
approach, ~s once y~u g~t 1t bu~ that devel?ping as a hum~n.&#13;
down, you II ~ more effictent bemg and not Just as a student 1s&#13;
an~ ~ble to en)OY more of that important as well.&#13;
ent1cmg free time.&#13;
For more tips on preparing&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
for cp/lege, visit www.gocol-&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
: . Social Life&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
lege:.c;om. · ·&#13;
&#13;
While education is the · most&#13;
important thing about college,&#13;
developing socially is important as well. For some students,&#13;
overfocusing on academics can&#13;
make college a difficult period&#13;
in their life. Particularly for&#13;
entering freshmen, developing&#13;
friendships is an important step&#13;
in ~dapting to college. Students&#13;
should embrace the chance to&#13;
meet new people, many of&#13;
whom might· be from diff~rent&#13;
parts ofthe country or even the&#13;
world, which can be an educationat: proce~s i~ and of itself.&#13;
· While sl;letallife should never&#13;
take preceaence over academics, balancing work and play&#13;
is something students will have&#13;
&#13;
J'fats off to _you for giving.school your alii&#13;
May you celebrate many"more triumphs&#13;
&#13;
. ON YOU.R WAY TO THE TOP!&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Page 18 •&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, l009&#13;
&#13;
.... .&#13;
&#13;
...,&#13;
&#13;
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL 2009 GRADUATES&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Ontna Quillen&#13;
&#13;
Colee Reeves&#13;
&#13;
Randall Reeves&#13;
&#13;
Richard Reuter ·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Jessamyn&#13;
Reynolds&#13;
&#13;
(MS) -~- With graduation on . on a budget before. If a student&#13;
the horiion, tnany high school will not .be working and their&#13;
seniors are anxiously antici~ parents will ·be sending them&#13;
pating their exodus from Mom money during the semester, it's&#13;
and Dati's house· to the. less best to work out a payment&#13;
restrictive dorms of their col- schedule (once per semester,&#13;
leges of choice. Visions of par- 0 nce per month, · bi-monthly,&#13;
ties, hite school nights spent etc.) and stick to it. Parents&#13;
hanging out· with friends, and should avoid the temptation of&#13;
no Mom .and Dad to check in . bailing kids out if they've spent&#13;
on th~J;ll po~ylate the dre~s their .allottt:4 money too quickof many a high .S&lt;:hool semot ly, just like . students . should&#13;
as gt!lduationdraws closer and avoid the temptation of spend- ·&#13;
closer.&#13;
..&#13;
.&#13;
.. .&#13;
ing the mo~ey too fast. .&#13;
But ·as exc1tmg as begmnmg&#13;
Parents should also discuss&#13;
college can be, it can also credit cards with their children&#13;
prove difficult in a number of before the kids head off to&#13;
ways if soon-to-be freshmen · school. College campuses are&#13;
~en 't prepared for what may notorious breeding grounds for&#13;
he ahead. Parents and college- credit card solicitation. Kids·&#13;
bound kids ~ike sho.uld discuss who don't fully understand the&#13;
the . followmg . top1cs before concept of credit can, and often&#13;
partmg ways thts fall.&#13;
do, find themselves in deep&#13;
financial trouble because of&#13;
credit cards. If a student has his&#13;
or her own cell phone (and who&#13;
·It seems that no matter how doesn't these days?), let_.YOUr .&#13;
much money kids head off to son .o~ dllughter begin paying&#13;
col.le$e with •.it's 11ever enough. for It m the months before he&#13;
Th1s 1s espectally true of enter- leaves for college: This should&#13;
ing freshmen, who have more help get 'him or her acclimated&#13;
than likely never faced living tO paying bills, and the impor-&#13;
&#13;
·Finances&#13;
&#13;
Brian Rice&#13;
&#13;
Renee Richmond&#13;
&#13;
Valisha Richmond&#13;
&#13;
Sar:-ah Roach&#13;
&#13;
Denzil Roberts&#13;
&#13;
Class of- 2009&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
• Page 19&#13;
&#13;
Helping neW bigh schoolgrads understand what Des ahead ·&#13;
&#13;
. '&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
tance of paying them on ti111e,&#13;
before heading off to school.&#13;
&#13;
Academics&#13;
Understandably, most students start off struggling in the&#13;
academic department. This&#13;
often has nothing to do with the&#13;
course load. Instead, it'~ typically tl)e . product . 6f ~tudents&#13;
being overwhelmed · by their&#13;
newfound freedom, resulting in&#13;
studies sliding down their priority list&#13;
Incoming freshmen should&#13;
recognize that, while struggling to adapt to a new course&#13;
load and new environment is to&#13;
be expected, it's not an excuse&#13;
for . a p(olonged academic&#13;
struggle. The point of going to&#13;
college is an education first&#13;
and foremost. GoCollege.com,&#13;
an online resource for collegebound •students, recommends&#13;
developing a diligent and COil·&#13;
sistent system of study .habits&#13;
to avoid digging an early acadernie hole. This can involve&#13;
study groups, brief study periods after each class to make&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
i'&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
sure yo!! understand all materi- to do the rest of their lives, and&#13;
als, or a nUJllber of things that part of college ,.is preparing&#13;
might work for each individ- · them to do just that. Parents&#13;
ual. But·tbe main thing is to be should make students aware&#13;
consistent in your study that academics are important,&#13;
approach, ~s once y~u g~t 1t bu~ that devel?ping as a hum~n.&#13;
down, you II ~ more effictent bemg and not Just as a student 1s&#13;
an~ ~ble to en)OY more of that important as well.&#13;
ent1cmg free time.&#13;
For more tips on preparing&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
for cp/lege, visit www.gocol-&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
: . Social Life&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
lege:.c;om. · ·&#13;
&#13;
While education is the · most&#13;
important thing about college,&#13;
developing socially is important as well. For some students,&#13;
overfocusing on academics can&#13;
make college a difficult period&#13;
in their life. Particularly for&#13;
entering freshmen, developing&#13;
friendships is an important step&#13;
in ~dapting to college. Students&#13;
should embrace the chance to&#13;
meet new people, many of&#13;
whom might· be from diff~rent&#13;
parts ofthe country or even the&#13;
world, which can be an educationat: proce~s i~ and of itself.&#13;
· While sl;letallife should never&#13;
take preceaence over academics, balancing work and play&#13;
is something students will have&#13;
&#13;
J'fats off to _you for giving.school your alii&#13;
May you celebrate many"more triumphs&#13;
&#13;
. ON YOU.R WAY TO THE TOP!&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�--·&#13;
&#13;
. _.,._&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Page 20 •&#13;
&#13;
- ··-&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
MEIGS HIGH ·SCHOOL. 2009&#13;
GRADUATES&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Melissa Thomas&#13;
&#13;
Tessa Thomas&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
· · KellyTyree ·&#13;
&#13;
.' .&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Joey Unbankes ·&#13;
&#13;
JOSi VanMeter&#13;
&#13;
Friday~ May&#13;
&#13;
.Class of2009&#13;
&#13;
IS, 2009&#13;
&#13;
,. -&#13;
&#13;
• Page 21&#13;
&#13;
TIPS ·F.O R FINDING THE RIGHT CO .L LEGE&#13;
(MS) - While a fresh crop . their child was. born: For kids,&#13;
of high school graotiates is set it's Jt1ore than likely the biggest&#13;
to walk across the stage at high decision they've ever faced.&#13;
school commencement cere- Before the process begins, conmonies across the country, for sider the following tips for&#13;
the many students about to .choosing the right college.&#13;
.&#13;
become · high school seniors . • Consider a possible career&#13;
now is · an important time to path. Most )8-year-olds have no&#13;
start thinking ~head. That's idea what they might want to do&#13;
because the college application for a living, and that's perfectly&#13;
process is about to begin.&#13;
fine. ',\'hen !~king at colleges,&#13;
Choosl11g a college is a big kids should looK: at all of the pro-:&#13;
choice (or parents and children grams they offer, and make a list&#13;
alike. F~r .parents,. it'sa financial of the programs that. most interest&#13;
commitment they've likely been them. This isn't choosing a career&#13;
prepari!lg to make since the day . (as many students-c~ange majors&#13;
&#13;
while ·in college), .\Jut· rather embrace the freedom . Also,&#13;
doing some preliminary research . schools vary greatly depending&#13;
about what you may wanrto on the size,ofthe college. Some&#13;
study. For students who really students nught prefer a smaller,&#13;
have no · idea what they might more close-knit college com- .&#13;
want to study, con11ider applying munity, while others might preto a larger state school, as those fer a larger school with more&#13;
often offer the most programs of students. Students should make&#13;
,; study, meaning a student won't a list of what theirper8onal pref.have to transfer once they do erences are and seek out schools ·&#13;
decide on a course of study: .&#13;
that match those preferences.&#13;
• Mak~ a liSt of what you&#13;
• Disctiss finances. Thanks to&#13;
want out of a .schoo•. For some the ever-increasing costs associkids , going to school too far ated with higher education, ·&#13;
away from home is a frighten- finances figure heavily into the&#13;
in~ prospect, while o~rs might college decision. While parents&#13;
&#13;
would Jove to send !heir children&#13;
to their fU'St choioo, sometimes&#13;
finances mandate otherwise.&#13;
Parents and children should discuss how much they can afford to&#13;
spend, and how realistic some&#13;
college choices might be. While&#13;
financial aid and scholarships are&#13;
options, they aren't always .&#13;
enough to cover tuition and room&#13;
and board costs. Rather than risk&#13;
a heated argument when it comes&#13;
time to make .a decision, parents&#13;
and children .should get oil the&#13;
same page with respectto w~'s&#13;
affordable as soon as possible. .&#13;
&#13;
Racine Service ·Center Christopher E. TenogUa&#13;
BattEriEs · BrakEs · Engine Diagnosis&#13;
CompletE UnE of AutomotivE. arid .· Ught ·&#13;
Truck TirEs In S.tockl&#13;
&#13;
All Major Crecttt Cards Accepted&#13;
. pick up and loCal delivery avallablel&#13;
.-.&#13;
Kerri VanReeth&#13;
&#13;
~aryWard&#13;
&#13;
Ernie Welsh&#13;
&#13;
Christi Will&#13;
&#13;
Briana Willis&#13;
&#13;
104 Fifth St. • Racine, Ohio&#13;
740-949-2700&#13;
&#13;
Attorney at Law&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
211 East.Seeoad Street • Pollieroy,·Ohio&#13;
&#13;
.. 740·992-6388 .·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN HIGH -' SCHOOL 2009· GRADUATES&#13;
&#13;
Chassidy Wills&#13;
&#13;
·Damian Wise&#13;
&#13;
Nick Wise&#13;
&#13;
CatieWotfe&#13;
&#13;
Sarah Woodard&#13;
Weston Roberts&#13;
&#13;
NOT PICTURED&#13;
Tara Arnott&#13;
Jesse Carr&#13;
Ashley Cremeans&#13;
Brittany Cundiff&#13;
Destiny Dotson&#13;
Caitlin Edwards&#13;
Taylol"'flliott&#13;
HolleyGea.Y&#13;
KaylaGheen&#13;
&#13;
Robert Grover&#13;
LarryHess&#13;
,&#13;
Gabriel Hill&#13;
Alexandria Jones&#13;
Joshua Lewis&#13;
Jahnna Lydic&#13;
Alysia Masters&#13;
Joshua Morris&#13;
&#13;
Seth Perry&#13;
Sarah Pullins&#13;
Allsha Quillen&#13;
Ripley Raubenolt&#13;
Johnathon Runyon&#13;
Tracy Smith&#13;
Robin Taylor ·&#13;
Jclcob Workman&#13;
&#13;
· Jenria Simpson&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
�--·&#13;
&#13;
. _.,._&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Page 20 •&#13;
&#13;
- ··-&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
MEIGS HIGH ·SCHOOL. 2009&#13;
GRADUATES&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Melissa Thomas&#13;
&#13;
Tessa Thomas&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
· · KellyTyree ·&#13;
&#13;
.' .&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Joey Unbankes ·&#13;
&#13;
JOSi VanMeter&#13;
&#13;
Friday~ May&#13;
&#13;
.Class of2009&#13;
&#13;
IS, 2009&#13;
&#13;
,. -&#13;
&#13;
• Page 21&#13;
&#13;
TIPS ·F.O R FINDING THE RIGHT CO .L LEGE&#13;
(MS) - While a fresh crop . their child was. born: For kids,&#13;
of high school graotiates is set it's Jt1ore than likely the biggest&#13;
to walk across the stage at high decision they've ever faced.&#13;
school commencement cere- Before the process begins, conmonies across the country, for sider the following tips for&#13;
the many students about to .choosing the right college.&#13;
.&#13;
become · high school seniors . • Consider a possible career&#13;
now is · an important time to path. Most )8-year-olds have no&#13;
start thinking ~head. That's idea what they might want to do&#13;
because the college application for a living, and that's perfectly&#13;
process is about to begin.&#13;
fine. ',\'hen !~king at colleges,&#13;
Choosl11g a college is a big kids should looK: at all of the pro-:&#13;
choice (or parents and children grams they offer, and make a list&#13;
alike. F~r .parents,. it'sa financial of the programs that. most interest&#13;
commitment they've likely been them. This isn't choosing a career&#13;
prepari!lg to make since the day . (as many students-c~ange majors&#13;
&#13;
while ·in college), .\Jut· rather embrace the freedom . Also,&#13;
doing some preliminary research . schools vary greatly depending&#13;
about what you may wanrto on the size,ofthe college. Some&#13;
study. For students who really students nught prefer a smaller,&#13;
have no · idea what they might more close-knit college com- .&#13;
want to study, con11ider applying munity, while others might preto a larger state school, as those fer a larger school with more&#13;
often offer the most programs of students. Students should make&#13;
,; study, meaning a student won't a list of what theirper8onal pref.have to transfer once they do erences are and seek out schools ·&#13;
decide on a course of study: .&#13;
that match those preferences.&#13;
• Mak~ a liSt of what you&#13;
• Disctiss finances. Thanks to&#13;
want out of a .schoo•. For some the ever-increasing costs associkids , going to school too far ated with higher education, ·&#13;
away from home is a frighten- finances figure heavily into the&#13;
in~ prospect, while o~rs might college decision. While parents&#13;
&#13;
would Jove to send !heir children&#13;
to their fU'St choioo, sometimes&#13;
finances mandate otherwise.&#13;
Parents and children should discuss how much they can afford to&#13;
spend, and how realistic some&#13;
college choices might be. While&#13;
financial aid and scholarships are&#13;
options, they aren't always .&#13;
enough to cover tuition and room&#13;
and board costs. Rather than risk&#13;
a heated argument when it comes&#13;
time to make .a decision, parents&#13;
and children .should get oil the&#13;
same page with respectto w~'s&#13;
affordable as soon as possible. .&#13;
&#13;
Racine Service ·Center Christopher E. TenogUa&#13;
BattEriEs · BrakEs · Engine Diagnosis&#13;
CompletE UnE of AutomotivE. arid .· Ught ·&#13;
Truck TirEs In S.tockl&#13;
&#13;
All Major Crecttt Cards Accepted&#13;
. pick up and loCal delivery avallablel&#13;
.-.&#13;
Kerri VanReeth&#13;
&#13;
~aryWard&#13;
&#13;
Ernie Welsh&#13;
&#13;
Christi Will&#13;
&#13;
Briana Willis&#13;
&#13;
104 Fifth St. • Racine, Ohio&#13;
740-949-2700&#13;
&#13;
Attorney at Law&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
211 East.Seeoad Street • Pollieroy,·Ohio&#13;
&#13;
.. 740·992-6388 .·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN HIGH -' SCHOOL 2009· GRADUATES&#13;
&#13;
Chassidy Wills&#13;
&#13;
·Damian Wise&#13;
&#13;
Nick Wise&#13;
&#13;
CatieWotfe&#13;
&#13;
Sarah Woodard&#13;
Weston Roberts&#13;
&#13;
NOT PICTURED&#13;
Tara Arnott&#13;
Jesse Carr&#13;
Ashley Cremeans&#13;
Brittany Cundiff&#13;
Destiny Dotson&#13;
Caitlin Edwards&#13;
Taylol"'flliott&#13;
HolleyGea.Y&#13;
KaylaGheen&#13;
&#13;
Robert Grover&#13;
LarryHess&#13;
,&#13;
Gabriel Hill&#13;
Alexandria Jones&#13;
Joshua Lewis&#13;
Jahnna Lydic&#13;
Alysia Masters&#13;
Joshua Morris&#13;
&#13;
Seth Perry&#13;
Sarah Pullins&#13;
Allsha Quillen&#13;
Ripley Raubenolt&#13;
Johnathon Runyon&#13;
Tracy Smith&#13;
Robin Taylor ·&#13;
Jclcob Workman&#13;
&#13;
· Jenria Simpson&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
�Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Page 22 •&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May&#13;
15,2009&#13;
. . . ..&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
· Class of 2009&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.....&#13;
&#13;
·- • Page 23&#13;
&#13;
-·&#13;
·----~-~ ~--~--·----&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
,.. -~--. ,.,·-.--:9·:.-y&#13;
&#13;
~..CA:.:~4.:.:.~...&#13;
&#13;
. ..·, .. · ..&#13;
&#13;
·• Ioday·s·•. Graduates&#13;
omorrow•s leaders ·&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'We're So &lt;ProuiOf%u!&#13;
Momet~#&#13;
&#13;
~est&#13;
CONORATULATIONS&#13;
&#13;
Merrie CoUins&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
BRITTANY&#13;
&#13;
'Bri&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
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!Jim So ~ ~J,You!&#13;
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••• " Sa ,,... Of&#13;
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uft, U~tlt ••• &amp;A11t Tenu&#13;
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.lollolfl Your ~l1!aln8- •&#13;
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/Dpe,Mom-&#13;
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... - . , , ~ ,........ . ....&#13;
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.......,...&#13;
&#13;
111 Court Street&#13;
Pomeroy, OH&#13;
.&#13;
Ph: 740-992-2156 Fax: 740~992-2157&#13;
www.mydai lysentinel.com&#13;
&#13;
WllriSIIIII&#13;
&#13;
Proud Of You Bubbfl'l&#13;
Good luck In AI You Dol&#13;
lOVE jJOU, Mom &amp; Dad&#13;
&#13;
Wf'l'f&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
�Class of 2009&#13;
&#13;
Page 22 •&#13;
&#13;
Friday, May&#13;
15,2009&#13;
. . . ..&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
· Class of 2009&#13;
.&#13;
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'We're So &lt;ProuiOf%u!&#13;
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CONORATULATIONS&#13;
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111 Court Street&#13;
Pomeroy, OH&#13;
.&#13;
Ph: 740-992-2156 Fax: 740~992-2157&#13;
www.mydai lysentinel.com&#13;
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WllriSIIIII&#13;
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Proud Of You Bubbfl'l&#13;
Good luck In AI You Dol&#13;
lOVE jJOU, Mom &amp; Dad&#13;
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ALONG THE RivER&#13;
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fiouse of the Weelt&#13;
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Foster parents provide stability, support, Cl&#13;
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Create a new tradition,. 01&#13;
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HometownNews for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties&#13;
&#13;
.. lliams' competency&#13;
·called ·. into question&#13;
&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
:-.Tournament baseball&#13;
::action. See Page 81.&#13;
&#13;
BY. BRIAN J. REED&#13;
eREEDoMYDAlLYSENTINEL.coM&#13;
&#13;
· PoMEROY - Counsel&#13;
for C-harles S. ~tlliams said&#13;
this week a sychological&#13;
evaluation is ecessary to&#13;
determine if illiams is&#13;
com~tent to stand trial.&#13;
· W11liams is charged with&#13;
the robbery and murder of&#13;
Deris Jacksmi of Tuppers&#13;
Plains in February. The&#13;
indictment against h1m con-&#13;
&#13;
tains two ·counts of ag~vated J11Urder and erght&#13;
other charges: three counts&#13;
of kidnapping, aggmvated&#13;
robbery, aggravated ·burglary, tampering with evidence, and grand theft of a&#13;
motor vehicle. .&#13;
-·&#13;
His trial has been set for&#13;
July 1.&#13;
. . . ··&#13;
According to defense&#13;
attorneys Charles Knight&#13;
and William Eachus,&#13;
. Williams was imprisoned in&#13;
&#13;
1991 for threatening the life&#13;
of President George H.W.&#13;
Bush; and has been treated&#13;
in the psychiatric wards of&#13;
at least six facilities since&#13;
then.&#13;
.&#13;
.· In a memorandum . supporting a motion for a psychological · examination&#13;
filed May 13. Knight said .&#13;
. Williams has made suicide .&#13;
attempts.since his arrest on&#13;
murder and other charges.&#13;
''The defendant's mental&#13;
&#13;
condition has limited his&#13;
ability to take part in his&#13;
defense," Knight wrote.&#13;
"Clearly, (Williams') extensive history of psychiatric&#13;
treatment warrants a psychological evaluation to&#13;
determine his •competency&#13;
to stand trial 0r his ability to&#13;
understand the contents of&#13;
any plea agreement."&#13;
·&#13;
According to Knight's&#13;
memorandum, William.s has&#13;
Please •&#13;
&#13;
Williams, A2&#13;
&#13;
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Friday, May 15, 2009&#13;
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GALLIPOLIS - · Chris&#13;
Haynes of Hamilton has&#13;
been announced as the '&#13;
speaker and parade marshal&#13;
for the .annual Memorial ·&#13;
Day&#13;
observ,ation . in&#13;
Gallipolis on Monday, May&#13;
&#13;
25. '&#13;
&#13;
I ••&#13;
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Congratulatio-n s _&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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ClasS&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
Organized by the Gallia&#13;
County Veterans. Service .&#13;
Office, the parade will be at&#13;
10:30 a.m. The parade will&#13;
march through downtown to&#13;
· the .Veterans Memorial in&#13;
ti1~' City:Patk, with the ceremony beginning at II a.m. ·&#13;
Haynes is currently the .&#13;
state&#13;
inspector for the&#13;
•• Local Briefs.&#13;
Veterans of Foreign Wars .&#13;
SeePageM&#13;
Department of Ohio. He&#13;
·• SOuthern honors&#13;
served in the U.S. NavY. .&#13;
from July 1988 unttl&#13;
2009's best, btightest.&#13;
September 1996.&#13;
;SeePageA3&#13;
Haynes became eligible&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
. .&#13;
C_&#13;
hartene Hoelllchlphqto&#13;
•• Occupants escape&#13;
for&#13;
the VFW for his service&#13;
From leff; John ~nUey, Bob Graham and Rick Riling, sell coins to Meigs !Ourih graderS making-their purchases with pl!ly&#13;
Operation · Desert&#13;
during&#13;
.fire In apartment. · · ·· mgn.ey.·TM ~:&lt;?'""~air marked the finale for p~rams this school year-bY t~e OhKan. · Ch,tb· members.&#13;
·&#13;
Shield. Haynes has just .&#13;
:See Page AS , .&#13;
completed a year as the&#13;
: • Special m~ng to&#13;
grand commander of the ·&#13;
Military Order . of the&#13;
.discusS sctiooltevy.&#13;
Cooties.&#13;
·See Page A6.&#13;
More information on the&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
;• Kyger Creek alumni&#13;
event is available at the&#13;
VSO by calling 446-2005 .&#13;
.reunion set for May 23.&#13;
Prior to the parade and&#13;
SeePageA6&#13;
ceremony, Sons of Union&#13;
:.'• Bean dinner, parade&#13;
School all nine years. He is usually Family Homes and Farmers Bank, he Veterans of the Civil W,ar&#13;
BY .CHARLENE HOEFLICH&#13;
HOEFLICHCIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM&#13;
· assisted·by.another coin collector, John bought quantities of coins to share Cadot-Blessing Camp · 126&#13;
:'slated at Centerville. ·&#13;
of Gallipolis will conduct a&#13;
.&#13;
Bentley of Syracuse.&#13;
with the students at the fair.&#13;
:;See Page A6&#13;
' POMEROY - Getting kids interThe history of coins and coin colEach one in the class was· provided Memorial Day commemoested in coin colle~;ting is the goal of leering, the different designs, and the · $5 in "play" money to spend. They ration at Pine Street&#13;
::•lfs openi~g weekend&#13;
.&#13;
B9b Graham of Pomeroy; wbo for the inost and least valuable as a collectible crowded around a long table filled . Cemetery, starting at 9 a.m. ·&#13;
Cedar Point&#13;
past nine years has been gointt; into because of date and condition are · with coins purchased by the coin club&#13;
The program, with the&#13;
1?-See Page A6&#13;
Bend area schools tP .show ~nd sh.are among the infonnation he shares with to "spend" their money. .&#13;
.&#13;
· Rev, Michael Lynn of the&#13;
bis long~time hobby.&#13;
· · ·&#13;
. the students.&#13;
Gallipolis Christian Church&#13;
·"I&#13;
JUst&#13;
want&#13;
these&#13;
kids&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
exposed&#13;
:•·&#13;
A member of the OhKan Coin Club,&#13;
To wrap up the school year, Graham to something new and ·this fair where as speaker, will honot veter.•'&#13;
Graham has been doing coin programs decided to do a .coin fair. With Cl)- . they use play money to buy coins · ans of all wars and includes&#13;
with the fourth gqule students of Karen sponsors, the OhKan Coin &lt;;Iub and gives them the concept of going to real&#13;
.WEATHER&#13;
Walker at the Meigs Intennediate some individual members, Pullins _show," said Graham.&#13;
.......... Spu••• A2&#13;
&#13;
2009&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
::tor&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
_Commissioners closely&#13;
monitor autopsy, jail fees&#13;
&#13;
To All Our Local Graduates ...&#13;
Here's to :all the young men and women&#13;
· who have worked so hard towards&#13;
co~me!Jcement day. ·.Seize the day and&#13;
may .a.~ I your dreams ·come true!&#13;
&#13;
tbe&#13;
&#13;
Bv :BRIAN J. Rem . "'&#13;
&#13;
2009, includin~ those of&#13;
three murder v1ctims, and ·&#13;
Meigs ·&#13;
County&#13;
. POMEROY · - M;urder Conunissionersmay need to&#13;
cases · are expensive for make .additional funding&#13;
.county · government~; · and availabJe · to meet autopsy&#13;
with three such cases pend- cosis for the remainder of&#13;
ing,&#13;
Meigs&#13;
County the year.&#13;
Commissioner:; could face&#13;
Health . Commissioner&#13;
financial. re~trilints as the Larry Marshall, _who has&#13;
year progresses. , .&#13;
been serving as an assistant&#13;
"&#13;
Coroner Douglas Hunter to Coroner Douglas Hunter,&#13;
4 SECitONS - 24 PAGES&#13;
has ordered 10 autopsies in&#13;
J\routld Town&#13;
A3- the first five months of&#13;
Pl•nsHFees,A2&#13;
BREEDCIMYOAILYSENTINEl.COM&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
STAFF&#13;
&#13;
RACINE 81 SYRACUSE&#13;
&#13;
We've Got It!&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
(:e}ebrations&#13;
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Editorials&#13;
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insert&#13;
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Obituaries&#13;
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~mics&#13;
&#13;
Sports&#13;
Weather&#13;
&#13;
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&lt;tJ 1009 Ohio Volley Pub~ Co.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
.&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
Retail suryey n~eds input&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
~&#13;
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'&#13;
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STAFF REPORT&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
MOTNEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM&#13;
&#13;
GALLIPOLIS&#13;
~&#13;
Residents of Gallipolis and&#13;
people .who live elsewhere;&#13;
but work here, are being&#13;
asked to help in a study&#13;
examining the current state&#13;
of retail shopping in&#13;
Gallipolis and the future of&#13;
the c1ty's business districts .&#13;
Community residents· and&#13;
workers can express their&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
opinions in a survey being&#13;
condil£t¢ about shopping&#13;
· habiis''and preferences, the&#13;
curre~tt~ condition o( the&#13;
city's '&lt;retail areas, and the&#13;
· types of business establishments they think are needed&#13;
Kevin Kettyfphoto&#13;
in Gallipolis.&#13;
Galli&#13;
a&#13;
County&#13;
law&#13;
enforcement&#13;
gathered&#13;
in front of the&#13;
The survey is part of a&#13;
retail market study being Gallipolis City Building for Friday's observation of Police&#13;
done for the city by the Memorial Day, when the efforts of police officers past and&#13;
Voinov ich&#13;
School&#13;
of present to protect and serve are memorialized. The observation and concluding prayer were led by local chaplain&#13;
PluM see Survey. A2&#13;
Bob Hood. .&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
.Caldwell&#13;
appointed.&#13;
advertising&#13;
manager -·&#13;
REPORT&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MDTNEWSCIMYOAILYTRIBUNE.(X)M&#13;
&#13;
Jm&gt;EX&#13;
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Making coin&#13;
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.&#13;
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MOTNEWSCMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COM&#13;
&#13;
:PageAS&#13;
.&#13;
:• Qr..Philip L Edmiston&#13;
•• Dallas Janey&#13;
.:&gt;Dakota.Lee Marshall&#13;
;• Larry L. Mitchell&#13;
. • Tommy J-. Queen&#13;
~ • Tina Mana Barsotti&#13;
·• Steven Kock&#13;
&#13;
t"l,.&#13;
&#13;
Memorial&#13;
Day guest&#13;
speaker&#13;
is named&#13;
Bv: KEVIN KELLY&#13;
&#13;
0BmJARIES&#13;
&#13;
'I&#13;
&#13;
Chris Haynes&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
-~&#13;
&#13;
GAI.;LiPOLIS ...., ·Pam&#13;
Caldwell, a 21-year employ,&#13;
ee of Ohio Valley Publishing&#13;
Co., has been named advertising manager for the Ohio Valley Group of Helirtland&#13;
Publications newspapers. •&#13;
. The Ohio Valley Group;&#13;
includes the Gallipolis Daily:&#13;
Tribune_ (Galli~ County),'&#13;
The Dmly Sentmel (Meigs&#13;
County) and the Point&#13;
·_Pleasant Register (Mason&#13;
County, W.Va.), in addition&#13;
to the Sunday Times· Sentinel, which includes the&#13;
Tribl!ne and Sentmel : .&#13;
.&#13;
Pam has been With . the&#13;
local newspapers smce&#13;
March 1981! as an adve~s·&#13;
mg representative, first wllh&#13;
PleiiH ... Cll&amp;hnll. A1&#13;
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