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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

I

www .mydailysentinel.com

Oregon St. ~ another College World Series

Reds
from Page Bl
of the season came before a
third consecutive sellout
crowd that gave him a
standing ovation before
three of his four at-bats. The
fans roared a!;ain as Griffey
waved and tipped his cap
after he caught the final out
of the bottom of the eighth.
"It was eventful, there
· was a buzz," Seattle's Willie
Bloomquist
said
of
Griffey's trip back. "There
were times when it felt like
we were the visiting team.
That was just a tribute to
what he did for this city. I
don't think there was an atbat when he didn 't get a
standing ovation."
The support was almost
overwhelming for the slugger, who hinted he may
return yet again to be a

run s or fewer for the fourth
time in the sl&lt;id . He gave up
I0 hits, struck out four and
issued an intentional walk.
Griffey also made a running, tumbling catch in right
field - a position he asked
back into before the game
instead of his original
· assignment as designated
hitter.
"It wouldn't be fair to the
people of Seattle to just
DH," he said, after asking
manager Jerry Narron to put
him back in right field.
In the first inning, Griffey
hit a 2-0 pitch from Bati sta .
to left-center. The slugger
took a step and hopped in
anticipation of a home run
that he had said he hoped to
hit this weekend at Safeco
Field, "The · Hou se that
Griffey Built." The ballpark
opened in 1999 - the last
full season Griffey played
in Seattle.
·As Griffey's high drive

Larry Crum/photo

· Show

dropped toward the wall.
left fielder Bloomquist
leaped and appeared to
catch it. For an awkward
moment. no one knew if
Griffey had homered or
flied out to end the inning.
Third base umpire Brian
Runge was in the outfield
but made no signal.
Bloomquist had no reaction.
Griffey
si mpl y stood
between first mid second .
And the stood in odd
silence.
· Finally, when Bloomquist
began walking back to his
position without the ball in
his glove. R_unge signaled
home run and the .crowd
cheered Griffey's 15th
career home run at Safeco.
Griffey called it the
weirdest of his J84 homers.
The second one was vintage Griffey, a no-doubt
drive in the fifth reminiscent of the many he
launched at the since-

demolished
Kingdome
ac ross the street. He jumped
all over Batista's first pitch
fastball and sent it rocketing
off an advert isement lining
the 'second deck beyond
ri ght field.
Batista gave up five hits
in six innings. He walked
lwo and struck out four.
· Notes: Griffey's first two .
homers against Seattle in
six career games left him
two behind Frank Robinson
for sixth place. It also gave
Griffey I,654 RBis. That
gave him sole possessio n of
18th place ahead of ex-Red
Ton y Perez.
Edwin
Encarnacion. one of three
hit batsmen. immediately
dropped the bat and stumbled around the plate after
Batista hit him in the left
elbow with a 2-2 pitch to
load the bases in the third.
He stayed in the game for
three more innings before
Juan Castro replaced him.

from PageBl

Rutland alumni
honor military, .
homecoming queens, A2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)0

Cl.:\ '1S • \ ol.

.)h .

• Indians beat ~s.

BY BETH SERGENT

SeePa~B1

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Council voted to pursue
placing renewal levies on
the November ballot by
requesting specif1c in formation from the Meigs County
Auditor's Office about the
amounts the levies would
bring into village coffers.
The five-year levies consist of a 1.9-mill current
expense levy and a one-mill
fire levy. Council has until

FutureGen
studies helped
market
proposed
Rentech site
.

INSIDE

WEATHER

Details on Pat:e A2

Sign up for 4WEEKS and get
\ ·aFifth Week FREE

on the parking lot and walkiilg path a~ well as all other
street lighting.
Council approved the purchase of a $39,000 tanker
truck for the water and
sewer department though
the vote was not unanimous.
Councilwomen
Ruth
Spaun and Mary McAngus
voted against the purchase,
saying they didn't know
enough aQ&lt;Jut the uses of the
truck and wondered if it
would be cheaper just to
hire Jack's Septic Service to

continue pumping out the approved the $39,000 loan
sludge at the water treat- with Farmers Bank at 4.~7
ment plant. Spaun also percent interest for a period
asked if anyone in the water of five years. The Joan is
department had a COL to rctroacti ve to June 22 and
drive the truck. No one had wi II be paid out of the water
a definitive answer to these aJ1d sewer funds.
questions but Councilman · Hysell iliformed council
Jim Sisson said he was ·in the advertisement for sale of
favor of owning the equip- the Pomeroy Junior High
ment needed and that he School lot appeared yestertrusted
Village day in Tile Daily Sentinel.
Administrator
John
Councilman Shawn Arnott
Anderson to know what
requested
a list of phone
equipment he needed.
In the end, council · Plene see Coundl, AS

Who you calling chicken?
.

.

.

BY BRIAN .J. REED

. GREAT BEND -A
study completed as part of
Meigs County's FutureGen
proposal made it easier to
market a site now under consideration for development
by a Colorado:based ftrrn.
Rentech, a company
whose chemical processes
gasifiy coal and turn it into
fuel, chemicals and other
products, has an option on
400 acres in Lebanon
Township, as a possible site
for a new $3.8 billion facility. Development and elected
officials met with company
representatives Thursday to
encourage the location of
the plant in Meigs County.
The site now under consideration is the same privatelyowned property proposed
last year as one of two in
Ohio for the federal government's FutureGen project. It
adjoins property where
American Electric Power
plans to build a new IGCC
clean-coal power plant.
Studies of the site included work of a world-class
engineering firm, Worley
Parsons. The site was rejected for consideration for the
FutureGen project, however,
due to its proximity to
Forked Run State Park, the
Racine Locks and Dam, and
a little-known wildlife
refuge. It was one of two in

Beth Ser&amp;enl/plloto

·Although this may look.like a strange game of dominos. it's actually a game of "chicken track" at the Meigs County Senior
Center. Described tly the center's activities director as the "hottest game in town" the object is to create a chicken track
or foot out of the dominos. The game begins every Tuesday and Thursday at the center around lunch time. No money is
involved, just bragging rights and a good time .

EMA exercise set for Pomeroy river front Racine p~ed

fire suppression with foam.
The fire will test the skills
--~---__.:.·- - of the· fire departments in
POMEROY
-· Meigs applying foam to a petrolePlease see Site, AS
County
Emergency urn based ftre. Parts of the
Management Agency (EMA) plan to be tested will be trafand the Emergency Planning fie control. commumcaCommittee (LEPC) will test · tions, and resource managevarious sections of the coun- menl with use of incident
ty's Emergency Operations command. .
.
Plan (EOP) late Wednesday
The exercise wtll be eva!afternoon in a simulated uated by Galha EMA. perexercise at the Pomeroy river sonnet from. the Athens
fronl parking lot.
County Spec tal. Response
BY BRIAN J. REED
The simulation involving team and the Oh10 EMA .
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
a loose river barge containAlso takmg· part bes1des
Pomer~y
Fire
MIDDLEPORT - . With ing a flammable petroleum the
just a week before product will beach in the Department wtll be the
Platns
F1re
Independence Day. the levy area and cause a fire. Tuppers
The
simulation
will
involve
Department,
units
of
Meigs
Middleport
Community
Association ·continues to
seek donations for the community's fireworks display.
The association has sent
.
.
letters soliciting donations
BY
CHARLENE
HOEFUCH
It's
described
as a dreamy
from business members
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
indie band that has folk and
and past donors, but $720
roots tendencies. The band
toward the $5.000 cost of
POMEROY- "No River organized in 2000 and soon
the fireworks display
remains to be collected. City," an ensemble present- provided singer-songwriter
President ing music in the new coun- Ore De Man a vehicle for
Association
Brenda Phalin said dona- try _genre strain, will open the songs he'd been writing
tions have been made the first of four free con- over the past few years. The
toward the free fireworks certs in the Rhythm on the band took about a year to
display, but paying for River series at 7 p.m. Friday change around and settle
them will deplete the in . Pomeroy's riverfront into a lig~tweight , tight
semi-acousttc group that
Community Association's amphitheater.
The
concerts,
sponsored
began
making the rounds of
treasury even if the remainby
the
Big
Bend
Blues
and
southeastern
clubs.
ing cost is covered by addiJazz
Society,
will
continue
Performing
on July 6 in
tional donations . .
o.n
Fridays
until
July
27-28
the
amphitheater
will be
Phalin said many regular
for
the
Big
Bend
Blues
Bash.
Alben
Castiglia;
on
July 13,
!1reworks donors have not
No
River
City
plays
an
Will
Kimbrough;
and on
contributed this year, and
unusual
variant
of
·
what
July
20,
Randy
McAllister.
~he hopes those regular
some people might call-"altTwelve bands will be comPlease see Fireworks, AS coun\ry" or "Americana." ing to the Bend area to play
STAFF REPORT

NEWS®MvDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

EMS. the Citizens Corp of
the
RSVP Homeland
Security. the Radio Amateur
Civil Emergency Servi~e,
the · Pomeroy
Pohce
Department, an~ possibly
the Ohio Highway Patrol
and the Meigs County
Health Department. Other
county f~:e .__de~artments
may be c~llf1luring the
simulated exercise.
The purpose of the exercise is to test the various
parts of an emergency
response for a hazardous
chemical. The Emergency
Operation Center will be in

Please see EMA, AS

Rhythm on the River series kicks off Friday
.

INDEX
2 SEcrtONS -

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week on our popular web site!
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.

A3

Calendars

A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

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I

Aug. 23 to tile the petitions
with the Meigs County
Board of Elections to place
the levies on the ballot.
Clerk-Treasurer
Cathy
Hysell said the last collection for the current ex~nse
levy is set for 2008 tf not
approved for renewal in
November. Hysell added
this levy supports the gener. al fund, including ·street
lighting expenses which
costs the village nearly
$4,000 a month. This
expense includes lighting

Association .
short on
fireworks fund

FREE house spot color in your ad!
I

www.mydailyscntincl.cmn

:!ll . :!011'7

BREEO@MVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

.
I

Tl ' I.SI&gt;AY, .Jll :'I:F

:\o. :.!:!&lt;)

Pomeroy Council considering renewal levies

SPORTS

..

First Page· Week of June 24th
for four weeks thru week of July 15th

Utility Workers
Union makes
.donation,A:J

•

• Police officer in court
on charges of killing
girlfriend, fetus. ·
See Page A5
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
· • Local musicians
play in OU
. summer concerts.
See Page A3
• Meigs student
chosen for academic
summit. See Page A3
• Truck assembly plant
to invest $8.6 million,
add 80 jobs in W.Va.
See Page A3

Special Spot COLOR pages
.kicking off the summer season.

Ken Nelson, driving his vehicle the 'Cool Bus," makes a run down the track during the
Thunder Jam event at Kanawha Valley Motorsports Park in Southside Saturday
nent on Saturday night Ken . of the track. The Super
Hall. described the trip Charged Thunder cars also
down the 1/8 mile track as made three runs each, with
from Page Bl
one of the most incredible the cars flirting with speeds
feelings in the world.
of 150 mph on the cool
It took nearly an. hour for
"If you have ever been in evening.
track workers to clear the a roller coaster when you
Racing was delayed again
track of debris left from the are going down the hill and for nearly I0 minutes when
semi, but after the track was at the very bottom, when a few light rain showers
cleared, the show . went on you are pinned to the seat entered into the area, but
as planned.
and you scream lil!:e a little other than that, the rest of
"The crowd was great, girl; it is just like that but I0 the night went on as
. ·
d' times faster." Hall said.
planned.
th ts
IS a great summer tra I- • Hanna and Hall race their
And for Marchyshyn,
lion," Marchyshyn said. "It exhibition vehicles. nearly who helped put· on the
is the fourth year we have every weekend and will event, he said there is nothbeen back here for the
make hundreds of passes ing like seeing it all come
Thunder Jam event and down the lri!Ck a year. But together and work out in the
every year it gets bigger and for Hall, who was at the end and explains that when
bigger and' it has become a track during the scary inci- the show is all put together
tradition in this part of the dent with Motz, said he per- · on the track, that is what
country. People love com- sonally has ·never had any makes it all worthwhile.
ing down here."
real problems during a run. · "It is a motor sports ver"I have had a couple close sian of putting oli a rock
. Among the other exhibilion vehicles Saturday night · calls • .but knock on wood,· concert: You. are producing
were two jet dragsters the good Lord has allowed , an event and you do the
named "First Strike" and me to talk about it," Hall same things and that is what
''Top Secret." The two rock- said. •
makes
it so neat,"
et cars caiTied 6,000 lbs. of
Along with the two jet Marchyshyn said. "There is
thrust and stole the show as dragsters, the track also a lot of work in making sure
the two drivers flirted with brought out the "Cool Bus," there is food and drinks for
the 200 mph barrier.
a wheel-standing school bus everyone, making sure the
Rich Hanna, driver of driven by Ken Nelson and track surface is set, a lot of
"First Strike'; and son of AI eight cars from the Super advertising and ·promotion
Hanna who owns both cars, Charged Thunder division.
goes iilto this event."
holds the world speed and
Nelson made three runs
Racing action will contin-.
ET record for jet funny cars down the track with the bus ue at the track each weekof 5.42' at 295.08 mph.
standing on its back wheels, end throughout the summer
His teammate and oppo- · dragging sparl.&lt;s the length months.

season high with six strike,
.
outs.
The news W&lt;jSn 't all good
for . Washington. though.
Shortstop Cristian Guzman
sprained his left thumb
while tagging out Josh
Barfield at second base on a
steal attempt in the fifth
inning . Guzman, who is hitting .329. didn 't leave the
game but was placed on the
15-day disabled list afterward.
Like
Simontacchi.
Na ti onals closer . Chad
Cordero also bounced back
from a bad outing.· He got
three outs for his 13th save
in 19 chances - less than
24 hours after blowing a
two-run lead in the ninth
inning of Washington's 4-3
Joss Saturday.
Ronnie Belliard went 3for-3 and Dmitri Young
scored twice for the
Nationals, who won a home
se ries for the first time in
six tries.
Jake Westbrook ( 1-3)

came off the disabled list
and pitched seven solid
innings for Cleveland 111 hts
first start since May 2. He
gave up three ruos and
seven hits, struck out two
and walked none. He had
bee1.1 on the DL with an
abd_ominal injury.
Cleveland scored a season-low five run s -.ih the
three-game series.
Young led off .the second
inning by reaching on a
hard comebacker that
· deflected off Westbrook 's
left forearm for an infield
single. With one out, Young
advanced to third on
Belliard' s single . Flores
then broke out of his 1-for23 sltunp with a two-out
single up the middle that
scored Young.
Washington adqed a run
in the fourth. Youn g began
the inning with a double to
right . .moved to third on
Belliard's one-out single
·and scored on Ryan .
Langerhans' sacrifice fly.
Franklin Gutierrez homered off Simontacchi in the
tlfth.
Flores drove home an
insurance run with a·
grou ndout in the seventh.

Indians

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - n't gel much going against eariiest in a game in two the Tar Heels came away
Oregon State. became the Oregon State's steady pitch- years.
. with only one run each time.
first team in a decade to ing and solid defense. and · Not eve n Carignan. who
Ackley homered in the
repeat as College World were shut down whenever had ·given up one hit and n&lt;i fifth . and two more battc;rs
Series champion. complet- they appeared on the verge runs in 6 1-3 CWS innings reached
before Stutes
ing a dominant run through · of a big inning.
before Sunday, could Slop induced an inning-ending
the tournament with a 9-3
Mark Grbavac and Joe the Beavers. Singles by groundout.
·
victory over North Carolina Paterson combined to retire Santschi in the thi rd and
After Garrett Gore dou · on Sunday night.
the last seven North John Wallace in the fifth bled in the sixth. Anton
The Beavers (49-18) won Carolina batters. Paterson s tre ~c h.ed the Beavers· lead Maxwell entered and hit
1
all five of their CWS games. got a called third ~trike on l 0 5 2
Josh Horton to put two runincluding a sweep of the Tar pinch-hitter Kyle Shelton to
Dustin Ackley hit his sec- ners on with the ,Jangerous
Heels in the best-of-three end the game and send the ond homer of the CWS and Ackley coming up. Ackley
finals, and trailed for only Beavers sprinting out of IOth or the season to pull drove a liner into left !1eld
one of 45 innings they their dugout for the celebra- North Carolina to 5-3. but that Wallace snagged to end
tory pile.
played .in Omaha.
Scott Santschi 's third RBI the threat.
North Carolina was runThe Beavers knocked out single and Chris Hopkins'
In th e seventh. 'Tim
ner-up for the second North Carolina starter Luke infield hit made it 7-3 in the Fedroff tried to score on
straight year after the first Putkonen (8-2) in the second seventh.
Seth Williams' hit to the leftCWS finals rematch smce mmng after Barney lined a
Ackley's RBI ' ingle in the field wa ll. But Wallace
Ariwna State and USC met pitch, over the left-field wall. tlrst put North Carolina up threw to Barney, the ~hortin 1973. Oregon State is the Another run scored on third 1-0 and ended a streak of 61 stop, whose relay home was
first back-to-back champion basem11n Chad Flack's innings over seven games in in plenty of time to get
since LSU in 1996-97 and throwing error.
which Oregon State led or Fedroff at the.plate.
the fifth overall.
Putkonen, a sophomore, was tied. The Beavers hadn' t · The Beavers lost six posiDarwin Barney's two-run went only I 2-3 innings in trailed in a CWS game in 50 tiun players. two-thirds of
homer gave the Beavers the the shortest outing of his innings, since the fom;th their starting rotation and the
lead in the second inning of career.
frame of Game 2 of last closer from last year's team.
the decisive game. Jordan
Tar Heels coach Mike Fox year's tlnals.
They almost were left oui of
Lennerton hit hi s second made a surprise move by
North Carolina's first the NCAA tournament after
homer in two nights, a two- bringing in closer Andrew three batters reached against they went 4-8 in May and
run shot in the eighth.
Carignan, whose appearance Mike Stutes (12-4) in the finished tied for sixth in the
The Tar Heels (57-16) did- in the second inning was his first and third innings. but Pacific-tO Conference.
Mariner agam before he then retire.
retires.
"But I've still got a few
Griffey didn't specify more years," Griffey said.
whether he would like to "So I don't think it's anyjoin Seattle as an active time soon."
player or simply in a cereWhen . asked to clarify
monial contract signing. He whether he'd like to play
is signed through 2008 with again for Seattle, Griffey
Cincinnati, part of a $116.5 said: ·:t don't· know. That
million, nine-year deal he depends on a Jot of things,
signed after the trade · in health and everything .else."
February 2000, when he
Ben Broussard hit a twodemanded a return to his . out, . two-run double . off
hometown.
Bronson Arroyo in the sixth
The Reds hold an option inning to tie it and Willie
for $16.5 million in 2009, Bloomquist executed a perwith a $4 million buyout.
fect suicide squeeze in the
"You always want to seventh to put Seattle ahead.
retire with the team . you · Eric O'Fiaherty (4-0)
started with. I mean. you pitched a scoreless · seventh
look at Ernmitt Smith and to get the win and J.J. Putz.
everybody else," the · 37- got four outs for his 21st
year-old fqrrner Seattle icon save in as many chances.
said.
The last-place Reds lost
The
former
Dallas for the fourth time in six
Cowboys star running back games.
came back from a stint with
Arroyo (2-9) dropped his
the Arizona Cardinals to . seventh consecutive decisign again with Dallas and sion despite allowing three

'

Monday, Jmie 25, 2~07

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

I

·,

•

.

at the Blues Bash including
the Andy Francis Group,
Mudfork Blues, Free Beer
'N Chicken Coalition, The
Royales. and Johnny Rawls,
5 to II :30 p.m. Friday ; and
Law of Attraction, Greg
O'Brien and the Spoo-doo
Cadillacs, David Childers
and the Modern Don Juans,
· Lil' Dave Thompson and
Big Love, Johnny Rawls,
Shannon Curfman and
Lucky Peterson, I to II :30
p.m. on Friday.
There will be entertainment that weekend on
Second S~a~e in the Court
Street mtm-park on both
Friday and Saturday, as well
as at the Court Street Grill.

barge• aCCident

SUrviVOrs,·
• tim•
VIC
.S
r~om
1.'

n•ver

Bv BETH ·SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYOAILYSENTI NEL:coM

RAVENSWOOD. W.VA.
- Although many have
heard of the deadly accident
between a barge and pleasure
boat near Ravenswood, W.Va.
this weekend, it was actually
members of the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department
that rescued three people
from the Ohio River and
recovered three drowning victims in the aftermath.
Despite the accident happening near Jackson County,
W.Va., Racine ended up as
the primary responder, drop- ·
ping its rescue boat in at the
Portland boat levy shortly
after receiving the call
around 2 a.m. on Saturday
morning. J. Scoll Hill. assistant fire chief for Racine and
the officer in charge, said his
department pulled the first
survivor, Michael Fisher,
35, Ripley, from the water ·
near the Portland levy.
Fisher was then taken to
shore, saying there were five
more· victims in the waier
before being transported to
Jackson General Hospital.
. The Racine boat then
recovered survivor Roger

Please see Accld~t. ~S

..

...-.---------------------_...._~~ --·-- ---- -

�'

~

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~ageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Jwie 26,

2007

Rutland alumni reunion recogniZes military, honors homecoming queens
RUTLAND- More than
400 attended the 78th annual Rutland alumni reunion
held recently at the Rutland
Civic Center.
The event got underway
with a social hour as the
alumni gathered. President
Sue Clonch Larkin welcomed all to the "Celebrate
Our Country" themed banquet served at tables decorated with hurricane lamps,
crystal glass centerpieces,
red-white and blue star garlands and lighted candles.
Darlene Smith Vanaman
gave the invocation with the .
Pledge of Allegiance led by
Eugene Fink. There was
recognition of those who
had served in the' military.
The candlelight dinner
was provided the Star
Grange 778, and following
that the 1967 Girls
Ensemble took everyone on
a "Sentimental Journey" in
song.
·
Mike Bartrum and Mike
Chancey, Meigs High
School head football coach,
spoke regarding their vision
for a new sports complex at
Submitted photos
Meigs High School.
. Recipients of th~ RHS The oldest Rutland High School homecoming queen pre2007 Alumni Scholfu-ships sent, Mary McKnight Russell, class of 1939, was honored
were announced and pre- and is pictured here with her husband, Samuel Russell.
sented by Suzie Parker
Hysell. They . were Ashley Colwell Shenefield
Prdidy, ·Mickey
John
Dawn Taylor and Sarah
1948: Charles Buck
Hawkins Roberts, Lynn
Nicole Cochran. Miss
1949: Helen Taylor , Scragg
.Swackhammer,
Taylor is the granddaughter Atkeson, Mildred Thomas ' Shirley Turner, Jim ' Sheets,
.
of Jerry Black, class of Donahue, John Dyke, Carol · Robert Good
1964. She plans to attend Dawson Pack, Dorothy
1959: Dennis Ballengee,
Ohio University in the fall. Caton Deemer ·
Dan Cremeans, Elaine
Cochran is the granddaugh1950: Bill .Brown, Avanell Steele Dyer, Louise Parsons
ter of Max Davis, 1934, and Jordon George, Janet Ogdin Ead~ , Dee Thomas Easter.
Arline Nelson Davis, 1937, Jones, Samuel May
Euna Ric hards Eaton,
and she will attend Rio
1951 : Jack Barton, Marie Jimmy Graham, Shirley
Grande io major in nursing. .Little Birchfield, Joan Ballengee Head, Betty
, One of the highlights of Snowden May, Henry Jeffers Longstreth, · Richard
the evening was the honor- McKnight, Virginia Moore Nelson, Ronald Rife, Laura
ing of the longest serving Michael, Shirley Cremeans Turner Good
· RHS homecoming queen. Simmons, Lowell Vance
· 1960: Alberta Hawkins
Mary McKnight, the 1939
1952: Darlene Wolfe Brewer, John · Brogan,
· "May Queen" who was Kreuzer, Ainslee Wilson Thomas Buck Patty Young
escorted to the stage by her McKnight, Helen Stevens Clark,
Lin.da
Haley
husband Samuel Russell, Ransom, Corwin Smith, Hoffman,
Clara Mac
class of 1937, was joined by Wanda Foster Williams, Hysell, Marr Lee, Judith
· family members from New Mary Dyke Woodrum, Slawter . Marmacci, Harold
York, Tennessee and O~io Carol)'n Miller Gardner
McKenzie, Wayne Nelson,
.for pictures under a lighted
1953 Joan· Montgomery Marjorie Priddy Rife,
arbor. Also reco~nized were Corder, Nell Rice Dicken, Wayne Roush, Wanda
·past homecommg queens Jean Barr Messer, Judy Tackett Smith. Dottie Lucas
attending.
Lambert Snowden
Turner
Following the roll call of
1954 Ronald Ballengee,
1961 ; .
Sherman
classes, the program con- Donna Bolen Nelson, Ballengee, Charles Barrett.
eluded with singing of the Charles Richards Marian Jr, Helen Barr Bullis,
·Rutland School song, Reed Smith
Marlin
Goff.
Jim
accompanied by Catherine
1955 Alberta Snowden Hobstetter, David Martin,
Colwell Shenefield, fol- Montgomery,
John Patricia Rife McCort,
lowed by Mark Tillis lead- Montgomery, Jim Nelson, Mar~aret Kitchen Sinclair,
ing the Lord's Prayer in Paul Shoemaker, Ann Louise . Milam Soulsby,
· benediction. The evening PriddY. Thomas
Elena Martin Thompson
concluded with music,
1956 Lynh Bartrum.
1962: Phyllis Howard
refreshments, and a social Benschoter Janet Turner Cline, Lee . Combs, Louise
time.
Bolin, JO.e Bolin, Bill Higginbotham
Dulany,
Alumni attending and the Brewer, Harold Carson, Sandra Little Harris, Alan
class year· in which .they Edna German Coy, Jim King ,Larry Parsons, Junior
graduated were as follow s:
Dyer,. Lucy Turner ·Hess, Rife, Judy Lee Sheets, Viola
1933: Eugene Fink
Donna Will Higgins, Linda McKni ght
Shoemaker,
1935: Harold Rice
Buck Moore, Larry Pickens, . Wesley Sisson
1937: Samuel Rilssell , Bill Brewer
1963: Darlene Goff Dill,
Mildred Miller Williams
1957 . Leroy Chapman, Robert
Gibson,
Paul
1939: Mary McKnight Phyllis Rice Crandall, Joyce Higginbotham ,
Charles
Russell
Wolfe
Crossen ,
Bill Hoffman, Bobby Pope,
1940: Alta Will Casdorph, Edwards;
Bi II Frye, David Scragg, John Tillis,
Marjorie Standley Rice
JohnJeffers,
Kenneth Dreama Birchfield Harvey
1941 : Maxine · Ogdin Longstreth,
Minnie
1964: Charldene . King
Griffith, Mary Davis Holter Kitchen,
McKenzie Alkire, Jerry Black, Roma
1942: Harold . Darst, C:larenceMight,
Henry James Cremeans, Ancil
James Hewitt, James · Milam, Eloise Spires Cross, Steve King, Daniel
. Lanning, Robert Snowden, Reeves, Jerry Schoonover, McDonald, Sonja Turner
Laura Brown Steele, James Joseph
Scragg,
Judy Parsons, Rosemary Harless
Thomas
Hatfield · Simon, Dorothy Pope, Gary Saxton, Benny
1944: Marie Hoffman Nelson . Taylor, Thomas Slawter, Roberta Smith
Riggs, Eleanor Taylor Turner, Wanda Graharn Meyer, Jerry Tillis, Panny
Thomas
Vining, Raymond Wilcox, Tillis, DiJ&gt;ie Roush Waters,
1945: Delma Ri ggs Joan Rife Wolfe
Sharon Quillen Wise,
Nelson
1958:
Duane
Barr,
1965 : Keever Grate Linda
1946: Bill Bailey
Barbara
Montgomery Sue Parker Hysell Tom
1947: Roger Bolen, Eisenhart,
Charlotte Hysell Cecil Johnston Bill
Daniel Dawson, Betty Birchfield Grant, Danny Lambert Judy Cremeans
Miller Levis, Carl Pierce, Holliday, Thomas Jeffers, McDonald Shirley Dugan
Richard Rupe, Catherine Margaret Ballengee Nelson, Priddy, Larry Rupe, Ronnie

Local Weather Local Stocks

-

Tuesday... Mostly sunny.
Hot with highs in the lower
90s. Southwest winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday night ••. Partl y
cloudy. Lows in the upper
60s. Southwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable.
Wednesday ... Mo st ly
sunny with a slight chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Hot with highs in
'the lower 90s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 20 percent. .
Wednesday
night...
Mostly cloudy with a slight
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s. Southwest winds
5 to I0 mph. Chance of rain
20 percent.
· Thursday __ , Mo s tly
, cloudy with a chance of
: showers and thunderstorms.

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27.03

Utility Workers Union make~ donation
The. Utility
Workers Union of
America Local
296 of American
Electric ·Power's
Gavin Plant in
Cheshire recently made a monetary donation to ·
the.Sprlngfield
Township Fire
Department.
Local 296
President James

Past Rutland High School homecoming queens attending the reunion were honored. They
were Darlene Smith Vanaman, 1957; Clara Mae Hysell, 1960, Louise Parsons Eads, 1959;
Elena Martin Thompson, 1961; and Wanda Foster Will ia ms, 1952, left to right. Also attending but not pictured was Joan Rife Wolfe. 1937.
Taylor, Linda Chapman
Young,
·
1966: Barbara Cotterill
Cremeans, Larry Fetty,
Steve
Grimm,
Nancy,Lambert Haddox,
Mary Crouser Hobstetter,
Gloria
Higgi nbotham
Mabe,
Nancy
Lee
McHenry, · Loretta Harless
McQuaid, John Moore,
Mike Nicholson, Beverly
Forbes
Rupe,
Joetta
Erlewine Eskew
1967: Glenda Johnson
Aleshire, Roger Alkire,
Roger Barrett, Kenneth
Carsey, Roger Davis, Peggy
Tillis DeWees, Martha
Brown Farley,
Karen
Tucker Floyd, Lori Godby,
Douglas Grover, Nancy
Knotts Hall, Raymond
Harless,
Ernest
Lee
Hawkins, Gary Haynes,
Chester
King,
Lilly
Imboden Kloes, Sue Clonch
Larkin, Sam Larkin, Roger

Lathey, Dixie Wamsley
Leonard, Joyce Might
McDaniel, Patty Malone
Moore,
June · Jarv is
Mowery, Chris Napper,
Bonnie Grate Nicholson,
Debbie Turner Pool, Tim
Priddy, Debbie Smith Rose,
Iva Sams Sloter, Dillie
Carson Sayre, Joy ce Brogan
Rowe , Kathy Tomas
Schu'ltz, Mark Tillis, Gil
Turley, Darlene Smith
Vanaman, JimVanaman,
Betty Clark VanMatre,
Denni s · Weber, Deborah
Sheets Winters., Harry
Yarbrough
1968: Roger Black, Mary
Hall Fallon, Jim .Fink, Lelia
Kitchen Haggy Larry
Montgomery, Mike Porter,
Leroy Welsh, Tim Hall
1969: Janice Smith
Grimm, Pam Lee Harless,
Candy ChafinTillis, Brenda
Johnson Vickers, Ronnie
Grate

1970: Kathy Barrett,
KarenGriffith
1971: Ellen Rice Brooker,
Mike Grate, Donna Weber
Jenkins, Becky Johnston,
Betty Smith Lambert,
Sherrie Turner Might, Linda
Midkiff
Montgomery,
Gloria Gotf Oiler, Sharon
Roberts .Yarbrough .
1973: Jim Birchtield
1974: Robert Birchtield
1975: Regina Harri son
Wolfe
1977: Melanie Simmons
Dudding
1979: Timothy Wyant
1981 : Carla Smith Wyant .
Other graduates with
classes unlisted attending
were Jock Davidson, Kyle
Davidsdion, Robert Russell,
Carol Gibson · Williams,
Diane
Lee,
Carlos
McKnight. Teachers attending were Martha Ohlinger
Vennari', Don Spencer, and
Joan Montgomeroy Corder.

POMEROY - Several
area residents arc participating again this year in the
Under the Elms concert
Series held annually at Ohio
· University.
The free conce rts are held
at 7 p.m. Wednesday
evenin gs on the Main
College Green. They bega n

POMEROY - Jose' F.
Whitlach, an eighth grade
student at Meigs Middle
School, has been chosen to
attend the People to People
Leadership Summit in Los
Ange les, Calif. at UCLA.
All students accepted into
a People to People program
must meet rigorous acade1w
ic and leadership requirements. Whitla'ch was nominated by a teacher at Meigs
Middle School .and was
accepted for the honor based
on outsta nding scholastic
merit, civic involvement and
leadership potential.
The summi t isn ' t i1ntil

~nanclal

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Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for June 25,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advlsol'tl Isaac
Mills In Galllpo.lls at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero
In Point Pleasan,t at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

•

Township Trustees meet in
regular session, 7:30 p.m.,
township garage.

Clubs and
organizations

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I

I

Take a closer look
at this relationship
BY KATHY MtTCHEU
AND MARCY SUGAR

Chloe be "honest" wi th her.
Today, Chloe told me she
went to the same doctor to
Dear Annie: I'm in love ask if birth control pills
. with an engaged man, but would help reg ulate her menunfortunately, · he isn't strual cycle. The doctor told
engaged to me. He knows her she had to get a pregnanhow I feel and has told me 9 test first, even though
he has similar feelings. We Chloe reiterated that she was
know we aren 't doing the not sexually active. Chloe
smartest thing, but we both wa' so humiliated, spe has
Jeffers, right,
believe a little bit is better decided tu change physicians.
presents a
than nothing at all.
· What is wrung wit]) doccheck to Jerry
The problem arises with tors these days? Is it so
Rhodes, assishis fiancee. I don't dislike inconceivable that a young
tant chief, and
her, but I am concerned woman would be a virgin?
Charles Smith,
about her effect on him. -Mother of a Virgin
lieutenant..
There have been times when
Dear Mother: Doctors
Submitted photo
I believe she's hacked intu who have often been on the
his e-mail account because receiving end of less-thanletters of mine were ·sent to uuthful patients can become
everyone in his address cynical and. when prescribing
book. She also spread birth control pills. feel safer
rumors around that he beat requmng a pregnancy test.
her, which I find completely But it is ·unconscionable to
Bowen, Sharon Hawley, absurd, and I think at one repeatedly imply that a patient
Randy Hart, Beth Stivers, point, she might have staged is a liar. Chloe is right to find
Chris Kimes, Susan Legg a near rape to earn sympathy. someone more suitable.
and Meghan Dodson. From
Dear Annie: I'd like to
I feel he should be told, but
Meigs County, participants if it comes from me, I'm tell "Cautiously Optimistic"
include Ken Dotson and afraid I'll just come off as that s01ne anger problems
Darren Jackson who direct- jealous and spiteful. So far, cannot be fi xed by anger
ed the River City Players I've tried to let him notice management. Sometimes
production of "Fiddler on . things o,n his own, but I think it's a chemical imbalance.
he may purposely be blindMy brother and I both had
the Roof.
ing himself to certain of her · anger issues all our lives
actions to avoid being hurt. and onl y recently discovShould I tell him my ·con- ered. in our 50s, that we
cems or just leave things as need medical help. I used to
they are?- Fearful in Love be angry at other people for
Dear Fearful: This guy is not getting upset at things
45769. He can be reached by
engaged
to someone else and that upset me. After I had
phone at 992-0919.
fooling
around
with you, and been ·on· medication for a
. Past Honorary Chairmen
you're
worried
his fiancee is while, I realized this must
of People to People organization include Presidents taking advantage of him? be what normal people feel
John F. Kennedy, Ronald W. Open your eyes and take a like. It was enlightening.
My brother had a horrible ·
Reagan, William J. Clinton. closer look. If the two of you
are
so
in
love,
he
should
have
breakdown
before he got
The People to People
t\Je
decency
to
break
off
the
proper
medical
help. I hope
Leadership
Summit
engagement.
If
he
won't,
you
.
"Optimistic
's"
attempts to bring together can be sure it's because he can receive help·boyfriend
outstanding student leaders doesn't care for you as much being judged, and atwithout
an earfrom around the globe to as you think, and it won't tier age than we did.
focus on leadership, team matter if you spill the beans · Finally Feeling Better
building, community ser- or not. Get .out of this relaDear Finally: How
vice, college admissions..and tionship before you become unfortunate it took so long
professional aspirations. the Other Woman in his mar- for you and your brother to
Students also work · on an nage, writing us that you're a get help. We
hope
action plan to make a differ- wreck because he won't "Optimistic 's" boyfriend
ence in their communities.
leave his wife.
and others like him will call
, . Dear Annie: My daughter their dociors today.
IS 22 and has made a choice
Annie's Mailbox is writto remain a virgin until mar- ten by Kathy Mitchell and
riage. The problem? Her Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
doctor.
tors of the Ann Landers
The last two times "Chloe" column. Please e-mail your
#164 will hold a special went to her gynecologist, the questions to .anniesmailmeeting,- 6 p.m. ll!ith work female doctor asked if she box@comcast.net, or write
in the Entered Apprentice was on birth control. When to: Annie's ' Mailbox, P. 0.
Degree for two candidates, my daughter explained she Box 118190, Chicago, JL
Any
Pomeroy/Racine was a virgin, the doctor did- 60611. To find out' more
Lodge member interested in n't believe her and kept say- .about Annie's Mailbox, .
participating in the 4th of ing, "You can tell me the and read features by other
July parade should contact uuth." Cliloe repeated that Creators Syndicate writers
an officer.
she had decided to remain .a and cartoo11ists, visit the
Saturday, J11ne 30
virgin until marriage. The Creators Syndicate · Web
RAVENSWOOD
doctor kept insisting that page at www.creators.com.
Fifteenth anniversary rally
for Local 5668, noon, un ion
hall. Take covered dish. ·
Tuesday, July 3
MIDDLEPORT
Regular monthly meeting of
POMEROY - Brett and
Middleport Masonic Lodge Heather Newsome· of
#363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. All Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy.
Master Masons invited.
announce the birth of their
son;
Ashton
Cole
Newsome , on May 28 ,
2007, at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
He weighed six pounds, ·
/
business and most importwo
ounces
and
was
19
and
tantly, . We st Virginia's
,./ \ •,
workers - to put our state three-quarters inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Ashton New,!iome
on the map, and it's clear
Vince
and
Susann
Knight
of
the rest of the world is realizing that West Vi(ginia is a Pomeroy. Paternal gr.and- Syracuse and Rudy and
Stewart
of
world-class place to do parents are Auston and Rosa lyn
Loraine
Newsome of Middleport.
business."

Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.
RACIN E - Racine Area
Community Organization,
6:30 p.m., Star Mill Park.
Potluck.
Thursday, Jurie 28
POMEROY -American
Cancer Society Meigs
Co unty Advisory Board,
noon, basement Pomeroy
Library, lunch provided,
new members welcome, call
992-6626 to RSVP.
TUPPERS PLAINS -Regular meeting of VFW
Post 9053, 7 p.m .
RA CINE
Pomeroy/Racine Lodge

Newsome birth

WILLIAMSTOWN, W.Va. have played a (O]e in bring- stamping plant, a producer
(AP) - A Toyota-owned ing the company to West of oxygen sensors, ignition
coils and spark plugs, and
truck
.manufacturer Virginia.
"It's re markable to think now a full-scale automoti ve
announced plans Monday to
plant
in
invest $8.6 million to open . that in just 15 ·short years, assembly
the state's first vehicle assem- our state has become home Williamstown," the se nator
bly plant and hire 80 workers to an automobile parts man- said. "We have all worked
in a region hit hard by the ufacturer, a sheet-metal very hard - government,
2005 closure of another large
manufacturing company.
Hino
Motors
Manufacturing plan s to .
spend the money upgrading
the former Walker Systems
plant and installing manufacturing
equipment,
accordin g to a ·news release
from Goy. Joe Manchin's
office. In addition to the
governor, U.S. Sen. Jay
Rockefeller ·and company
president
Hideichiro
Chikahiro
attended
Monday 's ceremony iii
WiUiamstown.
The 'company plans to
begi n operations at the
194,000-square-foot plant
in November building 2,500
trucks a year, the governor's
office said.
"The Williamstown plant
is not only West Virginia's
first vehicle assembly plant,
it's also the first assembly
plant for Hino Motors in the
U.S.," the governor said in
the release. "!t's a great day
for · Wood Coul'lty . and for
Travis R. Neely, MD, MPH
West Virginia."
Rockefeller, who has been
courting Hino Motors since
2001, sai.d he was proud to
.

At. Holzer Clinic, Pediatrics
is Our Specialt't...

FREE house spot color in your ad!
I

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

True~ assembly plant to inves~ $8.6 million, add 80 jobs in W.Va.

First Page- Week of June 24th
.for four weeks thru week of July 15th

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Virgi~ia Tech University as
guest conductor. Conducting
the July 3 concert will be
Richard Blatti of Ohio State
Uni versity, while both the
July II and July 18 concerts
will be conducted by Climer.
Meigs County res idents
play ing in the band are
Dave Bowen, Jeanne

June . 23 of next year but also the oldest o~ four chilWhitlacll is attempting to dren. Whitlach has lived in
raise funds for the trip now. Pomerdy all his life and
Raising enough money will says he hopes to one day
be the deciding fac tor on raise a famil y here also.
whether he can attend the
Whitlach has hopes of
summit. Whitlach says if he attending college to become
is able to make the trip he an electrical engineer ·or
will spend ten days at the architect. He also says he,
summit. going to classes on · "hopes that some day I will
·campus and learning ways be able to help out the comto become a stronger leader. munity that I hope will be
Whitlach has a 4.0 GPA, helping me. Kindness is a
is active in baseball, basket- chain that should never be
ball and ·football. He also forgotten or broken."
attends
Hysell
Run
For those wishing to supCommunity Church. 'He is port Whitlach's summit trip,
the son of Neal and Opal his address is 36425·
Whitlach- Bonecutter and is . Rocksprings R~ad, Pomeroy,

Other events

53.35
-23.87

last week with the John
·Climer. director of bands at
Ohio, conducting and featuring Brett Shuster of the
University of Louisville on
the trombone, and John R.
Jones, also of the University
of LouisYille, on the tuba.
This week's concert will
feature Patrick Casey of the

Thursday, June 28
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
will meet at 7:30 p'.m.
Saturday, June 30
·Thursday in counci l chamMIDDLEPORT
bers, instead of Monday.
POMEROY Meigs "Singing in the Street"
County Commissioners. I0 gospel bluegrass concert, I0
a.m. to 6 p.m., at The Corner
· a.m. instead of I p.m.
POMEROY
The Restaurant, 308 S. Third Ave.
Mesigs Soi l and · Water
Conservatoi n
Disdtrict
Board of Supervisors will
uike place at II a. m. at the
office on Hiland Road
Tuesday, June 26
Monday, July 2
POMEROY -OH-KAN
REEDSV ILLE - Olive

Norfolk Southam (NYSE) Oak Hill

1

HOLZER
CLINIC
304.675.4498 Pt. Pleasan
740.446.5371 Gallipolis
t.9912.0060 Pomeroy

• ....., .8805 Jackson

.

Accepting New Patients ·with No Wait Time, Call Us Today

_________...._____...........__........__________________
l

26, 2007

Meigs student chosen for academic summit

Public meetings

I

Tuesday, June

Local musicians play in.OU summer concerts

Community Calendar

Special Spot COLOR pages
kicking off the summer.season;

PageA3

BY 'T HEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Medical Excellence.
Local Qlring:

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

�'

~

.

.

~ageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Jwie 26,

2007

Rutland alumni reunion recogniZes military, honors homecoming queens
RUTLAND- More than
400 attended the 78th annual Rutland alumni reunion
held recently at the Rutland
Civic Center.
The event got underway
with a social hour as the
alumni gathered. President
Sue Clonch Larkin welcomed all to the "Celebrate
Our Country" themed banquet served at tables decorated with hurricane lamps,
crystal glass centerpieces,
red-white and blue star garlands and lighted candles.
Darlene Smith Vanaman
gave the invocation with the .
Pledge of Allegiance led by
Eugene Fink. There was
recognition of those who
had served in the' military.
The candlelight dinner
was provided the Star
Grange 778, and following
that the 1967 Girls
Ensemble took everyone on
a "Sentimental Journey" in
song.
·
Mike Bartrum and Mike
Chancey, Meigs High
School head football coach,
spoke regarding their vision
for a new sports complex at
Submitted photos
Meigs High School.
. Recipients of th~ RHS The oldest Rutland High School homecoming queen pre2007 Alumni Scholfu-ships sent, Mary McKnight Russell, class of 1939, was honored
were announced and pre- and is pictured here with her husband, Samuel Russell.
sented by Suzie Parker
Hysell. They . were Ashley Colwell Shenefield
Prdidy, ·Mickey
John
Dawn Taylor and Sarah
1948: Charles Buck
Hawkins Roberts, Lynn
Nicole Cochran. Miss
1949: Helen Taylor , Scragg
.Swackhammer,
Taylor is the granddaughter Atkeson, Mildred Thomas ' Shirley Turner, Jim ' Sheets,
.
of Jerry Black, class of Donahue, John Dyke, Carol · Robert Good
1964. She plans to attend Dawson Pack, Dorothy
1959: Dennis Ballengee,
Ohio University in the fall. Caton Deemer ·
Dan Cremeans, Elaine
Cochran is the granddaugh1950: Bill .Brown, Avanell Steele Dyer, Louise Parsons
ter of Max Davis, 1934, and Jordon George, Janet Ogdin Ead~ , Dee Thomas Easter.
Arline Nelson Davis, 1937, Jones, Samuel May
Euna Ric hards Eaton,
and she will attend Rio
1951 : Jack Barton, Marie Jimmy Graham, Shirley
Grande io major in nursing. .Little Birchfield, Joan Ballengee Head, Betty
, One of the highlights of Snowden May, Henry Jeffers Longstreth, · Richard
the evening was the honor- McKnight, Virginia Moore Nelson, Ronald Rife, Laura
ing of the longest serving Michael, Shirley Cremeans Turner Good
· RHS homecoming queen. Simmons, Lowell Vance
· 1960: Alberta Hawkins
Mary McKnight, the 1939
1952: Darlene Wolfe Brewer, John · Brogan,
· "May Queen" who was Kreuzer, Ainslee Wilson Thomas Buck Patty Young
escorted to the stage by her McKnight, Helen Stevens Clark,
Lin.da
Haley
husband Samuel Russell, Ransom, Corwin Smith, Hoffman,
Clara Mac
class of 1937, was joined by Wanda Foster Williams, Hysell, Marr Lee, Judith
· family members from New Mary Dyke Woodrum, Slawter . Marmacci, Harold
York, Tennessee and O~io Carol)'n Miller Gardner
McKenzie, Wayne Nelson,
.for pictures under a lighted
1953 Joan· Montgomery Marjorie Priddy Rife,
arbor. Also reco~nized were Corder, Nell Rice Dicken, Wayne Roush, Wanda
·past homecommg queens Jean Barr Messer, Judy Tackett Smith. Dottie Lucas
attending.
Lambert Snowden
Turner
Following the roll call of
1954 Ronald Ballengee,
1961 ; .
Sherman
classes, the program con- Donna Bolen Nelson, Ballengee, Charles Barrett.
eluded with singing of the Charles Richards Marian Jr, Helen Barr Bullis,
·Rutland School song, Reed Smith
Marlin
Goff.
Jim
accompanied by Catherine
1955 Alberta Snowden Hobstetter, David Martin,
Colwell Shenefield, fol- Montgomery,
John Patricia Rife McCort,
lowed by Mark Tillis lead- Montgomery, Jim Nelson, Mar~aret Kitchen Sinclair,
ing the Lord's Prayer in Paul Shoemaker, Ann Louise . Milam Soulsby,
· benediction. The evening PriddY. Thomas
Elena Martin Thompson
concluded with music,
1956 Lynh Bartrum.
1962: Phyllis Howard
refreshments, and a social Benschoter Janet Turner Cline, Lee . Combs, Louise
time.
Bolin, JO.e Bolin, Bill Higginbotham
Dulany,
Alumni attending and the Brewer, Harold Carson, Sandra Little Harris, Alan
class year· in which .they Edna German Coy, Jim King ,Larry Parsons, Junior
graduated were as follow s:
Dyer,. Lucy Turner ·Hess, Rife, Judy Lee Sheets, Viola
1933: Eugene Fink
Donna Will Higgins, Linda McKni ght
Shoemaker,
1935: Harold Rice
Buck Moore, Larry Pickens, . Wesley Sisson
1937: Samuel Rilssell , Bill Brewer
1963: Darlene Goff Dill,
Mildred Miller Williams
1957 . Leroy Chapman, Robert
Gibson,
Paul
1939: Mary McKnight Phyllis Rice Crandall, Joyce Higginbotham ,
Charles
Russell
Wolfe
Crossen ,
Bill Hoffman, Bobby Pope,
1940: Alta Will Casdorph, Edwards;
Bi II Frye, David Scragg, John Tillis,
Marjorie Standley Rice
JohnJeffers,
Kenneth Dreama Birchfield Harvey
1941 : Maxine · Ogdin Longstreth,
Minnie
1964: Charldene . King
Griffith, Mary Davis Holter Kitchen,
McKenzie Alkire, Jerry Black, Roma
1942: Harold . Darst, C:larenceMight,
Henry James Cremeans, Ancil
James Hewitt, James · Milam, Eloise Spires Cross, Steve King, Daniel
. Lanning, Robert Snowden, Reeves, Jerry Schoonover, McDonald, Sonja Turner
Laura Brown Steele, James Joseph
Scragg,
Judy Parsons, Rosemary Harless
Thomas
Hatfield · Simon, Dorothy Pope, Gary Saxton, Benny
1944: Marie Hoffman Nelson . Taylor, Thomas Slawter, Roberta Smith
Riggs, Eleanor Taylor Turner, Wanda Graharn Meyer, Jerry Tillis, Panny
Thomas
Vining, Raymond Wilcox, Tillis, DiJ&gt;ie Roush Waters,
1945: Delma Ri ggs Joan Rife Wolfe
Sharon Quillen Wise,
Nelson
1958:
Duane
Barr,
1965 : Keever Grate Linda
1946: Bill Bailey
Barbara
Montgomery Sue Parker Hysell Tom
1947: Roger Bolen, Eisenhart,
Charlotte Hysell Cecil Johnston Bill
Daniel Dawson, Betty Birchfield Grant, Danny Lambert Judy Cremeans
Miller Levis, Carl Pierce, Holliday, Thomas Jeffers, McDonald Shirley Dugan
Richard Rupe, Catherine Margaret Ballengee Nelson, Priddy, Larry Rupe, Ronnie

Local Weather Local Stocks

-

Tuesday... Mostly sunny.
Hot with highs in the lower
90s. Southwest winds
around 5 mph.
Tuesday night ••. Partl y
cloudy. Lows in the upper
60s. Southwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable.
Wednesday ... Mo st ly
sunny with a slight chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Hot with highs in
'the lower 90s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 20 percent. .
Wednesday
night...
Mostly cloudy with a slight
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s. Southwest winds
5 to I0 mph. Chance of rain
20 percent.
· Thursday __ , Mo s tly
, cloudy with a chance of
: showers and thunderstorms.

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-10.9$

.

City Holding (NASDAQ).38-00

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Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 60.64
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 48.36
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Umlted Brands (NYSE) ,__
27.03

Utility Workers Union make~ donation
The. Utility
Workers Union of
America Local
296 of American
Electric ·Power's
Gavin Plant in
Cheshire recently made a monetary donation to ·
the.Sprlngfield
Township Fire
Department.
Local 296
President James

Past Rutland High School homecoming queens attending the reunion were honored. They
were Darlene Smith Vanaman, 1957; Clara Mae Hysell, 1960, Louise Parsons Eads, 1959;
Elena Martin Thompson, 1961; and Wanda Foster Will ia ms, 1952, left to right. Also attending but not pictured was Joan Rife Wolfe. 1937.
Taylor, Linda Chapman
Young,
·
1966: Barbara Cotterill
Cremeans, Larry Fetty,
Steve
Grimm,
Nancy,Lambert Haddox,
Mary Crouser Hobstetter,
Gloria
Higgi nbotham
Mabe,
Nancy
Lee
McHenry, · Loretta Harless
McQuaid, John Moore,
Mike Nicholson, Beverly
Forbes
Rupe,
Joetta
Erlewine Eskew
1967: Glenda Johnson
Aleshire, Roger Alkire,
Roger Barrett, Kenneth
Carsey, Roger Davis, Peggy
Tillis DeWees, Martha
Brown Farley,
Karen
Tucker Floyd, Lori Godby,
Douglas Grover, Nancy
Knotts Hall, Raymond
Harless,
Ernest
Lee
Hawkins, Gary Haynes,
Chester
King,
Lilly
Imboden Kloes, Sue Clonch
Larkin, Sam Larkin, Roger

Lathey, Dixie Wamsley
Leonard, Joyce Might
McDaniel, Patty Malone
Moore,
June · Jarv is
Mowery, Chris Napper,
Bonnie Grate Nicholson,
Debbie Turner Pool, Tim
Priddy, Debbie Smith Rose,
Iva Sams Sloter, Dillie
Carson Sayre, Joy ce Brogan
Rowe , Kathy Tomas
Schu'ltz, Mark Tillis, Gil
Turley, Darlene Smith
Vanaman, JimVanaman,
Betty Clark VanMatre,
Denni s · Weber, Deborah
Sheets Winters., Harry
Yarbrough
1968: Roger Black, Mary
Hall Fallon, Jim .Fink, Lelia
Kitchen Haggy Larry
Montgomery, Mike Porter,
Leroy Welsh, Tim Hall
1969: Janice Smith
Grimm, Pam Lee Harless,
Candy ChafinTillis, Brenda
Johnson Vickers, Ronnie
Grate

1970: Kathy Barrett,
KarenGriffith
1971: Ellen Rice Brooker,
Mike Grate, Donna Weber
Jenkins, Becky Johnston,
Betty Smith Lambert,
Sherrie Turner Might, Linda
Midkiff
Montgomery,
Gloria Gotf Oiler, Sharon
Roberts .Yarbrough .
1973: Jim Birchtield
1974: Robert Birchtield
1975: Regina Harri son
Wolfe
1977: Melanie Simmons
Dudding
1979: Timothy Wyant
1981 : Carla Smith Wyant .
Other graduates with
classes unlisted attending
were Jock Davidson, Kyle
Davidsdion, Robert Russell,
Carol Gibson · Williams,
Diane
Lee,
Carlos
McKnight. Teachers attending were Martha Ohlinger
Vennari', Don Spencer, and
Joan Montgomeroy Corder.

POMEROY - Several
area residents arc participating again this year in the
Under the Elms concert
Series held annually at Ohio
· University.
The free conce rts are held
at 7 p.m. Wednesday
evenin gs on the Main
College Green. They bega n

POMEROY - Jose' F.
Whitlach, an eighth grade
student at Meigs Middle
School, has been chosen to
attend the People to People
Leadership Summit in Los
Ange les, Calif. at UCLA.
All students accepted into
a People to People program
must meet rigorous acade1w
ic and leadership requirements. Whitla'ch was nominated by a teacher at Meigs
Middle School .and was
accepted for the honor based
on outsta nding scholastic
merit, civic involvement and
leadership potential.
The summi t isn ' t i1ntil

~nanclal

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Royal Dutch Shell - 78.92
Seal'll Holding (NASDAQ)169.01

Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 47.82
Wendy's·(NYSE)- 37.35
Worthington (NYSE)- 20.50
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for June 25,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advlsol'tl Isaac
Mills In Galllpo.lls at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero
In Point Pleasan,t at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

•

Township Trustees meet in
regular session, 7:30 p.m.,
township garage.

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organizations

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I

I

Take a closer look
at this relationship
BY KATHY MtTCHEU
AND MARCY SUGAR

Chloe be "honest" wi th her.
Today, Chloe told me she
went to the same doctor to
Dear Annie: I'm in love ask if birth control pills
. with an engaged man, but would help reg ulate her menunfortunately, · he isn't strual cycle. The doctor told
engaged to me. He knows her she had to get a pregnanhow I feel and has told me 9 test first, even though
he has similar feelings. We Chloe reiterated that she was
know we aren 't doing the not sexually active. Chloe
smartest thing, but we both wa' so humiliated, spe has
Jeffers, right,
believe a little bit is better decided tu change physicians.
presents a
than nothing at all.
· What is wrung wit]) doccheck to Jerry
The problem arises with tors these days? Is it so
Rhodes, assishis fiancee. I don't dislike inconceivable that a young
tant chief, and
her, but I am concerned woman would be a virgin?
Charles Smith,
about her effect on him. -Mother of a Virgin
lieutenant..
There have been times when
Dear Mother: Doctors
Submitted photo
I believe she's hacked intu who have often been on the
his e-mail account because receiving end of less-thanletters of mine were ·sent to uuthful patients can become
everyone in his address cynical and. when prescribing
book. She also spread birth control pills. feel safer
rumors around that he beat requmng a pregnancy test.
her, which I find completely But it is ·unconscionable to
Bowen, Sharon Hawley, absurd, and I think at one repeatedly imply that a patient
Randy Hart, Beth Stivers, point, she might have staged is a liar. Chloe is right to find
Chris Kimes, Susan Legg a near rape to earn sympathy. someone more suitable.
and Meghan Dodson. From
Dear Annie: I'd like to
I feel he should be told, but
Meigs County, participants if it comes from me, I'm tell "Cautiously Optimistic"
include Ken Dotson and afraid I'll just come off as that s01ne anger problems
Darren Jackson who direct- jealous and spiteful. So far, cannot be fi xed by anger
ed the River City Players I've tried to let him notice management. Sometimes
production of "Fiddler on . things o,n his own, but I think it's a chemical imbalance.
he may purposely be blindMy brother and I both had
the Roof.
ing himself to certain of her · anger issues all our lives
actions to avoid being hurt. and onl y recently discovShould I tell him my ·con- ered. in our 50s, that we
cems or just leave things as need medical help. I used to
they are?- Fearful in Love be angry at other people for
Dear Fearful: This guy is not getting upset at things
45769. He can be reached by
engaged
to someone else and that upset me. After I had
phone at 992-0919.
fooling
around
with you, and been ·on· medication for a
. Past Honorary Chairmen
you're
worried
his fiancee is while, I realized this must
of People to People organization include Presidents taking advantage of him? be what normal people feel
John F. Kennedy, Ronald W. Open your eyes and take a like. It was enlightening.
My brother had a horrible ·
Reagan, William J. Clinton. closer look. If the two of you
are
so
in
love,
he
should
have
breakdown
before he got
The People to People
t\Je
decency
to
break
off
the
proper
medical
help. I hope
Leadership
Summit
engagement.
If
he
won't,
you
.
"Optimistic
's"
attempts to bring together can be sure it's because he can receive help·boyfriend
outstanding student leaders doesn't care for you as much being judged, and atwithout
an earfrom around the globe to as you think, and it won't tier age than we did.
focus on leadership, team matter if you spill the beans · Finally Feeling Better
building, community ser- or not. Get .out of this relaDear Finally: How
vice, college admissions..and tionship before you become unfortunate it took so long
professional aspirations. the Other Woman in his mar- for you and your brother to
Students also work · on an nage, writing us that you're a get help. We
hope
action plan to make a differ- wreck because he won't "Optimistic 's" boyfriend
ence in their communities.
leave his wife.
and others like him will call
, . Dear Annie: My daughter their dociors today.
IS 22 and has made a choice
Annie's Mailbox is writto remain a virgin until mar- ten by Kathy Mitchell and
riage. The problem? Her Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
doctor.
tors of the Ann Landers
The last two times "Chloe" column. Please e-mail your
#164 will hold a special went to her gynecologist, the questions to .anniesmailmeeting,- 6 p.m. ll!ith work female doctor asked if she box@comcast.net, or write
in the Entered Apprentice was on birth control. When to: Annie's ' Mailbox, P. 0.
Degree for two candidates, my daughter explained she Box 118190, Chicago, JL
Any
Pomeroy/Racine was a virgin, the doctor did- 60611. To find out' more
Lodge member interested in n't believe her and kept say- .about Annie's Mailbox, .
participating in the 4th of ing, "You can tell me the and read features by other
July parade should contact uuth." Cliloe repeated that Creators Syndicate writers
an officer.
she had decided to remain .a and cartoo11ists, visit the
Saturday, J11ne 30
virgin until marriage. The Creators Syndicate · Web
RAVENSWOOD
doctor kept insisting that page at www.creators.com.
Fifteenth anniversary rally
for Local 5668, noon, un ion
hall. Take covered dish. ·
Tuesday, July 3
MIDDLEPORT
Regular monthly meeting of
POMEROY - Brett and
Middleport Masonic Lodge Heather Newsome· of
#363, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. All Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy.
Master Masons invited.
announce the birth of their
son;
Ashton
Cole
Newsome , on May 28 ,
2007, at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
He weighed six pounds, ·
/
business and most importwo
ounces
and
was
19
and
tantly, . We st Virginia's
,./ \ •,
workers - to put our state three-quarters inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Ashton New,!iome
on the map, and it's clear
Vince
and
Susann
Knight
of
the rest of the world is realizing that West Vi(ginia is a Pomeroy. Paternal gr.and- Syracuse and Rudy and
Stewart
of
world-class place to do parents are Auston and Rosa lyn
Loraine
Newsome of Middleport.
business."

Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.
RACIN E - Racine Area
Community Organization,
6:30 p.m., Star Mill Park.
Potluck.
Thursday, Jurie 28
POMEROY -American
Cancer Society Meigs
Co unty Advisory Board,
noon, basement Pomeroy
Library, lunch provided,
new members welcome, call
992-6626 to RSVP.
TUPPERS PLAINS -Regular meeting of VFW
Post 9053, 7 p.m .
RA CINE
Pomeroy/Racine Lodge

Newsome birth

WILLIAMSTOWN, W.Va. have played a (O]e in bring- stamping plant, a producer
(AP) - A Toyota-owned ing the company to West of oxygen sensors, ignition
coils and spark plugs, and
truck
.manufacturer Virginia.
"It's re markable to think now a full-scale automoti ve
announced plans Monday to
plant
in
invest $8.6 million to open . that in just 15 ·short years, assembly
the state's first vehicle assem- our state has become home Williamstown," the se nator
bly plant and hire 80 workers to an automobile parts man- said. "We have all worked
in a region hit hard by the ufacturer, a sheet-metal very hard - government,
2005 closure of another large
manufacturing company.
Hino
Motors
Manufacturing plan s to .
spend the money upgrading
the former Walker Systems
plant and installing manufacturing
equipment,
accordin g to a ·news release
from Goy. Joe Manchin's
office. In addition to the
governor, U.S. Sen. Jay
Rockefeller ·and company
president
Hideichiro
Chikahiro
attended
Monday 's ceremony iii
WiUiamstown.
The 'company plans to
begi n operations at the
194,000-square-foot plant
in November building 2,500
trucks a year, the governor's
office said.
"The Williamstown plant
is not only West Virginia's
first vehicle assembly plant,
it's also the first assembly
plant for Hino Motors in the
U.S.," the governor said in
the release. "!t's a great day
for · Wood Coul'lty . and for
Travis R. Neely, MD, MPH
West Virginia."
Rockefeller, who has been
courting Hino Motors since
2001, sai.d he was proud to
.

At. Holzer Clinic, Pediatrics
is Our Specialt't...

FREE house spot color in your ad!
I

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

True~ assembly plant to inves~ $8.6 million, add 80 jobs in W.Va.

First Page- Week of June 24th
.for four weeks thru week of July 15th

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Virgi~ia Tech University as
guest conductor. Conducting
the July 3 concert will be
Richard Blatti of Ohio State
Uni versity, while both the
July II and July 18 concerts
will be conducted by Climer.
Meigs County res idents
play ing in the band are
Dave Bowen, Jeanne

June . 23 of next year but also the oldest o~ four chilWhitlacll is attempting to dren. Whitlach has lived in
raise funds for the trip now. Pomerdy all his life and
Raising enough money will says he hopes to one day
be the deciding fac tor on raise a famil y here also.
whether he can attend the
Whitlach has hopes of
summit. Whitlach says if he attending college to become
is able to make the trip he an electrical engineer ·or
will spend ten days at the architect. He also says he,
summit. going to classes on · "hopes that some day I will
·campus and learning ways be able to help out the comto become a stronger leader. munity that I hope will be
Whitlach has a 4.0 GPA, helping me. Kindness is a
is active in baseball, basket- chain that should never be
ball and ·football. He also forgotten or broken."
attends
Hysell
Run
For those wishing to supCommunity Church. 'He is port Whitlach's summit trip,
the son of Neal and Opal his address is 36425·
Whitlach- Bonecutter and is . Rocksprings R~ad, Pomeroy,

Other events

53.35
-23.87

last week with the John
·Climer. director of bands at
Ohio, conducting and featuring Brett Shuster of the
University of Louisville on
the trombone, and John R.
Jones, also of the University
of LouisYille, on the tuba.
This week's concert will
feature Patrick Casey of the

Thursday, June 28
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
will meet at 7:30 p'.m.
Saturday, June 30
·Thursday in counci l chamMIDDLEPORT
bers, instead of Monday.
POMEROY Meigs "Singing in the Street"
County Commissioners. I0 gospel bluegrass concert, I0
a.m. to 6 p.m., at The Corner
· a.m. instead of I p.m.
POMEROY
The Restaurant, 308 S. Third Ave.
Mesigs Soi l and · Water
Conservatoi n
Disdtrict
Board of Supervisors will
uike place at II a. m. at the
office on Hiland Road
Tuesday, June 26
Monday, July 2
POMEROY -OH-KAN
REEDSV ILLE - Olive

Norfolk Southam (NYSE) Oak Hill

1

HOLZER
CLINIC
304.675.4498 Pt. Pleasan
740.446.5371 Gallipolis
t.9912.0060 Pomeroy

• ....., .8805 Jackson

.

Accepting New Patients ·with No Wait Time, Call Us Today

_________...._____...........__........__________________
l

26, 2007

Meigs student chosen for academic summit

Public meetings

I

Tuesday, June

Local musicians play in.OU summer concerts

Community Calendar

Special Spot COLOR pages
kicking off the summer.season;

PageA3

BY 'T HEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Medical Excellence.
Local Qlring:

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

�.....-------

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

TUesday, June 26, 2007

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Tuesday, June 26; 2007

READER'S
by an arrogant managerialprofessional class of bureaucrats and intellectuals who
manifest contempt toward the
heartland citizenry.
I reject the notion that the
people should exist as a
"resource" for the use of a
managerial elite who set up
Dear Editor:
''
With his June 18 letter artificial barriers to entry
complaining about unwar- into the professions by their
ranted inln.Jsion into the gov- control of state systems of
ernment process by an igno- professional accreditation
rant mass, Bob Weedy repudi- - the latter being . little
ates what has long been a key more than arbitrary guild
conservative argument, that rules designed to keep prothe government is controlled fessional salaries high by

Elitist?

Takes an opposite
view on utedy

Congress shall make 110 law respectiug tin ·
establishment of religio11, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom of
speech, or of tire press; or the right of tire peolong .as Congress and
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the its.Asleaders
are so unpopular
Govemment for a redress ofgrievances.
- largely because they

Host youth tournaments

VIEW

keeping the number of practitioners artificially low.
In contrast to Bob, I advo· cate maximum feasible partieipation. Instead of supporting
elitism by dispardging mass
participation, Bob should try
to understand what's really
happening: The triumph of the
oligarchic
free
trade
Jeffersonian vision over that
of the industrial Hamiltonian
and the creation:of a high-tech
feudal banana republic-style
of government ruled by privile~ed whiles coupled with
mmority tokenism.

Contrary to what Bob
states, the system didn't
"work well" in earlier times.
Only compromise managed
to hold the system together
until 1861. When the oligarchical Southern planter
elite realized that their privileged class couldn't last,
they decided to destroy the
union. The south did indeed
return in a sense and its free
trade vision is destroying
the nation even now. So the
south is triumphing after all.
Jeff Fields
Syracuse

Who} ll have courage to call for gas taxes as energy a"nswer?

•

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

OUR

VIEW

Legacy
be
1Yins
wt'll
vw

Why Bob E

rememl.~-d
CJf:1l:l

Bob Evans may have become a business success and
celebrity on the ,level of Col. Harlan Sanders and Dave
Thomas during his 89 years on this Earth, but he never for·got where he was from. Even when the company he helped
to found moved to Columbus in 1968, he remained a Gallia
CQunty resident, and proud of the fact. Bob Evans Farms
Inc. would remain one of his primary concerns for decades
to follow, even after his retirement in 1986, but the contributions to and interest in his backyard and southern Ohio as
a whole will remain his legacy.
As he is laid to rest today, it is instructive, and impressive, to retlect on the enthusiasms he had that helped GaHia
counuans. These range from his support of the traditional
family farm by backing the year-round grazin~ concept,
financial contributions to 4-H, and higher education. It was
his belief that every child should have access lei a college
education that led to the creation of the Ohio Appalachian
Center for Higher Education, a program that has been suecessful in opening the doors of area universities to high
school students who believed the experience and benefits
·
of college may n,ot be within their grasp.
· Untold are numerous stories of Bob's help to individuals..
and not only to those who worked for the company. On a
broader scale, his interest in conservation grew to an over•
all concern with the area's environment and air quality, a
topic he was researching and discussing in the last years of
h1s hfe. Few may have suspected that when Bob opened his
first restaurant, the fabled Eastern Avenue truck stop where
he served h1s own brand of sausage back in 1946, it would
be the beginning of a major restaurant and food product
manufacturer, and that Bob would develop such varied
interests in his life.
. It has been said Bob Evans' passing closes a major chapter in local and Ohio history. In hi s lifetime, Bob became a
force for good and ~eveloprhent not only in Gallia County
but around the regwn. And both are the better for his
involveme'nt in the lives of the people who live here.

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today is Tuesday, June 26. the I77th day of 2007. There
are 188 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: On June 26, 1963, President
Kennedy visited West Berlin, where he made his famous
declaration: "lch bin ein Berliner" (I am a Berliner).

cheaper than it is elsewhere
in the world - $5 in Tokyo
and more than $6 in most of
can't get anything done Europe, topping out at nearly
they ought to do something
$7 in Oslo, Norway.
that will be very unpopular
The report was unveiled
Molton
in the short run but will vinat a conference June II at
dicate them in the long run:
Kondracke which the clear mess:~ge
raise gasoline taxes.
from energy experts was
A hefty hike in gas taxes
· that the United States needs
- better yet, in taxes on all
to "do it all" to fulfill its
carbon-based fuels - will
future energy needs, diveraccomplish far more than support it if it resulted in less sify sources and "get green"
mandates and subsidies for consumption or · eased the .:._expand domestic producwhat everyone claims to threat of global warming.
tion of oil, gas and coal;
want: "energy indepen-.
This suggests that real remove restrictions on enerdeuce" and "clean energy." leadership is required from gy production and transmisCarbon taxes would our top politicians. Instead, sion; promote conservation;
encourage co.nservation, fuel- they pander to their favorite advance alternatives; and
efficientcars,developmentof groups - environmentalists invest in new technology~
alternative energy sources and populists for Democrats,
The
Chamber
of
and would provide funds for anti-environmentalists and Commerce will issue its own
mvestment
in
energy energy
producers
for · recommendations later this
research and infrasbUcture.
Republicans - and decry year, but experts at the conRebates could be provid- high gasoline prices.
. Ference advocated proposals
ed to diminish the impact on
Democrats are accusing oil inclqding plug-in hybrid cars,
poor people, and taxes · companies of "gouging" and expanded off-shore drilling in
could be clft when oil, gas "profiteering." Republicans, America, more nuclear
and ~oal companies develop with more evidence, are plants, more electricity trans"clean" techl)ologies.
blaming increased demand. mission lines, ethanol derived
Sensible though the 'idea for oil from China and India from agricultural waste, and
is - and despite evidence and a lack of U.S. refinery tidal and thermal power
that . $3 per gallon ~as capacity for high price~.
derived from the oceans.
already
is
caustng
But neither is telling the
In .Congress, instead of
Americans to move from truth, even with oil at $70 a ·· promoting do-it-all energy
SUVs to hybrids- gas and barrel and gasollne at $3 a development and finding
carbon taxes have not even gallon, as the U.S. Chamber bipartisan ways to do it,
been broached in the current · of Commerce put it in a Republicans and Democrats
energy debate in Congress. recent report, "the typical are fighting with each other,
Nor is President Bush or family is not paying more promoting their favorite
any candidate for his job than ever before for energy." energy nostrums- and getadvocating them, though all
The report, "Energy ting nowhere. .
say they support freeing the Security in the 21st
As one Chamber of
United States. from depen- Century: Facts, Choices and Commerce conference ·predency on foreign oil . and Challenges," the first prod- senter put it, "Republicans
1mproving the environment. uct of a new chamber pro- act as if only wimps advoIt certainly would take ject headed by . retired cate
renewables,
and
courage. The instant reaction NATO commander Gen. Democrats think that oil,
of voters to any tax increase James Jones, did not call for gas and coal is for pigs."
1s "no." The last pol! I could higher taxes.
It should be obvious from
find on the subject, a New
But it did make the point the
Senate's
tortured
York Times/CBS . poll in that "energy consumption progress with immigration
2006, showed that 85 per- represented approximately 7 reform that the only chance
cent of voters opposed a gas percent of the average hi&gt;uSe- for progress is a bipartisan
tax hike.
hold budget between 1990 '"grand bargain" developed
And yet, 55 percerlt said and 2004, a decrease from II by leaders such as Sens. Jon
they'd support such an percent in the early 1980s." · Kyl, R-Ariz., and ·Edward
mcrease if it reduced U.S.
And, even at $3 a gallon, Kennedy, D-Mass. Even it
dependence on foreign oil, the report showed that gaso- could come to naught.
·
and 59 percent said they'd line in the United States is far , In the case of energy, the

The Daily Sentinel

Senate has two potential bargainers - Jeff Bingaman
(D) and Pete Domenici (R),
both from New Mexico. But
if Domenici is playin~ the
role of Kyl, Bingaman 1s not
playing Kennedy. Instead, he
is advancing a requirement
that utilities produce IS percent of their energy from
renewable sources, meaning
wind power, primarily.
When Domenici proposed
widening the definition of
"renewable" to include ·
nuclear and hydro-electric
power, it was voted down,
primarily by Democrats.
Bingaman's proposal is
likely to be filibustered by
Republicans.
Meanwhile~ Democrats
(and some Republicans) in
both ihe House and Senate
are proposing to withdraw
huge subsidies granted ·by
Republicans to oil, gas and
Goal companies in 2005 and
give them instead to developers of alternative sources,
primarily wind. This idea,
too, is likely to be blocked.
The result is that the public will look once again with
disgust at Cdngress, whose
approval rating in the Gallup
Poll stands at 24 percent,
even lower than Bush's dismal 31 percent. The
Rasmussen poll put Senate
Majority Leader Harry
Reid's, D-Nev., approval at
,19 percent. Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif., rated 34
percent in a Newsweek poll.
Admittedly, higher energy
taxes would be a hard sell for
any Democratic leader.
Republicans likely would
make their lives miserable.
The idea would need bipartisan backing. But it is the right
idea and it could be sold as a
path to what everybody wants
- energy independence and
a dean environment.
(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

Alberto Gonzales versus Alexander Hamilton

'On June II,' when Senate
Republicans blocked a
LETTERS TO THE
Democratic
resolution
expressing
no
confidence
in
EDITOR
Attorney General Alberto.
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less Gonzales (Democrats were
than 300 words. All /etten · are subject to editing, must be seven votes shy of moving
signed. and include address and telephone number. No the resohltion to full debate),
unsigned leiters ll'ill be published. Letters should be in they were joined by
·good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of Independent democratic Sen.
thanks to organizations and individual;.. will not be accept- Joseph
Lieberman
of
ed for publicwiun.
Connecticut. I admire
Liebennan's independence of
party labels and d1ctates, but I
am appalled at his indifference to the attorney general's
persistent role in radically
(USPS 213•960)
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respect around
Ohio Valley Publishing
the
world
for
what used to be
Co.
Correction Polley
this
nation's
rule
of law.
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
At
the
time
of
the Senate
through Friday, 111 Court Street.
be accurate. If you know of an error
vote
on
the
resolution,
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is among
By carrier or motor route
News
many
by
the
CIA
that
One month
'1 0.27
Gonzales,
as
our
chief
law
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
One year
.'115.84
enforcement
officer,
has
Qally
50'
· Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. I 4
never
opposed.
I
could
add
Senior
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rates
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. I 3
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where home carrier service ls availAs Dianne Feinstein, DClanJCin:.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
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Calif., a co-sponsor of the noconfidence resolution, said
Mall Subscription
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during
the
debate:
lnalda Meigs County
Chartene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'3~.26"
"(Gonzales) has turned the
26 Weeks
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52
Weeks
'
127
.11
extension of the White House
E-mail:
rather than a scrupulous, illilenews@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Melge County
pendent enforcer of the law."
13 Weeks
'53.55
On the same day, in a 2-toWeb:
26 Weeks
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Collf( of Appeals panel in

Local Briefs

"coercive" ' interrogations of laws." Do you recognize the ·
non-American ' "detainees" ·present attorney general in
that often turned into torture. that job description?
Moreover, Gonzales had
For
these . enduring
no qualms in upholding the reminders of our presently
denial of meaningful weakened basic American
Nat
habeas corpus rig~ts to our values, I am indebted to
Hentoff
1mpnsoned terronsm sus- George W. Liebmann of
pects - in defiance of a . . Baltimore, who quoted
Supreme Court 2006 deci- Hamilton and Story in a June
sion that the later Military 8, 2007, letter in The
Commissions Act of 2006 Washington Times. (In the
the "enemy combatant" case set aside cavalierly.
newspapers I read regularly,
of a legal resident in this
Republican Sen. Arlen .I pay attention to the letters
country, Ali al-Marri, Judge Specter (Pennsylvania) has to the editor because soDiana Motz ruled - as the called this refusal of habeas called "ordinary" Americans
2004 Supreme Court had corpus rights, al~ concemilig often know more clearly why
previously decided in the conditions of confinement, we are Americans than some
case of an American "enemy "atrocious." Specter, unlike professional commentators.)
combatant" that, as Lil)berman, has "absolutely
And, listening on the night
Sandra Day O'Connor said, no confidence" in Gonzales.
of June 12 to Tom Ashbrook's
"a state of war is not a blank
I · recommend to the always-challenging Boston
check for the. president." Senate as a whole, and espe- radio hour (www.wbur.org), 1
(That 2004 decision was cially the president, the fol~ heard, during a discussion on
greatly diminished by lowing highly pertinent the CIA trials in Italy. a caller
the Republican-controlled statements by Alexander from Germany who also
Military Commissions Act Hamilton and the Supreme knows why we're Americans:
of 2006.) Motz, nonetheless, Court Justice Joseph Story. "I was an exchange student in
declared emi?hatically: "To
Hamilton,
in
the America years ago, where I
sanction presidential author- . Federalist Papers (76), learned mqst of what 1 know
ity to order the military to declared the Framers' clear about the rule of the law and
seize and indefinitely detain intent was to avoid having democracy in the United
civilians- even if the pres- officials with "the pliancy States. I am dismayed at what
. ident calls them 'enemy that would render them has happe&lt;! to the American .
combatants' - would have obsequious instruments of rule of law givin~ up what .
disastrous consequences for (the president's) pleasure." we're fightin~ for.'
the Constitution - · and the
Story,
whose
1833 . That wasn t just a symbolcountry." Gonzales's Justice "Commentaries on .tht! 1c no-confidence resolution
Department will appeal that Constitution" remains influ- on Gonzales; which failed.
rulmg.
entia! to .this day, was nomi- It was a message io all of us
Before he became attorney nated to the Supreme Court Americans - and to the
general, Gonzales, as White by. President James Madison, world - on how he has
House counsel to the presi- who knew more than a little failed America's rule of law.·
dent, stoutly supported this about the Constitution, cer(Nat Hentoff is a nationaldangerously sweepin~ doc- tainly more than Gonzales ly renowned authority on the
trine of the pres1dent's does. Story wrote that public First Amendment and the
"inherent," unilateral consti- offices are "not for cnnging Bill of Rights and author of
tutional powers. Bush also favorites or court sycophants many books, including "The ·
used it to evade the Geneva (but) to give d1gnity, War on the Bill of Rights and .
conventions and our own · strength,purity and energy to ·the Gathering Resistance"
War Crimes Act by allowing . the administration of the (Seven Stories Pre~s, 2004). ,

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Police officer in court on
charges of killing girlfriend, fetus

NELSONVILLE- Nelsonville Youth Football progr~
will host three baseball tournaments July 13-15 at the
BY JOE MIUCIA
Nelsonville Clty Park. Tournaments will be held for ages
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
II and 12, 9 and 10, and 7 and· 8. The entry fee is $80 and
two baseballs.
CANTON Patricia
Information is available from Earich Dean at 753-9036 Porter stood up from her
after 4:30 p.m., or at Earich_Dean@tstna.com.
front-row courtroom seat
and stared at the man
charged with murdering her
daughter and the nearly fullfetus she carried.
MIDDLEPORT - A "Singing in the Street" bluegrass tenn
About
20 feet away,
gospel concert will be held from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at The Bobby Cutts
Jr.; her daughCorner Re staura~t. ~08 S. Third A&gt;·:e., Middleport.
ter's
boyfriend,
held his
Performers wlll tnclude Charhe and. Ellen Rife, Joe head high and scanned
the
Mcqoud, Va_Ierie Clonch, Truly Saved Trio, The Williams
several times durFam1ly, Mart1e Short, Ronnie Kisner, The Zions, The Perry audience
ing
his
brief hearing in
Duet, Charles and Claudette Harbin and The Country Canton Municipal
Court ..
Gentlemen.
They made eye contact
at one point, Porter said
afterward.
"I'm not sitting down
GALLIPOLIS - Eastern High School Class of 1987 when I see Bqbby Cutts,"
will _have its 20th reunion on July 7 at the Holiday Inn in she said. "I can't really verGl!lhpohs. A soc1al hour will begin at 6 p.m., followed by balize what was going
a buffet at 7 p.m. A D.J. will provide mus1c. The cost is $25 through my niind, but I
per person and $50 for a couple.
wanted to make sure he
. Those planning to attend are asked to contact Susan knew I was there."
Swain ~or reservations by Saturday, at 992-1016, or
Jessie Davis, 26, was
ssda1syh1ll@aol.com.
missing for about a week
Anyone with information about the following classmates before her body was found
are also asked to contact Swain: Janet Buchanan, Randy in a park Saturday. Cutts is
Cowdery, Angela Damewood, Laura Farley, Becky Kimes, the father of her 2-year-old
AP photo
Pam Lawrence, Jay Neutzling, Tommy Parker, Jeff Roush, son, and Davis' relatives
Patricia
Porter,
right,
and
her
daughter,
Whitney
Davis,
center,
hold
hands
before
the
initial
Yvonne Edwards, Marie Scyoc, Cindy Randolph, William have said he is the father of
appearance
of
Bobby
Cutts
Jr.,
Monday,
in
Canton.
Cutts
Jr.,
accused
of
murdering
his
preg·
Smith, Richard Smith, William Taylor, Becky Tucker and the girl she was due to
Angie West.
nant
girlfriend,
Jessie
Davis,
and
her
nearly
full·term
fetus,
was
expressionless
when
a
deliver July 3 and planned
judge ordered him held on $5 million bond. .
·
to name Chloe.
Cutts, 30, a police officer
in this northeast Ohio city, counroom.
10 her daughter June 13, a small dirt parking area and a
MIDDLEPORT - Rumpke Waste, Inc. will not collect was arrested the same day . The uncle said Cutts' fam- day before authorities say couple benches overlooking
trash, recycling or yard waste on July 4. Collection will be the body was found. He ily members were the only . she was killed at her home a grassy field. Thousands of
delayed one day during the week, except for residents col- remained expressionless black people there. ''That's in nearby Lake Township. volunteers searched for
lected on Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday's collection when Judge John Poulos on American justice," he said. Davis was reported missing Davis for several days in the
will be . moved to Thursday, Thursday's to Friday, and Monday ordered him held "We are suffering. We're June 15. after the mother few miles around her home.
on $5 million bond.
related to the little baby, found her grandson home
The sheriff's offiee,
Friday's to Saturday.
.
Porter
stood
up
again
and
too."
·
.
alone,
with
bedroom
furniwhich
is leading the investi- .
Normal collection will resume on July 9. Additional
stared
when
one
of
Cutts'
Cutts
has
been
charged
ture
toppled
and
bleach
galion,
has not released fur- ·
information is avlailable at (888) 786-7531, or at
.high
school
classmates
with
two
counts
of
murder.
spilled
on
the
floor.
The
ther
information
about the
www.rumpke.com.
appeared, accused of lying Ohio law allows a murder boy, Blake, gave investiga- obstruction of justice charge
to investigators about the charge against someone tors some of their first clues, against Ferrell. Her attorset
case. fv.lyisha Ferrell, 29, accused of killing .a fetus saying: ·"Mommy was cry- ney, assistant public defendwas ordered held on that would have been able ing. Mommy broke the er Jean Madden, declined to
RACINE - A reunion of the Charles and Fannie Beaver $500,000 bond on a count to live outside the womb.
table. Mommy's in rug."
comment at Iter office.
family will be held July 14 at Star Mill Park. Friends and of obstruction of justice.
lams said Cutts was susFamily members have
Sheiiff's deputies and FBI
relatives are invited to bring a covered dish. Lunch will be
Both Cutts and Ferrell pended
without
pay. told Blake that his mother is agents with a search warrant
served at 12:30 p.m.
stood behind a window sep- Monday by the Canton in heaven, said Porter who broke down the door of
arating them from the court- police department.
was granted temporary cus- Ferrell's
apartment
room, which is standard
Also on Monday, Cutts tody of the boy Monday in Saturday night, authorities
procedure for initial court lost a custody battle over his Stark County Family Court. said. She was not home dur9-year-old daughter, Taylor,
"Blake is doing as .well ing the search.
RUTLAND - On Sunday Leading Creek Conservancy appearances.
Cutts' attorney, Bradley a lawyer said.
.
as can be expected for a 2
Justin Lindstrom, 27, an
District had an eight inch main water line leak on Ohio 124
lams,
declined
to
discuss
Cutts
met
Taylor's
mothwhose
mom
is
upstairs
neighbor, said offi1/2-year-old
east of Noble Summit Road. All Leading Creek Water cusdetails
of
the
charges
er,
Nikki
Giavasis,
when
not
coming
home,"
Porter
cers
left
after two hours
tomers east of Noble. Summit Road (past Rutland), will be
against
his
client
or
·what
with
several
full. brown .
both
attended
nearby
Walsh
said.
"He
has
an
old
cell
und~r a boil advisory until funher notice. A water tank Is
Cutts
said
to
him
during
the
.
University,
Taylor
has
lived
phone
and
he
calls
her
and
paper
bags
and
bottles of
currently out of service for painting; therefore the district
brief
appearance
in
bleach
from
the
basement.
with
Giavasis
for
most
of
talks
to
her."
will not be able to flush lines as long as it normally would
Municipal
Court.
He
said
it
Authorities
would
not
her
life
in
California,
but
Davis'
body
was
found
after a main line leak. If experiencing water discoloration.
was
too
early
to
say
whether
describe
what
the
deputies
Cutts
challenged
the
cusnine
days
after
authorities
the district asks for patience during the situation. ·
any trial should be moved tody arrangement in 2005.
believe she was killed. seized.
out of Stark County, and he
Hours before Cutts' Determining the cause of
Lindstrom said Ferrell
was not surprised by the arrai~nment, Stark County death will take weeks due to lived in the apartment
Posten and Michael Fisher.
bond amount.
Famtl~ Court Judge David advanced decomposition, downstairs with her ItHill said in addition to
A man . who only Stuckt dismissed the case, the medical examiner's year-old daughter and had
Racine, volunteers from the described himself as Cutts' said Jeffrey Jakmides, a office said Monday. The parties every night.
Syracuse
Volunteer Fire uncle left .the courtroom lawyer
from Page A1'
Asked if her sister would
representing office will test the paternity
Department and emergency comp'Wning that the family Giavasis. Stucki cited the of the fetus and conduct get justice, Whitney Davis
personnel from Meigs EMS
Posten, Jr. followed by Jill assisted in the rescue and was shoved into a far comer charges against Cutts as one toxicology and DNA tests said, "Everybody knows
what happened here." ·
fa,tor in his decision, · and a skeletal analysis.
Fisher, 28, Ripley, both of recovery efforts in Jackson furthest from the window.
As she continued, her
Authorities
have
not
said
Moments before the .Jaklnides said. Another cuswhom were transponed . to . County.
mother
stopped her.
Jackson General Hospital.
Racine was on the scene defendants appeared, three tody dispute regarding how the body was found
"We
do not want
All three survivors were until SJO a.m: Saturday reporters were asked to Taylor is ongoing in a about 25 miles from Davis' vengeance,"
Porter · said.
home in an area of a nationlater treated at St. Mary's morning. Hill confirmed the move so the Davis family ·California court, he said.
Davis' mother last spoke al park with a dirt road, ~ "We want justice.':
Hospital in Huntington, conditions were extremely cauld sit in the center of the
W.Va. and later released.
~
h h d
Racine also recovered the . ~~~d~ en t e epartment
ings whether Mayor John · say, not as I do" to resi- Agency fund in the amount
body of Jennifer Posten
The Associated Press
Musser was attending or not. dents. MeAn gus also of $15,807. This repay- ·
which was found outside of reported the group of boaters
No supervisors were present brought up the question of ment reflected the recent
· the boat.
had gone fishing and apparfor
'last night's meeting. having police dispatchers check the village received
fromPageA1
Hill said both Racine and ently was unable .to find a
Musser
was out of town with cease saying social security from the Appalachian
the Cottageville· Volunteer . way to get off the river when
Amott,
who is president of numbers over the public Regional Commission for
Fire Department had divers thick fog rolled in about mid- numbers for supervisors for
in the water which attempted night. The 16-foot fiberglass council to have for reference council, sitting in his place. . scanner to protect against money to repair the parking lot wall which officialMcAngus also said by identity theft. .
to recover victims trapped boat attempted to get out of to "help us all with commuCouncil passed resolu- ly ends that project.
inside the boat but due to a the way of a barge owned by nication.'' Amott also want- the village allowing grass
. gas leak this made it difficult Shelly Materials and ran imo ed the minutes to reflect a and weeds to grow high tion 16.07 which was a . Council approved $450
for the divers to do their job. the s1de of the larger vessel "friendly reminder" that along village owned prop- repayment to the general for rebuilding the street
Racine and Cottageville then instead. A spokesperson fqr council needed to hear from erty, including the walking fund from the Federal department's Gravely· and
"wenched" the boat loose the
West
Virginia supervisors at regular meet- path, it was saying, "do ·as I Emergency Management $1 00 for a chain hoist.
from the barge and turned it Department of Natural
right side up to find the bod- Resources described visibiliies of two children still ty as "zero" at the time. .
state in the event of a extra man power. The exer- ed exercise with no chemiinside the boat. The children,
While
the
accident
cise is a requirement of the cals involved and citizens
major disaster.
Samantha Fisher, 4, and her remains under investigation,
The exercise will test the State Emergency Response of the area should. not be
brother Jessie Fisher, 16 the WVDNR spokesperson
ability to communicate with Commission (SERC) and alarmed. Questions should
from PageA1
months, also of Ripley, said he does not expect any
area fire, EMS and Law The Ohio and Federal be addressed to Robert E.
lx;longed to parents Jennifer charges to be filed. ,
Emergency Management Byer, EMA Director at
operation charting the vari- Enforcement Agencies in Agencies
(OEMA) 992-4541.
ous messages and requests the event of a major disaster (FEMA).
that would require an inter'
A critique of the exercise
The fireworks display that would be forthcoming operable communications
in
such
an
event.
Also
a
will
held at the Pomeroy
will be set off from an area
system in order that all Fire beHouse
the
new
MARCS
test
of
following the
along the Ohio River in
responding and involved
lower Midrlleport. They will radio system will be made. agencies could communi- · end of the event. Traffic
from PageA1
will be rerouted around the
be visible from the football The MARCS radio system cate with each other.
area. This will be a simulatfield where Phil Dirt &amp; the is a statewide coded freThe scenario will also test
business donors and mem- Dozers will perform a free quency that can be used by
bers of the commljnity will concert, sponsored by the EMA, EMS, Fire, Health the ability to ' provide
help make up the cost of the River City Players.
and Law Enforcement to resources needed in such an
show.
The day's celebration will talk to Columbus and other event that would involve
There has been no begin
downtown, with the agencies through out the staging and utilization of
Independence Day celebration in Middleport since unveiling of the new "Walk
Vegas Weekend
2004. In 2005 , the celebra- into Middleport's Past"
ed on studying the site for
mural
series,
a
storytelling
tion was canceled because a
June 29&amp; 30
the state's FutureGen bid
suitable location for the session by Donna Wilson,
Call
now
for tickets and details
made marketing the site to
fireworks display could not and a gospel sing and coin
Casino
Night
June 29 7-10 pm
from ·Page A1
Rentech easier.
be identified in time. Last show in Dave Diles Park.
win great erizes!
The Ohio Department of
year, the celebration was The traditional July 4 Parade
Movie
"Viva Las Vegas"
Development
has
made
will take the celebration into Ohio proposed for the prorained out.
June
30 at 2 pm
$250,000
available
to
"It's still a tradition for the lower Middleport, where the ject, and involved marketing Rentech to assist in compleVegas
Legends
Conceit
by both Meigs and Athens
Middleport commu~ity and conceri will take place.
June
30
at8
pm
Donations for fireworks County. The other site .was tion of a feasibility study, to
for ·Meigs County, Phalin
featuring Dwight Icenhower
include a conceptual design,
said. "This year, we plan to may be made to the in Tuscarawas County.
&amp;more
environmental
permits
and
Paul Reed, president of
Community
resume the tradition and make Middleport
a
market
analysis.
The
study
Meigs
County
it .even better, and I hope the Association by mailing the
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
community will pull together them to P.O. Box 9, Community Improvement · is expected to take about
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS
Project, said work complet- eight months to complete. ·
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
and make it happen."

Gospel concert set

Plan '87 reunion

Schedule changed

Family reunion

Boll advisory

Accident

Council

. EMA

Fireworks

Now-Open
For Business
Monday,

A!!!·

Site

June 18, 2007

Portland Plant
McDade Rd. .
Portland, OH

1·740-843-5293

..

�.....-------

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

TUesday, June 26, 2007

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Tuesday, June 26; 2007

READER'S
by an arrogant managerialprofessional class of bureaucrats and intellectuals who
manifest contempt toward the
heartland citizenry.
I reject the notion that the
people should exist as a
"resource" for the use of a
managerial elite who set up
Dear Editor:
''
With his June 18 letter artificial barriers to entry
complaining about unwar- into the professions by their
ranted inln.Jsion into the gov- control of state systems of
ernment process by an igno- professional accreditation
rant mass, Bob Weedy repudi- - the latter being . little
ates what has long been a key more than arbitrary guild
conservative argument, that rules designed to keep prothe government is controlled fessional salaries high by

Elitist?

Takes an opposite
view on utedy

Congress shall make 110 law respectiug tin ·
establishment of religio11, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom of
speech, or of tire press; or the right of tire peolong .as Congress and
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the its.Asleaders
are so unpopular
Govemment for a redress ofgrievances.
- largely because they

Host youth tournaments

VIEW

keeping the number of practitioners artificially low.
In contrast to Bob, I advo· cate maximum feasible partieipation. Instead of supporting
elitism by dispardging mass
participation, Bob should try
to understand what's really
happening: The triumph of the
oligarchic
free
trade
Jeffersonian vision over that
of the industrial Hamiltonian
and the creation:of a high-tech
feudal banana republic-style
of government ruled by privile~ed whiles coupled with
mmority tokenism.

Contrary to what Bob
states, the system didn't
"work well" in earlier times.
Only compromise managed
to hold the system together
until 1861. When the oligarchical Southern planter
elite realized that their privileged class couldn't last,
they decided to destroy the
union. The south did indeed
return in a sense and its free
trade vision is destroying
the nation even now. So the
south is triumphing after all.
Jeff Fields
Syracuse

Who} ll have courage to call for gas taxes as energy a"nswer?

•

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

OUR

VIEW

Legacy
be
1Yins
wt'll
vw

Why Bob E

rememl.~-d
CJf:1l:l

Bob Evans may have become a business success and
celebrity on the ,level of Col. Harlan Sanders and Dave
Thomas during his 89 years on this Earth, but he never for·got where he was from. Even when the company he helped
to found moved to Columbus in 1968, he remained a Gallia
CQunty resident, and proud of the fact. Bob Evans Farms
Inc. would remain one of his primary concerns for decades
to follow, even after his retirement in 1986, but the contributions to and interest in his backyard and southern Ohio as
a whole will remain his legacy.
As he is laid to rest today, it is instructive, and impressive, to retlect on the enthusiasms he had that helped GaHia
counuans. These range from his support of the traditional
family farm by backing the year-round grazin~ concept,
financial contributions to 4-H, and higher education. It was
his belief that every child should have access lei a college
education that led to the creation of the Ohio Appalachian
Center for Higher Education, a program that has been suecessful in opening the doors of area universities to high
school students who believed the experience and benefits
·
of college may n,ot be within their grasp.
· Untold are numerous stories of Bob's help to individuals..
and not only to those who worked for the company. On a
broader scale, his interest in conservation grew to an over•
all concern with the area's environment and air quality, a
topic he was researching and discussing in the last years of
h1s hfe. Few may have suspected that when Bob opened his
first restaurant, the fabled Eastern Avenue truck stop where
he served h1s own brand of sausage back in 1946, it would
be the beginning of a major restaurant and food product
manufacturer, and that Bob would develop such varied
interests in his life.
. It has been said Bob Evans' passing closes a major chapter in local and Ohio history. In hi s lifetime, Bob became a
force for good and ~eveloprhent not only in Gallia County
but around the regwn. And both are the better for his
involveme'nt in the lives of the people who live here.

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today is Tuesday, June 26. the I77th day of 2007. There
are 188 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: On June 26, 1963, President
Kennedy visited West Berlin, where he made his famous
declaration: "lch bin ein Berliner" (I am a Berliner).

cheaper than it is elsewhere
in the world - $5 in Tokyo
and more than $6 in most of
can't get anything done Europe, topping out at nearly
they ought to do something
$7 in Oslo, Norway.
that will be very unpopular
The report was unveiled
Molton
in the short run but will vinat a conference June II at
dicate them in the long run:
Kondracke which the clear mess:~ge
raise gasoline taxes.
from energy experts was
A hefty hike in gas taxes
· that the United States needs
- better yet, in taxes on all
to "do it all" to fulfill its
carbon-based fuels - will
future energy needs, diveraccomplish far more than support it if it resulted in less sify sources and "get green"
mandates and subsidies for consumption or · eased the .:._expand domestic producwhat everyone claims to threat of global warming.
tion of oil, gas and coal;
want: "energy indepen-.
This suggests that real remove restrictions on enerdeuce" and "clean energy." leadership is required from gy production and transmisCarbon taxes would our top politicians. Instead, sion; promote conservation;
encourage co.nservation, fuel- they pander to their favorite advance alternatives; and
efficientcars,developmentof groups - environmentalists invest in new technology~
alternative energy sources and populists for Democrats,
The
Chamber
of
and would provide funds for anti-environmentalists and Commerce will issue its own
mvestment
in
energy energy
producers
for · recommendations later this
research and infrasbUcture.
Republicans - and decry year, but experts at the conRebates could be provid- high gasoline prices.
. Ference advocated proposals
ed to diminish the impact on
Democrats are accusing oil inclqding plug-in hybrid cars,
poor people, and taxes · companies of "gouging" and expanded off-shore drilling in
could be clft when oil, gas "profiteering." Republicans, America, more nuclear
and ~oal companies develop with more evidence, are plants, more electricity trans"clean" techl)ologies.
blaming increased demand. mission lines, ethanol derived
Sensible though the 'idea for oil from China and India from agricultural waste, and
is - and despite evidence and a lack of U.S. refinery tidal and thermal power
that . $3 per gallon ~as capacity for high price~.
derived from the oceans.
already
is
caustng
But neither is telling the
In .Congress, instead of
Americans to move from truth, even with oil at $70 a ·· promoting do-it-all energy
SUVs to hybrids- gas and barrel and gasollne at $3 a development and finding
carbon taxes have not even gallon, as the U.S. Chamber bipartisan ways to do it,
been broached in the current · of Commerce put it in a Republicans and Democrats
energy debate in Congress. recent report, "the typical are fighting with each other,
Nor is President Bush or family is not paying more promoting their favorite
any candidate for his job than ever before for energy." energy nostrums- and getadvocating them, though all
The report, "Energy ting nowhere. .
say they support freeing the Security in the 21st
As one Chamber of
United States. from depen- Century: Facts, Choices and Commerce conference ·predency on foreign oil . and Challenges," the first prod- senter put it, "Republicans
1mproving the environment. uct of a new chamber pro- act as if only wimps advoIt certainly would take ject headed by . retired cate
renewables,
and
courage. The instant reaction NATO commander Gen. Democrats think that oil,
of voters to any tax increase James Jones, did not call for gas and coal is for pigs."
1s "no." The last pol! I could higher taxes.
It should be obvious from
find on the subject, a New
But it did make the point the
Senate's
tortured
York Times/CBS . poll in that "energy consumption progress with immigration
2006, showed that 85 per- represented approximately 7 reform that the only chance
cent of voters opposed a gas percent of the average hi&gt;uSe- for progress is a bipartisan
tax hike.
hold budget between 1990 '"grand bargain" developed
And yet, 55 percerlt said and 2004, a decrease from II by leaders such as Sens. Jon
they'd support such an percent in the early 1980s." · Kyl, R-Ariz., and ·Edward
mcrease if it reduced U.S.
And, even at $3 a gallon, Kennedy, D-Mass. Even it
dependence on foreign oil, the report showed that gaso- could come to naught.
·
and 59 percent said they'd line in the United States is far , In the case of energy, the

The Daily Sentinel

Senate has two potential bargainers - Jeff Bingaman
(D) and Pete Domenici (R),
both from New Mexico. But
if Domenici is playin~ the
role of Kyl, Bingaman 1s not
playing Kennedy. Instead, he
is advancing a requirement
that utilities produce IS percent of their energy from
renewable sources, meaning
wind power, primarily.
When Domenici proposed
widening the definition of
"renewable" to include ·
nuclear and hydro-electric
power, it was voted down,
primarily by Democrats.
Bingaman's proposal is
likely to be filibustered by
Republicans.
Meanwhile~ Democrats
(and some Republicans) in
both ihe House and Senate
are proposing to withdraw
huge subsidies granted ·by
Republicans to oil, gas and
Goal companies in 2005 and
give them instead to developers of alternative sources,
primarily wind. This idea,
too, is likely to be blocked.
The result is that the public will look once again with
disgust at Cdngress, whose
approval rating in the Gallup
Poll stands at 24 percent,
even lower than Bush's dismal 31 percent. The
Rasmussen poll put Senate
Majority Leader Harry
Reid's, D-Nev., approval at
,19 percent. Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif., rated 34
percent in a Newsweek poll.
Admittedly, higher energy
taxes would be a hard sell for
any Democratic leader.
Republicans likely would
make their lives miserable.
The idea would need bipartisan backing. But it is the right
idea and it could be sold as a
path to what everybody wants
- energy independence and
a dean environment.
(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

Alberto Gonzales versus Alexander Hamilton

'On June II,' when Senate
Republicans blocked a
LETTERS TO THE
Democratic
resolution
expressing
no
confidence
in
EDITOR
Attorney General Alberto.
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less Gonzales (Democrats were
than 300 words. All /etten · are subject to editing, must be seven votes shy of moving
signed. and include address and telephone number. No the resohltion to full debate),
unsigned leiters ll'ill be published. Letters should be in they were joined by
·good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of Independent democratic Sen.
thanks to organizations and individual;.. will not be accept- Joseph
Lieberman
of
ed for publicwiun.
Connecticut. I admire
Liebennan's independence of
party labels and d1ctates, but I
am appalled at his indifference to the attorney general's
persistent role in radically
(USPS 213•960)
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diminishing
respect around
Ohio Valley Publishing
the
world
for
what used to be
Co.
Correction Polley
this
nation's
rule
of law.
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
At
the
time
of
the Senate
through Friday, 111 Court Street.
be accurate. If you know of an error
vote
on
the
resolution,
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is among
By carrier or motor route
News
many
by
the
CIA
that
One month
'1 0.27
Gonzales,
as
our
chief
law
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
One year
.'115.84
enforcement
officer,
has
Qally
50'
· Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. I 4
never
opposed.
I
could
add
Senior
Citizen
rates
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. I 3
'10.27
One month
many exaD)ples of his faith'103.80
One year
ful
adherence to this admin'
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IStration's revisions of the
Constitution and violations
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of our inteml!tional treaties.
Outalde Solu: Brenda Davis. Ext 16
where home carrier service ls availAs Dianne Feinstein, DClanJCin:.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able .
Calif., a co-sponsor of the noconfidence resolution, said
Mall Subscription
General Manager
during
the
debate:
lnalda Meigs County
Chartene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'3~.26"
"(Gonzales) has turned the
26 Weeks
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52
Weeks
'
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.11
extension of the White House
E-mail:
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Outside Melge County
pendent enforcer of the law."
13 Weeks
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On the same day, in a 2-toWeb:
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Collf( of Appeals panel in

Local Briefs

"coercive" ' interrogations of laws." Do you recognize the ·
non-American ' "detainees" ·present attorney general in
that often turned into torture. that job description?
Moreover, Gonzales had
For
these . enduring
no qualms in upholding the reminders of our presently
denial of meaningful weakened basic American
Nat
habeas corpus rig~ts to our values, I am indebted to
Hentoff
1mpnsoned terronsm sus- George W. Liebmann of
pects - in defiance of a . . Baltimore, who quoted
Supreme Court 2006 deci- Hamilton and Story in a June
sion that the later Military 8, 2007, letter in The
Commissions Act of 2006 Washington Times. (In the
the "enemy combatant" case set aside cavalierly.
newspapers I read regularly,
of a legal resident in this
Republican Sen. Arlen .I pay attention to the letters
country, Ali al-Marri, Judge Specter (Pennsylvania) has to the editor because soDiana Motz ruled - as the called this refusal of habeas called "ordinary" Americans
2004 Supreme Court had corpus rights, al~ concemilig often know more clearly why
previously decided in the conditions of confinement, we are Americans than some
case of an American "enemy "atrocious." Specter, unlike professional commentators.)
combatant" that, as Lil)berman, has "absolutely
And, listening on the night
Sandra Day O'Connor said, no confidence" in Gonzales.
of June 12 to Tom Ashbrook's
"a state of war is not a blank
I · recommend to the always-challenging Boston
check for the. president." Senate as a whole, and espe- radio hour (www.wbur.org), 1
(That 2004 decision was cially the president, the fol~ heard, during a discussion on
greatly diminished by lowing highly pertinent the CIA trials in Italy. a caller
the Republican-controlled statements by Alexander from Germany who also
Military Commissions Act Hamilton and the Supreme knows why we're Americans:
of 2006.) Motz, nonetheless, Court Justice Joseph Story. "I was an exchange student in
declared emi?hatically: "To
Hamilton,
in
the America years ago, where I
sanction presidential author- . Federalist Papers (76), learned mqst of what 1 know
ity to order the military to declared the Framers' clear about the rule of the law and
seize and indefinitely detain intent was to avoid having democracy in the United
civilians- even if the pres- officials with "the pliancy States. I am dismayed at what
. ident calls them 'enemy that would render them has happe&lt;! to the American .
combatants' - would have obsequious instruments of rule of law givin~ up what .
disastrous consequences for (the president's) pleasure." we're fightin~ for.'
the Constitution - · and the
Story,
whose
1833 . That wasn t just a symbolcountry." Gonzales's Justice "Commentaries on .tht! 1c no-confidence resolution
Department will appeal that Constitution" remains influ- on Gonzales; which failed.
rulmg.
entia! to .this day, was nomi- It was a message io all of us
Before he became attorney nated to the Supreme Court Americans - and to the
general, Gonzales, as White by. President James Madison, world - on how he has
House counsel to the presi- who knew more than a little failed America's rule of law.·
dent, stoutly supported this about the Constitution, cer(Nat Hentoff is a nationaldangerously sweepin~ doc- tainly more than Gonzales ly renowned authority on the
trine of the pres1dent's does. Story wrote that public First Amendment and the
"inherent," unilateral consti- offices are "not for cnnging Bill of Rights and author of
tutional powers. Bush also favorites or court sycophants many books, including "The ·
used it to evade the Geneva (but) to give d1gnity, War on the Bill of Rights and .
conventions and our own · strength,purity and energy to ·the Gathering Resistance"
War Crimes Act by allowing . the administration of the (Seven Stories Pre~s, 2004). ,

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Police officer in court on
charges of killing girlfriend, fetus

NELSONVILLE- Nelsonville Youth Football progr~
will host three baseball tournaments July 13-15 at the
BY JOE MIUCIA
Nelsonville Clty Park. Tournaments will be held for ages
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
II and 12, 9 and 10, and 7 and· 8. The entry fee is $80 and
two baseballs.
CANTON Patricia
Information is available from Earich Dean at 753-9036 Porter stood up from her
after 4:30 p.m., or at Earich_Dean@tstna.com.
front-row courtroom seat
and stared at the man
charged with murdering her
daughter and the nearly fullfetus she carried.
MIDDLEPORT - A "Singing in the Street" bluegrass tenn
About
20 feet away,
gospel concert will be held from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at The Bobby Cutts
Jr.; her daughCorner Re staura~t. ~08 S. Third A&gt;·:e., Middleport.
ter's
boyfriend,
held his
Performers wlll tnclude Charhe and. Ellen Rife, Joe head high and scanned
the
Mcqoud, Va_Ierie Clonch, Truly Saved Trio, The Williams
several times durFam1ly, Mart1e Short, Ronnie Kisner, The Zions, The Perry audience
ing
his
brief hearing in
Duet, Charles and Claudette Harbin and The Country Canton Municipal
Court ..
Gentlemen.
They made eye contact
at one point, Porter said
afterward.
"I'm not sitting down
GALLIPOLIS - Eastern High School Class of 1987 when I see Bqbby Cutts,"
will _have its 20th reunion on July 7 at the Holiday Inn in she said. "I can't really verGl!lhpohs. A soc1al hour will begin at 6 p.m., followed by balize what was going
a buffet at 7 p.m. A D.J. will provide mus1c. The cost is $25 through my niind, but I
per person and $50 for a couple.
wanted to make sure he
. Those planning to attend are asked to contact Susan knew I was there."
Swain ~or reservations by Saturday, at 992-1016, or
Jessie Davis, 26, was
ssda1syh1ll@aol.com.
missing for about a week
Anyone with information about the following classmates before her body was found
are also asked to contact Swain: Janet Buchanan, Randy in a park Saturday. Cutts is
Cowdery, Angela Damewood, Laura Farley, Becky Kimes, the father of her 2-year-old
AP photo
Pam Lawrence, Jay Neutzling, Tommy Parker, Jeff Roush, son, and Davis' relatives
Patricia
Porter,
right,
and
her
daughter,
Whitney
Davis,
center,
hold
hands
before
the
initial
Yvonne Edwards, Marie Scyoc, Cindy Randolph, William have said he is the father of
appearance
of
Bobby
Cutts
Jr.,
Monday,
in
Canton.
Cutts
Jr.,
accused
of
murdering
his
preg·
Smith, Richard Smith, William Taylor, Becky Tucker and the girl she was due to
Angie West.
nant
girlfriend,
Jessie
Davis,
and
her
nearly
full·term
fetus,
was
expressionless
when
a
deliver July 3 and planned
judge ordered him held on $5 million bond. .
·
to name Chloe.
Cutts, 30, a police officer
in this northeast Ohio city, counroom.
10 her daughter June 13, a small dirt parking area and a
MIDDLEPORT - Rumpke Waste, Inc. will not collect was arrested the same day . The uncle said Cutts' fam- day before authorities say couple benches overlooking
trash, recycling or yard waste on July 4. Collection will be the body was found. He ily members were the only . she was killed at her home a grassy field. Thousands of
delayed one day during the week, except for residents col- remained expressionless black people there. ''That's in nearby Lake Township. volunteers searched for
lected on Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday's collection when Judge John Poulos on American justice," he said. Davis was reported missing Davis for several days in the
will be . moved to Thursday, Thursday's to Friday, and Monday ordered him held "We are suffering. We're June 15. after the mother few miles around her home.
on $5 million bond.
related to the little baby, found her grandson home
The sheriff's offiee,
Friday's to Saturday.
.
Porter
stood
up
again
and
too."
·
.
alone,
with
bedroom
furniwhich
is leading the investi- .
Normal collection will resume on July 9. Additional
stared
when
one
of
Cutts'
Cutts
has
been
charged
ture
toppled
and
bleach
galion,
has not released fur- ·
information is avlailable at (888) 786-7531, or at
.high
school
classmates
with
two
counts
of
murder.
spilled
on
the
floor.
The
ther
information
about the
www.rumpke.com.
appeared, accused of lying Ohio law allows a murder boy, Blake, gave investiga- obstruction of justice charge
to investigators about the charge against someone tors some of their first clues, against Ferrell. Her attorset
case. fv.lyisha Ferrell, 29, accused of killing .a fetus saying: ·"Mommy was cry- ney, assistant public defendwas ordered held on that would have been able ing. Mommy broke the er Jean Madden, declined to
RACINE - A reunion of the Charles and Fannie Beaver $500,000 bond on a count to live outside the womb.
table. Mommy's in rug."
comment at Iter office.
family will be held July 14 at Star Mill Park. Friends and of obstruction of justice.
lams said Cutts was susFamily members have
Sheiiff's deputies and FBI
relatives are invited to bring a covered dish. Lunch will be
Both Cutts and Ferrell pended
without
pay. told Blake that his mother is agents with a search warrant
served at 12:30 p.m.
stood behind a window sep- Monday by the Canton in heaven, said Porter who broke down the door of
arating them from the court- police department.
was granted temporary cus- Ferrell's
apartment
room, which is standard
Also on Monday, Cutts tody of the boy Monday in Saturday night, authorities
procedure for initial court lost a custody battle over his Stark County Family Court. said. She was not home dur9-year-old daughter, Taylor,
"Blake is doing as .well ing the search.
RUTLAND - On Sunday Leading Creek Conservancy appearances.
Cutts' attorney, Bradley a lawyer said.
.
as can be expected for a 2
Justin Lindstrom, 27, an
District had an eight inch main water line leak on Ohio 124
lams,
declined
to
discuss
Cutts
met
Taylor's
mothwhose
mom
is
upstairs
neighbor, said offi1/2-year-old
east of Noble Summit Road. All Leading Creek Water cusdetails
of
the
charges
er,
Nikki
Giavasis,
when
not
coming
home,"
Porter
cers
left
after two hours
tomers east of Noble. Summit Road (past Rutland), will be
against
his
client
or
·what
with
several
full. brown .
both
attended
nearby
Walsh
said.
"He
has
an
old
cell
und~r a boil advisory until funher notice. A water tank Is
Cutts
said
to
him
during
the
.
University,
Taylor
has
lived
phone
and
he
calls
her
and
paper
bags
and
bottles of
currently out of service for painting; therefore the district
brief
appearance
in
bleach
from
the
basement.
with
Giavasis
for
most
of
talks
to
her."
will not be able to flush lines as long as it normally would
Municipal
Court.
He
said
it
Authorities
would
not
her
life
in
California,
but
Davis'
body
was
found
after a main line leak. If experiencing water discoloration.
was
too
early
to
say
whether
describe
what
the
deputies
Cutts
challenged
the
cusnine
days
after
authorities
the district asks for patience during the situation. ·
any trial should be moved tody arrangement in 2005.
believe she was killed. seized.
out of Stark County, and he
Hours before Cutts' Determining the cause of
Lindstrom said Ferrell
was not surprised by the arrai~nment, Stark County death will take weeks due to lived in the apartment
Posten and Michael Fisher.
bond amount.
Famtl~ Court Judge David advanced decomposition, downstairs with her ItHill said in addition to
A man . who only Stuckt dismissed the case, the medical examiner's year-old daughter and had
Racine, volunteers from the described himself as Cutts' said Jeffrey Jakmides, a office said Monday. The parties every night.
Syracuse
Volunteer Fire uncle left .the courtroom lawyer
from Page A1'
Asked if her sister would
representing office will test the paternity
Department and emergency comp'Wning that the family Giavasis. Stucki cited the of the fetus and conduct get justice, Whitney Davis
personnel from Meigs EMS
Posten, Jr. followed by Jill assisted in the rescue and was shoved into a far comer charges against Cutts as one toxicology and DNA tests said, "Everybody knows
what happened here." ·
fa,tor in his decision, · and a skeletal analysis.
Fisher, 28, Ripley, both of recovery efforts in Jackson furthest from the window.
As she continued, her
Authorities
have
not
said
Moments before the .Jaklnides said. Another cuswhom were transponed . to . County.
mother
stopped her.
Jackson General Hospital.
Racine was on the scene defendants appeared, three tody dispute regarding how the body was found
"We
do not want
All three survivors were until SJO a.m: Saturday reporters were asked to Taylor is ongoing in a about 25 miles from Davis' vengeance,"
Porter · said.
home in an area of a nationlater treated at St. Mary's morning. Hill confirmed the move so the Davis family ·California court, he said.
Davis' mother last spoke al park with a dirt road, ~ "We want justice.':
Hospital in Huntington, conditions were extremely cauld sit in the center of the
W.Va. and later released.
~
h h d
Racine also recovered the . ~~~d~ en t e epartment
ings whether Mayor John · say, not as I do" to resi- Agency fund in the amount
body of Jennifer Posten
The Associated Press
Musser was attending or not. dents. MeAn gus also of $15,807. This repay- ·
which was found outside of reported the group of boaters
No supervisors were present brought up the question of ment reflected the recent
· the boat.
had gone fishing and apparfor
'last night's meeting. having police dispatchers check the village received
fromPageA1
Hill said both Racine and ently was unable .to find a
Musser
was out of town with cease saying social security from the Appalachian
the Cottageville· Volunteer . way to get off the river when
Amott,
who is president of numbers over the public Regional Commission for
Fire Department had divers thick fog rolled in about mid- numbers for supervisors for
in the water which attempted night. The 16-foot fiberglass council to have for reference council, sitting in his place. . scanner to protect against money to repair the parking lot wall which officialMcAngus also said by identity theft. .
to recover victims trapped boat attempted to get out of to "help us all with commuCouncil passed resolu- ly ends that project.
inside the boat but due to a the way of a barge owned by nication.'' Amott also want- the village allowing grass
. gas leak this made it difficult Shelly Materials and ran imo ed the minutes to reflect a and weeds to grow high tion 16.07 which was a . Council approved $450
for the divers to do their job. the s1de of the larger vessel "friendly reminder" that along village owned prop- repayment to the general for rebuilding the street
Racine and Cottageville then instead. A spokesperson fqr council needed to hear from erty, including the walking fund from the Federal department's Gravely· and
"wenched" the boat loose the
West
Virginia supervisors at regular meet- path, it was saying, "do ·as I Emergency Management $1 00 for a chain hoist.
from the barge and turned it Department of Natural
right side up to find the bod- Resources described visibiliies of two children still ty as "zero" at the time. .
state in the event of a extra man power. The exer- ed exercise with no chemiinside the boat. The children,
While
the
accident
cise is a requirement of the cals involved and citizens
major disaster.
Samantha Fisher, 4, and her remains under investigation,
The exercise will test the State Emergency Response of the area should. not be
brother Jessie Fisher, 16 the WVDNR spokesperson
ability to communicate with Commission (SERC) and alarmed. Questions should
from PageA1
months, also of Ripley, said he does not expect any
area fire, EMS and Law The Ohio and Federal be addressed to Robert E.
lx;longed to parents Jennifer charges to be filed. ,
Emergency Management Byer, EMA Director at
operation charting the vari- Enforcement Agencies in Agencies
(OEMA) 992-4541.
ous messages and requests the event of a major disaster (FEMA).
that would require an inter'
A critique of the exercise
The fireworks display that would be forthcoming operable communications
in
such
an
event.
Also
a
will
held at the Pomeroy
will be set off from an area
system in order that all Fire beHouse
the
new
MARCS
test
of
following the
along the Ohio River in
responding and involved
lower Midrlleport. They will radio system will be made. agencies could communi- · end of the event. Traffic
from PageA1
will be rerouted around the
be visible from the football The MARCS radio system cate with each other.
area. This will be a simulatfield where Phil Dirt &amp; the is a statewide coded freThe scenario will also test
business donors and mem- Dozers will perform a free quency that can be used by
bers of the commljnity will concert, sponsored by the EMA, EMS, Fire, Health the ability to ' provide
help make up the cost of the River City Players.
and Law Enforcement to resources needed in such an
show.
The day's celebration will talk to Columbus and other event that would involve
There has been no begin
downtown, with the agencies through out the staging and utilization of
Independence Day celebration in Middleport since unveiling of the new "Walk
Vegas Weekend
2004. In 2005 , the celebra- into Middleport's Past"
ed on studying the site for
mural
series,
a
storytelling
tion was canceled because a
June 29&amp; 30
the state's FutureGen bid
suitable location for the session by Donna Wilson,
Call
now
for tickets and details
made marketing the site to
fireworks display could not and a gospel sing and coin
Casino
Night
June 29 7-10 pm
from ·Page A1
Rentech easier.
be identified in time. Last show in Dave Diles Park.
win great erizes!
The Ohio Department of
year, the celebration was The traditional July 4 Parade
Movie
"Viva Las Vegas"
Development
has
made
will take the celebration into Ohio proposed for the prorained out.
June
30 at 2 pm
$250,000
available
to
"It's still a tradition for the lower Middleport, where the ject, and involved marketing Rentech to assist in compleVegas
Legends
Conceit
by both Meigs and Athens
Middleport commu~ity and conceri will take place.
June
30
at8
pm
Donations for fireworks County. The other site .was tion of a feasibility study, to
for ·Meigs County, Phalin
featuring Dwight Icenhower
include a conceptual design,
said. "This year, we plan to may be made to the in Tuscarawas County.
&amp;more
environmental
permits
and
Paul Reed, president of
Community
resume the tradition and make Middleport
a
market
analysis.
The
study
Meigs
County
it .even better, and I hope the Association by mailing the
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
community will pull together them to P.O. Box 9, Community Improvement · is expected to take about
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS
Project, said work complet- eight months to complete. ·
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
and make it happen."

Gospel concert set

Plan '87 reunion

Schedule changed

Family reunion

Boll advisory

Accident

Council

. EMA

Fireworks

Now-Open
For Business
Monday,

A!!!·

Site

June 18, 2007

Portland Plant
McDade Rd. .
Portland, OH

1·740-843-5293

..

�Page A6- The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tue.sday, June 26, 2007

-FUN, GAMES AND PUZZLES

Inside
Hawks eyeing Olnley, Horford, Page 82

Mauk transfers to UC, Page B2
Colts lead ESPY nominees, Page B6

Gizmos

upcomin!i

POMEROf - A schAdule of
college
and high &amp;ehool varsity &amp;porting eYM'IIs lmoMlg
teams trom Gallia and Meigs OOU'Ities.

Wednt•day, June 27
Legion Bateball
Gallia at Meigs, 6 p.m.

,~,

,

'i

u
-

I .

1

I

! t..
L..

K·STRIKER
BASEBALL PITCHER'S
..
GUN~

Little league coaches·everywhere will want one!
.

'

'

.,

~

..

Middleport Little
League Tourney
set for July 7

The pe-rfect tool for
overstressed little leaguer's' arms. The K-Striker .
uses the little known factthat kangaroos have
a vckle spot that triggers.an involuntary spasm',.
in ,their legs. (much like dogs) When the trigger
is pushed(D,a)mechanism animates the stimulation feather(D,
causing a po\Yfifulleg thrust@, which propells the baseball@.
As an added )fnus the snail slime spit ball attachment@can ·
:l be engaged to create slippery sliders. · '. ,

To advenise call
992-2155

PABLO

WINKY

The K-Striker is endorsed
by the Australian National Little
League Federation
Ire CHEESE

\f1 ~

~t.

'Big smile
high cheeks

, To create a happy face we need to create a wide
bright smile with high cheeks and big wide open eyes
with high arching eyebrows. Be careful, bec&lt;juse if
you e~aggerate to much you get a dopey look.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

oddity occurred when the
scores were posted on the
leader board showing five
teams had shot identical
scores of 61 over the par 72
layout, resulting in a fiveway tie.
·
A quick meeting of the
Lions resulted in a decision
to award all fi'le teams a
$200 cash prize for their
day 's work. The five winning
teams are as follows: Ryan .
Smith, Smokey Wion, Robin
Hudson, and Norm Tarr.
Team 2: Jeff Slone, Rodney
Rankin, Barry Barnette, and
Terri Marchi. Team 15-a:
Tom Russell, Jeff Adkins,
Steve Poner, and J.R .
Killingsworth. Team 12a:
John Davis, Larry Elliott, Wil
Jenkins, and Dan Swindall.
Team lOb: Craig Jagers, Paul
Covey, Charlie Saunders, and
Frank Krau!ter.

Individual awards went to
Tom Young for the longest
putt on Number 9: Jeff Slone
for the longest drive by an A
or B player on Number I;
Barry Barnette, closest· to the
pin on Number 16: Nancy
Ohlinger longest drive by a&lt;':
or D player: and Andrea
Adkins closest to the pin on
Number 4.
None of the golfers tallied
a hole in one during the day,
but there were some drives
that were close to winning
the $10,000 award.
This golf outing is currently the largest fund raiser conducted by the 50-year old
Gallipolis Lions Club with
all proceeds used to purchase
eye glasse~ for children,
needy adults, suppon the
Ohio Lions Eye Bank at Ohio
State University, provide
financial assistance to the

Pilot bog School m
Columbus, plus numerous
local and community organizations and charities.
The Lions other main fund
raiser is the Annual Light
For Sight Light Bulb Sale
each year with proceeds used
to purchase eye glasses and
provide other support to
those who are visually
impaired .
President Rick Tipple
extended the appreciation of
the entire club when he stated, ''That once again our generous community of ~olfers
turned out to play in this tournament, and we thank each
one of them and also to all of
our sponsors who really step
up by sponsoring a hole each
year. We thank everyone who
helped n any way to make
this tournament one of the
best in the area."

Sabathia, Cleveland ·handles Oakland

will

Wahama 3-on-3
hoops tourney

wide open ·
eyes

Lions Golf Tourney winners announced

GALLIPOLIS
.
LeglonBooeboll
Members
of
the
Gallipolis
Gallia at CK Tournament, TBA
Lions Club would like to
friday. Juno 29
thank all of the sponsors,
Legion Booeball
. players, and donors that
Galtia at CK Tournament. TBA
made the 7th Annual Lions
Meigs at McArthur, 6 p.m.
Golf Tournament . an outSaturday. June 30
standin~- event on June 21 at
.
Loglon Booeboll ·
the Clirrside Golf Course ·in
Gallia at CK Tournamen~ TBA
Gallipolis.
Athens at Meigs (DH), 1 p.m.
The 18-hole scramble
attracted 19 teams, or 76
jlOifers, who competed in
SPORTS BRIEFS
Ideal weather for a $1 0,000
prize for a hole in one, cash
to the top four winning foursomes, prizes for closest to
the pins, longest putt, to
enjoy the delicious food, an
auction, and numerous door
prizes that had been donated
to
the Lions.
MIDDLEPORT - There
However,
a real golfing
will be a double-elimination little league baseball
tournament
held
in
Middleport starting on
Saturday, July 7.
All participants will
receive a t-shirt and there
BY ToM WITHERS
AP SPORTS WR ITER
be both indiyidual and
team trophies. presented.
CLEVELAND - C.C.
No traveling teams or all-·
Sabathia
joined Boston's
star teams will be permitted
Josh
Beckett
as the majors'
into the tournament.
only
11
-game
winners and
There will also be a
finally
beat
his
hometown
Homerun ,Derby on the last
team
again,
leading
the
day of the tournament for
Cleveland
Indians
to
a
5-2
anyone who hits a homer
victory over the Oakland
during the tournament.
Athletics on Monday night.
For information contact
Sabathia (11-2) allowed
Dave Boyd at 590-0438; nine hits in his second comTanya Coleman at 992- plete game this month to
5481; Mike Miller at 416- Improve to 2-5 in 12 career
5301; or Tim Ebersbach at stans against the A's, the
416-7934.
team he pulled for as a kid
growing up in Vallejo,
Calif.
The left-hander had been
0-4 vs. Oakh!nd since ~ast
beating the A's .on July 30,
MASON, W.Va. -The 2003.
Sabathia struck out eight
Wahama Athletic Boosters
are sponsoring a 3-on-3 bas- and didn't walk a batter,
ketball tournament at continuing an impressive
Wahama High School on run of great control. and
command of his pitches. In
Saturday, July 14.
There is a girls division his last 14 stans, Sabathia
for grades 9-12, as well as has walked only II and not
boys divisions for grades 6- more than one in any out8 and 9-12. There is also an ing. He has 89 strikeouts
over the same span.
18-and-ovc:;r division.
Ryan Garko drove in two
Contact Lisa Gardner at
runs
with a founh-inning
304-882-2082 . Space . is
double
off Chad Gaudin (6limited.
3), and Travis Hafner homered for Cleveland, just II- .
in June.
Thrf replacement · 12With
Sabathia clinging to
project complete at a one-run lead, the Indians
two in the eighth on
Mountaineer Field added
RBI singles by Jhonny
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. Peralta and pinch-hitter
· (AP) - The installation of Jason Michaels.
Oakland has lost a seanew turf at Milan . Puskar.·
son-high
four straight, and
Stadium is complete, in
seven
of
nine
overall.
plenty
of
The
A's
threatened
in the ·
time for the
ninth
,
getting
runners
to
opening of second and third with two
W e s I
before Sabathia struck
Virginia outs
out
Mark
looking on
University's his I lith Kotsay
pitch to end his
football sea- 14th career complete game.
son ,
the
university
AP photo
Sabathia, probably a lock
announced Monday.
to make his third All-Star Cleveland Indians pitcher C.C. SatJathia looks at the scoretJoard and leaves the field
The new synthetic surface
after striking out the side during the third inning of a baseball game Monday at
is
called
FieldTurf
Please see Indians, 16
Jacobs Field in Cleveland.
·
Duraspine, which is engineered to replicate the best
things about · natural grass
with just a fraction of the
maintenance required for
BY RICK GANO
· both sides. It didn 't , and we
the real thing.
AP SPORTS WRITER
have decided. to move on."
· Mountaineer coach Rich
Police in the Phoenix subRodriguez said it's the best
CHICAGO
. Tank urb of Gilben said Johnson
surface available.
Johnson
was released was stopped for driving 40
. The turf was installed by
Monday
by
the Chicago mph in a 25 mph zone at
Ballard Sports of Cary,
Bears,
who
are
"embar- 3:30 a.m. Friday and the
N.C., at a cost of. $901,152.
rassed"
by
the
defensive
officer made observations
Fall camp for the
tackle.
'
s
legal
troubles
and
that led him to believe
Mountaineers opens on
. say he "compromised the Johnson was impaired .
Aug . 4 and the season
credibility'' of the team.
Sgt. Andrew Duncan, a
opener against ·Western
Johnson was waived three police spokesman, said
Michigan is Sept. I in
Mprgantown .
days after he was pulled Johnson was arrested for
over by police in Arizona. ·:DUI Impafred to the
He already had been sus- Slightest Degree" but was·
pended for -the first eight released without . being
CoNTACfUS
games of the 2007 season booked or charged.
for violating probation on a Duncan said Johnson
· OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.l
gun charge. He spent two was taken to. the Gilbert
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
.months ·in jail and was police station, where (/ffireleased in MaY..
cials drew blood for a
Fax- 1-740-446-3008 ·
"We
are
upset
and
embarblood-alcohol content test
E-mail- sports0mydailysen1inel.com
rassed
by
Tank's
actions
last
before
his release. He
J;Qmo_~IJ.f!
week,'' general manager described Johnson as "very
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
Jerry Angelo said in a state- cooperative."
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
ment. "He compromised the
Test results aren't expectbshermanOmydailytribulle.com
credibility of our organiza- ed for up to two weeks, and
AP photo tion. We made it clear to him they would be sent to Gilben
Larry Crum, Sparta Writer
(740)446-2342 , ext. 23
·
Chicago Bears defensive lineman Terry "Tank" Johnson that he had no room for town prosecutors for considIerum 0 mydailyreglster.com
enters Cook County Court accompani~d by Bears head error. Our goal was to help eration of any charges.
Johnson had called his
Bryan Walters, Sports Wrltlll' coach Lovie Smith, right, in Skokie, Ill. , in this March 15, file someone through a difficult
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33,
photo. The Chicago Bears said Monday they have cut . period in hi.s life, but the suspension an "op~nunity
bwaltersOmyda!lytr!bune.com
effon needs to come from for me ~o move . orward."
Johnson from the team.
Thursday. June 28

:i ; .

..
Thesday, June 26, 2007

LocAL SCHEDULE

,. ....

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

CONFERENC E

Congressman
concerned
about access
to Network .
WASHINGTON (AP)
House
Energy
and ·
Commerce
Committee
Chairman John Dingell said
Monday he was concerned
about the ability of fans to
watch Big Ten sponing
events on a new television
networ~ debuting this summer.

~

Dingell, D-Mich., wrote
Big Ten Commissioner Jim
Delany with questions about
the Big Ten Network, which
is expected to launch somelime m August. .
The congressman said
many constituents have
expressed worries about
bemg able to watch
.University of Michigan football games this season
because none of the state's
cable systems carry the network.
''While I . understand the
motivation on the pan of the
Big Ten Conference and its
member schools to ~reate a
new all-Big Ten cable channel, I am increasingly concerned about the migration of
previously free, over the air
content to a pay television
tier," Dingell wrote.
Dingell, whose comminee
has jurisdiction over telecommunications, asked Delany
about the status of negotiations with cable systems,
whether they would be concluded before football season
and how the conference
reached. the $1.10-per-household monthly rate from cable
systems for the network.
He•also noted that all 13 of
Michigan's football games
last season were available on
either free, over-the-air
broadcast or on cable chlinnels widely available to subscribers. Requesting details
for each school, he asked
how many of the games will
be on free or basic cable TV.
A conference spokesman
·did not immediately comment Monday on the letter.
The Big Ten and Comcast
Corp. have been at odds over
the price of the new network
and whether it should be
offered on basic cable. The
network has agreements with
about 40 smafler cable companies and DirecTV, but not
ComcaSl, which has 5.7 million subscribers in the eight .
states with Big Ten schools.
The Chicago-based network, which is co-owned by
the 'conference and Fox
Spons. plans to show all the
conference's football games
that aren't broadcast elsewhere. It also · plans to
broadcast numerous other
events, including at least
I05 regular-season men's
basketball games.

'Embarrassed' Bears cut Tank Johnson

-.

Unscramble the letters to form ordinary words. Then place them in the
crossword grid. Then unscramble the circled
letters to form todays coded message.
f ft.!)lfW i
(Do I sl olliWI U EI'EIBfii r lcil Q;jof l[N f6.fLfl] I I I lo I
·

QUo[ III IIGIB!I l l lo!" 0o[l I IAJBTziEI RI
(i.lol .IGfUJNJ· [ r If I lol QJoi !RIEIAIBI l I I
@o,l TrT rl·fJC!Af i lei! @6Fli -JUiiEI'GIRI
@orllJifsitltirErP.rAINiol @ol 11&gt;1'EJ!IIFIF.ITTIH

I to !
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@.@Ti:rt:t o[G[R IA.JI.f IT JoJ' C.Ucir r r.rr·JS[PJAle r Jol
@@r r rJEivT61MJK{FJlTol @cF..JAICITJiiTr I I 161

oeuuoo
•

NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell had said the suspension could be reduced to six
games if Johnson had no fur.ther involvement with law
enforcement and underwent
counseling.
"A lot of people within our
organization gave extra time
and energy to support Tank:
players, coaches and our
front office," Bears coach
Lovie Smith said in a statement. "We did our best to
establish an environment for
him to .move forward.
Ultimately, Tank needed to
live up to his side of the
deaL" ,
Last D,ecember, police
rai4ed the 300,pound defensive tackle's suburban
Chicago home and found six
unregistered firearms . - a
violation of his probation on
an earlier gun charge.
That char~e stemmed
from Johnson s 2005 arrest
after a Chicago nightclub
valet
reponed
seeing
Johnson wnh a handgun in

Please see Tank. 116 ·

�Page A6- The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tue.sday, June 26, 2007

-FUN, GAMES AND PUZZLES

Inside
Hawks eyeing Olnley, Horford, Page 82

Mauk transfers to UC, Page B2
Colts lead ESPY nominees, Page B6

Gizmos

upcomin!i

POMEROf - A schAdule of
college
and high &amp;ehool varsity &amp;porting eYM'IIs lmoMlg
teams trom Gallia and Meigs OOU'Ities.

Wednt•day, June 27
Legion Bateball
Gallia at Meigs, 6 p.m.

,~,

,

'i

u
-

I .

1

I

! t..
L..

K·STRIKER
BASEBALL PITCHER'S
..
GUN~

Little league coaches·everywhere will want one!
.

'

'

.,

~

..

Middleport Little
League Tourney
set for July 7

The pe-rfect tool for
overstressed little leaguer's' arms. The K-Striker .
uses the little known factthat kangaroos have
a vckle spot that triggers.an involuntary spasm',.
in ,their legs. (much like dogs) When the trigger
is pushed(D,a)mechanism animates the stimulation feather(D,
causing a po\Yfifulleg thrust@, which propells the baseball@.
As an added )fnus the snail slime spit ball attachment@can ·
:l be engaged to create slippery sliders. · '. ,

To advenise call
992-2155

PABLO

WINKY

The K-Striker is endorsed
by the Australian National Little
League Federation
Ire CHEESE

\f1 ~

~t.

'Big smile
high cheeks

, To create a happy face we need to create a wide
bright smile with high cheeks and big wide open eyes
with high arching eyebrows. Be careful, bec&lt;juse if
you e~aggerate to much you get a dopey look.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

oddity occurred when the
scores were posted on the
leader board showing five
teams had shot identical
scores of 61 over the par 72
layout, resulting in a fiveway tie.
·
A quick meeting of the
Lions resulted in a decision
to award all fi'le teams a
$200 cash prize for their
day 's work. The five winning
teams are as follows: Ryan .
Smith, Smokey Wion, Robin
Hudson, and Norm Tarr.
Team 2: Jeff Slone, Rodney
Rankin, Barry Barnette, and
Terri Marchi. Team 15-a:
Tom Russell, Jeff Adkins,
Steve Poner, and J.R .
Killingsworth. Team 12a:
John Davis, Larry Elliott, Wil
Jenkins, and Dan Swindall.
Team lOb: Craig Jagers, Paul
Covey, Charlie Saunders, and
Frank Krau!ter.

Individual awards went to
Tom Young for the longest
putt on Number 9: Jeff Slone
for the longest drive by an A
or B player on Number I;
Barry Barnette, closest· to the
pin on Number 16: Nancy
Ohlinger longest drive by a&lt;':
or D player: and Andrea
Adkins closest to the pin on
Number 4.
None of the golfers tallied
a hole in one during the day,
but there were some drives
that were close to winning
the $10,000 award.
This golf outing is currently the largest fund raiser conducted by the 50-year old
Gallipolis Lions Club with
all proceeds used to purchase
eye glasse~ for children,
needy adults, suppon the
Ohio Lions Eye Bank at Ohio
State University, provide
financial assistance to the

Pilot bog School m
Columbus, plus numerous
local and community organizations and charities.
The Lions other main fund
raiser is the Annual Light
For Sight Light Bulb Sale
each year with proceeds used
to purchase eye glasses and
provide other support to
those who are visually
impaired .
President Rick Tipple
extended the appreciation of
the entire club when he stated, ''That once again our generous community of ~olfers
turned out to play in this tournament, and we thank each
one of them and also to all of
our sponsors who really step
up by sponsoring a hole each
year. We thank everyone who
helped n any way to make
this tournament one of the
best in the area."

Sabathia, Cleveland ·handles Oakland

will

Wahama 3-on-3
hoops tourney

wide open ·
eyes

Lions Golf Tourney winners announced

GALLIPOLIS
.
LeglonBooeboll
Members
of
the
Gallipolis
Gallia at CK Tournament, TBA
Lions Club would like to
friday. Juno 29
thank all of the sponsors,
Legion Booeball
. players, and donors that
Galtia at CK Tournament. TBA
made the 7th Annual Lions
Meigs at McArthur, 6 p.m.
Golf Tournament . an outSaturday. June 30
standin~- event on June 21 at
.
Loglon Booeboll ·
the Clirrside Golf Course ·in
Gallia at CK Tournamen~ TBA
Gallipolis.
Athens at Meigs (DH), 1 p.m.
The 18-hole scramble
attracted 19 teams, or 76
jlOifers, who competed in
SPORTS BRIEFS
Ideal weather for a $1 0,000
prize for a hole in one, cash
to the top four winning foursomes, prizes for closest to
the pins, longest putt, to
enjoy the delicious food, an
auction, and numerous door
prizes that had been donated
to
the Lions.
MIDDLEPORT - There
However,
a real golfing
will be a double-elimination little league baseball
tournament
held
in
Middleport starting on
Saturday, July 7.
All participants will
receive a t-shirt and there
BY ToM WITHERS
AP SPORTS WR ITER
be both indiyidual and
team trophies. presented.
CLEVELAND - C.C.
No traveling teams or all-·
Sabathia
joined Boston's
star teams will be permitted
Josh
Beckett
as the majors'
into the tournament.
only
11
-game
winners and
There will also be a
finally
beat
his
hometown
Homerun ,Derby on the last
team
again,
leading
the
day of the tournament for
Cleveland
Indians
to
a
5-2
anyone who hits a homer
victory over the Oakland
during the tournament.
Athletics on Monday night.
For information contact
Sabathia (11-2) allowed
Dave Boyd at 590-0438; nine hits in his second comTanya Coleman at 992- plete game this month to
5481; Mike Miller at 416- Improve to 2-5 in 12 career
5301; or Tim Ebersbach at stans against the A's, the
416-7934.
team he pulled for as a kid
growing up in Vallejo,
Calif.
The left-hander had been
0-4 vs. Oakh!nd since ~ast
beating the A's .on July 30,
MASON, W.Va. -The 2003.
Sabathia struck out eight
Wahama Athletic Boosters
are sponsoring a 3-on-3 bas- and didn't walk a batter,
ketball tournament at continuing an impressive
Wahama High School on run of great control. and
command of his pitches. In
Saturday, July 14.
There is a girls division his last 14 stans, Sabathia
for grades 9-12, as well as has walked only II and not
boys divisions for grades 6- more than one in any out8 and 9-12. There is also an ing. He has 89 strikeouts
over the same span.
18-and-ovc:;r division.
Ryan Garko drove in two
Contact Lisa Gardner at
runs
with a founh-inning
304-882-2082 . Space . is
double
off Chad Gaudin (6limited.
3), and Travis Hafner homered for Cleveland, just II- .
in June.
Thrf replacement · 12With
Sabathia clinging to
project complete at a one-run lead, the Indians
two in the eighth on
Mountaineer Field added
RBI singles by Jhonny
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. Peralta and pinch-hitter
· (AP) - The installation of Jason Michaels.
Oakland has lost a seanew turf at Milan . Puskar.·
son-high
four straight, and
Stadium is complete, in
seven
of
nine
overall.
plenty
of
The
A's
threatened
in the ·
time for the
ninth
,
getting
runners
to
opening of second and third with two
W e s I
before Sabathia struck
Virginia outs
out
Mark
looking on
University's his I lith Kotsay
pitch to end his
football sea- 14th career complete game.
son ,
the
university
AP photo
Sabathia, probably a lock
announced Monday.
to make his third All-Star Cleveland Indians pitcher C.C. SatJathia looks at the scoretJoard and leaves the field
The new synthetic surface
after striking out the side during the third inning of a baseball game Monday at
is
called
FieldTurf
Please see Indians, 16
Jacobs Field in Cleveland.
·
Duraspine, which is engineered to replicate the best
things about · natural grass
with just a fraction of the
maintenance required for
BY RICK GANO
· both sides. It didn 't , and we
the real thing.
AP SPORTS WRITER
have decided. to move on."
· Mountaineer coach Rich
Police in the Phoenix subRodriguez said it's the best
CHICAGO
. Tank urb of Gilben said Johnson
surface available.
Johnson
was released was stopped for driving 40
. The turf was installed by
Monday
by
the Chicago mph in a 25 mph zone at
Ballard Sports of Cary,
Bears,
who
are
"embar- 3:30 a.m. Friday and the
N.C., at a cost of. $901,152.
rassed"
by
the
defensive
officer made observations
Fall camp for the
tackle.
'
s
legal
troubles
and
that led him to believe
Mountaineers opens on
. say he "compromised the Johnson was impaired .
Aug . 4 and the season
credibility'' of the team.
Sgt. Andrew Duncan, a
opener against ·Western
Johnson was waived three police spokesman, said
Michigan is Sept. I in
Mprgantown .
days after he was pulled Johnson was arrested for
over by police in Arizona. ·:DUI Impafred to the
He already had been sus- Slightest Degree" but was·
pended for -the first eight released without . being
CoNTACfUS
games of the 2007 season booked or charged.
for violating probation on a Duncan said Johnson
· OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.l
gun charge. He spent two was taken to. the Gilbert
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
.months ·in jail and was police station, where (/ffireleased in MaY..
cials drew blood for a
Fax- 1-740-446-3008 ·
"We
are
upset
and
embarblood-alcohol content test
E-mail- sports0mydailysen1inel.com
rassed
by
Tank's
actions
last
before
his release. He
J;Qmo_~IJ.f!
week,'' general manager described Johnson as "very
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
Jerry Angelo said in a state- cooperative."
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
ment. "He compromised the
Test results aren't expectbshermanOmydailytribulle.com
credibility of our organiza- ed for up to two weeks, and
AP photo tion. We made it clear to him they would be sent to Gilben
Larry Crum, Sparta Writer
(740)446-2342 , ext. 23
·
Chicago Bears defensive lineman Terry "Tank" Johnson that he had no room for town prosecutors for considIerum 0 mydailyreglster.com
enters Cook County Court accompani~d by Bears head error. Our goal was to help eration of any charges.
Johnson had called his
Bryan Walters, Sports Wrltlll' coach Lovie Smith, right, in Skokie, Ill. , in this March 15, file someone through a difficult
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33,
photo. The Chicago Bears said Monday they have cut . period in hi.s life, but the suspension an "op~nunity
bwaltersOmyda!lytr!bune.com
effon needs to come from for me ~o move . orward."
Johnson from the team.
Thursday. June 28

:i ; .

..
Thesday, June 26, 2007

LocAL SCHEDULE

,. ....

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

CONFERENC E

Congressman
concerned
about access
to Network .
WASHINGTON (AP)
House
Energy
and ·
Commerce
Committee
Chairman John Dingell said
Monday he was concerned
about the ability of fans to
watch Big Ten sponing
events on a new television
networ~ debuting this summer.

~

Dingell, D-Mich., wrote
Big Ten Commissioner Jim
Delany with questions about
the Big Ten Network, which
is expected to launch somelime m August. .
The congressman said
many constituents have
expressed worries about
bemg able to watch
.University of Michigan football games this season
because none of the state's
cable systems carry the network.
''While I . understand the
motivation on the pan of the
Big Ten Conference and its
member schools to ~reate a
new all-Big Ten cable channel, I am increasingly concerned about the migration of
previously free, over the air
content to a pay television
tier," Dingell wrote.
Dingell, whose comminee
has jurisdiction over telecommunications, asked Delany
about the status of negotiations with cable systems,
whether they would be concluded before football season
and how the conference
reached. the $1.10-per-household monthly rate from cable
systems for the network.
He•also noted that all 13 of
Michigan's football games
last season were available on
either free, over-the-air
broadcast or on cable chlinnels widely available to subscribers. Requesting details
for each school, he asked
how many of the games will
be on free or basic cable TV.
A conference spokesman
·did not immediately comment Monday on the letter.
The Big Ten and Comcast
Corp. have been at odds over
the price of the new network
and whether it should be
offered on basic cable. The
network has agreements with
about 40 smafler cable companies and DirecTV, but not
ComcaSl, which has 5.7 million subscribers in the eight .
states with Big Ten schools.
The Chicago-based network, which is co-owned by
the 'conference and Fox
Spons. plans to show all the
conference's football games
that aren't broadcast elsewhere. It also · plans to
broadcast numerous other
events, including at least
I05 regular-season men's
basketball games.

'Embarrassed' Bears cut Tank Johnson

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NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell had said the suspension could be reduced to six
games if Johnson had no fur.ther involvement with law
enforcement and underwent
counseling.
"A lot of people within our
organization gave extra time
and energy to support Tank:
players, coaches and our
front office," Bears coach
Lovie Smith said in a statement. "We did our best to
establish an environment for
him to .move forward.
Ultimately, Tank needed to
live up to his side of the
deaL" ,
Last D,ecember, police
rai4ed the 300,pound defensive tackle's suburban
Chicago home and found six
unregistered firearms . - a
violation of his probation on
an earlier gun charge.
That char~e stemmed
from Johnson s 2005 arrest
after a Chicago nightclub
valet
reponed
seeing
Johnson wnh a handgun in

Please see Tank. 116 ·

�---Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 26,

2007

.

.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Horford, Conley Jr. try to
impress Hawks before draft
BY JONATHAN lANDRUM JR.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ATLANTA - The last
time AI Horford and Mike
Conley Jr. were in competition against each other, it
was for college baske tball 's national champi onship.
Horford he! ped th e
Florida
Gators
beat
Conley's
Ohio
State
Buckeyes in Apnl's title
game. On Monday, each
tried to show during individual workouts that he
was worthy of being chosen third by the Atlanta
\... Hawks in the upcomin g
"'--N-Bx-draft.
" It definitely seems like
we are competmg agam,"
Conley said. "We're going
for the highest spot we can
possibly ach1eve 1n the
draft."
The first two p1cks seem
to be a lock between Greg
Oden and Kevin Durant,
who could land in either
Portland or Seattle on

Thursday. Some mock
drafts have the Hawks
goi ng with Ho rford or
Conley with their No. 3
pick
In th e early sess ion ,
Horford impressed the
Hawks with his 6-foot-1 0,
244-pound sturdy frame,
aggressive rebounding and
abil"ity to make the short
perimeter shot. He averaged 13 .2 points, 9.5
rebounds and 1.8 blocked
shots a ga me as a junior for
the Gators.
Conley didn't look too
shabby either. The point
guard 's speed, quickness
and defensive skill s seen
on tape are all mtan.g1hles
the Hawks are looking for
at the position, making up
for hi s slim 6-foot-1, 175pound frame.
As a freshman, Conley
led the Big Ten with 6.1
assists and 2.2 steals. He
also scored 13.2 points a
game and shot 52 percent
from the fl oor.

J

HARRIS

AP SPORTS WRITER

Sentinel- laegtster·
CLASS I.F IE D

"He's the first point going to fill the need of a
guard we've had in here big man, then address the
who 1s probably a true point gua rd situation as
point guard in term s of well."
possessing speed and
Horford believes he can
being able to get up and · step in and fulfill the role
down the floor, " coac h asked of him .
Mike Woodson said.
''I'm physically there
Factonng into the deci- rebounding and sconng in
s10 n are point guards the low post," he said.
Speedy
Claxton
and "The three years in college
Tyronn Lue, who were gave me a chance to be
injury-plagued last season. well -ready for the NBA ."
Woodson believes the tanThe Hawks also have the
dem should be stronge r for No. II pick . They could
the upcomin g season and grab a young point guard
th at upgrade in the front- in Acie Law or Javaris
court is more a necessity. Cnttenton, who worked
Journeyme n forwards out last week, or obtain a
Esteban Bati sta and Slava veteran player through
not trade.
Medvedenko
are
returning, and they need
"We've got to have SO!fle
more depth there, which insurance," Woodson said.
could ultimately lean "Not to say Speedy and
toward picking Hurford , Lue won't come back,
Woodson said.
because I'm counting on
"We still lack size," he them being in Hawks' unisaid. "We are still consid- form next season. They ' re
ered one of the smallest veterans and battle tested.
teams in the league, so we But just in case, we need
need someone big. We are an insurance policy. "

in the film. He cries and
laments never getting the
chance to say goodbye. He
says that before every game
·he talks to the brother he
idohzed.
The convicted triggerman,
identified in the movie as
Marcus, did seven years in
jail. Forer found Marcus'
father, and through him, got
to Marcus, who appears in
the movie talking about the
murder he committed at IS.
After prison, Marcus left
gang life and now works as a
recruiter for law finns.
The movie delves into
Marcus' flashbacks of the
shooting and his regret, along
with Charles Sr.'s desire for
vengeance and Mae's eontempt for her son's killer.
Charles Sr. considers meeting Marcus, but it doesn't
happen.
"He killed my son,"
Charles Sr. said in an interview. "There's nothing that
he can say to me that's going
to change my mind about
him."
Forer still thinks the two
men will end up meeting.
"Charles has some demons
that he's still deal in~ · with,"
the director said. ' Marcus
has a messa~e .that he is
uniquely qualified to ,share.
He wants to be an example."
Forer hopes to land a distribution deal for the 94-minute
movie with a major studio or
cable TV network. Charles
Sr. hopes the film sends the
message that tragedy shouldn't keep people down forever.
"You can move on and
accomplish your own goals,"
he said. "This has been a
dream of Nick's since he was
a kid. Everybody should
have a dream. Ifyouain't~ot
a dream, y~u ain't living.'

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0tfftee llot(/4'lf'
AP photo

.,
'

passing (17,523) and touchdowns (178).
At Wake Forest, he was
red-shirted as a freshman,
then spent two years sharing
the job at quarterback,
where the main responsibility was handing off to a running back.
"The biggest thing was
maturing during those three
years to be the type of quarterback they wanted me to
be," Mauk said.
The job was all his a year
ago, but he I:Jroke his right
arm and dislocated hi s
shoulder agamst Syracuse.
Mauk mi,ssed the rest of the
season, and in spring practice it became evident that
the starter would be Riley
Skinner, who had taken the
Demon Deavons to an II · 3
record and the Atlantic
Coast Conference championship.
"It was a situation where I
didn't think they were going
to let me compete for the
job," Mauk sa1d. "If I'm not
going to have a. chance to
compete for the job, I don't
want to be in that situation. I
wanted to move closer to
home and throw the ball
more like what I'm used to."
Mauk won't have to sit out
a season because of a nowrescinded NCAA rule that
allowed a player who had

completed an undergraduate
degree at one school to
enroll in a graduate program
at another school and use his
remaining eligibility.
It seemed like a perfect fit
for Mauk and Cincinnati.
"What I was looking for
was an experienced quarterback in the spread offense
who had done 11 at a BCS
level, a player who had that
competitive demeanor that I
like in my quarterbacks,"
Kelly said. ·
The Cincinnati medical
staff determined that Mauk
should fully recover from
his injuries. Mauk estimates
that he has regained about
80 percent of the strength in
his right shoulder and is contident he' ll be ready by the
tune fall practice starts.
He figures the switch back
to a passing-oriented offense
won't be as difficult as the
adjustment he had to make
at Wake Forest.
"To switch and do a complete 180 degrees and turn
and hand the ball off most of
the game and just throw
when needed was frustrating
to me," he said.
Mauk has only one year of
eligibility remaining , but he
pl ans to pet1t1on the NCAA
after next season for another
year due to his injury.

Goodell stresses conduct with rookies
REYNOLDS

AP SPORTS WRITER

Roger Goodell briefed all
255 members of this year 's
draft class Monday on the
NFL's stricter conduct rules.
Hours later, the Chicago
Bears released troubled
defensive tackle Tank
Johnson m a move that most
likely underscored the commissioner's message.
"We're concerned about
them as men," Goodell said
at the leallue's rookie symposium m Palm Beach
Gardens, Fla., shortly before
Johnson's release was
announced. "How do they
become not only great NFL
players, but how do they
become great men? How do
they conduct themselves
appropriately
for
the
remainder of their life, not
just when they're in the
National Football League?"
· Goodell released his
stricter policy in April, an
attempt to quell a rash of
off-the-field
episodes
involving NFL players,
notably cases involving
three suspended players Johnson, Tennessee Titans
cornerback Adam "Pacman"
Jones
and
Cincinnati
Bengals receiver Chris
Henry, who was among 10
Bengals player arrested in
about 14 months.
Goodell spent about 20
minutes with this season's
draftees on that" topic, most·
ly in a question-and-answer
session.
"I'd be naive to think
everyone would be able to
understand it," Goodell said.
"But I think we're making

players more aware of the
standards of behavior. We' re
giving them more tools and
resources to make sure they
can make those deci sions."
Johnson, who was cut by
the reigning NFC champions Monday, spent time in
jail this offseason after violating probation and was
stopped in A~izona last week
when police said he was
speeding. He had blood
drawn to determine if he was
driving while impaired.
"He compromised the
credibility of our organization," ·Bears general manager Jerry Angelo said. "We
made it clear to him that he
had no room for error. Our
goal was to help someone
through a difficult period in
his life, but the effort needs
to come from both sides. It
didn't, and we have decided
to move on."
It's a situation the NFL
clearly doesn't like, which is
where the emphasis on educating players comes in.
The , rookie symposium
teaches incoming NFL players - attendance is mandatory for draftees - about
how to handle finances and
relationships and how to
prefare for life after footbal . But the conduct issue is
one of Goodell's priorities,
and it's taking center stage
this year.
"You could see the players·
were engaged," Goodell
said. ''They asked very good
questions, very responsive
questions to things that I
said."
This offseason has been
dominated by news of players getting into tmuble,
(

includm g Atlanta quarterback Michael Vick's alleged
involvement with dogfighting and tillS past weekend's
arrest of Miami Dolphins
defensive tackle Fred Evans
on South Beach after he
allegedly fought with police
ofticers when he refused to
leave a taxi.
Then there is the ongoing
Jones saga. He faces two
charges in a Las Vegas strip
club melee that preceded a
triple shooting , and was
sought by Atlanta-area
police last week for questioning in a shooting after a
·fight at another strip club.
Goodell said fan s have
been "quite supportive, qlllte
positive" about the tougher
policies, and he still believes
most players understand and abide - by the rules.
"The vast majority of our
players do," Goodell said.
"There's a select few that
don't. And they get a lot of
focus ... and have a negative
Impact on the other players
in our league and the NFL in
general."
The sy mposium , which
also includes current and
former players "talking to the
r.ookies about life in the
NFL, a youth clinic and
other events, continues
through
Wednesday.
Speakers include current
NFL players Vince Young,
Reggie Bush, Jonathan
Vilma and Jeff Saturday;
Cleveland Browns coach
Romeo Crennel; NFL Hall
of Farner and Baltimore
Ravens general manager
Ozzie Newsome; and NFL
Players Assoc iation president Troy Vincent.

Word Ads

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

Flonda's AI Horford (42) jams the ball m the basket during
second half basketball play against Providence as he goes
for a career high of 21 points in Gainesville, Fla., 111 th1s
Dec. 6, 2006 f1le photo. Horford is one of the top prospects
for the NBA 'Draft, to take place 111 New York on June 28.

'

BY TIM

Meigs County, OH

;

CINCINNATI (AP) Ben Mauk of Kenton, who
passed for 6,528 yards when
he was Ohio's Mr. Football
in 2002, has transferred to
Cincinnati to finish his college career.
His ill-fated venture at
Wake Forest ended when he
broke his ann in the season
opener last year.
"I haven't been this excited about football since I was
in high school," said Mauk,
who is getting ready for the
Aug. 3 start of fall practice.
Mauk has good reason to
be excited: New coach Brian
Kelly has said he will open
up the Bearcats' offense. But
first, Mauk will have to beat
out returning starter Dustin
Grutza, who led Cincinnati
to a 7-5 regular-season
record last year.
"If he's healthy, he has a
great chance to be our starting quarterback," Kelly said.
"He's got all the tools to be
the starting quarterback at
the University of Cincinnati,
but we're not going to hand
it to him."
During his senior year at
Kenton, Mauk completed
434 of 668 passe~ (64 perAP photo cent) for 6,528 yards and 76
Southern California's Nick Young, right, controls the ball touchdowns, and rushed for
around Washington's Adrian Oliver, left, in thiS f1le photo · I,385 yards and 18 touchtaken Thursday, Dec. 28, 2006, in Los Angeles. Young is downs. He set national
cateer records for yards
set to be chosen in this week's NBA draft.

LOS ANGELES - By all
rights, Nick Young wasn't
supposed to be a college basketball star.
He flunked out of two high
schools. His oldest brother
died in a drive-by shooting.
Now;
the
Southern
California player is set to be
chosen in this week's NBA
draft and earn millions of
dollars.
His struggle is portrayed in
"Second Chance Season."
The documentary debuted
last week at the Los Angeles
Film Festival, where a third
screening is scheduled for
Sunday.
"Every now and then, a
kind of special story picks
me," said Daniel H. Forer,
the drrector and co-producer.
"It was an absolutely remarkable journey."
Forer discovered Young,
one of the city's most heralded prep stars, in early 2003
while working on a cable
pilot about basketball.
Intrigued by his background,
Forer followed Young's multiple appeals with the Los
Angeles Unified School
District to get back into high
school. Days before his and isn't coming back. We
senior year was to begin, have to push the kids we
Young was admitted to have now in their careers."
Cleveland High in suburban
Especially Nick.
Reseda.
Young is projected as a
"I'm not the smartest per- top-20 pick in Thursday's
son, but sit down and work NBA draft, with some
with me," Young says on experts considering him as
camera. "I know what to do." the second-best shooting
The film follows Young's guard behind Corey "Brewer
attempts to score at least 800 of
national
champion
on the SAT exam to earn a Florida. First-round picks
basketball scholarship to receive guaranteed contracts.
USC, a private school with
"Maybe he'll get a high
hefty tuition.
draft choice and make a lot of
On each of three tries, he money, then I can retire,"
gets special tutoring and said Charles Sr., who has
extra time on the test. The supported his family by dricamera zooms in as he ving moving vans and haulrepeatedly opens the score ing other people's stuff for 29
results.
years.
"It started off pretty cool,
''I'm getting nervous,"
but some days it got kind of Nick said. "Everybody keeps
overwhelming," Young said saying it's a big draft and you
in an interview about the don't know where you're
film . "It was hard."
going to end up. I'm so used
In between Young's acade- to being an L.A. city guy and
mic lows, he leads Cleveland I could be out of there."
High against rival Taft High
Young has yet to live away
and Jordan Farmar, a close from home, having stayed
friend whom Young saw get with his family during his
, more acclaim and be drafted three seasons at USC.
by the Los Angeles Lakers.
"Nick is kind of a
At home, the Young fami· momma's boy," his father
ly's emotion); careen between said.
joy at Nick's basketball
Young's mother, Mae, was
prowess and persistent anger a stay-at-home mom to the
about the de11th of oldest son couple's five sons- Charles
Charles Sr. There is also Jr., Andre, Terrell, John and
worry about another son Nick, the baby. ·
whose emotional problems
"I'm always out in the
land him i11 a group home field, my wife would always
and concern about Nick's test be there for them," Charles
scores.
Sr. said. "That way I wouldForer's cameras capture n't have to worry about them,
the family's life in their mod- they wouldn't get in gangs!'
est three-bedroom apanment
In 1991, when Nick was 5,
and the mounting pressure on Charles Jr. was killed in a
Nick to succeed.
park shooting witnessed by
"It's just right on," Charles his pregnant fiancee, who
Sr. said about the film. "It recalls the horrific scene in
helped my son and my fami- the movie.
ly get through some hard
Basketball fans familiar
tunes. We've gotten used to with Young's outgoing perthe idea that my son is dead sona SCl! another Side of hi!ll

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~rtbune-

I
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Must

USC's Nick Young's journey of Fonner Mr. Football transfers to UC
loss, redemption an~ basketball
BY BETH

www.mydailysentinel.com

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'IR\IIIS

GIYEA\\~V

~------_.1
Born March 1st Male, Mtxed
pup, Bnndle/Biack to good
home Needs room to run
(740)446·7685
Full
blooded
male
warmaraner
to a good
home With no cats, call alter
5 30 304-675·6620
--------'
Used Secunty Fence must
take all Fence rs m PI
Pleasant 740·992·7841

r

ln.iAND

FOLII\1J

LOST DOG
Gray and wh1te female
Shllzu, 12 yrs old . answers
to Kat1e, lost Sunday
' 6124107 on 3rd Ave
Reward offered 614·27 1•
5888
Lost 6 month old black male
pup-recently neutered-near
Crank's Vel Chnc/ Rt 35
answers to "lll 811"- call 674·
3085

r
Jiff4

I

YARIJ SAU:·
PoMEROY/MIDDLE

5 fam1ly yard sale 1 1/2
m1tes
Story
Run
Roart/Hobson
VechlsHoushold 1tems toys Fn
28,Sal 29
6·30,7·1 9 OOio6 00 Baby
clothes, matermty scrubs,
household tlems , gray
house by Me1gs h1gh school
810 Elm Sl Racme by
Methodts!CHUACH
Bed,hamper,game----- boy,
ctothes,to'(S
Three family yard sale.
A1tch1e res 1dence, Tyree
Blvd , Rac1ne, Oh, June 29·
30th. 9am·5pm. bocycles.
elierc1se equ1pment, clothes
and miSc 1tems
Thurs 6128 ·Sun 7,1, Sam-?,
, 38422
St
At
684 ,
Harnsonv111e (bes1de F1ra
Dept. dnveway,) large clothmg IJP to 4X, 1740) 742 _2081 ,
740.742-2371
-;;r.;.;;;.;;;~_..;.._.,

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W~Tm
TO BUY

-Absolute Top Dollar· U.S
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proolsets. Gold R1ngs, Pre·
1935
US.
Currency,
• Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S
Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Galllpois. 740'446·
2842.
Want to bUy trailer on land
contract. Can pay $400·500
per 'l'onlh. 446·2743

Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

• All ada must be prepaid•

Echo~ng

Meadows
Aes1denuat Ce nter IS now
accepting apphcatmns for
mature and responstble
Program Asststant!Nurse
A1ds (STNA preferred but
not requ1red) Full t1me and
Part 11me sh1fts are both
'available lor afternoons wtth
a Full lime n1ght shift post·
lion also ava1lable. Full t1me
positions are offered wun a
lull benef1t package. Apply 1n
person
at
Echo1ng
Meadows, 319 W. Un1on
Street, Ath ens, Oh1o Phone
740·594·354 I

A 011 &amp; Gas Broker
Company IS lookmg for an
adm1n ass! for the Gallipolis
off1ce Candidates should be
self sta rters an d posses
good orgamza 11onal sk1lls
prof1c1entm Word, E~cel and
Outlook Knowledge of tand

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For Sundays Paper

Hw&gt;WANrnJ

Gat11el Counly Counc1t on

\1 I \II 'IS

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p .m .

All .Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

;;;,;;;,0;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;

lof
PlC programmmg
(RSLogox I ASV1ew) , hnh
·•
speed data acqu1stt1on, alectncaltest equ1pment, heavy
1d
equ1pment and automae
control systems BSEE -+
related expenence or equlv
Assemble crafts, wood alent desired UTAON, Inc
1tems To $480/wk Matenals www.untron1c com FAX 703·
proVIded Free mlormat1on 369 _5298
pkg 24Hr 801·428·4649

descnpiiOns and Iitle exp IS
I
Mus I have a h1gh
a Pus
d1pIoma and some coIIege
expenence
pre Ierre d
PIease ca II Andrea Hea IY aI
740-446-6800or fa~to740·
446
6802
- - ·- - - - - A c c e p I 1 n g
ApplicatiOns/Resumes lor
secretanat/
recept1omst
pos111on Must be profiCient
1n OUick Books Pro Apply m
person, 1743 Centenary Ad
Gallipolis, OH 45631 No
Phone Calls Please
- - - - -- -An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-882·2645

Agmg/Sen 1or
Resource
Center Is currently accept1ng
apphcat 1ons for STNA , CNA,
HHA Must have valid dnv·
ers license and msurable
nsk Must be able to read,
wnte, and follow directions
Must have valid dnvers
license and 1nsurabie nsk
Includes Vts1on/DentaJ, SICk
leave vaca11on ret1rement
benet 1t EOE
Apply Sen 1or Resource
Center. 1165 State Route
160, Gallopolos, OH 4563,
Phone (740)446 ·7000
- - -- - - - Help wanted at Darst Adult
Group Home, some ~ftmg ,
7-5 shift, 740 "992 "5023

IRS JOBS

$18 46·$32 60/hr , now hlf1ng Pa1d Tratnlllg IS pmVId·
ed For apphcat1on and free
government JOb 1nto. call
Amencan Assoc of Labor .191 3·599·8244 24~rs emp
Arrow Concrete Company
· '"
serv
Now hinng for the
lollowmg poslllons at our
GaU1poi1S faaltty
Quall.ied Mtxer Dnvers,
Mechanics, Laborers &amp;
Loader Operators
Must be willing to travel
All e~penses pa1d
Vacation &amp; Heatthcare
ava1lable
Aet1rement package
ava1labte

Registered
nurse
Rocksprmgs Nursma and
Rehabilitation Center ts
looking for a lew ded1cated
people to become a part of
our team We are a 100 bed
sk 1tled facd1ty located 5
m1tes from Pomeroy This fs
a 20 mmute commute from
Athens and Albany We IUSI
recently mstalled a state of
the art on fine documenta·
tion system for the nurs1ng
asststants which reduce
paper wOfk t1me cons1derably We offer compet1ttve

0
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£4:it~

• 2001 b NEA 1
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"li10

0 ,_ '1''"'·•~..
aJU nru.,•u.o

han system for the nursmg
assistants whiCh reduce
paper work t1me cons1der·
ably We are a low hh fac1111y
wh1ch has reduced our back
lnJunes to almost 0 We
have 1 pos111on on 2 to 10
PM shift and 1 on 10 to 6 AM
sh1H tor a licensed pract1ca1
nurse Stopby and hlloutan
application and receiVe an
1nterv1ew Monday through
Fnday between 9 AM and 4
PM or call and ask for
Debb1 e Wayland Staffmg
Coordmator Rocksprings IS
an
equal
opportun1ty
employer
_ _:._ _ _ _ __
MACHINIST For manual
lathes m1lhng machines:
saws. rad•al dnAs Must be
able to hold tderances to
00005~ m line work and
accurate ly cut vanous mate
female and buttress threads
Must read draw1ngs and
make parts to spec111ca110n
G-Code des1red L1ft truck
operation a plus UTRON ,
Inc www utromc com FAX
703-369-5298

... .. . .

;~~e:~~Y ~~ ~~9 d!~:!~~~-

'j_~_Do_CJ)_ _I~t.'-•ro•"::.~:~~--,J

I

The cra1g Group needs out·
gomg tndiVlduais to help wtth
state-wtde campa1g1 Make
$1·$2 per stgnature &amp; up to
$500 weekly Please call
ChnS at 740·251-7591 or
e
m
a
1
1
dbanas@cratggroup.com
Truck Onver With Class A
COL local Hauling Mon·Frl,
home fNery mghl Reliable.
responsible, mature Send
resume 10 Dnver Resume,
PO BoK 655 Gallipolis, Oh
45631
-------USA TODAY

Lawn-Care Service, Mowmg
&amp; Tnmm1ng Call (740)441·
or (740 )645·0546

IJ33

Need someone to lake care
of you or a loved one then
call (740)446·7 t65 or
(740)441 ·9232 I have good
references
-------S&amp;M Home Aepa1r Pa1nt1ng,
Decks, F1msh work, yard
care,
Free
Est1mates
(740)446-3682
11\1\i Ill
=;;:r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

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B~I&lt;Ni

(}proRTIJIIJIY

All realeatate advertlaing
in thra newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it Illegal to
adv.rt!u "any
preference, llmitatron 01
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
ongln, or any 1ntentlon to
make any such
preference, timrtatlon or
d1ac:nmmatlon."

"Tile Nat1ons Newspaper"

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertreements for real
estate which tstn
v1otation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
mformed that all
dwellings advertised 1n
this newspaper are
available on an equal

•NOTICE•

I

,.___...;__--.

11110

LPN's Rockspnngs Nursing
Nursng and Rehabihtatton
Center IS looktng lor a few
ded1cated pecple to become
a part of our team We are a
100 bed sk1lled fac111ty located 5 m1les from Pomeroy
This 1s a 20 mnute commute
from Athens and Albany We
IUS! recently mstalled a state
of the art on lme documenta·

HW'WANJlD

0

80
"'r__

Is acceptmg appficanons for
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHan mdependent contractor 1n
lNG CO , recommends
the Pomt PleasanVGalilpohs that you do bus1ness wtth
rates, health, dental, and area
people you know, and
VISionmsuranceaswellasa
u~~m.M ~...
we are a 1ow lift
NOT to send money
nu.r n~" u.~
401K plan
Applicants
must
have through the mail unUI you
faollty whtch has reduced dependable vehic le, valid have mvestlgated the
ourba~mJuriestoalmostO auto IOSIJrance and gOOd offenng
NURSING
ASSISTANT We have 2 positions opened
ADD, Aockspnngs Nurs1ng •for registered nurses 1 IS credit tn order to be bonded :;;:::;;:===~
and Rehabilitation Center 1s for everyother week and 1 Early
mornmg
hours
MONEY
lookmg for a lew dedicated full lime po5111on for day and
Monday
lhru
Fnday,
no
people to become a part ofe.ve...:..:nr:::
ng::__ _ _ __ weekends
..,
we are a 10obad our team
ResCore
skilled facility located 5 Temporary Full time Filing Call t ·800-782·2230 exl
HNOTIUcH
5008
mileS from Pomeroy ThiS IS Clerk. Out1es wdl1nclude
a 20 minute commute from Personnel F11lng, InVOICe
Borrow Smart Contact
Leave message w1th name the Ohm OiV ISton of
Athens and Albany We JUSt Codmg, Ordertngl
recently mstalled a state of Mamtalnmg Office SOpplies, and phone number
Fmanctal
Institution 's
Office 01 Cons~Jmer
the art on lme documenta- Assist with Human
t1on system for the nursmg Resource Tasks. and must Or ema11to amyers@usa.to·
Affairs BEFORE you reflassistants which reduce be prof1C1ent1n M1crosoft
~
nance yaur home or
paper work lime conSider· Word and Microsoft E~cel
obtain a loan BEWARE
Wanted Pa1nters, pay due to
ably We offer compellllve Temporary Full time
of requests for any large
Expenence, PTIFT Send
rates, health, dental and Maintenance Dulles Will
advance
payments of
reSumes
to
Box
TSC20
rJo
VISIOn 1nsurance as well as mclude mamtalnmg malnte·
fees or msurance Ca ll th.e
Po1nt
Pleasant
Reg1ster,
200
401
a
K plan Wf!f are a low nance for 4 homes, VehiCle
Office ' of Consumer
Main Street PI Pleasant,
!1ft fachty wh1~h has reduced Mamtenance and various
Afla1rs toll free at 1·866wv 25550
our back lnjunes to almost 0, other duties. It you would
278-0003 10 learn If the
2
0
2
We have postiiOns ~ to like to take advantage of
Wanted 01rect SuperviSIOn mortgage broker or
1o PM sh1ft and 1 on 0 to these opportunities you
employees to oversee mate lender
ts
properly
SAM shtft Stop by and fill may apply at 8204 Carla
licensed (Th1s 1s a public
youth In a staff serure rest- serVIce announcement
out an application and Dnve, Gallipolis, OhiO,
dent 1al enVIronment Must
rece1ve an 1nterv1ew Monday Mooday lhru Fnday.
pass
ptlyslcal
trammg from th e Ohto Valley
through Fnday between a OOam·4 OOpm No telerequuement Pay based on :P:u~b=l1s;h1:ng:C:o:m:pa:n:y)=~
9AM and 4PM Rockspnngs ph one calls wiN be accept·
expenence Call (740)379·
IS an eQual opportunity ed An Equal Opportunity
9083
between 9-3 Mon-Fn
PROF18SJONAL
employer
Employer V/M/DN
150
ScHoolS ·
SERVICES
Jr.sfRucrJON
Open Interviews Satellite Installers. We are
now taking appllcaltons for
M s Cteamng serv1ce
$300
energet1c, sell drwen people GaiUpolll Career College Busmess and Restdent1a l.

:::"::_______,.::w.:;.-;;.';;.'m;;.'::"::.:'.:.'m~

Bonus

~

IriO

A&amp;J Trucking leading The
Way A&amp;J Trucking now
Hmng at our New Haven,
WV Term1nal For Aegronat
Haul s·Oump Dtv. 1 year
OTA ver1ftable exp Call 1·
800-462-9365 ask lor Kent

John Sang Ford lincoln
Mercury
Needs three IndiVIduals
that are Interested ma
career as an Automotive
CoflSultant We are lookmg
tor Individuals that are out
go1ng, self mot1vated and
professmnat We have one
Now Hiring!
of the best compensation
plans 1n the mdustry and a
benef1ts package that has
$300 Hiring
health Insurance, 401 K
DrivelS:
ret1rem~nt . d1sab1hly and life
Must have &lt;'II least a current
Insurance If you want to
40 hours a week
Class B COL
ears an e~cellen t hv1ng and Up to $8 50/hour + bonuses
Must have a satisfactory
bener yourself, contact Pat
MVR
Hill or Bnan Ross
Make calls you behave 1nl
Must have a current
Call on behall ol cooserve1rve
DOT phys1cal
--~
... ..... , &gt;
-~ "'Poh11cal organ1ZBI1ons
Company w11ltra1n
~~ '
1ne~penence dnvers who
Pa1d vacat1ons, paid hoh
meet the above cr1ter1a
John Sang Ford lincoln
days and paitJ tra1mng
Earn wages up to $1BOD
Mercury
Full benefits package and
per hr
Has a pos1110n open for an
401-K
AutomotivE! Techntetan We
$300
Hiring
Bonus
To apply please send a
are tookmg for an 1nd1vlduat
resume _.. a copy ot your
that has a well rounded
Call today to schedule an
Onl(er's li cense MVA and
knowledge about automo1nterv1ew
DOT phys1cal too
tive repa1r Ford Motor
1-877-463-6247
Company tra1n1ng Will be
Arrow Concrete, Inc:.
ext. 2321
provtded and IS on gong
ATIN Marla Jenkins
www
mloclslon.com
We offer a competitive comPO Box 4336
pensatiOn plan and our benParkersburg, WV 26104
efit package Includes health NURSING
ASSISTANT
employO arrowconcretewv com
Insurance, 401K retirement . AOD Aockspnngs Nursmg
Phone 1·866·505-2776
d1sab111ty msurance and life and Rehabilitation Center IS
Fax 304·485·1882
Insurance If you are t1red of lookmg for a few dedicated
EOE
work1ng for someor)e that ts people to become a part of
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or not work1ng for you or want our team We are a 100 bed
to better yourself, contact skilled facility located 5
Sell Shirley Spears, 304
Service Manager J1P1
675·1429
miles from Pomeroy This IS
Thomas
a 20 minute commute from
Computers 4 U 1s seek1ng a
Athens and Albany We JUS!
Computer Tech for part lime
~
d
f
5 11 8
leadin g full hme work You
must be pro"c1ent m com·
«&amp; 1... ,... . . ......
1100 system for the nursmg
puler repair, dependable an - - - - - - - - assistants whtch re duce
honestl Bnng resume m Local home health agency paper work l ome cooslderperson to Computers 4 U, now hlrmg PCA CHHA. ably We offer competitive
Inc 303 Mam Street. Point CNA, STNA w111 tra1n 1f nee rates health dental and
Pleasant, WV 25550 or ca ll essary Classes start July lvlsto~ Insurance as well as
for directions at 304·675· 9th Call740-441-1377
a 401 K plan We are a low
5282
lift facllty which has reduced
Desk Clerk needed at 0 ve rb rook c enI er IS currenI • our back IOJUnesto almost 0.
Budget Inn 260 Jackson ly accepting applicatiOns fo r we have 2 pos1t1ons on 2 to
Pike Looking lor a pereon STATE TFSi"ED Nursmg 10 PM shlff and 1 on 10 to
who 1S mottvated, great Assistants Full Time and ·SAM Shiff Stop by aoo Hll
communlcallon skills I and a Part Time poslhons avatl· out a[l appltcallon and
positive attllude Please able. Interested applica nts re ceive an interview Monday
apply within
,
can pick ~Pan applicallon or through Friday between
contact Hollie Bumgarner, 9AM and 4PM Rockspnngs
Part
and
Full
Time LPN Stall Development IS an equal opportunity
Paramedics and dispatch· Coordinator
@740·992- employer
ors, greal wages, call Nick 6472 M-F 9a·5p at 333 Page .:._:_:..:______
at 740-446-7930 or apply St , Mtddleport, Oh EOE &amp; a Roofers Metal rool1ng, s1d·
on person al 1770 Jackson par11crpanl ollhe Drug Free ong and EPDM Top pay and
Pike, Gallipolis.
Workplace Program
benef1ts. 724-229·80.20

to

Now vou can have bor~ers and graphics
~
added to vour classified ads
f!~
..m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally Jn wColumn: 1:00 p.m.
Monday- Prlday for Insertion
In Next Day•s Paper

1"0

ELEC CONTROLS ENGI NEEA Defense program
needs hands-on engineer

1\~01

Oear/1/ir~

1

iL--·roiiiiiloiliiiiANiii.-r

1t..-oiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiil-,..1

Hiring Bonus

lnfoCislon
Management Corp.
~voted

ons of the top fen

best places to work rn
Ohio"
Tuesday, June 26
1O:OOam-2:00pm
HOliday Inn
577 Slale Rt 7 North
GaU1poi1S, OH

II unable to attend,
please call
Hln-463-6247
ext. 4256
www.lnfoclsion.com
Overbroo~ Center located
@333 Page St, Middleport,
Oh10 Is pleased to announce
we w1U be holding an STNA
Class scheduled for July
Hourswlllbe8am-4.30pm If
you are Interested m JOinmg
our lnendly and dedicated
staff, please stop by our
front offtce Mon-Fn, 9am5pm and 1111 out an applo ca·
tion Full lime and part time
pos1t10ns ava11abl e to th ose
qu .lllled lndlVI du.Is Com plellng the class Applicants
must be dependable (attendance IS a n:'ust) team players wtth postltve attitudes to
·JOin us1n prov1dmg Outstard·
lng, quality care to our resldents 11 you have any ques!tons
contact
Hollte
Bumgarner, LPN, Staff
Development Coordmator
@740·992·6472. Overbrook
Cen.ter IS an E 0 E and a
.partiCipant of the Drug Free
Workplace Program

-.,.------,---:-VACANCY: H.S. Science
lnltructor. Valid Ohio
Science
certification
requ,·red·. co•~ACT Gal11a"''
Jackson-Vmton
JVSD
17401245•5334 EKt 201 ,
EEO

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20/hr or
S57K annually
lncludng Federal Beneftts
and OT,Paod Tralnng,
Vacations-FT/PT
1·800·584·1775 Ext. N8923
USWA

~e=~;~ces:t~~~t~~ayl!,~::

Trcumng available FT wtben·
ef1ts, Dnve a Co truck or get
more $ for dnv 1ng your trud&lt;
Dnvmg, Felony background
check and drug screen1ng
w111 be requrred Call 877·
682·8324 oploon 8 M·F 8·
5pm
Scenic Hills Nurs1ng Center
1s currently accepting apph·
cat1ons for AN's and lPN's
Applicahons must possess a
current 11cense 1n the State
of Oh1o Potential applicants
should
contact
D1ana
Harless, DON al (740)446·
7150 EOE
The
Athens·MBIQS
Educai•onal ServiCe offers
an opportun1ty for the right
IndiVIduals to make a differ·
once 10 the lives of adults
and lhe 1r fam1lies A parttime reach 1ng positiOn IS
open 1n the Meigs County
Adult Bas1c Education program at our Bradbury
Center. Applicant must hold
(or be ehg,ble lor) a leachong
certlflcate/hcense !rom the
OhiO
Department
of
EducatiOn and be WI U1ng lo
work 3 evemngs per week
Pos1llon is gra11 funded for
20 hours per week for so
weeks per year
A part-t1me educat1onat a1de
position IS open .at our
Middleport Center Applicant
must hold (or be eligible for)
an educational a1de perm 1t
through
the
Ohio
Department ol Education
Poslhon IS grant funded for
20 hours per week for 50
weeks per year
Applicant should submit a
Jetter of tnterest and resume
Wllh three references by
3 30, PM on JtJiy 3: 2007
b t I0 'the M
u ml
ns- elgs
· ,..
Ed ucattona ISBI'\Jlce Ce.nter,
Anenlion Carol Brewer. PO
Box 684, 320 112 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Oh 45769 '
The Athens·Metgs ESC Is
an
equal
opportunity

s

employer/p~ovlder.

FIND A JOB

IN THE
CLASSifiEDS

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446-4367,
1-800-2 t4 0452
www g&amp;llpohscaroorcollege rom
Accreciled

Member Accr&amp;dltlnQ

Coui'ICll lor lndependenl Colleges
and Schools 12748

_ _ __ _ _ __
STUDENTS FOR THE NA
PROGRAM
Rockspnngs
Nursmg and Rehabibtatton
Center IS located 5 moles
from Pomeroy and 20 m1nutes from Athens and
Albany. We currently are
seekmg tndiVlduats 1nterested 1n anendng our 75 hour
Nurs1ng Asststant Progam
wh 1ch w11t $far! June 4,
2007 Th1s class 1s ftee of
charge and begins wtth 2
volunteer days that wtll allow
you to see what the JOb con·
StSIS of f1rst hand We allow
12 students per class so
they 1111 up quickly Please
come 10 and complete an
appl1catto n 11 Interested
Rocksprtngs 1s an equal
opportunity employer
-------STUDENTS FOR THE NA
PROGRAM
Aockspnngs
Nurs1ng an d Aehab1ita'1On
center 1s located 5 m1tes
tram Pomeroy and 20 mmutes from Athens and
Albany, We currently are
seek1ng IOOtvtduals mterested m attendtng our 75 hour
Nursing ASSistant Program
whiCh Will start June 4,
2007 Th1s class IS free of
charge and beg1ns w1th 2
volunteer days that will allatt
you to see what the JOb conSISts of f1rst hand We allow
12 students per class so
they 1111 up net
qUickly 1Pleate
t
come m a camp e e an
apphcation 1f Interested.
Aockspnngs ts an equal
opportumtv employer

~::..,::po:":":"lty::b•:•:••:·~
HUO HOMESI 4bd onlv
$155/mo, 3bd $181/mo .
More 1-4bd homes available 5% dn, 20 yrs @ 8%
For hstmgs 1·800-559-41 09
X F144
Newly butlt home m Green
Twp on Kmg Ad off
Neighborhood Ad Approx
1200 sq h 3 acres m/12 BA
2 full baths w/whtrlpooltubs
large LA Asking 87,500
740 .446. 7029

i

MOBFOILERs~~~
tu...a:.

I

1998 Clayton Spirit II Lots ol
extras excellent cond1t10n
Must · be moved Call 949·
2698 after 4 p m
d
Great used 2005 3 be room
16xBO w1th vtnyl/shingle
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�---Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June 26,

2007

.

.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Horford, Conley Jr. try to
impress Hawks before draft
BY JONATHAN lANDRUM JR.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ATLANTA - The last
time AI Horford and Mike
Conley Jr. were in competition against each other, it
was for college baske tball 's national champi onship.
Horford he! ped th e
Florida
Gators
beat
Conley's
Ohio
State
Buckeyes in Apnl's title
game. On Monday, each
tried to show during individual workouts that he
was worthy of being chosen third by the Atlanta
\... Hawks in the upcomin g
"'--N-Bx-draft.
" It definitely seems like
we are competmg agam,"
Conley said. "We're going
for the highest spot we can
possibly ach1eve 1n the
draft."
The first two p1cks seem
to be a lock between Greg
Oden and Kevin Durant,
who could land in either
Portland or Seattle on

Thursday. Some mock
drafts have the Hawks
goi ng with Ho rford or
Conley with their No. 3
pick
In th e early sess ion ,
Horford impressed the
Hawks with his 6-foot-1 0,
244-pound sturdy frame,
aggressive rebounding and
abil"ity to make the short
perimeter shot. He averaged 13 .2 points, 9.5
rebounds and 1.8 blocked
shots a ga me as a junior for
the Gators.
Conley didn't look too
shabby either. The point
guard 's speed, quickness
and defensive skill s seen
on tape are all mtan.g1hles
the Hawks are looking for
at the position, making up
for hi s slim 6-foot-1, 175pound frame.
As a freshman, Conley
led the Big Ten with 6.1
assists and 2.2 steals. He
also scored 13.2 points a
game and shot 52 percent
from the fl oor.

J

HARRIS

AP SPORTS WRITER

Sentinel- laegtster·
CLASS I.F IE D

"He's the first point going to fill the need of a
guard we've had in here big man, then address the
who 1s probably a true point gua rd situation as
point guard in term s of well."
possessing speed and
Horford believes he can
being able to get up and · step in and fulfill the role
down the floor, " coac h asked of him .
Mike Woodson said.
''I'm physically there
Factonng into the deci- rebounding and sconng in
s10 n are point guards the low post," he said.
Speedy
Claxton
and "The three years in college
Tyronn Lue, who were gave me a chance to be
injury-plagued last season. well -ready for the NBA ."
Woodson believes the tanThe Hawks also have the
dem should be stronge r for No. II pick . They could
the upcomin g season and grab a young point guard
th at upgrade in the front- in Acie Law or Javaris
court is more a necessity. Cnttenton, who worked
Journeyme n forwards out last week, or obtain a
Esteban Bati sta and Slava veteran player through
not trade.
Medvedenko
are
returning, and they need
"We've got to have SO!fle
more depth there, which insurance," Woodson said.
could ultimately lean "Not to say Speedy and
toward picking Hurford , Lue won't come back,
Woodson said.
because I'm counting on
"We still lack size," he them being in Hawks' unisaid. "We are still consid- form next season. They ' re
ered one of the smallest veterans and battle tested.
teams in the league, so we But just in case, we need
need someone big. We are an insurance policy. "

in the film. He cries and
laments never getting the
chance to say goodbye. He
says that before every game
·he talks to the brother he
idohzed.
The convicted triggerman,
identified in the movie as
Marcus, did seven years in
jail. Forer found Marcus'
father, and through him, got
to Marcus, who appears in
the movie talking about the
murder he committed at IS.
After prison, Marcus left
gang life and now works as a
recruiter for law finns.
The movie delves into
Marcus' flashbacks of the
shooting and his regret, along
with Charles Sr.'s desire for
vengeance and Mae's eontempt for her son's killer.
Charles Sr. considers meeting Marcus, but it doesn't
happen.
"He killed my son,"
Charles Sr. said in an interview. "There's nothing that
he can say to me that's going
to change my mind about
him."
Forer still thinks the two
men will end up meeting.
"Charles has some demons
that he's still deal in~ · with,"
the director said. ' Marcus
has a messa~e .that he is
uniquely qualified to ,share.
He wants to be an example."
Forer hopes to land a distribution deal for the 94-minute
movie with a major studio or
cable TV network. Charles
Sr. hopes the film sends the
message that tragedy shouldn't keep people down forever.
"You can move on and
accomplish your own goals,"
he said. "This has been a
dream of Nick's since he was
a kid. Everybody should
have a dream. Ifyouain't~ot
a dream, y~u ain't living.'

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0tfftee llot(/4'lf'
AP photo

.,
'

passing (17,523) and touchdowns (178).
At Wake Forest, he was
red-shirted as a freshman,
then spent two years sharing
the job at quarterback,
where the main responsibility was handing off to a running back.
"The biggest thing was
maturing during those three
years to be the type of quarterback they wanted me to
be," Mauk said.
The job was all his a year
ago, but he I:Jroke his right
arm and dislocated hi s
shoulder agamst Syracuse.
Mauk mi,ssed the rest of the
season, and in spring practice it became evident that
the starter would be Riley
Skinner, who had taken the
Demon Deavons to an II · 3
record and the Atlantic
Coast Conference championship.
"It was a situation where I
didn't think they were going
to let me compete for the
job," Mauk sa1d. "If I'm not
going to have a. chance to
compete for the job, I don't
want to be in that situation. I
wanted to move closer to
home and throw the ball
more like what I'm used to."
Mauk won't have to sit out
a season because of a nowrescinded NCAA rule that
allowed a player who had

completed an undergraduate
degree at one school to
enroll in a graduate program
at another school and use his
remaining eligibility.
It seemed like a perfect fit
for Mauk and Cincinnati.
"What I was looking for
was an experienced quarterback in the spread offense
who had done 11 at a BCS
level, a player who had that
competitive demeanor that I
like in my quarterbacks,"
Kelly said. ·
The Cincinnati medical
staff determined that Mauk
should fully recover from
his injuries. Mauk estimates
that he has regained about
80 percent of the strength in
his right shoulder and is contident he' ll be ready by the
tune fall practice starts.
He figures the switch back
to a passing-oriented offense
won't be as difficult as the
adjustment he had to make
at Wake Forest.
"To switch and do a complete 180 degrees and turn
and hand the ball off most of
the game and just throw
when needed was frustrating
to me," he said.
Mauk has only one year of
eligibility remaining , but he
pl ans to pet1t1on the NCAA
after next season for another
year due to his injury.

Goodell stresses conduct with rookies
REYNOLDS

AP SPORTS WRITER

Roger Goodell briefed all
255 members of this year 's
draft class Monday on the
NFL's stricter conduct rules.
Hours later, the Chicago
Bears released troubled
defensive tackle Tank
Johnson m a move that most
likely underscored the commissioner's message.
"We're concerned about
them as men," Goodell said
at the leallue's rookie symposium m Palm Beach
Gardens, Fla., shortly before
Johnson's release was
announced. "How do they
become not only great NFL
players, but how do they
become great men? How do
they conduct themselves
appropriately
for
the
remainder of their life, not
just when they're in the
National Football League?"
· Goodell released his
stricter policy in April, an
attempt to quell a rash of
off-the-field
episodes
involving NFL players,
notably cases involving
three suspended players Johnson, Tennessee Titans
cornerback Adam "Pacman"
Jones
and
Cincinnati
Bengals receiver Chris
Henry, who was among 10
Bengals player arrested in
about 14 months.
Goodell spent about 20
minutes with this season's
draftees on that" topic, most·
ly in a question-and-answer
session.
"I'd be naive to think
everyone would be able to
understand it," Goodell said.
"But I think we're making

players more aware of the
standards of behavior. We' re
giving them more tools and
resources to make sure they
can make those deci sions."
Johnson, who was cut by
the reigning NFC champions Monday, spent time in
jail this offseason after violating probation and was
stopped in A~izona last week
when police said he was
speeding. He had blood
drawn to determine if he was
driving while impaired.
"He compromised the
credibility of our organization," ·Bears general manager Jerry Angelo said. "We
made it clear to him that he
had no room for error. Our
goal was to help someone
through a difficult period in
his life, but the effort needs
to come from both sides. It
didn't, and we have decided
to move on."
It's a situation the NFL
clearly doesn't like, which is
where the emphasis on educating players comes in.
The , rookie symposium
teaches incoming NFL players - attendance is mandatory for draftees - about
how to handle finances and
relationships and how to
prefare for life after footbal . But the conduct issue is
one of Goodell's priorities,
and it's taking center stage
this year.
"You could see the players·
were engaged," Goodell
said. ''They asked very good
questions, very responsive
questions to things that I
said."
This offseason has been
dominated by news of players getting into tmuble,
(

includm g Atlanta quarterback Michael Vick's alleged
involvement with dogfighting and tillS past weekend's
arrest of Miami Dolphins
defensive tackle Fred Evans
on South Beach after he
allegedly fought with police
ofticers when he refused to
leave a taxi.
Then there is the ongoing
Jones saga. He faces two
charges in a Las Vegas strip
club melee that preceded a
triple shooting , and was
sought by Atlanta-area
police last week for questioning in a shooting after a
·fight at another strip club.
Goodell said fan s have
been "quite supportive, qlllte
positive" about the tougher
policies, and he still believes
most players understand and abide - by the rules.
"The vast majority of our
players do," Goodell said.
"There's a select few that
don't. And they get a lot of
focus ... and have a negative
Impact on the other players
in our league and the NFL in
general."
The sy mposium , which
also includes current and
former players "talking to the
r.ookies about life in the
NFL, a youth clinic and
other events, continues
through
Wednesday.
Speakers include current
NFL players Vince Young,
Reggie Bush, Jonathan
Vilma and Jeff Saturday;
Cleveland Browns coach
Romeo Crennel; NFL Hall
of Farner and Baltimore
Ravens general manager
Ozzie Newsome; and NFL
Players Assoc iation president Troy Vincent.

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

Flonda's AI Horford (42) jams the ball m the basket during
second half basketball play against Providence as he goes
for a career high of 21 points in Gainesville, Fla., 111 th1s
Dec. 6, 2006 f1le photo. Horford is one of the top prospects
for the NBA 'Draft, to take place 111 New York on June 28.

'

BY TIM

Meigs County, OH

;

CINCINNATI (AP) Ben Mauk of Kenton, who
passed for 6,528 yards when
he was Ohio's Mr. Football
in 2002, has transferred to
Cincinnati to finish his college career.
His ill-fated venture at
Wake Forest ended when he
broke his ann in the season
opener last year.
"I haven't been this excited about football since I was
in high school," said Mauk,
who is getting ready for the
Aug. 3 start of fall practice.
Mauk has good reason to
be excited: New coach Brian
Kelly has said he will open
up the Bearcats' offense. But
first, Mauk will have to beat
out returning starter Dustin
Grutza, who led Cincinnati
to a 7-5 regular-season
record last year.
"If he's healthy, he has a
great chance to be our starting quarterback," Kelly said.
"He's got all the tools to be
the starting quarterback at
the University of Cincinnati,
but we're not going to hand
it to him."
During his senior year at
Kenton, Mauk completed
434 of 668 passe~ (64 perAP photo cent) for 6,528 yards and 76
Southern California's Nick Young, right, controls the ball touchdowns, and rushed for
around Washington's Adrian Oliver, left, in thiS f1le photo · I,385 yards and 18 touchtaken Thursday, Dec. 28, 2006, in Los Angeles. Young is downs. He set national
cateer records for yards
set to be chosen in this week's NBA draft.

LOS ANGELES - By all
rights, Nick Young wasn't
supposed to be a college basketball star.
He flunked out of two high
schools. His oldest brother
died in a drive-by shooting.
Now;
the
Southern
California player is set to be
chosen in this week's NBA
draft and earn millions of
dollars.
His struggle is portrayed in
"Second Chance Season."
The documentary debuted
last week at the Los Angeles
Film Festival, where a third
screening is scheduled for
Sunday.
"Every now and then, a
kind of special story picks
me," said Daniel H. Forer,
the drrector and co-producer.
"It was an absolutely remarkable journey."
Forer discovered Young,
one of the city's most heralded prep stars, in early 2003
while working on a cable
pilot about basketball.
Intrigued by his background,
Forer followed Young's multiple appeals with the Los
Angeles Unified School
District to get back into high
school. Days before his and isn't coming back. We
senior year was to begin, have to push the kids we
Young was admitted to have now in their careers."
Cleveland High in suburban
Especially Nick.
Reseda.
Young is projected as a
"I'm not the smartest per- top-20 pick in Thursday's
son, but sit down and work NBA draft, with some
with me," Young says on experts considering him as
camera. "I know what to do." the second-best shooting
The film follows Young's guard behind Corey "Brewer
attempts to score at least 800 of
national
champion
on the SAT exam to earn a Florida. First-round picks
basketball scholarship to receive guaranteed contracts.
USC, a private school with
"Maybe he'll get a high
hefty tuition.
draft choice and make a lot of
On each of three tries, he money, then I can retire,"
gets special tutoring and said Charles Sr., who has
extra time on the test. The supported his family by dricamera zooms in as he ving moving vans and haulrepeatedly opens the score ing other people's stuff for 29
results.
years.
"It started off pretty cool,
''I'm getting nervous,"
but some days it got kind of Nick said. "Everybody keeps
overwhelming," Young said saying it's a big draft and you
in an interview about the don't know where you're
film . "It was hard."
going to end up. I'm so used
In between Young's acade- to being an L.A. city guy and
mic lows, he leads Cleveland I could be out of there."
High against rival Taft High
Young has yet to live away
and Jordan Farmar, a close from home, having stayed
friend whom Young saw get with his family during his
, more acclaim and be drafted three seasons at USC.
by the Los Angeles Lakers.
"Nick is kind of a
At home, the Young fami· momma's boy," his father
ly's emotion); careen between said.
joy at Nick's basketball
Young's mother, Mae, was
prowess and persistent anger a stay-at-home mom to the
about the de11th of oldest son couple's five sons- Charles
Charles Sr. There is also Jr., Andre, Terrell, John and
worry about another son Nick, the baby. ·
whose emotional problems
"I'm always out in the
land him i11 a group home field, my wife would always
and concern about Nick's test be there for them," Charles
scores.
Sr. said. "That way I wouldForer's cameras capture n't have to worry about them,
the family's life in their mod- they wouldn't get in gangs!'
est three-bedroom apanment
In 1991, when Nick was 5,
and the mounting pressure on Charles Jr. was killed in a
Nick to succeed.
park shooting witnessed by
"It's just right on," Charles his pregnant fiancee, who
Sr. said about the film. "It recalls the horrific scene in
helped my son and my fami- the movie.
ly get through some hard
Basketball fans familiar
tunes. We've gotten used to with Young's outgoing perthe idea that my son is dead sona SCl! another Side of hi!ll

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~rtbune-

I
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Must

USC's Nick Young's journey of Fonner Mr. Football transfers to UC
loss, redemption an~ basketball
BY BETH

www.mydailysentinel.com

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nsk Must be able to read,
wnte, and follow directions
Must have valid dnvers
license and 1nsurabie nsk
Includes Vts1on/DentaJ, SICk
leave vaca11on ret1rement
benet 1t EOE
Apply Sen 1or Resource
Center. 1165 State Route
160, Gallopolos, OH 4563,
Phone (740)446 ·7000
- - -- - - - Help wanted at Darst Adult
Group Home, some ~ftmg ,
7-5 shift, 740 "992 "5023

IRS JOBS

$18 46·$32 60/hr , now hlf1ng Pa1d Tratnlllg IS pmVId·
ed For apphcat1on and free
government JOb 1nto. call
Amencan Assoc of Labor .191 3·599·8244 24~rs emp
Arrow Concrete Company
· '"
serv
Now hinng for the
lollowmg poslllons at our
GaU1poi1S faaltty
Quall.ied Mtxer Dnvers,
Mechanics, Laborers &amp;
Loader Operators
Must be willing to travel
All e~penses pa1d
Vacation &amp; Heatthcare
ava1lable
Aet1rement package
ava1labte

Registered
nurse
Rocksprmgs Nursma and
Rehabilitation Center ts
looking for a lew ded1cated
people to become a part of
our team We are a 100 bed
sk 1tled facd1ty located 5
m1tes from Pomeroy This fs
a 20 mmute commute from
Athens and Albany We IUSI
recently mstalled a state of
the art on fine documenta·
tion system for the nurs1ng
asststants which reduce
paper wOfk t1me cons1derably We offer compet1ttve

0
6

;,
;'"

4.~
£4:it~

• 2001 b NEA 1
-t -~:::::::..::!'~:::.·

"'::~-----"'!

"li10

0 ,_ '1''"'·•~..
aJU nru.,•u.o

han system for the nursmg
assistants whiCh reduce
paper work t1me cons1der·
ably We are a low hh fac1111y
wh1ch has reduced our back
lnJunes to almost 0 We
have 1 pos111on on 2 to 10
PM shift and 1 on 10 to 6 AM
sh1H tor a licensed pract1ca1
nurse Stopby and hlloutan
application and receiVe an
1nterv1ew Monday through
Fnday between 9 AM and 4
PM or call and ask for
Debb1 e Wayland Staffmg
Coordmator Rocksprings IS
an
equal
opportun1ty
employer
_ _:._ _ _ _ __
MACHINIST For manual
lathes m1lhng machines:
saws. rad•al dnAs Must be
able to hold tderances to
00005~ m line work and
accurate ly cut vanous mate
female and buttress threads
Must read draw1ngs and
make parts to spec111ca110n
G-Code des1red L1ft truck
operation a plus UTRON ,
Inc www utromc com FAX
703-369-5298

... .. . .

;~~e:~~Y ~~ ~~9 d!~:!~~~-

'j_~_Do_CJ)_ _I~t.'-•ro•"::.~:~~--,J

I

The cra1g Group needs out·
gomg tndiVlduais to help wtth
state-wtde campa1g1 Make
$1·$2 per stgnature &amp; up to
$500 weekly Please call
ChnS at 740·251-7591 or
e
m
a
1
1
dbanas@cratggroup.com
Truck Onver With Class A
COL local Hauling Mon·Frl,
home fNery mghl Reliable.
responsible, mature Send
resume 10 Dnver Resume,
PO BoK 655 Gallipolis, Oh
45631
-------USA TODAY

Lawn-Care Service, Mowmg
&amp; Tnmm1ng Call (740)441·
or (740 )645·0546

IJ33

Need someone to lake care
of you or a loved one then
call (740)446·7 t65 or
(740)441 ·9232 I have good
references
-------S&amp;M Home Aepa1r Pa1nt1ng,
Decks, F1msh work, yard
care,
Free
Est1mates
(740)446-3682
11\1\i Ill
=;;:r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

•rto

B~I&lt;Ni

(}proRTIJIIJIY

All realeatate advertlaing
in thra newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it Illegal to
adv.rt!u "any
preference, llmitatron 01
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
ongln, or any 1ntentlon to
make any such
preference, timrtatlon or
d1ac:nmmatlon."

"Tile Nat1ons Newspaper"

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertreements for real
estate which tstn
v1otation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
mformed that all
dwellings advertised 1n
this newspaper are
available on an equal

•NOTICE•

I

,.___...;__--.

11110

LPN's Rockspnngs Nursing
Nursng and Rehabihtatton
Center IS looktng lor a few
ded1cated pecple to become
a part of our team We are a
100 bed sk1lled fac111ty located 5 m1les from Pomeroy
This 1s a 20 mnute commute
from Athens and Albany We
IUS! recently mstalled a state
of the art on lme documenta·

HW'WANJlD

0

80
"'r__

Is acceptmg appficanons for
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHan mdependent contractor 1n
lNG CO , recommends
the Pomt PleasanVGalilpohs that you do bus1ness wtth
rates, health, dental, and area
people you know, and
VISionmsuranceaswellasa
u~~m.M ~...
we are a 1ow lift
NOT to send money
nu.r n~" u.~
401K plan
Applicants
must
have through the mail unUI you
faollty whtch has reduced dependable vehic le, valid have mvestlgated the
ourba~mJuriestoalmostO auto IOSIJrance and gOOd offenng
NURSING
ASSISTANT We have 2 positions opened
ADD, Aockspnngs Nurs1ng •for registered nurses 1 IS credit tn order to be bonded :;;:::;;:===~
and Rehabilitation Center 1s for everyother week and 1 Early
mornmg
hours
MONEY
lookmg for a lew dedicated full lime po5111on for day and
Monday
lhru
Fnday,
no
people to become a part ofe.ve...:..:nr:::
ng::__ _ _ __ weekends
..,
we are a 10obad our team
ResCore
skilled facility located 5 Temporary Full time Filing Call t ·800-782·2230 exl
HNOTIUcH
5008
mileS from Pomeroy ThiS IS Clerk. Out1es wdl1nclude
a 20 minute commute from Personnel F11lng, InVOICe
Borrow Smart Contact
Leave message w1th name the Ohm OiV ISton of
Athens and Albany We JUSt Codmg, Ordertngl
recently mstalled a state of Mamtalnmg Office SOpplies, and phone number
Fmanctal
Institution 's
Office 01 Cons~Jmer
the art on lme documenta- Assist with Human
t1on system for the nursmg Resource Tasks. and must Or ema11to amyers@usa.to·
Affairs BEFORE you reflassistants which reduce be prof1C1ent1n M1crosoft
~
nance yaur home or
paper work lime conSider· Word and Microsoft E~cel
obtain a loan BEWARE
Wanted Pa1nters, pay due to
ably We offer compellllve Temporary Full time
of requests for any large
Expenence, PTIFT Send
rates, health, dental and Maintenance Dulles Will
advance
payments of
reSumes
to
Box
TSC20
rJo
VISIOn 1nsurance as well as mclude mamtalnmg malnte·
fees or msurance Ca ll th.e
Po1nt
Pleasant
Reg1ster,
200
401
a
K plan Wf!f are a low nance for 4 homes, VehiCle
Office ' of Consumer
Main Street PI Pleasant,
!1ft fachty wh1~h has reduced Mamtenance and various
Afla1rs toll free at 1·866wv 25550
our back lnjunes to almost 0, other duties. It you would
278-0003 10 learn If the
2
0
2
We have postiiOns ~ to like to take advantage of
Wanted 01rect SuperviSIOn mortgage broker or
1o PM sh1ft and 1 on 0 to these opportunities you
employees to oversee mate lender
ts
properly
SAM shtft Stop by and fill may apply at 8204 Carla
licensed (Th1s 1s a public
youth In a staff serure rest- serVIce announcement
out an application and Dnve, Gallipolis, OhiO,
dent 1al enVIronment Must
rece1ve an 1nterv1ew Monday Mooday lhru Fnday.
pass
ptlyslcal
trammg from th e Ohto Valley
through Fnday between a OOam·4 OOpm No telerequuement Pay based on :P:u~b=l1s;h1:ng:C:o:m:pa:n:y)=~
9AM and 4PM Rockspnngs ph one calls wiN be accept·
expenence Call (740)379·
IS an eQual opportunity ed An Equal Opportunity
9083
between 9-3 Mon-Fn
PROF18SJONAL
employer
Employer V/M/DN
150
ScHoolS ·
SERVICES
Jr.sfRucrJON
Open Interviews Satellite Installers. We are
now taking appllcaltons for
M s Cteamng serv1ce
$300
energet1c, sell drwen people GaiUpolll Career College Busmess and Restdent1a l.

:::"::_______,.::w.:;.-;;.';;.'m;;.'::"::.:'.:.'m~

Bonus

~

IriO

A&amp;J Trucking leading The
Way A&amp;J Trucking now
Hmng at our New Haven,
WV Term1nal For Aegronat
Haul s·Oump Dtv. 1 year
OTA ver1ftable exp Call 1·
800-462-9365 ask lor Kent

John Sang Ford lincoln
Mercury
Needs three IndiVIduals
that are Interested ma
career as an Automotive
CoflSultant We are lookmg
tor Individuals that are out
go1ng, self mot1vated and
professmnat We have one
Now Hiring!
of the best compensation
plans 1n the mdustry and a
benef1ts package that has
$300 Hiring
health Insurance, 401 K
DrivelS:
ret1rem~nt . d1sab1hly and life
Must have &lt;'II least a current
Insurance If you want to
40 hours a week
Class B COL
ears an e~cellen t hv1ng and Up to $8 50/hour + bonuses
Must have a satisfactory
bener yourself, contact Pat
MVR
Hill or Bnan Ross
Make calls you behave 1nl
Must have a current
Call on behall ol cooserve1rve
DOT phys1cal
--~
... ..... , &gt;
-~ "'Poh11cal organ1ZBI1ons
Company w11ltra1n
~~ '
1ne~penence dnvers who
Pa1d vacat1ons, paid hoh
meet the above cr1ter1a
John Sang Ford lincoln
days and paitJ tra1mng
Earn wages up to $1BOD
Mercury
Full benefits package and
per hr
Has a pos1110n open for an
401-K
AutomotivE! Techntetan We
$300
Hiring
Bonus
To apply please send a
are tookmg for an 1nd1vlduat
resume _.. a copy ot your
that has a well rounded
Call today to schedule an
Onl(er's li cense MVA and
knowledge about automo1nterv1ew
DOT phys1cal too
tive repa1r Ford Motor
1-877-463-6247
Company tra1n1ng Will be
Arrow Concrete, Inc:.
ext. 2321
provtded and IS on gong
ATIN Marla Jenkins
www
mloclslon.com
We offer a competitive comPO Box 4336
pensatiOn plan and our benParkersburg, WV 26104
efit package Includes health NURSING
ASSISTANT
employO arrowconcretewv com
Insurance, 401K retirement . AOD Aockspnngs Nursmg
Phone 1·866·505-2776
d1sab111ty msurance and life and Rehabilitation Center IS
Fax 304·485·1882
Insurance If you are t1red of lookmg for a few dedicated
EOE
work1ng for someor)e that ts people to become a part of
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or not work1ng for you or want our team We are a 100 bed
to better yourself, contact skilled facility located 5
Sell Shirley Spears, 304
Service Manager J1P1
675·1429
miles from Pomeroy This IS
Thomas
a 20 minute commute from
Computers 4 U 1s seek1ng a
Athens and Albany We JUS!
Computer Tech for part lime
~
d
f
5 11 8
leadin g full hme work You
must be pro"c1ent m com·
«&amp; 1... ,... . . ......
1100 system for the nursmg
puler repair, dependable an - - - - - - - - assistants whtch re duce
honestl Bnng resume m Local home health agency paper work l ome cooslderperson to Computers 4 U, now hlrmg PCA CHHA. ably We offer competitive
Inc 303 Mam Street. Point CNA, STNA w111 tra1n 1f nee rates health dental and
Pleasant, WV 25550 or ca ll essary Classes start July lvlsto~ Insurance as well as
for directions at 304·675· 9th Call740-441-1377
a 401 K plan We are a low
5282
lift facllty which has reduced
Desk Clerk needed at 0 ve rb rook c enI er IS currenI • our back IOJUnesto almost 0.
Budget Inn 260 Jackson ly accepting applicatiOns fo r we have 2 pos1t1ons on 2 to
Pike Looking lor a pereon STATE TFSi"ED Nursmg 10 PM shlff and 1 on 10 to
who 1S mottvated, great Assistants Full Time and ·SAM Shiff Stop by aoo Hll
communlcallon skills I and a Part Time poslhons avatl· out a[l appltcallon and
positive attllude Please able. Interested applica nts re ceive an interview Monday
apply within
,
can pick ~Pan applicallon or through Friday between
contact Hollie Bumgarner, 9AM and 4PM Rockspnngs
Part
and
Full
Time LPN Stall Development IS an equal opportunity
Paramedics and dispatch· Coordinator
@740·992- employer
ors, greal wages, call Nick 6472 M-F 9a·5p at 333 Page .:._:_:..:______
at 740-446-7930 or apply St , Mtddleport, Oh EOE &amp; a Roofers Metal rool1ng, s1d·
on person al 1770 Jackson par11crpanl ollhe Drug Free ong and EPDM Top pay and
Pike, Gallipolis.
Workplace Program
benef1ts. 724-229·80.20

to

Now vou can have bor~ers and graphics
~
added to vour classified ads
f!~
..m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally Jn wColumn: 1:00 p.m.
Monday- Prlday for Insertion
In Next Day•s Paper

1"0

ELEC CONTROLS ENGI NEEA Defense program
needs hands-on engineer

1\~01

Oear/1/ir~

1

iL--·roiiiiiloiliiiiANiii.-r

1t..-oiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiil-,..1

Hiring Bonus

lnfoCislon
Management Corp.
~voted

ons of the top fen

best places to work rn
Ohio"
Tuesday, June 26
1O:OOam-2:00pm
HOliday Inn
577 Slale Rt 7 North
GaU1poi1S, OH

II unable to attend,
please call
Hln-463-6247
ext. 4256
www.lnfoclsion.com
Overbroo~ Center located
@333 Page St, Middleport,
Oh10 Is pleased to announce
we w1U be holding an STNA
Class scheduled for July
Hourswlllbe8am-4.30pm If
you are Interested m JOinmg
our lnendly and dedicated
staff, please stop by our
front offtce Mon-Fn, 9am5pm and 1111 out an applo ca·
tion Full lime and part time
pos1t10ns ava11abl e to th ose
qu .lllled lndlVI du.Is Com plellng the class Applicants
must be dependable (attendance IS a n:'ust) team players wtth postltve attitudes to
·JOin us1n prov1dmg Outstard·
lng, quality care to our resldents 11 you have any ques!tons
contact
Hollte
Bumgarner, LPN, Staff
Development Coordmator
@740·992·6472. Overbrook
Cen.ter IS an E 0 E and a
.partiCipant of the Drug Free
Workplace Program

-.,.------,---:-VACANCY: H.S. Science
lnltructor. Valid Ohio
Science
certification
requ,·red·. co•~ACT Gal11a"''
Jackson-Vmton
JVSD
17401245•5334 EKt 201 ,
EEO

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20/hr or
S57K annually
lncludng Federal Beneftts
and OT,Paod Tralnng,
Vacations-FT/PT
1·800·584·1775 Ext. N8923
USWA

~e=~;~ces:t~~~t~~ayl!,~::

Trcumng available FT wtben·
ef1ts, Dnve a Co truck or get
more $ for dnv 1ng your trud&lt;
Dnvmg, Felony background
check and drug screen1ng
w111 be requrred Call 877·
682·8324 oploon 8 M·F 8·
5pm
Scenic Hills Nurs1ng Center
1s currently accepting apph·
cat1ons for AN's and lPN's
Applicahons must possess a
current 11cense 1n the State
of Oh1o Potential applicants
should
contact
D1ana
Harless, DON al (740)446·
7150 EOE
The
Athens·MBIQS
Educai•onal ServiCe offers
an opportun1ty for the right
IndiVIduals to make a differ·
once 10 the lives of adults
and lhe 1r fam1lies A parttime reach 1ng positiOn IS
open 1n the Meigs County
Adult Bas1c Education program at our Bradbury
Center. Applicant must hold
(or be ehg,ble lor) a leachong
certlflcate/hcense !rom the
OhiO
Department
of
EducatiOn and be WI U1ng lo
work 3 evemngs per week
Pos1llon is gra11 funded for
20 hours per week for so
weeks per year
A part-t1me educat1onat a1de
position IS open .at our
Middleport Center Applicant
must hold (or be eligible for)
an educational a1de perm 1t
through
the
Ohio
Department ol Education
Poslhon IS grant funded for
20 hours per week for 50
weeks per year
Applicant should submit a
Jetter of tnterest and resume
Wllh three references by
3 30, PM on JtJiy 3: 2007
b t I0 'the M
u ml
ns- elgs
· ,..
Ed ucattona ISBI'\Jlce Ce.nter,
Anenlion Carol Brewer. PO
Box 684, 320 112 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Oh 45769 '
The Athens·Metgs ESC Is
an
equal
opportunity

s

employer/p~ovlder.

FIND A JOB

IN THE
CLASSifiEDS

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446-4367,
1-800-2 t4 0452
www g&amp;llpohscaroorcollege rom
Accreciled

Member Accr&amp;dltlnQ

Coui'ICll lor lndependenl Colleges
and Schools 12748

_ _ __ _ _ __
STUDENTS FOR THE NA
PROGRAM
Rockspnngs
Nursmg and Rehabibtatton
Center IS located 5 moles
from Pomeroy and 20 m1nutes from Athens and
Albany. We currently are
seekmg tndiVlduats 1nterested 1n anendng our 75 hour
Nurs1ng Asststant Progam
wh 1ch w11t $far! June 4,
2007 Th1s class 1s ftee of
charge and begins wtth 2
volunteer days that wtll allow
you to see what the JOb con·
StSIS of f1rst hand We allow
12 students per class so
they 1111 up quickly Please
come 10 and complete an
appl1catto n 11 Interested
Rocksprtngs 1s an equal
opportunity employer
-------STUDENTS FOR THE NA
PROGRAM
Aockspnngs
Nurs1ng an d Aehab1ita'1On
center 1s located 5 m1tes
tram Pomeroy and 20 mmutes from Athens and
Albany, We currently are
seek1ng IOOtvtduals mterested m attendtng our 75 hour
Nursing ASSistant Program
whiCh Will start June 4,
2007 Th1s class IS free of
charge and beg1ns w1th 2
volunteer days that will allatt
you to see what the JOb conSISts of f1rst hand We allow
12 students per class so
they 1111 up net
qUickly 1Pleate
t
come m a camp e e an
apphcation 1f Interested.
Aockspnngs ts an equal
opportumtv employer

~::..,::po:":":"lty::b•:•:••:·~
HUO HOMESI 4bd onlv
$155/mo, 3bd $181/mo .
More 1-4bd homes available 5% dn, 20 yrs @ 8%
For hstmgs 1·800-559-41 09
X F144
Newly butlt home m Green
Twp on Kmg Ad off
Neighborhood Ad Approx
1200 sq h 3 acres m/12 BA
2 full baths w/whtrlpooltubs
large LA Asking 87,500
740 .446. 7029

i

MOBFOILERs~~~
tu...a:.

I

1998 Clayton Spirit II Lots ol
extras excellent cond1t10n
Must · be moved Call 949·
2698 after 4 p m
d
Great used 2005 3 be room
16xBO w1th vtnyl/shingle
Mu"St sell, Only $25,995 with
dehvery Call (740)385·4367
New 3 Bedroom homes from
$2 14.36per monlh, lnclude s
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
set-up (740)385-2434
Ntce used 3 bedroom home

licensed In Ohio and WV vlnyl/shmgte Will help With
304 444 4694
Call
• "
delivery. 740-385-4367

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1-688·582·3345

OWNER FINANCING
NI Ce 312 S1nglew1des
From $1,800 down
payment
Scoll (740) 828·2750

1{1 II I \II II

~rii10F;;;;;~H:-O\-I•t:'i--.,

·--I'ORiiiiiiSiiALiii:;._.l
0 Down even with less than
per1ect credtl IS avatlable on
thiS 3 bedroom, 1 bath
rome Corner tot, l1replace,
modern kitchen, Jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month 740·367·7129

L..-------'

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program $0 Down, If you
own Land or use Famtl y
Land We own the Bank your
Approved 606·474-6380
...,,..._ _ _ _ __,

i

LoTs &amp;
ACRF.AG E

Lo.-..;Iiliiiiiiiiiiiii-r

- - - - - - - - 10 66 acres, 1594 Northup
104 Tatum
Dr. New

H
wv 3bdl2ba Aanch'
aven
lg sunroom, 2 car gar great
area D, 304·675·3637 E,
304 -882·2334
--,:-::---:----:-BR IBA l
F
3
'
' arge ami 1Y

~~~·a~~droe, H:~~~ La~;~

.
or
_
441 5826 446 9664
- - -- - - - 3bd
GALLIPOLIS
Foreclosure!
Buy
lor
$50,9001 Only $404imo . 5%
00, ,20yrs @ 8% For IIS!tngs
call 800·559-4109 xF254
-------Attention!
Local compa:ny offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for you to buy your
home Instead of renting,
• 100% Hnancmg
• Less than perfect credit

accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(740)367·0000
- - - -- - - Beautlfui-Mtddl eport hamel
3BR, 2BA, lull basement1
112 car garage wtth a room
above Many NEW features!!
seelhlsonet740·416-

Ad 1n Green Twp, Gallla Co
x barn, recent survey
24 48
no restrictions. beautiful

house 1cx::at1on all ut11it1es on
site. $79 900 (937)362·
,
_
4775 19371605 3581
- -- - - - -4 Acres located off Kemper
Hollow Ad Already has
water/elec Secluded area
740-388 8228
:....::..:::.::...:::::.:__ _ __
55 acres more or tess
$69,000 Gall 740 256-9247

i

Rl:AL E.~T.o\ll:
L--•W;,;,;;A.
~'fED
-0.._.1
~

Wanted to Buy Property on
l ower Ave M1le Rd or Jtm
Hill Ad, area 304-593·3281

~

'iil)-H;j;;;;"-l
~

$155/mot Buy 4bd HUD
hamel 5% dn, 20yrs @ S%.
For l istings 800-559-4109
x
1709
------1 passibly2Br House m
New Haven, $325/month,
$325/depostl No Pets
A-OK-Corrals &amp;
the whh
~(30'--'4).:.88.:.2...:·36.:.5...:2_ _ __
Metal
bedroom~ 3 Bed room House m
Concrete,
Rodney V~lage II, Syracuse $500/month •
Decks,
ot down payment deposit No Pets (304)675Garages. Free estimates Call may be made In monthly 5332 weekends 740-591-304·633_·_•2_30_ _ _ _
· payments (740)446·4543
0265

t..-----!1!

P'"

I"~:T1...,n;;;-:;o.,;-r."'I'Oi;"i=ii'"PV'.,

Lawn mowmg. Rales by the
job, not the hour, Free
Esllmates Call Paul 0
(304)675-2940

SHOP CLASSI Fl EDS
FOR BARGAINS

�Tuesda~June26,2007

Tuesday, June 26, 2007
ALLEY COP

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS
3Bd house,138 Lincoln Hill 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
S400,Catl 614-491·4850 for tor Rent, Meigs Courty, In

Phillip
Alder

EllmView
Apartments

Exercise bike, table lamp, Ill- AKC Yorkle puppies, 2 94 Ford Tempo, 4DR, blue,
ing cabinet, set of china for males 1()wt(s old $900 each, AC, tinted windOws, spoiler,
llppNcation. No pets, Dep. town. No Pets. Deposit
12, set of crystal goblets, set 3 female Swks old, $800 front wheel drive, rims,
__
. - ·- -- -Required, (740)992-5174 or
of Chrlatmas dishes for 12, each ~ 2 males $700 each, 2 exCellent gas · mileage
-5400
•
2&amp;3
bedroom
apartments
(740)441 -011 0.
mallOglrt( dresser wlmlrror, lem~e 6wks old, $900 each, $2000. 740-645-6474 days,
. Attention!
•Central heat &amp; AJC
double bed w/mettress full very small, 1 male 6wks okl 740-256-1020 nlghta.
Local company offeri ng ~NO 1 and 2 bedroom apart· • Washerld!yer hookup
size, swivel office chair, $900, veryamajl, shots &amp; vet 1m~""'::""...~-.,
DOWN PAYMENr pro· ments. furnished and untur• Tenant pays electrtc
wooden glider w/cushlon, &lt;;:hecked 3()4..895-3926
TRuacs
grams tor you to buy your nished, af}d houses in
big manS rocker recliner.
FOR SuE
(304)882·3017
Pomeroy and Middleport,
home instead ol rent1ng.
book sh elves, computer CKC Tov Rat Terriers~ Ct'Kx: 1._-llliiiiiiiiio-rl
Johnson's Tree
~ 100% financing
secunty deposit required, no
tabfe, desk · &amp; chair, 1 &amp; White, tst shots, tails
04
Ford
Ranger
XLT.
extendService
~~~:~han perfect .cred~ c:P•:::•s:__:_74=0=·99:.:2:.-22:::_:_1:.8·_ _
_ •
mahogany nign stand, all in dOcked. Asking $250. 379ad
cab,
4x4,
Standard,
~
very good condilioo, 740- :_95:__1:_
5:_or'-64'-5-ti85'----7--• Payment could be the 1 Bedroom Apt. very private
.
8XC :
cond.
$13,500
Tot~•l'rllll•ltlulll!a• . . . .
245·5633
same as ren1.
all utilities included. plus
Purebred Toy Poo&lt;le pup- (304)675-8893 aHer 5pm
IM&amp;ftd•fNI ~
Mortgage
Locators. Satellite TV &amp; OVO recorder - - - ' - - -- - - - ------~~ pies, CKC, vet checked; tails
740-44,.....,
·
Mollohan Furniture. Great
-..~~
ovod
(740)367-0000
304-674-0042
Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave ,
Ooc;(ed, dewl,ifl:lws rem
, 2000 Dodge pickup, 112 ton,
"k:llM•-• Own;a
for save
a Great
shots&amp; &amp; wormed,
Good
Condition. Call
Fo nt
BA 2 bedrooms, living room. Gallipolis, Upstairs,
1 selection
Drive 8 little,
a lot!price.
202 blk
.
.. &amp;we
F have
.
1
1
r re or Of sae 2
k11 he 1 bath
I Bedroom. No Pets, All utili·
.
apricot, M
• pnce (740)441-1110
Nice Remodeled Home 1n
c n,
· apa. p ..en
Clark ·Chapel Rd. Bidwell, Males $300, Females $350, - - - - - - - have central air. Furnished lies paid, (740)446-9523
OH 17'""""~173
lown, No Pets. Renovated. with couch, Chairs, washer,
· ~~
(740)992-7007
2000 T,...•
""7 " ... Taooma, Ext
All . new carpel. Call dryer. stove. microwave. Grac:tous Living 1 and 2
~
-MDIOIANDISE
'
Gab, Auto. 4x4. 4cyl., 88,000
(740)446·7425
Bedroom Apts. at Villano
miles, New tires; 1994
beds. d1nnmg lable and
-,
R ~·
Sid '
HUD HOMES! 4bd only chaus $400 depOsi t. S4 50 a Manor and Riverside Apts. in
;,,.;..;;;;;;;;;;.._.;.,.;;;.._, Toyota Ext Cab. 4cvl., Auto,
00 Jng,
mg,
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
$155/mo., 3bd S1811mo monlh call 304-882-2523 Middleport, from $327 to
0
F.·n·l
Air, Runs Groat, $1500, Call
Soffit, Decks,
•n·992-5064.- Equal $99$2
For ·~a
ld hJto
~·
after 5pm, (740)245-5946,
Doors, ""
_.
740-446-0007 Toll Free ,877-669-0007
Mora 1·4bd home's avail- leave a message and num· $592- 7'tV
100Batteries
$30Qea1IO'n. ..... ~
nmuows,
Housmg
·
0 pportuMy.
· Th 16
' 250+ -~
· . THE
+ · BAT-' -,
Lw--"""'iiliii..-iiii
"~
iiii";,..,.l oell (740)645-3743.
Electric, p•rumbing,
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs @ SO-b ber 11 not at home
$4 .QOe~
Fot- listings 1·800·559·4109 =~===--- institution is an · EqlJal TERY TERMINAL 1-900·
FORS~~ ~
Drywall,
Wise Concrete
.: F144.
3 Br .$395 M plus Ut..Pius Opportunity Provider and 796-6797
0% Financi ng- 36 Mos.
~
Remodeling, Room
Dep.. av. 1st of M. 3rd St. Employer.
- - -- - -- - available now on John
A..Jditions
All type s of concrete
lnPomeroy Houseforrent!3 Racioe. 740·247·4292.
- - - -- - - - 2003 Exiss 3 Horse Deere ZTrak ZeroTuma&amp;
v
Owner· Rick Wise
Bd.,2 bath. newly remod· 4
Honeysuckle
Hills Goosenec:X Trailer, Excellent 5.99% Fixed Rate on Jotln 04 Nissan XTerra 49000
Local Contractor
740-992-5929
eled, IolBI electnc. 740·843- RM &amp; Bath. slove ,fridge. Apartments now aooepting oond. Ca11304-576-2201_ ·Deere Gator's Carmichael miles. $10900. 740-256740-367.0544
5264.
lJ!ilities paid, upstairs. 46 applications lor 1. and 2BR
Equipment (740)446-2412. ~16!:11;;.8--"!'"~-...,
Free Estimates
740-416-1698
St
No pets. apis- No rental asSistance - - - -- - - "
7 40-367.0536
· Large 4 bedroom house tn Ohve
available at this time. Rent 22 auto rille, $125: good John Deer 5500 4WD, 73
r.. 4x4
S
~==:;:;:;;:;::=~ ~=;;:;;;;;;;~====
Pomeroy, very clean. newly 5450/mon th. 446-3945
starts 3t $310 month. Equal metal detector, $125; 1000 HP. cab, air, 540 loader, L--•'•'ORiiiiiiiM.EiOii-.,J
remodeled, new ca binets,
k... • ...a..-1 manure forks round '
Housing
OpportlJnity. channel mobile or base L.OUVW
•
•
new carpal, (740)949-2303
scanner. $175: (304)882- balo lork, very good cond. 03 Dodge Dakota SXT 4x4 ,
17401446_3344 .
3418 1eave message
740-256-J;864
59000 miies, e•collenr conMOI!n.E HU!Ill!i
r
~
l!ll
Middleport,
Beech
St
,
2
br.
dition. $10900. 388-8125
FOR h--vr
Seamless Gutters
.. furnished apartment, utilities For Sale- hard maple fire· Kiefer Built· Valley-Bison· - - - - - - - Horse
and
livestock 91 Chevy Ext cab 4X4, Roofing, Siding, Gutters
paid,
depos~
&amp;
references,
wood,
(740)99~
·
5326
1 br Trailer in Letart.
lGrellert- k D Loadmax&amp;- excellent truck for tne year.
Insured &amp; Bonded
no pets, (740)992-0165
Complete flJrnished , utilities
A
HIDDEN
TREASURE,
!
'
--JET
paid $350 mooth (304)862·
'
umps,
_
dean but has. some·
Utility· Aluma
Alummum
56-6 rust,
,.
lalJret
Commons Middleport, North 4th Ave., 2
AERATION MOTORS
1 740 2
160
2858
Trailers· B&amp;W Gooseneck .,ru.,ns,..g;.re_•_·~----.
Apartments. Largest in tile br. furnished apartmen t, Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
VAN'i
14X60 . HUD, 2 bd. room . 1 area! Beautjfully renovated deposit &amp; references, no Stock. Call ~on Evans, 1· Hitches- Trailer Parts.
Carmichael
Trailers.
FOR
SM.E
bath. Air, electricity. Water. throughout including brand pets. (740)992.0165
800-537-9528.
(740)446-2412
~
trash, &amp; sewer included. No new kitchen and bath. -----~-- - - - - - - - pets. $325, dep. $325. 740- Starting al $405. Call today! Moder n I BA Apt Call 446- NEW AND USED STEEL Massey Ferguson 150 95 Plymouth van, air, auto V&amp;
992-5639.
(304)273·3344
3736
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Tractor
with
loader, 6, $1400 OBO. 740·258- *Prompt and Quality
'--------''-'----- - - Apartment ava11able now
For - CollCfete,
Angle, · International 574, 165
Work
161180 Trailer, -_3br, 2"'"'
......, Riverbend Apts_ New Haven New 2BR apartments. Ch anne 1, Fl a1 Bar, Sl ee 1 "asse
m
Y Ferguson , 264
lOcated on 15 acres in Pl.
Washer/dryer
hookup, Grating
For
Drains, International, 9"! Ford,
•Reasonable Rates
Pleasant,
$550/monlh, WV. Now accepting applica· stove/refrigerator included.
(740)286-£522
*Insured
$550/depos~ 740 _41 6- 3346 lions lor Hud-Subsklized, Also, units 011 SR. I60. Pets Driveways &amp; Walkways; L&amp;L
www.~~~~Htay.one Bedroom Apts. Utilities Welcome! {740)441..0194.
Scrap Metals Open Monday, New Idea Manure Spreader, 1994 Honda 300 . Founrax, •Experienced
2 Br . AJC. Very nica, included. Based on 30% of
T~esday, Wednesday &amp; Ground Driven, GoO&lt;f 2WO, Great Shape, $1800; References Available!
Johnson Mobile Home Pari&lt;. adjusted lncomEt.
Call Tara
Townhouse Fnday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed Condition {740)441 -1110
2004 Kawasaki KX100, 2
Call Gary Stanley @
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 (304)882-3121 al'ltilable for Apartments, Very Spacious, ~~~'0;. :~~ &amp;
stroke, Excellent Shape,
740-742-2293
I.JvooocK
$1400. Call after 5pm
2 BR, Big yard, Storage Senior and ~isabled Pe~le. 2 B.edrooms, CIA, 1 112
1 (7401245-5946,
buikling, $325/mo plus $22&amp; Equal Houstng Opportumty Bath, AduH Pool &amp; Bally Pol
B '
30 40 10'
cell Pleuse leave messa e
.Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
e
arn
x x
(740)645-3743.
deposit. Renter pays all utili· Apartment for rent, 1·2
Delivered &amp; Erected $8,595 Donke s-Siemale, wh•'le
1
ties. (740)256·6202
Bdrm., remod9ed, new car- No Pets, Lease Plus plus Sales Tax. Call 6
Y
.
YOUNG ' S
3 BR, i 4x70, Addaville pet', Glove &amp; frig .. water. Security Deposit Required, (937)718-1471 www.nation· male. Call 740-256-9247 or 2001 Kawasaki . Elimina~or
'de""'eb
740·256-6504
125, garage kept, m1nt
·School district. 740·367- sewer, trash pd . Middleport. (740)446-3481 .
WI f"V' arns.com
d
.
$
St: At. 7, Tuppers Plains, OH
$425 00 N0
I
AI
u ·y &amp;
con ., 682 m•les, 2000,
7762 or 367-7272
· ·
pe s.
e · Twin Rivers Tower is acceptIli\GRAJN
(740)949-1 006
_
reqlJired. 740-843-5264.
ing epplications for waiting
PErs
. Room Addttlona 6
1
Beautiful River · View in
Ae..-lng
FOR SM.E
2005
H.D.SoH
Tail
custom
t&lt;anauQa· Ideal tor 1 or 2 Beautilul Am•,
t'UIO at Jld&lt;JOn list for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
1
·estates. 52 Westwood apartment,for
the
Livestock Feed, shelled corn maroon
w/embossed
Service Auto Repair
people, references, No pets.
$5 20/50 lb &amp; ho
h
Eioctrlcal I Plumbing
Loc. 5 mi. lrom Gavin. Drive, from $365 to $560. elderly/dislibled can 675· AKC Boston Terrier Pups. 7
.
.
rse crunc flames,1 of 200 made.800
Roollag I Gurtoro
Oil Change, Tune-Up, Engine
(7401441 -0 181
740·446·2568.
Equal 6679
Equal
Housing wksold, both mate. Parents $7.~50 lb., &amp; more. miles since
new,prlce
VInyl Siding &amp; PlinUng
Pttto 1nd Porch Dlcka
Housing OpportlJnity. This Opportunity
on prem. with pedigree, vet ~ $21,500, call for detaits·740·
Diagnostics, Full Brake Service, Air
WVG38725
Mobile homes for rent, institution is an Equal
SPACE
chkd, shots, wormed. 740- - - - 949-2217.
Conditioning Recharge &amp; Repair,
~~~~:;.~~ea, no pets, ~~~~;~~ity Provider and
FOR RF.Nr
. 388-9325
2003 Bolens Lawn Tractor, rii:jj
· ~llo~K.;,TS""!'&amp;-M"'!"OI'Oil'i-...,1 V.C YOUNG Ill
9CJ2
u2
1
'J
~
;
45· cut, used 2 years,
FOR
Alignment, Cl!stom Exhaust
f'romr rr y 0 111 1
·"1111\IENTS
CONVEN1ENTLY LOCAT,• Mobile Home space in Rio AKC female Boston Tarrier
JU"n
Rocky Hupp-Owner
J•R Bissell, Managtr
1
I I' l l c L •r II xp r 'lr •
mR n-ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
sale. 1st740
shots
&amp;
:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j=:;==~~~::;
rv
....,,
Grande. Will take up to puppiesd for$"OO
88 Wellcraft 20ft V-8 350
388
Townhouse
apartments, 16,xBO. 446·3617
worme
' .
. . ,.
'li!F;;;;;;~,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Mercruiser, tandem axle
8743
3 Rms &amp; bath. WID hookup, and/or small 740
houses FOR - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - AIJI'OS
trailer w/llrakes, good cond..
Mushroom Compost
1 1111
clean. No pets. 446-1 519
RENT. Call 1 144 •
Prime commercial space for AKC Mini Pinscher puppies,
H&gt;R SALE
740-256-6160
·
$35 A Scoop
lor application &amp; inlormation. rent al SpringvaUay Plaza. red, choo., bl: AKC Mini L.-..itlliliiiiillii-.,J - - - - - - - T-Post6ft $3.29
~C,jlall~64;,;;,5-;;,21~9~2._ _ __, Dauschund puppies, br. 03 'Ford Taurus, 54,000 89 Ba~iner 27ft. Now V-8 • Vinyl Siding
Wide Variety of
:;;
T:;;
ha; n; k;' ;;;m
WANfiD
dapple, tj, dapple, bf; AKC miles. $5900 080.740-256- 351 OMC Eng. Frklge, • Replacement
Sheltie .puppies (2 males) 1618
stove, bathroo m/shower. · Windows
Lawn Seed,
10 RENT
L,---l.iiiiii;...,J
slw: AKC Standard Poodle - - - -- - - - Sleeps 4-6, tandem exle
• New Homes
Fertilizer and
puppies, bL, cr., apr.; all vet 03 Subaru Legacy, 74000 trailer wlbrakas. great • Roofing
' Garages .
Showmaster Sllow
LAN DOWNER S-NEED checked cal) for prices, miles, 30mpg, sunroof, shape. 740-2~160
•Decks
, Complete
EXTRA FARM INCOME? (7401696 _1085
spoiler, excellent oondtion. - - - - - -- - •Garages
We ha"' responsitjesports- - - - - - - - - $13000. 388-9305 Llt.1
93 Marada 21H. 4.3 V-6 • Pole Buildings
Remodeling
Sha d e Ri ver
menlookingtoleasehunting _AKC Reg Yorkie { F) 11
M~rcruiser, tandem axle
~JIA
properly in lhis area. weeks old. Shots and 10 to 15 small cars for sale. trailer wlbrakes, great condi· • Room AddHions
,.....
•
Ag Service
Midwest Trophy Leases Inc. wormed. Call 740·339·3600 Cavaliers, Escorts, Neons, tion. 740256·6160
Owner:
"-I . I{ l . (304)532-6015 or 1-800- -----~-- etc. Gas Savers! 740-446- - - - - - - -Jamas Keeaae It
Stop&amp; Compare
( IH -. 11 ·1

rl e

North

fiS
I

0:.:!:'1

-·-r.-

L-.:"::.-::::.:-=:"'::-:......1

r

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

I

• QJ 5
• J986 3
West
East
• J 975 3!
• Q 10
" 86S
" 7!

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

+

rfamiJ1J C·tfNM•

South

llftwod blllle&amp;ry Aid F.III'IIHure

i '

r

i

r•

i

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

'

-Ga-

I

I

r-------,
J&amp;L

The family
joseph Kirby
Sr. would like
to thank
everyone that
sent food,
cards, and
flowers to our
family during this time of loss.
Your thoughts and prayers are
greatly appreciatell.
Josephine, Joe Jr. &amp;
Stephanie Kirby

Construction

r

. w~Ars T~AT

I&gt;IPN'T YOll
n£.L M~ TO

fiSH I&gt;OING
/

liP

T~~llE1.

Sf:NP

'

fO~

A

PIANO
TUNA?

698·1073
----::----Responsible TN hlJr\ter look·
ing lo lease, your land or
farm tor hunting. Please call
423-748·7045 or email
rdavis@MUSFIBER.com

AKC Reg. Beagle Puppies
304-576-2779
--,--~----AKC
Registered
Weimaraner puppies. 3
Female and 3 Males. Ready
on 6/30. $350. 304-5933889

72 7

~::___:_8 _ _ _ _ __

Pro Angler Fishing Kayak
742-2332
1991 Ford Explorer XLT, 9" with liborglass paddle, $750 .__..;,;,;;,;;.;.;,;.._ _.
Lift, 33~ tires, nerl bars, value, sell for $500· new!
"' I 1(\ J( I ..,
148,000 miles. Auto, PW, (7401441-1971 9-5 M·F
PL, $~000 (740)339·2070
C
&amp;
AMPmiS
1995 Chevy Lumina, runs
MOIOR Ho~
great 446-9370

i

1993 24ft, 5th Wheel
BASEMENT
Camper, Good Condition,
WATERPROOFING
$4500. (7401379-2513.
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur2006 25ft Layton by nished. Established 1975.
Skyline, tag-a-long, sleeps Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446- 8, fully self contaim:d, 0870, Rogers Basement
18.500 firm 304-675-5842 Waterproofing.

Hotm!OIJ&gt;

Goooo .

GE Electric Range, GOCKI
Condition, Clean, {740)441·
1110

r

BLIC
NOTI

I

97 Hitchhiker Di6COvery 34
11211, 5th wh eel camper
made by NU-WA. 1 Doubl e
slide and 1 single slide plus
exrras that will go with thiS
unit. Excellent shape. Asklng
$16,500. Call after 6pm 740208-0507 or 256· 1243

DIDJA HEAR 'BOUT
SHE DOES,
SME 1
MABEL AN' CLEM ? J,...~~l,-L, I'LL HAVE YOU
LOWEEZY SMIF
KNOW ...
TOLD ME-r-----,~
SME KNOWS
EVER'IHIN' !!

WUZ ME WHO MADE
UP THAT STORY 'BOUT
MABEL AN' CLEM !!

IT

THE BORN LOSER

'l AA\~ Ill£ WEA\1-l.E:.I!:. ~~
~- NJ-1'\' ~

\':&gt; li:NK

'feM· ROU~t&gt;!

'KNow W~T'\'fl-E.I&gt;\FFERE~i"' .
15 ~tit£ &amp;-1'tJEHI51J~~AAt&gt;

'IN

~Utl\fo\ERr '1'1-l.E. MIK \~

"''

W"-Rf.\£it!

'\'1-\1:-0\1-\a~~~?

NOTICE TO CONTRAC· aforesaid
Meigs
TORS
C o
u n
t y
Sealed proposals lor Commissioners. Bid
the Pomeroy Dlslress Bonds shall be accom·
Clearance
Project, panled by Proof of
Meigs Counly, Ohio Aulhorily ollhe ·onlcial
wlil be received by lhe or agent signing lhe
Meigs
Counly bond.
.
1
Commissioners at lhe Bids shail be sealed
Meigs
Courthouse, and marked as Bid lor
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Pomeroy
Distreas
unlll
1:00
•p .m. Sidewalk Replacement
Thursday, July 5, 2007 pmjact and .mailed or
and lhen at 1:t5 P_M,, de!lveredlo:
al said o.Hice opened Meigs
County
and read aloud for the Commissioners
Courthouse
following:
This Is a Prevailing Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Wage project
Attention of bidders Is
See specifications in called to ail of. the
.
bid pa ckel
requiremenls
con·
SpecHicatlons, and bid tained in lhls bid packforms may be secured at, pertlcuiariy lo the
at lhe office of Meigs Fodera!
Labor
C
o
u n 1 y Slandards Provisions
C om m Iss I one r s , and
Davls·Bacon
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Wages, various lnsurOhio
45769 Phone ance
requlremenls,
740·992-2895.
· various equal opportu·
A deposH of 0 dollars nlty provisions, and
. will be required for lhe requiremenl lor a
each set of plans and payment bond and perapec!l!catlons, check formahce bond lor
made payable lo· . The t 00% of lhe contraol
lull .amount will be price. No bidder may
returned within lhlrty withdraw his bid within
(30) days ·Iller recelpl thirty (30) days altar
of bids.
the actual date of the
Each bid muat be opening thereof. The
accompanied by either Meigs . . County
a bid bond in an Com m ta sl onere
amount of 100% of the resarve lhe right to
bid amount with a rejocl any or ail bide.
eurely aallafactory to'. Mlck
Davenport,
lhe . aloreoeld Meigs Presldenl
C o
u n . I
y Meigs
County
Commleelonero or by Commissioners
certllled
check, (8) 21 , 26, 29
cuhiers Check, or let·
ter of credit upon a eo!vent bank ln. the
amount of no1 lese
than t 0% of lhe bid
11.:. &amp;,f;,o,
amount in favor of the .
IIIII' r• . . - , . .

"-MIL
v

W~r:r!,

BIG NATE
l:S THERE A"'Y SOllND
SWE~ER THAl-l A
SCJ-iOOL BELL IN
SUM MElt.~

·

·- - - - - - Public Notice
Columbia Township
Trustees will hold a
budget hearing at the
regular maellng Ju:y·s,
2007 at the fire station.
Mary Wingo,
Fiscal Officer
(740) 698-6204
(61 26
Public Notice
-------NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Seturday,
June 30, 2007 st 10:00
a.m.; a public aa!e will
be held at 211
Second St., Po Rll!roy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company ;1 sellhig lor
cash in hand or certilied chock !he foilowlng collateral:
2002
GMC
Envoy
tGKDT13S622170936 ·
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reserves the right 1o
bid at .t his sale, and 1o
withdraw the above
collateral prior 1o sale
Further The Farmer~
Bank 'and Sev!nga
Company reoervse lhe
rightto reject any onll
bide aubmltted.
The above described
.collateral will be eold
•u ls·where Ia" with
no
expressed' or
Implied
· warranty ·
given.
'
For further Jnlormalion, or for an appoint- ,
men! to lnepect co!lateral, prior to ..le date
contact Cyndle, Ken or
Randy at992·2136.
(6) 28 27 28
' '

w.

Based on double occupancy
State room taxes will be applied to
credit card at check-in
Includes llight, hotel accorn- ·
modations, luggage &amp; transfers
Private jet leaves from Charleston,

WV Must be 21

years of age
credit cards, checks, money !
orders and payroll deduction
accepted. No refunds ·
LIMITED SEATS!
To make reservations please

call PVH Community Relations,

--W-iiS." -.\.•U I

We Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Helios Sy'stem

on

SAVINGS

.....

SUNSHINE C.LUB ·
Fl.CCOS,

HELP WANTED
received by local

conservative church
ror part-time nstudent
Ministries Director"

al'allablt. Rt!!iuml!':s
may he sent to
PO BoK45J,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~()lEN

Meigs Co. Holzer
Tobacco PrE)vention
Open House
Wednesday, June

27

1:oo - 4:30 pro

115 W .

Second Street in

Shop
·Ctassifieds!
Help Wanted

Now Accepting Applications
For These Positions
• Service Manager
• Service Advisor
• Auto Technician

. Pomeroy
For rnore

992-2175

Join the Automotive Excellence group at
Smith GM Superstore. Candidate should

TEEN VOLUNTEER
ORIENTATION
for .Holzer Hospice

28
1:DO pm - 3:00pm

Thursday, June

Holzer Hospice Office

2881

St.

At 160 Gallipolis, OH

Formore info, call

446·5074 or toiHree at
1·800·500·4850. '

IS

IS n.RRIBIE, LU}T£R.,

IT eof.X&gt;

10 WD .

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Froe Elllmll

(304) 675-4340, ext. 1326
Help Wanted

Dm:JGHTS.T~S.

FI~S.. JH£ ~S

Hill's Self
Storage

being

(Youth Dlreclor),
Salary and houn to be
discussed,anvrding to
ahility and time

FORTUNATELY, THAT'S
VE~'( FUNN'&lt; !

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

Help Wanted

Re~me 's

PEANUTS

~ •""""•)~'~:"J..1P!H"""4":...•

~:

have automotive knowledge and abi!ity to
work well with employees and customers.

Manley's
Recycling
..., lliJ riM........

..........
..
......
,..,,,
...........
,......
..
....
..............
. . . . . . . .12:111 ••

PIYIIITW PIICES ,_

We are studying how 1o avoid losers 1n
su~ contracts. There are two common
ways to do this.The first is to ruff a loser
in the shorter trump hand.
Suppose you have a trump suit or 9-8-7
on the board and A-K-0 -J-tO in your
hand. You have five trump iricks for sure.
But if you can ruff a loser on the bOard,
· that gets you up to a siiC1h lrump trick. In
contrast, taking a ruff in your hand does
not generate an extra trick: it consumes
one eX your five winners.
So, you can arrange 1o ruff a loser in
the shorter trump hand, thet will almost
always be1he right line of play. But e"'n
then, you must occasionaJly ba careful
-as in this deaL Agalnsl your four-heart
oonlracl, West leads the spade five: siK,
queen, ace. How would you continue?
You have lour losars: two clubs, one diamond and one spade.
Why one spade? Well, in one of my
classes, a man, seaing that he could ruff
his spade loser on the board, counted
only lhre~ losers. Than he recaled I had
said that when your loser count is not
more than you can afford, immediately
draw trumps - and that is exactly what
~e did. But drawing tha opposing trumps
left dummy without any. When it came
time to ruff the spade lour on \he board,
he could not do it and went down one.
Count all of !hose losers.
At Irick two, cash the spade king. Then,
lead your last spada and ruff if wil~
dummy's heart queen. Do not send a
girl, lhe heart three, to do a woman's job.
After ruffing the spade. draw trumps,
knock out the diamond ace, and daim
10 tricks.

~Astro-

. 446-0007

Get

1

Tunica, Mississippi
THE GRAND CASINO
September 5·7, 2007
$295/person

·~-----. .

Pass
Pass

po .._.s

4 Exercise
place
7 Lltlie pieces
11 Sum lola!
12 Thunder
14 Raucous
diver
15 Moet.of the

earth
16 Run
In neutral
17 Governess
in Slam
18 Space
telescope
20 Rumors, ·
often
22 Nolin lhe
pink
23 Kitchen
pelll
24 Paso
around
27 Defoe
castaway
30 Wresller s

grip
31 Cows'
mouthfuls
32 Vllalily
34 Before
35 Explodes

36 "-cosl
you"

n

BARNEY

a92 1m

!

',.

ROBERT
BISSELL
CIISTIICTIII

Feeds

f'

I,.

Full

Pass

East

Do not send a girl
for the task

·agpp lllftl C£1!111
740-667-3177

North
2•

Opening lead: • 5

SALE

ii~Cia~rd;;;oi;;;T;h;;;a;;;n;;;ks;;;~:;;C:;;a:;;.r:;;d:;;o:l;;

'
''

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Pass
. Pass

••

~=:7:4:0.:6:53:-96:5:7:::: •==~====~~==~~~~
Stanley TreeTrimming

::...=c.:..:=----

West

I"

1

Removal

7 6 4 3

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

H&amp;H
G
.
uttenng

j

•

• A K 10 S
Soulh
4 AK4
" A K J 10 9
+ K 10 9
• 4 2

j

401

A 8 2

• Q7

I

~senec

06-21H17

8 6

" Q. 3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

I
i

r,o

•

1 c;els'

37 Darts away
Answer 10 Previous PUZZle
39 Domineering
40 To dale
4t Happy ohou1
42 Vila!fiuld .
45 Marbles
49 Righi,
on a map
50 Japanese
cllll!
52 Gratn
53 Issue a
summons
54 CQnstanlfy
55 Viclorian,
e.p.
56 Mtx ~ up
57 Wail
13 Letter
38 Oil-white
hanging
algnolf
39 He married
58 CIA agent 19 Egg layer
Baca!l
21 Reoponsl- 41 RaSlaurant
DOWN
freebie
bilily
24 Yon maiden 42 Torso muat Currency
25 - d'oeu·
c!es
2 Moldy
vres
43 Cafe au cheese
26 Obi-Wan
44 Italian wine
3 Thick slice
portrayer
oily
4 Radiator
27 Tea holders 46 Bool porta
covering
28 Decides
47 Legendary
5 Malterhorn 29 Moraye and
marshal
echo
congers
48 Command
6 -de mer 31 Modest
lo Rover
7 Wltd pertlea
home
51 A Gabor
8 Free
33 Wield, as
sister
electrons
oars
9 Coger
35 Ode, e.g. ·
- Kukoc
36 Missouri
tp Break
,neighbor

GARFIELD
[ 'THINK
L-OVE: FINALL-Y

FOUNP ME'!

l'f'!l ..1061' 1'0.0 WINOE:P
'TO RUN ANYMORe

Wednesday, June 27, 2007
By Bernice Bede Oaol
You are likely to be ·associating with
many more enterprising individlJals than
you have in the past. One or two COlJid
tum out to be invaluable by encolJraging
you toward bigger and better things.
CANCER !June 21-July 22) - Engaging
In an activity that is somewhat physically '
challenging, whether It Is work related or
jlJSt for fun, could do you a world of good.
It'll stimulate both You r mind and body.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Although It
might be necessary for you to take a calculated risk In order to improve your
position or standing in the eyes of your
peers, ifll be worth It Be bold, but not
brash.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Home-ori·
ented activities will prove to be the most
gratifying, so if you can, spend time tin·
kering around the house or getting out
into the yard. It's a good day for gardening.
UBAA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - This is the day you've been waiting for. You snolJid
fin811y have tin)e to catch up on your Cor-..
i-espondence or paperwork . .Clear up
those bills that need attending to.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)- Allhough
you won't be inclined to be unfair or take
advantage of others: you are . likely to
profit nicely from any financial negotlatiOI1.S. DOn't put off handling these affairs
now.
.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - It is
important you do not lei slip from your
hands anything that Is personally important to you. ThoSe things you handle
yourself Will be the most successful.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - A dif·
ficull situation can be lessoned considerably if you allow the solution to appear to
be the idea of whOO\Ier had his or her
nose out of whack. It's a small thing .
. AQUARIU S pan. 20-Feb. 19) - Before
getting Involved in anything new that
might require a friend's help, make certain this person is agreeable. Even if you
believe he or she w.ill be, it's polite to ask
first.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - A goal
you thought was Impossible to reach Can
be attained. It's a good thing you -didn't
drop the project, because It'll be all that
you had hoped It would be.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Do not discount your thinking on any important
Issue. Your mind is keen, and your rea- ·
soning abilities are sharp. It's an excel·
lent day for learning something you con·
sider difficult.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Teaming
up with another for a common goal looks
promising for you. Try to play a leading
role, rather than a SlJbordlnate one.
Chances are you'll be the bost one tor
the part.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -You'll be
mOat fortunate In sltlJatlons that require a
collective effort. You're flJIIy prepared to
be part of a working unit that wantS nothIng more than to contribute to a a~cceaa-

1CELEBRITY

CIPHER

· by Luis Campos .

Cehbty C1plier ~ograms are created lfom quctatoos by f&lt;~mous people, past aM p-8Sirll
Each l~er 1n thec1plier Slaf\ds lor o\V10ther

Today's clue: Mequals G

" J
EG

BPIG
PI

FCJL

NJL

ZBPSG
XAD

CAKPI

•

XPMEZI
J

ZA . BPL,

XAAC

FAIIPTCG

BEA

EJI

TKZ
LA

YGXGJZ. "

C'JNAKD

PA~VIOUS SOLUTION - "Some guys are ~wardly outgoing." - Ralph Kiner
'Why buy good luggage? You only use it when you !raveL· -Yog1Be"a

,::!:t~~' S©lt~1A-LGt-~Se
.
. 0 Rtcrrange !etten or .the
- - - - - - fdllld by tl.IY R. 10tl.AN

::::

four scromblod words bolcw to form four Jimpfe wordt

D IPK AN

I II

I

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I

I~

H I\ B C

·1 I I 1'

l

T 1i'• t',,1 I .N

I 1I I
5

G

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0

.•.I .
N

I

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"A il ch iiJhood,'' sighed the
ov1rwdgh: W\llnan.

''That's tile

time of li fe wh en all rou hav~

10 do

w lose wc:itht is -~- · a ·

~,.,
.
:
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.
J
:
,
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-L-~.L..J__J._-' you dl!velop from 1tP.p No. 3 beloW.

____..

___ _

C\ VN5CP/•.M8l[ fO;:
~ At.t ~.v~'rR ·

. SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS ' - '· :; ., Q7
Tiglus- Exult - Hover - Kn orty - TRUll!
"You should not mi ud th.e J;,,, people "II about you," laughed

tbb old gent loa younger man. "lust he ihankful they don't tell the
TRU11I."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

,.
'

ful effort.

SOUPTO NUTZ

Deliver ResuiT!e in person to

1900 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
40 I K Benefit Plan

MY ~018 usep 1b Sf1o/
'r; ~Siil! s were FiSieS, rb
casT Me

a NeT.:

I: SllLL Dc•iT kNo-U
l1\8'r ~ 01.0 SIT l&lt;liiS

l!lu&lt;iNG aB:«JT:.

Health/Life Insurance
Generous Pay Plans
Clean Work Environmem

SMITH SUPERSTORE
Chevrolet-Buick-Pontiac

1900 Eastern Avenue , Gallipolis

,.

I

�Tuesda~June26,2007

Tuesday, June 26, 2007
ALLEY COP

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS
3Bd house,138 Lincoln Hill 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
S400,Catl 614-491·4850 for tor Rent, Meigs Courty, In

Phillip
Alder

EllmView
Apartments

Exercise bike, table lamp, Ill- AKC Yorkle puppies, 2 94 Ford Tempo, 4DR, blue,
ing cabinet, set of china for males 1()wt(s old $900 each, AC, tinted windOws, spoiler,
llppNcation. No pets, Dep. town. No Pets. Deposit
12, set of crystal goblets, set 3 female Swks old, $800 front wheel drive, rims,
__
. - ·- -- -Required, (740)992-5174 or
of Chrlatmas dishes for 12, each ~ 2 males $700 each, 2 exCellent gas · mileage
-5400
•
2&amp;3
bedroom
apartments
(740)441 -011 0.
mallOglrt( dresser wlmlrror, lem~e 6wks old, $900 each, $2000. 740-645-6474 days,
. Attention!
•Central heat &amp; AJC
double bed w/mettress full very small, 1 male 6wks okl 740-256-1020 nlghta.
Local company offeri ng ~NO 1 and 2 bedroom apart· • Washerld!yer hookup
size, swivel office chair, $900, veryamajl, shots &amp; vet 1m~""'::""...~-.,
DOWN PAYMENr pro· ments. furnished and untur• Tenant pays electrtc
wooden glider w/cushlon, &lt;;:hecked 3()4..895-3926
TRuacs
grams tor you to buy your nished, af}d houses in
big manS rocker recliner.
FOR SuE
(304)882·3017
Pomeroy and Middleport,
home instead ol rent1ng.
book sh elves, computer CKC Tov Rat Terriers~ Ct'Kx: 1._-llliiiiiiiiio-rl
Johnson's Tree
~ 100% financing
secunty deposit required, no
tabfe, desk · &amp; chair, 1 &amp; White, tst shots, tails
04
Ford
Ranger
XLT.
extendService
~~~:~han perfect .cred~ c:P•:::•s:__:_74=0=·99:.:2:.-22:::_:_1:.8·_ _
_ •
mahogany nign stand, all in dOcked. Asking $250. 379ad
cab,
4x4,
Standard,
~
very good condilioo, 740- :_95:__1:_
5:_or'-64'-5-ti85'----7--• Payment could be the 1 Bedroom Apt. very private
.
8XC :
cond.
$13,500
Tot~•l'rllll•ltlulll!a• . . . .
245·5633
same as ren1.
all utilities included. plus
Purebred Toy Poo&lt;le pup- (304)675-8893 aHer 5pm
IM&amp;ftd•fNI ~
Mortgage
Locators. Satellite TV &amp; OVO recorder - - - ' - - -- - - - ------~~ pies, CKC, vet checked; tails
740-44,.....,
·
Mollohan Furniture. Great
-..~~
ovod
(740)367-0000
304-674-0042
Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave ,
Ooc;(ed, dewl,ifl:lws rem
, 2000 Dodge pickup, 112 ton,
"k:llM•-• Own;a
for save
a Great
shots&amp; &amp; wormed,
Good
Condition. Call
Fo nt
BA 2 bedrooms, living room. Gallipolis, Upstairs,
1 selection
Drive 8 little,
a lot!price.
202 blk
.
.. &amp;we
F have
.
1
1
r re or Of sae 2
k11 he 1 bath
I Bedroom. No Pets, All utili·
.
apricot, M
• pnce (740)441-1110
Nice Remodeled Home 1n
c n,
· apa. p ..en
Clark ·Chapel Rd. Bidwell, Males $300, Females $350, - - - - - - - have central air. Furnished lies paid, (740)446-9523
OH 17'""""~173
lown, No Pets. Renovated. with couch, Chairs, washer,
· ~~
(740)992-7007
2000 T,...•
""7 " ... Taooma, Ext
All . new carpel. Call dryer. stove. microwave. Grac:tous Living 1 and 2
~
-MDIOIANDISE
'
Gab, Auto. 4x4. 4cyl., 88,000
(740)446·7425
Bedroom Apts. at Villano
miles, New tires; 1994
beds. d1nnmg lable and
-,
R ~·
Sid '
HUD HOMES! 4bd only chaus $400 depOsi t. S4 50 a Manor and Riverside Apts. in
;,,.;..;;;;;;;;;;.._.;.,.;;;.._, Toyota Ext Cab. 4cvl., Auto,
00 Jng,
mg,
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
$155/mo., 3bd S1811mo monlh call 304-882-2523 Middleport, from $327 to
0
F.·n·l
Air, Runs Groat, $1500, Call
Soffit, Decks,
•n·992-5064.- Equal $99$2
For ·~a
ld hJto
~·
after 5pm, (740)245-5946,
Doors, ""
_.
740-446-0007 Toll Free ,877-669-0007
Mora 1·4bd home's avail- leave a message and num· $592- 7'tV
100Batteries
$30Qea1IO'n. ..... ~
nmuows,
Housmg
·
0 pportuMy.
· Th 16
' 250+ -~
· . THE
+ · BAT-' -,
Lw--"""'iiliii..-iiii
"~
iiii";,..,.l oell (740)645-3743.
Electric, p•rumbing,
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs @ SO-b ber 11 not at home
$4 .QOe~
Fot- listings 1·800·559·4109 =~===--- institution is an · EqlJal TERY TERMINAL 1-900·
FORS~~ ~
Drywall,
Wise Concrete
.: F144.
3 Br .$395 M plus Ut..Pius Opportunity Provider and 796-6797
0% Financi ng- 36 Mos.
~
Remodeling, Room
Dep.. av. 1st of M. 3rd St. Employer.
- - -- - -- - available now on John
A..Jditions
All type s of concrete
lnPomeroy Houseforrent!3 Racioe. 740·247·4292.
- - - -- - - - 2003 Exiss 3 Horse Deere ZTrak ZeroTuma&amp;
v
Owner· Rick Wise
Bd.,2 bath. newly remod· 4
Honeysuckle
Hills Goosenec:X Trailer, Excellent 5.99% Fixed Rate on Jotln 04 Nissan XTerra 49000
Local Contractor
740-992-5929
eled, IolBI electnc. 740·843- RM &amp; Bath. slove ,fridge. Apartments now aooepting oond. Ca11304-576-2201_ ·Deere Gator's Carmichael miles. $10900. 740-256740-367.0544
5264.
lJ!ilities paid, upstairs. 46 applications lor 1. and 2BR
Equipment (740)446-2412. ~16!:11;;.8--"!'"~-...,
Free Estimates
740-416-1698
St
No pets. apis- No rental asSistance - - - -- - - "
7 40-367.0536
· Large 4 bedroom house tn Ohve
available at this time. Rent 22 auto rille, $125: good John Deer 5500 4WD, 73
r.. 4x4
S
~==:;:;:;;:;::=~ ~=;;:;;;;;;;~====
Pomeroy, very clean. newly 5450/mon th. 446-3945
starts 3t $310 month. Equal metal detector, $125; 1000 HP. cab, air, 540 loader, L--•'•'ORiiiiiiiM.EiOii-.,J
remodeled, new ca binets,
k... • ...a..-1 manure forks round '
Housing
OpportlJnity. channel mobile or base L.OUVW
•
•
new carpal, (740)949-2303
scanner. $175: (304)882- balo lork, very good cond. 03 Dodge Dakota SXT 4x4 ,
17401446_3344 .
3418 1eave message
740-256-J;864
59000 miies, e•collenr conMOI!n.E HU!Ill!i
r
~
l!ll
Middleport,
Beech
St
,
2
br.
dition. $10900. 388-8125
FOR h--vr
Seamless Gutters
.. furnished apartment, utilities For Sale- hard maple fire· Kiefer Built· Valley-Bison· - - - - - - - Horse
and
livestock 91 Chevy Ext cab 4X4, Roofing, Siding, Gutters
paid,
depos~
&amp;
references,
wood,
(740)99~
·
5326
1 br Trailer in Letart.
lGrellert- k D Loadmax&amp;- excellent truck for tne year.
Insured &amp; Bonded
no pets, (740)992-0165
Complete flJrnished , utilities
A
HIDDEN
TREASURE,
!
'
--JET
paid $350 mooth (304)862·
'
umps,
_
dean but has. some·
Utility· Aluma
Alummum
56-6 rust,
,.
lalJret
Commons Middleport, North 4th Ave., 2
AERATION MOTORS
1 740 2
160
2858
Trailers· B&amp;W Gooseneck .,ru.,ns,..g;.re_•_·~----.
Apartments. Largest in tile br. furnished apartmen t, Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
VAN'i
14X60 . HUD, 2 bd. room . 1 area! Beautjfully renovated deposit &amp; references, no Stock. Call ~on Evans, 1· Hitches- Trailer Parts.
Carmichael
Trailers.
FOR
SM.E
bath. Air, electricity. Water. throughout including brand pets. (740)992.0165
800-537-9528.
(740)446-2412
~
trash, &amp; sewer included. No new kitchen and bath. -----~-- - - - - - - - pets. $325, dep. $325. 740- Starting al $405. Call today! Moder n I BA Apt Call 446- NEW AND USED STEEL Massey Ferguson 150 95 Plymouth van, air, auto V&amp;
992-5639.
(304)273·3344
3736
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Tractor
with
loader, 6, $1400 OBO. 740·258- *Prompt and Quality
'--------''-'----- - - Apartment ava11able now
For - CollCfete,
Angle, · International 574, 165
Work
161180 Trailer, -_3br, 2"'"'
......, Riverbend Apts_ New Haven New 2BR apartments. Ch anne 1, Fl a1 Bar, Sl ee 1 "asse
m
Y Ferguson , 264
lOcated on 15 acres in Pl.
Washer/dryer
hookup, Grating
For
Drains, International, 9"! Ford,
•Reasonable Rates
Pleasant,
$550/monlh, WV. Now accepting applica· stove/refrigerator included.
(740)286-£522
*Insured
$550/depos~ 740 _41 6- 3346 lions lor Hud-Subsklized, Also, units 011 SR. I60. Pets Driveways &amp; Walkways; L&amp;L
www.~~~~Htay.one Bedroom Apts. Utilities Welcome! {740)441..0194.
Scrap Metals Open Monday, New Idea Manure Spreader, 1994 Honda 300 . Founrax, •Experienced
2 Br . AJC. Very nica, included. Based on 30% of
T~esday, Wednesday &amp; Ground Driven, GoO&lt;f 2WO, Great Shape, $1800; References Available!
Johnson Mobile Home Pari&lt;. adjusted lncomEt.
Call Tara
Townhouse Fnday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed Condition {740)441 -1110
2004 Kawasaki KX100, 2
Call Gary Stanley @
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 (304)882-3121 al'ltilable for Apartments, Very Spacious, ~~~'0;. :~~ &amp;
stroke, Excellent Shape,
740-742-2293
I.JvooocK
$1400. Call after 5pm
2 BR, Big yard, Storage Senior and ~isabled Pe~le. 2 B.edrooms, CIA, 1 112
1 (7401245-5946,
buikling, $325/mo plus $22&amp; Equal Houstng Opportumty Bath, AduH Pool &amp; Bally Pol
B '
30 40 10'
cell Pleuse leave messa e
.Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
e
arn
x x
(740)645-3743.
deposit. Renter pays all utili· Apartment for rent, 1·2
Delivered &amp; Erected $8,595 Donke s-Siemale, wh•'le
1
ties. (740)256·6202
Bdrm., remod9ed, new car- No Pets, Lease Plus plus Sales Tax. Call 6
Y
.
YOUNG ' S
3 BR, i 4x70, Addaville pet', Glove &amp; frig .. water. Security Deposit Required, (937)718-1471 www.nation· male. Call 740-256-9247 or 2001 Kawasaki . Elimina~or
'de""'eb
740·256-6504
125, garage kept, m1nt
·School district. 740·367- sewer, trash pd . Middleport. (740)446-3481 .
WI f"V' arns.com
d
.
$
St: At. 7, Tuppers Plains, OH
$425 00 N0
I
AI
u ·y &amp;
con ., 682 m•les, 2000,
7762 or 367-7272
· ·
pe s.
e · Twin Rivers Tower is acceptIli\GRAJN
(740)949-1 006
_
reqlJired. 740-843-5264.
ing epplications for waiting
PErs
. Room Addttlona 6
1
Beautiful River · View in
Ae..-lng
FOR SM.E
2005
H.D.SoH
Tail
custom
t&lt;anauQa· Ideal tor 1 or 2 Beautilul Am•,
t'UIO at Jld&lt;JOn list for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
1
·estates. 52 Westwood apartment,for
the
Livestock Feed, shelled corn maroon
w/embossed
Service Auto Repair
people, references, No pets.
$5 20/50 lb &amp; ho
h
Eioctrlcal I Plumbing
Loc. 5 mi. lrom Gavin. Drive, from $365 to $560. elderly/dislibled can 675· AKC Boston Terrier Pups. 7
.
.
rse crunc flames,1 of 200 made.800
Roollag I Gurtoro
Oil Change, Tune-Up, Engine
(7401441 -0 181
740·446·2568.
Equal 6679
Equal
Housing wksold, both mate. Parents $7.~50 lb., &amp; more. miles since
new,prlce
VInyl Siding &amp; PlinUng
Pttto 1nd Porch Dlcka
Housing OpportlJnity. This Opportunity
on prem. with pedigree, vet ~ $21,500, call for detaits·740·
Diagnostics, Full Brake Service, Air
WVG38725
Mobile homes for rent, institution is an Equal
SPACE
chkd, shots, wormed. 740- - - - 949-2217.
Conditioning Recharge &amp; Repair,
~~~~:;.~~ea, no pets, ~~~~;~~ity Provider and
FOR RF.Nr
. 388-9325
2003 Bolens Lawn Tractor, rii:jj
· ~llo~K.;,TS""!'&amp;-M"'!"OI'Oil'i-...,1 V.C YOUNG Ill
9CJ2
u2
1
'J
~
;
45· cut, used 2 years,
FOR
Alignment, Cl!stom Exhaust
f'romr rr y 0 111 1
·"1111\IENTS
CONVEN1ENTLY LOCAT,• Mobile Home space in Rio AKC female Boston Tarrier
JU"n
Rocky Hupp-Owner
J•R Bissell, Managtr
1
I I' l l c L •r II xp r 'lr •
mR n-ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
sale. 1st740
shots
&amp;
:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j=:;==~~~::;
rv
....,,
Grande. Will take up to puppiesd for$"OO
88 Wellcraft 20ft V-8 350
388
Townhouse
apartments, 16,xBO. 446·3617
worme
' .
. . ,.
'li!F;;;;;;~,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Mercruiser, tandem axle
8743
3 Rms &amp; bath. WID hookup, and/or small 740
houses FOR - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - AIJI'OS
trailer w/llrakes, good cond..
Mushroom Compost
1 1111
clean. No pets. 446-1 519
RENT. Call 1 144 •
Prime commercial space for AKC Mini Pinscher puppies,
H&gt;R SALE
740-256-6160
·
$35 A Scoop
lor application &amp; inlormation. rent al SpringvaUay Plaza. red, choo., bl: AKC Mini L.-..itlliliiiiillii-.,J - - - - - - - T-Post6ft $3.29
~C,jlall~64;,;;,5-;;,21~9~2._ _ __, Dauschund puppies, br. 03 'Ford Taurus, 54,000 89 Ba~iner 27ft. Now V-8 • Vinyl Siding
Wide Variety of
:;;
T:;;
ha; n; k;' ;;;m
WANfiD
dapple, tj, dapple, bf; AKC miles. $5900 080.740-256- 351 OMC Eng. Frklge, • Replacement
Sheltie .puppies (2 males) 1618
stove, bathroo m/shower. · Windows
Lawn Seed,
10 RENT
L,---l.iiiiii;...,J
slw: AKC Standard Poodle - - - -- - - - Sleeps 4-6, tandem exle
• New Homes
Fertilizer and
puppies, bL, cr., apr.; all vet 03 Subaru Legacy, 74000 trailer wlbrakas. great • Roofing
' Garages .
Showmaster Sllow
LAN DOWNER S-NEED checked cal) for prices, miles, 30mpg, sunroof, shape. 740-2~160
•Decks
, Complete
EXTRA FARM INCOME? (7401696 _1085
spoiler, excellent oondtion. - - - - - -- - •Garages
We ha"' responsitjesports- - - - - - - - - $13000. 388-9305 Llt.1
93 Marada 21H. 4.3 V-6 • Pole Buildings
Remodeling
Sha d e Ri ver
menlookingtoleasehunting _AKC Reg Yorkie { F) 11
M~rcruiser, tandem axle
~JIA
properly in lhis area. weeks old. Shots and 10 to 15 small cars for sale. trailer wlbrakes, great condi· • Room AddHions
,.....
•
Ag Service
Midwest Trophy Leases Inc. wormed. Call 740·339·3600 Cavaliers, Escorts, Neons, tion. 740256·6160
Owner:
"-I . I{ l . (304)532-6015 or 1-800- -----~-- etc. Gas Savers! 740-446- - - - - - - -Jamas Keeaae It
Stop&amp; Compare
( IH -. 11 ·1

rl e

North

fiS
I

0:.:!:'1

-·-r.-

L-.:"::.-::::.:-=:"'::-:......1

r

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

I

• QJ 5
• J986 3
West
East
• J 975 3!
• Q 10
" 86S
" 7!

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

+

rfamiJ1J C·tfNM•

South

llftwod blllle&amp;ry Aid F.III'IIHure

i '

r

i

r•

i

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

'

-Ga-

I

I

r-------,
J&amp;L

The family
joseph Kirby
Sr. would like
to thank
everyone that
sent food,
cards, and
flowers to our
family during this time of loss.
Your thoughts and prayers are
greatly appreciatell.
Josephine, Joe Jr. &amp;
Stephanie Kirby

Construction

r

. w~Ars T~AT

I&gt;IPN'T YOll
n£.L M~ TO

fiSH I&gt;OING
/

liP

T~~llE1.

Sf:NP

'

fO~

A

PIANO
TUNA?

698·1073
----::----Responsible TN hlJr\ter look·
ing lo lease, your land or
farm tor hunting. Please call
423-748·7045 or email
rdavis@MUSFIBER.com

AKC Reg. Beagle Puppies
304-576-2779
--,--~----AKC
Registered
Weimaraner puppies. 3
Female and 3 Males. Ready
on 6/30. $350. 304-5933889

72 7

~::___:_8 _ _ _ _ __

Pro Angler Fishing Kayak
742-2332
1991 Ford Explorer XLT, 9" with liborglass paddle, $750 .__..;,;,;;,;;.;.;,;.._ _.
Lift, 33~ tires, nerl bars, value, sell for $500· new!
"' I 1(\ J( I ..,
148,000 miles. Auto, PW, (7401441-1971 9-5 M·F
PL, $~000 (740)339·2070
C
&amp;
AMPmiS
1995 Chevy Lumina, runs
MOIOR Ho~
great 446-9370

i

1993 24ft, 5th Wheel
BASEMENT
Camper, Good Condition,
WATERPROOFING
$4500. (7401379-2513.
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur2006 25ft Layton by nished. Established 1975.
Skyline, tag-a-long, sleeps Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446- 8, fully self contaim:d, 0870, Rogers Basement
18.500 firm 304-675-5842 Waterproofing.

Hotm!OIJ&gt;

Goooo .

GE Electric Range, GOCKI
Condition, Clean, {740)441·
1110

r

BLIC
NOTI

I

97 Hitchhiker Di6COvery 34
11211, 5th wh eel camper
made by NU-WA. 1 Doubl e
slide and 1 single slide plus
exrras that will go with thiS
unit. Excellent shape. Asklng
$16,500. Call after 6pm 740208-0507 or 256· 1243

DIDJA HEAR 'BOUT
SHE DOES,
SME 1
MABEL AN' CLEM ? J,...~~l,-L, I'LL HAVE YOU
LOWEEZY SMIF
KNOW ...
TOLD ME-r-----,~
SME KNOWS
EVER'IHIN' !!

WUZ ME WHO MADE
UP THAT STORY 'BOUT
MABEL AN' CLEM !!

IT

THE BORN LOSER

'l AA\~ Ill£ WEA\1-l.E:.I!:. ~~
~- NJ-1'\' ~

\':&gt; li:NK

'feM· ROU~t&gt;!

'KNow W~T'\'fl-E.I&gt;\FFERE~i"' .
15 ~tit£ &amp;-1'tJEHI51J~~AAt&gt;

'IN

~Utl\fo\ERr '1'1-l.E. MIK \~

"''

W"-Rf.\£it!

'\'1-\1:-0\1-\a~~~?

NOTICE TO CONTRAC· aforesaid
Meigs
TORS
C o
u n
t y
Sealed proposals lor Commissioners. Bid
the Pomeroy Dlslress Bonds shall be accom·
Clearance
Project, panled by Proof of
Meigs Counly, Ohio Aulhorily ollhe ·onlcial
wlil be received by lhe or agent signing lhe
Meigs
Counly bond.
.
1
Commissioners at lhe Bids shail be sealed
Meigs
Courthouse, and marked as Bid lor
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Pomeroy
Distreas
unlll
1:00
•p .m. Sidewalk Replacement
Thursday, July 5, 2007 pmjact and .mailed or
and lhen at 1:t5 P_M,, de!lveredlo:
al said o.Hice opened Meigs
County
and read aloud for the Commissioners
Courthouse
following:
This Is a Prevailing Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Wage project
Attention of bidders Is
See specifications in called to ail of. the
.
bid pa ckel
requiremenls
con·
SpecHicatlons, and bid tained in lhls bid packforms may be secured at, pertlcuiariy lo the
at lhe office of Meigs Fodera!
Labor
C
o
u n 1 y Slandards Provisions
C om m Iss I one r s , and
Davls·Bacon
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Wages, various lnsurOhio
45769 Phone ance
requlremenls,
740·992-2895.
· various equal opportu·
A deposH of 0 dollars nlty provisions, and
. will be required for lhe requiremenl lor a
each set of plans and payment bond and perapec!l!catlons, check formahce bond lor
made payable lo· . The t 00% of lhe contraol
lull .amount will be price. No bidder may
returned within lhlrty withdraw his bid within
(30) days ·Iller recelpl thirty (30) days altar
of bids.
the actual date of the
Each bid muat be opening thereof. The
accompanied by either Meigs . . County
a bid bond in an Com m ta sl onere
amount of 100% of the resarve lhe right to
bid amount with a rejocl any or ail bide.
eurely aallafactory to'. Mlck
Davenport,
lhe . aloreoeld Meigs Presldenl
C o
u n . I
y Meigs
County
Commleelonero or by Commissioners
certllled
check, (8) 21 , 26, 29
cuhiers Check, or let·
ter of credit upon a eo!vent bank ln. the
amount of no1 lese
than t 0% of lhe bid
11.:. &amp;,f;,o,
amount in favor of the .
IIIII' r• . . - , . .

"-MIL
v

W~r:r!,

BIG NATE
l:S THERE A"'Y SOllND
SWE~ER THAl-l A
SCJ-iOOL BELL IN
SUM MElt.~

·

·- - - - - - Public Notice
Columbia Township
Trustees will hold a
budget hearing at the
regular maellng Ju:y·s,
2007 at the fire station.
Mary Wingo,
Fiscal Officer
(740) 698-6204
(61 26
Public Notice
-------NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Seturday,
June 30, 2007 st 10:00
a.m.; a public aa!e will
be held at 211
Second St., Po Rll!roy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company ;1 sellhig lor
cash in hand or certilied chock !he foilowlng collateral:
2002
GMC
Envoy
tGKDT13S622170936 ·
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reserves the right 1o
bid at .t his sale, and 1o
withdraw the above
collateral prior 1o sale
Further The Farmer~
Bank 'and Sev!nga
Company reoervse lhe
rightto reject any onll
bide aubmltted.
The above described
.collateral will be eold
•u ls·where Ia" with
no
expressed' or
Implied
· warranty ·
given.
'
For further Jnlormalion, or for an appoint- ,
men! to lnepect co!lateral, prior to ..le date
contact Cyndle, Ken or
Randy at992·2136.
(6) 28 27 28
' '

w.

Based on double occupancy
State room taxes will be applied to
credit card at check-in
Includes llight, hotel accorn- ·
modations, luggage &amp; transfers
Private jet leaves from Charleston,

WV Must be 21

years of age
credit cards, checks, money !
orders and payroll deduction
accepted. No refunds ·
LIMITED SEATS!
To make reservations please

call PVH Community Relations,

--W-iiS." -.\.•U I

We Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Helios Sy'stem

on

SAVINGS

.....

SUNSHINE C.LUB ·
Fl.CCOS,

HELP WANTED
received by local

conservative church
ror part-time nstudent
Ministries Director"

al'allablt. Rt!!iuml!':s
may he sent to
PO BoK45J,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~()lEN

Meigs Co. Holzer
Tobacco PrE)vention
Open House
Wednesday, June

27

1:oo - 4:30 pro

115 W .

Second Street in

Shop
·Ctassifieds!
Help Wanted

Now Accepting Applications
For These Positions
• Service Manager
• Service Advisor
• Auto Technician

. Pomeroy
For rnore

992-2175

Join the Automotive Excellence group at
Smith GM Superstore. Candidate should

TEEN VOLUNTEER
ORIENTATION
for .Holzer Hospice

28
1:DO pm - 3:00pm

Thursday, June

Holzer Hospice Office

2881

St.

At 160 Gallipolis, OH

Formore info, call

446·5074 or toiHree at
1·800·500·4850. '

IS

IS n.RRIBIE, LU}T£R.,

IT eof.X&gt;

10 WD .

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Froe Elllmll

(304) 675-4340, ext. 1326
Help Wanted

Dm:JGHTS.T~S.

FI~S.. JH£ ~S

Hill's Self
Storage

being

(Youth Dlreclor),
Salary and houn to be
discussed,anvrding to
ahility and time

FORTUNATELY, THAT'S
VE~'( FUNN'&lt; !

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

Help Wanted

Re~me 's

PEANUTS

~ •""""•)~'~:"J..1P!H"""4":...•

~:

have automotive knowledge and abi!ity to
work well with employees and customers.

Manley's
Recycling
..., lliJ riM........

..........
..
......
,..,,,
...........
,......
..
....
..............
. . . . . . . .12:111 ••

PIYIIITW PIICES ,_

We are studying how 1o avoid losers 1n
su~ contracts. There are two common
ways to do this.The first is to ruff a loser
in the shorter trump hand.
Suppose you have a trump suit or 9-8-7
on the board and A-K-0 -J-tO in your
hand. You have five trump iricks for sure.
But if you can ruff a loser on the bOard,
· that gets you up to a siiC1h lrump trick. In
contrast, taking a ruff in your hand does
not generate an extra trick: it consumes
one eX your five winners.
So, you can arrange 1o ruff a loser in
the shorter trump hand, thet will almost
always be1he right line of play. But e"'n
then, you must occasionaJly ba careful
-as in this deaL Agalnsl your four-heart
oonlracl, West leads the spade five: siK,
queen, ace. How would you continue?
You have lour losars: two clubs, one diamond and one spade.
Why one spade? Well, in one of my
classes, a man, seaing that he could ruff
his spade loser on the board, counted
only lhre~ losers. Than he recaled I had
said that when your loser count is not
more than you can afford, immediately
draw trumps - and that is exactly what
~e did. But drawing tha opposing trumps
left dummy without any. When it came
time to ruff the spade lour on \he board,
he could not do it and went down one.
Count all of !hose losers.
At Irick two, cash the spade king. Then,
lead your last spada and ruff if wil~
dummy's heart queen. Do not send a
girl, lhe heart three, to do a woman's job.
After ruffing the spade. draw trumps,
knock out the diamond ace, and daim
10 tricks.

~Astro-

. 446-0007

Get

1

Tunica, Mississippi
THE GRAND CASINO
September 5·7, 2007
$295/person

·~-----. .

Pass
Pass

po .._.s

4 Exercise
place
7 Lltlie pieces
11 Sum lola!
12 Thunder
14 Raucous
diver
15 Moet.of the

earth
16 Run
In neutral
17 Governess
in Slam
18 Space
telescope
20 Rumors, ·
often
22 Nolin lhe
pink
23 Kitchen
pelll
24 Paso
around
27 Defoe
castaway
30 Wresller s

grip
31 Cows'
mouthfuls
32 Vllalily
34 Before
35 Explodes

36 "-cosl
you"

n

BARNEY

a92 1m

!

',.

ROBERT
BISSELL
CIISTIICTIII

Feeds

f'

I,.

Full

Pass

East

Do not send a girl
for the task

·agpp lllftl C£1!111
740-667-3177

North
2•

Opening lead: • 5

SALE

ii~Cia~rd;;;oi;;;T;h;;;a;;;n;;;ks;;;~:;;C:;;a:;;.r:;;d:;;o:l;;

'
''

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Pass
. Pass

••

~=:7:4:0.:6:53:-96:5:7:::: •==~====~~==~~~~
Stanley TreeTrimming

::...=c.:..:=----

West

I"

1

Removal

7 6 4 3

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

H&amp;H
G
.
uttenng

j

•

• A K 10 S
Soulh
4 AK4
" A K J 10 9
+ K 10 9
• 4 2

j

401

A 8 2

• Q7

I

~senec

06-21H17

8 6

" Q. 3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

I
i

r,o

•

1 c;els'

37 Darts away
Answer 10 Previous PUZZle
39 Domineering
40 To dale
4t Happy ohou1
42 Vila!fiuld .
45 Marbles
49 Righi,
on a map
50 Japanese
cllll!
52 Gratn
53 Issue a
summons
54 CQnstanlfy
55 Viclorian,
e.p.
56 Mtx ~ up
57 Wail
13 Letter
38 Oil-white
hanging
algnolf
39 He married
58 CIA agent 19 Egg layer
Baca!l
21 Reoponsl- 41 RaSlaurant
DOWN
freebie
bilily
24 Yon maiden 42 Torso muat Currency
25 - d'oeu·
c!es
2 Moldy
vres
43 Cafe au cheese
26 Obi-Wan
44 Italian wine
3 Thick slice
portrayer
oily
4 Radiator
27 Tea holders 46 Bool porta
covering
28 Decides
47 Legendary
5 Malterhorn 29 Moraye and
marshal
echo
congers
48 Command
6 -de mer 31 Modest
lo Rover
7 Wltd pertlea
home
51 A Gabor
8 Free
33 Wield, as
sister
electrons
oars
9 Coger
35 Ode, e.g. ·
- Kukoc
36 Missouri
tp Break
,neighbor

GARFIELD
[ 'THINK
L-OVE: FINALL-Y

FOUNP ME'!

l'f'!l ..1061' 1'0.0 WINOE:P
'TO RUN ANYMORe

Wednesday, June 27, 2007
By Bernice Bede Oaol
You are likely to be ·associating with
many more enterprising individlJals than
you have in the past. One or two COlJid
tum out to be invaluable by encolJraging
you toward bigger and better things.
CANCER !June 21-July 22) - Engaging
In an activity that is somewhat physically '
challenging, whether It Is work related or
jlJSt for fun, could do you a world of good.
It'll stimulate both You r mind and body.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Although It
might be necessary for you to take a calculated risk In order to improve your
position or standing in the eyes of your
peers, ifll be worth It Be bold, but not
brash.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Home-ori·
ented activities will prove to be the most
gratifying, so if you can, spend time tin·
kering around the house or getting out
into the yard. It's a good day for gardening.
UBAA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - This is the day you've been waiting for. You snolJid
fin811y have tin)e to catch up on your Cor-..
i-espondence or paperwork . .Clear up
those bills that need attending to.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)- Allhough
you won't be inclined to be unfair or take
advantage of others: you are . likely to
profit nicely from any financial negotlatiOI1.S. DOn't put off handling these affairs
now.
.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - It is
important you do not lei slip from your
hands anything that Is personally important to you. ThoSe things you handle
yourself Will be the most successful.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - A dif·
ficull situation can be lessoned considerably if you allow the solution to appear to
be the idea of whOO\Ier had his or her
nose out of whack. It's a small thing .
. AQUARIU S pan. 20-Feb. 19) - Before
getting Involved in anything new that
might require a friend's help, make certain this person is agreeable. Even if you
believe he or she w.ill be, it's polite to ask
first.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - A goal
you thought was Impossible to reach Can
be attained. It's a good thing you -didn't
drop the project, because It'll be all that
you had hoped It would be.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Do not discount your thinking on any important
Issue. Your mind is keen, and your rea- ·
soning abilities are sharp. It's an excel·
lent day for learning something you con·
sider difficult.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Teaming
up with another for a common goal looks
promising for you. Try to play a leading
role, rather than a SlJbordlnate one.
Chances are you'll be the bost one tor
the part.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -You'll be
mOat fortunate In sltlJatlons that require a
collective effort. You're flJIIy prepared to
be part of a working unit that wantS nothIng more than to contribute to a a~cceaa-

1CELEBRITY

CIPHER

· by Luis Campos .

Cehbty C1plier ~ograms are created lfom quctatoos by f&lt;~mous people, past aM p-8Sirll
Each l~er 1n thec1plier Slaf\ds lor o\V10ther

Today's clue: Mequals G

" J
EG

BPIG
PI

FCJL

NJL

ZBPSG
XAD

CAKPI

•

XPMEZI
J

ZA . BPL,

XAAC

FAIIPTCG

BEA

EJI

TKZ
LA

YGXGJZ. "

C'JNAKD

PA~VIOUS SOLUTION - "Some guys are ~wardly outgoing." - Ralph Kiner
'Why buy good luggage? You only use it when you !raveL· -Yog1Be"a

,::!:t~~' S©lt~1A-LGt-~Se
.
. 0 Rtcrrange !etten or .the
- - - - - - fdllld by tl.IY R. 10tl.AN

::::

four scromblod words bolcw to form four Jimpfe wordt

D IPK AN

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H I\ B C

·1 I I 1'

l

T 1i'• t',,1 I .N

I 1I I
5

G

"
0

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N

I

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"A il ch iiJhood,'' sighed the
ov1rwdgh: W\llnan.

''That's tile

time of li fe wh en all rou hav~

10 do

w lose wc:itht is -~- · a ·

~,.,
.
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J
:
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L-Ls:_: -

-L-~.L..J__J._-' you dl!velop from 1tP.p No. 3 beloW.

____..

___ _

C\ VN5CP/•.M8l[ fO;:
~ At.t ~.v~'rR ·

. SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS ' - '· :; ., Q7
Tiglus- Exult - Hover - Kn orty - TRUll!
"You should not mi ud th.e J;,,, people "II about you," laughed

tbb old gent loa younger man. "lust he ihankful they don't tell the
TRU11I."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

,.
'

ful effort.

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Page 86 • the·Daily Sentinel ·

Tuesday, June

www.mydailysentinel.com
•

'

26, 2007

\

Reader's choose
Best ofthe Best, inside
.totb:ty's Sentinel

Want to stop cheating in NASCAR? Send the driver home
.

'

.

BY JENNA FRYER
AP AUTO RACING WRITER

When six crew members were
thrown out of the Daytona 500 for
cheating it was suggested that
NASCAR stan suspending drivers
as pan of the penalty process.
Jimmie Johnson was aghast at
the idea.
·
The defending Nextel Cup
champion said he has no idea what
crew chief Chad Knaus does while
building his race cars. And eve n if
Johnson were privy tu such information, he has no control in how
his Chevrolets are constructed.
Johnson's defense is at the very
core of why ]'1 AS CAR should start
suspending its drivers. Benching
the star of the team would force
him to take responsibility for his
crew.
Nothing else is working.
· Johnson and teammate Jeff

Gordon both showed up in
Sonoma, Calif., with cars that
failed initial inspection, and
NASCAR refused to let them on
the track Friday. But they still
were allowed to race Sunday, and
crew chiefs Knaus and Steve
Letarte were both on site to ~uide
their drivers to decent fimshes.
Gordon finished seventh and
Johnson 17th.
Now they wait and wonder what
fun her punishment NASCAR will
impose . Penalties are tradit ionally
issued on Tuesdays.
"All of us are bluwn away and
we don 't know what's coming
next," Gordon said. "We are at the
mercy of NASCAR and I hope
they are light on us, but who
knows?"
That there's any doubt in what
the penalties will be stems from
decades of inconsistency when it
comes to enforcing the rules and

doling out the punishm.ent.
Cheating has long beert celebrated as a quaint piece of NASCAR
culture that even has its own slogan - "If r,ou ain't cheatin' , you
ain' t try in.'' There's long been a
blurry territory of what is flagrant ,
what is working the margi ns of the
rule book and what is a simple
mistake.
Hendrick Mororspons is using
that defense following this lat est
infraction, with team owner Rick
Hendrick contending his crew
chiefs were working within a
"gray area" of the rule book.
"I don't necessaril y say they
bent the rules - I th tnk they
thought they were workirg inside
an area in which they could,"
Hendrick said. "It's going to be
tough, as we go forward, on
what's intentional and what's accidental and how they handle it, so
you're definitely going to have to

show up with these ·things mea- stiffer penalty because any thing
short of what Earnhardt and Eury
sured up."
Here's the issue the Hendrick received would seem unfair.
t;uys aren 't understanding: There
Problem is, it's probably not
IS no "gray area" anymore.
enough to even dent the Hend.rick
NASCAR is pretty serious about juggernaut.
its new Car of Tomorrow, and has
Even after a 100-point penalty,
made it clear it won 't tolerate any Gordon would still be leading the
alterations in · its design . In fact, Nextel Cup standings by 171
series official s distributed a memo points. Johnson would drop from
before the car dehuted in March third 10 fifth . The monetary fines
that ourlined the penalties teams are irrelevant. and Hendrick
would be subjected to if they were proved last year it can overcome
caught messing with the COT.
the absence of a crew ohief when
So it was no surpri se to anyune, Johnson won t.wice during Knaus'
Hendrick teams mel uded, when
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was docked ·I 00 four:ra ce suspension .
points and crew chief Tony Eury
And, don ' t think for a minute
Jr. was suspended six wee ks and that Knaus and Letarte won't
fined $100,000 when their COT spend their free weekends back
fail ed a May inspection.
at the Hendr.ick compound
The Hendrick teams most likely · mak ing sure their progra·m is
will ge t the same punishment - locked and loaded for when the
althou~h some argue Knaus' past Chase for th e championship
infractions should warrant a much be gins in September.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o I

I:\ IS'\ ol. :;1&gt; . '\o :!: lo

and.the St. Louis Cardinals.
Women have won the
ESPY for Best Team twice:
the Connecticut basketball
team in 1996 and the U.S.
World Cup soccer team in
2000.
There won't be a repeat
in the Best Male and
Female Athlete awards.
Cyclist Lance Armslr!Jng,
who won the men's honor
four consecutive years, has
retired, and golfer Annika
Sorenstam, who won the
women 's title two years in
a row, is not nominated.
· James is pitted against
tennis' Roger Federer, the
NFL's Peyton Manning and
LaDainian Tomlinson and
golf's Tiger Woods in the
men's
category.
The
women 's nominees are the
WNBA's Lisa · Leslie,
Arizona softball's Taryne
Mowatt, golfer Lorena
Ochoa and Tennessee basketball 's Candace Parker.
Woods, who is also nom-

LAS VEGAS (AP) - A neys, Manny Arora, was not
bouncer who was shot and immediately returned.
said his left ankle was bitten
The melee at Minxx
by Adam "Pacman" Jones in Gentleman's Club on NBA
a strip club melee sued the All-Star weekend was
suspended NFL player and sparked after Jones threw
other members of his cash from a plastic trash bag
entourage for civil damages on stage to "make it rain" for
Monday.
dancers as tips, according to
The lawsuit for an unspec- the lawsuit
ified amount was ti led with
When two dancers began
the Clark County District to fight over the cash at about
Court on behalf of Aaron 4:30a.m., Jones grabbed one
Cudworth three days after the by the· hair and punched her
Tennessee Titans cornerback in the face two or three times,
surrendered in Las Vegas on the lawsuit says.
two felony charges of coerCudworth wrapped hi s
cion and posted $20,000 in arms around Jones from
bail.
behind, but let go when the
Facts about the Feb. l9 club manager. was ·esconing
melee and shooting, which the former West Virginia
paralyzed another strip club standout outside. Jones
bouncer and wounded one jumped back on stage, vowother person, were confirmed ing not to leave, . cursing
in charges that the district , Cudwonh and threatening to
attorney filed against Jones kill him; the lawsuit says.
on
Wednesday, ·
said
After Cudworth again tried
Cudworth's lawyer, Richard to restrain Jones, the lawsuit
Schonfeld.
says he was knucked over by
"When they made their til- Jones' 400-pound bodying, it confirmed what I was guard, Roben Reid, 37, of
looking for," Schonfeld said. Compton, Calif. Jones took a
The civil case can proceed swing at Cudworth, who
independently of the criminal restrained Jones, the lawsuit
trial, he said.
says. That's when Jones bit
Jones' Las Vegas attorney, Cudworth on th6 ankle ,
Robert Langford, said he had according to the lawsuit
Fame in 1956.
Jones escaped, and when
The
documentary not seen the lawsuit and
includes rare footage of declined to comment late Cudworth pursued him,
Henderson from private Monday. A message left after Sadia Morrison, 25, of New
collectors and dozen s of business, hours at the Atlanta York, allegedly smashed a
interviews with his former office of one of Jones' attor-. champagne bottle over the
athletes and acquaintances.
Novak and Witek's work
also includes "Ashes to
Glory: The Tragedy and
Triumph of Marshall
Football ,"
University
which .also won an Emmy.
inated in two other categories, holds the records
for the most nom inations
(30) and wins (16) . He is
one of three athletes with a
chance to be honored as the
best in his sport for a third
consecutive year, . joining
Federer and baseball 's
Albert Pujols.
A new award for Best
Finish has been added this
year. And the Best Boxer
award has been renamed
Best Fighter to include
mixed martial arts competitors as well as boxers.
two special awards are
not voted on by fans . The
Arthur Ashe Courage
Award is presented to individuals whose contributions transcend sports. The
new Jimmy V Award for
Perseverance wi II be pre-.
sented to a person whose
perform·ance has ev9ked
emotion and provided
inspiration to the sports
world.

Henderson documentary wins Emmy
HUNTINGTON , W.Va. ketball
at . Marshall
(AP)
Documentary University between 1935
filmmakers
Deborah and 1955, is the win. Novak and John Witek ningest coach in school
have done it again.
history with 358 wins.
The Huntington duo ' s He's credited with inventfilm, "Cam Henderson: A ing basketball ' s zone
Coach's Story,"
was defense and fast break.
awarded an Emmy at the
Henderson was inducted
43rd annual Midwestern · into the Helms Athletic
Regional Emmy Awards Foundation
NAIB
over the weekend.
National Hall of Fame in
Cam Henderson, who 1952 and the West
coached football and bas- Virginia Sports Hall of

bouncer's head, cutting him.
Cudworth finally forced
Jones outside, where he says
Jones threatened to shoot
him and acted as if he was
reaching for a weapon in his
waistband. The lawsuit says
a witness heard Jones tell
another member of his group,
"Let's smoke this fool. "
Later, the lawsuit al.leges
that a member of Jones'
group fired a black semiautomatic handgun five or six
times toward Cudwol1h, hit-·
ring him in the chest and left
arm, causing him permanent
injury. Another . bouncer,
Thomas Urbanski, was shot
in the left hand and the torso,
and was left paralyzed from
the waist down. A female
club patron was wounded in
the head.
Cudworth is suing Jones,
Reid, Morrison and others
for assault, battery, false
imprisonment and intentional
inlliction of emotional distress.
Schonfeld said Cudwor~h
underwent "multiple surgeries" and lost wages as a
result.
Jones, 23, who has been
suspended by the NFL for the
2007 season, is scheduled to
return to Las Vegas on July
23 to face criminal charges
that carry a maximum of 12
years in prison and a $1 0,000
tine if he is convicted.

IAW~A . my&lt;laily~enlnll't

\\ l .ll,l .Sil\' , ,J! ' \1. :!7, :!00'7

;,

BY BETH SERGENT

• Wrestler kills family,
self. See P8ge B1

BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CoM

POMEROY - Have an
idea -for a small busi nesses
but no idea how or where to
begin? .The free services of
Ohio University's Voinovic'h
Center for Leadership and
Public Affairs may help.
Representatives from the
Voinovich Center's Small
Business
Development
Center will be at the Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce ·on Thursday
afternoon for a bi-weekly
workshop to offer free con-

sultation to those wishing to ,
start or expand a small business. The center plans to
visit the chamber office
every two weeks for halfday sessions catered to meet
individual counseling needs
for local entrepreneurs.
Presc heduled appointments are requested by calling locally at 992-5005 or
calling Shawn Mallett, small
business development director at the Voinovich Center
at 740-593-0474. However,
other appointment times are
available to make it convenient for the client.

Since the center is state accounting an d integ rat~d
funded, the services are free technology among other
and include assisting a topics. The point is, the
client with developing a workshops are fashioned to
business plan with the help meet the individual 's need.
of MBA students from OU.
Mallett said off all the
Developing a business plan assistance the Voinovich
is more than just assisting Center does offer it dpes not
with paperwork according provide financial assist~nce
to' Mallett who said with the · but rather the tools to receive
help of the MBA students tinancial assistance. If interand counseling on which est increases, so will the ceomove to make next, a busi- ter's visits to Meigs County
ness plan can be completed which Mallell said he hopes
in a few weeks.
· will eventually expand into a
These workshops can also full day once a week.
focus on everything from
Mallett said in the next
manufacturing, marketing, five years, the economic

Tank
from PageBl

I

his SUV. He subsequently
pleaded guilty to a misdemeimor charge.
Two days after last
December's raid. Willie B.
Posey, Johnson 's bodyguard, was shot and killed ·
in an early morning fight
while he and Johnson were
at a Chicago nightclub.
Johnson was suspended
by the Bears for one game
for being at the club. He
played in the Super Bowl as ·
the
Bears
lost
to
Indianapolis.
In March, Johnson began
his two-month jail stint and
during his time he was visited by numerous teammates
and members of the Bears

Indians
fromPageBl
team, gave up two run s in
the second but then shut
down the A's on two hits
over the next seven innings.
He got Oakland to bounce
, into three double plays, and
at one point he retired 13 in
a row - five on strikeouts.
In June; Sabathia is 3-1
with a 2.18 ERA and he has
pitched nine innings three
times.
Garko's two-run double
over Kotsay 's head in center
put the Indians ahead 3-2 in
the fourth.
With two outs, Hafner
singled to center . and
Peralta walked before
Garko, batting .. 118 since
June I, delivered in the
clutch for the Indians; who ·
scored just six runs while
dropping two of three in
Washington last weekend.

Gaudin gave up three
runs and six hits over six
innings.
.
Hafner's first homer in
68 at-bats since May 31
brought the Indians to 2-1
in the second.
Hafner, who has been in
a prolonged slump, drove a
1-2 pitch to right for his
lith homer. The Indians
haven't been getting their
customary production from
the hard-hitting designated
hitter, who insists he has
not been distracted by having contract talks broken
off between his agent and
the club.
Hafner can become a free
agent after next season.
The A's scored two run s
in the second off Sabathia,
who had some bad luck
and bounces in the inning.
Dan Johnson 's RBI
groundout made it 1-0 and
Kot say followed with a
one-out
RBI · single.
Sabathia
got
Jason
Kendall to ground into

that Tank had more than
thought about the time he
did in prison or just every
other compromising situation that he has been in, not
to j~apardize that any further," Vasher said. "It's 'di sheartening for something
like that to happen.''
· Last month, Johnson
pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor weapons charge
stemming
from
the
December raid as pan of a
deal with prosecutors that
· kept him from serving more
time in jail. He was ordered
to serve 45 days, which he
served concurrently with
the. sentence for violating
his probation.
Johnson was chosen by
the Bears in the second
round .of'the 2004 draft out
of Washington . He played
in 46 games, starting 15.
what looked to be a potential double play, but second
baseman
Josh
· B.arfield couldn ' t come up
with it.
Sabathia later took a hard
grounder off the foot before
finally retiring the A's after
28 pitches in the second.
Notes: Despite a strong
first three months , the
Indians are not drawing
well at home. They
entered Monday ' s game
averaging just 23,778 fans
per home game, the thirdworst a1tendance in the
AL. ... Oakland RHP Rich
Harden, building up arm
strength after being on the
DL for nine weeks, struck .
out two in a hitless inning
of relief.... Hafner came
in batting only .213 (40for-188) si nce going 4-for4 on April 23 ... Kot say
has always feasted on
Indians pitching. He 's batting .4 15 (39-for-94) in hi s
career against Cleveland.

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BY

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

• Skyline Speedway ·
winner. See Page A5
• Pomeroy Mayor's
Court. See Page A2
• Mick:llep6rt student
wins awatd ~WU.
See Page A3
• Family Medicine.
See Page A5
• Pomeroy class has
reunion. See Page AS
• GCC spring graduates.
See Page A6

.

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

Joy KOCMOUO

JKOCMOUD@MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Page AS
• Virginia Meeker, 98

WEATIIER

1228/t.IONTH'

DOWN MY!ftiT

growth precipitated by larger corporation planning to
move into Meigs County
will also present an opportunity for the small business
owner.
"Thi s will be a large
influx from an income
standjJoint and people need
a place to spend their
money," Mallett said.
Tentative Meigs County
. workshop dates·. at the
chamber office include July
5, morning; July 19, afternoon; Aug. 2, mornin g;
Aug. 16, afternoon; Aug.
30, morning. .

Family,
friends honor
memory of
Bob Evans

.

staff.
"I went to go .see him a
couple of times when he
was there. As far as the situation now, it's very unfortunate," defensive back
Nathan Vasher said.
"Tank is one of my closest friends here in Chicago.
It's really hard to see him go
through some of the things
that he has. But I think
sometimes the Bears were
kind of pushed into a corner
because we had been able to
support him throughout this
whole ordeal. I think you
have to be accountable for
your actions and the
Chicago Bears had to do
what was needed."
Vasher said he was surprised that Johnson would
be involved in another incident.
"I was really convinced

,.,,,

Free workshops 011 starting, improving small businesses

SPORTS

Colts lead with 6 ESPY nominations Vegas bouncer sues 'Pacman' over melee
NEW YORK (AP) The Super Bowl champion
Indianapolis Colts lead the
way with six ESPY nominations thi s year.
ESPN announced · the
nominees Monday morning. Fans will vote for the
winners in 38 categories,
and the awards show airs
July 15 from Hollywood's
Kodak Theatre.
Cleveland Cavaliers star
LeBron James, who will
co-host the event with ABC
lille-night talk show host
Jimmy Kimmel , is nominated in three categories,
including
Best
Male
Athlete.
' The national champion
Tennessee women's basket- ·
ball team has the second
most nominations with
five, including Best Team.
The other Best Team
nominees . are the Florida
men's basketball and foot ball squads, the San
Antonio Spurs, the Colts

· Donations picking up
for Phil Dirt concert, A6

.

Beth Sergent/ photo .

The band "Beyond the Obvious" will perform at the July 4 celebration at London Pool and this Friday at the Middleport
Pool as part of the Abstinence Builds Character (ABC) summer programs. Pictured (from left) is Darby Gilmore, guitar.
Kastle Balser. vocals, Dusty Eads, vocals 1 Kayle Lawrence, X·Box 360 winner from ABC program, Nick Ingels , bass, lan
Buflington, guitar.
·

London Pool.July 4
BY BETH SER~ENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE -The London Pool is
recognizing its 30th anniversary with a
special July 4 celebration complete
with games, music, prizes and free
lunches for children.
The Abstinence Builds Character
(ABC) program is organizing the all
day event w~ich beings at noon and
ends at4 p.m. on July 4 at the London
Pool and Syracuse Municipal Park.
The schedule of events is as follows: Noon · 12:30 p.m., cornhole
tournament begins and continues all
day; 12:45 p.m., team races for crab
walk, three-legged race, sack race,
spoon and marble walk; I :45 p.m.,

bration

water balloon toss and water balloon
volleyball;· 2 p.m ., limbo and hula
hoop contest; 2:30p.m. , softball toss,
basketball free throw competition ,
football toss; 3 p.m., splash. contest
with categories of biggest, smallest,
most creative jump and furthest
jump; 3:45 p.m., winners are
announced and prizes awarded.
· Winners must be present to win.
Boxed lunches are provided for all
children regardl ess · of income
Monday-Friday at the London Pool by
the Appalachian Nutrition Network
and will be provided on Ju ly 4. Each
week, children who participate in the
ABC games and programs are entered
into prize drawings and July 4 is no
different. Children who attend on July

4 will ·be eligible to win this week's
prizes which is a boy and girl bicycle
given away on Friday. The ABC program has already• given away an XBox 360 and an Apple iPod.
·
The local band "Beyo nd the
Obvious" will also be performing at
the July 4 celebration in the a ~ternoon.
The ABC program is funded through
the Meigs County Depanment of Job
and Family Services and has free summer programs at God 's NET,
Middleport
Pool ,
Southern
Elementary, Rutland Civic Center and
Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
With the exceptions of the Middleport
and Syracuse locations, the remaining ·
ABC program si tes in the county will
be closed for the holiday.

RIO GRANDE- Family
man, philanthropist, farmer,.
world traveler and entrepreneur Bob Evans was fondly
remembered for his sense of
humor and his conservation
efforts during funeral services Tuesday at Lyne
Center.
Close friends and family
members shared songs,
smiles, and stories in a celebration of of the life of Evans,
who df~i:1 :Jb'iie'21 at age 89:
Following the military
salute by the Gallia County'
·veteran service organizations, those in attendance
were greeted by Pastor John
Jackson, formerly of New
Life Lutheran Church.
Evans'
grandson,
Anthony Donskov, said that
Evans' relationship with his
wife , Jewell, served as a
great example for him
growing up.
Donksov expressed much ·
admiration for his grandfather before playing a special
song he composed in
Evans' memory titled
''Cowboys Don't Cry.''
"People who knew my
grandfather . really well,
would know that he could
relate to this song," said
Donksov. "He shared so
many things with so many
people. His time, resources,
money, and love. The greatest gift my grandfather has
ever given me is my mother."
Randy Reed, a friend of
Evans for over 50 years,
chose to focus on the lighter
side of the lege nd 's life. He
remembered Evans as a
funny, generous, warm,
kind person with whom he
m\d his wife had traveled
extensively.
Please see Evans, AS

Blood donors sought to Wilson inundated with passport problems
J,
address summer shortage
Bv BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
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Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

REED

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
Annie's Mailbox

J.

door activities and summer
WASHI!)IGTON, D.C. vacations. About 20 percent
U.S.
Rep. Charlie Wilson,
of blood donations in the D-Bridgepon,
said hi s casePOMEROY
Two Greater Alleghenies Region
workers
are
. receiving
upcoming bloodmobiles in come from drives at high
between
I
0
and
20 calls
the community will allow schools, colleges and unievery
day
for
ass
istance
local residents an opportu- versities, which are closed
nity to address a seasonal in the summer or have with passport applications.
Meigs County Clerk of
blood shortage.
reduced numbers uf faculty,
Courts
Marlene Harrison.
The American Red Cross staff and st.udents during the
who
begins
the process of
bloodmobile will VISit summer months.
passport
applications
for
Racine First Baptist Church
' The Red Cross is offering
coumy
residents,
said
passfrom 11 a.m.. to 5 'p.m. on gifts and a chance to win
Thursday, with donations two tickets to the 2008 port applications have douhelping to earn scholarship Daytona 500. Donors who .bled over this time a year
money for Southern High visit bloodmobiles in June ago, due to increased need .
School students. The blood- wiil receive a "Join the for them and because resi - ·
mobile will be at Middleport Race to Save Lives" .t-shirt, dents indicate they want to
Church of Christ from 1-6 · and those who donate in have one "just in case,'' due
increasing delays.
.
P·~h~~~~ri~~n Red Cross July and August will receive to Mas:;ive
backlogs
at
passa six-pack insulated .cooler
reports a one-day supply or with the "Join the Race to port processing centers have
·less of illl'blood types due to Save Lives" theme. All reportedly derailed hon eythe ty.pical summer shortage
moons and dashed the vacaof donors, blamed on out,
Please see DonorS. AS
tions of some American
BY BRIAN

Details on Pa&amp;e A8

B SectiQn
A6

© a0070blo Volley Publlshlnc Co.

11-- - -- - -·-- .. - - - - - --

- - - -- - - --

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I

.

travelers this
summer.
Members of
the 'Easrern
High School
French Club
went so far
as to trave l to
Washington.
Charlie
D.C.
the
Wilson
weekend
before their trip to France tu
sec ure passports for students..
Wilson said hi s staff has
been working to help the
constituents of Ohio's Sixth ·
District battle the log jam
caused by new air travel
restrictions.
Wilson said hi s oftice cannot always work miracles,
but can make a call on behalf
of constituents, Sometimes,
depending on the complexity
of the case, a call is enough
to make a difference.

Wil son wrote -a letter earlier this spring to Sec. of
State Condoleezza Rice
about th e excessive and
fru strating passport delays
his constituents face .
'The State Department
simpl y didn't hire enough
staff fast enough to meet the
spiked demand for passports triggered by a new
security law," Wilson said .
Earlier this week the U.S.
Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) delayed by
six ·months a new bordersecurity requirement that
citizens traveling by car,
boat or cruise ship must pre.sent a passpo11. This move
follows the government
announcement less than two
weeks ago that the rules
requiring passpons of airline passengers would also
Please see Passport. AS

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