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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

~

~·

·-

www .mydailysentinel.com

:

Monday, May 14. 2007 ·

)

•

Doctors are increasirigly
trying to diagnose
autism and other mental
disorders in babies, A2 .·

Jazz push Warriors to
brink of elimination
West, Uia h simply bullied dig at the Warri ors, hitting
a 3-pointer wqen Utah had
past Golden State.
"We ' re doi ng better stay- a 13-point lead and 10 seeOAKLAND. Ca lif.
ing wi th what- the y' re try- onds to play.
The Utah Ja zz had seen ing to take away from us."
Utah finished the game
enough of the Go lden State Sloan said. "Our team has- on a 22- 10 run, incl uding a
Warriors' beautiful game . n ' t had to make th ese I 0-2 push in less than 2
Carl os Booze r and th e adjustments. but our guys minutes after Richardson ' s
Jazz shoved and sc raped to are ge uing better and bet- 3-poi nt er with 3:47 left
';low down the Warrio rs - ter."
pulled Go lden State to 93and then Derek fi sher put a
AI Harrington scored 24 9 1.
·
sweet fini sh on a vic tory points before fouling out , "I don ' t think we had the
that put Utah on the brink but Baron Davis had ju st same · bou nce that we had
of the Western Conference 15 points and seven ass ists. th e
other
ni ght ."
fin als.
The Warriors were a disso- Harrington said. " It wasn't
Boozer had 34 point' and nant mess throug h most of for lack of effort, but we
12 rebounds as the Jazz the ir first _home loss in I0 neve r reall y hit that gear
handed the eighth -seeded ga mes datmg to th e regular · where we separated from
Warriors their ·firs t home season :- ye t th ey still held the othe r team . We 've ju&gt;t
Joss of th e postseason. Il S- a lead 111 the fmal mtnutes got to find a way to play at
I 0 I Sunday ni ght to put betore Uta h s supen or th e speed we want to play
at. "
·
Utah up .1- 1 in the ir 'cc- poi se won it again .
ond-round playoff se ries.
"We just didn ' t hav e
Golden State stayed close .
Fisher scored 14 of his 21 eno ugh juice.·· Warriors for all four quarters despite
points in th e fou rth quart er coac h Do n Ne lson said. awfu l shot select ion and
for th e su rpri sin.gJazz. who 'They did eve ry!hing they Iiule inside ga me. but not
can clinch th eir first trip to were supposed to do to beat eve n its mass of ye llowthe confere nee final s since us. and they took 11 to us. clad fan s helped aga in st
1998 with a victory at Thev ca me in and played Utah's defense. The Jazz
home in Game 5 Tuesda y rea lfy we ll, and we weren ' t forced bad shots by the
ni ght.
th at good."
Warriors' all- too:willing
"That was a big step in
Fisher's 3-po in te r put shooters. th en· go t inside
the growt h process for us Utah ahead to stay with for consistent points on the
as a tea m." sa id Fisher. 5:57 to play, and the veter- other .e nd.
who mis sed th e se rie s an g'uard - traded by
Sleepy Floyd had hi s 5 1ope ner an d drama tical ly Golde n State to the Jazz
last
summer
_
hit
a
long
point
playoff game for the
return ed du ring Ga me 2
jumper
and
another
_
Warriors
aga inst the Los
3
after tendin g to hi s daugh poi
nter
in
the
final
minutes
Angele
s
Lakers
on
ter 's serious health probsilence
the
Oakland
din.
.Mother's
Day
20
years
ago,
lem . "I haven' t practiced 10
muc h late ly. so it felt good
"This is an environment a but Davis had no heroics
to be able to step up for my lot of our guys had n't been left in hi s outstand ing posttea mmates."
in before, and I'm glad I season . The Warriors'
.
AP photo
Derpn William s had 20 was ab le to use so me of my leader went 6-for- 16, Go lden State Warriors' Baron Davis (5) is defended by Utah Jazz's Derek Fisher duri·ng the
points and 13 assists as the ex peri ence to help us including 2-of-8 on 3- secend half of an NBA Western Conference second-round basketball playoff game mi
pointers.
Jazz finall y solved the rid- toni ght ,'' Fisher said.
Sunday in Oakland, Calif.
Poor free-throw shooting
dl e of Oracle Arena. where
Fisher dropp ed to the
the underdog Warriors won noor in a heap afte r a scary - the Warriors ' undoing in whi Je Richardson went Warriors hitting IS 3-point- 1Notes: Actress Jessica Alba
th eir firs t four play off coll ision with Dav is with Game 2 - also hurt th em nearl y 42 minutes between ers and jumping to a 30- and boyfriend Cash Warren
home games with th e I :37 left , but even tu ally got again· in Game 4. Golden baskets on the way to seven point lead in front of their were back at courtside in
State was 21-of-34 from points.
de li rious fans . ·
uptempo offens e and fan up to finish the game.
Oakland, · wearin g yellow
the
line,
including
back-InUtah won the series' first
support that d~ zz l ed .the
The Jazz limi ted Davi s to ''We
Believe" T-shirts.
Jaso n Ri chardso n th en
nation .
·
was ejected for clothcslin- back mi sses by Davis with two ga mes with superior 2-of-6 shootin g in the first Warren and Davis played
But with a Jerry Sloa n ing Mehmet Ok ur on a 4:39 to play.
late -ga ~1e execution, hold- · half and he ld Go lden State high-sc hool
basketball
Stephen Jackso n. scored ing on · after Go lden Stat e without a fie ld goa l in the together in Santa Monica ....
game plan that hearkened dri ve to the basket with 37
back to th ose brui sing days seconds · left, prompting 24 points but co mm itted twi ~;e rallied from bi g fin al 7:18 befo re halftime . Utah G Dee Brow n, who
wh en Karl Malone and angry shou'ts by both play- six turnovers and .took a deficit s. Game 3 was n' t yet stilt on ly led by one spmined his neck in Game 2,
John Stockto n rul ed th e ers. Okur added one last spa te of foolish shot s, mu ch of a contest, with tlie poi nt.
sat out again.

Local dance team
wins state title, A6

BY GREG BEACHAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

·Angels

Tournament Softball·
lose b~g lead, fall

GALLIPOLIS - It's not
ove r until it's over - that
sayi ng exists fo r a reaso n.
Holding a 7- I lead after
four innings. it looked very
li kely that Ga lli a Academy
wou ld lay claim to its first
ever sectio nal champi onship
but
New
Lexington had other ideas.
The Lady Panthers made it
7-3 heading into th e seventh and scored fo ur times
in that inning to send it into
extra frames where the visitors managed to pull out a
9-7 victory in nine innings
and more important ly.
claim .the Division. II . softball sectional title .
"Most tea ms wou ld give
up and I ha ve· had teams
li ke that. down 7- 1 they
wou ld say lets get out of
here, especiall y with today
being prom day for us. But

thi s team has been like thi s
all year, res ilient and just
won't qu it." sa id New
Lex rngton head coach Todd
Brown . "My hat goes off to
Gallipoli s, they have a nice
team and do a good job,
they had us on our ll eels."
Things qui ckly turn ed
around in th e seve nth
mnmg of Saturdays sectional championship as
Gall ia Academy ( 17- 11 )
errors - whi ch the team
talli ed five in th e game proved cos tly. The Blue
Ange ls took a 7-3 lead into
the final inning with hopes
of sealing th e win, but it
qu ic kly became apparent
that would not be so easy
when Leach reac hed base
on an error and Scheirt followed her on a walk with
no out~ .
' Huffma n then brought

in final

both teams fan s to their feet
when she s ma s h~d a threerun homer to c'enterfietd to
bring the score to 7-6 with
just one out.
Gatlia Academy pitcher
Amy Noe, who pl ayed a
very strong ga me through
six innings, was then
relieved by Kimber Davis
who finished ottt the game.
Davis retired her first batter
and was then hit for two.
singles by Wolfe and
Gibson, with Wolfe eventually comirlg home to tie the
game 7-7.
The Blue Angels tried to
answer back, with Davis
reac hin g on a wa lk and
Brittany Elliott smashing a
single, but New Lexington
( 12- t 0) pitcher Gibso n put
a stop to that, endin g the
innin g with no damage
done.

HARD WORK HAS
NEVER BEEN SO EASY!

Annual Spring Gun Raffle

Guns and Other
Fabulous Prizes

SPORTS
• Cayaliers take eom·
mand against Nets.
See PageB1

Bv BETH

·Z I P · - - - - - -

- - - - - - - E·ma'L----~---Number of Tickets_ 0 $50.00 each =$,_ _ _ _ __

'

Check, Cash, or Money Order
1 'Make Check&amp; Payable to: .
Noble County Gun Baah

Noble County Agricultural Society c/o Dave Reed

POMEROY- Last night .
Pomeroy Vtllage Councrl
denied a time extension on
demohtton of what rt deems
an eyesore on Lmcoln
Height_s.
.
Restdent Alan Ervm
asked for a lime ex,tens10n
on tearing down a home
which he has a land cmitract
for at 234 Lincoln Heights.
Mayor John Musser said he
spoke with Ervin 20 months
ago about re storing the property on which a home suffered fire damage but noth-·
ing had been done to

HONORING LOCAL HERO
.

I

OBffUARIES
PagJAs
• Sedonia Morgan

INSIDE
• 2 bank wor1&lt;ers killed,
2 others wounded
during Alabama robbely.
See Page A2
• Philippines miilterm
elections declared
'relatively peaceful,'
despite deaths, alleged
fraud. See · Page A2
• Missing Big Boy statue
found on. top of Ohio high
school; prank suspected.
See Page A5
• Cerberus to pay $7.48
to DaimlerChrysler for
· 80.1 percent of Chrysler.
See Poge AS
• 8 states seek
sex offender data
from MySpace.com . .
See Page AS
• TOPS holds award
ceremony. See Page A&amp;
• Tornadoes perform
at Kings Island.
See Page A6
• Bartrum speaks
at Overbrook.
See Page A&amp;

conditioner theft

NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A6

:"mur Friendltf Outdoor Pmtk'r Equipme11t n11d Trnctor Srqnstore"

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Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

·A4

Obituaries

As

~ports

Weather

B Section
A6

1CJ 0007 Obio Valley Publlshln&amp; Co.

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Bv BRIAN J. Rem
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

A3

.,. _ .,, ........ .... ._ oo ~ •-· -'llo4.,... ... JO IC ~ · - - lw,.-,.. ,'1(&gt;1111 ' '"'" .,.., ..., ""'"' ~ --

-

Reid One at General Hartinger
Park in Middleport is now
known as INocl;}y Call Reid,
after the Middleport Youth
League dedicated the field to
Call in honor of his contribu. lions to the local sports community. Call was honored at
the recent openingday festivities at the park, Call was a 40year coach of Uttle League,
Pony League, Babe Ruth, and
high school baseball and girls
softball. His Pony League
teams. were severrtime champions, and in all, Gall's team
won 27 championships. Call
himself was an accomplished
.player, serving as the 1950
Middleport High School bas&amp;
ball team captain, leading the
team to the state finals. The
Cincinnati Reds actively sought
him for their team, and the
Brooklyn Dodgers, Philadelphia
Athletics and Detroit r~ers
also expressed interest in him
as a )Qung baseball player.
Call is pictured with his son,
. Wrxxiy Ill, and Wes Perkins,
and greeting )QUng players '
before they take the field tor
the season's first game.

STAFF REPORT .

Calendars

Jar
activities · include
Southern High School Pep
Club, Student Council,
RACINE - Mallory Hill National Barrel Horse
is valedictorian and Adam Assoc iation,
American
Phillips is salutatorian of the Quarter Horse Association.
2007 Southern High School Racine Southern FFA , FFA
graduating class.
Equine Judging Team, Silver
Hill and Phillips will Spurs 4-H Club , Fellow
make their respective Christian Students,. Spanish
speeche · on · challenges Club;
Racine
United
they 've faced in their lives Methodist Church Member,
durin g Southern 's com- Southern Girls Basketball,
mencement at 8 p.m., May 20 Southern High School Quiz
at the Charles W. !-layman · Bowl
Team.
FFA
Gymnasium.
Parliamentary Procedure
Joining Hill and Phillips Team, National Honor
are southern . honorari ans ·Society, Wooly Bully and
with a minimum grade point More 4-H Club, Meigs
average of 3.5 maintained Cou nty Junior Fair Board,
during their student career: Yearbook Committee, Prom
Ryan Donaldson, son of Co mmittee, Southern High
Sally Donaldso n of Long School Drama Member,
Bottom; Amber Hill , daugh- Varsity S Club, Student
ter of Richard and Wendy Tobacco Athlete Mentor
Hill of Racine; Jacob Hunter. Program. South ern High
son of Doug and Tonj a School News paper Staff
Hunter of Racine; Miranda (The Echo). Racine United
McKel vey, daughter of Methodist Bell Choi r, Meigs
Bruce and Teresa McKelvey Cou nty Fair Gy mkhana
of Portland; Jesse McKnight, Grund Champio n, Senior
so n of Kenny and Janet crass Treasurer, Student
McKnight of Minersville; Council President. FFA Vice
Adelle Rice, daughter of President. National Honor
Julie and Steve Rifn e of Society Treasurer. Buckeye
Racine; Beth any Vance. Giris State participant .
daughter of Dave and Southern Local and Meigs
Annette Vance of Portland; County Academic Award
Rachel Wood, daughter of Banquet attendee.
Kerry and Deborah Wood of
Phillips. son of Kim and
Raci ne.
Keith Romine of Pomeroy.
Hill ,daughterofPerryand and Gary Phillips of
Bobbi Hill of Letart plans to Gallipoli s. plans ·io attend
attend Wilmington College Marshall U niv~ rsity in the
in the fall to pursue a
fall and has received the unibachelor of life sciences . versi ty 's
Board
of
and minor in equine studies Governor's Scholarship to
which witt translale into a a cover tuition costs. He will
pre-veterinary
medicine be attempting a double major
degree. Hill hopes to eventu- in both music education and
ally attend The Ohio State secondary mathe)Tlatics eduUniversity School
of cation. Phillips. a member of
Veterinary Medicine. She the Southern Hieh School'
received th e Wilmington Marching Band. wi ll also be
College . Achiev.ement a member of Marshall 's
Award. Ohio Student Choice Marching Thunder.
Grant, Wilmington College
Phillips recently won the
Academic Merit Award. and Franklin B. · Walter Allthe Wilmington College Scholastic Award which is
Grant, all of which total given to only one senior in
around $ t 1,000.
each county in. the State of
In addition. Hill has Ohio. It is based upon the fol -'
attended many local and lowing live areas: Activities,
regional equestrian competi- awards. personal goal
tions and hopes to use those statement, grade point averexperiences iri her college age, and ACTISATscore.
education. She wi ll be going
Phillips' · other awards ·
to .Mississippi fo r the include: Outstanding Citizen
National Barrel Horse Award-Buckeye Boys State.
Association 's Youth World Straighi A Honor Roll,
Show this summer.
Hill's list of extracurricu- Please see Southern. AS
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

Accident leaves Deputies investigate air
three injured

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

1\ ) l ' l t -. . . . . . .

Top graduates at
Southern announced

-photuo

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT .

out a lift station and pump- for $ 11 ,900 without co uning out sludge at the ·water . cil 's knowledge though
treatment plant. These tasks Musser said Anderson is
are currently being done by permitted·to make purchases
a private septic company. of $15,000 or less without
Council agreed to enter into council's permission.
a loan agreement with
Council ag reed to place
Farmers Bank to purchase two lots on Butternut
the truck at 4.29 percent Avenue up for sale and up
interest for 48 months. for bid .
Councilman Shawn Arnott
Musser sa id there has
abstained on the vote to been some interest in the old
enter into the loan agree- Pomeroy
Junio~
High
ment. Councilwomen Ruth School lot but nothin g has
Spaun and Ruth Spaun voted happened with those bits of
against the purchase and interes t.
loah.
McAngus asked when the
Spaun also pointed out alternative road to Monkey
· Anderson recently purchased a used bucket truck
Ple•se see Council, AS

'

• 3.6.5 PTO HP,
4-Cylinder lndirert .
. lnjt&gt;ction Liquid-Cooled
Diesel Engine
• Choice o( Transmission
• Optional Grand Cab
with Deluxe Featur"!s
• Performance-Matched
Implements Available

16617 T-Ridge Rd. • Caldwell, OH 43724 • 740-732-2547

The Noble County Fairgrounds are located at Exit 25 on Interstate n
Ju•t West of Caldwell, OH
· www.noblecountyfalr.net

improve the
property. have the home ready for
Council has the funds vta occupancy by Dec. 31 but
insurance money to tear the that agreement was rejected.
property down but that was A vote; on giving Ervin a
delayed because Ervin 'had time extension of one month
said he wanted to improve ended in a ti e with Mu sser
the property. Musser said he breaking it in favor of progave him a deadline of ceeding with the home 's
November of last year but demolition. ·
saw no improve_ments. .
Council approved a bid
Pomeroy Chtef of Pollee from Pullins Excavating for
Mark E. Proffitt said his $4,200 to tear down the
code enforcement officer home in· question at 234
rece ives numerous co m- Lincoln Heights.
plaint calls on the property
Though not · unanimous,
that has ·suffered vandalism council voted to purchase a
and Proffitt said is a home $45 ,000 used tanker truck at
for rodents.
the request of Village
Last night, Ervin ·offered Administrator
John
council an agreement to · Anderson to use in pumping

SERGENT

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 S ECDONS- 12 PAGES

:...__ _ _ _ _.....,._State

www. m~d.,ilyst·ntin.-l.,·uon

:.!1111'7

Council
denies time extension on Ervin property
..

WEATHER

SATURDAY, MAY 19, 2007 • Caldwell, Ohio

Tl ll·.Sil,\Y , ~L\Y t;, ,

;;o CENTS • VoL ;,h, No. t&lt;)&lt;J

.

'~
'~~
Noble C~unty Fairgrounds
GATES OPEN AT 10:00 A.M.
DRAWINGS BEGIN AT NOON

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A two car head-on collision injured three people
Friday night; one remains in
critical condition.
According to the police
report Truman .H. Harmon,
21, 32943 Happy Hollow
Road, Middleport was traveli ng westbound on Ohio
124, traveled left of center
and struck a 2007 Chevy
Cobalt driven by 20-year-·
old Alisha L. Lewis, 306 N.
Second Ave:. Middleport
head-on.
Lewis was transported by
Medflight
to
CabeiiHuntington Hospital where
she was listed in critical condition on Monday.

Please see Acddent. AS

.. -.-

POMEROY - An air conditioner has been stolen from
another local church, according to information provided
Monday , by Meigs County
Sheriff Roben Beegle.
Beegle said David Fox of
Racine reported that an air
conditioning unit was stolen
from the East Letart United
Methodist Church, · and that
another unit was damaged. A
week ago, Beegle reported
the investigation df , the
removal of copper tubing
fro m the ce ntral air-conditioning units at St. John 's
Lutheran Church near Racine
and 1 from Sutton United
Methodist Church~ The
Letart Township Trustees

reponed the .theft of copper
tubing from an air oonditioner at the chapel at Letart Falls
Cemetery.
Beegle asked a ny~me with
information about the theft
cases to contact his office.
Beegle said hi s office is
also assisting with the investigation of beer kegs which
may liave been stolen in
Athens County. Beegle said
Tri-County Recycling c~ll ed
his office about a number of
kegs which had been brought
to the recycling business for
sale. While deputies were on
the scene, another individual
brought 13 kegs to the scene.
beputies obtained identification from the subjects, photographed them and the kegs
Pleltse see n.eft. AS

�.

'

•

NATION • WORLD
.Doctors are increasingly ttyiltg to diagnosing
The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

I

autism and other mental disorders in babies
AP MEDICAL WRITER

CHICAGO Within
days of their birth, healthy
babies will look you in the
eye. By 4 months, they will
delight in others. And by 9
months, they will exchange
smiles.
Jacob Day did none of
those things.
"We used to say it was
like it burned his eyes to
look at you," said his moth·
er, Tamie Day of Antelope,
Calif. "It was like a physically painful thing for him.
It wasn't just that he wasn't
looking at us; he was rurposefully looking away.'
Day, who has a psychology degree, suspecfed her son
might have autism. She
enrolled him in a study, published in April, that found
that babies like 1acob are
indeed at high risk for
autism if they do not
AP photo
respond to their names by
Instructional
assistant
Jessica
Reeder
touches
her
nose
to
get
Jacob
Day,
3,
who
is
autis·
12 months of age.
tic,
to
focus
his
attention
on
her
during
therapy
at
the
Day
home
in
Antelope,
Calif.
At
18
At 18 months, he was formally diagnosed with . months old, Jacob was formally diagnosed with autism, about a year earlier than usual.
autism, abotit a year earlier· · Before he turned 2, he began daily intensive .behavior treatment designed to help him lead
than usual. Before be turned a more normal life.
·
2, Jacob began daily inten- "we were being a little with parents by 4 months.
ments is booming. For
sive behavior treatment overzealous," Day sat'd.
• exc· hange smt'Ies and example:
designed to help him lead a · Still, there was no point- sounds with parents by 8 to
-Dr. Fred Volkmar at
more
· no c1appmg,
·
Yale University is studying
He normal
is part life.
of a growing mg:
no share d ' 9 months.
• take a parent's hand to potential ways to diagnose
smtles, and when Jacob
field in psychiatry called would laugh, it seemed like find a toy and point to autism in the first months of
infant · mental
health.
Doctors and scientists are his own private joke. So his objects by 12 to 16 months. life, including whether lookLast year, the · American ing at objects rather than
parents sought out UCincreasingly looking for Davis specialists, who gave Academy of Pediatrics rec- people is a sign. ' 11 think
early signs in babies of them the heartbreaking ommended that pediatri- we're on the verge of being
autism, attention deficit dis- diagnosis.
cians routinely evaluate able to do a much better
order and other mental probJacob, now 3 1/2, has children for developmental job" of diagnQsing autism in
lems that Just a generation made meaningful progress problems such as autism mfancy, Volkmar said.
ago, scarcely ·anyone thanks to treatment, his starting in infancy, and
- Researcher Stephen
thought could appear in mother said, including a begin testing at age 9 Porges a.t the University of
children so youn$.
· breakthrough moment at age months.
Illinois at Chicago is startSome scientists even 2 It still makes her cry to
"Waiting until a young ing a five-year study of
believe. that intensive treat- recall
·
it.
child misses a major mile- whether excessive crying
ment m some susceptible
She was giving Jacob a stone such as. walking or past 6 month~ of age might
babies can actually prevent bath olafling the "itsy bitsy talking may result in late be an early stgn of autism,
autism, attention deficit dis- spider
' ~.' mger game, when rather than early recognition
attention deficit or other
order and other problems.
he looked up and really ... depriving the child and behavior problems.
·
An influential Institute of gazed into her eyes. "He family of the benefits of
-Greenspan is launching
Medicine repon in 2000 was smiling up at me and I early identification and a multimilhon-dollar study
helped energtze this idea. realized that was the first intervention," the academy involving parents and babies
The report emphasized the time he had done that," she said.
at risk for autism or attenplasticity of babies' brains. said. "He has gorgeous blue
Some critics worry that tion deficit disorder. One
It Blso explained how inter- eyes, and l was like, 'My the trend will trigger need- group will n:ceive intensive
acting with babies can God, your eyes are so beau- less diagnoses in children
change their brain wiring.
tiful."'
with normal variations in
"We used to say 'nature
Interest in infant mental behavior.
versus nurture,' but now - health has been boosted by
Dr. Michael Fitzpatrick, a
people really think it's awareness of the prevalence London physician, said that ·
nature through nurture,"' of attention deficit disorders . while early recognition and
said the University of and autism which govern- treatment of true disorders
Chicago's Dr. Lawrence ment offi~ial s said in are important, "the extenGray. .
.
February affects I in 150 sion of these categories to
Tamte. Day notlced _the U.S. children and may be include 20 to 30 percent of
first ottunous clue the mght more common than previ- all children reflects a social
she and her husband, Chris, ously thought.
trend of pathologizing imd
b~u~ht Jacob home after
In April, r~searchers-from medicalizing
children's
hts birth.
the federal Centers for lives, which seems to reflect
"We walked in the door Disease
Control
and . difticulties of parents and
and he wouldn't stop look- · Prevention
and
the teachers in dealing with
injl at our ceiling fan," she Interdisciplinary Council on familiar problems of childswd. "The next day, that's ·. Developmental
and hood development."
all he would look at."
Learning Disorders presentDr. Stal!ley Greenspan, a
Babies typically begin ed a report emphasizing ear- psychiatry professor at
makins eye contact soon tier diagnosis and treatment.. George
Washington
after btrth, and "understand
The repon said that about University who co-authored
at a basic, perhaps hard- 17 percent of U.S. children the CDC-Interdisciplinary
wired level, that eyes are have a developmental dis- group report, said the idea is
special -they look more at ability such as autism, men- not to slap a label .on babies
eyes than at other parts of tal retardation and attention and give them medication.
LT 1041
the face," said Sally deficit-hyperacti vity disor- Greenspan said the goal is to
LAWIITJAClOR
Ozonoff, an autism special- der, but that fewer than half raise awareness about early
·~Wf!Oiw
ist at the University of are diagnosed before start- warning signs and to
.~'"'1.:'""'"'"
•
4t ~ '"""" cld
• 20 tf" Kotill' Coqt"California at Davis' MIND ing school.
·
encourage treatment to
• 20 Ill'
• Pllnld Smwt.ltr hifl1nuun
Institute.
The authors say warning increase the chances that
.
When
his
mother signs include failure to:
children can develop norexpressed her autism con• focus on sights and mally.
_
cems at . Jacob's 6-month sounds by 2 months.
Research on identifying
checkup, the. doctor said . • initiate joyful behavior early clues and testing treat-

Philippines midterm elections declared 'relatively
peaceful, 'despite deaths, alleged fraud
MANILA, Philippines The national police chief
' declared Monday's midterm
vote "relatively peaceful"
despite eight more killings that
. brought the campaign season
death toU to 121 in violence
· that has become a hallrnark of
elections in the Philippines.
Turnout was projected at
three-quarters of registered
vOiers. But scattered reports of
vote-buying and other fraud
trickled in, and balloting was
postponed in several districts
- especiaUy in the south,
home to the southeast Asian
nation's restive Muslirll
minority.
'1t was a picture of chaos,"
said Joe Dizon, a Roman
Catholic priest from the electiQil watchdog group Kontra
Daya, or ·~Against Cheating."
..There was confusion in many

wounded during
Alabama robbery

areas. The elections have not
improved."
A total of 121 people have
been killed in election violence since campaigning
bejlan four months ago, compafed with 189 in the 2004
vote. Warnings that communist rebels might try to disrupt
the balloting with a f]!Sh of
anacks proved unfounded.
"We have noted a relatively
peaceful situation nationwide,
and I am confident tbat · this
will be the ultimate outcome
until after the entire election
process · is completed," Oscar
Calderon, the national police
director general, told reponers.
Among
those
voting
Monday were suspected
Muslim militants and accused
coup-plotters running for
office, who said their .participation proved they love the
democracy authorities allege
they wish to destroy.
"By doing this.} can prove

that I'm on· the good side,"
said Dawud TYrone Santos, a
suspected al-Qaida-linked militant who voted in his northern
hometown of Anda, where he
is running for councilor.
Filipinos were electing 12
out of 24 senators, all 236
House of Representatives
members and nearly 17,500
governors, mayors and other
local officials. Counting is by
h;_md, so official' results are
weeks away.
The
House
of
Representatives was likely to
remain in the . hands of
President GIoria Macapagal
Arroyo's backers, which
would doom any effort to
launch a third impeachment
bid against her over allegations that she fixed the 2004
election. Arroyo is considered
an10ng the United States' closest allies in the war on terrorism.

ZERO

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BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Wednesday, May 15
ROCKPORT - Ch uck
Blakeslee. former re, ident.
will cclehrale hi' birthday
today, card' can be 'ent to
3400 West Ridgewood
Drive. Rockport. 47615 .

Keeping
Meigs County
informed
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Gallipolis, OH .

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(740) 446-0724
David Mink· Owner

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1304) 675-7036
rivertilies ins@suddenlinkmail.com

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7 40-446·9020
O~n

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Open M-( 1Oam-Ciose

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B.irthdays

Thursday, May 17
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association will meet for a
noon luncheon al the
Riverside Golf Course clubhouse in Mason, W.· Va.
Sheriff Robert Beegle wi II
speak on "Identify Theft and
Other Scams." There wi ll be
music by lhe French City
Quanet. Guests are· welcome.
SY RACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club.
open · house, 6:30 p.m ..
Syracuse
Community
Center. program on creating
a hang ing basket, refreshments served.

I AO:nl S~ from

\It.
- -·- -

, t•

Middleport
Masonic on Wedne,day at Pomero y
Temple building. Publi c Library. Dues are payable .
welcome.

Jrench City

_

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Community Calendar

Slgp a .1 year Lease

RlT 42

PageA3.

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Reeel\lt 2 months FREEl

""....---·-lol

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

BY PAUL ALEXANDER

2 bank workers
killed, 2 others

BY JAY REEVES
behavior training, the other
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
will not; both will be· com·
pared through age 5.
BESSEMER, A;la. - A
While rigorous scientific gunman killed rwo bank
evidence is needed to prove tellers and wounded two
that early intervention suc- others during a robbery
ceeds, 'Greenspan said tiis Monday morning, then was
work with patients has shot by deputies as he tried
shown promise.
to walk out with a hostage,
Jacob didn' t say his first authorities said:·
'
word, "more," until he was
Bessemer Police Chief
in treatment and almost 2 -: Nathaniel. Rutledge said the
entered
the
about a year later than nor- gunman
mal. He didn' t say "mama" Wac hovia bank branch
shortly after it opened at 9
until he was 3.
a.m.
and fired on the tellers
He gets 33 hours of weekafter
demanding money.
ly home treatment with
Investigators
believe only a
trained college students,
single
gunman
was involved
including six hours most _
days. The tab is $70,000 but are checking whether a
yearly, paid for by second ·suspect was outside
California, one of the few the bank, Rutledge said.
declined to elaborate
states that pay, through s.tate onHewhat
happened inside.
and federal funds, for early Video from
surveillance
intensive autism treatment.
cameras is being reviewed,
Jacob's sessions involve Rutledge said.
lots of repetition, and
Police identified the two
rewards, iucluding prai se dead tellers as Sheila Prevo
and treats, for a job well and Eva Hudson. Their age
done. For example, to and hometown were not
improve eye contact, teach- given. Prevo had worked at
ers bounce him on a favorite Wachovia for just over two
giant ball, then stop. If he years, and Hudson had·been
turns to look at them, he gets with the company for nearly
praise, maybe a piece of four years, Mitchell said.
candy, and more bouncing.
The wounded
bank
To teach language, they employees were taken to a
use activities like swinging hospital. Police at a news
that get him excited enough conference said that Anita
to make sounds, then offer Gordon was in critical conrewards for sounds like dition and that LaToya
vowels or consonants rather Freeman was treated and
than humming. Then they released.
The suspect, whose name
name objects, encourage
was
not released, was taken·
mimicking, and offer more
to
a
hospital.
rewards . .
Eight employees were
Now he knows the alphainside
the bank at the time
bet, understands commands
of
the
shooting, said
like "Bring me the cow and·
·
Wachovia
spokeswoman
the horse toy," and can say Evelyn Mitchell,
but she
simple sentences . like "I was unsure whether any
want juice," his mother said. customc;rs were present.
"We definitely hope to
FBI spokesman Paul
mainstream him. We hope Daymond said a deputy was
that he will have a job and driving by -the bank when he
have a life where he can saw a man coming o.ut with
take care of himself and be a hostage, Deputies said the
happy,"
Day
said. man was holding a gun to
"Everyone has given us rea- the head of a woman when
son to believe that's not an he tripped, was shot and
outlandish expectation."
was captured.

BY LINDSEY TANNER

' ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageA2

Open

M 111l .

1\Ht ·Offa:·~

• C·PAP
• Portable Oxygen
• Pulse Oximetry
flamily
a

MEDICAL

I

- Thurs. S:.\0-.~ pm

(740) 446-7619

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

\

�.

'

•

NATION • WORLD
.Doctors are increasingly ttyiltg to diagnosing
The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

I

autism and other mental disorders in babies
AP MEDICAL WRITER

CHICAGO Within
days of their birth, healthy
babies will look you in the
eye. By 4 months, they will
delight in others. And by 9
months, they will exchange
smiles.
Jacob Day did none of
those things.
"We used to say it was
like it burned his eyes to
look at you," said his moth·
er, Tamie Day of Antelope,
Calif. "It was like a physically painful thing for him.
It wasn't just that he wasn't
looking at us; he was rurposefully looking away.'
Day, who has a psychology degree, suspecfed her son
might have autism. She
enrolled him in a study, published in April, that found
that babies like 1acob are
indeed at high risk for
autism if they do not
AP photo
respond to their names by
Instructional
assistant
Jessica
Reeder
touches
her
nose
to
get
Jacob
Day,
3,
who
is
autis·
12 months of age.
tic,
to
focus
his
attention
on
her
during
therapy
at
the
Day
home
in
Antelope,
Calif.
At
18
At 18 months, he was formally diagnosed with . months old, Jacob was formally diagnosed with autism, about a year earlier than usual.
autism, abotit a year earlier· · Before he turned 2, he began daily intensive .behavior treatment designed to help him lead
than usual. Before be turned a more normal life.
·
2, Jacob began daily inten- "we were being a little with parents by 4 months.
ments is booming. For
sive behavior treatment overzealous," Day sat'd.
• exc· hange smt'Ies and example:
designed to help him lead a · Still, there was no point- sounds with parents by 8 to
-Dr. Fred Volkmar at
more
· no c1appmg,
·
Yale University is studying
He normal
is part life.
of a growing mg:
no share d ' 9 months.
• take a parent's hand to potential ways to diagnose
smtles, and when Jacob
field in psychiatry called would laugh, it seemed like find a toy and point to autism in the first months of
infant · mental
health.
Doctors and scientists are his own private joke. So his objects by 12 to 16 months. life, including whether lookLast year, the · American ing at objects rather than
parents sought out UCincreasingly looking for Davis specialists, who gave Academy of Pediatrics rec- people is a sign. ' 11 think
early signs in babies of them the heartbreaking ommended that pediatri- we're on the verge of being
autism, attention deficit dis- diagnosis.
cians routinely evaluate able to do a much better
order and other mental probJacob, now 3 1/2, has children for developmental job" of diagnQsing autism in
lems that Just a generation made meaningful progress problems such as autism mfancy, Volkmar said.
ago, scarcely ·anyone thanks to treatment, his starting in infancy, and
- Researcher Stephen
thought could appear in mother said, including a begin testing at age 9 Porges a.t the University of
children so youn$.
· breakthrough moment at age months.
Illinois at Chicago is startSome scientists even 2 It still makes her cry to
"Waiting until a young ing a five-year study of
believe. that intensive treat- recall
·
it.
child misses a major mile- whether excessive crying
ment m some susceptible
She was giving Jacob a stone such as. walking or past 6 month~ of age might
babies can actually prevent bath olafling the "itsy bitsy talking may result in late be an early stgn of autism,
autism, attention deficit dis- spider
' ~.' mger game, when rather than early recognition
attention deficit or other
order and other problems.
he looked up and really ... depriving the child and behavior problems.
·
An influential Institute of gazed into her eyes. "He family of the benefits of
-Greenspan is launching
Medicine repon in 2000 was smiling up at me and I early identification and a multimilhon-dollar study
helped energtze this idea. realized that was the first intervention," the academy involving parents and babies
The report emphasized the time he had done that," she said.
at risk for autism or attenplasticity of babies' brains. said. "He has gorgeous blue
Some critics worry that tion deficit disorder. One
It Blso explained how inter- eyes, and l was like, 'My the trend will trigger need- group will n:ceive intensive
acting with babies can God, your eyes are so beau- less diagnoses in children
change their brain wiring.
tiful."'
with normal variations in
"We used to say 'nature
Interest in infant mental behavior.
versus nurture,' but now - health has been boosted by
Dr. Michael Fitzpatrick, a
people really think it's awareness of the prevalence London physician, said that ·
nature through nurture,"' of attention deficit disorders . while early recognition and
said the University of and autism which govern- treatment of true disorders
Chicago's Dr. Lawrence ment offi~ial s said in are important, "the extenGray. .
.
February affects I in 150 sion of these categories to
Tamte. Day notlced _the U.S. children and may be include 20 to 30 percent of
first ottunous clue the mght more common than previ- all children reflects a social
she and her husband, Chris, ously thought.
trend of pathologizing imd
b~u~ht Jacob home after
In April, r~searchers-from medicalizing
children's
hts birth.
the federal Centers for lives, which seems to reflect
"We walked in the door Disease
Control
and . difticulties of parents and
and he wouldn't stop look- · Prevention
and
the teachers in dealing with
injl at our ceiling fan," she Interdisciplinary Council on familiar problems of childswd. "The next day, that's ·. Developmental
and hood development."
all he would look at."
Learning Disorders presentDr. Stal!ley Greenspan, a
Babies typically begin ed a report emphasizing ear- psychiatry professor at
makins eye contact soon tier diagnosis and treatment.. George
Washington
after btrth, and "understand
The repon said that about University who co-authored
at a basic, perhaps hard- 17 percent of U.S. children the CDC-Interdisciplinary
wired level, that eyes are have a developmental dis- group report, said the idea is
special -they look more at ability such as autism, men- not to slap a label .on babies
eyes than at other parts of tal retardation and attention and give them medication.
LT 1041
the face," said Sally deficit-hyperacti vity disor- Greenspan said the goal is to
LAWIITJAClOR
Ozonoff, an autism special- der, but that fewer than half raise awareness about early
·~Wf!Oiw
ist at the University of are diagnosed before start- warning signs and to
.~'"'1.:'""'"'"
•
4t ~ '"""" cld
• 20 tf" Kotill' Coqt"California at Davis' MIND ing school.
·
encourage treatment to
• 20 Ill'
• Pllnld Smwt.ltr hifl1nuun
Institute.
The authors say warning increase the chances that
.
When
his
mother signs include failure to:
children can develop norexpressed her autism con• focus on sights and mally.
_
cems at . Jacob's 6-month sounds by 2 months.
Research on identifying
checkup, the. doctor said . • initiate joyful behavior early clues and testing treat-

Philippines midterm elections declared 'relatively
peaceful, 'despite deaths, alleged fraud
MANILA, Philippines The national police chief
' declared Monday's midterm
vote "relatively peaceful"
despite eight more killings that
. brought the campaign season
death toU to 121 in violence
· that has become a hallrnark of
elections in the Philippines.
Turnout was projected at
three-quarters of registered
vOiers. But scattered reports of
vote-buying and other fraud
trickled in, and balloting was
postponed in several districts
- especiaUy in the south,
home to the southeast Asian
nation's restive Muslirll
minority.
'1t was a picture of chaos,"
said Joe Dizon, a Roman
Catholic priest from the electiQil watchdog group Kontra
Daya, or ·~Against Cheating."
..There was confusion in many

wounded during
Alabama robbery

areas. The elections have not
improved."
A total of 121 people have
been killed in election violence since campaigning
bejlan four months ago, compafed with 189 in the 2004
vote. Warnings that communist rebels might try to disrupt
the balloting with a f]!Sh of
anacks proved unfounded.
"We have noted a relatively
peaceful situation nationwide,
and I am confident tbat · this
will be the ultimate outcome
until after the entire election
process · is completed," Oscar
Calderon, the national police
director general, told reponers.
Among
those
voting
Monday were suspected
Muslim militants and accused
coup-plotters running for
office, who said their .participation proved they love the
democracy authorities allege
they wish to destroy.
"By doing this.} can prove

that I'm on· the good side,"
said Dawud TYrone Santos, a
suspected al-Qaida-linked militant who voted in his northern
hometown of Anda, where he
is running for councilor.
Filipinos were electing 12
out of 24 senators, all 236
House of Representatives
members and nearly 17,500
governors, mayors and other
local officials. Counting is by
h;_md, so official' results are
weeks away.
The
House
of
Representatives was likely to
remain in the . hands of
President GIoria Macapagal
Arroyo's backers, which
would doom any effort to
launch a third impeachment
bid against her over allegations that she fixed the 2004
election. Arroyo is considered
an10ng the United States' closest allies in the war on terrorism.

ZERO

...
pun

SALE '1699"

'

-

ANNIE ' S MAILBOX

Is his interest real or is he flirting?

Public meetings

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Wednesday, May 15
ROCKPORT - Ch uck
Blakeslee. former re, ident.
will cclehrale hi' birthday
today, card' can be 'ent to
3400 West Ridgewood
Drive. Rockport. 47615 .

Keeping
Meigs County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today
992-21,55

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

WIN UP TO $1,000 ! !!
Employees, lndependenl Contraclors, Vendors and their immediate famllly nol eligible.

Another satisfied
Customer!
"Cal/1ts ft1dt1y tmd you
col!ld be smili11g tool"

..,.,

~
~ADVANCED HfARINC

CEN.T£11
1122 Jacllson Pike • Gallipolis
(7401-441-197_1 (8001-434-4194

'

'

.

.LWC

Storage·

m

[fiJJJJIDJJ]J)

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

~
Rally Package
Quad Seats

12,J)JJ"§j .

839 Kerr Road
Bi~well, OH
(74.0) 446·9043
(740) 388-8320

Gallla Auto Sales
2147 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH .

675-4340

(740) 446-0724
David Mink· Owner

·~

ktique &amp; Craft .MaU

CITIES

STOP 8Y 808'S FOR
.THt PfRtCT
MOTHfR'S DAY GIFT

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

INSURANCE.LLC
'

'

rli Erie

~ Insurance
Debra K.

(304)675-7036
1304) 675-7036
rivertilies ins@suddenlinkmail.com

Auto!HBrne/HusinesstUrt'/

7 40-446·9020
O~n

, Agent

215 Sixlh St. Pt. Ple..,ant, WV

B42 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH

· ltt'althiAnnuity
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!:TOP I~ AIJD S[[ OUR IJ[W
2007 !:Pf~IJG AIR IAATTRtSS
Gtl GR(AI IN TRODUCTORY
SALt PRIC[Sl
" ! rom ( Jr:r J fomt' 'To 'limr.('

Co~in &amp; Snyier Jurniture

•••

tiS St«t• Att ~11e • Ca!li,olis, OH·
lllllla:.. ~l;~lol·lll-1111•-

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ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
88SO UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
740·593-3279 OR 1·800-710-1917
MON · FRI9:00AM · 6:00P~ I SAT 9QOAM · SOOPM

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• Oxygen
• Nebulizers

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· N,,il C.1r&lt;; • Helix Cur•
• f"c&gt;·ll• &amp;. Waxing
· MI•Sdge • llody Wraps
• ~ Packllges • Chemical reels
• Mtcroderm Abr,.ston.&gt;

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326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

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Hours:

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Otlcon Doha.

llii.ES IIF \RI~C
( 't-:\ II· R
GALLIPOLIS
435'/, Se&lt;ond Avenue

(740) 446-2933
Open M-( 1Oam-Ciose

'
••

B.irthdays

Thursday, May 17
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association will meet for a
noon luncheon al the
Riverside Golf Course clubhouse in Mason, W.· Va.
Sheriff Robert Beegle wi II
speak on "Identify Theft and
Other Scams." There wi ll be
music by lhe French City
Quanet. Guests are· welcome.
SY RACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club.
open · house, 6:30 p.m ..
Syracuse
Community
Center. program on creating
a hang ing basket, refreshments served.

I AO:nl S~ from

\It.
- -·- -

, t•

Middleport
Masonic on Wedne,day at Pomero y
Temple building. Publi c Library. Dues are payable .
welcome.

Jrench City

_

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Community Calendar

Slgp a .1 year Lease

RlT 42

PageA3.

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Reeel\lt 2 months FREEl

""....---·-lol

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

BY PAUL ALEXANDER

2 bank workers
killed, 2 others

BY JAY REEVES
behavior training, the other
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
will not; both will be· com·
pared through age 5.
BESSEMER, A;la. - A
While rigorous scientific gunman killed rwo bank
evidence is needed to prove tellers and wounded two
that early intervention suc- others during a robbery
ceeds, 'Greenspan said tiis Monday morning, then was
work with patients has shot by deputies as he tried
shown promise.
to walk out with a hostage,
Jacob didn' t say his first authorities said:·
'
word, "more," until he was
Bessemer Police Chief
in treatment and almost 2 -: Nathaniel. Rutledge said the
entered
the
about a year later than nor- gunman
mal. He didn' t say "mama" Wac hovia bank branch
shortly after it opened at 9
until he was 3.
a.m.
and fired on the tellers
He gets 33 hours of weekafter
demanding money.
ly home treatment with
Investigators
believe only a
trained college students,
single
gunman
was involved
including six hours most _
days. The tab is $70,000 but are checking whether a
yearly, paid for by second ·suspect was outside
California, one of the few the bank, Rutledge said.
declined to elaborate
states that pay, through s.tate onHewhat
happened inside.
and federal funds, for early Video from
surveillance
intensive autism treatment.
cameras is being reviewed,
Jacob's sessions involve Rutledge said.
lots of repetition, and
Police identified the two
rewards, iucluding prai se dead tellers as Sheila Prevo
and treats, for a job well and Eva Hudson. Their age
done. For example, to and hometown were not
improve eye contact, teach- given. Prevo had worked at
ers bounce him on a favorite Wachovia for just over two
giant ball, then stop. If he years, and Hudson had·been
turns to look at them, he gets with the company for nearly
praise, maybe a piece of four years, Mitchell said.
candy, and more bouncing.
The wounded
bank
To teach language, they employees were taken to a
use activities like swinging hospital. Police at a news
that get him excited enough conference said that Anita
to make sounds, then offer Gordon was in critical conrewards for sounds like dition and that LaToya
vowels or consonants rather Freeman was treated and
than humming. Then they released.
The suspect, whose name
name objects, encourage
was
not released, was taken·
mimicking, and offer more
to
a
hospital.
rewards . .
Eight employees were
Now he knows the alphainside
the bank at the time
bet, understands commands
of
the
shooting, said
like "Bring me the cow and·
·
Wachovia
spokeswoman
the horse toy," and can say Evelyn Mitchell,
but she
simple sentences . like "I was unsure whether any
want juice," his mother said. customc;rs were present.
"We definitely hope to
FBI spokesman Paul
mainstream him. We hope Daymond said a deputy was
that he will have a job and driving by -the bank when he
have a life where he can saw a man coming o.ut with
take care of himself and be a hostage, Deputies said the
happy,"
Day
said. man was holding a gun to
"Everyone has given us rea- the head of a woman when
son to believe that's not an he tripped, was shot and
outlandish expectation."
was captured.

BY LINDSEY TANNER

' ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageA2

Open

M 111l .

1\Ht ·Offa:·~

• C·PAP
• Portable Oxygen
• Pulse Oximetry
flamily
a

MEDICAL

I

- Thurs. S:.\0-.~ pm

(740) 446-7619

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

\

�OPINION

the Daily Sentinel

The Daily.Sentinel
·

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio .

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

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

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

T 0 DAY IN HIS T 0 Ry

.
.
.
.
· Today is Tuesday, May 15, the !35th day of2007. There are
230 days left in the year.
'
· Today's Highlight in History:
.·
. .
.
· ·On May 15, 1942, wartime gasolme rdtiOmng went mto
effect in 17 states, limiting sales to three gallons a week for
BOn~ssential vehicles.
On
this date:
In 1856, Lyman Frank Baum, the author of ·~e Wonderful
Wizard of Oz," was born in Chittenango, N.Y.
· In 1886, poet Emily Dickinson died in Amherst, Mass.
In 1911 , the Supreme Court ordered the dissolution of
Standard Oil Co., ruling it was a monopoly in violation of the
Sherman Antitrust Act.
· In 1918, U.S. airmail began service between Washington,
Philadelphia and New York.
In 1930, registered nurse Ellen Church, the first airline stewardess, went on duty aboard an Oakland-to-Chicago flight
opemted by Boeing Air Transport (a forerunner of United
Airlines).
In 1940, nylon stockings went on general sale for the first
time in the United State~.
In 1963, astronaut L. Gordon Cooper blasted off aboard
Faith 7 on the final mission of th~ Project Mercury space program.
In 1986, searchers on Oregon's Moum HOOd found two
teenage survivors of a hiking expedition that became trapped
in a whiteout blizzard. Nine other climbers died.
· Ten years ago: Space shuttle Atlantis blasted off on a mission to deliver urgently needed repair equipment aild a fresh
American astronaut to Russia's orbiting Mir station. Attorney
General Janet Reno requested the death penalty for
Unabomber suspect Theodore Kaczynski. (However, under an
arrangement in which he adlllitted his guilt, Kaczynski agreed
to be sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole.)
Five years ago: The White House acknowledged that in the
weeks before the 9/11 attacks, President George Bush was told
by U.S. intelligence that Osama bin Laden's ·terrorist network
might ~ijack American airplanes, but that officials did not
Jrnow that suicide hijackers were plotting to use planes as missiles. Financier Martin Frdllkel pleaded guilty in New Haven,
CoJ111., to pulling off one of the most brazen swindles Wall
Street had ever seen.
One year ago: In an Oval Office address, President Bush
said he would order as many as 6,000 National Guard troops
to secure the U.S. border with Mexico, llnd he urged Congress
to give millions of illegal immigrants a chance at citizenship.
A defiant Saddam Hussein refused to enter a plea at his trial ,
insisting he was still Iraq's president as a judge formally
charged him with crimes against humanity. The Pentagon disclosed the names of everyone detained at the Guantanamo Bay
prison since it opened four years earlier. The U.S. removed
Libya from its list of terrorist states and said it would restore
normal diplomatic relations.
·
·
Thought for Today: "Not to discover weakness is/ The
t,\rtiflce of strength ... " - Emi·Iy Dickinson, American poet
(1830-1886).

PageA4
Tuesday, May 15,2007

The Daily S~ntinel

.

1

•

US. needs alternative for Iraq: Back Shiites and (win dirty'
Without
prejudging
relm;tance to compromise miiitias - would not emerge
whether President Bush's
with their fonner oppressors as the victor in a power strug"surge" policy will work, the
and partly because al-Qdida gle with ai-Maliki's Dawa
admirtistmtion and its critics
succeeded in triggering a civil Party and the Supreme
Counci l for the Islamic
ought to be seriously thinking
war.
about a Plan B, the "80 perMolton
Bush's troop surge - along Revolution in Iraq. led by
cent solution" - also knoWil
Kordacke with Gen. David Petraeus' Abdul Aziz ai-Hakim.
as "winning dirty."
shift of military strategy - . is . Iran fonnerly backed the
Right now, the administradesigned to suppress the civi l SCIRI and its Badr Brigades
lion is committed to building .
war !Qng enough for Imqi mil- but recently switched allea unified, reconciled. multiitary forces to be able to main- giance' __: foolishly. my
sectarian Iraq - "winning that he and his allies prevail tain even-handed order on Con2ressional source conclean." Most Democrats say over both the Sunni insur- their own and for Sunni. te nd~ - 10 al-Sadr, who's
that's what they want. too. gency and his Shiite adver- Kurdish and Shiit~ politicians regarded by other Shiites ao;
But it may 1101 be possible.
sary Muqtada al-Sadr, who's to agree to share power anJ young. ' oi&lt;1tile and unreliable.
The 80 percent alternative now Iran's candidate to rule resources.
I 'nJcr a win-dirty strategy,
involves accepting rule by Iraq.
The new stmtegy deserves a the United State&gt; would have
Shiites and Kurds, allowing
Shiites make up 60 percent chance, but so far civilian 10 back al -Maliki and the
them to violently suppress of the Iraqi population, so casualties are· not down, Badr Brigades in their eventuSunni resistance and making Shiite dolllination of the gov- progress on political reconcilsure that Shiites friendly to emment is inevitable and a iation is glacial, and U.S. al showdown with al-Sadr. It
the United States emerge vic- democratic outcome.
casualties have increa..:d sig- also . would have to help
Jordan and Saudi Ambia care
torious.
The Urtited States also has nificantly.
No one has publicly advo- gOOd relations with Iraq's
As a result, politica.l for a surge in Sunni refugees,
1
cared this Plan B. and I !mow Kurdish minority. 20 percent patience iQ the United States possibly I million to 2 million
of only one member of of the population, and would is running down. If Petraeus joining an equal number who
Congress who backs it- and want to cement it by semi per- cannot
show
dramatic . already have ned.
Sunnis wi ll suffer under a
he wants to stay anonymous. manently stationing U.S. progress by September,
But he argu~s persuasively troops in Nortl,lem Iraq to Republicans wonied about re- wi nning dirty strategy, no
that it's the best altemative ward o!f _the possibility of a election are. likely to demand question, but so far they' ve
available if Bush's surge fails. Turkish invasioo.
a U.S.. withdrawal, joining refused to accept that they' ne
Winning will be dirty
Ever since the toppling of Democrats
who
have a minority. They will have to
because it will allow the Saddam Hussein, SuJlllis demanded it for years.
do so eventually, one way or
Shiite-dominated Iraqi mili- representing 20 percent of the
Prudence calls for prepard· another. And, eventually, Imq
tary and some Shiite militias population - have been the tion of a Plan B. The with- will achieve political equilibto decimate the SuJllli insur- cone of armed resistance to drawal policy advocated by rium. Civil wars do end. The
1 e1Y WI·n be the United States and the lnaqi most Democrats virtually losers lose and have to knuckgency. 11Jere l'k
ethnic cleansing, atrocities government. The insurgency guarantees catasiiOphic ethnic le under.
. t c•'vt'l•'ans and mass•'ve consists mainly of ex-Saddam cleansing - but without all)'
agams
As my Congressional
refugee flows.
supporters and SUJllli nation- guarantee that a government source says, "Every civil war
On · the. other hand, as alists, both eager to return to friendly to the United States . is a political struggle. The
Bush's critics point out, power, and of jihadists anx- would emerge. .
center of this struggle is for
bloody civil war is the neality ious to sow chaos, humiliate
·Almost certainly, Shiites control of the Shiite commum lrdq right now. U.S. troops the United States and create a wi ll dominate Iraq because nity. Wherever the 'Shiites go
are standing in the llliddle of it safe wne for ai-Qaida opera- they outnumber SUiinis three is where Iraq wi ll go. So, the
and so far cannot stop either lions throughout the Middle to one. But the United States
Shiites from killing Sunnis or ·East.
would get no credit for help- quicker we back the winning
Sunnis from killing Shiites.
Bush wants to establish Iraq ing the Shiites win. In fact, side, the quicker the war ends.
Winning dirty would as a model representative America's credibility would ... Winning dirty isn'l attracmvolve taking sides in the de1110cracy for the Middle suffer because it abandoned tive, but it sure beats losing.:·
(Morton Kmulracke is
civil war - backing tlie East, but that's proved impos- its mission.
Shiite-dominated elected gov- sible so far - partly because
And, there is .no guardlltee execlllil'e editor o/' Roll Call,
emment of Prime Minister. of the Sunni insurgencies, thai al-Sadr .- currently the newspaper r!{' Capitol
Nuri ai-Maliki and ensurillg partly · because of Shiites' residing in Iran and resting his Hill.)
_ _ _ _ _ _ _...:..,---~------~---------,---./..'~----'------,---

Obituaries
Sedonia MOrgan
WATERFORD - Sedonia A. Spen&lt;;er Morgan, 58, of
Waterford, died on . Monday, May 14, 2007. at Selby
General Hospital in Marietta.
She was born May 6, 1949, in Gallipolis, daughter of the
late Sydney A. and Margaret Pauline Diehl Spencer. She
was a retired school teacher having taught for 30 years in
th~ Caldwell School District. She graduated from Pomeroy
Htgh School, University of Rio Grande and received her
Master's degree from Muskingum College.
.She loved horses and was a member of the United States ·
Trotting Association and past treasurer of the River Valley
and Southern Valley Colt Circuits.
Surviving are her husband, Dick Morgan, whom she married in 1999; two brothers, Don Spencer and his significant
ot~er, Pat Vaughan of Pomeroy, and Mike Spencer and his ·
w1fe, Susie of Middleport; two stepsons, David Morgan,
and hts Wife, Amy of Marietta, and Steve Morgan and his
wife, Becky of Chicago, Ill.; special aunts, Phyllis Spencer
and Betty Spencer and cousm, Debbie Spencer; several
nieces and nephews and great nephews; a special friend,
Michelle Dunfee and Tamra Harring.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a stepson, Paul Morgan.
Funeral will be held at -II a.m. on Thursday, May 17.
2007, at Mcc;urdy Funeral Home in . Beverly, with
Evangelist Zack Waite officiating. Burial will follow at
Mei~s Memory Gardens.
.
Fnends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home. Memorial contributions may be made to
Caldwell Elementary School.

For the Record
Divorces
POMEROY -Actions for divorce were filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Natasha A. Stewart,
Albany, against Michael E. Stewart, Chester; S.C., Jason
Lee Runyon, Pomeroy, against Penny Michelle Runyon,
Reedsville, and Sabrina Withrow, Cheshire, against James
Withrow, Cheshire.
·
Divorces were granted to Amy L. Workman from Robert
L. Workman, and Susan R. Bums from Levi R. Bums. .

Local Briefs
Special meeting
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Community Center Board of
Directors will hold a special meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
the Community Center.

Announce banquet

Dl D YOU Gt:.T A
SEXY MOVIE OR A

CHESTER - Chester Alumni Association will hold its
· annual alumni banquet at 6:30p.m. on June 2. Scholarships
will be l?r~sented. Cris Kuhn will provide dinner. mustc.
Reservations are due by May 23.
·

GORY ONE?!
NEITHfR ... SUT
EVERYONE 5/'t'IOKES!

Missing Big Boy statue found on top
of Ohio high school; prank suspected

.,

Separation of powers still broken

York Times (April 28), we senators C;u·l Levin, D-Mich.,
Pulitzer-prize
winning
don't know whether Mr. al- chair of the Anned Services
reporter Dana Priest, who
Iraqi was water,boarded or Committee, mid Lindsey
later helped expose the egreLETTERS TO .THE
otherwise tortured before Graham. R-S.C. Although
gious failures of care at Walter
EDITOR
amvmg at Guantanamo Graham is the chief congresReed Hospital, spoke on April
(where he will not be allowed sinnal architect of denying
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less 12 at New York University's
Nat
to say publicly what hap- Guantanamo prisoners habeas
Center
on
Law
and
Security
than 300' words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
·Hentoff
pened to him). Notes Sifton: corpus rights on their condi·signed, and include address and telephone number. No program, "Secrecy and
"No independent monitors tions of confinement, he
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in Government." · •
The
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of Washington Post journalist
have been able to see him joined Levin in calling· for an
,thanks to organizations and individuals. will not be accept- recalled that after she broke
since his arrest."
investigation of, whether
-ed for publication.
But rest assured, CIA' Khalid Mohammed had
the story on CIA secret pris- the United States was not one
•
Director Michael Hayden told indeed been tortureJ:
ons in Eastem. Europe, "peo- of the signatories. ·
In a March 20 editorial
pie were calling me a traitor."
The president did not admit us on April 27 that his operaAnd,r there were reports that · the existence of CIA's hidden lives always act in "keeping ("Top-Secret Torture), The
Alberto Gonzales- if he can interrogation chambers until with American laws and val- Washington Post concluded:
~
(USPS
213·980)
recall
- would launch a last year,
when . the ues." (There are very few peo- "What's needed is a genuine~ Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
criminal investigation of her. · Rep ubI i ca n- con t ro II ed pie left among our allies who ly independent investigation
Co.
... that airs Mr. Mohammed's
Slnce then, however, Priest Congress - in its eerie last believe that about·the CIA.)
Correction Polley
PubliShed every attemoon, Monday
However, as Vice President charges and tests the adminisnotes, 'There have been ram- months- passed the Military
Our main concem in all stories is to
through Fr iday, 111 Court Street,
ifications from the CIA prison Commissions Act of 2006, Dick Cheney has said about tration's claim that the CIA's
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-ctass
stories
(including), investiga- giving the already · powerful charges of torture by · ·actions were legal.·· So where.
In a slory. calllhe newsroom al (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
lions throughout Europe in presidency even more pow- American interrogators, deci- Sen. Levin, is that investiga992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
every country (connected to ers. ln happily signing the leg- sions in our courts have tion?
the Ohio Newspaper Association .
Priest was no traitor. She
Poatm11ter: Send address correcthose CIA secret prisons). islation, the president said that · defined an act of torture as
Our main number Ia
tions to The Daily· Sentinel, 111 .Court
depending on "whether or not has always followed the con- ·
Those
governments
have
all
the
inmates
(their
identities
(740) 992·2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .'
been forced to respond to their and conditions of treatment it shocks the conscience," he stitutional advice of Supreme
Dllpllrtment extensions are:
told
ABC-TV's Court Justice Louis Brandeis:
citizens and their legislatures. still unknown) had been taken once
Subscription Rates
"Nightiine," "and on what is ··sunlight is the best disinfecAnd there are three criminal out of the prisons.
8y carrier or motor route
cruel and inhuman. And, to tant." And we.need prolonged
investigations."
But
the
Military
,·News
One month
'10.27
some extent, f suppose that's sunlight on this administraAlthough
Americans
have
Commission
Act
neither
EdHor: Charlene Haalllch, Ext. 12
One year
'1 15.84
in the eye of the beholder."
tion to validate Hayden's and
Dally
50'
'
long
been
aware
of
not
only
closed
down
those
chambers
RoJ)OMr: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Senior Citizen rates
Those
who
have
been
torthe president 's assurance that
the CIA secret prisons opera- definitively . nor ended the
Reporter: Beth Sergenl, Ext. 13
011a month
'10.27
.
tion around the world - as ·. CIA ''renditions" or banned tured· while in American cus- they always act "in keeping
One year
'1 03.90
well as.CIA "renditions" kid- the CIA's . and ·our other tody cannot, however, with American laws and val' Sltlsc1ibers SholJtd rerm in advance
Advertising
napping European citizens to forces' use of "coercive inter- become part of the debate on ues."
direct 1o the Oaity Sentinel. No subOuttlde Saleo: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
As Ge11. David Petraeus,
be tortured in other countries rogations" (much lauded by defining torture because anysc ription by mail permitted in areas
Oulolcle Saito: Brenda Davis, E•l 16 where home canier servtce is ·availthing
they
say
about
being
·
com
mander of the U.S.
- there have been no sub- the president) in any of its
ClnoJCirc:: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext. 10
able.
.stantive congressional investi- questionings of terrorism sus- abused is redacted out of mil- Forces in Iraq, said recently:
gations, with subpoena pow- peelS. And we now know that itary commissions' tran- "We mu'st not sink to the level
Mall Subscription
ers,oftheCIA-which,
with Ahd ai-Hadi al-lmqi, an AI scripts. That happened . \O of our enemy."
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
(Nat Hemoff is a nationally
presidential
support,
act~
as a ·, Q~eda leader - since trans- Khalid Sheik Mohammed's
13 Weeks
'32.26
Char1ene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
attempt
to
speak
after
renowned
a111horitv 011 . rlie
law unto itself.
felTed to Guantanamo Bay 26 Weeks
'64.20 ·
As for future U.S. plans for was taken into a secret CIA bei ng transferred to miliiary First Amendment a;1d tlw Bill
52 Weeks
' 127.11
e:.msu:
secret prisons, it was not sur- prison after the president sai,d commissions proceedings at of Rights and autlwr of mlii&gt;Y
news 0 mydailysentiQet.com
Outside Meigs County
prising that when 60 countries the secret cells had been emp- Guantanamo - about ·his books, including 'The War on .
,I
13 Weeks
'53.55
experience in a secret CIA the Bill of Rights and the
on Feb. 6 signed a treaty pro: tied.
I 26 Weeks
' 107. 10
Web:
.
Gathering
Resistance"
hibiting these governments
As John Sifton of Hun\an prison.
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydait}'sentinel .com '
Present at his hearing were (Seven Stories Press, 2004).)
from holding peopl~in secret, Rights Watch told The New
'

.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

GAHANNA . (AP)
seniors, Gahanna police
Students
arnvmg
at Lt. Jeffrey Spence said.
Gahanna Lincoln High No arrests had been made.
School on Monday ·momA .school maintenance
ing were greeted by a 7- crew removed · the statue
foot statue of a rosy- with a forklift and returned
cheeked lad that was pil- it to the restaurant, Spence
fered from a Frisch's Big said. The statue, valued at
Boy restaurant.
$7,000, was not damaged.
The +DO-pound fiber"We're just glad to have
glass figure of the chubby it back," said Karen Maier,
boy in red and white sus- a vice president with
penders was reporting Cincinnati-based Frisch's
missing Saturday morning Restaurants Inc.
The company operates
from its concrete base.
only to turn up on the roof 88 Frisch's Big Boy
of the sc hool · in the restaurants
in
Ohio,
Columbus suburb, police· Kentucky and Indiana. Big
. Boy restaurants operate in
said.
Officers believe it may other states under different
have been a prank by franchisee names.
and community activities
include: Member of Macy's
Great American Marching
Band;
Rio
Grande
from PageA1
University's Symphonic
Perfect
Attendance, Band and Pep Band;
Scholars
National Honor Society, Regional
Superior "I" ratings at solo Conference· at Burr Oak;
and ensemble competition, Buckeye Boys State Band;
school
First Chair Tuba in Ohio high
marching/pep/concert
band;
University 's District 17
gave
90
minute
music
Honors Band, John Philip
Sousa Award, .Student lessons at Bidwell-Porter
Council/Class
Reporter, Elementary as part of its
Southern Local's Academic Literacy Education and
Award Banquet attendee, Development Services protaught Mrs. Struble's third gram; attended and particigrade class each morning for pated in the Model United
45 minutes through the Nations at Ohio University;
Educational ·
Service member of the Spanish Club,
Pep Club and Prorn
Learning program.
Committee.
Pbillips extracurricular

Southern

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

CERBERUS TO PAY $7.4BTO DAII\fi.ERCHRYSIFR
FOR 80.1 PERCENT OF CHRYSlER
BY MAn MOORE

~OM=SHER

M' BUSINESS WR1TERS

FRANKFURT, Germany
German-based
DaimlerChrysler
said
Monday it will sell almost
all of money•losing Chrysler
to a private equity flflll for
$7 .4 billion, backing out of a
troubled 1998 takeover
aimed at creating a global
automotive powerhouse.
Eighty percent of Chrysler
Group, burdened by high
labor costs and declining
market share in the· United
States, will be sold to
Cerberus
Capital
Management LP, a New
York private equity firm.
The impact on Chrysler's
80,000 workers remained
unclear, but Cerberus
Chairman John Snow, a former U.S. treasury secretary,
said the company plans to
keep Cl!rysler's management and work with unions
to return the struggling
automaker to profitability.
Car buyers have little to
fear from the transaction
because warranties and spare
parts requirements must be
honored by law, one industry
analyst said.
"From a consumer perspective, in the practical
sense, there's no real downside.. I think consumers are
pretty well protected," said
Jeremy Anwyl, president of
the Edmunds.com alitomotive Web site. "I can't see a
scenario where consumers
are going to be left exposed
on the thing."
Consumers may benefit
from the deal because
Chrysler ·will have more
money to invest in its products, he said.
In the deal, announced
Monday
morning,
Daimle\'Chrysler AG will
sell 80.1 percent of the
money-losin~ Chrysler to
Cerberus. Its a stunning
reversal of the $36 billion
takeover of the Jeep and
Dodge maker by Daimler
Benz AG nine years ago.
DaimlerChrysler, which
would become Daimler AG
if the. name gains board
approval, would retain 19.1
percent
ownership
in
Chrysler: Cerberus would
hold a majority of a new
company that would run
Chrysler, Chrysler . Holding
LLC.
It's a huge risk for
Cerberus because it has
agreed to take on Chrysler's
estimated $19 billion in
retiree health care co~ts.
Chrysler's U.S. pension
obligation is overfunded at
present, the company has
said.
Snow told a news conference in Germany that the
New York-based private
equity firm believes in
Chrysler and wants to see it
recover.
"We think at this particular
point ·in Chrysler's history,
there may be opportunities
in the private world, the

world of private investment,
that create more room for
growth and expansion, that
allow D13Jlagernent to focus
with greater intensity on the
day-to-day business of producing better cars," Snow
said.
Although Chrysler would
become a private company,
Daimler's shares would continue to be traded on U.S.
and
German
stock
exchanges.
In
midday
trading,
DaimlerChrysler 's shares
rose $1.22, ·or 1.49 percent,
to $83.22. They have traded
in a 52-week range of
$45.98 to $84.90.
Cerberus has steadily been
building strength in the automobile business. It led a consortium that bought a majority stake last year in General
Motors Acceptance Corp.,
the financial arm of GM, and
plans to invest in ailing auto
parts giant Delphi.
The prospect of a sale to a
private equity firm had worried unions in the United
States and Canada because
of the firms' tendency to
slash costs and jobs.
.Daimler will contin1,1e to
work with Chrysler on drive
systems, purchasing, sales
and financial services outside North America. But it
was
clear
that
DaimlerChrysler and its
chief executive .Dieter
Zetsche, who tried to prop
up sales in the U.S. with his
"Dr. Z" television commercials, had lost confidence
that a combined Chrysler
and ·Daimler could be a
worldwide
automotive
leader.
I.
"We determine~! that
DaimlerChrysler, as currentJy structured, would not provide the best" framework,
Zetsche told reporters in
Stuttgart.
Analysts said Cerberus'
entry into auto-making could
be a plus for Chrysler's
U.S.·based
competitors,
Ford Motor Co. and General
Motors Corp., because
Cerberus is more likely to be
a catalyst for change at the
bargaining table with the
United Auto Workers union.
Formal talks between the
Detroit Three and the UAW
on a new national contract
are set to begin in July, with
the master contract expiring
in September. All three have
said they need lower labor
· costs to compete in a global
automotive market, mainly
with Asian manufacturers.
"The threat of an independent Chrysler majority
owned by Cerberus at the
negotiating table· is likely to
bring about broader change
than
having
DaimlerChrysler AG negoti·ating with the union again,"
Morgan Stanley analyst
Jonathan Steinmetz said in a
note to investors.
With Cerberus at the bargaining table, it's unlikely
· that the union would remain
unwilling to give Chrysler
the same .health care concessions that it gave Ford and

Accident
from PageA1

GM, Steinmetz said.
be honored imd that no jobs
"Cerberus brings a fresh would Ill: eliminated.
The Cerberus deal, which ·
perspective and likely a
stronger backbone to union likely is to be completed by
negotiations,"
Lehman the third quarter, probably
Brothers analyst Brian will reduce Daimler's overJohnson said in a note.
all profit by as much as $5.4
Snow said at the news bilhon for 2007, the compaconference that he and his ny said .
company respected orgaPri vate equity firms typinized labor.
cally use money provided by
"I think Cerberus has a pension funds and hedge
good record of working sue- funds and wealthy private
cessfully with companies investor~ to acquire public
that are organized and we compames or parts of comrespect the role of organized panies and take them prilabor and we greatly appre- vate, often to reorganize and
ciate the support tht UAW later sell at a profit.
has given to this transaction,
Snow said Cerberus would
the statement that this is in focus on longer-term earnthe best interest of Chrysler ings.
... tells us a lot," he said.
"We don't think about the
The UAW's endorsement next ' quarter. We don't think
of.the transaction was a shift about what analysts have to
from earlier this year, when say about us. We care very
UAW · President
Ron . much about producing longGettelfinger warned that a term results for investors,"
private equity buyer would he said.
"strip and flip" the company
Analysts said last week
by selling it off in pieces.
that Magna International
Gettelfinger, speakin~ on Inc. was the likely leading
WJR-AM in Detroit, sa1d he bidder
for
Chrysler.
made a last-minute pitch to Billionaire investor Kirk
Zetsche to keep Chrysler Kerkorian, who tried to take
with Daimler over the week- control of Chrysler in the
end, but when that failed, he 1990s, also has said he
decided to embrace the would make a bid. ·
·
Cerberus purchase.
. · Zetsche announced ·Feb.
"The decision has been 14 that all options were open
made, we 're supportive of for Chrysler, which lost $1.5
it," Gettelfinger said. "We're billion last year and is undergoing to close that past chap- going a restructuring plan '
ter. We're going to move for- that will eventually shed
ward."
13,000 jobs.
· Canadian Auto Workers · · Snow said the deal was a
President Buzz · Hargrove sign of faith in Chrysler, an
said he was assured that the icol)ic American brand an&lt;)
collectiv~ bargaining agree- thtrd-largest U.S. carmaker
ment w1th Chrysler would behind GM and Ford.
·

8 states seek sex offender
data from MySpace.com··
Bv SAMUEL SPIES

Theft

.h~~!&amp;

RALEIGH, N.C. ·- Top
law en.forcement officers
from eight states asked
MySpace.com on Monday
to turn over the names of
registered sex offenders
who use the social networking Web site. ·
·
In a letter, the attorneys
general asked MySpace to
provide information on how
many registered sex offenders are using the site, and
where they live . North
Carolina Attorney General
Roy Cooper signed the letter, along with attorneys
general from Connecticut,
Georgia, Idaho, Mississippi,
New Hampshire, Ohio and
Pennsylvania.
Cooper's office said that
in 2006, media .outlets
"reported almost 100 criminal incidents across the
country involving adults
who used MySpace to prey
or attempt to prey on children."
In December, MySpace
announced it was partnering
with Sentinel Tech Holding
Corp. to build a database
with information on sex
offenders in the United
States.
"It is our understanding

to the Public
CPR and First Aid Training

May 21·22, 2007
5:30 • 9:00 p.m.
·Gavin Plant
,7397 N. State Route 7
Cheshire, Ohio 4.5620

.

Register through the
Gallia County American Red Cross

'ILil' Abner"

Ri~er VaHey

U.S. Drama

Deft.

41

Mayl8&amp; 9at8pm

that the data from Sentinel
reveals that thousands of
known sex offenders have
been confirmed as MySpace
members," the letter said. :
In an interview, Cooper
said the ' information was
provided by "absolutely
credible" sources •. whom he
declined to identify.
The attorneys general also
asked
that . My Space
describe the steps it has
taken to warn users about
sex offenders and remoye
their profiles. They asked
the Web site to respond to
their requests by May 29,
Connecticut
Attorney
General
Richard
Blumenthal called the site a
"virtual playground" for
predators.
"That combination of sex
offenders and children is a
recipe
for
tragedy,"
Blumenthal said.
• MySpace's policy pr-events children under 14
from setting up profiles, but
it relies on users to speci fy
their ages.
The site is owned by.
media cong lomerate News
Corp.
Attorneys for MySpace
said they had not seen the
letter and could not immediately comment.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Lewis' vehicle suffered
severe
damage
and
Harmon's vehicle suffered
disabling damage.
No further information
was available at press time:

Harmon was transported
to Holzer Medical Center by
Meigs EMS, was ireated and
transferred to another hospital.
from PageA1
·Daniel R. Lewis Jr., 32,
306 N. Second Ave ..
Middlepoi:t, a passe nger ·in and sent the information to
Lewis' vehicle was also Athens County for an investransported to
Holzer tigation there, Beegle said.
Beegle said the owner of
Medical Center by Meigs
B&amp;D
Market of Tuppers
EMS, treated and transferred
Plains
reported
that the stone
to.another hospital.
had been enteted overnight.

advanced $15,807 from the project. The village recently
general to the Fedeml received a NatureWorks
Emergency Management grant of roughly $1,700
Agency II Fund to pay off though it asked for $20,000.
from PageA1
the remainder, of the parking
The gasoline bill for all
Jot wall repair project. Also village depanmems totaled
Run would be opened. included in the resolution roughly $3,800 this month ..
Musser said to his knowl- was the repayment of . Council discussed developedge the property is still $4,000 from the general to ing·a better system for keep· ing track of where the
owned by businessman Jay the state highway fund.
Cemetery Trllstee · Jiin money is bein~ spent in
Hall and . the Commumty
Improvement Corporation Kitchen asked for help in regards to fuel b1lls.
Council changed its next
haspaid for risers to build- re setting stones in Beech
Grove. Kitchen said the vet- meetin~ due to the ·
ing m the sewers.
Council passed resolu- erans will be putting flag s Memonal Day holiday' to 7
p.m., Tuesday, May 29 at
tion 12.07 increasing the on graves nex:t .week.
·Musser
said
the
·
village
the
Pomeroy Municipal
2007 appropriations by
be
applying
for
Building.
would
$2,145 in the general fund
All members of counciL
to cover interest 'on a vi llage another Ohio NatureWorks
Grant
in
July
to
help
with
.
were
present for .the meetloan.
costs
on
the
Mulberry
Pond
ing.
·
Re solution
13.07

Council

{

740446-8555
'

Class size is limited and will be fillsd on e lirsl-

Ballroom Dance Classes
llegQI5/18
Ariel Dancers Recital at
URG5119

ca/1, first-served basis.

AUDITIONS:
''Caf.tain Fantastic"

Roles or T~teens
MAY22&amp;23
PM

Gavin Plant

The Ariei·Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave.\~~~~,?H

Cheshire, Ohio
I

.
'

,.

�OPINION

the Daily Sentinel

The Daily.Sentinel
·

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio .

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

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

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

T 0 DAY IN HIS T 0 Ry

.
.
.
.
· Today is Tuesday, May 15, the !35th day of2007. There are
230 days left in the year.
'
· Today's Highlight in History:
.·
. .
.
· ·On May 15, 1942, wartime gasolme rdtiOmng went mto
effect in 17 states, limiting sales to three gallons a week for
BOn~ssential vehicles.
On
this date:
In 1856, Lyman Frank Baum, the author of ·~e Wonderful
Wizard of Oz," was born in Chittenango, N.Y.
· In 1886, poet Emily Dickinson died in Amherst, Mass.
In 1911 , the Supreme Court ordered the dissolution of
Standard Oil Co., ruling it was a monopoly in violation of the
Sherman Antitrust Act.
· In 1918, U.S. airmail began service between Washington,
Philadelphia and New York.
In 1930, registered nurse Ellen Church, the first airline stewardess, went on duty aboard an Oakland-to-Chicago flight
opemted by Boeing Air Transport (a forerunner of United
Airlines).
In 1940, nylon stockings went on general sale for the first
time in the United State~.
In 1963, astronaut L. Gordon Cooper blasted off aboard
Faith 7 on the final mission of th~ Project Mercury space program.
In 1986, searchers on Oregon's Moum HOOd found two
teenage survivors of a hiking expedition that became trapped
in a whiteout blizzard. Nine other climbers died.
· Ten years ago: Space shuttle Atlantis blasted off on a mission to deliver urgently needed repair equipment aild a fresh
American astronaut to Russia's orbiting Mir station. Attorney
General Janet Reno requested the death penalty for
Unabomber suspect Theodore Kaczynski. (However, under an
arrangement in which he adlllitted his guilt, Kaczynski agreed
to be sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole.)
Five years ago: The White House acknowledged that in the
weeks before the 9/11 attacks, President George Bush was told
by U.S. intelligence that Osama bin Laden's ·terrorist network
might ~ijack American airplanes, but that officials did not
Jrnow that suicide hijackers were plotting to use planes as missiles. Financier Martin Frdllkel pleaded guilty in New Haven,
CoJ111., to pulling off one of the most brazen swindles Wall
Street had ever seen.
One year ago: In an Oval Office address, President Bush
said he would order as many as 6,000 National Guard troops
to secure the U.S. border with Mexico, llnd he urged Congress
to give millions of illegal immigrants a chance at citizenship.
A defiant Saddam Hussein refused to enter a plea at his trial ,
insisting he was still Iraq's president as a judge formally
charged him with crimes against humanity. The Pentagon disclosed the names of everyone detained at the Guantanamo Bay
prison since it opened four years earlier. The U.S. removed
Libya from its list of terrorist states and said it would restore
normal diplomatic relations.
·
·
Thought for Today: "Not to discover weakness is/ The
t,\rtiflce of strength ... " - Emi·Iy Dickinson, American poet
(1830-1886).

PageA4
Tuesday, May 15,2007

The Daily S~ntinel

.

1

•

US. needs alternative for Iraq: Back Shiites and (win dirty'
Without
prejudging
relm;tance to compromise miiitias - would not emerge
whether President Bush's
with their fonner oppressors as the victor in a power strug"surge" policy will work, the
and partly because al-Qdida gle with ai-Maliki's Dawa
admirtistmtion and its critics
succeeded in triggering a civil Party and the Supreme
Counci l for the Islamic
ought to be seriously thinking
war.
about a Plan B, the "80 perMolton
Bush's troop surge - along Revolution in Iraq. led by
cent solution" - also knoWil
Kordacke with Gen. David Petraeus' Abdul Aziz ai-Hakim.
as "winning dirty."
shift of military strategy - . is . Iran fonnerly backed the
Right now, the administradesigned to suppress the civi l SCIRI and its Badr Brigades
lion is committed to building .
war !Qng enough for Imqi mil- but recently switched allea unified, reconciled. multiitary forces to be able to main- giance' __: foolishly. my
sectarian Iraq - "winning that he and his allies prevail tain even-handed order on Con2ressional source conclean." Most Democrats say over both the Sunni insur- their own and for Sunni. te nd~ - 10 al-Sadr, who's
that's what they want. too. gency and his Shiite adver- Kurdish and Shiit~ politicians regarded by other Shiites ao;
But it may 1101 be possible.
sary Muqtada al-Sadr, who's to agree to share power anJ young. ' oi&lt;1tile and unreliable.
The 80 percent alternative now Iran's candidate to rule resources.
I 'nJcr a win-dirty strategy,
involves accepting rule by Iraq.
The new stmtegy deserves a the United State&gt; would have
Shiites and Kurds, allowing
Shiites make up 60 percent chance, but so far civilian 10 back al -Maliki and the
them to violently suppress of the Iraqi population, so casualties are· not down, Badr Brigades in their eventuSunni resistance and making Shiite dolllination of the gov- progress on political reconcilsure that Shiites friendly to emment is inevitable and a iation is glacial, and U.S. al showdown with al-Sadr. It
the United States emerge vic- democratic outcome.
casualties have increa..:d sig- also . would have to help
Jordan and Saudi Ambia care
torious.
The Urtited States also has nificantly.
No one has publicly advo- gOOd relations with Iraq's
As a result, politica.l for a surge in Sunni refugees,
1
cared this Plan B. and I !mow Kurdish minority. 20 percent patience iQ the United States possibly I million to 2 million
of only one member of of the population, and would is running down. If Petraeus joining an equal number who
Congress who backs it- and want to cement it by semi per- cannot
show
dramatic . already have ned.
Sunnis wi ll suffer under a
he wants to stay anonymous. manently stationing U.S. progress by September,
But he argu~s persuasively troops in Nortl,lem Iraq to Republicans wonied about re- wi nning dirty strategy, no
that it's the best altemative ward o!f _the possibility of a election are. likely to demand question, but so far they' ve
available if Bush's surge fails. Turkish invasioo.
a U.S.. withdrawal, joining refused to accept that they' ne
Winning will be dirty
Ever since the toppling of Democrats
who
have a minority. They will have to
because it will allow the Saddam Hussein, SuJlllis demanded it for years.
do so eventually, one way or
Shiite-dominated Iraqi mili- representing 20 percent of the
Prudence calls for prepard· another. And, eventually, Imq
tary and some Shiite militias population - have been the tion of a Plan B. The with- will achieve political equilibto decimate the SuJllli insur- cone of armed resistance to drawal policy advocated by rium. Civil wars do end. The
1 e1Y WI·n be the United States and the lnaqi most Democrats virtually losers lose and have to knuckgency. 11Jere l'k
ethnic cleansing, atrocities government. The insurgency guarantees catasiiOphic ethnic le under.
. t c•'vt'l•'ans and mass•'ve consists mainly of ex-Saddam cleansing - but without all)'
agams
As my Congressional
refugee flows.
supporters and SUJllli nation- guarantee that a government source says, "Every civil war
On · the. other hand, as alists, both eager to return to friendly to the United States . is a political struggle. The
Bush's critics point out, power, and of jihadists anx- would emerge. .
center of this struggle is for
bloody civil war is the neality ious to sow chaos, humiliate
·Almost certainly, Shiites control of the Shiite commum lrdq right now. U.S. troops the United States and create a wi ll dominate Iraq because nity. Wherever the 'Shiites go
are standing in the llliddle of it safe wne for ai-Qaida opera- they outnumber SUiinis three is where Iraq wi ll go. So, the
and so far cannot stop either lions throughout the Middle to one. But the United States
Shiites from killing Sunnis or ·East.
would get no credit for help- quicker we back the winning
Sunnis from killing Shiites.
Bush wants to establish Iraq ing the Shiites win. In fact, side, the quicker the war ends.
Winning dirty would as a model representative America's credibility would ... Winning dirty isn'l attracmvolve taking sides in the de1110cracy for the Middle suffer because it abandoned tive, but it sure beats losing.:·
(Morton Kmulracke is
civil war - backing tlie East, but that's proved impos- its mission.
Shiite-dominated elected gov- sible so far - partly because
And, there is .no guardlltee execlllil'e editor o/' Roll Call,
emment of Prime Minister. of the Sunni insurgencies, thai al-Sadr .- currently the newspaper r!{' Capitol
Nuri ai-Maliki and ensurillg partly · because of Shiites' residing in Iran and resting his Hill.)
_ _ _ _ _ _ _...:..,---~------~---------,---./..'~----'------,---

Obituaries
Sedonia MOrgan
WATERFORD - Sedonia A. Spen&lt;;er Morgan, 58, of
Waterford, died on . Monday, May 14, 2007. at Selby
General Hospital in Marietta.
She was born May 6, 1949, in Gallipolis, daughter of the
late Sydney A. and Margaret Pauline Diehl Spencer. She
was a retired school teacher having taught for 30 years in
th~ Caldwell School District. She graduated from Pomeroy
Htgh School, University of Rio Grande and received her
Master's degree from Muskingum College.
.She loved horses and was a member of the United States ·
Trotting Association and past treasurer of the River Valley
and Southern Valley Colt Circuits.
Surviving are her husband, Dick Morgan, whom she married in 1999; two brothers, Don Spencer and his significant
ot~er, Pat Vaughan of Pomeroy, and Mike Spencer and his ·
w1fe, Susie of Middleport; two stepsons, David Morgan,
and hts Wife, Amy of Marietta, and Steve Morgan and his
wife, Becky of Chicago, Ill.; special aunts, Phyllis Spencer
and Betty Spencer and cousm, Debbie Spencer; several
nieces and nephews and great nephews; a special friend,
Michelle Dunfee and Tamra Harring.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a stepson, Paul Morgan.
Funeral will be held at -II a.m. on Thursday, May 17.
2007, at Mcc;urdy Funeral Home in . Beverly, with
Evangelist Zack Waite officiating. Burial will follow at
Mei~s Memory Gardens.
.
Fnends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home. Memorial contributions may be made to
Caldwell Elementary School.

For the Record
Divorces
POMEROY -Actions for divorce were filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Natasha A. Stewart,
Albany, against Michael E. Stewart, Chester; S.C., Jason
Lee Runyon, Pomeroy, against Penny Michelle Runyon,
Reedsville, and Sabrina Withrow, Cheshire, against James
Withrow, Cheshire.
·
Divorces were granted to Amy L. Workman from Robert
L. Workman, and Susan R. Bums from Levi R. Bums. .

Local Briefs
Special meeting
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Community Center Board of
Directors will hold a special meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
the Community Center.

Announce banquet

Dl D YOU Gt:.T A
SEXY MOVIE OR A

CHESTER - Chester Alumni Association will hold its
· annual alumni banquet at 6:30p.m. on June 2. Scholarships
will be l?r~sented. Cris Kuhn will provide dinner. mustc.
Reservations are due by May 23.
·

GORY ONE?!
NEITHfR ... SUT
EVERYONE 5/'t'IOKES!

Missing Big Boy statue found on top
of Ohio high school; prank suspected

.,

Separation of powers still broken

York Times (April 28), we senators C;u·l Levin, D-Mich.,
Pulitzer-prize
winning
don't know whether Mr. al- chair of the Anned Services
reporter Dana Priest, who
Iraqi was water,boarded or Committee, mid Lindsey
later helped expose the egreLETTERS TO .THE
otherwise tortured before Graham. R-S.C. Although
gious failures of care at Walter
EDITOR
amvmg at Guantanamo Graham is the chief congresReed Hospital, spoke on April
(where he will not be allowed sinnal architect of denying
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less 12 at New York University's
Nat
to say publicly what hap- Guantanamo prisoners habeas
Center
on
Law
and
Security
than 300' words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
·Hentoff
pened to him). Notes Sifton: corpus rights on their condi·signed, and include address and telephone number. No program, "Secrecy and
"No independent monitors tions of confinement, he
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in Government." · •
The
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of Washington Post journalist
have been able to see him joined Levin in calling· for an
,thanks to organizations and individuals. will not be accept- recalled that after she broke
since his arrest."
investigation of, whether
-ed for publication.
But rest assured, CIA' Khalid Mohammed had
the story on CIA secret pris- the United States was not one
•
Director Michael Hayden told indeed been tortureJ:
ons in Eastem. Europe, "peo- of the signatories. ·
In a March 20 editorial
pie were calling me a traitor."
The president did not admit us on April 27 that his operaAnd,r there were reports that · the existence of CIA's hidden lives always act in "keeping ("Top-Secret Torture), The
Alberto Gonzales- if he can interrogation chambers until with American laws and val- Washington Post concluded:
~
(USPS
213·980)
recall
- would launch a last year,
when . the ues." (There are very few peo- "What's needed is a genuine~ Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
criminal investigation of her. · Rep ubI i ca n- con t ro II ed pie left among our allies who ly independent investigation
Co.
... that airs Mr. Mohammed's
Slnce then, however, Priest Congress - in its eerie last believe that about·the CIA.)
Correction Polley
PubliShed every attemoon, Monday
However, as Vice President charges and tests the adminisnotes, 'There have been ram- months- passed the Military
Our main concem in all stories is to
through Fr iday, 111 Court Street,
ifications from the CIA prison Commissions Act of 2006, Dick Cheney has said about tration's claim that the CIA's
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-ctass
stories
(including), investiga- giving the already · powerful charges of torture by · ·actions were legal.·· So where.
In a slory. calllhe newsroom al (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
lions throughout Europe in presidency even more pow- American interrogators, deci- Sen. Levin, is that investiga992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
every country (connected to ers. ln happily signing the leg- sions in our courts have tion?
the Ohio Newspaper Association .
Priest was no traitor. She
Poatm11ter: Send address correcthose CIA secret prisons). islation, the president said that · defined an act of torture as
Our main number Ia
tions to The Daily· Sentinel, 111 .Court
depending on "whether or not has always followed the con- ·
Those
governments
have
all
the
inmates
(their
identities
(740) 992·2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .'
been forced to respond to their and conditions of treatment it shocks the conscience," he stitutional advice of Supreme
Dllpllrtment extensions are:
told
ABC-TV's Court Justice Louis Brandeis:
citizens and their legislatures. still unknown) had been taken once
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"Nightiine," "and on what is ··sunlight is the best disinfecAnd there are three criminal out of the prisons.
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But
the
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'10.27
some extent, f suppose that's sunlight on this administraAlthough
Americans
have
Commission
Act
neither
EdHor: Charlene Haalllch, Ext. 12
One year
'1 15.84
in the eye of the beholder."
tion to validate Hayden's and
Dally
50'
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long
been
aware
of
not
only
closed
down
those
chambers
RoJ)OMr: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Senior Citizen rates
Those
who
have
been
torthe president 's assurance that
the CIA secret prisons opera- definitively . nor ended the
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011a month
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tion around the world - as ·. CIA ''renditions" or banned tured· while in American cus- they always act "in keeping
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Advertising
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direct 1o the Oaity Sentinel. No subOuttlde Saleo: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
As Ge11. David Petraeus,
be tortured in other countries rogations" (much lauded by defining torture because anysc ription by mail permitted in areas
Oulolcle Saito: Brenda Davis, E•l 16 where home canier servtce is ·availthing
they
say
about
being
·
com
mander of the U.S.
- there have been no sub- the president) in any of its
ClnoJCirc:: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext. 10
able.
.stantive congressional investi- questionings of terrorism sus- abused is redacted out of mil- Forces in Iraq, said recently:
gations, with subpoena pow- peelS. And we now know that itary commissions' tran- "We mu'st not sink to the level
Mall Subscription
ers,oftheCIA-which,
with Ahd ai-Hadi al-lmqi, an AI scripts. That happened . \O of our enemy."
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
(Nat Hemoff is a nationally
presidential
support,
act~
as a ·, Q~eda leader - since trans- Khalid Sheik Mohammed's
13 Weeks
'32.26
Char1ene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
attempt
to
speak
after
renowned
a111horitv 011 . rlie
law unto itself.
felTed to Guantanamo Bay 26 Weeks
'64.20 ·
As for future U.S. plans for was taken into a secret CIA bei ng transferred to miliiary First Amendment a;1d tlw Bill
52 Weeks
' 127.11
e:.msu:
secret prisons, it was not sur- prison after the president sai,d commissions proceedings at of Rights and autlwr of mlii&gt;Y
news 0 mydailysentiQet.com
Outside Meigs County
prising that when 60 countries the secret cells had been emp- Guantanamo - about ·his books, including 'The War on .
,I
13 Weeks
'53.55
experience in a secret CIA the Bill of Rights and the
on Feb. 6 signed a treaty pro: tied.
I 26 Weeks
' 107. 10
Web:
.
Gathering
Resistance"
hibiting these governments
As John Sifton of Hun\an prison.
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydait}'sentinel .com '
Present at his hearing were (Seven Stories Press, 2004).)
from holding peopl~in secret, Rights Watch told The New
'

.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

GAHANNA . (AP)
seniors, Gahanna police
Students
arnvmg
at Lt. Jeffrey Spence said.
Gahanna Lincoln High No arrests had been made.
School on Monday ·momA .school maintenance
ing were greeted by a 7- crew removed · the statue
foot statue of a rosy- with a forklift and returned
cheeked lad that was pil- it to the restaurant, Spence
fered from a Frisch's Big said. The statue, valued at
Boy restaurant.
$7,000, was not damaged.
The +DO-pound fiber"We're just glad to have
glass figure of the chubby it back," said Karen Maier,
boy in red and white sus- a vice president with
penders was reporting Cincinnati-based Frisch's
missing Saturday morning Restaurants Inc.
The company operates
from its concrete base.
only to turn up on the roof 88 Frisch's Big Boy
of the sc hool · in the restaurants
in
Ohio,
Columbus suburb, police· Kentucky and Indiana. Big
. Boy restaurants operate in
said.
Officers believe it may other states under different
have been a prank by franchisee names.
and community activities
include: Member of Macy's
Great American Marching
Band;
Rio
Grande
from PageA1
University's Symphonic
Perfect
Attendance, Band and Pep Band;
Scholars
National Honor Society, Regional
Superior "I" ratings at solo Conference· at Burr Oak;
and ensemble competition, Buckeye Boys State Band;
school
First Chair Tuba in Ohio high
marching/pep/concert
band;
University 's District 17
gave
90
minute
music
Honors Band, John Philip
Sousa Award, .Student lessons at Bidwell-Porter
Council/Class
Reporter, Elementary as part of its
Southern Local's Academic Literacy Education and
Award Banquet attendee, Development Services protaught Mrs. Struble's third gram; attended and particigrade class each morning for pated in the Model United
45 minutes through the Nations at Ohio University;
Educational ·
Service member of the Spanish Club,
Pep Club and Prorn
Learning program.
Committee.
Pbillips extracurricular

Southern

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

CERBERUS TO PAY $7.4BTO DAII\fi.ERCHRYSIFR
FOR 80.1 PERCENT OF CHRYSlER
BY MAn MOORE

~OM=SHER

M' BUSINESS WR1TERS

FRANKFURT, Germany
German-based
DaimlerChrysler
said
Monday it will sell almost
all of money•losing Chrysler
to a private equity flflll for
$7 .4 billion, backing out of a
troubled 1998 takeover
aimed at creating a global
automotive powerhouse.
Eighty percent of Chrysler
Group, burdened by high
labor costs and declining
market share in the· United
States, will be sold to
Cerberus
Capital
Management LP, a New
York private equity firm.
The impact on Chrysler's
80,000 workers remained
unclear, but Cerberus
Chairman John Snow, a former U.S. treasury secretary,
said the company plans to
keep Cl!rysler's management and work with unions
to return the struggling
automaker to profitability.
Car buyers have little to
fear from the transaction
because warranties and spare
parts requirements must be
honored by law, one industry
analyst said.
"From a consumer perspective, in the practical
sense, there's no real downside.. I think consumers are
pretty well protected," said
Jeremy Anwyl, president of
the Edmunds.com alitomotive Web site. "I can't see a
scenario where consumers
are going to be left exposed
on the thing."
Consumers may benefit
from the deal because
Chrysler ·will have more
money to invest in its products, he said.
In the deal, announced
Monday
morning,
Daimle\'Chrysler AG will
sell 80.1 percent of the
money-losin~ Chrysler to
Cerberus. Its a stunning
reversal of the $36 billion
takeover of the Jeep and
Dodge maker by Daimler
Benz AG nine years ago.
DaimlerChrysler, which
would become Daimler AG
if the. name gains board
approval, would retain 19.1
percent
ownership
in
Chrysler: Cerberus would
hold a majority of a new
company that would run
Chrysler, Chrysler . Holding
LLC.
It's a huge risk for
Cerberus because it has
agreed to take on Chrysler's
estimated $19 billion in
retiree health care co~ts.
Chrysler's U.S. pension
obligation is overfunded at
present, the company has
said.
Snow told a news conference in Germany that the
New York-based private
equity firm believes in
Chrysler and wants to see it
recover.
"We think at this particular
point ·in Chrysler's history,
there may be opportunities
in the private world, the

world of private investment,
that create more room for
growth and expansion, that
allow D13Jlagernent to focus
with greater intensity on the
day-to-day business of producing better cars," Snow
said.
Although Chrysler would
become a private company,
Daimler's shares would continue to be traded on U.S.
and
German
stock
exchanges.
In
midday
trading,
DaimlerChrysler 's shares
rose $1.22, ·or 1.49 percent,
to $83.22. They have traded
in a 52-week range of
$45.98 to $84.90.
Cerberus has steadily been
building strength in the automobile business. It led a consortium that bought a majority stake last year in General
Motors Acceptance Corp.,
the financial arm of GM, and
plans to invest in ailing auto
parts giant Delphi.
The prospect of a sale to a
private equity firm had worried unions in the United
States and Canada because
of the firms' tendency to
slash costs and jobs.
.Daimler will contin1,1e to
work with Chrysler on drive
systems, purchasing, sales
and financial services outside North America. But it
was
clear
that
DaimlerChrysler and its
chief executive .Dieter
Zetsche, who tried to prop
up sales in the U.S. with his
"Dr. Z" television commercials, had lost confidence
that a combined Chrysler
and ·Daimler could be a
worldwide
automotive
leader.
I.
"We determine~! that
DaimlerChrysler, as currentJy structured, would not provide the best" framework,
Zetsche told reporters in
Stuttgart.
Analysts said Cerberus'
entry into auto-making could
be a plus for Chrysler's
U.S.·based
competitors,
Ford Motor Co. and General
Motors Corp., because
Cerberus is more likely to be
a catalyst for change at the
bargaining table with the
United Auto Workers union.
Formal talks between the
Detroit Three and the UAW
on a new national contract
are set to begin in July, with
the master contract expiring
in September. All three have
said they need lower labor
· costs to compete in a global
automotive market, mainly
with Asian manufacturers.
"The threat of an independent Chrysler majority
owned by Cerberus at the
negotiating table· is likely to
bring about broader change
than
having
DaimlerChrysler AG negoti·ating with the union again,"
Morgan Stanley analyst
Jonathan Steinmetz said in a
note to investors.
With Cerberus at the bargaining table, it's unlikely
· that the union would remain
unwilling to give Chrysler
the same .health care concessions that it gave Ford and

Accident
from PageA1

GM, Steinmetz said.
be honored imd that no jobs
"Cerberus brings a fresh would Ill: eliminated.
The Cerberus deal, which ·
perspective and likely a
stronger backbone to union likely is to be completed by
negotiations,"
Lehman the third quarter, probably
Brothers analyst Brian will reduce Daimler's overJohnson said in a note.
all profit by as much as $5.4
Snow said at the news bilhon for 2007, the compaconference that he and his ny said .
company respected orgaPri vate equity firms typinized labor.
cally use money provided by
"I think Cerberus has a pension funds and hedge
good record of working sue- funds and wealthy private
cessfully with companies investor~ to acquire public
that are organized and we compames or parts of comrespect the role of organized panies and take them prilabor and we greatly appre- vate, often to reorganize and
ciate the support tht UAW later sell at a profit.
has given to this transaction,
Snow said Cerberus would
the statement that this is in focus on longer-term earnthe best interest of Chrysler ings.
... tells us a lot," he said.
"We don't think about the
The UAW's endorsement next ' quarter. We don't think
of.the transaction was a shift about what analysts have to
from earlier this year, when say about us. We care very
UAW · President
Ron . much about producing longGettelfinger warned that a term results for investors,"
private equity buyer would he said.
"strip and flip" the company
Analysts said last week
by selling it off in pieces.
that Magna International
Gettelfinger, speakin~ on Inc. was the likely leading
WJR-AM in Detroit, sa1d he bidder
for
Chrysler.
made a last-minute pitch to Billionaire investor Kirk
Zetsche to keep Chrysler Kerkorian, who tried to take
with Daimler over the week- control of Chrysler in the
end, but when that failed, he 1990s, also has said he
decided to embrace the would make a bid. ·
·
Cerberus purchase.
. · Zetsche announced ·Feb.
"The decision has been 14 that all options were open
made, we 're supportive of for Chrysler, which lost $1.5
it," Gettelfinger said. "We're billion last year and is undergoing to close that past chap- going a restructuring plan '
ter. We're going to move for- that will eventually shed
ward."
13,000 jobs.
· Canadian Auto Workers · · Snow said the deal was a
President Buzz · Hargrove sign of faith in Chrysler, an
said he was assured that the icol)ic American brand an&lt;)
collectiv~ bargaining agree- thtrd-largest U.S. carmaker
ment w1th Chrysler would behind GM and Ford.
·

8 states seek sex offender
data from MySpace.com··
Bv SAMUEL SPIES

Theft

.h~~!&amp;

RALEIGH, N.C. ·- Top
law en.forcement officers
from eight states asked
MySpace.com on Monday
to turn over the names of
registered sex offenders
who use the social networking Web site. ·
·
In a letter, the attorneys
general asked MySpace to
provide information on how
many registered sex offenders are using the site, and
where they live . North
Carolina Attorney General
Roy Cooper signed the letter, along with attorneys
general from Connecticut,
Georgia, Idaho, Mississippi,
New Hampshire, Ohio and
Pennsylvania.
Cooper's office said that
in 2006, media .outlets
"reported almost 100 criminal incidents across the
country involving adults
who used MySpace to prey
or attempt to prey on children."
In December, MySpace
announced it was partnering
with Sentinel Tech Holding
Corp. to build a database
with information on sex
offenders in the United
States.
"It is our understanding

to the Public
CPR and First Aid Training

May 21·22, 2007
5:30 • 9:00 p.m.
·Gavin Plant
,7397 N. State Route 7
Cheshire, Ohio 4.5620

.

Register through the
Gallia County American Red Cross

'ILil' Abner"

Ri~er VaHey

U.S. Drama

Deft.

41

Mayl8&amp; 9at8pm

that the data from Sentinel
reveals that thousands of
known sex offenders have
been confirmed as MySpace
members," the letter said. :
In an interview, Cooper
said the ' information was
provided by "absolutely
credible" sources •. whom he
declined to identify.
The attorneys general also
asked
that . My Space
describe the steps it has
taken to warn users about
sex offenders and remoye
their profiles. They asked
the Web site to respond to
their requests by May 29,
Connecticut
Attorney
General
Richard
Blumenthal called the site a
"virtual playground" for
predators.
"That combination of sex
offenders and children is a
recipe
for
tragedy,"
Blumenthal said.
• MySpace's policy pr-events children under 14
from setting up profiles, but
it relies on users to speci fy
their ages.
The site is owned by.
media cong lomerate News
Corp.
Attorneys for MySpace
said they had not seen the
letter and could not immediately comment.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Lewis' vehicle suffered
severe
damage
and
Harmon's vehicle suffered
disabling damage.
No further information
was available at press time:

Harmon was transported
to Holzer Medical Center by
Meigs EMS, was ireated and
transferred to another hospital.
from PageA1
·Daniel R. Lewis Jr., 32,
306 N. Second Ave ..
Middlepoi:t, a passe nger ·in and sent the information to
Lewis' vehicle was also Athens County for an investransported to
Holzer tigation there, Beegle said.
Beegle said the owner of
Medical Center by Meigs
B&amp;D
Market of Tuppers
EMS, treated and transferred
Plains
reported
that the stone
to.another hospital.
had been enteted overnight.

advanced $15,807 from the project. The village recently
general to the Fedeml received a NatureWorks
Emergency Management grant of roughly $1,700
Agency II Fund to pay off though it asked for $20,000.
from PageA1
the remainder, of the parking
The gasoline bill for all
Jot wall repair project. Also village depanmems totaled
Run would be opened. included in the resolution roughly $3,800 this month ..
Musser said to his knowl- was the repayment of . Council discussed developedge the property is still $4,000 from the general to ing·a better system for keep· ing track of where the
owned by businessman Jay the state highway fund.
Cemetery Trllstee · Jiin money is bein~ spent in
Hall and . the Commumty
Improvement Corporation Kitchen asked for help in regards to fuel b1lls.
Council changed its next
haspaid for risers to build- re setting stones in Beech
Grove. Kitchen said the vet- meetin~ due to the ·
ing m the sewers.
Council passed resolu- erans will be putting flag s Memonal Day holiday' to 7
p.m., Tuesday, May 29 at
tion 12.07 increasing the on graves nex:t .week.
·Musser
said
the
·
village
the
Pomeroy Municipal
2007 appropriations by
be
applying
for
Building.
would
$2,145 in the general fund
All members of counciL
to cover interest 'on a vi llage another Ohio NatureWorks
Grant
in
July
to
help
with
.
were
present for .the meetloan.
costs
on
the
Mulberry
Pond
ing.
·
Re solution
13.07

Council

{

740446-8555
'

Class size is limited and will be fillsd on e lirsl-

Ballroom Dance Classes
llegQI5/18
Ariel Dancers Recital at
URG5119

ca/1, first-served basis.

AUDITIONS:
''Caf.tain Fantastic"

Roles or T~teens
MAY22&amp;23
PM

Gavin Plant

The Ariei·Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave.\~~~~,?H

Cheshire, Ohio
I

.
'

,.

�·P ageA6

COMMUNI1'Y

The Daily Sentinel

May15,2007

Members
share ,:Yeadings ·
RACIN E- Mary K. Yost
had devotions and all attend:
ing shared readin g~ for the
program at tho: ·recent meeting of the Bertha M. Sayre
Missionary Society, held at
the home of Nondus
Hendricks.
Yost\ devot ions were
"Good Shepherd" from ·
23.
Members
Psalm
answered roll call with scripture passages. Readings were
"Time." by Mary K. Yost.
"Smile'' by Mabel Br&lt;Jck.
"Spring Time" by Geraldine
Cleland, "Don't Worry:· by
Martha Lou Beegle. "God's
Gifts" by Linda Grimm.
'Thank ·You, Lord," by
Mildred Shuler, ""What is a
· Friend"
by
Nondus
Hendricks. and "Home at
Last,': by Lillian Hayman.
Lillian Hayman discussed
White Cross Gift of the
Heart. Members approved a
donation to Bacone College.
Mary K. Yost brought marble
Easter eggs for all attending.
Mildred Shuler closed the
meeting with prayer and a
blessing over refreshments
served to all attending.

Graduates UC
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
- Robyn Freeman of
Pomeroy graduated from
· the
University
of
Charleston, . W.Va. recent! y
with a degree in interior
· · design. She is an active
member of the American
Society
of
Interior
. Designers (ASID). ·
She is the daughter of
Robert C. and Nancy
Freeman.

Inside
Rem lose fourth straight, Page 82
NASCAR comumed with Eambanlt, Page 82 ·

.Bartrum speaks
at Overbrook

Tuesday, May 15, 2007
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROV - A !dledule of l41C00ling OOilege
anct hi!;~ school varsity sporting BY9111&amp; irNotving
loams from Ga~ia and Meigs counties.

Tuetday'a game
Tournament SOftball
Southern vs. Green at Minford HS, 5

p.m.

Track and Reid

a•ma•

Wednaeday'a
Tournament Baeeball

Leesburg Fairfield vs. Southern at
Univ. ol Rio Grande, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy vs. Washington C.H. at
VA Stadium, 5 p.m.
Track and Field

Division II District at Oak Hill

Thuradav'• a•mt

Tournament Bllebalt
Sciotoville East vs . Eastern
Lucasville Valley HS, 5 p.m..

.

Submitted photo

Tr•ck 1nd Field

Division Ill District at Oak Hill
Salurdov'a game

Track ond Reid
Dlvlslon II DIStrlct al Oak Hlll

Local dance team wins state title ·
GALLIPOLIS - During
Ohio's
State
Dance
Championships
in
Columbus March 31 and
April I , the Gallia-Meigs
Performing Arts Junior
Team won the state dance
championship title for Large
Junior Recreational Group.
Dance members are
Kelsey Purdum, Sarah
Stump, Courtnee Woodyard,
·Grace Martyn, Mackenzie
Erwin ,. Elizabeth Holley,
Madison Holley, Alexa
Paxton, Claudia Skinner and
Samantha McClure.
The Senior Team from
Gallia-Meigs Performing
Arts won first place with a

gold rating for Lyrical
Senior Small Recreational
Dance. Members are Kerri
VanReeth, Alisha Green,
Jennifer Blevins, Samantha
Denbow, Jessica Northup,
Stacy
Stump,
Jordan
Simpson and Kayla Purdum.
Solo winners were Kayla
·Purdum, first lyrical, age 13;
Jennifer Blevins, first tap,
age 13; Kelsey Purdum, first
jazz, age I0; Stacy Stump!
second tap, age 14: Kern
VanReeth, second jazz, age
16; and .first place duet/trio
age 12/13 winners were
Alexa Paxton and Claudia
Skinner. All the soloists
received gold ratings.

The compelltion routines
were choreographed by
Patty Fellure.
The students will perform
in · the
Gallia-Meigs
Performing Arts recital on
Saturday,'June 2 at 7 p.m. in
the Fine and Performing
Arts · Center
at
the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College.

at

Friday'• game

Dance teams from the Gallia-Meigs Performing Arts that participated in the Ohio State
Dance Championships were, from left, first row; Grace Martyn, Madison Holley and
Courtnee Woodyard: second row, Mackenzie Erwin, Elizabeth Holley, Claudia . Skinner,
Kelsey Purdum and Sarah Stump; back row, Samantha McClure. ·

Members of the
Southern l•ligh
School
Marching Band
were treated to
a reward day
this past weekend at Kings
Island where
they also performed. The
band boosters
chartered a bus
to the amusement park so
the kids could ·
ride in style.

AP photo

New Jersey Nets' Richard Jet.ferson, right, drives to the basket as he is guarded by Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James
during the first quarter of Game 4 of NBA Eastern conference semi-final basketball Monday in East Rutherford, N.J.

INSIDE

,

Cavs regain control
of Eastern ·semifmals

Submitted photo

Yesterday Mike Bartrum spoke at Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center to kick off festivities for National Nllrsing Home
Week. Bartrum spoke about generations helping one anoth·
er through life , how everyone has a purpose and that everything happens for a reason. He also stressed his pride in
Meigs County.
·

TOPS holds award ceremony

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Y~U ~~UIA7 &amp;~N~lt'e-Pl AINt.Plfl~INt! ON
ve.e.~~.-y t'NN~ VJl..ar...-

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in .

every week for one of the advertisers

FIRST ISSUE ON MAY 17TH

to present

en
ke
•

J

• 6:30p.m.
• Light refreshments will be served

West winds 10 to 15
mph . Chance of rain 50
percent.
Wednesday
night...Partly
cloudy.
Much cooler with lows in
the mid 40s. Northwest
winds 5 to I0 mph .
Thursday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Thursday ni ght.. .Partly
cloudy. Lows 111 the
lower -lOs.
Friday
through
clear.
Sunday .. :Mos tl y
Highs in the mid 70s.
Lows· in the upper 40s.
Sunday
night
and
Monday .. .Partly cloudy.
Lows in Ihe mid 50s.
Highs. in the mid 70s.

• Public is cordially invited
For more in.fommtion about the Womm &amp; Stro*e
Public For1111i or other upcoming educational
progrt~nfj pleavu afl, (30-1) 675-iJ.JO. Ext. 1151.

CLEVELAND (AP) - · ·
Cleveland Browns wide
receiver Braylim Edwards
has pledged $1 million in
college scholarships for
eighth grade students in
Cleveland who keep at least
a 2.5 grade point average
through high school, the
team announced Monday.
Edwards' foundation is
choosing I00 students from
the city's 58,000-student
district for the program,
which will include mentoring and tutoring. The students will also volunteer for
IS hours of community service each year and will not
be allowed unexcused
absences, the Browns said
in a statement.
Edwards is scheduled to
announce the program on
Wednesday, along with the
I 00 students and Cleveland
Mayor Frank Jackson, at
Lincoln-West High School,
the Browns said.
: The program follows
Edwards decision last year
to donate $500,000 to the
University of Michigan,
:where Edwards played from
2001-2004, to , create a
scholarship endowment for
football players.
Edwards will enter his
{hird year in the NFL this
fall.

CoNfACfUS
· OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)

Agnes A.E. Simon, MD
Family Medicine

. ..-To increase awareness of the global problem of stroke in women
..- Recognize the unique -risk factors and symptoms in wom~n
..- Describe strategies to targel stroke risk reduction among \\omen
·.- ·Discuss appropriate management strategies for female patients
..- Explore why. based on gender, stroke is diff~rent .
'

I

Special Physician Guest: :

• PVH Wellness Center

·Local weather

.

Bryan Walters/photo

Members of the Southern infield congratulate one anothe'r after a strikeout during last
Saturday's Division IV sectional final against Eastern at Tuppers Plains. The fifth-seeded
Lady Tornadoes take on Franklin Furnace Green today in a Division district semifinal contest at Minford High School. Game time is scduled for 4:30 p.m. ·

VALLEY HOSPITAL

2007 officers elected
are: Kay Graham. leader:
Karen Hill , co-leader: Jo
Willford, trea surer; Linda
Grimm, secretary: Martha
Parsons. weight recorder;
Julia Hysell , assistant
wei ght
recorder; and
Janice Curry, program
chairman. Officers accepted their duties by performin g a rap song for
the chapter.
'
The
chapter
meets
Tuesday evenings at the
Mei gs
County
Multipurpose
Senior
Center. with weigh-in
from 5 to 5:45 p.m. , and
meeting
from
6-7 .
In formation is available
by calling Graham at 9927735.

time unless the Nets become
the ninth NBA team to erase
a J-1 deficit. And that won't:
EAST RUTHERFORD, happen unless Vince Carter,
N.J. The Cleveland Jason Kidd and Richard
Cavaliers regained control Jefferson shoot better tha·n
of the Eastern Conference they did Monday.
semifinals by making New
Carter had 25 points, nine
Jersey's Big Three . look rebounds and nine assists,
awfully smalL
but shot 6-for-23 from the
LeBron James had 30 field. Kidd wasted his career
points, nine rebounds and playoff-high
17-rebound
seven assists, ;md the performance by shooting 2Cavaliers moved one victo- for- 13 and scoring five
ry from their first confer- points, while Jefferson had
ence finals appearance in 15 15 points but was only 3-ofyears by beating the Nets 12 from the field.
87-85 111 Game 4 on Monday
New Jersey had only three
mght
field goals in the fourth
larry Hughes added 19 · quarter and couldn't even
points
and
Zydrunas get ' off a shot that wouldllgauskas had 13 points and have tied it. With Eric Snow
II · rebounds for the defending him, Carter lost
Cavaliers, who put them- the ball out of bounds with
selves in position to wrap up 1.9 seconds left and the Nets
the best-of-seven series at trailing by two.
home Wednesday night.
Mikki Moore kept New
Cleveland made the last of Jersey in . it with a career
its two , conference finals playoff-best 25 points. He
appearances in 1992. The had two of the. Nets' three
Cavs ·fell one win short last bas,kets in the fourth quarter,
year, dropping the final two when the Big Three were a
games to Detroit in the combined 1-for- 13.
Eastern semifinals.
Cleveland will be safe this
Please see Cavs, 81
BY BRIAN MAHONEY

TO: EVERY RESTAURANT, CATERER, FAST FOOD AND TAKE OUT BUSINESS

Submitted photo

Thesday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s.
South winds around 5
mph ... lncreasing io south west I0 . to 15 mph with
gusts up to 25 mph in
the afternoon.
Thesday night...M ostl y
· cloudy. A slighr chance
of showers and thunderstorms
in
the
evening... Then a chance
of · showers and thunder. .storms after midni 2ht.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Southwest' winds I0 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 50
percent :
Wednesday ... Mos tl y
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Much cooler with
hig hs in the upper 60s.

Southem faces·Green in
distrid semifinal today

Otvlsion Ill District at -Oak Hill

Tornadoes perfonn at Kings Island

POMEROY - TOPS
#OH 570, Pomeroy, used
a picnic theme for its
annual · award recognition
and installation of officers.
KOPS mem bers Julia
Hysell. Bernice Durst and
Hazel Hutchison were
presented with flashin g
light glasses.
·
Janice Zwilling. Nicole
Hill , Cathy Ju sti ~, Frances
Haggy and Sherri .Darst
were honored as chapter
division winners. Some
succeed becaus they are
destined to do it. but most
succeed because they are
determined to do it.
Winner's were prese nted
with kite s as a token they
are moving to thei r goal.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

, 1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Flx -

1·74o-«6·300B

'e-rn~~ll- sportsOmydailysentinel.oom
Soorts StaM

Bred Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342, 9)(1. 33
bshe.rmanOmyda!lytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 23
.
lcrumOmydaityregister.com ,
Welten~, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, 8)(1. 33
bwanersO mydailytnbune.com

Bryan

Landis wears y.ellow, attorneys
.see red in Day 1 of arbitration
which
a
high testosterone-.to· MALIBU, Calif. - Floyd
epitestosLandis began a most unusuterone ratio
a! defense of his Tour de
is
conFrance title Monday, trading
·firmed by"
his yellow jersey for a yela carbonlow necktie and doing it in
i so to pe
an open courtroom instead
ratio test.
of the open road.
S u h ·,
Striding into the law
Landis
however,
building at Pepperdine
said it was
University, Landis said he more than just another case.
was confident he'll retain
"It's a historic case, and it
his title if the arbitrators rule . needs to be done right," he
· fairly and '"oil 'the facts:"
said.
His mother and father,
Accused of using banned
Arlene and Paul, and his synthetic testosterone during
wife, Amber, sat behind the his win last year, Landis
defense table . Before the insisted on turning his arbiproceedings began, Arlene tration hearing into a public
Landis stepped to the front process, in part to expose
of the room to snap a picture what he says is the frauduof her son and the team of lent way US ADA •·and its
lawyers leading his multi- partners in the industry do
million-dollar defense.
business.
Then, it was showtime.
Landis generated lots of
Landis' . lead attorney, support and raised about
Maurice Suh, didn't disap- $500,000 through the Floyd
point.
·
Fairness Fund, but that pub"Make no mistake about lie support didn' t translate
it," Suh said in his opening into attendance at the hearstatement, "this case is an ing.
utter disaster."
About I 00 people The disaster, Suh said, is including attorneys, family,
the way the U.S. Anti- media, witnesses and folks
Doping Agency has gone from the university about prosecuting the case, showed up. Only two people
which could result in a two- made use of an overflow
year suspension for Landis room that had been set up
and make him the first especially for extra spectacyclist in the I 04-year his to- tors.
ry of the Tour de France to
The hearing is expected to
be strip~ of his title.
last through riext Wednesday
"I'm excited to get the with dozens of scientific
case under way," Landis experts scheduled to testify
said . before the hearing before a three-man panel of
began. ~·1 hope the arbitra- arbitrators who will decide
tors rule fairly and on the
facts . I'm confident if they Landis' fate .
do, I' II retain my title and be
Opening day included
·
·
"
plenty
of hostile exchanges
racmg agam.
h
Richard Young, the lead between the lawyers, w o
attomey presenting the U.S. spent 10 minutes before
Anti-Doping Agency's case, opening statements· arguing
said in his opening state- with the arbitrators over
ment that t;Jesp1te the pu6lic- what, exactly, could be said.
ity, this was simply another
The first' witness, Cedric
in a long list of cases Shackleton of the Oakland
USADA handles - one in Research Institute, was subwhich the cold, hard scien- ject to a long, unfriendly
tific data would prove an cross-examination. one that
athlete had used synthetic began ln the morning ,
picked up again after lunch
testosterone.
"There's nothing unique and included some testy
,
about what the panel has to interplay.
decide," 'Young said . "It's
"This is about the 15th
one of dozens of cases in time that the witness hasn't

been allowed to answer the
question," Young said while
objecting during Suh 's
cross-examination.
"This is about the 15th
time that the witness has
answered
, . some other ques-

BY EDDIE PELLs

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Please see Landis. 81

·

(304) 675-6091
'

:

' '
I

'

\

'

'

.' '
"

,

.

'
'

0

'
'

.

\,

'

'

',·

\

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPI'FAL

Tle f,.,~ " P+t/OI(Illr .

.__......____________________________
_
!,

./

�·P ageA6

COMMUNI1'Y

The Daily Sentinel

May15,2007

Members
share ,:Yeadings ·
RACIN E- Mary K. Yost
had devotions and all attend:
ing shared readin g~ for the
program at tho: ·recent meeting of the Bertha M. Sayre
Missionary Society, held at
the home of Nondus
Hendricks.
Yost\ devot ions were
"Good Shepherd" from ·
23.
Members
Psalm
answered roll call with scripture passages. Readings were
"Time." by Mary K. Yost.
"Smile'' by Mabel Br&lt;Jck.
"Spring Time" by Geraldine
Cleland, "Don't Worry:· by
Martha Lou Beegle. "God's
Gifts" by Linda Grimm.
'Thank ·You, Lord," by
Mildred Shuler, ""What is a
· Friend"
by
Nondus
Hendricks. and "Home at
Last,': by Lillian Hayman.
Lillian Hayman discussed
White Cross Gift of the
Heart. Members approved a
donation to Bacone College.
Mary K. Yost brought marble
Easter eggs for all attending.
Mildred Shuler closed the
meeting with prayer and a
blessing over refreshments
served to all attending.

Graduates UC
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
- Robyn Freeman of
Pomeroy graduated from
· the
University
of
Charleston, . W.Va. recent! y
with a degree in interior
· · design. She is an active
member of the American
Society
of
Interior
. Designers (ASID). ·
She is the daughter of
Robert C. and Nancy
Freeman.

Inside
Rem lose fourth straight, Page 82
NASCAR comumed with Eambanlt, Page 82 ·

.Bartrum speaks
at Overbrook

Tuesday, May 15, 2007
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROV - A !dledule of l41C00ling OOilege
anct hi!;~ school varsity sporting BY9111&amp; irNotving
loams from Ga~ia and Meigs counties.

Tuetday'a game
Tournament SOftball
Southern vs. Green at Minford HS, 5

p.m.

Track and Reid

a•ma•

Wednaeday'a
Tournament Baeeball

Leesburg Fairfield vs. Southern at
Univ. ol Rio Grande, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy vs. Washington C.H. at
VA Stadium, 5 p.m.
Track and Field

Division II District at Oak Hill

Thuradav'• a•mt

Tournament Bllebalt
Sciotoville East vs . Eastern
Lucasville Valley HS, 5 p.m..

.

Submitted photo

Tr•ck 1nd Field

Division Ill District at Oak Hill
Salurdov'a game

Track ond Reid
Dlvlslon II DIStrlct al Oak Hlll

Local dance team wins state title ·
GALLIPOLIS - During
Ohio's
State
Dance
Championships
in
Columbus March 31 and
April I , the Gallia-Meigs
Performing Arts Junior
Team won the state dance
championship title for Large
Junior Recreational Group.
Dance members are
Kelsey Purdum, Sarah
Stump, Courtnee Woodyard,
·Grace Martyn, Mackenzie
Erwin ,. Elizabeth Holley,
Madison Holley, Alexa
Paxton, Claudia Skinner and
Samantha McClure.
The Senior Team from
Gallia-Meigs Performing
Arts won first place with a

gold rating for Lyrical
Senior Small Recreational
Dance. Members are Kerri
VanReeth, Alisha Green,
Jennifer Blevins, Samantha
Denbow, Jessica Northup,
Stacy
Stump,
Jordan
Simpson and Kayla Purdum.
Solo winners were Kayla
·Purdum, first lyrical, age 13;
Jennifer Blevins, first tap,
age 13; Kelsey Purdum, first
jazz, age I0; Stacy Stump!
second tap, age 14: Kern
VanReeth, second jazz, age
16; and .first place duet/trio
age 12/13 winners were
Alexa Paxton and Claudia
Skinner. All the soloists
received gold ratings.

The compelltion routines
were choreographed by
Patty Fellure.
The students will perform
in · the
Gallia-Meigs
Performing Arts recital on
Saturday,'June 2 at 7 p.m. in
the Fine and Performing
Arts · Center
at
the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College.

at

Friday'• game

Dance teams from the Gallia-Meigs Performing Arts that participated in the Ohio State
Dance Championships were, from left, first row; Grace Martyn, Madison Holley and
Courtnee Woodyard: second row, Mackenzie Erwin, Elizabeth Holley, Claudia . Skinner,
Kelsey Purdum and Sarah Stump; back row, Samantha McClure. ·

Members of the
Southern l•ligh
School
Marching Band
were treated to
a reward day
this past weekend at Kings
Island where
they also performed. The
band boosters
chartered a bus
to the amusement park so
the kids could ·
ride in style.

AP photo

New Jersey Nets' Richard Jet.ferson, right, drives to the basket as he is guarded by Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James
during the first quarter of Game 4 of NBA Eastern conference semi-final basketball Monday in East Rutherford, N.J.

INSIDE

,

Cavs regain control
of Eastern ·semifmals

Submitted photo

Yesterday Mike Bartrum spoke at Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center to kick off festivities for National Nllrsing Home
Week. Bartrum spoke about generations helping one anoth·
er through life , how everyone has a purpose and that everything happens for a reason. He also stressed his pride in
Meigs County.
·

TOPS holds award ceremony

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Y~U ~~UIA7 &amp;~N~lt'e-Pl AINt.Plfl~INt! ON
ve.e.~~.-y t'NN~ VJl..ar...-

.

ONLY 10 BUSINESSES

• Suns even series..
See Page 82

. will have advertising space available on this page.

A FEATURED ESTABLISHMENT EVERY WEEK· ·
double your ads size for free

SPORTS BRIEFS

·Edwards to give
$1 million
scholarships to
Cleveland schools

·Drawing for a $30 Gift Certificate .

in .

every week for one of the advertisers

FIRST ISSUE ON MAY 17TH

to present

en
ke
•

J

• 6:30p.m.
• Light refreshments will be served

West winds 10 to 15
mph . Chance of rain 50
percent.
Wednesday
night...Partly
cloudy.
Much cooler with lows in
the mid 40s. Northwest
winds 5 to I0 mph .
Thursday ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Thursday ni ght.. .Partly
cloudy. Lows 111 the
lower -lOs.
Friday
through
clear.
Sunday .. :Mos tl y
Highs in the mid 70s.
Lows· in the upper 40s.
Sunday
night
and
Monday .. .Partly cloudy.
Lows in Ihe mid 50s.
Highs. in the mid 70s.

• Public is cordially invited
For more in.fommtion about the Womm &amp; Stro*e
Public For1111i or other upcoming educational
progrt~nfj pleavu afl, (30-1) 675-iJ.JO. Ext. 1151.

CLEVELAND (AP) - · ·
Cleveland Browns wide
receiver Braylim Edwards
has pledged $1 million in
college scholarships for
eighth grade students in
Cleveland who keep at least
a 2.5 grade point average
through high school, the
team announced Monday.
Edwards' foundation is
choosing I00 students from
the city's 58,000-student
district for the program,
which will include mentoring and tutoring. The students will also volunteer for
IS hours of community service each year and will not
be allowed unexcused
absences, the Browns said
in a statement.
Edwards is scheduled to
announce the program on
Wednesday, along with the
I 00 students and Cleveland
Mayor Frank Jackson, at
Lincoln-West High School,
the Browns said.
: The program follows
Edwards decision last year
to donate $500,000 to the
University of Michigan,
:where Edwards played from
2001-2004, to , create a
scholarship endowment for
football players.
Edwards will enter his
{hird year in the NFL this
fall.

CoNfACfUS
· OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)

Agnes A.E. Simon, MD
Family Medicine

. ..-To increase awareness of the global problem of stroke in women
..- Recognize the unique -risk factors and symptoms in wom~n
..- Describe strategies to targel stroke risk reduction among \\omen
·.- ·Discuss appropriate management strategies for female patients
..- Explore why. based on gender, stroke is diff~rent .
'

I

Special Physician Guest: :

• PVH Wellness Center

·Local weather

.

Bryan Walters/photo

Members of the Southern infield congratulate one anothe'r after a strikeout during last
Saturday's Division IV sectional final against Eastern at Tuppers Plains. The fifth-seeded
Lady Tornadoes take on Franklin Furnace Green today in a Division district semifinal contest at Minford High School. Game time is scduled for 4:30 p.m. ·

VALLEY HOSPITAL

2007 officers elected
are: Kay Graham. leader:
Karen Hill , co-leader: Jo
Willford, trea surer; Linda
Grimm, secretary: Martha
Parsons. weight recorder;
Julia Hysell , assistant
wei ght
recorder; and
Janice Curry, program
chairman. Officers accepted their duties by performin g a rap song for
the chapter.
'
The
chapter
meets
Tuesday evenings at the
Mei gs
County
Multipurpose
Senior
Center. with weigh-in
from 5 to 5:45 p.m. , and
meeting
from
6-7 .
In formation is available
by calling Graham at 9927735.

time unless the Nets become
the ninth NBA team to erase
a J-1 deficit. And that won't:
EAST RUTHERFORD, happen unless Vince Carter,
N.J. The Cleveland Jason Kidd and Richard
Cavaliers regained control Jefferson shoot better tha·n
of the Eastern Conference they did Monday.
semifinals by making New
Carter had 25 points, nine
Jersey's Big Three . look rebounds and nine assists,
awfully smalL
but shot 6-for-23 from the
LeBron James had 30 field. Kidd wasted his career
points, nine rebounds and playoff-high
17-rebound
seven assists, ;md the performance by shooting 2Cavaliers moved one victo- for- 13 and scoring five
ry from their first confer- points, while Jefferson had
ence finals appearance in 15 15 points but was only 3-ofyears by beating the Nets 12 from the field.
87-85 111 Game 4 on Monday
New Jersey had only three
mght
field goals in the fourth
larry Hughes added 19 · quarter and couldn't even
points
and
Zydrunas get ' off a shot that wouldllgauskas had 13 points and have tied it. With Eric Snow
II · rebounds for the defending him, Carter lost
Cavaliers, who put them- the ball out of bounds with
selves in position to wrap up 1.9 seconds left and the Nets
the best-of-seven series at trailing by two.
home Wednesday night.
Mikki Moore kept New
Cleveland made the last of Jersey in . it with a career
its two , conference finals playoff-best 25 points. He
appearances in 1992. The had two of the. Nets' three
Cavs ·fell one win short last bas,kets in the fourth quarter,
year, dropping the final two when the Big Three were a
games to Detroit in the combined 1-for- 13.
Eastern semifinals.
Cleveland will be safe this
Please see Cavs, 81
BY BRIAN MAHONEY

TO: EVERY RESTAURANT, CATERER, FAST FOOD AND TAKE OUT BUSINESS

Submitted photo

Thesday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s.
South winds around 5
mph ... lncreasing io south west I0 . to 15 mph with
gusts up to 25 mph in
the afternoon.
Thesday night...M ostl y
· cloudy. A slighr chance
of showers and thunderstorms
in
the
evening... Then a chance
of · showers and thunder. .storms after midni 2ht.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Southwest' winds I0 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 50
percent :
Wednesday ... Mos tl y
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Much cooler with
hig hs in the upper 60s.

Southem faces·Green in
distrid semifinal today

Otvlsion Ill District at -Oak Hill

Tornadoes perfonn at Kings Island

POMEROY - TOPS
#OH 570, Pomeroy, used
a picnic theme for its
annual · award recognition
and installation of officers.
KOPS mem bers Julia
Hysell. Bernice Durst and
Hazel Hutchison were
presented with flashin g
light glasses.
·
Janice Zwilling. Nicole
Hill , Cathy Ju sti ~, Frances
Haggy and Sherri .Darst
were honored as chapter
division winners. Some
succeed becaus they are
destined to do it. but most
succeed because they are
determined to do it.
Winner's were prese nted
with kite s as a token they
are moving to thei r goal.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

, 1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Flx -

1·74o-«6·300B

'e-rn~~ll- sportsOmydailysentinel.oom
Soorts StaM

Bred Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342, 9)(1. 33
bshe.rmanOmyda!lytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 23
.
lcrumOmydaityregister.com ,
Welten~, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, 8)(1. 33
bwanersO mydailytnbune.com

Bryan

Landis wears y.ellow, attorneys
.see red in Day 1 of arbitration
which
a
high testosterone-.to· MALIBU, Calif. - Floyd
epitestosLandis began a most unusuterone ratio
a! defense of his Tour de
is
conFrance title Monday, trading
·firmed by"
his yellow jersey for a yela carbonlow necktie and doing it in
i so to pe
an open courtroom instead
ratio test.
of the open road.
S u h ·,
Striding into the law
Landis
however,
building at Pepperdine
said it was
University, Landis said he more than just another case.
was confident he'll retain
"It's a historic case, and it
his title if the arbitrators rule . needs to be done right," he
· fairly and '"oil 'the facts:"
said.
His mother and father,
Accused of using banned
Arlene and Paul, and his synthetic testosterone during
wife, Amber, sat behind the his win last year, Landis
defense table . Before the insisted on turning his arbiproceedings began, Arlene tration hearing into a public
Landis stepped to the front process, in part to expose
of the room to snap a picture what he says is the frauduof her son and the team of lent way US ADA •·and its
lawyers leading his multi- partners in the industry do
million-dollar defense.
business.
Then, it was showtime.
Landis generated lots of
Landis' . lead attorney, support and raised about
Maurice Suh, didn't disap- $500,000 through the Floyd
point.
·
Fairness Fund, but that pub"Make no mistake about lie support didn' t translate
it," Suh said in his opening into attendance at the hearstatement, "this case is an ing.
utter disaster."
About I 00 people The disaster, Suh said, is including attorneys, family,
the way the U.S. Anti- media, witnesses and folks
Doping Agency has gone from the university about prosecuting the case, showed up. Only two people
which could result in a two- made use of an overflow
year suspension for Landis room that had been set up
and make him the first especially for extra spectacyclist in the I 04-year his to- tors.
ry of the Tour de France to
The hearing is expected to
be strip~ of his title.
last through riext Wednesday
"I'm excited to get the with dozens of scientific
case under way," Landis experts scheduled to testify
said . before the hearing before a three-man panel of
began. ~·1 hope the arbitra- arbitrators who will decide
tors rule fairly and on the
facts . I'm confident if they Landis' fate .
do, I' II retain my title and be
Opening day included
·
·
"
plenty
of hostile exchanges
racmg agam.
h
Richard Young, the lead between the lawyers, w o
attomey presenting the U.S. spent 10 minutes before
Anti-Doping Agency's case, opening statements· arguing
said in his opening state- with the arbitrators over
ment that t;Jesp1te the pu6lic- what, exactly, could be said.
ity, this was simply another
The first' witness, Cedric
in a long list of cases Shackleton of the Oakland
USADA handles - one in Research Institute, was subwhich the cold, hard scien- ject to a long, unfriendly
tific data would prove an cross-examination. one that
athlete had used synthetic began ln the morning ,
picked up again after lunch
testosterone.
"There's nothing unique and included some testy
,
about what the panel has to interplay.
decide," 'Young said . "It's
"This is about the 15th
one of dozens of cases in time that the witness hasn't

been allowed to answer the
question," Young said while
objecting during Suh 's
cross-examination.
"This is about the 15th
time that the witness has
answered
, . some other ques-

BY EDDIE PELLs

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Please see Landis. 81

·

(304) 675-6091
'

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPI'FAL

Tle f,.,~ " P+t/OI(Illr .

.__......____________________________
_
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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN ANTONIO - The
Phoenix Suns· 12-1 run to
end Game 4 of the Western
Conference semifinals gave
them a I 04-98 victory
Monday night that evened
the series with the San
Antonio Spurs.
The tension that has been
building between the teams
thtoughout nearly boiled
over with 18 seconds to play
The Suns, who trailed by
as many as II points, had
taken the lead for the first
time in the second half on
consecutive behind-the-back
feeds from Steve Nash to
Amare Stoudemue that
made it I 00-97 With 32 seconds to play.
As Nash started to bring
the ball up the court after
Manu Ginoblli missed the
Spurs' fourth straight shot,
San Antonio's Robert Horry
hit him with a forearm that
knocked him Into the scorers' table and had players
from both teams rushing to
the scene.
Phoenix's Raja Bell tned
to get at Horry as d1d Nash
'
after he jumped to his feet.
Horry was given a flagrant
AP photo
foul and was ejected. Bell Phoemx Suns center Amare Stoudemire {1) defends San
was given a techmcal foul A Antonio Spurs guard Manu Gmoblll, of Argentina. dunng the
free throw by each team · first half of the1r Western Conference semifinal basketball
made II 10 I :98. The Suns game 1n san Antomo Monday.
kept posseSSion and Nash
'
"He JUSt bod~ checked me understand he 's frustrated, it
added another free throw
with 16 seconds to go.
out of bounds,' Nash said. "I happens but he dtd body

check me."
Shawn Marion added two
free throws with 7.4 seconds to go.
Game 5 is Wednesday
mght in Phoenix and it's
possible there could be suspensiOns from the league
for players leavmg the
bench after Horry fouled
Nash.
"Simply, we stuck wllh it.
We could've folded a lot of
times," Nash said. "They
were playing great and
made a lot of shots "
Stoudemire led th'e Suns
With 26 pomts, while Nash
had 24 points and 15 assists.
"We needed to open the
floor off Steve some and get
that balance," Suns coach
D' Antoni
said.
Mike
"Tonight we were able to go
smaller and get away with
it
"We just have to have that
desperation and play with
the fury we d1d in the last
quarter."
Tony Parker led the Spurs
with 23 points and Tim
Duncan had 21 points and
II rebounds.
The increas10gly hostile
series has been marked by
bumps, bruises and harsh
words: A gash across Nash,'s
nose requued s1x stitches
after a collision with Parker
10 Game I and Ginobili got
a bloodied and bruised eye
m Game 3 on a dnve to the
basket.
Last week, Stoudemire

called the Spurs a "dirty
team" and targeted Bruce
Bowen and Ginobili in particular. He said Bowen purposely kicked him in the
Suns' Game 2 wm.
And Bowen gave his critICS ammunitiOn when In
Game 3 on Saturday he
kneed Nash m the grom
area. Nash said Monday
before the game that Bowen
told him on the court that
the move was unintentional
The foul onginally called
on the play was upgraded to
a "flagrant foul I ."
The Spurs entered the
fourth quarter leading 8072.
Marion's dunk with I :3 1
to go brought the Suns within one, and Stoudemire's
first layup put the Suns up
98-97. It was their fiiSt lead
since 3:38 left in the second
quarter, when they were up
38-37.
Manon
was
largely
absent offensively, scoring
just three points headmg
into the final quarter. His 3
with 8:33 to go, followed by
another basket, brought the
Suns within 85-80 with 7:51
to play. Marion finished
with· 12 points and 12
rebounds. Kurt Thomas had
14 p&lt;iints and Bell 12.
Stoudemire, who sat
much of the second half of
Saturday's Game 3 with
foul trouble, picked up his
fourth and fifth fouls just
four se~onds apart In the

CLASSIFIED

fourth quarter. He went Io
the bench with 6:54 left 10
the game.
Fmley had 17 points,
including four 3-pointers,
for San Antonio, Brent
Barry added 12 and
Gmob1h had 10 points.
The Suns led 20-12 in the
first quarter as Nash, who
was scoreless in the fir.st
half of Game 3, made h1 s
first three shots. Phoentx
was up 24-22 headmg into
the second quarter but Nash
cooled, missing three of
four shots He also picked
up his first foul, and complained about 11, when
Bowen fell to the court as
the two ran down the floor
on a break
Stoudemire played just 49
seconds in ,the second quarter when he picked up h1 s
second foul with II : II to
play
1
The Suns, who held the
Spurs to JUSt 81 pmnts m
their Game 2 win, outrebounded the Spurs 23-17 in
the first half and 42-32 in
the game
Notes. Many Spurs fans
were wearing a dab of black
under their left eyes in support of G10obili The di splay mimicked Game 2,
when a local radio station
passed out bandages for
Suns fans to wear over their
noses in support of Nash
after his inJUry. .• . The
Spurs' bench outscored the
Suns' reserves 28-16.

and walked one.
Maddux, who went 5-0
against Cincinnati last season, was perfect until Javier
Valentm powered a 1-1
chai\geup off the base of the
outfield wall in deep rightcenter field for a double.
Pmch-hitter Jeff Keppmger
followed with a single up the
middle, and Valent10 stopped
at third base.
Maddux then got out of the
sixth when Ryan Freel
grounded into an inning-endmg double play.
The 41-year-old Maddux
was remarkably efficient
before the threat, requiring
only 46 pitches to get
through five innings. He also
did well at the plate, convertmg three sacnfices.
Notes: Phillips extended
his hitting streak to 17 games
with a smgle in the seventh.
H1s streak IS the longest by a
Reds batter since Sean Casey
hit m 21 straight from July 430, 2000.... Maddux's five
wms over C10cinnati in 2006
marked the most he has had
agamst one team m one season.

MLB Standings

Landis
fromPageBl
lion" than what he had
asked, Suh replied
Through it all, Landis
looked mildly amused, at
some points looking to
friends and smiling as he sat
at the corner of the defense
table. He is expected to testify later in the hearing.
the crux of USADA's
argument is to provide evi• dence of Landis' testosterone use by lookmg at
results from two tests.
The frrst, called the testos• terone-to-epi testosterone
test, showed Landis had an
ll-1 ratio in the urine sam-

pie. taken after Stage 17.
Anything higher than 4-1
can be considered a positive
test.
The second, called a carbon-isotope rauo test, IS a
more complex analysis of
the unne and debates about
that figure to fill up much of
the next eight days of testimony.
.
The Landis plan is to
question the credibility of
the process used at the
French lab where the urine
was analyzed. That , evidence then will be used to
impeach USADA's science
Suh 's open10g statement
included VIsuals that repeated the word "incompetence" in bold, ned letters
six times.

Cavs
from PageBl
But Moore battled foul
trouble, even picking up a
flagrant for sending Sasha
Pavlovic to the floor in the
third quarter, and he was on
the bench for much of the
final period, when the Nets
couldn't manage another
field goal after his threepoint play gave them a 7675 lead with 6:58 to play
'Meanwhile,
James
bounced back after he was
held to 18 points, his lowest
10 a playoff game, in New
Jersey's Game 3 VIctory He
took only 16 shots, and even
the Nets were wondenng if

he would come out looking
for his own offense this
time.
"With LeBron, any time a
special player feels like he
had a mght, that he thought
he could have done better,
you can anticipate him trying to put his head down
and getting to the paint,"
Nets coach Lawrence Frank
said before the game. "At
the same time, why he is so
special is that he trusts his
teammates.
"Does he try to make a
statement early? I don't
know I'm not inside their
locker room. I do know we
are going to have to be very
very sharp in keepmg him
out of the paint, because
when h'e IS 10 the paint,

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violation ot the taw

to

roBUY

We are now tak1ng appllca
tions lor energettc seH dr1v
en people to servtce and
tnslall D1sh Network Satellite
systems Tratn1ng ava1lable
F/1" wlbeneflls Dnve Co/
truCk or get more S for d11v
tng your truck Dnvmg
lelony background check
and drug screenmg w1ll be
reqwred Call BOO 893-1991
opt1on 8 M·F 8-Spm

0 Down even w1th less than
per1ect credit IS avatlat&gt;te on
lh1s 3 bedroom, 1 bath
home Corner lot frreplace
modern kitchen 1acuzz1 tub
Payment around $550 per
month 740-367·7129
104 Tatum Dr New
Haven WV 3bd/2ba Rancll
lg sunroom, 2 car gar great
area D 304-675·3637 E
304 682 2334
2 bedroom House 519 500
304 675 1911
3BR house on 1 acre stts on
A1ver Front New s1dmg and
new wmdows $155 000
709·0531 www orvb com
Code 90303
Anentton'
Local company offeung *NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro
grams tor you to buy your
home 1nstead of rentmg
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' less than perfect cred1t
accepted
Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
locators
(740)367 0000

"'"''P8'•rl

MOBILE H0\1&amp;;
lllR S\1 E

FOR S\l.t.

kltncarly~comcast.net

Absolute Top Dollar us
S1lver and Gold Co1ns,
Proolsets Gold Rmgs Prel 935
US Currency,
Solltatre Diamonds MT S
Com Shop 151 Second
Averue, Galhpohs, 740·4462642

Hu\11~

• Th11

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program SO Down If you
own Land or use Famtly
land We own the Bar'lk your
Approved 606~74-6380

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC
OND ANNUAL REUNION,
Errors Must 8 MOOSE LODGE MAY 26,
2007 8-100 ENTERTAIN·
eported on the II
1':'::-"-"'!'!"----,
MENT (304)675 4831 OR
of publication a
fAR\tS
1740)446·3466
he Tr~bune-Santtnel
L---•'iiOiiRiiSilrAiiiLEiiro_.l
wdl
Paul Taylor Famtly .Aeumon Buy1ng Junk Cars,Trucks &amp;
June 3rd at Krodel Park Wrecks, Pay Cash J D
Brand new log home w1th 60
Shelter House 2
acres M1L $180 000 Call
Salvage (304)773-5343
740 256·9247
(3041674-1374
GIVFAWAY
0
150
Lars &amp;
Srnom.~
I \11'1 11\ \ II\ I
AcREA&lt;,E
OO'rRUcnON
0
"I I&lt;\ It I "
3 gorgeous kitlles 1 BW 2
10 acres located on Broad
Pers1an hke 304·576-4156
Gallipolis Career College
Run Road m New Haven
(Careers Close To Home)
Ashley Wood Stove to gtve·
538 500 1304)773 5881
C.all Today• 740 446 4367
away 304-937-2355
1 800 214 0452
t 06 acres on Leon Baden
www
com
Gats &amp; K1Hens togood home
Ad stream pasture &amp;
Accredteo Member Accredtltng
304-675-6720
COuflcll lOr lndeperlden1
woods electnc ava11 call
aooSchools 1274B
Randall
Bradford lor d1rec·
Free to good home Male Toy
11ons
304 206 6326
Poodle, Apricot a1ov1ng pet
$125
000
Century 21
2yrs old 6t4-890·8606
5 ·IS'
Runyan Assocalles T1m
Runyan Broker
Free to good tlome
Do you need a Care gtver
Male/neutered
Border
for a elderly man m the
2 Mobtle Home lot for rent
Colhe/HLJsky m1x 3 yrs old
Mason/Gall1a area? Call
® 2007 by NEA. Inc
www comics com
1 Mar V1nton and 1 on
Housebroken 446-3742
740-578 1109 alter 7pm
Georges Creek Ad Call
Real
(74014411111
G1veaway Membership to
verhsements ar
Lawn Care Serv1ce t-'1owtng
ble&lt;:l lo the Fedora 'Lazy T Royal Chappral"
35 acres of htfable farm land
Tnmm~ng Call (740)441
10 IIEil' WANIID
__w_M'__
IED L,.o_IIEil'-·VI':·M'!ED-- &amp;1333
air Housing Act o Resort Call 740 949-2220
for
lease 740·446 9387
or
(7401645-0546
Leave Message
968
Several 5+acre lots m Gafila
&amp;
Bestdent
Pmfesstonally
Clean
losT AND
Co Morgan Twp Morgan ln
Galha-Metgs
CAA IS accept- Ohro Valley Home Health Ofllce/Houseclean 1ng
Ass1stants
lnterv1ews
Are
newspape
FOUND
$3000/acre ,Some lots !lave
applt caltons for Servtce INC hmng Per D1em or References (J04)S?5 2208
Now Betng Conducted For mg
ccepts only hoi
Coord1nator and Home Contracted Med1cal , Sooal - - - - --septiC permtts lor 06 and
CNA
&amp;
~es1dent ASSlstant
anted ada meetm
Vtsltor
for
the
Me1gs
Help
Worker Apply at 1480 W1ll care for elderly person All real estate advertlstng pnor specs 669 o143
Reward Lost male Munchkln
Pos11ions If You Are A Me Grow Program Jackson P1ke, Gallipolis, OH
1n th1s newspaperIS
OE standanls
Cat, while &amp; dark gray On
1n lhetr home 16 yrs e~p
Canng,
Enthus1ast1c,
subJect
to the Federal
RULE,T\If
Deadltne
for
apphcattons
or
phone
740
441-1393
4th St New Have 304-882·
Many
ref
a11a1lable
740
591
Dependable
Person,
Then
Fa1r
Housmg
Act of 1968
resumes,
and
apphcallons
IS
\VA:&gt;ri!J)
&gt;We will not knowmg 8259
wh1ch makes It Illegalto
We Want You To Jdn Our May 22, 2007, 4 oo p m at Part T~me vend1ng attendant 9034 or 740-388-9783
y accept any adver
advertise
any
Team Compet1t1ve CNA GMCAA, PO Box 272, 1n Galltpohs area $7 25/hr
11\\\(1\1
Small Male dog With blue
tsement m vtolatto
preference, hm•tat1on or Need to sell your home?
Wages, Pa1d Vacattons, Paid Cheshtre, OhiO 45620 Paid holidays and vacahons
collar
found
on
Ptne
Street
d1senmlnallon
based on Late on payments d1vorce
!the law.
Meals,
Many
Ott-er
Beneftts
10
Servtce
Coordinator Call 740-698-0008 ·
8 USI.t'll:SS
m Galhpohs 446-7685
race, color, rehg1on, se• JOb transler or a death? I
$7 50 an hour for farm work Ravenswood Care Center
l•mlhat status or nat10nal can buy your home All cash
m letart
Ohm call 1113 Washmgton St Mtntmum of Assocrates Medr Home Pnvate Care ~==~011~'1l~R'I~lJN~r=n:·~ ongm,
or any Intention to and QUICk ClOSing 740-416
Degree
1n
Early
Childhood,
now
accept
ng
apphcat
1
ons
1
(3041273 2999
Ravenswood, WV Across Soctal Servtces, Nurstng or lor dependable STNA CNA
CLASSIFIED INDEX
n'take any such
3130
The A1tch1e Bndge, Turn related f1 eld dulles 1nclude CHHA, PCA for more nfor·
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
preference, hm1tatlon or
tNOTICE•
1{1\1\1'
1
tOO WORKERS NEEDED R1ght, Last Busmess On reIerra Is and se rv1Ce COord1 mation please contact lalJra OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Announcement. ... .. . . .. . . . .. .. . .......... 030
d1scnmmat1on
R
ighi
on
68
North
Antiques ............................................. ,....... 530 Assemble crafts, wood
natmn fm fam1hes, home vts· at 740.446 4148
lNG CO recom mends
newspaper w11t not
Apartments lor Rent .................................. 440 1tems To $480/wk Materials References Reqwed
tis lactlttate and partiCipate :::..:..::..:..:.:...:..:_...:..:____
that you do bustness wtth Th1sknowmgly
10
accept
ijousf:s
Auction and Flea Market ...........................080 provtded Free tnformallon _D_n
e _t-ai_A
_s_el-sta_n_t_S_e_e_klng- m parentmg education POST OFFICE NOW
people you know and
ad11ert1sements
for
real
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ........................ 760 pk_g_2_4H_'_8_0_1_42_8' 4_64_9_ Full·Time, rnendly outgo1ng classes, child ftnd acbv1l1es,
fUR
Rf.Nl
HIRING
NOT to send money
estate wh1ch 19m
Auto Repair ........................... ., ...........770
etc
Home
Visitor
Mn1mum
Avg
Pay
$20/hr
or
through
the
mall
unt1l
you
7
Chatrside Asststant forSlate
v1olat1on of the law Our S1581mo' Buy 4bd home
Autos lor Sale ............................................. 710 "'" ":
$57K annually
have 1nvest1gated the
readers ar&amp; hereby
of The Art Pract1ce Htgh SchOol Diploma or
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale .......................... 750
HUD ! 5°t. dn 20yrs @ 8%
Informed that all
Expenenced reqwred iax GED Duttes tnclude refer- Including Federal Beneftts oftenng
Building Supplies .......................................550
For L1slings 800 559-4109
rals
for
fam1hes,
facili
t
ate
and
OTPatd
Tra1n1ng
dwellings
advertised
tn
~
740·594-6025
Business and Buildings ............................ 340
~1709
lh1s
newspaper
are
one
on·one
parentmg
sktlts
Vacat1ons
FT/PT
Business Opportunity............................... 210
MONfY
300 Bnarwood Dnve
Do you want htgh wages? and partiCipate In parenttng 1 800·584·1775 Ext #6923
available on an equal
Business Training .......................... 140
opportumty bases
2 M11es from town 3BA eat
Gallipolis, Ohto
1'0 LOA~
Do you want to make your
Usw
Cempera &amp; Motor Homes ......................... 790
educauon
classes
home -P-ro-le-ss-,o-n::ai::.:.,F:..u_nd-ra-:A
~===~::=~ .~:::::~~~~::~ In k1t LA/DR 1 bath
740-441-9633
own
schedule?
CaU
Taylors
v
1sds,
child
lind
act1vit1es
,s-e-rs
P
Camping Equipment.................................. 780
COUNTRY SETIING 5450/mo No pets 446·3292
Staff~ng @ (7 40)446 3305
cards of Thanks ........................................ 010
etc Both poslhons reqwre needed Part/Full t1me 3 **NOTICE••
Holzer
ASSISted
LIVing
lor
an
appo1ntment
Monday·
3br
2ba wllh 24 x 24 II 2br House for Rent qu1et
Child/Elderly Care .......... .........f................. 190 Galhpolts has Employment Thursday 1Oam·2pm We ability to work with parttCI· shifts dally 7 days a week
,garage
9/10 of an acre ne1ghborhood
dapoS1t
ElectrlcaVRelrlgeratlon ..... : .
. .,840
ol all soct~-economlc $9 hr after paid tralr.Jmg + Borrow Smart Contact
Opportuntttes for
are now htnng State Tested pants
approx 8 m1les from PI requ 1red no pets plus ut1l1·
Equipment lor Rent ...................................480 PART-TIME
backgrounds
WI!
extenstve
Benel!s,
Contact
us
today'
and as needed Nursmg ASSistants and Ioca II rave Iand some ouI of _
the OhiO 01v1S10n of
or
, Pleasant on At 2 call lor tres 740 446 6939
Excavating .................................................. 830
1888 974.JOBS
Aes1dent Ass1stants
LPN s EOE
the area travel Must be www
obs
com
Fmancral lnst1tut1on s Appointment 304 675 5995 ...:..,_______
Farm Equlpment ......................................... 610
1888974
1
Preler expenenced STNA,
3 Bedroom House 1n
bondable, have valid dnvers
Offtce of Consumer
Farms lor Rent.. ...................................... 430
Earn up to$1240 per month, license and reliable trans- Someone to clean house m Afta1rs BEFORE you reli- House on land Contract Syracuse $500/month +
but not required
Farms for Sale.. ... .. .. ....
.. 330
depos1t No Pets (304)675
Please apply tn person or per Child Become a Foster portallon GMCAA ts an the Hamsonv1Ue area twtce nance your home or Pomeroy 740 992 5858
For Lease ................................................. 490
Parent Call Shelly at 740· EEO
send Resume to
a
week
Must
be
reliable
and
obtarn
a
loan
BEWARE
HUD
HOMESt
4 bedroom 5332 weekends 740-591
For Sale ...................................................... 585
For Sale or Trade ........................................ 590· D1ane Camden AN, DON 794·0248
- - - - - - - - trustworthy Call 992-7936 of requests lor any large only $199/mo 3 bedroom o_2_6_s_ _ _ _ __
advance
payments
Fruits &amp; Vegatables .................................... 580
Operators Hatr Stylist need for new The Vtllage of Syracuse ts lees
or msurance
Call theof $203/mo More 1 4 bed 3 bedroom 3 m11es from
Furnished Rooms. .. ... .. ... . . ......... 4511 Ambrosta Machine Inc Exper1enced
needed for commercial con· Business Opemng Soon In taktng apphca\lons lor the Office of Consumer homes ava1lable 5° a dn 20 PomeiOy on 143 0-wlde
General Hauling ..........................................850
@ S"~o For hstmgs BOO- wtth attached garage no
Pomt
Pleasant,
wv
(304)structton
company Travel Potnl Pleasant 304"593" pos1tton of Head Life Guard Affatrs toll free at 1 866 yrs
Giveaway ................................... .................. 040
559 4109 ext F144
6570
60
:.::::.;:..::::.:::::::.:...:..:_:.._____
pets part1al lurnrsl1ed $375
675·1722
(304)675
1723
within
miles
of
Bidwell
and
or
asststant
manager
278-0003
1
0
learn
tf
the
Happy Ads ................................................. 050
00
experience
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hst
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Local company otfenng "NO
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PO
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ox.
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or
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PRESSURE
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the first half, but still took
over in the closing seconds.
He had three rebounds and
three assists in the final
I :36, the last one setting up
Moore's jumper as lime
expired to put the , Nets
ahead 46-42.
Notes : Magic Johnson,
the only player with mor!J
postseason triple-doubles
than K1dd, was seated courtside. Johnson had 30 tripledoubles 10 the playoffs.
Kidd had h1s II th in Game
3.... Cavs reserve F Donyell
Marshall played despite
hurting his left ankle when
he stepped on another player's foot in the closmg minutes of Game 3. ... The Nets
had their I 0-game home
winnmg streak snapped.

. ... ... ...
.....--------·~
· -· ---..----·-------' ~· -·---.----·-~~~~~~~~~~-~~--·

\\ \t It \ I I \ II \ I "

OearltlrM

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

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He must figure out how to
But the Gibbs team has a
meet NASCAR's 2009 four- strict family values message
car mandate before even that makes it leery of bringconsidering
adding ing Budweiser on as a sponEamhardt.
sor. The beer company is
That
leaves
three expected to follow Earnhardt
Chevrolet
teams
wherever he goe$.
Hendrick
Motorsports,
"For us it would be hard,"
Richard Childress Racing said team president J.D.
and Joe Gibbs Racing - as Gibbs. ''!' m not sure if that
the front-runners. Upstart would fit for us. Even though
Ginn Racing also plans to we really appreciate what
pursue Earnhardt but is a they're doin&amp; and they're a
longshot at best
great group, It'd be hard for
"There are a lot of safer us to do "
routes he could take," firstThat leaves RCR, where
year owner Bobby Ginn the elder Earnhardt won SIX
said. "But I hope that he of his seven championships.
would see that we try hard- It's the one team Earnhardt
er."
fans would embrace, anq
So where does that leave Junior really does care what
his fans think.
Earnhardt?
He wants to wm champiChildress plans to make a
onships, and Hendnck run at Junior, as soon as he's
Motorsports seems to be the ready to listen.
RCR can offer him the No.
place to do it. Winners of
eight of the last nine races, 3, his daddy's old car numthe orgamzation is the best in ber, though Earnhardt 1sn 't
NASCAR right now. But all even sure he'd even want 11.
four of its drivers are under
In the hours after his
contract, and Hendrick isn't announcement
last
looking to dump any of Thursday, two different TV
them.
- reports had Earnhardt signed
Casey Mears, struggling and sealed at RCR. One
through his first season, is report had him in the No. 3,
the most expendable dnver If another had him in the No
Hendrick wanted to make 33.
room for Earnhardt But
Both troubled Earnhardt,
Mears is like a son to who was upset about the
Hendnck, IS best friends crush of attention it brought
with Jimmie 'Johnson and to Childress when he arnved
~eserves a c.han~e to make it 10 the garage last Friday
m the orgamzatwn.
mommg .
"I was sort of hurt or upset
It's also not the most natural fit for Earnhardt.
or disappointed. that Richard
Hendrick drivers are was put in the position,"
taught to be polished, pohti- Earnhardt said. "Speculation
cally correct and arnve at that wouldn't make it to TV
events in starched stilrts and a couple years ago, these
slacks. That could be tough days 11 seems to make it
for
Earnhardt,
whose there pretty easily. And I
wardrobe seems to consist of thought that TV jumped the
only wnnkled white T-shirts. gun, because he's got drivers
Gibbs has won three and crew members over
championships since 1990, the.re trymg to wm ra9es and
and Earnhardt IS friends with trymg to do the best they can
Tony Stewart and , Denny this year.
Hamlin. He and Stewart
'The last thmg I want to
have been unofficial team- do IS get 10 the middle and
mates for years at restrictor- confuse their mmds and start
plate races, and Stewart rumors over at his shop You
pushed Earnhardt to his 2004 know how rumors move
Daytona 500 victory.
around."
along with all the other
things he does, he's a monster. That's why he is really
special."
James didn't attempt his
frrst shot until nearly 7 112
minutes into the game. He
made that, but it was his
only attempt of the first
quarter, which ended with
New Jersey leading 20-19.
James started qmckly in
the second, sconng eight ·
pomts in the first 2 1/2 minutes and givmg the Cavs a
27-24 lead when he powered his way to a three-pomt
play on the fast break. But
he came out moments later,
and the Nets scored seven in
a row in the brief time he
was on the bench.
Kidd was only 1-of-9 10

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Earnhardt's decision about future

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- Dale Earnhardt Jr. nq:ds
some time to decompress.
It's been all Earnhardt all
the time since he announced
he was defect10g from his
ninth on the career list
late
father's company.
San Diego jumped in front
Rumors
swirled through the
early aga10st skidding
garage,
false
reports showed
Cincmnau, wbif::h has lost
up
on
television
and the
six straight on the road and
Internet
buzzed
after
seven of eight overall.
Earnhardt
said
he
was
leavMatt Behsle (3-3) allowed
ing DEI at the end of the
the first three Padres he
year
faced to reach base. Marcus
"It's going to last until he
Giles hit a leadoff double,
s1gns
a contract with someJose Cruz Jr. singled .. and
body,
which is really good,"
Bnan Giles walked to load
sa1d two-time champion
the bases Khahl Greene
Tony
Stewart, who JOked he
delivered a sacnfice fly with
could
have punched someone out, and Cameron folbody
at
Darlington Raceway
lowed with a two-run triple
last
weekend
and no one
into right-center field .
would
have
noticed.
Cruz drove in a run with a
Stewart, no stranger to the
groundout in the second.
spotlight,
wasn't exaggeratBard nit RBI smgles 10 the
ing.
third and fifth, and Kevin
Earnhardt seemed to be the
Kouzmanoff added a sacrionly
story at Darlington Pay
fice fly in the fifth.
no
attention
to that feud
Belisle allowed 10 hits in
between
Kasey
Kahne and
five innings. He struck two
David Stremme or the intentional bumping and banging
between Stewart and Ryan
Newman during the Busch
race. Save a brief mterruption
by
Hendrick
NIUOIIII L.lllgue
(Eaton 3·3), 705 pm
WLPctGB
Eut Dlvlakln
Motorsports' fourth consecuChK:ago Cubs (Zambrano 3-3) et NY Los Angeles 22 17 564 WLPctGB
Mats (Mame 5-Q), 7 10 p m
Seattle
17 t6 515 2
tive victory, the spotlight
NewYorlc
24 13 649
San Franc1sco (Morns +1) at Houston
Oak~nd
19 t8 514 2
never left Earnhardt, who
Atlanta
24 14 632 .~
(W Williams 1-5), 605 pm
Texas
15 23 395 6 ~
Philadelphia 18 20 474 6~
Anzona (R Johnson 0~2) at Colorado
finish¥d eighth Sunday.
(H11sh 2-3), 635 pm
16 22 421 8~
Monday's Gamea
That's why Earnhardt
WUhlngton 13 25 342 It ),
C11'1C1nnat1 (Harang 5-1) at San 01ego
LA Angels 7, Texas 2
· Contnol Dlvlalon
(DWells 1-2). tO 05 pm
asked for a break - just a
Boston 7 Detm1t 1
WLPctGB
St LouiS (Wa1nwnght 3-2) at LA Toronto 5 Ba1t1more 3
week or two to unwind.
Milwaukee
25 t3 658
Dodgers (Lowe 3-4) 10 10 pm
Kansas C1ty 2 Oakland 1
Houston
t8 t9 488 6 ~
Now, the wait begms
Wednesday's Games
Tuesday's Games
. ChiCSgo
t7 t9 472 7
Flonda at Pittsburgh, 7 05 p m
DetrOit
(Verlander
3
1) at Boston
Even
though he'll hkely
Pittsburgh
t7 20 459 7 ~
Atlanta at Wash1ngton , 7 05 p m
(Wakefield 4·3), 705 pm
St LOUIS
have
his
p1ck of teams, figur16 20 444 8
Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 7 05 p m
Minnesota (Orttz 3·3) at Cleveland
C1nt1nnah
15 24 385 10 ~
Ch~eago Cubs at N Y Mets 7 1o p m
(Byrd 2·t)705pm
mg out his future might not
Welt DlviJion
San Franc1sco at Houston, 8 05 p m
Baltimore (D Cabrera 3-3) at Toronto be so simple.
WLPctGB
Anzona at Colorado, 8 35 p m
,
(Lilsch 0·0), 7 07 pm
LOs Angeles 23
t6 590 Earnhardt wants to stay m
Cincinnati at San 01ego 10 05 p m
Texas (McCarthy 3-4) vs Tampa Bay
San Diego 2t t8 538 2
St louiS at l A Dodgers, 1.0 10 p m
(Shields
3-0)
at
K1ss1mmee
Fla
7 10
a
Chevrolet, · which puts
San Franc1sco 19 t8 5t4 3
I pm
Arizona
20 19 513 3
Dodge
owners
Ray
American League
NY Yankees (Muss1na 2·1) at Chtcago
Colorado
16 22 421 6~
East Division
I White Sox (Danks 1·4), 811 pm
Everitham, Chip Ganass1 am!
WLPctGB
LA Angels (Escobar 4-1) al SeaWe Roger Penske at the bottom
Mond8'f'l Gamet
Boston
26 11 703
(FHernandez 2·t), 1005 pm
Pittsburgh 7, Flonda 0
NewYork
17 19 472 8:Z
Kansas Ctty (Banntster 0-2) at Oakland of the list.
Wuhlngton 2, Atlanta t
Ballimore
18 2t 462 9
(Kennedy
1-2) 10 05 pm
Earnhardt fans everywhere
Philadelphia 8, Milwaukee 6
Toronto
16 22 421 10'/,
Wednesday'•
Gamea
N Y Mete 5, ChiCago Cubs 4
would
revolt if he went to
Tampa Bay 15 22 405 11
Detroit at Boston, 7 OS pm
San Diego 7, Cincinnati t
Central Dlvfalon
Minnesota
at
Cleveland
7 05 pm
one
of
the
new Toyota teams,
St Lou1a 8, L A Dodgers 4
WLPctGB
Balttmore
at
Toronto,
7
07
p
m
and
none
are compet111ve
TuHdoy'aGomea
Detro1t
23 14 622 Texas vs Tampa Bay at Ktss1mmee,
Florida (Mitre 0-2) at P1Hsburgh
Cleveland 21 14 600 1
enough
to
entice
him.
FIB , 7t0pm
(Maholm 2-4), 705 p m
Chtcago
18 16 529 3 ~
N Y Yankees at Ch1cago Wh1te Sox.
Jack Roush, the best of the
Adanta (T Hudson 4-1) at Washington Minnesota t8 t9 486 5
~ tt pm
(Williams 0-4), 7 05 pm
Ford owners, is already over
Kansas City t3 26 333 t1
LA Angels at Seattle, 10 05 p m
Milwaukee (Vargaa 3-01 at Philadelphia
Weal Dlvlalon
Kansas City at Oakland 10 05 p m
the hm1t with five drivers.

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Usclasslfled@!~~;:~nbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
NOW

SD hands Reds fQurth straight loss NASCAR consumed with
SAN DIEGO (AP) Greg Maddux pitched a fivehitter for his frrst complete
game in two years and the
San Diego Padres beat
Cincinnati 7-I Monday mght
to hand the Reds their fo11rth
straJght loss.
Maddux retired the first 16
batters he faced, struck out
five and walked none 10 his
I 09th career complete game
He needed only 96 pitches to
complete the gem.
Mike Cameron and Josh
Bard each had two hits and
two RBis for San Diego,
which led 7-0 after 'five
innings.
Maddux (3-2) carried a
three ~hit shutout into the
ninth but Juan Castro singled
and advanced to third on
Ryan Freel's base h1t. One
out later, Ken Griffey Jr. hit a
sacrifice fly before Maddux
struck out Brandon Phillips
to finish . off his frrst complete game since Sept, 27,
2005, for the Chicago Cubs
in a 5-3 loss at Pittsburgh.
Maddux also picked up
WID No. 336, puttmg him SIX
behind tying Tim Keefe for

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

m:ribune - Sentinel - 1\egi~ter

Suns stay alive with late run, even series with San Antonio
BY EuZABETH WHITE

www.mydailysentinel.com

rio

L..------.1

L--~--~--------~-----_-_-_-_-_~_~_-_-_-_-~----~---~---=--· ~-~-----~--r-----------

.~

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN ANTONIO - The
Phoenix Suns· 12-1 run to
end Game 4 of the Western
Conference semifinals gave
them a I 04-98 victory
Monday night that evened
the series with the San
Antonio Spurs.
The tension that has been
building between the teams
thtoughout nearly boiled
over with 18 seconds to play
The Suns, who trailed by
as many as II points, had
taken the lead for the first
time in the second half on
consecutive behind-the-back
feeds from Steve Nash to
Amare Stoudemue that
made it I 00-97 With 32 seconds to play.
As Nash started to bring
the ball up the court after
Manu Ginoblli missed the
Spurs' fourth straight shot,
San Antonio's Robert Horry
hit him with a forearm that
knocked him Into the scorers' table and had players
from both teams rushing to
the scene.
Phoenix's Raja Bell tned
to get at Horry as d1d Nash
'
after he jumped to his feet.
Horry was given a flagrant
AP photo
foul and was ejected. Bell Phoemx Suns center Amare Stoudemire {1) defends San
was given a techmcal foul A Antonio Spurs guard Manu Gmoblll, of Argentina. dunng the
free throw by each team · first half of the1r Western Conference semifinal basketball
made II 10 I :98. The Suns game 1n san Antomo Monday.
kept posseSSion and Nash
'
"He JUSt bod~ checked me understand he 's frustrated, it
added another free throw
with 16 seconds to go.
out of bounds,' Nash said. "I happens but he dtd body

check me."
Shawn Marion added two
free throws with 7.4 seconds to go.
Game 5 is Wednesday
mght in Phoenix and it's
possible there could be suspensiOns from the league
for players leavmg the
bench after Horry fouled
Nash.
"Simply, we stuck wllh it.
We could've folded a lot of
times," Nash said. "They
were playing great and
made a lot of shots "
Stoudemire led th'e Suns
With 26 pomts, while Nash
had 24 points and 15 assists.
"We needed to open the
floor off Steve some and get
that balance," Suns coach
D' Antoni
said.
Mike
"Tonight we were able to go
smaller and get away with
it
"We just have to have that
desperation and play with
the fury we d1d in the last
quarter."
Tony Parker led the Spurs
with 23 points and Tim
Duncan had 21 points and
II rebounds.
The increas10gly hostile
series has been marked by
bumps, bruises and harsh
words: A gash across Nash,'s
nose requued s1x stitches
after a collision with Parker
10 Game I and Ginobili got
a bloodied and bruised eye
m Game 3 on a dnve to the
basket.
Last week, Stoudemire

called the Spurs a "dirty
team" and targeted Bruce
Bowen and Ginobili in particular. He said Bowen purposely kicked him in the
Suns' Game 2 wm.
And Bowen gave his critICS ammunitiOn when In
Game 3 on Saturday he
kneed Nash m the grom
area. Nash said Monday
before the game that Bowen
told him on the court that
the move was unintentional
The foul onginally called
on the play was upgraded to
a "flagrant foul I ."
The Spurs entered the
fourth quarter leading 8072.
Marion's dunk with I :3 1
to go brought the Suns within one, and Stoudemire's
first layup put the Suns up
98-97. It was their fiiSt lead
since 3:38 left in the second
quarter, when they were up
38-37.
Manon
was
largely
absent offensively, scoring
just three points headmg
into the final quarter. His 3
with 8:33 to go, followed by
another basket, brought the
Suns within 85-80 with 7:51
to play. Marion finished
with· 12 points and 12
rebounds. Kurt Thomas had
14 p&lt;iints and Bell 12.
Stoudemire, who sat
much of the second half of
Saturday's Game 3 with
foul trouble, picked up his
fourth and fifth fouls just
four se~onds apart In the

CLASSIFIED

fourth quarter. He went Io
the bench with 6:54 left 10
the game.
Fmley had 17 points,
including four 3-pointers,
for San Antonio, Brent
Barry added 12 and
Gmob1h had 10 points.
The Suns led 20-12 in the
first quarter as Nash, who
was scoreless in the fir.st
half of Game 3, made h1 s
first three shots. Phoentx
was up 24-22 headmg into
the second quarter but Nash
cooled, missing three of
four shots He also picked
up his first foul, and complained about 11, when
Bowen fell to the court as
the two ran down the floor
on a break
Stoudemire played just 49
seconds in ,the second quarter when he picked up h1 s
second foul with II : II to
play
1
The Suns, who held the
Spurs to JUSt 81 pmnts m
their Game 2 win, outrebounded the Spurs 23-17 in
the first half and 42-32 in
the game
Notes. Many Spurs fans
were wearing a dab of black
under their left eyes in support of G10obili The di splay mimicked Game 2,
when a local radio station
passed out bandages for
Suns fans to wear over their
noses in support of Nash
after his inJUry. .• . The
Spurs' bench outscored the
Suns' reserves 28-16.

and walked one.
Maddux, who went 5-0
against Cincinnati last season, was perfect until Javier
Valentm powered a 1-1
chai\geup off the base of the
outfield wall in deep rightcenter field for a double.
Pmch-hitter Jeff Keppmger
followed with a single up the
middle, and Valent10 stopped
at third base.
Maddux then got out of the
sixth when Ryan Freel
grounded into an inning-endmg double play.
The 41-year-old Maddux
was remarkably efficient
before the threat, requiring
only 46 pitches to get
through five innings. He also
did well at the plate, convertmg three sacnfices.
Notes: Phillips extended
his hitting streak to 17 games
with a smgle in the seventh.
H1s streak IS the longest by a
Reds batter since Sean Casey
hit m 21 straight from July 430, 2000.... Maddux's five
wms over C10cinnati in 2006
marked the most he has had
agamst one team m one season.

MLB Standings

Landis
fromPageBl
lion" than what he had
asked, Suh replied
Through it all, Landis
looked mildly amused, at
some points looking to
friends and smiling as he sat
at the corner of the defense
table. He is expected to testify later in the hearing.
the crux of USADA's
argument is to provide evi• dence of Landis' testosterone use by lookmg at
results from two tests.
The frrst, called the testos• terone-to-epi testosterone
test, showed Landis had an
ll-1 ratio in the urine sam-

pie. taken after Stage 17.
Anything higher than 4-1
can be considered a positive
test.
The second, called a carbon-isotope rauo test, IS a
more complex analysis of
the unne and debates about
that figure to fill up much of
the next eight days of testimony.
.
The Landis plan is to
question the credibility of
the process used at the
French lab where the urine
was analyzed. That , evidence then will be used to
impeach USADA's science
Suh 's open10g statement
included VIsuals that repeated the word "incompetence" in bold, ned letters
six times.

Cavs
from PageBl
But Moore battled foul
trouble, even picking up a
flagrant for sending Sasha
Pavlovic to the floor in the
third quarter, and he was on
the bench for much of the
final period, when the Nets
couldn't manage another
field goal after his threepoint play gave them a 7675 lead with 6:58 to play
'Meanwhile,
James
bounced back after he was
held to 18 points, his lowest
10 a playoff game, in New
Jersey's Game 3 VIctory He
took only 16 shots, and even
the Nets were wondenng if

he would come out looking
for his own offense this
time.
"With LeBron, any time a
special player feels like he
had a mght, that he thought
he could have done better,
you can anticipate him trying to put his head down
and getting to the paint,"
Nets coach Lawrence Frank
said before the game. "At
the same time, why he is so
special is that he trusts his
teammates.
"Does he try to make a
statement early? I don't
know I'm not inside their
locker room. I do know we
are going to have to be very
very sharp in keepmg him
out of the paint, because
when h'e IS 10 the paint,

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POLICIES Ohio Valley Pubt'-hing reMrV• the r~ to edit, reject, 01 cam:elany all at any lime Errors must be reported on the l1r st day of
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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

1nser11on
to the Federal Fair Hous1ng Act ot 1968
violation ot the taw

to

roBUY

We are now tak1ng appllca
tions lor energettc seH dr1v
en people to servtce and
tnslall D1sh Network Satellite
systems Tratn1ng ava1lable
F/1" wlbeneflls Dnve Co/
truCk or get more S for d11v
tng your truck Dnvmg
lelony background check
and drug screenmg w1ll be
reqwred Call BOO 893-1991
opt1on 8 M·F 8-Spm

0 Down even w1th less than
per1ect credit IS avatlat&gt;te on
lh1s 3 bedroom, 1 bath
home Corner lot frreplace
modern kitchen 1acuzz1 tub
Payment around $550 per
month 740-367·7129
104 Tatum Dr New
Haven WV 3bd/2ba Rancll
lg sunroom, 2 car gar great
area D 304-675·3637 E
304 682 2334
2 bedroom House 519 500
304 675 1911
3BR house on 1 acre stts on
A1ver Front New s1dmg and
new wmdows $155 000
709·0531 www orvb com
Code 90303
Anentton'
Local company offeung *NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro
grams tor you to buy your
home 1nstead of rentmg
· 100% fmarcmg
' less than perfect cred1t
accepted
Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
locators
(740)367 0000

"'"''P8'•rl

MOBILE H0\1&amp;;
lllR S\1 E

FOR S\l.t.

kltncarly~comcast.net

Absolute Top Dollar us
S1lver and Gold Co1ns,
Proolsets Gold Rmgs Prel 935
US Currency,
Solltatre Diamonds MT S
Com Shop 151 Second
Averue, Galhpohs, 740·4462642

Hu\11~

• Th11

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program SO Down If you
own Land or use Famtly
land We own the Bar'lk your
Approved 606~74-6380

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC
OND ANNUAL REUNION,
Errors Must 8 MOOSE LODGE MAY 26,
2007 8-100 ENTERTAIN·
eported on the II
1':'::-"-"'!'!"----,
MENT (304)675 4831 OR
of publication a
fAR\tS
1740)446·3466
he Tr~bune-Santtnel
L---•'iiOiiRiiSilrAiiiLEiiro_.l
wdl
Paul Taylor Famtly .Aeumon Buy1ng Junk Cars,Trucks &amp;
June 3rd at Krodel Park Wrecks, Pay Cash J D
Brand new log home w1th 60
Shelter House 2
acres M1L $180 000 Call
Salvage (304)773-5343
740 256·9247
(3041674-1374
GIVFAWAY
0
150
Lars &amp;
Srnom.~
I \11'1 11\ \ II\ I
AcREA&lt;,E
OO'rRUcnON
0
"I I&lt;\ It I "
3 gorgeous kitlles 1 BW 2
10 acres located on Broad
Pers1an hke 304·576-4156
Gallipolis Career College
Run Road m New Haven
(Careers Close To Home)
Ashley Wood Stove to gtve·
538 500 1304)773 5881
C.all Today• 740 446 4367
away 304-937-2355
1 800 214 0452
t 06 acres on Leon Baden
www
com
Gats &amp; K1Hens togood home
Ad stream pasture &amp;
Accredteo Member Accredtltng
304-675-6720
COuflcll lOr lndeperlden1
woods electnc ava11 call
aooSchools 1274B
Randall
Bradford lor d1rec·
Free to good home Male Toy
11ons
304 206 6326
Poodle, Apricot a1ov1ng pet
$125
000
Century 21
2yrs old 6t4-890·8606
5 ·IS'
Runyan Assocalles T1m
Runyan Broker
Free to good tlome
Do you need a Care gtver
Male/neutered
Border
for a elderly man m the
2 Mobtle Home lot for rent
Colhe/HLJsky m1x 3 yrs old
Mason/Gall1a area? Call
® 2007 by NEA. Inc
www comics com
1 Mar V1nton and 1 on
Housebroken 446-3742
740-578 1109 alter 7pm
Georges Creek Ad Call
Real
(74014411111
G1veaway Membership to
verhsements ar
Lawn Care Serv1ce t-'1owtng
ble&lt;:l lo the Fedora 'Lazy T Royal Chappral"
35 acres of htfable farm land
Tnmm~ng Call (740)441
10 IIEil' WANIID
__w_M'__
IED L,.o_IIEil'-·VI':·M'!ED-- &amp;1333
air Housing Act o Resort Call 740 949-2220
for
lease 740·446 9387
or
(7401645-0546
Leave Message
968
Several 5+acre lots m Gafila
&amp;
Bestdent
Pmfesstonally
Clean
losT AND
Co Morgan Twp Morgan ln
Galha-Metgs
CAA IS accept- Ohro Valley Home Health Ofllce/Houseclean 1ng
Ass1stants
lnterv1ews
Are
newspape
FOUND
$3000/acre ,Some lots !lave
applt caltons for Servtce INC hmng Per D1em or References (J04)S?5 2208
Now Betng Conducted For mg
ccepts only hoi
Coord1nator and Home Contracted Med1cal , Sooal - - - - --septiC permtts lor 06 and
CNA
&amp;
~es1dent ASSlstant
anted ada meetm
Vtsltor
for
the
Me1gs
Help
Worker Apply at 1480 W1ll care for elderly person All real estate advertlstng pnor specs 669 o143
Reward Lost male Munchkln
Pos11ions If You Are A Me Grow Program Jackson P1ke, Gallipolis, OH
1n th1s newspaperIS
OE standanls
Cat, while &amp; dark gray On
1n lhetr home 16 yrs e~p
Canng,
Enthus1ast1c,
subJect
to the Federal
RULE,T\If
Deadltne
for
apphcattons
or
phone
740
441-1393
4th St New Have 304-882·
Many
ref
a11a1lable
740
591
Dependable
Person,
Then
Fa1r
Housmg
Act of 1968
resumes,
and
apphcallons
IS
\VA:&gt;ri!J)
&gt;We will not knowmg 8259
wh1ch makes It Illegalto
We Want You To Jdn Our May 22, 2007, 4 oo p m at Part T~me vend1ng attendant 9034 or 740-388-9783
y accept any adver
advertise
any
Team Compet1t1ve CNA GMCAA, PO Box 272, 1n Galltpohs area $7 25/hr
11\\\(1\1
Small Male dog With blue
tsement m vtolatto
preference, hm•tat1on or Need to sell your home?
Wages, Pa1d Vacattons, Paid Cheshtre, OhiO 45620 Paid holidays and vacahons
collar
found
on
Ptne
Street
d1senmlnallon
based on Late on payments d1vorce
!the law.
Meals,
Many
Ott-er
Beneftts
10
Servtce
Coordinator Call 740-698-0008 ·
8 USI.t'll:SS
m Galhpohs 446-7685
race, color, rehg1on, se• JOb transler or a death? I
$7 50 an hour for farm work Ravenswood Care Center
l•mlhat status or nat10nal can buy your home All cash
m letart
Ohm call 1113 Washmgton St Mtntmum of Assocrates Medr Home Pnvate Care ~==~011~'1l~R'I~lJN~r=n:·~ ongm,
or any Intention to and QUICk ClOSing 740-416
Degree
1n
Early
Childhood,
now
accept
ng
apphcat
1
ons
1
(3041273 2999
Ravenswood, WV Across Soctal Servtces, Nurstng or lor dependable STNA CNA
CLASSIFIED INDEX
n'take any such
3130
The A1tch1e Bndge, Turn related f1 eld dulles 1nclude CHHA, PCA for more nfor·
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
preference, hm1tatlon or
tNOTICE•
1{1\1\1'
1
tOO WORKERS NEEDED R1ght, Last Busmess On reIerra Is and se rv1Ce COord1 mation please contact lalJra OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Announcement. ... .. . . .. . . . .. .. . .......... 030
d1scnmmat1on
R
ighi
on
68
North
Antiques ............................................. ,....... 530 Assemble crafts, wood
natmn fm fam1hes, home vts· at 740.446 4148
lNG CO recom mends
newspaper w11t not
Apartments lor Rent .................................. 440 1tems To $480/wk Materials References Reqwed
tis lactlttate and partiCipate :::..:..::..:..:.:...:..:_...:..:____
that you do bustness wtth Th1sknowmgly
10
accept
ijousf:s
Auction and Flea Market ...........................080 provtded Free tnformallon _D_n
e _t-ai_A
_s_el-sta_n_t_S_e_e_klng- m parentmg education POST OFFICE NOW
people you know and
ad11ert1sements
for
real
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ........................ 760 pk_g_2_4H_'_8_0_1_42_8' 4_64_9_ Full·Time, rnendly outgo1ng classes, child ftnd acbv1l1es,
fUR
Rf.Nl
HIRING
NOT to send money
estate wh1ch 19m
Auto Repair ........................... ., ...........770
etc
Home
Visitor
Mn1mum
Avg
Pay
$20/hr
or
through
the
mall
unt1l
you
7
Chatrside Asststant forSlate
v1olat1on of the law Our S1581mo' Buy 4bd home
Autos lor Sale ............................................. 710 "'" ":
$57K annually
have 1nvest1gated the
readers ar&amp; hereby
of The Art Pract1ce Htgh SchOol Diploma or
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale .......................... 750
HUD ! 5°t. dn 20yrs @ 8%
Informed that all
Expenenced reqwred iax GED Duttes tnclude refer- Including Federal Beneftts oftenng
Building Supplies .......................................550
For L1slings 800 559-4109
rals
for
fam1hes,
facili
t
ate
and
OTPatd
Tra1n1ng
dwellings
advertised
tn
~
740·594-6025
Business and Buildings ............................ 340
~1709
lh1s
newspaper
are
one
on·one
parentmg
sktlts
Vacat1ons
FT/PT
Business Opportunity............................... 210
MONfY
300 Bnarwood Dnve
Do you want htgh wages? and partiCipate In parenttng 1 800·584·1775 Ext #6923
available on an equal
Business Training .......................... 140
opportumty bases
2 M11es from town 3BA eat
Gallipolis, Ohto
1'0 LOA~
Do you want to make your
Usw
Cempera &amp; Motor Homes ......................... 790
educauon
classes
home -P-ro-le-ss-,o-n::ai::.:.,F:..u_nd-ra-:A
~===~::=~ .~:::::~~~~::~ In k1t LA/DR 1 bath
740-441-9633
own
schedule?
CaU
Taylors
v
1sds,
child
lind
act1vit1es
,s-e-rs
P
Camping Equipment.................................. 780
COUNTRY SETIING 5450/mo No pets 446·3292
Staff~ng @ (7 40)446 3305
cards of Thanks ........................................ 010
etc Both poslhons reqwre needed Part/Full t1me 3 **NOTICE••
Holzer
ASSISted
LIVing
lor
an
appo1ntment
Monday·
3br
2ba wllh 24 x 24 II 2br House for Rent qu1et
Child/Elderly Care .......... .........f................. 190 Galhpolts has Employment Thursday 1Oam·2pm We ability to work with parttCI· shifts dally 7 days a week
,garage
9/10 of an acre ne1ghborhood
dapoS1t
ElectrlcaVRelrlgeratlon ..... : .
. .,840
ol all soct~-economlc $9 hr after paid tralr.Jmg + Borrow Smart Contact
Opportuntttes for
are now htnng State Tested pants
approx 8 m1les from PI requ 1red no pets plus ut1l1·
Equipment lor Rent ...................................480 PART-TIME
backgrounds
WI!
extenstve
Benel!s,
Contact
us
today'
and as needed Nursmg ASSistants and Ioca II rave Iand some ouI of _
the OhiO 01v1S10n of
or
, Pleasant on At 2 call lor tres 740 446 6939
Excavating .................................................. 830
1888 974.JOBS
Aes1dent Ass1stants
LPN s EOE
the area travel Must be www
obs
com
Fmancral lnst1tut1on s Appointment 304 675 5995 ...:..,_______
Farm Equlpment ......................................... 610
1888974
1
Preler expenenced STNA,
3 Bedroom House 1n
bondable, have valid dnvers
Offtce of Consumer
Farms lor Rent.. ...................................... 430
Earn up to$1240 per month, license and reliable trans- Someone to clean house m Afta1rs BEFORE you reli- House on land Contract Syracuse $500/month +
but not required
Farms for Sale.. ... .. .. ....
.. 330
depos1t No Pets (304)675
Please apply tn person or per Child Become a Foster portallon GMCAA ts an the Hamsonv1Ue area twtce nance your home or Pomeroy 740 992 5858
For Lease ................................................. 490
Parent Call Shelly at 740· EEO
send Resume to
a
week
Must
be
reliable
and
obtarn
a
loan
BEWARE
HUD
HOMESt
4 bedroom 5332 weekends 740-591
For Sale ...................................................... 585
For Sale or Trade ........................................ 590· D1ane Camden AN, DON 794·0248
- - - - - - - - trustworthy Call 992-7936 of requests lor any large only $199/mo 3 bedroom o_2_6_s_ _ _ _ __
advance
payments
Fruits &amp; Vegatables .................................... 580
Operators Hatr Stylist need for new The Vtllage of Syracuse ts lees
or msurance
Call theof $203/mo More 1 4 bed 3 bedroom 3 m11es from
Furnished Rooms. .. ... .. ... . . ......... 4511 Ambrosta Machine Inc Exper1enced
needed for commercial con· Business Opemng Soon In taktng apphca\lons lor the Office of Consumer homes ava1lable 5° a dn 20 PomeiOy on 143 0-wlde
General Hauling ..........................................850
@ S"~o For hstmgs BOO- wtth attached garage no
Pomt
Pleasant,
wv
(304)structton
company Travel Potnl Pleasant 304"593" pos1tton of Head Life Guard Affatrs toll free at 1 866 yrs
Giveaway ................................... .................. 040
559 4109 ext F144
6570
60
:.::::.;:..::::.:::::::.:...:..:_:.._____
pets part1al lurnrsl1ed $375
675·1722
(304)675
1723
within
miles
of
Bidwell
and
or
asststant
manager
278-0003
1
0
learn
tf
the
Happy Ads ................................................. 050
00
experience
deadhne for resume May mortgage broker or Let your apartment make mo plus depos1t (740)992·
Hay &amp; Grain ...............................................640 fax Machmtst 5 years or Pay117based
15th Resume May 15th lender 1s properly your house payment 2 bed7.4.::0:..1_ _____
Help Wanted .................................. 110 more expenence $8-$12 per _c_• __40_-_36_8_·9_51_5_.,-·
FEDERAL
TO DRIVE
Resume can be ma1led to licensed (Th1s 1s a public room house &amp; 1 bedroom -3 br , sm den 2 ba
Home lmprovements ...................................810 hour
Homes lor Sale .......................................... 31 0 On Hand Shop Foreman
ALLIANCE
Clerks Olltce PO Box 266, serv1ce announcement garage apartment tor sale 1n Flatwoods Ad no pets fel·
POSTAL JOBS
TRACTOR TRAILER
or dropped off a~ VIllage from lhe Ohto Valley Middleport call (740)992 erenca and depostt
Household Goods ................ .................... 510 Machme Shop &amp; Fatmcallon
1821 for more 1nformat1on requ1red available June 1st
Houses lor Rent... ................................... 410 knowledge 10 years or more $16 53·$2'7 58/hr , now hlrTRAINING CENTERS
Hall More Info 740 992· Publ1
shlng Company)
In Memoriam . .. . ... .. .. .. . . ........ 020 expenence $12·$15 per 1ng For appl1cat1on and free
•
FULL TIME C
LASSES'
77t7
:;~====~
Mtntature larm UntbUIII $450 month (740)992 4025
governament 10b tnfo call
Insurance ................................................... 130 hour
· COL TRAINING'
Vtllage of Syracuse taking r-"'
'"" PROtl-:ssiONAI.
home on 4 acres on SA
- - - - - - - - AmencanAssoc oflabor1"FINN&gt;ICINGAVAILAeLe·
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ....................... 660
Attenttonl
160 3BR 1BA Peaclles
913·599·8042
24/hrs
emp
"JOOPLACEMENT..
resumes
for
reserve
hst
of
SF.RVIC~
Livestock ....................................................630 An Excellent way to earn
Local company otfenng "NO
C.~t~m~tlng a VNn in Bu•mn.
Vtllage
patrolman
for
pohce
bernes
grapes
Sw1r'
n
m1ng
Lost and Found ......................................... 060 money The New Avon
Wythevlll&amp; Vrrgtma
deparlmenl
Resumes
pool New appliances Wood DOWN PAYMENT" Pro
Lots &amp; Acreage . . . ..... . ................. 350 Call Manlyn 304-882-2645 serv
grams lo1 you to buy your
The
Meigs
County
Council
1·800-334·1203
,
mailed
to
PO
B
ox.
266
or
CHUCKS
PRESSURE
Miscellaneous ... ....................................... 170 - - - - - - - - on Agtng IS accepting'apph- m alllancetriC!Grlratlllfcon dropped off at Vtll age Hall WASHING decks Stdmg, burner $95 000 740 388 home mstead ol rentmg
0815
Miscellaneous Merchandise ......................540 AVQNI AU Areasl To Buyor cations/resumes for the fol
dnveways farmequ•pment
· 100°c fmanc1ng
Mobile Home Repair ...................................880 Sell Shtrley Spears 304- lowmg positions WELL· Light Farm Work grass mow- Wanted Full t1me employ· s1dewalks
boats
and
more
· less than perfect cred•t
Mon111
Ho~n :'
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................ 420 675 .1429
1ng weed eating ,brush cut- men11n your own home as 0 NO JOB TO SMALL
accepted
FORS\U,
NESS
CENTER
ASSIS·
Mobile Homes lor Sale............................... 320
ling, hght fence work 304 • Home Servtces Worker With Restdenhal or Commercial
Payment could be the
Money to Loan ..........'...... ..... .. . .. ... . . 220 Bob Evans m Mason now TANT- Part tJme Organize 675
8019
durmg
day,
cal
l
B
k
C
t
(740)645
2178
'
same
as rent
lan
and
mplement
fitness
uc
eye
ommunl
Y
For
Sale
2000
14x70
1rarler
1
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ......................... 740 hmng eKpenenced Gnll P
304·458·1727
after
930
Serv1
ces
We
provide
salary
-------~ No call s alter 9pm 304 675 Mortgage
Locators
Musical Instruments ................................. 570 Cooks applyw1th1n
and health promot1on acttVI·
I b It d d II
TURNED DOWN ON
(740136HOOO
Personals :........................... ..................... 005
11BS Instruct partiCipanls In - - - - - - - - ~~~ :nn: l:aa: ra~e ~o~ SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? _39_2_7______
Pets lor Sale ............................................. 560 Certtfted Pharm Tech With proper use of exerctse Need someone lo stay wtth
bd
G
d
Houses lor rent or sale
reat use 2005 3 e room $550 each per month land
Plumbing &amp; Heating ..... .! .. ................. 820 large sm1les and computer eqwpment and technique elderly women m Mason provtde a home, gutdance No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1888 582-3345
16x80 With vmyl/shtngle contract a pOSSibility
Professional Services ................................ 230 sktlls no mghts no week- Develop goal onented exer area 2 n~ghts a week 10pm and fnendshlp In a family
Must sell, Only $25 995 w1th Rod V111
AI
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repelr ............................... 180
else Plogram' 10, lndl '"du· to 6am ea11304.n3.9106h atmosphere Requ1res ab1lrty
"
t0 1eachPersonaII lVI ng sk1lls
delivery Call (740)385 4367 houseneylor rentageor area
so
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360 ends $10/hour Ematl als
Convey honest
sale
at
803
Schools Instruction .................................... 150 c:ass1e degracla @pscmed- respectful communtcahOn --~----- and a commitment to the
HoMES
New 3Bedroom homes from Brownell Middleport Oh
supply com or lax resume to w1th co workers, busmess
Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer . .................... 650.
Now Hiring!
growth and development ol
FOR SALE
S2t4 36 per monln Includes $475 per month 740-446·
Sltuailons Wllnted ..................................... 120 800·507-5820
associates, consumer ant:t
We have work to do
two IndiVIduals With mental ~,__tilliiiiiiiiii;,._.l many upgrades delivery &amp; 4543
Space lor Rent .......................................... ..460 - - - - - - - - the public Must be htghly
and we need you'
retardation If Interested
I
B GALLI PO set-up (740)385 2434
.:::_:...:..:____:____
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520 Commumty Achon IS seek- mottvated Team player For
contact Cectlta at 1·800 $269 mol uy
·
HUD HOMESI 4 bedroom
SUV's lor Sale...........................................,.720 1ng laborer(s) tor the more mformabon or to apply
We offer
531 2302 or 740-286·5039 LIS Foreclosure• 1oo4 bed N1ce used 3 bedroom home only $199/mo 3 bedroom
Trucks lor Sale .......... ~ ............................ 715 Wea1henzat1on crew Prefer , please call (740 )992 2161 t $300 Hiring Bonus! Pre employment Drug homes from 199/mo S% vmyl/shtngle VIlli help w1th $203/mo More 1·4bed
Upholstery ................................... ............. 870 those w1th general knowl- Appltcattons are available at
+Up to$8 SO/hour
Tesllng Equal OpporluOily down, 20 years at 8% delivery. 740 385-4367
homes a\allable 5~o dn 20
Vana For Sele............................................... 730 edgeoIhorne rep.lr· InsuIa · the Metgs Multipurpose
t Weekly bonuses
Emplnuer.
More homes avatlable For
yrs @ 8% For ltShngs 800~,
wanted to Buy ............................................. 090 uon etc send or deliver Semor Center, 112 East
t Weekly Pay
FIND AJQB ~~: ~;~~~s call BOD-559· OWNER FINANCING 559-4109 ext F1 44
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllea ....,............. 620 resume
and references to Mem0r1al Dnve Pomeroy • Paid Holidays vacations
N1ce 3/2 stnglewtdes
Large 4 Oedrootp house 1n
Wanted To Do ................................. :.......... 180
GMCAA,
attention
Sandra
OhiO
AnEOE
employer
andtratmng
IN
THE
FromS18DO
down
Pomeroy very clean newly
Wanted to Rent........ ...... ...... .. . .. ..... ...470 Edwards, 8010 N State ----,.-----'---'--,t Full benefits
Home FS 077 ac, 3b( 2ba
Yard Sale- Gallipolis .................................. 07~
added tam11y 91room 2 car
payment
remodeled
new cabtnets,
7, Cheshire, Ohio Help wanted at Darst Adull
D Scon(740)82B·2750
newcarpet $735permonth
Yard Sole-Pomeroy/Middle ........................ 074 Route
45620 by Slt6/07 GMCAA Group Home, some lifting
CaiiTodayl
CLASSIFIEDS
garage 294 ackb11d r
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleaaant ................................ 076 15 an EOE
7-5 sh1H740·992·5023
1-Sn-463-6247 ext23tt •
Ashton WV 304 576 2967
(7401949 2303
rejeCt or cancel any
ad at any time.

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the first half, but still took
over in the closing seconds.
He had three rebounds and
three assists in the final
I :36, the last one setting up
Moore's jumper as lime
expired to put the , Nets
ahead 46-42.
Notes : Magic Johnson,
the only player with mor!J
postseason triple-doubles
than K1dd, was seated courtside. Johnson had 30 tripledoubles 10 the playoffs.
Kidd had h1s II th in Game
3.... Cavs reserve F Donyell
Marshall played despite
hurting his left ankle when
he stepped on another player's foot in the closmg minutes of Game 3. ... The Nets
had their I 0-game home
winnmg streak snapped.

. ... ... ...
.....--------·~
· -· ---..----·-------' ~· -·---.----·-~~~~~~~~~~-~~--·

\\ \t It \ I I \ II \ I "

OearltlrM

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

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, ~ Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
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He must figure out how to
But the Gibbs team has a
meet NASCAR's 2009 four- strict family values message
car mandate before even that makes it leery of bringconsidering
adding ing Budweiser on as a sponEamhardt.
sor. The beer company is
That
leaves
three expected to follow Earnhardt
Chevrolet
teams
wherever he goe$.
Hendrick
Motorsports,
"For us it would be hard,"
Richard Childress Racing said team president J.D.
and Joe Gibbs Racing - as Gibbs. ''!' m not sure if that
the front-runners. Upstart would fit for us. Even though
Ginn Racing also plans to we really appreciate what
pursue Earnhardt but is a they're doin&amp; and they're a
longshot at best
great group, It'd be hard for
"There are a lot of safer us to do "
routes he could take," firstThat leaves RCR, where
year owner Bobby Ginn the elder Earnhardt won SIX
said. "But I hope that he of his seven championships.
would see that we try hard- It's the one team Earnhardt
er."
fans would embrace, anq
So where does that leave Junior really does care what
his fans think.
Earnhardt?
He wants to wm champiChildress plans to make a
onships, and Hendnck run at Junior, as soon as he's
Motorsports seems to be the ready to listen.
RCR can offer him the No.
place to do it. Winners of
eight of the last nine races, 3, his daddy's old car numthe orgamzation is the best in ber, though Earnhardt 1sn 't
NASCAR right now. But all even sure he'd even want 11.
four of its drivers are under
In the hours after his
contract, and Hendrick isn't announcement
last
looking to dump any of Thursday, two different TV
them.
- reports had Earnhardt signed
Casey Mears, struggling and sealed at RCR. One
through his first season, is report had him in the No. 3,
the most expendable dnver If another had him in the No
Hendrick wanted to make 33.
room for Earnhardt But
Both troubled Earnhardt,
Mears is like a son to who was upset about the
Hendnck, IS best friends crush of attention it brought
with Jimmie 'Johnson and to Childress when he arnved
~eserves a c.han~e to make it 10 the garage last Friday
m the orgamzatwn.
mommg .
"I was sort of hurt or upset
It's also not the most natural fit for Earnhardt.
or disappointed. that Richard
Hendrick drivers are was put in the position,"
taught to be polished, pohti- Earnhardt said. "Speculation
cally correct and arnve at that wouldn't make it to TV
events in starched stilrts and a couple years ago, these
slacks. That could be tough days 11 seems to make it
for
Earnhardt,
whose there pretty easily. And I
wardrobe seems to consist of thought that TV jumped the
only wnnkled white T-shirts. gun, because he's got drivers
Gibbs has won three and crew members over
championships since 1990, the.re trymg to wm ra9es and
and Earnhardt IS friends with trymg to do the best they can
Tony Stewart and , Denny this year.
Hamlin. He and Stewart
'The last thmg I want to
have been unofficial team- do IS get 10 the middle and
mates for years at restrictor- confuse their mmds and start
plate races, and Stewart rumors over at his shop You
pushed Earnhardt to his 2004 know how rumors move
Daytona 500 victory.
around."
along with all the other
things he does, he's a monster. That's why he is really
special."
James didn't attempt his
frrst shot until nearly 7 112
minutes into the game. He
made that, but it was his
only attempt of the first
quarter, which ended with
New Jersey leading 20-19.
James started qmckly in
the second, sconng eight ·
pomts in the first 2 1/2 minutes and givmg the Cavs a
27-24 lead when he powered his way to a three-pomt
play on the fast break. But
he came out moments later,
and the Nets scored seven in
a row in the brief time he
was on the bench.
Kidd was only 1-of-9 10

Webs1tes
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To Place
m:rtbune
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To ·(740) 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Earnhardt's decision about future

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- Dale Earnhardt Jr. nq:ds
some time to decompress.
It's been all Earnhardt all
the time since he announced
he was defect10g from his
ninth on the career list
late
father's company.
San Diego jumped in front
Rumors
swirled through the
early aga10st skidding
garage,
false
reports showed
Cincmnau, wbif::h has lost
up
on
television
and the
six straight on the road and
Internet
buzzed
after
seven of eight overall.
Earnhardt
said
he
was
leavMatt Behsle (3-3) allowed
ing DEI at the end of the
the first three Padres he
year
faced to reach base. Marcus
"It's going to last until he
Giles hit a leadoff double,
s1gns
a contract with someJose Cruz Jr. singled .. and
body,
which is really good,"
Bnan Giles walked to load
sa1d two-time champion
the bases Khahl Greene
Tony
Stewart, who JOked he
delivered a sacnfice fly with
could
have punched someone out, and Cameron folbody
at
Darlington Raceway
lowed with a two-run triple
last
weekend
and no one
into right-center field .
would
have
noticed.
Cruz drove in a run with a
Stewart, no stranger to the
groundout in the second.
spotlight,
wasn't exaggeratBard nit RBI smgles 10 the
ing.
third and fifth, and Kevin
Earnhardt seemed to be the
Kouzmanoff added a sacrionly
story at Darlington Pay
fice fly in the fifth.
no
attention
to that feud
Belisle allowed 10 hits in
between
Kasey
Kahne and
five innings. He struck two
David Stremme or the intentional bumping and banging
between Stewart and Ryan
Newman during the Busch
race. Save a brief mterruption
by
Hendrick
NIUOIIII L.lllgue
(Eaton 3·3), 705 pm
WLPctGB
Eut Dlvlakln
Motorsports' fourth consecuChK:ago Cubs (Zambrano 3-3) et NY Los Angeles 22 17 564 WLPctGB
Mats (Mame 5-Q), 7 10 p m
Seattle
17 t6 515 2
tive victory, the spotlight
NewYorlc
24 13 649
San Franc1sco (Morns +1) at Houston
Oak~nd
19 t8 514 2
never left Earnhardt, who
Atlanta
24 14 632 .~
(W Williams 1-5), 605 pm
Texas
15 23 395 6 ~
Philadelphia 18 20 474 6~
Anzona (R Johnson 0~2) at Colorado
finish¥d eighth Sunday.
(H11sh 2-3), 635 pm
16 22 421 8~
Monday's Gamea
That's why Earnhardt
WUhlngton 13 25 342 It ),
C11'1C1nnat1 (Harang 5-1) at San 01ego
LA Angels 7, Texas 2
· Contnol Dlvlalon
(DWells 1-2). tO 05 pm
asked for a break - just a
Boston 7 Detm1t 1
WLPctGB
St LouiS (Wa1nwnght 3-2) at LA Toronto 5 Ba1t1more 3
week or two to unwind.
Milwaukee
25 t3 658
Dodgers (Lowe 3-4) 10 10 pm
Kansas C1ty 2 Oakland 1
Houston
t8 t9 488 6 ~
Now, the wait begms
Wednesday's Games
Tuesday's Games
. ChiCSgo
t7 t9 472 7
Flonda at Pittsburgh, 7 05 p m
DetrOit
(Verlander
3
1) at Boston
Even
though he'll hkely
Pittsburgh
t7 20 459 7 ~
Atlanta at Wash1ngton , 7 05 p m
(Wakefield 4·3), 705 pm
St LOUIS
have
his
p1ck of teams, figur16 20 444 8
Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 7 05 p m
Minnesota (Orttz 3·3) at Cleveland
C1nt1nnah
15 24 385 10 ~
Ch~eago Cubs at N Y Mets 7 1o p m
(Byrd 2·t)705pm
mg out his future might not
Welt DlviJion
San Franc1sco at Houston, 8 05 p m
Baltimore (D Cabrera 3-3) at Toronto be so simple.
WLPctGB
Anzona at Colorado, 8 35 p m
,
(Lilsch 0·0), 7 07 pm
LOs Angeles 23
t6 590 Earnhardt wants to stay m
Cincinnati at San 01ego 10 05 p m
Texas (McCarthy 3-4) vs Tampa Bay
San Diego 2t t8 538 2
St louiS at l A Dodgers, 1.0 10 p m
(Shields
3-0)
at
K1ss1mmee
Fla
7 10
a
Chevrolet, · which puts
San Franc1sco 19 t8 5t4 3
I pm
Arizona
20 19 513 3
Dodge
owners
Ray
American League
NY Yankees (Muss1na 2·1) at Chtcago
Colorado
16 22 421 6~
East Division
I White Sox (Danks 1·4), 811 pm
Everitham, Chip Ganass1 am!
WLPctGB
LA Angels (Escobar 4-1) al SeaWe Roger Penske at the bottom
Mond8'f'l Gamet
Boston
26 11 703
(FHernandez 2·t), 1005 pm
Pittsburgh 7, Flonda 0
NewYork
17 19 472 8:Z
Kansas Ctty (Banntster 0-2) at Oakland of the list.
Wuhlngton 2, Atlanta t
Ballimore
18 2t 462 9
(Kennedy
1-2) 10 05 pm
Earnhardt fans everywhere
Philadelphia 8, Milwaukee 6
Toronto
16 22 421 10'/,
Wednesday'•
Gamea
N Y Mete 5, ChiCago Cubs 4
would
revolt if he went to
Tampa Bay 15 22 405 11
Detroit at Boston, 7 OS pm
San Diego 7, Cincinnati t
Central Dlvfalon
Minnesota
at
Cleveland
7 05 pm
one
of
the
new Toyota teams,
St Lou1a 8, L A Dodgers 4
WLPctGB
Balttmore
at
Toronto,
7
07
p
m
and
none
are compet111ve
TuHdoy'aGomea
Detro1t
23 14 622 Texas vs Tampa Bay at Ktss1mmee,
Florida (Mitre 0-2) at P1Hsburgh
Cleveland 21 14 600 1
enough
to
entice
him.
FIB , 7t0pm
(Maholm 2-4), 705 p m
Chtcago
18 16 529 3 ~
N Y Yankees at Ch1cago Wh1te Sox.
Jack Roush, the best of the
Adanta (T Hudson 4-1) at Washington Minnesota t8 t9 486 5
~ tt pm
(Williams 0-4), 7 05 pm
Ford owners, is already over
Kansas City t3 26 333 t1
LA Angels at Seattle, 10 05 p m
Milwaukee (Vargaa 3-01 at Philadelphia
Weal Dlvlalon
Kansas City at Oakland 10 05 p m
the hm1t with five drivers.

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Usclasslfled@!~~;:~nbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
NOW

SD hands Reds fQurth straight loss NASCAR consumed with
SAN DIEGO (AP) Greg Maddux pitched a fivehitter for his frrst complete
game in two years and the
San Diego Padres beat
Cincinnati 7-I Monday mght
to hand the Reds their fo11rth
straJght loss.
Maddux retired the first 16
batters he faced, struck out
five and walked none 10 his
I 09th career complete game
He needed only 96 pitches to
complete the gem.
Mike Cameron and Josh
Bard each had two hits and
two RBis for San Diego,
which led 7-0 after 'five
innings.
Maddux (3-2) carried a
three ~hit shutout into the
ninth but Juan Castro singled
and advanced to third on
Ryan Freel's base h1t. One
out later, Ken Griffey Jr. hit a
sacrifice fly before Maddux
struck out Brandon Phillips
to finish . off his frrst complete game since Sept, 27,
2005, for the Chicago Cubs
in a 5-3 loss at Pittsburgh.
Maddux also picked up
WID No. 336, puttmg him SIX
behind tying Tim Keefe for

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

m:ribune - Sentinel - 1\egi~ter

Suns stay alive with late run, even series with San Antonio
BY EuZABETH WHITE

www.mydailysentinel.com

rio

L..------.1

L--~--~--------~-----_-_-_-_-_~_~_-_-_-_-~----~---~---=--· ~-~-----~--r-----------

.~

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

~=::::;;;;;:;-

Nice 2 BA • 1BA in town, off
stree1 par!Ong. S500imo plus
dep: and ref. 740-446-1079

Tal&lt;ing applications for 3BR
remodeled house. No pe1s.
$425/mo. $3001dep. 446·

3617
Wery nice home lor rent in
Midd. 2 Br.,1 bath. sun
room, 7 rooms total, garage
&amp; basement. Available . Call
. 740-992-9784.

laurel
Commons
Apartmeris. Largest in the
areat Beautifully renovated
throughout including brand
new kitchen and bath .
Starting at $405. Call today!
(304)273-3344

2007 ·Honda Foreman 4x4
144 miles. ramps included
and cargo bag, call lor price
304-675·2083

Friday, 6am-4:30pni.
Closed
• ¥""
- - BuHs for sale.
Satu....t""'
&amp; Reg. ....
,,_,
Hotlybrook Farm . 740-245Also. uni1s on SR 160. Pets Sunday. (7401446-7300
5964
wetcome! (740)441-()1.94. ~j=---~-~--...,

ra os,
J h
'
Eveorude, 80 hours o n O nson S

W h ld

hook

c ~ 1;,

New Haven . 1 Br.. furnished.

FORSAu

no pels, dep.&amp;relererlces,

740-992.0165.
•
Apartment for rent . 1-2
2 betdroom Trailer in Bdrm .. remodeled , new car- Nice 2br Apt. for rent quiet
Gallipolis Ferry $350 rent . pet, stove &amp; frig. , wate r, neighborhood. family orlen$350 deposi1 No Pe1s 304· sewer. trash pd. Mlddlepon. 1ated $450. sacuri1y deposi1
no pels 740-446·7425
675-7996
$425.00. No pe1s. Rei.
required. 740-843-5264
Tara
Townhouse
2 bedroom trailer. $250/rimt
1lld $250/dep. 245-0095
Beautiful Apts. at Jacllson Apartments, Very Spacioos,
Estates.
52 Westwood 2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 112
2BR, 1 Bath, CIA, diShwash·
Drive, from $365 to $560. Batt1, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
er, new -carpet. 1624
740-446-2568
Equal Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
·Chatham Ave. Gallipolis,
Housing Opportunity. This No Pets, Lease Plus
Ohio (740)208-71!61 0 '
institution is an Equal Security Depos~ Required,
(740)446-4234
Opportun i1y Provider and _!7_40
_l_36_7_·7_086
_ ·_ _ __
Ntce 2 BR mobile home. Employer.
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptNC. l oca1ed a1 Johnson
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· ing applicaHoos for waiting
Mobile Home Park. 446·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
lis1 lor Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
2003
Townhouse
apartments. apartment,for
the
. Nk:e 2BR, 2BA, mobile ard'or smaU houses FOR· elderly/disabled call 675home. CIA. private lot in AENT. Call (740)441 ·1 111 6679
Equal
Housing
GaU!polis. $450/mo. Call for application &amp;information. ~O,;;,..".;.u"
ppo • .1.;.Y_ _ _ __,
845-7765 affer Spm please.
Gracious Uvlng 1 and 2
FORSP~~~ce 2BR, 2BA. mobile Bedroom Ap1s. a1 Village
~e. C/A, private lot in Manor and Riverside Apts. in '
~all ipolis . $450/mo. Call Middleport, from $327 to Commercial building ·For
645-n65 after 6pm please. $592. 740·992·5064. Equal Renf 1600 square feet, off
. Housing .Opportunity. This s1&lt;eet parkng Great locaAPAR'IMEl'ITS
tnstilution is an Equal 1ion! 749 Third Avenue in
1 Opportunity Provider and
FOR lbNr
Gallipolis. Ren1 $400lmo.
Employer.
Call Wayne (404)456-3802
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments =.:::::=_____
i4r Rent. Meigs County. In Gracious living. 1 ard 2 bed- Prime commercial space for
town, No Pets, Deposit room apartments at Village rent at Springvalley Plaza.
):mQuired. (740)992·5174 or Manor
and
Riverside Call645·2192.
~ 740}44 1~ 110:
Apartments in Middleport.
\ IIIH II \\ 111"1
From $0-$592. Calt 74()' and 2 bedroom apart- 992·5064. Equal Housing jj;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;
ments.iturnished and unfur· Opportunities.
Equal riO
lfouiimow
hished, and houses in Opportuni1y Employer
~
Golla;
Pomeroy · and Middleport ,
Honeysuckle
Hills
deposi1 required,no Apartments
now accepting Broyhill · Couch, excellent
lle1S. 740-992·2218.
applications for 1 and 2BA condition . $150. 740-446, BR Apt WID hool&lt;ups. apts. No rental assistance 0123
tirst Mon. rent $175 plus available at this lime. Rent - -- -- - - dep. 740-441 -9668 or 74Q- ~1arts ai $310 mon1h. Equal MOVING Salol Everything
Housing
Opportunity. must go! MuHi-lamily yard
339-Q362.
(740)446·3344.
:;ale. Appliances, elec1ron2br, Apt. in Pt. Pleasant. ~.:..:....:..:...:.::.._____ ics, lurniture, etc. For more
New1y remOdeled, $475/mo. Middlepor1 1 or 2 Br. ap1s., _in~lo:"c~~ll
a 446-~.;38.;.;.;.56_ _..,
utilities
paid.
depsoit no pets. dep. &amp; ref.. 992required (304)675-8635
0165
"~"-"'""

iacuri1y

In Memory.

'Betty~8-7-33

:Jvfanfey
1·28·05

Roses are red and some ?re
yellow. I was always so-o proud
to be your fellow...
Thinking of you on our 59th
wedding anniversary
May 14, 1948
Husband Odell Manley
Auction

Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
ESTATE OF ROLAND H. OILER
SATURDAY, MAY 19,.2007.
LOCATED AT 1470 S. OHIO AVE.,
WELLSTON, OH 45692

.'

(Directions from Nollh· Go South on 93fPenn. Ave . right on
93 (Inward Coaltl)n). go to 1st road . Ohio Ave., lum left.
Follow 10 ~ale .
From Soulh- Take 327N 1o lir~ l strcel a1 CarWash· turn left.
Follow to sale)
,
Partial list: H ou s~:hul d · louis · Lawn Carden. 'Misc. Items
HOUSEHOI.. D: Couch, Chairs. 20' TV, TV .Stand, Coffee
table. End Tables, Desk w/chair, pictures, vacuum sweCpcr,
full bed (Headboard. footboard. Box Spring. Manress J.
Chest of Drawers. Nighl Stand. Quilts, 6 Shelf Storage rack.
TOOLS: 2 Bench Grind er ~ . Garden tiller. Shopma1e
collapsible workbe nch, yard rertilizer spreader, cordless
drill, electric blower, 3 gal. electric air conipres5or. small
drill press, Black &amp; Decker table sa ~ Bl~d:. &amp; Decker
electric drill, Craflsman labk saw, Black &amp; Decker power
sander moumed on table, Electric ~ hai n saw, Delta tland saw,
Electric j ig saw. Many more misc. loots.
MISC: Lamps, pil'tures, fi g u ri ne~. dishes, kitchenware.
AUTO: 197 Ford Escon LX Slat ion Wagon· 84.&lt;.00 mile.&gt;·
Salvage Tille
TRUCK: /9 1 Chevy S-10 pi ckup- Over 150.000 m i l e ~­
Satvage Title
GUNS, MISC. RELATED ITEMS: New England SB2 10
ga . -AJ Aubrey Single S.ho1 12 g~ . (16) Remington model
10-"!2 ga, Marlin Model 24G 12 ga· Winche~tc r Model #~5
12 ga- Marlin Model43 12 ga- Winchester Model 12 12 ga.
Remington Sportsman 58 12 ga. H&amp;R Model1908 12 ga ..
JC Higgins Model 20 12 ga. lthica. Model 87 MagnumMossburg Model SOOA l 2 ga. (w/scope ) - Savage 12 gaWinchester Model .~0 12 ga· W i nc he ~t l.'r Mod~l 12 12 ga .. Mossburg Model 500A 12 ga. Western Field Deluxe Model
SO - 12 ga Remington Model H78 (no barr"cl) Winchester
Model 12 12 ga, Central ~rm s Single Shot l 2 ga. Rt:mington
_(w/scope) Model 870· Rt:mingLOn Model 29 12 Ga.·
Remington 870 Express Magnum 12 Ga, Kcmington Model
31 12 Ga. Remington Model 31 12 ga· Remington Model 29
12 g_a. JC Higgins Model 20 12 ga .. Mossburg Slug Barrel
Model 500C 20 ga- H&amp;R Baystatle- lver Johnsnn 12 gaBoume &amp; Bond 12 ga- R iven id ~ Arms'l 2 g~ - American
Anru 20 ga· Sears Si ngle Shot 12 ga, J St~v~ns Anns 12 gaH&amp;:R Model Model l 58 l 2 ga- H&amp;R MoJcl 48 20 ga.
Meriden Double Barret 12 ga· H&amp;R 'foppcr Ocluxe -HAND
"GUNS: Browning 22 ~uto matic wA:Ii p- Smith Revolver·
Asua- Cadi:c 22 cal. LeVeniabte D"Armes·22 automaticBersa Model 38.l cal. 380 - H&amp;R 38 Smith &amp; WesSon
Hammerless· Savage Model IOJ, 22 si n ~le shot · Smi th &amp;
WeSson 38: H&amp;R Topper Model 158 12 ga . . Gibralite 12 ga
MISC: Gun Cabinet - Soft sided gun cases- Hurd ~id ed gun
case. Various gun trade book s- Gun Scopes- Sholgun
Barrels· Sholgun Magazines- Shotgun· forend!&gt; · Sho1gun
bullends-Handgun holsters- Pistol grips
AU!:TIONEERS NOTE: Sale 1tarr• i! 9:)0 a.m.
wlhousthold, tool5, lawn/garden eci uipment. AUIU· Truck &amp;
Misc. items. GUNS w111 bt displayed fur tnspection and
viewing from l 2:30 pm to I:30 pm Gun Sale_ and Misc. gun
items begin at 1:30pm. A printed lisl will be available. The
manner and method guns will he sold and buyers signing for
will be announced before sale. TERMS: Cash •Or check
w/valid drivers license ID. All items in thi s 1uk sold a.&gt;is,
where is. Owner/E~ec . offers No Warranties Wh~l socvcr. All
Buyers musl be l 8 years uld IU purchase Long Guns and ~l
years old 10 Purchase H and .Gu ns~ and MUST BE a Resident
of Ohio forthis Sale
·
GE'ITLFS AUCTION SERVICE
James H. Gettles, AuctiOneer
Licensed State of Ohio
1024 S. Penn. Ave., Wellston, OH 45692
(740) 384-2125

Holly Cox, Executor

••

1998 18' S1 1

rebuild. $7800. (740)256·
1962
Boathouse

Gallipolis

Boat

"*":~";-.:*

I

I-

--"!"'"-..,I

r

Homegrown Strawberries·. r15

:u~

"
I \ H\1

-. t 1'1'111"

,\ 11 \ l '-. 1(1\"
rlO

FARM

L..-..;F.QuiPMFM;IiiiliiiiiiOii._.l
0% Financi ng- 36 Mos.

available now on John
Deere Z Trak Zen&gt; Tums &amp;
5.99% Fixe&lt;( Ra1e on John
Deere Gato'ra Carmichael
Equipment (740)44&amp;241 2.

Traclor. $5000. 740·2455296

1986 East Dump Trailer. Flip
larp, liner, 34l!72, tandem,
$11 ,000 OBO, (740)992·
5617
97 Dodge 1500 ext cab,
a~;~to/air, 4WD Short Bed,
318, $5800 Exc. Cond; 1981
Dodge 4Wb 318 4spd,
$2200 Super Swampers.
(740)256-6543
~.:..:::::..::...:.::....::......_ __
'98 Ford Ranger XLT.
camper top, very good con·
dition, under 58000 mfles.
$6200, 740-379·2260

must sell 2000 Skamper
Camper, $7500 25' comes
with TV, buy before she kicks
me ou1' call (740)949-4601
or 740-416·4379

Help Wanted

w·ISe ( oncrete

All types of conc rete

Owner- Rick Wise

~r~to~"'"-~H'"o•••fE---,

740·9'12-5929

!1

'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NG
Unconditional lifetime .guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446Boom
Truck
Pitman 0870. Rogers Basement
UnVDyne forty fool boom Six Waterproofing.
ton hydraulic crane on a 2
1/2 ton steel deck Ford Truck
304-675·5000

'•
l

North

j

• 8 6 3

+ AQJ

MONTY

r

740-416-1698
15 yrs. Exp. Free Estimates

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

Mushroom Compos!
$35AScoop
T-Post 6rt. $3.29

1996 Dodge Avenger, needs
work, SBOO 080, 740·416·
_7_ooo_o_r _74_D_·9_9_2·_60_70
_._
2003 F150 , 4 x4 , 46000

Wide Variety

or

Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and

miles $13500. 2003 Jeep
Grand ' Cherokee 56000
miles. $14000. 675-6121

i~--oiFiiOiHiiSiiAiii.Eii
VANS

units within the

Roofing, Siding.
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Re,modeling, Room
Additions

jurisdiction or the

Local Contractor

Pomeroy,OH
5xl0, 6xl0,

IOxiO,

10x24
The only storage

Pomeroy P.D.

740-367-0544

(740) 742-2690

740·367-0536

2003 V·Star Classic 1100
Cruiser, Like New, 6,000
miles, Windshield, Bags &amp;
ex1ras. $6,000. (740)446·
9278

www.tlmberereeJc.cablnotry.com

740.446.9200
2AS9 St. Rt. 160 •GaiUpolls
f

Hubbard's Greenhouse

• Q 6 52

r

South

1•

3 NT ·
6•

CARPENTER
SERVICE

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

TI'IAT'S' MA~~. F~ANG ANf&gt;
1-I~A ·-· TtifY vlf~f Fl~ff&gt;
AND ~tPLAGff&gt; BY TtiAT
~~ "tu~O"

BARNEY
FIVE-cARD DRAW, DEUCES
AN' 01\£ -EYED JACKS

ARE WILD, FOURS COU\IT .r:,~.,~
DOUBLE, CLUBS DON'T

CCU\IT ·AN'

QUEENS"

. EQUAL
ACES!!

THE BOFIN LOSER

~us, w&lt;. W&gt;o.\JE
TO D\~U:-:6 ~OUR
~~OR.IN6!

BIG NATE

aiiiilii.w.llitliliitl

Loo!dng for an exciting
career in Health Care?
Ohio Valley Home Health,
Inc. is now hiring STNA's,
CNA's, CHHA's and PCA's
for our Passport office.
Competitive wages,
benefit.s and mileage.
Please contact Gail Meade
at 1480 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis or phone toll free
1-866-441-9263.
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

we Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios Systein

{illRlihJ •"""'•..&gt;:"i~1"fl-M":"""I

V.C. YOUNG Ill

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

PEANUTS

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446·0007

· Public Notice

NOTICE TO CONTRAC- or agent signing the ing collateral:
GMC
Envoy
TORS
bond,
2002
sealed proposals for Bids shall be seated 1GKDT13S622170936
the Pomeroy Distress and marked as Bid lor 1996 Plymouth Van
Sidewalk Replacement Pomeroy
· Dlslress 1P4GP44R6TB194631
Project, Meigs County, Sidewalk Replacement The Farmers Bank and ·
Ohio, will be received project and mailed or. Savings
Company, IP.!~~~~~~~~~~~~
by the Meigs County delivered to:
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
Commlealoners at the Meigs
County reserves the right to
Meigs
Courthouse, Commissioners
bid atlhls sale, and to
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 Courthouse
withdraw the above
until
1 :00
p,m., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
collaleral prior to sale.
Thursday, May 31 , 2007 , Attention of bidders Is Further, The Farmers
and lhan at 1:15 p.m. at called to all of the Bank and Savings
saki office opened and requiremenls
con· Company .reserves the
read aloud for the fol- talned In this bid pack- right to reject any or all
et, particularly to the bids submitled.
lowing:
This Is a Prevailing Federal
Labor The above described
Wage project. See Standards Provlelons collateral will be sold
specifications ln bid and
Davis-Bacon "as is-where is", w'ith
packot.
Wages, various lnsur· no
expressed
or
Specifications, and bid ance
requirements, Implied
warranty
forma may be secured various equal opportu· given.
at the office of Meigs nlly provisions, and For further lnformao u
n I
y the requirement for a lion, or for an appoint·
C
C o m m I s s I o n e r s , payment bonc;land per· mepl to inspect collatCourthouse, Pomeroy, formance bond for eral, prior to sale ~te
Ohio 45769· Phone 100% of the contract contact Cyndle, Ken or
740-992·2B95·.
price.
Randy at 992·2136. ·
A deposit of 0 dollars No bidder may with· (5) 15, 16, 17
111111t111n. 01
will be required for draw his bid within
J40-992-3111C
each set of plans and thirty (30) days after
specifications. The full the aclual date of the
Public Notice
·... lllldiV.fi'IIIIVI:IOIIM:IO Ill
amount
will
be opening lhereot. The
IM...IIVI:DI-12:11.11
returned within thirty Meigs
County NOTICE OF AVAIL·
(30) days after receipt C o m m I s s i o n e r s ABILITY FOR PUBLIC
of bids.
reserve the right to INSPECTION
Each bid must be reject any or all bids.
The
Veterans
of
1111111111 J:lls •I1M111• Wllllls
accompanied by either Mlck
Davenport, Foreign Wars of the
CIOMJCe.v.I..
a bid bond In an President
9053 VFW Board of
amount of 100% of the Meigs
Counly Trustees has filed Its
IIIII fir Clmlt Prlclll
bid amount with a Commissioners
annual return of a prlaurety satisfactory to (5) 1t, 15, 18
vate foundation, Form
tho aforesaid Meigs
990-PF,
with
the
NOTlCE :
C
o u
n t
y
Internal
Revenue
LANDOWNERS IN MEIGS
Commlplonors or by
Public Notice
Service lor calendar
AND GALLIA COUNTIES
certified
check,
year 2006. In secor·
WC!&gt;tt'rn Lane! Sen.IIC£''&gt;. Inc. &lt;1 le;~der rn Oil ,Hlll
cashiers check, or lot· PUBLIC NOTICE
dance with Internal
Ga!&gt; C"kp l01 .rt1 on ;urd devf'lopment. would llkf' lo
ter of credll upon a sol: NOTICE: Is hereby Revenue Code Section
eKienJ 11 £&gt; oller of ;n Oil anrl Gas Lt&gt;.r-.r' 1u
vent bank In the given lhat on Salurday, 6104(b), this form Is
thos !"' l :r ndownE&gt;rs/rnrn P.ra l ow nors wr thrrr f.Ji f' rq o.;
amount of not less May 19, 2007 at 10:00 · available for public
and Ga lli ;r Counties . Over 40.000 acre s 111 ltr &lt;'!&gt;o'
than 10% of the bid a.m., a public .sale wlll lnspecllon at the home
arcns hilve alre ady been leased nntl .lro•
amount In favor of lhe be held at 211 W ol James R. Ingels ,
pr ep&lt;rr in g t o be developed. If yolJ l1nve llli&lt;., '&gt;f'\l
t he c han ce to br' in~·olvecl 111 this ven l urf'
aforesaid
Meigs Second 51., Pomeroy, Commander, 700 Art
ple :~se con til ct th e locill o lf1ce ill 740-446 -fil\(10
C o
u· n t
y Ohio. The Farmers Street,
Middleport,
Don I rT'ISS l hr~ opportun rt y to parl!up.liP n thP
Commissioners. Bid Bank and Savings Ohio, during the 180dew•l o p rTll'rll o f ymrr n ;~ lurill t c&lt;&gt;ourr.('&lt;; ;t•; Wr'll
Bond shall be accom· Company Is selling for day period beginning
;:r:&lt;; !h{' pult.•nlra t 1or rn r.rP;lhiiHJ your
pan led by Proof of cash In hand or certl· May 16, 2007.
p Prso nal .nco me
Authority oftha official fled check the follow- (5) 15

Manley's
Recycling
• •st·

LPN-PH or Medical A8sistanl
And Medical Receptionist
Dr. Lieving's Office is currently
accepting resumes for a Full 'lime •
LPN-PH or Medical Assistant and a •
full·tlme Medical Receptionist. LPN
appUcants must have a current West
Virginia license. Ail applicants should
have at least one year experience in a
physician office or hospital related ares,
working with direct patient care.
.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
. 304-674·2417
ot fax to 304-675-6975

AAIEOE

SUNSHINE CLUB

GARAELD

45J8o

PlYING,., PIICES FOI .

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

•CII•

1

~nd resumes to:

5•
Pass

IT~&amp;C.Q~I\

1-WOR.~I(I

GuY.

J

Think about
the "unthinkable"
J. William Fulbright, a senator from
Arkensas who died in 1995, said, "We
musl dere to think 'un1hinkeble' 1hough1s.
We must learn to 'explore all the options
and possibimies that confront us in a
complex and rapidly changing wond."
At !he bridge ta~e . you ~onally
need 10 1hink "un1hinkable" 1hough1s as In lhis deal. You are Sou1h, in six
hearts. West leads !he club jack. You win
perforce on the board and call for a
trump, Eas1 playing 1he queen. How
would you conlinua 110111 there? Did
West have a more effective lead?
Note North's inilial response. Wilh tha
values lor a two-over-one call. he correctly bid his longest suil first He would
have responded ooe-spade wi1h only 610 points.
·
Souih's 1hree·no-1rump reb.id showed a
balanced hand wi1h 18 or 19 points, or
parllaps a poor 20. This left North a tad
stymied, wanting to invite a slam, but not
sure how best to do it. After some
ltloughl, he jumped to five hearts, hop·
ing his partner would 1hnk 1ns was ask. ing lor good trumps. On 1he same wavelengt~. Soulh raised 10 six hearts.
To make1he con1ract, you mus1 1e1 Eas1
toke 1he second 1rick wi1h his heart
queen. Suppose East sMts to a spade.
You win wi1h )OUr ece, ruff a ctub on 1he
board, draw trumps, and run the dia·
monds. If you win the second 1rick, )Oil
will lose one heart and either one club or
one spade.
Wes1 defeats 1he contraC1 with a die·
mond lead. The delenders can cut
declarer off from dummy's diamonds.
Bu1 who would lind 1ha1?
By thinking 1he "unlhinkaljs: )Oil make
1he makable.

W~!e,
By Bernice Bede 0101

Help Wanted
Public Notice

Pass
PaSs

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Wodneodoy, May 16,2007

Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gutla.rs
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pallo and Porch Decks
WV036725
992-62 15
PomProy Oh1r.
2S YC"1r~ local Expt'riC'IlC('

North

PaSs . 2 t

~Astro-

• New Homes

Remodeling
New Garages

~~ '(QU ::£E:::;:q
FOR. u::.?

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUCTIOI

Room Additions &amp;

Weal

Opening lead: ofo

OPEN FOR SEASON!

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

1 Unexclllng
5 llaHball's

Mel-

GRIZZWELLS
1dif.."it::i.!.. 1'M

47

Aurora ~

48

10 Plato
Hunter

ofmyth

50 Auto import

·stabilizer
11 Caughllhe

52 Buslneea

bus
12 Ooh

53

VIP

A number of new developmen1s migh1
occur 1he1 will set 1he .Cene lor many
years to come. Fortunatety, you will be ·
the author and in)tlator of your own
future. Make the most ol what is offered
you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Wi1h your
popularity ascending, your influence over
your friends and associates should be on
the rise as well. This is the time to
advance any personal interests you may
be harboring.
GEM1N1 (May 21-.lune 20) - Today
could marie. the beginning ol a new
achievement cycle for you. A secret
ambition that you have been nurturing for
some lime has excellent chances for
being fulfilled." Gf;!t on it now.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Hope,
coupled with mu ch faith In your abilities
and Ideas, is a big asset you need to
start using more to your advantage.
Don't hold back on all the things you
·· have going for you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Something new
is on lh~ hOrizon wher8 your work or
career Is concerned. What occurs should
prove ~o be to your ultimate 'benefit. even
if early appearances appear to be otherwise.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - If you apply
yourself to "better oommunlcatlon with a
partnership arrangement that has been
in trouble , .tliings will work out quite welt.
· This could be true in two instances.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - New measures may be introduced that could pro·
duce additional benefits for you where
your work or career Is concerned - if
you choose to take advantage of them.
It's up lo you.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. . 24-Nov. 22) - .
Someth'ing interesting is stirring that
could bring you into contact with a new
social group you might want to join: II will
contain the types of people who . will
make you fe81 welcomed.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - A
condition that has been bothersome and
you've been anxious to resolve is on its
last legs. What transpires will help you to
move on in a new direction.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Now
le an excellent time to start developing
more expertise and/or skill in your
favorite sport or activity. You could be a
fast learner when il comes to anything
that has captured your fancy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()-feb. 19) -You are
entering a good eamlng cycle, which
could benefit you and your family In
many desirable w~a . If you are openminded and willing to try new thlnga,
you'll do well.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - If your
past work or enona hM mtrtttd It, there
Ia o otrong ponlblli1y you could a.dvonco
your poaltlon during thl1 time frame. You
may team of your qualification to do 10.
AR IES (March 21-Aprll 19) - The
aapectl favor )'Ol.l again when It comea to
conditions that affect your financial poal·
tlon. You could be on tnt verge of some
kind of Important, lasting chlnge you'll
enJoy.

Drawer part

54 Like navel

· companion
13 Turl&lt;ey's
neighbor
15 Kind
of bello1
17 Hockey
felnl
18 Guitarist
- Paul
19 Small rocke
!1 Quench
!4 Resort
!5 Newspaper

oranges

59 Trig tunetion

60 Wolf Man
portrayer ·

61 She,
in Seville
62 After taxes
63 Up till now
84 The - lhe
limit! ,

eKecs

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

Syracuse, Ohio

Flats $7.50
1O"Hanglng Baskets $5.50·$6.50
4" Pots $1.25·$1.49
Shrubs·$2.95·$6.95
Open M·Saturday 10·5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

• 8 1 5'
K 14 3

•

+K4

Free Estimates

.Hardwood Cablneiry And FurnUure

7 6 3 2

9 AKJ94

70 Pin e S1rcet • Gall ipo l i s
740-446-0007 Toll Free !177-669-0007

Nye Ave

•

• Q
South
• A J

Stop &amp; Compare

YOUNG'S

East

K 8 4

• 10 7 5 2
• 6 3
• J 10 9 8

740-992·1611

.. .,.l

Public Notice

•

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
CORNIR STONf
CONSTRUCTION

10 9

• A

West

(/amill}.C•t\1ij#ll
East End
Storage

05-15-07

• Q 10 9 5

740-992·5776

L~

Palomino 3yr.old, Paint
Stallion. Aid ing horses, $550
each, Pony wlsaddle.$325.
740-367-7760

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

Free Estimates

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

-.1 I&lt;\ I I I '

·-IIIIPRoiiiiiiiliiVEIIIENfSiiiiiiiiiii,.l

44 Cunnlng

· 8 PI-

David Lewis

1999 Chevrolet Conversion
Used Bale wrapper for AS1ro Van, PIC , PIS, P/W,
Silage call 304-675·4308
AM/FM Radio w/Casselle
TV wNCR , towing package,
JET
125,100 miles. $6200.
AERATION MOTORS
740)367·0622
Repaired, New &amp; Aebuil In
·Stock. Call Ron Evans. 140 MCJIORCYU.ESI
12 yr. old Missouti Fox
800-537-9528.
Troller gelding. s1ands 15 L.o.oi4ioWIIiHEEJ:RSiiiiii
_ _ __.l
1/2 hands, $1,000; 6 yr. old ...,
like New Goodman gas furnace, under · warranty, MisSQuri Fox Trotter, gelding, 2001 HD Heritage Softail
90,000 BTU, up llow LP, stands 15 hands; $900; call Classic. Mint condition, low
Danny after 5pm, (740)949- mileage. Call after 5pm,
$800 (740)245·5181
991 2
740·441 ·9757

r

Alder

1 -:-~:-:-le_l_m_e_b~a-ck-in_h_o-us-e, 740-992·6?-~!od

McKean Farm, Centenary

Kiefer Buill- Va ll ey~ BisonComplete computer sys- Horse
and
livestock
1ems for sale (15) $125
Trailersl..oadmaxeach, (870)565-6128
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
For sale/Best offers: over- Utility- Aluma Aluminum
stuffed chair, 2 lamps, and Tnlllei's- B&amp;W GOOseneck
. h
~ .1
Par1s.
1
tables,
oak
doors, · H11c es·
ral er
Trailers
Van'.1y/so'nk, ab lounger, Carmich.ael
·
pala1es machine. Call 992- (740)446·2412
. 4521
Massey Ferguson 135

Precious and semi-precious
stones and jewelry. Best
Ofler.109
Kineon· Dr.
Gallipolis. 740-208-00~

ree

Orindint•Buc:lwiTn~ek

at

Cl!3arance on New &amp; Used
~OIANJISE
Aoto Tillers. Sate on Disc &amp;
Plows. Select 6' Finish
2 cemetary lots, at Letart Mowers spacial price. Jims
Falls, Oh., in Meigs
Farm Equipment. 740·446$600; large rolllop desk, 9777
$300;'Tappan chest tieezer,
$200: (740)992-2636
'Due1z 4WD 6 cyl. diesel
tractor Model 10 06 $5800. · Red 1998 Ford F150 Tri1on
36K24 Oval Pool with.deck-. Case Tractor Model 530 V8 Xl'r. 4.6L engine
ing. Pool sits down inside $3500. 669·0143
129,000 miles, Cargo Cover
deck, $1500. (740)446-7425
Au1oma1ic, power windows &amp;
Ford 3600 Tractor. Massey locMS $6,500 304-882·3333
8 Gun cherry gun cabinet for Ferguson 275 Tractor. 5050
4x4 ·
sale $150 Call 304-773- AC. l2250 Kubo1a wl
9108
mower. 740·286-6522
FoRSAu:

u e , ran
paning. Milton wv Fie
arke1, Sat&amp;Sun. 5 S1a
arran . 606-326-0m

T

· Service
Glmpous. oH45e31
CGrnpno r ... c.r.

Club,

r

·eo.,

In .LoVing Menwty

L,--·FOR-·Siu:·--,.1

Phillip

;,

20'x40 '

'-~ 1 '-'D

NEA Crosf!word Puzzle
ACROSS

Top • Ttlm • Holu~ng· Stump

· A•~

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5.

n

i

r . __ .· -·-I

In Memory

~10

www.mydallysentlnel.com

0

AKC "Boston Terrier Pups.
$14,000; 1994 21" Marada
Rldl.~ot~-.o.rn.
Taking dep 10 hold. Pererrts
305 Chev, 97 hrs, $6500. ,_....;"';;.;.;,_..
;;;,;,;.,..;;:
;;;;;;
'";;;'~;...._.
on prem. with pedigree, vet 00 Chevy Camaro SS black. (740)441·9372 ·
chkd, shots, wormed. 740· 6-spd, 1-lops, good condi.1om·.., ln·l "wnil'l'
388.9325
lion, $11,000 (304)57&amp;2223 Skiff Crah 1975. 26'. f~ing
leave message
bridge, dual controls, 225
• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stump
AKC Yof1&lt;ie pups MJF; AKC - - - - - - - - Mercruiser, lull mooring
Grindi ng • Bucket
Bos1on Ternet (F): AKC 1997 Ford Escort- auto, AC, cover, SIS prop, extras, VG
Shehie p~ Mil', vet ck., 121,000 mites $1400 as .is. cond., $6800(740)992-7376
Truck
ready now (740)696·1085
1998 Ford Escort- auto,
~
&amp;
Full insured
222,000 miles $500 ,as is.
AA~~tt'O:'
Senior Citizen
CKC Jack Russell Terrier Both can be seen 81 1he ~
~~~~
•
Puppies. $125 each. 256- Gallipolis Daily Tri~ne, 825
Discount
~165.:..::2-'-------' Third Ave, GaJipoHs or call GM 1rucl&lt; bumper. Brand
740-367-0266/
new in box. 68·2000.
CKC Westies. 1st shots, 'Mll, 446-2342, ask lor Paul.
Brackets
&amp;
pads.
1-800-950-3359
Vet checked. $400/Female
2B004 Chevy Malibu Classi~ part#999863 , dealer price
30 Yrs. Exp. Ins.
$350/Male. Both parants on urgundy, 4 cyl. Loaded. $376, asking $225.740-245- • 0
Site. 740-388-9453 or 740· 42000 miles. new Goo:tyear
wncr Ronnie Jones
0611
645·7007
tires, Asking $9500 OBO ~~-~--"""!~., .__F.re.·e. E
. s.tt..
·m..;atc""s_ _.
00
:Yo.::r:..ki.::e~Poo::.__,-liny--1e_a_c_u_p: 245-()61 1 or 44&amp;9640/ Ask
CAMPERS &amp;
MCJIOR HOIIIFS
Chihuahuas, applehead: 1or Vicky.
Poodle, lif'¥ toy, quality lap
2006 Chevy Coboll LS, 03 Winnebago/Adventu re
bebies. (740)645·6987
18•000 miles, $8300; 2004 38' loaded, low miles 304·
~-=--~...----.., Mercury Sa~e LS. 43.000 675 _3049
miles, SOOOO: 2004 Chevy . - - - - - - - Concrete Removal
'-.-.il
Cava lier, 30,000 mil es, 1983 30' RV, 45,000 miles.
and Replacement
.,
S6000; 2007 Chevy Cobolt, Sacrifice due to health,
For sale. Wurli1zer Piano 2.000
miles. · $9600. $8,000. (740)256·6395 or
All Types
and bench. 740-446-7903or (740)388·0010
(304)544·0101.
Concrete Work
74(}441-709ll
:9_3-'
O-'
Id-smo-b-ile_C_u1_1_ase_$6_7_5 ' - - ' - - - - - - - r--,.-------,
B!!!!'-....
1998 5th wheel travel trailer 26 Years Experience
FRuns &amp;
runs good, No Sunday Calls 32 ', double slide. lo1s of
~ VroEL\BIES
• 304·593-3156
options. $10.500. 740-698-

i·--iiiiio""""iiiliiio'-r

C

1

Tuesday,May15,2007
ALLEY OOP

BRIDGE

Mkldleport Beech S1ree1, 2 NEW AND USED STEEL For Sale Pigle1s 1or sale.
Br., furnished apt., utilities Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar' Ready .now. · Joseph A.
paid, no pets, dep. &amp; ref.. For
Concrete.
Angle, Peachey 3 1/2 miles from
992.0165.
. Channel , Flat Bar, Steel West Columbia on lieving
- - - - - - - - Grating
For
Drains. Road
DriVeways &amp; Wal~ l&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Mondey, Grain Fed S1eers only 3 lett
R apartments. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; $1 .99 lb. il'ldudes cut &amp;wrap
28
as er ryer
up, ThurSday,
stove/refrigerator included.

7

!6 Pay for
!7 Game piece
10 Gill opening
12 "Luck

--lady"

13Malaculotat
17 Is, In Avila

18 Panel truck
19 Dragon's .
breath
10 Parched
feeling
13 Big green
parrot

16 Financialaid criterion
20 Neutral
shade
2) Give
DOWN
medicine
22 Wise birds
1 Car grill
23 College
cover
credit
2 Soft toss
24 Dirty
3 TV spols
streaks
4 Loaf ends
28 Plainly
5 Feedbag
29 Big galoot
filler
31 Trim a dolly
6 - kwon do 34 Polynesian
7 Actors
. carvinQ
8 Dog name
35 Sandwich
9 Cas11e or
cookie
Dunne
36 Be sincere
10 In the raw
41 Tha1
14 Famed Loch
woman

42 Three--

sloth
44 Requests

45 rill (hyph.)
46 Carnivore's
delight
(hyph.)
49 Functions
51 Help a teton
52 Bronze coin
55 Help·wanted
abbr.
56 Taiga...,.
57 Craf!y
58 Al~lne ro
Stockholm

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Calaity Cipha- ~ogramsare created !rom quolalioos ~ tamous people, past ard p-esent.
Ead11ert1J lntheCIJ1lef stm !Of Nher.

Today's due: Mequals F

" E W F Z F l A C V E W l C, K E V G F
HFNZCFP

MZVX

DF'ZF

ABLFCBF

LC

WLAEVZR

NCRXVZF .

MLBELVC

CVD.'

• N H.H F C K L C A G F Z K

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "They wanted an atm and a leg."· Martina
Navralilova, on lhe reason why she neve1 insu1ed her len arm

.....
·~~::.' S~1\cil1J.-4£~S· ...,
'

_ _ _;.....;, Ulto4

~ClAY

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O::V.:ri.~~~ :;

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low·to 101111 leur si1rtple -ds.

RU S p E U

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"An in~estme~l in

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"

knowledge," the profts!Or

lectured his class, "pays lhe besl

IJUMTEN

:SCIAM.tfTS AHSWEII$

5• II • a1

Alyhun - HOIIIld - Wqve - Martyr- LAST WORD

•Aupology,"tite woman told her crying daughter, "is a good way :
haW&gt; tbe LAST WORD."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

·eor IT'&amp; 1llO !.Art 'Ill &amp;roP. •

•I

SOUPTONUTZ

f{\,\1-\1-\\~
\.~iE

V:JVA'I

1.·

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

~=::::;;;;;:;-

Nice 2 BA • 1BA in town, off
stree1 par!Ong. S500imo plus
dep: and ref. 740-446-1079

Tal&lt;ing applications for 3BR
remodeled house. No pe1s.
$425/mo. $3001dep. 446·

3617
Wery nice home lor rent in
Midd. 2 Br.,1 bath. sun
room, 7 rooms total, garage
&amp; basement. Available . Call
. 740-992-9784.

laurel
Commons
Apartmeris. Largest in the
areat Beautifully renovated
throughout including brand
new kitchen and bath .
Starting at $405. Call today!
(304)273-3344

2007 ·Honda Foreman 4x4
144 miles. ramps included
and cargo bag, call lor price
304-675·2083

Friday, 6am-4:30pni.
Closed
• ¥""
- - BuHs for sale.
Satu....t""'
&amp; Reg. ....
,,_,
Hotlybrook Farm . 740-245Also. uni1s on SR 160. Pets Sunday. (7401446-7300
5964
wetcome! (740)441-()1.94. ~j=---~-~--...,

ra os,
J h
'
Eveorude, 80 hours o n O nson S

W h ld

hook

c ~ 1;,

New Haven . 1 Br.. furnished.

FORSAu

no pels, dep.&amp;relererlces,

740-992.0165.
•
Apartment for rent . 1-2
2 betdroom Trailer in Bdrm .. remodeled , new car- Nice 2br Apt. for rent quiet
Gallipolis Ferry $350 rent . pet, stove &amp; frig. , wate r, neighborhood. family orlen$350 deposi1 No Pe1s 304· sewer. trash pd. Mlddlepon. 1ated $450. sacuri1y deposi1
no pels 740-446·7425
675-7996
$425.00. No pe1s. Rei.
required. 740-843-5264
Tara
Townhouse
2 bedroom trailer. $250/rimt
1lld $250/dep. 245-0095
Beautiful Apts. at Jacllson Apartments, Very Spacioos,
Estates.
52 Westwood 2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 112
2BR, 1 Bath, CIA, diShwash·
Drive, from $365 to $560. Batt1, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
er, new -carpet. 1624
740-446-2568
Equal Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
·Chatham Ave. Gallipolis,
Housing Opportunity. This No Pets, Lease Plus
Ohio (740)208-71!61 0 '
institution is an Equal Security Depos~ Required,
(740)446-4234
Opportun i1y Provider and _!7_40
_l_36_7_·7_086
_ ·_ _ __
Ntce 2 BR mobile home. Employer.
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptNC. l oca1ed a1 Johnson
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· ing applicaHoos for waiting
Mobile Home Park. 446·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
lis1 lor Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
2003
Townhouse
apartments. apartment,for
the
. Nk:e 2BR, 2BA, mobile ard'or smaU houses FOR· elderly/disabled call 675home. CIA. private lot in AENT. Call (740)441 ·1 111 6679
Equal
Housing
GaU!polis. $450/mo. Call for application &amp;information. ~O,;;,..".;.u"
ppo • .1.;.Y_ _ _ __,
845-7765 affer Spm please.
Gracious Uvlng 1 and 2
FORSP~~~ce 2BR, 2BA. mobile Bedroom Ap1s. a1 Village
~e. C/A, private lot in Manor and Riverside Apts. in '
~all ipolis . $450/mo. Call Middleport, from $327 to Commercial building ·For
645-n65 after 6pm please. $592. 740·992·5064. Equal Renf 1600 square feet, off
. Housing .Opportunity. This s1&lt;eet parkng Great locaAPAR'IMEl'ITS
tnstilution is an Equal 1ion! 749 Third Avenue in
1 Opportunity Provider and
FOR lbNr
Gallipolis. Ren1 $400lmo.
Employer.
Call Wayne (404)456-3802
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments =.:::::=_____
i4r Rent. Meigs County. In Gracious living. 1 ard 2 bed- Prime commercial space for
town, No Pets, Deposit room apartments at Village rent at Springvalley Plaza.
):mQuired. (740)992·5174 or Manor
and
Riverside Call645·2192.
~ 740}44 1~ 110:
Apartments in Middleport.
\ IIIH II \\ 111"1
From $0-$592. Calt 74()' and 2 bedroom apart- 992·5064. Equal Housing jj;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;
ments.iturnished and unfur· Opportunities.
Equal riO
lfouiimow
hished, and houses in Opportuni1y Employer
~
Golla;
Pomeroy · and Middleport ,
Honeysuckle
Hills
deposi1 required,no Apartments
now accepting Broyhill · Couch, excellent
lle1S. 740-992·2218.
applications for 1 and 2BA condition . $150. 740-446, BR Apt WID hool&lt;ups. apts. No rental assistance 0123
tirst Mon. rent $175 plus available at this lime. Rent - -- -- - - dep. 740-441 -9668 or 74Q- ~1arts ai $310 mon1h. Equal MOVING Salol Everything
Housing
Opportunity. must go! MuHi-lamily yard
339-Q362.
(740)446·3344.
:;ale. Appliances, elec1ron2br, Apt. in Pt. Pleasant. ~.:..:....:..:...:.::.._____ ics, lurniture, etc. For more
New1y remOdeled, $475/mo. Middlepor1 1 or 2 Br. ap1s., _in~lo:"c~~ll
a 446-~.;38.;.;.;.56_ _..,
utilities
paid.
depsoit no pets. dep. &amp; ref.. 992required (304)675-8635
0165
"~"-"'""

iacuri1y

In Memory.

'Betty~8-7-33

:Jvfanfey
1·28·05

Roses are red and some ?re
yellow. I was always so-o proud
to be your fellow...
Thinking of you on our 59th
wedding anniversary
May 14, 1948
Husband Odell Manley
Auction

Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
ESTATE OF ROLAND H. OILER
SATURDAY, MAY 19,.2007.
LOCATED AT 1470 S. OHIO AVE.,
WELLSTON, OH 45692

.'

(Directions from Nollh· Go South on 93fPenn. Ave . right on
93 (Inward Coaltl)n). go to 1st road . Ohio Ave., lum left.
Follow 10 ~ale .
From Soulh- Take 327N 1o lir~ l strcel a1 CarWash· turn left.
Follow to sale)
,
Partial list: H ou s~:hul d · louis · Lawn Carden. 'Misc. Items
HOUSEHOI.. D: Couch, Chairs. 20' TV, TV .Stand, Coffee
table. End Tables, Desk w/chair, pictures, vacuum sweCpcr,
full bed (Headboard. footboard. Box Spring. Manress J.
Chest of Drawers. Nighl Stand. Quilts, 6 Shelf Storage rack.
TOOLS: 2 Bench Grind er ~ . Garden tiller. Shopma1e
collapsible workbe nch, yard rertilizer spreader, cordless
drill, electric blower, 3 gal. electric air conipres5or. small
drill press, Black &amp; Decker table sa ~ Bl~d:. &amp; Decker
electric drill, Craflsman labk saw, Black &amp; Decker power
sander moumed on table, Electric ~ hai n saw, Delta tland saw,
Electric j ig saw. Many more misc. loots.
MISC: Lamps, pil'tures, fi g u ri ne~. dishes, kitchenware.
AUTO: 197 Ford Escon LX Slat ion Wagon· 84.&lt;.00 mile.&gt;·
Salvage Tille
TRUCK: /9 1 Chevy S-10 pi ckup- Over 150.000 m i l e ~­
Satvage Title
GUNS, MISC. RELATED ITEMS: New England SB2 10
ga . -AJ Aubrey Single S.ho1 12 g~ . (16) Remington model
10-"!2 ga, Marlin Model 24G 12 ga· Winche~tc r Model #~5
12 ga- Marlin Model43 12 ga- Winchester Model 12 12 ga.
Remington Sportsman 58 12 ga. H&amp;R Model1908 12 ga ..
JC Higgins Model 20 12 ga. lthica. Model 87 MagnumMossburg Model SOOA l 2 ga. (w/scope ) - Savage 12 gaWinchester Model .~0 12 ga· W i nc he ~t l.'r Mod~l 12 12 ga .. Mossburg Model 500A 12 ga. Western Field Deluxe Model
SO - 12 ga Remington Model H78 (no barr"cl) Winchester
Model 12 12 ga, Central ~rm s Single Shot l 2 ga. Rt:mington
_(w/scope) Model 870· Rt:mingLOn Model 29 12 Ga.·
Remington 870 Express Magnum 12 Ga, Kcmington Model
31 12 Ga. Remington Model 31 12 ga· Remington Model 29
12 g_a. JC Higgins Model 20 12 ga .. Mossburg Slug Barrel
Model 500C 20 ga- H&amp;R Baystatle- lver Johnsnn 12 gaBoume &amp; Bond 12 ga- R iven id ~ Arms'l 2 g~ - American
Anru 20 ga· Sears Si ngle Shot 12 ga, J St~v~ns Anns 12 gaH&amp;:R Model Model l 58 l 2 ga- H&amp;R MoJcl 48 20 ga.
Meriden Double Barret 12 ga· H&amp;R 'foppcr Ocluxe -HAND
"GUNS: Browning 22 ~uto matic wA:Ii p- Smith Revolver·
Asua- Cadi:c 22 cal. LeVeniabte D"Armes·22 automaticBersa Model 38.l cal. 380 - H&amp;R 38 Smith &amp; WesSon
Hammerless· Savage Model IOJ, 22 si n ~le shot · Smi th &amp;
WeSson 38: H&amp;R Topper Model 158 12 ga . . Gibralite 12 ga
MISC: Gun Cabinet - Soft sided gun cases- Hurd ~id ed gun
case. Various gun trade book s- Gun Scopes- Sholgun
Barrels· Sholgun Magazines- Shotgun· forend!&gt; · Sho1gun
bullends-Handgun holsters- Pistol grips
AU!:TIONEERS NOTE: Sale 1tarr• i! 9:)0 a.m.
wlhousthold, tool5, lawn/garden eci uipment. AUIU· Truck &amp;
Misc. items. GUNS w111 bt displayed fur tnspection and
viewing from l 2:30 pm to I:30 pm Gun Sale_ and Misc. gun
items begin at 1:30pm. A printed lisl will be available. The
manner and method guns will he sold and buyers signing for
will be announced before sale. TERMS: Cash •Or check
w/valid drivers license ID. All items in thi s 1uk sold a.&gt;is,
where is. Owner/E~ec . offers No Warranties Wh~l socvcr. All
Buyers musl be l 8 years uld IU purchase Long Guns and ~l
years old 10 Purchase H and .Gu ns~ and MUST BE a Resident
of Ohio forthis Sale
·
GE'ITLFS AUCTION SERVICE
James H. Gettles, AuctiOneer
Licensed State of Ohio
1024 S. Penn. Ave., Wellston, OH 45692
(740) 384-2125

Holly Cox, Executor

••

1998 18' S1 1

rebuild. $7800. (740)256·
1962
Boathouse

Gallipolis

Boat

"*":~";-.:*

I

I-

--"!"'"-..,I

r

Homegrown Strawberries·. r15

:u~

"
I \ H\1

-. t 1'1'111"

,\ 11 \ l '-. 1(1\"
rlO

FARM

L..-..;F.QuiPMFM;IiiiliiiiiiOii._.l
0% Financi ng- 36 Mos.

available now on John
Deere Z Trak Zen&gt; Tums &amp;
5.99% Fixe&lt;( Ra1e on John
Deere Gato'ra Carmichael
Equipment (740)44&amp;241 2.

Traclor. $5000. 740·2455296

1986 East Dump Trailer. Flip
larp, liner, 34l!72, tandem,
$11 ,000 OBO, (740)992·
5617
97 Dodge 1500 ext cab,
a~;~to/air, 4WD Short Bed,
318, $5800 Exc. Cond; 1981
Dodge 4Wb 318 4spd,
$2200 Super Swampers.
(740)256-6543
~.:..:::::..::...:.::....::......_ __
'98 Ford Ranger XLT.
camper top, very good con·
dition, under 58000 mfles.
$6200, 740-379·2260

must sell 2000 Skamper
Camper, $7500 25' comes
with TV, buy before she kicks
me ou1' call (740)949-4601
or 740-416·4379

Help Wanted

w·ISe ( oncrete

All types of conc rete

Owner- Rick Wise

~r~to~"'"-~H'"o•••fE---,

740·9'12-5929

!1

'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NG
Unconditional lifetime .guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446Boom
Truck
Pitman 0870. Rogers Basement
UnVDyne forty fool boom Six Waterproofing.
ton hydraulic crane on a 2
1/2 ton steel deck Ford Truck
304-675·5000

'•
l

North

j

• 8 6 3

+ AQJ

MONTY

r

740-416-1698
15 yrs. Exp. Free Estimates

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

Mushroom Compos!
$35AScoop
T-Post 6rt. $3.29

1996 Dodge Avenger, needs
work, SBOO 080, 740·416·
_7_ooo_o_r _74_D_·9_9_2·_60_70
_._
2003 F150 , 4 x4 , 46000

Wide Variety

or

Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and

miles $13500. 2003 Jeep
Grand ' Cherokee 56000
miles. $14000. 675-6121

i~--oiFiiOiHiiSiiAiii.Eii
VANS

units within the

Roofing, Siding.
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Re,modeling, Room
Additions

jurisdiction or the

Local Contractor

Pomeroy,OH
5xl0, 6xl0,

IOxiO,

10x24
The only storage

Pomeroy P.D.

740-367-0544

(740) 742-2690

740·367-0536

2003 V·Star Classic 1100
Cruiser, Like New, 6,000
miles, Windshield, Bags &amp;
ex1ras. $6,000. (740)446·
9278

www.tlmberereeJc.cablnotry.com

740.446.9200
2AS9 St. Rt. 160 •GaiUpolls
f

Hubbard's Greenhouse

• Q 6 52

r

South

1•

3 NT ·
6•

CARPENTER
SERVICE

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

TI'IAT'S' MA~~. F~ANG ANf&gt;
1-I~A ·-· TtifY vlf~f Fl~ff&gt;
AND ~tPLAGff&gt; BY TtiAT
~~ "tu~O"

BARNEY
FIVE-cARD DRAW, DEUCES
AN' 01\£ -EYED JACKS

ARE WILD, FOURS COU\IT .r:,~.,~
DOUBLE, CLUBS DON'T

CCU\IT ·AN'

QUEENS"

. EQUAL
ACES!!

THE BOFIN LOSER

~us, w&lt;. W&gt;o.\JE
TO D\~U:-:6 ~OUR
~~OR.IN6!

BIG NATE

aiiiilii.w.llitliliitl

Loo!dng for an exciting
career in Health Care?
Ohio Valley Home Health,
Inc. is now hiring STNA's,
CNA's, CHHA's and PCA's
for our Passport office.
Competitive wages,
benefit.s and mileage.
Please contact Gail Meade
at 1480 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis or phone toll free
1-866-441-9263.
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

we Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios Systein

{illRlihJ •"""'•..&gt;:"i~1"fl-M":"""I

V.C. YOUNG Ill

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

PEANUTS

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446·0007

· Public Notice

NOTICE TO CONTRAC- or agent signing the ing collateral:
GMC
Envoy
TORS
bond,
2002
sealed proposals for Bids shall be seated 1GKDT13S622170936
the Pomeroy Distress and marked as Bid lor 1996 Plymouth Van
Sidewalk Replacement Pomeroy
· Dlslress 1P4GP44R6TB194631
Project, Meigs County, Sidewalk Replacement The Farmers Bank and ·
Ohio, will be received project and mailed or. Savings
Company, IP.!~~~~~~~~~~~~
by the Meigs County delivered to:
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
Commlealoners at the Meigs
County reserves the right to
Meigs
Courthouse, Commissioners
bid atlhls sale, and to
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 Courthouse
withdraw the above
until
1 :00
p,m., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
collaleral prior to sale.
Thursday, May 31 , 2007 , Attention of bidders Is Further, The Farmers
and lhan at 1:15 p.m. at called to all of the Bank and Savings
saki office opened and requiremenls
con· Company .reserves the
read aloud for the fol- talned In this bid pack- right to reject any or all
et, particularly to the bids submitled.
lowing:
This Is a Prevailing Federal
Labor The above described
Wage project. See Standards Provlelons collateral will be sold
specifications ln bid and
Davis-Bacon "as is-where is", w'ith
packot.
Wages, various lnsur· no
expressed
or
Specifications, and bid ance
requirements, Implied
warranty
forma may be secured various equal opportu· given.
at the office of Meigs nlly provisions, and For further lnformao u
n I
y the requirement for a lion, or for an appoint·
C
C o m m I s s I o n e r s , payment bonc;land per· mepl to inspect collatCourthouse, Pomeroy, formance bond for eral, prior to sale ~te
Ohio 45769· Phone 100% of the contract contact Cyndle, Ken or
740-992·2B95·.
price.
Randy at 992·2136. ·
A deposit of 0 dollars No bidder may with· (5) 15, 16, 17
111111t111n. 01
will be required for draw his bid within
J40-992-3111C
each set of plans and thirty (30) days after
specifications. The full the aclual date of the
Public Notice
·... lllldiV.fi'IIIIVI:IOIIM:IO Ill
amount
will
be opening lhereot. The
IM...IIVI:DI-12:11.11
returned within thirty Meigs
County NOTICE OF AVAIL·
(30) days after receipt C o m m I s s i o n e r s ABILITY FOR PUBLIC
of bids.
reserve the right to INSPECTION
Each bid must be reject any or all bids.
The
Veterans
of
1111111111 J:lls •I1M111• Wllllls
accompanied by either Mlck
Davenport, Foreign Wars of the
CIOMJCe.v.I..
a bid bond In an President
9053 VFW Board of
amount of 100% of the Meigs
Counly Trustees has filed Its
IIIII fir Clmlt Prlclll
bid amount with a Commissioners
annual return of a prlaurety satisfactory to (5) 1t, 15, 18
vate foundation, Form
tho aforesaid Meigs
990-PF,
with
the
NOTlCE :
C
o u
n t
y
Internal
Revenue
LANDOWNERS IN MEIGS
Commlplonors or by
Public Notice
Service lor calendar
AND GALLIA COUNTIES
certified
check,
year 2006. In secor·
WC!&gt;tt'rn Lane! Sen.IIC£''&gt;. Inc. &lt;1 le;~der rn Oil ,Hlll
cashiers check, or lot· PUBLIC NOTICE
dance with Internal
Ga!&gt; C"kp l01 .rt1 on ;urd devf'lopment. would llkf' lo
ter of credll upon a sol: NOTICE: Is hereby Revenue Code Section
eKienJ 11 £&gt; oller of ;n Oil anrl Gas Lt&gt;.r-.r' 1u
vent bank In the given lhat on Salurday, 6104(b), this form Is
thos !"' l :r ndownE&gt;rs/rnrn P.ra l ow nors wr thrrr f.Ji f' rq o.;
amount of not less May 19, 2007 at 10:00 · available for public
and Ga lli ;r Counties . Over 40.000 acre s 111 ltr &lt;'!&gt;o'
than 10% of the bid a.m., a public .sale wlll lnspecllon at the home
arcns hilve alre ady been leased nntl .lro•
amount In favor of lhe be held at 211 W ol James R. Ingels ,
pr ep&lt;rr in g t o be developed. If yolJ l1nve llli&lt;., '&gt;f'\l
t he c han ce to br' in~·olvecl 111 this ven l urf'
aforesaid
Meigs Second 51., Pomeroy, Commander, 700 Art
ple :~se con til ct th e locill o lf1ce ill 740-446 -fil\(10
C o
u· n t
y Ohio. The Farmers Street,
Middleport,
Don I rT'ISS l hr~ opportun rt y to parl!up.liP n thP
Commissioners. Bid Bank and Savings Ohio, during the 180dew•l o p rTll'rll o f ymrr n ;~ lurill t c&lt;&gt;ourr.('&lt;; ;t•; Wr'll
Bond shall be accom· Company Is selling for day period beginning
;:r:&lt;; !h{' pult.•nlra t 1or rn r.rP;lhiiHJ your
pan led by Proof of cash In hand or certl· May 16, 2007.
p Prso nal .nco me
Authority oftha official fled check the follow- (5) 15

Manley's
Recycling
• •st·

LPN-PH or Medical A8sistanl
And Medical Receptionist
Dr. Lieving's Office is currently
accepting resumes for a Full 'lime •
LPN-PH or Medical Assistant and a •
full·tlme Medical Receptionist. LPN
appUcants must have a current West
Virginia license. Ail applicants should
have at least one year experience in a
physician office or hospital related ares,
working with direct patient care.
.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
. 304-674·2417
ot fax to 304-675-6975

AAIEOE

SUNSHINE CLUB

GARAELD

45J8o

PlYING,., PIICES FOI .

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

•CII•

1

~nd resumes to:

5•
Pass

IT~&amp;C.Q~I\

1-WOR.~I(I

GuY.

J

Think about
the "unthinkable"
J. William Fulbright, a senator from
Arkensas who died in 1995, said, "We
musl dere to think 'un1hinkeble' 1hough1s.
We must learn to 'explore all the options
and possibimies that confront us in a
complex and rapidly changing wond."
At !he bridge ta~e . you ~onally
need 10 1hink "un1hinkable" 1hough1s as In lhis deal. You are Sou1h, in six
hearts. West leads !he club jack. You win
perforce on the board and call for a
trump, Eas1 playing 1he queen. How
would you conlinua 110111 there? Did
West have a more effective lead?
Note North's inilial response. Wilh tha
values lor a two-over-one call. he correctly bid his longest suil first He would
have responded ooe-spade wi1h only 610 points.
·
Souih's 1hree·no-1rump reb.id showed a
balanced hand wi1h 18 or 19 points, or
parllaps a poor 20. This left North a tad
stymied, wanting to invite a slam, but not
sure how best to do it. After some
ltloughl, he jumped to five hearts, hop·
ing his partner would 1hnk 1ns was ask. ing lor good trumps. On 1he same wavelengt~. Soulh raised 10 six hearts.
To make1he con1ract, you mus1 1e1 Eas1
toke 1he second 1rick wi1h his heart
queen. Suppose East sMts to a spade.
You win wi1h )OUr ece, ruff a ctub on 1he
board, draw trumps, and run the dia·
monds. If you win the second 1rick, )Oil
will lose one heart and either one club or
one spade.
Wes1 defeats 1he contraC1 with a die·
mond lead. The delenders can cut
declarer off from dummy's diamonds.
Bu1 who would lind 1ha1?
By thinking 1he "unlhinkaljs: )Oil make
1he makable.

W~!e,
By Bernice Bede 0101

Help Wanted
Public Notice

Pass
PaSs

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Wodneodoy, May 16,2007

Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gutla.rs
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pallo and Porch Decks
WV036725
992-62 15
PomProy Oh1r.
2S YC"1r~ local Expt'riC'IlC('

North

PaSs . 2 t

~Astro-

• New Homes

Remodeling
New Garages

~~ '(QU ::£E:::;:q
FOR. u::.?

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUCTIOI

Room Additions &amp;

Weal

Opening lead: ofo

OPEN FOR SEASON!

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

1 Unexclllng
5 llaHball's

Mel-

GRIZZWELLS
1dif.."it::i.!.. 1'M

47

Aurora ~

48

10 Plato
Hunter

ofmyth

50 Auto import

·stabilizer
11 Caughllhe

52 Buslneea

bus
12 Ooh

53

VIP

A number of new developmen1s migh1
occur 1he1 will set 1he .Cene lor many
years to come. Fortunatety, you will be ·
the author and in)tlator of your own
future. Make the most ol what is offered
you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Wi1h your
popularity ascending, your influence over
your friends and associates should be on
the rise as well. This is the time to
advance any personal interests you may
be harboring.
GEM1N1 (May 21-.lune 20) - Today
could marie. the beginning ol a new
achievement cycle for you. A secret
ambition that you have been nurturing for
some lime has excellent chances for
being fulfilled." Gf;!t on it now.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Hope,
coupled with mu ch faith In your abilities
and Ideas, is a big asset you need to
start using more to your advantage.
Don't hold back on all the things you
·· have going for you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Something new
is on lh~ hOrizon wher8 your work or
career Is concerned. What occurs should
prove ~o be to your ultimate 'benefit. even
if early appearances appear to be otherwise.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - If you apply
yourself to "better oommunlcatlon with a
partnership arrangement that has been
in trouble , .tliings will work out quite welt.
· This could be true in two instances.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - New measures may be introduced that could pro·
duce additional benefits for you where
your work or career Is concerned - if
you choose to take advantage of them.
It's up lo you.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. . 24-Nov. 22) - .
Someth'ing interesting is stirring that
could bring you into contact with a new
social group you might want to join: II will
contain the types of people who . will
make you fe81 welcomed.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - A
condition that has been bothersome and
you've been anxious to resolve is on its
last legs. What transpires will help you to
move on in a new direction.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Now
le an excellent time to start developing
more expertise and/or skill in your
favorite sport or activity. You could be a
fast learner when il comes to anything
that has captured your fancy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()-feb. 19) -You are
entering a good eamlng cycle, which
could benefit you and your family In
many desirable w~a . If you are openminded and willing to try new thlnga,
you'll do well.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - If your
past work or enona hM mtrtttd It, there
Ia o otrong ponlblli1y you could a.dvonco
your poaltlon during thl1 time frame. You
may team of your qualification to do 10.
AR IES (March 21-Aprll 19) - The
aapectl favor )'Ol.l again when It comea to
conditions that affect your financial poal·
tlon. You could be on tnt verge of some
kind of Important, lasting chlnge you'll
enJoy.

Drawer part

54 Like navel

· companion
13 Turl&lt;ey's
neighbor
15 Kind
of bello1
17 Hockey
felnl
18 Guitarist
- Paul
19 Small rocke
!1 Quench
!4 Resort
!5 Newspaper

oranges

59 Trig tunetion

60 Wolf Man
portrayer ·

61 She,
in Seville
62 After taxes
63 Up till now
84 The - lhe
limit! ,

eKecs

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

Syracuse, Ohio

Flats $7.50
1O"Hanglng Baskets $5.50·$6.50
4" Pots $1.25·$1.49
Shrubs·$2.95·$6.95
Open M·Saturday 10·5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

• 8 1 5'
K 14 3

•

+K4

Free Estimates

.Hardwood Cablneiry And FurnUure

7 6 3 2

9 AKJ94

70 Pin e S1rcet • Gall ipo l i s
740-446-0007 Toll Free !177-669-0007

Nye Ave

•

• Q
South
• A J

Stop &amp; Compare

YOUNG'S

East

K 8 4

• 10 7 5 2
• 6 3
• J 10 9 8

740-992·1611

.. .,.l

Public Notice

•

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
CORNIR STONf
CONSTRUCTION

10 9

• A

West

(/amill}.C•t\1ij#ll
East End
Storage

05-15-07

• Q 10 9 5

740-992·5776

L~

Palomino 3yr.old, Paint
Stallion. Aid ing horses, $550
each, Pony wlsaddle.$325.
740-367-7760

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

Free Estimates

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

-.1 I&lt;\ I I I '

·-IIIIPRoiiiiiiiliiVEIIIENfSiiiiiiiiiii,.l

44 Cunnlng

· 8 PI-

David Lewis

1999 Chevrolet Conversion
Used Bale wrapper for AS1ro Van, PIC , PIS, P/W,
Silage call 304-675·4308
AM/FM Radio w/Casselle
TV wNCR , towing package,
JET
125,100 miles. $6200.
AERATION MOTORS
740)367·0622
Repaired, New &amp; Aebuil In
·Stock. Call Ron Evans. 140 MCJIORCYU.ESI
12 yr. old Missouti Fox
800-537-9528.
Troller gelding. s1ands 15 L.o.oi4ioWIIiHEEJ:RSiiiiii
_ _ __.l
1/2 hands, $1,000; 6 yr. old ...,
like New Goodman gas furnace, under · warranty, MisSQuri Fox Trotter, gelding, 2001 HD Heritage Softail
90,000 BTU, up llow LP, stands 15 hands; $900; call Classic. Mint condition, low
Danny after 5pm, (740)949- mileage. Call after 5pm,
$800 (740)245·5181
991 2
740·441 ·9757

r

Alder

1 -:-~:-:-le_l_m_e_b~a-ck-in_h_o-us-e, 740-992·6?-~!od

McKean Farm, Centenary

Kiefer Buill- Va ll ey~ BisonComplete computer sys- Horse
and
livestock
1ems for sale (15) $125
Trailersl..oadmaxeach, (870)565-6128
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
For sale/Best offers: over- Utility- Aluma Aluminum
stuffed chair, 2 lamps, and Tnlllei's- B&amp;W GOOseneck
. h
~ .1
Par1s.
1
tables,
oak
doors, · H11c es·
ral er
Trailers
Van'.1y/so'nk, ab lounger, Carmich.ael
·
pala1es machine. Call 992- (740)446·2412
. 4521
Massey Ferguson 135

Precious and semi-precious
stones and jewelry. Best
Ofler.109
Kineon· Dr.
Gallipolis. 740-208-00~

ree

Orindint•Buc:lwiTn~ek

at

Cl!3arance on New &amp; Used
~OIANJISE
Aoto Tillers. Sate on Disc &amp;
Plows. Select 6' Finish
2 cemetary lots, at Letart Mowers spacial price. Jims
Falls, Oh., in Meigs
Farm Equipment. 740·446$600; large rolllop desk, 9777
$300;'Tappan chest tieezer,
$200: (740)992-2636
'Due1z 4WD 6 cyl. diesel
tractor Model 10 06 $5800. · Red 1998 Ford F150 Tri1on
36K24 Oval Pool with.deck-. Case Tractor Model 530 V8 Xl'r. 4.6L engine
ing. Pool sits down inside $3500. 669·0143
129,000 miles, Cargo Cover
deck, $1500. (740)446-7425
Au1oma1ic, power windows &amp;
Ford 3600 Tractor. Massey locMS $6,500 304-882·3333
8 Gun cherry gun cabinet for Ferguson 275 Tractor. 5050
4x4 ·
sale $150 Call 304-773- AC. l2250 Kubo1a wl
9108
mower. 740·286-6522
FoRSAu:

u e , ran
paning. Milton wv Fie
arke1, Sat&amp;Sun. 5 S1a
arran . 606-326-0m

T

· Service
Glmpous. oH45e31
CGrnpno r ... c.r.

Club,

r

·eo.,

In .LoVing Menwty

L,--·FOR-·Siu:·--,.1

Phillip

;,

20'x40 '

'-~ 1 '-'D

NEA Crosf!word Puzzle
ACROSS

Top • Ttlm • Holu~ng· Stump

· A•~

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5.

n

i

r . __ .· -·-I

In Memory

~10

www.mydallysentlnel.com

0

AKC "Boston Terrier Pups.
$14,000; 1994 21" Marada
Rldl.~ot~-.o.rn.
Taking dep 10 hold. Pererrts
305 Chev, 97 hrs, $6500. ,_....;"';;.;.;,_..
;;;,;,;.,..;;:
;;;;;;
'";;;'~;...._.
on prem. with pedigree, vet 00 Chevy Camaro SS black. (740)441·9372 ·
chkd, shots, wormed. 740· 6-spd, 1-lops, good condi.1om·.., ln·l "wnil'l'
388.9325
lion, $11,000 (304)57&amp;2223 Skiff Crah 1975. 26'. f~ing
leave message
bridge, dual controls, 225
• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stump
AKC Yof1&lt;ie pups MJF; AKC - - - - - - - - Mercruiser, lull mooring
Grindi ng • Bucket
Bos1on Ternet (F): AKC 1997 Ford Escort- auto, AC, cover, SIS prop, extras, VG
Shehie p~ Mil', vet ck., 121,000 mites $1400 as .is. cond., $6800(740)992-7376
Truck
ready now (740)696·1085
1998 Ford Escort- auto,
~
&amp;
Full insured
222,000 miles $500 ,as is.
AA~~tt'O:'
Senior Citizen
CKC Jack Russell Terrier Both can be seen 81 1he ~
~~~~
•
Puppies. $125 each. 256- Gallipolis Daily Tri~ne, 825
Discount
~165.:..::2-'-------' Third Ave, GaJipoHs or call GM 1rucl&lt; bumper. Brand
740-367-0266/
new in box. 68·2000.
CKC Westies. 1st shots, 'Mll, 446-2342, ask lor Paul.
Brackets
&amp;
pads.
1-800-950-3359
Vet checked. $400/Female
2B004 Chevy Malibu Classi~ part#999863 , dealer price
30 Yrs. Exp. Ins.
$350/Male. Both parants on urgundy, 4 cyl. Loaded. $376, asking $225.740-245- • 0
Site. 740-388-9453 or 740· 42000 miles. new Goo:tyear
wncr Ronnie Jones
0611
645·7007
tires, Asking $9500 OBO ~~-~--"""!~., .__F.re.·e. E
. s.tt..
·m..;atc""s_ _.
00
:Yo.::r:..ki.::e~Poo::.__,-liny--1e_a_c_u_p: 245-()61 1 or 44&amp;9640/ Ask
CAMPERS &amp;
MCJIOR HOIIIFS
Chihuahuas, applehead: 1or Vicky.
Poodle, lif'¥ toy, quality lap
2006 Chevy Coboll LS, 03 Winnebago/Adventu re
bebies. (740)645·6987
18•000 miles, $8300; 2004 38' loaded, low miles 304·
~-=--~...----.., Mercury Sa~e LS. 43.000 675 _3049
miles, SOOOO: 2004 Chevy . - - - - - - - Concrete Removal
'-.-.il
Cava lier, 30,000 mil es, 1983 30' RV, 45,000 miles.
and Replacement
.,
S6000; 2007 Chevy Cobolt, Sacrifice due to health,
For sale. Wurli1zer Piano 2.000
miles. · $9600. $8,000. (740)256·6395 or
All Types
and bench. 740-446-7903or (740)388·0010
(304)544·0101.
Concrete Work
74(}441-709ll
:9_3-'
O-'
Id-smo-b-ile_C_u1_1_ase_$6_7_5 ' - - ' - - - - - - - r--,.-------,
B!!!!'-....
1998 5th wheel travel trailer 26 Years Experience
FRuns &amp;
runs good, No Sunday Calls 32 ', double slide. lo1s of
~ VroEL\BIES
• 304·593-3156
options. $10.500. 740-698-

i·--iiiiio""""iiiliiio'-r

C

1

Tuesday,May15,2007
ALLEY OOP

BRIDGE

Mkldleport Beech S1ree1, 2 NEW AND USED STEEL For Sale Pigle1s 1or sale.
Br., furnished apt., utilities Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar' Ready .now. · Joseph A.
paid, no pets, dep. &amp; ref.. For
Concrete.
Angle, Peachey 3 1/2 miles from
992.0165.
. Channel , Flat Bar, Steel West Columbia on lieving
- - - - - - - - Grating
For
Drains. Road
DriVeways &amp; Wal~ l&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Mondey, Grain Fed S1eers only 3 lett
R apartments. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; $1 .99 lb. il'ldudes cut &amp;wrap
28
as er ryer
up, ThurSday,
stove/refrigerator included.

7

!6 Pay for
!7 Game piece
10 Gill opening
12 "Luck

--lady"

13Malaculotat
17 Is, In Avila

18 Panel truck
19 Dragon's .
breath
10 Parched
feeling
13 Big green
parrot

16 Financialaid criterion
20 Neutral
shade
2) Give
DOWN
medicine
22 Wise birds
1 Car grill
23 College
cover
credit
2 Soft toss
24 Dirty
3 TV spols
streaks
4 Loaf ends
28 Plainly
5 Feedbag
29 Big galoot
filler
31 Trim a dolly
6 - kwon do 34 Polynesian
7 Actors
. carvinQ
8 Dog name
35 Sandwich
9 Cas11e or
cookie
Dunne
36 Be sincere
10 In the raw
41 Tha1
14 Famed Loch
woman

42 Three--

sloth
44 Requests

45 rill (hyph.)
46 Carnivore's
delight
(hyph.)
49 Functions
51 Help a teton
52 Bronze coin
55 Help·wanted
abbr.
56 Taiga...,.
57 Craf!y
58 Al~lne ro
Stockholm

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Calaity Cipha- ~ogramsare created !rom quolalioos ~ tamous people, past ard p-esent.
Ead11ert1J lntheCIJ1lef stm !Of Nher.

Today's due: Mequals F

" E W F Z F l A C V E W l C, K E V G F
HFNZCFP

MZVX

DF'ZF

ABLFCBF

LC

WLAEVZR

NCRXVZF .

MLBELVC

CVD.'

• N H.H F C K L C A G F Z K

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "They wanted an atm and a leg."· Martina
Navralilova, on lhe reason why she neve1 insu1ed her len arm

.....
·~~::.' S~1\cil1J.-4£~S· ...,
'

_ _ _;.....;, Ulto4

~ClAY

l PQUAN _..;._ _.....;..

O::V.:ri.~~~ :;

I .I I ·II I I
low·to 101111 leur si1rtple -ds.

RU S p E U

~....--.;..;.,.,...:;...;..,.,,.-j

2
L.:.·...1..-.1-....1..-L-..1..--1
1

•

VI RER
3

.

....

T UCE A
6

I

"An in~estme~l in

"'I ·
"

knowledge," the profts!Or

lectured his class, "pays lhe besl

IJUMTEN

:SCIAM.tfTS AHSWEII$

5• II • a1

Alyhun - HOIIIld - Wqve - Martyr- LAST WORD

•Aupology,"tite woman told her crying daughter, "is a good way :
haW&gt; tbe LAST WORD."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

·eor IT'&amp; 1llO !.Art 'Ill &amp;roP. •

•I

SOUPTONUTZ

f{\,\1-\1-\\~
\.~iE

V:JVA'I

1.·

�Page B6 -The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 15 ,2007

FUN, GAMES AND PUZZLES

Mother's Day
celebration, A3

Gizmos.

Food For Thought
ribbon cutting, A6

someone call
for me? ·.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 56 , No .

SPORTS

Middleport to proceed with trail, downtown grant projects
BY BRIAN

•lady Bobcats beat

ADVERTISERS VISIT:

PABLO

~

••
A

J

Six times the excitement!
Six times the speed !
Six times the vet bills!

Page AS
• Alma Compston, 87 I
•:lohn Wifliam Leath, 84

When a well defined source of light is included
in your image, the lighting effect must emanate from
that source. The thinnest line weight will be
closest to the source.

H FIDD

· • Summer school .
offered at Southam.
SeePageA2
• Meigs Industries/
Carteton School Relay.
SeePageA2
• Strokes - warning
signs and prevention.
See .Page A3
• Seniors plan •
dinner theater trip.
See Page' A3
• PVH gets new
orthopedic surgeon.
See Page AS
• Grant awarded to
Canter's Cave for
educational features.
See Page AS

WEATHER

Each column, row and square must use #s·6,2,3,&amp;
must add up to the #'s shown.( diagonals can

Unmarrible the letters to form ordinary words. Then place them in the
. I crossword grid. Then unscramble the circled
l
!2!
letters to form todays coded message.
. ~!:'!! •

(Uol IJ51!1 FRIEI I I lo l
Q.Ao[ lbiWIRIRIAIEIH IAI lo i
~lol INiulil llil I I 1 I lol
(vloiiEIMicloJuiPJT(Rl'[o j
~oiLI Aiw i L I KZ,l FI'GI !Ji'lol
~ciFI R i i IEI -·K2A EiblsfNiol
@ol I I l l iNIP] I [ I [o l

Details on Pace

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE Star Mill
Park
is
undergoing
some
NEWSOMYDAfLYSE,NTINEL.C OM
major improvements, not
the least of which is a new
CHESHIRE - Galliarestroom facility estimated
Meigs Community Action
to cost $20,450.
Agency will be assisting
Contractor Roy Bailey is
residents with the 2007
completing
the modern
Emergency
Summer
meas ures
facility
which
Cooling Program.
Sandra
Edwards,
eight by 16 feet and is made
Cha~ene Hoeftlch/photos
Emergency
Services
of the same split face block
Division director, said that Presented trophy awards were, left to right, seated, Ashley Taylor, outstanding musician; which covers Racine's new
the program will begin June Caitlin Williamson·, director's award a[-ld flag captain's trophy; ,Rachel Mowery, Arion Award; water treatment plant. Dale
I and will run through Aug. Jennifer Smith, field commander trophy; and Whitney Smith, 110 percent award. Other Hart, president of the
31 or until the funds are senior band member recognized were standing, Heather Elam , Rene Edmonds, Christeena Raci ne Park Board said
depleted. Income eligible Young, Laura. Miller, Samantha Shontz, Sarah Jeffers, and Kayla Grover.
weather permitting, the
individuals must make an
facility should be completed
appointment.
... ·
by the end of this month.
There are· two types of
Hart said for the past few
households that may be
days the plumbers have been
assisted: An income ehgible
installing equipment and fix- .
household with a member
tures which will allow Bailey
who has a current qualifying
Please see Park. AS
medical condition/breathing
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM
disorder verified by physician documentation from a
medical professional will be
POMEROY
qualified to receive the fol- Reflections of the past' four ·
lowing:
years along with recognition
• One air conditioner, pro- for
accomplishments
viding they' did not receive markecj with lots of laughter
one in the last three years and a. few tears highlighted
(2004, 2005 or 2006), and Monday night's Meigs
may receive one payment Marauder Band banquet
for a current electric bill or honoring graduating seniors.
PIPP, whichever is more,
The 12 girls graduating
BY BETH SERGENT
but not to exceed $175. (No this year moved to an open
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
disconnect required).
microphone where they
• If they do not qualify for reminisced about band life,
POMEROY - Women
ages 35 to 49 may be eligian air conditioner, they may the fun they had, the .friendstill receive one payment ships they made , the wisble to receive ·a free mamfor the electric bill as dom they gained from the
:mogram and $ 10 in gas
described above.
vouchers to that mammogdirector Toney Dingess and ·
An income eligible house- his assistant David Deem.
raphy appointment thanks
hold with a member who is One senior described
to gran t money rece ived
60 or older is eligible to Dingess as "a father fi gure" · Rachel . Mowery was presented the Meigs Marauder top from the Susan G. Komen
receive one payment for elec- -further commenting that "he award, The Arion Award, by Toney Dingess, director of the Breast Cancer Fo undation.
Meigs Marauder Band, at Monday night's recognition banquet.
tric bill up to the current bill pushed us to be our best."
The gran t money was di sor PIPP, whichever is more,
tribut ed to the Meigs
They described · their
Dingess spoke of th e mended those who prepared County Cancer Initiative's
but not to exceed $175. (No experiences in band as "the
"highs and lows" of the past for auditions noting that getdisconnect required).
best four years ever, some- four years emphasizing the ting ready is just as impor- Think Pink Program and .
Appointml!nts can be made thing I' II never forget" as
now allows for women wi th ·
between the hours of 8 until they spoke before about 200 successes of the past two tant as ·making it, because hi gher income levels to take.·
II :30 a.m. and I to 4:30p.m. parents and friends gathered years. "This is more than the ·'getting ready" is a real advantage of the free man1on Thursday, May 31, and 8 in the cafeteria. They were · just .about music" said the learning experience.
mograms.
· director. He recogni zed the
Patches, medals and certo 11:30 a.m. on Friday, June ·
Women who are un inI by calling 367-7341 for there to pay special-tribute members who had made the ti ficates were presented to sured or have insurance with
Gallia County and 992-6629 to the band members, their honors band at Ohio 9th, IOth and II th grade a deductible of more than
directors, and the many University where hundreds
for Meigs County.
faithful volunteers who sup- auditioned for 80 spots and students in the, band, wit~ $ 100 may also be eli gible.
' Please see Free, AS
Please see CAA. AS
port the program.
Meigs took nine. He comPlease see Band, AS

Calendars

A:3
A:3

Classifieds

B2-4

Annie's Mailbox

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Offering free
mammograms
to women
ages 35 to 49

J.

REED

BREED@MV(}AILVSENTINEL .COM

2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGES

~

Band-

BY BRIAN

Ae

INDEX

r -

000

Improving
Star MiD
Park facility

accamnpUshllents

INSIDE

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cover all costs up to con- with appli cations for the
struction, including desi gn matching funds for the prowork. Any funds left after ject. and 10 fi le a second
design work is completed application for downtown
can fulfill a match require- revitali zation funds through
ment for the project's con~ the Ohi o Department of
struction.
Development. The vi llage's
Zoller is now working firs t application for revitalwith the development group ization funding was rejectto secure additional funding ed, and the second applicato cover a-20-percent match tion is due at month 's end.
required of the grant.
In other business, council
Counci l approved resolutions n~cess ary to proceed
Please see Proje&lt;ts. AS

STAFF REPORT

0BITUARIFS

theorise that
head), a member (\If the
Cr.ata·cec,us Period, and

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
approved preliminary legislatiOn Monday allowing the
village to apply for grant
funds for a new multi-purpose trail along the Ohio
River and a second application for Tier II downtown
revitalization funds.
Council
President

Stephen Houchins presided The proposed 6,500-foot
at the meeting in the walking and bike path will
absence of Mayor Sandy li~ely begin somewhere
Iannarelli. Tim King of the near
the
MiddleportMiddleport Development Pomeroy corporation line
Group, Melissa Zoller of and proceed to the tnarina
Buckeye
Hills/Hocking area, if funding for conValley
Regional struction is secured.
Development District, and
The . project has already
Bill Lambert of the Ohio received $200,000 in federDepartment
.
.of al fundin g, which will pay
Transportation met with vil- for title and right-of-way
lage council to discu ss work. Lambert said ODOT
funding for the trail project. anticipates that grant to

program

ea5o•
- ~&lt;&gt;
A

Can you help
find the cheese;
two flags and his glasses?

REED

CAAsets
summer
cooling

GIZMOSIDS.COM
Ubber Go 'dachshund food pellets and Ubber
Glow Liquid rehydration solution, are available
only at the finest pet stores.

J.

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Southern. See Page 81

Not yet approved for. use on US highways

'""'-lll)dail)"'"'i"d ·'""'

\\' 1-:D:\I·.SDAY. i\1AY 1(, , 2007

2 1111

B Section

A6

© 00070hio Volley Publlshlng Co.

TUPPERS PLAfNS Diplomas will- be conferred
to 58 graduating seniors at
the 49th annual commencement exercises ·at Eastern
High School on Sunday
afternoon.
Last week, Principal Scot
Gheen announced three co- .
valedictorill)ls and the salutatorian of the class. The
Top I 0 scholars will be
introduced at the school"s
senior awards assembly on .
Friday moming, in keeping
with school tradition.
Co-valedictorians Brittany
Bissell, Alex McGrath and
Erin Weber will join
Salutatorian Ryan Davis in
addressing their classmates.

---

c

-

-~

Brittany Bissell .

Bissell is the daughter of
Royce Bissell of New
Haven, W.Va. and Amy and
Lester Stewart of Thppers
Plains. McGrath is the son of
Ronnie
and
Tanowa

Alex McGrath

ErlnWebe,

McGrath of Coolville, and
Bissell has played volleyWeber the daughter of David b.all and softball throughout
and Debbie Weber of high school. She is a former
Reedsville. Davis is the son member of the French Club.
of Jerry and Cynthia Davis She has been a member of
of Reedsville.
. the Student Council for one
-·-·---

'

Ryan D.avls

year, and class treasurer for
three years. She is also treasurer fdr the National Honor
Society. She was a STAMP
mentor for four years.
Please see Eastern, AS

.•

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