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                  <text>Health care edition,
iiiSide today's Sentinel

,.
at

HMC recognizeS
volunteers, A6
•

\..

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.SPORTS

I

• Local youth attend
Bartrum and Brown football
camp.
SeePage 81

Commissioners attend Public Utilities Commission meeting for AEP pJant
BY BETH SERGENT
Davenport and Jim Sheets.
Until then. Davenport ~ nd
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
PCCO\ di;;(o,·ery meet- fellow comm issioners Sheets
ing provided a forum fur citi- and Jeff Thorton are reiteraiPOMEROY - The first zens to '"k 4uest ions con- ing their re4uest that citizens
step in implementing a cost (erniti2 · the
Ameri'can ;end letters of sup'port for the
recovery plan for , the con- Electric . Puwe·r plant ar1d to plant to PUtO, the .Ohio
struction of a$ 1 billion coal- voice opposition. PUCO is Power Sitin2 Board. which
fired power plant in Meigs · the agency that must approve .appro1·cs the' location of new
County was taken· when a AEP' s plan to recover costs power plants. and the Ohio
Public Utilities Commiss ion of constructing the plant.
.Consumer's Counsel. Janine
of Ohio discovery meeting
Davenport sa id !hat he L. · Mid ein -Ostrander who
was held in Columbus last anticipated a tina! decision 11 ur~s ,)s an advocate ori
week. The meeting was from PUCO mncerning the behalf of Ohio utility conattended by Meig s Count y cost recovery plan to be sumers.
.Mitk handed down on Aug. ~Commi ssioners
"The letters don't have to

be lengthy and they can be
dropped off here at the commissioner's otnce or mailed
· directly ... Davenport said .
Addresses for the agencies
are: . O hio Power Siting
Board, 180 E. BriJCtd St:.
Colum bus, Ohio 43 215 : Ohio
Consumers Council. 10 W.
Broad 'st.·. Suite · 1800.
Co.lumbus. Ohio -13215 3485:
Public
Ut ilit ie,
Commission of Ohi o. PUCO.
Alan R. Schriber. Ch &lt;~ irman .
180 E. Broad St., Columbus.

Ohio -+32 15.
The leuers·of su pport were
di,.·u"ed once again during
Thur,day's Meigs County
C0 111111 i"ioner 's meeting.
In other ~ommissio n busin~ss:

.

Comm iss iopers approved.
a resolution approv ing a five
1~ar Commu nity Housing
lmpr01·e·ment Strategy presented and prepared· by Fair
Please see Plant. AS

Syracuse residents
asked to conserve
water
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Bo&lt;lrd of Public Affai rs
President
Gordon
Winebrenner is asking village
residents that are supplied by
the Syracuse water system \0
OBITUARIES conserve
water until further
notice.
The village of Syracuse has
.Page AS
two
wells. from which it's
·• Hilda Wilson .
water is taken and although
·• Arlis B. Thornton
both well pumps arc presently
working. one is not pumping
.
Charlene Hoefllchj photos
water sufficiently.
The Ohio SAR Color Guard had an impressive presentation as
A replacement pump has a part of the annual conference's opening ceremony. Pictured
been ordered and is tentatively here are from the left , John Fast of Lima, Richard Montgomery
scheduled to arri ve today. of Yellow Springs, and Guard Commander John Franklin of
: • Brown wins Ohio State
However, once the new pump Hudson.
.
.
is installed the well cannot be
Bar Association wnting
placed back into service fo r a
contest.
period of three to four business
See Page AS
days during which time testing
• Laurel Cliff women have is completed on the new
Bv CtiARLENE HoEFLICH ·
bers of the Bend area's
equipment.
.
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
banquet.
Ew in g Chapter.
Dale
Winebrenner said the pub- ·
Co
lburn
as
new
president
of
See Page A6
lie should not be alarmed with
ATHENS
Roland . the local chapter spoke at the
• Two Koreas end talks
the announcement to conserve Downing of Wilmington meeting on plans and projects
with agreement that doesn't water. He explain~d that while Dela.. National Secretary un derway to promote the
the . defective pump is being General. Sons of the 'organi zation 's
work in
mention nuclear impasse.
replaced the villqge has anoth- American Revolution (SAR), Meigs . .Gallia .and Athens
See Page A7
er well and pump that will be was featured speaker at the Cou'nties.
working properly to provide recent !16th annual confer. • Groups demand stop to
Jarnes H. Lochary, formerence of the Ohio Sons.
water.
ly
of Pomeroy and a member
executions in Ohio.
Held at the Ohio University or Ewing Chapter, retired as
Common tips from the
~Page AS
American Red Cross for con- Inn in Athens. the confe rence state president after addresswas attended by. many mem- ing the nearly I 00 SAR
serving water are as follows :
• Check toilets for leaks.
• Take shorter showers.
• Don't let the water run
WEATHER
while brushing your teeth,
washing your face or shaving.
• Avoid flushing the toilet
.unnecessarily. Dispose of tisSTAFF REPORT
tors.
sues, insects, and other similar
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Other recent · incidents
waste in the trash rather than
reported by the Meig s
the toilet.
POMEROY Meigs County Sheriff's Office
• OiJerate automatic dish- County
Sheriff
Robert incl ude:
washers only when they are Beegle reported that Chris
Ruby
Cougenhour,
fully loaded. Use the "l ight Workman of Carpenter Hill Langsville. reported the theti
wash" feature if available to Road was attempting to ·or aluminum cans from her
use less water.
"unjam" a .22-caliber rille
. .
• Kitchen sink disposals when it accidentally di s- residence
Angela Conlin, Pomeroy,
require lots of water to opemte charged on Wednesday night.
reported
a male subject drove
properly. Start a compost pile
After the weapon di s- through her yard located on
as an alternate method of dis- charged the slu g struck a
posing of food waste, or sim- piece of metal ai1d fragment- Ball Run Road causing propply dispose of food in the ed: striking Workman in the erty damage.
Dennis Miller, Tuppers
2 SECTIONS - t6 PAGES
garbage.
cheek and head. He was treat- Plains. reponed two build• Operate automatic clothes ed and released from the
Calendars
A3
ings on his property were
washers only when , they are
room
of broken into and that his vehiB4-6 fully. loaded or set the water eniergency
Classifieds
Hospital , in cle was driven around the
O'Bieness
B7 level for the size of your load . Athens. The report was ll led property and left in his drive'comics
; Repair dripping faucets by
by Sgt. Dann y Leonard .
way. Nothing was reported
Dea'r Abby
A3 replacing washers: One· drop
Beegle also reported that missing.
per second .wastes 2,700 galhi s office has 'received severEditorials
A4 lons of water per y~ar.
Archie
Rose, · Long
al
reports
of
motorists
failing
• Make sure· your home is
Bottom. reported· a Lawn
A2-3
Faith•Values
·leak-free. When you are cer- to stop at the. fou r way stop Boy Mower and weed eater
on Flatwoods Road and stolen from his property
Obituaries
As tain that no water is being used sign
in your home, take a reading Pomeroy Pik:e. In order to located on Scout Camp Road.
B1 of the water meter. Wait 30 . prevent a se rious accident
Sports
Recent arrests:
depu
ti
es
will
do
periodic
minutes
and
then
take
a
secSteve
Hill . Racine. on a
A6
Weather
ond reading. If the meter read- enforcement at the location,
Please see Sheriff. AS
ing changes. you have a leak. issuing c!tations to the viola© aoos Ohio V.U~y Publl.shlnM Co.

INSIDE

'.

Congratulations Class of 2005 ·

Page 32 •

Meigs

Bend area SAR members attend Ohio SA.R conference

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INDEX

l
i

members attending . Elected
· new state preside nt was .
Robert G. Parvin or
Painesvi lle.
The Ohio Society Color
Guard in full uniform under
the leadership of commander
John Franklin · of Hudson
opened the conference with
an impressive presentation of
!lags.
.
Introduced and speaking
. briefly at the confere nce was
the SAR· Vi ce Pre sident

Ge neral of the Central
Di strict, David Sympson of
Louisville. Ky. Other di stingui shed guests introduced
included Senator Joy Padgett,
Rcpresemative Clyde Evans,
Repre sentative
Jimmy
Stewart. and Athens Judge
Aian Goldsberry.
Beve rl y
Schumaci)er,
rege nt of Nabby Lee Ames
Chapter uf Athens. brought
greetings from the Daughters
of the Anierican Revolution.

Sheriff's Office investigates. ·Stack continues ascent
accidental shooting .
.at Mountaineer Plant

r .

I

I

James H.· Lochary, left, retiring state · president of the Ohio
Sons of the Ame rican Revolution, presided at the 116th annual conference. Beve rly Schumacher, regen.t of Nabby Lee Ames
Chapter. DAR, brought greetings , and Dale Colburn. new pres- .
ident of Ewing Chapter, SAR, reported on plans and projects of
the Bend a_rea organization.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
.

"

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant) WV 25550
304-675-4340
'

'

,.

•

- --·....•

•'

•

.
Bv TtMAMALONEY
.
TMALONEY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM
NEW HAVEN - The new
stack at Appalachian Power's
Mountaineer Plant · is just
over one-fifth of the way up
on its I,000-foot climb.
As of Thursday morning, it
stood at 213 feet.
"It 's bee n going really
well,'' said site construction
manager Ed Young. "We had
a lot of rain at the outset but
you worli. through that."
The construction workforce currently stands at 144.
and will grow to an ayerage
of 500·craftsmen during most
of the building phase, expected to be complete by January
2007. Pullman Power LLC of
Kansas City, Mo. which built
the original I ,1 03-foot stack
when Mountaineer was constructed in the 1970s, is the
main contractor. Pullman
employees
working
at
Please see Stack. AS

nin Maloney/ pllolo .

The new stack at Appalachian
Power's Mountaineer Plant in ·
New · Haven is seen at a
height of 213 feet, as it stood
Thursday morni ng. On the
right side ofthe stack, a large
area' covered by plyWood can·
be seen where a scrubber. will
be installed.

�•

,
Friday, May 20, 2005

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 20,

2005

PASJOR TRINITY
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

"The twenty-thtrd Psalm ts
the mghttng ale o l the
Psalms,'' said Hem y Ward
Beecher. " It ts snMll. of a
homely feather, singm'g shyl y
out of obscunty ; but oh. n has
tilled the air of the whole
world with melodwus joy,
greater than the he,u t can
concetve. Blessed be th e day
on which that Psalm was
boro 1 "
One of the most fa mous
passages of Holy Scnpture. tl
Jonathan Noble
ts the Church's song to C hn st
her Lord. for who else ts the dow n 1rl t!ret:n p.lsturc-s. that
Shepherd that leads the is the nch. feru le .mel mexChurch but Chnst0 Who else h.ltl sttble tnll ih ot Scn pture
but Je sus, our resurrec ted And He le.Jlb us bv W.t ters ot
Shephetd Ktng, who Wtlhng- rest As th e ~~ c:n ChMies
ly laid down Hts life f01 us. Spurgeo n Ltughr "\Ve are not
:'the people of His pasture . .d w.tys lymg Llo11 n to teed.
and the she,ep of His hand, ..
bw dre mo \'Jng on towlLrd
It ts for thts reason we say perl ec uon . hence we re.td,
He ts our Shepherd as a mdt- he leadeth me hestde the still
ter of fact. a present day redl - w.tters ...
ity. not that He was or that He
And these 11 .ners ol rest are
may be or that He could be. npthm g less 1h ,111 Hts Holy
but that He is our Shepherd
Sp1n1, who " 11 llh . us to
My children look at me &lt;~n d gu tdC dtrec t Lmd ~o~us t a m us Ill
say, 'Tht s ts my da9dy." as a
ulutllless dttl etc lll " ,t)'s - to
!)latter of fact, wnh compl ete
de,mse and tdres h. to nurconfidence.
From
the
moment they were born they tu re and chcttsh us m our
have known nothing else I JOurney It ts along these
am there father I have been waters ot rest out Shepherd
and always wtll be , and they le,tds us by hts example and
are my chtldren And so 11 ts the powet ot h1 s love.
It IS onl y 1ight. then. th&lt;tt
for every beltever. "The Lord
we
obey Hun as He le.tds us
ts my shepherd."
And wtth the Lord Hunself down "path s of n ghteousas Ol!r Shepherd we may be ness." and thts ought to be an
confident will never lack for ohedten ce of love Jesus s.ttd.
II you love me. you wt ll
anythmg good and necessary
kee
p my commandments.'' so
m thts ltte or the next. This
whatevet
He may call us to
Shepherd who fed the hungry, healed the stck, calmed do we should do gladly "1m
the storms and Himself died Hts name's sake," lor Hts
and rose again is certainly honour and glory
Even 111 the valley of the
able to supply our needs, a~d
shadow ol death, then. we
willing
So we are pnvtleged to he wtll walk We wtl l not run 111
1

lear .nor wtll we stand. as if
un\1 ti ling to advance fo rward
mto eterl1 ity. rat her. we wtll
w.tl k co nftde ntl y, know tng
our desttnatton Calml y and
s.t kl y we II follow the
Shepherd who subdued thts
va lley of darkness long ago
From the mome nt we
belteve ttll o ur dymg breath
ami beyond. we n m truly ami
earn estly &gt;ay. "ltTte L01 d is
my shepherd " No wo nder
th is Psalm has been uttered tn
hospital rooms and on b.tttletields, su 11 2 tn churches an~
funeral hon1cs. read by chtldre n's beds ,md 111 nursmg
homes
For rent un es and tn hundreds 'ol languages. God's
peop le have proclatmed,
'The Lord " my shepherd. "
And thts Lord is none other
than Jes us Chttst. the Good
Shep hetd. who ts al so Kmg
of kmgs .md Lord ot lords
He ts our mi ght y Shepherd
Km g. who pre pares for us a
feast 111 the presence ot our
enem1es
He .tn otnt s us wtth Ht s
Holy Spmt and blesses us
beyond our capacny to hold
.til ol Hts heavenl y bless mgs.
Ht s goodness and merc y follow us every day. wherever
we venture m thts world,
th10ugh the "black days as
we ll as the bnght days," as
Sptu geon satd . throu gh "the
days of tasttng as well as the
days of feast mg "
• And m exchange for Hts
und ytng co mmitment to us,
"the people of Ht s pasture,
.tnd the sheep ot Hts hand;:
we should abtde 111 Hts house
- that ts, H1 s Church - forever
servmg Htm. rather than askmg Htm to serve us as some
pn vtleged guests who will
someday leave The Lord is
out Shepherd . . we are the
sheep of Hts fold
c.

Church news
Revival set

musi C wtl l be pre~e n ted by

co rnedJ,Jll Carl Hurley They

"Freed By Chn st." a gospel

h ave ope ned .1c ts fm The

qu.u te1

PAGEVILLE
Rev1 val
scrvtces wtll be held at the
Pagevtlle Free WJII Baptt st
Church, May 25-27 Se1 vtces
wtll be at 7 p m wtth Calvm
Minms as speaker. Don Karr,
pastor, said the church is
located on State Route 692 at
Page ville.

Plan riverfront
concert
POMEROY - The Kings
of Lancaster wtll perform at 7
p.m . on Saturday at the
Pomeroy Levee. The concert
is sponsored by Me1gs Area
Holiness Assoctallon.
The g10up consists of the
mother, Sue, and he r two talented children, Sarah, 14, and
Jonathan, 13 . The group has
won several music awards,
and appeared • in numerous
concerts across Ohto and 13
other states. They have performed severalt•mes w•th the
Lewts Family and with

Community
prayer meeting
planned
POMEROY - A commumty prayer meetmg will be
held at 7 p.m. Wednesday at
the
Enterprise
United
Methodist
Church
on
Enterprise Road. Spectal

S tn g111g Cookcs,
Kcvtn
Spencer and Fnends, The
Pfeiffers, 'fhe Perrys, Betty
Jean Rob1 son , The Easter
Famtly and Pure m Hean.

Gospel sing
announced ·
POINT
PLEASANT,
W Ya - A gospel sing will
be held at 7 p.m. Saturday at
the Pomt Pleasant Church of
God, 22nd Street for benefit
of the World Christian
Outreach Mtm stry. The
smgers wtll be Proclaim, The
Cadl e Family, and the
Bledsoe Famtly Money wtll
IJO toward butldmg churches
m Afn ca

Ftllowship
Apostolic

public school Bible classes
BY R'ICHARD N. OSTLING

The teachers satd btblt c,tl
knowledge )lt ves stud en ts a
di stinct acadenuc adv antage
in understandin g literatu re,
a pomt others have made
regard1n g ht story
They we re tnter vt ewcd
for a comprehensive '" Btbl e
Literacy Report .'' tssueu by
th e Bible Litera cy ProJect of
Fatrfax, 'va , an organi zati on
th at want s U S. ht gh ~c hoo l s
to offer co urses and cou rse
seg ments on th e Scnptures.
But wall - tsn' t th at tilega l. at least I ll publt c
school s 1
That was one co nce rn
wh en th e Odes,a, Texas ,
sc hool board ap proved a
Btble elecuve 111 Apnl , folJow 111 g requ es ts from 6,000
ctttzens.
Desptte what many thtnk .
co u"e work 1s perfectl y
legal if handl ed ptoperl y
The U.S Supre me Co urt
enco ura ged such stu dy 111
th e 1963 cases wh ere ath etst

AP RELIGIO N WR ITER

Can you tdenttl y the fo llowmg?
" In th e beg1nnmg."
"Let th ere be h ght."
"The promtse d land. "
"Eye for dn eye' .
" A ti me to be bo111 a nd J
tune to d ie''·
"Root of ,til ev il "
"Cast the ltrs t s ton e. "
''Love th y neighbor "
''Do un to othe rs"
"Rende r unt o C aesar,a:
These
nota bl e l:ftble
phr.tses wer ~ am ong 72
it ems thai every stud e nt
needs to know, a s chosen by
41 ht g h sch oo l Engli sh
teachers. ' The p anel also
lt stcd e v e nts (e.g .. cro ss mg
th e Re d Sea . th e Last
. s upp er). peopl e (Goliath ,
Sol omon ), pl.tces (Sod om,
B.tbel), conce pt s (an g ina l
st n)
.md
lest 1va ls
(Passove r)

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Roofing &amp; Building Work
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Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215

Located less th an 30 mmute s from

Athens, Pomero) or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156

"Still small enough to care"

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,Wc..'dn~sd .ty S~ rV t,;~s-

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

Dairq
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and o m,rriod ol
dudes to perform
wllh oo r&lt;lterOO'
holp in 511)1~ A,.
lbtn any Jll'll&lt;IICIII

Br&lt;1:zie r

700 N

2nd St.

···

Mtddleport, OH

7 40-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home PeoJ*"

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Evcntng

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uardra1l , Fence &amp;

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

Pamer

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Ohto 45769-0683

10 Hft. In Mauhew
II : :Ill. OBr lloa•enly

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us.•• WCQilfM 10 me:.
..1 rau chat are wear)' anti are carrying hea&lt;t y burdens. and I will lin: you rat."'
"11wu -nels Hkt what l netd IIOdiiSporatel)"• yooo '"Y· " but h""' rio I go about
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....

THUIIIOAT
4:1-JZ

-

IAT111Do\f

1:441

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594-6333
1·800-451 -9806

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for: they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8
'

7 40-949-2217
Stzes avatlabte 5x1 o to 10 x 20
If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

Rn uh~

G reat Bend

124

MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Oblo 45769
(740) 992-3279
Tol Fr.. 1-877-583-2433

Ra"n~

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Old Hethel Free Wtll Hapt1st Chun:h
School

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212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy
992-3785

Davis-Oulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide ill Me, a11d My
F;u ll hne of
words abide i11 you, ye slw/1
Insurance
·
Products+ ask wliat ye will, a11d it shall
F manc1al
be do11e wllo you.
Serv1ces
AGENCIES Inc
Joh11 15:7
Bill Outckel
992-66n

Jrrjj
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
17.&amp; l nnt Strttt• PO Rox 210
:'lir-.1 Haun. \lr \ Z526S
J anws H \ nderson.l.keflSftl funual Ulrt'rtor
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..
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Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE

SERVIC~S ., ~
214E. Matn
992-5130
Pomeroy

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K&amp; C JEWELERS

Middleport, OH

Bald Kn, lt&gt; on Ct&gt; Rd i I 1-'.a,lm Ro:\

l.ong Buitom

Mall hew 5 16

White Funeral ome
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
7
-3110

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The rare mu deserve, close to hmnr

36759 Roekspnngs Rd
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptic;~ns

•
•

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While 's (hupl'l Wesle}un

7 pIll

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITIION CENTER

s~lln&lt;~l -

Worshtp 1 p m

Cmol\llle Ro,ad

992-2955

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
MattheJ¥ 5.

1\1

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Mt Oint' Communtl) ( hun:h

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Christian Union

10

your hght so shme belorc

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

a Ill
p lll

SdHII&gt;I 9 ll) 1111 Sumlt'

'lflll~

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Middlcpon Pa~lt•r

' Wcdnc$duy Scf\ 1 ~cs

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
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1),1\ td Ru"dl

CmtR·r S)lant\llt: &amp; s~n• ml St

Don W tlkcr

Salem St

J lmL~ P

1&lt;.1\llhii&lt;'Od

IOOOu 111 'Am ~h1p

Stud} Wl J nntl.l) 6 \0 p m

1

Ru1.l111nd het• Will Bu ptist

740-992·7713

Pt ~ tm

Su nJ 11

BtbiL

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~II

7 1{1

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Wal n ut a nd H ~ tu \ Sl'

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Wors ht p

Sl John I uthHIIIR Churt h

t:hrJsttHn li mon

Home Cooktd Mtals &amp; Dally Specials

Open 7 days a week

lJ 10 t"i

IP

7 jlll\ ,\:

Ro,I\J P l'l nr ( h 1rk ' f{ &lt;•tl\h I \l l-1 ) {r ·~
l'ldlHtg

Pastor Bill Marsh:lll Sund~1 Sdlllo1

Lutheran

7 00

7 00 1111r

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Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Or.
"A Celebration of We"

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A m.I Lllllo( &lt;or 1 n ~ (

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l:{u( tnC f• rs t Uupt1sl

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
ARCADIA NURSING

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9~0am \, ,,,~!11p
lltm md6rm

ner of th e Metropolttan Opera
Audit tons
In 1976 Fr. Payne took a
fa c ulty positton at Ftsk
Umverstly tn Nashville,
Tenn. where he met his wife,
Gail In addttton to Payne's
two sons. they had two chil dren. Sherman and Momca .
In 1979 Payne took a positiOn at Ohto University,
where he was appointed assoCiate professor of Mustc and
Managmg Arti stic Director of
the Ohto Umversity Opera
Theater Dunng hi s tenure of
14 years. he' also served as
asststant provost and recetved
the 1982 University Professor
Award
for Out standtng
Teachtng
The years 1989 - 1991'
Payne commuted back and
torth to New York City to
smg a leading role in the
Metropolitan Opera's production of Porgy and Bess. It was
then that he answered God's
call to priesthood. He
resigned his tenured position
at Ohto University and
moved his family to New
York where he began work at
the General Theologtcal
Semmary where he earned a
master of divinity degree.
He recently served as
Rector of St . Simon of
Cyrene Episcopal Church,
Lincoln Heights, Ohio, and
Priest-m-Charge at St Mary's
- Waynesvtlle, Ohto.

llunl u~ k
ll. l t m~kt

Assembly of Cod ·
I' U

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- Congregational

flt'lH I I ..,, hnht ( hun h

Pl'l\ 1 I{" Hubul (rr II&lt; Suud11 'itlh•;&lt;l
9 to 1 111 \\nhhtp
II ,, 111 (, I' 111

lu ppt'f'l l'l.mh St l1aul
I' 1'&gt;11&gt;1 J 111~ lk till&lt; '&gt;und 11 \ , h,•ol

Ill

~Ill

Church of Christ ·

f mm.1 n n ~ l 1\p t t ~lnht l uht r n11t h lnt
l &lt;ltljl l{d tlll "1&lt;.:1\ 1 1111 1 Wd Rullu H.l

,.

Catholic

I

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11 Ill

pm , YPu lh I•• 7 111 pm

Ill
!'Ill

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Grace Episcopal Church .has new priest

Performance Award and the
Philip E. Fatth Award for
e)(cellent singing dictton m
Ge rman , French, and Italian.
Following graduation he
went to Italy where he was
selected to sing m a Young
Artt st Fe sttval m Barga, Italy.
He performed the role of
Tarabotto
111
Rossini 's
Llnganno Fehce (The Happy
Deception) . The followmg
year he was invtted back to
sing the same role wtth the
Teatro Comunale Dt Ftrenze
{The Florence, Italy Opera
House), a company under
whose ausptces he later
toured the enure country of
Italy
After hi s !taltal\ expenence, he moved to New York
City where he toured for
three years with the Boris
Goldovsky National Touring
Opera Company. While hving m New York, he was the

Strund lltlp ll ' t ( hurt h
" \ "illl1d,i\ "i&lt; h&lt;~&lt;ll [I I 1111

11•\~t&gt;tld

\lnnllil,.! \\t&gt;t,lllp II 11111 lllltm.'
( hut lb 111 .It ' us ( h n' l \ pu~lnhl

M.tda lyn Murra y and others
won a ban on devotwnal
Bi ble rec ll &lt;~tt o n s m publt c
school s
Th e nonpa rtisa n Ftrs t
Amendm ent Cent er and
Btble Lttet acy ProJec t brakercd a 1999 ,tcco rd, "The
Btbl e tn Publt c Sc hoo ls,"
wh 1ch - remarkabl y - is
end orsed by the Nati onal
Assoeta llo n of Secondary
School Pn nctpal s. s1x other
secular edu cau on organt Z&lt;\·
ttons. th e Nau onal Counctl
of Chlll ches. m;IJ Or Jewt sh
and ev.m"oe li ca l Protes tant
groups and ad voca tes o f
church-state se pa rati on.
· Th e .tccotd says Bible
co urses arc dcceptable tf taug ht 111 ''.tn objet:ltve , acade mt c mdnner" tha l doesn ' t
ptom ote or dt scourage relt gious fatth and avotd s "a.
parttcular sectilnan pmnt ot
v'ie w'' or
"devo tiOnal "
approach.
•

Edward Thomas Payne

II&lt;

f{

llofM. Bo\plls l ( hurl h {So uth~ ru )

POMEROY The Rev
Fr. Etlw a~d Thomas Payne ts
th e new pnest at Grace
tn
Eptscop a l
Church
Pomeroy. He ts conducting
servtccs at the church at II
a.m each Sunday.
Born in Cleveland, Payne
was baptized and confirmed
in th e Epi scopal Church ,
attended the Cleveland public
schools where he was active
in scout, athlettcs and mustc.
Dunng h1s JUntor year in
htgh school, he was awarded
ftrst prize 111 the Cleveland
orutono s mging competition
and the Martha Holden
Jennings Scholarshtp. Those
two aw a rds led to summer
voc.tl
study
at
The
Chautauqua Summer Institute
and a ·· debut wtth the
Cleveland Orchestra as baritone solmst in Leonard
Bernste111 's
Chtche ster
Psalma, Robert Shaw conductmg.
After
graduating from
Glenville Htgh School, Payne
received a full scholarship to
study mus1c, opera, and conducting at The Cleveland
Insl!tute of Music and Case
Western Reserve University.
He worked for six years with
James Levtne, who ts currently arttstic director of the
Metropolitan Opera and m
1972, he recetved a bachelor
of music degree in singing, a
Master of Music degree in
singing and a Master "of
Mustc degree m music. Upon
his ~raduauon he rece1 ved the
Bons Goldovsky Opera

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK·

The Shepherd King - Psalm 23 New surveys make the cas~ for
Bv JoNATHAN NoBLE

www.mydailysentinel.com

P il~ t ur

U/ \OIIr ltght ~l1 &gt;fll ne btjore
men. that the_\ ma_\ ~ee \U I/1
gum/ Hurk\ ami gl01ifi. _\Oitr
Father 111 hecnen "

M~:t g~ Cou nt \ \, Oh.J~:.,t

East Matn
Pomeroy, Oh

Flun .. l

~

W

Ma l/he» 5 16
74(}.992-2644

or God so IOI'ed the wotld

he gave his on/\
lb&lt;?l!&lt;&gt;ll&lt;'ll SO il . .

Jolm 3: 16

Pomeroy

&amp;noufftr'l

''So l stm e always to keep
my consete nce clear befo re
God and man ..

:ltrr &amp; &amp;afrt~

......

TOu.nu
ITMU'MM

'IAU.IPOI. •
Acts 24: I ,__.,.,.

--·-

-....o.. ...... _...._..._ ........

74(}.992 -6298

MY 2race is sufficient
for thee: for mY
streni!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
It. Cor. 12:9

Off1ce Service &amp; Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

7

�•

.r ' '

N

The Daily.Sentinel

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

.. ,

.

.

Congress shall make- no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the .
free o:ercise thereof; o·r abridging the freedom
· of SJJeecll, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Gor:ernment for a redress of grievances.
~T he

First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
..

VIEW

READER'S

Friday, May 20, 2005

Buckle up.
Click It or Ticket to begin .
/Jear Editor:
.~ny

people still doh't take one of the simplest and most
c·ITcc tive steps to stay safe: buckling up. According to the
'iationa l Highway Traffic Safety Admin istrat ion (NHTSA) of
the 3 1.904 passenger ve hicle occupan ts who were killed in
c-rashes in 2003. 50 percent of them we ren't wearing safety
hdt s.
Tccn.1~ers and yo ung adults. and those drivin g pickup
tru&lt;.: ks. and Ji, ing in rura l areas are partiwlarly at risk. Motor
,·chicle crashes are. the lead ing cause of death for teens and
voung ad ults in the United States from age 16 through 34,.
ac,o rdi ng' to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
.
.mll safety belt use by pickup truck occupants is abo ut 70 percent. among the lowest for any demographic group. Safety
hc lt use in rural areas was a little better at 76 percent in 2004.
hut , till below the national ave rage.
Smnetime' the fear of getti ng a traffic ticket is the only rea'nn that s;m1eone will wear a safei y belt. That's why State and
local law enforcement officers across the country are joining
the national Cli&lt;.:k . It or Ticket May 2005 MobiJization that
run s t'rom May 23 through June 5. Otlicers will aggressively
ticket unbc ltcd drivers and passengers. High-visibility
~nfo rcemeni has proven effective in increasing safety belt use.
.&lt;\ simil;1r mobi lization held this past year in May 2004
helped increase .the national belt use rate to an all time high of
HO percent. The combination of active Ia-;: enfo rcement. highprofile publicity. and the advocacy and promotion by public
and pri' ate gro ups continues to be an extremel y effective
means for mcreasing safety belt use - . and saving lives aero" the country.
.
Bottom Line - law enforcement· officers would rather
v- rite someone a ticket than find that same person dead or critically injured because he or she wasn't restrained in a crash.
. Wear yo ur safety belt·every trip, every time - and encourage teen-agers and you ng adults, pickup truck drivers, and
thpse li vi ng in rural areas to do the same - or risk getting a ..
. ticket especiall y May 23-June 5.
Mark E. Proffitt,

Thi s in&lt;.: ident happened
quite a tC\v years ago. I was a
you ng dergyman driving
down the streets pf Boston. I
made a le ft-hand turn at a
li gh t where it was clearly
George
marked. •·No left turn ." A
Plagenz
policeman spotted me &lt;llld
pulled me over to the cu rh.
I was .wearing a clerical
coilar ami after I rolled uow n
the window to talk to the olli- sa1cl tlley ' had forgiven the
' ccr I sa1d v-i th a smil e. dru nken teenage driver who
"Forg ive us our ·trespa"es." ki lled their
3-year-o ld
It was a bad joke and he did- d&lt;~ug ht e r. · That n1uS1 he one
n't laugh. Instead he gave me of .the most diffic\ilt kinds qf
a ticket.
fi1rgivencss .
• · Jes us said we sfiou ld forIt is the rare- pe1:son who
give our brnthei- "sevent y doesn't carry some grievance
times seven:·· I wa~n·t asking against somebody else whom
the arrest1n ~ o fficer to be he is unwil ling t11 forgive. Or
anyw here ne...Ur that niagJ?a ni- · maybe feeling a sense of reli mous. One aci of forgive ness gimiS obligation fie will say,
on his part wou ld do it.
" I forgive him - but 1 can
1 was of course being face· .. never lorget what he did .''
tious. We know Jesus wasn't
To forg ive but not to forget
asking that judges and tile · usual IV means not to forg ive.
police forg ive those who vio- Aut hoi· Dorothy Sayers once
late the law. Few of \IS - at wrote. '·Forgiving means to
least umil we ru n afoul of the act as if It had never haplaw ourselves - would want pened."
it that way.
So me medica l studies
What Jes us had in mind show that a personal it y prowas more like .the late Pope file of cancer victims can
John Paul IJ's public act of inc ludes bitterness. resentforg iving the man who once ment and holding a grudge.
tried to assass inate him. That
Mini sters remind their
forg iveness did not. howev- congregations that Je sus
er. take the· form of getting wa rned that. if we don't fo rthe man released from . g iv e our fellow men .and
women , God won ' t forgive
pnson .
.
There was a story in the us. But if we do, God will. ·
What these doctors and
paper about two parent&gt; who

clergymen arc tellir~g us i~.
that for~ivi111'
ot her~ rs one .ot
'
e

Obituaries

the nice things

\Ve

can do for

ourselves - for our health
and salvat ion.
Sometimes we are waiting.
we sav. for the other party to
sav he's sorry. Jes us, we
OLigh t to be remi nded. forgave those who kill ed him
· wi thm1t the ir giving any hint
that they were sorry. When
he fo rgave the ad ulteress he ·
said onl y. "Go and .si n no
more .'' He demanded no
promise from her that her ·
ev il life was behind her.
Somct illles. as Jesus of
cm1rse knew. it is· the act of
forgiveness that moves the
wrongdoer to repent&lt;tnce .
Some of us who find it relatively easy to forgive injustices done to us sy n1pathi ze
with those who don ' t forg ive .
··t &lt;.:an never forgive
1ncompetcnce,
says th e
. emplo yer who fires th e
incompetent worker. Do we
reall y want him to fo rgive .
incompetence and retain the
worker'~ Maybe once · or
twice - but 490 time s (70
times 7)'1 Jesus would never
make it in the busine ss world
whe re to show forgiveness
would be un forgivable.
A magazine report on ·the
I0 toughest corporate executives h1 the country showed
that the characteristics that
di stingu ished them are arroga nce, gratuitou s cruelt y.

Arlis B. lhomton

ARE THl:Y
COMPARIN&amp;
ME.TO

lETS

DARTH

VADER?

,.....__.....

RIOT
OVER
THAT

NEXT

•

he less than 300 words. All /etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
he published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

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l

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Bill Clinton's desire to
succeed Koti Annan ·as secretary-general of the United
Nation s when the latter
steps down next year has
now graduated from the
rumor stage to that of a fact
as well-established as such
a thing can·reasonably be at
this point in the ga me.
In a wav it's so obvious
that one c'an reproach oneself for not havi ng foreseen
it sooner. At 58 and in reasonably ·- good
health
(despite his recent bypass
surgery) . .the fom1er president can expect a decade,
or even two, of potentially
prOductive years ahead of
him. i)nd. barred · by the
Constitution from -running
for president ·again, his present rather aimless life mu;t
be a continuinc (rustration.
He · can travel' almost anywhere on the globe. being
greeted by adoring crowds
and make a hundred grand
or so per ·speech. but that's
a far cry indeed from playing a genuinely imponant
role . in some major political
context. What doe, a former president of the United
States. fQrcibly retired at ' a
cruelly early age. do for an
encore·&gt;·
The . job of 'ecretary-general ;eem~ the perfect
answer.
Whatever
,it&gt;,
defect; · and Iimitation'. it
cert~inly 4ualitie' a; a

- - - : -.------~TOLEDO (AP) -· Since (he
narrow defeat of a high-tech
development proposa l two
) ears ago. Gov. Bob Taft's
administration has been
reaching out to farm groups to
win their support.
It hasn't worked yet.
Ohio Fann Bureau leaders
say they've seen some positive changes. but the intluential organizmion isn' t ready to
endorse · another attempt at
puttin~ more money into
attracung high-tech businesses:
The president of the Ohio
Fart;ners Union has concerns
too.
Taft's Third Frontier proposal will be on the ballot
again in November as part of a
$2 billion bond issue that also
would put money into road
and bridge repairs and new
sites for · factories and · businesses.
Also i'ncluded is $500 million for high-tech researc h
and developmen\.
Backers say the campaign
will make an effort to pitch
the proposal to community
groups and organi za~ion s.
"This will be a much more

grassroots driven can1paign. ··
. said
Mark
Rickel.
"
~poke"""" fnr the governor.
"Part of that effort will focus
011 how the Third Fromier
applies to the agricui!Ure comnlllnity."
Former House Speaker Jo .
Ann Dandson. a Republican.
will help lead .t.h~ campaign. ·
"We need to take the message
to the commu nity level." she
sitid.
. She said a earant awarded to
Ohio State Un iversity last
wee k should show the. fa rm
community just how the progr;qn can benefit them. The
universit y will get S 11.6 mdl10n to create a center th;it will
look at how corn and soybeans can be used to .develop
industrial products.
,,
In December. the state also
gave out $1.5 million (or
research into · turn ing farm
waste into elec tricity.
Taft has met wit h leaders of·
the Oh1o Fa_v11 Bwe.tu to outIme h1s agenda and hear their
concerns.
· The farm bureau opposed
the measure in 2003 because
it felt the state should tirst
.address workers compensa:
tion laws. the tax cOde and
lawsuit abuse.

Ground zero cultural center billed as
gateway to memory, window to future

BY VERENA DOBNIK
. visual arts area devoted to drawArli s B. · Thornton. 83, Vinton (Meigs County). died ·
ASSOC.IA
TED
PRESS
WRITER
ing. a visitor's hub imd a center
Thursday. May 19, 2005, in O'Bleness Memorial Hospifal,
foc using on the global struggle
Athens.
Arrangements will be announced by the ·McCoy.Moore
NEW YORK - The planned fvr freedo m, according to plans
Funeral Home, Vinton.
cultuml center at the World unveiled Thursday.
Tnlde Center site will house a
The avant-garde World Trade
Center Cultural Center will be
suspended from a suppo11 b1idge
and its crystalline surt:.1ce will be
Bv MARY DALRYMPLE
tem well enough to evaluate tits· me as a citizen of a com- sprinkled with glass prisms pulAP .TAX WRITER
whether it is fair or not," munity. However, funding a sating \iiith light. The building's
wrote Jo shua Nathaniel child tax credit - middle . roof will be landscaped.
In the seemingly weightless,
WASHINGTON - When Pritikin of Santa Barbara. class welfare - is preposterfive-story edifice overlooking
a presidential commission Calif. "A fair tax system ous!"
asked tax payers for their should be so obviously fair
Memorial Plaza, ''we've created
Peter Dobush. who 1s a pJace of re necdon, yet &lt;~ so a
thoughts about tax 'laws. they that 1 ~ hould be able to judge
got a stream of replies that its fairness without getti ng a divorced, told the panel he place of enelb'Y·" said architect
could be summed up by one college degree in economics." supports hi s children like any Craig Dykers, whose firm
from Harry Brown of Port
Most upsetting to many tax- other father but gets little help designed the center. "It will be
Huron. Mich.
payers who took the time to with those expenses because both a gateway to the memorial
"There ~ as got to be a better write the commission is the he must tile as a "single" tax- &lt;llld a window to a bright future. "
way than this,'' Brown ·wrote. seemingly arbitrary nature of payer.
Groundbreaking for tl1e cul-·
"Examples are clothes, tum] center is s~ heduled for
The hundreds of public tax breaks. They sound good
comments submitted to the . uiuil you look at the tine school tuition. maintammg a 2007 with completion in 2009.
President's Advisory Panel on print. Then ~ou see that the separate place for the childre il
The Norway-based designer,
Federal Tax Reform, a com- rules disquahfy many taxpay- such as extra bedrooms In my
Snohetta.
was chosen from 34
mission studying ways · to ers; or that the benefit is not apartment. sporting activity
make tax laws fairer and sim- nearly as helpful as it looks.
fees, clothes, foOd, and. all the applicants and is known for the
pler, show · taxpayers in disGary H. Burger of Tempe, normal ex pen ses associated Alexandria Libmry in Egypt, !!he
tress.
Ariz., told the panel that so with raising a family. " he Norwegian Embassy in Berlin
Tax laws and forms cannot many things in the tax laws · wrote. "Buy a video game imd the . soon-to-be-completed
New National Opem in Oslo..
be deciphered, they said. are unfair, it's hard to know lately?"
Paperwork takes too much where to start.
Also at the unveiling
A married . coupl e from ThillSday, Gov. George Pataki
time. Tax! professionals cost
"Try the child' tax crl'dit,''
too much. No one sh"uld he wrote: "It ends at age 1·6. Jacksonville. Fla., wrote to said a new plan would be ready
have to be a tax attorney or an Do your 17- and 18-year-olds complain that' they make too by the end of June for the 1,776much money to qualify for foot Freedom Tower, which will
accountant to meet the basic cost you less, or more?"
certain family tax benefits,
responsibilities of citizenship.
Tax breaks for married cou- even though "we really li ve be the apex of the new trade cenAnd many suspect lobbyists ples discriminate against sinter. Police criticized tl1e current
pretty much check to check plan as leaving the building too
wrote a lot of the tax laws.
gle taxpayers who pay more
"I don't understand the sys- and get fewer henetits. wrote like the rest of America ...
vulnemble to ·bombs canied in
"I ask that the tax reform vehicles. The tower is now to be
Deidre East.
"As a single person, I· am panel . take a Serious look at · set back farther from the street. .
sick and tired of subsidizing the disparity in treatment
married people and children between the truly wealthy and
that are not mine," East those who someone decided
wrote. "Funding schools have an income that they conthrou gh my taxes when I sider to be ' wealth,'" they
from Page A1
don 't have children still bene- wrote.
Housing
and
Grants
Meigs County Common Administrator Jean Trussell .
Pleas Court.
Commissioners acknow l.·
Richard Long, Middleport, edge donations toward the
RACINE - The Racine
on an indictment from Meigs renovation of the Meigs
from Page A1
high School class of 1960 is
County Common Pleas County Jail from 'the Racine
having a get-together at J., charge of alleged domestic Court.
American Legion and Edith
p.m. Saturday, May 28, at th~ violence.
·
Wanda Merinar, 'Racine, Sisson of Pomeroy.
Racine Library. All classCommiss
ioners
signed
a
Mary Franc.is, Pomeroy. on a bench warrant · for
mates and friends are invited.
Wai
ver
of
~iority
for
Vicki
CHESTER - · The Eastern on a bench warrant for alleged· domestic violence · Cundiff.
.
and a bench warrant fo r
High School class of 1960 alleged failure to appear. ·
Commissioners
al
so
Martin Pierce, Rutland. on allegeq failure to pay old
will have a get-together
appro ved payment of bills in
Saturday, May 28 at the Long an indictment from the Meigs fines.
the amount of $502,222.59.
Bottom
Community County Co mmc.n Pleas - John Hunnell , Syracuse, with 212 entries recorded.
on a bench warrant for
Building. It will begin at Court .
The meeting was . called
Steven Neville, Pomeroy, alleged failure to· pay old into execut ive session to disnoon and all classmates and
on ·an indictment from the tines. ,.
friends are invited.
cuss 11ersonnel matters with
Meigs County Jobs and
Family
Services Exec uti ve
stack,
it's
so
much
cheaper
if
stru ction, the building of the
Director
Mike Sw isher.
wider, thicker pirrt toward the you put them in now," Young
Present
for the mee ting
bottom goes a little slower, said. "This gives us the
from Page A 1
Young said. Currently; crafts- option of installing the fut ure was Davenport; Sheets.
men are pouring the wall at a technology without too big of Trussell, Swisher and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.
Mountaineer ha~e come from thickness of 27 inches, and a cost"
The future technology of
over the United S_tates. the current rate of growth· is
which
Young speaks is a wet
'· between 50 and 60 feet per
and a few from overseas.
electrostatic
precipitaior
Arrow Concrete has built a week.
(ESP).·
The·
plant
already has
"For now .it goes up a little
batch plant nearby to mix all
the concrete for the stack, slower but it will pick up," ESPs, but ot the dry, not wet.
~ &amp; I\IEDICAL EQUIPI\!ENT
•
variety.
which will total 50,000 cubic Young said.
,
yards when all is said and
In building the first tew . The stack is being built
HELlOS
PERSONIU..
done. ·
hundred feet of the stack, using slipform construction,
.
OXYCEN
SYS1fM
The stack is part of a $5Q7 . · craftsmen have put in place which: was invented in
Easy to ~arl)l.
.
million project to install a both openi ngs co¥ered . ~Y · Germany in 'the 1940s to
···-·
......
......
•
Cool,
qUiet
optratiOn.
flue gas desulfumatton plywood where the scrubbers build mi ssile silos in World
• weighs just 3.61bs. filled
(FGD) system at the plant. will be installed. and places War II. Work began in • Requires no electricity or ban!ri~.
up to 10 hours at a setting of 2.
Wheri complete, the FGD where the concrete has been December. when the founda- ·Lasts
·Takes about 40 sec.ohds to fil l.
system, commonly known as poured thin, so that it can be tion was built, electrical. and • Operates Upright. on its ba'k or tn any
position inbetween.
a scrubber, will reduce sulfur knocked out easily in . the water lines were rerouted and
dioxide emissions at the plant fu ture should Appalachian infrastructure was put ' in
740-446-0007
by as much as 98 percent.
Power decide to install even place to house the new equipWhile the stack is expected more advanced emission- ment. said Phil Moye,
Toll Free 877-669·0007
spokesman for Appalachian
to climb an average of 100 cleaning technology.
·
'70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Locally owntd. Wt cart abou1 you!
feet per week during con"\Yhile you're building a Power.

Local
briefs

Secretary- General Clinton?

Letti:i·s to the editor are welcome. They should

Bv JOHN SEEW,ER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Public tells presidential panel to scrap tax laws

Chief,
Pomeroy Police Departme11t

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Farm groups not ready to embrace high-tech ballot issue

Hilda D. Wilson. 8..:1. of New Haven, died May 18. 2005. at
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation .
She was retired from the Ai leen Sewing Factory, and was a
botn agai n Christian. She was a member of the Mt. Olive
United Methodist Church in Strasburg. Va .. and Father's
·
House Church in Hartford.
Wilson was born Oct. 26, 1920, in Strasburg. Va .• daughter
of the late Robert Franklin Dyke and Florence Virginia
(Conner) Dyke.
.
In additi on to her parents, she was preceded in death by her
husband. Thomas Edward Wilson : sons. Ri chard 'Wymer,
Shelby Wymer and William Edward Wil son: granddaughter. ,
Tracey Wymer; brothers, Warner. Louis and Robbi e Dyke:
and a sister in infancy.
.
Survivors incIude daughter/son-in-law. Cecelia Ann
(Wi lson) and Sam Eugene McKinney. Sr of Hartford:
son/daughter- in-law . .Raben "Bob" and Vivian Wyiner of
Wardensville. Va.: grandchildren. Eddie McKinney. Robin
Wymer. Lisa Barb. La ura Shr'um. Eric Wymer. Gene Wymer,'
Tony Wymer. Boyd Wymer. Dean Wymer. Stella See, .Robert
Wy mer. Jr. and Clarence Wymer; II great-grandchildren:
brotherslsisters-i'n-law. Henry and Joy Dyke of Toms Brook,
Va .. Anhur and Fleda Dyke oflbms Brook, Ya.: sister, Yosbel
Dellinger of Toms Brook , Va.; sister/brother-in-law, Ann and
John Nicholes of West Virginia ancj man y nieces and
nephews.
Services wi ll be held at I p.m. Monday at Stover Funeral
Home in .Strasburg, Rev. Sam McKinney, Sr. officiati'ng.
Yis.itation wi II be held at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home on ·
Friday from 5:30-8)0 p.m. , and at Stover Funeral Hqme on
Sunday from 6-9 p.m . She will be buried in the Ri verview
Cemetery in Strasburg.
Pallbearers wi ll be Warner Dyke. Eddie McKinney, Eric
Wymer, Robert Wymer. Jr, Clarence Wymer and Kevin
Wymer.
Co ndole nces
may
be . emailed
to
fog lesongt ucker@ rny y.; ay.com.

se lf·centeredness and lack of
consideration fo r others. Yet
they are high among the role
models for American corporate executives.
However much this is true .
most of us are not aspiring to
corporate leaders hip or hoping to be picked for a covete~
spot on "The· ApprentiCe .
We can therefore - if we
wan t to - try to become
more forg iying in our per-.
sonal relationships. H•w ·'
One woman 1 know does
this each Le nt. She makes a
li st of people in her life from
whom she has become
estranged for one reason or
another and she gets in touch
with ·them. If the estrangeme nt is because of ~o mething
thev have done. she doesn't
say: " ! want you to know I
fo rgive you." '("Neve r - do
that:· she says. "it put s you in
a superior positiqn").
Sl1e says something like,
" We haven't seen each other
in a long time. How are
youT or "How about having
lunch next wee k?"
Whatever brought on the
breach between them, she
·'acts as if it had never happened.'' That. as Dorothy
Sayers said, is the onl y tflle
forgiveness.
'
· (G~orge Plagenz is an
ordaitied minister and vetera/1 11ewsma11 based i11
Columbus, Ohio.)

William
Rusher

major post ·- the closest
approx imation there is
(albeit not ve ry close) to a
"presidency of the world:'
It involves frequent travel,
lots of speeches and a mod·
est amount of admini strative drudgery. but very little
rea ll y heavy lifting of the
kind a president of the
UniteJ .States confronts
every day. Best of all, the
pre&gt;tige of the United
Nations i&gt; current ly at an
all-time low. thanks to the
oil-for-food scandal and all
sorts ol' other embarrassments (including alleged
sexual mi sconduct . among
U.N. employees in Africa).
C linton could reasonably
hope to improve matters
and retire someday with
accolades
for
having
cleaned up the ' me".
And yet. there are some
major obstacles in Clinton\
way. It's true. of course.
that t~e Uniteu i\ation&gt;
wmi ld not norm;illy choose
a citiLen of the world\ only
~uperpowe r a~ It&gt; head. ~ut

Clinton is so popular· in
many countries normally
hostile to the United States
that he is probab ly the sole
exception to that rule .
More dirticult is the probkm raised by his w.ife's
well-known intention to run
for the presidency of the
United States in 2008. No
doubt the Clintons, wi th
Bill ~t that poi nt well into
his second year as secretary-gene ral , would try to
depict the combination as
downrig ht beneficial: How
, convenient it would be to
have th ~ president o( the
United States whispering
the nation's wishes to the
• secretary-gene ral of the
Uni ted .Nations as a form of
' pillow talk 1
But American . voters
m1ght well be mchned to
think that the world would
be better off not being run
exclusively by the Clinton
family. If Jeb Bu sh's mem:
bership · in the · " Bush
dynasty" · is considered an
obstacle to a presidential
race by him in 2008 (and it
i' ). what should w.e be
expected to think of havi ng
the
world's • closest
approach to a government.
and the world's most powerful nation, ruled by a husband-and-wife team ry
Then too. there is the
q u e~ tioq
of
obtaining
Pre,ident Bush's consent to

Reunions
planned

Clinton's designation as
secretary-general. It 's all
very well to say that his
· consent isn't technically
necessary, and that. if it
were
withheld,
many
nations would cheerfully
vote for C linton just to put
a thumb in Bush's eye; bul'
the fact is that diplomatic
protocol would absolutely
require Bush's approval. ·
But, curiously. enough.
Bill Clinton has been snuggling up to the Bush family
rather ostentati ously · in
recent · months. President
. Bush designated his own
father and - Clinton as
America's team to inspect
the aftermath of the Indian
Ocean tsunami, and the two
were afterward reported to
have gotten along famously.
Clinton is well known tor
being able to charm a dog
down off a meat-wagon,
and he may now be focu s. ing on the Bush fami ly with
something more. than mere
camaraderie in mind .
·So keep an eye on Slick
Willie, and let's . hope
President . Bush has some
other candidate in mind for
the post of secretary-generat of the United Nations.
(How about John Bolton?)
· (William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of
the Claremont Institute for
the Study of Statesmanship
and Political Philosophy.)

I

Plant ·.

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As'

www .mydailysentinel.com

Hilda Wilson

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· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Friday, May 20, 2005

The path to forgiveness

The Daily ·Sentinel

.

PageA4

Jacl Fisher. execu ti ve ,·icc
pnislllent of farm bureau. 'aiel
th e ·'organization ha' been
pleased by 'omc change' in
those area'. but it won't
decide until August "hether
to back the ballot initiati,·c.
"We want to see how the
state budget ends up." he said.
"We want to see h&lt;&gt;w thev ~o
forward wi th the tax refOI:m~..
He said the farm hureau ·'
concerns about the economy .

PuttinQout more money for
Jthanol ' and bin-diesel fuels ·
would he a hetter u,e. Logan
..,a1U
"All of th&lt;hC things can
bring back vaJue to the coun·
tryside:· he ;aid. "Jt", pretty
hard Ill turn \our back on
rc&gt;earch. but r;n not sure thi'
is a ve ry well. thought out
approach." ·
John Green. director of the
Ray C. Bli» ln ,t itute of
Applied Poli tics at the
Uni,ersity of Akron. sa id
courtuJg rural \'\lter::-, is a wise
mllve but slltiu ldn 't he the

are ro()ted in the fact that ··a

lot oi· .farm famil ies hold jobs
off the f;mn. The backbone of
a loi of rura l com mun itie; is
an agri cu lture .business."
One change alre;1dy made in
the Third Frontier program
has made it e'tsier for a!.!based • us ine,ses to compete
for the research gra nts.
"They've heard us. Fi,her
said. "They realized we have a

{'l!l!v one.

"The gowrnor really needs
to reac h out to a lot of people ... Green said . "One of the
problems with the lir&gt;t effo11
was the focus. on umversit ies
with manufa.cturing ties. We
heard very little about bring-

va lid point."

Ohio
Farmers
Union ing h1~h 1ec h to agriculrurc ...
Gell ing the farm bureau on
President Joe Logan saic! he's
not convinced that farmers board would he an advantage
wi.l,l ben.efit from the type of give n its intluencc in Ohio\
research that the plan will sup- }arm communit i·cs. h~ sa id.
Green said addi n): money
pan ..
for
road and .bridge repairs to
lie thinks it's &gt;til l too
foc·u5ed on universities .1nd the ball.ot issue could hdp win
corporations.
"' er farmers too. "We all nc~d
"Will farme r' benetit''" he 10ads:· he said . "Fa nn~rs realsaid. "I real ly have questions ." ly need the r.oads."

Brown wins Ohio StAte Bar
Association.writing contest
RACINE
- Ash ton
Brown. dau ght er of Robe,rt
and Cindy Brown of Racine.
recen tl y wo n the Regional
writi ng contest of the Ohio
State Bar Association.
Ash ton. a sen1or at
Southern High School. wrot e
about the validity and fairness of the Ohio Graduation
Test and standardi zed test in g
in ge neraL Out of the 159
papers that qualified th1'ough
the reg ionals, Ashton\ paper
made the top 17 in the State
of Ohio.
Eac h
year. the OSBA sponsors a
writing contest ca lled the
"There Ought to· be a Law"
contest. a teaching program
which Engli sh teac her Scott
Wolfe uses in his classroom.
Over the past four years. stu·
dents in Wolfe's classes have
.won the· regional portion of
the con tes t. Overall , ' 48
school s are represented 111
the region .
'Tm very proud of

Ashton Brown

Ashton,'' said Wolfe. She
always does . an outstanding
job, and with her abilities
has the potential to do anything she wants in life . It is
a ~rea t honor to have some- ·
one advance to be a state
fmali st, and it is especia ll y .
rewarding hl have a winning
essay from our school."

EPA won't allow partial treatment
at sewage plants in storms
tio)l of pollutants in wa~tes after
heavy rains.

BY JOHN HEILPRIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON The
Protection
Environmental
Agency said Thursday it will
not allow sewage treatment
plants to skip a process for
killing· some disease-causing
micro-organisms after heavy
rains or snow melts. The decision reverses a plan propcised in
November 2003.
Just hours after EPA's
announcement, the House
approved a measure to block the
agency's 2003 proposal from
taking effect. Reps. Bmt Stupak,
D-Mich.. E. Clay Shaw, R-Ra ..
Frank Pallone. D-N.J .. and Jeff
Miller, R-Ra.. had oflered it
before EPA's about-face.
If the EP.'\ had adopted the
policy, U.S. ·st·wage plants
might have avoided an estimated $90 billion or more in facility upgrades to allow for ox ida-

1:15,3:15,7:15 &amp;
UNLEASHED (R)
1
7:30 &amp; 9:30

THE LONGEST YARD (PG13)
MADAGASCAR (PG)

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Chiropractor of the .yellt

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V.P. WV Chiropractic 1oc,ety
Me~r of Ameri_,R&lt;Jard hf

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Page.f\6 .

BYTHE BE

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 20,

2005

First birthday observed. Community Calendar

Submt:tted photo

Receiving· awards ·for volunteer ~e rvice at the Holzer Medical
Center were. left to right, Maxine Carmen ,(5.000 Hours);
Jess1e Payne (20.000 Hours ) and Roxanne Hanington (500
Hours ) with Dawn Halsdtead. director of volunteers services.
Others, recognize·d were Brandl May. George Mcfarland. Diz
Richards and Bertie Roush·.
·

HMC Recognizes Volunteers
GALLIPOLIS - Hol zer
Medi&lt;:al Center recently
observed volunteer week by
honoring its \'o!umccrs at

lh~

hospitaPs
J3 rd . An nual
Volunteer
Awards
and
Recbgniri on Program.
:fhis year's theme was
"Vo lumccrs Live Wel l. Love
Much. Volunteer Often". A
dinner was sei·ved 'th the vo lunteer&gt; and guests that
included members of the
Hospital's
administrative
sraff. and stall members who
benefit daily from the dedicated work of the Hospital's
volunteers.
Service award recipient s
incl4ded: I00 Hours
·
Brandi May and Bertie
Roush:
500 · Hours
Roxanne Hanington and .
George McFarland: 5,000
Hours - Moxine Carmen and
Diz Richards: and 20,000
Hours - Jessie Pay ne. who
was give n special recogni·
tion of her many years of service and volu nteer hours that
equal to ten years of employment al Holzer Medical
Center.
In add iti on to se rvice

aw ards. volunteer~ ~ece i ving .
hou rs bars included: 200
Hours - Bertie Roush: 300
Hours - Brandi Mayo: 400
Hours - Louise Nickels; 600
Hours - George McFarland:
Naomi
t .500 Hours
Gooderham: 2.000 Hours
Jeane Fisher; 2,500 Hours Mick Gilbert: 3.500 !:foursVelma Rue: -1.000 Hours Ann Longstaff; 4.500 Hours
- Vivienne Trowbridge and
Wanda Waugh : 5.5 00. Hours
- Diz Richards: and It ,000
Huu" - Eltabelle McDonald.
"O ur volunt eers are an
invaluahlc

reso urce

who

sel tlessly give their time, talents and skills to benetit others eve ry day". said Dawn
of
Hal stead.
Director
Volunteer Services at Holze r
Medical Center. Along with
their dedication and commitment . our volunteers "brighten li ves" with their ge ntle
touch and kind a&lt;.:ts to everyone they help. "
For information about the
vo lunteer
opportunities
Holzer Medical Center has to
offer. contact Halstead at
(740) 446-5056.

POMEROY Jessica
Pai ge Workman. daughter of
BJ and Lacy Workman of
Pomeroy. celebrated her first
birthday on May 6.
A party · was held in her
honor at her parents' home. A
Hawaiian · luau theme was
&lt;.:arried out complete with 'l
barbecue. Attending or send. ing gifts 1iJere · maternal
grandparents Albert and
Sandy · Banks ' of Pomeroy.
Marcia and Sonny Shankle
of Frederick. Md .. maternal
great-grandmother Doroth y
Day of Pomeroy. Gerry
of
Pomeroy.
Lightfoot
Martha and Dean Weinkauf
of The Plains. paternal greatgrandparents Robert and
Jessica Workman
Joanne Vaughan of Pomeroy,
paternal grandfather Bob gra ndparents Co nard and
Workman of Rutland.
Thelma Belcher ol Pomerov.
Jean ie and Martina Arms Kelli and Isaac McCarty of
of Racine, Brittany Mann of · Pomeroy, Tom and MaryEtta
Fairmonr. ' W.Va .. Art and Burn side of Pomeroy. Vern
Amy Fleming of fairmont. and Cindy Castle of Athen s.•
W.Va., Jere my Banks of maternal grand mother Cathy
Pomeroy, Butch. Bonn ie , and Workman of Pomeroy. Bob
Jerry Lightfoot of Pomeroy. Titus of Pomeroy. Bob and
Linda Darnell of Pomeroy. Chnsttne Day oi· Pomeroy.
Mi ssy and Joey Ryder of Linda Rapp ot Pomerox. and
Pomeroy. paterna l great- _Clauuia Guffey of Glouster

Laurel Cliff women have banquet
POMEROY - "Jes us is oiven .to Linda Rowe . .le&lt;.m
the Rock" was the theme of Wright. Clarice · J:uyis. · and:
the recent ladies spri ng .ban- Vonda • Herman and each
quet held at 'the Laurel C li ff received fl owers. Games
Free Methodist Church
.we re played with · p:rizes
Brenda Haggy sa ng " In hei ng won by Teresa
Times t.ike These'' and was Reynold s
and
Voncla
then joined by Becky Eblin to Herm an .
Linda Row e had prayer
sing "Standing on the Solid
Rock." Jean Wright prese nt- before the banquet. Others
ed a reading entitled "The attending were Bea Clark.
Rock." "The Wi se Man and Marie Weaver. Sharon Smi th,
· the:&gt; Foolish Man" was sung Betty Sayre, Cath y Cli fford,
by Sharon. Wright, Alexis Debra and · Emma Morris.
Meadows and Drew lyn' Ariel Landi s, Mary Ann
Lemley.
Vanover. Karolyn Walsh.
A fashion show was pre· June Soulsby. Wanda Ebl in.
sented by Linda Rowe and Aladine Baker, Stacy Hyse.ll.
Teresa Rey nolds with models . Donna Gilmore, Judy Wolfe.
being Jane Alsept. Teresa Kim and Hope Zuspan. Joyce
Reynolds, Cheryl Dunkle. Haggy, Lynn W ri~ht. Jessica
Ashlee Reynolds, Vonda and and Sha ron Wnght. E(l la
Grace
Herman .
Linda Odegard, Shirley and Karen
Hoalcraft,
Janelle Meadows, Doric Surface.
Bendervi ch, Susie Bryan t Diana Johnson, Ida Martin.
and Becky Eblin.
Kathy Pullins , Debbie Coup,
Special recognition .was Sue Marr and Janice Haggy.

Church events

Public meetings
I\ Iunday. Ma~· 23 ·
POMEROY
- Veteran'

S~rvicc: Commi~~ion. 9 a.m ..
117 Memorial Dr.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Library Bmml wilt
meet at :. p.m . at the Pomeroy

Lihrary.

Monday, May 23
SALEM CENTER
Sli l ~m To.wn,hip Trustees'
Saturdav, May 21'
monthl y . meeting. 6 p.m . at
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va .
Salem Fir~housc on Ohi o - A [!lbp&lt;l ' in g will be held
I 2-1.
~
at 7 p.m. at th e Point Pleasant
Chun.:h of God . 22nd Street.
Tuesday, May 24
bc rwfit of the WorJd
POMEROY
The for
Chri
stian
Outreach Ministry.
Mnrl.!an ·~ · Raid 2006 or1!ani lational meeting will be'hetd The o.; in"t:l'"' wi ll h~ Proclaim. ·
at t 0 ·a.m. at the Meigs The C:dlo: Fami ly. and tile
Coulllv
Chamber
of Bledsoe Famitv. Money wi ll
Comnicrcc. RSVP by ca lli ng go toward boiiding churches
in Africa.
·
;
992-2239.
POMEROY - The Kings
of lancaster wi ll be .-..irigin g al
and
7 p.m. at the Pomeroy levee.
Spoi1sor~d
by Meigs Arect
organizations
.
.
HulineS&gt; A»ociation.
Saturday, May 21
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #77g ,and Star Junior
Gran.:e #87H wilt hold
Saturdav, Mav 21
their Fun Night and Potluck . CHESTER ·_ .A meta l
Sup!Jer on Saturday May 21 tookin£ c l ~1ss where co pperwith supper at 6:3 0p.m.
~ cmbo ...;Sed pi..: tures wi l.l be

Clubs

Other events

"''"lc wi t be held from t 2:30
1\'lrmda:". \Ia)· 23
1, ~p. m . at the Chester courtI'U\IFP U Y il'l' U t- . house
Museum . R e~e rva tion s
Kan Cc ,n Club will meet at R
are
to
he mad e with Pat
p.m. :.t the Pomeroy Library
Htilter.
992-726
t.
·
in "e ad of the usual date
POMEROY
Mei ~s
which fa lls pn Memorial Day.
County
Health
Department
There will be a class·on gradand · Middlepo rt -Pomeroy
ing from 5: t 5 to 6:.\5 p.tll.
Rotary Club ho,ts an outTuestlay, May 24
reach imm unilation cli nic
RACINE - The May meet- from tO a.m. until noon at
·ing of the Racine Area ·Powel l's Foodfair. Bring shor
Conmmnity' Organization will records, .rnedic'll cards . 'chiitt
be held at 6:30 p.m. at the mu st be accompanied by parRacine First Baptist Church. All . ent or legal gm~rd ian . $5
RACO. Edison Brace Memorial · donati on ac;cepted but not
and Jim Adams Memorial req uired
for
shot's .
s~hotarship recipients will be Refre shment' provided by
honored irt the dinner.
Rotary Club.
·

Holzer Clinic retirees meet
.

GALLIPOLI S
On
Tuesday. \lay 3, Hol·rer Clinic
hosted the monthl y Ht•lzer
POMEROY - The an nual year witt be unusual as the.
Clinic· Retiree Luncheon. There
Civil War Memorial Day.cer- soldier to be featured witt be
w~ re ·4 retirees in attendance.. emonies . wilt be held at It Pvt. Jame s Bailey. whose
The retiree gnJtli1meetSOn a
a.m. Saturday. May 2 1 at the name does not appear on the
Bv JAMES AND MORRIS
credit card number. Some banks reguhu basis the· first Tuesday
Civil War statue beside the monument due to government
and tinancial institutions, such as of each month .
CAREY
Meigs County Courthouse.
error. .
.
ASSOC IATED PRESS
· Citibank ;md Discover Card,
Robert Daniel; Holzer
Memorial day first began as
Brooks-Grant Camp Sons
offer temptimry one-time, oneholiday
when
·
a
national
of Union Veterans of the Civil
Afraid to shop online because use credit cm'd numbers that are Clinic administrator, we lcomed
War an the Major Daniel General. John A. Logan of the identity thieves might steal your designated for a specitic mer- the retirees ·and introduced
McCook C ircle Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic.
guest speaker Dr. Nicholas
Grant Army of the Republic the largest Union veterans' credit card number? Last year. chant and for a specitic pur- Economides. Hol zer Clinic
. will sponsor the event. The oroan izati o n, issued General nine million people were victims chase.
featured speaker will be noted O;der No. II . establishing of identity theft, with losses to
local ht storian, Michael Memorial Day a a day to victims m1d businesses exceedhonor deceased Union veter- ing $50 billion. Almost one-third
'Gerlach of Middleport.
Each year the event focu ses ans by placing tlowers on the was due to credit-card fmud. "
H ~re's one way to protect
on one of the over 500 sol- grav.es of these men.
The public is invited to yourself with something sifnple
diers on the monumenl who
'died in the Civil war. ·This' attend the ceremony.
mld easy to obtain -- a temporary

Civil War memorial ceremonies set

Protect yourself from identity theft

Three's a crowd when sister butts,into marriage
'band is a couple of years
DEAR ABBY: My hu sband, "Don," and I have been
.yoonger (I call him my "boy
toy"), but I'm sure we looked
married for fi ve years. We
"old" to the pink-cheeked
have two beautiful children.
high school student selling
anu Don is a terrific fath er.
For the most part, we ha ve a
Dear
the tickets.
good · Iife together and get
Abb
This has happened .to meon
a .couple of other occasions,
along well.
and I have said nothing. On
·The problem is his sister,
"Marsha." Marsha has major
the one hatid, I feel like we
are receiving a benefit under
boundary issues, and she tries
false pretenses. On the other
to undermine my ro le as both RED fN MINNESOTA
mother and wife. Their mothDEAR SEEING RED: An hand, I still recall being II
er died young . and · Marsha effective 'counselor is some- and tall for my age, and being
took on the role of mother. . one who is unbiased. A required to buy adult tickets
She still hasn't let go.
worse-tha n-moth e r- in - law from people who didn 't
When Don and l first began should not be assuming the believe I wasn' t 12.
I would never claim to be a
dating, Marsha said some · role of ··counselor." Because
senior
to ge t a di scount, .
extremel y nasty things in an of her dual role in your huseffort to break u' up. ·For band's li fe. she should (ethi· because I'm not . - and. we
did buy popcorn that . ~ve
example. she said I wa~n't hi s call y) disqualify herself.
type (right! ). that he had been
On some level , your hus- might otherwise not have
promi scuous in his past (not band must realize that when purchased. I think to have
true), and that I would never he runs to his sister, she ' ll said something, especially
know Don as well as she automaticall y take his side. after the fact, would have
knows him. (S he sti ll• says it That's neither a fai r nor embarrassed us all. In. your
l)n a regu lar basis.)
healthy solution to your prob- opinion, what's the . right
When Don .and I have · the Iems. Some sess ions with a thing to do? - . JANET IN
rare quarrel, he goes ·ru nn ing professional marriage coun- PALM SPRINGS
DEAR JANET: The tight
off to Marsha for advice. He selor could help you resol ve
also spends time with her l)n your differences. It could also thing Io do is to inquire when
his days off. anq they discuss lengthen - if not sever - . you reach the ticket booth
very personal issues 'in our hi s sibling umbilical cord, how old a person must be to
marriage. Marsha uses this and I strongly recommend it. get a senior discount. The age
personal infonnation as fodDEAR ABBY: I have ;m can vary among different
·establi shments - · including
der for gossip and pretends to ethics question fo r you.
be our ''counse lor." Because . The other night, mrhus- restaurants - · and if you
Don knows it upsets me. he hand and I went to a movie don' t qualify for the discount,
now lie s about ·;isiring her or - something we seldom do. be honest enough to' say so. ·
her coming over. I am on the . When we got into the theater
Dear Abby is written by
brink of telling him I don'! and looked at our ticket stubs. Abigail Van Buren, also
want to sec his sister, any- we realized we'd been known .as Jeanne Phillips,
more.
charged the senior rate rather and was ,founded by her
Other than our issues with than the one for .adult admis- mother, Pauline Phillips.
her, our life is wonderf!il . \ion.
Dear Abby at
'Write
Any advice regarding a
l'n) on ly 5 1, but' I \tarted www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
worse-than-mother-in-ll!w turning gray in college and Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
.
sister-in- law? - SEEING don't color my hair. My !ius- 90069.
'

• __v__ ,

Wedn,esdaJ·, Ma~· 25
POMEROY - A community pr~I)Cr lllt'~ting v..ill_ be
held Jt 7 p.m. on Mav 2) at
the
Entcrpri&lt;c
'united
Meth,,Ji,t
Church
on
Entapri 'c Road . Special
mu,ic wil l be presented by
"Freed By Chri,t." a go, pel '
quartet.

.

plastic surgeon.
Economides gave a presentation on body co.ntouring and
general information on plastic
surgeries. Daniel then gave an
update on activities at Holzer :
Clinic. ir1cluding the Holzer'
Center for Cancer Care and the
Cardiovascular Insti tu te.
The retirees concluded their ·
meeting with a brief business
session condu cted by Hilda
Janey.

The Daily Sentinel

PageA7

NATION • 'W ORLD

Friday, May 20,

Two Koreas end talks with agreement
that doesn't
mention·
nuclear
impasse
.
.

2005

Hurricane
·Adrian hits El
Salvador coast

PUERTO LA LIBERTAD.
El
Salvador (AP)
Bv PAUL ALEXANDER
Agency quoted an unidentiHurricane Adrian slammed
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
lied government spokesman
into E l .Salvador tate'
as saying. " It is very natural
Th.ursdav. cutting off power
SEOUL, South Korea for us to strengthen se lfand unte'ushing heavy·rains in
South Korea· cou ldn ' t get defensive ·nuclear deterrence
an area prone to severe tloodNorth Korea to agree to protect our people's di gniing.
.
1 ·
Thursday to return to nuclear ty and sec urity." .
Some 14.000 people were
arm ~ nego tiations but did . Wh.i.tfr progress at the first
evacuated "' the storm, ' the
persuade the re clusive com- fa&gt;e -to-face talks between
first recorded Pacific hurri munist country to schedule the two Koreas in 10 months
cane to strike El Salvador.
high-leve l talks for next- appeared to be scan!, both
: bore down on the Salvadoran
m.onth where the contentious sides left the North Korean
coast.
issue is certain to come up border to\"n of Kaesong with
, The country's National
again:
small victories and avoided
Service for Territori'al Stud ies
In the meantime,. the North making major con'cessions.
said the hurricane hit near the
is expected to consider an Even the fact that the North
port of Acajutla. · about 35
apparent overture from didn't walk out was seen as a
miles
west Of the capital, San
Washington, whic h sent positive development.
Salvador. Its winds were
diplomats to a secret m~eting . "We have reached these
weakened by contact with.·
las t' week at the Pyongyang good results because North
land
but the full force of the
regime's U.N. office.
and South Korea have pooled
storm, had vet io be felt.
Japan's Asahi newspaper their wisdom and will." said
The
U.S. · National
said senior Stale Department Kim Man Gil, head of North
Hurricane
Center
said Adrian
offic ials offered assurances Korea's de legatio n. "Our
h1d max.imum sustained
the Bush ad,ministration rec- position is also to peacefully
wrmls of about 80 mph
ognizes North Korea as a resolve· the nuclear issue. We
before
landfall .
sovereign nation under Kim are also willing to return to
AP Photo
In
Puerto
La Libertad, the
Jong ll's leadership and does the six-nation talks. It's just South Korean Vice Un ification Minister Rhee Bong-jo, right, toasts with ~is North Korean counbeach ' resort closest to San
not intend to attack it.
thllt the United States should . terpart Kim Man Gil during· their lu ncheon at the North Korean border town of Kaesong, Salvador. streets we re desertWhite House spokes man make the conditions and Thursday. South Korea . raised North Korea's worrisome nuclear p~ogram again as the rival
ed as rains sprayed across an
Trent Duffy confirmed the atmosphere ."
nations sought to wrap up their first face-to-face talks in 10 months Thursday. with the South agi tated surf . and waves
meeting took place , but
Those talks - involving trying to downplay prospects for getting Pyongyang to rejoin s ix-nation talks on the. issue.
pounded at the pier
offered few details . .
the two Koreas, the United
"The electricity has gone
"In the ·past thi s channel States, . China, Japan and
out,
the wind is getting
has been used to convey mes- Russia - are aimed .at get- nuclear program to wring aid. rivals.
lies divided since the Korean stronger and it's raining non- .
sages to North Korea, mes- ting the North to abandon its
"We tried to include the
South Korean media said War or a trial run of two stop," Jorge Alberto Turcios,
~ages of U.S . policy. not to
nuclear arms
program . · North , Korean nuclear iss.ue, that it wo uld be ted by cross-border rail ways.
a guard at a restaurant in La
negotiate." Duffy said. "Thi s Pyongyang said Feb. t 0 that the largest point of con- Unification Minister Chung
South Korea's government Libertad, said by telephone.
time the channel was used to it has nuclear weapon&gt; and tention, in the joint state- Dong-you ng and that there has found itself walking a
Adrian is the eastern
reiterate the message directly, would stay away from the . ment ," said South Korean was a possibility he would tightrope, trying to appease Pacitic's first storm of the
that the North Koreans need talks
until
Washington Vi ce Unification Mini ster visit No rth Korean leade r domestic pressure for some season.
to return to the six-party talks dropped its "hostile" policy.
Rhee Bong-jo.
Kim Jong II. Chung said no improvement in re lations
El Salvador det.:lared an
without pre-conditions, so we
A joint statement said both
"It is so me what ins.uffi- decision had been finalized with the Nor,th. while allies emergency
and . 'closed
can pursue a policy of a Koreas . agreed to work for cient, but by S'lating that on whether he would go, but
sc
hools
once
it
became clear
including
Washington
nuclear-free
Korean peace. It said a follow ,up South and · North Korea he was upbeat about the
press for · action on the Thursday that the storm was .
Peninsula."
Cabinet-level meeting would exe rt joint efforts for results of the talks .
issue.
' headed its way. President
nuclear
North
Korea rej ected proposed by the .South - . the peace of the Korean
"South-North dialogue that
officials
said
last
week
. Tony Saca appealed to people
U.S.
Washington 's recognition of would be held June 21-24 in Peninsula, the South and the has been blocked for t 0
its ·sovereignty, say ing late Seoul. South Korea also will North have ex pressed ·our months witt be normalized, that ·spy satettite s ·spotted to obey evacuation requests.
"We understand that they
Thursday that it was a "lie" to begin providing 200,000 toos active witt to solve the North and (the agreement) will help construction of a tunnel and a
in
North
are
guarding · their belongreviewing
stand
conceal a plan to topple its of fertilize r to the North in Korean nuclear issue."
in the resolu!ion of the North
government.
two days, in time for the
nuclear
issue." Korea that could be possible ings, but lives are worth more
The South also agreed to Korean
indication s of a coming than anything ," he told Radio
"It was dear (the U.S.) ·is spring planting season.
send a delegation ·to · Chung said.
North Korea often · suffers Pyongyang for June I5 cele- · There w:ls· no· mention in nuclear weapons ·test.. South La Chevere.
trying to ignite a fire of
In some cases helicopters
nuclear war on the Korean food shortages and the com- brations of the tifth anni ver- the final statement of South Korean officials dismissed
were
to eva'c uate people.
Peninsula," the North's oni- munist regime regularly uses sary of a hi storic summit . Korea's proposals for another .tlie. reports as lacking firm most used
of whom we re taken to
cial Korean Central News ·brin ks man ship over it s accord between the two round of reunions for fami- evidence.
improv ised
shelters
at
schools.
Rivers rose both El
Salvador and in neighboring
l:londuras, both nations de v-'
Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD womim. This •time, the Seoul frustration that many U.S. sci- mitional ethics guidelines on gins of diseases such as astated b)' Hurricane Mitch
AP MEDICAL WRITER
' scientists created stem cells entists .feel at being left stem-cell research.
Alzheimer's form inside an
Canbbean storm - in
that were genetic matches to behind.
The lead South Korean actual patient's cloned, living 1998.
WASHINGTON - South each of I I patients - male
"It's just going to highlight researcher, Hwang Woo-suk cells, said neuroscientist Fred
The rains be~an to wash
Korean scientists have dra- and female, as young as age 2 the tragedy of our current .sit· . of Seoul National University, Gage of the Salk Institute for out some roads m both counmatically sped up the creation and as · old as 56, suffering uation in America where there said in a telephone interview, Biological Studies in San tries, officials reported.
of human embryonic stem .either spinal cord injuries, are technologies that are 'Therapeutic cloning has Diego. That could point to . At least one death was
cells, growing II new batches diabetes or a genetic immune promising that are not being tremendous,
tremendous new ways to prevent and treat linked to the storm. A milithat for the first time were a disease.
pursued by talented American healing potential, but we have illness, said Gage, who plans tary pilot died Wednesday
genetic rriatch for injured or ' -Last · year, it took ·scientists because of ideolog- .to open so many doors before to .perform some of that work:. when he crashea a small
sick patients.
.
The Seoul researchers col- plane that he was fe rrY.ing ·
· It is a ' major advancement attempts with 242 donated ic constraints," said Dr. Janet human trials."
human
eggs
to
grow
one
.
Rowley
of
the
University
of
More
immediately,
the
lected
eggs that were.donated . from San Salvador's civtlian
in the quest to grow patients'
to a military base as. a ·
. own replacement tissue to batch of stem cells. This time, Chicago. The genetics spe- research will allow scientists by 18 unpaid volunteers and airport
an
average
of
1'7
eggs
cialist
·
helped
write
recent
.
·to
watch
the
very
earliest
ori·
remoYed
the
gene-containing
I precaution against , the heavy
it
took
'·'treat diseases.
·
per batch and 14 eggs jf they.
nucleus trom them.
winds.
The same scientists last were from women younger
year were the first to clone a than 30.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF KANAWHA COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA
human embryo. Now . they
KENNETH
S
REYNOLDS,
- The researchers eliminathave improved, by more than ed use of mouse "feeder
Plainlft,
CNil Aclion No 01·C-53e
..
Pudge Blooml
tenfold, their efficiency at cells" that, until now, have
A&amp;l
COMPANY,
GRANITE
STATE
INSUAANCE
culling these master cells, ·been used to nourish human·
COLIPANY, NEW HAMPSHIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY, AMERICAN
thus making pursuit of thera- stem-cell lines, easing conMOTORISTS INSURANCE COMPANY, OHIO FARMERS
peutic cloning more practical. cerns about animal contamiIN SURANCE COMPANY end SCOTISD~E INSURANCE COMP~Y.
DefendantJ
"I dido 't think they would nation.
NOTICE Qf PENDING CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT
: be at this s ta~e for decades,
The research also will add
PlEASE READ THIS NOTICE CAREFULLY.
let alone withm a year," .said
YOU MAY BEA MEMBEA OF THE PLAlNnFF CLASS IN THIS
to
political
sparring
·over
Dr. Gerald Schatten of tl!e .
ClASS ACTION AND YOUR RIGHTS MAY BE AFFECTED.
I
This oodoe desaibes me proposed seiJiamenl of a class action broug~t agarns1 A&amp; I Corporation I'M I") and II! Insurers I
University of Pittsburgh. He whether to expand govern-.
cell .
ir.;Nding the 'Sf.lnlrng II\IIJrert' (as defined below). If 'fOl.l wele •~posed lo ASI asbestos. you ma~ ha~e a cleim rn 1he
acted as an adviser to the ment-funded · stem
proposed sattlemanl
··
·
in
the
United
States
..
research
Korean lab in analyzing its
WHO IS IN THE PROPOSED SEffiEMENT. The Court has condinorn~lly ruled that a~ pel'1tlns \'lhO fitlhe lolowin~
· Because culling stem cells
descnption are membera ol the H!11ement dass (lhe "Stttlemt~nt Cia sf):
data, which was being, pub1
All Plllont ...., .... liNn ..,_.,to....._ tor Whlcl'l A&amp;l Carporldon (•A&amp;r) ..·IHIOICI to be Habll,
the
days-old
embryo
destroys
. lished . Friday in the journal
,_ltiCJII
wOO tllher U) hmr 1 '*ldllCI \I'IMtlled lrwNI Med «1 or befol1 NoYember 5. 2001. or {i) te1116d. [
harboring the cells, President
l"'ltuador hid adjudiclled 1 ~ b- ~lt.tnlll(llhi:MI orilllnaur!ts lntonnedion wl1h II.ICM eXJII)!Uf11. I
: Science. · ·
lfyot~ 11'1 I~Mtt~ber of ltll ~nt ClaM, your rlgllta will bll*-ctld by tnt S.nltfn.lnt.
"This paper will be of Bush in 2001 banned federalWHAT IS THIS ~T. A&amp;I was a Wes1 VIrginia coqJOrabon 'fttlich s~pliedar.d installed a!oes1cs lnS&lt;Jiaoon aoo Slmgar I
major impact," said stem-cell ly funded research on all but a
material al ~a rlous Wes1 Vlf\11nla, Ohio and Karrlucky industrial sites in ll'le 1950s lhrougl1 \ 70s and removed asbesto.5 [
few
old
embryonic
stem-cell
m !1'11!1 19701 and 19801 E!.po&amp;ureiD asbMtos hu be!n knoWn to contribute to lUng disease and certain cancers A&amp; I
Rudolph
researcher Dr.
6 Months Same As Cash with Approved Credit!
officially went out of butlnm by 1'111ng arlides ol dtuot~tlon on Nowernber 5. 19!!9. A&amp;l and Its 111S&lt;Jrance compan.es
coruand INn ftli"9 1t1e arlldas of di&amp;&amp;Okltbn Pf~Vef\1! anyone from making claims arJSinst A&amp;l after Novef!1oer 5. 2001
Jaenisch of the Whitehead lines. A vote on whether to
lor pe!lOOII injur11s "tuch result from .,;poau11 to aWntol !arwnidl A&amp; liS alleged lobe ~able. The P!aintr111n thiS case
eaSe
those
restrictions
could
OPEN
9am-5pm
MonFrl;
9am-lpm
Sat.
Institute for Biomedical
bmughtltliS ICfiOn for himsar and clherl srmilart¥ stluated to ctltaln a lr\Jst fund 1D pay claims which may anse aller A&amp;II
wen: out of business
.
Over 40 yean ex~erience. · Family owned &amp; opetatetl.
Research in Cambridge, come in the House as ear]yas
THE PROPOSED SETTLEMENT. Settlement counS~~I for 1t1e Plainlift"has readied 8 propoSed seiUement or;rl\ lt\e SettjinQ
next
week
.
..
Mass. "The argument that it
IIISinlrs. The ~ lr!Sulllr, sr11 St. Paul Tra11!1ers (whidl indudes Phoen~ lnsu•ance Ccmpan)l. St. Pa~. USF&amp;G. f
The Tn1Vel$1'111ldemnrty Company, Travelers CaSUIIIty ant:! Surety ~mpanl {lonne~ known as Tlle_Ae'!'a CUll!llty and
The
South
Korean
research,
will not work in humans will
Surety Company) and lheir pBranls . subllidlaries. and alli1iates, and also The AIG COillpaniea. whu::t1 1ndudes Granite
State Insurance Company, New Hampshire Insurance Company 11'1&lt;1 t11e1r pan!nts. sublrt:!lsries, and affilratesj Under 11\e I
funded l;ly the South Korean
not be tenable after this ."
terms ollhe proposed wttlemenl !he SeU11pglnsnrs wrHpa~ $13,135.000 over the nexl fNe ~ear11 to creJie s setllement
992•7028
175 N. :Znd AVENUE· .MIDDLEPORr, OH
government,
spotlights
the
fund whidl wiH be held In trustiD pay !1'11!1 tu!Lre Claims of ptllOI'I! who suffer asbestos drsease as • resuk ol their e•po:~sure
This research is not cloning
Ill asbestO! IDf llltlid!A&amp;IIs liable In r.llJm all d&lt;i~ a~inst t~e $e1thng Insurers based upon a~1111ed liab~ty of A&amp;l (of
to 111ake babies. Instead, sciubeslos expo&amp;Ufl or based upon 1he in111rance relaliollsli9 between ~e Settl•ng lnSI.Jre~ and Ml wl_n be barred
. entis(s
create
test-tube
The Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family Services is seeking proembryos to supply ste m cells
• - the building blocks which
posals to pr~lVide a comprehensive adult Employment/Life Skills and
:give rise to every ti ssue in the
Job Search Training Program for TANF eligible ·residents of Meigs
' body - that are a genetic
County. The program costs must not exceed $110,000.00 for the period
match for a particular patient
and thus won't be rejected by
of July 1, 2005 through June 30, 2006. For a copy of the Guideline for
. the imm4ne system.
Proposers, Profile of Proposer and Proposed Budget Format, contact
· If scientists could harness
. 'the r~generative power of
Jane Banks at the Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family Services
· those stem cells, they nught
(740} 992-2117 ext. 106.
.
; be able to repair dama~e from
· 'spinal cord rnjuries, drabetes,
· Proposals should be submitted to Ja~e Banks, Meigs County Job ~
. Parkinson's and other disFamily Services, 175 Race. ~treet, P.O. Box 191, Middleport, OH 45760
eases.
no l~ter than June 1, 2005 ·at 4:00 p.m. All submissions must be
Stem cells also can come
fro m 'embryos left over in ferreceived by mail or hand delivery by the. above date and time. No
tility clinics. But these cells
materials received after the, date will be included in previous submis'would not be a genetic match
· for any patient.
sions nor be considered. The department reserves the . right to reject
. Any potential therapy is
any or all proposals. In accordance with 29 CFR part 31, 32 Meigs
years away from being tested
County Department of Job &amp; Family Services is prohibited from disin people. But the new
research
marks
several
I'
crimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age, religion,
" advances:
Of go online Ill. www.AI!IIItllmtnt.COm
e~ &lt;Adfll'" of tilt ClmJI Coun I
political belief or disability,
- Last year's cloned stem
LOUII H ~. Ji1agii
cells were from -one healthy
.

South Korean scientists speed first patient-matched stem cells

- a

I

1

r

1

INGELS CARPET ~

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·The Daily Sentinel

·Page AS.

OHIO

Friday, May 20,

San Antonio slops SuperSonics, Page 82
Miller, Pacers burned by Pistons, Page 82
Point track headed to state, Page 88

2005

Groups demand stop to executions in Ohio
we'll certainly look at that. "
The role of geography in
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
determining death sentences
was one of several factors
COLUMBUS .;:__ While death penalty opponents cited
Gov. Bob Taft remains stem.!- Thursday.
fa stly opposed to stopping
For example. both Butter
execut ions in Ohio. he says and· Montgomery coumies he would consider a study of neighboring . counties in
th~ capital punishment sys- southwestern Ohio- sent the
tem. •
.same amount of peop le to
Opponents of tl)e death death row over a 21-year peripenalty, citing resu lts of an . oct eve n though Butler County
Associated Pre ss review of has a third fewer res iden'ls.
the state\ death penalty law. . Prosecutors in
Butler
asked Taft on Thursday for a Coumy also filed far more
moratorium and an indepen- de ath penal ty cases than
den t review of the law enact- Montgomery County, whose
cd in 198 1.
county seat of Dayton is the
" It's ve ry important that state 's sixth largest city.
any such review not try to according to an analysis of
reinvent the wheel wit h capital indictments by the AP.
respect to spec ific cases thar Ohioans
To
.Stop
have already taken place," Executions. the League of
sa id Taft, a Republican. ' Women Voters · and the
"But the death penalty law's American Civi l Liberties
been on the books for a Union made the reque,st to
number of years- if there's Taft.
ways we can improve it,
The groups cited the AP

Friday, May 20, 2005

id~a .

.

AP Photo

Paul Beaudry holds the door o[iert to ·the Annunciation Church Thursday in Cleveland. Several
groups opposing the death penalty formally asked Gov. Boq Taft on Thursday to stop executions in
Ohio, citing numerous flaws in the system, inc luding some documented by The Associated Press.

around 73 with today's high
of 76 occurring arou nd 2
p.m. Winds will be 10 MPH
fro m the west turning from
the northeast as the afternoon
progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It will remain cloudy.
There is a slim chance that it
cou ld rain . Temperatures will
tlrop from 69 early this
evening to 58 · by 10 p.m.
then climb back up to 60 late
evening. Winds will be 10 to
15 MPH from the northeast.
Ovemight (/·6 a.m.)
Temperatures wi ll fall from
60 'to today \ • low of 52 by 6

are doing more of a thorough
study of it themselves. And
they are coming to the conelusion that we should stop
executions," said Sister Alice
Gerdeman, president of
Ohioans to Stop Executions.
·State Rep. Shirley Smith of
Cleveland has introduced a bill
calling for a death penalty
study. The House approved a

study, a separate, 18-month
review by the League of
Women Voters and four
recent cases in which federal
courts overturned Ohio death
sentence s becau se of problems with evidence and legal
representation. .
"The mood of the people is
changing. They are seeing the
problems in the system. They

annel·
a.m. Skies will be partly
cloudy to cloudy w(th.·IO to
IS MPH winds from the
northeast.

'

Senate President Bill Harris
said he'll consider the legisla-.
tion if it comes to the Senate
but is personally opposed to a
study. .
.
"We've got ample laws
.now. I think we've got checks
and balances." said Harris, an
Ashland Republican·. "'I 'd
much rather see the money
used to try to rehabilitate pri s- ·
oners that have not committed
crimes that warrant the death
penalty."
Butler County, with a popu lation of about 340,000;
indicted 32 ·offenders from
1981 through 2002 . Seven; or
22 percent, resulted in death
sentences, according to the
AP analysis,
Montgomery County, with .
a population of about
540,000, indicted 18 offenders during the same time.
Seven, or 39 percent, resulted
in death sentences.
Butler County indicts all
offenders whose crimes meet
the requirements for a' death
sentence, but does want the ·
cases to be strong, said ·
. Prosecutor Robin Piper.
Though it's true outcomes
vary by region, he said jurors
take an oath to rejlresent their
own community, not someplace
. they
. . don't live .

Local stocks ·
Federal Mogul- .47
USB- 29.74
Gannett- 75.70
General Electric - 36.92
GKNLY-4.60
Harley Davidson - 4!t56
JPM -36.19
Kroger - 16.86
Ltd.- 20.90
NSC- 32.05
Oak Hill Financial - 29.20
OVB-28
BBT- 40.89
Peoples - 28.29

ACI- 47.49
A.E P- 35.70
Saturday, May 21
Akzo
-41.20
Momir1g (7 a.m.-Noon)
Ashland
Inc. - 62.09
Temperatures will increase
fro m · 52 to 67 by late this AT&amp;T-19
morning. Skies will be su nny B'LI -13.39
with 10 MPH winds from the Bob Evans - 22.1!4
BorgWarner - 51.20
northeast.
Afternoon 0·6 p.m.)
. Champion - 3.90
Temperatures will stay near. Charming Shops - 8.36
71. Skies will .range from City Holding - 33.16 ·
sunny to mostly sunny with 5 Col- 48.89
to I 0 MPH winds from the DG- 21.84
DuPont- 47,.61
northeast.

'

-..,_

I I

.Prep Schedule
Today's games
Toum!lment -Baaeball
- eastern vs. LeeSburg- Fairfield (at
lucasville VaJiey H.S.). 5 p.m.
'rrack and Field
D-Ill District Meet (at Roc&lt; Hill), 5 p.m.
W.Va. Sta.te Meet (at Charleston)
Saturday'• game
Track and Field
D-11 District Meet (a t Fairland), 10 a.m.
W.Va. State Meet (at Charreston)

l, l

\ ... I

!

• • •• ,

Monday, Maw 23
Tournament Sauball

·

~Wahama

vs. TBA (at Huntington H.S.)

'llloodoy, May 24
Toumament Baseball
: Flolnt Pleasant at Roane County, 7 p.m.

-·

wednesday, May 25
'!rock and Fletd

0-IJ Regional (at MeadoWbrook), 4 p.m.
.p-111 Regional (at P!ckerlngton), 4 p.m.

Friday, May 27
T&gt;ack and Field
Ill Regional (at Pickerington),
.

1 ~1 : 30a.m .

1
1
·

Directions to
Lucasville Valley
High School
LUCASVILLE - Here are
the directions for Eastern's
Division IV district final
· againsr Leesburg Fairfield
today at Valley Hi gh School.
, From Eastern High School;
head south on Route 7 into
Gallipolis.
Turn onto U.S. Route 35
and head toward Jac kson.
. Turn left onto Route
. 279/Centerville exit.
Drive past Oak Hill and
remain on 279 into Minford.
Turn right on Route 335 in
Minford, then turn left ·on
Route 728. ·
That will lead you to
Lucasville; and the high
school is on the right across
· from the Southern .Ohio
Correctionili Facility.
Game time of the district.
. fjnal is slateq for 5 p.m .

..

tryouts scheduled
ROCKSPRINGS
Tryouts for this year's
American Legion Post 128
. baseb'all team w.ill be held 5-7
p.m. Tuesday, May 24 through
Thursday, May 26 at the Meigs
High School baseball field.
Galli a and Meigs County
residents age 19 and under are
eligible to play.
It is important to attend all
three dates. If you cannot
anend one of the dates, or have
questions, ·contact manager
Chris Stewart at (740) 5914605 or (740) 797-0535.

Huntington Pony ·
Express hosting
AAU tournament

IN STOCK

The Huntington (W. Va .)
Pony Express under-13 and
under-15 teams are hosting a
national AAU basketball
tournament June ,I0-12.
Boys ages 9-16 and girls
ages J.l -16 are invited. Entry .
fee is $200 per team and the
entry deadline is June 6.
All games will be played at
fluntrngton High School and
th,e 'Huntington YMCA's on
6th Avenue and 8th Avenue .
Please
contact
Scott
Hutchison at (304) 416-3704
or Arkell Bruce at (304) 4124192 or Ahmed Witten at
(304) 741'-1819.

00
• OVER INVOICE
PLUS YOU ·KEEP THE REBATE
OFFER .EJIPIA£8 W1o05

Contact Information
fH- 1·740-446-3008
E-mail - sportsOmydaitysentinel.oom
SoortJ Staff

Shermon. Sporto Edit!&gt;'
(7.W) 445-2342, ext. 33
b&amp;herman0mydai!y1ribune.com
-

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

Ta &amp; . .

•

-

lf'lellldK.AI.,._.

..,..

......-

CiMC::.
....... n...-

DtlwiiL....

---

&lt;Z&gt; Oldelii!Oblla

..,
....-'

.
L...ln'r

........,I

'

llfyon Wollenl, Sparta Wrtt.r
(740) «6-2342. ext. 23
bwaJtersOmydailytrlbtJne.com
Crum, Sporta Wrtter
(304) 676-1333, e&gt;d. 19
icrum 0 mydailyreg&lt;ster.com

~

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.
.
'
· COLUMBUS (AP) - A WOill'!ll who S&lt;IIO she wus
former Ohio State instruc- par( or a host family for
toi said he changed a fail- Boban Savovic. who is
in g grade for a men's bas- from Serbia.
ketball playe~ beca use the
" It wasn ' t a matter of him
student was having person- sleeping late and not coma! problems.
.
ing to class or not trying or
Doug Kenn ard, now an anything," Kennard said.
professor
at
Kathleen Salyers , an
ass istant
Mount Vernon Nazarene OSU booster who says she
Univers ity northeast of ,. hou sed Savovic, has said
Columbu s,
told
The she persuaded professors to
Associated
Press . on change· Savuv ic's fai lin g
Thursday that he remem'- grades so he would remain
bered a phone ·ca ll from a eli gible to P.lay. Salyers

.

said 'she .askcd for the grade
chang~s at the request of
then-as ~ i stant' hasketball
coach Paul Biancardi .
Now head coach· at
Wright State, Biancardi has
denied the allegation in
court filings.
The ·sc hoo l looked into
Salyers' story abou t th e
grade changes, · Oh io State
sports in formation director
Steve Snapp said. · He
wou ldn' t .confirm what the
univers it y concluded , but

said boo sters are not
, allowed to ask th at studentathletes get special benefit s.
Salyers has said part of
her motivatioil for calling
profe ssors was that she
didn't want Savovic to be
sent back to hi s war-torn
homeland:
"It was in response to her
discussion that I considered
chang ing
the
grade,"

Please see Grade. Bl

National Football LEaguE

Browns' Winslow tears knee ligament

Post 128 baseball ·. ·

NY NEW CiM ·VEHICl

says he changed former
Ohio State .player's failing .grade

n:30a.m.
k..~sion

Pepsico ..:.... 57.03
Premier- 10.35
Rockwell - 50.11
Rocky Boots - 28.80
RD Shell - 58.63
SBC- 23 ..73
. Wai-Mart- 47.51
Wendy's - 44.32
Worthington - 16.44
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing qqotes of the
previous day's transactions,
. provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc • .of Gallipolis.

1 t

Instruct~r

Qivision II Regional {at Meadowbrook),

•

WE ClOBBER BIG CITY RIC
0 NEED.TO GlE

740-992-6614
1-800-837-1094
~.
.._not
,_.,a:

,.

, similar bill last year but the
Senate quickly shelved the

Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Friday, May 20
Maming (7 a.m.-Noon)
It shou ld be a cloudy
morning. Temperatures will
rise from 63 to 69 by late
this morning. Winds will be
5 MPH from the southwest
turning from the west as the
mornmg progresses .
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It wi ll continu e to be
cloudy. You will see light
rain. The rainfall is expected
to begin near 4 p.m. The
rainfall should end around 5
p.m. witli total accumulations
for this event near 0.10 inches. Temperatures will remain

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

•

1

CLEVELAND (AP) ·- ·
Browns tight end Kellen
Winslow Jt: tore the anterior cruciate ligament in hi s
rig ht knee when he
crashed h·is motorcycle,
two sources within the
league told The Associated
Press on 'Thursday, placing
his 2005 season in doubt.
An lllJUry such as
Winslow's
typically
requires I 0 to 12 months
· of rehabilitation,
Winslow, who wrecked
hi s high-powered bike
while riding in a parking
lot on May I . will get a
·~ec ond medical opinion
before surgery is scheduled, said the sources, who ·
ha&gt;~e knowledge of hi s
injuries and spoke on the ·
conditi on of anonymity .
Although the Browns
have Winslow 's medical
test results, the clu~ can
not disclose the nature of
hi s injuries because they
have not received permission from Winslow or his
family.
On Wednesday, after
conferring with his father,
NFL Hall of Fame tight
end Kellen Winslow Sr:,
the Browns issued a statement
saying,
"The
Winslow family has not
authorized us to release
· .any
information
on
Kellen's condition."
Until they are given
approval, the Browns m&lt;Jy
not be able to . reveal
Winslow's injuries until he
fails a phy sical and they
. have to place him on an
injury list per league rules.
Winslow's agent, Kevin
Poston,· could not be
reached for coinment.·
Winslow Injured his
right knee and sustai ned
AP photo
unspecified
internal
cleveland Browns tight end .Kellen Winslow Jr. leaves the Cleveland Clinic on crutches, in
inju ~ i es when · his Suzuki
GSX-R750 hit a curb at 35 · this May 10 file photo taken in Cleveland. Winslow to re the anterior cruciate ligament in his
mph 'and he flipped over right knee when ne crashed his motorcycle; two sources within the league told The
Associated Press on Thursday: Ah injury such as Winslow's typically requires 10 to 12
Please see Wln~low. Bi months of rehabilitation.

CollEgE Football -

ConfErEncE USA .·

Conference USA football
cQnsidering instant r~play
"

HUNTINGTON , W.Va.
(AP) - Conference USA
athletic directors have
recomme'nded the experi ~
mental use of limited
instant' replay for the
2005 season .
·
The
conference ·s
Board of Directors wi ll
'd
h
.
const er t e P1an at ·liS
June 6-7 meeting in
Dallas, Commissioner
.. Britton Banowsky said
Thursday. .
Th e con ference won ld
follow a model that the
NFL uses in the final two
.
mmutes
o f pIay t'or eac h
half. A technical adviser
· t he press box WI' II
m
decide 1f a review is
needed , but . the referee
will still make the final
call on the field. Coaches
will be unable to make a
c',hallenge , a difference
from the NFL's policy.
Other conferences that

.

are eli.periinenting with
instant replay rely on the
technical adviser to both
call for the review and
make the final decision.
The recommendation wa s
·
.
made dunng · the conference's spring meetings
this week in Desti n, Fla.
The Atlantic Coast, Big
East, Mountain West.
Southeastern and Pacific10 conferences · have
appi\JVe'd instant replay s
starling in the 2005 season.
Conference USA football coaches and athletics
directors also .approved a:
tiebreaker formula for

the inaugural confere nce
championship game on ·
Dec. 3. .
· ·
Home field wil l be
awarded to the teani with
the hi ghest regular season winning percentage
against con ference opponents. The first tiebreak er is the winner of a
head-to-head matchup. If
the two teams did not
play during the regular .
season. the team with the
ht'o"hest BCS ranking
would rec'eive the nod.
Marshall debuts in
Conference USA thJ' s
fall, along wit h Rice ,
SMU, Tul.sa, UTEP and
fellow . Mid-American
Conference
member
Central Florida. They'll
join existing Conference
USA
schools
East
Carolina,
Houston ,
Memphis,
Southern
Miss. Tulane and UAB .

Brad Sherman/OVP flle

Erin Pyles paces herself in an
event earlier this yea r. Erin
s igned her papers to run for
the Un iversity · of Charleston
Thursday. ·

Pyles signs
·with U. of
Charleston
BY lARRY CHUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - It seems Erin Pi yes
. will not be running cross the
country to continue her running career, she will be doing
that right here at home.
An incredible year was
capped off Thursday as Pi yes
signed her .letter of intent to
run cross country for the
Uni versity of Charlesto n.
This news come s as no sur.prise to girl s track coach
Chi p Wood who knew she
had a future at the next level.
"She was our high scorer
and has scored more points
than any other girl I have had
in six years," said Wood.
"She placed somewhere in
every meet we have gone too
and scored 1/8 of our total
team p,aints.''
During that stretch, Pyles
also managed to break a pair
of 20-year old records at
Point Pleasant High School.

Ple•se see Pyles, B8

Local youth attend
·Bartrum/Brown camp
•

.

Submitted pl)olo

HUNTINGTON. W.Va . -

Sqme local youth attended the Bartrum-Brown Football
Camp on May 14. Pictured with Mike Bartrum of the Philadelphia Eagles, in back,

are: In front. from left. Reid Eastman. Marcus Moore. Devin Henry and Gntnn
. Sta~tey. lp the middle. from left. are Michael Moore . Tann Barnitz a~ Owen Moo~e .

.\

�(

Page 82 •

·.

,

The Daily Sent:irlel

www.mydailysentinel.com

National BaskEtball Association

Friday, May 20,

2005 ,

Frida y. Mrry 20. 200S

The Daily Sentinel • Pa)!e 1-l.l

2005 Playoffs

San Antonio stops SuperSonics
SEATTLE (AP) - Tim
Duncan rook a sharp pas'
from Manu Ginobili and
banked in a short shot with
0.5 seconds left, lifting the
San Antonio to a thrillin-g 9896 win over the Seattle
SuperSonics .on Thursday
night and putting the Spurs ·
into the Western Conference
finals.
Duncan had 26 points and
nine rebounds. and ,the Spurs
.survived his 6-for-21 shooting to win the series 4-2 and
move one step closer to a
chance for the franchise' s second NBA tiile in. three sea-

Nextel Cup
Nextel AII·Star
Challenge, 9 p.m.,
Saturday
·

Tony ·Parker and Robert
Harry each had 14 points ,
while Ginobili scored l3 and
Nazr Mohammed added 12.
The So nics didn't have '
much time for a final attempt.
Antonio Daniels in bounded to
Ray Allen, who lobbed a shot
from the _left corner over .
Duncan's head. Ir bounced off
'the rim, ending a remarkable
season in Seattle. ·
Allen scored 25 points
. while Daniels had 22. Jerome
AP photo
James and Damien Wilkins
each scored 10 for the Sanies, The Seattle SuperS6nics' Jerome James·, left, has his shot
who played their third straight rejected ~Y San Antonio Spurs defender Tim Duncan in the first
game .- half the series - quarter of Game 6 of their Western Conference semifinal in
without All-Star Rashard Seattle Thursday.
·
·
Lewis, sidelined by a brui sed .
toe on his left foot: ·
Going into the fourth quar- other end , Gi nobi li m.ade one return. ,
Things got heated midway
ter, Duncan had missed 12 of of two free throws, giving the
his 13 field goal.arrempts, and Spurs a 96-93 lead with 58.4 through the third period.
Seattle collected · three
he didn't make his first shot seconds left.
The
Sonics
sure
had
their
strai
ght offensive rebounds
from the floor until the 5minute mark of the third peri- chan ces to fqrce a Game 7 on ·- by Reggie Evans, James
Sundity.
and Evans again- but couldod.
Collison
inade
a
tip-in
to
n't score. Mohammed and
But he. came though when it
make
it
96-95
with
37.9
secDuncan
were credited with
really mattered, shooting 5remaining,
and blocked shots, the Spu~s came
of-8 from the field and· scor- a nels
Duncan's
try
at
the
other
end away with a rebound and the
ing 12 points in the final 12
bouncetl
ollthe·rim
with
14A
moot! turned ugly.
minutes. Duncan was 14-of-.
Boos rumbled off the
17 from the free throw line. seconds to play. Robert Harry
was
c~lled
for
a
loose
ball
·r;lt'ters,
McMillan was whiswhich carried him until the
foul,
putting
Daniels
on
the
tied
for
a technical foul for
final period.
protesting the no-call under
The Spurs also survived a line.
Daniels
missed
the
fi
rst
free
the
basket and a fan threw a
scare when Duncan curled on
throw,
sending
a
nervous
buzz
half-empty
water bottle onto
the floor and grabbed his left
foot with 8:05 remaining. He throug h the crowd. The sec- the court in front of San.
crashed into Seattle's Nick ond one bounced on the rim · Antonio's bench ..
Notes: With Seattle's loss,
Collison on a drive, and his and dropped, tying. it at 96.
When
Allen
's
sho
t
missed
the
Miami Heat are the only
• ankle turned when he landed
moments later, fans stand a•1d playoff team that hasn 't lost a
squarely on Collison 's foot.
cheered
Seattle's remarkable home game .... Fans cheered
After walking it off, the
run.
when. former Sanies star
perennial All-Star made two
The Sanies weren't expect- Brent Barry fouled out for the
free throws to put San
Antonio ahead 78-77 -· ·one ed by many to improve much Spurs \liith 6:03 to play....
Jf nine .lead changes and five on a 37-win season the year Collison picked up three fouls
before, but they won the during a 27-span in the tirst .
ties in the fourth quarter.
The teams traded baskets Northwest Division and 52 quarter. ... Mariners RF lchiro ·
"
·Suzuki got a standing ovation
;~nril Duncan's fifth tield goal games.
Now
the
team
.
faces
a
long
in the second- quarter. It was
put San Antonio ahead 95-91
li st of offseason quesrio:1s. eve n 'louder ,for retired DH
with I:23 to go.
Daniels drove past Duncan Chief among them is whether Edgar Martinez a few minutes
:o pull Seattle to 95-93 live they'll be able to re-sign later.... Ginobili limped to the
seconds later, and James Allen, who will be one of the · bench after a c()llision as rhe
:ouled out when Ginobili premiere free agents, · and if fi rst quarter ended but started
jrove to the basket at the ·coach Nate McMill an will the second period.

..

Ohio State tailback cited
with m~rijuana possession

...

I.

;:; # :¥i 3 ;=: c: eq ~ I* ~-::::;: tH' § -.:

r&amp;tFX

Race: Nextel AII·Star Chal·

warrant for traffi cking mari- ..
juana and was suspended
from the team indefinitely.
He was later released from
jail on $ 10,000 bond.
Coach Jim Tressel, who is
attending a Big Ten conference meeting in Chicag,o,
issued a statement saying he
is disappointed by Haw's
citation. .
" As soon as I get' back to
town and learn all the
details, we will deal with it
in ·an appropriate manner,"
Tressel said.

Ohio State will require
him to enter a drug education program and undergo
frequent testing . He is
sc hedul ed to appear May 27
in
Franklin
County
Municipal Court. '·
Calls to the ·campus phone
number under Haw 's name
Went unanswered Thursday.
Haw, a redshirt freshman
from Columbus .. is a former
Dtv1s1on II h1gh school
oflens1ve player ol th~ year.
He and sophomore tailback
Antonio Pit~ma~ are battling
lor the startmg JOb.
In last month's ScarletGray scrimmage, Pittman
r~n for 57 yards on 14 earries for th,e Gray team ,
while Haw scored the
Scarlet's only touchdown on
a lO-yard run in the fourt.h
quaper. H.aw also rushed 16
times for a game-high 86
'·
yards.

Snapp . said he did not
Salyers said in a lawsuit
know .whether that was stan- against her former employdard procedure for the ers that they agreed to pay
fromPageBl
school's academic depart- her to let Savovic stay with
ments. A message was left her. The case was oqe reaKenna£d said, "It wasn't with a university spokes- son the NCAA investigated
the school's athletic departfrom talking with any coach woman seekin,g further ment. which resulted earlior anybody in the university explanation.
this week in the NCAA
. Kennard said he changed er
or anything like that."
notifying · Ohio State of
Kennard said he couldn't the F for Savovic in spring nine allegations of rules
remember
whether
he · 1999 when he was a tempo- violations. Seven of those
changed S'avovic :s F in rary instructor at Ohio State. accusations concern the .
Rural Sociology to a D or to The Columbu s Dispatch men 's basketball program,
an Incomplete. Any change first reported the grade though none allege gradewould have had to be change in its Thursday edi- fixing.
approved through the soci- tions.
Ohio State has until July
ology department chair, he
Savovic played at Ohio 26 to respond to the
NCAA .
State from 1998 to 2002 .
said.

Grade

I .

·the same track where the
man he o.utdueled , Tony
Where : Lowe's Motor Speed· Stewa rt. won hts first race 1n
way. Concord. N.C. [15 1999. It was also an impormiles). 90 laps/135 rn11es. tant .first for Dodge because
three segments .
Kahne became tile f1rst dnvWhen: Saturday. May 21
er to put a Ctlarger in the Wlnlast year's .winner: Matt ner"s wcle s1nce the model
~ense t11
·
was reincarnated this y(!ar.
Qualifying record: Format Kahne had to hold off Stewhas varied tt1rough the years . a(t for seven fi nal green-flag
Race record: Format has var· laps . but there we re only two
ied through .the years.
th at mattered. Stewar t made
last week : For Kasey Kahn e. a valiant stab at the lead. bu t
. the Chevy Arre ri can Revolu- When he co uldn't stick a l Ong~
ti6 n 400 was swee t indeed. side, Kal:me roared away and
bec au se
th e
2004 · left Stewart ~o nudge out
Raybestos Rookie of the Year Rya n N~ wmari for second.
had to .suffer through six second-pl ace fmishes bcfore 1flnally .arriving in victory lane at

lenge

Busch Series
CarQuest Auto Parts
200, 6.:30 p.m.;May 28

sons.

COLUMBUS (APJ
'Jhio State running back
3rik , Haw was · cited by
· 'Jolice with possessing marijuana, the second time in
about a week that a player
~n
the • team · has been
accused·of a drug offense. ·
· Haw, who ,is competing to
be Ohio State's starting taii'Jack this fall . was spotted
Wednesday by a university
police offi(:er holding a
marijuana cigarette while
standing nutside a dormitory, As sistant Police Chief
Rick Amweg said.
He dropped .the cigarette
from his left hand as the
· officer approached, Amweg
· said Thursday. Two others
standing with Haw walked
away before the officer
could question them, he
said.
Kicker Jonathan Skeete
was arrested May II on a

~ If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCARThiS Wee k, c;o The Gaston G.azette. P.O. Box 1893. Gastonia, NC 28053

Afl times Eastern

Truck Series
Quaker Steak and
Lube 300, 8:30 p.m ..
Friday

·1

ftftmrt!wt&amp;-!nhd
~ It se emS inconceivab le that

NASCAR officials elected not to
punish Kurt Bus ch or Michael
Waltrip for incident s in the Da r-

lington race on May 7. It's obvious that the same rules do not
applyto everyone.

Race : Carquest Auto Parts

Race : Quaker St€ak &amp; Lube

300

200

Where : Lowe·s Motor Speedway, Concord. N.Q. n .5

Where : Lowe·s Motor Speedway, Conco rd. N.C. (1.5

IAll-Star Challenge

• UAW-GM
Quality 500 Oct 15

May21

miles! . 200 taps/ 300 m1les. • milesl.1341apsj201 miles.
When: Saturday. May 28 . When: Fn ~ay. May 20
Last year's Winner : Kyle
Busch

Last year's winner : Denni s
Setzer

Qualtfying record: Kev~n Har· Qualifying record: Bill Lester.
vick . .Chevrolet. 184.445 Dodge, H5593 mph. May
mph . May 24. 2003_
15. 2003.
Race record : Mark Maq1n:

Race record : Ted Musgrave,

Ford. 155.799 mph. May 24.
2003.

Dodge. 114.768 mph. May
16, 2003.

Last week : Carl Edwa rds. in Leist week : Bobby Hami lton .
a Ford, won the Funai 250 at · in a Q.odge , won th e ·

Richmond. Va.

Dlstance:.................... 1.5 mile oval
Le!!llh olfron1stretch: ..... l,952 ft.
[ength olbackstretch: ...:.1,360 ft.
Mlles/Leps: .....600 mi.~ 400 laps

UAW/ GMOhio 250 1n Mans·
fie ld. Ohio.

.,. Kasey Kahne 's 'first victory was
obv iously long overdue . .Now

that the ice is broken, it will be
interesting to see if Kahne fol-

r~

lows it up with another victory. m

v

NASCAR PIT CREw CoMPETITioN

E

the near future.

R

.,. .,. It obv10 us ly meant a lot to ·
Kahne that he won his first race
by outdueting Tony Stewart, a

s

driver with a similar backgroUnd

AP photo
Reggie Miller Waves to the crowd as he leaves the court after losing to the Detroit Pistons
88-79 inthe sixth game ofthe Eastern Conference semi:final in Indianapolis Thursday. Miller
is retiring. ·

.Miller, Pacers burned by Pistons
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- Indiana.
widen the. ·lead after an
The Detroit Pistons are
The Pacers led almost the offensive foul on Ra sheed
headed back to the Eastern entire first half and turned Wallace, but the Pi stons got
Conference finals, while back every Detroit rally · the ball back when O'Neal
Reggie Miller i's headed until tWo'straight baskets by mi ssed a shot and Tayshaun
into retirement without ~ver Hamilton put the Pistons Prin'ce scored just ahead of
having won a championship ahead early in the fourth the halft ime buzzer.
rmg.
quarter. The final score
Richard Hamilton scored marked the Pistons' biggest
Detroit got back into the
28 points .and Chauncey lead of the game.
game with two big runs in
Billups aoded 23 )IS Detroit
Detroit has won ei~ht the third quarter.
beat the ·lndiana P&amp;cers 88- consecutive playoff senes . The first time ; .afler · a
79 Thursday night·, winning clinchers over the last three rebound · basket by Ben
Wallace cut Indiana's lead
their best-of-seven series 4- seasons.
2. The Pistons will open the
The Pacers, hoping to to 48-47. O'Neal, Dale
on extend · Miller's career at Davi s and Miller scored
conference
finals
least one more game, finally consecutive ba·skets, and a
Monday at Miami.
It was the final game for found their shooting touch free throw by Miller on a
against
Miller, the NBA's 12th- after being blown out the teclinical . foul
leading career scorer, who past two games.
Rasheed Wallace made it
is retiring after 18 years in
Miller, one of the NBA's 55-47.
the league. He broke out of r at clutch shooters· who
e been stymied
·
The Pacers still led 59-51
a shooting slump .and led ghad
·into 38
.Indiana with 27 points, and percent shooting through before a basket and free
his final basket was a 3- ·the first five games of this thrinv by Hamiiton started
pointer with under 2 min - series, shot 1·1-o f-·16 and an 11-2 run , and . two more
utes left to pull Indiana to made four 3-pointers. free throws by Hamilton
82-79.
Reminiscent of past playoff gave the Prstons their first
Hamilton then hit a basket glory; two of his 3-pointers lead ,
62 -61.
Indiana
and Billups added two free came in a span of 39 sec- regained the lead at the end
throws with 26 seconds left onds late in the second
before Miller missed a 3" quarter after nine · straight of the period 011 a dunk by
pointer and left the game to points by Billups and a free Foster and opened the'
a prolonged, standing ova- throw by Hamilton brought fourth quarter with a basket
tion - which the Piston s the Pistons within 40-37.
,' by O'Nea l and 3-pointer by
joined in - as the crowd
Billups dribbled out of Anthony John son.
chanted "Reg-gie, Reg-gi'e" . bounds · !'or a turnove~. and · The. Pistons then scored
Miller hit one 3-pointer. seven straight points to take ·
with 16 seconds to go . . ·
At the end of the game, Seconds later after Billups the lead for good, denying
the chant changed to "One missed a 3-poinr attetl]pt
more year."
and with the Indiana crowd the Pacers. a chance to gi,ve
· Jermaine . O' Neal, still already chanting for Miller, .Miller a shot at a champibothered by a sore shoulder he responded with another onship. Indiana's only trip
that sidelined him late in the 3-pointer to put the Pucers to the NBA . Finals was in
regu lar season, added 22 up 46-37.
2000, when the Pac.ers lost
points and 1.1 rebounds for
Indiana had a chance to to the Los Angeles Lakers. ·

who also won for the first time
at Richmond .
.,. Stewart 's career has often

u
s

Elliott
Sadler

the 2002 Cup champion is as

Carl Edwards
vs. Elliott Sadler

,.: No one has .more of a fla ir for

Edwards won tile Fu nai 250, R1cl l
mond."s· Busch Series, race. at
Sadler's expense, pasSing Sadler on

-been marked by cOfltroversy, but
respecte~ as anyorie within the
conf1nes of the garage area.

the fi naJ lap after the t'ND bum pee ·

the dramatic than Carl Edwards,
· Whose exciting Busch Series vict ory·'at Richmond created some
hard feelings ·but most assured-

twice. ·The-two debated tile 1ssue C'lf.

terward, and Sadler refused to talk tu
Edwa rds the foll Owing day at the dnv·
ers· meeting pri or to the Nextel Cup·
race .

ly gave the fans thei r money's
worth.

j.

The Nextel All-Star Cha llenge

NASCAR This Week 's Monte

has rewarded young drivers -

Dutton gives his take : ·• Edwarcts
sa id he wo ul dn"t . have cllanged &lt;1
thing 1f he had to do rt ove r. Sadle1
had extra incentive at a race 111 In -;
nati\'€ Virginia. It was a raugll finlf'b .
but Sadler ·had been Simila rl y aggres
sive j ~ st moments before w11en he
passed Johnny Sauter. Hrey'll get
over it.~
·
'

Date Earnhardt Jr. and Ryan
Newman among IDem - but it's
also been a showcase for greats

like the late Dale Earnhardt and
JeH Gordon, the only th ree-time
winners.
_.The dom inant .driver at Lowe's

Motor Speedway, at present. is
Jimmie John son , but he ha sn't

won the Challenge .. . yel.
-. Stewart should also be consid·
ered a favori t e. if for no oiher

reason than the fact that his
not

John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

yet include a victory in the all·

The Kurt Busch Sharpie team rims their pit stop during the National Pit Crew Championship powerd by Tyson Monday May, 9, 2005 in
Mooresville, N.C., on May 9.

distinguished career

doe ~

star race .

What a contrast we'll see in
the next two weeks . The All-Star

10-

•

Challenge is like a local Satur-

day·night race, complete with
segments , field inversions and
spontaneous strategy moves.

Then it's the Coca-Cola 600. the

..

time in his career last week-

end In Richmond. He also took
the pole for !nat race.
not- Dale Earnhardt
Jr. felt out of the top 10 in the
points standings. He's yet to
win a race and nasn't finished

in the top three yet, either.

: Valley

Twelve finalists have been named
for the all-time IROC team. selected by
the far)s in a Crown Rdyal initiatiVe
The fina li sts are Mario Andrett 1. Marl •.
Donohue, Dale Earnhardt, Hurley Hay
wood, Tom Kendall. Steve Kinser. Bub ·
by Labonte. rv]ark Marti n, Sco\l P.r uclt.
Yarborough. The fan vote 1s bemg cun
ducted at w-~vw.crownroya lraci ng .c o m'.

•
.,. Who's hot
,
Tony
Stewart and
Jamie ' Me·
Murray each
have three .
straight top10 finishes.
KaseyKahne won KAHNE
for the first

All·time IROC team
narrowed to 12 names

Bobby Unser. Danny Lasosky and Cale

closest thi ng stock-car racing
has to an endurance race.

1&gt; Who's

The Meigs County Department of Job.&amp; Family Services is seeking proposals to provide a comprehensive adult Employment/Life Skills and
Job Search Training Program for TANF eligible residents of Meigs
County. The program costs must not exceed $110,000.00 for the period
of July 1, 2005 through June 30, 2006. For a copy of the Guideline for
Proposers, Profile of Proposer and Proposed Budget Format, contact
Jane Banks at the Meigs County Department of Job &amp;Family Services
(740) 992-2117 ext. 106.
·
Proposals should be submitted to Jane Banks, Meigs County Job &amp;
Family Services, 175 Race Street, P.O. Box 191, Middleport, OH 45760
no later than June 1, 2005 ·at 4:00 p.m. All submissions must be
received by mail or hand delivery by the above date and time. No
material's received after the date will be included in previous submissions nor be considered. The department reserves the right to reject
any or all proposals. In accordance with 29 CFR part 31, 32 Meigs
County Department of Job &amp; Family Services,is prohibited from discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age, religion,
political belief or disability..

Carl
Edwards

The champ's team wins pit-crew competition devised by crew chiefs
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
MOORESVILLE, N.C. - The N~­
tipnal Pit-Crew Championshi~ Presented by Tyson wasn't the offrc1ally
sanctioned NASCAR event, but it was
the ev~nt put together by. the actual
men who change the tires and refuel
the cars at Nextel Cup and Busch Series tracks all across the country.
The event, envisioned and devised
by· the ·Crew Chief Club, played to a
capacity crowd -about 4,000- at the
Pit Instruction and Training Facility,
· arid none of them had to pay to get in.
Fans were encouraged to make charitable donation s. The event will be
shoivn on Speed Channel on Aug., 6.

'The winning pit crew represented 21) . The best first-round pit stop was
the reigning champion. Kurt Busch's by the McMurray crew, whic)l changed
team was made up of: Mark Full four tires and filled a fuel tank in
. (fro nt tire carrier), Scott Ward 15.992 seconds .
(front tire changer), Scott Radel
McMurray's team wound up being
(jackman), Doug Newell (fueler), eliminated in the . ne'xt round. The
Jim Gaudette (catch can), Kevin · cham~ionship pit crew, representing
Gillman ( rear tire changer) , Jason Busch and Roush Racing, turned in a ·
· 'Binger (rear tire carrier) and Wayne stop of 16.34.2 seconds.
DeLoria (coach).
A bonus round -which could have
The first-round winners were the netted one team a $500,000 bonus had
Cup pit crews of Matt Kenseth, one of them completed a stop in 14A36
Michael Waltrip, Joe Nemechek, Kurt seconds or less - went to Busch's
Busch, Jason Leffler, Jamie McMur- team , as well, though it did not man·
ray, Greg Biffle, Jeremy Mayfield, age to earn the bonus.
Matt Kenseth and Kasey Kahne, as .
well as the "various driver" Busch Se' Monte Dutton at
ries crews fielded by Kevin Harvkk
Contact
(No. 33)· and Richard Childress (No.
hmdutton50@aol.com

&amp; Supply

St Rt.

Co.

A U4 •

Hard to figure out
NASCAR's policy on fines
Come on , NASCAR! Enough is
eriougtl! Where are the fines, pro~a
tions and possibl e sus pensions to
ward Hendnck M o t !;:H S P O~~s? Espe
cially Jimm ie Johns on ··'ltit all t11e
wrecks (h6· has) cau se d t111s year. A
Hendrick driver has tau sed a wreck
in every r-Bce this year! Once aga 1n . 11
that had bee n .To n ~ Stewart. lle
would've been on probation, f1necJ
and possi bly sus pended .... Is therA
a .. . gentleman-'s agreement? If so.
plea"se inform all the Cup drivers
they have a ri ght to be reckless 1f

they ·play it cool" after the race.
Brian Huckaby
C ~eSterfie l d, "lnd
For what it's wort h. we have a /JarO

time understanding why _[VA SCAR offi- ·
cia/s pena lize so me drivers; teamf8nd seem' to "let it go " with others.

• Pomeroy, OH

BEFORE THE RACE, STOP IN AND
VISIT OUR DELl OR HOT STUFF PIZZA!

lea Cold Bear
Available lor Carryout!
E)${0N

.S..Ds

lllllrn fte
Bacef
'
106 North Second Ave. • Mid~leport, OH

. 252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

228W. Main
Pomeroy, OH
992-5432

�.,

www.mydailysentinel.com'

Page 84 • . The Daily Sentinel

20,2005

\!tribune - Sentinel - 3Re
CLA-SSIFIED

ter

'·

C l A S S I F"l E D

Me151 Cuunl y OH

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
Ancl Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

r

A~\R1111ENfS

IDRRENl

r--FOUl~
iiO

In One Week With Us

Sentinel

Oeacllf;,~
·Word Ads

Monday th ru Friday
• 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

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

• All

• Start Your Ads W1th A Keywqrd • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address Whl!:n Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

~~;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; l.__
.r •G•I\•E•AI•H•\-·' r

f130 A ~NO! " 'E\'I&gt;NI'

My storage un'1t was broken
11110 at GallipoliS Storage on
Flamingo Dnve betv.een
Apnl 30 anct May 14 If anyone knov.s somebody who
'lc:ls bought or solei a 12
yauge
Single
shotgun
motorcycle helmet w/gogsu1tcases
fog
gles
machine sword Ple ase call
me at (740)245·9266 leave
messaqe 1f no answer

~

~4 11

r

[..an

prepa1d•

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlshmg res11rves the right to
reJect or cancel~tn:t ad a1
lime Errors must be reported on the f1rst day ol
Tr bune-Sent1nel Reg1ster will be responsible for no more" than the cost of the space occupied by the error and only the flrtt Insertion We I hall not !Je II
any loss Of expo!nse thet results from the publication or om1ss1on of an advethsem111nl Correction will be made 1n the f1rst an1iable editi on • Box
are always confidential • Current reta card applies • All real estete advertlsem.,nts are subJect to the Federal Fa1r Housing Act of 1968 • This , ;,.,,,,.,, .
accepts only help wanted ads meeting EOE standards We will not knowingly accept any ad\lert1alng 1n VH:IIatlon of the 1-

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

11
10
Seek1ng ene1get1c bnght
collection spec1ai 1SI Dental
background helpful Fa x
resume to (740)446·4840
STNA

Found but not captured 5
11 05 Magnolia Drlve m
Sprmg Valley Call (740)446
4488

. .... 840
. .. ......... 480
. . .. ......... 830
. ... .. .. ... . •. 610
.. ............ 430

Excavating ,
Farm Equ1pmenl .
Farms for Rent.. .
Farms for Sale...... • . ................. 330
For Lease . . .. .. . . . . .. .. .. .... .. .. 490
For Sale ......................... ... ...... 585
For Sale or Trade.. ...... . .. .. ... ... .. . 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ................................... 5811
Furnished Rooms ..................................... 45()
General Hauling .......... ............ ................. 850
Giveaway ....... ........................................ 040
Happy Ads ........................... .................. 050
Hay &amp; Grain .. .. .. ........................... 640
Help Wanted . .. .. . .. .. ................ 110
Home Improvements . .................... 810
Homes for Sale.. . ......... .... ...... ... 310
Household Goods ......... .. ............. 510
Houses for Rent . ..................... .'... 410
In Memonam .................. ........................ 020
Insurance ................ ................ ......... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equ1pmen1 ........................ 660
Livestock .... ..... ....................................... 630
Lost and Found ....................................... 060
Lots &amp; Ac•eage ........ . ... ....................... 350
Miscellaneous ................................... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise ... : ..... ....... 540
Mobtle Home Repa1r . . ........................ 860
Mobile Homes for Rent ................... 420
Mobtle Homes for !:?ale ....... .. . _, ..... ... -~20
Money to Loan ..... .................. ·...... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .. ....................... 740

Muslcallnstrumen't s .............................. ..... 570
Personals ................................................. 005
Pets for Sale .
. ......................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .. •.................... 820
Professional Services. ..... ..
........ 230
Rad1o , TV &amp; CB Repair ... .. •
.. ... . 160
Real Estate Wanled. ... . .. ...
.. .. 360
Schools lnstrucllon .. . • ..
.. • • 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ... .. .• . .. .. .... 650
S1tuat1ons Wanted ........................... 120
Space for Rent , . . .•. . . ... .. ...
.460
Sportmg Goods .................... ·' · ...... 520
SUV 'slor Sale ........... .: ..................... ......... 720
Trucks for Sale ......................................... .. 715
Upholstery ............................................... 870
Vans For Sale ... ...... ... ......... .................... .. 730
wanted to Buy ................................, ........... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620
Wanted To Do ..... .................................... 1811
Wanted to Rent.. .. .. ... . ... •• .... .. .. .. 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis .......... ................. 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle .. .. ... .. .... 074
Yard Sale· PI Pleasant
. 076

0

0
Lost dog- small tong ha1r
black &amp; tan markmgs
Chihuahua Star Hall Ad
Salem Center area Reward,
call (740)698-6502 740742 1083
White w/Qiack spots Ral
Tamer was taken from 1034
2nd Ave
Gallipolis on

www com1cs com

L--------yo\RI) SALF-

Pr. Pl.EA.'iiAJVI

Mov1ng Sale Old Large Wooden Desk Occas1onat
Cha1rs D1mng Room Set
luggag-e
M1sc
Friday/Sat urday 9am 3pm

.t:I::U::;Y:ARD:~S:o\:LE:~~ 9rto ~ANlFJ)
Main

~

'

TOBl~

Excellent Income Nat1ona1
Ca~ital F urto1ng Group now
h1r1ng
CourthOus e
Researc hers W1JI tram lo
work from home on your
compute r No exper1enc e
necessary Call 1- 800 440
7234

FINANCE OFFICER
The
Absolute Top Dollar U S Appatach1an Center for
GAU.IPOIIS
Networks '
Sdve,r and Gold Co1ns Econom1c
Proofsets Gold Rm9.s U S (ACEnet) IS seekmg an
234 Honeysuckle Dnve Currency -M J S Colti Shop expenenced finance of11cer
Addison M1sc books cloth· 151
Second
Avenue, to work m th1s dynam1c
1ng (new scrubs s1ze small)
mnovat1ve
non-pro111
•
5/20·5/22 9· 7
Applicant shou ld be skilled
I \11'1.0\ \II \I
m qu1ck accurate use of
Sl R\ IC I S
Byer mov1ng sale 3 5 miles
computerized accounting
down 775 Fn Sat only 9-5
Non-prof1t
programs
ItO
Freeze1 enterla1nment cen·
accounting expenence IS a
.HllPWANilD
ter much more, m1sc
pt u ~ Job dutles.,..w tll Include
all accou nling related fu nc
Cold Mountam Condiments 100 WORKERS NEEDED
t10ns 1ncludmg date entry
and Crafts
mters ect1on
Assemble cr'afts
payroll accounts payable
L1 ncoln P1 ke and State
wood Items
and rece1vable collections
Route 141
Fnday and
Malenals prov1ded
bank raconc1hal1 ons casll
Saturday Sale 1501o oil
To $480/Wk
flow management, f1nanc1al
Cedar Furn11ure
Amish Free mformat 1on pkg 24 hr
rejX)rl1ng and grant reportDonuts Potatoes 5 pounds
801 428 4649
Ing S!ronQ mterpersonal
99t
Hangmg Baskets
skills effechve oral and 'Mil
$8 DO Fresh Strawbemes • An Excellent way to ear n
ten commurucat1on sk1lls a
money The New Avon
des1
re to 1den11fy and 1mple
FMay Saturday 9·5 2 6 Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
ment system Improvements
m1les out Add1son ~Ike
"-1,ov1ng Sale
Furniture, AVQNI All Areas' To Buy or and good organ1zal1onat
Sh1rtey Spears 304· sk1lls w1th an attentton to
beds
some neW
old Sell
deta11 are essent1al for th1s
General richng horse much 675·1 429
pos1
t1 on
Salary Will be
more ·
Bull dog Wifeless Authorized
dependent upon quallliCa·
Alllel Agent IS hnsng rata11
GARAGE SALE
Irons
and e){penence
w1retess consultants lor
Stand name cloth1ng Boys
Please send a resume
Gallipolis 12, rnontlls sales
1nfant-toddler Womens s1ze
1ncludtng recent salary h1s
experience preferred Great
6· 14 toys household much
tory and th1ee work-related
Pay Great BenefitS Great
more Corner of TtwdiGrape
relerences
lo
Don
Company Call (740 )355St Gall1pohs, 5/20·5121
Holycross Ch1el Operatmg
0000 e"t 24 EOE
9am Spm Ram or Shme
Officer,
ACEnet ,
94
Columbus Road , Athens
Dom1n0 snow H1nng
Huge yard sale Saturday
Oh1a 45701 Resumes Will
Sale Dr1vers
Only 477 LeGrande Blvd
be recewed unt1l position 1s
and Management
B 30-3 00 Household 1tems,
lrlled ReVIS\'; ol resumes w111
Al l Locations
lawn mowe~ womensJchll·
begm on May 23 ACEnet 1s
Apply 1n person
c:lrens cloth1ng
an
equal
opportunity
(304 )675·5858
employer
(740 )446·4040
Yard sale Fn·Sat 20th &amp;
21st 120 Fa1rt1e td Lane Due to reCent changes 1n Help wanted Darst Mull
Clothll'lg household 1tems coverage area Medi Home Group Home (740)992
and antiques
Health Agency IS seekmg a 5023
h1ghly motivated IndependAthens -Me1gs
Yard Sale Sat 8 00-4 30 ent full ·t1me Registered The
1240 Kemper Hoflow Ad Nurse to manage1serv 1ce Educallonal Servtee Center
Toots, l1sh1ng polas &amp; mucl'1 c t~nts out of our Galhpol1s has a poSitiOn open1ng as
School Psycholog1st tor the
more
off1ce Must be licensed m
I
Me1gs County Schools for
Doth 01'110 and West V1 rg 1n1a
4
YARD SALEthe 2005-2006 School Year
We offer a competitive
Po\IEROY/M:IOOI E.
Apph ~ant s must hold a cer·
sataryl benefits package and
t1hc~1e Of' !~e ensa that all ows
401 K E 0 E Please send
9 00 Saturday, May 21 S1x resume to 352 Second Ave , ths.1 to se1ve as a School
Fam 11 y
Ches1'11re Boat Galhpol1s OH 45631 or call Ps'(Cholog1st Sala ry: wrll qe
ba:ted on expenence and
Ramp Shelter House, Ra1n 1 800-48 1 6334
Attn
ce~tlcatto n accord ing to the
or Shme 992 9475
Audrey Farley AN
salary sehedute Th1s pos1·
Bar n across from Valley Established Heat1ng·COOI 1ng tlon has Board approved
Concrete
W Company m Galha Counr1 benefits Submit tetter of
Brook
Columb1a, Clean mce mer- lookmg for expene nced mlerest and resume to John
chandise Sat Sun 9·3
1ns1~1ters an d techn1C1ans If D
Costanzo
Interested send resume to Supenntendenl
A thens
Huge yard sale May 20 &amp; CLA Box 568 clo Galhj:Johs Me1gs E ducat1onA.I SerVIcE
21 , 235 Mulberry Avenue , Tnbune
P0
Sox 469 Cenler, 320 112 East Mam
lot's of miscellaneous 1tems Galhpot1s OH 456~ 1
Street Pomeroy Oh 45769
0684 AppiiCa!IOn Deadline
Sat May 21 Bone Hollow HELP
WANTED
Thursday May 26 2005 Tile
Ad fTaylor Or off At 7 across Salesperson An amblt1ou3
M.iESC 15 an equa l opportutram Lead1g Creek Ad , person can earn up to
nity Employer/Prov 1der
some lurmture m~rrow s $500/wk Call Jor de tails
books, DVD s, v1deos, tool locally at 304-675·5100 or Pammed1cs &amp;
EMT s
bmces to fit bed Qf p1cktlp, out-of-town at 1·866·90:2 needed
Apply at t3S4
lots of m1sc &amp; clothtng
5100
Jackson P1ke Gall1polls

n

r

YAKD

Veten nary Ass1stant need
ed Expenence preferred
bUt w111 tra1n PT/FT some
weekends
reqUi red
Mm1mum
wage
Send
resume to French Town
Vetermar)l Clime 360 SR
160
Gallipolis Or fax
1740)446 4101

•

r

S&lt;\LE-

I

- -------'----

HHA

Gal l1 a County Counc11 on
Ag1ng 1s seekmg a1des to
prov1de Home Care and
Persona l Care to Santor
Crt1lens of Gallia County
Benefi tS mclude
Compet111ve wage
M1!eage rennbursernent
• Day sh1lt
No mghi/No call
2 Sat or Sun a monlh
VISion/Den tal plan
Apply Sen1or Re so urce
Center
1167 St At 160 Gallipolis
Mon-Fn 8 4
(740)446 7000 EOE

Lost ~ / 14 around GAHS
Black/wh11e male Boston
Tamer Fam1ly' pet Cal l
(740)446·7573 or (740)709
6141
Lost cat long hatred Femf\le
Tabby W1th white paws Call
(740)446 0350

CAN

Wanted B111 1ng person for
phys1c1an ofllce Part t1me
Mu st have, reliable trans
portat1on and med1cal off1ce
cod1ng and bllhng expen
ence- computer and typmg
skil ls a must Benef1ts available Send resume to CLA
Box 569 c1o Gallipolis
Trrbune
PO Box 469
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Holzer Semor Care Center
If you enJOY work1ng 1n long
term healthcare and want to
beco me part of a car1ng
team you may be a candl
d ate for one ot the followmg
pOSIIIOrlS
~

NURSING.
RN
LPN
Evemng s
STNA S
Night Shift

150

and

&amp;HOOf..~
INSTRUC110N

Galltpohs Career College
1Careers Close To Home)
Ca ll Todayl 740·446·4367
, 80o- 2 14-G4 52

r

HOMES

IIEt.P WMj'll l l

511 3105 across from Gal11a
Country Ammal Welfare
League If see,n please
return he IS a CHILO S
fflll Call (740)441 D544
Consider Award

CLASSIFIED INDEX

ElectrlcaiiRelngerat1on.

be

Found Female Rat Terne r
weanng red collar Rees€;
HollowiJencho Rd area
(740)367·0429

\NO
FOL'ND

4x4 s For Sale . ..
... .. .. ... ..
725
Announcement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 030
Ant1ques. .. . .
.• . ... .. .. ..... 530
Apartments lor Rent
.. . .. 440
Auction and Flea Market . •. •• .. . .. .. .080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones .
.. . ••. 760
Auto Repair ...... ·.. .. .. .
. ....... 770
Autos for Sale ... .. .. ..
.. . .. .. .. . 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale...... .. . .. . •• 750
Building Suppl1es .............................. 550
Business and Buildings.. •. ....... . .. .. . .. 340
Bu::uness Opportun1ty ............................ 210
Bustness Training .......................... ........ 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .. ·........................ 790
Camp1ng Equipment ...... .. ....................... 780
Cards of Thanks .............................. , ... 010
Child/Elderly Care . . . . . . ............... 190
Equipment for Renl .. .

musl

l'l::::"-"":'............- , - - - - - - - - - ' -

7 FREE pupp1es Mom IS
hound Dad IS a traveling
sa lesman 1740)256 1495
allm 3pm
E~

ads

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Busmess Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m .
Thursday for Sundays Paper

Free F ~rewood 10 Loads Found· gentle black L.ab w1th
must P1ck-up (304)675·4088 co ll ar M1ddlepon Football
F1eld area (740)'392 1780
Half P1t Bull Half Boxer pup or 740 992 7415
p1es
Reaoy
5/23105 ::-~-:-:::---=:-:-::--'-(304)675·6635
Found Dog P1tbull very
PuppieS to GIYeaway Black fnenc:lly whl1e wlbtack spots
Lab &amp; Siberian Husky mix has pla1n collar
Call
(304 )675 4469 or (7401441 (740)367 7760 or clleck animal shelter
7193

S Sol1d wh1te kittens Call
( / 40)446·0129

740)448 7484 01 (740)441

iJi

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
!r1'o
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 504 for small
·
$1.00 for large

~

"Lost Dog .. Goes by tile
name Lacy s. years old
Golden
Retr1ever
Very
tnendly
last
seen
on
male
1 female pup
School
Rd
(black) small calico k1tten Graham
good pe ts for ch1ldren call GallipoliS OH If you have
any 1nlormahon please call
(740)949 2306
ASAP
(740)446·8611
2 long hau Ca l1co k11tens (740)645-3733 (740)645·
One mostly black one most 3280 (740)645-0130 Call
ly grey {740)446 7484 or anyt1me
(74D)441·7411
Found adoratJie female tan
3 K1ttens 2 Black &amp; 1 Gray &amp; black puppy w1th colla!
Tabb~ (304)675 5730
call (740)949 1329 to 1dent1·
fy the collar
3 puppies 2j male 1 temale • - ' - - -- - - - - !dther AKC Dalmatian black
w1th wh1te markmgs house
broken 1740)992 9832

- - - -Coal You haul away

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Datly In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

{740)446-

MERCilo\NIJISJ:

FOR SAl£

Bl!SINESS
0FI'I.)tmJNIT\'

•

Mowv
TO LoAN

Ba rra.,., Smart Contac
he O hiO DIVISIOn 0
Fm anc1a1
ln stiiUIIon
ot Consume
fflce
lfa1rs BEFORE you rel r
ance your home o
btam a loan BEWAR
1 requests for any larg
dvance payments o
ees or Insurance Cal
he Of1rce ol Consume
ffatrs to ll tree at 1 866
mtgage broker
o
ender
lS
properl
1censed (This 1s a publl
erv1ce announcemen
rom the OhiO Va lle
PubiiSilln Compan )

i'RoFESSIONA!.
SERVICES
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wm l
1 888-582 3345

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Is
subtect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
wh1ch makes It Illegal to
advertise ' any
preference llm1taHon or
discrimination based on
race color, religion, sex
familial status or national
or1gm or any 1ntantlon to
mAke any such
preference, limitation or
d1scrtm1natlon "

1

I·

HotJSEHC )U)

Gooos

~.o--------,..l
Appliance

Delta 9 Bench top band
saw' almost new Craf1sman
comb1nat1on 6~ diSC and 4
belt sander slightly used
$55 Craf1sman 7 1/4 Circu lar saw S25 Skll 7 114 Circular saw co mmerc1al duty
$30 Wood cen ter mount
drawer sl1der metal ce nter
mount slide r w1th brackets
an d rollers approx 8D sets
Box of Senco na1ter 2 1/2
nails (740)44t 9359 leave

JET
Warehouse
AERATION MOTORS
Repatred New &amp; RebUilt In
m Henderson WV
Pre Stock Call Ron Evans 1
owned apphcanes start1ng at 800 -537 9528
$76 &amp; up all under wa rranty
we do serv1ce work on all - - - -- - - - - Make and Moc:lels (304)675· Mm11ng sale Story&amp;Ctark
7999
up r1g1'1t p1ano $50 Broh11t
sola/sleeper queen s1ze
Furniture &amp; Appliances lor $50 bolh ax good cond1!1on
L1st &amp; Pnce's (304)675·5652 (740)44B·P555 ask lor
Barbara Jean
Furmture Sale Mollotlan s
Sofa and cha1 r startmg at
NEW AND USED STEEL
$399 Cal l (140}446·7444
' Steel Beams P1pe Rebar
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio
(740)446 7444 1 877-830
9f62 Free Est1mates Easy
fmanc1ng 90 days same as
casll V1sal Master Ca rd
Dnve- a· little save alot

I_

L1ke new 2 bedroom cent;al
a1r all appliances furni shed
Call (740)446 2003
Mobile Home 2br, 2ba all
In
Country
Electnc,
(304)882·2537 or 593·5433

New 3 BR Home Only
189/mo lncluc:les ale dehvery and set up 740 385
4367

Tara '
Townhouse
Mob1le Homes s11es rn the
Apartments, Very Spac1ous
Shade area Water Sewer
2 Bedrooms, CIA 1 1/2
Tr~sh 1nc tuc:led
$130 00
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
per month 740·385-4019
Pool Pallo Start $385/Mo
No
Pets, Lease Plus
~~IENfS
Secunty
Deposit ReqUired
FOR
(740)446 3481

No Down Payment Poss1ble
1900 square It house 3
bedroom 2 batll ful l baseHOMES
ment new heat pump, sets
FOR SALE
on 3 acres SA 7, Eastern
School D1stnct (740)985·
$59 000 New Haven 2 BOO
sq f1 log cabm as IS, w/3. 5 4321
acres Call Mike (51 3)31 4·
dy
BR
Rea
to move 1n 3
2754

WI \I I· SI\11

t

RENf

1 and 2 bedroom apar tments furmshed and unlurnlshed secunty depoSit
required no pets 74D-992·
2218

'N'·'~'s

Tw1n R1verS Tower 1s accept
1ng appllcatrons for wmhng
IISI for HIJd·SUbSIZed, 1· br
apartment call 675·6679
EHO

MUSIC\!.
IN5TRUJ\IfNI~
$300

Faurrs&amp;
VF.Gh'TA81£S

on Centenary Road and the
W1!11am Ann Motel (740}446·
9442 I

....-.,

i~--"':':'-~
Fot&lt;SALE

1988 Ford F250 $950 16
loot tra1ter factory built
$800 61oot flmshlng mowerlike new used tw1ce $800

I·

\In I ~I

I'PI

II~

l\ 1.1\ IS lOth

r10

fAml
EQUIPMENT

..__ _iiiliiiiiliiiii""'-"
0% F1xed Rate up to 24
months on New John Deere
Compact Tractors&amp; 110 TLB
01 Carmochael Equopmenl
(740)446-2412
-1-9-95_M
_F_3-62-1-ra_c_to-,-55

Your
used
equipment
source
Carmichael
Equ1pment (740)446·241 2
or VI ;lit www careq ~.QID

'

Sentinel • Page 85

Au us

4\~

1\JR SII. E

FORS\11

2002 Bu1ck Rega l Brown
Metall10
9 700
M1les
Leather L1ke Nev. $13 500
(304)773 5338

1999 B avada fully loaded
leather dual power sears
new t1res Alloy .... neets Bl ue
Bcok pr1ce $8 750 sacr f 1 c~
S6 495 !7 40)645·2729 or
2002 Cadillac Dev111e Nh11e (7401379 2544 leave: mes
Lll E.'.TOCK
d1amond tully equipped sage w11 return ca ll
factory warrant~ 22 900
m11es like new S24 995 1999 ""'rd F250 d1eseltruck
14 month old Black Angus
(740)256 1428
4x4 31l' ton e)(tended cab
cross bull ou t of reg1stered
Bspeeo
standprd loaded
Bull (740)446 6755
2003 Chrysler PT Cru1ser
a
1 OOD Very clean Pnce
21 000 miles take over pay
tB yearling ewes 5125
S21 500 (740!388 0356 '
ments {740)992 2379 see
each 740 388 -9747 or leave
at 245 Mulberr,. Ave
'a mess age ar 740 669
2DOO Dodge Durango 4x4
Pomeroy
9905
RfT Sport 5 9l V8 67K.
2003
Toyota
Sp~der m1le5 loaded leather cowl
Jyr-ord Palomino Pa,nt
1ndur:t1on hood
cus tom
Mare can be Reg1st~red Convert1ble Excellent cond1
S11 300
OBO
Sunny Dee Bar
Green tlon 7 ODD rn1les 6·speed pam l
broke $SOO 'OBO (304 )593 Sequential Shift 1n stora~e (1'40)245 03~5 '
from October to Apnl
1392 (304)576 2201
Jeep
Liberty
{304)6 75 4318 or (304)208· 2003
Renegade Loaded 4x4
Ask about our AQHA 4128
Member Discounts on new
S14 500 '
oeo
Call
John Deere Equ1p ment 98 Camaro V6 Ma_gna 11011. (740)256 1618 or (740)256
Carmichael
Eqwpment exhaust t8 nms cd player 6200
(740)446 -2412
automat1c 78 000 m1tes
~:=:.~:=-:~:....::-::--:"­ S7500 Call (740}441 -0450
84 Ford F1 50 4x4 automat
For
Sale
Unbroken
1c newly reoullt 302 engme
191mon' h old Red·Wh1 te 98 Dodge Neon 9D 000 Al um1num
mtake
Edel
Pa:mt Colt To Good Home m1tes cold atr tilt runs Brock carburetor new t1res
on ly (304 )576 2806 make good great gas milea ge S1 400 (7 40)379 2826
$1 200 OBO (740)256 9031
Olier
or (740)256 1233
96 Jeep Che rokee Sport
Yearl1ng Angus Bulls Mostly
A I excellent bloodlmes Cadillac 1988 Sedan Deville 4x4 auto a1r wh1te looks
pnced reasonably State Run 105 600 m11es new brakes and runs good $2 800
Farm Jackson (740)286- $1,200 (740)379-2366
' &lt;740 !742 •2662
5395
15
l'IWCK..fit
97 Jeep Wrangler 4cyl 5
www slaleruntarm com
11::;;-F;;.;.~~~::t-UH. SALE
speed 4WD Soft Top very
~
HAY &amp;
good cond1 t1on (40416 75
GRAIN
1971 Ford P1ck-up short 7474

r

...-,

L
1.,0..--iiiiiiiiii.--"

H P 8430 ease I H round
ba11er 55 N H , rake 479
N H hayb1ne ha~· tedder
t7 40)985 3843

wheel base many new pans
$700 Call (304)6 75 5798
please leave message

-1-9-72_C_h_e_,-y~P-oc-k-up--3~
50

''

John Deere 10ft No T1l Dnll startmg at $1 399 F;, n'"'""o
wrmger washers Will do 40x64x12$13 995 tor
Rent
Carmu::hael available subJeCt to John
repa 1rs on major brands In {937)599 7740 http 1/nat1on Equipment {740)446·2412
Deere Cred1t approval You r
stlop or at your home
:w~td=e~p~o~le~b~a=tn~s:o~o=m':____ _ John Deere Commerc1al payments could be as low
as $39 month w1th $0 down
Two matchmg mauve niCe Rabb ots lo&lt; sale ba r set w1th Works1te Products In Stockll Carmlct"tael
EQuipment
h
$ 3
stools krtchen table 4 Compact Excavator 27C (7 40)445-24, 2
upholstered c a1rs
1 5
D
oD/Skid
Ste6!s
371
35
5
; 109 Sunset Dr Phone cFh;.a'.,"-":(7i!4;;;0;5)44~6~3'!7~32""""~
(740 )446• 3257
320
325
328/"fraotor Purchase a NeW John
SPA OunET
I " Loader Backt1oe 110TLB
Deere
Prem1um
Lawn
Super Sale
Check out our rental rates Tractol" &amp; rece1ve $250
Used FurOI!ure Store 130
New Locat1on
Great F1narrc1ng Available· toward a John Deere
Butav1lle P1ke, Appliances
11
am
7pm
Monday
Fnday
Carmichael
EQuipment Implement Acc essory or
mattresses
dressers
12pm 5pm Saturday(740)41\6 24 12
Mamtenance Plan Oiler
couches dmettes recliners
Sunday
bunkbeds
grave rnonu
us 50
New 50o3 5005 &amp; 5020 good May 3 1hru June 27 at
Carm1chaet
EQUipment
ments
much
more
Can11onsburg-Asl1land
Senes John Deere Ut11ity
(740)446·4782 Gallipolis
4
1
4
2
74
4
(beh1nd Mr Gattis)
l'ractors @ D% t1xed l 36 01c".c0:.:l..,,.;6c.·:._ .::'::--::--'--OH Hrs 11 ·3 (M·S) We buy
·. (606)922·7185
monttls Used Ut1iltyTractors Zero Turn Z-Trak Mowers
used furn tire
@
4 9% , Var1able1 60 1rom John Deere available at
Weslerns W1l1 Trade or rnonths
Carmichael 4 9%
f1xed
ra1e
fro
Wasller $95 dryer $95
Exchange (304)675·5884
EqUipment (740)446 2412
Carm1chael Eqwpment w1!h
refngerator $95, etectnc
range $95, l1ke new washer --W-olff_t_a_n_n"'ln'-g-B
_IKI
_s_ New John Deere 5025 John Deere Credit approval
(74D)4~6
2412
S175 wrmger washer l1 ke
Senes Utility Tractors @
new $200 Kenmore Side
Huge selecti on
www ca req ~QID
2 99°b F1xed/ 36 months
by·slde S295 twnl SIZe bed
lmmed1a1e Delivery
Ca rmrchael
Equ1pment
II~ \'\SPOIU \110'\
$ 75 love seat 550 very ntee
F1nanc1ng
(740)445 2412
round table w/ 4 chairs $ 150
1 800-894 6997
Skaggs Appliances
(740)446 6579
76 Vme Street
BUJLDrl"G
[740)446 7398
~ ...PUI-:S

r

New 3 BR 2 Bath SectiOnal
Home
On ly
249/mo
Includes A/C c:le l1very &amp;
setup 740-385-7671

CKC Reg istered Black &amp; Tan
M1n1Dachst':und Pup 9wks
Old
$175 call anyt 1me
(304)88 2- 1101

r

10

FAR\I
f...Ql.'ll';\ ll _"o;T

HOMEGROWN
For sale Elect riC hosp1ta1
STRAWBERRIES
bed
Good
cond1t1on
Available a1 McKeari Farms
(740)446 0974

For
Concrete
Ang le
Cllannel Flat Bar Slee!
Gratlng
For
Drams
Dr1veways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
Friday Bam 4 30pm ClO sed
Thur sday
Saturday
&amp;
Thompsons Apphence &amp; Sunday (740 )44 6-- 7300
Repmr 675 7388 For sale
Downtown
Luxury recond itioned automatiC Pole
Barn
30x50x 10
Apartment, Now Leas1ng1 washers &amp; dryers refnge ra $5 795 mcludes Pa1nted
Smgle Bel1mom Availab le to rs
gas and €1ectnc Metal Slider Free Delivery
(304)675-51!19
$4 595
ranges a~r cond1lloners and 24x32x10

Furn1st1ec:l apt 2nd Ave
Ups1alfs, all ut11111es pa1d
One bedroom , no pets
Gallipolis (740)446-9523

10

PETS
FOR S\LF

m~~sage

1

New 3 BD 2 Bath Home
Only 198/mo Includes ale
delivery and set up 740·
385·9948

r

RTh1'

10

•t

Grac1ous 11vfng 1 and 2 bed2 Bedroom Mob1le Home'
room apartments at V1 11age
$375/mon 1 Mobile Home
,Manor
and
R1 vers1de
Lot
$150/mon
Ca ll
Apartments In Middleport
(304)675·3423
From $295 $444 Call 740
2 bedroom mobil€ home on 992-5064 Equal Housmg
Pole Cat Ad $425 month Opportun11!es
plus utillt1es 5425 depos11
Norlh 3rd Ave M1ddleport
ean (740)446·4107
1 br furnished apt no pets
2 bedroom R10 Grande prev1ous rental retereces &amp;
$400 month+ deposrt Water c:tepos 1t (740)992·0165
&amp; trash pa 1d No pets
One Bedroom , No Pels
(740)245·5671
Ut111t1es Pa1d
S400/mo
3 Qedroom, 2 bath C/A, w1th DepoSit
&amp;
Refe rence
deck &amp; room ac:ld1!10n 455 ReqUired (740)446·3667
St Rt 218 (740)446·7322
Pleasant Valley Apartment
3 Br 2 Ba Mobile Home
Are now tak1rig App lications
T P: / C Water Eastern for 2BA 3BR &amp; 48R
Schools Call- 1·502·943·
Apphca!IOns
are
taken
0386
Monday thru Fnday, from
Beaullful r1ver v1ew m 9 00 AM 4 PM OHIC€ Is
Kanauga Ideal for 1 2 peo Locatad at 1151 Evergreen
pie
No pets, please Drive Po1nt Pleasan t WV ~=-...;....;;~---~ •~---ii"iiiio
urtiiiiiiiii;.,-,J,
ApplrcatiOns bemg taken Phone No ts (304)675 ~
ANTIQUES
5806EHO
Call (740)441-0181

Th1s newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which Is In
v1olat1on ot the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

RESIDENT SERVICES:
AC'TWITY
ASSISTANTS/
www gall poli ~careeroollega ~;a m
STNA
Accredllild M11mber Accred 1tmg
Council far lndepend!lnl CaHege 5
DIETARY
o•n~d~~
~
· ~,,~,~··----~--,
li170 ~h~o&gt;
- - - - - - - - - - . Home m country sett1ng only
COOKIAIOE
M"SC'I"'
I 3 8 edroom , 1 8 alh Large 198/mo w1th 10% down
L
:.. .....,. l:A~"-'
DIETARY AIDE
1
Fenced Lot Lots of Storage 740 385-4367
If you are tnle resled m JOin
4 m1tes out
Sandlllll f320 MOBILE Ho~
FREE Home (304)675 2507
1ng our team and becornmg OIRECTV
IUR SALE ,
System
part
of
thle
"Holzer ent ertammen1
FREE Eqwpment and In stall 3 Bedroom 2 Bath 2 Car
g.p;e
1
Difference '
up to tour rooms 145 chan- Garage on spac1ous lot 1979 Homette 12x50 2
Cantrell DON
Bedroom/1 Bath gas , self
(740 )446 5001 or CQ &lt;n O\,see nels $29 00 a month Ask Sunset Lane oH Sand/'1111 Rd
cont
-a1r condlltoner
W1ll
how
to
get
FREE
HBO
Must See Call {304)675·
us at
rent lor $265 00 a mol]lh or
MAX and STARS 1 800 4352 lor appt
sell for $3 495 00 740-385·
523-7556 lor dela1ls
3-Bedroom
1·Bath 4019
WANlUl
Remode led Full Basement,
To Do
Appliances
mcludec:l, 1991 Sunshme 14x65 2
380 Colonial Dr1ve
Outbuilding &amp; 24FT Pool , bedroom, 2 bath central a1r,
B1dwell Ohi045614
DHK CLEANING &amp; POW· 1BB Park Onve (304)675· covered porch, good condiERWASHlNG houses Lei 7460
tion $11,000 (740)379Us Help You I tns1de/Ouls1de
2484
Res 1d e'n t 1a ll Bus 1ness 3br House Dmmg Room ,
tl Ctean-er-upl!l Whatever the Kitchen Hot water heal &amp; 2000 Fleetwood
front
(An equal opportunity employer! JOb we II Get er-11one111 Electnc C1ty-Water &amp; DnUed kl1chen model wltl) sk1rtmg
Karen or Dave (740)985 We ll Br1ck &amp; Vmyt Ext and central an~ W111 deliver
3633 or 740 416-1 823 dhk (304)5B6·4858
Very clean 1J8oo-837-3238
Lifeguards for Middleport
cleanlng@yahoo com
Pool apply at pool Sat
60FT by 24FT 97 OakwOOd
10am-5pm or call 740·992· Gentles ContructiOn Home Manufuct~red Home With 99 Holly Park Glenmoor 3
6969
Improvement
30 years Fne Place &amp; Garden Tub BA. 2 bath, v1nyl/ sh1ngfe
expenence Customer sat1- Books for $35,000 Reduced A10 Grande already set up
Immediate Opening
or can be moved $11 ,900
Motor route avaUabla In faction guareneed Anyttng to $29 900 Senous Calls
(304)633-6536
w1th
nome
1mprovemen1
onlyll!
(304)675·42
18
the Leon area $900 • $950.
a month call Sean Cullen Compare our pr1ces F.ree: --~------- - - - - " ' : ' - " - - - estimate (740)256·6878
7 Homes under $14000 New 14x60, only $198 73
at 304-675--1333 ext. 20
Will deli ver 740 385-4367
per mo Includes complete
McClure s Restaurant now I w1ll clean Mouses or ofl1ces
set up and delivery, 740h1r1ng all locat1ons full or References ava1labte For
Attantlonl
385-2434
part-t1me, p1c;k up applica- tl'1e best 1n clean11ness call Local company oflenng ~ No ------~--­
t ion at location &amp; bring back Malmda at 304-531 1794 or DOWN PAYMENT~ pro- SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
betwe en
10 OOam
&amp; 740 992 5805 ·
grams for you to buy your Stock models at old prices,
11 OOam
Monday
th ru
home Instead of renting
2005 models amv1ng Now,
, J1m s Carpentry
Saturday
' 100% fmancmg
Cote's
Mobile
HorT)eS
f"ree est1mates fully 1ns and
• Less than perfect credit 15266 U S 50 East, Athens,
tandscapmg
McOonalds 1n R1o ,Grancie small
OhiO 4570 1 (740)592-1972,
accepted
now h1nng all sh1ft s Paid (740)446-2506 or (740)367·
• Payment could be the "Where You Get Your
0437
We
do
11
a1111
v acaiiOn s pa1d llol1days,
same as rent
Money's Worth"
startmg above m1 01mum
K'A S lawn Mow1ng serviCe Mortgage
Locators ·
wage Apply 1n person
FARMS
and haulmg D1scoun) for (740)992-7321
FOR SALE
Need 10 people to sell Avon sen1orsl (740)245-9240 or
1740)339·0066
N1ce 3 BR LA FA DR Eat·
Call (740)446 3358
In-Kitchen
1- 1/2 Bath, Santa s Forest
25,000
LOW•mOt81Ure
F1replace, Gas Centra! Heat plus/mmus
NEED ESTIMATES ON
Cl'1nstmas
Carpet-Cleaning
&amp; Afr lnler Com System, Trees 27 aces Mature
ROOFING &amp; PAINTING
Brand
New
Mettlod
Double Garage, lngro und Hardwood $40,000 (if new)
BUILDING (304)675-1333
Ory ln 1 Hour
Pool, 2 Lots Total 100Kt00, Machrnery, M1nerats, Rent&amp;d
9AMT04PM
No Steam-or-Shampoo
Fenced
1n
Backyard Tra1ter Site
4-Bec:lroom ,
Free-Est1mates
Now Hnng
1800sq Feet Ranch Style reconstructec:l Log House
···clearly Clean... •
Exp HVAC Installers need·
call (304)773-5944
Three OutbUildings County
ed , also need Install er
_1304_]675-0022
Tra1nec:l
Labor
Water
Owner relocating 0% clown
H elpers App ly at Comfort
Must see th1s 1mmaculate
A1r 1160 Jackson P1 ke
2000 sq tt home With
Gallipolis

FOR

14x70 2 bedroom, all elec
trfc CNHeat E1tcellent con
dillon No pets 2 m1les from
!own
Depos1VAeferance
reqwred $450/month Call
after 5pm (740)446-6565

•NOTICh
HID VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do bus1ness w1th peo
le you know and NOT 1
end money through th
ma11 until you have 1nvest1
ateO the offenn

MOBILE HOMES

\II IU II\ 'IllS I

9061

Apartment PI Pleasant
275/275
dep No Pets
3 Bdrffi. 1 bath Cntrl NC
W /D nook up Ref ndg &amp; Homestead Realty Broker
Slove Included C1ty school (304)675·4024 (304)675.
$500 mo $450 deposit, No 5540 as~ for Nancy
pels
Rei
requ1red
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
(304)675 2525
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
3 bedroom, 1 112 bath PRICES AT JACKSON
located al 1641 Lin Hgts ESTATES, 52 Weslwood
Pomeroy Lease &amp; dep No Dnve from $344 lo $442
pets Call (740)667 0762
Wa lk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
Equal
740-446 2568
Attention!
~usmg Opj)orlumtY
Local company oHenng "NO ' _:____:._:..:.__;_:.__ _
DOWN PAYMENr
pro- Chester Oh10 2 bedroom 1
grams for you to buy your bath wid !look-up $350 per
month {1nc tudes water &amp;
home 1nstead of rent1ng
• 100% f1nancmg
trash), call 740.992·6604 or
• Less than perfect cred1t (740)992·3332
accepled
Clean spac1ous Duplex 3
• Paymenl could be the
bedroom, bonus room
same as rent
Ga llipOliS
Mortgage
Locators dowo,town
5610/month no pets renter
(740)992 7321
pays ut11il1e s (740}446·
F~H Rent 3br 2ba detached 9961
Garage, $400/month m
CONVENIENTLY LOCATGlenwood (304)'743-8584
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
House lor Ren t Jackson Townhouse
apartment s
Avenue
S475 plus One and/ or small houses FOR
Month Depos11 {304)675 RENT Call (740)441 1111
3100
for application &amp; 1ntormatton

1

Oftfee liP~~

S 150/depostt

RENl

112VInton Cgurt
Gallipolis. OH

~egister
Your Ad,
(740} 446-2342 (740) 99~·2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To
992-2157

Uttihune

MISL"ll.LANEOUS

For Lease Oll1ce or retail
spaces 1n very good cond1
tlon Downtown Gallipol is
Approx 1600 sq ft each 1
or 2 baths Lease pnce
34
112 Smttl'1ers Ave negotiable to encourage
Upstatrs stovelre fr~ gerator new
busmess
Ca ll
turntshed 2BR Renter pays (740)446 4425 or (7 40)446uttht tes
$2BO/mo 3936

IIOUSIS

I,-

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
NOW ONLINE
To· Place

r

SPACE

FOR REI&gt;T

I Buy Homes- Loca l person 2 Bedroom
Apartment
buys homes Conlldenllal $400 a month no pets call
OUick cash Jtm 740-992· 740-9 924119 -ask,_
fo r
6300 No ca lls after 9
Marge

1{1"\l"i

TheDa'

Qertbune
·- l\egt!iter
. . - Sentinel
'

•

Galh• County OH

.

www.myd,ailysentinel.com

30

V\NS

FoR SALE
.1997 Ford Conversion Van

Full s1ze Serta Etec Bed 3
P1ece Mahogany Bedroom
SUite (304)675 4034 or
(304)675·04 18

1994 Ponwon boat' tra ler
40 HP Johnsor Mora· used
very l1tt,e S5000 00 740
992 3875
1996 Stratos bass boat 1t5
fast stnke 2001 Soft nde
tr&lt;JIIer custom cover ~xcel
lenl
co nd1t1on
$6500
(740)44€ 4987
2000 Bayl1ner 21 H cuddy wl
tra1ter many extras very
clean 304 575·5563
Year 2000 Pontoon Boat 24
loot. J S~~oeetwater 50 HP
Merqury Power Tnm 4
Stroke Engme Btg Foot
Outdnve Lounge Seats
Pnvacy
Room
Depth
Fmder How Me1er Gooa
Rad10 Has only 50 hours on
Boat Garage kept m w1nler
Like New Pa1d ' over S18 000
W11 1 sale
for $13000
(3D4)773-5944

CAMPFJt~ &amp;
MomR Hm tES
1984 Skamper pup up 25ttl
Ann1versary Ed1t1on exeat
lent cond1110n 16 l;lox AC
and heat , stoYe 1cebox
dme1te $2 OQO (740)9 49
2709)
1992 29 A1rstream Excalla
Very good cond1!10n twin
bed s Ph, (740)645 4454
1998 30 f1 fth wheel trave l
tra11e r double slide excel·
S13 900
lent cond1li0n
phone (740)698·93 19
24FT Dod ge Wmnebago
Motor Home (304)593 0898

1988 Ford Ranger extended
Cao will run S400 (304)458
1727
1996 S 10 P1ckup 4cyl
Automat1c 30 ooo actual
miles
$2 450 (304)576
2934

--~------

1998 Chev Silverado Ext
Cab 4x4 all power Auto
4 3L V 5 Vortex Alum nms
topper
Pewl er/Charco al
98 000
m1
Excellent
Cond1t1on S9 900 OBO
Phone (304)675 2039 after
500pm
2001 Dodge 1500 Sport VB
quad
cab
S16 900
(740)645·6734
89 Chevy 4x4 VB aula 6
mch 1111 35 1nch l1res Reese
$7 000 (7 40)36 7

98 Ford Explorer w1th Sun
Roof Eddie Bauer Ed1!10n
Excellent Cond1t1on 1ns1de &amp;
out Books tor $10 ODD sell
pnce $6 300 Sertous Calls

85 W innebago Ch1eftam
many updates &amp; extras
6KW Generator Ready to
Go {304 1675 3D35
92
Plymm1 th
Voyage r ::----'~:-::---:c::-107 OOD m1les runs good Coleman Camp1ng Tra1ler
$800.( 740)379 2826
12FT 2 K1ng Beds S5 500
ca ll for Dela1ls (304)67540 MOTORCH. t f..'il
1731
4 WHU.I.ERS
For Sale or Trade 77 CrUise
A1r 30FT as k1ng $6 000
1998 Buell 53 TnunderbOit
Ph (304)675 1935
Harley David son eng1ne
very fast sport 01ke great Trude Camper AC TV
shape $5100
(7 4D)985 Antenna Wl 'ed for Cable
9857
hke ne"" S€
(304)675
3353
2000
Harley
DavidSOn
St-.R\ I&lt; FS
Sporrster 883 w/1200 k1t
8 000 miles new t1res lots 810
HO\IE
of chrome excellent cond1
1.\
IPRO\ b\ lENTS
l1on $8 000 (740}949 4019
740 591 5610
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
200 4 RedCat/ tt Dec
4Wheeler
Pa1d
St 5DO Unconditional hfet1me guar
Askmg S1 100 (304)675 antee Local references fur
4262
(304)593 4290 n1shed Establi shed 1975
(3 D4 )593·0840 leave mes Call 24 Hrs {740f 446
0870 Rogers Basement
sage
WaterproOfing
2004 Re dCaV110cc
4
Wheeler
Pa1d
S I 600
Askmg
1 ; OD
Helmet
EXCAl\ IJr- (,
mcluded
(304)675-4262
( 304 )593 429 D (3 04)593
JD 450E Dozer 6 Way
0840 leave message
Blade Good Undercamage
- - - - - -- -94 Harley Oav1dson Ultra Ready to work Hours
ClasSIC 10 000 miles blue unknown S18 500 740·992·
excellent cond1(1on $13 500 4119

51J9

s

1984 Chevy 314 ton 4)(4 p1ck - - - - - - - - , - up Newly rebUilt engme GSF 600S Suzuk1 Band1t
$2000 (7 40)4 46 23 15
2003 3,00tl miles Custom
Pa1nt
Custom exhaust
1991 Cllevy S-10 4 3 V6 5 t11ghly modtfled strong bike
speed 4x4 $4 000 OBO S5DQO (740)44 1 0450
Call (304)675 5612
ButterfiV KOI
Harley Dav1dson custorn low
1998 Ranger 4x4 5 spd 3L nder Black w' chrome tnbal
Large Water Hyacmths Tandoro gooseneck full 8x8 1997 Mercury Sable Runs &amp; AM/ FM cassette A/C ott flames perfect shape only
$3 sq Bl.J!!erlly Ko1 Healthy head deck 23+5 treated looks good garage kept road package new pa1nt 21 000 m1les many €)1tras
lots o( Colors Phone flo'Or $4 300, good llres high miles, very dependable 56 000 080 Call after S9 150D (740)4 16·2213 or
(304)675·5043
(740)446 9317
$1 500 (740)446 8947
4 30pm (740)256 6257
(740)985·3677

~

\ I&lt;HOR.'

nmS\JL

Au to ma11 c
LWB
Gor::1d 74 DOD m1le ~ excellent con
Cond $2 500 (304)675 d1110n new t1re s $9 800
5652
(740)992 2945

(740)9 49 2217

22 Oak factory padded
Church Pews, 11 It long
good cond1t1on $125 each
40 new Hymnal Church
(740)388
books
$360
8965

I"'" lim r:-. &amp;

r

'

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

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

i

I
I,
I
•

'

·--------J

'

Po1nt Pleasant Dental Off1ce
seekmg
Exp
DentS I
Hyg1emst 3 days a-week
Send Resume clo PO Bolt
45 Pt Pleasant WV 25550

FI~~D AJOB

IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

remodeled k1tchen/ bUilt ms
Great ne1ghbortlood close
to town Call (740)446-8325
or VISit WWW OAVB com
Code 4505 PriCed to sell at
$132.500

L---~
2 acres more or less, an utllitles, paved road 2 m1les
lrom Chester $16000
(304)483-7550

I

i
I

~allipolis ilBailp m:rtbun~ The Daily ~entinel ~oint ~I.ea!iant ~egi!iter i
l. · ... .F4~~- 44l!:-.234~--~----··-·--J~)..992:-.2ts?.. .....:..:.-::.:.:...:_:..__::!.!.304)__675-}33~---··-..J
- ·-- ---- -- - - ---"-'--- ·-.!.--

�.,

•
'

Friday, May .20, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentin el

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS

Friday, May 20, 2005,
ALLEY OOP .

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

./ .

ACROSS

Phillip
Aider

I

ON THIS PAGE FOR
AS LOW AS
$26.00 PERMONTH!.

r\ortb

BISSEll

BUILDERS InC.

Sales &amp; Warranty Service De•aii&gt;r

Sid in£ • NC\\ Garu~L·~
~ Rq)lw.'l' llll'llt

Windows • R()ofing ·

=== '- - -

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

II """'' fl.~,, .•.,~- I S~ t. . ( "!&lt;'-&lt;! ~ ..ntbn . •·"'"'kd h"""' In~""" ""d'""'·

The Daily Sentinel

__c_c=c_="'.

TERRY 'S ENG INES

'

.

Cull B.D. Const.
for a ll yo u r honu.•
repuir needs, roulin~ .
s idin~ ,

ad d-uns.
remodeling r i c,••
l'rel~ estimui cs

\ 740) 992·2979
leone messa ,e

Your

Saturday, May 21,
NOTICE : is hereby
2005 at 10:00 a.m. at
given
that
on
the Bank 's. parking
Saturday, May ·21,
lot:
1998
Chevy
ca' v a l i e r
2005, a t 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
1G1JC52441W714381
held at 211 W Second
6
Sl. , · Pomeroy, Ohio. 1998 Dodge Ram 4x4
The Farmers Bank
1B7HF16Y1WWS6186
and
Savings
24
Company is seliing
The Home National
for cash in hand or
Bank reserves the
certified check the
right to reject any and
following colla1eral :
all bids. All vehicle
1994 HARLEY DAVID, are sold, as. is where
SON XL2 SPORT· is, with no warrantieS
S
T . E
R expres$ed or i·mplied.
1HD1CAP13RY21185 For an appointment
to see, call 949~221 0,
3
1991
CHEVROLET · ask for Sheila.
CAVAUER Z24 20 (5)18, 29, 20
1G1JF14TOM72386t3
The. Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Public Notice

· PUBLIC

NOTICE

Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
:right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annuB1 report
Form 990PF fqr ttie
the above collateral · Kibble Foundation ,
prior to sale. Further, Bernard V.
Fultz,
The Farmers Bank Trustee is available
and ·
Savi·n gs· for public inspection
Company reserves
at Bernard V. Fultz
the right to reject any
Law Office, 111 1/2
West Second Street,
· 0~ all bids submitted.
The
above
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
described collateral
during regular busl·
will be sold " as is· ness hours for a peri·
where Is", with no od of 180 days subse·
. expressed or implied
quent Ia publication
of this notice.
warranty given.
For further informa(5) 18, 19, 20. 23, 24.
tion,
or
for
an
25,26.27,31 (6)1 , 2, 3
appointment
. to
inspect
collateral ,
prior to sale date conPublic Notice
tact Cyndle or Randy
at 992-2136.
REQUEST FOR PRO(5) 18, 19, 20
POSAL
The Meigs County
Department of Job &amp;.
Public Notice · Family Services , subrecipient of Area 14
The Home National Workforce
Polley
Bank will auction the
Board, is seeking profollowing items on
posals to provide a
comprehensive year
round youth program
Card of Thanks·
to eligible youth ages
14·21 consistent with
Meig~
County's
T he famil y ol
W
o
r
k
f
o
rce
Beverly Chapman
Development Plan ,
woul d li ke to thank
provisions of the fedthe Commu ni ty and
eral
, Workforce
Investment Act (WIA),
church family for
and related federal
the outpouring of
and state regulations,
support . love fui d
in establishing youth
prayers for '"
activities under WIA ,
during the illne»
service providers are
expected to link proand lo» of our
grams with local
w i fe. mother.
grandmother. great labor needs, provide
a strong connection
grandmoth~r.... i,ter
between
¥ademic
and aunt.
and ·~ occupational
We are so bleS&gt;ed . learning; and estabto Ji ve in ·a
Happy Ad
commun ity that

cares and support :-.

H.i~hl

l ive~.

love.

We

wi sh to give
special recognition
to the ncighbo" of
B.ob and Bev.
Pastor Bob
Robinson . The
Syracuse M ethodist
Church. Tina Story
(home health

nurse). Fi:-;hcr
Funeral Home.
Holzer Cancer Care
Center.' Ho,pice
and the sta ll of
holzcr Medical
Cemer. God has
ble"ed the
Chapman famil~

•

with

~9me \t!f)'

special friend,;
Joyce Si&gt;wn and
famil y. Bar!J
McCoy and famtly.
Bill and ;o;an Da'i&gt;.
Dorothy Sa) re arid
Jean Stout. We
wi&gt;h ""could

mention each
person that touched
our famil y duri"ng
o.u r los. . Than&gt;. ~ uu

seems too "'mall a
gesture for you r
care. ; uppon and
IO\e .
Thank Yo u.
The family of
Beverly Chapman

HAPPY43RV

BIRTHDAY TO

STfVf
CARSON
Guess
Who????

Announcements

MISSI,NG
Reward offered far

mi·ssing
personalized wild
turKey box call
· · made for James
Earl Kennamer by
J.D. Harris. last
seen Tuesday, May
10 in a leather
holster. Reward of
$100 far info
leading to recovery
and $500 for the
return . Call Horace
Karr, Jay Reynolds
at Baum lumber or
call 803-480- 1842.

on

State

Rt.

All'JYpesQf
Concrete Work
25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimates

Time-?

FREE KIDS
FISHING DERBY
Saturday, June 11th
Bam-12pm
at Meigs County Fish &amp; Gam·e
. Club on W . Shade Rd- 1 mile
West ·of Skinner Rd .
Info call D ave at _992·0026
Sponsored by Meigs County
F ish
Game Association _

&amp;

Outreach
Immunization Clinic
Sponsored by
Meigs County Hea~h Dept &amp;
. Middleport/Pomeroy Rotary
'
Club ~

Saturday, May '&lt;!1
10 am - 12 pm
Powells Food Fair
Pomeroy, OH
Spaghetti Dinner Benefii
$6.00 per person
Saturday, May 21 3 pm- 6 pm
. Pomeroy Eagles #2171
Proceeds to benefit the kids F i s~1ng
Oerb Info Call Dave 992-0026 .

---- -

remole hyd mulics J year warranty

• Task

*"'**A lso u,· ~il~blc &gt;t="'**
M~ster Trac 1~1 rs 26 h ors~ - 3S horse,

· loud ers. fir~i~h m ow&lt;'rs. tillers
NEW ARRIVAL ZT!{ llixon tZero Turn
Radius Mower) ,\0 irll'h l'ulting width to 50'
inch L~ utling width J ycnr wnrrnuty
'·
T&amp;D TRo\Cl"OR SALES,._ EO! III'MENT
ri~t in the hl-.art 11f"Cin!!tiCr

Formt• rl~·

at 101'1

W. -.\ l t~i n l ,tmu~ru~

Ct•n tt-r

f..tJ~· l'riu~·

( )li E I'-

i\ lon-Fri.
· Yam tu 3!Ull
11 H: j}92-4 i8.'

AN' HE TAKES HIS
SMOES OFF ! I

GREENHOUSE ,
S~ ratu .~c. O H
'
741 PN 2-.'i 77li
rlu\\ cr..: &amp; Vl'gduhlC
plulll.'- Flat $6 ,95

THE BORN LOSER

l(f" Hanging Ba:.kct:-.21! Vat·.

~ -~. 9 ~ - $7.9.)

p-TI-\OR.t-11\I'I'LE. f&gt;..LWI'-'{~ ':££f'l\~-.,
C.OOL N-ID CJ-J..I'\ NO MATIE.R

·Perenniah ll' ' - ]' "
s~.t.1.'i . $5.9:i ~· 1\f!l\:J Planh r . I rL
. $ 1 . ~5 -$ 1 ~.95
12·· h:rn~ ~ 10.95
Opt·n Dail y l)-5:
Clo~cd Sunday

I
I .

WAA\'~GOII'\G ON

~

1&gt;-WI&gt;-.~ OF Wf\1\~~ GO\ NG 01'\ !

1

possible.)

OK , GOOD,.

STRIKE
. TH I S

Ho w c•vou

OUT

\JANNA. WORK.
HIM ?

" TO
I
WHO FL\.JNKEO
OUT qF A NGER
1'\ANAGEI"\ENT CLASS .

FINE. BUT PO

You

WANN~

WORK. Hlt1

SOMETIMES ! LIE AWAKE AT NIG~T. AND l
ASK,"Wr.IAT IS T~E MEANIN6 OFL.IFE?''

. Pari~&lt;

\larl(el

1--------~~

rt;..-1~•

t

lllEN ·A VOICE COMES TO ME TI1AT
SA'i5, '' I BEFORE E. EXCEPT AF1'ER C ! 1'

SUNSHINE CLUB
•

rr AUTOMATICALLY
(ALLS (;{)(.R IXXTOR
MlD'«X!R~

E'

•l

.,'

I

:!
~

. o L - - - - - - - - - ---,,:...-J

740·742-2293

.. GARFIELD

' Leave a messa e

Hill's Self
Storage

I'M A
LONEL.&lt;,&gt; &amp;UY,

-.
•

29670 Bashan·Aoad
Racine . Ohio
45771
741).949-2217

GARFIEI-t&gt;

LONELY. l-ONELY. ·L.ONf-1-Y, .

LONELY, LONEL"'- ·-

ADVERTISE
'

•

• Mushr.oom Compost
Available
$35 - 't ,000 lbs Approx. weight
18 spreader buggies available for use
Airway pasture renovators and seeders
a~ailable to rent.
Licensed agronomist on staff .watlable tor
·

SHADE RIVER AG SERVU.:E
Pomeroy, Ohio

JC. LTWNPJD

.P A

WD I T GPC A

CB

UCADH

GRIZZWELLS

KDGDW

BAt':\1 LlJlVIBER
Scorpion Tractors
''Taking Tile .Sting Out Of
Hard nurk!"

I r• I I• I

L_l:Z;:_;Ar-'W-rT-;:-lr-1
r

r'-=======~~
o

I

rw II A.1T, AI 10.'1.

tion essential to your p resent n'eeds
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..,... Ins tead of
looKing •o OU1 Sidern lor your social

I r I I I ,. I

~~:;

:~~~~r 91~:. ~~~~~~~~ 0~:::

•

SCORPI O (Oct . 2 4 -N ov. 22) . 11
could p r ove run rodoy to Involve your ·
sell in some type of activity that" offers
· •a bit of frif:l:ndly competition ." II might
amaze you to di scover how well you 'll
do when your mettle is tested
SAGITTAR IUS (Nov. 23·08&lt;:. 21) ~
Your ir1tuitlon may bEt far more acute
than usual today,. so f?lay your hunch· ..
as when they come to you . Chances
are events will unfold in exactly the
manner you envtslon them to be.
· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) ~
In tellectual pursuits could prove to be
e xciting for you today. You may uneX·
plainably see and understand things
in different ways that wore never clear
or apparent to you previously.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) ~
Cond ition s might favor you today in·
· ways where you may be unencum·
bered and unlimited in your pu"r s uit t'o
cJevelop your career or material. pur ~
suits·. Look for unusual opportunities
to arise.
PISCES (Feb . 2Q- March 20) In
order to f)ratlty yOur restlessness
today, you may find ycursefl seeking
involvements which challenge your
imagination and creatlvrty. Limitations
you've placed on yourself will be
gono.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - It you
have any financial or businesa trans~
actions • to work out t oday, don't
all your carde up front. ~
your beat on•• ' undar wfapa in caae
you hav. to trump an oppon.,t.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ) - Should ·
you ~ fltcad wlth having to maklt a
d ifficult ct.clalon .today, ehare your
alternatl....e with a cl....., trl.,d who
h aa a freeh .ya. Chane. . .,.. ~r pal
will apot ex..:1ty what vcu.,. mlulng:

' - - ' -- ' --'--

'---'

RS V E H R

'

_

_

•

.

.

•

,,

.

be led into temptation they usu-

.

ally

find -... - own • - •,.

0

Complete the ~hvclde (luOied
by fillinQ in the rniuiMg word1
you develop from step No. 3 below.

I

f t UNSCRAMtll E fOR
~ANSWER
.

SCIIAM-I.nS ANSWIU

Uremic · FUth • Tangy : Hectic· FIGHT for THEM
A wise old man once told me th;~t, 'If's harder fo live
Jp to principles than it is to FIGHT for THEM."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

YOU i,OV~ 1kAI.
DOIS1YOU~

9'\.11

~li'i

985-330 I

'

to

~ lETTERS IN SQUARES

~A

- - - - - l -- -

don't need

f t PR INT NUMI!ERED

SOUP TO NUTZ

1&lt;N1tLE 1

Most people

•

BAUM LUMBER
I

TUCVAG

WOII
IAlill '

with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

,_

GF0

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "You fail ,.. so whilt? I lailed ala lot of things
My firs! record was llorrib le . ~ - John Mellencamp
·
(c) 2005 by NEA, Inc. 5-20

J1,1iti - Size 4Wheel Drive Tructor

St. Rt. 124 Chester

PAJWDTODO

VOGPACZ

.

gi rlfriend or boyfflend, or a tar;nily
msmbtiH': Spend some quality time
together.
V IRGO (Aug. 23- S&amp;pl . 22) ~ Even
though your mind may be set on
doing something in a specific way
today. keep you r m ind opt:~n tor e
bnght alternative that m ight pop int o
your head or mentioned 1;Jy another.
LIBRA (Sep t; 23 -0ct. 23) ~ Just
when you're not looking for it. something financially advantageous might
be dropped in yoUr lap toQay from a
least SJCP"!:Cied source . It may come
from somdone you know o nl y casua l-

~~~.,~~

Now Availabl e A I

GC

BPIU

PAZDOGON ."

•"PP••

IN THIS SPACE
FOR. $52 PER
MONTH
-

$265 ton (While Suj)py Last)

l-ONELY. LONELY, L.ONELY.. .

..

,•

17-17-t h

~LONELY, LONEL&lt;,&gt;, LONEL&amp;,&gt;,

L C WIN ,

PADYKIPJTXIO

possibility
that ocrhance
rema
r R: at a
social gatherinQ
even Bt
a grocery
store mig ht contain valu able ,,form a"

ty.

•

got you

~

r --------'------:---"'----'------,
.

~

High cost of

. CANCE R (June 2 1-July 22)..:... Be a
good li stener t oday. Th e re's a str ong .

~-

Advertise
in this
spacefor$J04
per month.

GFD

BDde O•ol

enable you to fulfill some of your
g rando r goals may be forth coming in
the yea r ahead .. Be ready to move
swillly and responsibly when th e
breaks begin to occu r.
GEM IN I (May 21-June 20) ~ Your
amb itious goals can be furthered
today if you use t rash approaches to
circumve nt the obstac leS: that have
been in the way. Try new techniques
v.ou 've heard abou t.

~~· - ' t
I

"PA

-.r'lll~:

By · Beml~;e

· Athens

PEANUTS

Today 's clue: X equals p

big s h ift in · conditions 'thai w ill

A

0

UP AND IN , OR .

by Luis Campos

Celoibnty Ciphef cryplog1~ms a1e creatJd lrom Quol!ltons b"f !!mo\Js peopl!. past 8lld present
Each tener in ll1e clph!)r stands lor another

Saturday, May 21 , 2005

OUT_
S I PE, 0~

~

7:00AM· 8:00PM

G

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AstroGraph

.

WA.NNA
Kl\)

St. Rt.681 Darwin. OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Rt•~&lt;lockiii,Y [,a It• .\/oriel Sa H/llrll' I

Sat. 8:30-1\'uon
Sun. Closed

Hours. '

Pass

Opposl1e a no·lrump opening, if the
responder makes a big jump to four of
either red suit, il ls a transfer to .the next
suit up: hearts over diamonds, and
spades over hearts, The responder will
have at leas1 six cards in his major (so
that he can guarantee an eight-card lit)
and .eith9r game-onlY ·interest (he passes
next) or serious slam ambition (he will
probably rebid .four no·trump) .
Before moving on, thougl1, if you were
South, the declarer in four hearts; how
would you plan the Play after West lecids
the spade king?
Clearly, opposite a strong no·trump. thai
North nand is worth game. Also, with a
known 'eigl1t·card or better lit, ·he should
Texas 1ransler into four hearts
After West leads the spade king, check
your losers: two spades, one heart and
one diamond~ one 100 many. And if you
play .a trump immediately, you should
lose .those four tricks. But if you win the
firsl (or second) trick and p'romptly casl1
three ~lup ·tricks (stafting with dummy's
. king, the honor from 1he shorter sic;fe), ·
discarding a spade tram the board , you
will bring home your contract. (After taking your pitch, draw trumps as quickly·as

,BIG NATE

work
• Affordable Rates
• References
·
Available
• Free Estimates
Call Gal)' Stanley

consulting.

'Tf\1\l's &amp;.cf&gt;..vsc: flf..'s N£~e:R...,

·Parts

" Middleport's only
Sell-Storage"

&amp;ae. 5'x10'
to 10'x:W'

P;:~ ss

Pass

Britls~ Journalist Simon Hoggart.

Whaley's Auto

and Arter-

t:::ast

Hoggar1 wrote this about H9uston: "Fish
have water. the bushmen of the Kalahari
have sand, and Hous1onians have inte ri~
or decor." 111link he is accenting 11le need
to decorate those zip-code·sized homes.

EAST IMPORTS

93 Columbus Rd.
740·592-2497

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8 30-5:00

Stop &amp; Compare

~

.Vow ope11

97 B.eech Street
Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20
992-3194
. or 992-6635

140-992-1611

4•

38 Fixes Up
44 Assail
46 Famed oil·
well capper
47 Perpetually
48 Trevl
Fountain
coins
49 Made top
honors
50 Farewells
53 Off-road
vehicle
55 Shark '
hablta1
56 Laaly
climber
57 · Once called

In bridge·;. we have a Texas transfer.

HUIJ IIARil"S ,

Rocky "RJ."
Hupp

Jan ~t JefTe~s

·New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

·-

HOW DO YOU
ME AN ' PAW HAVE
GIT RID OF
WORKED OUT
COMP'NY THAT'S
A SIGNAL-STAYED TOO .
I WINK THREE
LONG, LO\NEe;zy
TIMES ..•

See .

(740) 992-5232
5xl0, !OxlO,
IOx I 5. 10x20,
10x30

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCDON

North

Pas s
P~s

42 Young goat
43 NBC rival
1 Bing
45 Mover'a
Croeby tune
rental
5 Scrooge's ·
ihyph.)
word
47 Bring cheer
8 Gullet
50 Droplet
11 A crowd,
51 Crooner
maybe
- Damone
13 Frazier foe 52 Right to
14 Blow It
daelde
15 Gazes
54 Water holder
dreamily
58 Before
16 Very pale
59 Summer
17 Petite, plua
In France
18 Footnote
60 Colander
ab.br.
61 Wine
20 Protest
catagory
8 Whimper
song singer 62 Motel room 9 Circle slztt
22 Win every
llxturee
to Brown bird
game ·
63 "Big-mouth" 12 Honor
. 24 Batman
Martha
19 Comes
Into view
and Robin
25 Mother
DOWN
21 Caterwaul
rabbit
22 Type
26 Sword
1 Cash
of eclipse
28 Powl
dispenser
23 Slice
32 Ancient
2 Electrical
of cake
24· lower the
33 Game show
unit
exchange
name
3 lnean
34 Rinse
treasure
rale
'25 Oal 35 Falls behind 4 Ms.
37 Lab medium
Zeilweger
27 As a resuH
39 Woosnam
5 S9b noisily 29 Zen poem
ot goH
6 Crimson
:10 Banoflt
40 Coatrock
Tide sl
31 Patch
41 .Butler,
7 Swami or
36 Denomlnalaklr
to Gsbls .
, lion

Wl1en someone mentions H9uston,
Texas, what do you thinK about? Perl'1aps
BIG . Below, you will find the thoughts of

Are you in the market ·
anew car

Phone

·MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

.,/
...

91!5-lJS.I

and Smili""R

Po_meroy, Ohio

'

BARNEY

4wd ( I nur wurnmh')

·. • Farm Pro traCtors 20 honic' - 30 hurse

f "rielltJ/_1' f.-an·,·.

STANLEY ·TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

·--,- _,

~-wd,

' Stmli' Grt•ut

33795 Uiland Road

QIJ~STIONS 1

starting a t 27 hn rsc- 57 ho rsc
with sh1,1t1h: tnms mission

2M) !\ lulht&gt;rr~· An,

Q49-1405

Notice of Publication
Stephen D. Miles,
Attorney at Law
18 · W. Monument
Avenue
Dayton, Ohio 45402
Winifred J. King, aka
Wi nifred Jane King,
and , if deceased, all
heirs, devisees, lega·
tees,
executors,
executrixes, admlnis·
trators, administra·
trlxes and assignees
and, David Allen ··
Reed, aka David A.
Reed,
and
if
deceased , . all heirs,
devisees, legatees,
executors, executrix-.·
es, administrators,
administratrixes and
assignees
whose
addresses
are
unknown, will hereby
take notic-e that on
Dec-ember 20, 2004 , ,
USDA
Rural
DevelopnHmt, filed its
COmplaint
in
Foreclosure·
and
Marshalllng of Liens
In the Common Pleas
of ,_Meigs
' Coun
County, Ohio, being
Case No. 04·CV·169
against John E. Miller
and Lori .A. Miller
preying lor judge·
ment In the amount of
576 .181.10 with Inter·
est thereon according
to the terms of the
note from August 30,
. 2004 until paid and
lor foreclosure of
said Mortgage Deed
on the loll...,lng
described real estate,
of
which
said

Y~S. WtiY DO~S
Afl.N TO ~~At&gt; IY
"PtiONICS" rMIN viiTI'I
Ttl~ SOUNPS Of
"P-~" ANP NOT yi/TI'I "F"?
1-~TTffl.S. ANY

New Dealer .for Montana Tractors

. IS NOW OPEN AT
Tlw :\lulhHr~

Storage

Wf'!it

1 NT
4~

Transfers with a
six-card major

USING PtiON IG~, YOU

30 Yrs. E.x:p. • Ins. Owner: Ronni e Jones

Com.munit ~·

TD
Construction

Broad Run Gun Club
Sat. May 21st party for
members and a guest

' FRANK .&amp; EARNEST

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South

Opening lead: It K

Top • Removal • Trim
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• J 10 9 6
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992·6215 wv 006725
Pomeroy. Ohio
25 Years ~ocal Ex erience

II 7 2
A lO 2
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South

JONES'

• Vinyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
• P!!tio and Porch Decks

992-5682

Defendants, John E. act is given. Said
lish programs which
Miller and Lori A. defendants , will take
prepare youth for
post secondary edu·
Miller are the owners notice that it be
required to. answer
ca lion or unsubsi- of:
said Complaint on or
dized employment as Commonly known as
33058 St. Rt. 33 #215, b.~?fore the 1st day of
appropriate. Services
should include: deter- Pomeroy, OH 45769, July, 2005 orjudgemining eligibility lor and further described ment will be rendered
WlA programs, pro· in a mor1gage flied accordingly . •
viding a comprehen- July 21 , 1988 ·in
USDA
Aural
sive array of services
Volume 171 , Page
Development
Plaintiff
to eligible youlh and 641 , Meigs County
• An-t· ptin~ New
Stephen D Miles
incorporating the ten ,Recorder's Office.
· l\1cmhc r.'i
program
elements And that Defendants, Attorn.ey
• l·lt•:n ·\· Dul\'
under WIA. Two proWinifred J. ~ing aka (4) 29, (5) 6, 13, 20, 27,
t:urnn~enci'ui
Etjuipnwni
grams will be award·
Winifred Jane Klng, (6) 3
• \ Vnrknut 011 ~· nur O\\ u
ed and program costs
and if deceased, all
· huu rs 2417
must not exceed
heirs, devisees, legaSt.• riou .~ lnljuirit'' Onl ~·
· executors,
$1 00,000.00
each tees,
Public Notice
740-992-WJ SS
(subject to available executrixes, adminis..\ .~ k fur Jt·n·
funds) and shall be
trators, administra - NOTICE OF t:IEN
for the period of July trixes' and assignees
SALE
·~:--~~-~
Let us ht'lp you
1, 2005 through June and, David Allen The_following person clwow.&gt; a lasth1g
30,
2006. Reed , aka David A. al propeny within the
tribute 10 your ltn·ed
Administrative cost
Reed,
and
if listed storage units is
o11e ~· memmJ.
may not exceed 10% deceased, all heirs , scheduled for sale by
of the total contract · devisees, legatees ,. Auction to satisfy the
A&lt; "1{ 1-:E
award. In addition, executors, executrlxlie"n
of
Hartwell
~IONL ~lENT
Storage·.
·
30% of the total con~s.
adi'n. inl~trators,
CO~II', \NY
tract award must be admlnistratrlxes anQ Thd. sale will be held
'9728 SR 14'
used to serve out-of· assignees
be · June 9, 2005 at 10:00
Pumerov. O H
required to set up any a.m. at the Hartwell
school
youth·.
740-99i-9922
Proposal's
must
interest they may Storage facility, 34055
~·1on
- S:n HIA~L'iPM
have in said premises
demonstrate
the
L~Urel
Cliff
Rd.,
\\ ~ \\,]lllllll .illl' l
capability to meet or be forever barred, Pomeroy, Ohio.
]h&gt;ttl ,\:Ill 1111111'
i
that upon failure · of Unit: #4
performance
stan.1('1'('1111111~'11\'\ ,Iilii~· i
dards and to quantify said Delendan1s 1o \ OWner: Bonnie Smith
l.lllliltL' ctlll\L'IIIc'llc~' '
program outcomes. A
pay or to cause to be 4 Cardinal Lanecopy of the Request
paid said judgement
Apt. B
Athens, OH 45701
for Proposal , may be
within three days
from itS rendition that
Unit: #32
picked
up
from
, Theresa Lavender or
an Order of Sale be
Owner Terry Swindell
Jane Banks at the
issued to the Sheriff 2216 Eastern Ave.,
Meigs County Job &amp; ol Meigs County, Lot 26, Gallipolis, OH
Family Services, 175 · OhiQ, to appraise, 45631
Race
Street,
advertise fn 1he Dally Unit: ~40
Middleport,
OH Sentinel .and sell said Owner: · JoSy Blazer
40664 Carman Rd .
45760.
r8al estat~ , that the
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ·
premis.es be sold free
Proposals mi.lst be
and clear of all
·submilted .to Ther.esa
Unit: #67
Owner: Tony Connolly
Lavender,
Meigs claims, liens and
All Your Hutm:
S.
2nd
County Job &amp; Family interesl of any of the 466
l mpnm:mcnl Need:Services, 175 Race parties herein, that Middleport, OH 45760
• Sid inc • Windm~ ~
Street·, P.O. Box 191, the proceeds from the · Unit: #100
• Deck~ • Porche~
Middleport, OH 45760 sale of said premises Owner:
Shelly
• Ccr:.11nic Ti lc &amp;
no later lhan May 27, be applied to the
Langvell
H:trdwo1&gt;d Fluonn!J
2005 at 4:00 p.m. All Pla'intiff's judgemenl 38366 Hemlock Grove
Gant£l':-&gt;
Rd . Pomeroy, OH • Romn• 1\dd
submissions must be and for such other
. • Rnufi11~
received by mail or relief to which USDA 45769
·• Kih.:hen .~ • B;lth' ~
hand delivery by the Rural Developmen1 is (5) 20 , 27
"'No Joh '/(! Sm11fl ..
above date and time. enlitled. ·
Racine. OH
No materialS received
Said defendants are
740-247-2 162 or '
7411·41 fo- .ISOR
aHer the date will be
directed to the comI~)~ . Ex pcri"c ncc
included in previous ' plaint . wherein notice
pd 1 mo t
under the fair ' debt .
submissions nor be
considered·.
Ttie
colleCtion · practice
department reserves
HOWARD£.
the right to reject any
or all proposals. In
WRITfSfl &amp; SONS
accordance with 29
ROOFING
CFRparl 31 , 32 Meigs
County Department
A ll IY!X' !-&gt; of roofing:
of Job &amp; Family
Shingk·. Flat. Me1al Services Is prohibited'
N~\~ or R~p at r
from discrimination
Scamkss Guna On the basis of race ,
color~ national origin ,
D cm 11 '\pou l '· Siding
seX, age, religion, ·r
kfrte ES11mates*
polllical belief or dis· •
abllily.
(5) 6, 13,20

t:asl
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124

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�Page 88 • 'The Daily Sentinel

Friday,·May 20, :toos

www.mydailysentinel.com

Point Pleasant track headed to state meet
lh

lARRY CRUM

LCRUMOMYOAILY'REGISTER .COM

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
_ Word on the street is the
Point Pleasant boys and girls
track team stand a good
chance at making .some noise
today.
Th e teum WI·11 be ta k.mg
with them plenty of experience and contidence entering
into the West Virginia stare
track meet today a~d Saturday
i.n Charleston.
"I would like t6 break ·.into
the top- 15 with the girls, the
guys want to be in !he top-10,"
sai.d girls track coach Chip
Wood. "As long as things go
righ t. we don't have any of
those unexpected 'mistakes.
the boys have a legitimate shot
at top-five."
Shooting for that top-live
· \Viii be.tough, but not impossi-

ble for the boys squad who is Pleasant are Mattox wtio qualQualifying for individual
sending a solid squad !hat has ified for the 100-meter dash events were freshman Mallory
been impressive all season.• ·and the 200-meter dash, along· Nowlin in the l(J!)-meter and
Heading into the meet. the with Riffle who will be' com- 200-meter dashes, along with
t
K t 1 H"pes
·n the discuss
Big Blacks will be especially peting in the I00-meter dash.
a e yn 1 · 1
tough
Orher events on the sched- and1 Rachel
Hannum in the
~ in a lew events where
It
they have been close to the top ule for the boys are the 110- poe vau ·
al
notch in the 'iate all season.
111eteJ· hurdles ,·n which Smith
Two
team
events
are
·
th
thso
One of those squads is the and De shuk qualified for, gmng to stale, ey are e
Shuttle Hurdles team of Travis along with the field events of 4x 100-meter team of Kayla
..
.
d
Dewees, Megan Wamsley,
. Riflle, Justin Smith, Newton shot put w1th Kevm Hu nal 1. . J . .. Elia and Nowlin and ·
Mattox and Steven Deshuk. dJScuss wuh Hudnall. and t~~s~hauttle hurdles team feawho will enter imq Charleston · Dy lan Stevens and the Ion~ ·turing Jessica Elias, Char
ranked No. I in the state.
JUmp w1th n!!le.
. Bibbee, I-laley . Burdeue and
The other team events for
. Til~ Ltdy s h.ad less qual1-· Wamsley.
the Big Blacks will be the tiers lor the stale meet, but for
"All the gi rls who are going
4x I 00-111eter ' rei a\
with the ones gomg they should have an excellent . chance at
Michael Crist e. Riffle. Smith, make an impact In fact this scoring this weekend because
and Mattox. the 4x200-meter season has been a success lui we got out of regionals and the
relay will feature Michael one tor !he Lady Kmghts.
regionals are very tough," said
Tupes.- Deshuk, Smith and
"By far the best year the Wood.
Criste and the . 4x800-meter girls have ever had," said
The state meet kicks off at 3
relay with Christoph Bruns, Wood . "Six years ago it took p.m. today at Laidley Field in
Johti Slayton, Evan Grinstead us eight weeks to get one Charleston and will continue
and J upes. ·
point, · this year we have beginning at 9 a.m. on
Top sprinters .for P&lt;Jint scored over 900 points."
Saturday.

AP photo

Kentucky Derby winner Giacomo gives the cameras a toothy
smile as he is given wiped down after his morning workout at
Pimlico race track in Baltimore Thursday. qiacomo will race in
the 130th running or The Preakness Stakes on Saturday.

I

Zito ·has three chances
to win Preakness
BALTIMORE (AP) - Nick Hero was eighth, High Ry was
Zito is back tor ·another classic IOth, Noble Causeway was
try. The trainer who couldn't .14th and Sun King was 15th.
win this year's Kentucky Derby
In the aftermath, Bellamy
with five horses has three ·Road has been sidel ined with a
lc~
injury
and
chances to win Saturday's minor
Preakness Stakes.
Andromeda s Hero IS being
"We'd like to tum it around." pointed to the Belmont Stakes.
Zito said Thursday morning
"We went over everything
outside. the stakes barn at and don ' t understand why they
Pimlico. ''I'd like these horses ran like thev did," Zito said.
to run much, much better. That '·Obviously. Bellamy Road had
would be a plus." •
some kind of explanation when
Zito sends out three Derby he popped a splmt (bone). But
also-rans -. High Ry. Noble the other horses are training
Causeway and Sun Kmg'- in 'ti.ne. and I just want to see lhem ·
an attempt to ease his Derby go forward."
.
disappointment and add a secIs he seeking redemption''
and Preakness victory to his
"You 're re.ally going deep,"
resume.
he said. "This is a horse race.''
His 3-year-old colts may
And then. in one of his better
have a tough time. The trio is Yogi Berracisms, . he added:
part of a full tield of 14 3-year- "Adversity ls nothing comaids that includes Derby wmner pared to J;)ve1yday life."
Giacomo and the next two finHigh Fly, with Hall of Fame
ishers, Closing Argument ru1d rider Jeny Bailey aboard, may
Afleet Alex the · 5-2 be Zito's best chance. The.
Preakness favorite.
chestnut colt is the 9-2 second
· Zito · comes into the second choice despite his Derby lin ish.
leg of the Triple Crown reeling. However, 1-ligh Fly came into
He still ha' no explanation for · the Derby with five wins in six
his Fab Five flop that saw starts, including relatively easy
favorite Bellamy Road finish victories in the Fountain of
seventh, and ahead of his four Youth Stakes and the Rorida
stablemates.
Andromeda' s Derby.

Winslaw
fromPageBl
the handlebars while practicing near his home.
, Winslow was wearing a
helmet, but it wasn't fastened
properly and flew off when
he hit the ground .
.He spent nine days in the
Cleveland Clinic before
being released last week.
Winslow, who has been resting at home;· has not comJlleuted on his accident or his
injuries: ·
· Doctors had to wait for the
swelling to go down on the
2 1-year-old's knee before
performing a more thorough
examination.
Winslow, who missed 14
ga mes as a rookie with a broken leg, breached a hazardims acti vities clause in his
contract by riding the motorcycle. The Browns could ask
him to return part of the
money he already has been
paid as part of his six-year,
$40 million contract ~ the
richest. deal given to a tight

end.
· Cleveland traded a secondround pick 'to move up a spot
in the 2004 NFL draft to
select Winslow, who starred
at the Uni ve rsity of Miami.
In his second ga me last
. seaso n, Winslow broke a
bone in the lower part of his
right leg and tore Iigaments
in his ankle while trying to
recover an onside kick. He
had two operations on the leg
and it was still mending at the •
ti me of his accident.
Meanwhile, police in suburban Westlake concluded
their
investigation
of
Winslow's accident th!s week
and turned the case over to
ci ty law director John
· Wheeler, who will determine
whether c harges ·should be
tiled, Lt. Ray Arcuri said.
Winslow could be charged
wit h reckless operation,
which carries a maximum
penalty of 30 days in pi! and
a $250 fine.
A few hours before his
accident, Winslow and a few
fr iends 1 made the 50-m il e
drive on their motorcycles to
·Canton to see a stunt riding
team perform.

really exciting," said Pyles.
Her work ethic and dedication also proved to be a big
fromPageBl
lift for the others on the
team.
" Bei ng a senior, the fresh-·
Both records .were broken
men
see how much work she ·
at the Gazette Relay s in
Charleston earlier this year. has .put in," said Wood. "She
Pyles finished the 3200- has to go off on runs by herself, I send her on runs to Tumeter- run with a ·time of Endie-Wei and back, we do
12:35.30, beating the record · countless repetitions on the
set in I ~82 by Catherine ·track, no one has a stronger
· work ethic.''
Boon sue by 7.5 seconds.
She also broke the record
Pyles plans to major in
in the 1600 meters with a psychology at the University
time of 5:43.21, setting her of Charleston and says she
mark 5.5 ~conds faster than looks forward to going to
the original set by Elisabeth
school and still being close·
Boonsue·in 1977 .
·"I have been trying to to home.
break those records for three · Erin is the daughter of
years now and put allot of · David and Connie Pyles of
work into this )(,Car, it was GalliPolis Ferry.

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