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Page Df!

ENTERTAINMENT

·Rene Preval sworn in as
Haiti's new president, A2

"·

'

Is $599 too much for a video game console?J
software given the high price
of the hardware," McNealy
wrote.
Microsoft's Xbox 360 starts
at $299 for a basic model,
with a higher-end model
available for $399 - still .
$100 less thaQ the cheapest
PS3 . And though Nintendo
Co. hasn't released the cost of
its upcoming Wii system, the
company's consoles histori·cally have been less expensive than their rivals.
Sony's PlayStation 2
debuted in 2000 at $299 but
can be bought today for $130
after a rebate.
"All of a sudden the $299
Xbox (360) looks like a bargain," Davison said.
The $499 PtaxStation 3 will
have a 20-gigabyte hard drive
but lacks a memory card slot,
built-in wireless and HDMI,
the favored connection · for
high-definition televisions.
Those features come in the
$599 mo&lt;!el, which includes a
60-gigabyte drive. .
High-price consoles . have
failed before.
In the early 1990s,
Electronic Arts Inc. founder
Trip Hawkins created the
300 Interactive Multiplayer
console. Though packed with
state-of-the-art technology
for the time like a CD-ROM
drive, the unit's $700 price
was more than consumers
were willing to swallow and
it soon failed.
But some experts believe
that's unlikely to happen this
time. With 2 million units
aYailable worldwide at
launch and another 2 million
units by xear's end, PS3
demand still will likt;ly far
outstrip supply.
Tom Russo, editorial director of games for the G4 cable
TV network, said the higher
costs won't deter the hatdcore
faithful who will gobble up
the PS3 -whatever the price.
"There's going to be ·a
demand, eyen at $600,'' he
said. 'They're going to sell out.
You'fl! gomg to have to end up
paying a grand on eBay."
AP Technology Writer May
Wong contributed to this
report from Milpitas, Calif.

"If it was $400, that would
be better," said · Nathan
Guajarao. 21, as he wrapped
LOS . ANGELES - The up a lunchtime game of
·buzz at the annual Electronic Madden NFL at an arcade in
Entertainment Expo usually Milpitas, Calif.
·
surrounds. the latest new · Guajardo, a longtime
owner of the PS2 whose
video games.
This year, the hot topic isn't video-gamin~ hours have
a sneak peek at "Halo 3" or now dropped to perhaps a
':Metal Gear Solid 4" but a few sess1ons a month, says
price tag ·- namely, the $499 the $500 price tag will keep
and $599 Sony Corp. said it him on the fence for a purwill ask for its eagerly await- chase for himself.
ed',
next-generation
Avid gamer Russell York of
PlayStation 3 ~aming consoles San Jose wasn't surprised ·
when they hit retail shelves about the price tag. The 25around the world on Nov. 17. year-old who owns a
. Analysts and industry PlayStation 2 and a PlayStation
experts attending this week's . Portable said he almost bought
E3 show said they aren't sur- Microsoft's Xbox 360 but
prised by the price. The PS3 decided to stay loyal to his
·Qoes, after all, include a Blu- brand and wait for PS3.
"If it. does what it's supray optical drive for playing
high-definition m~vies. The posed to do, then that's fine,'~
current crop of stand-alone York said. "But it better be
Blu-ray players retail for better than the 360." ·
Sony executives have
around $1 ,000.
· But at $599, is Sony. is insisted the PS3's pricing is
pushing - or perhaps even appropriate, given · all its
&lt;;rossing - the line on what h1gh-tech innards.
"I think that price and
consumers will be willing to
value have always been two
pay for games?
. "A lot. of people are like, different things,'' said Phil
'OK, this is a lot of money Harrison, president of Sony
and I need more justification Computer Entertainment's
for dropping this money,"' Worldwide Studios.
said John Davison, editorial . Though game companies
~irector of the video game won't say how much, .they
generally lose money on the
Web site IUP.com.
. The console price doesn 'I acturu console with the idea of
even consider the additional making it up in sales of games
cost of the actual games. and accessories. They're hopMicrosoft Corp.'s Xbox 360 ipg people will view the boxes
raised the average price per as the hub of entertainment in
game from $50 to $60. Sony the living room.
Indeed, the latest consoles
hasn't .said how much PS3
games will cost. '
. ..
are designed to plug into the
. Only II percent of garners Internet, work with high-defin a national AP-AOL Games inition TVs and handle a varipoll last month reported ety of digital content beyond
·
spending more than $500 last games. .
alhhe
capabilities,
Despite
year on gaming, including
consoles, game software, Sony's pricing was still highonline charges and acces- er than expected. analyst P.J.
of American
sories. The telephone survey McNealy
Technology
Research
said in
of 1,046 adults who said they
play games on. a computer or a research note. It could end
gaming console was conduct- up hurting game publishers,
ed by Ipsos and had a sam- who have . already been sufpling error margin of plus or fering through a sales
minus 3 percentage points. · drought while consumers
Outside the conference, wait for the new systems.
"We are concerned about
reaction to Sony's asking
consumer spending levels on
price was mixed.
BY MAn SLAGLE

M' TECHNOLOGY WRITER

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

AP TELEVISION WRITER

is? At some point, it stops."
. On- or off-camera, Frankie
was adorable, and - along
with being inventive and outrageous - so was his series.
But childhood must indeed
stop, even on sitcoms. All too
soon, Muniz hit a growth
spurt. More time passed.
Next thing you knew, he was
Agent Cody Banks in a couple of movies.
By then, the sight gags,
cutaways and overall comic
edge on ''Malcolm" were
starting ·to dull. Even
Malcolm's new - fourth brother couldn't freshen
things up. Frankie had outgrown the show, and the
show had 'outgrown what
made it special.
Now M(llcolm (played by a
20-year-old Muniz) has been
accepted into Harvard, as
"Malcolm in the Middle"
finally acts its age and r~!ires .
Meanwhile, as the end
nears for "That '70s Show,''
Fox is trumpeting how this
sitcom, which began in 1998,
lasted only two years short of

NEW YORK - Benjamin
Franklin famously declared
that houseguests, like fish,
begin to smell after three days.
He had little specific to say
about television, but whe11 it
comes to TV series that have
passed their freshness date,
he couldn't have found better
examples than a pair of Fox
comedies finally taking their
leave.
"Malcolm in the Middle"
airs a half-hour adieu, Sunday
at 8:30 p.m. ED'f.
Then Thursday at 8 p.m.,
"That '70s ·Show" has its
one-hour farewell .
Between these particular.
fish, "Malcolm" is the lesser
offender.
. For one reason, it's just
seven seasons old, to the
other show's eight.
For another, it was · genuinely funny when it began.
. Back then, Malcolm was a
scrappy, pint-sized 11-year-old
with a genius·IQ who was try'
ing to mask his braininess and
get thtough grade school under
the guise of norinalcy. He was
further challenged by his
catch-as-catch-can home life:
three non-genius · brothers; a
non-genius father who resided
in a zone of all-embracing
detachment, and a fire-breath- .•
ing mom who ran the household in a state of red alen,
Malcolm's family wasn't
actually dysfunctional, insisted series star Frankie Muniz.
"Just ... different. There are
real families like ~that. Not
every family is like 'The
Walkens,' or whatever their
name was."
Frankie was 14 when we
Spoke in January 2000, the
month "Malcolm in the
Middle" premiered. Small for
his age, he sat; legs dangling
from an office chair in his
publicist's conference room,
as he hiughingly recalled 'the
very first scene h.e had filmed
·for the show: Addressing the
· camera, he asked the audience, "Wanll;l know what the
best thing about childhood

the decade it celebrated. But
many who lived through that
decade believe even the
decade itself lasted longer
than it should have.
A sort of paint-by-numbers ·
work on velvet, this sitcom
portrayed
suburban
Milwauke.e teens "hanging
out, down the street; the same
old thing we did last week"
(per the theme song) set in an
era it reduced to smiley faces,
leisure suits. and other token
references. Certainly, "Same
old thing we did last week"
served as the writers' credo.
Now to the finale. (Please
stop reading. here ·if you're a
"'70s Show" fan and prefer
blissful ignorance, which
may be two ways of saying
the same thing.)
As this laughingstock
decade lumbers to its final
day, the gang of no-longerteens engages in something
vaguely resembling selfapprai~: Will these characters ever leave town and/or
do something with their
lives?

i\10!\ n \ Y, :\L\ Y 15 , :!oo6

;;o CENTS • Vol.:;:;. :\u. 191

"'"' · "'~·dail"t"nlind . t· um

syracuse loses a favorite son.with Wmgett's passing

SPORTS

· BY BETH SERGENT

• Phillies ouUast Reds.
SeePage 81

BSERGENT@MY~AILYSENTINELCOM

SYRACUSE - The flag at
Syracuse Village Hall has
been lowered as a sign of
respect for one of its favorite
sons, the late, Robert L. (Bob)
Wingett who .passed away on
Sa\Jlrday.
Although Wingett had
experienced health problems
in the past year, his passing
was still a shock to a community that has his fingerprints
stamped all over it, from the
Syracuse Community Center,
to the boat ralllP· to the installation of the village's . new

AP Pllotd

Traders view Sony's PlayStation 3 gaming console at the Electronic Entertainment Expo
Wednesday, May 10. in the Los Angeles Convention Center. The buzz surrounding the annual
expo usually has .everything to. do with hot video games and related technology. This year it'll
the pricing of PlayStation 3.
.,
I

water system.
Desp1te his health problems
Wingett had lately stepped
back into his role as a community'leader and the "unofficial chief executive officer of
Syracuse."
When asked to describe
what Wingett gave back to the
Syracu se
community,
Syracuse Community Center
Board
Member
Bi!'!
Winebrenner joked, "Oh my
goodness, how much time
have you got?"
"He was a fine fellow and
I'm not just saying that
because
he's
gone,"
Winebrenner added. 'T d have

said that while he was alive."
Winebrenner said one thi ng
he knew for sure was if
Wingett hadn 't purchased' the
Syracuse Grade School there
would be no community center and the village would be
without one of its assets .
"He didn't have to do that ,"
Winebrenner
said
of
Wingett's involvement in the
old school turned community .
center. " But, him being a bona
fide citizen of Syracuse he
saw where the school had
possibilities .and how good
things could happen . That was
probably his thinking in buy)ng that building, renovating

•

it and turning it over to the
tow n for a community center."
One of Wingett's latest ventures foe village improvement
had been his involvement to
save the London Pool. The
London
Pool
Steering
Committee even met at his
home.
Although
Syracuse
Councilman Mike Jacks
acknowledges that it has
taken more than Wingett to
get the pool repaired, he
believes without Wingett 's
involvement the lool would
not be schedule .. to reopen
this Memorial Day Weekend.

Jacks went on to give a
laundry list of community
improvement projects that
Wingett participated
in
including ra1sing donations to
pay for a village fire truck,
finding grants to pay for
· paved roads and ·the new
water system and providing
village children with a place
to play baskeiball, tennis and
now swim.
Of course those· that knew
Wingett also. knew he was
quick to praise others and
acknowledge . he could've
never completed those comPlease see Wln1ett. AS

TELLING MOM 'THANKS'
OBITUARIES
..

Page ·AS
• Jessie L. Grueser
• Robert 'Bob' Wingett
.. • David Charles Pratt
Submitted photo

With funding from the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer
Foundation the Meigs County Cancer Initiative is now providing
free .mammograms to local women who qualify through its
"Think Pink Project. " Pictured at the kick off event are. (from
left) N(/rma Torres , Mary Slawter, Marlene .DQJ1ovan, Heather .
Jones , MD; Carol Adams; Darla Fickle and Leann Matvey of the
Appalachian Community Cancer Network.

INSIDE
· • ~;&gt;entagon, considering ·
troop cuts,,wOnies aboUt
reliability of Iraqi police.

See Page A2 ·

'Malcolm' and 'That '70s Show'
are leaving after staying too long
Bv FRAZIER MOORE

AP Newsmaker: BRAC,
war mark tenure of
Wright-Patterson
co:nnnander,·A6

Sunday, May 14, 2oo6

• Women invited to
MatemaTea.
See Page A3
• Annu(;ll gospel jubilee
begins next week.
See Page A3
• Garden dedication ·
recognizes local
organizations.
See Page AS
· • Decals to remind truck
drivers to buckle up.
SeePage AS
• • Man to be freed after 4
years hi prison for fatal

••••,,.....,.,,..,.

r:;rash. See Page A6
:• State representative
·pleads no contest to a DUI
:ch8rge. See Page A6
• Closing parishes among
new bishop's challenges.
~Page A&amp;

·WEATHER
'''"

.

L UW'U" D •

.
"11

Free mammograms naw ·
available through 'Think Pink'
Bv BETH

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Free mam·
mograms are now available to
qualifying Meigs County
women ages 40-49 and just
how many women qualify
may -surpn se you.
Not just for the very .low
income, if you are a resident
of Mei~s County between the
ages of 40-49 who is single
with a gross income of
$19,600, or a woman in a
family of four with a gross
household in,come of $40,000

people
everywhere told
(or should've
told) their mother
how Important
she is to them.
Here, these
Southern kindergartners perform
during a Mother's
Day Tea at the
school, singing
songs to their
mothers ,. grandmothers and
other special
ladles In their
lives. This
Southern kindergartner gets into
the spirit of pointing out her mom
and singing, "I
love you ."
Yest~rday

you may be eligible for a free
mammogram via the "Think
Pink Project" currently being
overseen by the Meigs
County Cancer Initiative
CMCCI).
MCCI recently received a
$28,400 grant from the Susan
G. Kamen Breast Cancer
Foundation for · the project
designed to remove the barriers to mammography by providing women who qualify
with free mammograms. The .
grant also provides services
Please see Pink. A!l

Beth sereent/phot..

The Holzer Cardiovascular Institute welcomes

EHS names valedictorian, salutfl.t:orian

Howard Kander, MD, .FACC

Interventional Cardiology
Dr. Kamler is.seeing patients at the f{ol:Zer Cardiovascular Institute in
Gallipolis and Ja:ckson, Ohio. Dr. Kander is Board Certified in Internal
Medicine and has performed thousands of angiopl!~Sty and.stenting procedures, ·as well as cardiac catheterizations. ·

To schedule an appointment, please call

.'.

740.446.5002

'Honor Society. She is a mem'
ber of the Bethel Worship
Center and its Outer Limits
TUPPERS PLAINS - youlh group.
Taylor Ann Russell has been . She plan s to attend Ohio
named va lediciOrian and University in the fall. and has
'Christop her Rober! Davis received the Jewell-Mannaseh
sa lulalorian of I he Eastern Culler Scholarship. She plans
High School Clas; of 2006. lo siUdy biology and pre-medPrincipal
Jon
Lindner icirie . ·
.an noum;ed.
Davis is a four-y ear track
Russell is the "ctaughler of team member and was a twoJohn ai1d Brenda · Russell of time regienal qualifier and
Chester. and Davis is the son · winner of the Tri ~ Valley
of Kimberly and Dennis Conference meet. He is also a
Marcinko and Rob and Norma member of Nalional Honor
Davis , all of Reedsville.
Society.
Russell participated ih
He pl ans lo attend Ohio
marching and concert band. Universi ty in fall and study '
and was a member of 1hc e lectrical engineering . Both
Dimict 17 Honor Band lu.r Russell and Davis will address
Jwo years. She is a lwo-year !heir fellow graduates, fami·
member of the concert choir.
lies and friends at the ~ hoot 's
· Russell has been a member annual commencemen t exerof French Club for four years.
and is treasurerofthe,Nmional
Please see EHS, A5
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detallo on Page AI .'

Health fair to offer free screenings and blood tests
Bv BETH SERGENT

INDEX
•

2 SEC'llONS -

Calendars
·classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

' ence.
ing s,
health information ,
The test HGB A IC is also refreshments and door prizes
will be offered.
available for diabetics only.
POMEROY ~ They say the
Appointments prior to the
The following agencies will'
best things in life are freeespe- . health . fair are required for be attending the health fair to
cially when it comes to free these specific blood tests and offer information and service., ~
health care screenings and space is limited. To make an Meigs
County
C~mce r
blood tests which will take appointment call Leifheit at lnitiative'sThink PinkPrnjecl,
plaee at a commumty health 992-9919 or 992-7400,9 a.m. Meigs Cou nl y Co uncil on
fair from 9 a.m. to noon on to I p.llJ., Monday - Friday.
Aging , Inc .. American Cancer
Saturday, May 20 at ' the · In addition to the te,sting, Society Patient Navigator,
Mulberry Community Center. free screenings will be offered Meigs
County
Hea lth
Pari sh Nurse
Lenora (with no appointn,1ent neces- Department . Meig s Counly
Leifheit, RNC, said there are sary) on the day of the health Extension Office Famil y
free screenings available for fair. These free screenings Nutrition Program , Mulberry
fasting lipid profiles and glu- include non-fasting · choles- Community Cenler, May Kay
cose. Thl!se tests are also avail- terol and gluGose, blood pres- Represe11tati ve
Julie'
able for young people 10 to 17 sure, bone density, body !at . Campbell , Holzer Hospice,
years old with a parent or analysis.
·
guardian signature and pres- , In addition to the screenPlease SH Health, AS
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

12 PAGES

A3
B3-4

B5

A:3
A4
As
B Section
A6 .

. © ooo6 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.
I .

-- - - li!o--

t'"

"

}

.

�•

•

•,

. .- .

..

NATION • WORLD

'The Dail
' y Sentinel

....

•

BY STEVENSON JACOBS

•

•

PageA2 _

weU as roads, hospitals and
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
other facilities.
"We know wha~ needs to
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti be done. We need to make
- Rene Preval, the only peace through dialogue and
elected president. in Haiti's talking to each other so we
history to finish his term, can decide where we want
was sworn in Sunday to to go together," he said. "If
again lead the impovenshed we don't talk, then we will
nation in its latest attempt at only fight .and there will be
democracy after decades of no peace."
.
armed uprisings, lawlessness
Thousands of people,
and foretgn intervention.
some ·pressed up agamst the
In a brief ceremony, green iron gates surrounding
Preval took the oath of the·palace and many waving
office in a sweltering; Haitian flags, cheered as
packed Parliament chamber, Preval spoke.
and the Senate leader placed
"Please help me, help the
on him the presidential sash country, help yourself," he
of Haiti's national colors said.
·
blue and red.
Before the inauguration,
Afterward, he stood and inmates rioted at Haiti 's
waved as about 300 legisla- main prison ·abo ut a ·halftors and foreign dignitaries, mile
from
Parliament.
including Florida Gov. Jeh Gunfire could be ·heard from
Bush, Canadian . Governor- inside the prison and about
General Michaelle Jean and I 00 -inmates massed on the
the actor Danny Glo'(er; roof, hoiding what appeared
gave him a standing ovation. to ·be two dead bodies. There
.The inauguration was the was no immediate official
final step in Haiti's return to word on casualties.
Haitian police and U.N.
democratic rule two years
after a bloody revolt ousted· peacekeeping troops surPresident
Jean-Bertrand rounded t!te prison. The riot
Aristide and plunged the could not be heard in the
Western Hemisphere's poor- Parliament area.
est nation into chaos. .
.
The U.N. envoy to Haiti.
After the ceremony, Preval Juan Gabriel Valdes, has
waved to several hundred said one of Preval's main
onlookers gathered · behind a priorities should be fixing
line of heavily armed police the country 's broken justice
and U.N. peacekeepers. system.
Some in the crowd held · "In .Haiti, impunity is
aloft portraits of Aristide and almost total for many crimicalled for his return from nals who roam free while
exile, chanting ~'Aristide' s the innocent and those
blood is our blood!" and wrongly accused of a crifl!e
"We want him back!"
stagnate in prisons," Valdes
Preval, who previously wrote in an editorial pubgoverned Haiti in 1996-2001 lished . Saturday in · the
and replaces a U.S.-backed Canadian newspaper Le
interim government appoint- Devoir.
ed after the ·revolt, is a forJela Altius, a 31-year-old
mer Afistide ally and cham- food vendor, said she wants
pion of Haiti's poor.
Preval to· improve security.
The 63-year-old agrono"We want to be able to go
mist has pledged to unite the out at any time of day and
country's fractured society not worry that something is
and restore peace, but he going to happen to us,"
faces big challenges, includ- Altius said.
.
ing a corrupt state bt~reauHaiti's capital was gripped
cracy, a wrecked economy, by a wave of kidnappings
roiling insecurity and the and killings after Aristide's
pl1ght of prisoners.
' ouster, but officials say violn his inaugural address lent • crime has dropped
outside the national palace, sharply since Preval's victoPreval urged Haitians to put ry in the Feb. 7 election.
aside their differences and
Jean, who was born in
allow the country to concen- Haiti and left · the country
trate on building an econo- with her family at age II to
my that can provide jobs as escape persecution by dicta-

Monday, May 15, 2006 · ·

Community Calendar
· ~ Public meetings

tor Francqis "Papa Doc"
Duvalier, urged Haitians to
work to maintain democracy.
"I think democracy has to
prevail here, and I think it's
so important to bring that
hopeful spirit back to
Haitians,"
Jean
told
reporters Sat4rday.
Experts say Preval's skills
at governing and healing
Haiti's deep social rifts will
largely determine whether
the · former French colony
will move toward stability or
remain mired in turmoil and
despair.
Preval has begun reaching
out. to rival political . parties
to' cobble together a legislative coalition in Haiti's parliament, which has members
from 16 political parties. He
has also sought ties with
members of Haiti's business
elite, . some of whom
oppose.d Aristide and campaigned against Preval.
"We're hoping he' 11 do
what he says he will," said
AP Photo ·
Charles Henri . Balcer, a
wealthy industrialist 'and the Haiti's newly-sworn in President Rene Preval shakes hands as he exits a ceremony inside Haiti's ·
third-place presidential fin- Parliament in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Sunday. Rene Preval, the only president In Haiti's history to
isher. "If so, Haiti will be finish a five-year term, was sworn in Sunday to again lead the impoverished nation in its latest
off to a good start."
attempt at democracy after decades of armed uprisings, lawlessness and foreign Intervention. - :

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( ,, ,., (..~~ lf;)fi1 f'!&gt;tot 91't"i.;.4l
0Jll·n M11n.• Thuno "'i. ~lh"iptn

BY NICOU: FIELDS
I'!FIELDS@MYDAILVREGISTER.COM

.

COTTAGEVILLE, W.Va.
: - It's gospel music at its
best.
', More than · 60 . singing
groups from eight states will
take part in this year's Bend
Area Gospel .Jubilee, sched· j.iled to begin Tuesday at the
Jackson
County Junior
Fairgrounds in Cottageville,
W.Va.
Evelyn Roush, promoter,
said last year's jubilee attracted more than 100 campers
from ll states and Canada
and a crowd of nearly 900
people throughout the ti veday event, and. she expects an
even bigger crowd this year.
More people attending the
event is precisely what
t~used the jubilee to be
: moved from Mason County,

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

' Bv ROBERT BURNS

Worthiness of Iraqi security
AP MILITARY WRITER
forces have gotten a higher
profile following the sectari'an
WASHINGTON As ki)lings that have proliferated
Pentagon officials weigh the after the bombing of a Shiite
pace and timing of a si~able mosque in February.
troop cut in Iraq, they worry · The police are under the
more about the reliability of control of the Interior
U.S.-trailled Iraqi police than Ministry. It has been dominatabout the more developed ed by Shiites and accused of
. Iraqi army.
•
atrocities against Sunnis, who
Amid a recent rise in sectar- sometime~ fear the mere presian violenee, questions about ence of the police.
dependability .. are . focused
To allay those ,fears,
mainly on the Iraqi police. American soldiers have handTheir training has progressed ed out cards in Baghdad that
more slowly than the army's, encourage residents to call
and their religious and tribal authorities if they see police
allegiances are more problem- commandos, or fighters posatic.
ing as police, on suspicious
The Iraqi army and police, missions without U..S. troops.
along with smaller forces such
The calls go directly to U.S.
as the border. patrol, are cru- headquarters instead of the
cia! to the Bush administra- ministry.
'lion's plan for reducing U.S.
Lt. Col. Micbae1 Negard, a
troop levels from 133,000 to spokesman for the U.S. generperhaps 100,000 or fewer by alin charge of training and.
the end of this election year.
equipping the Iraqi army and
. As the U.S. public grows police, said the army in partiemore impati.ent with the war, ular is making steady progress
.the administration is hoping it in its fitness to battle the
can draw down U.S. forces by insurgents.
transferring security responsi- ' "The · small units are very
bility to the Iraqis.
aggressive during operations
Yet the administration must and they take the fight to the
assess how ready the Iraqis enemy at every opportunity,"
:are to handle ihe volatile mix Negard ·said in an e-mail
of sectarian ·Violence, insur- exchange Friday.
·
gent attacks and weak instituThe total number of trained
. tiona! support for the Army personnel in the Iraqi army
and police. Any doubts about and police has grown steadily,
.the Iraqi ability to cope with now exceeding 250,000. But
those problems could compli- size alone i.'s not sufficient for
cate U.S: hopes · for with• the Iraqi for'ces to assume full
drawals.
responsibilitY, from
the
The reliability issue has Americans . .The Iraqis also
been a central concern from ·. need experience, le&amp;dership
the moment the U.S. military and a support system to k,eep
began rebuilding the Iraqi them fed, fueled, armed and
army from . scratch following paid.
the fall of Baghdad in April
There have been well-docu2003. That task arose because mented cases of Iraqi soldiers
L. Paul Bremer, the initial and police fleeing in the face
American occupation chief, of insurgent opposition, and
decided to disband what was of infiltration of the forces by '
left of the defeated army.
insurgents. U.S. officials say
Questions about the trust- those problems have lessened.
I•

Home Oxygen

Portable Oxygen
Nebulizers

Come in for our
"Daily Lunch

Electric Beds
Wbeelchalrs ·

• Hair C.ue &amp;. Makeup

Specials"
10:30 am - 2:00 pm
5 great sandWiches
to 'choose from ...

Diapers

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We do the bliUng locally

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615-1812

Toll Free 877·661-0007
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3111 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, OH 45631

Point Pleasant, WV

{740) 446·2933

113-5538

. Hours:
M·fl

man

~-

where it got its start at the
West Virginia State Farm
Museum in 1990. Back then it
was a two-day event that
brought quite a crowd to the
area; such a crowd, in fact,
that the event was moved
from the farm museum to the
Mason County Fairgrounds
for four years until they
· moved it back to the farm
museum in the late 1990s.
Roush said . weather also
played a role in the decision
to move the jubilee from
Mason County because rain
during the event each year
caused the need for better
shelter.
Held in Cottageville for the
past three years, she said the
· Jackson County venue provides adeq uate space and
shelter for the crowd and performers. Plus, there is ample
camping space and plenty of
,,

bleachers and space for lawn
chairs.
Regardless of where the
show takes place, Roush said
the purpose remains the same.
"We always put God number
one," she satd. "That's what
we're there for. It's a ministry
that God led me into."
The event begins at 6 p.m.
Tuesday, with preaching and
singing scheduled throughout
the evening. Singing also will
take place . Wednesday·Saturday h\:ginning at 3 p.m.
each day. A potluck · dinner
will take place at noon
Friday, and Saturday's festivities wi.ll jnclude an auction at
10 a.m. to help support the
jubilee .
For more information, call .
Roush at 304-882-2049.
Donations may be mailed to
P.O.· Box ) 36, ]'l!ew Haven,
.WV 25265.

'
Medical Excellence.
Local Carine.
. EverYwhere

ATHENS -Women who
are considering starting a
. fa mil y are invited to .
O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital's Maternatea to
be held Saturday; May .20,
from ·II' a.m. to 1 p.m. in
the Castrop Center, located
by the hospital. ·
The MaternaTea is sponsored by, the O'Bleness
Birth Center; Jack Chan,
D.O.; Catherine Coats,

llaw Plavtna Evln
FI'IIIIW&amp;IIIIIIIIIIIIIdl'
124 HIGHLAND AVE.
PT PLEASANT, WV
• (Old Carolina Lumber Building Across
from CSX)

www.holzerclinic~.c~-o~m~~~~?6~7~5g·3~8~7~7~

Powell's
FOODFAI

On Friday, May 26, we will publish a special page devoted to \hose who .are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
·

David C, Alldtews
olidy 10, 1981·May 6, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
· Always ill our h~,
olohn and Mona Andrews and

www.foodfairmk.com

Abon • lngrot.~nd A.pt~lr
4bov• Ground &amp; fnground Salcta

~ Ct&lt;llr'I\JCill!.

&amp;

51.lpphw~

• CNii~S

• F1~4 Water ~lyUs

• l•r•n;

Finllnrlng , ., vo\lla~..

• P"timpl
• ~litera

1

PLEASANT
VALLEY ·
HOSPITAL
'

740-441-9896
J80 State Rl. 1 N. •G..Iipolis, OH

a ,.

..

304-675-4340

WHY PAY MORE??
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES!
~

t

UN(OlN

WE HAVE OPENINGS

~MI.CUlY
"

195 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis

Arcadia is here for our local community-no need to drive to Parkel'liburg,
.
'
Marietta or Athensll ·
Please call 740-446-3157 and ask for Kathy McDaniel
Arcadia Nursing Center
Coolville, Ohio 45723
..Still Small
to Carel!!

.•

'140-448-9100

.'

,,

"'

wish, select one of the following FREE verses below to
lact:omtlanyyour tribute.
I. We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever.
2. May.God cradle you in His anns, now and forever.
3. Forever missed,. never forgouen. May God hold you in lhe palm of
His hand.
4. Tliank you.for the wonderful days we shared together. My prayers
will be with you unlil we mee1 agam,
5. The days we shared were sweet. I long to see you again in God's
heavenly glory.
6. Your cour&lt;ge and bravery slill inspire us all, and the memory of your
smile fillsus with joy and laughler. •
·
. 7. Though out of sight, you'll forever be in my heart and mind.
8. The days may come aod go, bullhe times we shared will always remain.
9. May tbe light of peace shine on your face for ctemily.
10. May God's angels guide you and protee1 you throughout time.
11 . You were a light in LlUr life thm bums forever in our heans.
12. May God\ grac~s shine nver you rm &lt;~II lime.
13. You are in our thoughts and p 1 aycr~ from morning to night and from

year toyear. - ·
·
14. We send this message wilh a loving kiss for eternal resI and happiness.
15. May the Lord bless yon wilh His graces and warm, loving heart.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below· and drop off to:

'

The Daily Sentinel
With :Fondest Memories
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, ou·45769

DEADLINE: MONDAY, MAY 22ND, NOON

•••

r-------------------------------------,
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Please publish my tribute in the special Memory Page un Friday. May 26.

·

·

Name of deceased---.....,,..----------------------1

I
I Relationship to me _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Number of selected verse ____ I
I
I
Date
ofpassin!!------1
I Date ofbinh _ _- ' - - - - - - - - - - - - 11Print
. your name hc r e - - - - - - ' - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

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family

include a dietitian, a physical therapist and a nurse. ·
Light refreshments, tea and
other beverages will be
served. Each guest will
receive a gift for attending
the event.
For more information or
to
register
for
the
MaternaTea,
call
O'Bleness' .community relations .department at (7 40)
592-9300.

We[comes You!

740-992-5252

Compl~t.e

&amp; lnat•lletiOn
CotnDJ!tl• '-JM .Q.t
• Opet'.11"1gi

D.O.; as well as River Rose
Obstetrics and Gynecology,
with support from the Guild
of O'Bleness. Speakers at
the event will share info,rmation about pregnancy
and managing pregnancy.
An informal chat session
will cover a variety of topics, such as nutrition, exercise, tobacco use and subs_tances to avoid during
pregnancy. Presenters will

Arcadia Nursing Center

· 700 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

IIAYIIIG OALU4 fl
IIIU011HDING C:OIIImll

Dear Abby is written · by·
Abigail Van Buren, ' also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded .by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O;
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

Women invited to MatemaTea
HOLZER ·
CLINIC

divorce. Ten years of abuse is
enough.
DEAR
READERS:
Sunday, May 21. 2006, marks
the
beginning
of
Remembrance We~k. leading·
up to the observance of the
National
Mome11t
of
Remembrance, established by
Congress to occur at 3 p:m.
(local time). on Memorial
Day. This year. the public is
invited to a historical tribute,
"A Time of Remembrance,"·
which will take place at noon·
on the 21st on the grounds of
the Washington Monument in'
Washington, D.C. It will .
honor our fallen from the
conflicts in Afghanistan and
Iraq and their families. We
want them .to know that their
fellow Americans care about
their great loss and the sacd-'
fice of their loved ones.
A wise man once said:
"Like a breath to the human
body, remembrance makes
the spirit live." The greatest'
gift we can give to our fallen·
and the loved ones who survive them is the gift of
remembrance.
In the words of Carmella
LaSpada, director of the
Commission .
on
Remembrance: "We hope our:
tribute on May 21 will com-·
for.t the families who gave
their hearts to our country."

Annual gospel.jubilee begins next week

.&amp;35 1/J St.ocond Avenue

Pentagon, considering
·troop cuts, wornes about
reliability of Iraqi police OXYGEN
~

Wednesday, May 17
POMEROY - American
Red Cross blood drive, I :30
p.m - 6:30 p.m., Meigs
Senior Center.

Gardeners learn all about the iris

Available
•Antiques for the
Antique lover
dur'19,000 square foot
store offers thousands of
gifts for the entire family.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Church events

Clubs and
; organizations

'Home Decor 'Furniture
·

Sunday - Por&lt; C~op Dinner

1 pc. $5.99

.

·Mother's Day Gift Items

BANK. .

PageA3
BY THE. BEND
Man frets about the company
Other events
of depressed female friend

DEAR ABBY: I am happily married with a great wife.
I also have a platonic female
friend, "Tina," I have known
Thursday, May 18
for many years and who sufPOMEROY -Youth drug
fers from depression. She and
Thursday, May 18
Dear
awareness and solutions
POMEROY - Official I have been getting together
Abby
meeting, 7 p.m., God's NET.
count of May 2 primary, 9 for the last few months over
'
tea, and I. usually let her air
a.m., Board of Elections.
what's on her mind in an
effort
tQ alleviate her depresSaturday, May 20
1\Jesday, May 23
ston.
•
POMEROY - Health fair,
LONG BOTTOM
We. also go for walks occa- are golng off and you're getRevival services will be 9 a.m. to noon, Mulberry
sionally
and sometimes hold ting "nervous about being
, Thursday, May 18
held May 23-26 at the Faith Community Center, free
,POMEROY
Meigs Full Gospel Church at Long health screenings, non-fast- hands. I feel guilty doing this, seen," then you are, perhaps,
Cqunty American Cancer Bottoq1. Services will begin ing and fasting blood tests, but there is absolutely no seeing her too often and ·getSociety Taskforce meeting, at 7 p.m. each evening. Leon .call 992-9919 for appoint- threat at all of us ever becom- ling closer than you should,
noon, Pomeroy Library, Forte will be the speaker.
ments for fasting blood tests. ing intimate. I worry that if I both physically and emotiondon't befriend Tina she might ally. Plea·se think about it.
commit suicide, which would
DEAR ABBY: 1 have been
make me feel terrible. I also married for 10 years to a
· worry about being seen in her who just ,doesn't take work
CHESTER
·' Mace! Christian Queen, Clotilda had which bloom even before cro- company by one of my wife's seriously. It seems he'd rather
Barton presented a program long wanted her husband to cuses. She said they like alka- friends and the whole thing that I work than he. He has
on the iris from its htstory to convert to Christi~~ity. b.ut he · lil)e soil, and suggesting dust- becoming a big misunder- been on workers' comp twice
. its family members to dis- y;ant~d no part of It unttl the ing the bulbs with lime before standing. I value Tina's and just got of( again after
·: eases that plague the royal mvas10n. It se~ms that Clovts planting them four inches . friendship, but also do not three years. He works when
want to jeopardize my mar- he wants, just enough to $et
· fl,ower at the May meeting of promtsed Cloulda that 1f he deep and three inches apart.
riage.
What should I do? - by - 'pretty much burdemng
the Chester Garden Club.
· won he would admtt that her
She listed various types
me wiih the bills.
. According to Barton, the God was ~tronger than hts. . including the swarf bearded· BEWILDERED IN RENO
DEAR
BEWILDERED:
! have an opportunity to
flower name Iris comes from
After wu;mmg. the battle, m iris, the German iris which
First
of
all,
(ecognize
your
board
where I work this .year.
the Greek Goddess of that keepmg Wtth hts promtse to she said is the most familiar
limitations.
If
you
.
sincerely
It
is
quite
a ways away, and
name who, among other his Queen, Clovis was bap- the Siberian which cim thriv~
things, was the personifica- tt~ed and he ab~ndoned t~e in almosdt any,soil, the Dutch believe Tina is · so depressed the season lasts six months.
:ti'on of the rainbow. The first three toads on hts ba~ner !n iris which comes in a variety that if you stop holding hands My husband threatens to kick
with her during your walks me out if I do. To be honest,
·known use of the In's t'n art favor of
_,
. the fleur-de -Its · Stv
. ~ of bi-c6lor and multi-color
she might end her life, then I think he just wants me here
was when it was incorporated hun~red. years later Ktng types, and the Japanese iris please urge her to get profes- to pay the bills.
as the background of a stucco Louts VII adopted the .purple which are the latest blooming. sional help. She would be
Oh, and he abuses IJ)e, too,
of the priest-king on the walls Ins for hts banner m the
Iris have relatively few better served if she was "air- . so I feel leaving would be
of the Minoan palace at Crusade, and the assoctatton pests or diseases she s 'd ing what's on her mind" with ' good for me all the way
Knossos. Shortly afterward, of French roya,lty wtth the al
·· '
. l :1 '
King Thutmosis III , who Iris, in the form or'the Fleurthough borer and apthtds a therapist who can counsel ·around. Please tell me wh~t
: reigned in Egypt from 1504- de-lis, continued for approxi- somettm~s attac~s the plants her and possibly give her you think. - GLAD FOR A
· 1450, built a garden near his mately another six hundred and requtre an msecttc~de to . medical treatment for her ill- WAY OUT IN NEW YORK
DEAR GLAD: Your buspalace to show off the plants years, only to inspire the control. Soft rot .ts. a dtsease ness - because that's what
depression
is,
an
illness.
band
isn't going to "throw
)'te brought back with him fol- wrath
of the
French tha! causes the wtltmg of the
It's
all
right
to
stand
by
you
out"
- you should be so
lowing a successful war in Revolutionaries in 1789 when fohage, glVlng tt a wateryour
friend
in
her
time
of
lucky!
Ta~e
the JOb and,
;Asia Minor. The Iris of his they set out to obliterate t)'te soaked appearance and a.foul
$arden showed up sculptured symbol from sculpture, paint- s":lelhng mass .m the eptder- need, but if your alarm bells wh1le you re apart, file for
mts. Control mclud~s bumm stone on the walls of the ings, jewelry and Clothing.
. iemple Anon at Karnak in
The !tis was cultivated as a mg the worst of the mfected
major industry in 19th centu- plants. Leaf spot and ~osaic
Egypt.
.. ,Barton said the fleur-de-lis, ry Italy for use in perfumery are .other problems wtth 'iris
or "lily flower" is· actually a and in medicines, and in requmng that the affected
stylized iris that bas long been Ruissia to flavor a soft drink, leaves be cut back.
associated with the Kings of while today its chief use is as
Hostess Judy
Bunger
. France. According to her, the flavoring for toothpaste, and served a chicken salad and
cookies for refreshments, and
legend of how the association as a flower in our gardens.
Barton said . there are a Betty Dean won the door
came about involved Clovis,
the Frankish King, who in number of different kinds of prize. The next meeting will
496 AD successfully defend- Iris to choose [(Om incliuding be the club's annual picnic ·
eJi his kingdom from an inva- border pilants, those best use and auction at the home of Pat
);ion by a Germanic tribe. His · in rock gardens, or ones Holter 6:30p.m. on. June 7.

~tique 8c Ctaft ~

VALLEY

luncb . provided, RSVP at
992-6626. ext. 24.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Retired Teachers
wi II meet for lunch at noon
at the Riverside Golf Course
Clubhouse in Mason. Perry
Varnadoe, economic development director will be the
speaker, and a women's
quartet will entertain.

Monday, May 15 .
LETART FALLS -Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
office building.

(french City

HIO

IJ08[A)Tf~lf Al'f. ~WPOII~

.

.The Daily Sentinel

"

)

�•

The Daily Sentinel

. PageA4

OPINION

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, MaY. 15, the I 35th day of 2006. There are
230 days lefl in the year..
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 15, 1942, wartime gasoline rationing went into
effect in 17 states, limiting sales to three gallons a week for
non-essential vehicles.
On this date:
In 1856, Lyman Frank Batim, the author of "The Wonderful
Wizard of Ot," was born in Chittenango, N.Y. ·
In 1886, poet Ernily Dickinson died in Amherst, Mass.
lri 1911 , the Supreme Court ordered the dissolution . of
Standard Oil Company, ruling it was in violation of the
Sherman Antitrust Act.
In 1918, U.S. airmail began service between Washington,
Phil a(lelphia and New York.
In 1930, Ellen Church, the first airline stewardess, went on
duty aboard a United. Airlines night between San Francisco
.
and Chey\!nne, Wyo.
In 1963, astronaut L. Gordon Cooper blasted off aboard
Faith 7 on the final mission of the Project Mercury space pro·
gram.
.
·
. In 1970, Phillip Lafayette Gibbs and James Earl Green, two
black students at Jackson State University in Mississippi,
. were killed when police opened fire during student protests.
In 1972, George C. Wallace was shot by Anhur Bremer and
left paralyzed while ca!llpaigning in Laurel, Md., for the
Democratic presidential nomination.
In 1986, searchers on Oregon's Mount Hood found two
teenage survivors of a hiking expedition that became trapped
in a whiteout blizzard. Nine other climbers died.
Ten years ago: Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole
announced he was leaving the Senate after 27 years to challenge President Clinton full-time.
'
·
One year ago: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice paid a
surprise .:visit to Iraq to express .support. for its new government. The Czech Republic denied Canada its third straight
title and won the world. ice hockey championship 3-0 in
Vienna, Austria.
Today's Birthdays: Singer Eddy Arnold is 88. Actor Joseph
Wiseman is 88. Playwright Sir Peter Shaffer ("Amadeus") is
80. Actress-singer Anna Maria Alberghetti is 70.
Counterculture icon Wavy Gravy is 70. Former Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright is 69. Singer Trini Lopez is 69.
Singer Lenny Welch is 68. Actress-singer Lainie Kazan is 66.
Actor-director Paul Rudd (" Knots Landing") is 66. Country
singer K.T. Oslin is 64. Singer-songwriter Brian Eno is 58.
Actor Nicholas Hammond ("The Sound of Music") is 56.
Actor Chazz Palminteri is 55. Baseball Hall of Farner George
Brett is 53. Musician-composer. Mike Oldfield ('ITubular
Bells") is 53. Actor Lee Horsley is 51 , TV personality Giselle
Fernandez is 45. Singer'rapper Prince Be (PM Dawn} is 36.
Actor Brad Rowe is 36. Actor David Charvel· is 34. Rock
musician Ahmet Zappa is 32. Olympic gold-medal gymnast
Amy Chow is 28. Actor David Krumholtz ("Numb3rs") is'28.
Actress Jamie-Lynn Sigler.is 25.
Thought for Today: "History is a better guide than good
intentions." - Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, former U.S. ambassador
to the United Nations.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned let. ters will be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to orga- .
nizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
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(USPS 213·9601
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error In a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992·
2156.

Our main number Is
(740) 992·2156.
Departmenl extensions are:

Published every afternoon, Monday
throUgh Friday, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
paid at Pomeroy.
1
Member: The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newsp8per Association.
Postmaater: Send address' corrections
to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Coun Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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.'

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday, May 15,2006

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Monday, May 15, 200"6 ·

-..

'

The D~ly ·Sentinel

I

No 'mas: JYhen
are
we
getting
tough
UJith
'the
PAt
.

Obituaries
.

Meigs County 4-H news

Kayte Lawrence gave a
. Meigs County Dairy
Officers of the club are Eric
4-H Club
4-H Club
Pierce, president; Paul
The Another Generation report on. why you should
connect. After all, the United tight, and the United States
The Meigs County Dairy Morrison, vice president; 4-H Club met on April 9 at sift
flour
and
Keri
States and the European gave in on its anti-terro(jst.
: · Jessie L. Gureser, 92, of Rutland, passed away Saturday, May 4-H Club met on April 22 Timothy El'am, treasurer ; the home of Terri Hoschar Lawrence talked about why
Union cut off aid to the PA stance and agreed to airl,if!:
13,' 2006, at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
at the Pullins home with 15 Marcus H111, secretary; with eight members and you shou ld serge your gartwo months ago in order to ·necessities- which is a dtsBorn Nov. 10, 1913, in Morgan Township, Gallia County, she members, three cloverbuds Kelsey Myers and Britney one
advisor
present. ment.
extract concessions - like, grace.
The Copy Cat game
was the daughter of the late Claten .and Iva Taylor Barrell. She and three advisors present. Morrison, health officers, Fundraiser possibilities of
for instance, on Israel's right
Of course, the administra,was a homemaker and store owner, and formerly attended Committees were assigned, and Meredith Gaul. news candles, cookbooks. candy learned at 4-H camp was
to exist. Hamas' responscr? tion ·would probably empha."club dues decided on and reporter. .
and car wash were dis- played and Ashley Life
Rutland Church of Christ.
No concessions. The United size that it's "only" $10 mil trips
were
talked
about.
A
bake
·
sale
.
as
a
cussed . Terri
Hoschar served refreshments. The
· 'Surviving are her daughter, BW'bara VanMeter of Rutland; a
States and European Union lion worth of Band-Aids ami,
There was discussion. on fundraiser and T-shirts for served refreshments.
next meeting will. be at the
~on, Charles Richard Grueser of Rutland; grandchildren: Greg
are now cranking aid back such; and it's not going t{):~
club
were
discussed.
At
the
April
23
meeting
filling
out
project
books.
the
Lawrence's
on May 21 with
(Shirley) VanMeter, Langsville, Teresa (Randy) Houdashelt,
up - sure, in humanitarian Hamas ofticials, it's going•w
Jordan
Parker
gave
a
health
Au.drionna
Pullins
came
to
held
at
the
Hoschar
home
a cook-out. Everyone is to
Pomeroy; great grandchildren: Kyle and Kevin VanMeter of
dribs and drabs, but this is Hamas constituents _ 'Ill'
.l;.angsville; a brother, Robert Barrett of Middleport; and several report on snuff - encourag- the meeting to talk about 4- fund raisers ' and projecct bring their fishing poles for
· probably just the beginning
ing not ·to use it. Brenna H summer camp.
were discussed. · · Renee recreation.
·nieces and nephews ..
- and still no concessions. maybe even Fatah corte• :
Holter advised not to go
The next meeting will be Colburn talked about piigs
Keri Lawrence, News
This doesn't sound like suc- stituents, whose out,~l.ooif(;k;rd~~-J~-~·~·B~e~~s~ide's her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, swimming without an adult; on May 21 at the Chester and carbon dioxide .
Reporter
.
Grueser; two infant children; a sister, Madge Fife; and
life and Israel is so 11
cessful statecraft. ·
The next meeting will be
Kirk Pullins enco ura ged Fire Hou se.
..
· two brothers, Charles and Buster·Barrett.
On the other hand, it from Hamas that they sli(Y·'· '
Meredith Gaul, News on May 21 at the home of
USA Kids 4-H Club
: Services will be held at II a.m. Tuesday, May 16, 2006, at that a helmet should be
seems that statecraft is no port the AI Aqsa Mar.tyr.
worn
when
riding
and
Reporter
MaKayla
Rose
.
Projects
The
USA Kids 4-H Glub
Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland with Rev. Amos Tillis offilonger the craft of our state. Brigades. (Yes, I'm bemlt
Stephen
Yost
cautioned
.that
·
·
and
horses
will
be
dismet
on
May '7, at the home
.CJ.ating and burial following at Riverview Cemetery in
After predictions of cash and sarcastic.) But there is more:.
you shouldn't look down a
Believers and Achievers cussed.
·
of Joyce Weddle with nine
·Middleport.
,gas shortages, and a couple to this incident than $ 10 mu:·
gun
barrel
.
as
Safety
4-H
Club
·
Alex
Morris,
News
members and three advisors
'The family will receive friends from 5 to 8 p.m. on Monday at
of · stories about sick lion, Band-Aids or Hamas.,
reports.
The
Believers
and
Reporter
present.
· Plans for fair
, the funeral home. .
·
Palestinian babies made. the What we are witnessing -g·
Basketball was enjoyed Achievers 4-H Club met on
booth, animal projects and
..,
papers .- youngsters lan- the stumbling behavior of a:
and Stacie Pullins provided April 23 at the Dick Eblin
Lakeside Leaders
fundraising opportunities
~ '
· ..
guishing "because funds
refreshments.
home
with
nine
mernbers
4-H
Club
were discussed.
have been withheld from the superpower that doesn ' t
Kara Osborne, .. News and three advisors present.
The Lakeside Leaders 4- · . Members are working on
West" (oil-rich Islam is know how to act either super
Clean up at The Maples, H Club met on April 23 at their project book work and
. ''Robert L. "Bob" Wmgeu, 63, retired publisher of The Daily Reporter
"
never to blame) ' the · or powerful. ·
~fJitinel, Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Point Pleasant Register
bake sale at Walmart and the
Reed sville
United the Ctoverbuds have made
Maybe waging ·a nebulo'it~.
United States blinked. Or,
&lt;li~d at 7:38 a.m., Saturday, May 13, 2006 at his home in
Bleedln' Green 4-H
trip to Ohio Valley game · Methodist Church with 32 a poster for the fair booth.
rather, we teared up. Acting · "war on terror" has ho§e!.t
~yracuse, of natural causes.
·
Club
birds were discussed.
members and 15 advisors
Joyce Weddle provided
like an emotional individual lessly confused us. Mayll{:
, Bob was born Dec. 31, 1942, the son of the late Lowell and
The Bleedin' Green 4-H
Tracy Beaver and Dylan and guests attendin,g.
refreshments.
The next
rather than the leader of the finding ourselves in the cost,.,
Eleanor Edwards Wingett.
.
Club met on April 23 with Lavender served refreshThe Junior Fair Theme meeting will be on June II
Free World, the United · ly business of making t~e' ·
., He is survived by his sister, Ruth (George) Strode, Grove City; twenty-one members and ments. T~e next meeting "Get Fired Up About Junior at Weddle' s.
Discussion
States trade(j its goals and world safe for sharia has
Brother, William (Jeanene) Wingett, Arlington, Tenn.; stepmoth- three advisors present. 4- will be May 28 and plans Fair"; Cloverbud Day Camp will be on possi ble plans to
' *''
principles
(pressuring muddled our objectives. Bu,s
...
·
:er,'Mary
Wingett, Pomeroy; nephews, James andB·nan ""
wJngett; H camp was discu ssed, fair will be made for the trip to oo June 2 from 9d:3FO ak.md. partl.cl' pate 1·n the Oht'o
Hamas, not supporting ter- if we cannot retrieve ~~ .
or e River Sweep and going
fdur great nephews; ·several a,unts, uncles, cousins and many sin- project books were passed the Ohio Valley Game to 12: 30 p.m.; an
Run Clean-up Day were
.
h
out and projects will be . Birds.
rorists) for a big wet hanky. simple, preciou s princip,l}l,
ct!fe friends.
k d
h
Eddl·e Hendricks, news discussed.
,
over ( projects to get t em
But notice Hamas didn't get that .took us into war -7 ·
."Bob was well known in the tri-coun.ty area as a civic, bank and wor e on at t e next meetH
h
d ready for judging.
ing. ·
reporter
Kay 1a
awt orne . an
N
weepy over its own young you're either with ·us o.r:
f
and
.Played
a
major
role.
in
the
development
o
Sarah
Lawrence
brought
Breanna
Haym
an
gave
R
Autumn
Hauber,
ews
business
leader
and decide .to "save the chilyou're against us- not onlr:·
. syracuse as its grants administrator and to Meigs County as a . in pictures of exhibits and .
Another Generation
'Health and Safety reports. : eporter
dren" by simply recognizing
·
1
4 H Cl b
Th c ]]'
D ·
d
member of the Community Improvement Corporation.
will
we
never
achieve
vicm•·
Israel's right to exist. Nor
. .
·
· · talked about them. Ma lary
•
u
e
o ms,
avts . an
Wha'z Ka' dz 4-H Club
we
won't
even
l}tnow
ry,
·
:
·He
bought
his
old
elementary
school
in
Syracuse,
re-n~mg
tt
Mcintyre
gave
a
demonstraThe
Another
Generation
Ayres
families
served
The
Wh.iz Kidz _H Club
did any of Hamas' oil-rich
4
Syracuse
Community
Center
and
donated
11
back
to
the
vtllage.
tion
on
healthy
foods.
4-H
Club
met
on
March
26
refreshments.
what
it
looks
like.
""
Muslim brethren feel moved
He oversaw all major projects in converting the school to a com- Molly Dunlap told how 10 at the Robert Strol home
The next meeting will be met on ·rMJay 7, R'dat the
(Diana West is a columnist
to come to the rescue, either.
·
prepare for a disaster.
. with ten members and two on May 21 at the Reedsv ille homhe
eanble 1 denour
munity center.
No. Hamas remained true to for. The Washington TimeS'. '
64
16
. He was a member of Pomeroy Racine Masonic Lodge #I '
Red rover and freeze tag advisors present. Officers United Methodist Church.
Wit
• mem ers an two
its creed (Kill the Jews), the She can be contacted yia .
and
was
honored
as
the
lodge's
Man
oftheYear
in
2005.
He
was
were
flayed.
Snacks
were
were
elected,
fund
raisets
Abigail
Collins,
News
advi.
s
ors
present. Projehc ~s.
Arab-Muslim world sat dianawesr@verizon.net.) :"''
a
32nd-degree
Mason
and
a
member
of
the
Scottish
Rite,
York
b
M
11
·
were
discussed
and
three
Reporter
fundraisers
and
t- s trt
' '
serve
Y
ameet
ary unexcused misses of meet. 1
orders were d1' scussed.
fi
d
ed
d
ted
Rite,
and
Athens
Shrine
Club:
Bob
also
ona
tve
en
ow
M
1
t
The
next
.,. "'
. on May 27 and- ings would cause dismissal
Casey Ridenour did a
·mc:rnberships for Lodge I64
· ·
·
·ngc nw 1~re
Jl be
Pioneers 4- H c·l u b
1
demonstration
for
the
d
d
Be graduated from Racine High School in. ] 960 and atten e
fair projects and photo J.D.s from club .
The Pioneers 4-H Club
A
Obio University before launching his long..career in the newspa- wi]]. be worked on.
Projects were di sc ussed. met on Aprjl30 at the home You're !,he Chef projecl.
pet business with Ohio Valley Publjshjng Co .. ~e started as .a
Samantha Cline, News . Roliert Strol served refresh- of Ashley Life with eight ~ity servtce proJect
'"'nter's
assistant
and
became
a
reporter
before
bemg
nameded1R
ter
ments. The next meeting members, six Cloverbuds of planting flowers was
P'"''
epor
Rt'denour 's served
tot
of the Point Pleasant Register. From there, he ad vaneed to the
will be on April 9 at · the and three advisors presel\t. done.
The Shining Stars
Terry Rose home .
.
Camp at Canters Cave, refreshment s.
Pl!blisher's desk in Gallipolis and.retired in 1999.
He was a fanner member of the board of directors of City
4-H Club
Alexanl)er Morri s, News Teen Genes Camp, Spring
The next meeting will be
N~tional Bank, fonnerly Peoples Bank; president of the Syracuse
The Shining Stars 4-H Reporter
Fling and serving at the on June 4 at Pam Buckleys.
Cemmunity Center; member of the Pleasant Valley Hosp1ta! Club met April 23 at . !he .
Eastern Alumni dinner were
Cassie Hauber, News
F@undation; Syracuse Security Investigators; Meigs County Chester
Fire
House .
Another Generation
discussed.
Reporter
Historical Society; Rotary Club of Point Pleasant and served w1th
•
thl! Carleton College Board of Trustees in Syracuse.
Bob received caring reliable liealth services from Lisa Jacks,
Sl)aron Harris, Ella Mitchem and Shirley Lude.
:Services wil~ be 1 p.m. Tuesday May 1,6 , 2006 at the Sy~~use
Ct~mmunity Center with Rev. Mary Jaruce Lavender offic1atmg.
Bprial will follow in Gilmore Cemetery.
. :friends may call 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Mo11day .at t}te. Pomeroy · ATHENS - Appalachian will be placed to honor their
qlllpel of Fisher Funeral Home. Masop1c Semces Will be con· Community Visiting Nurse loved ones. Special commemoPOMEROY- In an effort likely to buckle up when
.
dllcted at 6:30p.m. by Pomeroy/Racine Lodge #164.
Association, Hospice and rative bricks will be placed in to remind commercial vehicle compared to drivers of other
'In lieu of flowers the family ask that donations be made to Health Services, Inc. announces the gardens to honor the Athens drivers to buckle their safety yehicles," said M'aj. · Robert
Syracuse Community Center, Cathy Crow Treasurer, P. 0. ~x its spring dedication ceremony Rotary, Athens Elks Post 973, belts, decals are being offered Brooks, commander of the
289, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
at
the
Veterans'
and and the Athens First United by the· Ohio State l:lighway patrol's Office of Licensing
:Pallbearers will be: Judge Fred W. Crow Ill, Michael Jacks, Commemorative Gardens at 30 Methodist Women for their con- Patrol in an effort to remind and Commercial Standards.
J~ Hayman, Rick Chancey, Rod Gilkey, Don Hendricks and Herrold Avenue at 2:00 p.m. on tinued support of the agency's commercial vehicle drivers to
"Truck drivers' who buckle
Tony Hawk. Honorary Pallbearers will be: Richard Owen, Lee Saturday, May 20.
buckie their safety belts.
up are making a choice Jhat
home health and hospice care.
B}ight, Howard K. Parker, Mike Chancey, Je.rry Lee, .George
As part of a federally- could save their life," he
This event is free and the
Engraved granite bricks purStrode, Eber Pickens, Pat Whitehead, Jeff Moms anti Mack Ash. chased by community members public is invited to attend.
funded safety belt awareness .' added.
..
According to Jhe Federal
initiative fo.cused on com'
merc1~! .veh1cle dnvers, t~e Motor
Carrier · Safety
Hawthorne, Brittni Rose .decal Two seconds ... that s Administration (FMCSA),
Lee the amount of time. tl takes to nationally, 48 percent of
Hensley,Richard
•
•
Hoffman .
.....
protect yourself ... P,!ea s~. truck drivers wear safety
Bryce .Allen Honaker,
from
PageA1
your safety belt Will belts compared with 79 per.,.
Jessica Elaine Hupp, Amanda faste~
be
d1splayed
on the back of
' ..
h' 1 dr'
.
'
' I
Beth King, Nicholas Andrew commercial vehicles travel- cent ot passenger ve IC e l""
•
'
Kuhn, Kayla Renee Lee, ing on Ohio roadw ays.
: :Davis Charl~s Pratt, 65, Po~eroy, ~ied Saturday, M ay 1~ , cises, 2 p.m. on Sunday.
vers who buckle up. Any
..
Garret
Eldon
Long
,
Joshua
2Q06, at Holzer Medical Center m Galhpohs. Arrangements w11l .
The school will announce
Last month as part of the commerctal veh1cle company
bt·announced by the Pomeroy Chapel of Ftsher Funeral Home. the remaining Top 10 Scholars Stephen Marcinko, David same initiative, the patrol mterested tn recennng the
Maxson,
Ashley placed similar signs at 10 safety belt .decals may conat an awards assembly on Allen
Brooke McCaman, Herbert truck terminal s across the tact Lt. D1ck Grau of the
Friday.
American Cancer Society
The following students are Andrew Mcintyre, Je sse state.
patrol' s Gallia-Meigs Post at
Resource Center will also be
tentative candidates for grad- Owen Nutter, Brooke Lee
"In
Ohio
,
commercial
(740) 446-2433. There is no
open during the fair.
.
Parker, Thomas Wilson Parks,
uation:
truck drivers are the least cost for the decals.
The health fair is sf.onsored
from PageA1
Brandon Scott Bartee, Jr., Kevin Lee Powell , l&lt;risla
by Holzer Medica · Center Branden Matthew Batey, Lynn Price.
'·
tablets and capsules are not contain the element carDEAR DR. BLONZ: Why
Community Health and ·Britney Lynn Bogg.s, Taylor
Shawn
Jacob
Reed,
designed to dissolve before bon. A unique thing abqut ,.
aren't lactose-free dairy
Coniinuity of Care, Karr Wellness Department and the Edward Boyd, Halhe Ntcole Brittany Marie Roush. Derek
they reach the absorptive minerals is that they cann.?J .
· products made into yogurt or
Meigs Cooperative Parish .Brooks, ·Brian
AUdiology.
ATHEN.S
-C had
Michael William Roush , Brittney Lee
surfaces of'the small intes- be synthesized or changed
cottage cheese? I haven't
County Faith Community Nursing.
,
Rucker.
Taylor
Anne
Russell,
'' The
Meigs
Castor, Levi Gene Clegg,
Hubbard of Racine, Tony
tine. A colloid describes a by the body. Like vitamins,
found such products at the
Nathan Marshall Cozart, Cory Daniel Sargent, Steven Hupp of Racine and Elaine
physical state in which solid minerals are needed only in
market, and they would be a
project throughout the com- Michael Scott Cranston, James Sims, Whitley Viola Chase Kincaid of Reedsv1lle
particles are ·suspended in a trace amounts, and they
good addition to the lactoseChristopher Robert Davis, Smith, Shana Taylor Snyder, were among those stude~t s
''
munity.
Ed
Blonz
as
a
liquid,
in
medium,
such
don 't provide any calories.
Cari Renee Steger, Je ss ica earning degrees at &lt;;JhlO
free selection. J.D.
- Part of that. promotion was Terty Evan Durst.
a way in which the solids do . The minerals in our diet are
Lynn Walker. Ashley Gale University at the end of the
Charlotte, N.C.
Angelica
Marie
Eddy,
· , from Page A1
the recent kick off event held
Welch,
Matthew Ryan White, winter quarter.
not settle out. This state is distributed throu ghout the
DEAR J.D.: The friendly
Aaron
Jackson
Gillilan,
at the Meigs County Senior
Sara
Rose
Wiggins, James
usually
referred
to
as
a
colorganisms used to make
foods 'we eat. Calcium, for
i(j 'women over 50 by linking Center in which radiofogist Brandon Michael Goeglein, Philip Will , Charles Micahel
yogurt and cultured cottage that is based on liquid col- loidal suspension. The example, is found in dairY, '
th~m to other available pro- oncologist Dr. Heather Jones, Lance Anthony Griftin, Adam Wilson.
Amanda . Dawn
cheese utilize lactose as fuel, loidal minerals . 1 have been source of colloidal miqeral products, a number of green '
:grams for mamm&lt;egraphy.
MD of the Holzer Center for Wesley Grpssnickle, Lucas Windon,
Sasha
Dawn
Morgan Grueser,
Mark
and some:
so you need th(l lactose to concerned about osteoporo- supplements is usually clay leafy vegetables
· " In addition to free mam- Cancer Care spoke on the .
•
rl •
Wriston,
Ashlie
Nicole
Emerson
Guess,
Autumn
Lea
get thing,s going. The live sis and would be happy to or humic shale deposits.
nuts; magneSIUlll .1s present .
mbgrams, women are provid- importance of early getection Hauber,
·
Dyana • Marie Young.
and active cultures that are switch to a product that
The key question is in nuts, banamls, legum~'(
. ~d'With gasoline vouchers for of breast 'cancer.
•
'
present continue to live 'off would be more effective. Whether, all things being and whole grains; and zinc It
The Daily Sentinel
!h\: Jo~rnt:Y to and from the
Dr. Jones presented an
said Win~ett has set an exam- Subscribe today • 992-2155
the lactose. Another plus is These products are m'o re equal, the body will ·a.bsorb present in meats, whql(
p~rtlctpatmg health care educational presenta\ion entiple for h1m to live up to as a
that once you eat and begin expensive thi)n the other more minerals tn lhe form of grains and seafood. The d)~~ :
428 Sec. Ave.
provider peforrnmg the mam- tied "Think Pink; Take
www.mydailysentillel. com
councilman.
to digest these cultured-food minerals ·I take, but the a colloid 'Illiquid than it will tribution of the various mi~;.
. n]ogram. Those participating Action." She stressed the
"1. want 10 do what Bob
products,
the
lactase expense, she says, is justi- from a similar amount sup- · erals among the differen\ :
from PageA1
· llealth · care providers are importance of early detection
would
want me to do," Jacks
enzymes they contain help fied due to . the h1gher plied as a standard pill, pow- foods (the same theme holds:. ·
Holzer
Meigs
Clinic, of breast eancer and encourexplained
about wanting to
the · body to digest and absorption level. Please der, tablet &lt;;Jr capsule.
t111e for vitamins) is the basiH::
O''Bleness
Memorial aged women · to adhere to a munity improvement projects
do what is right for Syracuse
absorb some of the lactose check on this to see if there
Next, you should think fo~ the advisory to focus
l:'fdspital in At~ens and good breast health plan alone.
"Bob was the smartest man which was a question
that remains. It is not an "!Ill is any substance there. about what you would variety when it comes fil:,
in including
mammograms,
Doctors
Hospital
·~ :; ·
gone" phenomenon, but B.E., Arlington Heights, 111. accept ·as proof. Would you food selection.
N~lsonville.
clinical breast examim!tions I ever knew," Jacks said. ''He Wingett obviously asked
ju st had common sense. I himself on more than one
Send questions to: "On
yogurt and cottage cheese
DEAR B.E.: 1 don't have want positive statements and
· 'The local "Think Pink··· and self breast exams.
New Horizons Childhood
'
are both considered to be access to the particular &lt;\Udio testimonials from ' people Nutrition,'.' Ed Blonz; c/o,
:Project" has budgeted $8,840 ·
The grant was rec~ived don't care who you were, he occasion.
Due to Wingett's sudden
very low-lactose · foods. For file you rece!ved or t!Je exact who want to sell you their Newspaper
Enterpri~~ •.
Bnrichment Center··
for a project manager salary,. with help from Darla F1ckle knew no strangers."
passing
no
plans
haye
yet
said
he
had
known
Jacks
those who can't tolerate any statements 11 contams; but products, or would you Association ,' 200 'Madi sow ,
$2 ·500 for travel vouchers for and LeAnn Matvey from the
Mulberry Ave. • Pomerpy, OH
more than zero grams, there colloidal mineral products · demand solid science, such Ave. , New York, NY 10016 ·
patients, $12,31'9 for outpa- Appalachia
Community . Wingett since he was 18 and be~li made to honor h1s contributions
to
th
e
village
'
.
foV"him.
had
also
worked
are lactose-free alternatives, are not new. There remains a as the publication of unbi- For e-rriail, address inquiri,e,~ ~
Network
m
tient mammography screen- Center
though
Jacks
said
he
was
sure
Is
Now
Offering
Afternoon
"He' always told me he 'd
and there is always . the lack of competent and reli- ased research m a peer- to: ed@blonz.com. Due to .
ihgs, $1,390 for educational Columbus. .
give
me an opportunity but the village would eventually
option of taking a LAC- able scientihc evidence to reviewed. journal? I hope the volume of mail, persomil'
materials as well as funds for
F1ckle and Matvey
Classes For .Ages 4-5
TAID-type product to help ·support claims that these you would opt for the latter, replies cannot be provided.:::
other equipment and maieri- explained the Think Pink I'd have to take it from honor Wingett's local legacy
(Ed Blonz, Ph.D., is ·~ ·
you handle any of the lactose types of dietary supplements and there is published evi1s
Project was meant to reach there," Jacks recalled about as was Winebrenner.
sure we'll honor him
nutririon scientisr and rhe .
stragglers.
bnng anything spec1al to the dence to be found.
f~ The project manager is those ·~hard to reach women" Wingett's generous nature as in ''I'm
some
another with
Minerals are considered autlwr of "Power Nutrilion: :,:
DEAR DR. BLONZ: I table.
lieai RN educator and cancer · who many not have access .to· an employer and human somethingwaythator will
For more information
last, like
Mineral absorption takes . inorganic elements because, (Signet, 1998) and rh e "Your.'
received an audio file from a
survivor Nm;ma Torres who mammograms· for financ1al bein~ .
will
last,"
Wmgett himself was once a the center
call 992-6245
close friend about a new place, for the most part, in unlike protein, fat, carbohy- Personal Nurritionist" bq(1* :
be reached at 992-2161. reasons or who may steer
Winebrenner
added.
"He
was
Syracuse
council
member
series
(Signet,
1996).),
,
..
type of mineral supplement the small intestines. Pills, drates and vitamins, they do
Torres along with . MCCI clear from m~dical sc~een­
a leader. I can tell you that."
members are promotmg the mgs due to thear fears.
' just as Jacks is now. Jacks
,,
'
If democracy makes leaders accountable to the people
who elect them, it works the
other way as well: People
are also accountable for their
elected leaders. Which is
Diana
why . the United States, in
West
agreeing to provide a $10
million care packa~e to the
Palestinian Authonty (PA),
is so dangerously wrong in
failing to hold the people of voiceless victims even after
the PA ·accountable for the exercising their political will
democratically elected terror at the ballot box, voting into
chieftains of H~. ·
power an outlaw organizaHere's what Secretary of tion whose charter unfolds
State Condoleezza Rice said under a statement by Muslim
this week . when
she Brotherhood founder Hassan
announced the United States al-Banna: "Israel will exist
would provide medical and and will continue to exist
other supplies to \he PA, until Islam will obliterate it,
which, after two months of just as it obliterated others
no American or Eur9pean before it." Regardless of
J.Jnion aid, has run desper- whether this heinous call to
ately low on such necessi- jihad leaves any (ieace for
ties:
"The
Hamas-run the so-called "Quartet" to
Palestinian Authority gov- process, . Rice continued:
ernment bears sole responsi- "Hamas' policies and actions
bility for the hardships fac- should not deprive the
ing the Palestinian people Palestinian people of their
and .the international isola- legitimate
humanitarian
tion that the PA is now expe- needs."
riencing due to its refusal to
Why ever not? Why
recognize Israel, renounce shouldn't Hamas' "policies
terrorism, and abide by pre- and actions," driven by a
vious agreements and oblig- Hitlerian plan to "obliterate"
ations."
·
Israel; deprive Hamas conThat's a lot of refusill, but stituents of their "needs,"
never mind. The real here humanitarian or otherwise
question is, Why does the - and particularly when it
Hamas-run government bear comes to support from civi"sole" responsibility? What lized nation-states spilling
about its supporters, i.e. the blood and treasure to fend
Palestinian voters who gave off Islamic jihad in ·the sothat Hamas-run government called "war on terror"?
a landslide victory? In the There · is a strategic and
world according to the Bush moral senselessness to the
administration, they remain administration's willful dis-

. · OL.D

..

Robert 11ob' VJingett

;/

°

· ·

'NEW .··

SUPERPOWE~S...

SUPERPOWERS ...

Garden dedication recognizes
local organizations ·

.

Decals
to remind truck
.
drivers to buckle up

'

C&gt;eaths ·
·-..
David diaries Platt

Microsoft

EHS

'

Health

Mat's the deal with lactose-free cheese?

OU names grads ·

Pink

PROUD TO.BE APART

OF YOUR LIFE.

Wingett

on::

U'eeMee~l

can

.J i ll

I '

..

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6 .
Monday, May 15, 2006 ·

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Tigers sneak past Cleveland, B2

WAR MARK.TENURE Man ~o be freed after 4 years
in prison for fatal crash ·

AP NEWSMAKER: BRAC,

'

: Inside
Heat burns New Jersey, B2

~

Jerry West receives honorary doctorate, B6

OF WRIGHT-PATIERSON CO:MMANDER

MANSFIELD (AP) - A the driver and sought to -retract ·
man who says be mistakenly his plea.
·
.confessed to being the driver
A group of University of
BY JAMES HANNAH
in a fatal crash was to be freed Cincinnati law students decidASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Sunday after four years of a . ed to take ofi Bennett's case
prison sentence.
through the Innocence Projec~
nine-year
DAYTON -· At the age of
Christopher
.Bennett
is
the
a
law course that uses DNA · ·
8, Andrew Weaver nearly
second inmate in five months testing and other evidence to ;
stepped off the path that
to be helped by the Ohio try to exonerate convieted ·
would later lead him to
Innocence Project, which cbl- felons.
become
commander of
lected evidence indicating he
The students found the van
Wright-Patterson, one ·of the
was the passenger that won days before . it was slated for
largest bases in the Air Force.
him a shortened sentence.
crushing, collected hair and
Weaver was aGcustomed to
Bennett, 30, pleaded guilty blood · samples from the pa~­
pulling up stakes and moving
TuescJay to lesser charges in senger-side air vents and .
·around the globe with his Air
the May 2001 crash that killed determined they matched ·
Force father. But he reached
his best friend, Ronald Young, Bennett.
the breaking point when the
They also found a new wit:
42. He was sentenced to about
family set up house at a base
3 1/2 years, which h~ has ness who said he saw Bennett
in New Mexico when many
already served at Mansfield in the passenger seat with his.
·families were on vacation
Correctional Institution.
arm hanging out the window
and there. were no pl aymates
In January, Bennett won an seconds after the crash.
to be found .
appeal allowing him to with- . Bennett still pleaded guil\)' :
"I was just adamant This
draw his guilty plea to aggra- to aggravated vehicular honu· ·
was not .the place. I didn ' t
vated vehicular homicide and cide and aggravated vehicular
like it. There were no Jdds.
other charges, which carried a assault, but the charges . were
There were no friends, and I
nine-year prison sentence. reduced to second-degree
was running away," Weaver
Stark County prosecutors felonies from first-degree ,
recalled. "My mother was
agreed to a plea deal last week.. felonies, said his attorney; :
absolutely despondent over
said· both Howard Nicols. He also plead~ :
Authorities
thts. My dad said, 'He's a
Bennett and Young were legal- ed guilty again to driving with-.
boy, he ' ll be back by dinner.'
ly drunk when their van spun out a license and drunken dri·
And I was back by dinner:•·
out of control and pit a parked ving.
.
'
Today, the 4 7 -year-old
truck in Paris Township near
Despite the DNA evidence,
Weaver is commander of the
Canton. Young was found Bennett decided to stop fight88th Air Base Wing and runs
between the seats and Bennett ing for exoneration, said Mark
Wright-Patterson, the largest
in the back of the van, s0 it Godsey, a University of .
single-site employer in Ohio
was not clear who was dri- Cincinnati law professor and ·
with more than 22,000 miliving.
director of the Ohio Innocence
tary and civilian workers and
Bennett, who suffered a tear ~ Project.
an annual payroll of more
in his brain, said he had trouStark County prosei:utors
than $1 billion.
.
ble
remembering
the
accident.
could
have retried the case,.
. APPhoto
The 8,.145-acre base plays Col. Andrew Weaver is Interviewed in his office at command headquarters at Wright-Patterson He has said he pleaded guilty using Bennett's original plea, .
host to several major Air Air Force Base, Thursday in DaYton. Weaver, who plans to retire in June, has been at the helm because prosecutors said acct- · their accident reconstruction
Force commands, in9luding since May 2004 and has shepherded Wright-Patterson through the base-realignment process dent reconstruction showed he and his statements to others .
one that designs and devel'was the driver, but gradually . about being the driver, Godsey :
and will pick up 1,200 jobs while many other bases will close or downsize.
ops new aircraft and weapons
began to remember Young as and Nicols said.
systems.
university there before immi- special-operations branch, tive director of the Aviation
Weaver has been at the grating to the United States. where he developed concepts · Heritage Fpundation, said
helm since May 2004. He has The man is now conducting on information warfare. He Weaver has taken a special
shepherded Wrighi-Patterson cultural-training sessions for later was in 'chargenf brietin- interest in the aviation histothrough the base-realignment . a1rmen ·bound for Iraq.
gs, news conferences and ry of the region, which proprocess and · wi II pick up
''One of the things .that you strategic planning for the duced Wilbur · and Orville
I ,200 jobs while many other have to do when you go over general commanding all Air ' Wright.
MENTOR (AP) - A state sibility for my actions," he
bases will close or downsize. there is you have to create Force units in Europe.
"He gets iC Sculimbrene
·
Perhaps the biggest chal- friends,
enemies,"
At
Wtight-Patterson, said:. "He gets the fact that representative pleaded no said.
not
contest
to
a
drunken
driving
Mentor
police
accused
lenge for Weaver has been Weaver said.
Weaver works a 60-to-80- the air base wing is the place
preparing his troops for duty
Born in Sacramento, Calif., hour work week, managing were we. have the sm~le charge on Fliday after his car Cassell of causing a rear-end ·
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Weaver's boyhood was a the base by day and often largest collection of aviauon rear-ended another car, injur- collision shortly after miding the other driver.
night Friday on a road near an
· Pilots
from
Wright- world tour. He not only lived meeting with community heritage facilities."
State
Rep.
Timothy
Cassell,
entrance
ramp to state Route ·
Patterson
have
ferried in Maryland, Colorado and lea(\ers at night.
He said Weaver pushed for
a
Madison
Democrat,
was
2,
.causing
. a minor nee.!!: .
wounded soldiers home; doc- New Mexico, but also in
"Opening up the base and a SJ?ecial waiver so that a
to
one
year
of
proinjury
to'Amanda
Nebbia, 20'.
seutenced
tors and nurses have treated Germany, Guam and Tokyo. buildmg relations with the replica of the Wright brothers
The woman told police .
wounded soldiers near the He joined t!Je Air Force communit,ies and with the plane could fly on base prop- bation and ordered to serve
two
days
of
community
serCassell
tried to drive away
fighting; airmen have guard- because he loved flying, ·. press I think are one of the erty Oct 5, 2005, to mark the
and
fined
about
$1,000.
but
skidded
off the road
vice
ed convoys, directed air traf- :;oloing in a small plane at things I'm proud of," Weaver lOUth anniversary of the
His
driver's
license
was
susahead
of
her
car.
Police Capt. :
fic and set up communica- 16. He · joined ROTC and said. "It's important for us Wrights longest. successful
tions equipment
graduated in 1980 from the not to be a fence coiiiihunity flight that led them to declare pended for six months, with John Jaros said the evidence
"We took a look at the way University · of California- that nobody can look at, they had the world's first work privileges after 15 days. did not prove a hit-skip, and
Cassell, 36, who faces re- Cassell
told
The.
that we trained our airmen Berkeley, a school that in the because it's the taxpayer's practical airplane.
apolo(WilJoughby)
News-Herald,
election
in
November,
and changed it significantly, late '60s was known as a money."
Weaver, who plans to retire
.
h
he was trying to clear hi:'£
well before the Air Force told hotbed of unrest.
. PeoP.le who know Weaver from the.A!r Force at the end gized in a statement.
"I
made
a
big
error
in
judg·
vehicle from the road afte,r
us to," Weaver said.
"When I first told my dad I descnbe him as a strong of June, takes pride in the
ment,
and
lam
taking
responthe
crash.
·
He instituted realistic train- wanted to go to Berkeley, leader.
base carrying on the legac-y
' .
ing exercises on the base in that didn't go well," Weaver
"He's essentially running a of the Wright brothers' mas- ------------------------~------------~. which airmen are placed on recalled.
small city out there," said tery of the air.
,'
.'
convoys, which come under
"Wright-Patterson really
Weaver
rose
quickly Jim Leftwich, vice president
·~
••
attack by soldiers posing as through Air Force ranks. He of aerospace and defense has its thumbprint on everyhas served as a navigator and technology .for the Dayton thing we do as an Air Force,"
enemy forces .
)\1onday ... Cioudy.
A cloudy with a 40 percent
Coalition. he said. "Whether or not
Weaver discovered an air- instructor on F- Ill fighter- Development
chance of showers with
man working at the base den' bombers, Jogged· several "They don't just hand out America gets to dominate the patchy drizzle in the morn- chance of show.ers. Hi~hs
the -upper 60s. Lows m tlie
air for the -next 50 years will
those leadership positions."
tal clinic who grew up in stints , at the Pentagon lower 50s.
·':
ing
..
.
Then
showers
likely
in
Tony Sculimbrene, execu- be decided here."
Baghdad and attended the including one as chief of the
the afternoon. Highs in the
Friday ... Mostly
cloudy
upper 50s. Southwest winds "'ith a chance of showers and
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain thunderstorms. Highs in the,
70 percent ,
·
upper 60s. Chance of rain 4Q
Monday nighLMostly percent.
·~
cloudy. Showers likely iil the
Friday : nighLMost(i:
evening ...Then a chance of cloudy · w1th a 40 percen~ ·
PAINESVILLE (AP) emphasis on whether some- showers after midnight. Lows chance of showers. Low'~
:·
parish ;md merged two others Schools send notes home to body is legal or not legal," in the upper 40s . Southwest around 50.
Bv JOE MIUCIA
winds
around
5
mph.
Chance
Saturday
...
Mostly
cloudy.
·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
since 2002, instead establishing parents in English and said Veroflica Dahlberg, the
with a chance of showers and
a program in which parishes Spanish,. and banks offer loan group's founder. "It'-s more, of rain 60 percent
thunderstomis,
Highs in tire ·
Tuesday
...
Mostly
cloudy
CLEVELAND - The new share resources. But church . .programs that allow undocu- 'How
can
we
make
40·
percent
chance
of
lower
.
70s.
Chance
of rain 40
with
a
. leader of the Cleveland closings would seem inevitable, mented immigrants to finance Painesville a better place?'"
percent
_
showers.
Highs
in
the
lower
Diocese's .800,000 Catholics panicularly in the inner-city.
cars and even buy houses.
In southwest Ohio's Butler
faces a number of challenges, . Lennon, 59, hopes his experiAt a time when some Ohio County, some leaders want 60s. West winds 5 'to 10 mph .. Saturday nighLMostly Tuesd~y
nighLMostly cloudy with a 30 percent ·
including a priest shortage and ence a~ an auxiliary bishop in cities · are struggling to deal state legislation that would
cloudy
with
a 40 percent chance of showers. Lows in'
the possible closing of some . ·Boston, and head of the com- with growing numbers of ille- make it a state crime of Iresthe lower 50s.
·
parishes.
mittee responsible for consoli- gal immigrants, Painesville, a pass to be in Ohio illegally. chance of showers. Lows in
Sunday ...Partly
cloud):
Challenges are nothing new dating the archdiocese, will help city of 17,000 people about 30 Last month, Sheriff Rick the mid 40s. West winds
around
5
mph.
,
with
a
30
percent
chance
of
to Bishop Richard G. Lennon, him in Cleve!and. Among the miles northeast of Cleveland, Jones launched a $10,000
Wednesday
through
showers. Highs in the mid .
who led the Boston Archdiocese more than 60 church closings in is trying to make it work. ·
advertising campaign to warn
70s.
·
Thursday
·
nlghLMostly
at the height of the clergy sex Boston was his home parish, St. . Lake County,_ .a largely employers who are hiring illeabuse scandal and was faced James the Apostle, whose white, politically conservative gal immigrants that they are
IVith closing his boyhood church wa~ built by his grandfa- community, was among the breaking federal law, and
church.
.
first in the Midwest to other county leaders want to
ther and great-uncles.
Lennon will be installed as
"I appreciate in a very real endorse the matricula con- require anyone who seeks a
the diocese's lOth bishop dpring sense that there's ,pain and a real solar, a Mexican-government · building permit to sign a
a Mass on Monday, taking over sense of loss," Lennon said. identity card. Police and busi- pledge not ·to hire illegal
for Bishop Anthony M. Pilla, '1'b!!se aren't just any old build- nesses in Lake County now immigrants.
who is retiring after 25 years.
A commissioner iTh nearby
ings. These are buildings where accept the card as proof of
Lennon noted that. be was some very holy things have hap- identity, which can · help Warren County said he also
humbled by Pope Benedict pened that have touched indi- immigrants . open· bank supf!Orts the idea.
accounts and arrange utility ·. But in Painesville. the attiXVI's selection of him as bish- vidual lives and family lives."
tude on immigration is more
op on April4.
Gerard Dsouza, a parishioner service.
"We
re~lize
there's
proba-don't',~Sk, don't tell.
'Alai: day, when he spoke to at St. John Cathedr.ll downlhe media in Cleveland, one of town, hopes Lennon will con- hly a certam percentage of the It's a tolerance rooted in the
the first questions asked was, tinue Pilla's clustering of church population here that's undoc· mutual interests of employers
umented ," Painesville City and immigrant workers. Lake
"Do you favor the Red Sox or resources.
'That's the ·way a business is Manager Rita McMahon said. County's largest employer,
the Indians?'
But Lennon, whose Boston run. It's a good idea," said "As long as it's not creating a the nursery industry, has
accent will be just as out of Dsouza, 46, of Lakewood. problem, we really do not about' 3,000. workers - most
place in Cleveland as his love "Bishop Lennon is probably have the resources to be able - of them Mexican immigrants.
"That's very hard work and
for the Red Sox, faces greater going to have to build up on that to worry about it."
Lake County and nearby those folks are very _good at ·
Challenges than the questioning or change it. It's going to be a
Perry
Township
fresh breath of air to the dioce5e Ashtabula County have it."
of his baseball allegiance.
betw«en 8,000 · and 10,000 Administrator Walter Siegel
While the growing priest after 2~ y~."
Mexican immigrants, and said. "I know I don't want to
Si~ter Christine Schenk, execshortage is a widespread issue
about
half are probably here do it" .
for the Roman CatHolic church, utive director of FutLrreChurch,
Herman Losely &amp; Spn Inc. ,
the Cleveland Diocese wi II have a Cleveland-based group of lib- illegally, according to the
i.o run 233 parishes with the er.ll R&lt;;&gt;man Catholic reformers, Hispanic Organizations · of a Perry nursery, adds about
thinning ranks of about 460 wants to see more lay ministers Lake and Ashtabula, an immi- 150 seasonal workers to a
year-round staff of about 50,
placed in charge of parishes to grant advocacy group.
active priests. ·
"There
isn't
that
heavy
said
owner Karl Losely.
Pilla has closed just one keep them going.

State representative pleads . no contest·to DUI charge -·:

4

Local weather

..

tn .

City embraces illegal immigration
instead iffighting it .

•

.,

•

Monday, May 15, 20o6

Waterford grounds Southern, wins sectional title
BY Scorr WoLFE
. SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

l.ocAL SCHEDULE
GALUPOUS- A schedule ol ui)OOfhlng colleo&amp;
and high school varsity sponlng events invoMng
1eams from Gallla. Ufliga and Mason counties.

Todav'agam11
Tournament Baaebell
Eastern ·\Is. Notre Dame/Clay (at Rio
Grande), 5 p.m.

OHSAA Division II Dislrlct ,at Oak Hill,
3:30p.m.

=•

Thursday'•
Tournament l;a11
Point Pleasant vs. MagnoRa/Oak Glen (at
Rllchle County). TBA

Fdday'a gam11
Track and Field
West Virginia Stijte Championships, TBA.

Satun:iay•a ~tm11

·

·
ll'lck and leld
0HSAA Division II District fll Oak Hill, 10
a.m.

WATERFORD
The
Waterford Wildcats (14-S)
hosted their version of
Mythbusters Saturday afternoon with the. Southern Lady
Tornadoes as the experimental test .group. The Wildcats
busted the myth that it is ha.rd
to beat a team three times in a
single season, as the hosts had
a relatively easy time in post~
ing the 9-4 sectional championship win.
·
Waterford. advaPlces to a
round one District game
against Portsmouth Clay on
at
Minford.
Thursday
Southern (8-14) bows out of

the 2006 campaign and will
prepare for next season.
Southern says goodbye to its
lone senior Linda Eddy, who
had a nice athletic eareer for
the Lady Tornadoes.
Southern had
runner
reach second in the first and
second · innings, but they
could get no further.
Waterford scored two runs
in the first inning when a batter walked, another batter was
hit, Angela Martin singled,
and an error scored a run ..
Shannon Hill then had an RBI
single to give the hosts a 2-0
lead.
.
A host of walks, a hit batter
and Tiffany Wallace single
led to a big six-run second

•

a

a

Pape

Wolfe-Riffle

inning for the Wildcats. A lihe
single by Martin, _and infield
hit by Hill, and aNegri double
were the key hits in the frame.
the score now 8-0.
· Waterford scored a single·
run in the third to lead 9-0.
Southern scored a single run

West VIrginia State Championships, TBA

in the fifth, then rallied in the
six th for three runs. The
effort was too little, too late as
the Wildcats had already done
the damage in posting the 9-4
wm.
Southern ended the season
at 8-14, not bad for a very
young team that consisted of
all but one underclassman.
With all returning but one for
next season, the team as much
promise for the future. ·
Southern hitters were led
by Chelsea Pape two singles,
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle with a
si ngle, and Kaylyn Spmdling
a single:
. Waterford hitters were Hill
with two singles, and Tiffany
Wallace, Negri, and Anglea

Bv BRAD SHERMAN

BSHERMAN~MYDAILYTR1BUNE.COM

=========='.

CoNrAcrUs
· OVP Scorellne t5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
1-740-446-2342 ex1. '33
or 992·5267 (Meigs Co.)
Fax- 1·740..446-3008
&amp;·mall-

sportsQ.myd~llysentlnel . com

$oot11 Start

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
bsherman 0 mydailytribune.com

Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342; ext. 23
bwaltersOmydallytribune.com

· i.arry Crilm, Sports Wrltei
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33

'

lcrumOmydaltyregister.com

WATERFORD 9, SOUTHERN 4
Southern 000 013 o - 4 4 5
Waterford 261

WP -

~Ient i ne.

000

11:

-

951

LP - Sf!rah Eddy

Eastern,
Meigs both
eliminated

Point falls
in sectional
RIPLEY, W.Va . It's
'Been either feast or famine
for the Point Pleasant offense
all season - Saturday's sectional doubleheader saw a little of both.
The Big Blacks pounded
Ravenswood 11-1 in six
innin~s to force a third 'and
decidmg game in their bestof-three series, but could only
muster four hits in a 4-1
game two defeat.
The games were held at
Ripley High School, where a
tarp was available in case of
rain.
~ Ravenswood
(13-16)
advances to next Monday's
regional semifinal, where the
Red Devils will face Roane
County.
·
Point Pleasant, on the other '
hand, saw an up-and-down
season come to an end with a
17-13 overall mark. It was
· the first time in three years
·that the· Big Blacks did not
·win a sectional crown..
·
It was Nate Adkins' double
to left in the fifth inning that
plated a pair of insurance
. runs and break open a close
one-run game. Adkins fin~shed with a pair of hits for
:the winners, as did teammate
·Dusty
Mullins .
Derek
Cavender and Cody Brown
also recorded hits.
: Meanwhile, Point Pleasant
liad four hits - all singles.
James
Casto,
Brandon
Warner, Nick Stalnaker and
·Chris Cooper had the
safeties.
Warner scored Point's lone
run in .the third inning on a
passed ball.
- Brown pitched a complete
game to annex the victory,
meanwhile Cooper started
:and took the loss for Point .
· The Big Blacks' fortunes
were much better in game
one. Ricky Wyant and
Cooper combined on a onehitter, and the offense supplied plenty of support in the.
· foim of II runs on 10 hits.
Point scored five run sin
the first inning and never
looked 'back. The score stood
9-1 after three innings.
: Wyant paced · the offense.
going 2-for-4 in~luding a
fhird-inning
home
run.
Warner and Casto added doubles and Justin Cullen drove
in three runs . Dewey Wroten ,
(;hris Casey, Ashton Jones
and Cooper also hit safely in
the triumph .
Josh Click had the lone
Ravenswood hit - that com:ing in the sixth inning.

Martin with singles .
Sarah Eddy suffered the
loss with three strikeouts, 12
walks, and two hit batters;
while giving up five hits and
nine runs. Valentine was the
winning pitcher with seven
strikeouts, one walk, two hits,
and two runs. Ashley Arnold
came on in relief and have up
two hits and two runs.
..
Waterford advances to the
District tournament to play
Portsmouth Clay Thursday at
Minford High School in a
first-round District game,

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Two more Meigs County
softball teams were eliminated from the tounament trail
Saturday after both Mei~s
and Eastern were shut out m
their respective sectional
finals.
The Lady Marauders ( 147) were held hitless by
. Amanda Clatterbuck in their
6-0 loss to Wa,rren, while the
Lady Eagles (7' 14) had their
seven-year reign i11 the districts ended with a I0-0 loss
to Trimble.
MHS received six innings
from starter Joey Haning,
who allowed six earned runs,
eight hits and a walk in the
setback. Haning also struck
out three in her Maroon and
Gold .finale.
Clatterbuck, who improved
to 16-1 thisseuson,fanned II
and · walked one in guiding
WHS to .a 24-3 overall mark. ·
Sammie Bowen paced the
Lady Warriors .with two hits
and three RBls. Six others
had one hit apiece.
Warren now advances to
the
Division II district to play
.
.
. ,
, .
. .
.
.
AP photo
P~iladelphi~ Phlll1es Ryan Howard Is congratulated by teammates 111 the dugout after he hit a solo home run off Cincinnati Reds
McClain ar Unioto. Game
Pitcher Chns Hammond in the 12th inning of their baseball game ·sunday in Cint: innati.
time is slated for Wednesday
at 5 p.m.
EHS (7:14) managed only
three hits off of Trimble
starter Carri Woodgerd in the
CINCINNATI (AP)
13th time in 14 games, com- Howard bats left-handed, yet victory, a day after he was Division IV matchup. '
Ryan Howard was tired and pleting its first three-game both homers came off left- recalled from Triple-A. Tom
Woodgerd went the disaching when he came to bat a sweep in Cincinnati since handed pitchers.
Gordon got the last three outs tance for the winning decifew hours after.his late-night September 2002.
· Working on only a few for his 13th save in 14 tries.
.s ion and also knocked in
trip to the emergency room.
"We come to the ballpark hours of sleep, Howard had
The Reds have lost three in three RBls. ·
Two nonstop trips around the expecting to win," manager no expectations when he a row for the tirst time this
.Brittany Bissell was creditbases made him feel a little Chilrlie Manuel said. "Right came to bat. He was stunned season, a slump that knocked ed with the loss, allowing 10
now, · we're good as far as when' the ball cleared the wall them out of first place in the . runs and I 0 hits in the setbetter.
Out of the lineup because of being together and our chem- . - twice, no less.
NL Central. .The league's back.
a stomach illness, Howard got istry and how we logk at - " l .have no clue. It ju st hap- highest-scoring offense has
THS now adavnces to its
!nto tbe _game_as ~ pinch-hi~ter . things. I've got a good feeling pened," said Howard, who gone cold. scoring one run or third-straight district tournam. the etghth mnmg and h1t a about our club right now."
!Jomered three times in the le ss in six of the last II ment and · will take on
tymg . homer. He connect~d
Howard wasn't feeling very series. "I felt weak, tired. I games.
. Franklin Furnace · Green.
agammthe 12thfor ·a 2-l v1c- good when his 12th homer off was just trying to see some
"Offensively, it 's been Game time is scheduled at
tory over the Cincinnati Reds left-bander Chris Hammond· pitches .' I was just being very tough." manager Jerry Narron Minford High School for 5
on Sunday that extended the (O-J) finishe_d the longest selective ."
said. "We' re not scoring run s. p.m.
Phillies' remarkable two- game of the season for both
Geoff Geary (1-0) pitched We're not getting hits early in
No other information was
teams. It was his third two- out of a two-o n, two-out
week tear.·
available for either game at
Ple.se SH Reds. Bl
Philadelphia won for the homer game of the season. threat in the II th to get the
release time .

.Phillies outlast Cincinnati in 12 innings, 2-1

Firing Piston: Wallace predicts
Game 4.win over Cavaliers
. CLEVELAND (A_P) _The
Detroit Pistops will win
Game 4 - guaran-Sheed.
One day after an 86-77 loss
to the Cavaliers cut Detroit's
.series lead -in half, forward
Rasheed Wallace, the irrepressible motor mouth from
the Motor City, declared the
Pistons would win Game 4.
On top of that, Wallace proclaimed the best-of-seven
series over.
"I know we're going ·to win'
it," Wallace said sitting on the
scorer's table following
Sunday practice. at Quicken
Loans Arena. "We're going to
bust their (butt). Tomorrow
ni~ht is the last game here in
th1s building for this year."
Sheesh, Sheed . Anything
else big fella?
· "Y' all can quote me, put it
back page, front , page, whatever,' said Wallace. "They
can send whoever they want
I,

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

to send. I know tlie crew I care ofthe balf and do more.to
think they're going to send. contain LeBron James or .
But it don't matter. I know we they ' ll have make another trip
can do it, and they know we to Ohio. Game 5 is
can do it We know what Wednesday night in Auburn
we've got to do."
Hill s, Mich .
Jame s. who scored 15
Although he saicl he
re spects the Cavs, Wallace points in the founh quarter
isn't worried about giving Saturday. while recording his
second tripl e-double in his
them any motivation.
"It ain't bulletin board first playoffs , laughed off
material, it's a fact ," he said. Walhice 's boasts.
"They can put it on the but:
"That 's Rasheed," James
letin board. They can put it on said. "Every playoffs, you
a video. I don't care. I know · know you're goi ng to get at
what we're capable 9f doing, least one good quote out of
that's all that it is."
him . We can't get caught up
Wallace has gone prognos- in that. "
ticator before in the playoffs,
The Pistons are accustomed
placing his neck on the hne to to hearing WRII ace spout off..
mspire his t.eammates. And And. the y know when ·he
the Pistons have responded does. they'd better come
..
with a win every time.
through.
.
pholo
"That 's what we do,"
"You have to go out th ere
Detroit
Pistons'
Rasheed
Wallace
(36)
blocks
a
shot
by
Cleveland
Wallace said .
and play even harder and get a
Cavaliers' Anderson Varejao during the first quarter of a secondThe Pistons, up 2-1 in the
Please SH Cavs, B1
series, will have to take better
round NBA tJaskettJall playoff game Saturday in Cleveland.

�•

Monday, May 15, 2006

Pace B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, May 15.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\egi~ter

Tigers sneak past Cleveland, 3-2

C L A S.S I F I E D

'

AP photo

Cleveland Indians second baseman Ronme Belliard. top, lands
on Detroit Tigers runner CurtiS Granderson after throw1ng to
first to complete a double play on T1gers' Placido Polanco m
the sixth inning of a baseball game Sunday in Cleveland.
'

CLEVELAND (AP) - Mike Maroth
can't ex.plam why he IS so successful
agamst the Cleveland Ind1ans
Maroth (5·2) allowed one unearned
run over SIX innings and the Detrmt
Tigers completed their first three-game
sweep m Cleveland m near! y I 6 years
with a 3-2 v1ctory over the Indians on
Sunday.
"I do well here," said Maroth, who 1s
6-0 with a 2.30 ERA in seven career
starts m Cleveland "Why, I don't know
I just do"
Aaron Boone, who had one of the
seven hits allowed by the left-h01nder,
offered a theory.
"He's a good pitcher lt's more than
what you see on radar guns. Good pitchmg is hming spots and changing speeds.
He sure does that well," Boone said.
Detroit won its fourth straight to
Improve the best road record in baseball
to 16-7 The Ind1ans lost their sixth
stra1ght for the first lime since a sixgame sk1d Aug. 9-14, 2004
"We're m one of those funks," Ind1ans
manager Enc Wedge sa1d.
The Ttgers last swept a senes m
Cleveland in June of 1990.
"You're not supposed to wm on the
road," Maroth said "You're supposed to
lose a senes or maybe get swept. The
skipper (Jim Leyland) keeps us focused.
He has us ready to play every day."
Maroth hasn't allowed an earned run
to the Indmns in 13 mnings this season
and is 8-3 in his career agamst them. He
walked one and struck out two, leaving

after the T1gers scored three runs m the
top of the seventh and a 59-minute rain
delay to start the bottom half.
The Indians put runners on second and
third with no outs in the e1ghth, but Joel
Zumaya came on and struck out V1ctor
Martinez before yielding · a pinch-hit
sacrifice fly to Ben Broussard that made
it 3-2.
"I thought it might go out, but 11 was
rainmg agam and the wmd was commg
in pretty hard," Broussard smd. "Guys in
the dugout sa1d the ball took off and
then Just d1ed." /
.
Casey Blake was mtenuonally walked
before Ronme Belhard lined out to end
the rally.
Fernando Rodney pitched the ninth
' for his s1xth save, walking two before
~etting Travis Hafner on fly to the warnmg track in left-center for the final out
Hafner leaped up m disgust before
splashing his way through the mud near
first base.
"That one looked hke 11 m1ght be off
the wall ," Broussard sa1d "That's JUSt
the way thmgs are nght now."
Jason Johnson (2-3), m h1s first outing
agamst the T1(lers smce leavmg them as
a free agent m December, held a 1-0
lead after s1x.
Carlos Guillen poked a smgle just past
diVIng second baseman Belhard to open
the seventh. He went to third on Chris
Shelton's line smgle to right and Craig
Monroe followed with an RBI double to
tie It 1-1.
Reliever Fernando Cabrera got Vance
Wilson to top a bouncer that frrst base-

man Eduardo Perez misplayed tor an
error, allowmg both runners to score.
"He h1t 1t off the end of the bat and 11
had spm on 11," Perez sa1d "Sometimes
those are as tough to catch as a knuckleball. I said. 'Oh boy, hope for the best '
"W1th nobody on, you can JU st knock
It down, but with a runner on thrrd, I had
to try and catch it and make a play I dtd n't."
.
Cleveland used three singles and a
m1splay by Tig_ers nght fielder Magglio
Ordonez to take a 1-0 lead m the fifth.
Blake smgled with one out and went
to second on a two-out smgle by Boone
Grady S1zemore then smgled to right,
but Blake was held up by th1rd -base
coach Jeff Datz - until Ordonez had
the ball pop out of his glove tor an error,
enabling the runner to score.
Johnson allowed two earned runs and
e1ght h1ts over s1x-plus mmngs He fell
to 0-3 with an 8 28 ERA m five starts
since opening 2-0 w1th a I 83 ERA
through Apnl 18.
Notes: During the game, the Indians
announced they had sold RHP Steve
Karsay to Oakland The 34-year-old
right-hander had been pitchmg at TripleA Buffalo. ... Seven Ttgers and four
Indians used pink bats to honor Breast
Cancer Awareness Day Indians OF
Jason M1chaels sw1tched to his regular
model after grounding out m the first. .
Blake extended h1s hlllmg streak to -12
games, tying a career h1gh . ... Johnson
had a 16-28 record and 4 82 ERA m 66
starts over two seasons m Detro1t

Heat burns New Jersey, 102-92 Indians' Wedge retpains optimistic
EAST
RUTHERFORD,
N J (AP) - The wake-up
call came early Sunday for an
8 a.m walk-through - a
dectdedly unusual gathenng
m NBA Circles
"Make no m1stake," Udoms
Haslem said. "It was gruelmg."
a nd
But tt worked Dwyane Wade, Shaqutlle
O ' Neal and company ' are a
win away from a return to the
Eastern Conference finals .
Wade had 31 points, eight
assists and seven rebounds,
and the Mtam1 Heat beat the
New Jersey Nets 102-92 to
take a 3-1 lead m thetr bestof-seven series.
"We're not sur~rised.
When we play Miam1 Heat
basketball on both ends of the
floor, we're a tough team to
beat, at home or on the road,"
Wade sa1d. "We go home to
Game 5 and try to close 11 out
at home "
Wade was sensational as
usuaJ. but It was the play of
Antoine Walker and Haslem
during a key stretch of the
thud quarter that gave Miamt ·
the cushion It needed to hold
on for its th1rd stra1ght victory. The Heat can now wrap 11
up when they host Game 5 on
Tuesday night m M1ami .
"I've said it all year,"
O 'Neal said. "If we do what
we're supposed to do, we'll
be fine."
Walker scored 20 points on
7-of- 11 shootin~ and Haslem
added 20 pomts . and II
rebounds, shootmg 8-of-ll.
They combined for 16 of
Miami's 22 points dunng the
third penod, when the Heat
built their lead to as much as
II.
"They h1t shots, they hit a
lot of shots," Nets forward
Richard
Jefferson
sa1d.
"Udoms Haslem, I swear he
didn 't miss one tonight."
Jason K1dd tned to rally the
Nets , collectmg h1s ninth
postseason triple-double and
moving over to guard Wade
after h1s hot start. But New
Jersey could never regain the

Cavs
f'rom Page 81
win for him," Richard
Hamilton said. "We have to
have his back, do what we
do, and get a win."
: The Cavaliers' hopes rest
with James, who in Game 3
had perhaps his finest all'around 48 minutes this sea-

Reds
fromPageBl
the ~arne. But if we continue
to pttch the way we have the
past couple of days, we're
going to win a lot of games
because we'll break out of
it. tl
Cincinnati's Jason LaRue
hit a solo homer w1th a pink
bat inscnbed with his mother's name, providing the only
run off a Phillies starter in the

•

lead after the first quarter.
K1dd had 17 points, 13
rebounds and 12 asststs, tymg
W1lt Chamberlam for third
place on the postseason
careed1st and movmg w1thin
one of Larry B1rd for second
Vince Carter added 26
pomts and Jefferson scored
17 Nenad Krsllc had 20
pmnts and 14 rebounds.
Only eight teams m 163
series have come back from a
3-1 deficit to win a best-ofseven series, though it did
happen earlier in this ~ostsea­
son when the Phoemx Suns
rallied past the Los Angeles
Lakers.
"It's tough You want to
take care of business at
home," Carter said. "We put
ourselves in the hole. We're
not gom~ to hang our heads
and say It's over I expect us
to, come out suck together,
play hard."
The game was tied at 54
before Walke~ drilled consecutive 3-pointers for a 60-54
lead. Carter made a basket,
but Haslem knocked down
three straight JUmpers as the
Heat pushed the lead to 66-56
with 5:42 remaining in the
third quarter.
"Antoine is there to be a
psychological threat," Miami
coach Pat Riley said. "Teams
feel he m1ght ~o ·on a run
Udoms was sohd throughout
the game defens1vely and in
the third making shots."
The lead grew to 70-59 on
Walker' s basket 111 the lane
with 4:03 left in the quarter,
but Lamond Murray h1t a 3pomter and Kidd made three
free throws at the end of a 124 spurt as the Nets pulled
withm 74-71 w1th I : II to go
Miam1 was up 76-73 after
three
The Heat d1dn't even need
much from O' Ne111, who took
only 13 shots and scored 16
pmnts. Maybe that's why forward Jason Collins thinks the
Nets would be better forcing
0' Neal to do more mstead of
double-teammg h1m and
leaving shooters open.
son.
James didn't take over
until he had no other choice.
For three quarters, he sat
back and let thmgs unfold
before him. He entered the
final 12 minutes w1th just
six pomts on 3-of-10 shoot·
ing before seizmg the game.
With 11 Chamberlain-like
finger roll, James gave the
Cavs their first lead of the
second half, and over the
next 6:36, he scored II with
series.. Left-hander Brandon
Claussen made the 1-0 lead
stand until the weary Howard
came to the plate in the
·eighth.
A day after Philadelphia's
Jon Lieber retired the ftrst 20
batters on his way to a 2-0
victory, Claussen was almost
as stingy, blanking the
Phtllies on a pair of hits
before Howard's third career
pinch-hit homer tied it at I. It
was the first pmch-hlt homer
by the Philhes this season.
"Everything was good,"

,

CLEVELAND (AP) Eric Wedge has a seemingly
endless supply of confidence
even when his 1team
appears to be lackmg m all
areas
of game.
somehmes we're not"
For
a manager who has lost
Wade opened the fourth
w1th a drive before the Nets six straight, seven of eight,
scored four stra1ght to get and watched his Cleveland
w1thm one. Carter then Indian s plummet to fourth
m1ssed two free throws, and place, Wedge was surprisingthe Nets missed three more lY upbeat Sunday after a 3-2
chances to . take the lead loss to the Detrott Tigers.
before Haslem's follow made
"The guys fought back
it 80-77 w1th 7:38 to go.
today and they're ready to
Haslem added two more pop out of this," Wedge said
b1g plays down the stretch, even though he had just seen
hllting a JUmper after a Cleveland's usually overscramble to extend Miami's powering offense score only
lead to 92-87 with 2:37 six runs in a three-game
remammg, then hitting a pair sweep- the Indians' first at
of free throws with I :32 left home to the Tigers since
after the Nets had gotten 1990.
withm two.
"You'll see 11 happen here
Wade was 6-of-7 m the first soon," contmued Wedge.
quarter, cappmg h1s 12-point "Things will start gomg our
penod with a jumper with 2.4 way."
seconds left that gave Miami
Wedge insists the cause for
a 27-24 lead. The Heat shot his unbridled optim1sm 1s
65 percent (13-for-20) m the what he sees when he looks
first 12 mmutes.
past the results.
But they' missed a chance to
"These guys work every
expand their lead much more day, they care about every
with some poor free throw game," he said. "Thi s is a
shooti'ng in the second. They good team that is maybe trymis sed four of seven dunng a mg too hard. When the guys
4-minute stretch without a just do what they are capable
field goal, allowing New of indiVidually, we'll go as a
Jersey to tie it at 44.
team ."
Jason Williams made a 3Wedge sa1d bad breaks
pointer to break the lie, and
seem
to haf?pen dunng losmg
Walker added one later in the
streaks,
pomung to one play
period as Miam1 took a 54-48
lead at halftime. The Nets in particular Sunday when
were only 7-of-25 (28 per- Detroit scored two runs on a
cent) from the field in the slow roller With odd spm that"
second quarter and 37 percent eluded lnd1ans f1rst baseman
Eduardo Perez
in the first half.
"It hu nght on the very nub
Notes: Magic Johnson is
of
the bat and had crazy
the career leader w1th 30
postseason triple-doubles .. English on it," s31d Wedge.
M1am1 improved to 4-0 111 "That was a centimeter away
playoff games at New Jersey, from being a stnkeout."
Later, Ben Broussard and
mcluding wms m Game 3 and
4 dunng their first-round Travis Hafner hu drives that
sweep 111 2005 . The New. may have reached the seats
York Giants' Ell Mannmg or caromed off the outf1eld
and La Var Arrington were walls- when conditions are
among those in the crowd . not as wmdy and rainy as
The Heat improved to 6-0 Sunday.
Perez who has been around
when leading at halftime m
this postseason
b1g-league clubhouses since
two assists - the last to
Damon Jones for a 3-point
dagger to put Cleveland
ahead by 10
:'It's the best game he's
played," Cavs forward
Donyell Marshall satd. "He
didn't press the 1ssue. He
found people, he rebounded
and he scored when he
needed to score."
For the second straight
game, the Cavaliers will be
without
guard
Larry
Claussen Said. "I just made
one mistake. What's done is
done. They're playing good
baseball right now."
Numerous players from
both teams used pink bats,
part of major league baseball 's support of the f1ght
agamst breast cancer. Ken
Griffey Jr. used one inscribed
with the name of his mother,
Alberta, and liked the way 11
felt.
"I'm telling you, they're
not gettmg th1s one back," he
said, swingmg it in the elub-

•

Hughes. He remams with
his family following the
death of hi s 20-year-old
brother, Justin, from heart
fa1lure Thursday
Cleveland coach M1ke
Brown sa1d the club 1s planning to attend the funeral
Tuesday in St. Lou1s before
heading to Detroit for Game

5.
Other than James, the
P1stpns' btggest problem
was, well, the P1stons.
house before the game.
It felt better than it worked.
Griffey went 0-for-5 with a
walk and a strikeout.
Then again, none of the
Reds' bats worked very well
agamst the Phillies' starters
dunng the series. Cole
Hamels and Lieber combmed
for 13 2-3 shutout mnings In
the first two games.
Brett Myers extended the
streak to 17 2-3 mnmgs
before LaRue - using a pink
bat mscnbed with Melanie
LaRue - hit a solo homer

Call II Counly OH

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'

"

toddling around hts dad
Tony's Big Red Machine
days in Cincinnati in the
1970s, said it is not time to
panic.
"That's the beauty of this
game and its long season,"
said the 36-year-old. "These
are tough times that can only
make us stronger. We w1ll
learn from them because we
are a very good team."
' Tigers
manager
Jim
Leyland agreed.
"When you sweep a team
hke Cleveland, it's for a couple of reasons," he said.
"They're
probably
not
swinging the bats as good as
they can and you also pitched
good.
"We caught a big break
w1th the little sqUJbber. We
caught a couple of breaks m
the three games, but the good
part is we took advantage of
them.
''I'm sure we'll see a different Cleveland club the
next time we play them."
IN THE PINK: All players on both teams wore pink
ribbons and pink wnstbands
wh1le four lndmns and seven
T1gers used pmk bats on
Breast Cancer Awareness
Day.
"I thmk 1t's a real nice concept," Indians f1rst baseman
Eduardo Perez sa1d about the
bnght bats. "I was happy to
oblige when they asked me. I
never even gave it a second
thought "
Perez sa1d he' ll keep his
bats as souvemrs. "I went
back to my regular one midway through the game. It just

ALL IN THE FAMILY:
Manager Eric Wedge and
wife Kate brought their onemonth-old daughter Ava
Catherine to her f1rst game
uMy mom was here, too/'
Wedge said. "ThIS was a special Mother's Day for us"
Hall of Farner Tony Perez
spent the weekend visitmg
h1s son Eduardo.
"We. wanted to spe nd',my
birthday With our two grandchildren," sa 1d Perez, who
turned 64 Sunday and
watched the game from a
broadcast booth behmd home
plate. "It was a nice v1s1t on
Mother's Day for my w1fe
(Pituka)."
Perez recalled that one of
the scanest at-bats of his 23year career came at old
Cleveland Stadmm on Labor
Day in I 980 - when one of
the Blue Angels Jets performmg at an a1r show buzzed th&lt;;
ballpark.
"That was very scary
because I had no idea what
was going on," Perez sa1d,
who was JUSt d1ggmg mto the
batter's box "I'm trymg to
focus on the pitcher, get
lock'ed m, and th1s b1g jet
comes over the scoreboard. I
ducked. Everybody did."

1.

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Bt.~alneas and Bulldlnga .
.. .............. 340
Bualneas Opportunlty ............... CI'.'"'' ......... 210
Bualneas Training...... •

••

• ................. 830
... . ............... 810
. ... .................. 430

F111m Equlpmenl....... .
Ferma tor Rent . .......
Farm• for Sale ............................ ................. 330
For LeaM. .. ... .... ... ..
.
.............. 490
For Sole ........................................................ 585
For Stile or Trade....... . .. . . . ................ . 590

a

sao

Fruit~
Vegetabln .....................................
Fur.nlehed Roome..... .. . . ........... .... . . •so
• General Haullng................ ,.......................... 850
Giveaway....... .......... ... ••
•............... 040

Happy Ado ...................................................050

Hey 6 Grain.... .......... . ... . • ......................640

AVON I All Areas! To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears 304·
675·1429

BELIEVE IT!
full Time- Up IO

$8/hour
Part Time also avalloblo
Make cells that make a
difference!
Call on behalf of the
NRA or Major Non·
Profit
Organizations
•Weekly pay and
bonus pl an
•Patd tralntng and
holidays
•Pa1d vacations f!tlery
6 months
•Top-norch work
environment
Call NOW and start a
newca,....l

1-877-463-6247

ext. 2454

I"'!)

tM oPflilll

TRACWR TRAILER

TRAIN ING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

Houaehold Goode ..................................... 51 0
Houaee for Rant . 1.. ~. ............................. 410

Chlldcare worker needed
tor Residential Treatment
Facility Pay bas&amp;d on
experience paid tnsur
ance Call to- apply MonFrl, 9em-3pm (7401379
9083

a

L~tatond Found ........................................... 080
Lpta li Acreage ............... .... .... ................... 360
Mlacellaneoua.............................................. 17.0

Mlacellaneoua Merc:handlae . .................. 540
Mobile Home Repair ..... ..............................880
Mobile Homea for Rent.. . . . : .... .......... 420
Mobile Homea for Sate ..... .. ......................... 320
to Loan............. . . .. ................. 220

Motorcycle• A 4 Wheel.,-~ .........................740
Mualcatlnatrumanla ....... .......... .. .. . . !170
Paraonala .....................................................005
Pe.. tor S81e . . . ..................... . . ...... 1580

a. HHllng .................................... 820
Rodlo, TV a. CB Ropolr ............................... teo

Plumbing

Prora. .lonal S.rvlc.a.... .... ..... .. ..... ....... 230

Real Eat.te Wanted .................................. 300
Schoola lnatructlon............. ........................ 150
Seed , Plant Fertilizer.............. .
. .850

a

Situation• Wanted ..................................... 120
for Rent. .. ......... .. ......... . ...... 480

Spa~

................................. 520
.. ...........................720

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

Uphololory... .. ..... .. .. ........ ...... ...

.

. '115
. .. 870

Van a For Sale. . ... ........ . ..... ... .... ....... 730
Wanted to Buy.. .... .................... . . .. ... 090
Wanted to Buy- Ferm Suppllaa..
. ... 820
Wonted To Do ............ ............................... 180
Wanled to Rant .
• ••••••••••••••••••
••• •••• 470
Yard 5alo· Qalllpollo ...................................07Q
Yard Sale·PomeroyfMiddle........... • • • •• 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleaaani .................. ,............. 078

T1red of work1ng all holl·
days? T~red of working 12
hour shifts? Come home
and JOin us at Medl Home
Health! Opening tor a PAN
RN and/or lull t!me AN
position EOE Full lime
poslt1ons Includes benel1t
package 40~ K, and sign
on bonus $2 000 Call
Judie Reese
AN
CIIMICBI
Manager
at
(7401441·1779 or 1·600·
481-8334

Y~u

fiND ~0/lf:: 'J/1/-U/Jf'l
{o 61~ You A !lATH

c

C aoor

I' 16
Commumty Actions IS
seekmg a Dnver for med·
teal tran sportation programs Must be able to
transport out of town
Columbus
(Huntington
Charle ston, etc ) wit hin
150 mile radius have valid
dr1vers license good drlvmg record
and
be
approved by our Agency
Insurance carrter Able to
deal wrth persons of various aocio eoonomlc back·
grounds Good communi·
cation and record keeping
skills Sensitive to the
needs of others High
School Graduate or equlv·
alent Send or bnng
resu me Wllh three (3) ref·
erences to Mrs Edwards,
Galha Meigs C A A • 6010
N
Stale
Route
7
Chesh1re, Ohto 45620 by
5126106 GMCAA rs EO~
Direct Sales Fantastic
SOK
no
Opportunity,
Problem
Must
be
MotiVated and Self Starter
can Ken (740)992·7440
Growmg Home Health
Agency has full· Time
pos1t10n for an RN or LPN
Competitive
wages
&amp;
benefits
bonuses
Contact Home Health
Care of SEOToll Free at1·
886·368 1 100
EXPERIENCED
TRUCK DRIVERS AND
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
OPERATORS,
DRIVERS MUST HAVE
VALID CCL LIE:ENSE/
0PEAATORS MUST
HAVE EXPERIENCE
WITH
VARIOUS DOZERS AND
EXCAVATORS APPLY
IN PERSON AT MEAD·
OWS DRILLING LLC IN
RAVENSWOOD. WV OR
CALL {304)273-8121
FOR DIRECTIONS

ALLIANCE

1-800·334-1203

In Memoriam .......................................... 020

•

'NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
• FULL TIM E CLASSES
' COL TRAINING
' FINANCING AVAILABlE
'JOe PLACEMENT
' ENAOLL INO NOW

Help Wanted ................................................ 110
Home lmprovementa... .. ..... . ..................810
Home• for Sale............... ....................... 310

Insurance . ......... .. ........ . ... ........... ....... 130
Lawn Barden Equipment .................... 880
Llveatock............................................... 830

sund•y Dl•play: 1:oo
Thur•day for Sunday•

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Assista nt managerfcoun·
Ierman Pomeroy Auto
Parts, 1 19 W Second
Street, Pomeroy

.. ................. 780

Excavating. ................ •.•.

Trl.lcka for Sale

llor Sunday• Papar

All Dleplay: 12 Noon 2
Bu•ln••• Daye Prior To
Publication

An EKC&amp;IIent way to earn
money The New A110n
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645

ATTENTION AN'SIII
NEW PEA DIEM RATEIII
Overbrook
Center
Currently Has Open1ngs
For AN'S If You Are A
Caring
And
Compassionate Person
Who En joy's Worktng W1th
The Elderly, We Wou ld
Love Ta Have You As Part
01 Our Team We Are Now
Offering New Per Diem
Pay Rates Please Stop In
And Fill Out An Appjlcatlon
Or Call At(7 401992·64 72
For More Info rmation
EOE

, _ llllntiiiiiCIOrtllhr com

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified, ads
{I•~
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

• All ada must be prepaid'

Assemble crafts,
wood Items
To $480/wk
Matenals provided
Free Information pkg
24Hr
801 ·426-4649

•............... 140

Equipment .....

Sporting Goode
SUV'a for Sale..

.., 1 18

100 WORKERS NEEDED

Carda of Thanks .................. ....................... 010
. Child/Elderly Care... •. . • •
••••••.••••••.• 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ............................. . 840
Equipment for Rent...
. ... .••..•....... .. 480

Money

Word Ads

Dally Xn-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for JFQ~ertlon
Jn Next Dav•• Paper
,.s,.u ncd,•YY In-column: 1:00 p . m.

ltib IIELPWANnDr I

Campers &amp; Motor Homea ........................... 780
Camping

lJeaa'tir~

Attention Mechanics Now
tak1ng applications for
e;.cperlences
Truck
Mechanic Mall resume to
A&amp;J Truckrng 14530 St R1
7 Marietta OH 45750

ant. Corrections wll
made In the t1
vallablo edition.

BASELINES: Right-hander Rafael Betancourt struck
out two m one scoreless
inmng at Double-A Akron in
a rehab assignment Sunday
Sidelined si nce straming a
muscle m his upper back on
April 19, Betancourt could ·
be activated by the lnd1ans
on Tuesday. . RF Casey
Blake is hlltmg .442 (19-for43) with four homers and
e1ght RB! s dunng a 12-game
h1tting streak .... SS Jhonny
Peralta has hit m 12 of 16
games, going 20-for-63
(.317) with 14 runs .... DH
Travis Hafner has 17 RB!s in
his last 15 games, battmg
.300 (18-for-60) oyer that
stretch.

mild back spasms. .. The
Reds put LH reliever Kent
Mercker on the 15-day disabled hst with a sore elbow
and called up RH M1ke Burns
from Tnple-A .... Reds LHP
Eric Milton, on the DL following knee surgery, is
expected to start the Hall of
Fame game Monday m
Cooperstown, N Y, agamst
Pittsburgh .. Claussen went
e1ght inmngs, matchmg h1s
career high ... The Reds have
g1ven up four pmch-hit
homers th1 s season.

r

lon ol an advert!

They made 17 turnovers
"It's .a matter of getting
- only one less than their .back to meat-and-potatoes
combined total in the basketball," he sa1d. "We
tried to do too much. We
series' f1rst two games and missed shots that were played out of character"
Wallace doesn't see h1s
npped the nets m Games I
and 2 For a'll the•r playoff prediction as riskY.. He relexpenence, the P1stons IShes the role of v11lam, and
looked like postseason will be treated with the .
newcomers
down
the usual disdam by Cleveland
fans, who are still angry at
stretch .
However, coach Flip h1m fur a flagrant foul
Saunders 1sn't too con- agamst center Zydrunas
Ilgauskas this season
cerned.
off the facmg of the upper
deck in the fifth inning.
It was the only mistake in
seven innings by Myers, who
got hll hard m his first two
starts of the season but has
since gone on a roll. The
right-hander has given up
only I 0 earned runs in his last
six starts, a 2.11 ERA over
that span.
Notes: The Philhes are 2-0
m extra innings, the Reds 11 ... Philadelphia's Bobby ,
Abreu sat out a second
stra1ght game because of

(

To Place

felt more comfortable "

"Stick w1th the game r,lan
of makmg Shaq beat us, ' he
said "From Game I that's
been the strategy Sometimes
we're able to do that and

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

2006

Kitchen help wanted·
even1ngs and weekends a
must, 20·30 hours per
week
Must
Be
Dependable Apply In per·
son D&amp;M Pizza Syracuse,

01!_
Llconled Property Inc!

caaualty lnauranct
Agent

Oak
Hill
Finartclal
Insurance a subs•dlary of
Oak Hill Banks, has a lull·
Housekeeping Supervisor
time career opportunity In
Heal!hcare
Services
our Jackson office lor an
Group Inc Is looking for a
expenenced Property, and
career onented sggras·
Casualty Insurance Agent
slve hands-on manager In
licensed In Ohto Excellent
the Gallipolis area As the
communication and orga·
leading provider of hou~e­
are
mzattonal
skills
keeplng and laundry serv·
required Excellent com
Ieee to the long term care
pensatlon and benefit•
Industry, we are seeking
Including heallh!lHe lnaur·
' Individuals who w1ll effectively represent our com- • ance and profit shar·
lng/401 (~I
Pre- amploy·
pany and manage our onment
drug
testing
Site operations We pro
required Send resume
vide a competitive salary,
and salary requirements
pa1d training and benefits
to Oak Hill Banks, AHn
package
Please
faK
Human Resources PO
resume to
1 614 577
Box 647, Jackson, OH
0125
45640, Please reference
ResCare/Chespeake/Le.wr
Job Code N575E EOE
ence Group Homes w1ll be
MIFIDN
hiring a full time R N For
Rl 35 Adull Book S10re
more mlormatlon you may
need Mldntght Clerk Full
contact Angle McMtllln at
llme(304)937·4900
(740)887·3051

c.-

~

NEA Inc

HELP WANIID

I

Oakwood Homoo
Sales Person 6 llgure
potenllal Blue Cross, Blue
Shield, 401K, 5 day work
week
Proven
sales
record Call Russ Murdock
{740)446-3093 or tax
(7401446·3699
email
rm7600clayton net
Ohio VaHey Home Health
Inc hiring AN's Accepting
applications for CNA
STNA,
CHHA
PCA
Competitive
wages,
mileage and benefits
Including health Insurance
Apply at 1480 Jackson
Pike Galhpolls or 2415
Jackson Avenue, Point
Pleasant, WV or phone toll
he 1·866-441-1393

Clolllpollo
Collage
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740 446 4367
1-BOD-214·04e2
WWtl galllpoll~tt reercotteg&amp;

com

Accredited Member Accredit ng
Couoc1l lor lntlependenl ColteO&amp;&amp;
lnd Schools 12748

180
1.

WANIF.D
ToDo

George's
Portable
sawmill, don't haul your
Logs to the Mill just call
304 675 1957

Needed lmmedre.taly
Babysmer tor afternoon
shift Various days includes
some weekends Prefer in
my home due to a child
whh food allergy Must be
great with kids depend·
able and reliable Call for
morelnlo (740)245·0321

Part lime position to
Manage Country Homes
rental commun~ty'ln Shade
Area · Includes a house to
live In Send resume to
Country Homes, PO Box
1033 Logan, Ohio 43136

I I\\ \ i I \ I

Parts Salesperson want·
ed Computer eKperience
and knowledge of farm
eqUipmenl
preferred
Salary negotiabte depend·
ing on experience Heatth
Insurance provided Send
resume to CLA Box ~
clo Gallipolis Trtbune, PO
Box 469. Gallipolis OH
45631

HIO VALLEY PUB
ISHING CO recom
ends lhat you do busi
ess w1th peop le yo
now and Nor to sen
ney through the mal
ntil you have lnvestiga.t
the otferln

Physicians Office In need
of part·t1me A&amp;slstant
Nurse, ReceptiOnist and
Billing Clerk Ma11 resume
to PO Box 220, 3009
Jackson Ave
Point
Pleasant, WV 25550 or
lax 10 (3041675·2096

•NOTICh

Party Supply Store for sale
In Pomeroy {304 )675 5332

r

MoNEY

rol..oAN

Seeking highly motivated
parson tor fast paced
hourly
Management
Position
Retail
and
Automotive experience a
must Call (740)992-5391
Summer sitter needtd for
2 boyo (7&amp;91 Conlonary
area Mon·Thurs $20/day
MUst be 14 or older
(7401446·Ba79

20
acre
tarm
w1th
2500sq ft custom 1 999 2
story
home
located
between Ato Grande and
Jackson 3·4BR den, 3 full
bath with master jacuzzt,
huge wrap-around porch,
large kitChen with Island 3
car garage foundation
ready to frame, pnvate set·
t1ng w1th great hunting
$234.900 (7401384-5182
2112 acres at 44996 Baum
Addition , Behind skating
r1nk Last House on right
4 or 5 bedrooms-3 bath
split level, basement,
anached garage, and sep
arate garage $199 000
740·985-3586
380, 2Ba fireplace, 40K60
barn, 8 fle.l acres Pleasant
Valley Ad Rto Grande
$120,000 (7401709-1166
3BA
2 Car attached
Garage on 1 06 acres
$60,000 (304)675·6331

for Sale Large porch
heat
basement
deck
pump located 1n Gall1po11s
Ferry
$69 900 phone
(304)675 1536
Attention!
Local company of!enng
"NO DOWN PAYMENr
programs for you to buy
your home Instead ol rent·

•ng

INCREDIBLE

$37,997
MIDWEST HOMES

ISS I?

i ·IO B28-27SO

No Fee Unless We Wi nI
1-868·582·3345

Three Bedroom t;ouse on
1/2 acres lot Hardwood
floors heat pump, large
patio, 11nlshed walk out
basement
Two acres
optional IOeal for Horse
'TWo miles tram
owner
Poln1 Pleesant (90416751536

HOMFS
FOR SALE
112 Pleasant Street, Point
Ploaoan1, WV (304(675·
4034 or 13041675·0416 3
bedroom, 1 112bsth, family
room dining room, new
Y'llndows, new AC new
water tank fellCed yard
2912 Anniston Or, pt
Pleesan1 3BA 2BA, LA,
FA Garage N~e neigh·
borhood ( 3041875 3837
days
(3041675 2355
evenings

tMO~ES~-~
14x55·'97 FleetwOOd MH2BA
1 bath,
elec
heatiA.C· good oondlhon
$10,500 Call (7401446·
3644 tor appt
1970 2 Bd Am Trailer on
50 X225'
Lot
1n
Harnsonv1lle
Extenor
Pa1nted recently Has new
carpel, cellmgs pamled
Make mce slarter home or
renta l umt $1360000
740-742-40 11
2000 Clayton 16X70
3
Bf • 2Ba C/A Heat pump
new carpet vinyl porches
on rented lot ··$18 oc:x&gt;
740·992·0050

86 Skyline front k1 lchen
Cash pnce $8 995 Wtll
deltver Call (740)38 5·

BESTBm

1: I \ I I ..., I \ I I

Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlaementa for real
eatate which Ia In
violation of lht law Our
readers are hereby
InforMed lhat all
dwellings adv.rtl1ed In
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity .,.,..,.

A well maintained House

Never hveo m
new
3BDAM wl2 bathrooms m
drywall stage s1ts on 2
beautiful acres county
water at road about 20
mms south of Athens, OH
$74 500 Cal l (7401489·
9146

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY

Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makatiiiUegalto
lldvartlae "any
preference, llmltatle»n or
dlacrtmlnatlon baaed on
race, color religion, HX
familial atatua or national
origin, or any Intention to
m11ke any auch
pr.terenc:e, limitation or
dlacrlmlnaUon •

86 Creslrlge 14x70 2BR!
Call
2 both
$6 995
(7401365 9948

BANK REPO

r~NAL

~

All real estate adv.rtlalng
In thla newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal

4BR Foreclosure only
$14,900 For listings caU
600-:)91·5226 ex1 F254

• 100% f1nanctng
• less than per1ect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(7401367·0000

$15 87·$21 98/hr. now
hklng For application and
free governement job 1nfo,
call American Assoc of
Labor 1 913 599·6042,
24/hrs emp serv

Security Offlctra neeQed
PT $6 661llr Call T·f 9-6
18001275·8359 EOE

1997 Fairmont Celebnly
double wide 28x72, FA .
den, lg k1tchen, 2 full
baths, 3BA with walk-In
closets, lg deck, above
ground pool 36x18. 2 ut1h
1y buildings Lol 2 89
acres very secluded pn
vale drive 5 min from
Green
Schooi/Holzer
$1 10.000 Call after 3pm
(740)441 0494

3BA, den, LA K 1 112
balh, AC. pnvate dr rec
room basement garage In
1own Call(7401441 ·0514

POSTAL JOBS

Rocksprings Rehaljlll1atlon
Center' provides residents
with outstanding nursmg
care and rehabilitation
services helping them
r'eturn to a life ol independence at home We currently ' have opportun tties for
AN's and LPN s at our
lacllity located In Pomeroy,
Ohio
We offer a COMPEnnvE
SALARY
SCALE
an excellent
benefit package and a
supportive work environment
Interested candl·
datet should apply to
Roekaprlngs Rehabilitation
Center,
36759
Rocksprings
Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Extendlc-ve
Health
ServM:ee Inc is an equal
opportunity employer that
encourages
workp lace
dlverol1y MIF ON

1900 sq ft 3bd 2ba home
with basement sits on 3
acres, Ju st off of AI 7,
Chester Township, Eastern
SChoOl D1strlct Also regts·
tared qu~rter horses for
sale Call (7401965·4321
after 6pm

New 3 bedroom 2 bath
bnck home for &amp;ale In Rio
Clrande Call (740)379
2615

9~48

9/1 Oth of an acre for sale
on 143 2 mob1le homes
740 992 5858

3 bedroom 2 full baths full
basement 1 car garage
deposit
$600/sec
5600/mo (7401446 3481
3 bedroom cJa, ntce clean
house small yard, qutet
street good neighbor
hood
$450 00
plus
deposl1 (7401843 5264 In
Rac1ne
3BR house SA 160 $400
month plus deposit No
pets
reference
Call
(7401446·6865
or
(7401379-2923
3br
1·bath, attached
Garage fenced yard mce
ne1ghborhood
In
Pt
Pleasant
$695/month
(3041531·1197
or
(3041531·11 96
Accepting apphcatton s 3
bedroom 1 bath 1 car
garage. outbuilding Green
School Otstnct No pets
$550/mo plus deposit
(74012 45·0372
Attention!
Local company offermg
"NO DOWN PAYMENr
programs lor you to buy
your home Instead ot rent·
lng
• 100% tlnanc1ng
• Less than perfect cred11
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(740)367·0000
Rent ('r Sale 4br 1n
Syracuse $600/month &amp;
Depos1t
Water/Sewe r
mcluded,
No
Pets
(304 1675·5332
or(7401591·0285
SR 75· 4BR 1 balh home
garage basement rlvor
access Propane heat
Window NC $650/month
rent $650 sec dep you
pay utilities Available 1st
April
Call
week m
(740)446 3644 tor an
applrcat•on
Stop rer hng Buy 3 bedroom foreclosure $1 1 500

For llst1ngs 800 391
ext 1709

52 2~

Two 2 Bedroom Homes

Brand new 16 wide
vlnyl!shmgle $161/mo Call
(7401365·7671

Kttchen equtpped
No
Pets
Dep requ1red
Middlepor t
740·992
3623

N1ce 14x70 3 bedroom
only $10 995 W•ll help
delivery
Call
with
(7401385 9621

Two House One 3BR all
alectnc full bas ement
garage CIA One 2BA
CIA (7401379 2254

Trailer &amp; House 1n Country
(Broad
Ru n
area)
(3041882·3970
Very cle~ n 14x64 2 bed
room Only $7 995 Call
(740)385 0698

fARMS

MOBILE Hoiii•:S
FORRI·Nf
14x70 trader $400 month
depostt (740)367
pll
771 2 (740) 367 7272 or

(7401446 4060

f"OR SALE

7 acres on Rtver 3BA
barn $150 000 Crown
I

2 H4 acre 101 available
quiet settmg on Crew
Road close to Meigs High
SChool (304)773·5270

Mobile hOme Sites tor up to
16xBO In Country Homes
(740)365 4019.

49 5 acres by Tycoon
Lake Call (740)709-~ 166
Vacant land on Jessie
Creek off 554 by Kyger
5 064 acres R1le Farm Lot
#8 $10 000 (7401645
0440

Need to sell your home?
Late on payments dtvorce
Job transfer or a death? 1
cen buy your home All
cash and quick closing
740 416·3 130
I~

I \ I \ I ...,

1BA house· 11 Garfield
Ave
Gallipolis
$350
month Call lor deta1l1
(7401441·0194
or
(740)441 ·1 184

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt newl\
renovated A/C downtown
across
from
park
mcluded
Water/trash
(7401709·1690

1 and 2 bedroom e.pi!rl·
m8nts
lurnlshed and
security
unfurnished
deposit required no pets
740·992·221 6
t SA aptlcabm all utilities
pa•d Cell (7401441 0117
3BA apt WI D stove
refrlg
OW
central
air/heal (7401256 6846
5 Ams &amp; bath range &amp; re!
!urn W/ D hookup 2ndlloor tn city Reference &amp;
deposit
requ1red
(7401441·0596
Clean Efficiency, Ael
Dep No Pels (3041875·
5162

�'·

..

..,,

Monday, May 15, 2006

Uonday, 'May 15, 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

LEV OOP
IJ('Ig ~ ...
wry Nee 1br, Garage Apt. ,

..

THE 'MAPlES APART-

Pro Form 7«8 Quick

MENTS 100 Memorial
Drive East 740-992-7022

SpeedTr..-seoo-.

~ paid.

Subsidiz~

aaklng $225 cult

$42511!1Cl0111,
1275/depoo/1 (304)675231V

""""otio 111 oppllcatlons

for

1 Of 2 btdloom apartment,
$400-$500 month, kilchon

appliances &amp; WID fur-

- · water &amp; garbage

Included, no pets, 1st
month, IIOCUrily deposit &amp;

-·
-

AlqUired. (740)446-

Apte. for, Renl.
New
Hawn, 1 bdrm. furnished

or unfurnished. No Pets.
Deposit &amp; Fleterences.

Residential

Housing ... 50 VOl!" gf
101 and ·older. Priority
Given To Applicants With
Income At Or Below
$10,900.00 for 1 person or
$12,450.00 br 2- persons.
Maximum lncome-1 per·
son
$18,150.00
or
$20,700.00 for 2 persons.
Must meet HUD/202/8 crt·
teria tor household cOmpositio'n.
MANAGED By
Sllverheels·A
Realty
Corflpan~. Equal Housing
Opportunity.

•

740-992.0165

\II

~ ~~

0031 or 304-1!82-3449.
8EAUnFUL
APARTMENT&amp; AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive lrom S344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies.
Call 740-446-2568 . Equal

Housing Opportunity.

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
Townhouse apartments,
and/or small houses FOR

RENT.'Call (740)441-1 I 1I
for appllcatio'n &amp; informalio~.

Grack&gt;us living. 1 and 2

bedroom apartments at
Village
Manor
and
Riverside Apartments ln

Middleport. From $295·
$444. Call -74D-992-5064.

Equal
Opportunities.

Housing

Free ~stl mates Mollohan
Carpet, Berber $5.95/}tard.
(740)446-7444, 76 Vine

St.
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepair-675· 7388. For sale,
re -coriditloned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, fefrigar·
ators·, gas and electric
ranges , air conditioners ,
and wringer washers. Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop .or at your home.

Used Furniture Store. 130
, Bulavllle Pike. Electric gas
ranges, bl.lnkbeds, chests,
· dlneues, couches, used
mattresses.
· Grave
Monuments. , (740)446·
4782. Gallipolis, OH. Hrs.

r
I

1-3 (M-F)

s~

$350 080. (740)24508 11.

ed, wrc hookup. Beautiful

New

2

Bedroom

Apartments yYas he r/dry~r

hookup, .stove/refrigerator
included. starti ng
at

slruc1l&gt;lo Bullorlly log' &amp;
dip attachments. Thesa
sell now lor $1,850, aaldng

$400

r

OBO. (740)245-

0611 .

Block. brlcll, sewer pipes,
etc.
·Rio

AKC Mk1i Dachshunds 2
male pupptes. 74{}-256-

1498.
Chihuahuas. 12 weeki oki.
Had 1st Shots. $200 each.

(740)256-1871 .
CKC Registered black
Pugs. One male &amp; female,
1.5 years .old,· and orie
male 10 month ol d. $250.

(740)388-9327.

(304)937-2929
Male· Bull Mastiff lor sale.
15 months old. Movtng lind
ca n't take him. $200 080.

Missing since Frk:tay near
White Road . Reddish!~
blondei buff Pomenulian.
Needs cancer medtcation.
If you find or heve seen a
new 'Pomeranian in your
area. Please call . Deb

(740)446-2451 .

He

Buy or sell. Riverine
Antiques. 11 24 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy,
740-992-2526.
Russ
Moore, owner.

r~1

Rai nbow Lory Parakeet,
hand tamed, very playful &amp;

talks $400 lirm (304)5762999
Tiny Toy Poodles. 1 apricot, t black fe male, 1 black
male. Father Champion

Sired. !740)44.1-9478.

$400/mo. Call for details

);:g/::1•:;~t1:9;4

used.
61 14 ·

900.00.
Pomeriain Puppies ~KC
Male
300.00·-Females

AKC
Male
$500 (304)675- - Females

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repair'ed. New &amp; Rebuitt
In Stock. Call Ron Evans,

1-800-537-9528.
NEW AND USED STEEL

(740)367-7086 .
Twin

Rivers

lower

is

accepting applications for

waiting list for Hud-subslzed, , - br, apartment.
call
675-6679 . Equal
Housing Opportunity

Mini

Tnu:tor Loader
Backhoe/ Skid Stears.
Carmichal

Equipment

(740)446-2412
Load
TraiVLoad
Max
Trailer•·
Oooae nlcks / D umps/

Utill1iea.
Equipment
2412.

Carmichael
·(740)446-

New
John
Compacts
and

Deere
5000

Series Utill1y traotors 0 0% .

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Angle,
For Concrete,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways .
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Opei1
Monday,
Tuesday,
WednesdaY &amp; Friday, Sam·
4 :30pm, Closed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Sunday.

(740)446-7300

600.oo-

350.00 Chooolate.
696-1085.

t

74D-

FRUITS&amp;
VEGEfAIII_I;S

Homegrown Strawberries
available McKean Farm on
Centenary Road . end
William
Ann
Motel ,
Second Avenue, Gallipolis

Equipment
2412:

r

(740)446-

~1

(2) tuH blOOded, I yr old
bulls.

Call

Angus Black limousine,
Cross . herd Bull. gentle

easy calving, 1,6001b.
Deliver locally $1 ,200
(304)675-6442

(304)882-2302

steering,

power

brake,

window, power INI.,
Price Sl 3,500.00. HIU'ti
Automotive Classk: Car
Reo1onltlon &amp; Parta, I"'··
29670 Buhan Road,
Racine,

Ohio

740-949-2217;
740,949-1957;
Pictured on WWW thuodtc-

blue, power doors, seats.
w)ndows, sunroof, mt,
cruise, AJC, AM, FM cassette, hal"!dS tree ce ll
phone, Sharp car. Wetl
taken care of would make
great. Graduation gift,

(304)593-6437
(304)675-8868

miles,

all

power,

AC,

$2,600 080. (740)2455934.
1997 Buick Park Avenue.
Leather, loaded, all maintenance records , ·well

maintained. t 1 ~ k. asking
$4,600. (740)245-5934.

060.

Istered males. Ready to
Championship
breed.

bl_
oodlines. Call (740)2450465.
Miniature Stud, part regis·
tared, not trained , approx

34". $250 080. (740)25612S3.
Performance tested Angus
and Polled Hereford Bulls
and Heifers for sale. 12 •
28 months okl. Certified
and Accredited Herd with
negative Johne·s test.
Contact Diamond L. Farms

(304)875·1888
Quality horse and livestock
trailers now available at
Carmichael Equipment.
New dealer for Valley and
Kleferbuilt Horse and
Livestock Trailers. Many
options available- steel,
aluminum,
dressi ng
rooms. living quarters.

(740\446-2412.
Registered Angus bulls. 3
year ofds to yearling. Price
$2,000-St.OOO.
Call
(740)245-5984.

I \ 1{\ I "l 1'1'1 II ',\ I I \ I -.. I I ll 1,

2001 Grand Prix SE , bu r-

gundy,

$8,000.

Free

Stt41c &amp; ChLeu
wJFriLs
.$5.99 [rJ4?fYd11!f.

(made wllh Choice Fre!!lh
Black Angu• Sliced Ri~eye)

1..---'----.
Brf!ak{ilst Sptcidl

A ll D•y
.
2 eggs, sausage or baCoN

homefries F.:! loJJst $4.99

54,000

miles,

(740)446-6957

can leave message.

200t Stralus $4.900: 1998
Honda Civic 2D $4,200'
1997 Blazer 4D $4,500:
1999 Goo Metro 4D
$2,900: 1997 Tahoe 4x4,
Sunfires,
Cavaliers,
Saturns &amp; others In stOck.
3 months· 3,000 miles
warranty. See Carl Stover
or Rodney Cook, Cook
Motol'l, 328 Jackson Pike

(740)446-0 I 03.
2003 PT CrtJiser, 4 cyL,
runs &amp; looks great, gOOd.

gas ·mileage, 57.200. Call
(740)388-0140.
2005 Chevrolet Cavalier.
Auto. 2dr. Burnt Orange .
exterior and charcoal lnt&amp;.
rior, lowered, 16" factory

rims.
$10,000
(740)416.0522

OBO

S6 Chevy Celebrlly, lois of
new parts, runs great,
good
gas
mileage,
$900.00. Negotiable. 74D992-0759.

· Groat. $1500. 740-74240t I
$500! ·Pollee Impounds!
Cars from $500. F01 list-

Ings 800-391 -5227 eJCt.
3901

$4.99

Snlads· Chef· Grilled
Chicken &amp; Chicken Tender

A.ll B•'!JetS m•dt from fresh ground chuck fwuring
Judy K11ys Special Burger ·Chllrlie"BroWn Burger
&amp; CaroliHa Burgn

Dog Pound
Yellow chow · Mix.male
timid

Brittany Spaniel -mix · female

Many puppies to choose
from

·

992-3779

Red Mercedes Roadster
excenert condition, 79
Ford Lariat Ranger, _as
Chariot edition
silver
Cavalier
Cadillac, 90

(304)675-2290 bolore 9pm

&lt;irs. (740)446·2412.

FREE
ESTIMATES
(740) 949-1405

~

2001
600 GriZzly Auto ·
4X4. Less than 300 miles.
Greet Shape. $3600. 7~

742-4011.
2001

Grand

Chief

Cherokee · 4x4,

v.hlte ,

loaded, sun root, $12,000,
books $14,500. (740)3677272,
(740)367-7762,
(740)446-4060.

.

·- - ~

\.

,I

•roll~

11

\i

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

EltNif5 LUC~Y IN

/

IPII(•

$3,900. (740)367.()394.
f4ll' MOTORCYcww'

4WIIEilUmS
• 2004 Honda Trail 70
Clone, 90Cc, · 4 speed.
semi auto. Street Legal, 79
miles. titled and licensed.
Adult owned and ridd en
only on pavement. $750
OB0. !740)245-061 I .

MANLEY'S
SELFSTOUGE

TO

.

WINNIN' ?!

740.446.

MUST Sf;

GOOD!!

2459 St. Rt. 160 •

i[

F#tOM

t4

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

To evaluate, listen
-to the bidding

13 Heirlooms
19 Morae coda
word
21 Stomscb·
turning
24 Mecca
pilgrimage
25 Ostrich kin
26 ObJective
27 Small barks
28 Avail
onaaeH of
30 Boer's malt
31 Jeer
32 Sot
33 Decompose
35 .Ceremonial

40 Lured
41 Big name
In wlne
42 Fixed •

aq-

43 - -craflay
44 Forward
or nworu
45 Once
around
the aun
47 Valley
o1 grapea
48 Prevent

errata

51 Hotsprlng
53 Whiz

fire

36 Absorbedly
39 Snort
·of disgust

l'j'

1..___ __.
1HE BORN LOSER

• New Homes • Additions
.• Remodeling ·

:'P'I C.Otl\t:. f'Wti\Ol..l&gt; 1'\01'\t:.'(, ""'
, \f\O~t-1 ~PI'l.l:: . .

Licensed-Home Builder

P"'NO 00€:

C.ll.~ ,._CI:.U~t:. 1&lt;\£ OF'"'

&amp;C.II'IC. NOU\/tP..U Rl~€:!

'

992-3194
or 992-6635

... ...

12·1 '
Refreshments Served
$8.00 Flats $8.00 Baskets
Variety of Miniature Roses
Houlli: 8·8 Daily
50447 Tornado Rd .

2006 Jayco 27' travel trai t·
er.
Used
twice .
Cueen/futVtwin beds &amp;
sofa , lg. shower, surround
sound. Was $18 ,000, Now

$14,000. (740)446-2800
For Rent Camping Traner

Sltee Near River. Cement
Patios. Full Hook-Up. Only

2 s;tes Len. Caii74Q-992-

(•

II

I

•y

Ill

Cll1 r

II f 'I H

PjANUTS
I I-lOPE '(OU ENJOVED IT
AS MUCJ.l A5 TI-lE BIRDS ..

Racine, Ohio

qq:_y h21 .,
r

.

Opening Day
Sunday May 7th

ElectriCIII &amp; Plumbing
Flooflng &amp; Gutte,.
Yl"yt Slclint &amp; Painting
P811o and Porch O.Cke

,1

I''

ADVERTISE IN .THIS
SPACE FOR S54 PER
MONTH

"

·-_.'
'

Cornerstone ·
Construction

Hill's Self
Storage

-

·SUNSHINE CLUB
'

29!)70 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771"
740-949-2217

. 5956. .
&lt;.., llnlc I'-..

rio~~'
• • BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional
tifeitime
guarantee: Loca l · refer ·
ences
turnlshed 1

Established 1975. Cell 24
Hrs. (740) 448-0870 ,
Basement

Waterp-roofi ng .

Caeto Contrac::tlng
Commercial Residential
Remode ling ~we do It al l"

Phone (740)446-0306.

STANLEY TREE

TR~~:~~&amp;

50ME F'ET5 ARE AC.TUAL.l.Y'.
.........._

CONTRACTING

• Prompt &amp;.quality
wotk

·

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"

Call Gaty Stanley
740·742-2293

* Leave a messa

• New Momes.
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

740-882-1811
Stop &amp; Compare

. · FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY .
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
I Luxury- Also HUD
_A lso Commercial Space

e

ROBERT
BISSEll
COimiiCTIOI

----,- - - ----~---------

BTNL

Now Available At

'

,

...

..

with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester .985-3301

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

' '

'

.

I:N'I'eRTAININ&lt;#

I DON'T KNOW .. I

I-lATE C~IRPIN6 AROUND
T~E CAMPFIRE ..

ments in the year ahead, especially If they
Include situations th8t could lead to
ewpandlng your involvements with others .
The returns for your friendship will make
them very worthwhile.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Althoug h
you lend to be somewhat of a loner at
limes, w ith the .right choice of partne rs ,
you should be able to accomplish things
that have be£in unattainable on your own.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - There. Is a
strong possibility that event.!! co uld take an
unexpected twist of fate, which wm turn out
to your advantage. Once they' are set In
moticm , there isn't likely to be a way to stop
them.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - ShOuld you
have to make. a quick d8clsion where an
important social interest is concerned ,
trust your judgment. Your evaluations will
not only turn out to be accurate but for1unate as well.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) ~ You shouldn't
have to settle for second best In maHers
that are reiBled to your work or career. If
you th ink big, yo ur actions will devise
deeds that shall manifest themselves Into
being.
VIRGO (Auc. 23-Sept. 22) - Rather than
being serious and sta id, concentrate on
bringing joy and laugtlter to those with
whom you're Involved, especially when the
situati on can usa a bit of humor.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - Lady Luck Is
iikeiy to llgure largely in your affairs. And
when they involve material concerns. this
could mean money. Be optimistic regard ing matters that would bring you joy.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24- Noll. 22) - As a
Seorplo,_you are naturally curious and you .
like to get to the bottom of th ings.
Combining these two assets could lead to
so'mething quite lucky lor you. Poke your
nose Into atypical places. •
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - Pay
particula r heed to your instincts In busi·
ness and/or . financia l transactions. Your
inner voiee can reveal ' some unusual but
fortunate things that your mind may never
think of.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan. 19) Somli"thlng quite unusual may transpire
that could awaken &amp;Kelting new hope with In you . Don't let your Capricorn serious ness diecount it, even If it sounds toO good
·•
to be true:
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Events
could cause your attention to be turned
toward striving for larger ambitions than
usual , but the effort you d&amp;\/Ote won 't seem
· like work. In fact, It will provide great
chance• for achieve m~n l.
PISCE"S (FIIb. 20·March 20) -You'll mix
rather well with others , whether you ere
m ingling with fam iliar_ fr iends or new
acquaintances. With !hit positive attitude,
aoelal encounters wiU prove \lery fortunate
lor

BAl ll\1 Ll!I\IBEI{
Scorpion Tractors:
"Taki11g The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid~Size 4Whe.el Drive Tractor

HFLPV

F ' RV

AVVL

you.

ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) ...::... You're ue ually pretty lucky In compatltlve Involve·
manit, and thi s cou ld be evan fur ther
enhanced becauae you'll respond partlcu·
larly well to challenge• whe n the ttakla

are worthwhile.

SOUP TO NUTZ

ZFLV-HCD . " - HVNBBDV

HOZVOHCLFP GVMMFV
TFH

IGOM

VRNLH,

CL

BVHB

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Even~ lhe Frencl1 people cannol hear my
language, they have always heard my heart.' - Legion of Honor medalist Jerry
Lewis

r~~~:~:~T S~'\3-.;.~'M-~"£~~\i ::!~
0 ~ecr rar1c:e wcr:::3of lh~e

- - " - - - . . ; . il'"'d by CI.AY R. ")II.AN _,;__ _ _ __

.

iow

Be prepared to make some sudden adjust-

'Red 'Rose
· §reenficn:t.se

'

PDVNL

F L 8 .T V D V N M 0 V . . . F ' W P D V N L V G

By Bemlce Bede Oaol

IMPORTS
Athens

Syracuse, OH
740-992-5776
Open Mon-Sa1 I 0-5
Closed Sunda

p,,,,,

"F.'R· V AVVL

1\oeodoy, Mooy 10, 2006

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

WV036725
V.C . YOUNG

Today's clue:·/ equals Q

. W'~!T!;

•Hanging Baske1s
*Pots and Tubs
SPRING SPECIAL
Large j 0" Fems $6.95
Shrubs and Perennials

slide out. tiberglass sides,

Celebrity Cjp"oef avplo}'ams are oeat«&lt;lrcrn q~ by 1111110Us PIIOIH. PIS! n JJ"!IMill.
.
Each tetter in fle d~t sllrlls fo! anolher.

~Astro-

OptnFor
Spring Season! .
*Fials $7.50

NewG•r•gee

by Luis Campos

is a singleton or lhat il is backed up by lhe
jack. East would be saying thai il Wesl so
desires, he may underlead the heart king
and East will win lhe Irick, eilher with a
ruff or wrth his jack.
Normally, to ploy this spade suil lor no
But here lhere are only 15 high-card
points missing and East has already produced lhe heart queen. Wesl must have
lhe spade ~ng . So, play a spade lo your
· ace and return a low spade, hoping Wesl
slarled l'lilh exactly king·doubleton.

10xl0xl0x20

Room Addltton• &amp;
Remodeling ' ·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

the queen would guarantee eilher th at it

losers, you would lead low to your queen .

(740) 992-0496

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

02 Wildcat 2BN. 5th wheel,

Rogers

F:ast

Obi.
34

Last week, we looked al hand evaluation.
In particular, we conCentrated on underI'IOT~ING
if ~ bidding_when lhe partnership's hands do
not til well and overbidding when lhera is
F~Ait
a good lrump Iii. Part of lhis eval~alion
requires you to pay anenlion lo lhe oppoPOLIC~.
~ ~ nents' calls. If lhey pass throughout, you
mighl gain no uselul information (excepl
- ~
perhaps that they do nol have the values
S-/S
lor an opening bid). But if they do slart or
enter t~e auction, you are given some
data lhat will probably be helpful to your
side's declarer.
deal ~ a good illustration of what you
This
SHE TOOK
can do. Look al North's and Soulh's
W!F TI-IAT
spades. If lhe auction were unconlesled,
LI'L
how woukJ you pl~y the suif lor only one
'DISH !!
-loser?
·
I
~~i~~~~~;=;:;il~:Ji A~er lhe given aucfion. Wast leads lhe
· heart ace: 11tree, six, live. West cashes
lhe heart king: eighl, queen. two. West
shifts Ia a minor-sui1 card. Ho~ would you
handle the trump sun now?
LGL li........_..U. \ 1..)
Note Easl's heart six at Irick one. Playing

·

. Owner

Ford
Windstar,
94,000 miles, quad bucket
seating, dual air/ heat.
Good condition . Asking

Equipped. $6499.00. 740.
992-5963.

The Gallipolis Elks Lodge
107 will have their ann val
Soccer Shoot
Sunday, May 21 -at 2:30
at the Elks Fa1m on
SA 588. This event _is free
and open to all kids born
Aug. 1, 1992 or after.
There will be boys and girls
· divisions with four age
groups~ Registration starts
at 2:00 with competition
beginning at 2:30.'There will
b~ trophies for first, second
and third and other priz~s .

A WAY··~~~AS .

1998

2000 Aerolite Cub, 23-30
Ft. ,Like
New
Fully

s-.

1,,

North

Op'\ning lead: • A

"Middleport's only
Salf·Storagt"

(740)441 -7632.

R a s o u r ·c e a

Ill'

South

••

l•

4x4
FOR SALE

t lon, clean . (740)245-9109,

Manegom•nt,
Department
of
Natural Resources,
upon receipt ol a
check or money order
In the amount .of
$20.00 made payable
to
the
Ohio
Department
of
Natural Resources
(ODNR) and mailed to . TO~SBID.
ODNR, Division bf Bids are to be -led
Mineral Reaourcoa and daNvared to the
management, 2046 add-• glvan above.
Morae Road, Building No bidder may with·
H·3, Columbus, Ohio draw hla bid within
43220-6693 Attention: alxty. (60) daya lifter
Judy
Stacey the actual data of the
(Telephone Number:
opening ihereof.
(614)
• 265·6629). The
Director
of
Plana and apeclflca· NIIUIII
Raaourcea
tiona become the' reHrvaa the rklht to
property
of • the reject 1my or elf blda, .
prospective bidders or to accept the bid
and no refunds will be which ambra.,.a auch
made. For lnforma· combination altornlla
lion regarding the propoaala ea may
. project the primary . 'promote the beat
· contact peraon ,la the . ' lnttrest of the
· Project
Englnaar, Approved
for
Dean Carroll; In hla Publication : The Dilly
absence you may Senllnal, L.agal NOll.,.
contact the Project Dept., 111
Court
Dnlcer, Barb Flowers Straot, P.O. Box 729,
or
the
De&amp;!fln """'"'oy, OH 45711,
Specialist,
Scott Monday, May 8, 2006,
Davies. They can be and Monday, May 15,
.
reached
In
the 2006
Jackson
District Approved Mlchlll L.
ontc:e (740.286.6411).
Sponaor,
Chief
Each bid must be Dlvlalon of Mineral
accompanied by a Reeource .a
BID
GUARANTY, Management.
meeting the require- (5) 8, 15

•

POWER WASHING:
Homes- Decks - "'
LAWN CARE
Driveways - Equlpme~t
,Mowing- Tree
Degreasing- Boats- .,.
Trimmirig - Aeration- Campers- Trucks - Dec•
Fertilization- plantingstaining or painting
Mulching
Special rates for
Trucking companies

98 Dodge 1500 Quad cab.
4WD, loaded , $6,850
negollable. (740)446-1905
or 13041412-4645.

$17,500. Excellent condi-·

proposal forms will
be forwarded from the
Division of Mineral

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: North-South

1*1'2ffi

I

SERVICE

and

OP.

PRIZE-

CARPENTER

specl?lcatlons,

+

Hardwood Clbinewy And

YOUNG'S

menta of Section
153.54 ol the Ohio
Revised Coda.
CONTRACTORS ARE
ADVISED
THAT
EQUAL
EMPLOY·
MENT OPPORTUNITY
CONDITIONS
ARE
APPLICABLE TO THIS
BID IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THE PROVI·
SIONS OF SECTIONS
153.58 AND 125.111
OF
THE
OHIO
REVISED
CODE.
WAGE R_ATES ESTAB·
LISHED IN ACCOR·
DANCE WITH SEC·
TION 1513.18 AND
1513.37
OF THE
REVISED CODE ARE
ALSO APPLICABLE

11

6 5 3

43 Khan
of note
1 1!0 lOCka . 44 High aplrHa
5 -out (relix) 46 Lorelei's
8 Lots of
rlvor
laughs
49 Plumbing
11 Taloiauago
bend
,
12 Happily 50 Perchance
· afler
52 Dramatic
14 Unaaal,
lntro (hyph.)
to a poet
54 Stout
15 Bearing
55 MOU1ha,
16 Evaluate
slangily
17 Lawyer's
56' G111nd
t,hlng
In ocale
18 Ia ahead
57 Dowel
20 Evens up 58 Bolger
22 No,
or Conllf
to a lassie 59 S11cky fruit
23 Clinched,
asa deal
· DOWN
24 Moor
v Oh, gront 1 DW:h can1lr
29 F~l'a
2 Claw
boyfriend
3 - fixe
· 4 Landlord's
30 Biker's
back rut
need .
12 wds.)
5 Stanza
34 Playground 6 "'- Luna"
(Allende
I!" me
{2 wds.)
book)
37 Gloating cry 7 Japanaae
38 Swing•
clog
offooc:ourse
8 Imitate a
39 "Lusltanta" . signature
sinker
9 Overturn
(hyph.)
10 Monster's
41 Trail mix
loch

T~~ T~OUG~T ~n

New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

·

2004 Yamaha V-Star 1100.

2006 @ 11:00 A.M., at
. the project site. ·No
PLANS OR SPECIFI·
CATIONS WILL BE
SOLD AT THE PRE·
BID MEETING.
Copies ol the plans,

I

&gt;,

•

... 107543
A Q 5 3
52
10 a 1 4
... 9 6 2

All typoo of rooHng:

4

Notice To Bidders
Sealed proposals will
be received at the
Division of Mineral
.R e • ·o u r c e s
Management
Department
of
Natural Resources
2045 Morse Road
· Buii!Jing
H-Third
· Floor Columbus, Ohio
43229-6693
until
TUesday, June 6, 2006
0
1:30 PM and
. opened thereafter for
furnishing the materials and performing
the labor for the execution ·and construction ol: THOMAS-DUN
RECLAMATION PROJECT MEIGS COU,N·
TY, OHIO PROJECT
NUMBER MG·Sb-61 In
~cordan.,. with the
plane and apeclllca·
tiona prepared by the
Department
of
Natural Resources,
Division of Mineral
Resources
Management,
Columbus,
Ohio.
Biela will be opened In
tha second Floor
Conference Room ·or
2045 (Building H·2) ol
The Fountain Square
0111.,.• of The Ohio
Department
of
Natural Reaourcaa.
The United States
Office of Surface
!ollnlng Raclamatlo_n
and Enforcement ·Ia
supplying 100% olthe
lunda for thl• project.
The utlmata for thla
· proJect• delermln&amp;l'
by the Division ol
Mineral
Resources
Mlnagemen)
Ia
$75,414.00. '
A mandatory pra·bld
meeting will be held
on FRIDAY, MAY 19,

\

• J 10 9

4

4"

Golden Retriever · Mix mile
Black Lab • Mix male
\ 'Cry

,

• Q6

AKJI0 9 74
9 2

•

IJ.Wrhesel
IRIIS•

Dog

Retriever beagle mix
3 _Jack Russell - Milt
2 Aulitralian Shepherd Mb,
Fe male

,

.
•

South

(740) 992-2804
(740) 517-6883
Jell Sl elhern- Owner

195 N. Sewnd Ave. • Middleport, OH

Huoky ffiix ~ yed

I

TRI -STATE mOBILE POWER WflStl
flllD lHWil CflRE

lr" f

t]udy '.Kay's 'Restaurant

Please Adopt A

ill

Ea!lit

28YII

304-675-2457

J

Wes1
• K 6

... J 8

like new $6,900

Leather, Great
Shape, runs great, green,
tan Interior $4500.
92
CorSica V-6 Auto New
Tires and Brakes Lois ot
repairs done. Recent Paint
Job Looks and Runs

(740)286-6522

Daily Lunch S,recials

lWPNTV

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private ~
Roads • Driveways • Streets • · ..'
-Free Est;mates Playgrounds
~
••

Phirf~

95 Z·28 Camaro 350 Auto.

Ford 2910 tractor; Ford
4100; John Deere 1250;
Massey Furguson 298;

740-517·3704
740-992·0650

Meigs County

T-Tops

Have some hauling to do?
Carmichael Equipmentyour source for quality
goosenecks, dumps and
utilities. Your dealer for
Prostar and Loa"d Trail trail·

740-992-6971

(740)386·0034

2001 Chevy Melro ·call
between 8-5pm (304)675·
7375 or call (304)6740088 after 5:30

BoorOootalornlo

David .Lewis

1998 4x4 Bronco, excellent condition, new wheels,
tires, brakes, etc. $3,500
evenings.

e full blood, 1 year old reg-

l6 Yell1'1i Experience

or

I 995 Pontiac Bonnevlne
3800 VB, 20 mpg , 93,000

·Carpet
Ceramic Tile
Hardwood • Vinyl
Carpet Restretch
Laminates

8 74 2
8 3

t A K Q
... A K Q

• SEAL COATING
•PATCHING

Installer

bfrdcAolargpm
1993 Dodge Shadow runs
good, 4 door, auto, 4 cyl,
116,862
miles .
Price

•
•

Ray Martin

0 5- 1 5~06

North

Free Measurements

Phone:
Fu:

Angus Bulla, two X·breds,

(740)286-5395.

"Carpet Guy"

45771 ;

4 heifers. Excellent breed·
lng. Slate Run Farm. See·
www .slaterunfarm.com,

Phillip
Alder

power

1995 Ford Thunderolrd LX,

Equipment for less-round
balers, square balers &amp;
mower
condhloners
04 .7% Fixed for 48
months through John
Oeere Credit. Carmichael

ACROSS

auto lranamlaalon, power

through
Cred it..

''

Panasonic 46-inch Wide
screen Projection TV,
Panasonic 300-wan DVD
Home Thea ter Sound
Both
for
Sys tem .
$8001cash.
Kenwood
Spectrum
994-System:
$800/cash • 2 Cerwl nVega VS·15 Speakers,
includes 1 Sony 100-watt
Subwoofe r.
Todd '

E:d erlor. Ivory leather
lntertor, White vinyl top.
Njc~ driver. 390ci engine,

$1,100. (740)448-29n.

John
Deere
Carmichael

,
NEA Crossword Puzzle
BRIDGE · --------------------------------~

1M2 Thuncloflllrd : Blua

Fixed tor 31 monthl

(740)256-1520.

Dalmatian Puppies AKC
Registered
$200

Yorkshire Terrier Puppies

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments,
\/ery
Spacious, 2 Bedrooms,
CIA, 1 1!.2 Bath, Adult
Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Patio,
Start $425/Mo. No Pets,
Lease • Plus Security
Deposit
Required.

Deere

Excavato~

Angus

Electric Scooter P8ce
Saver by Passport. Rarely

gr

John

(740)446-

Quality John O.Orw Hay

answers to Sparkey and
there Is a reward.

·country setting. Must see
to appreciate. $400/mo.

(740)446·3736.

Solo
Flex
uercisa
machine, old but inde·

' Contact (740)441-91 I 5 or
(740)709·1462.

apartment in the country.
New carpet &amp; cabinetS.

Modern one bedroom. Call

9304)773-51 86

Equipment
2412.

Equipment (740)448-2412

Immaculate 2 bedroom

(614)595-n73 or 1--800796-4686.

Sofa
bed .. ~Bed
used
twin
tlmee.

Grande, OH Call 740-245-

Auger
1022
Target,
Volquartsen scope mount
&amp; trig_ger parts, 6-18 target
scope, $600 invested ,

freshly painted &amp; decorat-

Dav glt1

windows,
lintels,
Claude .Winters,

II \'Ill -..1

AHention Conatructlon
WOrker&amp;.
2 steeping
rooms.-furnished w/cable
and utilities-Weekly and
monthly rates. 740-992·

A GJH1 Mothoft

John Door• 1o n. No Tl
Drill tot- 1ent. Carmichael

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS '

I
I

'
I
I'

letrer!
iour s;rol"1blec
~·
·ro ion!! leur simctt words .

R _E PP OR

I' I I I ~ I
NIL TG

I ·I I' [·
~

I

KORBE

I Is I I

i

I

I

WI M ON N

"! can n:call the good old
days." gritme.J the old lady.
"when tile~ were no elearic
dryers and clothes were run ·
11hrou¢ta-·-· ."

f-""TI":'·....;r:..:.;.::,.l:..;.,.l.:..._.,.l""':-l 0 Ccm~l~lt

chu~icle

·

rne _
QUOtad
.
.
.
.
.
bv IJI!Jn9 ln tne 11'11SSJnQ words
L-...!.-L...l-L...l......i you develop from sreo No. 3 below.

@ PR IN;

!~UMBe RED tEllERS
IN THE&gt;£ I OUARES

€)

UNS(PAMBLE LETTERS TO

GE T ANSWER.

SCRAMLETS ANSW!RS Sl12104i ·
Naught- Wiper- Noisy- Eschew- YEARNINGS
"Why is it," the woman asked her lriend, '1hat increased
earnings go hand in hand .with increased YEARNINGS"

ARLO &amp;JANIS

I

t!/

�•
\

Page B6 • The.Daily Sentinel

Monday, May ts, 200~ .

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

-

.

~.

Rain postpones Indy qualifying ·- again

INDIANAPOLIS (N') Frustration is mounting at the
Indianapolis Motor S~dway.
Dri v~rs and fans will have to
wait another week for qualifying.
Rain, which has cut short or
canceled every practice session
since the track opened for Indy
500 practice last Tuesday, beld
off just long enough Sunday to
give everrone a little taste of
what they re missing.
Defending Indy champion ·
Dan Wheldon and Sam
Hamish Jr. txith nianaged to
post speeds above 228 mph the fastest so far this month AP photo
·during a brief practice session
NBA great Jerry West, left, receives an honorary Doctorate of that was supposed to be only a
Humane Letter~ degrf!e from West Virginia University warmup for ihe start of quahfiPresident David Hardesty on Sunday in Morgantown, W.Va.
cations for the May 28 race.
T\vo-time Indy winner Helio
Castroneves, Hamish's teammate, arid . Scott Dixon,
Wheldon's teammate, added
laps over 227 as 24 drivers took
advantage of the short dry spell
.
.
· .
,.
.
AP photlj :
and
nearly
perfect
track
condiIndy
Racing
League
driver
Michael
Andretti
·sits
In
his
car
under
an·
umbreaal
as
rain
delayell.
MORGANTOWN, W.Va . .cious player who was rarely
tionsovercast
sl&lt;.i'es,
no
wind
·
the
start
of
qualifications
for
the
90th
running
of
the
Indianapolis
500
at
the
Indianapolis
Motor
(AP)- Jerry West is now Dr. satisfied with· hi s perfor·
mance. He grew up shooting and temperatures mthe !ow 50s Speedway Sunday in Indianapolis.
J.
to get m some practice laps be .
h .
·
H .. h
d 1 behi d
West returned to West at a basket nailed to a shed -in anticipation
of qualifying.
gm .t eir ' vre]Jaraupns orrus staye c ose
n at and newcomer Jeff Simmons
University · six and often shot until hi s finVirginia
But then the rain returned, Wednesday. That s likely to 228.220, followed by h1s were bunched well down the ·
months after his alma mater gers bled.
·
wiping out time trials for ihe m~e for a crow~ed track.
' Marlboro Team Penske team- speed chart, with Patrick, lasi :
retired the NBA great's No.
He became the first high second straight day and
It puts a httle burden on (the mate Castrone,ves at 727 .8~8 year's fourth-place qualifier :
44 jersey to give the school's school player in state history prompting track officials to teams) now .because they have and Wpeldon s Target Chip and finisher, best at 222.720.
Asked about waiting to qual- ·13 7th
commencement to score more than 900 points reschedule qualifying to next to kind of rrux and balance full- Ganass1 teammate Dixon at
ify
until next weekend, the only
.
address Sunday.
..
. in a season, averaging 32.2 Saturday and Sunday, which t~ runs a.n'd race prepara~on 227.274. .
woman
entered here said, "It
Andretti Qreen Racmg. teamIntroduced as among the points in leading East Bank were supposed to be ihe last of wtth quahfyn~g preparat!on
could
be
better or worse. All we
four days of time trials.
because you w\~ be JOCkeyi!lg mates Dana Franchi\II and
most . recogm~~ble West High to a state title.
know
·is
we need mofl! rrack .
Brian Barnhart, president of ~r all,33 spots, Barnhart satd. Tony Kanaan, last ~ear s poleVirgmians ever, West also
"Success without a personal
time and we're looking forwan'l
an
honorary satisfaction or sacrifice isn't the Indy Racing League, said They II hav.~ to keep an eye on wmner, were next at 226.960 to it."
received
:·,
officials
had
considered
trying
the
weather
wrecast,
too.
It
JUSt
and
226.389.
,
.
Doctorate of !:fumane Let~ers. success at all," West said.
Still, for many drivers and
. West, weanng the tradmon- "It's posturing. Money is .a to qualify at lea~t part ofthe33- adds ~'?ther dimension to II .. The restless dnvers went out teams, the delay in qualifying
ar field on Monday or that Will JUSt mak~. 1t more chal- as soon as .they ~ould Sunday
al gold-and-blu.e cap and means of power, but seldom a 'cTuesday,
.
with no on-track lengmg for ~em. ·
and Franchmi sa1d the speeas simply is ftustrating·. ,
gown, foc~sed h1s speech on measure of succes~."
"For a driver, you get focused
activity scheduled for those
The last time the first two - weren t Im:licattv~ of the re;tl
how he built his career from
·
.
·
.
humble beginnings in his
West was given a standmg days. But Barnhart .said that · days of qualifymg were washed strength of the drivers because and do some decent times ana
hometown of Chelyan.
ovation before and after his with more rain in the forecast out was m 1983 and all 33 spots there was so much traffic on the then get rained out. To ine, i(s .
more frustrating sitting out
.
"I had a God-given gift, but 30-mmute .speech to about many fans unable to returri in the field were filled on the 2.5-mile oval.
there,"
said Tomas Scheckter,
because-ofwo_rk
and
other
following
Saturday.
The
fie!d
"~,was
!TYi[.Ig
tt?
get
a
clear
that alone WiJS not enough," 3,300 students and a crowd of
who
was
I Oth on Sunday ~t
obli~ations and many of the was also filled on one day m lap, he said. We JUSt need one
West said. "I needed charac- I~:000 .
225.091.
IRL s volunteer officials and 1999, when there was only one clear lap to know exactly where
ter
determination
and
That was neat because he track
workers in the same boat, weekend of qualifying on the we are. But I'm a lot happier
Townsend Bell, Scheckter!s
rcs~lve. I never took myself is a legend here and not many it was decided to continue with schedule.
rookie teammate on the Vision
than I was a few days ago.
very seriously, but I took people ~et the opportumty. to the original schedule. ,
. !"omish had been the fastest
"I think my team has worked Racing team, had a different
what I did very seriously."
do that, doctor of pharmacy
That
includes practice driver each day smce practice really,.really hard on th1s car for viewpoint. .
.
The current president of the graduate M&lt;1ndy, Downes Wednesday through Fnday.
began, topping out at 226.789 these four (qualifying) laps. It
"It's been a good month,"
NBA's Memphis Grizzlies Jed said. "He offered a lot of
All of the top teams ran the mph as part '?f ~four- l ap simu- d?Csn't really matter m the big said Bell, who got up to
the Mountaineers to their advice for grads, ~ lot of first week with hopes of quali- . lated quahfymg . run o.n picture, because !think you can 224.779. "Kind of a series of
only NCAA finills appearance things we could take with us fying on the openmg weekend Thursday, the last lime the dri- wm this, race from th~ last row. starts and stops. l suppose. But,
in 1960. He still holds school and use in life."
and spending a couple of days vers · had been on track unlll But we d certamly like to get to me, Indianapolis and this .
records in points scored
West's son, Johnnie, has · this week setting up their cars Sunday.
up at the front and stay there." race is all about drama and ten(2,309), rebounds ( 1,240) and signed a letter of intent •to for the race. Several of the
But Wheldon jumped to the
Rahal Letterman Racing's sion and unpredictability,
four. other categories.
play basketball at West other teams, with smaller bud- top with a lap of 228.663 in driving trio of Danica Patrick, which is kind of cool. It just
gets and less equipment, will Sunday's
short
session. 2004 race winn11r Buddy Rice adds to the flavor."
· West was known as a tena- Virginia next season.

South Ameriea's largest
. city erupts in violence;
four-day toll passes So, A2

MODEL GT 2542 HEAVY-DUTY
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;; () l ' ) '"\"I s

• \ •t .1.

,),}. ~ 4) ,

YOUR LOCALLY OWNED
CUB CADET RETAILER KNOWS
HOW TO GET YOU MORE ER;

.

'• Eagles leading after four
i~nings. See Page 81

• Factory-trained technicians
• The best selection
.• Test-drives and "how-to" advice
• Setup and assembly
• Home delivery

•

8880 UNITED lANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
1-S00-71 0-19.17
(740) 593-3279;

.1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER, OH 43130
1-800-71 0-'1921
(740) 653-2.827

"iCM•t...-;.dlllcflqc~ ":CC!!;: •.I..._.~.,.....w:~rt !«l ._..l!lofl"'lffy..-lnl~liif"J'"'"'
~ ~601 " .. ~

·

I
'

.. ~ , 4Ubyao.~ apivists ·
~· dealh of'l'\8. ~rm-­
drlve In region~
See Page A2
• HN!3 teaches kids the
value of money.
See Page A3
:• Gheen leads Society
meeting. See Page A3
• Senator asks oourt to
examine records.
SeePage AS
• Taft funds .,
treatment-over-time after
opposing similar idea in
~2. See Page AS
' • Cheney stands firm on
Patriot Act. See Page AS
•• Cincinnati to study
whether to remove tiles
.over City Hall art.
Page A&amp;
:• New style of worship
brings new spirit to
mainline church.
SeePage A&amp;

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

until then ,
Meanwhile, Brian Conde,
Mayor Sandy who addressed the issue of
lananrelh.
streetlight operations at last
The village cannot other- week's meeting of village
wise afford to pay for the council, said he, will suggest
operation of the 250 lights the formation of a commitnow illuminating village tee, to investigate funding
streets. Fiscal Officer Su san options for operating at least
Baker said earlier this month a portion of the public lights.
it would cost the village
The village has tried three
approximately $17,000 to times to pass a current
keep the lights burning for expenses levy for the operathe remainder of· the year, a tion uf the lights. The levy ·
sum the village cannot afford proposal on the May 2 prito pay without levy pro- mary ballot failed by JUSt
ceeds.
one vote.
accordin~

dark
to

Bv

Bm

Classifieds

12 PAGES

'

A3

. B3-4

Bs

Comics

A3
A4
As
B Section
A6

l.

"By NICOLE FIELDS
NFIELDS@MYDAILYREG.ISTEA .COM

club and more.
the Middleport Library.
. A schedule of special programs assoThe adult summer reading program
POINT PLEASANT, W Va.
ciated with the children's summer read- also kicks off on June 5 and will go until - This isn't your average hisPOMEROY -. The Meigs County ing program is as follows: 2 p.m., June 5, July 28, with · registration beginning on tory lesson.
. Butit's unlikelyyou 'llleave
District Public Library will kick off the Pomeroy Library,Mark Wade, ventrilo' , May 22.
For every three books an adult patron without learning something
summer with reading programs for bath quist; 2 p.m., June 14; Pomeroy Libracy,
adults and children.
· Nancy the Turtle Lady; June 21, to be checks out of any of the county's library about the string of events that '
The 2006 Children's Summer announced; 2 p.m., June 28, Pomeroy branches they will receive an entry slip tran spired during the late
Reading Program is set to begin on ,June Library, Mark Wood Fun Show; 5 p.m., that goes towards ·random drawings for 1770s to shape this region .
5 wllh a theme any pet lover can appre- July 5, Pomeroy Library, P.T. Reptiles ; ·travel mugs, At the end of the program
Organizers currently ate
ciate- "Paws, Claws, Scales and Tales!" July 12, to be announced; 6 p.m, to 8 all those entry slips will go into an even preparing for the sixth annual
Registration for this program begins p.m., July 19, Middleport Pool , end of bigger drawing for a $50 Wal-Mart gift SiegeofFortRandolph,a hiscard: ~
tori cal drama and encampMay 22 with the program lasting from summer reading prollram.
·
Children's story lime programs are at
. For more information, call the ment scheduled to begin
June 5-Jul;,: 22.
The children's summer reading pro- 2 p.m .. Mondays at the Racine Library; 2 Pomeroy Library at 992-5813 or visit Friday and run throughout the
gram is open to young people preschool p.m., Tuesdays at the Eastern Library ; to www.meigs.lib.oh.us. The library wei- weekend.
,
age through young adult, With programs, be announced on Wednesdays at the comes children and adults of all abilities.
According to Craig Hesson,
prize drawings, story hours, a reading Pomeroy Library; 2 ·p.m ., Thursdays at All programs are free of charge.
chairman of the Fort
'
---'------------ - - - - - - - - - - " - - - - - - - - - - - - : - ,- - - - - - - - - Randolph Committee, the
SERGENT ·

BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
Calendars

soon

to

BvBETHSERGENT

2 SI!CI10NS -

Organizers
prepare annual
Si~ge of Fort
Randolph

Beth Ser&amp;fnt/photo

Cristina Oney, 4, of Mason, W.Va. reads. up on one of her favorite subjects - dogs. Oney, who is the daughter of Gary James and
Gloria Oney will have an opportunity to do even more reading during the Meigs County District Public Library's 2006 Children's
Summer Reading Program beginning June 5. The library will also offer an adult sumfl)er reading program. Both programs begin
registration on May 22 .

e~ent
has grown
year.
Re-enactors
from each.
six states

• ,

@ 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

····-··

remain

.
·. es 'llraledicton·an, salutaton
··an
SHS.nam

Detail• on Poco Ae

'

,.

,\ llfll

POMEROY
- Sheriff
Robert Beegle has issued an
advisory about a financial
scam operating in the area,
and warned about mailings
· containing checks
and
promises of c;ash prizes . .
According to Beegle, letters have been mailed from
Canada to reside.nts in the
local community, informing
them they have won a sweep.stakes drawing or other jackpot prize, and enclosing
checks tO' help pay taxes and
other fees .
· ' "The letter gives a telephone number to .call, and
residents are asked to send
part of the money back
before they can receive the
balance of the winnings,"
Beegle said.
In the most recent 'case
reP?rted to his office, Beegle
said, the check was written in
the name of a Colorado business, drawn on a bank in Van
Wert, with the letter announcing the winning of the sweepstakes from the Netherlands,
and the envelope postmarked
from Canada.
"All of this should arouse
suspicion," Beegle said.

·see

Sports

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streetlight's operation . once. determine the best location
the village contract expires for a li~ht and the costs· of
is not true. However, he installat.Ion and monthly
said, the utility company operation, Rennie said.
offers an "area hght" service
The streetlights are to be
for tesidential customers, extinguished next month ,
allowing for the instilllation when a contract between the
of a security ligl)t on a pole village and AEP for their
operation expires. because
near the residence.
Rennie said arrangements voters· in the village rejected
for an area light can be a proposed one-mill current
made by calling AEP's cus- expenses levy for the lights'
tomer service line, (800) operation .. The village ·will
277-2177. After the call is try •again in November to
made, an AEP representative generate public support for
wilf visit the customer and . the levy, but the streets will

REED

INSIDE

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Ruth Basim
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·• David Pratt

~bituaries

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BY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BITUARIFS

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STAFF REPORT

.~ito rials

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NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

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Sher!ff advises ,
community about
"'"'nL·'"' scam

DearAbby

"* ~A-u _ .,..Pifl'llll*•~ "'*'.....- ~or O$ti'l ,.,.,...... ~ ra&amp;Kpra\ .,, .w! !of.,... ..:~_,,... ,.lua h•tf'l. • • .-d~ u_.,es !llrfbeld:i:I:"""".C .filly .,.;y thiMt. NI;KI tt ltn• w•k:.Df

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MIDDLEPORT
Residents of Middleport concerned about the coming
dark streets cannot "adopt" a
streetlight, b11t · they •.can pay
the power company for an
area light to help secure ,
their property.
·
Jeff Rennie, a spokesman
for American Electric Power,
said earlier reports that
Middleport residents will be
able to pay the cost of a

'

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

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AEP: Streetlight 'adoption' not an alternative in Middleport

SPORTS

WEATHER

'

Ex-interim Boston
leader installed as
Cleveland bishop, A6 ·
•

West receives honorary
doctorate at WVU

l!"""'l'd~ Y·Twin
......"OHV
. -onatn•
•• $0"
23 ·H~-dilly
f&gt;t I&lt;Dhler' cC!ftlino,oci"
• Futtr wo~dod ""'~r~~M

•

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RACINE - John Robert
Bentz has been named valedictorian and Kristiina Dahn
Williams salutatorian of the
Southern High School Class of
2006, Principal Matk Miller
announced.
Bentz is the son of Keith
and Rebecca Bentz of Racine,
and Williams is the daughter of
Debi Williams and Todd
ZeinerofRacine. ·
Bentz was a member of the
SHS golf team that made it to
the state tournament for the
first time in the school's his tory last fall . He was also a.member of the National Honor

•.·

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Society, Pep Club, Spanish
Club, Drama Club, Varsity "S"
Club and participated in Quiz
Bowl and Educational Service

come to Fort Ran~olph ·for the
·
b
h
·
d
encampment
and drama that
studymg ot accountmg an
centers around the events that
computer-aided design and took place there in 1777 and
drafting.
·
17
Bentz received a full schol- · 1~· the story ·goes, Chief
arship from Rio Grande in the Cornstalk returned 10 Point
form of the Ohio First Pleasant to seek mediation
Scholarship. In addition he . over .land deals tha.t had creat" received Ohio Regents, Dale · ed friction between native
Arnold Cutler and Kibble Americans and the new setScholarships.
tiers after he was repelled
valedictorian from the area by the forces of
Bentz's
· speech .focuses on success and CoL Andrew Lewis in the
more ·specifically how to use Battle of Point Pleasant on
the present and future to obtain Oct. 10, 1774.
th.at success.
Cornstalk and his son,
as
Elinipisco,
were slain, and
Williams,
also
known
John Robert Bentz
"Tex" to classmates was a despite assurances from ·
Learning.
member of the SHS basketball authorities that the $Uilty parHe plans to attend the and volleyball teams. She was tics would be pumshed, the
University of Rio Grande in
Please see SHS, AS
Please see Slep. AS
the fall as a double major.

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