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.

, Monday, 'July 7,

www. ritydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

2008

But with one out, Craig
Monroe walked. Delman
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Young reached on an intield
si
ngle when third baseman
MINNEAPOLIS - Cliff
Andy Marte lost the ball tryLee was cruising, anJ the
ing to pull it from t,;s glove
Cleveland
Indians
were
on
BY COLIN FLY
after
a diving stop and a s pi~
the
verge
of
a
much-needed·
ASSOCIATED PRESS
move left him on the ground.
victory.
.
Then
came
the
seventh
Brendan Harris fqllowed ·
MILWAUKEE The
and
a
sign
of
julit
with
a single to load the
inning,
Brewer&gt; are extremely dtN~
how
fragile
the
defending
bases.
and Nick Punta pulled
to a deal lll acquire Indians ·
AL Central champions curthe Twins within one with
ace C.C. Sabathia in a trade
rently
are.
The
Twins
took
his base hit on a 3-1 pitch.
that bolsters their rotation for
full
advantage,
using
a
handLee went to a 3-1 coun:t
a playoff push. a person with ' out of contention making a
ful
of
walks
and
well-placed
ag~in on Span. and ball four
direct knowledge of the deal move . likely. Milwaukee
tied the game. Gomez gave
told The A"oci~teJ Pre".
wants Sabathia. now to make · singles to send the Indians to
their
eighth
straight
loss
Minnesota its first lead oil
The person requested as many starts as possible .
Sunday.
his
groundout to shortstop. :
Sabathia. who was slated
anonymity because the trade
Carlos Gomez capped the
"I try not to look at th~·
has not been finalized and to · start for Cleveland
name of the back of the jersaid there were a few remain- 1uesday at Detroit, rejected a three-run seventh against
sey." Span 5aid. "They ' ve
ing issues to work out. ·
$72 million, four-year exten- Lee with an RBI groundout ,
and
Minnesota
rallied
for
a.
got to throw strikes just like
Sabathia went 19-7 with a sion from the Indians during
anybody else. whether dow~
3.21 ERA to win the AL Cy spring
training
and. 4-3 victor)' over Cleveland.
"I have to do a better job of
in the minor leagues or U(&gt;
Young last season and would announced he wouldn ' t
damage
control
there,
and
I
here."
.
give the Brewers another negotiate any deal until after
didn'l
,"
:;aid
Lee.
who
Lee was critical of hinisett:,
p&amp;-.vcr pi:rhcr 1:0" pair w ~rh the season.
especially for the bases,
Ben Sheets as Milwaukee
The Brewers starling learned before the game he
tries to make the playoffs for pitching has been thin ever was selected for the All-Star
loaded \valk to Span. but he
team.
"And
they
got
a
win
the first time since 1982.
since Yovani Gallardo went
still found a way to be opti.
The big lefty is 6-8 with a on the disabled list with a because of it. That is totally
mistic .
·
3.83 ERA for the Indians, but torn knee ligament that on me right there."
':1 think we can turn it
Lee ( 11-2) lost for the tirst
has also been plagued with a required surgery. His rehab
around ," he said. "It's just
in nine starts. hurt by a
time
lack of run support. In nine was supposed to take four
going to take everybody
of his 18 starts. Cleveland months, which gives him an rare lack of control in the
playi_~g the game the right
has scored two runs or less outside chance of returning seventh that helped the
way.
Twins
put
before the end of the season. resourceful
for him.
AP photo · The
Indians are· off
"I'm good.' . excited."
Sheets ( 10-2,2.77 ERA) is · together another· one of their Cleveland Indians' pitcher Cliff Lee wipes his brow after giv· Monday, a welcome respite
Sabathia wrote in a text mes- easily off to the best start of small-ball rallies. They bat- ing up the go-ahead run against the Minnesota Twins' dur- after a mi serable weekend
sage posted on ESPN .&lt;:am. his career, but the All-Star ted eight times that inning ing the seventh inning of a baseball game Sunday in made worse by the uncer'·It's weird leaving these righty is in the final year of a and hit the ball out of the Minneapolis.
tainty of C.C. Sabathia's
guys."
$38.5 million, fqur-year con· intield twice.
status amid trade talks the
17 walks in Ill 2-3 innings team is having regarding
"We've got a good attitude offense.
To
get
Sabathia, tract and hasn' t wanted to
Perkins allowed seven hits all season before Sunday.
Milwaukee will have to part talk about his upcoming free on the bench. Guys are into
,
"When you're going the big left-hander.
it," manager Ron Gardenhire in .seven innings before turn·
with a package of prospects agency.
need
to
get
away
"They
Milwaukee, which hasn't said. "We feel like some- ing the lead over to Matt through strerches like we're from it. give themselves a
including Matt LaPorta, a
power hitting left fielder been in the postseason since thing's going to happen Guerrier and Joe Nathan , going ·through right now, break,"
Wedge
said.
selected in the first round last the days of Robin Yount and eventually. We've just got to who celebrated his third All- that's usually the way it "Obviously, it was a very
manager
Eric
.
Star selection by pitching .a works,''
year who was scratched from Paul Molitor, fell two games keep plugging away."
tough road trip. We have a·
Since losing 12-2 to the perfect ninth . for this 25th Wedge said.
a Double-A game in short of the division title last
Until Span stw1ed the sixth Jot going on rig_ht· now.
Huntsville on Sunday night. year. The Brewers are per- Indians in Cleveland on June save.
Perkins, who hasn't lost in with a triple, the only hils by Hopefully, with the good
LaPorta was hitting .288 centage points ahead of St. . 12, the Twins are 18-3. They
with 2{} oomers an&amp; 56-R-BI; Ltmis for !he- sceoiid-bes! have swept four of lh~ir last · sden starts since iVi ay 30, the Twins didn 't (eave the off day w~ can put a lot of
iti 84 games for ljuntsville.
record in the NL, and both six series.' The surge looks has been one of Minnesota ',s infield - a popped-up bunt this behind us and take a
"It's kind pf flattering to teams are chasing Chicago, 3. more impressive upon exam- most consistent starters. The by Alexi Casilla that just positive step forward."
Notes: Twenty-four of the
ination of the recent list of left-hancier has allowed three cleared Lee's .. head and a
have your name brought up . .1/2-games ahead.
Twins'
50 wins have come
for one of the best pitchers in
The, Brewers play four losing opposing pitchers: runs .or Jess in his last six grounder that Gomez beat
after
they
fell behind. ...
out, drawing a _brief argu·
the game." LaPorta told the games at St. Louis to cap a Lee, Ben Sheets, G'reg appearances.
Lee needed 37 pitches ro ment about the call from Injured· Indians starter
Huntsville Times. "There seven-game road trip after Maddux, Trevor Hoffman,
Fausto Carmona threw a
Wedge.
would be no 'hard feelings the All-Star break and have a Brandon Webb and Randy tinish the seventh.
strong
bullpen session of 35
He walked two, including
Lee struck out Gomez
one way or another. This is a four-game series .against the Johnson.
"It definitely proves we Denard Span with the bases after Span's triple,and traded pitches before the game,
business, and. I understand Cubs at Miller Park at the
c,an
hit. We can score · runs loaded, and wasted a 3-1 an out for a run when Casilla and he 's set for 50 pitches
that."
end of July.
· The Indians, who were one
The trade was lirst report- against anybody;" said Glen lead cushioned by Jhonny hit a grounder to shortstop, Tuesday as he progresses
win from the World Series ed by the Milwaukee Journal Perkins (5-2), the latest ben- Peralta's two-run homer in still taking a 3-l 'lead into the toward a return 1n the sec'•
, om.l half.
last year, have quickly fallen Sentinel.
.eficiary of the uptick in the sixth. Lee had issued just seventh.

Torn.ACLs, other big
injuries hit little
athletes, A2

BY DAVE CAMPBELL

•

at
.')0

t'ENTS

o

Vol.

,}7,

"

·'

ZTT42
ZERO-TURN TRACTOR
o Zero-turn maneuverability with traditional

,,.,.'

• Sabathia traded to
B.rewers .for tour
prospects. See Page Bl

tractor steerins

heavy-duty twin-blade
3-in-1 mowing deck
• 18 HP' Kohler. Courage• OHV engine
o 42"

'

• Dual hydrostatic transmission and

adjustable ...t

• Award winner for innovation excetlenct

''

.&amp;2!! •4.0.

.,

PAYIIIIINTS

LOW
IOTftOOutTOftV

M,LOWAS.

/Motmf

PAYMENTS

SALE ' 2 &amp;99 "

$55
.

ASLOWAS

/MONTH.

SALE '3 &amp;99 "

'
'
......................................•........••..•.•....•......••.......

'

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY- The rising
cost of gasoline affects
everyone and on Thltrsday
staff at the Meigs County
Council on. Aging will
attempt to raise funds to
keep the cost from affecting
services the Meal s on
Wheels program provides to
80 people, five days a week.
From II a.m . - I p.m. on
Thursday at the Meigs
Senior Center. staff will be
selling a hot dog lunch with
grilled hot dogs. with or
without sauce, macaroni
salad, baked beans and
dessert for $5. The staff can
deliver to local businesses

. ,. .

· lERO·TURN Rlf;)ER

,,
·

• 50" lloa1ina 1riple-lilade 3-irt-1 ~ina. ~.

• 221;iP' Kawasaki~ v~Twin OHY qine
• Pivoting fron1 _ . a!ld llaltlnl deck.
• 3-yw limited wamnty"** · ·, ,

.

LT 1045
LAWN TRACTOR
o 46" heavy-duty triple-blade mowing deCk
o 20 HP' Kohler, Courage· engine

THE TANK" M48 HEAVY-DUTY
COMMERCIAL ZERO-TURN RIDER
o Ex~tusive 48" Select Cut Systom"
ultra-premium mowing deck
• 23 HP' Kewauki 0 V-Twin OHV engine

.J: '1

.

I'AY!IIINTS

':

SALE ' &amp; 999"
HAIIOE«
. '

'

'25

INDEX
ASWwAII ·'
/MONTH'

2 SECTIONS -

Calendars
'

- BECAUSE VOU DO ENOUGH l-IARD WI)Rk ALREADY.
M

0

'

o

Classifieds

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996
1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE • RT. 33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
8880 UNITED LANE• ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON RT. 50/32
LANCASTER. OH 43130 • (740l 653-2827
ATHENS, OH 4570i • (740l 593-3279
STORE HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00, SATURDAY 9:00·5:00
~~~~~~~ ~c• r·~• ~~ '""~ I• lll')oofl&lt;r.~c·~:tt•t&gt; UY'II!

~ ~tilt&gt;

.,,r· t.u~ i.l , "111 · ~ ~ ro~"" "' "~ ,.,. rT~.~ ·

•

.

lo ~,..,.,..., . ~ .t·:-..,ll:"'rl.~ t'(.: ., "'~r&lt; ~tr, rr.""' ~....,...;•..e•t«~••""""" ~ 1 0H ., ........,.,.....,,.......,.,...,. "' '!clt.&lt;~ ••P-..,.iu".-...........~.,.. , ,. ...o:-t&gt;...m f~ ,.. ~·&gt;'I" I•••""""" ••t ,..,..._,.,., ""'""'~"'~"''"1•11~ ., 11., r· ~.·.~ ......, •. ,"",...., ,.,._., •-fir&lt; ·•:...- 111 , 1 .~ ...... ~. "'"'"''''"""'"'1;.... -, .. , ;.o .• ~

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...-

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• ll:tl&gt; ~ . .,., ,...,~._~,,._.,.,... ,. ,...._!"'~~u"'l"

.,,,, ... ,.,~,(~ . ~ •• •••".

...,,...,..llo· ,._,

·~·• •""•"•"'

·----·--··
'

(-•*" :.,.

"",e..&lt;l\lfll • ' ;:., ......, ... ,
t•· ~··~"" 't1\ ~~'" "')(I• ""'' ,..,.., '*&lt; •i ......,..., \~ •Mh ~..,.. ,,,,., ..., ,.. ... 1&lt;"\•r J&lt;~• ~N \&lt;rf.
VI.,~ ...... ~ ' ''"'•" '" ""' · • ~ .. .. ,., .,..,,. ...,_ ""~ ~ •• •• ••~• ~ '· ' ~"••;.....,..i t&lt;• ,, _. • ~ "'1-'1••·'" ' "
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...,...... ....,.~- -

...~ n;. .... l _ ....

Editorials

• "t

Sports

r...,. ·.,. t&lt;C'\ol:'...._.., ........,._ • •••""'"'"'" ',.."'' ,,.., ... ,.,.,.,,~, ... •·•r&lt; dJ tl1)1lo;..,.,olo)~,. -~ ..... . \'!ol'&gt;"• ~n r.. ..,..,,&lt;l ,~ ...,,,oa;,~·~o,......, •., .,,,_. 1,;-:t. ,. ,, ,,,, ··•. ... ~· · .,.,.., .. ,,~ ., ,· ··· ,., .,... ""-" 1....,•.., ,., •••

..... ~ ot:l&lt;&gt;' - .... ...., . ,. , ......,. ,,,totVt•l......., f&lt;oJiol.loo

·-· -----c

Weather

,_,

As
As
B Section

A3

I

CuhCade.t:

'~&lt;~" ~""' -.•.'

3-4

Bs

Qbituaries

, ,., .. , • 11 ... ...,.. ·•;. ,.;
"tot•• ••. ,.. ~· .,.
~ • ... J. ., .. , .:,,,. • l"!oJ. /'- &lt;~~• ,_......,. ·, .., ..._.,..,.' ~·.I'• ,

B

Comics

Movies

- ...,.... - ........... . tlllO&lt;Io4--. ,. .... .,....,... , ,.,.. • • ll&lt;... _ol'f'"'&gt;:lli •...... _

.. _ , . ~,., ... W ,., " ., , ., &gt;&lt;' L, ~' "' ... -~ ..-, lor&gt; '" 'f" •...,

t:i PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

SALE '1 &amp;49 "
'

'

"

.

Pago A3

• Automatic hydrostatic transmissior.

.(J!tZT 42 lllo IVItillbiiJ I~ it, ~r'l
f' '

on

• Pivoting st1ll front axllt and premium

LOW
tH1'fiOOIICTOAY

@.2.008 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.. .

._... •• ,., · - ......... , """ ..... ,.............. ~ ! .... . . .... 4."' , .,.•• 1'4~i" '

'

'

WE MEAN BUSINESS:

YOU CAN'T GET ANY

BETTER ~
4

'

'

.,

just ca ll 992-2161 to place
an order. All proceeds go
towards supplementing the
gasoline fund for the Meals
on Wheels program .
MCCOA Director Beth
Shaver said so far this year
the gasoline expense has
been under . budget but it
appears if something is not
done to offset the increased
cost in fuel, that line item will
be over budget by the end of
the month. The hot dog lunch
is meant to help offset the
increased cost and Shaver
hopes around $1,000 will be
mised though she said she
and th~ staff will be happy
with whatever is given.
"We've been blessed with

people in the community simply check in on the funding source.
who are always willing tO client which .can make a
In Meigs County, th e
give," Shaver said.
huge difference to someone Meals on Wheel s program
Shaver also explained that living alone.
has already been affected by
in some places some pro·
With 80 current clients on rising prices. havin~ to cut
grams are cutting back to the route, that means around back on deliv e rin~ frozen
delivering meals three days 400. meals . are delivered meals on Friday ' fo r the
a · week' and delivering weekly though Shaver said weekend . Shal'cr said they
frozen meals on those deliv- due to rising gas prices no are doing their best not to
ery days to compensate for new clients who are off the make anv further cuts from
the two days drivers are not already established routes now untli the end of ihc yea r
on the road.
are being accepted. She through fundraiser&lt; Iike the
"We don't want to do added this was an unfortu- one on Thursday.
that." Shaver added. "Some nate circumstance because
This isn't just atlecting
of our people are so isolat· some of the most isqlated our program, this is clear
. ed, our drivers are the only people may be off.that' beat- aGross the country," Shaver
human contact our clients en path/established routes. said of the situation many
might have all day."
. She did say there are some· Americans find themselves
Shaver said often drivers times exceptions but they are in these days, searching for
bring in a client's mail, help exceptions who are clients in the money to pay at the
with other simple tasks and dire situations with no other pump and the grocery sto,re.

BSEAGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
o Nellie E. Michael, 83
• Eloise Rea, 89

Details

su.pension seat w~h erm reots

""w . mrdailv,~nlinel.t·om

TUESHAY, .lli.LY H, :wo8

Syracuse :showz
~'ng~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;
(zero tolerance'
on cuifew
OBITUARIES
Bv BETH SERGENT

.WEATIIER

RZT~O

.

D ....

·Bentjit' lunch to supplement fuel prices

Bush and German
leader meet on G-8
challenges.
See Page A2
o Wahama alumni
gather for annual
banquet See Page A3
• Ohio woman pleads
guilty in bridge crash.
See Page AS
o Bomber kills 41
outside Indian Embassy
in Kabul. See Page AS
• Housing rescue
advances in Senate
See Page A6

Z-FORCE• 44
HEAVY-DUTY ZERO-TURN RIDER
o 44" floating heavy-duty ,;;pte-blade mowing
deck with foot pedal deck height adjustment
o 20 HP' Kohler®Courage. PRO V
·Twin ·
OHV engine

Nn.:.ql-1

~

Gas prices pinch Meals on Wheels

SPORTS

o

..

l"rinttd on JOOt;r
Reqded N.-:wsprinl

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE

' i.

ne

SYRACUSE
-The
Village of Syracuse is
,showing a "zero tolerance"
attitude .towards its underage curfew currently in
effect from the hours of II
p.m. to 6 a.m. , seven days a
week · for young people
under 18.
Young J?eople under 18
mu st be off the streets and
off village property during
the curfew time unless
by
a
accompanied
parent/guardian. Violators
of this e~isting village ordinance will be subject to
citations
in
Syracuse
Mayor's Court .
At its most recent meeting, council heard concerns
from residents Stacy and
John Brickles about the curfew. The Brickles had
recently paid $315 in total
lines and court costs after
their underage son was cited
by Syracuse Chief of Police
Shannon Smith for being
out past the curfew, around
II :30 p.m. The Brickles
were not arguing the fine
but added their 17-year old
son had never been in trouble before. They felt the
zero tolerance curfew was
being enforced at the
expense of "good kids" like
their son who were being
punished for others who
habitually ignore the curfew
and have been causing
property damage around the
village .
"It doesn' t matter whose
kid it is or where they are,"
Mayor Eric Cunningham
said about the zero tolerance ·approach to cut down
on escalating incidents of
vandalism in the village.
Smith told the Brickles
and counci I the Brickles'
son was 'cooperative and
well behaved. Mrs. Brickles
suggested council might
consider using some of the
fine money taken in on cur·
few fees to give the kids
something to do, such as a
dance or activity at the pool ,
hdding there aren't 'many
positive activities for kids in
the village to take part in.
The pool has become a
favorite target for · vandals
after dark who have repeatedly broken into the facility
this summer, tossed rocks in
the pool and did damage to ·
the
restrooms .
The
restrooms have since been
padlocked and Cunningham
told council the fence needs
replaced to prevent not only
vandalism but an accidental
drowning . It appears. the
vandals are getting into the
pool through a week' spot in
the fencing.

.
Brian J. Reed/photos
Shandi Beaver and Bre Bonnett took best "kid-powered entry" honors in Middleport July 4 parade .·Middleport Community
Association President Brenda Phalin presented their trophy. Hope Baptist Church was awarded first place for its float
entry, and the Meigs Marching Band was judged the best marching unit.
.
·

Association begins plans
for '09 fireworks show
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@ MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

helby Johnson and her Pomefanian, Belle, received the trophy for
best four-legged entry in Middlepott's July 4 parade .
·

MIDDLEPORT - A last-mmute change tn Joe a·
tion made July 4 firewor~s difficult for some to
see, but the Middleport Community Association
has already begun plans to improve the fireworks
display for 2009.
According to Mayor Michael Gerlach , the U.S.
Coast Guard, which regulates the discharge of fire ·
works from the Ohio River, rc4uired the American
Electric Power towboat used to discharge the dis·
play to move downriver just before the sllow
began. Spectators in Dave Diles Park were mlvisetl
of the move , Gerlach said, but many were dis:tp·
pointed that the move ; combined with bad wcath·
er, affected visibility.
This is the first July 4 celebration to be llelu in
Dave Diles Park in three years. 2007 and 2006 eel •
ebrations centered around Gener;Jl Hartinger Park
and the football stadium. but those event' were
spoiled by rain.
.
Although rain threatened this year\ celehratinn ,
the crowd grew as afternoon became ,,veni ng. and
Association President Brenda Phalin s:~id it W:l&lt; a
successful day, despite some di,appuint mcnt " ith
the fireworks show.
·
"We have to adhere to the Coast Guard ·, rule, ...
Phalin said. "I think people do not :~!way' understand that we can'tjust park the boat in tl1c miudk
of the-river and set off fireworb . There i' a permit
process and rules that must be followed ."
Phalin said the association and village hal'e identified a government-owned riverfront lot wl1ere the
boat can be tied·up for next year's tircworks sl1ow.
Phalin said Hamburg Fireworks. the company
which puts on the show for the village. has indicated
a much bigger show can be had for around $7.000.
She said the association plans several more fu11drai s·
ing luncheons in Dave Diles Park thi&gt; summer to
begin raising money for next year\ show. The next
luncheon will be. served on July 25, and all pnlCL'C&lt;h
will be earmarked specifically for the tircworks
show.

�'

-~

The Daily Sentinel
~

NAT.

PageA2

N

T-uesday,~July

8, 2008

!I

'I

•

•
•

•
:
Thesday, July 8
• CHESTER - Chester
: Township Trustees will
! have a budget meetmg 7
: p m at the town hall

'

Thursday, Jul y 10
: RACINE
- Southern
: Local School. Boa1d, special
• meetmg to d1scuss employi mg perso nnel. 8 p.m . h1gh
t school media room.

'

·rm ve1V s,Jt"I Jcd v.ith the wo1k tiM! has gone on nn the
G-K dnLunienh, ._1~ 1eg.trJs progress on the 1~sue o1 ell mate
change. coopcr,HJOn 111 the area ol food and o1l." she sa1d.
She Ci ted ··.1 ve ry mterest mg exchange of view, very
mten"' e excho~ngc of "ew" Merkel also said she hoped
that Jntcrnall on,d tr,1dc negotiators cou ld make progress on
rcstarlln~ l on~-s!.tllcd llade hbem hLa!Jon !&lt;Lib "over the

•.
'

Thesday, July 15
RUTLAND - Rutland
~ Village Council. resc hed: uled -regu lar meeting. 7
: p.m., &lt;Jvic center.

nex t lew. . . weeks to come ··

Bush was more terse after the meetmg. not. menlloning
global wannmg but te ll1ng rcpo1tcJS "We talked &lt;Lbr&gt;ut a lot
of common pw blems . dlld ,, lot ol common opp011umtJes.
We talked o~bou t the G-R We talked ahout the need to work
- coni111Lie '" wud.. together on iran:·
He told Merk~l he \alued her lnendsh1p ,md advi&lt;e and
ca lled he1 ·-., tOJh!JUL!IVe fmce 1m good ..
The two met JUst he fore G-R members piLmged into a discussion .tbout the mator problems on the agenda: decJdmg
whethe1 to 'et new targets lor retluc111g enw~stons that contribute tn glob,il wannm g. and decid ing what to dn abmlt
nsmg load and oil pr1ces
After the mornmg work 1ng sess1on. the leaders began a
wo1 king lunch - but not bef01e f1 lm g outSJde to pose fo1 a
group p~eture
They stood on a platform on the lawn of the mountamSJde re"lll hotel. With pK!uresyue Lake Toya fa r below
them. It h&lt;Ld bt'en 1ain y and foggy s1nce the1r meeting
began. but the sun beg,m breakmg out as the p1cture was
tuken. Bush stood betwee n Ru ssmn President D1m1try
Medvedev an d Japanese Pri me Mm1ster Yasuo Fukuda
The summit p,utne~&gt; ,1ppe:ued close to a deal fo r usi ng
111tern ,l!JOnal food reserves to help the poorest countnes
cope w1th som mg gram pnces But di VISions remams on
clunate change that pitted o lder. more estabiJShed
econom1e' like those in th e Group of E1ght with fast nsing
econom1es lik~ Ch ma and lnum
Beyond the chmlltc-change standoff. Bush's proposal to
base a mi ssile defe nse system in Eastern Europe W.ls
rebuffed on Mond,Jy by RusSia's new president , Medvedev.
1\nd i'ttrsfl t:i'Jiea to achteve a consensus among African
leaders on san&lt;!Jons agm nst the government ot
Zimbabwe·' Robe11 M11gabe to pilltest his widely condemned re-e lect ion last month .tfter hJS opp(,,ition-pa~ty
rival dropped out. fearful lor h1s hfe .
.
"You know l co1 re deeply about the people of Zimbabwe."
Bu sh told repolleJS afte1 a Mond.ly meetmg with African
leaders "'ho we1e 1nvited to meet with summit partners
''I'm extreme ly d1s&lt;tppmnted m the elections , which I
labeled a sham ele&lt;tton ."
Separately. Merkel sa1d earli er that Mugabe 's elect ion
was not leg 1timate "As for us m Germany. we do not rul e
out fu rther sancllons." she smd, addmg that many other G8 na!Jons Ieel the same w,ay. _
But African nations are deeply divided, with many reluctant to put public pressure on M~_allbe Q.esptte U.N. and
·
·
Westem call s for tough act1on.
"There were d1tterences. Not all leaders are there yet m
terms of san&lt;tJons." satd Dan Pnce, a Wh1te I louse na!Jonal security aide .
The b1g 1ssue on Tuesday's agend a was climate change
Merkel IS one of the G-8's strongest advocates for tough
reductions 111 the emtssions that contnbute to global warming
She succeeded 111 wmn mg Bush's back mg last year, when
the summit was held m Germany, to a statement pledgmg
that the group would seriously consider a goal of halvmg
greenhouse-gas em1ssions by 2050 - while failing to persuade htm to commit to more spec1fic targets.
Now, as then. Bush is msist mg that maJor emcrgmg
economies like China and India be included in any plan to
cur emissions. But they have so far resisted. Adding to
Bush's isolation on the 1ssue , European Commtss1on
President Jose Manuel Barroso said G-8 natmns mu st reach
agreement among themselves and avoid takin g the
approach that "I w1 ll do nothing unless you do it first,"
wh1ch he called a "v1cious c1rcle ."
Still, Bush has come a long way since his first G-8 summit when he held that evidence was not conclusive that
man 's act1v1ty contnbuted to the warming of the Earth's climate.
The G-8 - the U.S .. Japan , Russia, Britain, Germany,
France. Italy and Canada- takes up the subject in earnest
on Tuesday. On Wednesday. the leaders of these countries
will be JOmed by eight other big-polluting "major economy" nat1ons that are not members, mcludmg Chma anct
Indm , to see 1f a w1der agreement 1s possible.
G-8 leaders are mindfu l that Bush's days m office are
numbered - and it' seems likely they will await BJ.lsh's
successor rather than push tor a strong commitment now.
Meanwhile .. Metkel offered Germany's support for an
Amencan lllJtlatJve for a fund that would "promote climate-fnendly technology until a follow-up treaty to the
Kyoto P10tocol v.ould take effect." That pact, which neither the U.S. nor lndJa nor Ch ina has ratif1ed, expires in
20 12.
Furthermore , "eve n a new American ad mmistration" is
goi ng to insJst that any climate agreement entail the principle that emerging economics must contnbute to stemming
global w.1rmmg. Merkel sa 1d m an mterv1ew last week with
The Associated Press
Meanwh1le , Bush met wuh Medvedev on Monday. The
new Russmn president s1gnaled he was no more supportive
of Bush 's plan to base parts of a missile defense system in
eastern Europe than was h1s mentor, former president and now pnme mm1 ster - Vlad1mir Puun.
While agree1ng WJ!h Bush oi1 curtailmg nuclear weapon
capabi li ties of Iran and North Korea, Medvedev said there
were other 1ssues "w1th respect to European affatrs and
missile defense where we have differences."
After the talks. a K1emlin aide said Bush and Medvedev
made no progress on missile defense.
Serge1 Pnkhoclko said Russ1a is not yet satisfied with
steps the United States has offered to take to ,ease
Moscow's concerns th e system would be aimed at weakening Russm's defenses. Medvedev also expressed serious concern about medtu rcporLs that tlie U.S. has discussed the posSibility of deploying interceptors 111
Lithuania. if its first choice of basmg them in Poland
doesn't work out.
.
Poland's foreign min"ter was in the Umted States for
talks with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice about
Warsaw's latest rehuffs to basmg American m1sstle interceptors 111 Pol and for a future m1ssile &gt;hield agmn~l Iran.
"ThiS 1s ab&gt;olutely unacceptable for the Russian
Federation." Pnkhodko said of the L1thuan~an plan . He said
Medvedcv also spoke to Bush about "the unacceptabtlity"
of form r Sm iet republics Georg1a and Ukra me JOming
NATO , a move pushed by the United States.

Public meetings

•

TOYAKO. Japan (A PJ - Pre ~Jdent Bush and German
ChmKelloJ An~d.t Merkel pledged Tuesday to keep workmg togethe1 on common p1oblems. but prog1ess appea red
slow on re.1ch mg a conSensus on climate change as the
Group ot E1ght m.IJOI' econom ics t~.1ck led that and other
knollv ~lob,d ISsues
'
Me'rkel cxpres-ed opt1mi'm as the two leaders met wit h
reporters after a one-on-one meetmg before Tuesday's
summit ~c:-.~1011.

""'

:.Community Calendar

Bush and German leader
meet on G-8 challenges

Clubs and
organizations

•

•

AP photo

'

Th1s September 2007 photo prov1ded by the Maddox family shows McCall Maddox (6) playmg football 111 Jacksboro,
Texas . ln]unes once seen mostly m adu lt athletes are now becommg dtstressingly common 1n children and not just highschool athletes, but elementary school kilds . Worse, some Jn]unes to little l1mbs don't have good treatments. The surgery
that f1 xed T1ger Woods' torn ACL , for 1nstance, can stall the growth of a young child's leg.

, ACts, other

BY LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP MEDICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON - A 14yeaJ-o ld gym nds t v.Jth a
&gt;tress l r,l&lt;t ur~ 111 he1 lower
back. A 12-yeaJ -old v.hu
tore IllS ACL 1n a soccc1
game. A 16-year-olcl runner
·W ith d icc S(JC" IJ .l&lt;:IUIC. i\
15-yem-old who to1 e hi '
meniS CUs play1ng b,tskc tball
A sJnglc . mornJTH( s
' o,llients fnt H:w..ml'• i),
Mininder Kocher prov1des a
wmdow mtn a u oub lm g
!Jend lnJu nes orKe seen'
mostl y .m adult ath letes are
becon11n g
diStress mgly
w mmon 111 yo uth athletes
- not JUSt 111 h1gh school
hut in L11t le L ed~uc and Pee
Wee Football. "
These
;ucn't
Si mpl e
mjuries. In the past decade.
"Tommy John" surgenes 10
repatr elbows bl own out
playing baseball - an operation named fm a famous
baseball pitcher - have
almost tti pled among - adolescents at a ht gh-proflle
Alabamn clime. a meetmg
of sports med icine speqaiJSts w!ll be told by
researchers tl11s week.
Worse, so me lnJLIIJ es
don't have good treatments
for young patient s. The
surg ery th at fixed the tmn
ACL in Tige1 Woods' knee ,
tor instance, can thwart the
growth of a youn g child ·s
leg
Kocher, an orthoped ic
surgeon
at Children's
Hosp1tal Boston. IS about to
begin a govern ment-funded
study to figure out the best
treatment fo r children who
tear that antenor crucwte
ligament while grow th
plate s around the knee still
are act1ve.

-~ hi

But no m&lt;~tl e r how well
ce1 ta1n InJuries heal for
no". Kocher worries about
the lungtcrm w nsequences
1'01 itl!ie JII IO( S
"I wonde1 what these kids
me gomg to be II ke 20 to 30
yc&lt;Lrs dov. n th e road.'' he
Sd}S "W il l we ha ve a whole
ge ner,J!Jtlll of middle-aged
adult' w1th edrly an~nllsT'
Wll\ the suduen mf1ux 0
01 th opedtc su rgeons say that
today\ youth sports are

meeting of the Amencan
Orthopaedic Society for
Sports Med1cme .
by
such
Prompted
research, Little League
Baseball last year hm1ted
how many pitches youngsters of d1fferent ages can
throw before mandatory rest
periods .
• Then there's the notonously painful to1n ACL not an overuse inJury but
one that can happen to anyone wno lands wrong wh1le
pivoting on a knee.
It was long thought a runty in childhood. But among
males. one in five tom ACLs
occurs before age I 8: the
figure IS 30 percent among
fema les , Kocher says
In 2006, McCall Maddox
of Jacksboro , Texas, tore h1s
ACL durmg Pee Wee
Football at age 12 Three
doctors refused to do
surgery until he was 16 and
had qu!l growmg, ordering
no running until then . Join
the swim team , one adv ised .
Why? Standard ACL
repair mvolves drilling
through \he leg's growth
plates, n sking a stuntmg of
any still -to-come growth.
McCall was devastated .
He was a good athlete and
in his small town, "we don 't
have a swim team. We don 't
have a chess club. We don'!
have any other options,"
says McCall 's mother,
Roxanna Maddox
She sought out Kocher m
Boston, who repairs children's ACLs in a different
way: Wmdmg the new ligament around the shinbone
mstead of dnlling . Kocher
reports patients doing well
five to etght years later but
acknowledges a big question : "W1II It hold up 20 , 30
years down the lme" like

fl'm,, m&lt;e=.~lrptay-ets

often p1ckmg JUS! one to speciali ze in as yo un g as 8. And
they can play and tram in
some splllls vi1tually yearround - w1t h a school team,
recre.Jtion . leag ue, travel
blguc, sum mer camp.
"Youth ath letes are not
the same as small adults ,"
says Dr. E. Lyle Cam Jr. of
th e
Andrews
Sports
Medicine &amp; Orthopaedic
Center in Birmm gham, Ala .
Certa m types of injunes
"«lll &lt;ause permanent damage that affect the1r future
growth ."

More th an 3.5 million
children 14 and under
rece1ve medical treatment
f01 sports-1elated injuries
each year ·Along with the
typ1cal sprams and strains
are a lot of overuse injunes
- stress fractures, tendo1111Js. cartilage damage.
P1tch ing offers a prime
example. The Andrews clinIC counts a hve- to s1x-fold
JJJCJease 1n senous shoulder
and elbow- injunes m youth
baseball and softball smce
2000
The worst is a torn ulnar
collateral ligament on the
instde of the elbow. By
2006. near ly a third of
Tommy John surgeries to
repatr 1t were on patients
undet 18. Cain will tell a

the adult surgery does?
McCall took a chance
with the operatiOn and, after
SIX months of sometimes
grueling physical therapy,
he was back playmg football and basketball and runnmg track m seventh grade.
"Was his mother nervous?
Absolotely," Maddox says
with a laugh. But McCall
had "no trouble, none .... It
was a risk worth taking."
But such s11cces.s. stories
don't make scientific proof.
So Koch er ts joining Dr.
Allen
Anderson
of
Nashville - whose own
ACL
repair
pediatri c
involves dnllin g near but
not through growth plates
- and about 10 hosp itals
around the country to compare the d1fferent surgeries
or waitmg to operate, to find
the best approach.
Until then , Kocher has
some easy adv1ce: Try oldfashioned play, like jumping
rope. playmg hopscotch,
chmbmg trees. High school
teams now are tramed 'to
avoid ACL tears with corebody conditioning and ups
on bendmg knees for jumpmg - things younger k1ds
can learn on their own just
by havmg fun .
"A lot of the stuff kids
used to do 111 free play was
ACL prevention," he says.
" Now they don't get th;tt,
and they JUmp into highleve l soccer."

On the Net
A1lrerican Academy oj
Ortlwpaedrc
Surgeons:
http://orthomfo .aaos .org!m
enuslchi/dren .cfm
Little League pitching
mfo:
http://w ww.littleleague.org

m:be ~alhpoh~ l)atlp m:rtbune,
m:be ~oint ~lea~ant ~egt~ter
and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called '~Faith and Family".
If yon have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:
kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
500-7 50 words.
Please include a phone number
in your email.

.

Tuesday, July 8
- Me1gs
POMEROY
. County , Cham ber
of
Commerce. bu siness- minded
luncheo n,
noon.
_Pomeroy Library, featured
s peaker Phyllt s Bohnmg .
Sehou l
of
'Vomov tch
Leadersh ip and Pub Iic
Affa1rs at Ohio Umve r'lty.
Entrepreneunal S1gna ture
: Program . M1ke Bartrum on
Meigs Local En nchment
Foundation, Bob E'ans ol
M ason, W.Va cate11ng. ca ll
992-5005 to RSVP. '

l'
I

... .. .
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211:-;,:

Wife demonstrates issues with intimacy
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Church events

Reunions

Birthdays

Tuesday, July 1:1,

ANNLE'S MA!Ll3UX

therapy because she fears
getting cancer. I have gone
to counselmg several tunes
Dear Annie: I've been because I am so depressed
RACINE
- R&lt;1cme
Southe1n FFA meetmg. 6 married to &lt;1 great woman over the lack or mtimacv.
I know she loves me and is
p.m . \-Owag room. members fo r over 16 ye:1rs We were
a
great w1fe in every other
asked to attend to update both 1n our 40s when we
way
I' ve tried to hve w1th
mformat1on.
met, We d1dn ·r have sex
before
the
wcddmg. the situation and count my
alt hough &gt;he told me she ble"1ngs. but I am begmnmg
Iikes it
very
much to be resentful and I snap at
Friday .. July 11
Howe,er. I R months after her. How do I overcome th1s?
LONG BOTTOM
j·we marned, our sex l1 te - Need to Feel Loved
Dear Need: We are always
Gospel sing with Dave and I 11 en I downhtll
amazed at otherwise-lovmg
Debbie Dailey, 7 p m.. Fa1th
A year ago, I told her I was people who ignore or deny
Full Go&gt;pel Church
leavmg. She then agreed to thei1 spouse's need for intimahave sex, but only unde1eel cy There are ways to have a
tam terms· not at our home sat1sfymg sex ual relauonsh1p
Saturday, Jul y 12
RUTLAND
Chuck as long as her son '' li ving th at don 't reyu1 re honnones
Compton Will be 111 gospel w1th us the_1s 35 years old). Your wife's inability to show
conce11 at the Rutland Freewi II and 11 Will happen •whcn she passion or be undressed
Bapttst Church. 7 p.m. Pastor "gets the feeling ." Now the around vou mdJ&lt;ates she mav
only place we can have sex have scime umesolved issues
Eq Bamey mvites pubk
is at a cabin we own We go about sex. Insist that she see
the re every weekend. but she her doctor for a complete
"gets the tee lmg" less than checkup (not for honnones.
once a month. She kiSses but ·to be sure 11othmg else JS
Saturday, .July 12
RACINE - Reumon of like a 2-year-old - pursed wrong) and then come With
Charle, and Fanmc Be.~&gt;c r l1ps only - and there JS no you for counseling so yo_u can
family wnh lllcnch at noon. passiOn from her whatsoev- work on this together.
Dear Annie: Because of
Star Mill P,u k Fnends dnd er I haven 't seen her naked
m
mer
I
5
yems,
although
budget
cuts, I lost a wonrela!J'es mvited B11ng emshe
has
a
cute
ligure
,md
IS
erect dJSh
"
derful JOb as a secreta! y. So
very pretty
a friend hired me. I thought
I
have
asked
my
w1le
to
I wo uld JUS! hang at th iS job
Sunday, Jul) 13
see
he1
doctor,
but
she
says
until somethm g else came
RACINE -,- 17th anmt.tl
The1ss reun1on . Star M1ll the1c·, no JC,hOn She 1efus- ' along. but 1t\ been almost
Park, Racme Potluck at I es to co nSJder hormone four years at minimum pay
p m and p1g in a poke o.wction Ram or shme

HARRISONVILL E
H arrisonv ille 255. Order of
' the Eastern SDtar, will meet
at 7:30p.m. Jul y 8 at the hall

dnd I feel stuck
I have an assocwte 's
degree 1n compu!eJs. I' ve
had a few mterv1ews. but
nobody can offer me enough
hours 01 pay to 'IJ'tain my
lifesty le My husband makes
about $ 1.000 a week &lt;Lnd I
barely make $200. He &lt;On stantly reminds me of my
low waees and how r m not
pulling my weight
How du I keep my sp1rits
up' Relocattng 1s out of the
question - Down and Out
in Michigan
Dear Down and Out: At
$200 a week, we' re not sure
what ilfesryle you o11e sustaming. You arc alre,ldy
work1 ng for min 1mum
w,1ge. so look lor a JOb that
offeJS an oppm tun it y to
move up th e ladder, some
thmg your current posliJOn
clocsn ' t allo\v. You also
should cons 1der see mg a fOb
cou nse lor and poss1b ly
gomg bdck to sc hoo l 1n
order to become yuulil1ed
fo1 employme nt that pays
better It serves no purpose
to wan until so meone o fl eJS
you exactl y wh,ll you want
Take whatever g1ves you
the chance to 1mprove your

ddcj {()

)'OUI

Je~p011 " l'

!l

"K T ... who Jsked ,thout !Itt
etiquette ol us1ng lh111d1
capped st,JI Is. Some pcoplt
who a1c hand1 cappcd "'' ""
nece.sanly appear to h&lt;' "'
I have an tlcostomv (SJil ll
tar to a l'Oiostomy) \Vhell tht
bag fi lis up so met 1!llt'~ u'1 !l' \
pected ly. tt IS ncce;s,u' t
get 1t emptied Jm rnedkLk· l' ( l
JJSk a b,ld leak I don ' t 1,~,
tymg up the handJc ap pcc
stalls 11 the1e me others'" .11 1
ab le. but sometimes I It ""
no cho1ce Please let }ou1
redders know th at not ,JI
lldndtcaps arc VISible
Concerned Citizen
De&lt;,l r Concerned: Ou .
th,mks to vou and the othc1 ,
who wrote. regarumg mvJSJblt
dJSabJIJtJes. We hope rc,,deJ'
will keep yo ur letter 111 mtmJ.

Annie's Mailbox is written
by Kathy Mitchell and Mwc_1
Sugar, longtime editor&lt; oi
tire ,11111 Landers column.
Plea.\e e-mail your quesliom
to
annie~mailbox@com
cast.net, nr write to: Annie',\
Mailbox, P.O. Box 1/8190
Chicllgo, IL 60611. To jim.'
out more about A1mie ·,.
Mailbox, and read .feature.&lt;
,by other Creators Syndical&lt;
writer\ ond cartoordsts. vi.&lt;it'
situation . t'~ie ll 1f it\ Ill till)
tire Creaton Syndicate Wei ·
step; tnstead of gw nt leaps
Dear Annie: I'd l1ke to page at www.creators.com.

Wahama alumni gather for annual banquet

MASON . W.Va. - On G!lnste.Jd: Class 1941 . RotJbeJt E. Roush. to Ann M:uy i\11is. Class of 1'16f&gt;
May 24. the G .. .iltnJ Clyde Roush, Class Emol eton, Jim Prolfm
N.mcy Profitt. Bonme Bla ' '
Saturday, July 12
Wahama
Hi
gh
School
alumof
1942
Don
s
Gnnstead
Carol
Roush
Prollll.
Carol
Cra
bt ree. Class of 1967
MIDDLEPORT
Roush ,
Davu.l Wtllwm Arthur. W.md.
Thusday,J uly 10
Coleen Dunfee wdl obse1ve 111 gathered to ce lebrate the Yonker. Roy Roush; Coos Ewwg
1eumon
ye..rs
end
mg
in
the
of
1943.
James
Ben
Sayre.
Rou
sh.
Jack
Wmcb1enner.
H&lt;111 ah Stdffo rd . Jennlf,·,
. CHESTER
Shade her 81stbiJthdayo n.lu ly 12
number
e1ght
Celebratin
g
Annabelle
Gnmm
Hudnall.
Adalee
Boston
Lvnch
,
Ze1klc
Hart: Class of I%S
. River Lodge 45 3, 7 30 p m Cards may be sent 10 her at
Class of 1956 Belly Jones Clllistme Ha!fdh. Son' ,
.. at the hall. Scholarships to 97'1 Hyse ll St .. M1ddlepon. were the classe s ol 1 92~ - Gale Berry:
of
1944:
Lawrence
R&lt;l\&gt;lmg,, Tom Van,ce . Ynn kc1 Roush . G,1rv GJet~ n
2008
Class
Ohw 45760 .
be awarded. Refreshments.
This yem 's banquet was at Fo1eman, Mazy Young Dons Donohue Mart1n. K.ncn Staats Hmde't. Ul&lt;•ll :
the Wahama Jun1or Semor Sh1tlet: Class ol' 1946: Pete Eleanor Cuntillt .BI,llock. G1hhs Compston. PIJJIIq ·
H1gh School gym. The elm- Burns. Betty Roush Burns. Delores Peggy Kmg. Julm Bu'~''"
Je11" Mn1~ ""
ner
was
prepared
by
the
Lo1s
Ha1t
Bumgmdner.
Willoughby,
Jack
Paugh
.
K.tthv
Roush
R1d-., ,d
City/Region
M,1
son
C
hapter
of
the
Betty
Grinstead
R1ce.
Orpha
Sue
"Patty"
Allensworth
:
D~111i1s
Tul
loh.
Ol.tll.
H 1gh I Low temps
Forecast lor Tuesday, July 8
Eastern St,lr. Greetmg and Weaver F1elds. Charles
Class of 1957 F1ances lellel'' H,lJJY VanMetc1
rcgJStc11ng fe llow alumni Yeager. Class of 1947 Johnson
Slllkey. Gene K.uh y Ingles F.111'.AI,m1 Lnt.
MICH
we1e Pat Noel and My' '' Donald L. Hall , Robert Stukey, Everett Foremdn. V1ck 1e Weaver Kreb'. DI\IL
Hatfield The invocat1on was Barton. Sarah Kell y Gibbs. Gene Jewell. R,liph 1\JtJS. Sh1111tpli n Folden.
Toledo•
gJ'c n by Pat Noel. Class of Dorothy Perry Sayre. Emd Vi1guHa D;ust. Ge1ald
Class of 1970· Ste!Lt K11tc
88' I 68'
1955 Welcommg t))e guests Lavne
Adams,
WilliS "Jerry" Arnold. Peggy Moru,m. Shcli,\ \Jc\ Ill Youngstown •
was Pres ident lim Stewart. Du-ddin g. Class of 1948: Blessmg Rogers: Cla~s of Rou ~b. Class ol' l'l7 l
85' I 63'
The guest speaker was James Spmuse, Barbara 1958: Sharon Berry hoffman . Bcrmta St a:ns Allen. VHelll &lt;
PA
Mansfield •
William ''Bill" Duel , band . L1ev mg Zerkle. Avalec Lmda Bnnke1 Me,ldO"-s . Sl1 11mplm. Class ol' l'l72
88°1 67° ~
dJrectOJ from 1948- 195.1.
McGrew Hanshaw. Evalee ·Agnes Young Roush fohn D,mn) M.m Class ul' 1')7,1
Dmner ente rt,tinment fm Fry Wolfe. Verla Rou sh Layne,
Edna
Crump Pamcl&lt;~ Eli"'· Class iol I'J77
the evenin g was the IMber- HaJTah. Att,lrah R oL~&gt;h s~mbcnv.
Euwm
E Jenlllrer Wc.tVCI Ciindlll
shop
qu:utet.
Ri
vers
Blend.
Dewhurst.
D~li.e
Sayre.
R&lt;tybUJn'.
GeJ
!rude
Sm1t
h T1m Davis. Class nl' 197N
*Columbus
Dayton •
With lead SII1CCI Gerald Dann y Yonke!, Kath leen Bewer. Amy Th011011. James Tim R,l\1'1111gs. S:n,Jil zu,p,ll
88' I 67'
~·t ee· I / 1 1
Kelly. ,, 1950 'fpadu.Jte of Gnnstead Roush, Lawrence Johnson
Ill ,
Ma11lyn S to;~J. K,uen Stodold Lc 1cli
Wah
,tma
Other
members
of
(Mack)
Stewart;
C
lass
of
Foglesong
Johnson.
ConlliC BLIIIun D.tvis n :t''
l
tl1e gro up are Gerald Powell 1949: Rosanna Frv Manley, Marshall
McMillion . of 1980 .l cftJ cy A1nol d
I Cincinnati
ol Pume10y. Ohi o, M1k~ Georgi a Howa1d Mllh m n:
Dorothy Shu ley Blessmg . An)!Cid PJOfiJII Stank'
• 90° 167°
'" " .
Edc 1JI1.Jnn of Gallipolis .
Class of 1950: Bill1e June Jeny Zcrkk. Shu ley Lyon' Class of 1982 Sh.l\\lt L1
Oh1n.
and
Vi
nton
Rankin
of
Cartwnglll
Hayes. Aleta Roush, Ann CIHsle1 G,nf1eld. Paugh.
,,
•
RIO UratH.lc . Oh1o. Following Snyde1 Wea,er, Charlotte James M.1Ckl11 gh t. Dav1d
CJass of I983 T:~n 11.t .I
~
88•fe;r,•
WVA.
I
the h,myuet , mus1c for dane- Cook Yonker, Joanna Van an Richard son. Ramona G1bbs Pau :; l1. Dnn,tltl V,m~ kl c
mg wds prov1ded by Bernu,t Counctl. Arlene
Sayre Kmgh t. Gwy 0 Roush. J1 .
LJSa
Bum gdrdJil ,
KY
02008
and Juddy Allen.
Gnmm. Gernld Kelly: Class Hamett Ingles Laudcnmlt :
P1ckc lln~. Class of l'JX~
ScholarshipS were award- of 1952. Loretta L1evmg
Class of 1959 Dons Sunc K~n ~ Ft.JJtLJS. CJa,•
~ Cloucty ~ Thunder·~ flumes ~
Ice
ed by Pat Noel !o Heather Roush. Edward Spencer. Elliott
Coffee . Phyll" of 191\5 P:unei,J Van ,Vk! t'l
Partly ~ 1 1 1' ' ~ ~ ~ • ••• • ~
N1cole
Stanley.
who
rece1ved
Walter
Amold
Roush,
Shidey
ZJC
kafonse
Arthur.· En a Class of 1986 : Su;ctt&lt;
Cloudy
ShQwer~ ~
Aa lr;~
•
* Snow : : : ~G:
a 'd10larsh ip 111 hon01 of the G11mm
Karr, MarJOI'Ie Roush Richardson. Na n&lt;) Pdugh HIC ks. 'Class n:·
Weather Underground • AP
Oldest L1 vmg Alumni 111 the Howard Stickland. James E. Fletcher Ohhnge1 . Class of 1987 L"a Flowers: Cl:1s•
,Jmount of $5 .000. The fol- Barton , Eugene Weave1, 1960
Carolyn
Dot son of 1988: Melan 1c F1 cld •
Larry
Hill. AlveJSon . S.trah Sh,unhlu
lowmg graduates JeCeJved Dear Kn ig ht:"Class or 1953: MacEwan.
schol.trships 1n the amount of Glen Harrah , Doris Llllon W1lmmme Clmk Hill. Myra ln nbode n: Class of 1991\
1\Jesday...Partly sunny 6() peil:CIII
$500: Justm Ke1th Arnol d. Harrah. Ben Roush, Paul F Foreman H.tlll1ill . M.1nly n Brandy EndJ&lt;otl HI!'!!"''
- with scattered showers and
Wednesday night...P.ll'tly g1ven by the CI,Jss of 1957 Roush. Susan nah Roush. Schwarz. Strother. Kenneth Amv V&lt;~nMcteJ . Cia" n l'
: ;thunderstonns Highs m the cloudy with a chance of · Memori al Scholarship Fund . Lew is, Leora Young Krebs, Dodson. Class of 1961
20011. letfrey Paugh
; upper 80s. Chance of ram 40 showers and thunderstorms Haley N1cole Dav1s. Class of Betty Hoschar Davidson. Susan Zaspan Wmeh1cnner.,... Class of 20\11 John Rt&gt;lll'J
' percent.
Dee
Anderson \1t)J g,ut. Class of 2UUJ
I'IS7 Memorial Scholarship Wdfmd Scarberry, Elai ne Peggy
Lows 111 the mid 60s
· · Thesday night ... Mostly Chance of ram 40 percent
fund.
Mega n
Nicole Sayre
Elliott ,
Donna Bumgardnc1, Jud y F1 y Dallc'Jt Kc1th Jackson. Cia''
cloudy w1th a charce of showThursd-dy
through Dangerfield , anonymous Bumgarner DotsoA , J11ck Re1be1, J&lt;~ckJe Capehmt of 2\Hl!l· Justm Keith Allh&gt;ld
ers and thunderstorms Lows
cloudy. alumna from the Class of Sc1tes. Elizabeth Click Kmg, S1sson. Emma Jane Weaver Hale y NICole Dav1s. Me~ · "
m the lower 10s. Chance of Friday ... Partly
1953:
Class of 1954 Mary Paugh . Irma Gunstcad N 1 ~ole Dangettield. Chc-k,
Hi'ghs m the mid 80s. Low'
: rain 50 percent.
Fowler,
Ruth Dodson. Donald VanMeleJ. N1cole Htcks. T1ffanv k ,11
Courtney Miche le Long. Stewart
:' Wednesday ... Mo st ly in th e lower 60s
Wahama
Alu mni L1evmg
Roush.
John Ann Howard Va nMeter. Paugh. Kasey Jo VmiM,·tc·J
Friday · night ... Pm tly Scho larship ;
cloudy ·With showers and
M1kayla R1chard "Pete" Roush. Jim Darlene Stuke y Knopp. A'hlcy
Nicole
Wulk
thundersto1111s likely. H1ghs in cloudy. Lows 111 the uppe1 Danie!le Shamblin . Wahama Stewart , Martha Henry Sheldon Roush. Glen Rou,h. CoUJtney M1chele L on~
the lower 80s . Chance of rain 60s.
Alumm Scholarshtp: Jolisha Coleman. Charles Blessmg.
Class of 1962· Okey Ml):&lt;~yla Damelle Shambhl1
Suzanne
Cund1ff. Alice Howard Leach: Class Capehart. Tom Knopp. Jol ish,, Suzanne Cundill
Anonymous
Alumnus of 1955 . Patricia Roush Ralph Roush: Class of 1963. s,,vannah Raeann \1,11 1
Eleanor
Sue Ba1 bara Mulford Rou,h. Hem her Nicole Stanley. Cod)
Scholarship and a scholarshi p Noel,
Market watch
. g1ven by Eleanor Cundif f Cartw ngh t · Hall . Peggy Beverly Staats: Class of Lee Bums. Brent Mllil,Jc'
Jury 7 2008
, AEP (NYSE) - 39.74
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Marv
Foste1 Jones. Kc1th Edwmd Pe.ti"Hl
Blalock. RN. Cl,,ss of 1965; McDaniel
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:· p.m. ET closing quotas of trans·
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Volunteer now for a truly worthy c.ause.

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TUPPERS PLAINS VFW '1053 wtll ;neet at 7
p m. A dmllCI will be held .tl
6 30 p m

,

Page l '

HE BEN. .,_,.

:The Daily Sentinel

-

'

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�'

-~

The Daily Sentinel
~

NAT.

PageA2

N

T-uesday,~July

8, 2008

!I

'I

•

•
•

•
:
Thesday, July 8
• CHESTER - Chester
: Township Trustees will
! have a budget meetmg 7
: p m at the town hall

'

Thursday, Jul y 10
: RACINE
- Southern
: Local School. Boa1d, special
• meetmg to d1scuss employi mg perso nnel. 8 p.m . h1gh
t school media room.

'

·rm ve1V s,Jt"I Jcd v.ith the wo1k tiM! has gone on nn the
G-K dnLunienh, ._1~ 1eg.trJs progress on the 1~sue o1 ell mate
change. coopcr,HJOn 111 the area ol food and o1l." she sa1d.
She Ci ted ··.1 ve ry mterest mg exchange of view, very
mten"' e excho~ngc of "ew" Merkel also said she hoped
that Jntcrnall on,d tr,1dc negotiators cou ld make progress on
rcstarlln~ l on~-s!.tllcd llade hbem hLa!Jon !&lt;Lib "over the

•.
'

Thesday, July 15
RUTLAND - Rutland
~ Village Council. resc hed: uled -regu lar meeting. 7
: p.m., &lt;Jvic center.

nex t lew. . . weeks to come ··

Bush was more terse after the meetmg. not. menlloning
global wannmg but te ll1ng rcpo1tcJS "We talked &lt;Lbr&gt;ut a lot
of common pw blems . dlld ,, lot ol common opp011umtJes.
We talked o~bou t the G-R We talked ahout the need to work
- coni111Lie '" wud.. together on iran:·
He told Merk~l he \alued her lnendsh1p ,md advi&lt;e and
ca lled he1 ·-., tOJh!JUL!IVe fmce 1m good ..
The two met JUst he fore G-R members piLmged into a discussion .tbout the mator problems on the agenda: decJdmg
whethe1 to 'et new targets lor retluc111g enw~stons that contribute tn glob,il wannm g. and decid ing what to dn abmlt
nsmg load and oil pr1ces
After the mornmg work 1ng sess1on. the leaders began a
wo1 king lunch - but not bef01e f1 lm g outSJde to pose fo1 a
group p~eture
They stood on a platform on the lawn of the mountamSJde re"lll hotel. With pK!uresyue Lake Toya fa r below
them. It h&lt;Ld bt'en 1ain y and foggy s1nce the1r meeting
began. but the sun beg,m breakmg out as the p1cture was
tuken. Bush stood betwee n Ru ssmn President D1m1try
Medvedev an d Japanese Pri me Mm1ster Yasuo Fukuda
The summit p,utne~&gt; ,1ppe:ued close to a deal fo r usi ng
111tern ,l!JOnal food reserves to help the poorest countnes
cope w1th som mg gram pnces But di VISions remams on
clunate change that pitted o lder. more estabiJShed
econom1e' like those in th e Group of E1ght with fast nsing
econom1es lik~ Ch ma and lnum
Beyond the chmlltc-change standoff. Bush's proposal to
base a mi ssile defe nse system in Eastern Europe W.ls
rebuffed on Mond,Jy by RusSia's new president , Medvedev.
1\nd i'ttrsfl t:i'Jiea to achteve a consensus among African
leaders on san&lt;!Jons agm nst the government ot
Zimbabwe·' Robe11 M11gabe to pilltest his widely condemned re-e lect ion last month .tfter hJS opp(,,ition-pa~ty
rival dropped out. fearful lor h1s hfe .
.
"You know l co1 re deeply about the people of Zimbabwe."
Bu sh told repolleJS afte1 a Mond.ly meetmg with African
leaders "'ho we1e 1nvited to meet with summit partners
''I'm extreme ly d1s&lt;tppmnted m the elections , which I
labeled a sham ele&lt;tton ."
Separately. Merkel sa1d earli er that Mugabe 's elect ion
was not leg 1timate "As for us m Germany. we do not rul e
out fu rther sancllons." she smd, addmg that many other G8 na!Jons Ieel the same w,ay. _
But African nations are deeply divided, with many reluctant to put public pressure on M~_allbe Q.esptte U.N. and
·
·
Westem call s for tough act1on.
"There were d1tterences. Not all leaders are there yet m
terms of san&lt;tJons." satd Dan Pnce, a Wh1te I louse na!Jonal security aide .
The b1g 1ssue on Tuesday's agend a was climate change
Merkel IS one of the G-8's strongest advocates for tough
reductions 111 the emtssions that contnbute to global warming
She succeeded 111 wmn mg Bush's back mg last year, when
the summit was held m Germany, to a statement pledgmg
that the group would seriously consider a goal of halvmg
greenhouse-gas em1ssions by 2050 - while failing to persuade htm to commit to more spec1fic targets.
Now, as then. Bush is msist mg that maJor emcrgmg
economies like China and India be included in any plan to
cur emissions. But they have so far resisted. Adding to
Bush's isolation on the 1ssue , European Commtss1on
President Jose Manuel Barroso said G-8 natmns mu st reach
agreement among themselves and avoid takin g the
approach that "I w1 ll do nothing unless you do it first,"
wh1ch he called a "v1cious c1rcle ."
Still, Bush has come a long way since his first G-8 summit when he held that evidence was not conclusive that
man 's act1v1ty contnbuted to the warming of the Earth's climate.
The G-8 - the U.S .. Japan , Russia, Britain, Germany,
France. Italy and Canada- takes up the subject in earnest
on Tuesday. On Wednesday. the leaders of these countries
will be JOmed by eight other big-polluting "major economy" nat1ons that are not members, mcludmg Chma anct
Indm , to see 1f a w1der agreement 1s possible.
G-8 leaders are mindfu l that Bush's days m office are
numbered - and it' seems likely they will await BJ.lsh's
successor rather than push tor a strong commitment now.
Meanwhile .. Metkel offered Germany's support for an
Amencan lllJtlatJve for a fund that would "promote climate-fnendly technology until a follow-up treaty to the
Kyoto P10tocol v.ould take effect." That pact, which neither the U.S. nor lndJa nor Ch ina has ratif1ed, expires in
20 12.
Furthermore , "eve n a new American ad mmistration" is
goi ng to insJst that any climate agreement entail the principle that emerging economics must contnbute to stemming
global w.1rmmg. Merkel sa 1d m an mterv1ew last week with
The Associated Press
Meanwh1le , Bush met wuh Medvedev on Monday. The
new Russmn president s1gnaled he was no more supportive
of Bush 's plan to base parts of a missile defense system in
eastern Europe than was h1s mentor, former president and now pnme mm1 ster - Vlad1mir Puun.
While agree1ng WJ!h Bush oi1 curtailmg nuclear weapon
capabi li ties of Iran and North Korea, Medvedev said there
were other 1ssues "w1th respect to European affatrs and
missile defense where we have differences."
After the talks. a K1emlin aide said Bush and Medvedev
made no progress on missile defense.
Serge1 Pnkhoclko said Russ1a is not yet satisfied with
steps the United States has offered to take to ,ease
Moscow's concerns th e system would be aimed at weakening Russm's defenses. Medvedev also expressed serious concern about medtu rcporLs that tlie U.S. has discussed the posSibility of deploying interceptors 111
Lithuania. if its first choice of basmg them in Poland
doesn't work out.
.
Poland's foreign min"ter was in the Umted States for
talks with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice about
Warsaw's latest rehuffs to basmg American m1sstle interceptors 111 Pol and for a future m1ssile &gt;hield agmn~l Iran.
"ThiS 1s ab&gt;olutely unacceptable for the Russian
Federation." Pnkhodko said of the L1thuan~an plan . He said
Medvedcv also spoke to Bush about "the unacceptabtlity"
of form r Sm iet republics Georg1a and Ukra me JOming
NATO , a move pushed by the United States.

Public meetings

•

TOYAKO. Japan (A PJ - Pre ~Jdent Bush and German
ChmKelloJ An~d.t Merkel pledged Tuesday to keep workmg togethe1 on common p1oblems. but prog1ess appea red
slow on re.1ch mg a conSensus on climate change as the
Group ot E1ght m.IJOI' econom ics t~.1ck led that and other
knollv ~lob,d ISsues
'
Me'rkel cxpres-ed opt1mi'm as the two leaders met wit h
reporters after a one-on-one meetmg before Tuesday's
summit ~c:-.~1011.

""'

:.Community Calendar

Bush and German leader
meet on G-8 challenges

Clubs and
organizations

•

•

AP photo

'

Th1s September 2007 photo prov1ded by the Maddox family shows McCall Maddox (6) playmg football 111 Jacksboro,
Texas . ln]unes once seen mostly m adu lt athletes are now becommg dtstressingly common 1n children and not just highschool athletes, but elementary school kilds . Worse, some Jn]unes to little l1mbs don't have good treatments. The surgery
that f1 xed T1ger Woods' torn ACL , for 1nstance, can stall the growth of a young child's leg.

, ACts, other

BY LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP MEDICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON - A 14yeaJ-o ld gym nds t v.Jth a
&gt;tress l r,l&lt;t ur~ 111 he1 lower
back. A 12-yeaJ -old v.hu
tore IllS ACL 1n a soccc1
game. A 16-year-olcl runner
·W ith d icc S(JC" IJ .l&lt;:IUIC. i\
15-yem-old who to1 e hi '
meniS CUs play1ng b,tskc tball
A sJnglc . mornJTH( s
' o,llients fnt H:w..ml'• i),
Mininder Kocher prov1des a
wmdow mtn a u oub lm g
!Jend lnJu nes orKe seen'
mostl y .m adult ath letes are
becon11n g
diStress mgly
w mmon 111 yo uth athletes
- not JUSt 111 h1gh school
hut in L11t le L ed~uc and Pee
Wee Football. "
These
;ucn't
Si mpl e
mjuries. In the past decade.
"Tommy John" surgenes 10
repatr elbows bl own out
playing baseball - an operation named fm a famous
baseball pitcher - have
almost tti pled among - adolescents at a ht gh-proflle
Alabamn clime. a meetmg
of sports med icine speqaiJSts w!ll be told by
researchers tl11s week.
Worse, so me lnJLIIJ es
don't have good treatments
for young patient s. The
surg ery th at fixed the tmn
ACL in Tige1 Woods' knee ,
tor instance, can thwart the
growth of a youn g child ·s
leg
Kocher, an orthoped ic
surgeon
at Children's
Hosp1tal Boston. IS about to
begin a govern ment-funded
study to figure out the best
treatment fo r children who
tear that antenor crucwte
ligament while grow th
plate s around the knee still
are act1ve.

-~ hi

But no m&lt;~tl e r how well
ce1 ta1n InJuries heal for
no". Kocher worries about
the lungtcrm w nsequences
1'01 itl!ie JII IO( S
"I wonde1 what these kids
me gomg to be II ke 20 to 30
yc&lt;Lrs dov. n th e road.'' he
Sd}S "W il l we ha ve a whole
ge ner,J!Jtlll of middle-aged
adult' w1th edrly an~nllsT'
Wll\ the suduen mf1ux 0
01 th opedtc su rgeons say that
today\ youth sports are

meeting of the Amencan
Orthopaedic Society for
Sports Med1cme .
by
such
Prompted
research, Little League
Baseball last year hm1ted
how many pitches youngsters of d1fferent ages can
throw before mandatory rest
periods .
• Then there's the notonously painful to1n ACL not an overuse inJury but
one that can happen to anyone wno lands wrong wh1le
pivoting on a knee.
It was long thought a runty in childhood. But among
males. one in five tom ACLs
occurs before age I 8: the
figure IS 30 percent among
fema les , Kocher says
In 2006, McCall Maddox
of Jacksboro , Texas, tore h1s
ACL durmg Pee Wee
Football at age 12 Three
doctors refused to do
surgery until he was 16 and
had qu!l growmg, ordering
no running until then . Join
the swim team , one adv ised .
Why? Standard ACL
repair mvolves drilling
through \he leg's growth
plates, n sking a stuntmg of
any still -to-come growth.
McCall was devastated .
He was a good athlete and
in his small town, "we don 't
have a swim team. We don 't
have a chess club. We don'!
have any other options,"
says McCall 's mother,
Roxanna Maddox
She sought out Kocher m
Boston, who repairs children's ACLs in a different
way: Wmdmg the new ligament around the shinbone
mstead of dnlling . Kocher
reports patients doing well
five to etght years later but
acknowledges a big question : "W1II It hold up 20 , 30
years down the lme" like

fl'm,, m&lt;e=.~lrptay-ets

often p1ckmg JUS! one to speciali ze in as yo un g as 8. And
they can play and tram in
some splllls vi1tually yearround - w1t h a school team,
recre.Jtion . leag ue, travel
blguc, sum mer camp.
"Youth ath letes are not
the same as small adults ,"
says Dr. E. Lyle Cam Jr. of
th e
Andrews
Sports
Medicine &amp; Orthopaedic
Center in Birmm gham, Ala .
Certa m types of injunes
"«lll &lt;ause permanent damage that affect the1r future
growth ."

More th an 3.5 million
children 14 and under
rece1ve medical treatment
f01 sports-1elated injuries
each year ·Along with the
typ1cal sprams and strains
are a lot of overuse injunes
- stress fractures, tendo1111Js. cartilage damage.
P1tch ing offers a prime
example. The Andrews clinIC counts a hve- to s1x-fold
JJJCJease 1n senous shoulder
and elbow- injunes m youth
baseball and softball smce
2000
The worst is a torn ulnar
collateral ligament on the
instde of the elbow. By
2006. near ly a third of
Tommy John surgeries to
repatr 1t were on patients
undet 18. Cain will tell a

the adult surgery does?
McCall took a chance
with the operatiOn and, after
SIX months of sometimes
grueling physical therapy,
he was back playmg football and basketball and runnmg track m seventh grade.
"Was his mother nervous?
Absolotely," Maddox says
with a laugh. But McCall
had "no trouble, none .... It
was a risk worth taking."
But such s11cces.s. stories
don't make scientific proof.
So Koch er ts joining Dr.
Allen
Anderson
of
Nashville - whose own
ACL
repair
pediatri c
involves dnllin g near but
not through growth plates
- and about 10 hosp itals
around the country to compare the d1fferent surgeries
or waitmg to operate, to find
the best approach.
Until then , Kocher has
some easy adv1ce: Try oldfashioned play, like jumping
rope. playmg hopscotch,
chmbmg trees. High school
teams now are tramed 'to
avoid ACL tears with corebody conditioning and ups
on bendmg knees for jumpmg - things younger k1ds
can learn on their own just
by havmg fun .
"A lot of the stuff kids
used to do 111 free play was
ACL prevention," he says.
" Now they don't get th;tt,
and they JUmp into highleve l soccer."

On the Net
A1lrerican Academy oj
Ortlwpaedrc
Surgeons:
http://orthomfo .aaos .org!m
enuslchi/dren .cfm
Little League pitching
mfo:
http://w ww.littleleague.org

m:be ~alhpoh~ l)atlp m:rtbune,
m:be ~oint ~lea~ant ~egt~ter
and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called '~Faith and Family".
If yon have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:
kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
500-7 50 words.
Please include a phone number
in your email.

.

Tuesday, July 8
- Me1gs
POMEROY
. County , Cham ber
of
Commerce. bu siness- minded
luncheo n,
noon.
_Pomeroy Library, featured
s peaker Phyllt s Bohnmg .
Sehou l
of
'Vomov tch
Leadersh ip and Pub Iic
Affa1rs at Ohio Umve r'lty.
Entrepreneunal S1gna ture
: Program . M1ke Bartrum on
Meigs Local En nchment
Foundation, Bob E'ans ol
M ason, W.Va cate11ng. ca ll
992-5005 to RSVP. '

l'
I

... .. .
'

~·

"'

211:-;,:

Wife demonstrates issues with intimacy
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Church events

Reunions

Birthdays

Tuesday, July 1:1,

ANNLE'S MA!Ll3UX

therapy because she fears
getting cancer. I have gone
to counselmg several tunes
Dear Annie: I've been because I am so depressed
RACINE
- R&lt;1cme
Southe1n FFA meetmg. 6 married to &lt;1 great woman over the lack or mtimacv.
I know she loves me and is
p.m . \-Owag room. members fo r over 16 ye:1rs We were
a
great w1fe in every other
asked to attend to update both 1n our 40s when we
way
I' ve tried to hve w1th
mformat1on.
met, We d1dn ·r have sex
before
the
wcddmg. the situation and count my
alt hough &gt;he told me she ble"1ngs. but I am begmnmg
Iikes it
very
much to be resentful and I snap at
Friday .. July 11
Howe,er. I R months after her. How do I overcome th1s?
LONG BOTTOM
j·we marned, our sex l1 te - Need to Feel Loved
Dear Need: We are always
Gospel sing with Dave and I 11 en I downhtll
amazed at otherwise-lovmg
Debbie Dailey, 7 p m.. Fa1th
A year ago, I told her I was people who ignore or deny
Full Go&gt;pel Church
leavmg. She then agreed to thei1 spouse's need for intimahave sex, but only unde1eel cy There are ways to have a
tam terms· not at our home sat1sfymg sex ual relauonsh1p
Saturday, Jul y 12
RUTLAND
Chuck as long as her son '' li ving th at don 't reyu1 re honnones
Compton Will be 111 gospel w1th us the_1s 35 years old). Your wife's inability to show
conce11 at the Rutland Freewi II and 11 Will happen •whcn she passion or be undressed
Bapttst Church. 7 p.m. Pastor "gets the feeling ." Now the around vou mdJ&lt;ates she mav
only place we can have sex have scime umesolved issues
Eq Bamey mvites pubk
is at a cabin we own We go about sex. Insist that she see
the re every weekend. but she her doctor for a complete
"gets the tee lmg" less than checkup (not for honnones.
once a month. She kiSses but ·to be sure 11othmg else JS
Saturday, .July 12
RACINE - Reumon of like a 2-year-old - pursed wrong) and then come With
Charle, and Fanmc Be.~&gt;c r l1ps only - and there JS no you for counseling so yo_u can
family wnh lllcnch at noon. passiOn from her whatsoev- work on this together.
Dear Annie: Because of
Star Mill P,u k Fnends dnd er I haven 't seen her naked
m
mer
I
5
yems,
although
budget
cuts, I lost a wonrela!J'es mvited B11ng emshe
has
a
cute
ligure
,md
IS
erect dJSh
"
derful JOb as a secreta! y. So
very pretty
a friend hired me. I thought
I
have
asked
my
w1le
to
I wo uld JUS! hang at th iS job
Sunday, Jul) 13
see
he1
doctor,
but
she
says
until somethm g else came
RACINE -,- 17th anmt.tl
The1ss reun1on . Star M1ll the1c·, no JC,hOn She 1efus- ' along. but 1t\ been almost
Park, Racme Potluck at I es to co nSJder hormone four years at minimum pay
p m and p1g in a poke o.wction Ram or shme

HARRISONVILL E
H arrisonv ille 255. Order of
' the Eastern SDtar, will meet
at 7:30p.m. Jul y 8 at the hall

dnd I feel stuck
I have an assocwte 's
degree 1n compu!eJs. I' ve
had a few mterv1ews. but
nobody can offer me enough
hours 01 pay to 'IJ'tain my
lifesty le My husband makes
about $ 1.000 a week &lt;Lnd I
barely make $200. He &lt;On stantly reminds me of my
low waees and how r m not
pulling my weight
How du I keep my sp1rits
up' Relocattng 1s out of the
question - Down and Out
in Michigan
Dear Down and Out: At
$200 a week, we' re not sure
what ilfesryle you o11e sustaming. You arc alre,ldy
work1 ng for min 1mum
w,1ge. so look lor a JOb that
offeJS an oppm tun it y to
move up th e ladder, some
thmg your current posliJOn
clocsn ' t allo\v. You also
should cons 1der see mg a fOb
cou nse lor and poss1b ly
gomg bdck to sc hoo l 1n
order to become yuulil1ed
fo1 employme nt that pays
better It serves no purpose
to wan until so meone o fl eJS
you exactl y wh,ll you want
Take whatever g1ves you
the chance to 1mprove your

ddcj {()

)'OUI

Je~p011 " l'

!l

"K T ... who Jsked ,thout !Itt
etiquette ol us1ng lh111d1
capped st,JI Is. Some pcoplt
who a1c hand1 cappcd "'' ""
nece.sanly appear to h&lt;' "'
I have an tlcostomv (SJil ll
tar to a l'Oiostomy) \Vhell tht
bag fi lis up so met 1!llt'~ u'1 !l' \
pected ly. tt IS ncce;s,u' t
get 1t emptied Jm rnedkLk· l' ( l
JJSk a b,ld leak I don ' t 1,~,
tymg up the handJc ap pcc
stalls 11 the1e me others'" .11 1
ab le. but sometimes I It ""
no cho1ce Please let }ou1
redders know th at not ,JI
lldndtcaps arc VISible
Concerned Citizen
De&lt;,l r Concerned: Ou .
th,mks to vou and the othc1 ,
who wrote. regarumg mvJSJblt
dJSabJIJtJes. We hope rc,,deJ'
will keep yo ur letter 111 mtmJ.

Annie's Mailbox is written
by Kathy Mitchell and Mwc_1
Sugar, longtime editor&lt; oi
tire ,11111 Landers column.
Plea.\e e-mail your quesliom
to
annie~mailbox@com
cast.net, nr write to: Annie',\
Mailbox, P.O. Box 1/8190
Chicllgo, IL 60611. To jim.'
out more about A1mie ·,.
Mailbox, and read .feature.&lt;
,by other Creators Syndical&lt;
writer\ ond cartoordsts. vi.&lt;it'
situation . t'~ie ll 1f it\ Ill till)
tire Creaton Syndicate Wei ·
step; tnstead of gw nt leaps
Dear Annie: I'd l1ke to page at www.creators.com.

Wahama alumni gather for annual banquet

MASON . W.Va. - On G!lnste.Jd: Class 1941 . RotJbeJt E. Roush. to Ann M:uy i\11is. Class of 1'16f&gt;
May 24. the G .. .iltnJ Clyde Roush, Class Emol eton, Jim Prolfm
N.mcy Profitt. Bonme Bla ' '
Saturday, July 12
Wahama
Hi
gh
School
alumof
1942
Don
s
Gnnstead
Carol
Roush
Prollll.
Carol
Cra
bt ree. Class of 1967
MIDDLEPORT
Roush ,
Davu.l Wtllwm Arthur. W.md.
Thusday,J uly 10
Coleen Dunfee wdl obse1ve 111 gathered to ce lebrate the Yonker. Roy Roush; Coos Ewwg
1eumon
ye..rs
end
mg
in
the
of
1943.
James
Ben
Sayre.
Rou
sh.
Jack
Wmcb1enner.
H&lt;111 ah Stdffo rd . Jennlf,·,
. CHESTER
Shade her 81stbiJthdayo n.lu ly 12
number
e1ght
Celebratin
g
Annabelle
Gnmm
Hudnall.
Adalee
Boston
Lvnch
,
Ze1klc
Hart: Class of I%S
. River Lodge 45 3, 7 30 p m Cards may be sent 10 her at
Class of 1956 Belly Jones Clllistme Ha!fdh. Son' ,
.. at the hall. Scholarships to 97'1 Hyse ll St .. M1ddlepon. were the classe s ol 1 92~ - Gale Berry:
of
1944:
Lawrence
R&lt;l\&gt;lmg,, Tom Van,ce . Ynn kc1 Roush . G,1rv GJet~ n
2008
Class
Ohw 45760 .
be awarded. Refreshments.
This yem 's banquet was at Fo1eman, Mazy Young Dons Donohue Mart1n. K.ncn Staats Hmde't. Ul&lt;•ll :
the Wahama Jun1or Semor Sh1tlet: Class ol' 1946: Pete Eleanor Cuntillt .BI,llock. G1hhs Compston. PIJJIIq ·
H1gh School gym. The elm- Burns. Betty Roush Burns. Delores Peggy Kmg. Julm Bu'~''"
Je11" Mn1~ ""
ner
was
prepared
by
the
Lo1s
Ha1t
Bumgmdner.
Willoughby,
Jack
Paugh
.
K.tthv
Roush
R1d-., ,d
City/Region
M,1
son
C
hapter
of
the
Betty
Grinstead
R1ce.
Orpha
Sue
"Patty"
Allensworth
:
D~111i1s
Tul
loh.
Ol.tll.
H 1gh I Low temps
Forecast lor Tuesday, July 8
Eastern St,lr. Greetmg and Weaver F1elds. Charles
Class of 1957 F1ances lellel'' H,lJJY VanMetc1
rcgJStc11ng fe llow alumni Yeager. Class of 1947 Johnson
Slllkey. Gene K.uh y Ingles F.111'.AI,m1 Lnt.
MICH
we1e Pat Noel and My' '' Donald L. Hall , Robert Stukey, Everett Foremdn. V1ck 1e Weaver Kreb'. DI\IL
Hatfield The invocat1on was Barton. Sarah Kell y Gibbs. Gene Jewell. R,liph 1\JtJS. Sh1111tpli n Folden.
Toledo•
gJ'c n by Pat Noel. Class of Dorothy Perry Sayre. Emd Vi1guHa D;ust. Ge1ald
Class of 1970· Ste!Lt K11tc
88' I 68'
1955 Welcommg t))e guests Lavne
Adams,
WilliS "Jerry" Arnold. Peggy Moru,m. Shcli,\ \Jc\ Ill Youngstown •
was Pres ident lim Stewart. Du-ddin g. Class of 1948: Blessmg Rogers: Cla~s of Rou ~b. Class ol' l'l7 l
85' I 63'
The guest speaker was James Spmuse, Barbara 1958: Sharon Berry hoffman . Bcrmta St a:ns Allen. VHelll &lt;
PA
Mansfield •
William ''Bill" Duel , band . L1ev mg Zerkle. Avalec Lmda Bnnke1 Me,ldO"-s . Sl1 11mplm. Class ol' l'l72
88°1 67° ~
dJrectOJ from 1948- 195.1.
McGrew Hanshaw. Evalee ·Agnes Young Roush fohn D,mn) M.m Class ul' 1')7,1
Dmner ente rt,tinment fm Fry Wolfe. Verla Rou sh Layne,
Edna
Crump Pamcl&lt;~ Eli"'· Class iol I'J77
the evenin g was the IMber- HaJTah. Att,lrah R oL~&gt;h s~mbcnv.
Euwm
E Jenlllrer Wc.tVCI Ciindlll
shop
qu:utet.
Ri
vers
Blend.
Dewhurst.
D~li.e
Sayre.
R&lt;tybUJn'.
GeJ
!rude
Sm1t
h T1m Davis. Class nl' 197N
*Columbus
Dayton •
With lead SII1CCI Gerald Dann y Yonke!, Kath leen Bewer. Amy Th011011. James Tim R,l\1'1111gs. S:n,Jil zu,p,ll
88' I 67'
~·t ee· I / 1 1
Kelly. ,, 1950 'fpadu.Jte of Gnnstead Roush, Lawrence Johnson
Ill ,
Ma11lyn S to;~J. K,uen Stodold Lc 1cli
Wah
,tma
Other
members
of
(Mack)
Stewart;
C
lass
of
Foglesong
Johnson.
ConlliC BLIIIun D.tvis n :t''
l
tl1e gro up are Gerald Powell 1949: Rosanna Frv Manley, Marshall
McMillion . of 1980 .l cftJ cy A1nol d
I Cincinnati
ol Pume10y. Ohi o, M1k~ Georgi a Howa1d Mllh m n:
Dorothy Shu ley Blessmg . An)!Cid PJOfiJII Stank'
• 90° 167°
'" " .
Edc 1JI1.Jnn of Gallipolis .
Class of 1950: Bill1e June Jeny Zcrkk. Shu ley Lyon' Class of 1982 Sh.l\\lt L1
Oh1n.
and
Vi
nton
Rankin
of
Cartwnglll
Hayes. Aleta Roush, Ann CIHsle1 G,nf1eld. Paugh.
,,
•
RIO UratH.lc . Oh1o. Following Snyde1 Wea,er, Charlotte James M.1Ckl11 gh t. Dav1d
CJass of I983 T:~n 11.t .I
~
88•fe;r,•
WVA.
I
the h,myuet , mus1c for dane- Cook Yonker, Joanna Van an Richard son. Ramona G1bbs Pau :; l1. Dnn,tltl V,m~ kl c
mg wds prov1ded by Bernu,t Counctl. Arlene
Sayre Kmgh t. Gwy 0 Roush. J1 .
LJSa
Bum gdrdJil ,
KY
02008
and Juddy Allen.
Gnmm. Gernld Kelly: Class Hamett Ingles Laudcnmlt :
P1ckc lln~. Class of l'JX~
ScholarshipS were award- of 1952. Loretta L1evmg
Class of 1959 Dons Sunc K~n ~ Ft.JJtLJS. CJa,•
~ Cloucty ~ Thunder·~ flumes ~
Ice
ed by Pat Noel !o Heather Roush. Edward Spencer. Elliott
Coffee . Phyll" of 191\5 P:unei,J Van ,Vk! t'l
Partly ~ 1 1 1' ' ~ ~ ~ • ••• • ~
N1cole
Stanley.
who
rece1ved
Walter
Amold
Roush,
Shidey
ZJC
kafonse
Arthur.· En a Class of 1986 : Su;ctt&lt;
Cloudy
ShQwer~ ~
Aa lr;~
•
* Snow : : : ~G:
a 'd10larsh ip 111 hon01 of the G11mm
Karr, MarJOI'Ie Roush Richardson. Na n&lt;) Pdugh HIC ks. 'Class n:·
Weather Underground • AP
Oldest L1 vmg Alumni 111 the Howard Stickland. James E. Fletcher Ohhnge1 . Class of 1987 L"a Flowers: Cl:1s•
,Jmount of $5 .000. The fol- Barton , Eugene Weave1, 1960
Carolyn
Dot son of 1988: Melan 1c F1 cld •
Larry
Hill. AlveJSon . S.trah Sh,unhlu
lowmg graduates JeCeJved Dear Kn ig ht:"Class or 1953: MacEwan.
schol.trships 1n the amount of Glen Harrah , Doris Llllon W1lmmme Clmk Hill. Myra ln nbode n: Class of 1991\
1\Jesday...Partly sunny 6() peil:CIII
$500: Justm Ke1th Arnol d. Harrah. Ben Roush, Paul F Foreman H.tlll1ill . M.1nly n Brandy EndJ&lt;otl HI!'!!"''
- with scattered showers and
Wednesday night...P.ll'tly g1ven by the CI,Jss of 1957 Roush. Susan nah Roush. Schwarz. Strother. Kenneth Amv V&lt;~nMcteJ . Cia" n l'
: ;thunderstonns Highs m the cloudy with a chance of · Memori al Scholarship Fund . Lew is, Leora Young Krebs, Dodson. Class of 1961
20011. letfrey Paugh
; upper 80s. Chance of ram 40 showers and thunderstorms Haley N1cole Dav1s. Class of Betty Hoschar Davidson. Susan Zaspan Wmeh1cnner.,... Class of 20\11 John Rt&gt;lll'J
' percent.
Dee
Anderson \1t)J g,ut. Class of 2UUJ
I'IS7 Memorial Scholarship Wdfmd Scarberry, Elai ne Peggy
Lows 111 the mid 60s
· · Thesday night ... Mostly Chance of ram 40 percent
fund.
Mega n
Nicole Sayre
Elliott ,
Donna Bumgardnc1, Jud y F1 y Dallc'Jt Kc1th Jackson. Cia''
cloudy w1th a charce of showThursd-dy
through Dangerfield , anonymous Bumgarner DotsoA , J11ck Re1be1, J&lt;~ckJe Capehmt of 2\Hl!l· Justm Keith Allh&gt;ld
ers and thunderstorms Lows
cloudy. alumna from the Class of Sc1tes. Elizabeth Click Kmg, S1sson. Emma Jane Weaver Hale y NICole Dav1s. Me~ · "
m the lower 10s. Chance of Friday ... Partly
1953:
Class of 1954 Mary Paugh . Irma Gunstcad N 1 ~ole Dangettield. Chc-k,
Hi'ghs m the mid 80s. Low'
: rain 50 percent.
Fowler,
Ruth Dodson. Donald VanMeleJ. N1cole Htcks. T1ffanv k ,11
Courtney Miche le Long. Stewart
:' Wednesday ... Mo st ly in th e lower 60s
Wahama
Alu mni L1evmg
Roush.
John Ann Howard Va nMeter. Paugh. Kasey Jo VmiM,·tc·J
Friday · night ... Pm tly Scho larship ;
cloudy ·With showers and
M1kayla R1chard "Pete" Roush. Jim Darlene Stuke y Knopp. A'hlcy
Nicole
Wulk
thundersto1111s likely. H1ghs in cloudy. Lows 111 the uppe1 Danie!le Shamblin . Wahama Stewart , Martha Henry Sheldon Roush. Glen Rou,h. CoUJtney M1chele L on~
the lower 80s . Chance of rain 60s.
Alumm Scholarshtp: Jolisha Coleman. Charles Blessmg.
Class of 1962· Okey Ml):&lt;~yla Damelle Shambhl1
Suzanne
Cund1ff. Alice Howard Leach: Class Capehart. Tom Knopp. Jol ish,, Suzanne Cundill
Anonymous
Alumnus of 1955 . Patricia Roush Ralph Roush: Class of 1963. s,,vannah Raeann \1,11 1
Eleanor
Sue Ba1 bara Mulford Rou,h. Hem her Nicole Stanley. Cod)
Scholarship and a scholarshi p Noel,
Market watch
. g1ven by Eleanor Cundif f Cartw ngh t · Hall . Peggy Beverly Staats: Class of Lee Bums. Brent Mllil,Jc'
Jury 7 2008
, AEP (NYSE) - 39.74
Edwards, 1965:
Marv
Foste1 Jones. Kc1th Edwmd Pe.ti"Hl
Blalock. RN. Cl,,ss of 1965; McDaniel
• , Akzo (NASDAQ) - 66.50
-5ue
Dow Jones
: Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 46.2&amp;
Savannah Reann Mnrr. an MarJone Clarke Walburn. Hendncks. Reginald Han . Waylon Randall Sturgeon
lndustrlals
,, ,231 96
. · Big Lots (NYSE) - 32.19
Anonymous
Alumnus , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - .,
': Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27 50
Scholarship
and
a
&gt;cholarship
"\
'
·~-Ill
•
: , BorgWarner (NYSE) - 38.30
Nasdaq
in
memory
of
Doug
and
Attn
:
People
who
like
to
help
._ Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
composite
2,243 32
•. - 61.15
.,
Nannie Roush: Heathe1
; •Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.36
-10.58
Stondard &amp;
Nicole Stanley. Class of
• Charming Shops (NASDAQ) ' Poor's 500
1955, Ke1th Pearson , scholar1 252 31
: 4.48
ship
m memory ol Roy Jones
• . City Holding (NASDAQ) - 36.55
We are OSHIIP We offer free . unb1ased Information and counseling about
-7.62
Russett
.
'
~ •Collins (NYSEf - 48.16
g1ven
by hJS three grandsons;
2000
health tnsurance to people covered by Medtcare. thetr famtlies and caregtvers
• DuPont (NYSEl - 41.52
65826
Waylon Sturgeon. $500 1n
: US Bank (NYSEl - 26.9t
OSHIIP is funded by lhe fede ra l government and the State of Ohro
memory
or Stafi Sgt. James
NYSE diary
&gt; Gannett (NYSEf - 18.83
G. Stewart: Cody Bu111s .
• ' General Electric (NYSEl - 27.10
, Advanced ·
950
; :Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 35.78
from the Class of 1965:
$200
You may have family or fnends who would benefit from our help As an OSHIIP
Declined :
2 229
, JP Morgan (NYSE) - 34.04
Brent Jones, $325 from the
volunteer. you can make a difference in the1r lives
Unchanged:
77
• 'Kroger (NYSel - 29.31
Class of 1968: and Chelsea
:, ·Limited Brands (NYSE) - t6.83
Volume.
526b
Nicole Hicks , Tiffany Jean
•• ' Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 58.86
OSHIIP has more than 500 volunteers across the state . but we need people
·,:Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASPaugh,
Kasey Jo VanMeter
Nasdaq !llary
;':'DAQ) - 24.50
illld Ashley Renee Wolfe,
like you to help in your area. Our volunteer tratmng and related reference
Advanced .
854
• BBT (NYSE) - 21 68
$ 125 fro m the Class of 1961
matenals are free. You can choose from f1ve d1fferent volunteer JOb postttons
-~ ·Peoploa (NASDAQ) - 18.94
Docllned:
1,642
Those attendmg were:
... 'Papaleo (NYSEl - 66.62
to match your background and expenence .
UrlchllnfiOd: 80
Class of 1927: Evelyn
:0 )'romler(NASOAQ) - t 0.40
Volume:
1 96 0
·~ flockwell (NYSE) - 42.87
Fogleson Proflm; Class of
:• Jlocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 4.29
1933:
Mildred Roush Fry.
AP
SOURCE SunC':&gt;E~rrt
Interested? Call us for tnformatton
Oepartment of
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Class
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Leot:1
·, Seers Holding (NASDAQ) - 74 01
Insurance
Reitmire Roush: Class of'
actions for July 7, 2008, provid. • !Nat-Mart (NYSEl - 56.9t
1-888-686-8657
ed by Edward Jones financial
~ Wendy's (NYSE)- 27.t8
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OPINION

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Tbe Daily Sentinel ,
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740} 992·2157
www.mydailysentlnel.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
people peaceably 'to assemble, and to petition
the Governme11t for a redres~- of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, July 8, the !90th day of 2008. There
- the year.
are 176 days Ie f.t 111
Today 's Highlight in History:
.
One hundred years ago, on July 8, 1908, busmessman
and philanthropist Nelson Aldrtch Rockefeller, a libl!ral
Republican who served as governor of New York a~d then
as vice preside1it of the United States, was born tn Bar
· .
Harbor, Matne
. date:
0 n th ts
I II o f Eng Ian d grante d a Roya 1
In 166 3. King Ch arcs
ch arter to Rh o de IsIan d.
In 1776, Col. John Nixon gave the first public reading of
1 h"ta. M h
the Declaration of lndependenceb, inCPh t.!adedp
In 1853, an expedition led y ommo ore att ew
Perry arrived in Yedo Bay. Japan, on a mission to see k
diplomatic and trade relations with ,the Japanese.
In 1889; The WJII Street Joumal ·wa, firs t published.
In 1907, Florenz Ziegfeld stage d . h"ts f trst "Fo II"ies, " on
the roof of the New York Theater.
In 1919, President Wilson received a tumultuou s weicome in New York City after hi s return from the Versailles
Peace Conference in France.
In 1947, demolition work began in New York City to
make way for the new permanent headquarters of the
United Nalions.
In 1950, President Truman named Gen . Dou glas
MacArthur' commander-in-chief of l)nited Nations forces
m Korea.
In 1958,: Presideot Eisenhower began _a visit to Canada,
where he conferred with Prime Mini ster John Diefenbaker
and addressed the Canadian Parliament.
In 1994, Kim II Sung, North Korea's communist leader
since 1948, died at age 82.
Ten years ago: A federal bankruptcy judge announced a
tentative settlement under which an estimated 170,000
women who said silicone breast implants had made them
sick would get $3.2 billion from Dow Corning Corp.
•
Five years ago: In Senegal at the start of a five-nation
tour of Afric:j, President Bush called American slavery one
of history's greatest crimes as he stood at the very spot
where hundreds of thousands of Africans had been bought
and sold like cargo. A factory worker opened tire at a
Lockheed Martin plant in Meridian, Miss ., leaving five
dead before he committed sui~ ide. Twenty-nine-year-old
Iranian twins joined at the head died following .;;urgery in
Singapore to separate them.
Today 's Birthdays : Actress Kim Darby is 6.1 . Children's
performer Raffi is 60. Actress Anjelica Huston is 57. News
columnist Anna Quindlen is 56. Actor Kevin Bacon is 50.
Rock musician Andy Fletcher (Depeche Mode) is 47.
Country singer Toby Keith is 47 . Rock singer Joan Osborne
is 46.
Thought for Today: "You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing
enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel
'insecure about you." - Nelson A. Rockefeller, American
politician and businessman ( 1908-1979).

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Page'!\4
ucsday, JulyS, 2008

~

vVhos to blame for $4 gas? Both Democrats and GOP
dards or investing in non- himself up to charges of
What' s the cause of $4
petroleu m alternatives.
election-year "gi mmickfor a gallon of gasoline'!
Just suppose. when ry" by advocating a sumTo Iiste n to Democrats in
gaso line wst $1.71 a gal- mer "gas tax holiday " that
Co ngress and"'n the ca mlon - as it did in 2001, will save the average conpai gn trail - and also
when Pres ident Bush ca me sumer about $30 and
some Republicans - the
Morton
"to uffi~e - th at the federan.swer is "price go uging."
Kondracke al
governmen t
had propusmg a $300 million
"spec ul ation ," "oil compaincreased gaso line taxes prize for development of
ntes'' or "the fai led poliby $1 ur $2 and used the an electri c car hattery - ·
&lt;.: te s of G eo r~e Bu sh and
mone y to build infraSiruc- which smacks of an ea~­
Di ck Cheney. '
.
ture
and invest in alterna- mark for entrep re neurs
Everything is getting lions for _ all the reasons
tive-energy
research, already working on the
blamed except the w~ ll ·
b
h
doc umented obv iou s: the being bandted a out Y rebating some to poor peo- project.
Congressiona l Democrats
.
The bottom line here is
law of supply and demand. (and a few Rep ubli cans) ple.
th
e
Fur
seve
n
years.
the United States
that
The hi story of U.S. ener- -a nd Sen. Barack Obama .
public
would
have
been
gy
policy
is
that
The Democ rats have an
needs a bipartisan energy
Democrats have refused to obvious motive for their buymg more fuel-efficient strate gy that 's simply statincrease
supply
and denial of Econ 101 reali-ty : ~ars - as they are now ed: Do It AIL Drill for oil
Republicans have refused They are so beliolden to and domestic aut o compa- and gas. expand nu clear
10 curtail demand. They !Itt tnvironmental lobby nies wou ld have had an
to
dev elop power, promote conservaare both to blame (or $4 that they . can' t ad vocate in~entive
tion and develop alterna· gasoline - and they'd increased domestic oil and hybrids and elec tri c cars.
Amenca 's tran sponatiun tl ves.
better get together to ke-ep natural gas produ c1ion .
networks would ha ve bee n
The "EIA says that for
Americans from paying
1
f
$200 a barrel to foreign oil
To ·save the P anet n) m more
effici ent.
and decades to come, 85 perwarming,
th e
glbbal
alternatives cent of U.S. energy needs
producers.
green s want to end promt si ng
such
as
wind
, solar and will come from oil and
Here 's what the federal mankind 's use of fo ss il
biofue
ls
would
have bee n gas: So. the U.S. ought to
Energy
Information fuels, so they oppose
along
seven
years
further
Administration say s: "A drilling fo~ natural gas oilproduce more of its own in
variety of factors have ;,hore. for oil in the Arctic than they are now.
In stead , a vast tran sfer th e near term while develca
used
oil
·price
s
to
National
Wildlife
Refuge
1ncrease . including strong
of wealth ts takin~ place oping alternatives for the
demand growth in non - and exploitmg America's with oil at, as I wnte thi s, ion~ run .
·
OECD Asia and the vast coal reserves. And about $ 140 a barrel , and
A~nd , acco rding to the
Middle East, 110 growth in Democrats obey, as do the beneficiaries are coun - Wall Street Journal , anothproduction since 2005 some Republican s, recent - tries suc h as Saudi Arabia ,
e r expert group, the
from the members of , the ly includin g Sen. John Russia · and Venezuel a.
International
Energy
,
McCain.
Organization of Petroleum
with interests often ho stile Agency is scheduled to
Exporting Countries, ri s- . The greens for years to ours, plu s Asian makers
ing costs for oil explo- have also blocked new of more fu el-eiTicient cars. report in November that
ration and development, nuclear platH s, although
With the public justifi- oi 1-produci ng countries
across-the-board increases some huve changed their ably fu_riou s at the pri ce of not only won' t produce
becau
se nuclear Most
is
gas. Republican s and more oi l - they can't,
in commodity prices, and tune
carbon
-l'ree.
a weaker U.S. dollar. "
Demu~rats
remain Democrats are doin;; what because of aging oi l fields
Simp le
translation :
. Ob
· they usually do -· find ing and tnadequate investChina and !ndia are buv- opposed, wht 1e
ama 15 P.V("U~'P&lt;' ~. ,..{ p~~-~~~«C' ~··.~- Jll tHL
mg lots more oil, increa~~- wishy-washy on the sub- gers at each other.
That means that the
, toand
his always
credit ,
Republicans co uld have price of oil and gasoline i's
mg overall demand, and ject.
favDrMcCain
s nuclear
OPEC is not producing has.
the better of it polittcally goi ng to continue to rise.
more supply. Under such
McCain 's
fellow because poll s show that It's all the more reason for
ctrcumstances - duh 1 Republicans also are to the publi c favors drilling Obama· and McCain,
prices rise .
blame for $4 gas. It took offshore. alt hough
and
Additionally. the United ex-oilman Bu sh six years be ca use of th e general Republi ca ns
States, with it s interest to di sco ver that America is political climate - the Democrats, to agree to
rates too low and chron i- "addicted to oil" and beg in public also prefers Obama increase dome stic supp lies
cally_ co nsuming more · ,promoting conservation to McCain on energy of all energy and to reduce
demand.
than tl produce s, has seen and alternative energy issues.
its currency lose value, so . sources.
McCain has taken a
If they were really seritha't every barrel of oil
half-step
toward
exploitous, they ' d even institute a
If Democrats still refuse
(and bushel of wheat) to increase U.S. supplies ing ang er over gas prices carbon tax . If gasoline
costs more.
of
-oil
and
gas, - and - recognizing the went to $6 or even $8, it
The EIA analysis says Republicans for year s law of supply and demand would still be lower than it
. not a ·word about oil com- have rcfJJsed any measure - by dropping his previpany "gouging," future s to decrease demand - by ous oppo~ition to offshore ts in Europe.
(Morton Kondracke is
market speculation .or taxing gasoline to encour- drilling . However, he still
executive
· editor of Roll
refusal by U.S. oil produc- age conservation, raising refuses
to
advocate
Call, the 11ewspaper o{
ers to exploit the exp lo- auto fuel -efficiency stan- drilling in ANWR.
ratton leases they pay bil McCain al so has opened Capitol Hill.)
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Of what use is the United Nations?
Voting early on the
morning of Election Day
tn Zimbabwe, the only
candidate,
Robert
Mugabe, sm iling broadly,
said he was "happy and
hungry for victory." In hi s
wake are the corpses of at
least 80 members of the
Movement for Democratic
Change and thousands of
tortured and beaien opposition
Zimbabweans.
Among them - seen on
the front page of the June
26 New York Times - is.
an
11-month-old boy
whose legs were shattered
by the "Green Bombers,"
Mugabe 's yo uth militia.
Fqllowing
Mugabe 's
Stalinesque triumph, the
U.N. Security ' Council
expressed "deep regrets"
that the election was conducted "in these circum ~
stances." That language
would have been a tad
more critical, but South
Africa, not wanting to hurt
Mugabe 's feelings , objected to describing the elections as "illegitimate."
On the very day before,
hospitals in Harare, the
capital. were overflowing,
as there weren't enough
doctors . Some hospital s,
responding to threats by
the military, refused to
take any more victims of
torture .
. Not at all surprisingly,
the U.N. Human Rights
Council has yet to even
put on
it s
age nda
Muga be's extended version of the
Nazis '
"Kristillnacht" that presaged the Holocaust, when
the world also declined to
intervene.
As the June 25 Times of
London reported, Mugabe
the Liberator of his country crowed: "Other people
ca n .say what they want,
but the elections are ours.
We are a sovereign state,
and that is it."
The United Nations
insists that the sovereignty

ers. sayi'ng in th e June 25
How abo ut military
The Guardian newspaper intervention, tf all else
in London: "Zimbabwe fail s, by Zimbabwe 's
will break tf th e world African
leaders,
an
does not come to our aid. " in~re asing number of
Tsvangirai has called on whom are dismayed and
Nat
the United Nations to send repelled by Mugabe's litHentoff
peacekeepers
to erally.getting away with
Mu gabeland to clear th e murder? Even the revered
way for the new elections Nel so n Mandela had , at
so that he could campaig n long last, conquered his
of it s members
even as a ''legitimate candt- acute desire. not to critithose who terrorize their date,"
for
whom cize another former freeca n vote
.
.
own People _ 1· s i·nvio- 'Zimbabweans
h
h
·
dom
fighter
agatnst
]able . Savoring that guar- wtt out puttmg t etr very
.
· danger.
European co lonizers. (The
tn
antee, Mugabe declared Itves
•
But if the United white rulers of Rhodesia
.
h ts
1o 'camdurin~
so
N
·
paign ': "We will not
atwns
were to do more kept Mugabe in prison for
express
"deep 10 years before he was
accept any meddling in !han
Zimbabwe's
internal regrel s" and onl y impose out , and Rh odesia became
affairs; even from fellow more econom ic sanctions Zimbabwe .)
Africans ."
on Mugabe and'hi s prit;naCelebrating hi s 90th
Among . the millions -of --- ry
aecompltces,
th~t birthday at a dinner in
Zimbabweans aba ndoned wou ld hardly cause fear tn London , Mandela faced
b~ the world are the sur- the Hitler of Africa. the naked, barbaric truth,
vtvors - in Chitungwiza, Thou gh . well-t,ntended. and said there is "a tragic
18 miles south of Harare Queen Elizabeth s ruling . failure of leadership" in
- of an attack on a home on June 25 to strip Zimbabwe. He didn't
that was a refuge for M~gabe of hi s 1?94 speak the dreaded name,
Kmght but the message was clear.
Movement for Democratic kntghlhood
Change members . Said Grand· Cross .in the Order Maybe Mugabe, on hearone of them , 57-year-old of Bath - must have been · ing Mandela 's irreverence,_
.
Georgina Nyamut samba, dertstvely rece~ved by the . shrugged.
in a June 27 Washington cas htered kmght. You
To be contin ued: Are
Post report: "There are so . thtnl&lt;; he cares'
many boys buried in
Sarah Childress of the there specific, realizable
(nearby) Warren Hill s Wall Stre~ t Jou.rnal has an swers to Zimbabwean
Cemetery,
killed
by been covenng tht s satantc Georgina Nyamutsamba ,
Mugabe. Plea se help ' us' "e lection" - that has mourning "so many boys
suffering in Zimbabwe. shamed Africa and t_he buried ... · killed by
Wh11t can we do?"
world - with conststent Mugabe'1"
One of the owners of accuracy. ''Mr. Muga be,''
''What can we do ?'' she
that refuge . Annastas ia she "' ru te on June 26, "has asks. Will there be no
Chipiyo, ha s given up any long disre~arded what the reply except more deep
hope of deliverance from world thtnks of h~m . regrets - and the imposZimbabwe's · Liberator. Unless Mr. Mu ga be is sibility of first having to
She says: " I have nothing pre ssun;d by pis African get permiss ion from U.N.
to fear. I' ve just lost my counterparts . . there
is Security Council members
son" - one of the four apparently little diplomats China and Ru ssia to actumurdered in the June 17 can do to sway him ."
ally intervene with armed
Will the Afri can Union f
,
attack on her home . She
has nothing left to lose. .expel
Zimbabwe,
as
orces ·
numbers
of Muga be is strangling that
(Nat Hentoff is a
Untold
Zimbabweans are al so nation? What actions will nationally
rmowned
frozen in hopele ssness.
now be take"n by the - · authority Oil the First
Morgan
Tsvangirai, Southern
African Amendment and the Bill
le-ader of the Movement De' elop ment Co mmunit y, of Rigltts and author of
for Democratic Change, which Childre ss describes many hooks, including
wi thdrew from th e run-off as "the mo st powerful "The War 011 the Bill of
election because he did internatio nal (economic ) Rights ll,!ld the Gathering
not want to add to th e bro- actor in Zimbabwe'
Resistauce"
(Se"e"
ken bodies of his su pport- drama?"
Storie.! Press, 2004).)

__________,._,________________

Tuesday, July 8, 2008
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:Obituaries

kills 41

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

KAB UL, Afghanistan -·
A bomb ripped through the
gates of the Indian Embassy
on Monday, killing 41 people and scattering bodies
and pools of blood across
some of Kabul 's most protected Streets. Afghani stan
quickly blamed Pakistan.
India's archrival.
The suicide car bomber
followed a diplomat's vehicle and detonated the explosives at the building's mam
entrance, only 30 yards
from where dozens or
Afghans had lined up to
apply for visas. The blast
was the deadliest in Kabul
· since the fall of the Tal) ban
tn 200 I. Nearly !50 other
peopl" wtrt wounded.
Women ·and children
browsing nearby shops
were among the victims
who lay on the ground.
bloodied and in agony, crying fer help. Debris covered
the pavement, including
sandal s, a wrecked bicycle
and heaps of twisted metaL
The embassy is on a hu sy.
tree-lined
street
near
Afghanistan's
Inter ior
Ministry that is protected on
both ends by police. though
the checkpoints are easily
driven past. The 8:30 a.m
explosi"n rattled much of
Kabul and kicked up gray
•.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va -Eloi se Mundy Rea, 89, of dust that shrouded the bodPoint Pleasant. W.Va ., "died Monday, July 7, 2008, at St. ies of the dead and
.Mary's Hospital in Huntington , W.Va.
enve loped the survivors A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m . on Friday, July a monochromatic coating
II , 2008. at Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Pnint PlP.itsant, broken 0 111} Uy lin; 1,; 1 iua~un
with Gary W Rea. Jr. officiating. Friends may call at Crow- blood of the wounded. The
HusseH Funeral !-lome from 12:30 p.m. until I:45 p.m., blast blew clothing off
when the proces sion leave:,.
many victims.
Memorial contributions may be made to the West
President Hamid Karzai
Virginia State Farm Museum .
,ondemned the bombing.
and said it was carried out ·
hy militants trying to rupture _ the Afghan-India
friendship . He told the
India n prime minister dur.
•'
ing a phone conversation
that Afgh~ni s tan would do
all it could do identify the
. POMEROY - Disso lutions were granted in Meigs attackers.
, County Common Pleas Court to Trina D. Smith and The Afghan Interior
. \ Christopher Smith, Tamara Kay Hubbard and James Mini stry hinted that the
William Hubbard , Gregory Browning and Trudy attack was carried out with
Browning, and Walter Aaron Woolard and Heidi Mae help from Pakistan 's intelliWQolard.
gence service, saying the
blast happened " in coordinatio n and consul tation wilh
some of the acti'Ve intelligence
circles in the region ."
POMEROY - Dtvorces v.ere granted in Meigs County
A
spokesman
fo r
Common Pleas Court to Betty Jean Hawk from Kenneth
Allen Hawk, Andrew Coffman and Amy R. Coffman, and Pakistan's Foreign Mini stry
declined to comment on the
Crystal Napier from Phillip G. Napier II.
bombing. The Paki stani foreign minister said hi s country. condemned the attack
and all forms of terrori sm.
POMEROY - Foreclosures were issued in Meigs
The bombing showed that
.County Common Pleas Courllo Farmers Bank and Savings Afghanistan is also a theater
Co. against Raymond Andrews , and others, and Special for the strugg le between
'Property VII, LLC, against Jacob Wayne Landis, and oth- longtime rivals India and
·ers.
Pakistan.
"These attacks seem
designed to sabotage any
improvement of relations
POMEROY - A~thony Wayne Petty was sentenced in between Pakistan and either
Meigs County Common Pleas Court to two one-year sen- of its two neighbors, India
and Afghanistan, to assure
tences,on counts of forgery, to be served consecutively.
that
Pakistan has no alterna· Roger D. Shoemaker was sentenced to two one-year sentences on charges of possession of crack cocaine and traf- tive but to conti nue to supficking in crack cocaine. The sentences are consecullve port militant organizations
-with an eight- year sentence in a 2001 ~ase, and were sus- as part of its foreign policy,''
'pended. He was se ntenced to commumty control and sub- said Barnett Rubin , an
Afghani stan expert at New
je,ct to a property forfeiture .
York University.
At Kabul 's hospital s,
anguished · parents railed
I against the Afghan governPOMEROY - Amber Slewart was arraigt1ed in Meigs ment.
·county Common Pleas Court on charges of forgery and
"Where is the security?"
receiving stolen property. Tnal was set for Sept. 4. cried Mirwais, a father of
Christopher Tenaglia was assigned counseL
four who knew that two of
his children had been killed .
Before heading to another
•
hospital to search for hi s
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs other two children, he
County Probate Court to Ty Chris\ian Ault, 22, Pomeroy, shouted obscemttes at
and Ashley Lynn Thomas, 25, Middleport; Andrew Steven Karzat.
.
.
Reed, 26, Reedsville, and Shonda Rae Bellville, 3~1- . Mome.nts later, a. woman
Stockport; Darrick Eugene McCloud, 35, and Sandra Gml ran outside _screammg, crySouthern, 36, Pomeroy ; Joseph Arthur · Boyd, 34. and tng and htttmg her face wtlh
Rebecca Lynne Minshall , 23. Middleport; and Ezra Jay both hands. Her son and
Dalton, 25. and Doroth~ Ilene Hiawa Barringer, 24, ~aughter had , been krlled.
Reedsville .
·
Oh my God.1 the woman
·
screamed. "They are both
dead!"
Six police officers a'ld
merly of ihe Langsville and Dexter areas, went home to be
with her Heavenly Father on Sunday, July 6. 2008 at
Overbrook Nursin g and Rehabilitation Center in
. ·Middlep.ort.
.
Born Auo. II , 1924 at Dartmoth, W.Va., she was the
'daughter ofthe late Charles and Chloe Bradshaw. She was
a homemaker, member of the Rutland Church of God, a
longtime volunteer at the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy and a member of the Swinging Seniors
Dance Club. During World War II she worked in an am munition plant in Maryland.
Nellie was a lov"ing wife to husband Samuel Mi~ha~l.
Racine, and a lovmg mother to children Shirley (Ernie)
Mitchell , Pomeroy. Linda tJeff) Cleland, Lancaster. Connie
Dodson. Middleport. · Charles (Cheryl) Hatfield,
Middleport. Rtchard (Karen) Hatfield, Dexter, a daughterin-law, Debbie Hatfield, Col~mbu s, son-in-law, Dave
Dodson. Point Pleas•ant, W.Va: , slep children , Gary
(Sharon) Michael. Loui se Michael , Lenora (Roger)
Leifheit , 16 grandchildren, 20 great grandchildren, and a
great great grandchtld.
In addition to het pateuts she was preceded in death by
first husband Clarence Hatfi eld. son Paul Hatfield, three
sisters and u brother.
A funeral service will be held at II a.m. , Thursday, July
. 10, 2008 at the Rutland Church of God, Rutland, .with
.Pastor Ronald Heath ofti ciating. Burial wil1 follow at
,Standish Cemetery, Dex ter. The family will receive friends
dunng visitation from 6-9 p.m.. Wednesday. July 9, 2008 at
Birchfield Funeral Home. Rutland, which is in charge of
arrangements.

Deaths

Eloise Rea, 89

For the Record

Dissolutions

Divorces

Foreclosures

Sentenced

Arraigned ·

Marriage licenses

..

('-

. ..

..

inKab

SHAH
AND JASON STRAZIUSO

LANGSVILLE- Nellie E. (Hatfield) Michael, 83, for-' -

' . ATHENS (AP) A restitution to the family of
"woman has been se ntenced the victim .
·to four years in prison for a
Police said"Abishek (A'.crash one year ago that beh- shehk ) Singh (sing)
killed an Ohio University was walktng across a
bridge on June 30, 2007
Twenty-seve 11 -yea r -o ld when Hankinson ran a red
Hankinson of Athens light, struck another car
rn
court with her SUV and spun up
:M,onctay as she pleaded onto the sidewalk, pushing
ilty to aggravaled vehic- Singh into the Hocking
lar homicide. In a plea River.
The body of the 22-year'deal with prosecutors, she
old
graduate student frm\1
''also has had her driver's
was
license suspe nded for eight Faizabad. India.
years and was ordered to found in the water the next
pay more than $ 15 ,000 day.

·-

Bv AMIR

Nellie E. (Hatfield) Michael~ 83

. Ohio woman pleads
:guilty in bridge crash

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

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SHOWTIMES FOR TUES. 71081118

fOil DONi \lESS
W1111111E zott.IN ~~-1!,
H.\tifOCK ' tt~;·l.&lt;&lt;

1:1,til,1:1.
1~1. 2tl, 4:1, 1:1,

photo
An Afghan policeman helps a wounded person at the site of ·a suictde al1ack near' the
Indian Embassy in central Kabul, Afghanistan , on Monday. A car bomb ripped lh rough the
front -wall of the Indian Embassy tn central Kabul on Monday, kil ltng 40 people in wha1
appeared to be the deadliest attack in Afghani~tan's capital since the fal l of the Taltban.
AP

three embassy ·guards were
among the dead.
In New Delhi. India's foreign mini ster said four
Indians, including the mili tary attache and a diplomat,
were killed.
The blast also killed fi ve
Afghan security guards at
the nearby lndones tan
Embassy, where windows
Wt"n:: shauered and d_oors

and gates broken. Two
diplomats were slightly
wounded, Indonesia's foreign mini stry said.
In Washington, the White
House oflered condolences
to the victims.
"Extremi sts continue to
show their disregard for all
human life and their willingness to kill fellow
Muslims as well as others,"
said Gordon Johndroe, a ·
White House nationhl security spokesman. "The
United States stands with
the people of Afghanistan
and India as we face this
common enemy."

Afghani stan has seen · a
sharp rise in violence from
Taliban militants in recent
months. In surgents are
packing bombs with more
ex plosives than ever, one
reason why more U.S. and
NATO troops were killed in
June than any month since
the 200 I invasion.
Sti ll , no one claimed
responsibility for the blast,
and a Taliban spokesman,
Zabiullah Mujahid, denied
the militants were behind it.
The Taliban tend to claim
responsibility for attacks
against intern ational or
Afghan troops and deny
responsibility for bombs
that primarily kill Civilians.
"Whenever we do a suicide attack, we confirm it ,"
Mujahid said. "The Taliban
did not do this one."
The explosion was the
deadliest in Afghanistan
sin ce ·a suicide bomber
killed more than I00 people
at a dog fighting compe_tition in Kandahar in
February.
·
The Indian embassy in the
last several days had beefed
up security by tnstalling
large, dirt-filled blast walls ·
often used by military
force s.
The Indian Mini stry of
External Affairs said the
attack would not deter its
country's ti1iss ion to fulfill
"our commitments to the
government and people of

WED 712108 • THURS 7110108

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P.Jh.i,tan·"

premier "P~ a~cnc~ ol \)rg~t­

mztn g an Apr II a!'-...,a;..:-.t natiu n attemp t
Afgh;lll

K . ttl.~t l.

01 1

!l~ddcr ....

also

allege tha t Paktst ,tn -.xrelil
suppottcd a Ju ne 1.1 tn,u tr!e nl a ttad~ nn

;t

nt i.:.nn i11

ihc southern ~-itv of
Kandahar that fr cc:l -lO fl
T.t!ib~m fi ghtc1 ~

And K:tr ui l;tsl nu mth
threatened to ,end Afeh;tn
troops after Talthan ic&lt;ldct''
in Paki-.tan . :-..tytng he hotd
h.td enough nf cro"-hmdcr
milttallls attack'.
Afl2.h.m ist;tn
Fotl'i~n
Min i~ter Raneccn D.td l',n

Spatlta vi,ncu'thc cmha"y
:-hortly .tlkr the attad anu
,aiu the bJa,t \\ould not
harm reldtion-. ht't\\eCtl the

two countnc,.
The Uni ted Nal ions allll
NATO's
lntc nwt &lt;n nal
Secunty Asststance Force
both conuemncd the .tllack.
The em has,,· all ad; ",ts
the sixt h s u i~ t lfc bomhtng tn
Kabul thi' vc.tt ]n,uJeciil
vio lence h"-' killed ttlure
than 2,200 people' - mo,tl y
militants - 111 All2.h:t nJstan
in 2008, dLLorditl~ tu an
Associated Pre" L~ou tll ol

official fi gure'.
•••
Associalcd Pres' write rs
Rahtm Fai e1. and Ftsntk
Abrashi co ntnbu ted to this
report.

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WALLE (G)
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1:11,. 7.. t15.

G!T ~'li!Rf' &lt;lt~JI

picion India' s '!'n volvement
in Afghantstan, includ ing
the mtll tons of do llar'
donated for reconstruction
and the thou sands of ln(\ian
engineers and laborersnc lping to build roads anJ other
tnfrastntcture .
Pakt stani s arc also warv
ol lndtan consulates th &lt;it
have been establi shed tn the
'outlytng ctt ics ot Kandahar.
Jalalabad.
Herat. ·anJ
Mazar-i-Sha ri f. But Indi an
officials· ,,ay they are thet'e
to _sup port reconstru~ltun .
Mil ilant s have frequently
attacked Indian offices and
projecls
around
Afghanistan.
lkram Sehga l, a political
analyst in Paktstan. satd he
doubts Paki stan's i nte II ige nce service was behind I he
attack. He im;tead blamed
Pashtuns - the largest of
Afghan ethnic groups that
al so forms the core of the
Taliban insurgency.
"The Indians were uskmg
for it," Sehgal said . ''The y
have set up so many con sulates along the border."
Sehgal sa td. "It was question of time . The (Pashtuns)
see them as enemies, actually. They h&lt;td to react to the
Indian s settin g up co nsulates there."
Pakistan and India hav e
fought three wars since their
independence from Britain
in 1947. Kashmir is divided
between Paki stan and lndiu.
and India says Kas hmirr
militant groups - which
are seeking independence or
to merge Kashmir with
Paki stan - get military and
financial support from
Islamabad. Pakistan says ii
only supports lhe rebel s'
cause morally.
Afghanistan 's allegation·s
that Paki stan was involved
in Monday's attack will
probably only sour already
troubled rela tion, .

Lat~
l.t'-11
spo k ~sman

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The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

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Tbe Daily Sentinel ,
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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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
people peaceably 'to assemble, and to petition
the Governme11t for a redres~- of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, July 8, the !90th day of 2008. There
- the year.
are 176 days Ie f.t 111
Today 's Highlight in History:
.
One hundred years ago, on July 8, 1908, busmessman
and philanthropist Nelson Aldrtch Rockefeller, a libl!ral
Republican who served as governor of New York a~d then
as vice preside1it of the United States, was born tn Bar
· .
Harbor, Matne
. date:
0 n th ts
I II o f Eng Ian d grante d a Roya 1
In 166 3. King Ch arcs
ch arter to Rh o de IsIan d.
In 1776, Col. John Nixon gave the first public reading of
1 h"ta. M h
the Declaration of lndependenceb, inCPh t.!adedp
In 1853, an expedition led y ommo ore att ew
Perry arrived in Yedo Bay. Japan, on a mission to see k
diplomatic and trade relations with ,the Japanese.
In 1889; The WJII Street Joumal ·wa, firs t published.
In 1907, Florenz Ziegfeld stage d . h"ts f trst "Fo II"ies, " on
the roof of the New York Theater.
In 1919, President Wilson received a tumultuou s weicome in New York City after hi s return from the Versailles
Peace Conference in France.
In 1947, demolition work began in New York City to
make way for the new permanent headquarters of the
United Nalions.
In 1950, President Truman named Gen . Dou glas
MacArthur' commander-in-chief of l)nited Nations forces
m Korea.
In 1958,: Presideot Eisenhower began _a visit to Canada,
where he conferred with Prime Mini ster John Diefenbaker
and addressed the Canadian Parliament.
In 1994, Kim II Sung, North Korea's communist leader
since 1948, died at age 82.
Ten years ago: A federal bankruptcy judge announced a
tentative settlement under which an estimated 170,000
women who said silicone breast implants had made them
sick would get $3.2 billion from Dow Corning Corp.
•
Five years ago: In Senegal at the start of a five-nation
tour of Afric:j, President Bush called American slavery one
of history's greatest crimes as he stood at the very spot
where hundreds of thousands of Africans had been bought
and sold like cargo. A factory worker opened tire at a
Lockheed Martin plant in Meridian, Miss ., leaving five
dead before he committed sui~ ide. Twenty-nine-year-old
Iranian twins joined at the head died following .;;urgery in
Singapore to separate them.
Today 's Birthdays : Actress Kim Darby is 6.1 . Children's
performer Raffi is 60. Actress Anjelica Huston is 57. News
columnist Anna Quindlen is 56. Actor Kevin Bacon is 50.
Rock musician Andy Fletcher (Depeche Mode) is 47.
Country singer Toby Keith is 47 . Rock singer Joan Osborne
is 46.
Thought for Today: "You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing
enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel
'insecure about you." - Nelson A. Rockefeller, American
politician and businessman ( 1908-1979).

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Page'!\4
ucsday, JulyS, 2008

~

vVhos to blame for $4 gas? Both Democrats and GOP
dards or investing in non- himself up to charges of
What' s the cause of $4
petroleu m alternatives.
election-year "gi mmickfor a gallon of gasoline'!
Just suppose. when ry" by advocating a sumTo Iiste n to Democrats in
gaso line wst $1.71 a gal- mer "gas tax holiday " that
Co ngress and"'n the ca mlon - as it did in 2001, will save the average conpai gn trail - and also
when Pres ident Bush ca me sumer about $30 and
some Republicans - the
Morton
"to uffi~e - th at the federan.swer is "price go uging."
Kondracke al
governmen t
had propusmg a $300 million
"spec ul ation ," "oil compaincreased gaso line taxes prize for development of
ntes'' or "the fai led poliby $1 ur $2 and used the an electri c car hattery - ·
&lt;.: te s of G eo r~e Bu sh and
mone y to build infraSiruc- which smacks of an ea~­
Di ck Cheney. '
.
ture
and invest in alterna- mark for entrep re neurs
Everything is getting lions for _ all the reasons
tive-energy
research, already working on the
blamed except the w~ ll ·
b
h
doc umented obv iou s: the being bandted a out Y rebating some to poor peo- project.
Congressiona l Democrats
.
The bottom line here is
law of supply and demand. (and a few Rep ubli cans) ple.
th
e
Fur
seve
n
years.
the United States
that
The hi story of U.S. ener- -a nd Sen. Barack Obama .
public
would
have
been
gy
policy
is
that
The Democ rats have an
needs a bipartisan energy
Democrats have refused to obvious motive for their buymg more fuel-efficient strate gy that 's simply statincrease
supply
and denial of Econ 101 reali-ty : ~ars - as they are now ed: Do It AIL Drill for oil
Republicans have refused They are so beliolden to and domestic aut o compa- and gas. expand nu clear
10 curtail demand. They !Itt tnvironmental lobby nies wou ld have had an
to
dev elop power, promote conservaare both to blame (or $4 that they . can' t ad vocate in~entive
tion and develop alterna· gasoline - and they'd increased domestic oil and hybrids and elec tri c cars.
Amenca 's tran sponatiun tl ves.
better get together to ke-ep natural gas produ c1ion .
networks would ha ve bee n
The "EIA says that for
Americans from paying
1
f
$200 a barrel to foreign oil
To ·save the P anet n) m more
effici ent.
and decades to come, 85 perwarming,
th e
glbbal
alternatives cent of U.S. energy needs
producers.
green s want to end promt si ng
such
as
wind
, solar and will come from oil and
Here 's what the federal mankind 's use of fo ss il
biofue
ls
would
have bee n gas: So. the U.S. ought to
Energy
Information fuels, so they oppose
along
seven
years
further
Administration say s: "A drilling fo~ natural gas oilproduce more of its own in
variety of factors have ;,hore. for oil in the Arctic than they are now.
In stead , a vast tran sfer th e near term while develca
used
oil
·price
s
to
National
Wildlife
Refuge
1ncrease . including strong
of wealth ts takin~ place oping alternatives for the
demand growth in non - and exploitmg America's with oil at, as I wnte thi s, ion~ run .
·
OECD Asia and the vast coal reserves. And about $ 140 a barrel , and
A~nd , acco rding to the
Middle East, 110 growth in Democrats obey, as do the beneficiaries are coun - Wall Street Journal , anothproduction since 2005 some Republican s, recent - tries suc h as Saudi Arabia ,
e r expert group, the
from the members of , the ly includin g Sen. John Russia · and Venezuel a.
International
Energy
,
McCain.
Organization of Petroleum
with interests often ho stile Agency is scheduled to
Exporting Countries, ri s- . The greens for years to ours, plu s Asian makers
ing costs for oil explo- have also blocked new of more fu el-eiTicient cars. report in November that
ration and development, nuclear platH s, although
With the public justifi- oi 1-produci ng countries
across-the-board increases some huve changed their ably fu_riou s at the pri ce of not only won' t produce
becau
se nuclear Most
is
gas. Republican s and more oi l - they can't,
in commodity prices, and tune
carbon
-l'ree.
a weaker U.S. dollar. "
Demu~rats
remain Democrats are doin;; what because of aging oi l fields
Simp le
translation :
. Ob
· they usually do -· find ing and tnadequate investChina and !ndia are buv- opposed, wht 1e
ama 15 P.V("U~'P&lt;' ~. ,..{ p~~-~~~«C' ~··.~- Jll tHL
mg lots more oil, increa~~- wishy-washy on the sub- gers at each other.
That means that the
, toand
his always
credit ,
Republicans co uld have price of oil and gasoline i's
mg overall demand, and ject.
favDrMcCain
s nuclear
OPEC is not producing has.
the better of it polittcally goi ng to continue to rise.
more supply. Under such
McCain 's
fellow because poll s show that It's all the more reason for
ctrcumstances - duh 1 Republicans also are to the publi c favors drilling Obama· and McCain,
prices rise .
blame for $4 gas. It took offshore. alt hough
and
Additionally. the United ex-oilman Bu sh six years be ca use of th e general Republi ca ns
States, with it s interest to di sco ver that America is political climate - the Democrats, to agree to
rates too low and chron i- "addicted to oil" and beg in public also prefers Obama increase dome stic supp lies
cally_ co nsuming more · ,promoting conservation to McCain on energy of all energy and to reduce
demand.
than tl produce s, has seen and alternative energy issues.
its currency lose value, so . sources.
McCain has taken a
If they were really seritha't every barrel of oil
half-step
toward
exploitous, they ' d even institute a
If Democrats still refuse
(and bushel of wheat) to increase U.S. supplies ing ang er over gas prices carbon tax . If gasoline
costs more.
of
-oil
and
gas, - and - recognizing the went to $6 or even $8, it
The EIA analysis says Republicans for year s law of supply and demand would still be lower than it
. not a ·word about oil com- have rcfJJsed any measure - by dropping his previpany "gouging," future s to decrease demand - by ous oppo~ition to offshore ts in Europe.
(Morton Kondracke is
market speculation .or taxing gasoline to encour- drilling . However, he still
executive
· editor of Roll
refusal by U.S. oil produc- age conservation, raising refuses
to
advocate
Call, the 11ewspaper o{
ers to exploit the exp lo- auto fuel -efficiency stan- drilling in ANWR.
ratton leases they pay bil McCain al so has opened Capitol Hill.)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - ~,•~..,.,._,,,

....
LHIU

V

II

111 z:,

II

Of what use is the United Nations?
Voting early on the
morning of Election Day
tn Zimbabwe, the only
candidate,
Robert
Mugabe, sm iling broadly,
said he was "happy and
hungry for victory." In hi s
wake are the corpses of at
least 80 members of the
Movement for Democratic
Change and thousands of
tortured and beaien opposition
Zimbabweans.
Among them - seen on
the front page of the June
26 New York Times - is.
an
11-month-old boy
whose legs were shattered
by the "Green Bombers,"
Mugabe 's yo uth militia.
Fqllowing
Mugabe 's
Stalinesque triumph, the
U.N. Security ' Council
expressed "deep regrets"
that the election was conducted "in these circum ~
stances." That language
would have been a tad
more critical, but South
Africa, not wanting to hurt
Mugabe 's feelings , objected to describing the elections as "illegitimate."
On the very day before,
hospitals in Harare, the
capital. were overflowing,
as there weren't enough
doctors . Some hospital s,
responding to threats by
the military, refused to
take any more victims of
torture .
. Not at all surprisingly,
the U.N. Human Rights
Council has yet to even
put on
it s
age nda
Muga be's extended version of the
Nazis '
"Kristillnacht" that presaged the Holocaust, when
the world also declined to
intervene.
As the June 25 Times of
London reported, Mugabe
the Liberator of his country crowed: "Other people
ca n .say what they want,
but the elections are ours.
We are a sovereign state,
and that is it."
The United Nations
insists that the sovereignty

ers. sayi'ng in th e June 25
How abo ut military
The Guardian newspaper intervention, tf all else
in London: "Zimbabwe fail s, by Zimbabwe 's
will break tf th e world African
leaders,
an
does not come to our aid. " in~re asing number of
Tsvangirai has called on whom are dismayed and
Nat
the United Nations to send repelled by Mugabe's litHentoff
peacekeepers
to erally.getting away with
Mu gabeland to clear th e murder? Even the revered
way for the new elections Nel so n Mandela had , at
so that he could campaig n long last, conquered his
of it s members
even as a ''legitimate candt- acute desire. not to critithose who terrorize their date,"
for
whom cize another former freeca n vote
.
.
own People _ 1· s i·nvio- 'Zimbabweans
h
h
·
dom
fighter
agatnst
]able . Savoring that guar- wtt out puttmg t etr very
.
· danger.
European co lonizers. (The
tn
antee, Mugabe declared Itves
•
But if the United white rulers of Rhodesia
.
h ts
1o 'camdurin~
so
N
·
paign ': "We will not
atwns
were to do more kept Mugabe in prison for
express
"deep 10 years before he was
accept any meddling in !han
Zimbabwe's
internal regrel s" and onl y impose out , and Rh odesia became
affairs; even from fellow more econom ic sanctions Zimbabwe .)
Africans ."
on Mugabe and'hi s prit;naCelebrating hi s 90th
Among . the millions -of --- ry
aecompltces,
th~t birthday at a dinner in
Zimbabweans aba ndoned wou ld hardly cause fear tn London , Mandela faced
b~ the world are the sur- the Hitler of Africa. the naked, barbaric truth,
vtvors - in Chitungwiza, Thou gh . well-t,ntended. and said there is "a tragic
18 miles south of Harare Queen Elizabeth s ruling . failure of leadership" in
- of an attack on a home on June 25 to strip Zimbabwe. He didn't
that was a refuge for M~gabe of hi s 1?94 speak the dreaded name,
Kmght but the message was clear.
Movement for Democratic kntghlhood
Change members . Said Grand· Cross .in the Order Maybe Mugabe, on hearone of them , 57-year-old of Bath - must have been · ing Mandela 's irreverence,_
.
Georgina Nyamut samba, dertstvely rece~ved by the . shrugged.
in a June 27 Washington cas htered kmght. You
To be contin ued: Are
Post report: "There are so . thtnl&lt;; he cares'
many boys buried in
Sarah Childress of the there specific, realizable
(nearby) Warren Hill s Wall Stre~ t Jou.rnal has an swers to Zimbabwean
Cemetery,
killed
by been covenng tht s satantc Georgina Nyamutsamba ,
Mugabe. Plea se help ' us' "e lection" - that has mourning "so many boys
suffering in Zimbabwe. shamed Africa and t_he buried ... · killed by
Wh11t can we do?"
world - with conststent Mugabe'1"
One of the owners of accuracy. ''Mr. Muga be,''
''What can we do ?'' she
that refuge . Annastas ia she "' ru te on June 26, "has asks. Will there be no
Chipiyo, ha s given up any long disre~arded what the reply except more deep
hope of deliverance from world thtnks of h~m . regrets - and the imposZimbabwe's · Liberator. Unless Mr. Mu ga be is sibility of first having to
She says: " I have nothing pre ssun;d by pis African get permiss ion from U.N.
to fear. I' ve just lost my counterparts . . there
is Security Council members
son" - one of the four apparently little diplomats China and Ru ssia to actumurdered in the June 17 can do to sway him ."
ally intervene with armed
Will the Afri can Union f
,
attack on her home . She
has nothing left to lose. .expel
Zimbabwe,
as
orces ·
numbers
of Muga be is strangling that
(Nat Hentoff is a
Untold
Zimbabweans are al so nation? What actions will nationally
rmowned
frozen in hopele ssness.
now be take"n by the - · authority Oil the First
Morgan
Tsvangirai, Southern
African Amendment and the Bill
le-ader of the Movement De' elop ment Co mmunit y, of Rigltts and author of
for Democratic Change, which Childre ss describes many hooks, including
wi thdrew from th e run-off as "the mo st powerful "The War 011 the Bill of
election because he did internatio nal (economic ) Rights ll,!ld the Gathering
not want to add to th e bro- actor in Zimbabwe'
Resistauce"
(Se"e"
ken bodies of his su pport- drama?"
Storie.! Press, 2004).)

__________,._,________________

Tuesday, July 8, 2008
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www.mydailysentinel.com

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:Obituaries

kills 41

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

KAB UL, Afghanistan -·
A bomb ripped through the
gates of the Indian Embassy
on Monday, killing 41 people and scattering bodies
and pools of blood across
some of Kabul 's most protected Streets. Afghani stan
quickly blamed Pakistan.
India's archrival.
The suicide car bomber
followed a diplomat's vehicle and detonated the explosives at the building's mam
entrance, only 30 yards
from where dozens or
Afghans had lined up to
apply for visas. The blast
was the deadliest in Kabul
· since the fall of the Tal) ban
tn 200 I. Nearly !50 other
peopl" wtrt wounded.
Women ·and children
browsing nearby shops
were among the victims
who lay on the ground.
bloodied and in agony, crying fer help. Debris covered
the pavement, including
sandal s, a wrecked bicycle
and heaps of twisted metaL
The embassy is on a hu sy.
tree-lined
street
near
Afghanistan's
Inter ior
Ministry that is protected on
both ends by police. though
the checkpoints are easily
driven past. The 8:30 a.m
explosi"n rattled much of
Kabul and kicked up gray
•.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va -Eloi se Mundy Rea, 89, of dust that shrouded the bodPoint Pleasant. W.Va ., "died Monday, July 7, 2008, at St. ies of the dead and
.Mary's Hospital in Huntington , W.Va.
enve loped the survivors A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m . on Friday, July a monochromatic coating
II , 2008. at Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Pnint PlP.itsant, broken 0 111} Uy lin; 1,; 1 iua~un
with Gary W Rea. Jr. officiating. Friends may call at Crow- blood of the wounded. The
HusseH Funeral !-lome from 12:30 p.m. until I:45 p.m., blast blew clothing off
when the proces sion leave:,.
many victims.
Memorial contributions may be made to the West
President Hamid Karzai
Virginia State Farm Museum .
,ondemned the bombing.
and said it was carried out ·
hy militants trying to rupture _ the Afghan-India
friendship . He told the
India n prime minister dur.
•'
ing a phone conversation
that Afgh~ni s tan would do
all it could do identify the
. POMEROY - Disso lutions were granted in Meigs attackers.
, County Common Pleas Court to Trina D. Smith and The Afghan Interior
. \ Christopher Smith, Tamara Kay Hubbard and James Mini stry hinted that the
William Hubbard , Gregory Browning and Trudy attack was carried out with
Browning, and Walter Aaron Woolard and Heidi Mae help from Pakistan 's intelliWQolard.
gence service, saying the
blast happened " in coordinatio n and consul tation wilh
some of the acti'Ve intelligence
circles in the region ."
POMEROY - Dtvorces v.ere granted in Meigs County
A
spokesman
fo r
Common Pleas Court to Betty Jean Hawk from Kenneth
Allen Hawk, Andrew Coffman and Amy R. Coffman, and Pakistan's Foreign Mini stry
declined to comment on the
Crystal Napier from Phillip G. Napier II.
bombing. The Paki stani foreign minister said hi s country. condemned the attack
and all forms of terrori sm.
POMEROY - Foreclosures were issued in Meigs
The bombing showed that
.County Common Pleas Courllo Farmers Bank and Savings Afghanistan is also a theater
Co. against Raymond Andrews , and others, and Special for the strugg le between
'Property VII, LLC, against Jacob Wayne Landis, and oth- longtime rivals India and
·ers.
Pakistan.
"These attacks seem
designed to sabotage any
improvement of relations
POMEROY - A~thony Wayne Petty was sentenced in between Pakistan and either
Meigs County Common Pleas Court to two one-year sen- of its two neighbors, India
and Afghanistan, to assure
tences,on counts of forgery, to be served consecutively.
that
Pakistan has no alterna· Roger D. Shoemaker was sentenced to two one-year sentences on charges of possession of crack cocaine and traf- tive but to conti nue to supficking in crack cocaine. The sentences are consecullve port militant organizations
-with an eight- year sentence in a 2001 ~ase, and were sus- as part of its foreign policy,''
'pended. He was se ntenced to commumty control and sub- said Barnett Rubin , an
Afghani stan expert at New
je,ct to a property forfeiture .
York University.
At Kabul 's hospital s,
anguished · parents railed
I against the Afghan governPOMEROY - Amber Slewart was arraigt1ed in Meigs ment.
·county Common Pleas Court on charges of forgery and
"Where is the security?"
receiving stolen property. Tnal was set for Sept. 4. cried Mirwais, a father of
Christopher Tenaglia was assigned counseL
four who knew that two of
his children had been killed .
Before heading to another
•
hospital to search for hi s
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs other two children, he
County Probate Court to Ty Chris\ian Ault, 22, Pomeroy, shouted obscemttes at
and Ashley Lynn Thomas, 25, Middleport; Andrew Steven Karzat.
.
.
Reed, 26, Reedsville, and Shonda Rae Bellville, 3~1- . Mome.nts later, a. woman
Stockport; Darrick Eugene McCloud, 35, and Sandra Gml ran outside _screammg, crySouthern, 36, Pomeroy ; Joseph Arthur · Boyd, 34. and tng and htttmg her face wtlh
Rebecca Lynne Minshall , 23. Middleport; and Ezra Jay both hands. Her son and
Dalton, 25. and Doroth~ Ilene Hiawa Barringer, 24, ~aughter had , been krlled.
Reedsville .
·
Oh my God.1 the woman
·
screamed. "They are both
dead!"
Six police officers a'ld
merly of ihe Langsville and Dexter areas, went home to be
with her Heavenly Father on Sunday, July 6. 2008 at
Overbrook Nursin g and Rehabilitation Center in
. ·Middlep.ort.
.
Born Auo. II , 1924 at Dartmoth, W.Va., she was the
'daughter ofthe late Charles and Chloe Bradshaw. She was
a homemaker, member of the Rutland Church of God, a
longtime volunteer at the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy and a member of the Swinging Seniors
Dance Club. During World War II she worked in an am munition plant in Maryland.
Nellie was a lov"ing wife to husband Samuel Mi~ha~l.
Racine, and a lovmg mother to children Shirley (Ernie)
Mitchell , Pomeroy. Linda tJeff) Cleland, Lancaster. Connie
Dodson. Middleport. · Charles (Cheryl) Hatfield,
Middleport. Rtchard (Karen) Hatfield, Dexter, a daughterin-law, Debbie Hatfield, Col~mbu s, son-in-law, Dave
Dodson. Point Pleas•ant, W.Va: , slep children , Gary
(Sharon) Michael. Loui se Michael , Lenora (Roger)
Leifheit , 16 grandchildren, 20 great grandchildren, and a
great great grandchtld.
In addition to het pateuts she was preceded in death by
first husband Clarence Hatfi eld. son Paul Hatfield, three
sisters and u brother.
A funeral service will be held at II a.m. , Thursday, July
. 10, 2008 at the Rutland Church of God, Rutland, .with
.Pastor Ronald Heath ofti ciating. Burial wil1 follow at
,Standish Cemetery, Dex ter. The family will receive friends
dunng visitation from 6-9 p.m.. Wednesday. July 9, 2008 at
Birchfield Funeral Home. Rutland, which is in charge of
arrangements.

Deaths

Eloise Rea, 89

For the Record

Dissolutions

Divorces

Foreclosures

Sentenced

Arraigned ·

Marriage licenses

..

('-

. ..

..

inKab

SHAH
AND JASON STRAZIUSO

LANGSVILLE- Nellie E. (Hatfield) Michael, 83, for-' -

' . ATHENS (AP) A restitution to the family of
"woman has been se ntenced the victim .
·to four years in prison for a
Police said"Abishek (A'.crash one year ago that beh- shehk ) Singh (sing)
killed an Ohio University was walktng across a
bridge on June 30, 2007
Twenty-seve 11 -yea r -o ld when Hankinson ran a red
Hankinson of Athens light, struck another car
rn
court with her SUV and spun up
:M,onctay as she pleaded onto the sidewalk, pushing
ilty to aggravaled vehic- Singh into the Hocking
lar homicide. In a plea River.
The body of the 22-year'deal with prosecutors, she
old
graduate student frm\1
''also has had her driver's
was
license suspe nded for eight Faizabad. India.
years and was ordered to found in the water the next
pay more than $ 15 ,000 day.

·-

Bv AMIR

Nellie E. (Hatfield) Michael~ 83

. Ohio woman pleads
:guilty in bridge crash

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

I I

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193 t\B22.

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SHOWTIMES FOR TUES. 71081118

fOil DONi \lESS
W1111111E zott.IN ~~-1!,
H.\tifOCK ' tt~;·l.&lt;&lt;

1:1,til,1:1.
1~1. 2tl, 4:1, 1:1,

photo
An Afghan policeman helps a wounded person at the site of ·a suictde al1ack near' the
Indian Embassy in central Kabul, Afghanistan , on Monday. A car bomb ripped lh rough the
front -wall of the Indian Embassy tn central Kabul on Monday, kil ltng 40 people in wha1
appeared to be the deadliest attack in Afghani~tan's capital since the fal l of the Taltban.
AP

three embassy ·guards were
among the dead.
In New Delhi. India's foreign mini ster said four
Indians, including the mili tary attache and a diplomat,
were killed.
The blast also killed fi ve
Afghan security guards at
the nearby lndones tan
Embassy, where windows
Wt"n:: shauered and d_oors

and gates broken. Two
diplomats were slightly
wounded, Indonesia's foreign mini stry said.
In Washington, the White
House oflered condolences
to the victims.
"Extremi sts continue to
show their disregard for all
human life and their willingness to kill fellow
Muslims as well as others,"
said Gordon Johndroe, a ·
White House nationhl security spokesman. "The
United States stands with
the people of Afghanistan
and India as we face this
common enemy."

Afghani stan has seen · a
sharp rise in violence from
Taliban militants in recent
months. In surgents are
packing bombs with more
ex plosives than ever, one
reason why more U.S. and
NATO troops were killed in
June than any month since
the 200 I invasion.
Sti ll , no one claimed
responsibility for the blast,
and a Taliban spokesman,
Zabiullah Mujahid, denied
the militants were behind it.
The Taliban tend to claim
responsibility for attacks
against intern ational or
Afghan troops and deny
responsibility for bombs
that primarily kill Civilians.
"Whenever we do a suicide attack, we confirm it ,"
Mujahid said. "The Taliban
did not do this one."
The explosion was the
deadliest in Afghanistan
sin ce ·a suicide bomber
killed more than I00 people
at a dog fighting compe_tition in Kandahar in
February.
·
The Indian embassy in the
last several days had beefed
up security by tnstalling
large, dirt-filled blast walls ·
often used by military
force s.
The Indian Mini stry of
External Affairs said the
attack would not deter its
country's ti1iss ion to fulfill
"our commitments to the
government and people of

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mztn g an Apr II a!'-...,a;..:-.t natiu n attemp t
Afgh;lll

K . ttl.~t l.

01 1

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also

allege tha t Paktst ,tn -.xrelil
suppottcd a Ju ne 1.1 tn,u tr!e nl a ttad~ nn

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ihc southern ~-itv of
Kandahar that fr cc:l -lO fl
T.t!ib~m fi ghtc1 ~

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threatened to ,end Afeh;tn
troops after Talthan ic&lt;ldct''
in Paki-.tan . :-..tytng he hotd
h.td enough nf cro"-hmdcr
milttallls attack'.
Afl2.h.m ist;tn
Fotl'i~n
Min i~ter Raneccn D.td l',n

Spatlta vi,ncu'thc cmha"y
:-hortly .tlkr the attad anu
,aiu the bJa,t \\ould not
harm reldtion-. ht't\\eCtl the

two countnc,.
The Uni ted Nal ions allll
NATO's
lntc nwt &lt;n nal
Secunty Asststance Force
both conuemncd the .tllack.
The em has,,· all ad; ",ts
the sixt h s u i~ t lfc bomhtng tn
Kabul thi' vc.tt ]n,uJeciil
vio lence h"-' killed ttlure
than 2,200 people' - mo,tl y
militants - 111 All2.h:t nJstan
in 2008, dLLorditl~ tu an
Associated Pre" L~ou tll ol

official fi gure'.
•••
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Rahtm Fai e1. and Ftsntk
Abrashi co ntnbu ted to this
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picion India' s '!'n volvement
in Afghantstan, includ ing
the mtll tons of do llar'
donated for reconstruction
and the thou sands of ln(\ian
engineers and laborersnc lping to build roads anJ other
tnfrastntcture .
Pakt stani s arc also warv
ol lndtan consulates th &lt;it
have been establi shed tn the
'outlytng ctt ics ot Kandahar.
Jalalabad.
Herat. ·anJ
Mazar-i-Sha ri f. But Indi an
officials· ,,ay they are thet'e
to _sup port reconstru~ltun .
Mil ilant s have frequently
attacked Indian offices and
projecls
around
Afghanistan.
lkram Sehga l, a political
analyst in Paktstan. satd he
doubts Paki stan's i nte II ige nce service was behind I he
attack. He im;tead blamed
Pashtuns - the largest of
Afghan ethnic groups that
al so forms the core of the
Taliban insurgency.
"The Indians were uskmg
for it," Sehgal said . ''The y
have set up so many con sulates along the border."
Sehgal sa td. "It was question of time . The (Pashtuns)
see them as enemies, actually. They h&lt;td to react to the
Indian s settin g up co nsulates there."
Pakistan and India hav e
fought three wars since their
independence from Britain
in 1947. Kashmir is divided
between Paki stan and lndiu.
and India says Kas hmirr
militant groups - which
are seeking independence or
to merge Kashmir with
Paki stan - get military and
financial support from
Islamabad. Pakistan says ii
only supports lhe rebel s'
cause morally.
Afghanistan 's allegation·s
that Paki stan was involved
in Monday's attack will
probably only sour already
troubled rela tion, .

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1~173

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�.,The Daily Sentinel

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PageA6

ACROSS TBE NATION·

Tuesday, July 8 , zooS

Hoilsing What kind·,.,.. . --· awaits next presidential kids?
rescue .
advances Y
in Senate

reality."
alone .
Thus far . the Obamas
Of course. there was the
haven ' t been shy ahout time Mike Myers referred
oung Tad Lincoln
including the girls in their to Chelsea in a sketch on
herded goats into a
public life. Their photos "Saturday Night Live" as
White House sitting
have been itr campaign ads, not "a babe," prompting an
room. Quentin Roosevelt
and they've. been on stage angry reaction , then an
for some rallies and speech- apology by the comedian.
rammed his wagon into a
es . Malia had an especially And there was a bit ol a
historic painting. John
sanguine answer when flap when Amy sat readmg
WASHINGTON (APl Kennedy Jr. had to be
asked how she deals with at the state dinner. "She
A mortgage rescue plan to scooped out of a hiding ·
the crowds: "Those people didn't attend any form~ I
'save hundreds of thousands place in his father's desk.
aren 't there to see me," ·she dinners
after
that. '
of homeowners froln fore- Amy Carter famously
said
,
according
to
her
mothMonk
man
note
s.
closure drew overwhelming . brought a book to a state
er. 'They just think I'm
Jenna and Barbara Bush,
Senate support Monday, dinner.
cute. So I just wave and 19 when thm lather
inching toward passage
Anq teenager Susan Ford.
smile. and then I'm out of became pres1dent , have
despite Republican objec- in a mini-revolt, dodged the
there."
been known to chafe at
tions .
Secret Service for a brief
McCain, by contrast. is their Secret Service protecThe Senate voted 76-10 to taste of freedom on the
reticent about discussing his lion . However burdensome .
advance . the bill , a broad streets of Washington.
.
se ven hildren from two all that security didn't prearrav of housin~ measures
Malia Obama· turned 10
. marriages , espe,ially his vent . Jenna. now 26 and
including overhaub of the last week, and her sister
. son Jimmy. a Marine corpo- marned , from havmg
Hou sing Sash a is 7. Should their
Federal
raJ who returned frou1 hag brushes with . \he . law
Admini stration,
the father, B:track, win the elecearlier this year. The public agam st underage drmkm~ .
Depression-era mortgage tion.~hey'd be the youngest
sees little of the McCain
Monkman feels Wh1te
insurer . . and government- ·kids in the White House
kids except for Meghan, 23 . House children look back
sponsored home loan giants since Amy Carter arrived at .
who blogs from the . cam- · fondly on the1r years there .
Fannie Mae and Freddie age 9. They, too, would
paign trail on McCain but Wead. the former Bush
Mac.
become the subjects of
·
aide. sees a dow~. side Blogette.
Its centerpiece is a new anecdotes that wind up in
The senator's older three what he calls a cnsts ot
$300 billion FHA program history books.
· •
children - two sons of his identity," the inability of a
to allow debt-ridden homeThey'd have challenges
first wife. Douglas and presid~ncs child to e.ver
owners who are currently that face few children . Their
Andrew, whom he adopted, ·. escape hc mg de lined as JUSt
too financially risky to fashion faux pas, the first
and
a daughter they had that.. no matter . what they
qualify for government· braces on their teeth , even
together, Sidney - are in achteve later 111 hfe.
backed loans to refinance their first boyfriends might
their . 40s. With Cindy
Such con~1dera11ons are
into safer, more afford&lt;lble be docunwnted forever.
McCain·,
he
.
l]as
Meghan,
premature
tnr the Obama
mortgages.
Their parents' choice of
AP photo
1
The measure is on track school - public or private
In this Dec. 21, 2002 file photo, President Bush's twin Jack, Jimmy, and · their child1:cn. A mot·c current
Would . they
for passage by an over- - would be debated. They daughters, Barbara, ielt, and Jenna, walk past reporters youngest, Bridget, adopted questiOn:
the
whelming margin, possibly could even find themselves , before departing the White House for Camp David, where from Bangladesh as an · beeom e part ol
infant.
She
told
a
young
prankster
tradition
·)
Early
by week's end. It has sur- like Chelsea Clinton at 13 , they spent Christmas Dec. 21. 2002.
reporter for Scholastic pract1110ners mclud~ Tad
vived several test votes in the subject of an unkind refhttched
the Senate, repeatedly erence on "Saturday Night
The rriost pressillg ·issue . ceed," she says. She picked News in December that her · L111coln. who once
1
·
favorite subject at her pri- two goats to a c latr an d bardemonstrating that there's
Live"
to her adolescent concerning White House
·
1
k
up ' a friend. drove to a vate school in Phoenix is reled 111(0 a stttmg mom
e noug h suppor l for 11 1o oo s
B~t· -;.1 h~tl!er il'~ th~ children would surely be supermarket
parking
lot ht"·' !~"
"·!ld '""' "" " 1~~" " wh~re hi' ~m&lt;•mlt&gt;J'.I.lllll)!h~r
0 vc&gt;rr!de !'res!de~·l Bush's
and
called
to
say
she
was
v')• "au
av ... "' .
promised veto.
Obama.. girls or the older security. "Way back into the
· playing sports.
. was giving a tour. Quentin ·
all
right.
·
R
ch
'Jdren
of
John
McCal·n
_
earliest
days,
the
children
of
1
"We are a normal family Rooseve It, son ot'Tedd y, ran
.
: BuI Sen. John Ens1gn . . ·
But
there
were
plentv
of
Nev., is blocking its 16-year-old Bridget is the presidents have been target'
just like everyone el se,'' she h'1s 1oy wagon stra1·ghr·
perks.
Ford
had
the
unique
said.
through a priceless painting
progress
because youngest of his seven - the ed," says Doug Wead, a forrivilege
of
holding
her'
Democratic leaders have next presidential progeny mer aide to .President P
Like the 71 -year-old of a f'1rs t 1ad v; anot her t'1me
refused to allow a vote on will also have an unparal - George H.W. Bush and senior prom in the East McCain, many presidents he . near 1Y ,·opp 1ed a· 350"
au.thor
of "All
the Room. Malia and Sasha haven't . been
· Van·
youn g poun d bust of Martm
attaching an $8 billion leled view of history m the President's
Children.''
Obama have a ways to go enough 10 have small chi I- Buren .·.
package of renewable ener- making , and worldly experi gy tax breaks. Ensign has ences other children can Jackie Kennedy. he notes, before their proms. First, dren in the White Hou se. . John Kennedy Jr. so liked
said he wants the tax incen- only dream of.
was so concerned 'about their parents would need to and so a young family like the hiding place .in his
iives to hitch a ride on the
"Sure, maybe a few times . keeping her kids safe and decide: Public school.· or the Ken!ledys or Obamas is fath er 's desk th at he had to
rare. "A young family ere- he removed occasionally by
housing measure because it I wished my father was just out of view that she orga- private?
Jimmy
Carter
·
famously
ates
a whole different an aide before important
has a good chance of being a congressman," . Susan nized kindergarten for
Ford . Bales, now chairman Caroline inside the White sent Amy to public school. atmosphere," says Betty business could b,e·done. And
signed into law by Bush.
"This will be the major uf the Betty Ford Center, House. And when President The choice was again de bat- Monkman, who was a sister Caroline, now vetting
achievement and accom- said in an interview. "But in Kennedy allowed th?se ed when Chelsea Clinton White House curator for 30 vice presidential prospects ·
1&gt;lishment of this Congress fact I wouldn.!t trade it ·.for {afTIOUS phptos of Carohne came to the White House at years until 2001 and. wrote for Obama·. is clearly much
when it comes to dealing · anytb,ing.· The uavels J)\~ and fohn m the Oval Office . f3. What better :e~' some "The
Living . White more tightlipped at 50 than
, . . ..
she was as a child, when. ·
with the underlying econom- people' you meet. F~ori('· tel be"t~k~n. :We~d .says: it " argt1ed, ·i'o!'-the · ··· presi- 1"1ouse."
ic crisis, which is at its heart movie st'ars'"' to· heads of ' .w;~s·a.gaJolit h1s w1fe s ed1ct. ,(,lent to.le3f)1 alx.mt)ht( st~.tt( ...Monklll,M. reqJer@.ers asked by reporters what her
the foreclosure crisis," said state. it was like, 'Oh my Conveniently, she was out of public education than Amy Carter having friends father was doing one day.
Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, D- gosh, look who I'm meet- df.town . .
. . .
through his daughter? over 10 carve pumpkins on she replied. "Oh. he's
Conn.,
the
Banking ing now!"'
fhe ktds of pres1dents Ultimately, Bill and Hillary Halloween, playing in her upstairs with his shoes and
Committee Chairman who
Her advice to the next have
constant
Secret Clinton chose an elite pri- special tree house designed socks off. · not doing anywrote the legislation.
president and his wife; Service protection. Susan vale . school,
Sidwell by Dad, or collecting money 1hing ."
Beyond the Senate, the "Keep being a parent. Keep For~ had, tl even as a vtce Friends, where tuition now · around the White House for
And there was Alice
election-year package still loving your children and. pres1dent s daughter after runs about $27,000.
the March of Dimes. She Roosevelt , who. got 'into so
faces a tricky path.
keep being available to tt was dtscovered ~he
Malia and Sasha Obama also recalls a historical many shenanigans that her
The president has said he them." She notes that when Symbtonese
LtberatJOn currently attend the priv~te . scavenger hunt that her staff father, .Teddy, seemed to
thinks a deal is possible, but . she needed something from Army, the group that kid- University of Chicago designed for Chelsea and gtve up.
the White House is balking her parents, she could inter- napped newspaper heiress Laboratory Schools, where her friends from Little Rock
"! can do one of two
ut key portions of the bill, . rupt them at any time - and Patty Hearst, had listed her Michelle Obama is on the on tlie night of the Clintons ' things,'' .he was quoted as
particularly $3 .9 billion did.
·
as a target.
board. The Obamas haven't inaugural ball.
saying. "! can be president
mclu~ed for buying and fixShe recalled a meeting
One day she: popped out said where they would send
"These were · normal, of the United States, or! can
ing up foreclosed proper- her dad was having with of the security bubble. The their chil&lt;)ren should he active kids ," she says of control Alice."
ties. Democrats argue the Henry, Kissinger, then sec- White House gates were win. "I try not to be obses-· . both Amy and Chelsea.
money is key to preventing retary of state. "I walked in open for her mother to sive about it,'' Michelle "They were able to come
neighborhood blight, but and said: 'Hi; Mr. Secretary. drive in, and Susan Obama said recently on · and go and have a life."
most Republicans call it a Dad, I need my allowance whizzed out in her own car, "The View" when asked Chelsea, she notes, was
White House Historical
bailout for lenders who and Mom doesn't have any unchaperoned. "Everybody what her ~ids' lives would active in ballet and with her A s s o c i a t i o n :
helped cause the mortgage cash."' The leader of the tries it. ·It becotnes a chat- be like, "because we've got church youth group; and the http: llwww. wh itelwusehismess.
free world obliged.
lenge and you want to sue- · a lot of work before it's a media generally left her tory.org/
BY JOCELY~ NOVECK

Inside

n~11-v
.,..._ ....J
. ... . Th• P.- ....,-

Indians starting Mier, Page 82

~~ntine1
lfAJ"
A.

~""a

Sports briefs, Page 82
Fresh faces on U.S. swim team,
Page B6 ·

AP NATIONAL WRITER

.,

lliUl

. l l ,....

On the Net

Thesday, July 8, 2008

POMEROY - A schedule ol upcom ing high
school vars1ty spo r11ng events 1rw olv ing
rea ms from Meigs County.

Jueaday July 8
Legion Baseball
Chillicothe at Post 128 , 6 p.m.

. Frldav: Ju lv 11

legion Baseball
Post 128 at Portsmouth (do.ublehead-

er). 6 p.m.
Saturday July 12
L9glon Baseball
Parkersburg at Post· 128 (doublehead·

er), 1 p.m.

SPORTS BRIE.FS

EHS football
parents ·meeting
There will be a. meeting
for Eastern High School
fo&lt;:&gt;tball
parents on
Thursday, July 10, at 8 p.m.
on the stadium bleachers.
For questions · .or more
information, contact head
football coach Kevin Welsh
at 740-678-0608.

ASpecial supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

r----------------------,1 • ·
·
1 ·Simply send your baby's
IAge
I photograph along with the coupon
I Parents
I to the left with your payment of
I
I $10.00, and we'll do the rest.
I Baby's Name
I
·

I Address
I Phone
·
,

I
I

The Daily
1 Address wiH ·not be published 1
L----------------------J Sentinel

1

Baby Edition '08
to be published
Friday, July 25
'

Your Baby's
~ge

Parents Names Here

.

•'

'

1

Mail or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline for submission,
Friday, July 18

l11 Court St. Pomeroy, OH ·

TUPPERS PLAINS
Athletic packets for the
2'008 fall!iports season are
current Iy available
at
Eastern High School.
Packets can be picked up in
the office from 8:30 a.m.
until 3:30 p.m. Tuesday
through Fdday.
All student-athletes it!' 7th
through 12th grade who
wish to participate in cheerleading, football, golf, cross
country, or volleyball must
complete the packet with ·a
parent in order to be eligible
to play a sport in the fall.
Additionally, all studentathletes must have a physical completed and turned in
in order.to participate.
For more information,
contact Pam Douthitt at
Eastern High School. ·

in December in the trade for
outtielder Josh Hamilton.
"Everybody has dreams,"
he said. "A lot of pitchers
want to win the Cy Young or
go to the All-Star game . This
is one of mine."
The trade has been good
for both teams.
. Hamilton batted .292 with
19 .homers in his rookie sea-

;,..:.
. : ~, .·,.a.. •'--e o ... r~ ...
"''I I ""' Ill 1rt

1\. \.- \ t .'• \

"' '··•
............. ~(...
l i t t!LtiOUI

problems limited him to 90
games. Thi s year with
Texas, he's an all- star, too.
his 84 RBls the most in the
majors.
Volquez was 1-10 in parts
of two seasons with the
Rangers, who sent him all
the way back to Single-A
Bakersfield in 2007. He said
the deep demotion made
him grow up .
.
Reds scouts· noticed a
change in his on,field
demeanor in ·the minors. By
the end of the season, he was
back in the major~ and again

RACINE
The
Southern Volleyball Youth
Camp for all girls entering
fifth through eighth grades
in the fall will be held from
9 a.m. to noon, July 14-16 at
Southern High School.
The cost is $30 per student. A camp T-shirt is
included in the price.
The camp is meant to
teach passing, setting~ hitting skills, and fundamentals.
Contact .Tonja Hunter at
740-949-3088 for more
information.

The Big Bend Youth
FootbaH League will be
holding football and cheerleading sign-ups every
Saturday in July for any
area youth from Ohio or
West Virginia interested in
participating.
On July 5, sign-ups will
be held in Rutland at the 4th
of July celebration. Each
Saturday , thereafter, signups will be . held at · the
:Veterans Memorial Stadium
In Middleport from 10 a.m.
\intil I p.m.
.For questions or more
information. contact Sarah
lit 740-698-4054, Regina at
740-698-2804, Dave at 304674-5178, Misty at 304173-5230, or Rick ·at 740367-0438.
'

'

.

-

J

.,.., :...1

t... .... S'..... ~ ,.,.
.hiiU U O... IV IL. ,

. .. L ~- " " l' ' i· ~
W lll....ll )' \ J I

·- · '

t:"" lttlt

al the lop of the di visi1111 .
you tend to only get one .
maybe two (players in) ."
Ken Griffey Jr. had lookru
like he was headin g for
another All-Star start . Now.
he may be taking an island
vacation instead.
Griffey was second in the
NL balloting released last
Monday.
leading
Milwaukee 's Ryan Braun by
about 167,000 votes .. Rrm111
wound up winning . among
NL outfielders while G ri flt~y
Please see Volquez, 82

..

, 't
i

.~

: . -i¥d
,

Steelers looking
to restructure
team ownership

\

'

AP photo

Milwaukee Brewers new pitcher C.C. Sabathia, left, smiles with manager Ned Vast as he talks at a news conference
Monday in Milwaukee.
·
·

Sabathia traded to Brewers for four prospects
BY CHRIS JENKINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MILWAUKEE - With
one XXL-sized move, the
Milwaukee Brewers hope to
transform themselves from
scrappy underdogs to a big,
bad pitching powerhouse
intent on chasing down the
Chicago Cubs and making
the playoffs for the first time
since 1982.
The Brewers obtained AL
Cy Young Award winnef CC
Sabathia in a trade with the
Cleveland
Indians
on
Monday, giving up four

prospects in a gamble thar
favors the present over the
future.
"I 'd say we're going for
it," Brewers general manager Doug Melvin said.
"Th,at's the way I look at it."
The deal stacks the
Brewers' deck with a pair of
aces. Sabathia and Ben
Sheets - but only for a few
months.
Barring blockbuster con- '
tract offers from a smallmarket team that already is
stretching this year's payroll
into the $90 million range;
both players will become

free agents after the season. playoffs, I'll definitely be
But Sabathia said that's a doing that." .
concern for the offseason.
Still, the deal ~ardly
Right now, lie's just trying to assures the Brewers an easy
blend in and get back to hav- road to the postseason.
ing fun on the mqund - Milwaukee began Monday a
something he didn' t do in percentage point ahead of
the postseason last year.
St. Louis· for the second-best
"If anybody 's ever seen record in the NL, and both
me pitch, I' m out there teams arc chasing the
laughing and having fun ," Chicago Cubs, who are 3 112
said Sabathia. who went 19- games ahead in the ' NL
7 with a 3.21 ERA last sea- Central~
son but lost two games to
"Let's face it: This is still a
Boston in the ALCS. "That's calculated risk,'' Brewers
just me , and that's something that I didn't do last ·
year. When we get to the Please see Sabathla, 81

· PITTSBURGH (AP) Pittsburgh Steelers chairman Dan Rooney and hi s
son. team ptesiuent Art
Rooney II. want to buy
other fal'nily members'
shares to assure that'"'" 111'
the NFL's most storied fran "
chises does not lcil ve
Rooney control .
In a statement Mondav.
the team said some of D:in
Rooney's four brother.'
want to focus their busittcs.s
efforts on racetrac.ks and
other non -football 111lerest&lt; . ·
The brothers - Art .l r.,
Timothy, Patrick and John
- all own an interest in the
team as does another relat ed
family, the McGinleys.
although it has only a small
stake in the 75 -year-old
franchi se.
NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell has asked former
comm1ss1oner
Paul
Tagliabue to represent the
league in talks to reach an
agreement on a separation
of the gambling interests
and the restructured llwnership if part of the team is
sold, according to the stiltement.
"For the past two years. ·
the Rooney family has l1&lt;1d
.disc.ussions about a restructuring of the ownership of
the Steelers in order to
ensure compliance with the
NFL ownership policies and
Please see Steelers, 82

A-Rod's wife: Divorce over 'extramarital affairs'
BY CURT ANDERSON
AND JAKE COYLE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI - A tumultuous
week , for Alex Rodriguez,
played out in tabloid headline s and carried on the
whispers of a connection to
Madonna, came to a ·head
Monday when his wife filed
'for divorce.
The more than 5-year marriage collapsed am1d reports
of a new friendship between
CoNTACfUS
the Yankee slugger and the
49-year-old pop singer, an
:.: H40·446·2342 ext. 33
only-in-New York conver•
gence of sport and entertain.... - ].7;1{).446·3008
ment celebrity.
E--'JTI&amp;!I- sportsOmydaitysentlnei .GQm
Played out in both the
~Ot!LS!illf
sports pages and gossip
' '
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer · magazines,
the
saga
(140/ 446·2342, oxl. 33. ·
appeared to have taken its
~tra nclo lph @ mydailysentinel .com
toll on Cynthia Rodriguez,
'Bryan Watters, Sports Writer who said in di l'orce papers
that her husband "emot1on(740) 446·2342, exl. 33
bwa tters@ mydeilytrlbune.com
allY. abandoned hi s wife and
chtldren."
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
"The marriage of the par(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
ties is irretrievably broken
lcru mC mydailyregtster.com

..

•

rated a top prospec:t.
Volquez found out Sunday
that he alone would represent the Reds. Seconu ba,eman Brandon Phillips. 11ho
lead s Cincinnati with 56
RBis and 17 stolen buses.
was not selected.
"I really would have liked
to see Brandon on the team
too," Raker said. "R111 li kl' I

..

Southern High
volleyball camp

'

•

CINCINNATI (AP) Manager Du sty Baker call s
pitcher Edinson Volquez, the
only Cincinnati Reds player
chosen for the All-Star
game. the team's lifesaver
this season .
He was thrilled for
Volquez (11 -3 with a 2.36
ERA), who got his lith win
Sunday when the Reds beat
the-Washington Nmiomll·; 65 at Great American Ball
Park, where Volquez is 6-0.
" I think that's great,"
. Baker .said. "I mean, he's
well deserving. I'm glad
he's going there with II,
possibly 12 (wins)."
Volquez was selected by
fellow players for the 79th
annual game, set for July 15
at Yankee Stadium.
" I'm
excited,"
said
AP photo
Volquez. 2~. "This 1s my
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Edinson Volquez walks back to the fir;;t full season in the big
mound after walking in Washington Nationals' Ronnie · leagues and I' ve made the
·.
Belliard in the third inn.ing of a baseball game Sunday in All-Star game."
Cincinnati.
·
Yolquez came to the Reds

EHS fall sports
athletic packets

BBYFL sign-ups
Saturdays in July

In the Daily Sentinel

Volquez an all~star in first full season

LocAL SCHEDULE

becau se of the hu s.band's
extramarital affairs and
other marital misconduct,"
according to her petition for
dissolution of marriage,
filed in the family division
· of Miami-Dade County
Circuit Court.
' The New York Yankees
third baseman, who earned
hi s 1'2th All-Star selection
Sunday, has refused to comment on any relationship
with Madonna.
Rodriguez's attorney in
Miami, . .Ira M. Elegant who is . al so representing
NBA star Shaquille O'Neal
in his ongoing divorce said he had not reviewed the
divorce petition but added:
"A' you know,.anyone can
pay the filing fee and make
alle$ations."
R1chard Rubenstein, a
spokesman for Rodrigue z.
deci'ined to addre ss to ailegations of infidelity. suyin g
that would be brought i1p in
court.
.
"His priorites are to have a

future with his· children and
be a big {JUri of their lives,"
Rubenstem said.
Cynthia Rodriguez has
asked for primary custody of
their two children
Nathasha Alexander, 3, and
2-month-old Ella Alexander
- as well as child suppori
and alimony.
Days before t.he filing , stories linking Rodriguez and
Madonna began to surface.
including an Us . Weekly
report last week saying that
Rodri~uez made several
VISit S
· to
late-mght
Madonna 's apartment in
New York .
Madonna, who is married
to filmmaker Guy Ritchie,
denied
any
romantic
involvement with Rodriguez
in a statement Sunday.
"My husband and I are not
AP photo
pl annin~
on getting a
divorce,' the statement said. New York Yankees star Alex Rod riguez, right, and l1i s wife,
"I know Alex Rodrigue z Cynthia, arrive to the 12th annual GQ "Men of the Year"
through Guy Oseary, who party at the Chateau ·Marmont hotel in Los Angeles. The
wife of Alex Rodriguez has filed for divorce in a Miami court.
Ple11e see Divorce, B6
A lawyer for Cynthia Rodriguez filed the papers on Monday.

�.,The Daily Sentinel

.

-

PageA6

ACROSS TBE NATION·

Tuesday, July 8 , zooS

Hoilsing What kind·,.,.. . --· awaits next presidential kids?
rescue .
advances Y
in Senate

reality."
alone .
Thus far . the Obamas
Of course. there was the
haven ' t been shy ahout time Mike Myers referred
oung Tad Lincoln
including the girls in their to Chelsea in a sketch on
herded goats into a
public life. Their photos "Saturday Night Live" as
White House sitting
have been itr campaign ads, not "a babe," prompting an
room. Quentin Roosevelt
and they've. been on stage angry reaction , then an
for some rallies and speech- apology by the comedian.
rammed his wagon into a
es . Malia had an especially And there was a bit ol a
historic painting. John
sanguine answer when flap when Amy sat readmg
WASHINGTON (APl Kennedy Jr. had to be
asked how she deals with at the state dinner. "She
A mortgage rescue plan to scooped out of a hiding ·
the crowds: "Those people didn't attend any form~ I
'save hundreds of thousands place in his father's desk.
aren 't there to see me," ·she dinners
after
that. '
of homeowners froln fore- Amy Carter famously
said
,
according
to
her
mothMonk
man
note
s.
closure drew overwhelming . brought a book to a state
er. 'They just think I'm
Jenna and Barbara Bush,
Senate support Monday, dinner.
cute. So I just wave and 19 when thm lather
inching toward passage
Anq teenager Susan Ford.
smile. and then I'm out of became pres1dent , have
despite Republican objec- in a mini-revolt, dodged the
there."
been known to chafe at
tions .
Secret Service for a brief
McCain, by contrast. is their Secret Service protecThe Senate voted 76-10 to taste of freedom on the
reticent about discussing his lion . However burdensome .
advance . the bill , a broad streets of Washington.
.
se ven hildren from two all that security didn't prearrav of housin~ measures
Malia Obama· turned 10
. marriages , espe,ially his vent . Jenna. now 26 and
including overhaub of the last week, and her sister
. son Jimmy. a Marine corpo- marned , from havmg
Hou sing Sash a is 7. Should their
Federal
raJ who returned frou1 hag brushes with . \he . law
Admini stration,
the father, B:track, win the elecearlier this year. The public agam st underage drmkm~ .
Depression-era mortgage tion.~hey'd be the youngest
sees little of the McCain
Monkman feels Wh1te
insurer . . and government- ·kids in the White House
kids except for Meghan, 23 . House children look back
sponsored home loan giants since Amy Carter arrived at .
who blogs from the . cam- · fondly on the1r years there .
Fannie Mae and Freddie age 9. They, too, would
paign trail on McCain but Wead. the former Bush
Mac.
become the subjects of
·
aide. sees a dow~. side Blogette.
Its centerpiece is a new anecdotes that wind up in
The senator's older three what he calls a cnsts ot
$300 billion FHA program history books.
· •
children - two sons of his identity," the inability of a
to allow debt-ridden homeThey'd have challenges
first wife. Douglas and presid~ncs child to e.ver
owners who are currently that face few children . Their
Andrew, whom he adopted, ·. escape hc mg de lined as JUSt
too financially risky to fashion faux pas, the first
and
a daughter they had that.. no matter . what they
qualify for government· braces on their teeth , even
together, Sidney - are in achteve later 111 hfe.
backed loans to refinance their first boyfriends might
their . 40s. With Cindy
Such con~1dera11ons are
into safer, more afford&lt;lble be docunwnted forever.
McCain·,
he
.
l]as
Meghan,
premature
tnr the Obama
mortgages.
Their parents' choice of
AP photo
1
The measure is on track school - public or private
In this Dec. 21, 2002 file photo, President Bush's twin Jack, Jimmy, and · their child1:cn. A mot·c current
Would . they
for passage by an over- - would be debated. They daughters, Barbara, ielt, and Jenna, walk past reporters youngest, Bridget, adopted questiOn:
the
whelming margin, possibly could even find themselves , before departing the White House for Camp David, where from Bangladesh as an · beeom e part ol
infant.
She
told
a
young
prankster
tradition
·)
Early
by week's end. It has sur- like Chelsea Clinton at 13 , they spent Christmas Dec. 21. 2002.
reporter for Scholastic pract1110ners mclud~ Tad
vived several test votes in the subject of an unkind refhttched
the Senate, repeatedly erence on "Saturday Night
The rriost pressillg ·issue . ceed," she says. She picked News in December that her · L111coln. who once
1
·
favorite subject at her pri- two goats to a c latr an d bardemonstrating that there's
Live"
to her adolescent concerning White House
·
1
k
up ' a friend. drove to a vate school in Phoenix is reled 111(0 a stttmg mom
e noug h suppor l for 11 1o oo s
B~t· -;.1 h~tl!er il'~ th~ children would surely be supermarket
parking
lot ht"·' !~"
"·!ld '""' "" " 1~~" " wh~re hi' ~m&lt;•mlt&gt;J'.I.lllll)!h~r
0 vc&gt;rr!de !'res!de~·l Bush's
and
called
to
say
she
was
v')• "au
av ... "' .
promised veto.
Obama.. girls or the older security. "Way back into the
· playing sports.
. was giving a tour. Quentin ·
all
right.
·
R
ch
'Jdren
of
John
McCal·n
_
earliest
days,
the
children
of
1
"We are a normal family Rooseve It, son ot'Tedd y, ran
.
: BuI Sen. John Ens1gn . . ·
But
there
were
plentv
of
Nev., is blocking its 16-year-old Bridget is the presidents have been target'
just like everyone el se,'' she h'1s 1oy wagon stra1·ghr·
perks.
Ford
had
the
unique
said.
through a priceless painting
progress
because youngest of his seven - the ed," says Doug Wead, a forrivilege
of
holding
her'
Democratic leaders have next presidential progeny mer aide to .President P
Like the 71 -year-old of a f'1rs t 1ad v; anot her t'1me
refused to allow a vote on will also have an unparal - George H.W. Bush and senior prom in the East McCain, many presidents he . near 1Y ,·opp 1ed a· 350"
au.thor
of "All
the Room. Malia and Sasha haven't . been
· Van·
youn g poun d bust of Martm
attaching an $8 billion leled view of history m the President's
Children.''
Obama have a ways to go enough 10 have small chi I- Buren .·.
package of renewable ener- making , and worldly experi gy tax breaks. Ensign has ences other children can Jackie Kennedy. he notes, before their proms. First, dren in the White Hou se. . John Kennedy Jr. so liked
said he wants the tax incen- only dream of.
was so concerned 'about their parents would need to and so a young family like the hiding place .in his
iives to hitch a ride on the
"Sure, maybe a few times . keeping her kids safe and decide: Public school.· or the Ken!ledys or Obamas is fath er 's desk th at he had to
rare. "A young family ere- he removed occasionally by
housing measure because it I wished my father was just out of view that she orga- private?
Jimmy
Carter
·
famously
ates
a whole different an aide before important
has a good chance of being a congressman," . Susan nized kindergarten for
Ford . Bales, now chairman Caroline inside the White sent Amy to public school. atmosphere," says Betty business could b,e·done. And
signed into law by Bush.
"This will be the major uf the Betty Ford Center, House. And when President The choice was again de bat- Monkman, who was a sister Caroline, now vetting
achievement and accom- said in an interview. "But in Kennedy allowed th?se ed when Chelsea Clinton White House curator for 30 vice presidential prospects ·
1&gt;lishment of this Congress fact I wouldn.!t trade it ·.for {afTIOUS phptos of Carohne came to the White House at years until 2001 and. wrote for Obama·. is clearly much
when it comes to dealing · anytb,ing.· The uavels J)\~ and fohn m the Oval Office . f3. What better :e~' some "The
Living . White more tightlipped at 50 than
, . . ..
she was as a child, when. ·
with the underlying econom- people' you meet. F~ori('· tel be"t~k~n. :We~d .says: it " argt1ed, ·i'o!'-the · ··· presi- 1"1ouse."
ic crisis, which is at its heart movie st'ars'"' to· heads of ' .w;~s·a.gaJolit h1s w1fe s ed1ct. ,(,lent to.le3f)1 alx.mt)ht( st~.tt( ...Monklll,M. reqJer@.ers asked by reporters what her
the foreclosure crisis," said state. it was like, 'Oh my Conveniently, she was out of public education than Amy Carter having friends father was doing one day.
Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, D- gosh, look who I'm meet- df.town . .
. . .
through his daughter? over 10 carve pumpkins on she replied. "Oh. he's
Conn.,
the
Banking ing now!"'
fhe ktds of pres1dents Ultimately, Bill and Hillary Halloween, playing in her upstairs with his shoes and
Committee Chairman who
Her advice to the next have
constant
Secret Clinton chose an elite pri- special tree house designed socks off. · not doing anywrote the legislation.
president and his wife; Service protection. Susan vale . school,
Sidwell by Dad, or collecting money 1hing ."
Beyond the Senate, the "Keep being a parent. Keep For~ had, tl even as a vtce Friends, where tuition now · around the White House for
And there was Alice
election-year package still loving your children and. pres1dent s daughter after runs about $27,000.
the March of Dimes. She Roosevelt , who. got 'into so
faces a tricky path.
keep being available to tt was dtscovered ~he
Malia and Sasha Obama also recalls a historical many shenanigans that her
The president has said he them." She notes that when Symbtonese
LtberatJOn currently attend the priv~te . scavenger hunt that her staff father, .Teddy, seemed to
thinks a deal is possible, but . she needed something from Army, the group that kid- University of Chicago designed for Chelsea and gtve up.
the White House is balking her parents, she could inter- napped newspaper heiress Laboratory Schools, where her friends from Little Rock
"! can do one of two
ut key portions of the bill, . rupt them at any time - and Patty Hearst, had listed her Michelle Obama is on the on tlie night of the Clintons ' things,'' .he was quoted as
particularly $3 .9 billion did.
·
as a target.
board. The Obamas haven't inaugural ball.
saying. "! can be president
mclu~ed for buying and fixShe recalled a meeting
One day she: popped out said where they would send
"These were · normal, of the United States, or! can
ing up foreclosed proper- her dad was having with of the security bubble. The their chil&lt;)ren should he active kids ," she says of control Alice."
ties. Democrats argue the Henry, Kissinger, then sec- White House gates were win. "I try not to be obses-· . both Amy and Chelsea.
money is key to preventing retary of state. "I walked in open for her mother to sive about it,'' Michelle "They were able to come
neighborhood blight, but and said: 'Hi; Mr. Secretary. drive in, and Susan Obama said recently on · and go and have a life."
most Republicans call it a Dad, I need my allowance whizzed out in her own car, "The View" when asked Chelsea, she notes, was
White House Historical
bailout for lenders who and Mom doesn't have any unchaperoned. "Everybody what her ~ids' lives would active in ballet and with her A s s o c i a t i o n :
helped cause the mortgage cash."' The leader of the tries it. ·It becotnes a chat- be like, "because we've got church youth group; and the http: llwww. wh itelwusehismess.
free world obliged.
lenge and you want to sue- · a lot of work before it's a media generally left her tory.org/
BY JOCELY~ NOVECK

Inside

n~11-v
.,..._ ....J
. ... . Th• P.- ....,-

Indians starting Mier, Page 82

~~ntine1
lfAJ"
A.

~""a

Sports briefs, Page 82
Fresh faces on U.S. swim team,
Page B6 ·

AP NATIONAL WRITER

.,

lliUl

. l l ,....

On the Net

Thesday, July 8, 2008

POMEROY - A schedule ol upcom ing high
school vars1ty spo r11ng events 1rw olv ing
rea ms from Meigs County.

Jueaday July 8
Legion Baseball
Chillicothe at Post 128 , 6 p.m.

. Frldav: Ju lv 11

legion Baseball
Post 128 at Portsmouth (do.ublehead-

er). 6 p.m.
Saturday July 12
L9glon Baseball
Parkersburg at Post· 128 (doublehead·

er), 1 p.m.

SPORTS BRIE.FS

EHS football
parents ·meeting
There will be a. meeting
for Eastern High School
fo&lt;:&gt;tball
parents on
Thursday, July 10, at 8 p.m.
on the stadium bleachers.
For questions · .or more
information, contact head
football coach Kevin Welsh
at 740-678-0608.

ASpecial supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

r----------------------,1 • ·
·
1 ·Simply send your baby's
IAge
I photograph along with the coupon
I Parents
I to the left with your payment of
I
I $10.00, and we'll do the rest.
I Baby's Name
I
·

I Address
I Phone
·
,

I
I

The Daily
1 Address wiH ·not be published 1
L----------------------J Sentinel

1

Baby Edition '08
to be published
Friday, July 25
'

Your Baby's
~ge

Parents Names Here

.

•'

'

1

Mail or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline for submission,
Friday, July 18

l11 Court St. Pomeroy, OH ·

TUPPERS PLAINS
Athletic packets for the
2'008 fall!iports season are
current Iy available
at
Eastern High School.
Packets can be picked up in
the office from 8:30 a.m.
until 3:30 p.m. Tuesday
through Fdday.
All student-athletes it!' 7th
through 12th grade who
wish to participate in cheerleading, football, golf, cross
country, or volleyball must
complete the packet with ·a
parent in order to be eligible
to play a sport in the fall.
Additionally, all studentathletes must have a physical completed and turned in
in order.to participate.
For more information,
contact Pam Douthitt at
Eastern High School. ·

in December in the trade for
outtielder Josh Hamilton.
"Everybody has dreams,"
he said. "A lot of pitchers
want to win the Cy Young or
go to the All-Star game . This
is one of mine."
The trade has been good
for both teams.
. Hamilton batted .292 with
19 .homers in his rookie sea-

;,..:.
. : ~, .·,.a.. •'--e o ... r~ ...
"''I I ""' Ill 1rt

1\. \.- \ t .'• \

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............. ~(...
l i t t!LtiOUI

problems limited him to 90
games. Thi s year with
Texas, he's an all- star, too.
his 84 RBls the most in the
majors.
Volquez was 1-10 in parts
of two seasons with the
Rangers, who sent him all
the way back to Single-A
Bakersfield in 2007. He said
the deep demotion made
him grow up .
.
Reds scouts· noticed a
change in his on,field
demeanor in ·the minors. By
the end of the season, he was
back in the major~ and again

RACINE
The
Southern Volleyball Youth
Camp for all girls entering
fifth through eighth grades
in the fall will be held from
9 a.m. to noon, July 14-16 at
Southern High School.
The cost is $30 per student. A camp T-shirt is
included in the price.
The camp is meant to
teach passing, setting~ hitting skills, and fundamentals.
Contact .Tonja Hunter at
740-949-3088 for more
information.

The Big Bend Youth
FootbaH League will be
holding football and cheerleading sign-ups every
Saturday in July for any
area youth from Ohio or
West Virginia interested in
participating.
On July 5, sign-ups will
be held in Rutland at the 4th
of July celebration. Each
Saturday , thereafter, signups will be . held at · the
:Veterans Memorial Stadium
In Middleport from 10 a.m.
\intil I p.m.
.For questions or more
information. contact Sarah
lit 740-698-4054, Regina at
740-698-2804, Dave at 304674-5178, Misty at 304173-5230, or Rick ·at 740367-0438.
'

'

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al the lop of the di visi1111 .
you tend to only get one .
maybe two (players in) ."
Ken Griffey Jr. had lookru
like he was headin g for
another All-Star start . Now.
he may be taking an island
vacation instead.
Griffey was second in the
NL balloting released last
Monday.
leading
Milwaukee 's Ryan Braun by
about 167,000 votes .. Rrm111
wound up winning . among
NL outfielders while G ri flt~y
Please see Volquez, 82

..

, 't
i

.~

: . -i¥d
,

Steelers looking
to restructure
team ownership

\

'

AP photo

Milwaukee Brewers new pitcher C.C. Sabathia, left, smiles with manager Ned Vast as he talks at a news conference
Monday in Milwaukee.
·
·

Sabathia traded to Brewers for four prospects
BY CHRIS JENKINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MILWAUKEE - With
one XXL-sized move, the
Milwaukee Brewers hope to
transform themselves from
scrappy underdogs to a big,
bad pitching powerhouse
intent on chasing down the
Chicago Cubs and making
the playoffs for the first time
since 1982.
The Brewers obtained AL
Cy Young Award winnef CC
Sabathia in a trade with the
Cleveland
Indians
on
Monday, giving up four

prospects in a gamble thar
favors the present over the
future.
"I 'd say we're going for
it," Brewers general manager Doug Melvin said.
"Th,at's the way I look at it."
The deal stacks the
Brewers' deck with a pair of
aces. Sabathia and Ben
Sheets - but only for a few
months.
Barring blockbuster con- '
tract offers from a smallmarket team that already is
stretching this year's payroll
into the $90 million range;
both players will become

free agents after the season. playoffs, I'll definitely be
But Sabathia said that's a doing that." .
concern for the offseason.
Still, the deal ~ardly
Right now, lie's just trying to assures the Brewers an easy
blend in and get back to hav- road to the postseason.
ing fun on the mqund - Milwaukee began Monday a
something he didn' t do in percentage point ahead of
the postseason last year.
St. Louis· for the second-best
"If anybody 's ever seen record in the NL, and both
me pitch, I' m out there teams arc chasing the
laughing and having fun ," Chicago Cubs, who are 3 112
said Sabathia. who went 19- games ahead in the ' NL
7 with a 3.21 ERA last sea- Central~
son but lost two games to
"Let's face it: This is still a
Boston in the ALCS. "That's calculated risk,'' Brewers
just me , and that's something that I didn't do last ·
year. When we get to the Please see Sabathla, 81

· PITTSBURGH (AP) Pittsburgh Steelers chairman Dan Rooney and hi s
son. team ptesiuent Art
Rooney II. want to buy
other fal'nily members'
shares to assure that'"'" 111'
the NFL's most storied fran "
chises does not lcil ve
Rooney control .
In a statement Mondav.
the team said some of D:in
Rooney's four brother.'
want to focus their busittcs.s
efforts on racetrac.ks and
other non -football 111lerest&lt; . ·
The brothers - Art .l r.,
Timothy, Patrick and John
- all own an interest in the
team as does another relat ed
family, the McGinleys.
although it has only a small
stake in the 75 -year-old
franchi se.
NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell has asked former
comm1ss1oner
Paul
Tagliabue to represent the
league in talks to reach an
agreement on a separation
of the gambling interests
and the restructured llwnership if part of the team is
sold, according to the stiltement.
"For the past two years. ·
the Rooney family has l1&lt;1d
.disc.ussions about a restructuring of the ownership of
the Steelers in order to
ensure compliance with the
NFL ownership policies and
Please see Steelers, 82

A-Rod's wife: Divorce over 'extramarital affairs'
BY CURT ANDERSON
AND JAKE COYLE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI - A tumultuous
week , for Alex Rodriguez,
played out in tabloid headline s and carried on the
whispers of a connection to
Madonna, came to a ·head
Monday when his wife filed
'for divorce.
The more than 5-year marriage collapsed am1d reports
of a new friendship between
CoNTACfUS
the Yankee slugger and the
49-year-old pop singer, an
:.: H40·446·2342 ext. 33
only-in-New York conver•
gence of sport and entertain.... - ].7;1{).446·3008
ment celebrity.
E--'JTI&amp;!I- sportsOmydaitysentlnei .GQm
Played out in both the
~Ot!LS!illf
sports pages and gossip
' '
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer · magazines,
the
saga
(140/ 446·2342, oxl. 33. ·
appeared to have taken its
~tra nclo lph @ mydailysentinel .com
toll on Cynthia Rodriguez,
'Bryan Watters, Sports Writer who said in di l'orce papers
that her husband "emot1on(740) 446·2342, exl. 33
bwa tters@ mydeilytrlbune.com
allY. abandoned hi s wife and
chtldren."
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
"The marriage of the par(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
ties is irretrievably broken
lcru mC mydailyregtster.com

..

•

rated a top prospec:t.
Volquez found out Sunday
that he alone would represent the Reds. Seconu ba,eman Brandon Phillips. 11ho
lead s Cincinnati with 56
RBis and 17 stolen buses.
was not selected.
"I really would have liked
to see Brandon on the team
too," Raker said. "R111 li kl' I

..

Southern High
volleyball camp

'

•

CINCINNATI (AP) Manager Du sty Baker call s
pitcher Edinson Volquez, the
only Cincinnati Reds player
chosen for the All-Star
game. the team's lifesaver
this season .
He was thrilled for
Volquez (11 -3 with a 2.36
ERA), who got his lith win
Sunday when the Reds beat
the-Washington Nmiomll·; 65 at Great American Ball
Park, where Volquez is 6-0.
" I think that's great,"
. Baker .said. "I mean, he's
well deserving. I'm glad
he's going there with II,
possibly 12 (wins)."
Volquez was selected by
fellow players for the 79th
annual game, set for July 15
at Yankee Stadium.
" I'm
excited,"
said
AP photo
Volquez. 2~. "This 1s my
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Edinson Volquez walks back to the fir;;t full season in the big
mound after walking in Washington Nationals' Ronnie · leagues and I' ve made the
·.
Belliard in the third inn.ing of a baseball game Sunday in All-Star game."
Cincinnati.
·
Yolquez came to the Reds

EHS fall sports
athletic packets

BBYFL sign-ups
Saturdays in July

In the Daily Sentinel

Volquez an all~star in first full season

LocAL SCHEDULE

becau se of the hu s.band's
extramarital affairs and
other marital misconduct,"
according to her petition for
dissolution of marriage,
filed in the family division
· of Miami-Dade County
Circuit Court.
' The New York Yankees
third baseman, who earned
hi s 1'2th All-Star selection
Sunday, has refused to comment on any relationship
with Madonna.
Rodriguez's attorney in
Miami, . .Ira M. Elegant who is . al so representing
NBA star Shaquille O'Neal
in his ongoing divorce said he had not reviewed the
divorce petition but added:
"A' you know,.anyone can
pay the filing fee and make
alle$ations."
R1chard Rubenstein, a
spokesman for Rodrigue z.
deci'ined to addre ss to ailegations of infidelity. suyin g
that would be brought i1p in
court.
.
"His priorites are to have a

future with his· children and
be a big {JUri of their lives,"
Rubenstem said.
Cynthia Rodriguez has
asked for primary custody of
their two children
Nathasha Alexander, 3, and
2-month-old Ella Alexander
- as well as child suppori
and alimony.
Days before t.he filing , stories linking Rodriguez and
Madonna began to surface.
including an Us . Weekly
report last week saying that
Rodri~uez made several
VISit S
· to
late-mght
Madonna 's apartment in
New York .
Madonna, who is married
to filmmaker Guy Ritchie,
denied
any
romantic
involvement with Rodriguez
in a statement Sunday.
"My husband and I are not
AP photo
pl annin~
on getting a
divorce,' the statement said. New York Yankees star Alex Rod riguez, right, and l1i s wife,
"I know Alex Rodrigue z Cynthia, arrive to the 12th annual GQ "Men of the Year"
through Guy Oseary, who party at the Chateau ·Marmont hotel in Los Angeles. The
wife of Alex Rodriguez has filed for divorce in a Miami court.
Ple11e see Divorce, B6
A lawyer for Cynthia Rodriguez filed the papers on Monday.

�Ij-

Page B2 • The Daily Senl:iJ:lel

Tuesday, July R, :wo8

www .mydailyscntincl.com

. . T!JeSday, July 8, 2008

Tulice as old as the competition, faster than eve/r Indians starting over without Sabathia Her 'tory. so ~.1sy to 1.111
for. rc,,d, l1~c .1 t.ury t.1lc.
At ~ln o~gt: \'hen mo"t
people ,u c c mb.~tr.t"cd

What stud wtth USADA
ch tcl 1 r.t11s T) g.u t mon th '

Jll~t

JUSt her drrect .mswers to a
sene' ot !rank qLie,uons J om:~ h,tJ Uonc t h..:o ...,,une
thrng - but her wtl lrngness to go beyond the
requirement~. 'he ollc red
to prLlltue • ,, ltletlllle ol
medtc.tl rec ords . suhmrt
DNA s.unples and t,1ke· .t
.lte-dett:l: l\11 tC'-.[ 1t rcquc·.:
ed
·· J gue-.~ you ctn make

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..,een

111 d \\\'1111-

Torr~s

has lllicd
the pool ,\t the L: S.
Olymptc tt "'"· WllllH il g the
100-mctcr t'tecstylc to
book .tn tmprobab lc berth
u11 her teulld ltlth Olymprc
te,un Sund.ty nt[!ht she
W,IS
to 'Willl the )()
trccs tvlc ltnal. one d.tv
,ofter · t.t~lll~ h,tL k he·,
Amerrc.rn rcoml 111 th,ll

eve m
Al tet c.rc h r.tcc s h ~ h,1s
pulled he1 -ll -) e.tr-o ld . " till
p1cturc-pc rlect body out nl
th e wc~ t et to scoop up
anoth er
m e dc~l
whil e
cradltn g hct 2-ycar-o ld
daughte1

,Lfter he mtc!VIC\\&lt;CU To1re~
for the pro~t .tm 11 ' " not

!11

her ..u ms

· " In some w.tys. I 111 l1 ke
all the uthct s11 I'H )ller&gt;
here hec .ruse I sttll lee [ the
passH&gt;n tor wh,tt I do.'
Torre" '~lid " In some w.ty . .
I'm lt ke 11 one ol them
bc c,wsc I ve lt vcd theu
li ve.., twtt e"

So maybe tt 's stmp ly
Tones· rotten luck to h,ove
clawed her w.ty back to the
top ol the athletic wor ld at
d tunc when dilllO&lt;.;t no one
belr e1es rn f,ru y tales ,mymore Whet e once we marveled at human achievement , we now suspec t better lt vrng through ~ h e ni­
"try
There's no w.ty to s,ty
wrth \:~tt.ttnty wh~n lh.rt
ltn e became hopelessly
blurred. but !01 me. tt was
after Canadru n spnnter Ben
John ,on r:r n I00 meters 111
a \hllld-n!c&lt;l t'd 9 7"1 se\:on ds at the 1988 Seoul
Olympr cs .md got bu sted
soo n alter There were susptctons .rnd stm 1es .rbout
wrdespread doprng .tr the
Olymprcs long bctore that.
bltt Juhn sUII s Wds the ltrst
sportrng mtrade, I'd wr tn~ssed 111 p~ t son. onl y to
s~~ II ~~ .rsed wr thtn houts
Then came the 11 se and
fall ol Manon Jones. Floyd
Landi s, tbe susptcJOns and

Jim
Litke
..lCCUSLltiO!lS

ag .. l111~l ~dff)'

Bonds. Roge r Clemens and
too many others to cou11 t,
.111d with them , th e hard-todety concluston that whenever somcthmg Iouks too
good to be true . It turn s out
to be JUs t that
Torres • st01 y pt eces
together eleme nts trom all
then ston es - .rdvances 111
tratmng. nutritio n and con,i.l., ... ;n.-., .;_ vnr tt• w•• '- Wl]rL.
ethtc. an almost-un lrmttcd
ouclg.:t. topped oi I by "
good. o ld-fashron ed com pelttl\ e st reak
Torres IS I,JSter nuw than
:-,he Wds as a teenage r, or ~tn
NCAA champ1on . or &lt;111
Olymp1&lt;1n And th.tt 's alter
gtv rn g tmth to a chtld, sttttng on the stdelrne&gt; for stx
yeMs ,l!ld CQilltng back
trom operation s on her
shoulder (bone spur) and
kn ee (to rn mentseLJS) 111 the
past erght months
On the other hand, Torres
has never tested posttrve
tor performance-enhatKing
dru gs o r been dra ggeu
bel ore .t gra nd Jury, co ng re ssw n&lt;~l hearing or anlldopm g age ncy to dtscuss
her tra1mng regtmen. Ju st
th e oppostte
--ron s~. . 'i vJ.un :: er~d~·~ ,,
year to be one ot a dozen
athletes t&lt;~km g part tn ,1
ptl ot dru g- test mg progra m
ad mmt stered by the U S.
Anu -Doprng Agency that's
arguably the most stnn gen t
111 ,Ill of ;po11s Drug
testets deve lop a b.tselme
pro! ti c o t each parttct pant 's body chemr stry, then
check tt repeatedly through
1epeated blood and unne
samples
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drgum ent

th,tl

she

anttctp.tted
q ucs tr ons
wou lu lOme up. but tu
o llet th.ttlc1el of coopet,ttton wllh the .tu th ot llt es
v.ho co ulu end up proscl: utm g you. well.
Ty~ d lt
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CLEVELAN D (AP) CC Sabathra matured from a
tecn.t~er who dtdn 't know
the bJslC&gt; of prtchtng to an
&lt;\L C) Young Award ":lllner
wrth the Clcve l.mdlndrans
The b1g lel t-hander helped
the lndr.tns ge t w1th111 one
g.une ol the World Senes
l.tst vc.u. but a trustratmg,
mJur)'·marrcu s~.rson forced
the dub to ded i S.!batht a to·
Mtil,.rukee lor prospects on
Mond.ty
The indt.Jns. who have
~one Itom 96 WillS 1n 2007
to l.ts! pl,!ce 111 the AL
Ccntr.II. gave up hope of a
trr p b.tck tu the postseason
and wr ll st,Jrt over agar n
They'll do It wit hout
S&lt;Jb,ltiH.t. who was 17 when
he srgned wtth the team 10
ye~u

··~

s .tgo
rc~•scrnbcr

he didn't
t...r JO \\ nuw ro gnp the basehail or stand on the rubber
when we tu st got him ,
lnd r.r n' gene r.rl manager
M.trk Shapu o sa1d
"H.rvrng hee n part of
w.rtc hmg h11n develop and
grow from a tee nager to a
m.tn , It om an mexpe11enced
mmo r leaguer to a dom mant
Cy Young Award winner,
,md hcmg p.rtt ol such a speCia l se,rson JUst ldst 'Year - a
VCIV uli'flcU it dec isron emottOti,tiJy." Sh.rptro satd
In cxc h,mgc. the lndrans

inte11rew Sund.t) t11cn let
hi s IOILC tt ,l![ Olt
The pc~u se " bec.ruse
Tyg. rrt know s hettet th.rn
most that lor .r ll the ume
ICSOU ICCS
and
money
In vested tn the progr.tm
th e're 's sttll no w.ty to ccrttty an ,tthletc rs drug-t ree.
" It 's a s.td wo llu when I
c.tn 't w.rtc h the 111,11, wllh
my 6-year-old d.turhter
wtthou t the com ment.ttm s
addtess mg that ISSlll.! And
whi le we .til w.rnt to h,tve"
sldmp ol cle.r nlrness. dl the reLe ive lo ur. m1nor league1s,
end ol dc~ y. the only thtn g tndudtn g powet-htttrng outyo u ca n trust ts th,u out lreldcr/ltrst baseman Matt
LtPort.r. who s exp~cte d to
athkt~s .tie b~rng held to
the hrghcs t st.!nd.~rds ,rv.lll - help C le1cl.md's anemtc
o llc nse 111 the near futwe
dhle t odc~y ..
L.t Pot ta , ,, frrst-rouncl
It 's sc~d, to be sute ,
dralt
prck last year. h1t 288
because rr ght .rround the
ttme Torres m.tde he1 debut with 20 homers and 66 RBls
!11 84-:gume,..f.,r Duabk-i\
,_111 rile wnr ld st.tg c .• tssurances ltk e th ose wou lu : hmtm'l lco dfld'"*W 1ii )Uin me
l nd r•.1ns
mgantzat Jon •at
ha ve been mo re th .tn Double-A Akwn.
eno ugh But rt 's .t. me.ts urc
" He's had oreal success at
too. ot whet c we ;c be en Double- A thu" s tar. but tt's
111 the days S!ll ce th.rt .rs she rmpor t,mt lor him to come in
vent u1 es out onto th.rt st.tge hct c .md get se tt led,"
once mote no one ts ~tbo\ c Sh.1p11o satd "1-le's gm ng to
$USptCIOil
t.tkc th.rt ex pectatiOn that
comes wtth a No. I pick and
lim Luk e 11 a !lall orwl "pLtt another amped up
1pu11; w illlll/11 \/ for Th e ex pectatton of bemg a major
A:Hocwted Pu~ \\ Wure fo pte~e of a big trade." .
him at jlitkeap.m ~
L1Porta, 23, wtll play in
1

'

CLASSIFIED

l e&lt;~gue ~y~ t em ,

I I

VV I .

Southern Basketball
Golf Scramble set

optional cash.pot, skms, and
mullrgan 'for purchase .
Prizes of first, second, and
thrrcl place timshes wrll be
awarded
Addttwnally.
pnzes for longes t putt,
longest dnve, and closest to
the pin wrll be presented
Beverages and food wtll be
provrded. To enter, please
contact coach Jett Caldwell
at 740-949·3129.
J

RACINE - The Southern
Basketball progt&lt;~m wr ll host
a four-m.m galt sc ramble on
Aug . 2 m Rtverstde Golt
Club tn M.rson, W Ya
The swunble wtll be an
8:30 am shotgun stdrt .• md
the fo11nat IS b1ing-you1 own team On ly one player
wtth an unuer- 10 h.rndt c.rp IS
allowed per team wtth " tot dl
team handtc.tp ot 40 or
CHESTER - A Days of
above
The cost wtll be $60 per Glory
Co-Ed
Softball
person {$240 per te.rm) with Tournament has been set tor

Softball tourney
set for Aug. 8

Steelers
from Page Bl
the continuation ot the
Rooney fumtl y ow nership
and opcr,nton ot the team."
the te.1m sa1 u 111 the st.rtemem.
So me farmly members
apparently wa nt to gauge tf
thetr shat e' would be worth
more money tl the club was
sold uutsrde the famtly
The Steelers are one ol
the NFL's most successful

Sabathia
from Page 81
pnncrpal ow ner Mark
Attanasro satcl "The other
teams 111 our cit visiOn are n't
go mg to sit back and look at
this and say, 'Oh. now the
Brewers have got CC
Sabathta Let's JUSt roll
over.'"
The football player·stzed
Sabathta - slugger Prince
Fielder offered to lend h1m a
pa1r of umform pants - is
the first reigmng Cy Young
wmner to be traded 's ince
Roger Clemens was dealt to
the New York Yankees in
the offseason after winning
the award with the Toronto
Blue Jays 10 1998
For Cleveland, tt's a sign
of surrender hardl y anyone
would hav imagined going
into the season
Indians general manager
Mark Shapiro said the

fra nchiSes despite not wmnmg any torm of champtonshtp unttl therr 40th season. a dtvrston mle 111 1972
The five-t11ne Super Bowl
champions have sold out all
home game for the last 36
years and have one ot the
league\. la1 g~ ... l Lu1 bd:-oes
out~lde the tr' own region;--anattonal followm g nvaled
by only a handful of NFL
teams
Dan Rooney IS the eldest
of team founder Art Rooney
Sr. 's ttve sons and a Pro
Foot ball Hall of Fame
ow ne r who ttrst worked tor
team's stnng of IIIJunes and
cltsappointing perform ances
made tt hard to nnagme a
sigmhcant rally tn the second half
"We all headed into this
season wtth what we feel
are wel l-founclecl expectatiOns tor a championshtpcontendlng
season,"
Shaprro said. "Fo ur core
players on the DL - tough
f01 almost any franchtse to
overcome - as well as dlsappomung performances
from many •omponents of
our team, most noticeably 111
the bullpen, leave us at the
juncture we're at. There
wasn't much doubt or questiOn m our mind that ll was
nearly impossible for us to
become a contendmg c lub
this year."
arrived
in
Sabathiu
Milwaukee before Monday
ntght's
game
against
Colut ado and is s heduled
to ptt' h against the Rockies
on Tuesday night. He also is
expected to pitch agamst

Aug. 8 through I0 ,u the
Chester Ball Ftelds w1th .111
proceed s to benettt the
Chester Ball Assoct.ltton and
the Angela E.tso n Mcmmral
f1elds. ·
The charge ts S I00 a team
plus 2- 12 rnch 44 core b,tlb
TI11S rs slow pi tc h, live male
and li ve tcm.r le on the held
at all tunes. men bat oppost te hands. dges 1 1 dtlCI
older. and- slow pttch bats
onl y wrth double ehmiiMtlon . one hou r g,tmt:s

Space "

hmtted to 12

teams. h)t mmc m to r matmn

c,dl

An~rc

Edw.rrus ,ot 740
416-69~1)
or
Mandr e
Grueser at 740-416-0900
On Aug. 9 there wtll be a
the team '" a b,!llboy wh tle
111 grade school
" I h,rve spent my entire
It tc
devoted
to
the
Pittsburgh Stee lers .u1d the
Nauonal Football Le&lt;~g u e."
smd Dan Roonev one of the
most mtluenttai owncts rn
NFL hrstory " I wtll uo
everythutg_JlOS'iblc to work •
out a solutr on to ensur e my
lather's legacy of keeping
the Steelers 111 the Rooney
fa mtl y and 111 Pmshurgh for
at least another 75 yews."
Art Rooney J 1.. D,m 's
brothet , w.rs the Steelets'
scoutmg qu ectot when the
Cmcmn.ttt on Sunda y. gtv·
ing hrm " p.111 ot starts for
hiS n~w te.r m at home le.tdtn g tnto the AII -St,ll bre.t k
Mrlw.rukce
se nt
C l evel&lt;~ n d OLitfteldct Matt
LaPorta. pit chers Rob
Bryson and Z.tch Jackson
and a player to be named
Sh.op1ro sard the playe r to be
named ,would be one ot t"-O
specif ied m the de.li
Melvm satd the Brewe1 s'
strong farm sy stem g,1ve
him tlexrbtltty to dea l away
a good prospect
"Matt LaPorta rs go mg to
be a good big league player.
and I hope he ts," Melvm
said
Attanasio said the acqut sitron of Sabathia will push
the team's payroll around
$90 million this season
Attanusto sutd the move
might prevent the club from
turning a prot 11 th ts year,
but n was made posstblc by
increas~u· ian support and
sound ftnandal decisions 111
recent years.

"'

hog roast d111ner at $6 per
person , a home run derby at
$5 per person with 50 percent of the pwceeds going
for ftrst, second and thtrd
place prizes. and a vanety of
clo01 pnzes

OU baseball camps
ATHENS - The Ohto
Unr verst ty b.rseball program
wtll be hosttng two prospect
camps thrs summer and fall
lot 2009. 201 0. and 2011
htgh school graduates The
l11st c.ttnp wtll be held
August 23. anu the second ts
scheduleu lnr October 4.
The camps will grve stuclem-athletes the opportumty
te.tm h.1d some ol the best
dralt classes 111 NFL htstory
m the 1970s. leadmg to a
tun o l tour Super Bowl
ch.tmpro nshrps 111 SIX seasons
Dan and &lt;\rt Jr. had a
lalltng nut rllthe late 1980s,
wltl1 i\tt Jr lcc~vmg the toot[,,.! I SJUe oJ U1e bu., mess Art
Jt has smce been mvolved
m the Rooneys· real estate
holdmcs. tltough he recently wrote a book focusing on
ht s work tor the Steelers.
Therr fathet, Art Rooney
Sr . was heavrly mvolvcd 111
g.1mb ltng &lt;~nd , acconding to
'We' d alwdys love to .go
for rt .'' Attan,lSio sard " But
you can go tor rt Ill a stupid
t,1sh ron and Doug and hiS
group ha ve never done
th.lt .,
S,lb.rtht a h.td a slow start
but IS 6 ll wr th a 3 83 ERA
Cleve land sc01ed two runs
or tewet 111 II ot ht ~ 18
st,u ts

Mtl waukee's
startmg
ptt ~ hmg 'has bee n thm ever
" nee Yovan1 Gall ard o went
on the dtsabled ltst on May
2 wtth a to tn knee ligament
that requtred surge ry His
rehab was su pposed to take
tour months, wht ch gtves
hrm an outside chance of
returntng before the end of
the seaso n
Shec~ ( I 0-2. 2.77 ERA)
rs oft to the best start of his
career, but the All·Star
nghty ts in the fin al year of
u $31:1.5 million, four-year
'on trm:t. No matter what
huppens 111 • the future,
Sheets surd he 's glad the
Brewers are going for 11

to showcase thetr sk1lls m
front of college coaches from
all divi sions and professional
scouts from Ohw and its surrounclmg areas'.
Each camp will begm with
regiSlratton at 8 a.m. at Bob
Wren Stad1um and conclude
at approximately 6 30 p.m
There wtll be a limtt of 72
student-athletes per camp, so
pre-registratiOn IS encouraged to ensure a participant 's
place. Cost tor the camp ts
$205 per player
To
pre-reg1 ster, vtstt
http·//ohiobobcats em comic
amps/ohto-camps. html For
more mformatton, contact
Rrian Hoskmson at 740-593134 1 or hoskmsb@ohto.edu
legend, bought the Steelers
in 1933 wtth $2,500 111 racetrack winmngs. But the
NFL now frowns on any
ownershtp assocratJOn with
gamblmg.
The Rooney famtly owns
racetracks in New Yo1k and
Florida and has addecllonns
of gaming that are--mconsistent With NFL gambltng
policy
Art Rooney II says the
discussions should have no
affect on the team or tts
fans The Steelers. who won
the AFC North wtth a 10-6
record las t season, open
now
"It's hard to tell peo ple 111
years past , ' Three yea rs
from now, we're gomg to
be good ,~·- heets.said "We
want to 111 now "
Milwa kee, whtch hasn't
been 111 the postseason
since the days of Robin
Yount and Paul Mohtor,
fe ll two game s short of the
dniston title last year
The Indians, who fell one
wm shy of the World Senes
last year, are in need of
power-htttmg corner outfielders and LaPorta IS
' expected to ftll that vOid.
He htt .288 with 20 homers
and 66 RB!s 111 84 ~ames
for Double-A 1-luntsvtlle.
Sabathta reJected a $72
million, four-year exten·
sion from the lndtans during spring training and
announced he wouldn ' t
negotiate until ufter the
season.
Shaptro said seven teams
were mterested in Sabathia,
and the trade came after

Volquez
from PageBl

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Bahamas"

Gnffey has playeclm ntne
All -Star games and was
voted in tour other times
when he was lllJUred and
couldn't pl ay
trammg camp July 27.
"There is no reason to
believe that the current
mternal d1 scuss ion s will
have any tmpact on our fans
or on our team this season
or m the ·seasons to come,"
Art Rooney II said
The Rooney family has
owned the team since Its
mception, except for a brief
penod in 1941 when Art
Rooney Sr. sold the team to
Alexis · Thompson and
bought into the Philadelphia
Eagles. Rooney regamed
control of his hometown
Steelers m less than a year
three to five clays of intense
negotiations
wtth
Milwaukee.
"CC made It clear that
once the season started he
dtd not want to entertain
any negotiatrons," Shapiro
satd . "Our exploratton of a
contract was thorough
enough 111 spring training to
understand the eombinatton of our capabilities and
CC's expectati ons d1dn 't
al1gn."
Sabathia satcl he wasn't
gomg to worry about his
contract until the end of the
season.
"It's hard enough to play
thts game as it is, let alone
with any other distractions
such as a contract going
on," Sabathia satd. "I'll
focus on that lvhen it
comes. Right now, I'm
worri'ed about pitching
tomorrow."

Associated Press Writer
Joe Milicia in Cleveland
contributed to this report,

"ag
r
t:

,.,.~,

C .;

Galli a

E-mail
classrfted@ mydat lytnbune com

UI:rihune

To Place
Ad,
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r

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Sentinel

(740,\ 446-2342 t,740', 992-2-155 (304} ,675-4 333

-~-~--•_•__•_-_._. ._.,_•_•_•
.
___o_r_F~a~x,.T.
o (740) 446;.·31.0!PO,;:B_ _ _ _o:.r~F~a:.x~T.:o.:.(7_4.:..:0:.:.l.:9.::.92:.·.::.21.:. :5:..:.7_ _

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,.

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ay of publication an

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etpon•ible for n
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POLICIES Oh iO Valley Publl ahlng reserves the right to ed ll reject or cancel any ad at any l1me Errors must b&amp; reported on the llr at day of
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any lou or expense that reeultllrom the publtcation or omission of an advertlaement Correct ton Will be made tn the l tr$1 ava ttable edttlon • Bolt number ada
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accepts onl~ help wanted ads meetmg EOE 1tandards We wdl not kno~tngly accept an~ adverllstng tn v1olat1on o f the law W11l not be responsible l or any
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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

310

6.,.1.;:

';..

::J~ .. _ ... ¥

ton

y \Hil S,\( .F•

tiJUit;; • '-1 I

.. alit: l t::" IUt:: l..t::

of~

"Oiiilhc;:e~----...., Movres toys kntck knacks

-

Brand New Restaurant lor.
Lease AT 2 good tocanon
Owner has other mterests
, ... •O:
call 304 549 StiAh """•'m-

c;o Awf~Y( 1't1G
~; ft: &amp;JA!&lt;tl ; S

call Gall1a County Shent1s 5 larnrltes July 9 10 11

YIHIJS\11·

c~1Y 1

0H10 VALLE 'f PUBLISH·
lN G co recommends
that you do bus rness wtth
peop le you know and
mnney
through the ma1l unltl you
have tnvestrg:;jtod lne
offenng

NOT ro send

0

r

"-------,.I
Ill

8! 'I'

Free half wol t female 5
months olP 740 418-1877
Absolute Top Dol lar

i..AhT ANO
FOUNil

ertl.em&amp;ntl
ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

currenc y proolfm1n t sets
d1a monds MTS Co1n Shop
151 2nd Avenue Gall tpolls
446 2842

&gt;This

newspape

1 - '!5

ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standards.

&gt;We will nor knowing
y accept any adver
lsement In violation
the law

1:\ll'lll\ Ill \I
Los t brown/whi te Rat Terner
Horse Cave Ad area childs
pet please cal l 740 949
13637404161749Thanks

4x4's For Sola ......,....................................... 725

.. .. .. 030

Antiques........................ ... ......... ............ 530
Apartments lor Rent...... .. . .. ..... .. ... . 440
Auction and Flea Market... . .
080
: Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair..
,...
770
Auloslor Sale............ . .......... .. .......... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale
... 750
550
• Building Supplies. .
Business and Buildings ................... ........ 340
Business Opportunity .. .
210
• Buslnass Training ..................... ............ 140
, Campers &amp; Motor Homes.. ..... . ... ... 790
Camping Equipment .. . . ....... .. ..... 780
' Cards of Thanks ...................................... 010
ChlldiEiderty Care. .
. . .... t 90
Electrical/Refrigeration .. ... ..... .. ... .. ........ .. .840
Equipment for Rant
480
Excavating .................................. ... ........... 830
Farm Equipment
610
· · Farm; lor Flont....
430
Farms for Sale .......................................... 330
·, For Lease.... . , .. ....
..
.......... 490
, For Sale...... ........ .. ..... ........... . .. .......... 585
For Sale or Trade .
....... ... 590
· ' Fruita &amp; Vegetables ..
. ..... : 580
•, Furnished Rooms. . .. ..... ................... ... 450
. General Hauling. . . ...
. 850
Giveaway.. .. ......................... ... ......
040
Happy Ads .. .... . . ..... . . .. ......... ... 050
Hay &amp; Grain........... .........
.... ... .
640
Help Wanted..... ........... . ... .. .. ............. 11 0
Home Improvements .. ...
. 810
Homes for Sale... . . ............... .............. 310
Household Goods
......... 510
·~
Houses for Rent........
............ 410
. ............ . ............ . 020
In Memoriam .

Insurance ...........
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ..................... 660
Livestock. ......
630
Lost and Found.. ......
060
Lots &amp; Acreage. . . . . ............................. 350
Miscellaneous. . .....,
. . ..
170
Miscellaneous Merchandise . ...... .. ...540
Mobile Home Repair . ....
.. .. 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ..
420
Mobile Homes for Sale...... .................320
Money to Loan .
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers . ........
. 740
Musical Instruments . ......... ............. 570
Personals ........
005
Pets for Sale .... . ...• ... ...... .. . .. ,..
560
. 820
• Plumbing &amp; Heating . ..
Professional Services.....
230
' Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ......................... 160
. ...• ..
. 360
Reel Estate Wonted ... .....
Schoolalnstrucllon........ ...... ........ ...•••• 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer.... .. ........... ... 650
120
Situations wanted. . ......
Space for Rent .................................... . ...460
· • Sporting Goodtl . ... . ....... .. .............. .. 520
•. SUV's lor Sale .................................... ....... 720
Trucks for Sale.. ... ............... ................ . . 715
Upholttery ........ . . . . .....
. ..... . ... 870
Vans For Sate .......,........................
.... .730
Wonted to Buy .............................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies . ...
. 620
Wanted To Do .............. ,.. ......... :....... . . 180
Wonled to Rent ....................... ........... 470
Yard Sole· Gallipolis..
............ .. ........ 072
Yard So. .Pomeroy/Middle ............. ....... 974
Yard Sole·Pt Pleasant ......
........ . .. 076

110

1.

HrlJ' W.1~11- n

110

l1i::tJ&gt;Wr\N it:J)

i!IC::I tlfUCision

Lost
Old
dog
small
Temer/Beagle mtx on OJ An Excellent way to ea rn
White Rd and St Rt 160 Call money The New Avon
Ca ll Manlyn 304 882 2645
446·96 18

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Announcemenl ... .. .

HLLP WwrEn

S~.ll\IUS

Take tnbou nd customer
serv1ce ca lls tor
Fortune 100 Compantes
lncludtng

AVONI All Areas• To Buy or
Sell
Shtrloy Spears 304
675·1 429

Two weeks vacatiOn alter
one year three weeks after
live yea rs Starltng salary
$26 000 to $28 000 Must
have collage degree tn
Human Servtces or m1n0f m
Human Serv1ces f1eld wrth a
mtnor m Admtnlstrahon At
least two years experte nce
worktng w1th the public tn a
semce
pOS ift On
Send
resume and three refer
ences to Search Commrttee
PO So• 454 Galltpohs
Ohto 45631

limn s

I

All rea l estate adverltstng I
1n this newspaper 1s
'
sub:ect to the Fede•:::!
Farr Hau srng Act of 1966
whtch ma kes ltr llegal to
advertise any
preference llmrtalt on or
dtscrlm1"11t1 0n ba sed on
race col or rellgron o:; ex
fatntltal status or nat1on rl
oriQ!rl or '"'Y mtentron lu
make any such
pr~tlerence hmrtai!O
dl scrlmrnat1on

1

IOH S\11

2br lba Home on N PArk
Or new Carpet updaled Krt
&amp; Ba Full bsmt scr oc rcto
lg 2 112 car gar Must Sell
304 675·6395 \ea\ e mes
sagP.

3 bed HUD Hom~s only
$10 OOO' for lls!inos ROO
620 4946 ex R01 9
3br 2ba Secllanal nn 6
acre Roseberry Rd PI
Pleas:m t w/ washer dr~er
d1~hwasher&amp;
refnge!f\to r

$65 000 (304)675 6626

Thrs newspaper wrll .,j 1 1
knCiwrngly accepr
r
ndverttsements for 1 1'
estate wh1ch rs 111
~ rol a hon of the la w C 1 1
readers Are herf'b\
I
Informed thAt ~II
dwelltngs ad11erl1sed
thiS newspaper are
a11eth1ble on an e(lurtl

I

op portunity

base~&gt;o.

.....

4 bedroom 2 1,2 bdt1 log
home 34286 New Crel'l
Ad Pomeroy lg pole bu1ld Me1gs County SyrarOJ
tng &amp; out butldtng on 6 acres Sale 01 rent 3 bed ? ' r •
utpond (816)668 0758
laundrv
room 1 11
garage
near
p Jol ~
Brand new Never 11ved rn
plus jcpostt NOP E I
1
2b r 2 bath w whtrlpoot tubs
Plt'&lt;.ISe (.(Ill 740 ':1~';;1 )I
large LA on 3 acrls m'l
$80 000 740 446 7029

N e\~ Haven 3 br 2 IJ, 11
Fo rec losure 4br 2ba o 1ly
aw s Ilot tub gas leg l1
$29 9001 Pnced to Selll For
Ltstmgs 800 62 0 4945 c ~e. ptace great vtew (:.!04 )P')
3021 !53 000
T4 62

• Up lo $8.50/hour
1 Prevtous experte nce
wtth customer servtce a
plus
• Patd Tramtng Onstte
1 Health 8enel11s

Catllo schedule an
mtervlew
Home Health Care South
East 0 1110 tS currently hm ng
Home Health Atdes lor
Metgs Co Must be certtfted
or currently have one year s
e11penence Toll Free call ·1 ·

1-888·1MC-PAYU

Ext.2311
Vrstl us at

865 368·11 00

&amp;'HClOI S

Prr Sec unty Ofltcers must L.-.:·~~~~,;;il,;;'R;;
LIC~11ii10:;N;.,,.J
-L-n-ch
, - ro-om-V-en-d-,ng-.,-,.,- . be ahle to paS" drug 1 ~" 1 &amp; ~
dant par1 time M F Sam
background check Send Galhpoltl Ca reilr College
1pm proctucl delivered to resume to www mtoweare
(Careers Close To Home)
yoJ.J Patd trarntng holidays, gonnagetem com or fa11 to Call Todayl 740 446 4367 .
vacai!On 401k Pre employ 740 44, 9645
1 800 214-0452
men1 drug testm g EOE Call - - ' - - - - - - www galh~HM:IIreercollege edu

mtnor 1'1 Eldl!untslrulton 1\1
l6as t lwv yt::tt 1b t!XIJt&gt;ttE:!rlce
workmg wtth the public rn a
servtce
postllor
Send
tesume and three refer
ences to Search Commrttee 304 485 5421
PO Box 454 Galltpo!ts
Ohto 45631
Mason Counry EMS rs
Execu11ve 01 rector pos1110n aLceptmg applrca tsons for
tor oomesllc Vtolence FT and PT MedJCS EMTs
' more tn10r·
•
Agency servtng lhree coun and Drsver s rOr
ttes of South-ern Ohto 40 hr lflatJon ca/1675 6 134
week pot&gt;t110 n wrth some
weekend overhme needed
Compensatory ltme provtd
ed
Benefits Health
Insurance Pa1d Holtdays

I~
I
I

1

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohto DIVISIOn of
Ftnanc1al
tnshtutton s
Othce
ol
Consumer
Atfmrs BEFORE you reft
nance your home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
ol requests for any large
advance payments of
lees or Insurance Call the
Oltt ce
ot
Co nsumer
Affatrs to ll free at 1·866
278 0003 to learn 1f the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
rs
properly
licens ed (Thts IS a public
serv1ce announcement
from the Oh to Val ley
PubliShing Company)

HOIII.,
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8ENNIG AN S now htrtng
gnll cooks 304 675 5227
Execut ve Duector postMn
for
DomestiC
Vtolence
Ag enc,. SfHVtng rtoree coun
t1 es ot Southern OhiO 40 h"i
a week pos111on wtth some
overttme
needed
Compensatory tnne provtd
ed
Beneftts Heal th
Insurance Patd Holi days
Two weeks vacatton alter
one year three weeks AHer
ftve years Starttng salary
S26 000 to $28 000 Mus1
have College Degree tn
Human Serw::es or mrnor tn
human servtces fteld w1th a

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$39 500 between rOam
9pm 304 773 9192

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Mixed breed Puppy 304 verlgold
rotns
any
10K'14K/18K gold Jewelry
.
593 6038
...,,_;.;;....;_ _ _ _., denial gold pre 1935 US

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No Fee Unless We Wtn'

oNOli Ch

0

l,t)I\ I~K(J\/r'.IIIJI)\ ~
6 wks old Hetnz 57 pupptes
wtll be med s•ze good
guatd dogs 304·395 5204
f he Gra te resuJonce 2 miles
- - - - - - - - south of Tuppers Platns oo
Approx 6 8 .vks old male le tt Th ursdil 1OH1
krtten grey lrger litter bol( =~~~.:::::-....;.,
tratned 256 6870
W\!'illll

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

10

ptctures baby tlems com
pu ler etc 46 Burnell Rd

74

BL'SINI);S
Oi,Uil'I1'NI 1\

'

;:uorn--gm'!S"S jtmull y ?u:::e~::.u

GIVMWM

10

kltncartyle@comcast net

REWARD $500 For tnforma "--•Giii'iiAiiillil
.llil'iiiJI.iiiiStton leadtng to the arrest &amp; -,
convtct1on o1 the thtev tng 4 family sale July 1D &amp; 11
scum that broke tn to our tram 9am Spm at1522 State

"r

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968.

fmtshed 87,000 votes
behmd Chicago's Kosuke
Fukudome 111 fourth.
" I always have a back-up
plan," Gnffey satd. ")f you
can ' t htt a tough lefty, bunt.
If you can't hit a tough
nghty. bunt. There 's· always
a back-up Can' t go to the
All-Star Game? Go to the

I

We cove
Meigs, Gallia,

0H

Current
pplles

SPORTS BRIEFS

,.

.:l~ll llll ~l"'

County,

11
...
l 1\.-

conSidernt&gt;On for the U S was the last hnk to the damOlympic team
mant tea ms that won srx AL
Cleveland also recerve s Central titles from .199520-year-olcl Rob Bryson, a 200 I
Smgle-A nght-hander wtth a
SabathJa, who now wants
strong arm but a long road hts tnltt als wntten without
ahead to the maJors. and penods. had the chance to
left-hander Zach J.ackson , help Cleveland clinch the
who could help the lndtans pennant at home last season,
get throu gh thi s season.
but he lost to the Boston Red
The lncltan s have unttl the Sox 111 Game 5 of the AL
end of the season to select champ1o nsh1p series.
the ftmtl ptece ot the deal Shaptro has been m thts
a pl.1yer to be named who posrtton before, begmning
tsn 't JUSt a throw-tn. The hiS tenure as general managclub has two Bt ewers mmor er wrth the unpopular trade
Bartolo Colon to
leaguers to choose trom. ol
Shaprro said
Montreal for Lee, Grady
The club that Wdtched J1m S1zemore and Brandon
Thome. Manny Ramtrez and Ph1ll1ps 111 2002.
Albert Belle leave in free
The Indian&gt;got great talent
agency dectded tt couldn ' t in return
Lee and
do the same thm g wtth S1zemore are All-Stars thts
Sabathta, the tirst Cleveland season and Phtlhps ts the
pttc~r ~o wm the Cy Young Cmcim~ali Reds' slartillg ser:Aw·ard-slu\.:1; Guyiv•J Pt:IJ )""-cmtt basemar1 - bm lt tOOK
in 1972
untd last season for them to
Shapiro was realtst1c win the AL Central agam
about the odds of the lndrans
Shaptro pOint s to the
signing htm if he becomes a amount of talent left from
free agent after the season
last year on Cleveland's ros"1 know he' ll be open to teras signs that the Indians
that, but once a guy ge ts out won ' t be clown long.
in free agency you recog"Good ttmes are commg
mze the challenges that ahead and I really firmly feel
exist," Shapiro said
thts team hus the chance to
Sabathia, a f11st-round come right back out next
draft ptck 111 1998. shot year and contend for the
through the Indians' mmor division," Shapiro said.

r

Meigs County, OH

NoOne
El&amp;e 'canl

joming the

·n 2""'

'I

UdUJ

And Mason
Counties Like

AP pholo

T...,...,,
l &lt;;:'A• ........
~ .......1.... ., ~ . ... .-1 .. , .... .--~,... . . .~\,.UIII
........... • 5 -~t'
'" " ....
Vtl ..,._.,.V"J ......... 1.) U IIU.._.I
I V UIJ V II

~

--;- m:rtbune - Sentinel'- l\.egtster

Cleveland
lndtans
pitcher CC
Sabathta
walks back
to the
dugo ut after
grvrng up
two home
runs to the
Chrcago
Whtte Sox
dunng the
ftrst tnntng
of a baseball game
Wednesday
in Chrcago.

the Futures Game for Team

.,-.1
1 It:

www.mydailysentinol.com

------Needed tmmediately
3
house cleaners 8am 12pm
or 1pm Sp m $20 per shift
Oebbte 446 2451
------Needed DediCated HHA s
PCAs CNAs &amp; STNAs
Established
and
well
respected local home health
agency
Localed
m
Galhpotts OhiO has avail
able l ull tune and parHtme
cases If you have a destre
to work as a respected
TEAM
member
call
(740)446·3808 for 1mme11
ate tnletvre\•,

Ohto Valley Home Health
tnc htrmg STNA CNA
FEDERAL
Home Health Atdes &amp;
Personal Care Aides Full
$17 89·$28 2?1hr now hrr Part Ttme &amp; Per Otem pOSt·
1ng For applicat1on and free 11ons avatlable Apply at
Jackson
P1ke
governement jOb Info call 1480
AmMcan Assoc of Labor 1 Galltpolis or phone 44 1
913 599·8226 24/hrs amp 1393 Compet1t1ve Wages
mtleage retmbursement and
SII'V

Regional Dump Drivers
Accreo ted Member Accreo1t no
A&amp;J Truckmg IS seektng ColJflcll lor lndoperd9flt CoHegas
qu aItIied COL A d nvers Io
ope ra1e semt·dumps tor
regtonal routes We featUJe
excellent hom e ttme health

170

u ·- •

ML"it:•l L\NF.OUS

and
den tal
•nsurance Pet Crematrons Call 740
40 1(k) vaca.110n bonus pay
446 3745
and safety awards Oualifted r.i:~~:':':"---.,
ap pltcants must be over 23 180
W ,Wil:ll
yrs have a r'n1 n1mum of 1
year of commoncal dr)vtng
expenence &amp; clean MVR
Pnor e11penence wtth semt·
dUmps and roll ons ts help
fu l Contact Kent at 800·
462·9365 or ftll out apphca·
tron at www rJtrucktng com

Get A Jump
OJ1

SAVINGS

We w1H do your cleanmg
an d errands lor you lo
Save you Prec tous ttme •
Free esttmates
Reasonable pnces OualtlY
of Servrce IS EXCEPTION·
All Call Michele at !7 40·
)446 3881 Leave MessaQe
Will do pressure washmg
work to your home- No
house to big I small Call lor
more mfo 740 794 1340

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L---TIIoiill&lt;-l--"

All types of Home Repatrs
and Improvements Call R1ck
740·992 2910 or 740·274
2338
_ _:_~----­
Looktng for part 1tme work ·
2nd JOb mtlttary construe
EOE
. , . - - - - - - , - - - - , - hon secu r1t y tood han
AT 35 Adull Vtdeo &amp; Book dllngtcookmg landscaptng
Store need Mtdntght Clerk p11or exper1ence and have
full or part ltme 304 937 worked co nsts1enlly for the
4900
past 12 years 1n1ury free tn
manttme tndustry 304·675
2017

POSTAL JOBS

- - - - - - - . Qlher beneltls mcludrng
health rnsurance
ParHtme defilal assistant
needed Experrence helpful
POST OFFICE NOW
but not reqwed
Bnng
HIRING
resume
1fl
person
to
Avg
Pay
$20/hr or
2922 Ja ckson Ave Potnt
$57Kiyr tncludes
Pleasant WV No phone
Federal Benefits OT
calls pleasel
Placed by adSource not
Port Ttmo AN 740 377 offcrod wl USPS who h1res
1·866·403 2582
9095, Oualrty Care NurSing

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.

~alltpolis iatlp ~fibune

l9oint t)Ieasant ~egister
The Daily Sentinel
'

iu.nbap m:tmes -ienttnel

�Ij-

Page B2 • The Daily Senl:iJ:lel

Tuesday, July R, :wo8

www .mydailyscntincl.com

. . T!JeSday, July 8, 2008

Tulice as old as the competition, faster than eve/r Indians starting over without Sabathia Her 'tory. so ~.1sy to 1.111
for. rc,,d, l1~c .1 t.ury t.1lc.
At ~ln o~gt: \'hen mo"t
people ,u c c mb.~tr.t"cd

What stud wtth USADA
ch tcl 1 r.t11s T) g.u t mon th '

Jll~t

JUSt her drrect .mswers to a
sene' ot !rank qLie,uons J om:~ h,tJ Uonc t h..:o ...,,une
thrng - but her wtl lrngness to go beyond the
requirement~. 'he ollc red
to prLlltue • ,, ltletlllle ol
medtc.tl rec ords . suhmrt
DNA s.unples and t,1ke· .t
.lte-dett:l: l\11 tC'-.[ 1t rcquc·.:
ed
·· J gue-.~ you ctn make

to

b~

wn. D.1r.1

..,een

111 d \\\'1111-

Torr~s

has lllicd
the pool ,\t the L: S.
Olymptc tt "'"· WllllH il g the
100-mctcr t'tecstylc to
book .tn tmprobab lc berth
u11 her teulld ltlth Olymprc
te,un Sund.ty nt[!ht she
W,IS
to 'Willl the )()
trccs tvlc ltnal. one d.tv
,ofter · t.t~lll~ h,tL k he·,
Amerrc.rn rcoml 111 th,ll

eve m
Al tet c.rc h r.tcc s h ~ h,1s
pulled he1 -ll -) e.tr-o ld . " till
p1cturc-pc rlect body out nl
th e wc~ t et to scoop up
anoth er
m e dc~l
whil e
cradltn g hct 2-ycar-o ld
daughte1

,Lfter he mtc!VIC\\&lt;CU To1re~
for the pro~t .tm 11 ' " not

!11

her ..u ms

· " In some w.tys. I 111 l1 ke
all the uthct s11 I'H )ller&gt;
here hec .ruse I sttll lee [ the
passH&gt;n tor wh,tt I do.'
Torre" '~lid " In some w.ty . .
I'm lt ke 11 one ol them
bc c,wsc I ve lt vcd theu
li ve.., twtt e"

So maybe tt 's stmp ly
Tones· rotten luck to h,ove
clawed her w.ty back to the
top ol the athletic wor ld at
d tunc when dilllO&lt;.;t no one
belr e1es rn f,ru y tales ,mymore Whet e once we marveled at human achievement , we now suspec t better lt vrng through ~ h e ni­
"try
There's no w.ty to s,ty
wrth \:~tt.ttnty wh~n lh.rt
ltn e became hopelessly
blurred. but !01 me. tt was
after Canadru n spnnter Ben
John ,on r:r n I00 meters 111
a \hllld-n!c&lt;l t'd 9 7"1 se\:on ds at the 1988 Seoul
Olympr cs .md got bu sted
soo n alter There were susptctons .rnd stm 1es .rbout
wrdespread doprng .tr the
Olymprcs long bctore that.
bltt Juhn sUII s Wds the ltrst
sportrng mtrade, I'd wr tn~ssed 111 p~ t son. onl y to
s~~ II ~~ .rsed wr thtn houts
Then came the 11 se and
fall ol Manon Jones. Floyd
Landi s, tbe susptcJOns and

Jim
Litke
..lCCUSLltiO!lS

ag .. l111~l ~dff)'

Bonds. Roge r Clemens and
too many others to cou11 t,
.111d with them , th e hard-todety concluston that whenever somcthmg Iouks too
good to be true . It turn s out
to be JUs t that
Torres • st01 y pt eces
together eleme nts trom all
then ston es - .rdvances 111
tratmng. nutritio n and con,i.l., ... ;n.-., .;_ vnr tt• w•• '- Wl]rL.
ethtc. an almost-un lrmttcd
ouclg.:t. topped oi I by "
good. o ld-fashron ed com pelttl\ e st reak
Torres IS I,JSter nuw than
:-,he Wds as a teenage r, or ~tn
NCAA champ1on . or &lt;111
Olymp1&lt;1n And th.tt 's alter
gtv rn g tmth to a chtld, sttttng on the stdelrne&gt; for stx
yeMs ,l!ld CQilltng back
trom operation s on her
shoulder (bone spur) and
kn ee (to rn mentseLJS) 111 the
past erght months
On the other hand, Torres
has never tested posttrve
tor performance-enhatKing
dru gs o r been dra ggeu
bel ore .t gra nd Jury, co ng re ssw n&lt;~l hearing or anlldopm g age ncy to dtscuss
her tra1mng regtmen. Ju st
th e oppostte
--ron s~. . 'i vJ.un :: er~d~·~ ,,
year to be one ot a dozen
athletes t&lt;~km g part tn ,1
ptl ot dru g- test mg progra m
ad mmt stered by the U S.
Anu -Doprng Agency that's
arguably the most stnn gen t
111 ,Ill of ;po11s Drug
testets deve lop a b.tselme
pro! ti c o t each parttct pant 's body chemr stry, then
check tt repeatedly through
1epeated blood and unne
samples
Q

-

th e

drgum ent

th,tl

she

anttctp.tted
q ucs tr ons
wou lu lOme up. but tu
o llet th.ttlc1el of coopet,ttton wllh the .tu th ot llt es
v.ho co ulu end up proscl: utm g you. well.
Ty~ d lt
lr-" Ld llt:U
" '

d un11g.

d

pn' on e

CLEVELAN D (AP) CC Sabathra matured from a
tecn.t~er who dtdn 't know
the bJslC&gt; of prtchtng to an
&lt;\L C) Young Award ":lllner
wrth the Clcve l.mdlndrans
The b1g lel t-hander helped
the lndr.tns ge t w1th111 one
g.une ol the World Senes
l.tst vc.u. but a trustratmg,
mJur)'·marrcu s~.rson forced
the dub to ded i S.!batht a to·
Mtil,.rukee lor prospects on
Mond.ty
The indt.Jns. who have
~one Itom 96 WillS 1n 2007
to l.ts! pl,!ce 111 the AL
Ccntr.II. gave up hope of a
trr p b.tck tu the postseason
and wr ll st,Jrt over agar n
They'll do It wit hout
S&lt;Jb,ltiH.t. who was 17 when
he srgned wtth the team 10
ye~u

··~

s .tgo
rc~•scrnbcr

he didn't
t...r JO \\ nuw ro gnp the basehail or stand on the rubber
when we tu st got him ,
lnd r.r n' gene r.rl manager
M.trk Shapu o sa1d
"H.rvrng hee n part of
w.rtc hmg h11n develop and
grow from a tee nager to a
m.tn , It om an mexpe11enced
mmo r leaguer to a dom mant
Cy Young Award winner,
,md hcmg p.rtt ol such a speCia l se,rson JUst ldst 'Year - a
VCIV uli'flcU it dec isron emottOti,tiJy." Sh.rptro satd
In cxc h,mgc. the lndrans

inte11rew Sund.t) t11cn let
hi s IOILC tt ,l![ Olt
The pc~u se " bec.ruse
Tyg. rrt know s hettet th.rn
most that lor .r ll the ume
ICSOU ICCS
and
money
In vested tn the progr.tm
th e're 's sttll no w.ty to ccrttty an ,tthletc rs drug-t ree.
" It 's a s.td wo llu when I
c.tn 't w.rtc h the 111,11, wllh
my 6-year-old d.turhter
wtthou t the com ment.ttm s
addtess mg that ISSlll.! And
whi le we .til w.rnt to h,tve"
sldmp ol cle.r nlrness. dl the reLe ive lo ur. m1nor league1s,
end ol dc~ y. the only thtn g tndudtn g powet-htttrng outyo u ca n trust ts th,u out lreldcr/ltrst baseman Matt
LtPort.r. who s exp~cte d to
athkt~s .tie b~rng held to
the hrghcs t st.!nd.~rds ,rv.lll - help C le1cl.md's anemtc
o llc nse 111 the near futwe
dhle t odc~y ..
L.t Pot ta , ,, frrst-rouncl
It 's sc~d, to be sute ,
dralt
prck last year. h1t 288
because rr ght .rround the
ttme Torres m.tde he1 debut with 20 homers and 66 RBls
!11 84-:gume,..f.,r Duabk-i\
,_111 rile wnr ld st.tg c .• tssurances ltk e th ose wou lu : hmtm'l lco dfld'"*W 1ii )Uin me
l nd r•.1ns
mgantzat Jon •at
ha ve been mo re th .tn Double-A Akwn.
eno ugh But rt 's .t. me.ts urc
" He's had oreal success at
too. ot whet c we ;c be en Double- A thu" s tar. but tt's
111 the days S!ll ce th.rt .rs she rmpor t,mt lor him to come in
vent u1 es out onto th.rt st.tge hct c .md get se tt led,"
once mote no one ts ~tbo\ c Sh.1p11o satd "1-le's gm ng to
$USptCIOil
t.tkc th.rt ex pectatiOn that
comes wtth a No. I pick and
lim Luk e 11 a !lall orwl "pLtt another amped up
1pu11; w illlll/11 \/ for Th e ex pectatton of bemg a major
A:Hocwted Pu~ \\ Wure fo pte~e of a big trade." .
him at jlitkeap.m ~
L1Porta, 23, wtll play in
1

'

CLASSIFIED

l e&lt;~gue ~y~ t em ,

I I

VV I .

Southern Basketball
Golf Scramble set

optional cash.pot, skms, and
mullrgan 'for purchase .
Prizes of first, second, and
thrrcl place timshes wrll be
awarded
Addttwnally.
pnzes for longes t putt,
longest dnve, and closest to
the pin wrll be presented
Beverages and food wtll be
provrded. To enter, please
contact coach Jett Caldwell
at 740-949·3129.
J

RACINE - The Southern
Basketball progt&lt;~m wr ll host
a four-m.m galt sc ramble on
Aug . 2 m Rtverstde Golt
Club tn M.rson, W Ya
The swunble wtll be an
8:30 am shotgun stdrt .• md
the fo11nat IS b1ing-you1 own team On ly one player
wtth an unuer- 10 h.rndt c.rp IS
allowed per team wtth " tot dl
team handtc.tp ot 40 or
CHESTER - A Days of
above
The cost wtll be $60 per Glory
Co-Ed
Softball
person {$240 per te.rm) with Tournament has been set tor

Softball tourney
set for Aug. 8

Steelers
from Page Bl
the continuation ot the
Rooney fumtl y ow nership
and opcr,nton ot the team."
the te.1m sa1 u 111 the st.rtemem.
So me farmly members
apparently wa nt to gauge tf
thetr shat e' would be worth
more money tl the club was
sold uutsrde the famtly
The Steelers are one ol
the NFL's most successful

Sabathia
from Page 81
pnncrpal ow ner Mark
Attanasro satcl "The other
teams 111 our cit visiOn are n't
go mg to sit back and look at
this and say, 'Oh. now the
Brewers have got CC
Sabathta Let's JUSt roll
over.'"
The football player·stzed
Sabathta - slugger Prince
Fielder offered to lend h1m a
pa1r of umform pants - is
the first reigmng Cy Young
wmner to be traded 's ince
Roger Clemens was dealt to
the New York Yankees in
the offseason after winning
the award with the Toronto
Blue Jays 10 1998
For Cleveland, tt's a sign
of surrender hardl y anyone
would hav imagined going
into the season
Indians general manager
Mark Shapiro said the

fra nchiSes despite not wmnmg any torm of champtonshtp unttl therr 40th season. a dtvrston mle 111 1972
The five-t11ne Super Bowl
champions have sold out all
home game for the last 36
years and have one ot the
league\. la1 g~ ... l Lu1 bd:-oes
out~lde the tr' own region;--anattonal followm g nvaled
by only a handful of NFL
teams
Dan Rooney IS the eldest
of team founder Art Rooney
Sr. 's ttve sons and a Pro
Foot ball Hall of Fame
ow ne r who ttrst worked tor
team's stnng of IIIJunes and
cltsappointing perform ances
made tt hard to nnagme a
sigmhcant rally tn the second half
"We all headed into this
season wtth what we feel
are wel l-founclecl expectatiOns tor a championshtpcontendlng
season,"
Shaprro said. "Fo ur core
players on the DL - tough
f01 almost any franchtse to
overcome - as well as dlsappomung performances
from many •omponents of
our team, most noticeably 111
the bullpen, leave us at the
juncture we're at. There
wasn't much doubt or questiOn m our mind that ll was
nearly impossible for us to
become a contendmg c lub
this year."
arrived
in
Sabathiu
Milwaukee before Monday
ntght's
game
against
Colut ado and is s heduled
to ptt' h against the Rockies
on Tuesday night. He also is
expected to pitch agamst

Aug. 8 through I0 ,u the
Chester Ball Ftelds w1th .111
proceed s to benettt the
Chester Ball Assoct.ltton and
the Angela E.tso n Mcmmral
f1elds. ·
The charge ts S I00 a team
plus 2- 12 rnch 44 core b,tlb
TI11S rs slow pi tc h, live male
and li ve tcm.r le on the held
at all tunes. men bat oppost te hands. dges 1 1 dtlCI
older. and- slow pttch bats
onl y wrth double ehmiiMtlon . one hou r g,tmt:s

Space "

hmtted to 12

teams. h)t mmc m to r matmn

c,dl

An~rc

Edw.rrus ,ot 740
416-69~1)
or
Mandr e
Grueser at 740-416-0900
On Aug. 9 there wtll be a
the team '" a b,!llboy wh tle
111 grade school
" I h,rve spent my entire
It tc
devoted
to
the
Pittsburgh Stee lers .u1d the
Nauonal Football Le&lt;~g u e."
smd Dan Roonev one of the
most mtluenttai owncts rn
NFL hrstory " I wtll uo
everythutg_JlOS'iblc to work •
out a solutr on to ensur e my
lather's legacy of keeping
the Steelers 111 the Rooney
fa mtl y and 111 Pmshurgh for
at least another 75 yews."
Art Rooney J 1.. D,m 's
brothet , w.rs the Steelets'
scoutmg qu ectot when the
Cmcmn.ttt on Sunda y. gtv·
ing hrm " p.111 ot starts for
hiS n~w te.r m at home le.tdtn g tnto the AII -St,ll bre.t k
Mrlw.rukce
se nt
C l evel&lt;~ n d OLitfteldct Matt
LaPorta. pit chers Rob
Bryson and Z.tch Jackson
and a player to be named
Sh.op1ro sard the playe r to be
named ,would be one ot t"-O
specif ied m the de.li
Melvm satd the Brewe1 s'
strong farm sy stem g,1ve
him tlexrbtltty to dea l away
a good prospect
"Matt LaPorta rs go mg to
be a good big league player.
and I hope he ts," Melvm
said
Attanasio said the acqut sitron of Sabathia will push
the team's payroll around
$90 million this season
Attanusto sutd the move
might prevent the club from
turning a prot 11 th ts year,
but n was made posstblc by
increas~u· ian support and
sound ftnandal decisions 111
recent years.

"'

hog roast d111ner at $6 per
person , a home run derby at
$5 per person with 50 percent of the pwceeds going
for ftrst, second and thtrd
place prizes. and a vanety of
clo01 pnzes

OU baseball camps
ATHENS - The Ohto
Unr verst ty b.rseball program
wtll be hosttng two prospect
camps thrs summer and fall
lot 2009. 201 0. and 2011
htgh school graduates The
l11st c.ttnp wtll be held
August 23. anu the second ts
scheduleu lnr October 4.
The camps will grve stuclem-athletes the opportumty
te.tm h.1d some ol the best
dralt classes 111 NFL htstory
m the 1970s. leadmg to a
tun o l tour Super Bowl
ch.tmpro nshrps 111 SIX seasons
Dan and &lt;\rt Jr. had a
lalltng nut rllthe late 1980s,
wltl1 i\tt Jr lcc~vmg the toot[,,.! I SJUe oJ U1e bu., mess Art
Jt has smce been mvolved
m the Rooneys· real estate
holdmcs. tltough he recently wrote a book focusing on
ht s work tor the Steelers.
Therr fathet, Art Rooney
Sr . was heavrly mvolvcd 111
g.1mb ltng &lt;~nd , acconding to
'We' d alwdys love to .go
for rt .'' Attan,lSio sard " But
you can go tor rt Ill a stupid
t,1sh ron and Doug and hiS
group ha ve never done
th.lt .,
S,lb.rtht a h.td a slow start
but IS 6 ll wr th a 3 83 ERA
Cleve land sc01ed two runs
or tewet 111 II ot ht ~ 18
st,u ts

Mtl waukee's
startmg
ptt ~ hmg 'has bee n thm ever
" nee Yovan1 Gall ard o went
on the dtsabled ltst on May
2 wtth a to tn knee ligament
that requtred surge ry His
rehab was su pposed to take
tour months, wht ch gtves
hrm an outside chance of
returntng before the end of
the seaso n
Shec~ ( I 0-2. 2.77 ERA)
rs oft to the best start of his
career, but the All·Star
nghty ts in the fin al year of
u $31:1.5 million, four-year
'on trm:t. No matter what
huppens 111 • the future,
Sheets surd he 's glad the
Brewers are going for 11

to showcase thetr sk1lls m
front of college coaches from
all divi sions and professional
scouts from Ohw and its surrounclmg areas'.
Each camp will begm with
regiSlratton at 8 a.m. at Bob
Wren Stad1um and conclude
at approximately 6 30 p.m
There wtll be a limtt of 72
student-athletes per camp, so
pre-registratiOn IS encouraged to ensure a participant 's
place. Cost tor the camp ts
$205 per player
To
pre-reg1 ster, vtstt
http·//ohiobobcats em comic
amps/ohto-camps. html For
more mformatton, contact
Rrian Hoskmson at 740-593134 1 or hoskmsb@ohto.edu
legend, bought the Steelers
in 1933 wtth $2,500 111 racetrack winmngs. But the
NFL now frowns on any
ownershtp assocratJOn with
gamblmg.
The Rooney famtly owns
racetracks in New Yo1k and
Florida and has addecllonns
of gaming that are--mconsistent With NFL gambltng
policy
Art Rooney II says the
discussions should have no
affect on the team or tts
fans The Steelers. who won
the AFC North wtth a 10-6
record las t season, open
now
"It's hard to tell peo ple 111
years past , ' Three yea rs
from now, we're gomg to
be good ,~·- heets.said "We
want to 111 now "
Milwa kee, whtch hasn't
been 111 the postseason
since the days of Robin
Yount and Paul Mohtor,
fe ll two game s short of the
dniston title last year
The Indians, who fell one
wm shy of the World Senes
last year, are in need of
power-htttmg corner outfielders and LaPorta IS
' expected to ftll that vOid.
He htt .288 with 20 homers
and 66 RB!s 111 84 ~ames
for Double-A 1-luntsvtlle.
Sabathta reJected a $72
million, four-year exten·
sion from the lndtans during spring training and
announced he wouldn ' t
negotiate until ufter the
season.
Shaptro said seven teams
were mterested in Sabathia,
and the trade came after

Volquez
from PageBl

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Bahamas"

Gnffey has playeclm ntne
All -Star games and was
voted in tour other times
when he was lllJUred and
couldn't pl ay
trammg camp July 27.
"There is no reason to
believe that the current
mternal d1 scuss ion s will
have any tmpact on our fans
or on our team this season
or m the ·seasons to come,"
Art Rooney II said
The Rooney family has
owned the team since Its
mception, except for a brief
penod in 1941 when Art
Rooney Sr. sold the team to
Alexis · Thompson and
bought into the Philadelphia
Eagles. Rooney regamed
control of his hometown
Steelers m less than a year
three to five clays of intense
negotiations
wtth
Milwaukee.
"CC made It clear that
once the season started he
dtd not want to entertain
any negotiatrons," Shapiro
satd . "Our exploratton of a
contract was thorough
enough 111 spring training to
understand the eombinatton of our capabilities and
CC's expectati ons d1dn 't
al1gn."
Sabathia satcl he wasn't
gomg to worry about his
contract until the end of the
season.
"It's hard enough to play
thts game as it is, let alone
with any other distractions
such as a contract going
on," Sabathia satd. "I'll
focus on that lvhen it
comes. Right now, I'm
worri'ed about pitching
tomorrow."

Associated Press Writer
Joe Milicia in Cleveland
contributed to this report,

"ag
r
t:

,.,.~,

C .;

Galli a

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UI:rihune

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(740,\ 446-2342 t,740', 992-2-155 (304} ,675-4 333

-~-~--•_•__•_-_._. ._.,_•_•_•
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o (740) 446;.·31.0!PO,;:B_ _ _ _o:.r~F~a:.x~T.:o.:.(7_4.:..:0:.:.l.:9.::.92:.·.::.21.:. :5:..:.7_ _

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

310

6.,.1.;:

';..

::J~ .. _ ... ¥

ton

y \Hil S,\( .F•

tiJUit;; • '-1 I

.. alit: l t::" IUt:: l..t::

of~

"Oiiilhc;:e~----...., Movres toys kntck knacks

-

Brand New Restaurant lor.
Lease AT 2 good tocanon
Owner has other mterests
, ... •O:
call 304 549 StiAh """•'m-

c;o Awf~Y( 1't1G
~; ft: &amp;JA!&lt;tl ; S

call Gall1a County Shent1s 5 larnrltes July 9 10 11

YIHIJS\11·

c~1Y 1

0H10 VALLE 'f PUBLISH·
lN G co recommends
that you do bus rness wtth
peop le you know and
mnney
through the ma1l unltl you
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offenng

NOT ro send

0

r

"-------,.I
Ill

8! 'I'

Free half wol t female 5
months olP 740 418-1877
Absolute Top Dol lar

i..AhT ANO
FOUNil

ertl.em&amp;ntl
ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

currenc y proolfm1n t sets
d1a monds MTS Co1n Shop
151 2nd Avenue Gall tpolls
446 2842

&gt;This

newspape

1 - '!5

ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standards.

&gt;We will nor knowing
y accept any adver
lsement In violation
the law

1:\ll'lll\ Ill \I
Los t brown/whi te Rat Terner
Horse Cave Ad area childs
pet please cal l 740 949
13637404161749Thanks

4x4's For Sola ......,....................................... 725

.. .. .. 030

Antiques........................ ... ......... ............ 530
Apartments lor Rent...... .. . .. ..... .. ... . 440
Auction and Flea Market... . .
080
: Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair..
,...
770
Auloslor Sale............ . .......... .. .......... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale
... 750
550
• Building Supplies. .
Business and Buildings ................... ........ 340
Business Opportunity .. .
210
• Buslnass Training ..................... ............ 140
, Campers &amp; Motor Homes.. ..... . ... ... 790
Camping Equipment .. . . ....... .. ..... 780
' Cards of Thanks ...................................... 010
ChlldiEiderty Care. .
. . .... t 90
Electrical/Refrigeration .. ... ..... .. ... .. ........ .. .840
Equipment for Rant
480
Excavating .................................. ... ........... 830
Farm Equipment
610
· · Farm; lor Flont....
430
Farms for Sale .......................................... 330
·, For Lease.... . , .. ....
..
.......... 490
, For Sale...... ........ .. ..... ........... . .. .......... 585
For Sale or Trade .
....... ... 590
· ' Fruita &amp; Vegetables ..
. ..... : 580
•, Furnished Rooms. . .. ..... ................... ... 450
. General Hauling. . . ...
. 850
Giveaway.. .. ......................... ... ......
040
Happy Ads .. .... . . ..... . . .. ......... ... 050
Hay &amp; Grain........... .........
.... ... .
640
Help Wanted..... ........... . ... .. .. ............. 11 0
Home Improvements .. ...
. 810
Homes for Sale... . . ............... .............. 310
Household Goods
......... 510
·~
Houses for Rent........
............ 410
. ............ . ............ . 020
In Memoriam .

Insurance ...........
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ..................... 660
Livestock. ......
630
Lost and Found.. ......
060
Lots &amp; Acreage. . . . . ............................. 350
Miscellaneous. . .....,
. . ..
170
Miscellaneous Merchandise . ...... .. ...540
Mobile Home Repair . ....
.. .. 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ..
420
Mobile Homes for Sale...... .................320
Money to Loan .
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers . ........
. 740
Musical Instruments . ......... ............. 570
Personals ........
005
Pets for Sale .... . ...• ... ...... .. . .. ,..
560
. 820
• Plumbing &amp; Heating . ..
Professional Services.....
230
' Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ......................... 160
. ...• ..
. 360
Reel Estate Wonted ... .....
Schoolalnstrucllon........ ...... ........ ...•••• 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer.... .. ........... ... 650
120
Situations wanted. . ......
Space for Rent .................................... . ...460
· • Sporting Goodtl . ... . ....... .. .............. .. 520
•. SUV's lor Sale .................................... ....... 720
Trucks for Sale.. ... ............... ................ . . 715
Upholttery ........ . . . . .....
. ..... . ... 870
Vans For Sate .......,........................
.... .730
Wonted to Buy .............................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies . ...
. 620
Wanted To Do .............. ,.. ......... :....... . . 180
Wonled to Rent ....................... ........... 470
Yard Sole· Gallipolis..
............ .. ........ 072
Yard So. .Pomeroy/Middle ............. ....... 974
Yard Sole·Pt Pleasant ......
........ . .. 076

110

1.

HrlJ' W.1~11- n

110

l1i::tJ&gt;Wr\N it:J)

i!IC::I tlfUCision

Lost
Old
dog
small
Temer/Beagle mtx on OJ An Excellent way to ea rn
White Rd and St Rt 160 Call money The New Avon
Ca ll Manlyn 304 882 2645
446·96 18

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Announcemenl ... .. .

HLLP WwrEn

S~.ll\IUS

Take tnbou nd customer
serv1ce ca lls tor
Fortune 100 Compantes
lncludtng

AVONI All Areas• To Buy or
Sell
Shtrloy Spears 304
675·1 429

Two weeks vacatiOn alter
one year three weeks after
live yea rs Starltng salary
$26 000 to $28 000 Must
have collage degree tn
Human Servtces or m1n0f m
Human Serv1ces f1eld wrth a
mtnor m Admtnlstrahon At
least two years experte nce
worktng w1th the public tn a
semce
pOS ift On
Send
resume and three refer
ences to Search Commrttee
PO So• 454 Galltpohs
Ohto 45631

limn s

I

All rea l estate adverltstng I
1n this newspaper 1s
'
sub:ect to the Fede•:::!
Farr Hau srng Act of 1966
whtch ma kes ltr llegal to
advertise any
preference llmrtalt on or
dtscrlm1"11t1 0n ba sed on
race col or rellgron o:; ex
fatntltal status or nat1on rl
oriQ!rl or '"'Y mtentron lu
make any such
pr~tlerence hmrtai!O
dl scrlmrnat1on

1

IOH S\11

2br lba Home on N PArk
Or new Carpet updaled Krt
&amp; Ba Full bsmt scr oc rcto
lg 2 112 car gar Must Sell
304 675·6395 \ea\ e mes
sagP.

3 bed HUD Hom~s only
$10 OOO' for lls!inos ROO
620 4946 ex R01 9
3br 2ba Secllanal nn 6
acre Roseberry Rd PI
Pleas:m t w/ washer dr~er
d1~hwasher&amp;
refnge!f\to r

$65 000 (304)675 6626

Thrs newspaper wrll .,j 1 1
knCiwrngly accepr
r
ndverttsements for 1 1'
estate wh1ch rs 111
~ rol a hon of the la w C 1 1
readers Are herf'b\
I
Informed thAt ~II
dwelltngs ad11erl1sed
thiS newspaper are
a11eth1ble on an e(lurtl

I

op portunity

base~&gt;o.

.....

4 bedroom 2 1,2 bdt1 log
home 34286 New Crel'l
Ad Pomeroy lg pole bu1ld Me1gs County SyrarOJ
tng &amp; out butldtng on 6 acres Sale 01 rent 3 bed ? ' r •
utpond (816)668 0758
laundrv
room 1 11
garage
near
p Jol ~
Brand new Never 11ved rn
plus jcpostt NOP E I
1
2b r 2 bath w whtrlpoot tubs
Plt'&lt;.ISe (.(Ill 740 ':1~';;1 )I
large LA on 3 acrls m'l
$80 000 740 446 7029

N e\~ Haven 3 br 2 IJ, 11
Fo rec losure 4br 2ba o 1ly
aw s Ilot tub gas leg l1
$29 9001 Pnced to Selll For
Ltstmgs 800 62 0 4945 c ~e. ptace great vtew (:.!04 )P')
3021 !53 000
T4 62

• Up lo $8.50/hour
1 Prevtous experte nce
wtth customer servtce a
plus
• Patd Tramtng Onstte
1 Health 8enel11s

Catllo schedule an
mtervlew
Home Health Care South
East 0 1110 tS currently hm ng
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Metgs Co Must be certtfted
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e11penence Toll Free call ·1 ·

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Prr Sec unty Ofltcers must L.-.:·~~~~,;;il,;;'R;;
LIC~11ii10:;N;.,,.J
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yoJ.J Patd trarntng holidays, gonnagetem com or fa11 to Call Todayl 740 446 4367 .
vacai!On 401k Pre employ 740 44, 9645
1 800 214-0452
men1 drug testm g EOE Call - - ' - - - - - - www galh~HM:IIreercollege edu

mtnor 1'1 Eldl!untslrulton 1\1
l6as t lwv yt::tt 1b t!XIJt&gt;ttE:!rlce
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servtce
postllor
Send
tesume and three refer
ences to Search Commrttee 304 485 5421
PO Box 454 Galltpo!ts
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Execu11ve 01 rector pos1110n aLceptmg applrca tsons for
tor oomesllc Vtolence FT and PT MedJCS EMTs
' more tn10r·
•
Agency servtng lhree coun and Drsver s rOr
ttes of South-ern Ohto 40 hr lflatJon ca/1675 6 134
week pot&gt;t110 n wrth some
weekend overhme needed
Compensatory ltme provtd
ed
Benefits Health
Insurance Pa1d Holtdays

I~
I
I

1

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohto DIVISIOn of
Ftnanc1al
tnshtutton s
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ol
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Atfmrs BEFORE you reft
nance your home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
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advance payments of
lees or Insurance Call the
Oltt ce
ot
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Affatrs to ll free at 1·866
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or
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rs
properly
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from the Oh to Val ley
PubliShing Company)

HOIII.,
HlH Sill

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8ENNIG AN S now htrtng
gnll cooks 304 675 5227
Execut ve Duector postMn
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DomestiC
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Ag enc,. SfHVtng rtoree coun
t1 es ot Southern OhiO 40 h"i
a week pos111on wtth some
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Compensatory tnne provtd
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Beneftts Heal th
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Two weeks vacatton alter
one year three weeks AHer
ftve years Starttng salary
S26 000 to $28 000 Mus1
have College Degree tn
Human Serw::es or mrnor tn
human servtces fteld w1th a

1-888·582 3345
___ j(L

2b r W10 hookup 8 'I 0 ou I
bu r ldtng~ 2 lots m Gl ft on
$39 500 between rOam
9pm 304 773 9192

stl

Mixed breed Puppy 304 verlgold
rotns
any
10K'14K/18K gold Jewelry
.
593 6038
...,,_;.;;....;_ _ _ _., denial gold pre 1935 US

r

No Fee Unless We Wtn'

oNOli Ch

0

l,t)I\ I~K(J\/r'.IIIJI)\ ~
6 wks old Hetnz 57 pupptes
wtll be med s•ze good
guatd dogs 304·395 5204
f he Gra te resuJonce 2 miles
- - - - - - - - south of Tuppers Platns oo
Approx 6 8 .vks old male le tt Th ursdil 1OH1
krtten grey lrger litter bol( =~~~.:::::-....;.,
tratned 256 6870
W\!'illll

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

10

ptctures baby tlems com
pu ler etc 46 Burnell Rd

74

BL'SINI);S
Oi,Uil'I1'NI 1\

'

;:uorn--gm'!S"S jtmull y ?u:::e~::.u

GIVMWM

10

kltncartyle@comcast net

REWARD $500 For tnforma "--•Giii'iiAiiillil
.llil'iiiJI.iiiiStton leadtng to the arrest &amp; -,
convtct1on o1 the thtev tng 4 family sale July 1D &amp; 11
scum that broke tn to our tram 9am Spm at1522 State

"r

Business Days Prior To
Publication

ANNOUNCI~IIENI~

-I~&amp;:-¥

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
'{p~~
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

All Display · 12 Noon 2

In Next Day 's Paper

1\\01 \1 'Jill\ I !i

----_.J

i

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descdpt•on • Include A Pnce • Avoid Abbre vtat lo ns
I

675·5231

Oearltiru

Daily In-Column: 1.00 p .m .
Monday wfriday for Insertion

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

l v...-;.;._:

Websrtes.
www mydatlytnbune com
www mydatlysentrnel com
www mydarlyregrster com

968.

fmtshed 87,000 votes
behmd Chicago's Kosuke
Fukudome 111 fourth.
" I always have a back-up
plan," Gnffey satd. ")f you
can ' t htt a tough lefty, bunt.
If you can't hit a tough
nghty. bunt. There 's· always
a back-up Can' t go to the
All-Star Game? Go to the

I

We cove
Meigs, Gallia,

0H

Current
pplles

SPORTS BRIEFS

,.

.:l~ll llll ~l"'

County,

11
...
l 1\.-

conSidernt&gt;On for the U S was the last hnk to the damOlympic team
mant tea ms that won srx AL
Cleveland also recerve s Central titles from .199520-year-olcl Rob Bryson, a 200 I
Smgle-A nght-hander wtth a
SabathJa, who now wants
strong arm but a long road hts tnltt als wntten without
ahead to the maJors. and penods. had the chance to
left-hander Zach J.ackson , help Cleveland clinch the
who could help the lndtans pennant at home last season,
get throu gh thi s season.
but he lost to the Boston Red
The lncltan s have unttl the Sox 111 Game 5 of the AL
end of the season to select champ1o nsh1p series.
the ftmtl ptece ot the deal Shaptro has been m thts
a pl.1yer to be named who posrtton before, begmning
tsn 't JUSt a throw-tn. The hiS tenure as general managclub has two Bt ewers mmor er wrth the unpopular trade
Bartolo Colon to
leaguers to choose trom. ol
Shaprro said
Montreal for Lee, Grady
The club that Wdtched J1m S1zemore and Brandon
Thome. Manny Ramtrez and Ph1ll1ps 111 2002.
Albert Belle leave in free
The Indian&gt;got great talent
agency dectded tt couldn ' t in return
Lee and
do the same thm g wtth S1zemore are All-Stars thts
Sabathta, the tirst Cleveland season and Phtlhps ts the
pttc~r ~o wm the Cy Young Cmcim~ali Reds' slartillg ser:Aw·ard-slu\.:1; Guyiv•J Pt:IJ )""-cmtt basemar1 - bm lt tOOK
in 1972
untd last season for them to
Shapiro was realtst1c win the AL Central agam
about the odds of the lndrans
Shaptro pOint s to the
signing htm if he becomes a amount of talent left from
free agent after the season
last year on Cleveland's ros"1 know he' ll be open to teras signs that the Indians
that, but once a guy ge ts out won ' t be clown long.
in free agency you recog"Good ttmes are commg
mze the challenges that ahead and I really firmly feel
exist," Shapiro said
thts team hus the chance to
Sabathia, a f11st-round come right back out next
draft ptck 111 1998. shot year and contend for the
through the Indians' mmor division," Shapiro said.

r

Meigs County, OH

NoOne
El&amp;e 'canl

joming the

·n 2""'

'I

UdUJ

And Mason
Counties Like

AP pholo

T...,...,,
l &lt;;:'A• ........
~ .......1.... ., ~ . ... .-1 .. , .... .--~,... . . .~\,.UIII
........... • 5 -~t'
'" " ....
Vtl ..,._.,.V"J ......... 1.) U IIU.._.I
I V UIJ V II

~

--;- m:rtbune - Sentinel'- l\.egtster

Cleveland
lndtans
pitcher CC
Sabathta
walks back
to the
dugo ut after
grvrng up
two home
runs to the
Chrcago
Whtte Sox
dunng the
ftrst tnntng
of a baseball game
Wednesday
in Chrcago.

the Futures Game for Team

.,-.1
1 It:

www.mydailysentinol.com

------Needed tmmediately
3
house cleaners 8am 12pm
or 1pm Sp m $20 per shift
Oebbte 446 2451
------Needed DediCated HHA s
PCAs CNAs &amp; STNAs
Established
and
well
respected local home health
agency
Localed
m
Galhpotts OhiO has avail
able l ull tune and parHtme
cases If you have a destre
to work as a respected
TEAM
member
call
(740)446·3808 for 1mme11
ate tnletvre\•,

Ohto Valley Home Health
tnc htrmg STNA CNA
FEDERAL
Home Health Atdes &amp;
Personal Care Aides Full
$17 89·$28 2?1hr now hrr Part Ttme &amp; Per Otem pOSt·
1ng For applicat1on and free 11ons avatlable Apply at
Jackson
P1ke
governement jOb Info call 1480
AmMcan Assoc of Labor 1 Galltpolis or phone 44 1
913 599·8226 24/hrs amp 1393 Compet1t1ve Wages
mtleage retmbursement and
SII'V

Regional Dump Drivers
Accreo ted Member Accreo1t no
A&amp;J Truckmg IS seektng ColJflcll lor lndoperd9flt CoHegas
qu aItIied COL A d nvers Io
ope ra1e semt·dumps tor
regtonal routes We featUJe
excellent hom e ttme health

170

u ·- •

ML"it:•l L\NF.OUS

and
den tal
•nsurance Pet Crematrons Call 740
40 1(k) vaca.110n bonus pay
446 3745
and safety awards Oualifted r.i:~~:':':"---.,
ap pltcants must be over 23 180
W ,Wil:ll
yrs have a r'n1 n1mum of 1
year of commoncal dr)vtng
expenence &amp; clean MVR
Pnor e11penence wtth semt·
dUmps and roll ons ts help
fu l Contact Kent at 800·
462·9365 or ftll out apphca·
tron at www rJtrucktng com

Get A Jump
OJ1

SAVINGS

We w1H do your cleanmg
an d errands lor you lo
Save you Prec tous ttme •
Free esttmates
Reasonable pnces OualtlY
of Servrce IS EXCEPTION·
All Call Michele at !7 40·
)446 3881 Leave MessaQe
Will do pressure washmg
work to your home- No
house to big I small Call lor
more mfo 740 794 1340

Shopthe .
Classifieds!

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Local Sports
• Community
Calendar
... and much more.

L---TIIoiill&lt;-l--"

All types of Home Repatrs
and Improvements Call R1ck
740·992 2910 or 740·274
2338
_ _:_~----­
Looktng for part 1tme work ·
2nd JOb mtlttary construe
EOE
. , . - - - - - - , - - - - , - hon secu r1t y tood han
AT 35 Adull Vtdeo &amp; Book dllngtcookmg landscaptng
Store need Mtdntght Clerk p11or exper1ence and have
full or part ltme 304 937 worked co nsts1enlly for the
4900
past 12 years 1n1ury free tn
manttme tndustry 304·675
2017

POSTAL JOBS

- - - - - - - . Qlher beneltls mcludrng
health rnsurance
ParHtme defilal assistant
needed Experrence helpful
POST OFFICE NOW
but not reqwed
Bnng
HIRING
resume
1fl
person
to
Avg
Pay
$20/hr or
2922 Ja ckson Ave Potnt
$57Kiyr tncludes
Pleasant WV No phone
Federal Benefits OT
calls pleasel
Placed by adSource not
Port Ttmo AN 740 377 offcrod wl USPS who h1res
1·866·403 2582
9095, Oualrty Care NurSing

L-------'

·r··:"';:"f.::":::"":'l.lii
" l:
" li.
' ----

FIND A JOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

({1]

u..J'-A-Ll-1

~-

.

~alltpolis iatlp ~fibune

l9oint t)Ieasant ~egister
The Daily Sentinel
'

iu.nbap m:tmes -ienttnel

�.....

P~ge 84 • The Daily Sentinel

r

Good -

APARTIIIENIS

Auru;

mR RE.'!r

I'OR SAJ.F.

GI'IC1ous Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apls . at Village
Manor and Aiversrde Apts. 1n
Middleport, trom $327 to

to the

Last
Word

$592 . 740·992·5064. Equal
Housmg Opponunity

.Tuesday, July 8, 2008
:ALLEY OOP

Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
For
Concrete.
A119le .
Channel , Flat Bar Steel
Grating
For
Dra1ns.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
·scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Fridav. Bam -4:30pm. Closed
Thu rsday,
Saturdav
&amp;

1999 Ford F-150, $7400;
both very good cond1tion.

i

Police lmpoundsl Cars from
$5001 , Hondas. Chevys,
Jeeps. Fords. &amp; more! for
listings 800-620·4876 ex V435

t..------_.1

Phillip
Alder

79 Corvette T-Top. 350
engine. auto trans very
clean. 70 ,400 miles. 740·

388·0236

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling
New G&amp;ragea
El e~:trica f

iiiiiliiliili;...,J

&amp; Plumbing

Rooting &amp; Gultera
VInyl SkUng &amp; Pai nti ng
Patio and Porch Oecks

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

furnished apartment, no n!"'"-~!----,
pets. deposit &amp; references.
10
FARM
1988 GMC Dump truck w. a
(740l992·0165
EQulPI\IEJ\'T
.7. 4 gas eng1ne. Truck works
~---iiiiiiiiiiiiii-pl ·great and is ready to work.
Nice quiet 2BA apt.
2BA
$3900. 740-645-1800
house.
Aelerences
&amp; EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER
deposit required . No Pets. BUILT.
VALLEY Fi_JJ
VANS
446-1271 or 709-1657
HO AS E f l l V ESTOCK
F OR SALE
TRAILERS , LOAD MAX ..__ _ _ _ _ __.

992·621 5
Po me roy Oh1 o
2J Years l oc al E~ penencr.

·.
r-------.,
'1!J:I:'""-"""!":"'"--....,

and

Ho~n:~
FOR S~LE

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Townhouse EQUIPMENT TRAILERS .
Apfirlm ~nls, Very Spacious CAfU";Q EXPR ESS ~ 10G3 Ford ?50 Cargo Van , 6
~ nn-mcv;-;-.:;, -:;;:, , : ; ,!:? ~- C- ~..~ ~ ~ 1' ::: ~ :). ::
~','!.. :!u1c. !1~ ~G~::~:}
r4~4;:,
6·,;;;
63
;:;5~2,__ _ _.,
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby C AA GOfC0 N CESS t 0 N ~oioi

apal\ment
lor
the TRAI LER INVENTORY AT
elderly/disabled . call 675· WWW . CARMICHAELHJR SALE
IORRE:-.T
6679
TRAILERS.COM 740..46 ·
3825
PRICE REDUCED $69,900 BraM new 3bed 2bath on
2br m Pt. Pl easant. $465
2712 Lincoln Ave . 3br. 1ba. • - half acre in Pt. Pleasant. month , Homestead Really
Have you priced a John
wi th detached
garage, OWNER FINANCE AVAIL- Broker Nancy 304-675- 4024
Deere la tely? You'll be surmotivated seller, 304-675- ABLE . 740-446-3570
or 304-675-0799
prised! Check out our used

1&amp;r

6757,

304-610·13 13

0&lt; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Assist 2 Sale 304-755-2980

' 2BR in town. Galhpol 1s. No Unfurnished t bedroom apt.

lor La11d Owne rs. No

ll20 MOBILE HOMES

clos- Call 441 _0110 or 59 1_5174

and

ing cost and ZERO DOWN!

Pine.

References

No

FOR SAl£

Vinton area. must be moved. 5 bedrooms Clvai lable. 740Good Cond. $4500. 740- 446·3384
853-1143 or 446- 1648
New 3 Bedroom homes Irom
16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Batll $214 .36 per month, Includes
Vinyl Sidin g. Shingle Roof.
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
$230 per month. 740-385se t-up. (740 )385-2434 '

9948.

r9'1~ ~.

fJ50
? i.taifl, rttminenf

1 nrs ~

446-3870

--------

3br house with nice yard and .,.,,...._ _ _ _ _ _.,

10

pond on Bulaville Pike. 740-

339 3186
:_:c_c·
:.c:.:_____
4br, ·2ba, HUD! only $317

20;rs.

H OUSUIOI..D
r .
'-"lOllS

Tetter. 740 "446 ·

a~ ~-~.Prj )

1\.iullui ,t~"

IL._...;A,;;C~RFA:;;';;&lt;;~E-_.1! ~-~-~i-~-gs-eu_u_·"_'_"._'_"•_•_e'

Ct~i~et

2006 Redman 14x65 in as
new condition on . rented lot'
in Apple Grove, WV 304·
576-2000
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec- - - - - - - - ti onal home $279 p er month
740-385-7671.
2 bedroom house lor rent.
,no pets. (740)992-5858
92
Bayview Cimmeron
Mobile· Home. 16x80, 2br. 2416 B Monroe Ave. 3 bed·
2ba, underpinning, axles &amp; 1oom. full size basement, No
wheels, porch, cement Pets; $500 month, $500
steps, ,Out Ouildings includ- deposit Ser iou s Inquires
Only 304-675-5 155
ed $5,000 304-674-4689

In Memory

t

APAR'IMENTS
FOR RENT

In Memory

of

Mary (Wiggins) Bentz
11/2/1925- 718/2003

A golden heart stopped beating,
Hard working hands put to rest:
God broke our hearts to prove to
He only takes the best.
With love ... \'our fa mily
Help Wanted

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fu mished and unfur·
ni shed , and houses in
Pomeroy and M iddleport,
security deposit required , no
pets, 740-992·2218
-------1BR Apt, WID hookups,
satellite TV incl. w/rent,

Help Wanted

2 Apts, for Rent beside
Domino's in Pt. Pleasant

30H1 H350
2 bedroom apa rtment for
rent in Middleport. no pets,

(7401992·5858
212 3rd Ave. 3 rooms and
bath, fUr nished, no pe ts . .
Rent-+ Dep. 740 -44 1-0245

2BR apt. CIA. (740) 441·
0194
Apar tmen t ava il able now
Aiverbelld Apts. New Haven
WV. Now accepting applicatioll s lor Hud-S ub sidi2ed,
one Bedroom Ap ts. Utilities
included. Based on 30% of
adjusted income. Caii .304B82·312 1, available tor

hiJI.

Senior

a n d

Disabled pec:lple

licensed Practical Nurses

Plea.sant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitati on
is currently accepting applications for full time and per diem LPN's. Long term care
experience preferred. Must ·have WV
license. 12 hour shifts.
Please contact
Angie Cleland,
Director of Nursing at {304) 675-5250.

AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Beautiful Apts. at Jackson
Eatatet. 52
Westwood
Drive .. from S365 to $560.
Eq ual
740- 446-2568
Housing Opportunit y. This
institution is Sn Equal
Opportur:~ lty Provider and
Employer.

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
anct/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1 t 11
for application &amp; information.

Free Rent
Special!!!
sJSs'

2&amp;3BA apls.
and up,
Cebtral Air, WID Hookup,
Tenant pays electric. EHO

Pharmacy Buyer
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a fu ll -time
Pharmacy Buyer. State registration and
National certification as a Pharmacy Tech.
A mini,mum of 3 years as a hospital
pharmacy tech. Previous Busin ess and/ or
purchasing/buying
experience in a
Pharmacy setting preferred.
Send resumes to :··
.Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
Fax: (304) 675-6975
or apply on-line at www.P"alley.org

AA/EOE

I

t

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Aebuih In
Stock. Call Ron ,Evans, 1·

600·537-9528.

~

f

..___illiiliiliili;...,J

- - - - - - - close to hospital. Call 740-339-0362

·In Loving Memory

,

r

Ellm VIew Apts.
(304 )882-3017
Frenclltown
Apart ments,
727 4th Ave, Gallipolis. is
now accepting applications
lor waiting list for 1 bedrcom,
USDA Rural Development,
Subsidized apartment lor
elderlv and handicapped.
740·446·4652 .
Equal
HoUsing Opportunity.
' Gallia
Manor
Apartments, 138
Buhl Morton Ad .
~
Gallipolis. is nOw
accep1ing appllca lions • lor
waiting list lor 1 bedroom
Huo . subsidized apartment
for ~derty and handicapped.

740·448·4652.
Middleport N. 4th Ave. 2
room eHiciencv Apt. utW1ties
paid. no pets. dep. ·&amp; ref..

740·992·0165.

Insured
WVIM21B2 Free Es timates

RV Service at Ca rmichael

HOME
'

L\1i"ICU\'EJ\.1ENIS

I

866-564-867 9

ri):
/
0

'.

~~ 5~CU~I'TY
•, /..., CL~AilANC.e.

•

'

.....____ j

~

www.tJD.I.bei-cree:k.cabinetry.eom

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rl. t60 ·Gallipolis

*

I

1~~992 -56112

AN' LUKE BEGAT ABRAM
WHO BEGAT LAZLO
WHO WED
DELIA
WHO
BROUGHT
FORTH
TH' TWINS,
DANI'El ·AN''
DAVID ...

15 TH ' PARSON
TELLJN' A BIBLE

BLA H,
BLAH ...

i'

HOME.GROWN
CABBAGE

General Contractor 35 Years
Experience. New Homes ,
Remodeling &amp; Home Repair,
licensed and Insured WV

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Cell : 740-416·5047
email:
jrshadlrm @aol.com

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;.
Paul Rowe

_,-,

NAW, HE'S 'SPLAININ'
HIS FAV'RiTE

I

I'Oi!.\U~Tt: ...

'\q Wf&gt;.t-ITTO(,(H\'1 Wif E.. TO-,

i

Tfl.l~').

t;X) 50/o\El'~i t-IG., I llJ.-\j( TO

Dt&gt;.l{GLE. M LWT

Are you 65
or older?
If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
\

when .you pay for
a 6 or 12 ·
.
month subscTiption on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon ·b elow
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.
~alltpolh~ · Dail!'

m:rtbune

tlotnt f)lea•aut

)L\_egt~ter

The Daily Sentinel ·
mtme~ -6e.,tinel

·---------- ~ ------------------- Subscriber's Name
Address ~------------------------

Phone ____________________________

20 yc:m experience

I

$2.50 per dol~ n
H r.~ M-F 7JO - 5:00
Sut. 8:3{) - 4JO Sun. 1-5

l l kr..,~en Ur~olhu~

li:.

Rulland l

740-992-7960

OVER AND OVER .

WHAT CAN WE ·
Att'\ AT ~ WH ...T
(AN

WE ..

AHI

Poe ket D rupes,

Vege ta ble plant s

Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport. OH

WE 1&lt;-E E.P PLIWING
THE SAME HOLES.

Dmpcs. Sheers. Rod

48 per flut $6.00

Ed's Greenhouses

GOLF ...NYMORE

in sewi ng

Bedding Pl an t ~

Swags.

Vu l un~cs.

Rom an Shad es and
M ore ..
Plu s Pill ow, Bedskin s

Table

Cover~

&amp; Table

Runners

CAtL SANDY

Home:74U-99l-3llU
Cell:740·416-6144

,PEANUTS

Manley's
Recycling
5113 MIIISt • MlddiiDDft. OH 45780

OKA'f', BEFORE WE
BE61N. I'LL READ
.TI-lE RULES ..

741-912:3894

/60C)D ! I LOVE TI-lE
RULES.. ONCE 'fOU
KNOW TI-lE RULES,
'{OU CAN CI-IEAT..
1

Wl-lAT I ALWA'f5.SA'f'
IS 'f'OU CAN'T REALLV '
CI-IEAT UNLESS 'f'OU
KNOW TI-lE RULES ..

Tl-lAT 15 Wl-lAT I
ALWA'f'S SA'&lt;

••• M1111•1tf111111 9:00 11111-5:00 am
s•uniiiB:OO •12:18 am

PAYIIIGTOPPIICES FU

......,........Clll••

111111111m •·••111111.. Whlll
Cllllvdc c....,.,. •
ICIII ftr Clrrtll PriCes!

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE
New Homes. RoOm Additions, Remodeling,

Melal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, Deck.&lt;,
Balhroom Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
WV # c 4095·1 Cell 740-590- 7666

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
• Decks

• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Rooni Additions
Owner:

James Keesee II
742·2332

740 -992 -0730

COW and BOY
I'M Tll1£0, LADIES AND
GENTLEMEN. TIQEO OF
WATCHING' MYBELOVED
COUNTRYCQUMBL£
WHILE YOU CAVE IN
TO BIG BUSINESS.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

IN

THE SIOEWAU&lt; BY THECANOY STORE.

:GARFIELD
ONE SMAL-L !ITEP FOR MAN ,
ONE GIAN'f L£AP FOR.NERDKIND

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544
Free Eslimates

740·367-0536

and Wood Siding • Roofi ng • Pole
Pa li o 's,

I THOUGHT THIS WAS ABOUT THE CQACK

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

For Remodeling and New House Building
Caii:.M ARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
Barns •

City/State/Zip ______________

l l\RE.t.

'BTGNATE
DON'T W... N~A PLIW

Porches and Decks

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Road, Long Bouom, OH

----- ---------------- ------- --- --

·-·

- ~--·

20
22

Doorbells
Peace

57

gesture

58 Honey

stands

sh ows

Vole

Furniture
buy

Chomps

24

A J 10 7

30
31

West
Pass

North
3• ·

East
Pass

P;~ ~o:

P a!~

!'~~

32

34
35 Danza or
Hanaatt
36

Nefertili's

Ok1.timuy

low means elsewhere

40 Coral habltal

Glances

over

5

development 28

39

Gol a ian

41
42

Radi o part
Lepton
locale

43

Dried-up

44

Tarot
reader

46

Dagwood's

nei gh bor
47 Buff~ l n ' .c:.

atte ndee
Is, in Madrid

48
29 A q uestion 51

6 Ouch!
l es s certain
of time
8 Trolley
31 Kic ks in
9 Freeway
33 USN rank
strip
35 Secu res

lake
Tilled lady
6aby wear

7

French essayist Michel de Montaigne
wrote , "Virtue rejects facility to be her
companion .. .. She requires a craggy,
rough and thorny way."
Such are the subconscious fe;etings of
defende rs a_l the bridge tab le. The best
defensive play migh t not defeat the contract . Then v1rtue must be its own

ought not to be hard - except that many
c;telende rs·would not resist the lure of. a
quic+; Irick. '
You are West, delend1ng agai nst tour
spades. You lead the heart ace: 10, two,
si)( . What would you do ne•t?
When East drops 1he two at trick one. he

Could So uth's seco nd he!:irt lose r evaporate? Onl y if he has ace-doubleton in
diamonds.
Althougll it 15 not guaranteed to be righl 1
West ought immediately to shift to the
club nine. And here that is neceSsary to
defeat the ·contract. East, going third
hand high, plays his jack, the bottom ol
his touc hing ca rds. South wins with the

CELEBRITY C!PHER
by Luis Campos
Celetlnt~

Cipher Cl)'p!ogl ams a·t crea!l!d !·Jr ~__c: ~tens b t laP"o~s UE&lt;JC e ;a;•.it' :
: ac~ leller n l~e .: :re· ;·anJs 'or ao~ he•

:: 'es~~·

Toaay·s clue, Seauals Y

'' R B D J' C G
OO JEN H S

E 0 .N B T .E N N 0
N ·PTN

T CKTGK H AE

BO J CG

TES

CRZK

P]ZK

XDHN

MDCRNROT C U K EN ."

·

RE T

AK

TX

OW

N DA

PTEVX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - I never want lo qwt p~y1 ng ball They'l l have lo cui ·
this unt!orm off o! me to get me out oltl ' · Roy Ca mpane-•la

•that trick, cashes the heart king, and
plays another club for down one.

G

AstroGraph
""""'lllrthda;y:

Wednescbly, July 9, 2008
By Bernice Bede Osol
You'll get plenty of opportunities in the
year ahe!'ld, but they a re apt to come in
pairs. When th is occurs. th ings could get
quite tricky, especially if you are pulled in
opposite direchons at H1e same time. Be
prepared to drop one if necessary.
CA NCER (June 21-July 22) - 11 is
essentia l to partner with reliable associales. and not those who may be fun but
always hinder yo ur prog ress. A poor
choice wi ll l ake you on wild-goose
chase, as well as tarnish your reputation
in the process.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Ins tead of
attemptin g to do things in a grandiose
manner, you'll do btJ tter to start out small
and gradually work your way toward your
goa ls. That way,- you won.'! leave out any
esse ntial bits and pieces.
VIFiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Do your
bast to be as carefu l about the handling
of your funds as possible, because
regardless of how prudent you arc, YOl!
cou ld easi ly do something foolish that
wo uld be a se rious financial blunder.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Be as coop·
erative and generOus with others as you
can, beca use U you show any signs of
selfishness, those who control the popularity ci rcle's will 'drop you so fast your
head will .be spinning .
SCORP IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Responsibili ties wi ll not be accomplished
on their own. Something ighored won't
m ~rely wait fo r you; It wrll become far
more severe and cause many rnore
headaches than you will want to handle.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· 0 ec. 21 ) When e\!al uating something thai has
great potential but about which you know
little, be realistic and seek the expertise
you need. It's good to be enthusiastic,
but be sure that you have the facts.
CAPRICO RN ·(Dac . 22-Jan. t 9) - It
won't gO ove r very we ll wi th friends that
you knowingly overlook In order to show
fa\lorltism to someone you. want to '
impress. You'll lose In both instances.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Before
you attempt to play a trump card , be
mindful of the strength of your competition . They migh t be holding all the h1gh
cards, and you cou ld end up looking like
a joker
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - Be carelui with whom you partner in a collective
l1nanclal endeSvor. If your assoc1ate tails
to deliver what he or she pledges, the
entire bill will be staring you In the face
AR IES (March 21·Aprll 19)- AlthOugh
you !!ire Qui te e tree spirit, you're still
attuned to the traditional socia l amenities, However, you could throw !!BUl len to
the wind and do something that might
. make anyone blush
TAUR US · (Ap ril 20 -May 20) Intolerance could lead to you r undOing . It
you insist upon being stubborn ·about
what you want to do and fall to accept
opportunities that can benefit your welfare, It will be your loaa.
·
GEMINI (May 2t -June 20) - Don't make
th e mistake of thinking It Ia who you know
th at will bring IUcceu, because. In the
end, It wlll only be what you know that
can advance your lnteresta.

.ORearrange

letter~

Advertise
in this space for.
.$64 per month
•

~he

d

l ovr ~crambled words

b!!-

low tc fcrm four :1rr,oie ,,.,·etc's .

.A. R ME K
l

4 .

N U FT I

,.
0

s

T -1

---1.

II

SCRAMLETS ANSIVERS ln'Oi

Carafe - Plant - Noisy - Penury ·· A FIRE
A famous cducafor once wrote, "l:ducation is n•&gt;l the lillinf
of a pail, but the lighting of A FIRE.

.ARLO &amp;JANIS

r
~

i

~

~~"'

W\48T 8CC8HT lo/WLP

-~

writef

27 Reu n ion

crazes
Stage of

A ussie rock
group

38 ·1 Robol"

Weird
In a dead
heal

21 Lo ndon
park
1 Hay bundle 24 Life slory,
Heavy molal 2 Sneaking
briefly
Sand
suspiciOn
25 Jordan
deposit
3 Morister 's
neighbor
Any woman
loch
26 Soy
Lout
4 Fads and
pr od uct

'IW sa~ ,.,'i Wrtln""

.

13
19

DOWN

High means· more, ·

Cell: 740· ~16-1834

·---

, 36

C arr ies

·wearil y

down
27 Fergie's ex

SOUP TO NUTZ

740-985-4141

10

maker

37
39

15+ years experience Free Estimates

Mall or drop off this coupon along
w ith .a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 46~ , Gallipolis, OH 45631

Paul
55 Basketball
Gape open
hoop
Wolf's tooth 56 Griffi n of
Flip-chart
game

king at Irick two. whic h many players
cou!d not reclst :;Gt~ up ~ discurd lor
declarer (on which he would throw his
club loser).

Farm Letart Falls

10" h;:mging Basket:-.
$7.75
4" Gerani ums .60e

16
17
18

has either played a singleton, or has at
leas t three cards in the suit. (We saw

tf~=====~~
THE: WINDOW
UDY

cooki e

54 Team

in favor

ace, leads a diamond to the board, an d
takes th e spade finesse. But West wins

Cluse-Oul Sale

stat
53 Sandwic h

yesferday that if he had a doubleton. he
would have started a high:low.) It is
unlikely that East has a si ngleton 11nr1 if
he has three hearts. cashing ttie heart

Jim O'Brien

030318 30H58·1668 (H)
304·51J.0759 ICI
'

12 You , once
14 Wife, in

In this deal, though , beating four spades

SOAP OPERA

THE BORN LOSER
f"i \.1~\/E. \0 DN'\&amp;LE. ~ C~"iooq '(_~')\ t&gt;e:.R. 'IOURSW;

'
: I1'1 FROOT 01' .6L~t&gt;YS'S NOSE
· TO (,(."i f\E:R \ 0 DO

along

agent
49 Overllow
7 "- do for
wllh
now"
50 Pool's black
11 Fruit cooler 52 easeball

reward. And even when there is a k1 ll1ng
defense, it can be a struggle to find it.

:BARNEY

Hardwood Cablne1ry Alld furniture·

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDS I 740-247-2113

6unbap

(A- ~'Lt. Be GLAI&gt; ~~~~~~N 'T~f
3ANIT0fl GeTS ~15

4 Double

23

Opening lead: • A

UIV HOMf :,

!!.~!!!@I

FRESH

• KQ J 41

't •
4A

Seamless Outters
Roofing , Sidmg , Gutters

9·12Sit.

Call
24 Hrs . (740} 446- .
0870, Rogers Basement
,Waterpro:oting .

" 98 5

South

o..n9-61H

Unconditio nal lifetime guarantee. Loca l references furnished. Established 1975.

• 63 2

7 3
9 :J 2

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: ~o t h

H&amp;H
Guttering

II. II. 1241'1111em. 01

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

• 98 5

rna _pd

ROGER HYSEllS

il

22 12 - - - - - - - - 1:'::1:'""-~:-"--.....,

,O
. AIJms
Fl ower
Flats.
S3.50.
G eran1ums, _
3/$1.00 ,
FOR SALE
Elephant Ears, Ca.mas ,
Also have Goldfish, Koi, 16' lowes fishi ng boat, 25hp
Pond Plants. (740)446-1578, Jotrnson, $2,500 OBO, 2003
(740)645·1361
Polaris 700,, $3,500 OBO,
2001 Le)(US 300 ES 304Hot Tub / Swi m Spa Outlet.
77J.5109
$1000 ott. Huge selection.
New Styles. Free Delive ry.
1994 Toyota 4 runner.
Top Quality. 606-929-5655
engine needs fi xed or
repl aced, body great. 740JET
446-9465

740-992-6971

MmnR HOMH\

~5Fi-t774

t..-llilliliiiillliiliiiii_.l

20 MOIULI: HOMFS
HJR RENJ·

4407

LIV I-SIOCK

Eastern Ave Gallipolis Oh Burrows for sate, 1 male and
hardwood floors, cia, $5000.
Call 740·256-6382
446-7444
14 females. Call ;or more
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR Newly remodeled house,
Mlsl:tl.IAJ~E( M.J.~
intormation .- 740-643·2430
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek 3br, Gallia County. $500/renl
MERCHANDJ,!,'E
II~\'\"''~ H~ I\ I 10'\
$3501deposit. 740·388-9060
Ad, 441 -111"1
IH \1 \I..,

•
Davi d LeWIS

•
•

t

Alll]ipesOf

_74'1!1~0-----...., ili:lr-~---::-..,
CMU'ERS &amp;

Berber Car pet $ 5 _95 yard 36 cows, some witll calves,
2 limousine ht ill ~ _ CaU_74nReminen!s $~ 0 .!.. 1.:;;,

rnonth ! Great Location! (5%

l do;·m.

r

Galfr ie

9'

lf AK874

"" A 10

and Replacement

Will
do
Land 2br. 1 small pet ole Security deposit. $275 per New Ho lland 256 Rake, 1996 Kawasaki STS 750, 2 . - - - - - - - Improvements. BanKruptcy $400/rent
$400/dep. month, water included. Ca ll Gallrie 6. Drllm Mower, yr old engine, new Oat1e ry. 28 Years Experience
14x70 2 bedroom 2 bath in &amp; Bad Credit OK. 2, 3. 4 and Refere nces required. 740- 44&amp;4425 or 446-3936
$1800, (740)992-6728 , 591-

East

South
. AIOH65
• 6 5

Concrete Removal

Concrete Work

7 6 3

West

Stop &amp; Compare

1 Flour holder 45 Sidled

15 Guitarist -

• K2

740-992·1671

Hours
7:00AM • li:OO PM

I I \I I'&gt;

L--·fj,i,\,jjlRjiSIIAiiili
LEio
. -r

pets. Carmichael EQulpmEl!nt. 740-

to 10'x30'

l ()'\l 10 II
l 0'\' li{L l 110'\

lloATS &amp; M !JIURS

required. 446·2412

Sizes S'x10'

Call Gary Stan k·y 0'~
7411·5Y 1· 81144
Pkasc leave messo1gc

at 1;1!1~--~"'!"'-­

invento y

+

41 Fizzle

42 Lend a hand

Berlin

·• Q J 10
.t K Q 4

Rc.!fcrc ncc:-. Availahlt'!

07 HD Dyna Street Bobdeep cobalt blue S1100 in
e)(fras $1 3 ,500 Firm. 99 HD
Sports1er XI 883. loaded wl
chiome, has trike kit. $6000
w/ kit.or $4500 w/o kit . • 740·
441-1037 or 740-645· 7086

Federal Funds just released pets. SSOO/rent ; deposit. 2nd ttoqr. corner ol Second WWW . CARE Q . COM

740.949·2217

07-0lH)B

• QJ H

• New Homes·
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

45771

1/ 1411

Nort h

CONSTRUGnON

Road

Racine, Ohio

*Rcasonahle Rate~
*ln:-.urcd
*Expcrit·rn:ed

53999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE

HOLSE:i

29670 Bashan

ROBERT
BISSEll

Insured &amp; Bonded
740·65J.9657

Work

Pool. Patio. Start $425/Mo. TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE·
«l MOTORC'tC!.E.'i/
No Pe ts, Lease Plus NECK
HITCHES.
4 WH•UERS
CAR MIC HAEL
EQU IP- .__ _ _ _ _ __.
Security Deposit Required,
MENT / CARM t CHAE L
(7401367·0547 .
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA· 05 Suzuki King Quad,
700cc. 4WD, 92 miles. w1nch
Twrn Rivers Tower is accept· VICE .
SPECIAL
20FT
&amp; ramps $4 ,800 304.S7~ ing applications lor waiting GOOSENECK
FLATBED
3279
list for Hud-subsidized. 1-br

10

Hill's Self
Storage

'•

Tara

Momu: HoM•:s

NEA ' Cross word P uz:&lt;:le

ACROSS

(740I99n301

15
CKC Minature Pinscher 2
TRUCKS
Middleport, Beech St .. 2 br.
males.
4
.mon.
old,
ear6
1-llR
SAt.F.
furnishe&lt;1 apartment, utilities
cropped . tails docked. shots. ..__ _
paid , ·deposit &amp; references ,
740· 388 -8788
1968,Chevy Pick-up, V8 · 3
no pets, ( 7 40)992 - 016~
I \1{\ 1.._,1 1'1 '1 II'
speed, long bed. $2500 Call
N_ 3rd Ave ., Middleport. 2 br.
446-4999 or 446-6352
,, '1\l ... f()( 1\

--------

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

-

BRIDGE

r:

• 10

www.mydailys~ntinel.com

NEW AN D USED STEEL 2002 Ford Mustang, $7500;

Large, charm1ng, unfurnished 3 bedroom apt., 200
floor, LA, DR. overlooking
the
Park
downtown Sunday. (7401446-7300
G'allipolis
' References liZ!"'"-""'!:-"---,
requi red, no pet.&amp;, security
I:'E'IS .
deposit. $600 per month.
FOR SALE
Call 446-4425 or 446-3936

That's the wo.rd from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and $0
much more!

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

www.mydallysentineLcom

�.....

P~ge 84 • The Daily Sentinel

r

Good -

APARTIIIENIS

Auru;

mR RE.'!r

I'OR SAJ.F.

GI'IC1ous Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apls . at Village
Manor and Aiversrde Apts. 1n
Middleport, trom $327 to

to the

Last
Word

$592 . 740·992·5064. Equal
Housmg Opponunity

.Tuesday, July 8, 2008
:ALLEY OOP

Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
For
Concrete.
A119le .
Channel , Flat Bar Steel
Grating
For
Dra1ns.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
·scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Fridav. Bam -4:30pm. Closed
Thu rsday,
Saturdav
&amp;

1999 Ford F-150, $7400;
both very good cond1tion.

i

Police lmpoundsl Cars from
$5001 , Hondas. Chevys,
Jeeps. Fords. &amp; more! for
listings 800-620·4876 ex V435

t..------_.1

Phillip
Alder

79 Corvette T-Top. 350
engine. auto trans very
clean. 70 ,400 miles. 740·

388·0236

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling
New G&amp;ragea
El e~:trica f

iiiiiliiliili;...,J

&amp; Plumbing

Rooting &amp; Gultera
VInyl SkUng &amp; Pai nti ng
Patio and Porch Oecks

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

furnished apartment, no n!"'"-~!----,
pets. deposit &amp; references.
10
FARM
1988 GMC Dump truck w. a
(740l992·0165
EQulPI\IEJ\'T
.7. 4 gas eng1ne. Truck works
~---iiiiiiiiiiiiii-pl ·great and is ready to work.
Nice quiet 2BA apt.
2BA
$3900. 740-645-1800
house.
Aelerences
&amp; EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER
deposit required . No Pets. BUILT.
VALLEY Fi_JJ
VANS
446-1271 or 709-1657
HO AS E f l l V ESTOCK
F OR SALE
TRAILERS , LOAD MAX ..__ _ _ _ _ __.

992·621 5
Po me roy Oh1 o
2J Years l oc al E~ penencr.

·.
r-------.,
'1!J:I:'""-"""!":"'"--....,

and

Ho~n:~
FOR S~LE

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Townhouse EQUIPMENT TRAILERS .
Apfirlm ~nls, Very Spacious CAfU";Q EXPR ESS ~ 10G3 Ford ?50 Cargo Van , 6
~ nn-mcv;-;-.:;, -:;;:, , : ; ,!:? ~- C- ~..~ ~ ~ 1' ::: ~ :). ::
~','!.. :!u1c. !1~ ~G~::~:}
r4~4;:,
6·,;;;
63
;:;5~2,__ _ _.,
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby C AA GOfC0 N CESS t 0 N ~oioi

apal\ment
lor
the TRAI LER INVENTORY AT
elderly/disabled . call 675· WWW . CARMICHAELHJR SALE
IORRE:-.T
6679
TRAILERS.COM 740..46 ·
3825
PRICE REDUCED $69,900 BraM new 3bed 2bath on
2br m Pt. Pl easant. $465
2712 Lincoln Ave . 3br. 1ba. • - half acre in Pt. Pleasant. month , Homestead Really
Have you priced a John
wi th detached
garage, OWNER FINANCE AVAIL- Broker Nancy 304-675- 4024
Deere la tely? You'll be surmotivated seller, 304-675- ABLE . 740-446-3570
or 304-675-0799
prised! Check out our used

1&amp;r

6757,

304-610·13 13

0&lt; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Assist 2 Sale 304-755-2980

' 2BR in town. Galhpol 1s. No Unfurnished t bedroom apt.

lor La11d Owne rs. No

ll20 MOBILE HOMES

clos- Call 441 _0110 or 59 1_5174

and

ing cost and ZERO DOWN!

Pine.

References

No

FOR SAl£

Vinton area. must be moved. 5 bedrooms Clvai lable. 740Good Cond. $4500. 740- 446·3384
853-1143 or 446- 1648
New 3 Bedroom homes Irom
16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Batll $214 .36 per month, Includes
Vinyl Sidin g. Shingle Roof.
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
$230 per month. 740-385se t-up. (740 )385-2434 '

9948.

r9'1~ ~.

fJ50
? i.taifl, rttminenf

1 nrs ~

446-3870

--------

3br house with nice yard and .,.,,...._ _ _ _ _ _.,

10

pond on Bulaville Pike. 740-

339 3186
:_:c_c·
:.c:.:_____
4br, ·2ba, HUD! only $317

20;rs.

H OUSUIOI..D
r .
'-"lOllS

Tetter. 740 "446 ·

a~ ~-~.Prj )

1\.iullui ,t~"

IL._...;A,;;C~RFA:;;';;&lt;;~E-_.1! ~-~-~i-~-gs-eu_u_·"_'_"._'_"•_•_e'

Ct~i~et

2006 Redman 14x65 in as
new condition on . rented lot'
in Apple Grove, WV 304·
576-2000
2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec- - - - - - - - ti onal home $279 p er month
740-385-7671.
2 bedroom house lor rent.
,no pets. (740)992-5858
92
Bayview Cimmeron
Mobile· Home. 16x80, 2br. 2416 B Monroe Ave. 3 bed·
2ba, underpinning, axles &amp; 1oom. full size basement, No
wheels, porch, cement Pets; $500 month, $500
steps, ,Out Ouildings includ- deposit Ser iou s Inquires
Only 304-675-5 155
ed $5,000 304-674-4689

In Memory

t

APAR'IMENTS
FOR RENT

In Memory

of

Mary (Wiggins) Bentz
11/2/1925- 718/2003

A golden heart stopped beating,
Hard working hands put to rest:
God broke our hearts to prove to
He only takes the best.
With love ... \'our fa mily
Help Wanted

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fu mished and unfur·
ni shed , and houses in
Pomeroy and M iddleport,
security deposit required , no
pets, 740-992·2218
-------1BR Apt, WID hookups,
satellite TV incl. w/rent,

Help Wanted

2 Apts, for Rent beside
Domino's in Pt. Pleasant

30H1 H350
2 bedroom apa rtment for
rent in Middleport. no pets,

(7401992·5858
212 3rd Ave. 3 rooms and
bath, fUr nished, no pe ts . .
Rent-+ Dep. 740 -44 1-0245

2BR apt. CIA. (740) 441·
0194
Apar tmen t ava il able now
Aiverbelld Apts. New Haven
WV. Now accepting applicatioll s lor Hud-S ub sidi2ed,
one Bedroom Ap ts. Utilities
included. Based on 30% of
adjusted income. Caii .304B82·312 1, available tor

hiJI.

Senior

a n d

Disabled pec:lple

licensed Practical Nurses

Plea.sant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitati on
is currently accepting applications for full time and per diem LPN's. Long term care
experience preferred. Must ·have WV
license. 12 hour shifts.
Please contact
Angie Cleland,
Director of Nursing at {304) 675-5250.

AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Beautiful Apts. at Jackson
Eatatet. 52
Westwood
Drive .. from S365 to $560.
Eq ual
740- 446-2568
Housing Opportunit y. This
institution is Sn Equal
Opportur:~ lty Provider and
Employer.

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
anct/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1 t 11
for application &amp; information.

Free Rent
Special!!!
sJSs'

2&amp;3BA apls.
and up,
Cebtral Air, WID Hookup,
Tenant pays electric. EHO

Pharmacy Buyer
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a fu ll -time
Pharmacy Buyer. State registration and
National certification as a Pharmacy Tech.
A mini,mum of 3 years as a hospital
pharmacy tech. Previous Busin ess and/ or
purchasing/buying
experience in a
Pharmacy setting preferred.
Send resumes to :··
.Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
Fax: (304) 675-6975
or apply on-line at www.P"alley.org

AA/EOE

I

t

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Aebuih In
Stock. Call Ron ,Evans, 1·

600·537-9528.

~

f

..___illiiliiliili;...,J

- - - - - - - close to hospital. Call 740-339-0362

·In Loving Memory

,

r

Ellm VIew Apts.
(304 )882-3017
Frenclltown
Apart ments,
727 4th Ave, Gallipolis. is
now accepting applications
lor waiting list for 1 bedrcom,
USDA Rural Development,
Subsidized apartment lor
elderlv and handicapped.
740·446·4652 .
Equal
HoUsing Opportunity.
' Gallia
Manor
Apartments, 138
Buhl Morton Ad .
~
Gallipolis. is nOw
accep1ing appllca lions • lor
waiting list lor 1 bedroom
Huo . subsidized apartment
for ~derty and handicapped.

740·448·4652.
Middleport N. 4th Ave. 2
room eHiciencv Apt. utW1ties
paid. no pets. dep. ·&amp; ref..

740·992·0165.

Insured
WVIM21B2 Free Es timates

RV Service at Ca rmichael

HOME
'

L\1i"ICU\'EJ\.1ENIS

I

866-564-867 9

ri):
/
0

'.

~~ 5~CU~I'TY
•, /..., CL~AilANC.e.

•

'

.....____ j

~

www.tJD.I.bei-cree:k.cabinetry.eom

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rl. t60 ·Gallipolis

*

I

1~~992 -56112

AN' LUKE BEGAT ABRAM
WHO BEGAT LAZLO
WHO WED
DELIA
WHO
BROUGHT
FORTH
TH' TWINS,
DANI'El ·AN''
DAVID ...

15 TH ' PARSON
TELLJN' A BIBLE

BLA H,
BLAH ...

i'

HOME.GROWN
CABBAGE

General Contractor 35 Years
Experience. New Homes ,
Remodeling &amp; Home Repair,
licensed and Insured WV

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Cell : 740-416·5047
email:
jrshadlrm @aol.com

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;.
Paul Rowe

_,-,

NAW, HE'S 'SPLAININ'
HIS FAV'RiTE

I

I'Oi!.\U~Tt: ...

'\q Wf&gt;.t-ITTO(,(H\'1 Wif E.. TO-,

i

Tfl.l~').

t;X) 50/o\El'~i t-IG., I llJ.-\j( TO

Dt&gt;.l{GLE. M LWT

Are you 65
or older?
If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
\

when .you pay for
a 6 or 12 ·
.
month subscTiption on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon ·b elow
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.
~alltpolh~ · Dail!'

m:rtbune

tlotnt f)lea•aut

)L\_egt~ter

The Daily Sentinel ·
mtme~ -6e.,tinel

·---------- ~ ------------------- Subscriber's Name
Address ~------------------------

Phone ____________________________

20 yc:m experience

I

$2.50 per dol~ n
H r.~ M-F 7JO - 5:00
Sut. 8:3{) - 4JO Sun. 1-5

l l kr..,~en Ur~olhu~

li:.

Rulland l

740-992-7960

OVER AND OVER .

WHAT CAN WE ·
Att'\ AT ~ WH ...T
(AN

WE ..

AHI

Poe ket D rupes,

Vege ta ble plant s

Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport. OH

WE 1&lt;-E E.P PLIWING
THE SAME HOLES.

Dmpcs. Sheers. Rod

48 per flut $6.00

Ed's Greenhouses

GOLF ...NYMORE

in sewi ng

Bedding Pl an t ~

Swags.

Vu l un~cs.

Rom an Shad es and
M ore ..
Plu s Pill ow, Bedskin s

Table

Cover~

&amp; Table

Runners

CAtL SANDY

Home:74U-99l-3llU
Cell:740·416-6144

,PEANUTS

Manley's
Recycling
5113 MIIISt • MlddiiDDft. OH 45780

OKA'f', BEFORE WE
BE61N. I'LL READ
.TI-lE RULES ..

741-912:3894

/60C)D ! I LOVE TI-lE
RULES.. ONCE 'fOU
KNOW TI-lE RULES,
'{OU CAN CI-IEAT..
1

Wl-lAT I ALWA'f5.SA'f'
IS 'f'OU CAN'T REALLV '
CI-IEAT UNLESS 'f'OU
KNOW TI-lE RULES ..

Tl-lAT 15 Wl-lAT I
ALWA'f'S SA'&lt;

••• M1111•1tf111111 9:00 11111-5:00 am
s•uniiiB:OO •12:18 am

PAYIIIGTOPPIICES FU

......,........Clll••

111111111m •·••111111.. Whlll
Cllllvdc c....,.,. •
ICIII ftr Clrrtll PriCes!

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE
New Homes. RoOm Additions, Remodeling,

Melal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Siding, Deck.&lt;,
Balhroom Remodeling Licensed &amp; Insured
WV # c 4095·1 Cell 740-590- 7666

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
• Decks

• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Rooni Additions
Owner:

James Keesee II
742·2332

740 -992 -0730

COW and BOY
I'M Tll1£0, LADIES AND
GENTLEMEN. TIQEO OF
WATCHING' MYBELOVED
COUNTRYCQUMBL£
WHILE YOU CAVE IN
TO BIG BUSINESS.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

IN

THE SIOEWAU&lt; BY THECANOY STORE.

:GARFIELD
ONE SMAL-L !ITEP FOR MAN ,
ONE GIAN'f L£AP FOR.NERDKIND

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544
Free Eslimates

740·367-0536

and Wood Siding • Roofi ng • Pole
Pa li o 's,

I THOUGHT THIS WAS ABOUT THE CQACK

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

For Remodeling and New House Building
Caii:.M ARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
Barns •

City/State/Zip ______________

l l\RE.t.

'BTGNATE
DON'T W... N~A PLIW

Porches and Decks

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Road, Long Bouom, OH

----- ---------------- ------- --- --

·-·

- ~--·

20
22

Doorbells
Peace

57

gesture

58 Honey

stands

sh ows

Vole

Furniture
buy

Chomps

24

A J 10 7

30
31

West
Pass

North
3• ·

East
Pass

P;~ ~o:

P a!~

!'~~

32

34
35 Danza or
Hanaatt
36

Nefertili's

Ok1.timuy

low means elsewhere

40 Coral habltal

Glances

over

5

development 28

39

Gol a ian

41
42

Radi o part
Lepton
locale

43

Dried-up

44

Tarot
reader

46

Dagwood's

nei gh bor
47 Buff~ l n ' .c:.

atte ndee
Is, in Madrid

48
29 A q uestion 51

6 Ouch!
l es s certain
of time
8 Trolley
31 Kic ks in
9 Freeway
33 USN rank
strip
35 Secu res

lake
Tilled lady
6aby wear

7

French essayist Michel de Montaigne
wrote , "Virtue rejects facility to be her
companion .. .. She requires a craggy,
rough and thorny way."
Such are the subconscious fe;etings of
defende rs a_l the bridge tab le. The best
defensive play migh t not defeat the contract . Then v1rtue must be its own

ought not to be hard - except that many
c;telende rs·would not resist the lure of. a
quic+; Irick. '
You are West, delend1ng agai nst tour
spades. You lead the heart ace: 10, two,
si)( . What would you do ne•t?
When East drops 1he two at trick one. he

Could So uth's seco nd he!:irt lose r evaporate? Onl y if he has ace-doubleton in
diamonds.
Althougll it 15 not guaranteed to be righl 1
West ought immediately to shift to the
club nine. And here that is neceSsary to
defeat the ·contract. East, going third
hand high, plays his jack, the bottom ol
his touc hing ca rds. South wins with the

CELEBRITY C!PHER
by Luis Campos
Celetlnt~

Cipher Cl)'p!ogl ams a·t crea!l!d !·Jr ~__c: ~tens b t laP"o~s UE&lt;JC e ;a;•.it' :
: ac~ leller n l~e .: :re· ;·anJs 'or ao~ he•

:: 'es~~·

Toaay·s clue, Seauals Y

'' R B D J' C G
OO JEN H S

E 0 .N B T .E N N 0
N ·PTN

T CKTGK H AE

BO J CG

TES

CRZK

P]ZK

XDHN

MDCRNROT C U K EN ."

·

RE T

AK

TX

OW

N DA

PTEVX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - I never want lo qwt p~y1 ng ball They'l l have lo cui ·
this unt!orm off o! me to get me out oltl ' · Roy Ca mpane-•la

•that trick, cashes the heart king, and
plays another club for down one.

G

AstroGraph
""""'lllrthda;y:

Wednescbly, July 9, 2008
By Bernice Bede Osol
You'll get plenty of opportunities in the
year ahe!'ld, but they a re apt to come in
pairs. When th is occurs. th ings could get
quite tricky, especially if you are pulled in
opposite direchons at H1e same time. Be
prepared to drop one if necessary.
CA NCER (June 21-July 22) - 11 is
essentia l to partner with reliable associales. and not those who may be fun but
always hinder yo ur prog ress. A poor
choice wi ll l ake you on wild-goose
chase, as well as tarnish your reputation
in the process.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Ins tead of
attemptin g to do things in a grandiose
manner, you'll do btJ tter to start out small
and gradually work your way toward your
goa ls. That way,- you won.'! leave out any
esse ntial bits and pieces.
VIFiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Do your
bast to be as carefu l about the handling
of your funds as possible, because
regardless of how prudent you arc, YOl!
cou ld easi ly do something foolish that
wo uld be a se rious financial blunder.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Be as coop·
erative and generOus with others as you
can, beca use U you show any signs of
selfishness, those who control the popularity ci rcle's will 'drop you so fast your
head will .be spinning .
SCORP IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Responsibili ties wi ll not be accomplished
on their own. Something ighored won't
m ~rely wait fo r you; It wrll become far
more severe and cause many rnore
headaches than you will want to handle.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· 0 ec. 21 ) When e\!al uating something thai has
great potential but about which you know
little, be realistic and seek the expertise
you need. It's good to be enthusiastic,
but be sure that you have the facts.
CAPRICO RN ·(Dac . 22-Jan. t 9) - It
won't gO ove r very we ll wi th friends that
you knowingly overlook In order to show
fa\lorltism to someone you. want to '
impress. You'll lose In both instances.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Before
you attempt to play a trump card , be
mindful of the strength of your competition . They migh t be holding all the h1gh
cards, and you cou ld end up looking like
a joker
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - Be carelui with whom you partner in a collective
l1nanclal endeSvor. If your assoc1ate tails
to deliver what he or she pledges, the
entire bill will be staring you In the face
AR IES (March 21·Aprll 19)- AlthOugh
you !!ire Qui te e tree spirit, you're still
attuned to the traditional socia l amenities, However, you could throw !!BUl len to
the wind and do something that might
. make anyone blush
TAUR US · (Ap ril 20 -May 20) Intolerance could lead to you r undOing . It
you insist upon being stubborn ·about
what you want to do and fall to accept
opportunities that can benefit your welfare, It will be your loaa.
·
GEMINI (May 2t -June 20) - Don't make
th e mistake of thinking It Ia who you know
th at will bring IUcceu, because. In the
end, It wlll only be what you know that
can advance your lnteresta.

.ORearrange

letter~

Advertise
in this space for.
.$64 per month
•

~he

d

l ovr ~crambled words

b!!-

low tc fcrm four :1rr,oie ,,.,·etc's .

.A. R ME K
l

4 .

N U FT I

,.
0

s

T -1

---1.

II

SCRAMLETS ANSIVERS ln'Oi

Carafe - Plant - Noisy - Penury ·· A FIRE
A famous cducafor once wrote, "l:ducation is n•&gt;l the lillinf
of a pail, but the lighting of A FIRE.

.ARLO &amp;JANIS

r
~

i

~

~~"'

W\48T 8CC8HT lo/WLP

-~

writef

27 Reu n ion

crazes
Stage of

A ussie rock
group

38 ·1 Robol"

Weird
In a dead
heal

21 Lo ndon
park
1 Hay bundle 24 Life slory,
Heavy molal 2 Sneaking
briefly
Sand
suspiciOn
25 Jordan
deposit
3 Morister 's
neighbor
Any woman
loch
26 Soy
Lout
4 Fads and
pr od uct

'IW sa~ ,.,'i Wrtln""

.

13
19

DOWN

High means· more, ·

Cell: 740· ~16-1834

·---

, 36

C arr ies

·wearil y

down
27 Fergie's ex

SOUP TO NUTZ

740-985-4141

10

maker

37
39

15+ years experience Free Estimates

Mall or drop off this coupon along
w ith .a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 46~ , Gallipolis, OH 45631

Paul
55 Basketball
Gape open
hoop
Wolf's tooth 56 Griffi n of
Flip-chart
game

king at Irick two. whic h many players
cou!d not reclst :;Gt~ up ~ discurd lor
declarer (on which he would throw his
club loser).

Farm Letart Falls

10" h;:mging Basket:-.
$7.75
4" Gerani ums .60e

16
17
18

has either played a singleton, or has at
leas t three cards in the suit. (We saw

tf~=====~~
THE: WINDOW
UDY

cooki e

54 Team

in favor

ace, leads a diamond to the board, an d
takes th e spade finesse. But West wins

Cluse-Oul Sale

stat
53 Sandwic h

yesferday that if he had a doubleton. he
would have started a high:low.) It is
unlikely that East has a si ngleton 11nr1 if
he has three hearts. cashing ttie heart

Jim O'Brien

030318 30H58·1668 (H)
304·51J.0759 ICI
'

12 You , once
14 Wife, in

In this deal, though , beating four spades

SOAP OPERA

THE BORN LOSER
f"i \.1~\/E. \0 DN'\&amp;LE. ~ C~"iooq '(_~')\ t&gt;e:.R. 'IOURSW;

'
: I1'1 FROOT 01' .6L~t&gt;YS'S NOSE
· TO (,(."i f\E:R \ 0 DO

along

agent
49 Overllow
7 "- do for
wllh
now"
50 Pool's black
11 Fruit cooler 52 easeball

reward. And even when there is a k1 ll1ng
defense, it can be a struggle to find it.

:BARNEY

Hardwood Cablne1ry Alld furniture·

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDS I 740-247-2113

6unbap

(A- ~'Lt. Be GLAI&gt; ~~~~~~N 'T~f
3ANIT0fl GeTS ~15

4 Double

23

Opening lead: • A

UIV HOMf :,

!!.~!!!@I

FRESH

• KQ J 41

't •
4A

Seamless Outters
Roofing , Sidmg , Gutters

9·12Sit.

Call
24 Hrs . (740} 446- .
0870, Rogers Basement
,Waterpro:oting .

" 98 5

South

o..n9-61H

Unconditio nal lifetime guarantee. Loca l references furnished. Established 1975.

• 63 2

7 3
9 :J 2

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: ~o t h

H&amp;H
Guttering

II. II. 1241'1111em. 01

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

• 98 5

rna _pd

ROGER HYSEllS

il

22 12 - - - - - - - - 1:'::1:'""-~:-"--.....,

,O
. AIJms
Fl ower
Flats.
S3.50.
G eran1ums, _
3/$1.00 ,
FOR SALE
Elephant Ears, Ca.mas ,
Also have Goldfish, Koi, 16' lowes fishi ng boat, 25hp
Pond Plants. (740)446-1578, Jotrnson, $2,500 OBO, 2003
(740)645·1361
Polaris 700,, $3,500 OBO,
2001 Le)(US 300 ES 304Hot Tub / Swi m Spa Outlet.
77J.5109
$1000 ott. Huge selection.
New Styles. Free Delive ry.
1994 Toyota 4 runner.
Top Quality. 606-929-5655
engine needs fi xed or
repl aced, body great. 740JET
446-9465

740-992-6971

MmnR HOMH\

~5Fi-t774

t..-llilliliiiillliiliiiii_.l

20 MOIULI: HOMFS
HJR RENJ·

4407

LIV I-SIOCK

Eastern Ave Gallipolis Oh Burrows for sate, 1 male and
hardwood floors, cia, $5000.
Call 740·256-6382
446-7444
14 females. Call ;or more
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR Newly remodeled house,
Mlsl:tl.IAJ~E( M.J.~
intormation .- 740-643·2430
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek 3br, Gallia County. $500/renl
MERCHANDJ,!,'E
II~\'\"''~ H~ I\ I 10'\
$3501deposit. 740·388-9060
Ad, 441 -111"1
IH \1 \I..,

•
Davi d LeWIS

•
•

t

Alll]ipesOf

_74'1!1~0-----...., ili:lr-~---::-..,
CMU'ERS &amp;

Berber Car pet $ 5 _95 yard 36 cows, some witll calves,
2 limousine ht ill ~ _ CaU_74nReminen!s $~ 0 .!.. 1.:;;,

rnonth ! Great Location! (5%

l do;·m.

r

Galfr ie

9'

lf AK874

"" A 10

and Replacement

Will
do
Land 2br. 1 small pet ole Security deposit. $275 per New Ho lland 256 Rake, 1996 Kawasaki STS 750, 2 . - - - - - - - Improvements. BanKruptcy $400/rent
$400/dep. month, water included. Ca ll Gallrie 6. Drllm Mower, yr old engine, new Oat1e ry. 28 Years Experience
14x70 2 bedroom 2 bath in &amp; Bad Credit OK. 2, 3. 4 and Refere nces required. 740- 44&amp;4425 or 446-3936
$1800, (740)992-6728 , 591-

East

South
. AIOH65
• 6 5

Concrete Removal

Concrete Work

7 6 3

West

Stop &amp; Compare

1 Flour holder 45 Sidled

15 Guitarist -

• K2

740-992·1671

Hours
7:00AM • li:OO PM

I I \I I'&gt;

L--·fj,i,\,jjlRjiSIIAiiili
LEio
. -r

pets. Carmichael EQulpmEl!nt. 740-

to 10'x30'

l ()'\l 10 II
l 0'\' li{L l 110'\

lloATS &amp; M !JIURS

required. 446·2412

Sizes S'x10'

Call Gary Stan k·y 0'~
7411·5Y 1· 81144
Pkasc leave messo1gc

at 1;1!1~--~"'!"'-­

invento y

+

41 Fizzle

42 Lend a hand

Berlin

·• Q J 10
.t K Q 4

Rc.!fcrc ncc:-. Availahlt'!

07 HD Dyna Street Bobdeep cobalt blue S1100 in
e)(fras $1 3 ,500 Firm. 99 HD
Sports1er XI 883. loaded wl
chiome, has trike kit. $6000
w/ kit.or $4500 w/o kit . • 740·
441-1037 or 740-645· 7086

Federal Funds just released pets. SSOO/rent ; deposit. 2nd ttoqr. corner ol Second WWW . CARE Q . COM

740.949·2217

07-0lH)B

• QJ H

• New Homes·
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

45771

1/ 1411

Nort h

CONSTRUGnON

Road

Racine, Ohio

*Rcasonahle Rate~
*ln:-.urcd
*Expcrit·rn:ed

53999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE

HOLSE:i

29670 Bashan

ROBERT
BISSEll

Insured &amp; Bonded
740·65J.9657

Work

Pool. Patio. Start $425/Mo. TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE·
«l MOTORC'tC!.E.'i/
No Pe ts, Lease Plus NECK
HITCHES.
4 WH•UERS
CAR MIC HAEL
EQU IP- .__ _ _ _ _ __.
Security Deposit Required,
MENT / CARM t CHAE L
(7401367·0547 .
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA· 05 Suzuki King Quad,
700cc. 4WD, 92 miles. w1nch
Twrn Rivers Tower is accept· VICE .
SPECIAL
20FT
&amp; ramps $4 ,800 304.S7~ ing applications lor waiting GOOSENECK
FLATBED
3279
list for Hud-subsidized. 1-br

10

Hill's Self
Storage

'•

Tara

Momu: HoM•:s

NEA ' Cross word P uz:&lt;:le

ACROSS

(740I99n301

15
CKC Minature Pinscher 2
TRUCKS
Middleport, Beech St .. 2 br.
males.
4
.mon.
old,
ear6
1-llR
SAt.F.
furnishe&lt;1 apartment, utilities
cropped . tails docked. shots. ..__ _
paid , ·deposit &amp; references ,
740· 388 -8788
1968,Chevy Pick-up, V8 · 3
no pets, ( 7 40)992 - 016~
I \1{\ 1.._,1 1'1 '1 II'
speed, long bed. $2500 Call
N_ 3rd Ave ., Middleport. 2 br.
446-4999 or 446-6352
,, '1\l ... f()( 1\

--------

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

-

BRIDGE

r:

• 10

www.mydailys~ntinel.com

NEW AN D USED STEEL 2002 Ford Mustang, $7500;

Large, charm1ng, unfurnished 3 bedroom apt., 200
floor, LA, DR. overlooking
the
Park
downtown Sunday. (7401446-7300
G'allipolis
' References liZ!"'"-""'!:-"---,
requi red, no pet.&amp;, security
I:'E'IS .
deposit. $600 per month.
FOR SALE
Call 446-4425 or 446-3936

That's the wo.rd from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and $0
much more!

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

www.mydallysentineLcom

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

lJeisel,Weber-Gale among new faces on Olympic team
Bv BETH

I

Tuesday, July 8, 2008 ,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2000 U.S. swim team at 16. ··Good Morning America,''
ASSOCIATED PRESS
· Jendrick narrowly missed and actor Johnny Dcpp,
makmg the team fur Athens which should make her very
OMAHA. ·Neb .
and then retired. She'll swim popular with her teammates.
Elizabeth Bei sel emerged as the 100 breaststroke in·, Cullen Jones made his
first Olympic team, two
a rwng star ;n the U.S. trials. Beijing. ·
earning a trip to her first
"It just feels amazing to be years after coming to attenOlympic s at 15 . Garrett back on top," she said . ''My tion as the world 's topWeber-Gal e assumed th e ooal is to delinitely break ranked swimmer in the 50
sprint lega9 left behind by the world record and win the free . He didn't qualify in
Gary Hall Jr. Then there's gold again."
any individual events: but
Megan Jendrick, back in the
Like Jendrick , . Weber- he' ll sw im the 400 free
swim or things eight years Gale missed out on making -relay.
after winning gold as a the 2004 team . The 22-yearJones helped the U.S. win
teenager.
.
old spri nter from Milwaukee gold in that event at last
They are among the fresh is a veteran of two world year's world championships.
face s joining
Michael championships, but as a He became lhe lirst black
Phelps. Katie Hoff, Natalie relay swimmer.
swimmer to break a loneCoughlin an&lt;i Ryan Locine
Now he'll try to extend the course world record in 2006,
" in rhe pool at the Beijing gold-medal legacy of Hall, again on the 400 free relay at
Olympics.
the two-time defending the
Pan
Pacific
Beisel . for one. still can ' t Olympic 50 free champion Championships.
quite believe it .
who fmled to qualify at the
Towering above then] all
The · teenager
from tnals.
·
is 6-foot-8 Matt Grevers the
Saunderstown, R.I. . earned . Weber-Gal_e, \~hose ~ame so n of Dutch immi gr~nts
spots in the 200-meter back- 1s a comhmat10n o. ~I S from suburban Chicago. He
stroke and 400 individual mother:s maiden . name will swim the 100 b·ackmedley just t~o years (Weber) and his father's stroke and the 400 free relay.
removed ~ro.m bemg on the . name (Gale), Will compete
Another first-ti me, Lacey
national B team. a step · ·m the 50 and I 00 freestyles Nymeyer, caught a hreak
be.I,o~ the b1g-t1me. .
. -. hts first tndlVIdual events Monday when 41-year-old
h s .~retty cool be~?g the m an mternatwnal meet - Dara Torres dropped out of
rook1e, Be1sel sa1d. There and the 400 tree relay.
the 100 free in Beijing.
are so. many veterans here
"If you ?on 't eKpect to do
Nymeyer was only set to
that w1ll help me out w1th well, you r~. not gomg ~? swim the 400 free relay, but
l)erves and stuff. I, was not swim fast , he sa1d. I now she'll compete in the
expectmg th1 ~. I ve been tramed hard all year. 1 was 100 free while Torres focus. dreamtn~ of th1s smce 1 w~s really . confident 111 my es on the 50 free as her best
a IJtt[e g1rJ ,and now that It S SWt mmmg and wanted the chance for an' individual
true and I m up here with best tunes. I· want to keep
ld
these guys. it's pretty my confidence high going to go.,. ·
- b th ldest
..
B ...
d
.orres WI 11 e e o .
1
sw~~~ips was also 15 when a:J 1 ~~P~~tat~~~: 0~1r s~~~~ ~m~\can ever toh swim ~
he made hf6 Olymj'lic debu! rn'tng fast ;md winning .sameymp~c~- ~~ reco
at the Sydney Games in medals."
. 1_t - ~n s e cou poten2000, going all but unno- Jessica Hardy has been tlally ~w 1 ~ 1 t":o _relays_.
ticed except for his status as around for a few years, but
Locme 15 ?~cK 111 hiS secthe youngest J)Jaie since never in an Olympics. The ond Olymptcs, havmg guah1932. He tinished fifth in the 21-year-old from Long fled m three mdJHdual
Beach. Calif., earned spots· events as the runner-up each
200 butterfly.
He's not worried about in the 50 free. I00 breast- ttme. but Phelps IS Ill two of
Beisel handling the pressure. stroke and 400 free relay.
them;
.
"S he 's been on a · few
"I pon't think "if you had
He II challenge Phelps 1_n
-national team trips already, told me a month ago that 1 both the .200 and 400 mdJ which is a few. steps ahead would make it in all three of v1dual medleys, wh1\e teamof where 1 was in 2000," these events that I would mate . and
defendmg
Ph!!lps said. "The biggest have believed you," she Olymp1c champ10n Aaron
said. ''I' m expecting good Petrsol a watts 111 the 20Q
thing is just to have fun."
The bubbly Jendrick is things for sure."
backstroke.. ,
.
back this time with a differAnother newcomer is
Lochte 1sn t fazed by
ent 'name after marrying Elaine Breeden; an 18-year- either of them.
.
"1 think that .1 can wtn
three years ago. She won old from Lexington, ·Ky. ,
two gold medals in Sydney who will swim the I00 and every time," he. said. "! still
under her maiden name of 200 butterflys. Her relatives have another month to corQuann,
becoming the include
cousin
Diane rect things. Beijing is going
youngest medalist on the Sawyer, co-host of ABC's to be a lot different." ·
HARRIS

n\

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Pirates beat'Astros on McLouth,.Doumit homers

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Divorce

USA Recycled faper

•
;;o CENTS~ Vol. 57, No. 249

See Page Bl

Bv BRIAN

Page AS
• Phyllis Ebersbach, 70

INSIDE

\

· • US, allies want global
pollution slashed-by
2050. See Page A2
• Wildfires push some
from homes.
See Page A:2
• When e·mailing gets
inappropriate.·
See Page A3
• Divers learning more
about Lake Erie
shipwreck: See Page AS
• 4-H news notes.
See Page A6

_., euu

Violf

t Dlr)l

CO UPE &lt;.

· -?r· 47K, ;
COUPE
' ...! lk . $9
.«1 COlli"
'lii. ll2l!OC

c!. Ot. RII

Detatts on Page A6

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Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
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CONVER1
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·noc:utolt

SSI

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds
Comics.

B3-4

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

group outside the huilding
belonging to the environmental organization Earth
First 1 · WOSU National
Public Radio is reporting
Columbus Police said officers used mace on ''about
six protesters" while Earth
First! daimcd police used
tasers on some members.
Police denied thi s claim to
WOSU and said no one was
tased. The Associated Press
quoted
Columbus
Lt.
William ·Morrison as saying
officers used pepper spray

J.

740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com

~otnt jleasant ~egtster

spe aking with police, the
company was told three of
the protesters arrested were
from Athens, one was from
Minnesota. one was from
Oregon, one was from
Indiana. two were from
Arizona. No one arrested
was from Meigs County.
Thompson said police told
her the eight are being
charged with criminal trespass and resisti ng arrest.
Thompson said the company · plans to pursue the
charges of criminal trespass.

Internet blogs associated
with the prote st and Earth
First 1 claim the activi &gt;t&gt;
"charged the building and
occupied the lobby. di sabled
video cameras with silly
. string, danced on furniture.
banged on pots and pans
and delivered anti-coal messages to employee &gt; wi th
chants and songs."
Thompson. who was in
the building &lt;tt the time of
th e protest. said the pro-.

Ple•se see AMP. AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Bs
A4
As
As

HOEFLiCH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

' POMEROY- Again this .
year
the
Pomeroy
Merchant's Association will
hold a duck . derby at the
Pomeroy
Sternwheel
Festival Sept. 11-13, it was .
decided at a meeting,of the
group Tuesday.
The derby is annually
held · to raise funds for the
Association's operation and
downtown improvements.
George Wright is chairman
and Edna Weber co-chair-

© 2008 Ohio Valley Publishlng Co.

•

•

.The Daily Sentinel

Beth Sergent/photo

grams located in the center ing strategy and protecting · nesses or ventlll'·es based on
which offers free help to an inventor's intellectual technology. These "lifesty le.
those entrepreneurs who propeny. The program also bu sine sses" mi ght · nmge
simp ly don't know where to helps start ups connect with anywhere from a movie thestart with their business investors, identify required ater to a grocery store. The
ideas or how· to improve an financial resources ·and only thing the program does
existing business.
eventually help attract not assist with are lega l and
Bohning spoke about the investors. A free online tax questions. Otherwise.
sc hool 's Entrepreneurial apphcation to begin the the program provides a
Signature Program (ESP) process is available at wide variety of free consultwhich assists those entre- www .techgrowthohio.com ing to help an existing busipreneurs who have a tech- or call 1-877-476-9681.
ness grow or help an entrenology I invention they
Jollick spoke about the preneur start up a new busiwish to manufacture or pro- . school's Small bu siness ness. Services include helpmote. The ESP program development
program ing develop a business plan.
assists in creating a business which deals with "lifestyle Please see Ch•mbe~. AS
plan, developing a market~ businesses" more than busi-

Merchants discuss festival fundraiser

A6

.,

Speaking to the Meigs
County Cham\;&gt;er of
Commerce about free
opportunities for small busi nesses were, front row
(from left) Sharon Hopkins,
Lissa Jollick, Phyllis
Bohning from the Voinovich
School of Leadership and
Public Affairs in Athens.
Also pictured from the
Chamber, back row (from
left) Patty Pickens, Michelle ·
Donovan:
·

Voinovich School·reps visit Chamber

man for the event to be held
on Sept. 12 at 4 p.m. John
Musser, president of the
Merchants Association and
chairman of the Stern wheel
Festival, noted that there are
1,000 ducks available to be
sold ..It was decided the top
award for the first duck
crossing the finish line
would be $1 ,000 in
Chamber of Commerce
bucks which means that the
prize money rem ains in
Meigs County. Numerous.
smaller prizes will also be
awarded at the derby.

f11;@liiiifWJ=m!OC®tOii£3o&amp;£l!.liAA3:1a~

~~e ~allipolt~ ·lailp ~rtbune

on about 20 people.
Though a spokesperson
for the Columbus Police
Department could not be
reached for comment on the
protest and arrests. Jolene
Thompson. vice president
of government and member
relations at AMP-Ohio. said
officers used pepper spray
on the protesters only after
they had been repeatedly
asked and refused to · leave
the private office/property
peacefully.·
Thompson said after

REED

POMEROY
-An
Albany man is. charged with
an indictment containing 12.
sex ual assault charges
involving four children.
Two other men were
recently indicted for ~exual ·
offenses, and appeared for
arraignments before Judge
Fred W. Crow Ill, along
with two others indicted on
charges of non-support and
drug-related counts ..
Jessy Wayne Young, 31,
appeared ·in Meigs County
Common Pleas CoJ,Jrl ·on
charges contained in a
secret indictment filed last
month. A local court rule
require s that all indictments
. be filed as secret indictments until defendants are
served. They are not made
public until that time,
regardless ·of when the
grand jury returns the
charges.
Young is charged with
four counts of gross sexual
imposition, four counts of
sexual assault, and four
counts of rape."Accordin!j to
· BY BETH SERGENT
an answer to discovery flied BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
in the case by th county
POMEROY - How to
prosecutor's office, the
female victims in the case start as . we! I as assist existranged in age from five to ing small businesses with
fre e help from Ohio
II years old.
Yoinovich
At his arraignment before University's
Crow, Young entered a plea School of Leadership and
of innocent. Crow set an Public Affairs took center
appearance
bond
of siage at yesterday 's Meigs
Chamber
of
$25,000, and set Young's County
Commerce's
Business·
trial date for Aug. 5.
Pomeroy .
Attorney Minded Luncheon.
Phyllis Bohning, Lissa
Christopher E. Tenaglia was
Jollick and Sharon Hopkins
Please see Indicted, AS
all spoke about various pro-

••
BSectwn

Sports
Weather

REACH OVER
17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

w''"" ·lll)&lt;hoil)"S&lt;'ntinel.com

OffirJre~. help for small business owners

WEATHER

COUP I;

c o~
? w/l;llk ·

·

BAEED@MYD."-,!LYSENTINEL.COM

. ,; 002$71...

"S cohd ·

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS - Several
. news outlets are reporting
Columbus Police arrested
eight people who · allegedly
refused to leave the ~orpo­
rate ·offices of American
Municipal Power-Ohio in
Columbus on Monday,
protesting the co mpany's
plan to build a ~oat-fired
power plant in Letart Falls.
Those arrested were
· allegedly part of a larger

.,rr. ''hr l
,)j COUPt
~ 'l

\\'EDNESil ·\ Y, JULY 9, :wo8

.

Three recently
indicted on
sex offenses
OBITUARIES.

I ' ffi hearing, no, it's not.'.'

co::-:u~P::-:e=­

_

~

Protesters arrested at AMP's Colu_mbus office

.SPORTS

Rodriguez has .found himself in the tabloids more
than any other Yankee since
arriving in New York in
2004. Last year, he was
labelecl "Stray-Rod" on the
front page.of the New York
Post after being .photographed out at night with
a former -Vegas stripper.
"I think for Alex. he's
been through this before, he
knows how to handle it,"
Yanke.es manager Joe ·
Girardi said Thursday. ''I'm
sure there are times he
wishes he could just fit in .
That's the price you pay."
everyone
"Obviously,
likes to keep their life private. Unfonunately,. in this
world, that doesn't h;tppen."
Ynnkees
co··ch:1-inn~n
Hank Steinbrenner said the
reports would not faze ·the
club.
"It 's no distraction to the
team," Steinbrenner · said
Thursday . at the Yankees'
complex in Tampa, Fla.
''Whether it is to Alex 1
don't know. But from what

to

frinll&gt;d on lOO t;(.

RccydL'd !\c11Sprint ~ ....

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

• Dempster, Fontenot, Soto
iead Cubs to 7-3 win.

Jake Co\'le contributed
this story jrom Ne!V York.

~

• is priht~d Qh ioo,% ·

l_e_adJor _.2:0')d

Rodriguez is in th~ first
season of a $275 million ,
10-year contract with the
Yat1kees, a deal that allows
him to earn up to $305 million. He made $185.45 million from 2001-7 from his
contract with the Texas
Rangers and Yankees.

.

. IDaily; Sentinel~· '

have lost -six nf seven and bursitis in ., hi s throwing in the founh.
Madonna - or any alleged
paramours - by name.
''Cynthia has made it ·very
clear to me that she wants to
from Page 81
take the high road and promanages both of ~s: I tect her children and herself.
. brought my kids to a Yankee There's no vindictiveness
game. I am nor romantically here," Kutner said. "She
involved in any way with wants to re.&gt;olve the issues
between Alex and herself in
Alex Rodrigue z.
an
amicable fashion."
Rodriguez added some
The
couple, who married
Hollywood glitz to his management team -last year in November 2002, has had
when he hired Oseary, who a prenuptial agreement in
had previously worked \Vith place since Oct. 3. 2002,
Madonna
and
Lenny according to the divorce
Kravitz. Oseary is not' a reg- papers.
Because Florida is a noistered baseball agent,
though. Rodriguez retained fault divorce state , extraScott Boras as his represen- marital affairs do not factor
into how the Rodriguezes '
tative on baseball matters.
assets
might be divided,
Madonna's
statement
added that she has "nothing a&lt;:&lt;.:&lt;Jtdh!g w marri&lt;Jgo: law
to do with the state of his experts Leon Finkel and
marriage or what spiritual David Levy of Oak Park.
path he may choose to [Jl. That is," unless such
study," apparently in refer- affairs are · specifically
ence to reports that the addressed in the prenuptial
.
singer had introduced the agreement.
They
have
a
$12
million,
ballplayer to the ·form ur
Jewish.mysticism known as six-bedroom house in the
upscale Miami suburb of
Kabbalah.
Coral
Gables. A company
· Cynthia Rodrigue.z last
week visited the Pari s home nm by a corporation conof . Kravitz. The rocker trolled by Rodriguez bought ·
denied anything improper, an apartment at Trump Park
say ing she had come to Avenue in Manhattan for
$7.4 million in July 2005.
Fran~e to escape the media
The divorce petition was
frenzy in New York and
day
after
stayed at his home as a filed . the
Rodriguez hit ·his 536th
friend:
Her lawyer, Maurice homer, tying Yankees Hall
Kutner, declined to elabo- of Farner Mickey Mantle
rate· on the divorce filing, for 13th.
which does not menti"on
The
32-year-old

Racine parade
wrapup,A6

'

· · '·., Your
~ ·• r ' - · - ·

PITTSBURGH (AP) - · fell back into last place in shoulder.
Nate McLouth and Ryan the National League Central.
He allowed a season-high
Doumit each hit home runs
The Houston pitching~staff seven runs on nine hits and
to lead 10 Pittsburgh Pirates was depleted after a 17- two walks in 3 1-3 innings,
with at least one hit in a 10-7 inning loss Sunday at his shortest start of the seawin over the Houston Astros Atlanta. forcing the Astros ·son.
on Munday night to snap a to ride Runelvys Hernandez
But the Pirates bullpen
(0-3) for four inning s in worked 5 2-3 shutout innings,
three-game losing streak.
Adam LaRoche reached which he allowed 10 runs _on highlighted
by
Denny
base four times, scored twice 13 hits and four walks.
. Bautista (2-1) 2 2-3 innings.
and drove in a run as eight
f\ilaking his season debut Tyler Yates struck out four in
Pirates had RBls. Jason Bay after having his contract · two perfect innings, and
went 2-for-3 with two walks purchased
after
the Damaso Marte pitched the
and two- runs, and Xavier marathon game Sundt)y, ninth for his second save,
Nady had two hits and two Chad Paronto pitched the .walk,ing Mark Loretta with
RBls for Pittsburgh, whic)l. final four innings, al lowing two outs to ruin a streak of 16
scored more runs during the only a hit and a walk. .
Astros in a row retired by the
first three innings Monday
Pittsburgh's pitching staff Pittsburgh bullpen.
than they did in being sw"ept has had its own problems
McLouth 's home run. his
in three games in Milwaukee with injuries and ineffective- I(jth, went high over the
ness in recent weeks. Lefty stands in right in the second.
over the weekend.
Carlos Lee hit his 20th Phil Dumatrait was ineffcc- Doumit 's shot, hi s II th.
home run and had three tive in his first start since a. scored Lui s Rivas, and gave

- -~(,\\~

Musser noted that The
Ruble excursion boat will
be docked at the levy offering cruises all weekend. He
said that severa l classes
from schools will be iaking
cruises, that there will be a
special
Chamber
of
Commerce crui se, and two
or more Meigs Alumni
cru.ises. That same·weekend
the
Meigs
Alumni
Association will have its
reunion and several hundred
graduates of Meigs High
School are expected to be in
town for the Friday night

· sq, by alociiiQIIIII olllcl and get a
Quote lor • CaUIMI Ill'-' now and Augult 31st
Nationwide will doMte $10 fllr ..:11 quota Ill the light egaln8t ClllCtl'
H~ ue rwll our goal of donating $75,0001

--- aou,_..
'

successful hi storical walks
in ·Pomeroy and the possi - ·
bility of conducting another
one this fall. Mike Gerlach.
local historian, has conducted two previous walks in
the community.
Bill Quickel reported on
. the success of t.he Gold
Wings and Ribs Festival in
early June and noted the
suppon of the loca l co mmunity.
Musser reported .that the
village received $4.000 in

Ple•s• see Merch•nts, AS

nationwide. com/pink

GET A QUOTE TODAY!

740-992-2155 .
304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentinel.com

homecoming game and participation in a variety of
· activities including a downtown P.arade. ·
The possibility of holding
~ holiday church tour again
this year was discussed. The
· one two years ago was very
successful and ideas to
enhance the event this year
making it more inclusive of
the merchants, displays in
downtown, along with
adding music in the way of
a quartet or band were d-iscussed.
Also disc,ussed was the

BROWN AGENCY
33105 Hiland Rd. Suite 1
f=-QMEAOY, 6H 46789
740-992-2318

.

·

·;
· .
. Nunticliilj,. a ~~·-· of
'
.DO ~ lalqW ~who • WOfldna hardin 11\1 ftght OIMt cai\Oet? If eo, nomlnat. t1er lor the
· · ' · ·· ~ 1~ '$,~ or Cal!raoe llWtlld at natlonwlde.cotulplnk
•
•
"

••

'

•

,,

�</text>
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