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Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 23, 2oos;

www.mydailysentinel.com

Foundation announces
local scholarship
recipients, A3

-Desperate teams don't care about character
ASSOCIATED PRESS

,,

t

You might lhink that after
his last bad experience with
!he bubbly, Javon Walker
would not have been out
spraying bottles of Dom
Perignon on people partying
in a Las Vegas nightclub.
You might.
. You might think the
Oakland Raiders would
have figured out Walker
could be bad news at any
price, much less the $16
million he was guaranteed
to play wide receiver for
lhem.
You might.
Unlike
the
Raiders,
Walker has an excuse of
sorts. Like many athletes
he' s young, dumb and so
flush with money lhat he
can't wait to buy $900 lxitties of champagne just to
shower people with.
Just how dumb really
comes into focus when you
think about what happened
with Walker just 18 months
ago when police believe
champagne spraying by a
teammate touched off a
fight in a Denver nightclub.
When it was over, Walker
was in a 'limousine cradling
a dying Darren! Williams in
tiis iums.
AI Davis isn't'that dumb,
just increasingly desperate.
1be architect of the great
Raider teams of old isn't
getting any younger and he
badly needs someone to
. catch lhe balls thrown by
JaMarcus Russell· if the
Raiders are going to have a
chance to win again.
Davis rolled lhe dice on
Walker not because ihe
Raiders have a reputation of
taking lhe NA..'s trash and
turning it into treasure. He
did it for the same reason he
took Randy Moss a few
years back and the same
reason Jerry Jones takes
every misfit who can find
his way· to Dallas.
They want to win so badly
they can't help lhemselves.

In Walker's case, the
Raiders knew they were getting someone who had
antagonized Brett Favre in
Green Bay, was with
Williams when he was shot
after a night out in Denver,
and had a history of bickering with the teams lhat
employed him. But when
the Broncos unceremoniously cut him, he got a $55
million deal from the
Raiders.
..
Walker has yet to play a
down for lhe Raidets but he
rewarded lhat failh earlier
this week when he was
found unconscious, beaten
and robbed, on a Las Vegas
street comer, hours after
being seen spraying champagne on fellow clubbers at
a nightclub. Technically
he's a victim, guilty only of
random champagne madness, since stupidity by
itself is not a crime.
Down in Texas, meanwhile, former bad boy
Micha~l lrv_in is helping
baby-sit vanous Cowboys
in hopes lhey'U aJI be ready
to play opening day. So far,
Terrrell Owens ha_s for the
most pan kept his mouth
shut., Tank Johnson has kept
hts guns home and Pacm~
Jone~ has kept out of stnp
clubs._
.
Whtle Jones ~opes ~ts
g~ behaviOr will get htm
.remstated for lhe upcommg
season, his past keeps popping up at just lhe wrong
time. In lhe latest chapter in
lhe Pacman saga, a woman
involved in a Las Vegas
brawl that police say Jones
incited was found dead last
week behind a building in
lhe Bronx after a fall from a
building.
, That by itself won't stop
Jones from getting reinstated by commissioner Roger
Goodell. There is, however,
the little matter of his testimony in the case of a man
charged in lhe Vegas shooting that left a strip club
bouncer paralyzed. The man
told a television station last

month that Jones ordered ·
lhe shooting and was trying
to fnune him for lhe crime.
Cowboy fans, of course, ·
couldn't care less what
Jones did in his past if he
can help lhem get to lhe ·
Super Bowl. And neither
does Jeny Jones, who worries ·more about selling
expensive seats in his new
stadium than lhe legal probterns of his latest project
Tl!e Yankees have a lot of
·expensive seats to sell in '
lheir new stadium, too, and
a desperate need for pitching. So lhey dido 't think
twice about signing seriaJ
malcontent Sidney Pooson
to a contract wilh the bope
he will be on the mound
soon·in New YQrk.
Ponson so tested lhe
patience of the Texas
Rangers that they waived
him this week even though
they need pitching even
worse than lhe Yankees and
he had an ERA of 3.88. That
number proved so enticing
that the Yankees were willing to overlook Ponson's
alcohol-soaked problems of
lhe past and his inability to
get along with both teammates and managetnent. ·
With the Yankees floun. dering most of the season in
the AL East, about the only
surprise is that they haven't
tried to sign Barry Bonds as
lh . DH
·
etr
·
·
Indeed, most ?f lhe talk
Y0~ ~ear by teams about
bu1ldm~ character an_d
~mploymg _good c1ttzens IS
-J~t talk. Gtven a Chan&lt;:C to
ptck up a star player w1th a
checkered past., most will do.
it without a second thought
if they t;Jtink it will help
them wm a few more
games.
'Like the Raiders, lhey' re
usually so desperate lhey
can.'t help themselves. ·

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-,(J\.1 '1'-.•\ld . :;-. \o .:.!

Crew, Galaxy match ends in 3-3 draW:
Evans - finally
broke ·
11lrough In the 67th nun~
when he slammed tiu:
bouncing ball into lhe back
of lhe net Barros Schelotto
tied it four minutes later.
O'Rourke
foule4
· Beckham inside the penaJcy
area and Donovan converted
the ensuing penalty.
Lenhart., who catne on in
the 761h minute, knocked a
baJI into an empty net after a
brief scramble to give tht;
Crew the tie.
" It feels like a loss when
we commanded lhe game.
for so long. went in front 20 at the start of the secon4
half," Beckham said. "We
need to learn how .to fmisb
games off.
"Surrendering · leads i~
becoming an aU,too-famil~
sight"

Page AS

.• AJm¥t qen Henry, 79
• Robert E. Hudson, 60
• Joe Tavan, 83

feloliy wammt.

- · -· .. ~~,..

• Resii&amp;6keep
f91ti11g rising Miss'ssWJ

River. See PJ1F A2
• Coroner: Ohio
hker likely died

. d heat exhauStion.
See . . A3
• 'OYer the Hill
: Vacation Bille School.'
SeePi1JtA3

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SUB-COMPACT TRACTOR
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work tights fur after dusk or before dawn
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~

~:,
,., ......
,,..

'

'

'

• For lhe Aecold.
See

r.AS·

. • LDcal Briefs.
Seer.AS
• Baseball and SoCial
Security: More ~ .
. ntll1'1bels. See ftlge A6
• Family Medicine:
Determine type of
anemia befo.re deciding
beatnlel1l See Pate A6

WEA'111Elt
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Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

i\3

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

fmtorials
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Obituaries

A4
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Weather

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B Section

As

e -ow..v...,r HI Noc(Jo.

.)

o l!medDy"1mo-CU8546-ll~)

a SECI10Ns - Ill PMli!S

Sports

11/!JJIZ~~ilt~l

••• .Ill f'II'O'fi!M, IJIIII III'IJII1 hetflt

INDEX

BE'IOfl) TIE EXPEC IED:

I

4

'

'
.· • de~

,

''

.•

.~

..-•

•'

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'·'

. '

language whicb would
allow a new emvloyee to
bring past ,experience at
other public water utilities
to Pomeroy instead of staning ow at "kro."
Council also approved the
ftrSt reading and vote of an
amendment -on bow, when
and where political signs
are displayed i.n dJe village.
The amendment was discussed bl!lt ultimately failed

earuer this year. 1be ftrSI
readin~ of the amendment
to ordinance 593 prohibits
~litical signs pert.ainiJ1g to
a political GICC ()f issue from
being ·erected in the village
earlia: than 30 days prior to
an ·election. 1be signs must
be no larger than 12 square
feet and ootlocated HI feet
near a public right-of-way.
. Signs are .also prohibited
from any vi.liage plllilperty,
including adjacent to the
walkin,g path. Al1 signs must

be removed seven days after
an election.
Council also decided to
honor .the members of the.
Meigs Archery Team wruch .
took home a national championship wilh certificates and
a proclamation .at its next
meeting at? p:m.. July 14.
Council adjourned into
executive session once to
discuss personnel in the
street department and more
specifically a legal matter
within lhat department.

small business,
housing,

Randy Smith,
dllaimlan of
lheMeigs
Ooonty
Oepal bii8o1l of

'

·

James F. Bryant., 60,
Henlawson, W.Va., was
reoently aiR!Sted a&amp;r a foot
. ~~
in
downtown
uy and charged with
readtiug atUt and laiture to
comply in Pomeroy Mayor's
Cowt. ~g (O " f t
Pomeroy Polioe Depanment, .
Bryantts ooosidc:md a ~gi­
ti ve from justice who is
wanted in Mingo County,
W.Va. on a felooy charge of
attempted grand larceny.
According to Patrolman
Ronnie Spaun, Bryant was
ridiq a bicycle down the
middle of West Main Sweet
near Pizza Hut when Spaun
attempkd to stop him from
obstructing traffic. Bryant
then allegedly turned west
on Locust Slireet., jumped
off. his bicycle and ran into
the woods. The pursuit continued behind the Pomeroy
Exxon towards Lincoln Hill
and by this time Spaun was
:assisted by Chief Mlirk E.
Proffitt., Meigs County
Sheriff ,Robert Beegle and
Deputies Andy Myer~.
Ricky Smith and Josh
Ridenour.
Spaun and Proffitt eventually found Bryant laying on
tile ground in the weeds
behind a residence on
Lincoln Hill where he was
arrested. Bryant was transpol1ted from the Pmneroy
· Polire Department to the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Office for incarceratioli. He
is alSII on parole in Logan
' County, W.Va., according to
Police
the
Pomeroy
Dep.artment.
Another recent foot pur- '
suit · resulted in an · arrest
which saw Spa11D use his
taser· gun on Charles L.
Stewart, 27, Middleport.
ACCOFding to the )&gt;{Jmeroy
Police Department, Spaun
recently pul.kd ova: .a vehic;le on M«banie Street
Wlle:m Slew.ad was a pas~ei. .A1W ~ng with
· the dispatchtt, Spaun said
he learned Stewart was
wanted in Mjddlrpnrt ·un a
warrant.
Spaun said StewaJt dlen
fled the scene on foot while
he and Patro4nan Brent
Rose were in pursuit The
pursuit went from Butternut
Avenu~ into the woods on
Linco!D Hill. Spaun said he
and
Rose
repeatedly
advised Stewan to stop and
that they would use lhe taser
but Stewart did not comply.
Spaun lhen tasered Stewan
in the right ann and uoda
arm. Meigs EMS ' and

Ph u ... Aia

made. The amendment to

Sl per hour. ordinance 721 also includes

to address

POMEROY
l'wo
reoent foot pursuits by the
Pomeroy Police Department
resul.ted in as many am:stS,
including tbe am:st of an
alleged fugitive from Mingo
County, W.Va. wanted on a

0 BffUARIFS

~l-

\\\\" nndaih"'t'fltind en ll l

-Partnership

Foot ·
purs11its
result in
arrests

....

.. ll '\I :.!-J.:.!OOH

Mayor JOOil Musser said tbe
POMEROY -Last night wa1a: department is a public
Pomeroy Village Council utilily and it raises its own .
approved the ftrst two read- funds. Co"ncilwoman Mary
ing~ on separate ordinances McAogus \'Okd against the
liea! iog with raises in the raise wbiie Councilwoman
water depaltmellt and lhe Ruth Spaun abstailled.
, placement of political signs.
McAogus aslced about
Council approved the first mises in tbe slrCCI depanreading and vote on an ment as well Mus-ser said it
. nmendment to ordinaooe 721 was discussed at a recent
which will increase wages in fmaooe oommitt.ee meeting
tbe water depanment for the though not decision was

AP pllc*i

"From a character standpoint., we showed a loi,"
Crew coach Sigi Schmid
saili "I don't think this is
something we could have
done last year."
·
The match marked the
fm;t time since May 24 that
Donovan
and
David
Beckham played together
for the Galaxy, 3nd lhe pairing quicltly paid off.
Beckham crossed a baJI
into lhe front of the net, but
Columbus
goalkeeper
William Hesmer couldn't
oontrol it Donovan got lhe
hall and scored the first ~al
mto an empty net.
In the . 47th minute,
Buddie shook off defender
Danny ·O 'Rourke inside lhe
penalty area and ripped a
close-range . shot
past
Hesmer.

~~~\"l

supervisor and

labola.s by

Columbus Crew's Guillermo Barros Schelotto, left, soores on a penally kick past Lo~;
Angeles Galaxy goal keeper Steve Cronin, right, during the second half of an MLS soccer
match on Saturday in Carson. Calif. The game ended in a 3-3 tie.

CARSON, CaJif, (AP) Secood-balf
solmilutc
Stephen Lenhan netted the
tying goaJ in lhe 881h minute
for lhe Columbus Crew, who
scored three times in the
fmaJ 23 minutes and earned
a 3-3 draw with the Los
Angeles' Galaxy on Saturday
night.
I::andoo Donovan converted a penalty kick in the 83rd
minute, but .Lenhart erased
the second one-goal deficit
of the half for lhe Crew (7 -42).
Donovan had gi veiJ lhe
Galaxy a 1-0 lead in the
fourth minute.
Edson Huddle's goaJ in the
47th minute gave the Galaxy
Trm Dahlberg is a notion- (6-4-3) a 2-0 lead, but Brad
al· spons columnist for The . Evans and Guillermo Barros
Associated Press. Wnu to Schelotto answered to get
the Crew even. .
him at tdnhlbergap.org

Ill

assistant

·US~team
selected. See~ Bl

.

; .~

Pomeroy approves readin~ on raises, political signs

SPORTS

INsiDE

•

.

bi,AS

.

infrastructure

Joband

BY BRIAN

Family
SeNioeS dilaritatlle foundation preseuted
a$500donationto the
Meigs CQunly
Aelay tor Ufe
I:OJoann
Crisp, chairman ,o fthe
event.

J.

REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

. POMEROY
A
$300,000 federal grant 'will
fund a strategic pI an
addressing future residential
infrastructure needs .and
encourage community-based
business opportunities.
The
Meigs
County
Economic
Peveloprnent
Office will partner with the
Rural
Community
Assistance Program on a
two- year project, aimed at
establishing a local re\'olv. iiig Joan program, development 'Of a community service initiative for young
adults and identifying areas
of projected res_idential
growth and infrastructure
SrAR' Aa ORr
NEWSewDAII:t'SENTINEliCOIII
needs in lhose areas.
Economic Development ·
Director Perry Varnadoe
MIDDLEPORT
said the plan will particularEmployees of the Meigs
ly study the need for sewerCmmty Department of Job and .
.age services in those areas
Family Services have formed a
where residential growth is
charitable foundation to supexpected. The study will
port local organizations and
identify tbe areas where
projects.
infrastructure
needs are
AU funds for the foundation
greatest, and assist with
come from in bouse through
fmding
sources of funding
donations .and fundraising
for
additional
infrastructure.
efforts by agency staff.
WSOS
.Community
~lt is the goal of the foundaAction Commi ssion of
tion to donate to a charity -that
Fremont.
the parent organi,serves Meigs County each
zation
of
the RCAP, identiquarter,~ said Chairman Randy
fies Meigs County as "an
Smith. "Staff members offer
area of Appalachian Ohio
die name of a charity they
exptlriencing
unprecedented
would like to see recei"'e the
in the .face
growth
potential
donation, and the charity with
of continuing and signifithe most votes gets the donacant
distress ...
tion for the quarter."
The
work plan for the proSmit:h said the employees
will
include an economject
hope to donate at least $500
Brian J. All cHphatc ic development strategy,
each Qlllii'ICI:. The first recipiTheresa
Lavender
ol
the
Department
of
Job and Family development of a business
ents are the American Cancer
Society's Meigs County Relay Services presented a $1 00 donation toward Middleport's loan fund, assistance to new
for Life and the Middleport July 4 fireworks display to Brenda Phalin, president of and expanding busine sses.
affordable and energy-effi,
the Middleport Community Association.
Commllllity Association.
cient housing technical
assistance and development
facilitation in response to th
need for inc(eased home
ownership and rental housing choices. ·.
"Activities will include
teclinical a·ssistance and
capitalization of a small
business loan fund. net·
working of local agencies
and governments to otbatin
highest -priority r~sources to
catalyze develo11ment and
housmg oppllrturlities, technical assistance to local
jurisdictions in matching
delivery of water and wastewater · infrastructure to
needs of emerging businesses and ·public facilities.
including
_the
new
University of Rio Grande
and a proix&gt;sed heal!h facility at Rocksprings. and intitiation of a county leadership development program .
That leadership P.rogram.
Varnadoe said. will focus
primarily on young professionals in their 20's and
30's.
'
-~
Varnadoe said Meigs
Emergency personnel from Middleport's Ladder 16. Pomeroy's Squad One and Meigs'
County
already suffers from a
EMS Medic 5 responded yesterday afternoon to the scene ol this on car rollover near the
of affordable housing.
.Meigs and Gallia County lines on Ohio 7. One person was transported to an area hospital lack
and is in panicular need of
for treatment ol their injuries. The Ohio State Highway Patrol was investigating the accin ._ ..., ,. AS
dent at press time.

Accident on Ohio 7

..

•

,_

�'

"

E NATION

The Daily Sentinel

BY CHERYL WITTENAUER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

BY IIAACUS ·wOHLIIDI

WINFIELD. Mo . -With
a few days to go before ihe
last stretch of the bloated ·
Mississi ppi River reaches
its cresL p~ople toiled
around the dock Monda) to
rei nforce · levees already
strai ned and samra1ed from
the preS'ure of the ri,ing
water.
.
Officials
m
Lincoln
C()unty asked for l'oluntecr&gt;
to h elp till 50.000 sandbag&gt;
to forti f) the ] 1C-milclong Pin Oak' le,·ee. an
earthen ·berm that was &gt;O
waterlogged that il was like

ASSOCIAlEJ .PRESS WRITER

SAN FRANCISCO firefigbleri from neighboring stales arrived to help
Monday after an "unprec:edented" lightning storm
sparked more than 800
wildfues, from Big Sur to
wine country to Humboldt

County.

··walking un a waterbed ...

APpholo .

Rex Hipes sits m a lawn chair as he monitors pumps behind a sandbag wall protecting the
Cla rksville.Christian Chu rch from the swollen Mississippi River Monday in Clarksville, Mo.
As of Monday evening. the wall was doing its job and keeping the church dry.
Winfield. tlt&gt;nJwaters late Ciarkw ill e on ~h&gt;nd:r\­ Manage ment Agency offiMonda' " ·ere tilling the afternoon and " Jid he wa~s cials said National Guard
higher part nf town . The mo:-1· ~.:on~.:crned aho_lll :rgri- 'nld iers, pri son inmates and
e:Et"'"\itle o J:Coley w'" clrltltral levees up and down . others kept piilng sandbags
already s·ubmerged.
,
the river.
Monday on the Sny levee, a
Elsew here in the hard-hi t
" I think what the\- have 52-mile barrier near Qnincy,
county a few Jo;.en miles is holding well.'' Va n Ill. , as the riv er crested
nm1hwest of St. Louis, Ant\\erp s~id_ "Now, it's a Monday and started to
Nati onal Guard &gt;oldiers matter of 1rettinn the water recede.
patrolled leVees loP~ing for otT of iL""
"
: Down river from Quincy,
,oft spots_
Not far from the .iowa the levee at Hannibal, Mo.,
Down river in Grafton, st3te line, the ri,er was was holding the slowly
Ill.. Mayor Ri cban:nvt osby down a few incile s -:n fatting ri ver out of the bo-ysrud about 20 homes and Canton
after
·c re&gt;ting hood hometown of Samuel
businesses were llooded Sunday at 27 - feet - less C le mens. who wrote as
but no mor e were expected ·than a foot short of the Mark
Twain.
Marion
to be affected if the record set during the Great ·co unty
·Emergency
Mississippi crests· as ·fore- Flood of
1993 .
Jeff Managei)Jent Director John
cast j ust .a few- inches above .McReynol&lt;.Ls. the city's Hark · ·s aid the city was
Monday·~ le v·el. ·,
·
., e1nergency
managemen t already planning for its
l'he.-iver was not e~:~peot- director, said a voluntary National Tom Sawyer Days,
ed to complete .illl cres~ at .. evacuation
. re4 ue.st the early July festival celeWinfield and Graf!tot\ ·until remained in place in the brating Twain's work.
Thursday
a nd
frid ay, town of roughly 2,500.
Hark said that with the
according to th e federal
"We were righ t up there to ri ver dropping, he could
niver , f orecast
issued our nostri ls . for about . 24 focus on other things . that
Mond;!y afternoon.
hours." McReynolds said. might di scourage tourists Upri-ver, where the fiver ' 1T ile cn ncern from o ur such..as high gas prices.
already · had crested, off'i- opentlil)n ~ center is they
"The tlood, 1 think,.is eascials nervously stood )\latch ( residems) have seen the ier." he said.
Monday as they waited for ,crest, and think the river has
A ssociated Press writers
tbe danger to recede. Lt. come dow n and wa nt to' Bet&gt;.v Ta ylor in St. Louis
Gt:n. Robert Van Antw~rp . move back into their and. Don · 'Babwin in
the · Army Corps' chief of homes."
Chicago contributed to rlzis
engineers .
·
tourea · Ill inois
Emergency- "port:

;):).,..33::»&lt;"33::;):;) ..~-" . .... .. • -

•
''

Tue-lay, .Juile q, 2008

Lightning sparks 800plus fires in California

keep

said c'oumv emergenn
managemeni ,poke~man
And v Binder. Federal ,,ftl.
cials· said thev couldn 't he
sure it would -un "e
through the ri,·er·, crest :11
Winfield later in the week
"They ha,·e a &gt;enou s cund ition on their hands.''
Travis Tutka. the L·.s. Ann'
Corps of Engineers chief of
dam safet\. &gt;aid late
Mondav afiernoon . "Thi'
will be· q.uite a tesi of that
levee,"
If it breaches. the ri' er
·wlll s\i'an1p HXl1iomes in
east Winfield. as well -a&gt;
·3.000 acres of fann fields.
se,·eral busine»cs and a
c ity bal lpark. A muskrat
burrowed a hoi~ in the 'ofl
groun d during the night.
releasi ng a ge~ ser of water.
and offic·ials said it took
nearl y six hours to choke off
the leak.
"There is no guarantee of
performance. bu t we ' re
fi ghting the good fig ht:·
Tutka said.
Onl y a handful of residents remained in ·east
Winfie ld on Mondav. after
emergency workers went
door to door urging them to
evacuate. Amo ng the holdouts was Sherman Jones.
56, who was all alone in hi s
house except for hi s dogs.
Mugsy and Junior.
'There is no place to go
but the high school. I am not
going to leave ' til my feet
are wet," Jones sa.id. ''It's
been a ro~gh year. but we'l l
get through ·it. "
In Fole y, . north of

PageA2

......... .,......""'".. ~........

come in off the Pacific,
there'S no history Of the
weatber as it approaches the
shore-llldsowegothamr

mered."
·
In Mendocino County
alone tbere were HO fires\
with just 17 contain _
TWo of the biggest; fire~
had each cliarred nearly 6
square miles. ·
One started in - Napa
County ~ quickly moved
into Solano County, and
tbrealened about 2SO homes
about 40 miles southwe!it of
SaCramento, said Kevin
Colburn, a spokesman for
the adi.fomia Dcpauruent
of Forestry and F'tre
Protection. ft was 60 per.
cent oootained 'Mooday. ·
The -OChrE was jn the
Sbasta~TrinitY
Nalional
Forest, about 160 miles
nottb of Sactamento, and ·

Thousands of firefighters
battled "'the blazes on the
ground and from the air and
Gov.
Arnold
Schwarzenegger said he
was alarmed by the number
of fires that kept erupting. .
He said be was told late
Sunday evening ·t hat the
state had 520 files, llld he
fOIJlld it "quite shocking"
·that by morning the nUIIlbi:r
had risen above 700.
Moments later, a top state
fire official standing at ~ abotlt 1.200
Schwarzenegger's
side bomeS. lbe l.tqest .o f the
offered a grim update: The fires threaleoed about 1,200
figure was actually '842 homes, and several youth
ftres, said Del Walters, camps llld forocd evacuaassistant regional chief of tions. The governor declamt
.the California Department a state of emergency ia ·
of . fm:estry _ and Fire Monterey
and
Trinity
PititeLiiun. All but COUple eowities oo MOOlliy.
~
were in the northern part of
Along the coast in the Los
the state.
Padres National Forest, a
"This is an unprecedented 2,000-1112 wildfire burning
lightning
storm
in south of Big Sur since
California, that it lasted as Saturoay forced the evacua•
long as it did, 5,000 to 6,000 tions of 75 homes and busiligbtning strikes," . Walters nesses, destroyed one bouse
said.. "We are finding ftres and du""""""' hundmds of
a11 the time."
othmi.
The assistance, mostly
It also led to an ~firefighting aircraft, arrived gency airlift Su~:~.;:f
Monday from Nevada and eight endangered C ·
·a
Oregon after being request- · condors. U.S. Coast Guard
ed over the weekend. . helicopters transponed the
Schwarzenegger said he had seven juveniles and one.
enlisted the help "because adult bird from a wildlife
you can never prepare for center to the Monterey
500 or 700 or 800 fires all at Airport
A second fire in the Los
the same time."
Part of the reason for the Padres burned more than
swelling number of wild- 57,000 acres and lw injured
fires was that local and state nine firefighterS.
officials were still counting
TWo blazes about 25
after )he fierce thunder- miles south of San Jose had,
storm Friday night that foroed hUndreds residents
to flee over the weekend,
touched off the blazes.
"We didn't get real lucky but · most wen: being
with this lighting storm,'' allowed to return Monday,.
Walters said. "It wasn't pre- · One fli'C WJIS 90 percen~
dieted - which often hap- contained llld the other SO
pens with these storms .that percent.

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

.
The Daily Sentinel
•

•

BYTHEBEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

I

•

He sdepriving her of sociability
. BY KATMY MITCHEU
AN~ MARCY SUGAR

PageA3

. I still believe they need their
father. What do I do? -

Suffering in N.D.
-- Dear Annie: My hus- .
Dear N.D.: Not everyone
band and I are in our early is social and there are a ·
30s and have three kids, I variety of reason s why.
am very sociable. but my However, if your husband
kusband is not. When we is unwilling to address the
were da.ting, -we went to issue and. worse, prevents
ather couples' homes for you from deriving enjoyCards. pool or darts. His ment from your friends, it
friends were all retirement is a problem. It 's possible
age. but they still were fun he fears losing you (hence
to be around.
the retirement- age friends)
' • Now we' ve moved back or has an anxiety disorder
lOom hometown, and many and the accusation s are
. of our friends are doing the intended to convince you to
Same. Thi S"·should be a great stay home with him. You
'Opportunity to socialize can get more information with people our own age, through
the
National
'but my hu.sband would Institute of Mental Health
rather sit in front of the TV. at 1-866-61 S-6464.
If I invite people over, he
Dear
Annie:
My
makes everyone feel unwel- boyfriend and I (both in our
come. On the rare occasions 50s) live together. Five
when we go out, he accuses years ago, we purchased a
me of oleeping with any home in another state and
man I talk to.
will move there when he
- I am about to lose my retires in two years. ln the
oooL I'm only asking to get meantime, I sold my house
together with friends onoe and moved into his.
everv month or two, but it's
My boyfriend is a widowtoo much for him. I feel like er. He has a large picture of
I'm in jail. I resent his his late wife llaiJging near
ridi,cul~!!.S ,
ac cu~ations, the enll)'way. I asked him to
wb1ch 1niJ1eak a Jack of . take Tt down out of respect
-respect for me . He will not for me . He says that wollld
i:onsider counseling. I have be disrespectf1d to his late
tried for four years. The wife ' s memory. What is·
way he treats me makes me your opinion? - Unhappy
worry that he isn't the best Housemale
role model for our kids, but
Dear Unhappy: Yes. he .

Tuesday, June 24,2008

Community Calendar
Public meetings

should move the picture to a income as long as they live
Thursday, June 26
less prominent place. It there. When _the house is
POMEROY
Meigs
won ' I be disrespectful to his sold, the proceeds go to the Soil
and
·
Water
late wife. but leaving it in mortgage company. My
the entryway is disrespect- wife and I have . a reverse Conservation District Board
ful to you. It sounds like he mortgage and our children of. Supervisors. II :30 a.m.
at the di strict office, 33101
may be having some diffi- . are fully supportive , Of Hiland Rd., Pomeroy,
culty letting go. You are course, George may not be
moving into a new borne in 5\l suppof!ive, but it still
Clubs ~and
two years. Perhaps you can .coul\l be the best solution .
-·
Cape
Coral,
Fla.
compromise . Leave the picDear
Cape
Coral:
ture where it is with the
.
understanding that when Reverse mortgages are
Tuesday, June 24
.
you relocate. it will be hung loans paid back from the
RACINE
The
Racine
elsewhere. Have something equity on your home. A
Community
more currel]t ·ready to. monthly sum isn ' tlikely to . Area
Organization
will
meet at
replace it. His late wife is no satisfy George, so the parthreat to you . Please treat ents would have .to take a 6:30 p.m. at the Star Mill
· Park building. Potluck meal
lump sum upfront. which
his memories delicately.
Dear Anoie: "Tired of caiJ be quite costly in fees. to be served _New. members
Drama" said her . adult And if the .parents don 't welcome.
Thursday, June 26
brother, "George," claimed keep up with the taxes and
TUPPERS
PLAINS they
could
to be; terminally ill and insurance,
Eastern
Music
Boostt;_~ s
wanted the parents to default. However, it is defiplanning
meeting.
7 p.m.,
remortgage their home in nitely an option worth lookband
room
..
Officers
meet at
order tD give him money. ing into. Thanks.
She feared her parents
Annk 's Mailbox is writ- 6p.m.Monday, June 30
would end up losing their ten by KJJthy MitcheU allll
POMEROY· OH-KAN
house.
Marcy Sugar, longtinre edi- Coin
Club will meet at 7
Si nee the parents have tors of the Ann l..amlers p.m. _ at the Pomeroy
paid off the house, t!he most . column. Pleilse e-mail your
Library. Dues payable, auclogical solution is a reverse questions to anniesmailiion to be held, visitors welmortgage. The only saCri- box@comcast.net, or write come .
fice would be a reduction in tu: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Of
the 3!110UO.t
- ,- -.inheritance
=-:r Box 118190,__C.hi.caco. JL . ~ church
'he lllld ller stlllings woiim 60lll. To jiiid out liWre
receive from the ultimate about Annie's Mailbox,
Saturday, June 28
sale of the family home.
and refill feoJures by other
WILKESVILLE - The
With a reverse mortgage, Creaton SyllllicoJe wriien
the mortgage company buys and cartoonists, visit the Wilkesville Presbyterian
the house from the parents Creaton Syndicate Web Church will feature David
Stiffler, Jr., singing gospel
and pays them a monthly · page oJ www.creators.rom.
music, 6 p.m. Public invited. For more information
call 669-6920.
Sunday, June 29
RACiNE
-Fourth
Annual Shall We Gather at
the River, I 1 a.m:. Star Mill
Park. worship service and
·
potluck to follow. ,
REEDSVILLE
Homemade ice · cream and
karaoke
at
Reeds ville
United Methodist Church, 2
p.m.
CHESTER - · Gospel
sing at the Chester Church
of the Nazarene 6 p.m. with

organizations

.

events

~

Foundation announces local scholarship recipients
: NELSONVILLE - The
.f'oundatien for Appalachian
Ohio
{FAO)
recently
·announced the recipients of
its 2008 scholarship awards,
ilistributing $68,000 to students
throughout
Appalachian Ohio.
. · Four seniors from Meigs .
-High .School each received a
'$2,500 Bachtel Scholarship
Award: Talisha Beha aiJd
kirk Legai for . academic
excellence; and Amy Barr
and Steven Stewart for athletic e)(cellence.
" The Bachtel Schol'!fship
Awards Program provides
-annual scholarships to grad·uates of Meigs High School
through an endowed fund
the late Dr. Harry Keig
establi shed with FAO. Dr.
f(eig grew up in M~igs
County and went on to
become a successful physi~
_tian and surgeon in the
Omaha area. but· he never
forgot hi s hometown or the
1eachers who educated him .
He also never forgot the
·life-shaping influence of his
.friend. Forrest Bachtel .
longtime teacher and coach
at Middleport High School.
pr. Keig established this
fund in Coach Bachtel's .
honor.
This year. FAO distributed SO scholarships to. students in Appalachian Ohio,
.awarding a total of $68,000
!o .help high school students
jn th~ region pursue secOndary education. The FAO
scholarshtp
committee
~lected 50 winners from a
pool of more than 270
i!-pplicants.
.._ ''We were pleased with
the number of qutstandinp,
applications we r~peivoo

The Bi ssell Boys and local
groups .

Reunions
Saturday, June 28
RACINE
- Clelllnd
family Reunion. noon. Star
Mill Park, potluck.
Sunday, June 29
HENDERSON. W.Va. Descendants of Sam and
Melvina Birchfield annual
reunion at the Henderson
. Build~ng,
Community
Basket dinner at noon.
REEDSVILLE - BiramHayman reunion. I p.m.,
Forked Run State Park shelter #2 . Bring covered dish
and lawn chairs. ·
·

.Other events
Friday, June 27
MIDDLEPORT - Free
conununity diuner. 4:30-6
p.m .. Middleport Church of
Christ, Family Life Center.
Menu of turkey·hot dogs with
sauce and cheese. potato
salad. cole slaw aiJd dessert.

Youth events
}'ll~y.

June .l4 , ·

RUTLAND Oas1s
Christian
Fellowship
Vacation Bible School, 68:30 p.m., through June 26,
Rutland Church· of Christ
Power Lab is the theme, for .
children ages three through
fifth grade .

Birthdays
Sunday, June 29
SYRACUSE - Virginia
"Ginny" · Hedrick
will
observe her 86th .birthday
today, cards may be sent to
PO Box 424, Syracuse.
Friday, July 4
SYRACUSE Elma
Weese will observe her 90th
birthday on July 4. Cards
may be sent to her at Box
127, Syracuse, 45779.

Coroner: Ohio hiker likely
· died of .heat exhaustion

·-~

Submitted photo

Meigs recipients of Bachtel Scholarships of $2,500 each , pictured here with Marianne
Campbell. representing the Foundation for Appalachian Ohio, are from the left, Kirk Legar.
Talisha Beha, Steven Stewart, and Amy Barr.
thi s vear," said committee working with donors to erechair-and f"AO board trustee . ate scholarship opportuniMarianne CampbelL "So tie s. FAO is helping
·many students in this. region improve access to education
have aspiration s (oward with the goal of enhancing ·
education . beyond high the quality of life for all ,citschool, ·yet do not have the izens of Appalachian Ohio.
resources they ntl\)d. FAO is
Each year. the Foundation
working to make these for Appalachian Ohio offers
dreams a reality for all stu- schiJlarshipb to students
dents in Appalachian Ohio." across the 29 counties of
Access to higher educa- Appalachian Ohio. For
Lion has historically been more information about
limited in Appalachian how to apply or how you
Ohio; the college atten- can contribute to scholardance rate for thi s region is ship
resources,
ns1t
30%, compared to 41 %'for · www.appalachianohio.org
the State of Ohio and 62 % or call 740-753-1111 _
for the United States. By · The Foundation
for

Appalachian Ohio is a
regional community foundation and 501 (c)(3) public
charity serving the 29 counties of AppalachiaiJ Ohio.
The Foundation attracts
contributions for programs
and endowment. makes
grants for charitable apd
civic purposes and supports
local efforts for positive ·
change. For more information or to learn more about
the Foundation's rm a
Child of Appalachia®
Network (ICAN'J to promote regional access and
success in education , visit
www.appalachianohio.org .

'
CHiLLICOTHE (AP) with his troop in Tar
Preliminary autopsy results Hollow State Park in southindicate an 11-year-old Boy ern ·Ohio.
Scout who collapsed during
The coroner said fellow
a weekend hike died from hikers gave the boy water
heat exhaustion.
and performed CPR until
Ross Countv Coroner paramedics arrived. but didJohn Gabis said Monday o 't lake his temperature .
Ross County Sheriff's ·
that pathologists will run
standard toxicology tests officials said the bo.y was
and investigate whether the dehydrated. Tests to conboy, Payden Sommers, had firm heat exhaustion could
any contributing heart prob- be done within a week,
lems.
Sommers,
of while the heart and toxicolChillicothe,
collapsed ogy reports will take weeks
Saturday night while hiking · or months.

PoHce: Skeletal remains are.
missing Ohio pregnant woman
PORTSMOUTH (AP) Authorities say they have
confirmed .that skeletal
remains found near a
remote wooded area ' in
southern Ohio are those of a
21-year-old
pregnant
woman
missing
since
August.
.Portsmouth police say
the remains discovered in
April are those or' Amb~r

Howard of Portsmout)), a
single mother of a 2-yearold boy.
Officials have not determined the cause ·of death.
but called Howard's uis"flpearan,ce suspicious.
. The
Scioto
Countv
Sheriff' s otflce says people
hunting mu shrooms · in
Shawnee Stale Forest dis,
covered the bones.

'Over the Hill Vacation Bible School'
'

An "Over the Hill
Vacation Biblt
School - The
View is Terrific"
was held recently
· at the Senior
Citizens Center. It
was sponsored by
the Bible Seekers
Sunday School
Class of the
Middleport Church
of Christ. Enrolling
for Bible school
were from the left,
front, Mary
Murray, Polly
I
Curtis and Judy
I
McHaffie, and
·
Oltl1 lfdlll I fI I hull:
I
back witt! Debbie
j,J. . . . ,.,. ....." ••
1
Jones, activity
director/RSVP,
I
.
Caa• ... ,,..,_,, , _ tl'"'
left, Maxine Little ,
I
IZCIIIJCI .. MIIIffwLatiMJ.IJ
June Kioes, Pat
41solr.ltiiJiMMr
:.:;;':-" '"•'-Cfll ,
1
Marcinko, Betty
J
Johnson , Mack
,! ~41 ,;~o..,jfS/1 Sf• Co.ltfL S.l btfwtft Alii~~~ M&lt;IC..tl'i/k,QII
Leighton] Jaun~a
NDSpriNCinioo ....... of.Vm/_,..,,... 17"
Roush , · immy
I
Wa' I e_, Frldey liiiJhtl
Cummins, and
I
.
CIIM*O.W ltl._
Alice Wamsley.
I
www.lk!ll
d p.Mt

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740-446-2342
www .mydailytribune.com
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\Bomt fleasant l\tgtsttr
304-675-1333

www.mydailyregister.com
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200e SPORT

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111 Court Street • Pon~e~oy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740} 992-2157

www.mydllllyHntlnel.com

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

Congress shall make no law_respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, ·or of the press;' or the right of the
peoplepeaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievancu.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

:•T ODAY IN HISTORY

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

E

Obituaries

~-

ftc._The Daily Sentinel

'f' ·
F*::::::

:

\,

-·

university research pro- percent for NSF, bul'
grams have been canceled, Democrats have signalec!·
according to City College of that no domestic appropria1
New
York
professor tions bills are likely to pass
··
Michael Lubell, director of while Bush is in office.
public affairs for the
The Senate has included
American Physical Society. science funding in its versioft
Also in danger is U.S. par- of the Iraq War supplemental
ticipation in an international bill. The House has not. bli
high-energy physics project may yet, along with iliC1cascd
in
Geneva, unemployment insurance.
based
Switzerland, and developHowever, Bush is threat•·
ment of work in U.S. labs on · ening to veto anything but high-intensity X-rays· useful "clean'' war supplemental,
for biomedical research, In the meantime, the Senaf!;
nanotechnology and com- has allocated $200 million
puter-chip design - all keys increases for NSF and $400
to competitiveness.
million for the Nationaf
The goals authorized in lnslitutes of Health, bul
2007 were never funded. only $100 ntillion for [)()£
Both the House and Senate science, while allocating
actually agreed to a 17 per- $300 million to nuclear-site
cent increase in funding for environmental cleanup. ·:
DOE science projects - to · Earlier this month, 7i
make up for money diverted CEOs of tec\mOiogy compa'
the . previous year for nies and university presiHun·icane Katrina cleanup dents signed a. Jetter to con~
- as well as I 2 percent for gressional leaders appealing
the
National
Science for increases in the NSF and
Foundation and 32 percent DOE levels in the suppJe::
for the National Institute of mental and declaring t:hai
Standards and Technology.
past underfunding ineaml
But after Democrats and tftat "cutting edge resellldl
the. Whit~ Hoy ~e reillihed a has been halted or 1101
funding
impasse
in launched; scientists by lhli
December, Congress passed hundreds have lost their jobs;
an omnibus fiscal 2008 fewer teachers are being
appropriation that contained trained; bright students ~
barely any increases for sci- chQOsing alternative paths.
ence.
and international partnerr
Lubell.
says
some ships have been severed." :,
Democrats told him at the · To a.;f~ance the causes of
,lime th_at they were unwil!· cornpettti_yeness and eua~
mg to let Bush claim credit research, Obama and Mc:Caill
for passing competitiveness should take a few minutes oui
initiatives. Also, Democrats from campaigning and ~
were furious with Bush for some phone calls. If they sue'· ·
suddenly becoming a budget ceed, they can claim credil
hawk after years of failing to for leadership.
'
veto GOP spending hills.
(Morton Kondracke i~
111is year. Bush called for executive editor of Rol~
an 18 percent increase in the ·call, the newspaper Of
DOE science budget and 14 Capitol Hill.)
·

-·
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'
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be held at Ctuist United Methodist Church at II a.m. on
. Thursday, June 26, with an additional viewing hour preceding (10-11 a.m.). It will be officiated by Rev. Roberta
APPLE GROVE, W.Va.- Joe Dandgridge Tavan, 83,
Lindrier, Rev. Scott Lindner, Diaconal Mintster Janie Karl
of
Apple Grove, W.Va., died Sunday, June 22, 2008.
and Rev. Dale Lykins. with a lunch to follow in the church
Service
will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 25, 2008. II
fellowship hall. The family will proceed later for a burial
Ctow-Hussell
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., with
service in Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy at 3 p.m.
burial
following
in Beale Chapel Cemtery, Appl~e.
In lieu of flowers, the family su11gests_ memorial donations to the Christ UMC Fanuly Life Center, 150 Visitation will be beld an hour prior to the funeral.
Portsmouth St., Jackson, OH 46540; or to the local ACS
"Relay For Life," c/o Roxie Underwood, 103 N. David
Ave., Jackson, OH 45640.
·

JACKSON - . Audrey
Ellen Henry, 79, of Jackson,
~o, passed away peaceful·
l:'o' m her sleep on Samrday,
June 21, 2008 at her home,
after a long anll vali&lt;U~t bat·
tie with cancer. Sbe spent
~ last several weeks of her
Jffe in her own home, sur~unded by loving family,
tpe~s and round-the-clock

.For the Record

•••

~gtvers .

• Audrey was born on June
26, 192.8 in Racine, Ohio to
lite late Harry and Georgia
&amp;i~~C Hayman. In October,
1950, she was manied to
8,obcrt · 1. Wilson, with
· hom she .had three children: Daughter Roberta (husband,
w) Lindner of Columbus, son Pete (wife, Pam) W'Jlson of
· ksoo, and daughter Rhonda (husband, Buzz) Ball of
lumbus, all of whom survive.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
OrSt husband, Robert Wilson in I965; her second husband,
Edqlond Henry in 1984; a sister, Norma Jean Smith of
Dayton and three special cousins, Ruth, Grace and Jane
Ellis, all of Columbus.
.
. Along with her children and their spouses, also surviving are three grandsons, Scott (wife, Su) Lindner of
Florida, and Robert and Paul Lindner, both of Columbus;
(Wo great-grandsons, George and Brian Lindner; step4alighter, Sharon (husband, ltuss) Miller of Marietta; two
~~ep-grandchildren, Jean Ann and Rob; half-sister,
Eleanor Clark of Massachusetts; brother-in~ljlw, Bill
$mith and nephew, Jeff Smith, both of Dayton; special
Ctiend, neighbor and caregiver, Sandy Adair of Jackson;
il\d belOVed pet, Lilcll'y tlli!i eM.
-...
.
·· Audrey was a 1946 graduate of Racine High School and
~ graduate of Buxton Beauty School in _Coh1mbus, and
the operated her own beauty shop in 1951. She also
attended Rio Grande College and through the years
worked in many other fields, including law (Attorney
Tom DeLay's office), pharmacy (Lewis Drug Store), the
1rocery business (Henry's -Grocery and Jamestown
Market), and newspaper·advertisioglcolumn writing (The
Wellston Sentry, The Jackson Tlmes, The Tunes-Journal
$lid The Telegram). Professionally, she was perhaps ~s!
tnown for her newspaeer columns, "Hometown Cooking
ind "Social Sharings.
· She was a member of Cbrist United Methodist Chtm;h,
United Methodist Women, The Jackson RoAnns Club and
The Jackson Mothers' Guild. She was a volunteer for the
Flolzer Cancer Resource Center and for the Jackson Countr,
t.Tnit of the American Cancer Society's "Relay For Life,'
:!lerving for several years as its publicity chairman.
Audrey was a loving wife, mother, grandmother, sister
.and true friend to all, and was much beloved by all who
knew her. She_leaves · behind many golden memories to
-cherish for a lifetime, and will be greatly missed.
Thanks to Sandy Borden and staff at Four Winds
Community, to Derek, Linda and others at Highbanks
Care Center, Columbus and to Hospice; thanks to care·
givers Karen Smith, Krissy Morga.n, Beth Allen,
Michelle Staten, Barbara Newberry and Ann Greene; and
a very special thanks to all other friends, family, neighbors and .well-weishers in the community who remembered Audrey with loving thoughts, prayers and gestures
-·
of kindness 10 any way.
Calling hours for Audrey Henry will be Wednesday, June
25 from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 6 to 8 p.m. at the EisnangleLewis Funeral Home in Jackson. ,The funeral service will

•

God looked around the Garden
And found an empty pl.ace,
·
He loolced down upon tM Earth,
Ami saw your tired face.

Fire reported

He put His arms aroUJ!d yo~
And lifted yo~ to rest;
·
God's Garden must be b.Muliful,
For He only takes the be$1.
He knew that you well! weary
And He knew you were in pain,
He knew that you would 11e11er
Be well on Earth agaill.
He saw tM roads were getting rough
And the hills were hard to climb,
So He closed your weary eyelids
And whispered, "Peace be thine. "
·
(From tM poelry collection of Gamet Adnir.)

Robert-E. HUdson
RACINE Robert E.
Hudson, 60, of Racine, went
to be with our Lord at 3:30
p.m. Friday, June 20. 21198,
at his Vine Street home after
11 courageous battle

BALD KNOBS- A structure ftre was reported yea1adq
afternoon at a residence near the intersection of Bald KnaiJI.
Stiversville Road and Richard Road in Lebanon Townsbip.
The Racine and Bashan f'tre Departments responded as did
emergency personnel from Squad 33. Squad 33 did transp111t
a patient from the scene to St. Joseph's Hospital ill
Parltershurg, W.Va. though initial reports were the pariel1f
was a firefighter experiencing chest pains. The office of Ill!=
Ohio State Fire Marshal was contacted in relation to the fire.
No further details were available at press time.

Bear sighting
POMEROY - . A black bear was sighted in PomenJoy
early Saturday oioming near Triplett's Car Wash and lbc_
bridge construction site. Pomeroy Patrolman Ronnie Spann
and Middleport Police Offtcer Ben Davidson observed the
bear foraging in dumpsters near the car wash and consuuc..:
tion site. Officers were advised by wildlife experts to leave
the bear alone unless·it was aggressive, which it was not It
was described as small and calm. The bear was last seen
walking off towards the new bridge. -~

cancer.

Partnership rrom Page AI

He was born Jan. I, 1948,
in Hartford, W.Va.
He was a graduate of
Wahama High School. Bob
high-end housing for those
Was a U.S. Army veteran,
who will be moving to the
having served as a medic in ·
community to work on
the Vietnam War from 1966
planned industrial conrerns,
until 1975. He worked on
such as the AMP.Ohio power
the river for 31 years, his
plant and the coal mines that
last job as a rivbboat pilot
.Robert E. Hucl1011
plan to operate here.
captain
for . Campbell.
'The county has ·an ongoTransportation Co, of Dunlevy, Pa. He was recently certi-· ing housin~ shortage,"
. VarnadOe satd, "not only
fled ~ a boat pilot instructor.
He wa:J:eroceeded in death his mother, Juanita Hoschar, short-term and affordable
and his f
r, Junior Hoschar.
'l housing for workers but
He is survived by hi~ w~e of 30 years, April Taylor · also new homes. There has
HU:dson, whom he mamed m Pomeroy on June 3, 1978,
and his Son, Jason E. Hudson of Grand Junction, Colo.
Also surviving are his brother, Chucli: (Pam) Hoschar of
West Columbia, W.Va.; a sister, Lynn (John) -Young,
Gallipolis; mother-in-law and father-in-law, Marian And ·
Everett Taylor of Largo, Ra.; brother-in-law, Robert D. Pomeroy's Squad One were
Taylor of Akron; brother-in-law and sister-in-law, the Rev. notified and responded to
Dave and Bobbie taylor of Mount Zion, Ul.; and nieces and reniove the taser prongs.
nephews, Shasta Hoschar, John (Erin) Young, Jerry (Amy) Stewart was then transportHoschar, Crystal Taylor, Kirstie Taylor, Christen Taylor and ed by to the Pomeroy Police
Aaron Taylor.
· .
·
Department where he was
ln. keq!ing with Bob's wishes, there are no calling hours charged with resisting
or funeral services. A memorial service will be held at a arrest, disorderly by intoxilater date. Cremation services are under the direction of .cation and failure to comply
Cremeens Funeral Home at Racine.
·
with a police officer. He is
~ssions of sympathy may be sent to the family by .:)ue to appear in Pomeroy
visil!Dg www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
Mayor's Court Qn June 30.
Sgt. Brandy King also
investigated a recent automobile accident with no injuries
near Holzer Meigs Clinic on

been no major growth in
new home construction· fot
many years."
Varnadoe said the project
is expected to be complet..:
ed in two years, at which
time the ateas of e~.pect.ed
residential growth are to be
identified and th~ most·
cost effective means of
providing needed infra•
structure to those areas are
to be determined.
' -:

Arrests rrom Page AI

Local Weather

Local Briefs

\

•

Mulberry Avenue. Melinda
G. Sallee, Gallipolis, was·
found at fault for failure: tO
yield when a vehicle she driving struck a vellick
owned by the Meigs Couo::Y ·
Commissioners, driven by
Meigs County Depanmeaw of .
Job and Family Services
Employee Charles Knopp.
Sallee' s vehicle ~ived
damage to the front end of
the car, the county vehicle
received · damage to the
bumper and beadJ,ight on the
driver's side of the vehicle.

,-

The lead in a June 8 story in
the Toronto Star revealed:
"Guantanamo Bay inter. rogatoi-s were directed to
· destroy (their) handwritten
notes (while getting alleged
confessions from Khadr) in
an attempt to minimize the
chances they could have their
actions questioned in court."
Now that he has ·been
rebuked by the Supreme
Court, Mukasey might want
·to take note that "the document confrrms for the frrst
time that the Pentagon had a
policy that required original
(interrogators) notes to be
systematically destroyed something detainee defense
lawyers argue undermines
their ability to challenged
the government's evi·
dence.'' No kidding,
A former Guantanamo
Bay prisoner, Adel Hassan
Hamad, was caged there for
five years until - as the
Feb. 6 Christian Science
Monitor reported -· interrogators reached "the con· ·
· elusion that (Hamad) was
exactly who he claimed to
be: a hospital administrator
in Pakistan. On Dec. II ,
2007. they put him back on
a cargo plane, hOOded and
handcuffed. and sent him'
.hack to his home in Sudan."
Hooded. handcuffed and
innocent, Mr. Attorney
Generdl. Hamad, · writes
reporter . Scott Baldauf, is
suing the United Stiltes government "for compensation
for those lost years - years
where his family became
impo veri sbed and one
daughter became sick and
died.'' Fida was 3 when she
died in 2005.
.
The lawsuit is not only
what Hamad · wanted from
the United States: "We must
want to respect America

again. The American conscience and the AmericaD
people need to return to the
great concepts establisbe4
by the Founding Farhers, of
freedom, democracy, equali-ty and justice. All these val:
ues and even the justice sys;.
tern are being shaken, pia~
with." (These are Hamad1.
words in English, . learned
from his prison guards.)
·
How is it that Mukasey
became a very high-level
player with the Americail
JUstice system after a lonJ ·
career exemplifYing it as •
federal judge? My answer:
The culture of the Bua
administration is contagious.
Now, with Mukasey al~
insisting that major teleoom.:.
munications systelll&amp; should
get inununity for ~
the law by helping the(gov~
ernrneot eavesdrop wilboul
warrants oa our phone calls
and e-mails, this man whO
earned the esteem of bod! ·
defense lawyers and JIU»Je;.
cutors appearing hefoce u
in a federal oowtroom . .
become a parody cl
America's chieflaw offiOCI'.'
· Mukasey oould be a tipreof fun on a more sophisticltloed oational TV show than Jay
Leno 's.lf there comes to be •
President _John McCain, wiD
he continue the Bush ~epcy,
of American justioe by ,... • •
tog Mukasey as ·
P:
era!? Maybe, ·
McCain disagnies with ...:
majority of the S
··
Court decision - that .
was NO Jaw lit Guantal- ·
(Nat HenJojfis a rta,;,.,.,,
ly renoW111!d audtority tlft IN
First Amendmmt and •
Bill of Rig/us and author .(#,

many

books, illcluditr '"IJ.it'

War on the BiU of Rigb attl,
the GatMring Resi.stanoe • .
(Sewn Slories PR!ss, 2004J. '
•

Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
mid 60s. Southwest winds
around S mph. Chance of
.
Taudly DIJht.••Mostly rain 40 percent.
Tbunday-Partly
sunny
clear. Lows in the mid SOs.
West winds around S mph in with a chance of showers
the
evenint .. 8ecomjng and thunderstorms. Highs in
the mid 80s. Chance of rain
li~ and varia le.
·
ednesd•y ••• Mostly JO.;:rccot.
. unday aiPt through
sunny. Highs in the mid 80s.
nlght...Mostly
Southwest winds S to 10 Friday
cloudy. Lows in the mid
night... 60s. Highs in the upper 80s.

'liletday-Mosdy sunny.
Hiahs in the lower 80s.
North winds around S
POMEROY - Me1Jt County Commisslonm will meet
~~ming wesfin the
at 10 a.m. Thunday instead of 1 p.m.

•'

'

Deaths
JoeTavan

How our attorney general difines justice

~,-

The Daily Sentinel• Pqe As

www.mydaJlysentinel.c:om

•

•

Tuesday, June 24, 2oo8

John McCain and Barack
Obama unveiled impressive
plans this week on energy
and competitiveness policy,
but they need to act now to
save federal energy research · ·
from collapsing.
~
. Kondracke
Specifically,
McCain
should call the White House
and Ohama ·should call
Democratic congressional
.leaders to make sure that
federal scientific research threatening the nation's
standard of living.
budgets aren't tlatlined for · As Obama put it in his
another year.
· recent speech in Rint. Mich.,
Funding cuts are especial- "At a time when technology
ly dire for science programs is shaping our future, we
at the Department of · devote a smaller and smaller
Energy, resulting in layoffs share of our national
at national laboratories and resources to research and
cuts in university research development. It's time for
in the physical sciences.
America to lead."
There's widespread bipartiHe rrornised to double
san agreement- in principle ' d
f d.
'
b ·
- that the United States .e era un mg .or astc.
research :;~nd said, "We can
needs to increase funding for ensure that the discoveries
basic research, science edu- of the 21st century happen
cation and energy innovation. in America - in our Jabs
But, somehow, what and universities."
And ML'Cain. in his energy
everybody agrees to in prin·
ciple doesn't get done in speech Tuesday in HoustQn,
practice - · either because declared that he would lead
of partisan rancor or com- "a great national campaign to
petiug p.riruilit.:.~ .
!lchiev~ et!crgy "l)§urity lor
In 2006, for instance, America" involving an evenPresident Bush called for an tua1 "great turn" from carbon
American Competitiveness to alternative fuels - for
Initiative, including a dou- which, he said, ··we will need
bling of basic science all the inventive genius of
research over a ]().year peri- which An1erica is capable."
od. And Congress, by wide
And yet, right now, the·
margins in both the House United States . is being
and Senate, passed the forced by Department · of
America Competes Act last E:nergy budget cuts to with-.
year, authorizing the doubling draw from ITER, the inter·
in seven years and calling for national project - based in
increases in science teaching. France - to investigate
The impetus. of course, whether nuclear fusion is a
was a rising concern that the potential source of energy.
United States is in danger o_f . More than 2,700 workers
falling •behind its foreign at the DOE's national !abocompetitors in research and ratories already have been
the training of scientists, laid off, and 200 planned

, Today is Tuesday,June 24, the I 76th day ot 2008. There
are 190 days left in thi: year..
.
Today's Highlight in History: On June 24, 1948,
Communist forces cut off all land and water routes between
West Germany and West Berlin, prompting the western
allies to organize the massive Berlin Airlift. _
On this d~t~; In 1J!4, !he foroes of Sootlund's King
Robert I defeated the English in the Battle of Bannockburn.
In 1509, Henry Vlll was crowned king of England.
In 1793, the ftrst republican constitution in France was
adqpted.
. In 1807, a grand jury in Richmond, Va., indicted former
Vice President Aaron Burr on charges of treason and high
misdemeanor (he was later acquitted). .
. In 1908, the 22nd and 24th president of the United States,
Grover Cleveland, died in Prmceton,_N.J., at age 71.
. In 1940, France signed an armistice with Italy during
World War ll.
·
In 1968, "Resurrection City," a shantytown constructed
as part of the Poor People's March on Washington, D.C.,
was dosed down by authorities.
. In I 983, the space shuttle Challenger - carrying
America's first woman in space, Sally K. Ride- coas.ted
to a safe landing at Edwards Air Force Base in California.
Ten years ago: President Clinton left on a nine-day visit
to China amid a swirl of controversy over his policy toward
the Beijing government. AT&amp;T Corp. struck a deal to buy
cable TV giant Tele·CommunicatioQs for $31.7 billion.
Five years ago: Six British soldiers were killed by Iraqis
in a police station in southern Iraq and eight were wounded in a nearby ambush. President Vladimir Putin arrived in
London on the frrst state visit to Britain by a Russian leader
~ince the 19th century. An Air France Concorde bound for
a;(lmo:Ian museum landed in Germany,
One year ago: Ali Hassan ai-Majid,. Saddam Hussein's
ooosm known as "Chemical Ali," and two other eJ-officials
iJJ. Saddam's were sentenced hy the Iraqi High Tribunal to
hang for slaughtering up to 180,000 Kurdish men, women
and clrildren two decades earlier. Charles W. Lindberg, one of
1he U.S. Marines who raised the first American flag over Iwo
lima during World War ll, die_d in Edina, Minn., at age 86. .
· Today's Birthdays: Actor AI Molinaro is 89. Comedian
Jack Carter is 85. Movie . director Claude Chl\brol is 78.
Actor-director Georg Stanford Brown is 65.'Rock musician
Jeff Beck is 64. Singer Arthur Brown is 64. Rock singer
~olin Blunstone (The Zombies) is 63. Musician Mick
eetwood is 61. Actor Peter Weller is 61. Rock musician
hn lllsley (Dire Straits) is 59. Actress Nancy Allen is 58.
ggae singer Derrick Simpson (Black Uhuru) is 58. Actor
foe Penny is 52. Reggae singer As\1'0 (UB40) is 51. Singermusician Andy McCluskey (Orchestral Manoevres in the
Dark) is 49. Actress Danielle Spencer is 43. Actress Sherry _
When Michael Mukasey,
$ilringfield is 41. Singer Glenn Medeiros is 38. Actress-proawidely respected former
Miody Kaling is 29. Actres's Minka Kelly (TV:
day Night Lights") is 28. Singer Solan~e Knowles is 22. federal judge, was nominat-. Thought for To¢1y: "Self-denial is mdulgence.. of a ed by President Bush to sucpeosity to forego." - Ambrose Bierce, American ceed Alberto Gonzales as
U.S. attorney general. I
thor-journalist (1842-19141).
Nat
. .
doubt even his most enthusiHentoff
astic admirers would have
expected
him
to
proclaim,
as
LETTERS TO THE
he did June 4, that the mili~·
EDITOR
tary commissions proceed~~.
ill Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be fess ings at Guantanamo will be defendant before the com·
~n 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be "in the best traditions of the missions, Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed. When he tried
~gned, and include address and telephone number. No American legal system."
On
Feb.
14,
the
Supreme
·
fiisigned letters will be published. Letters should be in Court of the United States to descn'be wh.at th at expenence - and other tortures
food taste, addressing issues, not persOTUJlities. Letters of
gave
Mukasey
a
failing
he had undergone - were
~nks to organizations and individuals will not be accepr·
grade
in
constitutional
law.
like, he was silenced by the
ftJ. for publication.
Mukasey indulged in this military judge.
~
.
fantasy as he spoke at an
Other defendants who
annual
conference of claim to have been tortured
Washington federal judges. _ while being interrogated
;,;~
.
I assume that out of respect at Guantanamo's "Camp
for this nation's chief law Justice." where the hearings
F;.;•eader Services oJ~'i,~ officer,
the audience of are held -· are forbidden
I :.
Coo rwc11on Polley '
judJleS managed to suppress from speaking about the con~ r
,
PUblllhed . every Bfterooon, Monday
therr guffaws. Now that the ditions of their confmement.
~main &lt;:01....., "'aH atorieo/8 to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
Supreme Court declared the There have been detainees
~ """""""· H you kJMM alan onor Pomeroy, Ohio .
Second-daN
military
commissions who no longer have to appear
jj,,a ~. coli the newsroom at (7-40) ..-ve paid at ~unconstitutional,
those before these unconstitutional
112-2156.
• ..... lhe - - ...... '!I'd
·.v
the Ohio New.lptper •.:~ old ()II.
judges can laugh aloud.
military
commissions,
'"
0... ..,.In ftUIIIber Ja
Pab: a • Send addrMa 00f't80They all knew that the designed by administration
&lt;~
(7401 1112·2158.
tionelo The DaHl- Sentinel, 11t Court
detainees (Gitmo guards are lawyers with degrees from
~
Stree!, l'on*oy, Ollio 45769.
not allowed to call them some of our premier I'aw
~-·.-~j)epe·t1nMMotextenalons 11111:
pnsone~sl
before the lllted__, scttools. because these prisRlttn
New a
.,SubKrlptlon
_, ... or motor.
route
bar of JUStice there are not on·ers have committed suiOne-*'
'10.27
allo\1/ed to _rebut the fl!OSt cide in their cells out ofhope~ Cllarlene Hoellich, Ext 12
One'115.84
cructal ~vtdence agamst lessness, their lawyers claim.
DaiiJ
50'
Brian Reed. Ext. 14
them, whtch ts dasstfled.
. Guantanamo Bay officials
fJ
: Botto Sergent, Ext. 13
Senior Cltlaon · Nor
are
the
_pnsoners
percharacterize such suicidal
One mconlh
'10.27
tnJtted to testify about bow resistances to American
One'103.10
9• ..... !hoLid remll i'1 acMn:le
they've been treated . at authority as "asymmetrical
Advertlaing
to llo Daly - No subGuantanamo Bay or dunng acts of war" committed by
acription ~ "** pet1n.-cl in areas
:··=~-=
oa...-Hams.
. . ., B
Oovioo ,Ext.
Ext Is
18 where home carrier aeMoe is availprevtous confmements at these enetnJes of the United
' ..... .: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext: 10
such legal black holes as in States engaged in a tenninal
the CIA's secret prisons, public relations assault
..... SuiMcrlptlon
from
which some have been against us infidels.
i'_', Gane~al 'M anager ,
....,. ...... County
transferred
to Guantanamo.
A recent disclosure further
• , Charlene Hoellk:lo, Ext . 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
At those dark sites. autho- puncturing
Mukasey's
26 Weeks
'64.20
rized
by
George
W.
Bush
in
·
attempted
idealization
of
52
Weeks
'
127.11
~ '!
E-mail:
his
sovereign
extrajudicial
Arnencan.justice
was
brought
. news OmydaWysentinal.com
Outlolda Mtoigs Counly
authority, the ClA finally to sharp bght in the case of
~~:,
13Weeks
'53.55
admitted
that some of their alleged terrorist Canadian
26 Weel&lt;s
' 107. 10
inmates
had
been water- ·, Omar 'Kbadr appearing
52 Weeks
'214.21
boarded, including the star before a military oommission.

~

··PageA4
•

Obamaj McCain can help_
advance energy, competitiveness now

The Daily Sentinel

•

~

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

. .. .

-

·Tent revival

1

·: POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - An old-fashioned tent
levival will be held at 1 _p.m. niihtly, through Friday, at
New Beginnings Baptist Church, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
· Different putOn will speak niahtly. The revival is sponsored by Brean Baptist Cliurch, Church of God in Christian
Cnion, Church of God of Prophecy, Krebes Chapel United
Methodist Church, Maranatha · Cornerstone Church, and
New Beginnings Baptist Church.
! There will special music nightly. Information is available:
by caJ.ling (304) 67Sc54Ji3.

Gospel concert
. MIDDLEPORT- The Comer Restaurant in Middleport

Mit sponsor the Thitd Annual "Singing in the Street" blue~s gospe! conce~ from 10 a.m.

~e.-..y

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BBT CNYIEI- 24.04

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Poopln (NASDAQ)-21.10
PeplloO (NYSE) - 14.13

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1. . . 1:11,...

I!IWA,Qili llfC.UI

t:ll,. . lll, ...

1JISIIANIDS11o

.•

IIIIUWIIlW f'C.Ilo
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....

Sj 1 11(74GJ ..I4M1IAeley X sao In Paint
Pit nt .. (QJ 17...,74.
I

IIPC.

Save DlOieY with our multi-policy disoountl

Boil advisories ispled

Wbon yOUJ inJure your car and luome or
mobile bome with us. lhrouP, Auto-Ownm
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~ policyleoldcn can eam even gre*r
..vmg.. Contact OUJf IIFIC)' -today I

; RUTLAND , -Leading Creek Conservancy District
repaired a main line water leak near Noble Summit Road
yesterday. Customers wbo euerienced low pressure or no
water east of Noble Summir !toad will be on a boil advisory until f1,trtber noti~. AlllO, the u:x::n e1.perlenc:ed problems with one of Its water . tanks Sunday lD01111118· _Any
LCCD custO!IIet that was wUbout water or lutd low pressure
C)n Sunday wili .!Je oa a boil advisory ~ furtlic:r notice. .

.

Betty Plymale's birthday ~anre

•
•

- ---~ --'·

....•..

•• n 1

•

~--Oir-­

•

Reed " Baur IDsurance Agency

GALLIPOLIS -A surprise birthday celebration will be
beld I to 5 p.m. on July 1 for Betty Plymale at the
(iallipolis Fue Department. Cards may he sent to ha at th
tlome of her daughter, Joy Beaver, 15034 Hannan Trace,
Crown CitY, Ohio 45623. For more information call Beaver
at 7-400645-3412.

-----

clll-ara~a.-:-.ln

a

SF

nl Eut MUt Stred
Pumenly, Ohio 45769

740-992-3600

~~~.

1....

...

Brooke Ashley
Vaughan of Pomeroy,
OH recently
graduated from Ohio
University in Athens,
OH with a Doctorate
Degree in Physical
Therapy.

ca.wiiB .-.c=-27.40 .-... ror ..... u .... ....,.
lllllrtiiJ O.Widl :a
· '. SYRACUSE. The ~ Pool will ~er swimming 17.11
wldad=Ed•d ...........

.. ,, =IEJ-•.11
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Dr. Brooke Vaughan ·

11-ni.ET I t • .. , _ . , _

.k:ssons· July 7-11 at the pool. LessoDil begm at 9 a.m., Jut
(or one hour and are given to beginning, iota nwtim and
-21
(IIYIE) -18.82
·adv~ swdents. If a !Dl!keup day i.s RqUired it will be II to• ......
S. ,._ (NYIEIJuly 12. The cost is $25 per student. Space is limited and
can be reserved by calling the pool at 992-5418.

t. . . . . .

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Tilt: tiOI1DI 1:

SIIAftl!IIIG" !ll

to 6 p.~ o_n Saturday.
Music will begm at 10 a.m. and will mclude: Joe
:s-:=JNASDIUlJ-11.25
oc
(NYSE)- 52.87
McCloud, Charlie and Ellen Rife, Tami and Craig Dugan, CMIIIIy AlullllooeUM (N~)
(NAIIOAQ)- 5.42
truly Saved Trio, The Miller Family, Kelly Perry, Dave ~.a
lltplon (IUIOAQJ - 1.12
.
Sluell- 71.23
ferry, Ronnie Kisner, Delivered, Valerie Clonch, Charles ct•lllll•lhopa
(NAIIOAQ)- . ._.. lhtlllng (NASDAQ).
hd Claudette Harbin. Earthen Vessels, and The Country
71.11
Gentlemen.
g'Jt~AQ). -·1AS Wvtl rt (NYSEJ - .....
Wencly'a (NYSEJ,.- 21M
, Bring a lawn chair.
'll1 " 100 (N
J- 11AZ
OUPonl (NYIIE) - 4U7
:

(Jilll"U

She graduated from
Meig s High School in 2()()().
She is the daughter of Richard Williams of
. Middleport and Barbara Williams .
of Milton, WV.
She is nJ(lrried to Dodger Vaughan and they
have a son Trey who is 4.
She is thf granddaugluer of
June Williams of Glouster; OH and
The Rev. Amos Ttllis of Pomeroy and the
late Ruth.1illis.

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PageA6

·OHIO

;

·The Daily Sentinel
'

Imide

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Baseball and.Social Security:
More·than numbers

U.S. dlW ausllt's MAC AU-stan,

r..BZ

Votto's a student f'l the pme, Page B6

&lt;&gt;nr
· SOCIAL SECURITY MANAQBI. AJI£NS

96 percent of the workforce. And Soci31
Security is .OOre than just retiremellt
benefit~. Disabled ·workers and their
Baseball is America'.s paSdme. It' s dependents account for 18 peroent of
also game !mown for its numbers. Joe the t.otai benefits paid, while survivor's ,
DiMa~io's 56-game hitting streak, Cal beoefits account for 13 ~nt. Almost ·
Ripken s reconl of 2,632 consecutive one ill four workers wtU become dis-.
games played and Hank A;lron's 755 abled before reaching age 67 and t¥
career home runs all tell stories mucb majoriry of these workers have no lon~­
larger than the numbers thc:lmelves. ti:nn disability insurance besides therr
Mention any one of these numbeni to a 'Social Security &lt;;overage.
. 1\jot onI y do these numbers paint a
baseball fan and you're sure to~ to
pietui'e
of Social Security today, they
mind memories and anecdotes,
.
also
help
us predict how .thai picture
Social Security' s numbeni tell stories
will
change
in the future. In 1935, th!.'
too. The fU'St lump sum Social Security
payment was made to Ernest Ackerman . life expectancy of a 65-year old was
· m 1937 for the whopping amount of V IZ.5 years. Today it's 18 Y~- The~
cents. That wasn't a bad return, consid• are currently 3,3 wofkers for every
ering Mr. Ackerman ~y wolked one Social Security beneficiary. That numday and contributed five cents in Social ber will decrease to 2.1 workers per
taxes before retiring. The first beneficiary in 2034. By that time, there.
..... Security
monthly Social Sect~rity check went to will be almost twice as many older
Mike Davies leads his "Kids Boot Camp" class in stretching before the start of the 45-minute car- . Ida May Fuller in January of 1940, for · Americans as there are today.
:.
.dio workout at Metro Fitness in Worthington on June 4. More children are turning to gyms and per- $22.54. Miss Fuller lived to be I 00,
Another exciting statistic: more th311
sonal trainers amid concerns over obesity.
which means she collected Social one million people have applied f~
retirement benefits .the fast, easy, conveSecurity benefits for 35 years.
nient
way - online. s~ whenyou' reup
In 2008, over 50 million Americans
to
bat
for
fetrrement,
vtSt:t
will receive nearly $614 billion in Social
founder of Lifestyle Family branches, where 1,100 teens Security benefits. That's one out of www.~ialsecurity.gov and you' re s~
BY JILL lAsTER
hit a home run.
Fitness, based in Lakeland, are members. Aoolher is par- every five dollars spent by the federal to Baseball
THE colUMBUS DISPATCH
and Social Security~
Fla. "So where does a teenager ents' concern about their chil- government. 1be average;: monthly bene- .
America's
pastime
and America·~
fit for a retired worker in 2008 is $1,079
,COLUMBUS - Just four come for exercise these days? dren's fitness, he said.
retirement
program.
Both
have long and
"Childhood obesity i_s in - a far cry from Miss Fuller's $22.54.
months ago, Alex Rummel The fitness center."
Social Security benefits represent about storied histories and associations with
Sever.!l central Ohio gyms and people's minds now, where it
could barely keep up in gym
-reet-eation ~nters offel' a range wasn't before. 'Ibl:rll was u 40 peroent of inoornc- for the ekl!lrly. nl!llll!m tb~ .;;an c:.vok1=. recollections 11{.
clas~. days gone by, reflecuons of present
Before he was able to com- of options - from weightlifting time a few months ago where a Ninety percent of Americans age 65 and times · and predictions of the future :
plete half a lap, he would see to aerobics classes and personal big story would !liD on it every older receive Social Security benefits.
An estimated 164 million worlcers are Learn more about Social Security by
week. People come in and ask
other kids finish and sit down, training - for youths.
·
covered under Social Security - that's vi~iting www.socialsecurity.gov.
Lifestyle Family Fitness, what we have for children."
said the seventh-grader at
Ron Rummel, Alex' s father,
Heritage Middle School in which has 10 area branches,
allows 12- to 17-year-&lt;~lds to saw an opportunity to teach his
Westerville.
Even warming up for foot- exercise free until 5 p.m. daily 5on to be~ early to _live a
ball practice often left him during a summer program that healtbfullifestyle.
began in mid-May and cootiJlRummel described himself
gasping for air. ·
_.
"It was anything. If I was ;1es through July 15. Lifestyle ·as a "professional couch pota(/untio11: I went .to the .doctor for my
Iron deficiency anemia is diagnosed
himging.out with friends walk· . expects I 0,000 participants to" - . until he began working physical last month, .and my blood by blood tests to determine your iron
ing down the street, I would be nationwide this year, a out a year ago.
work shows that I am anemic. My levels. These are probably some of the
"l didn't want him to go the hemoglobin level was 10.5, whatever additional tests your doctor wants tO
behind," said the 12-year-&lt;~ld spokesman said, up from
same route," he said. "Plus, tluzt means.
who lives with his parents in 2,400 in 2006. ,
run. lbey may include a serum iron te~~t
In
the
fall,
Ohio
State
I've
been doing this for a year,
Columbus and.Minerva Park.
My doctor wants to do more tests, b~t that measures the amount of iron in the
With their help, he found a University will again offer a and I thought this could be my mother says aU young women are blood, · and a serum ferritin test tl;lat
kids' boot camp for 8- to 13- strength-training class for something we do together."
anemic and that it is normal to be ane- looks for a special protein that helpS
Fourteen-year-old
John mic. I feel foie, so mJJybe I sho~ld do store iron in the body. Th_ese tests can
year-olds at Metro Fitness in youths 7 to 18 through the Age
Worthington. He also works Groups and Camps program. Smilges, who works out at the wluztmy!1Wther says instead_ of what my help your doctor get an eslimate of y~ur
said director 1ilaine Anderson. Liberty
Township/Powell
with a personal trainer. ·
doctor says. What do yo~ .thm.k?
body s rron reserves.
·.
·
Frequent
changes
in
activiYMCA,
said
his father also
"I'm starting to feel better ...
Allswer: I don't want to get iii the
There are also a number of causes of
encourages him to exercise middle of .a family problem. but in this . underproduction of red blood cells th!li
· and I can keep up with all of ties help keep interest high.
"Kids don't get that interest- regularly.
.
my friends," Alex said
case your molbtr should lt;ave the med- are unrelated to blood loss. One of
ed
if
it's
a
matter
of
getting
on
"I
knew
the
other boys my ical care and advice to your doctor. these is low 1evels of vi.tamin B-12 am)
between swigs of water after a
weekly aerobics class. "It's a !he treadmill or pumpin~ , age liked to play and run Anemia is not normal for anyone, and folate. Another is a hereditary type
rron·, " Anderton sa1d. "Ttl.t:'""around, artd I wanted to get the cause should be determined s&lt;i it can anerilia called thalassemia. This disorg\')00 feeling."
.
• AJex isn't alone in his desire OSU trainers keep things mov- there. Plus, l knew what was be trealed properly.
"
·d er, which can run in families, is
.... ·-good forme, and I wanted to
to be fiL The younger-than-18 ing, moving:'tii&amp;ving."
Anemia is defined as having less caused when you inherit a genetic ten• is t1J6, second-fastest-grow. . A1 ,·the C.nna YMCA, build llll1scle," John 'said,
hemoglt'lbiii than normal in the blood or deney to un?er~produce red blood cells.
Mike Davies, w)!o o~ns .a fewer red blood cells than e~ted. In Some med1cauons can also suppress
ing demographic for gym branch, more parents are
membership, said Rosemary requesting that '.adult activities personal-training studio in women, the normal hemoglobm level is red blood cell production . .
Lavery of the Boston 7based be adapted for younger age Columbus, acknowledged that 12.1 to 15.1 graDl5 per decili.ter (gmldl).
Hemolytic anemias are caused by
Chris parents are important motiva- Your level of 10.5 ts too low.
director
International ~th. Racquet groups,
destruction of red blood cells. This can
tors.
and Sportsclub Associat1on, Angellatta said.
Basically there are three processes be d~ to genetic ~blem~ like sick!~
In '2007, he said, Columbus
But, he added, "It comes that can lead to aneDlla: (1) blood loss, cell disease, trauma, mfectton, and aruwhich tracks industry data. The
YMCAs
had
about
3,600
down
to the kids. If they don't
nwnber of fitness club memeither acute or chrOnic, (2) under-pro- ficial heart valve&amp;.
io
come,'they won't."
teenagers
participating
in
want
bers ages .6 to 17 more than
ductimi of red blood celts by the bone
So as you can see, ·there are many
Dillon Cz.empinski, 9, said he marrow or (3) increased destruction of types of anemia. Treatment of each is
~led between 1987 and 2006. structured exercise programs
'I think kids aren't always - almost triple the number in wakes up sore the day after he red blood cells, a process called based on the specific cause. That is why
attends one of Davies classes. hemolysis.
.interested in a spmts program, 2003.
it is importantto find .out which type of
One
reason
for
the
increase
Even so, the WOI1hington boy
and no one plays in the street
Each of these types of anemia is diag- anemia you have so that your doctor can
anymore," said Michael. Dyer, is the addition of two new Y said he always wants to go back. nosed and ·treated differently. When prescribe 'the correct treatment.
·
your momer suggests that .all women
Ftuttily Meilicille® if a w~eldy colare anemic, she probably refers to · umn. To submit questio11s, write to
monthly blood loss from menstrlial Martlla ..4.. SiMpson, D.O., M.B.A..,
Olrio
University
College
of
· · COLUMBUS {AP) - cal year, which ends Jui.e 30.
The hill was sparked by sev- periods. ·
The
fact
is
that
normal
menstrual
Osteopathic
Medicine,
P.O.
Box
110,
Ea'rollment pP;&gt;jec!ions at same
Those projections- partially . eral school district treasurers,
OhiO scbool districts were off detennit1ed how money was who calculated that .their dis- blood loss does not generally cause Atluns, Ohio 45701, or via t"~il to
for the just.:completed academ- allocated in Ohio's complex tricts should have received anemia. Howevet, some women, ·e spe- r~aduquntions@familymedicine­
ic year, meaning 188 districts school-funding formula.
more based on actual enroU- cially those who experience heavy peri- rtews.org. Medical illformation in diU
'will have to ·return a total of
The· 188 districts whose rnenl figures and notified offi- ods, can develop a specific type of ane- CIJlulllll is provilkd as an edMcaJioiUII
mia as a result of menstrual blood loss. · ser~~ice o11ly. It 4oes 1101 npllJce tllf
$6.4 million to the state.
enrollments were lower than l;ials .o f the discrepancy. .
K Gov. Ted . Strickland is estimated will h_a-.:e to c~~
Officials at the Lancaster In these cases, the menstrual blood loss ju4gwrent ofyou.r persolllll
expected to s1gn a budget bill back the $6.4 IIUihon, w
schools district, about 30 miles depletes a woman's iron §{ores, which wlla sltordd be nlml 011 to · 110se
th1s week that corrects a dis- 116 other .districts · whose southeast of Columbus, said causes her body to unde~uce red tuUl ncolflmtml treatme11t for uy
crepancy between enrollment enrotlment exceeded expecta- they had no warning they blood cells. This is referred to as iron lllellicol corulilions. Past col11111111 are
projections and actual enroll- tions will receive payments would have to pay back about · deficiency anemia .and is treated by tak- t~VIIiloble ·DIIline at www.fillllilyirudiing an iron suppleinC?nt.
' cille11ews.org.
$618,000.
ment figures for the ,2008 fls- totaling $15.9 million.
BY ff!ZABETH

•

,.,

Famlly Medicine

Detemzine type ofanemia before deciding treatment

w

BiU adjusts funding for Ohio school districts .

P'if::ialt,

Thesday, June 24, 2008 ·

.'

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY- A - l e a1 ~ hign

acf'lool v•rsity

~ing

eventa

ln~tng

ttlm&amp; from Meigs and Galli• coi.Witin .

"r'

1e...,.as

IAgkan I
, PI
Logan al Post 128, 6 p.m.
.'

fdc:ley Mw%7
t..egtOn Bar tn"
McArthur at Peat 128, 6 p.m.

•rt ••.JyrwM

a..gionS t
,o.tt..ns at Post 128 (dOubleheader), 1
X

p.m.

Smcttt . . . .
L.eg6on p

t

•

.i!lcl&lt;erington at Posl128 (-headOf), 1 p.m.

'

D '

.My1
t n
lUI 128 at Logan, 6 p.m.

t..v'on e

Somerville
takes lead in
Riverside ·
Senior League
.

S'!M' RtPoiir .

, SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM .

r----------------------,
Name
1.......,.y .-.~bab
your y;s
fi:l ....a

Parents

·to .dleldlwidly•payantef
J ·stue, aihe'll• die mt.
I

be published
i'rifhly,July 25
•

nQt be published

'I
.,1
1

L----------------------~
Milord I•« to:
BABd 'l1le DIJ.y SMiiafi
llol7• • Ill c-1 Street
p . oy, 011457t9

D S

(or : '

"nita,

The Daily
·sentinel
ll1 c.rt St. P.roy, OH

11

•

•

.

.

to win at Skyline Speedway

and Matt Fizer had good
runs, while old-standby's
George Klintworth and
K~ith Young, an? visiting
Mitchell Eddy fimshed with
strong top tens. Rounding
out the top ten behind
McClain were Spike Rizer
Za~h
Kisner, . Georg~
Khntworth, Matt Fizer
Keith Young, and Mitchell
Eddy. MitcheU Eddy flipped
on the last lap after the
checkered flag, but was not
seriously injured.
In the 25 tap
· t
spnn
car
main Danny Smith ran down
early leader Josh Davis on
the sixth lap, then the pair
raii nose-tail in a high-speed
version of cat-and-mouse.
On the twelfth circuit Nick
Naber
in
the
B&amp;J
Contracting 22 bagged
Davis for second. setting up
a shootout to the finish as
Wes McLumphy spun on the
16th roundoNaber took the lead
momentarily, but · Smith

quickly reclaimed the top
spot with another test of
nerves on the high side. ·
Smith, one of the original
outlaws, is off to one of his
best seasons ever. With the
win in his Doug Wtlliams
Logging entry, Smith proposed buying stock in a
piece of Billy Jarrell's
Skyline clay. Cody Kinser
was the hard charger in coming from 16th to 8th. After a
wall-climbing incident in the
heat, Adam ,Strausser had a
e;ood run from 19th to II th
m an equally good charge.
Naber brought home a
strong second, while Josh
Davis continues a banner
season, yet is still in search
of his fU'St win. Keith Baxter
ironed out the wrinkles in
Freddie Staats mount and
brought home a top five with
youngster Aaron Higgins.
Behind second place Naber
wereDavis,
Baxter,
Higgins, Cole Duncan,
Wayne
McPeek, COdy

Kinser, Greg Mitchell, and
Dave Dickson.
The
No.
59
Boss
Chassis/Fast Jack Racing
Engines/Fritter
Logging
entry was the "Boss" of the
Late
Model
field .
Defending champ Lar ry
Bond and Todd Smith paced
the field to the green flag ,
however. . Fritter made a
hasty charge into second.
Bond led the first five
rounds, then engaged in a
side-by-side dual with Tracy
Fritter. Fritter finally bagged
Bond for the lead, then
checked oui on the rest of
the field. Bond immediately
found a new dance partner
and locked horns with Travis
Brookover, while Doug
Dodd and Corey Conley
went two-wide for ten laps
in a run for the top five.
Jason Montgomery charged
from .Jlth to sixth, then

Plea11- Skyline. M

Bryant, James to lead U.S. team at Olyffipics

"··-···.......

AP photo

In this Sept. 2, 2007 file photo, United States' Kobe Bryant, left, and LeBron James react
after their teammate Deron Williams scored against Argentina during their ABA Ame ricas
Champions.hip gold medal basketball game at the Thomas &amp; Mack Center in Las Vegas.
The two NBA superstars were part of the U.S. men's basketball team that was announced
Monday for the Beijing Games.
.;

Indians fans prep·are to we.lcome back Omar Vizquel_

(be GiaDU in

I pbetGgrapll alolg widt die C8UpOil .

I Address
·~-~
I .- IUUU!I::
1 Address will

~tion

•~~m~~

I

1 Age

Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here

Bumper ·to bumper, the duo
put on a great show for the
buzzing
four-bangers.
STEWART - With 104 Through the first eight laps,
cars in the pits, Skyline the two were all atone out in
Speedway hosted anOther front of the pack; however,
great night of tacing with by the ninth circuit the taolocal ace T!Dl Christopher of . dem ran hard .upon a gaggle
Belpre claiming the Four- of lapped traffic.
·
Cylinder Invitational in a
Adkins was locked to
strong field of 28 cars. Christopher's back bumper
Danny Smith went six-for- as they weaved through the
.six on Skyline runs in .the ~Jack-markers ,
then
sprint division, TCIICy Fritter Christopher made some
claimed his ftrst ·Skyline spine-tingling moves that
Late Model main, Jeremy shook
Adkins
briefly.
Berwanger claimed the Adkins 1&amp;ound
another
· route
'
AMRA Modified · main, and quickly closed the gap
Brian Shaffer won the Pure but watched in front of him
Stocks, and Ron Pickens as_ Christopher posted . the
brough( home the mini- wm.
·
wedge main. .
Tommy Adkins blasted up
In,the exciting $600 to win to third place after a raceFour Cylinder invitational long ~attle ':"ith Shawn
T!Dl Christopher celebrated McCIBm:. Adkins . won !}le
a bi' win over Portland, battle w1th McClam edgmg
Ohio s Dennis Adkins. Spike Rizer for fifth.
Christo!~:" was the rabbit Coming off a short retirean.d A ' s was the grey- ment was heat winner Rizer.
hound in hot pursuit. Newcom_ers Zach Kisner

°

A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old. ·

I

BY Seem WolfE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Meigs High School practice
field, ,and the final date for
CLEVELAND (AP) registration is July I st. The Indians will welcome
Payment must also be back
Id f · d Th da
,...,.,.ived ,by July I st. A
·an
nen
es Y
·~
night, and for a change, a
workout/combine will be player from the club's ' 90s
held on July 26th at 9 a.m. heyday won' t be greeted
at Meigs High SchooL All with boos.
~becks must be !}lade out to
Unlike· Manny Ramirez
Meigs
flag
Football and Jim Thome, who left for
League, P.C? . .Box 751, more money, Omar Vizquel,
Pomeroy,_ Ohio !i~69 .
· is still higbly regarded in
~ To reg~ster o
e go to Clev.elaQ.d. - A choms of
!'ww.~etgsftl.~om. and for : Ch~ ~ 1 5 is llltici.pated for the
more .information go to die sao FfiiiiCi~eo shortstop
.,.ebSJte or call 740-541- wbat be mums for the flf&amp;t
}222.
time . ~ he ,signed -with

In the Daily Sentinel

I

Chris~pher bests 27 cars

MASON, W.Va. - Paul
of
Point
SomerviUe
Pleasant bas taken the lead
" tbe midway point of the
2008 Riverside Senior
given the opportunity to rep8Y .llllll AEW Sa.laMV~
Men's
Golf
League.
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
resent my country, lllld I
Somerville has a total of
strong!
y believe that with :
139 points to lead Carl
MVP
Kobe
the
team
that has . been
CHICAGO
StOne of Ripley :l&gt;y a mere
Bryant has a shot at another · assembled, the United States
one point.
big
prize after falling short will be represented weU,"
: Stone was absent from
of
the
NBA championship, Prince said.
pia&gt;: on Tuesday and his
The team was selected
lead evaporated in one and he'll have plenty of help
without a tryout. It will have
week. In third place ·with . along the way.
LeBron James is there. a minicamp this week in Las
J36 points is Mick
Vegas and meet there July
Dwyane
Wade, too. '.
Winebrenner of Racine.
They will lead .a U.S .' 20-25 to train and play an
· A total of 81 players ·were
on hand for the Tuesday Olympic basketball team exhibition against Canada
play to make up 18 four- that .was announced Monday before heading overseas.
Americans
open
roan teams and three three- and hopes to capture the The
man teams. This was a new gold medal in Beijing in Olympic play against China
~mgle-day record for the August after a third-place on Aug. 10.
league, with the old reconl showing in Athens four . Although the Americans
years ago.
captured the j!Old at the
being78.
·
The·team
already
bas
"reSydney Games m 2000, they
• The · tow . score· or· I 0under par 60 was shot by the established itself' on an no longer dominate internawinning team of Mick intemational level, USA tiona! play as lhey once did.
Winebrenner (Racine), Dick Basketball managing direc- The talent gap has narrowed
Dugan (Racine), Bob Hysell ~or Jerry Colangelo said dur- and many top players have
chosen to not play for the
(P.omeroy)
and
Paul mg a news conference.
The next step iS' to bring national team in recent
Somerville (Point Pleasant).
The second l~tw round home the gold, and the U.S. years.
Now, the U.S. team
was a 63 (7-under par) and will send a deep, versatile
there; was a three-way tie. team to China. Carmelo appears loaded. Then again,
The trio of Willis Korb Anthony and Jason Kidd the Americans went 5-3 in
(Guysville),
Marvin were ·a lso among the 12 Athens and lost for the fust
Stafford (Letart) and Don · players chosen frol)l a pool time since NBA players
Waldie (Point Pleasant) .was · of 33. They were joined by started competing in 1992
Detroit'
Pistons' even though they had James~
one runller-up team.
. the
The foursomes of Jim Tayshaun Prince, along with Anthony, Wade and Tim
Gress (Letart), Ed Coon Carlos Boozer, Chris Bosh, Duncan. That group ~ot
(New Haven), Don Wilson Dwight Howard, Chris Paul, coated by Puerto R1co
Michael Redd and Deroo before losing to Lithuania
Williams.
and ~entina, but this one
"It was a very difficult is confident it will take the·
selection
process," gold.
Colangelo said. "When you
"it's really the world' s
SPOKI'S8RIEFS
have as many outstanding game. We think we're the
players as we have in this best at playing that game," ·
2008 Meigs Flag
country - to select a group .said
coach
Mike
. Football Registration of 1-2 is obviously going to Kri!fzewski , warning that
leave out a number of out- "unless we show the respect
standing
people."
.
to the rest of the world that it
Registration is now open
The Pistons issued a state- is the world' s game" there
for the 2008 flag football
·Season to boys and girls in ment from Prince in which will be no gold medal.
8.fades 1·6 beginning with he said he was "honored to · Wade and Anthony said
die 2008-09 school year. ·b e selected."
The registration f~ is $40
"I take great pride in being PI axe ... Olr pies. M
per player and $25 for each
additional siblinJl' ·

s~ims!p~~~r~~;:

I1 Baby's
I .

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Ji'aletetl Wr" "wiutWlmbJrdon,
. . . 82

2004.

lt'• not just the barehanded
scoops that made him a
[nNTACI' Us
. fan favorite. His smile and
happy-go-lucky
attitude
• : . 1-7-40-446-2342 ext. 33
were as much a part of the
3001
1'-- 1•7early Jacobs Field magic as
. _ --Bmy&lt;lllylontinll.oom
the titanic blasts from
! ,.....
Ramirez and Thorne's bats.
"You bear me talk about
Eric AMclolph, Sporta Wtftlr
having
fun and enjoying the
[1'40) -2342. ""'· 33
-ldolphOmydollyMntlnel.com
game .and loving to come to
8rpn Walletw, Spoo1e Wrttw the ballpark," Indians manager Eric Wedge said . "I
!7&lt;W) o.t6-2302, ""'· 33
-•mydolly1rfbuoo.oom
don' t know if you could
think of somebody who did
.._, Cnam,lporlaWiftlr
it better than him."
(7&lt;1D) 4*2342, eoct. 33
Vizquel played II seasons
lcrumOftWdid!Ji ..IJt.r.com
l

...-

for Cleveland until the
Giants signed him .as a free
agent. Fans consider the 11 time Gold Glove winner the
one from those potent teams
of the '90s who didn 't abandon them for the big payday.
"Grabbing balls barehanded. Getting to balls that no
one else could get to," said
longtime fan Ray Pulkkirien.
"He loved 19 J?lay ball, and
he loved bemg here, it

seemed"
It wasn' t an act.
V~uel said he had never
lived m such' a laid-back city
before. Cleveland provided
Spll(le to Stop and breathe, to
appreciate the &lt;
landscape and
its people .
'1t. Iilade me relax," he
said. "Made me change as a
'
penon...
In an age of untouchable
sports heroes, Vizquel was
accessible.
He became part of the
c.o mmunity . fabri c.
He
shopped at the West Side
Market. He danced to his
beloved Latin music at
downtown clubs. sometimes

.

AI' piau

In th is June 18 file photo , San Francisco Giants shOrtstop Omar VizQuel s its in the dugout
before the ~tart of the ir baseball game against the Detroit Tigers in San Francisco. Vizquel
shOuld elq)eCt quite a homecoming Tuesday when the Indians host his San Francis co
. . 7 I . . . VI .sisl.ll . Giants In the opener of a thf'e9i!ame series .
r·

�-.

... ~

....... --- .,... _ - - ........ .. .. ~ - - - - - - _ ............. . . : ~ . . .n.-.·-...-·

I

Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesd•y, June 24. aoo8

www. mydailyscntinel.com

Sunny start at Wimbledon for Roger, Serena
WIMBLEDON, Eng land in hi' warmup outlit. high·
(AP) - Wimbledon began lighted b) a beige. fom-(-lut with
a few 'urprise' tun S\\eater \1 ith !&gt;tlld trim
Monday. There was lots of and a qylited F o~1 the k rt
~unshine, Serena Williams brea'L
wore a raincoat anyway, and
But judgin ~ from pmt Roger Federer's changeover matdl imen 1e" s, Feue1 c1
routine was interrupted by a was up,taged on the fa:.l1ion
friendl y visi t from hi s oppo- front - perhap&gt; -a further
nem.
sign he 's in dedi ne. Hi ,
The tenn is wem mostly as apparel inspired on ly nn~
expec_ted. Federer. Wi IIiams que,tion. while Wi II iwm
and new women's No. I Ana · fielded five qucr ie&gt; about
l vanovic won in straight the ,tvl i'h white trench &lt;.' oat
sets. Australian Open cham- she ,i·orc onto court before
pion Novak Djokovic also beating Kaia Kanepi 7-5. 6eased into the second round. 3.
while American men went 1-.
A 'ample of the question'
4.
and Williams· response-':
The top-ranked Federer
Q : Wa' that an effort to
began hi s bid for a sixth con- ~eep the rain away th i, year:
seciltive Wimbledon tit le by
A: I just low coah. I" m
winning the first match on always - bu ying Burberr)
Centre Court. Sporting a coat&gt;. And I don ·t know
classy cardi gan. he stepped whv. because I five in
&lt;into lhe fresh grass prompt- Flo~idtL so it doesn ·t re;Ji lv
ly at I p.m. and looked eager add up. Now I ha ve a w&lt;into di spel the notion he's in deti"ul white coat I can wear
decline. winning the tirst 1I on the court.
points and beating fortner
Q : It looked aliml&gt;l
doubles partner Dominik Carnaby
Street-inspired.
HJ'baty 6-3. 6-2. 6-2.
Wa' it a '60s retro look ·!
During a changeover one
A: It's definitel v k&gt;nd of
game from the !inish. the 30- retro-inspired - -buckles on
year-old Hrbaty broke with the wrist. the wai,thand tie.
protocol by wandering over You ca n tie it or button it.
to the seated Federer.
Q : ft", not- nece"ari !)· a the William' sisters ,;nee
" I looked
over and there piece of athletic attire. Diu
" F d
the_,. lost on_ the same da)' in
he was,
e erer smd. " He yo u have to ,get anv- sr,erial the-third ruund al ihe Ercnch
a&gt;ked if I couiU sir n~xt o pcrmi ,ion !rom the c ub lo
me. I said, ' Sure. There's no wear it.,
Open -. Thev
from
Fran ce tu Fl nr ida ami preproblem. There's an ex tra
A : It \ definitd v not mh ' wego way back. ___ He letic
·
pared lor gra" by ltitting "n
seat.
attire . But it -, ladv 1ike. hard-c·o un'.
said it mi g ht be hi s last and I'm ver) lady like . Jt
Wimbledon, so it was almost goes perfet:l wi th ml perThe unonhndo x preparalion fo r vv·imhledo n is , tan, 1 b'
a 1Jll e 11 emotionaL"
sonality.
It 's just delecSaid Hrbaty : ''If it had tab le.
d;trd for the ,i,ter' and not to
been someone else, I wouldThere were only t.hree be qu e)t ion cd they've
n't have done it. ... We 've questions about Williams' won the titl e six of the past
had a lot of good limes match. even though it _pro- eighfyears:
together. I j ust wanted to tell vided a bit of drama when _ "We Just •go home and
him he's a great friend -of she faced a break point serv- practice in the hot sun:· said
Serena, who is seeded sixth.
mine, and I appreciate that." ing at 5-all in the tirst set.
Federer extended his
Kanepi , an Estonian who "We're so ready to leave
grass-court winning streak -reached the French Open Florida. We're like. ·we' re
to 60 matches, including 35 quarterfi nals. takes -lusty _going to do anything we can
al the All Engl and Club, and swings that often put - two- to stay at the tournament as
yet his continuing domina- time champi()n Williams on long· as we can sn we don 't
tion is in doubt beCause he the ~efens t ve. But Williams have -((\ go back in · thai
struggled the first half of the endured _the onslaught a nd heaL...
·
year.
tool&lt; charge after Kanepi
Defending .
champion
. That might help eX.plain doubl e-faulted ..·to end the Venus Wi lliams begins her
· first set.
'- · ,
bid for· a fifth Wimbledon
his prematch jitters. ·
"I did feel all of a sudden a
"Today detinitely was not title Tue,day when she faces
little pressure a bout two ·an ·easy match," Wi lli ams wild card Naomi Cavaday uf
minutes before 1 went on said. "She was pla yin g unhe- Britain .
court," Federer said. " I fell lievubh;. I felt like she wa'lvano \'ic played her first
like, 'Wow, OK. here we go. n' t maltifll;\ any· errors . I ju st match as the No. I womanLet's try to ~et off to a good fe lt lik~ I JUSt ·])&lt;l,d .to han g in and French Open champion,
.star.t.' I dld.'
there and slay-pOsitive _"
and -the 20-year-olcl ' Serb
· He looked as regal as eve r · The matc-h was the first for seemed comfortable in the

nn,

555-5 55~~-

r

' '

'

'

, ,Tuesday, June 24, 2008

MAC AU-Stars:

-

t!tribune - SentinelCLASSIFIED

.'

\..tf.t(•

,-,.o.~\lt'"h•r~

1:

~ u~~ti

(AP) ~
Monica Abb~Xl pitched a DQhitter with 15 strikeout~.
Crystl Bustos and Stacey
Nuveman hit three-run

Former

charnlilon

Serena
Williams retu('lls to
Kaia Kanepi
of Estonia,
durtng their
Women's
Singles, fin;t
round match
on the
Number One
Court at
Wimbledon
on Monday.

new role, beating Rossana
de Los Rios 6-J. 6-2.
"Becoming-No . I takes
tilore pressure, but also you
have to see pressure for what
it is." fvanovic said. "It's a
retlection of your own ambition. If you see it as a positive thing. it means that you
put yourself in a position to
do so methin g memorable.
So if you look at it that way,
it can ~6e very motivating_"Fellow Serb Djokovic
bou nced back from a bad set
to beat Michael Berrer 7-5,
~-6.

6-3. 6-0.

The highest-seeded player
to lose was No. 7 David
Nalbandian , eliminated by
Canad ian Frank Dancevic 64. 6-2. 6-4. Lleyton Hewitt,
who beat Nalbandian in the
2002 tina!. fist-pumped his
way to a five-se t victory
over Robin Haase. Two-time
Gra nd
Slam
champion
Mar at Sa fin .also won.
Despite the sunny weather. it was another in a series
of dismal day s for U.S. tennis . The only American
wo man to join · Williams _in
the second round was

homen.

the U.S.
01~ team nmed up for
Be1jing with a :20.{) win over
and

a

Gallia
County
OH

Mid-American ·

Conference All-Star team op
Monday night
•
The Americans, who will
be seeking a fourth straight
gold medal in China,
unproved to 49-1 on their

In One Week With Us
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classified@ mydailytribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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Webs~es :

"BOund 4 Beijing" tour and
delighted a standing-rooD'!- '
only crowd of 4,126 fans .. •
A first-time Olympian and
-former star at Tennessee,
Abbott was in control from
the outset. She bad at leasr
two strikeollts in all but one
inning and ran her IWIIll lp
13-0. The hard-throwing
left-bander is part of a threopitcher rotation - along
with Olympic veterans
Iennie Fincll and Cat
Osterman that coach
Mike aind!ea will use in
Beijing.
.
The closest the MAC team
came to a hit was when
Bowling Green's Hayley
Bethanie Mattek, who ral- Weimer lined out to short in
lied past Severine Brerilond the seventh.
.
Blank'cd for two · innings
5-7, 6-0._ 6. 1.. Ashley
Harkleroad lost to 2006 by Kent Stale's Gabrielle
champion
Amelie Bums, the U.S. scomJ nine
runs in the tliird inning,
Mauresmo 6-4, 6-3.
The lone U.S. male to win highlighted by Bustos' 22nd
was Bobby Reynolds, who homer .o f the tour- a·tow~
advanced when Filippo ering shot to left off Westen~
Volandri retired with a sore Michigan's Kyla Sullivan.
left knee after lo~ing the fii'St Natasba Watley bad an RBl
two sets. Eliminated were double and singled home ll
Vince Spa&amp;a, Kevin · Kim run in the outbUrst.
Jessica Mendoza holliCRiil ·
and 2008 Olympians Sam
in
the fifth and had thR!e
Querrey and Robby Ginepri.
RBis
and Law-en Lappin hit
Spadea blew a big lead
a
two-run
shot in die sixth
against Thomas Johansson
for
the
Americans,
who
and lost 6-7 (8), 6-7_(5), 6-3,
6-4, 6-3. Querrey also start. posted their 41st shu~ qf
the lOUr and have ou~
ed fast·but lost to former No. opponents 571-26.
:
11uan Carlos Ferrero 2-6, 6Finch. played ftrst base
4, 6-4, 6-4. Gin.epri was _· and druve in two runs.
eliminated by No. 15-seeded . Nuveman, who had ·ftve
Fernando Gonzalez, and RBis, connected in the ftftb .
Kim lost to big-serving . when the U.S. scomJ four
Robin Soderling, who will tiDies, and Lappin homel-ed
play Fedeier.
• in the sixth to cap the 5001:- ·
The three highest-ranked
Americans
Andy ·
u.s. has 10
Roddick, ·James Blake and • remaining on its coast-tOMardy Fish - are Sl'hednled coast tour. The America!$
to play their opening match- will open OlyDtpic tournaes Tuesday. No word yet on ment jllay on Aug. 12 vs.
what they '11 wear. .
Venewera.
.·

in~

ca,;:.::;. .

.

Or Fax To

Mooday t.,ru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW

IQ WRITE AN AQ
SuccessfuiAds -

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Respanoe ...

i

ANNouNmlmrs

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

Publication
Sunday D•aplay : 1 :00
Thursday for Sunday•

Da~

~

Prior TO

I.

ret-ct. Of ~.,.,ad 81.-.y time. En-on ffldt be~ on tt. fim
wttl be ~lblt lor no more thin 1M coe1 of the tp10t occupied bytheln'Or Wanly the tnt ineMtlon.
any kJu or..,..... tNt NMittll from the PJll tltwo or omiMklon of .n ~- Conwc1ton will b. ,.,... in tt. flm •walllibte ecHtion.
. .. ...,.,. conlldentiiL • Current Nte c.d .,.,._ • All fMI .-n. MwerdMn•ntl . . IILibjtct to lht F.w.l Fair ttou.lng Act of 1f161. • Thlt
~ anly help ...ted Mle mMI"'t EOE •tanarda. W. will not kuo•la'Qiiw ecclpl: *'Y ~ k1 vio(Mior! of the .__WlH not ~ rnpon.!bleo for
POUQES: Ohto v.llty PublietMng ~ tt. righl to .cllt,

'"Ill-.... 1!!0 .........

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t

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1

I'I:JMERoy/Mmou:.

. 2 Aduh &amp; 2 k~ens 304-5763073
Mini Car Port Sale!! Thurs.,
3 Mlnen Paw Kittens Gold. June 26th. Lee ,residence

~

Qouch '&amp; Chair. Fil dirt must
haul away. 74G-591-oo82.

Free swing set. You must

take apart and haul away.

accept onv

oclv~

l.l lll'lent In vlotlt
tho tow.

.Weimaraner
OoOerman Mil( 5 112 month
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6702
Glveaway-1 BlaCk &amp;1 Calico
~a"s5wk
''
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k"'

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a"er
5,_
. .,...
- . . :£
"

l.Dng hair kittena;cute.Solld
caMeo. 740-992~2335 ...

~ fliid

CLASSIFIED I DEX
. 4x4'a For sale ..............................................725

Ctirdl ol ~ .......................................... 010

ChttdiEtderly C.. .......................... _________ ___, 1!10
Etectrlc.IIIRelria-llon-.................... ,........ .840
~lot - ----·-····"""''"'"""""'""/..0

Exctlvotlng ........................... ~ ...................... 130

•

f

l'

. 7:'9--~·1566 .

f...., Equl_,t..... _ ..................................i10

armtlot RenL ............._.. _ _, ___ _,_,____ , __,__..430

Farmo tor sate -- -- ----·--·--.. -·-- _,_--·---·-------___----· 330
• For Lolloe .................................................... 4to
'; For sale ....................--·······..-····-.. - .....515
For sale or T..-............. __..................... 580
FI'Ub &amp; ·:egrtlbAM ......... ______ ,.............. SIO
f'wNihod-.........................._._,.,,...450
General Haullng........................................... 850

• Gl-way..................................................... 040

ltltPPY Ads.................................................... oso

Hay &amp; Graln .............: ..... ................- ...........640
110
Home lmprovementa ...................................810
Homes lot sale ............................................ 310
Houllllhokl Gooda ..................... :................. 510
Houoes lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memoriam .............. .................................. 020
lnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpl1*11 ........................ 660
: Uvestock. .....................................................630
Loot and Faund ..................................:........ 060
Lata &amp; Ac:ruge .........,.................... - -........ 350
Ill callaneous .. ...~ ........................................170
Ml•c•bneous Merehandiae .......................5t0
Mabile Home Ropatf ................................-.160
ltlablte Homeolor Ront ...............................420
·• Mabile Homeolor Sote ... ,............................ 320
' Money to Loan .............................................220

w-......................................_.........

•PI:

~ARD
.; Rae~~--:~

""'~

I £4'!-t

School• -ructton ..................................... 150
, _ ' Plant &amp; r.tttlzer .............................. 650
- Slluattona
120
• Spoce lor Rent ...........................---------· ........ 410
&amp;porting Goada ........................... --------.. ·-··.. 520
• SUV'alor Sate------ .. ·----.. ·--,_...... ,......,............ 720
Truo:kslor Sate ............................................ 715
Uphalllel y ....................... ,........................... 110

w.-.. ._. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .

.._ . v- F'or sare...............................-................130
. Wllllled to Buy ............................................. 090

W-lo Buy- Farm Suppllea .................. 620

_ W- To Do -----·- --..-·--·------........................ 180
W.tlild to Ren\ ....................L..........;.. ,... ,. ... 470

Veld- Gallipolla .................................... 072
V...:l Sill POiftMOWIM. . .- ....................... 074
Veld-.!'!. Plellllnt ................................ 076

-._

11110

IIFJJ'W~'Ill? ll~.t·--~-~-Do--·
· ••

The
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center
has anticipated position
openings for Full Time
Preschool Teacher5 with
benefits, and Part-Time
Preschool Teachers with No
benefits in. Athens County
for the 2008-2009 School
Year. Applicants must hold a

740-441-1360

Teaching . Home, Office Ect. Cleaning
LlcenseJCertlficate in Pre., of all Kinds, reasonable
Kindergarten. These posi- rates 304-812·0554 or 304tions are 9-month contracts. ·
0960
Salary will be based on 01
_ _5__ _ _ _ __
experience and certifica- Will do Babysitting in my
tionllicensure accon:ling to Home. Link Cemtied 20yrs
salary schedule. Submit let·
304--593-6812
ter of interes1 to John o.

All Types Masonry, Brick,

Bklck, Stone, Free Estimate,
(740)416·7305·
6421 .

-,--------~

only. Call Priscilla Dodrill.

_74_0-_388_-8_1_93_ _ __

valid

·
. ~si~ions
~th Sodexo
Dmmng S:erv.c~s located ~
The Un1versity . of R1o
Grande. Cook-start1ng w~ge
of $9 .30, ~ Serv1ce
Worker - S1artmg wage_ of
S8.50, On call p_art time
catering staff- st~T11ng wage Costanzo,
Supertindent,
~ $7·50· El(pe.nence pre- Athens-Meigs Educational
ferred but not necessary. Serllice
Center.
507

t:ilAING
Avg . Pay $20Jhr or

~

"IU'I•.:.u

r

3()4.593·

Have room in my home to
care for 1 elderly lady. Total
care providetl! Private pay

1n person at Richland Avenue , Suite
Please IIJ_'PIY _
The ~n1versity_ o1 Rio ~1108, Athens OH 45701 .
Grande s ca1eterla. No ·lele- Application Deadline : June
phone calls please.
21. 2008. 3:30 p.m . The
POST OFFICE NOW
AMESC is an Equal

11'11'"______, ,..,,....-----.,
1110
IIIlO
111'1110 .._-

0 p p ·o r t u n i I y
EmployerfProvider.

11§)

~-~

OwoRn..rNrrv

Lw-iiiioiiiiiiliiiiti.rl
.,
Brand ·New Restaurant for
Lease AT 2 good Jocalion,
Owner has other interests
call 304-549·5696 Anytlmo

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

~
~

G..l; Ua c....-

~riiiJOr-'"":~:!'""-..;;;;;;;~

£&lt;

CoNlee

(tar'""" Close To Home )
Gall Today! 7oll}-446-4367,

altering.

t-800-214-0452

-- gatl~ .edu

ING CO. recommends
thai you do bUsineS6 with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail until you
have investigated the

BARGAINS
IN THE
1
CLASSIFIEDS

AC'C18!:IIIe0 Member ... ceredning
Cour1Cil tor 10ae.....,dftnt eo~ 1 ,..,

lt7U

, •..
andSdloolst274B.

"-------.,1
MNH' 4NEOlS

Pet Cremations Call 740-446-3745

CI .ASSIFIEDS

CofllnloCillon "'

Hill 's

Automotive
Car
Restorations, LLC is cur·
~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; rently seeking an experi·
er;ced custom and ctassic
IIH.P W~Im · car tanatic to work full time
in our shop. Known for the

I

An E;~~icellent way 1o earn
money. The New Avon.
Call MarHyn 304-882-2645
------:--AVON ! All Area5! To Buy ,or
Sell. Shirley Spea1s. 304675·1429.

55-57

Thunderbird&amp; &amp; the 64-70
Mustang's: Hill's is a full
Service restoration shop for
Classic, Antique &amp; Muscle
cars currently em the international car &amp;how ci rcuit.

-

EMPLOYMENT

... h... tocloyl
1.an~47

&amp;1.2317
. -.lnlocloJon.com -

-KVC

-

County Olfico

Job requirements include
Community Action ts seek· (bu1 not lfmited to) working
ing laborerjs) for the on areas such as: engile,
.Weatherization crew. Prefer transmission , bl'ake, various

those with general knowl· disassembl;- &amp; reassemblv
edge of home repair, insula- of ci&amp;$Sic shOw cars
tion, etc. Send Of deliver Applicant is alao expected 1o
resume and reierences to have some time manage·
GMCAA , attenUon Sandra ment &amp; customer service
Edwards. 8010 N. State skills, i.e., answering tech

KVC provides tn.t10me and L£"~~~: foster care services to children and families. KVC ........_.,.,

offers training and benefits.

r

Send 1-esumes to HR Dept.,

Route 7, Cheshire. Ohio calls, ordering parts, etc.
Bradford
St.,·
45620 by 7-03-pa. GMCAA JotJ can work into full limo 200
Charleston, wv 2530 1.
ts an EOE.
position after probationar~
1-800-835·5277.
period.
ln1erested ' appli· Call
Ext.121
or
FaK 1304)347cants ptease call 140-949email
2217 or email resume to 9728 ,
is
cgradyOkyc.orgKVC
!bird 1957 c wrlzon.net.

Equal Opporiuni1y Emptoyor

-Home
~-_,.,
H_ea_lth_C_a_re_So_
u_th Local Home Heatth Agency

now hiring HHA's, STNA"s,
CNA's, PCA's. Flexible
Home Healrt1 Aides for scn8duling. Call 740- " 1_
Meigs Co. Must be oertffied , n
East Ohio -ts currentty hiring

3

year's ~u!;j;;d=tfi;G;;;
experience. Toll Free a¥1-1 - l.fJN p ' tel High Gas
Of

eutTenUy

have

B66-3(j8.1 100

740
570

Ptnanats .....................................................IIOS
Pelllor sate ................................................560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ... ----·-·-·-------.................820
Prolnlional Servlces.............. ----- ---·----·-----230
.:·A- . TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
1Ettlale Wl-............... ,.....................360

IIFuWANIDl

Oftice Admintstfator ~ad. MUST HAVE ~enSive
work:ing knowledge of MS
E~tcel
program, strong
accounting skilled alid payroll experience. ~~ton is tn
the Bidwetl. OH area. M-F 95, no benefits. pay defendant upon elq)erience.
Leave a message.

b- dolj
4--~

w-... . . . . . . . . . . . ..
Mualc.lt tnstrumenll .................,.................

·• -.:rein 1 4

..

r::r-~---,

$57Kiyr. includes
~ 2008 b NEA t 0
www'.como·ca.com
Federal Benefits, OT.
L~;;...;;~:...;;;Y:..;;=.::.·;:.";:.::.··_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;:.:;;;;::::;:;:::;:::::_j
Pia~~• by adSource not
2 Family Yard sale boys
""""
'
clothes &amp; lots of other stuff 3
_:!!'"_ _ _ _ __, offered w/ USPS who hires.
miles out Sandhill Rd. on the
m ..~
_ _1_·866~-40_
3-_2582=-right look for signs B-3 Sat· . ·
lhl..PWAN'JU} . w
IIEl.JJW~ . .
our
RT 35 Adult Video &amp; Book
6121 Moo 6123 lues 6124
Store need Midnight Clerk
and Wed 6125 also pet Bird Full·time Phalmacy Cashier
full or part time 304-937iitolt;r.S~a:::le~~---., position available at the Join Our Team!
Ohio Valley Home Healtl1 , 4900
Inc. hiring LPN lof an office - - - - - - - WANnD
Point
pteasant
Fruth ·
Wanted: Front Desk Clerk,
·
ro Buv
Pharma
•~t 1·n person -b. 1 of 0 c o - - .scheduling/aide supervisor
~--..;;~.:0-_.1
cy.- ~ Y·
u. ..-,
..,..... ,
-•
positiQn. Apply at 1480 musI be com..,
..,er I"..erate.
a1 2501 Jackson Ave. NO .tha'lwaalfOted N In the
t
.
.
PHO_NE CAUS PLEASE.
StMt ot Ohio for Bell
Jackson Pike, Ga11ipoli6, or cus omer &amp;ervtce expenAbsolute Top Dollar - sil- Also:
PlacM to Wortcl
phone
.441-1393 . ence preferrec:l. Must be wiM·
ver/gokt
coins.
any Fru1h Pharm&amp;cy in Point
Competitive Wages and ing to work any shift. Apply
10Kf14Kii8K gold jewelry,
benefits including health in person a1 the Gallipoli&amp;
dental gold, pre 1935 US Pleasant has a Part-Tn-ne
tf you are looicing for:
insurance.
Holday Inn. No phone call&amp;
currency, proof/mint sets, aeanlng Position available.
• Up to Sl.so.t.our
please.
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop, Hours Monday • Friday
• Weeki~ $$$ Incentives
151 2nd All8nue. Galli~lis 8:00am - 12:00pm . Apply in
+Employee Health and
44&amp;
person at 2501 Jackson
WeMneS6 Programs
2842
- - - - - - - Aile. NO PHONE CALLS
• On-Site Doctor
PLEASE.
t Professional Work
Junk cars with Of without
.
titles. 74D-388-o884
Atmosphere
J'U)\SANf

e.=.

Trlbune-~INr

.-----------,.-------riO

FOUND

(.~

oddedtoyourclasslfledads
BOrders$3.00/perot:
.Graphics SOC for smoil
$1 .00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid'

will · be
no
Lost:
long
haired
Trespassing, Dumping, or
Chihuahua, answers to
Burning on K &amp; B Realty
Cocheo, in Pine Grove,
Property in New Ha"oJen, WV
Eagle Ridge a1ea. 992·4580
(FOrmerly known as the
or 591-4191

C-"'9 Eflll.. menL................................ 780

304-675-1333
www .mydailyregister.com

Bu•lne.e

There

: CMipera&amp;--.......,.................. 790

740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com

All Dl .....y: 12 Noon z

REWARO:for information on
per"SOn or persons Breaking
&amp; Entering Jerry's Heating &amp;
Cooling. 645-281 0

Anriouncement .........................................- 030
• Anllqueo ....... _ ......;............;.......................... 530
- Aplrtmon!alot llenl .................- :............... 440
• Auction anc1 AM Market............................. oeo
Auto Parts &amp; Acceoaortea .......................... 160
Auto Aepelr .................................................. no
Autos lor sale .......................-....................... 710
· BOllia &amp; MOionlot Sate ............................. 750
. Building SuppltH ........................................ 550
. .B UIInell - Bulkllnp ............................. 340
• Bldlnell Opparlunlly................................. 210
B u - TNinlng ..............c........................ UO

l9olnt ~leasant legtller .

Dally In-column: 1:00 p.m.
Moftday-Friday for Insertion

· t~C~rr---:-,-osr-AND-...., KIT &amp; CARLYLE

We will not knowln

'

Now you can have borders and graphics

Display Ads

...... 1'1

Coll740-446-2689

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis ~aily Tribune, Point Pleasant Regiter or
Daily Sentinel, And It WiD Run For FREEin ·
· The Tri-County Marketplace!

992-2157

Oeatltir~

• St.n: Your A"- With A Keyword • Include Compllrte
Ducription e lndude A Pf'k:e e Avoid Abbrev'..UOM
• lftdude Phone Number And Adclrea Wheri Needed
• Ads Should btl 1 D•vs

Giveaway

REACH 3 COUNT

Or Fax To

446-3008

Word Ads

,.,. ,,.. ,;; •

·l~t 8allipolls laH~ ~ribunr

Meigs County, OH

ASHLAND

Cert~ l'r....Owned VehH; Ie-s
8 ,,~f!!OK v.•c; n
8oS~ ~l«ti&lt;&gt;"

..
r:-;;,

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailyaentinel.com

U.S. softball
team steamroll$

,,, ......,. ,......t TJ\NuuU. ;;;J;,~a;:~~;,

ll):;):)•:;):):;)•:):):):)

~~~~&lt;:

'

. $17.89-$28.27/hr.. now hir·
in~. For application and tree
gowrnement job info, call
American Assoc. of Labor 1913-599-8226. 24/ln, .,.,_

aerv.

~-------

one

/

Prices Hurtffig Vour Budget?
W0&lt;k Localy &amp; Gll1 Ahead.
Interview Are Now Being J:~J,fi....;::;;'j

Cond uc1.ed
For
A
Professional
LPN
2
Midni ghts. 2 Evenings.
Applicants Must Posse~ A
T&amp;am Spiri1 With
oaictnotl
The Abl~ To Interact With
A
Aagio.- ~- DriveN ·
Elderly ·Residents &amp; Thair
A&amp;J TruOkmg IS seektng Families.
Med ications
qualified COL-A drivers to Baokground &amp; Supervisary
operare s&amp;t'ni-dumpS tor Skills A Plus But: Not
regionol routes. We 1oalure Roqund . Jncludo:
exceHenl home ~ · heal1h_ Competitrve Wages, Paid
and
dental
msurance. Vacation,
Paid
Meals,
401(k). vacation, bOnus pay, Available
IoWrance
and safety awards. Qualit~ On;oounts &amp;
'
applicants must be over 23 More
Interested ,
yrs, ha~ a minimum of 1 ProfessiooNs. MaY eau Or
year of comtnerical driving Stop By Monday·Sun. ·~ .
wr.perieooe &amp; clean MVA . 1 t 13 Washington
St.,
Pr1o1 ex.penenoe with semt- A a~~ft~
----~ .
273-5893,
dumps and roll-oft&amp; it; help- !"1VIal8flC8S
o-'-"--ReQLIIfed
·
E .0 .E.

Otuo Val~ Home Health,
Inc htnng STNA, CNA.
Home Hea11h Aides &amp;
Personal Care Aides. Full,
Par1 Time &amp; Per Diem post1ions available. Apply st
1480
Jackson
Pilie,
Gallipolis or .phone
441 ·
.
1393 . Competittve Wages, ful.

wv

Contact Kent at 800--

mileage reimbursement and 462-9365 Of fill out appliQI- Non COL driver neeoed tor
o1her benefits including licx'l at www.rjtruddng com tow tnri. operator. Will train.
health ifl6Uranoe.
EOE
740.388-8547

·~~~"!~'!'18

�•

.. '

1' ••••• June 24, 2001

· The Daily Sentinel • Plgl 85

~~::-.OOP

NEA Cros1word Pu&amp;&amp;le

BRIDGE

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

Off--

Phillip
Alder

)

.......
--M-10
_
_
........_..,_
..,_.
.

.,_

All .................

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

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...............
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pc ... am:,H It I :.or
, .... 1 ....... ..

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52 . . . .

----..

...........

. vioiiMon aiiM .... OUr

62 StocldK&gt;Im
CIIIW

p&amp;rt

2&amp; .... Hogen
ollillld

77 liclit*

•.:tu•

.. --!.

••

•

Dbl
.Pus

t Pa4nw.,.
10 lnlllc:t

30 Soli
32 lgnooed •
33 diet
~
II : fltl

Pus

Opening lead: • A .

20 lntiiiUpMI

·

-

21 La . . I l l 41 Galllr -

1 ttoppy

~-

22 Nillgod
23 Rlj&amp;h'o

oigha
2 -.g
ll1liw
3 ,..,.. colt.
4 Eftilno

41

a-

WI-'
.._
24 Slww
51 . . . . . . .
21 11u. .111, 52 .,_ 2 •
29 ~··
goJup
31 AMini

55 ...._

lnla4
5I Willi
34 Allal
57- Faal 4lll
equootk
35 Onlint
5I Flntll
7 SentiIUCtlon
.._.
36 a- .....
8 GilDp11 ere a

5 ASAP .
6 All

31 ..,. gc II.,

The. negative
can be positive

DOWN

10UIId

31 IItke I
o I
31 .....

41 c..'t11
G w.tr
.

14 -1111
~co=-==16
Kind ,.,.. "T
ol diUin
45 Du I •

21
'' a
Tllllldly
1M F'laHI
TypeGidoll
6411equlre
25 Suowutoblo

Dealer: South

Pus

X

11 Cowboy
....

10 7
AQ t 2
J 8 4
A K 61

_"

5I - . , . ane

c:MdJ eo -roll w..t
17 11 GrMalal
61 pe......,
........
lnugo

Vuloerable: East-West
,.
S•

=

54._..,.

f5 Pleco ul

•AQ65S
• a 11

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

• ...

53"'-

• K i

•
•
•
•

wiM .

12 ..... 1n
lltditd
'13 Juno, In

SC

• 10 t 7
•• !

•Completr

L'"

('50otlllllic)
Mol llllW'I

....

• .a I !

6AKQJS
• 10 I 6

•New Homes

47

·---

West

...
l41 . . . .
:Tirlo::·: : : · ...
I

ssr-~

11 ...........

Remodeliuc
. . . .

. a l)lldl

• K!
• Q J 10'

..........., IMi1MIIIiGr

I'

1 Found

.•. '6.
J 7I S

...__.,,.._~,-

"--wop

I ..._.aCII41 Cuu;ttn

-

.

:::::: ~-

'

43 AM luliiiiJ

ACROSS

deleot
40 - • a l l

Altho bridge llble, you lihould Bll'l!yS
· lt1ink poailivelf, but 1hele is one 'negative'lhal.,.., be beneficial: the negative

--

A nega1ive -Is made by ri!SpOirde&lt;
tis parlne!'s openi1g bid hils boeo'r
IMl!t:alled in a ouit by the llOid ~: •
Tho """"ioeo lenglh in an urbid
major and """"' poinls. Ercacay lenglhs and how many poinls depend on
lhe sequance. Here, North~ double
8howed a1 leaa1 lOur hearts and six
poinls. (H North had 1iYe or six hearts, be
\Mlillll 6-9 poiml: to ..
!eop01lda11he.---)
South Oll8ltli&lt;l a tad when he robidthrea
hearts, bul the til inCreaaedthe wlue 111
his hand.
East - lllrong for tis I'M?-BIJide ..... .
Many IOOIIId p!8for a two-cU! cue-bid
raise, ildcaliilg at lealt ~
al wlueo trld 1hrea « 1110111 II*M- Bul
would probably nol like lhe puoh
1o threa ~. primorlly boco!Jse 111
lhe unfavorable vulnorolllll1y. (Threa
spades goes _ , one, losing two
heariB, one diamond trld two clube)
Against threa hea118, Cllllhas two
""' apacles. (For aoperll: e..t should
play first the two, disa&gt;Uraglng, then the
eighl, the higher card being a sull-pref-

YOUNGS

. CARPENTER
SERVICE

-·

ftoonl~··
A.mdll1g
-6..--

EMetricall Plumlilng

Rooting iGutttR
VI., Skiing 'P.......
POitO--Docks

. WY031125

V C YOU"G Ill
:'-' ~

'
.

.

~

lllrdftld cma•.., Jill ......
......-..r t a•• trl! 1 , ......

WIF 11EM

WATCMIN'
!!

.

'

'

..

.-, ....
. ...

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2011

~

Cell: 740-t1M047
elllll:

r'mi~P\XE.~GCiM£.~.(1.' rWEc.ET ~~~~AA"'',_, =1ha1~.!t~:~":'Jm'::~:
AAt&gt; ,.,.._"(fl.:lt!. It\ ..JUNE. !
Eaollal&lt;ing two 1riol&lt;s In lhe suM. then
awltclling to a club.
Sou)h wins onlhe boanl, plays a heart

-·and

-.. .

The Auction In the June 22nd
Sunday 1imes Sentinel WIIS nSted
with the wrong date- The Auction
date is June 27th - 5:30pm

••••
JIIIII-MII
-HIH

4" Geraniunt5 .60¢

Bedding PlaniS
48 per flal $6.00

. Dnpes, ~-- ....
Pud&lt;otO...,
Swqo,Val-.
Romon Shades 1011

Vegetable 'plants

ffi

FRESH
Jim O'Briea ·

MLTIMT
Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has
openings . for full-time · MLTIMT's.
B.accalaureate · degree in Medica·!
Technology or related field plus eligibility
for ASCP and/or associates degree in
applied science or relaled field plus
eligibility for cenification by ASCP. Must
be able lo wort; all shifts.

Fann I..efan·Fails

740-247-2113

Send Resume To:
.Family Healthcare, Inc.
do Wallda Edwalds
P.O.Box707
POII""W, Ohio 45789.
. Fax: 7-40-992-()264

EOE
No pholte cals please

-:7~-

fBUlWe'a1 ~rMhtlry &amp; Rutlud)

.........
.
Reeve ,._
••
•m.01:7.....1....1"

7411-'J91-7M

1111£ DECIDED 1D 1IW 'TD
liE A IE fiSt PERSON •.

IUT NOT Rt6f:IT
AJ/JA'( OF COIHtSE ..

MAvtEA FEW
QWS FROM HOW ..

••a·rn

r

HPJOYX

7

tor sale

call for
304-895-3943

prices

. Pleasant Valley

New York City
Bus Trip
2 seats available
· $545 each/doUble
oooupancy
·July 10th -13th
For more information,

oontact
(304) 675-4340, ext.
1444

PUBLIC N01'IOE
In lite 1bandoMCI
Farm. Mesh Chid(en5, pas- ~ Ohio C...l underground
mine
ture
raised
broilers, eomp.ny IIIII - - wo•ttlnga a! 8...-n
butetlered
for average lid •
Appllcllll "' to Ohio Coat Company's
dressed weight 4-5 l&gt;s. 37Q. Aewlw o eo.! Mining Mine No. 31.
9128
.
permit tR-354~3 to The .....,_, • on
the Ohio ~ file at Meigs coUnty
a!-..,..~ Aeconlet 's Olla, 100
2006 Toro 2 tum mower, 54 OlviMon &lt;11':&gt;-Mm.r.l E. Second She!,
inch cut only 80 hrs use. R • • o u , c • • Pol••or. Ohio 4l7tt
Arll&lt;ing S3800. 740-441 · ...............

Celebrating
75th Anniversary
June 30 - July 3
Lots of Specials!
2nd Ave. Gallipolis, OH

tor public:

olejlhljj -

New..._,

I

Meal ..

)

l'
, J&amp;L

Construction

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

CORNER STONl
CONSTRIJCTIOII

THAT FUNN'I.
MYTIJM

S.

'I'MIIII'
OlliE 'E11

•Auor••

s...m

r 1• I I I
F U R 0' M

hold an oppoolla ar&lt;l graal
.... )Ill be
judged.- -· Judge
'

·~EF&lt;» 111 . 11111r

a_......... -.
U

U.S.G.S. G1 ¥A&gt;11 a4hol Gl 1hlll

2002 Hyunc~e; Sorma. 2002
~- Other qUalily ..n;. ..,....,K-,

-

-

-

-

in 8100&lt;. .....

or call Cook- 51'-

INort

c:-,Ill Ohio
2.0
1

~-

(t) 111, 11, 24 {f) 1

"'

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

~ II W
L
....
id)
0103
milia Nultt 1 I G1 . .
--Joop--G-11101d--Oherol&lt;ee-lt .....&amp;CIIon Gl Olio Col&amp;
95

3 2 8 - Plloo, 740-446-

1 14,000 ,; $5000 obo

99 Sltte ... -

4dr Chevy Lum;na 52.000 325.
mi$5500.740-441-DilBI!
Tile

.t-.. . -·
II

To&amp;:ttlllp

11M ..... a-d "' r - ..
hold I budga4 ~-~·

ltiPIIC- .......
po- the unclef- lng on Ju1r 1011t, 211111

97 Neon 4dr. 4 cyl.: aUla. gfounc1 lnjeclknt Ill
115,000 .,;, AIC. ""' 1;195, treated ICid mine
extra clean . 3 mo 3000 m1 d~inaga ttudge from
warromy $2500. S&amp;S Aulo Sout...,.n Ohio Coa4
Sales. 740-669~
Compllllfl llllne No.
PoUoo ....., ....,1Cars from 31
Hydrated Lime

--·.-·-

at 7:011 p.m. • 1he fiN

at.tion. The bud9et
CMI be tewls ad llt ·the
fitc~~l

olllcsr

,..,_

donee.

MMy Wingo, Fltc~~l

WTnnltment Olllcer
ssoot Hondos. Chevvs. FaMitr, The tnjec:lion (740) 811 acM
Jeeps, Fordo. &amp; fllOI81 for .........., will occur......_ (6)24
lia1ings (100&lt;120-&lt;1"',. v•os -"•nr
--··

• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofill8 • Pole
Baros • Patio 'li, Pun:ht:ii...a DDcb

-· -

47239 Riebel Rood, '-1 S..,OH

740-985-4141

Cell: 7..0..16-18l4
. lS+,..., zq11i JCse F,. £ r1

Advertise
in this space for
$64 .
month

-

in """"" ·

SAG!Tt\RIUS
. 21) -uncon~
This
could
be one of(Nov.
1hoae23-0oc
days When
trotlable,CUI ldltic:MIS pt'fJWM1t you from ful1111ng

your -

or

,f1RB!"

onil' odd to your--

ll(lOI'I llolng .....

-

enoodlr!' .. , 1

~ lnlllr

11 .....,... 91 o1111e
_~

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

-

- Con, lol - -

bo • -

K you

ful, you must detine

betW.en

aggressiveness

a..:l ~ . Oon't tfy to bultdoze

your "'"Y .......,;. - ·· especiafty

lhooelhotatloclyouo-work.
"AlES (,..reh 21 -"1&gt;"1 1 9) - Vour
wll bo...- H..,., loel certain
~iloi:tliiillb• ·tmm a1111nd Ia qU81tianatH

...
-your-

or.'"""'""'
bo OO&lt;TY
you
.
, . . _- jull 10· 'lb&lt;l'll
gol along
wlltiHyour
1l'iiJRUS (&lt;lprti20-MIW 20)- Fooe "" 10
m!ghl bo
know-lfYIO prallt .. lho_ of anolt&gt;-

er.

'you

'*"" -but'pul
, _ monov "
c lho- of your--

~-

your

___ .. _

ton.

- 1 (Mow , . . , .
-

10) - "
.. - l n g • llilrlnlrrohlp

,......_
-..MID.......

. . . . . . .t. . . . . -....out

•

--·

-1-IO(It'IVNUTZ

-~

una.r.

.IDf

rr t r r r r't
~

Aflame,- S1a:7 -llrill- Raaow- CEASB Filii
Tile CIUMI dietnd ..... IIPirinc p!titiaJ1 "' t .....
ll'Owd, "We ~:~~~'twin die- 011 inflatiOII, ao kt'sCllllaa!"'•-

l•""•lioo '"· Gelling ARLO &amp;JANIS

__...,_
..
___

~ ...

1

SCJAIUI'S ANSWW

your Mtraiiaganoes are llk81y to go

wanl to be •u
1he dlftai•IIOii

.• ..

.

slruc!MI, don1 bo ourpriMd • 1ho roclpl-

you--

......... , ,

=

·~!W.s~msl

domago
PISCES (F«r. 20-l&amp;lrch 20) -

Wlndo&amp;a

VA."

SLYSAG

AQUARIUS (Jon: 2{)-Feb, 19)- Slriwl to
reduce your ..,.. . . wherw nones&amp;efltlal out:s6de ·interests are concerned .
811fi«iaHlj tf 1hlngs haYe beBn • bit toultl .
Making oomrnitmentl ;'DU ca.n'1: a!JDrd will

• Vlnrt Siding

ZPOR

ll

-·"""·

lioo,

0

AP

ZPOR.

four tc~~~mbled
low 10 "'"" 'faur . . . word~

CAPRIOORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19)- H you

App'h ..,.,.., AeviM. ........... lor •
l'wmll (APR) II Wllllllldllptall iljj
_ _"""!'_ _...., locllled
In lloolp .,. '-t dille Gl publl- · •Dicb
Au1os
County,
c:llllon "' .... ....... ·~
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mileage 25,000, 1 owner _ . _ 1 ....... (APR) Aootd, tluHdlltjj H-3,
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I'REVIOUS,SOLliTION - 'Hillefs get paid a lot of money 1o hili.JI'IID I,
111!11, somolimes 1hey jUSI do.' - Pilcher Andy-

a-

.,._nod to - - 1ho c:ompetttion m4Ch rnDN" to ol'ler.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - II you
~to a mood awing and adopt a
. _ ,.uitude, you'll _.-ooc11 wool&lt; m
a dimtnlahed Wfl'1 and make your taaks
muc!l ,_...,than neod bo. Fight II oft.
1£0 (July 23-Aug. 22) - Oon'l Llldy Lldt to ball you out • )IOU knowingly book the odDs and lOse. You - and
only you - Mil have to pay the cor'tfletor golng OUI on 1ho limb.
VIRGO (AUg. 23-Sepl. 22) - ~ you'"'
.all aeeklng _f8Y8f1Qe tn some manner
and bring up an old, na&amp;tr domestic
ileue at the dinner tatHe. you will cause a
· elkation that parallels 1he opening of

Mon: ...

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began
wl1h 1o - - 11l-8,
b u t - ollould not fall for • .

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'II&gt;U'le IPI to,.,. S1r0ng, powe~ul desires
10 scale new heights as fresh ambitions
are-awale18d In the year ahead. These
indinationa can be aatisfied If you are

Plus Pillow; B«vl...,
Tobie
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Noble' Summit Rd.
Middlepoit, OH

PB

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-No\1. 22) - Allllough
your eamtng abllties look promistng,

Send resumes lo:
· "
It V.uey Hospitltl
de H - Resourc:s
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Point... at, wv 2SS58

C.. llfled lladk:ll Aulatant or
Llcanndl Ptlldkal Nutw .
Full-Time Pa 11tlon

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HOME-GROWN
CABBAGE

... THE

AAIEOE

$2.50 per dozen
Hn; M-F 7:30 · 5:00
Sut 8:30 - 4:30 Suo. 1-5

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f'Oit TE1&gt;DY 1 "

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AmVets Building • Galllpolis, OH
I0" hanging Baskels

by Lull ClmpOI
Qelei:Jrtv Optwr ~s II! creeled lTorn ~ by llfi'OOII.-.. . ., - .

1o hio
cashes 1ho ace. When
the king drops,- claims.
'las, lhiUd play tis elghl undor

AstroGraph

www.auctionzip.com

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

�Pqe B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, J:une.24. zoos:
I

C.an~dian-native

,

Skyline

Rounding out the top ten
behind winning Berwanger
were Chris Stotts, Jeremy
_ ; from Page Bl
Blake, Louis Krushansky,
' .
Robbie
Evans,
Mike
McPherson, Ryan Mayle,
~gan to work on Conley
Jim Ashcraft, ·Robin Ours,
~dDodd.
and
Dusty
Ilolt~y .
Dodd blasted by the entire McPherson
came from II th
quartet for second, while
si!lth
to
earn
hard-charger
to
Conley followed in suit as
awards.
~ and 6rookover shufIn .the Pure Stock main
fled to fifth and sixth. With
two laps to go Montgomery Brian Shaffer took early
command, but old-ironside
ch~ed by Conley for third,
Jeremy
Blake was rattling
but ume ran out with Fritter
his
.hind
quarters. Blake
bringing home his first
on
worked
meticulously
Skyline win.
Fritter said, "We had a Shaffer for the top SJK?t. but
great car, a great track to Shaffer would not yteld and
pulled first into victory
race on and it -went green- lane. Blake sat comfortably
to-checkered. We had funin second ahead of Curt
What more can you ask for? Reck, Dusty Adkins, Mike
I'd like to thank my spon- Lauer, George Klintworth,
sors and crew for getting us Darin Roush, Joe Mise!,
here to victory lane."
Steve · Anthony,
Chad
Behind second place Roush, and Pat McPeek.
Dodd was Montgomery,
In the Norman's Auto
Corey
Conley,
Travis Care
trophy-sponsored
Brookover, K.C. Burdette, Mini-Wedges Ron Pickens
Larry Bond, Pat Gillian, took advantage of a skirDan Morrison, and .Chris mish between Scott Perine
Games. Hard charger of the and Kyle Bond. Pickens
race was Montgomery's · went on
12th to 3rdpJace run.
· to win ove:r. Mariah
In the AMRA Modified MiUer, Tyler Evans, Kyle
main Chris Stotts took the Bond, Zach Fox, Martin
early. lead and appeared to (Jibson,
Scott
Perine, .
be the class of the field. Coleman
Evans,
and
Then after an early tango Sydney Staats.
with Louis Krushansky,
Skyline hosts the All-Star
Jeremy Berwanger of Sprints
in . an
Ohio
Murray City took over sec- Speedweek
show
ond and set his sights on Wednesday,
The
Stotts. Berwanger closed Southeastern Ohio track
rapidly on the early leader · rhen hosts a $2,000 to win
Stotts, then took the lead on late model show on Friday.
lap ten. He blitzed the rest AMRA Modifieds, Pure
of the field convincingly to Stocks, Four Cylinders, and
claim the win. Berwanger Mini-Wedges will be on the
bested a good field of racing cards as well. There
AMRA hard-hitters that saw will be no sprints June 27 in
former
champ
Kenny honor of the remaining
Johnson exit with a flat tire. ·Speedweek races_.

...

\

VJZquel
from Page Bl .
jamming with the band· on
the sidewalk out front. He
dined at Cleveland's restaurants, sold his own brand of
salsa, ice ci:eam and trademark line of bright-colored
clothing. He played team
comedian at an Indians rally
on Public Square.
· The Indians plan a video
tribute before the first
game, . .acknowledging
VI.Zijuel' s place in baseball
and team history.
ViUJuel' s · tenure
1n
Cleveland ended as the
team was rebuilding. When
Wedge became Indians
manager in 2003, Vizquel
was the last conduit to ·a
past filled with division
titles and two trips to the
World Series.
·
"He ·was very supportive
of me as a young manager," Wedge said. "That

Riverside
rn.nPageBl
1

(Cbe1tm') and Bob Brooks
(Ripley)- as well as Rusty
· Wopd (New Haven), Bill
Rainey (Point Pleasant),
Claude Proffitt (Patriot) and
BiU
Winebrenner
(Syracuse) were the .
other second-place teams.
The closest to the pin
winneci
were
Chuck
Stanley on the ninth bole
and Benoy Dent on No. 14 I

--lt--&amp;Aovut

meant a great deal to me.
When you're a young manager, you need your veteran players to get on board
or it can be a long day. He
did."
Wedge remembered calling Vizquel into his office
one day. Vi;zquel, as he
sometimes did, didn't run
out a groul)d. ball. At .the
time, Wedge bad gone
head-to-head with outfielder Milton Bradley
over the same issue..
"What I said is, 'How
can f get these guys to run
if you don't run?' He
looked at me and said, 'I
understand.' After that he
was great," Wedge said.
"I asked him to help me
out, trying to teach these
guys bow to play, and be ·
did. The key to that is I
nevec bad to talk to him
again. That's ·the key. It
doesn ' t mean anything if
he doesn't respect me and
the game. But be does ... he
respects the game."

....... _,._

Paul Somorvlllo

1311.0

Miele WinobutllllOI ·
Don Wlldio
Bell Hill

131.0
113.5
112.0

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-Cecil Minton
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100.5

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Jad&lt; Maloney

92.5
92.0

Curtis Grubb
8

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Tom Do1soo

8111 Wi-ollner

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Rolph

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Hor1eyR""' .

91 0

90.0
90.0

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87.0
86.5

CINCINNATI (AP) Joey Votto returns to his
native Canada this week
with a hot bat and a reputation for being an a~ntive
student
of American's
national pastime.
Votto, 24, has taken over
the Cincinnati Reds' first
baseman job in his ftrst full
season in the major leagues.
He's batting .293 ~er getting 14 hits in his last 28
times·at bat as the Reds head
to Toronto to begin a threegame series Tuesday night
against the Blue Jays.
Reds manager Dusty
Baker said Votto already has
a reputation for a good work
ethic, and he likes that Votto
tries hard to learn.
"I think one day in the
near future, he's going to be
a big run producer. ·He's a
tough out," Baker said of
Votto, who bats left and
throws right. "He battles,
he's ·good against lefties,
(and) he's always in there
studyin~, always."
Votto s mom, Wendy, said
his bookshelf at home is
packed with books on baseball, batting and bow to
become stronger physically
and mentally. Bestdes reading, Votto also is. known for
spe.nding hours watching ·
baseball video, working
with coaches artd seeking
advice from veteran players.
"I just love this. I want to
be as good as I can as a baseball player," Votto said. "It's
somethmg I have passion
about. If I .feel motivated to

Olympics
from Page Bl
'they didn't know what to
expect in Athens.
.
. "I've always seen greatness in the Olympics, but
that was never one of my
dreams," Wade said. "I
never rea!Jy expected to be
on the Olympic team, especially in my ftrst year. I didn 't have a clue what I w.as
getting into. , ... Now, we
respect the gatne so milch.
We .respect the team basketball that they play intemationally so much."
Anthony saw the 2004
Games as a chance to have
"some of the best workouts
in the summertime with the .
best players in the world"
and went there thinking "the
USA is supposed to win
everything."
"Going through that experience really helped me to
learn the · international
game," Anthony said.
He's part of a team that
includes one of the best shooters (Redd) and defenders (Prince). There are role
players and scorers, iocludmg the two biggest. . .
Bryant ~ill play ~ !Us
ftrst OlympiCS after wmrung
his ftrst MVP while leading
the Los Angeles Lakers to

'

Votto student ofg~e ;
Cincinnati
Reds Joey ··
Votto walks
to the dugout:
during an , ·
interleague :
baseball
,.
game against:
the New Yorl( ·
· Yankees at :
,
Yankee .
Stadium in :
New Vorl! on
Sunday.
·-

-~..

'
;'

.

1".

Students visit
Washington, D.C., A3

'

•
Middleport
• Pomeroy, Ohio
•
1 11t!

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

... '
do something, 'I do my very
best."
His defense is still suspect
at times, and he agreed he
went through "little bit of a
rough patch." He said he's
working on being patient
and relaxing.
Baker said Votto will
improve
defensivelr,
"because he wants to get it. '
"Everybody wants this
finished
product
right
away," Baker said. "It doesc

n't happen like that. There
are very few guys that come .
up a finished product in all
departments."
His family lives in
BraUiptlm, Ontario, and he's
the efdest of four children.
His mother is the general
manager .a nd soinmelier at
Via Allegro Ristorante in
Toronto: Father Joe works in
corporate food services.
Wendy Volto said Joey,
who speaks French, wasn.'t

cut out for ice hockey
because of problems skating.
"In Canada, you're ·a
hockey player, but· he's a
disaster on ice," she said. She said his fiifilily will ~
out in force for the Rods' visit
Some 50 family members;
friends and fans have rented
a bus for the games. They
will be wearing Reds shirts
and sitting near the ftrst-base
line "so they can heckle
him," she said.
:.

the fmals. James averaged
'This was to see .b ow far . Trainer TIDl Grover has
30.0 points, just enough to along he had come in his been working . out with
beat Bryant for the ·scoring rehab," Colangelo .s aid. Wade.. Colana!lelo sai(j.
title.
'That was the whole thing. · Grove~ assured him the
Those .two, along with Plus, I had a little con(.ersa- Miami Heat star will contAnthony, Kidd and Dwight tion I wanted to have · with pletely ready when the team
Howard, .started for a team him. We took care of that. I gathers in Las Vegas next
that went unbeaten in the watched him work. I saw month.
Olympic qualifying touma- him do a few things in terms
"I feel great,"Wade said; :
ment last year. Eight 'o f the of
explosiveness
that
And he'd feel even benet
12 players headed to Beijing showed me that he was pret- with a gold medal dangling
played on that team and six . ty muc.h back."
from hi snec.
k
.·
played in the 2006 world
championships.
'1\Ve're a team already,"
Krzyzewski said. "The thing
that this ~gram has done is
... proVIde continuity . and
celationshipg.... We' II !lit the
ground running."
Phoenix forward Amare
Stoudemire withdrew from
Olympic
consideration,
apparently concerned · about
pusbing his body too hard
after knee surgery in 2005
and 2006. So did Detroit's
Chauncey Billups, · who
would have had a tough time
making the team given the
backcourt depth.
.
Wade's season ended in
March because of a sore left
knee that had been bothering
him since surgery in 2007.
He started . working out in
his hometown Chicago in
May, and James and Paul
joined him to help s~n
his game. Colangelo visited
' '
recently and left convinced
... ..•. .. .~
"' .. . .' ' Ill'....
,J.
the 6-foot-4 guard was
j "
• .
healthy.
,..... ~-

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SPORTS
:• Blue Jays rout
Reds. Seer.. Bl

APphoto

\\: 11 ',1....,1•\ 't

'\1""'•\td ,, - '\o .:2;{ l)

I!J~:::J...:.:J~~~

L

·INsiDE

"Whether the pool is the
oldest above-ground public
pool in Ohio or in the coun. tly, it has seen its day,"
Craig said, encouraging
other ·council members to
see the deterioration for
rhemselves. "We are seeing
the effects of a lack of mainte.nance for years."
Craig aslred that the street
department remove park
benches and picnic tables
from the storage areas
below the pool and place
them in Dave Diles and
Fel1ll3ll Moon: parks.
Craig said the recreation
. committee plans a youth
dance in the parking lot next
to Dave Diles Park on July
25. She said the village provides more recreational
opportunities, such as playgrounds, for young children, but does not offer
enough activities for teens.
The dance will be free to the
pul!lic and will be supervised by recreation commit-

MIDDLEPORT -The
Middleport Pool is ·in poor
condition, and the village
might be wise to abandon
plans to ever open it again, a
village council member said
Monday evening.
Jean Craig, chairman of
the council's recreation
committee,.said sh¢ was in a
storage area below the pool
last _week, and she and others observed leaks, rust and
other si~s of deteriOr-ation.
Craig S31d Ute pool is showing the signs of years of
neglect, and plans to repair it
would probably be in vain.
Early this , year, council
agreed that the village could
not afford to open the pool
for this summer season, but
agreed funding sources
should be sought to assist
with repairs' Jor possible
opening in 2009. ·
Craig said the 55 yearold pool ar,pears to be a
"done deal. :
·

"'"a .
. . Piloi.AI
.

...

~

The Middleport Pool, dass,d to the public this summer, might be beyond pn~ctical repair,
Council Member Jean Craig said Monday.

Monday tire
detennined

as arson
Bv Bmt SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.OOM

BALD
KNOBS
. - Divisloti'"'
State Fire
Marshal investigators have
determined Monday's fire
in lebanon Township was
an inlentionally set ftre. or
arson, according to a statement released by Shane
Cartmill, public information officer for the ftre marshal's office.
According to the statement, the ftre' s area of origin was on the first floor of
the A-frame structure. No
further details about how
the fire was started are
being released. at this time.
The structure was not
equipped with smoke detectors and according to
Racine Fire Chief Jamie
Jones, no one was home
when the fire began.
Jones said it was his
understanding the A-frame
structure bad been remodi:led and was used as a hunting cabin by a1 least two
brothers
from
the
Reynoldsburg
area
though
tiiW'IJ. AIJ Cl'ph
their names were not immeLocal emergency responders from Gilllia and Meigs Counties engaged in a tabletop exercise Tuesday organized by the diately available. The cabin.
Meigs younty Emergency Manageinent Agancy and Local Emergency Planning Commission. In the "mock disaster," which was located near the
responders w()lt(ed through a scenario involving a train delailment on Ohio 7, a tanker carrying chemicals Jor the Kyger intersection of Richard
Creek SlaCk project, and a burning school bus. The exen::ise was in preparation for a full-scale exerc•se to mvolve both
..... -File. AI
Middlepon and Gallipolis fire depai1ments this fall.

of

• G~ mulls future
_.of ancient mound site.
:See l"llle· AS
~. tblae
fails mmove
r'
•
' ii8S ~ price gougilg
, bil, 'See . . .u . '
I

'

•

'

· • HeMda~

''Camp slarts July 7.

.s- ·r.e A3

.
-• Gracen1en 1o
petfonn. See 1'¥ A3
: Jt For lhe Record.
-Bee Pille AS
.• Wilkesville
July 4 plans set
.See Page A6
'

a

Gtbt \Oallipolis llailp ~rtbunt,
~bt Joint tnm•ant 3!tgiSttr
and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yOUI'Rif
'or even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:

WiArimR
.

' .

Names of AMP: Draft pemrits release 'another milestone'

·•. p-oo
·

m
_.

nllelds@mydailyregister.com
hoeflich@mydailysentinel.tom
Limit your story to
500-750wo. .

STAFF REPoRT
IEWSeiiiYDAi.'I'SEN11Nei..OOM

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4171

•

•

A6

4

BY BEnt SEAGENr

Discharge
Elimination
(NPDES) permit for the
.
•
facility as "another. mileCOWMBUS
stone."
American
Municipal · AMP-Ohio President I
Power-Ohio
recently CEO Marc Gerlcea said of
refermd to · the Ohio the most recent deve!~pEnvironmental Protection ment "'The AMPGS facility
Agency's teltaed of a draft continues to mo~e forward
permit-to-install (PTI) for on scbrdnle. ~of these
the Amelican Municipal ~o draft ~ IS anodler
Power Genecaliog Stabon milestone m the developresidual solid waste laodfill meal, and wbik; we still ba~e
(AMPGS Landfill) and the a I~ way to go, we mDI1Il
draft National Pollution proud of Ibis puject and the
BSERGENTOMYDM.YSENTINEL.otlll

_.,:..=..1...

•

~dly@mydailytribune.com

'•

MIDDLEPoRT - The
Middlepor;t
Police
Depan:Jqenl is withholding
the names of two injured in
a Saturday mOtor vehicle
accident pending completion of an investigation.
1be vehicle's driver was
allegedly
fleeing
a
Middleport Police officer a~
the time of the accident. .
Ciiief Bruce Swift . said IEWSeiiiiYI»USENTTIOOM
the driver and a passengec
·
tnmsponed from the
Cf{ESHIRE - Galliasccoe, ooe by aeromedical
unit and another by ambu- Meigs Community Action
lance to Holzer Medical A~cy will be assisting
residents with the 2008
Center in Gallipolis. ·
Summer
Swift said the accident Emergency
took. place at I :40 a.m. near Cooling Progwn, beginthe intersection of Grant ning July l.
Emergency
Services
Street and Fairlane Drive.
Divisioo
DireCtor
Sandra
Patrolman Chris Pitchford ·Edwards said the program
will run throu.gh Aug. 31 or
.M r~IM-ad&amp;.AI

significani P!,Ogress we've
made to date.
Gerken also acknowledged the support of local
people from Meigs County.
The landfill PT1 must be
obtained f~om the_ OEPA ·
before a res1dual solid waste
area for the ~S plant
can be esta~h~hed. The
NPDES {lel'ffilt IS required
for any discharge of tteated
wastewater . . from
the
AMPGS facility.
OEPA has scheduled a

public m~ormation sesStonlj)ubhc heanng on both
pemuts for 6:30p.m .. Alig.
5 at Southern Elementary
School. There will be a presentation before formal testjmony is. taken from resideBts or others with concems and/or support of the
draft permits. Written comments will also be accepted
during the meeting or they
can be mailed to OEPA
M

su lliee AMP. A5
'

Su~coo~!~~!!!~~~.!~~. !,
"This will be a traumalic
time for tbe elderlf and
low-inoome citizens m our
Secvicc.u," sbe said.
. ~~be~ lirwodit1IJia'; during Ibis program
year.~ persons
lliUSimakeanllftiOIII1IDCII
There are (2) types of
bo~seholds that may be
assisted
.
. _
(I). An moome-eligtble
household with a nocml~tr

•

medical oonditi
· ·
disonJer wrificd by pby&amp;i-

bousebold with a member
who is 60 or older is eligibk:
ciao doatnJentation lfom a to receive:
=~essioaal maybe
• One payment for elec.· . to ~i~ ~ fol- tric bill up to the current
_lqwing, if the utility will DOl bill or PIPP. whichever is
aooept the meclira1 ~- more. but not to exceed
CllllicforaJ&lt;Hiayex.tmslon: 1100. (No discon nect
• One payffiC!ll for a Qll'- required) . Priority will be
rent electti~ bill or PIPP, given to elderly clients
wbi_c bev« ts more, ~ not from July 1 through July
to exceed SIOO.(Nodi5(l()ODectll~Quired) .
M
1 . . C1 ' S AI

•

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