<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4737" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4737?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T01:02:47+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14665">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/66e2172b867c6950eb1800e413bc05a3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>2667ccd1d4e0ae7e3215182b6a8cd632</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="16314">
                  <text>I

'·

Sunday, May 21, 2006

Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH
• Pt.
Pleasant, W
.
'

Page 06 • &amp;unbap '~!times ·&amp;.tn~ind

'

Palestinian police foil
attack on commander
loyal to Abbas, A2

Fanners ·Bank opens in
Point Ple~ant, As

HOLZBR CUNIC

r

Middlepol"t• Pomeroy, qhio
;;o CENTS. • \'ol . ,";"'
, , , N o . l&lt;)fl

'

STAfF REPORT '

• Meigs sends nine to
regionals. See Page.81

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Why Aquatic Therapy?
first question
aslu:d by patients
referred to
aquatic therapy is:
"U/hgt can aquatic
tberapy do for me
regular therapy
'tT' Most genera physician will
someone for
aqu:mc therapy if
have an illness

ning is the buoyancy of the water. Buoyancy is a
force that acts against gravity. It is felt as an
upward thrust or floati~g feeling almost a feeling of
weightlessness.

"Most generally a physician will refer
someone for aquatic therapy ifthey have
an illness or condition that makes land
therapy to.o difficult or dangerous for that
patient. " .

l!!erous for that
most cases
aquatic therapy is used
as a starting point to help patients build the
.strength, endurance, balance and any other factors
needed to transition to a land based program. One
of the reasons aquatic therapy is used in the begin·

. This allows for virtually impact free exercise.
While the buoyancy makes movements easier; the
water also provides a resistance to make the exercise more effective. Another advantage to aquatic
therapy is its ability to improve circulation and
decrease swelling. This is because of the water's
hydrostatic pressure. This is the force the water

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local Board .of
Education approved substitute teachers and supplec
mental contracts with facul ·
ty at its meeting last week.
Shannon ·
Crowley,
Jennifer L. Ervin, Matthew
B. Ervin, Lindsay Nosse,
Amanda (James) Remnant,
Athena Smith, Megan E.

exerts on an immersed body. It works kind of like
a compression stocking after surgery; it squeezes
on the body and assists the heart by increasing
blood flow back to the heart. This improved circulation is what helps to reduc.e swelling. l'he water
also provides warm relaxing environment which
helps·decrease pain and makes it the perfect place
to begin an exercise routine. These are just a few
of the reasons why aquatic therapy may be used
instead of a land program or as a transition to a
!arid program.
You and your doctor should assess your
needs and determine which program is best f9r
you. Ifyou have questions about your therapy or
rehabilitation needs please call the Holzer Clinic
Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility
(CORF) at 441-3560.

Toplis · and Wendy E.
Joaquiri were employed as
substitutes:
The board approved the
following supplemental contracts for the 2006-07
school . year:Nan~y Wachter,
JUnior . class advisor; John
Burdette, junior high girls'
basketball coach; Jerry
Burdette, junior high girls'
basketball coach; Samuel
Thompson, elementary · student council co-advisor;

Page AS
• L. Irene Justis

By: Ronnie Morrison, LPTA
'

•

• Bush pushes
lawmakers .to pass
irTI'fnigration .legiSlation.
'
· Beth Serpnt/pholoo
See Page A2
Southetn High School said goodbye to 50 seniors yesterday
.including (from foreground) Ryan Amberger, Kevin Hill and
• AP In.terview: U.S.
Shane Hayman. ·
ambassador says next six
months 'truly critical' for
Iraq. See Page·A2 .
• Rice says security
guarantee for Iran not part
of talks. See Page A2
• Antioch College
buttons-up image, just a bit.
See Page A3
• Birthday observed.
See Page A3
• First communion.
See PageA3
• Church women obse!Ve
Mother's Day. ·
See Page AS
:
• Sides closer to deal on
_lending-fraud bill.
See Page A&amp;
• Local graduates honored
by WSAZ. See Page A6

Adolescent and adult pertussi.s vaccination

In adults the diagnosis of pertussis is rarely entertained as the illness is often less severe in adults
than it is in children. Pertussis has classically been
considered a childhood illness and may be clinical~
ly indistinguishable from other causes of prolonged
cough in an adult. Unfortunately, Pertussis is highly contagious, spread through.respiratory droplets

On October 26, 2005, the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices (ACIP) began recommending the routine use of a single dose of Tdap to
replace the next booster of the classic Td (which
does not contain a pertussis component) for adolescents and adults, particularly for adults and adolescents with close contact to infants younger than 12
months of age. ·

'

• Heard reports from
• Approved district partie·
Elementary Principal Jody ipation in Project SOAR
Howard 'and · High school with Battelle for Kids at a
Principal Jon Lindner:
cost of $3.50 per student.
• 'Hired Pamela Boyd as a
Approved resolutions
substitute bus driver. pend- authorizing the superintening certification.
·
de;1t to hire staff and
• Approved a resolution accept resignations between
authonztng 2006-07 mem- board meetings through
bershtp m· the Oh1o High May 3 1, 2007.
'
School Athletic Association. ' • Set the next regular
•
Approved
Open ·meeting for 7:30 . p.m. on
El)rollment Students for the June 23. in the elementary
2006-07 school year.
library conference room.

BY BRIAN J. Rtim
BREEIJ@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

Childhood immunization programs have been
extremely effective for reducing or eradicating the
diseases that they were intended to pr~vent with
. one 'exception, Pertussis (Whooping Cough) has
increased from a low of lO 10 cases in 1976 in the
United States to 25,827 cases in 2004. Sixty per·
.cent. of these. cases occurred in adults and
. adolescents. The reason for the high percentage of cases
in adults and adolescents is likely related to immunity waning 5-l 0 years after receipt of standard
DTaP immunizations received In early childhood.

Carly Hayes, elementary
student council "Co-advisor;
Samuel Thompson, junior
high class advisor.
The board approved contracts with Howte Lawrence
·and Lee Swain to· fulfill
duties as part-time grounds
maintenance workers, on a
part-time basis.
Heather
Wolfe
was
approved as play director
for the current school year.
The board also:

Rossen, Davis address fellow EHS
grads -in Sunday commencement

OBITUARIES

' '
and adult illness.poses a real threat to children, particularly infants under 12 months of age. This fact
was sadly demonstrated by the death on an infant
last year in West Virginia who was surrounded by a
number of adults with unsuspected Pertussis.

·
W\\'W . IlJ)'f 1Ul'I }'~l"lllil1l'i.('HI11

Eastern board approves subs, supplemental contracts

SPORTS
•

\1(lNI&gt;,\vt • JV
"1 ,\\' -'"'
' 'ltl»f•
- • .._

'

the inherent difficulty in making the.diagnosis of
Pertussis in adults a moot point through prevention
and to add Pertussis to the list of effectively
decreased or eradicated illnesses through the judicious use of immunizations. The tragic loss of a
young life should be foremost in our minds when
considering trying to institufe this public h~alth
measure.

.,
As a medical community we need to try to make
the two. recently approved Tdap products (Adacel
for use in ages 11 - 64 years of age and Boestrix for
use in ages 10-18) 1\Vailable.to the publicto make

Yesterday the Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium was packed with
family and friends of the Southern High School Class of 2006 when
(at left) Nicole Jones and Kristiina Willi.ams walked in the processional during baccalaureate
and commencement exercises. ··
,

WEATIIER

TUPPERS PtAINS
Addressing her cia&gt;smates at
commencement exercises at
Eastern High School Sunday,
Valedictorian Taylor Russell
told her classmates they were
facing "a whole new beginning
·_ a · life .fanned around the
decisions we choose to make."
Russell and Salutatorian
Christopher Davis shared
thoughts about their years at
Eastern and their hopes for the
future in their remarks during
the 49th annual Eastern commencement, held in the school
gymnasium. Diplomas were
awarded to 55 graduates.
Russell is the daughter of
John and Brenda Russell of
Chester, and Davis'Is the son of
Kimberly . . and · Dennis
Marcinko and Rob and Nanna
Davis, all of Reedsville.
"It no longer matters what
you got on your last English
test, which parking space is
B~anJ. R~/phOtoo
. yours, or what you are going to ·
The.55
graduates
of
Eastern
High
School
process
onto the stage
wear tomorrow," Russell said. ,
"We have come upon a great prior to th~ beginning of commencement exercises Sunday.
milestone, but it is by no means
the greatest one we will
encounter."
Russel.! recounted her experiences through two Christian
schools and home-schooling,
and thanked those who ·helped
her in her accomplishments,
including God, family ~md
friends and the faculty members who .assisted her along the
way.
·
·· "I grew up in a very ditl"erent
environment than most of my
class. I wa&gt; painfully shy and
obviously ignorant of the ways
of 'nonnal' junior high kids. In
my case, ignorance was truly
bliss"
"I am thankful to God. He
made me everything I am. He
blessed me with the ability to
succeed at anythin~ l put my
hand to. Because ot Him, there
is nothing I have not or will not
.overcome. He gave me the
wonderful friends and family I
have; He gave me every breath: Eastern High School 2006 Valed ictorian Taylor Russell told
classmates the decisions they make will affect their future in
Please see' Eastern, AS · ' her remarks at Sunday's commencement.

Southern says 'farewell'
to 50 graduates during L.H~is=to-.:;ria=n-r:le::-=a'Lds~=:,==:;;==;=~~~~iiiii
Srmd~y connnencement journey into
'
.
BY BETH SERGENT
Soci.ety me!llber followed with nomev:o·y's pa
· St
the mvocauon and Jenny . Gay 1~,
''
.

We deliver wry
special packages......
'

6 Bu 1rl

C.,,.,

'

01 stclfi\ie!fS
I~ fltdfiai·N Jarhdoas··
Jb Uti 110 ptJilt-illiwq aw
Jl Ht.' Art: id rMr CDM.

BSERGEN.T@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM •

Detallo on Page A6

INDEX
2 SECJ10NS- 12 I'AGES

Calendars

r.ri..Ao-..

·Classifieds

~~
.

.

.

.

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Editorials

...••;
'.
ria

A3

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© aoo6 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

__ _____

,...,.

.._,

'

'

(

..

~---------~---:-----'-------------....-:,-. --·~· .~.-

·--

RACINE - Yesterday 50
seniors from Southern High
School received their diplomas
ta begin their lives as adults,
and as a popular song says, "the
rest is still unwritten."
Family, friends . and well- .
wishers packed the Charles W.
Hayman Gymna~ium to witness their special student be rec·
ognized at graduation and com.mencement ceremonies that
began with the "Pomp and
Circumstance" of the processional accompanied by . the
, Southern High School Band
under the direction of Mr. Chad
Dodson. ·
Amber Melissa Hol si nger,
vice-president of the Class of
2006 gave the welcome, Selena
Marie Spencer, National Honor

•

Warner, student council vicepresident of ihe Class of 2006
led the Pledge of Allegiance,
Chelsea Diane Smitli, secretary of student council recited
from the poem "Changes."
Choir members followed
with a rendition of "Lean On
Me" by Bill Withers.
Kristiina Dahn Williams
then came to the jX)dium to give
the saluu\torian address which
focused on how to define suecess in the fonn of happiness,
compassion, family, friends,
memories and distinguishing
between dreams and ~oals.
Goals.
accordtng
to
Williams, require the reality of
hard wlJrk while she deltncd
dreams as "faint hope" that

.

•

.

..

Please see Southern, .AS

·
Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

POMEROY - A journey
into Pom eroy 's past . was
e njoyed by residents who
joined local histori an Mike
Gerlach on the Pomeroy
Merchants Association's second hi storic walking tour of
downtown Pomeroy. .
Meeting at Trinity Church
the church women there
se rved refreshments to the
three dozen or so participants
before they joined Gerlach
·for a stroll down Main and up
Second Streets all the while
li stenin g to Gerlach talk
Charlene Hoeftlchj photo
about Pomeroy's pa,t.
Michael
Gerlach
tells
the
story
of
Pomeroy's
settlement ·and
He cred it e~ Samuel W.
industria·! develppment during a journey mto Pomeroy's past
Please see Pomeroy, AS
Satu rday morn ing.

•

�' .

I

'

NATION •WORLD

The Daily Sentinel
.

'

Monday, May 22,

2006

Rice says security guarantee
or Iran not part of talks .·

PALESTINIAN POLICE. FOIL ATTACK
ON COMMANDER LOYAL TO ABBAS

Energy Agency, would meet
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
with Rice and President
Bush's national security advi sWASHINGTON - The er, Stephen Hadley, this week
U.S. has not offered a guaran- in Washington. In addition,
tee against attacking or under- representatives from the five
mining Iran's hard-line gov- permanent U.N. Security
ernment in exchange for hav- Council member&amp;, the EU and
ing Tehran curtail its nuclear ' Germany plan to met in
progmm, Secretary of State London to talk about Iran.
Condoleezza
Rice
said
Rice said she thought it was
Sunday.
strange even to di~uss securi' ·
"Iran is a troublemaker in ty guarantees when Iran threatthe international system, a cen- ens Israel, promotes terrorism
tral banker of terrorism. in the Middle East and stirs up
Security assurances are not on violence in southern Iraq to the
the table," Rice said.
detriment of U.S. forces.
The. European Union said
Asked on NBC's "Meet the
last week it would propose Press" if Bush would leave
economic and political incen- office with nuclear arms being
tives to persuade Iran to halt its developed in Iran, Rice said:
.plans for enriching uranium. , "We can't allow Iran to steadi. While Iranian officials contend ly tum toward nuclear
they are only seeking nuclear weapons because it would be
power, the U.S. and other tremendously destabilizing in
nations fear Iran is working this already volatile region. We
toward developing weapons.
have a lot of tools at our -disRice. appearing on ·Sunday posal."
i
news shows, said European
Rice dismissed as "high
officials have not asked the talk" the statement last month
U.S. for security guarantees as by Iran's president, President
they discuss options for deal- · Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, that
·ing with Iran. She did not say his country would not "give a
what the U.S. response would damn" about U.N. resolutions
be if !ISked to provide such an that could penalize Tehran.
assurance.
"The Iranians know that ·
"What we're talking about is sanctions, that international
a package that will make clear action can, in fact, be quite
to Iran that there are choices to damaging to them," she .said.
be mhde," she said on "Fox "And so I assume that tl\e
News Sunday."
Iranian president is simply
"Either that there will be posturing on this because I
sanctions and actions taken think the Iranians do know
against Iran by the internation- how devastating this could
al community or there's a way be."
for them to meet their ci vii
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
nuclear concerns," she said on Olmert told CNN's "Late
Fox, where she also used the Edition" that he believes Iran
is just a few months rather than
"troublemaker" label.
Diplomats have said that a few years from ac9uiring the
· Mohamed EIBaradei, who technological experttse needed
heads the International Atomic to build a nuclear bomb.
BY DOUGLASS K. DANIEL

Bv RAVI NESSMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip
- Palestinian police thwarted an attack Sunday on a
security commaoder - the
se~ond ally of President
Mahmoud ·Abbas targeted in
~wo days as the rivalry
between his moderate Fatah
Party and the Hamas militant'
group threatened to explode.
Abbas .called on both sides ··
to do everything possible to
avoid violence and said he
would open talks with
Hamas later this week to end
ihe dangerous power struggle.
"Civil war is the red line
that nobody dares cross, no
matter which side they are
on," Abbas told reporters at
the World Economic Forum
in the Egyptian Red Sea
resort of Sharm el-Sheik.
Abbas met Israeli Foreign
Minister Tzipi Livni there the first high-level talks
between
Israelis
and
Palestinians since Hamas
beat Fatah in January parliamentary elections.
Since the Hamas Cabinet
took power in March, tensions have risen as Abbas
and the militant group vie for
power. Abbas was elected
separately last year. .
, In an effort· to consolidate
his control over the Fatahdominated security forces,
Abbas installed close ally
Rashid Abu Shbak as the
.commander oJ the three
branches that fall under the
Hamas-controlled Interior
Ministry.
01) Sunday, security forces
discovered a !54-pound
bomb planted along a route
used by Shbak's motorcade,
and security officials said it
was intended to assassinate
him. The ex~losives were
found as pohce conducted
their daily inspection of
Shbak's route before he
heads to work, officials said.
The discovery came a.day'
after Abbas' intelligence
chief was seriously wounded
when a bomb filled with
metal pellets ripped through
an elevator shaft in his Gaza
City. headquarters.
Fatah -officials hinted they
believed Hamas was behind
both incidents but stopped
short of making an open
accusation.
"There is a clear conspiracy aimed to target Fatah

PageA2

AP Photo

Israeli school children look at the damage caused by a · Kassam rocket, fired by Palestinian militants, in their school in the southern Israeli town of Sderot Sunday. A Palestinian rocket hit on
Sunday a school in Sderot, hitting an empty classroom but causing no injuries, the Israeli army said.

leaders and the security chief restore regular· contacts funds to buy desperately
Israelis
and needed medical sup~lies for
in the Gaza Strip with suspi- between ·
cious object s. What hap- Palestinians. Israel has the Palestinians. Olmert said
pened today near Abu . refused to deal with the ne»' the aid would be given
Shbak 's house and yesterday Palestinit!n government as directly to Palestinian hospiwith the intelligence services long as Hamas does not rec- tals to ensure the money is
is proof of this," Fatah ognize Israel and renounce not diverted to militants.·
spokesman T:awfiq Abu violence.
·
Abbas wants Israel to conKhoussa said.
During their 45-minute duct peace talks through him,
Hamas.
But
After the bomb was dis- meeting, Livni assured . bypassing
covered, hundreds of Fatah Abbas that Israel remained Olmert played down that
activists took to the streets in committed to the internation- possibility m an interview
Gaza City, expressing sup- ally backed "road map" with CNN broadcast Sunday.
port for the security forces peace plan. They also dis"Abbas doesn't have even
and volunteering their ser- cussed plans for Abbas and the power to take charge of
vices. The Fatah-dominated Israeli Prime Minister Ehud his
own
government,"
Preventive Security agency Olmert to meet soon.
Olmert told "Late Edition"
also stepped up patrols in
"It was a very good meet- ahead of his Sunday visit to
Gaza City and restricted ing. a very irpportant meet- Washington. "So how can he
ing and the first of many," represent that government in
access to its headquarters.
With no direct control of Livni said.
the most crucial, complex
ahy security branch, Hanias
Even as Livni reached out and sensitive negotiations,
formed its own 3,000-strong to Abbas, she appealed to the about which there are so
security force and sent it into international community to many divisions within the
' BY DEB RIECHMANN
the proposals the president
Gaza's streets last week remain firm in its rejection of Palestinian community?"
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRITER
announced
Monday. "As the
despite Abbas' veto.
Also Sunday, Israel's
Harnas.
Senate continues to consider
Fatah
officials . have
"It is a terrorist govern~ Defense Ministry approved
WASHINGTON
comprehensive
immigration
demanded the new black- ment, on the other hand we expanding the boundaries of
President
Bush
·urged
reform,
the
president
needs to
clad force be disbanded, and want to help the Palestinian four Jewish settlements, a
Congress
on
Saturday
to
find
a
stand
up
to
the
far
right,
and
about I ,000 Fatah supporters people and not to punish practice the United States
middle ¥round between mass take a stand on the details of
·rallied against it in the south- · them .... This was part of the has opposed previously.
.
deportaUoil
or instant U.S. cit- the bill before them."
Olmert
has
said
discussion,"
Livni
said.
he
will
ern Gaza town of· Rafah on
izenship
for
the estimated 12
On Thursday, the president
Sunday. Gunmen, some of
A Western economic boy- draw Israel's borders, unilatmillion
illegal
immigrants
traveled
te Arizona to tour an
them masked, fired rifles in cott of the Hamas-led gov- erally if necessary, by 2010,
unfortified section of the barthe air as an activist in a car ernment has crushed the dismantling rnany West"Bank alieady living in Americil
Bush's
radi&lt;;l
message
was
der
in the desert. He endorsed
Palestinian
economy
and
led
shouted through a loudspeaksettlements· and incorporatthe
third
time
this
week
he
has
using
fences and other barriers
er, "No, to the black militia!" .to fears of a humanitarian ing the largest settlement
blocs into Israel. Three of the spoken out about immigration. to cut down on illegal crassHamas forces left the crisis.
On Monday, in a televised ings.
The
Senate
on
streets before the· Fatah
Israel's Cabinet on Sunday ·settlements slated for expanaddress
from
the
Oval
Office,
Wednesday
voted
to
put
370
approved
the
release
of
$11
lie
within
areas
Olniert
sion
march.
Bush said he would order as · miles of fences on the border.
Abbas appealed to Livni to· million in frozen Palestinian hopes -to annex.
many as 6,000 National Guard
'To secure our border we
troops to secure the U.S. bor- · must create a temporary workder with Mexico, and urged · er program that provides forCongress to give millions of eign workers a legal and orderillegal immigrants a chance at ly way to enter our country for
.
'
citizenship.
a limited period of time," Bush
. Bush said the National said.
Guard troops would fill in
Bush wants an immigration
temporarily while the nation's bill that pairs up better securiBorder Patrol is expanded. He ty on the border with a guest •
ments that led to the forming the past, now that we have the That will take a bit of time to asked Congress to add 6,000 worker program.
of the government, five Sunni Arabs participating in develop, and we will work mpre Border Patrol agents by
He f~es opposition from
months after national elections the political process, now that with the government to devel- the end of his presidency and conservative Republicans, parin which 12 million Iraqis par- we have a government of op such a plan."
add 6, 700 more beds so illegal ticularly -in the House, who
ln the meantime, U.S. and immigrants can be detained prefer a get-tough approach
national unity, but I am, of
ticipated:
Al-Maliki 's government course, realistic enough to Iraqi officials have stepped up while waiting for hearings.
and largely oppose a guesr
was sworn in without new know that there are significant efforts to recruit Sunni Arabs
· Homeland worker program - something
However,
ministers of defense and ·inte- challenges that 'are still part of into .both .the police and the Security Department Inspector they.view as giving amnesty to
army so they can replace General Richard L. Skinner criminals.
rior, but Khalilzad said he was. the picture," Khalilzad .said.
confident that choices for the
U.S. officials hope the. new Shiite and Kurdish soldiers in said in a report Friday that the
The Senate, meanwhile, is
posts would be made within a government of Sunnis, Shiites heavily Sunni areas where the administration hadn't budget- . working on broad legislation
week.
' and Kurds will manage to wiil insurgency is most active.
ed enough, and that it will take t~at largely answers Bush's
"I think that with the partic- nearly 35,000 more"jail beds to call. It includes measures to
Khalilzad acknowledged publicJrust, ease sectarian tenthat
polls
show
that sions and lure Sunni Arabs ipation of the Sunni Arabs and detain all high-risk aliens.
tighten control of the borders,
all
commuqities
in
the
politiAmericans are lqsing confi- away from the insurgency,
"This . week I asked creates a guest worker prodence in U.S. policy in Iraq.
enabling the United States and cal process, I helieve that the Congress to provide funding gram and offers a path to citi"I believe the American its coalition partners to with- situation in Iraq will"improve, f.or dramatic improvements in · zenship to many, but not all,
but it will not improve in the manpower and technology at illegal . immigrants in the
people understand the impor- draw their forces.
. "The next six" months will security domain immediately. the border," Bush said nation.
tance of success in Iraq, they
Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala.,
understand that Iraq is impor- be truly critical for lraq ," It will take time," Khalilzad Saturday. "We' ll hire thousaid.
·
sands more Border Patrol an ardent opponent of the
tant, but they have lost some .Khalilzad said.
Khalilzad also said he was agents. · And to. help these Senate bil!, conceded Friday
To achieve stability, the new
confidence in whether we
know what we · are doing, government must "get the ready to engage in talks with agents do their jobs, we will that the measure is likely to
whether we have the right security ministries to trans- the Iranians about their rela- deploy advanced technologies pass next week. "The Senate
strategy for achieving success form in such a way that they tionship with Iraq . .U.S. offi- such as high-tecl1 fences in should he ashamed of itself,''
in Iraq and that has produced will have the confidence of the cials have expressed concern urban areas, infrared cameras he said. But he also predicted
loss of confidence, a Iraqi peoples," Khalilzad said. about Iranian ties to Shiite and unmanned aerial vehi- that it won' t become law
Many Sunni Arabs believe militias, which the new Iraqi cles."
unless House and Senate
decreasect level of suppoit for
the security forces, especially government has pledged to
Many
congressional negotiators rewrite it.
the enterpri se," he admitted.
Republicans said they supportIn addition to a guest work"I believe that as they see the paramilitary commandoes di sband.
The
Bush
administration
ed Bush's plan to use National cr program, Bush said employimprovement in the political of 'the Interior Ministry, have
situation and that in tum pro- been infiltrated by Shiite mili- said in March it was prepared Guard troops at the border. But crs need to be held accountduces improvement in the tias and death squads that kid- to talk with Iran about the sit- he ran into criticism from able for the workers ,they hire
uation in Iraq, but the offer some border state governors, . by creating a better system for
security situation, I believe the nap and kill civilians.
One key task facing al - was shelved until the new Democrats and some other &gt;&lt;erifying documents and work
numbers will change."
eligibility. The president said
But he added that any tum- Maliki's government will be Baghdad government was in Republicans.
place.
U.S.
officials
made
In
the
Democratic
radio
the system should include a
purging
militias
from
the
around "really depends on the
identification
performance of this govern- security forces , Khalilzad clear that the talks would be response, Rep. Mike Honda of tamperproof
specifically about Iraq and California said Bush should card for every legal foreign
ment" and whether it succeeds said .
·
'They will have to do it would not include the dispute denounc.e the approach of worker.
in c.urbing the violence.
"The card would help us
Asked whelher the United because gaining · the security over Tehran's nuclear. pro- House Republicans, who won
passage of a tough immigra- enforce "the law and leave
States would have to admit ·of the people is very impor- gram.
U.S. authorities al so ar~ tion bill that would erect employers with no excuse· .for
failure and pull out if there tant. The prime minister has
was no improvement in the stated that militias are a prob- concerned that weapons have fences along the Mexican bor- break,ing it," he said. "And by
been smuggled into Iraq from der and treat people·who sneak making it harder for illegal
next six months or a year, he lem," he said.
Shiite-dominate&lt;J
Iran,- across as felons to be deported. ·immigrants to lind work in·our
"With
regard
to
militiasl
of
said: "We wilL have to wait
'The president's public rela- country, we would discourage
course there is a need for a although. the Iranian governand see."
"I am more optimistic now demobilization , decommis - ment has strongly denied tions campaign won't get the people from c·rossing the barjob done," Honda said about · der illegally in the tirst place."
than I have been at times' in sioning and integration plan . those allegations.

Bush pushes lawmakers to
pass immigration legislation

AP lnteniew: u~s. ambassad~r· says
next six m·onths 'truly critical' for Iraq
Bv JOHN DANISZEWSKI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The
U.S. ambassador said Sunday
that Iraqi . Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki will have no
honeymoon and will be immediately challenged by al-Qaida
and other terrorists.
In an interview with the
Associated Press one day after
the seating of the new leadership,
U.S. Ambassador
Zalmay Khalilzad outlined the
immediate challenges facing
the government of national
unity and said the next six
months will be "truly critical."
Al-Maliki was meeting
Sund\IY with the security
chiefs of the police and mili tary to underline his immedi ate priorities, Khalilzad said.
The · government "will be
faced immediately with chal lepges because the terrori sts
are not going to go away, they
are going to persist in the
effort to promote sectarian
conflict," Khalilzad said.
'They want Iraq to fail , but ·
Iraq in itself is not important
. for them. Iraq is one theater in
a global war that they want to
-provoke, a war of civilization."

In one of al-Mali.ki's first
acts, the ambassador said, he
ljad approved a plan for
"infrastructure security' ~ and is
planning to review a strategy
for security . in Baghdad in
coming days.
"Security will be a si,gnificant challenge, as will the provision of services," said the
ambassador, who was instruTental in brokerin,g agree-

'

•

'

BY THE BEND
First Communion
Parents pinch college funds
sentby children's godparent
.

.,

Monday, May 22,

'

DEAR ABBY: I am the
godparent of three children
from different famil ies. In the
past, l have given each child
money designated for his or
her college fund, along with
appropnate event gtfts.
Within the last year, the
parents of all three . godchildren have disclosed to me that
they (the parents) used the
children's college funds for
"family" use - such as a down
· paym~nt on a home, a family
vacation or home renovation.
I am hurt and bewildered
that my friends could do such
a thing and destroy their
child's college savings. All
three of the children are
young, and the parents each
said something about "replac"ing" those 'funds "someday."
Now I no longer feel comfortable giving them money,
since I do not wish to fund the
next family vacation or nGw
.car.~

How do I address this tactfully with my friends, especially since my no longer contributing to the college funds
will be noticed? Please help.
ELIZABETH
IN
MOBILE, ALA.
DEAR ELIZABETH: You
say you are hurt and bewildered? I'd be furious that the
money I had given for· a col lege fund had been pilfered
by parents too immature to
understand the blessing of
compound interest.
Please don't penalize your
godchildren for the bad
behavior of their parents. Talk
to your banker or financial
adviser about establishing

ERPOOL, N.Y.
DEAR DAVID: You should
not be punished for your parents' failure to supervise your
brother. If you haven 't
alreapy done so, tell your parDear
. ents exactly what you have
Abby
told me. And while you're at
it , s~gge s t that they either
acti"vate the parental control;
on the television set in your
brother's room, or remove it
your own college funds for entirely so that he can watch
them - funds that can't be only in the den or family
touched until they a:re needed room where his viewing can
for the purpose for which they be monitored.
are intended. There tmiy even
DEAR ABBY: What do you
be a tax break for you. And if think of a mother-in-law who
the parents have the bad taste asks that an afghan made by
to bring up the subj ect, tell her friend be given back? It
them the money will be there, was given to my daughter and
but for now, it's safely out of her ·husband as a wedding gift
the way of "temptation."
three yeats ago. They just got
DEAR ABBY: I am ·l5. My divorced . Isn 't th1s a bit
youn·ger brother, "Mikey," is tacky ? - JUST WONDER7. I enjoy watching a televi- lNG
sion show that is rated PG- 13.
DEAR
WONDERING :
My parents didn ' t mind rn y When a marriage ends, it is
watching it until a few weeks not unusual for the splitting
ago.
spouses to divide the wedding
Over the- last couple of gifts according to whose
weeks, Mikey has been com- "side" they came from. Was it
ing into my room while I'm tacky of the former motherwatching the show. When I in-law to ask? I don't think
ask him to leave, he throws a · so, if the request was made
fit. He then goes · into his politely. However, once a gift
room and watches it, thinking ts given, it · belongs to the
no one will lind out.
recipient - and possession is
Mikey has been imitating nine points of the law.
some of the violence on the
Dear Abby is written by
show, and my parents are Abigail Van Buren, also
blaming me for showing it to known as Jeanne Pllillips,
him. Now they are threaten- and was founded by her
ing to take away my privilege mother, Pauline Phillips.
of watching the show. What Write
Dear Abby
at
can I do to convince them that www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
I am not exposing him to the Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
violence? -· DAVID IN LIV- 90069.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, May 22
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club will have its annual banquet 6 p.m. at the
Meigs Library. Members are
encouraged to take prospective members as guests to the
'dinner. A meeting and auction will follow the dinner.
POMEROY Meigs
County Library Board·, regular meeting 3 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.
Southern
RACINE Band Boosters·, · 7 p.m.
Monday in the high school
band room.
'
·
·POMEROY · - Meigs
County Right to Life, monthly ,meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy Ltbrary.
Tllesday, May 23
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District Board of Supervisors
will meet in regular session,
fll a.m., at the district office
in Pomeroy.
·
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold a special
meeting and past masters'
night at 7 p.m. for the pur. pose of conferring the Master
Mason degree on a candidate.
RACINE - Racine
Area
.
'

Antioch College .

buttons-up ·

2006

.

B~on

J. Reed/photo

These children rec.eived their first Holy Communion at Sacred Heart Church yesterday: Jake
Korn, Gino Casci, Brynn Harris, Holly Johnson, Colton Lilly and Andrew Johnson. Also pictured
are the children 's religious education teachers, Joan Anderson and Sheila Cozart, and Rev. Fr.
Walter Heinz, pastor. Dorothy Thompson , not pictured , assisted with the children's Instruction.

·Birthday observed

POMEROY
Jessica
Paige Workman, daughter of
BJ and Lacy Workman of
Pomeroy, observed her second birthday on May 6 and
the following week a ,
Sesame Street party and barbecue was . held in celebration at the home of her
grandparents, Albert and
Sandy Banks.
Attending or sending gifts
were maternal grandparents
Albert and Sandy Banks of
Pomeroy; Marcia, Sonny,
and David Shankle of
Frederick, Md.; Linda Rapp
.
'
Community Oq~anization . ing
mus1c,
and
Sam of Racine; Howard Banks of
annual scholarshtp dinner, Anderson
will
preach Racine; Jeremy Banks of
6:30 p.m ., First Baptist · Saturday night with open tal- Pomeroy; Amanda Vance of
Church of Racine, fellowship ent.
· Jackson; maternal greatroom.
grandmother, Dorothy Day
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
CommunitY, Center Board of
Trustees wtll meet at 7 p.m. at
Monday, May 22
the community center.
PORTAND --.- Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
Thursday, May 25
POMEROY - Alpha Iota the township building.
·- Southern
RACINE
Masters will meet at II a.m .
Local
School
Board,
regular
at Bennigans in Point
meeting
,
g
p.m.,
Southern
Pleasant for a luncheon.
·RACINE
Racine High School.
American Legion Auxiliary,
Tuesday, May 23
Post 602, 7 -p.m. at the hall.
.
SYRACUSE
- · Syracuse
Take items for Girls State
Board of Public Affairs, spebasket.
cial meeting, 7 p.m., village
hall.

Community Calendar

Public meetings

Jessica Paige Workman

of Pomeroy; maternal greatgrandparents Conard an'd
Thelma Belcher of Pomeroy;
paternal grandparents, Bob

•

and Cathy Titus of Pomeroy;
paternal gra.ndparents Bob
and Belva Workman of
Rutland; Bob and Christine
Day of Pomeroy.
Art, Amy, Nick, and
Allison
Fleming
of
Fairmont , W.Va.; Amber and
Brittany Maim of Fairmont,
W.Va.; Jim, Deni se, and
Melissa
Holman
of
Middleport ; Tamra O'Dell of
New Lexington; Kelli and
Isaac McCarty of Pomeroy;
Butch, Bonnie, and Jerry
Lightfoot of Pomeroy; Tim,
·Stephanie, and Abbie Fife of ·
Cheshire; Sharon Lightfritz
of The Plains; John, Tara,
Dustyn, and Wayne Kratz of
Fair Haven, Mich. ; and
Gerry Lightfoot of Pomeroy.

KUBOTA HAS YOU
COVERED FROM~· THE.FRONT
YARD TO THE FIELD
'

Church events

Other events ·

1\Jesday, May 23
LONG BOTTOM
Monday, May 22 ·
Revival services will be held
CHESTER
- TB Clinic
May 23-26 at the Faith Full
Chester
Fire
.
staff
at
Gospel Church at Long
Bottom. Services will begin Department to administer
at 7 p.m.-each evening. Leon skin tests, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.
Return Wc;dnesday to read.
Forte will be the speaker. , ~
Friday, May 26
CARTHAGE -A spring
revival will be held May 26
and 27 at the Carthage
Community Church, 7 p.m.
both nights. Jay Hubbard will
speak at the Friday service
with Erica Cremeans provid-

. Wednesday, May 24
.POINT
PLEASANT,
W.VA. - Ohio Valley Home
Health, Inc. , open house, .
blood pressure checks, horne
health information, refreshments. 9 a.m. ~ 3 p.m., 2415
Jackson Avenue.

First turkey

image, just a bit
' YELLOW SPRINGS (AP)
- Antioch College, a "small liberal arts school with a history
and emphasis on social activism
and civil disobedience, is buttoning-up i~ academic program to
stop declining enrollment.
The school, located in this village about 20 miles east of
Dayton, offers a cooperative
education that blends work
experience with classroom learning. But enrollment has declined
from more than 2,&lt;XXJ in the
· 1960s to 500 in recent years.
traditionally, its system was
loosely structured. Students
made nearly all their co-op
arrangements themselves and
had solo experiences across the
nation. Now they're going in
groups; and a coordinator. oversees their co-op.
"W.e had maintained our system as loosely structured: highchoice, high-freedom, as an
exploration. an adventure," saki
Richard Jurasek, executive vice
president of Antioch. "But there
are fewer people whQJwant that.
They wanted more traditional·,
less nontraditional; more mainstream, more predictable."

.

,.

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel
.

..

ALLP,OWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST OF A1HENS
ON ROUTE 50/32 • ATHENS, OH
740-593--32791 800-710-1917

''Your Friendly Outdoor Power Ei.JuipmL•n\ and Tri.\Ct:or 'Superstore"
'II._ t\ U .t .....,ilnimuu!l ....,

...... • ?&gt; '"" IO. 'lla • .. •••• mu ~~~;·

~ Tttltlllll c..nrt......,..._~ ~ , ,..,, ,_

1 r

. . . ,.,....

'"~ ll&lt;l!ltUlll l.rJ . . . l l .......

..,....t

\1] )4,. $1 _01tlw•..... RIMIII•...,., ,., .,.,, .,I• c "'''1'1'1.... 0\ ~. -..~ • &lt;W~ ........ '· ~·~t••- - ,..
~l.
· '!i:-.IU .. Pt -... 1. """'• ,. 3(,
~ U.l ...... ll-"1 ..,_,~ ,·
~.I. U , .ou ii ..AI_,....,

Submitted photo

Kirk Pullins, 1.1, son of Tom and Stac1e Pullins, bagged his first
turkey during the recent youth season . His .uncle, Davie Hall.
also pictured, called in the 14-pound turkey on the farm of
Kirk '.s grandfather, Theodore Pullins.

I(•JI)I)tll.
enaYTHING YOU VALU£

,,_..II .......

1

··l f ll*l~ Uh.........
~ IM

.... ,...... lD IIl iOORIMO:h liJO
.. t•ltot iXml. tUJ 11'111, •• •,\((~.
' ~ 610) lilt» . ._.. !SW,fit
ll tvl ':H/'.t~~( 1110&amp; 11 1211 .. ... ... UMI&gt;,.. ., ,. ,.,.,..,,.,..&amp;~ill!ill ... IU PI......

"' ... u .... -. ,... . lltt.,.._illu.
l ll1 1 *- •~ ttt,

,,

·

•

Kt- 1 9.{) 1 ·62 ~ ""1).:\

�•

111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
, Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

l
~

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 petiti~n
· the .Government for a redress ofgrievances.
'

'

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Monday, May

Monday, May 22,

22, 2006

1

:READER'S'
VIEW
.
'

Festival·
•

County enjoyed evening ifmusi£ .
Dear editor,
The approximate 450 attending the first ever Spring Music
Festival ''Boots, Fiddles and Blue Suede Shoes" at Eastern
High School, May 13, was treated to a great evening of music
by Northwest Territory Bluegrass Band, Harry Gorrell's High
Country Band, .Dwight Icenhower (Elvis Impersonator),
·Burning Love Trio, 1osh Waters, Gatlinburg and AI Babyok,
Nashville.
· The crowd gave Northwest Territory a standing ovation at
the end of their performance. High Country Band a favorite
band of our area and other areas in and out of state outdid
'themselves with another outstanding performance. Dwight
Icenhowei:(Eivis) could not have been better. He and the ·
Burning Love Trio awed the crowd with many songs of the
king. They would have made "Elvis" proud.
The festival could not have become a reality if it had not
been for Harry and Donna Gorrell plus many others that
worked long and hard hours to make it possible. Thanks to
Eastern High School for the use of the gym.
Betty Milhoan
·
Belpre

I wonder how many
Americans, listening to
President Bush bringing his
too-little, too-late immigration add(ess to a close, felt
like he ran out of track when
he concluded: "We honor the
heritage of all who come
here ... because we trust in
our country's genius for
making us all Americans,
one nation under God" end of speech . .Every allegiance-pledging American,
of course, on hearing the
phrase, "one nation under
God," automatically adds
"indivisible," not to mention
"with libertY and justice for
all."
The r.resident did not ·
It's likely that Bush simply
dido 't wish to sign off with
the final words of the Pledge
of Allegiance, which would .
have been our of place. Still,
he invoked the pledge, and
ended up omitt.ing "indivisible." Purposeful or not, the
omission is apt We - · if I
may say "we" to indicate the
United States of Ainerica are anything but "indivisi'
ble" at this sotry point in history, and, as a perilous
result, we think and we act
less and less like a "nation."
. A nation has borders and
defends them. "We" do not
Otherwise, building a fence
against an unprecedented
invasion by Mexico wouldn't be considered a harsh and
radical position in the political mainstream. A nation has
laws and upholds them.
"We" do not Otherwise, the .
Babbitts of the business
world wouldn't illegally

But so what if we all have equal, And certain ly doesn't
more stuff? That's just not sound well thought out
enough for the long haul, Goodbye, republic: hello oliespecially when the long garchy?
haul is the next 20 years durTo survive, to prosper, and
ing which the Senate immi- to · project power, great
Diana
gration "reform" bill would nations must be guided by
West
permit about 200 million reason and principle - not
new legal immigrants to take childi sh feelings . But with
up residency in the US of A national interest no longer at
- this according to two dif- heart, our leaders have only
Iowa
build American com1nerce ferent studies conducted by heartstrings.
the
Heritage
Foundation
and
Steve
King,
a
Republican
on the backs of.law-breaking
Sen.
Jeff
Sessions,
R-Aia.,
forthright opponent of the
(and ill-paid) aliens, and
seek their mass legalization ~s the Washington Times Senate bill, described a kind
(along with their families). A reported. What kind of of sob-sister visit presidennation defines itself as a nation survives a seismic tial adviser Karl Rove
nation. "We" certainly do demographic tsunami like recently paid to hang-tough,
not. We are, as we are end- that?
no-a mnesty
,House ·
No nation. Just people , Republi cans: "Rove told
lessly told, a Nation of
llflllllgrants, a concept that people, people. Masses and · lawmakers Bush is sincere
blows , to smithereens the . masses of alien individuals about enforcement," the
unique nature of the "nation" would permanently over- Associated Press rc&lt;ported
to which immigrants have whelm any linge ring con- Mr. King as saying. "But,
traditionally assimilated: the cept of American nation- (Mr. King) added, 'The presEuropean-derived, mainly hood - a concept already ident doesn't want to enforce
Anglo-Saxon polity, born of undermined by the so-called immigration law because
the Enlightenment . and culture wars of the 1980s. In he's afraid he' ll inconveextraordinarily .blessed by that more or less academic nience someone who wants
Providence, which the cur- strugg le· of yore, national
rent president is now rapidly · identity lost, and identity to come into this country for
politics won. Now we see a better Iife."'
phasmg out.
Oh ; brother.
Of course, long before ourselves increasingly as a
How about inco.nveniencimmigration finally became land of identity groups and,
ing
10 million, iO million,
The Big Issue (thanks, Tom therefore , extremely divisi200
million "someones"
Tancredo;
thanks, ble as a nation-state.
If President Bush and too who want a better life? I
Minutemen), the nation of
"We the People" had many legislators are· any have this terrible feeling I
become a confederation of measure, the American per- finally understand what a
"We the Peoples," an amal- spective has become blurry "co mpassionate conservagam of groups professing or and ill-defined, focused on tive" is: an emotional train
tolerating m,ulticulturalism, short -sighted policies con- wreck . It' s time to get a grip
sharing a common welfare ceived in emotion and dedi- and build a fence - a
state, and participating in an cated to the proposition, that pledge, possibly, to become
ever-burgeoning economic all men, women and children indivisible again.
zone that stretches from the from South of the border are
(Diana West is a columnist
.People's Republic of China created
to do
"jobs for :The Washington Times.
to the peoples' repositories Americans won't do." She can be contacted via
ofWal-Mart
Which doesn 't exactly sound dianawesr@ verizon.net.)

•

'

Church women obsewe Mother's Day
'

POLITICAl STRATEGISTS

ARE DOIN6 SOMETHING
WRON6.

Pomeroy
from PageA1

Today is Monday, May 22, the 142nd day of 2006. There·
are 223 days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On May 22, 1868, the "Great Train Robbery" took place ·
near Marshfield, Ind., as seven members of the Reno gang
made off with $96,000 in loot.
On this date: ·
.
In 1761, the first life insurance policy in the United States
was issued, in Philadelphia.
In 1819, the first steam-propelled vessel to attempt a transAtlantic crossing, the Savannah, departed from Savannah, Ga.
(It arrived in Liverpool, England, on June 20.)
In 1939, Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini signed a "Pact
· of Steel" committing Germany and Italy to a military alliance.
In 194 7, the "Truman Doctrine" was enacted as Congress
appropriated military and economic aid for Greece and
Turkey.
In 1969, the lunar module of Apollo I 0 tlew to within nine
miles of the moon's surface in a dress rehearsal for the first
.
lunar landing. ·
Thought for Today: "Tact is, after all, a kind of mind-reading."- Sarah Orne Jewett, American author (1849-1909).

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigne'd let.ters will be published Letters should be .in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to orga,
nizations and individuals will nor be accepred for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(UsPs 213·960) .
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley

Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 ·Coun Street,
accurate. If you know ot an error in a
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage ·
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- paid at Pom3roY.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press and the

Our main num~r Is
(740) 992-2156.
,Department extensions are:

Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postma,ter: send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769'.
I

Subscription Rates

News
EdHoi: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Advertising
Outolde Seleo: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 '
Oulllde S.leo: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
c .. uJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ex1. 10

General Manager
Charlene HoeMICh, Ext. 12
EofNIII:
• newsO mydallysentinel.com
Wob:
www.mydailyuntinel.com

By c'a rrler or motor route
One month .•. ..•.... .'10.27
One year . : . .........'123.24
Dally .... . . . .•••••. . , , .50'
Senior Citizen rates
. Onemonth . .•. •. ....• .'9.24
One year ........... .'1 03.90'
Subscribers should remit ln advance dlrect
to the Daily Sentjnel. No subscription by
mail permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

-

Mall Subacrlpllon

tnslde Meigs County
13 Weeks ............. '32.26
26 Weeks ·.. . ...... .. . .' 64.20
52 Weeks ............ '127.11
Outalde Meigs County
13 Weeks ...... ..... . .'53.55
26 Weeks . .
. ...•1 07.10
· 52 Weeks ..... : ..... '214.21

I

Pomeroy and Valentine B.
Horton with the industrial
development which led to
this area becoming the salt
and coal capital of the world.
He commented on the influx
of the Germans who came
here to work in the mines and
the eventual move of many
into merchandising, and thetr
influence on the architecture
of many of the buildings
which line Main Street.
Gerlach noted that in the
mid-!800s a large proportion
of the population . were
Germans who settled primarily in Minersville, also called
Dutchtown, and Coalport, the
area below the bridge. Many
of them did not speak English
at that time and of the nine
newspapers being published~
two. were in English, and
seven in German.

·southern

Farm aid draws protes(s from Bush} House leaders
Bv LIBBY QUAID
AP FOOD AND FARM WRITER

WASHINGTON (AP) Giving money to farmers,
tradition·ally a popular elec·
tion-year idea, is growing
less popular in this election
year. ·
The Senate wants to spend
nearly $4 billion to help
farmers cope with high fuel
prices and damage from
severe weather. House leaders object to the aid, saying
Congress spends taxpayer
dollars too freely, and
President Bush is threatening
to veto the aid.
The White House dislikes
the farm aid because it raises
the price of a spending bill
for the lralJ war and hurricane recovery. Beyond that,
the farm 1noney 'wouldn't
give energy relief to every
farmer, said Bush's agricullure secretary, Mike Johanns .
Farmers who don't get
subsidy checks - fruit and
vegetable growers and many
others
"would be
absolutely cut out,"he said.
"My goodness, can I say to
these folks, that's fair; you
should be satisfied with
that?" Johanns told reporters ·
last week in Chicago,•where
he was speaking to fruit and

vegetable growers .
Johanns was t&lt;llking about
payments to help producers
pay for fuel and fertilizer,
costs that soared last year
after Hurricane Katrina.
The energy-related payments, about $1.6 billion of
the $4 billion in aid, would
go only to those who get
government subsidies.
That 's four of every 10
farmers, according to the
Agriculture
Department
Subsidies go primarily to
those who grow com, wheat,
rice, cotton and soybeans.
So while California has
more than twice as many
farms as North Dakota,
California farmers would get
less energy aid than North
Dakota farmers, according to
analysis by Environmental
Working Group, one of many
groups that criticize subsidy'
programs:
"An irrigated orchard in
Oregon is just as dependent
as corn and soybean operations in North Dakota, if not .
more dependent.," said Scott
Faber, . spokesman
for
Environmental Defense.
Congress should find ways
to end the need for annual
bailout from Congress, such
as providing incentives to
farmers to use .energy more

efficiently, Faber said.
Senators who want the
energy aid ·say it benefits
farmers who need it most. '
'.'It is rough justice,"
allowed Sen. Byron Dorgan,
D-N.D. ."But it is the right
way to do it. "
Growers of subsidized
crops produce more and face
higher costs, saiq Sen. Kent
Conrad, D-N.D.
"The 40 · percent are the
very farmers who are most
affected," Conrad said.
Besides the rei ief from
energy costs, another $2.17
billion would go to farmers
or ranchers who suffered
losse~-of at least 35 percent.
Another $40 million would
pay for extra Agricultu~e
O~partment employees to
process the aid payments,
according to analysis from
the Congressional Bf.\ilget
Oftice.
Gull' Coast hurricanes
weren' t the only disaster for
farmers last year. Some pans
of the country suffered from
floods while drought persisted throughout the Midwest
and Southwest. Many farmers lost entire crops or left
fields unharvested; some quit
altogether.
."To our family businesses
in the state of Arkansas, the

disasters they've suffered are
no less than the disasters suffered in the Gulf State
region," said Sen. ' 'Blanche
Lincoln, D-Ark :
The senators are asking
farmers to sign an · online
petition supporting the aid.
Since Friday, more than
1.2.00 people have signed,
Dorgan said .
The aid nwney for farmers
is part of a Senate-passed
spending bill for the Iraq war
and hurricane recovery.
The Senate added -billions
of dollars the president didn't
·ask for, such as the farm aid.
House conservatives, urged
on by Bush's veto threat, will
try to strip the extras from
tile bill wlien House-Senate
negotiators meet in coming
weeks.
Even without the disaster
aid, the government will
spend an estimated $17 billion subsidizing farmers this
year.
It will spend at least another $3.6 billion on crop insur·
ance, which covers unavoid"
able crop losses . Unlike subsidies, which go to the major
crops, crop insurance is
available for all kinds of
crops, froni avocados to
macadamia nuts to sunflowers ..

from PageA1
·required no 'Work, dedication or
discipline. ' ,
"It is when a person turns
their dream into a reality that
things really start to happen,"
she said about turning the reality of hafd work into the goal of
attaining that ,dream.
Williams also defined success as finding happiness. ·
"I personally believe that
, finding success is tinding hapP.iness," she told the audience.
'Someone once said: 'Success
is not the key to happiness.
Happiness is the key to success.' So cla~s of 2006 I hope
you find success, but more
umportantly, I hope you fmd
happiness.''
.
Williams ·went on to 11rge
her clao;smates to· realize the
importance of compassion in
their lives.
"It (compa%ion) gives you
the ability to understand where
people are coming from and it
has the power to change like
nothing else does," she said. .
Williams encouraged Iter
classmates to remember people
who have impacted their lives
and to remember what she
called, "Little acts of kindness,
evilness, words of encouragement or of bewildem1ent, hugs
and kisses. punches and pinches from others" because, as she
put it, those experiences, "help
to mold the person that you
have become in the end."
/

...

~ .·~ -

.....

·- - · ~·- ·-

,,

,,

,,
'

. .'

~

..'
'• '

Farmers Bank opens in Point Pleasant

•
.MASON, W.Va. - L Irene Justis, 90, of Mason, W. Va.
d1ed Saturday, May 20, 2006, at Pleasant Valley HospitaL
Born on Nov. 24, 1915, she was the daughter of the late
Okey Roush and Alma Pickens Roush. She was a homemaker and· a member. of the Clifton United Methodist
Church.
S~e was preceded in death by her hu sband, Major Ferris ·
Jusus; Sisters, Frieda Henry, Elsie Lieving, Eunice Hart,
Estyl Clark, Fannie Clark, Loui se Gibbs, Eileen Roush ; and
brothers : Hazen Roush and Raymond Roush . ·
She is survived ,by ·a daughter, Joann Taylor of Mason,
W.Va., a son and daughter-in-law, Dale (Sharon) Justis of
Avon , Ind ., grandsons: Barry Taylor of Branson, Mo .. Greg
(Darci) Justis of Bloomington,Ind.; granddaughters, Jill
(Gene) Nelson of Mason, W.Va., and Wendy . (Randy) ·
Thomas of Brownsburg, Ind.; great crandchildren, Jared
Thomas, Hannah Thomas, Luke Justis, Gavin Justis; and a
sister-in-law, Evelyn Roush of New Haven, W.Va., along
· with many nieces and nephews.
. ·
· Visitation will be held 6 to 9 p.m. Monday at the Clifton
Umted Methodist Church. Funeral services will be held 10
a.m. on Tuesday, May 23, 2006 at the church with the Rev.
Doreen Adkin officiating. Burial will be in the Graham
Cemetery:
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. E-Mail condolences to the family may be sent to
foglesongtucker@ myway.com

RA.CINE -Ladies of the
Carmel-Sutton and Morning
Star
United
Methodist
Churches, and their guests,
enjoyed a "Ladies Night Out"
in observance of Mothers'
Day.
The event, attended by
about 55 women, was sponsored by the' Friendship
Circle was a catered dinner at
the Carmel fellowship hall on
Ml!y 12. Nancy Circle
blessed the food before the
meaL
Kathy McDaniel had devotions and asked each one present to reminisce about some· thing her mother had said to
her that .she remembered
through the years.
Guest speaker was, . Prisca
Nemapare of Zimbabwe,
Africa. She was a professor
in Human and Consumer

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

L Irene Justis

TODAY IN HISTORY

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

2006

Obituaries ·

American alien nation

-The Dally Sentinel

I

PageA4

OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

.,.

ServiCes at Ohio University.
In 1999, she returned to
Africa to help imr.rove lives
of people and famtlies suffering from Aids. She is now
chief program officer of the
Zienzele Foundation d~aling
. with Aids orphans. She .had
handmade African baskets
available for purchase with
the profits going back to
Africa to pay for orphans'
school fees.
Door prizes of hanging baskets from Sue's Greenhouse
were won by Helen Kelly,
Geraldine Varney, Ml!bel
Brace,
Imogene
Cunningham, Rebecca Wiles
and Katrina Hayes.
During
Carmel-Sutton
Worship service on Mothers'
Day, Geraldine Varney was
chosen as "2006 Mother of
the Year."
The need to get coal from
here . to others pans of the
nation led to the manufacture
of steamboats and tow boats.
"The first towboat in the
United States was built right
here," said Gerlach. "It was
· The Condor and was. built in
the area of what was later
named Condor Street.
Included in Gerlach's commentary were remarks abot~t
the great fire in 1856 and the
rebuilding of downtown
Pomeroy, the anti-slavery
mood and the impact of the
Civil War ·With over 500
locals being killed.
He said Pomeroy reached
its peak in population and
business in about 1880. The
advent of. railroads, a faster
and cheaper way to transport,
led to the decline of river
transportation . Horton's misjudgment in recognizing the
change and his success in
'b eing able to block them
from coming into town, led
to an economic decline,
according to the hi storian.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POINT
PLEASANT.
W..Va. - Paul Reed , president and chief executive
officer of Farmers Bank; has
announced that the bank's
newest location in Point
Pleasant opened for business
on Tuesday; May 16. The
office, located. on Jefferson ·
Boulevard,
is · Farmers
Bank's fifth location.
"Our Point PleasR{It effice
is a re sult of the overwhelmingly
pos111ve
response we received upon
moving into West Virginia
at · Mason · several years
ago,'' Reed said. "We are a
community bank, locally ·
owned and local! y managed,
and wherever we· go, folks
&amp;re glad we expanded to
meet their needs ."
Reed credited tbe presiNicole Fields/photo
dent of Farmers Bank 's Officials were on hand May 16 for the ribbon cutting at Farmers Bank's new Point Pleasant
West Virginia Division, office. Pictwed from left are Celesty Fielder, executive assistant of the Mason County
Mike Lieving , with his Development Authority; Jacob Hill, city events coordinator; Charles Humphreys, Main Street
enthusiasm and determina- Point Pleasant; Hilda Austin, Mason County Area Chamber of Commerce; Woody Stines, senior
tion to bring Farmers Bank lending officer: Doug Little, Farmers Bank director; Tom Karr, director; Jim Wilson, mayor;
· to Point Pleasant.
Carson Crow, director; Ferman Moore, director; Ben Ewing, director; Mike Lieving, president of
"He has a real sense for Farmers Bank of West Virginia; ·ram Reed, director; Paul Kloes, chairman of Farmers Bank
community banking, putting· Board of Directors; Paul Reed, president of Farmers Bank; John Musser. director; and Mark
people first. His staff mem- Groves, vice president of operations.
bers are community bankers, ·
friendly people with experi"We are very proud of it," has served as a director- of giveaways · and other grandence and a strong communi-. Lieving said. "The interior Pleasant Valley Hospital , opening promotions will
ty orientation," Reed said, design is low-key and love- past president of t~e Mason continue throughout June.
adding that the staff has a ly, very comfortable and County Area Chamber of With the opening of the
total of more than 140 years inviting , like a home. Commerce and· officer of ' Point
Pleasant
office,
of
banking
experience Everyone is welcome to just the West Virginia ·Bankers · Farmers . Bank, based in
stop in to look."
between them.
Association .. among other Pomeroy, now operates five
"Farmers Bank has the
He added 'that he is equal- professional affiliations. · He local offices. Other locations
ability to make local deci- ly proud of his experienced will divide his time between include the corporate office
sions," Lieving said. , ''That staff, which includes Vicki the bank's Point Pleasant in Pomeroy and branches in
means everything. Your Clendenin, loan officer; and Mason offices.
Mason. Thppers Plains and ·
financial
transactions Diane Crad&gt;!ock, head teller; The bank formally opened Gallipolis. The 102-year-old,
shouldn 't be govenied by Polly Vanscoy; Shelia Elias with a ribbon-cutting cere: family-owned establishment
people from outside the area and Susie Roush, tellers; mony. The bank's grand has asse ts of $177 million.
who don't know you or Gerry Duncan. customer openlng celebrations will
"It's a great time for our
your business or the com- service representative; and stan Tuesday, May 30, with bank.
We ' re
growing
munity you live in." Sharon Stapleton, assistant a Customer Appreciation because we've been able to
The Point Pleasant office branch manager.
.
Day held Friday, June 2. help other people in our
is designed to blend in with . Lieving himself has been fei!luring free refreshments communities to grow," Reed
its residential .surroundings. in .banking for 30 years and and · entertainment. Prize concluded.

Eastern.
from PageA1
He gave me every day, and I
can't thank Him enough."
Davis quoted Poet Robert
F10st: "In three words I can sum
up everything I've learned
about life: It goes on."
.
"We will make more memories, have new experiences, and
meet new friends, Life will go
oil. It is important for each of us
to continue pursing our longrange goals while remembering
there will always be short-range
failures along the way," Davis
said. ..
"You hold your future in your
own hands. Be persistent You
cannot overcome life's obstacles without taking the pains
that come with them. Maintain
a healthy attitude because if you
think you're beaten, you are.
"Life's battles don't always
go to the stronger and faster
man, bu(sooneror later the man
who wins is the man who thinks
he can."

Davis told his classmates of Alma Mater. The Eastem Bell
Bryce Allen Honaker, Jessica
the iportance of forgiveness and Choir, also directed by KUhn, Elaine Hupp, Amanda Beth
love.
performed "Within the Darkest King, Nicholas Andrew K\lhn,
"Our attitude determines our Night" by Derek K Hakes.
Kayla Renee Lee, Garret Eldon
approach to life, our relation,Principal Jon Lindner recog" Long,
Joshua
Stephen
David . Allen
ships with people, and is often nized the Top 10 Scholars: Marcinko,
the only difference between Russell, Davis, Brian Castor, Maxson, Ashley Brooke
success and failure."
Brandon Bartee, Sara Wjggins, McCaman, Herbert · Andrew
"Remember to always take · Derek
Roush,
Amanda- Mcintyre, Jesse Owen Nutter;
the high road When dealing Windon, Brittni Hensley, Brooke Lee Parker, Thomas
with life's displeasures, rather Autumn Hauber, and Shawn Wilson Parks, Jr., Kevin Lee
than getting revenge or retaliat- Reed, and presented the class to Powell, Krista Lynn Price.
ing when wron,\':ed - . forgive Superintendent Rick Edwards. . Shawn Jacob Reed, Brittany
and love unconditionally, refuse
Board President John Rice Marie Roush, Derek William
to play games and live by ptin- presented diplomas to: Brandon Roush, Brittney Lee . Rucker,
ciples and be ~ided by char~\(- Scott Bartee, Branden Matthew Taylor Anne Russell, Cory
ter and values, ' Davis said. "Be Batey, Britney Lynn Boggs, Daniel S~ent, Steven James
a winner."
Taylor Edward Boyd, Hallie S\ms, Whitley Viola Smith,
Class Secretary Brittni Nicole Brooks. :Srian Michael Shana Taylor Snyder, Cari
Hensley introduced Russell and , Castor, Levi Gene Clegg. Renee . Steger, Jessica Lynn
Davis, Co-President Jessica Nathan . Marshall Cozart, Walker, Ashley Gale Welch,
Hupp gave the welcome, Michael Scott Cranston, Matthew. Ryan White, Sara
Chaplain Brandon Bartee the Christopher Robert Davis, Rose Wig,\':ins, James Philip
Will, Charles Micahel Wilson,
invocation and benediction and . Terry Evan Durst
,
Vice President Derek Roush led . Angelica Marie Eddy, Aarop Amanda Pawn Windon, Sasha
the Pledge of Allegiance,
Jackson Gillilan, Brandon · Dawn Wriston, Ashlie Nicole
·
The Eastern High School Michael . Goeglein, Lance Young.
Band, under direction of Cris Anthony Griffin, Adam Wesley
Class officers Hupp, Russell,
Hensley, · Dyana
Kuhn, performed the Grand Grossnickle, Lucas Morgan Roush,
March, Elgar's "Pomp and Grueser, Mark Emerson Guess, Hawthorne and Brandon
Circumstance," and "Castles Autumn Lea Hauber, Dyana Bartee led their classmates in
and Dragons" by Todd Statler Marie Hawthorne, Brinni Rose the tmditional Thming of the
and the &amp;stern High School . Hensley, Richard Lee Hoffman. TasseL

In his own words Bentz chan~e of tassels.
For. Williams she thanked
her friends . and teachers for said, "One should do every- · N1cole Celeste McDaniel
helping to mold her as well as .thing to the maximum of their gave the benediction and the
her mother and step-father. She potential to be what they want . graduates tiled out during the
recessional to "Pomp and
also made special mention of to be.';
her late father whom she called
Looking to SUCCt::SS in the Circumstance" perlonned by
''the biggest influence of my future, Bentz gave his fellow · the Southern High School
·
life."
.
·
graduates the following advice, Band.
ln addition to valedictorian
"Life is precious, be thank- "Keep in mind that it is smart
ful for .what you have, and try when choosing a career or Bentz, son of Keith and
and make the most of it," she future plans to not choose it . Rebecca Bentz .of Racine, and
based on a monetary value, but salutatorian Williams, daughtold her classmates.
Valedictorian John Robert rather on the interest you have ter of Debi Williams and Todd
Bentz gave similar thanks to in the career and if it is what Zeiner of Racine, other honorees.of the Class of 2006 are
his family both al home and at you like to do."
Bentz also read an inspiring Brad Crouch, son of Tony and
church as well as his friends
and teachers, and how without quote from Joshua I :9: "Have I Angie Crouch of Racine;
them, he said, ''This would be not commanded you? Be Chelsea Smith, daughter of
just a dream, never to be ful- strong and courageous. Do not . Meg Guinther of Racine ;
be terrified; do not be discour- Dustin Brinager, son of Tye
filled."
He began ..his speech by aged, for the Lord our God will and Lori Brinager of Portland ;
telling his classmates that, "In be·with you wherever you go." Selena Spencer, daughter of
When ending his speech, David and Linda Spencer of
our book of life. only the beginning chapters have been set It Bentz reminded hi s class- Racine; Jenny Warner, daughis now time to go out into the mates, "I wish you the best of ter of Michael and Sheila
world and make this book end luck in however way you
choose to end your book."
the. best way possible."
Choir members once again
Bentz's speech also focused
'
on success and how it can be sang, this time to "When Ever
obtained by examining the You Remember'' by Carrie
· past, present and future of one's Underwood.
Southern High School
life.
Bentz said success can be Principnl Mark Miller then
obtained by looking at one,'s made special · recognition s
~1a10past and more specifically at wfthin the Class of 2006 foJ,
failures, saying, "It is the· peo- lowed by Southern Local
·
Pta~
ple who learn from their own Schools Superintendent Robert
§l2
mistakes, as well as other peo- Grueser who presented the
Emr:m
~t:a
ples ' mistakes ' that gain suc- entire class.
Southern Local School I· ~C.ert61l7
cess."
Bentz's take on success in Board President Janet Sue . s~teilnSOOiil
leptet' DOW for Adlng,
the pre5ent included this state- Grueser then presented the
ment from · Ralph Waldo. diplomas followed by Caitlin
Danee &amp; String
Emerson, "Make the most of Rebekah Nease, president of
The Ariet :Dater Hall
yourself, for that is all there is the Class of 2006 who
428 Sec. Av.".\~~~ip ~~\~H
1 7R7
acknowledged the class
? .io-446of you.''

Warner of Racine. Nicol e
lone&lt; daught~r of Roger
Jones and Aamna Khan of
Portland.
The list of 2006 Southern
High Schotll graduates is as
follows:
Ryan
William
Amberger, John Robert Bentz,
Stacy Marie Black, Dustin
Tyler Brinager, Michael Lee
Con ley, Jr. , Bradley Robert
Crouch, Christopher Todd
Curtis,
James
Wayne
Davisson, Robert Allen Eblin ,
Linda Jean Eddy, John Joseph
Fisher, Kourtney Lynn Fi sher.
Brittany Nico le Guinther,
Jame s Wesley Hai·mon ,
Ronald James Harmon, Shane
Michael Hayman, Kevin
Wesley Hill, Betty Jo
Holman , Amber Meli ssa
Holsi nger. Zachery Franklin
Imboden, Jamie
Lynne
Johnson, Heather Nicole

,Am~!&amp;

t,~ucqtloUa ~-=:~t ~~
li;..et\Tb}!yl--;g'*

8UMo

nnu

Jones,
Charies
Roscoe
Lawrence, Benjamin Kyle
Lee, Alisha .Marie Maddox,
Nicole Celeste McDaniel,
Tiffany Beth McDaniel, ,t.fyca
Ann Michael. David Eugene
Myers, Jr.. Caitline Rebekah
Nease,
Joseph
Edward
Nottingham, Joshua Allen
Pape,
Andrea
Michelle
Parsons , Andrew Michael
Parsons , Sylvia Elizabeth
Riffle , Timothy Russell
• Sands, Ernest Sellers, Jr.;
Kasie Michelle Selle'rs;
Chelsea Diane Smith, Tyler.
Joshua Smith, Selena Marie
Spencer, Dale Clair Teaford.
IV, Matthew David Triplett;
Jenny Gay Warne~. Summer
Dawn Wickersham, Kristiina
Dahn Williams, Eric Sco¢
Wilson , Erin Christina Wise',
Nicole Lorene Writesel;
Glenn Francts Young, Ill.
•
.
'

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
\')1'. t(e\tY K- '-l""'t.D

rh .roprul·tor of the year

"'"

V P. WV Chiropractic
Society
•
Mcmher of American
Board of FOteJlsic

CH\R
Auto Accidents
Worker's Compensation
• Sfl('fl~ l rlJUfll''i
• Medn:nrr

•

,\ ~tlpt ln cwre

•

Pro fes~ionab

20 yrs e,.perience

Mn~f ln~urnnct\

. Member of American
Academy of Medical

• S:mW! dlly appt

Acupunctwt

304-273-5321 •
-3 t6 Washington St '

Ravenswood, WV

�•

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

OHIO

Monday, May 22,

BY JOE DANBORN
COLUMBUS Banks
and consumer advocates
appeared closer to a compromise Sunday on a heavily debated bill meant to proteet homeowners from
fraudulent loans and lenders
from frivo lous lawsuits, but
key provisions remained
Ul)resolved.
A draft version obtained
by . The Associated Press
would allow more criminal
background checks on mortgage lenders and loan officers, though it was unclear
. how much convictions
would hinder their ability to
conduct business. The bill is .
aimed chiefly at policing
sub-prime loans, which generally carry intere st rates
above 8 percent and are
designed fu r people who
can't qualify for traditional
mortgages because of poor
credit, low income or the
lack of a down payment.
Such loans have contributed to Ohio's foreclosure rate, among the highest
in the nation. More than
59 ,000 foreclosure notices
were filed in Ohio in 2004.
In the first half of 2005, 3.3
percent of state home loan s
were in foreclosure , more
than triple the national ave rage·, according to the
Mortgage
Bankers
Association .

"It is a giant step forward liomeowne,rs. The draft verPOMEROY - · Five Meigs
in
signaling
as
· a sion includes the exempCounty
high school grnduates
Legislature, we want these tions.
are
among
the over 200 top
kinds of unconscionable
Consumer advocates, who
practices to stop," said Sen. have praised the Senate ver- scholars from 33 counties in
Joy Padgett, a Coshocton sion, have said the Ho~se West Virginia, Ohio and
WS/\Z
Republican on the joint leg- added loopholes that would Kentucky's
NewsChannel
3's
viewing
area
islative committee that has
swinallow
brokers
to
keep
selected as "Best of the Class
been meeting to resolve differences between the Senate dling borrowers by shoving 2C06."
They are John. 'Bentz of
and House versions. The complicated · paperwork at
closthem
during
the
loan
Southern
· High
School,
committee wil l take up the
proposal again Tuesday and ing. The draft version would Whitney Thoene, Jacob Venoy, '
could recommend it fo r pas- require lenders to notify and Minlnda Beha of Meigs,
buyers of changes i'n inter- and Taylor Russell of Eastern.
sage this week .
The honored students are
" I think people on the est rates within a day of the
whole agree that thi s needs change and no later than 24 being featured in public service announcements that
to be a consumer-friendly hours before closing.
were
videotaped during a
bill," said Karen Tabor, a
"I don ' t know if that 's
luncheon
held at the
spokeswoman for House enough, but that's where we
Huntington Museum of Art
Speaker Jon Hu sted, a landed,"
Padgett
said on May I. The' announceDayton-area Republican .
ments will air on WSAZ
The legislation has been Su nday.
The
draft
proposal
also
through
June 12.
in the works for years, held
the
process
for
delineates
All of the honorees can be
up by ,co ncerns on both
sides . The Senate version background .checks on mort- viewed at wwW:wsaz.com by
aimed 10 include mortgage gage lenders a nd loan offi- clicking on the "Best of the
lran saction s that aren' t han- ce rs, the same requirements . Cla~s" tab on the top of the page.
New thi s year.. . all
died by a federall y regulat - that the cons umer proteced institulion .in the state's tion act imposes on other schools' announcements will
be
available on
cons umer protection law. li ce nsed agents. A convic- also
WSAZ.COM.
Anyone with
That would allow the attor- tion could make 11 lender or
ney general to intervene on loan officer ineligible for a internet capabilities can
behalf of homeowners and state license, though the bill access their announcement
would all.ow consumers to allows the superintendent of 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week. Through video streamsue over fraudulent transac - the Ohio
Bureau of ing, the same announcements
tion s.
Banking groups com- Cri minal Identification and can be viewed, as seen over
plained that suc h language, Inves tigation to exempt the air on WSAZ.
WSAZ celebrates , gradualeven tho ugh it contained convicts who have stayed
exemptions for th,em, would out of trouble since their in~ seniors each year with
require them to waste conv1ct1on, a point Padgett thts nationally acclaimed prom01'1ey defending against said the bill will need to gram. This year marks the
22nd year for the event and
lawsuits from unhappy clarify.
the 6th · 'year Marshall
University has partnered with
the station .

Local weather
Monday ... Sunny. Highs in
the upper 60s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Monday
night...Ciear.
Cold with lows· in the mid
30s. Northwe$t winds 5 to
10
mph
in
the
light
evening ... Becoming
and variable.
Thesdily ... Mostly sunny.
Hi ghs in the lower 70s.
Northwest winds · around S
mph .
Thesday
night...Most ly

clear. Lows in the lower
40s. Light and variable
winds.
Wednesday . : .Most ly
sunny. Highs in the mid 70s.
Wednesday night...Partly
cloudv. Not as cool with
lows ·1n the mid 50s.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 70s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Thursday
night and

Bernardini wins Preakness, B~
.
Johnson wins Nextel All-Star .race, B2
Milestone celebrated, Bonds not, B6

honored bV WSAZ ·

Sides closer to deal on lending-fraud bill
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

2006

Monday; May 22, 2006

Prep Track and Field ~ SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS - A achedule of upcoming coHege
and high !IChool varsity sporting event$ Involving
teams from Gal~a. Meigs and M!MOI'l 'counties .

Thyrtdev·•
Meadowbrooke , 5 p.m.

OHSAA Division Ill Regional at

OHSAA Division
II
Regional
at
MeadOwbrooke, 5 f .m.
OHSAA Olvlsion II Regional at lancaster,
5p.m. .

frlt'v. Junt 2

Tree and Field

OHSAA Slate Ch&amp;"lJIOnshlps
SATURQA'/, JUNE 3

..Track and Field
OH$.¥ Stale Championships

Point falls
one gaJTie

short of state·
. BY LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Taylor Russell
Eastern High School

John Bentz
Southern High School

dant suit for .about a minute, given two years of probation,
then jumped into the Chagrin with the threat of a 90-day
River.
Some onlookers .jail term if he did it again.
gasped as he leapt and held
Batchelor was a hijlhthetr breath for a moment school student when he f1rst
made the jump on a bet to
before he surfaced. .
Baichelor performed the earn money for prom. He
stunt annually for 10 years went on to be a professional
beginning in 1976. Usually stunt mun and holds the
he was arrested right after- world record for the lonllest
ward, and the last time he did full-body burn without oxyit he was fined $1 ,000 and ·gen.

TANK" M48·KW PROFESSIONAL
ZERO·TURN RIDER ·
-.

1

'

1

mowitls deck
.
· • 23 HP' KIWINki• V-Twin otfv 1n1int
• 3~ yur limited commerciel warranty... •

TANKh M60-KW PROFESSIONAL
ZERO-TURN RIDER
• 60. Command Cut System"' triple-blade

mowlna de&lt;k
·
• 25 HPt Kawasaki* V-Tw!n OHV ensine
. •l ~ ytar limited c:ommerc:ial werren1yu•

• Command Cut System· . . · •.
.mowinJ deck with tFiple blade.s'
·· 2a:: a~ -:, ~s HP! Pf8mi11in'
,.
' .aas qr,, die15el
eniiOfiS
· ,t:
'
. '
.

, .

· front axle with lockout pins
~ He~vy-ciuty drive system wit~
. cast·tron punipa arid wheal mcltots

· • Commercial.air flltration ·sy.st~l'!l .
' ~ . 3-year limited commercial warranty"**

' \

• Factory-trained technicians
• The be.st selection
• Test-flrives and "how-to" advice
• Setup and assembly
• Horrie delivery

• ,
'

CoNTACfUS

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER, OH . 43130
1-800-710-1921
(740) 653-2827

8880 UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
1-800-710-1917
(740) 5,93-3279

OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 a.m.)
t-740-446·2342 ext. 33
or 992-5287 (Meigs Co.)
. ' FIX -

"'-' It'

o .&gt;~d

C=~•tott

h-.,.,._._

r.• .-c1 ~~ .. " '·u er d~""' p~-1~'

'

sportsC m~dallyse nt i n el . c':Jm

. 61&gt;0Ilt Stoll

~I

~·BUll

~ " ~ ' ·~•·

ll'w~n4. tl~

·srad Sherman, Sports Editor .

~~ ~~ V~1 1'1't~cot! --r.~ ai~UI"rr

(740) 446·2342,

''f

fifllwttJW
•• f'nllt.rd P!tc t - lllor.lt! y ~~ !J·l!WI'I o» r ~t

1·740·446-3008

E·mall -

1
oM1 J Cut. Ctdtl
l A.. Ji l-'I.Y.IU
T..t\W 11;'\l tlfl}'()t. V&lt; 1 P..wtt C&lt;t ..l C1r1 Wli&lt;t&lt;" '
IN!'Kt t111f'llt'l .,.,,1 l.t iuuw!
c..
.r.t&gt;l
!!It tlOI If()'otl.. ~ llftio l l'oll4 ~ 'k1"•10fr'l..,..,l
1}:.0~ ll1 '"• ~ C'~~""' Jll!'(~W t"' J 1 ~ I'~ 'f1l:l'"' ~'"'! o!I~'J!i~\00' i• l'""'l!i" Ql i•t• 'llllfoll')'l, k&gt; I'Ji i(.~"l&gt;ltf'JI' ;:~ 'ltillilrfllrr il~rn~ ~ tl}.,.&lt;r.l I ,....,__ Jllllf•llif ie)"l'l' ~~ O'l p.· trr:(W'ol ~·· ,.~; 11111(1 1fl!lfn
u . .t_ ~oQKotl-'~ ~m ~ 'f\l)"ht ~IM~ Orf.&gt;:.&lt;&gt;l r•otf~ '" .·trr~.llf#od:l (Vort-1ol'i&gt;l'!tl tN·~t ••· 1'1)&lt;.' r ·r ~ " r-• ·r-.v..e
~ ~.:ll, .. r' If I~ pr{,ll' f!'~l r.rm !i'll'·f~'1 -Ki:~ ~P&lt;n ~ r 1(, l&lt;lti-)~~~~~IV&gt;.ll ~VII \1.\·~v ,l.fW k T!.9f'l n'lf l r'll'~ flffl ~PI! "' nm ~~ ~-- t •'If
"""""'"' U'f'l""l! •P4' .,.,;. !If ' 'W ~ dl:of !&amp;1!1 ' - ~·•I ,~ ..., , ' ltr"t"~""' W ,.,j ~,..-&lt;;;(II !li-.'1" J&lt;t
'11'1•;. 1\ NJ roroo')(t"f&lt;I'Ot'l'lll~o.li I'll' ,. .odl!'i' lll u. ~~!1. ~ [mt-. (l•fn.DW. c ~IGI;Id- lltC1I' n d l tlrH .. ~ lot ! trdlil ttfUl ()It!'' ' lUI:Jf:l 'ttl:!t..II:$"WI' O!J

l1l flrEtl WOI!f'I&lt;IX I\MW£tirS ~ ltl Wll;... L loO l'i'U:f:$r f\.111 jb WOUfl~ '.:.n•" h

ELLENBORO, W.Va. After two straight delays, the
Point Pleasant softball ·team
finally got to play its regional
championship match against
Magnolia Saturday and the
Blue Eagles took advantage
of the extra days of practice.
Magnolia (26-5), who finished the regular season
ranked ninth in the final state
coaches poll, used the bats of.
Brooke . Keene and Kay Ia
Brill and pounded out a 6-5
ilpset victory over the Lady
Knights, who finished the
season . as the top-ranked
Class AA school.
Point Pleasant scored &lt;1 run
in the top of the seventh 'to
close the gap to 6-5, but
couldn't get any closer as the
Blue Eagles. now advance to
the state tournamcmt in
Vienna later this week.
Keene went 2-for-3 at the
plate and drove in three ruhs,
while Brill had two hits and
Ashley McSweeney knocked
in a run. Tory Greene went
the distance on the mound,
allowins only four runs on
seven h1ts in the victory.
Tasha Wyant highlighted
the Lady Knight offense with
a pair of hits including a double and an RBI. Kayla Shobe,
pitching in .her last game in a
Point Pleasant uniform,
struck out seven and walked
one while giving up nine hits
and one earned run in the
loss.
And
wnile
Magnolia
moves on, Point Pleasant is
left looking back at a season
chalked full of success.
The Lady Knights started
the' se11son with confidence
and rode that momentum to
their first big win of the season when they took the
championship in the Best of
Best tournament, beating
some of the best teams in the
state to do so.
However, Point showed it
had ·weakness in the tournament when they followed up
big . wins over top ranke&lt;l
teams with a loss to Poca.
The Lady Knights then
responded with another
strong run, eventually travel. ing to the Wendy's Spring
Classic national tournament
where they found themselves
against some of the top softball competition in the country.
At the tournament, the Red

Please see Point. B6

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

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

J7''" .,, w. C)o dotl;-r' .,-.~ "'-' ~ ,..,.w

.

r- . lflif.t"-. U!IIJI&gt; lll'lt 11....- &lt;ll.r' d•&gt;~ ·.•~• m-v b• •lkl• _ _.

..n11M)' ~.,., l.kdt! ~

ext. 33

:bsherman 0 mydallytrlbune .com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer

lld!l'f&lt;-' !0 !·""''-" ,.-.,llllllil'y

(740) 446·2342, ext 23
bwallers c nwdallytrlbune.com

'

YOU CAN'T

.

GET ANY BETTER:"

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342,

ext. 33

Ierum @ mydai lyreglster.com

•

•

lancaster,

Slturday'• ~mu
Tnlck end old

Whitney Thoene, Jacob Venoy, and Miranda Beha
Meigs High School

• 48~ · cammtnd Cut SY$1tm"'tr-iple·blade

• Patehtfd atticulatina .

at

i

Sp.m.

r

'

J"'"'

Track and leld
DIVIsion
II
Regional

OHSAA

Daredevil revives tradition ifflaming leap into river

Friday ... Mostl y cloudy with
a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
CHAGRIN FALLS (AP)
upper 50s. Highs in the - A stunt man has revived a
upper 70s. Chance of rain tradition of li~hting himself
40 percent.
.·
on fire and d1ving into the
Friday
night
and Chagrin Falls in northeast
Saturday ... Partly
cloudy. Ohio.
Lows ·in the upper 50s.
Ted Batchelor took the
Highs in the mid 80s.
flaming plunge Saturday, the
Saturday
night
and 30th anniversary of the first
Sunday.:. Mostl y clear. Lows time he did it. About I ,000
· in the lower 60s. Highs in ·people cheered as he burned
the mid 80s.
while wearing a flame-retar-

,,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Division II District Championships

rigers
edge Reds .

DETROIT
(AP)
Manager Jim Ley land's smart
choice for a pinch hitter paid
off in a big way for the
Detroit Tigers.
Placido Pqlanco's pinoh-hit
single in the eighth irlJ,ling.
broke a scoreless tie and Nate
Robertson tossed 7 1-3
innings to help Detroit beat .
the Cincinnati Reds 1-0
Sunday.
Polanco, the team 's regular
second baseman, wasn't in
the .starting lineup ' because
Leyland rested him after
Saturday night's win. Ramon
Santiago started at second
and was in Polanco's usual
spol, second in the batting
order.
But with runners on first
and thi rd with one out in the
eighth, Polanco was sent to
the plate .
"I knew he wasn't going to
slrike out /' Ley land said. ''If
he hil s it on the ground, he
could hit into a double pl ay,
but so would most of the of
the other guy s on the team."
The base hit to right scored
Brandon ln ge from third.,..,
.
.
Bryan Walters/photo
lnge led oft' with a walk and
Meigs' senior Andy Kinnan, left, beats Gallia Academy's Zac Wallen over the final obstacle in the 300-meter hurdles event at moved to third on a sacrifice
Saturday's Division II district championships held at Davis Stadium in Oak Hill. Kinnan defeated\Vallen for fourth, allowing the and a throwing error by
Marauders' senior to earn a berth at this week 's regional tournament in Byesville.
Cincinnati starter Aaron
Harang. .
"I just tried to stay inside
the ball," sa id Polanco, a
ri ghi-handed hitter. ~' I try ' to
hit the ball to right field a
lot:"
Harang said the throwing
'
error, which came on Vance
Wilson' s sacrifice bunt, was
the key.
BY BRYAN WALTERS
"That thro w cost me the
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
game," he said . " I tried to
·backhand it and it hit my
OAK HILL - One down. Two to go.
glove and the throw go t
Gallia Acaclemy's quest for the 2006
away."
OHSAA track and field state title started off
Robertson struck out seven, •
with a bang Saturday during a dominant 88walked
five and allowed
point victory in the Divjsion H girls district
three
hits.
Fernando Rodney
meet held at Davis Stadium.
(3-1) and Todd Jones comThe Blue Angels .won 10 championships in
bined to throw I 2-3 hitless
17 events en route to a team score of 161
innings
with Jones getting his
points, more than double the total of any other
13th
save
in 14 opportunities.
school at the competition. Runner-up Ironton
Jones set a franchise record
was next with 73 points.
with his !55th save, moving
The landslide victory also marked the II th
one
ahead
of
Mike
straight district crown for the Blue and White,
Hen
neman.
which won all four relay events and had five
Detroit has won nine of its
competitors yield more than 10 poi~t s apiece.
last
I0 games a ~d have postAfterward GAHS gtrls coach R1ck Howell
ed
eight
shu tout wins this
was ecstatic, but not surprised, with the results
season:
produced by his Angels in advancing' to regionRodney (~-I) entered with
als.
Felipe
Lopez on tirst and one
"The girls knew coming in. that they would
out
in
the
eighth . Lopez was
have to run their best the rest of the way to
thrown
oul
altempting to
advance," said Howell. "These kids have a
steal second, and Rodney
. knack that when the chips are on the line, they
retired the next batter.
step it up. And that's exactly what they did
Robertson set down the
Saturday."
first
nine batters he faced
Senior Felicia Close led all individual scorbefore walking Ryan Freel to
ers on the day with 32.5 points, the fourth
off the fourth . After
lead
straight year that Clo~e has finished as the top-·
Lopez
struck out, Ken
point scorer at district .
Griffey
Jr.
got the Reds' first
Close won three individual titles in the 100hit
of
the
game
when he lined
meter hurdles, 300m hurdles and long jump,
a gro und-rule double into the
and was also part of a fourth championship in
ri ght-field corner to send
the 400m relay.
Freel
tu third . Rich Aurilia
Bryan Watteralphoto
Senior Kayla Perry won an individual title in
the 400m dash and was also part of the win- Meigs' senior Ashley Samar, left, tries to qualify for regionals in the long jump then lined to third and Austin
ning 400m and BOOm relay squads. Perry also Saturday at the Division II district championships held at Dayis Stadium in Kearns walked to load the
Oak Hill . Samar did not qualify in the long jump, but did advance to regionals
Please see Reds. 86
Please see District. 82
in the 300-meter hurdles. Pictured right is Gallia Academy' s Felicia Close.

Angels dominate
D-11 district meet
Meigs sends nine to regionals

Pistons knock out Cleveland
second half against a fran chise in the second round for
the first time since 1993, and
AUBURN HILLS, Mich .
with James in hi s first post-LeBron James made things
season.
.
rough for the Detroit Pistons.
"Detroit showed why they
In the end, the two-time
are champions, when they
,
defending
Eastern
·turned it up a notch," Cavs
Conference champions got it
Eastern Conference Finals coach Mike Brown said .
right.
Game I Tuesday
James carried the Cavs in .
Coming back from a 3-2
The Pi stons held Cleveland the first half, scoring 21
deficit, Detroit· eliminated to the lowest-point total in a points and outscoring .the rest
James and the Cleve lan'd · Game 7, and to its worstquar- of hi s leammates, but
Cavaliers with a 79-61 win ter offensively in franchi se Cleveland stru ggled to lind
open spots on the court to
Sunday in Game 7 of their playoff history.
.second-round series.
In a rematch of last year's shoot after halftime .
The Pistons he ld the Cavs
"Our slogan is, ' If it ain't conference fi nals, Detroit
to
a franchi se playoff-low ·10
rough, it ain 't right,"' Richard hosts Miami on Tuesday night
Hamilton said . "So it -.y.as in Game I. The Heat have points in the th1rd quarter, an.d
rough fpr us, and we got the been resting since eliminaling James didn'l make a field
goal in the second half until it
win. Now we're looking for- New Jersey last Tuesday.
Detroit,
which
ne ver', was too late. His three-point
ward to the next series."
James was often sensational trai led, took .comma11d of play with 4:42 left · in the
throughout the series, but ulti- Game 7 with a 19-6 run that game cut Cleveland's deficit
mately, the. 21 -year-old phe- started in the third quarter and to 12 poi11ts.
James finished with 27
nom cou ld not help the ended with it ahead 67-52
point s, and hi s. teaJ])Ill'ates
Cavali ers overcome Detroit's midway throug h the fourt h.
defense, experience and
The Pistons ha ve been failed to g·ive ' him much suphome-court advantage: The a mon~ the NBA's elite for the port, with only reserve Larry
Pistons proved - again past tour year by clamping Hughes scoring in doubiJ: figthat being · down does not down on defense when necesPlease see Pistons, B6
mean they're out.
sary. That time arrived in the
BY LARRY LADE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP pholo

Detroit Pistons ' Rasheed Wallace, left, qnd Richard Hamilton
celebrate in the final minutes of Detroit's 79-61 win over the
Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 7 o~ their NBA basketball pliJyoff
series at the Palace in Auburn Hills, Mich. Sunday.

'I.

•
•"

•

�•

Page B2 • 'The Daily Sentinel

.

~

RosENBLATT

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BALTIMORE - Barbaro
was rann' to go. The unbeaten
Kentucky Derby winner gave
jockey Edgar Prado every
indication he was set for the
race of his life.
The strapping bay colt was
bucking in the starting gate at
Pimlico Race Course, and
actually broke through early.
All seemed well after Prado
reined him in and returned to
the No. 6 post, ready to try
again.
About 12 seconds later, the
questwn was no longer
· whether Barbaro would win
the Triple Crown but whether
he would survive at all.
After galloping only a few
hundred yards in the
Preakness, Barbaro's right
rear leg flared out and he
veered sidewars while eight
rivals passed htm.
The record crowd of
'
AP photo
118.402 watched in shock as Be!nardini ndden I:Jy Javier Castellano (8) comes from behind to overtake -Sweetnorthernsalnt, (7) ridden by Kent Desormeaux, .
Prado pulled the powerful in the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore Saturday. Sweetnorthernsaint came in second.
horse to a stop and jumped straight victories - was in seat and ran onto the track.
winner who didn 't run in the feel very upset when you see
off. With Barbaro still on the the middle of the pack when
Al~o on the track was Derby since Red Bullet in something like that."
track and . runnmg on three he suddenly dropped back.
owner Gretchen Jackson, and 2000.
.
D.O. Matz, the trainer's
legs, there wasn't much
"During the . race, he just the rider told her, "I'm sorry,
"It's very exciting for wife said Barbaro was behav- ·
enthusiasm for the fini sh, took a bad step," Prad(l said. I'm sorry."
everyone, for me especially, ing "like the true champion
especially with many of the " I heard a noi·se about 100
She put an arm on his shoul- to win the Preakness. It's also that he is and, hopefully, he' ll
fan s in tears.
yards into the race and pulled der and said , "You di'd a great very, very sad. It's a big dis- get the best care possible and
Bernardini won the $1 mil- him right up."
job."
appointment,"
Castellano be all righi."
.
lion
race,
. beating
The colt was noticeably
Fans were crying in the .said.
Barbaro's injury came a
Sweetnorthemsaint by 5 1-4 favoring his right rear leg.
grandstand as the strapping 3Lightly raced, Bernardini year after Afleet Alex's brush
lengths.
"It's a serious fracture. This xear-old was loaded into an was taking a major step up in .with catastrophe. Thrning fbr
' Barbaro, thought by many will reguire pretty major equine ambulance and taken class in just his fourtlt career home, the horse was bumped
to be a serious contender for surgery,' Bramlage said. away, his injured leg in an start. The well-bred son of by another and nearly
the Triple Crown, was diag- "Keep your fingers crossed inflatable cast.
A.P. Indy came into $1 mil- knocked to his knees before
nosed with a fracture above and say a prayer. His career is "You never expect it," lion Preakness off an impres- gathering himself and going
and below his ankle. Dr.. Larry over. This 1s very life-threat- Jackson said.
sive win in the Withers Stakes on to win.
Bramlage, of the American . en mg.
The devastating de velop- at Aqueduct on April 29.
Thoroughbreds have broken
As sociation
of Equine
"U nder lhe best circum- ment dramed all the exciteThe colt has now won three down in the past in big races:
Practitioners, called it a "life- stances, we will try to save ment from a Pimlico crowd straight after running fourth in ln the 1993 Preakness, Union
threatening" injury.
him as a stallion." ·
expecting a victory by his debut, and · earned City· broke down and was
Surgery was set for Sunday
Bramlage said a huma n Barbaro that would have set $650,000 for Darley Stable, euthanized; in the 1993
at
the
University
of would have to spend six the stage for a seventh Triple operated by Dubai's Sheik Belmont Stakes, Preakness
Pennsylvania's New Bolton weeks in bed with a compara- try in the last 10 years.
Mohammed.
winner Prairie Bayou broke
Center, a veterinary facility, in ble fracture , "with a horse
The Triple talk is over now. Winning time for the I 3-16 down; in the 1999 Belmont
Kennett Square, Pa.
that's impossible."
·Bernardini took control miles was I :54.65 , off the
Stakes, with Charismatic try"Two weeks ago we were
Barbaro was taken back to from pacesetter Like Now and stakes record of 1:53.40.
on such a high and this is our his barn, where he was X- pulled away for his victory
Bernardini paid $27.80, ing 10 win the Triple Crown,
worst nightmare," trainer rayed, tranquilized and stabi- after an impressive move $9.40
and
$5.80. he was pulled up while finishMichael Matz said at the hos- lized before being transported around the far turn.
Sweetnorthernsaint, who fm- ing third with a fractured
pita!. "Hopefully, everything to the hospital.
Hemingway's Key was ished seventh in the Derby, ankle; Go For Wand broke
will go well with the opera"We just have to pray for third .
behind returned $7.80 and $5. down in the stretch of the
tii:Jn and we ' ll be able to save. th&lt;; best," Matz said.
Sweetnorthernsaint, followed Hemingway 's Key paid $8.
1990 Breeders' Cup Distaff
him."
Bramlage said Barbaro by Brother Derek, Greeley's
Winnin~
trainer Tom and was euthanized; and in
The horrifying scene breaking through the gate Legacy, Platinum Couple, Albertram said he didn' t see 1975, the great Ruffian broke
occurred directly in front of before the oflicial start had Like Now and Diabolical.
Barbaro break down.
down in a match race with
the grandstand as the field of nothing to do with the injury.
Ridden
by
Javier "I saw Michael run by me Foolish Pleasure. She was
nine headed to the first turn:
As soon as his horse broke Castellano,
Bernardini and I knew something was O.Perated on, but was later
The 1-2 favorite - with SIX down, Matz bolted from hi s became the first Preakness' wrong," Albertrani said. "You euthanized. ·

Hornish leaves everyone behind at Indy as he takes pole
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Sam Hamish Jr. wasted no
time showing he was the guy
to beat Saturday in pole qualifying for the ln(lianapolis 500.
After posting a 229.996
mph in the morning warmup
- by far the fastest lap since
practice for the May 28 race
began nearly two weeks ago
- Harnish came back less
than two hours late ~ and
proved it was no fluke with
two more laps over 229 on the
way to a four-lap qualifying
average of 228.985.
·
"This car is about as perfect
as I've ever had," Hornish
said. "I was really about 99
percent happy with it."
Harnish, who has failed to
fimsh the b1g race in each of
his six previous starts, said he
told his Marlboro Team
Pen ske crew on Thursday
night he would qualify at 229.
With just · more than three

hours remaining in the quali-.
fying session postponed last
weekend by rain, Horn ish was
fastest by a considerable margin.
"Wmning the pole here
would be the second best thing
to winning the race here," he
said. "It's a long race next
Sunday and I want to make it
through that. I want to make
sure I make the full500 ll)iles.
"You know, it's nQt the guy
who's the fastest here that
wins this race; it's the one who

..

Bryan watter.iphoto
Meigs' senior Jared Casey gets out of t~e blocks in the 4x10Dmeter relay during Saturday's Division II district championships held at Davis Stadium in Oak Hili. Casey and the
Marauders won the 4x100m relay and advance to regional~.

•

•

wmsagam:
at Lowe's

CONCORD. N.C. (AP}
-There's a very clear rea-.
son why Jimrn1e Johnson:
considers Lowe's Motex,
SJ)Iledway his own persoom·
playground: He owns ·the;
G
'~
trac...
.
Johnson won the Nextel·
'All-Star Challenge and its'
Sl,. million -prize Saturd;ty'
nigbt, .his seventb victory at .
the suburban Charlotte tratk.;,
''Good job driver! Good
iC?bl" ~rew ~ c:;hief Chad
~us~~· "lJ)is is your,
hnnse!"- ~ ,

.

L-'-~

t.JIC»U

. .

,

«:fu

',

~.

,,~z

In One Week With Us
REACH . OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS.
AD NOW ONLINE
TO Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
~egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax
446·3008
or Fax To (7.40) 992·2157
Or Fax To
675· 5234
&lt; ,.

HOMEll
FORSALF.

OhtoVotleJ
Pubt..hlng,...rvll

lho rlghllo

edit,

re)lcl or concel any
· eel It any limo.
~Er·ron . Mull
llti&gt;Ortld on lht

Absolute Top Dollar US.
Sliver arid Gold Co1ns,
Proofs&amp;!&amp;, Gold Rings, Pre·
1935
U.S
Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds· M.TS
Coin Shop, t 51 Second
Avenue, Gall ipolis, 740-44S·
2842

Farm Help, Cleaning Horse
Stalee, Building Fence, and
Weed Eating
74b·949·
2067.

wanted: Old 1BOO's Log
Cabin, logs must be m good
condition , willing to tear
down 1f standing (740)407·

$16.78JHr. FT Contract

6880.
I \ 11'1

f

1:~ • •

warlls

S, p,f~Vet" Slr.K~ •

.

· 'l'o:&lt;~

$200 Sign

District

Tonia Logan, ·Ivy Hurt,
Mayo,
Dana
Whitley
Dodson, Lee Ann Townsend
and H~nnah Rousb also qualified for regionals with their
efforts in the four winning
relay events. In all, Gallia
Academy will be sending 13
girls to Meadowbrook High
School to d~fend its 2005
regional/title .
•
"We hoP.e things carry over
to Byesville this week, but
the re~ional is goin!i io be
tough, said Howell. 'We are
expecting things to be a lot
closer and we will be a target
as defending champions·, but
hopefully we'll step it up
again and come away with
the same results."
The Blue Angels, h~wever,
were not the only the area
girls team to taste district
success.
River Valley placed sixth_
overall with a team score of
42.5 points and has two competitors headed to regionals .
Kayla Smith finished runner-up in the 300m hurdles,
as well as third in the I OOm
hurdles, for two berths in
Byesville ..
Ashley Fitch is also headed
to the regional in the 800m
run after a third-place effort

Saturday.
.
Fisher and English also
Meigs, which placed eighth qualified individually with
with 37 points, had three fourth-pl,ace efforts in the
individuals and one relay lOOm dash and 200m dash,
team advance out of districts. respectively.
Freshman Devan Soulsby
Senior Andy Kinnan was
placed second in the 800m the , final Marauder to
run and was also- along with advance to Byesville after
Ashley Samar, Meg Clelland , finishing fourth in the 300m
and Caite Wolfe - part of the hurdles, ·
runner-up 1600m relay team.
The Blue Devils also had
Both Samar and Adrian three individual qualifiers in
Bolin rounded out· the quali- Seth Haner, Luke Watts and
fi.ers in the 300m hurdles. Alex Abels.
Bolin finished third and
Haner tied for second in the
Samar placed fourth.
long jump and had thirdOn the boy.s side, South place fimshes in both the
Point repeated as district 1OOm and 200m dashes.
champion with a 107-85 vic- • . Watts was third in the pole
tory
over
runner-up vault and Abels placed fourth
Wheelersburg.
in -the 400m dash.
And of the locals, Gallia
The Raiders had a pretty
Academy had the best overall good day in the BOO, but
day with a seventh-place fin-· that's about it.
ish with 46.5 points. Meigs
Chris Lester and Jonathan
placed ninth with 2Q. points Casto finished third and
and River V~lley was 12th fourth , respectively, in the
with 24 markers.
individual 800m run, then
The Maruaders were the joined Kyle Hively and Vince
only local school to come Weatherstein in the 4x800m
away with a district title after· relay to place third .
winning the 400m relays.
Regional qualifying begins
Jared Casey, Corey Wilson, Thursday at Meadowbrook
Cornelius English
and High School in Byesv ille.
Brandan Fisher took the top , field qualifying starts at 4
spot with a win~ing time of p.m. Track events start · ~~
44.7 seconds.
4:30p.m.

lfo

•

on Bonus!

·
Plu s earn up to Sathour
We also offer paid 1ramlng,
h lid
d
1
o ays an vacatons.
Full or part time .
shlfts'avalalble
Full medical benefits
and 401K
ll pays to yrork at

•

lntoCielon- a company that
wa~ voted one of the 2006

"Ton Ten BBst Places to •

"l'«ork In OhiO"
CALL TODAY!
1-87.7-483-6247 ext. 2455

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cratts",
wood Items
To $480/Wk
"
Materials p rovided.

iii

Freelnformat1·• pkg , 24Hr
801 ·428":4'649 .
_ _.:.:___:.:_~:.._An E C.llenl Way 10 earn
)(
money. The New Avon.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ '"Call Marilyn 304-882·2645

. The t~~ .cars •b!JI!li)e&lt;t;~4:
~~~~(!&lt;hot a fe'w feet,-·~q,

1 t "'

\II' '

HllLP WANTilll

~

227.338 was far short of o,yhat
he'd hoped for, placing him
tentatively on the outside of
the front row of three.
Two-time lndy winner Helio
Castroneves was the only driver able to even approach
teammate Harnish's performance. The Brazilian started·
with a lap of 227.741 befofe
ticking off three straight trips
around the 2.5-mile oval
above 228 for an average of
228.008.
That run placed him in the
middle of the front row, but it
was still nearly a full mile an
hour slower than Horn ish.
Under
the
rules,
Castroneves, Wheldon or any
other driver could withdraw
their qualifying speed and take
another shot at the-pole before
the 6 p.m. close of first-day
qualifying.
But Castroneves, who made
a second try last year and fell

(I'

' ' U\ II I '-

I

Je
6n was' ·third '
CarJ·,
was fourtffi
and Ryan Newman·, ~aS:
fifth. Sobby Labonte, Dale·
181,Telti fan·vote winner Kyle:
Petty llnq Dale Earnhardt Jr.-;
j'l'ere !qe .only ,other drlv~
to'finisb on the lead lap. \ ,!;
Scott Riggs, who racectriiSJ
way into the event by w.in~
!ling the·· preliminary ra~e:
hotu"s jl3tlter, · finislied Oi)6
l!ipAowpin lOth: ~ WI!$~
JMI 'catitchfinish·!btl race,~:
,J:be);,Q~·: IQ drlveis '/WM:I
kiloc'ked O\Jt Of th¢ race. o!,"'!
Sev~n g!lo4 cars W!:re\
eliminated on acrash d!U)i{lg
a restart in the second ~g,;
mept. "Ka~ey Klihri.e a¢•
Mark Marti.h. we~e stde~y-1
' ili!ihl at tbe frOnt Of the Jll!CIG
w~en .~ seemed to I?~·
contro!;of his OOdge co.rmpg·
!Jut of the secoild tum 11119
.wMi~!~~••~): ~9!1} .; ~
anu1

Mrip Co11nty, OH

t.. ' '

,;v •

1,'

makes the fewest mistakes."
With all the top teams well
prepared after an extra week
of practice, car after car took
to the 2.5-mile oval without a
break from the moment qualifying began at noon . By the
time Daria Franchitti became
the frrst driver to abort a qualifying run, 2 hours and 20
minutes later, all but four
spots in the 33-car starting
field had .been filled.
Each car is allowed up to
three qualifying attempts, and
Franchitti was the biggest
name who had yet to earn a
spot in the tentative lineup.
Defending Indy champion
Dan Wheldon, the only driver
!!ble to beat Harnish for a
day 's fast lap this month,
·couldn' t come close to
Harnish's Saturday effort.
Wheldon· posted a solid run
with four consistent laps over
227, but hi s average of

qualified for regionals wiih a
runner-up effort in the 200.
Freshmen Alexis Geiger
and Lauren Adkins made
grand debuts in their first district com~etition, accounting
for 47 pm nts and four championships.
Adkins won both the
1600m and 3200m races, and
was al so part of the triumphant 3200m relay squad.
Geiger was the -runner-up
in both the long jump and
IOOm dash. Geiger also qualified in the 200 with a thirdplace finish and was part of
the winning 400m relay
team.
Crystal Wade also broke
double-digits in points with
winning efforts in the 800m
and 1600m relays. Wade also
·qualified for regionals with a
third-place showing- in the
400m dash.
Carol Fahmy qualified for
the 1600m run by placing
fourth and Ryan~ L.eshe
advanced m the h~h hump
: after a fourth-place m1s ·

-~-

' ·~;
Jobtlson, ·whO ~~o woO:
the All-Star race in 2003. JW;
won ·three-straight CQCa••
Cola 600s and will try to.
~ · it(our 'in a row riexi;
Sundav ffigi)t. ' 'w ' · 1
· Kevfn}'lilii'V!o'kf&gt;Wb6 ;wort.•
the secon&lt;l segrrtnt of the:.
event, tOOk only two tires on;
the finlll;_ pit slops whil~
eyeryone else took four. · J~
was a ~sky, gjll)lb}e, jU!d;
Jolu\sox(,;, wasted n'o .lim,!':
passing· him .for tbe .lea&amp;
wheh the tlnal 20-lap ~prine
,began., "
' '
, ;
Johnsoh iliert pulled away·
and Harvie~ finisbeii 1·a:
whop iii~ ' L 729 s'ec:ond$!

"li"it\cleed it is.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

c :· LASSIFIED

'

slid mt~) the wal,l. , •·' ,j
, "We,go~ to 'the (!:om.th!lJ:il
and l just Wll\ trying to fliCei
further back in the. lineup, with . Mark imd just •lost
wasn't expecting that to hap- grip,". &lt;Kahne ~4.·/ "It's
·tough, , therejs .ttot a 1~, Of
pen.
-Scott Dixon, Wheldon' s .grip om thilfli. Next thmg Jl
Target Chip Ganassi team- ~t~~Cw I' was pilc~ards, and:
mate, was fourth fastest at ·diat's .not goOd when you are
.:
226.921, followed by Tony in front like tlfat.'~ ,
Manin, ' '\he defending
Kanaan, last year's pole-win- ·
ner, at 226.776 and 2005 race champion; didn't hav~ .a
~
~\
runner-up Vitor Meira at chance.,;"
'ir~~c.an•t rteu .· fwm .that
226.156.
angle
•.but it looks like Kasey'
The tentative third row ,
just
slid
into me,'' Martin
included Kosuke Matsuura at
225.503, Scott Sharp at said as. ~e watched a replay
225.321 and 19-year-old rook- of the aq:jdent, ' . .
ie Marco Andretti, grandson · Martin; woo does DQt Rlari
of · 1969 winner Mario to run a ' fulf Nextel CUp
'schl\,4\lle pext seas.on; ~owe:&lt;!
Andretti, at 224.918.
Danica Patrick, last year's tl&gt; retull) for another All-Star
., ·
rookie sensation and the only race in 2007.
Kyle
Buscl),
Jeremy
woman in the field, remained
far off her 2005 pace but was Mayfield, Jamie Mc'MIIJT!IY.
sti II content after posting her liM Greg Biffle Cl)llldn t
four best laps of the month on ayoiti ' tlie . carna~. Stew~.
the way to an average of did s)id~ through, only to'~~q
224.674 and the ioside of the hit by ,Mayfield's careemll8·
car. •'
" ·'
fourth row.

from PageBl

www.mydallysentlnel.com ;

m:rtbune - Sentinel - ~e

Barbaro ·breaks down, Bernardini wins Preakness Johnson
. .
Bv RICHARD

Monday, May 22, 2006

Monday, May 22, 200~.,

www.mydailysentinel.com

• Bedding &amp; Vegetable
• Plants, Hanging Baskets,
· combO
Pots,
Sue's
Greenhouse,
Morlngstar
Ad., Aacins, Ohio. 74(}-9493151.

-r

GJVEAWAY

I

: .._ _ _ _ _ _ _,..
,
•(2) 6 month old female
' mixed breed pups. Call
. (740)446·3897.
2 Gray Kittens, litter trained,
and some other cats to good
home (304)675-6720

·'

AnenUon Mechanics Now
laking appijca.tlons for Gll:pe·
rlenceS Truck Mechanic'
Mall resume to
R&amp;J
Trucking 14530 St Rt
7,Marletta, OH 45150
AVON • All Areasl Td Buy ot
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304675. 1429_
- - - - - - -Busy Insurance Agency
seek•ng full time employee
P&amp;C license helpful, but not
reqwred
Job w111 Include
sale~. some telemarketing
and service work Forward
resumes to Pt Pleasal)t
Reg1ster Box lBC1 5, 200
Main St P1 Pleasant, WV
25550
;:==-------,

©l!lll!.

: 2 male puppies ab out 3
· months old, really cute to
: good homo (304)675·8901
' NO

3
·4 Gorgaous Kittens
White, 1 Gray (304)576·

3364

• FINANCING ...VAILABLE
' J()8 PLACEMENT
• ENROLLING NOW

8 month old· Saint Bernardi
German

EkPERIENCE NECESSARY
• FUll·TII.lE ClASSES
• Cot. TRAINING

Shepherd

mhc.

. 100+ lbs Good watch dog.

ALLIANCE

: (740)379·2306

TRACTOR·TRAI LER

TAAIN!NG CENTERS
WYTH EI/ILLE, VA

: Free 6wk's old Kittens,
: wormed 1304)882·3324

1' -800-334·1203

1

Free to good home, year
-~~MI~r.l&gt;Clllrwe1of1rallero;o-n
old Border ColllefGerman
Shepherd ,
black.
Call Certified Home Health
Aide Cla11es- H~meca re
(740)256·61 54.
Training Center will be offer·
Free to gooc;1 home. Lab mix lng CHHA olasse..s to any·
bOdy •nterested In work1ng
puppies. (74o)446-4122 •
as an aide In the home
Giveaway: Kittens raised m health field . The class will be
the barn. Call 1740)256· held June 5, 2006· June 16,
8932.
2006 We help with job
Kltlena 10 glwaway 10 good ' placement. Cal l (740)441 ·
home. Litter trained, good 13n or 1740)9~2-0090 for
with ~Jdo 304-675•3042 _
lnlormatlon.

------

Chlldcare worker needed tor
Ktttena to giveaway, ready
Residential
Treatment
Juno lot. (304)882·2925
Facility. Pay based on expe ~
rlence, paid 1nsurance. Call
l..arrAND
to apply Mon·Frl, 9am·3pm
(740)379·9063.

r

FOUND

Found 1 Female Lab, &amp; 1
miXId Long haired Black
Malo, Jtrk:ho Rd. (304)87153522 .

Direct
Sales
~antas1i c
Opportunity, ~ 50K
no
Problem . Must be Motivated
and Self Starlet. Call Ken
(740)992·7440

Ft•md Bliok and Whltl Dog
on Klngobury Road. Gall Erahlga Contra cto rs with
Mountaineer Power Plant Ia
,7&lt;40o992.0202
now
hiring
Laborers
~ost:
Tan
Auatrallan Experience with Fiberglass
Shephard. Blue eyoo. purple pralerr8d. Please appJ~ st
oollll. WOOdt Mill Ad off 325 the F»olnl Pleaaant Job
N. (7&lt;40)388.8Q6.1
Service

I.

Expanding Home Haalln
• Agency haa lmmadlale
opanln go lor part time/lull
time AN 'a In Gallla County
Competitive Baneflt pack·
age. Fax Reaume to ·
(740)S34-9918 or caii'Kim at
Alligator Jacka·May 28, 10· :17_4 0I::.
::__·9_:9_:&lt;J8:..:·::.E..:O::.E·_ _
2 &amp;34
5, Moy 27 &amp; 26 9·5. St At
Experienced Farm Hand
?Pomo
5oatu .
•
needed tor Galllpolla area
Phone (304)675·1743
WANTI!Il

•

TO BUY
I will buy JuDI!
17i0)388·9303.

'

.

..... .,_•. .. .

Carl-

Expe rienced loader for load·
lng limber. Call after Bpm
Call (740)882-73t8 or (740)988·
6941 ,

Barn Removal Service
304-373-0011
References available ~
We work In WV and Ohio
areaa.

For a limit~ time make 50%
selling A&lt;JOn Call (740)446·
3358

position for local Federal
Office thfough FYOG. 1 Yr
Operator exp and
Certification REQUIRED
Apply online at
www concorctps com
CPS. lnc,or fak resume to
(863)675-0432
ATIN• Geoff Haas
CPS Inc EOE

HOMES

~

www.como.com

lion tor an AN or LPN .
Competitive wages, bonus·

1110 u-.-m..~n

~~m! Hba~~t~fl6~re ~~~:~

C1200B

Il.l'..l...r "HJ'l.l"''lr.u

·-------"
Part time poSitiOn to Manane
•
Country Homes rental com·
munlty In Shade Area·
Includes a house to hve in.
Send resume to Country

1110

'I

Lw-------"
u-n"'•~

nu...- ""'~•.....-

1411.10 trailer, $400 month
plus depos1t. (740)367·
7762, (740)367~7272 or
(740)446·4060
:__:__ _ __ -:-_
2 &amp; 3 bedroom. water &amp;
trash serv1ce 1ncluded Call
1740)441 ·7033

40:.:14
9/1Oth of an acre for sale on :._17~
_:4_:6_:·90
_:6:_1 _·_ __

FOR SALE

Growing Home
Health
Agency has Fui&gt;·Time posl·

FOR ~r

FOR SAlE

3 bedrooms, I bath ,
'86 Skylin e •front kitchen stove/ref furnished , W/0
,Cash price $8 ,995 Will hookup No 1ns1de pets, .
deliver Call (740)385·9948
$325/m o.
S1 50/deposn

Ul \I I -.., I \II

J1i:J!"_ _

. ,

6 good conditi on used
mobile homes, 1997·2900
models, 14 &amp; 16 wide 2·3·4
bedrooms, all w1th cen1ral
air. Spec1al 1997 14x70,
2BA 2 bath , S16,500
Daytime
(740)388 -o·ooo .
evenmg (740)386·6017

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless Ws Win!
1-688·582· 3345

L---

I' Lw-M.,;OB;,;;ll.Eiii11Hiiiolii~ioo1F•'S.,I· 1.,20-M..:O~Ull.E_.H:O;,;M(,ll_.,J

143 2 mobile homes 74Q- 3BDR, 2Ba , doublew1de
992·5858
close to RVHS $450 month,
$450 dep, ref required No
Brand
new
16' wide pets (740)367-7025.
vlnyl!shmgle $181/mo Call C:::::.:.'.:..:.;.:=..:=:::..-.,.(740)~5-7671
aBr Aefndg &amp; Stove,Washer
&amp; Dryer 1ncluded (304)576·
N1ce 14,.;70 3 bedroom bnly 2934
$10,995. Will help with dellv· ::.:.:..:..__ _ _ __
c 17401385 9621
Mobile home s1tes lor up to
ery a
•
16xBO m Country Homes"

*Bum In 1996 *Appro,.; 1800
Sq Ft wf2 1/2 acres *3brm 2
lull baths •LAm, FRrn ,
F,(Hmal DAm, Eat in kitchen
"All Appl Slay •central
Air/heat •covered Front
Porch, Deck •3 car detach

11

garage w/one stall as a lin·
~hod ~eated room "Small
shed attached to narane Central air, full ba sement, Very clean 14x6d

d~g

with a well •Two·ru•n
kennel
•Immediate
WANTED Po sitions avail·
L
Posses•on
• oan
able to assist Individuals
.1
Assumpt ion Ava1
55%
with mental retardation at a *Located
between
Ala
group home In S idwell.
Grande
and
Gallipolis

?

0 38::5_:·4_:0::
bed· 17
, .;_4::_:):::
19..:..__ __

hardwood fl oors , detached room Qnly $7 ,995 Ca ll Newer large 3 bedroorn 2
40
..,9,..8_....,,......, bath on 1J4 acre lot 5 m1tes
Toii .Free at t -866·368· 1100
garage, covered
patiO. :..
17.,
,.;1_385_·06
fenced back yard newly "I330
.
,
~~\RW;; - .
!rom
Grtlllpolls
Green
remodeled 3 or 4 bed·
Herrlt Steak House
'
h
. FUR SALE
School , storage building
Now Hiring.
rooms close to sc ools.
$475 month, $475 depoSit
(304)875-9726
Point Pleasant, $69,500
no utilities paid (740)4461740)709 138"
7 acros on A1vor JBR barn,
"$99,500 ShOwn by Appl·
·
&lt;.
911 6. (740 )645·2541 leave
Homes. PO Box 1033
11 40 hrs 1 9pm Sun 3·30
$ 150 000 Crown C1ty Call
Housekeeping Supervisor Logan, Ohio 43138.
· ~
· · · 740-245-Q1 25 or 740-645message
Group.
11pmMon-Thurs,
740 256-6140
·
Hea llhcare Serv~ees
2249
Inc. IS looking for a career Parts Salesperson wanted. 2) 35 hrs. 3 :30·10pm WITh,
LoTs &amp;
AP.-\.KJ=rs
oriented, aggressive hands- Compute r ell:penence and 2·1 -1pm Frl, 10am-9pm Sat, 112 Pleasant Street, Pomt
t...--A.iiCREAiiiiiiii
. iii(;iiiE-_.1
on manager in the Gallipolis knowledge of fa rm equip·
Pleasant-, WV (304(675·
.,
.,
area . As the leading provider men t preferred Salary MusGthEaDve high schoodl d ip~- 4034 or {304)675·0418: 3
__,_
2 1/4 acre lot available, quiet 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
of housekeeping and laun· nego tiable dependmg on mal
,
valid
nvers bedroom, 1 1/2bath, family
Alllrea~lestlttadv..n,~lng setttng on Crew Road, close ments, furnished and untur·
.dry services to the long term experience
Healt h license and three years room, dining roo m, new winn I • newspaper •
n.shed, secunty depoSit
bj t t th Fede al
to M&amp;IIJS Htgh School
care industry, we are seek· Insura nce provided Send good driving e,.;penence dows. new AC, new water
Felu Hec lo Aect f1r968
1304)773 5270 .
reqwred , no pel s, 740·992·
0
·
· d d 15
h0
&gt;II resume to: CLA BO&gt;c ~::aa c/o $7 25/hr Pre-employment tank, fence d yard.
• r ous ng
2218
•ng In lVI ua
w
w
&gt;iW&gt;il.
;::.:::....:;:=.:.:::_:::____
hi h' k &gt;t l!legel to
effectively represent our Gallipolis Tribuna, ~0 Box Drug Tesltng Send resume 1900 sq.•. 3bd 2ba home
w c rna es
4.'4 acres lor sa le on - - - - - - - - . , . 0
to:
Buckeye
Commun1ty
ll
advertln " any
1 BA apt1cab1n, an utilit1e s
company a'nd manage our 469 • GaIllpo II s, OH 45631·
with basement sits on 3
preference, limitation or • Walnut Creek· out Sandhill
w
-Services. P 0 Box 604,
R
dl " 1 tl •---"
·
pa1d. Call (740)441 0117.
11
1
on-s 8 opera IOns
e P•V""
POSTAL JOBS
Jackson, OH 45640 or email acres, just off of
t 7
1c .. m na on.,.._.. on
Road call (304)593·872 1
v 1de e competitive salary,
to ·. beyecservCiyanoo.com Chester Township, Eastern
race, color. religion, sek
4 rooms &amp; bath , stovetref
paid training and benefits $15.67-$21 98/hr., now hlr·
Sch 1 D' 1 AI
famlllal•tetus or national
vacant land on Jesste Creek U
d 54501
line
lor
applicants.
oo
1str
ct.
so
regiS·
t11111es pa1
mo
Dead
d
h
origin, or any Intention to
off 554 by Kyger. 5.064 U
S N
Package Please fax resume lng For application an d t ree
1
, please Indicate tare quarter orses or
make ony ouch ·
psta~rs 46 01 1ve t
o
5126106
to: 1·61 4·577-Q125
governement JOb 1nfo, call
I
acres A1fo Farm Lot #8
- - - - - - - - - Amer~can Assoc ol l abor 1· position. Equal Opportunity sale. Call &lt;740 985 " 432 ~
prel erence, llmitnt1on or
pets (74 0)446 3945
aHe1 6pm
S1 0 000 1740)645 0440
Licensed Practical NurHB 913·599-8042, 24/hrs amp Employer.
d1&amp;cnmma11on. "
Accep!lng r~pp l lcahol1'1 for 1
360
(LPN) lor tull·tlme and part- s-•:.•v_ :__---,_ _ _ _ r : l l r - - : : - - - - - , 1997 Fe irmOnt Celebnty
REAL Eslt\Tl~
or 2 bedrocm apartment,
time work In a 114 Bed Long Scuoot..s
double w1de 28x72 FA, den,
This ~ewapaper w•ll not
W ·\N'ruD
$400-$500 month kitchen
term Care State Fa cility.
Pl. Pleaurat
L,--·-·--~-~-,1
lg kitchen 2 full baths 3BA
knowingly accept
appl1ances &amp; Wi D turn1shed .
, ••Sales PositiOn""
.1:1'3 JK
·
'
'
•dvertl11menta for r.al
Ful l-time employment offers
WJth walk·ln dosets, lg deck,
••tete which 18 In
Need to sell your home? water &amp; gar.,t~age Included ,
·
bene 11 pack~. ground poo 36x18 , 2
an e,.; tenslve
Concealed Pistol Class auu.e
vlola11on of the law. our
tate on payments, dlv6rce, no pets. 1st mont h. seour
age, includmg State c1vli llyouenJoydecorallngwl\h Ohio, wv, June 10,- 2006, utility buildings Lot 289
readersareheTBby
JOb transfer or a death ? 1 deposit &amp; tease required .
serv1ce retirement, earn up Wallpaper and have an e~e $75 00
g·ooam VFW acres, very secluded, pri·
Informed that all
can buy your home A.ll cash (740)446·9585
to 15 days vacat1on per year,
for Color and Style this
Mason wv Ph (740)843- vate dnve. 5 m1n. from Green
dwelling• advertlaed In
and qu1ck clos1ng 740·41 6· ~
A_:
tte~n-llo_:n...:.:....:;:C_o-ns-tr-uc-!1.on
16 days sick leave, and t2
couldbetheposlllonyou
Schooi!Holzer $11Q,ODO
thl•newsl)tlperare
3,30
5555
•
Workers
Downtown
have been I00 kl ng for·
plus paid holidays; heal! M 1te
Call after 3pm (740)441 ·
available on an equal
Insurance IS
available We are a secure and grow0494
opportunity b.. ea. ·
Want to buy small house Gallipolis. 1 5 bedroom,
Salary Is commen surate lng and growing Company Galllpoll• Career Collage
With 20 or more acres In knchen w/apphances, WID;
with e,.;perl ence
Contact
With 17 retail locations. If
(Careers Close To Home) 21/2 acres fll 44998 Baum - - - - -- -Bedford, Scipio, or Columbia partially furnished S4251mo,
Kim Billups, ON at Lakin youenjoypeopleandare
Ca11Todayl740·446·4367, Addition, Behind skat 1ng For Sale Pretty, clean , 3 Township
north Meigs depoSit (740)441 -07:3 1
10
1 112 bath County. 740·591 ·9843
Hospital, WV at (304).675· self·mot•vated, reliable and
HW0· 214 -D4 52
rmk. las! House on nght 4 bedroom
BEAUTIFUL
APART.
0860, ext 126, Monday thru seeking employment please
www.QSUipolltcareerocllege.com
or 5 bedrooms -3 bath. split Downtown Gallipolis 446·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Friday hom 8 :00 a.m.• 4 00
apply (see below)
Acc,fldlled Member Accredltmg level, basement, attached 4639
PRICES AT JACKSON
·p.m . Lakin Hospital is an
Our uoaltlont offtm
~~~. ~~7".iancleot Collfl~s garage, and separate
Handy Man Spec&lt;'al
V'
d
,C
"I
:::w:;;.;;;;.;;.;;;,;,;;;__ _..., ~arage $199 000 740·
ESTATES 52 'ostwoo
EEQ/AA Employer
ompe" IV8 wages
11176 ••~....._,... • , ....,,..,, on 1 9_8::5_:.3_:58::6::___ _ _ _ _ Newer 3 bdrm Ranch, .-112 k'IIO
Drive from S34&lt;1 to $442
• Day hou rs only·9:30 to 4:30
lYinL-I!LLArU~A.JU~
bathrooms Ne~er lived 111, m 1'·
Hots.::~;;
Walk to shop 8- mO VI'"S Call
Local convenience store "Closed Sundays
2912 Anniston 'Or , Pt drywall stage Sits 0 11 2 c..-.,;,";,;'iiKjRiii:Niiiitr_ _. 740·446·2568
Equal
aCcepting applicatiOns for • Paid vacatiOns &amp; holidays
Pleasant 38A , 2BA. LA, beautiful acres, City water at ....,
Housmg Oppor tunity
store
manager.
Employee discounts
DR Trimmer/Mower 5 HP FR, Garage. Nice neighbor· road, about 20 mlns south of 1BA house- 1 1 Garfield Ave .
Briggs &amp; Stratton Electnc hood.( 3041675 •36 37 days, Athens . $74 .500 Owner Gallipolis $ 350 month Call Beach St. Middleport 1 Bd.
Convenience store ell:porl- * Ekper~ence helpful
I P
at 56
b t not n&amp;:cessarv
5tart Exce11 ent Con dllo
one e pre rre d - AP
YY
t n. (304 )675·23Ss_evenings
flnanc 1ng (740)489·9146
for details (740)441·0194 or Furn1shed ap·t . Prev1ous
Gallipolis.
Apply m person at 410 Main Askmg $399.00. Call 74()..
{740 )441 . 1184
rental references. No Pets.
Vine St. . "'
Street or you can ema11
992·5720.
' 38D, 28a, fireplace, 40x60 Log Home with add1hon
740·992·0165
your resume to
W.t..urvn
barn, 8 flat acres. Pleasant Large living room and eat m 3 bedroom house for rent 10
Loca l retail store needs full
time help Send resume to: chuckOWAL.LPAPER·!NCCOM
"'"" 1 .......
Valley Rd .. Rio Grande.
Clean EffiCiency. Ref, Dep.,
To
Do
kitchen Utility, 1 112 bath . 2 Tuppers Pla1ns Central A1 r. No Pets (3041675. 5162
CLA Bmc ~. clo Gallipolis Rt 35 Adult Book Store need L.------_.1 $120,000 (740)709 .. 1166.
bedrooms and loft . Ali elec· $450.00 Month plus ulil1t1es
469
· Midnight Clerk Full time
Tribune, PO Box
tr ic, heat pump/AC. L.P: lire- and depos1t No Pets 740· CONVENIENTLY LOCAT(Jo4) 937 _4900
Affordable COmputer Repair.
place, lttrge deck and lull 667 •3487
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Gatllpoll s, OH 45631.
Expert Serv1ce. (740)992 ~
front porch. Separate 1 car . - - - - - - - - Townho use
apartments ._.
No w hlnng lull t1me Walt
Temp orary elde rly care 2395
garage/ workshop on 2 2 3B A house on Rt 160, North and/or small houses FOR
Staff. Fnendly personality,
needed 8a -6p Must be
acres
10 m1les north ol Gall1a $450/mo plus dep &amp; RENT. Call (7'\0 )441 -1111
professional attitude a must
famlhar W!th diabetic care or Ekp Dnver looking for work
Pomeroy,
Route 11 7 1· 740· references
No
pets for appl1cat1011 &amp; Information
Bring your smile and app&gt;y
965·428 1
(74 0)446 6495
'
in person, Holiday Inn , willing to learn Excellent All endors (740)367·7899,
Grac1ous ltv1nc; t And 2 l.Jed poyll Call (740)256·6169
1740)645·6795
. Gallipolis. No phone calls
Now 3 bod•own 2• 1 .1 1 1 &gt;lJH llouc;H, SA 160, $400 '•oom aoa tn ;•tt. 11 V lla yP.
T1red of work1ng all holl· .,.-----::---.,.-~ 4 year old Coloma! on 3 briCk home l VI :,,:.;k n r"ll
Manor
~· d
R•v~ ·~·d~
pleasel
I vlllllj.JI.JS depOSit No pets
, Employment acres , appro,.;, 1•900 sq ft 3
days? Tired of working 12 Summer
Apa
rtments
1n
M•ddleport
Grande
Call
(740)37
9·2615
Call
(740)446·
1eFe1en..::e
Nurees Aides
hOur shifts ? Come home Wa nted.
Computer and bdr, 2 baths, 2 car garage,
From $295·$4411 Call 7dQ.
6865 or (740)379·2923
and JOtn us at Mecll Home off1Ce skills. OulckBooks, masler bdr. IS 28x24 w1th a Reduced Pnce 2·Houses
992-5064 Equal H o u~tng
IT'S YOUR TURN TO
Heahh l 6penmg for a PAN word processing, graphiCS, J&amp;Cuzzl
tub
$125,000 one
In
New
Haven,
Attention!
Opportunities
BLOSSOM
RN and/or full time AN pos l· and Web development (740)446-7029
Brick/Wood Home 4-bed- Local company offering ~No ~l.m::m::.:a:..:c:::
u l::at_:ec.._2_b_edr-o-om­
And we have just the oppor- tlon . EOE. Futl Ume positions (740) 992 - 5613 ·
'room · $50 000 al so In DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
4BA, ForeclosUre, only Mason Manufactured Home
apartment 1n the countfy.
tunities you need to bloom in
$20,900 For listings call l ·bedroom. 2.full -baths No grams tor you to buy your New carpet &amp; cabi nets,
a field where your talent and Includes benefit package,
401K, ancl sign on bonus
800·391 ·5228 ekt F25-4
land contracts
$62,000 home Instead of renting
freshly painted &amp; decorated,
skills are truly needed. $2.000.
Call ,Judie Reese, r10
Bt.SINEi'i
• • 100% financmg
W/0 hookup Beauti ful co unHeartland of Jackson has
• Less than perfect credit
try sel!lng Must see to
exciting opportunities avail- RN , C, Clinical Mana.ger, at ~==OPPotm.mY:::;::~ 5 rms, bath. upstairs . (304)862-3200
(740)441-1779 or 1·800· ' -,
Furnished 1 BA apt down- wanted 10 buy· Old t BOO's accepted
appreciate
5400/mo.
able for·
stairs Furniture Store 1n rear
481 6334
•
·
Log Cabin logs must be In • Payment could be the (614 )595 _7773 or l ··BOO·
_
•NOTICE•
112 ac. lot, commercial, at good condition. willing to same as rent
798 4686
Truck Drivers.
STNAI
PHiO VALlEV PUBLISH
130
Bulavllle
Pi ke, tear down 11 standing Mortgage
Locators
Full &amp; Part-time, All ehltts Ohio Based Small Trucking
NG co. re&lt;;ommendotha
Gallipolis, OH (740)446·
_
.
1740)367·0000
In Pomeroy Are a 3 Bd ·2
17401407 6680
Company · looking ·for
~u do buslneSI with peo 4782
~~~;,;,;;~-:--Bath mob1le hOme Also. :2
Apply In peraon, or forward Tractor Trailer drivers with
Bd -1 Bath Both Very Good
le
you
know,
and
NOT
l
Attention!
J320
MOB!
I.E
1-tO.
'
IL~
For
Ran
i
Clear
..
pre
try,
3
flatbed ell:perlence. $600 to
resume to: Heartland of
Con d11ion
c~~~ J A 740·
jsand
money
through
th
Local
company
offering
"NO
I.--·IOI
1iiomioiSroiAilliii
.r
_
_,
b AL'II M m ,
1
ti2
bath
$900
take
home
after
lall:ea
Jackson. 8668 Stale At. 93 ,
N:)- Sf\ 11 \ v -·l,'l deld I
t"nalt
until
you
have
lnY&amp;atl
DOWN
PAYMENT"
pro·
Om\
ntowr
Ga!h,C-OIIs
57"'5
Jackson, OH 45640, Fax. Home every we8kend and 111
119
grams for you to buy your 14x55· 97 f' leah\e&gt;OC1 MI-l "o
•
740.286·0295. App ly online some weekdays delivering
Modern l or,. •oor·1 Apt ~ o
•1 1111 1·11es 44 ""-' "'v
"" J9
home Instead of renting
2BR, 1 bath, El!'::l~,.. hM &amp;AC·
at. www.hcr·manorcare.corh to 8H, KY, VA, &amp; WV
pets. :0275 'fl1U1~u. 1I1Ciudes
. 100% financing
goOd COndition $10,500 Cat House lor rent 480 Paxton wate r/sewer $200 doposl t.
EEO/Dru Q·Free Employer 1330)527·2789
People Strength
I;
· ;;11)~;1.oAN;
' ;;~ L.e11 than perfect credit (740)446·3644 tor appt
Ad 2BA stove, ref rig sup· 1740)446 -~617
Wanted someone In Racine ......
accepted
plied , WID hookup 5350
Co'i\mltment
Area to take elderly woman
• Payment could be the 2000 Clayton 16X70. 3 Br • . month $350 dep + Utilities Modern one bedroom Call
umt u rent
2Ba , C/A·Haat pump new Ready
June
1., Call (740)446·3736
Ohio Valley Home Hes lth, ' shopping 0!'1QI or twice I
Mortgage .
Locatora. carpet. vinyl, porches, on (740)4 46·251 5
HUD
Inc hiring RN's. Accepting month, time &amp; wagea neg.
New 2 Bedroom Apt~rtm•nta
47_·,_8;_,9,...
4 1 .,..-"-----,
74_0.-::2=rented lot .. $18 ,000 740· ••cepted
•
17401387-oooo
appllcatlono lo&lt; CNA, STNA, ,..
Wuharldryer
hookup,
992-{)6~0
CHHA, PCA Competitive
stove/ refrigerator Included.
Beautltlll Mmt On 2acrea,
SA 75- -4BR , 1 bath homewages, mileage and benefits
atartlng at $400/mo. Cell for
2400oq.ft., 3bdr.• 1.5balho, 2000 Oakwood 18x80, vinyl
garage, baaemant , river
Including health Insurance.
dotalla (740)441 ·0t94 or
(ceramic ·1111) hardwood tiding, ohlnglo root. 4BR, 2
accau Propane heat, win·
Apply at 1480 Jackoon Pika,
(740)441 ·0 t94
llooralo finished buement, bath. otnlral air $1 ; ,ooo
Gallipolis or 2415 Jaekson
(740)386·0000 dow AJC $650/month rent·
new appliance•. new aepttc Oeytlmo
$650
aec
'
dap.,
you
pay
utll·
Avenue, Point Plaeaant, WV
New ~BR aptt. Watson Ad .
ayattm,
scar
garage. evening 1740)3B8·80t 7
ltlea Available l;t week In Rodney PikB/85Q area.
or phone toll tree 1·868-441·
$t59,000 1173 Socond
~ DepoSit
2002 14x52 Clayton Mobile April Cell 1740)446·3644 for Aeleren ce '
1393
Streit, Cllfton,WV 1304)773·
roqulred no pols (740) 446·
Home 2 Bt:l 1 Bath Has an ~ polication
5379
Overbroalc Rehab Center 11
~1·w 1 1lf""l '1llo1&gt;\~
U~f''ilr'l•li
- · ; - - - -- - 1271 ' (7.::.01709 ~ ~~;
cur(ently seeking a day shift
\\'1/lllUV,', , , 1 'q,',
11
,,
t • '• P1 v r t' Bdroom
Ta ra
,, -l''
AN
Manager to join our
1 1(11 t. l 1:1 1 ·•• 1 .r:1 1,
• "'' For list·
1
1
mana~ement .team
If you
landlord. Great ConUIIIOr l lO QS 80CJ·391·52;l8 ext. Apartments, W 1 ( f ' ( ' '-'~are Interested In this posi2 Bedrooms, Ci A, 1 1/ 2
$16 800
I 17 40)446 4096 1709.
•
cal
•
- - - - - - - - Bath , Adult POol &amp; Baby
llori. please contact Michelle
4
4
or 17 016 5·0535
Two 2 Bedroom Homlt. Pool, Polio, S1art $42111'-lo.
Gilmore AN . DON fOr more
'86
Creetrlge
t&lt;4x70
2BR!
2
Kitchen
equipped No ~ts. No ~Pet..: , Laue Pius
lnformotlon at (740) 992·
bolh, $6,995 Coil [740)385· Cap. required . Middleport. Security Deposit Requ ired,
6472, or stop by and fill out
74().992·3823.'
(740)367·7086.
9946.
an appllcalion.

G:t
=

r

L.---FII'OR;;;.;.iiiii-._.1

1150

1·

Wallpaper Outlet

1

llil

-----

;;;::=;:===:::;

· ~=~
:rzm'-;·i~:·::;;~;•l;n';
MONEY

~

.Shop

e.o.e.

Clattslfledsl

•

11y

l

���</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="517">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9968">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="16316">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="16315">
              <text>May 22, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4280">
      <name>justis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="75">
      <name>taylor</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
