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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.eom

Wednesday, April18, 2007

Va. Tech gunman sent

;Lady Falcons take two from Wirt County ·
BY BRYAN W.\LTERS
BWALTER S@ M Y DAI ~YT R IB U NE .C OM

'i

.I

HARTFORD.
W.Va .
Wahama softball picked up wins
number I0 and II this spring following a doubleheader sweep of
Wirt County Tuesday by scores
of 11 -0 and 13-3 .
The Lady Falcons ( 11 -3)
pounded out 17 hits in the home
twin billing. while the Lady
Wildcats managed just three
apiece in each setback.
Kylie Riggs threw six shutout
innings in game one. allowing
just three hits and three walks
. while striking out eight.
WHS also belted out seven hits
i11 the first contest. im;luding a
pair apiece from Taylor Hysell.
Haley Davis and Kayanna Sayre.
Amber Tully provide the other
safety in the triumph .
Davis scored three times and
Sayre added two run s scored.
The Red and White led 5-0
through three .innings of play.
then tacked on two more scores

in the bottom of
the fifth fot a 7-0
edge . The hosts
~dded four more
111 the six th to
secure
the
mercy-rule outcome .
Brooke
Gabritsch
worked
six
Sayre
innings in game
two. allowing
just three hits and four walks
while fanning seven .
However. Wahama 's bats took
a little longer to warm up in the
nightcap, producing _only a 1-0
lcl!d after three complete innings.
WCHS tied the game at one in
the top of the fourth, but the hosts
rallied for a score of their own in
the fourth for a 2- 1 lead .
Wahama increased its advantage to 4-1 after the fifth, but the
visitors countered with two
scores in the top of the sixth making it 4-3. Wirt County never
came closer.

to many extru runs for the
wmners .
Meigs goes to TriValley Conference Ohio
. from Page 8 l
Division leader Wellston
on
Thursday.
River
Lady Raiders. The defense Valley, ·meanwhil e, goes
did make six errors behind to Chesapeake to resume
McFann . which helped lead · the
Ohio
Valley

Blast

coup~Jrbf

Southern
from Page8l

d

I
'

Likewise, Southern let a
3-0 le'ad dwindle the night
before at Trimble. On the
bright side, however, was
the fact that ·Southern
played well against both
division
front-runners .
Belpre, 8·4, 5- 1 leads the
Ohio Divisibn of the TriValley Conference. while
Southern falls to 5-8. 3-3.
Southern went to work
early. Lead-off hitter
Lindsey Buzzard reached
on an error,Sarah Eddy ·
singled. and Kasey Turley
reached on an error that
brought home two runs.
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle singled to keep the inning
alive ; but Southern's hopes
went down the tubes in a
2-0 start.
Southern threatened a

times, and firstbaseMan Amber Hifl, the
only two-hit person of the
night had two singles but
was left stranded in both
accounts. Meanwhile, Sarah
Eddy, who has grown into a
great pitcher the past few
weeks , .hekj Belpre scoreless through the first four
innings.
·
·
In the fifth inning after
Eddy' pad set the side down
on just five pitches in the
fourth , Lady Luck bit the
Tornadoes. - And she bit
down hard. Amaris Skinner
singled, two walks and a hit
batter brought home a run
around a two-run singled by
Mindi Jo Bonar and another
two-RBI single by Kylie
Martin. All this came inexplicably without an out.
Martin was throw out trying
to stretch her shot into an
extra base , then a flyout and
strike out ended the inning.
Belpre led though 5-2.
Southern threatened on a

WAHAMA 11, WIRT COUNTY 0
Wirt Co 000 000 031
Wahama 104 024 -

11 7 0
WC: Co~~: , Sommerlield (4) and Haidbargur

WHS (10-3): Kylie Riggs and Mary Kebler
WP - AigQs; LP - Cox

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;oll \IS•\oi..)h, \o . 1X1

MEIGS 18, RIVER VALLEY 2

Meigs

07(10)

RValley 000

1

-

2

-

1880

236
MHS (7-4): Amy Barr, Hailey Ebersbach
(3) and S. Smith, Amber Burton (3) .

AVHS: Kari McFann an d Terra Porter.
Barr: LP -

from Page 81

McFann

Hill and Rashell Boso single in the fifth, but did not
score. Belpre added two
insurance runs in the sixth
for a 7-2 tally. then
Southern charged back with
too little, too late. Four
walks and a ground out
made the score,7-4, but two
strike outs played a role in
stifling the comeback.
Southern hitters were
Amber Hill with two · singles, and hits by Buzzard,
Eddy, Turley, Wolfe-Riffle,
and Boso.
Courtney
Meri wet~er
picked up the victory on the
Belpre mound with four
strikeouts , three walks and
seven hits allowed. Eddy
suffered the loss with seven
strikeouts , six walks, and
tive hits allowed.
Southern is to play at
Alexander on Wednesday.

and single in the fifth , but
was able to work out of
each inning.
Although Southern had
nine hits in nine innings,
the bats were not very
lively in the middle
innings. Lack of an insurance run nearly sealed
Southern'' s fate going
down the stretch. In the
sixth· inning , Belpre took
advantage of that and .also
capitalized on an error.
Hector Gonzales reached
on an error and scored
after advancing on a
Jordan Thornhill walk, a
'steal, and a 4-3 ground out
by Nate Watson, the score
now 1-1.
Southern put three runners on in the seventh, but
a pick off, pop up, and fly
. out ended the Tornado seg~
ment of regulation offense .
Belpre put two runners on
in the seventh. but

Chapman buckled down to
get out of the inning. He
also worked out of a jam in
the eighth.
In the top of the ninth
inning , Nick Buck reached
on an error, Krieg Kleski
singled, and Jordan Pierce
walked to load the bases.
Jake Hunter reached on an
'error that lefi all runners
safe and the bases loaded,
then after a pop-up Pat
Johnson gave Southern the
boost it need , literally.
Johnson ripped a one-out,
two-run single that gave
SHS a 4-1 advantage. John
· Logue came on in relief of
Josh
Sizemore,
but
Logue 's fresh arm did not
hi-nder Southern's quest
for the win.
Chapman grounded out
to shortstop to bring home
Hunter with what proved
later to be the winning run ,
5-1. Patrick Johnson came
on in relief of Chapman,
and ended up with the
save. A hit batter to leadoff the frame added to the
drama. Then a walk.
Johnson next dug down

• Meigs sweeps Eastern
tri-meet. See Page 81

deep to strikeout the leadoff batter before a 6-3
groundout brought home a
run, 5-2. An RBI Thornhill
single, and two more
walks brought home a run
before Johnson struck out
the final batter for the SHS
win.
Chapman fanned seven
and walked just two in the
win, while Johnson fanned
two and ·walked four with
a save .Sizemore went
. eight-plus innings with
two strikeouts and one
walk , while Logue went
two-thirds of an inning
with no walks and no
strikeouts.
Southern hitters were
Hunter, Johnson, Chapman
(two singles), Marnhout
(double and single). Buck ,
Kleski , and Pierce (two
singles). ·
Southern
goes
to
Alexander Wednesday for
an interdivisional TriValley Conference game. ,

~

Page AS
• Delmer McClanahan

INSIDE
• Dutton first to the
finish . .See ' Page A3
• Pomeroy Mayor's
Court. See Page AS
• Meigs County
.Girl Scout Diary.
See Page AS
• Rock Ensemble
performs Friday.
See Page A7

4-1/2

$46.99~.

)1

• Lifetime limited warmn1y

MAINTENANCE FREE VINYL FENCE
mowint

..

• 20 HP· Kohl~· Cour111.. q iN
• Pltlnttd S...t.Jet" hilh·prttfiVfW

•20HP~~

• 22 tf'' KIWttet.rV-Twin

V-Twin OHV qint
• Cut-ifon nnunia,ion with helvy-duty

• PiVOfina lnd lf'IUiblt fronl IXIt with

6'x 6' Fence Panel19IOO ....... S75.00
3'x 6; Gate t9102 ..................... S70.00
S"x S"x 98" Post 19104 .......... $21.00
S"x S" Bevel PoSt Cap 19107 .. $1.89

o.c• ••lhina syatlfTI

·• 3- trld S.ytar limittd Wlf'l'anty..

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• 4r twin·b!Ne rnow_io1 dtcl

hydrostJI!lc pump

• 3· and S-yw

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OHVqino

cesltf' whNit
• Eraonomit ~~p bin wiltl10ft-101.1:h
Fipt INI donoftn
lqt

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ZERO -D!!ITERE~J
ZERO

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P'-ViiENTS

SALE '1,699"

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page AS

INDEX

3Rail Vinyl Fence

taM:1QI CIMlt

-

SALE '3,199"

2 SECTIONS- 16 PAG•:s

2x6x 16' Vi_nyl Rail t9120 .......S15.99
3 Rail Line Post 19122........... $14.99
3 Rail Corner Post 19124.......$14.99
3 Rail End Post 19t26 ............ $14.99

SALE '2,999"

'
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,.

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'I'OIUmJWN .

TUDITIONAI.
HANDIUULKR

~

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

•

Section 19050 ....................... $68.00
a· Section 19052 ......................
10' Section t9054 ................. $160.qcl

6'

1

' · ~l '(~S W.•"'-'T\C'f' S ~'t)11"'fllfS" f ~D91'1tf!f 1~
t'1 ' 1 l.le!IIH!0F'ty!&lt;tt:~ !. Ito .... ·~:~• '~'U · ·~~~ ~ 'l t.tQo ... ¥¥4Qfl p..t r .._'" . I999 ~-- ~.;..0C-'Jl~I~ (, _C...tttoilll ()opr~~~~~M 11&amp;0\CII'IIIll!
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... SltJ'tl.t IIT.ttl~'!dttlf !Orltlt-- 1111 ;.~r:SN ·- · w,,..m C..'P ''"'"'~
_ .,'{I '..:M

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·1:~

·

Includes mountilll
brackets and screws.
Does not include posts.

;Traditional Handrail Kit

8880 UNITED LANE • ATHENS. OH 45701
740-593-3279 OR 1-800·710-1917
MON -·fRI 9:00AM- 6:00PM • SAT 8:00AM ·~ 12:00fM

•• ~ ~'&gt;'u · ..-..o!IIV ::~~ ~ J:; ~ ~ 1&amp;9:tll* ll&gt;K ~..., ,.,..__ .\'t.lllfllil 11"'«1 n WI~ •
Ta.f~!!f11! MI.;Rit«dd'f t•.rl(-1"rllf-.lJ.:Yoli¥1S~p¥ 1 lotD~lU.l::lkl!t~IN~t!IW• 1 •

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

•

Getly$burg

ZERD·TIJRN RIDER

$99.09\

HANDRAIL KlT

lndudeo mounting
J&gt;rectets and scnws.
lloes - include posts. ·

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

BS-6

Comics

B7

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Places to go

A7

Sports
Weather

Yorktown Handrail

Kit

1g(J62 .................

A8

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Section 190SS ...................... S82.00
a·
• 1906o ....................S127.00'
6'

10'

B Section

POMt;iROY - Delegates to attend
Buckeye Girls State, June 17-23 at
Ashland College, have been selected
by the Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post
39; American Legion, of Pomeroy.
They are Cassie Hauber of Eastern
High School, and Kaylee Kennedy of
Meigs High School. The alternates to
the delegates if they are unable to
attend are Hannah Pratt of Eastern,
and Kelsey Fife of Meigs.
The girls are juniors in t~ir respective high schools where they are active
in extracurricular activities and also
contribute to organizations in their.communities. The two who attend Buckeye
Girls State are sponsored by Pomeroy's
Legion Auxiliary with support from
Farmers Bank and Peoples Bank.
For the past 61 years, the Legion
Auxiliary has sponsored the Girl Staie
·program which is designed to educate'
Ohio's young women ia the duties,
privileges, rights and responsibilities
of good citizenship. It has been recognized and honored by many organizations including Freedom's Foundation
at. Valley Forge and the National

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Kelsey Fife

Cassia Hauber

Association of Secondary School
Principals, for its work in the development of young women.
Students are selected on the basis of
their interest in government and current events, leadership skills, and academic ability.
Once on the campus of Ashland
College, the young women are
assigned as citizens into two mythical
political parties. Elections are held to
fill city, county and state positions.
Activities .include government workshops, campaigning, party . rallies,
debating, voting, and legislative sessions, along with social and recreational events.
The students receive instruction in
parliamentary procedure, and 'Jive

S179.00

5"x5"x104" White
Traditional Post
19055

$109.00

¥II IN!' .-r,

" '•tl'or'o!:l lfiPI!'

r r u~· !O o-, ··~!Ill« '"''1ft "'-lJ "'" '"'11'1:1 .)flit' ~J ~ .,n:t \PK&lt;fU ! U:1

ty "'t&gt;fl!! l".f'\Jtrt:.-..-.

.-----·
'i'• ' . f.'lf.T•/

f.

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---- _,

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

r " " r("fr~(' r
----

--

!

YOO CNI'T GH ANY Brn'ER~

Please see Crash, A5

Southern to
.
·
A
.
uxili•
I
.
G.
1
·
Stat
d
I
t. interview
L
· eg~on . ary se ects Ir . e. e ega es treasurer
candidates

•l"itentcd
SMAR.TWAI..I. fe:,~tures: nail·light ht.•m, PemmAe-l Su!if,ensiun C!'hles
und St00Nailing' 01 lrn.JiQI.turs
·
• Resi~tarit kl 180 mp2 winds {imtaltOO with staple~)

• scr lloatlnt tr($1le-~ 3-in-1

Please see Savings. AS

probes

It's prom time again and Southern officially begins the season this Saturday when 12~· ~t~~~nts starHo arrive around 7
p.m. at the high school to walk the purple carpet Into the gymnasium. This year's prom theme is 'TCan Love You Like
That' complete with ·a castle and other water themes. The prom king and queen will be crowned at 10 p.m. and those
candidates are, front row (from left) Jake Hunter, Nick Buck, Jesse McKnight, Ada!fl Phillips; second row (from left) Mallory
Hiii, .Bethany Vance, Rachel Wood, Emily Babbitt. Not pictured, Amber Hill, Weston Counts.

WEATHER

• STlJIJfi1Kil'r 1 lnslUIIalion System
• Wind-n'!Ustant roU-o\'tr nail hem
Encore flc~ has J).l" daphoord and 0 +I IX' dutchlop profiles

HEAVV-DUTY GARDEN TRACTOR

median home value of
$66,000. qualifying homeowners in the Eastern Local
School District would save,
on t.he average, 37.8 percent
on their tax bill. In Meigs
Local, where the median
home value is $52,000, the
savings is estimated at 48
percent because, Byer-Hill
said Wednesday, the taxation
rate in the district is higher.

Patrol

Beth Sergent/photo

prot11cs

• Heevy-cNty shill drivt

by owners who are over 65,
the spouse of a homeowner
who was 65 at the time of
death, or permanently and
totally disabled.
The proposal would
expand the · number of
homeowners who receive
the
exemption
from
220,000 to about 775,000,
or one in four homeowners
in the state, the taxation
department reports.
Based on an estimated

BIDWELL - The State
Highw'ay Patrol is curren\·
· ly investigating a fatill
motor vehicle crash that
occurred at approximately
I :50 p.m. Tuesday.
The two vehicle crash
occurred on Ohio 160 in
Gallia County.
A red 1992 Mercury
Topaz, driven by Brian R.
Porter of Gallipolis. was
southbound on
f+~~lW~?U When a blu.e..l9$]
Ford F-1 SO pickup truck,
driven by Jimmy G. Laws
of Bidwell, blew a tire and
drove left of center, striking
the Topaz head-on.
Porter, an auxiliary and
part-time Gallia County sheriff's deputy and former
Meigs County sheriff's
deputy, ·was transported to
Holzer Medical Center where
he was pronounced dead.

OBITUARIES

f.11core And F.m.'Oren'
For pcrfonnance and \o&amp;lue
• 10 populur colon wilh a wide. variety of coordinating trim · .5 in slo'k ·
a lii~k quality •l ..ow Mai111erwnc~ • Gn.'tl.t Value • \\/ondgro~in finish
• f..ncorr. is offered in T:t··: 1.»··. us· cl:z(lboord and 0+ 112'' dUic:hlap

LAWN TttACTOR

Homestead Exemption program. The state also reimburses local governments
for inside millage and ·
voted levy revenue lost
because of the exemption,
County Auditor Mary
Byer-Hill said.
Strickland has proposed
eliminating any income limits on the tax reduction, and
providing an exemption of
$25,000 from the market
value of all homes occupied

STAFF R.EPORT

WMe, gray, Clay, Herringbone ,

1
"

• 46" ~$Jiy triplt·bllctl

proposal would provide an
exemption of $25,000
from the market value of
all homes occupied by
owners who qualify under
new guidelines included in
the program.
School districts and other
local political subdivisions
would not be affected,
because the state would
reimburse counties for the
. relief program. as it does
now ·for the existing

NEWS®MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.

Double 4"

· Wlilte $
$44.99 sq.

RZT50

REED

fatal crash
inGallia

SOUTHERN 5, BELPRE 4
100 000 004 593
Belpre
000 001 003 466
WP - Chapman: LP - ..k&gt;hnson

.

""" " " " ·"""'"1" "' 1' "'"

Southern Prom on Saturday

Double

GT 2542

J.

Southam

.,

LT 1045

Bv BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.C\)M

POMEROY -A proposed expansion of the
Homestead Tax EKemption
program would save the
average Meigs County taxpayer who qualifies about
43 percent in real estate
taxes, according to figures
from the Ohio Department
of Taxation.
Gov. Ted Strickland' s

Vinyl

. BELPRE 7, SOUTHERN 2
So1,1thern 200 000 2 - 4 7 3
Belpre 000 052 J~ - 7 5 2
WP - Meriweth_er; LP ~ Eddy

llll ' J{&lt;.,JI\\ . \1'1{11 IIJ . :.!Oo-

Tax savings in Homestead expansion estimated at 43 percent

SPORTS

WC : Cox .. Sommerfield (6) and Haidbargur
WHS (11 ·3): Brooke Gabritsc:h and Beth Rollins
WP- Gabrilsch: LP- Cox

Bounce·

at Buckeye Hi11s, A7

'

3 3 4
13 10 2

Conference sc hedule.
Game time is sched ul ed
for 5 p.m.

' WP -

photos to NBC, A2

Bryan
Watteral
photo

WAHAMA 13, WIRT COUNTY 3
Wirt Co 000 102 Wahama 001 129 -

a video manifesto and

Wahama
infielders
congratulate game
one starting pitcher
Kylie
Riggs, left,
after a
strikeout
during
Tuesday's
doubleheader
softball
cont\!st
against
Wirt,
·County in
Hartford,
W.Va.

The Lady Falcons finally erupt- ·
ed in the sixth. scoring nine times
to wrap-up another mercy-ruly
victory.
Gabritsch and Ashley Wolfe
paced the offense with two hits
apiece . Sayre. Davis, Hysell ; Beth
Rollins. Kayla Young and Aireal
Derifield provided the other
safeties.
Cox , the loser of game one. was
also the losing hurler in game two.
Sommerfield worked rei ief as
well in both contests.
Wahama returns to action today
wh~n it travels to Ashton for a
softball matchup with Hannan.
Game time is scheduled for 5 p.m.

Music helps headline
annual open house

555 Park St Middleport, Ohio ·
740-992-6611 • 1-800.-733-3334
..

-- - •

•

RACINE - Candidates
for the treasurer's position
in the Southern Local
School District will be interviewed ·by the school board
Hannah Pratt
during Wednesday"s special
together as self-governing citizens session.
according
to
with duties. privileges , rights and Superintendent Mark Miller.
responsibilities which has · to be
If none of the candidates
assumed in any democratic communi- are certitied but are working
ty as adults.
.
towards certification they
A goal of Buckeye Girls State is to can still be hired and work
educate young women in citizenship. under the supervision of
help them develop patriotism. give Cindy Rhonemu s. interim
them a knowledge of how state govern- treasurer who is certified.
ments work, and teach them the imporThe board will also be
tance of a love of God and country.
meetino this Monday to disAs in the past this year's program
fitling the positions of
will feature a variety of speakers cuss
athletic
director and boy's
· including some state officials, special
varsity
basketball
coach for
music. and recreational .activities in
the
1007-08
school
year. A
addition to a whirlwind -of duties as
for
both
positions
candidate
they move into their elected and
appointed positions of state and coun- is Jeff Caldwell who was
ty government:'
Please see Southern. A5

�'

The Daily Sentinel
'

NATION • WORLD

senti video

NBC
he was free to leave ' as of Tech officials to recognize
Pee. 14. Virginia Tech Cho's problems was awardspokesman Larry Hincker winning · poet · Nikki.
said Cho had been continu- Giovanni. who kicked him
ally enrolled at Tech and out of her introduction to
never took a leave of creative writing class in late _
absence.
2005.
A spokesman for Carilion
Student s in Giovanni's
St. Albans would trot com- class had told their profesment.
sor that Chu was taking
Though the stalking inci- photographs- of their legs . .
dents did not result in crim- and knees under the desks ,
inal charges, police referred . with hi s cell phone. Female .
Cho to the university's dis- students refused to come to .
ciplinary system, Ainchum class. She said she consid·said. But Ed Spencer, assis- ered him ''mean" and "a
tant vice president of stu- . bully."
dent affairs, would not comQuestions lingered over
ment on any disciplinary whether campus police
proceedings, saying federal shou ld have issued an
law protects students' med- .immed iate campus-wide
ical privacy even after warning of a killer on the
death. ·
loose and locked down the
Some parents complained campus after the first burst
that the university failed to of gunfire. ·
lock down the c&amp;mpus and
Pol ice said that after the
spread a warning after the t1rst shooting, in which two
ftrst round of shootings. students were killed, they
Still, two days after the believed that it was a
shooting spree, many stu- domestic dispute, and that
dents resisted pointing t1n- the gunman had fled the
gers.
campus. Police went look:
"Who would' ve woken ing for a young man, Karl
up in the morning and said, David Thornhill, who haq
'Maybe this student who's
just troubled is really going once shot guns at a firing
to do something this horrif- range with the roommate of
ic?'" said Elizabeth Hart, a one of the victims. But
communications major and police said Thornhill is no
.a spokeswoman for the stu, longer under suspicion.
dent government.
Lucinda Roy, professor of
English at Virginia Tech,
said that she, too, relayed
her concerns to campus
police and various other
college units after Cho displayed antisocial behavior
m her class and handed in
disturbing writing assign' , . 'W1 ~ luppcNt
• -llotsiOng . ...., ,.,.._ ...
ments.
• 10 ,..,.., lddr•• wlh Wlbmtll
But she. said authorities
• Cu1tom811rtP1Qt ·I'IIM, WIINr &amp;moN1
"hit a wall" in terms of what
they could do "with a stu·
(:,:,': 6X frln.r/'1
dent 9n campus unless he'd
'-~
.... UpDnlillol _......_._
made a very overt threat to
himself or others." Cho
resisted her repeated sug·
gestion that he undergo ·
counseling, Roy said.
One of the first Virginia

BY MATT APUZZO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEWS

I

Thursday, Apri119, 2007_

The Daily Sentinel
•

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I

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·Va.Tech

1,

PageA2

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'BLACKSBURG, Va. ~-. NBC
Between his t1rst and second bursts of guntlre, the
Virginia Tech gunman
•
mailed a package to NBC
News containing pictures of
him brandishing weapons
and video of him delivering
a diatribe about getting even
with rich people.
"This may be a very new,
critical component of this
investigation. We' re in the_
process right now o!
attempting to analyze and
eval uate its worth," said
Col. Steve Flaherty, super. intendent of Virginia State
•
Police. He gave no details
on the material. which NBC
said
it
received
in
Wednesday morning's mail.
NBC said that a time
stamp on the package indicated the material . was
mailed in the two-hour window between the first burst
of gunfire in a high ~rise dormitory and the second fusillade, at a classroom building. Thirty-three people
AP photo
died in the rampage. includ- This video frame grab image taken from a· video aired by NBC News on Wednesday shows
ing the gunman, 23-year-old Virginia Tech gunman Cho Seung-Hui. The video was part of a package allegedly mailed to
student Cho Seung-Hui, the network on Monday between Cho's first and second shootings on the Virginia Tech camwho committed suicide.
pus. NBC said that a time stamp on the package indicated the material was mailed in the
The package included a two-hour window between the first burst of gunfire In a high-rise dormitory and the second
manifesto that "rants fusillade, at a classroom building. Thirty-three people died in the. rampage, including the
agai!ISI rich people and gunman, who committed suicide.
warns .tttat he wants to get
even," according to a law Service stamp showing that messages from Cho, but conducted Dec. 14 found
enforcement official who it had been received . at a they considered the mes- that that Cho's "affect is
spoke to The Associated Virginia post ofl1ce at 9:0 I sages · "annoying," not flat. ... He denies suicidal
Press on condition of a.m. Monday, about an hour threatening, and neither ideations. He does not
anonymity because he was . and 45 minutes after Cho . pressed charges, Virgi ni;:t acknowledge symptoms of
not authorized to speak first opened fire, according Tech Police Chief Wendell a thought · disorder. His
aboui the case.
to MSNBC.
Flinchum said.
insight and judgment are
MSNBc;: said the package
If the package .was indeed
Neither woman was normal."
included a CD-'ROM on mailed between the first among the victims in the
The court papers indicate
which Cho read his mani- attack and the second, that mass·acre, police said. .
that Barnett checked' a box
festo.
would help explain where
Around the same time, that said Cho "presents an
Late
Wednesday, Cho was and what he did one of Cho's professors Imminent danger to himself
MSNBC showed a photo during that two-hour win- informally shared some as a result of mental illfrom the package of ·Cho dow.
concerns abm~t the ·young ness." Barnett did not check
Earlier in the day man's writings, but no offi· the box that would indicate
glaring at th!! camera, his
arms outstretched with a Wednesday, authorities dis· · cial report was filed, a danger to others.
gun in each hand. He wears closed that more than a year Flinchum said.
It is. unclear how long
a khaki-colored military- before the massacre, Cho
After the seconl! stalking Cho
stayed at · Carilion,
style vest, fingerless gloves was accused of stalking two complaint, the university
though
court papers indicate
and a backwards, black . women and was taken to a obtamed a temporary detenbaseball cap. "NBC Nightly psychiatric hospital on a tion order and took Cho
News" planned 10 show magistrate's orders because away because an acquainsome of the material
of fears he might be suici- tance reported he might · be
Wednesday
night.
NBC News President dal. He was · later released suicidal,· authorities
, said.
Steve Capus said the net- with orders t.o undergo out- Police did not identify the
work promptly turned the patient treatment.
acquaintance.
material over 10 the FBI· in
The disclosure added to
On Dei:. 13, 2005, a mag. New York.
·
the rapidly growing list of istrate ordered Cho to
The material is "hard-to- warning signs that appeared undergo an evaluation at
follow ... disturbing, very well before the student Carilion St. Albans, a pridisturbing very angry, pro; opened fire. Among other vate psychiatric hospital.
fanity-laced, " he said on the things, Cho's twisted, vio- The magistrate signed the
MSNBC Web site. Among lence-filled writings and order after an initial evalua.
vacant-eyed tion found probable cause
the materials are digital sullen, ·
video files showing Cho demeanor had disturbed that Cho was a danger to
talking directly to the cam- professors and students so himself or others as a result
. To be published
era about his hatred of the much that he was removed of mental illness.
wealthy, Capus said.
from one English class and
The next day. according
Sunday, May 13th
It does not include 'itnY . was repeat~dly urged to get to court records, doctors at
images of the shootings, but counseling.
Carilion conducted further
contains "va~ue refer- . In
November
and examination and a special
ences," includmg "things December 2005,
two justice; Paul M. Barnett,
like, 'This didn't have to . women COil)plained to cam- approved outpatient treathappen,"' Capus said. ·
pus police that they had ment.
The packa11e bore a Postal received calls and computer
A medical examination

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Don't miss this opportunity to say it. · ,

Greeting Examples ...

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ntinel ·

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Gates says U.S., Israel, others
united on Iranian nuclear issue

(Your
Mother's
·Name)

BY LOUTA C. BALDOR

munity at 'this point," Gates · Middle East travels, Gates
said.
·
exhorted Arab countries to use
His words appeared aimed their influence to undermine
TEL AVIV, Israel - at diffusing suggestions in the insurgency and encourage
Defense Secretary Robert Israel and the U.S. that the political reconciliation in Iraq.
Gates said Wednesday .that Pentagon is moving toward a "Whatever disagreements
diplomatic effons to resolve strike against Iran.
. we might have liod over how
the standoff with Iran over its
At the same time, Gates con- we got .to this point in Iraq, the
nuclear program are· working fumed the U.S. commitment to consequences of a failed .state
and should getachance to sue- Israel, notin~ that he is the first in Iraq -of chaos there - will
ceed.
Pentagon chi_ef to visit country adversely impact the security
Both the U.S. ~nd ISrael in eight years.
.
and prosperity of every nation
accuse Imn of trying to devel"I think the fact that I have in the Middle E:mand the Gulf
op nuclear weaiions, which
· "Gates s:n'd .
.d come here in the end of my regiOn,
.
G
Tehran denies. ates sat fourth month as secretary ill usGates. on his third trip to the
many nations are "united in trates the importance that I region as defense secretary,
telling lnm what it needs to do attach to our relationship 'with reaffimled ·the u .S. commit- .
wtth respect to its nuclear pro- lsrdel," he said.
ment to Iraq and to protecting
gram." .
. Discussing Iraq, Gates allies iil the area. In
The United States and its ' decried the attacks Wednesday Washington. the Democraticallies have led efforts to pass in Baghdad that killed more
lied c
d tl
two U.N. Security Council than 170people. The violence, contro
ongress an le
resolutions punishing Iran for' he said, ~as "horrifying" and administration are nearing a
refusing to suspend .uranium he blamed ai-Qaida.
showdown about bringing an
·enrichment. That process can
He said the attackers were end to tht; ~ar. · . .
be used. to develop nuclear trying to show that the U.S.
l!.S. rmlitary offictals, meanweapons.
security plan for Baghdad was . whJI~, have stepped up the.•r
"We agreed it was impor- failing. '1ltese terrorists are cnttctsm of Iran, sa~mg this
tapt to deal with the Iranian killing innocent men, women week. for ~ first ttme tl_tat
.nuclear problem . through and children who are Iraqis. ~ramansaremvolvedm_Provtd­
diplomacy, which appears to They're killing their country- mg w~ns to Afghantstan.
be working," Gates said at a . men," Gates said.
Manne Gen. ~eter Pace;
news conference with Earlier, in Cairo, Egypt, chamnaf! of the Jomt Chiefs of
Defense Minister Amir Gates hewed· to the Bush Staff, satd Thesda~ that U.S.
· Peretz.
administration's line that any forces recently mte~cepted
''These things don't work U.S. military failure in Iraq lrantan-made weapons mtendovernight, but it seems to me would unleash sectarian strife ed for. Tali ban. fighters . m
clearly the preferable cou~ and extremism that would be Afghantstan. Mthtary offictak
to keep our focus on the diplo- felt frrst in tile Middle East
have . satd for months t~at
malic initiatives, and particuSpeaking to an Amencan Irantans are
supply,mg
larly because 'of th~ .united Chamber of Commerce lun- weapons and tr~ning to insu~­
front of the international com- cheon on tile third day of his gents m Iraq.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Love, Brenda,
Joe, Tom, Ken .
&amp;. Elaine
We love you
mommy!
Love,
Cierra, Skylar
. &amp;. Pratt

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BY THE BEND

A.N NIE'S MAILBOX

Selfassessment will aid mental health
BY KAnt\'

MITCHELL

AND MARC\' SUGAR

Dear Annie: I'm writing
·because, as a Marine wife, I
know the toll deployment
· and war can take on a family. When we were married
30 years ago, my husband
and I were both in active
duty. I soon separated from
. the Navy to raise our family
of four children.
My
husband
was
deployed in the first Gulf
War. It wasn't until years
later, about the time he was
· considering retirement, that
he started to experience persistent health problems that
needed more than routine
medical care. The years
since the war had exacted a
price not only physically,
but psychologic.ally as well.
We slowly started to
unravel as a family. Even
while my husband began to
get the treatment he needed,
I knew l needed help as
well. I made an appointment
with a mental health counselor at our medical facility.
I n~ded to learn that it wasn't being selfish to be able
to put myself first in order
to be a car~giver for others.
I've recently learned of a
new service that allows military service members and
their families to take a free

mental health self-assessment ~
Available
at
www.MilitaryMentaiHealth
.org and by phone at 1-877877-3647, it helps you think
about your symptoms and
connects you with military
and veterans' treatment
resources. I wish this program had beetf there when I
needed it. I know I would
have seen the need for getling help much sooner.
I hope other military
. spouses or family members
reading this will 1learn from
my story and take advantage of this free service. A
self-assessment is a first
step toward supporting one
another and a huge leap to
ensuring your own persona.!
health. - A Marine's Wife
in Virginia
Dear Virginia: Thank you
for passing along this wonderful information . We, hope
active military members, as
well as veterans and· their
families, will check this website and take the screening. It
is completely confidential
and can point you in the right
direction if you need help. ·
Dear Annie: I am a 14year-old girl; and my grandfather has macular d ~generation. He is almost totally
blind and. extremely stubborn. My· grandparents are
both in their 70s, and I'm

often at their house, helping · Even if the appointment is
with chores.
for one child , he always
My grandfather was an takes the time to peek at my
airplane ' mechanic in the other two. He talks to each
Anny and still likes to tinker of them and makes them
with his truck. e.ven though feel like the most important
he cannot drive anymore. person in the world.
·
I'm really afraid something
We moved four cities
is going to happen if some- away. but when a child i&gt;
one is not helping him. I feel ~ ick. it 's worth the one-hour
I should be the one out there . drive to see 'thi s doctor.
with him, but I'm not sure '·Lady'' needs to stop com· how to approach him and . plaining, take something to
ask because I don 't want do while waiting, and make
him to feel helpless or some- some extra time in her day
how degraded by needing for doctor visits. Thanks for
· const;ml help. Should I just lening me vent, and brag,
back off and wait until he because - I Love My
asks for my assistance? Doctor and Never Mind
Caring Granddaughter
Waiting
Dear Caring: What a
Dear Never Mind: You
wonderful. loving grand- should cut this out and give
daughter you are. We rec- it to your pediatrician. It 's
ommend you take a sudden quite a testament to his
interest in truck engines and skills and charisma.
ask Grandpa to teach you
Annie's Mailbox is wrilabout them. Next time he is ten by Kathy Mitchell and
tinkering, ask him how one Marcy Sugar, longtim,e ediof the truck parts works. tors of the Ann Landers
You will make Grandpa feel column. Please e-mail your
useful. and you will learn questions to anniesmail·
something.
box@comcast.net, or write
Dear Annie: I'm writing to: Armie'~ Mailbox, P.O.
about "Lady in Waitittg," Box 118190, Chicago, IL
who complained about doc- 606ll. To find out more
tors making patients wait.
about Annie's Mailbox,
I am a mother with a great and read features by other
pediatrician. While we Creators Syndicate writers
sometimes have to wait, and cartoonists, visit the
when it is our turn, we have Creators Syndicate Web
his undivided attention. · page at www.creators.com.

PageA3
Thursday, April19, 2007

Dutton first to the fmish
RACINE
Jeremy
Dutton. son of Robin and
Dale Dutton of Racine, was
the first Southern student to
complete and pass all portions of his grade level work
on the school's Study Island
program.
The youth not only t1nished his work on the third
grade level . and passed the
accumulative post-test, but
has now started working on
fo urth grade level material.
"Thi s is quite an accomplishment. The program is a
-very comprehensive one,
and Jeremy not only completed all parts, but was able
to pass each post-test." said
Principal Shawn Bush.
He reminded parents that
the Ohio Achievement Test
is schedulefl\{or the week of
April 30-MayYwith makeups the following week. He
urged parents to make sure
their ch ildr.en eat well, sleep

·

Jeremy Dutton

well, and dress comfortably
for test week, and noted that
activities and snacks will be
available to help relax students during this the t e~ting
period.
Bush and Administrative
Assistant Scott Wolfe continue to urge parents and st udents to practice for the test
orl the Study I~land program.

MSWCD selling trees
POMEROY- The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District has tree packets available for sale and pickup.
_The District is offering white pine in packets of I0 for·
$10 and a Wildlife tree packet for $ 15. The wildlife tree
packet includes two each of white pine, Sargeant crabapple,
ha zelnut, red oak and white oak.
The District also has tree marking flags available for $.08
each. Those interested in purchasing any of the tree packets can
stop by the office on 3310 I Hiland Road, Pomeroy, between 8
a.m. and 4:30p.m. Payment must accompany the order.

Community Calendar
·Church events

from Hel)ven" of Parkersburg,
W.Va. to sing at II a.m., Hope
Baptist Church .

served, .7-8 p.m., Mulberry
Community Center.
POMEROY Meigs
County Retired Teachers will
meet at noon Trinity Church,
Second Street meeting room.
Bob Byer, Meigs County
Thursday, April 19
EMS
director will talk about
POMEROY - Public
9
11
and
emergency premeeting to discuss Pomeroy
paredness.
Members to take
sewer system and how to
paper
products
and personal
bring it up to the Ohio
care
items
for
Serenity
Environmental Protection H11use. Reservations,
992Agency 's
requirements.
3214.
Guests
welcome.
7:30
p.m.,
Pomeroy
Saturday, April 21
Municipal Building.
MIDDLEPORT
Monday, April 23
RACINE Financial
Planning
Superv ision
Commission, regular meeting, 10:30 a.m., Southern
High School media room.

Friday, April 20
REEDSVILLE - Spring
revival at the Reedsville
United Methodist Church, 7
p.m. thro ugh Sunday, with
Speaker Ronnie Vance.
Sunday, April 22 .
POMEROY Laurel
Cliff Free
Methodist
Church, will have the. Miller
family singers at the 10:30
a.m. worship service. Pastor
is Glenn Rowe. For more
information call 773-55:59.
POMEROY· Humphrey
Family in concert, 6:30p.m.,
Mt. Union Baptist Church,
Carpenter Hill Road. For
information call 742-2832 .
FOREST
RUN
Combined worship at Forest
Run Church, I I a.m. followed by 12:30 p.m. fellowship carry-in dinner. Special
guests,. missionaries from
Thursday, April 19
the Congo, Gaston, Jeannie
POMEROY Meigs .
and Eileen Ntambo .
County Coalition, regular
Sunday, April 29
meeting, alcohol awareness
. MIDDLEPORT- "Bound discussed ,
refreshment s

Public meetings

Disabled American Veterans
9th District spring meeting
will be held at the Meigs
Chapter 53 hall. Dinner at
noon ; meeting at I p.m.
Monday, April 23
CHESTER
Shade
Ri.ver Lodge 453, special
meeting, 7 p.m: for the purpose of conferring the ·
Entered Apprentice Degree
on two candidates.
Thesday, April 24
POMEROY - Library
Book Club, 6:30 p.m ..
Pomeroy Library.

•·:··~...,·
Smile! Now you can own the pictur9 of that unforgettable
moment caplured in the newspape1. Photos become timeless
when framed or printed on a mug Of r:nc&gt;tJSe pad.

Visit

and clic:t&lt; lhe blue

Clubs and
organizations

OPEN STOCK
CHESTS
Perfect for extra storage
medium oak finish

.Spring carnival to benefit
Eastern playgrou~4 ;,·
TUPPERS .PLAINS The Eastern Elementary
Playground
Fundraising
Spring Carnival will take
place from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.
this Saturday at the school.
All proceeds will go towards
new playground equipment
for Eastern Elementary.
The carnival will feature
an M&amp;M lnflatab)e:s · com
hole tournament, a cake
walk, talent show, food,
prize drawings and two different kinds · of auctions
with signed items from
Mike Bartrum.
If you would like to participate in the talent show,

call Lisa Victory at 4162763 or 667-0~J-8, ASAP
There are also tickets on sale
for special drawings and
three of the winners for the
drawings will be featured 011
the Eastern Elementary
Morning Show. The Eastern
PTO is also sponsori ng the
"Basket A Day In May''
for
campaign
tickets
chances at baskets to · raise
funds. Call Joyce Cline.
992-0228 or Angie Parker,
992-6 I38 for more information or contact Cathy Elliot
at the school library to purchase one ticket for $1 0 or
two tickets.for $ I5'.

TOPS honors biggest loser
· COOLVILLE . -Becky
Schirtzinger was named
weekly best weight-loss
winner and Diane Burns
runner·up at the April 17
meeting of TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) Chapter
#OH 2013, Coolville. There
w~re 20 members present. ..
Recognized was Joan
Cole for her recent birthday.
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Sensibly) members May
Frost
&amp;,nd
Patricia
Richmond were in leeway.
March contest winners,were ·
Richmond, perfect attendance; LaChresia Bogardus,
Doris Buchanan, · Connie
Rankin and Richmond, food
charts;
Bogardus ,
Buchanan, Burns, Powell
and Rankin, exercise charts.
Plans and contests for the
upcoming Area Recognition

Days in Chillicothe on April
27-28 were discussed. Ten
members will auend and
May Frost will panicipate_in
the KOPS graduation ceremony that will be held there.
.After a month: long use,
pedomelers were returned
along with statistics on the
number of steps for each
panicipant. Doris Buchanan
reported a total of 394,200
step$ for the period.
Leader Pat Snedden prese nted a program on the ten
commandments of weight
loss.
The group ·meets every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Church. Weigh-in is from
5: I5 to 6: I5 p.m. with a
meeting from 6:30 to 7:30.
For information, call Pat
Snedden at 662-2633 or
attend a free 111eeting.

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The Daily Sentinel
'

NATION • WORLD

senti video

NBC
he was free to leave ' as of Tech officials to recognize
Pee. 14. Virginia Tech Cho's problems was awardspokesman Larry Hincker winning · poet · Nikki.
said Cho had been continu- Giovanni. who kicked him
ally enrolled at Tech and out of her introduction to
never took a leave of creative writing class in late _
absence.
2005.
A spokesman for Carilion
Student s in Giovanni's
St. Albans would trot com- class had told their profesment.
sor that Chu was taking
Though the stalking inci- photographs- of their legs . .
dents did not result in crim- and knees under the desks ,
inal charges, police referred . with hi s cell phone. Female .
Cho to the university's dis- students refused to come to .
ciplinary system, Ainchum class. She said she consid·said. But Ed Spencer, assis- ered him ''mean" and "a
tant vice president of stu- . bully."
dent affairs, would not comQuestions lingered over
ment on any disciplinary whether campus police
proceedings, saying federal shou ld have issued an
law protects students' med- .immed iate campus-wide
ical privacy even after warning of a killer on the
death. ·
loose and locked down the
Some parents complained campus after the first burst
that the university failed to of gunfire. ·
lock down the c&amp;mpus and
Pol ice said that after the
spread a warning after the t1rst shooting, in which two
ftrst round of shootings. students were killed, they
Still, two days after the believed that it was a
shooting spree, many stu- domestic dispute, and that
dents resisted pointing t1n- the gunman had fled the
gers.
campus. Police went look:
"Who would' ve woken ing for a young man, Karl
up in the morning and said, David Thornhill, who haq
'Maybe this student who's
just troubled is really going once shot guns at a firing
to do something this horrif- range with the roommate of
ic?'" said Elizabeth Hart, a one of the victims. But
communications major and police said Thornhill is no
.a spokeswoman for the stu, longer under suspicion.
dent government.
Lucinda Roy, professor of
English at Virginia Tech,
said that she, too, relayed
her concerns to campus
police and various other
college units after Cho displayed antisocial behavior
m her class and handed in
disturbing writing assign' , . 'W1 ~ luppcNt
• -llotsiOng . ...., ,.,.._ ...
ments.
• 10 ,..,.., lddr•• wlh Wlbmtll
But she. said authorities
• Cu1tom811rtP1Qt ·I'IIM, WIINr &amp;moN1
"hit a wall" in terms of what
they could do "with a stu·
(:,:,': 6X frln.r/'1
dent 9n campus unless he'd
'-~
.... UpDnlillol _......_._
made a very overt threat to
himself or others." Cho
resisted her repeated sug·
gestion that he undergo ·
counseling, Roy said.
One of the first Virginia

BY MATT APUZZO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEWS

I

Thursday, Apri119, 2007_

The Daily Sentinel
•

I

I

.

'

·Va.Tech

1,

PageA2

'

'BLACKSBURG, Va. ~-. NBC
Between his t1rst and second bursts of guntlre, the
Virginia Tech gunman
•
mailed a package to NBC
News containing pictures of
him brandishing weapons
and video of him delivering
a diatribe about getting even
with rich people.
"This may be a very new,
critical component of this
investigation. We' re in the_
process right now o!
attempting to analyze and
eval uate its worth," said
Col. Steve Flaherty, super. intendent of Virginia State
•
Police. He gave no details
on the material. which NBC
said
it
received
in
Wednesday morning's mail.
NBC said that a time
stamp on the package indicated the material . was
mailed in the two-hour window between the first burst
of gunfire in a high ~rise dormitory and the second fusillade, at a classroom building. Thirty-three people
AP photo
died in the rampage. includ- This video frame grab image taken from a· video aired by NBC News on Wednesday shows
ing the gunman, 23-year-old Virginia Tech gunman Cho Seung-Hui. The video was part of a package allegedly mailed to
student Cho Seung-Hui, the network on Monday between Cho's first and second shootings on the Virginia Tech camwho committed suicide.
pus. NBC said that a time stamp on the package indicated the material was mailed in the
The package included a two-hour window between the first burst of gunfire In a high-rise dormitory and the second
manifesto that "rants fusillade, at a classroom building. Thirty-three people died in the. rampage, including the
agai!ISI rich people and gunman, who committed suicide.
warns .tttat he wants to get
even," according to a law Service stamp showing that messages from Cho, but conducted Dec. 14 found
enforcement official who it had been received . at a they considered the mes- that that Cho's "affect is
spoke to The Associated Virginia post ofl1ce at 9:0 I sages · "annoying," not flat. ... He denies suicidal
Press on condition of a.m. Monday, about an hour threatening, and neither ideations. He does not
anonymity because he was . and 45 minutes after Cho . pressed charges, Virgi ni;:t acknowledge symptoms of
not authorized to speak first opened fire, according Tech Police Chief Wendell a thought · disorder. His
aboui the case.
to MSNBC.
Flinchum said.
insight and judgment are
MSNBc;: said the package
If the package .was indeed
Neither woman was normal."
included a CD-'ROM on mailed between the first among the victims in the
The court papers indicate
which Cho read his mani- attack and the second, that mass·acre, police said. .
that Barnett checked' a box
festo.
would help explain where
Around the same time, that said Cho "presents an
Late
Wednesday, Cho was and what he did one of Cho's professors Imminent danger to himself
MSNBC showed a photo during that two-hour win- informally shared some as a result of mental illfrom the package of ·Cho dow.
concerns abm~t the ·young ness." Barnett did not check
Earlier in the day man's writings, but no offi· the box that would indicate
glaring at th!! camera, his
arms outstretched with a Wednesday, authorities dis· · cial report was filed, a danger to others.
gun in each hand. He wears closed that more than a year Flinchum said.
It is. unclear how long
a khaki-colored military- before the massacre, Cho
After the seconl! stalking Cho
stayed at · Carilion,
style vest, fingerless gloves was accused of stalking two complaint, the university
though
court papers indicate
and a backwards, black . women and was taken to a obtamed a temporary detenbaseball cap. "NBC Nightly psychiatric hospital on a tion order and took Cho
News" planned 10 show magistrate's orders because away because an acquainsome of the material
of fears he might be suici- tance reported he might · be
Wednesday
night.
NBC News President dal. He was · later released suicidal,· authorities
, said.
Steve Capus said the net- with orders t.o undergo out- Police did not identify the
work promptly turned the patient treatment.
acquaintance.
material over 10 the FBI· in
The disclosure added to
On Dei:. 13, 2005, a mag. New York.
·
the rapidly growing list of istrate ordered Cho to
The material is "hard-to- warning signs that appeared undergo an evaluation at
follow ... disturbing, very well before the student Carilion St. Albans, a pridisturbing very angry, pro; opened fire. Among other vate psychiatric hospital.
fanity-laced, " he said on the things, Cho's twisted, vio- The magistrate signed the
MSNBC Web site. Among lence-filled writings and order after an initial evalua.
vacant-eyed tion found probable cause
the materials are digital sullen, ·
video files showing Cho demeanor had disturbed that Cho was a danger to
talking directly to the cam- professors and students so himself or others as a result
. To be published
era about his hatred of the much that he was removed of mental illness.
wealthy, Capus said.
from one English class and
The next day. according
Sunday, May 13th
It does not include 'itnY . was repeat~dly urged to get to court records, doctors at
images of the shootings, but counseling.
Carilion conducted further
contains "va~ue refer- . In
November
and examination and a special
ences," includmg "things December 2005,
two justice; Paul M. Barnett,
like, 'This didn't have to . women COil)plained to cam- approved outpatient treathappen,"' Capus said. ·
pus police that they had ment.
The packa11e bore a Postal received calls and computer
A medical examination

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could be the best gift you could
ever give your mother.
Don't miss this opportunity to say it. · ,

Greeting Examples ...

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ntinel ·

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Gates says U.S., Israel, others
united on Iranian nuclear issue

(Your
Mother's
·Name)

BY LOUTA C. BALDOR

munity at 'this point," Gates · Middle East travels, Gates
said.
·
exhorted Arab countries to use
His words appeared aimed their influence to undermine
TEL AVIV, Israel - at diffusing suggestions in the insurgency and encourage
Defense Secretary Robert Israel and the U.S. that the political reconciliation in Iraq.
Gates said Wednesday .that Pentagon is moving toward a "Whatever disagreements
diplomatic effons to resolve strike against Iran.
. we might have liod over how
the standoff with Iran over its
At the same time, Gates con- we got .to this point in Iraq, the
nuclear program are· working fumed the U.S. commitment to consequences of a failed .state
and should getachance to sue- Israel, notin~ that he is the first in Iraq -of chaos there - will
ceed.
Pentagon chi_ef to visit country adversely impact the security
Both the U.S. ~nd ISrael in eight years.
.
and prosperity of every nation
accuse Imn of trying to devel"I think the fact that I have in the Middle E:mand the Gulf
op nuclear weaiions, which
· "Gates s:n'd .
.d come here in the end of my regiOn,
.
G
Tehran denies. ates sat fourth month as secretary ill usGates. on his third trip to the
many nations are "united in trates the importance that I region as defense secretary,
telling lnm what it needs to do attach to our relationship 'with reaffimled ·the u .S. commit- .
wtth respect to its nuclear pro- lsrdel," he said.
ment to Iraq and to protecting
gram." .
. Discussing Iraq, Gates allies iil the area. In
The United States and its ' decried the attacks Wednesday Washington. the Democraticallies have led efforts to pass in Baghdad that killed more
lied c
d tl
two U.N. Security Council than 170people. The violence, contro
ongress an le
resolutions punishing Iran for' he said, ~as "horrifying" and administration are nearing a
refusing to suspend .uranium he blamed ai-Qaida.
showdown about bringing an
·enrichment. That process can
He said the attackers were end to tht; ~ar. · . .
be used. to develop nuclear trying to show that the U.S.
l!.S. rmlitary offictals, meanweapons.
security plan for Baghdad was . whJI~, have stepped up the.•r
"We agreed it was impor- failing. '1ltese terrorists are cnttctsm of Iran, sa~mg this
tapt to deal with the Iranian killing innocent men, women week. for ~ first ttme tl_tat
.nuclear problem . through and children who are Iraqis. ~ramansaremvolvedm_Provtd­
diplomacy, which appears to They're killing their country- mg w~ns to Afghantstan.
be working," Gates said at a . men," Gates said.
Manne Gen. ~eter Pace;
news conference with Earlier, in Cairo, Egypt, chamnaf! of the Jomt Chiefs of
Defense Minister Amir Gates hewed· to the Bush Staff, satd Thesda~ that U.S.
· Peretz.
administration's line that any forces recently mte~cepted
''These things don't work U.S. military failure in Iraq lrantan-made weapons mtendovernight, but it seems to me would unleash sectarian strife ed for. Tali ban. fighters . m
clearly the preferable cou~ and extremism that would be Afghantstan. Mthtary offictak
to keep our focus on the diplo- felt frrst in tile Middle East
have . satd for months t~at
malic initiatives, and particuSpeaking to an Amencan Irantans are
supply,mg
larly because 'of th~ .united Chamber of Commerce lun- weapons and tr~ning to insu~­
front of the international com- cheon on tile third day of his gents m Iraq.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Love, Brenda,
Joe, Tom, Ken .
&amp;. Elaine
We love you
mommy!
Love,
Cierra, Skylar
. &amp;. Pratt

'

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Daadlkltfortl!lsSpedatMDU!er'sDayTrlbulets ~;MG\19,2007
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BY THE BEND

A.N NIE'S MAILBOX

Selfassessment will aid mental health
BY KAnt\'

MITCHELL

AND MARC\' SUGAR

Dear Annie: I'm writing
·because, as a Marine wife, I
know the toll deployment
· and war can take on a family. When we were married
30 years ago, my husband
and I were both in active
duty. I soon separated from
. the Navy to raise our family
of four children.
My
husband
was
deployed in the first Gulf
War. It wasn't until years
later, about the time he was
· considering retirement, that
he started to experience persistent health problems that
needed more than routine
medical care. The years
since the war had exacted a
price not only physically,
but psychologic.ally as well.
We slowly started to
unravel as a family. Even
while my husband began to
get the treatment he needed,
I knew l needed help as
well. I made an appointment
with a mental health counselor at our medical facility.
I n~ded to learn that it wasn't being selfish to be able
to put myself first in order
to be a car~giver for others.
I've recently learned of a
new service that allows military service members and
their families to take a free

mental health self-assessment ~
Available
at
www.MilitaryMentaiHealth
.org and by phone at 1-877877-3647, it helps you think
about your symptoms and
connects you with military
and veterans' treatment
resources. I wish this program had beetf there when I
needed it. I know I would
have seen the need for getling help much sooner.
I hope other military
. spouses or family members
reading this will 1learn from
my story and take advantage of this free service. A
self-assessment is a first
step toward supporting one
another and a huge leap to
ensuring your own persona.!
health. - A Marine's Wife
in Virginia
Dear Virginia: Thank you
for passing along this wonderful information . We, hope
active military members, as
well as veterans and· their
families, will check this website and take the screening. It
is completely confidential
and can point you in the right
direction if you need help. ·
Dear Annie: I am a 14year-old girl; and my grandfather has macular d ~generation. He is almost totally
blind and. extremely stubborn. My· grandparents are
both in their 70s, and I'm

often at their house, helping · Even if the appointment is
with chores.
for one child , he always
My grandfather was an takes the time to peek at my
airplane ' mechanic in the other two. He talks to each
Anny and still likes to tinker of them and makes them
with his truck. e.ven though feel like the most important
he cannot drive anymore. person in the world.
·
I'm really afraid something
We moved four cities
is going to happen if some- away. but when a child i&gt;
one is not helping him. I feel ~ ick. it 's worth the one-hour
I should be the one out there . drive to see 'thi s doctor.
with him, but I'm not sure '·Lady'' needs to stop com· how to approach him and . plaining, take something to
ask because I don 't want do while waiting, and make
him to feel helpless or some- some extra time in her day
how degraded by needing for doctor visits. Thanks for
· const;ml help. Should I just lening me vent, and brag,
back off and wait until he because - I Love My
asks for my assistance? Doctor and Never Mind
Caring Granddaughter
Waiting
Dear Caring: What a
Dear Never Mind: You
wonderful. loving grand- should cut this out and give
daughter you are. We rec- it to your pediatrician. It 's
ommend you take a sudden quite a testament to his
interest in truck engines and skills and charisma.
ask Grandpa to teach you
Annie's Mailbox is wrilabout them. Next time he is ten by Kathy Mitchell and
tinkering, ask him how one Marcy Sugar, longtim,e ediof the truck parts works. tors of the Ann Landers
You will make Grandpa feel column. Please e-mail your
useful. and you will learn questions to anniesmail·
something.
box@comcast.net, or write
Dear Annie: I'm writing to: Armie'~ Mailbox, P.O.
about "Lady in Waitittg," Box 118190, Chicago, IL
who complained about doc- 606ll. To find out more
tors making patients wait.
about Annie's Mailbox,
I am a mother with a great and read features by other
pediatrician. While we Creators Syndicate writers
sometimes have to wait, and cartoonists, visit the
when it is our turn, we have Creators Syndicate Web
his undivided attention. · page at www.creators.com.

PageA3
Thursday, April19, 2007

Dutton first to the fmish
RACINE
Jeremy
Dutton. son of Robin and
Dale Dutton of Racine, was
the first Southern student to
complete and pass all portions of his grade level work
on the school's Study Island
program.
The youth not only t1nished his work on the third
grade level . and passed the
accumulative post-test, but
has now started working on
fo urth grade level material.
"Thi s is quite an accomplishment. The program is a
-very comprehensive one,
and Jeremy not only completed all parts, but was able
to pass each post-test." said
Principal Shawn Bush.
He reminded parents that
the Ohio Achievement Test
is schedulefl\{or the week of
April 30-MayYwith makeups the following week. He
urged parents to make sure
their ch ildr.en eat well, sleep

·

Jeremy Dutton

well, and dress comfortably
for test week, and noted that
activities and snacks will be
available to help relax students during this the t e~ting
period.
Bush and Administrative
Assistant Scott Wolfe continue to urge parents and st udents to practice for the test
orl the Study I~land program.

MSWCD selling trees
POMEROY- The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District has tree packets available for sale and pickup.
_The District is offering white pine in packets of I0 for·
$10 and a Wildlife tree packet for $ 15. The wildlife tree
packet includes two each of white pine, Sargeant crabapple,
ha zelnut, red oak and white oak.
The District also has tree marking flags available for $.08
each. Those interested in purchasing any of the tree packets can
stop by the office on 3310 I Hiland Road, Pomeroy, between 8
a.m. and 4:30p.m. Payment must accompany the order.

Community Calendar
·Church events

from Hel)ven" of Parkersburg,
W.Va. to sing at II a.m., Hope
Baptist Church .

served, .7-8 p.m., Mulberry
Community Center.
POMEROY Meigs
County Retired Teachers will
meet at noon Trinity Church,
Second Street meeting room.
Bob Byer, Meigs County
Thursday, April 19
EMS
director will talk about
POMEROY - Public
9
11
and
emergency premeeting to discuss Pomeroy
paredness.
Members to take
sewer system and how to
paper
products
and personal
bring it up to the Ohio
care
items
for
Serenity
Environmental Protection H11use. Reservations,
992Agency 's
requirements.
3214.
Guests
welcome.
7:30
p.m.,
Pomeroy
Saturday, April 21
Municipal Building.
MIDDLEPORT
Monday, April 23
RACINE Financial
Planning
Superv ision
Commission, regular meeting, 10:30 a.m., Southern
High School media room.

Friday, April 20
REEDSVILLE - Spring
revival at the Reedsville
United Methodist Church, 7
p.m. thro ugh Sunday, with
Speaker Ronnie Vance.
Sunday, April 22 .
POMEROY Laurel
Cliff Free
Methodist
Church, will have the. Miller
family singers at the 10:30
a.m. worship service. Pastor
is Glenn Rowe. For more
information call 773-55:59.
POMEROY· Humphrey
Family in concert, 6:30p.m.,
Mt. Union Baptist Church,
Carpenter Hill Road. For
information call 742-2832 .
FOREST
RUN
Combined worship at Forest
Run Church, I I a.m. followed by 12:30 p.m. fellowship carry-in dinner. Special
guests,. missionaries from
Thursday, April 19
the Congo, Gaston, Jeannie
POMEROY Meigs .
and Eileen Ntambo .
County Coalition, regular
Sunday, April 29
meeting, alcohol awareness
. MIDDLEPORT- "Bound discussed ,
refreshment s

Public meetings

Disabled American Veterans
9th District spring meeting
will be held at the Meigs
Chapter 53 hall. Dinner at
noon ; meeting at I p.m.
Monday, April 23
CHESTER
Shade
Ri.ver Lodge 453, special
meeting, 7 p.m: for the purpose of conferring the ·
Entered Apprentice Degree
on two candidates.
Thesday, April 24
POMEROY - Library
Book Club, 6:30 p.m ..
Pomeroy Library.

•·:··~...,·
Smile! Now you can own the pictur9 of that unforgettable
moment caplured in the newspape1. Photos become timeless
when framed or printed on a mug Of r:nc&gt;tJSe pad.

Visit

and clic:t&lt; lhe blue

Clubs and
organizations

OPEN STOCK
CHESTS
Perfect for extra storage
medium oak finish

.Spring carnival to benefit
Eastern playgrou~4 ;,·
TUPPERS .PLAINS The Eastern Elementary
Playground
Fundraising
Spring Carnival will take
place from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.
this Saturday at the school.
All proceeds will go towards
new playground equipment
for Eastern Elementary.
The carnival will feature
an M&amp;M lnflatab)e:s · com
hole tournament, a cake
walk, talent show, food,
prize drawings and two different kinds · of auctions
with signed items from
Mike Bartrum.
If you would like to participate in the talent show,

call Lisa Victory at 4162763 or 667-0~J-8, ASAP
There are also tickets on sale
for special drawings and
three of the winners for the
drawings will be featured 011
the Eastern Elementary
Morning Show. The Eastern
PTO is also sponsori ng the
"Basket A Day In May''
for
campaign
tickets
chances at baskets to · raise
funds. Call Joyce Cline.
992-0228 or Angie Parker,
992-6 I38 for more information or contact Cathy Elliot
at the school library to purchase one ticket for $1 0 or
two tickets.for $ I5'.

TOPS honors biggest loser
· COOLVILLE . -Becky
Schirtzinger was named
weekly best weight-loss
winner and Diane Burns
runner·up at the April 17
meeting of TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) Chapter
#OH 2013, Coolville. There
w~re 20 members present. ..
Recognized was Joan
Cole for her recent birthday.
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Sensibly) members May
Frost
&amp;,nd
Patricia
Richmond were in leeway.
March contest winners,were ·
Richmond, perfect attendance; LaChresia Bogardus,
Doris Buchanan, · Connie
Rankin and Richmond, food
charts;
Bogardus ,
Buchanan, Burns, Powell
and Rankin, exercise charts.
Plans and contests for the
upcoming Area Recognition

Days in Chillicothe on April
27-28 were discussed. Ten
members will auend and
May Frost will panicipate_in
the KOPS graduation ceremony that will be held there.
.After a month: long use,
pedomelers were returned
along with statistics on the
number of steps for each
panicipant. Doris Buchanan
reported a total of 394,200
step$ for the period.
Leader Pat Snedden prese nted a program on the ten
commandments of weight
loss.
The group ·meets every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Church. Weigh-in is from
5: I5 to 6: I5 p.m. with a
meeting from 6:30 to 7:30.
For information, call Pat
Snedden at 662-2633 or
attend a free 111eeting.

Reg. $189.00 · 4 Drawer Lingerie Chest ... Sale $149
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Qp NION

The 'Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
·

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) !J92-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

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

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

•

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S
,I
I

VIEW

Help

.

' I

!I

Fix leak bifore summer hits
Dear Editor:
The citizens of Nye Avenue in Pomeroy have had to
endure the stench generated by a major sewage leak behind
the gas station on Nye Avenue without any help from the
Pomeroy Water Department.
This matter has been reponed several times without any
action. This leak can be seen from the parking lot of the station, .a huge black stream of raw $ewage flowing freely into
the creek.
Would it be asking too much to have it finally fi xed
· before we are forced to endure it another summer?
Isn't this sewage problem against EPA regulations?
Hoby Landers ·
Pomeroy

PageA4
Thursday,April19,20o7

ALL BUSINESS: US. shoppers hold
the key to worldwid~ economic growth
BY RACHEL BECK
PP BUSINESS W81TER

NEW YORK The
world
should
thank
American shoppers . They've
kept buying. despite all the·
reasons they have for pinching pennies.
Their spending has moderated the slide in the U.S.
economy largely caused by .
the housing market collapse.
U.S. consu tiJers also have
fueled growth abroad, where
many economies are expanding at a much faster pace
th an what has been 'seen
here.
Whether that continues is
shaping up as one of the key
questions of the day. Morgan .
Stanley's chief global·economist Stephen Roach says it
best: ''If the lead engine of
the global growth train goes
off the trJcks, the rest of the
world will' be quick to fol·
low."
.
·
That throws cold water on
the idea that the global econ·
omy is "decoupling." a theory advanced by some economists who claim that just
because U.S. growth is slowing, economies elsewhere
can still thrive.
Supporting th~t view is the
fact that the U.S. economy
decelerated from a 3.2 percent annual growth rate in
2005 to around a 2.2 percent
pace expected this year. At
the same time, Europe has
seen growth accelemte from
1.4 percent two
'
.vears ago Ito

expectations of 2.3 percent in of the preceding three years, that some retailers ex·pect
2007. and Japan has seen its· Rdach said.
· tougher times ahead should
pace go from 1.9 percent to
That's surprising given that · be noted.
estimates for 2.3 percent this consumer confidence has
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. was
year.
In
developing been rattled by the housing among those sounding W3!1!economies. like China and recession and the implosion ings. The. world's largest
India. the growth is expand- in the subprime mortgage retailer said it expects April's
ing far faster. ,
· tn;.IJket, whiciJ hao; tightened
The cause nf those diver- credit everywhere. U.S. con- selling environment to be
gent expansion rates largely sumen; are also facing rising tough. Federated Department
Stores Inc., owner of the
has to do with a slowdown energy and food prices.
in U.S. housing and manuSpending has held up Macy's chain, said its ftrStfacturing - and not a broad- largely due to tile fu ndamen- quarter sales will come in at
based shock to consumer tally sound U.S. labor mar- the low end of expectations,
spending caused by surging ket. The unemployment rate while Children's Place Retail
oil prices or a major stock dropped to 4.4 percent in Stores Inc. said its fin;t-quarmarket
correction. th e March, matching a tlve-ye:jr ter e&lt;mlings per share will be
International Monetary Fund low, as · employen; boosted roughl y fl at with last year's
said in its jusi-released 2007 hiring by 180,000 workers, results. causing it to likely
World Economic Outlook.
the biggest gain in payroll miss WaU Street estimates.
The bigger gains in jobs in three months, Labor
Countries counting on U.S.
domestic demand in some ·Department ligures showed. shoppen; to buy everything
foreign econom ies al so
While that should keep the
should be factored into why U.S. economy from tumbling from toys to T-shirts. have the
growth abroad' has outpaced into a recession. growth still most at staKe. Mexico tops
U.S. growth. AI the same won 't be strong compared that list, with goods shipped
time. some countries are less with the global outlook. The to the United States accountreliant on .U.S. tmde as they JMF projects U.S. growth to ing for 23 percent of its
once w.~:re. the IMF report slow to 2.2 percent this year, gross domestic product,
said.
the w eakest since 2002. triple the levels seen· from
But believing that the U.S. Worldwide growth is expect- 1981 to 1985, according to
economy's moves doesn' t ed to expand at a brisk pace the IMF. China's U.S.
sway growth elsewhere over- 9f 4.9 percent, the IMF said. export,~ were 5.9 percent of
looks the power of American
'" If the U.S. labor market its GOP from 200 I to 2005,
shoppers. Since their spend- continues to display extraor- weU above the 0.8 percent
ing has remained strong in dinary staying power in the two decades ,ago. Other Latin
recent years, the worldwide · face of adversity elsewhere American and emerging
economy hasn 't had a "legit- in the economy, the overly ·
imate decoupling test," indebted,
saving-short Asian econolnies also have
Roach said.
American consumer will seen their exports to· the
Recent data show that squeak by once again - and United States go up.
American shoppen; have
annua li zed real U.S. con- so, too, will the rest of a stillsumption has avemged 3.2 coupled world," Roach said. · done rigl)t by the global
perce nt growth ·- down
With so much reliance on economy. for a long time.
only 0.2 of a· percentage · U.S . shoppers to keep global The world better hope they
point from the growth pace growth alloat. recent news continue to feel optimistic.

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The Daily Sentinel

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· into a fury. Washington Post
columnist
Charles
Krauthammer lamented "the.
humiliation of Britain," and
the "fatuousness of the "international com munity."' Where
Gene
others saw compromi se, he
Lyons
discerned
"impotence,"
"capitulation" and "farce."
· If the outcome of the stand. .off was a success, "one hesiplay un Farsi- and Arab·lan- tales to ask what would conguage lelevision.
stitute fail ure," wrote former
For their pan, the Brits U.N. Ambassador John ·
reportedly waved off a series Bolton in the Financial
of aggressive military options Times. "The only thing risen
suggested by the Pentagon. In from this cri sis is Iranian
the aftennath, Prime Minister determination and resolve to
Tony Blair ·praised hi s coun- confront us elsewhere, ·at
try 's handling of the crisis as their di scretion, whether on
"finm but calm - not negoti- Iraq, nuclear weapqns and
ating but not confronting, terrorism.''
either."
Disappointment was proWithout
addressing found among those clamorAhmadinejad directly, Blair ing for war · with Iran. Fox
told the Iranian people, "We News pundit William Kristol
bear vou no ill will. On the · .complained of U.S. passivity.
contriuy, we respect Imn as He favored bombing Tehran.
an ancient civilization, as a So did GOP presidential .
nation with a proud and dig- wannabe Newt Gingrich. He
· nified history ... the disagree- appeared on right-wing talk
ments we have with your radi&lt;?' calling for the destrucgovernment we wish !O tion of Iranian oil refineries·
resolve peacefully through and a blockade of the Persian
dialogue."
'Gulf - potentially doubling
In the end, neither side the price ofoil and throwing
budged from its origi nal story the world's economy ·into a
about whether the sai lors tailspin. .
•
were captured in Iraqi · or
And for what? Try to
Iranian waters. Time was·, ·believe even ·Gingrich said it:
Glenn Greenwald pointed out To "show the planet that
in Salon.com, when . one you're tiny and we're not."
cou ld simply have assumed
See, it's not enough to
' the Brits were telling the truth invade Iran's . neig hbors,
and the Iranians lying. But Afghanistan and Iraq, and to
that was before Blair !ill the Persian Gu lf with U.S.
assumed his role as what . aJ)d British warships. Mere
British detracton; cal i"Bush's reality never suffices .' To realpoodle." Anyway, none of ly make thesB joken; feel all
that mattered as much as the virile and manly it's necesbloodless ending.
sary to kill a lot more people, ·
Needless to say, the peace- and strut around the ring with
fu l
resolution
threw the championship belt raised
American neoconservatives over our heads.

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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Delmer E. McClanahan
67, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Tuesday, April 17, 2007:
at the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipoli s.
SefVlce w11l be II a.m., Friday, April 20, 2007, at the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home Point Pleasant with Pastor
Rick Towe oftlciating. Burial will follow in' Forest Hills
Cemetery, Flatrock, W.Va. .
. Visitation will be held one hour prio( to the service at the
funeral home. Online eamail condolences may be sent to
the famtly at crowhussell @suddenlinkmail.com.

Local Briefs
Correction
RACIN E- In a picture of the climbing wall at Southern
Elementary. kindergartner Rylan Jarrell was incorrectly
identified as Brody Dalton.

Discussion set
RACIN E - The Meigs Community Action Network will
hold its nex t meeting from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday_at the
Racine Library.
·
Members wi ll work on submitti ng comments on Gatling
Ohio's mining permit on Yellowbush Creek. The deadline
to submit comments is April 30.
Meigs CAN member Elisa Young said the meeting is
open to anyone and 'for anyone with concerns about the
long-term impacts of the mine on the community. Those
wishing to submit comments who are not sure how are
encouraged to attend, according to Young.
.
"In addition to underground minin g impacts, the permit also incl ud es plans for a coal prep plant, sludge
impoundments, and beltline on or nearhistoric sites,"
Young said.
.
·
For more information call 949-2 H5 or 949-090 l.

Collecting items
SYRACUSE ~ Cadette and Senior Girl Scout Troop
1208 will collect baby items for families in need at a "Baby
Drive," from 6 to 9 p.m. on Friday and 9 a.m. to noon on
Saturday at the Syracuse Community Center.
Donations of new or gentlyaused baby items will be
a,Gepted.

Student with knife leads to
schoollockdowns,.police say

George Orwell analyzed
the phenomenon in a 1945 .
essay called "Notes 011
Nationalism," which · he'
detlned as "the habit of identifying oneself with a· single
nation or other unit, placing it
beyond good and evil and
recognizing no other duty
than that of advancing it&amp;
interests."
Writing immediately after
WWII, Orwell emphasized
that "(n)ationalism is not to
be confused with patriotism."
It was to him a species of
moral insanity. A patriot loves
his country and its institutions, while "a nationalist is
one who thinks solely, or
mainly, in tenms of competitive prestige ... his thoughts
always turn on victories,
defeats, triumphs and humiliations. ... Nationalism is
power-hunger tempered by
self-deception."·
Did Ahmadinejad, an
annoying jerk, use the British
seamen badly? ·He did. But
here's what Iran didn't do: No
torture, no waterboarding, no
being strip~d naked, no 24hour stress positions, no sensory deprivation, no sexual
humiliation, no naked .pyramids, no dog attacks or dog
leashes. ·The sailors were
released in twO' weeks, basically unhilf!lled.
If Iran won a propaganda
victory, it's important to recognize it wasn't British capitulation that made it easy; it
was American tough guys.
(Arkansas
DemocratGazette columnist Gene
Lyons is a national magazine
award wilmer and co-author
of "The Hunti11g of the
President" (Sr. Manin !s
Pre'S.~. 2000 ). You can e-mail
Lyons at genelyons2@sbcglobal.ne/.)

-- - "

PoMEROY MAYOR'S ·CoURT

PI5P~H ­

·Politics and prifessional wrestling

To some people, the themes
of international politics are
indistinguishable froni t)lose
of professional wrestling.
They. see in the relations of
nation states a ritualized
melodrama of dominance
LETTERS TO THE
versus submission. triumph
ven;us h,umiliatioi1. To them,
EDITOR
every · game's a zero-sum
Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be Jess • game; millions of individual
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be human beings are labeled
signed, and include address and telephone num/Jer. No "good" or "evil." All conflicts
unsigned /errers will be published. Letters should be in that don.'t end violently, end
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of shamefull y;
compromise
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepr- equates with cowardice.
edfor publication.
·
So it was with the sUmuoff
between Great Britain ;md
Iran over 15 Royal Navy
sailors taken captive in the
Persian Gulf. Ordinary peo(USPS 213·960)
ple welcomed their release
Reader Services
· Ohio Valley Publishing
with happiness and relief.
.
Co.
·Correction Polley
Actually, it's tempting to say
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
most nonmal people did. A
through Friday, 111 Court Street ,
be accurate. If yo~:~ know of an error
perilous
situation had been
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
in a story, eall the newsroom at (740) posta9e pa1d at Pomeroy.
resolved
without
tragedy, and
,
without
provoking
a poten992·2t56.
Member: The Associaled Press and
tially
disastrous
war.
tha Ohio Newspaper Association .
Poatmast,r: Se~d address correc·
Sure, Iranian President
Our main number is
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad used
(740) 992·2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohip 45769 .
the
occasion
to score propaDepartment extensions are:
ganda
points.
But what
Subecrlptlon Rates
points,? That Iran is a soverBy carrier or motor route
eign · nation capable .of
News
One month
'1 0.27
Editor: Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
defending its territory. That
Reporter: Brian Reeq, Ext. 14
. Dally
50'.
its leaders can act magnaniReport••; Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
Se.n lor Citizen rates
mously, freeing the prisoners
One month
'10.27
before Easter as a "gift to the
One year
' 103.90
British r,eople." With a char·
Advertising
StbscOOer.; si'OO!d mmH " ""'•nco
acteristic
lack of subtlety,
Oulsl~e Sales: Dave Harris, Ext .. 15 direct to the Daly Sentinel. No sub·
Ahmadinejad all but''spelled
scription by mail permitted in areas
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 , where home carrier service is avail·
out the message: We respect
CtaaaJCtic.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext. 10
able ..
your faith; maybe you should
respect ours.
Malt Subscription
Although there were indiGeneral Manager
Inside Malga County
cations
the crisis came as a
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. t2
13 Weeks
'32.26
to Iran's government
surprise
26 Weeks
'64.20
52
Weeks
'
127.11
- · London's Guardian newsE-mail:
paper
reported
that
news@ mydailysentinel.com
Outalde Meigs County
Revolutionary Guard hot13 Weeks
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heads had acted on their own
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
it managed to present the
52 Weeks
'214.21 .
www.mydailysentinel.com
thing · as a Persian morality

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GAHANNA (AP)
Web site. The schools'
Students at two schools emergency
procedures
were locked in their class- Worked as plann~d, he said.
room s for about 30 minutes
Williams Said that, even
Wednesday while officers before this week's deadly
subdued a student who held rampage at Virginia Tech,
a knife io a school office, his department was devolpolice said.
ing special attention to
A police officer used a schools, given Friday's
stun gun to incapacitate the eighth anniversary of the
18-year-old student , who Columbine High School
was then di sarmed, said shootings in Colorado..
police Lt. Dan Williams. No
"'Tis· the season. So, we
mjuries were reported.
were prepared· well in
School officials in thi s advance of the Monday
Columbus suburb placed incident. That ramped us up
Lincoln High School under a little bit more," he said.
lockdown around 9:45 a.m.
In
Columbus
later
after the student entered the Wednesday, one person was
front office with a fixed- injured and another was
blade knife and made verbal arrested as a result of a shootthreats 'toward him5elf and ing .outside Linden McKinley
general, vague threats against High School, authorities said.
other students, Williams said. . Police said a fight
Neighborin g · Lincoln between two groups of peoElementary was locked pte broke out after classes
down as a precaution.
were dismissed. Shots were
As a staff member in the fired and a bullet hii' off a
high school office was call- nearby business, striking a
ing 911 , two police officers man in the leg. He was taken
assigned to the school hap- to a hospital. Police arrested
pened to arrive in the office one person who was not the
on another matter and sub- · gunman but who investigadued the student, Williams tors say was c3J1Ying a consaid.
cealed weapon.
He said use of the stun gun
Columbus police detec was appropriate because the tive Greg Sheppard said
student was holding a knife in there were · multiple shots
close proximity to school staff fired , but the people
members. Williams and the involved "just took off run prinCipal said the student was- ning." He said there is gang
n't threatening the staffen;.
acti vity in the area, but
Police identified the student police remain unsure what
as Jordan Pryce. No charges set off the shooting.
we~ immediately filed.
"Jt didn ' t seem to have
No phone listing could be. anything to do with anyfound for Pryce in Gahanna. th.ing goi ng on at the
There was no answer at a school," Sheppard said.
listing in neighbori ng
In
northwest · Ohio
Clinton Township.
Wednesday night, authoriThe lockdown lasted for . ties in Lima evacuated and
about 35 minutes and was closed the campuses of
lifted after it was determined Rhodes State College and
there was no basis to the stu- Ohio State University-Lima
dent ' s threats, the hi gh after a bomb threat was
sc hool's principal, Mark called in. to a switchboard
White, said in a letter to par" · shared by the two schools
ents posted on the school's sl)ortly after 4 p.m.

Savings
from PageA1
In Southern Local, the average savings would be 41 per~
cent, based on a· median
home value of $60,000.
"As •I travel Ohio 1 hear
how this tax cut will truly
benefii the lives of Ohioans,
and I can iell it will make a
meaningful difference for
Ohio's senior citizens,"
Strickland said. "This is an
example of investing in
what matters. )3y making

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com _

Delrner McClanahan

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, April 19, the I 09th day of 2007.
There are 256 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 19, 1775, the American Revob.Jtionary War
began with the battles of Lexington and Concord.
On this date:
.
In 1897, the.first Boston Marathon was held;' winner John
J. McDermott ran the course in 2:55:10.
In .193~ . the United States went off the gold standard.
In 1943, during World War LI , tens of thousands of Jews
living in the Warsaw Ghet.to began a valiant but futile battle against Nazi forces.
In 1975, India launched its first satellite atop a Soviet
·
·
rocket.
In 1989, 47 sailors were killed when a gun turret exploded aboard the USS Iowa.
lri , 1993, the 51-day siege at the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, ended as fire destroyed the struc- ·
lure after federal agents began smashing their way in;
dozens of people, including David Koresh, were killed.
In 1995. a truck bomb destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah
Federal Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people.
(Tim'orhy McVeigh was later convicted of federal murder
charges and executed.)
Thought fqr Today: "Never one thing and seldom one
person can make for a success. It takes a number of them
merging into one perfect whole." -· Marie Dressler,
Canadian actress ( 1869-1934).

Thursday, Aprilt9, 2007

so und fiscal decisions to
fund current and future
school building projects, we
are also able to offer .a tax
cut for our seniors."
Strickland's spokesman,
Keith Dailey, said the proposal to expand the
Homestead Exemption program is now being considerect by the House Finance
· Committee as · part of
Strickland's budget proposal.
If approved in the House, it
· w1ll go to the Senate, where
it must be approved by May
if it is to be part of the
upe6'ming biennial budget.

POMEROY
• Richmond, Va., loitering, Tracy Patterson, Pomeroy,
Magistrate . Linda
R. $50 and. costs; Nicole M. petty theft, $250 and costs,
Warner recently · processed Varian, Long Bottom, speed three days jail, suspended
the · following cases jn 43/25, $43 and costs; Brian . upon payment of restituPomeroy Mayor's Court:
K. Ford, Little Hocking, tion ; Mary K. Bare,
Bond's forfei ted, Donald stop light, $75 and costs; Langsville, dri ving under
A. May, Pomeroy, speed Nicholas
B'. Dobbs, suspe'nsion, $200 and costs;
43/25, $43 and costs; Shelly Fleming, speed 49/35, $39 Mark A. Fairrow. Pomeroy,
D. Dixon, Logan, speed and costs; Judith Marshall, di sorderly conduct and pub42/25, $42 and costs; Racine, speed 42/25. $42 lie intoxication. $100 an d
Sharon
L.
Schull er, and costs; Jessica B.artimus, costs. for disorderly cgnduct
Pomeroy, speed 37/25, $37 Reedsville. speed 49/25 , and $100 and costs fur puband . costs; Daniel R. $40 and cost; Nikita Lewi s, li&gt;: intox·ication, two years
Morri son,
Middleport, pomeroy, stop sign. $75 and non· reportin g probation,
defect'ive exhaust. $75 and costs; Margie Lawson , ordered to compl ete a
costs; Thomas McCloud, Long Bottom, speed 41/25 , health recovery assess ment
Middleport,
wrongful $4 1 and costs ; David and \0 days jai l with I0
entrustment of ·a motor McQuaid, Gallipoli s, dri- days suspended upon co mvehicle, $150 and costs; ving under suspe nsion , pletetion of health recovery
Stephen C.
Harrison, $200 and costs; Debra recommendations ; Dale
Raci ne, speed 44/25 , $44 Wallace,
Parkersburg , Ohm, II, Vinton , OVI and
and costs; William · R. W.Va.,. expired tags, $75 un safe vehi cle, $75 and
Martin , Syracuse, speed and costs; Tony Johnso n, cost for un safe ve hicle,
47/35 , $37 and costs; Gallipolis, open container, $700 fine and costs for OVI
Richard T. Gri nestead, $100 and costs; Jason A. with $300 suspended upon
Clifton, W.Va., speed 49/35, Phalen, Pomeroy, posses- compl etetion of dr iv ing
$39 and costs; Marvin A. sion, $100 and costs.
intervention school, three
Day, Pomeroy, di sorderly
Appearing in court: Li sa day s in jail, suspended ;
conduct by intoxication, Marcum, Pomeroy, viola- Te ssa Walker, Pomeroy,
$100 and cos ts; Kathy tion of trash ordinance, possession, $ 100 and costs;
Ritchie, Reedsville, speed $100 and costs; 10 days in Shane Leach, New Have n,
40/25 , $40 !)nd costs; Roger jail, suspended if rubbish W.Va., physical co ntrol,
L. Sams, Mt. Gilead, speed . removed in five days; Scott $700 and costs; Karen E.
43/25, $43 and cos ts; Creamer, Pomeroy. public Wills, Middleport. dri ving
Angela D. Roac h. Point intoxic ati Qn, $100 and under suspension , red light,
Pleasant,· W.Va., speed cos ts; Clayton A. Taylor, $200 and costs, driving
39/25, $39 and cos ts; Middleport, traffic control under suspensi n, $75 'and
Brenda
A.
Merrill, device, $75 and costs; costs for red light; James E.

Real estate transfers posted
POMEROY
- Mei~s
County Recorder Kay H1ll
reported the fo llowing
transfers of real estate: ·
Sidney Lee Branch,
deceased, to Madalen V.
Branch, affidavit, Orange.
Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development to
Donald E. Vaughan, Jr. ,
Brooke A. Vaughan, deed,
Village of Middleport.
Debra L. Spencer to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement, Chester.
Carl E. Shenefield, Lue E.
Shenefield, to Oxford Oil
Co:, right of way, Salem.
Ru ssell J. Seymour,
Cynthia K. Sey'Pur, to
Oxford Oil Co., . right uf
way, Salem.
Robert L. Ritterbeck,
Christina M. Ritterbeck. to
Oxford Oil Co., right of
way, Salem.
Frank
G.
Gilmore ,
Carolyn S. Gilmore, to
Oxford Oil Co., right of
way, Columbia/Salem.
Jose phine E. Bickle to
Oxford Oil Co., right of
way, Rutland.
Richard K. Douglas, Joyce
L. Douglas, to Eleanor 'Douglas, deed, Bedford.

Lyle J. Swain to Lee
Swain, Megan Swain, deed,
Orange.
Johnetta J. Chapman to
Rebecca Fairchild, deed,
Salisbury.
Steven C. Hill, .Kellie R.
Hill, to Home National
Bank, sheriff's deed, Letart.
Eleanor R. Lawso n to
James E. Beha, Christi
Beha, deed.
John F. Barnes to
Mortgage
Electronic
Registtation
Systems,
United Financial Mortgage,
Countrywide Home Loans,
Inc.. sheriff's .deed, Village
of Middleport.
Raymond
Napper,
Christine.
Napper.
to
Leading Creek Conservancy
Dis(r\ct, easement, Rutland.
Tara Reynolds, Kenny
R'eynolds, to LCCD, easement~ Rutland.
Kristi Braley to LCCD,
easement, Rutland.
Booth Insurance Agency,
Lanet Bolender, to LCCD,
easement, Salem.
Jesse Wood, Mindy
Patterson, to LCCD, easement; Salisbury.
Barbara Flaisig, Grover
K. Klein, to LCCD, ease-

Hospital in Columbus by
Med Flight. The .other passenger in the truck, Ramona
from PageA1
D. Mitchell of Bidwell. was
not injured.
Both vehicles received
Laws was transported td heavy damag~ and' were,
Cabell Huntington Hospital towed from the scene·.
in Huntington by Healthnet
Also res ponding to the
and one. of his passengers, accident
were
the
5-yeai's-old Yahshua J. Springfield
Township
Peaks of Bidwell, was trans- Volunteer Fire Department,
ported
to · Children's Gallia County EMS and

Crash

27

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ment, Salisbury.
Madgle L. Smith Bamerr to
LCCD. easement, Salisbury.
Judith Y. Dorst, Nancy K.
Frederick , Wesley · C.
Frederick, to Gary M. Dorst,
Judith Y. Dorst, deed, Olive.
Dale M. Kautz to Tuppers
·Pl;lins-Ctiester Water District,
right of way, Chester.
Robert P. Wood, Edna
Wood, to TP-CWD, ri ght of
way, Chester.
Roy .Alan Holter, Edward
J. Holter, Jan S. Holter,
Valerie K. Holter, Roy T.
Holter, Patricia T. Holter, to·
TP-CWD, right of way,
Chester.
Gerald L. Moore, Brenda
H. Moore, to TP-CWD,
right of way, Scipio.
Lois Ann Barrett to Larry
M. Wri ght, Wanda L.
Wright, deed. Salem .
Brenda Taylor Hill ,
Brenda S. Hill, Robert J.
Hill, Deborah Taylor Glaze,
James D. Glaze, to ,Zachary
T. Glaze, Kara M. Glaze,
deed, Chester. ·
Breflda Taylor Hill ,
Robert J. Hill, Deborah
Taylor Glaz~ . James D.
. Glaze, to Deborah Taylor
Glaze . . James D. Glaze,

Mason County EMS .
This is the second rural
· tratfic fatalit y in Gallia
Coun~ for 2007. It is the
· h
1 ffi f' 1' ·
tourr rura tra tc ata tty m
the Gallia-Meigs Post area
in 2007.

OUthern .

S

be filled.
"I'm not permitted to add
any new staff, I can only
from Page A1
replace or cut back," Miller
said when asked if two
hired by the board at its teachers would be hired to
recent meeting as a teacher replace. Beegle who taught
at Southern Elementary two subjects. Miller added
School for the upcoming he wa~ bound to what the
state Financial Planning
school year.
Supervision
Commission
Also at its recent meeting
the board accepted the res- has told him concerning
ignations , due to retire- increasi.ng the staff at this.
ment, of teachers Barbara time. The commission overBeegle, Janice Curry and sees all financial decisions
in the district.
Linda Fisher.
· Also at the recent meeting
Beegle taught high school
the
board approved the new
English and mathematics,
and
·revised high school
Curry was a . title one
coui:se
description for the
instructor for kindergarten
and Linda Fisher . tau ght 2007-08 school year.
fifth grade. Miller said at . The meeting adjourned
this time he does not plan to into .executive session
eliminate those positions once to di sc uss th·e
and two of the positions "'employ ment of a public
have already been posted to official.

deed, Chester.
Brenda Taylor Hill .
Robert J. Hi 11, Deborah
Taylor Glaze, . James D.
Glaze, to Brenda Taylor
Hill , Robert J. Hill, deed.
Bedford/Chester.
Ronnie B. Grimm, Ronald
B. Grimm, Linda A. Grimm .
to Steven A. Yonker, deed ,
Village of Racine.
. Madalen V. Branch to
Charles Meredith Cleland .
Heather Lynn Cleland .
deed, Orange.
Jack L. Ervin. Tammy
Ervin. to Bruner Land Co ..
Inc., deed, Salem .
Louise Gilmore. Ph lli s
Kapple , to
Raymond
Andrews, Megan Andrews,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Laura R. Lee to Brenda D.
Leslie, deed, Village ·of
P~meroy.

}\IDEL
ESTABL!SH[D

t895

Auditions for
Ariel Jr. Theatre's

"Disney's 101
Dalmatians Kids"
Sunday, April22, 1·4 pm
Monday, April 23, 6·8 pm
Roles Ai·ailablc for Kids 6-18
. Ohio VaUey Symphony
April 28 at 8 pm
Guitar Classics

The Ariel-Dater Hall

42~~~c~ ~,~eA ~~t~ip1~~~~?H .

by Swisher &amp; Lohse
Employees for Relay For Life
Friday, April 20th ·
·&amp; Saturday~ April21 st
9 til? Lot Behind Swisher&amp;·
Lohse on Second St.
~, --------- ~ - ~ -~,

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992-2155 ·

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Kenneth McCulloul)h, R. Ph.
Charles Rime R. Ph.
Prescription ~h. 992-2955
112 East'Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS

1!\on - Frt Sam - 8pm
Sat. Sam - 5pm

San. CLOSED

Open Weekniqhts 'TillS • · Friendly Service

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7

Kennedy 11, Pome roy, OVJ.
driving under suspension
and possession of paraphernalia, OVI $700 and costs,
DU S, $200 ·and cosb . possession of parphernalia,
$100 and co,ts. three days
jail, · credit for three days
s.erved; Janu sz Harri s.
Gallipolis. nu operators and
fictitiou s ta gs. $200 and
$75 and · costs; Dan iell e
Ratliff. Shade, drivin g
unr,ler suspension . no seat
belt passe nge r. $200. S15
and costs: Howard Searles,
Pomeroy. no tai ll ights, $75
and costs: Tan ya Sue Dee m.
Racine, failure to produce
operators li ce nse. $75 and
costs: . Gary
Haning.
Pomeroy, physical control·
and leaving th e sce ne.
$700, $250 and costs: Terri
L9.u Brewer. Pomeroy, contnbuting to delinquency of
a minor, two count s, $250
each count and costs:
Donna S. Conlin, Pomeroy.
OVI, driving under suspension, littering from motor
vehicle, ope n container in
motor ve hicl e, $700 and
custs, three day s jail, $300
and costs, and three days
suspended if drivin g intervention sc hool completed,
$200, $ 150, $ 100 and costs.

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The 'Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
·

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) !J92-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

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

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

•

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S
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VIEW

Help

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Fix leak bifore summer hits
Dear Editor:
The citizens of Nye Avenue in Pomeroy have had to
endure the stench generated by a major sewage leak behind
the gas station on Nye Avenue without any help from the
Pomeroy Water Department.
This matter has been reponed several times without any
action. This leak can be seen from the parking lot of the station, .a huge black stream of raw $ewage flowing freely into
the creek.
Would it be asking too much to have it finally fi xed
· before we are forced to endure it another summer?
Isn't this sewage problem against EPA regulations?
Hoby Landers ·
Pomeroy

PageA4
Thursday,April19,20o7

ALL BUSINESS: US. shoppers hold
the key to worldwid~ economic growth
BY RACHEL BECK
PP BUSINESS W81TER

NEW YORK The
world
should
thank
American shoppers . They've
kept buying. despite all the·
reasons they have for pinching pennies.
Their spending has moderated the slide in the U.S.
economy largely caused by .
the housing market collapse.
U.S. consu tiJers also have
fueled growth abroad, where
many economies are expanding at a much faster pace
th an what has been 'seen
here.
Whether that continues is
shaping up as one of the key
questions of the day. Morgan .
Stanley's chief global·economist Stephen Roach says it
best: ''If the lead engine of
the global growth train goes
off the trJcks, the rest of the
world will' be quick to fol·
low."
.
·
That throws cold water on
the idea that the global econ·
omy is "decoupling." a theory advanced by some economists who claim that just
because U.S. growth is slowing, economies elsewhere
can still thrive.
Supporting th~t view is the
fact that the U.S. economy
decelerated from a 3.2 percent annual growth rate in
2005 to around a 2.2 percent
pace expected this year. At
the same time, Europe has
seen growth accelemte from
1.4 percent two
'
.vears ago Ito

expectations of 2.3 percent in of the preceding three years, that some retailers ex·pect
2007. and Japan has seen its· Rdach said.
· tougher times ahead should
pace go from 1.9 percent to
That's surprising given that · be noted.
estimates for 2.3 percent this consumer confidence has
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. was
year.
In
developing been rattled by the housing among those sounding W3!1!economies. like China and recession and the implosion ings. The. world's largest
India. the growth is expand- in the subprime mortgage retailer said it expects April's
ing far faster. ,
· tn;.IJket, whiciJ hao; tightened
The cause nf those diver- credit everywhere. U.S. con- selling environment to be
gent expansion rates largely sumen; are also facing rising tough. Federated Department
Stores Inc., owner of the
has to do with a slowdown energy and food prices.
in U.S. housing and manuSpending has held up Macy's chain, said its ftrStfacturing - and not a broad- largely due to tile fu ndamen- quarter sales will come in at
based shock to consumer tally sound U.S. labor mar- the low end of expectations,
spending caused by surging ket. The unemployment rate while Children's Place Retail
oil prices or a major stock dropped to 4.4 percent in Stores Inc. said its fin;t-quarmarket
correction. th e March, matching a tlve-ye:jr ter e&lt;mlings per share will be
International Monetary Fund low, as · employen; boosted roughl y fl at with last year's
said in its jusi-released 2007 hiring by 180,000 workers, results. causing it to likely
World Economic Outlook.
the biggest gain in payroll miss WaU Street estimates.
The bigger gains in jobs in three months, Labor
Countries counting on U.S.
domestic demand in some ·Department ligures showed. shoppen; to buy everything
foreign econom ies al so
While that should keep the
should be factored into why U.S. economy from tumbling from toys to T-shirts. have the
growth abroad' has outpaced into a recession. growth still most at staKe. Mexico tops
U.S. growth. AI the same won 't be strong compared that list, with goods shipped
time. some countries are less with the global outlook. The to the United States accountreliant on .U.S. tmde as they JMF projects U.S. growth to ing for 23 percent of its
once w.~:re. the IMF report slow to 2.2 percent this year, gross domestic product,
said.
the w eakest since 2002. triple the levels seen· from
But believing that the U.S. Worldwide growth is expect- 1981 to 1985, according to
economy's moves doesn' t ed to expand at a brisk pace the IMF. China's U.S.
sway growth elsewhere over- 9f 4.9 percent, the IMF said. export,~ were 5.9 percent of
looks the power of American
'" If the U.S. labor market its GOP from 200 I to 2005,
shoppers. Since their spend- continues to display extraor- weU above the 0.8 percent
ing has remained strong in dinary staying power in the two decades ,ago. Other Latin
recent years, the worldwide · face of adversity elsewhere American and emerging
economy hasn 't had a "legit- in the economy, the overly ·
imate decoupling test," indebted,
saving-short Asian econolnies also have
Roach said.
American consumer will seen their exports to· the
Recent data show that squeak by once again - and United States go up.
American shoppen; have
annua li zed real U.S. con- so, too, will the rest of a stillsumption has avemged 3.2 coupled world," Roach said. · done rigl)t by the global
perce nt growth ·- down
With so much reliance on economy. for a long time.
only 0.2 of a· percentage · U.S . shoppers to keep global The world better hope they
point from the growth pace growth alloat. recent news continue to feel optimistic.

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The Daily Sentinel

r

· into a fury. Washington Post
columnist
Charles
Krauthammer lamented "the.
humiliation of Britain," and
the "fatuousness of the "international com munity."' Where
Gene
others saw compromi se, he
Lyons
discerned
"impotence,"
"capitulation" and "farce."
· If the outcome of the stand. .off was a success, "one hesiplay un Farsi- and Arab·lan- tales to ask what would conguage lelevision.
stitute fail ure," wrote former
For their pan, the Brits U.N. Ambassador John ·
reportedly waved off a series Bolton in the Financial
of aggressive military options Times. "The only thing risen
suggested by the Pentagon. In from this cri sis is Iranian
the aftennath, Prime Minister determination and resolve to
Tony Blair ·praised hi s coun- confront us elsewhere, ·at
try 's handling of the crisis as their di scretion, whether on
"finm but calm - not negoti- Iraq, nuclear weapqns and
ating but not confronting, terrorism.''
either."
Disappointment was proWithout
addressing found among those clamorAhmadinejad directly, Blair ing for war · with Iran. Fox
told the Iranian people, "We News pundit William Kristol
bear vou no ill will. On the · .complained of U.S. passivity.
contriuy, we respect Imn as He favored bombing Tehran.
an ancient civilization, as a So did GOP presidential .
nation with a proud and dig- wannabe Newt Gingrich. He
· nified history ... the disagree- appeared on right-wing talk
ments we have with your radi&lt;?' calling for the destrucgovernment we wish !O tion of Iranian oil refineries·
resolve peacefully through and a blockade of the Persian
dialogue."
'Gulf - potentially doubling
In the end, neither side the price ofoil and throwing
budged from its origi nal story the world's economy ·into a
about whether the sai lors tailspin. .
•
were captured in Iraqi · or
And for what? Try to
Iranian waters. Time was·, ·believe even ·Gingrich said it:
Glenn Greenwald pointed out To "show the planet that
in Salon.com, when . one you're tiny and we're not."
cou ld simply have assumed
See, it's not enough to
' the Brits were telling the truth invade Iran's . neig hbors,
and the Iranians lying. But Afghanistan and Iraq, and to
that was before Blair !ill the Persian Gu lf with U.S.
assumed his role as what . aJ)d British warships. Mere
British detracton; cal i"Bush's reality never suffices .' To realpoodle." Anyway, none of ly make thesB joken; feel all
that mattered as much as the virile and manly it's necesbloodless ending.
sary to kill a lot more people, ·
Needless to say, the peace- and strut around the ring with
fu l
resolution
threw the championship belt raised
American neoconservatives over our heads.

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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Delmer E. McClanahan
67, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Tuesday, April 17, 2007:
at the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipoli s.
SefVlce w11l be II a.m., Friday, April 20, 2007, at the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home Point Pleasant with Pastor
Rick Towe oftlciating. Burial will follow in' Forest Hills
Cemetery, Flatrock, W.Va. .
. Visitation will be held one hour prio( to the service at the
funeral home. Online eamail condolences may be sent to
the famtly at crowhussell @suddenlinkmail.com.

Local Briefs
Correction
RACIN E- In a picture of the climbing wall at Southern
Elementary. kindergartner Rylan Jarrell was incorrectly
identified as Brody Dalton.

Discussion set
RACIN E - The Meigs Community Action Network will
hold its nex t meeting from noon to 3 p.m. Saturday_at the
Racine Library.
·
Members wi ll work on submitti ng comments on Gatling
Ohio's mining permit on Yellowbush Creek. The deadline
to submit comments is April 30.
Meigs CAN member Elisa Young said the meeting is
open to anyone and 'for anyone with concerns about the
long-term impacts of the mine on the community. Those
wishing to submit comments who are not sure how are
encouraged to attend, according to Young.
.
"In addition to underground minin g impacts, the permit also incl ud es plans for a coal prep plant, sludge
impoundments, and beltline on or nearhistoric sites,"
Young said.
.
·
For more information call 949-2 H5 or 949-090 l.

Collecting items
SYRACUSE ~ Cadette and Senior Girl Scout Troop
1208 will collect baby items for families in need at a "Baby
Drive," from 6 to 9 p.m. on Friday and 9 a.m. to noon on
Saturday at the Syracuse Community Center.
Donations of new or gentlyaused baby items will be
a,Gepted.

Student with knife leads to
schoollockdowns,.police say

George Orwell analyzed
the phenomenon in a 1945 .
essay called "Notes 011
Nationalism," which · he'
detlned as "the habit of identifying oneself with a· single
nation or other unit, placing it
beyond good and evil and
recognizing no other duty
than that of advancing it&amp;
interests."
Writing immediately after
WWII, Orwell emphasized
that "(n)ationalism is not to
be confused with patriotism."
It was to him a species of
moral insanity. A patriot loves
his country and its institutions, while "a nationalist is
one who thinks solely, or
mainly, in tenms of competitive prestige ... his thoughts
always turn on victories,
defeats, triumphs and humiliations. ... Nationalism is
power-hunger tempered by
self-deception."·
Did Ahmadinejad, an
annoying jerk, use the British
seamen badly? ·He did. But
here's what Iran didn't do: No
torture, no waterboarding, no
being strip~d naked, no 24hour stress positions, no sensory deprivation, no sexual
humiliation, no naked .pyramids, no dog attacks or dog
leashes. ·The sailors were
released in twO' weeks, basically unhilf!lled.
If Iran won a propaganda
victory, it's important to recognize it wasn't British capitulation that made it easy; it
was American tough guys.
(Arkansas
DemocratGazette columnist Gene
Lyons is a national magazine
award wilmer and co-author
of "The Hunti11g of the
President" (Sr. Manin !s
Pre'S.~. 2000 ). You can e-mail
Lyons at genelyons2@sbcglobal.ne/.)

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PoMEROY MAYOR'S ·CoURT

PI5P~H ­

·Politics and prifessional wrestling

To some people, the themes
of international politics are
indistinguishable froni t)lose
of professional wrestling.
They. see in the relations of
nation states a ritualized
melodrama of dominance
LETTERS TO THE
versus submission. triumph
ven;us h,umiliatioi1. To them,
EDITOR
every · game's a zero-sum
Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be Jess • game; millions of individual
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be human beings are labeled
signed, and include address and telephone num/Jer. No "good" or "evil." All conflicts
unsigned /errers will be published. Letters should be in that don.'t end violently, end
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of shamefull y;
compromise
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepr- equates with cowardice.
edfor publication.
·
So it was with the sUmuoff
between Great Britain ;md
Iran over 15 Royal Navy
sailors taken captive in the
Persian Gulf. Ordinary peo(USPS 213·960)
ple welcomed their release
Reader Services
· Ohio Valley Publishing
with happiness and relief.
.
Co.
·Correction Polley
Actually, it's tempting to say
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
most nonmal people did. A
through Friday, 111 Court Street ,
be accurate. If yo~:~ know of an error
perilous
situation had been
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
in a story, eall the newsroom at (740) posta9e pa1d at Pomeroy.
resolved
without
tragedy, and
,
without
provoking
a poten992·2t56.
Member: The Associaled Press and
tially
disastrous
war.
tha Ohio Newspaper Association .
Poatmast,r: Se~d address correc·
Sure, Iranian President
Our main number is
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad used
(740) 992·2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohip 45769 .
the
occasion
to score propaDepartment extensions are:
ganda
points.
But what
Subecrlptlon Rates
points,? That Iran is a soverBy carrier or motor route
eign · nation capable .of
News
One month
'1 0.27
Editor: Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
One year
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defending its territory. That
Reporter: Brian Reeq, Ext. 14
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its leaders can act magnaniReport••; Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
Se.n lor Citizen rates
mously, freeing the prisoners
One month
'10.27
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One year
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Advertising
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acteristic
lack of subtlety,
Oulsl~e Sales: Dave Harris, Ext .. 15 direct to the Daly Sentinel. No sub·
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scription by mail permitted in areas
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 , where home carrier service is avail·
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CtaaaJCtic.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext. 10
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your faith; maybe you should
respect ours.
Malt Subscription
Although there were indiGeneral Manager
Inside Malga County
cations
the crisis came as a
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. t2
13 Weeks
'32.26
to Iran's government
surprise
26 Weeks
'64.20
52
Weeks
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reported
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news@ mydailysentinel.com
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Revolutionary Guard hot13 Weeks
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Web:
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thing · as a Persian morality

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Deaths

~AHLfR
Q:llVtl'lllVf

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GAHANNA (AP)
Web site. The schools'
Students at two schools emergency
procedures
were locked in their class- Worked as plann~d, he said.
room s for about 30 minutes
Williams Said that, even
Wednesday while officers before this week's deadly
subdued a student who held rampage at Virginia Tech,
a knife io a school office, his department was devolpolice said.
ing special attention to
A police officer used a schools, given Friday's
stun gun to incapacitate the eighth anniversary of the
18-year-old student , who Columbine High School
was then di sarmed, said shootings in Colorado..
police Lt. Dan Williams. No
"'Tis· the season. So, we
mjuries were reported.
were prepared· well in
School officials in thi s advance of the Monday
Columbus suburb placed incident. That ramped us up
Lincoln High School under a little bit more," he said.
lockdown around 9:45 a.m.
In
Columbus
later
after the student entered the Wednesday, one person was
front office with a fixed- injured and another was
blade knife and made verbal arrested as a result of a shootthreats 'toward him5elf and ing .outside Linden McKinley
general, vague threats against High School, authorities said.
other students, Williams said. . Police said a fight
Neighborin g · Lincoln between two groups of peoElementary was locked pte broke out after classes
down as a precaution.
were dismissed. Shots were
As a staff member in the fired and a bullet hii' off a
high school office was call- nearby business, striking a
ing 911 , two police officers man in the leg. He was taken
assigned to the school hap- to a hospital. Police arrested
pened to arrive in the office one person who was not the
on another matter and sub- · gunman but who investigadued the student, Williams tors say was c3J1Ying a consaid.
cealed weapon.
He said use of the stun gun
Columbus police detec was appropriate because the tive Greg Sheppard said
student was holding a knife in there were · multiple shots
close proximity to school staff fired , but the people
members. Williams and the involved "just took off run prinCipal said the student was- ning." He said there is gang
n't threatening the staffen;.
acti vity in the area, but
Police identified the student police remain unsure what
as Jordan Pryce. No charges set off the shooting.
we~ immediately filed.
"Jt didn ' t seem to have
No phone listing could be. anything to do with anyfound for Pryce in Gahanna. th.ing goi ng on at the
There was no answer at a school," Sheppard said.
listing in neighbori ng
In
northwest · Ohio
Clinton Township.
Wednesday night, authoriThe lockdown lasted for . ties in Lima evacuated and
about 35 minutes and was closed the campuses of
lifted after it was determined Rhodes State College and
there was no basis to the stu- Ohio State University-Lima
dent ' s threats, the hi gh after a bomb threat was
sc hool's principal, Mark called in. to a switchboard
White, said in a letter to par" · shared by the two schools
ents posted on the school's sl)ortly after 4 p.m.

Savings
from PageA1
In Southern Local, the average savings would be 41 per~
cent, based on a· median
home value of $60,000.
"As •I travel Ohio 1 hear
how this tax cut will truly
benefii the lives of Ohioans,
and I can iell it will make a
meaningful difference for
Ohio's senior citizens,"
Strickland said. "This is an
example of investing in
what matters. )3y making

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com _

Delrner McClanahan

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, April 19, the I 09th day of 2007.
There are 256 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 19, 1775, the American Revob.Jtionary War
began with the battles of Lexington and Concord.
On this date:
.
In 1897, the.first Boston Marathon was held;' winner John
J. McDermott ran the course in 2:55:10.
In .193~ . the United States went off the gold standard.
In 1943, during World War LI , tens of thousands of Jews
living in the Warsaw Ghet.to began a valiant but futile battle against Nazi forces.
In 1975, India launched its first satellite atop a Soviet
·
·
rocket.
In 1989, 47 sailors were killed when a gun turret exploded aboard the USS Iowa.
lri , 1993, the 51-day siege at the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, ended as fire destroyed the struc- ·
lure after federal agents began smashing their way in;
dozens of people, including David Koresh, were killed.
In 1995. a truck bomb destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah
Federal Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people.
(Tim'orhy McVeigh was later convicted of federal murder
charges and executed.)
Thought fqr Today: "Never one thing and seldom one
person can make for a success. It takes a number of them
merging into one perfect whole." -· Marie Dressler,
Canadian actress ( 1869-1934).

Thursday, Aprilt9, 2007

so und fiscal decisions to
fund current and future
school building projects, we
are also able to offer .a tax
cut for our seniors."
Strickland's spokesman,
Keith Dailey, said the proposal to expand the
Homestead Exemption program is now being considerect by the House Finance
· Committee as · part of
Strickland's budget proposal.
If approved in the House, it
· w1ll go to the Senate, where
it must be approved by May
if it is to be part of the
upe6'ming biennial budget.

POMEROY
• Richmond, Va., loitering, Tracy Patterson, Pomeroy,
Magistrate . Linda
R. $50 and. costs; Nicole M. petty theft, $250 and costs,
Warner recently · processed Varian, Long Bottom, speed three days jail, suspended
the · following cases jn 43/25, $43 and costs; Brian . upon payment of restituPomeroy Mayor's Court:
K. Ford, Little Hocking, tion ; Mary K. Bare,
Bond's forfei ted, Donald stop light, $75 and costs; Langsville, dri ving under
A. May, Pomeroy, speed Nicholas
B'. Dobbs, suspe'nsion, $200 and costs;
43/25, $43 and costs; Shelly Fleming, speed 49/35, $39 Mark A. Fairrow. Pomeroy,
D. Dixon, Logan, speed and costs; Judith Marshall, di sorderly conduct and pub42/25, $42 and costs; Racine, speed 42/25. $42 lie intoxication. $100 an d
Sharon
L.
Schull er, and costs; Jessica B.artimus, costs. for disorderly cgnduct
Pomeroy, speed 37/25, $37 Reedsville. speed 49/25 , and $100 and costs fur puband . costs; Daniel R. $40 and cost; Nikita Lewi s, li&gt;: intox·ication, two years
Morri son,
Middleport, pomeroy, stop sign. $75 and non· reportin g probation,
defect'ive exhaust. $75 and costs; Margie Lawson , ordered to compl ete a
costs; Thomas McCloud, Long Bottom, speed 41/25 , health recovery assess ment
Middleport,
wrongful $4 1 and costs ; David and \0 days jai l with I0
entrustment of ·a motor McQuaid, Gallipoli s, dri- days suspended upon co mvehicle, $150 and costs; ving under suspe nsion , pletetion of health recovery
Stephen C.
Harrison, $200 and costs; Debra recommendations ; Dale
Raci ne, speed 44/25 , $44 Wallace,
Parkersburg , Ohm, II, Vinton , OVI and
and costs; William · R. W.Va.,. expired tags, $75 un safe vehi cle, $75 and
Martin , Syracuse, speed and costs; Tony Johnso n, cost for un safe ve hicle,
47/35 , $37 and costs; Gallipolis, open container, $700 fine and costs for OVI
Richard T. Gri nestead, $100 and costs; Jason A. with $300 suspended upon
Clifton, W.Va., speed 49/35, Phalen, Pomeroy, posses- compl etetion of dr iv ing
$39 and costs; Marvin A. sion, $100 and costs.
intervention school, three
Day, Pomeroy, di sorderly
Appearing in court: Li sa day s in jail, suspended ;
conduct by intoxication, Marcum, Pomeroy, viola- Te ssa Walker, Pomeroy,
$100 and cos ts; Kathy tion of trash ordinance, possession, $ 100 and costs;
Ritchie, Reedsville, speed $100 and costs; 10 days in Shane Leach, New Have n,
40/25 , $40 !)nd costs; Roger jail, suspended if rubbish W.Va., physical co ntrol,
L. Sams, Mt. Gilead, speed . removed in five days; Scott $700 and costs; Karen E.
43/25, $43 and cos ts; Creamer, Pomeroy. public Wills, Middleport. dri ving
Angela D. Roac h. Point intoxic ati Qn, $100 and under suspension , red light,
Pleasant,· W.Va., speed cos ts; Clayton A. Taylor, $200 and costs, driving
39/25, $39 and cos ts; Middleport, traffic control under suspensi n, $75 'and
Brenda
A.
Merrill, device, $75 and costs; costs for red light; James E.

Real estate transfers posted
POMEROY
- Mei~s
County Recorder Kay H1ll
reported the fo llowing
transfers of real estate: ·
Sidney Lee Branch,
deceased, to Madalen V.
Branch, affidavit, Orange.
Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development to
Donald E. Vaughan, Jr. ,
Brooke A. Vaughan, deed,
Village of Middleport.
Debra L. Spencer to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement, Chester.
Carl E. Shenefield, Lue E.
Shenefield, to Oxford Oil
Co:, right of way, Salem.
Ru ssell J. Seymour,
Cynthia K. Sey'Pur, to
Oxford Oil Co., . right uf
way, Salem.
Robert L. Ritterbeck,
Christina M. Ritterbeck. to
Oxford Oil Co., right of
way, Salem.
Frank
G.
Gilmore ,
Carolyn S. Gilmore, to
Oxford Oil Co., right of
way, Columbia/Salem.
Jose phine E. Bickle to
Oxford Oil Co., right of
way, Rutland.
Richard K. Douglas, Joyce
L. Douglas, to Eleanor 'Douglas, deed, Bedford.

Lyle J. Swain to Lee
Swain, Megan Swain, deed,
Orange.
Johnetta J. Chapman to
Rebecca Fairchild, deed,
Salisbury.
Steven C. Hill, .Kellie R.
Hill, to Home National
Bank, sheriff's deed, Letart.
Eleanor R. Lawso n to
James E. Beha, Christi
Beha, deed.
John F. Barnes to
Mortgage
Electronic
Registtation
Systems,
United Financial Mortgage,
Countrywide Home Loans,
Inc.. sheriff's .deed, Village
of Middleport.
Raymond
Napper,
Christine.
Napper.
to
Leading Creek Conservancy
Dis(r\ct, easement, Rutland.
Tara Reynolds, Kenny
R'eynolds, to LCCD, easement~ Rutland.
Kristi Braley to LCCD,
easement, Rutland.
Booth Insurance Agency,
Lanet Bolender, to LCCD,
easement, Salem.
Jesse Wood, Mindy
Patterson, to LCCD, easement; Salisbury.
Barbara Flaisig, Grover
K. Klein, to LCCD, ease-

Hospital in Columbus by
Med Flight. The .other passenger in the truck, Ramona
from PageA1
D. Mitchell of Bidwell. was
not injured.
Both vehicles received
Laws was transported td heavy damag~ and' were,
Cabell Huntington Hospital towed from the scene·.
in Huntington by Healthnet
Also res ponding to the
and one. of his passengers, accident
were
the
5-yeai's-old Yahshua J. Springfield
Township
Peaks of Bidwell, was trans- Volunteer Fire Department,
ported
to · Children's Gallia County EMS and

Crash

27

,,

ment, Salisbury.
Madgle L. Smith Bamerr to
LCCD. easement, Salisbury.
Judith Y. Dorst, Nancy K.
Frederick , Wesley · C.
Frederick, to Gary M. Dorst,
Judith Y. Dorst, deed, Olive.
Dale M. Kautz to Tuppers
·Pl;lins-Ctiester Water District,
right of way, Chester.
Robert P. Wood, Edna
Wood, to TP-CWD, ri ght of
way, Chester.
Roy .Alan Holter, Edward
J. Holter, Jan S. Holter,
Valerie K. Holter, Roy T.
Holter, Patricia T. Holter, to·
TP-CWD, right of way,
Chester.
Gerald L. Moore, Brenda
H. Moore, to TP-CWD,
right of way, Scipio.
Lois Ann Barrett to Larry
M. Wri ght, Wanda L.
Wright, deed. Salem .
Brenda Taylor Hill ,
Brenda S. Hill, Robert J.
Hill, Deborah Taylor Glaze,
James D. Glaze, to ,Zachary
T. Glaze, Kara M. Glaze,
deed, Chester. ·
Breflda Taylor Hill ,
Robert J. Hill, Deborah
Taylor Glaz~ . James D.
. Glaze, to Deborah Taylor
Glaze . . James D. Glaze,

Mason County EMS .
This is the second rural
· tratfic fatalit y in Gallia
Coun~ for 2007. It is the
· h
1 ffi f' 1' ·
tourr rura tra tc ata tty m
the Gallia-Meigs Post area
in 2007.

OUthern .

S

be filled.
"I'm not permitted to add
any new staff, I can only
from Page A1
replace or cut back," Miller
said when asked if two
hired by the board at its teachers would be hired to
recent meeting as a teacher replace. Beegle who taught
at Southern Elementary two subjects. Miller added
School for the upcoming he wa~ bound to what the
state Financial Planning
school year.
Supervision
Commission
Also at its recent meeting
the board accepted the res- has told him concerning
ignations , due to retire- increasi.ng the staff at this.
ment, of teachers Barbara time. The commission overBeegle, Janice Curry and sees all financial decisions
in the district.
Linda Fisher.
· Also at the recent meeting
Beegle taught high school
the
board approved the new
English and mathematics,
and
·revised high school
Curry was a . title one
coui:se
description for the
instructor for kindergarten
and Linda Fisher . tau ght 2007-08 school year.
fifth grade. Miller said at . The meeting adjourned
this time he does not plan to into .executive session
eliminate those positions once to di sc uss th·e
and two of the positions "'employ ment of a public
have already been posted to official.

deed, Chester.
Brenda Taylor Hill .
Robert J. Hi 11, Deborah
Taylor Glaze, . James D.
Glaze, to Brenda Taylor
Hill , Robert J. Hill, deed.
Bedford/Chester.
Ronnie B. Grimm, Ronald
B. Grimm, Linda A. Grimm .
to Steven A. Yonker, deed ,
Village of Racine.
. Madalen V. Branch to
Charles Meredith Cleland .
Heather Lynn Cleland .
deed, Orange.
Jack L. Ervin. Tammy
Ervin. to Bruner Land Co ..
Inc., deed, Salem .
Louise Gilmore. Ph lli s
Kapple , to
Raymond
Andrews, Megan Andrews,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Laura R. Lee to Brenda D.
Leslie, deed, Village ·of
P~meroy.

}\IDEL
ESTABL!SH[D

t895

Auditions for
Ariel Jr. Theatre's

"Disney's 101
Dalmatians Kids"
Sunday, April22, 1·4 pm
Monday, April 23, 6·8 pm
Roles Ai·ailablc for Kids 6-18
. Ohio VaUey Symphony
April 28 at 8 pm
Guitar Classics

The Ariel-Dater Hall

42~~~c~ ~,~eA ~~t~ip1~~~~?H .

by Swisher &amp; Lohse
Employees for Relay For Life
Friday, April 20th ·
·&amp; Saturday~ April21 st
9 til? Lot Behind Swisher&amp;·
Lohse on Second St.
~, --------- ~ - ~ -~,

,,.

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COUPON

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·~{i?@' J

· ·p to $5.0,0 OFF ·*~1
an., prescr1pt1on.
•

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• Ltm.it 1 per customer, per prescription. :

('·. ~y,islwr &amp; _Lohse Phar.m.a.c.~ ~{i
{ ., ,,f : ., , . elCPir~ 05-02.07
,. '" "'· .rii:J
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Keep.i.ng ·Meigs
. ·county Jotormed

•·the D_a#y -$ell:ti~t .
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· · .Subscribe toO!l)!

992-2155 ·

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Kenneth McCulloul)h, R. Ph.
Charles Rime R. Ph.
Prescription ~h. 992-2955
112 East'Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS

1!\on - Frt Sam - 8pm
Sat. Sam - 5pm

San. CLOSED

Open Weekniqhts 'TillS • · Friendly Service

..

7

Kennedy 11, Pome roy, OVJ.
driving under suspension
and possession of paraphernalia, OVI $700 and costs,
DU S, $200 ·and cosb . possession of parphernalia,
$100 and co,ts. three days
jail, · credit for three days
s.erved; Janu sz Harri s.
Gallipolis. nu operators and
fictitiou s ta gs. $200 and
$75 and · costs; Dan iell e
Ratliff. Shade, drivin g
unr,ler suspension . no seat
belt passe nge r. $200. S15
and costs: Howard Searles,
Pomeroy. no tai ll ights, $75
and costs: Tan ya Sue Dee m.
Racine, failure to produce
operators li ce nse. $75 and
costs: . Gary
Haning.
Pomeroy, physical control·
and leaving th e sce ne.
$700, $250 and costs: Terri
L9.u Brewer. Pomeroy, contnbuting to delinquency of
a minor, two count s, $250
each count and costs:
Donna S. Conlin, Pomeroy.
OVI, driving under suspension, littering from motor
vehicle, ope n container in
motor ve hicl e, $700 and
custs, three day s jail, $300
and costs, and three days
suspended if drivin g intervention sc hool completed,
$200, $ 150, $ 100 and costs.

a t · r nr •

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.The Daily Sentinel

PageA6.

REGIONAL

Thursday, April19,

POMEROY- The next linking everyone toge ther. ation to take home and We all had a great time
together. We had nine
event will be ''Baby Think On March 29. the Boy enjoy.
Mei gs Brownie Troop gi rl s present with parents.
it Over.'' April 20 and 21 . Scouts in vited ihe Girl
At · the March 26 meetat Syracuse Community Scouts to a K-9 demon- 5878 includes Olivia
Davi
s,
Mica
Dre
hel,
ing.
Phyllis told us that all
Center. for girls II to l7 . stration at the Syracuse
Kimberly
Duncan.
Emil
y
our
cookies
had been sold ,
A Baby Drive will be held Community Center. The
Graham,
·
Aubrey
Hart,
but if we had people that
a's welL Donations of dog's name. was Andy and
good and new baby items we learnetl a lot about Peyton Humphreys. Tesla wanted them we co uld
will be accepted through- him _ He is a very good Kauff, Cai li e Lee,, Melyla help our sister Brownie
out the weekend at the dog. and an a.sset to the Mash, Shayla Molden, troop sell theirs. Helping
Center. Drop off times are po li ce
department. Elena Mu sse r, Raeline with our booth sale this
6 p.m. to 9 p.m. \In Friday Emmalea Durst attended Reeves, Jordan Rou sh, year were As hl ey I;:&gt;eem,
· Mikayla Schwendeman, Megan McGee, Lauren .
and 9 a.m. to \Oon on this event.
Saturday. Donations wi ll
Out next meeting .will Kalei gh Scot! and Ariann Dunn. Abbie Houser,
be given to needy fami- be Apri l 9, and we wil l Sizemore. The troop is led Brittany Cogar and Halley
lies.
have our Easter Party. bv Barbie Musser. Wendy Wilson. These girls will
Volunteers
Jerrena Anyone is welcomed to Sizemore and Tiffany receive a booth sale patch .
Katie Hill helped Troop
· Ebersbach and Steven ·attend . Co me and learn Vance.
Grady completed a two- and expericence the fun of
11 20 with their sale. More
'tlay
Project
Wild Girl Scou ts. We meet 6 to
magazines were turned in
Facilitator Training 111 7:30 p.m. at Reedsville
for soldiers in Iraq . The
March at Hueston State Churc h of Christ.
leader wants to ge t them
·Park . Camden . There will
turned in to a lady in
be Project Wild even ts for
Ripley, W.Va. as soo n as
the Summer Sizzle event s
possible.
The March 5 mee ting
A repo rt was given by
to be announced .
opened
as
usual
with
tlag
th
e
gi rl s about their trip to
Troop Report s: .
and
Meigs Brownies have ceremony
d
d then dues Mason County dog pound .
an
atten
ance
were We had seven girls go to
had a bu sy March. wi th taken . For bus1ness
·
Abb'
1e thi s: Ashley, Brittan y,
two regular meetings and H
h
d
h
ouse r s owe us er two Mega n, Katelynn, Abbie,
a field trip.
. requiremen ts on the two Cassie and Halley. Girl s
Our meeting on March b d
k·
13 was held after sc hool a ges we are wor mg each brought somet hin g to
on. Girls were told that give plus the troop oought
The troop had a ve ry in the Meigs Eleme ntary coo k'tes wou ld soon be a large bag of dog and c.at
busy
and
productive . cafeteria. We co ntinued delivere d to us.
food . They enJ·oyed walk- .
Ph 11·
th
month. On March 7, we work on our "Pe nn y
y ts· went ove r
e ing th!! dogs. Patti helped
met at th e library at ' Project ," whi ch focuses choices for our end of the the girls finish· up their .
Eastern to get ready for on helping Girl Scout s year trip. Leader told girls Challenge Necklace by
p
1
learn the va lue of money. h h H
our Thinking Day.
t at t e arry otter sty
Brownies
voted
on
so
me
11
de · · makin g lap quilts . These
In attendance we'r'e Anna
will be given to so me
event
was
cance
e
· 1s· elderl
Pierce.
Hann ah issues, includine" purchas- because no t enough g1r
y person.
Girls will divide into
Damewood, and Emmalea ing Thinking Day patches · signed up. The troop then
d
k
1
for th e Meigs Daisies,
Durst.
starte to wor on ·a mura two group s starting next
who
shared
Thinking
Day
f
Th
'
k.
D
Wh-le
On March
I 0, 111
m mg ay. . 1
meet·ing so each group can
or
Reedsville . we held our activ ities with our troop in some worked on I·t oth ers work on their different
Thinking Day. Our coun - · February. We also di s- practiced the ga me they award s. Officers will be
try .was Hai ti . The gir ls cussed . var ious ideas for WI' II teac h ot her gn· 1s. elected then , too. Halley
did a wonderful job, the serv ice projec ts and our Refreshments were served Wilson se rved refresh · Rous h.
by c asste
girl s made a craft, sang a Girl Scout cookie sales.
ments.
Our next .re!!u_
lar.
troop
At
th
sorig, and lea rn ed a ·lot
~
e M ar ch 12 1neet Friendship
Circle
· g·1r1s told th at· they had always ends meetin gs
about the country of Haiti. mee,tin!!~ was he ld on mg
·
h ·
Amanda
Honaker March 27. Brow ni es in starte d de 1·1ve nn
g t etr afte_r closing nag ceremoattendance
co
tilpleted
the
cook
ies.
Ph
ylli
s
told
them
ny.
helped our group out
Colors
and
Shapes
TryIt
th
ey
onl
y
had
until
the
great ly by bringing items
that act ually came from badge wi th severa l fun 26th to ge t their. money in. ·
We are to pay th e bill the
Haiti . Also, we held ou r activities.
The
Girl
Scouts
made
nex
t day. shl ey Deem
lnvestiture/Petai/Trefoi I
dough
and
created
differshowed
her req uirement
pin . Ceremony that day.
~
111
shapes
with
it.
They
·
for
th
e
Global
Awareness
Anendin g were Emmalea
The troop has
been
Hann&lt;th also made an Easter yarn badge. Girl s will be
Durst.
busy
deliverin
g
our
coo
kDamewood, Anna Pierce. painting wit h spring hues receiv ing thi s badge after
ies
and
planning
for
our
Shayla Honaker, and and wove a beautiful Thinking Day if they have
Abbie
Ridenour.'
On paper Eas ter egg. The · their Woman Leader of annual trip thi s year. We
have been working with
March 12, w e me\ for our girls mi x.ed primary colors the World turned in.
Jerrena
Ebersbach on
A handout of the animal
next meeting. We ea rned and created spring paint·
planning
our
Baby Think
the rose-·colured pt:ta l for in gs with their sister Girl shelter was given to the
it
over
Projec
t. We eac h
girls so they would know
making 'the world a be tter Scout s.
Al so taking place in what to bring Thu rsday ha ve been working on getplace . We al so learned
more on Juli ette Gordon March was th e de li very of for the eve nt that ni ght. tin g out the information
Lowe, the founder of Girl our Girl Scout cookies. Plan s were to meet at the on our Baby Drive iu help
Scouts. Thi s year we are Elena Musse r was our top Community Center and go those in our area.
We want to take time to
celeb ratin g 95 yea rs in seller, with 302 boxes. We from there. Linda Putman
thank
our leader and
participated
in
a
booth
of
Troop
1042
is
.
kind
Girl Scouts and we also·
Jerrena
·
on co mpletin g
got to decorate a cupcake sale at Hometown Market .enough to be a driver for
th
ere
two
day Project
in Miqdleport. We' would us.
Her dau ghter,
for the eve nt .
Wild
course.
We 'look forThose attendi ng thi s like to thank Hometown Lindsey, will be · go ing
ward
to
hea
rin g more
were Anna Pierce, Shayla Market and the co mmuni- with us.
about
.it.
Leader ask the girl s to
Hon aker; Jessica Rees. ty for their support of
Hannah Damewood,' and sco uting, with their cook- wear somethin g from Girl
Emmalea Durst.
ie -purchases. We apprec i- Scouts to school each day
On March 26 we held ate the support and will for Girl Scout Week. They
· our next me etin g. We . conti nue with our goa l of can wear their pin , a tee
grow shirt, or vest.
earned our Red petal for helping "Girl s
being courageous and stronger." .
• ·
Mot e work was done on
stron g. We also held a
On March 3 1, our troop the mu ra l fo r Thinking
make-up
lnves t.iture took a nice fie ld trip to Day. Girls took turn s
Ceremony on thi s special Build-A-Bear Workshop working on it while others
day for Jessica Rees , and in Charl eston, W.Va . All picked so methin g -they
co-leader
Angie · of the. girls made unique had learned about Hon g
Damewood investitured in creations and were ab le to Kong to share with the
as a leader. Those attend- choose clothing for their Brownies. Kimmy and
ing this were Jessica Rees, animals, whether it was a Katelynn Ginther served
Shayla Honaker, · Abbie bear, a dog, a koala, or refreshments .
Ridenour, Anna Pierce, even a turtle. We finished
The March 19 meeting
Hannah Damewood, and the fieJd trip with lunch in was held with Southern
Emmalea Durst.
the food court. All of the Brow nies 1120. They t6ld
Brownie and Junior girl s had a great time and . us about Germany and
troops participated 111 a made a wonde rful ere- shared their food with us.

Southern
Junior Troop
1204

Reedsvlle
Daisy Troop
1334

Cadette/Sen ior
Troop 1208

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2007

Pet food recall expanded; industrial
chemical found in second ingredient

,MEIGS COUN1Y GIRl SCOUT DIARY

Meigs' Brownie
Troop 5878

•

I

difficult to understand what
led to this pet' fOod crisis,"
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-111.,
WASHINGTON - An told The Associated P.ress
industrial chemical that led after meeting with the FDA
to the nationwide recall of commissioner, Dr. Andrew
more than I 00 brands of cat von Eschenbach.
and dog food has turned up
A message left Wednesday
in a second pet food ingredi- with the Chinese Embassy
ent imported from China.
i'n ;wrashingtqn was not
The discovery expands the immediately returned. . .
monthlong cascade of
Natural Balance sa1d tt
recalls to include more was recalling all its Venison
brands and varieties of pet and Brown Rice canned and
foods and treats minted by · bagged dog foods, _its
the chemical.
Venison and Brown Rtce
'This has exposed that tlie dog treats and its Venison
safety standards for pet and Green Pea dry cat food.
foods are not in place in any
T~e recalls now include
significant way and the kind products made by at least
of drumbeat, day after day, seven companies and sold
of recalls has shaken con- under more than 100 brands.
sumers' confidence in the
Th~ Pacoima, Calif., 90mpet food industry 's adher: pany said recent laboratory
ence to food safety stan- tests showed its recalled
dards ,'~ said Wayne Pacelle, products contain melamine.
president and chief execu- Natural Balance believes the
tive officer of the Humane source of the contaminant
Society of the United States. wa~ rice protein concentrate,
The chemical, melamine, which the company recently
is believed to have contami- added to the .dry venison
nated rice protein concen- formul as.
trate used to make a variety
A San ·Francisco company,
of Natural Balance Pet Wilbur-Ellis Co., began
Foods products for both importing the ingredient in
dogs and cats, the Food and July from a Chin~se compaDrug Administration said ny,
Futian
Biology
Wednesday.
Technology
Co.
Ltd.,
The FDA has there is no according to Wilbur-Ellis
evidence so far to suggest president and chief execuany of the rice protein went tive John Thacher.
to companies that make
'It resold the ingredient to
human food, said Michael five pet food manufacturers,
Rogers, director · of the including Diamond Pet
agency\ division of field Foods Inc. of Meta, Mo.
investigations. But the FDA Diamond manufactured the
has not accounted for all the dry dog and cat foods
imported ingredient.
recalled by Natural Balance,
Previously, the chemical Diamond
F'et
Foods
was found to contaminate spokesman Jim Fallon said.
wheat gluten used by at least
Thacher declined to idensix other pet food and treat tify his company 's other
manufacturers.
four ctistomers, except to
Both ingredients were say two tes!ed the ingredient
imported · from
China, ·and found no melamine.
though by different compa- Wilbur-Ellis has not heard
nies and from different man- from the other two, both of
ufacturers.
who·m received limited
The FDA on Wednesday amounts of the ingredient,
began reviewing and sam- Thacher said~
·
piing all rice protein concenThe FDA's tests detected
Irate imported from China, melamine in a rice protein
much as the agency has sample; the agency would
been doing for wheat gluten, not di sclose the sample's
Rogers said.
origin.
A
lawmaker
said
The source of the
Wednesday the Chinese melamine remains · unclear.
have re fused · to grant visas It may have contaminated
to FDA inspectors seeking the rice protein through the
to visit the plants where the reuse of dirty bags used to
ingredients were made. An ship the products.
FDA spokesman later said
Thacher said an April 4
the visas were not refused . delivery
from
Futian·
but that the agency had not Biology included 146 1-ton
received the necessary invi- bags of rice protein concentation letter to get visas.
trate. All were white except
"It troubles me greatly the for a single pink bag, which
Chinese are making it more was stenciled "melamine."

BY ANDREW BRIDGES

Page A7 • The Daily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Music helps headline annual
:open house at Buckeye Hllls
RIO GRANDE - An
open hou se weekend is
planned thi s Saturday and
Sunday on the campus of
Buckeye Hills Career
Center in Rio Grande.
This annu al eve nt is
filled with fa mily entertainment and fun activities. The
schedu le will feature the
second annual Buckeye
Hills . Student Idol Contest
6n Saturday a t I p.m.,
along with clogging, country music, gospe l and bluegrass singers.
On Sunday at 3 p.m.,
The Joe Freeman Band will
perform.The band Is made
up of a father, son and
cousin along with a few
good friends. The band has
been together in some form
or another and under many
names since the early
1980s.
·
The band is made up of
musicians who were self
taught and play by ear wi thout the ability to read musical notes, but with the ability to play almost any song
we hear within a few minutes in our musical genre.
The band represents the .
third and fourth generations .
of musicians that date back
to the early 1940s, wheh
their great uncles, The York
Brothers, were· members of
the Grand Ole Opry.
.
The band has opened
shows and/or shared the
stage with such Bluegrass
musical legends as Dr.
Ralph Stanley, Third Tyme
Out, Doyle Lawson and
Quicksilver, Lou Reed and
Carolina, New Found Road,
Larry . Cordle, Mountain
Heart, Rhonda Vincent and

Wednesday, April 25th
Administrative Professional Week

I

I

former country music 'entertainer. of the year, Ricky
Skaggs. They have performed on a local Sunday
morning Bluegrass gospel
show called ... America's
Bluegrass" on WSAZ-TV.
The band features a 17year-old musical prodigy
who plays several instruments and has created
much talk in the Bluegrass
world.
·
Ricky Skaggs once proclaimed that he "could
become the best mandolin
picker the world has ever
known!"
The music .
schedule is as follows:
·
SATURDAY
Noon-12:40 p.m. - Big
Bend Cloggers.
12:40-1 p.m. - Jeff
Seitz . (2006 Buckeye Hills
Idol winner).
1-2 p.m. Second
annual BHCC Idol Contest
(Students from local high
schools compete for the
I;JHCC Idol title).

HUNTINGTON , W.Va. Tennessee', North Carolina,
;- Independent filmmakers South Carolina, Georgia,
f rom New York to North . Alabama and Mississippi .
Carolina will have their
The schedule is as folmovies shown on the big lows:
~;c reen during the · fourth
THURSDAY
annual Appalachian Film
Noon, "Audition" (short)
12:30 p.m. "I Ran With a
Festival starting today and
~ontinuing
through Grey Ghost" (short)
Saturday. All movies will
12:40 p.m., "Ricca the
tj,,~ presented in the Keith · Bully" (short)
f
i llbee Theater in down 12:50 p.m. , "Sons 0
t:own Huntington.
Virginia" (short)
·
: "We're jUst very excited
I :45 p.m. , "Kenya 's
.l I'
h'
W . "(o
t
)
a IJout the f 1 m meup t IS
all
oc umen ary
y.;~ar. The quality of film2: 10 p.m., "Scripture
0'1aking among our entrants Cake" (feature)
just keeps getting better
3:45 p.m. , "Bernee" (feawith each festival," said ture)
San St. Clair, festival
5:45 p.m., "Willow
~ l:tairman .
Garden" (short)
- Winning festival entries
fl :40
p.m.,
"The
receive awards rangin g Hopewell
Haunting"
from $250 to $1,000, (short)
dc :~ pending on 'the category.
7:30 p.m., "Two Fire.
Movie tickets will be avail- Flies" (feature)
·
able at the Keith Albee
9 . p.m., Cocktail Q&amp;A
Theatre for $2 per person.
with Dani Englander
·
· In addition to documenFRIDAY
ia1ries, music videos, fea9:30 a.m., "Hoot In the
tu.res and short films, guest Hole - The Story of
speakers will host work- Jackson Hole" (doc umenshops at the festivaL For tary)
,
complete details, visit the·· II a. m. , Huey Perry,
ofificial festival website at speaker.
II :45
w ww.appyfilmfest.com.
, ( ha. m.,
) "The Joy
f
C
The Appalachian Film
a e s ort
Ft,stival is sponsored by
12: 10 p.m., "The Scarlet
ihe Huntington Regional Letters" (short)
Fi llm Commission. The
12:30 p.m ., " Ri chard
comest is open to all resi- Johnston : Hill Co untry •
·de cnts of the 13 states in the Troubadour" (docume nAppalachian' region, which tary)
indudes West Virginia,
I :30 p.m., " Keep on
Ohio, Kentucky, New Steppin'" (documentary)
Yo•rk,
Pennsylvania,
2: 15 p.m.; " Birth .of a
Maryland,
Virginia, Legend: The Story of the

The page will run on:

II

Joe Freeman Band

2-3 p.m . - Paul "Bub"
Williams (local country
music .singer - also a
BHCC alumni).
3-4 p.m.' - Bill Hawks
Band (country).
4-4:20 p.m: - Cody
Webb (country).
4:20-4:40 p.m. - Alex
Mays (instrumental-guitar).
SUNDAY
Noon- 1 p.m. - Cherry
Ridge
Band
(bluegrass/gospel).
1-1.30 p.m. - Karen
Polcyn (gospel).
1:30-2 p.m. Kari
McFann
(contemporary ·
gospel).
2-3 p.m. ~ Community
Christian Fellowship P,raise
Band (gospel).
3-5 p.m . - . The Joe
Freeman Band (bluegrass).
Other events include
local firefighter water ball
contest, tractor show, rock
climbing wall, classic car
show, health checkup,
bounce house and food. ·

Appalachian Film
.
· Festival slates 3-day stand

Thank your staff
in our Administrative
Professional Week Page.

April 22nd - 28th
A 2 co. x 4~; advertisement that relays
your gratitude. Spot Color included at no
extra charge. The page will be online on
·our Website for a week.

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

.

Thursday, Aprll 19, 2007

Rock
RIO GRANDE-The Rock
Ensemble from the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College will perform on Friday. April 20. 'l,lte
concert, free. and open to the
public, will begin at 8 p.m. in
me Beny Fine and Performing
Arts Center on the Rio Grande
campus.
The Rock Ensemble is made
up of Rio Grande students and
is · directed by Assistant
Professor Christopher Kenney,
who also perfonns with the
group at times.
This semester, the group has
five guitarists, and the members
also double o,n keyboards and
trade off on doing vocals.
"''ll be playing the drums,"
Kenney added.
This is the second year for the
Rio Grande Rock Ensemble,
and Kenney is completing his
first year leading the group.
"I enjoy it," Keriney said. "It
gives me the opportunity to let
my hair down, as it were,and do

something a little different."
Kenney has always been a
fan of rock and roll music, and
enjoys playing it and teaching it
to the studentS.
"I am from that era. I
born basically when the
Beatles started, so I sort of grew
up wim it," Kenney said."The
students enjoy it, too."
In the concerts, the ensemble
plays rock songs that are generally not as well known as omer
songs. A few of the songs at the
concerts are hits, but most are
just very good songs that are
somewhat obscure.
For example, the group will
performthreesongs byGeorge
Harrison that he performed in
his solo career. The songs are
"Beware ofDarksless," "Apple
Scruffs"
and
"Wahwah."Another song will be
"Say It Ain't So," which is a
'Roger Daltrey song that
Daltrey perfonned in his solo
career.
" It's just a really good song

wa' ·

that practically . nobody
knows," Kenney explained.
"Unless you're really into
Roge.r Daltrey music, you've
probably neverheardofit."
Kenney likes to teach his stu.
dents songs that mey do not
know already. as it helps them
learn more about rock music
and music in general.
A few concerts have already·
been held, but several more ·.
shows teaturing outstanding
student musicians from Rio
Grande will be held in April.
On Monday, April 23, the
Symphony Orchestra will be in
concert beginning at 8 p.m. On
Tuesday, April 24 the .
Departmenml Honors Recital
will be held at 8 p.m., ~d
Wednesday,April25 will be the
date for the Recital Seminar,
which will begin at 2:30 p.m.
Finally, me Grande Chorale
r.;oncert will be held on Friday,
April27 beginning at 8 p.m.
For more information, .call
Kenney at (800) 282-720 I.

Large crowd expected for first .antler show
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Organizers wanted to bring
a one-of-a-kind show to area
hunters and ·outdoor enmusiasts.
They succeeded in creating
the inaugural Hom and Antler
Show in Mason County.
The show' will take place 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the
West Virginia State Farm
Museum. Those wanting to
enter a set of horns or antlers
for judging · may register
beginning at 7 a.m. Entcy for
judging is $2 per set.
·
More than 300 sets of horns
and antlers will be on display,
each with a story to tell, said
organizer Donald Click, who
plans to display a few of his
own sets of deer antlers.
"I'm looking for a big
crowd," he said. "It's just gain-

ing momentum by leaps and
"As far as l am concerned;
bounds."
for the local yocals, it's going
Click said the response from to be the biggest giveaway east
business owners and hunters of me Miss1ssippi," Click said:
has been very positive. Events
More than 80 items will be
like this are not offered .in the given away at the event. Prizes
area much, and enthusiasts · will be awarded to sets of
often have to travel to horns and antlers killed with
Charleston or Columbus, gun and bow in the women's'
Ohio, for a similar event.
and men's division. Awards
Click began planning the will be given to the beSt exotic
event.in January and has been set.
working since to make it a sueJudging will be done by an
cess. The show will feature internationally-known judge.
vendors from all over the area,
A prize will be given to the
and everyone who comes to oldest hunter in attendance and
the show is eligible for prizes. the hunter who traveled the
Between $1,800 and $2,300 in· farthest to get to the show.
prizes will be given away,
Additionally, food and
Click said, adding that one per- refreshments will be served by
cussion rifle will be raffied, the cooks at the West Vrrginia
along with an AT'( helmet, and · State Farm Museum. They
they plan to give away T-shirts, will serve chili, com bread and
cups, hats and DVD players. beans, hot dogs and more.

Musician, composer
David Amram coming to Rio

WAWA" (feature)
·4: 10 p.m:, "Iron City
Blues" (documentary)
5:10 p.m., "Simple
RIO
GRANDE
Rio Grande Graduate Studies as Leonard Bernstein, Dizzy
Things" (feature )
Acclaimed jazz musician and Program, the Rio Grande Fine Gillespie, Lionel Hampton,
6:45 p.m., "Lenders composer David Amram will and
Perfonning
Arts Charles Mingus, Dustin
Morgan" (feature)
be taking part in two special Department, the Rio Grande Hoffman, Thelonious Monk,
. 8:30p.m., Cocktail party events at the University of Rio Sigma Tau Delta Honors . Willie Nelson, Beny Carter,
(event) at the Arcade
Grande/Rio
Grande English Society and Rio Odetta, Elia Kazan, Arthur
SATURDAY
Community College on Grande's Madog Center for Miller and Tito Puente. He
.9 a.m,, "Jewish U.S. Friday, April 20 and Saturday, Welsh Studies.
has also written the score for
Multicultural
Project" April 21.
·
On Saturday, April 21, films such
as
"The
(YFM)
Arnram will be involved in Amram will be leading a dis- ManchutimlCandidate."
1
The events on Friday and
9 :20 a.m., "TIJe Wh
. o e events that coincide with the cussion titled "Reme111bering
World is Watching" (YFM) National Library Week activi- Kerouac," from 9 a.m. ·until Saturday are both free and
10 a.m. , " Maneater" ties at Rio Grande, as well as noon. The event will feature open to the ·public. A
National Poetry Month and discussions · with Amram on "Teaching Kerouac" work(YFM)
J , (YFM) National Jazz Appreciation · the significance of Kerouac's shop or course credi~ is also
II :45 a.m., " oy ·
worlcs, his collaboration with available for teachers and Rio
I p.m., "Crazy Cracker" Month.
His
visit
is
being
sponsored
Kerouac, and the "Beat Grande graduate students who
(documentary)
in
part
by
the
Friends
of
the
Generation.'·
' The morning attend both sessions.
2:45 p.m. , "'l.Jiorious
Davis
Library,
and
tlte
Friday
·
will
also
feature
the sc~ning
For more information on
Mail" (feature)
will be held in the Davis of me landmark 1959 film course credit options for the
4:20 p.m. , "Lost Music event
Library
beginning at 8 p.m.
"Pull My Daisy," which is presentations, call Dreama
Video" ~ Meetu Chilana
Arnram
will
perfonn
and
narrated by Kerouac with Hudson at (800) 282-7201.
(music)
speak
at
the
library
that
m!}sic by Amram.
Amram is a famous and
4:30 p.m.; "Lover Never
evening
in
a
presentation
Amram
has
played
an
critically
acclaimed artist, and
Change"
(YFM plus
titled
"From
Cairo
to
important
role
in
American
the
Friends
of the Davis
music)
·
Kerouac."
Refreshments
will
culture.
The
Boston
Globe
has
Library
are
proud
to be bring4: 35 p.m., "Ode to Peace
be
served
and
area
residents
even
described
him
.
as
''the
ing
him
to
campus.
In recent
and Love" (music)
are
invited
to
come
to
campus
Renaissance
man
of
American
·years,
me
Friends
of
the
Davis
4:45 p.m. , "Pres sing
and hear this acclaimed musi- Music.'' He is well known for . Library have. been involved in
Scars on You" (music)
his
collaboration
with several projects on campus
4:50 p.m., "The Noose" cian and composer.
The evening will feature Kerouac. nie two collaborat- and in me community, such as
by A Perfect Circle (music) music from around the world, ed on the first ever jazz poet- taking an entertaining and
4 :55 p.m., "The Rat an d jazz classics, poetry ani! ry reading in New York City informative series of films on
the Duck" (music)
selected reading~ from Jack in 1957 and also worked World War l out into the com"Tw T' k
5 P.:m·,; . 0 IC ets to Kerouac's On The Road. ·, together on ''Pull My Daisy." munity, while also bringing
Arnram will also be accomAmram has also been hon- speakers such as historian
Paradtse (feature) .
6:45 p,m. , CocktaJI Q&amp;A panied dtlling the concert by ored as the first Composer-in- Fred Anderson and an expert
(event )
.. at the Jazz Arts Group of Residence of the New York on the Black Sox scandal to
Columbus.
.
Philharmonic Orchestra, has can1pus and holding special
Frederick/Rocco's
The ·event · is sponsored composed more than , I00 ' events on campus such as
7 · p.m.: Banquet, (event)
financially by the Arts orchestral and chamber Celtic Night in me library.
at Fredenck/Rocco s ·
For more information, call
8 p.m., Awards (event) at Education Endowment Fund, worlcs, wrinen two operas and
and
is
co-sponsored
by
the
collaborated
with
artists
such
the
library at (800) 282-7201.
Frederick/Rocco's

All this for only S&amp;O
Double Block 10% off- S108

Mohday, April·23 ·
11 :30 am - 1:30 pm

..-

Bring in This Ad
And Recieve $500 Off
A Set Of Digital
Hearing
Aides.
.
,-

.Deadline April 23, 2()07
'

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

Offer Ends April 301 2007

For more information, call 44b-5121
or loll-free at 1-800-816-5137.

IJ

•

Aprll25

PHONAKMICRO
. SAVIAART

Z!Ot Icon • Delta
"Dmptr Htorl/11
Dmte for 4 New
. GtMrGtioll"

�' '

.The Daily Sentinel

PageA6.

REGIONAL

Thursday, April19,

POMEROY- The next linking everyone toge ther. ation to take home and We all had a great time
together. We had nine
event will be ''Baby Think On March 29. the Boy enjoy.
Mei gs Brownie Troop gi rl s present with parents.
it Over.'' April 20 and 21 . Scouts in vited ihe Girl
At · the March 26 meetat Syracuse Community Scouts to a K-9 demon- 5878 includes Olivia
Davi
s,
Mica
Dre
hel,
ing.
Phyllis told us that all
Center. for girls II to l7 . stration at the Syracuse
Kimberly
Duncan.
Emil
y
our
cookies
had been sold ,
A Baby Drive will be held Community Center. The
Graham,
·
Aubrey
Hart,
but if we had people that
a's welL Donations of dog's name. was Andy and
good and new baby items we learnetl a lot about Peyton Humphreys. Tesla wanted them we co uld
will be accepted through- him _ He is a very good Kauff, Cai li e Lee,, Melyla help our sister Brownie
out the weekend at the dog. and an a.sset to the Mash, Shayla Molden, troop sell theirs. Helping
Center. Drop off times are po li ce
department. Elena Mu sse r, Raeline with our booth sale this
6 p.m. to 9 p.m. \In Friday Emmalea Durst attended Reeves, Jordan Rou sh, year were As hl ey I;:&gt;eem,
· Mikayla Schwendeman, Megan McGee, Lauren .
and 9 a.m. to \Oon on this event.
Saturday. Donations wi ll
Out next meeting .will Kalei gh Scot! and Ariann Dunn. Abbie Houser,
be given to needy fami- be Apri l 9, and we wil l Sizemore. The troop is led Brittany Cogar and Halley
lies.
have our Easter Party. bv Barbie Musser. Wendy Wilson. These girls will
Volunteers
Jerrena Anyone is welcomed to Sizemore and Tiffany receive a booth sale patch .
Katie Hill helped Troop
· Ebersbach and Steven ·attend . Co me and learn Vance.
Grady completed a two- and expericence the fun of
11 20 with their sale. More
'tlay
Project
Wild Girl Scou ts. We meet 6 to
magazines were turned in
Facilitator Training 111 7:30 p.m. at Reedsville
for soldiers in Iraq . The
March at Hueston State Churc h of Christ.
leader wants to ge t them
·Park . Camden . There will
turned in to a lady in
be Project Wild even ts for
Ripley, W.Va. as soo n as
the Summer Sizzle event s
possible.
The March 5 mee ting
A repo rt was given by
to be announced .
opened
as
usual
with
tlag
th
e
gi rl s about their trip to
Troop Report s: .
and
Meigs Brownies have ceremony
d
d then dues Mason County dog pound .
an
atten
ance
were We had seven girls go to
had a bu sy March. wi th taken . For bus1ness
·
Abb'
1e thi s: Ashley, Brittan y,
two regular meetings and H
h
d
h
ouse r s owe us er two Mega n, Katelynn, Abbie,
a field trip.
. requiremen ts on the two Cassie and Halley. Girl s
Our meeting on March b d
k·
13 was held after sc hool a ges we are wor mg each brought somet hin g to
on. Girls were told that give plus the troop oought
The troop had a ve ry in the Meigs Eleme ntary coo k'tes wou ld soon be a large bag of dog and c.at
busy
and
productive . cafeteria. We co ntinued delivere d to us.
food . They enJ·oyed walk- .
Ph 11·
th
month. On March 7, we work on our "Pe nn y
y ts· went ove r
e ing th!! dogs. Patti helped
met at th e library at ' Project ," whi ch focuses choices for our end of the the girls finish· up their .
Eastern to get ready for on helping Girl Scout s year trip. Leader told girls Challenge Necklace by
p
1
learn the va lue of money. h h H
our Thinking Day.
t at t e arry otter sty
Brownies
voted
on
so
me
11
de · · makin g lap quilts . These
In attendance we'r'e Anna
will be given to so me
event
was
cance
e
· 1s· elderl
Pierce.
Hann ah issues, includine" purchas- because no t enough g1r
y person.
Girls will divide into
Damewood, and Emmalea ing Thinking Day patches · signed up. The troop then
d
k
1
for th e Meigs Daisies,
Durst.
starte to wor on ·a mura two group s starting next
who
shared
Thinking
Day
f
Th
'
k.
D
Wh-le
On March
I 0, 111
m mg ay. . 1
meet·ing so each group can
or
Reedsville . we held our activ ities with our troop in some worked on I·t oth ers work on their different
Thinking Day. Our coun - · February. We also di s- practiced the ga me they award s. Officers will be
try .was Hai ti . The gir ls cussed . var ious ideas for WI' II teac h ot her gn· 1s. elected then , too. Halley
did a wonderful job, the serv ice projec ts and our Refreshments were served Wilson se rved refresh · Rous h.
by c asste
girl s made a craft, sang a Girl Scout cookie sales.
ments.
Our next .re!!u_
lar.
troop
At
th
sorig, and lea rn ed a ·lot
~
e M ar ch 12 1neet Friendship
Circle
· g·1r1s told th at· they had always ends meetin gs
about the country of Haiti. mee,tin!!~ was he ld on mg
·
h ·
Amanda
Honaker March 27. Brow ni es in starte d de 1·1ve nn
g t etr afte_r closing nag ceremoattendance
co
tilpleted
the
cook
ies.
Ph
ylli
s
told
them
ny.
helped our group out
Colors
and
Shapes
TryIt
th
ey
onl
y
had
until
the
great ly by bringing items
that act ually came from badge wi th severa l fun 26th to ge t their. money in. ·
We are to pay th e bill the
Haiti . Also, we held ou r activities.
The
Girl
Scouts
made
nex
t day. shl ey Deem
lnvestiture/Petai/Trefoi I
dough
and
created
differshowed
her req uirement
pin . Ceremony that day.
~
111
shapes
with
it.
They
·
for
th
e
Global
Awareness
Anendin g were Emmalea
The troop has
been
Hann&lt;th also made an Easter yarn badge. Girl s will be
Durst.
busy
deliverin
g
our
coo
kDamewood, Anna Pierce. painting wit h spring hues receiv ing thi s badge after
ies
and
planning
for
our
Shayla Honaker, and and wove a beautiful Thinking Day if they have
Abbie
Ridenour.'
On paper Eas ter egg. The · their Woman Leader of annual trip thi s year. We
have been working with
March 12, w e me\ for our girls mi x.ed primary colors the World turned in.
Jerrena
Ebersbach on
A handout of the animal
next meeting. We ea rned and created spring paint·
planning
our
Baby Think
the rose-·colured pt:ta l for in gs with their sister Girl shelter was given to the
it
over
Projec
t. We eac h
girls so they would know
making 'the world a be tter Scout s.
Al so taking place in what to bring Thu rsday ha ve been working on getplace . We al so learned
more on Juli ette Gordon March was th e de li very of for the eve nt that ni ght. tin g out the information
Lowe, the founder of Girl our Girl Scout cookies. Plan s were to meet at the on our Baby Drive iu help
Scouts. Thi s year we are Elena Musse r was our top Community Center and go those in our area.
We want to take time to
celeb ratin g 95 yea rs in seller, with 302 boxes. We from there. Linda Putman
thank
our leader and
participated
in
a
booth
of
Troop
1042
is
.
kind
Girl Scouts and we also·
Jerrena
·
on co mpletin g
got to decorate a cupcake sale at Hometown Market .enough to be a driver for
th
ere
two
day Project
in Miqdleport. We' would us.
Her dau ghter,
for the eve nt .
Wild
course.
We 'look forThose attendi ng thi s like to thank Hometown Lindsey, will be · go ing
ward
to
hea
rin g more
were Anna Pierce, Shayla Market and the co mmuni- with us.
about
.it.
Leader ask the girl s to
Hon aker; Jessica Rees. ty for their support of
Hannah Damewood,' and sco uting, with their cook- wear somethin g from Girl
Emmalea Durst.
ie -purchases. We apprec i- Scouts to school each day
On March 26 we held ate the support and will for Girl Scout Week. They
· our next me etin g. We . conti nue with our goa l of can wear their pin , a tee
grow shirt, or vest.
earned our Red petal for helping "Girl s
being courageous and stronger." .
• ·
Mot e work was done on
stron g. We also held a
On March 3 1, our troop the mu ra l fo r Thinking
make-up
lnves t.iture took a nice fie ld trip to Day. Girls took turn s
Ceremony on thi s special Build-A-Bear Workshop working on it while others
day for Jessica Rees , and in Charl eston, W.Va . All picked so methin g -they
co-leader
Angie · of the. girls made unique had learned about Hon g
Damewood investitured in creations and were ab le to Kong to share with the
as a leader. Those attend- choose clothing for their Brownies. Kimmy and
ing this were Jessica Rees, animals, whether it was a Katelynn Ginther served
Shayla Honaker, · Abbie bear, a dog, a koala, or refreshments .
Ridenour, Anna Pierce, even a turtle. We finished
The March 19 meeting
Hannah Damewood, and the fieJd trip with lunch in was held with Southern
Emmalea Durst.
the food court. All of the Brow nies 1120. They t6ld
Brownie and Junior girl s had a great time and . us about Germany and
troops participated 111 a made a wonde rful ere- shared their food with us.

Southern
Junior Troop
1204

Reedsvlle
Daisy Troop
1334

Cadette/Sen ior
Troop 1208

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2007

Pet food recall expanded; industrial
chemical found in second ingredient

,MEIGS COUN1Y GIRl SCOUT DIARY

Meigs' Brownie
Troop 5878

•

I

difficult to understand what
led to this pet' fOod crisis,"
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-111.,
WASHINGTON - An told The Associated P.ress
industrial chemical that led after meeting with the FDA
to the nationwide recall of commissioner, Dr. Andrew
more than I 00 brands of cat von Eschenbach.
and dog food has turned up
A message left Wednesday
in a second pet food ingredi- with the Chinese Embassy
ent imported from China.
i'n ;wrashingtqn was not
The discovery expands the immediately returned. . .
monthlong cascade of
Natural Balance sa1d tt
recalls to include more was recalling all its Venison
brands and varieties of pet and Brown Rice canned and
foods and treats minted by · bagged dog foods, _its
the chemical.
Venison and Brown Rtce
'This has exposed that tlie dog treats and its Venison
safety standards for pet and Green Pea dry cat food.
foods are not in place in any
T~e recalls now include
significant way and the kind products made by at least
of drumbeat, day after day, seven companies and sold
of recalls has shaken con- under more than 100 brands.
sumers' confidence in the
Th~ Pacoima, Calif., 90mpet food industry 's adher: pany said recent laboratory
ence to food safety stan- tests showed its recalled
dards ,'~ said Wayne Pacelle, products contain melamine.
president and chief execu- Natural Balance believes the
tive officer of the Humane source of the contaminant
Society of the United States. wa~ rice protein concentrate,
The chemical, melamine, which the company recently
is believed to have contami- added to the .dry venison
nated rice protein concen- formul as.
trate used to make a variety
A San ·Francisco company,
of Natural Balance Pet Wilbur-Ellis Co., began
Foods products for both importing the ingredient in
dogs and cats, the Food and July from a Chin~se compaDrug Administration said ny,
Futian
Biology
Wednesday.
Technology
Co.
Ltd.,
The FDA has there is no according to Wilbur-Ellis
evidence so far to suggest president and chief execuany of the rice protein went tive John Thacher.
to companies that make
'It resold the ingredient to
human food, said Michael five pet food manufacturers,
Rogers, director · of the including Diamond Pet
agency\ division of field Foods Inc. of Meta, Mo.
investigations. But the FDA Diamond manufactured the
has not accounted for all the dry dog and cat foods
imported ingredient.
recalled by Natural Balance,
Previously, the chemical Diamond
F'et
Foods
was found to contaminate spokesman Jim Fallon said.
wheat gluten used by at least
Thacher declined to idensix other pet food and treat tify his company 's other
manufacturers.
four ctistomers, except to
Both ingredients were say two tes!ed the ingredient
imported · from
China, ·and found no melamine.
though by different compa- Wilbur-Ellis has not heard
nies and from different man- from the other two, both of
ufacturers.
who·m received limited
The FDA on Wednesday amounts of the ingredient,
began reviewing and sam- Thacher said~
·
piing all rice protein concenThe FDA's tests detected
Irate imported from China, melamine in a rice protein
much as the agency has sample; the agency would
been doing for wheat gluten, not di sclose the sample's
Rogers said.
origin.
A
lawmaker
said
The source of the
Wednesday the Chinese melamine remains · unclear.
have re fused · to grant visas It may have contaminated
to FDA inspectors seeking the rice protein through the
to visit the plants where the reuse of dirty bags used to
ingredients were made. An ship the products.
FDA spokesman later said
Thacher said an April 4
the visas were not refused . delivery
from
Futian·
but that the agency had not Biology included 146 1-ton
received the necessary invi- bags of rice protein concentation letter to get visas.
trate. All were white except
"It troubles me greatly the for a single pink bag, which
Chinese are making it more was stenciled "melamine."

BY ANDREW BRIDGES

Page A7 • The Daily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Music helps headline annual
:open house at Buckeye Hllls
RIO GRANDE - An
open hou se weekend is
planned thi s Saturday and
Sunday on the campus of
Buckeye Hills Career
Center in Rio Grande.
This annu al eve nt is
filled with fa mily entertainment and fun activities. The
schedu le will feature the
second annual Buckeye
Hills . Student Idol Contest
6n Saturday a t I p.m.,
along with clogging, country music, gospe l and bluegrass singers.
On Sunday at 3 p.m.,
The Joe Freeman Band will
perform.The band Is made
up of a father, son and
cousin along with a few
good friends. The band has
been together in some form
or another and under many
names since the early
1980s.
·
The band is made up of
musicians who were self
taught and play by ear wi thout the ability to read musical notes, but with the ability to play almost any song
we hear within a few minutes in our musical genre.
The band represents the .
third and fourth generations .
of musicians that date back
to the early 1940s, wheh
their great uncles, The York
Brothers, were· members of
the Grand Ole Opry.
.
The band has opened
shows and/or shared the
stage with such Bluegrass
musical legends as Dr.
Ralph Stanley, Third Tyme
Out, Doyle Lawson and
Quicksilver, Lou Reed and
Carolina, New Found Road,
Larry . Cordle, Mountain
Heart, Rhonda Vincent and

Wednesday, April 25th
Administrative Professional Week

I

I

former country music 'entertainer. of the year, Ricky
Skaggs. They have performed on a local Sunday
morning Bluegrass gospel
show called ... America's
Bluegrass" on WSAZ-TV.
The band features a 17year-old musical prodigy
who plays several instruments and has created
much talk in the Bluegrass
world.
·
Ricky Skaggs once proclaimed that he "could
become the best mandolin
picker the world has ever
known!"
The music .
schedule is as follows:
·
SATURDAY
Noon-12:40 p.m. - Big
Bend Cloggers.
12:40-1 p.m. - Jeff
Seitz . (2006 Buckeye Hills
Idol winner).
1-2 p.m. Second
annual BHCC Idol Contest
(Students from local high
schools compete for the
I;JHCC Idol title).

HUNTINGTON , W.Va. Tennessee', North Carolina,
;- Independent filmmakers South Carolina, Georgia,
f rom New York to North . Alabama and Mississippi .
Carolina will have their
The schedule is as folmovies shown on the big lows:
~;c reen during the · fourth
THURSDAY
annual Appalachian Film
Noon, "Audition" (short)
12:30 p.m. "I Ran With a
Festival starting today and
~ontinuing
through Grey Ghost" (short)
Saturday. All movies will
12:40 p.m., "Ricca the
tj,,~ presented in the Keith · Bully" (short)
f
i llbee Theater in down 12:50 p.m. , "Sons 0
t:own Huntington.
Virginia" (short)
·
: "We're jUst very excited
I :45 p.m. , "Kenya 's
.l I'
h'
W . "(o
t
)
a IJout the f 1 m meup t IS
all
oc umen ary
y.;~ar. The quality of film2: 10 p.m., "Scripture
0'1aking among our entrants Cake" (feature)
just keeps getting better
3:45 p.m. , "Bernee" (feawith each festival," said ture)
San St. Clair, festival
5:45 p.m., "Willow
~ l:tairman .
Garden" (short)
- Winning festival entries
fl :40
p.m.,
"The
receive awards rangin g Hopewell
Haunting"
from $250 to $1,000, (short)
dc :~ pending on 'the category.
7:30 p.m., "Two Fire.
Movie tickets will be avail- Flies" (feature)
·
able at the Keith Albee
9 . p.m., Cocktail Q&amp;A
Theatre for $2 per person.
with Dani Englander
·
· In addition to documenFRIDAY
ia1ries, music videos, fea9:30 a.m., "Hoot In the
tu.res and short films, guest Hole - The Story of
speakers will host work- Jackson Hole" (doc umenshops at the festivaL For tary)
,
complete details, visit the·· II a. m. , Huey Perry,
ofificial festival website at speaker.
II :45
w ww.appyfilmfest.com.
, ( ha. m.,
) "The Joy
f
C
The Appalachian Film
a e s ort
Ft,stival is sponsored by
12: 10 p.m., "The Scarlet
ihe Huntington Regional Letters" (short)
Fi llm Commission. The
12:30 p.m ., " Ri chard
comest is open to all resi- Johnston : Hill Co untry •
·de cnts of the 13 states in the Troubadour" (docume nAppalachian' region, which tary)
indudes West Virginia,
I :30 p.m., " Keep on
Ohio, Kentucky, New Steppin'" (documentary)
Yo•rk,
Pennsylvania,
2: 15 p.m.; " Birth .of a
Maryland,
Virginia, Legend: The Story of the

The page will run on:

II

Joe Freeman Band

2-3 p.m . - Paul "Bub"
Williams (local country
music .singer - also a
BHCC alumni).
3-4 p.m.' - Bill Hawks
Band (country).
4-4:20 p.m: - Cody
Webb (country).
4:20-4:40 p.m. - Alex
Mays (instrumental-guitar).
SUNDAY
Noon- 1 p.m. - Cherry
Ridge
Band
(bluegrass/gospel).
1-1.30 p.m. - Karen
Polcyn (gospel).
1:30-2 p.m. Kari
McFann
(contemporary ·
gospel).
2-3 p.m. ~ Community
Christian Fellowship P,raise
Band (gospel).
3-5 p.m . - . The Joe
Freeman Band (bluegrass).
Other events include
local firefighter water ball
contest, tractor show, rock
climbing wall, classic car
show, health checkup,
bounce house and food. ·

Appalachian Film
.
· Festival slates 3-day stand

Thank your staff
in our Administrative
Professional Week Page.

April 22nd - 28th
A 2 co. x 4~; advertisement that relays
your gratitude. Spot Color included at no
extra charge. The page will be online on
·our Website for a week.

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

.

Thursday, Aprll 19, 2007

Rock
RIO GRANDE-The Rock
Ensemble from the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College will perform on Friday. April 20. 'l,lte
concert, free. and open to the
public, will begin at 8 p.m. in
me Beny Fine and Performing
Arts Center on the Rio Grande
campus.
The Rock Ensemble is made
up of Rio Grande students and
is · directed by Assistant
Professor Christopher Kenney,
who also perfonns with the
group at times.
This semester, the group has
five guitarists, and the members
also double o,n keyboards and
trade off on doing vocals.
"''ll be playing the drums,"
Kenney added.
This is the second year for the
Rio Grande Rock Ensemble,
and Kenney is completing his
first year leading the group.
"I enjoy it," Keriney said. "It
gives me the opportunity to let
my hair down, as it were,and do

something a little different."
Kenney has always been a
fan of rock and roll music, and
enjoys playing it and teaching it
to the studentS.
"I am from that era. I
born basically when the
Beatles started, so I sort of grew
up wim it," Kenney said."The
students enjoy it, too."
In the concerts, the ensemble
plays rock songs that are generally not as well known as omer
songs. A few of the songs at the
concerts are hits, but most are
just very good songs that are
somewhat obscure.
For example, the group will
performthreesongs byGeorge
Harrison that he performed in
his solo career. The songs are
"Beware ofDarksless," "Apple
Scruffs"
and
"Wahwah."Another song will be
"Say It Ain't So," which is a
'Roger Daltrey song that
Daltrey perfonned in his solo
career.
" It's just a really good song

wa' ·

that practically . nobody
knows," Kenney explained.
"Unless you're really into
Roge.r Daltrey music, you've
probably neverheardofit."
Kenney likes to teach his stu.
dents songs that mey do not
know already. as it helps them
learn more about rock music
and music in general.
A few concerts have already·
been held, but several more ·.
shows teaturing outstanding
student musicians from Rio
Grande will be held in April.
On Monday, April 23, the
Symphony Orchestra will be in
concert beginning at 8 p.m. On
Tuesday, April 24 the .
Departmenml Honors Recital
will be held at 8 p.m., ~d
Wednesday,April25 will be the
date for the Recital Seminar,
which will begin at 2:30 p.m.
Finally, me Grande Chorale
r.;oncert will be held on Friday,
April27 beginning at 8 p.m.
For more information, .call
Kenney at (800) 282-720 I.

Large crowd expected for first .antler show
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Organizers wanted to bring
a one-of-a-kind show to area
hunters and ·outdoor enmusiasts.
They succeeded in creating
the inaugural Hom and Antler
Show in Mason County.
The show' will take place 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the
West Virginia State Farm
Museum. Those wanting to
enter a set of horns or antlers
for judging · may register
beginning at 7 a.m. Entcy for
judging is $2 per set.
·
More than 300 sets of horns
and antlers will be on display,
each with a story to tell, said
organizer Donald Click, who
plans to display a few of his
own sets of deer antlers.
"I'm looking for a big
crowd," he said. "It's just gain-

ing momentum by leaps and
"As far as l am concerned;
bounds."
for the local yocals, it's going
Click said the response from to be the biggest giveaway east
business owners and hunters of me Miss1ssippi," Click said:
has been very positive. Events
More than 80 items will be
like this are not offered .in the given away at the event. Prizes
area much, and enthusiasts · will be awarded to sets of
often have to travel to horns and antlers killed with
Charleston or Columbus, gun and bow in the women's'
Ohio, for a similar event.
and men's division. Awards
Click began planning the will be given to the beSt exotic
event.in January and has been set.
working since to make it a sueJudging will be done by an
cess. The show will feature internationally-known judge.
vendors from all over the area,
A prize will be given to the
and everyone who comes to oldest hunter in attendance and
the show is eligible for prizes. the hunter who traveled the
Between $1,800 and $2,300 in· farthest to get to the show.
prizes will be given away,
Additionally, food and
Click said, adding that one per- refreshments will be served by
cussion rifle will be raffied, the cooks at the West Vrrginia
along with an AT'( helmet, and · State Farm Museum. They
they plan to give away T-shirts, will serve chili, com bread and
cups, hats and DVD players. beans, hot dogs and more.

Musician, composer
David Amram coming to Rio

WAWA" (feature)
·4: 10 p.m:, "Iron City
Blues" (documentary)
5:10 p.m., "Simple
RIO
GRANDE
Rio Grande Graduate Studies as Leonard Bernstein, Dizzy
Things" (feature )
Acclaimed jazz musician and Program, the Rio Grande Fine Gillespie, Lionel Hampton,
6:45 p.m., "Lenders composer David Amram will and
Perfonning
Arts Charles Mingus, Dustin
Morgan" (feature)
be taking part in two special Department, the Rio Grande Hoffman, Thelonious Monk,
. 8:30p.m., Cocktail party events at the University of Rio Sigma Tau Delta Honors . Willie Nelson, Beny Carter,
(event) at the Arcade
Grande/Rio
Grande English Society and Rio Odetta, Elia Kazan, Arthur
SATURDAY
Community College on Grande's Madog Center for Miller and Tito Puente. He
.9 a.m,, "Jewish U.S. Friday, April 20 and Saturday, Welsh Studies.
has also written the score for
Multicultural
Project" April 21.
·
On Saturday, April 21, films such
as
"The
(YFM)
Arnram will be involved in Amram will be leading a dis- ManchutimlCandidate."
1
The events on Friday and
9 :20 a.m., "TIJe Wh
. o e events that coincide with the cussion titled "Reme111bering
World is Watching" (YFM) National Library Week activi- Kerouac," from 9 a.m. ·until Saturday are both free and
10 a.m. , " Maneater" ties at Rio Grande, as well as noon. The event will feature open to the ·public. A
National Poetry Month and discussions · with Amram on "Teaching Kerouac" work(YFM)
J , (YFM) National Jazz Appreciation · the significance of Kerouac's shop or course credi~ is also
II :45 a.m., " oy ·
worlcs, his collaboration with available for teachers and Rio
I p.m., "Crazy Cracker" Month.
His
visit
is
being
sponsored
Kerouac, and the "Beat Grande graduate students who
(documentary)
in
part
by
the
Friends
of
the
Generation.'·
' The morning attend both sessions.
2:45 p.m. , "'l.Jiorious
Davis
Library,
and
tlte
Friday
·
will
also
feature
the sc~ning
For more information on
Mail" (feature)
will be held in the Davis of me landmark 1959 film course credit options for the
4:20 p.m. , "Lost Music event
Library
beginning at 8 p.m.
"Pull My Daisy," which is presentations, call Dreama
Video" ~ Meetu Chilana
Arnram
will
perfonn
and
narrated by Kerouac with Hudson at (800) 282-7201.
(music)
speak
at
the
library
that
m!}sic by Amram.
Amram is a famous and
4:30 p.m.; "Lover Never
evening
in
a
presentation
Amram
has
played
an
critically
acclaimed artist, and
Change"
(YFM plus
titled
"From
Cairo
to
important
role
in
American
the
Friends
of the Davis
music)
·
Kerouac."
Refreshments
will
culture.
The
Boston
Globe
has
Library
are
proud
to be bring4: 35 p.m., "Ode to Peace
be
served
and
area
residents
even
described
him
.
as
''the
ing
him
to
campus.
In recent
and Love" (music)
are
invited
to
come
to
campus
Renaissance
man
of
American
·years,
me
Friends
of
the
Davis
4:45 p.m. , "Pres sing
and hear this acclaimed musi- Music.'' He is well known for . Library have. been involved in
Scars on You" (music)
his
collaboration
with several projects on campus
4:50 p.m., "The Noose" cian and composer.
The evening will feature Kerouac. nie two collaborat- and in me community, such as
by A Perfect Circle (music) music from around the world, ed on the first ever jazz poet- taking an entertaining and
4 :55 p.m., "The Rat an d jazz classics, poetry ani! ry reading in New York City informative series of films on
the Duck" (music)
selected reading~ from Jack in 1957 and also worked World War l out into the com"Tw T' k
5 P.:m·,; . 0 IC ets to Kerouac's On The Road. ·, together on ''Pull My Daisy." munity, while also bringing
Arnram will also be accomAmram has also been hon- speakers such as historian
Paradtse (feature) .
6:45 p,m. , CocktaJI Q&amp;A panied dtlling the concert by ored as the first Composer-in- Fred Anderson and an expert
(event )
.. at the Jazz Arts Group of Residence of the New York on the Black Sox scandal to
Columbus.
.
Philharmonic Orchestra, has can1pus and holding special
Frederick/Rocco's
The ·event · is sponsored composed more than , I00 ' events on campus such as
7 · p.m.: Banquet, (event)
financially by the Arts orchestral and chamber Celtic Night in me library.
at Fredenck/Rocco s ·
For more information, call
8 p.m., Awards (event) at Education Endowment Fund, worlcs, wrinen two operas and
and
is
co-sponsored
by
the
collaborated
with
artists
such
the
library at (800) 282-7201.
Frederick/Rocco's

All this for only S&amp;O
Double Block 10% off- S108

Mohday, April·23 ·
11 :30 am - 1:30 pm

..-

Bring in This Ad
And Recieve $500 Off
A Set Of Digital
Hearing
Aides.
.
,-

.Deadline April 23, 2()07
'

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

Offer Ends April 301 2007

For more information, call 44b-5121
or loll-free at 1-800-816-5137.

IJ

•

Aprll25

PHONAKMICRO
. SAVIAART

Z!Ot Icon • Delta
"Dmptr Htorl/11
Dmte for 4 New
. GtMrGtioll"

�I

Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

. Thursday, Aprilt9, ,2007

lnsitde

Tht( Paily Sentinel

I

/·

Easter n tri-meet results, Page 83 ·

,.'

Treasurer bans investments .Local stocks
Gannett
connected to ·terror groups
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STAfEHOUSE
CORRESPONDENT

'

COLUMBUS - Ohio's
treasurer is instituting one
of the first policies in the
nation to ban state invest·ments with any connection
to terrorist groups, bringing
the $12 billion state portfolio into line with federal
anti-terror guidelines, he
announced Wednesday.
"All Ohioans wi s ~ to live
in a peaceful world. free of
the threat of terrorism,''
begins the policy drafted
by Treasurer Richard
Cordray, "And all surely
agree that public fund s
should not be invested in
ways that promote terrorism."
A new tracking program
will be put ·in place with
' the intent of ridding the
state portfolio of any terrorist-linked investments within the next 30 days, and the
office then will certify the
portfolio complies with the ·
policy each quarter.
Cordray, a Democrat

0

I

,

elected in November, said
he drafted the policy after
learni!]g state investment
guidelines didn ' t mirror
federal ones when it came
to investing money with
individuals · and entities
with terrorist ties.
"We were surprised to
see that no policies were in
place at all at the' Treasury
dealing with this issue,"
Cordray said.
Missouri Treasurer Sarah
Steelman, a Republican,
first wrote to Cordray in
January encouraging him to
follow her state's decision
to divest from stocks in
companies that partner with
governments in Iran, Syria,
Sudan or North Korea.
"Of course, . terror-free
investing is about more
than financial risk ," she
wrote. "In .my view, this
investment strategy provides an opportunity for
those of us . far from ~he
from lines of the war on
terrorism to do our part."
Cordray said there was a
"llurry of activity" around

the nation at that time to
ban investments in individual nations, but most of
those efforts are still . in the
proposal
stages.
Information
from .the
National Association of
State Treasurers indicates
Ohio is on the leading edge
of putting such a sweeping
ban in place, he said.
He said his policy broadens Missouri's model by
including all the threats on
four federal lists.
All the same, it is possible that the state has no
investments with terrorist
links, he said. But Cordray
said the suite must comply
with federal regulations and
executive orders imposing
sanctions . on
terrorist
nations and other entities
that pose a risk to national
security and there is no evi- ·
dence that it has done so.
"We could sit back and
see I don't think this is a
problem for us, but up until
now that would have been
only a guess," he said.

Cancer society sues over smoking
ban exemption for private clubs
COLUMBUS . (AP) The American Cancer
Society of Ohio filed a lawsuit Wednesday challenging
a portion of the state's
workplace smoking ban
that exempts cenain mili •
tary veterans' halls and
other priv~te clubs.
The
exemption
announced in March by the
Ohio Department of Health
- waters down · the law
and leaves private club
employees exposed to secondhand smoke, said cancer
society
spokeswoman

Wendy Simpkins.
tage.
The lawsuit was filed in
The
smoking · ban,
Franklin County Common approved by 58 percent of
Pleas Court in Columbus.
voters last November, took
It comes less than a week effect Dec. 7; however,
after the Ohio Licensed · fines of up to $2,500 won't
Beverage Association, a start until the first week of
trade group that represents May and compliance has
bar owners and other liquor been spotty in some parts
permit holders, filed its of the state. The law proown lawsuit in the same hibits smoking in most pubcourt seeking to throw out . lie places, including restau_the exemption but for dif- rants,. bars and offices. ·
ferent reasons - owners of
Exceptions include tobactraditional bars and taverns co shops, designated hotel
say it gives private clubs an rooms and enclosed areas
unfair competi~ive advan- of nursing homes.

15.50
· Rockwell (NYSE) - 59.65
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)-

60.41

35.13

11.85

Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.11
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -

Harley-Davidson ( NYSE) -

61.26

Royal Dutch Shell - 69.71
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -

37.46

JP Morgan (NYSE)-

189.61

BorgWamer (NYSE) -

52.07

74.88

Kroger (NYSE) ~ 29.40
Umlted Brands (NYSE)-

Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 47.97
Wendy's (NYSE) - 33.20
Worthington (NYSE) -

26.46

22.18

Century Aluminum (NAS.
DAQ) - 48.49 .
Champion (NASDAQ) -

·Local weather
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers
city/Region
in the morning ... Then a
.
.
High
I Low
slight chance of showers in
the afternoon. Highs in the
upper 50s. Northeast winds
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
- -~;!~ _,.,,,..,. ~
SO percent.
Toledo•
Thursday night...Mostly
.so· 1ae·
cloudy. A slight chance of
Youngatown• •
showers in the . evening.
53" 136"
Lows around 40. Northe·ast
winds 5 to I0 mph. Chance
of rain 20 percent.
Friday. ,.Mostly sunny.
Not as cool with highs in the
· upper 60s. Nor.th winds
around 5 mph.
Friday
night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 30s.
North winds around 5 mph.
Saturday Jtnd Saturday
night...Mostly clear. Highs
in the lower 70s. Lows in
the mid 40s.
Sunday ...Sunny. Highs in
the mid 70s.
Sunday
nlght...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
aoudy ~ Thunder·~ Flurries
50s.
Sf!lnns
.
'
\ \\
~onday
through
Partly
~ .
~
Showe~
Tuesday
nlght...Mostly
Rain
• *
Snow
cloudy with a chance of
Wednesday . .. Partly
showers and thund~storrns. in the mid 50s. Chance of
sunny. Highs in the mid 70~;.
Highs in the. mid 70s. Lows rain 30 percent.

Today'.s Forecast

6

Thursday, April19, 2007

================================================
Alexander rallies late to down Tornadoes, 8-7
LoCAL 8cHEDULE ·

POMEAC )Y- A·scfledule ol upcomng college
and high , ;chool varsity sporting 9\IMIS ~
teams !J01 ri Gollia and Meigs CQunties.

Todav's games

' Norfolk SOuthern (NYSE)- Dlllly stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
55.08
8.03
transactions for April 18, .
Charmlrig Shops (NASDAQ) Oak Hill Financial (NAS.
2007, provided by Edward
DAQ)- 24.40
-12.26
Jones financial advisors
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
City Holding (NASDAQ) Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(NASDAQ)- 25.26
40.09
(740) 441·9441 and Lesley
BBT (NYSE) - 41.05 .
Collins ( NYSE) - 65.51
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.53 Marrero In Point Pleasant
Dollar General ( NYSE) Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.92 · at (304) 674-0174.
21.27
Member SIPC.
Premier (NASDAQ) DuPont (NYSE) - 49.29

e:::,

)

PhotO!; rrom Eastern tri-med, Page B4

· US Bank (NYSE) - 34.40
(NYSE)- 58.31
General Electric ( NYSE) -

AEP (IIIYSE) - 4$.77
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 76.80 .
Ashland Inc: ( NYSE) -

'

Cavs (·linch two-seed in East, Page 83

\

0

c.........·

Prep Softball ,
_ Meigs 211 Wellston. 5 p.m
Trimble at Eastern, 5 p.m
Waterfc •rd at Southern •. 5 p.m.
Prep Baseball
Meigs 1 :l~ Well ston, 5 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern. 5 p.m.
Waterfc &gt;rd at' SOuthern, 5 p.m.
Friday's games
Prep Softball
Eastern at Nelsonville -York. 5 p.m.
Prep Baseball

Easte1 n at Nelsonville-York . 5 p.m.
Track and Fleld
Eastet· n at Parke rsburg Invite. 4:30
p.m.
Meigs at Oak Hill Invite, 4:30 p.m.

Saturday. April 21
Prep So~ball
Belpr e at Eastern (DH). noon

BY. ScoTT WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

pionship with a 17-3 overall
mark, an .850 winning percentage. Reportedl y in 1988.
ALBANY - On a pace to Coach Mick Winebrenner's
eclipse or equal the best club posted a 2 1-5 mark
winning percentage in : with a .810 winning percentSouthern
llistory,
the age.
Southern Tornadoes job got
The great start in·2007 fell
tougher after an 8-7 loss to to the Spartans, but a Trojan
Alexander Monday night at horse wasn't necessary.
Alexander High School.
Only determination and
Southern, .12-3, fell to the true grit allowed the host
host Sfartans after posting Spartans to pull off the win.
one o the best starts in
Southern took a 1-0 lead
Southern history. The best in the second inning and
winning percentage in SHS controlled the entire game
history came in 1977 when right down to the final
Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr.'s inning . .In 'that first inning
team won the SVAC cham- Butch Marnhout walked and

scored on a
b a s e s
loaded walk
to Jordan
Pierce, 1-0.
SHS went
up 5-0 in the
third when
Pat Johnson
singled,
R y a n
Hupp
C h ap ma n
singled,
Marnhout had an RBI single, Nick Buck walked, J.R:
Hupp had a two-run tielder's
choice advance, and Jordan
Pierce reached on an error to
score Hupp, S-0.

Meanwhile, Pat Johnson
masterfully sat down the
Spartans witho~t incident.
Southern added two runs
in the fourth for Coach Ryan
Lemley's club, who now
weighs in with a 12-3
record. A big game with
Waterford is coming up
Thursday along with for all
practicality the league championship twinbill Monday.
against Federal Hocking.
Alexander scored four
runs in the fifth inning, but
still trailed 7-4 going into
the final'inning. Johnson had
Please see Rally. BJ

T'VC STANl&gt;INGS

Please see Meet. BJ

Please see Meip. B1

SOFTBALL
Ohio .Division
WellstOJI ·
· 6-0
5-l'
Belprti
Alexander
3-3
Meigs
3-3
Vinton Co
1-5
Nels-York
0-6 ,

:c." .•., ~-J, , ,.:,

Southern
Eastern ,
Miller

3-3 ·
3-3 ·
2-3
0-6

sp·artans

,.
~hu:ut M;i;~"J;~; ';d~;is;;.~tri:;;t~i"Eastern
ou ern

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs teammates Meghan Cle!lanQ, far left, and Catie Wolfe make a baton exchange just after the Eastern duo of Lauren

BY BRYAN WALTERS .
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.coM

their second crown this
spring by winning nine of 16
BY SCOTT WOLFE
competitions,
resulting in a,
SPORTSCORRESPONDENT
TUPPERS PLAINS ·- team score of 77.5 points.
Meigs track and field made The Maroon and Gold just
ALBANY
The it a · clean sweep at the edged out runner-up Eastern
Spartans
Alexander
tri-meet Tuesday, , (71.5) by six points, while
trumped Eastern
posting wins in both · the the Lady Rebels were a dist
h
e
and girls· competitions tant third with just nine
Southern boys
against
the host Eagles and markers.
L a d y
South
Gallia,
South Gallia's Steven Call
Tornadoe s
The
Marauders
won
their
and
Adrian Bolin of Meigs
in a 10-0
tirst
boys'
title
of
2007,
postwere
the top-point scorers,
mercy-rule
ing
a
team
score
of
63
points
managing
respective numg a m e
after
winning
eight
of
the
16
bers
of
18
and
11.25 points
Wednesday
events.
MHS
held
off
runfor
their
teams.
.
at
night
ner-up
Eastern
(56)
by
seven
Call
won
the
long
jump,
AleKander
points, while the third-place 400-meter dash a_nd 3200m
Wolfe-Riffle . H i g h Rebels ended the day with run, ~s well as fimsh10g secSchool dur·
ond 10 the h1gh JUmp. Bohn
ing a Tri-Valley Conference 27 points.
The
.
Lady
Marauders,
on
won both hurdle events and
Interdivisional
make-up
the
other
hand,
captured
was also pprt of the winning
game orjginally scheduled
as a double-header on April
7.
.
Southern 's offense found
itself handcuffed most of
the night in the . I0-0 shellacking. Alexilnder lifts its
record to S-6 overall and 33 in the Ohio Division,
while Southern falls to 5-9,
3-3 . ..
· Shelley Williams was the
culprit · in
much of
Southern's offensive woes
as the Alexander hurler
Please see Shutout. Bl

.,

CoNTACfUS
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 o.m.)

1-740.446-2342 ext. 33
Ftx-1 ·740-446-3008
. E-mail -

sports @mydailysentinel.com

SI!OL!&amp;Jita!! .

.

-1

I

•

· • Pomeroy, Otl

~nt~tn.-Fr:t. 8~;
·9-4;.Sun. 12;-4 WWW•markporterJPII.CORI
*All.,.,....,.. MmonUta with tu, title. Dock'- dOwn wllh .......,.,. credit.
7.811xed ..... All ....... to diller. S.le . . . Aprtl30, 2007.

'

Brad Sherma 0, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
bsherman@myda~lytribu n e.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23
lcrumOmydailyregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
bwattarsOmydailytribune.com

vanquish
Meigs, 11-3

Owen - brought home . a
pair of first-place finishe.s.
McGrath captured gold 111
both the h1gh jump and
200m dash~ while Ow_en was
an easy wmner tn both t~e
800m and 1600m runs.
Owen ~id not compete in the
two-mtle event.
In the girls' competition,
the Lady Marauders had a
trio of participants capture
·multiple crowns in Bolin,
Meljssa Gnieser and· Kimi
Swisher. Grueser swept the
shot put and discus titles,
while Swisher won both the
mile and 2-mile races.
Devan Soulsby captured
gold m the 400m dash, and

Hocking Division
Southern
5-0
Fed Hock
3-1
Eastern
3-2
Waterl'ord
3-;2
Miller
1-5
0-5
Trimble

fed Hock

K~ights

ROCK SPRINGS
Point PleaSant broke out the
proverbial whooping sticks
Wednesday, poundmg out
four home
runs during
a comfortable 11-3
victory
over host
Meigs.
The Lady
Knights
(14-2)
received a
pair of long
balls from
sophomore Anna Sommer
- including a grand slam in
the second - while classmates Tessa Wyant and
Devin Cottrill each went ·
yard once in the eight -run
triumph.
PPHS went up 2-0 in the
second after back-to-back
lead-off walks to Wyant and
Alyssa Darst turned into
scores
after
Jennifer
Wickline delivered a basesclearing double. E·mily
. Jones followed with a single, then Cottrill walked to
load the bases with two
outs.
Sommer drove a 1-1 pitch
over the left-center field · ·
wall , giving the Black, Red
and White a six-run edge
after two complete frames:.
The visitors increased that
lead to eight in the tifth following Wyant's two-tun
homer with one out. Tasha
Wyant also .scored on the
long lly after reaching safely on a fielder's choice. "
The Lady Marauders ( r5) finally got on the board in
the bottom of the fifth when
a lead-off walk to Amy Barr
turned to fruit ion after
Talisha Beha reached safely
on an·error. Barr scored on
the miscue , cutting the
deticit to 8-1 after five full
mnmgs.
Point quickly retaliated in
the sixth, .responding · with
three runs for an Il-l
advantage. Megan Hatfield
led off the inning by striking
out, but · a dropped third
strike allowed her to reach
safely.
Two baners later, Cottrill ·
delivered a two-run homer

• Ohio Djvision
· Al~xander ·
. 5-1
3,1
· W~llston
Meigs
4-2
2-3
Belpre
2-3
Vinton Co
0-6 '·
. Nels-York

·T.r.•mbJ~

Lady

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAlfERS@MYOAilYTRIBUNE.COM

BASEBALL

. Hocking Division
W~teFfo~ · , 4;0 ' ,. ~

•

Bl

4x200 squad.
MHS won three of the
four relay events on the
boys' side, capturing gold in
the 4x I00, 4x200 and
4x400. The Eagles, who
won five overall events, .won
the other boys' relay title in
the 4xll00.
Seniors Brad Soulsby and
Casey Richardson won first
in the shot put and discus for
the Marauders, respectively,
while
classmate
Brad
Ramsburg won a pair of
golds in the hurdle events.
Junior Brandan Fisher
ro~nded out the first-pl'!ce
ti~ushers for MHS w1th a
wm 10 the lOOm dash.
A pair of Eagle seniors Alex McGrath and Michael

Lady Falcons blast Hannan, 37-2
BY LARRY CRUM .
·LCRUM@MYOAILYREGISTER .COM

ASHTON, W.Va. - Kylie
Riggs went 4-for-4 and
Wahama combined for 12
hits to help pace- the Lady
Falcons in their win over
Hannan.
And that was just in the
tirst inring:
All told, Wahama had 22
hits and four home runs,
while ·Hannan · strug'gled
with nearly two dozen errors
as the Lady Falcons rolled
over their Mason County foe
37-2 . in three innings
Wednesday night in Ashton.
· The win moves Wahama
to 11 -3, while. Hannan falls
. to 1-6 on the year.
Clearly, the power house
Lady Falcons were too
much from the get-go as
Wahama started a nunlber of
its junior varsity players, but
Larry Crum/photo still had little trouble movWahama's Raelynn .Grimm hits for a single during the sec- ing around the bases as the
ond inning of a high school softball game against Hannan Hannan team, only in its
second year of existence,
Wednesday in Ashton. Wahama won .the contest 37-2.

·s i m p I y give Hannan two run s
could not scored before being replaced
proper I y after only six batters faced.
field . the ·· Brooke Gabritsch came in
ball
and and got the job done, finish made too ing · out the final three
many mis- · innings with no hits given up
takes to be and no runs scored to get the
competi ~ wm.
tive.
In fact. oAce Gabritsch
Wah am a came in Hannan only got on
Riggs
scored 25 base twice more in the conruns in the test, both ·times unable to
first inning alone, thanks to score.
Riggs who had a home run,
Wahama. on the other
four hits and three runs hand, kept up the hit parade.
scored in the opening frame
The Lady. Falcons added
alone. Chelsea Fowler had a four run s in the second
pair of do11bles in the first inning, as Fowler and
mning and Airael Deritield Sabrina Estep added . backalso added a home run and a to-back home runs ·to lead
single to help tally the 25 off the jnning, and Wahama
run lead. ·
.
scored eight more in the
Riggs was also slated to third to tally the 37:2 victostart the contest, but with the ·ry.
lead comfortably in hand,
There was a number of
Beth Rollins got the start in strange occurrences during
the pitching circle. Rollins, the contest, inclul'ling three
·in . her ftrst varsity outinJ!. collisions where Wahama
walke~ two batters and htt
.., ___._ see Wallalll.. Bl
another three with pitches to ~

�I

Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

. Thursday, Aprilt9, ,2007

lnsitde

Tht( Paily Sentinel

I

/·

Easter n tri-meet results, Page 83 ·

,.'

Treasurer bans investments .Local stocks
Gannett
connected to ·terror groups
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STAfEHOUSE
CORRESPONDENT

'

COLUMBUS - Ohio's
treasurer is instituting one
of the first policies in the
nation to ban state invest·ments with any connection
to terrorist groups, bringing
the $12 billion state portfolio into line with federal
anti-terror guidelines, he
announced Wednesday.
"All Ohioans wi s ~ to live
in a peaceful world. free of
the threat of terrorism,''
begins the policy drafted
by Treasurer Richard
Cordray, "And all surely
agree that public fund s
should not be invested in
ways that promote terrorism."
A new tracking program
will be put ·in place with
' the intent of ridding the
state portfolio of any terrorist-linked investments within the next 30 days, and the
office then will certify the
portfolio complies with the ·
policy each quarter.
Cordray, a Democrat

0

I

,

elected in November, said
he drafted the policy after
learni!]g state investment
guidelines didn ' t mirror
federal ones when it came
to investing money with
individuals · and entities
with terrorist ties.
"We were surprised to
see that no policies were in
place at all at the' Treasury
dealing with this issue,"
Cordray said.
Missouri Treasurer Sarah
Steelman, a Republican,
first wrote to Cordray in
January encouraging him to
follow her state's decision
to divest from stocks in
companies that partner with
governments in Iran, Syria,
Sudan or North Korea.
"Of course, . terror-free
investing is about more
than financial risk ," she
wrote. "In .my view, this
investment strategy provides an opportunity for
those of us . far from ~he
from lines of the war on
terrorism to do our part."
Cordray said there was a
"llurry of activity" around

the nation at that time to
ban investments in individual nations, but most of
those efforts are still . in the
proposal
stages.
Information
from .the
National Association of
State Treasurers indicates
Ohio is on the leading edge
of putting such a sweeping
ban in place, he said.
He said his policy broadens Missouri's model by
including all the threats on
four federal lists.
All the same, it is possible that the state has no
investments with terrorist
links, he said. But Cordray
said the suite must comply
with federal regulations and
executive orders imposing
sanctions . on
terrorist
nations and other entities
that pose a risk to national
security and there is no evi- ·
dence that it has done so.
"We could sit back and
see I don't think this is a
problem for us, but up until
now that would have been
only a guess," he said.

Cancer society sues over smoking
ban exemption for private clubs
COLUMBUS . (AP) The American Cancer
Society of Ohio filed a lawsuit Wednesday challenging
a portion of the state's
workplace smoking ban
that exempts cenain mili •
tary veterans' halls and
other priv~te clubs.
The
exemption
announced in March by the
Ohio Department of Health
- waters down · the law
and leaves private club
employees exposed to secondhand smoke, said cancer
society
spokeswoman

Wendy Simpkins.
tage.
The lawsuit was filed in
The
smoking · ban,
Franklin County Common approved by 58 percent of
Pleas Court in Columbus.
voters last November, took
It comes less than a week effect Dec. 7; however,
after the Ohio Licensed · fines of up to $2,500 won't
Beverage Association, a start until the first week of
trade group that represents May and compliance has
bar owners and other liquor been spotty in some parts
permit holders, filed its of the state. The law proown lawsuit in the same hibits smoking in most pubcourt seeking to throw out . lie places, including restau_the exemption but for dif- rants,. bars and offices. ·
ferent reasons - owners of
Exceptions include tobactraditional bars and taverns co shops, designated hotel
say it gives private clubs an rooms and enclosed areas
unfair competi~ive advan- of nursing homes.

15.50
· Rockwell (NYSE) - 59.65
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)-

60.41

35.13

11.85

Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.11
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -

Harley-Davidson ( NYSE) -

61.26

Royal Dutch Shell - 69.71
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -

37.46

JP Morgan (NYSE)-

189.61

BorgWamer (NYSE) -

52.07

74.88

Kroger (NYSE) ~ 29.40
Umlted Brands (NYSE)-

Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 47.97
Wendy's (NYSE) - 33.20
Worthington (NYSE) -

26.46

22.18

Century Aluminum (NAS.
DAQ) - 48.49 .
Champion (NASDAQ) -

·Local weather
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers
city/Region
in the morning ... Then a
.
.
High
I Low
slight chance of showers in
the afternoon. Highs in the
upper 50s. Northeast winds
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
- -~;!~ _,.,,,..,. ~
SO percent.
Toledo•
Thursday night...Mostly
.so· 1ae·
cloudy. A slight chance of
Youngatown• •
showers in the . evening.
53" 136"
Lows around 40. Northe·ast
winds 5 to I0 mph. Chance
of rain 20 percent.
Friday. ,.Mostly sunny.
Not as cool with highs in the
· upper 60s. Nor.th winds
around 5 mph.
Friday
night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 30s.
North winds around 5 mph.
Saturday Jtnd Saturday
night...Mostly clear. Highs
in the lower 70s. Lows in
the mid 40s.
Sunday ...Sunny. Highs in
the mid 70s.
Sunday
nlght...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
aoudy ~ Thunder·~ Flurries
50s.
Sf!lnns
.
'
\ \\
~onday
through
Partly
~ .
~
Showe~
Tuesday
nlght...Mostly
Rain
• *
Snow
cloudy with a chance of
Wednesday . .. Partly
showers and thund~storrns. in the mid 50s. Chance of
sunny. Highs in the mid 70~;.
Highs in the. mid 70s. Lows rain 30 percent.

Today'.s Forecast

6

Thursday, April19, 2007

================================================
Alexander rallies late to down Tornadoes, 8-7
LoCAL 8cHEDULE ·

POMEAC )Y- A·scfledule ol upcomng college
and high , ;chool varsity sporting 9\IMIS ~
teams !J01 ri Gollia and Meigs CQunties.

Todav's games

' Norfolk SOuthern (NYSE)- Dlllly stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
55.08
8.03
transactions for April 18, .
Charmlrig Shops (NASDAQ) Oak Hill Financial (NAS.
2007, provided by Edward
DAQ)- 24.40
-12.26
Jones financial advisors
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
City Holding (NASDAQ) Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(NASDAQ)- 25.26
40.09
(740) 441·9441 and Lesley
BBT (NYSE) - 41.05 .
Collins ( NYSE) - 65.51
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.53 Marrero In Point Pleasant
Dollar General ( NYSE) Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.92 · at (304) 674-0174.
21.27
Member SIPC.
Premier (NASDAQ) DuPont (NYSE) - 49.29

e:::,

)

PhotO!; rrom Eastern tri-med, Page B4

· US Bank (NYSE) - 34.40
(NYSE)- 58.31
General Electric ( NYSE) -

AEP (IIIYSE) - 4$.77
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 76.80 .
Ashland Inc: ( NYSE) -

'

Cavs (·linch two-seed in East, Page 83

\

0

c.........·

Prep Softball ,
_ Meigs 211 Wellston. 5 p.m
Trimble at Eastern, 5 p.m
Waterfc •rd at Southern •. 5 p.m.
Prep Baseball
Meigs 1 :l~ Well ston, 5 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern. 5 p.m.
Waterfc &gt;rd at' SOuthern, 5 p.m.
Friday's games
Prep Softball
Eastern at Nelsonville -York. 5 p.m.
Prep Baseball

Easte1 n at Nelsonville-York . 5 p.m.
Track and Fleld
Eastet· n at Parke rsburg Invite. 4:30
p.m.
Meigs at Oak Hill Invite, 4:30 p.m.

Saturday. April 21
Prep So~ball
Belpr e at Eastern (DH). noon

BY. ScoTT WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

pionship with a 17-3 overall
mark, an .850 winning percentage. Reportedl y in 1988.
ALBANY - On a pace to Coach Mick Winebrenner's
eclipse or equal the best club posted a 2 1-5 mark
winning percentage in : with a .810 winning percentSouthern
llistory,
the age.
Southern Tornadoes job got
The great start in·2007 fell
tougher after an 8-7 loss to to the Spartans, but a Trojan
Alexander Monday night at horse wasn't necessary.
Alexander High School.
Only determination and
Southern, .12-3, fell to the true grit allowed the host
host Sfartans after posting Spartans to pull off the win.
one o the best starts in
Southern took a 1-0 lead
Southern history. The best in the second inning and
winning percentage in SHS controlled the entire game
history came in 1977 when right down to the final
Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr.'s inning . .In 'that first inning
team won the SVAC cham- Butch Marnhout walked and

scored on a
b a s e s
loaded walk
to Jordan
Pierce, 1-0.
SHS went
up 5-0 in the
third when
Pat Johnson
singled,
R y a n
Hupp
C h ap ma n
singled,
Marnhout had an RBI single, Nick Buck walked, J.R:
Hupp had a two-run tielder's
choice advance, and Jordan
Pierce reached on an error to
score Hupp, S-0.

Meanwhile, Pat Johnson
masterfully sat down the
Spartans witho~t incident.
Southern added two runs
in the fourth for Coach Ryan
Lemley's club, who now
weighs in with a 12-3
record. A big game with
Waterford is coming up
Thursday along with for all
practicality the league championship twinbill Monday.
against Federal Hocking.
Alexander scored four
runs in the fifth inning, but
still trailed 7-4 going into
the final'inning. Johnson had
Please see Rally. BJ

T'VC STANl&gt;INGS

Please see Meet. BJ

Please see Meip. B1

SOFTBALL
Ohio .Division
WellstOJI ·
· 6-0
5-l'
Belprti
Alexander
3-3
Meigs
3-3
Vinton Co
1-5
Nels-York
0-6 ,

:c." .•., ~-J, , ,.:,

Southern
Eastern ,
Miller

3-3 ·
3-3 ·
2-3
0-6

sp·artans

,.
~hu:ut M;i;~"J;~; ';d~;is;;.~tri:;;t~i"Eastern
ou ern

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs teammates Meghan Cle!lanQ, far left, and Catie Wolfe make a baton exchange just after the Eastern duo of Lauren

BY BRYAN WALTERS .
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.coM

their second crown this
spring by winning nine of 16
BY SCOTT WOLFE
competitions,
resulting in a,
SPORTSCORRESPONDENT
TUPPERS PLAINS ·- team score of 77.5 points.
Meigs track and field made The Maroon and Gold just
ALBANY
The it a · clean sweep at the edged out runner-up Eastern
Spartans
Alexander
tri-meet Tuesday, , (71.5) by six points, while
trumped Eastern
posting wins in both · the the Lady Rebels were a dist
h
e
and girls· competitions tant third with just nine
Southern boys
against
the host Eagles and markers.
L a d y
South
Gallia,
South Gallia's Steven Call
Tornadoe s
The
Marauders
won
their
and
Adrian Bolin of Meigs
in a 10-0
tirst
boys'
title
of
2007,
postwere
the top-point scorers,
mercy-rule
ing
a
team
score
of
63
points
managing
respective numg a m e
after
winning
eight
of
the
16
bers
of
18
and
11.25 points
Wednesday
events.
MHS
held
off
runfor
their
teams.
.
at
night
ner-up
Eastern
(56)
by
seven
Call
won
the
long
jump,
AleKander
points, while the third-place 400-meter dash a_nd 3200m
Wolfe-Riffle . H i g h Rebels ended the day with run, ~s well as fimsh10g secSchool dur·
ond 10 the h1gh JUmp. Bohn
ing a Tri-Valley Conference 27 points.
The
.
Lady
Marauders,
on
won both hurdle events and
Interdivisional
make-up
the
other
hand,
captured
was also pprt of the winning
game orjginally scheduled
as a double-header on April
7.
.
Southern 's offense found
itself handcuffed most of
the night in the . I0-0 shellacking. Alexilnder lifts its
record to S-6 overall and 33 in the Ohio Division,
while Southern falls to 5-9,
3-3 . ..
· Shelley Williams was the
culprit · in
much of
Southern's offensive woes
as the Alexander hurler
Please see Shutout. Bl

.,

CoNTACfUS
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 o.m.)

1-740.446-2342 ext. 33
Ftx-1 ·740-446-3008
. E-mail -

sports @mydailysentinel.com

SI!OL!&amp;Jita!! .

.

-1

I

•

· • Pomeroy, Otl

~nt~tn.-Fr:t. 8~;
·9-4;.Sun. 12;-4 WWW•markporterJPII.CORI
*All.,.,....,.. MmonUta with tu, title. Dock'- dOwn wllh .......,.,. credit.
7.811xed ..... All ....... to diller. S.le . . . Aprtl30, 2007.

'

Brad Sherma 0, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
bsherman@myda~lytribu n e.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23
lcrumOmydailyregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
bwattarsOmydailytribune.com

vanquish
Meigs, 11-3

Owen - brought home . a
pair of first-place finishe.s.
McGrath captured gold 111
both the h1gh jump and
200m dash~ while Ow_en was
an easy wmner tn both t~e
800m and 1600m runs.
Owen ~id not compete in the
two-mtle event.
In the girls' competition,
the Lady Marauders had a
trio of participants capture
·multiple crowns in Bolin,
Meljssa Gnieser and· Kimi
Swisher. Grueser swept the
shot put and discus titles,
while Swisher won both the
mile and 2-mile races.
Devan Soulsby captured
gold m the 400m dash, and

Hocking Division
Southern
5-0
Fed Hock
3-1
Eastern
3-2
Waterl'ord
3-;2
Miller
1-5
0-5
Trimble

fed Hock

K~ights

ROCK SPRINGS
Point PleaSant broke out the
proverbial whooping sticks
Wednesday, poundmg out
four home
runs during
a comfortable 11-3
victory
over host
Meigs.
The Lady
Knights
(14-2)
received a
pair of long
balls from
sophomore Anna Sommer
- including a grand slam in
the second - while classmates Tessa Wyant and
Devin Cottrill each went ·
yard once in the eight -run
triumph.
PPHS went up 2-0 in the
second after back-to-back
lead-off walks to Wyant and
Alyssa Darst turned into
scores
after
Jennifer
Wickline delivered a basesclearing double. E·mily
. Jones followed with a single, then Cottrill walked to
load the bases with two
outs.
Sommer drove a 1-1 pitch
over the left-center field · ·
wall , giving the Black, Red
and White a six-run edge
after two complete frames:.
The visitors increased that
lead to eight in the tifth following Wyant's two-tun
homer with one out. Tasha
Wyant also .scored on the
long lly after reaching safely on a fielder's choice. "
The Lady Marauders ( r5) finally got on the board in
the bottom of the fifth when
a lead-off walk to Amy Barr
turned to fruit ion after
Talisha Beha reached safely
on an·error. Barr scored on
the miscue , cutting the
deticit to 8-1 after five full
mnmgs.
Point quickly retaliated in
the sixth, .responding · with
three runs for an Il-l
advantage. Megan Hatfield
led off the inning by striking
out, but · a dropped third
strike allowed her to reach
safely.
Two baners later, Cottrill ·
delivered a two-run homer

• Ohio Djvision
· Al~xander ·
. 5-1
3,1
· W~llston
Meigs
4-2
2-3
Belpre
2-3
Vinton Co
0-6 '·
. Nels-York

·T.r.•mbJ~

Lady

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAlfERS@MYOAilYTRIBUNE.COM

BASEBALL

. Hocking Division
W~teFfo~ · , 4;0 ' ,. ~

•

Bl

4x200 squad.
MHS won three of the
four relay events on the
boys' side, capturing gold in
the 4x I00, 4x200 and
4x400. The Eagles, who
won five overall events, .won
the other boys' relay title in
the 4xll00.
Seniors Brad Soulsby and
Casey Richardson won first
in the shot put and discus for
the Marauders, respectively,
while
classmate
Brad
Ramsburg won a pair of
golds in the hurdle events.
Junior Brandan Fisher
ro~nded out the first-pl'!ce
ti~ushers for MHS w1th a
wm 10 the lOOm dash.
A pair of Eagle seniors Alex McGrath and Michael

Lady Falcons blast Hannan, 37-2
BY LARRY CRUM .
·LCRUM@MYOAILYREGISTER .COM

ASHTON, W.Va. - Kylie
Riggs went 4-for-4 and
Wahama combined for 12
hits to help pace- the Lady
Falcons in their win over
Hannan.
And that was just in the
tirst inring:
All told, Wahama had 22
hits and four home runs,
while ·Hannan · strug'gled
with nearly two dozen errors
as the Lady Falcons rolled
over their Mason County foe
37-2 . in three innings
Wednesday night in Ashton.
· The win moves Wahama
to 11 -3, while. Hannan falls
. to 1-6 on the year.
Clearly, the power house
Lady Falcons were too
much from the get-go as
Wahama started a nunlber of
its junior varsity players, but
Larry Crum/photo still had little trouble movWahama's Raelynn .Grimm hits for a single during the sec- ing around the bases as the
ond inning of a high school softball game against Hannan Hannan team, only in its
second year of existence,
Wednesday in Ashton. Wahama won .the contest 37-2.

·s i m p I y give Hannan two run s
could not scored before being replaced
proper I y after only six batters faced.
field . the ·· Brooke Gabritsch came in
ball
and and got the job done, finish made too ing · out the final three
many mis- · innings with no hits given up
takes to be and no runs scored to get the
competi ~ wm.
tive.
In fact. oAce Gabritsch
Wah am a came in Hannan only got on
Riggs
scored 25 base twice more in the conruns in the test, both ·times unable to
first inning alone, thanks to score.
Riggs who had a home run,
Wahama. on the other
four hits and three runs hand, kept up the hit parade.
scored in the opening frame
The Lady. Falcons added
alone. Chelsea Fowler had a four run s in the second
pair of do11bles in the first inning, as Fowler and
mning and Airael Deritield Sabrina Estep added . backalso added a home run and a to-back home runs ·to lead
single to help tally the 25 off the jnning, and Wahama
run lead. ·
.
scored eight more in the
Riggs was also slated to third to tally the 37:2 victostart the contest, but with the ·ry.
lead comfortably in hand,
There was a number of
Beth Rollins got the start in strange occurrences during
the pitching circle. Rollins, the contest, inclul'ling three
·in . her ftrst varsity outinJ!. collisions where Wahama
walke~ two batters and htt
.., ___._ see Wallalll.. Bl
another three with pitches to ~

�'·

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Aprilt•tJ,

Wahama .Bask~tball . stars at the reins of the football Bucke:~ves
from PageBl
base runners mowed over
the Hannan first and third
basemen and two Lady 'Cat
' players running to catch a
fly ball who collided, resulting. in both having to leave
the game.
The sophomore Hannan
program still has a long way
to go, as nearly two dozen
errors allowed Wahama to
score a majority of its runs.
Riggs provided a big portion of the offcnsi ve power,
going 5-for-5 with four runs
scored, Fowler went 4-for-6
with a home run, two doubles
and five runs scored. Raelynn
Grimm went 3-for-3 with a
triple and five runs scored,
Derifield went 3-for-3 with a
home run and four .runs
scored. Estep had a home run,
a triple and five runs scored
and Rollins and Gabritsch
had a pair of hits each.
Hannan did not have any
hits, but Brittany Edmonds
and Tabby Payne did provide
the only offense when they
scored runs. Edmonds also
got the start on the ·mound,
going midway through the
first. m the loss before giving
up pitching duties to Summer
Stover who finished out the
contest.
Wahama returns to action
against' South Gallia (2-6)
later today, while Hannan .
returns to action ;Uso against
South Gallia on Friday. .

COLUMBUS (AP) Talk about having a possible
lame-duck coach.
Basketball ·· point guard
Mike Conley Jr. will be an
honorary head coach in
Ohio
State 's
annual
intrasquad Scarlet vs. Gray
spring football game on
Saturday.
Conley, along with high
school classmate and friend
Greg Oden, Jed the
Buckeyes to a 35-4 record
and the national championship game. Now he, Oden
and a third fre shman ,
Daequan Cook, are contemplating jumping to the NBA .
Conley ·said he was looking forward to being in
charge &lt;Jf the Scarlet's
,{lffense.
"I play my share of video
games," he said Wednesday.
"I like to get up and down
the field with the passing
game. I'll mix in some run
plays here ami there as
well ."

Football
coach Jim will be the head coach of the ing film, getting 'ready for
At Wednesday's draft, a
Tressel'said he wasn't trying. Gray team, with help from the draft."
degree of trash talking was·
to hide the fact that he want- Ivan Harri s, David Lighty,
None were at the actual not only perm ttl ed blit
ed to keep Conley and the Danny Peters and Mim draft, but they'll play major encouraged.
.
roles on Saturday.
After the football coaches
other freshmen at Ohio · Terwilliger.
State.
"This is going to be a
"They're going to give the divided up the vete1·a n play" I certainly want them great experience being halftime talks and they 're ers, offensive tacl; le Kirk
around here. If we have to down on the field at the going to talk to the guys Barton .and severa I others
put them on the staff to do 'S hoe coaching the football when they're off the field ," drafted players to mund out
that, then we'll do it," he players," said Butler, who Tressel said.
the Scarlet squad.
·
said with a grin.
wi ll be a senior. "I've
Asked if he was taking the
Later, Barton was so
The 7-foot Oden was also played football but never day off, Tressel smiled and pleased with the pi ayers h·e
offered a chance to coach, coached - but I'm stil l s;~id, "Absolutely."
picked that he saiGI one qf
but had to turn down the going to out-coach Mike."
Each year the football the Scarlet quarterbacks
opportunity to be the tallest . They' ll actually call the coaching st.aff tries to make wouldn ' t have tp pll ay h~rd
college coach in the country. plays, off , a list given to the . spring game - which in the fourth quarter becau~e .
"Oden is in the tank them by the football coach- concludes 15 humdrum he'd be taking a k!nec to prebecause his aunt is getting es.
.
practice sessions- as much serve a lopsided win .
married," Tressel told his
Tressel first proposed the fun as possible for the playBrandon Smith, a tight
team as they drafted players coaching jobs soon after the ers. To keep interest high, end ·and fullbac k, was in
on Wednesday afternoon for " basketball team returned they run quirky plays that charge of the Gray's picks.
the scrimmage. "He's from an 84-75 loss to will never see the light of
Goaded into predicting
already started watching Florida in the national title . day during the season.
victory, he eve ntual! y said.
film ; but he can 't be here ." ga me in Atlanta on April 2.
"I am going to have to "We ' re go ing to win ... .
Conley will be assisted Basketball .coach Thad think about some trick We' ve got a great d·efense.
with the Scarlet sq uad by Malia checked with the plays," Conley said. "I don 't We should be ab le l' o hold
hoops teammates Cook, players and sent a text-mes- have anything in mind right them to just a handlful of
Mark Titus, Othello Hunter sage .to Tressel !0 minutes now but I'll have to work on . points and hopefully domi and Kyle Madsen. Jamar later: "The guys are ready something for the week- nate and ring up the scoreButler. also a starting guard, and they're already watch- end."
· board on them."

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Summer Stover (1 ) end Allsha Leonerd.
• WP -

Gabritsch. LP- Edmonds. HR:

PP -

Kylie Riggs {first lnrilng, nobody

(']anti.Ly.

on , nobody out), Airael Deritield (first

Inning, three on, two outs), Chelsea
Fowler (seco.nd inning, nobody on.
nobody out), Sabrina Estep (second
inning, nobody on, nobody out)

6 ' MEDIC.AL

70

Pine Street • Gallipolis

740-446·0007

.Meigs .

,{

'·
I
I

.I

over the left field wall for a
10-1 edge, then Sommer
followed with her second
homer to give the guest
back-to-hack shots and a
I 0-run lead.
The Maroon and Gold
answered with two runs in
their half of the sixth when
Lian Hoffman led off the
inning with a walk. Cassi
Whan delivered a single
that scored Hoffman for an
II -2 score, then Whan later
came around on a sacrifice
fly by Amber Burtpn.
Tessa Wyant worked four
innings in the circle for
PPHS, allowing just one hit
and one walk during her
start. Wyant also struck out
five in the winning decision. Cottrill worked the
final three innings of relief,
surrendering two hits, two
walks and three earned
runs.
Sommer and Wickline led
the Lady Kights with two
hits apiece, followed by
Cottrill, Tessa Wyant, Darst
an(! •Jones with a safety
apiece. Sommer had five
RB!s and also scored twice,
as did Cottrill and Tessa
Wyant.
Cottrill's homer was her
sixth of the season, tying a
school record set by Amber
. Rainey in 2004.
The Lady Marauders used
three hurlers in the setback.
Hailey Ebersbach · started
and lasted four innings,
allowing six earned runs,
three hits and four walks in
the losing decision.
Whan took over in the
fifth and allowed four ·
earned runs, three hits and
two walks in her two frames
in the circle. All three hits
allowed were home runs.
Barr worked relief in the
seventh, allowing two hits
and two walks.
Whan, Nikki Ginther and
Whitney Smith had the lone
hits for Meigs.
Point Pleasant returns to
action today when it hosts
Poca. Meigs travels to
Wellston for a Tri- Valley
Conference Ohio Division
matchup with the leagueleading Lady Rockets. Both
game · times are scheduled
for 5 p.m.
.
· PT PLEASANT 11, IIEIGS 3
Polnl
0110 023 o - 11 8 1
Meigs
000 012 0 331
PPHS (14-2): Tessa Wyant, Davin
Cottrill (5) and Alyssa Darot
MHS (7·5): Hailey Ebarsbach, Cassl
Whan (5), Amy Barr (7) and Shanal"
Smilh, Talisha Betja (6)
WP- Wyant; LP - Ebarobach
HR: PP. - Anna Sommer (second
Inning, grand slam, rwo out) ; T8188
Wyant (fifth inning, one on, one out):
Devin COnrill {Sixtn lnhlng,. one on, ona
out); Sommer (olxthlnnjng, nobody on,

•

••

~

-

•

•

•

•

••

#

•

$TAFF REPORT

MASON,
W.Va.
Richard Mahe of Point
Pleasant is the leader of the
Riverside Senior Men's Golf
League through three weeks
ofplay.
.
Mabe has scored 40.5
points to lead Curtis Grubb
of Gallipolis by four p&lt;)ints.
Holding onto third place with
-35.5 points is Jack Maloney.
Rounding out the top 10
players is Charlie Hargraves
(35), Willis Ko,rb (32), Mick
Winebrenner {30.5), Bob

Oliver (30.5 ), Chet Thomas
(28.5), Gary Drenner (28.5)
and Harley Rice (28.5).
A total of 62 players
formed 14 teams of four
players and two three man
teams to make 17 points possible for the winners of
Tuesday's play. The winning
. score of 63 was shot by the
team of Richard Mabe,
Bucky Dent, Bob Hysell aqd
Jack Maloney. .
There was a three way tie
fot second with scores of 65
between the teams of Garb
Drenner, Curtis Grubb,
Dickie Dugan and Tom

•

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Gallipolis, OH

rwf/ lr~rafimu ;

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·
Mason, WV

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Open Mon.- Thurs. 8:30-5pm

(740) 446-7619

~
CI'I'IES
INSUIIANCE.u.c

Shutout
from Page Bl
pitched a great game for the
win. She struck out two and
walked one in the win.
Sarah Eddy with relief
from Kasey Turley suffered the loss. Together
they. fanned four and
walked twelve.
- Alexander scored all it
needed ·in the first when

, Agent

(304)675·7036
(31M) 675-7036
rt ..n:t11e!ins@suddenUnlaull.eem
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An lnol&lt;.......ol A1&lt;ncy

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GIRLS

TEAM RESULTS - 1. M'oigs'77.5; 2. Eastern 71 .5; Soulh
GaiHa 9
•.
.
$HOT PUT - 1, .Mel.lssa a,ueser (M) 29-3; 2. Savanna
.Hadleld (SG) 27-7.5:3: Haley·Perdas,(E1·26·7: 4. AshleyGood (M) 26-4; 5. Whitney Putnam (S) 25·6
. ..
DISCUS - t. Melissa GI\Jesar,(M) 6e-9: 2. tjillly Perdaa
(E) 79:3; 3. Valentyna Ryazanlseva (E) 77-2; 4. Whitney
Putnam (E) 73-11; 5. Savanna Hadield (SG) 70-4
,
HIGH JUMP- 1 . Morgan Burt'(E) 4·2; 2.. Jessica Holliday
(~) 4-0
•
. .
.
LONG JUMP- 1. Audrianna Pullins (E) ts-7; 2. Casey
Sm"h (M) t2-9; ' 3. Morgan Burl (E) 12-8; 4. Sarah
Martindale (E) 11 -11; 5.'Sarah White (SG) 11-7
4•600-METER RELAY - ·1. Easlern (Erin Weber, Alyssa
Newland, Sarah !.1artlndals and Belh Hysell) 11:13.91 ; 2.
Mei~$ 11 :43.14
tOO-METER HURDLES - 1 Adrian Bolin (M) 17.12; 2.
-casey .Sm"h (M) 18.38; 3. Breanna Hemsley (M) 19.82; 4.
Jackie Burris (SG) 26.56
,
too-METER DASH- 1. lauren Cummings (E) 13.61; 2.
Catie Walla (M) 13.84; 3. Emily Fields (M) 14.06: 4. Morgan
Werry (E) t4.35; 5. Patti Vining (M) 14.47
4x200-METER RELAY - 1. Meigs (Adrian Bolin, Emily
Fielde, Morgen Lantos and Meghan Clelland) 2:00.06; 2.
Eastern 2:02. 16; 3. South Gellis 2:12.59
t6QO-METER RUN - 1. Klmi Swisher (M) 6:04; 2. Both
HyseH· (E) 6:08; '3. Sarah Martindale (E) 6:52: 4. Nakila ·
fltzpalrick (SG) 7:57
4X10Q-METER RELAY ~ 1. Meigs (Patti VIning, Emily
Fields; Meg~an c;lelland and CaHo'Woffe) 55.65; 2. Eastern
56.80: 3. South Gallla 1:02.06
400-METER DASH - ' 1. Oovan Soulsby (M) 1:05.1t : 2.
Erin We~r. (E) 1:07.75; 3. Alyssa Nowland (E) 1:10.21: 4.
Audr'iannaPumno (E) 1:12.0; Halley.Williams (M) 1:14.75
300-ME:rEA HURDLES- 1.'Adrlan Bolin tM) 52.03; 2.
Katki tfayman (E) 54.27; 3. Casey Smllh (M) 57.29; 4.
Sara~ White (SG) 1:00.07 .
'·
'·soo-t,tEtER RUN - 1. Beth Hysell (E) 2:62; 2. Jessica
Holliday (M) 2:55; 3. Sarah Martindale (E) 3:04; 4. Hailey
Williams (M) 3:09; 5. Nakita Fltipatrlck (SG) '3:35
20Q-METER DASH - t . llecca Owen (E) 28.60; 2. Lauren .
.Cummlngs-(E) 28.54: 3. Calle Wo~e (MJ 29.05; 4, Devan
Soulaby '(M) 29.38; 5. t.jeghan Clelland (M) 29.65
3200-METER RUN - 1. Klmi · Swisher' (M) 13:09. 7; 2.
.X400-METER
RELAY
- 1. Easlem (Erin Weber, Lauren
Nel&lt;ite Fllzpatri&lt;:k
(SG) .16:58.(
Cummings, ~atie Hayman and llecca Owen) 4:32.1; 2.
148~ (A) 4:36.2; 3. Moigo (B) 5:06.9

ALEXANDER 8, SOUTHERN 7
·southem 014 200 o - 7 9 3
Alexander 000 040 4 - B 7 1
WP - ·Thomas . LP- Chapman .

I

215 Slxlh SL Pt. l'ttaSUit, WV

Re re5enll

,i

the Alex start with two
fanned batters and five
walks, while Thomas 'posted the win with two K's
and three walks.
Southern hosts Waterford
Thursday. Game time is
scheduled for 5 p.m.

. Erie

Debra K.

•

Rally

\1{1\(,

B. Chat Thomas, Gary Drenner and
Harley Rice 28.5: 11 . (tie) Ed Coon, Jim
Cunningham and Joe Long 27.5, t14.
Tom McNeely and Earl Johnson 27

Cory Bean) and a walk
combine with an error, a hit
batter and a game winning
one-run single by John
from PageBl
Dibenedette produced the 87 AleK win.
seen enough despite a 1-2-3
Johnson fanned seven
inning in the Alexander and walked five but was
sixth. Ryan Chapman carne
on in relief, but after an not involved in the deci-·
eight inning outing Tuesday ·. sion, while Chapman (no
was not in superior form. K' s and two walks) played
1\vo singles (R.T. Thomas, into the Joss. Hedrick got

the Maroon and Gold also
won titles in the 4x I 00 and
4x200 relays.

con •

Hargraves 35 ; 5. Willis Korb 32; 6. (tie)
Mick Winebrenner and· Bob Oliver 30 .5;

tive victories in the 200m
and Iporn dashes. Morgan
Burt won the high jump and
Audrianna Pullins claimed
the lmigjump crown.
The Lady Rebels did not
win a title in the girls
competition.

from PageBl
Another satisfied

1. Richard Mabe 40.5; 2. Curtis Grubb

36.5: .3. Jack M~loney 35.5, 4. Charne

The Lady Eagles won the
other seven events held ,
including a pair of relays in
the 4x400 and 4x800.
Beth - Hysell won the
800m 'ru n, while Becca
Owen
and
Lauren
Cummings posted .respec-

~Uque &amp; era~ .Mall.
·, ·~'

seniOr League Standings
Aher three weeks

s.

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'fisher, the team of B.ob
Oliver, Ralph Sayre, Earl
Johnson and Pat Williamson
and the team of Chari ie
Hargraves, Harvey Blain and
Harley Rice.
·
The closest to the piJJ winners were Curtis Grubb on
hole No. 7 and 'Ralph Sayre
on hole No. 14.

meet results

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(7401446·1711

against any team, and delivered again even though he
was in a deep slump, batting
only .184.
Sampson gave up five hits
in seven innings, including
solo homers by Brandon
Phillips and Josh Hamilton.
The 25-year-old Hamilton
has been so sensational during his comeback from drug
addiction that manager Jerry
Narron reconfigured his
lineup this week to keep
Hamilton on the field.
Hamilton's homer was his
fourth in only 24 at-bats, the
Ia.test sign that the former
No. I overall draft pick is
rounding into form after
more than three years away
from the game.
Phillips didn 't dally on his
homer, which barely cleared
the wall in front of the Reds'
bullpen in center field. A
night earlier, he prematurely
broke into a home run trot on
·a fly that hit the wall, drawing a comment from Narron.

Erie lllftra.ce

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Jill Howard reached on an
error and scored on an RBI
· single by Lacey Shaulis, l0. Alexander scored two
runs in the third on three
walks, 'an error, and two
passed balls, 3-0, then
· after a one run fourth
scored · four in the fifth
innin~ to break open the
gam~
·
· _: Af ,' \ ctred two 1~· ~he
stxth -to seal the wm.
Soutlrern was led by
. Whitney Wolfe-Riffle with
two singles, Stephanie

Cundiff had a double, and .
Chelsea Pape singled in a
four-hit Southern game.
Alexander hitters were
Lacey Shaulis, Shelby
Williams and Jill Howard.
Southern was stricken
with six errors defensively.
Southern
Waterford Thurs&lt;;lay at
Star Mill Park in Racine.
ALEXAptDER 10, SOUlliERN D.
SoutMm
000 000 0 46
Alexander

102 142 -

WP- Williams. LP '-

Eddy.

104 2

·

CLEVELAND (AP) The wait was worth it for
the Clevelanll Cavaliers .
Was it ever.
In a Iittle more than an·
hour, they jumped three
playoff spots and somehow
dodged the Miami Heat.
LeBron James scored 24
points and capped a decisive run to open th e fourth
quarter with one of hi s
powerhouse dunks , giving
Cleve land a 109-96 win
over the Milwaukee Bucks
in its regular-season finale
wd d
on e nes ay night.
Following the game, the
Cavaliers _ and several
thousand fan s - stayed
around to watch New
Jersey beat Chicago, giving Cleveland the No . .2
seed in the NBA playoffs.
If that wasn ' t enough , the
Cavaliers were furth er .
rewarded
when
Washington clinched the
No. ?spot.
.
So instead of being the
No. 5 seed and an underdog in ~ound I vs. the
defending NBA champions, the Cavaliers wi ll be
AP photo
favored over the injuryCleveland
Cavaliers'
LeBron
James
(23)
shoots
over
depleted Wizards, who are
missing stars Gilbert Milwaukee Bucks' David Noel (34) and Damir Markota (52),
of Croatia, during the second quarter of an NBA basketball
Arenas and Caron Butler.
Talk
about
luck y game Wednesday ill Cleveland.
bounces.
because those guys in a playoffs and we accom"I don ' t care if we play second season can rise to plished that and now it's
this team or that team," th e occasion and you never all about trying to win a
Cavs. coach Mike Brown know what could happen championship.''
said . "To me they are all this time of year. We have
Unlike many of the play- ·
dangerous at this time of to go into this series know- off-bound teams,
the
the year.':
ing we must defend first Cavaliers couldn't afford
The Cavaliers (50-32), and contin ue to · do the to rest any of their starters
who finished the regular things that got us to the with so much on the line.
season with four straight second seed."
For a while, it looked like
wins, pulled away from the
Sasha Pavlovic scored they forgot what they were
Buch by outscoring them
points,
Donyell playing for.
12-3 to open the final peri~ 21
Marshall 14 and Anderson
After blowing most of a
od.
Varejao
had
12
rebounds
16-point
lead,
the ·
How.ever, · they left the
for
the
Cavs,
who
crushed
Cavaliers
opened
the
third
confetti-littered floor of
Quicken. · Loims J\rena not the undermanned Buck s quart~r with an 18-7 blitz
to lead 72-60. The aucks,
knowing who their next 53-30 on the boards.
Earl Boykins scored 28 though, wouldn't go away
opponent
would ·· be.
and
Ruben Patterson 19 to and reeled off their own
During postgame interlead
Milwaukee, which · 12-2 spurt to get within
views, James and Co. kept
made
the
playoffs last sea- 74-72 on Boykins' 3-pointone eye on the TV screens
son
but
had
a promising er.
in Cleveland's locker
2006-07 season sabotaged
Leading py seven enterroom .
by
injuries.
ing
the fourth , the Cavs
James , who has said .for
just
couldn'
t
find
a
scored
the first nine points
"We
two weeks that .he didn't
lineup,"
said
of
the
period.
James ended
cons
istent
Cleveland
care
who
played, sure seemed to .be coach Larry Krystkowiak, the run by making a steal
"and when you thought it · near midcourt and blasting
pulling for the Nets. ·
couldn't
get worse, it actu- to the rim for a windmill
"You can't Jet Ben
ally
did
. get worse. It 's dunk.
Walll!Ce get a layup! "
Down by 14 and in danhollered James, who · then been very crazy."
cheered when Nets for- . James finished the reg u- ger of being blown out, the
ward Bostjan Nachbar Jar season averaging 27.3 Bucks oufscored the Cavs
knocked down a 3-pointer poin ts, 6.7 rebounds and 21 -8 ove r a six- minute
from the corner to put New 6.0 assists. He and Hall of stretch of the seco nd periFarner Oscar Robertson are od, taking a 47-46 lead on
Jersey up by I0.
The
Cavaliers
and the only players in league . two free throws by . David
Wizards played a memo- history to average at least Noel.
rable first-round series. last 27-6-6 for three straight · With Brown standing
with his hands on his hips
. year, with Cle ve land. win- years.
And for the second year in front of Cleveland's
ning
in six games.
Cleveland went 2- 1 against in a row, the 22-year-old bench wondering what his
Washington this season, and hi s teammates are on team was doing , James
· but Brown knows the post- their way to the postsea- responded by scoring six
season is entire ly different. son.
quick points and t.hen fed
"We have to respect
'This year, we kind of Varejao for a dunk to give
them," he said. "Thi s could expected it," James said. the Cavs a 54-51 halftime
be a dangerous team "We expected to go to the lead.

Mabe leads Riverside Senior League·

Great gas mileage

'.

'

key role in a pair of losses.
It was a rousing start to an
unusual trip for the Astros
-nine games in four cities.
They play two in Cincinnati ,
three in Milwaukee , one in
Philadelphia and three in
Pittsburgh, a good early test
for a team that was 38-43 on
the road last season.
Until the late meltdown.
the Reds were in position for
another win behind starter
Aaron Harang, who beat the
Astros in all four of his starts
last season and was ahead 2I when he left the game after
the sixth.
Carlos Lee drove in the
only run off Harang with a
groundout in the sixth
inning, the outfielder's 17th
RBI.in 13 games. Lel; was 0for-2 with a pair of walks,
ending his six-game hitting
streak.
Although the Reds kept
Lee in check, they co uldn ' t
stop Berkman from getting
another game-turning hit.

~

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•

completing a rally that lifted
the Houston Astros to a 7-2
vjctory over the Cincinnati
Reds on Wednesday night.
Down 2-1, the Astros
scored five times in the
eighth against a bullpen that
·hadn't suuendered a lead so
late.
Not surprisingly, Lance
Berkman was a big part of
the Astros' comeback for
their sixth victory in seven
games. Berkman, who has
had some of his biggest
games against the Reds, singled home the tying run with
two outs off Todd Coffey (1I) .
Af
· h h'
ter pmc - Itter Mark
Loretta gave Houston a 3-2
lead with a single off Rhea!
· Lane h'It the leftCorm,ter,
hander's first pitch into th!!
seats in left field for his third
homer.
. The rally started when
Coffey
hit
Orlando
llalmeiro, who was pitlchhitting for starter Chris

·-

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 83 ·

Sam~son (2-0). Coffey has· Berkman has 35 career

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CINCINNATI (AP) -

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one out)

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fromPageBl

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www.mydailysentinel.com .

Houston.blasts Cincinnati, 7-2· Cavs
clinch second seed in
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SPORT~MYDAI LYSENTINE L.COM

WAHAMA 37, HANNAN 2
Wahama (25)48 37 22 0
Hannan
200
2 o 20
Beth Rollins, Brooke Gabrltsch (1) and
Amber Tully. Brittany Edmonds.

.I

Thursday, ApriltC), 2007

2007

�'·

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Aprilt•tJ,

Wahama .Bask~tball . stars at the reins of the football Bucke:~ves
from PageBl
base runners mowed over
the Hannan first and third
basemen and two Lady 'Cat
' players running to catch a
fly ball who collided, resulting. in both having to leave
the game.
The sophomore Hannan
program still has a long way
to go, as nearly two dozen
errors allowed Wahama to
score a majority of its runs.
Riggs provided a big portion of the offcnsi ve power,
going 5-for-5 with four runs
scored, Fowler went 4-for-6
with a home run, two doubles
and five runs scored. Raelynn
Grimm went 3-for-3 with a
triple and five runs scored,
Derifield went 3-for-3 with a
home run and four .runs
scored. Estep had a home run,
a triple and five runs scored
and Rollins and Gabritsch
had a pair of hits each.
Hannan did not have any
hits, but Brittany Edmonds
and Tabby Payne did provide
the only offense when they
scored runs. Edmonds also
got the start on the ·mound,
going midway through the
first. m the loss before giving
up pitching duties to Summer
Stover who finished out the
contest.
Wahama returns to action
against' South Gallia (2-6)
later today, while Hannan .
returns to action ;Uso against
South Gallia on Friday. .

COLUMBUS (AP) Talk about having a possible
lame-duck coach.
Basketball ·· point guard
Mike Conley Jr. will be an
honorary head coach in
Ohio
State 's
annual
intrasquad Scarlet vs. Gray
spring football game on
Saturday.
Conley, along with high
school classmate and friend
Greg Oden, Jed the
Buckeyes to a 35-4 record
and the national championship game. Now he, Oden
and a third fre shman ,
Daequan Cook, are contemplating jumping to the NBA .
Conley ·said he was looking forward to being in
charge &lt;Jf the Scarlet's
,{lffense.
"I play my share of video
games," he said Wednesday.
"I like to get up and down
the field with the passing
game. I'll mix in some run
plays here ami there as
well ."

Football
coach Jim will be the head coach of the ing film, getting 'ready for
At Wednesday's draft, a
Tressel'said he wasn't trying. Gray team, with help from the draft."
degree of trash talking was·
to hide the fact that he want- Ivan Harri s, David Lighty,
None were at the actual not only perm ttl ed blit
ed to keep Conley and the Danny Peters and Mim draft, but they'll play major encouraged.
.
roles on Saturday.
After the football coaches
other freshmen at Ohio · Terwilliger.
State.
"This is going to be a
"They're going to give the divided up the vete1·a n play" I certainly want them great experience being halftime talks and they 're ers, offensive tacl; le Kirk
around here. If we have to down on the field at the going to talk to the guys Barton .and severa I others
put them on the staff to do 'S hoe coaching the football when they're off the field ," drafted players to mund out
that, then we'll do it," he players," said Butler, who Tressel said.
the Scarlet squad.
·
said with a grin.
wi ll be a senior. "I've
Asked if he was taking the
Later, Barton was so
The 7-foot Oden was also played football but never day off, Tressel smiled and pleased with the pi ayers h·e
offered a chance to coach, coached - but I'm stil l s;~id, "Absolutely."
picked that he saiGI one qf
but had to turn down the going to out-coach Mike."
Each year the football the Scarlet quarterbacks
opportunity to be the tallest . They' ll actually call the coaching st.aff tries to make wouldn ' t have tp pll ay h~rd
college coach in the country. plays, off , a list given to the . spring game - which in the fourth quarter becau~e .
"Oden is in the tank them by the football coach- concludes 15 humdrum he'd be taking a k!nec to prebecause his aunt is getting es.
.
practice sessions- as much serve a lopsided win .
married," Tressel told his
Tressel first proposed the fun as possible for the playBrandon Smith, a tight
team as they drafted players coaching jobs soon after the ers. To keep interest high, end ·and fullbac k, was in
on Wednesday afternoon for " basketball team returned they run quirky plays that charge of the Gray's picks.
the scrimmage. "He's from an 84-75 loss to will never see the light of
Goaded into predicting
already started watching Florida in the national title . day during the season.
victory, he eve ntual! y said.
film ; but he can 't be here ." ga me in Atlanta on April 2.
"I am going to have to "We ' re go ing to win ... .
Conley will be assisted Basketball .coach Thad think about some trick We' ve got a great d·efense.
with the Scarlet sq uad by Malia checked with the plays," Conley said. "I don 't We should be ab le l' o hold
hoops teammates Cook, players and sent a text-mes- have anything in mind right them to just a handlful of
Mark Titus, Othello Hunter sage .to Tressel !0 minutes now but I'll have to work on . points and hopefully domi and Kyle Madsen. Jamar later: "The guys are ready something for the week- nate and ring up the scoreButler. also a starting guard, and they're already watch- end."
· board on them."

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Summer Stover (1 ) end Allsha Leonerd.
• WP -

Gabritsch. LP- Edmonds. HR:

PP -

Kylie Riggs {first lnrilng, nobody

(']anti.Ly.

on , nobody out), Airael Deritield (first

Inning, three on, two outs), Chelsea
Fowler (seco.nd inning, nobody on.
nobody out), Sabrina Estep (second
inning, nobody on, nobody out)

6 ' MEDIC.AL

70

Pine Street • Gallipolis

740-446·0007

.Meigs .

,{

'·
I
I

.I

over the left field wall for a
10-1 edge, then Sommer
followed with her second
homer to give the guest
back-to-hack shots and a
I 0-run lead.
The Maroon and Gold
answered with two runs in
their half of the sixth when
Lian Hoffman led off the
inning with a walk. Cassi
Whan delivered a single
that scored Hoffman for an
II -2 score, then Whan later
came around on a sacrifice
fly by Amber Burtpn.
Tessa Wyant worked four
innings in the circle for
PPHS, allowing just one hit
and one walk during her
start. Wyant also struck out
five in the winning decision. Cottrill worked the
final three innings of relief,
surrendering two hits, two
walks and three earned
runs.
Sommer and Wickline led
the Lady Kights with two
hits apiece, followed by
Cottrill, Tessa Wyant, Darst
an(! •Jones with a safety
apiece. Sommer had five
RB!s and also scored twice,
as did Cottrill and Tessa
Wyant.
Cottrill's homer was her
sixth of the season, tying a
school record set by Amber
. Rainey in 2004.
The Lady Marauders used
three hurlers in the setback.
Hailey Ebersbach · started
and lasted four innings,
allowing six earned runs,
three hits and four walks in
the losing decision.
Whan took over in the
fifth and allowed four ·
earned runs, three hits and
two walks in her two frames
in the circle. All three hits
allowed were home runs.
Barr worked relief in the
seventh, allowing two hits
and two walks.
Whan, Nikki Ginther and
Whitney Smith had the lone
hits for Meigs.
Point Pleasant returns to
action today when it hosts
Poca. Meigs travels to
Wellston for a Tri- Valley
Conference Ohio Division
matchup with the leagueleading Lady Rockets. Both
game · times are scheduled
for 5 p.m.
.
· PT PLEASANT 11, IIEIGS 3
Polnl
0110 023 o - 11 8 1
Meigs
000 012 0 331
PPHS (14-2): Tessa Wyant, Davin
Cottrill (5) and Alyssa Darot
MHS (7·5): Hailey Ebarsbach, Cassl
Whan (5), Amy Barr (7) and Shanal"
Smilh, Talisha Betja (6)
WP- Wyant; LP - Ebarobach
HR: PP. - Anna Sommer (second
Inning, grand slam, rwo out) ; T8188
Wyant (fifth inning, one on, one out):
Devin COnrill {Sixtn lnhlng,. one on, ona
out); Sommer (olxthlnnjng, nobody on,

•

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$TAFF REPORT

MASON,
W.Va.
Richard Mahe of Point
Pleasant is the leader of the
Riverside Senior Men's Golf
League through three weeks
ofplay.
.
Mabe has scored 40.5
points to lead Curtis Grubb
of Gallipolis by four p&lt;)ints.
Holding onto third place with
-35.5 points is Jack Maloney.
Rounding out the top 10
players is Charlie Hargraves
(35), Willis Ko,rb (32), Mick
Winebrenner {30.5), Bob

Oliver (30.5 ), Chet Thomas
(28.5), Gary Drenner (28.5)
and Harley Rice (28.5).
A total of 62 players
formed 14 teams of four
players and two three man
teams to make 17 points possible for the winners of
Tuesday's play. The winning
. score of 63 was shot by the
team of Richard Mabe,
Bucky Dent, Bob Hysell aqd
Jack Maloney. .
There was a three way tie
fot second with scores of 65
between the teams of Garb
Drenner, Curtis Grubb,
Dickie Dugan and Tom

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Gallipolis, OH

rwf/ lr~rafimu ;

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Mason, WV

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IAams from Post Office)

Open Mon.- Thurs. 8:30-5pm

(740) 446-7619

~
CI'I'IES
INSUIIANCE.u.c

Shutout
from Page Bl
pitched a great game for the
win. She struck out two and
walked one in the win.
Sarah Eddy with relief
from Kasey Turley suffered the loss. Together
they. fanned four and
walked twelve.
- Alexander scored all it
needed ·in the first when

, Agent

(304)675·7036
(31M) 675-7036
rt ..n:t11e!ins@suddenUnlaull.eem
Auo./llome/Busiae&amp;'Llle/
Hoallh/Anulty •
An lnol&lt;.......ol A1&lt;ncy

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GIRLS

TEAM RESULTS - 1. M'oigs'77.5; 2. Eastern 71 .5; Soulh
GaiHa 9
•.
.
$HOT PUT - 1, .Mel.lssa a,ueser (M) 29-3; 2. Savanna
.Hadleld (SG) 27-7.5:3: Haley·Perdas,(E1·26·7: 4. AshleyGood (M) 26-4; 5. Whitney Putnam (S) 25·6
. ..
DISCUS - t. Melissa GI\Jesar,(M) 6e-9: 2. tjillly Perdaa
(E) 79:3; 3. Valentyna Ryazanlseva (E) 77-2; 4. Whitney
Putnam (E) 73-11; 5. Savanna Hadield (SG) 70-4
,
HIGH JUMP- 1 . Morgan Burt'(E) 4·2; 2.. Jessica Holliday
(~) 4-0
•
. .
.
LONG JUMP- 1. Audrianna Pullins (E) ts-7; 2. Casey
Sm"h (M) t2-9; ' 3. Morgan Burl (E) 12-8; 4. Sarah
Martindale (E) 11 -11; 5.'Sarah White (SG) 11-7
4•600-METER RELAY - ·1. Easlern (Erin Weber, Alyssa
Newland, Sarah !.1artlndals and Belh Hysell) 11:13.91 ; 2.
Mei~$ 11 :43.14
tOO-METER HURDLES - 1 Adrian Bolin (M) 17.12; 2.
-casey .Sm"h (M) 18.38; 3. Breanna Hemsley (M) 19.82; 4.
Jackie Burris (SG) 26.56
,
too-METER DASH- 1. lauren Cummings (E) 13.61; 2.
Catie Walla (M) 13.84; 3. Emily Fields (M) 14.06: 4. Morgan
Werry (E) t4.35; 5. Patti Vining (M) 14.47
4x200-METER RELAY - 1. Meigs (Adrian Bolin, Emily
Fielde, Morgen Lantos and Meghan Clelland) 2:00.06; 2.
Eastern 2:02. 16; 3. South Gellis 2:12.59
t6QO-METER RUN - 1. Klmi Swisher (M) 6:04; 2. Both
HyseH· (E) 6:08; '3. Sarah Martindale (E) 6:52: 4. Nakila ·
fltzpalrick (SG) 7:57
4X10Q-METER RELAY ~ 1. Meigs (Patti VIning, Emily
Fields; Meg~an c;lelland and CaHo'Woffe) 55.65; 2. Eastern
56.80: 3. South Gallla 1:02.06
400-METER DASH - ' 1. Oovan Soulsby (M) 1:05.1t : 2.
Erin We~r. (E) 1:07.75; 3. Alyssa Nowland (E) 1:10.21: 4.
Audr'iannaPumno (E) 1:12.0; Halley.Williams (M) 1:14.75
300-ME:rEA HURDLES- 1.'Adrlan Bolin tM) 52.03; 2.
Katki tfayman (E) 54.27; 3. Casey Smllh (M) 57.29; 4.
Sara~ White (SG) 1:00.07 .
'·
'·soo-t,tEtER RUN - 1. Beth Hysell (E) 2:62; 2. Jessica
Holliday (M) 2:55; 3. Sarah Martindale (E) 3:04; 4. Hailey
Williams (M) 3:09; 5. Nakita Fltipatrlck (SG) '3:35
20Q-METER DASH - t . llecca Owen (E) 28.60; 2. Lauren .
.Cummlngs-(E) 28.54: 3. Calle Wo~e (MJ 29.05; 4, Devan
Soulaby '(M) 29.38; 5. t.jeghan Clelland (M) 29.65
3200-METER RUN - 1. Klmi · Swisher' (M) 13:09. 7; 2.
.X400-METER
RELAY
- 1. Easlem (Erin Weber, Lauren
Nel&lt;ite Fllzpatri&lt;:k
(SG) .16:58.(
Cummings, ~atie Hayman and llecca Owen) 4:32.1; 2.
148~ (A) 4:36.2; 3. Moigo (B) 5:06.9

ALEXANDER 8, SOUTHERN 7
·southem 014 200 o - 7 9 3
Alexander 000 040 4 - B 7 1
WP - ·Thomas . LP- Chapman .

I

215 Slxlh SL Pt. l'ttaSUit, WV

Re re5enll

,i

the Alex start with two
fanned batters and five
walks, while Thomas 'posted the win with two K's
and three walks.
Southern hosts Waterford
Thursday. Game time is
scheduled for 5 p.m.

. Erie

Debra K.

•

Rally

\1{1\(,

B. Chat Thomas, Gary Drenner and
Harley Rice 28.5: 11 . (tie) Ed Coon, Jim
Cunningham and Joe Long 27.5, t14.
Tom McNeely and Earl Johnson 27

Cory Bean) and a walk
combine with an error, a hit
batter and a game winning
one-run single by John
from PageBl
Dibenedette produced the 87 AleK win.
seen enough despite a 1-2-3
Johnson fanned seven
inning in the Alexander and walked five but was
sixth. Ryan Chapman carne
on in relief, but after an not involved in the deci-·
eight inning outing Tuesday ·. sion, while Chapman (no
was not in superior form. K' s and two walks) played
1\vo singles (R.T. Thomas, into the Joss. Hedrick got

the Maroon and Gold also
won titles in the 4x I 00 and
4x200 relays.

con •

Hargraves 35 ; 5. Willis Korb 32; 6. (tie)
Mick Winebrenner and· Bob Oliver 30 .5;

tive victories in the 200m
and Iporn dashes. Morgan
Burt won the high jump and
Audrianna Pullins claimed
the lmigjump crown.
The Lady Rebels did not
win a title in the girls
competition.

from PageBl
Another satisfied

1. Richard Mabe 40.5; 2. Curtis Grubb

36.5: .3. Jack M~loney 35.5, 4. Charne

The Lady Eagles won the
other seven events held ,
including a pair of relays in
the 4x400 and 4x800.
Beth - Hysell won the
800m 'ru n, while Becca
Owen
and
Lauren
Cummings posted .respec-

~Uque &amp; era~ .Mall.
·, ·~'

seniOr League Standings
Aher three weeks

s.

Jrench City
•Home Decor •Furniture
'Hand Puppets for
Children
•Antiques for the
Antique lover
Our 19,000 square foot
store offers thousands
of gifts for the entire
family,

'fisher, the team of B.ob
Oliver, Ralph Sayre, Earl
Johnson and Pat Williamson
and the team of Chari ie
Hargraves, Harvey Blain and
Harley Rice.
·
The closest to the piJJ winners were Curtis Grubb on
hole No. 7 and 'Ralph Sayre
on hole No. 14.

meet results

Sign a 1 year Lease
Receive 2 months FREEl

Mink-Owner

~ lrruance

•

•

.. LWC sto1raae
a39 Kerr Road
Bidwell, OH
(7~0) 446·9043
(740) 388·8320

Gallla Auto Sales
Gallipolis, Ohio
(7401446·1711

against any team, and delivered again even though he
was in a deep slump, batting
only .184.
Sampson gave up five hits
in seven innings, including
solo homers by Brandon
Phillips and Josh Hamilton.
The 25-year-old Hamilton
has been so sensational during his comeback from drug
addiction that manager Jerry
Narron reconfigured his
lineup this week to keep
Hamilton on the field.
Hamilton's homer was his
fourth in only 24 at-bats, the
Ia.test sign that the former
No. I overall draft pick is
rounding into form after
more than three years away
from the game.
Phillips didn 't dally on his
homer, which barely cleared
the wall in front of the Reds'
bullpen in center field. A
night earlier, he prematurely
broke into a home run trot on
·a fly that hit the wall, drawing a comment from Narron.

Erie lllftra.ce

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. ..

.. . . "

.,

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.

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.

Jill Howard reached on an
error and scored on an RBI
· single by Lacey Shaulis, l0. Alexander scored two
runs in the third on three
walks, 'an error, and two
passed balls, 3-0, then
· after a one run fourth
scored · four in the fifth
innin~ to break open the
gam~
·
· _: Af ,' \ ctred two 1~· ~he
stxth -to seal the wm.
Soutlrern was led by
. Whitney Wolfe-Riffle with
two singles, Stephanie

Cundiff had a double, and .
Chelsea Pape singled in a
four-hit Southern game.
Alexander hitters were
Lacey Shaulis, Shelby
Williams and Jill Howard.
Southern was stricken
with six errors defensively.
Southern
Waterford Thurs&lt;;lay at
Star Mill Park in Racine.
ALEXAptDER 10, SOUlliERN D.
SoutMm
000 000 0 46
Alexander

102 142 -

WP- Williams. LP '-

Eddy.

104 2

·

CLEVELAND (AP) The wait was worth it for
the Clevelanll Cavaliers .
Was it ever.
In a Iittle more than an·
hour, they jumped three
playoff spots and somehow
dodged the Miami Heat.
LeBron James scored 24
points and capped a decisive run to open th e fourth
quarter with one of hi s
powerhouse dunks , giving
Cleve land a 109-96 win
over the Milwaukee Bucks
in its regular-season finale
wd d
on e nes ay night.
Following the game, the
Cavaliers _ and several
thousand fan s - stayed
around to watch New
Jersey beat Chicago, giving Cleveland the No . .2
seed in the NBA playoffs.
If that wasn ' t enough , the
Cavaliers were furth er .
rewarded
when
Washington clinched the
No. ?spot.
.
So instead of being the
No. 5 seed and an underdog in ~ound I vs. the
defending NBA champions, the Cavaliers wi ll be
AP photo
favored over the injuryCleveland
Cavaliers'
LeBron
James
(23)
shoots
over
depleted Wizards, who are
missing stars Gilbert Milwaukee Bucks' David Noel (34) and Damir Markota (52),
of Croatia, during the second quarter of an NBA basketball
Arenas and Caron Butler.
Talk
about
luck y game Wednesday ill Cleveland.
bounces.
because those guys in a playoffs and we accom"I don ' t care if we play second season can rise to plished that and now it's
this team or that team," th e occasion and you never all about trying to win a
Cavs. coach Mike Brown know what could happen championship.''
said . "To me they are all this time of year. We have
Unlike many of the play- ·
dangerous at this time of to go into this series know- off-bound teams,
the
the year.':
ing we must defend first Cavaliers couldn't afford
The Cavaliers (50-32), and contin ue to · do the to rest any of their starters
who finished the regular things that got us to the with so much on the line.
season with four straight second seed."
For a while, it looked like
wins, pulled away from the
Sasha Pavlovic scored they forgot what they were
Buch by outscoring them
points,
Donyell playing for.
12-3 to open the final peri~ 21
Marshall 14 and Anderson
After blowing most of a
od.
Varejao
had
12
rebounds
16-point
lead,
the ·
How.ever, · they left the
for
the
Cavs,
who
crushed
Cavaliers
opened
the
third
confetti-littered floor of
Quicken. · Loims J\rena not the undermanned Buck s quart~r with an 18-7 blitz
to lead 72-60. The aucks,
knowing who their next 53-30 on the boards.
Earl Boykins scored 28 though, wouldn't go away
opponent
would ·· be.
and
Ruben Patterson 19 to and reeled off their own
During postgame interlead
Milwaukee, which · 12-2 spurt to get within
views, James and Co. kept
made
the
playoffs last sea- 74-72 on Boykins' 3-pointone eye on the TV screens
son
but
had
a promising er.
in Cleveland's locker
2006-07 season sabotaged
Leading py seven enterroom .
by
injuries.
ing
the fourth , the Cavs
James , who has said .for
just
couldn'
t
find
a
scored
the first nine points
"We
two weeks that .he didn't
lineup,"
said
of
the
period.
James ended
cons
istent
Cleveland
care
who
played, sure seemed to .be coach Larry Krystkowiak, the run by making a steal
"and when you thought it · near midcourt and blasting
pulling for the Nets. ·
couldn't
get worse, it actu- to the rim for a windmill
"You can't Jet Ben
ally
did
. get worse. It 's dunk.
Walll!Ce get a layup! "
Down by 14 and in danhollered James, who · then been very crazy."
cheered when Nets for- . James finished the reg u- ger of being blown out, the
ward Bostjan Nachbar Jar season averaging 27.3 Bucks oufscored the Cavs
knocked down a 3-pointer poin ts, 6.7 rebounds and 21 -8 ove r a six- minute
from the corner to put New 6.0 assists. He and Hall of stretch of the seco nd periFarner Oscar Robertson are od, taking a 47-46 lead on
Jersey up by I0.
The
Cavaliers
and the only players in league . two free throws by . David
Wizards played a memo- history to average at least Noel.
rable first-round series. last 27-6-6 for three straight · With Brown standing
with his hands on his hips
. year, with Cle ve land. win- years.
And for the second year in front of Cleveland's
ning
in six games.
Cleveland went 2- 1 against in a row, the 22-year-old bench wondering what his
Washington this season, and hi s teammates are on team was doing , James
· but Brown knows the post- their way to the postsea- responded by scoring six
season is entire ly different. son.
quick points and t.hen fed
"We have to respect
'This year, we kind of Varejao for a dunk to give
them," he said. "Thi s could expected it," James said. the Cavs a 54-51 halftime
be a dangerous team "We expected to go to the lead.

Mabe leads Riverside Senior League·

Great gas mileage

'.

'

key role in a pair of losses.
It was a rousing start to an
unusual trip for the Astros
-nine games in four cities.
They play two in Cincinnati ,
three in Milwaukee , one in
Philadelphia and three in
Pittsburgh, a good early test
for a team that was 38-43 on
the road last season.
Until the late meltdown.
the Reds were in position for
another win behind starter
Aaron Harang, who beat the
Astros in all four of his starts
last season and was ahead 2I when he left the game after
the sixth.
Carlos Lee drove in the
only run off Harang with a
groundout in the sixth
inning, the outfielder's 17th
RBI.in 13 games. Lel; was 0for-2 with a pair of walks,
ending his six-game hitting
streak.
Although the Reds kept
Lee in check, they co uldn ' t
stop Berkman from getting
another game-turning hit.

~

f

•

completing a rally that lifted
the Houston Astros to a 7-2
vjctory over the Cincinnati
Reds on Wednesday night.
Down 2-1, the Astros
scored five times in the
eighth against a bullpen that
·hadn't suuendered a lead so
late.
Not surprisingly, Lance
Berkman was a big part of
the Astros' comeback for
their sixth victory in seven
games. Berkman, who has
had some of his biggest
games against the Reds, singled home the tying run with
two outs off Todd Coffey (1I) .
Af
· h h'
ter pmc - Itter Mark
Loretta gave Houston a 3-2
lead with a single off Rhea!
· Lane h'It the leftCorm,ter,
hander's first pitch into th!!
seats in left field for his third
homer.
. The rally started when
Coffey
hit
Orlando
llalmeiro, who was pitlchhitting for starter Chris

·-

· ~U].)1JDJJ

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83 ·

Sam~son (2-0). Coffey has· Berkman has 35 career

~~

'.

•

CINCINNATI (AP) -

·Storage

one out)

•

.

· ·Lwc

fromPageBl

'

www.mydailysentinel.com .

Houston.blasts Cincinnati, 7-2· Cavs
clinch second seed in
.
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.
.
I
.
·
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~~s~~r\~~~eh~\g~t~hi~~i~gn ~~~e~~~~e~~~~~s:np~~~rn';~ ~\:C~~~!ti~~~~~t~~~~a~~~!
3S ern 0Iue.,.eDCe.P 3Y0IIS

SPORT~MYDAI LYSENTINE L.COM

WAHAMA 37, HANNAN 2
Wahama (25)48 37 22 0
Hannan
200
2 o 20
Beth Rollins, Brooke Gabrltsch (1) and
Amber Tully. Brittany Edmonds.

.I

Thursday, ApriltC), 2007

2007

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

:Thursday, April19, 2007
.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

-

Eastem track and field tri~meet

~rihune

- Sentinel
C L.A S S I F I E D
..,

E:mru!
classified@ mydailytribune.com

Meigs County, OH

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

Websites:
' www.mydailytribune.com
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To Place
mrtbune
Sentinel
~egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday~.. or Fax To 44&amp;-3008
. or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Word Ads

Bryan Waltars/pllotos

South Gallia's Steven Call crosses the finish line after winning
the 400-meter dash Tuesday at the Eastern tri-meet in Tuppers
Plains. Call was the top-point scorer in the boys' competition.

.

Sunday In-Column: 1:00

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edll,
.rejeCt or cancel any
ad at any time.
errors Must B
eported on the firs
ay of pUblication a
he Trlbun•Sentlnel
egllter will
eaponslble for n
ore th~n the coat o
he apace occuple
the error and on
e first Insertion. W
hall not be liable f
ny lOll of expen
hit mutts from th
ubllcallon or omlo
ion ol an advertl

Eastern sen ior Beth Hysell is in full stride during the BOOmeter run Tuesday at the Eastern tri-meet in Tuppers Plains.

ANN&lt;&gt;Imm1El'~

\ \\ti l \ ( I \ II \ I "

r .
·

t

I

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC·
OND ANNUAL REU NION,
MOOSE LODGE, MA~ 26,
2007. 8·1:00 ENTERTAINMENT. (304)675-4631 OR
740 446·3488

GIVFAWAY
10x20 Angle iron frame, tin
bu ilding for giveaway. You
take apart and/or haul
away.304·895·3769
-:-----:--:~

2 commOdes, 2 vanity tops,
~~st iron tub. 740·992·

P.m.

For Sundays Paper

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buslness· Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sunday• P••IN•r .,1

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complet~
Description • Include A Price • Avofd Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addren When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 Days

Meigs sophqmore Adrian Bolin , far left, clea rs the final
obstacle du ri ng t he 300-meter hurdles event at th e East ern
tri-meet held Tuesday in Tuppers Plain s. Bolin won both the
100 and 300 hurdle events, he~ing her take top-point scoring honors in the girls' competition.

Now you con have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
,fw~
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p .m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
'

(}ea.tltir~

~ou:n I

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlsttlng reunes the rtghtto edit, reject, or cance l any ad at any time. Errors must be reported on the first dav of
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Regltter wilt be rHponllble for no more than the colt of the space occupied by ttte en or and only the first Insertion. We
any lo11 or ••pensethat resulta from ttte publlc1tlon or omlulon of an advertlaement. Co.rrectlon will be m11deln the first available ~ltlon.
1r11 alwayl contldenllll. • Current rata Cllrd apptMtt. • All rul utate edvertl111menta are sub ject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968.
accepts onty help Wl nted Mia mMtlng EOE llal'\darda. We will not knowingly accept any lldvertlslng In violation of the lew.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
kitncarlyle@lconicast.net

Found at Gallia Frgrnds dur·
ing French 500 Flea Mrket.
Small Choc.Lab mi&lt;. 304·
675·2697 or 304·532-6707
--.,---.,..-----.-,:-Reward Missing Female
Bassett Hound, Tri Color
scar on top of head, blaCk
spot on back of neck, she
has been spayed, missing
March 17th, If you have
seen ~e r Call 740-446-4197
leave message

l

i10

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg. Pay S201hr or
$57K anrually
lncli.Jding Federal Benelils
and OT,Paid Trainin g:.
Vacations-FTIPT
1·800·584·1775 EKI. #8923
USWA

If ~6f· fo~ fott..G1'
\'!If'~' -1""GR.IO Wotil..p~ 'T
B6 1-\~'flittN~ 1"o Do
Al'olllllb \-\e;12~ 1-\f Al-1..- .

r
r

Receptionist
John Sang Ford lincoln
Mercury is experiencing
continued growth that
requires us to find a
energetic Receptionist.
Qualifications that would
be a good fit for the job
is, out going personality,
good phone Skills and
cashiering experience.
Contact Dee Sweeney in
person at John Sang
Ford lincoln Mercury.
195 Upper River Aoad
Gallipolis. Ohio

7 week old Btlie Healer mix
puppies; they look like Blue 1818 Chatham Ave. Fri&amp;Sat.
Healer male &amp; female 304· Clothes, Angels, Crafts,
Baby Clothes, Riding Toys.
881·9362

Real

Eslat
ar
u~ to the Fodera
air Housing Act o
dvertlaements

968.

Michael Owen, far right, leads a pack of Eastern runners during the 1600-meter run..

Eastern's Alyssa Newland, left, and Meigs' Meghan Clelland
get out of the ·blocks during the 200-meter dash held
Tuesday at the Eastern tri-meet in Tuppers Plains.

We will not knowing
y accept any sdver
Iseman! In vlolallo
fthelsw.

LEFT Meigs
sophomore
Catie Wol~e ·
gets.-out of
the blocks
during the.
4x100 relay
held
Tuesday at
the Eastern
track and
tield tri-meet
In Tuppers
Plains. MHS
head coach
Mike
Kennedy,
· left, ht&gt;lds ,
the starting
blocks in
place.

LEFTEastern
senior Darcy
Winebrenner
gets out of
the blocks
during the
200-meter
dash held
Tuesday at
the Eastern
track and
field tri-meet
in Tuppers
· Plains.

'
•••• v

?'

•

l

·-; .. · · ,· n ' +'

2005 3· bedroom. 2 bath,
Commodore Doublewide
Hom e. Never lived in. As
new 28K60 with delivery and
set-I.Jp
S S,OOO
calt
4
) .
1304 675 5578
------,:----

24/7 HOME
STORE

Business closed: relrigeralion parts: motors. filters.
freon , meters, assorted
Midwest Homes
misc. Making deals. 740·
mymldwesthome.eom
698·2613
GALLIPOLIS,
Foreclosure! Buy for only
554,9001 More homes
available. For loca listings
caii80D·559-41D9 &lt;F254

5 Aoom House wilh Bath
Leon area phone 304-674·
0132
Attention!
Local company offering "NO
Block, Stone, Free Estimate, DOWN PAYMENT" pro(304)773-9550 . 304·593· grams for you to buy · your
642 1·.
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• l:.ess than perfect credit
accepted
' Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators·.
(740)367-.00bO
All Types Masonry, Brick,

Lo5rAND

FOUND

Found: Large standard bred - - - - - - - - black Poodle in the Bidwell Large Yard Sale 4/20 and
B.rea. 740·388·9130
4/2 1. Guns, fishing poles,
household items, etc. 10544
State Route t 41

................................................... ero·

up~~o~a~ery·

r

WANTEi&gt;
TO BuY

AbsolUte Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
1935
U.S. , Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds· MT.S.
Coin Shop, 15·1 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-4462842.

-c:c-c'-::-~-c-c---

DRIVERS ·needed to pro·
vide library service through·
oul Galli~ Coi.Jnty. Reqi.Jired:
COL. love ·of reading, ability
to work with people of all
ages, computer and Internet
skills. Must be 25 or older,
able to drive 35H BII.Jebird
bookmob~e. Substitute posi·
lions available. For applies·
lion and .complete job
description, visit Bossard
Library. 7 Spruce Street

Buying Junk Cars.Trucks &amp; GalllpoWs, Ohio. EOE.
Wrecks, Pay Cash J 0 \ .
,
Salvage
rvers ~~eded:
COL
1304) 773 . 5343 · Dr_
(30 4)674• 1374
Dnvers w1Htng . to Ortve for
local ready·mlx company.
Want lo buy cars in any con· Experience is preterred but
dition. 388-8228
not necessary. Drivers must
I \ 11'11 1)\ JI \1

" ' I~\ lt I "

HFil' WAII'flll

300 BriarwooO Drive
Gallipolis. Ohio
740-441-9633
Holzer Assisted Living
Gallipolis
/las· Erilploymenl
Opportunities for a PARTTIME Oish..W.sher.
Please appty In pera~n or
aend resume to:

Chits Wood
Kitchen M'anoger
Actiyity
Pirector
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center is accepting applicalions for a qualified activity
Oirector. The successful
candidate must have excel·
lent time management and
organ ization skills, must
have the ability to be a productivo management team
member, and must · ~ave
Strong written and' vetbal
skills. Overbrook. Is a drug
tr ee work place and an
equal opportunity employer.
333
Page
Street,
Middleport, Oh 45760.
An Excellent way to eam

money.The New Avon.

Call Manlyn 304-882-2645
Vano For Sale. ............:....................._. ...........730
Wlnt.d to Buy .............................................090
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Wont.d to Buy- Form SUpplles .................620 ' Sell. Shi~ey Spears, 304·
Want.d To Do ............................................. 180
675·1429.
Want.d to Rent...................................: .......470
Yard Sate- Qalllpi011s..................;.................072
Ex.perlenced Farm Hand
Yard Sate-Porneroy1M_
Icldle.........................074
needed in Addison .TWp.
Yllrd Sale-Pt. PINaant . ..............................076
area. caii304.S75·1743

'

Antique business closed:
making deals. lurrliture, pot·
tery, glassware. stoneware.
boo~s . jewelry, Esso gas
pump. 740·698-2613

0 Down even wnh less lhan
perfect credit is available on
this 3 bedr"oom. 1 ' bath
home. Corner lot. fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi 1ub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740·367-71 29.
--------104 Tatum
Dr. New
Haven.WV. 3bd/2ba. Ranch.·
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. grEiat
area. 0 ; 304-675·3637 E;
304-882·2334

3bd.

White and ye llow guinea pig
with cage. 794-0391

· 4x4'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcemant. ........................................... 030
Antlquea ........................................................ 530
Apartmantslor Rent ............ ....................... 440
Auction and Flea Markat... .......................... OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......... .. :.............. 760
Auto Repalr ................. ................... ..... :........ 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 7t0
· · Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ......... .................... 750
Building Suppllea ....................... ................. 550
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Bualntl8 Opportunlty ............................ .... ;210
Buslneas Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment .................. .. :.............. 780
t.ds of Thanks ......................;................... 01 0
Chlld/Eiderlv Core ...................... ................. 190
Electrlcai/Relrlgeratlon .................... ........... 840
Equipment for Rent. .................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment ......... ................................. 6t0
Farrnalor Rent ...... .......................................430
Farms lor Sate ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................585
For Sale or Trada .........:••...••: .......................590
Fruits &amp; Vagetabtes ..................................... 580
Fumlahed Rooma ............................. ........... 450
General Hautlng ..................................... :..... aso
Glveawav .. .................................................... 040
Happy Ada ....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640.
Help Waillad ................ ................................. 110
Home lmprovements................................... 810
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
Housahold Goods ....................:..........., ...... 510
Housaalor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memoriam ............................ .................... 020
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................660
Llvestock........................................ .............. 630
Lost and Found ..........................................:060
Lots &amp; Acraage ........................ .................... 350
Miscellaneous .................................,. ........... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlsa•........... ...........540
Mobile Home Repalr ..............,.....................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ....•.•.••••...........:....... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale .............:.........: ........ 320
Money to Loan ........._. ................................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Whaalers .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ..............:.................... 570
Parsonals ..................................................... oos
Pats lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heotlng .................................... 820
Prolesolona~Sarvlcea. ;........................, ...... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr••.•••.••••.•.'................. 160
R•l Eo- Wantad ..................................... 360
sc:tiool.lnstn1Ctlon ......,.............................150
SMd, Plant &amp; FerttiiMr .............................. 650
Sltuatlona Wonted .......................................120
Spll!:e lor Rent .............................................480
Sporting Goodo ............................. ..............520
SUV'olor Sale ................................o...........720 .
TrUcks lor Sate ...........................:•••.•••••.•••.. 715

Meigs· Cornelius Engli sh, front, receives a "hand-off from
teammate Brad Ramsburg during the 4x400 relay event
·he ld Tuesday at th e Eastern tri-meet . in Tuppers Plains .

FOSTER PARENTS AND
RESPITE
PROVIDERS
NEEDED. Become state
licensed by attending train·
ings held ·on Saturda~s.
Earn $30-$45 a day for the
care of a child living in your
home. Homes are needed
in your county. Call Oasis
toll free t -~77·325-1 558 .
Training will begin March 31
in Albany.

Free · lab puppies, and
Female lab Call 740·2450125

r

HoMts ·
FOR SALE

Canning Jars to Giveaway,
Tribble Road, Leon 304·458·
1818

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Meigs junior Brandan Fisher gets out of the starting blocks
during the 4x400 relay event Tuesday at the Eastern track
and field tri-rneet in Tuppers Plains . .

INSIRUCilO~

Mother cat , 5 kittens. 740·
992·7841 ."

Th.lo
newspspe
ccepta only hal
· anted ads meetl
OE standards.

Meigs senior ~asey Richardson, center, takes off after receiving the baton from teammate
Brad Soulsby, far right, during the 4x100 relay event Tuesday at Eastern. Richardson won
the discus eve nt, while Soulsby captured the crown in the shot put.

10

Sci!OOIB

. lb:u&gt; WA!1.1'ID

be willing to do pre maintenance on trucks &amp; equipment. yard work &amp; other mig.
ce llaneous
chores.

Local Cleaning Company is
accepting applications for
Call TODAY!
Cleaning Crew Members.
1-877-463-6247
Must have reliable transext. 2321
portation and verifiable ref.
erences. Online applications
now being accepted at P a r t · t ·im e
"www.ohcleanlngmaideasy.c Hous e keepl ng /Laundr y
Overbrook Center is acceptom
ing
applicallons lor part--------Local Insurance Co. looking time Housekeeping/laundry ·
for representative, to service position. Please stq&gt; by for
local areas. Guaranteed first an application at 333. Page
·
1
·
year 1ncome pus comm1s· St, Middleport, Oh_OBC iS'
Equal
Opportunity
sian.
Minimum $1950 an
monthly. Pleas$ call. 740· Employer and a Participant
ol the Drug Free Workplace
701·2557.
Progra m.
----L-PNIR-::N_ __

Sales Position
II\\ '\( Ill
An outstanding opportu·
nily fa the rig:hl person.
Prefer some sales expe·
rience. but will consider
possibility of trainin_g
ideal candidate. Offer 5
day work week.
EKcellent benefit pkg.
Contact
Carolyn Murdock
Office Admin.
Mro-Fri (740)446·3093
or email resume to
r760@ clay1on. net
to schedule an interview:
No Walk·lns Please

a

Part·time and or Full·Time
Home HeBtth Setting

Secretary

Admissions Office
Competitive Wage
Benefits
The University ol Rio
E-xperience operating equipL
C ty A
.
.
awrence oun
rea
Grande invites applications
ment. &amp; eKtra sktll s such as
o-JiHKJ
74
95
tor the position of Secretary
weld1ng a plus.
~,.----------in the University's
(304)937-34 10
Office personnel in Gallipolis
Admission Office.
Experienced Roofers need- area, e~s Mon·Fri, reliable, ResPQnsibilili es include, but
ed. E ~ep.e rience in Meta l, responstble, mature male or
are not limited to,, .
Shingles, and Rubber. Must fe~ale. Send resume to: providing general secretAri·
have tools and transports- Offl~e ~esu~e P.O.BoK 655
al and clerical duties. ·
l ion. Top Pay, . Serious GaUipohs, Ohto 45631
maintaining: electronic files
Inquiries Only. (740)379·
on prospective stUdents.
9079 if no answe r leave
and working with
OTR, Regional,
Admissions
Flatbed, Raaler &amp;
Staff lor coordination cind
Farmers Market Manager
Tanker Drivers
follow UR on student
Athens Farmefs Market
campus visits and reception
Seeks Part· Time Manager
duties for the office.
Responsibilities: Manage Prime Inc. is expanding in
Must have high school .
Market, Plan &amp; Implement this area! Massive increase
diploma or equivalent.
Market programs, work with of business from loCal cusAssociate Degree in
governmental &amp; Community tomBrs! Loo«ing for experisecretarial science or
groups. Knowledge of tarm- enced and non-experienced
computer technology
ing arld marketing, strong
preferred. Must have knowlcommuni((B.tions and com·
edge of personal and mainpuler
skills
essGntial.
0Dtn Job Interviews
frame computers.
Resume~ and lener of appliMonday, April 23nl
Confidentiality a must. Good
cation to: Athens Farmers
from 10:00am·5:30pm
oral arlO wrinen communi·
Market , PO Box s·727,
Making Hiring Decisions
cation skills required.
Athens, Oh 45701
Today!
All applicants must submit a
Red Roof Inn
1et1er of interest ana resume
FEDERAL
1000 ~ ~...
· including the names and
POSTAL JOBS
Jocf&lt;oon, OH 45640
addresses of ·three refer·
16
ences on or before May 1.
$ ·53-$27.58/hr., now hlr·
ing. For application and free
2007, to Ms.Phyllis Mason,
govemement job into, call Excellent Freight Networfc;
SPHR, DirectOf of Human
Ameriearl Assoc. ol Labor 1_
Late Modal Equipment
Resources. University of
913-599-6042, 24hus. emp. 401k, MaJor Medical, AX ,
Rio Grande, P.O.BoK 500,
serv.
Dental &amp; life Ins. Avail.
Rio Grande, OH 45674, e·
mail prnasoflChio.edu, fa~e
.417-343-1303
Homemakers needed in the
740-245-4909
en-491-1102
Ashton·. Mason Co., ar98 to
provide in·home services to
www.primeinc.com
EEO/AA Employfr
!he Elde~y .Oisabl ed. Part
t1me 25 hrs, a week. Tr~ Driver with Class A
Training available. Please COL Local Hauling Mon-Fri. R&amp;J Tn.dc:ng laading The Wily
home eNery night. Reliable,
Call 304-453·4992
R&amp;J Tn.dting now Hiring at our
responSible, mature. Senp New Hawn. WV Tennnal. For
Roofers: Metal roofing, sid- resume to: Driver Resume, Regional Hauls·Dump Oiv. 1
ing and EPDM. Top pay and P.O. 6o&lt; 655 Gallipolis,
year OTR verifiable pP. Gall 1•
benalrts. 724·229·8020
45631
800-i52·9365 ask lor Kem

---===:-=-:---

clh

Brand new log home sitting
on appro~ . 1.44 acres.
almost ready to move into.
Custom Amish Kitchen with
sofid su rface counters, 38R.
2BA.
$142,000.
Call
(740)256-9247

Tired ol your current job?
Do ~ou want Ia make
more money?
You could earn up to

$9.25/hr FT

OPEN
INTERVIEWS
Saturdav, April 21
9am-12pm
242Thlrd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
If unabl e to anend.
please call to schedi.Jie
· an interview.

1:888-IMC·PAYU
Job ext· 4256
www.inloc1sion.com
Wanted Someone in Leon to
Mow yard in leon ·phOne
304-674-{)132
Wanted: Direct Supervision
erpployees to oversee male

s~ure

10

B USINESS

OI&gt;PoRTUNnY
2 unit Apartment Building for
sale fully furnished with all
appliances, occupied S1,000
month income in Point All real estate 1dvertislng
In this newspaper ill
Pleasant. Asking: $39 ,000 ·
subject to the Federal
(304)593-3542
Fair Housing Act ol1968
wttich makes it illegal to

oNOTICEo

r

familial atatus or national
origin, or any intention to
meke any such
preference, limitation or

discrimination ...
Th is newspaper will not
knowingly accept
a&lt;tverttsements tor real
estate which is in
violation of th e law. Our
rea ders are hereby
informed that all
dwellingSadvertised in
this n 11ws pa~r are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

HNOTICE**
Borrow . Smart. Contact
the Ohio Divis1dn of
Financial
Institution's
Oflice
ol Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance Pilyments of
fees or insurance . Call the
Office
of Consum er
Affairs ton tree at 1·86&amp;
278-0003 tO learn if the
morigage broker Qr
lender
is
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcem ent
from the Ohi o Valley

:~P:ubl=i~sh;in:g:C:o:m:p:•:n:y)=~

i

SF..RVI~AL

1

www.gal~~ .com

preference, limitation or
di11crlminatlon based on
race, c;oiOr, religion, se11

MONt:Y
lll loA~

youth i_n a staff
residential env ironment. ~ u s t
pass physical training
~
requirement. Pay based on
: .
e~~:perience. Call (740 )379- __
9083 between 9-3 Mon·Fri
TURNED DOWN ON
1~
SOKX)Uil
SOCIAl SECURITY ISSI?
lr8ntucnoN
No Fee Unless We Win!
1_888•582 _3-345
Galllpolla c • ...,. College
I{ I \II " I \ II
(Gareers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-446-4367 ,
HoM~
1-800-214-0452_
FOR SALE
AccrediTed Utmber Accreditl':'Q
Coooci tor lndeperdenl ~
arid Sc:hooh 1:V48.,

adYllrtirse "any

OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SHING CO. recommet1ds
that you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail until you
have investigated the
offering.

Home in countrY. 9.73 acres
3 BA. 1 1/2 Bath. Full OaSE·
men!. 2 1/2 car garage.
Mature P1ne trees. 2 barns ola school house. $130.000.
can 740-286·72·12 or 937515·8670
Miniaii.Jre farm . Untbutll
home on 4 ac res, on SR
160. 3BR. tBA . Peaches.
berries. grapes. Swimming
pool. New apphances. woor;;
burner. $95.000. 740·368·
08 15

_________l

New Home lor Sale. Save
$20,000. lmmedtat&amp; occu·
pa!V'\1. appliances Inc., 2
' ..,
story w/wrap around porch.
3·Br.. 2&amp;1 /2
balh.large .
garage w/Bonus room over:
head·Full Basement &amp;
More.Seller ..,.,;u pay closing
cost 740-992-5635 or 992-

2478.

Aacine,2or.,WIC:a&amp;a'c.Fb.,1
Cg,20X20W/S;Iully
floor
House on Land . Contract upstairs,3.29 acres.$82,500 ..
Pome•oy. 740·992-5858.
740-949·2253. On AI. 124.

I

• I

a

ns

'

s'

2

5

2

s

0

jp.

s na

C I

e

-

=-

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

:Thursday, April19, 2007
.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

-

Eastem track and field tri~meet

~rihune

- Sentinel
C L.A S S I F I E D
..,

E:mru!
classified@ mydailytribune.com

Meigs County, OH

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

Websites:
' www.mydailytribune.com
.www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com ·

To Place
mrtbune
Sentinel
~egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday~.. or Fax To 44&amp;-3008
. or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Word Ads

Bryan Waltars/pllotos

South Gallia's Steven Call crosses the finish line after winning
the 400-meter dash Tuesday at the Eastern tri-meet in Tuppers
Plains. Call was the top-point scorer in the boys' competition.

.

Sunday In-Column: 1:00

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edll,
.rejeCt or cancel any
ad at any time.
errors Must B
eported on the firs
ay of pUblication a
he Trlbun•Sentlnel
egllter will
eaponslble for n
ore th~n the coat o
he apace occuple
the error and on
e first Insertion. W
hall not be liable f
ny lOll of expen
hit mutts from th
ubllcallon or omlo
ion ol an advertl

Eastern sen ior Beth Hysell is in full stride during the BOOmeter run Tuesday at the Eastern tri-meet in Tuppers Plains.

ANN&lt;&gt;Imm1El'~

\ \\ti l \ ( I \ II \ I "

r .
·

t

I

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC·
OND ANNUAL REU NION,
MOOSE LODGE, MA~ 26,
2007. 8·1:00 ENTERTAINMENT. (304)675-4631 OR
740 446·3488

GIVFAWAY
10x20 Angle iron frame, tin
bu ilding for giveaway. You
take apart and/or haul
away.304·895·3769
-:-----:--:~

2 commOdes, 2 vanity tops,
~~st iron tub. 740·992·

P.m.

For Sundays Paper

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buslness· Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sunday• P••IN•r .,1

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complet~
Description • Include A Price • Avofd Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addren When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 Days

Meigs sophqmore Adrian Bolin , far left, clea rs the final
obstacle du ri ng t he 300-meter hurdles event at th e East ern
tri-meet held Tuesday in Tuppers Plain s. Bolin won both the
100 and 300 hurdle events, he~ing her take top-point scoring honors in the girls' competition.

Now you con have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
,fw~
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p .m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
'

(}ea.tltir~

~ou:n I

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlsttlng reunes the rtghtto edit, reject, or cance l any ad at any time. Errors must be reported on the first dav of
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Regltter wilt be rHponllble for no more than the colt of the space occupied by ttte en or and only the first Insertion. We
any lo11 or ••pensethat resulta from ttte publlc1tlon or omlulon of an advertlaement. Co.rrectlon will be m11deln the first available ~ltlon.
1r11 alwayl contldenllll. • Current rata Cllrd apptMtt. • All rul utate edvertl111menta are sub ject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968.
accepts onty help Wl nted Mia mMtlng EOE llal'\darda. We will not knowingly accept any lldvertlslng In violation of the lew.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
kitncarlyle@lconicast.net

Found at Gallia Frgrnds dur·
ing French 500 Flea Mrket.
Small Choc.Lab mi&lt;. 304·
675·2697 or 304·532-6707
--.,---.,..-----.-,:-Reward Missing Female
Bassett Hound, Tri Color
scar on top of head, blaCk
spot on back of neck, she
has been spayed, missing
March 17th, If you have
seen ~e r Call 740-446-4197
leave message

l

i10

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg. Pay S201hr or
$57K anrually
lncli.Jding Federal Benelils
and OT,Paid Trainin g:.
Vacations-FTIPT
1·800·584·1775 EKI. #8923
USWA

If ~6f· fo~ fott..G1'
\'!If'~' -1""GR.IO Wotil..p~ 'T
B6 1-\~'flittN~ 1"o Do
Al'olllllb \-\e;12~ 1-\f Al-1..- .

r
r

Receptionist
John Sang Ford lincoln
Mercury is experiencing
continued growth that
requires us to find a
energetic Receptionist.
Qualifications that would
be a good fit for the job
is, out going personality,
good phone Skills and
cashiering experience.
Contact Dee Sweeney in
person at John Sang
Ford lincoln Mercury.
195 Upper River Aoad
Gallipolis. Ohio

7 week old Btlie Healer mix
puppies; they look like Blue 1818 Chatham Ave. Fri&amp;Sat.
Healer male &amp; female 304· Clothes, Angels, Crafts,
Baby Clothes, Riding Toys.
881·9362

Real

Eslat
ar
u~ to the Fodera
air Housing Act o
dvertlaements

968.

Michael Owen, far right, leads a pack of Eastern runners during the 1600-meter run..

Eastern's Alyssa Newland, left, and Meigs' Meghan Clelland
get out of the ·blocks during the 200-meter dash held
Tuesday at the Eastern tri-meet in Tuppers Plains.

We will not knowing
y accept any sdver
Iseman! In vlolallo
fthelsw.

LEFT Meigs
sophomore
Catie Wol~e ·
gets.-out of
the blocks
during the.
4x100 relay
held
Tuesday at
the Eastern
track and
tield tri-meet
In Tuppers
Plains. MHS
head coach
Mike
Kennedy,
· left, ht&gt;lds ,
the starting
blocks in
place.

LEFTEastern
senior Darcy
Winebrenner
gets out of
the blocks
during the
200-meter
dash held
Tuesday at
the Eastern
track and
field tri-meet
in Tuppers
· Plains.

'
•••• v

?'

•

l

·-; .. · · ,· n ' +'

2005 3· bedroom. 2 bath,
Commodore Doublewide
Hom e. Never lived in. As
new 28K60 with delivery and
set-I.Jp
S S,OOO
calt
4
) .
1304 675 5578
------,:----

24/7 HOME
STORE

Business closed: relrigeralion parts: motors. filters.
freon , meters, assorted
Midwest Homes
misc. Making deals. 740·
mymldwesthome.eom
698·2613
GALLIPOLIS,
Foreclosure! Buy for only
554,9001 More homes
available. For loca listings
caii80D·559-41D9 &lt;F254

5 Aoom House wilh Bath
Leon area phone 304-674·
0132
Attention!
Local company offering "NO
Block, Stone, Free Estimate, DOWN PAYMENT" pro(304)773-9550 . 304·593· grams for you to buy · your
642 1·.
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• l:.ess than perfect credit
accepted
' Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators·.
(740)367-.00bO
All Types Masonry, Brick,

Lo5rAND

FOUND

Found: Large standard bred - - - - - - - - black Poodle in the Bidwell Large Yard Sale 4/20 and
B.rea. 740·388·9130
4/2 1. Guns, fishing poles,
household items, etc. 10544
State Route t 41

................................................... ero·

up~~o~a~ery·

r

WANTEi&gt;
TO BuY

AbsolUte Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
1935
U.S. , Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds· MT.S.
Coin Shop, 15·1 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-4462842.

-c:c-c'-::-~-c-c---

DRIVERS ·needed to pro·
vide library service through·
oul Galli~ Coi.Jnty. Reqi.Jired:
COL. love ·of reading, ability
to work with people of all
ages, computer and Internet
skills. Must be 25 or older,
able to drive 35H BII.Jebird
bookmob~e. Substitute posi·
lions available. For applies·
lion and .complete job
description, visit Bossard
Library. 7 Spruce Street

Buying Junk Cars.Trucks &amp; GalllpoWs, Ohio. EOE.
Wrecks, Pay Cash J 0 \ .
,
Salvage
rvers ~~eded:
COL
1304) 773 . 5343 · Dr_
(30 4)674• 1374
Dnvers w1Htng . to Ortve for
local ready·mlx company.
Want lo buy cars in any con· Experience is preterred but
dition. 388-8228
not necessary. Drivers must
I \ 11'11 1)\ JI \1

" ' I~\ lt I "

HFil' WAII'flll

300 BriarwooO Drive
Gallipolis. Ohio
740-441-9633
Holzer Assisted Living
Gallipolis
/las· Erilploymenl
Opportunities for a PARTTIME Oish..W.sher.
Please appty In pera~n or
aend resume to:

Chits Wood
Kitchen M'anoger
Actiyity
Pirector
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center is accepting applicalions for a qualified activity
Oirector. The successful
candidate must have excel·
lent time management and
organ ization skills, must
have the ability to be a productivo management team
member, and must · ~ave
Strong written and' vetbal
skills. Overbrook. Is a drug
tr ee work place and an
equal opportunity employer.
333
Page
Street,
Middleport, Oh 45760.
An Excellent way to eam

money.The New Avon.

Call Manlyn 304-882-2645
Vano For Sale. ............:....................._. ...........730
Wlnt.d to Buy .............................................090
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Wont.d to Buy- Form SUpplles .................620 ' Sell. Shi~ey Spears, 304·
Want.d To Do ............................................. 180
675·1429.
Want.d to Rent...................................: .......470
Yard Sate- Qalllpi011s..................;.................072
Ex.perlenced Farm Hand
Yard Sate-Porneroy1M_
Icldle.........................074
needed in Addison .TWp.
Yllrd Sale-Pt. PINaant . ..............................076
area. caii304.S75·1743

'

Antique business closed:
making deals. lurrliture, pot·
tery, glassware. stoneware.
boo~s . jewelry, Esso gas
pump. 740·698-2613

0 Down even wnh less lhan
perfect credit is available on
this 3 bedr"oom. 1 ' bath
home. Corner lot. fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi 1ub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740·367-71 29.
--------104 Tatum
Dr. New
Haven.WV. 3bd/2ba. Ranch.·
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. grEiat
area. 0 ; 304-675·3637 E;
304-882·2334

3bd.

White and ye llow guinea pig
with cage. 794-0391

· 4x4'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcemant. ........................................... 030
Antlquea ........................................................ 530
Apartmantslor Rent ............ ....................... 440
Auction and Flea Markat... .......................... OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......... .. :.............. 760
Auto Repalr ................. ................... ..... :........ 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 7t0
· · Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ......... .................... 750
Building Suppllea ....................... ................. 550
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Bualntl8 Opportunlty ............................ .... ;210
Buslneas Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment .................. .. :.............. 780
t.ds of Thanks ......................;................... 01 0
Chlld/Eiderlv Core ...................... ................. 190
Electrlcai/Relrlgeratlon .................... ........... 840
Equipment for Rent. .................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment ......... ................................. 6t0
Farrnalor Rent ...... .......................................430
Farms lor Sate ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................585
For Sale or Trada .........:••...••: .......................590
Fruits &amp; Vagetabtes ..................................... 580
Fumlahed Rooma ............................. ........... 450
General Hautlng ..................................... :..... aso
Glveawav .. .................................................... 040
Happy Ada ....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640.
Help Waillad ................ ................................. 110
Home lmprovements................................... 810
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
Housahold Goods ....................:..........., ...... 510
Housaalor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memoriam ............................ .................... 020
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................660
Llvestock........................................ .............. 630
Lost and Found ..........................................:060
Lots &amp; Acraage ........................ .................... 350
Miscellaneous .................................,. ........... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlsa•........... ...........540
Mobile Home Repalr ..............,.....................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ....•.•.••••...........:....... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale .............:.........: ........ 320
Money to Loan ........._. ................................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Whaalers .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ..............:.................... 570
Parsonals ..................................................... oos
Pats lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heotlng .................................... 820
Prolesolona~Sarvlcea. ;........................, ...... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr••.•••.••••.•.'................. 160
R•l Eo- Wantad ..................................... 360
sc:tiool.lnstn1Ctlon ......,.............................150
SMd, Plant &amp; FerttiiMr .............................. 650
Sltuatlona Wonted .......................................120
Spll!:e lor Rent .............................................480
Sporting Goodo ............................. ..............520
SUV'olor Sale ................................o...........720 .
TrUcks lor Sate ...........................:•••.•••••.•••.. 715

Meigs· Cornelius Engli sh, front, receives a "hand-off from
teammate Brad Ramsburg during the 4x400 relay event
·he ld Tuesday at th e Eastern tri-meet . in Tuppers Plains .

FOSTER PARENTS AND
RESPITE
PROVIDERS
NEEDED. Become state
licensed by attending train·
ings held ·on Saturda~s.
Earn $30-$45 a day for the
care of a child living in your
home. Homes are needed
in your county. Call Oasis
toll free t -~77·325-1 558 .
Training will begin March 31
in Albany.

Free · lab puppies, and
Female lab Call 740·2450125

r

HoMts ·
FOR SALE

Canning Jars to Giveaway,
Tribble Road, Leon 304·458·
1818

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Meigs junior Brandan Fisher gets out of the starting blocks
during the 4x400 relay event Tuesday at the Eastern track
and field tri-rneet in Tuppers Plains . .

INSIRUCilO~

Mother cat , 5 kittens. 740·
992·7841 ."

Th.lo
newspspe
ccepta only hal
· anted ads meetl
OE standards.

Meigs senior ~asey Richardson, center, takes off after receiving the baton from teammate
Brad Soulsby, far right, during the 4x100 relay event Tuesday at Eastern. Richardson won
the discus eve nt, while Soulsby captured the crown in the shot put.

10

Sci!OOIB

. lb:u&gt; WA!1.1'ID

be willing to do pre maintenance on trucks &amp; equipment. yard work &amp; other mig.
ce llaneous
chores.

Local Cleaning Company is
accepting applications for
Call TODAY!
Cleaning Crew Members.
1-877-463-6247
Must have reliable transext. 2321
portation and verifiable ref.
erences. Online applications
now being accepted at P a r t · t ·im e
"www.ohcleanlngmaideasy.c Hous e keepl ng /Laundr y
Overbrook Center is acceptom
ing
applicallons lor part--------Local Insurance Co. looking time Housekeeping/laundry ·
for representative, to service position. Please stq&gt; by for
local areas. Guaranteed first an application at 333. Page
·
1
·
year 1ncome pus comm1s· St, Middleport, Oh_OBC iS'
Equal
Opportunity
sian.
Minimum $1950 an
monthly. Pleas$ call. 740· Employer and a Participant
ol the Drug Free Workplace
701·2557.
Progra m.
----L-PNIR-::N_ __

Sales Position
II\\ '\( Ill
An outstanding opportu·
nily fa the rig:hl person.
Prefer some sales expe·
rience. but will consider
possibility of trainin_g
ideal candidate. Offer 5
day work week.
EKcellent benefit pkg.
Contact
Carolyn Murdock
Office Admin.
Mro-Fri (740)446·3093
or email resume to
r760@ clay1on. net
to schedule an interview:
No Walk·lns Please

a

Part·time and or Full·Time
Home HeBtth Setting

Secretary

Admissions Office
Competitive Wage
Benefits
The University ol Rio
E-xperience operating equipL
C ty A
.
.
awrence oun
rea
Grande invites applications
ment. &amp; eKtra sktll s such as
o-JiHKJ
74
95
tor the position of Secretary
weld1ng a plus.
~,.----------in the University's
(304)937-34 10
Office personnel in Gallipolis
Admission Office.
Experienced Roofers need- area, e~s Mon·Fri, reliable, ResPQnsibilili es include, but
ed. E ~ep.e rience in Meta l, responstble, mature male or
are not limited to,, .
Shingles, and Rubber. Must fe~ale. Send resume to: providing general secretAri·
have tools and transports- Offl~e ~esu~e P.O.BoK 655
al and clerical duties. ·
l ion. Top Pay, . Serious GaUipohs, Ohto 45631
maintaining: electronic files
Inquiries Only. (740)379·
on prospective stUdents.
9079 if no answe r leave
and working with
OTR, Regional,
Admissions
Flatbed, Raaler &amp;
Staff lor coordination cind
Farmers Market Manager
Tanker Drivers
follow UR on student
Athens Farmefs Market
campus visits and reception
Seeks Part· Time Manager
duties for the office.
Responsibilities: Manage Prime Inc. is expanding in
Must have high school .
Market, Plan &amp; Implement this area! Massive increase
diploma or equivalent.
Market programs, work with of business from loCal cusAssociate Degree in
governmental &amp; Community tomBrs! Loo«ing for experisecretarial science or
groups. Knowledge of tarm- enced and non-experienced
computer technology
ing arld marketing, strong
preferred. Must have knowlcommuni((B.tions and com·
edge of personal and mainpuler
skills
essGntial.
0Dtn Job Interviews
frame computers.
Resume~ and lener of appliMonday, April 23nl
Confidentiality a must. Good
cation to: Athens Farmers
from 10:00am·5:30pm
oral arlO wrinen communi·
Market , PO Box s·727,
Making Hiring Decisions
cation skills required.
Athens, Oh 45701
Today!
All applicants must submit a
Red Roof Inn
1et1er of interest ana resume
FEDERAL
1000 ~ ~...
· including the names and
POSTAL JOBS
Jocf&lt;oon, OH 45640
addresses of ·three refer·
16
ences on or before May 1.
$ ·53-$27.58/hr., now hlr·
ing. For application and free
2007, to Ms.Phyllis Mason,
govemement job into, call Excellent Freight Networfc;
SPHR, DirectOf of Human
Ameriearl Assoc. ol Labor 1_
Late Modal Equipment
Resources. University of
913-599-6042, 24hus. emp. 401k, MaJor Medical, AX ,
Rio Grande, P.O.BoK 500,
serv.
Dental &amp; life Ins. Avail.
Rio Grande, OH 45674, e·
mail prnasoflChio.edu, fa~e
.417-343-1303
Homemakers needed in the
740-245-4909
en-491-1102
Ashton·. Mason Co., ar98 to
provide in·home services to
www.primeinc.com
EEO/AA Employfr
!he Elde~y .Oisabl ed. Part
t1me 25 hrs, a week. Tr~ Driver with Class A
Training available. Please COL Local Hauling Mon-Fri. R&amp;J Tn.dc:ng laading The Wily
home eNery night. Reliable,
Call 304-453·4992
R&amp;J Tn.dting now Hiring at our
responSible, mature. Senp New Hawn. WV Tennnal. For
Roofers: Metal roofing, sid- resume to: Driver Resume, Regional Hauls·Dump Oiv. 1
ing and EPDM. Top pay and P.O. 6o&lt; 655 Gallipolis,
year OTR verifiable pP. Gall 1•
benalrts. 724·229·8020
45631
800-i52·9365 ask lor Kem

---===:-=-:---

clh

Brand new log home sitting
on appro~ . 1.44 acres.
almost ready to move into.
Custom Amish Kitchen with
sofid su rface counters, 38R.
2BA.
$142,000.
Call
(740)256-9247

Tired ol your current job?
Do ~ou want Ia make
more money?
You could earn up to

$9.25/hr FT

OPEN
INTERVIEWS
Saturdav, April 21
9am-12pm
242Thlrd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
If unabl e to anend.
please call to schedi.Jie
· an interview.

1:888-IMC·PAYU
Job ext· 4256
www.inloc1sion.com
Wanted Someone in Leon to
Mow yard in leon ·phOne
304-674-{)132
Wanted: Direct Supervision
erpployees to oversee male

s~ure

10

B USINESS

OI&gt;PoRTUNnY
2 unit Apartment Building for
sale fully furnished with all
appliances, occupied S1,000
month income in Point All real estate 1dvertislng
In this newspaper ill
Pleasant. Asking: $39 ,000 ·
subject to the Federal
(304)593-3542
Fair Housing Act ol1968
wttich makes it illegal to

oNOTICEo

r

familial atatus or national
origin, or any intention to
meke any such
preference, limitation or

discrimination ...
Th is newspaper will not
knowingly accept
a&lt;tverttsements tor real
estate which is in
violation of th e law. Our
rea ders are hereby
informed that all
dwellingSadvertised in
this n 11ws pa~r are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

HNOTICE**
Borrow . Smart. Contact
the Ohio Divis1dn of
Financial
Institution's
Oflice
ol Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance Pilyments of
fees or insurance . Call the
Office
of Consum er
Affairs ton tree at 1·86&amp;
278-0003 tO learn if the
morigage broker Qr
lender
is
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcem ent
from the Ohi o Valley

:~P:ubl=i~sh;in:g:C:o:m:p:•:n:y)=~

i

SF..RVI~AL

1

www.gal~~ .com

preference, limitation or
di11crlminatlon based on
race, c;oiOr, religion, se11

MONt:Y
lll loA~

youth i_n a staff
residential env ironment. ~ u s t
pass physical training
~
requirement. Pay based on
: .
e~~:perience. Call (740 )379- __
9083 between 9-3 Mon·Fri
TURNED DOWN ON
1~
SOKX)Uil
SOCIAl SECURITY ISSI?
lr8ntucnoN
No Fee Unless We Win!
1_888•582 _3-345
Galllpolla c • ...,. College
I{ I \II " I \ II
(Gareers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-446-4367 ,
HoM~
1-800-214-0452_
FOR SALE
AccrediTed Utmber Accreditl':'Q
Coooci tor lndeperdenl ~
arid Sc:hooh 1:V48.,

adYllrtirse "any

OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SHING CO. recommet1ds
that you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail until you
have investigated the
offering.

Home in countrY. 9.73 acres
3 BA. 1 1/2 Bath. Full OaSE·
men!. 2 1/2 car garage.
Mature P1ne trees. 2 barns ola school house. $130.000.
can 740-286·72·12 or 937515·8670
Miniaii.Jre farm . Untbutll
home on 4 ac res, on SR
160. 3BR. tBA . Peaches.
berries. grapes. Swimming
pool. New apphances. woor;;
burner. $95.000. 740·368·
08 15

_________l

New Home lor Sale. Save
$20,000. lmmedtat&amp; occu·
pa!V'\1. appliances Inc., 2
' ..,
story w/wrap around porch.
3·Br.. 2&amp;1 /2
balh.large .
garage w/Bonus room over:
head·Full Basement &amp;
More.Seller ..,.,;u pay closing
cost 740-992-5635 or 992-

2478.

Aacine,2or.,WIC:a&amp;a'c.Fb.,1
Cg,20X20W/S;Iully
floor
House on Land . Contract upstairs,3.29 acres.$82,500 ..
Pome•oy. 740·992-5858.
740-949·2253. On AI. 124.

I

• I

a

ns

'

s'

2

5

2

s

0

jp.

s na

C I

e

-

=-

�I.

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.'mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Apri119, 2007

--~------~=--A~~-~~-.
-~~--~
IUK REJ&gt;T
Remod.i ted singre sto ry · 3 Bi. ho~Jsa in Pome roy
home with 3 bedrooms and Large 8 very clean. 1 112

Ave. ,

Pt. Pleasant WV small back yard, 740·949-

AskJng 45.500 Sellers will 2303, 01 591.3920
pay

closing

cost.

~-------

For

appointment to see: 304·

Attention!

675-2247

Local company offering ~ NO

River Front: 3 BR, 2 112
Bath, Full basement. Ap~rox
1 acre. Boat d()d(s &amp; R1ver
Access.
$155.000.
(740)709·0531

DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
Apartments. Largest in the
g"ams for you to buy your
area!
Bea utifully renovated
home instead of renting.
throughOut Including brand
• 100°'o llftancmg
new kitchen and bath.
• Less than perfect credit
Starting ~t $405. Call today!
accepted
(304 )273·3344

Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367·0000
'- - - - ' - - - - - - .
Duplex
for
rent
m
Mid dleport . 2 bedroom
appointment to see· 304- aparlmenls . bolh recenlly
remodeled. $4 50 upstairs
5765 _2247
and $475 downstairs. Extras
www.orvb.cam
like new deck. sunroom.
BA
.
Bath,
acres
garage.
storage,
Call
5
35
5
with access to the boat
(140)992·5094 and leave
docks. 1 mi. outside
message.
.--"------Gallipo~s . View photos/info HUD HOMES&lt;4 bed
2
online. Code 41 07 or call
bath .
m~ 3 b~:~~ (740 )441 •1605 .
$1 98/rno.More homes avarl=~~-~--., able 5% dn 20 yrs @ a•0
MOBILE HOMES
·
·
' •
mR S.w :
For listings 600·559· 4109
_eKI_._F_r4_4_. _ _ _ _ _
-,
In CliHon Lg. Lol, 2br. balh,
laundry -room $300/month,
$100fdeposi1 serious calls
NEW 2007 4 Bed
only 304·882·,3801

Charles
Berry

l!'lll""!~---~.....,

MISCFJJ.ANEC:MJS
MER.OJMt&gt;JSF.

L.--iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii;,...

51991

Lw------·
BEST BUY
$49,989

Nice 4br. 2 ba. LR , DR, FR.
Garage. in ground Pool, all
appliances
included
mymlctwesthome.com
51.!00/month (304 l593 ·
3542 In Po int Pleasant
Clearance Sale. New Total Pomeroy. 2 or 3 BA ..
drywall homes trom $299.63 Nayters Run/Co ndor. No
per monlh. Call (740)365·
d sl WID h00k
pets,Ayar
2434
.
I s. r: C · II 992•
up. e erences. a
•
Great used
3 bedroom
16x80 with .vinyl/shingle.
MOBILE HOI\~

111111111 141.121.2151

6886~·~--~--.,

200.5

Mus! sell. Only $25,995 wilh
F~R
- -1
·v n
ru..rc
del'·very. Call (74013e5·4387 .· ._ _ _ _ _ __ .
BUSINESS
2 BR, 2 BA, Approx 1/2 acre,

'

r

I~~!~~

AND Btw&gt;INGS

--

in $~~~~~~e,

mp~:~

1578 or 740·446·82111
- '- - -- - - Griswold Cast Iron Skillets.
All large block emblems, II 0,
3. 4, 5, 6. 7, 8, 9 , 10. 11 , 12,
14, 20; only !he #2 and #13
missing from having a complete set. includes well
designed iron display mete;, 4
ft . high, for th e complete set.
Wont sell separate , very
unique, $2900; Pair of
Winchester Roller Skates.
$45.00: Also. Amber Brown
Coca-Cola Bottle marked
Nashville, $90; 2- Wagner
Cast Iron Skillets #2 and 114,
5120 . (7401533·36 70

Apartment for rent, 1·2
Bdrm., remodeled, new ca rpet. stove &amp; h ig., Water,
sewer. trash pet Middleport.
$4 25 _00
No pets Ref
required. 740-843-5264.
-~~~--:-:Beautiful Apts. at Jadlson
Estates. 52 Westwood
Drive. from $365 to $560.
740-4 46-2 568
Equal
Hous1 ng Opportun ity. This
institUtion is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.

- - ':::-::=-:-:::-::-:-::-::---:::-

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
JET
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
AERATION MOTORS
for applicaticrr &amp; information Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
S!ock. Call Ron Evans, 1Grac5ous llvmg 1 and 2 800 _537_9528 _
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in NEW AND USED ST~EL
Middleport. from $327 to Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
$592. 740-992·5064. Equal For
Concrete,
Angle,
Housing Opportunity. This channel, Flat Bar. Steel
,· nsll.lull·on ,·s an Equal Grating
For
0 rams
.
Opport unity Provider and Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Employer.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
--'-'~----- Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Gracious living. 1 and2 bed· Friday. Bam-4:30pm . Closed
room apartments at Village Thursday, Saturday
&amp;
Manor
and
Riverside Sunday. (740)446-7300
Apartments in Middleport.
F
$0 $592 C II 740
rom · •
· a
· • 11 Tae
1 AI arm System,
992·5064. Equal Housing ,at eI bO
$400 I d fo
.
new n x,
or ra e r
Opporlunilie~.
Equal G
OppOrtunity Employer .
un. 740 ·992•2476
Honeysuckle

Hill s .

r

PJ..~

106 acres on l eon Baden
Ad . stream, pasture &amp;
woods, electric avail. call
Randall Bradford for direc·
tions
304-206-6326.
Century
21
$125,000
Runyan Assocaites Tim
Runyan Broker
2 Mobile Home Lot tor rent
1 near Vinton , and 1 on
Georges Creek Rd. Call
(740)44 Hill .

4 acre rot tor sale (304)743·
6323
Mobile Horne lot .for Rent 2
miles from Point Pleasant at
• lhe Y Rt2 &amp; 62 phone 304·
675-3246
One Acre fenced with 36x36
Pole Barn, Concrete floor,
Water. Electric ., (304)675·
2844
Undeveloped limd, 6.86 ac
mil avail. pond, open! wood·
ed. Long term (5·15 yr)
lease for mobile home or
other approved uses. Loc
Br umfield Rd. Harrison Twp .
ph (513)295-6309 leave

r

msg for return call.

HAY &amp;

Ir..,

lw--•GiiiiRAINiiiir--r·

For Sale Oates $3 bushel, 2000 Road star VafT)aha
for Seed or Feed. John Dresser, 6 ,561. miles. asking
Deere 15f1
Brush S6000.00 304-675-2793 or
304-593·51 57.

r'

Ir

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

I

Additions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
New Construction biterior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985·4141 Office
740416-1834

'

1999 GT Grand AM
1
.sunroo1. re d. 1oaded . exce.
lent condition , 1 owner
31026
75
,000 $5,599 (304)675-

1994 Bass Tracker" Pro 18,
60HP Mere, Troll motor,
Electric anchor, 2 fish find·
ers. cover. newer bass track·
er tr8iter, $4500 . (740)446·
6970
- --,..-,----93 Astro Bass Boat, i50hp.
Mercury. Just over hauled
by Mercury, Loaded 1yr
Warranty $100001
1lfm
' . 304 .
.
675·6278
r

awning. Excellent condition.
$6900 446·1511
----:~--2000, 30 ft., Sandpiper 5th
wheel, 2 slideouts, across
from Memory Gardens
Cemerery, (740)992·5672
21ft 1983 Skylark Camper
$3.000 090 304-675·1694
"I I(\ It I ...,

HOME
IMPROVF111J..NI'S
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gu ~rr
antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870., Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Find Bargains
in the
Classifieds

FOR
·--iiiiiiiiii"""-'

Prime commercial spe ce for
rent at Springvalley Plaza.
Call645·2192.

'

WANTFD
TO Rmr
A.esponsible and ethical
hunter looking for Hunting
Land. for lease in Gallia
County area, will pay min.
$20 per acre maybe more
depending on location. 304675-5256
\ IIIH 11 1\1&gt;1'1

OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPY i:tEALTH FAIR
Monday, April 23
11 :30 am- 1:30_pm
HMC Education &amp;
Conference Center
Call (740) 446-5121 for
more

Eagles
Karaoke,
with

Jimmy Joe
Hemsley Saturday,
April 21 .• 2007
a.VVIJI

Woodyards Mini Mall
Auction Sat. 6:30pm
A half load of name brand tools
and half load for ladies.

www.tlmbo,.......kobbletsT.oo•

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

HOUSF.JKJID

G&lt;xni
Appliance Warehouse
in Henderson. WV. Preowned Appliances. all under
Warranty, also have recondi·
tioned Big Screen TV's
(304)675-7999
Mollohan Furn . 202 Clark
Cfiapel Ad . New turn . If you
like' to save money, check us
out. Drive a liUie, Save alot!
388·0173 .
•

"---~iiiiiiiio_.i

Hill's Self
Storage

Advertise

in this

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

space
for
S90
per

z Trak ZeroTums &amp;

. ·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

THf MNIC HAS"

~

MOl&gt;fflNIZfl&gt; -

Stop in at
participati-,rg
Pomeroy
Merchants
· for our
Mother's
Day Gift
Basket
Giveaway

I

month

THe ATM'~!

GOIJLl&gt; PO

'

WH~N ~
Mil: FO~ MY

BARNEY
LOOK WHO'S HERE, MAMA' !!
YOU RECKYMEMSER OUR
NEIGHBORS, TH' SMIFS ?!

THE BORN LOSER

L.()Q(-'.~'( AAt:&gt; ~~
1"/o..~~

PLr..'ill-IG Il-l~ U'JE
OLt&gt;l~

0~, T~t'i W~E OK~

--· ..._

coo.:rn!

L€.1'~ JUST !l/o..'i '!l\E
mt&gt;S to~~ AA!I "

OF fA.'I

F"-'10~1'\'E:.

6ROU~OF

"''

W~t&amp;l ~'\'~in()~,

T~l»-'&lt;~!

. S\~T\f:l!
~"rl\'1',

14./o..'.Jtll't
WE.'?

Work

BIG NATE

Pass

Pass

+K

We are looking at the misconceptions
aboul a one·club opening bid and the
opener s subsequenl rebids. Here is a
comment I have oHen hoard; "I didn'l
show my major because I hed to conlirm
I had a long, not short, minor.'
Wrongl If you skip a major lo repeat
minor, you deny four cards In lhol major.
For example, .if an unoontssted auction
begins orie dub - one diamond, or one
club - one heart. and the. opener rebids
two clubs, he denies a four-oard major.
So, In !tis deal, SOulh rebids one epade,
not two clubs. Then, when North raises
10 lwo spades, promi~ng four-card support, Soulh re-evaluates. He has 15
· hlgh·card poinrs. lwo shortage points for
lhe singleton hean and one for !he dou·
blelon diamond. This gives a total of 18
points. Also, that excellent cllll suit is
worth a"point or two more. Hence the
lump to game. Arrj lime you smeli a
game, bid lhat game.
Ramsmber also that when bidding
game, not sian), we love majors and
hera. mnors. Wilh no major-suit fit , we
always.lry to steer into three nO&gt;Irump.
Now for ths declarer-play problem.
Against four spades, West leads !he dia·
mond king and continues the sui. How
should SOulh proceed after ruffing the
third diamond?
He should establish his club s~t. The
simplest - and best - line is to ,draw
two rounds of !rumps (ff trumps are 4·1,
the conrract is hopeless),. caslr the ace·
king of cubs, and ruff a dub on lhe
board. Sourh rerurns 10 his hand wrlh a
heart and leads winning clubs. West may
ruff In whenever he likes.

G

' Prompl and Quality

East
Pass

AstroGraph
-'llrthdor:

Friday, April 20, 2007

•Experienced

By Bernice Bede Oeol

References Avai l able!

Your financial prospects look quite
encouraging, but you might h.ave to team
up with others for this to materla"llze.
You're lik6ty to make more !rom joint
endeavors than from what you do .on

Call Gary Stanley @
740· 742-2293
Please l eave messa e

your own.

We Deliver To You!

NOTICE TO CONTRAC· Standards provisions sale will be held lor the

Ihe Pomeroy Distress ance

• Home Qxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Helios System

requirements, contents of sell·serv·

Deere Getora Carmichael
Equipmenl (740)446·2412.

a.s per specifications nlty provisions, and
In bid packet will be the requirement tor a
received by the Meigs payment bond and perFor Sale 4 nice Hay Wagons
u
n
t
y. formance b,ond for
0
304
c:.:......c·6_7_5-.:..33:.c0.:..6_ _' - _ Commissioners
at 100% of the contract
Kiefe&lt; Buill· Valley-Bison· their oHice at the price. No bidder . may
Horse
and
Uveslock Courthouse, Pomeroy, withdraw his bid within
Trollers·
Loadmax· Ohio 45769 until 1:00 thirty (30) days alter
Gooseneck, Dumps. &amp; p.m ., May 3, 2QD7 and the actual date of the
Ulilily· Aluma Aluminum then at 1:15 p .m ., at opening thereof. The
Trailers· B&amp;W Gooseneck said office opened and Meigs
County
Hitches- Trailer Parts. read aloud for the tot- C o m m I s s I o n e r s
1
h
1·
Carmichael
· Trailers. low ng:
reserve t e r ght to
1 1
(740)445·2412
Th s s a Prevailing reject any or all bids.
' - - ' - - - - - - - ·Wage project. See Mlck
DaVenport,
NH 315 w~re·lle hay baler. Specifications In bid President
JD 215 16" d' · 1
r·
"
erna
packet. Specifications, Meigs
County
aJ 12H field cunivaror. 740· and bid forms may be Commissioners
256 6011
•
secured at the office of (4) 12, 19, 26
USED Rorary riflers. 4', s·. Meigs
County
6'. 3 poinr hi!Ch. BIG Commissioners,------~SELECTION. Jim's Farm Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Public Notice
Equipment 740·446·9777
Ohio 45769, Phone
740·992-2895.
A PUBLIC NOTICE
LIVOOOCK
deposit of 0 dollars will NOTICE: Is hereby
~
be ,required lor each given that on Saturday,
set of plans and spec I- April 21, 2007 at 10:00
Club lamb Sale, Sar., April llcatlons. The
lull a.m., a public sale will
21 , 2007. 9:00 AM·nooo for amount
will
be be held at 211 W.
more info conlacr Ryan returned within thirty. Sec~md st.. Pomeroy,
Beegle. 740-949·2006.
(30) days alter r!'Celpt Oh,lo. The Farmers
of bids.
Bank and
Savings
Fair pigs $100 each. 304· Each bid · must be Company Is selling lor
675·1798
accompenled by either cash in hand or certiFar1 Show P~s tor sale, bur· a bid bond In an fled check the followrows ano gills. 740·446· amount ol100% of the lng collateral :
6741 or 740·339.0944
bid amount with a 2005
Chevrolet
sureiy satisfactory to S I I v e r a d o
GoalS for Sele. Boer Goars. the aforesaid Meigs 1GCEK19B15E109636
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb. C
o
u
n
t
y The Farmers Bank and
2007. Call 1740)256·9247
Commissioners or by Savings
Company,
Quality 4·H SllOw r;gs . Now certified
check, Pomeroy,
Ohio,
1100 Private Treaty at !arm . cashiers check, or let- reserves the right to
521 Ewinglon Road , Vinron. tar of credit upon a sol- bid at this sale, and to
Ohio 74D-:i8e-ore3 or 645· vent bank In the withdraw the above
1644
amount of not less collateral prior to Sale.
than 1O'Yo of the bid Further, The Farmera
amount In favor of the Bank and
Savings
aforesaid
Meigs Company reserves the
C
o
u
n
t
y rlghtto reject any or all
Commissioners. · Bid bids submitted.
Bonds shall be accom- The above described
ponied by Proof of collateral will be sold
· Authority of the official " as is-where Is", with
or agent signing the no
expressed
or
bond.
Implied
warranty
Bids shall be. seated given.
and marked as Bid lor For further InformsPomeroy
Distress lion, or lor an apjlolnl·
Sl-atk Replacement ment to Inspect cotlat·
and mailed or dellv- erat, prior to sale date
ered to:
contact Cyndle, Ken,
Meigs
County or Randy at 992-2136.
Commissioners ·
(4) 17, 18, 19 ·
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders Is
Public Nollce
called to all of the ·- - - - - - - requirements
con· PUBLIC SALE
talned in this bid pack- Notice Is hereby given
et, particularly to the that on April 21 , 2007
Federal
Labor at 10:00 a.m. a public

c

•on-

r

goods to be sold are
described generally as
miscellaneous person·
al &amp; household. The
room will be opened
lor viewing Immediately prior to solicitation
otblds.
Description of proper·
ty as follows: Toddler
bed,
Kids
Toys,
Christmas
Tree ,
Phone a
Bay t40
Name:
Jennifer
Contreras
Address : 238 Rahelte ·
Drive
City: Columbus, Ohio

43204

(Jam_i1q_ -·~·&gt;"':"t"'11'!ijP.!I§~:...
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

Public Notice
PUBLIC SALE
Notice Is hereby g iven
that on April 21 , 2007
at 10;00 a.m . a public
sale will be held for the

contents of seH-servIce storage room. The
goods '" be sold •re
described generally as
miscellaneous persbnat &amp; household. ·The
room will be opened
lor vlawlng Immediately prior to solicitation
of bids".
Description of property as follows: 3 Air
Conditioners,
Baby
Bed,
Automotive
Items,
Chrlatmas
Decorations, camping
Equipment, Antiques
Clock, Numerous Totea
of Clothes
Bayt20
Name: Tammy Bable
Address:
48246
Tomt!do Road
City : Racine, Ohio

I SAMUEL 19:5!

''AND THOU SHALT
REJOICE IN E'VER'1'
600D THIN6 ''
DEUTERONOM'r' Z6:Ji

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You r
extravagant urges could be stirring with·
in ·you again, so you wilt have to recog·
nlze them for what they are and.not give
way to ovei-spending. En)Ov yourself In
lrie•panslve ways.
GEMJNI (May 21-.June 20)- SoCially, this
.should be a very pleasant day for you.
But If you treat somebOdy as' an Interior,
conditions could get rathet" dlsa~eable
and what should have been fun wll
bomb out.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - Serious
matters should not b8 swept under the
ru"g, especially If other people could be
affected. Wishful thinking won't make tha
situation go away.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Do not lmpos8
yo~rself on anybody or any group that
wishes to be left to do its own thing.
Recognize when the welcome mat has
been pulled away and spend time with
others.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Room Acldnlons 1
Romodollng
N.w Garagea
Eloctrlcor 1 Plumbing
Roofing Ia Gutt.,.
VInyl Slclng &amp; Pointing
Potio end P..ch Decke
WV03&amp;n5

V C. YOUNG Ill

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit. Decks.
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbr·ng,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

992 62 15
!

PnrllC't0\ Oh L'
'•'ll L,&gt;("ll~ . p~r•cn,e

74CI-367-Q544

• Free Estfmatea

74()..367-G536

a ;:;~;:===~===::;=~~

purpose(\1
satisfying
landtord·s lien
on the

REJOICE! ''THOU
SAWIST IT, AI-ID
DIDST REJOICE''

tV

•

Terms of the sale will .
be cash or certified
lund ONLY.
.
Hill's Sell Storage
29625 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH 4Sn1
(4) 13, 17, 19

PEANUTS

Manier.··
,

Racycl ng
11111111~~===~ II 41111

. . , illlfl'llllls. . . . . .

..........1!:11.

NVIIITIPPIICEIIII
111111118C.•21 ' I ,.. . 111¢1111•-..r

n ,,.........

lll!flrC...MIIIII

VIRGO (Aug. 23-5ept. 22)- All mener5,
even serious ones, can be wo~ed. out
satisfactorily. You'll be tested, so hang in
there and maintain a positive posture.
Think win, and take ell challenges In
stride.
LIBRA {Sept. 23-Qcl. 23) - II a serious
conflict of opinton should arise, don't
react with disdain. Count to 10 and then
try to talk things out with the other party.
If you remain coot, a soothing of egos
can be anained.
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 221 Something you can shlire with another
mtght develop out of a situation engineered by another. 11 may not live up to
wnat ls expectecl, but It will nd-lerthaless
be something worthwhile.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·0et . "21) Being flexible will be important. If a better
wily of doing something Is proposed, or if
another person comes along who would
work out better, be agreeable to making
!he change.
CAPRICORN (Dec . · 22:-Jan. 19) Shoukt a mistake be made whJte 'fOtJ are
wonting on something impor1ant, exerctse patience. II you remain cool, the
problem can be rectified easier thail you
lhoughl possible.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) - U it
looks flke condilions appear to be going
againSt you. don't drop out of the race. A
twist of fate could be in the offing, whtch
should enable you to snatctl St.JCC9SS
from the jaws ot defeat.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Maidl 20) - Don' fry
too hard to win peer approval 01" you
"""' be able 1o refix, and othm will fall
to see your great personality. let ;'QLir'Satf
be who )'OU are, and you'l Hilly acquir-.
ondornments. ·
ARIES(Maidl21·Aprll19)- o mlghl.be
w1oe not ro raka to 1101n "'"r'fiN"'I you
holr. Bo lblo 1o cllsHngultjl belwHn fact
and tlctlon boeouao accoptlng lho wrong
taeta eould cauae troutie lof you.

SOUPTONUTZ

4m1
Terms of the sale will•
be cash or certified
fund ONLY.
Hilt's SeH Storage
29625 Beahan Rd.
Racine, OH 45n1
(4) 13, 17, 19

\

•

•="-"..:.!1-'20 Running
tracks
21 White-water
craft
22 Diligent
inseets
23 Vaughan or

43 Toward the
luturt
45 Flnlahed
47 Ms. Paquin
48 - time no

aee .

49 Park lea-

Miles
24
25
27
29
30
32
34
37
38
41

ture

Fragile layer
" - -Hur"
Au~ment
M01n idea
Casual
farewell
Caters'
Lash LaKing beater
Demolished
Rage
Watered
silk

50 Long·lactd
51 Traveler's
guide
52 Lyric poem
53 Tyke

54

Mas~~euse

employer

a

BALANCf.

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal
*Reasonable Rates
*In sured

North
1• ·
2•
Pass

Show a major before
you repeat a minor

WITHOuT THe
t..AuGH TllAGI'

Wt:.'\/E.~

5.99% Fixed Rate on John Sidewalk Replacement varlou,s equal opportu- Ice storage room. The

•sc."

• New Homes
• Garages

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

ROIERT
IISSEll
COISD,CBII

i40-992-1m

0% Fin ancing - 36 Mos. TORS
and
Davis-Bacon purpose of satisfying a
available now on John Se"aled proposalS for Wages, various lnsur· landlord's lien on the
Deere

South
1•
1•
4•

15 y r~. Exp. Free Estimates

riO

i" .· FO~R~&lt;;!;_-

I,

Hardwood Clblneiry An~ FurnlWre

7 4

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

740·992-6971
, Insured

Twin Rivers Tower is accept- Pleasant, Asking $39,000
ing applications lor waiting
I \1(\1 '\ 11'1'111"'1
list ror Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apartment.tor
the
,\ 11\ 1,1!)(1..
elderly/disabled call 675· ~~;;.;;~;;.;;;;;;;;;;~
6679
Equal
Housing
FARM
all utilities pd except electric. Oppmlunlly
~
EQuiPMFNf

RFAL EsTATE
$350/mo, call (740)256: Upsrairs ,
Two
BD.
~
WANTEIJ
· 1135
Apt .,Large,Ciean modern
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 ~A Apt . on Watson Rd WID Private,No grass 10
Need to sell your· home? Rodney area. Ref, Stove , mow.992·7094or416·4369.
Late on payments, div'a~ce , W&amp;D Included. Water &amp; Fully furnished or not.
job transfer or a death? 1 Sewer pd. Dep and Ref -~--:::----.,
can buy your home. All cash required . No pets. 709-1657
"""•
and quid&lt; closing. 740-41 6· or 4~ 6· 1 27 1
3130.
3 and 4 room furnished aprs. Commercial building ' For
ltl\l\1'
clean WID hookup. No pels. · Renl" 1600 square feel, off
Ref. and deposit required . street parking. Great loca~r~lo~~""-~~~---., 74.0·446·1519.
rion! 74g Third Avenue rn
o~~
IU..I"'ll
New 2BA apar tments. Gallipolis. Aenl $400/mo.
Washer/dryer
hookup. Call Wayne (404)456·3602
stove/refrigerator included. Commer,·cal Space to'r renr
For Rent 2 B&amp;droom House
Also, units on SA 160. Pets Main St. Pt. Pl. $4001mo ca ll
304-675·2535
Welcome! (7401441·0194.
Julie 703-526·0617

• 5l

•

Dav1"d Lew1"s

•

• Q 10 8

• AKJ976

26 Year's Experience

~-----,,- MOTOR Ho•n~
Free Eatlmateo
-199901dsAiero4cyl., Auto, ~-lliiiiriiiiriiiii"ii~. ~::::~~~~~~
2 door. CD,. Sunroof, 99,000
r996 24ft Trail Lire. Sleep 5.
Wise Concrete
mites A-title good work car Full
size
bed . Batti

combo.
stove. AC,

• Q 10
'fK 109'l4
• A6 5 2

• A

Concrete '"
nork

~=---::C:-AMPE--.-RS-:&amp;:--,1

Ea11t

matron

s8

Soulb
• K6 3 2

llarCIDR Constnu:tion and
Geaeral Cantractiag

D iscount

Bo··rs &amp; M·~~
0
AI/IUi
n FURS~:'~'
·--miiiRiiSALiiiiiE
··· ~
•
1994 Prism runs great standard 304·675·2208
--:-:--,---...,1998 Pontiac Grand AM GT
5 speed, black, new tires,
needs motOf work $500, 4
Parne rr·1Jones r rres
· 351 ~
'
•vS
$250 304-675-6439

West

46 Cea~~ei
51 Incentive
54 Mexlcall

55 Doted on
56 'Sought .
nuggeta
12 Eder
ottine 57 Newscaster
13
nand
-Jennings
nasty
Platitude
f4 Seld
hoarsely
DOWN
15 Fhln
16 Rural
1 Cou~tees's
strueture
husband
t 7 Plowlllorql 2 Watermelon
f9 Myrna
IOUrce
played her
3 ShangrHa
13 Cry loudly
4 Bookish
16 Ms. ·
. types
Lane hester 5 Taka a
18 Furniture
crack at
mover
6 Fanatic's
19 Summar·
feeling
hOUI!e
7 Welles or
l1 Ani Yll1lon
Bean
l3 Wry humor 8 Pants
14 Grown·ups
problem
l5 Kyoto hon· 9 Beluga
orillc
delicacy
l6 Ambler or 10 Unusual
Clopton
11 Stick up
l9 Slalom run t2 Stuffed
10 The oth.era
shirts
12 Linoleum
16 Musical
measureseale note
ment
18 'Sign before
14 Seep
VIrgo

DHIHJ7

• J 9 8
• 8 53
• K Q J 10

70 Pine S treet • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

740·367 -0266/
1·800·950·3359

1 Mlleatone
6 Manlna
maak
· 11 Oakland

• 9 8 3
• 4 3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

2006 Honda' 400 ATV, Auto
30 Yrs . Ex p. Ins.
1988. Pontiac Riding l awn with Winch. Lots of Extras, .
Mower. Ask for Jr. 256- 11 02 200 milo. 4 year warranty,
Owner Ronnie Jones
$ 5,000. (740) 446-6970
Free Estimates
.

r1....---------l

I

• Trim • Stump
Grinding • Bucket
Truck
Fu ll insured
Senior Citizen

MOJORCYO...Es/
__4 \VHEELF~

...,

I

$350 plus dep. Rei. No Pels.
No ~making . Stove &amp;!rig ,
furn. Coin WID on·premises.
258 'state St. Gallipolis. 740446·3667
-2b--ed_ro_o_m_a_p_r i-n-Cen-re_n_a-ry,

• Top • Removal

-..:ill"'"-~-~-- -~
· 1""":":"----~
1:!

North
• A 7 5I
• Q J 6 2

('famlhJ 1•!:1133:1

,lo! H., l!ll ~ll,lll'

Apartments now accepting L---mliRiiiiiSIIALEiiiii
. -,.1
applications lor 1 and 28R 94 Chevy Lumina. 4 DR,
apts. No rental assistaQce AKC BostonTerrier puppies white, new windshield and
available at this time. Rent mlf $ 4 00ea .·AK~ Coll&lt;'e brakes. Runs great. $850
v
OBO 441 16
electric. very nice. Approx. 3 starts at $310 month. Equal puppies mff sable/wh.,eyes _ _
. _ _ ._ _n____
mi from town . Gree n Housing
.. Opportunity. normai;OSU cart. $400ea.- Auto Buyer has 20 cars tl"lat
Township , no pets. Ref. (740)446-3344.
AKC
Golden
Ret.
o 30
6 2 6
$475/mo and $475/dep. ":-c---:-:-~--9e12 · mpg. 44 ·7 7
740-446·6565
i BA Apt. April free. with paid pups (2F) 12wks . ,sh o t s
Red 92 Eagle Talon, runs
- - - - - - -deposit and approved appli· $350ea.·AIC;C Yorkle pup·
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson cation . 740•441 _9668 or pies males $800, females good, no rusr. good SliCker
Mobile Home Park in 740 _3jg. 0362
$900 small. ALL Vet Ck'd . CD player $1 ,OOOffirm 304·
675·7474
Gallipolis,
OH. Phone ~--:=-:-::--:__. · 740·696· 1085
(740)446·2003 or (740)446· Modern 1 BR Apl Call 446· - - - - - - . , . - 1409_
3736 1
AKC Siberian HuSky pllp_ _,_,_ _ _- ; - pies, Blue eyed, mates,
Very nice 3,BR. 1 BA mOOile New Haven, I Br., furnished, B&amp;W,
$250.00·
G&amp;W,
home. All electric. NO PETS. no pets, dep.&amp;references, $300.00.
Ready
now! 2003 E250 cargo van, bins,
$400/monlh &amp; $400/deposil 740·992·0165
(740)446·6627
ladder rack. ale , towing pkg,
Available May 1, 2007 .. Call ~-=-:-~--:---:-:garage kept. 740·6~8-26 13 .
304-674_4633
Nice Clean
furnished 1 Bassetlpu psAKC
six
bedroom Apartment. $350 wk .old,4-tri -co lor,4-lemon 96 Ford Wlndstar LX EXT.
APARTMENTS
mon th Deposit required and wh . Parenlson site.Ask l eather. CO changer. Rear
FOR RENT
(304)675·2970
$275 ea.740·667-6756
alr. Runs goo'd. $1500. 388"--..,;iiiiiriiiiii-._;1· ·N,·ce clean new decoraled, English Mastiffs AKC , CH 6497
1 and 2 bedroom apart- 2br no pets, ref/dep 304· bloodlines. Only 3 left. · .., MmnRCYGJ..i!S"
ments, furnished and unfur- 675·5162
Cleara nce sale. 740-245 4WHEELERS
nished, and houses in
5823 or 740·645-1912 .
Po meroy and Middleport, Tara
Tow nhouse
2004 Honda 450 Foreman
security dePosit required , no Apartments, Very Spacious, '
FoR SALE
ATV, 4x4 , $3000 firm .
pets, 740-992-2218.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
:___ _ __ __ _
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
(740)441·5636
1 BR Apt. Closeto Wai-Mart, Pool, Patio. Start $425/Mo.
2 unit Apartment Building for
utilities included. Dep. No Pets: Lea se Plus
sale fully lurnished with all
Required. ~45·5555
· Security Deposit Required,
appliances. occupied $1 ,000
1 BA, 2nd lloor. AJC, util.pd., (740)367-7066.
month income in Point

r

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

Pomeroy H.S.
, . Class of /966

28mpg $1 ,800 (304 )593· tub/shower
1392 or (304)576-2201
Microwave,

deposit or will sell for
Commercial Building on $! 7,000 . (740 )44 1_0775
Eastern, Approx. 1200sq.ft.
Next to lrvins Glass. 446· 3 BR, 2 BA, Utility room. au

NEA Crossword Puzzle
Phillip
• Alder

Dell 51 50 lnspiron laptop
• Payment could be the
Single story home with 2 same as rent.
~---:----:-:: computer. 5370. 740-709-

bedrooms and 1 bath. l arge
lot.
Loca ted ' at 2112
Madison Ave. Pt. Pleasant,
WV Asking $29,500 Sellers
will pay closing cost For

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

ACROSS

F)

·

www.mydally~entlnel.com

BRIDGE

Used furniture store. 130
BUiavilte Pike, Electric
Ranges. CheSis. C!)Uches.
Mattresses, bunk beds,
d1nettes, recltners. Nice
2002 Bass T10ct&lt;er fishing
boat. Business and property
for sale. (740)446·4782
GallipoliS, OH, Hrs 11·3 (M·

1 112 baths on large lot. bath, AJC. hardwood floors.
located at 3408 Mossman full basement, 2 car garage,

Thursday, April19, 2007
ALLEYOOP

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celetwity Ci~ cryptograms n ctaa!ed lrom qootallllt'!s by'famolis people. past ard ll"ewrl
Each teller in lile apter starcls 101' ancthlr.

Today's clue: Hequals X

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION .- "Lel lhere be spaces in your logelhemess I And let
the winds of !he heavens dance between you.· - Kahlil Gibran

'::~::~' s~tt~by CUY
~~ t ~s· GAM I
R. POUAN - - - - WoaD

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four Krombled words bt·
to form io&lt;K slft'll~ wordt

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r--~~~A~-:F:-1:-E-:C~6-A:"1II ~--~~mplere

rne chudl; quored

.
by fillino in the missing words
L.~.....II-.J..~-.1.--' you devo!op hom 11ep No. 3 below.

t:ll. PRINI NUMSf.REO IETmS IN
'.7 THESE SQUARES
ft UNSCRAMBlE lETTIRS 10
~ GET ~NSWER
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

, - 1 e ·- o ,

S1itch - Legal - Unlit - lloifor - LEISURE
. "If you use yo ur vacation just to lie around." the
wife infomled her hmo;band, ..tJune will l~ somebody
who wnn1s to ll'ie your Lt:.ISUR.E : ·

ARLO&amp;JANIS

�I.

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.'mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Apri119, 2007

--~------~=--A~~-~~-.
-~~--~
IUK REJ&gt;T
Remod.i ted singre sto ry · 3 Bi. ho~Jsa in Pome roy
home with 3 bedrooms and Large 8 very clean. 1 112

Ave. ,

Pt. Pleasant WV small back yard, 740·949-

AskJng 45.500 Sellers will 2303, 01 591.3920
pay

closing

cost.

~-------

For

appointment to see: 304·

Attention!

675-2247

Local company offering ~ NO

River Front: 3 BR, 2 112
Bath, Full basement. Ap~rox
1 acre. Boat d()d(s &amp; R1ver
Access.
$155.000.
(740)709·0531

DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
Apartments. Largest in the
g"ams for you to buy your
area!
Bea utifully renovated
home instead of renting.
throughOut Including brand
• 100°'o llftancmg
new kitchen and bath.
• Less than perfect credit
Starting ~t $405. Call today!
accepted
(304 )273·3344

Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367·0000
'- - - - ' - - - - - - .
Duplex
for
rent
m
Mid dleport . 2 bedroom
appointment to see· 304- aparlmenls . bolh recenlly
remodeled. $4 50 upstairs
5765 _2247
and $475 downstairs. Extras
www.orvb.cam
like new deck. sunroom.
BA
.
Bath,
acres
garage.
storage,
Call
5
35
5
with access to the boat
(140)992·5094 and leave
docks. 1 mi. outside
message.
.--"------Gallipo~s . View photos/info HUD HOMES&lt;4 bed
2
online. Code 41 07 or call
bath .
m~ 3 b~:~~ (740 )441 •1605 .
$1 98/rno.More homes avarl=~~-~--., able 5% dn 20 yrs @ a•0
MOBILE HOMES
·
·
' •
mR S.w :
For listings 600·559· 4109
_eKI_._F_r4_4_. _ _ _ _ _
-,
In CliHon Lg. Lol, 2br. balh,
laundry -room $300/month,
$100fdeposi1 serious calls
NEW 2007 4 Bed
only 304·882·,3801

Charles
Berry

l!'lll""!~---~.....,

MISCFJJ.ANEC:MJS
MER.OJMt&gt;JSF.

L.--iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii;,...

51991

Lw------·
BEST BUY
$49,989

Nice 4br. 2 ba. LR , DR, FR.
Garage. in ground Pool, all
appliances
included
mymlctwesthome.com
51.!00/month (304 l593 ·
3542 In Po int Pleasant
Clearance Sale. New Total Pomeroy. 2 or 3 BA ..
drywall homes trom $299.63 Nayters Run/Co ndor. No
per monlh. Call (740)365·
d sl WID h00k
pets,Ayar
2434
.
I s. r: C · II 992•
up. e erences. a
•
Great used
3 bedroom
16x80 with .vinyl/shingle.
MOBILE HOI\~

111111111 141.121.2151

6886~·~--~--.,

200.5

Mus! sell. Only $25,995 wilh
F~R
- -1
·v n
ru..rc
del'·very. Call (74013e5·4387 .· ._ _ _ _ _ __ .
BUSINESS
2 BR, 2 BA, Approx 1/2 acre,

'

r

I~~!~~

AND Btw&gt;INGS

--

in $~~~~~~e,

mp~:~

1578 or 740·446·82111
- '- - -- - - Griswold Cast Iron Skillets.
All large block emblems, II 0,
3. 4, 5, 6. 7, 8, 9 , 10. 11 , 12,
14, 20; only !he #2 and #13
missing from having a complete set. includes well
designed iron display mete;, 4
ft . high, for th e complete set.
Wont sell separate , very
unique, $2900; Pair of
Winchester Roller Skates.
$45.00: Also. Amber Brown
Coca-Cola Bottle marked
Nashville, $90; 2- Wagner
Cast Iron Skillets #2 and 114,
5120 . (7401533·36 70

Apartment for rent, 1·2
Bdrm., remodeled, new ca rpet. stove &amp; h ig., Water,
sewer. trash pet Middleport.
$4 25 _00
No pets Ref
required. 740-843-5264.
-~~~--:-:Beautiful Apts. at Jadlson
Estates. 52 Westwood
Drive. from $365 to $560.
740-4 46-2 568
Equal
Hous1 ng Opportun ity. This
institUtion is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.

- - ':::-::=-:-:::-::-:-::-::---:::-

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
JET
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
AERATION MOTORS
for applicaticrr &amp; information Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
S!ock. Call Ron Evans, 1Grac5ous llvmg 1 and 2 800 _537_9528 _
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in NEW AND USED ST~EL
Middleport. from $327 to Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
$592. 740-992·5064. Equal For
Concrete,
Angle,
Housing Opportunity. This channel, Flat Bar. Steel
,· nsll.lull·on ,·s an Equal Grating
For
0 rams
.
Opport unity Provider and Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Employer.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
--'-'~----- Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Gracious living. 1 and2 bed· Friday. Bam-4:30pm . Closed
room apartments at Village Thursday, Saturday
&amp;
Manor
and
Riverside Sunday. (740)446-7300
Apartments in Middleport.
F
$0 $592 C II 740
rom · •
· a
· • 11 Tae
1 AI arm System,
992·5064. Equal Housing ,at eI bO
$400 I d fo
.
new n x,
or ra e r
Opporlunilie~.
Equal G
OppOrtunity Employer .
un. 740 ·992•2476
Honeysuckle

Hill s .

r

PJ..~

106 acres on l eon Baden
Ad . stream, pasture &amp;
woods, electric avail. call
Randall Bradford for direc·
tions
304-206-6326.
Century
21
$125,000
Runyan Assocaites Tim
Runyan Broker
2 Mobile Home Lot tor rent
1 near Vinton , and 1 on
Georges Creek Rd. Call
(740)44 Hill .

4 acre rot tor sale (304)743·
6323
Mobile Horne lot .for Rent 2
miles from Point Pleasant at
• lhe Y Rt2 &amp; 62 phone 304·
675-3246
One Acre fenced with 36x36
Pole Barn, Concrete floor,
Water. Electric ., (304)675·
2844
Undeveloped limd, 6.86 ac
mil avail. pond, open! wood·
ed. Long term (5·15 yr)
lease for mobile home or
other approved uses. Loc
Br umfield Rd. Harrison Twp .
ph (513)295-6309 leave

r

msg for return call.

HAY &amp;

Ir..,

lw--•GiiiiRAINiiiir--r·

For Sale Oates $3 bushel, 2000 Road star VafT)aha
for Seed or Feed. John Dresser, 6 ,561. miles. asking
Deere 15f1
Brush S6000.00 304-675-2793 or
304-593·51 57.

r'

Ir

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

I

Additions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
New Construction biterior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985·4141 Office
740416-1834

'

1999 GT Grand AM
1
.sunroo1. re d. 1oaded . exce.
lent condition , 1 owner
31026
75
,000 $5,599 (304)675-

1994 Bass Tracker" Pro 18,
60HP Mere, Troll motor,
Electric anchor, 2 fish find·
ers. cover. newer bass track·
er tr8iter, $4500 . (740)446·
6970
- --,..-,----93 Astro Bass Boat, i50hp.
Mercury. Just over hauled
by Mercury, Loaded 1yr
Warranty $100001
1lfm
' . 304 .
.
675·6278
r

awning. Excellent condition.
$6900 446·1511
----:~--2000, 30 ft., Sandpiper 5th
wheel, 2 slideouts, across
from Memory Gardens
Cemerery, (740)992·5672
21ft 1983 Skylark Camper
$3.000 090 304-675·1694
"I I(\ It I ...,

HOME
IMPROVF111J..NI'S
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gu ~rr
antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870., Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Find Bargains
in the
Classifieds

FOR
·--iiiiiiiiii"""-'

Prime commercial spe ce for
rent at Springvalley Plaza.
Call645·2192.

'

WANTFD
TO Rmr
A.esponsible and ethical
hunter looking for Hunting
Land. for lease in Gallia
County area, will pay min.
$20 per acre maybe more
depending on location. 304675-5256
\ IIIH 11 1\1&gt;1'1

OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPY i:tEALTH FAIR
Monday, April 23
11 :30 am- 1:30_pm
HMC Education &amp;
Conference Center
Call (740) 446-5121 for
more

Eagles
Karaoke,
with

Jimmy Joe
Hemsley Saturday,
April 21 .• 2007
a.VVIJI

Woodyards Mini Mall
Auction Sat. 6:30pm
A half load of name brand tools
and half load for ladies.

www.tlmbo,.......kobbletsT.oo•

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

HOUSF.JKJID

G&lt;xni
Appliance Warehouse
in Henderson. WV. Preowned Appliances. all under
Warranty, also have recondi·
tioned Big Screen TV's
(304)675-7999
Mollohan Furn . 202 Clark
Cfiapel Ad . New turn . If you
like' to save money, check us
out. Drive a liUie, Save alot!
388·0173 .
•

"---~iiiiiiiio_.i

Hill's Self
Storage

Advertise

in this

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

space
for
S90
per

z Trak ZeroTums &amp;

. ·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

THf MNIC HAS"

~

MOl&gt;fflNIZfl&gt; -

Stop in at
participati-,rg
Pomeroy
Merchants
· for our
Mother's
Day Gift
Basket
Giveaway

I

month

THe ATM'~!

GOIJLl&gt; PO

'

WH~N ~
Mil: FO~ MY

BARNEY
LOOK WHO'S HERE, MAMA' !!
YOU RECKYMEMSER OUR
NEIGHBORS, TH' SMIFS ?!

THE BORN LOSER

L.()Q(-'.~'( AAt:&gt; ~~
1"/o..~~

PLr..'ill-IG Il-l~ U'JE
OLt&gt;l~

0~, T~t'i W~E OK~

--· ..._

coo.:rn!

L€.1'~ JUST !l/o..'i '!l\E
mt&gt;S to~~ AA!I "

OF fA.'I

F"-'10~1'\'E:.

6ROU~OF

"''

W~t&amp;l ~'\'~in()~,

T~l»-'&lt;~!

. S\~T\f:l!
~"rl\'1',

14./o..'.Jtll't
WE.'?

Work

BIG NATE

Pass

Pass

+K

We are looking at the misconceptions
aboul a one·club opening bid and the
opener s subsequenl rebids. Here is a
comment I have oHen hoard; "I didn'l
show my major because I hed to conlirm
I had a long, not short, minor.'
Wrongl If you skip a major lo repeat
minor, you deny four cards In lhol major.
For example, .if an unoontssted auction
begins orie dub - one diamond, or one
club - one heart. and the. opener rebids
two clubs, he denies a four-oard major.
So, In !tis deal, SOulh rebids one epade,
not two clubs. Then, when North raises
10 lwo spades, promi~ng four-card support, Soulh re-evaluates. He has 15
· hlgh·card poinrs. lwo shortage points for
lhe singleton hean and one for !he dou·
blelon diamond. This gives a total of 18
points. Also, that excellent cllll suit is
worth a"point or two more. Hence the
lump to game. Arrj lime you smeli a
game, bid lhat game.
Ramsmber also that when bidding
game, not sian), we love majors and
hera. mnors. Wilh no major-suit fit , we
always.lry to steer into three nO&gt;Irump.
Now for ths declarer-play problem.
Against four spades, West leads !he dia·
mond king and continues the sui. How
should SOulh proceed after ruffing the
third diamond?
He should establish his club s~t. The
simplest - and best - line is to ,draw
two rounds of !rumps (ff trumps are 4·1,
the conrract is hopeless),. caslr the ace·
king of cubs, and ruff a dub on lhe
board. Sourh rerurns 10 his hand wrlh a
heart and leads winning clubs. West may
ruff In whenever he likes.

G

' Prompl and Quality

East
Pass

AstroGraph
-'llrthdor:

Friday, April 20, 2007

•Experienced

By Bernice Bede Oeol

References Avai l able!

Your financial prospects look quite
encouraging, but you might h.ave to team
up with others for this to materla"llze.
You're lik6ty to make more !rom joint
endeavors than from what you do .on

Call Gary Stanley @
740· 742-2293
Please l eave messa e

your own.

We Deliver To You!

NOTICE TO CONTRAC· Standards provisions sale will be held lor the

Ihe Pomeroy Distress ance

• Home Qxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Helios System

requirements, contents of sell·serv·

Deere Getora Carmichael
Equipmenl (740)446·2412.

a.s per specifications nlty provisions, and
In bid packet will be the requirement tor a
received by the Meigs payment bond and perFor Sale 4 nice Hay Wagons
u
n
t
y. formance b,ond for
0
304
c:.:......c·6_7_5-.:..33:.c0.:..6_ _' - _ Commissioners
at 100% of the contract
Kiefe&lt; Buill· Valley-Bison· their oHice at the price. No bidder . may
Horse
and
Uveslock Courthouse, Pomeroy, withdraw his bid within
Trollers·
Loadmax· Ohio 45769 until 1:00 thirty (30) days alter
Gooseneck, Dumps. &amp; p.m ., May 3, 2QD7 and the actual date of the
Ulilily· Aluma Aluminum then at 1:15 p .m ., at opening thereof. The
Trailers· B&amp;W Gooseneck said office opened and Meigs
County
Hitches- Trailer Parts. read aloud for the tot- C o m m I s s I o n e r s
1
h
1·
Carmichael
· Trailers. low ng:
reserve t e r ght to
1 1
(740)445·2412
Th s s a Prevailing reject any or all bids.
' - - ' - - - - - - - ·Wage project. See Mlck
DaVenport,
NH 315 w~re·lle hay baler. Specifications In bid President
JD 215 16" d' · 1
r·
"
erna
packet. Specifications, Meigs
County
aJ 12H field cunivaror. 740· and bid forms may be Commissioners
256 6011
•
secured at the office of (4) 12, 19, 26
USED Rorary riflers. 4', s·. Meigs
County
6'. 3 poinr hi!Ch. BIG Commissioners,------~SELECTION. Jim's Farm Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Public Notice
Equipment 740·446·9777
Ohio 45769, Phone
740·992-2895.
A PUBLIC NOTICE
LIVOOOCK
deposit of 0 dollars will NOTICE: Is hereby
~
be ,required lor each given that on Saturday,
set of plans and spec I- April 21, 2007 at 10:00
Club lamb Sale, Sar., April llcatlons. The
lull a.m., a public sale will
21 , 2007. 9:00 AM·nooo for amount
will
be be held at 211 W.
more info conlacr Ryan returned within thirty. Sec~md st.. Pomeroy,
Beegle. 740-949·2006.
(30) days alter r!'Celpt Oh,lo. The Farmers
of bids.
Bank and
Savings
Fair pigs $100 each. 304· Each bid · must be Company Is selling lor
675·1798
accompenled by either cash in hand or certiFar1 Show P~s tor sale, bur· a bid bond In an fled check the followrows ano gills. 740·446· amount ol100% of the lng collateral :
6741 or 740·339.0944
bid amount with a 2005
Chevrolet
sureiy satisfactory to S I I v e r a d o
GoalS for Sele. Boer Goars. the aforesaid Meigs 1GCEK19B15E109636
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb. C
o
u
n
t
y The Farmers Bank and
2007. Call 1740)256·9247
Commissioners or by Savings
Company,
Quality 4·H SllOw r;gs . Now certified
check, Pomeroy,
Ohio,
1100 Private Treaty at !arm . cashiers check, or let- reserves the right to
521 Ewinglon Road , Vinron. tar of credit upon a sol- bid at this sale, and to
Ohio 74D-:i8e-ore3 or 645· vent bank In the withdraw the above
1644
amount of not less collateral prior to Sale.
than 1O'Yo of the bid Further, The Farmera
amount In favor of the Bank and
Savings
aforesaid
Meigs Company reserves the
C
o
u
n
t
y rlghtto reject any or all
Commissioners. · Bid bids submitted.
Bonds shall be accom- The above described
ponied by Proof of collateral will be sold
· Authority of the official " as is-where Is", with
or agent signing the no
expressed
or
bond.
Implied
warranty
Bids shall be. seated given.
and marked as Bid lor For further InformsPomeroy
Distress lion, or lor an apjlolnl·
Sl-atk Replacement ment to Inspect cotlat·
and mailed or dellv- erat, prior to sale date
ered to:
contact Cyndle, Ken,
Meigs
County or Randy at 992-2136.
Commissioners ·
(4) 17, 18, 19 ·
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders Is
Public Nollce
called to all of the ·- - - - - - - requirements
con· PUBLIC SALE
talned in this bid pack- Notice Is hereby given
et, particularly to the that on April 21 , 2007
Federal
Labor at 10:00 a.m. a public

c

•on-

r

goods to be sold are
described generally as
miscellaneous person·
al &amp; household. The
room will be opened
lor viewing Immediately prior to solicitation
otblds.
Description of proper·
ty as follows: Toddler
bed,
Kids
Toys,
Christmas
Tree ,
Phone a
Bay t40
Name:
Jennifer
Contreras
Address : 238 Rahelte ·
Drive
City: Columbus, Ohio

43204

(Jam_i1q_ -·~·&gt;"':"t"'11'!ijP.!I§~:...
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

Public Notice
PUBLIC SALE
Notice Is hereby g iven
that on April 21 , 2007
at 10;00 a.m . a public
sale will be held for the

contents of seH-servIce storage room. The
goods '" be sold •re
described generally as
miscellaneous persbnat &amp; household. ·The
room will be opened
lor vlawlng Immediately prior to solicitation
of bids".
Description of property as follows: 3 Air
Conditioners,
Baby
Bed,
Automotive
Items,
Chrlatmas
Decorations, camping
Equipment, Antiques
Clock, Numerous Totea
of Clothes
Bayt20
Name: Tammy Bable
Address:
48246
Tomt!do Road
City : Racine, Ohio

I SAMUEL 19:5!

''AND THOU SHALT
REJOICE IN E'VER'1'
600D THIN6 ''
DEUTERONOM'r' Z6:Ji

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You r
extravagant urges could be stirring with·
in ·you again, so you wilt have to recog·
nlze them for what they are and.not give
way to ovei-spending. En)Ov yourself In
lrie•panslve ways.
GEMJNI (May 21-.June 20)- SoCially, this
.should be a very pleasant day for you.
But If you treat somebOdy as' an Interior,
conditions could get rathet" dlsa~eable
and what should have been fun wll
bomb out.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - Serious
matters should not b8 swept under the
ru"g, especially If other people could be
affected. Wishful thinking won't make tha
situation go away.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Do not lmpos8
yo~rself on anybody or any group that
wishes to be left to do its own thing.
Recognize when the welcome mat has
been pulled away and spend time with
others.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Room Acldnlons 1
Romodollng
N.w Garagea
Eloctrlcor 1 Plumbing
Roofing Ia Gutt.,.
VInyl Slclng &amp; Pointing
Potio end P..ch Decke
WV03&amp;n5

V C. YOUNG Ill

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit. Decks.
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbr·ng,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

992 62 15
!

PnrllC't0\ Oh L'
'•'ll L,&gt;("ll~ . p~r•cn,e

74CI-367-Q544

• Free Estfmatea

74()..367-G536

a ;:;~;:===~===::;=~~

purpose(\1
satisfying
landtord·s lien
on the

REJOICE! ''THOU
SAWIST IT, AI-ID
DIDST REJOICE''

tV

•

Terms of the sale will .
be cash or certified
lund ONLY.
.
Hill's Sell Storage
29625 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH 4Sn1
(4) 13, 17, 19

PEANUTS

Manier.··
,

Racycl ng
11111111~~===~ II 41111

. . , illlfl'llllls. . . . . .

..........1!:11.

NVIIITIPPIICEIIII
111111118C.•21 ' I ,.. . 111¢1111•-..r

n ,,.........

lll!flrC...MIIIII

VIRGO (Aug. 23-5ept. 22)- All mener5,
even serious ones, can be wo~ed. out
satisfactorily. You'll be tested, so hang in
there and maintain a positive posture.
Think win, and take ell challenges In
stride.
LIBRA {Sept. 23-Qcl. 23) - II a serious
conflict of opinton should arise, don't
react with disdain. Count to 10 and then
try to talk things out with the other party.
If you remain coot, a soothing of egos
can be anained.
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 221 Something you can shlire with another
mtght develop out of a situation engineered by another. 11 may not live up to
wnat ls expectecl, but It will nd-lerthaless
be something worthwhile.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·0et . "21) Being flexible will be important. If a better
wily of doing something Is proposed, or if
another person comes along who would
work out better, be agreeable to making
!he change.
CAPRICORN (Dec . · 22:-Jan. 19) Shoukt a mistake be made whJte 'fOtJ are
wonting on something impor1ant, exerctse patience. II you remain cool, the
problem can be rectified easier thail you
lhoughl possible.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) - U it
looks flke condilions appear to be going
againSt you. don't drop out of the race. A
twist of fate could be in the offing, whtch
should enable you to snatctl St.JCC9SS
from the jaws ot defeat.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Maidl 20) - Don' fry
too hard to win peer approval 01" you
"""' be able 1o refix, and othm will fall
to see your great personality. let ;'QLir'Satf
be who )'OU are, and you'l Hilly acquir-.
ondornments. ·
ARIES(Maidl21·Aprll19)- o mlghl.be
w1oe not ro raka to 1101n "'"r'fiN"'I you
holr. Bo lblo 1o cllsHngultjl belwHn fact
and tlctlon boeouao accoptlng lho wrong
taeta eould cauae troutie lof you.

SOUPTONUTZ

4m1
Terms of the sale will•
be cash or certified
fund ONLY.
Hilt's SeH Storage
29625 Beahan Rd.
Racine, OH 45n1
(4) 13, 17, 19

\

•

•="-"..:.!1-'20 Running
tracks
21 White-water
craft
22 Diligent
inseets
23 Vaughan or

43 Toward the
luturt
45 Flnlahed
47 Ms. Paquin
48 - time no

aee .

49 Park lea-

Miles
24
25
27
29
30
32
34
37
38
41

ture

Fragile layer
" - -Hur"
Au~ment
M01n idea
Casual
farewell
Caters'
Lash LaKing beater
Demolished
Rage
Watered
silk

50 Long·lactd
51 Traveler's
guide
52 Lyric poem
53 Tyke

54

Mas~~euse

employer

a

BALANCf.

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal
*Reasonable Rates
*In sured

North
1• ·
2•
Pass

Show a major before
you repeat a minor

WITHOuT THe
t..AuGH TllAGI'

Wt:.'\/E.~

5.99% Fixed Rate on John Sidewalk Replacement varlou,s equal opportu- Ice storage room. The

•sc."

• New Homes
• Garages

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

ROIERT
IISSEll
COISD,CBII

i40-992-1m

0% Fin ancing - 36 Mos. TORS
and
Davis-Bacon purpose of satisfying a
available now on John Se"aled proposalS for Wages, various lnsur· landlord's lien on the
Deere

South
1•
1•
4•

15 y r~. Exp. Free Estimates

riO

i" .· FO~R~&lt;;!;_-

I,

Hardwood Clblneiry An~ FurnlWre

7 4

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

740·992-6971
, Insured

Twin Rivers Tower is accept- Pleasant, Asking $39,000
ing applications lor waiting
I \1(\1 '\ 11'1'111"'1
list ror Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apartment.tor
the
,\ 11\ 1,1!)(1..
elderly/disabled call 675· ~~;;.;;~;;.;;;;;;;;;;~
6679
Equal
Housing
FARM
all utilities pd except electric. Oppmlunlly
~
EQuiPMFNf

RFAL EsTATE
$350/mo, call (740)256: Upsrairs ,
Two
BD.
~
WANTEIJ
· 1135
Apt .,Large,Ciean modern
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 ~A Apt . on Watson Rd WID Private,No grass 10
Need to sell your· home? Rodney area. Ref, Stove , mow.992·7094or416·4369.
Late on payments, div'a~ce , W&amp;D Included. Water &amp; Fully furnished or not.
job transfer or a death? 1 Sewer pd. Dep and Ref -~--:::----.,
can buy your home. All cash required . No pets. 709-1657
"""•
and quid&lt; closing. 740-41 6· or 4~ 6· 1 27 1
3130.
3 and 4 room furnished aprs. Commercial building ' For
ltl\l\1'
clean WID hookup. No pels. · Renl" 1600 square feel, off
Ref. and deposit required . street parking. Great loca~r~lo~~""-~~~---., 74.0·446·1519.
rion! 74g Third Avenue rn
o~~
IU..I"'ll
New 2BA apar tments. Gallipolis. Aenl $400/mo.
Washer/dryer
hookup. Call Wayne (404)456·3602
stove/refrigerator included. Commer,·cal Space to'r renr
For Rent 2 B&amp;droom House
Also, units on SA 160. Pets Main St. Pt. Pl. $4001mo ca ll
304-675·2535
Welcome! (7401441·0194.
Julie 703-526·0617

• 5l

•

Dav1"d Lew1"s

•

• Q 10 8

• AKJ976

26 Year's Experience

~-----,,- MOTOR Ho•n~
Free Eatlmateo
-199901dsAiero4cyl., Auto, ~-lliiiiriiiiriiiii"ii~. ~::::~~~~~~
2 door. CD,. Sunroof, 99,000
r996 24ft Trail Lire. Sleep 5.
Wise Concrete
mites A-title good work car Full
size
bed . Batti

combo.
stove. AC,

• Q 10
'fK 109'l4
• A6 5 2

• A

Concrete '"
nork

~=---::C:-AMPE--.-RS-:&amp;:--,1

Ea11t

matron

s8

Soulb
• K6 3 2

llarCIDR Constnu:tion and
Geaeral Cantractiag

D iscount

Bo··rs &amp; M·~~
0
AI/IUi
n FURS~:'~'
·--miiiRiiSALiiiiiE
··· ~
•
1994 Prism runs great standard 304·675·2208
--:-:--,---...,1998 Pontiac Grand AM GT
5 speed, black, new tires,
needs motOf work $500, 4
Parne rr·1Jones r rres
· 351 ~
'
•vS
$250 304-675-6439

West

46 Cea~~ei
51 Incentive
54 Mexlcall

55 Doted on
56 'Sought .
nuggeta
12 Eder
ottine 57 Newscaster
13
nand
-Jennings
nasty
Platitude
f4 Seld
hoarsely
DOWN
15 Fhln
16 Rural
1 Cou~tees's
strueture
husband
t 7 Plowlllorql 2 Watermelon
f9 Myrna
IOUrce
played her
3 ShangrHa
13 Cry loudly
4 Bookish
16 Ms. ·
. types
Lane hester 5 Taka a
18 Furniture
crack at
mover
6 Fanatic's
19 Summar·
feeling
hOUI!e
7 Welles or
l1 Ani Yll1lon
Bean
l3 Wry humor 8 Pants
14 Grown·ups
problem
l5 Kyoto hon· 9 Beluga
orillc
delicacy
l6 Ambler or 10 Unusual
Clopton
11 Stick up
l9 Slalom run t2 Stuffed
10 The oth.era
shirts
12 Linoleum
16 Musical
measureseale note
ment
18 'Sign before
14 Seep
VIrgo

DHIHJ7

• J 9 8
• 8 53
• K Q J 10

70 Pine S treet • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

740·367 -0266/
1·800·950·3359

1 Mlleatone
6 Manlna
maak
· 11 Oakland

• 9 8 3
• 4 3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

2006 Honda' 400 ATV, Auto
30 Yrs . Ex p. Ins.
1988. Pontiac Riding l awn with Winch. Lots of Extras, .
Mower. Ask for Jr. 256- 11 02 200 milo. 4 year warranty,
Owner Ronnie Jones
$ 5,000. (740) 446-6970
Free Estimates
.

r1....---------l

I

• Trim • Stump
Grinding • Bucket
Truck
Fu ll insured
Senior Citizen

MOJORCYO...Es/
__4 \VHEELF~

...,

I

$350 plus dep. Rei. No Pels.
No ~making . Stove &amp;!rig ,
furn. Coin WID on·premises.
258 'state St. Gallipolis. 740446·3667
-2b--ed_ro_o_m_a_p_r i-n-Cen-re_n_a-ry,

• Top • Removal

-..:ill"'"-~-~-- -~
· 1""":":"----~
1:!

North
• A 7 5I
• Q J 6 2

('famlhJ 1•!:1133:1

,lo! H., l!ll ~ll,lll'

Apartments now accepting L---mliRiiiiiSIIALEiiiii
. -,.1
applications lor 1 and 28R 94 Chevy Lumina. 4 DR,
apts. No rental assistaQce AKC BostonTerrier puppies white, new windshield and
available at this time. Rent mlf $ 4 00ea .·AK~ Coll&lt;'e brakes. Runs great. $850
v
OBO 441 16
electric. very nice. Approx. 3 starts at $310 month. Equal puppies mff sable/wh.,eyes _ _
. _ _ ._ _n____
mi from town . Gree n Housing
.. Opportunity. normai;OSU cart. $400ea.- Auto Buyer has 20 cars tl"lat
Township , no pets. Ref. (740)446-3344.
AKC
Golden
Ret.
o 30
6 2 6
$475/mo and $475/dep. ":-c---:-:-~--9e12 · mpg. 44 ·7 7
740-446·6565
i BA Apt. April free. with paid pups (2F) 12wks . ,sh o t s
Red 92 Eagle Talon, runs
- - - - - - -deposit and approved appli· $350ea.·AIC;C Yorkle pup·
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson cation . 740•441 _9668 or pies males $800, females good, no rusr. good SliCker
Mobile Home Park in 740 _3jg. 0362
$900 small. ALL Vet Ck'd . CD player $1 ,OOOffirm 304·
675·7474
Gallipolis,
OH. Phone ~--:=-:-::--:__. · 740·696· 1085
(740)446·2003 or (740)446· Modern 1 BR Apl Call 446· - - - - - - . , . - 1409_
3736 1
AKC Siberian HuSky pllp_ _,_,_ _ _- ; - pies, Blue eyed, mates,
Very nice 3,BR. 1 BA mOOile New Haven, I Br., furnished, B&amp;W,
$250.00·
G&amp;W,
home. All electric. NO PETS. no pets, dep.&amp;references, $300.00.
Ready
now! 2003 E250 cargo van, bins,
$400/monlh &amp; $400/deposil 740·992·0165
(740)446·6627
ladder rack. ale , towing pkg,
Available May 1, 2007 .. Call ~-=-:-~--:---:-:garage kept. 740·6~8-26 13 .
304-674_4633
Nice Clean
furnished 1 Bassetlpu psAKC
six
bedroom Apartment. $350 wk .old,4-tri -co lor,4-lemon 96 Ford Wlndstar LX EXT.
APARTMENTS
mon th Deposit required and wh . Parenlson site.Ask l eather. CO changer. Rear
FOR RENT
(304)675·2970
$275 ea.740·667-6756
alr. Runs goo'd. $1500. 388"--..,;iiiiiriiiiii-._;1· ·N,·ce clean new decoraled, English Mastiffs AKC , CH 6497
1 and 2 bedroom apart- 2br no pets, ref/dep 304· bloodlines. Only 3 left. · .., MmnRCYGJ..i!S"
ments, furnished and unfur- 675·5162
Cleara nce sale. 740-245 4WHEELERS
nished, and houses in
5823 or 740·645-1912 .
Po meroy and Middleport, Tara
Tow nhouse
2004 Honda 450 Foreman
security dePosit required , no Apartments, Very Spacious, '
FoR SALE
ATV, 4x4 , $3000 firm .
pets, 740-992-2218.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
:___ _ __ __ _
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
(740)441·5636
1 BR Apt. Closeto Wai-Mart, Pool, Patio. Start $425/Mo.
2 unit Apartment Building for
utilities included. Dep. No Pets: Lea se Plus
sale fully lurnished with all
Required. ~45·5555
· Security Deposit Required,
appliances. occupied $1 ,000
1 BA, 2nd lloor. AJC, util.pd., (740)367-7066.
month income in Point

r

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

Pomeroy H.S.
, . Class of /966

28mpg $1 ,800 (304 )593· tub/shower
1392 or (304)576-2201
Microwave,

deposit or will sell for
Commercial Building on $! 7,000 . (740 )44 1_0775
Eastern, Approx. 1200sq.ft.
Next to lrvins Glass. 446· 3 BR, 2 BA, Utility room. au

NEA Crossword Puzzle
Phillip
• Alder

Dell 51 50 lnspiron laptop
• Payment could be the
Single story home with 2 same as rent.
~---:----:-:: computer. 5370. 740-709-

bedrooms and 1 bath. l arge
lot.
Loca ted ' at 2112
Madison Ave. Pt. Pleasant,
WV Asking $29,500 Sellers
will pay closing cost For

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

ACROSS

F)

·

www.mydally~entlnel.com

BRIDGE

Used furniture store. 130
BUiavilte Pike, Electric
Ranges. CheSis. C!)Uches.
Mattresses, bunk beds,
d1nettes, recltners. Nice
2002 Bass T10ct&lt;er fishing
boat. Business and property
for sale. (740)446·4782
GallipoliS, OH, Hrs 11·3 (M·

1 112 baths on large lot. bath, AJC. hardwood floors.
located at 3408 Mossman full basement, 2 car garage,

Thursday, April19, 2007
ALLEYOOP

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celetwity Ci~ cryptograms n ctaa!ed lrom qootallllt'!s by'famolis people. past ard ll"ewrl
Each teller in lile apter starcls 101' ancthlr.

Today's clue: Hequals X

"SE

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YHLYMSYXOYJ

EBM FTNK KTYA

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PY ISWWSBXNSMYJ ."

-

FY ' Z NWW

08JK

NPSDNSW ' GNX PCMYX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION .- "Lel lhere be spaces in your logelhemess I And let
the winds of !he heavens dance between you.· - Kahlil Gibran

'::~::~' s~tt~by CUY
~~ t ~s· GAM I
R. POUAN - - - - WoaD

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four Krombled words bt·
to form io&lt;K slft'll~ wordt

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"NCI'CT brog," grorups

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rne chudl; quored

.
by fillino in the missing words
L.~.....II-.J..~-.1.--' you devo!op hom 11ep No. 3 below.

t:ll. PRINI NUMSf.REO IETmS IN
'.7 THESE SQUARES
ft UNSCRAMBlE lETTIRS 10
~ GET ~NSWER
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

, - 1 e ·- o ,

S1itch - Legal - Unlit - lloifor - LEISURE
. "If you use yo ur vacation just to lie around." the
wife infomled her hmo;band, ..tJune will l~ somebody
who wnn1s to ll'ie your Lt:.ISUR.E : ·

ARLO&amp;JANIS

�..
Page BS • The Daily Sentin~l

www.m¥dailysentinel.com

Thl!rsday,'April 19, 2007

2007 Lawn and

Gift basket donated
. to Meigs~ High
School band, AS

Garden Guide inside
todays Sentinel

••

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio .
II{ID \) . \1'1{11 20 . 2oo-

:;o CJ.NTS • \'ol. :;h. ;\;o. 1H2

""" ·m)da ih•&lt;'lllill ei.&lt;·•""

Reduced.surnmer youth program approved

SPORTS
• Tornadoes tame
Waterford. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Meigs
County
Commissioners
approved $240,000 in
spending for a youth
employment program 10 be
operated through the GalliaMeigs Community Ac1ion
Agency.
Half of the positions to be
filled by 14-18 year olds
will include lifeguard training, with up to 20 to be

placed iri jobs at Middleport
and Syracuse London pools.
Last year, the county 's
summer youth -employment
program, funded through
Temporary Assistance to
Needy Families, employed
90. This year, it will be
employ 70 in public-sector
lifeguarding; · maintenance ~
office and other jobs.
Students who qualify
under income guidelines of
200 percent of the federal
povery guidelines will be

directed 10 apply through
CAA, said Jane Banks at
Tly.Jrsday 's regular commissioners meeting.
In other business, commissioners opened a sole
bid from Home Creek
Enteprises, Pomeroy, in the
amount of $19.500 for con struction of a basketball
court and retaining wall ~t
the Mulberry Community
Center. The project will be
funded
through
the
Community · Development

Block Grant formula program.
The bid was tabled until
next week for review by the
center's administration.
Commissioners:
o Approved bids. opened
last week for Black Top
Asphalt of Nelsonville for
paving of the Long Bottom
Community Center parking
lot and Shelly Co.,
Thornville, for paving in
Columbia
Town ship,
throu gh · the Community

Development Block Grant
formula program.
o Approved payment of
bill s in the amount of
$441 ,322 .
o Approved appointment
of a special prosecutor in a
2000 criminal case involving Ronald Vance . upon
r.equest of Prosecuting
Attorney Pat Story.
o Approved release of a
mortgage through the

Ple11se see Youth, AS

License plates
promote organ
donation
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - A new
specialty license plate recognizing the Ohio Donor
is available this
OBITUARIES Registry
week from the Ohio Bureau
of Motor Vehicles.
The image of the new
Page AS
plate can be found at
• Russell W. Moore, 85
www.bmv.ohio.gov
and.
cost $15 annually, in addition to the usual registration
fees. A portion of the plate
fees, $5, will go to benefit
the Ohio Department ·Of
Health's Second Chance
Trust Fund
·SCTF educates
· about the difference one
individual can. make by
signing up as an organ and
tissue donor in the Ohio
Donor Registry.
Approximately 18 times
each day a man, woman or
child dies while waiting for
an organ transplant. In
Ohio, more than 2,500
people are waiting for an
organ transplant at any
• Virginia Tech shooter
time, and hundreds more
await tissue transplants. In
was almost a textbook
2006, 1.7 million Ohio dricase of a school
vers were registered as
gunman. See Page A2 organ donqrs.
• Eastern Elementary . · The Ohio Donor Registry,
honor roll. See Page A3 establishe~ by the BMV in
2002, is a·way for Ohioans
• Grange banquet
to ·give legal consent for
· set for next week.
organ, tissue and eye donation at ·the time of their
See Page AS
death. Anytime an individ• Daughters of
ual renews or is issued a
Amertca hold rally.
new driver license or state
identitication card, he or she
See Page AB
. is asked if they would like
to become a donor. If the
person answers yes, he or
she is automatically entered
WEATHER
into the registry.

INSIDE

Plene see Plates, AS

Submitted photo

This Inman Hill section of Carmel Road is closed to traffic due to a major slip.

Sip cl.as •ction of
· Bv ,CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

'

RACINE r- Freezing, thawing.
and exc.es ~b'e' rain, such as we've
had this y !tr,' can take ,its toll on the
condition of roads.
Comb1ne t,he weather factor with a
curly ro~t;l!~c~.\ed on a steep hill side .
and what do y'&lt;iu get? A major slip, of
course. And that's what has ,happened
to the Carmel Road on Inman Hill. It
started slipping several weeks ago
and from all indications hasn't
stopped yet.
About two weeks ago the Sutton
Township Trustees closed that section
of Carmel Road to traffic. According

.Recycling program
receives grant for truck

to Trustee Larry Ebersbach while It's
. created some minor inconvenience for
residents living near that area, it has
not cut anyone off from reaching their
homes. "It's like a short cut for some,
but there are other ways they can in,"
said Ebersbach.
What's to be done to correct the
problem? "Well we're not sure." said
Ebersbach. "It ' ll take a lot of
money." he added, going on to note
that the Sutton Trustees have "very
little." They would like to fix the
road. but then there's the problem of
''wh!:re's the money to do it and will
it just slip again."
.
This week, the trustees called in
Meigs County Engineer Gene Triplett

With just over three
countie's to cover. State
Representative Jimmy
Stewart (R-Meigs) puts
a lot of miles on his
official vehicle which
isn't a Cadillac but a
Geo Prizm that recently
rolled over 350.000
miles. Stewart bought
and p'aid for the car in ,
1995 in Clendenin,
W.Va . when it had three
mites on the odometer.
The Prizm still has its
original engine 'and
although ]le is reim- .
bursed for one trip a
. week to Columbus.
Stewart chose to keep
his :mo're economical
means of getting
around his district.
Although the Prizm
"broke down" on his
way to a recent meeting with Gov. Strickland,
Stewart said it wasn't
· tong before it was back
on the roai:l again.

NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.C OM

INDEX
2 SECf10NS -

!

16 PAGES

Calendars

· A3
A3

Classifieds-

Bs-6

Annie's Mailbox

II ·

Us

It _

II

•
~::·

••

,., ,..

. '. l !l•

1900 Eastern Ave. • Gallipolis, OH
;

,.,..,

B7

Editorials

A4

Faith • Values

l
..

Comics

t

Movies·

As

NASCAR

88

Obituaries .

As

Sports

B Section

Weather

.

~

l~

A6-7

AS

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publbhing Co.

- ·--· ~

;

-

.

'

to get his opimon. He estimated it
would take a few hundred thousand
dollars to do the repair work to what
the trustee referred as "basically a
dead-end road.'' Any grants which the
trustees might be able to get would
require a 20 percent m~tch. according
to Ebersbach. "We don 't have that
kind ofmoney."
As for now that section of road will
remain closed. the signs will stay up,
and the trustees will continue watching to see if more slipping occurs. As
they wait they will continue to search
for repair money which rem.ains the
deciding factor in whether the Inman
Hill section of Carmel .Road is
repaired or permanently closed.

Not the Cadillac kind

STAFF REPORT

Details on Page A8

Road

POMEROY - Meigs County's recycling and litter prevention program will
receive funds from the state for the purchase of a new truck.
The O"io Q.epartment of Natural
Resources approved a $26,000 grant for
the Meigs County program, for purchase
of a truck to assist the department in collecting recycling materials. from stations .
established in Racine and Syracuse, at .
Forked Run State Park at Reedsville,
Hiland Road in· Pomeroy, the Chester
Commons and the · Salem Township Fire
Department. .
.
Program Administrator Paula Wood said
the county has funds available ,for a
required match of $13,000. Funding for the
truck
comes
from
Community
Development Grants at ODNR. The state
recently awarded over $1 million in grants
to communities for local recycling and litter prevention etTorts.
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid
Waste Management District .also received a
. grant through the program. For $50,000,
the district will purchase a truck, specialized crane and 10 recycling containers to
be placed at 12 sites in Gallia and three
sites in Jackson County.

Beth Sertentj plloto
•I

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