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PageD~

REAl, ESTATE

iunba~ ~~m~ ·•entintl

Consumers seek safer chemicals for pest control
(MS) - Green is gaining
ground_Across the country
individual s. businesses and
the
gove rnment
are
·addressing ways to reduce
waste and increase conser·
vation efforts. A significant
element of the Green cause
is the trend to.ward usi ng
safe r chemical s in and
around the home . This not
only creates better environments for residents . but
also minimizes the environm ental impacts of
cleaning and pest co ntrol.
Fortunately. as many con-·
sumers are di scovering.
help is available from a
variety of sources.
Nestled
outside
of
Sacramento. the City of
Folsom. Calif.. decided to
take a stand against harsh · More and more homeowners are turning to eco-friendly
chemicals used in house- · mean~ of pest control.
hold pe st control. ··Many
people don ·, realize that with fish growth in rivers
The retailer has singled
conventional pesticides because pesticide run-off. out three commercial ·
can be toxic to people. pets kills the organisms that chemicals
it
wants
· and the environment." says nourish batJy f~sh. By removed from· products it
Rod Miller. senior environ- encouraging residents to carries over the next few
mental specialist with the use less-toxic alternatives, years. Although the retailer
City
of
Folsom's Folsom. hopes to reduce the is not requiring suppliers to
Hazardous
Materials risk of contaminating local omit the chemicals, it has
(HazMat) division.
wetlands and streams ,from . announced that .it will rec ognize and reward those
To combat the problem. lawn and garden runoff.
··By givi ng people free who do. In the coming two
the city developed its
"Wholesome Folsom" pro- samples of less toxic pesti- years, \\:al-Mart .intends to
we're
helping add 17 "chemicals to its
gram . They studied avail- cides,
able products on the mar- Folsom residents under- phase-out program.
While some manufacturket, and developed a list of stand that you can have
the least toxic products. effective pest control ers race to modify their
The highly successful pro- results, while still protect- formulas in response to
gram gives Folsom resi- · ing the environment," retailer and public preferdents free sample kits of explai ns Miller.
ences, some products have
less-toxic pesticides to get
As evidenced by the been both natural, as well
rid of pests while protect- sheer number of safer as highly effective, for
ing restdents and the envi- chemical alternatives pop- many years. One of the
ronment. Included in the ping up in store aisles, pioneers in this arena has
kits . are products like Folsom is not alone in its been the TERRO brand of
TERRO Liquid Ant Bait, concern over the effects of ant control products, which
which contams the natural- harsh
chemicals. are con tained in the
ly-occurring
ingredient Consumers across the Wholesome Folsom kit and
Borax,
to
combat country have begun chang- are sold at Wal- Mart and
California's rampant ant ing spending habits to other retail outlets. The
problems.
include hea.lthier options brand's well-known Liquid
Pesticides are being for pest control as well. ln Ant . Baits rely on natural
shown to impact the envi- fact , mega-retailer Wai- pesticides instead of'harsh
ronment in numerous Mart recently announced chemicals to control pests.
ways . There is growing plans to make its product
TERRO contains a sweet
evidence to suggest that offerings more ·environ- food -based product with a
pesticides are interfering mentally friendly.
small amount of Borax as

the fiCtive ingredient.
"According to the EPA ,
Borax is one of the leasttoxic substances avai lable
as an insecti cide,.. says
TERRO's resident ani
exPt:rt Stewart Clark . "In
fact. Borax is actually used
in · eyewash and variou s
However.
deterg en.ts...
despite its low toxicit y.
numerous independent laboratory tests have proven
that TERRO is one of the
most effective ant killing
products
available,
demostrating that pests can
be controlled safely and
naturally.
Liquid Ant Bait with
Borax works . so well
because the sweetne ss
anracts worker ants that
are foraging for food. T~e
ants consume the ball ,
return to the nest with thi s
lethal combination. and
fc:ed· it to other members of
the ant colony. In this way.
the bail not only kills the
ants that you see, but also
eliminates
the
entire
colony of ants, including
the queen. And they do so
with minimal ri sks to
homeowners, pets and the
environment.
Products such as TERRO
are setting the standard for
pest control today and in
the future .. As consumers
increasingly turn to these
and .other natural products,.
the green movement continues to make strides
toward a safer, healthier
environment.
l'lnult.._

~-z
a-lcCWIII

'530 Richland Avenue

(MS)
Think an
"extreme makeover'' for
your home has to include
sledgehammers and .a general contractor? Well, ·interior
design does not always mean
knocking down walls.
Changing a few select
items c_an bring new color
and texture into an ·existing
space - just the thing needed to brighten. lighten and
transform any room in your
home.
One of the easiest ways to
change an interior is to stan '
with new area rugs. which go
far beyond merely providing
a covering for the floor. They
•can serve as the impetus for a
new color palette and decorating scheme. changing the
entire look and feel . of ·a
room without breaking the
bank.
From traditional Persians
to ultra-modem works of art
in knotted wool. there are
more styles to choose from
than ever before. "Today's
designs have a level of
sophistication that just wasn't available : in the past."
says Joyce.Lowe . carpet and
decor expert for Nourison.
the worl9\ largest manufacturer of hand-made area rugs.
Are you a traditionalist?
Choose an heirloom-quality
Persian rug with fields of
midnight blue accented with
rich chocolate and gold.
Want a living room that 's
sleek and modern? A rug
from designer Calvin Klein,
rich in texture, color and

10 Windows For

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Sunday 1-3 pm

'M

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siyle. can provide the starting
point.
Color is a huge component
of a room ·s decor and should
be chosen with care. "A
basic rule of thumb. in interiorllesign is to select one neutral tone and two brighter
accent colors that combine in
a pleasing way," adds Lowe.
Area rugs from Liz
Claiborne Home, made
exclusive ly by Nourison for
example. make choosing
room accent colors easy
because design teams have
already selected colors that
work well together. Simply
pull and mi1tch colors from
the field or design.
·
"Your choice of acces·
sories should , c,omplement
the decor,"' says Lowe . Wall
colors. window treatments
and accessories are important to a good redesign but
need not be ex pensive. Toss
out pillows, curtains, candles
and other accessories from
your old room and bring in
new ones in complementary
colors and styles. You'll be
surprised how dramatic the
change wi II be_
Promote a traditional style
with classic elements; a more
modem look with sleeker,
pared-down accents. Since
the eye is drawn to like colors, stick to the use of complementary shades of metal
and wood. Table and floor
lamps don 't need to match,
but they should have some
similar elements, in color or
design.

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
I\IONDi\\', i\I'RIL :!;J,

;;o l"I ·.!\TS • \ 'nl. ;,6, No. tH;l

SPORTS
• Meigs splits double
header with Gallia
Academy. See Page B1

t)'

OPEN HOUSE

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Sunday, Apri122, 2oo7 .

OBITUARIES
Page AS .
• Lee W. Hobbs, n
• Matvin D. Wise, 63
• Belva Marie Bolin, 84
• Roger W. Lance, .65

200"'

LOCALS RAISING AUUSM AWARENESS
BY Brnt SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENnNEL.COM

SYRACUSE - The symbol for Autism is a ribbon
stamped with a puzzle pattem, reflecting the . mystery
and complexity of Autism, a
disability about which some
local people are trying to raise
awareness.
Recently students and
teachers from Carleton
School passed out informational pamphlets at different
locations in the community to
raise awareness of the disability and in some cases put a
face and therefore a reality to
who the disability affects.
"People are unaware of the
actual neurological problem,
they think the child is misbehaving," Jessica Barnett,
speech therapist at Carleton
School said. "Just because the
child looks typical doesn't
mean they are."
Barnett says she loves
working with autistic children, saying they are her
"favorites." Barnett teaches
them how to communicate
through sign language or pictures because most of the children with the disability don't
even like to make eye contact,

Many of the staff and students at Carleton participated
in the HOPE Intervention
Autism Walk on Saturday in ·
Gallipolis. For more information on the group go to
www.hopeintervention.org.
The Mid-Ohio . Valley
Autism Support Group, a support group for JJ!!Ople with
autistic children or family
members, meets from noon to
2 p.m., every second Saturday
at the Ravenswood Library in
Ravenswood, W.Va.
·The group is planning its
own Autism Awareness Walk
in October in Ripley, W.Va.
with money rai5ed going
towards the purchase of locator devices used. for
Alzheimer's patients that can
also be used for children with
Autism who wander off. For
more information about the
group call . Carla Hopton at
949-2933 or Patricia Boyce at
304-273-3228.
There is also a support
group for parents of autistic
children thai meets at 6:30
p.m. oil the third Tuesday of
every month at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
April is Autism Awareness
Month.

Beth Sargent/photo

These Carleton School students, teachers and aides rece ntly pa:&gt;sed out Autism
Awareness literature at different locations in the community to raise awareness of the dis·
ability and are (from left) Mindy Williams: Mel Smith, Haley Walbrown , Mich&lt;~el Phoenix;
Sarah Quails, Cale Ulbrich, Sharon Warner, Makala Russell, Valerie Nottingham, Brianne
Crisp, Mary Knopp, Frankie Council, Sandra Southern, Jessica Barnett.

Schools relying more
on business-savvy PTA
groups for funding

.INSIDE
• Democrats weigh
options on Iraq after
expecte&lt;fBush veto.
See Page A2
• Navy identifies pilot
killed in Blue Angels crash;
investigators sift through
wreckage in S.C.
See Page Ax
• Disappointed wife
should consider
counseling.
See Page A3
• Ru~and scholarship
deadline nears.
See Page A3
• Meigs County 4-H
news. See Page AS·
• Critics blast use of
private e-mail for official
state business.
See Page AS
• Club discusses
.disaster of secretive
action. See Page AS

m"'·m~d"it~s&lt;· ntinl'l.&lt;·om

CLEVELAND(AP) - No
niore bake sales.
Parent-teacher associ ations are becoming sophisticated organizations, selling
catalog merchandise to raise
money for schools and running publishing companies
to help teachers laminate and
bind classroom materials.
A PTA for Falls-Lenox
·
·
Pnmary schoo 1 m suburban
Cleveland raised $32,000
this year, mainly through catalpg sales of items that
include flowers and sausage.
"It's really not your mom 's
'PTAanymore," said Rebecca
Gawsyszawski, president of
the group.
.
But all that fundrai sing can
8rlan J. Reed/photo
widen the disparity that
U.S, Congressman Charlie Wilson, center, visited with County Commissioner Mick Davenport al1-eady exists between highand Democratic Party Chairman Sue Maison at Saturday's Jefferson/ Jackson Dinner.
' income and low-inco me di s-

\

tricts, some education
experts worry. And even
some PTA members question
whether groups may cross a
line by paying for teacher
salaries, playgrounds and
arts programs, which traditionally have been the
responsibility of tax -supported schools.
The Falls-Lenox PTA
includes parents from the
city of Olmsted Falls and
Olmsted Township _ both
growing suburbs. The city's
median household income is
about $57,000.
. The st udent body is 93 percent white, and only 12 percent are considered economically
disadvantaged.
according to the Ohio
Department of Education.

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way."
that he knows where Meigs
Wilson cji scussed the County is," Wilsor said.
diversity of the freshman
Democratic ·
· Party
MIDDLEPORT - U.S. class
in
the
new- Chairman Sue Maison noted
Rep. Charlie Wilson, who . Democratic - majority that all of Meigs County's
succeeded
Gov.
Ted Congress. He said the 27 votin g. precincts _are now
Strickland in Ohio's Sixth biggest accomplishments of Democratic for the first ttme
Congressional ' District, Congress, so far, are the in recent history, ~fter they
shared his experiences as a increase in the minimum . all carried Strickland in the·
freshman in Congress and wage, efforts to improve governor's race .
praised Strickland's leader- homeland security policies
"This is one of the most
ship
in
Columbus
Saturday
by
improving
the
security
of
exciting
times in many,
Detallo ·on Pace A6
at the Meigs County cargo carried on airplanes. many years for our party,"
Democratic
Party's and a reduction in the stu- Maison said. " It just doesn ' t
Jefferson/Jackson Dinner.
dent loan interest rate by get any better than this."
Wilson was elected in half.
Maiso n recognized, late
November . after
the
Wilson discussed the dis- party ~upporters Jim Polmer
Democratic Party nominated trict's potential to be "the and James Will , and Carol
2 SECTIONS -12 PAGES
him as a write-in candidate energy capital of the world." Ohlinger, a member of the
·Calendars
A3 in the 2006 primary election. due to plans for two power Central Committee who
He .holds the. record, he said, plants in Meigs Cou nty and passed away last week .
Classifieds
B3-4 for winning a Congressional a new ethanol production Ohlinger's family was preseat as a write-in.
facility in Scioto County.
sented citations . on her
.comics
County
Commissioner
Wilson
also praised behalf
from
Wilson,
Mick Davenport introduced. Strickland in his efforts as Strickland and the party.
Annie's Mailbox
A3 Wilson.
Ohio's new governor. · and
Maiso n also recog nized
"He
had
some
big
shoes
to
.
said
Meigs
.County
and
the
Democratic
supporters in
Editorials
A4 fill when he was elected, and rest of Ohio' s Sixth District att'endance from
Gallia,
•
he's
lacing
them
up
very
.
will
benefit
from
Hocking.
and
Athens
Obituaries
As well," Davenport said. . Strickland's support of pro- Counties_
City
Sports
B Section · "People who care about jects and issues affecting his Ath'ens
people are making decisions old Congressional territory. Councilwoman
Debbie
~ommended
Weather
A6 m Washington, again," "One of the great things Phillips
Wilson said. "We·re doing about workin g with Ted
Please s" Wilson, AS
the right thing the right ' Strickland as governor is
© :iOO? Ohio Valley Publishinl! Co.
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX

Bs

.,
: {I

'·

..

;

•

Beth Sargent/ photo

Amber Hill anc! Jacob Hunter were named the 2007 Southern
High School Prom queen anc! king, respectively. Hill is the
daughter of Richard and Wendy Hill of Racine while Hunter is
the son of Doug and Tonja Hunter also of Racine.
.-

-~

--

�NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Navy identifies pilot killed in
Blue Angels crash; investigators
.sift through wreckage in S.C.
Bv MEUSSA NELSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PENSACOLA. Fla. Investigators looked through
wreckage Sunday ro determine what caused a Navy
Blue Angel jet to crash during a maneuver. while the
military identified the fallen
pilot as a 32-year-old who
was performing in one of hi s
first air shows with the team.
Lt. C!:mdr. Kevin J. Davis
of Pittsfield. Mass. was in hi s
second year with the Blue
Angels, the team known for
it s high-speed, aerobatic
demonstrations, Lt. Cmdr.
Garrett Kasper said.
At Marine Corps Air
Station Beaufort, the site of
Saturday's crash, a somber
crowd watched Sunday as
six jets flew overhead in formation. Smoke streamed
behind one of the jets as it
peeled away from the others
to complete the "missing
man formation," the traditional salute for a lost military aviator. ·
"The spirit of the pilot is in
the arms of a loving God,"
said Rob Reider, a minister
who was the announcer for
the air show.
· The crash happened as the
team was performing its final
maneuver Saturday afternoon during the air show.
The team's six pilots were
joining from behind the
crowd of thousands to form a
triangle shape known as a
delta, but Davis' jet did not
join the formation .
Moments later, his jet
crashed just outside Marine
Corps Air Station Beaufort,
hitting homes in a neighborhood about 35 miles northwest of Hilton Head Island,
S.C. Debris - some of it on
fire - rained on homes.
"Eight people on the ground
were injured, and some
homes were damaged.
The squadron's six, F/A-18
Hornets routinely streak low
over crowds of thousands at
supersonic speeds, coming
within feet , sometimes inchd, of each other. The pilots,
among 'the Navy's most elite,
are.so thoroughly trained and
their routines so practiced
that deadly crashes are rare;
the last one happened in
1999.
.
The Navy said it could be
· at three weeks before it
. announces what may have
caused the crash. The
squadron was scheduled to
return to its home base of
Pensacola Naval Air Station
late Sunday~
Ernie Christensen, a retired
rear admiral and former
Vietnam fighter pilot who
flew with the Blue Angels
and later- commanded the
Navy's Top Gun fighter
school in California, said he
did not want to speculate
about what could have
caused Saturcjay's crash. But
he said the intense flying
leaves no room for human or
mechanical error.
"When you are working at
-high speeds, Close to the
ground and in close proximity to other aircraft, the environment is extremely unforgiving. That is the reason
they practice so many thousands of times," said
Christensen.
The last fatal Blue Angel
crash was in 1999, when a
pilot and crewmate died
while practicing for . air
shows with the five other
Blue Angels jets at a base in
Georgia. Saturday's crash
was the 26th fatality in the
team's 60-year history.
The Blue Angels are
unique from other jet avia_tors because they don't wear
the traditional G'suits that
most jet pilots use to avoid
blacking out during maneuyers that exert strong gravitational forces. The suits
inflate around the lower
body to keep blood in the
brain, but that could cause a
pilot to bump the control
stick :- a potentially deadly
move when flying inches
from other planes.
After the ·deadly 1999 .
crash, the Navy's air training
chief ordered the Blue
Angels to consider wearing
G-suits. · An investigation
determined that the most
likely cause of that crash was
,that the pilot was 'momentai-

il y impaired because of a
prior rib injury. Pain from the
rib injury might have kept
the pilot from tensing hi s
abdominal muscles during a
turning causing him to suffer
tunnel vision.
· Pensacola Mayor John
Fogg flew with Blue Angels
in 1973 and 1974. During
Fogg's teimre. the squadron
had six F-4 crashes and lost
three members. Congress
held hearings and considered
getting rid of the Blue
Angels but decided the flying group was beneficial as a
recruiting tool and for troop
morale. he said.
Fogg, who flew more than
200 combat mi ssions in

Vietnam, said Blue Angel
. !lying is more demanding
than any other type of flying
~ including dodging surface
to air mi ssiles. And he. said
that hasn 't changed through
the decades.
"It's tremendously difficult
work. The only thing that
compares to it is the last 4 or
5 seconds of a night carrier
landing because if you do it
just right you are just right at
the end of the boat," he said.
Friends and neighbors uf
Davis in Pittsfield, Mass.,
where he was raised, said
Sunday he was fascinated
wit~ planes from the time he
was a child.

·Par;eA2

Monday~ Aprif 23, 2007

Democrats weigh options on Iraq after expected Bush veto
BY ANNE R.AHERTY

the president's desk as early as
the end of the week.
Anny Gen. David Petraeus,
commander of the Iraq war, is
expected to brief lawmakers
beh' d loseddoo
the
m c
rs as Ycast
their final vote.
The 1 . 1 . . peeled
egJS abon IS ex
to
fund the Iraq war but call for
combat troops to leave, probably by March 31, 2008. Bush
has promised to reject it and
Republicans say they will back
him, leaving Democrats short
of the two-thinls majority support needed to ovehide the
veto.
Setting an end date to the war
· before it's won "would be a
death blow to forces of moderation throughout ihe Middle
East," said Sen. Lindsey
Graham, R-S.C.
Del)locratic leaders have
been reluctant to discuss their
next step, focusing instead on
their ability to send Bush legislation rebuking his Iraq policy.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRfTER

WASHINGTON
Democrats are considering their
next step after President Bush's
inevitable veto of their war
spending proposal, including a
possible short-term funding bill
that would force Congress to
revisit the issue this summer.
Another alternative is pnoviding the Pentagon the money it
needs for the war but insisting
that the Iraqi government live
up to oertain political promises.
Or,
the
congressional
Democrats could send Bush
what he wants for now and set
their sights on 2008 spending
legislation.
The options are being
weighed as Bush and Congress
head toward a showdown this
week on his Iraq policy. House
and Senate appropriations committees meet Monday to negotiate a fmal bill that. if approved
by both chambers, could reach

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But other lawmakers say tliere
is no denying that DelliOCrats
do not have the · two-thirds
majofity needed to override
Bush's ~eto. And soon enough,
everyone will be asking what
happens next.

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Disappointed: wife should
consider counseling
things in her house, splitting
wood for the winter, etc. Of
course, there was no charge
Dear Annie: I've been hap- - 'she was a friend.
Manina recently got back
. pily married for more than 10
· -years and have a · toddler 1 together with her husband.
'always knew that my hus~nd She called and invited me to
.occasion~ly watched porno- have lunch at a restaurant at
·graphic vrdeos on the Internet her in-laws' resort. I had out!llld it never really bothered of-town guesLs, s0 I declined.
me. Now I think maybe I was She told me, "No problemwrong.
bring your friends along." So,
I discovered that last year, we all went and had a great
my husband created a free lunch. And then she presented
personal profile on
online me with the bill.
dating site that is designed to
Needless to say, I was
meet women in our vicinity. stunned. I paid the bill (for
Of course, I was crushed. fi:Ve people), then phoned
Before I approached my hus- Manina later and told her. this
band, I checked our computer was not right. We got into a
history to see what si tes had big argument, and she said, ·
been visited, what kind of e- "Did you think this was
mails he has been getting, and free?" I replied," "Well, yes,
any
other
surpri ses. you invited me." Am I
Fortunately, I found nothing wrong? - Eagerly Awaiting
· -except the fact that he did not Your Answer
· answer any of the responses
Dear Eager: You are not
. , to his profile.
·
wrong. Martina invited you to
·
I told my husband how lunch, picked the place, and
hurt and disappointed I am. should have paid the bill. If
He claims that because the she expected you to pay for
dating sites are tree (unlike yourself and four guests, she
the porn sites), it's a conve- should have made it clear
nient way to receive online · when she issued the invita·
sexy pictures of women. So tion.
.
.
for him, it's just free po111.
Dear Annie: I read the letAm I insane to believe his · ter from "Lonely Teen
reasomng? He hasn't lied to Lacking a Dog." You should
me (as far as I know) si nce also have suggesied he talk to
. we've been manied. He apol- his parents about fostering a
o~ized for his actions, deleted dog. That way he can have a,
h~ s prolile and ha~ been on dog and prove to the parents
. hrs best behavior. He offered that he is a responsible owner.
: to go to marriage counseling
There are many . rescue
and anything else to save our organizations that are looking
mamage. I haven't pushed tor foster . families. I would
the counseling thing because not have my dog if it weren't
everything else in our mar- tor O(le such foster family that
nage seems to be back to nor- took care of my companion
mal.
until we found each other. I haven't spoken about this Proud Owner of a Fostered
to anyone. Am I doing the Animal
right thing? - Depressed
Dear Proud Owner:
and Disappointed
Thank you so much for menDear Depressed: We actu- tioning this wonderful proally bel-Ieve your husband gram. Anyone interested in
used the profile only to get fo stering an animal should
free porn, but it eventuaUy contact their local humane
. could have gotten out of society.
· hand, especially since the
Annie's Mailbox is written
. women were local, so it's by Kathy MitcheU and Marcy
-.. good he stop'ped. We think Sugar, longtime editors of
: you should take him up on hi s the Ann lllnders column.
offer to get marriage counsel- Please e-mail your questions
· ing. It can help both of you t
•o
~nderstand and deal with this anniesrTUJilbox@comcast.net,
. 1ssue more completely and, or write to: Annie's Mailbox,
. we hope, regain your trust.
P.O. Box ll8190, Chicago,
. Dear Annie: I have been JL 606ll. To find out more
: friends with " Manina" for a about Annie's Mailbox,, and
· wh1le. My husband and I read features by other
· helped her move when she Creators Syndicate writers
. separated from her husband, a11d cartoonists, visit the
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POMEROY - The dead'line for applying for a
School
Rutland
High
Alumni scholarship is May.
Recipients will be awarded
the honors at the annual
reunion at the Rutland Civic
Center on Saturd ay, May
26.
.
App li cants must be a
2007 high school graduate
and the child or grandchild
of a Rutland High School
alumni . Winners will be
chosen on 1he basis of grade
point average, co urse of
study and compliance with
requirements. with some
consideration of extracurricular and co-curricular activities and career objectives;
The following mu st bt.:
included as application
materials: Current official
transcript with seal and
guidance counselor'S signature , and must include
grades from at least three of
the fo ur nine-week or live
of th e six-week grad in g
periods for the senior year,
along with current GPA
based on a four-poi nt system; career · objecttves,
name of intended hi ghe r
educa ti onal instirution to
\vh ich the applicant has
been accepted; name and
graduation year of alumni
parent or grandparent ;
resume of activities; current
ph'otograph· for publicity
purposes;
applicant's
address and telephone num ber.
·
Materials may be postmarked by May . I to
Rutland.. High
School
Alumni
Scholarship
Committee, P.O .Box 802. ·
Syracuse, Ohio 45779 or
hand delivered to Suzy
Parker, Meigs Primary
School, SR 124, ncar
Rutland or Joan Wolfe at
Pomeroy Branch of Peoples
Bank by May I.

This mothers day, a heartfelt .

s~fli~ -

GALLIPOLIS

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Church events

-..,0'~'fff~":fl· ~ 13 .

Cl

Cuts

. Band Boosters will meet. ·7
POMEROY
The
p.m. in the high school band American Cancer Society
room. Nominations of offi- Meigs County Advisory
Monday,April23
cers
will be held. All band par- Boa rd' s annual meeting,
RACINE Financial
ents
and supporters invited.
noon, basement conference
Planning
Supervision
room at Pomeroy Library.
Commission, regular meetTuesday, April24
ing, 10:30 a.m., Southern
POMEROY - Library
High School n1edia room.
Book . Club, 6:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy
Library.
Wednesday, April25
Saturday, April28
RACINE - Special meetRIO
GRANDE
Wednesday,April25
ing of the Southern Local
Community
Christian
MIDDLEPORT
.School District Board of
El,lucation, 8 p.m. at the high Middleport Literary Club, 2 Fellowship youth r11lly to feaschool for the purpose of con- . p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. ture "Mantl e" in concert, 6
ducting interv iews for the Phyllis Hackett to review . p.m. Located at Trails End,
"The Team of Rivals" by Rio Grande. For more infor·
treas urer's position.
Doris Keams Goodwin. Dana mati on call 740 -742-1900 or
Kessinger, hostess.
740-245-5946. Games. fear
Thursday, April26
· factor, prizes, free pizza and
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
Thursday,April26
drinks.
and Water Conservation
District Board of Supervi~ors,
II :30 a.m. at the district
office, 3310 I Hiland Road,
Pomeroy.

Rutland
scholarship
deadline nears

Happy
Mother's Day

DILl'S III-\!{)\( .

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Public meetings

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The "Par tne rs In Care" group recently had a balloon launch at the Meigs Senior Center.
The event 1s one of the many activities offered by the early memory loss group. Those par·
tiCipatlng were left to right, front, Margaret Cremeans, Richard Fetty, Don Sayre, and Fran k
Hudnall , and back, Jean Thomas and Marilyn Powell, volunteers, Liz Rice, Louise Harrison ,
and Mildred. volunteer, and Kathy McDaniel, program coo rdinator.

-The Daily
Sentinel

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.- Partners in Care hold balloon lunch.·

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Monday, April23, 2007 .

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

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PageA3

·.The Daily Sentinel

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

-

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

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

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an·
estab/islrmwt of religion, or prohibiting the
free e.wrcise tlrereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the rig/at of the
. people pcaccabl)' to assemble, and to petition
tire Gor•errrment for a redress of grievances.
'

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. April ~3. the I 13th day of 2007. There
are 252 days left in the year.
.
Today·s Highlight in History:
·
Ap ril 13. 1564 .. is be li eved to be the birthdate of English
poet and dramati st Wi lli am Shakespeare; he died 52 years
later: also on Apri l 23 .
On thi s date:
In 179 1. the 15th president of the United States, James
Buchanan. was born in Franklin County. Pa.
In 1896. the Vitascope· system for projecting movies onto
a sc reen was publicly demonmated in New York City.
In 1899, Ru ssian-Americ an author Vl adimir Nabokov
was born in St. Petersburg.
In 1954, Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee Braves hit the
first of hi s record 755 major-league home runs, in a game
against the St. Louis Cardinals. (The Braves won, 7-5.)
In 1968. the Methodist Church and the Evangelical
UnitetL Brethren Church merged · to form the United
Methodi st Church.
In 1969, Sirhan Sirhan was sentenced to death for assassi nating New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. (The se ntence
was later reduced to life imprisonment.)
In 1985, Coca-Cola Co. announced it was changing the·
secret flavor formula for Coke (negative public reaction
forced the company to resume selling the original version).
Ten years ago: Doctors at University of Southern
California announced that, a child was born in late 1996 to
a 63:year-old woman on hormone therapy. Golfer Fuzzy
Zoeller, agai n apologizing for · racial cornments about
Masters winner Tiger Woods, withdrew from the Greater
Greensboro Chrysler Classic. The military confirmed that
two pieces of wreckage found on a snowy Rocky Mountain
peak were from an Air Force plane that had vanished oli a
training miss ion over Arizona.
Today's Birthdays: Actress-turned-diplomat Shirley
Temple Black is 79. Actor Alan Oppenheimer is 77. Actor
David Birney is 68. Actor Lee Majors is 68.1rish national·
ist. Bernadette Dev lin McA liskey is 60. Actress Blair
l3rown is 59. Writer-director Paul Brickman is 58. Actress
Joyce DeWitt is 58. Actor James Russo is 54. Filmmakerauthor Michael Moore is 53. Actress Judy Davis is 52.
Actress Jan Hooks is SO. Actress Valerie Bertinelli is 47.
Actor Craig; Sheffer is 47 . Actor George Lopez ("Gedrge
Lopez") is 46 . Rock musici an Gen is 43 . U.S. Olympic
gold medal skier Donna Weinbrecht is 42. Actress Melina
Kanakaredes is 40. Rock musician Stan Frazier (Sugar
Ray) is 39. Country musician Tim Womack (Sons of the
Desert ) is 39. Act or Scott Bairstow is 37. Actor Barry
Watson is 33. Actress Jai me King is 28. Actress Rachel
Skarsten .is 22. Actor Matthew Underwood is .17. Actor
Camcyn Walling is 17.
·
.
Thought for Today: "Be not afraid of greatness: some are
born great, some achieve greatness, and some have great·
ness thru st upon them ." - From "Twelfth-Night," by
William Shakespeare ( 1564-1616 ).

Monday, April23 , 2007
.

When anything goes

The Daily Sentinel .
:111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

r

Like a cultural earthquake , the Virginia Tech
massacre violently jolted all
news and events to a halt.
Or, rather, all non-massacre
news and events. Massacre
updates .remain constant:
the survivors' ghastly stories, which are ghastly; the
victims' harrow ing e nd s,
which are harrowing; the
campus authorities' inexplicable actions, which are
inexplicable. Is there anything more to learn?
True
to
compul sive
American habit, we want to
know why the crime
occurred, what ·drove Clio
Seung-Hui, a. chroni cally
maladjusted individua l of
irredeemable evil, to shoot
28 students and four professors to death on a chilly
April morning - as though
the secret still to be deciphered lies with him .
But even as the murderer's life is scrutini zed for a
"motive," we also come fO
understand there is no "reason" to explain thi s
supremely irrational crime.
So. liberals conclude insufficient gun control is at
fault. If only Clio hadn't
been able to get hi s hands
on handgun s, the theory
goes, thi s heinou s mass
murder - the worst sc hool
shooting in U.S. history ·would never have haQpened.
But owning guns doesn 't
kill people. And under even
the strictest gun control
laws, Clio might well have
taken a page from the black
book of Andrew Kehoe,

PageA4

Diana
West

who, back in 1927, perpetrated the biggest school
massacre in U.S. hi story
when he used dynamite to
blow up a Michigan school.
The blast killed 38 children
and seven teachers.
A conservati ve explanation of the crime points not
10 the existence of gun s in
society, but rather to the
existence of evil in the killer
- a mah who, according to
reports, left no fewer than
three bullet wounds in each
of hi s victims. But even evil
is not enough to expl ain
why thi s crime happened.
or. rather. why thi s crime
was virtually allowed to
happen.
The fact is, .Clio SeungHui wasn't the "quiet man"
you read about who one day
"snapped." He was notorious in his academic circle
long be fore the heinous
events of this week. Indeed,
one former classmate, Ian
MacFarl ane, has written
that on reading the 'twisted.
violent plays Clio wrote for
an English class, "we students were talking to each
other with serious worry
about when he could be a
school shooter....
Even faculty and adminis-

even evil

tration members at Virgin ia
Tech were reportedly well
aware of Cho's alarming
work and behavior, whether
it was teacher Nikki
Giovanni, who told The
Washington Post that her
2005 poetry class of 70
dwindled to seven over students· fears of Cho, or
unnamed univ ersi ty officials to whom faculty niembers say they turned for
guidance about the troubling student.
According
to
press
accounts. the poetry class
case went up the academic
of
command .
chain
Agreeing that Clio's writings were disturbing. the
of
the
then -chairman
English
department.
Lucinda Roy. "co nt ac ted
campus police: cOU ihCiing
services. sllldent affairs and
ofticials in her department."
The New York Times
reported. But since Cho had
made no "direct threats ...
there wa s nothing they
cou ld do. And besides.
according to The New York
Post's Andrea Peyser. there
were concerns about Cho 's
" free speech."
So Clio exercised hi s free
speech. but no one listening
was permitted to respond to .
i.t. Clio set off all the alarm
bells - and I haven' t eve n
mentioned the sta lking incidents, and other psychopathic behavior - but evidently, as in a frustration
nightmare, no one in authority did, or thought they
could do much . about it
besides suggesting therapy.

And even that was fruitless.
"He wouldn 't say yes.'' said
Ms . Roy.. '·and unfortunately. I couldn't force him. to do
it."
Why in tarnation not ?
Why cou ldn 't Virgi nia Tech
officials have •·forced" Clio
to seek counseling or else
lu se his affil iation with the
·college• Better still. why
couldn't lhe college have
given Cho "F's" for handing
in · psychopathic ti rades
instead of poetry and plays?
The college could have ..
expe lled him even as it
ur.gently recommended to
hi s paren ts that he seek
counseli ng. And since when
do psychopat hic tirades
earn course credit. anyway·•
Since for a long time.
Since we. '" a soc iety,
decided to abolish "normal. " effectively eliminatin g the paranieters of. well,
normal behavior. Since we,
as a socie ty. decided to rid.
ourseh·es of taboos. effectively disarming basic se lfdefense
mechanisms,
including good judgment. It
is unlikely Cho reali zed any
of thi s as he maniaca ll y
exploited society's weaknesses. But i1 is .crucial we
understand our inaction on
Cho's warning signs as a
consequence of politi ca l
correc tness and begin to
reverse it. Otherwise, we
won't have even .a hope of
warding off such evil. next
time.
(Diana West is a columnist
for Th e Washington Ttmes.
She cm1 be contacted via
·dia I W \\'est@ve ri~011 . net.)

USA

Monday, April 23, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.oom

·Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

MEIGS=COUN1Y 4-H·NEWS

Belva Marie Bolin

Backyard Crifters
ing projects, discussing the members and four advisors progress on their projects.
4-H Club
4-H Kick-off and having a attending.
·
Basketball was enjoyed
P~ANT CITY, Fla. - Belva Marie (Gordon, Faber)
The Backyard Critters 4·. booth.
The following officers after the meeting. Amber
Bolm, 84 of Plant C,ity, Fla., formerly of Athens, H Club has. had two meetMembers were encour- were
elected :
Baylee Davidson and Shelby Bing
Pomeroy, and Columbus died April 20, 2007 at home. ings both held at the Meigs aged to di scuss the projects Collin's, . president; Wade served refreshments.
· She was born Aug. 22, 1922 in Kenna, W.Va., the County Mu se um Annex they are interested in with Collins, vice president ; , The next meeting will be
daughter of the late George Henry and Canna Belle with members, cloverbuds their parents and to make Rebecca Chadwell , s~c re- at the home of Dawn Kopec
Gordon .. Dunng her worki ng years, she worked in· an advi sors present.
their selection . The advisor tary; Heaven Westfall, trea- on April ~8. Refreshments
tomato f1elds at Letart Falls; for "The Midway Market"
At the first meeting there and Shayla Molden served surer; Kayla Hawthorne , will be served by Mo'rgan
in Pomeroy; Bolin's Flower &amp; Body Shop in Athens, was a discussion on what · refre shments. ,
news reporter; Nicole and Kyle Ru ssell.
and a~ a com mercial sewing machine operator at sev- trips to take; whether to do
At the March 18 meeting Moodi spaugh, hi storian ;
Amber Davi dson, News
eral dtfferent locations, most of them in Columbus.
a fundraiser for a trip and if officers were elected. They Brianna Ayres, health Reporter · · Belva was a member of the Springhead Church of so when to do it.
are Lindsey Houser, presi· leader; Brooke . Johnson,
Chnst m Plant City, Fla. She loved the outdoor life of
A craft project of bunnies dent; Abbie Houser, secre· safety leader; Savanna
U.S.A. Kids 4-Jf Club
camping and trave lin g. (especially in the we stern and ducks was made for tary/news reporter; Shayla Speelman-Hawley, recreThe U.S. A. Kids 4-H
states) . . Wuh many years of travel and living in at least recreation.
Molden, treasurer/health ation leader.
Club met on April 15 at the
thlf!y dtfferent addresses, she got to see much of thi s
At the next meeting there and
recreation;
and
A camping date in June home of Joyce Weddle with
"Great America" we liv e in.
was a discussion on offi- Matthew
Brown, was set and fundrai sers and 12 members and two adviShe was preceded in death by two husbands- Alva cers, what to do for the fair safety/recreation.
community projects were sors prese nt. Discussion
Jerald Faber and John Ru ssell Bolin ; one sister, Dollie theme "Ride the Tide with
The skill-a-thon, judging di scussed.
was on quality assurance
A. Williams; three brothers- Ru sse ll , Robert and Fred Junior Fair," and how to activities and dates were
Kayla Hawthorne, New s and tag- in dates; skill; aGordon ; and a son-in-law, Charles H. Schuler.
assist the · 4-H Advisory discussed. Members select- Reporter
thon and everyone' s pro·
She is survived by five children; Harold Raymond Committee's · Longaberger ed projects and disc ussed
jects and the progress they
. (Lydia) Faber of We ston Colo., Wanda Belle Schuler of basket fund raiser. 'Craft reviewing project books
Pioneers 4-H Club
have made.
St. Clairsville, Leona Christine (Leo n) Sauters of projects were completed before selecting their proThe Pioneers 4-H Club
There was discu ssions on
Pomeroy, Loretta Faye (Lee) Gilkerson of Millersport. and refreshment s served by jects. Recreation was kick- met recently at the Drake sw ine, chicken and various
and Deborah Lynn (Dan) Bl ac k of Plant City, Fla.;
Angie Parker. Another ball .
Lindsey Hou ser home with officers tieing other projects. Joyce Ann
Also survi vi ng .are 19 grandchildren; Tyrsa Lorinda meeting as held last week served a veggie tray and elected and fundraisers and Weddle gave a demonstra(Faber) Sollars,
Harold Bl ay rle Faber,
We ndy at the Mu seum ·Annex .
juice. At the nex1 meeting projects discussed.
tion on how to handle
Gaynelle Faber, David Lee, Schuler, Rosemary
Joshua Parker, New s Abbie Houser will provide
For recreation the 17 chickens, their anatomy
(Schuler, Whaley) Shippy, Norman Arthur Schuler, Reporter
refreshments. A bake sale members and three advi- and how to care for them.
Randall Henry Schuler, Pollyanna (Schuler) Strupe,
to raise money to help pay sors played the license '. Refre shment s were proTamatha Lynn (Schuler, Church) Blasko, Daryl'
for !-shirts and a demon- plate game . . Tina Dr@ke vided by Mrs. Weddle. The
Bleeding Green
Thomas Schuler, Angel Darlene Schuler, Vicki Linnea
4-H Club
stration by Abbie Houser served refreshments. At next meeting will be on at 2
(Sauters) Lon g, Cynthia Doreen (Sauters) Diehl,
The ' Bleeding Green 4-H on rabbits will be included. the March meeting attend- p.m . May 20.
Christie Marie (Sauters) Hemsley, . Connie Lucille Club met in March at the
Abbie Houser, News ed by 19 members and the
Joshua Nelson, News
(Sauters. CundifO Carl, Sherry Ann · (Burt) Peugh. Amazing Grace Church, Reporter
advisors , officers were Reporter
. Sandra Sue (Burt, Wri ght) Hanson, Danielle Lynn Tuppers Plains, with tweninstalled, community serBlack , Heather Michelle Black; 42 great-grandchil· ty-two members and one
Harrisonville 4-H!!rS
vice projects and the basket
Whiz Kidz 4-H Club
dre n; and four great-great-grandchildren.
advisor attending.
The Harrisonville 4-Hers a day fund raiser were dis·
The Whiz Kidz 4-H Club .
Funeral service will be conducted Thursday II a.m.
Officers elected were met on March 26 at the cussed. Samuel Evans gave hao(le had two meeting at
lagers and Sons Funeral Home, 24 M&lt;:lffi s Avenue, Molly Dunlap, pre sident; Scipio VFD with .eight a report on safety tips. The the Buckley home.
., Athens with Pastor David Johnston officiating. Burial Sam Cline, vice president; members and three advi- Ficks, Trussells and Drakes
Club dues were set at $5,
will follow in Clark Chapel Cemetery, Athen s. Friends Katie Keller, secretary; sors present. Officers were served refreshments.
and plans were made to
may call Wedne sday 2-4 and 6 ~ 8 p.m. at the funeral Haley Bush, historian; elected and judging and
Makya Trussell , News plant flowers at the
home. '
·
Mallory Mcintyre, news other event dates were dis- Reporter
Chesdter Courthouse as a
reporter ; Ross Keller, cussed.
community project and
. recreation ;
Cassidy
Julia Lantz brought cookRocksprings Raiders
possibly p'ainting parking
Cleland; Josie Hayman, ies. Becca Donohue will
4-H Club
barrels. The new county 4Larissa Hllyman and Alex provide refreshments· for
The Rocksprings Raiders H rules an the possibility of
POMEROY - Roger W. Lance, 65, of Pomeroy, Schuler health and safety.
the next meeting
4-H Club met on April I, . taking a trip were dis Ohio, passed away at home with hi s family by hi s side
Members talked about 4Jonathan Donohue, News 2007 with eight members cussed.
.
on Thursday, April 19, 2007 after an extended battle H youth training and about · Reporter
and three advisors present.
Officers elected were
with cancer.
quality assurance training ·
·
.O fficers ·were elected; Morgan Werry, president;
H'e proudly served his country for .2 1 yeats in the and livestock skill-a-thon
Kids + K-9s 4-H Club upcoming activities were Vice President - Megan
United States Air Force and was a Vietnam War livestock.
The Kids + K-9s met on discussed and plans made Broderick, vice president;
Veteran. He was also a member of the VFW Posl 9053
Recreation was Hot April 9, '2007 at the for the April meeting to be Sarah Martindale, tn!asurin Tuppers Plains, the Coolville Masonic Lodge 337 Potato with Hula Hoops Pomeroy Church of the held at the Rock Springs er; Amanda Eason, secreF&amp;AM and the American Legion.
·
presented
by
Cassidy Nazarene with three mem· U.M. Church.
tary; Daniel Buckley, news
He was preceded in death by his parents, Frank Cleland.
Elizabeth bers and two advisors pre·
Nathan Cook, News reporter; Tyler Lee, recre·
Edward and Ora Ann Lance; a brother, Jack Lance; and Lawrence served chips, pop sent.
Reporter
auon leader; Jenna Hysell,
a sister, Mona Janelle Lance:
heath officer;
Andrea
and strawberry cake.
Discussion was on taking
He leaves to cherish his memory, his devoted wife of
Buckley, safety leader. The
Salem Center
The next meeting will be a pet to the nursing home;
42 years, Bertie Lance; his children, Roger Lance Jr.. on April 29, 2007 at getting a sponsor for T·
Buckleys provided refreshGo-Getters 4-H Club
Jennifer Seers and Christopher Lance; two brothers, Amazing · Grace Church. shirts; getting donation of
·
The Salem Center Go- ments.
Joe Lantz and Mike Lance ; four sisters, Judy Elkins, Audrionna Pullins will talk lumber to build a·dog house ,Getters 4-H Club met
At the last meeting
Ruth Ann Lance, Barbara Summerfield and Cynthia to the club about 4-H camp. · for a needy family.
recently at the home of attended by 14 members,
Haughton ; grandchildren, Amber Willbarger, Allison
Mallory Mcintyre, News
Tiffany Will is the recre· Dawn Kopec with 15 mem- community projects were
Seers, Brittany Lance, Ashley Seers, Brianna, Jake and Reponer
'
· ation leader and will be in bers and two advisors pre- again discussed with paintAlexa Romanoskie ; and a host of many cousins, niece s,
ing at !he church added. A
charge of recreation for the sent.
·
nephews and other relatives. Officers . elected were trip to "The Beach" in
April 23 , 2007 meeting to
Dream Catchers
Services will be held I p.m., Wednesday, April 25,
be held at the home of Melissa Snowden , presi· Cincinnati was planned and
4-H Club
2007 at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville,
The Dream Catchers 4- H Austin Miller. Plans are to dent; Amanda Gilkey, vice 4-H cams and who would
OH, with Rev. George Horner officiating. Burial will Club members have met work with the dogs.
president; Morgan Russell, be ·attending were dis be in the' Lance Family Cemetery, Tuppers Plains,. three times already this
·
Sarah Turner, News secretary; Kyle Russell, cussed.
Ohi.o . Fr.iends may call at the funeral home Tuesday, spring to make plans for the Reporter
At the next meeting
treasurer; Amber Davidson,
from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. In lieu of flowers, contributions activities at the home of the
news
reporter;
Kyle Morgan Werry and Megan
can be made to the American Cancer Society.
VanMeter, safety; Brayden Broderick will provide
Lakeside Leaders
advisor, Rebecca Minshall.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.white·
Kopec , recreation. Project refreshments and members
4-H Club
At the first meeting busi·
schwarzelfuneralhome.com
updates
and livestock are to bring in dues and
The Lakeside Leaders 4ness included registration
of old and new members, H Club recently at the requirements were dis - money for books.
Daniel Buckley, News
United cussed.
going over the project Reedsville ·
guide with members select- Methodist Church with 22
Each member report~d on Reporter
POMEROY Marvin D. Wi se, 63 , Pomeroy,
passed away on Friday April 20, 2007 after an extended illness. He was born on July 29, 1943 to the late
Charles and Mazie Rossiter Wise in Chillicothe, Ohio.
Mr. Wise was a welder for most of his life.
He is. survived by his Children: Rosalie (Vincent)
Common Pleas Couri by
King, Pomeroy, Teresa (Ricky) Reeves , Albany,
William Jones , · Wellston,
Shannon(Scott) Odgin, Middleport; a brother, Charles
POMEROY _An action , and
Kimberly
Jones,
Wise, Columbus; grandchildren: David Young, Jr. ,
Zachary Young, Briuany (Bobby) Eblin, Summer King , for foreclo sure was filed in Racine.
Ashley King, Alexandria Odgin , and Aaliyah Odgin ; a Meigs · CoJ.!nty Common
great-grandson, Marku s Allen Eblin; special nephews: Pleas Court by U.S. Bank,
Park, . Colo.,
Darrin, David, Jeff and Mark Wtse., a very spectal Highland
against
Garfield
A. Stewart,
friend , Mary Hawk, and good friend s at Fort Meigs,
POMEROY - . Divorce
Long
Bottom,
and
others.
Carl Stewart and John Partlow.
actions
were filed in Meigs
An action for injunction
He was preceded in Death by his loving wife,
County Common Pleas
Gertrude (Klein) Wi se, his parents, a brother, Damon was filed by Dame Oliveri, Court by Jared · Smith,
· Athens, and others, against Racine, against Eddena
Wi se; and a cousin, Sydney Wi se.
Inc.,
North
Service will be held a1 7 p.m. on Tuesday, April 24 at Gatherco,
Smith, Racine , and by
Canton.
Submitted Photo
the Fishe( Funeral Home in Pomeroy with William
Robert Barnhart, Albany, The Ohio Valley Christian School lower elementary students
· King officiating. Visitation will be held two hour s p'rior
against
Margaret
A. recently enjoyed special library time with Mother Goose
to the funeral service at the funeral home.
Barnhart, Lancaster.
Nursery Rhymes. Julia Parissi. OVCS librarian dressed as
Online condolences may be sent to: www.fi sherfuA
divorce
was
granted
to
Mother
Goose read to the kindergarten students. The
neralhomes,.com
POMEROY -An action
James
L.
Legg
from
school is currently inviting new families to consider kinder·
for dissolution of marriage
garten enrollment at Ohio Valley Christian.
was fried in Meigs County Kandice R. Legg.

Marvin D. Wise

ALL BUSINESS: Bid for Sallie Mae shows
good and bad qf debt~laden buyout deals

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Letters to rhe editor dre welcome. The v should ·be less
than 300 words. A/1/erter.\· are subject tu . editin g, must be
Bv RACHEL BECK
s,igned, and include addreu and telephone number. No
AP BUSINESS WRITER
unsigned letters ll'ili he published. utTers should be in
.
good taste, addressing isl'lles, not personalities. LetTers of
NEW YORK - The $25
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· billion bid for Sallie Mae
ed for publicatioi1 .
illustrates why a buyout-driven frenzy is propelling
stock prices higher. But it
also sends a message that
conS\Imers and mortgage
holders may find less com, (USPS 213·960)
Reader Services
forting:
All the debt-laden
Ohio Valley Publishing
dealmaking
could keep
Co.
Correction Policy
interest
rates
from
coming
Published every atternoon. Monday
Our main concern in all stories is to
down
soon.
.
.
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. lf you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Before the bid for SLM
Second-class
in a story, call the newsroom at (740} Postage paid at Pomeroy.
· Corp., commonly referred
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Pres\ and
to as Sallie Mae, was
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
announced, its stock traded
Postmaster: Send address correc- • around $40 each. Then
Our main number Is
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
came the rumors of pnvate(740) 992·2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Oh io 45769.
equity interest, sending its
Department extensions are:
shares up to $46 apiece.
Subscription Rates
When the deal was
By carrier or motor route
•announced
April 16, its
News
One month
'10.27
stock
jumped
to $55. And
Editor: Charlen e Hoeflich, Ext 12
One year
'115.84
that's
not
even
the real payDally
· 50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
out:
If
the
buyout
goes
Senior
Citizen
rates
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
· One month
'10.27
through, shareholders will
One year
'1 03.90
take home $60 a share in
Advertising
.Subscribers should rem~ " advance
cash.
Outside Sales: Dave Harns, Ext 15 dii9CI to lhe Dai~ Serlinel. No subBut there is more to this
scription by mail permitted in areas
deal worth noting. The purOutside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ex116 where home carrier service is avail.chase by buyout firm J.C.
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark , Exl. 10 .
abie .
Flowers &amp; Co. and three
other investors is being
Mail Subscription
General Manager
fin anced in part with $ 16.5
Inside Meigs County
· Charlene Hoef li~h , Ex!. 12 .
13 Weeks
' 32.26
billion in debt, a move that
'64.20
26 Weeks
will likely knock down ·
52 Weeks
' 127.11
Sallie Mae 's credit rating to
E-mail :
junk.
That would niake it
news@ mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
more
ex pensive for the
13 Weeks
' 53.55
company
to borrow new
Web:
'107.10
26 Weeks
funds
.
52 Weeks
' '214.21
www.mydailysentinel.com
No doubt the Federal

The Daily Sentinel

•'

Reserve is keeping tabs. Its wide has reached $275 .bil· bank 's next move - and
policymakers have been try- Jion so far thi s year, exceed- hoping it 's a rate cut, given
mg to slow down credit ere- ing the $131 billion during !hat th e econo my has
ation as part of their drive to . the first four months of slowed significantly from a
keep inflation from acceler- 2006,
according
to growth rate of 3.4 percent in
ating. But super-sizedlever- Dealogic . For all of last 2006 to the 2.2 percent
aged buyouts, or LBOs, like year. the buyout deal making expansion expected this·
this show them how plenti- hit a record $745 billion. year.
ful cheap debt still is.
more than double the 2005
Add ing to those expectaThat could steer the Fed levels.
tions has been some tame
from easing monetary .poliThe biggest global buyout inflation new s. The Labor
cy soon, which would dis- so far in 2007 was $32 bil- Department on Tuesday
appoint those on Wall Street li on bid for electric utility reported that the core rate of
who think a slowing econo- TXU Corp, according to the cons um er price index,
my and some weakening Dealogic. Pri vate-equity whi ch excludes vo latil e
inflationary pressures· will firms Kohlberg Kravi s energy and food costs, rose
lead to lower rates.
Roberts &amp; Co. and Texas only 0.1 percent ri se in
From the way that · Pacif1c · Qroup will put up. March. the. smalles t gai n in
investors have been cheer- .J ess than $8 billion in cash three month s.
ing for the record-setting and borrow more than $24
But Bernstein thinks all
~ace of deal making, they billion against TXU 's assets the
head line-grabbing
probably don ' t recog nize to finance the deal.
LBOs show the Fed's
the resulting ri sk to rates.
The $8.2 billion going- . efforts to curb credi t ereThey 've largely had a sharp private deal for Tribune Co. at ion are· "impotent." The
focu s on what company is by real estate mogul Sam . last thing that the Fed might
gettin g bought out and ZeiJ will be almost entirel y wmi t to do is make borrowwhich one might be next.
financed with debt.
ing costs even cheaper. by
This private' equity buyRic hard
Bernstein . . cutting rates. ·
ing bonanza has provided Merrill · Lynch's
chi ef
''The more one reads
somewhat of a floor to the in vestment strategist. warn s · about the mega-LBOs in the
stock market in rece nt that the leveraged dealmak - works, the less one should
months, since investors are ing cou ld be "handcuffing" anticipate the Fed preempreluctant to se ll shares they Fed policymakers as they tively lowe ring interest
think could be bought.
rates," Bernste in said in a
deal with interest rates.
That's given a huge jolt to
After
boosti ng
its note to clients.
stocks, erasing the losses overnight lending rate 17
May be
lower
rates
sustained dudng a tempo- times 0 vcr the two ye ars shouldn ' t matter if buyouts
rary, yet pronounced plunge , beginning in June 2004 to for Sallie Mae and others
in late February. The Dow slow the economy su ffi - sig nals fin ancial markets
Jones industrial average has ciently to th wart infl ati on. are sti ll awash wi th cheap
surged to record levels and the ce ntral bankers have left debt. But the easi ng of monother major market indexes the rate u~changed si nce etary po li cy certai nl y would
are at six-year highs.
last summer at 5.25 percent. give everyone - compaThe total value of
lnvestors have been anx- nies, homeowners and more
announced buyouts world- iously awaiti ng the central - belter access to it.

Reading rhyme$.. .

For the Record
Civil suits

Divorces

Dissolution

Lee W. Hobbs

ALBANY - Lee W. Hobbs, 77 Albany, passed away 1
Friday, April 20, 2007 at Pleasant Valley Hospital after
an extended illness.
·
He was born June 29, 1929 in . Sovereign, W.Va. to
't he late. Willia1n "Henry" Hobbs and Fanny Taylor
Hobbs. ·He was a coal miner for most of hi s life and a
member of the Elks and a member of the Uriited Mine
Workers Association.
Surviving are his wife Ge~trude " Ruth " Hobbs ,
Albany · children, Ruth Ann Gtbbs of Albany, Sharon
' Vance ~f Albany, John H. Hobbs of Gallipolis, Jeannie
M. Fields of Mason , Linda J. Allensworth of
Columbus, and Danny L. Hobbs of Albany; 13 grandchildren , II great-grandchildren; two ststders, Frances
Hawks of Bloomington, 111 , and Jean Carver of Flonda;
and special friends, Rev. James' Lewis and Dr. Jamora.
He was preceded in death by his parents. a·son, Terry
Lee Hobbs brothers and sisters, Hobart Hobbs , Homer
Hobbs John Hobbs, Florence Breedlove, Blanche
Hobbs: Dai sy Kuhn , and Lo ui se Boegli.
.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Tuesday, Apnl 24,
at the Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev.
·James Lewis and Rev. Ron Branch officiating, Burial
will fo llow at the Well s Cemetery. Vi sitation will be
· held from 6 to 8 p.m. on Monday, April 23, 2007 at the
fun eral home .
.
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

•

Schools
from Page A1 .

The situation is different .at
St. Clair Elementary School
in Paines ville, where the
median household income is
about $35,000 and 70 percent of students are eligible
·for free or reduced-price
lunch.
The PTA in Painesville has
35 members who raise about
$4,000 to $7,000 a year.
mainly by se lling cookie
dough. The money goes
toward library books, a~sem·
blies and field trip~ .
"More-affluent schools
may choose or be able to provide etiquette , financialplanning and specified finearts instructors," said Jessica
Herendeen, St. Clair's PTA
president. "We would love
these perks but are unable to

provide them."
PTA groups say tight
school blltlgets force them to
increase their fundraising .
"Schools these days are
asked to more with less,"
said
James . Martinez,
' National PTA spokesman.
A few years ago, a PTA
council in suburban Solon
paid for an online math program for students in grades
K-6 after the program's original sponsor, M~Donald :s,
dropped out.
At the same time, PTAs are
wary of becoming th:e
fundraising arm of school
districts.
Kathy Perry, a member of
the Westwood Elementary
School parent-teacher organization in Warrensville,
said she might be receptive
to helping out her sc hool for
a blg-tic~et item but would
first need lo learn why the
·d istrict came up short.

Wilson
from PageA1
Strickland for his efforts
toward equity in sc hool
funding , saying he has
made a "clear commitment
to public education."
Phillips, who. was the
party 's candidate. for State
Representative last ., fall,
emphasized the importance

of a Democratic majority
in the Ohio House, and
noted that only four seats
are required for that majority. She indicated she plans
to run for the seat again
next year.

A~~!·,
Auditions for
Ariel Jr. Theatre's

"Disney's 101
Dalmatians Kids"
Sunday, April 22, 1-4 pm
Monday, April 23, 6-8 pm
Roles AvaUable for Kids 6,18
Ohio Valle) S)mphony
April 28 at 8 pm
Guitar Classics
The Ariel-Dater Hall

42~~~; ~~.. ~_;!~i~~~~7~H

�..,

.Bridge over
zoo, creek .
being replaced
CLEVELAND (APl - A
crumbling
75-year-olu
· bridge must come down
next weekend to make room
for a new one, but the
demolition must be delicate
si nce it straddles a zoo,
creek and railroad tracks.
A five-second series of
blasts will topple the historic Fulton Road Bridge
over Big Creek Valley and
part of the Cleveland
Metroparks Zoo. The
bridge. in disrepair for
years. closed to traffic in
October.
Its six concrete arches up
td II 0 feet high still cross a
valley and pieces of its deck
have been removed to prepare for the implosion on
Saturday. A new, similarly
designed .bridge is expected ·
to take its place late in 2009.
The demolition crew must
take care in bringing down
the 50 million~pound concrete· and steel structure so·
not to harm the homes; zoo
animals, creek and railroad
tracks underneath;

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Mon(\ay, 1April23,:2007

Inside

The Da.ily Sentinel

Wahama struggles agai~t Man, Page B2

p

Club ·discusses disaster .·
of secretive action
COLUMBUS (AP)
Some state agencies have no
policies restri ct ing public
employees from using private
e-mai l accounts for official
business or using persqnal
handheld digital devices
where records are routinely
deleted. a newspaper reported
Sunday.
E-mails and other electronic commun ications generated
by state employees are considered public records, but
Inspector General· Thomas
Charles said he ·s concerned
that some public information
is being .shielded or
desu·oyed.
"We're quite concerned
about it." he said. "It's an
issue that's going to continue
to revolve around new technology."
The Columbus Dispatch
said it asked to review emails sent to and from elected
officials and top government
staffers on two days in March
- when Democratic Gov.
Ted Strickland delivered his
State of the State address and
when he. introduced his twoyear budget proposal.

Democratic House Leader
Joyce Beatty of Columbus,
who uses private accounts
and a handheld device.
agreed to tum over her emails, but they already been
deleted. the newspaper said.
John
Kohlstrand,
a
spokesman for
House
Democrats, said that when
members were told in a
recent caucus that some emails on their personal handheld devices could be pub Iic
records, "people were horrified."
"If a conversation with
. your kid goes on the same
device, that process of sorting
out what is a public document gets pretty personal,"
Kohlstrand said.
House Speaker Jon Husted,
a Republican from suburban
Dayton. uses a private handheld device for e-mail. . The
Dispatch said. For the two
days requested, GOP caucus
officials turned over a few
routine ·responses to constituent co mmuniques and
widely distributed office
messages from his state
account. ,

Local weather

Scott
Borgemenke,
Husted's chief of staff, said
he has all messages from his
state e-mail address automatically bumped to a private
account
with
America
Online. He uses the private
account for convenience and
efiiciency. not to hide information. he said.
"I don't know if they are
public records,'' he said.
David
Marburger, a
Cleveland lawyer who represents the Ohio Coalition for
Open Government, said
using a private e-mail
account to conduct public
business breaks state law
because it removes public
· records from the control of
the gdvenunent.
Also. deleting any private
e- mails that contain public
business could violate the law
banning desUllction of public
records. he said.
Anomey General Marc
Dann, a Democrat, agrees
that all e-mail should be public if it deals witb public business, regardless of whether it
is kept on a government or
private account.

•

Monday ... Partly sunny. storms after midnight.
Scattered showers with a . Breezy with lows in the
slight chance of thunder- upper 50s.
Southwest
storms in the afternoon. winds I 0 to 20 · mph.
Highs in the upper 70s. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Southwest winds I0 to 15
Thesday ... Mostly sunny.
mph with gusts up to 25 Highs in · the mid 70s.
mph. Chance of rain 40 Northwest winds 5 to I0
percent.
mph.
Monday night...Mostly
Thesday night...Mos(ly
cloudy. Showers likely with cloudy with a 30 percent
a chance of thunderstorms chance of showers. Lows
in · the evening.:.Then a in the mid 50s. Northeast
'chance of showers with a winds around 5 mph.
Wednesday ... Mostly
slight chance of thunder-

cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
W e d n " e s d a· y
nighi...Showers and thunderstorms likely. Lows in
the mid 50s. Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Thnrsday ... Showers and
thunderstorms likely in the
morning ... Then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the afternoon . Highs in
the upper 60s. Chance of

rain 60 percent.
Thursday
night...A
chance of thunderstorms in
the evening. Cloudy with a
chance 1 of showers. Lows
in the upper 40s. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
.
Fdday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance
of showers. Highs in the
upper 60s.
Friday night through
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Highs in the upper 60s.

MIDDLEPORT - In lieu to take her to a home for disof a book review, members of abled children. When Norah
the Middleport Literary Club awakens he tells her !.hat their
had a group discussion of the little daughter was stillborn. It
2005 novel 'The Memorv was a quick decision that
Keeper's Daughter" by Kiri1 holds many implications for
Edwards at a recent meeting the futures of all of them.
held at the Pomeroy Library. Caroline does as she is told;
Program chainnan Nadine but she finds the institution a
Goebel gave a brief biogra- teiribly cold and disheartell'"
phy of the author, noting that ing place:Unable to leave the
the author drew recognition baby girl there, Caroline disand critical acclaim. with her appears and takes the baby
first hook, The Secrets of a Phoebe with her.
Fire King, a collection of
The author said that the
short stories published in story was like a stone thrown
1997. It was a finalist for the in water with the ripples
prestigious PEN/Hemingway being . the events created in
Award and she has al.lo won the lives of the characters.
the Whiting Award and the The parallel lives of the two
Nelson
Algren Award. tirmilies then unfold over the
Currently she lives in next 25 years. David's act of
Lexington. Ky. and teaches deception to Norah corrodes
writing at the University of his marriage and deeply
Kentucky. The Memory affects the life of their son ·
Keeper's Daughter js her tirst . Paul. Caroline se ttles in
novel.
Set in Lexington in the Pittsburgh, gets a good job:
mid-1960's, the story begins and raises Phoebe as her own
with an unusual snow storm child. Phoebe thrives in the
that blankets the city. Dr. Jove and guidance of
David Henry, an orthopedic Caroline. The title of the
surgeon, and his wife Norah novel comes from David's
are expecting their first child. hobby a~ a photographer, a
When Norah's labor begins. "memory·keeper."
In a lively and thoughtful
David tries to get her to the
discussion,
members .considhospital but the storm forces
ered
David
and his wellhim to take her instead to his
i
mentioned,
but
disastrous
clinic. There he and his nurse
decision,
as
well
as
attitudes
Caroline Gill . deliver the
towards
children
with
Down
baby, a son. Then unexpectedly, a second child is deliv- Syndrome at that time and
ered, a girl. David recognizes now. They also discussed the
in her the signs. of Down effect of lies and secrets on
relationships and the skill of .
Syndrome.
·
the
author in portraying all
David has been secretive
these
things.
.
about his own life. He grew
The
next
meeting
of the
up in West Virginia, the son
Literary
Club
will
be
on
April
of a desperntcly poor family
and he had a chronically ill 25 at the Pomeroy Library.
sister who died at age 12. He Phyllis Hackett will review
knew the difficulty faced by Team Of Rivals: The Political
parents with a sick child, and Genius of Abraham Lincoln
hoping to spare his wife what by Doris Kearns Goodwin.
he sees as a life of heart- Club
President
Dana
break, he 'hands the baby over Kessinger will serve as host-.
to his nurse with instructions ess.

Monday, April 23, 2007

LocAL SCHEDULE

Prep Track

POMEROY- A~ of 14JC0011ng college
and high 9CtlOol varsly sporting events ilvoMng
teams from GaRia and Meigs counM&amp;. ·~ -"

Angels tie
for title in
Parkersburg

Monday 's game•
.BIIHtNIII
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 5 p.m
Ironton St Joe at South Gallia, "5 p.m.
River Valley at Aock Hill, 5 p.m
Meigs at Belpte, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 5 p.m.
Softball
Gallia Academy at Jackson. 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Fairview, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Aock Hill, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 5 p.m.
·
Tennlt
Portsmouth at (lallia Academy, 4:30
p.m.

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOA/LYTR/BUNE.COM

u

Tuttday'•

a•ma•

Baaeball

Eastern at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Southern, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Wahama at River Valley. 5 p.m.
Softball
Meigs at Southam. 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at River Valley, 5 p.m.
South.Gallia at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Meigs, Gajlia at Athens, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Jackson, 5 p.m.
Eastern, Southam at Alexander, 4:30
p.m.
Tennis
Gallia Academy vs. Vinton Co ., 5 p.m.
College Soltboll ·
Glenville at Rio Grande, 3 p.m.

Wectn•td•v's Plflll•

BaMbi II
GaUia Academy at Point Pleasant, 5 ·
p.m.
Fairfand at River Valley, 5 p.m.
t.4eigs at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Southern at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Softball
GaUia Academy at Pt. Pleasant, 5 p.m.
Huntington St. Joe at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Fairland at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Trimble, 5 p.m.
. Athens at Eastern, 5 p.m.

·

Tennis

Ironton at Gallia Academy, 4:30p.m.

Larry Crum/photo

Gall ia Academy's Cody Noble gets caught between Meigs' Caleb Davis (left) ·and Dave Poole on a steal attempt during a
high school baseball game Saturday aftElrnoon in Gallipolis. Noble was out on the play.

Thursday'• qam11

Baoeball .
Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Southern "at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Softball
Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Traek and Field
South GaHia, Eastern at Vinton County,
4:30p.m.

arauders, Gallipolis split
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDA/LYTR /BUNE.COM

Meigs ·takes ·
one from ·
Gallipolis

Dr. Kelsey M. Henry, D.C.
M-W-F Sam-Spm
Tues 8-1
Thurs 12-5

Is Proud To Introduce
Th·e EB Pro Detoxifier

"I was surpJ:ised at how much better I feel, the ·
pain eased up and I felt better all over."
•
Cheryl E., Middleport, OH
"I was amazed at how improved my knee
pain was, I even slept better."
B. Williams, Middleport, OH
"I felt so much better, I couldn't wait for
the second one. You .iust have to 'try it."
A. K. Age 82, Hartford, WV

Thellnic fill Bath TherapJ SJsteiD IS
An ERective wav 01 Reducing
TIXinlevels In The BldVI
•

People are constantly being exposed to unheaithy levels of pollution. The human
body is like a giant magnet that attracts and holds on to toxins. Heavy metals and a
vast array of other toxins attach themselves i,n ionized form to joints, organs, .
arteries, nerves and tissues, disrupting their function. This creates an envvironment
for disease, allergies and immune system breakdowns.

1065 South Second Street • Mason, WV 25260

--------,

TIISAD :
I

'
I
I

Most Insurances Accepted. L--------------~
.

•

'

.

Eagles·drop games
to Adena, Greenfield

Bend area CARE
to sponsor
Special Olympics
at Riverside .

Redmen drop four
crucial games to ODU

This therapy is available to gently cleanse unwanted chemicals f.rom the body.
· 'Healthy individuals can expect to feel.light~r and experience a greater feeling of
well being. Some patients with pain, edema, and swollen joints have reported relief
immediately. Other patients with arthrritis, allergies, gout, limpheqema, headaches,
and neuralgia as well as other symptoms have experienced relief and benefits with
multiple treatments.
·

The Bl4e Devils led most of the way the game.
in the first game, but it was close the
It was Thompson 's lone hit, and he
entire way, and Meigs was able to pull also pitched well , going the distance
even at four apiece with a run in the top for the victory. He gave up five hits,
of the sixth inning. But Gallia struck out five and did not walk a batAcademy won it in walk-off fashion by ter. Meigs ' Austin Dunfee, who
breaking the tie in the home half of the relieved starter Bryan Delong, took the
seventh.
loss.·
John Paul Finnicum and Austin king
Cody Noble paced the Blue Devil
had back-to-back one out singles in the . bats by ..going 3-for-3 with a pair of
seventh to set up the game-winning hit runs batted in. Finnicum went 2-for-4
by Shawn Thompson. Thompson hft a while King, Thompson and Austin
double off the fence in left center field ,
allowing Finnicum to score ar1d end
Please see Split. B1

PARKERSBURG. W.Va.
-Lauren Adkins won both
indi vid ual distance races,
and Kara Jackson set a new
meet record, as the Gallia
Academy High School girls
track and field team won the
Russ Parsons In vitational
on Saturday.
But the Blue Angel s
weren't the m\Jy ones, host
Parkersburg and Akron
Buchtel scored 122 points
along with Gallia Academy
- creating a three-way tie
for the team championship.
Adkins won the 1600meters in a time of 5:32.19,
six seconds.before her nearest competitor. She al so
won the 3200 meters in a
time of 11:28.04 - way
ahead of second -place
Emmy
Moore
of
Parkersburg.
Jackson ran the 400meters in a record time of
58.38 seconds, erasing the
record set by former Blue
Angel Kay la Perry last season. . .
The Blue Angels also
took fir st in · two other
events. The 4x I 00-meter
relay team of Brea Close,
Tonia Logan, Jackson and
Alexis Geiger won in a time
of 51.17 seconds; also
Geiger won the long jump
11y gliding 17-03.5 through
the air.
Sophie Wagner was the
meet's high scorer on the
girls side with 28 points,
·helping Marietta to a fourthplace showing with 94

GALLIPOLIS -Two tense endings
fell two different ways as the Gallia
Academy · Blue Devils ood Meigs
Marauders. split a high school baseball
doubleheader on Saturday afternoon.
Gallia Academy scored a hm in the
bottom of the seventh inning to win
. POMEROY- The 14th Game I by a 5-4 ·count, then Meigs
annual Meigs . Football Golf staved off a comeback bid in the secTournament will be held at ond' contest to win 12-10 and earn the
Please see Track, B2
Pine Hills GoW Course on split.
Mar 12 with a shotgun start
begmning at 9 a.m.
Game setup will be a four
man scramble with each team
bringing th.eir own members.
Included with entry fees will
be a round of golf, cart, lunch
and beverages with prizes for
each team.
STAFF REPORT
ble. Kyle Gordon also had
. There will also be a skins
SPORTS@MVDA/LYSENT/NEL.COM
two hits in the setback.
game during the day.
Titus Pierce, Joel Lynch.
BY STEVE EBERT
For more information,
GREENFIELD - The Derek Young and Justin
SPECiAl TO. THE SENfiNEl
please contact Mike Chancey
Eastern High School base- Browning also hit safely.
at 992-2158 or 992-0064.
ball
team played well. but
The second game of the
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
lost a pair of one-run games day for the Eagles was
Academy and Meigs split
over the weekend at especially a heartbreaker, as
a high school softball douGreenfield McClain
Greenfield McClain used a
bleheader on · Saturday .
falling
8-7
to
Adena
and
6walk-off RBI single from
afternoon on Gallipolis'
5 to the host Tigers.
Kingsolums in the bottom
Memorial Field - the '
The·
'losses
dropped
of
the seventh to win 6-5.
Blue Angels won the openEastern
8-6
on
the
season.
Eastern
led 5-0 at one
er 7-3 before· the Lady
Eastern
and
Adena
were
time,
but
the
Tigers came
Marauders salvaged the
neck-and-neck,
matching
back with six unanswered
MASON, W.Va. - The second game 8-2.
each other run-for-run to pull out the come-fromBend Area Community
Some of the more excitthrough the first three behind win .
Assistance and Relief to ing action in Game I came
but the Warriors
innings,
Willman had a solo home
Everyone, also known as about as a result of scarscored
three
in the fourth run, part of a two-hit day
CARE, will sponsm its armu- ing threats that were avertinning to break the 4-4 tie, for
the
winners.
a] golf tournament to benefit ed. With Amy Noe in the
and
added another in the Kin gsolums added another
the
Special
Olympics pitching ring for GAHS,
fifth to ex.tend to all' 8-4 safety to go along with his
Sunday, April 29 at. Riverside Meigs had runners on the
advantage.
game-wumer.
•
Golf Club in Mason.
. · corners in the first inning
Eastern came back with
Morris again paced his
The tournament will shot- with only one out. Amber
three of its own in the sixth club with two hits, includgun start at 8:30 a.m. and is Burton lifted a fly ball to
frame , but could not get the ing an RBI double. Derek
open to the first 144 golfers to left that was caught by
equalizer.
Griffin. Co.ry Shaffer,
register with several levels of Brittany Miller, · and when
Rou sh had three singles Lynch and Pierce all added
entry available to players.
the lead runner tagged up
for Adena. Starr, Ru gland singles.
All entry fees include green and tried to score, Miller
and Logan all had doubles.
Eastern goes to miller for
fees, cart, mulligan, _ skin gunned her down; Sarah
Larry Crum/photo
Matt Morris paced th e a Tri· Valley Conference
game, food and prizes.
Meigs' Cassi Whan makes 'l throw to first b;lse during a
· Players will also have a
high school softball game against Galli a Academy Saturday , Eagle pats with a pair of Hocking Div.ision clash on
hits, including an RBI dou- Mpnday.
chance to win a new car
Please see .Meigs, B2
afternoon in Gallipolis.
sponsored by Mark Porter in · ------~--.,----------'---------~--------:---------------Pomeroy.
·
Teams will be drawn
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. There
Rio Grande's
will also be a meet the team
Cory
Cottrell
part on Friday wi\h free food
available ·for tournament
(11) is wei·
players in attendance.
corned. back
to the dugout
BY MARK WtUIAMS
The second game lasted
by Mike
SPECIAL TO THE SE~f/N EL
nine innings.
.
Warren (34)
Rio Grande (22-19-1, IIComAcrUs
and
others
RIO GRANDE - The 5 AMCS) scored first in
after
scoring:,
University of Rio Grande game one with two runs in
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 o.m.)
a
run
during·Redmen base ball team was the opening inriing. Senior
1·740·446-2342 ext 33
a
big
fourth
7
out to ave.nge the double- catcher Kyle Wells and
inning for the
FIX - 1· 740-446·3008
header loss to NAJA No. 13 ·junior first baseman Kyle
Redmen in ··
· E..,.ll- sports0 mydailysentinetcom
Ohio . Dominican that Moore delivered RBls.
1
Game
2
.Soorta Stefl
occurred on Saturday when
bhio Dominican (32-8.
Su'nday.
ODU
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor the two teams took to the 17-3 AMCS) grabbed the
swept
the
.
diamond at Bob Evans lead in the third inning
(740) ~6-2342, ext. 33
bshermanOmydallytrlbune.com
season
Field on Sunday afternoon. when former Redmen Josh
se~ies.
The
Redmen
were
not
Brown
crushed
a
grand
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
slam
home
run.
ODU
later
. (740) 446-2342, ext.. 23
able to accomplish what added a tw o-run shot from
Brad
lcrumOmydailyreglster.com
they set out to do as the Joe Janusik and the rout
Sherman/photo
Panthers finished off a fourBryan WaHera, Sports WrHer
game
sweep with a pair of
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
bwaltersOmydailytribune.com
victories, 9-.2 and 15- 11 . Please see Redmen, B2

Meigs Football
Golf Tourney

'

•

'

SPORTS BRIEFS

BEND ·AREA
CHIROPRACTIC
CENTER

~ Bl

_______________
--.

___________

- - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - ----~---------

;,..__..;,_;_

--- - - ~

·

-.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

W~hama

offense struggles
against Man Hillbillies

Bv

th row stnkes enabled Man
to score t1ve tim es m the
fl tth mnmg and once m the
MASON W Va - After SIXth bef ore the VI Sitors
expenencmg an ottens1ve blew the Wh1te Falcons
outburst over the past two away with mne more tallies
cont ests th e W,th&lt;tm,J m th e seventh Wahama
Whtte Falco n bat s tell was ,tble to avo 1d the
silent Saturda) afternoon shutout by sco nn g three
111 a one-s1ded 17-3 base- unearned run s m the1r tmal
ball setback at th e h&lt;tnd s of plate appearance to make
the
VJS1l1ng
Man the fmal count 17 -3
Hillbillie s
Man ope ned th e sconng
Coach Tom Cullen's with tv.o run s m the third
Bend Area d ~a mond nme · to break free from a scoreban ged out 14 h1ts 111 w1ns less de,1d lock to take a slim
O\er South Ga l ha mtd 2-0 lead 1 Wahama, despite
011 placmg men on base m s1x
Calhoun
County
Thursday and Fnday. but of the seven mmn gs strugcou ld mu ster only f1ve gled mightily 111 trymcr to
safeties on a sun-drenched come up With the clutch hit
WHS campus Saturday that would JUmp stan the
afternoon
Man turned what was an Bend Area teams offen se
Corns started on the
extremely close 2-0 affmr mound for Man and fanned
mto the one -stded 17-3
rout by sconng 15 limes 12 WHS batters w1th JUmor
d
h t 1 three Derek Veazey bem g the
fr~%:~ t e Jna
lone Wh1te Falcon starter
The
While
Falcons to escape the stnkeout bug
played the rol e of the gra- A huge deficiency that d1s
c1ous host by contnbut 1ng rupted the local dtamond
Slgmf1cantly to the v1s1tors nme was the f&lt;~ct that seven
cause by comm 1ttmg s1x of the 12 WHS stnkeouts
errors on the day, wh1ch Jed were called th1rd stnkes
to II unearned Man tallies that severely hampered the
F1ve
Falcon
pitchers Bend Area team ' s many
reverted back to the Bend sconng opportunities
Area team's early season
Cody Ge1lach emerged
form by tss umg II tree as the offens1vely leader
passes m the outmg 10 for Wahama after dnvmg
addll1on to surrendenng 15 m a pmr With two tnples on
hns, wh1ch also played a the day Derek Veazey.
hu ge role 111 the h1 gh Brenton Clark and W1llmm
school baseball contest
Zuspan added a smgle each
Errors, both of the phys1- tor the White Falcons,
cal and mental category, Gerlach chased home the
along w1th the mab11ity to flfst two Falcon runs wilh
GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPON DENT

Split
from PageBf
Roush all ch1pped tn wnh
one safety each
Corey Hutton paced
Me1gs wnh a 3-for-5 day all smgles Dunfee had two
hits and two RB Is Delong
also had a pa1r of hits,
mcludmg a tnple Clayton
Blackston and Jacob Well
also hll safely
In Game 2, Me1gs pounded out 16 h1ts, JUmped out
to a 12-2 1ead and held off a
late rally to gam the 12-10
tnumph
Gallia Academy had fourrun mnmgs m the fifth and
seventh frames, and actually had the tymg run m scormg positiOn before Delong
struck out the fmal two batters to get the save and pre-

Redmen
from PageBl
was on
The Redmen managed
only f1ve h1ts Wells was 1for-2 w1th an RBI and
Moore was 0-for-2 w1th an
RBI sacnflce fly
• Brown led the Panthers,
gomg 2-for-3 w1th two runs
scored and the grand slam
N1ck Ass man also collected
two h1ts as the Panthers
posted I 0 knocks m the
game
Brandon Russell took the
loss for R10 Grande as he
gave up seven earned nuns
m 4 2/3 mnmgs Russell (44) surrendered nme hils
and allowed four walks
With one stnkeout
Jonathan Kounus (6-1 ),
the re1gmng Amencan
M1deast Conference pitcher of the week, had a 23
mmng scoreless streak
snapped by the Redmen 111
the openmg mnmg, but he
settled down and went the
distance for the wm
Kountls fanned SIX and
walked and only one and
one of the runs was
unearned
Game two had a little bit
of everythmg as an apparent rout by ODU turned in
a wh1te-knuckJmg slugfest.
The two teams combmed
for 26 runs, 34 hils, six
errors and 18 men left on
base
Rw Grande rallied from
an early I 0-3 deficu to take
an I I -I 0 lead on the
strength of an e1ght-run
fourth mnmg ODU tied the
game m the s1xth on a sac
fl y from Janus1k and won 1t
m the bottom of the nmth
1-

serve the wm
Hutton. who had &lt;1 b1g
f1rst -game, continued to
carry a hot bat by smackmg
a two-run homer and he fmJshed with three runs batted
111 Clay Bolm led the way
w1th four smgles and scored
three tunes
Also 111 the Me1gs' offenSIVe onslaught, Poole went
3-for-4, Blackston had two
htts and three RBls and ,
Dunfee and Caleb Dav1s
logged a patr of h1ts as well
Ryan Jeffers ch1pped m an
RBI double - part of a b1g
s1x-run second mntng for
the Marauders
Thompson had two doubles, part of a 3-for-4 day at
the plate 111 the setback
Noble also had a tno of hils
wllh two runs batted m, and
Dave Rumley had RBI smgles m the fourth , fifth and
seventh mmngs Kru1ze
Wandhng had two luts and
when they scored tour run's
oft R10 closer Kenta Sato
Oh10 Dom1mcan had 16
hns w1th f1 ve players
recordmg t\1/o hns and
Assman went 3-tor-5 w1th
two runs scored and tv.o
RBI. Matt Koblens was 2tor-5 w1th four RB!s He
had a two-run smgle 111 a
s1x-run second mnmg that
se nt the Panthers out m
front, 7-0
Venson Doster was one
of the Panthers With two
hils he scored three runs
and stole two bases
R10 Grande had 18 hils 111
the losmg effort Seowr
leftfJelder M1chael Warren
went 4-for-5 and scored a
run Wells added three hils,
mcludmg a solo home run,
h1s f1rst ot the season
Sato, Moore and freshman centerf1elder Cory
Cottrell all had two h1ts
each for R10 All three had
one RBI each
Sato (2-4 ), who took the
loss m relief, allowed four
runs (three earned) m I 1/3
mnings
Roland Rodnguez (1-1)
pttched two mnmgs of
shutout baseball to earn the
Victory for the Panthe(s
Rw Grande has now lost
s1x of the last eight games
and now will face Mount
Vernon Nazarene m a cructal four-game senes next
Fnday and Saturday.

ht s second three bagger of
the ga me to · bnng home
J ustm Arnold and Trevor
Peters who reached on successive errors Gerlach
would later score on a
grounder to th1rd off the
bat of Veazey
Corns and G1bson led
man 's 15 hit attack w1th
three hit s each w1th
Duncan
Boven
and
R1ggms owmng two base
knocks aptece Brownmg ,
Conley and Bays rounded
out the VISitors ' offense
with one safety each
Brownmg and Corns had
the lone extra base blows
for the wmners w1th a double
Clark was tagged with
the pllchmg loss w1th
Veazey,
Garrett
Underwood, Jacob Roach
and Andy Gnmm also
marctung to the mound 111
successiOn for Wahama
Corns notched the mound
tnumph with Bays also
seemg actton on the mound
for Man
Wahama, now 3-8 on the
spnng, will resume diamond baseball act1on on
Tuesday when the Whae
Falcons JOurney to RIVer
Valley for a 5 p m out111g
before returmng home at 5
p m on Wednesday to face
Southern
Man 17, Wahama 3
Man
002 051 9 17 15 0
Wahama 000 000 3 3 56
Clark Veazey 151 Underwood (7) J
Roach (7) Gnmm (7) and Stafford
Corns Bays (7) and Browning WP Corns LP - Clark

K111g a two-nun tnple
Poole started and got the
w111, stnkmg out II 111 five
mmngs of work. Roush lasted less than two 111mngs for
Gallia. takmg the loss,
before handmg the ball over
to Rumley
Gallia Academy goes to
Jackson 111 Southeastern
Oh1o Athlet1c League actton
tomght Me1gs, meanwhile,
IS at Belpre 111 Tn- Valley
Conference Oh10 play
DEVILS 5, MARAUDERS 4
Me1gs
101 101 o
- 492
G'!ihpohs 201 010 1
- 583
Bryan Delo ng Aust1n Dunfee and
Aaron Story Shawn Thompson and

Dav1d Rumley WP - Thompson LP Dunfee
MARAUDERS 12, DEVILS 10
Meigs
163 020 0
- 12160
Galhpolrs 010 140 3
- 10122
Dave Poole Bryan Delong (6) and
Evans B.yan Delong Austin Roush
Dave Rumley (2) and Dave Rumley
KrUize Wandling (2) WP - Poole LP
- Roush S - Delong HR - Me!QS
Corey Hutton third lnnmg one on

Conference
South
DiVISIOn doubleheader on
Saturday afternoon at
NAIA No
13 Ohw
Domm1can losmg 3-2 and
I I -0
The second game
lasted only five 111nmgs.
R10 Grande (22-17-1,
11-3 AMCS ) tra1led 3-0
headmg mto the seventh
and nearly came off the
mat to tie the game
Freshman John Storey
came off the bench to
deliver a two-run smg le
and cut the def1c11 to 3-2
Jumor second baseman
Keota Sato came w1thm
mches of tymg the score
as he dnlled a long dnve
to the deepest part of the
ballpark that was caught at
the fence 405 feet away
from home
The out
ended the game and gave
Oh1o Domtmcan (30-8,
15-3) the f1rst game win
Semor southpaw Nate
Chau took the loss desp1te
well Chau (6-3) allowed
only two earned runs
wh1le scattenng f1ve hils
He fanned six.
Ohw Dom1111can scored
all three runs m the second
mnmg and made the runs
hold up.
"(Nate) threw well
enough to win, but we didn't play any defense,'' sud
Rio Grande head coach
R10
Brad Warmmont
Gr11nde commttted three
errors in game one.
Game two was all Oh10
Domm1can as they rolled ,
to an 11-0 run-rule victory
Sato (3-4) took the loss
as R10 registered f1ve
COLUMBUS
The errors 111 game two.
Umvers1ty of Rw Grande
"Agam, we d1dn't play
Redmen base ball team any defense and JUSt fell
were swept 111 a key apart," Warntmont sa1d
Amen can
M1deas t 'We JUSt d1dn 't show up "

Redmen drop
a pair to ODU
on Saturday

Monday, April 23, 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April 23, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e ster

Clear Channel MOV R;tdlo/Russ Parsons Invitational
At Stadium Field, Parkereburg, W VI

CLASS I'F IE D

Glrla Team Scores Paril;ersburg 122 Akron Buchtel 122 Galha Academy 122 ._,.ar1ene 94 Parkersburg South 74
Eastern 11
Girl• High Point lndlvldu•l. Sophle Wagner Manetta 28 po1nts
100-1 Campbell Chnsty {AB} 12 69 2 Lew1s Jerrah (AB) 12 84 3 Ge1ger Alexis (GA) 12 95 4 Dav1s Bra (M) 13 42
5 Traugh, Chana (PS) 13 49 6 Logan Toma {GA) 13 66 7 Cummmgs Lauren (E)14 02 8 Dotson Dana (GA)14 31
200- 1 Campbell Chnsty (AB) 26 19 2 Jackson Kara (GA) 26 33 3 Geiger Ale1us (GA) 26 78 4 Lockhart Samantha
(AB) 26 95 5 Hall Janey (PHS) 27 09 6 Watk1ns Kelsey (PS) 27 29 7 A1chebacher Kr1sten (M) 28 64 7 Logan Toma
(GA) 28 64
400- 1 Jackson Kara (GA) 58 38 (new meet record -58 76 Kayla Perry, Galha Academy 2006) 2 Lockhart Samantha
(AB) 1 01 23 3 Wapner, Sophoe (M) 1 02 01 4 Londsey, Devaughn (PS) 1 04 12 5 Owen Becca IE) 1 05 07 6 Ross
Leanne (M) 1 05 46 7 Weber, Er1n (E) t 05 55 8 Newland, Alyssa (E) t 06 87
800 1 Devaughn Lindsey (PS) 2 33 33 2 Roberts Kathleen (PHS) 2 30 57 3 Gray Shanequa (AB) 2 41 54 4 Hooper
Amanda I PHS) 2 42 B9 5 Ladlclcco K~le (M) 2 44 83 6 Bryan! Taylor, !PHS) 2 48 13 7 Meeks Caothn (PHS) x2 48 71
1600 - 1 Adkons Lauren (GA) 5 32 19 2 Kls! Ellen (PHS) 5 38 34 3 Ladococco Kyho (M) 5 54 43 4 Gray Shanequa
tAB) 5 55 57 5 Townsend Lee Ann tGA) 5 57 B5 6 Fahmy Carol tGA) 6 11 43 7 Hysell Belh tEl 6 t 3 38 8 Slalter
Alyson (M) 6 14 43
3200- 1 Adk1ns Lauren (GA) 11 28 04 2 Moore Emmy (M) 12 13 67 3 Townsend Lee Ann (GA) 12 19 77 4 Fahmy
Carol (GA) 12 21 38 5 Sail, Andrea (PHS)12 22 89 B, Moms, Caoey Tlgers 12 ~7 45 7 Hysell Beth (E) 13 17 50 8
Betts Megan (M) 13 51 20
100H- 1, Golson Jasm1ne (AB) 15 74 2 Wagner, Soph1e (M) 16 13 3, Dent Kathleen (PHS) 16 22 4 Watkms Kelsey
(PS) 16 76 5 Close Brea (GA) 16 83 6 Echard Moranda (PS) 17 28 1 Tucker TrHany (AB) 17 44 B Casey Enn (M)
17 57
300H -1 Golson Jasmone (AB) 47 42 2 Wagner Sophie (M) 47 74 3 Den! Kathleen (PHS) 49 34 4 Close Brea IGA)
51 18 5 Ferguson Amber (AB) 51 28 6, Cheeseman, Tara (PHS) 51 62 7 Floyd Dan1elle (PS) 52 01 8 Casey Enn {M)
52 87
4x100- 1 Gatlla Academy (Close Logan Jackson Geiger) 51 17 2 Buchtel 52 44 3 PHS 53 40 4 South 53 68 5
Manetta 54 23 6, Eastern 55 87
4x200 - 1 Buchtel (Jasm1ne Golson Jerrah Lew1s Samantha Lockhan Tiffany Tucker) 1 46 67 (new meet record
1 47 85 Ponder, Hullum Chambers, Tucker Akron Buchtel 2004) 2 PHS 1 50 97 3 Gallla 1 51 23 4 Manetta 1 55 46
5 South 1 58 19 8 Ea&amp;lem 1 58 33 - PHS 'B DNF
4x400- 1, PHS (Katie Roberts Ellen KJSI, Megan Hurley, Janey Hall)" 22 57 2 Eastern 4 22 91 3 Buchtel 4 24 53 4
Manetta 4 29 12 5 South 4 45 26 6 Gall1a Academy 4 55 15
4x800- 1 PHS (Katie Roberts Ellen Krst Andrea Sail, Taylor Byrant) 10 25 23 2 Galha Academy 10 37 39 3 Manetta
10 44 29
Shuttles - 1 South (Kelsey Watkms Oanlelle Floyd Amanda Ferguson, M1randa Echard) 1 06 72 2 PHS 1 07 63 3
Marietta 1 15 11 4 Gall1aAcademy 1 20 44 -- Gad1a Academy B' DNF ·-, Buchtel DNF
Eastern DNF
High jump -1 1 James, Cl'lelsea (AB) 5-4 (tied meet record-- 5-~ Roxanne Ward Parkersburg 2001 and Dorea Glance
Fa1rmont Senior 1998) 2 Rosa, Leanne (M) 5.02 3, Marchand, Kathryn (PHS) 4 10 4 Floyd Demelle (PS) J4-10 S
Lelsle Ryann (GA) 4-08 B Dansey Erin (PHS) JHJB
Pol• vault ~ 1 Meeks Ca1thn (PHS) 9 00 2 Colltns, Tara (F'S) J9..00 3 Dav•s Bre lM) 8 06 4 R•chebacher Knsten
(M) 8 00 5 Cain Moranda (PS) H l6 6 Smith Kaycee (PHS) HXl 7 Tlpper Betsy (PHS) 6 06
Lo~gjump-1 Geiger Alexis (GA) 17 03 50 2 James Chelsea (AB) 16 09 75 3 Wagner Sophoe (M) 16 08 4 Echa rd
Miranda (PS) 15-10 25 5 Lew•s Jerrah (AB) 15·05 50 6 Colhns Tara (PS) 15 04 25 7 Ross Leanne (M) 15 01 25 8
Lolsoe Ryann (GA) 14-&lt;l7 75
Shot put- 1 Dent Kimberly (PHS) 33.00 2 Leasure Jessica (PS) 30-10 3 Franklm Charmeanya (AB) 29-06 4
Schramm, Mary Belh (M) 29-Q3 5 Ma•chand Ka!hryn (PHS) 28-11 B Good Lon dsey (PS) 2B 07 7 Adkons Who!ney (PHS)
27-10 50 B Sanders Oamelle (GA) 27-00
Dlacua - 1 Dent Kimberly (PHS) 116-()8 2 Troester, A/he (GA) 96 06 3 Leasure Jess1ca (PS) 95 01 4 Sanders
Danoolle (GA) 83-Q1 5 Slone Rachel (PHS) 79 05 6 Pordas Haley (E) 79·02 7 AugenSiern S!ormoe (PHS) 76-05 8
Good Lmdsey (PS) 75·00

Websttes
In One Week With Us
www myda1tytnbune com
E-mail
www mydallysenhnel com
classlfled@mydaJiytnbune com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www mydallyregJster com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
m:rtbune
Sentinel
l\egt%ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call TOday...

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

\\\01 \l I \ II \I"

-

'-NOELS 7, M'-R'-UDERS 3
Meigs '
001 ooo 2
394
GAHS
301 030 x
740
Barr and Burton Noe and Cochran WP - Noe LP - Barr
M'-RAUDERS 8, ABGELS 2
Meigs
002 113 1
aB3
GAHS
000 110 0
2 57
Ebersbach (WP) and S Sm•th Dav1s and Ward WP Ebersbach L~ - Davis

•

Thursday for Sundays

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publilhlng rnerves the right Ia edtt reject

any ad at any timt Errors mutt be reponed on the fir at day
lint •naertlon We
any loss or e•pense that rnults from the pubJtcation or omlnjon or an advertllement Correction will be made In the 11111 available edition
are always confidential • Cu rrent rate card applln • All real ••tate
are subj.et to the F.Oeral Fair Houamg Aet ol Hl61
accept a only help wanted ads meeting EOE standarda We will
In violation Of the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
_.~

orca~

Tnbune-Sentlnel Reg11ter wMI be respon t lb le fOf no more than the co at of the apace occupied by the errOf and only the

0

I"~=HEI:1'::;W:AN::rnn=:l

k1tncarlyle@comcast net

GAWPOLIS

Wou~D

Y•0

~~~ ~~v~

e&gt;l) N6t "'"' 'l
JutJ\I'ING ·

•·

" "'

Lw------_.1

Free lab pupptes and
Female Lab Call 74 0 245 Absolute Top Dollar US
0125
S1iver and Gold Co1ns
Proolsets Gold Rmgs Pre
Free to good home Reg (F) 1935
u s Currency
P1t Bull 2 yrs old Also 6 Sohta 1re D1amonds M T S
week old P1t Bull Pupp10s com Sl1op 151 Second
Call alter 5pm 446 0067
Avenue Galhpobs 740 446
l owes R1dmg Mower tor 2842

~

r

ll':l:-------,

~~~~~~~~~6~7~5~7~96~'_:__ _ _--,

;

s:;X
CLASSIFIED IND"'\
4x4's For Sale .

.

•. •• • • .. .

725
Announcement.... • •• • • • • •• • • .. • ••• 030
Antiques
Apartments lor Rent . .. ..

Auction and Flea Market.. ...
Auto Parts &amp; Accessortes
Auto Repair

.s:JO
440

.080
760

no

Autos lor Sate .... .. .... • .. •
•71 0
Boats 6 Motors lor Sate • • •
750
Building Supplies •
550
Business and Buildings '
340
Business Opportunity. • • ..
.. ......210
Buslneaa Training ... .... • • • .. • • .. ... • 140
.. • • • 790
Campers &amp; Motor Homes •
Camping Equipment
,
780
• .. 010
Cards o!Thanks... .. .... .. ....
Chtttli10tderty Care ... • ... • ... .... • • • • I 90
Etectrtcai/Relrigoration .. .. .... ... ..... 840
Equipment lor Rent
480
Excavating
830
Farm Equipment......
.. .610
Farma lor Rent
• 430
Farms lor Sate
330
For Lease .. .. ... •
.. .. 490
For Sate •
• .585
For Sate or Trade •
590
FruRs &amp; Vegetables
580
Fumished Rooms •
450
General Haultng • •
.850
Giveaway.. .. •
040
Happy Ads
050
• Hay &amp; Grain • .. • • •
• 640
Help Wanted.
11
Homelmprovements
810
Homes lor Sale
...310
Household Goods
• 510
Houses lor Rent ...
• 410
In Memoriam
D20
Insurance
• 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipmen1.
660
Livestock • • • .. •
630
Lost and Found. • • • ....
060
Lots &amp; Acreage
350
Miscellaneous
170
Miscellaneous Merchendtse
540
Mobile Home Rep01r
860
420
Mobile Homes for Rent
Mobile Homes for Sate .. .. • •
320
Money to Loan
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
740
570
Musical Instruments
Personals • • •
005
Pets lor Sate. ... • • •
560
Plumbing &amp; Healing
820
Professional Services •
23b
Radio, TV &amp; CB Reparr • • •
• 160
Reel Eotote Wanted ... • • • .. .. ....... 360
School• Instruction
150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer • • .. •
650
Sftuattona Wonted. .... .... ... .. • •
120
Specs lor Rent.. ..... .. ..... .. • • •
460
$porting Goods
.. • .. : ..
520
suv·a lor Sate.... .. .. ....... .... .. . .. . .. 720
Trucks for Sate ................................ 115
Upholstery .. .. .......... •
870
Vans For Solie
.................. ... 730
wanted to Buy.. .. .. ..... • .... .. ..... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies • • • • .620
180
Wanted To Do .. .... .
Wenled to Rent
• ... .. • • • ............. 410
Yarjl Solie- Gettlpotte ... • .... .. • ...... ... .. .0,2
Yerll S.te-Pomeroy/Middte. .... .... .... .. ... 074
Yard Sate-Pl. PlnHnl
076

o

••

,

HELPWANTF.])

I
•

S Earn Eltra Money S
Independent Contractors
(must be atleest 18)
needed to deliver the
Ohro Valley Phone Book
1n Galhpohs Jackson
Wellston &amp; surrolJnding
areas
1-86B-6D6-8900

mg and merkellng strong
comm un~ cat1ons and com
puter
sk lis
esse ntial
Resume and leHer ol apph
cat1on to Athens Farmers
Market PO Box 5727
Athens Oh 4570 1
FEDERAL

POSTAL JOBS
$16 53 $27 58/h r now hlr
mg For apphcahon and tree
100 WORKERS NEEDED governement )Ob mlo call
Assemble crafts
wood Amencan Assoc of Labor 1
terns To $480/wk Matenals 913 599-8042 24/hrs emp
prOVIded Free InformatiOn rsa_rv_. I:EJ(Rltr-1
pkg 24Hr 801 428 4649
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
AVQNI All Areas' To BUy or
Sell Shirley Spears 304
675 1429

Benmgans hmng Servers
Host and Cooks Apply at
tl1e Pomt Pleasant 1ocat1on
only
Carpentry Drywall Pamtmg
General Labor Must be
dependable Neat &amp; Clean
appearance Taking appt1 ca
liOns at Spec1al Care
Cleamng 1743 Centenary
Rd Gallipolis

TO DRIVE
ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
FULl liME CLASSES'

COl TRAIN NG

FINANCING I\Vj\ILA8lE
JOB PLACEMENl

year11n BUI IMII
Wythev1le V1rg1011l
I 800 334 1203
wv.-w All Hnco 111alorM ar com

Clltb/;l l lng 26

l ocal Clea ning Company ts
accepting apphcat ons lor
Cleanmg Crew Members
Must nave reliabl e t1ans
portat1on and venhable rei
erences Onl ne applications
now be1ng ecce pted at
www ot1c1eanmgma1deasyc

DRI VERS needed to pro om
v1de Lib rary serv1ce through - - - - - -- out Galloa Coun!y Requored
LOOK HERE
CDL love of read1ng ab1l1ty For a Bet1er Employmenl
Opportunlly! ..
to work w1th people of all
ages computer and Internet
We offer
sktlls MUst be 25 or older
able to dnve 35ft Bluebird ¢ Full 11me and Part I me
bookmob1le Substrtut e pos
sh1hs available
t1ons avaWable For appltca
0 Up to $8 SO/hour •
liOn and complete JOb
weekly bonus potent1al
descnphon VISit Bossard
¢ Pa1d tratmng
Library 7 Spruce Street
~
Pa1d
vacations &amp; patd
Gallipolis OhiO EOE
hol1days
Dnvers Needed
CDl 0 MediCal dental &amp; VISIOn
Dnvers wlllmg to dnve tor
msurance
local ready m1x company
0 401(k) retirement plan
Exper ence IS preferred but
0 Fnendly professional
ndt necessary Dr vers must
work almosphere
be wtlhng to do pre ma1nte
nance on trucks &amp; equip
Jom us In making calls
ment yard work &amp; o1her m1 s
for major Political
cellaneous
chores
organizational
Exper ence operat1ng equipmen! &amp; extra skills such as
Call today to schedule an
weldmg a plus
Call
Interview•
(304)937 3410
G81118 Coumy Coune&gt; I on
Agmg.'Sen1or
Resource
Ceo er 1s currenHy accep11ng
apphc8i10ns . tor
Meal
Transpor1er Must have vahd
dnvers hcense and tnsurable
nsk Must be able to read
wnte and follOw directions
Be able to work 20 hows per
W&lt;iek EEO

1-Bn-463-6247
ext 2331

Wanted D1rect SuperVISion
empl oyees to oversee male
youth 1n a staff secure res1
denhal enwonment Must
pass
phys1cat
trammg
requuement Pay based on
expenenCe Call (740)379
9083 between 9 3 Mon Fn

All real estate advertletng
In thiS newspaper Is
aubject to the Federal
Fair tiausmg Act of 1968
which makes tt tllegal to
advertise any
preference limitation or
d1acnmtnatlon basod on
race color reltg1on MJ:
familial s!atus or national
or1gln or an~ IntentiOn to
make any such
preference limitation or
dlscrlmmetlon ~
Tnls newspeper will nat
knowmgly accept
advert1sements for real
estate which 11ln
v1aiallon o1 the law Our
readers are here!&gt;~
informed that all
dwellings advertised In
this newapaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bates

The Vtllage of A10 Grande IS
if 2.~
laking appl •caMns for the
TURNED DOWN ON
pos1t1on of part t1me pohce SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
otf1cer._ Two years e~pen
No Fee Unless We Wml
ence
IS
requ1red
1 866·582 3345
&lt;OJ 2007 by NEA, Inc
AppliCations can be PICked
HQme 1n country 9 73 acres
IH \I I .., I \ 11
~~------, up at the RID Grande
3 BR 1 112 Bath Full base
t 10
Munte•pal Bu ld1ng Monday ~10:--~H~Ol\-l•I:S--"1 ment 2 112 car garage
10
HELP WAI'ITE[)
Fnday
a 30AM unit
FOR SALE
Mature Pme tlees 2 barns
.HEIPWANI'EII
•
4 30PM Applications are
old school house $130 ooo
due back to the Mumc1pal
can 740 286 7212 or 937
Bu lldmg by noon on Monday 0 Down even w1th less than
Secretary
515 8670
May
14 2007
per1ect credit ts available on - - - - - - -Adm1sslons Office
- ' - - - -- - - thts 3 bedroom 1 bath House on Land Contract
Wanted Someone 1n Leon to home Corner lot fireplace Pomernv
740 992 5858
The Untvers ty ol R10
~,
Mow yard m Leon phone modern k1tchen Jacuz21 tu b
Grande nv1 tes apphca11ons 304 674 0132
Mm•ature farm Un1bU1It
for th e postiiOn of Secretary ~:--~----, Payment around $550 per
S
r::
month 740 367 7129
nome on 4 acres on A
1n the UniVerSitys
Sai()()L.'i
160 3BR 1BA Peaches
AdmiSSIOn 0fflce
•
~UC110N
104
Tatum
Dr
New bemes grapes Sw1mmmg
Responstblhhes InClude but ·--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol-' Haven wv 3bd/2ba Ranc h pool New appliances Wood
are noi111Tl11ed to
FOSTER PARENTS AND lg sunroom 2 car gar great burner $95 000 740 388
provldmg general secreter~ RESPITE
PROVIDERS area D 304 675 3637 E 0815
at and ctencal dulles
NEEDED Become state 304 882 2334
Remodeled smgle story
ma1nta1nmg electron•c f•les li censed b~ attend 1ng tra1n
on prospectiVe studenJS
2 Br newly remodeled 1n home wth 3 bedrooms and
·
mgs held on Saturdavs
and workmg w1th
Rutl and ow of flood area 1 1/2 baths on large lot
Earn $30 $45 a day fo r the
Admtss ons
close to school 740 992 Located a! 3408 Mossman
care ot'a ch1ld li v1ng 1n your 7546 $25 000
Ave
Pt Pleasant WV
staff for coord1nal 1on and
home Homes are needed -=.._::____:::=:_:__ __
Askmg 45 500 Sellers w111
lollow up on student
1n your county Call Oasts 2005 3 bedroom 2 beth pay closmg cost
For
campu s VISIIs and reception
toll free 1 877 325 1558 Commodore Doublew1de appomtment to sec 304
dulles lor tl1e office
Tra1nmg w11i beg1n March 31 Home Never lived 1n As 576 2247
Must have htgh school
m Albany
new 28x60 w1th delrvery and
d1ploma or eqUivalent
se:t up
$45 ooo
call Smgle story home with 2
ASSOCI81e Degree 1n
Gallipolis Career College (304)675 5578
bedrooms and 1 bath Large
LPN/AN
secretanal science or
(Careers Close To Home) '-----'-------- - lot
Located at 211 2
Part 11me and or Full T1me
computer technology
Call Todayl 740 446 4367
Madson Ave PI Pleasant
Home Health Setting
preferred Must heve know!
1 BOD 214 0452
WV As kong $29 500 Se llers
Compe t111ve Wage
edge of personal and mam
WNW ga llpolisca•eetcollege com
wtll pay cloSing cost For
Benefts
frame computers
Accred~ea Member Accreanmg
appo1ntment to see 304
Confidenhahty a must Good Counc1l tor IMtlpendent Colleges
Lawrence County Area
M1dwest Homes
576 2247
Nld Schools 127·te
740.377 9095
oral and wr1Hen commUn1
mymtdwesthome com
catiOn SkillS reqUired
1170
MnHIU Ho~n·.."i
All applicants must submit a
MISCELlANEOUS
lbd,
GALLIPOLIS
foUR SALb
leH er of nterest and resume
Foreclosure' Buy for only
OTR, Reg1onat,
.
$54,900! More homes
I dmg 'h e names and
Flatbed, Reeler &amp;
lncu
Otl &amp; Gas Well Leases available For loca listings 1982 Mobile Home 4 bed
addresses
of
lhfee
refer
2 add
14 70 sem
Tanker Ortvers
Add son/Ches)me Twps 8 call 800-559-4109 xF254
room
on x
'
ences on or before May \.. Berea Welts comp w/ Pump
furnished
0 50
acl es
2001to Ms Phyllis Mason Jacks Mol ols Tenks &amp; 3BA 2BA 1 acre metal out $28 000 304 882 2196
Pr me Inc IS expandmg m SPHR Otrector ot Human Sales Me ters sse 000 bwldmg LA laundry ~arge
Resources Un1versny ot
Phone 740 934 2073
K t HT and SG d1stnct
thiS areal Masstve mcrease
all electnc Must move 740
R1o Grande PO Box 500
i:ie~.:.;:~;:;:;:~-..., $75000 740 256 9137
of bus1ness from local cus
80
69B 1815 $6000 DO
W\l\1l:J)
A1
o
Grande
OH
45674
e
tomersl Lookmg for expen
ma1i pmason@r o edu fax .
To Do
4t&gt;r 2 1/2 bath 2FP 2 acres
enced and non experienced
95 Horton t 4x70 2 BA 2
740•245 4909
AC $149 500 (304)674
BA V1nyl/sh1ngle Cent Heat
5921 or (304)593 88?1
All Types Masonry Bnek
and A r Pa11 Furn L1ke new
EEO/AA Employer
Block Stone Fr ee Est1mate 5 Room House ~1th Bath 12 900 304 633 6536
Ooen Job !ntery~ews
(304)773 9550
304 593 Leon area phone 304 674
Monday Apnl 23rd
- - - ; - - - - -6421
01 32
from 1o ooam 5 30pm
Buckeye H1lls Career Center - - - - -- - :.::;::__ __ _ __
Mak1ng Hmng Dec•s•ons
AHent1on1
IS now accept1ng apphca Prof essional
Today I
NEW 2007 4 Bed
hons lor subsl1tute teachers Offlce / Housecl e an 1ng Local company of1enng NO
Red Roof Inn
(1n all academ1c and C-T References (304)675 2208 DOWN PAYMENT pro1000 Acy Ave
grams for you to buy your
areas)
Contact
the
II \ I\( 1\1
Jackson, OH 45640
Supennlendents Oll1ce at ~:--~----, homd 1nstead of renting
IIMSI M0.821.2151
740 245 5334 EEO
mym1dwesthome com
10
BUSINF~
100% hnancmg
OPPOKruNrn
· Less than perfect cred1t
Excellent Fre1ght Network
POST OFF ICE NOW
l ate Model Equ1pment
accepted
HIRING
Payment could De the Clearance Sale New Total
401 k MaJor Med1cal AX
drywall homes from S299 63
Avg Pay S20hu or •
. •NOTICE•
same as rent
per month Call (740)385
Dental &amp; Lite Ins Ava11
$57K annually
Locators
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Morlgage
2434
417-343-1303
lncludmg Federal Be nel1ts
740 367 0000
lNG CO recommends { )
and
OT
Paid
Tram1ng
sn-491-1102
that you do bUSineSS With 81and new log nome s tt ng Great used 2005 3 bedroom
VacatiOns FT/PT
www pnme1nc com
people
,you know and on approx 1 44 acres 16x80 With v nyl/shtngle
I BOO 584 1775 Ext #8923
NOT
to
send money almost ready to move 1nto Must sell Only S25 995 w1th
USWA
Rockspnngs Rehab1htat1ons
through the ma1l unt1t you Custom Amtsh Kttchen w1th dehvery Call (740)385 4367
Center 1s seekmg an expen
anced
Payroll
Clerk R&amp;J TrLJdcmg Lead•ng The Way have mvest1gated the sold sudace counters 3BR
Bl~Nl..'i5
2BA
$142 000
Call
PositiOn s full lime With A&amp;J Truckmg now Hin~ at our of1enng
M'D
ButwtNGS
New He~en WV Tem11nal For
(740i256 9247
excellent beneftt package Reg1onal Hauls Dump D1v 1
Jump New Home tor Sale Save Commercial Bucldtng on
(401K)
Other dutle~ year QTR venltable exp Calli
mclude Accounts Payable aoo 462 9365 asl( tor Kent
$20 000 lmm edtale occu Eastern Approx 1200sq ft
Benehts
Coordinator
pancy appli ance s Inc 2 Next to lrVJns Glass 446
SAVINGS
Workers Compensation and Ray &amp; Sons Complete• Car
story wlwrap around porch 6565
Petty Cash Custodian Cleanmg at 2615 112
3 Br 2&amp; 112
bath large F.~--~-~~-.,
Expenenced
applicants Jad&lt;son Ave Pt Pleasent
garage w/Bonus room ove r
L&lt;ns &amp;
should apply to f\ockspnngs now 11lflng must have
head Full Basement &amp; __
ACREAGE
Road
Pomeroy
OhiO Dr vers License come m Ia
More Seller w111 pay clostng
45769 EKtendlcare Health apply no phone calls
cost 740 99~ 5635 or 992 106 acres on Leoo Baden
SerVIces Inc IS an equal please
..
247B
Ad stream pasture &amp;
woods ele ctnc ava1l call
opportumty empl oyer that ir;;
S=;
al=
es=;p=er"s"'
on=':N::'
ao=;d:::'d'il
e
wwworvbcom
Randall Bradtord lor d1rec
encourages
workplace Exper ence m hardware/
5 BR 3 5 Bath 5 ac res
uons
304 206 6326
diversity M/F DN
bUIIdmg matenats Apply
witl'l access lo the boat
$125 000
Century
21
docks 1 mt ou1s1de
m
person
Mon Fn
Roofers Metal rootng SldGallipolis V 1ew photos/into
Runyan Assocaites T1m
Tnomas
Do
It
Center
online Code 4107 o r calt
mg and EPDM Top pay and
Runyan Broker
Gallipolis OH
(740)441 1605
benef1ts 724 229-8020

11'

1110

Borr'Jw Sma•t Contact
the Oh10 D1V1ston of
Fmanc1al
lnst1tut1on s
Off1 ce of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refl
nance your home or
obta1n a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance Cali the
OlfiCe ol Consumer
At1a1rs toll free at 1 866
278 0003 to learn 1f the
mortgage broker or
lender
1s
pmperly
licensed (Th1s 1s a public
serv1ce announcement
fr om the Oh10 Valley
Publ1st1mg Company)

SERVICE'l

www com1cs com

lfOMEll
FOKSALE

••N011Ct: ••

I'ROI"EllSIONAL

Buy ng Junk Cars Trucks &amp;
458 ~1818
- - - - - - - - Wrecks Pay Cash J D
(304i773 5343
TV needs some work 304 Salvage
(304)674 1374
Farmers Market Manager
675 6578
Athens Farmers Market
Want to buy cars •n any con Seeks Part T1me Manager
l.osrAND
dillon 388 6228
FUUNO
Respon s1 b1hlles Manage
Marke t Plan &amp; Implement
I 111'111\111\1
LOST Version Treeco cell
Market programs work With
f( 1
phone 1n v•cm1ty of 8 M1te Rd
governmental &amp; Communtt y
Rt 62 to Point Pleasa nt 304
grou ps Knowledge of farm

s

10

EOE

parts been 1n water 304

'''n

r

Recepbonlat
John Sang Ford Lincoln
Mercury IS expe r1encmg
conllnued growth that
requues us to fmd a
energetic Receptton•st
OuahhcaliOns that would
be a good Itt for the JOb
tS ouf go•ng personality
gocx:t phone sk1lls and
cash•enng expenence
Contact Dee Sweeney m
person at John Sang
Ford L1ncotn Mercury
195 Upper River Road
Galhpolts Oh1o

YARDSALE-

%~

Track

Cochran applymg the tag
An mmng later, back-to-back smgles
for Me1gs off the bats of Whitney Smith
and An)y Barr w1th a stolen base put runners at second and third wah no outs, but
Noe stiffened, stnkmg out two and getling the th1rd out on a nubber m front of
the plate
In between, GAHS got the sconng
underway m the home half of the f1rst A
leadoff walk to Bnttany Elliott and
mfield smgle from K1mber Davts set the
stage for Bnttyn Saunders' run sconng
smgle Two more runs crossed the plate
when M1ller hit a hard shot off the th1rd
baseman's glove that was deflected mto
foul tern tory and tt was 3-0 Blue Angels
Me1gs got on the board 111 the thud as
Men Van Meter and Cass1 Whan both
doubled to make 1t 3-1 GAHS answered
nght back, sconng an unearned run on a
walk,. smgle by Miller, and another
Marauder error.
T~at score held until the Blue Angel
flftli Saunders drove m her second and
thud runs, platmg Dav1s and Cochran
who had gotten on base via walk and
error respechvely, and then Miller sacrificed the fmal GAHS tally home to make
It 7-1.
Me1gs made a great attempt to rally m
the seventh. After the first two had been
retired, a walk and two smgles brought
Whan to the plate, and her thud hll of the
game drove 10 the final two runs, making
it 7-3, but the fmal out was recorded to
secure the win for th;,home team
Noe got the wm to improve to 8-1. She
allowed three nuns, all earned, on mne
htts while walkmg only one and fanning
four
1 In game two, the usually reliable GAHS
defense commllted se ven errors, and

YARilSAIE

~

All Display• 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display 1.00 p.m.

• All ads must be prepaid'

Leftover
Sale
Estate
Crystal Jewelry Hou sehold
goods Holiday decorations
Etc One pnce takes auu To
set up an appo1n1ment call
Conceal &amp; Carry Tram1ng 740 441 5826
NRA Cert1t1ed instru ctor
Sam sharp May 5th
Mercerv lie Fre Dept ema11
starkey@mbox co m
(740)256 6514
AUCTION Modular House
~r~------, and too ls &amp; EqUipment
Glvt-:.\\\A\
Buckeye
H11is
Career
Center R1o Grande Oh1o T
&amp;Eat1100am Houseal
8eaut1lul Pin Boxer Pups 12 00 noon on May 5 2007
Born 2 26 3M 4F 1 Brondlo 740 245 5334
restare Black &amp; White Must ilrii!!"-~~---"1
Go ASAP. (740)367 024B

3200- 1 Woelor&lt;:h , Mark (M) 9 47 3h 2 Owen Mochael (E) 9 51 9h 3 Blanc Broan (PS) 9 55 6h 4 McConnell Mark
(H) 10 11 6h 5 McConnell lim (H) 10 20 Bh 6 Cockerham Casey (H) 10 36 5h 7, Murray Man (M) 10 59 9h 8 Aeoker
Kaolh (E) 11 04
110H- 1 Somerville Terence (AB) 14 55 {new meet record - 14 69 Dav•d Conley Buckhannon Upshur 1998) 2
Murray, George (H) 16 38 3 Bosman Ryan (H) 16 58 4 Shields Mrchael tMI 16 74 5 Meyers Andrew (PH) 16 94 6
Pouloot, John !H) 17 20 7 Eckelberry Brandon (PHS) 17 23 8, Sludenoc Drew (M) 17 52
300H- 1 Somerville Terence (AS) 39 34 (new meet recorcJ --39 99 Jake Howlett Manetta 1998) 2 Shields M1chae1
(M) 43 41 3 Bosman Ryan (H) 43 63 4, Studenoc Drew (M) 44 15 5 Eckelberry, Brandon (PHS) 44 96 6 Mey8fs
Andrew (PHS) 45 02 7 Murray George (H) 45 09 8 Krm Abo (H) 45 20
~x1 00 - 1 Hudson (Greg Caglln, Gebe. Adams, George Murray Robb•e Andrassey) 46 39 2 South 47 59 3 Galha
Academy 50 13 4 PHS 51 95 .. Maroetta 00
4x200- 1 Hudson (Robbie Andrassey, Josh Prochaska Sean Fert1ck Tony Dav•s) 1 34 66 2 Parkersburg Htgh School
A' 1 39 59 3 Marretto 1 42 48 4 South 1 43 28 -- GaHoa Academy DO
4x400 -1 South (M•cha,el Tanner Adam Sta1r Doug Teter Travis Townsend) 3 33 57 2 Hudson 3 34 74 3 PHS 3 42 78
4, Manetta 3 42 85 5 Buchtel 3 44 17 6, Gall a Academy 4 02 26
4x800- 1, Hudson (Carl Peterson NICk. Kelly Michael Wilke Joey Lesan e) 8 47 16 2 Manetta B 53 23 3 PHS a 56 62
4, Eastern 91240 5, South 101614
Shu«les - 1 Hudson (Ryan Bosman Abe K1m John Pouliot George Murray) 1 03 27 2 Manetta 1 03 52 3 South
I 06 55 4 Galha Academy 1 17 36 - Buchtel DNF -·, PHS 00
High Jump- t Westbrook Cody (M) 6-06 2 Offenberger Todd (PS) 6-02 3 Tabler Anthony (M) 5-10 4 Somerville
Terence (AB) J5·10 5, McGre!h Alex (E) 5-06 6, Bunortoeld Allan (PHS) 5 06 7 Foscher S!eve (H ) J5-06 8 Adams Gaba
(H) 5-04
•
Pole vault- 1 Townsend Travos (PS) 13 00 2 McMollan, ScoU (RHS) J13·00 3 Lemley Cameron (PHS) 12 06 4 Teter
Doug (PS) 12-00 5 Barnosh Jeff (H) J12 00 6, Fosher Enc (PHS) 11-QS 7 Tanner Mrchael (PS) 10 00
•
Long lump- 1, Somorvrlle Terence tAB) 21-04 50 2 Andrassy Rabble IH) 20·02 25 3 Foscher Sieve (H) 20 00 4
Offenberger, Todd (PS) 19 11 25 5 Tabler, Anthony (M) 19 02 6 Ruddfesden, Thomas (PHS) 19 00 75 7 Adams Gaba
(H) 18 10 25 B Flosley Ryan (M) 18-09 25
Shot Put - 1 Robinson Tlmothy (AB) 51 07 50 2 Sussky Hunter (H) 50 06 3 Huffman S!ephan (M) 49-10 50 4
Adkms Justin (PHS) 48-oa 50 5 Flint Brandon (PHS) 44-07 25 6 Armbruster Patr1ck (H) 43-11 25 7 Newell 2ack (E)
39 02 50 8 Garnes Demtnus (GA) 36 01
Dlscua -1 Huffman Stephen (M) 152-03 2 Robmson Timothy (AB ~ 149-05 3 Flint Brandon (PHS) 142 04 4 Adkms
Juslln (PHS) 138·04 5 Sussky Hunter (H) 131 09 6 Armbrusler Ra!nck (H) 125·05 7 Newall Zack (E) 111-04 8
Margaht Jordan (H) 107 01

fromPageBl

M~~·ms

Now you can have border~ and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
J!~
"""
Borders $3.00/per ad
f!i
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

For Sundays Paper

Ir
..,_____
r

ALl KCHS ALUMN I SEC
OND ANNUAL REUNION
MOOSE LODGE MAY 26
2007 8 1 00 ENTERTAIN
MENT (304)675 483 1 OR
( 740 i448 34BB

4 5708

Meigs

Oead'lfir~

• Start \'our Ads Wtth A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avo1d Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

r

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Daily In-Column l 00 p . m.
Monday - Friday for ln5ert1on
Jn Next Day ' s Paper
Sunday In-Column · 1 00 p.m

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

BOYS TEAM SCORES. Hudson 178 Marlena 99 Akron Buchtel 87 Parkersburg 78 Parkersburg South 71 GaU1a
Academy 21 Eastern 1-4
BOYS HIGH-POINT INDIVIDUAL: Terence Somerville Akron Buchtel 34 pomts
100- 1 Owans Damarquos (AB) 11 69 2 Davos Tony (H) 11 74 3 Prochaska Jo sh (Hj11 89 4 Andrassy Robbie (H)
12 03 5 Flesley Ryan tM) 12 27 6 Kemper Nock (PHS) 12 28 7 Annotage Sieve (PHS) 12 32 B Golbert Brandyn (PS)
12 56
200- 1 Davis Tony (H) 22 97 2 Garnes, Aaron (AB) 23 18 3, Bunertoold, Allen (PHS) 23 28 4 Owens Danl arquos (AB)
23 29 5 Abala Alex (GA) 23 60 8 KerT'IlOr, Nock (PHS) 23 B7 7, Prochaska Josh (H) 23 76 B Munfoeld Sean (M ) 23 99
400-1 Foscher Slevo(H) 52 25 2 Abela, Alex (GA) 52 48 3 Spldare, Mochaol (H) 52 95 4 Gaones Aaron (AB) 53 18
5 Te!er Doug (PS) 53 27 6 Schafer Mochaol tM) 53 38 7 Fertock Sean (H) 53 75 B Curry Alden tAB) 57 23
BOO- 1, Erdman Alex (H) 2 01 59 2, Lemley Cameron (PHS) 2 03 33 3 Moss Ladale (AB) 2 04 55 4 Tumlon Zach
IPS) 2 05 56 5 Teter Doug (PSI 2 OB 34 6 Lawos Jordan (AB) 2 09 59 7 S!aor Adam IPS) 2 09 66 8 Browne KylelM)
21414
•
1600-1 Nye Alax (H) 43523 2 Woelench Mark tMI43915 3 Panda Man tH) 43941 4 Saunders Tyler (H)
4 41 11 5 Wlefench Mall Tlgers 4 42 42 6, Blanc, Brran (PS) 4 43 71 7 Staor Adam (PS) 4 54 55 8 Browne Kyle (M)

combmed w1th SIX bases on balls , and
e1ght Lady Marauder hils proved to be
more than the Blue Angels could overcome Me1gs ran away with an 8-2 wm
An example of the Gallian's woes came
m the second mnmg Me1gs on ly garnered
a smgle h1t, but three walks and two GA
errors resulted m three unearned runs An
mmng later, the Lady Marauders converted a pa1r of free passes 1nto another run
A walk, groundout and wild pitch put a
runner at th1rd w1th two out When Whan
drew a bases on balls herself, she ran as
hard a'S she could to f1rst and contmued
on to second In the confuswn that followed, the runner on th1rd scored when
the throw to the plate was h1gh, makmg it
3-0.
H1ghhght of the second game for each
team came 10 the fifth mmng Amy Barr
dnlled a shot a thlfd of the way up the
trees m left f1eld for a home run for
Me1gs, and then Bnttyn Saunders followed sun for the Blue Angels m the bottom of the mnmg, wh1ch would be the
fmal GAHS run for the day
Me1gs would take advantage of four
Angel f1eldmg m1scues m the s1xth mnmg
to score three more times, and a fmal run
scoring single m the seventh Whan made
the final 8-Z .
•
H1tting stars for the day were GAHS'
Saunders, who went 5-5 wah four runs
scored, four RBis, and the home run
Whan was 5-for-8 for Metgs wtth three
RBis and a double
The Blue Angels, n6w 11-7 on the year,
take theu SEGAL South leading 9-1 mark
to Jackson Monday afternoon Game time
IS 5 p.m Me1gs goes to Belpre to resume
the TVC Ohw slate

or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-aooa

Word Ads

I

ncr-up Manetta (99) Akron Buchtel was
th1rd (87) followed by Parkersburg (78),
Parkersburg South (7 1), Gallia Academy
(21) and Eastern (14)
fromPageBl
Alex Ables was the top performer for the
Blue
Devils, takmg second m the 400-meter
points. Parkersburg South (7 4) was fifth
dash
and fifth in the 200. Gallia Academy
and Eastern ( 11) s1xth.
scored
much of us pmnts m relay events
The Lady Ea~les ' 4x400-meter relay
and
Demetnus
Garnes was e1ghth m the
team, a state quahfier last season, took secshot
put
ond for Eastern's htghest fimsh on the day
Eastern distance star Mtchael Owen
In tlie 400-meter indiVIdual event, Eastern
p1cked up a a lot of pomts as Becca Owen placed second m the 3200-meter run wh1le
was fifth, Enn Weber seventh and Alyssa teammate Ke1th Ae1ker was etghth m that
same event The Eagles were also fourth m
Newland e1ghth.
.Hudson High won the boys champi- the 4x800-meter relay and Zack Newell
onship with 178 points, way ahead of nun- threw seventh farthest m the d1scus

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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1150

24n HOME
STORE

Lw------_.1.

rJ;tU

·------_.11
1'

BEST BUY
$49,989

~:~:;;::~

on

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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

Card Qf Thanks

We wish to express our thanks to
our friends, neighbors and family for
all the kindness, flowers, food and
who helped in anyway
during our time of need.
A special thanks to White's Funer11l
Home, to all the caregivers who
helped with h(s care and the Posts
who put on the military services.
It was beautiful and will never
be forgotten.
The Kaylor Family

Mason Co. Fairgrounds
4:30p.m. - Darli
Wednesday, April 25
675-5463

r

lr

HlR RENT
" - - - - - - - • 3 and 4 room furnished apts. Nice Clean

furnished

t

clean WID hookup. No pets. bedroom Apar1ment. $350

2 Mobile Home Lot for rent For rent, Pomeroy. 2 Ret. and deposit req..Jired month
Deposit required
1 near V1nton. ancl 1 on BDRM .. FamilyRoom.S475.P
(304)675·2970
740·446· t5t9.

Georges Creek' Rd . Call Ius
Utilitys&amp;Oep.
(740144 t·t HI
Aei.Required .
740-843·5264.

2br n5 pets. refldep 304·
675·5 t6?

;q

ex1. F144 ·

also. (740)446-384 4

A HIDDEN TREASURE!

Middleport,3bdrm ,basement
One Acre fenced with 36x36 (full).fenced yard,neighborPole Barn. Conc1ete floor. hood good,$550 plus ut. &amp;
Water. · Electr ic (304)675·
oep.,ref.req .,740·843-5264 .
2644
2
3
Po.meroy,
or
BR .,
Undevelop ed land. 6.86 ac Naylers · Run/Condor. No
mil avail, pond, openi wood· •pets. yards. Sir; WI D hooked .. Long term (5·15 ' yr) up. References. Call 992 ·
lease for mobile home or 6886.
other approved uses. Loc
Brumfield Ad, Harrison Twp. 1- MORII£ HOMFS
ph (513)295·6309 leave
msg for return call.
2 BR. 2 BA. Approx 1/2 acre.
RJ..:AL BrAn:
located in Cheshire, many
--•WiiiiAN
iiiilllJ--,.t1 extras. $450/mo plus
deposit or will sell for
Need to se ll your home? $17,000 . (740)441·0775
iaur.on payments, .divorce,
job transfer or a de&lt;itth? I 3 BA. 2 BA, Utility
all
can buy your tiorpe. All cash electric. very r;ce. Approx. 3
and quick closing. 740-416- mi from town . Green
Township, no pets. Ref.
3130 .

t'OR Roo"

r
~

room.

"'~

Opporlunily. This
institution is an Equal
Opporlunity Provider and

r

HOl5Ell
HlRRoo"

$47$/dep

Full insured
Discount

1.

Soulh

· 30 Yr&gt;. Ex p. In s.
Owner Ronn ie Jones
Free Estimates

INT

'

SPACE

FOR Roo"

riO

r

I

II!T~~~~~.,

ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

~

lnsurad

Free Eatlmateo

Wise Concrete
of concrete
Ow~cr- Rick Wise

www.tlmNrwtekcablneu-y.com

All

types

740-992-5929
740-416' 1698

·Al.riOi

Middleporl. from $327 10
$592. 740·992-5064. Equal
Housing Opporlunily. This
institution is a.n Equal
OpporttJnity Provider and
Employer.

.

-------~

I
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·I

bath, AJC, hardwood 11oors,
luHasemenl. 2 car garage.
small back yard, 740-949·
2303. or 591·3920

- -----..,..-AHtntlonl
Local company oftering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT~ programs lor ~ou to buy your
home lnslead ol renting.
• 100•'o 11 nanCin
· g
• Less lhan pertect cred'"
accepled
• Paymcnl could be !he
same as •ent
Mortgage
(740)367-oooo·

and ethics!
Manor
and
Riverside hunter looking for Hunting
Apartments in Middleport Land for lease in Gellis
From $0-$592 . Call 740·
992.5064 . Equal Housing Counly area, will pay min.
.
$20 per acre maybe more
446-3667
Opportunilies.
Equal
- - - - - - - - Opportunily Employer
d6e7pe5-52nd58
ing on location. 304·
2 BR Apt. on Watson Ad.
R0 d
R
I
St
ney area. e ·
ave, · BR Apl Ap ·1t
"lh
'
(Iapproved
' ree, WI appli·
pal. ·. .,.,,......,._ _ _ _. ,
W&amp;O .included. Water &amp; Ideposit and
Sewer pd . Dep and Ref calion. 740-441·9666 or riO
HOUSEHOLD
required · No pets · 709 · 1657 740-339-0362
r~
~
or 446•1271 •
•
Modern 1 BR Apt Call 4462BR Apt Washer/Dryer 3736
Appliance Warehouse
Hookup, appliances furfished, (740)286·5789 or
Handerson. WV. Pra·
28R apartments. in
441-3702
Now
owned Appliances, all und~r
Washer/dryer
hookup, warranty, also have recondl·
New Haven, 1 Br., furnished, stove/refrigerator included. tioned Big Screen TV's
no pets: dep.&amp;refe re nces. Also. units on SA 160. Pets {304)675 .7999
740·992.()t65.
Welcome! (740)441-0194.
$350 plus dep. Ref. No Pets.
No smoking. Stove &amp;frig .
ftJrn . Coin W/D on premises.
25e State st Gallipolis. 740·

Locators .

For Rent 2 Bedroom House
304·675·2535

·o

I

•

-·

Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•I
Address _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
•I
I

City/State/Zip - - -- - - - - - - - - -

I

Phone _______ _~--·~------

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Mail or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

.

•

J

J'•D-992
1611
'I
•

TRUCKS
FOR S.&lt;\LE

Stop &amp; Compare

·

Johnson's Tree

ME \0 WY MIJf..Et&gt;
1-\UT:i, \&gt;lf\(.t-1 N..L YOU

Gzllllpolls, OH 45631
comp~NT•.. c.•
Grinding • Buc k•• Trutk

I

lnru~~~::~~'~~'"
Rlck JohniJOI\&lt;lwr~er
L......;";;;"';;;.;~~";;";;;'";;;";;;
e•-..t

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

M~R1%~

11-\l:.~E.WS?

Stanley Tree
•
Trim
. ming
&amp; Removal

1

Antique Farmall H tractor lnsla·trike kit , converts
with mounted on mowe r. Harley Sporlster into a trike.

bl R

*R

*I easona
d e atcs

new t&lt;es on back. kept in .;_
(7;::40~)38
::""'e·,..04,.0"::1~:0..~~
barn. hasn"l been run lor Fi BoATS &amp; MoroRS
years, also nice slide in truck
foUR SALE
bed ca,rnpar &amp; truck topper "--llliiiiliiiiiiii-P
lor large pick·up. (740)667· ·
19B9 Regal Medallion 18
3253
112ft open
bow
3.0
For Sale 4 nice Hay Wagons Mercruiser $3,000 304-773·
304-675·3308
5070 01 304·593{)958

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•
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•••
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1

Modet 1847 New Hollana

Tund•y, April 24, 2007
By Bernice a.de o.ol

·

Please leave messa e

PEANUTS

-tv.t

CL!cl( I

I I-lAVE PIIOTOS OF
.M'( SUPPER DISI-IES

1" .

L..--....,""l'----------..1

I

received at tha a.m . until 4:30 p .m .,
L,- - - - - • - " · ,be
Office of the Board of Monday
through
Fair Pigs 6 -kS Old sso •c
o u n
y Friday.

Without
dOing Bnytnlng different when yotJ come
on the scene, your upbeat charisma wUI
buoy the spirrts of everyone present You
won't have to do anything consdously;
it'll just happen.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Even
shoukl you play merely a minor role, i1
could have a positive ettecl on an
arrangement you have with another with a tar more profitable r&amp;$Uit than
either Of you thoughC possible.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 21) You'll make It yoor concern to see that
everyone with whom you're Involved Is
treated kindly and fairly. You am even apt
to take definite measures to make sure·
this happens.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) - Set
your sights high In busln&amp;ss situations.
HOW8'V'&amp;r, keep In mind that if you treat
everyone with counesy and fairness at
all times, you can stay ln tolat cqntrol ct
the outcom8.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- Mosl of
the time when one makes a new
acquaintance, n can be just a fleeting

1 VYCN'r MN IQ.XliJ
WilLARD

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Ooors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

R.JVtW

CHm .

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Es1lma1es

740-367-0536

GARFIELD

St......

..~~.. 4$111
· J4H92-RU
....ltft'llllll:llllll-6:11 ..
11111111119:11 •12:11111

......................
.........,..........
--l'rlclll
PIYIIIG TOP fiiCES Ill

round baler. Good condition. NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Bids will be opened
$250!). 740-441-7390
--~ a1 1;15 p.m •
Sealed bid propos- and '"""
USED Rotary tillers. 4', 5'. als for the Installation on May 11 .
Bid
packels are
6'. 3 point hitch. BIG of new HVAC, plumbSELECTION. Jim's Farm lng and elechical serv- available a1 1he office
Ices In the Chesler of the commissioners,
Equ""""t. 740-44S.9m
Academy
building, County Courthouse,
LM.SJOCK
VIllage of ·Chester, will Pomeroy, lrom 8:30

r.

the process.
'LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Manley's
Racyclln•

55

Sharp bark

curve

DOWN

Take a brook 41
19 Stipulations ·
1 Shoat 'a
22 Pickling
42
home
herb
43
2 Garden soil 23 Final leiter
3 Part of A .D. 24 Mean boss 44
4 Large dlghe 25 Average
45
(2 wds.)
26 Irwin
5 Faint omell
of the PGA 46
6Rome
27 Even once 47
wreckers
28 Dull one
7 Toady's
30 Jokes
49
reply
32 Last degree
8 Podmem· 34 Decorate a

bara

17

Flapjack
chain
Scverelgnty
Average
gredea
Entice
Cross the
ocean
Hot aprlng
Wood ash
product

Ballpark
figure

cake

9

Non-soap
opera
mooring
10 Acutely Old PC
perceptive
acronym
11 Koch and
Plewlflil•
Wynn

35 Fine
37 Made
typo-free
38 Disqualily
40 Keeps
Informed

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cfjtbnty Ci~~ c~og•ams wecreated from quotations by tamou, peo~. pa91 and P1e3en1
Each Idler ln th~ Cipher sta'lds !Qr aootlel •

· Toda(sdue: EB(juafs D

"'MP HRVAN RFLP
XZVYHWRFOP

'

MP ' N WO V YFOF·

WIX XMPZP

WZ

UPVZFOB MPRFIY LVOBVZWW NMWZXN
YVASP ."' - VOEA CVD NRALP , WO
WJJFP. NYFXM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Happiness hates the tmid ." - Eugene O'Neill
"Happiness is good health and a bad memory.' - Ingrid Bergman

IIIU

lAM I

l
1

'I ===~~:S;;;

,..,

GRIZZWELLS
~ QoZ~\o\ 't-IEASEL ~~-- ...-----r-1\W's
1o11ii. ~At&gt;&amp;ER
IT?'

ars ... A Rt«~

'
I

,.,..--'---'--"'--'-1

•=:..~-~~
l~1siYVJI

low to form fovr ~,.p. warda.

Both your social me and your material
affairs can experience some favorable
limes, but tt won't be by accident. The
wonderful way you treat people will have
a greallnftuence on the fulfilment 01 your
desires.
,
TAURUS (Apnl 20·May 20) - Should
you go shopping. you're likely to have
those you love on your mind, doing a bll
more spenelng lOr them then you dO fOr
yourseH. Th'y'll enjoy everything you
purchase.
GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) - You'll say
all the rlght things, using many sweet
words to express yourself, bUt people
won '). accuse you of being insincere.
They'll know what you say comes
straight from the heart.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ·- Don't be
unduty alarmed if a friend pokes t)ls or
her nose in your a,_lrs. You'll quickly
understand that your palls doing so·only
to point out many helpful hints you hadn'llhought of.
LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22)- You might want
to take extra time selecting your attire
alld primping If you're stepping out.
There Is a poulbWity you're about to
m&amp;et someone you'll want to impress.'
VIRGO (Aug. 23-5epl. 221 - Bolng a
booster lor your friends will have a doubte-&amp;Oged Elffeel. It will help tnem promote their lnlerests. But In doing so, it11
also make you look exceptionally good in

'
'
ClllllldCCIIIIrlft·--

llllliiiiliiiiii:::.:s:::m:Biillii:D

40

Up till now
Rickrack
lmhated
Wlndlng

Ultt4 .~ ClAY L POIWf .....;·~---

Re ·ercnccs Ava 1·1abl e.,
1
@
Call Gary Sian l ey
740-742-2293

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007.

_

Kiefer Built· Valley-BisonHorse
and
Livestock
Trailers·
Loadmax·
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;1
Utility- Aluma AlumintJm
Trallen:- B&amp;W Goos9neck
HitchesTrailer
Parts.
Carmichael
Trailers.
(740)446·241 2

39

BIG NATE

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPM-=NT

583 ••

t 6

of Gdansk

51
52
53
54

'==' s~~cil\'\-~~~s·

nsure
* Experienced

('1tun11tJ •"'~e)~":"§t'!4LI'!!rlP4!ft:"'•

992·6215
Pomero} Oh10
25 \l',;rs loca Ex pencncc

Pass

East
Pass
Pass
All pass

*P
dQ It
Wro
o rmkpt an
lla! y

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homcfill System
• Helios System

Top•Ttlm•Hrutlnu•St~~

..r

00 \~PICK. OUT

we Deliver To Your

Service

wv

.·-------------------------------.•
1

Remode1·tng

V.C . YOUNG Ill

-

•

• Complete

Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical.&amp; Plumbing
Roofing 6. Gutta,..
VInyl Siding &amp; Pelnting
Patio and Porch Oecks
036725

•~-------------------------------•

I

• ew omes
• Garages

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bailp Qi;ribune

I

r:~:

6

H

YOUNG'S

6uttba~ t!tinu.~• -&amp;entlnel

I

N

So's Classic Cars
200 Chevy S·1 0 ext. cab
AKC BostonTerrler puppies 5 speed, 4 cyl. 80,000 miles
m/1 $400ea .·AKC Collie nice $5500. 95 Bu ick Park

Two 1989 Buick Park
Avenues for !)arts. S300;
King woodburner, $200; old
22 rille. Mason. 16141226•
.

~ ~'&lt; 00 YOU TU.L

SUNSHINE CLUB

The Daily Sentinel

I

COIISTRUCDOII

Pa~s

14
2•
t •

J:he original declar;r played a heart to.
his king and cash8d the. heart ace. He
could no longer make the contract.
When East gol in wlh his trump !rid&lt;, he
shifted to the spade queen. giving the
defenders three spades and one heart.
The spade king is blowing in the wind, lo
coin a phrase . II Easlleads spades, you
need him to have the ace. But II West
. attacks spades, you will SCQre a Irick
wilh your ~ng. You musl fight t0 keep
EaSI off the lead. .So. at trick two, when
EaSt follows with a low heart, cover H
wlh your ·~x . Wesl takes the trick but .
cannel huri you. Suppose he switches lo
a club. You take tho trick, draw a second ·
round of 1rumps, r!Jf a diamond on the
board. remove the rest of East's trump's,
and run the clubs.

I \ In I..,, 1'1 '1 If "
,\ I I\ I ..., I I H I\

~oint ~lea•ant B.egf~ter

•

•

u:.

BISS~ll

i

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID. ' .

I

R

StO'P t'n at
parti"ct"patt'ng·
Pomeroy
Mer"chants
fior our
Mother's
Day Gtifit
Basket
G•
rveaway

1976 Chevy RV, sleeps 6,
·
new tires, 350 V-8, ale, runs
Podge Ram . 2WD. 5 good. $2500, 740-416-t472.
English Masllffs AKC, CH Speed. $1300 OBO Call 740·992·1493
74
bloodlines. Onlj 3 leh. ititi0i"·5;;,78;;,·.ol04~0~--"'l - -- - - - - Clearan ce sale . 740-245SUVs
21t1 1983 Skylark Camper
5823 or 740·645·1912
. mR SAJ.E
$3 .000 OBO 304·675-t e94

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

I
I

___

BasseVpupsAKC
six
wk .old,4-tri-color, .(-lemon
and wh. Parentson s~e. Ask ,
$275 ea.740-667-~758
94

Senior Discount*

I
I

I

pups (2 F)12wks . ,shots
· S350ea.-AKC Yorkie puppies males $800, females
$900 small. ALL Vel Ck'd.
740·696·10e5

If so, you qualify for a

I
I

o

PErs

FO SA· I:'

!!

OPEN FOR SEASON I•

II:

2000 Chevy Impala 43 .500
$7
mllesMust See .0003 4·
593-3707 or 304-675 ·4e93

2004 Slralus. $6000 OBO.
2000 Ford Mustang, $5000
OBO, 2000 Chevy Cavalier,
Tattle Tale Alarm Syste m. $2800 080. 2002 Dodge
new in box, $400 or trade for Slralus. 2 door. $5600 OBO.
(740)256·6169.
·
Gun. T40·992-247B.
"'"Ill~-"":'....- - , Auto Buyer has 20 cars 1hat
gel20·30 mpg. 446·7276

i .

.

syracuse ' Ohio

ROBERT

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

--------

or older? ·

~allipolt~

needs motor work $500. 4 •
Parnefli Jones Tires 35/16's
$250 304·675·6439

o

AT TH'
ELBOWS

"That's Gods Day"
1! 1411 mo. pc1
'=~=====::;-;:===~;:=~
~:;;::;;::;;:;;;:~:;
r

puppies m/f sable/wh.,eyes ave·. $110.000 miles $2800 .
normai,OSU cert. $400ea.- 740·208-0028 or 740·245.Ret. 5087.
AKC
Golden

Areyou65
'

s

TMAT

0
Flats
6.5
1O"H ang Ing B85ketS $5 •50 .. $6 •50
4" Pots 85¢-$1.50
Shrubs-$2.95-$6.95
Open M·Saturday 10-5
Closed Sunday

1998
Pontiac
Grand
GT
NEW AND USED STEEL 5
speed,
black,
newAMtires,

Sleel Bearns. Pipe Reba•
For
Concrete,.
Angle,
Channel. Flat Bal. Sleet
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
M 1
M nd
crap elas pen o ay,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
F "d Ba -4 30
Cl
d
·Th
n ay,d m :S 1pmd. ose&amp;
urs ay,
a ur ay
StJnday.
(740)446-7300

--'7

I'VE LOST COUNT, BUT HER

WEJ)"i)IN' DRESS IS PATCHED

Hubbard's "'reenho"
use
u

-19...:9_4-:P-ris_m_r-un_s_n_re-at~s-ta-n-

J\.1'..1'11

MERCY--HOW
MANY .TIMES
DOES

$

TOW~

pets. 740·992·2218.
3 Br. house in Pomeroy -::-::-:--:---:---:-:::----:--:Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedLarge &amp; very clean. I 112 t-BR, 2nd floor. AIC. util.pd., room apartments al Village Responsible

OLENA SNOPES
GOT HITCHED
AG'IN !\
,___.--

MAKE?

Hill 's Self
Storage

1987 Mazda 82200 ext. cab
automatic overdrive, hard
shell ' bed cover. good cond.

- - - - - - --'- - - - - - - - . . , . . - _ 1992 Cadillac Deville. Good
Prime commercial space for
JET
Shape, also 1996 Olds 88.
ron! al Springvalley Plaza.
AERATION MOTORS
740·446·7318
Call645·219,2. .
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
StOCk. Call Ron Evans. 1· dard 304·675-2208
800·537·9528 ·

rJ..------•I

BARNEY

l.'i yrs. Ellp. free Estimates

96.000miles$1 ,2000BOor
trade 3Q4.n3-5078 or 304593·0958

oo

~~~
~~

Gracloua Living I and 2
wheel chair. good condrtion.
2 Br. HUO approved, nice
AvAR'J'MINJ'S
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage M·ain 51. Pt. Pl . $;400/mo call Bedside commode toilet lift 1990 Mustang built 302 lots
74 992
back yard. no pels. 0· .,_ _,.m,.Riiliolloo"iiiill,__. Manor and Riverside Apl~ in Julie 703·528·0617
seal. 740·992·6968.
olextras. 740"742 "2026 ·
•
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
3 Bedroom House in · ments, furnished and unturSyracuse. $500/nionlh . + nished, and houses in
deposit No Pets_ (304)675- Pomeroy and Middleport,
5332
securily deposil required, no

/ TttOUGttT"1

Hardwood Cabinetry .AIIdFurniture

North

1taa1

50 CIIIzen

The late British comedian Dudley Moore
once said , "The best car safety device is
a rear·view mirror with a cop in it."
Thai's flUe. And a beeping radar delec·
tor doesn1 hurt, either.
In this deal. you are Soutn. in lour
hearts. West leads a lpw ~iamond to
dummy's ace. Can you see a sate play lo
bling home 10 tricks?
Nota South's . three·no·trump rebid.
Norlh mighl have raised wilh only lhree·
card heart support. II so. lhree no·llump
would probab~ be a better contraCI than
lour hearts. It is I!Ue thai South would
have preferred to ho!d a diamond-honor,
but sometimes one isn't dealt whal one
would like. ·
North , bacause he had such weak
hearts, might have passed ou1 three notrump. II he had, Soulh would most like·
ly have taken t0 Irick$.

ONTO TtiAT "~ ~

Dav1'd Lew1's
740 992 6971

Pontiac Grand Prix .
1988
.
Riding
lawn
•
_Ask mower.
for Jr. 740256 1102

22

Themes
Sheperd or
Greenspon
Gamy
Owing

23 R~lon1
26 WhiSpered
loudly
29 Teamwork
obstacles
30 Big blow
31 From, In
Hamburg
33 Go wrong
34 Take a spill
35 Fur
36 Appear
38 Yacht

A safety-play may
safely gain tricks

$AY "~AN6 1i~

and Replacement

r

West

Opening lead:

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

l&gt;II&gt;N'T YOU ~m

-

21

Deater: North
Vulnerable : E113t-West

740-367-0266/
1-800-950-3359

-

20

3

• 8 52

~;;:::~=~~~

2002 Bass Trackll&lt; fishing
boat. Business and property
for sale. (7 40)446·4782

• "Q 10 9 4 3
•

• J 7 &amp;

Senior Citizen

Quality 4-H show pigs . Now
$100 Private Treaty at farm .
52 1 Ewington Road, Vinton ,
Ohio 740·388·0183 or 645t644

18

4 K 4 3
• A K Q&amp;

26 Years Experience

Mollohan Furn. 202 Clark
Chapel Act New lurn, If you
like to save money, check us
out . Drive a little, Save alot!
388·0173
---..,..---:----:-:
Used furniture ' store , 130
Bulaville Pike, Electric
Range~ c. hests, Couches,
Mattresses, bunk beds,
dinettes, recliners, Nice

some!
(2 wds.)

Soulb

All l)rpes Of
LIVFSTOCK
Concfete
Work
Lw------~
-,
r-~:-:'--::--:---,

,

Tennille
13 -and cry_
14 Waquleldy
15 Masculine
principle
16 And then

,.."""'

4 Q J tO
• J 95 2

10

Grinding • Bucket
Truck

r

-- - - Commer~al Space for renl

7546.

•

• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stump

r•o
HOUSEHOlD I
~---'"'-~,_·-·· --"
\J\JUlA"1

question
46 NASA
8 Rouse from
vohlclea
lleep
48 Hula-dance

Eul

t KJ 7&amp;
• 8 54 2

Employer.
.
Gallipolis, OH, Hfs 11·3 (M- Lw-llliFORiiiiiSiiAiiLiioor
----~--=- CommerciBI building "For F) .
-,

r

Wesl
4 A9 8 6

Paul. Corv &amp; Stephen

new kil chen and bath. - -- - - - ' - - Starting at $405 . Cal today! Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
(304 )273-3344
lng applications for waiting
o.:..:.,:_..:...:cc:..:__ _ _~ list for Hud-subsized, 1_ br,
Apartment for rent , 1-2
the
Bdrm .. remodeled, new car· apartment,for
elderly/disabled call 675·
pet. stove &amp; frig., water,
6679
sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
Equal
Housing
$425.00 . No pets, Ref. Opportunily
re~irect 740·843-5264. ' --~----Upstairs.
Two
BD
Beautiful Apta. at Jackson Apt.,Large,Ciean modern
Eltates. 52 . Westwood WID Private,No grass to
.,.9.
Drive, Irom $365 to $560 . mow.992·7094 or 4 16·4'i"
740-446-2568.
Equal Fully furnished or not.

Hou~ng

MONTY

Answer 10 Previout Puzzfe

1 Large chunk 43 Pinkish
5 Sclentlat'1
lhadta

t A
4 A K Q 10 9

Asia, Israel. Bella. Leta,

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl- Rent" 1600 square feel. oH
street parking : Great loca·
MISCilLLANEOUS
Townhouse
apartments, lion! 749 Third Avenue in
MERCHANDBE
Nice 2 BR mobile home. and/or" small houses FOR Gall,·poll"s. Renf ••ooi mo. Lw-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio~
Ale L I d I J h
'
. oca
e ·aPark.o nson
Mobile
Home
446- RENT. Call (740)441 -1111 Call Wayne (404)456·.3802 Craftmatic Adjustable ~edfor application &amp; information.
2003
2 4 model. Rumba po'wer
$475/mo and
740-446-6565

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

41 Garden .

bloom

12 Brax!on or
· Nortb
• 7 52
• 8 7 43

&amp; Rich, Grandchildren. Rylm1d.

J

.,.,
1

I&lt;I \ I \I

Laurel
Commons
Apartments. Largest in the
area! Beautifully renovated
throughout induding brand

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious.
2 Bedrooms, CiA, 1 1/2
Bslh, Adull Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Patio. Start $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required ,
(740)367-7086.

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Fmi1ily of Tim Michael
Tim &amp; Laura, Tammy &amp; Charlie, Mich elle

~

·acres can be purchased For listings 800-559-4109

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Phillip
Alder

Nice clean new decorated,

Hmse property. 6 acres With -H-UD
- HO
_M
_E_S_',-b-edr-oo-m"
· .2
40K80 insulated,/ heated
horse barn , 10 stalls, Brick bath. $199/mo. 3 .bedroom,
wash stall With 4 Bedroom $198/mo.More homes availliving quarters. 37 additional able. 5%· dn, 20 yrs @ B"k

,'

www.mydailysentinel.com
BRIDGE

Words fail ro express rhe thankfulness
and appreciation we feel for tlr.e
overwhelming and generous love and
support s'wwn to us during this rime
· of tremendous grief and loss, your
kindness will not be forgorren, us we
face the long days ahead.
Specialrh(mks to Pastor Charlie
Staats. Chaplain Jolm Davis and the
Christian Motorcyclists Assoc.
Also Meigs Co. Bikers and Fisher
Funeral Home, Hobson Fellowship
Church, Jeff 's Carryout, Gloeckner's
Cafe, and 10 all the businesl·'s that
donated to the benefit and to all of
7im 's many, many fri ends.

i~--------ll'o· Houst~ J AP~ ~-••AP.Fii~iiii.Roo"iiirrs. ._.
L&lt;:m; &amp;

Card of Thanks

Monday, April 23, 2007
ALLEYOOP

To those who cared on
behalf of the family of
Tim Michael:•

~

AlliiA(;[

Monday, April 23, 2007

www.mydallysentln~l.com

HYP MN

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS " - 2 •- o1
Tioirty- Balott - Graft - Picnic - ANYTIIING
" If you are wrong." lhc teacher I o ld &lt;he young boy.
"an aJ?Ology can repair a lmo~1 ANYnnNG ."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

experiEK'ICe. But someone you ·meet tor
the first time could become a truly
staunch friend and ally.
PISCES (Fob. 20-... rch 20) - II ,ou
have an inner urge to dO something antstic or decoratr.. around the house; by all
means engage In doing so. The rvsutt&amp;
are apt tO be far more p&amp;aslng than
usual.
.
AAIES (Ma"?f'l 21 ·Aprll 19)- 'tbu can
swallow any distasteful situation as long
as you are with your friends. 'rour composure may fatter a tH!IIt times, but ha"lllng your pals around makes ,. ..,.rythlng
durable.

'HeLL _ , "i4e.' HIWe ~
"Oiffeille Rible&amp; 10 "'e'IN
'llltJ OW Coffee ~ ~ ..

. TAIL ~\.1?
Anw

t\l.\CKE.T-7,
l &amp;IIE&gt;SS

QIICh304-675·5492

Commlsslo .n ers,
Commissioners
Meigs County, 100 ·E. reserv• the right 10
Goats tor Sale. Boer GOats, Second St., Pomeroy, rejec1 any and all bids.
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb, Ohio" 45769, un111 1 (4)23, 26
2007. Call (740)256·9247
p.m. on May 11, 2007.

II

.

-·-

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydail~sentinel.com

Cavaliers take Game 1 over Wizards
.

'

'

CLEVELAND (AP) Flat on his back, LeBron
James grimaced as he
looked · toward the arena
rafters, where giant banners
spelled out his team's playoff motto: "RISE UP!"
And he did.
Ignoring a ~prained left
ankle, James stayed in the
game to score 23 points and
Larry Hughes added 27
Sunday,
lifting
the
Cleveland Cavaliers over the
depleted
Washington
Wizards 97-82 in the opener
of this Eastern Conference
series.
James turned his ankle on
a drive in the third quarter
but refused to come out.
adding nine rebounds and
seven assists in 44 minutes.
"I had no intention of not
corning back," he sa·id.
"First game of the playoffs,
we've got to set a tone. If I
was able to limp on it, I was
going to be in there."
The
Cavaliers
were
expected to blow through
their second straight firstround matchup with the
undermanned
Wizards,
, missing All-Stars Gilbert
Arenas , (knee surgery) and
Caron Butler (broken hand).
However, Game I was no
walk in the park for the Cavs
.
AP photo
on a beautiful, sunny spring
Cleveland
Cavali.
e
rs'
LeBron
James,
right,
and
Anderson
Varejao.
from
Bra~il. hug as the
day in Cleveland.
Antawn Jamison scored leave the floor late in the fourth quarter of a first-round NBA playoff basketball game
28 points with 14 rebounds against the Washington Wizards Sunday in Cleveland. Cleveland won the fif5t game of the
and Jarvis Hayes had 18 best-of-seven series, 97-82.
points for Washington, with 8:03 left in the third .
HHe's a machine, man," "Organizations and people
which was still within I0
On a drive, James rose for said Hayes, who tried to are like trees - vou're
points with more than seven a floater from about I0 feet. make James work extra hard either growing or dying ....
minutes.remaining.
As the ball dropped in, on offense. "You've just got To call the season a success
That's when the Cavaliers, James came down ·on Etan to do s.omething to slow him in growth,. you want to see
much more playoff savvy Thomas' right foot, twisting down ."
yourse lf up one notch."
than they were a year aso. his ankle and falling in obviHughes was just as tough Does James feel the same
movep their attack instde ous pain.
on the Wizards, his former sense of urgency? "No," he
and pounded the ball to 7The injury looked severe team. Not only did he knock said. "He (Gi lbert) has hi s
foot-3 center Zydrunas and the 'tired-up Cleveland down jumpers and pick up
llgauskas. He scored seven crowd moaned when James the slack when James got own opinion. I play for my
teammates. You can't go and
straight points to help began slapping his hand on
hurt,
but
Hughes
'
familiarity
contemplate
on what other
Cleveland push its lead to the floor. But after about a
witb
Washington's
offense
people
say."
... Butler is to
89-74 with five minutes left. · minute, James popped up
him
to
yell
out
the
allowed
have
hi
s
cast
removed
Ilgauskas, bothered by a
and
walked
to
the
bench
Wizards'
plays.
Monday
and
is
Hoping
to
sore · ankle when the Cavs
with
hardly
a
limp.
·
"We
were
worried
about
return. for Game 3. ... The
beat the Wizards in a six"That made everybody's LeBron, we were worried Wizards
return
to
game series a year ago,
scored II of his 16 points in heart jump a little bit,'' Cavs about the big fell a down low Washington for p~actice the
coach Mike Brown said. and trying to box out Drew next two days.
the fourth period.
.
"When the big fella is "You don't want .to see that Gqoden," ' Jamison said .
feeling good and he wants it, happen to any •of your guys, "Larry did a great job of getting in the teeth of the.
you have to give it to him," let alone LeBron.'·'
James
expects
a
sore
ankle
defense."
James said.
After the Wizards trimmed
Cleveland also clamped Monday, but he 's certain
down on the Wizards in the he' II be ready for Game 2 of a I0-point deficit to four,
fourth, holding them to 5-of~ the best-of-seven se ries Hughes drained a 3-pointer
at the halftime horn to give
20 shooting and making Wednesday.
The
scary
moment Cleveland a 48-41 lead.
Jamison go 1-of-7 for only
"We were struggling
three points in the last 16 sparked an 11-2 run· by the
Cavaliers.
They
appeared
most of the first
through
minutes. .
,
ready
10
bury
'the
Wizards,
half,"
Hughes
said. "I was a
"We missed .some open
but
Washington
hung
tough
little hesitant, a little tentashots," Wizards coach Eddie
Jordan said. "I thought we and .a 3-pointer by Antonio tive on both ends, so to get
executed well enough. It Daniels with 1.2 seconds left one to go in and push the
was a game. Their defense made it 74-67 with 12 min- lead to seven was good."
,
was good, but we've got to utes to go.
Notes: Cavs owner Dan
finish the plays."
James was little more than Gilbert's assertion that anyJames appeared as if his a decoy the rest of the way. thing short of the conference
second postseason as a pro He made only two hard dri- finals would be a fai lure didmight be in jeopardy when ves, deferring to Hughes and n't seem to sit well with
he crumpled to the floor llgauskas . .
James.
Gilbert
said,

Monday, April23, 2007

Phillie~ beat Reds, 9~3 CINCINNATI (AP)
count too much. I need to
Ryan Howard returned from pitch better than that when
a few · days off looking we have tlie lead. I need to
healthy and ready to l;Jreak trust my fastball."
out of his April slump.
Brett Myers, moved from
The NL MVP homered in. the rotation to the l;Jullpen by
his first game back from .an the Phillies earlier this week,
injury to help Freddy Garcia pitched the ninth and allowed
earn his first National an RBI double by Ken
League ·victory, aQd the Griffey Jr.
Phil lies beat the Cincinnati
Philadelphia's pitching
Reds 9-3 on Sunday.
limited Cincinnati lo siK runs
Howard, who missed the and 15 hits in -the three-game
last three games with a series, including Cincinnati's
s~rained ligament just below 2-1 10-inning win on Friday.
hts left knee. hit a sacrifice The Reds (9- 10) have lost
tly. drew a walk . .stmck out four or live and fell below
and flied out to center field .500 for the tirst time this
before hitting his second season.
homer of the season. a 410"You see them swinging at
foot, two-run shot to center pitches they don't normally
in the ninth.
swing at," Griffey said of the
"!felt good," the first base- Reds hitting slump. "It's not
man said. "I hit in the cage for lack of effort. Everybody
the last couple of day s but in this locker rooni wants to
the real test. was getting out do well, especially in front of
on the field for nine innings. the home crowd, but it backHitting the ball to center field fire s. It's like pitching. If you
· h
b ,.
try to throw it harder, vou
ts w ere you wan 1 1 e. · end up throwing it softer.('
Howard hit 58 homers last The Phillies took a 2-0 lead
season, . but has. strusgled in the first on Howard's sacalong \vtth the Pht!hes 111 the rifice fly and Helms' RBI
early goi ng.
single.
"It was good to .sec Ryan
"We cou ldn't get anything
pop one out," manager · · " R d
J
Charlie Manuel said. "The gomg, e s manager erry
Narron said. "We've got to
fly ball to center field says put the ball in play a little
he's about ready to break better. Rigpt now, as a team,
loose. I have a teeling he'll we' re just not hitting."
hit a few more."
Utley followed back-toChase Utley had .a pair of back singles by Jimmy
doubles and Wes Helms had Rollins and Shane Victorino
three hits for the Phillies, in the third inning with his
who have won three of four second double in two at bats.
and back-to-back games for Greg Dobbs later added a
the first time this season.
sacnfice fly on a diving catch
"Tw.o in a row," Manuel by left tielder Adam Dunn to
said. "Imagine that. It was a g1ve Philadelphia a 4-0 lead.
long time coming. I think
The Reds snapped a 10Garcia pitched pretty good . inning scoreless streak in the
He knows how to pnch. He fourth on Javier Valentin's
pops the fastball pretty sacrifice fly. They added a
good."
.
run in 'the sixth on Edwin
Garcia ( 1-1), who was Encarnacion's bases-loaded
acquired from the White Sox single to right field, but the
for two players in December, Phil lies responded in the sevwent five innings in his sec~ enth when Utley walked,
ond start since opening the stole second, moved to third
season on. the disabled li st on Valentin's throwing error
with tendiniti s. He didn't and scored on Encarnacion's
walk · a batter and allowed throwing error.
four hits and two runs with
Belisle (2-1) gave up eight
three strikeouts.
bits and four runs wtth one
''I' m making progress," the walk and six strikeouts five
right-hander said. "We're innings, the shortest of his
wmning. I got behind in the four starts this season. ·

-----

PSB

SPORTS
• Southern sweeps Lady
Lancers. See Page 81

°

v.ww.m)&lt;hoil)'&lt;'ntinl'l.com

sidng AEPplamin

ago was taken by the
OPSB at its Monday afierand
noon
meeting
POMEROY - The Ohio announced in a news
Power Siting Board (OPSB) release from that agency.
has approved AEP-Ohio's
The agreement, approved
proposal to site an electric by the Board late yesterday,
generaiion facility in the includes 36 specific-condiGreat Bend community tions that the company must
along the Ohio River in meet to remediate the enviMeigs County.
ronmental and economic
The action to approve impacts presented by the
AEP's application which construction . and operation
was filed more than a year of the fa~ility.
BY CHAIIJ.ENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH!tMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

Still under consideration
are the cost recovery
.issues associated with the
project. Determination on
those issues will come
from the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
The OPSB reviews applications for the siting of
large electric and natural
gas facilities in Ohio. The
!!-member boan.l is comprised of representati&gt;~es of
the PUCO, the Ohio

Environmental Protection
Agency, the state departments of Development ,
Re source s,.
Natural
. Agriculture and Health, the
Ohio General Assembly
and the public. The
Chairman of the PUCO also
chairs the OPSB.
The Great Bend facility
will connect to the regional
electric grid through the
existing 345 kilovolt Sporn-.
Waterford transmission line.

·Chief and
council
back officer.
'

AEP-Ohio anticipates · that
the project wi ll cost approximately $1.1 billion and create 1.900 construction johs
and 125 permanent jobs.
Once constructed , the
facilit y will use Integrated
Ga sification
Combined
Cycle (IGCC) clean coal
technology to generate 629
m~gawatt s of electricity.
In the IGCC process. coal

Please see Plant. AS

Dayton man
in two-county
chase appears
Monday

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINELCOM

BY BRIAN

OBiTIJARIFS
Page AS
• William L. Carr, 81

INSIDE
.

• Former Russian
President Boris
Yeltsin dead at 76.
See Page A2
• Showcase of bands
set. See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS

WEA'IHER

.Gordon gets historic victory

,. ,_

TliESllAY , .\I'RII. :.q. !.!11117

:-;o CI.N 'IS • \'ol. :-;h, No. tX-l

Onl One Kubota!

The timing was perfect for
The disappointed Stewart,
Gordon. who was ·able to who led a race-high 132
finish his pit stop and head laps, said, "I felt:like the
back toward the track before second half of the race we
,leader Stewart came back to had a good car."
the finish line, thereby
Denny Hamlin may have
keeping Gordon on the lead had the best car on the track
lap.
Saturday. He led 70 laps and
When all the other leaders . was still out ahead when he
pitted under the caution was caught speeding enterflag, Gordon stayed on track ing pit road on lap 99.
and took .the lead.
Hamlin was penalized to the
Once the green flag came back of the longest line
back out on lap 294, Stewart (30th) for the restart on lap
tried desperately to regain 104.
the top spot. As Gordon
That didn't slow him
struggled to get by Martin· down . much.
Hamlin,
Truex Jr. , who had pitted Stewart's Joe Gibbs Racing
before the yellow· and was teammate. charged back
on the end of .the lead lap. into contention and finished
Stewart saw his chance.
third ,
On lap 299, Stewart
It was the third race for
squeezed his Chevrolet NASCAR's new Car of
between Gordon and Truex Tomorrow and its first test
and somehow drove to the on a track longer than a half
lead. But Gordon wouldn't mile .
Hamlin
wasn't
quit, staying on Stewart's impressed with the bigger,
rear bumper and then dri- bulkier car.
ving under him to regain the
"If that was the point of it,
lead for good on lap 300.
to make it more competitive'
Gordon pulled away to for everyone, the mfssion
finish about six car-lengths failed, in my opinion,''
ahead at the finish , earning Hamlin said. "I don 't know
his first win · at Phoenix .· how· we're going to run
That leaves only Homestead these cars on bigger tracks
and Texas as active tracks without further changes."
where Gordon hasn't won.
Reigning Nextel Cup
"We didn 't lead a ton, but champion Jimmie Johnson,
we had a good car," said Gordon's
Hendrick
Gordon, who led 53 )aps in Moto~sports teammate. finthe No. 24 Chevrolet. "It all ished fourth. followed by
did fall in our lap.
Matt Kenseth, Jeff Green
. ''I almost drove through and Kyle Busch, in another
the pit. (Crew chief) Steve Hendrick Chevrolet.
(Letarte) made the call (to
Kevin Harvick, who wan
stop) and I love him. He's as both Cup races in Phoenix
sharp as can be. He's so cool last year, led some laps
under pressure."
early and wound up IOth.

''

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

So Many Different Models ...

AVONDALE, Ariz. (AP)
- A little luck helped Jeff
Gordon to a historic win
Saturday night at Pho(!nix
International Raceway.
.
The four-time NASCAR
champion tied the late Dale
Earnhardt for sixth place on
the career victory list with
76, winning for the first
time since last July.
After ending the 26-race
victory drought, Gordon
stopped to pjck up a flag
bearing Earnhardt's famed
No. 3 and black, ·red and
white color scheme for his
slow victory lap around the
mile oval.
.
"It means the world."
Gordon said. "Holding that
3 flag, it's certainly by no
means saying we're as good
as him. I learned so much
from him. We wanted to
honor h_im. We've been
holding onto that flag for a
long time."
Orte of the first 'drivers to
congratulate Gordon · in
Victory Circle was Dale
Earnhardt Jr.
pardon started froll) the
pole and led early, but he
spent most of th~ 312-lap
race
following
Tony
Stewart, who appeared to be
on the way to an easy victory.
As the leaders began a
series of green-flag pit stops
late in the race, Gordon
drove onto pit road at the
end of lap 283. As he drove
slowly toward his pit at the
end of pit road, a three-car
crash brought out the yellow
flag.

Holzer observing
occupational
therapy month, As-

Who needs
? A,...
a limo.~

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The conduct of an officer with the
Pomeroy Police Department
was discussed and ultimately
backed by Chief of Po~ce
Mark E. Proffitt and Pomeroy
Village Council during last
night's council meeting.
Resident Joyce Carter of
Lincoln Heights complained
to council about her treatment by Sgt.' Brandy Tobin
in relation to an alleged
domestic . dispute between
Carter and her adult daughter. The incident resl!lted in
Carter's arrest by Tobin on a
domestic violence charge
which w,as later dismissed.
Carter complained Tobin
was rude and asked her .not
to be belligereQI, when
Carter called the 'Pomeroy
Police Department for assistance. Carter said she was
not belligerent and said she
didn't hit her daughter.
"I wa&amp; appalled I was
arrested," Carter said, saying Tobin didn't listen to her
side of the story and this
kind of situation had never
happened to her before.
Chief Proffitt presented
the police log',pertaining to
the call where it was noted
Carter was belligerent.
Proffitt also stated Tobin
witnessed Carter and her
daughter in a physical con:C

I Beth Ser&amp;entj photo

•

Julie Campbell (center) presents donations from the Racine Area Community Organization
and the Sonshine Circle to Patty Pickens (left), president of the Friends of the Meigs County
District Public Library (MCDPL) and Kri.sti Eblin, director, MCDPL. The donations help the
"Friends" fund library programs as will proceeds from the "Friends' " upcoming book sate.

Book sale to benefit library_programs
BY BETH SERGENT

prizes for the summer reading program to
the annual Easter egg hunt. The "Friends"
also provide material for t.he Ohio Reads
POMEROY - A book sale sponsored by Program, supplies for craft nights and comthe Friends of the Meigs County District puter classes.
Public Library held from 9 a.m. to 6 p:m.
The "Friends" basically generate funds
on May 3 and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on May 4 at for library programs by sponsoring the
the Pomeroy Library will benefit library spring and fall book sales, year-round book
programs.
sales and selling bookmarks and bracelets
The books will not be pre-priced and at each library branch. Brochures on the
patrons can take as many as they want and "Friends" and how to join are also at each
make a donation to the Friends of the Library. branch. An annual membership is $5 with
The "Friends" are a nonprofit group of
money going back to programs .at the
local citizens who contribute to programs at
the library to help fund everything from
Pluse see Library. AS
BSERGENTIJ&gt;MYPAILYSENTINEL.COM

Pluse see Officer, AS

POMEROY - A Dayton
man charged with fleeing
police · officers in a
Thursday night chase
remains in jail after a court
appearance on Monday.
Diamond A. Glenn. 24,
appeared before Judge
Steven L. Story in Meigs
County Court. His bond was
set at $20,000, with I0 per- .
cent cash allowed. Glenn is
charged with fourth.degree
felor1y fleeing. and remains
in Meigs County Sheriff's
custody in lieu of bond.
Glenn is also wanted in
Montgomery County on
charges of pqssession of
drugs and p@ssession of
criminal tools, and hi s bond
· on those charges ·is set at
$ 10.000.
Glenn allegedly fled officers in Pomeroy as well as
Mason, Hartford and New
Haven, W.Va. after a New
Haven officer attempted to
stop him for a traffic violation late Thursday. Officers
chased Glenn through the
three Mason County towns
before he crossed the
Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge
into Pomeroy.
He was apprehended on
Lincoln Hill in . Pomeroy
after ofticers in Mason and
Please see Chase, AS

·Stream·Sweep a success
DetaltoonP.,.A7

BY JtM FREEMAN
CORRESPONDENT

INDEX
2 SECTIONS .;_ 16 PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

85-6

, Annie's Mailbox

.

'

Comics

87

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/800-710-1917

8 Section

Weather
© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

· RUTLAND The annual
Leading Creek Stream Sweep has
faced high water, cold temperatures
and spri ng rainstorms during much
of itsseven-year history, but on
.Saturday morning there wasn't a
cloud insight as 35 volunteers of all
ages turned out to help clean up ·
theLeading Creek watershed .
Volunteers filled two dump
trucks, . belonging
to
the
RutlandTownship
Board
of
Trustees, with trash collected from
throughout the watershed. from
locations
around
Albany,
Langsville, Rutland, Bradbury and
Laurel Cliff. The Meigs Transfer
Subniltted photo
Station
for
the
AthensThirty-five volunteers at the seventh annual Leading Creek Stream Sweep HockingLandfill agreed to accept
collected and disposed of two dumptruck loads of refuse Saturday. Workers the trash.
are shown here loading a dump truck at Jim Vennari Park in Rutland.
In addit ion to countless pop bot-

ties, beer cans and fast foodbags, the
odd items found this year included a
lar~e , blue sneaker and work boot
(mmus the feet), a television set and
recliner, a bathroom sink and a home
pregnancy test (results unknown).
· In past years, the stream sweep
was held at the Rutland Firemen's
Park: this year the event was held ai
Jim Vennari Park on Main Street.
For their service. vo lunteers
received a Leading Creek Stream
Sweep T-shirt and pi zza for lunch.
The Leading Creek Stream Sweep
roughly coincides witl1 Earth Day
and is sponsored by the Meigs SoH
and Water Conservation Di strict,
Rutland Town ship Board of
Trustees. Meigs County Transfer
Station and the Leading Creek
Conservam:y Distrilt.
1
The annual Ohio River Sweep
will be held June 16 from 9 a. m. to
noon.
J

Back to.Health Chiropractic

"Your Friendly Outdoor Poi1rer Equipme111 mui Tractor $uperstort"

would like to welcome Dr. Chris Good
For an appointment with Dr. Good ot Dr. Nick! Please call:

740.446.7460
•.

·.

---·-·---

---

-

'

'

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