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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Red hot Southern
from Page Bl
Indians
beat Reds
CLEVELAND (AP) Paul Byrd stayed unbeaten
this season at Jacobs Field
and the Cleveland Indians
matched the best home start
in their 107-year hi story
with a 5-3 victory over the
Cincinnati Reds on Sunday.
Byrd (4-1) improved to 40 in Cleveland and the
Indians pushed baseball's
best home record to 16-4.
The only other time they
started as well in home
games was 1995. when the
Indians also opened 16-4 on the way to their first
World Series appearance in
41 years. Actually, Cleveland is 143 at the Jake. The Indians
also
went
2-1 · . at
Milwaukee's Miller Park
when an April · series was
moved there because of co ld
weather.
Jhonny Peralta hit his IOth
homer to start Cleveland's
four-run fourth against
Aaron Harang (5-2).
Brandon Phillips extended
his career-high hilling streak
to 22 games with a se&lt;.:ondinning homer for Cincinnati.
but Reds rookie outfielder
Josh Hamilton was not with
the team.
Hamilton, who has made
an inspirational comeback
from drug and alcohol
abuse,
was
sent
to
Cincinnati to be examined
by Red s doctors. He had
been treated and released. at
Lutheran Hospital Saturday
with' gastroen'teritis, an
intestinal inflammation:
The Reds have lost nine of
their last II road games and
13 of 17 overall.

Eagles
from Page Bl
seven on Thursday.
"We . were very balanced
today and just took care of
the. fundamentals welL It
feels pretty good when it's a
complete team victory:·
Both teams committed two
errors and produced eight hits
in the contest, but the difference in the game squarely
came down to pitching panicularly early on.
Freshman Titus Pierce,
starting his first postseason
game in the district finals.
was masterful on the mound
through his
four-plus
innings of work.
The ' outhpaw shut down
the . Titan offense through
the first two innings, allowing only one hit during that
span while the offense
established a 3-0 lead for
him to·work with.
. Derek Young and Derek
Griffin were issued back-toback walks to start the game
in the top-half of the first,
then senior Matt Morri s
drilled a double to the leftcenter gap one batter later to
give the Eagles a 2-0 advantage after a half-inn ing.
Pierce helped his own
cause in the second by
drawing a free pass to lead
off the frame. then another
walk followed to Jake
Lynch. Notre Dame starter
Shane Slack was pulled
after thai free pass. lasting
just :;even hitters into the
Eastern lineup.
Reliever Trevin Coleman
came in and retired the fi'rst
batter he fac ed. then
uncorked a 'wild pitch that
allowed Pierce to come
home for a 3-0 edge.
Then things beca me
interest ing in the third as
the Titans prqd uced two
runs with a walk and two
hits , pulling the home
team to within 3-2 after
three complete.
Slack led off that frame
with a walk, then advanced
to second on a sacrifice bunt
from the bat of Trey
LaValley. Alex Davis si ngled one batter later, allow-

uRder adversity;· said
Coach
Ryan.
Lemley.
"Every player played his
role well. The turning point
was really that third inning.
Chris Holter got things
started for us. He really
stepped it up under pressure
in a ro le that .he- had never
been 111 before. Jake
(Hunter) laid down a good
bunt and Pat (Johnson) followed up with the same
thing (bunt). It was just perfect execution. Good old
fundamental baseball. The
kids responded well and to
be going to the regional is
phenomenal." ,
Prior to Fridays semifinal, Southern found it had
two players sidelined for
team rules infractions .
Coach Lemley and staff did
some shuffling Friday. then .
Saturday seemed to finetune a well-oiled machine
with a different look.
''Chappy · .
(Ryan
Chapman) caught his first
game in two years. He sacrificed a lot to get behind the
plate, and to get behind the
plate and catch such a super
game is just something else.
You can't expect any more
out of a player."
Chapman had reconstructi ve knee 'surgery prior to
last season. yet under uncertain terms found part of the
winning . answer for the
Tornadoes.
For a school that is known
statewide (7th in the state)
for its basketball, Southern
also has a rich baseball tradition. Southern first went
to the regional in 1982
under Coach Hilton "Big
Fooze" Wolfe, Jr., then in
1.988 Southern made a
retwn trip under c·oach
Mick
Winebren~er.

ing Slack to score for a 3-1
deficit. Aaron Noel followed with a double that
plated Davis. making it a
one-run ball game.
Des pite only one hit
through four full , Eastern
sti ll maintained that 3-2
edge leading into tlie fifth.
However,
the· guests
changed all of that in the top
of the fifth when a trio of
safeties led to two more
scores and a 5-2 lead.
Gordon legged out an
infield hit to lead things off,
then Young followed with a
double down the left field
line - giving EHS runners
at second and third with
nobody out.
A passed ball allowed
Gordon to come in from
third for a 4-2 lead, then
Young scored on an error a
couple of moments later for
a 5-2 edge.
Pierce, who allowed just
three hits, two runs and two
walks through four, started
the · fifth by walking
LaValley. Pierce - who
was the eventual winning ·
. pitcher of record - was
replaced from that point on
by number one hurler Joel
Lynch, who was available
for only three innings of.
work after tossi ng seve n in
a complete-game decision
last Thursday. Pierce also
struck out three.
A miscue and two hits fol lowed in the bottom of the
fifth against Lynch·, allowing the Titans to pull back to
within 5-4.
Alex Davis reached on an
.error in center. giving the
hosts runners at second and
third with nobody out.
Aaron Noel grounded into a
fielder 's choice that got
La Valley thrown out at
home, preserving the 5-2
lead at the time.
Davis, however, scored
one batter later when Brad
Hoover singlea him home
for a 5-3 contest. Taylor
Haney followed two at-bats
later with a single, plating
Noel for a 5-4 ball game
after five complete.
Eastern's pivotal sixth
started with three consecutive walks to Pierce, Jake
Lynch and Justin Browning
to 'load the bases. Kevin

Photo courtesy of lha Ironton Tribuna

Southern shortstop Nick Buck fields a ground ball during
Saturday's Division IV district final against Ironton St.
Joseph at the University of Rio Grande.

"

Monday, May 2~ 2007 •
Chapman owns an equally
impressive 8-2 overall
·mark.
"Pat just seems to pitch
better and better as thl! year
goes on .. I guess that is when
you need to be your best,"
gleamed -a happy coach
Lemley. "He has just been
phenomenal. It was another
great effort."
'
St. Joseph pitcher Ryan
Waginger deserved a better
fate according to hi s coach.
He gave up nine hits, three
of the infield variety, and
two of the runs were
unearned. The St. Joseph
skipper noted that when you
are in a close game, "those
run s mean a lot".
"If you don 't score more
than one run, you're not
going to win too many
games."
Tension grasped both
teams over the first two
innings. Hasty swings.
unsure aggression and a
wav~ring confidence ruled
the first six batters for both
clubs. Then Chris Holter
broke the ice in the third
inning. ) Holter, who spent
most ot the season on the
reserve squad, legged out an
infield hit and Jake Hunter
and Johnson bunted for base
hits. Wes Riffle walked to
force in a run and a two-out
dropped pop up (off the bat
of J.R. Hupp) allowed two
more runs to score.
Southern let out a collective sigh of relief, then
clamped shut the jaws of
their victory traps in a
sparkling performance the
rest of the way.
Coach Lemley said, "I felt
that getting that first run
was important. It created a
little doubt in their (St.
Joe's) minds, then when we
got a brea)c on the dropped
pop up, that seemed to
pump us up to the point we
knew we could win. From
there on, it was the defense

and Pat' s pitching"
Southern added an insur-' ance run with one out in the
fifth. Ryan Chapman and
Nick Buck singled to put
runners on the corners with
one out, and J.R. Hupp had
a two-out RBI single to
make it 4-0.
The Flyers plated J their
only run in the sixth mning
when Chad Harvey got a
.leadoff triple and scored
when Michael Basedow ·
grounded out.
Jerrod Laber singled in
the fourth inning for the
Flyers only other hit.
Southern hitters were
Ryan Chapman- (two singles), Jake Hunter, Nick ··
Buck, Pat Johnson, Chris
Holter, Anthony Shamblin
(two hits), and J.R. Hupp.
Wes Riffle had an RBI and
Hupp h.ad three.
St. Joseph ends the season
with an impressive 18-5
record.
Coach Lemley said,
"Winning the ·District was
one of our goals in the preseason. But it is not the end
-of the road. We've made it
this far and we want to take
it to the next level. The kids
are as excited as I have ever
seen them. The opportunity
is ours for the taking.
Thursday will be a very
tough gam~. but at this point
anything can happen."
"Anything" translates to
be a Southern victory.
Southern (21-5) plays
Newark Catholic at 2 p.m.
Thursday ·at Lancasteris
Beavers Field in the regional semifinals. Eastern plays
Berlin-Hiland -in the next
game at 5 ·p.m . The two
winners will square off
Saturday.

Winebrenner's teams also
went to the regional in
1993, 1996 and in 2000. In
1988 and 1993 Southern
went to the regional final s.
The 1988 team finished the
season at 21-5 the best
record in school history.
Hitting and pitching are
the name of the game. It
was a combination of
Southern pitching and lack
of Flyer hitting that stamped
the mould for Saturday's
.outcome. St. Joseph was
looking for some type of
success at the plate, but
found little. The Flyers
managed only two hits in
losing 4-1 to the Tornadoes
in the Division IV district
t1nals.
";tie just didn't hit That's .
the bottom line today,"

·Coach Greg Bryant said.
"He's (Johnson) the best
pitcher we 've seen all year.
He just did a really good job
hitting his spots and he had
a good breaking ball."
Patrick Johnson fashioned
the two-hitter for the
Tornadoes, fabricating a
plan for victory along with
way. He struck out seven
and did not walk a batter.
That is a great formula for
success in any baseball
arena.
Prior to the game on
Friday, Johnson signed to
play baseball at the
University of Rio Grande.
Saturday he proved to his
new school that he deserved
the honors.He now owns an
8-1 piiching mark with one
save on his resume. Ryan

Delabar came in for relief of
Coleman the .rest of the
way, but the first b.atter he
faced delivered a pretty
unfriendly welcome.
Gordon delivered his
game-opening heroics in
that at-bat after a double
made it to the gap, clearing
all the bags for •an 8-4
advantage. Young walked
one batter later, giving the
guests two-on with nobody
out.
Delabar settled down and
retired the next two·hitters,
but Cory Shaffer and Joel
Lynch followed with backto-hack RBI .singles making it 10-4.
Lynch Faced just four hitters in each' of the final two
innings, allowing two hits
in the sixth and one more in
the seventh. Lynch finished
the ,day with three strikeouts over three innings.
allowing five hits, zero
walks and an earned run in
relief.
A half-dozen Eagles provided at least one hit in the
winning cause, and all nine
in the roster were on base
at some point in the game.
Gordon and Shaffer led the
attack with two hits apiece,
followed by Young, Morris,
Browning and Joel Lynch
with one each.
Gordon drove in three
runs and Morris added two
RBI ~. while Young led the
way with three runs scored.
Gordon and Pierce also
scored twice each.
Hoover led the Titans
with two hits while six oth-

ers added one apiece. Notre
Dame also issued eight
walks in the setback, compared to three by the victors.
A majority of this starting unit was at Lancaster
two years ago in so me
capacity, and
Bowen
believes that will play a
·very large role in this coming week's regional tournament. He also feel s it will
make this Eagle team a litV;.
tle hungrier for the pro-• ". ii &lt;1&lt;:.'1~
gram's first regional win.
"We're excited to be
HAIR
going back to Beavers
IT 1'!:
Field and I think 'the experience will help. The first
time was kind of new and
we were in awe a little bit,"
Bowen said. "This time,
the kids have been there '
before and know what it's
about We' re looking forward to the opportunity to
go up there ~nd play." _ .
The Eagles now turn their
attention to the Division IV
regional
semis
this
Thursday w~en they take on
Berlin Hiland at Beavers
Field in Lancaster. The
Hawks defeated Fort Frye
Bryan Wallars/pholo
8-7 For the district title last Eastern starter Titus Pierce delivers a pitch during
Friday by scoring Four runs Saturday's Division IV district final against Portsmouth
in the seventh to overcome Notre Dame at Valley High School in Lucasville.
a 7-4 deficit. Game time is
tentatively scheduled for 5
p.m.
~

::~,

SOUTHERN 4, ST. JO.E 1
St. Joseph
000 001 0 12 1
Southern
003 010 · X - 4 9 1
Ryan Waginger and Pat Gagai. Patrick
Johnson and Ryan Chapman. WP Johnson (7 -K, 0-BB). L - Waginger (2K. 2-BB, 2-ER)

~

EASTERN 10, NOTRE DAME 4
Easlern · 210 025 o - 1082
Porls. NO 002 020 0 482
2) EHS (15-10): Titu s Pierce, Joel Lynch
(5) and Jake Lynch
'1) PND (19-7): Shane Slack. Trevin
Coleman (2). Kevin Oelabar (6) and Trey
LaValley
WP - Pierce: LP - Slack

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Office hours M-W-F 9-6

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SroRTS
• Pistons take·earty
series lead. See Page 81

'\ " . :.' f) I

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:.! '!. :.!II() -

AEP
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

water quality certification
associated with the proposed
600-megawatt power plant
at the intersection of U.S. 33
and Ohio 338 along the Ohio
River.
According to the EPA ,
AEP asked the application
be suspended to allow sufficient time to recalculate
impacts' to surface water
from a planned re-design of
a proposed landfill area that

is part of the project.
In a news release issued
Monday, the EPA said it will
await word from AEP to
restart review of the appl ication. A public hearing on the
EPA application was held in
March in Pomeroy.
Pending permits such as
that filed with the EPA are the
next immediate hurdle facing
the proposed project. Last
month, the Ohio .Power Siting

&lt;l9alltpolts iJBaHp ~ribnne
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
.$)oint .$)leasant ll.\egtster

.•

Board approved AEP's
request to construct the plant
in Meigs County.
The
Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio has
granted AEP's req uest to collee! costs associated with the
front-end engineering and
de sign phase of the project.
and customers are now paying those wsts. A second
phase of cost recovery, that
associated with actual con-

struction of the plant, has
been delayed whil,e AEP and
· the project designers work to
reduce wnstruction costs.
Because of delays in the
design _process and the permilling process, construction
on the project has been
delayed. Once under construction. the plant is expected to create nearly 2,000 construction jobs. Once completed. it will.employaround 125 . .

Holzer Tobacco
Prevention sets
up shop in Meigs
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINaOOM

·OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Charles E. Pauley
•Inez Roy
• Jimmy Lee Sr.

INSIDE
• Lebanese anny
pounds Palestinian camp
in fight against militants;
death toll near 50.
See Page A2
• Holzer names
physician of the month.
See Page A3
• National academic
honesty expert to speak.
See Page A3
• Museum de.veloping
Meigs mining history
display. See Page AS
• State paying top rates
for prison medical bills .
See Page AS
• Raids stir protest in
large northeast Ohio ·
_immigrant community.
See -Page AS
• Unified Long Tenn
Care providing service
on basis of need.
See Page A6

POMEROY
Holzer
Tobacco · Prevention has set up
shop in Meigs County with a
satellite office at 115 West
Second Street in Pomeroy.
With offices already in
Jackson and Gallia Counties,
finding a location in Meigs
seemed like a logical step.
"Are we here . to insist people quit smoking, no, but we're ·
here to help when they're
ready to quit,'' Todd Tucker,
project director for Holzer
Tobacco Prevention s.aid.
Tucker said the Holzer
Tobacco
Prevention . Meigs
Office has a slogan of "Are
you read to quit? Then we're
here to help."
According to · Tucker and
Lora Rawson, certified tobacco
treatment specialist who will ·be
in the Meigs office, there have
never. be.en more resources to
quit smoking.
Resources found at the
Meigs office include a meeting
place for Freedom From
Smoking Classes, individual
counseling, referral services to
local physicians for tobacco
cessation the.rapies such as gum
and patches, and counseling
help by phone through the
Ohio Quit Line.
Rawson's current cessation
Beth Sergent(photo
class meets at 6. p.m. every Lora Rawson of Meigs County and certified tobacco treatment specialis!'
Monday at the new office. The with Holzer Tobacco Prevention is now working at the n'ew Holzer Tobacco
classes are free and new memPrevention Meigs Office located at 115 West Second Street
bers can join up until the class'
smoking quit date on June 4.
2743. The toll free number to
received $439,136 in funding.
Holzer Tobacco Prevention
Although. the Meigs location the main office in Gallipolis is
Meigs is operating on a month isn ' t officially opened yet, an 1-866-855-8702.
by month lease though their open house is planned for next
The Meigs location· will also
Otiio
Tobacco
Prevention month and Rawson is in the be a home base for Megan
Foundation Grant which is set office periodically through th~ Harrison of HolZer Tobacco
to run out on Dec. 31 of this week. Eventually Rawson will Prevention who will be work year. This · year Holzer's -pro- be in the office three to four ing throughout the three school
gram which serves GaUia, days a week. The phone num- districts promoting tobacco preJackson and Meigs Counties her is 992-2175 and fax is 992- vention.

ODNR.schedules conference on mine
BY BETH SERGENT

In The Tri-County
Gallia • Meigs
&amp;Mason

il) " ' I l l i lll' LI'IIIII

permit application on hold

Residents will not get their
questions answered at the informal conference though residents
RACINE
The Ohio will have a chance .to be offiDepartment
of
· Natural cially heard. After the conferResources has scheduled an ence, the recording is turned
informal conference for the pub- into a taped transcript where
Details on Par;e A6
lic concerning the coal mine each question that was posed is
proposed by Gatling Ohio, LLC answered in writing. Answers
on Yellowbush Road.
are due 60 days from the day of
The meeting is scheduled for the conference.
6 p.m., Wednesday, June 13 at
According to engineers
the Racine Municipal Building. employed with Gatling, LLC,
2 SEcnoNs- 12 PAGES
ODNR
Environmental the Broad Run Mine in New
Calendars
.AJ Specialist Scott Stillier previ- Haven,
W.Va. is a reflection of .
ously said his office is not what Gatling Ohio wishes to
Classifieds
83-4 required -to hold a public hear- implement in Meigs County.
ing but by statute his office is The company wishes to use a
Comics
Bs · required
to hold an informal room and pillar method of coal
conference if it receives only extraction in addition to
Annie's Mailbox
.AJ one request to do so, which it installing a conveyor belt from
The statute does not call the · main · plani
along
Editorials
A4 did.
this informal conference a pub- Yellowbush Road, crossing
lic hearing but at the informal Ohio 124 to the Ohio River for
Obituaries
As conference
the public is invited, loading.
the
meeting
is tape recorded and
Gatling's permit in Meigs
B
Section
Sports
residents are permitted to voice County is for mining the
Weather
A6 ·their concerns over the proposed Pittsburgh 8A coal seam which
mining operation and ODNR's
Pluse see ODNR, AS
©2007 Ohio VaD&lt;;Y Publlshins Co. role in the -permit process.

Post qffice
employees honor
memory qf co-worker

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

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POMEROY -The Ohio
Environmental . Protection
Agency has suspended
review of a permit application
from American Electric
Power for its proposed plant
at Great Bend in Lebanon
Township.
·
AEP is seeking EPA
approval for water quality
impacts and a Section 40 I

WEATHER

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INDEX

-----

-~ l. ------

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

f GALUPOLIS - "I think he 'd be
shocked at how many friends he had,"
Dawn Rou sh said of her late hu sband
Jeff as his co-workers at the Gallipolis
Post Office took time Monday to dedicate a bench outside the building in his
honor.
The bench was placed at the north
entrance to the _post office's parking
area oni Second Avenue by empluyees
during the facility's recent remodeling.
"It's a fitting area for its purpose," .
Postmaster Walt Thomas sairl in a brief
ceremony. The bench carries a plaque
honoring Jeff Roush , who died Aug. II ,
2006. In addition to his wife, he is survived by two daughters, Michelle, 13,
and Victoria , 7.
Roush had worked at Gallipolis for
six years .as a part-time tlexible tlerk
occasional supervisor, forming close
relationships with his co-Workers, who
chose Monday for . the ·dedication
because it would have been Roush's

Please see Bench, AS

•.

. ..

Arts·
Council
•
recezves summer
storytelling funding
'

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

. MIDDLEPORT - A grant has been
awarded to the Riverbend Arts Council
to be used for developing .a summer
program of storytelling programs in
Dave Diles Park in Middleport, and
Lottie Jenks Memorial Park in Mason,
W.Va.
The award for a program titled
"Stories at .the River 's Edge" is from
the Ohio river Border Initiative, and is
a joint project of the Ohio Arts Council
and the West Virginia Commission on
the Arts. It will be carried out _in the two
towns across the river from ·each oth~r
in July.
_
Donna Wilson of Middleport, Ions
involved in storytelling across the area
and the organizer of Tellebration whicll
takes place here in the fall, is coordi:
natii1g the grant program. She is securing professional storytellers to present a
series of four programs geared for faiTI;ily audiences.
•
The programs are sc heduled OR
Wednesdays, beginning on July I I ana.
every week for the following .three
weeks. A schedule for each day
includes 10:30 a.m. performance inMiddleport and a I:30 performance in
Mason. Perfermers will present their .
programs at both locations on the same
day, 'allowing access by audiences in
both West Virginia and Ohio, according
to Wilson. ·'
Artists for th@oseries include:
July II __:_ Adele Browne from South
Bloomingville, Ohio. A storyteller for
'over 20 years. Adele is listed with the
Greater Columbus Alts Council. She is
a member of many professional storytelling organizations and has performed
widel y across Ohio at school s, lil)raries,
community events and festivals.
July 18 - Susanna "Granny Sue"
Holstein is from Jackson County, W.
Va. She has been performing for ove·r
I0 years. and is well known· to audiences across West Virginia. She has
perforn,1ed at national storytelling conferences and festivals and presents a
wide variety of workshops for teachers,
librarians. and storytellers. She has several publications and a CD.
.
July 23 - Suzi "Mama" Waples is
best known as the founder of the
"Mountain Women" storytelling group.
She and her group members traveled
extensively on the East Coast, as well
as in Ohio, Kentucky and other south- ·
ern states, presenting hundreds of proPlease see Arts, AS

-~------ .---------------------~---~, -----

�- . . ..,..

•

~

NATION • .W ORLD

The Daily Sentinel

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l*lese . . . . . Paleslillll alii il
BY BASSEM MROUE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TRIPOLI, Lebanon Lebanese troops blasted' a
Palestinian refugee camp
with artillery and tank tire
again Monday, seeking to
destroy a militant group
with ai-Qaida ties. The barrage smashed buildings and
sent plumes of black smoke
:towering over the crowded
:camp on the Mediterranean.
· The tierce, two-day battle
has killed nearly 50 combat·ants and an unknown num. ber of civilians, rai sing fears
-that Lebanon's· worst inter: nal violence since the 19751990 civil war could spread
in a country with an uneasy
balancing act among various sects and factions.
Refugees in the Nahr elBared camp, on the outskirts of the northern port
city of Tripoli, hid in their
homes as fighting raged,
and Palestinian officials in
the camp said nine civilians
were
killed
Monday.
Reports from the camp
could not be confirmed
because
officials
and
reporters could not get
inside.
'There are many wounded. We're under siege.
There is a shortage of bread,
mediCine and electricity.
,There are children under the
rubble" of damaged buildings, Sana Abu Faraj, a resident of the camp, told AIJazeera television by cell
phone.
.
All day, automatic gunftre
and explosions rocked the
camp - which is more like
a small town, with more
than 31,000 people living in
two- or three-story white
buildings on densely packed
narrow streets alongside
mosques, schools and businesses. Raging tires sent
large clouds of black smoke
into the sky, and shells
could be seen thudding into
some of the taller buildings.
· Hundreds of Lebanese
troops surrounded Nahr e)Bared, stayin~ outside in
accordance With a nearly
40-year-old agreement ~ith
the Palestinians. The troops
pounded the camp with
artillery and tank frre, and
militants responded · with
gunfire and mortar rounds.
The army is seeking to
uproot a militant group
called Fatah Islam, which
arose in the camp late last
year. The group touts itself
as a Pales.tinian liberation
·movement, but many view
it as a nascent branch of al. Qaida-style terrorism with
ambitions of carryjng out
anacks around the region.
Nevertheless, the military
assault adds yet another
.layer of instability to
:Lebanon's
potentially
:explosive politics. Prime
· Mmister Fuad Saniora 's
·.government already faces a
domestic political crisis,
with the opposition led by
. Iranian- and Syrian-backed
: Hezbollah demanding its
·removal.
· Fighting quieted after
:nightfall amid attempts by
·Other Palestinian factions to
broker a cease-fire. The representative
of
the
·Palestinian mililani group
Islamic · Jihad, Abu Ahmed
Rifai ~ said Fatah Islam militants pledged to cease ftring
and withdraw from positions facing Lebanese
troops. A senior officer at
Lebanese army command
would not say a cease-frre
was reached but repeated
the military's stance that it
will not shoot if it does not
come under fire.
Raising fears of spreading
violence, an explosion went
off in a shopping area in ·a
Sunni Muslim sector of
Beirut later Monday, wrecking parked cars and injuring
four people - a day after a
bomb blast in a Christian
part of the capital killed a
woman. Although there
were nO claims of responsibility, the confluence of two
bombings in as many days
while the fighting was going'
on in Tripoli was highly
unusual.
Saniora now risks sparking ii backlash . among
Palestinians in Lebanon's
other refugee camps, where
armed groups and Islamic
extremists have been growing in influence - and, in at
least one · case, have been
· sending recruits to fight
U.S. troops in Iraq .. If the

military moves into Nahr elBared in force, it could trigger widespread
anger
around the Arab world. particularly at a time when
Israel
is
battling
Palestinians in the Gaza
Strip.
The White House said it
supports Saniora'sefforts to
deal with the fighting. and
the
State
Department
defended the Lebanese
army, saying it was working
in a "legitimate manner"
against "provocations by
violent extremists" operating in the camp.
The leader of Fatah Islam,
Palestinian Shaker al-Absi,
has been linked to the former head of al-Qaida in Iraq
and is accused .in the 2002
assassination of a U.S.
diplomat in Jordan. He
moved into Nahr el-Bared
last fall after being expelled
from Syria,. where he was in

custody.
Since then, he. is believed
to have recruited about l 00
fighters. including militants
front Saudi Arabia, Yemen
and other Arab countries,
and he has said he follows
the ideology of al -Qaida
leader Osama bin Laden.
Among. the militants killed
in the fighting Sunday was a
man suspected in a plllt to
bomb trains in Germany last
year, according to Lebanese
security officials.
·
Lebanese security officials accuse Syria of backing Fatah Islam as a tool to
disrupt the country. "They
are not al-Qaida. This · is
imitation al-Qaida, a 'Made
in Syria' one," a national
police commander, Maj.
Gen. Ashraf Rifi, said, referring to Fatah Islam.
Syria - which hosts a
number of Palestinian militant groups, including

PageA2
TUesday,. May 22,

toll

Hamas
controlled
Lebanon until 2005, when
its troops were forced to
withdraw from the country
following the assassination
of former Lebanese prime
minister Raftk Hariri. But
Syria's
opponents
in
Leba.non accuse it of seeking to re-establish its control
· through its allies. including
Hezbollah.
Syrian Foreign Minister
Walid Moallem insisted
Darna~cus had nothing to do
with the Fatah Islam and has
· been seeking Interpol 's help
in arresting its members.
"Fatah Islam is rejected
and does not serve the
Palestinian cause. On the
contrary, it harms it in every
way," he said in Damascus_
Syria closed a border crossing near Tripoli, though
other
crossings
into
Lebanon remained open.
A spokesman for Fatah

Islam. Abu Salim. warned
that if the army siege did
not stop, the militants would
step up anacks by rockets
· and artillery "and would
take the battle outside
Tripoli."
"It is a life-or-death battle.
Their aim is to wipe out
Fatah Islam. We will
respond and we know how
to respond," he told The
Associated Press from the
camp.
Other Palestinian factions,
including Hamas, have distanced themselves from
Fatah Islam, though Hamas
was trying to broker a truce .
The assault on Nahr elBared, if it continues, raises
the prospect of unrest.
among the · more than
400,000
Palestinian
refugees living in Lebanon
- more than 215,000 of
whom live in 12 impoverished
refugee
camps.

2007

50

Lebanese officials cannot
enter the camps under ·a .
1969 agreement that gave
the Palestine Liberation
Organization authority over
them.
The battle was sparked
Sunday when police raided ·
suspected Fatah Islam hideouts in se veral buildings in
Tripoli, searching for men
wanted in a bank robbery. A
gun battle erupted and troops
were called in. Then militants burst out of the nearby
refugee camp. attacking
anny positions.
~banese troops later laid
siege 10 the refugee camp,
unleashing fire from tanks.
artillery and heavy machine
gun s. At least 27 soldiers
and 20 militants were killed
Sunday. Two more soldiers
were killed Monday night
when a mortar fired from
inside camp struck their
vehicle.

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.Community Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday, May 22
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, rescheduled regular session, 7 p.m.,
council's chambers.

.

ing, 7 p.m.
RACINE
- Racine
Chapter 134, Order of the
Eastern Star, 6 p.m., special
budget meeting. Committee
members to attend.

Wednesday, May 23
POMEROY
- OH-KAN
Wednesday, May 23 ·
Coin
Club
meets
at 7 p.m.
POMEROY - Board of
on
Wednesday
at
Pomeroy
Directors of Gallia-Meigs
Library.
Dues
are
payable.
Community Action Agency,
POMEROY - Feeney- .
Inc. meets at II :30 a.m.,
Bennett
Post 128, American
Wild Horse Cafe.
Legion, Auxiliary to meet at
I p.m. at the Meigs County
Thursday, May 24
Library
.
POMEROY Meigs
Soil .
and
Water
Thursday, May 24
Conservation Ditrict Board
POMEROY
The
of Supervisors, II :30 a.m.
Meigs
County
Humane
· at the District Office, 33101
Society will meet at 6 p.m.
Hiland Road.
at the Pomeroy Library to
I
discuss
fundraisers. The
Friday, May 25
public
is
invited.
POMEROY Meigs
Co mmi ssioners,
County
rescheduled regular session,
. 10 a.m., Meigs County
Courthouse.
Wednesday, May 23
LONG BOTTOM
Revival services will be
held at the faithful Gospel
Church, May 21-25, 7 p.m.
e?ch evening with Dave
Tuesday, May 22
Dailey preaching.
PORTLAND - Portland
Community Center meetThursday, May 24 ·

Church events

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ATHENS - Tim Dodd, a
leading expert ori academic
·honesty and executive director of Duke University's
Center
for
Academic
Integrity, will give a public
lecture on academic integrity
at I:30 p.m. Thursday, May
24, in the Baker University
Center Theatre at Ohio
University.
Sponsored by the Russ
College of Engineering and
Technology. the lecture, titled
"On the Road to a Campus
Culture of Integrity at Ohio
Universit;y: Posting Speed
Limits and Installing Speed
Bumps," will address issues
facing· Ohio University and
campuses across the nation.
Dodd says he will share his
view that in order to ensure a
culture of · integrity, Ohio
University must emphasize an
inspirational learning environment, create empathetic
and I'espectful social environments, and level the moral
playing field. These efforts act
like "speed bumps," habituating the honorable behavior
enshrined in honor codes, he

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Saturday, May 26
LONG BOtTOM
Hymn sing, 7 p.m. at the
Mt. Olive Church featuring
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Everyone
welcome.

Youth events
Wednesday, May 23
POMEROY Meigs
County Health Depanment,
free vision clinic, children
ages birth to 21, call 9926626 for appointment.

Birthdays .
Friday, May 25
Charlene Hoeftlchj photo
RACINE Margaret
Four
Bachtel
scholarship
awards
were
presented
by
the
Foundation
for
Appalachian Ohio
Yost, formerly of Racine,
now residing in North at the Meigs High School awards assembly. The scholarship program was set up as an
Carolina, will celebrate her !)ndowed fund by the ·tate Or. Harry Ke1g in memory of Forest Bachtel of Middleport, a ·
92nd birthday on May 25. teacher and coach of the physician. This year's awards of $2,500 each were presented by
Cards may be sent to her at Marianne Campbett. Foundation Board member and former Board chair, center, assisted by
P. 0. Box 245,.Davis, N.C. Amanda Hughes, the Foundation's Communications/Administrative Coordinator, right.
Receiving the awards were from the left, David Poole, Daniel Bookman, Whitney Smith and
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Installing "speed bumps" curricular and extracurricular
practices that prompt desired
behavior - is the next phase
for Ohio University, Dodd
said.
Executive director . of
Duke's Center for Academic
Integrity since January 2005,
Dodd was associate dean for
undergraduate studies a1 Case
Western Reserve University
for more than eight years.
Previously, he served five
years as associate dean of academic advising at Gettysburg
College, where also was
administrative adviser to the
Honor Commission. Prior to
his tenure at Gettysburg,
Dodd was director of academic resources and &lt;!dvisement
at . St. Lawrence University.
He received his bachelor's and
.master's
degrees
from
Fordham University and did
doctoral work at the .
University of Pittsburgh.
where he also taught political .
science and worked in the
advising center.
A reception ,will follow the
lecture.

Holzer names physician of the month
GALLIPOLIS - Randy
Stratton, MD, was selected as
the May Physician of the
Month at Holzer .Medical
Center in Gallipolis by the
Hospital's
Physician
Satisfaction Team.
Born in Dermott, Ark. Dr.
Stratton graduated from the
University of Arkansas
Medical Sciences in 1984
and completed his emergency medicine residency at
University Hospital in Little
Rock, Ark. in 1987.
Dr. Stratton joined Holzer
in July 1987 upon completion of his residency. He is

Dear Annie: I am 17.
years old and going to be a
senior in high school in the
falL Pretty soon, I will be
m~king some very important decisions about my
future and choosing .where I
waiu to go to college. I get
nearly straight A's . and
could probably get into
most of the places I plan to
apply to. · Here's my dilemma:
My boyfriend of almost
two years is already in college and wants me to go to
the same school he does.
His college is an OK
school, but nothing spectacular, and I feel I could 'do a
lot better. I looked at several of the colleges near his,
'but frankly, none of them
appeals to me.
I want to be · with my
boyfriend because we've
already been apari for the
past year and I miss him.
What should I do '' Scared of Settling for a
School
Dear Scared: Please
don't put limits ·on your
future because you miss
your boyfriend; You will
resent feeling forced to
·compromise. Alth~ugh it's
difficult, many couples
maintain long-distance relationships, seeing each other
on vacations .and breaks,
and communicating often
via phone and e-mail. And
of course, college should be
the · time when you mature
and develop. and it's possible you will discover you'd
·rather have the freedom to
play the field. You should
be allowed to make that1
choice as welL Eithyr way,
the school you choose
should be what is best for
J

your academic potential
and personal growth. Don't
let anyone talk you into
doing otherwise.
Dear Annie: I'm writing .
to ask if you know of an
organization that provides
support for children of
older parents.
My grandmother was
recently diagnosed with
Alzheimer's, and my parents had to move her ·into
an assisted-living facility.
Grandma is very bitter
about this and takes it out
on them. I realize part of it
is her illness, but the rest is
her unwillingness to adapt.
My parents have done all
they can to help Grandma
with the transition, brin~ing
family photos and farn1li~r
objects, etc. There is nothing more that can be done.
However, there must be
some sort of support group
for my parents. Thanks. Concerned Daughter
Dear Daughter: The
Alzheimer's
Association
(alz.org) provides a 24-hour
helpline at 1-800-272-3900,
as .well as support groups
and ·resources for families
of those with Alzheimer's.
We hope your parents can
fi~d the help they need, and
bless you for recognizing
that they could use it.
Dear Annie: Every 60
seconds of every hour,
another kid in America
becomes a regular smoker.
Even scarier, one in three
of them will die prematurely as a result. That's why
for the past year, I have
been working with the
Campaign for Tobacco-F~ee
Kids as a youth advocate.
I am fighting to protect
my friends . and peers .from
the dangers of tobacco
through education efforts.
student -to-si\Jdent programs

and outreach to policymakers. This year I am encouraged that Congress has
introduced legislation that
would allow the Food and
Drug Administration to regulate tobacco. It is shocking
that the FDA can regulate
what we eat and use on our
skin, but not what is put in
a cigarette
which .
inelu.des some pretty scary
ingredients like arsenic and
lead. The bill would al so
regulate and curb Big
Tobacco's advertising and
sales to children.
Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable
death in this country. Your
readers can learn how they
can raise awareness and get
involved
by
visiting
www.tobaccofreekids.org .
Thank s for helping me
spread the word. - Emily
Martuscello, age
16,
Dover, N.H.
Dear Emily : Thanks for
taking on this worlhwhile
cause. Young people who
are involved in this effort
can influence their peers
more deeply than the rest
of us. We hope all of our
readers will check out thi s
website today and lind out
what they can do to help
prevent this deadly addiction.
·
·
Annie's Mailbox is written by' Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the .Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail ycJUr
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190; Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by oilier
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syrzdicate Web
page at www.creators.com. ·

Randy Stratton, MD
Board
Certified
Emergency Medicine by
American
Board
Emergency Medicine.
In his spare time,

in
the
of
Dr.

Stratton enjoys · gardening.
'landscaping and yard work.
He resides in Jackson with
his wife, Amy, a real estate
agent with ERA Accent. II
Realty in Jackson, and owner
and operator of Curves
Women ·s Fitness Center in
Jackson.
The Physician Satisfaction
team presented Dr. Stratton
with the Physician of the
Month award based on comments by staff and peers. For
his special honor, Dr. Stratton
received a framed certiticate
and designated parking spot
for the month of May.

we remember those who have passed away
and are especially dea·r to us.

Avoid feeling offorced compromise
AND MARCY SUGAR

2007

MIDDLEPORT
Revival 7p.m. nightly, May
24, 25 and 26, at the Ash
Street Church, 398 Ash
Street, Middleport . Special
singers each evening.
PastorJeff Smith invites
public.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
BY KATHY MITCHELL .

• H,llr C..re 6. Makeup
· Nail C..re • Helix Cuts
• f.Kials 6. Waxing
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said.
Ohio University has spent
the past year reaffirming its
commitment to academic
honesty after several dozen
mechanical engineering theses and dissertations were
alleged to contain plagiarized
material. One degree has been
revoked, and other cases are
still under final review.
The university and the Russ
College have implemented a
host of measures to guard
against future pla~iarism and
cultivate academic honesty,
and honor codes are in the
process of being drafted.
"Identifying and sanctioning violators .is not the sole
focus for a learning commurity in which awareness of the
centrality of academic integric
ty has been awakened;" Dodd
noted. "Ohio University is to
be commended for its thorough and comprehensive
engagement of students, fac·Ulty and administrators in
fashioning a proactive and
thoughtful response to the
question of integrity on its
campus."

Tuesday, May 22,

Students receive Bachtel scholarships

National academic honesty expert to speak

:

· PageA3

BYTHEBEND

Clubs and
organizations

'

'

The Daily Sentinel

On Monday, May 28, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
If you wish, select one of the following FREE verses IH!Iow to
accompany your tribute.
I. We hold you in our thoughts and memoril's furrver.
2. May God crndle you in Hisanns, now and forever.
3. Forever missed. never forgotten. May God holdyouin the palm of

Hishand. ·

· July tO, t961·May 5, t980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you ·.
throughout time.
· Always in our hearts,
Jolul and Mona Andrews and
latl)ily

4. Thank vou lor the wonderful days we sh:•ed mgcthcr. Myprayers
will be ·with you until we meet again.
5. The days we sharedwere sweet I long to ~cc you again in God's

heavenlyglory.

.

6. Ym1r ccumge ~md hravcry still inspi~e us all. and the memory of your

smile !illsus with JOY and loughtcr.
7. Though out of sight. you'll forever he in my hean and mind.
~.The days may come and g~. hut the ti n~s we ~hamJ will ~I ways remain.
9. May God'sangels guideyou andprolcrt you throughout ume.
10. You were a light in {lllf life that hums forcn!r in our heans.
II. May God '~ ~~aces shine lWe r )OU fnr all tirnc. ·
·
12. You arc in our thoughtsand prayers from !Horning to night and from
year to year.

TO RE~IEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SENJ) $8.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PlCTIJRE INCLUDED
Fill out thr form hclo" and drop off to
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DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 12 Noon

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NATION • .W ORLD

The Daily Sentinel

-

l*lese . . . . . Paleslillll alii il
BY BASSEM MROUE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TRIPOLI, Lebanon Lebanese troops blasted' a
Palestinian refugee camp
with artillery and tank tire
again Monday, seeking to
destroy a militant group
with ai-Qaida ties. The barrage smashed buildings and
sent plumes of black smoke
:towering over the crowded
:camp on the Mediterranean.
· The tierce, two-day battle
has killed nearly 50 combat·ants and an unknown num. ber of civilians, rai sing fears
-that Lebanon's· worst inter: nal violence since the 19751990 civil war could spread
in a country with an uneasy
balancing act among various sects and factions.
Refugees in the Nahr elBared camp, on the outskirts of the northern port
city of Tripoli, hid in their
homes as fighting raged,
and Palestinian officials in
the camp said nine civilians
were
killed
Monday.
Reports from the camp
could not be confirmed
because
officials
and
reporters could not get
inside.
'There are many wounded. We're under siege.
There is a shortage of bread,
mediCine and electricity.
,There are children under the
rubble" of damaged buildings, Sana Abu Faraj, a resident of the camp, told AIJazeera television by cell
phone.
.
All day, automatic gunftre
and explosions rocked the
camp - which is more like
a small town, with more
than 31,000 people living in
two- or three-story white
buildings on densely packed
narrow streets alongside
mosques, schools and businesses. Raging tires sent
large clouds of black smoke
into the sky, and shells
could be seen thudding into
some of the taller buildings.
· Hundreds of Lebanese
troops surrounded Nahr e)Bared, stayin~ outside in
accordance With a nearly
40-year-old agreement ~ith
the Palestinians. The troops
pounded the camp with
artillery and tank frre, and
militants responded · with
gunfire and mortar rounds.
The army is seeking to
uproot a militant group
called Fatah Islam, which
arose in the camp late last
year. The group touts itself
as a Pales.tinian liberation
·movement, but many view
it as a nascent branch of al. Qaida-style terrorism with
ambitions of carryjng out
anacks around the region.
Nevertheless, the military
assault adds yet another
.layer of instability to
:Lebanon's
potentially
:explosive politics. Prime
· Mmister Fuad Saniora 's
·.government already faces a
domestic political crisis,
with the opposition led by
. Iranian- and Syrian-backed
: Hezbollah demanding its
·removal.
· Fighting quieted after
:nightfall amid attempts by
·Other Palestinian factions to
broker a cease-fire. The representative
of
the
·Palestinian mililani group
Islamic · Jihad, Abu Ahmed
Rifai ~ said Fatah Islam militants pledged to cease ftring
and withdraw from positions facing Lebanese
troops. A senior officer at
Lebanese army command
would not say a cease-frre
was reached but repeated
the military's stance that it
will not shoot if it does not
come under fire.
Raising fears of spreading
violence, an explosion went
off in a shopping area in ·a
Sunni Muslim sector of
Beirut later Monday, wrecking parked cars and injuring
four people - a day after a
bomb blast in a Christian
part of the capital killed a
woman. Although there
were nO claims of responsibility, the confluence of two
bombings in as many days
while the fighting was going'
on in Tripoli was highly
unusual.
Saniora now risks sparking ii backlash . among
Palestinians in Lebanon's
other refugee camps, where
armed groups and Islamic
extremists have been growing in influence - and, in at
least one · case, have been
· sending recruits to fight
U.S. troops in Iraq .. If the

military moves into Nahr elBared in force, it could trigger widespread
anger
around the Arab world. particularly at a time when
Israel
is
battling
Palestinians in the Gaza
Strip.
The White House said it
supports Saniora'sefforts to
deal with the fighting. and
the
State
Department
defended the Lebanese
army, saying it was working
in a "legitimate manner"
against "provocations by
violent extremists" operating in the camp.
The leader of Fatah Islam,
Palestinian Shaker al-Absi,
has been linked to the former head of al-Qaida in Iraq
and is accused .in the 2002
assassination of a U.S.
diplomat in Jordan. He
moved into Nahr el-Bared
last fall after being expelled
from Syria,. where he was in

custody.
Since then, he. is believed
to have recruited about l 00
fighters. including militants
front Saudi Arabia, Yemen
and other Arab countries,
and he has said he follows
the ideology of al -Qaida
leader Osama bin Laden.
Among. the militants killed
in the fighting Sunday was a
man suspected in a plllt to
bomb trains in Germany last
year, according to Lebanese
security officials.
·
Lebanese security officials accuse Syria of backing Fatah Islam as a tool to
disrupt the country. "They
are not al-Qaida. This · is
imitation al-Qaida, a 'Made
in Syria' one," a national
police commander, Maj.
Gen. Ashraf Rifi, said, referring to Fatah Islam.
Syria - which hosts a
number of Palestinian militant groups, including

PageA2
TUesday,. May 22,

toll

Hamas
controlled
Lebanon until 2005, when
its troops were forced to
withdraw from the country
following the assassination
of former Lebanese prime
minister Raftk Hariri. But
Syria's
opponents
in
Leba.non accuse it of seeking to re-establish its control
· through its allies. including
Hezbollah.
Syrian Foreign Minister
Walid Moallem insisted
Darna~cus had nothing to do
with the Fatah Islam and has
· been seeking Interpol 's help
in arresting its members.
"Fatah Islam is rejected
and does not serve the
Palestinian cause. On the
contrary, it harms it in every
way," he said in Damascus_
Syria closed a border crossing near Tripoli, though
other
crossings
into
Lebanon remained open.
A spokesman for Fatah

Islam. Abu Salim. warned
that if the army siege did
not stop, the militants would
step up anacks by rockets
· and artillery "and would
take the battle outside
Tripoli."
"It is a life-or-death battle.
Their aim is to wipe out
Fatah Islam. We will
respond and we know how
to respond," he told The
Associated Press from the
camp.
Other Palestinian factions,
including Hamas, have distanced themselves from
Fatah Islam, though Hamas
was trying to broker a truce .
The assault on Nahr elBared, if it continues, raises
the prospect of unrest.
among the · more than
400,000
Palestinian
refugees living in Lebanon
- more than 215,000 of
whom live in 12 impoverished
refugee
camps.

2007

50

Lebanese officials cannot
enter the camps under ·a .
1969 agreement that gave
the Palestine Liberation
Organization authority over
them.
The battle was sparked
Sunday when police raided ·
suspected Fatah Islam hideouts in se veral buildings in
Tripoli, searching for men
wanted in a bank robbery. A
gun battle erupted and troops
were called in. Then militants burst out of the nearby
refugee camp. attacking
anny positions.
~banese troops later laid
siege 10 the refugee camp,
unleashing fire from tanks.
artillery and heavy machine
gun s. At least 27 soldiers
and 20 militants were killed
Sunday. Two more soldiers
were killed Monday night
when a mortar fired from
inside camp struck their
vehicle.

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.Community Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday, May 22
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, rescheduled regular session, 7 p.m.,
council's chambers.

.

ing, 7 p.m.
RACINE
- Racine
Chapter 134, Order of the
Eastern Star, 6 p.m., special
budget meeting. Committee
members to attend.

Wednesday, May 23
POMEROY
- OH-KAN
Wednesday, May 23 ·
Coin
Club
meets
at 7 p.m.
POMEROY - Board of
on
Wednesday
at
Pomeroy
Directors of Gallia-Meigs
Library.
Dues
are
payable.
Community Action Agency,
POMEROY - Feeney- .
Inc. meets at II :30 a.m.,
Bennett
Post 128, American
Wild Horse Cafe.
Legion, Auxiliary to meet at
I p.m. at the Meigs County
Thursday, May 24
Library
.
POMEROY Meigs
Soil .
and
Water
Thursday, May 24
Conservation Ditrict Board
POMEROY
The
of Supervisors, II :30 a.m.
Meigs
County
Humane
· at the District Office, 33101
Society will meet at 6 p.m.
Hiland Road.
at the Pomeroy Library to
I
discuss
fundraisers. The
Friday, May 25
public
is
invited.
POMEROY Meigs
Co mmi ssioners,
County
rescheduled regular session,
. 10 a.m., Meigs County
Courthouse.
Wednesday, May 23
LONG BOTTOM
Revival services will be
held at the faithful Gospel
Church, May 21-25, 7 p.m.
e?ch evening with Dave
Tuesday, May 22
Dailey preaching.
PORTLAND - Portland
Community Center meetThursday, May 24 ·

Church events

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ATHENS - Tim Dodd, a
leading expert ori academic
·honesty and executive director of Duke University's
Center
for
Academic
Integrity, will give a public
lecture on academic integrity
at I:30 p.m. Thursday, May
24, in the Baker University
Center Theatre at Ohio
University.
Sponsored by the Russ
College of Engineering and
Technology. the lecture, titled
"On the Road to a Campus
Culture of Integrity at Ohio
Universit;y: Posting Speed
Limits and Installing Speed
Bumps," will address issues
facing· Ohio University and
campuses across the nation.
Dodd says he will share his
view that in order to ensure a
culture of · integrity, Ohio
University must emphasize an
inspirational learning environment, create empathetic
and I'espectful social environments, and level the moral
playing field. These efforts act
like "speed bumps," habituating the honorable behavior
enshrined in honor codes, he

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Saturday, May 26
LONG BOtTOM
Hymn sing, 7 p.m. at the
Mt. Olive Church featuring
"Dayspring."
Everyone
welcome.

Youth events
Wednesday, May 23
POMEROY Meigs
County Health Depanment,
free vision clinic, children
ages birth to 21, call 9926626 for appointment.

Birthdays .
Friday, May 25
Charlene Hoeftlchj photo
RACINE Margaret
Four
Bachtel
scholarship
awards
were
presented
by
the
Foundation
for
Appalachian Ohio
Yost, formerly of Racine,
now residing in North at the Meigs High School awards assembly. The scholarship program was set up as an
Carolina, will celebrate her !)ndowed fund by the ·tate Or. Harry Ke1g in memory of Forest Bachtel of Middleport, a ·
92nd birthday on May 25. teacher and coach of the physician. This year's awards of $2,500 each were presented by
Cards may be sent to her at Marianne Campbett. Foundation Board member and former Board chair, center, assisted by
P. 0. Box 245,.Davis, N.C. Amanda Hughes, the Foundation's Communications/Administrative Coordinator, right.
Receiving the awards were from the left, David Poole, Daniel Bookman, Whitney Smith and
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Installing "speed bumps" curricular and extracurricular
practices that prompt desired
behavior - is the next phase
for Ohio University, Dodd
said.
Executive director . of
Duke's Center for Academic
Integrity since January 2005,
Dodd was associate dean for
undergraduate studies a1 Case
Western Reserve University
for more than eight years.
Previously, he served five
years as associate dean of academic advising at Gettysburg
College, where also was
administrative adviser to the
Honor Commission. Prior to
his tenure at Gettysburg,
Dodd was director of academic resources and &lt;!dvisement
at . St. Lawrence University.
He received his bachelor's and
.master's
degrees
from
Fordham University and did
doctoral work at the .
University of Pittsburgh.
where he also taught political .
science and worked in the
advising center.
A reception ,will follow the
lecture.

Holzer names physician of the month
GALLIPOLIS - Randy
Stratton, MD, was selected as
the May Physician of the
Month at Holzer .Medical
Center in Gallipolis by the
Hospital's
Physician
Satisfaction Team.
Born in Dermott, Ark. Dr.
Stratton graduated from the
University of Arkansas
Medical Sciences in 1984
and completed his emergency medicine residency at
University Hospital in Little
Rock, Ark. in 1987.
Dr. Stratton joined Holzer
in July 1987 upon completion of his residency. He is

Dear Annie: I am 17.
years old and going to be a
senior in high school in the
falL Pretty soon, I will be
m~king some very important decisions about my
future and choosing .where I
waiu to go to college. I get
nearly straight A's . and
could probably get into
most of the places I plan to
apply to. · Here's my dilemma:
My boyfriend of almost
two years is already in college and wants me to go to
the same school he does.
His college is an OK
school, but nothing spectacular, and I feel I could 'do a
lot better. I looked at several of the colleges near his,
'but frankly, none of them
appeals to me.
I want to be · with my
boyfriend because we've
already been apari for the
past year and I miss him.
What should I do '' Scared of Settling for a
School
Dear Scared: Please
don't put limits ·on your
future because you miss
your boyfriend; You will
resent feeling forced to
·compromise. Alth~ugh it's
difficult, many couples
maintain long-distance relationships, seeing each other
on vacations .and breaks,
and communicating often
via phone and e-mail. And
of course, college should be
the · time when you mature
and develop. and it's possible you will discover you'd
·rather have the freedom to
play the field. You should
be allowed to make that1
choice as welL Eithyr way,
the school you choose
should be what is best for
J

your academic potential
and personal growth. Don't
let anyone talk you into
doing otherwise.
Dear Annie: I'm writing .
to ask if you know of an
organization that provides
support for children of
older parents.
My grandmother was
recently diagnosed with
Alzheimer's, and my parents had to move her ·into
an assisted-living facility.
Grandma is very bitter
about this and takes it out
on them. I realize part of it
is her illness, but the rest is
her unwillingness to adapt.
My parents have done all
they can to help Grandma
with the transition, brin~ing
family photos and farn1li~r
objects, etc. There is nothing more that can be done.
However, there must be
some sort of support group
for my parents. Thanks. Concerned Daughter
Dear Daughter: The
Alzheimer's
Association
(alz.org) provides a 24-hour
helpline at 1-800-272-3900,
as .well as support groups
and ·resources for families
of those with Alzheimer's.
We hope your parents can
fi~d the help they need, and
bless you for recognizing
that they could use it.
Dear Annie: Every 60
seconds of every hour,
another kid in America
becomes a regular smoker.
Even scarier, one in three
of them will die prematurely as a result. That's why
for the past year, I have
been working with the
Campaign for Tobacco-F~ee
Kids as a youth advocate.
I am fighting to protect
my friends . and peers .from
the dangers of tobacco
through education efforts.
student -to-si\Jdent programs

and outreach to policymakers. This year I am encouraged that Congress has
introduced legislation that
would allow the Food and
Drug Administration to regulate tobacco. It is shocking
that the FDA can regulate
what we eat and use on our
skin, but not what is put in
a cigarette
which .
inelu.des some pretty scary
ingredients like arsenic and
lead. The bill would al so
regulate and curb Big
Tobacco's advertising and
sales to children.
Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable
death in this country. Your
readers can learn how they
can raise awareness and get
involved
by
visiting
www.tobaccofreekids.org .
Thank s for helping me
spread the word. - Emily
Martuscello, age
16,
Dover, N.H.
Dear Emily : Thanks for
taking on this worlhwhile
cause. Young people who
are involved in this effort
can influence their peers
more deeply than the rest
of us. We hope all of our
readers will check out thi s
website today and lind out
what they can do to help
prevent this deadly addiction.
·
·
Annie's Mailbox is written by' Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the .Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail ycJUr
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190; Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by oilier
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syrzdicate Web
page at www.creators.com. ·

Randy Stratton, MD
Board
Certified
Emergency Medicine by
American
Board
Emergency Medicine.
In his spare time,

in
the
of
Dr.

Stratton enjoys · gardening.
'landscaping and yard work.
He resides in Jackson with
his wife, Amy, a real estate
agent with ERA Accent. II
Realty in Jackson, and owner
and operator of Curves
Women ·s Fitness Center in
Jackson.
The Physician Satisfaction
team presented Dr. Stratton
with the Physician of the
Month award based on comments by staff and peers. For
his special honor, Dr. Stratton
received a framed certiticate
and designated parking spot
for the month of May.

we remember those who have passed away
and are especially dea·r to us.

Avoid feeling offorced compromise
AND MARCY SUGAR

2007

MIDDLEPORT
Revival 7p.m. nightly, May
24, 25 and 26, at the Ash
Street Church, 398 Ash
Street, Middleport . Special
singers each evening.
PastorJeff Smith invites
public.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
BY KATHY MITCHELL .

• H,llr C..re 6. Makeup
· Nail C..re • Helix Cuts
• f.Kials 6. Waxing
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• Spa Pack.lges • Chemical Peels
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said.
Ohio University has spent
the past year reaffirming its
commitment to academic
honesty after several dozen
mechanical engineering theses and dissertations were
alleged to contain plagiarized
material. One degree has been
revoked, and other cases are
still under final review.
The university and the Russ
College have implemented a
host of measures to guard
against future pla~iarism and
cultivate academic honesty,
and honor codes are in the
process of being drafted.
"Identifying and sanctioning violators .is not the sole
focus for a learning commurity in which awareness of the
centrality of academic integric
ty has been awakened;" Dodd
noted. "Ohio University is to
be commended for its thorough and comprehensive
engagement of students, fac·Ulty and administrators in
fashioning a proactive and
thoughtful response to the
question of integrity on its
campus."

Tuesday, May 22,

Students receive Bachtel scholarships

National academic honesty expert to speak

:

· PageA3

BYTHEBEND

Clubs and
organizations

'

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The Daily Sentinel

On Monday, May 28, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
If you wish, select one of the following FREE verses IH!Iow to
accompany your tribute.
I. We hold you in our thoughts and memoril's furrver.
2. May God crndle you in Hisanns, now and forever.
3. Forever missed. never forgotten. May God holdyouin the palm of

Hishand. ·

· July tO, t961·May 5, t980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you ·.
throughout time.
· Always in our hearts,
Jolul and Mona Andrews and
latl)ily

4. Thank vou lor the wonderful days we sh:•ed mgcthcr. Myprayers
will be ·with you until we meet again.
5. The days we sharedwere sweet I long to ~cc you again in God's

heavenlyglory.

.

6. Ym1r ccumge ~md hravcry still inspi~e us all. and the memory of your

smile !illsus with JOY and loughtcr.
7. Though out of sight. you'll forever he in my hean and mind.
~.The days may come and g~. hut the ti n~s we ~hamJ will ~I ways remain.
9. May God'sangels guideyou andprolcrt you throughout ume.
10. You were a light in {lllf life that hums forcn!r in our heans.
II. May God '~ ~~aces shine lWe r )OU fnr all tirnc. ·
·
12. You arc in our thoughtsand prayers from !Horning to night and from
year to year.

TO RE~IEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SENJ) $8.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PlCTIJRE INCLUDED
Fill out thr form hclo" and drop off to
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DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 12 Noon

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Please publish my tribu!e in 1he spel'ial Memory Page on Monday. May 28.

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OPINION.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

'
'

'

;

PageA4
Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Ideological differences likely to block health reform until 2009

A bipartisan consensus
is
gradually developing
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
on
key elements for
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
improving
the U.S. health
www.mydailysentlnel.com
care system - . but a vast
gap still exists between
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Democrats
and
Republicans on the role of .
Dan Goodrich
government.
Publisher
The agreements should" t be discounted. Even
Charlene Hoeflich
the Bush administration
has come around to the
General Manager-News Editor
idea that all Americans
need to have health insurance.
Moreover,
both
Congress shall make no law respecting an .
Republicans '
and
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Democrats advocate comfree exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of puterrzing
medical
speech, or of tl1e press; or tlie right of the peo- records ·to reduce errors
cut costs. They also
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the and
agree that disease prevenGovernment for a redress of grievances.
tion and chronic care
management
deserve
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution greater emphasis and payment incentives.
But unless some miracle
occurs, it's likely to take
a full-scale presidential
Today is Tuesday. May 22. the 142nd day of 2007. There debate about health care
are 223 days left in the year.
to resolve the issue of the
Todav"s Hi2hlight in History:
government's role.
One hundred years ago. on May 22, 1907, actor-director
The miracle would
Laurence Olivier was born in Dorking, Surrey, England.
mvolve a decision by
On this date:
Congress and the Bush
In 1813. composer Richard Wagner was born in Leipzig, administration to adopt a
Germany.
.
plan for universal cover- ·
In 1868. a major train robbery took place near a
b f
h
'd
ge e ore 1 e pres• enMarshfield. Ind .. as seven members of the Reno gang made
tia! election gets fully
otf with $96,000.
under way. It's not likely.
In 1939. the foreign ministers of Germany and Italy,
The ideological differJoachim von Ribbentrop and Gaieazzo Ciano, signed a
"Pact of Steel" committing the two countries to a military ences between Democrats
afliance.
and Republicans were.
In 1947, the Truman Doctrine was enacted as Congress spelled out last month by
appropriated military and economic aid for Greece and Health
and
Human
Turkey.
.
Services Secretary Mike
In 1968, the nuclear-powered U.S. submarine Scorpion, Leavitt in a speech at the
with 99 men aboard. sank in the Atlantic Ocean. (The American
Enterprise
remains of the sub were later found on the ocean tloor 400 Institute.
miles southwest of the Azores.) ·
•
Leavitt didn't eKplicitly
In 1969, the lunar module of Apollo 10 tlew to within draw partisan lines, but it
nine miles of the moon 's surface in a dress rehearsal for the was clear he meant that
.
Republicans believe govfirst lunar landing.
ln I 972, President NiKon began a visit to the Soviet ernment should act as the
Union, d.uring which he imd Kremlin leaders signed the "organizer" of health covAnti-Baliistic Missile Treaty.
erage while Democrats
ln 1972, the island nation of Ceylon became the republic think it should be the
of Sri Lanka.
·
"proprietor."
In 1979, Canadians voted in parliamentary elections that
"There are two very
put the Progressive Conservatives in power, ending the II- divergent points of view,"
year tenure of Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
he said. If government is
In 1992, after a reign lasting nearly 30 years, Johnny the "proprietor," it will
Carson hosted NBC's "Tonight Show" for the last time.
Ten years ago: In a case that drew national attention,
Kelly Flinn, the Air Force's first female bomber pilot ctrtified for combat, accepted a general discharge, thereby
avoiding court-martial on charges of adultery, lying and
disobeying an order. The defense began presenting its case
in the Oklahoma City bombing trial ofTimothy McVeigh.
Five years ago: A jury in Binningham, Ala., convicted
former Ku Klux Klansman Bobby Frank Cherry of murder
in a 1963 churc.h,bombing that killed four black girls. The
remains of Chandra Levy, the federal intern who had disappeared more than a year' earlier, were found in a
Washington park.
One year ago: The Department of Veterans Affairs said
personal data, including Social Security numbers of 26.5
million U.S. veterans, was stolen from a VA employee after
With
Director
of
he took the information home without authorization.
National
Intelligence
Seven-year-old BraKton Bilbrey of Arizona swam from
Mike McConnell recently,
Alcatraz Island to San Francisco in 47 minutes.
and
. urgently, telling a
Thought for Today: " Always do your best. You can't do
more and you mustn't do less."- Laurence Olivier, British Senate committee that the
president must have even
actor ( 1907- I989).
more potvers to collect
data from our e-mails and
LETTERS TO THE
phone cal)s - under the
much manipulated · and
EDITOR
evaded
Foreign
Letters to the .editor are welcome. They should be less Intelligence Surveillance
than 300 words. All letters are subject to ~diting, must be Act - I had a question: If
signed, and include address and telephone number. No George Orwell were still
unsigned letters will be' published. Letters should be in alive, coming to the
good taste, addressing issues. not personalities. Leuers of United States as a visiting
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· professor of countersured for publication
veiilance, would his name
be on a no-tly list, se nding
him back to England?
After ail, it was Orwell,
in "I 984" (a novel that
(USPS 213-960)
turned into a documenReader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
tary). who predicted ours
Co.
eventually becoming a
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon, Monday
society under increasing
Our main concern in all stories is to
through 'Friday, 111 Co urt Street,
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:
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, . Ohio.
Secol')d-class .
"How often, or on what
in a SIO"J, call the newsroom al (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
system,
the Thought
992·2156
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Police plugged in any
the Oh io Newspaper Association'.
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tions Ia The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
work. It was even con(740) 992-2156.
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ail the time.
everybody
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at
any
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, they could
By carrier or motor route
plug
in
your
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whenevNews
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·
Edllor: Charlene Hoeflich, Exl. 12
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sal individual surveil Reporter: Beth Sergem. Exl. 13
One month
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One year
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scripti on by mail permined in areas
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that you have no way of
knowing whether you are
Mail Subscription
or not."
·
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
For one of many examCharlene Hoeflich. Exl. 12
13 Weeks
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ples of how this adminis. '64.20
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tration reminds me of the
52Weeks
1
'127.11
E-mail:
slogan
of the fabled and
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County I
feared
I9th
century
13 Weeks
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Detective
Pinkerton
Web:
2s 'weeks
' 107.10
Agency "We never
52
Weeks
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www.mydailysenlinel .com
sleep"
then-Secretary

TODAY IN HISTORY ·

"define 'the benefits, set
the prices, bear the risk."
If it's the "organizer,"
government will "set the
rules ,
remedy
the
inequities and subsidize
the needy."
He said the differences
- and results - are dramatically
evident
in
approaches to Medicare
and in the· upcoming
debate over who should
be covered by the State
Children's
Health
Insurance Prografll, which
is due to be reauthorized
this year.
Medicare Part A, covering · hospital stays for
seniors, and Part B, covering doctor visits, are
programs under which
Congress establishes the
benefits, regulates prices
and attempts to contain
costs by enforcing a bud.
get.
Government is the "proprietor," Leavitt said, and
the programs will either
go bankrupt or eat up the
federal budget. Medicare
Part D, the new prescription drug program, is
coming in at less than
estimated costs· and may
be contributing to a
reduction in hospital stays
by seniors .
T.he difference, he said,
is that "instead of using
compulsion,
the
Republican Congress and
the president said we're
going to use markets.
Instead of having onesize-fits-all, we'll have
the market allow prices to
be established and allow
competition. and innovation.

"And, today we stand
with 92 percent of all
those who were eligible
having .a plan. The better
news is that 80 percent jn
virtually every estimation
are happy with their plan
because they can choose a
plan that fits them ' '
He didn't say so, but
it's a fact that Democrats
have been railing against
Pan D. calling it a sellout
to drug and insurance
companies and saying it"s
too
complicated
for
seniors to navigate, and
they have tried to get .the
government to " negotiate'' drug prices much as
it sets prices for hospital.
and doctor services in
Parts A and B.
Leavitt said the "organizer" versus "proprietor"
battle will be replayed in
the SCHIP reauthorization
fi.ght and again, perhaps,
in the debate over universal health coverage for ail
Americans.
"SCHIP was meant to
be for low-income chiidren who were not eligible for Medicaid, those
[in famiiiesf that are earning less than twice the
federal poverty level," or
$41,300 for a family of
four, he said.
"There are some that
. would raise it to 400 percent or $82,600," Leavitt
said. "What that would
mean is that 71 percent of
American children would
be on public assistance.
There are those who
would eKpand it to cover
adults."
He was referring to Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton,
D-N.Y., and Rep. John
Dingell, D-Mich., who are
sponsoring a bill to dramatically eKpand SCHIP
to cover pregnant women
and parents. The Wall
Street Journal 's editorial
page at.tacked the plan as
a step toward creating a
governme nt-run
health
care system "on the

installment plan."
It's worth noting that in
most states, SCHIP is run .
through private insurance
plans, but eKtending it to .
people making $80.000
and to adults does seem a
reach when 8 million poor
·children still don't have
coverage .
Leavitt declared - surprisingly, to me - that
"our objective ought to be
for every American to
have ac cess to . basic
h~al!h in surance at an
affordable price. The
solution to this dilemma
is not to have incrementally put one more car on
the train of governmentfunded, government-run
health care. The solution
is for every American to
have basic, affordable
insurance."
This is a goal President
Bush should be trumpeting, but he's not. Instead,
he's proposed a useful
idea of offering every
family a $15 ,000 taK
deduction to purchase private insurance and has
authorized . Leavitt to
work with states to develop their own universal
coverage plans.
. Leavitt argued at the
AEI that the best way to .
proceed would be for thi s
Congress to assist the
states much as President
Bill Clinton and a GOP
Congress did in I 995 and
1996 with welfare reform,
achieving a dramatic success on a bipartisan basis.
·. However, a top White
House aide told me that
Bush "lacks passion for.
health care." That being
so. incremental progress
toward health reform is,
unfortunatt;ly, probably
the best we can hope for
until after a vigorous
2008 debate.
(Morton Kondracke is
executive t:ditor of Roll
Call. the newspaper of
CafJitol Hill.)

..

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Museum developing Meigs Local Briefs
mining history display -W-ood--lan_d_Ce_nt-er-s-co-n-du-ct-in_g_

.Chaltes E. Pa~ley
PO~EROY - . Ch~les E. Pauley, 69, of Pomeroy

(Darwm commumty) d1ed Saturday, May 19, 2007, in the
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
·
He was a U.S . Anny veteran and is survived by his wife,
Ella Mae Kessinger Pauley.
Graveside services, with full military honors, will be I
p.m.. Wednesday, May 23, 2007, in the Dayton National
Cemetery in Dayton, Ohio. There are no calling hours.
Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis, is in charge of
arrangements: Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by 'viSitmg www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com
.

Inez Roy

The Daily 5entinel• Page A5

POMEROY Meigs
County's rich mining history will be · presented in the
spring display. at the Meigs
County Museum currently
being constructed.
To add riclmess to the.display, those with local mining related ·items are asked
to consider loaning .them to
the museum for the new few
months. Items on loan will
be labeled to give cedit to
their owners and any stories
relating to the items will be

displayed with the object.
Residents are encouraged
to visit the museum the
museum this summer to
view the display, other
POMEROY- In observance of Mental Health
standing exhibits, and mate- Awareness month, the Woodland Centers staff therapist
rials including early county will coijduct free depression screenings today, May 22,
birth and death, marriage from I to 3 p.m. at its facility on Memorial Drive in the
and estate records.
Meigs Multipurpose building.
'
Those wishing to loan an
From 3:30 to 5 p.m. will be "kid time" during which
item or receive more infor- time the local fire department, the Ohio State Patrol, Life
mation about the historical Ambulance, OSU E)\tension office and other service
Society and Museum should providers will be available. There will be educational
contact the Meigs County materials given to the children.
Museum, 992-3810.
''We are hoping to increase the community's need for
'healthy' mental health and the services available in the
community," said J. Wesley Crum, Ph.D, outpatient therapist at Woodland Centers. He can be reached at 992-2192,
EKt. I06.

screenings, providing
fun activities for kids

RACINE - Inez Marie Roy, 73, of Racine, passed away
on Sunday, May 20, 2007, . at the Rockspring&amp;
Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
Born Oct. 24, 1933. in "Stringburg," Letart Township,
she was the daughter of tlie late Homer and Effie Edwards
Warner. Inez was a member of the Racine United Methodist
Church.
She is survived by her husband, Clarence Roy, whom she
MIDDLEPORT - I f you importance of selecting and
married on Aug. 25, 1952, in Shawnee, and their two children, Rex (Lisa) Roy of Little Hocking, and Nancy Roy of are looking' for experienced , designing a system to make
Glendale, N.M. Also surviving is her grandson, professional heating and · you and your family feel
Christopher Roy of Little Hocking and one brother, Arthur cooling services, where the comfortable. Listening to
POMEROY -A marriage licen5e was issued in Meigs
equipment is top_quality and the needs and concerns of County Probate Court to Daniel C. Leonard, 38, Pomeroy,
"Tom" Warner of Racine.
In addition to her parents, Inez, was preceded in death by the customer comes first, customers is their top prior- and Terri Lee Dewhurst, 41, Pomeroy.
call Foreman and Abbott ity.
a brother, Homer Warner.
Foreman and Abbott
Funeral will be held at I p.m., Friday, May 25, 2007, at Heating and Cooling today.
Foreman
and
Abbott
proHeating
and Cooling is the
the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, with Pastor Kerry
vides
.
service
and
installacompany
you can trust to
Wood officiating.
POMEROY -Divorce actions were filed in Meigs
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday at the funer- . tion of cooling, heating, semce the top brands and County Common Pleas Court by Greta Carr, Long Bottom,
al home. Cremation will follow and the remains will be ventilation and geothermal models of home comfort against Ronald Parish Carr. Pomeroy, and by Troy A.
buried in the Letart Falls Cemetery at a later date. On-line units for your home · or equipment. They repair, Shuler, Pomeroy, against Carrie A. Shuler, Long Bottom.
maintain, sell and install
condolences my be sent to the family by visiting cremeens- office.
Divorces were granted to James L. Legg from Kandice R.
• Foreman and · Abbott reliable, recognized home
funeraihomes.com.
Legg,
and Jessica D. Foster from Chad A. Foster.
Heating and Cooling is ·comfort products, and guarlocated at 391 North Second antee all work.
Ave., Middleport, phone
Twenty four-hour emer992-5893 . or (800) 359- gency service and regular
POMEROY- Jinuny Ray Lee Sr., 56, Pomeroy, passed 4303. They understand the contracts are available.
POMEROY- Actions for dissolution of marriage were
away Sunday, May 20, 2007, at St. Mary's Hospital in
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Jonathan
Huntington, W.Va.
.
W. Newsome, Middleport, and Jackie P. Newsome,
He was born July 23, 1950 in Pomeroy, to Maxine (Lee)
Middleport; Tammy Jo Thomas, Middleport. and Timothy
Stapleton of Pomer?y a~d the late Virgil Lee. Jimmy was
J. Thomas, Middleport; Thomas Bryan Proffitt,
a rettred federal mme IDSpector, and served ID the U.S. . .
.
't::J u ';
Middleport, · and Kimberly Kay Proffitt, Pomeroy; and
Robert B. Titus, Pomeroy, and Catherine E, Titus, Pomeroy.
Army during the Vietnam Conflict. He was a member of ·
the American Legion, Post #21, Athens, Veterans of
Foreign Wars. Post #3477, . Athens, a member of the
..
·
AMVETS Post #733, Albany, and a member of the
COLUMBUS(AP)-The yearsago.ltalsoexpectstopay
Fraternal Order of the Eagles # 1271, Pomeroy.
state is paying top rates- up to $69 million to the Ohio State
POMEROY - An action for foreclosure was filed in
Surviving, in addition to his mother, are ~is children, 100 percent of some billed Medical Center this· year, up Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Wells Fargo Bank,
limmy Ray Lee, Jr., Pomeroy, Angela McQuatd, Syracuse; charges _ for prescription from $33 million three years Fort Mill, S.C., against Jason E. Putman, Reedsville, and
grandchildren, Jessica and Dustin Shelton; sisters, Brenda drugsandmedicalcan:forpris- ago, according to documents others. alleging default in the amount of $98,780.89.
Guthrie Middleport and Diana (Gre!J) Lewis, Clifton, oners, prison officials said.
filed as part of the spending
Civil judgment actions were filed by Wachovia Dealer
W.Va.; brother, Greg (Kelly) Lee, Mid leport; and several
Patients covered by private request.
Services, Inc., Ontario, Calif., against Jason E. Putman,
nieces, nephews and cousins. •
·
health ·
1
ua11
The state is also copm'g' with Reedsville, and others, alleging default in the amount of
ms~ Pans us Y
Servl.ce will be at II a.m. on Thursday, May 24, 2007,. at pay rates
that are much lower risingoostsforpsychiatriccan:, $16,889.52, and by Chancellor Learning Systems,
Fish~r ~1,meral Home in Pomeroy, with Pasto! Greg Co II ms than billed charges The go
including drugs used to treat Ellisville, Mo .. against Amy B. Pierce, Pomeroy, alleging
· offic1atmg. Bunal will follow at the Rockspnngs Cemetery ernment's Medi~
merital illness, and the after- default on a retail credit· agreement, in the amount of'
in Pomeroy.
Medi 'd
~
math of a class-action inmate $2,844.90.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
caJ programs, or examlawsuit, which required the
Foreclosures were granted to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
funeral home.
pie, pay only the acwal cost of state to hire hundreds of med- against Melissa D. Johnson, and others; and to Household
Military Rites will be conducted by the American Legion ~obody pays billed charges ical personnel at a cost that has Realty Corp., against Paul Chadwell.
Post #21 and VFW Post # 3477, Athens.
ho
· sofarreached$14million.
Ce ·
Onil. ne co'ndolences may be sen.t to. www.fisherfuneral- eKcept someone w comes m
homes.com.
off the street and is uninsured
Ohio State's Medical nter
But we do," said Annette accounts for a third of the
Chambers, medical services prison system's annual total
POMEROY - An indiciment filed in Meigs County
chief for the Ohio Department bill. The agency is negotiating a · Common Pleas Court against David M. Persons has been
of
Rehabilitation
and contract to take the place of the dismissed.
Correction.
current one, which expires June
Ohio's 49,066 inmates, 10 30, Randle said.
.
percent of whom areolder than
Under the Ohio State conBv THOMAS J. SHEERAN flags high and avoid 50, are treated in individual tract, the prison system pays 80
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
responding to anti-immi- .
RACINE - Dara and Jeanette Lawrence of Racine
grant comments from com- prison infirmaries, a large percent of billed charges for
prison
health
care
center
in
high-cost
prescription
drugs
Shawn
Ratner announce the andthelatePauiLawrenceand
PAINESVILLE
muters
headed
home
.
tals
across
and
pays
the
university
the
hospl
Orient
and
15
Hundreds marched through through Painesville. ·
· 0f
1 40
birth of their frrst child, a Phy II'1s Row Iand of Gall'1polis
wal
ac cost care, P uswhenperand the late Herbert Rowland.·
this northeast Ohio . city
"If someone says, 'Go the state.
t of billed charges' · an daughter, Victoria Irene, born
.
g
drug
costs·
and
an
cen
paterna1 gran dparents are
Rism
Monday eveni"ng to protest home MeKican,' we're not
·
•5 h 'tal bill ceeds on April 16 weighing 8
aging
prison
population
with
mmate
osp•
eK
pounds,
3
ounces,
in
Orlando,
David
and Rita Cole of Viera,
the weekend arrests of 24 going to respond,'' Goiz
·c
diseases
$100,000,
The
Columbus
R
d L' d
Chrom
Of
high
rates
· people by federal immigra- said. "We're here to support
· 0 f Fla.
Fla., . and on an
ma
h&amp; d·
Di
such as . hemophilia,
spate •OUD m a reVJew
Maternal grandparents are Ratner of Ocala, Fla. Paternal
tion agents.
·
, the families divided by the The agency is pay,
d
R th
HIV/AIDS and dl.abetes _ ·documents.
· The marchers, estimated arrests."
58
t
'ornate Gene "George" and Paula great-gran parents are u
prison health care mg percen more pen
Fisher Lawrence of Racine Bernstein of Viera, Fla., and
by police at between 300
Goiz said some of those have sent ex"""',.,J
$IS 3 mil- to the university than it did five
M'l B
.. d
and 400, staged a noisy arrested were under deporta- Costs to an r-seal~
ndin years ago, though the average and the late Beverly Irene the late 1ton emstem an
fi
protest along a five-block tion orders but' said he didn't lion for the •
year e
g hospital stay dropped by nearly Lawrence. The maternal the late Allan and Mildred
know
how
many
were
illegal
route from St. Mary Catholic
June 30.
da
great-grandparents
are Ratner. ,
Church in Painesville, where immigrants. lri either case,
That's a 30 percent rise from _a=y;::.
many hid from U.S. he said agents making two years ago, said Mike r
Immigration and Customs arrests "took everyone Randle, assistant director at the ·
Enforcement agents on around" at the arrest ioca- Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction. '
·
tions. ·
Saturday, to City Hail.
"Pharmaceutical
costs
are
Painesville resident Robyn
They chanted, held U.S.
up,
hospital
costs
are
up,
just
and MeKican . tlags and Smartt, 40, yelled to the
waved at passing motorists marchers to criticize their like they are for everybody,"
who honked in support. display of the Mexican tlag. Randle said. ''This is happening
"If you want to be an in every segment of society."
They also held banners readThe state Controlling Board
ing, "Wecome to work and American, you can't fly that"
on
May 7 approved an agency
tlag,"
said
Smartt,
who
said
feed our children" and
request
from last month to shift
she
had
three
children
by
her
"They can't deport us all."
$7.4
million
in funds internally
former
husband,
an
illegal
Elias Goiz, a Salvation
to
deal
with
rising
costs, Randle
Mexican
immigrant.
She
Army captain and minister
said.
endorsed
the
weekend
who works with the
Ohio eKpects to pay $31 milMexican immigrant commu- arrests and said the immigralion
for medications this year,
nity in Painesville, asked the tion . a~ents were acting
up
from
$I 9 million just two ·
marchers to hold the U.S. appropnately with warrants.

Foreman and Abbott
For the Record
the firm to trust

Marriage license

Divorces

Jimmy Lee Sr.

Dissolutions

Slate.pa) nng
• to.In rates
r
fiorpnson
• ·med'zca
l bl'Us

Civil suits

.;d·

Dismissed

Raids stir protest in large northeast
Ohio immigrant community

Our government versus privacy.· Bad news and good .

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Nat
Hentoff

of
Defense
Donald
Rumsfeld instituted in
2002
the
Counterintelligence Field
Activity Office (CIFA) to
keep an unblinking eye on
terrorism groups and foreign intelligence services
inside the United States.
CIFA,
however,
was
barred by law from
domestic
spyi ~g
on
Americans.
But CIFA's d~tabase , in
2003, began to ignore that
prohibition ,
gathering
information - as Mark
Manzetti reported in the
April 25 New York Times
- on "antiwar · groups,
churches,
. student
activists"
and
other
Americans who· had been
taught at some point in
sc hool that \hey had a
First Amendmel)t right to
dissent from government
policies.
The Pentagon piCtorially
and vividly nameq this
Pentagon CIFA database
"Talon" (a · claw of a
predatory animal). Much
of what we have learned
about Talon's eKtra-legal
activities came from a
Freedom of Information
Act request by . the
American Civil Liberties
Union for documents that
. were released, under that
Ia~ . by the Pentagon last
year;
Among Talon's trophies

- likely to have been
shared 1\lith the databases
of other intelligence agencies - was an entry in
2005 that a "church service for peace" was about
to be held in New York
City. Presumably, Talon,
through its liaisons with
local enforcement agencies, informed the New
York Police Department
(long known for · its
"excesses" in 1 survei llance) that this church serv.ice should be observed
maybe with plainclothes officers in the
pews.
Another rather striking
Talon entry warned that a
"Stop the. War" rally in
Akron, Ohio, was "a
potential terrorist activity." The legacy of J. Edgar
Hoover - and hi s COINTELPRO (counterintelligence operation) surveillance and infiltration still lives and thri ves!
But since Hoover himself left us in 1972, he
never could have c·onceived - · nor, for that
matter, could have Orwell
the ever-eKpanding
advances in government
surveillance technology
that
causes
more
Americans to have a
sense. however tleeting
from time to tilhe, that
some electronic tendril of
government . may .be
watching over them, but
there's no way to be S\Jre.
However, in a sudden
shaft of good news for
those of us who sti li harbor a hope that we have
some privacy left, there is
a government official James R,. Clapper, the
Pentagon's new intelligence chief, who has

respondecj to complaints
from citizens (not only
professional civil libertarians) that hi s increasingly
controversial Talon database is acting beyond and ·
beneath the law. ·
As reported by Reuters
and The New York Times,
Clapper has recommended
to Defense Secretary
Robert · Gates - who is
not as-invincible to second
thoughts as his predecessor - that the Talon data:
base be declawed. As of
. this writing, Gates has not
yet given the dismantling
order, but it appears reasona ble that Clapper
would ·not have gone public with his desire to retire
Talon if he has not had
some encouragement from
Gates . .
An ACLU lawyer, Ben
Wizner, much involved ·in
trying to regenerate the
Bill of Rights, called
Clapper's intention a
"pos itive step" but cautioned that, · as has happened in the past, the
Pentagon cou ld continue
this kind of domestic spying under another name.
"What we . don't know
about Pentagon . survei lianc'e within the United
States," · he told The New
York Times, "far exceeds
what we do know."
Still, I offer a toast to
·-James Clapper, · as I
believe Orwell also would.
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authority
on the First Ame{!dlflent
and the Bill of Rights and
atlthor of many books,
.including ''The War on the
Bill of Rights and the
Gathering
Resistance"
(Seven Stories
Pres's,
2004).)

Birth announced

====::;:::;:;:;:=====::;;:::;:::;iiiiiiiilliilliiiili/iiiillliililiiiliiiiiiiiillllli

ODNR
from PageA1
is also being mined in New
Haven.
·
In a Gatling LLC press
release, the company •s
described as engaging in
''the pro d uct10n,
·
· process-

Arts ·
from PageA1
grams for schools, libraries,
conferences and festivals.
August I - Wilson, who
is coordinating 'the summer
program, has been telling
stories for over eight years
at
schools," churches,
libraries, senior centers and
conferences across Ohio.
She
has
produced

ing, and sale of bituminous
coal of steam grade through
its mining complex located
in New'Haven, W.Va. The
mining complex blends,
processes, and ships coal
that is produced from the
Broad Run mine. Gatling's
steam coal is purchased by
uti.II't•·es and industrial
clients as fuel for po\Yer
·.plants. As of April 2007,
Tellabration in Meigs county for five years on the
weekend
before
Thanksgiving. She is a
member of Storytellers of
Central
Ohio,
W.Va.
Storytellers Guild, O~io
Order for the Preservation
of Storytelling a~d . the
national
orgamzallon,
Nationai
Storytelling
Network.
·
Wilson S'did that in addition to the grant funding
Mason 'City Library, Meigs

Gatling, LLC operates one
underground coal mine in
the Pittsburgh SA coal ·
seam, a coal preparation
facility and coal transfer
beitline. Gatling, LLC di stributes its products through
a belt transfer line and a
barge loadout facility iocated on the Ohio River. The
company is headqt~artered
Kevtn Keltyfplloto
in New Haven."
A bench outside the Gallipolis Post Office was dedicated Monday to the memory of Jeff
Roush·of New Haven, a siK·year post office employee who died in August 2006. Pausing by
County Regional Library, the bench were, from left, Postmaster Walt Thomas. Roush's wife Dawn, and two of her
Riverbend Arts Council and husband 's co-workers. Susie Robie and Cheryln Roberts.
W.Va.. Storytellers Guild
Roush said. "I'm shocked ing at the Galiip9lis Post
have also pledged financial
and honored. We've been Office. Roush spent nine
support for the project.
very blessed by the people months with the Postal
"The events will be in the
he worked with. They were Service in Columbus,
from PageA1
grassy areas of the parks, so
'a great support system fo r Ohio. ·
those att~nding should bring
Du1'in ~ the ceremony,
myself and the girls.''
lawn chairs or blankets.
·
Roberts
read aloud a poem
Roush was raised in Nc1•.
· We ' re also asking tliat chii- 49th birthday. Gloria
dren be accompanied by an Salisbury, Cheryin Roberts Haven and was living in she ~omposed in Rou.sh's
adult," said Wilson who can and Others worked on mak- Virginia Beach,' Va., a honor, and employees took
be contacted or more infor- ing the bench and plaque a decade .ago when he time to speak with Dawn
returned home to look after Roush and share their
mation at who inv.ites 740 reality.
hi s parents. Prior to work- memories of herhusband.
"He
loved
his
job,"
Dawn·
. 992-7830.

Bench

)

�'•

OPINION.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

'
'

'

;

PageA4
Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Ideological differences likely to block health reform until 2009

A bipartisan consensus
is
gradually developing
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
on
key elements for
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
improving
the U.S. health
www.mydailysentlnel.com
care system - . but a vast
gap still exists between
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Democrats
and
Republicans on the role of .
Dan Goodrich
government.
Publisher
The agreements should" t be discounted. Even
Charlene Hoeflich
the Bush administration
has come around to the
General Manager-News Editor
idea that all Americans
need to have health insurance.
Moreover,
both
Congress shall make no law respecting an .
Republicans '
and
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Democrats advocate comfree exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of puterrzing
medical
speech, or of tl1e press; or tlie right of the peo- records ·to reduce errors
cut costs. They also
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the and
agree that disease prevenGovernment for a redress of grievances.
tion and chronic care
management
deserve
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution greater emphasis and payment incentives.
But unless some miracle
occurs, it's likely to take
a full-scale presidential
Today is Tuesday. May 22. the 142nd day of 2007. There debate about health care
are 223 days left in the year.
to resolve the issue of the
Todav"s Hi2hlight in History:
government's role.
One hundred years ago. on May 22, 1907, actor-director
The miracle would
Laurence Olivier was born in Dorking, Surrey, England.
mvolve a decision by
On this date:
Congress and the Bush
In 1813. composer Richard Wagner was born in Leipzig, administration to adopt a
Germany.
.
plan for universal cover- ·
In 1868. a major train robbery took place near a
b f
h
'd
ge e ore 1 e pres• enMarshfield. Ind .. as seven members of the Reno gang made
tia! election gets fully
otf with $96,000.
under way. It's not likely.
In 1939. the foreign ministers of Germany and Italy,
The ideological differJoachim von Ribbentrop and Gaieazzo Ciano, signed a
"Pact of Steel" committing the two countries to a military ences between Democrats
afliance.
and Republicans were.
In 1947, the Truman Doctrine was enacted as Congress spelled out last month by
appropriated military and economic aid for Greece and Health
and
Human
Turkey.
.
Services Secretary Mike
In 1968, the nuclear-powered U.S. submarine Scorpion, Leavitt in a speech at the
with 99 men aboard. sank in the Atlantic Ocean. (The American
Enterprise
remains of the sub were later found on the ocean tloor 400 Institute.
miles southwest of the Azores.) ·
•
Leavitt didn't eKplicitly
In 1969, the lunar module of Apollo 10 tlew to within draw partisan lines, but it
nine miles of the moon 's surface in a dress rehearsal for the was clear he meant that
.
Republicans believe govfirst lunar landing.
ln I 972, President NiKon began a visit to the Soviet ernment should act as the
Union, d.uring which he imd Kremlin leaders signed the "organizer" of health covAnti-Baliistic Missile Treaty.
erage while Democrats
ln 1972, the island nation of Ceylon became the republic think it should be the
of Sri Lanka.
·
"proprietor."
In 1979, Canadians voted in parliamentary elections that
"There are two very
put the Progressive Conservatives in power, ending the II- divergent points of view,"
year tenure of Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
he said. If government is
In 1992, after a reign lasting nearly 30 years, Johnny the "proprietor," it will
Carson hosted NBC's "Tonight Show" for the last time.
Ten years ago: In a case that drew national attention,
Kelly Flinn, the Air Force's first female bomber pilot ctrtified for combat, accepted a general discharge, thereby
avoiding court-martial on charges of adultery, lying and
disobeying an order. The defense began presenting its case
in the Oklahoma City bombing trial ofTimothy McVeigh.
Five years ago: A jury in Binningham, Ala., convicted
former Ku Klux Klansman Bobby Frank Cherry of murder
in a 1963 churc.h,bombing that killed four black girls. The
remains of Chandra Levy, the federal intern who had disappeared more than a year' earlier, were found in a
Washington park.
One year ago: The Department of Veterans Affairs said
personal data, including Social Security numbers of 26.5
million U.S. veterans, was stolen from a VA employee after
With
Director
of
he took the information home without authorization.
National
Intelligence
Seven-year-old BraKton Bilbrey of Arizona swam from
Mike McConnell recently,
Alcatraz Island to San Francisco in 47 minutes.
and
. urgently, telling a
Thought for Today: " Always do your best. You can't do
more and you mustn't do less."- Laurence Olivier, British Senate committee that the
president must have even
actor ( 1907- I989).
more potvers to collect
data from our e-mails and
LETTERS TO THE
phone cal)s - under the
much manipulated · and
EDITOR
evaded
Foreign
Letters to the .editor are welcome. They should be less Intelligence Surveillance
than 300 words. All letters are subject to ~diting, must be Act - I had a question: If
signed, and include address and telephone number. No George Orwell were still
unsigned letters will be' published. Letters should be in alive, coming to the
good taste, addressing issues. not personalities. Leuers of United States as a visiting
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· professor of countersured for publication
veiilance, would his name
be on a no-tly list, se nding
him back to England?
After ail, it was Orwell,
in "I 984" (a novel that
(USPS 213-960)
turned into a documenReader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
tary). who predicted ours
Co.
eventually becoming a
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon, Monday
society under increasing
Our main concern in all stories is to
through 'Friday, 111 Co urt Street,
surveillance
:
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, . Ohio.
Secol')d-class .
"How often, or on what
in a SIO"J, call the newsroom al (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
system,
the Thought
992·2156
Member: The Associated Press and
Police plugged in any
the Oh io Newspaper Association'.
Postmaster: Send address correcindividual wire was guessOur main number Is
tions Ia The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
work. It was even con(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
ceivable that they watched
Department extensions are:
ail the time.
everybody
Sullscription Rates
But
at
any
rate
, they could
By carrier or motor route
plug
in
your
wire
whenevNews
One month
' 10.27
er
they
wanted
to."
·
Edllor: Charlene Hoeflich, Exl. 12
'115.84
One year
Daily
50'
There is not yet univerReporter: Brian Reed , Exl. 14
Senior Citizen rales
sal individual surveil Reporter: Beth Sergem. Exl. 13
One month
.
'1 0.27
lance,· but as reporter Dan
One year
'1 03.90
Kennedy wrote in the
Advertising
Subscnbers should rem" In advance
Boston
Phoenix: "It's not
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that you're being watched.
scripti on by mail permined in areas
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is availIt's that you might be, and
. I
CtassJCtrc.: Judy Clark , Exl. 10
able.
that you have no way of
knowing whether you are
Mail Subscription
or not."
·
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
For one of many examCharlene Hoeflich. Exl. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
ples of how this adminis. '64.20
26 Weeks
tration reminds me of the
52Weeks
1
'127.11
E-mail:
slogan
of the fabled and
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County I
feared
I9th
century
13 Weeks
'53.55
·
Detective
Pinkerton
Web:
2s 'weeks
' 107.10
Agency "We never
52
Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysenlinel .com
sleep"
then-Secretary

TODAY IN HISTORY ·

"define 'the benefits, set
the prices, bear the risk."
If it's the "organizer,"
government will "set the
rules ,
remedy
the
inequities and subsidize
the needy."
He said the differences
- and results - are dramatically
evident
in
approaches to Medicare
and in the· upcoming
debate over who should
be covered by the State
Children's
Health
Insurance Prografll, which
is due to be reauthorized
this year.
Medicare Part A, covering · hospital stays for
seniors, and Part B, covering doctor visits, are
programs under which
Congress establishes the
benefits, regulates prices
and attempts to contain
costs by enforcing a bud.
get.
Government is the "proprietor," Leavitt said, and
the programs will either
go bankrupt or eat up the
federal budget. Medicare
Part D, the new prescription drug program, is
coming in at less than
estimated costs· and may
be contributing to a
reduction in hospital stays
by seniors .
T.he difference, he said,
is that "instead of using
compulsion,
the
Republican Congress and
the president said we're
going to use markets.
Instead of having onesize-fits-all, we'll have
the market allow prices to
be established and allow
competition. and innovation.

"And, today we stand
with 92 percent of all
those who were eligible
having .a plan. The better
news is that 80 percent jn
virtually every estimation
are happy with their plan
because they can choose a
plan that fits them ' '
He didn't say so, but
it's a fact that Democrats
have been railing against
Pan D. calling it a sellout
to drug and insurance
companies and saying it"s
too
complicated
for
seniors to navigate, and
they have tried to get .the
government to " negotiate'' drug prices much as
it sets prices for hospital.
and doctor services in
Parts A and B.
Leavitt said the "organizer" versus "proprietor"
battle will be replayed in
the SCHIP reauthorization
fi.ght and again, perhaps,
in the debate over universal health coverage for ail
Americans.
"SCHIP was meant to
be for low-income chiidren who were not eligible for Medicaid, those
[in famiiiesf that are earning less than twice the
federal poverty level," or
$41,300 for a family of
four, he said.
"There are some that
. would raise it to 400 percent or $82,600," Leavitt
said. "What that would
mean is that 71 percent of
American children would
be on public assistance.
There are those who
would eKpand it to cover
adults."
He was referring to Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton,
D-N.Y., and Rep. John
Dingell, D-Mich., who are
sponsoring a bill to dramatically eKpand SCHIP
to cover pregnant women
and parents. The Wall
Street Journal 's editorial
page at.tacked the plan as
a step toward creating a
governme nt-run
health
care system "on the

installment plan."
It's worth noting that in
most states, SCHIP is run .
through private insurance
plans, but eKtending it to .
people making $80.000
and to adults does seem a
reach when 8 million poor
·children still don't have
coverage .
Leavitt declared - surprisingly, to me - that
"our objective ought to be
for every American to
have ac cess to . basic
h~al!h in surance at an
affordable price. The
solution to this dilemma
is not to have incrementally put one more car on
the train of governmentfunded, government-run
health care. The solution
is for every American to
have basic, affordable
insurance."
This is a goal President
Bush should be trumpeting, but he's not. Instead,
he's proposed a useful
idea of offering every
family a $15 ,000 taK
deduction to purchase private insurance and has
authorized . Leavitt to
work with states to develop their own universal
coverage plans.
. Leavitt argued at the
AEI that the best way to .
proceed would be for thi s
Congress to assist the
states much as President
Bill Clinton and a GOP
Congress did in I 995 and
1996 with welfare reform,
achieving a dramatic success on a bipartisan basis.
·. However, a top White
House aide told me that
Bush "lacks passion for.
health care." That being
so. incremental progress
toward health reform is,
unfortunatt;ly, probably
the best we can hope for
until after a vigorous
2008 debate.
(Morton Kondracke is
executive t:ditor of Roll
Call. the newspaper of
CafJitol Hill.)

..

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Museum developing Meigs Local Briefs
mining history display -W-ood--lan_d_Ce_nt-er-s-co-n-du-ct-in_g_

.Chaltes E. Pa~ley
PO~EROY - . Ch~les E. Pauley, 69, of Pomeroy

(Darwm commumty) d1ed Saturday, May 19, 2007, in the
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
·
He was a U.S . Anny veteran and is survived by his wife,
Ella Mae Kessinger Pauley.
Graveside services, with full military honors, will be I
p.m.. Wednesday, May 23, 2007, in the Dayton National
Cemetery in Dayton, Ohio. There are no calling hours.
Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis, is in charge of
arrangements: Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by 'viSitmg www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com
.

Inez Roy

The Daily 5entinel• Page A5

POMEROY Meigs
County's rich mining history will be · presented in the
spring display. at the Meigs
County Museum currently
being constructed.
To add riclmess to the.display, those with local mining related ·items are asked
to consider loaning .them to
the museum for the new few
months. Items on loan will
be labeled to give cedit to
their owners and any stories
relating to the items will be

displayed with the object.
Residents are encouraged
to visit the museum the
museum this summer to
view the display, other
POMEROY- In observance of Mental Health
standing exhibits, and mate- Awareness month, the Woodland Centers staff therapist
rials including early county will coijduct free depression screenings today, May 22,
birth and death, marriage from I to 3 p.m. at its facility on Memorial Drive in the
and estate records.
Meigs Multipurpose building.
'
Those wishing to loan an
From 3:30 to 5 p.m. will be "kid time" during which
item or receive more infor- time the local fire department, the Ohio State Patrol, Life
mation about the historical Ambulance, OSU E)\tension office and other service
Society and Museum should providers will be available. There will be educational
contact the Meigs County materials given to the children.
Museum, 992-3810.
''We are hoping to increase the community's need for
'healthy' mental health and the services available in the
community," said J. Wesley Crum, Ph.D, outpatient therapist at Woodland Centers. He can be reached at 992-2192,
EKt. I06.

screenings, providing
fun activities for kids

RACINE - Inez Marie Roy, 73, of Racine, passed away
on Sunday, May 20, 2007, . at the Rockspring&amp;
Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
Born Oct. 24, 1933. in "Stringburg," Letart Township,
she was the daughter of tlie late Homer and Effie Edwards
Warner. Inez was a member of the Racine United Methodist
Church.
She is survived by her husband, Clarence Roy, whom she
MIDDLEPORT - I f you importance of selecting and
married on Aug. 25, 1952, in Shawnee, and their two children, Rex (Lisa) Roy of Little Hocking, and Nancy Roy of are looking' for experienced , designing a system to make
Glendale, N.M. Also surviving is her grandson, professional heating and · you and your family feel
Christopher Roy of Little Hocking and one brother, Arthur cooling services, where the comfortable. Listening to
POMEROY -A marriage licen5e was issued in Meigs
equipment is top_quality and the needs and concerns of County Probate Court to Daniel C. Leonard, 38, Pomeroy,
"Tom" Warner of Racine.
In addition to her parents, Inez, was preceded in death by the customer comes first, customers is their top prior- and Terri Lee Dewhurst, 41, Pomeroy.
call Foreman and Abbott ity.
a brother, Homer Warner.
Foreman and Abbott
Funeral will be held at I p.m., Friday, May 25, 2007, at Heating and Cooling today.
Foreman
and
Abbott
proHeating
and Cooling is the
the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, with Pastor Kerry
vides
.
service
and
installacompany
you can trust to
Wood officiating.
POMEROY -Divorce actions were filed in Meigs
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday at the funer- . tion of cooling, heating, semce the top brands and County Common Pleas Court by Greta Carr, Long Bottom,
al home. Cremation will follow and the remains will be ventilation and geothermal models of home comfort against Ronald Parish Carr. Pomeroy, and by Troy A.
buried in the Letart Falls Cemetery at a later date. On-line units for your home · or equipment. They repair, Shuler, Pomeroy, against Carrie A. Shuler, Long Bottom.
maintain, sell and install
condolences my be sent to the family by visiting cremeens- office.
Divorces were granted to James L. Legg from Kandice R.
• Foreman and · Abbott reliable, recognized home
funeraihomes.com.
Legg,
and Jessica D. Foster from Chad A. Foster.
Heating and Cooling is ·comfort products, and guarlocated at 391 North Second antee all work.
Ave., Middleport, phone
Twenty four-hour emer992-5893 . or (800) 359- gency service and regular
POMEROY- Jinuny Ray Lee Sr., 56, Pomeroy, passed 4303. They understand the contracts are available.
POMEROY- Actions for dissolution of marriage were
away Sunday, May 20, 2007, at St. Mary's Hospital in
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Jonathan
Huntington, W.Va.
.
W. Newsome, Middleport, and Jackie P. Newsome,
He was born July 23, 1950 in Pomeroy, to Maxine (Lee)
Middleport; Tammy Jo Thomas, Middleport. and Timothy
Stapleton of Pomer?y a~d the late Virgil Lee. Jimmy was
J. Thomas, Middleport; Thomas Bryan Proffitt,
a rettred federal mme IDSpector, and served ID the U.S. . .
.
't::J u ';
Middleport, · and Kimberly Kay Proffitt, Pomeroy; and
Robert B. Titus, Pomeroy, and Catherine E, Titus, Pomeroy.
Army during the Vietnam Conflict. He was a member of ·
the American Legion, Post #21, Athens, Veterans of
Foreign Wars. Post #3477, . Athens, a member of the
..
·
AMVETS Post #733, Albany, and a member of the
COLUMBUS(AP)-The yearsago.ltalsoexpectstopay
Fraternal Order of the Eagles # 1271, Pomeroy.
state is paying top rates- up to $69 million to the Ohio State
POMEROY - An action for foreclosure was filed in
Surviving, in addition to his mother, are ~is children, 100 percent of some billed Medical Center this· year, up Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Wells Fargo Bank,
limmy Ray Lee, Jr., Pomeroy, Angela McQuatd, Syracuse; charges _ for prescription from $33 million three years Fort Mill, S.C., against Jason E. Putman, Reedsville, and
grandchildren, Jessica and Dustin Shelton; sisters, Brenda drugsandmedicalcan:forpris- ago, according to documents others. alleging default in the amount of $98,780.89.
Guthrie Middleport and Diana (Gre!J) Lewis, Clifton, oners, prison officials said.
filed as part of the spending
Civil judgment actions were filed by Wachovia Dealer
W.Va.; brother, Greg (Kelly) Lee, Mid leport; and several
Patients covered by private request.
Services, Inc., Ontario, Calif., against Jason E. Putman,
nieces, nephews and cousins. •
·
health ·
1
ua11
The state is also copm'g' with Reedsville, and others, alleging default in the amount of
ms~ Pans us Y
Servl.ce will be at II a.m. on Thursday, May 24, 2007,. at pay rates
that are much lower risingoostsforpsychiatriccan:, $16,889.52, and by Chancellor Learning Systems,
Fish~r ~1,meral Home in Pomeroy, with Pasto! Greg Co II ms than billed charges The go
including drugs used to treat Ellisville, Mo .. against Amy B. Pierce, Pomeroy, alleging
· offic1atmg. Bunal will follow at the Rockspnngs Cemetery ernment's Medi~
merital illness, and the after- default on a retail credit· agreement, in the amount of'
in Pomeroy.
Medi 'd
~
math of a class-action inmate $2,844.90.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
caJ programs, or examlawsuit, which required the
Foreclosures were granted to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
funeral home.
pie, pay only the acwal cost of state to hire hundreds of med- against Melissa D. Johnson, and others; and to Household
Military Rites will be conducted by the American Legion ~obody pays billed charges ical personnel at a cost that has Realty Corp., against Paul Chadwell.
Post #21 and VFW Post # 3477, Athens.
ho
· sofarreached$14million.
Ce ·
Onil. ne co'ndolences may be sen.t to. www.fisherfuneral- eKcept someone w comes m
homes.com.
off the street and is uninsured
Ohio State's Medical nter
But we do," said Annette accounts for a third of the
Chambers, medical services prison system's annual total
POMEROY - An indiciment filed in Meigs County
chief for the Ohio Department bill. The agency is negotiating a · Common Pleas Court against David M. Persons has been
of
Rehabilitation
and contract to take the place of the dismissed.
Correction.
current one, which expires June
Ohio's 49,066 inmates, 10 30, Randle said.
.
percent of whom areolder than
Under the Ohio State conBv THOMAS J. SHEERAN flags high and avoid 50, are treated in individual tract, the prison system pays 80
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
responding to anti-immi- .
RACINE - Dara and Jeanette Lawrence of Racine
grant comments from com- prison infirmaries, a large percent of billed charges for
prison
health
care
center
in
high-cost
prescription
drugs
Shawn
Ratner announce the andthelatePauiLawrenceand
PAINESVILLE
muters
headed
home
.
tals
across
and
pays
the
university
the
hospl
Orient
and
15
Hundreds marched through through Painesville. ·
· 0f
1 40
birth of their frrst child, a Phy II'1s Row Iand of Gall'1polis
wal
ac cost care, P uswhenperand the late Herbert Rowland.·
this northeast Ohio . city
"If someone says, 'Go the state.
t of billed charges' · an daughter, Victoria Irene, born
.
g
drug
costs·
and
an
cen
paterna1 gran dparents are
Rism
Monday eveni"ng to protest home MeKican,' we're not
·
•5 h 'tal bill ceeds on April 16 weighing 8
aging
prison
population
with
mmate
osp•
eK
pounds,
3
ounces,
in
Orlando,
David
and Rita Cole of Viera,
the weekend arrests of 24 going to respond,'' Goiz
·c
diseases
$100,000,
The
Columbus
R
d L' d
Chrom
Of
high
rates
· people by federal immigra- said. "We're here to support
· 0 f Fla.
Fla., . and on an
ma
h&amp; d·
Di
such as . hemophilia,
spate •OUD m a reVJew
Maternal grandparents are Ratner of Ocala, Fla. Paternal
tion agents.
·
, the families divided by the The agency is pay,
d
R th
HIV/AIDS and dl.abetes _ ·documents.
· The marchers, estimated arrests."
58
t
'ornate Gene "George" and Paula great-gran parents are u
prison health care mg percen more pen
Fisher Lawrence of Racine Bernstein of Viera, Fla., and
by police at between 300
Goiz said some of those have sent ex"""',.,J
$IS 3 mil- to the university than it did five
M'l B
.. d
and 400, staged a noisy arrested were under deporta- Costs to an r-seal~
ndin years ago, though the average and the late Beverly Irene the late 1ton emstem an
fi
protest along a five-block tion orders but' said he didn't lion for the •
year e
g hospital stay dropped by nearly Lawrence. The maternal the late Allan and Mildred
know
how
many
were
illegal
route from St. Mary Catholic
June 30.
da
great-grandparents
are Ratner. ,
Church in Painesville, where immigrants. lri either case,
That's a 30 percent rise from _a=y;::.
many hid from U.S. he said agents making two years ago, said Mike r
Immigration and Customs arrests "took everyone Randle, assistant director at the ·
Enforcement agents on around" at the arrest ioca- Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction. '
·
tions. ·
Saturday, to City Hail.
"Pharmaceutical
costs
are
Painesville resident Robyn
They chanted, held U.S.
up,
hospital
costs
are
up,
just
and MeKican . tlags and Smartt, 40, yelled to the
waved at passing motorists marchers to criticize their like they are for everybody,"
who honked in support. display of the Mexican tlag. Randle said. ''This is happening
"If you want to be an in every segment of society."
They also held banners readThe state Controlling Board
ing, "Wecome to work and American, you can't fly that"
on
May 7 approved an agency
tlag,"
said
Smartt,
who
said
feed our children" and
request
from last month to shift
she
had
three
children
by
her
"They can't deport us all."
$7.4
million
in funds internally
former
husband,
an
illegal
Elias Goiz, a Salvation
to
deal
with
rising
costs, Randle
Mexican
immigrant.
She
Army captain and minister
said.
endorsed
the
weekend
who works with the
Ohio eKpects to pay $31 milMexican immigrant commu- arrests and said the immigralion
for medications this year,
nity in Painesville, asked the tion . a~ents were acting
up
from
$I 9 million just two ·
marchers to hold the U.S. appropnately with warrants.

Foreman and Abbott
For the Record
the firm to trust

Marriage license

Divorces

Jimmy Lee Sr.

Dissolutions

Slate.pa) nng
• to.In rates
r
fiorpnson
• ·med'zca
l bl'Us

Civil suits

.;d·

Dismissed

Raids stir protest in large northeast
Ohio immigrant community

Our government versus privacy.· Bad news and good .

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Nat
Hentoff

of
Defense
Donald
Rumsfeld instituted in
2002
the
Counterintelligence Field
Activity Office (CIFA) to
keep an unblinking eye on
terrorism groups and foreign intelligence services
inside the United States.
CIFA,
however,
was
barred by law from
domestic
spyi ~g
on
Americans.
But CIFA's d~tabase , in
2003, began to ignore that
prohibition ,
gathering
information - as Mark
Manzetti reported in the
April 25 New York Times
- on "antiwar · groups,
churches,
. student
activists"
and
other
Americans who· had been
taught at some point in
sc hool that \hey had a
First Amendmel)t right to
dissent from government
policies.
The Pentagon piCtorially
and vividly nameq this
Pentagon CIFA database
"Talon" (a · claw of a
predatory animal). Much
of what we have learned
about Talon's eKtra-legal
activities came from a
Freedom of Information
Act request by . the
American Civil Liberties
Union for documents that
. were released, under that
Ia~ . by the Pentagon last
year;
Among Talon's trophies

- likely to have been
shared 1\lith the databases
of other intelligence agencies - was an entry in
2005 that a "church service for peace" was about
to be held in New York
City. Presumably, Talon,
through its liaisons with
local enforcement agencies, informed the New
York Police Department
(long known for · its
"excesses" in 1 survei llance) that this church serv.ice should be observed
maybe with plainclothes officers in the
pews.
Another rather striking
Talon entry warned that a
"Stop the. War" rally in
Akron, Ohio, was "a
potential terrorist activity." The legacy of J. Edgar
Hoover - and hi s COINTELPRO (counterintelligence operation) surveillance and infiltration still lives and thri ves!
But since Hoover himself left us in 1972, he
never could have c·onceived - · nor, for that
matter, could have Orwell
the ever-eKpanding
advances in government
surveillance technology
that
causes
more
Americans to have a
sense. however tleeting
from time to tilhe, that
some electronic tendril of
government . may .be
watching over them, but
there's no way to be S\Jre.
However, in a sudden
shaft of good news for
those of us who sti li harbor a hope that we have
some privacy left, there is
a government official James R,. Clapper, the
Pentagon's new intelligence chief, who has

respondecj to complaints
from citizens (not only
professional civil libertarians) that hi s increasingly
controversial Talon database is acting beyond and ·
beneath the law. ·
As reported by Reuters
and The New York Times,
Clapper has recommended
to Defense Secretary
Robert · Gates - who is
not as-invincible to second
thoughts as his predecessor - that the Talon data:
base be declawed. As of
. this writing, Gates has not
yet given the dismantling
order, but it appears reasona ble that Clapper
would ·not have gone public with his desire to retire
Talon if he has not had
some encouragement from
Gates . .
An ACLU lawyer, Ben
Wizner, much involved ·in
trying to regenerate the
Bill of Rights, called
Clapper's intention a
"pos itive step" but cautioned that, · as has happened in the past, the
Pentagon cou ld continue
this kind of domestic spying under another name.
"What we . don't know
about Pentagon . survei lianc'e within the United
States," · he told The New
York Times, "far exceeds
what we do know."
Still, I offer a toast to
·-James Clapper, · as I
believe Orwell also would.
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authority
on the First Ame{!dlflent
and the Bill of Rights and
atlthor of many books,
.including ''The War on the
Bill of Rights and the
Gathering
Resistance"
(Seven Stories
Pres's,
2004).)

Birth announced

====::;:::;:;:;:=====::;;:::;:::;iiiiiiiilliilliiiili/iiiillliililiiiliiiiiiiiillllli

ODNR
from PageA1
is also being mined in New
Haven.
·
In a Gatling LLC press
release, the company •s
described as engaging in
''the pro d uct10n,
·
· process-

Arts ·
from PageA1
grams for schools, libraries,
conferences and festivals.
August I - Wilson, who
is coordinating 'the summer
program, has been telling
stories for over eight years
at
schools," churches,
libraries, senior centers and
conferences across Ohio.
She
has
produced

ing, and sale of bituminous
coal of steam grade through
its mining complex located
in New'Haven, W.Va. The
mining complex blends,
processes, and ships coal
that is produced from the
Broad Run mine. Gatling's
steam coal is purchased by
uti.II't•·es and industrial
clients as fuel for po\Yer
·.plants. As of April 2007,
Tellabration in Meigs county for five years on the
weekend
before
Thanksgiving. She is a
member of Storytellers of
Central
Ohio,
W.Va.
Storytellers Guild, O~io
Order for the Preservation
of Storytelling a~d . the
national
orgamzallon,
Nationai
Storytelling
Network.
·
Wilson S'did that in addition to the grant funding
Mason 'City Library, Meigs

Gatling, LLC operates one
underground coal mine in
the Pittsburgh SA coal ·
seam, a coal preparation
facility and coal transfer
beitline. Gatling, LLC di stributes its products through
a belt transfer line and a
barge loadout facility iocated on the Ohio River. The
company is headqt~artered
Kevtn Keltyfplloto
in New Haven."
A bench outside the Gallipolis Post Office was dedicated Monday to the memory of Jeff
Roush·of New Haven, a siK·year post office employee who died in August 2006. Pausing by
County Regional Library, the bench were, from left, Postmaster Walt Thomas. Roush's wife Dawn, and two of her
Riverbend Arts Council and husband 's co-workers. Susie Robie and Cheryln Roberts.
W.Va.. Storytellers Guild
Roush said. "I'm shocked ing at the Galiip9lis Post
have also pledged financial
and honored. We've been Office. Roush spent nine
support for the project.
very blessed by the people months with the Postal
"The events will be in the
he worked with. They were Service in Columbus,
from PageA1
grassy areas of the parks, so
'a great support system fo r Ohio. ·
those att~nding should bring
Du1'in ~ the ceremony,
myself and the girls.''
lawn chairs or blankets.
·
Roberts
read aloud a poem
Roush was raised in Nc1•.
· We ' re also asking tliat chii- 49th birthday. Gloria
dren be accompanied by an Salisbury, Cheryin Roberts Haven and was living in she ~omposed in Rou.sh's
adult," said Wilson who can and Others worked on mak- Virginia Beach,' Va., a honor, and employees took
be contacted or more infor- ing the bench and plaque a decade .ago when he time to speak with Dawn
returned home to look after Roush and share their
mation at who inv.ites 740 reality.
hi s parents. Prior to work- memories of herhusband.
"He
loved
his
job,"
Dawn·
. 992-7830.

Bench

)

�..

.

.

~

'

.

.

. :. "'I ....

~

•

The Daily Sentinel

0 'Bleness Menwrial Hospital
·. to offer health screenings
ATHENS - O'Bieness
. Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer blood pressure
screening as well as cholesterol and glucose screening
Wednesday, June 6.
The free blood pressure
screening will be open to the
public from 10 a.m. until
noon and from 2 p.m. until 4
p.m. in the hospital's patient
entrance lobby. The cholesterol and glucose screening,
which will be offered for a $5
fee, will be avai lable at the
same location by appointment only from 10 a.m. until
noon and from 2 p.m. until 4
p.m.
To make an appointment,
call O'Bleness · health education department at (740) 5664814. Please call as soon as
possible because appointments are limited.

PageA6

COMMUNITY
PVH nalnes 'Volunteer of·the Month'
Tuesday, May 22,

POINT
PLEASANT,
Free· colon-rectal cancer W.Va. - For over 17 years,
home screening kits and Eula Hudnall us,ed to walk
information will be availab)e the hall s of Pleasant Valley
at the screening. The free kits Hospital as an employee or
can also be obtai ned on a · the Respiratory Therapy
daily basis at the infoimati~n Services' Depanment.
desks near the hospnal s
On a daily basis. she saw
patient and visitor entrances. the [lositive impact the volCholesterol;levels typically . untcers made on the patients,
do not change dmmatically in visitors and other employone month so individuals may ees. Hudnall promi sed herwant to wait two to three self that upon her retirement
months before bei~g screened she woul~ also gi ve back to
again. Also, screenings do not the community and become
take the place of testing. A a hospital volunteer. She
screening will indicate kept her promise. ·
whether an individual's level
Recently. Hudnall was
is below. at or above normal recognized by her peers and
ranges: however. for specific named Pleasant Valley
readings, an individual .may Hospital Volunteer of the
be directed to see a phys1cmn Year. according to Charles
for further testing. The cho- Fulks. president of the PVH
lesterol and glucose screening Auxiliary.
measures total cholesterol.
"Eula is enthusiastic and
HDL and glucose levels.
embraces
volunteering,"
praised Fulks. "She continu~
ously goes above and
beyond the call of duty when
she is called upon to serve.
She truly deserves this
recognition."
"I consider this di stinction
an
honor," said Hudnall.
ribbons will also be awarded,
"Over
the years, I have tried
and all contestants wi II
to
volunteer
as much as my
receive a certificate of particschedule
woUld
allow
ipation.
because
I
feel
it
is
important.
pre-registration prior to the .
day of the contest if $5 per By volunteering, you can
child: on the day, $10 per and do make a difference."
Hudnall, who has served
child. To pre-register send a
2x5 card with the child's
name, male or female, date
of birth and parents' name,
address and phone number
along with the non-refundBY BARBARA E.RILEY.
able entry fee to Friends
DIRECTOR, OHIO
Club/ c/o Nova Lovett, treaDEPARTMENT OF AGING
surer, 41 Antioch Road. Oak
Hill, Ohio 45656.
We have long known that
All,money raised is used in given their . choice,, ol~r
projects to help people 10 Ohioans overwhelmmg
need.
want to "age in place" ·
their own homes. We also .
know consumers choose
wisely and economically
when they are offered a full
suggested for those who array of services, including
have lower back or neck both home-based and faciliproblems, or have difficulty ty:based services.
sitting on the floor.
However, knowing these
Students may register, and facts, Ohio still has an
questions can be answered established · bias toward
by contacting the instructor nursing homes, ranking 49th
at 740-256-1428, or e-mail- out of 50 Sl&lt;!tes in serving
ing charlene.ballard@earth- Medicaid long-term care
link.net.
clients in home- and comFor more information on munity-based settings.
all of the Summer course
In an effort to help proofferings, contact The Ariel vide consumer choice and to
- Dater Hall box office, 740- achieve better balance with446-ARTS (2787), or in per- in our long -term care sysson at 428 2nd Avenue, tem, Governor Strickland
Gallipolis, Ohio.
supports
providing
Medicaid consumers with a
choice of long-term care
services: This includes
offering an array of services
that meet the consumers'
Highs in the mid 80s. Lows needs throughout their live·s.
in the upper 50s.
The Ohio Departme~t of
Saturday riight...Mostly
cloudy in the evcning .. .Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Sunday ... Mostly sunny. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoo~.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Sunday
night
and
Monday .. .Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 50s. Highs in the
upper 70s. Chance of rain
30 percent. .

Baby contest at
Festival of the Flags
OAK HILL - The Friends
Club II th annual Festival of
Flags baby contest is set for
10 a.m. May 25 on the stage
at Aetna Park in Oak Hill.
All contestants are to
check in at the Comer school
· in Aetna· Park between 8:30
and 9:45 a.m. to be assigned
categories for their appear. ance., No registrations will b
accepted after 9:45 on the
·day of the contest.
·Entry is open to any child
under the age of six. They do
not have to reside in the Oak
Hill Area. Trophies will be
awarded in ten categories
based on age and sex of the
child. Second and third place

Local weather
1\Jesday... Sunny. Highs
in the mid 80s.. Northeast
winds
ar.o und
5
mph ... Becoming southeast
around 5 mph in the afternoon.
Thesday night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
50s. ·South winds around 5
mph.
. .
Wednesday ... Sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s. South
Winds around 5 mph.
Wednesday
· nigbt...Mostly clear. Lows
in the upper 50s. South
wi.nds around 5 mph.
Thursday
, through
Saturday ... Part! y cloudy.

Eula Hudnall, at right, was recently recognized as the
Pleasant Valley Hospital Volunteer of the Year. Hudnall has
vo1unteered for over 30 years and was a former employee
of the not-for-profit facility."With Hudnall is Matthew Keefer,
at left, director of human resources at PVH.
as a volunteer for approximately 30 years, has seen a
lot of changes at the not-forprofit facility.
,
"When I first started as al)
employee in 1960, PVH had
one wing and very limited
services. The hospital has

supports that improve consumers' quality of life;
·
• Provide a flexible array
of services that meet the
changing needs of consumers throughout their
'lives:
. • Help cons umers make
timely and informed decisions that reflect their preferences;
• Assure the state has a
system that is cost-effective,
links services across agencies and jurisdictions and
reduces duplication.
This will be a massive
Aging has been directed to task with many details to be
lead an inclusive group of discussed, including:
consumers, providers, advo- . • Who and what should be
cates, policymakers, and covered?
others to establish a process
• Who will determine who
that will lead to the creation is eligib le and the level of
of a unified long-term care care they need.
budget. Working together,
• Does everyone receiving
we can create a budget long-term care need care
based on the philosophy that management?
an individual's needs should
We know that a unified
drl.ve the services available, long rerm care budget
·
rather than which funding works. Washington is one of
stream has available "slots." a handful of states that has
What will .a unified [ong- an established unified budterm care budget do for get. Consumers can access
Ohio? It will:
·
an array of services, as they
• Provide a choice of need and choose. Under this
health care services .and system, most Washington

resident s receive care io
their own homes·.
_
We also know that the
average cost of long-tenl)
care varies greatly, from
about $1,100 a month for
in-home care . to around
$5,000 a month for nursing
facility care. We need a full
array of services _ nursing
homes for critical care; a
wide range of inchome services for those who may be ·
impaired, but do ilot need of
costly institutional care; and
all sorts of living arrangements in between - to offer
Ohioans real r;hoice.
I firmly believe we need
to develop a unified longterm care vision for Ohio to
successfully . provide services and control . Medicaid
costs in Ohio. We have to
address these issue~ now,
because the status quo won't
work as the baby boomers
· age. In 2050 more than one
million Ohioans will be
over age 85. We must build
the system that we want for
them, and let's be honest,
for ourselves and our loved ·
ones.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
·to present

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 49.70
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80.36
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 59.71
Big Lots ( NYSE)- 33.14
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 37.32
BorgWamer (NYSE)83.64
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) - 54.84 ,.
Champion (NASDAQ) 7.64
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-12.50
City H9[dlng (NASDAQ) 38.45 .
Collins (NYSE) - 68.81
Dollar General (NYSE) - .
21.56
DuPont (NYSE) - 52.07
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.58
Gannett (NYSE) - 59.31
General Electric (NYSE) 37.10
.
· Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 62.88
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 52.56
Kroger (NYSE) - 29,52
Umlted Brands (NYSE)- .
26.16
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE) 57.50

grown by leaps and bounds
and I'm proud to be associated with a facility that is
completely dedicated to it's
community," she praised.
A widower for over 16
years, Hudmlll says that yolunteering also fills a social

void in the lives of individuals who have ' lost loved
ones. After her husband,
Philmore, a retired employee
of Kaiser Aluminum. died
from a brain tumor, she continued volunteering in order
to meet people and make
friends.
"When you volunteer,
there is a network of support
that is invaluable ," she
declared. "It meant a lot to
me that I had friends and coworkers at PVH who cared."
· Currently, Hudnall works
one day per week in the hospital's Gift Shop and some
special events. In her srare .
time, she enjoys exerciSing,
walking, attending services
at Heights United Methodi~
Church and spending time
with her three grown children, four grandchildren,
seven great-grandchildren
and one great-great-grand·
child. Hudnall also added
she had one grandchild who
passed away.
"From a health standpoin~
mentally and physically, · I .
consider volunteering good
therapy," this dedicated
senior explained as sj!e
tidied the PVH Gift Shop
counter. "I strongly encourage others to learn more .
about volunteering. You def·
initely get back far more
than you give."
•

Oak Hill Financial ( NASDAQ)- 21.85
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.90
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.21 ·
Pepsico (NYSE) - 69.03
Premier (NASDAQ) 15.40
Rockwell (NYSE) - 64.29
Rocky BOots (NASDAQ) 15.17 .
Royal Dutch Shell- 74.84
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)179.59
'
.
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 46.62
Wendy's (NYSE),- 39 .
Worthington (NYSE)22.30
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for May 2.1,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis .a t
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 67~174.
Member SIPC.

•

en
oke .
Special Physician Guest:

• PVH WeUness Center
• 6:30p.m.

• Light refreshments will be served
• Public is cordially invited
For mon: if!formation uhoutthe Women &amp; Stroke
Public Forum or other upcomiltg educational
programJ please call, (304) 675-4340. Ext. 11 5I.

Objecdnaa

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 women
rf. Describe strategies to target stroke ri sk reduction among women
.:.:Discuss appropriate management strategies for female patients
,.. Expl ore why, based on ge~1der, stroke is di fterent

The Daily Sentinel.

Sc:oreboard, Page B2
Bengals Henry awaits results, Page B6

Tuesday, May 22, 2007
LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A sdledule Of t.p;:On"W'q 001ege

and""'""""'--.......
co.mes. teams from Galia and Meigs

W&amp;dn11dav 's gamee
Track and Field

Division !II Regional qualifying at
Pickerington. 4 p.m.

Thyllday'• gam11
Division IV Regional Baseball
at Beavers Field in Lancaster
Southern (21 ·5) vs Newark Catt1olic
(21 · 9) . 2 p.m.
1
Eastern (15·10) vs Berlin Hiland (26·
3) , 5p.m.
Track and Field
Division II Regional qualifying at

· Byesville, 4 p.m.
Frldoy'a gam,.

Dlvlalon IV Rogtonol Baaoboll
at &amp;avers Field in Lancaster
Southern-Newark Catholic wlnnel vs

Eastern-Hiland winner. 2 p.m.
Track and Field
Division Ill Regional finals
Pickerington. 4 p.m

at

.

Pistons take early .
senes lead over Cavs

Cincinnati Reds' Javier Valentin (17) is congratulated by Scott Hatteberg, left, and Jeff
Conine after Vale!'ltin hit a pinch-hit, tw~un home run off Washington Nationals pitcher Jon
Rauch in the eighth i:ningof a baseball game, Monday in Cinc innat~Cincinnati won 8-7

•

Reds wm battle of MLB s worst
BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

• · Giambi pid&lt;s bad time to
sat he's sorry with slump.
See Page B6

AP photo

Detroit Pistons forward Rasheed Wallace, right, trap~
Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James in the cornef
during the second quarter of Game 1 of the NBA basketbail
Eastern Conference fi nals Monday in Auburn Hills , Mich. ·

INSIDE

Unil8d Long Tenn
. care Providing service on baSiS II. need

Yoga Classes return to ·Ariel
GALLIPOLIS - Yogo
lessons will be offered at the
Ariel-Dater Hall Mondays,
5:30 to 7 p.m. June 4 to July
9.
Charlene Ballard, RYT,
Certified Yoga Instructor,
will teach the class.
Beginning students and
experienced practitioners
are welcome to participate.
Regi stration fee for the
course is $60 per person.
Advance regi stration is
required for the class participants must bring a yoga mat
or blanket. A firm pillow is

Submitted photo

2007

Inside

CINCINNATI - Already
down by six, runs in the second inning, the Cincinnati
Reds were expecting the
worst. Usually, that's what
they get these days.
·
Javier Valentin lifted their
gloom with a pinch-hit
homer in the eighth inning
Monday night, setting up an
8-7 victory that represented
the Washington Nationals'
biggest meltdown of the season.
"The way we started the
game, we thought it was
going to be ugly," said
Valentin, who won it with
the fifth pinch-hit homer of
his career.
·
It was ugly, all right.
Valentin's homer off Jon
Rauch (2-1) was set up by a
misplay characteristic of the

NL's worst team. Center
fielder Nook Logan and
right fielder Austin Kearns
let Scott Hatteberg's fly drop
for an RBI double ahead of
Valentin's homer, leaving
the Nationals (16-29) with
some explaining to do.
"We were both calling for
it," said Logan, who had his
glove lined .up but turned
away at the last instant. . "I
saw him at the last minute
out of the corner of my eye.
He was still . running, . and
he's a pretty big guy. That
cost us the game."
Jon . Coutlangus (2-0)
retired the four batters he
faced, and David Weathers
finished for his ninth save in
10 chances.
Hatteberg homered and
doubled twice, driving in
four runs as the Reds won
for only the fifth time in 19
games. Ken Griffey Jr.

Indians
finish
game with
Mariners Hendrick stable too full

BY LARRY LAGE

.

.

-

ASSOCIATED PRESS

added a solo homer, the
572nd of his career. Griffey
'
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
is one behind · Harmon - LeBron James might
Killebrew for eighth place have deferred to his teamon the list.
mates one too many times.
Second baseman Brandon
James drove and dished to
Phillips went 0-for-4, ending Donyell Marshall · who
his hitting streak at 22 missed a wide-open a 3games. It was the longest pointer with 5.9 seconds left 2.4 seconds left.
streak in lhe NL this season that ·allowed the Detroit
James was scoreless in the
and the longest by a Reds Pistons to escape with a 79- first quarter and finished
batter since 1996, when Hal 76 victory over the with a playoff-low 10
'Morris hit in 29 straight.
Cleveland Cavali ers on points, on 5-of-15 shooting,
The Nationals got up 6-0 Monday night in Game I of 10 rebounds and fell just
in the. s·econd inning, but th e Eastern Conference short of a triple-double with .
their usually dependable finals.
nine assists.
bullpen let them down. By
"I go for the winning
He took just three shots in
the time ' Valentin came to play," James said. "The win- the fourth quarter- making
bat, the Reds were feeling ning play when two guys one - and defended the
pretty good.
·
come at you and a teammate decision.
"Javy is one of the better is open is to give it up. It's as
"You just have to take
pinch hitters in baseball," simple as that." ·
what 's there," James said.
manager Jerry Narron said.
Chauncey Billups chased "It's not abqut taking a hi gh
"Every time he goes up down the long rebound of volume of' shots, it'&amp; about
there, you feel he has a Marshall 's miss from the trying to win the basketball
corner, and he later made
Please see Worst. Bl
Please see Pistons, Bl
one of two free throws with

&gt;

BY ToM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - The
snow was fake. There were
no shovels. brooms or leaf
blowers needed this time.
The grounds .crew . could
have taken th~ night off.
Forty-five days after they .
first tried to play their home
opener, the Cleveland
Indians finally finished it.
· • · "Let's move on," manager
Eric Wedge said. "Let it
go."
.
Casey Blake homered and
Josh Barfield had two RBis
as the Indians remained
baseball's best home team
with a. 5-2 . win Monday
night over the Seattle
Mariners, who are about to
rack up some frequent flyer
miles.
The game was a makeup
of the April 6 home opener
at Jacobs Field, which was
called after the clubs pl)lyed
4 2-3 innings in blizzardlike conditions and a snowstorm that dumped niore
than 2 feet on the ballpark
and caused the 'enure fourgame se ries to be postponed.
·
There was no hint of foul
weather as the clubs made
up the first of four rescheduled games, which were
moved to common off days
and created travel hardships
for both the Indians and

for Earnhardt

for now

BY JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHARLOTTE, N.C.
Rick HendriCk wasn't
.lying when he said he has
no room on his team for
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Hendrick, the last bigtime owner to comment
publicly on Earnhardt's
free-agent status, has spoken to NASCAR's most
popular driver about his
future. But with a full stable of drivers under contract, Hendrick didn't have
a whole lot to offer.
"I've talked to him about
doing motors and cars if he
wants to do this. himself,"
Hendrick
told
The
Associated Press. "But
that's really all we've discussed.
"Right now, I'm full."
C'mon, Mr. H, are you
really claiming there's no
room at the inn for a superstar such as Earnhardt?
"There 's no room at the
inn," he firmly repeated.
He's right. But that doesn '.t mean things can't
change.
Jeff Gordon has a · lifetime
contract
with
Hendrick Motorsports, so
he 's not going anywhere
Please see Indians, 86 until he retires. With a
fifth championship looking very realistic for this
season •. it doesn't appear
CoNTACT US
Gordon will be turning in
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 a.m.) hi s car keys anytime soon.
Jimmie Johnson, the
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
defending Nextel Cup
Fax- 1-740&lt;446·3008
champion, is a car owner's
E-mail- sports@mydailysentinel. com
dream and he just signed
~.g.Qlt$ . ll!AU
an extension last season
Brad Sherman,.Sports Editor that will keep him in a
Hendrick car for a very
(740) 446·2342 , ext 33
bsherman@mydailytribune.comlong time.
So that leaves Kyle
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Busch and Casey Mears,
(740) 446·2342 , ext 23
lcrumO.mydailyregister.com
and conventional wisdom
Bryan Walters; Sports Writer says Mears should be nervous about keeping his
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
bwalters@mydailytrlbune.com
cushy Hendrick job.

Earnhardt
Mears is having a tough
first season with Hendrick
and is currently a miserable 35th in the standings.
But he was placed with the
one team at Hendrick that
always has struggled, and
walked into a team that
was a tad bit behind when
he got there in December.
Hendrick made a crew
chief change four days
before teams reported to
Daytona, and it's taking
some time for everyone to
catch up .
Yes, Mears appears to be
the weak link. But it' s
unfair to judge him after a
mere I I . races, and it 's
doubtful that Hendrick is
doing that. .
Busch , on the other
hand, has had plenty of
t.ime to be judged.
Although Busch is under
contract through 2008 and
Hendrick previously said ·
he' s working on an extension, the car owner perhaps should reconsider.
Busch is an excelle.nt
driver. He made the Chase
for the championship last
season, has four career
victories and is currently
II th in the points.
But the 22-year-old has
made three significant
missteP.s this season that
raise questions if the talent
is worth the headaches.

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140-593·3219OR1-800·110·1911
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The Daily Sentinel

0 'Bleness Menwrial Hospital
·. to offer health screenings
ATHENS - O'Bieness
. Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer blood pressure
screening as well as cholesterol and glucose screening
Wednesday, June 6.
The free blood pressure
screening will be open to the
public from 10 a.m. until
noon and from 2 p.m. until 4
p.m. in the hospital's patient
entrance lobby. The cholesterol and glucose screening,
which will be offered for a $5
fee, will be avai lable at the
same location by appointment only from 10 a.m. until
noon and from 2 p.m. until 4
p.m.
To make an appointment,
call O'Bleness · health education department at (740) 5664814. Please call as soon as
possible because appointments are limited.

PageA6

COMMUNITY
PVH nalnes 'Volunteer of·the Month'
Tuesday, May 22,

POINT
PLEASANT,
Free· colon-rectal cancer W.Va. - For over 17 years,
home screening kits and Eula Hudnall us,ed to walk
information will be availab)e the hall s of Pleasant Valley
at the screening. The free kits Hospital as an employee or
can also be obtai ned on a · the Respiratory Therapy
daily basis at the infoimati~n Services' Depanment.
desks near the hospnal s
On a daily basis. she saw
patient and visitor entrances. the [lositive impact the volCholesterol;levels typically . untcers made on the patients,
do not change dmmatically in visitors and other employone month so individuals may ees. Hudnall promi sed herwant to wait two to three self that upon her retirement
months before bei~g screened she woul~ also gi ve back to
again. Also, screenings do not the community and become
take the place of testing. A a hospital volunteer. She
screening will indicate kept her promise. ·
whether an individual's level
Recently. Hudnall was
is below. at or above normal recognized by her peers and
ranges: however. for specific named Pleasant Valley
readings, an individual .may Hospital Volunteer of the
be directed to see a phys1cmn Year. according to Charles
for further testing. The cho- Fulks. president of the PVH
lesterol and glucose screening Auxiliary.
measures total cholesterol.
"Eula is enthusiastic and
HDL and glucose levels.
embraces
volunteering,"
praised Fulks. "She continu~
ously goes above and
beyond the call of duty when
she is called upon to serve.
She truly deserves this
recognition."
"I consider this di stinction
an
honor," said Hudnall.
ribbons will also be awarded,
"Over
the years, I have tried
and all contestants wi II
to
volunteer
as much as my
receive a certificate of particschedule
woUld
allow
ipation.
because
I
feel
it
is
important.
pre-registration prior to the .
day of the contest if $5 per By volunteering, you can
child: on the day, $10 per and do make a difference."
Hudnall, who has served
child. To pre-register send a
2x5 card with the child's
name, male or female, date
of birth and parents' name,
address and phone number
along with the non-refundBY BARBARA E.RILEY.
able entry fee to Friends
DIRECTOR, OHIO
Club/ c/o Nova Lovett, treaDEPARTMENT OF AGING
surer, 41 Antioch Road. Oak
Hill, Ohio 45656.
We have long known that
All,money raised is used in given their . choice,, ol~r
projects to help people 10 Ohioans overwhelmmg
need.
want to "age in place" ·
their own homes. We also .
know consumers choose
wisely and economically
when they are offered a full
suggested for those who array of services, including
have lower back or neck both home-based and faciliproblems, or have difficulty ty:based services.
sitting on the floor.
However, knowing these
Students may register, and facts, Ohio still has an
questions can be answered established · bias toward
by contacting the instructor nursing homes, ranking 49th
at 740-256-1428, or e-mail- out of 50 Sl&lt;!tes in serving
ing charlene.ballard@earth- Medicaid long-term care
link.net.
clients in home- and comFor more information on munity-based settings.
all of the Summer course
In an effort to help proofferings, contact The Ariel vide consumer choice and to
- Dater Hall box office, 740- achieve better balance with446-ARTS (2787), or in per- in our long -term care sysson at 428 2nd Avenue, tem, Governor Strickland
Gallipolis, Ohio.
supports
providing
Medicaid consumers with a
choice of long-term care
services: This includes
offering an array of services
that meet the consumers'
Highs in the mid 80s. Lows needs throughout their live·s.
in the upper 50s.
The Ohio Departme~t of
Saturday riight...Mostly
cloudy in the evcning .. .Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Sunday ... Mostly sunny. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoo~.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Sunday
night
and
Monday .. .Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 50s. Highs in the
upper 70s. Chance of rain
30 percent. .

Baby contest at
Festival of the Flags
OAK HILL - The Friends
Club II th annual Festival of
Flags baby contest is set for
10 a.m. May 25 on the stage
at Aetna Park in Oak Hill.
All contestants are to
check in at the Comer school
· in Aetna· Park between 8:30
and 9:45 a.m. to be assigned
categories for their appear. ance., No registrations will b
accepted after 9:45 on the
·day of the contest.
·Entry is open to any child
under the age of six. They do
not have to reside in the Oak
Hill Area. Trophies will be
awarded in ten categories
based on age and sex of the
child. Second and third place

Local weather
1\Jesday... Sunny. Highs
in the mid 80s.. Northeast
winds
ar.o und
5
mph ... Becoming southeast
around 5 mph in the afternoon.
Thesday night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
50s. ·South winds around 5
mph.
. .
Wednesday ... Sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s. South
Winds around 5 mph.
Wednesday
· nigbt...Mostly clear. Lows
in the upper 50s. South
wi.nds around 5 mph.
Thursday
, through
Saturday ... Part! y cloudy.

Eula Hudnall, at right, was recently recognized as the
Pleasant Valley Hospital Volunteer of the Year. Hudnall has
vo1unteered for over 30 years and was a former employee
of the not-for-profit facility."With Hudnall is Matthew Keefer,
at left, director of human resources at PVH.
as a volunteer for approximately 30 years, has seen a
lot of changes at the not-forprofit facility.
,
"When I first started as al)
employee in 1960, PVH had
one wing and very limited
services. The hospital has

supports that improve consumers' quality of life;
·
• Provide a flexible array
of services that meet the
changing needs of consumers throughout their
'lives:
. • Help cons umers make
timely and informed decisions that reflect their preferences;
• Assure the state has a
system that is cost-effective,
links services across agencies and jurisdictions and
reduces duplication.
This will be a massive
Aging has been directed to task with many details to be
lead an inclusive group of discussed, including:
consumers, providers, advo- . • Who and what should be
cates, policymakers, and covered?
others to establish a process
• Who will determine who
that will lead to the creation is eligib le and the level of
of a unified long-term care care they need.
budget. Working together,
• Does everyone receiving
we can create a budget long-term care need care
based on the philosophy that management?
an individual's needs should
We know that a unified
drl.ve the services available, long rerm care budget
·
rather than which funding works. Washington is one of
stream has available "slots." a handful of states that has
What will .a unified [ong- an established unified budterm care budget do for get. Consumers can access
Ohio? It will:
·
an array of services, as they
• Provide a choice of need and choose. Under this
health care services .and system, most Washington

resident s receive care io
their own homes·.
_
We also know that the
average cost of long-tenl)
care varies greatly, from
about $1,100 a month for
in-home care . to around
$5,000 a month for nursing
facility care. We need a full
array of services _ nursing
homes for critical care; a
wide range of inchome services for those who may be ·
impaired, but do ilot need of
costly institutional care; and
all sorts of living arrangements in between - to offer
Ohioans real r;hoice.
I firmly believe we need
to develop a unified longterm care vision for Ohio to
successfully . provide services and control . Medicaid
costs in Ohio. We have to
address these issue~ now,
because the status quo won't
work as the baby boomers
· age. In 2050 more than one
million Ohioans will be
over age 85. We must build
the system that we want for
them, and let's be honest,
for ourselves and our loved ·
ones.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
·to present

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 49.70
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80.36
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 59.71
Big Lots ( NYSE)- 33.14
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 37.32
BorgWamer (NYSE)83.64
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) - 54.84 ,.
Champion (NASDAQ) 7.64
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-12.50
City H9[dlng (NASDAQ) 38.45 .
Collins (NYSE) - 68.81
Dollar General (NYSE) - .
21.56
DuPont (NYSE) - 52.07
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.58
Gannett (NYSE) - 59.31
General Electric (NYSE) 37.10
.
· Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 62.88
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 52.56
Kroger (NYSE) - 29,52
Umlted Brands (NYSE)- .
26.16
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE) 57.50

grown by leaps and bounds
and I'm proud to be associated with a facility that is
completely dedicated to it's
community," she praised.
A widower for over 16
years, Hudmlll says that yolunteering also fills a social

void in the lives of individuals who have ' lost loved
ones. After her husband,
Philmore, a retired employee
of Kaiser Aluminum. died
from a brain tumor, she continued volunteering in order
to meet people and make
friends.
"When you volunteer,
there is a network of support
that is invaluable ," she
declared. "It meant a lot to
me that I had friends and coworkers at PVH who cared."
· Currently, Hudnall works
one day per week in the hospital's Gift Shop and some
special events. In her srare .
time, she enjoys exerciSing,
walking, attending services
at Heights United Methodi~
Church and spending time
with her three grown children, four grandchildren,
seven great-grandchildren
and one great-great-grand·
child. Hudnall also added
she had one grandchild who
passed away.
"From a health standpoin~
mentally and physically, · I .
consider volunteering good
therapy," this dedicated
senior explained as sj!e
tidied the PVH Gift Shop
counter. "I strongly encourage others to learn more .
about volunteering. You def·
initely get back far more
than you give."
•

Oak Hill Financial ( NASDAQ)- 21.85
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.90
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.21 ·
Pepsico (NYSE) - 69.03
Premier (NASDAQ) 15.40
Rockwell (NYSE) - 64.29
Rocky BOots (NASDAQ) 15.17 .
Royal Dutch Shell- 74.84
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)179.59
'
.
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 46.62
Wendy's (NYSE),- 39 .
Worthington (NYSE)22.30
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for May 2.1,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis .a t
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 67~174.
Member SIPC.

•

en
oke .
Special Physician Guest:

• PVH WeUness Center
• 6:30p.m.

• Light refreshments will be served
• Public is cordially invited
For mon: if!formation uhoutthe Women &amp; Stroke
Public Forum or other upcomiltg educational
programJ please call, (304) 675-4340. Ext. 11 5I.

Objecdnaa

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 women
rf. Describe strategies to target stroke ri sk reduction among women
.:.:Discuss appropriate management strategies for female patients
,.. Expl ore why, based on ge~1der, stroke is di fterent

The Daily Sentinel.

Sc:oreboard, Page B2
Bengals Henry awaits results, Page B6

Tuesday, May 22, 2007
LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A sdledule Of t.p;:On"W'q 001ege

and""'""""'--.......
co.mes. teams from Galia and Meigs

W&amp;dn11dav 's gamee
Track and Field

Division !II Regional qualifying at
Pickerington. 4 p.m.

Thyllday'• gam11
Division IV Regional Baseball
at Beavers Field in Lancaster
Southern (21 ·5) vs Newark Catt1olic
(21 · 9) . 2 p.m.
1
Eastern (15·10) vs Berlin Hiland (26·
3) , 5p.m.
Track and Field
Division II Regional qualifying at

· Byesville, 4 p.m.
Frldoy'a gam,.

Dlvlalon IV Rogtonol Baaoboll
at &amp;avers Field in Lancaster
Southern-Newark Catholic wlnnel vs

Eastern-Hiland winner. 2 p.m.
Track and Field
Division Ill Regional finals
Pickerington. 4 p.m

at

.

Pistons take early .
senes lead over Cavs

Cincinnati Reds' Javier Valentin (17) is congratulated by Scott Hatteberg, left, and Jeff
Conine after Vale!'ltin hit a pinch-hit, tw~un home run off Washington Nationals pitcher Jon
Rauch in the eighth i:ningof a baseball game, Monday in Cinc innat~Cincinnati won 8-7

•

Reds wm battle of MLB s worst
BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

• · Giambi pid&lt;s bad time to
sat he's sorry with slump.
See Page B6

AP photo

Detroit Pistons forward Rasheed Wallace, right, trap~
Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James in the cornef
during the second quarter of Game 1 of the NBA basketbail
Eastern Conference fi nals Monday in Auburn Hills , Mich. ·

INSIDE

Unil8d Long Tenn
. care Providing service on baSiS II. need

Yoga Classes return to ·Ariel
GALLIPOLIS - Yogo
lessons will be offered at the
Ariel-Dater Hall Mondays,
5:30 to 7 p.m. June 4 to July
9.
Charlene Ballard, RYT,
Certified Yoga Instructor,
will teach the class.
Beginning students and
experienced practitioners
are welcome to participate.
Regi stration fee for the
course is $60 per person.
Advance regi stration is
required for the class participants must bring a yoga mat
or blanket. A firm pillow is

Submitted photo

2007

Inside

CINCINNATI - Already
down by six, runs in the second inning, the Cincinnati
Reds were expecting the
worst. Usually, that's what
they get these days.
·
Javier Valentin lifted their
gloom with a pinch-hit
homer in the eighth inning
Monday night, setting up an
8-7 victory that represented
the Washington Nationals'
biggest meltdown of the season.
"The way we started the
game, we thought it was
going to be ugly," said
Valentin, who won it with
the fifth pinch-hit homer of
his career.
·
It was ugly, all right.
Valentin's homer off Jon
Rauch (2-1) was set up by a
misplay characteristic of the

NL's worst team. Center
fielder Nook Logan and
right fielder Austin Kearns
let Scott Hatteberg's fly drop
for an RBI double ahead of
Valentin's homer, leaving
the Nationals (16-29) with
some explaining to do.
"We were both calling for
it," said Logan, who had his
glove lined .up but turned
away at the last instant. . "I
saw him at the last minute
out of the corner of my eye.
He was still . running, . and
he's a pretty big guy. That
cost us the game."
Jon . Coutlangus (2-0)
retired the four batters he
faced, and David Weathers
finished for his ninth save in
10 chances.
Hatteberg homered and
doubled twice, driving in
four runs as the Reds won
for only the fifth time in 19
games. Ken Griffey Jr.

Indians
finish
game with
Mariners Hendrick stable too full

BY LARRY LAGE

.

.

-

ASSOCIATED PRESS

added a solo homer, the
572nd of his career. Griffey
'
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
is one behind · Harmon - LeBron James might
Killebrew for eighth place have deferred to his teamon the list.
mates one too many times.
Second baseman Brandon
James drove and dished to
Phillips went 0-for-4, ending Donyell Marshall · who
his hitting streak at 22 missed a wide-open a 3games. It was the longest pointer with 5.9 seconds left 2.4 seconds left.
streak in lhe NL this season that ·allowed the Detroit
James was scoreless in the
and the longest by a Reds Pistons to escape with a 79- first quarter and finished
batter since 1996, when Hal 76 victory over the with a playoff-low 10
'Morris hit in 29 straight.
Cleveland Cavali ers on points, on 5-of-15 shooting,
The Nationals got up 6-0 Monday night in Game I of 10 rebounds and fell just
in the. s·econd inning, but th e Eastern Conference short of a triple-double with .
their usually dependable finals.
nine assists.
bullpen let them down. By
"I go for the winning
He took just three shots in
the time ' Valentin came to play," James said. "The win- the fourth quarter- making
bat, the Reds were feeling ning play when two guys one - and defended the
pretty good.
·
come at you and a teammate decision.
"Javy is one of the better is open is to give it up. It's as
"You just have to take
pinch hitters in baseball," simple as that." ·
what 's there," James said.
manager Jerry Narron said.
Chauncey Billups chased "It's not abqut taking a hi gh
"Every time he goes up down the long rebound of volume of' shots, it'&amp; about
there, you feel he has a Marshall 's miss from the trying to win the basketball
corner, and he later made
Please see Worst. Bl
Please see Pistons, Bl
one of two free throws with

&gt;

BY ToM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - The
snow was fake. There were
no shovels. brooms or leaf
blowers needed this time.
The grounds .crew . could
have taken th~ night off.
Forty-five days after they .
first tried to play their home
opener, the Cleveland
Indians finally finished it.
· • · "Let's move on," manager
Eric Wedge said. "Let it
go."
.
Casey Blake homered and
Josh Barfield had two RBis
as the Indians remained
baseball's best home team
with a. 5-2 . win Monday
night over the Seattle
Mariners, who are about to
rack up some frequent flyer
miles.
The game was a makeup
of the April 6 home opener
at Jacobs Field, which was
called after the clubs pl)lyed
4 2-3 innings in blizzardlike conditions and a snowstorm that dumped niore
than 2 feet on the ballpark
and caused the 'enure fourgame se ries to be postponed.
·
There was no hint of foul
weather as the clubs made
up the first of four rescheduled games, which were
moved to common off days
and created travel hardships
for both the Indians and

for Earnhardt

for now

BY JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHARLOTTE, N.C.
Rick HendriCk wasn't
.lying when he said he has
no room on his team for
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Hendrick, the last bigtime owner to comment
publicly on Earnhardt's
free-agent status, has spoken to NASCAR's most
popular driver about his
future. But with a full stable of drivers under contract, Hendrick didn't have
a whole lot to offer.
"I've talked to him about
doing motors and cars if he
wants to do this. himself,"
Hendrick
told
The
Associated Press. "But
that's really all we've discussed.
"Right now, I'm full."
C'mon, Mr. H, are you
really claiming there's no
room at the inn for a superstar such as Earnhardt?
"There 's no room at the
inn," he firmly repeated.
He's right. But that doesn '.t mean things can't
change.
Jeff Gordon has a · lifetime
contract
with
Hendrick Motorsports, so
he 's not going anywhere
Please see Indians, 86 until he retires. With a
fifth championship looking very realistic for this
season •. it doesn't appear
CoNTACT US
Gordon will be turning in
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 a.m.) hi s car keys anytime soon.
Jimmie Johnson, the
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
defending Nextel Cup
Fax- 1-740&lt;446·3008
champion, is a car owner's
E-mail- sports@mydailysentinel. com
dream and he just signed
~.g.Qlt$ . ll!AU
an extension last season
Brad Sherman,.Sports Editor that will keep him in a
Hendrick car for a very
(740) 446·2342 , ext 33
bsherman@mydailytribune.comlong time.
So that leaves Kyle
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Busch and Casey Mears,
(740) 446·2342 , ext 23
lcrumO.mydailyregister.com
and conventional wisdom
Bryan Walters; Sports Writer says Mears should be nervous about keeping his
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
bwalters@mydailytrlbune.com
cushy Hendrick job.

Earnhardt
Mears is having a tough
first season with Hendrick
and is currently a miserable 35th in the standings.
But he was placed with the
one team at Hendrick that
always has struggled, and
walked into a team that
was a tad bit behind when
he got there in December.
Hendrick made a crew
chief change four days
before teams reported to
Daytona, and it's taking
some time for everyone to
catch up .
Yes, Mears appears to be
the weak link. But it' s
unfair to judge him after a
mere I I . races, and it 's
doubtful that Hendrick is
doing that. .
Busch , on the other
hand, has had plenty of
t.ime to be judged.
Although Busch is under
contract through 2008 and
Hendrick previously said ·
he' s working on an extension, the car owner perhaps should reconsider.
Busch is an excelle.nt
driver. He made the Chase
for the championship last
season, has four career
victories and is currently
II th in the points.
But the 22-year-old has
made three significant
missteP.s this season that
raise questions if the talent
is worth the headaches.

GT 254!
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140-593·3219OR1-800·110·1911
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~--------........;_--------~-----------·- -

�•

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
PRo BASKETBALL
National Baeketball Association
Pteyoff Glance
FIRST ROUND
!Beet of 7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE

~

Detron tOO Onando 92
Detro•t 98 Orlando 90
Detron 93 Orlando
Detroit 97 Orlando 93

n

Cllnland 4. Wublogton 0
CleYeland 97, Washlnglon 82
CleYeland 109 Washmglon t02
Cleveland 118, Washonglon 92
~nd 97, Washlnglon 90

Ntw JtrMy 4. Toronto a

New Je,..y 96 Toronto 9t
Toronto 89 New Jersey 83
New Jersey W2 Toronto 89
New Jersey 102 Toronto 81
Toronto 98 New Jersey 96
New Jersey 98 Toronto 97

Chicago 1. Miami 0
Chica~ 96 M1am1 91
Chk:ago 107 M1am1 89
- Chicago t 04 Moamo 96
Chicago 92 Moamo 79

CONFERENCE FINALS
(Boot of 7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
~
Detrort 79 Cleveland 76 DetrOit leads
senes 1 0
1 Thursday May 24 Cleveland at Oetrort
I 8pm
Sunday May 27 DetrOit at Cleveland
8 30 p m
Tuesday May 29 Detrort at Cleveland
1 ap m
Thursday May 31 Cleveland at Detrort
8 p m 11 necessary
Saturday June 2 Detroit at Ctevelanct
8 30 p m rf necessary
Monday June 4 Cleveland at Oetrort 8
p m , if necessat:y

New England t Houston 0
1 Ottawa 3 New Jersey 2
Kansas Coty t Colorado t toe
Ottawa 3 New Jersey 2
Sunday'&amp; Games
Los Angeles 1 CD Ch1vas USA 1 tie
WESTERN CONFERENCE
FC Dallas 2 Real 5alt Lake 1
~
Thursday, Msy 24
San Jose 2 Detrort 0
Chicago at New York 7 p m
Detrott 3 San Jose 2
saturday, May 26
san Jose 2 Datron 1
Toronto FC at Columbus 7 30 p m
1 Detroit 3 San Jose 2 OT
Houston at D C Untied 7 30 p m
Detroit 4 San Jose 1
Kansas City at New England 7 30 p m
Detroit 2 San Jose 0
Los Angeles at Colorado 8 30 p m
Anebtlm 1. Vlncouytr 1
FC Dallas at CD Chrvas USA 10 30
Anahetm 5, Vancouver 1
pm
Sundly, M1y 27
Vancouver 2, Anaherm 1, 20T
Anaheim 3, Vl!flOOUver 2
Real Salt Lake at ChiCago, 5 p m
Anaherm 3, Vancouver 2, OT
Anatlelm 2, Vancouver 1, 20T

I

Pbotnlx1. LA. L.lkora 1
Phoemx 95 L A Lakers 87
Phoemx 126 L A lakers 98
LA lakers 95 Phoenrx 89
Phoemx 113 LA lakers 100
Phoenox 119 L A Lakars t I 0
Sen Antonio 1. Denver 1

Denver 95 San Antomo 69
San Anton1o 97 Denver 88
San Antomo 96 Denver 91
San Antomo 96 Denver 89
San AntoniO 93 Denver 78

WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pet
GB
Phoenuc:
t 0 tOOO
1 Seattle
t 0 tOOO
Sacramento
' t
soo ''
1
Los Angeles
0 0
000
I Houston
o 1 ' ooo t
SanAntorno
0 t
000
t
Mtnnesota
02000
1,

ouawo 4. p!ttsburah 1

Onawa 6 Pittsburgh 3
Pittsburgh 4 Ottawa 3
Ottawa 4 Prttsburgh 2
Ottawa 2 Ptttsburgh 1
Ottawa 3 Ptttsburgh 0

'

5aturdoy'o Gomaa
DetrOit 75 Sacramento 68
Connect1cut 89 Washmgton 80
Indiana 83 Mtnnesota 64
Seattle 82 Houston 69
Phoeni&gt;: 81 San AntoniO 72
Sunday's Games
New York 83 Chrcago 71
Sacramento 74 Mmnesota 64
Monday'e Gamee
No games scheduled
Tueaday a Games
Mtnnesota at Detron 7 30 p m
Sacramento at Washmgton 7 30 p m
Los Angeles at Chrcago a p m

Utah 4. Hguston 3
Houston 84 Utah 75
Houston 98 Utah 90
Utah 8t , Houston 67
Utah 98 Houston 85
Houston 96, Utah 92
Utah 94 Houston 82
Utah t03, Houston 99
QUARTERFINALS

(Beet ol7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Detroit 4. Cb!capg 2
DatroH 95 Chicago 69
DetroH t08, Chicago 87
Detroit 81 Ch1cago 74
Chicago t 02 Detro of 67
Ch1cago 108 Detro11 92
Detroit 95 Chocago 85

PRo SoccER

Cltye!end 4. Now JarMy 2
Cleveland 81, New Jersey
Cleveland t 02 New Jersey 92
New Jersey 96 Cleveland 85
Cleveland 87 New Jersey 85
~ew Jersey 83 Cleveland 72
Cleveland 88 New Jersey 72

n

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Sen Antonio 4 Ph01n!r 2

San Antomo 111, Phoen1x 106
Phoemx 101 San Antomo 81
San Antonoo 108 Phoenix tot
Phoen~x 104 San Antonro 98
San Antomo 88 Phoenrx 85
San Antonto 114 Phoen1x 106

Major League Soccer
Eastern Conference
W L T PtsGF GA
New England
S t 2 t7 t5 7
NewYork
4 1 2 14 12 4
Kansas Crty
4 2 1 13 12 7
Ch1cago
3 3 1 10 8 10
DC United
2 3 t 7 8 tO
Columbus
1 2 4 7 4 8
TorontoFC
2 5 0 6 5 13
Weatem Conference
WLTPtsGFGA
FC Dallas
5 3 t 't6 13 t2
Colorado
3 2 3 12 10 tO
CD Chtvas USA 2 3 2 8 to 8
Houston
24t745
Los Angeles
t 22S77
Real Salt Lake 0 3 4 4 7 t4
Wedne1day'1 Game
Toronto FC 1 Houston 0
Thursdays Game
FC Dallas 2 Chicago 1
Saturctay s Games
DC Untied 2 Toronto FC 1
New Vorll 4 Columbus 0

Utah 4 Go!dtn Stlta 1
Utah 116, Golden Slate 112
Utah t27 Golden State 117 OT
Golden Slate t25 Utah tOS
Utah 115, Golden State tOt
Utah t 00 Golden Stele 87

Hendrick

pursed and clearly uncomfortable.
- Busch left the track
fromPageBl
without telhng hi s crew
after wrecking in Tell.as
Consider
last month When the team
- After wtnnmg the patched up the car to get
first Car of Tomorrow race b&lt;1ck on the track for valuat Bristol m March, Busch able pomts, Busch was
came off as a spmled brat nowhere to be found and
when he npped the car and they grabbed Earnhardt repeatedly
satd
tt of all people' - to fmish
"sucked" dunng
hts out the race
nationally
televised
- He wrecked hts older
Vtctory Lane mtervtew. brother, Kurt, m Saturday
When Busch conttnued the mght's All-Star race, then
rant m hts post-race news gave Kurt the opportumty
conference, Hendnck sat to be the model of decosilently nell.t to htm, hps rum Whtle Kyle stewed

1

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Dttrg!t 4 Calgary 2
Oetrort 4 Calgary 1
Oetrott 3, Calgary 1
Calgary 3 Detrort 2
Calgary 3, Detroit 2
Detro1t 5 'Calgary 1
Detroit 2 Calgary t 20T
Anaheim 4. M!nnaaota 1
Anaherm 2 Mtnnesota 1
Anaheim 3 Mrnnesota 2
Anaheim 2, Mrnnesota 1
Minnesota 4 Anaheim 1
Anaheim 4, Minnesota 1

\llncounr 4 Dlllll 3
Vancouver 5, Dallas 4 40T
Dallas 2 Vancouver o
Vancouver 2 Dallas 1, OT
Vancouver 2 Dallas 1
Dallas 1 Vancouver OT
Dallas 2 Vancouver 0
Vancou\ler 4 Dallas 1

a

San Joy 4 Neabyll!e 1
San Jose 5 Nashvrlle 4 20T
NashvtUe 5 San Jose 2
San Jose 3 Nashville 1
San Jose 3 Nashvrlle 2
San Jose 3 Nashvtlie 2
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
(Beot-of-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Buffalo 4 r4•w York Rangara 2
Buffalo 5 N V Rangers 2
Buffalo 3, N Y Rangers 2
1
N Y Rangers 2 Buffalo 1 20T
N Y Rangers 2 Buffalo 1
Buffalo 2 N Y Rangers 1 OT
Buffalo 5 N V Rangers 4
Ottawa 4. New Jeruv 1
Ot1awa 5 New Jersey 4
New Jersey '3 Ottawa 2 20T
Ottawa 2 New Jersey 0

mside hts hauler after the
acctdent, Kurt gave a
somewhat humorous mtervtew and delivered the
line of ·the race when he
said, "I'm not eaung any
Kellogg's any time soon,"
m reference to Kyle's
sponsor
The incident spoke volumes to how far Kurt
Busch has come Always a
bit qutrky, he's made Significant stndes smce JOtnmg Penske Racmg last
season When he's not trytng so hard to be hked, or
butchenng the English
language m an attempt to

1

Daldand

EASTERN CONFERENCE
BviTI!o ya. Ottna
Thursday May t 0 Ottawa 5 Buffalo 2
Saturday May 12 Ottawa 4, Buffalo 3
20T
Monday May t4 Ottawa t Buffalo 0
Wadnasday, Mey t6 Buffalo 3, Ottawa

Texas

WLPctGB
27 t8 60022 22 500 , ,
19 2t 475 s\
t8 27 400 9

Sunday'• Gomes

oatron 6, St 1.ouo0 3

Cleveland 5, Cinclnnatl 3
Philadelphia 5, Toronto 3
•2
Waaltinglon 4, Baltimore 3
Saturday, May t9 Ottawa 3 Buffalo 2 Florida 4 Tampa Bay 3
OT Ottawa wins senes 4-1
Boston 6, AUanta 3
Texas 14, Houston 1
Milwaukee 6 Mmnesota 5
Chicago Vllhite So&gt;e 10 Ch1cago Cubs 6
Fnday May 11 Detrort 2 Anahe1m 1
Kansas Crty 10 Coklrado 5 t 21nnrngs
Sunday May t 3 Anaherm 4, Oetrort 3 LA Angels 4, LA Dodgers t
OT
San Diego 2, 5aattle t
Tuesday May 15 Detroit 5 Anaherm 0
San Franclooo 4, Oaldaf}d t
1
Thursday May 17 Anahe1m 5 Detrort 3 N Y Yank- 6, N Y Mels 2
Sunday, May 20 Anaherm 2, Detroit 1
tlondoy'l Gomao
OT Anahalm leads senes 3 2
N Y Yankeas 8, Boston 2
Tuesday May 22 Detroit at Anaheim, 9 Cleveland 5, 5aattte 2
pm
Texas t4 Mlhnesota 4
Thursday, May 24 Anahetm at Detroit Chicago While Sox 8 Oakland 5
7 30 p m If necessary
TuHday'a Glmea
Bostoh (Tavarez 2-4) at NY Yankees
(MU68ona 2-2), 7 05 p m
LA Angels ILaCkey 6-3) at Detroot
IMarotlt :!-0); 7 05 p m
Arena Football League
torOhto (8umett -4 3) at BaH1more
Monday a.,Sporta Transactions
NAnONALCONFERENCE
ID.Cobrera 3-4), 7 05 p m
BASEBALL
Elatem Dlvlelon
Seattle (Waahbum 3-4) at Tampa Bay
American League
WLTPetPFPA
O(azmlr 2-2) 7t0 p m
BOSTON RED SOX-Recalled AHP
f Dallas
tO t 0 909 677 S53 Minnesota (J Santana 4 4) at Texas (Loe Manny Delcannen from Pawtucket (IL)
I Columbus
6 5 0 545 56t 537 I t 3) 8OS p m
Op!loned LHP Kason Gabbard to
1 Phoiadelphoa 4 6 0 400 5t2 505
Cleveland (Carmona 5 1) at Kansas Ctty Pa'Vfucket
1 New York
4 7 0 364 554 606 (Perez 2-4) 8 tOp m
TEXAS RANGER~Actovatad OF Frank
Southern Dl•lolon
Gakland (lewts o-o) at Ch1cago Whrte Catalanotto from the 15-day DL optioned
WLTPctPFPA
Sox !Danks 2-4) 8 11 p m
INF Travrs Metcalf to Frisco (Texas)
9 2 0 8t8 697 615
Wldnaldoy 1 Gomes
1 Georgra
National League
Orlando
7 4 o 636 532 470 M1nnesota at Texas 2 OS p m
ATLANTA BRAVES-Named Greg Heiler
I Tampa Bay 5 6 0 455 5t7 568 Boston at N Y Yankees 7 05 p m
\liCe pres dent and general counsel
New Orleans 4 6 0 400 494 511
LA Angels at Detrotl 7 05 p m
CINCINNATI REOS-Raonstatad AHP
Auston
3 8 0 273 S55 6t8 Toronto at Baltimore 7 05 p m
Marcus McBetn from the bereavement ltst
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Seattle at Tampa Bay 7 10 p m
and optiOned htm to Loursv1Ue (IL)
Central Oiviolon
Cleveland at Kansas Crty, 810 p m
Claimed INF Pedro Lopez off waivers
WLTPct PF PA
Oakland at ChiCago Whrte Sox, 8 11 p m from tha Chocago Whtte Sox and optioned
I Chocago
6 3 0 727 600 St2
Thurldav'o Gamaa
him to Loursvtile
...
Colorado
8 4 0 667 608 608 L A Angels al Detroit 1 05 p m
COLORADO ROCKIES-Actovatad INF
Kansas City 6 5 o 545 578 522 5aaHia at Tampa Bay, 3 tOp m
Kazuo Matsui lrom tbe 15-day DL
Nashvtlle
5 7 0 417 634 660 Toronto at Baltimore 7 05 p m
Opt1oned INF Omar Outntantlla to
Grand Rapods 3 8 0 273 598 71t
Cleveland at Kansas C1ty 8 t 0 p m
Colorado Spnngs (PCL)
Weatem Dlvlelon
FOOTBALL
Natlonel LHgue
WLTPctPFPA
National Fooflllll leaQue
San Jose
East
Division
8 3 0 727 696 554
BUFFALO BILLS-Agreed to terms woth
Los Angeles 6 5 0 545 585 S98
W L Pet
GB
CB Jason Webster on a one-year con
New
York
28
tS
65t
Utah
5 7 0 4t7 743 7SO
\&lt;Bet
An zona
AHant~
26 t 8 S9t 2112
CINCINNATI BENGALS-Waoved LB
3 9 0 250 680 72t
22 22 500 6 t /2
Las Vegas
A J Nicholson
2 tOO t67 545 749 Phoiadelphla
Florida
21 23 477 7tl2
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS Sogned TE
Was~N1gton
t6 29 356 t3
Friday's Games
RIChard Angulo Warved TE Dan Murray
Central Division
Tampa Bay 59 Anzona 50
MIAMI
OOLPHIONS-Sogned
S
W L Pet
GB
Yeremlah Bell to a one·year contract
Colorado 58 Columbus 40
Milwaukee
28 t7 622
NEW ENGLAND PATAIOTS-Re sognad
Las Vegas 54 Utah 53
Houston
2t 23 4n 6tl2
LB Juntor Seau
Saturday'e Gamee
Chocago
20
22
476
6tl2
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Named
Nashville 44 Chocago 27
Ptttsburgh
19 24 442 8
Shane Day quairty control coach
Los Angeles 57 Georgta 51
Cmonnat1
t8 27 400 tO
HOCKEY
San Jose 69 Grand Rap1d$ 44
St Lours
t6 25 390 tO
National Hockey League
Sunday's Games
West Division
NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Sogned LW
New York 62 Kansas Coty 56
W L Pet
GB
Sean Bentrvogho to a three-year contract
Orlando 46 Austtn 45
los Angeles
25 20 556
Named Pat Btngham ass stant coach for
Friday, May 25
San Drego
24 20 545
t /2
Brodgeport (AHL)
Utah at O~ando 7 30 p m
Anzona
2S 2t 543
112
NEW YORK RANGERS-Agreed IO
San Jose at Nashville 8 p m
San Francisco 22 22 500 2 tl2
terms With F Brod e Dupont
Saturday, May 26
1
Colorado
t8 27 400 7
WASHINGTON CAPITALS- Sogned C
Los Angeles at Kansas C1ty 6 p m
1 NICklas Backstrom
Tampa Bay at Georgta 7 p m
Sunctey'a Gamae
COLLEGE
Colorado at Grand Rapids, 7 p m
Detro1t 6 St Louis 3
ARKANSAS UTILE ROCK'-Extended
Dallas at Columbus 7 p m
Cleveland 5 Ctnctnnati 3
the contracts of mens basketball coach
Ch1cago at Anzona, 1o p m
Anzona 5 Ptttsburgh 2
Steve Sh elds and women s basketball
Sunday, May 27
Philadelphia 5 Toronto 3
coach Joe Foley for one year through the
! Ph1ladelphra at Austtn 4 p m
Washmgton 4 Baiumo re 3
2011 12 school year
1 Monday May 26
Flonda 4 Tampa Bay 3
NEW ENGLAND- Named Anthony
New York at New Orleans p m
t Boston 6 Atlanta 3
Ewmg women s basketball roach

I

wEg;,'i!]~.;o:';.:!f:cE

I
I

I

PRo FOOTBALL

.

playoff low was 18 potnts,
was outscored by five of hts
teammates until he made
two stratght shots toward
the end of the thtrd quarter.
"We've JUSt got to be
aggressive and know where
he 1s at all times on the
floor," Hamtlton satd of
James "Our guys did a
great JOb of belpmg out If
he makes the pass and they
score we'll hve wtth tt "
The Cavs - tn theu first
Eastern Conference fmal
smce 1992 - fell to 0-12 m
Game Is on the road
For the fifth straight year,
DetrOit is among the NBA's
final four and Its ell.penence
seemed to help
The Ptstons dtdn 't get dtscouragell when Cleveland

got off to a good start and
they made JUSt enough shots
and stops tn the closmg
mmutes to start the series
With a VICtory
The Cavs led by as many
as mne -pomts m the first
half and dtdn't tratl m the
game until DetrOit started
strong m the third quarter
w1th a block and shot-clock
vtolatton on defense along
with a 3-pomter and hook at
the other end of the coun.
The Ptstons went on an 80 run to take a ftve-pomt
lead and they led 56-55
entenng the final quarter.
Detroit fell back behmd m
the fourth and dtdn't lead
unttl Btllups made a threepomt play and a 3-pointer
for a 71 -68 lead wtth mtd-

f:mru!

classlfted@ myda1lytnbune .com

I

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sound smart, Kurt Busch
can be kind of cool.
Kyle Bu sc h~ Not so
much
When he ftrst was
stgned by Hendnck to
dnve the No 5 Chevrolet,
Kyle Busch vowed to use
everythmg he'd seen hts
brother struggle through
as a lesson on what not to
do_ He's mstead done JUSt
the oppostte ·
He comes off as arrogant and entnled, and veterans repeatedly gnpe
Busch never wants to Itsten to the1r advice. Twotime champiOn Tony

I

Stewart felt hke he was
talktng to a wall when he
tned to counsel Busch
after thetr 2006 tangles
And after Bu sch and
Mears had Issues last season, Busch Immaturely
satd he dtdn' t know how
to get m touch WIth Mears
to dtscuss It Never mmd
that these guys live mches
apart m the motorhome lot
38 weekends a year
Hendnck ts a pattent
man who can put up wtth
an awful lot And there's
no reason to believe that
enough ttme tn the
Hendnck
organtzatton

way through the quarter.
Just when tt seemed that
the Ptstons had control, the
Cavs showed plenty of
resolve m the back-andforth quarter.
Notes Faces in the crowd
mcluded several Detroit
Ttgers, mcluding Ivan
Rodnguez
and
Gary
Sheffield, along
with
Atlanta Hawks guard
Tyronn Lue, one of Btllups'
best fnends
Webber had
a strong thtrd quarter after
leavmg the game m the first
quarter wnh two fouls
The Cavs shot JUSt 37 percent from the field, but
compensated for 1t by tummg 18 offenstve rebounds
mto 17 second-chance
pomts.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

won't eve ntually make
Busch grow up and start
behavmg the way a good
Hendnck dnver ts expected to
But wtth Dale Earnhardt
Jr sllttng on the open market , wanting desperately
to ht tn wtth an organtzatton committed to helpmg
htm wm champwnshtps.
one has to wonder tl
Hendnck should take a
long hard look at maktng
ll happen
Who know s~ Maybe
room No 5 at the
Hendnck tnn suddenly
could open

the Nationals off to the 6-0
lead m thetr homecomms;
Wtth hts game-openmg
from Page Bl
smgle. Lopez stdrted one ot
Washmgtun 's btggest ralites
of
the season The Nationals
chance to htt the ball out of
sent
I0 batters to the plate
the park I feel pretty good
m
a
20-mmute, 49-pttch
wtth htm commg up there "
tnmng
agamst Bronson
Rauch made a btg mtstake
Arroyo,
who lasted only
on a one-ball, two-stnke
two
mmngs
pttch to Valentm
"I never got mto It," satd
"I wanted the pttch to
Arroyo,
who threw a comValentm down and awav,
an.d I left 11 over the mtd- plete game 111 hts last start
dle," Rauch satd "Of "I walked some guys I
course, I' m down on shouldn't have Just one of
myself I'm not gettmg the those games "
Dmnn Young doubled
JOb done"
home
a patr of runs dunng
The game umted the NL's
the
four-run
rall y, and sintwo worst teams of thts seagled
ahead
of Kearns'
son, and reumted players
mvolved tn one of last sea, homer tn the second mntng
son's btggest trades - one for a 6-0 lead - btg stuff
that's dtsputed to thts day for a team that hasn't scored
The Nationals are last m the more than seven runs m any
NL East, wtth the Reds at game thts season
the bottom of the NL
As usual, the Nationals
Central
dtdn 't deal well with prosThey're also linked by a ·penty
Rookte Leva)e
gnevance.
Spetgner gave up five runs
Washington got Kearns m three 4nnmgs, mcludmg
and shortstop Fehpe Lopez Hatteberg's two-run homer
m an e1ght-player deal wah and Gnffey's solo shot m
the Reds last July 13 The ' the thtrd Spetgner opened
Reds filed a gnevance thts the season m long relief,
month claJmtng that general and ts trymg to help the
manager Jtm Bowden NatiOnals' InJUry-depleted
who was ftred m Cmcmnatt rotatiOn
m 2003 - failed to fully
Notes Stnce he returned
mform them about Garv to h1s accustomed spot at
Majewski's sore pltchmg thtrd m the battmg order on
shoulder before the trade
May 3, Gnffey has hll seven
The teams hadn't played of hts mne homers He batsmce the deal Lopez and ted fourth or fifth early m
Kearns had roles m gettmg the season

•

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Reward yeilow&amp;whtte male

cat m1ss1ng stnce 5/11 from

Gavrn Street m Rodney
VIllage 2 SUbdiVISIOn Family
pet named NJIMMY" Mrssed
Concealed&amp;Carry Class very much Any info call
NRA Cart lns1 Bam sharp 675 2046 between 9am
June 2 Mercerville Ftre 9pm
Dept 740 256-65 t4 or
.:.::__ _ _ _ _ __
starkey@ rnbo&gt;: com
Set of Ford keys bund on
Ractne eKt\ ramp off At 33
Taylor Famtly Aeunton
Has OSU key nng Kroger
June 3rd at Krodel Park card,740 246-4601
Sheller House 2
Small tnstde epncot teacup
poodle answers to the
GIYF.AWAV
name Spunky He has a bad
back leg and can t really
• 3 adorable 7 week old kit· JUmp Was last seen around
tens to gtveaway to good 1pm at the Hartford Apts on
Mothers Day Reward offered
home 740 949-92t7
of lound Call 304 593 6802
4 year old fema)e cato-~r8~8;:;2..;3;;.70;.;2;..._ _ _..,
spayed declawed shots up
to date Call 304 67S 2948
YARD SALE

t

1

"lt"'to,....Hw&gt;--W-ANIID--..,~~110 HELP WAN'llilJ

t.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _, -

NURSING
ASSISTANT
ADO Rockspnngs Nursmg
and Reh(lbthtatron Center rs
look1ng for a lew dedrcated
people to become a part of
our team We are a 100 bed
sk1lled facriity located 5
mtles from Pomeroy This Is
a 20 mtnute commute from
Athens and Albany We JUS!
recently mstailed a state of
the art on hne documents
tron system for the nurs 1ng
assrstants wh1ch reduce
paper work trme constder
ably We offer competrt1ve
rates health dental and
vrsron rn surance as well as
a 401 K plan We are a low
lift faclrty whteh has reduced
Mtddieton Estates ts now
our back mtunes to almost 0
htrmg dtrect care staff You
We have 2 posrtrons on 2 to
will be part of a team that
provrdes servtees to rndiVId 1o PM shrft and 1 on 10 to
6AM shtft Stop by and f1ll
uais wtth mental retardaUon
out
an appltcat1on and
and de\lelopmental dtsab1l1
tres Must have \lal d dnvers recetve an tn!ervtew Monday
through Fnday between
hcense and h1gh school
9AM and 4PM ~oclc:sprmgs
dtploma or GED We pro
15 an equal opportumty
v1de on the lob tramrng If
you would like to take
employer
advantage of thiS opportunr
ty you may apply at 8204
Carta Dnve Monday thru
Friday 8 00 4 00 An Equal
INTERVIEWS
Opportunity Employer
FIMIDN
Now otfertng a
Full ttme reparr te chnt c1an
$300 Hmng
needed
Bonus'
Duties to rnclude repatr and
testmg of portable equrp
men! Travel tniiOived tn the
Wednesday
testtng
of
equtpment
May 23rd
throughout West Vtrg ma
$300 HtRtNG BONUSI Kentuclcy and Ohro Prefer
10 OOam-J·OOpm
someone detail onented
Plus much morel
mechamcaliy tncltned salf
242 Thtrd Avenue
starter and dependabl e
t Up to S8 SD/hour
GaHtpolrs OH
Wril tram Marl resume to P
+Weekly boouses
+Weekly pay
0 Box 339
tf unable to attend
• Pa1d Holtdays vacallcms Ravenswood wv 26164
please call
and tratntng
I 877 463 6247
• Full benefits
ext 4256
• Professronal work
to schedule an
Good experrenced gnll and
atmosphere
1nterv1ew
food prep cook 3 ~4 2nd
a\le No Phone Calls
Cai!Todayt
www lnfoclslon com
Hallmark Card Shop at Oh10
1-877-463-6247 ext
Atver Plaza Galltpolrs wtll
2321
rnterv1ew for all posrt1on on
$7 50 an hour for farm work Tuesday May 29 t 2-2pm ,.
OTR, Regional,
rn
letart
Ohro
call
Help wanted at Darst Adult
Flatbed, Reeler &amp;
(3041273-2999
Group Home 1some lrftrng
Tanker Drivers
100WORKERS NEEDED 7 S shoft, 740-992 S023
Assemble crafts
wood
ttems To $480/wk Materrals
TO DRIVE
provided Free tnformatton
pkg 24Hr 80t -428 4649
ALLIANCE
Massive lllCf9BS6 of
TRACTOR TRAILER
Acceptrng apphcattons lor
busmss from local
TRAINING
CENTERS
cashiers and sub shop work
customers/ Looking for
'FULL TIME CLASSES'
ers Must be avatlable to
expenenced and
COL TRAINING'
work all shrfts No Phone
• FINAAC~G AVAILABLE'
non expenenced dnvers.
• JOB PLACEMENT' '
calls please Apply at Par
Orl~tr ~gb loli~IIWI
CelebraUnr 28 YNrt In Suslntss
Mar 42, 150S4 St At t60
rues , 5122 t oam 5:30pm
Wyth eville Vngm1a
Vmton or Par Mar 43 56
at Red Roof Inn
t 8()()-334 t203
Vrne Street Galhpohs
tooo Acy Ave
. _ llliancelractortmi!Gr oom
Jackeon,
OH 45640
Local Insurance Co iooktng
Ohto Valley Home Health
Apply 6 get quoiiflad
for representah\le to servroe
INC h rmg Per Orem or
on the spot!
local areas. Guaranteer;t ftrst
Contracted Medtcal Soc al
Strong
Frerght Netwo~kyear rncome plus commie
Worl(er Apply at. t480
Blue Cross Insurance
s1on
MtntmlJm
$t9!i0
Jackson Prke Gallipolis OH
800-248-7735
monthly Please call 740
or phone 740 44t1393
www prrmemc com
70t-2'557

Payment around $550 pet
month 740 367 7t29

L--•'ii'OiiiRiiSi\iiUiiio
: _,-

1989 Clayton Mobtle Home
14x60 2 Bedroom 1 Bath
wtth a 12~t 18 addtttonal bed
room 12x6 muddroom on
1/2 acre lot wrth charn lmk
fence &amp; 1Ox 10 bulldrng
Askong $40 000 j740)379
2668
-------2 bedroom &amp; bath tor sate
1665 Lrncoln He•ghts
Pomeroy 740 949 2478

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 wtlh vrnyl/shtngle
Must sell Only $25 995 wtth
deh\lery Call (740)385-4367

110

Ht:.u• W-wn:u

12749

STUDENTS FOR THE NA
PROGRAM
Rocksprtngs
Nursrng and Aehab1h!alton
Center 1s located 5 mrles
from Pomeroy and 2ct mtn
utes from Athens and
Albany We currently are
seekrng tOOtvtduats tnterest
ed m attendrng our 75 hour
Nursmg Asststant Program
whrch wt!J start June 4
2007 Thts class ts free of
charge and begtns wtlh 2
volunteer days thai w1ll altoN
you to see what the JOb con
ststs of frrst hand We allow
12 students per class so
they fdl up qu1ckly Please
coma rn and complete an
app lrcat10n tf mterested
Aocksprmgs ts an equal
opportuntly employer

Lw--.iiltiliiiio--'

Medr Home Prrvale Care
now acceptmg appllcatrons
for dependable STNA CNA
CHHA PCA tor more mfor
malton pleaso contact Laura
at 740 446 4148

'-----!1111_.1

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
A\lg Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
lncludtng Federal Beneftls
and OT Pauj Tratntng
Vacattons FT/PT
1 600 584 1775 Ext #8923
____u_s~
w_A_~~
Prolessronal FundraiSEHS
needed Part/Full ltm e 3
shtfts da~y 7 days a ......eek
$9 ht. after pad tra 1nmg + &amp; Trrmmmg Ca li (740)441
t333 or (740)64S 0546
Benehts Contact us toclayt
888
97
4
JOBS
or
1
Professtonally
Clean
www 168897 4Jobs com
Off1ce / Ho u seclea n 1n g
Scenrc H !Is Nurs ng Center References (304)675 2208
ts currently accepting apph
II\ 1\1 I II
cattons for a Human ;;;=~:;;;;;;;;==~
Resources
Manager
10
B USINFSS
Apph[;ants must posses
OPI'ORTUNfrY

L

Autos for Sale
• 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............. 750
Building Supplies , ..... , • .. .. .. • • .. ... 550
Buslneaa and Buildings , • .. • • ....... 340
Business Opportunity ..... ........... ,, 210
Buslneaa Training ............................ 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .... .. .. • ........ 790
Camping Equipment • •
780
Cards of Thanks , ..... .. .. .. .. .. ...... 01 0
Child/Elderly Care
190
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeratlon ................. 840
Equipment for Rent
480
Excavaling.... . .. .. • • ... ...
• .. 830
Farm Equipment..... • ..
• ........,. 610
Farma for Rent...
•
430
Farms for Sale. .. .... .. ... .... .. • • • • .... 330
For Leaae.......... .. .... ... • • • • • • • • ... 490
For Sale......... .. .. .. ............ .......... . 585
For Sola or Trade •
..
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ....,.. .. ............... 580
Furnished Rooms
450
General Hauling............. .... ...... 850
Gl•eaway
•
• ................ 040
Happy Ada ..................................... 050
Hay &amp; Grain .. .... • ........... ............... 640
Help Wanted.- .. .. • • .. .. ...... 110
Home lmpro•emenls. • .. • • .. • ..• •• 810
Homes for Sale
... ... .. •
... • • 310
Household Goods. • .. .. .. ........ 510
Housaa for Rent
4t0
In Memoriam. , .. ... • , , .. .. • • • •••• 020
Insurance
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
•
• ••• 660
livestock
• • .... • .. 630
Loot and Found • • •
... .. • .060
Lots &amp; Acreage .. .. ..
.. .. .. .. 350
Mlscellaneou~.. • .. • • • • • • •
170
Mlscellaneou4 Merchandise •
, ••• 540
Mobile Home Repair
860
Mobile Homes for Rent • •
• 420
Mobile Homes for Sale
320
Money to Loan ... • .. • .. .. • ... ... • .. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers • • •
• 740
Musical Instruments • .. • • • .. • • • ... 570
Personals . . . . . . . . . . ..........
005
PetalorSale .......
,,
....... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .. .. • • • • • •
• • 820
Prolesalonal Ser•lces .. , .. • • ..
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair. • ............. 160
Real Eatate Wanted
360
Schoolalnatructlon ........................ 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer
• • ........ 650
Sltualions Wanted .. ,. ,, ................. 120
Space for Rent .. • .. • • • .. .. ........... 460
Sporting Good a, • .... .. .. .. .. .. • .. ........ 520
suv·s tor Sale .... -........................... 720
Trucks for Sale .... ,.,_,,,,, .. ........ 715
Upholstery ' .. .. ..................... . , , ........... 870
Vans For Sale ...
- 730
Wantod to Buy ..............1• .. • .. .... ....... 090
Wontod to Buy- Farm Suppllaa • • ...... 620
Won tad To Do .................................... 180
Wantod to Rent .. ,,,_,, ......... , .... , ...... 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis .......... , ........ • • .. 072
Yard 5ale-Pomeroy/Mtddle .......... ...... D74
Yard SOle-Pt. Plaaoant.. ............... 076

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today• 740 446 4367
' 800 21 4 0452

and SctOOs

pZ

CLASSIFIED INDEX

HOMFJ;

L._...;FUiiliKiiSiiiAU:iiii-_.1

AccredJtcd Merrber AccJedlhng
Counc11 lor Independent Colleges

Chihuahua Female Long - coat tr1co!or sweetheart 0 ,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _.., L:::...::::;:.:..:.!...:.;N;:E::,A::,.::'n:::c::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _w_w_w_c_o_m_oc_s_c_o_m-1
6t4 690 8606
YARD SALE-

GALIJPOLI'!

HOMFJ;

FOKSAU

Truck Dnver needed must
have a good duvmg record
Send Resumes to Twtn
R1 ver HardiNOods Inc 2612
US Route 35 Souths de
wv 2St87

vrww yt~l~pol1sca eercollege com

Br

Famale black boo taoi &lt;otten
304 576 2399

to

"'"'''""''I

Mtntalure farm Umbut!t
home on 4 acres on SA
5269/mo' Buy GALLIPD 160 3BR 1BA Peaches
LIS Foreclosure! 1-4 bed bernes grapes Swtmmlng
homes from 199/mo 5% pool New applrances Wood
down, 20 years at 8'"o burner $66 000 740 388 •
More hOmes available For 08 t S
-::&lt;:1!'""-~----, . loca listings call 8011-559- ~------­
r.
4109 xF254
On Marn St New Haven WV
Well kept New apphances
0 Down even wtth less than Newly remodeled bat11room
perfect credit Is a\lallable on New heat pump Call 304
thts 3 bedroom ~ bath 862 3773 for detatls
home Corner lot ftreplace
MOBILE H0\1~
Gallipolis Career College moclern k1tchen 1acuzzr tub

Mule call to identtfy 304
576 2002

r

tO

HELl' WA.vtlll

FOUND Apple Grove araa

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SECOND ~NNOAL REUNION
MOOSE LODGE MAY 26,
2007 8 t 00 ENTERTAIN
MENT 1304)675 483t OR
1740)446 3488

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{.;;:,
m
Borders $3.00/per ad
f!ii4
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Rummage Sale at Clay
•
Free sofa and love seat Townhouse Tuesday May
Poor condttton
Cali 22
Ambrosta Machme Inc
This
newspape
between 4pm and 9pm
WANfElJ
Pomt Pleasant WV (304)
ccepts only hal
675 t722 13041675 t723
740
992
7807
TO
BUY
anted ads meetin
fax Machrn~st 5 years or
Free to gOOd home Small
OE standards
more expener.ce $8 $12 per
male brown and whtte dog Absolute Top Dollar US
hour
)We will not knowing
very lroendly Call 740 794- Srlver and Gold Coms On Hand Shop Foreman
0425
y accept any adver
Proofsets Gold Rrngs Pre Mach ne Shop &amp; Fabncahon
laement In vlolatlo
1935
US
Cur{ency knowledge 10 years or more
Old hay good for feed or
f the law
Sohtarre Dramonds M T S experrence $12$15 per
mulch (740)992 3989
Com Shop 151 Second hour
Avenue Gaihpolrs 740 446
2842
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
I 111'10\ \ II \I
4x4's For Sale • .. • • ................. 725
Call Manlyn 304 882-264S
Announcement , • ...................... 030
"' IIH it I '
Antiques ... • •
• • • • • • • ... 530
AVONI All Areast To Buy or
Apartmantslor Rent
.440
110
Sell Shorley Spears 304
Auclion and Flea Market
• .. .. • ...... 080
,
Hlli'WANTID
67S t429
1
Auto Pal'ls &amp; Accessories
760
Care Staff
Auto Repair .. •
.. ........................ 770

•I

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Monday-Friday for Insertion

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\Eribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

TRANSACTIONS

Worst

game. We had an opportumty to wm"
Game 2 IS Thursday mght
at The Palace before the
senes shtfts to Cleveland
Btllups scored 10 of hts
13 pomts m the final quarter, mcludmg a 3-pmnter
that gave the Ptstons a 7876 lead wtth I 52 left
Det~oll' s
Rtchard
Hanulton scored 24 pomts
and had seven asststs, whtle
Rasheed Wallace had 15
points, 12 rebounds and a
career-high seven blocks
and Chris Webber scored I0
pomts Tayshaun Prmte
added eight pmnts, a playoff
career-h1gh mne ass1~ts and
chest-to-chest defense on
James
Prince was on James on
the Cavaliers' play that
ended with Marshall's shot
"That's a play we didn't
want to happen," Hanni ton
satd. "We wanted eyerybody to stay home but
LeBron goes to the basket
and draws so much attention Donyell JUSt mtssed "
Zydrunas Ilgauskas had
22 points and 13 rebounds
for the Cavs, takmg advantage of James ' pass-first
strategy Larry Hughes and
reserve Anderson VareJao
each scored 13 pomts
James, whose prev10us

.

Wool OMolon

LoaAnoetos

(BMt-of-7)

fromPageBl

~

-

CONFEREt«:E FINALS

Pistons

.

e

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

2007

Texas 14 Houston 1
M !waukee 6 Mnnesota 5
Chteago Whtle SoK 10 Chteago Cubs 6
Kansas City 10 Colorado 5 12 mnrngs
L A Angels 4 L A Dodgers 1
San Drago 2 Seattle 1
San FranciSCO 4 Oakland 1
N Y Yankees 6 N Y Mets 2
Monday s Games
Cmctnnah 8 Washtnglon 7
Anzona 6 Colorado 5
M~waukee 9 L A Dodgers 5
San Franctsco 4 Houston 0
Tuesdays Games
Philadelphia (Hamels 6 1) at Florrda
IOisan 3 3) 7 05 p m
Washrngton (Ch1co 3 4) at Cmc1nnat1
j5aarloos 0 3) 7 10 p m
N Y Mets (JSosa 3-D) at Atlanta (Da\ltes
t 2) 7 35 p m
Prttsburgh (Duke 1 4) at St Louts
(Wa1nwnght 3 3) 8 10 p m
Colorado (Fogg 1 5) at Arizona
(l Hernandez 4 2) 9 40 p m
Chtcago Cubs (Hill 4 3) at San Otego
(Peavy S 1) tO OS p m
Mrlwaukee (Sheets 4 2) at L A Dodgers
IWoll 5-3) tO tOp m
Houston (Oswalt 6 2) at San Franc1sco
(Lrncecum 1-Q) 10 15 p m
Wednesdays Games
Philadelphia at Flonda 7 05 p m'
Washrngton at C nctnnatr 7 10 p m
N Y Mets at Atlanta 7 35 p m
Plttsbur!IJ at St LOUIS 8 10 p m
Colorado at Anzona 9 40 p m
Chtcago Cubs at San Otego 10 05 p m
Milwaukee at L A Dodgers 10 10 p m
Houston at San Franmsco 10 15 p m
Thursdays Games
Ptttsburgh at St Lou1s 1 10 p m
Ph1ladelph18 at Flonda 7 05 p m
Washrngton at Clnctnnatt 7 10 p m
N Y Mets at Atlanta 7 35 p m
Houston at Anzona 9 40 p m
Chcago Cubs at San Drego 10 05 p m

American Le~ue
East Dlvloloii
WL
Pet
GB
Boston
30 t4 682
New York
20 23 465 811
Battomore
20 24 45S - tO
Toronto
19 24 442 10 ..
Tampa Bay
18 25 419 11 •
I
Central Division
I
W L PctGB
Cleveland
27 15 643
Detroit
27 1
628 h
Chocogo
22 t9 637 4\
Minnesota
20 24 455 8
Kansas Cny
17 2&amp; 378 11 ~

PRo HOCKEY

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Nattonal Hockey Lesgue
San Antonio va. Utah
Pleyotf Glance
Sunday May 20 San Antonoo t08 Utah
AiiTimeaEDT
100 San Antonto leads senes t-o
1
FIRST ROUND
Tuesday May 22 Utah at San Antomo,
(Beet-of-7)
9pm
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Saturday May 26 San Antomo at Utah
Buffalp 4 N Y lalanders 1
830 p m
Buffalo 4 N V Islanders 1
Monday May 28 San Antomo at Utah 9
N V Islanders 3 Buff~Jo 2
pm
Buffalo 3 N Y islanders 2
Wednesday May 30 Utah at San
Buffalo 4 N Y Islanders 2
Antonto 9 p m rf necessary
Buffalo 4 N Y Islanders 3
Fnday June 1 San Antonto at Utah 9
p m rf necessary
New Janey 4. Tsmpa Bay 2
Sunday June 3 Utah at San Antomo
New Jersey 5 Tampa Bay 3
8 30 p m 11 necessary
Tampa Bay 3 New Jersey 2
Tampa Bay 3 New Jersey 2
Women'• National
Now Jersev 4 Tampa Bay 3 OT
Belklflllll Association
New Jersey 3 Tampa Bay 0
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ne" Jersey 3 Tampa Bay 2
WL Pet
GB
Connectlc~
t 0 t 000
N.y. Bangars4. Atl•nte o
Detrott
1 0 1 000
N Y Rangers 4 Atlanta 3
I lndoana
t 0 t 000
N Y Rangers 2 Atlanta 1
New York
1 0 1 000
N Y Rangers 7 Atlanta 0
Ch1cago
0 1
000
N Y Rangers 4 Atlanta 2
Washrngton
0 1 000
1

Tuesday, May 22,

PRo BASEBALL

I

I

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Golden State 4. Dllla• 2
Golden State 97, Dallas 85
Dallas 112, Goklen Slate 99
Golden State t09 Dallas 9t
Golden Stale t 03, Dallas 99
Dallas 118 Golden State 112
Golden State 111 Dallas 85

PageB2

D~ect

'PRIME inc.

'

knowledge of Workers
Compensation OSHA and
wage and hoor reguiatrons
computer
sktlls
etc
Excellent commumcatton
slulls are a must EKpenence
1n a long term cara setttng ts
preferred If Interested
please conlact Dtanna Fitch
at 740 44£ 71SO EOE

- - - - -- - -

7 Room House w~h larue lot
located al 10 Ra1troad St
Mrddleport Oh1o Phone
740 992 3764

NICe used 3 becroom home
vrnyl/shrngte Wtll help wrlh
delivery 740 365 4367
OWNER FINANCING
Ntce 3/2 Slngiewtdes
From $1 800 down
payment
Scott (7 40) 828 2750

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program $0 Down II you
own Land 0 1 use Famrly
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
Land We own tne Bank your
grams for you to buy your
Approvecl606 474 6380
home mstead ol renttng
100% ftnanctng
FARMS
' Less than perfect credrt
FUR
SAIL
180
accepted
WANIIJ&gt;
' Payment could be the
ToDo ·
same as rent
Brand new log home wrth 60
Mortgage
Locators acres MIL $180 000 Cali
Do you need a Care g ver (740 )367 0000
740 256 9247
for a elderly man tn the c_c==:_::.:..:.c_
_ __
Mason/Ga!ha area? Call Beaut1lu! Mtddleport hamel
loTs &amp;
740 578 1109 after 7pm
3BR 2BA lull basement
ACRFAGf
Many NEW featuresll Must t..-•iiiiiiiiiiii'-_.1
see
thts one1740 41&amp; 1548 10 acres located on Broad
Lawn Care Servtce Mowtng

r~=~=~~=~
•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do busmess w th
people you know and
NOT 10 se nd money
through t~e marl unttl you
have

r

mves!lgated

the

ServtceMaster has tanrtonal lo;lf~er:•n:g:;:;:===~
pos111ons avat!abte n the !':
Apple Gro\le area F1.11! lrme
MONI:.'Y
hours M F Call 304 529
1'0 LOAN
7378
STAFFING
COORD INA
TOR Rockspnngs Nurstng
and Rehabrhlatton Center IS
lookmg for a few dedrcated
people to become a part of
our team We are a 100 bed
sk11ted lactltty located 5
m1ies from Pomeroy Th1s 1s
a 20 mmute commute from
Athens and Albany We are
currently seekmg a Licensed
Pract cal Nurse for a staff1ng
coordmator
posrtton
Requirements are 3 years
mtntmum rn long term care
Expertence tn staff develop
ment and or management a
plus Thts posttton conststs
of tntervtewtng hmng and
scheduimg nursmg staff
Thts also rnclud es the deter
mtnat1on ol onentatron and
preceptors Trainrng and
education of staff as well as
momtorrng staff health and
weHare If rnterested send a
resume to Rockspnngs
36759 Aocksprmgs Road
Pomeroy Ohto 45769 or fax
to 740 992 2678 attentron
Candy
Stmpson
Rocksprrngs 15 an equal
opportuntty employer

3 BA 1BA. large Fam11y
F!oom frtdge W/0 Large
lot can 441 5826 or 446
g664

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$2 14 36 per month Includes
many upgrades del very &amp;
set up I740)38S 2434

uNOTICt:u
Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohto DMston of
Ftnanc al
tnsutufiOn s
Office of Consumer
Affarrs BEFORE you refr
nance your home or
obtarn a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments ol
fees or msur~nce Cali the
Offrce of Consumer
Affatrs toll free at 1 866
278 0003 to learn tf the
mortgage broker or
lender
tS
properly
licensed (Thts ts a public
serv1ce announcement
from the Otuo Vall ey
Publrshmg Company)

:;:;::::::::::~
PRO~NAL

L---SiiERiivtiiliCEl&gt;--•
CHUCKS
PRESSURE
WASHING decks stdtng
dnveways tarm eqwpment
srdewatks boats and more
NO JOB TO SMALL
Aes1denltal or Commeretal

Tru ck Dnvers needed Must 1740)645 2178
have good dnvlng record
Please send resume to Twrn
TURNED DOWN ON
Rtver Hardwood 2612 US SOCIAL SECU~ITY ISSI1
HWY 35 Southsrde WV
No Fee Unless We Wtnt
t 868 582 3345
25187

Attention!

Local company offertng ·No

r

Run Road rn New Haven
$38 500 304 773 S881

Rf:AL f.srAl'E
WANI'Ell
Afl real eatale advertrsrng
tn this nl!wt paper is
subject to the Federal
Farr Housmg Act ol1968
wtueh makes 1t Illegal to
advertise any
preference llmi!atron or
dtacr1mlnatlon based on

race, color retrglon sex
famthai status or nat1ona!
origin or any 1ntent1on to
make any such
preference hmltatlon or
discrimination

newspaper w11f not
knowtngty accept
advertisements lor real
estate wh1ch 11 m
violation of the law Our
readers are hereb~
tnformed that all
dwellings advertised 10
thiS newspaper are

Th ts

available o n an equal
opportunity

Need to sell your home?
Late ot1 payments dtvorce
JOb transfer or a death? I
can buy your home All cash
andqurckciostng 740 416
3130
Ill \I liS

tO

St58/mo' Buy 4bd home
HUO r 5% dn 20yrs @ 8°o
For Lrs!lngs BOO 559 4109
x1709
1 br cia wid sto\le relnger
ator water &amp; gas 1ncluded
$400 per mo $200 dep
negot able located on 143
Pomeroy
(740)992 4163
!eave message

bases

3 Bedroom House tn
Syracuse $500/month +
Enjoy thrs spac ous 5 BR 2 deposrt No Pets (304)675
Ba home located n Galha 5332 weekends 74D-59 1
Co on the banks 01 0265
Raccoon Creek Well land
scaped 1 33 acre yard wrth 3 bedroom 2 full bath house
paved u shaped dnveway tn Pomeroy newly remod
Detached pate garage large eled nrce hardwood floors
enough for car and boat ale full basement plenty of
storage Many eKtras rnclud krtchen cabinets ntce half
rng hot tub monttored secu acre yard $685 per month
nty system and covered ptc (740)949 2303 740 591
nrc areas by creek Direct _3_92_0_ _ __ _ __
access to Ohto Rtver and
3 bedroom 3 m1tes from
accessrble
Pomeroy on 143 D Wtde
wrth attached garage no
pets partial furntshed $375
mo plus deposrt (740)992
740t

,,

3 BA house tn 'Galltpolts
W/D connect orr $435/mo
Also 1 BA rn Gal!rpohs
$250fmo No pets Call
- - - - - - - - Wayne 404 456 3802 for
For Sale by Owner 2000 sq tnformatra1
It Home less than a m1!e
Ntce 3 br 1 ba hotJse tn
oUI Sandhtl! Ad Large prt
Mason 1 car garage base
vale lot As Is 304 675 3779
ment da btg yard walktng
HUD HOMES• 4 bedooom ~stance
to
Walmart
only $199/mo 3 bedroom mctudes appliances &amp; wash
$203/mo More 1 4bed er &amp; dryer references and
homes avatlable 5% dn 20 deposrt reqwred $475 740
yrs @ 8% For hstrngs BOO 416,6622 740 4t6 6629
also available furntshed
559 4109 ext F144

�•

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
PRo BASKETBALL
National Baeketball Association
Pteyoff Glance
FIRST ROUND
!Beet of 7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE

~

Detron tOO Onando 92
Detro•t 98 Orlando 90
Detron 93 Orlando
Detroit 97 Orlando 93

n

Cllnland 4. Wublogton 0
CleYeland 97, Washlnglon 82
CleYeland 109 Washmglon t02
Cleveland 118, Washonglon 92
~nd 97, Washlnglon 90

Ntw JtrMy 4. Toronto a

New Je,..y 96 Toronto 9t
Toronto 89 New Jersey 83
New Jersey W2 Toronto 89
New Jersey 102 Toronto 81
Toronto 98 New Jersey 96
New Jersey 98 Toronto 97

Chicago 1. Miami 0
Chica~ 96 M1am1 91
Chk:ago 107 M1am1 89
- Chicago t 04 Moamo 96
Chicago 92 Moamo 79

CONFERENCE FINALS
(Boot of 7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
~
Detrort 79 Cleveland 76 DetrOit leads
senes 1 0
1 Thursday May 24 Cleveland at Oetrort
I 8pm
Sunday May 27 DetrOit at Cleveland
8 30 p m
Tuesday May 29 Detrort at Cleveland
1 ap m
Thursday May 31 Cleveland at Detrort
8 p m 11 necessary
Saturday June 2 Detroit at Ctevelanct
8 30 p m rf necessary
Monday June 4 Cleveland at Oetrort 8
p m , if necessat:y

New England t Houston 0
1 Ottawa 3 New Jersey 2
Kansas Coty t Colorado t toe
Ottawa 3 New Jersey 2
Sunday'&amp; Games
Los Angeles 1 CD Ch1vas USA 1 tie
WESTERN CONFERENCE
FC Dallas 2 Real 5alt Lake 1
~
Thursday, Msy 24
San Jose 2 Detrort 0
Chicago at New York 7 p m
Detrott 3 San Jose 2
saturday, May 26
san Jose 2 Datron 1
Toronto FC at Columbus 7 30 p m
1 Detroit 3 San Jose 2 OT
Houston at D C Untied 7 30 p m
Detroit 4 San Jose 1
Kansas City at New England 7 30 p m
Detroit 2 San Jose 0
Los Angeles at Colorado 8 30 p m
Anebtlm 1. Vlncouytr 1
FC Dallas at CD Chrvas USA 10 30
Anahetm 5, Vancouver 1
pm
Sundly, M1y 27
Vancouver 2, Anaherm 1, 20T
Anaheim 3, Vl!flOOUver 2
Real Salt Lake at ChiCago, 5 p m
Anaherm 3, Vancouver 2, OT
Anatlelm 2, Vancouver 1, 20T

I

Pbotnlx1. LA. L.lkora 1
Phoemx 95 L A Lakers 87
Phoemx 126 L A lakers 98
LA lakers 95 Phoenrx 89
Phoemx 113 LA lakers 100
Phoenox 119 L A Lakars t I 0
Sen Antonio 1. Denver 1

Denver 95 San Antomo 69
San Anton1o 97 Denver 88
San Antomo 96 Denver 91
San Antomo 96 Denver 89
San AntoniO 93 Denver 78

WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pet
GB
Phoenuc:
t 0 tOOO
1 Seattle
t 0 tOOO
Sacramento
' t
soo ''
1
Los Angeles
0 0
000
I Houston
o 1 ' ooo t
SanAntorno
0 t
000
t
Mtnnesota
02000
1,

ouawo 4. p!ttsburah 1

Onawa 6 Pittsburgh 3
Pittsburgh 4 Ottawa 3
Ottawa 4 Prttsburgh 2
Ottawa 2 Ptttsburgh 1
Ottawa 3 Ptttsburgh 0

'

5aturdoy'o Gomaa
DetrOit 75 Sacramento 68
Connect1cut 89 Washmgton 80
Indiana 83 Mtnnesota 64
Seattle 82 Houston 69
Phoeni&gt;: 81 San AntoniO 72
Sunday's Games
New York 83 Chrcago 71
Sacramento 74 Mmnesota 64
Monday'e Gamee
No games scheduled
Tueaday a Games
Mtnnesota at Detron 7 30 p m
Sacramento at Washmgton 7 30 p m
Los Angeles at Chrcago a p m

Utah 4. Hguston 3
Houston 84 Utah 75
Houston 98 Utah 90
Utah 8t , Houston 67
Utah 98 Houston 85
Houston 96, Utah 92
Utah 94 Houston 82
Utah t03, Houston 99
QUARTERFINALS

(Beet ol7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Detroit 4. Cb!capg 2
DatroH 95 Chicago 69
DetroH t08, Chicago 87
Detroit 81 Ch1cago 74
Chicago t 02 Detro of 67
Ch1cago 108 Detro11 92
Detroit 95 Chocago 85

PRo SoccER

Cltye!end 4. Now JarMy 2
Cleveland 81, New Jersey
Cleveland t 02 New Jersey 92
New Jersey 96 Cleveland 85
Cleveland 87 New Jersey 85
~ew Jersey 83 Cleveland 72
Cleveland 88 New Jersey 72

n

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Sen Antonio 4 Ph01n!r 2

San Antomo 111, Phoen1x 106
Phoemx 101 San Antomo 81
San Antonoo 108 Phoenix tot
Phoen~x 104 San Antonro 98
San Antomo 88 Phoenrx 85
San Antonto 114 Phoen1x 106

Major League Soccer
Eastern Conference
W L T PtsGF GA
New England
S t 2 t7 t5 7
NewYork
4 1 2 14 12 4
Kansas Crty
4 2 1 13 12 7
Ch1cago
3 3 1 10 8 10
DC United
2 3 t 7 8 tO
Columbus
1 2 4 7 4 8
TorontoFC
2 5 0 6 5 13
Weatem Conference
WLTPtsGFGA
FC Dallas
5 3 t 't6 13 t2
Colorado
3 2 3 12 10 tO
CD Chtvas USA 2 3 2 8 to 8
Houston
24t745
Los Angeles
t 22S77
Real Salt Lake 0 3 4 4 7 t4
Wedne1day'1 Game
Toronto FC 1 Houston 0
Thursdays Game
FC Dallas 2 Chicago 1
Saturctay s Games
DC Untied 2 Toronto FC 1
New Vorll 4 Columbus 0

Utah 4 Go!dtn Stlta 1
Utah 116, Golden Slate 112
Utah t27 Golden State 117 OT
Golden Slate t25 Utah tOS
Utah 115, Golden State tOt
Utah t 00 Golden Stele 87

Hendrick

pursed and clearly uncomfortable.
- Busch left the track
fromPageBl
without telhng hi s crew
after wrecking in Tell.as
Consider
last month When the team
- After wtnnmg the patched up the car to get
first Car of Tomorrow race b&lt;1ck on the track for valuat Bristol m March, Busch able pomts, Busch was
came off as a spmled brat nowhere to be found and
when he npped the car and they grabbed Earnhardt repeatedly
satd
tt of all people' - to fmish
"sucked" dunng
hts out the race
nationally
televised
- He wrecked hts older
Vtctory Lane mtervtew. brother, Kurt, m Saturday
When Busch conttnued the mght's All-Star race, then
rant m hts post-race news gave Kurt the opportumty
conference, Hendnck sat to be the model of decosilently nell.t to htm, hps rum Whtle Kyle stewed

1

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Dttrg!t 4 Calgary 2
Oetrort 4 Calgary 1
Oetrott 3, Calgary 1
Calgary 3 Detrort 2
Calgary 3, Detroit 2
Detro1t 5 'Calgary 1
Detroit 2 Calgary t 20T
Anaheim 4. M!nnaaota 1
Anaherm 2 Mtnnesota 1
Anaheim 3 Mrnnesota 2
Anaheim 2, Mrnnesota 1
Minnesota 4 Anaheim 1
Anaheim 4, Minnesota 1

\llncounr 4 Dlllll 3
Vancouver 5, Dallas 4 40T
Dallas 2 Vancouver o
Vancouver 2 Dallas 1, OT
Vancouver 2 Dallas 1
Dallas 1 Vancouver OT
Dallas 2 Vancouver 0
Vancou\ler 4 Dallas 1

a

San Joy 4 Neabyll!e 1
San Jose 5 Nashvrlle 4 20T
NashvtUe 5 San Jose 2
San Jose 3 Nashville 1
San Jose 3 Nashvrlle 2
San Jose 3 Nashvtlie 2
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
(Beot-of-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Buffalo 4 r4•w York Rangara 2
Buffalo 5 N V Rangers 2
Buffalo 3, N Y Rangers 2
1
N Y Rangers 2 Buffalo 1 20T
N Y Rangers 2 Buffalo 1
Buffalo 2 N Y Rangers 1 OT
Buffalo 5 N V Rangers 4
Ottawa 4. New Jeruv 1
Ot1awa 5 New Jersey 4
New Jersey '3 Ottawa 2 20T
Ottawa 2 New Jersey 0

mside hts hauler after the
acctdent, Kurt gave a
somewhat humorous mtervtew and delivered the
line of ·the race when he
said, "I'm not eaung any
Kellogg's any time soon,"
m reference to Kyle's
sponsor
The incident spoke volumes to how far Kurt
Busch has come Always a
bit qutrky, he's made Significant stndes smce JOtnmg Penske Racmg last
season When he's not trytng so hard to be hked, or
butchenng the English
language m an attempt to

1

Daldand

EASTERN CONFERENCE
BviTI!o ya. Ottna
Thursday May t 0 Ottawa 5 Buffalo 2
Saturday May 12 Ottawa 4, Buffalo 3
20T
Monday May t4 Ottawa t Buffalo 0
Wadnasday, Mey t6 Buffalo 3, Ottawa

Texas

WLPctGB
27 t8 60022 22 500 , ,
19 2t 475 s\
t8 27 400 9

Sunday'• Gomes

oatron 6, St 1.ouo0 3

Cleveland 5, Cinclnnatl 3
Philadelphia 5, Toronto 3
•2
Waaltinglon 4, Baltimore 3
Saturday, May t9 Ottawa 3 Buffalo 2 Florida 4 Tampa Bay 3
OT Ottawa wins senes 4-1
Boston 6, AUanta 3
Texas 14, Houston 1
Milwaukee 6 Mmnesota 5
Chicago Vllhite So&gt;e 10 Ch1cago Cubs 6
Fnday May 11 Detrort 2 Anahe1m 1
Kansas Crty 10 Coklrado 5 t 21nnrngs
Sunday May t 3 Anaherm 4, Oetrort 3 LA Angels 4, LA Dodgers t
OT
San Diego 2, 5aattle t
Tuesday May 15 Detroit 5 Anaherm 0
San Franclooo 4, Oaldaf}d t
1
Thursday May 17 Anahe1m 5 Detrort 3 N Y Yank- 6, N Y Mels 2
Sunday, May 20 Anaherm 2, Detroit 1
tlondoy'l Gomao
OT Anahalm leads senes 3 2
N Y Yankeas 8, Boston 2
Tuesday May 22 Detroit at Anaheim, 9 Cleveland 5, 5aattte 2
pm
Texas t4 Mlhnesota 4
Thursday, May 24 Anahetm at Detroit Chicago While Sox 8 Oakland 5
7 30 p m If necessary
TuHday'a Glmea
Bostoh (Tavarez 2-4) at NY Yankees
(MU68ona 2-2), 7 05 p m
LA Angels ILaCkey 6-3) at Detroot
IMarotlt :!-0); 7 05 p m
Arena Football League
torOhto (8umett -4 3) at BaH1more
Monday a.,Sporta Transactions
NAnONALCONFERENCE
ID.Cobrera 3-4), 7 05 p m
BASEBALL
Elatem Dlvlelon
Seattle (Waahbum 3-4) at Tampa Bay
American League
WLTPetPFPA
O(azmlr 2-2) 7t0 p m
BOSTON RED SOX-Recalled AHP
f Dallas
tO t 0 909 677 S53 Minnesota (J Santana 4 4) at Texas (Loe Manny Delcannen from Pawtucket (IL)
I Columbus
6 5 0 545 56t 537 I t 3) 8OS p m
Op!loned LHP Kason Gabbard to
1 Phoiadelphoa 4 6 0 400 5t2 505
Cleveland (Carmona 5 1) at Kansas Ctty Pa'Vfucket
1 New York
4 7 0 364 554 606 (Perez 2-4) 8 tOp m
TEXAS RANGER~Actovatad OF Frank
Southern Dl•lolon
Gakland (lewts o-o) at Ch1cago Whrte Catalanotto from the 15-day DL optioned
WLTPctPFPA
Sox !Danks 2-4) 8 11 p m
INF Travrs Metcalf to Frisco (Texas)
9 2 0 8t8 697 615
Wldnaldoy 1 Gomes
1 Georgra
National League
Orlando
7 4 o 636 532 470 M1nnesota at Texas 2 OS p m
ATLANTA BRAVES-Named Greg Heiler
I Tampa Bay 5 6 0 455 5t7 568 Boston at N Y Yankees 7 05 p m
\liCe pres dent and general counsel
New Orleans 4 6 0 400 494 511
LA Angels at Detrotl 7 05 p m
CINCINNATI REOS-Raonstatad AHP
Auston
3 8 0 273 S55 6t8 Toronto at Baltimore 7 05 p m
Marcus McBetn from the bereavement ltst
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Seattle at Tampa Bay 7 10 p m
and optiOned htm to Loursv1Ue (IL)
Central Oiviolon
Cleveland at Kansas Crty, 810 p m
Claimed INF Pedro Lopez off waivers
WLTPct PF PA
Oakland at ChiCago Whrte Sox, 8 11 p m from tha Chocago Whtte Sox and optioned
I Chocago
6 3 0 727 600 St2
Thurldav'o Gamaa
him to Loursvtile
...
Colorado
8 4 0 667 608 608 L A Angels al Detroit 1 05 p m
COLORADO ROCKIES-Actovatad INF
Kansas City 6 5 o 545 578 522 5aaHia at Tampa Bay, 3 tOp m
Kazuo Matsui lrom tbe 15-day DL
Nashvtlle
5 7 0 417 634 660 Toronto at Baltimore 7 05 p m
Opt1oned INF Omar Outntantlla to
Grand Rapods 3 8 0 273 598 71t
Cleveland at Kansas C1ty 8 t 0 p m
Colorado Spnngs (PCL)
Weatem Dlvlelon
FOOTBALL
Natlonel LHgue
WLTPctPFPA
National Fooflllll leaQue
San Jose
East
Division
8 3 0 727 696 554
BUFFALO BILLS-Agreed to terms woth
Los Angeles 6 5 0 545 585 S98
W L Pet
GB
CB Jason Webster on a one-year con
New
York
28
tS
65t
Utah
5 7 0 4t7 743 7SO
\&lt;Bet
An zona
AHant~
26 t 8 S9t 2112
CINCINNATI BENGALS-Waoved LB
3 9 0 250 680 72t
22 22 500 6 t /2
Las Vegas
A J Nicholson
2 tOO t67 545 749 Phoiadelphla
Florida
21 23 477 7tl2
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS Sogned TE
Was~N1gton
t6 29 356 t3
Friday's Games
RIChard Angulo Warved TE Dan Murray
Central Division
Tampa Bay 59 Anzona 50
MIAMI
OOLPHIONS-Sogned
S
W L Pet
GB
Yeremlah Bell to a one·year contract
Colorado 58 Columbus 40
Milwaukee
28 t7 622
NEW ENGLAND PATAIOTS-Re sognad
Las Vegas 54 Utah 53
Houston
2t 23 4n 6tl2
LB Juntor Seau
Saturday'e Gamee
Chocago
20
22
476
6tl2
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Named
Nashville 44 Chocago 27
Ptttsburgh
19 24 442 8
Shane Day quairty control coach
Los Angeles 57 Georgta 51
Cmonnat1
t8 27 400 tO
HOCKEY
San Jose 69 Grand Rap1d$ 44
St Lours
t6 25 390 tO
National Hockey League
Sunday's Games
West Division
NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Sogned LW
New York 62 Kansas Coty 56
W L Pet
GB
Sean Bentrvogho to a three-year contract
Orlando 46 Austtn 45
los Angeles
25 20 556
Named Pat Btngham ass stant coach for
Friday, May 25
San Drego
24 20 545
t /2
Brodgeport (AHL)
Utah at O~ando 7 30 p m
Anzona
2S 2t 543
112
NEW YORK RANGERS-Agreed IO
San Jose at Nashville 8 p m
San Francisco 22 22 500 2 tl2
terms With F Brod e Dupont
Saturday, May 26
1
Colorado
t8 27 400 7
WASHINGTON CAPITALS- Sogned C
Los Angeles at Kansas C1ty 6 p m
1 NICklas Backstrom
Tampa Bay at Georgta 7 p m
Sunctey'a Gamae
COLLEGE
Colorado at Grand Rapids, 7 p m
Detro1t 6 St Louis 3
ARKANSAS UTILE ROCK'-Extended
Dallas at Columbus 7 p m
Cleveland 5 Ctnctnnati 3
the contracts of mens basketball coach
Ch1cago at Anzona, 1o p m
Anzona 5 Ptttsburgh 2
Steve Sh elds and women s basketball
Sunday, May 27
Philadelphia 5 Toronto 3
coach Joe Foley for one year through the
! Ph1ladelphra at Austtn 4 p m
Washmgton 4 Baiumo re 3
2011 12 school year
1 Monday May 26
Flonda 4 Tampa Bay 3
NEW ENGLAND- Named Anthony
New York at New Orleans p m
t Boston 6 Atlanta 3
Ewmg women s basketball roach

I

wEg;,'i!]~.;o:';.:!f:cE

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PRo FOOTBALL

.

playoff low was 18 potnts,
was outscored by five of hts
teammates until he made
two stratght shots toward
the end of the thtrd quarter.
"We've JUSt got to be
aggressive and know where
he 1s at all times on the
floor," Hamtlton satd of
James "Our guys did a
great JOb of belpmg out If
he makes the pass and they
score we'll hve wtth tt "
The Cavs - tn theu first
Eastern Conference fmal
smce 1992 - fell to 0-12 m
Game Is on the road
For the fifth straight year,
DetrOit is among the NBA's
final four and Its ell.penence
seemed to help
The Ptstons dtdn 't get dtscouragell when Cleveland

got off to a good start and
they made JUSt enough shots
and stops tn the closmg
mmutes to start the series
With a VICtory
The Cavs led by as many
as mne -pomts m the first
half and dtdn't tratl m the
game until DetrOit started
strong m the third quarter
w1th a block and shot-clock
vtolatton on defense along
with a 3-pomter and hook at
the other end of the coun.
The Ptstons went on an 80 run to take a ftve-pomt
lead and they led 56-55
entenng the final quarter.
Detroit fell back behmd m
the fourth and dtdn't lead
unttl Btllups made a threepomt play and a 3-pointer
for a 71 -68 lead wtth mtd-

f:mru!

classlfted@ myda1lytnbune .com

I

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I•

sound smart, Kurt Busch
can be kind of cool.
Kyle Bu sc h~ Not so
much
When he ftrst was
stgned by Hendnck to
dnve the No 5 Chevrolet,
Kyle Busch vowed to use
everythmg he'd seen hts
brother struggle through
as a lesson on what not to
do_ He's mstead done JUSt
the oppostte ·
He comes off as arrogant and entnled, and veterans repeatedly gnpe
Busch never wants to Itsten to the1r advice. Twotime champiOn Tony

I

Stewart felt hke he was
talktng to a wall when he
tned to counsel Busch
after thetr 2006 tangles
And after Bu sch and
Mears had Issues last season, Busch Immaturely
satd he dtdn' t know how
to get m touch WIth Mears
to dtscuss It Never mmd
that these guys live mches
apart m the motorhome lot
38 weekends a year
Hendnck ts a pattent
man who can put up wtth
an awful lot And there's
no reason to believe that
enough ttme tn the
Hendnck
organtzatton

way through the quarter.
Just when tt seemed that
the Ptstons had control, the
Cavs showed plenty of
resolve m the back-andforth quarter.
Notes Faces in the crowd
mcluded several Detroit
Ttgers, mcluding Ivan
Rodnguez
and
Gary
Sheffield, along
with
Atlanta Hawks guard
Tyronn Lue, one of Btllups'
best fnends
Webber had
a strong thtrd quarter after
leavmg the game m the first
quarter wnh two fouls
The Cavs shot JUSt 37 percent from the field, but
compensated for 1t by tummg 18 offenstve rebounds
mto 17 second-chance
pomts.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

won't eve ntually make
Busch grow up and start
behavmg the way a good
Hendnck dnver ts expected to
But wtth Dale Earnhardt
Jr sllttng on the open market , wanting desperately
to ht tn wtth an organtzatton committed to helpmg
htm wm champwnshtps.
one has to wonder tl
Hendnck should take a
long hard look at maktng
ll happen
Who know s~ Maybe
room No 5 at the
Hendnck tnn suddenly
could open

the Nationals off to the 6-0
lead m thetr homecomms;
Wtth hts game-openmg
from Page Bl
smgle. Lopez stdrted one ot
Washmgtun 's btggest ralites
of
the season The Nationals
chance to htt the ball out of
sent
I0 batters to the plate
the park I feel pretty good
m
a
20-mmute, 49-pttch
wtth htm commg up there "
tnmng
agamst Bronson
Rauch made a btg mtstake
Arroyo,
who lasted only
on a one-ball, two-stnke
two
mmngs
pttch to Valentm
"I never got mto It," satd
"I wanted the pttch to
Arroyo,
who threw a comValentm down and awav,
an.d I left 11 over the mtd- plete game 111 hts last start
dle," Rauch satd "Of "I walked some guys I
course, I' m down on shouldn't have Just one of
myself I'm not gettmg the those games "
Dmnn Young doubled
JOb done"
home
a patr of runs dunng
The game umted the NL's
the
four-run
rall y, and sintwo worst teams of thts seagled
ahead
of Kearns'
son, and reumted players
mvolved tn one of last sea, homer tn the second mntng
son's btggest trades - one for a 6-0 lead - btg stuff
that's dtsputed to thts day for a team that hasn't scored
The Nationals are last m the more than seven runs m any
NL East, wtth the Reds at game thts season
the bottom of the NL
As usual, the Nationals
Central
dtdn 't deal well with prosThey're also linked by a ·penty
Rookte Leva)e
gnevance.
Spetgner gave up five runs
Washington got Kearns m three 4nnmgs, mcludmg
and shortstop Fehpe Lopez Hatteberg's two-run homer
m an e1ght-player deal wah and Gnffey's solo shot m
the Reds last July 13 The ' the thtrd Spetgner opened
Reds filed a gnevance thts the season m long relief,
month claJmtng that general and ts trymg to help the
manager Jtm Bowden NatiOnals' InJUry-depleted
who was ftred m Cmcmnatt rotatiOn
m 2003 - failed to fully
Notes Stnce he returned
mform them about Garv to h1s accustomed spot at
Majewski's sore pltchmg thtrd m the battmg order on
shoulder before the trade
May 3, Gnffey has hll seven
The teams hadn't played of hts mne homers He batsmce the deal Lopez and ted fourth or fifth early m
Kearns had roles m gettmg the season

•

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*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
'lti&amp;ct or cancel any
ad at any time
).Errors Must B
eported on the !Irs
ay of publication an
he Trlbune-5antlnet
egtster
will b
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ore than the coat o
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y the error and onl
he lirat Insertion W
hall not be liable fo
ny loll or axpens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omls
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ent Corrections wll
mode In the II
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dvertlsements ar
ubject to the Fodera
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any lo.. or expanae that results from the publication or om1se1on of an advertisement Correction will be 11'1108 In the first available edHion • Box
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are always confidential

Il l II I ' i l i l
kttncarlyle@comcast net

-~----­

Reward yeilow&amp;whtte male

cat m1ss1ng stnce 5/11 from

Gavrn Street m Rodney
VIllage 2 SUbdiVISIOn Family
pet named NJIMMY" Mrssed
Concealed&amp;Carry Class very much Any info call
NRA Cart lns1 Bam sharp 675 2046 between 9am
June 2 Mercerville Ftre 9pm
Dept 740 256-65 t4 or
.:.::__ _ _ _ _ __
starkey@ rnbo&gt;: com
Set of Ford keys bund on
Ractne eKt\ ramp off At 33
Taylor Famtly Aeunton
Has OSU key nng Kroger
June 3rd at Krodel Park card,740 246-4601
Sheller House 2
Small tnstde epncot teacup
poodle answers to the
GIYF.AWAV
name Spunky He has a bad
back leg and can t really
• 3 adorable 7 week old kit· JUmp Was last seen around
tens to gtveaway to good 1pm at the Hartford Apts on
Mothers Day Reward offered
home 740 949-92t7
of lound Call 304 593 6802
4 year old fema)e cato-~r8~8;:;2..;3;;.70;.;2;..._ _ _..,
spayed declawed shots up
to date Call 304 67S 2948
YARD SALE

t

1

"lt"'to,....Hw&gt;--W-ANIID--..,~~110 HELP WAN'llilJ

t.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _, -

NURSING
ASSISTANT
ADO Rockspnngs Nursmg
and Reh(lbthtatron Center rs
look1ng for a lew dedrcated
people to become a part of
our team We are a 100 bed
sk1lled facriity located 5
mtles from Pomeroy This Is
a 20 mtnute commute from
Athens and Albany We JUS!
recently mstailed a state of
the art on hne documents
tron system for the nurs 1ng
assrstants wh1ch reduce
paper work trme constder
ably We offer competrt1ve
rates health dental and
vrsron rn surance as well as
a 401 K plan We are a low
lift faclrty whteh has reduced
Mtddieton Estates ts now
our back mtunes to almost 0
htrmg dtrect care staff You
We have 2 posrtrons on 2 to
will be part of a team that
provrdes servtees to rndiVId 1o PM shrft and 1 on 10 to
6AM shtft Stop by and f1ll
uais wtth mental retardaUon
out
an appltcat1on and
and de\lelopmental dtsab1l1
tres Must have \lal d dnvers recetve an tn!ervtew Monday
through Fnday between
hcense and h1gh school
9AM and 4PM ~oclc:sprmgs
dtploma or GED We pro
15 an equal opportumty
v1de on the lob tramrng If
you would like to take
employer
advantage of thiS opportunr
ty you may apply at 8204
Carta Dnve Monday thru
Friday 8 00 4 00 An Equal
INTERVIEWS
Opportunity Employer
FIMIDN
Now otfertng a
Full ttme reparr te chnt c1an
$300 Hmng
needed
Bonus'
Duties to rnclude repatr and
testmg of portable equrp
men! Travel tniiOived tn the
Wednesday
testtng
of
equtpment
May 23rd
throughout West Vtrg ma
$300 HtRtNG BONUSI Kentuclcy and Ohro Prefer
10 OOam-J·OOpm
someone detail onented
Plus much morel
mechamcaliy tncltned salf
242 Thtrd Avenue
starter and dependabl e
t Up to S8 SD/hour
GaHtpolrs OH
Wril tram Marl resume to P
+Weekly boouses
+Weekly pay
0 Box 339
tf unable to attend
• Pa1d Holtdays vacallcms Ravenswood wv 26164
please call
and tratntng
I 877 463 6247
• Full benefits
ext 4256
• Professronal work
to schedule an
Good experrenced gnll and
atmosphere
1nterv1ew
food prep cook 3 ~4 2nd
a\le No Phone Calls
Cai!Todayt
www lnfoclslon com
Hallmark Card Shop at Oh10
1-877-463-6247 ext
Atver Plaza Galltpolrs wtll
2321
rnterv1ew for all posrt1on on
$7 50 an hour for farm work Tuesday May 29 t 2-2pm ,.
OTR, Regional,
rn
letart
Ohro
call
Help wanted at Darst Adult
Flatbed, Reeler &amp;
(3041273-2999
Group Home 1some lrftrng
Tanker Drivers
100WORKERS NEEDED 7 S shoft, 740-992 S023
Assemble crafts
wood
ttems To $480/wk Materrals
TO DRIVE
provided Free tnformatton
pkg 24Hr 80t -428 4649
ALLIANCE
Massive lllCf9BS6 of
TRACTOR TRAILER
Acceptrng apphcattons lor
busmss from local
TRAINING
CENTERS
cashiers and sub shop work
customers/ Looking for
'FULL TIME CLASSES'
ers Must be avatlable to
expenenced and
COL TRAINING'
work all shrfts No Phone
• FINAAC~G AVAILABLE'
non expenenced dnvers.
• JOB PLACEMENT' '
calls please Apply at Par
Orl~tr ~gb loli~IIWI
CelebraUnr 28 YNrt In Suslntss
Mar 42, 150S4 St At t60
rues , 5122 t oam 5:30pm
Wyth eville Vngm1a
Vmton or Par Mar 43 56
at Red Roof Inn
t 8()()-334 t203
Vrne Street Galhpohs
tooo Acy Ave
. _ llliancelractortmi!Gr oom
Jackeon,
OH 45640
Local Insurance Co iooktng
Ohto Valley Home Health
Apply 6 get quoiiflad
for representah\le to servroe
INC h rmg Per Orem or
on the spot!
local areas. Guaranteer;t ftrst
Contracted Medtcal Soc al
Strong
Frerght Netwo~kyear rncome plus commie
Worl(er Apply at. t480
Blue Cross Insurance
s1on
MtntmlJm
$t9!i0
Jackson Prke Gallipolis OH
800-248-7735
monthly Please call 740
or phone 740 44t1393
www prrmemc com
70t-2'557

Payment around $550 pet
month 740 367 7t29

L--•'ii'OiiiRiiSi\iiUiiio
: _,-

1989 Clayton Mobtle Home
14x60 2 Bedroom 1 Bath
wtth a 12~t 18 addtttonal bed
room 12x6 muddroom on
1/2 acre lot wrth charn lmk
fence &amp; 1Ox 10 bulldrng
Askong $40 000 j740)379
2668
-------2 bedroom &amp; bath tor sate
1665 Lrncoln He•ghts
Pomeroy 740 949 2478

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 wtlh vrnyl/shtngle
Must sell Only $25 995 wtth
deh\lery Call (740)385-4367

110

Ht:.u• W-wn:u

12749

STUDENTS FOR THE NA
PROGRAM
Rocksprtngs
Nursrng and Aehab1h!alton
Center 1s located 5 mrles
from Pomeroy and 2ct mtn
utes from Athens and
Albany We currently are
seekrng tOOtvtduats tnterest
ed m attendrng our 75 hour
Nursmg Asststant Program
whrch wt!J start June 4
2007 Thts class ts free of
charge and begtns wtlh 2
volunteer days thai w1ll altoN
you to see what the JOb con
ststs of frrst hand We allow
12 students per class so
they fdl up qu1ckly Please
coma rn and complete an
app lrcat10n tf mterested
Aocksprmgs ts an equal
opportuntly employer

Lw--.iiltiliiiio--'

Medr Home Prrvale Care
now acceptmg appllcatrons
for dependable STNA CNA
CHHA PCA tor more mfor
malton pleaso contact Laura
at 740 446 4148

'-----!1111_.1

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
A\lg Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
lncludtng Federal Beneftls
and OT Pauj Tratntng
Vacattons FT/PT
1 600 584 1775 Ext #8923
____u_s~
w_A_~~
Prolessronal FundraiSEHS
needed Part/Full ltm e 3
shtfts da~y 7 days a ......eek
$9 ht. after pad tra 1nmg + &amp; Trrmmmg Ca li (740)441
t333 or (740)64S 0546
Benehts Contact us toclayt
888
97
4
JOBS
or
1
Professtonally
Clean
www 168897 4Jobs com
Off1ce / Ho u seclea n 1n g
Scenrc H !Is Nurs ng Center References (304)675 2208
ts currently accepting apph
II\ 1\1 I II
cattons for a Human ;;;=~:;;;;;;;;==~
Resources
Manager
10
B USINFSS
Apph[;ants must posses
OPI'ORTUNfrY

L

Autos for Sale
• 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............. 750
Building Supplies , ..... , • .. .. .. • • .. ... 550
Buslneaa and Buildings , • .. • • ....... 340
Business Opportunity ..... ........... ,, 210
Buslneaa Training ............................ 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .... .. .. • ........ 790
Camping Equipment • •
780
Cards of Thanks , ..... .. .. .. .. .. ...... 01 0
Child/Elderly Care
190
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeratlon ................. 840
Equipment for Rent
480
Excavaling.... . .. .. • • ... ...
• .. 830
Farm Equipment..... • ..
• ........,. 610
Farma for Rent...
•
430
Farms for Sale. .. .... .. ... .... .. • • • • .... 330
For Leaae.......... .. .... ... • • • • • • • • ... 490
For Sale......... .. .. .. ............ .......... . 585
For Sola or Trade •
..
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ....,.. .. ............... 580
Furnished Rooms
450
General Hauling............. .... ...... 850
Gl•eaway
•
• ................ 040
Happy Ada ..................................... 050
Hay &amp; Grain .. .... • ........... ............... 640
Help Wanted.- .. .. • • .. .. ...... 110
Home lmpro•emenls. • .. • • .. • ..• •• 810
Homes for Sale
... ... .. •
... • • 310
Household Goods. • .. .. .. ........ 510
Housaa for Rent
4t0
In Memoriam. , .. ... • , , .. .. • • • •••• 020
Insurance
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
•
• ••• 660
livestock
• • .... • .. 630
Loot and Found • • •
... .. • .060
Lots &amp; Acreage .. .. ..
.. .. .. .. 350
Mlscellaneou~.. • .. • • • • • • •
170
Mlscellaneou4 Merchandise •
, ••• 540
Mobile Home Repair
860
Mobile Homes for Rent • •
• 420
Mobile Homes for Sale
320
Money to Loan ... • .. • .. .. • ... ... • .. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers • • •
• 740
Musical Instruments • .. • • • .. • • • ... 570
Personals . . . . . . . . . . ..........
005
PetalorSale .......
,,
....... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .. .. • • • • • •
• • 820
Prolesalonal Ser•lces .. , .. • • ..
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair. • ............. 160
Real Eatate Wanted
360
Schoolalnatructlon ........................ 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer
• • ........ 650
Sltualions Wanted .. ,. ,, ................. 120
Space for Rent .. • .. • • • .. .. ........... 460
Sporting Good a, • .... .. .. .. .. .. • .. ........ 520
suv·s tor Sale .... -........................... 720
Trucks for Sale .... ,.,_,,,,, .. ........ 715
Upholstery ' .. .. ..................... . , , ........... 870
Vans For Sale ...
- 730
Wantod to Buy ..............1• .. • .. .... ....... 090
Wontod to Buy- Farm Suppllaa • • ...... 620
Won tad To Do .................................... 180
Wantod to Rent .. ,,,_,, ......... , .... , ...... 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis .......... , ........ • • .. 072
Yard 5ale-Pomeroy/Mtddle .......... ...... D74
Yard SOle-Pt. Plaaoant.. ............... 076

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today• 740 446 4367
' 800 21 4 0452

and SctOOs

pZ

CLASSIFIED INDEX

HOMFJ;

L._...;FUiiliKiiSiiiAU:iiii-_.1

AccredJtcd Merrber AccJedlhng
Counc11 lor Independent Colleges

Chihuahua Female Long - coat tr1co!or sweetheart 0 ,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _.., L:::...::::;:.:..:.!...:.;N;:E::,A::,.::'n:::c::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _w_w_w_c_o_m_oc_s_c_o_m-1
6t4 690 8606
YARD SALE-

GALIJPOLI'!

HOMFJ;

FOKSAU

Truck Dnver needed must
have a good duvmg record
Send Resumes to Twtn
R1 ver HardiNOods Inc 2612
US Route 35 Souths de
wv 2St87

vrww yt~l~pol1sca eercollege com

Br

Famale black boo taoi &lt;otten
304 576 2399

to

"'"'''""''I

Mtntalure farm Umbut!t
home on 4 acres on SA
5269/mo' Buy GALLIPD 160 3BR 1BA Peaches
LIS Foreclosure! 1-4 bed bernes grapes Swtmmlng
homes from 199/mo 5% pool New applrances Wood
down, 20 years at 8'"o burner $66 000 740 388 •
More hOmes available For 08 t S
-::&lt;:1!'""-~----, . loca listings call 8011-559- ~------­
r.
4109 xF254
On Marn St New Haven WV
Well kept New apphances
0 Down even wtth less than Newly remodeled bat11room
perfect credit Is a\lallable on New heat pump Call 304
thts 3 bedroom ~ bath 862 3773 for detatls
home Corner lot ftreplace
MOBILE H0\1~
Gallipolis Career College moclern k1tchen 1acuzzr tub

Mule call to identtfy 304
576 2002

r

tO

HELl' WA.vtlll

FOUND Apple Grove araa

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SECOND ~NNOAL REUNION
MOOSE LODGE MAY 26,
2007 8 t 00 ENTERTAIN
MENT 1304)675 483t OR
1740)446 3488

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{.;;:,
m
Borders $3.00/per ad
f!ii4
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Rummage Sale at Clay
•
Free sofa and love seat Townhouse Tuesday May
Poor condttton
Cali 22
Ambrosta Machme Inc
This
newspape
between 4pm and 9pm
WANfElJ
Pomt Pleasant WV (304)
ccepts only hal
675 t722 13041675 t723
740
992
7807
TO
BUY
anted ads meetin
fax Machrn~st 5 years or
Free to gOOd home Small
OE standards
more expener.ce $8 $12 per
male brown and whtte dog Absolute Top Dollar US
hour
)We will not knowing
very lroendly Call 740 794- Srlver and Gold Coms On Hand Shop Foreman
0425
y accept any adver
Proofsets Gold Rrngs Pre Mach ne Shop &amp; Fabncahon
laement In vlolatlo
1935
US
Cur{ency knowledge 10 years or more
Old hay good for feed or
f the law
Sohtarre Dramonds M T S experrence $12$15 per
mulch (740)992 3989
Com Shop 151 Second hour
Avenue Gaihpolrs 740 446
2842
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
I 111'10\ \ II \I
4x4's For Sale • .. • • ................. 725
Call Manlyn 304 882-264S
Announcement , • ...................... 030
"' IIH it I '
Antiques ... • •
• • • • • • • ... 530
AVONI All Areast To Buy or
Apartmantslor Rent
.440
110
Sell Shorley Spears 304
Auclion and Flea Market
• .. .. • ...... 080
,
Hlli'WANTID
67S t429
1
Auto Pal'ls &amp; Accessories
760
Care Staff
Auto Repair .. •
.. ........................ 770

•I

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a

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CLASSIFIED

TRANSACTIONS

Worst

game. We had an opportumty to wm"
Game 2 IS Thursday mght
at The Palace before the
senes shtfts to Cleveland
Btllups scored 10 of hts
13 pomts m the final quarter, mcludmg a 3-pmnter
that gave the Ptstons a 7876 lead wtth I 52 left
Det~oll' s
Rtchard
Hanulton scored 24 pomts
and had seven asststs, whtle
Rasheed Wallace had 15
points, 12 rebounds and a
career-high seven blocks
and Chris Webber scored I0
pomts Tayshaun Prmte
added eight pmnts, a playoff
career-h1gh mne ass1~ts and
chest-to-chest defense on
James
Prince was on James on
the Cavaliers' play that
ended with Marshall's shot
"That's a play we didn't
want to happen," Hanni ton
satd. "We wanted eyerybody to stay home but
LeBron goes to the basket
and draws so much attention Donyell JUSt mtssed "
Zydrunas Ilgauskas had
22 points and 13 rebounds
for the Cavs, takmg advantage of James ' pass-first
strategy Larry Hughes and
reserve Anderson VareJao
each scored 13 pomts
James, whose prev10us

.

Wool OMolon

LoaAnoetos

(BMt-of-7)

fromPageBl

~

-

CONFEREt«:E FINALS

Pistons

.

e

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

2007

Texas 14 Houston 1
M !waukee 6 Mnnesota 5
Chteago Whtle SoK 10 Chteago Cubs 6
Kansas City 10 Colorado 5 12 mnrngs
L A Angels 4 L A Dodgers 1
San Drago 2 Seattle 1
San FranciSCO 4 Oakland 1
N Y Yankees 6 N Y Mets 2
Monday s Games
Cmctnnah 8 Washtnglon 7
Anzona 6 Colorado 5
M~waukee 9 L A Dodgers 5
San Franctsco 4 Houston 0
Tuesdays Games
Philadelphia (Hamels 6 1) at Florrda
IOisan 3 3) 7 05 p m
Washrngton (Ch1co 3 4) at Cmc1nnat1
j5aarloos 0 3) 7 10 p m
N Y Mets (JSosa 3-D) at Atlanta (Da\ltes
t 2) 7 35 p m
Prttsburgh (Duke 1 4) at St Louts
(Wa1nwnght 3 3) 8 10 p m
Colorado (Fogg 1 5) at Arizona
(l Hernandez 4 2) 9 40 p m
Chtcago Cubs (Hill 4 3) at San Otego
(Peavy S 1) tO OS p m
Mrlwaukee (Sheets 4 2) at L A Dodgers
IWoll 5-3) tO tOp m
Houston (Oswalt 6 2) at San Franc1sco
(Lrncecum 1-Q) 10 15 p m
Wednesdays Games
Philadelphia at Flonda 7 05 p m'
Washrngton at C nctnnatr 7 10 p m
N Y Mets at Atlanta 7 35 p m
Plttsbur!IJ at St LOUIS 8 10 p m
Colorado at Anzona 9 40 p m
Chtcago Cubs at San Otego 10 05 p m
Milwaukee at L A Dodgers 10 10 p m
Houston at San Franmsco 10 15 p m
Thursdays Games
Ptttsburgh at St Lou1s 1 10 p m
Ph1ladelph18 at Flonda 7 05 p m
Washrngton at Clnctnnatt 7 10 p m
N Y Mets at Atlanta 7 35 p m
Houston at Anzona 9 40 p m
Chcago Cubs at San Drego 10 05 p m

American Le~ue
East Dlvloloii
WL
Pet
GB
Boston
30 t4 682
New York
20 23 465 811
Battomore
20 24 45S - tO
Toronto
19 24 442 10 ..
Tampa Bay
18 25 419 11 •
I
Central Division
I
W L PctGB
Cleveland
27 15 643
Detroit
27 1
628 h
Chocogo
22 t9 637 4\
Minnesota
20 24 455 8
Kansas Cny
17 2&amp; 378 11 ~

PRo HOCKEY

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Nattonal Hockey Lesgue
San Antonio va. Utah
Pleyotf Glance
Sunday May 20 San Antonoo t08 Utah
AiiTimeaEDT
100 San Antonto leads senes t-o
1
FIRST ROUND
Tuesday May 22 Utah at San Antomo,
(Beet-of-7)
9pm
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Saturday May 26 San Antomo at Utah
Buffalp 4 N Y lalanders 1
830 p m
Buffalo 4 N V Islanders 1
Monday May 28 San Antomo at Utah 9
N V Islanders 3 Buff~Jo 2
pm
Buffalo 3 N Y islanders 2
Wednesday May 30 Utah at San
Buffalo 4 N Y Islanders 2
Antonto 9 p m rf necessary
Buffalo 4 N Y Islanders 3
Fnday June 1 San Antonto at Utah 9
p m rf necessary
New Janey 4. Tsmpa Bay 2
Sunday June 3 Utah at San Antomo
New Jersey 5 Tampa Bay 3
8 30 p m 11 necessary
Tampa Bay 3 New Jersey 2
Tampa Bay 3 New Jersey 2
Women'• National
Now Jersev 4 Tampa Bay 3 OT
Belklflllll Association
New Jersey 3 Tampa Bay 0
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ne" Jersey 3 Tampa Bay 2
WL Pet
GB
Connectlc~
t 0 t 000
N.y. Bangars4. Atl•nte o
Detrott
1 0 1 000
N Y Rangers 4 Atlanta 3
I lndoana
t 0 t 000
N Y Rangers 2 Atlanta 1
New York
1 0 1 000
N Y Rangers 7 Atlanta 0
Ch1cago
0 1
000
N Y Rangers 4 Atlanta 2
Washrngton
0 1 000
1

Tuesday, May 22,

PRo BASEBALL

I

I

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Golden State 4. Dllla• 2
Golden State 97, Dallas 85
Dallas 112, Goklen Slate 99
Golden State t09 Dallas 9t
Golden Stale t 03, Dallas 99
Dallas 118 Golden State 112
Golden State 111 Dallas 85

PageB2

D~ect

'PRIME inc.

'

knowledge of Workers
Compensation OSHA and
wage and hoor reguiatrons
computer
sktlls
etc
Excellent commumcatton
slulls are a must EKpenence
1n a long term cara setttng ts
preferred If Interested
please conlact Dtanna Fitch
at 740 44£ 71SO EOE

- - - - -- - -

7 Room House w~h larue lot
located al 10 Ra1troad St
Mrddleport Oh1o Phone
740 992 3764

NICe used 3 becroom home
vrnyl/shrngte Wtll help wrlh
delivery 740 365 4367
OWNER FINANCING
Ntce 3/2 Slngiewtdes
From $1 800 down
payment
Scott (7 40) 828 2750

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program $0 Down II you
own Land 0 1 use Famrly
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
Land We own tne Bank your
grams for you to buy your
Approvecl606 474 6380
home mstead ol renttng
100% ftnanctng
FARMS
' Less than perfect credrt
FUR
SAIL
180
accepted
WANIIJ&gt;
' Payment could be the
ToDo ·
same as rent
Brand new log home wrth 60
Mortgage
Locators acres MIL $180 000 Cali
Do you need a Care g ver (740 )367 0000
740 256 9247
for a elderly man tn the c_c==:_::.:..:.c_
_ __
Mason/Ga!ha area? Call Beaut1lu! Mtddleport hamel
loTs &amp;
740 578 1109 after 7pm
3BR 2BA lull basement
ACRFAGf
Many NEW featuresll Must t..-•iiiiiiiiiiii'-_.1
see
thts one1740 41&amp; 1548 10 acres located on Broad
Lawn Care Servtce Mowtng

r~=~=~~=~
•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do busmess w th
people you know and
NOT 10 se nd money
through t~e marl unttl you
have

r

mves!lgated

the

ServtceMaster has tanrtonal lo;lf~er:•n:g:;:;:===~
pos111ons avat!abte n the !':
Apple Gro\le area F1.11! lrme
MONI:.'Y
hours M F Call 304 529
1'0 LOAN
7378
STAFFING
COORD INA
TOR Rockspnngs Nurstng
and Rehabrhlatton Center IS
lookmg for a few dedrcated
people to become a part of
our team We are a 100 bed
sk11ted lactltty located 5
m1ies from Pomeroy Th1s 1s
a 20 mmute commute from
Athens and Albany We are
currently seekmg a Licensed
Pract cal Nurse for a staff1ng
coordmator
posrtton
Requirements are 3 years
mtntmum rn long term care
Expertence tn staff develop
ment and or management a
plus Thts posttton conststs
of tntervtewtng hmng and
scheduimg nursmg staff
Thts also rnclud es the deter
mtnat1on ol onentatron and
preceptors Trainrng and
education of staff as well as
momtorrng staff health and
weHare If rnterested send a
resume to Rockspnngs
36759 Aocksprmgs Road
Pomeroy Ohto 45769 or fax
to 740 992 2678 attentron
Candy
Stmpson
Rocksprrngs 15 an equal
opportuntty employer

3 BA 1BA. large Fam11y
F!oom frtdge W/0 Large
lot can 441 5826 or 446
g664

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$2 14 36 per month Includes
many upgrades del very &amp;
set up I740)38S 2434

uNOTICt:u
Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohto DMston of
Ftnanc al
tnsutufiOn s
Office of Consumer
Affarrs BEFORE you refr
nance your home or
obtarn a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments ol
fees or msur~nce Cali the
Offrce of Consumer
Affatrs toll free at 1 866
278 0003 to learn tf the
mortgage broker or
lender
tS
properly
licensed (Thts ts a public
serv1ce announcement
from the Otuo Vall ey
Publrshmg Company)

:;:;::::::::::~
PRO~NAL

L---SiiERiivtiiliCEl&gt;--•
CHUCKS
PRESSURE
WASHING decks stdtng
dnveways tarm eqwpment
srdewatks boats and more
NO JOB TO SMALL
Aes1denltal or Commeretal

Tru ck Dnvers needed Must 1740)645 2178
have good dnvlng record
Please send resume to Twrn
TURNED DOWN ON
Rtver Hardwood 2612 US SOCIAL SECU~ITY ISSI1
HWY 35 Southsrde WV
No Fee Unless We Wtnt
t 868 582 3345
25187

Attention!

Local company offertng ·No

r

Run Road rn New Haven
$38 500 304 773 S881

Rf:AL f.srAl'E
WANI'Ell
Afl real eatale advertrsrng
tn this nl!wt paper is
subject to the Federal
Farr Housmg Act ol1968
wtueh makes 1t Illegal to
advertise any
preference llmi!atron or
dtacr1mlnatlon based on

race, color retrglon sex
famthai status or nat1ona!
origin or any 1ntent1on to
make any such
preference hmltatlon or
discrimination

newspaper w11f not
knowtngty accept
advertisements lor real
estate wh1ch 11 m
violation of the law Our
readers are hereb~
tnformed that all
dwellings advertised 10
thiS newspaper are

Th ts

available o n an equal
opportunity

Need to sell your home?
Late ot1 payments dtvorce
JOb transfer or a death? I
can buy your home All cash
andqurckciostng 740 416
3130
Ill \I liS

tO

St58/mo' Buy 4bd home
HUO r 5% dn 20yrs @ 8°o
For Lrs!lngs BOO 559 4109
x1709
1 br cia wid sto\le relnger
ator water &amp; gas 1ncluded
$400 per mo $200 dep
negot able located on 143
Pomeroy
(740)992 4163
!eave message

bases

3 Bedroom House tn
Syracuse $500/month +
Enjoy thrs spac ous 5 BR 2 deposrt No Pets (304)675
Ba home located n Galha 5332 weekends 74D-59 1
Co on the banks 01 0265
Raccoon Creek Well land
scaped 1 33 acre yard wrth 3 bedroom 2 full bath house
paved u shaped dnveway tn Pomeroy newly remod
Detached pate garage large eled nrce hardwood floors
enough for car and boat ale full basement plenty of
storage Many eKtras rnclud krtchen cabinets ntce half
rng hot tub monttored secu acre yard $685 per month
nty system and covered ptc (740)949 2303 740 591
nrc areas by creek Direct _3_92_0_ _ __ _ __
access to Ohto Rtver and
3 bedroom 3 m1tes from
accessrble
Pomeroy on 143 D Wtde
wrth attached garage no
pets partial furntshed $375
mo plus deposrt (740)992
740t

,,

3 BA house tn 'Galltpolts
W/D connect orr $435/mo
Also 1 BA rn Gal!rpohs
$250fmo No pets Call
- - - - - - - - Wayne 404 456 3802 for
For Sale by Owner 2000 sq tnformatra1
It Home less than a m1!e
Ntce 3 br 1 ba hotJse tn
oUI Sandhtl! Ad Large prt
Mason 1 car garage base
vale lot As Is 304 675 3779
ment da btg yard walktng
HUD HOMES• 4 bedooom ~stance
to
Walmart
only $199/mo 3 bedroom mctudes appliances &amp; wash
$203/mo More 1 4bed er &amp; dryer references and
homes avatlable 5% dn 20 deposrt reqwred $475 740
yrs @ 8% For hstrngs BOO 416,6622 740 4t6 6629
also available furntshed
559 4109 ext F144

�Tuesday, May 22, 2001
ALLEYOOP
A-1
1 and 2 bedroOm apai-t·
local company offering ' NO ments, furnished and unlur·
DOWN

PAYMENr progr~ms for you to buy your
home instead of ~enting.
• 100% financing
• less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
! Locators.
(7 40)367-0000

~

nished. and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport.
security deposit required . no
pets, 740-992-221 8. :

V

BA

unfurnished

apt

Full-time position for front
office staff in an extremely
busy medical office. Prior
·. medical office or medical
facility experience desired.
Must be computer literate
and a multi-lasker. Non·
smokers only. Please
submit resume, reference
and salary history to:

un~ in Mason. newly renO- Range. fridge, garage and

appliances, washer &amp; dryer c446-·2_56_1- - - - &amp; water, references &amp; 2br. Apl. in Pt. Pleasant
deposit Tequired, $450, 740" Newty remodeled. $475/mo.
416-6622, 740-416·6629, utllittes
paid,
depsoil
ahso available furnished
required (304)G?S-S63S.

Duplex, 2 br.. '1 ba .. ~per
unit in Mason, wood floors,
l)eW windows. appliances &amp;
water inclUded. references &amp;
deposits required. $425,
740-416-6622. 740-4166629

LPN-PH
or Medical Assistant

ACROSS

Johnson's Tree
a.llpol.., OH 45131

c.....-.r.. c...

-......-

Top•Trtm·~· . . . .

~· . . . . . fAA
llwwM•fn.~

7....... 1......,

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Resource s,
2520 Valley Drive,

• Top • Removal

25550
(304)674-2417
or fax to (304) 675-6975
AAIEOE

Point Pleasant: WV

• Trim • Stump

East End
Storage

740-367-0U6/
1-800-950-3359

Large 4 bedroom noUse in
Pomeroy. very clean, newly
remodeled.- new cabinets.
new carpet, (740)949·2303

NyeAve
Pomeroy,

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

Otl

5x10, 6x10, IOxiO,
10x24

only storage

South

LOOIC; E~Nit, IT'S
It Ft,Ylf'l6 SO~CtlrEtt!

Local Contractor

74()-367-G544

•

Af'l

UNIPtNTIFitl&gt;

FLYING
0LL&gt; MAf'l!

Fnoe Estimates

740-367-G536

.
• e

i

10

HOUSEIIOIJ)Gooos
.

,

I

, p60

New Haven

Gracloul LlYing 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apls. in
Middleport. from S327 to
S592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.
_....:_...:_______ _ _
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
3 br., 2 ba ., room apartments at Village

trailer, cia, $450; 2 br., 1 ba .,
trailer, $365; 2 br. 1 ba. trail·
er. cia. $400; 2 br. 1 be. tra11er, $375; all K1cludes appliances and washer &amp; dryer,

Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $0-$592. Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportul"!ities.
Equal

Emp~er

references
&amp;
deposit Opportunity
required, (304)773-5601 ,
740-416-6629, also avail· MOdern 1 BA Apt. Call446·
able furnished..
3736

MOVJNG Slle! Everything
mu•t gol Multi-family yard
'sale. Appliances, elecl ron·
ics. furniture. etc. For more
info call446·3656

r·--•Goovsiiiil--r'
SroimNG

'

u rt

Nice 2 BA mobile home.
Locate~ at Johnspn
Mobile Home Park. 446·
2003

New 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
AI so, um-,son SR 160. pe1s
Welcome! _(740)44t -0194.

Nice 2BR, 2BA, mobile
home. CIA. private lot in Nice 2br Apt. tor renl qUiet
Gallipolis. $450/mo. Call neighborhood. family orien645·n65 after 6pm please .. tated $450, security deposit
no pets 740·446-742~

r~~~

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for Rent, Meigs County, In
town, N.o Pets, Deposit
Required, (740)992·5174 or
(740)441.0110. -

Ta1a
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Pat io, Start $425/Mo.
No Pels. Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required.
(740)367-7086.

SALE

FOR

s

r

r

FARM

d 30'

ch h 0% financing- 36 Mos.
padded urc. available now on John
870
pews for sale, call ( )565 · Deere Trak Zero Tums &amp;
6128
5.99% Fixed Rate on John
Deere Gators Carmichael
Broyhill dining room table &amp; Equipment (740)446-2412.
6-chairsw/extra leaf, match·
ing lighted hulch excellent Clearance' on New &amp; 'Used
condition $950. 304·675· Rota Tillers. Sate on Disc &amp;
t2381eave message
Plows. Select · 6' Finish
~.,--------- Mowers special price. Jims
Complete computer sys- Farm EquiPment. 740 .446•
tems for sale (15) $125 9777
each, (670)565-6128
Ford 3600 Tractor. Massey
For sale/Best offers: over· Ferg'uson 275 Tractor. 5050
stuffecJ chair, 2 lamps, and AC. l2250 Kubota w/
tables,
oak
doors, mower. 740 •286 -5522
vanity/sink, ab lounger, -------~
palates machine. Call 992· Used Bale wrapper for
4521
Silage call 304·675-4308

z

'-------.,1
10

~------r

4x4
FOR S.W:

. ,.
.

Stanley Tree-

Hil l's Self
Storage

Trimming
&amp; Removal
* Prompt and Quality

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

Work

45m
740-949--2217

*Reasonable Rates
* Insured

6574
--------,-96 Oodge 1500 Club Cab,
4x4, 318 auto, short bed
wttopper, 79,000 miles. like
new in/out. $8000 740.3792 23
7
11!1!'--....- - - - .

i
I

"

.~

FoR SAlE

1998· Chevy Astra Van,
AM/FM Cassette., TVNCR,
PW, Dl, Air, wheelchair lift,
72,900
miles.
$5900.
(740)388·0281 , (304)7735079

THEM FOLKS SHORE DON'T
LIVE 'ROUND MERE !!

a:======~
r
Mushroom Compost
$35AScoop
•T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed,
Fertiliur and
Showmaster Show·
Feeds
Sh ade Ri ve r
Ag Service

--------

"

TV wNCA, towng package •.

7278

;:?

p
ENG 125 ,100 miles. $6200.
::
co~~~i~~-0 1985 (740)367·0622
Corvelle 350 ENG auto r'I04_WMOJURCYIIflllliS
'rus'
Handyman
statidn wagon
glass
all around,
1957
Chevy SW DR 50 auto
2
3
restored 2 bedin a Bag
Queen Annfwing backs
wlfoot' rest chairs 304-675·
5813

--c:-:.,-----

1995 GT Mustang , VB , Auto.
Nice, $4200; 1997 Camara,
V6. Auto. $4200. (740)446·
8172, (740)256·6251.
----~--1999 Corvette Coupe, both
tops, auto, 59,000 mi, all
options, very nice, $19,000,
(740)949-2732
-~-----2004 Chevy Malibu Classic,
Burgundy, 4 cyl. loaded
42000 miles, new Goodyear
tires. Asking $9500 080
245-0611 or 446-9840/ Ask
for Vicky.

Ht. •

THE BORN LOSER

Roofing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

Decks '

V.C. YOUNG Ill

-Call Gary Stanley @

992 62 15

740-742-2293

Pi IIlii ' ''\- 01 11 '
~r 11, Lr r 1' f , I" r

Please leave messa e

,'

'I''It 1'-lE-\/E.\i:. SEW AA'I'~E:""'l
E~\ ~':&gt; ~UCJ\ f.-S l';RUTUS!

95 Coleman pop-up camper,
sleeps 7. king/queen beds,
1998 Kawasakl850 Vulcan, sink, 3 burner in/out stove,
Saddle Bags, Windshield, front storage. $2500 740·
low miles, Super Sharp, 379·2723

1

ROBERT
BISSEll

••m••
• New Homes
• Garages

__

MOIUR HOMEll

• Complete
Remodeling

Prime River lots for Rent~Beautiful Beach··Pienty of
Shade·- For InIo. CaU 740·

992·578~ .

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System ·
• H~lios System

PEANUTS

(Ja.m.i1tJ .~'!.'I.&gt;"!"i'l1~3"4:!'t:'ll•

WeLL, DID YOU ENJO'r'
TI-lE BOOK 7

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

REACH 3 COUNTIES

IMPRoVEMENIS

SUNSHINE CLUB

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

u'ncomtltional ~fetime guarantee. Local referenCes fur·
nished. Esleblishlld 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers easement
Waterproofing.
Top soil $10.00 per ton.
Dozer &amp; Excavating work.
Call740·352·0015

GARFIELD

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace! ·

Manley~ a

Racyclang
11113 Ill It• lllllll•rt II 451111
.
748-812-3184 •

... .....ltfrlll.. lilll D6:11 ••
, . . . . .:. &amp;12:11 ••

-··lllli·•. . ••WIIItlll
PlYING TOP IIICIS •

DIIIIWIII:CIIwwters·Ctl•
. .illltl.......

ICIII l'wlllr.al'rlclll

GRIZZWELLS
I'V ~II&lt;£ To 't'J~II'E
A ~to.\ !'a&gt;l&lt;,

em r9c*li
l&lt;tbW Wlllt.i

io-..1~\~

~be ~allipolis iailp ~ribune

740-446-2342
www .mydailytribune.com

t·

,.

l!loint lllleasant legis'ter The Daily Sentinel

304-675-1333
740·992-2155
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydallysentinelcmiJ

34 Geotoatc
1fonrutilon
35 Nearby

52 Rumor,

5 She, in~ 30 Coni
6 Gorilla

. 7 Went up

8 Cow's

mouthful

Guard off.
31 Tumuft
32 Feverillh

chill

48 Grocefvl

· steed
49 ·Drudod
..,..
50 "'"Wri,.WIIIWIIWIIIrltcr
...,.

51

No matter
Which
por11opo

54 Colton gin
,_

9 Flfl'a dale

SLEPT ALL THE

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetdy CiJhe' CfyljOg!M'IS ae created from !JI(ltalioos bV larntXJs ~- pas: in! P'!!flft
Each kt.er mthe cipher Ulds 10' iiiO!her

Toclly's due: G0/lf•ls Z

" II X Z P L X E A B X _L H.R F H E F'F Z P
KEPA . " ·C.Z. RNKPM
" A Z X C B P R Z P L X R M K· E C E F F

CLEHP OXN R HLRUPKD. "
• I.

AOXHH

IEHGUPLRFK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'You\e only here for a shon Vis~. Don1 htKTY. Don1
worry. Ard be sure to smell the ftowers a~ng the way.· • Golfer. Waner Hagen

....
'=~=' e&lt;e~4llA-4t~s·

AstroGraph

---- -~~~ClAY

" -'llrlhdo\r:

Wedneaday, May 23, 2007
By Bernice Bede Oaot
Although you could be rath8 r forlunale
some projects or ventures that bring you
into contact with the public. don't hesHate
to interact with people on a personal ·or
business level. You'll be at your best with
all Intercommunications.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - If you
anack a member ol your family while in
the presence ol outsiders, all you,'ll
accompliSh Is making a bad impression.
It doesn't matter who Is right or wrong · only who's unrefined ..
CANCER (~une 21·July 22)- Tat&lt;e care
nol to be negativerv preconditioned to
what a friend says about someone ewer'
whom he or she holds a grudge. Your
pal's stance could be totally dlsho~est
and lead you to be anlisoclal.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Make it a point
to be prudent· when It comes to your
financial resources. There's a chance
you could have a tendency to spend way
beyond your means and put yourself In
long·)erm debt.

Ull

II. POIWI.....;.·- - - -

0 r:.ml;!'..&amp;l:"'-i b':
low

10

form four

~mplo

wo«11.

VIRGO (Aug. 2j.Sepl. 22) -:- Don't be

.., 11 n tt 1 ..,

·-iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii...

I DON1T KNOW .. I

WAV THROUGH IT ..

lrrl:mi!"'"-~:""---...,
01 ' 25ft Kingston Hornet.
HOME
New condition, storecJ inside
garage. Sleeps 6, includes 2
tv's. $8500. 388·9815

45 Pral.. very
highly
46 lniiclble

FirsL lock only a1 the WeS1 hand. The
bidding proceeds as giVen. Your i&gt;artner's two-heart opening is weak, show·
ing a deoent ~x-calll su~ ard 5-10 highcard points. You let the adverse vulnera·
bili1y and your defensive prospects dissuade you from going to fi\'6 hewts.
Here. this would protlably prove fo be a
bad decision. II South I~ the spade ace,
wliich is a likely choice, five hearts would

in

140-992-1611

I
•

19 Calculator
figs.
monumen1
22 Paws
21 Ill-mannered
DOWN
23 Fair (~yph .)
onea
25 Fix typos
24 Valuoa
I Camel halts 26 Faint glow
28 Down
2 Shot
27 Cash
goddna ·
3 Divvy up
advance
30 Memorable 4 Tied up the 29 Pianist at
times
phone
Rick's

buddy

60 Undtol•ded

34 Hordes
37 Uno.n
10 Won 39 Starry villa
patticlo
aoup
40 Chopping
38 Old Ft:ench 13 Bubbly
voggles
coin
drink
42 Egg on
39 Waits In line 15 Really enjoy 44 Dons

From South's count
to West's lead

G

BIG NATE

-------70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Wife let me back in house,
446·0007
must sell 2000 Skamper .,_..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
Camper, .$7500 25' comes
with TV, yuy betore she ki~s
,.,.-~--~--, ma ou1 call (740)949-4601
CAMPERS &amp;
or 740·416·4379

111

I\,._\IE f&gt;,. 1-\0U..OW LE.&amp;!

I we Deliver To You!

L,oiioiiitiiiiiiliilio-.-J
-,

r

F£ KNOW~ I ffi\KK.I-\E /t\US~

1700 ' CAMPERS &amp;
~~-•MiiiiomiiiiiiiRiiHiiOIIiiiiiDiiiir·

I

$4000 ·
(740 )446 "8172 •
(740)44S- 8172
Aepo- 04 Harley Davidson
XLB83c. Will be audiooed.
on Thursday May
th at
24
: 0PM at Kyger Creek
4
2
Power p lant. Minimum ·bid
$6000. For more details call
_ _
740 367 5055

Room Acfdltlon• &amp;
Remodeling
New Geragn.
Electrical &amp; Plumbl.,g

Stop &amp; Compare

( ll l''-lt'l
• -111-'1.1' -.\.1 \ I

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I

. WV036725

References Available!

1999 Chevrolet Conversion
Cavaliers, Escorts, Neons, Aslro van, ~
"'C, PIS, P/W,
etc. Gas Savers! 740·446· AM/FM Radio w/Casset1:9

58 Strong soap
59 Bob's road

36 Ratlree'a
kitty

What, 11-oogh, would you lead aganst
lour spades?
If you are suffering lrom deja vu, do no1
feel perturbed. Yes, this is the same deal
as in yeS1erday's C&lt;&gt;umn. Then, WeS1Ied
the heart ace and another hean. South
got a count of the East hard 3rd made
his cornract, losing one spade, one heart
and one 'club.
You can SQe three probable ·defensive
· lricl&lt;s:' the spade king, heart ace and
club ace. You cannot gel a socond heart,:
because your side has 1D hearts
between you . Asocond spade is unlike·
ly. A socond club is possible. But ~ partner has the heart king, you sh&lt;XJid sae
your best shot to dafea1 South's coo1mct:
.Lead your single1on diamond.
•
East should realize that your lead is a
singleton. And in this situation, when
third hand cannot lake 1he lricli, he is
expected to give a suit-preference sig·
nal. Here, he shoukl play the !Iamond
queen or eight, the unnecessarily high
card being a signal lor the higher-rankIng ol the other 1wo sklo suits. Then,
wlien you gel in ..;th your spade king,
you shift to a low heart, puning East on
lead so lhat he can return a diamond.
You ruH and cash the club aca to defltal
the contract.

YOUNG 'S

Patio and Pofch

* Experienced

Hay Square Bales first cutling Good Price · call 304- 2000 Jeep Wronger, yellow,
72l
M
Air, ntt, 4" Lift Kit, Must see
to appreciate, (740)256·

jfio

~!.&gt;~
nu..m. . ~ ~ -Lilli:-•"•~-----~I:A.JVIrJwu:.~,.

,

-.a!'""--~~-..,.,

Full bloodecJ Beagle pups 6
weeks old with shots 304· 2004 Supreme lawn and
675·7324 or304-593·5130 garden tractor. 25 HP. 50"
- - - - - - - - cut, auto trans. only 198
p b d Poodl
·
·
ure re
e pupp1es, hours, like new. $1700 080.
CKC
·51 ed r· sh t
reg1 er , 1rst o s,,. 740-441-1202 or 740-709vet checked, both large &amp; 61 79
small toys, bladt, ·choco
cream &amp; apricot, male &amp;
female, 3 litterrlls. to choos$300e
~~
1rom , ma1es sa
1 ng a1
• 1
FOR SALE
females starting at $350,
(740)992·7007 leave mas·
04 Buicl&lt;
Rendezvous CXL,
sage
,
miles, leather, DVD
120 000
Registered Golden Retriever player, $7000, 740·742·
puppies,
. Call
_
740 2803
.1 5250
·
256 429
10 fo 15 small cars for saie.

h 20
d bl
ec ea
e, Teacup Chihuahuas pup.
1ga· hi
lock ga.
I' 1 oufo e
s ralg s
. spIn er r . pies, 6 weeks old, call
arm, under 6 lbs, IC/M , Sell (740)992 7335
now at lyon Country Supply
•
for 1295 . Asking $995 .
17401245.06 11 or 1740)446·
9840 ext. 221 .
a!'l:,o::---:~--...,

- - - - - - - - 20 an

NC .

Pt;:rs

1·

92" cream couch, slightly.
2 br.. 1 ba. trailer in Mason.
•
curved. 2 rediners, 1 brown,
new appliances, references
1 blue-g-een, all in eJCcel.
&amp; deposit required , $300,
cond·$400 Small uprig hl
740-416-66~2. 740-416piano wlbench , good cond.
6629, also available fur· -----~--. 5500 _ Call 992• 1117 a•er
Fresh Painted 2 BA upsta~rs
"
nished.
apt. Slave. fridge. water. 5:30pm.
3 BR, 14JC70, Addaville trash sewage paid, $350 - - - - - - - School distriCt. 740..441 - de
441 9672 0 709 Estate furniture for sale. Call
P req .
•
r
•
1283 or 4464060
9619
740-448-0373

3 BR, 2 SA, mobile home for
rent. $400/mo &amp; $400/dep.
Water &amp; Trash paid. No pets
andref. reQ. Aiso, large com·
mercial· building w/ .show·
room type area, $400/mo.
$250/d&amp;p + utilities. has
large parking area. Good for
storage or flea market ·type
area- 740·388-0855

740·441·4846

I
GRAJNj

~y &amp;

57 Dec:ompose

be unbeatable.

wwW.tbabetaeeltcabiMtry.eom

r

East

Opening lead: '?

J=RANK &amp; EARNEST

Hnrood cablneU'y And FIII'IIHure

Gal.can. Pd$176. sell for
$100 OBO

North

All pass

BARNEY

1 I&lt;I II \\ Ill 'I I

West

Greenspan

father
17 Califomla
motto
18 Wind up
20 Slone

33 Twooomo

' 2'1!

David Lewis
740-992-6971

2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee .
Prime Commercial space for Sherwin
Williams Reg. Angus Bulls for sale. Laredo. 2 wd., 25,000 mi.
rent at .Sprirygvalley Plaza. Oeckscapes. Solid deck Hotlybrook Farm. 740...245· 4/0, auto, all options, nice
Call645·2192.
stain. Flagstone Gray. 5 5964
$13,500, (740)949-2732

• K J 10 9 6 4
• Q8 7 4
• tO 5

Vulnerable: East-West

26 Yealli Experience

2000 NissaM Pathfinder 4x4,
leather. all power, Bose CD
system, TVNCR, runs great.
109,000 miles.$8000 . 740·
992-7936

•

Dealer: East

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

55 Volt or wat1

56 Mr.

16 Thor's

East
• 2

A 8 5 2

eer'otool
(2 wdo.)
50 Sturdy lock
rival
53 Goes back
13 ll&amp;an-)a:ar.• . to see
sigh
12 Kat Kan
lpllrl

West
• K 7 4

• 2

Contrete Work

1

nose

49 Mountain-

14 Glistens

•A J98 6
South
•AQJ865
• 3
t A 6 53
• 73

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
7 40-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Discount

10 9 3

• Q7
t K J 10 9
• K Q4 2

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Grinding • Buckel
Truck
Full insured
Senior Citizen

Aut us
FORS.w:

•

(]ami/1J l•thMM•

l o11 1 ... l 1t t "' t 1 \ Ill

0&gt;-zz&lt;n

North

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

Servjce

units within the
jurisdidion or the
Pomeroy P.O.
(740) 742-Ui90

'

Answet to Previous PUDlo

11 Pleased

The

2 bedroom trailer. $250/rent •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
and 5250/dep. 245-0D95
•Central heat &amp; AIC
2 Bedroom, country setting •Washer/dryer hookup
with a large yard in Vinton. · •Tenant pays electr ic
$400/mon + dep. 740-645(304)882-3017
3115

8 Domeatlc
animal

applicants should have at least one year
experience in a physician office or
hospital related area, working with direet
patient care.
Send resumes to;

Very nice and clean . 2 br.. 1
ba., two - car attached
garage, 1n Hartford, base·
ment, cia, wood floors, big
back yard . appliances
include, references
&amp;
deposit required, $475, 740·
416-6622. 740-416-6629.
also available furnished.

41 Boat-deck

wood
t Sillfll off on 43 Cay
4 Flecol pedod 47 Win - -

Phillip
Alder

30 Yrs. Exp. lns.
Owner Ronnie Jones
Free Estimates

Ellm View
Apartments

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PH or Medical Assistant for our' new
surgeon Dr. Atif. LPN applicants must
have a· current West Vtrginia license. All

' vated inside &amp; out includes/ air. 136 1st Ave Rear. 740-

t M~~=~ I

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a Full Time-LPN-

1 BR Apt. WID Hookups.
Qu iet, wOOded location,
Free internet, www.spring·
valley- proper l1es .com
(740)339-0362

Duplex, 2 br., 1 ba:., tower 1

www.mydallysentinel.com

~~~T

uncooperative when it · comas to taking
on .a tough job or you could jeopardize
your standing il the eyes of your co·
· workert~ or the boss. Step up to the plate
when asked.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Worrying
about thilgs that may ·never happen
coulc;i dominale your thinking, especially
•jf you let a negative attitude permeale
your being. AU It will do Is weaken your
ability to be successful.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - S"'ould
you find yourself in a joint yenture with
another, be as cooperative as you can . If
the endeavor should get otr on the wrong
foot, It could be doomed before II even
begins.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Instead of e~epeeling another to come
through tor you oo making a project
you're working on easter, be as se/f·suf·
ficient as possible, You won't be let down
If you're not expecting anything.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Co·
workers could be a bit thin-skinned and
require. some kid-glove treatment. Don't
resent having to tread softly becau5e
there will be days wnen they may have to
do the same for you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Shou~
your insallilble curiosity be more intense
tllan usual, don't excuse It as simply
wanting to gather knowledge. It is not OK
to poke your nose in another person's.
business.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- You know
what It Is !hat puts you and your mate.at
odds, so don't do anything or say anything that could cause tile two ol you, to
have a diSagreement. It's a needless
problem .
AR IES (March 21·April 19)- Before you
open .your mouth about something
another betl911es, make certain what you
think is eminently wis8r or better.
01herwlse, you could look foolish In tha
eyes of witnesses .
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) • Basically,
yo~'rt a friendly, bright · Individual wl'\o
knowe how to put thesa qualities to work
tor vou In all clrct.imatances. Don't dilute
your talents with an lnfuelon ol Irrational
behavior.

SCRAM-mS ANSWERS

5~2t•07

Rcapcrr - loint - Vouch - Fender - IN the ijEART
"Remember dear," granny advised the angry young girl, "your
kind words should always linger IN the HEART."

ARLO &amp; JANIS .
WilY DO PEOPI£ MAKE: FUIJ
OF yO() IF YOJ WA~T
10 TURIJ 10 E-AR~Y?

i

~

~

't---..:::0-'lr(

r----4

!-

$0UPTONUTZ

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

BuT I. Have
a Ht.JNCI-f ...

v

�Tuesday, May 22, 2001
ALLEYOOP
A-1
1 and 2 bedroOm apai-t·
local company offering ' NO ments, furnished and unlur·
DOWN

PAYMENr progr~ms for you to buy your
home instead of ~enting.
• 100% financing
• less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
! Locators.
(7 40)367-0000

~

nished. and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport.
security deposit required . no
pets, 740-992-221 8. :

V

BA

unfurnished

apt

Full-time position for front
office staff in an extremely
busy medical office. Prior
·. medical office or medical
facility experience desired.
Must be computer literate
and a multi-lasker. Non·
smokers only. Please
submit resume, reference
and salary history to:

un~ in Mason. newly renO- Range. fridge, garage and

appliances, washer &amp; dryer c446-·2_56_1- - - - &amp; water, references &amp; 2br. Apl. in Pt. Pleasant
deposit Tequired, $450, 740" Newty remodeled. $475/mo.
416-6622, 740-416·6629, utllittes
paid,
depsoil
ahso available furnished
required (304)G?S-S63S.

Duplex, 2 br.. '1 ba .. ~per
unit in Mason, wood floors,
l)eW windows. appliances &amp;
water inclUded. references &amp;
deposits required. $425,
740-416-6622. 740-4166629

LPN-PH
or Medical Assistant

ACROSS

Johnson's Tree
a.llpol.., OH 45131

c.....-.r.. c...

-......-

Top•Trtm·~· . . . .

~· . . . . . fAA
llwwM•fn.~

7....... 1......,

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Resource s,
2520 Valley Drive,

• Top • Removal

25550
(304)674-2417
or fax to (304) 675-6975
AAIEOE

Point Pleasant: WV

• Trim • Stump

East End
Storage

740-367-0U6/
1-800-950-3359

Large 4 bedroom noUse in
Pomeroy. very clean, newly
remodeled.- new cabinets.
new carpet, (740)949·2303

NyeAve
Pomeroy,

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

Otl

5x10, 6x10, IOxiO,
10x24

only storage

South

LOOIC; E~Nit, IT'S
It Ft,Ylf'l6 SO~CtlrEtt!

Local Contractor

74()-367-G544

•

Af'l

UNIPtNTIFitl&gt;

FLYING
0LL&gt; MAf'l!

Fnoe Estimates

740-367-G536

.
• e

i

10

HOUSEIIOIJ)Gooos
.

,

I

, p60

New Haven

Gracloul LlYing 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apls. in
Middleport. from S327 to
S592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.
_....:_...:_______ _ _
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
3 br., 2 ba ., room apartments at Village

trailer, cia, $450; 2 br., 1 ba .,
trailer, $365; 2 br. 1 ba. trail·
er. cia. $400; 2 br. 1 be. tra11er, $375; all K1cludes appliances and washer &amp; dryer,

Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $0-$592. Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportul"!ities.
Equal

Emp~er

references
&amp;
deposit Opportunity
required, (304)773-5601 ,
740-416-6629, also avail· MOdern 1 BA Apt. Call446·
able furnished..
3736

MOVJNG Slle! Everything
mu•t gol Multi-family yard
'sale. Appliances, elecl ron·
ics. furniture. etc. For more
info call446·3656

r·--•Goovsiiiil--r'
SroimNG

'

u rt

Nice 2 BA mobile home.
Locate~ at Johnspn
Mobile Home Park. 446·
2003

New 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
AI so, um-,son SR 160. pe1s
Welcome! _(740)44t -0194.

Nice 2BR, 2BA, mobile
home. CIA. private lot in Nice 2br Apt. tor renl qUiet
Gallipolis. $450/mo. Call neighborhood. family orien645·n65 after 6pm please .. tated $450, security deposit
no pets 740·446-742~

r~~~

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for Rent, Meigs County, In
town, N.o Pets, Deposit
Required, (740)992·5174 or
(740)441.0110. -

Ta1a
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Pat io, Start $425/Mo.
No Pels. Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required.
(740)367-7086.

SALE

FOR

s

r

r

FARM

d 30'

ch h 0% financing- 36 Mos.
padded urc. available now on John
870
pews for sale, call ( )565 · Deere Trak Zero Tums &amp;
6128
5.99% Fixed Rate on John
Deere Gators Carmichael
Broyhill dining room table &amp; Equipment (740)446-2412.
6-chairsw/extra leaf, match·
ing lighted hulch excellent Clearance' on New &amp; 'Used
condition $950. 304·675· Rota Tillers. Sate on Disc &amp;
t2381eave message
Plows. Select · 6' Finish
~.,--------- Mowers special price. Jims
Complete computer sys- Farm EquiPment. 740 .446•
tems for sale (15) $125 9777
each, (670)565-6128
Ford 3600 Tractor. Massey
For sale/Best offers: over· Ferg'uson 275 Tractor. 5050
stuffecJ chair, 2 lamps, and AC. l2250 Kubota w/
tables,
oak
doors, mower. 740 •286 -5522
vanity/sink, ab lounger, -------~
palates machine. Call 992· Used Bale wrapper for
4521
Silage call 304·675-4308

z

'-------.,1
10

~------r

4x4
FOR S.W:

. ,.
.

Stanley Tree-

Hil l's Self
Storage

Trimming
&amp; Removal
* Prompt and Quality

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

Work

45m
740-949--2217

*Reasonable Rates
* Insured

6574
--------,-96 Oodge 1500 Club Cab,
4x4, 318 auto, short bed
wttopper, 79,000 miles. like
new in/out. $8000 740.3792 23
7
11!1!'--....- - - - .

i
I

"

.~

FoR SAlE

1998· Chevy Astra Van,
AM/FM Cassette., TVNCR,
PW, Dl, Air, wheelchair lift,
72,900
miles.
$5900.
(740)388·0281 , (304)7735079

THEM FOLKS SHORE DON'T
LIVE 'ROUND MERE !!

a:======~
r
Mushroom Compost
$35AScoop
•T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed,
Fertiliur and
Showmaster Show·
Feeds
Sh ade Ri ve r
Ag Service

--------

"

TV wNCA, towng package •.

7278

;:?

p
ENG 125 ,100 miles. $6200.
::
co~~~i~~-0 1985 (740)367·0622
Corvelle 350 ENG auto r'I04_WMOJURCYIIflllliS
'rus'
Handyman
statidn wagon
glass
all around,
1957
Chevy SW DR 50 auto
2
3
restored 2 bedin a Bag
Queen Annfwing backs
wlfoot' rest chairs 304-675·
5813

--c:-:.,-----

1995 GT Mustang , VB , Auto.
Nice, $4200; 1997 Camara,
V6. Auto. $4200. (740)446·
8172, (740)256·6251.
----~--1999 Corvette Coupe, both
tops, auto, 59,000 mi, all
options, very nice, $19,000,
(740)949-2732
-~-----2004 Chevy Malibu Classic,
Burgundy, 4 cyl. loaded
42000 miles, new Goodyear
tires. Asking $9500 080
245-0611 or 446-9840/ Ask
for Vicky.

Ht. •

THE BORN LOSER

Roofing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

Decks '

V.C. YOUNG Ill

-Call Gary Stanley @

992 62 15

740-742-2293

Pi IIlii ' ''\- 01 11 '
~r 11, Lr r 1' f , I" r

Please leave messa e

,'

'I''It 1'-lE-\/E.\i:. SEW AA'I'~E:""'l
E~\ ~':&gt; ~UCJ\ f.-S l';RUTUS!

95 Coleman pop-up camper,
sleeps 7. king/queen beds,
1998 Kawasakl850 Vulcan, sink, 3 burner in/out stove,
Saddle Bags, Windshield, front storage. $2500 740·
low miles, Super Sharp, 379·2723

1

ROBERT
BISSEll

••m••
• New Homes
• Garages

__

MOIUR HOMEll

• Complete
Remodeling

Prime River lots for Rent~Beautiful Beach··Pienty of
Shade·- For InIo. CaU 740·

992·578~ .

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System ·
• H~lios System

PEANUTS

(Ja.m.i1tJ .~'!.'I.&gt;"!"i'l1~3"4:!'t:'ll•

WeLL, DID YOU ENJO'r'
TI-lE BOOK 7

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

REACH 3 COUNTIES

IMPRoVEMENIS

SUNSHINE CLUB

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

u'ncomtltional ~fetime guarantee. Local referenCes fur·
nished. Esleblishlld 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers easement
Waterproofing.
Top soil $10.00 per ton.
Dozer &amp; Excavating work.
Call740·352·0015

GARFIELD

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace! ·

Manley~ a

Racyclang
11113 Ill It• lllllll•rt II 451111
.
748-812-3184 •

... .....ltfrlll.. lilll D6:11 ••
, . . . . .:. &amp;12:11 ••

-··lllli·•. . ••WIIItlll
PlYING TOP IIICIS •

DIIIIWIII:CIIwwters·Ctl•
. .illltl.......

ICIII l'wlllr.al'rlclll

GRIZZWELLS
I'V ~II&lt;£ To 't'J~II'E
A ~to.\ !'a&gt;l&lt;,

em r9c*li
l&lt;tbW Wlllt.i

io-..1~\~

~be ~allipolis iailp ~ribune

740-446-2342
www .mydailytribune.com

t·

,.

l!loint lllleasant legis'ter The Daily Sentinel

304-675-1333
740·992-2155
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydallysentinelcmiJ

34 Geotoatc
1fonrutilon
35 Nearby

52 Rumor,

5 She, in~ 30 Coni
6 Gorilla

. 7 Went up

8 Cow's

mouthful

Guard off.
31 Tumuft
32 Feverillh

chill

48 Grocefvl

· steed
49 ·Drudod
..,..
50 "'"Wri,.WIIIWIIWIIIrltcr
...,.

51

No matter
Which
por11opo

54 Colton gin
,_

9 Flfl'a dale

SLEPT ALL THE

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetdy CiJhe' CfyljOg!M'IS ae created from !JI(ltalioos bV larntXJs ~- pas: in! P'!!flft
Each kt.er mthe cipher Ulds 10' iiiO!her

Toclly's due: G0/lf•ls Z

" II X Z P L X E A B X _L H.R F H E F'F Z P
KEPA . " ·C.Z. RNKPM
" A Z X C B P R Z P L X R M K· E C E F F

CLEHP OXN R HLRUPKD. "
• I.

AOXHH

IEHGUPLRFK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'You\e only here for a shon Vis~. Don1 htKTY. Don1
worry. Ard be sure to smell the ftowers a~ng the way.· • Golfer. Waner Hagen

....
'=~=' e&lt;e~4llA-4t~s·

AstroGraph

---- -~~~ClAY

" -'llrlhdo\r:

Wedneaday, May 23, 2007
By Bernice Bede Oaot
Although you could be rath8 r forlunale
some projects or ventures that bring you
into contact with the public. don't hesHate
to interact with people on a personal ·or
business level. You'll be at your best with
all Intercommunications.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - If you
anack a member ol your family while in
the presence ol outsiders, all you,'ll
accompliSh Is making a bad impression.
It doesn't matter who Is right or wrong · only who's unrefined ..
CANCER (~une 21·July 22)- Tat&lt;e care
nol to be negativerv preconditioned to
what a friend says about someone ewer'
whom he or she holds a grudge. Your
pal's stance could be totally dlsho~est
and lead you to be anlisoclal.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Make it a point
to be prudent· when It comes to your
financial resources. There's a chance
you could have a tendency to spend way
beyond your means and put yourself In
long·)erm debt.

Ull

II. POIWI.....;.·- - - -

0 r:.ml;!'..&amp;l:"'-i b':
low

10

form four

~mplo

wo«11.

VIRGO (Aug. 2j.Sepl. 22) -:- Don't be

.., 11 n tt 1 ..,

·-iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii...

I DON1T KNOW .. I

WAV THROUGH IT ..

lrrl:mi!"'"-~:""---...,
01 ' 25ft Kingston Hornet.
HOME
New condition, storecJ inside
garage. Sleeps 6, includes 2
tv's. $8500. 388·9815

45 Pral.. very
highly
46 lniiclble

FirsL lock only a1 the WeS1 hand. The
bidding proceeds as giVen. Your i&gt;artner's two-heart opening is weak, show·
ing a deoent ~x-calll su~ ard 5-10 highcard points. You let the adverse vulnera·
bili1y and your defensive prospects dissuade you from going to fi\'6 hewts.
Here. this would protlably prove fo be a
bad decision. II South I~ the spade ace,
wliich is a likely choice, five hearts would

in

140-992-1611

I
•

19 Calculator
figs.
monumen1
22 Paws
21 Ill-mannered
DOWN
23 Fair (~yph .)
onea
25 Fix typos
24 Valuoa
I Camel halts 26 Faint glow
28 Down
2 Shot
27 Cash
goddna ·
3 Divvy up
advance
30 Memorable 4 Tied up the 29 Pianist at
times
phone
Rick's

buddy

60 Undtol•ded

34 Hordes
37 Uno.n
10 Won 39 Starry villa
patticlo
aoup
40 Chopping
38 Old Ft:ench 13 Bubbly
voggles
coin
drink
42 Egg on
39 Waits In line 15 Really enjoy 44 Dons

From South's count
to West's lead

G

BIG NATE

-------70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Wife let me back in house,
446·0007
must sell 2000 Skamper .,_..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
Camper, .$7500 25' comes
with TV, yuy betore she ki~s
,.,.-~--~--, ma ou1 call (740)949-4601
CAMPERS &amp;
or 740·416·4379

111

I\,._\IE f&gt;,. 1-\0U..OW LE.&amp;!

I we Deliver To You!

L,oiioiiitiiiiiiliilio-.-J
-,

r

F£ KNOW~ I ffi\KK.I-\E /t\US~

1700 ' CAMPERS &amp;
~~-•MiiiiomiiiiiiiRiiHiiOIIiiiiiDiiiir·

I

$4000 ·
(740 )446 "8172 •
(740)44S- 8172
Aepo- 04 Harley Davidson
XLB83c. Will be audiooed.
on Thursday May
th at
24
: 0PM at Kyger Creek
4
2
Power p lant. Minimum ·bid
$6000. For more details call
_ _
740 367 5055

Room Acfdltlon• &amp;
Remodeling
New Geragn.
Electrical &amp; Plumbl.,g

Stop &amp; Compare

( ll l''-lt'l
• -111-'1.1' -.\.1 \ I

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I

. WV036725

References Available!

1999 Chevrolet Conversion
Cavaliers, Escorts, Neons, Aslro van, ~
"'C, PIS, P/W,
etc. Gas Savers! 740·446· AM/FM Radio w/Casset1:9

58 Strong soap
59 Bob's road

36 Ratlree'a
kitty

What, 11-oogh, would you lead aganst
lour spades?
If you are suffering lrom deja vu, do no1
feel perturbed. Yes, this is the same deal
as in yeS1erday's C&lt;&gt;umn. Then, WeS1Ied
the heart ace and another hean. South
got a count of the East hard 3rd made
his cornract, losing one spade, one heart
and one 'club.
You can SQe three probable ·defensive
· lricl&lt;s:' the spade king, heart ace and
club ace. You cannot gel a socond heart,:
because your side has 1D hearts
between you . Asocond spade is unlike·
ly. A socond club is possible. But ~ partner has the heart king, you sh&lt;XJid sae
your best shot to dafea1 South's coo1mct:
.Lead your single1on diamond.
•
East should realize that your lead is a
singleton. And in this situation, when
third hand cannot lake 1he lricli, he is
expected to give a suit-preference sig·
nal. Here, he shoukl play the !Iamond
queen or eight, the unnecessarily high
card being a signal lor the higher-rankIng ol the other 1wo sklo suits. Then,
wlien you gel in ..;th your spade king,
you shift to a low heart, puning East on
lead so lhat he can return a diamond.
You ruH and cash the club aca to defltal
the contract.

YOUNG 'S

Patio and Pofch

* Experienced

Hay Square Bales first cutling Good Price · call 304- 2000 Jeep Wronger, yellow,
72l
M
Air, ntt, 4" Lift Kit, Must see
to appreciate, (740)256·

jfio

~!.&gt;~
nu..m. . ~ ~ -Lilli:-•"•~-----~I:A.JVIrJwu:.~,.

,

-.a!'""--~~-..,.,

Full bloodecJ Beagle pups 6
weeks old with shots 304· 2004 Supreme lawn and
675·7324 or304-593·5130 garden tractor. 25 HP. 50"
- - - - - - - - cut, auto trans. only 198
p b d Poodl
·
·
ure re
e pupp1es, hours, like new. $1700 080.
CKC
·51 ed r· sh t
reg1 er , 1rst o s,,. 740-441-1202 or 740-709vet checked, both large &amp; 61 79
small toys, bladt, ·choco
cream &amp; apricot, male &amp;
female, 3 litterrlls. to choos$300e
~~
1rom , ma1es sa
1 ng a1
• 1
FOR SALE
females starting at $350,
(740)992·7007 leave mas·
04 Buicl&lt;
Rendezvous CXL,
sage
,
miles, leather, DVD
120 000
Registered Golden Retriever player, $7000, 740·742·
puppies,
. Call
_
740 2803
.1 5250
·
256 429
10 fo 15 small cars for saie.

h 20
d bl
ec ea
e, Teacup Chihuahuas pup.
1ga· hi
lock ga.
I' 1 oufo e
s ralg s
. spIn er r . pies, 6 weeks old, call
arm, under 6 lbs, IC/M , Sell (740)992 7335
now at lyon Country Supply
•
for 1295 . Asking $995 .
17401245.06 11 or 1740)446·
9840 ext. 221 .
a!'l:,o::---:~--...,

- - - - - - - - 20 an

NC .

Pt;:rs

1·

92" cream couch, slightly.
2 br.. 1 ba. trailer in Mason.
•
curved. 2 rediners, 1 brown,
new appliances, references
1 blue-g-een, all in eJCcel.
&amp; deposit required , $300,
cond·$400 Small uprig hl
740-416-66~2. 740-416piano wlbench , good cond.
6629, also available fur· -----~--. 5500 _ Call 992• 1117 a•er
Fresh Painted 2 BA upsta~rs
"
nished.
apt. Slave. fridge. water. 5:30pm.
3 BR, 14JC70, Addaville trash sewage paid, $350 - - - - - - - School distriCt. 740..441 - de
441 9672 0 709 Estate furniture for sale. Call
P req .
•
r
•
1283 or 4464060
9619
740-448-0373

3 BR, 2 SA, mobile home for
rent. $400/mo &amp; $400/dep.
Water &amp; Trash paid. No pets
andref. reQ. Aiso, large com·
mercial· building w/ .show·
room type area, $400/mo.
$250/d&amp;p + utilities. has
large parking area. Good for
storage or flea market ·type
area- 740·388-0855

740·441·4846

I
GRAJNj

~y &amp;

57 Dec:ompose

be unbeatable.

wwW.tbabetaeeltcabiMtry.eom

r

East

Opening lead: '?

J=RANK &amp; EARNEST

Hnrood cablneU'y And FIII'IIHure

Gal.can. Pd$176. sell for
$100 OBO

North

All pass

BARNEY

1 I&lt;I II \\ Ill 'I I

West

Greenspan

father
17 Califomla
motto
18 Wind up
20 Slone

33 Twooomo

' 2'1!

David Lewis
740-992-6971

2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee .
Prime Commercial space for Sherwin
Williams Reg. Angus Bulls for sale. Laredo. 2 wd., 25,000 mi.
rent at .Sprirygvalley Plaza. Oeckscapes. Solid deck Hotlybrook Farm. 740...245· 4/0, auto, all options, nice
Call645·2192.
stain. Flagstone Gray. 5 5964
$13,500, (740)949-2732

• K J 10 9 6 4
• Q8 7 4
• tO 5

Vulnerable: East-West

26 Yealli Experience

2000 NissaM Pathfinder 4x4,
leather. all power, Bose CD
system, TVNCR, runs great.
109,000 miles.$8000 . 740·
992-7936

•

Dealer: East

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

55 Volt or wat1

56 Mr.

16 Thor's

East
• 2

A 8 5 2

eer'otool
(2 wdo.)
50 Sturdy lock
rival
53 Goes back
13 ll&amp;an-)a:ar.• . to see
sigh
12 Kat Kan
lpllrl

West
• K 7 4

• 2

Contrete Work

1

nose

49 Mountain-

14 Glistens

•A J98 6
South
•AQJ865
• 3
t A 6 53
• 73

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
7 40-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Discount

10 9 3

• Q7
t K J 10 9
• K Q4 2

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Grinding • Buckel
Truck
Full insured
Senior Citizen

Aut us
FORS.w:

•

(]ami/1J l•thMM•

l o11 1 ... l 1t t "' t 1 \ Ill

0&gt;-zz&lt;n

North

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

Servjce

units within the
jurisdidion or the
Pomeroy P.O.
(740) 742-Ui90

'

Answet to Previous PUDlo

11 Pleased

The

2 bedroom trailer. $250/rent •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
and 5250/dep. 245-0D95
•Central heat &amp; AIC
2 Bedroom, country setting •Washer/dryer hookup
with a large yard in Vinton. · •Tenant pays electr ic
$400/mon + dep. 740-645(304)882-3017
3115

8 Domeatlc
animal

applicants should have at least one year
experience in a physician office or
hospital related area, working with direet
patient care.
Send resumes to;

Very nice and clean . 2 br.. 1
ba., two - car attached
garage, 1n Hartford, base·
ment, cia, wood floors, big
back yard . appliances
include, references
&amp;
deposit required, $475, 740·
416-6622. 740-416-6629.
also available furnished.

41 Boat-deck

wood
t Sillfll off on 43 Cay
4 Flecol pedod 47 Win - -

Phillip
Alder

30 Yrs. Exp. lns.
Owner Ronnie Jones
Free Estimates

Ellm View
Apartments

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PH or Medical Assistant for our' new
surgeon Dr. Atif. LPN applicants must
have a· current West Vtrginia license. All

' vated inside &amp; out includes/ air. 136 1st Ave Rear. 740-

t M~~=~ I

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a Full Time-LPN-

1 BR Apt. WID Hookups.
Qu iet, wOOded location,
Free internet, www.spring·
valley- proper l1es .com
(740)339-0362

Duplex, 2 br., 1 ba:., tower 1

www.mydallysentinel.com

~~~T

uncooperative when it · comas to taking
on .a tough job or you could jeopardize
your standing il the eyes of your co·
· workert~ or the boss. Step up to the plate
when asked.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Worrying
about thilgs that may ·never happen
coulc;i dominale your thinking, especially
•jf you let a negative attitude permeale
your being. AU It will do Is weaken your
ability to be successful.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - S"'ould
you find yourself in a joint yenture with
another, be as cooperative as you can . If
the endeavor should get otr on the wrong
foot, It could be doomed before II even
begins.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Instead of e~epeeling another to come
through tor you oo making a project
you're working on easter, be as se/f·suf·
ficient as possible, You won't be let down
If you're not expecting anything.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Co·
workers could be a bit thin-skinned and
require. some kid-glove treatment. Don't
resent having to tread softly becau5e
there will be days wnen they may have to
do the same for you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Shou~
your insallilble curiosity be more intense
tllan usual, don't excuse It as simply
wanting to gather knowledge. It is not OK
to poke your nose in another person's.
business.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- You know
what It Is !hat puts you and your mate.at
odds, so don't do anything or say anything that could cause tile two ol you, to
have a diSagreement. It's a needless
problem .
AR IES (March 21·April 19)- Before you
open .your mouth about something
another betl911es, make certain what you
think is eminently wis8r or better.
01herwlse, you could look foolish In tha
eyes of witnesses .
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) • Basically,
yo~'rt a friendly, bright · Individual wl'\o
knowe how to put thesa qualities to work
tor vou In all clrct.imatances. Don't dilute
your talents with an lnfuelon ol Irrational
behavior.

SCRAM-mS ANSWERS

5~2t•07

Rcapcrr - loint - Vouch - Fender - IN the ijEART
"Remember dear," granny advised the angry young girl, "your
kind words should always linger IN the HEART."

ARLO &amp; JANIS .
WilY DO PEOPI£ MAKE: FUIJ
OF yO() IF YOJ WA~T
10 TURIJ 10 E-AR~Y?

i

~

~

't---..:::0-'lr(

r----4

!-

$0UPTONUTZ

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

BuT I. Have
a Ht.JNCI-f ...

v

�Page B.6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 22_,

2007 •

·Agent says 'Henry drug test clear Giambi picks a lousy time to.say sorry ,
BY DAN SEWELl
ASSOCIATED PRESS

·Beng• waive tB Nicholson

CINCfNNATI
COVIN'GTON, Ky; (AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals
Prosecutors say more test· waived Jinebacker.A.J. ,Nicholson on M~rida~. hours.a~ter
ing will be needed to deter- he pleadetl not guilty to a charge accusmg htm of htttmg
mine whether Cincinn ati his $irl(riend.
- ·
.
Bengals wide receiver Chris
Ntcholsoll' was- a. ft.fth-rou11d dritft pick ft:om Florida
Henry, who has been sus· State in 2oo6 but played in only two games because of a
pended by the NFL and is hamstring injury.
·
on probation in criminal
Nicholson wa6 charged with misdemeanor assault on
cases in two states, fai led a Friday after his jlirlfriend, Victoria .Johnson, to!~ PQli~
drug screening.
that Nicholson htt her. On Monday, she asked a JUdg~ m
Hemry is on probation in Kenton County District Court to allow her to make a stateKentucky for letting mi·nors ment recanting the claim, but a judge did not allow it.
drink in a hotel room he
rented and 111 Florida · for screeni ng was part of times over 14 months, but
carrytng · a concealed Henry's two·year probation had avoided jai l time on the
weapon .
in Florida, where he pleaded other three charges.
Henry's agent, Marvin guilty last year to a con·
The Bengals wa ived
Frazier, insis,ted that the cealed weapon charge. Nicholson. who pleaded not
drug test was negative and Henry is also on probation guilty Monday in Kenton
the· Bengals said they were in Kenton County after County court to a domestic
awaiting more informa tion pleading guilty to a charge violence charge . His girlfrom authorities in Kenton of letting minors drink in a friend tried to recant her
County, Ky.. where the hotel room he rented.
claim that Nicholson hit her,
screening took place.
After reports circulated but a judge would not allow
"With respect to the early Monday that Henry it. Nicholson remains free
northern Kentucky proceed- · had fa iled a drug test, the on $5,000 bond, with a
ings, reports to date may not chief prosecutor for Kenton hearing set for May 31.
be based on complete infor· County said . authorities
The fifth·round draft pick
mation." the Bengals said in were awaiting the final from Florida State in 2006
a statement. "More informa· analysis.
was. hampered by a ·hamtion is expec ted to be made
··we have to wait for con· string injury last season and
available shortly, once all firmation from the state lab. appeared in only two games.
the procedural tests are We have suspicion on a field Bengals spokesman Jack
complete. and the club will test," Ken Easterling told Brennan said th e team had
await any action until that The Cincinnati Enquirer. no comment on the decision
information
has bee n · "We camiot confirm or deny to waive Nicholson.
released.''
(Henry's test sample ) con·
Nicholson had previously
Meanwhile, the Bengals. tains a controlled sub- pleaded no contes t to bur·
plagued by a series of off. stance.''
glary and grand .[heft in
Failing a drug test could Tallahassee, Fla., and was
field problems for more
than a year, waived line· resu lt in Henry's current sentenced to two months in
backer A.J. Nicholson hours NFL suspension of .eight a work program . He was
after he appeared in court. games bei ng ex tended. He also placed on two ye3:rs'
Monday on a domestic vio- could also face more jail probation, which could be
lence charge.
time in Kenton County, just jeopardized by his arrest last
A spokeswoman for the across the Ohio River from Friday on the domestic vioKehton Coun,ty attorney's Cincinnati.
lence charge.
Henry served two days
office said there would be
The Bengals, who ha&lt;!
more testing . in Henry 's tltere after pleading guilty to nine players arrested in a
case.
the charge to letting minors nine-month span, were part
"We know that there are drink in a hotel room he of the reason NFL commis·
inconsistent reports about rented. The judge suspended sioner Roger Goodell intro·
the routine drug screen· 88 days of the 90·day sen· duced a conduct pol icy last
ings,"
spokeswoman tence.
month that stitlens penalties
Melissa Pryor· Reed said.
A message seeking com- and holds franchi ses respon·
"As a result of these incon- ment was left with Henry's sible when their players get
sistencies, further tests are attorney, Robert Lotz.
into trouble.
·
currently pending." .
The Bengals said to the
Henry, a third·year pro,
Frazier, citing information club's knowledge, Henry and former West Virginia
he received from · the had been complying with teammate Adam "Pacman"
Bengals and Henry, said an legal and NFL-required pro· Jones became examples of
initial screening, which he cedures.
the
crac kdown,
with
compared to a home·pregHenry, the Bengals' No. 3 Goodell suspendin g Henry
nancy test, had been fol · receiver, has shown big· for eight games and
lowed up with one that con- play ability, and the offense Tenneesee's cornerback for
firmed there were no dru gs struggled last year when he the season.
in Henry 's system.
was benched one game by.
"I must emphasize to you
"It's negative," Frazier coach Marvin Lewis and that this is your last oppor·
said. "They _iumped the gun suspended two more by the tunity to salvage your NFL
on it."
NFL.
career," Goodell wrote in
Frazier said the drug Henry was arrested four letters to the players.

Indians
.from Page Bl
Mariners.
"The more ga me s we
knock out, the better we ' ll
all feel ," Mariners manager
Mike Hargrove said. "It's
not any more pleasant for
tbe Indians than it is for us.
You just have to deal wiih
it.,,
Blake's fourth homer, a
tWO·OUI shot off Cha Seung .
Baek (1·2), snapped a 1-1
tie in the sixth and
Barfield's 'two-run double in
the seventh gave the Indians
a 4;1 lead. Grady Sizemore
added a sacrifice tly in the
seventh.
Cleveland impruved to .
17-4 at home, with two of
those wins coming in
Milwaukee when the club
had to move a three-game
series against , the Los
Angeles Angels under
Miller Park 's retractable
roof in Apri I.
Tom Mastny (3-1) took
over for starter C.C.
Sabathia and got the win.
Sabathia allowed one run ·
and eight hits in five
innings. He walked one and
struck out four, recording
his I,OOOth career strikeout
in the fifth when he fanned
lchiro Suzuki for the second
time.
The· Marin~rs loaded . the
bases in the ninth on a dou ble, walk and single . off
reliever
,
Roberto
Hernandez. Closer Joe
Borowski came on and got
Suzuki to hit into an RBI
forceout before getting Jose
Vidro to pop up and Jose
Guillen to ground out for
his 14th save.
Seattle began a 6,273·
mile, four·city trip with its
fifth loss in six games.
The Indians billed th e
del ayed
matchup
as
"Opening Day 3" and the
club even tried to duplicate
some ofthe blustery conditions that transformed

Jacobs Field into a colossal
snow glebe last month.
Artificial snowmaking
machines, ·perched atop the
pedestrian walkway beyond
left tield, produced tlurries
tha) tumbled softly onto
fans - a few of them wear· .
ing Santa Claus hats - as
they arrived.
".1 saw the fake snow,"
Sabathia said. "I can do
without seeing that again.
Besides that, it felt like a
normal day:"
There were ice sculptures
in the plaza between the
Jake and Quicken Loans
Arena, and the club gave

Ja~on Giambi sure·picked a
lousy time to finally come
clean.
Mired in a deep slump, his
team in an even deeper funk,
Giambi cou ld have been
excused for doing what he's
been doing so well the last
few years - collecting more
money than some small
countries have while pre·
tending the wh0lc messy
steroid thing never really
existed..
So it was a bit surpri si ng to
hear Giambi 's de facto
acknowledgment the other
day that, yes. he was juiced
and that he and baseball owe·
everyone a big apology for
the sins of the past.
Actually, Yankee fans are
more concerned with the ·sins
of the present, which in
Giambi 's case ce nters l!ll the
fact he has just live home
runs and only one hit in his
last 26 at bats. There 's more
than a few New Yorkers who
wouldn't mind · making a
midnight run for some
human growth hormone jf it
would get his bat going
agam.
Whi le they're at it, maybe
they can lind a miracle drug
to repair an aging pitching
., tafT that gets even older
when the $28 million man
arrives in the next week or so
to earn his money six innings
at a time. Yes, Tyler Clippard
helped 'ease some of the sting
of a weekend series gone bad
at Shea Stadium, but there's
only so much a rookie pitch·
er can do.
Giambi sat quietly in the
dugout Sunday night, waitil)g
to be called upon to pinch hit
if necessary. It wasn ' t
because the· Yankees got a
good perfo rmance from
Clippard and some timely
home runs to avoid yet
another
embarrassment
against thei r CrOSS· IOWil
National League rivals.
Giambi is making $21 mil·
lion this year, so maybe he
felt it was his duty to make
some noise at a time when
hi s bat was so sileut. Or
maybe he couldn't sleep at
night knowing the onl y con·
troversies in the Bronx were
whether Roger Clemens
should be allowed· to come
and go as lie pleases and
whether Joe Torre and Brian
Cashman should simply go.
Giambi. of course. has
apologized before. He spent
an .entire press conference

OVCS graduates, A7

Yankees take
one from Boston
Tim

Dallilberg

NEW YORK (AP) Alex Rodriguez an~ the
New York Yankees have
quite a hike if they hope to
get back in the AL East
race, and they took an
important step in the right
direction Monday night.
Rodriguez, homered for
the third straight game
and Chien· Ming Wang
stymie\~ Boston, sending
the Yankees to a 6·2 victo·
ry that moved them within
9 1/2 games of the divi·
sion·leading Red Sox ,
who still own the best
record. in the major
leagues at 30·1 4.
Jason Giambi snapped a
1-for-26 slide with an
upper·deck homer and
leadoff batter Johnny
Damon got the Yankees
started all game again s~
his former team. New
York improved to 2-5 thi s
year against its biggest
rival. with both wins com·
ing against knuckleballer
Tim Wakefield.

prior to the 2005 season saying he was sorry, though he
l)ever really explained what
he was sorry about. Besides,
hitting lots of home runs
means never having to say
you' re sorry to Yankees fans.
What was must interesting
about Giambi's latest comments to USA Today is the
timing. Though he reportedly
admitted to the BALCO
grand jury in December 2003
that he used steroids, Giambi
has refused to address the
issue publicly and the media
has been so busy bashing
Barry Bonds that he's largely
been given a free pass.
The fact that Giambi said
anything might make the
more conspiracy minded
wonder if he has some inside
knowledge of upcoming
developments in one or more
of the various steroid probes. which likely wotdd have
What other reason would he happened by now had
have to ri sk a possible 50- George Steinbrenner not
game suspension onhe pos- mellowed with age. There's
si bility of having the rest of frustration over the team's
his lucrati ve contract voided? inability to consistently hit,
That said, he's not the first and I'{Orry about whether
baseball player to say some- Mariano Rivera might finally
thing he would later regrei.
be losing his m~terful touch
Giambi may have inadve.r- at the age of 37.
tently done Jhe Yankees a The Yankees will get bet"
favor by taking some of the ter, because they have too
heat off his underachieving much talent to languish
teammates, who can 't pitch , below .500 all season Jon~.
can't field, and lately haven't But if they don ' t turn tt
even been able to hit much. around fast, there's a good
They are so desperate they chance they'll not only fail to
not only signed Clemen s~ but win their division for the first
.have been burning through time in 10 years, but miss the.
one rookie starting pitcher a playoffs entirely.
week.
As for Giambi, his best
And while it may be too days ate already behind him.·
early in the season to panic, Hi s power numbers have
all $195 million has done so fallen and he doesn't hit for
far this year is buy· the average. He's also at an age
.Yankees a losing record and a . where things like the bone
tie for second place, 10 112 spur in his foot that caused
games behind the Boston him to miss several games
Red Sox.
· are occurring with increasing
"It's definitely embarrass- frequency.
ing." Johnny Damon said.
Worse yet, the 2000 AL
"We definitel y know that we MVP is at a point in hi s
are better than we've career where he reali zes his
showed."
accomplishments will always
Sports talk shows in New be tainted by being linked to
York are tilled with specula- the BALCO scandal.
.
tion that both Torre and
And forthat, he's really got
Cashman could be fired , something to be sor:ry about:

,)II

CL:\TS • \'nl. ,)h, No,

BY KEVIN KELlY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Joy Kocmoud/photo

Emergency personnel took to their boats .in a search for a Gallipolis City Police officer who
drowned while pursuing an individual who allegedly fled from police and jumped into the
river. As of late Tuesday, the officer, whose name was not re leased, had not been located.

• Lopez exacts
revenge with slam,
Nationals double up
Reds. See Page 84

WEATHER

"Your ·h eart works as hard as you do!

Your lola
Counts!

~allipolt~

Jlatlp mrtbune

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~oint -'lea~ant l\egt~ter

O'Bleness' HeartWorks program for cardiac and pulmonary
rehabilitation helps patients with heart or lung Jis~ase recover more
quickly and improve their quali ry of life. A customized care plan for
each patient helps reduce risk factors and slow d,)wn or reverse tne
;

Details on Page A7

Memorial Hospital

An affiliate of the O'Biene~ s Health System

American chestnut
makes
•
return to Meigs County

SEcnoNs- 16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A6
A6
B4-6
B7
A2

J. REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Only one
complaint alleging a violaCalendars
tion of the state's new smok·
ing ban has been received in
Classifieds
Meigs County, according to
Health Commissioner Larry
Comics
Marshall.
Marshall said the owner
Editorials
of the business subjeci to
Sports
B Section · the complaint has been contacted arid asked to comply
Weather•
A7 with the new state · Jaw,
approved by voters in
Novemtier. Two other busi·
. © 0007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

nesses have also been asked
to comply. .
The .complaint was made
·through a toll·free number
to the 0hio Department of
· Health\ the . · enforcing
agency,. Marshall said.
The state. began enforcing
the law earlier this month.
This new Jaw requires pub·
lie places and places of
employment to prohibit
smoking on the premises.
These businesses and orga·
nizations must also post
"No Smoking" signs that
contain a telephone number

for reporting violations and
remove ashtrays and other
smoking receptacles.
The Jaw imposes fines of
$100, $500, $1 ,000 and
$2,500 against owners of
public places who do not
comply, and $100 fines
against smokers who refuse
lo comply when asked by
the business owner.
"It . is important for the
public to know this is a
'complaint·driven ' law,"
Marshall said. " It is also a .
civil law, rather than a crim·
ina! matter."

Area jobless
rates mixed
during April
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLYII!&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Marshall said the local
health department is hoping .
that businesses which are
not now complying with the
ban will do so with~ut tines
being imposed.
·
"We have some latitude in
enforcing · the
Jaw,"
Marshall said. "It is the
local board of healtl) 's posi·
tion that we should work to
bring all businesses into
compliance without impos·
ing fines, if possible.'' ·
Marshall said perso nal ·

Please see Smoklna. A:S

Please see Jobless. A3

.

Bv BRtAN

RACINE- J. Scott Hill,
classified staff member of
the Southern Local School
District has been suspended
for five days without pay by
the. school board for
allegedly violating a district
policy pertaining to outside
activities of classified staff.
Board
policy
4231
includes th e clause "staff
members should refrain
from expressions that disrupt
the efficient operation of the
school and/or interfere with
the maintenance of disci·
pline by school officials."
Hill' s suspension came at
this week's board meeting:
Superintendent
. Mark
Miller advised against
Hill's decision to have the
personnel matter discussed
in open session but as the
employee in question Hill
reserved the right to the
public hearing.
Mil ler then referred to
remarks Hill made in a recent
article that appeared in The
Daily Sentinel concerning an
audit of the district
Hill's direct quote from
that article is as· follows:
"The truth should be told. L
Pleise see Employee, A:S

GALLIPOLIS
Unemployment in are'!
counties represented a
mi xed bag during April a'S
Ohio's jobless rate for the
month increased, the state:
Department of Jobs and
Family Services found.
Gallia County saw !(
three· tenths of a percent
drop, from 5.9 percent itt
March to 5.6 percent last
month,
while
Meig ~
County's unemployment
remained unchanged at 8.6
percent. The state released
county·by·county rates fot
last month on ·Tuesday.
·
Athens County decreased
slightly, from 5.7 percent in
March to 5.6 percent iq
April ,
but
Jackson
County's rate shot up five~
tenths of a percent to 8.8:

Health department
reports one complaint on p_ublic smoking
.
.

INDEX
2

O'BLENESS

RACINE - Tony Deem
was hired as. superintendent
and Roy Johnson-as interim
assistant treasurer of. the
Southern Local School
District · at the school
board's recent meeting.
Deem, currently the prin·
cipal of Southern High
School, was hired on a 260
day contract at the same rate
of pay as 'current superinten·
dent Mark Miller who.has an
annual salary of $70,000,
according to Johnson who
.
Jim Freeman/photo
has been working in the trea·
surer's office since May 14. Fifth. graders from Meigs Intermediate School near Rutland Ia sf week planted approximateMiller told the board Deem ly 175 American chestnut trees at the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District's
would be taking over at the· Conservation Area. Two of the students are shown here planting saplings with assistance
end of next month With the from Jason Crislip, a soil conservation with the U.S. Department of ·Agriculture's Natural
board approving Deem Resources Conservation Service.
working 20 extra days in
July as needed at the same
per diem rate as Miller's.
· The board accepted
•
Miller's resignation effec·
tive July 31: Deem's first
official day as superinten·
dent is Aug. I .
BY JIM FREEMAN
approximately 175 blight- help bring the American
The board also accepted
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
resistant American chestnut chestnut back to our
the resignation of certified
saplings, with assistance from · forests," said Jason Crislip,
lntermin Treasurer Cindy
RUTLAND- A hundred Meigs SWCD and Natural NRCS soil conservationist.
Rhonemus effective May years ago . . the might y . Resources
Conservation "This is a very unique pro·
14 and hired Brian Swann, American chestnut tree was Service staff. Later, an addi- ject to have ongoing in the
who is also certified, as known throughout the east· tional 25 trees were planted at county, and We look for·
interim treasurer at a rate of .ern United States as "Queen another location on the prop- ward to monitoring thi s pro·
$35 an hour, effective May of the Forest," but a fungal erty for a total of 200 ject for years to come."
14. Johnson will be consult· disease from Asia all ·but American chestnut trees.
The American chestnut,
or
ing with Swann until obliterating the massive
Castanea dentata, was
The trees were obtained
Johnson receives his certiti · trees, leaving forests full of through the Buckeye Hill once abundant across much
cation by Aug. I. Johnson standing, dead trunks.
Resource Conservation and of the eastern United States,
was hired effective May 14
Today there are few peo· Development Council ·and particulru:ly along dry ridges
at a per diem rate of $125, pie who can recall seeing the NRCS Plant Material where, according to some
plus benefits.
American chestnut trees in Center in Alderson, W.Va. accounts, the tl owering
Johnson, who lives in the wild, but a group of fifth Their locations were marked trees would make the moun·
Syracuse, comes to the dis· graders from . tile Meigs and recorded so their growth taios appear snow-capped
trict from the private sector, Intermediate School helped . can be monitored as part of a during early summer.
The trees were large ;
specifically
Children's to change that last week.
long·term project to reintro·
mature chestnut trees aver·
Hospital in Columbus.
. The 63 youngsters attend· duce American chestnu(.
Johnson said he is happy to · ing a field trip at the Meigs
"We are very excited to aged five feet in diameter
working in Meigs County Soil and Water Conservation have the opportunity to be and were up to I00 Jeet tall,
Please see Southern, A:S ~a near Rutland planted involved with a project to Please see Chestnut. A:S

..

counseling. Talk to yntir dnctor.ahout heart services at O'Bleness and

o•m.r- HNrt s.rvtc•
. A Heartbeat Away

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

re

includes exercise as w~ll as education, nmrition and stress management

'

BY BETH SERGENT

BY BETH SERGENT

• Local Briefs.
See Page A3
• Carmel-Sutton U.M.
Church honors ·mothers.
See J)age A3
• Holzer Medicai ·Center
hosts rehabilitation
'
nursing
seminar.
See Page A6
• Thompson
anniversary.
See Page A6
• Family Medicine.
See Page A7

the importance of rehabilitati on in your trearinent."

Southern
employee .
suspended

BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Director, HeartWorks

In The Tri-County
Gallia • Meigs
&amp;Mason

GALLIPOLIS - Dive
teams and resc uers were
expected to work through
the night into today in
search of a Gallipolis City
Police officer believed to
have drowned in the Ohio
River on Tuesday while
pursuing an individual who
reportedly fled from police.
As of an II :30 p.m. press
briefing, the officer had not
been found and his identity
was not being released.
City Police Detective Jeff
Boyer, speaking in somber
tones, said the officers were
conducting an investigation

around 5 p.m. in the vicinity
of the 900 block of Second
Avenue that led to a foot
pursuit with an individual
who was apparently part of
the investigation.
· Officers reportedly pur·
,sued the individual to the
bank of the Ohio River near
the 900 block of First
Avenue, where the individ·
ual entered the river to con.
· tinue his flight.
.
The individual , who was
not identified as of late
Tuesday, swam in the direc:
tion of Gallipolis Island,
Authorities said one of ·the
officers went under the water
Please see Officer, AS

Southern
•
vacancies
are rilled

Tom Murray,

Voice your opinion by voting for
all your favorites!

W\\\\.m~dail~-.·ntiowl.&lt;·um

211117

drowns

INSIDE

disease process. Progress is carefully monitored through a program that

\\'EilNJ ·: SllAY, MAY 2;1,

:!11.)

SPORTS

.

SOD !

goes to Cowboys'
new stadium, B2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

away snow tractors and ski
weekends at a nearby resort.
A couple fans even got into
a snowball fight outside the
park's gates.
·.
Hargrove remains di s·
pleased with Major League
Baseball's rescheduling of
the series. Seattle has to
make two more trips back to
Cleveland, and the clubs
will play a doubleheader on
Sept. 26 when the Indians
make their only trip to
Seattle.
"I think we got the short
end of the stick," he said.
:'The way they decided to.
make it up is not good.''

COlliNG

.2011 Super Bowl

.

"'

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