<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4533" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4533?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-04T10:16:47+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14460">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0d2fa46793f35462349b6a9d64beb986.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5c9c6339b573bfe85884926ce656547e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="15701">
                  <text>-••
• Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, September 24.

-

2007

UAW says national·
strike is about
job seCurity for
its members, A2

~dy Eagles defeat

Nelsonville-York, Bt

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.) oll'\1 ~• \~t l .)-. '\o.Jj

SPORTS
Pictured are m!Jmbers of the 2007 ~If-Riverside Tournament team. They are, from left, Tom Moss (Ravenswood}, Aaron
~arna (Hurricane 'A'), Taylor Green (Hurricane 'B'). Brian Anania (Hurricane 'A'), Evan Cole (Charleston Catholic 'A' ), Adam
Skaff (Charleston Catholic 'A'), Max Kriapp (Ravenswood) and Steve Burdette (Ravenswood). Absent from the photo was
~outhern's Bryan Harris and Aaron Boggs from Scott. The All-Riverside team consists of the t0!&gt;-10 Individual finishers.

Riverside
fromPageBl

RIGHT - · Pictured
are the 2007
lliverside .
Invitational team
Champions, the
aurricane 'A'
fledsklns. They are ,
from· ieft, Brian
Anania, Aaron
llarna, Sam Booth
and Vincent ·
!'urgess. Hurricane
'!&lt;' posted a team
\'Core of 222. beating out defending
fhampion
~harleston Catholic
six strokes.

Scott rounded out the topfive with a tally of 246.
Charleston Catholic also
sent a second squad, placing
.6th overall with a sum of
260.
Waterford, the 2007 Tri:
Valley Conference Hocking
Division champion, was the
top Ohio school in the rank.ings, finishi!lg 7th with a
team total . of 264. Both
. Southern and. Huntington
·. were three strokes off the
Wildcats, ending the day in
an 8th place tie with 267
,., apiece . Point I'leasant
·- rounded out the top-10 with
269.
. li.: Host Wabama was lith
):with a 272, followed by a tie
tfor. 12th between Buffalo
. ,and Trimble with matching
' team scores of 27$. Ripley
(278) and . Huntington St.
Joe (284) were 14th and
' 15th, rspectively.
River Valley and Eastern

ty

m~~:u:t~t'~:e

1.4th annual event,
·posting an even par
7b on the day.
Anania was a co~nner-up with a 1·
over par 71.
' Bryan Walters(photos

tied for 16th with 316 each,
while. Roane County finished last with a 340 tally.
Southern junior Bryan
Harris was the only Ohio
player to crack the top- I0
mdividually, tying both
Cole and Aaron Boggs
(Scott) for 5th place with .a
7 -over par round of 77.
Tailor Green (Hurricane
'B ) tied Moss for eighth
overall with .a 78, rounding
out the All-Riverside Team.
Hurricane's
victory
marked the first time in the·
event's 'history that a West
Virginia · school won team·
titles in consecutive .years.
Wahama is the only other
'Mountaineer State: program to win -the championship, doing · so baclc in
1999.
.
.
Athens and Jackson,.
both Ohio schools, lead the
all-time Riverside campaign with three titles
each.
HHS also captured the
inaugural West Virginia
Top Flite Junior Tour High
School Tournament Series
crown with the triJ.1.J!lpb.

"""""d·"""'"'""'' '""'

POMEROY SEWER RA1E INCREASES APPROVED

• Ea~y clinch gives
Eastern's Tyler Carroll chips out of a rough spot, with help
from the cart path, on No. 14 Saturday during the 2007
Riverside lnvitatlo~al.at Riverside Golf Club in Mason , W.Va.

ll ' I .SII\\ , SII' II . ~lln. l{:!:;.:!oo-

BY BETH SERGENT

Indians, fans a week to
prepare for playoffs.

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SeePageB1

POMEROY - Last night
Pomeroy Village Council
approved the third and final
reading of an ordinance
which will raise sewer rates
to help finance a federal
Environmental Protection
Agency regulation that
requires the village eliminate its two combined sewer
overflows (CSO's) in the
next 20 years .
The vote wasn't unanimous with Councilwoman
Mary McAngus voting
against the increase which is

three rate increases over a used in addition to the 2,000
period of two years . Right minimum. Then on Sept. I 0,
now sewer customers pay 2009, the rate would goes to
$4.50 for the first 2,000 gal- $8 for the first 2,000 gallons
Ions used while they pay and $5 per 1.000 gallons
$1.50 for ever 1,000 gallons used in addition to the miniused in addition to that first mum.
2,000. Beginning on Oct. 10,
Resident Victor Young
customers will then pay addressed council, asking if
$6.50 for the first 2,000 gal- this was the lowest possible
Ions and $3.50 for ever . increase due to what he
I ,000 gallons used in addi- called an older population in
lion to that first 2,000 gal- Pomeroy, many on a fixed
Ions.
income. Council President
The next rate increase is Shawn Arnott, who was siton Sept. 10, 2008 with a ting in for an absent Mayor
minimum cl)arge of $7 .50 John Musser, said he underfor the first 2,000 gallo,ns stood Young's concerns and
and $4.50. per 1,000 gallons
. . that no one wanted to raise

rates. On the rate to help pay for the project
increase Amott said, "if it's and possibly avoid future
not the minimum it's very increases.
close." He added Pomeroy's
Young said he understood
annual sewer rate is $173 the village was abiding b~
and with the first increase the law which mandates 11
that annual rate will go to do away with the CSO's in
$252 whiGh is near 20 years but asked if council
Middleport's annual rate of would set a guideline to at
$250.
least have all the meters
Village
Administrator working in the village so
John Anderson said unless that everyone is paying their
the village's sewer rates are "fair share." Anderson said
comparable to state guide- there could be as many as
lines which is at two percent l00 "dead meters" in the vi[ .
of the median mcome !age and added he is work(which it currently is not) ing to replace them but didthe village doesn't have
much opportunity for grams . PI..seseeRales,AS
the

OBITUARIES
· Page A&amp;
··Hans stump

iNsfuE
.

.,

-..

· • U.N. cUmate summit
heal'S call~ for IJtQent
action, condems over
~rate U.S.-Ied
meetings.' Sea Page A2
· • TOPS honors lo5ers.
See Page AS
BY CHARLINE HOEFUCH
• Graduates nursing
HOEFLICHoMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
pr6gram. See Page AS
POMEROY - For nearly
• Compete in Junior·
a dozen years train enthust- ·
Olympics. See Page AS ast David Robinette of
. • Local resident attends Pomeroy has, been volunteering his time to the operaCivil War meeting. . ·
tion of the Hocking Valley
See P~ge AS .
Scene
Railway
in
Nelsonville working as a
·-• Observes 13th ·
ticket
taker.
birthday. See Page AS
"I love every minute of it,
• Celebrates birthday.
or I wouldn 't be there" said
Robinette as he talked about
See Page AS .
• Parents need to repair the people from all over the
world he has met when they
damage with daughter.
came to take a ride on the
vintage passenger equipSee Page A6
ment
whtch includes three
• CommunitY Calendar.
Rock Island commuter cars .
See Page A6
from the I 920s, two open-

Local

volunteer

••••
=·
•••••
•••••

• Rlldt!cflpnl w....r
' (l~ lt.ttiG fer dry IOJ'I!lll

i"

WEATHER

i
i

III

-

j

lllor..,..\'~Nd!btil

tllltlndththome
llplionolllcwm lilo. .blo

_,~an-•a

• MIIChld

'*""'

GET 6EAIID UP .•• witt

Cllliltlc CotWtlltrfor lflilctd llfiloriw

STilL

wnr!

:1•
l

•
j

J

Detalla on Pa&amp;o A6

INDEX
2 SECfiONS -

Pomeroy

Baum Lumber Inc.
46384 State Route 248

Calendars

Dettwiller lumber

Classifieds ·

634 East Main Street

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A6

Editorials

A4
As

www.baumlumber.com

740-992-5500
Open 7 Days a week

Obituaries

stlhlusa.com

Sports
Weather

A3
B3-4

B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio VaUey Publishir~JJ Co.

•

B~anJ.

Meigs Community Coalition
• •
•
nnssmg
commuruty
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

Third man charged in meth investigation
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
- A
Middleport man is the third
to be charged with allegedly
manufacturing methamphetamine at his home.
Johnny Ratliff, 41 , of
Run
Road,
Story 's
Middleport, was expected to
appear in Meigs County
Court late Monday on a

•

R-/photo

A worker with General Preservation Corporation worked on
tuckpointing the sandstone along the street level of the county courthouse. The native sandstone and mortar have deteri·
orated from years of exposure to the elements, and are being
re~a ired with funds from a capital improvement loan.

12 PAGES

Chester
740·985·3301

. _ enthusiasts
Scenic Railway

air cars with roofs, a former
B&amp;O heavyweight combination baggage and passenger car, and a recentlyrestored B&amp;O passenger car
equipped with air conditioning and rest rooms.
Robinette, whose son,
Nathan, also a volunteer,
explained that the original
Hocking Valley Railway
wa~ a major transportation
link between Southeastern
Ohio and Lake Erie, and that
today's scenic railway still
operates over a portion of
the original Hockmg Valley
rail bed.
Submlttad photos
According to a brochure in
David
Robinette
is
pictured
in
the
striped
vest
filled with rail·
which David Robinette is
road patches and the railroad cap which he wears when he
Please see Railway, AS
takes tickets on Scenic Railway runs.

ill

far ncuu,..•nd

~.,..

charge of illegal manufacture of drugs. Two other men
were arraigned in Meigs
County Court last week on
the same charg~. Corbell E.
"Gene" Ratliff, 39, and
Philip C. Locke, 47, both of
Cheshire, will next appear in
court on Oct. 4 for preliminary probable cause hearings. The charge of permitting drug abuse filed against
Norma J. Ratliff have been

dismissed for grand jury
considetation.
Johnny Ratliff is also
charged with operating a
motor vehicle under the
inlluencc of alcohol, ficti·
timos registration. speed, driving under suspension aml a
scat belt violation.
The charges all stem from
an investigat ion on Sep1. 16,
~lea5e

see Meth, AS

•

POMEROY - The Meigs
County
Community
Coalition (MCCC) formed
last year to address the rise
in alcohol and drug abuse in
yoong people and although
some local agencie s and
school
districts
have
responded to the coalition,
involvement from private
citizens has been sparse.
Tomorrow at I0:30 a.m.
at God's NET the coalition
will meet for its organizq.
tional meeting and hopes to
attract concerned· citizens
who are interested in being
involved in the planning and
developing of thi s year's
meetings .
"We've
had
some
response from business
leaders, parents and school

administrators but we need
more involved," Cara
Bullington of the MCCC
said. "We also want to let
people know this is for
everyone in the community.
It is for anyone that wants to
go after the same goal we' re
after."
Simply put, the MCCC
atte mpts to alleviate juvenile drug and alcohol abuse
through communication and
information .
MCCC
membership
includes concerned citizens,
faith based community,
health recovery services,
Hocking
Correctional
Facility, Gallia-JacksonMeigs Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addition and Mental
Health
Services,
law
enforcement, local govern-

Please see Meigs, AS

·courthouse to close
POMEROY - Meigs County Courthouse will be closed
from 10:30 a.m. to I p.m. Tuesday so employees may attend
the funeral of Pomeroy Attorney Bemard.V. Fultz.
Flags at the court~ouse and other county agencies will be
flown at half-mast in Fultz's honor, by order of Common
Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow Ill.
Crow also ordered the courthouse 'bells rung durin ~ Fultz's
funeral procession, at approximately II :30 a.m. tho s morning.
.
Fultz "will be sadly mi ssed by the legal profession, courthouse employees and citizens of Meigs County," Crow said.

.

.

�•
'

The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

PageA2

WoRLD

Tuesday, Septeml;Jer,q, ao07

~

Page A3 - The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

..'

.•

UAW says national strike is about job security for its members
BY TOM KRISHER
AND

DEE-ANN DURBIN
II' AUTO WRITERS

DE'IROIT - In the end,
the ftrst nationwide strike
against General MO!Q!S Corp.
in 37 years came because the
United Auto Workers want
something thal GM will ftnd
difficult to promise: Job security.
UAW officials said the .
73,!XXJ UAW members who
work at about.80 U.S. facijities
the nation's largest
automaker didn't strike
Monday over what many
thought would trip up the
talks: A p~ to shift the retiree
health care buiden from the
company to the union. They
said they also didn't strike
over wages.
They said union members
walked out because they want
GM to promise that future
cars and truck$ such as the
· replacement for the Chevrolet
Cobalt small car or the stillon-the-drawing
board
Chevrolet Volt plug-in electric
car will be built at U.S. plants,
preserv~ union jobs.
.
The strike puts GM, which
is restructuring so it can better
compete with Asian automakers, in a bind as some of its
new products begin to catch
on with consumers. But it also
means workers are taking a
big risk - giving up pay and
slowin~ down . GM in an '
uncertam economy.
"Job security is one of our ·
primary concerns," UAW
President Ron Gettelfinger
told reporters Monday afternoon after talks broke off and
the strike began. ''We're talking about investment and
we're talking about job ereation" and preserving beneftts,
' he said.
Talks resumed a short time
later a5 sign-carrying picketers
mai'ched outside plant gates,
but weary bal}lainers stopped
to rest around 8 p.m. Talks
were to resume Tu~sday
morning.
·
Worker Anita Ahrens bw'sl
into tell15 as hundreds of
employees streamed out of a
G~ plant in Janesville, Wts.,
just afteJ: the strike began at 11
·a.m. EDT.
•
· "Oh m)' God, here they
come," smd Ahrens, 39. 'This

for

AP photo/Detn&gt;lt Free PrMa, Pwtca. lleck

Striking UAW members Rocco DeGiulio, left, 76, of Taylor and Ed Sims, 57, picket ou(sicle
the GM Powertraln Romulus Engine Plant in Romulus, Mich., Monday. DeGiulio has worked
for GM for 44 years. Sims has worked for GM for 40 years. Thousands of United Auto
Workers walked off the job at GM plants around the country Monday In the first nationwide
strike during auto contract negotiations since 1976.
is unreal."
•
Ahrens has seven years at
the plant, where she works
nights installing speakers in
spon utility vehicles. She
waited Monday for her husband, Ron Ahrens, who .has
worked there for 21 years.
The couple has three chi!dren, including a college
freshmim, and Alln;ns worried
about how they would pay
their bills.
'This is horrible, but we're
die-hard union, so we have
to," Ahrens said ''We got a
mortgage, two car payments
and tons of freaking bills." ·
The striking workers will
receive $200 a week plus
medical beneftts from the
UAW's strike fund. The union
had more than $800 milliOn in
that fund as of last Novembet,
according to the UAW's Web
site.
The UAW, Gettelfmger
said, is willing to talk about
taking money from the company to fonn a trust tbat would
be responsible for billions of
dollars in retiree health care
costs.
GM wants the trust, called a
Voluntary
~loyees
BenefiCiary Associabon, or
VEBA. so it can move milch
of its $51 billion in unfunded

retiree heaith care liabilities
off the books, potentially rais-

ing the stock price and credit
ratin~. It's all part of the company s quest to cut or elirninate about a $25-per-hour
labor CQSt disparity with its
Japanese competitors.
'This strike is not about the
VEBA in any way, shape or
form," Gettelfinger said. ''We
were more than eager to discuss it," although he said no
agreement had been reached.
Industry analysts said initially the strike would have littie impact bil consumers
because GM has sufficient
inventory stockpiled for most
of its products: . ·
But Monday afternoon, the
Teamsters
transportation
11Jlion said its 10,000 automolive transport members would
not cross UAW picket line$ to
deliver GM Cl!l'S and trucJct
GM reported that it had jUst
uncle!: 950,&lt;XX&gt; vehicles in its
inventory at the end . of

''Who wins in a strike? But
again. you can be pqshOO off a
clilf, and that's what we fee1
like happened tiere;'' he said
GM spokesman Dan Flores
said the automaker was disappointed in the union's decision.
''The bargaining involves
complex, difficult issues that
affect the job security of our
U.S. wo!X force and the long- .
term viability of the company," he said. ''We remain fully
committed to wodcing with
the UAV';l to develOp solutions
together to addreSs the competitive challenges facing
GM."
GM shares feU 20 cents to
$34.74 in trading Monday.
The last national strike
against GM was in 1970 and
lasted (fj days.
An agreemept between GM
and the UAW Would become
the paneni for pi1CtS with Ford
M019f Co. and Cluysler LLC.
· The.negotiations come at a
difficUlt time for · both \he
automjikers and t:l)e union.
Detroit's automakei's lost a
oo~Vc: $15 billion last year.
1be )lnioli ' ~ is feeling
pressure..u~w membership
ha$·Jaljeo
a high of 1.5
million •
· membeQI in

supply of cars and nudes as
Septembet began, versus a 71 day supply at the same time
last /ear, said Paul Taylor,
chie economist for the
Natioruil Automobile Dealers
Association. The Enclave, he
said, is at a tight 24-day supply.
The strike will cost GM
about 12,200 vehicles per day
or 700 per hour, according to
the auto forecasting fum CSM
Worldwide of Northville.
If the walkout goes beyond
36 hours, CSM expects vehicle production in Canada to be
affected because of a lack of
U.S.-built engines and trnnsmissions.
' The walkout could further
damage the image of the
UAW, David Cole, chairman
of the Center for Automotive
Research in Ann Albor, said
shortly before the strike
began.
.
''What it says is the union is
the same old militant organization;" Cole said. "What is a
real concern is buyers that
punish a union by not .buying
the products they build."
Cole said the UAW leadership may need a strike to show
members that it did all it Could
to gel the best deal.
"They're in a bit of a box, in
that they need some drama to
get an affirmative vote on
this," he said.
GM likely has threiuened to
puU investments out of the
U.S. if the union does not
3gree to iis terms, lie said
. Gettelftnger, in his postwalkout news conference,
said the union fuls done a lot to
help the struggling . GM,
including health care givebacks in 2005. Btit cluriQg the
weekend, he said OM's stance
hardened.
"It was going to be General .
Motors' way at the expense of
the workers," Gettelfinger
said 'The CODipliny. walked .
. . t9' clea4lline like

August, about 35,&lt;XX&gt; below
the same time last year.
· Tom Libby, senior director
of industry Jlllll]ysis for J.D.
Power and Associates, said
even a short strike could hurt
. the company because its new
crossover vehicles, the Buick
Enclave, GMC Acadia and
Saturn Outlook, are selling
well and in shon supply.
''The momentum they'.ve
established for those P.roducts
would be interrupted if there's
a supply interruption," libby
said. ''There's not a lot of
ifiventory available to sell
down. So they need to keep
· that pipeline full."
Libby called the Enclave
. and Acadia a success story for
GM because they .don't stay
on lots for Ion~ and they sell at,
or near full pnoe.
,
''GM, fih;mcially, tliey don't
" have a lot 9f cushion,' ~~ ·SI\id
"I just think Ws going,to hilrt
both sides in the'lOilg run."
GM had about a 6S~y didn't

"·

'•'

Gizmos
·'
•'

Forrest "Slack JaW" Carver didn't Invent the

TREE EATER SOOO CARPENTER ANT
.

'

·~

But he sure do love it...•
26 individually chain-mounted hungry bu&lt;gs(J)~'Ibiltl .~l~~~ttl~
frame as one Cheddar Head Weasei@Jll·ro~l~:; 'a,!i~Jptf,~al'~§~l
sistant
power
source.
J~~~:~~~~n;~:~.
~~,~~j~~~~~
guarantees
safety
withThe
this suo•e!tr··
-ch;uat!d
the pistol gripQ}and the bit-o-gouda.
Heads are famed for lov'n,@~ides , .
the retraction cup@ thus safely bra~ing .
bug blade.

.....

~-

Makes fell'n
trees ·a breeze

_,

.,,...,.....,._
_,.......,_""""..,
•10HIII ...... 111tlw.tlmll

• CUIIilmiMIII'IIIO · -

-·-

( 14!tfup ~o6XW
_)
•

./UfiiSmtn

llgi Upo.lntJ. www.' ec * lOOM

.

BETTER ·

U.N. climate summit hears calls
for urgent action, concerns over·
separate U.S.-led meetings
'
to neduce carbon dioxide
and
Pi' SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
other heat-trapping gases. It
set an average target of a 5
UNITED NATIONS - percent cut below 1990 levels
With tales of rising seas and by 2012 for emissions from
talk of human solidarity, power plants and other indusworld leaders at the first ·a1
· Jtural d
an trans'United Nations climate sum- tn ' agncu
,
·
ponation sources.
· mit sought Monday to put
Advocates for emissions
new urgency into global talks reductions say a breakthrough
to reduce global-warming is needed at Bali to ensure an
emissions.
What's needed is . "action, uninterrupted transition from
action, action," California's the 1997 Kyoto pact to a new,
environmentalist governor, deeper-cutting regime, someArnold Schwarzenegger, told thing that almost certainly
the assembled presidents and would require a change in the
premiers.
U.S. position.
The Bush administration
The chief U.N. climate scishowed no sign, however, entist, Rajendra Pachauri, told
. that it would reverse its stand the sununit of the mounting
against mandatory emission . evidence of global warming's
cuts endorsed by 175 other impact, including the acceler: nations. Some expressed fears ating rise in sea levels as
the White House, with its own oceans expand from heat and
forum later this week, would the runoff of melting land ice.
launch talks rivaling the U.N.
''The time is up for inac, climate treaty negotiations.
tion ~ · he said.
President Bush didn't take
A
Paciftc . islander,
part in the day's sessions, President· Emanuel Mori of
which drew more than 80 the Federated States of
national leaders, but planned Micronesia, told the summit
to attend a small dinner that encroaching seas are
Monday evening, a gathering already destroying crops,
of key climate players hosted contaminating wells and eatby Secretary-General Ban Ki- ing away at his islands'
moon.
beaches.
Ban set the day's theme in
"How does one explain to
his opening speech, declaring the inhabitants that their
that "the time for doubt has plight is caused by human
passed" on the issue of global activities done in faraway
warming and calling the U.N. lands?" he asked.
climate talks "the appropriate
forum for negotiating global
The United States has long
action."
been the world's biggest emitHe organized the one-day ter of greenhouse gases.
sununit to build momentum
Bush objects that Kyotofor December's annual eli- style mandates would damage
mate treaty conference in the U.S. economy and says
Bali,
Indonesia, when they should be imposed on
Europe, Japan and others fast-growing poorer countries
hope to initiate talks for an like China and India in addiemissions-reduction agree- Lion to developed nations. He
ment to succeed the Kyoto instead is urging industry to
Protocol in 2012.
cut emissions voluntarily and
· The 175-nation Kyoto pact, is emphasizing re.5earch on ,
which the U.S. rejects, clean-energy technology as
requires 36 industrial nations one answer.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Avoid poses with too much symmetry.

BY CHARLES J. HANLEY

(BORING)

Symmetry is when one half is a mirror
image of the other half.

'Vour ad will tie seen

.

24/7 :'

,

~

Top·Rider,rala

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

I

1....

8,000 visitors

req~:t!,~tt

mydallysentlnel.com
DIRECTLYI
.
.

J. vtftOo,GIIriiiHJm

Each column,row and square must use Ns 3,7,2,&amp; 1, plus the
diagonal must add up to the I shown.(diagonals can repeat Is)

"'... '

.. llvt.mm./nlll,lb. .....

S.~.wt/
6.mtf\.~lfllll

1. ,,,, . .,tJ*i .. GM'i/ftlwl(...._

.

Unscramble the letters to form ordinary words. Then place them in the
crossword grid. Then unscramble the circled I!!! Jfl
letters to form todays coded message.
· !ill

Q;fqEIOitlKIOrrr FT [QI QJcJ']HTSfQltl'olblt.l I loJ
~fTT'J'FINrer~:rr:rrwJ &amp;cr:r.r r r rurtfol 1 foJ
CfJormruF.JOrT r ;r:rJoJ &amp;Oi ffltJoJsT 1 1 r roJ
®tor:rrflGJVrr Tr:r~ &amp;9r rrrmlf'lliT rr r lof
Q®E lmJJ!IRfSJGfV'T J§l (OOIFT CRIDI5f'rl I I' [ .@
@~ftUAFI' l8fGr~raronoJ &amp;"ornro rsl I WliBr lbl
@WC:BTEJ"i!JifGfEftrNr 1'01 @@I'ArMJP r ®ArslsTGt WI

r

:

·Daily Number
of Visitors

Over 1,000 VIsitors
A Dayl Take a break
to check out
the newsl

'
I

·..•

.I

'('

;

OOO~D~

"i

.

�•
'

The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

PageA2

WoRLD

Tuesday, Septeml;Jer,q, ao07

~

Page A3 - The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

..'

.•

UAW says national strike is about job security for its members
BY TOM KRISHER
AND

DEE-ANN DURBIN
II' AUTO WRITERS

DE'IROIT - In the end,
the ftrst nationwide strike
against General MO!Q!S Corp.
in 37 years came because the
United Auto Workers want
something thal GM will ftnd
difficult to promise: Job security.
UAW officials said the .
73,!XXJ UAW members who
work at about.80 U.S. facijities
the nation's largest
automaker didn't strike
Monday over what many
thought would trip up the
talks: A p~ to shift the retiree
health care buiden from the
company to the union. They
said they also didn't strike
over wages.
They said union members
walked out because they want
GM to promise that future
cars and truck$ such as the
· replacement for the Chevrolet
Cobalt small car or the stillon-the-drawing
board
Chevrolet Volt plug-in electric
car will be built at U.S. plants,
preserv~ union jobs.
.
The strike puts GM, which
is restructuring so it can better
compete with Asian automakers, in a bind as some of its
new products begin to catch
on with consumers. But it also
means workers are taking a
big risk - giving up pay and
slowin~ down . GM in an '
uncertam economy.
"Job security is one of our ·
primary concerns," UAW
President Ron Gettelfinger
told reporters Monday afternoon after talks broke off and
the strike began. ''We're talking about investment and
we're talking about job ereation" and preserving beneftts,
' he said.
Talks resumed a short time
later a5 sign-carrying picketers
mai'ched outside plant gates,
but weary bal}lainers stopped
to rest around 8 p.m. Talks
were to resume Tu~sday
morning.
·
Worker Anita Ahrens bw'sl
into tell15 as hundreds of
employees streamed out of a
G~ plant in Janesville, Wts.,
just afteJ: the strike began at 11
·a.m. EDT.
•
· "Oh m)' God, here they
come," smd Ahrens, 39. 'This

for

AP photo/Detn&gt;lt Free PrMa, Pwtca. lleck

Striking UAW members Rocco DeGiulio, left, 76, of Taylor and Ed Sims, 57, picket ou(sicle
the GM Powertraln Romulus Engine Plant in Romulus, Mich., Monday. DeGiulio has worked
for GM for 44 years. Sims has worked for GM for 40 years. Thousands of United Auto
Workers walked off the job at GM plants around the country Monday In the first nationwide
strike during auto contract negotiations since 1976.
is unreal."
•
Ahrens has seven years at
the plant, where she works
nights installing speakers in
spon utility vehicles. She
waited Monday for her husband, Ron Ahrens, who .has
worked there for 21 years.
The couple has three chi!dren, including a college
freshmim, and Alln;ns worried
about how they would pay
their bills.
'This is horrible, but we're
die-hard union, so we have
to," Ahrens said ''We got a
mortgage, two car payments
and tons of freaking bills." ·
The striking workers will
receive $200 a week plus
medical beneftts from the
UAW's strike fund. The union
had more than $800 milliOn in
that fund as of last Novembet,
according to the UAW's Web
site.
The UAW, Gettelfmger
said, is willing to talk about
taking money from the company to fonn a trust tbat would
be responsible for billions of
dollars in retiree health care
costs.
GM wants the trust, called a
Voluntary
~loyees
BenefiCiary Associabon, or
VEBA. so it can move milch
of its $51 billion in unfunded

retiree heaith care liabilities
off the books, potentially rais-

ing the stock price and credit
ratin~. It's all part of the company s quest to cut or elirninate about a $25-per-hour
labor CQSt disparity with its
Japanese competitors.
'This strike is not about the
VEBA in any way, shape or
form," Gettelfinger said. ''We
were more than eager to discuss it," although he said no
agreement had been reached.
Industry analysts said initially the strike would have littie impact bil consumers
because GM has sufficient
inventory stockpiled for most
of its products: . ·
But Monday afternoon, the
Teamsters
transportation
11Jlion said its 10,000 automolive transport members would
not cross UAW picket line$ to
deliver GM Cl!l'S and trucJct
GM reported that it had jUst
uncle!: 950,&lt;XX&gt; vehicles in its
inventory at the end . of

''Who wins in a strike? But
again. you can be pqshOO off a
clilf, and that's what we fee1
like happened tiere;'' he said
GM spokesman Dan Flores
said the automaker was disappointed in the union's decision.
''The bargaining involves
complex, difficult issues that
affect the job security of our
U.S. wo!X force and the long- .
term viability of the company," he said. ''We remain fully
committed to wodcing with
the UAV';l to develOp solutions
together to addreSs the competitive challenges facing
GM."
GM shares feU 20 cents to
$34.74 in trading Monday.
The last national strike
against GM was in 1970 and
lasted (fj days.
An agreemept between GM
and the UAW Would become
the paneni for pi1CtS with Ford
M019f Co. and Cluysler LLC.
· The.negotiations come at a
difficUlt time for · both \he
automjikers and t:l)e union.
Detroit's automakei's lost a
oo~Vc: $15 billion last year.
1be )lnioli ' ~ is feeling
pressure..u~w membership
ha$·Jaljeo
a high of 1.5
million •
· membeQI in

supply of cars and nudes as
Septembet began, versus a 71 day supply at the same time
last /ear, said Paul Taylor,
chie economist for the
Natioruil Automobile Dealers
Association. The Enclave, he
said, is at a tight 24-day supply.
The strike will cost GM
about 12,200 vehicles per day
or 700 per hour, according to
the auto forecasting fum CSM
Worldwide of Northville.
If the walkout goes beyond
36 hours, CSM expects vehicle production in Canada to be
affected because of a lack of
U.S.-built engines and trnnsmissions.
' The walkout could further
damage the image of the
UAW, David Cole, chairman
of the Center for Automotive
Research in Ann Albor, said
shortly before the strike
began.
.
''What it says is the union is
the same old militant organization;" Cole said. "What is a
real concern is buyers that
punish a union by not .buying
the products they build."
Cole said the UAW leadership may need a strike to show
members that it did all it Could
to gel the best deal.
"They're in a bit of a box, in
that they need some drama to
get an affirmative vote on
this," he said.
GM likely has threiuened to
puU investments out of the
U.S. if the union does not
3gree to iis terms, lie said
. Gettelftnger, in his postwalkout news conference,
said the union fuls done a lot to
help the struggling . GM,
including health care givebacks in 2005. Btit cluriQg the
weekend, he said OM's stance
hardened.
"It was going to be General .
Motors' way at the expense of
the workers," Gettelfinger
said 'The CODipliny. walked .
. . t9' clea4lline like

August, about 35,&lt;XX&gt; below
the same time last year.
· Tom Libby, senior director
of industry Jlllll]ysis for J.D.
Power and Associates, said
even a short strike could hurt
. the company because its new
crossover vehicles, the Buick
Enclave, GMC Acadia and
Saturn Outlook, are selling
well and in shon supply.
''The momentum they'.ve
established for those P.roducts
would be interrupted if there's
a supply interruption," libby
said. ''There's not a lot of
ifiventory available to sell
down. So they need to keep
· that pipeline full."
Libby called the Enclave
. and Acadia a success story for
GM because they .don't stay
on lots for Ion~ and they sell at,
or near full pnoe.
,
''GM, fih;mcially, tliey don't
" have a lot 9f cushion,' ~~ ·SI\id
"I just think Ws going,to hilrt
both sides in the'lOilg run."
GM had about a 6S~y didn't

"·

'•'

Gizmos
·'
•'

Forrest "Slack JaW" Carver didn't Invent the

TREE EATER SOOO CARPENTER ANT
.

'

·~

But he sure do love it...•
26 individually chain-mounted hungry bu&lt;gs(J)~'Ibiltl .~l~~~ttl~
frame as one Cheddar Head Weasei@Jll·ro~l~:; 'a,!i~Jptf,~al'~§~l
sistant
power
source.
J~~~:~~~~n;~:~.
~~,~~j~~~~~
guarantees
safety
withThe
this suo•e!tr··
-ch;uat!d
the pistol gripQ}and the bit-o-gouda.
Heads are famed for lov'n,@~ides , .
the retraction cup@ thus safely bra~ing .
bug blade.

.....

~-

Makes fell'n
trees ·a breeze

_,

.,,...,.....,._
_,.......,_""""..,
•10HIII ...... 111tlw.tlmll

• CUIIilmiMIII'IIIO · -

-·-

( 14!tfup ~o6XW
_)
•

./UfiiSmtn

llgi Upo.lntJ. www.' ec * lOOM

.

BETTER ·

U.N. climate summit hears calls
for urgent action, concerns over·
separate U.S.-led meetings
'
to neduce carbon dioxide
and
Pi' SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
other heat-trapping gases. It
set an average target of a 5
UNITED NATIONS - percent cut below 1990 levels
With tales of rising seas and by 2012 for emissions from
talk of human solidarity, power plants and other indusworld leaders at the first ·a1
· Jtural d
an trans'United Nations climate sum- tn ' agncu
,
·
ponation sources.
· mit sought Monday to put
Advocates for emissions
new urgency into global talks reductions say a breakthrough
to reduce global-warming is needed at Bali to ensure an
emissions.
What's needed is . "action, uninterrupted transition from
action, action," California's the 1997 Kyoto pact to a new,
environmentalist governor, deeper-cutting regime, someArnold Schwarzenegger, told thing that almost certainly
the assembled presidents and would require a change in the
premiers.
U.S. position.
The Bush administration
The chief U.N. climate scishowed no sign, however, entist, Rajendra Pachauri, told
. that it would reverse its stand the sununit of the mounting
against mandatory emission . evidence of global warming's
cuts endorsed by 175 other impact, including the acceler: nations. Some expressed fears ating rise in sea levels as
the White House, with its own oceans expand from heat and
forum later this week, would the runoff of melting land ice.
launch talks rivaling the U.N.
''The time is up for inac, climate treaty negotiations.
tion ~ · he said.
President Bush didn't take
A
Paciftc . islander,
part in the day's sessions, President· Emanuel Mori of
which drew more than 80 the Federated States of
national leaders, but planned Micronesia, told the summit
to attend a small dinner that encroaching seas are
Monday evening, a gathering already destroying crops,
of key climate players hosted contaminating wells and eatby Secretary-General Ban Ki- ing away at his islands'
moon.
beaches.
Ban set the day's theme in
"How does one explain to
his opening speech, declaring the inhabitants that their
that "the time for doubt has plight is caused by human
passed" on the issue of global activities done in faraway
warming and calling the U.N. lands?" he asked.
climate talks "the appropriate
forum for negotiating global
The United States has long
action."
been the world's biggest emitHe organized the one-day ter of greenhouse gases.
sununit to build momentum
Bush objects that Kyotofor December's annual eli- style mandates would damage
mate treaty conference in the U.S. economy and says
Bali,
Indonesia, when they should be imposed on
Europe, Japan and others fast-growing poorer countries
hope to initiate talks for an like China and India in addiemissions-reduction agree- Lion to developed nations. He
ment to succeed the Kyoto instead is urging industry to
Protocol in 2012.
cut emissions voluntarily and
· The 175-nation Kyoto pact, is emphasizing re.5earch on ,
which the U.S. rejects, clean-energy technology as
requires 36 industrial nations one answer.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Avoid poses with too much symmetry.

BY CHARLES J. HANLEY

(BORING)

Symmetry is when one half is a mirror
image of the other half.

'Vour ad will tie seen

.

24/7 :'

,

~

Top·Rider,rala

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

I

1....

8,000 visitors

req~:t!,~tt

mydallysentlnel.com
DIRECTLYI
.
.

J. vtftOo,GIIriiiHJm

Each column,row and square must use Ns 3,7,2,&amp; 1, plus the
diagonal must add up to the I shown.(diagonals can repeat Is)

"'... '

.. llvt.mm./nlll,lb. .....

S.~.wt/
6.mtf\.~lfllll

1. ,,,, . .,tJ*i .. GM'i/ftlwl(...._

.

Unscramble the letters to form ordinary words. Then place them in the
crossword grid. Then unscramble the circled I!!! Jfl
letters to form todays coded message.
· !ill

Q;fqEIOitlKIOrrr FT [QI QJcJ']HTSfQltl'olblt.l I loJ
~fTT'J'FINrer~:rr:rrwJ &amp;cr:r.r r r rurtfol 1 foJ
CfJormruF.JOrT r ;r:rJoJ &amp;Oi ffltJoJsT 1 1 r roJ
®tor:rrflGJVrr Tr:r~ &amp;9r rrrmlf'lliT rr r lof
Q®E lmJJ!IRfSJGfV'T J§l (OOIFT CRIDI5f'rl I I' [ .@
@~ftUAFI' l8fGr~raronoJ &amp;"ornro rsl I WliBr lbl
@WC:BTEJ"i!JifGfEftrNr 1'01 @@I'ArMJP r ®ArslsTGt WI

r

:

·Daily Number
of Visitors

Over 1,000 VIsitors
A Dayl Take a break
to check out
the newsl

'
I

·..•

.I

'('

;

OOO~D~

"i

.

�•

OPINION
Septe!:!~~~~------~------------------~------------------~----~~------~.
The Daily Sentinel

'

'

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.~ydallysentinel.com

2007

Obituaries

•

Convinced 'suaess' is possible in Iraq, Bush does it his way'

The Daily .Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy,-Ohlo
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740J 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

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

'

Congress shall make r,o law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
\

TODAY IN HISTORi
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 25, the 268th day of 2007. There
are 97 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
·
.Fifty years ago,_on Sept. 25. 1957 ~ nine black .stud~nts
fQrced to withdraw from Central Htgh School m Ltttle
Rock, Ark., because of unruly white crowds were escorted ·
to class by members of the U.S . Army's IOist Airborne
Division.
On this date:
In 1493, Christopher Columbus set sail from Cadiz,
Spain, with a flotilla of 17 ships on his second voyage to
the Western Hemisphere.
In 1513, Spanish explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa
crossed the Isthmus of Panama and sighted the Pacific
Ocean.
!n 1775, American Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen
was captured by the British as he led an attack on Montreat
·In 1789, the first U.S. Congress adopted 12 amendments
to tl)e Constitution and ·sent them to the States for ratificati'on. (Ten of the amendments became the Bill of Rights.)
.In 1890, Wilford Woodruff, president of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, issued a Manifesto formally renouncing the practice of polygamy.
..
an 1973, the three-man crew of the U.S. space laboratory
Slcylab 2 splashed down safely in the Pacific Ocean after
stwnding 59 days in orbit.
In 1978, 144 people were killed when a Pacific
Southwest Airlines Boeing 727 and a private plane collided over San Diego.
:Ten years ago: President Clinton pulled open the door of
Central High School in Little Rock, Ark., as he welcomed
nine blacks who'd faced hate-filled mobs 40 years earlier.
Sportscaster Marv Albert ended his trial in Arlington, Va.,
by pleading guilty to assault and battery; within hours,
NBC frred him (the network later rehired him). The NBC
prime-time drama "ER" did its season premiere live for the
Eastern United.States, then repeated the performance live
fQr the West Coast.
Five years ago: American schoolchildren escaped.a rebelhetd Ivory Coast city that was under siege as U.S. special
forces and French troops moved in to rescue Westerners
caught in the West African nation's bloody ~prising.
Tropical Storm "Isidore" drenched the Gulf Coast. ·
One year ago: British forces in Iraq shot and killed Omar
ai-Farouq, a leading ai-Qaida terrorist, more than a year
after he embarrassed the U.S. military by escaping from a
ll)aximum security military prison in Afghanistan. Four
French tOurists kidnapped in Yemen were freed after more
than two weeks in captivity. The Louisiana Superdome, a
symbol of misery during Hurricane Katrina, reopened for a
New Orleans Saints game. (The Saints defeated the Atlanta
Falcons, 23-3.)
Thought for Today: "It is as fatal as it is cowardly to blink
(at) facts bec.ause they are not to our taste." - John
Tyndall, English physicist (1820-1893).

President Bush is so ·
convinced that he's got the ·
right policy in Iraq - and
that it can succeed - that
he rejects pl~as from
Capitol Hill moderates for
a declared change of mission.
In an interview with a
group of columnists that I
attended Wednesday, he
di smissed the notion of
establishing the 2006 recommendations of the Iraq
Study Group as official
U.S. policy, even though
its advocates think it's a
lot like his policy and
could bind the country
together.
"My attitude is , I accept ·
what (U.S. Iraq commander)
Gen.
(David)
Petraeus recommended,
nol what they recommend," he said, referring
to members of Congress
pushing the ISG approach,
which includes moving
U.S. troops from a combat
~~~ch~.?. one of "overBoth Petraeus and Bush
said last week that they
envision a "transition" of
mission toward "overwatch" Bush said,
beginning in Decemberbut the president evidently
wa,nts to have a firm grip
on the pace of change,
even if it means missing
an opportunity for achieving a consensus on Capitol
Hill.
•
In addition to lengthy
comments on ,Iraq policy.
Bush said he was "incredulous, and then mad"
about
last . . we~lc •5
MoveOn.org ad branding
Petraeus "General Betray
~s" and said he took·it as
'an attack on our troops."
"I expected people on
Capitol Hill to · say this
was wrong," he said. "1
didn't hear many," obviously meaning Democrats.
"That ad was uncalled
for," he said. "And also
the silence."
In a 90-minute session
10 the White House's

,,
•

'

Bush !adds to Chinas Olympic glory

•
.
.

..

.

.
.

"

0

'

raised to $125 citing lack of
being able to break even at
the current fee . The falseness of this reasoning was
~iscussed.
Further,
Congressional members are
trying to avoid dealing with
the problem by saying that
the National Archives is an
independent agency despite
the fact that Congress.controls the finances of all
such agencies. Such a massive increase will severely
injure historical research.
The national convention
is .scheduled for later this

.compete in ·
'Junior Olympics

REEDSVJLI,.E- Katlyn and Allison Barber,.daugters of
Jeremy and ~bbie Barber, recently.competed at the AAU
Junior Olympics in Knoxville, Tenn.
· .
.
Kl\tlyn reeeived the gold•medal for fti'st' place on Sub
Novice 'fumbling, the silver medal for second· glace on
RACINE
Kyrie
Intermediate Double Mini, and the bronze medal for third
Jordanne
Swann
celebrated
· place on Intermediate Trampoline.
Allison received fouth place on Sub Beginner Tumbling, her 13th birthday on 'Sept. 16
and thirteenth place on both Double Mini, and TramPQiine. · at the hOme of lier grandparBoth' girls are members of the Will Power Tumbling Team ents, David and Ann Zirkfe in ·
in Gallipolis, coached by their mother and Will Edmonds. Racine.
Kyrie, family and friends
enjoyed the day playing croAcetone, iodine, and meth quet, badminton, volleyball,
oil, which is .added to ether and horseshoes. After a cook·
or other chemicals to pro- · out, a birthday cake and ice
duce the final product were cream were served to Kyrie,
Page 1 ·
found at the homes, but her mother and step-fath.er,
which resulted in the dis- SheriffRohert .Beegle said it Brenda and Mike Seagraves
covery of materials used in appeared the operation was of Middleport; Terri, Bnice
the manufacture of meth at for manufacture of meth for· and Travis Hysell of Nitro,
W.Va.; Debbie and Joe
three mobile homes located personal·use .
Quivey
of Pomeroy; and
Anotlter
man,
.
Anthony
on Story's Run. Deputies
conducted a search of the Smith, was arrested on an Jordan Evans of Pomeroy.
residences after subjects ou~tandil)g bench warrant
Sending gifts were her
questioned in a traffic stop and released Ia.st .week. great-great-grandmother,
in Ga11ia Comity provided Beegle said he will likely be . Roberta Swisher of New
inform~tion
abput the charged in the drug investi- Haven, W.Va.; Amber, Arnie
and Lily
Dugan
of
alleged meth lab operations: gation as well.

Observes 13th birthday

'
·~

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Gerald "Butch" Arnold has
graduated from The Ohio
State. University College of
Nursing with a dual Master
of Science degree in adult
health and clinical nurse specialist.
Arnold is a 1984 graduate
of Wahama High School, a
1988 graduate of St. Mary's
School of Nursing and a
1995 graduate of Marshall
University.
Arnold is active in the
American
Nurses'
Association and the Ohio
Nurses Association, and a
variety of community organi-

KaUr

Math ·

'''",
&lt;

GRADUA1ES
NURSING ,PROGRAM

•

from·

'''

"

...."

brave humanitarian work· :·
genocide.
ers
who are also the vic- :
By hobnobbing with the
tims
of the violence. Some .,
·
leaders of the People's
Republic of China at the have been forced to leave; ·,
Summer Olympics, the and Eric Reeves quotes •
sports-loving president I an Egeland, former head ,.
will
as S'ophie of the U.N. humanitarian
an Asia operations, tha~ "hundre,ds
Richardson,
expert at Human Rights of thousands would die in
Watch, puts it, be giv~pg the event of humanitarian
"an e.normous propaganda collapse."
opportunity" as China
Maybe Mr. Bush, sitting
strives to erase the .image in his box seat at ·the
of the young pro-democra- games, will be moved to -:
cy protestor standing in
front of the army tanks at make "a political state· '
ment" to Hu Jintao, urging '
Tiananmen Square.
him to tell the government '
Some years ago, it was of Sudan that China is ·:
George W. Bush, on learn- considering disinvesting ,'
ing more of the details of
the Rwanda genocide, from Sudan if it continues .
who wrote on what he was the genocide. The presi- .
reading: "Not on my dent of China may listen .,
watch." How can he not politely, but it continues to .•
realize that in going · to be China's unwavering
watch the exciting games insistence that it will conin Beijing, the hosts with tinue, at the U.N. Security
whom he consorts will, in Council, to protect Sudan
time, be responsible for from forceful punishment
more corpses than the of its crimes against its
'
executors of the genocide own people.
in Rwanda?
Bush should reconsider ·
Amid all the current talk and not let his presence at '
by Ban Ki-Moon about the Genocide Olympics in ·
constructi v~ efforts by the Beijing be recorded ;~s '
government of Sudan to having been on his watch . .:
engage in peace negotiaI also hope that, on
tions with the rebels and reflection, a growing num- .
tribes, also warring with ber of the athletes winning
one another, Reeves -the a place at the Summer ·
pre-eminent historian of
will decide that'
this genocide - wrote in Olympics
receiving a gold medal at ..
the Sept. 6 Boston Globe an event hosted by a part- "
that "though violence in
Darfur has mutated ... eth- ner in genocide will not be :.
nically · targeted violence, worth the trip.
(Nat Hentoff is a nation- .
orchestrated
by
(the
Khartoum government), ally renowned authority .
continues to be chronicled on the First Amendment
by human rights investiga- and the Bill of Rights and
tors . .. . The regime contin- author of many books, ·
ues it s indiscriminate aeri- including ".The War on the
al
bombardment
of Bill of Rights and the ·
African villages."
Gathering
Resistance" ,.
(Seven
Stories
Press, ,
Under increasing danger
are the extraordinarily 2004).)

zations in Columbu!l. He has
practiced nursing in many
settings, including psychi·
attic mental health, medical
surgical, nursing program
manager, and bum trauma.
He is now pursuin¥ a posi·
tion as nurse practittoner and
clinical nurse specialist with
The Ohio State University
Medical Center 's Trauma
services.
..
He is the son of Jerry and
Delma Arnold of. New Haven
and the late Patty Childers,
and the grandson of Mary
Arnold, Lora Doddrill and:.
Pauline Greathouse of •
Middleport.

,,
0

0'

'

Local resident attends Civil War meeting

0

,:1.-

The Daily Sentinel

COOLVILLE - Marie award and a certificate for
LaChance was named week· presenting a skit; Richmond
ly best weight-loss winner won secoqd place in the Best
Hans Michael Stump, 25, of
and
Pat Snedden runner-up Uniform Contest; Snedden
Coalwood, was escorted to Heaven
at
the
Se_pt. 18 meeting of was presented a "l(ey to
by angels from the University of
TOPS (Take Off Po..nds Success" pin by the Chapter
VIrginia Hospital in Charlottesville,
Sensibly) Chapter IIOH 2013 for her work in planning the
Va., on Sept 18, 2JXJT.
Coolville. There were 17 trip to the event.
Born Jan. 7, 1982 at Parkersburg,
members present.
he was the son of Allen Stump of
Members discussed their
Pineville and Channaine Sauer Stump
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds experiences on . attending
of Coalwood.
Sensibly) members Mary their first Fall Rally and lisHe was a Christian and a member
to
"Morning
Cleland
and
Patricia tened
of Smyrna Gospel Ministries. ·
Inspirations,"
a
motivational
Richmond were in leeway.
Hans worked as a dispatcher for the
Judy Dicken was welcomed tape by Lorraine Sargent.
McDowell County Emergency
back to the' group. Eleven
The group meets every
Ambulance Authority in Welch. A
members attended the Fall Tuesday at Torch Baptist
special friend and supervisor was
· Rally at Lancaster on Sept. Chutch. Weigh-in is from
Susie Shelton. He alsO was an emer15. KOPS members Cleland 3:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a
gency medical technician and a memH- Stump
and Richmond received cer- meeting from 6:30 to 7:30.
ber of the Coalwood Fue Department.
tificates ·for the KOPS }fall For information, call Pat
He. is survived by a caring sister, Heidi Stump of Coalwood; of Fame; the Chapter won Snedden at 662-2633 or
paternal grandmother, Mary and the late Bob Sinnett of the second place publicity attend a free meeting.
Spencer; maternal grandmother, Della and the late I .P. Sauer of
Point Pleasant; and special grandparents, Glenn and Ann Ford
'
of Pineville.
.
Hans wished to he an organ donor, but because that wasn't
possible, his parents lovingl,Y donated his body to the West
Vtrginia Uruverslty Medtcal School of Research in
POMEROY Keith the Civil War who were a
Morgantown,
of
the
Ohio
Ashley of Roc)&lt;springs part
A memorial service will be II a.m. Sept. 30 at the Smyrna recently attended the fall Commandery.
Previous
Gospel Miilistries Church in Pineville.
meeting of the . Ohio Ohio commanders included
Commandery
Military Gen. William Tecumseh
S, . Pres.
Order of the Loyal Legion Sherman,
of the United States (MOL- Rutherford B. Hayes, and
LUS), held at the historical U.S . Pres. · Benjamin
Dillon House in Fremont, Harrison.
Business
discussions
Ohio.
The Dillon House is a included the intention of
part of the complex of .the the Walmart Corporation to
Rutherford
B. Hayes destroy a major piece of the
·Presidential Center, the Battle of Appomattox
only private presidential Courthouse in Virginia
center and library for a U. where Confederate General
S. president. The meeting Robert E. Lee surrendered.
featured a sumptuous l\ln· Also, the recent court case
cheon with members of its prosecuting an Ohio man
sister organization, the who stole veteran's markers
Dames of the Loyal Legion from a graveyard was disof
the U.S.
cussed.
. Allison Barber
aar~~er
The proposed massive
· Speaker for the day is
past commander-in-chief, increase of Civil War penGordon R. Bury, of sion file records from the
. Marshallville, Ohio, who National Archives was disspoke on a history of the cussed. The cllrrent cost of
famous Unidn· officers of $37 is being proposed to be

v

'

TOPS honors losers

Hans•···

And he reiterated his
ing a self·sustaining. government, an Iraqi military opposition to the proposal
capable of keeping inter- of Sen. Jim Webb,. D-Va.,
nal order and protecting to require trOQps be given '
its borders, an "Iraqi-style as much test time between "
MUibl
democracy" and an ally of Iraq tours as they serve in '
"
Kondl.., the United States against the combat zone.
extremism.
"I don't like the idea of .
Asked if he ihought suc- Congress · determining::
cess could be achieved by troop rotations," he said. ;.
the time he left office, he
Bush defended his plan
Roosevelt Room, Bush said, "we'll be ,!Jlaking to veto a bipartisan SCHIP-:
also set tbe stage for. veto progress" and muse.d that bill on the grounds that
battles over the · State East Asian co\ln. trle. s liRe "the. tactics of those who"
Children's
Health So1,1th Korea ~ad (pll9wed
•t
favor nationalized health"
Insurance ·
Program "all uneven- pa!h'.', ,, but care is incrementalism." .'
(SCHIP) anl1 possible rax ' arrived at democracy.
"1 ciire deeply about'·
increases and bUdget bills,
and he waxed philosophic
"The same thing will pqor children;" he said, ~
cal about what Americans happen in the Middle but he charged that
should look for in a presi- East," he s·~id . He also Congress was intent on ~
dent.
reiterated hts conviction expanding the prqgram to ;
. "He should be comfort' that failure in Iraq .wc;&gt;Uid families making more.! than ~
have disastrous conseable· with his family," quences, in.cluding ah Iran $80,000 a year and ..
encouraging them to abanBush said . . "Should be
somebody who'll work "emboldened to spread don private insurance.
"
hard to make sure there's radical Shiism and develBush also said he plans ·:
love. in the White House, op nuclear weapons," to confront Copgress over··
have a vision for the world destabilizing the region.
the fac~ that ~'they've ,
I asked him why he passed zero appropriations
and principles by which
they'd make decisions. · could not agree to pi:opos- even th~pg)} it's less thay..
"I would suggest they als put forward~ by tiiparti- two weeks before the Ji$~:
Iook for somebody who san groups of mo4erates cal year .ends:"
:
doesn't worry about cur- . like
Sens.
· Lamar
And• . cJescribipg the;:
.rent public opinion polls Alexand¢'r, R-Tenn~, ;tn~ process otJ&gt;icking his new:;:
- that's like a dog chas- · Ken Salazar, D-Colo.1and att9mey gf,lier~l l!g,iuine.e,::
ing its tail., 1'\1 look for Rep. John. Tanner, · D~· Michael 'Mukasey; Bush::
someone who'll enjoy this : Tenn., to m~~e the': ISG undencored ;IUs · detetmi~:
job. Yo~ can. eit.her be mis- : r~c?mmendat~ons ~au~n~l naqo~ io ::protect the pfil)~;:
erabl.e m thts JOb or JOy- ,po!t~y, espectally 11!..vt~w . ciple \.o,f,·exeeutive,:.pfivi-:
ous. I find it a joy."
· othts own (llans for a ~Is- lege ft1}~C.thi:: :abliitY'· P'f the:
If that's true _ and SIO!l change.
..
presideb~ t6\'t~'ce'ive1 'unfet~::
Bush · told us he .was . .· One .. House moderate, teted ·al:ivrce:'" ''' .. .
:
"upbeat about life" -· he R~p. M~rk •K.itk, a:~tJl.,
.'.~'lf s~nie()ne cooi~s into:
actually seemed more satd thatxhe, ISG ptotm:sal
. determiqed than euphorj.c , grad.l!a11y , T&lt;:movmg the Oval Office," lie · said,•
in this session. He asserted U.S. troqps from combat "they sh6ul&amp; not 'nave .to:
that he was sustained by and giving them the ·mis-. say, 'let me check with my
the conviction that sol- sion to "train and aid" lawyer' before tellirig the
they
diers in . Iraq and their . Iraqi forces - · could .'president .· what
commanders believe in the!' achieve a bipartisan con- think."
So, Bush may be a lame
mission there as . much as sensus akin to one .Bush's
he does.
·.
father establish!ld leading duck. And he showed he
He . said, · "I • asked Gen. · to an end to conflict over knows that his credibility
is low. He ·said, "People .
Petraeus, 'Can we sue- · Central America. ,
to Petraeus, not to' :
listen
ceed? If·not; lefs not conBut Bush said he was
tinue. I am not going to de,termined to stie.k with me.;' Still, like Frank '
look a mother in the eye the Petraeus schedule, Sinatra in what became his , ·
.who's lost her son and tell tying . troop . withdrawals signature song, . Bush .:
her something . tliat's not ' and mission changes to seems determineq to 110 ·" •
true.' He said .we could." · ·success on · the ground. out doing it "My Way." .. ·
(Morton Kondracke i$ "
Asked what ·would con- "The mission :can .change
stitute success, ' he -listed ~' 'in different· plac.~:~s ; ,..like executive ·editor of I{IJIF
reducing violence to "an Anbar, at a different rate Call, the newspaper of ;
·
Capitol Hill. J
acceptable"levE:I;" achiev- than elsewhere," he said.

In September 2004, the
president was the first
world leader to accuse the
government of Sudan of
the genocide of- black
Africans
in Darfur.
,.at
Despite all the U.N .
Hentoff
Security CounCil resolutions and the earnest but
natve ne.gotiations , by
U.N. Secretary-General
LETTERS TO THE
Ban Ki-Moon, the. killings · in the Bush administraEDITOR
and rapes continue , amid tion, told the. New York
; Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less the spreading ~chf!os , Times {Sept. 7), "The botthan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must1&gt;e which now encompasses tom line is (the president)
signed, and include address and telephone number. No Chad. It is all the more just loves sports, and I'm ·
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in startling that George W. sure he wants to go, like
g'ood taste, addressing issues, nor personalities. Letters of Bush has now accepted an an~ other guy, because it's ·
tllanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- invitation by Chinese · g~mg to pe exciting. 1
President Hu Jintao to thmk he s going. to
eel for publication.
grace next summer's watch."
It would be even more
Olympics in Beijing.
exciting
if, during what I
Bush must know that
and
others
are calling the
&lt;::hina is making elaborate,
(USPS 213-960)
Genocide Olympics, offi.: Reader Services
expensive preparations Ohio Valley Publishing
including reducing air pol- cials held an event to test
Co.
Correction Polley
lution in Beijing - for the synchronizing skills of
Published every afternoon, Monday
camel-riding
Qur main concern !n all stories is to
this legendary internation- Sudan's
through ·Friday, 1~1 Court Street ,
as they
Janjaweed
militias
be accurate. It you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
al event. There is an
Second-class
burn
village.s,
kill
the
men,
Iii a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
intel)se expectation among
992·2156.
..
Member: The Associated Press and
China's leaders that host- rape the' women, carry
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
ing (and sharing in) the away the livestock and
throw children
Postmaster: Send address correc·
• Our 'main number Is
glories of the quest for the sometimes
into
the
·
fires.
Sudan's
tlons
to
The
Daily
Sentinel,
111
Court
,•
gold medals will change Khartoum government has
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
China's image in the pledged to disarm the
: Department extensions are:
•
world, from a merciless Janjaweed but has shown
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
dictatorship to the embod· no inclination to so , let
News
One month
'1 0.27
iment of the Olympic spir- alone punish the leaders.
Editor: Cha~ene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
it of harmonious relations
Dally
50'
President Bush is cerReporter: Bnan Reed. Ext. 14
among nations.
Senior
Cl.
t
lzen
rates
tainly aware that Sudan's
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
White House Deputy chief investor in Sudan One month
' 10.27
One year
'103.90
Press Secretary Dana and leading arms supplier
Subscribers
should
remit
in
advance
Advertising
Perino says that, although - 'is the host of next sumdirect to the Daily Sentinel. No subOut.lde Salea: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Bush spoke to the Jintao mer 's Olympics. China's
scription by mail permined in areas
Out81de Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service · is a\lail"in a forceful way" during leaders are nervous about
a recent private meeting in plans for a worldwide
CIUaJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10
able.
Australia about China's campaign to shame China
Mail ·Subscription
disdain for human rights into exerting its enormous
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
and religious freedom, influence to compel the
Charlen~ Hoeflich , Ext. 12
i 3 Weeks
' 32.26
Bush was not going to Sudanese government to
26 Week s
' 64.20
attend the Olympics to join civilization . This ner52 Weeks
' 127.11
E-mail:
make a political state- vousness ex tends to a
n~wsOmydailys en ti n e l. c om
Outside
Meigs
County
ment .
.
growing movement to
13 Weeks
'53.55
•
boycott the Olympics
Michael
Green,
former
Web:
'107.10
26 Weeks
•
Asia director at the because of China's obvi52 Weeks
'214.21
. www.mydailysentinel .com
National Security Council ous complicity in the

.~

Tuesday, September 25,

1Uesday,

. p.m. on the weekends.
There is. a 14;-mile round
trip to Haydenville which
deplllts at noon and takes
from PageA1
about and hour and 45 min·
utes, with a 22 mile round
pictured, all trains depart trip to Logan which !likes
from the Nelsonville about two hours and. 15
Station right along U. s, minutes. Each run has a stop
33 in Nelsonville. The at Robbins Crossing which
regula~ season begins the is a restored '1840's Ohio
first Saturday after April log yillage including a gen15 and continues thrOUJ1h era! store, blacksmith shOij,
the first weekend m . school house, log barn and
November. During that' cabins where activities
time, the office and depot including
Appalachian
are open from 10 a.m. to 5 music, children's games,

Railway

.Rates
frqm Page A1

,,

..
\

\

n't think they could all be
replaced by the time the
frrst rate increase is implemented on Oct. 10. Council
did not act to place a guide. line on dead meter replacement.
Anderson said the rate
increases are a "worst case
scenario" for the project
that costs just shy of $3 million. That "worst case
scenerio" reflects ·amounts
that don't factor in grant
money that Anderson hopes
to acquire. He added it may
be a couple of years before
the village has enough
money to' pay for the first
significant step in eliminating the CSO's which is the
engineering fees for the project thought to be around 15
percent of the total project
cost, a fee in the neighborhood
of
$400,000.
However, Anderson said
until the money is there he
won't commit to any ser1

vices on the project such as
engineering.
McAngus
asked
Anderson to estimate a tol81
of delinquent bills owed. to
the wate~ department which
he gue~sed to be $20,000.
He said the department is
working on recovering the.
amounts but several were
renters or are simply gone
from the area. Arnott said if
these delinquent customers
are renters, council may
consider an option making
landlords responsible for
future amounts. Anderson
said
LeadinJ:l · Creek
Conservancy District has a
policy where the landlord is
responsible for the water
bill and often the landlord
factors in the water bill into
the monthly rent so that the
expense is covered.
In other council businesses:
Anderson reported the
Lincoln Drive project is
nearing an end wtth paving,
raising of manhole covers
and a guardrail remaining to
be installed.
Anderson said he has

Kyrle Jordanne Swan

Zanesville; and her brother
and family, Nik and Jessica
Seagraves and Lila, Sophie
and Joel ·Beattie of Flat
Roads, W.Va.

Chris McKee of Colonial
tried to contact a contractor
about the Pleasant Ridge Insurance presented council
slip but the contractor has with a packing on supplemental insurance for its
not returned his calls. ·
Street Superintendent employees.·
Council adJusted the
.Jack Krautter said the men
2007
appropnations by
in his department are doing
the best they can a: keeping adjusting the state highway
village grass cut with the fund by $20.88, and moving
equipment they have. $900 from the ·general fund
Krautter also said ·his in the police department
department is often· pulled line items from operating
·off of mowing jobs for road material to dental insurance.
Council
transferred
work which has increased
or other jobs in the village $10,000 from the general to
he is directed to do by the the street·fund.
All members of council
mayor. Krautter said soon
were
present for the meetthose jobs will include cutting and disposing of tree ing as was Clerk:-Treasurer
Kathy Hysell.
limbs along village streets.

Ernie Sisson Memorial
*****~4'et ~ 12'~*****
September 27th - 6pm.
Doors Open@ Spm
Syracuse Community Center
20 Games $20.00
For Advance Tickets Call
740-992·3804 74G-985-3818
Proceeds To Purchase Playground Equipment
At The Center!

.

.

0'.I

I

I

.~·.;.
.•.

' .

Celebrates birthday:,~~
RACINE -Lily Angelina
Dugan celebrated her third·
birthday at the home of her
great-grandparents, David
and Ann Zirkle of Racine,·
Sept. 9.
Lily's cake "Dora,. the
Explorer" was a gift of her
parents, Amber and Arnie
Dugan of Zanesville. After
dinner, the cake and ice cream
were setved to Lily, her par·
ents, . her grand~arents,
Debbie and Joe Quivey of
P~meroy; Travis Hysell of
Nttro, W.Va.; and Brenda
Seagraves and Kyrie Swantt
of Middleport.
Sending gifts were her

fromPageA1

animal visits, cooking on a . with trips II a.m. and 2 p.m.
wood stove and cprn hilsk . from Thanksgiving to the
dollmaking.
week befo~ Christmas.
Robine~ talked about the Robinette said the coaches
"s~al" trains which . he . lire heated and comfortable
· satd are a lot of fun - the· in winter.
Easter Bunny train, the
The entire operation as ·
· Memori~ Day and Labor well as much of ihe mainteDa,Y trams, the fireworks nance of the trains is done
tr&amp;ns; the train robbery b): volunteers like the
trains, the October foliage Ri!binettes wbo have either .
trains., O!Dd t,he Santa. train~. a background in railroad
Always popular w~th chtl· work or are avid model train
dren and adults are the collectors. Tl).eir goal is to
Santa trains which haye a preserve memories of those
special schedule operating early trains and their impact
on Saturdays and Sundays, on Ohio's development.

;

____________

Meigs

A

month at the U.S. Naval;
Academy in Annapolis,.,
Md.
MOLLUS was formed
in 1865 at the death bed of
Pres: Abraham Lincoln for•·
the commissioned officers"
of the Union forces of tit~ I,
Civil War. It has beeri -;
instrumental in preserving :
much of the historical ;
record of the war. Today; ·
direct and collateral
descendants of commi~- ...
sioned Union officers may.,
apply for membership.
____,_.....,..__ ,

ment. media, Meigs County
Department of Job and
Family Services, Meigs
County
Family
and
Children First Council,
Meigs County· Juvenile
Court, Meigs County
Prosecutor's
Office,
schools, Woodland Center,
Inc.
Last year several of the
coalition meetin~s featured
speakers identifymg the latest trends in drug and alcohol abuse. The coalition
also had some outreach programs for children in all
three school districts.
The MCCC also has a
billboard on Ohio 7 to help
further publicize its goal of
~

Pleasant Valley

Hospital
1-'r-~-t-J.

u tM ~&amp;•• ,.,?.a
Brandon
and
Ciera Mmiako

"

Uly Dupn
great·great-grandmother,; ·
Roberta Swisher of New7:
Haven, W.Va.. ; and Bruce and".
Terri Hysell of Nitro, W.Va.
educating and assisting the ·
public in "making Meigs
County a safer. place to ·
live"
of making it a "safer"
place" is the incorporation··
of agencies to assist citizens
with their concerns but :
Bullington wants the public
to know the coalition ts first ..
and foremost a grassroots
movement by the people,···
for the people.
·
Bullington also added' ,
the coalition hopes to&lt;
branch out !lnd meeting in .
all three school districts this ~
year, . not just at tll,e:
Mulberry
Commu:tity
Center.

Part

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

,,'

IDI'Ott\tiNGAIO'SL'L'TIIE

..

~
...;

&gt;

"'~

. Robin Hood

0

'

JrTheater
9/29-30

o'

The Ohio Valley
Symphony
10/6

Mark McVey· Tenor

eo. Otftce: 428 2nd Avt.
GllltlpOIII, OH (740) 44e-ART8

Texas Hold'em
Every Thursday
$35.00 entry tTee (no re~buy)
Start 7:00pm

Omaha Tournament
2nd &amp; 4th Saturday
$50.00 entry fee (no re-buy)
Start 6:00 pm

..

0

·..

"

..

.

�•

OPINION
Septe!:!~~~~------~------------------~------------------~----~~------~.
The Daily Sentinel

'

'

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.~ydallysentinel.com

2007

Obituaries

•

Convinced 'suaess' is possible in Iraq, Bush does it his way'

The Daily .Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy,-Ohlo
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740J 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

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

'

Congress shall make r,o law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
\

TODAY IN HISTORi
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 25, the 268th day of 2007. There
are 97 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
·
.Fifty years ago,_on Sept. 25. 1957 ~ nine black .stud~nts
fQrced to withdraw from Central Htgh School m Ltttle
Rock, Ark., because of unruly white crowds were escorted ·
to class by members of the U.S . Army's IOist Airborne
Division.
On this date:
In 1493, Christopher Columbus set sail from Cadiz,
Spain, with a flotilla of 17 ships on his second voyage to
the Western Hemisphere.
In 1513, Spanish explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa
crossed the Isthmus of Panama and sighted the Pacific
Ocean.
!n 1775, American Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen
was captured by the British as he led an attack on Montreat
·In 1789, the first U.S. Congress adopted 12 amendments
to tl)e Constitution and ·sent them to the States for ratificati'on. (Ten of the amendments became the Bill of Rights.)
.In 1890, Wilford Woodruff, president of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, issued a Manifesto formally renouncing the practice of polygamy.
..
an 1973, the three-man crew of the U.S. space laboratory
Slcylab 2 splashed down safely in the Pacific Ocean after
stwnding 59 days in orbit.
In 1978, 144 people were killed when a Pacific
Southwest Airlines Boeing 727 and a private plane collided over San Diego.
:Ten years ago: President Clinton pulled open the door of
Central High School in Little Rock, Ark., as he welcomed
nine blacks who'd faced hate-filled mobs 40 years earlier.
Sportscaster Marv Albert ended his trial in Arlington, Va.,
by pleading guilty to assault and battery; within hours,
NBC frred him (the network later rehired him). The NBC
prime-time drama "ER" did its season premiere live for the
Eastern United.States, then repeated the performance live
fQr the West Coast.
Five years ago: American schoolchildren escaped.a rebelhetd Ivory Coast city that was under siege as U.S. special
forces and French troops moved in to rescue Westerners
caught in the West African nation's bloody ~prising.
Tropical Storm "Isidore" drenched the Gulf Coast. ·
One year ago: British forces in Iraq shot and killed Omar
ai-Farouq, a leading ai-Qaida terrorist, more than a year
after he embarrassed the U.S. military by escaping from a
ll)aximum security military prison in Afghanistan. Four
French tOurists kidnapped in Yemen were freed after more
than two weeks in captivity. The Louisiana Superdome, a
symbol of misery during Hurricane Katrina, reopened for a
New Orleans Saints game. (The Saints defeated the Atlanta
Falcons, 23-3.)
Thought for Today: "It is as fatal as it is cowardly to blink
(at) facts bec.ause they are not to our taste." - John
Tyndall, English physicist (1820-1893).

President Bush is so ·
convinced that he's got the ·
right policy in Iraq - and
that it can succeed - that
he rejects pl~as from
Capitol Hill moderates for
a declared change of mission.
In an interview with a
group of columnists that I
attended Wednesday, he
di smissed the notion of
establishing the 2006 recommendations of the Iraq
Study Group as official
U.S. policy, even though
its advocates think it's a
lot like his policy and
could bind the country
together.
"My attitude is , I accept ·
what (U.S. Iraq commander)
Gen.
(David)
Petraeus recommended,
nol what they recommend," he said, referring
to members of Congress
pushing the ISG approach,
which includes moving
U.S. troops from a combat
~~~ch~.?. one of "overBoth Petraeus and Bush
said last week that they
envision a "transition" of
mission toward "overwatch" Bush said,
beginning in Decemberbut the president evidently
wa,nts to have a firm grip
on the pace of change,
even if it means missing
an opportunity for achieving a consensus on Capitol
Hill.
•
In addition to lengthy
comments on ,Iraq policy.
Bush said he was "incredulous, and then mad"
about
last . . we~lc •5
MoveOn.org ad branding
Petraeus "General Betray
~s" and said he took·it as
'an attack on our troops."
"I expected people on
Capitol Hill to · say this
was wrong," he said. "1
didn't hear many," obviously meaning Democrats.
"That ad was uncalled
for," he said. "And also
the silence."
In a 90-minute session
10 the White House's

,,
•

'

Bush !adds to Chinas Olympic glory

•
.
.

..

.

.
.

"

0

'

raised to $125 citing lack of
being able to break even at
the current fee . The falseness of this reasoning was
~iscussed.
Further,
Congressional members are
trying to avoid dealing with
the problem by saying that
the National Archives is an
independent agency despite
the fact that Congress.controls the finances of all
such agencies. Such a massive increase will severely
injure historical research.
The national convention
is .scheduled for later this

.compete in ·
'Junior Olympics

REEDSVJLI,.E- Katlyn and Allison Barber,.daugters of
Jeremy and ~bbie Barber, recently.competed at the AAU
Junior Olympics in Knoxville, Tenn.
· .
.
Kl\tlyn reeeived the gold•medal for fti'st' place on Sub
Novice 'fumbling, the silver medal for second· glace on
RACINE
Kyrie
Intermediate Double Mini, and the bronze medal for third
Jordanne
Swann
celebrated
· place on Intermediate Trampoline.
Allison received fouth place on Sub Beginner Tumbling, her 13th birthday on 'Sept. 16
and thirteenth place on both Double Mini, and TramPQiine. · at the hOme of lier grandparBoth' girls are members of the Will Power Tumbling Team ents, David and Ann Zirkfe in ·
in Gallipolis, coached by their mother and Will Edmonds. Racine.
Kyrie, family and friends
enjoyed the day playing croAcetone, iodine, and meth quet, badminton, volleyball,
oil, which is .added to ether and horseshoes. After a cook·
or other chemicals to pro- · out, a birthday cake and ice
duce the final product were cream were served to Kyrie,
Page 1 ·
found at the homes, but her mother and step-fath.er,
which resulted in the dis- SheriffRohert .Beegle said it Brenda and Mike Seagraves
covery of materials used in appeared the operation was of Middleport; Terri, Bnice
the manufacture of meth at for manufacture of meth for· and Travis Hysell of Nitro,
W.Va.; Debbie and Joe
three mobile homes located personal·use .
Quivey
of Pomeroy; and
Anotlter
man,
.
Anthony
on Story's Run. Deputies
conducted a search of the Smith, was arrested on an Jordan Evans of Pomeroy.
residences after subjects ou~tandil)g bench warrant
Sending gifts were her
questioned in a traffic stop and released Ia.st .week. great-great-grandmother,
in Ga11ia Comity provided Beegle said he will likely be . Roberta Swisher of New
inform~tion
abput the charged in the drug investi- Haven, W.Va.; Amber, Arnie
and Lily
Dugan
of
alleged meth lab operations: gation as well.

Observes 13th birthday

'
·~

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Gerald "Butch" Arnold has
graduated from The Ohio
State. University College of
Nursing with a dual Master
of Science degree in adult
health and clinical nurse specialist.
Arnold is a 1984 graduate
of Wahama High School, a
1988 graduate of St. Mary's
School of Nursing and a
1995 graduate of Marshall
University.
Arnold is active in the
American
Nurses'
Association and the Ohio
Nurses Association, and a
variety of community organi-

KaUr

Math ·

'''",
&lt;

GRADUA1ES
NURSING ,PROGRAM

•

from·

'''

"

...."

brave humanitarian work· :·
genocide.
ers
who are also the vic- :
By hobnobbing with the
tims
of the violence. Some .,
·
leaders of the People's
Republic of China at the have been forced to leave; ·,
Summer Olympics, the and Eric Reeves quotes •
sports-loving president I an Egeland, former head ,.
will
as S'ophie of the U.N. humanitarian
an Asia operations, tha~ "hundre,ds
Richardson,
expert at Human Rights of thousands would die in
Watch, puts it, be giv~pg the event of humanitarian
"an e.normous propaganda collapse."
opportunity" as China
Maybe Mr. Bush, sitting
strives to erase the .image in his box seat at ·the
of the young pro-democra- games, will be moved to -:
cy protestor standing in
front of the army tanks at make "a political state· '
ment" to Hu Jintao, urging '
Tiananmen Square.
him to tell the government '
Some years ago, it was of Sudan that China is ·:
George W. Bush, on learn- considering disinvesting ,'
ing more of the details of
the Rwanda genocide, from Sudan if it continues .
who wrote on what he was the genocide. The presi- .
reading: "Not on my dent of China may listen .,
watch." How can he not politely, but it continues to .•
realize that in going · to be China's unwavering
watch the exciting games insistence that it will conin Beijing, the hosts with tinue, at the U.N. Security
whom he consorts will, in Council, to protect Sudan
time, be responsible for from forceful punishment
more corpses than the of its crimes against its
'
executors of the genocide own people.
in Rwanda?
Bush should reconsider ·
Amid all the current talk and not let his presence at '
by Ban Ki-Moon about the Genocide Olympics in ·
constructi v~ efforts by the Beijing be recorded ;~s '
government of Sudan to having been on his watch . .:
engage in peace negotiaI also hope that, on
tions with the rebels and reflection, a growing num- .
tribes, also warring with ber of the athletes winning
one another, Reeves -the a place at the Summer ·
pre-eminent historian of
will decide that'
this genocide - wrote in Olympics
receiving a gold medal at ..
the Sept. 6 Boston Globe an event hosted by a part- "
that "though violence in
Darfur has mutated ... eth- ner in genocide will not be :.
nically · targeted violence, worth the trip.
(Nat Hentoff is a nation- .
orchestrated
by
(the
Khartoum government), ally renowned authority .
continues to be chronicled on the First Amendment
by human rights investiga- and the Bill of Rights and
tors . .. . The regime contin- author of many books, ·
ues it s indiscriminate aeri- including ".The War on the
al
bombardment
of Bill of Rights and the ·
African villages."
Gathering
Resistance" ,.
(Seven
Stories
Press, ,
Under increasing danger
are the extraordinarily 2004).)

zations in Columbu!l. He has
practiced nursing in many
settings, including psychi·
attic mental health, medical
surgical, nursing program
manager, and bum trauma.
He is now pursuin¥ a posi·
tion as nurse practittoner and
clinical nurse specialist with
The Ohio State University
Medical Center 's Trauma
services.
..
He is the son of Jerry and
Delma Arnold of. New Haven
and the late Patty Childers,
and the grandson of Mary
Arnold, Lora Doddrill and:.
Pauline Greathouse of •
Middleport.

,,
0

0'

'

Local resident attends Civil War meeting

0

,:1.-

The Daily Sentinel

COOLVILLE - Marie award and a certificate for
LaChance was named week· presenting a skit; Richmond
ly best weight-loss winner won secoqd place in the Best
Hans Michael Stump, 25, of
and
Pat Snedden runner-up Uniform Contest; Snedden
Coalwood, was escorted to Heaven
at
the
Se_pt. 18 meeting of was presented a "l(ey to
by angels from the University of
TOPS (Take Off Po..nds Success" pin by the Chapter
VIrginia Hospital in Charlottesville,
Sensibly) Chapter IIOH 2013 for her work in planning the
Va., on Sept 18, 2JXJT.
Coolville. There were 17 trip to the event.
Born Jan. 7, 1982 at Parkersburg,
members present.
he was the son of Allen Stump of
Members discussed their
Pineville and Channaine Sauer Stump
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds experiences on . attending
of Coalwood.
Sensibly) members Mary their first Fall Rally and lisHe was a Christian and a member
to
"Morning
Cleland
and
Patricia tened
of Smyrna Gospel Ministries. ·
Inspirations,"
a
motivational
Richmond were in leeway.
Hans worked as a dispatcher for the
Judy Dicken was welcomed tape by Lorraine Sargent.
McDowell County Emergency
back to the' group. Eleven
The group meets every
Ambulance Authority in Welch. A
members attended the Fall Tuesday at Torch Baptist
special friend and supervisor was
· Rally at Lancaster on Sept. Chutch. Weigh-in is from
Susie Shelton. He alsO was an emer15. KOPS members Cleland 3:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a
gency medical technician and a memH- Stump
and Richmond received cer- meeting from 6:30 to 7:30.
ber of the Coalwood Fue Department.
tificates ·for the KOPS }fall For information, call Pat
He. is survived by a caring sister, Heidi Stump of Coalwood; of Fame; the Chapter won Snedden at 662-2633 or
paternal grandmother, Mary and the late Bob Sinnett of the second place publicity attend a free meeting.
Spencer; maternal grandmother, Della and the late I .P. Sauer of
Point Pleasant; and special grandparents, Glenn and Ann Ford
'
of Pineville.
.
Hans wished to he an organ donor, but because that wasn't
possible, his parents lovingl,Y donated his body to the West
Vtrginia Uruverslty Medtcal School of Research in
POMEROY Keith the Civil War who were a
Morgantown,
of
the
Ohio
Ashley of Roc)&lt;springs part
A memorial service will be II a.m. Sept. 30 at the Smyrna recently attended the fall Commandery.
Previous
Gospel Miilistries Church in Pineville.
meeting of the . Ohio Ohio commanders included
Commandery
Military Gen. William Tecumseh
S, . Pres.
Order of the Loyal Legion Sherman,
of the United States (MOL- Rutherford B. Hayes, and
LUS), held at the historical U.S . Pres. · Benjamin
Dillon House in Fremont, Harrison.
Business
discussions
Ohio.
The Dillon House is a included the intention of
part of the complex of .the the Walmart Corporation to
Rutherford
B. Hayes destroy a major piece of the
·Presidential Center, the Battle of Appomattox
only private presidential Courthouse in Virginia
center and library for a U. where Confederate General
S. president. The meeting Robert E. Lee surrendered.
featured a sumptuous l\ln· Also, the recent court case
cheon with members of its prosecuting an Ohio man
sister organization, the who stole veteran's markers
Dames of the Loyal Legion from a graveyard was disof
the U.S.
cussed.
. Allison Barber
aar~~er
The proposed massive
· Speaker for the day is
past commander-in-chief, increase of Civil War penGordon R. Bury, of sion file records from the
. Marshallville, Ohio, who National Archives was disspoke on a history of the cussed. The cllrrent cost of
famous Unidn· officers of $37 is being proposed to be

v

'

TOPS honors losers

Hans•···

And he reiterated his
ing a self·sustaining. government, an Iraqi military opposition to the proposal
capable of keeping inter- of Sen. Jim Webb,. D-Va.,
nal order and protecting to require trOQps be given '
its borders, an "Iraqi-style as much test time between "
MUibl
democracy" and an ally of Iraq tours as they serve in '
"
Kondl.., the United States against the combat zone.
extremism.
"I don't like the idea of .
Asked if he ihought suc- Congress · determining::
cess could be achieved by troop rotations," he said. ;.
the time he left office, he
Bush defended his plan
Roosevelt Room, Bush said, "we'll be ,!Jlaking to veto a bipartisan SCHIP-:
also set tbe stage for. veto progress" and muse.d that bill on the grounds that
battles over the · State East Asian co\ln. trle. s liRe "the. tactics of those who"
Children's
Health So1,1th Korea ~ad (pll9wed
•t
favor nationalized health"
Insurance ·
Program "all uneven- pa!h'.', ,, but care is incrementalism." .'
(SCHIP) anl1 possible rax ' arrived at democracy.
"1 ciire deeply about'·
increases and bUdget bills,
and he waxed philosophic
"The same thing will pqor children;" he said, ~
cal about what Americans happen in the Middle but he charged that
should look for in a presi- East," he s·~id . He also Congress was intent on ~
dent.
reiterated hts conviction expanding the prqgram to ;
. "He should be comfort' that failure in Iraq .wc;&gt;Uid families making more.! than ~
have disastrous conseable· with his family," quences, in.cluding ah Iran $80,000 a year and ..
encouraging them to abanBush said . . "Should be
somebody who'll work "emboldened to spread don private insurance.
"
hard to make sure there's radical Shiism and develBush also said he plans ·:
love. in the White House, op nuclear weapons," to confront Copgress over··
have a vision for the world destabilizing the region.
the fac~ that ~'they've ,
I asked him why he passed zero appropriations
and principles by which
they'd make decisions. · could not agree to pi:opos- even th~pg)} it's less thay..
"I would suggest they als put forward~ by tiiparti- two weeks before the Ji$~:
Iook for somebody who san groups of mo4erates cal year .ends:"
:
doesn't worry about cur- . like
Sens.
· Lamar
And• . cJescribipg the;:
.rent public opinion polls Alexand¢'r, R-Tenn~, ;tn~ process otJ&gt;icking his new:;:
- that's like a dog chas- · Ken Salazar, D-Colo.1and att9mey gf,lier~l l!g,iuine.e,::
ing its tail., 1'\1 look for Rep. John. Tanner, · D~· Michael 'Mukasey; Bush::
someone who'll enjoy this : Tenn., to m~~e the': ISG undencored ;IUs · detetmi~:
job. Yo~ can. eit.her be mis- : r~c?mmendat~ons ~au~n~l naqo~ io ::protect the pfil)~;:
erabl.e m thts JOb or JOy- ,po!t~y, espectally 11!..vt~w . ciple \.o,f,·exeeutive,:.pfivi-:
ous. I find it a joy."
· othts own (llans for a ~Is- lege ft1}~C.thi:: :abliitY'· P'f the:
If that's true _ and SIO!l change.
..
presideb~ t6\'t~'ce'ive1 'unfet~::
Bush · told us he .was . .· One .. House moderate, teted ·al:ivrce:'" ''' .. .
:
"upbeat about life" -· he R~p. M~rk •K.itk, a:~tJl.,
.'.~'lf s~nie()ne cooi~s into:
actually seemed more satd thatxhe, ISG ptotm:sal
. determiqed than euphorj.c , grad.l!a11y , T&lt;:movmg the Oval Office," lie · said,•
in this session. He asserted U.S. troqps from combat "they sh6ul&amp; not 'nave .to:
that he was sustained by and giving them the ·mis-. say, 'let me check with my
the conviction that sol- sion to "train and aid" lawyer' before tellirig the
they
diers in . Iraq and their . Iraqi forces - · could .'president .· what
commanders believe in the!' achieve a bipartisan con- think."
So, Bush may be a lame
mission there as . much as sensus akin to one .Bush's
he does.
·.
father establish!ld leading duck. And he showed he
He . said, · "I • asked Gen. · to an end to conflict over knows that his credibility
is low. He ·said, "People .
Petraeus, 'Can we sue- · Central America. ,
to Petraeus, not to' :
listen
ceed? If·not; lefs not conBut Bush said he was
tinue. I am not going to de,termined to stie.k with me.;' Still, like Frank '
look a mother in the eye the Petraeus schedule, Sinatra in what became his , ·
.who's lost her son and tell tying . troop . withdrawals signature song, . Bush .:
her something . tliat's not ' and mission changes to seems determineq to 110 ·" •
true.' He said .we could." · ·success on · the ground. out doing it "My Way." .. ·
(Morton Kondracke i$ "
Asked what ·would con- "The mission :can .change
stitute success, ' he -listed ~' 'in different· plac.~:~s ; ,..like executive ·editor of I{IJIF
reducing violence to "an Anbar, at a different rate Call, the newspaper of ;
·
Capitol Hill. J
acceptable"levE:I;" achiev- than elsewhere," he said.

In September 2004, the
president was the first
world leader to accuse the
government of Sudan of
the genocide of- black
Africans
in Darfur.
,.at
Despite all the U.N .
Hentoff
Security CounCil resolutions and the earnest but
natve ne.gotiations , by
U.N. Secretary-General
LETTERS TO THE
Ban Ki-Moon, the. killings · in the Bush administraEDITOR
and rapes continue , amid tion, told the. New York
; Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less the spreading ~chf!os , Times {Sept. 7), "The botthan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must1&gt;e which now encompasses tom line is (the president)
signed, and include address and telephone number. No Chad. It is all the more just loves sports, and I'm ·
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in startling that George W. sure he wants to go, like
g'ood taste, addressing issues, nor personalities. Letters of Bush has now accepted an an~ other guy, because it's ·
tllanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- invitation by Chinese · g~mg to pe exciting. 1
President Hu Jintao to thmk he s going. to
eel for publication.
grace next summer's watch."
It would be even more
Olympics in Beijing.
exciting
if, during what I
Bush must know that
and
others
are calling the
&lt;::hina is making elaborate,
(USPS 213-960)
Genocide Olympics, offi.: Reader Services
expensive preparations Ohio Valley Publishing
including reducing air pol- cials held an event to test
Co.
Correction Polley
lution in Beijing - for the synchronizing skills of
Published every afternoon, Monday
camel-riding
Qur main concern !n all stories is to
this legendary internation- Sudan's
through ·Friday, 1~1 Court Street ,
as they
Janjaweed
militias
be accurate. It you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
al event. There is an
Second-class
burn
village.s,
kill
the
men,
Iii a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
intel)se expectation among
992·2156.
..
Member: The Associated Press and
China's leaders that host- rape the' women, carry
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
ing (and sharing in) the away the livestock and
throw children
Postmaster: Send address correc·
• Our 'main number Is
glories of the quest for the sometimes
into
the
·
fires.
Sudan's
tlons
to
The
Daily
Sentinel,
111
Court
,•
gold medals will change Khartoum government has
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
China's image in the pledged to disarm the
: Department extensions are:
•
world, from a merciless Janjaweed but has shown
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
dictatorship to the embod· no inclination to so , let
News
One month
'1 0.27
iment of the Olympic spir- alone punish the leaders.
Editor: Cha~ene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
it of harmonious relations
Dally
50'
President Bush is cerReporter: Bnan Reed. Ext. 14
among nations.
Senior
Cl.
t
lzen
rates
tainly aware that Sudan's
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
White House Deputy chief investor in Sudan One month
' 10.27
One year
'103.90
Press Secretary Dana and leading arms supplier
Subscribers
should
remit
in
advance
Advertising
Perino says that, although - 'is the host of next sumdirect to the Daily Sentinel. No subOut.lde Salea: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Bush spoke to the Jintao mer 's Olympics. China's
scription by mail permined in areas
Out81de Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service · is a\lail"in a forceful way" during leaders are nervous about
a recent private meeting in plans for a worldwide
CIUaJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10
able.
Australia about China's campaign to shame China
Mail ·Subscription
disdain for human rights into exerting its enormous
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
and religious freedom, influence to compel the
Charlen~ Hoeflich , Ext. 12
i 3 Weeks
' 32.26
Bush was not going to Sudanese government to
26 Week s
' 64.20
attend the Olympics to join civilization . This ner52 Weeks
' 127.11
E-mail:
make a political state- vousness ex tends to a
n~wsOmydailys en ti n e l. c om
Outside
Meigs
County
ment .
.
growing movement to
13 Weeks
'53.55
•
boycott the Olympics
Michael
Green,
former
Web:
'107.10
26 Weeks
•
Asia director at the because of China's obvi52 Weeks
'214.21
. www.mydailysentinel .com
National Security Council ous complicity in the

.~

Tuesday, September 25,

1Uesday,

. p.m. on the weekends.
There is. a 14;-mile round
trip to Haydenville which
deplllts at noon and takes
from PageA1
about and hour and 45 min·
utes, with a 22 mile round
pictured, all trains depart trip to Logan which !likes
from the Nelsonville about two hours and. 15
Station right along U. s, minutes. Each run has a stop
33 in Nelsonville. The at Robbins Crossing which
regula~ season begins the is a restored '1840's Ohio
first Saturday after April log yillage including a gen15 and continues thrOUJ1h era! store, blacksmith shOij,
the first weekend m . school house, log barn and
November. During that' cabins where activities
time, the office and depot including
Appalachian
are open from 10 a.m. to 5 music, children's games,

Railway

.Rates
frqm Page A1

,,

..
\

\

n't think they could all be
replaced by the time the
frrst rate increase is implemented on Oct. 10. Council
did not act to place a guide. line on dead meter replacement.
Anderson said the rate
increases are a "worst case
scenario" for the project
that costs just shy of $3 million. That "worst case
scenerio" reflects ·amounts
that don't factor in grant
money that Anderson hopes
to acquire. He added it may
be a couple of years before
the village has enough
money to' pay for the first
significant step in eliminating the CSO's which is the
engineering fees for the project thought to be around 15
percent of the total project
cost, a fee in the neighborhood
of
$400,000.
However, Anderson said
until the money is there he
won't commit to any ser1

vices on the project such as
engineering.
McAngus
asked
Anderson to estimate a tol81
of delinquent bills owed. to
the wate~ department which
he gue~sed to be $20,000.
He said the department is
working on recovering the.
amounts but several were
renters or are simply gone
from the area. Arnott said if
these delinquent customers
are renters, council may
consider an option making
landlords responsible for
future amounts. Anderson
said
LeadinJ:l · Creek
Conservancy District has a
policy where the landlord is
responsible for the water
bill and often the landlord
factors in the water bill into
the monthly rent so that the
expense is covered.
In other council businesses:
Anderson reported the
Lincoln Drive project is
nearing an end wtth paving,
raising of manhole covers
and a guardrail remaining to
be installed.
Anderson said he has

Kyrle Jordanne Swan

Zanesville; and her brother
and family, Nik and Jessica
Seagraves and Lila, Sophie
and Joel ·Beattie of Flat
Roads, W.Va.

Chris McKee of Colonial
tried to contact a contractor
about the Pleasant Ridge Insurance presented council
slip but the contractor has with a packing on supplemental insurance for its
not returned his calls. ·
Street Superintendent employees.·
Council adJusted the
.Jack Krautter said the men
2007
appropnations by
in his department are doing
the best they can a: keeping adjusting the state highway
village grass cut with the fund by $20.88, and moving
equipment they have. $900 from the ·general fund
Krautter also said ·his in the police department
department is often· pulled line items from operating
·off of mowing jobs for road material to dental insurance.
Council
transferred
work which has increased
or other jobs in the village $10,000 from the general to
he is directed to do by the the street·fund.
All members of council
mayor. Krautter said soon
were
present for the meetthose jobs will include cutting and disposing of tree ing as was Clerk:-Treasurer
Kathy Hysell.
limbs along village streets.

Ernie Sisson Memorial
*****~4'et ~ 12'~*****
September 27th - 6pm.
Doors Open@ Spm
Syracuse Community Center
20 Games $20.00
For Advance Tickets Call
740-992·3804 74G-985-3818
Proceeds To Purchase Playground Equipment
At The Center!

.

.

0'.I

I

I

.~·.;.
.•.

' .

Celebrates birthday:,~~
RACINE -Lily Angelina
Dugan celebrated her third·
birthday at the home of her
great-grandparents, David
and Ann Zirkle of Racine,·
Sept. 9.
Lily's cake "Dora,. the
Explorer" was a gift of her
parents, Amber and Arnie
Dugan of Zanesville. After
dinner, the cake and ice cream
were setved to Lily, her par·
ents, . her grand~arents,
Debbie and Joe Quivey of
P~meroy; Travis Hysell of
Nttro, W.Va.; and Brenda
Seagraves and Kyrie Swantt
of Middleport.
Sending gifts were her

fromPageA1

animal visits, cooking on a . with trips II a.m. and 2 p.m.
wood stove and cprn hilsk . from Thanksgiving to the
dollmaking.
week befo~ Christmas.
Robine~ talked about the Robinette said the coaches
"s~al" trains which . he . lire heated and comfortable
· satd are a lot of fun - the· in winter.
Easter Bunny train, the
The entire operation as ·
· Memori~ Day and Labor well as much of ihe mainteDa,Y trams, the fireworks nance of the trains is done
tr&amp;ns; the train robbery b): volunteers like the
trains, the October foliage Ri!binettes wbo have either .
trains., O!Dd t,he Santa. train~. a background in railroad
Always popular w~th chtl· work or are avid model train
dren and adults are the collectors. Tl).eir goal is to
Santa trains which haye a preserve memories of those
special schedule operating early trains and their impact
on Saturdays and Sundays, on Ohio's development.

;

____________

Meigs

A

month at the U.S. Naval;
Academy in Annapolis,.,
Md.
MOLLUS was formed
in 1865 at the death bed of
Pres: Abraham Lincoln for•·
the commissioned officers"
of the Union forces of tit~ I,
Civil War. It has beeri -;
instrumental in preserving :
much of the historical ;
record of the war. Today; ·
direct and collateral
descendants of commi~- ...
sioned Union officers may.,
apply for membership.
____,_.....,..__ ,

ment. media, Meigs County
Department of Job and
Family Services, Meigs
County
Family
and
Children First Council,
Meigs County· Juvenile
Court, Meigs County
Prosecutor's
Office,
schools, Woodland Center,
Inc.
Last year several of the
coalition meetin~s featured
speakers identifymg the latest trends in drug and alcohol abuse. The coalition
also had some outreach programs for children in all
three school districts.
The MCCC also has a
billboard on Ohio 7 to help
further publicize its goal of
~

Pleasant Valley

Hospital
1-'r-~-t-J.

u tM ~&amp;•• ,.,?.a
Brandon
and
Ciera Mmiako

"

Uly Dupn
great·great-grandmother,; ·
Roberta Swisher of New7:
Haven, W.Va.. ; and Bruce and".
Terri Hysell of Nitro, W.Va.
educating and assisting the ·
public in "making Meigs
County a safer. place to ·
live"
of making it a "safer"
place" is the incorporation··
of agencies to assist citizens
with their concerns but :
Bullington wants the public
to know the coalition ts first ..
and foremost a grassroots
movement by the people,···
for the people.
·
Bullington also added' ,
the coalition hopes to&lt;
branch out !lnd meeting in .
all three school districts this ~
year, . not just at tll,e:
Mulberry
Commu:tity
Center.

Part

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

,,'

IDI'Ott\tiNGAIO'SL'L'TIIE

..

~
...;

&gt;

"'~

. Robin Hood

0

'

JrTheater
9/29-30

o'

The Ohio Valley
Symphony
10/6

Mark McVey· Tenor

eo. Otftce: 428 2nd Avt.
GllltlpOIII, OH (740) 44e-ART8

Texas Hold'em
Every Thursday
$35.00 entry tTee (no re~buy)
Start 7:00pm

Omaha Tournament
2nd &amp; 4th Saturday
$50.00 entry fee (no re-buy)
Start 6:00 pm

..

0

·..

"

..

.

�..
The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

-Parents. need. to repair damage
with
daughter
.
.
Bv KAntY Mm:tiEI.L
AND MARcY Sucwl

PageA6

bein~

too involved in your
mamed life, or they may be
busy with their other young
children. R~gardless. you
need t~ make tt clear that they
are domg damage they may
not be able to fl.x later - not
on!&gt;' in their relationship with
therr grandchildren, but also
with you. Please continue to
call and invite them to your
children's events, but don't
~peel too much in return.
(We hope your husband's parents are close to your children.J
Uear Annie: .rm a foreign
language tutor and translator.
I love my job, but very often,
when people find out what I
do, they ask me how to say
something in a certain Ianguage or they tty 10 start a
conversation with me in one
of my languages.
Out of the context of my
work environment, I feel put
on the spot. I usually have my
mind on something else, and I
also don't want to appear as
though fm shOwing off. What
is an effective response to
these queries? - Put on the
Hot Seat
Dear Hot Seat: You
wouldn't be showing off to
display your knowledge when
asked. However, if you are
embatrassed or annoyed by
such questions, it's OK to
smile politely and say, "I'm

Inside

Tuesday, September 25, 2007,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 82

Community Calendar
P bll
· ·
11
u cmee ngs

may return at thi~ meeting.
POMEROY - . Alpha
Jota Masters members will
meet at I I :30 a.m. at
Beimigans,..Poi.nt Pleasant ,
W. Va. for a lunc;heon.
TUPPERS PLAINS Regular meeting of the
VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m. at
the hall .
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisoilville
Senior
Coitizens will meet at I I
a.m.- for blood piressure
checks followed by a
potluck dinner.

wanted to do away wtth . an
ex), bombasuc, pontificating
Thesday Sept. 25
jackasses. What happens to
RUTLAND' - Rutland
men in their 50s, 60s and 70s? Village Council, reschedDear Annie: I am the only
Is
tt some sort .of ~y-product uled regular meeting , 7
one of my siblings who is out
of
global
wanrung ·
p.m.,
Rutland
Civ ic
of the house and married with
I
spent
the
last
few
years
of
Center
children. I live relatively close
my 32-year marriage trying to
·
to my parents. The problem
"fix" myself with therapy and
wed nesd ay, sept. 26
is, I feel ·as if they no longer
antidepressants,
while
my
consider me therr daughter.
husband continued to drink
POMEROY - Meigs
'Jhey don't visit or invite us to
his
fifth
of
vodka,
with
no
County
Commissioners
~me over, go swimming,
worries and no j,ob. Fliially, Th::sd~yl? ~. m., instead of
have dinner, etc. I am usually
one
day I said, 'Who needs
ihe one who has to call them.
this?" and left.
Dad rarely phones, and Mom
Ladies, men will not make
CIU~s
wiU call only if I don't get in
Monday, Oct. 1
touch for a few days. We only
you happ;v. only you can do
ns·~
that.
W
e
IS
what
you
make
of
POMEROY
- Meigs
get together for birthdays and
County
Cancer
Initiative,
it. If yo~ happen to find that
,•
holidays.
rare specunen who makes you
TUesday, Sept. 2S
noon, conference room of
My children have played
happy,
you
won
the
lottery.
RACINE
Racine
Area
Meigs
Multipurpose
sp:rts for several seasons, and
I'm
not
bitter_
·
d
·t
ust
wiser.
Community
Organizauori,
New memSenior
Center.
I ve invited my parents to
Peace
in
the
C)Us
.
6:30
p.m.,
Star
Mill
Park.
bers
welcome.
Bring
watch them on numerous
Dear P~: Not all men Potluck meal. Members lunch . Courtney Sim, 992pccasions, but they are always
are like theones you've dated, bring school supplies .
6626 for information.
too busy. When my son gradbut
we
.
a~
that
no
woman
RACINE
Racing
uated preschool, my parents
should
bebeve
she
needs
a
Wednesday,
Sept.
26
-,,
chapter
134,
O.E.S.
7:30
managed. to find an excuse not
lllllll to be happy. Thanks for ·
POMEROY - Mei~J . p.m. with initiation of offito make 1t.
your words of expenence.
County
Commumt~l' cers. Wear chapter attire.
My parents are truly missAnnie's Mailbox is written Coalition, re-organizatio1),; Refreshmellfls.
ing out when it comes to their
by Kolhy MiJcluiU tJJUl Morey meeting, 10:30 a.m., God&gt;.~ ·
grandchildren. The relllly sad
Sugar, · longtime editors of NET.
;. ' .
. 1\Jesday, Oct. ~
part is that I have a younger
the Ann lAnders column.
. '.~:!' ·MIDDLEPORT
brother who is close iri age to
!11Y children and they love to
Pkase e-lllllil your q~~ertipns
Thursday,' Sep.t . 'Jlt ~~·, Regular 'monthly mee~ing
to
anniesmailbo:c@comRACINE · __;_ Special of Middleport Masonic
spend tiroe together, but . it
Casf:net, or wriU to: Annie's meeting
of
liappens rarely.
. I've expressed my frustraMa!Jbox, P.O. Box 118l90, Pomeroy/Racine Lod~e ,
Chicago, IL 60611. 70 ~
tion to my parents many
out. more about Ann1es #164, 6:30 p.m. for t e
times, but it dOesn't matter. It
Mailbox, and read f~s purpose of conferring th(
really hurts when they
by .other Creaton S,"rhc~te Entered Apprentice degree
exclude me. Am I wrong to
off-dufJnow.Ihope~oudon't
wT!ter$ an4cartoo~rsts, visit on one candidate. Anyon!f,·
expect them to want to have
the Creators Svndic1Jte Web with examinations in thet( .
quality time with me and my mind· we stick to nglish."
· "'
degre'e ·.· ·
Dear Almle: l read another page at www;creaJors.com.
·, Entered
, Ap"'rentice
,.
family? My children are too
young now to understand, but letter In your column from a - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --,;)_
how wiU I explain it .to them woman who can't seem to ·
later when they aSk whr. find a man to make her happy.
.
'
. Grandma arid Grandpa oren t I'm 61, a widQw, self-sufficient with two beautiful -----;__--''---------~--interested in them?- A.A.
Dear A.A.: Your parents daughters who have given me AEP (NYSE)- 48.97
150.154
Ollk HIU Financial (NASmaY feel they are too young to seven wonderful grandchil- Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80
be grandparents and don't dren. The men I have dated Aihland Inc. (NYSE)DAQ)- 31-82
want to be reminded, · they have been needy, self- · 61.30
Ohio Valley ·aanc Corp.
could ntistakenly believe they absorbed, selfish, egotistical, Bl&amp; Lots (NYSE)- 30.98
(NASDAQ) - '15
are doing you a favor by not stingy, lying, homicidal (he Bob Evane (NASDAQ) BBT (NYSE) - 4«1.88
. 31.59
Peoplea (NASDAQ)- 28.81
Bor,Warner {NYIE)Pepelco (NYSE)- 71.21
88.01
Premier (NASDAQ) c.tury Aluminum INAS14.80
clll_48.(N~SDAQ) :::....:· • , Rookw.U (NYIE)......- 88.05 , •
Thesday ...Sunny... Hot with mph. Chance of rain 40 per- C
"'
Rooky Boob (NASDAQ) _..
highs in the lower 90s. cent.
8.03, ' ' : ..
10.215 .
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday and Thursday C~IIIIShopa (NASDAQ) . Royal Dutch llhall- 83.70
night ...Partly nighi...Mostly cloudy with a
Thesday
(NASDAQ) - -~
cloudy. l.ilws in the in'id 60s. .'chance ortshoweis and tluln-J C~~!wt'* (NASDA4) '::...! ·,
Southwest winds around 5 derstorms~ Highs in the upper 37.82
wa...Mart (NYSE)- 43.17
mph
in
the 70s. Lows in the upper 50s. Collins (NYSE) -72.30
Wendy'l (NYSE) _ 33•84
evening ...Becoming light and Chance of rain 40 percent.
DuPont (NYSE) - ·49.61
variable.
Friday and Friday US Bank (NYSE)- 32.92 WorthlnCton (NYSE) 21.48
Wednesday ...Partly sunny night... Partly cloudy. Highs Gannett (NYSE) - 44.18
Dally stock reportl are the .
with a chance of showers and in the lower 70s. Lows in General Electric (NYSE) _
40.85
. 4 p.m. ET clcialng quat.. of
thunderstorms. Highs in the the lower 50s.
Harley-0avtd8on
(NYSE)•
ti'IIIIIIICtlone for Sept. 24,
mid 80s. Southwest win&lt;ls
Saturday and Saturday
47.18
.
2007, provided by EdWard
around 5 mph. Chance of rain night...Mostly clear. Highs
Jonas tlnanclal advisors
30 percent.
in the mid 70s. Lows in the JP Morgan (NYSE) 48..34
IUIC Mill In Gallpolll at
Wednesday nlght...Mostly lower 50s.
( 740) 4-U-9441 and Lealay
cloudy ·with . a chance of
Sunday
throuldl Kroger (NYSE) - 28.26
Marrero In Point Plealant
showers and thunderstorms. Monday ... Partly cloudy. Umlted Brands (NYSE) at (304) 6740174.
Lows in the lower 60s. Highs in the upper 70s. 23.04
Norfolk Southem (NYSE).- Member SIPC.
Southwest winds around 5 Lows in the mid 50s.

and
Qrganlz'atlo'

LocaI stocks

Local weather

D:!,:;_

=-a:oldlnl

.·''

Lodge #363, F&amp;AM, 7) 0
p.m. All Master Masons
mvited. Refreshments.
'

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

'

Church events;

.

LocAL ScHEDULE

·Thursday, Sept. 27 ·
POMEROY - Revival
will be held at the Calvarx
. Pilgrim Church, S.R. I 43.J
Pomeroy, S!i,pt. 27 -3~ . 1
p.m.
each
evenmg .
Richard McKenzie, evangelist; special singing.
Rev. Charles McKenzie,
pastor. For more informa~
lion call 992-2952.
:
Sunday, Sept. 30
REEDSVILLE
· "Delivered" to sing at
· Reedsville
United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m. ·
RACINE - Eagle Ridge
Church
Homecoming;
morning services, I 0 a.m.;
carry in dinner at noon:
afternoon singing at I p.m,
and preaching by JerrY.
· Frederic~. ,
•·
HOBSON ,
Homecoming a~ ~:~~iti3
Chrlstiah
F
Church, with l\lnCl1, .
noori: Randall Farley
preach. ''Mercy" to sing:.'

111

POMEROY- A achedule of upootN1g ~
lnd tirjl school varwity sportilg ewr1a i'l'IOM'Ig

iean from Meigs Cou1lee:.

Tut••v·•
S1IITll ~
Volleyball
Eastern at Meigs, 6 p.m.

b

WIIIWdft•l MIDI
Volleyball
1\ltelgs at Southern, 6 p.m.

Tlal"*t'• 9111111
Voltoyboll

NelaonviiJe.VQrk at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 6 p.m.

"

SPORTS BRIEFS

Eastern volleyball
selling t-shirts for
breast cancer
awareness Thursday
TUPPERS PLAINS The · Eastern Lady Eagles
'-.&gt;lleyball team, in an
attempt ·to raise money for
breast cancer awareness,
~Ul be selling t-shirts
Thursday during their home
TVC
Hocking
match
against Waterford.
The t-shirts will cost $7
apiece, with $1 of each sale
going towards this fundraiser cause: The t-shirts are
also pink. .
Anyone inierested in purchasing one of 'these shirts
should be in attendance this
ii:hursday at Eastern Hij!h
School. The junior vars1ty
game will start at 6 p.m.,
with the varsity contest fol~wing ·afterward.

Prosecutor will
seek indictments
in case at Mike
Vick
property
..
..

- RICHMOND, Va. (AP)
- •The prosecutor in the
county .. w)lere J\t!aQta
Falcons·"-, quarterback
Michael Vick has admitted
to bankrolling a dogfighting
operation plans to present
evidence to the grand jury,
Tuesday, that could possibly
·
lead to an indictment
."Yes, I'm presenting matters to the grand jury that
Involve dogfighting at 1915
Moonlight Road," Surry
County
Commonwealth
f1,ttorney
Gerald
G.
Poindexter
told
The
1'\ssociated Press in a telephone interview Monday
flight.
: Moonlight Road is the
address of the two-story
home on I 5 mostly undeveloped acres that has been
host to "Bad Newz
. Kennels" since 2001. It's
where dozens of pit bulls
were found in April, and
where they were trained,
fought and brutally executed.
"Most of the matters that
I'm presenting .have already
been admitted in sworn
statements· authored by the
defendants·.. in the federal
proceeding~." Poindexter
said.
Poindexter couldn't detail
the exact indictments he
will pursue, l;mt said the
local investigation and the
federal investigatio11largely
focused on different crimes.
"The killing of dogs is
one of thoSl! statutory prohipitions. D9gfi·ghting is a
crime, the mistreatment of
animals is a -crime, so you
could take your· pick; or take
them all," Poindexter said
before cuttin¥, the.conversaiion short. 'I don't have
anything else to say about it.

, ..... ' " Vlck. 82

CoNTACT US
: OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)
·: t-740-446-2342 ext. 33

F.•• -

1-74Q-446-3008

~·mill-

BY JOE MILICA
ASSOCIATED PRESS

sportsOmydaltysentlnet.com

f oorta Staff

l!rad Sherman, Sporta EdHor
(740) 445·2342. ext. 33

bsherman C mydailytrlbune .com

larry Crum, Sports Writer
[740) 445·2342, ext. 2 3

k:rumOmydaityregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 445-2342. ext. 3 3

bwallerS@mydailytribune.com

CLEVELAND
Clinching the AL Central
Division title with a week
left in the regular season
gives the Indians plenty of
time to strategize for the
postseason.
It also gives fans the
opportunity to shop.
Although they were slow
to show up \It Jacobs Field
this season, fans responded
Sunday to the Indians' first
playoff b_erth in six years by ·
snapping up T-shirts, hats
and balls. It was the club's
second biggest day in mer_chandise sales for a regular
season game, said Kurt .
Schloss, Indians merchandising director.
Everything but XL, 2XL
and children's T-shirts were
sold out at the team shop at
Jacobs Field on Monday but
more were due to arrive later
in the afternoon.
Sam Maul walked out
with a white and blue division champions T-shi)'t, like
the ones the Indians wore in
the clubhouse during their
champasne and beer-soaked
celebration.
"It's a good team. It's not a
. high-priced, high-payroll
team, but they've got a
group of athletes that work
together and believe in
APpholo
themselves," said Maul, 50,
Eduardo Santacruz looks over Cleveland Indians championship T-shirts at the team's gift shop at Jacobs Field in Cleveland
of Cleveland.
Monday In Cleveland. The Indians clinched their first American League Central Division title since 2001 Sunday with a 6Please see Indians. 8:1
2 win over the Oakland Athletics.

Browns kicking
themselves for lastsecondlosstin Oakland .
BEREA (AP) - One
snap. One kick. One block.
In just three seconds, the
Cleveland Browns went
from blissful to bitter.
·Sunday's
game
in
Oakland came down to a
fmal, nail-biting play, and
when kicker Phil Dawson's
40-yard field goal attempt
was batted backward by
Raiders defensive end
Tommy Kelly, the Browns
had lost 26-24.
On top of that, they
missed a chance to win consecutive games for the first
time in the same season
since 2003 - an inconceivable span of 61 games.
The Black Hole swallowed the Browns whole.
"It hurts," wide receiver
Braylon Edwards said
Monday. "I feel like we
fought hard enough . We'
fought with enough fortitude and enough will and
determinatiop to win and
then to not have it go
through ... it hurts."
What made it more deflating for the Bro.wns (1-2) was
that Dawson had kicked the
apparent game-winner seconds earlier.
As Cleveland's field-goal
unit lined up for Dawson 's
kick, Oakland. coach Lane
Kiffin, who one week earlier
had watched Denver coach
Mike Shanahan smartly and
successfully ke Raiders
kicker Sebastian Janikowski
in an identical situation with
a timeout, told an official he

Wahama

High School vonevball

Lady Eagles down Lady
Buekey·es-in ·straight games··

wanted to stop the clock
.
before the attempt.
STAFF REPORT
each adde.d six . .Morgan Burt and Kelsey
Unaware , the Browns
sPORTSOMYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM
Holter chtpped m four. Also at the net,
went ahead with the play
Hayman and Burt had five blqcks and
and the snap, hold and kick
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern Lady Swatzel one.
.
were perfect as Dawson split Eagles, ranked NQ. 16 in the latest coaches
Megan Broderick handed out 27 assists.
the uprights.
poll, made short work of the visiting
Defensively, Morgan Werry played solidly
Forced to do it over, Nelsonville-York Lady Buckeyes in straijlht on the ba9k row as the libero.
Dawson's attempt barely got games during high school volleyball ac.tton
Eastern also made it a sweep Monday after
off the McAfee Coliseum Monday.
posting a 25-23, 25-11 victory in the junior
dirt as the Raiders' rush had
Coach Howie Caldwell's club improved to varsity tilt.
.
.
collapsed Cleveland's pro- 13-2 overall following the 25-12, 25-13, 25The Lady Eagles travel to netghbonng
tection.
2' victory. It was the seventh straight victo- Meigs today for a much-anticipated reThree years ago, the NFL ry overall for the Lady Eagles.
match with their county rivals. Junior varsidecided to allow head
Katie Hayman led the winners with II ty action begins at 6 p.m . followed by the
eoaches to call timeouts kills while Kate Wilfong and Tresa Swatzel . varsity main event.
frpm the sideline.
Edwards wishes the
league had let things be. .
''That's a suc~er rule
because it really does mess
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Ziegler served up three the set and 16 for the
with the kicker," he said.
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
"ebviously, two weeks in a
points for the hosts and game. and Allison Graves
Southern went down 17- had six point s.
r~: . It fi!essed
w!th
Se,basttan and 11 messed wtth
McARTHUR The 15·. Scoring one point at a
Riffle was 19-21 passVinton
County time, VC held on to win in g, and 11 - 12 s ervin~
Pq\1,this week. I think that's host
Viking s defeated
the 25-19.
a t~ker· rule ..
with six · dinks, Eddy was
..,1 m not '!}'mgto say any- Southern Lady Tornadoes
In the second game the 10- 17 passing and 7-8
th\il~ negallve agat!'ls~ NFL (7 -6) Monday night during hosts took an early lead of serving, and Ashley Robie
m!efo or (comm1ss1o~er) Tri-Valley
Conference 16-8 before Southern was 12- 16 passing . Hunter
Rq~er Good~ll or anythmg, inter-division volleyball closed the gap on the sec- was 9- 11 serving, while
bu8J thmk 11 really affects action. Vinton County won ond round of serving. Turley had four blocks and
the ' ktcker, .the protec~ton in three game s 25 • 19·, 2S- . Whitney Wolfe-Riffle and Robie three. As a team,
and ~e emot~on of.the team. 17, and 25-9.
The first two games were Chel sea Pape scor!!d five Southern was 39-44 serv It's ltke playmg wtth someclose, but close doesn't and four points re spective- ing, 3 f-41 spiking, and 7one's emotions.
·
"We can 't do anything count on the hardwood.
ly going down the stretch 13 blocking .
Southern
won
an
excitabout it. So we have to
In the first game, Vinton to cut the lead to 23 -17,
move .forward and hope we C ounty overcame a 6 -4 but Casay Puckett and in g reserve match 13-2 5.
don.~ ~et put in that situation . deficit to lead 10-6. The Ziegler served up the last 25-15, and 26-24. Breanna
agatl). '
Lady Vikes then led 14-11, two point s for the win, 25- Taylor had 15 points, Katie
~wson -didn't find any but four serves from Kasey 17 ·
Wood s had II , Sarah
fault · with the Raiders' Turley gave Southern a 15VC scored early and Malt hews had nine, and
gamesmanship.
14 edge. Southern lost the often in the finale. Puckett Lind say Teaford had II.
Southern hosls Mei gs on
momentum and that made had seven on the second
Please see Browns, 1:1
all the difference. Megan serve, Ziegler had six for Wednesday.

Vinton County drops Southern

in bid lor

score of 472 and
Huntington St. Joe,
because of two
players withdrawmg. was unable to
STAFF REPORT
compete for the
SPORTSII&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
team competition.
MADISON, W.Va. - Wahama's
However, all was
attempt for a third straight appear-.
not lost for the
ance in the State High Golf
Wahama team . Both
Tournament fell short Monday at the :_
Dave Greene, with
Riverview Golf Club.
Greene
a score of 86, and
Five teams played 18 holes in a ,
Adam Roush, who
play five , count four format with the "turned in a score of 87 , qualified as
top two teams winning berths to the _individuals for the state tournament
state tournament. Wahama finished , which will be played October 2 and
in third place with a team score of 3 at the Oglebay Park Resort in
399 behind Man High School's win- , Wheeling.
ning score of 340 and the second .. In addition to the scores posted hy
place score of 379 from Buffalo.
Greene. and Roush in the regional
Tug Valley fini shed fourth with a competttJon , Brandon Johnson shot

Greene, Roush qualify
for State as individuals

strai

a 109 while Miriam
Gordon contributed
a 117 to the team's
final total. Austin
Gilbert also played,
but his score did not
count in the fin al
tally.
Lance West of
Huntington St. Joe
.__.....;.;;_ __, was the medalist for
Roush
the day shooting a
fine 76 . This effort
also qualified him for the state tournament as did the 82 shot by his
teammate, Thomas Dransfi eld .
Buffalo 's second place fini sh was
led oy Garrett Barnette, who shot a
81 for the day. Man 's leading scorer
for the day wa_s Tyler Browning,
who led the teams balanced scoring

with an 83.
Althou gh Wahama coach Bob
Blessing was disappointed with the
fmal team totals, he was proud of
both Dave Greene and Adam Roush.
"They are both fine young men
who have worked hard this season
and it is good to see them rewarded
for their effort s," Blessing said.
The future appears to be bright for
Wahama go If as all five of the players competing today are scheduled
to return next year.
"The potential for all 5 of tile
players that competed today is limited only by their des ire to achieve,"
Blessing added "Roush is currently
a junior while. Greene, Johnson and
Gilbert are sophomores and Gordon
is only a freshman . Next year could
be a good one."

�..
The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

-Parents. need. to repair damage
with
daughter
.
.
Bv KAntY Mm:tiEI.L
AND MARcY Sucwl

PageA6

bein~

too involved in your
mamed life, or they may be
busy with their other young
children. R~gardless. you
need t~ make tt clear that they
are domg damage they may
not be able to fl.x later - not
on!&gt;' in their relationship with
therr grandchildren, but also
with you. Please continue to
call and invite them to your
children's events, but don't
~peel too much in return.
(We hope your husband's parents are close to your children.J
Uear Annie: .rm a foreign
language tutor and translator.
I love my job, but very often,
when people find out what I
do, they ask me how to say
something in a certain Ianguage or they tty 10 start a
conversation with me in one
of my languages.
Out of the context of my
work environment, I feel put
on the spot. I usually have my
mind on something else, and I
also don't want to appear as
though fm shOwing off. What
is an effective response to
these queries? - Put on the
Hot Seat
Dear Hot Seat: You
wouldn't be showing off to
display your knowledge when
asked. However, if you are
embatrassed or annoyed by
such questions, it's OK to
smile politely and say, "I'm

Inside

Tuesday, September 25, 2007,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 82

Community Calendar
P bll
· ·
11
u cmee ngs

may return at thi~ meeting.
POMEROY - . Alpha
Jota Masters members will
meet at I I :30 a.m. at
Beimigans,..Poi.nt Pleasant ,
W. Va. for a lunc;heon.
TUPPERS PLAINS Regular meeting of the
VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m. at
the hall .
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisoilville
Senior
Coitizens will meet at I I
a.m.- for blood piressure
checks followed by a
potluck dinner.

wanted to do away wtth . an
ex), bombasuc, pontificating
Thesday Sept. 25
jackasses. What happens to
RUTLAND' - Rutland
men in their 50s, 60s and 70s? Village Council, reschedDear Annie: I am the only
Is
tt some sort .of ~y-product uled regular meeting , 7
one of my siblings who is out
of
global
wanrung ·
p.m.,
Rutland
Civ ic
of the house and married with
I
spent
the
last
few
years
of
Center
children. I live relatively close
my 32-year marriage trying to
·
to my parents. The problem
"fix" myself with therapy and
wed nesd ay, sept. 26
is, I feel ·as if they no longer
antidepressants,
while
my
consider me therr daughter.
husband continued to drink
POMEROY - Meigs
'Jhey don't visit or invite us to
his
fifth
of
vodka,
with
no
County
Commissioners
~me over, go swimming,
worries and no j,ob. Fliially, Th::sd~yl? ~. m., instead of
have dinner, etc. I am usually
one
day I said, 'Who needs
ihe one who has to call them.
this?" and left.
Dad rarely phones, and Mom
Ladies, men will not make
CIU~s
wiU call only if I don't get in
Monday, Oct. 1
touch for a few days. We only
you happ;v. only you can do
ns·~
that.
W
e
IS
what
you
make
of
POMEROY
- Meigs
get together for birthdays and
County
Cancer
Initiative,
it. If yo~ happen to find that
,•
holidays.
rare specunen who makes you
TUesday, Sept. 2S
noon, conference room of
My children have played
happy,
you
won
the
lottery.
RACINE
Racine
Area
Meigs
Multipurpose
sp:rts for several seasons, and
I'm
not
bitter_
·
d
·t
ust
wiser.
Community
Organizauori,
New memSenior
Center.
I ve invited my parents to
Peace
in
the
C)Us
.
6:30
p.m.,
Star
Mill
Park.
bers
welcome.
Bring
watch them on numerous
Dear P~: Not all men Potluck meal. Members lunch . Courtney Sim, 992pccasions, but they are always
are like theones you've dated, bring school supplies .
6626 for information.
too busy. When my son gradbut
we
.
a~
that
no
woman
RACINE
Racing
uated preschool, my parents
should
bebeve
she
needs
a
Wednesday,
Sept.
26
-,,
chapter
134,
O.E.S.
7:30
managed. to find an excuse not
lllllll to be happy. Thanks for ·
POMEROY - Mei~J . p.m. with initiation of offito make 1t.
your words of expenence.
County
Commumt~l' cers. Wear chapter attire.
My parents are truly missAnnie's Mailbox is written Coalition, re-organizatio1),; Refreshmellfls.
ing out when it comes to their
by Kolhy MiJcluiU tJJUl Morey meeting, 10:30 a.m., God&gt;.~ ·
grandchildren. The relllly sad
Sugar, · longtime editors of NET.
;. ' .
. 1\Jesday, Oct. ~
part is that I have a younger
the Ann lAnders column.
. '.~:!' ·MIDDLEPORT
brother who is close iri age to
!11Y children and they love to
Pkase e-lllllil your q~~ertipns
Thursday,' Sep.t . 'Jlt ~~·, Regular 'monthly mee~ing
to
anniesmailbo:c@comRACINE · __;_ Special of Middleport Masonic
spend tiroe together, but . it
Casf:net, or wriU to: Annie's meeting
of
liappens rarely.
. I've expressed my frustraMa!Jbox, P.O. Box 118l90, Pomeroy/Racine Lod~e ,
Chicago, IL 60611. 70 ~
tion to my parents many
out. more about Ann1es #164, 6:30 p.m. for t e
times, but it dOesn't matter. It
Mailbox, and read f~s purpose of conferring th(
really hurts when they
by .other Creaton S,"rhc~te Entered Apprentice degree
exclude me. Am I wrong to
off-dufJnow.Ihope~oudon't
wT!ter$ an4cartoo~rsts, visit on one candidate. Anyon!f,·
expect them to want to have
the Creators Svndic1Jte Web with examinations in thet( .
quality time with me and my mind· we stick to nglish."
· "'
degre'e ·.· ·
Dear Almle: l read another page at www;creaJors.com.
·, Entered
, Ap"'rentice
,.
family? My children are too
young now to understand, but letter In your column from a - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --,;)_
how wiU I explain it .to them woman who can't seem to ·
later when they aSk whr. find a man to make her happy.
.
'
. Grandma arid Grandpa oren t I'm 61, a widQw, self-sufficient with two beautiful -----;__--''---------~--interested in them?- A.A.
Dear A.A.: Your parents daughters who have given me AEP (NYSE)- 48.97
150.154
Ollk HIU Financial (NASmaY feel they are too young to seven wonderful grandchil- Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80
be grandparents and don't dren. The men I have dated Aihland Inc. (NYSE)DAQ)- 31-82
want to be reminded, · they have been needy, self- · 61.30
Ohio Valley ·aanc Corp.
could ntistakenly believe they absorbed, selfish, egotistical, Bl&amp; Lots (NYSE)- 30.98
(NASDAQ) - '15
are doing you a favor by not stingy, lying, homicidal (he Bob Evane (NASDAQ) BBT (NYSE) - 4«1.88
. 31.59
Peoplea (NASDAQ)- 28.81
Bor,Warner {NYIE)Pepelco (NYSE)- 71.21
88.01
Premier (NASDAQ) c.tury Aluminum INAS14.80
clll_48.(N~SDAQ) :::....:· • , Rookw.U (NYIE)......- 88.05 , •
Thesday ...Sunny... Hot with mph. Chance of rain 40 per- C
"'
Rooky Boob (NASDAQ) _..
highs in the lower 90s. cent.
8.03, ' ' : ..
10.215 .
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday and Thursday C~IIIIShopa (NASDAQ) . Royal Dutch llhall- 83.70
night ...Partly nighi...Mostly cloudy with a
Thesday
(NASDAQ) - -~
cloudy. l.ilws in the in'id 60s. .'chance ortshoweis and tluln-J C~~!wt'* (NASDA4) '::...! ·,
Southwest winds around 5 derstorms~ Highs in the upper 37.82
wa...Mart (NYSE)- 43.17
mph
in
the 70s. Lows in the upper 50s. Collins (NYSE) -72.30
Wendy'l (NYSE) _ 33•84
evening ...Becoming light and Chance of rain 40 percent.
DuPont (NYSE) - ·49.61
variable.
Friday and Friday US Bank (NYSE)- 32.92 WorthlnCton (NYSE) 21.48
Wednesday ...Partly sunny night... Partly cloudy. Highs Gannett (NYSE) - 44.18
Dally stock reportl are the .
with a chance of showers and in the lower 70s. Lows in General Electric (NYSE) _
40.85
. 4 p.m. ET clcialng quat.. of
thunderstorms. Highs in the the lower 50s.
Harley-0avtd8on
(NYSE)•
ti'IIIIIIICtlone for Sept. 24,
mid 80s. Southwest win&lt;ls
Saturday and Saturday
47.18
.
2007, provided by EdWard
around 5 mph. Chance of rain night...Mostly clear. Highs
Jonas tlnanclal advisors
30 percent.
in the mid 70s. Lows in the JP Morgan (NYSE) 48..34
IUIC Mill In Gallpolll at
Wednesday nlght...Mostly lower 50s.
( 740) 4-U-9441 and Lealay
cloudy ·with . a chance of
Sunday
throuldl Kroger (NYSE) - 28.26
Marrero In Point Plealant
showers and thunderstorms. Monday ... Partly cloudy. Umlted Brands (NYSE) at (304) 6740174.
Lows in the lower 60s. Highs in the upper 70s. 23.04
Norfolk Southem (NYSE).- Member SIPC.
Southwest winds around 5 Lows in the mid 50s.

and
Qrganlz'atlo'

LocaI stocks

Local weather

D:!,:;_

=-a:oldlnl

.·''

Lodge #363, F&amp;AM, 7) 0
p.m. All Master Masons
mvited. Refreshments.
'

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

'

Church events;

.

LocAL ScHEDULE

·Thursday, Sept. 27 ·
POMEROY - Revival
will be held at the Calvarx
. Pilgrim Church, S.R. I 43.J
Pomeroy, S!i,pt. 27 -3~ . 1
p.m.
each
evenmg .
Richard McKenzie, evangelist; special singing.
Rev. Charles McKenzie,
pastor. For more informa~
lion call 992-2952.
:
Sunday, Sept. 30
REEDSVILLE
· "Delivered" to sing at
· Reedsville
United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m. ·
RACINE - Eagle Ridge
Church
Homecoming;
morning services, I 0 a.m.;
carry in dinner at noon:
afternoon singing at I p.m,
and preaching by JerrY.
· Frederic~. ,
•·
HOBSON ,
Homecoming a~ ~:~~iti3
Chrlstiah
F
Church, with l\lnCl1, .
noori: Randall Farley
preach. ''Mercy" to sing:.'

111

POMEROY- A achedule of upootN1g ~
lnd tirjl school varwity sportilg ewr1a i'l'IOM'Ig

iean from Meigs Cou1lee:.

Tut••v·•
S1IITll ~
Volleyball
Eastern at Meigs, 6 p.m.

b

WIIIWdft•l MIDI
Volleyball
1\ltelgs at Southern, 6 p.m.

Tlal"*t'• 9111111
Voltoyboll

NelaonviiJe.VQrk at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 6 p.m.

"

SPORTS BRIEFS

Eastern volleyball
selling t-shirts for
breast cancer
awareness Thursday
TUPPERS PLAINS The · Eastern Lady Eagles
'-.&gt;lleyball team, in an
attempt ·to raise money for
breast cancer awareness,
~Ul be selling t-shirts
Thursday during their home
TVC
Hocking
match
against Waterford.
The t-shirts will cost $7
apiece, with $1 of each sale
going towards this fundraiser cause: The t-shirts are
also pink. .
Anyone inierested in purchasing one of 'these shirts
should be in attendance this
ii:hursday at Eastern Hij!h
School. The junior vars1ty
game will start at 6 p.m.,
with the varsity contest fol~wing ·afterward.

Prosecutor will
seek indictments
in case at Mike
Vick
property
..
..

- RICHMOND, Va. (AP)
- •The prosecutor in the
county .. w)lere J\t!aQta
Falcons·"-, quarterback
Michael Vick has admitted
to bankrolling a dogfighting
operation plans to present
evidence to the grand jury,
Tuesday, that could possibly
·
lead to an indictment
."Yes, I'm presenting matters to the grand jury that
Involve dogfighting at 1915
Moonlight Road," Surry
County
Commonwealth
f1,ttorney
Gerald
G.
Poindexter
told
The
1'\ssociated Press in a telephone interview Monday
flight.
: Moonlight Road is the
address of the two-story
home on I 5 mostly undeveloped acres that has been
host to "Bad Newz
. Kennels" since 2001. It's
where dozens of pit bulls
were found in April, and
where they were trained,
fought and brutally executed.
"Most of the matters that
I'm presenting .have already
been admitted in sworn
statements· authored by the
defendants·.. in the federal
proceeding~." Poindexter
said.
Poindexter couldn't detail
the exact indictments he
will pursue, l;mt said the
local investigation and the
federal investigatio11largely
focused on different crimes.
"The killing of dogs is
one of thoSl! statutory prohipitions. D9gfi·ghting is a
crime, the mistreatment of
animals is a -crime, so you
could take your· pick; or take
them all," Poindexter said
before cuttin¥, the.conversaiion short. 'I don't have
anything else to say about it.

, ..... ' " Vlck. 82

CoNTACT US
: OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)
·: t-740-446-2342 ext. 33

F.•• -

1-74Q-446-3008

~·mill-

BY JOE MILICA
ASSOCIATED PRESS

sportsOmydaltysentlnet.com

f oorta Staff

l!rad Sherman, Sporta EdHor
(740) 445·2342. ext. 33

bsherman C mydailytrlbune .com

larry Crum, Sports Writer
[740) 445·2342, ext. 2 3

k:rumOmydaityregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 445-2342. ext. 3 3

bwallerS@mydailytribune.com

CLEVELAND
Clinching the AL Central
Division title with a week
left in the regular season
gives the Indians plenty of
time to strategize for the
postseason.
It also gives fans the
opportunity to shop.
Although they were slow
to show up \It Jacobs Field
this season, fans responded
Sunday to the Indians' first
playoff b_erth in six years by ·
snapping up T-shirts, hats
and balls. It was the club's
second biggest day in mer_chandise sales for a regular
season game, said Kurt .
Schloss, Indians merchandising director.
Everything but XL, 2XL
and children's T-shirts were
sold out at the team shop at
Jacobs Field on Monday but
more were due to arrive later
in the afternoon.
Sam Maul walked out
with a white and blue division champions T-shi)'t, like
the ones the Indians wore in
the clubhouse during their
champasne and beer-soaked
celebration.
"It's a good team. It's not a
. high-priced, high-payroll
team, but they've got a
group of athletes that work
together and believe in
APpholo
themselves," said Maul, 50,
Eduardo Santacruz looks over Cleveland Indians championship T-shirts at the team's gift shop at Jacobs Field in Cleveland
of Cleveland.
Monday In Cleveland. The Indians clinched their first American League Central Division title since 2001 Sunday with a 6Please see Indians. 8:1
2 win over the Oakland Athletics.

Browns kicking
themselves for lastsecondlosstin Oakland .
BEREA (AP) - One
snap. One kick. One block.
In just three seconds, the
Cleveland Browns went
from blissful to bitter.
·Sunday's
game
in
Oakland came down to a
fmal, nail-biting play, and
when kicker Phil Dawson's
40-yard field goal attempt
was batted backward by
Raiders defensive end
Tommy Kelly, the Browns
had lost 26-24.
On top of that, they
missed a chance to win consecutive games for the first
time in the same season
since 2003 - an inconceivable span of 61 games.
The Black Hole swallowed the Browns whole.
"It hurts," wide receiver
Braylon Edwards said
Monday. "I feel like we
fought hard enough . We'
fought with enough fortitude and enough will and
determinatiop to win and
then to not have it go
through ... it hurts."
What made it more deflating for the Bro.wns (1-2) was
that Dawson had kicked the
apparent game-winner seconds earlier.
As Cleveland's field-goal
unit lined up for Dawson 's
kick, Oakland. coach Lane
Kiffin, who one week earlier
had watched Denver coach
Mike Shanahan smartly and
successfully ke Raiders
kicker Sebastian Janikowski
in an identical situation with
a timeout, told an official he

Wahama

High School vonevball

Lady Eagles down Lady
Buekey·es-in ·straight games··

wanted to stop the clock
.
before the attempt.
STAFF REPORT
each adde.d six . .Morgan Burt and Kelsey
Unaware , the Browns
sPORTSOMYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM
Holter chtpped m four. Also at the net,
went ahead with the play
Hayman and Burt had five blqcks and
and the snap, hold and kick
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern Lady Swatzel one.
.
were perfect as Dawson split Eagles, ranked NQ. 16 in the latest coaches
Megan Broderick handed out 27 assists.
the uprights.
poll, made short work of the visiting
Defensively, Morgan Werry played solidly
Forced to do it over, Nelsonville-York Lady Buckeyes in straijlht on the ba9k row as the libero.
Dawson's attempt barely got games during high school volleyball ac.tton
Eastern also made it a sweep Monday after
off the McAfee Coliseum Monday.
posting a 25-23, 25-11 victory in the junior
dirt as the Raiders' rush had
Coach Howie Caldwell's club improved to varsity tilt.
.
.
collapsed Cleveland's pro- 13-2 overall following the 25-12, 25-13, 25The Lady Eagles travel to netghbonng
tection.
2' victory. It was the seventh straight victo- Meigs today for a much-anticipated reThree years ago, the NFL ry overall for the Lady Eagles.
match with their county rivals. Junior varsidecided to allow head
Katie Hayman led the winners with II ty action begins at 6 p.m . followed by the
eoaches to call timeouts kills while Kate Wilfong and Tresa Swatzel . varsity main event.
frpm the sideline.
Edwards wishes the
league had let things be. .
''That's a suc~er rule
because it really does mess
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Ziegler served up three the set and 16 for the
with the kicker," he said.
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
"ebviously, two weeks in a
points for the hosts and game. and Allison Graves
Southern went down 17- had six point s.
r~: . It fi!essed
w!th
Se,basttan and 11 messed wtth
McARTHUR The 15·. Scoring one point at a
Riffle was 19-21 passVinton
County time, VC held on to win in g, and 11 - 12 s ervin~
Pq\1,this week. I think that's host
Viking s defeated
the 25-19.
a t~ker· rule ..
with six · dinks, Eddy was
..,1 m not '!}'mgto say any- Southern Lady Tornadoes
In the second game the 10- 17 passing and 7-8
th\il~ negallve agat!'ls~ NFL (7 -6) Monday night during hosts took an early lead of serving, and Ashley Robie
m!efo or (comm1ss1o~er) Tri-Valley
Conference 16-8 before Southern was 12- 16 passing . Hunter
Rq~er Good~ll or anythmg, inter-division volleyball closed the gap on the sec- was 9- 11 serving, while
bu8J thmk 11 really affects action. Vinton County won ond round of serving. Turley had four blocks and
the ' ktcker, .the protec~ton in three game s 25 • 19·, 2S- . Whitney Wolfe-Riffle and Robie three. As a team,
and ~e emot~on of.the team. 17, and 25-9.
The first two games were Chel sea Pape scor!!d five Southern was 39-44 serv It's ltke playmg wtth someclose, but close doesn't and four points re spective- ing, 3 f-41 spiking, and 7one's emotions.
·
"We can 't do anything count on the hardwood.
ly going down the stretch 13 blocking .
Southern
won
an
excitabout it. So we have to
In the first game, Vinton to cut the lead to 23 -17,
move .forward and hope we C ounty overcame a 6 -4 but Casay Puckett and in g reserve match 13-2 5.
don.~ ~et put in that situation . deficit to lead 10-6. The Ziegler served up the last 25-15, and 26-24. Breanna
agatl). '
Lady Vikes then led 14-11, two point s for the win, 25- Taylor had 15 points, Katie
~wson -didn't find any but four serves from Kasey 17 ·
Wood s had II , Sarah
fault · with the Raiders' Turley gave Southern a 15VC scored early and Malt hews had nine, and
gamesmanship.
14 edge. Southern lost the often in the finale. Puckett Lind say Teaford had II.
Southern hosls Mei gs on
momentum and that made had seven on the second
Please see Browns, 1:1
all the difference. Megan serve, Ziegler had six for Wednesday.

Vinton County drops Southern

in bid lor

score of 472 and
Huntington St. Joe,
because of two
players withdrawmg. was unable to
STAFF REPORT
compete for the
SPORTSII&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
team competition.
MADISON, W.Va. - Wahama's
However, all was
attempt for a third straight appear-.
not lost for the
ance in the State High Golf
Wahama team . Both
Tournament fell short Monday at the :_
Dave Greene, with
Riverview Golf Club.
Greene
a score of 86, and
Five teams played 18 holes in a ,
Adam Roush, who
play five , count four format with the "turned in a score of 87 , qualified as
top two teams winning berths to the _individuals for the state tournament
state tournament. Wahama finished , which will be played October 2 and
in third place with a team score of 3 at the Oglebay Park Resort in
399 behind Man High School's win- , Wheeling.
ning score of 340 and the second .. In addition to the scores posted hy
place score of 379 from Buffalo.
Greene. and Roush in the regional
Tug Valley fini shed fourth with a competttJon , Brandon Johnson shot

Greene, Roush qualify
for State as individuals

strai

a 109 while Miriam
Gordon contributed
a 117 to the team's
final total. Austin
Gilbert also played,
but his score did not
count in the fin al
tally.
Lance West of
Huntington St. Joe
.__.....;.;;_ __, was the medalist for
Roush
the day shooting a
fine 76 . This effort
also qualified him for the state tournament as did the 82 shot by his
teammate, Thomas Dransfi eld .
Buffalo 's second place fini sh was
led oy Garrett Barnette, who shot a
81 for the day. Man 's leading scorer
for the day wa_s Tyler Browning,
who led the teams balanced scoring

with an 83.
Althou gh Wahama coach Bob
Blessing was disappointed with the
fmal team totals, he was proud of
both Dave Greene and Adam Roush.
"They are both fine young men
who have worked hard this season
and it is good to see them rewarded
for their effort s," Blessing said.
The future appears to be bright for
Wahama go If as all five of the players competing today are scheduled
to return next year.
"The potential for all 5 of tile
players that competed today is limited only by their des ire to achieve,"
Blessing added "Roush is currently
a junior while. Greene, Johnson and
Gilbert are sophomores and Gordon
is only a freshman . Next year could
be a good one."

�''

1

PRo BASEBALL
Eall DIYIIIOn

w l Pet
New York
87 69 .556
Philadelphia
85 71 .545
Ananta
82 74 .52ti
Washington
70 87 .446
Florida
66 90 .423
Central Dlvlolan
w l Pet
83 73 .532
Ch~
80 76 .513
Milwaukee
73 83 .466
St.Louis
Cincinnati
71 85 .455
68 88 .436
Hous1on
68 90 .423
Pl1tsburgh
WHtDivl8lon
W L Pet
88 88 .564
Ar1zona
85 71 .545
Sen DiegO
84 72 .538
Colorado
80 76 .513
Los Angeles
70 87 .448
San Francisco

GB

Braun, Milwaukee, 33; MiCabrera, .
Fk&gt;rtda, 33; CSYoung, Arizona, 32.
STOLEN BASEs-JBReyes, New Vor&lt;,
78; Pierre: Los Angeles, 61 ; HaRamirez,
Florida, 50; Byrnes, Arizona, 47;
Victorino , Philadelphia, 37; Rollins.
Philadelphia, 37; Wright, New York. 34.
PITCHING (16 DeolslonsrPenny, Los
Angeles, 16·4, .800 , 2.93; Harang,
Cincinnati, 16-5, 762, 3.70; Peavy, San
Diego, 18·6, .750. 2.36; Hamels,
I Philadelphia, 14·5,.737, 3.54; BIIHngsley,
1 Los Angeles. 12·5, .706, 3.09; BSheels,
' Milwaukee. ,2-5•. 706, 3.82: CVarga&amp;,
Milwaukee, 11-5, .881 , !5.10.
STRIKEOUT5-PeeyY, Sen Diego, 233;
Harang, Cincinnati, 205; Webb, Arizona,
192; Smoltz, AUanta, 189; RHIII,
Chicago, 179; CZambrano , Chicago.
173; Snell, Pittsburg h, 171.
SAVEs-Valverde,
Arizona,
46;
FCordero, Mitwaukee, 44; HoHman, San
Di&lt;'go. 40; Saito, Los Angeles, 39;.
CCordero, Waalllngton,. 36; BWagner,
New York. 34; Weathers, Clncinoatt, 33.

GB
3
10
12
15
17
GB

3
4
8
18\

Washington 13, N.Y. Me1s 4
Milwaukee 13, St. louis 5
San Francleoo 9, Sen Diego 4

Tu-y·ooamu

Chk:Bgo Cubo (UIIy 15-7) a1 Florida
(Willis 9·15), 7:05p.m.
Arizona (Davis 13-12) at Plneburgh
(Snell9·12), 7:05p.m.
AUan18 (James 11-10) a1 Philadelphia
(Moyer 13-11), 7:05p.m.
, Waalllngton (Bergmann 5-5) a1 N.Y.
Me1s (Giavlne 13-6), 7:10p.m.
Houlton (Paulino 0·1) a1 ClrM:Inna11
(Bailey 3-2), 7.1 0 p.m.
.
St. LOuis (Looper 12·11) a1 Milwaukee
(S~n 10.12), 8:05p.m.
CoJotado (Jimenez 4-4) at L.A. Dodgers
(Pollll)' 111-4), 10:10 p.m.
Sen Diogo (Tomko 4·11) · at San
Francisco (Cain 7·16), 10:15 p.m.
Wodnndloy'o Gamu
Chicago Cubla1 Florida, 7:05p.m.
Arizona at PIU&amp;burgh, 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7:05p.m.
Woa~lngton at N.V. Me1s, 7:10 p.m.
Houston at Clnclnnall, 7:10p.m.
St.Lou1s atMiwaukee, 8:05p.m.
Colorado at l:A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
San DiegO at Sen F~, 10:15 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING-C.Jones: Ai1anta, .(!4.1;
Holliday, Cotorsd9,
.337;
Utl~y;
Philadelphia, .335; H8Ramlrez, Florida •.
.333; Ren1eria, A11anta, .382; Wright;
New VO&lt;k, .32a: D'(oung, waattlngton,
.323. .
'
.
RUN5-Rolllno, Philadelphia, 132:
HaAamlrez, Florida, 1~8 ; JBReyes. New
York, 116; Holliday, Colorado, 113;
Uggla. Florida. 108; Wrlgh1, New York,
107; BPhlllips, Clnclnna11, 106.
RBI-Holll&lt;;lay, Colorado, 131; Howard,
Philadelphia, 125; Fielder, Milwaukee,
115; Calee, Houston, 115; MICabrera,
Florida, 112; Hawpe, Colorado, 106;
. Dunn, Cincinnati, 106; Beltran , New
York, 106.
HITS-HaRamlrez,
Florida,
205;
Holliday, Colorado, 205; ROllins,
Philadelphia, 203; Pierre, Los Angeles.
169; Wright, New Yorl&lt;, 187; JBAeyes,
New Vorl&lt;, 186; BPhl11ips, Clnclnna11,
184; Rowand, Philadelphia, 184.
DOUBLES- Uggta,
Florida,
48;
~ ':¥7;

- n I.Nguo
eut·DIYieiQn
W L Pel
z·SQiton
92 EW .590
New Vorl&lt;
90 116 .577
Toronto
79 77 .506
Behlmore
87 89 .429
Tampa Bay
.84 .92 .410
Central Dlvlolon
W L Pet
x-CteYellnd
92 63 .594
Oetroh
85 72 ,541
Minnesota
71 78 ,494
Chicago
116 116 · .&gt;136
KaneesCity
67 e8 ,429·

X·LOS Angelle
Seattle
Oa~and
Te~~:as

Dlvlllon
W L Pet··
92 66· .686
83 72 .636
75 82 .478
73 84 .485

GB

2
13
25
28
GB .
8

,51,1,

24~
25~

GB
8
17
19

x--c!lnched division
z.&lt;:llnched playoH spot

Sund•r'• Oamn
Ctavetknd 6, Oakland 2
N.Y, Yankees 7, Toron1o 5
Detrol17, Kansas City 2
Tampa Bay 5, Bos1on 4
Minna- 7, Chicago While Sox 1
Texas 3, Battlffiore 0
L.A. Angels 7, Seattle 4

Mondoy'ao-

MAaOII LEAGUE LEADt!RI

48:

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING- MOrdonez, Oetroft. .358 ;
!Suzuki, Seattle, .350; Polanco, Detroit,
.339; Posada, New York, .335; Lowell,
Bost~n, .~4; VGuerrero, Los Angeles,
RUNs-ARodriguez, New York, 138;
Detroit, 117; Sizemore,

i Granderson,

5
17\
21

Mondoy'o GanMie

, Colorado,

I
I

Clnclnnan, 40; Holliday, COlorado. 36; 1 .323, DOrtiz, Bos1on, .321 .

2

· Su~··­
W&amp;shington 5, Philadelphia 3
N.Y Mats 7, fbida 6, 11 innings
Atlanta 7, Mitwaukee 4
Chicago Cubs 6, Pittallurgh 0
Colorado 7, Sen Diego 3
San Francisco 5, Cincinnati 4
L.A. Dodgers 7, Allzona 1
St Louis 4, HouS1on 3

Holliday,

JBReyes, New York, 12; Johnson,
.Attanta, 10; Pence, Houston, 9;
Amezaga, Florida, 9; OHudson, Arizona.
9; OAoberts, San Francisco, 9.
HOME AUNs---f"~er. Milwaukee. 48;
Howard. . Ph lladel~hia , 42: Dunn,

,._"-""

Utley.

Rio"omlr8z, Florlda,·.S;

Rowand, Philadelphia, 44; AdGonzsJez,
San Diego, 43; Church, Washington, 42;
KGreene, San Diego, 42: FSanchez.
PiHeburgh, 42.
TRIPLE5-Rolllns, Philadelphia, 18;

PageB2

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

Toionto 4, N.Y. Van- 1
Mlnne801a 2, De1rol1 o
Ba111more 3, ~· Cily 2 '
Toxaa 8, L.A. Angopls 7 '

CleYelend, 117; BAbreu, New York, 115;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 11 3; Rtos, Toronto,
109; ISuzukl, ~e.ttle, 109.
'
RBI-ARodnguez, New York, 1.¢;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 133; VGuerrern, Los

Angeles, 123; CPena, TIJ1ll8 Bay, 116;
DOrtiz, BoeiOn, 112; Lowell, Booton, 110;
Markakis, Baltimore, 109; Morneau,
Mlnnesola, 109,
HIT5-1Suzukl,
Seattle,
227;
MOrdonez, Oetroij, 208; Je1er, NewVork,
198; MYoung, Texas, 197; Polanco,
Detroit. 193; OCabrera, Los Angeles,
192; Rios, Toron1o, 185.
DOUBLES-MOrdonez, Detroit, 51 ;
OOrti• . Bos1on, 48; AHin, Thronto, 45;
VGyerrero, Los Angeles, 45; THunter,
Mlnneso1e, 44; Markakls, Banlmore, 43;
Rios, Toronto, 42.
TAIPLE$-Granderson. Detroit, 22;
DeJestJs, Kansas City, 9; Crawford,
Tampa Bay, 9; CGulllen, De1rol1, 9;
lwamura, T,mpa Bay, 8; MeCabrara,
Nevi York, 8; Teahan, Kansas C~ 8.
HOME RUN$-,ARodriguez, Nfi'W Vorl&lt;,
52; CPena, Tampa Bay, 42; DOrtiz,
Boston, 32; ThOI)18, Chicago , 32;
Momeau, . Minnesota, 30; Konerko,
Chicago, 29; THuriter, Mi"neso1a, 28.
STOLEN BASEs-crawford, Tampa
Boy, 50; BAoberta, Bahlmllre, 48;
Figgins, Los Angelos, 40; l~uzukl ,
seante, 37: CPonerson, Baltimore, 37;
Sizemore, Cleveland, 33; JLugo, Boston,
30.
PITCHING (16 De&lt;:lolo.no)-6oekeU,
Boston, 20·6, .769, 3.1-4; Verfander,
Oetri:&gt;l1, 18·6, .750, 3.116; Bede,rd,
Baltimore, 13-5, .722, 3.16; Wang,' Now
Yort&lt;, 18·7, . .720, 3.7:1; · Sabathla,
Cleveland, 18·7, .720, 3.19;, KESCObar,
Los Angetee, 17·7, .708, a,48, carmona.
Ctevolond, ·18-8..692, 3.03. ·
STRIKEOUTS-JoSa.ntana,
Mtnneeo1a, 231; ·Kazmlr, T~inpa Bay,
229; Bedard, Balllmore, 221 ; Saba1hle,
Cleveland, 205; JVazquez. Chicago,
204; Matsuzaka, Boston, 193; Beckett,
Boston, 188.
·
SAVES-Borowskl , Cleveland, ' 43;
Jenks, Chicago, 39; PtJtz, Seattle, a9;
FrRodriguez. Loa Angeles, 38; TJones.
Detroit, 38; Papelbon, Boston, 36;
~athan, Minnesota. 35.

PRo FOOTBALL
Notional Footbelllloguo
.AMERICAN CONFERENCE

· Eaot

WL T Pet PF PA
New England 3 0 0 1.000 114 35
N.Y, Jeta
1 2 0 .333 58 88
Oakland (Gau'dih 11i12) ' at BootQ~ liuffaio
9 3 o .ooo 24 79
(Schmlng 8-8), 7:05 p.m.
,
Miami
0 3 0 .000 61 84
Mrnneaota (Gma 4-6) at Oe1rolt
South
(Bazardo H). 7:05 p.m.
WL T Pet
PF PA
Toronto (Burnett 9-7) at Balttmore Indianapolis a o o 1.000 9a 54
'(Burres 6·6). 7:05p.m.
210.6677654
Houston
N.Y Yankees (Clemens 6·6) at Tampa Jacksonville 210.6674634
Bey (Hammel2·5), 7.10 p.m
Tennessee 2 1 0 .667 64 46
LA. Angels (Moseley 4·3) at Texas
North
•(McCarthy 5·10 or Wrlgh13·5), 8:05 p.m.
WL T Pet
PF PA
Kansas City (Bannister 12·9) at
3
0
0
1.000
97 26
Pittsburgh
Chicago White Sox (Contreras 1Q..16),
Baltimore
2 1 0 .6676663
8:11p.m.
120 .3339395
Cleveland (Laffey 3·2) at Seattle Cincinnati
1 2 0 .333 82 .105
Cleveland
(F.Hernandez 13-7), 10:05 p.m.
We•t
Wldneldey'• Gan)M
WL T Pet
PF PA
LA Angels at Texas, 2:05p.m.
Denver
2 1 0 .667 52 57
Oakland a1 Bos1on, 5:05pm.
Kansas Cliy 1 2 0 .333 Z6 SO
Minnesota at Detroit, 7:0&amp;p.m.
1 2 0 .333 67 83
Cleveland at Seattle, 705 p .m , 1st Oakland
San Diego 1 2 0 .333 52 72
game
~ NAnONAL CONF!!iiENC&amp;
· Toronto at Battfmbre,''7:05 p.m .
Eaat
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 7 :10p.m:
WL T Pet
PF PA
Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 8·11
Dallas
3 0 0 1.000 116 65
p.m.
Cklveland •at Seattle, 10 35 p.m., 2nd Washington 2 1 0 .667 53 49 ·
game
N.Y. Glen1s 1 2 0 .333 72 97

,_y·a·q.n,...

Philadelphia 1 2 o .333 81 57
Sovth
WL T PCJ PF PA
CaroiV\a
2 1 0 .667 75 67
Tampa Bay 2 1 0 .667 61 37
A11an1s
0 3 0 .000 3064
New Orleans 0 3 0 .000 38103
North
Wl T Pet PF PA
·Green Bey 3 0 0 1.000 B2 50
Detroit
210 .6677794
Chicago
120 .3333358
1 Minnesota
1 2 0 .333 51 38

Tuesday, September 25, 2007
2 2 1 5 12
0 2 2 2 6
PocHic Dlvlolon
W L OT Pis GF
a o 1 1 12
San Joee
a 1 1 1 18
PhOenix
3 3 1 7 17
Anaholm
Los,Ange!es
3 2 0 8 19
1 2 1 a· 11
Dallas

TRANSACTIONS

some rest who need it," general manager Mark Shapiro
said. "We want them to be
in position to. win that first
series."
With 18-game winners
C.C. Sabathia and Fausto
Carmona likely to pitch
twice in the five-game division series, Shapiro and
.manager Eric Wedge must
decide whether Paul Byrd
or Jake Westbrook will
pitch Game 3. The 25-man
postseason roster also must
be set.
The final week of the sea-

son also ~ives designated
hitter Trav1s Hafner a little
more time to get on a tear.
Hafner's average and power
numbers are down - he's
hitting .256 with 23 home
runs, but needs just four
RBis to reach 100 for the
fourth straight season.
The Indians will . likely
face Boston or New York in
the division series. two
clubs they've struggled
against this year, going 2-5
against the Red Sox and 0-6
vs. the Yankees.
Arlene Wise, a native

Clevelander who lives in
New York - and has gotten
into some· fights at Yankee
Stadium - would love to
see the Yankees knocked
out again.
"I've never changed my
allegiance to the Cleveland
Indians," Wise said. "I'm
delighted. I'm glad to see
them back. I just hope they
go all the way."
She picked up a Sabathia
shirt at the team shop
Monday where another popular, sold-out item is the red
"It's Tribe Time Now" T-

Coach Romeo Crennel
was more severe than usual
in assessing his team's performance following the
game. The long flight home
soothed him some. but
Crennel was discouraged by
the Browns' overall effort.
"I don't think we played
very well," he said. "That's
disapP.ointing because you
feel hke you can get something done, make something ha~pen and then w])en
you don t play well it's disappointing. Even if we had
won the game I would have
been di sappointed with the

way that we played."
Crennel, too, lamented
the Browns' inability to get
up for a team they matched
up
well
against.
Cleveland's talent is at least
comparable to Oakland's,
and Crennel felt that his
players may have underestimated the Raiders.
Beating Cincinnati in a
shootout may have given
the Browns a false sense of
security -and stature.
"Last week, one of the
things I talked about was
everybody would say that
we can score 51 points &lt;1

game and sometimes, guys ranked 31st overall in total
believe that," he said. "I defense, allowing 431 yards
think, maybe, we felt that per game. By contrast, the
we could score 51 . You New England Patriots have to be ready to play Crennel's former empl.oyeveryone in the NFL. You er - are giVIng up JUSt
can't just roll your hat out 207 .
Cleveland can't stop the
there and expect you're
run,
either, as teams are
going to win JUSt because
176 ~ards .
averaging
you think you're good.
Crennel didn t start nose
"You have to prove tackle Ted Washington on
you're good on every play Sunday and hinted at other
and every Sunday."
personnel chanj!es.
Through three Sundays,
"I'm really dt sappointed
Cleveland's defense could- because I know you can't
n't be much worse.
win in the NFL if you
The Browns have given can't stop the run ," he
up II TD passes and are said. ·

Browns
fromPageBl
"If they have timeouts
left, they should have the
. right to call a timeout," he
said.
And Ryan Pontbriand,
who watched his long snap
sail cleanly to the holder,
offered a funny viewpoint.
"From an upside-down
r.erspective," he said,
'everything looked good."
The Browns, hoping to
(

build off a 51-45 win over
Cincinnati a week earlier,
were their own worst
enemy. The)' came out lifeless and the1r early mistakes
- Cleveland was called for
three penalties on its first
drive
allowed the
Raiders to open a 16-0
deficit.
"Whatever the reasons
were, we came out flat,"
said Edwards, who had four
catches for 83 yards and a
touchdown. "Obviously it
, affected us in the first half,
and by the time we woke up
it was too late."

Websjtes:

vo;:.::;...

Word Ads

Oea.tllfir~

Dl•pl.y Ad•

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday•Frld•y for ln-rtlon
In Next D•y•e Paper
~~:~~'&gt;:,.~•.~n-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Sunctev• Paper

Monday thru Friday
:00
to 5:00p.m.

a.m.

• All ada must be prepaid'

• Slart Your Adl Wltb A KeywOf'd • lndude Complete
Delcrlptfon • lnduchl A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltlonl
• Include Phone Number And Add,_ When Needed
• Acft: Should RUR 7 D8ya
.

\'\'\I JI '\1 I \II '\I...,

All Dl•pl•y: 12 Noon 2
Bu.ln••• Daye Prior To
Publlc.tlon
Sund•y Dl•play: 1:00
Thurwct-v for sundaya

t rro: I

Now you can have borders and oraphlcs
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
{.;,~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
1!1111
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for Iaroe

.-t.,.,

POUCIEI: Ohkl Ylllly PubiWNnt NMI'YM the right tD Mit, Nfec:l, or cancel t1rf eel
time. Enora mu:tt be reported on
TrlbuM-Stntlnii-RetltW Will IN raponllfblt for no moit thin the COlt of the ._,. occupMcl by 1M .,-or Met oniJ the flrallnMrilon.
MW . _ or elplftN thll rttUIII from tM pubHcltlon or omlttion of en lldtoertleemenl. Cort.-tiOt'l wHI N midi In tiMI flrllt tvalllblt eclltlon. • Bo•
ocwiif*'•llal. • Cunwnl 11M Ani ....lea. • All fNI ...... tiCMitltementl 111
10 IN Fecttral Ftlr Houtlng Act of 1tll. •llU
....,._ W. will

In vtoAition of 1M llw.

MOBILE HOMES

KITI"'_a._c_A_R_Lv_L_E_______._,.,,__..,..-----

roRSALE

kltncorlyl. .comcut. net

1 FQUNIJ:

Small Goat, Ear
Tag, 304-675-6785
1 Female blaok Lab, 1 male - - - - - - - ml• breed 304·576-2490
Lost at Pomer01; Blues Fest.
Blue Pic album. Return to
2 nice inside 4 mo okl Court St. Grill or call 740•
' female kittens, short haired, 992•2090_$50 reward.
tested for fetlne leukemia. ---~---­
(740)448-46j3
Los1 mala beagle, belaYed
Free kittens, call (740)949- childrens pet, no collar, has
pink spots on hi&amp; nose,
3406
answers•10 i111e buddy, Lost
on Debbie Or off 141,
Reward for return, call
(740)208·0376

•NOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
throu~ the mall until yoo
hall&amp; Investigated the
altering.

All rool-11 odvll'lllllng
In thl1 fiiWIPiper II
au~t to

the F,.,_l
F•lr HOUalngAct of 111H

which

""""'It lllopl to

Hvertt• "•ny

p~Wferwnce,

tlmll8tlon or

dl-.:rlmlnMion baMd on

MONEY
To loAN
**NOTII:E**

rq color, rtllglon, ••
l•mlllal .t.tut or Nltlon•l
origin, or •ny Intention to
m11kt .-ty such
preference,llmltlltlon or
dlscrlmlnlltion."
Thla newspaper will not
knowlngtr occopt
lldvertiHments tor ,..,
...... whlch .. ln
vlol.tlon of the law. Our
,rndert .,. hereby
informtel that Ill

!'l•w

since Aug. 25, feel there's
no reason to let up now.
"It's really important for
us to try to get home-field
from PageBl
advantage," first baseman
With seven games left and Ryan Garko said. "We
won't be able to relax until
baseball's best record at 92- we know where we stand."
63 entering Monday night,
While these last seven
the Indians could still win games at Se'attle and Kansas
home-field
advantage City have plenty of meanthroughout the postseason ing, the Indians also need to
and decide when the AL have everybody fresh for
division series begins, Oct. the postseason.
"We're still trying to end
3 or4.
The Indians, who have this thing with the best
won II of 14 and' are 22-6 record and get some guys

Indians

In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E-mail
www.mydailysentinel.com
classlfied@mydailytribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.myclallyregistBr.com
PLUS .YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
ijtribune
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
(7!0) To446~!42 (7!~1 To~~~;!!~6 (304) 675-1333

So""

I'm through with it. Hopefully it's coming to an end."
As is the case in grand jury hearings, the prosecutor will
present evidence and the grand jury will decide whether or
nofto proceed. Vick, his co-defendants and lawyers are not
permitted to attend the closed proceeding.
Efforts to reach Vick's lawyers by telephone and email were not successful.
Vick and three co-defendants have already pleaded
guilty to conspiracy charges in the case, and all are
awaiting senteQcing in federal court before the end of
the year.
Vick, who faces. up to five years in prison on the fed·
eral charges, also has been indefinitely suspended
without pay by the NFL and been dropped by all his
major sponsors, including Nike.
The local charges, and a conviction, could spell an
end to any hope he has of resuming his NFL career
after serving a likely federal prison term.
An animal cruelty charge in Virginia is punishable
by up to five years in prison, and Vick adinilted in his
written plea to helping kill six to ejght pit bulls days
before the first raid.

fromPageBl

C LAs·S I F·l E D

15
15

aeveland•based Flash Seats
lawsuit alleges patent infringement

'

ijtribune - Sentinel -

.

0 J.D. Forrost, 0 Noah Babin, F Kel1h
Aucoin, F Patrick Dwyer and F Jakub
Potruzalek to Albany (AHL).
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS....
GA
8
Reassigned F Klr111 Starkov, F Adam
15
Plneaull. F Geoff Platt. D Mlkko
15
Maenpaa and 0 Dan LaCosta to
20
Syracuse (AHL).
21
EDMONTON OILEAs-Reeaslgned 0 .
T.J. Kemp and LW Adam Huxley to
Two jX)inta lola win. one potnt lor &lt;War- Sprlngtleld (AHL).
.
time loss or shootout lou.
MONTREAL CANADIEN5-Aaljlned
G Cedrlck Desjardins, G Lolc Lacsisse,
Bundoy'o,GomM
G Yann Danis, 0 Jon Gleed, 0 Andrew
W.,t
Montreal A, Booton 3
WL T Pet PF PA
Archer, 0 Mathieu Biron, 0 Pavel
Buffalo 3, Columbus 2, SO
San Fran
2 1 0 .1167 ~ 70
Valentenko, 0 Jamie Rivers, D Marvin
Chicago 4, St. louis 3
2 1 0 .587 6450
Seattle
Degen~ 0 Mathieu Carle, 0 Jean·
Anaheim 5, Vancouver 0
Arizona
1 2 0 .333 63etl
Philippa Co1o, F Mathieu Aubin, F Eric
030 .000 3268
Monday'• Gam••
StLouis
Mantow, F Duncan MHroy, F Gregory
New Jeruy 3, Philadelphia 1
S1ewart, F Man D'Agoe11nl, F Sergei
N.Y. tslandel'l 5, N.Y. Rangers 4, OT
Sllnday'o Gamoo
Kosti1syn, F Cory Urquhart, F Jimmy
Ottawa 4, Toronto 3, OT
N.Y. Je15 31, Miami·2S
Bonneau, F Francis Lemieux. F
Tampa Bay 4, Oe1rott 3
Jona1han Ferland, F Ajay Baines, F
I Baltimore 26, Arizona 23
Minnesota 2, Buffalo 1
Green Bay a1, San Otego 24
Janna Lahti, F Corey Locke; F Ryan
TuHclay'oGameo
New England 38, Bunato 7
Russell, F David Desharnais and F
Chicago at Florida, Noon
Indianapolis 30, Houston ~ 4
ThOmes Beauregard to Hamilton (AHL).
Nashville at Attanta, 7 p.m.
Kanees City 13, Mlnneaota 1o
Returned F Ben Maxwell to Kootenay
Philadelphia at onawa, 7 p.m.
Pittsb..gh 37, San Franctecq 16
(WHL) and Ryan White 1o Calgary
Carohna at Washington, 7 p.m.
TIJ1ll8 Bey 24, SL Louis a '
(WHL).
N.Y. Rangers at Detroit, 7:30p .m.
Phlla~lphla 51!, Detroit 21
PHILADELPHIA FLYER5-Promoted
Oakland 26, Cll!valand 24
Dallas at ColoradO. 9 p.m.
Shawn TIIger to senior vice president of
Sen Jose a1 Calgary, 9 p.m.
Seattle 24, CinCinnati 21
busli'less operatiOns.
Edmonton at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Jacksonv11ae 23, Denver 1-4
PHOENIX COYOTE5-Asslgned LW
Wodnoadoy'o Gameo
· C.rollna 27, Atlanta 20
·
Kevin Cormier, D Travis Roche and D
N.Y. Islanders va . New Jersey at Keith Van~1e to San An1ooio (AHL).
N!N.·Gian1s 24, washington 17
Lowell, Maas., 7 p.m.
··
Dellao (!4, Chicago 10
Returned LW Tomas Surovy to lulaa ot
Washington a1 Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Mondoy'o Go!M
the Swedieh League.
BuHalo at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.
Tennessee 3~, New Or1eans 14
SAN JOSE SHARKS-Aeslgned G
Atlanta at Aorlda, 7:30p.m.
Sunday,
:10
Taylor Oakers, 0 Derek Joslin, LW
St. Louis at Minnesota, 8;30 p.rR.
Chlcllgo at Detro11; 1 p.m.
Dennis Packard, ~W Nate Raduns and
Calgary at Edmonton , 9 p.m.
St. lools at Dallao, 1 p.m.
0 Toni Waloh 1o Worc01ter (AHL).
San Jose at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Oakland at Miami, 1 p.m.
COLLEGE
Houston at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
INDIANA STAT~-Announced Lou
N. v. Je1s at BuHalo, 1 p.m.
West. 1ootball coach, has been reu·
Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.1
Signed within the university. Named
. Bal~more at Cleveland, 1 p.m. · ~
Mondoy'o Bportl TranuciiOno
Dennis Raetz Interim 1oo1ball coeoh.
-. Se~ttle at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m·.
MONTCLAIR STATE- Named Karin
BASEBALL
Tampa Bay at Carolina, 4:06 p.m.
Harvey Interim women's basketball
Major lolguo -boll
Denver at Indianapolis, 4:15 p.m.·
1
MLB-Suspended Minnesota minor coach.
· Kanees City at San Otego, 4:15p.m.
league C Ell Tln1or (Balolt-MWL) lor 50
l't11sburgh a1 Arizona, 4:15 •p.m.
Mljor LNgue Socc«
gan'lea following a positive test for a drug
Philadelphia at N.Y. Gian11, 8:15p.m.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
of abuse.
Opan: Waohin~on. Jac;keonYijlo, No~
W l T PtoGF GA
American Laague
.
Orleaf]s, Tenneaeee
'· '
15 8 5 50 49 '29
OAKLAND ATHLETIC5-Exarclsed x·D.C. Unl1ed
Mondly, Oet. 1·
·
2008 and 2009 contract options on Bob x-New England 13 6 7 46 45 36
New England at Cincinnati, 8:30 p.m.
New York
11 10 5 36 41 39
Geren, manager, and 28 Mark Ellis.
Kanoas City
10 10 6 38 41 41
Notlonol l.Hgue
8 10 8 32 27 34
PRoHoc~v
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE9-Cialmed Chicago
7 9 10 31 '31 36
OF T.J. Bohn off waivers trom the Atlanta Colun-llus
Toronto
FC
6
14 8 21 19 39
Notlonol Hockoy Loogt»
Braves.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Pre...eon Glance
SAN DIEGO PADRE5-Acqulred OF
W L T PtsGFGA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Jason Lane from the Houston Astros for
x.CO Chlvas'
14 8 5 47- 41 23
Allontlc Dlvloton
a player 1o be named or cash consider&amp;·
13 7 6 45 38 21
x·Houston
W lOT PlaGF GA tiona.
12. 10 4 40 34 38
FC Dallas
N.Y. Iolande&lt;&amp; 2 1 2 6 14 15
BASKETBALL
7118292631
Colorado
Now Jersey
2 2 0 4 11 8
, Notlonol Booke1boU AIOOCIIIIon
Philadelphia
2 2 0 ·4 9 9
Real Salt lake 5 13 8 23 26 39
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORs-signed Los Angeles
5 13 6 21 30 43
Pi1teburoh
' 1 2 4 9 11
G Troy Hudeon.
N.Y. Rangers
1 1, 1 3 8 13
MILWAUKEE BUCKS-W&amp;Ived G Lynn
· Northoon Dlvlolon
NOTE: Three P,O(n1s tor victory, one
Greer.
W L OT' PtoGF GA
point tor lie.
WASHINGTON WIZARDs-Re·slgned
Ottawa
4 0 0 8 15 8
x-cllnched playoH spot
G Roger Mason to a one-year contract.
3 3 0 6 14 17
Montreal
FOOTBALL
2 ,. 2 6 14 15
Toronto
Thurodoy'o Gno
N1Uonot Football LllgUI
1 2 1 3 9 12
Boston
Los Angeles at Kansas City, 8 p.m.
DETROIT
LIONS-51gned
TE
Buffalo
120 2 5 8
saturdtiy'a Gai!Mia
Courtnay Andereon. WaiYed TE Rudy
Southuat Dlvlalon
Toron1o FC at D.C. Untted, 7:30p.m.
Sylvan.
W L OT P1sGF GA
Colorado at New Engtand, 7:30 p.m.
GREEN BAY PACKER5-Signed WR
Florida
3 1 0 6 11 7
Real Satt Lake at
Yorl&lt;, 7130 p.m .
Shaun
Bodiford.
Released
WR
Chris
Carolina
210487
Chicago
at
CO
Chi
vas
USA,
10:30 p.m.
Francies.
Tampa Bay
2 1 0 4 9 8
sundoy'aGomeo
HOCKEY
A11anta
2 2 0 4 12 12
Houston at FC Dallas, 3 p.m.
Notional Hockoy l.Hgue
Washington
1 1 1 3 9 10
Los Ange les at C,olumbus, 5 p.m.
BOSTON BRUINS....Traded C Mark
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Thurodoy, Oct. 4
Mowers to Anaheim · for D Nathan
Central Dtvlalon
New York at.Toronto FC, 7 p.m.
Saunders and D Bran Skinner. Assigned
W L OT . PtsGF GA
Friday, Oct. 5 .
Saundere, Skinner. F Vladimir Sobolke
Nashville
3 1 0
6 12 8
D.C.
Untted
at Kanees Ciiy, 8 p.m. ·
and
D
Jona1han
Slgate1
to
Providence
Detroit
3 2 0 6 17 10
Soluiday, Dct 8
(AHL).
Chicago
2 2 1 5 15 16
FC Dallas at Columbus, 7:30p.m .
BUFFALO SABRE5-Ae1Urned 0 T.J.
Columbus
2 2 1 5 14 14
New England at Chicago, 6:30 p.m. •
Brennan and C Joan-Simon AHa~ to St.
St. louiS-·
- 1· -3 0
2 12 15
co Chlvsa USA a1 Real san Lake, 9
John's (CMJHL), 0 Drew Schles1el to
Northwnt Dlvlalon
W L OT P1sGF GA Niagara (OHL), C Pau l Byron to p.m.
sunday, oct. 7
Gatinoau (CMJHL) and C Benjamin
Colorado
3 0 1 7 18 12
Los Angeles at Houston, 3 p.m.
BreauR to Bele-Comeau (OMJHL).
Edmonton
3 1 0 B 17 15
Toronto FC at Colorado, a p.m.
CAROUNA . HURRICANE5-Asslgned
Minnesota
3 1 0 6 11 13

Vancouver

Calgary

Though not likely, that alone could expose him to as
many as 40 years in prison .
Vick, in his written plea, also admitted to supplying
money for gambling on the fights involving Bad Newz
Kennels dogs. He said he did not personally place any
bets or share in any winnings, but gave his three codefendants all those proceeds:
The co-defendants , all of whom pleaded guilty
before Vick and detailed what they said was his
involvement, agreed to testify against him had the case
gone to trial.
The case. began in late April when authorities conducting a drug investigation of Yick's cousin raided
the former Virginia Tech star's property and seized
dozens of dogs, most of them pit bulls, and equipment
commonly associated with dogfighting.
Six weeks later, with the local investigation perceived to be dragging and a search warrant allowed to
expire, federal agents arrived with their own search
w.arrants and started digging up· dog· carcasses buried
days before the first raid.
Poindexter, who had been widely criticized for the
pace of the investigation, reacted angrily when the
feds moved in, suggesting that Vick's celebrity was a
draw, or that their pursuit of the case could have racial
overtones . He later eased off those comments, saying
that the sides would simply be pursuing parallel investigations.

Vick

www. m~dallysentlnel.com

dwelling~

ldvert!Hd In

thla MWIIM!pet' aN

avliltltM on •n equal
Oflpomrnlrt - ·

tion."

The Cleveland Cavaliers nearly a year ago were. the first
NBA team to agree to 'use the ticketing technology. Cavaliers'
owner Dan Gilbert is also the principal owner of Flash Seats.
Paciolan provides sports and entertainment venues with the
software needed for automated ticketing.
The company enables venues to sell directly to customers,
unlike ticketins providers that compete with sports and entertainment orgamzations, Paciolan says on its Web site. In doing
so, Paciolan says it helps to fill empty seats and improve customer relationships.
shirts that stadium workers
have been wearing..
"Fans were trying to buy
them off our back for $30 or
$50 a shirt," Schloss said.
The club asked fans to
wear red during the Indians
sweep of Detroit last week
and the fans have embraced
the new look.
"This red color sort of
stands out," Schloss said.
"While it's the secondary
color for the team, it's
become the primary color
for the fans for the postseason run."

'

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vlnytlshlngle.
Must seR, Only $25,995 with
dellwry. can (740)385·4367

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 per month, Includes
• many upgrades, delvery &amp;
ee1-up. (740)365·2434
Nice used 3 bedroom home
YlnyVshlngle. Will help with
dellwry. 740·385-4367

OWNER FINANCING
Nice 312 slnglewkles
From $1 ,800 down
payment
Gary (740) 826·2750

2.12 acres Walnut Creek
Samtllll Rd. Utilities ready,
Fla1 101. $25,000/0BO 304·
675·4411 Leave Message

CLEVELAND (AP) - Electronic ticketing venture Flash
Seats filed a federal lawsuit on Monday seeking to guard
against what it considers patent infringement.
.
The lawsuit in the U.S. District Court of Delaware alleges
that Irvine, Calif.-based Paciolan's Ticket Marketplace
infringes on Flash Seats' patent for electronic ticketing. The.
lawsutt seeks a court order protecting its patent and awarding
unspecified damages.
Flash Seats offers sp&lt;_~rts teams and live entenainment venues
paperless electronic ticketing, and provides season ticket holders a way to sell and transfer seats electronically.
·
Sam Gerace, Cleveland-based Flash Seats' chief executive
officer, said the lawsuit was (tied "to protect our customers
against imitators who have not done the hard work of innova-

•

2000 Clayton 24X56, 3 BR,
2BA , 314 acre in Green
Township. $79,900. Cal;
740·845-7113

Part·time position needed,
btlllng experience preferred,
send resume to: P.O. Box
368, Pomeroy. Oh 45769

Hall Time busrness office
position availttble, with some

computer knowledge.
An EKCellent way to earn Some medicaVdentalexperi·
ence helpful.
mc."~ey The New Avon.
Reply lo. TSC Box 17 c/o
Call Marilvn 304·882·2645
Potnt Pleasant Register 200
Main, Point Pleasant, WV
Aremark Correctional
25550
Services Is accepting
applications for Food
Heatth Care Serv1ces Group
Service Supervisors.
Nations
leading
Competitive wages and full The
benefit package. Must be provider or enviromental
able to pass a background services to the long term
care 1ndustry is looking for
check.
house
keepers/laundry
can 404·326·6758
- - - - - - - - aides for local nursing home.
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Apply in person : 36759
Sell Shirley Spears. 304· Aochprings Road, Pomeroy
675·1429. \
Ohio.

-·

--···---- -- ·----------·-·-···-·· ·---

-. --

POST OFFICE NIJW
HIRING
Avg . Pay $20/hr or
$!57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OT,Paid Training,
Vacations-FT/PT
1·866·542·1531
USWA
-------PreciSion Electric now Hiring
Licensed Electricians. Call
for Interview 304-:675·8076
We are looking for people
aged 12·14, 18·24 and Untv.
of Rio Grande Students to
participate in a tun study
that pays $70 in Gallipotis on
9/25 &amp; 9/26. Please call
Opinions, ltd at sn-893·
0300 eKt.l and mention the
Galtlpotls study for more
information.

- --- ·-------------·-----------~--. ------ ·--- . .

�''

1

PRo BASEBALL
Eall DIYIIIOn

w l Pet
New York
87 69 .556
Philadelphia
85 71 .545
Ananta
82 74 .52ti
Washington
70 87 .446
Florida
66 90 .423
Central Dlvlolan
w l Pet
83 73 .532
Ch~
80 76 .513
Milwaukee
73 83 .466
St.Louis
Cincinnati
71 85 .455
68 88 .436
Hous1on
68 90 .423
Pl1tsburgh
WHtDivl8lon
W L Pet
88 88 .564
Ar1zona
85 71 .545
Sen DiegO
84 72 .538
Colorado
80 76 .513
Los Angeles
70 87 .448
San Francisco

GB

Braun, Milwaukee, 33; MiCabrera, .
Fk&gt;rtda, 33; CSYoung, Arizona, 32.
STOLEN BASEs-JBReyes, New Vor&lt;,
78; Pierre: Los Angeles, 61 ; HaRamirez,
Florida, 50; Byrnes, Arizona, 47;
Victorino , Philadelphia, 37; Rollins.
Philadelphia, 37; Wright, New York. 34.
PITCHING (16 DeolslonsrPenny, Los
Angeles, 16·4, .800 , 2.93; Harang,
Cincinnati, 16-5, 762, 3.70; Peavy, San
Diego, 18·6, .750. 2.36; Hamels,
I Philadelphia, 14·5,.737, 3.54; BIIHngsley,
1 Los Angeles. 12·5, .706, 3.09; BSheels,
' Milwaukee. ,2-5•. 706, 3.82: CVarga&amp;,
Milwaukee, 11-5, .881 , !5.10.
STRIKEOUT5-PeeyY, Sen Diego, 233;
Harang, Cincinnati, 205; Webb, Arizona,
192; Smoltz, AUanta, 189; RHIII,
Chicago, 179; CZambrano , Chicago.
173; Snell, Pittsburg h, 171.
SAVEs-Valverde,
Arizona,
46;
FCordero, Mitwaukee, 44; HoHman, San
Di&lt;'go. 40; Saito, Los Angeles, 39;.
CCordero, Waalllngton,. 36; BWagner,
New York. 34; Weathers, Clncinoatt, 33.

GB
3
10
12
15
17
GB

3
4
8
18\

Washington 13, N.Y. Me1s 4
Milwaukee 13, St. louis 5
San Francleoo 9, Sen Diego 4

Tu-y·ooamu

Chk:Bgo Cubo (UIIy 15-7) a1 Florida
(Willis 9·15), 7:05p.m.
Arizona (Davis 13-12) at Plneburgh
(Snell9·12), 7:05p.m.
AUan18 (James 11-10) a1 Philadelphia
(Moyer 13-11), 7:05p.m.
, Waalllngton (Bergmann 5-5) a1 N.Y.
Me1s (Giavlne 13-6), 7:10p.m.
Houlton (Paulino 0·1) a1 ClrM:Inna11
(Bailey 3-2), 7.1 0 p.m.
.
St. LOuis (Looper 12·11) a1 Milwaukee
(S~n 10.12), 8:05p.m.
CoJotado (Jimenez 4-4) at L.A. Dodgers
(Pollll)' 111-4), 10:10 p.m.
Sen Diogo (Tomko 4·11) · at San
Francisco (Cain 7·16), 10:15 p.m.
Wodnndloy'o Gamu
Chicago Cubla1 Florida, 7:05p.m.
Arizona at PIU&amp;burgh, 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7:05p.m.
Woa~lngton at N.V. Me1s, 7:10 p.m.
Houston at Clnclnnall, 7:10p.m.
St.Lou1s atMiwaukee, 8:05p.m.
Colorado at l:A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
San DiegO at Sen F~, 10:15 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING-C.Jones: Ai1anta, .(!4.1;
Holliday, Cotorsd9,
.337;
Utl~y;
Philadelphia, .335; H8Ramlrez, Florida •.
.333; Ren1eria, A11anta, .382; Wright;
New VO&lt;k, .32a: D'(oung, waattlngton,
.323. .
'
.
RUN5-Rolllno, Philadelphia, 132:
HaAamlrez, Florida, 1~8 ; JBReyes. New
York, 116; Holliday, Colorado, 113;
Uggla. Florida. 108; Wrlgh1, New York,
107; BPhlllips, Clnclnna11, 106.
RBI-Holll&lt;;lay, Colorado, 131; Howard,
Philadelphia, 125; Fielder, Milwaukee,
115; Calee, Houston, 115; MICabrera,
Florida, 112; Hawpe, Colorado, 106;
. Dunn, Cincinnati, 106; Beltran , New
York, 106.
HITS-HaRamlrez,
Florida,
205;
Holliday, Colorado, 205; ROllins,
Philadelphia, 203; Pierre, Los Angeles.
169; Wright, New Yorl&lt;, 187; JBAeyes,
New Vorl&lt;, 186; BPhl11ips, Clnclnna11,
184; Rowand, Philadelphia, 184.
DOUBLES- Uggta,
Florida,
48;
~ ':¥7;

- n I.Nguo
eut·DIYieiQn
W L Pel
z·SQiton
92 EW .590
New Vorl&lt;
90 116 .577
Toronto
79 77 .506
Behlmore
87 89 .429
Tampa Bay
.84 .92 .410
Central Dlvlolon
W L Pet
x-CteYellnd
92 63 .594
Oetroh
85 72 ,541
Minnesota
71 78 ,494
Chicago
116 116 · .&gt;136
KaneesCity
67 e8 ,429·

X·LOS Angelle
Seattle
Oa~and
Te~~:as

Dlvlllon
W L Pet··
92 66· .686
83 72 .636
75 82 .478
73 84 .485

GB

2
13
25
28
GB .
8

,51,1,

24~
25~

GB
8
17
19

x--c!lnched division
z.&lt;:llnched playoH spot

Sund•r'• Oamn
Ctavetknd 6, Oakland 2
N.Y, Yankees 7, Toron1o 5
Detrol17, Kansas City 2
Tampa Bay 5, Bos1on 4
Minna- 7, Chicago While Sox 1
Texas 3, Battlffiore 0
L.A. Angels 7, Seattle 4

Mondoy'ao-

MAaOII LEAGUE LEADt!RI

48:

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING- MOrdonez, Oetroft. .358 ;
!Suzuki, Seattle, .350; Polanco, Detroit,
.339; Posada, New York, .335; Lowell,
Bost~n, .~4; VGuerrero, Los Angeles,
RUNs-ARodriguez, New York, 138;
Detroit, 117; Sizemore,

i Granderson,

5
17\
21

Mondoy'o GanMie

, Colorado,

I
I

Clnclnnan, 40; Holliday, COlorado. 36; 1 .323, DOrtiz, Bos1on, .321 .

2

· Su~··­
W&amp;shington 5, Philadelphia 3
N.Y Mats 7, fbida 6, 11 innings
Atlanta 7, Mitwaukee 4
Chicago Cubs 6, Pittallurgh 0
Colorado 7, Sen Diego 3
San Francisco 5, Cincinnati 4
L.A. Dodgers 7, Allzona 1
St Louis 4, HouS1on 3

Holliday,

JBReyes, New York, 12; Johnson,
.Attanta, 10; Pence, Houston, 9;
Amezaga, Florida, 9; OHudson, Arizona.
9; OAoberts, San Francisco, 9.
HOME AUNs---f"~er. Milwaukee. 48;
Howard. . Ph lladel~hia , 42: Dunn,

,._"-""

Utley.

Rio"omlr8z, Florlda,·.S;

Rowand, Philadelphia, 44; AdGonzsJez,
San Diego, 43; Church, Washington, 42;
KGreene, San Diego, 42: FSanchez.
PiHeburgh, 42.
TRIPLE5-Rolllns, Philadelphia, 18;

PageB2

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

Toionto 4, N.Y. Van- 1
Mlnne801a 2, De1rol1 o
Ba111more 3, ~· Cily 2 '
Toxaa 8, L.A. Angopls 7 '

CleYelend, 117; BAbreu, New York, 115;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 11 3; Rtos, Toronto,
109; ISuzukl, ~e.ttle, 109.
'
RBI-ARodnguez, New York, 1.¢;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 133; VGuerrern, Los

Angeles, 123; CPena, TIJ1ll8 Bay, 116;
DOrtiz, BoeiOn, 112; Lowell, Booton, 110;
Markakis, Baltimore, 109; Morneau,
Mlnnesola, 109,
HIT5-1Suzukl,
Seattle,
227;
MOrdonez, Oetroij, 208; Je1er, NewVork,
198; MYoung, Texas, 197; Polanco,
Detroit. 193; OCabrera, Los Angeles,
192; Rios, Toron1o, 185.
DOUBLES-MOrdonez, Detroit, 51 ;
OOrti• . Bos1on, 48; AHin, Thronto, 45;
VGyerrero, Los Angeles, 45; THunter,
Mlnneso1e, 44; Markakls, Banlmore, 43;
Rios, Toronto, 42.
TAIPLE$-Granderson. Detroit, 22;
DeJestJs, Kansas City, 9; Crawford,
Tampa Bay, 9; CGulllen, De1rol1, 9;
lwamura, T,mpa Bay, 8; MeCabrara,
Nevi York, 8; Teahan, Kansas C~ 8.
HOME RUN$-,ARodriguez, Nfi'W Vorl&lt;,
52; CPena, Tampa Bay, 42; DOrtiz,
Boston, 32; ThOI)18, Chicago , 32;
Momeau, . Minnesota, 30; Konerko,
Chicago, 29; THuriter, Mi"neso1a, 28.
STOLEN BASEs-crawford, Tampa
Boy, 50; BAoberta, Bahlmllre, 48;
Figgins, Los Angelos, 40; l~uzukl ,
seante, 37: CPonerson, Baltimore, 37;
Sizemore, Cleveland, 33; JLugo, Boston,
30.
PITCHING (16 De&lt;:lolo.no)-6oekeU,
Boston, 20·6, .769, 3.1-4; Verfander,
Oetri:&gt;l1, 18·6, .750, 3.116; Bede,rd,
Baltimore, 13-5, .722, 3.16; Wang,' Now
Yort&lt;, 18·7, . .720, 3.7:1; · Sabathla,
Cleveland, 18·7, .720, 3.19;, KESCObar,
Los Angetee, 17·7, .708, a,48, carmona.
Ctevolond, ·18-8..692, 3.03. ·
STRIKEOUTS-JoSa.ntana,
Mtnneeo1a, 231; ·Kazmlr, T~inpa Bay,
229; Bedard, Balllmore, 221 ; Saba1hle,
Cleveland, 205; JVazquez. Chicago,
204; Matsuzaka, Boston, 193; Beckett,
Boston, 188.
·
SAVES-Borowskl , Cleveland, ' 43;
Jenks, Chicago, 39; PtJtz, Seattle, a9;
FrRodriguez. Loa Angeles, 38; TJones.
Detroit, 38; Papelbon, Boston, 36;
~athan, Minnesota. 35.

PRo FOOTBALL
Notional Footbelllloguo
.AMERICAN CONFERENCE

· Eaot

WL T Pet PF PA
New England 3 0 0 1.000 114 35
N.Y, Jeta
1 2 0 .333 58 88
Oakland (Gau'dih 11i12) ' at BootQ~ liuffaio
9 3 o .ooo 24 79
(Schmlng 8-8), 7:05 p.m.
,
Miami
0 3 0 .000 61 84
Mrnneaota (Gma 4-6) at Oe1rolt
South
(Bazardo H). 7:05 p.m.
WL T Pet
PF PA
Toronto (Burnett 9-7) at Balttmore Indianapolis a o o 1.000 9a 54
'(Burres 6·6). 7:05p.m.
210.6677654
Houston
N.Y Yankees (Clemens 6·6) at Tampa Jacksonville 210.6674634
Bey (Hammel2·5), 7.10 p.m
Tennessee 2 1 0 .667 64 46
LA. Angels (Moseley 4·3) at Texas
North
•(McCarthy 5·10 or Wrlgh13·5), 8:05 p.m.
WL T Pet
PF PA
Kansas City (Bannister 12·9) at
3
0
0
1.000
97 26
Pittsburgh
Chicago White Sox (Contreras 1Q..16),
Baltimore
2 1 0 .6676663
8:11p.m.
120 .3339395
Cleveland (Laffey 3·2) at Seattle Cincinnati
1 2 0 .333 82 .105
Cleveland
(F.Hernandez 13-7), 10:05 p.m.
We•t
Wldneldey'• Gan)M
WL T Pet
PF PA
LA Angels at Texas, 2:05p.m.
Denver
2 1 0 .667 52 57
Oakland a1 Bos1on, 5:05pm.
Kansas Cliy 1 2 0 .333 Z6 SO
Minnesota at Detroit, 7:0&amp;p.m.
1 2 0 .333 67 83
Cleveland at Seattle, 705 p .m , 1st Oakland
San Diego 1 2 0 .333 52 72
game
~ NAnONAL CONF!!iiENC&amp;
· Toronto at Battfmbre,''7:05 p.m .
Eaat
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 7 :10p.m:
WL T Pet
PF PA
Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 8·11
Dallas
3 0 0 1.000 116 65
p.m.
Cklveland •at Seattle, 10 35 p.m., 2nd Washington 2 1 0 .667 53 49 ·
game
N.Y. Glen1s 1 2 0 .333 72 97

,_y·a·q.n,...

Philadelphia 1 2 o .333 81 57
Sovth
WL T PCJ PF PA
CaroiV\a
2 1 0 .667 75 67
Tampa Bay 2 1 0 .667 61 37
A11an1s
0 3 0 .000 3064
New Orleans 0 3 0 .000 38103
North
Wl T Pet PF PA
·Green Bey 3 0 0 1.000 B2 50
Detroit
210 .6677794
Chicago
120 .3333358
1 Minnesota
1 2 0 .333 51 38

Tuesday, September 25, 2007
2 2 1 5 12
0 2 2 2 6
PocHic Dlvlolon
W L OT Pis GF
a o 1 1 12
San Joee
a 1 1 1 18
PhOenix
3 3 1 7 17
Anaholm
Los,Ange!es
3 2 0 8 19
1 2 1 a· 11
Dallas

TRANSACTIONS

some rest who need it," general manager Mark Shapiro
said. "We want them to be
in position to. win that first
series."
With 18-game winners
C.C. Sabathia and Fausto
Carmona likely to pitch
twice in the five-game division series, Shapiro and
.manager Eric Wedge must
decide whether Paul Byrd
or Jake Westbrook will
pitch Game 3. The 25-man
postseason roster also must
be set.
The final week of the sea-

son also ~ives designated
hitter Trav1s Hafner a little
more time to get on a tear.
Hafner's average and power
numbers are down - he's
hitting .256 with 23 home
runs, but needs just four
RBis to reach 100 for the
fourth straight season.
The Indians will . likely
face Boston or New York in
the division series. two
clubs they've struggled
against this year, going 2-5
against the Red Sox and 0-6
vs. the Yankees.
Arlene Wise, a native

Clevelander who lives in
New York - and has gotten
into some· fights at Yankee
Stadium - would love to
see the Yankees knocked
out again.
"I've never changed my
allegiance to the Cleveland
Indians," Wise said. "I'm
delighted. I'm glad to see
them back. I just hope they
go all the way."
She picked up a Sabathia
shirt at the team shop
Monday where another popular, sold-out item is the red
"It's Tribe Time Now" T-

Coach Romeo Crennel
was more severe than usual
in assessing his team's performance following the
game. The long flight home
soothed him some. but
Crennel was discouraged by
the Browns' overall effort.
"I don't think we played
very well," he said. "That's
disapP.ointing because you
feel hke you can get something done, make something ha~pen and then w])en
you don t play well it's disappointing. Even if we had
won the game I would have
been di sappointed with the

way that we played."
Crennel, too, lamented
the Browns' inability to get
up for a team they matched
up
well
against.
Cleveland's talent is at least
comparable to Oakland's,
and Crennel felt that his
players may have underestimated the Raiders.
Beating Cincinnati in a
shootout may have given
the Browns a false sense of
security -and stature.
"Last week, one of the
things I talked about was
everybody would say that
we can score 51 points &lt;1

game and sometimes, guys ranked 31st overall in total
believe that," he said. "I defense, allowing 431 yards
think, maybe, we felt that per game. By contrast, the
we could score 51 . You New England Patriots have to be ready to play Crennel's former empl.oyeveryone in the NFL. You er - are giVIng up JUSt
can't just roll your hat out 207 .
Cleveland can't stop the
there and expect you're
run,
either, as teams are
going to win JUSt because
176 ~ards .
averaging
you think you're good.
Crennel didn t start nose
"You have to prove tackle Ted Washington on
you're good on every play Sunday and hinted at other
and every Sunday."
personnel chanj!es.
Through three Sundays,
"I'm really dt sappointed
Cleveland's defense could- because I know you can't
n't be much worse.
win in the NFL if you
The Browns have given can't stop the run ," he
up II TD passes and are said. ·

Browns
fromPageBl
"If they have timeouts
left, they should have the
. right to call a timeout," he
said.
And Ryan Pontbriand,
who watched his long snap
sail cleanly to the holder,
offered a funny viewpoint.
"From an upside-down
r.erspective," he said,
'everything looked good."
The Browns, hoping to
(

build off a 51-45 win over
Cincinnati a week earlier,
were their own worst
enemy. The)' came out lifeless and the1r early mistakes
- Cleveland was called for
three penalties on its first
drive
allowed the
Raiders to open a 16-0
deficit.
"Whatever the reasons
were, we came out flat,"
said Edwards, who had four
catches for 83 yards and a
touchdown. "Obviously it
, affected us in the first half,
and by the time we woke up
it was too late."

Websjtes:

vo;:.::;...

Word Ads

Oea.tllfir~

Dl•pl.y Ad•

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday•Frld•y for ln-rtlon
In Next D•y•e Paper
~~:~~'&gt;:,.~•.~n-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Sunctev• Paper

Monday thru Friday
:00
to 5:00p.m.

a.m.

• All ada must be prepaid'

• Slart Your Adl Wltb A KeywOf'd • lndude Complete
Delcrlptfon • lnduchl A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltlonl
• Include Phone Number And Add,_ When Needed
• Acft: Should RUR 7 D8ya
.

\'\'\I JI '\1 I \II '\I...,

All Dl•pl•y: 12 Noon 2
Bu.ln••• Daye Prior To
Publlc.tlon
Sund•y Dl•play: 1:00
Thurwct-v for sundaya

t rro: I

Now you can have borders and oraphlcs
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
{.;,~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
1!1111
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for Iaroe

.-t.,.,

POUCIEI: Ohkl Ylllly PubiWNnt NMI'YM the right tD Mit, Nfec:l, or cancel t1rf eel
time. Enora mu:tt be reported on
TrlbuM-Stntlnii-RetltW Will IN raponllfblt for no moit thin the COlt of the ._,. occupMcl by 1M .,-or Met oniJ the flrallnMrilon.
MW . _ or elplftN thll rttUIII from tM pubHcltlon or omlttion of en lldtoertleemenl. Cort.-tiOt'l wHI N midi In tiMI flrllt tvalllblt eclltlon. • Bo•
ocwiif*'•llal. • Cunwnl 11M Ani ....lea. • All fNI ...... tiCMitltementl 111
10 IN Fecttral Ftlr Houtlng Act of 1tll. •llU
....,._ W. will

In vtoAition of 1M llw.

MOBILE HOMES

KITI"'_a._c_A_R_Lv_L_E_______._,.,,__..,..-----

roRSALE

kltncorlyl. .comcut. net

1 FQUNIJ:

Small Goat, Ear
Tag, 304-675-6785
1 Female blaok Lab, 1 male - - - - - - - ml• breed 304·576-2490
Lost at Pomer01; Blues Fest.
Blue Pic album. Return to
2 nice inside 4 mo okl Court St. Grill or call 740•
' female kittens, short haired, 992•2090_$50 reward.
tested for fetlne leukemia. ---~---­
(740)448-46j3
Los1 mala beagle, belaYed
Free kittens, call (740)949- childrens pet, no collar, has
pink spots on hi&amp; nose,
3406
answers•10 i111e buddy, Lost
on Debbie Or off 141,
Reward for return, call
(740)208·0376

•NOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
throu~ the mall until yoo
hall&amp; Investigated the
altering.

All rool-11 odvll'lllllng
In thl1 fiiWIPiper II
au~t to

the F,.,_l
F•lr HOUalngAct of 111H

which

""""'It lllopl to

Hvertt• "•ny

p~Wferwnce,

tlmll8tlon or

dl-.:rlmlnMion baMd on

MONEY
To loAN
**NOTII:E**

rq color, rtllglon, ••
l•mlllal .t.tut or Nltlon•l
origin, or •ny Intention to
m11kt .-ty such
preference,llmltlltlon or
dlscrlmlnlltion."
Thla newspaper will not
knowlngtr occopt
lldvertiHments tor ,..,
...... whlch .. ln
vlol.tlon of the law. Our
,rndert .,. hereby
informtel that Ill

!'l•w

since Aug. 25, feel there's
no reason to let up now.
"It's really important for
us to try to get home-field
from PageBl
advantage," first baseman
With seven games left and Ryan Garko said. "We
won't be able to relax until
baseball's best record at 92- we know where we stand."
63 entering Monday night,
While these last seven
the Indians could still win games at Se'attle and Kansas
home-field
advantage City have plenty of meanthroughout the postseason ing, the Indians also need to
and decide when the AL have everybody fresh for
division series begins, Oct. the postseason.
"We're still trying to end
3 or4.
The Indians, who have this thing with the best
won II of 14 and' are 22-6 record and get some guys

Indians

In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
E-mail
www.mydailysentinel.com
classlfied@mydailytribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.myclallyregistBr.com
PLUS .YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
ijtribune
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
(7!0) To446~!42 (7!~1 To~~~;!!~6 (304) 675-1333

So""

I'm through with it. Hopefully it's coming to an end."
As is the case in grand jury hearings, the prosecutor will
present evidence and the grand jury will decide whether or
nofto proceed. Vick, his co-defendants and lawyers are not
permitted to attend the closed proceeding.
Efforts to reach Vick's lawyers by telephone and email were not successful.
Vick and three co-defendants have already pleaded
guilty to conspiracy charges in the case, and all are
awaiting senteQcing in federal court before the end of
the year.
Vick, who faces. up to five years in prison on the fed·
eral charges, also has been indefinitely suspended
without pay by the NFL and been dropped by all his
major sponsors, including Nike.
The local charges, and a conviction, could spell an
end to any hope he has of resuming his NFL career
after serving a likely federal prison term.
An animal cruelty charge in Virginia is punishable
by up to five years in prison, and Vick adinilted in his
written plea to helping kill six to ejght pit bulls days
before the first raid.

fromPageBl

C LAs·S I F·l E D

15
15

aeveland•based Flash Seats
lawsuit alleges patent infringement

'

ijtribune - Sentinel -

.

0 J.D. Forrost, 0 Noah Babin, F Kel1h
Aucoin, F Patrick Dwyer and F Jakub
Potruzalek to Albany (AHL).
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS....
GA
8
Reassigned F Klr111 Starkov, F Adam
15
Plneaull. F Geoff Platt. D Mlkko
15
Maenpaa and 0 Dan LaCosta to
20
Syracuse (AHL).
21
EDMONTON OILEAs-Reeaslgned 0 .
T.J. Kemp and LW Adam Huxley to
Two jX)inta lola win. one potnt lor &lt;War- Sprlngtleld (AHL).
.
time loss or shootout lou.
MONTREAL CANADIEN5-Aaljlned
G Cedrlck Desjardins, G Lolc Lacsisse,
Bundoy'o,GomM
G Yann Danis, 0 Jon Gleed, 0 Andrew
W.,t
Montreal A, Booton 3
WL T Pet PF PA
Archer, 0 Mathieu Biron, 0 Pavel
Buffalo 3, Columbus 2, SO
San Fran
2 1 0 .1167 ~ 70
Valentenko, 0 Jamie Rivers, D Marvin
Chicago 4, St. louis 3
2 1 0 .587 6450
Seattle
Degen~ 0 Mathieu Carle, 0 Jean·
Anaheim 5, Vancouver 0
Arizona
1 2 0 .333 63etl
Philippa Co1o, F Mathieu Aubin, F Eric
030 .000 3268
Monday'• Gam••
StLouis
Mantow, F Duncan MHroy, F Gregory
New Jeruy 3, Philadelphia 1
S1ewart, F Man D'Agoe11nl, F Sergei
N.Y. tslandel'l 5, N.Y. Rangers 4, OT
Sllnday'o Gamoo
Kosti1syn, F Cory Urquhart, F Jimmy
Ottawa 4, Toronto 3, OT
N.Y. Je15 31, Miami·2S
Bonneau, F Francis Lemieux. F
Tampa Bay 4, Oe1rott 3
Jona1han Ferland, F Ajay Baines, F
I Baltimore 26, Arizona 23
Minnesota 2, Buffalo 1
Green Bay a1, San Otego 24
Janna Lahti, F Corey Locke; F Ryan
TuHclay'oGameo
New England 38, Bunato 7
Russell, F David Desharnais and F
Chicago at Florida, Noon
Indianapolis 30, Houston ~ 4
ThOmes Beauregard to Hamilton (AHL).
Nashville at Attanta, 7 p.m.
Kanees City 13, Mlnneaota 1o
Returned F Ben Maxwell to Kootenay
Philadelphia at onawa, 7 p.m.
Pittsb..gh 37, San Franctecq 16
(WHL) and Ryan White 1o Calgary
Carohna at Washington, 7 p.m.
TIJ1ll8 Bey 24, SL Louis a '
(WHL).
N.Y. Rangers at Detroit, 7:30p .m.
Phlla~lphla 51!, Detroit 21
PHILADELPHIA FLYER5-Promoted
Oakland 26, Cll!valand 24
Dallas at ColoradO. 9 p.m.
Shawn TIIger to senior vice president of
Sen Jose a1 Calgary, 9 p.m.
Seattle 24, CinCinnati 21
busli'less operatiOns.
Edmonton at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Jacksonv11ae 23, Denver 1-4
PHOENIX COYOTE5-Asslgned LW
Wodnoadoy'o Gameo
· C.rollna 27, Atlanta 20
·
Kevin Cormier, D Travis Roche and D
N.Y. Islanders va . New Jersey at Keith Van~1e to San An1ooio (AHL).
N!N.·Gian1s 24, washington 17
Lowell, Maas., 7 p.m.
··
Dellao (!4, Chicago 10
Returned LW Tomas Surovy to lulaa ot
Washington a1 Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Mondoy'o Go!M
the Swedieh League.
BuHalo at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.
Tennessee 3~, New Or1eans 14
SAN JOSE SHARKS-Aeslgned G
Atlanta at Aorlda, 7:30p.m.
Sunday,
:10
Taylor Oakers, 0 Derek Joslin, LW
St. Louis at Minnesota, 8;30 p.rR.
Chlcllgo at Detro11; 1 p.m.
Dennis Packard, ~W Nate Raduns and
Calgary at Edmonton , 9 p.m.
St. lools at Dallao, 1 p.m.
0 Toni Waloh 1o Worc01ter (AHL).
San Jose at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Oakland at Miami, 1 p.m.
COLLEGE
Houston at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
INDIANA STAT~-Announced Lou
N. v. Je1s at BuHalo, 1 p.m.
West. 1ootball coach, has been reu·
Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.1
Signed within the university. Named
. Bal~more at Cleveland, 1 p.m. · ~
Mondoy'o Bportl TranuciiOno
Dennis Raetz Interim 1oo1ball coeoh.
-. Se~ttle at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m·.
MONTCLAIR STATE- Named Karin
BASEBALL
Tampa Bay at Carolina, 4:06 p.m.
Harvey Interim women's basketball
Major lolguo -boll
Denver at Indianapolis, 4:15 p.m.·
1
MLB-Suspended Minnesota minor coach.
· Kanees City at San Otego, 4:15p.m.
league C Ell Tln1or (Balolt-MWL) lor 50
l't11sburgh a1 Arizona, 4:15 •p.m.
Mljor LNgue Socc«
gan'lea following a positive test for a drug
Philadelphia at N.Y. Gian11, 8:15p.m.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
of abuse.
Opan: Waohin~on. Jac;keonYijlo, No~
W l T PtoGF GA
American Laague
.
Orleaf]s, Tenneaeee
'· '
15 8 5 50 49 '29
OAKLAND ATHLETIC5-Exarclsed x·D.C. Unl1ed
Mondly, Oet. 1·
·
2008 and 2009 contract options on Bob x-New England 13 6 7 46 45 36
New England at Cincinnati, 8:30 p.m.
New York
11 10 5 36 41 39
Geren, manager, and 28 Mark Ellis.
Kanoas City
10 10 6 38 41 41
Notlonol l.Hgue
8 10 8 32 27 34
PRoHoc~v
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE9-Cialmed Chicago
7 9 10 31 '31 36
OF T.J. Bohn off waivers trom the Atlanta Colun-llus
Toronto
FC
6
14 8 21 19 39
Notlonol Hockoy Loogt»
Braves.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Pre...eon Glance
SAN DIEGO PADRE5-Acqulred OF
W L T PtsGFGA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Jason Lane from the Houston Astros for
x.CO Chlvas'
14 8 5 47- 41 23
Allontlc Dlvloton
a player 1o be named or cash consider&amp;·
13 7 6 45 38 21
x·Houston
W lOT PlaGF GA tiona.
12. 10 4 40 34 38
FC Dallas
N.Y. Iolande&lt;&amp; 2 1 2 6 14 15
BASKETBALL
7118292631
Colorado
Now Jersey
2 2 0 4 11 8
, Notlonol Booke1boU AIOOCIIIIon
Philadelphia
2 2 0 ·4 9 9
Real Salt lake 5 13 8 23 26 39
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORs-signed Los Angeles
5 13 6 21 30 43
Pi1teburoh
' 1 2 4 9 11
G Troy Hudeon.
N.Y. Rangers
1 1, 1 3 8 13
MILWAUKEE BUCKS-W&amp;Ived G Lynn
· Northoon Dlvlolon
NOTE: Three P,O(n1s tor victory, one
Greer.
W L OT' PtoGF GA
point tor lie.
WASHINGTON WIZARDs-Re·slgned
Ottawa
4 0 0 8 15 8
x-cllnched playoH spot
G Roger Mason to a one-year contract.
3 3 0 6 14 17
Montreal
FOOTBALL
2 ,. 2 6 14 15
Toronto
Thurodoy'o Gno
N1Uonot Football LllgUI
1 2 1 3 9 12
Boston
Los Angeles at Kansas City, 8 p.m.
DETROIT
LIONS-51gned
TE
Buffalo
120 2 5 8
saturdtiy'a Gai!Mia
Courtnay Andereon. WaiYed TE Rudy
Southuat Dlvlalon
Toron1o FC at D.C. Untted, 7:30p.m.
Sylvan.
W L OT P1sGF GA
Colorado at New Engtand, 7:30 p.m.
GREEN BAY PACKER5-Signed WR
Florida
3 1 0 6 11 7
Real Satt Lake at
Yorl&lt;, 7130 p.m .
Shaun
Bodiford.
Released
WR
Chris
Carolina
210487
Chicago
at
CO
Chi
vas
USA,
10:30 p.m.
Francies.
Tampa Bay
2 1 0 4 9 8
sundoy'aGomeo
HOCKEY
A11anta
2 2 0 4 12 12
Houston at FC Dallas, 3 p.m.
Notional Hockoy l.Hgue
Washington
1 1 1 3 9 10
Los Ange les at C,olumbus, 5 p.m.
BOSTON BRUINS....Traded C Mark
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Thurodoy, Oct. 4
Mowers to Anaheim · for D Nathan
Central Dtvlalon
New York at.Toronto FC, 7 p.m.
Saunders and D Bran Skinner. Assigned
W L OT . PtsGF GA
Friday, Oct. 5 .
Saundere, Skinner. F Vladimir Sobolke
Nashville
3 1 0
6 12 8
D.C.
Untted
at Kanees Ciiy, 8 p.m. ·
and
D
Jona1han
Slgate1
to
Providence
Detroit
3 2 0 6 17 10
Soluiday, Dct 8
(AHL).
Chicago
2 2 1 5 15 16
FC Dallas at Columbus, 7:30p.m .
BUFFALO SABRE5-Ae1Urned 0 T.J.
Columbus
2 2 1 5 14 14
New England at Chicago, 6:30 p.m. •
Brennan and C Joan-Simon AHa~ to St.
St. louiS-·
- 1· -3 0
2 12 15
co Chlvsa USA a1 Real san Lake, 9
John's (CMJHL), 0 Drew Schles1el to
Northwnt Dlvlalon
W L OT P1sGF GA Niagara (OHL), C Pau l Byron to p.m.
sunday, oct. 7
Gatinoau (CMJHL) and C Benjamin
Colorado
3 0 1 7 18 12
Los Angeles at Houston, 3 p.m.
BreauR to Bele-Comeau (OMJHL).
Edmonton
3 1 0 B 17 15
Toronto FC at Colorado, a p.m.
CAROUNA . HURRICANE5-Asslgned
Minnesota
3 1 0 6 11 13

Vancouver

Calgary

Though not likely, that alone could expose him to as
many as 40 years in prison .
Vick, in his written plea, also admitted to supplying
money for gambling on the fights involving Bad Newz
Kennels dogs. He said he did not personally place any
bets or share in any winnings, but gave his three codefendants all those proceeds:
The co-defendants , all of whom pleaded guilty
before Vick and detailed what they said was his
involvement, agreed to testify against him had the case
gone to trial.
The case. began in late April when authorities conducting a drug investigation of Yick's cousin raided
the former Virginia Tech star's property and seized
dozens of dogs, most of them pit bulls, and equipment
commonly associated with dogfighting.
Six weeks later, with the local investigation perceived to be dragging and a search warrant allowed to
expire, federal agents arrived with their own search
w.arrants and started digging up· dog· carcasses buried
days before the first raid.
Poindexter, who had been widely criticized for the
pace of the investigation, reacted angrily when the
feds moved in, suggesting that Vick's celebrity was a
draw, or that their pursuit of the case could have racial
overtones . He later eased off those comments, saying
that the sides would simply be pursuing parallel investigations.

Vick

www. m~dallysentlnel.com

dwelling~

ldvert!Hd In

thla MWIIM!pet' aN

avliltltM on •n equal
Oflpomrnlrt - ·

tion."

The Cleveland Cavaliers nearly a year ago were. the first
NBA team to agree to 'use the ticketing technology. Cavaliers'
owner Dan Gilbert is also the principal owner of Flash Seats.
Paciolan provides sports and entertainment venues with the
software needed for automated ticketing.
The company enables venues to sell directly to customers,
unlike ticketins providers that compete with sports and entertainment orgamzations, Paciolan says on its Web site. In doing
so, Paciolan says it helps to fill empty seats and improve customer relationships.
shirts that stadium workers
have been wearing..
"Fans were trying to buy
them off our back for $30 or
$50 a shirt," Schloss said.
The club asked fans to
wear red during the Indians
sweep of Detroit last week
and the fans have embraced
the new look.
"This red color sort of
stands out," Schloss said.
"While it's the secondary
color for the team, it's
become the primary color
for the fans for the postseason run."

'

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vlnytlshlngle.
Must seR, Only $25,995 with
dellwry. can (740)385·4367

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 per month, Includes
• many upgrades, delvery &amp;
ee1-up. (740)365·2434
Nice used 3 bedroom home
YlnyVshlngle. Will help with
dellwry. 740·385-4367

OWNER FINANCING
Nice 312 slnglewkles
From $1 ,800 down
payment
Gary (740) 826·2750

2.12 acres Walnut Creek
Samtllll Rd. Utilities ready,
Fla1 101. $25,000/0BO 304·
675·4411 Leave Message

CLEVELAND (AP) - Electronic ticketing venture Flash
Seats filed a federal lawsuit on Monday seeking to guard
against what it considers patent infringement.
.
The lawsuit in the U.S. District Court of Delaware alleges
that Irvine, Calif.-based Paciolan's Ticket Marketplace
infringes on Flash Seats' patent for electronic ticketing. The.
lawsutt seeks a court order protecting its patent and awarding
unspecified damages.
Flash Seats offers sp&lt;_~rts teams and live entenainment venues
paperless electronic ticketing, and provides season ticket holders a way to sell and transfer seats electronically.
·
Sam Gerace, Cleveland-based Flash Seats' chief executive
officer, said the lawsuit was (tied "to protect our customers
against imitators who have not done the hard work of innova-

•

2000 Clayton 24X56, 3 BR,
2BA , 314 acre in Green
Township. $79,900. Cal;
740·845-7113

Part·time position needed,
btlllng experience preferred,
send resume to: P.O. Box
368, Pomeroy. Oh 45769

Hall Time busrness office
position availttble, with some

computer knowledge.
An EKCellent way to earn Some medicaVdentalexperi·
ence helpful.
mc."~ey The New Avon.
Reply lo. TSC Box 17 c/o
Call Marilvn 304·882·2645
Potnt Pleasant Register 200
Main, Point Pleasant, WV
Aremark Correctional
25550
Services Is accepting
applications for Food
Heatth Care Serv1ces Group
Service Supervisors.
Nations
leading
Competitive wages and full The
benefit package. Must be provider or enviromental
able to pass a background services to the long term
care 1ndustry is looking for
check.
house
keepers/laundry
can 404·326·6758
- - - - - - - - aides for local nursing home.
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Apply in person : 36759
Sell Shirley Spears. 304· Aochprings Road, Pomeroy
675·1429. \
Ohio.

-·

--···---- -- ·----------·-·-···-·· ·---

-. --

POST OFFICE NIJW
HIRING
Avg . Pay $20/hr or
$!57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OT,Paid Training,
Vacations-FT/PT
1·866·542·1531
USWA
-------PreciSion Electric now Hiring
Licensed Electricians. Call
for Interview 304-:675·8076
We are looking for people
aged 12·14, 18·24 and Untv.
of Rio Grande Students to
participate in a tun study
that pays $70 in Gallipotis on
9/25 &amp; 9/26. Please call
Opinions, ltd at sn-893·
0300 eKt.l and mention the
Galtlpotls study for more
information.

- --- ·-------------·-----------~--. ------ ·--- . .

�.

...•

~-·

-- ....

.. .. ... ..

..

.

.

~

'TUelday, S.ptember 25, 2001

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tun day, September 25,2007
ALLEYOOP
a-

.. Country eattlng,

1 &amp; 2,Bedloow Apartmen1o
for Rem, Mtlga COomy, In
City - pluo · depooJt
No - &amp; refer·
peta, town, No Pets, Depoe!J
$460
enceo(740,.._90
Requlrad, (740)992·5174 or
(740).. 1-Q110.
3BR
near
Holzer,
.l.ppllancea,
No
Pets, 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
$650/mo plus deposit. ments, furnished ancl untur·
(7~)245·9880, (740)645· nished, and houses In
3836
Pomeroy and Middleport,
_-010ry--olde-r
securlly deposh roqurad, no
-ba-th.
1
2
farm house on SR 554 • pets, 740-992·22t8.
'-------. BldwetvRV
schoots
2 bedrooms, lilring room.
$575/mo plus sec dep. Pets k/1cheo, t ba1h, apar1moot
under 15 lb8 wl$575 pet have central air. Furnished
deposit Available 1Jl:13-Q7. with COUCh, chars. wesher.
Call 44&amp;-3644 for appllca· dryer, stO\Ie, microwave,
lion
__
. - - - - - - beds, dinning tabte and
chars $400 depooit, $450 a
3SR, t .5 bath, 2·story on
Cedar St • $575/rent, $575 month call 304-882 -2523
sec. dep. Pets less than 20 leave a message end nurnJbs wl$575 per deposh. Call _be_r_w_no_t_st_h_om_e_ _ _
..S-3644 tor •~Jication .
...,,...
2 br., country setting, wid
"I
1
2BR
hookup, utilities included, no
69 G811 ad •
• 1BA
•••01month
sec dep pets, available 10/01 107,
~
+
·
·
You
pay all utilities. c an 446- $550 per month plus
_3644
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ deposh. (740)992·4 119

--=-.=-

Alllntlonl

"

2br. Apl. on 5th Slreet Pt.

local c:Ompany offering "NO
DOWN PAVMENr pr0r
grwns 1or I"" 10 buy )&lt;&gt;Ur
hOme tnstead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect credil
accepted
Payment could be 1he
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
:..
17..c
40:.ci3::.::.:..
8H=Ooo
.:..__ _ _
For sale or rent, 3 bedroom,
1 bat h, new Iy remOdeled
house in Aocrrey Village II.
Buy for $64,000 with possi·
bJe owner a..st or rent Ior
$500 per month with securi·
ty dapoeJJ No inside pets.
_
cal~l-'(7_4o..:.)645__t:l83
____
Nice 3BR, 1 BA, CIA,
Stov&amp;!Frldge, turn. 1 yr
lease: $600.Mo+Deposit,
references, no smoking, no
pets. 105 Bastlanl. 740..446·
.3667
1

f

.&gt;

II I

r\0

11

1

\.I

Phillip
Alder

I'

• ,

I'-

llruiiHJW

GooDs

·--iiiiiiiii"""!-rl

·

•

1..------·
..

Am1Qvts

Ellm View
Apartments

~

740-367..()544
FreeEatlmaiH

740-367.0536

• Stop By Our Shqwroom

•

70 Pine Street • G1lllpolle, OH

• A Q 91

740-

-·

Wise Concret-:
All types o( concrele

r

-

$3000:t'994'che\oyS·tOV6,

Does.

jiB

1

"ICITC~eN SlJ~FA'e
INSTAL£.~1t5: NOT
"GOlJNTe~·fiTT~~S"!

FJI

4

- ~=&lt;DS(
·

www.tta1ru••III..UU bJ.,..

J&amp;L
..Ylnyl Skiing
• Replacement

1

I

Ext. Cond, Great gj!s
mMeage, $9,000, (740)441 ..
9865
-------97 Camero RS, whl wlblk
radng stripes/racing spoiler.
Lookslr':M'S QOOO. Priced to
sell $:i!BOO! 304-634-8523
COOK
MOTORS 328
Jackson
Pike. Quality
cars/trucks with· w~rranty.
Our low prices are posted on .
vehicle. Compare price and
quality to vehi~es anywhere. Slop or call 740-4460103

Windows

·~ -~ftO'IlFR."
·

a•a•1'ENT

IOIEIT
aiSSEll

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

740-14...2217

THJ: BORN I,.OSER
_,,..--- ---,
TII.t.'{ !)~'{

IOOI~C. il~l.E.

WJC:MTt~
~~~t&amp;St .

IW®lll£ OFfiCE.
I~ LI\CE. Gti\'1~

1'\U)IC.I~ ...

"'1».\l.'(
llOOStU~T!

lb.

C

•

I

omp ete

Remodeling

.·

.

WID II
Dllaell Wilt

i5

·Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios,
Concrete Footers
Also

TR~r1iitA~Lmilii~
.__ _lliFOiiiiRii"""'iiiiiiioo_.l

on
SAVINGS
' :'
·;

,;

14ft. $75.00
16 ft $83.00

35537 St itt 7 North '

J41•112-11rM
U. 1

·

10ft. $53.00
12ft. S$65.00

J

BIG NATE

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
! •Prompt and Quality
Work

I::~~::;~,oced

Rates

VOCIII.. GRouP! :n1
TAL..~INt'o

tNSTRUI1EN~~

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER .
SERVICE
Room Aclcltlon• &amp;

·=
·~·t
Electrlcol Plumbing
Roofing I Guttlrl

VInyl Siding I hinting
Patio lnd Porah C.CU

'

A ~EtTER!

1!(1,' h .-' I ,
•

&gt;I'll ' ' '
,
1
,

I

• Ill '

r x,

I GOT A LETTER lo'KUnH
PEN PAL IN SCOTL.AHt!!

,

B3 5-10 4&lt;4, runs good,
$800firm, (740)91l2·1477

r

Dennis Bry!lnt
740-742-2377

4x4
FOR Sill:

1996 Dodge Ram 1500 4x4,
72,876 miteS, AC, elec
brakes and windows, cloth
interior, Reese hitch, some
rust. $5000.00, Riverview
PrOductions (740) 44t · t150
7:00am • 3:30pm, ask for
Rodney Rankin.

Date of Birth
October 27, I 933
Date of Death
September 25, 2006
Who went to be with the Lord
HE ONLY TAKES THE BEST
God saw she was getting tired
And a cure wtu not to be.
So he pul His arms around Jrer

And whispered, "Come with me".
llith ltiU'-fllltd •yes we wMched her
Su/ftr at1d flllle away,
.Although we lo¥ed her deeply,
Wt could not make Mr stay.
A golden heart stopped beating,

H41YI-workint lwnds pul to resl.
God IJToke our hearts to prove to us
He only takes the be.~t.
Sltl Lt sadly missrd and in our hearts fore,er.

REMEMBER THAT SPECIAL _
SOMEONE
WITH ACLASSIFIED AD
1

wlnnero: fi'le apades, one diamond and
two cfuba.
At trick thrH, Sou1h should lead his
remaining low spade, retaining hi&amp; hl!j1
ones ·for later. The defensa tal&lt;e8 lha
trld&lt;, but everything Is under control. ~
they play another heart, HIs ruffad on Jho
board. Doclarer can draw trumpe and
claim 10 lrid&lt;a: lour apades, one dla·
monel and five cfuba.

AstroGraph

w.dnnday, Sopl. 28, 20o7
By Bomlco Oool

In tha year ahead, you oould find your·

aelf being dragged Into a retuctant partnership arrangement wl1h someone you
may not like too well. Even though It may
not be What you want, 11 couki generate
coftective benefltl.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - It~ good to
be an lndivldualiet, but 11 II equally Impor-

~DEAR CIIARLIE. JUST SEEN TO
THE SIIOPS .. MA MAIJfS IN SED
WIT!-1 A SORE I-IEID AND MA
DA'S MAKIN MINCEANDTATTIE5
FOR TilE PIHNER .. LOVE, MORA6'

strong suit.

SAQtTTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) - Be
particularly selective regarding the topic
'J of your conversations wlth friends, or you
could touch on something lhllrl unlea.ahee
a, healed debate. Steer dear of 1ubjecta
of opposing oplnloM.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. t9) Getting along with peqons from all welkl
of life could be your strong suit. However,
thll actmlrable quality might not apli over
Into dealing with authOrity flgUI'JI. Be
tactful and careful .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20--Feb. 19) - Jult
because something workl well tor you
&lt;toean't mean h wit do the same for oth81'1. Don't try to force your procedures or

ality as well .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Vour associates will be helpful, but onty to a Hmlted
degree: Umlt your request to tot&gt;e too big
for one person to tle.ndle, but don't ask
them to do things you can easily do your·

River Cities Military
Support Group

....

Manley' a
Raa:ycllng

2nd Ave. Gallipolis

Final Week to
Save BIG!
60% off
All Items
Also display cases
for sale etc.

Closing Friday 9/28
441·9603

Good News
Bible Bookstore
35 Court St. Gallipolis

·--=-=The Syracuse Racine
Regional
Sewer
Dlslrlct will hold a public meeting on the proposed
Tackervllle
Expansion on October
9, 2007 at 7:00 pm at
the American legion .
(9) 25, 26, 27, 28, 30
(10) 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Saturday,
September 29, 2007 al
10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211
• W.
Second
St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company is
aalllng for cash In
hand or certified check
the following collater-

al:

"

2001 Dodge Str~tus
1BEEJ46X91 N722152
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy,
Oblo,
reserves lbe right ,to
bid at Ibis sola, and to
withdraw the · above
collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
rlghtto reJect any or all
blda submitted.
The above de~crlbad
collateral will be sold
"as Js-whare Is", with
no
expressed
or
Implied
warranty
given.
For further Inform•·
tlon, or lor an appointment to Inspect collet-

eral, prior lo sale date
contact Cyndla or Ken
at 992-2136.
(9) 25, 26, 27

Public Notice
legal Notice
Sealed Bids are baing
accepted tor a 1977
International
dump
truck,
Bodford
Township
Trustees
reserve the right to
accept or reject any or
all blda. fo view or
Inquiries call 740-9927015. Mall bids to
Bodford
Townohlp
42774 Helwig Ridge:
Shade OH 45778 Blda·
accepiad until october
9th
Ba~bsra J . Grueaer
Fiscal Officer
74()..696-1244 ·
(9) 25, 26,
28 (1 O) 1,
2 3 4 5

v,

'

1

'

... II F I 111M. . . HI ..
111. . . . . .12:11 ..

PIYIIIIT.. PIICES.
e. ·n
••nu
Clllllllelt
y. . . . . . . . .

N••l•••

. • .........
1

L---~·!•!•!~~1-!ft~l~lll~l--_J

21

~IY

GEMINI
(May 21 ·June 20) Disappointment never comes from
hopes baHCI on reallatlc premises, but
you could be severe!~ disappointed
when your expectations are predicated
upon thinking you'll get 11 free ride.
CANCER (June 21 ·Jllly 22) Conditions that have to do wi1h ~ur work
or career could be rather -complex. You
could proftt In one II'IIJtanoe. only to be
penalized in another. Handle each wtth
the aama graclouenele.
LEO (July 2a.Aug. 22)- You'll be • mott

GARFIELD

.'

...,•

,,

.,

·•'

delightful peraon 10 be around, provided

.,•

no one Cha!l•ngea your kiNa, oplniona
or methods. ThoH who dare might ...
quite anothflr aide of your pertan~llty.
VIRGO jAug. 23-9ept. 22) - Do exceptionally ca.utloua In your dullngs wHh
othel1i, especially H money Ia irWolved.
Make cartsin everyon1 antet up the
eama amount whan pitching In for a
mutual lntereet.

..

,,

-·

11 Crude

greln

23 Fill the llble 1

'11 PltcM or
Llbr!

17 In front

DOWN

rnatalt

41

U"""'-

22 SldutJIIlped 43 Rllltlc
24 Onloitd
- Sedgwick 23 .l,lthe
44 .........
24 Fllhhoolc
%7 "- lapltll" 2 FM!t '
a Honor
naWbom
part
45. JCarete bloW
3 S!IPI*I
25 IQrghlz
48 JNIC)jll
.110111

33 MCurad
34 Laft Ins
hurry
35Rear36 81"11'

4
5
8
7

Actreu

Klog clog
rtnge
~
CozY · 26 Promo llpe 48 lltum11111
MI. Tlunwl 28 1939
49 lclcfalltt .
Lugotl rv1tt
29 FICUhy

Sllndltnl
Oelhl

adclreu

mem.

8 Cr!VIII kin
9 BiaiChlr
Blllythouta
37 rllbd Into 10 Jacqllll'
il8 Set CIOII
girl
39 A Bobbloy 14 Winding
twin
curve

and conti"'Jng with the aca?
The auction was dlffocu~. On tho second
round, Sou1h did well not to rebid three
no-trump. But three diamonds pUt North
In a quandary. Perhaps he ahould have
given preference w!th a throo-&amp;pado bid.
!" North held thr118 spl\das, he would
have reload to two apadas, not lespondad one no-trump.) But he aattfad 1or ralalng dlamonda. Now Sou1h rebid hla
excellent liva-card alit, which North was
happy to pue. (Note that fi'le diamonds
I&amp; poor, but fi'le clube, which Ia Y111V hard
to rasch, le good.)
Dedit~~ will be tamplad to ruff Jho second heart and cash his tllrH top trumps.

through your fingers.
ARIES (March 21 · Aprll 19) - Being a
take-charge person comes naturally to
you, but you must be careful that you
don't ruffle the feathera of companions
who may want to express thEKr Individu-

Wednesday, Sept. 26
Courtside Grill

59 Oompeh-60 Shoe pert
18 Rtmolt
61 Vim and
20 Fire angina
vigor
-

30 Two

quertere

31

Memorial

Day race
36 StHI

60 Gather In,
II C10P1
52 ~ in lledit
53 rtbblt

54 Bullring ytll

glrdtr
(hyph.)

In vlcfory."
Thai. shotJd apply at lhe brldga table.

Don't let what you acquire. easily slip

meets 7:00 p.m

58 Future filii

Arthur Asha said, "Rogardlas&amp; oi how
• you feel Inside, always try to look Ilks a
winner. E110n " you are behind, a sulltalned look of oontrof and confidence
can give you a mantal edge that result8

mathods ,on reluctan1 companions who
want to do things dltrerentty.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Meoch 20) - You mlgh1
be quite skilled at bringing In the buc::kl,
but, sadly, you'll ha\18 tittle discipline In
the management ol those resource&amp;.

COW and BOY

In Memory

Aladine
Jean Baker

Pas8

benettt. ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-f'lov. 22) - You hove
the ability to achteve many Important
objecttvea, but you· oould rlak -spreading
youi"Htf too lNn. Managing a couple of
things ·simultaneously may not be your

PEANUTS

V C YOUN G ill
I

ttva.ili

16 Fleata

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

ert.ooiyCiptw_ .. , _ , . , _ . . , ..... _
Eailletl.- rr the clj:trw !llllndS b ftdw.
Todsy's d&lt;.e: H eqvsls K

"B

GRIZZWELLS
~~'li'ti~
~ \E'~Iil 1'----"'"\

tA~ aJCII

~--- 1111

SOUPTONUTZ

, ,.. ... ~­

AN J BY R.B K INC C N D N II V B E B L

JBY NYTV NP CASTV SY

RVP DSXV,

CN EV CRBYHXWD XNP 8 INNL NYY."
• YNMVDSKC JBPFNPSV PBADSYJK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'They say nobody is pe~. Then they Jell us
;
practice mal&lt;es perfect. Iwish they'd make up their minds.' • W~ Chamberlain · ·.

,~~:t:~y S@tt41Nt-Lrr-~s·

,.......

WOlD
UMI

lditod by CIA Y

Olileorrong1

letters of lha

four sc:ro!'lbled words be·

low

10

form four Simple words.

DOFJMY

I I I I I'

I

AM N 0 W

tant to be cooperative when the oocaelon
calls for lt. 11 you're self-serving, othera
will emulate your blhavtor and none will

Bmk&amp;
Brickwork

.&lt;

IF IT'LL
HELP, :r
CAN 1!011. •
_....,.""' 1'\'f !lAO'S
ACCOR.DtoN !

AI!IOUf A

REAL ltOCJ(. 'M'ROLL
i!r".N!) '· WITH REAL..
INSTR.UI'IENTS!

Po..-roy, OH

WV0387215

Call Gary Stanley @
740· 742-2293

Pass

. ....... Uidor:

THAT WAS JU!;oT A.

Shade River Ag. Service

• New HomeS
, Garages

Eut
Pass

How do you control
their trumps?

G

'

Prlefert Powder Coated Gates

cltaln
44 SonnMMI
4 Ht*ll~
riVII
8 ....
~ llenNth
P-efllan 51 Lobder11 Nol me
55 a.tct1t
12 Stwtf of the
cf ........
movtee
56 Clvfl Wl'l1l1g
13 No tlllltl'llll 57 Fizzy
15 AJI_..t
btVtlaal

·c:'Y

But Jhon Sou1h will be foroad fo shiH to
cfuba. East··rUffto the third round , and
plays another hUrl Mer dedarer r\rfto,
he is out of trumpe and has only eil#ll

4sn1

Why d.W. anywhe111 else

co•mucno•

fur·

...

IT STILL SEATS TH' HECK
OUTTA TH' ALTERNATIVE II

'

S-UREA ...................$199/ton Bulk Only

Going Out 01 Buolneaa
Inventory must Go, Vehides,
Local references
• 1 Off' ~ ·
n1 Eel nlshad. Established
oOOS,
. . . . qu~me
. ca• 2'4 Hre
' • (740)
Kenny's Aut1 Center 740..
"
446·9971
0870, ROgers Basement ..
Waterprno!lng.
1

~
02 Dodge Ram 42k mHes,
auto, 4K4 , $SSOO. 2000
Ranger EXP, std. 4, 4 ,
$4500, and more. 446-7278

rcuz

zt,s....,_..,$9.99/50

St &amp; C
'"
op
ompare
Unoond~ional ' llletlnie guar···~~~=::~~~

anlee.

·''

1l% Horse Feed
Sportsmlx Dog Food

··•

-•'
WATEAPAOoi'ING

StOid(jl.?

'

742·2332

I

.

A•PAYIN' II

•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• RoOm AddHJons
Owner:
JamtiKN-11

fleetwoOd Mallard, . 28ft, ·
EKCell9nt Condltloo, Gara~ .
kept, Reese Hitch, Sway
bar. 446-1266

.IMI"IW ......,.w~.-._...,

'
'

•Decks

76 Air
condklon 304·674'·0006 or
30'1'593-3933 $5,800 OBo'

riO

.·

Hill·s Sc lr

• Roilflng

·~::;F;=;;;;
Stream, 31FT, great '

tra~iSS/00.-sO~oOO ·-

YEP, AN' WE
JEST KEEP ON

TH' COST OF UVIN'
WENT UP AG'IN !!

''
'
:::::::~~!! .;
Constr1;1etio~

Pa10 ·Pass

1 Feet-food

40 UncltUin
. 41 Merry
42 JcUifrdtln

-a

~

.1

4t

ACROSS

Oou conlidenca irom every pore.
But on some de818, tt is Important to try
to control !rumps -as in thlo deal. How
would I"" pi8y in lour spadea after Wut
heart, Eat winning w11h hll kfng

BARNEY

".........,,.., lid ,..,...

Auto, $2400: t993 Ford ~
Escort. 1 owner, $1400;
1998JeepGrai1dCherokeo, 05Honda450A, LowHoure.
$3900:
1998
Dodge $4500. Call 740-416-7055.
Caral'l!n, $2400: 1998 Leave Message.
Ka)'lasaki Vulcan 800,
Saddlebags, · windshield, 2004 Sportster · B83 XL
$J200; 1992 Chevy S·tO, w/shield, Engine Guard, ·
y6, Auto, s1200, t 997 Forward foot controls, pull
Chevy Cavalier, 52500 . ~ back H Bar, _Two Seater,
(740)446-8172
Foot pegs, sissy bar, $5000.
(740)245·5027
2000 Black Grand IW GT, :1.006 Honda Gold Wing
VS, Rain Air, Sunroof, CD. $4,000 in accessories. Paid
91,000 miles. $5,600.00. $24,000 new.. $19,SOO. Call
74_0_'94
_
::-9-_9008
_.,.· _ _ _ _ 740·387-7129.
2003 Dodge Stratus, 2 door, :-:---:-:-:--- - 2007 Honda Rancher. 420
4 cy/, Auto, Air, Sunroof,
ES/4x4
paid $5,300 asking
93 000 11 14500 080 '
(74' 0l256mes,
304·675·37t1
_33
:__ ..:..,._·_t2
_ _ __
2004 Saturn Jon 5!!Q!l

ca"

r

0

P~~Fett

lw-lliiiiiij,iiijo-pl "--titiiiiiiiiiiiot_.l

I

r

' wt

0

=-=-=-=-

In Loving
Memory of

NEA Crossword Puzzle

32 Porter and

Opening lead; • 5

740-653-9657

r

Pass

. 4• ·

Insured &amp; Bonded

13

West · North
Pus 1 NT

••

Seamless Guners
Rooling, Siding, Guners

01
Hyundal
Accent 1998 Eddie Bauer Explorer,
Hatchback. 5 speed trans, Good chnd. new tires 740.
65,310 mNos, JIOOd · condi· 645·8262
1Jcn. needs cataly11c convert·
er. Asking $3200. Call 740·
709·6339.
-03_-n_a_uru_s_.-a-ut_o_$-3900-.-0-4
t992 GMC S fan Ml I"
Sunfire, auto $5200, 91 Olds
a
n van
front
&amp; rear air, Captain•.
$t 450 98 Tiburon, $2200
•
· chairs eKe. cond. $t .soo'
72_7_8 _ _
_and_mo_re_
. ..s_-_
4-11 •
·
30 75 5831
1999 Ch.=.. .... Monte Carlo,

K J 5

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

3.

.lrr-...:.----,

A

8

•

H&amp;H
Guttering

•
AERATION MOTORS
Pomeroy, 2·3 br. apt or
Rep81
red, New &amp; Rebulh In
house, partllilly furnished,
HUO approved.; near paf'l(, - - - - - -- - Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· r.:r--~----.,
800·537-9526.
no pets, (740)992-6886
Gnocl... Living 1 and 2
iii._.l
Pretty, 3BR, 1 Bath. Bedroom Apts. at Villa9e NEW AND USED STEEL
·Downtown Gallipolis. Very Manor and Riverside Apts.ln Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Concrete,
Angle, 8Ft dl1c $400, 7 112 Tye
close to Washington Elem. Ulddleport, from $327 to For
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Paoture, Pleeoer no 1111
and GAHS. $695.
Grating
For
Drains drtR $&amp;,000 IJC ' row No
No smoking. Ulili1ies not Housing Opportunity.
Nice 2 Bedroom Apartment Drlll8ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Till com planter S1,500
Included.
in Point Pteesant with all Scrap Metals Open Monday, Andy Sigler 304-837-2018
645·6378 ask for Kelly
k~ohen appliances gas fUr· Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Taking a!'pl ication$300s
, 3BRde
. No nace. NC and washer Dryer Friday, Sam-4:30pm: Closed Clearance on round bale
pets. 1o 751mo,
p. hookup, $350. + $200 Thursday, . Saturday &amp; teeders, starting at $t25.0~
446"36 t 7
Deposit 304-675·6375 · or Sunday. (740)446-7300
and up. End 01 season on 6
M
H
804-6n-8621
finiShing mowers as low as
OIIIJ.E OMFS
0 Frick Sawmill with bfower, $899 and up. Fall sale on
FOR RENT
brush"""•
' . . . t O'&amp;
Nice Clean
furnished l belts and pipes. Sawdust
'"""'P 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 ,
~
bedroom Apartment. $350 Bucket. No Sunday Cells. t5' "~1Je
"" suppi ee IastN
. ow
00 l4K70 38R, 2BA for rent. month Deposit required 3149 Nebo Rd, f'atrlot, Oh
is the best tim&amp; to buy grad·
$450/dep. $4351 a month. (304)675·2970
er blades. ~fore !he snow
304-1175· 7911
· - - - - - - - - Saw to% off regular price comes 4', 5', 6~ 7' &amp; · s·.
Now Accep!ing ~plicatlons on all Vent Free Gas Heaters Hurry they won't last tong at
1118 Cora Mill Ad, Central at: Valley V•ew Apartments, (Propane
or
Natural) the discoonted prie&amp;. ..liJl''s
Air, 2BR, Very QOOd neigh· 800 St Ate .325, Thurman, Aluminum Fiberated Paint Farm Equipment tnc. 2150
borllOod, $395/mo, sva1lable Ohio 45685, (740)245-9170, (Clreat tor Mobile Homes) 5- Eastern Ave. GaJMpolis 740·
Oct. 1, (740)245·5211
t -2 Bedroom Apartments IJII. Buckal $36.95. Sta· 440.9777
2 Br , AJC, Very nice with with _appliances fu~~ished. Kool ~hlle Elastomertc ~oof ' ar~-----,
porch in Gallipolis. No pe1s. On Site Laundry faclhly. Call Coating !-gel. Bucket
LMSTOCK '
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 for details or pick up $7e.59. BPS Barn &amp; Fence
•
c....:....:..:::..:.:.:.:..:::...:.:.:..:.=_ Application at the rental 011 Base Paint~ Barn Red)
2BR on private Jot, Addison office. Possibility ol rental 51181. Buckel $89.9!1. We 2 Jersey Milk Cows recently
Twp, ~o Rent ,&amp; $400 assistance. Equal Housing carry Pittsburgh Paints &amp; fresh, lots . of milk.
Oepo~it; 2BR on private lot, Opportunity. TDOif 419·526· Sikkens Finish for al your Reasonably priced. 740very_OIC8, quiet, scenic area, 0466. -rhis lns1itution is an coating needs.
245-9044
Addison Twp, $5~/rent, equal Opportunity provider,
Paint Plut H•rdwere .
$550 Daposil (740)645· and Employe~
304-t76-4084
3413 or (740)645·3592
Syr Old Registered Black
IIIli"-_,~---. Angus Bul304-456;t083
2BR, 1BA, CA, Dishwasher.
P£rs
1624 Chatham Ave.
L,----iiiiiiiSiiAUliiiio-,.1 -Boa-rG-oa-ts-fo-rS-a-Je_B_u_cks_&amp;
3BR, 2BA. CA. large deck.
l 00% &amp; down 304·
3696 BulaviJJe Pike. Both
AKC Germe
Sh h d 675-5906 '
. n
ep er 'T.;rn::=-r.::;o:"l'!::::"l!ll
homes are extra nice. 740· : : - - - - - . . , . . - - - Puppies, BlacM. &amp; Tan, $350- IF
446·4234 home or 74Jl:208· Tara
Townhouse males, $300-females 304· ~:~!:~~oA~:a~n';;";,:us.
'-'786=1.::ce:;;ll:...- - - - - Apartments., Very Spsclous, 773·6062. cell 304·593· ~~-Ill7:,o4;;;,0·645:::,;-4;:;999:::.,_ _.
93 t4&lt;80 MH In GallipoliS 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 tl2 4287
F
SR B
Bath, Adult 'Pool &amp; Baby ::--:-.,...,-----erry, 3 , 1.5 A, 2501mo Pool, Patio. Start 1425/Mo. Blonde &amp; White 5 week old
+ $80 lot rent and $100 No Pets, lease Plus puppies and their 2 year old
deposit. No central Air. Call Seauity Deposit Required, parents, part lab and retrievAtrll:ti
.:;
304:..;..:·8..c
75:.-3:.1.::29:...._ _ _ 17401446.348 t .
er. 441-t417 after 5pm
•-..oFOiiiRiSiii.w!iiii-.,.1
Mobile Homo for Rent, 2 BR, - . , - - - - - - - - CKC Toy Poodle puppies,
A/C, HUO Approved, Total Twin Rivers Tower is accept- females. Shots and wormed. 95 Ford Contour. 4Cyl, auto.
Etectrlc, Renllncludes trash, ing appMcalions for waiting Males $250 Females $300. air. $1000 OBO. 74()..2561233
water &amp; BBwer. $325fmo, list for Hud-subsized, 1· br, 740·256-3168
$325 deposi, Call(740)992· apartment,for
the
.:;5839=..:.for;...•::P:::.Pt;;,..- , . . - - - alderly/disabled call 675·
Mobile Homes lor Rent 6679
Equal
Housing
located o1f Sandhill Road Opportu~ty
call 304-675 3423
=..:..:.:..:.:.:..:...:..:.___ Very nice apartment for rent
Small 2BA MobUe Home in in FlomerC1f, great neir;tlbor~
Johnsons Mobile Home hood, quiet. Newly remodPark. 740-446·2003 or 446· eled. New appliances. 2
:':t4'-"0:::.9-,---=--::-:- Bedrooms., 1 bath. Central
Trailer for rent, 3BR, 2 BA. Air &amp;Hest. Call 992-9784 or
CaH 367·n62 or 446--4060 992-5094 for more details.

111 Memory

• Free Delivery

Owner- Rick W~
740-992-5929
740-416:-J698 '

Locel Contrecto•

-

i

~ 24hr. Emergency Service

• Many More Items

Additions

Townhouse
apartments., I'm buyir1g old Milk Bottles ~
aRnErJ/NTor 'cmJall1 ~ s •• tF R and Pomeroy Ink bottles, ...";-tiiiiiiiiiioo_.l
· •.
• 1
. 11 (740)992 5088
fO!' applicatiOn &amp; informat1on.
Cocker Spaniels, 6 w1u3 old,
MRU~
females, purebred, both
MERaiANJlN:. parents on premises, $125.
(740)387-7231
.Nice clean, 2BR, 1BA.
92 CASE 580 SuperK -~-..,.---·$500/dep. Fridge &amp; Stove, .•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments Backhoe, vary good. condl· Kittens · 6wks old. Siamese·
WfO hook·up. Must see! CaM •Central heat &amp; AIC
lion, low hours. $18,000. Himalayan. $50 each. Call
days-740-709·1285 or eves·
740· 441 .()727
Call 7'"709·9420
740-446-3272
•Washerldryer hookup
--~------ - - - - - - - •Tenant pays electric
&amp; Love seal $200, Miniature Pincher Pups, 2
Off SR 141 , 3BR, 2BA,
(304)882-30 17 Couch
OueensetMaHress$75, Ph. Black/Tan females, $300
appliances, basement, 1 car
304-675--5015
each. 8 weeks old.
garage, $500/mo plus
----JET
_ _ _ _ (740)388-6124
dapoell.(614)226-0859
.

°

LOCSity Owne!l and Operatad '

Soffit, Decks,
D6ors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room

can

AQ983
West
Eoa1
• 93
• J 10 7 5
•Q165Z
.AK94 3
• 10 3
• KJ l
• 7 6 4'
• 10 z
South
•AKQ41

f.\ONTY

Roofing, Siding,

i..-----..,
7~754

•uu

.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Entertainment

86

• J 10

·--·--

Table &amp; Chairs. End Table,
eenter. All for $150.

Mort~

•

Full and King Size
Bedspreads for sale, $2:0
esohl Inquire at 1he fioiJdly
IM of Gall~ 7~
0090
-------New sofa &amp; kNe seat, $400,
New Khchen table/ 4 · char
t
1179.95 . Mollohan ·~._rpe
202 Clali&lt; Chapel Rd.
BJdwell, OH (740)388.()173
Mon·Frl 9a_.., Sat 9a-3p.
Stove,

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5 ;·

BRIDGE

Commorclal building 'for
Rtnl" 1800 oquare foot, o1f
ltrtet parking. Great locationl 749 Third A......., In
Galllpol~. Rem $300/mo.

Pleasam $375 ask for Don
_(304-'-)8_1_2·_43_50:---- ,
Coke Sign, Coke Lamp,
Apartment for rent, 1' 2 Barber chair, Ttunks, Green
Bdrm., remodeled, new car· Glass. Presaed Glass, Shot
pet, stove &amp; trig.. water, Glasses, Chicago Bulls
~er. trash pd. Middleport . Glasses, Raggedy Ann
$425 ·00 · No pets. Rei. books, Sidewalk Scale,
reQuired. "740' 843- 5264 ·
Military Folding Batttetleld
Beautiful Apte. at Jlckton Organ, Much Misc., Call
Eotatea. 52 Westwood (740)992·4197
Drive, from $365 to $560. H- U_G_E_Bo
-nJ_e_an_d_St_on_ewar
__e
740-446'2568 .
Equal
T
Auction: Oct. 5th, 6pm, Old
Housing 0 pportunity. his Glory
Auction
House
institution Is an Equal Middleport,
Oh.
Opportunity Provider and Consignments welcome, .
_Em_p~oyer
__
. - - - - - (740)992·5088 Listing at:
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· http~/www. auctionzlp.c:omll
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
Jstlngs/3428tt .hlml

17 144 1

www.mydallysentl~.com

WE L DL

.

"• "We know who inYeUicd
"'~ eleclrici1y ," the wise IDIJI said, "but ;

r--::-~:-:-::--:-:--"-, whoever iuveott:d tbe meter is ibe

C I L CI N

I

one who made the----."

f--~r-"11-TIT!"']r-"1]--l G)

Complete the chu&lt;klo quo&lt;ad
'hv fill;ng 1~· the mll!ing w«ds
'-'-'-~-.J-'-1......1---:-' rou d"'tloo fro,. •top No. 3 b01ow. •

e 'PliiNI NUMifRIO LITTERS IN
IHISf SQUARfS

6 UNSCRAMm
A80VI LITTERS
TO GfT ANSWER

' '

Tr1·1· .r1

I IIIII

SCIAM-UTS ANSWERS '~2 ~ -o 1
Physic: - Yeast - bt1et - Yonder - HELI'ED
Oood wolds to Uve by: "The only people wldt whom you
should try to even wldt aw lltole who bave HELPeD you." · ·

Icc

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�.

...•

~-·

-- ....

.. .. ... ..

..

.

.

~

'TUelday, S.ptember 25, 2001

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tun day, September 25,2007
ALLEYOOP
a-

.. Country eattlng,

1 &amp; 2,Bedloow Apartmen1o
for Rem, Mtlga COomy, In
City - pluo · depooJt
No - &amp; refer·
peta, town, No Pets, Depoe!J
$460
enceo(740,.._90
Requlrad, (740)992·5174 or
(740).. 1-Q110.
3BR
near
Holzer,
.l.ppllancea,
No
Pets, 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
$650/mo plus deposit. ments, furnished ancl untur·
(7~)245·9880, (740)645· nished, and houses In
3836
Pomeroy and Middleport,
_-010ry--olde-r
securlly deposh roqurad, no
-ba-th.
1
2
farm house on SR 554 • pets, 740-992·22t8.
'-------. BldwetvRV
schoots
2 bedrooms, lilring room.
$575/mo plus sec dep. Pets k/1cheo, t ba1h, apar1moot
under 15 lb8 wl$575 pet have central air. Furnished
deposit Available 1Jl:13-Q7. with COUCh, chars. wesher.
Call 44&amp;-3644 for appllca· dryer, stO\Ie, microwave,
lion
__
. - - - - - - beds, dinning tabte and
chars $400 depooit, $450 a
3SR, t .5 bath, 2·story on
Cedar St • $575/rent, $575 month call 304-882 -2523
sec. dep. Pets less than 20 leave a message end nurnJbs wl$575 per deposh. Call _be_r_w_no_t_st_h_om_e_ _ _
..S-3644 tor •~Jication .
...,,...
2 br., country setting, wid
"I
1
2BR
hookup, utilities included, no
69 G811 ad •
• 1BA
•••01month
sec dep pets, available 10/01 107,
~
+
·
·
You
pay all utilities. c an 446- $550 per month plus
_3644
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ deposh. (740)992·4 119

--=-.=-

Alllntlonl

"

2br. Apl. on 5th Slreet Pt.

local c:Ompany offering "NO
DOWN PAVMENr pr0r
grwns 1or I"" 10 buy )&lt;&gt;Ur
hOme tnstead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect credil
accepted
Payment could be 1he
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
:..
17..c
40:.ci3::.::.:..
8H=Ooo
.:..__ _ _
For sale or rent, 3 bedroom,
1 bat h, new Iy remOdeled
house in Aocrrey Village II.
Buy for $64,000 with possi·
bJe owner a..st or rent Ior
$500 per month with securi·
ty dapoeJJ No inside pets.
_
cal~l-'(7_4o..:.)645__t:l83
____
Nice 3BR, 1 BA, CIA,
Stov&amp;!Frldge, turn. 1 yr
lease: $600.Mo+Deposit,
references, no smoking, no
pets. 105 Bastlanl. 740..446·
.3667
1

f

.&gt;

II I

r\0

11

1

\.I

Phillip
Alder

I'

• ,

I'-

llruiiHJW

GooDs

·--iiiiiiiii"""!-rl

·

•

1..------·
..

Am1Qvts

Ellm View
Apartments

~

740-367..()544
FreeEatlmaiH

740-367.0536

• Stop By Our Shqwroom

•

70 Pine Street • G1lllpolle, OH

• A Q 91

740-

-·

Wise Concret-:
All types o( concrele

r

-

$3000:t'994'che\oyS·tOV6,

Does.

jiB

1

"ICITC~eN SlJ~FA'e
INSTAL£.~1t5: NOT
"GOlJNTe~·fiTT~~S"!

FJI

4

- ~=&lt;DS(
·

www.tta1ru••III..UU bJ.,..

J&amp;L
..Ylnyl Skiing
• Replacement

1

I

Ext. Cond, Great gj!s
mMeage, $9,000, (740)441 ..
9865
-------97 Camero RS, whl wlblk
radng stripes/racing spoiler.
Lookslr':M'S QOOO. Priced to
sell $:i!BOO! 304-634-8523
COOK
MOTORS 328
Jackson
Pike. Quality
cars/trucks with· w~rranty.
Our low prices are posted on .
vehicle. Compare price and
quality to vehi~es anywhere. Slop or call 740-4460103

Windows

·~ -~ftO'IlFR."
·

a•a•1'ENT

IOIEIT
aiSSEll

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

740-14...2217

THJ: BORN I,.OSER
_,,..--- ---,
TII.t.'{ !)~'{

IOOI~C. il~l.E.

WJC:MTt~
~~~t&amp;St .

IW®lll£ OFfiCE.
I~ LI\CE. Gti\'1~

1'\U)IC.I~ ...

"'1».\l.'(
llOOStU~T!

lb.

C

•

I

omp ete

Remodeling

.·

.

WID II
Dllaell Wilt

i5

·Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios,
Concrete Footers
Also

TR~r1iitA~Lmilii~
.__ _lliFOiiiiRii"""'iiiiiiioo_.l

on
SAVINGS
' :'
·;

,;

14ft. $75.00
16 ft $83.00

35537 St itt 7 North '

J41•112-11rM
U. 1

·

10ft. $53.00
12ft. S$65.00

J

BIG NATE

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
! •Prompt and Quality
Work

I::~~::;~,oced

Rates

VOCIII.. GRouP! :n1
TAL..~INt'o

tNSTRUI1EN~~

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER .
SERVICE
Room Aclcltlon• &amp;

·=
·~·t
Electrlcol Plumbing
Roofing I Guttlrl

VInyl Siding I hinting
Patio lnd Porah C.CU

'

A ~EtTER!

1!(1,' h .-' I ,
•

&gt;I'll ' ' '
,
1
,

I

• Ill '

r x,

I GOT A LETTER lo'KUnH
PEN PAL IN SCOTL.AHt!!

,

B3 5-10 4&lt;4, runs good,
$800firm, (740)91l2·1477

r

Dennis Bry!lnt
740-742-2377

4x4
FOR Sill:

1996 Dodge Ram 1500 4x4,
72,876 miteS, AC, elec
brakes and windows, cloth
interior, Reese hitch, some
rust. $5000.00, Riverview
PrOductions (740) 44t · t150
7:00am • 3:30pm, ask for
Rodney Rankin.

Date of Birth
October 27, I 933
Date of Death
September 25, 2006
Who went to be with the Lord
HE ONLY TAKES THE BEST
God saw she was getting tired
And a cure wtu not to be.
So he pul His arms around Jrer

And whispered, "Come with me".
llith ltiU'-fllltd •yes we wMched her
Su/ftr at1d flllle away,
.Although we lo¥ed her deeply,
Wt could not make Mr stay.
A golden heart stopped beating,

H41YI-workint lwnds pul to resl.
God IJToke our hearts to prove to us
He only takes the be.~t.
Sltl Lt sadly missrd and in our hearts fore,er.

REMEMBER THAT SPECIAL _
SOMEONE
WITH ACLASSIFIED AD
1

wlnnero: fi'le apades, one diamond and
two cfuba.
At trick thrH, Sou1h should lead his
remaining low spade, retaining hi&amp; hl!j1
ones ·for later. The defensa tal&lt;e8 lha
trld&lt;, but everything Is under control. ~
they play another heart, HIs ruffad on Jho
board. Doclarer can draw trumpe and
claim 10 lrid&lt;a: lour apades, one dla·
monel and five cfuba.

AstroGraph

w.dnnday, Sopl. 28, 20o7
By Bomlco Oool

In tha year ahead, you oould find your·

aelf being dragged Into a retuctant partnership arrangement wl1h someone you
may not like too well. Even though It may
not be What you want, 11 couki generate
coftective benefltl.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - It~ good to
be an lndivldualiet, but 11 II equally Impor-

~DEAR CIIARLIE. JUST SEEN TO
THE SIIOPS .. MA MAIJfS IN SED
WIT!-1 A SORE I-IEID AND MA
DA'S MAKIN MINCEANDTATTIE5
FOR TilE PIHNER .. LOVE, MORA6'

strong suit.

SAQtTTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) - Be
particularly selective regarding the topic
'J of your conversations wlth friends, or you
could touch on something lhllrl unlea.ahee
a, healed debate. Steer dear of 1ubjecta
of opposing oplnloM.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. t9) Getting along with peqons from all welkl
of life could be your strong suit. However,
thll actmlrable quality might not apli over
Into dealing with authOrity flgUI'JI. Be
tactful and careful .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20--Feb. 19) - Jult
because something workl well tor you
&lt;toean't mean h wit do the same for oth81'1. Don't try to force your procedures or

ality as well .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Vour associates will be helpful, but onty to a Hmlted
degree: Umlt your request to tot&gt;e too big
for one person to tle.ndle, but don't ask
them to do things you can easily do your·

River Cities Military
Support Group

....

Manley' a
Raa:ycllng

2nd Ave. Gallipolis

Final Week to
Save BIG!
60% off
All Items
Also display cases
for sale etc.

Closing Friday 9/28
441·9603

Good News
Bible Bookstore
35 Court St. Gallipolis

·--=-=The Syracuse Racine
Regional
Sewer
Dlslrlct will hold a public meeting on the proposed
Tackervllle
Expansion on October
9, 2007 at 7:00 pm at
the American legion .
(9) 25, 26, 27, 28, 30
(10) 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Saturday,
September 29, 2007 al
10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211
• W.
Second
St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company is
aalllng for cash In
hand or certified check
the following collater-

al:

"

2001 Dodge Str~tus
1BEEJ46X91 N722152
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy,
Oblo,
reserves lbe right ,to
bid at Ibis sola, and to
withdraw the · above
collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
rlghtto reJect any or all
blda submitted.
The above de~crlbad
collateral will be sold
"as Js-whare Is", with
no
expressed
or
Implied
warranty
given.
For further Inform•·
tlon, or lor an appointment to Inspect collet-

eral, prior lo sale date
contact Cyndla or Ken
at 992-2136.
(9) 25, 26, 27

Public Notice
legal Notice
Sealed Bids are baing
accepted tor a 1977
International
dump
truck,
Bodford
Township
Trustees
reserve the right to
accept or reject any or
all blda. fo view or
Inquiries call 740-9927015. Mall bids to
Bodford
Townohlp
42774 Helwig Ridge:
Shade OH 45778 Blda·
accepiad until october
9th
Ba~bsra J . Grueaer
Fiscal Officer
74()..696-1244 ·
(9) 25, 26,
28 (1 O) 1,
2 3 4 5

v,

'

1

'

... II F I 111M. . . HI ..
111. . . . . .12:11 ..

PIYIIIIT.. PIICES.
e. ·n
••nu
Clllllllelt
y. . . . . . . . .

N••l•••

. • .........
1

L---~·!•!•!~~1-!ft~l~lll~l--_J

21

~IY

GEMINI
(May 21 ·June 20) Disappointment never comes from
hopes baHCI on reallatlc premises, but
you could be severe!~ disappointed
when your expectations are predicated
upon thinking you'll get 11 free ride.
CANCER (June 21 ·Jllly 22) Conditions that have to do wi1h ~ur work
or career could be rather -complex. You
could proftt In one II'IIJtanoe. only to be
penalized in another. Handle each wtth
the aama graclouenele.
LEO (July 2a.Aug. 22)- You'll be • mott

GARFIELD

.'

...,•

,,

.,

·•'

delightful peraon 10 be around, provided

.,•

no one Cha!l•ngea your kiNa, oplniona
or methods. ThoH who dare might ...
quite anothflr aide of your pertan~llty.
VIRGO jAug. 23-9ept. 22) - Do exceptionally ca.utloua In your dullngs wHh
othel1i, especially H money Ia irWolved.
Make cartsin everyon1 antet up the
eama amount whan pitching In for a
mutual lntereet.

..

,,

-·

11 Crude

greln

23 Fill the llble 1

'11 PltcM or
Llbr!

17 In front

DOWN

rnatalt

41

U"""'-

22 SldutJIIlped 43 Rllltlc
24 Onloitd
- Sedgwick 23 .l,lthe
44 .........
24 Fllhhoolc
%7 "- lapltll" 2 FM!t '
a Honor
naWbom
part
45. JCarete bloW
3 S!IPI*I
25 IQrghlz
48 JNIC)jll
.110111

33 MCurad
34 Laft Ins
hurry
35Rear36 81"11'

4
5
8
7

Actreu

Klog clog
rtnge
~
CozY · 26 Promo llpe 48 lltum11111
MI. Tlunwl 28 1939
49 lclcfalltt .
Lugotl rv1tt
29 FICUhy

Sllndltnl
Oelhl

adclreu

mem.

8 Cr!VIII kin
9 BiaiChlr
Blllythouta
37 rllbd Into 10 Jacqllll'
il8 Set CIOII
girl
39 A Bobbloy 14 Winding
twin
curve

and conti"'Jng with the aca?
The auction was dlffocu~. On tho second
round, Sou1h did well not to rebid three
no-trump. But three diamonds pUt North
In a quandary. Perhaps he ahould have
given preference w!th a throo-&amp;pado bid.
!" North held thr118 spl\das, he would
have reload to two apadas, not lespondad one no-trump.) But he aattfad 1or ralalng dlamonda. Now Sou1h rebid hla
excellent liva-card alit, which North was
happy to pue. (Note that fi'le diamonds
I&amp; poor, but fi'le clube, which Ia Y111V hard
to rasch, le good.)
Dedit~~ will be tamplad to ruff Jho second heart and cash his tllrH top trumps.

through your fingers.
ARIES (March 21 · Aprll 19) - Being a
take-charge person comes naturally to
you, but you must be careful that you
don't ruffle the feathera of companions
who may want to express thEKr Individu-

Wednesday, Sept. 26
Courtside Grill

59 Oompeh-60 Shoe pert
18 Rtmolt
61 Vim and
20 Fire angina
vigor
-

30 Two

quertere

31

Memorial

Day race
36 StHI

60 Gather In,
II C10P1
52 ~ in lledit
53 rtbblt

54 Bullring ytll

glrdtr
(hyph.)

In vlcfory."
Thai. shotJd apply at lhe brldga table.

Don't let what you acquire. easily slip

meets 7:00 p.m

58 Future filii

Arthur Asha said, "Rogardlas&amp; oi how
• you feel Inside, always try to look Ilks a
winner. E110n " you are behind, a sulltalned look of oontrof and confidence
can give you a mantal edge that result8

mathods ,on reluctan1 companions who
want to do things dltrerentty.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Meoch 20) - You mlgh1
be quite skilled at bringing In the buc::kl,
but, sadly, you'll ha\18 tittle discipline In
the management ol those resource&amp;.

COW and BOY

In Memory

Aladine
Jean Baker

Pas8

benettt. ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-f'lov. 22) - You hove
the ability to achteve many Important
objecttvea, but you· oould rlak -spreading
youi"Htf too lNn. Managing a couple of
things ·simultaneously may not be your

PEANUTS

V C YOUN G ill
I

ttva.ili

16 Fleata

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

ert.ooiyCiptw_ .. , _ , . , _ . . , ..... _
Eailletl.- rr the clj:trw !llllndS b ftdw.
Todsy's d&lt;.e: H eqvsls K

"B

GRIZZWELLS
~~'li'ti~
~ \E'~Iil 1'----"'"\

tA~ aJCII

~--- 1111

SOUPTONUTZ

, ,.. ... ~­

AN J BY R.B K INC C N D N II V B E B L

JBY NYTV NP CASTV SY

RVP DSXV,

CN EV CRBYHXWD XNP 8 INNL NYY."
• YNMVDSKC JBPFNPSV PBADSYJK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'They say nobody is pe~. Then they Jell us
;
practice mal&lt;es perfect. Iwish they'd make up their minds.' • W~ Chamberlain · ·.

,~~:t:~y S@tt41Nt-Lrr-~s·

,.......

WOlD
UMI

lditod by CIA Y

Olileorrong1

letters of lha

four sc:ro!'lbled words be·

low

10

form four Simple words.

DOFJMY

I I I I I'

I

AM N 0 W

tant to be cooperative when the oocaelon
calls for lt. 11 you're self-serving, othera
will emulate your blhavtor and none will

Bmk&amp;
Brickwork

.&lt;

IF IT'LL
HELP, :r
CAN 1!011. •
_....,.""' 1'\'f !lAO'S
ACCOR.DtoN !

AI!IOUf A

REAL ltOCJ(. 'M'ROLL
i!r".N!) '· WITH REAL..
INSTR.UI'IENTS!

Po..-roy, OH

WV0387215

Call Gary Stanley @
740· 742-2293

Pass

. ....... Uidor:

THAT WAS JU!;oT A.

Shade River Ag. Service

• New HomeS
, Garages

Eut
Pass

How do you control
their trumps?

G

'

Prlefert Powder Coated Gates

cltaln
44 SonnMMI
4 Ht*ll~
riVII
8 ....
~ llenNth
P-efllan 51 Lobder11 Nol me
55 a.tct1t
12 Stwtf of the
cf ........
movtee
56 Clvfl Wl'l1l1g
13 No tlllltl'llll 57 Fizzy
15 AJI_..t
btVtlaal

·c:'Y

But Jhon Sou1h will be foroad fo shiH to
cfuba. East··rUffto the third round , and
plays another hUrl Mer dedarer r\rfto,
he is out of trumpe and has only eil#ll

4sn1

Why d.W. anywhe111 else

co•mucno•

fur·

...

IT STILL SEATS TH' HECK
OUTTA TH' ALTERNATIVE II

'

S-UREA ...................$199/ton Bulk Only

Going Out 01 Buolneaa
Inventory must Go, Vehides,
Local references
• 1 Off' ~ ·
n1 Eel nlshad. Established
oOOS,
. . . . qu~me
. ca• 2'4 Hre
' • (740)
Kenny's Aut1 Center 740..
"
446·9971
0870, ROgers Basement ..
Waterprno!lng.
1

~
02 Dodge Ram 42k mHes,
auto, 4K4 , $SSOO. 2000
Ranger EXP, std. 4, 4 ,
$4500, and more. 446-7278

rcuz

zt,s....,_..,$9.99/50

St &amp; C
'"
op
ompare
Unoond~ional ' llletlnie guar···~~~=::~~~

anlee.

·''

1l% Horse Feed
Sportsmlx Dog Food

··•

-•'
WATEAPAOoi'ING

StOid(jl.?

'

742·2332

I

.

A•PAYIN' II

•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• RoOm AddHJons
Owner:
JamtiKN-11

fleetwoOd Mallard, . 28ft, ·
EKCell9nt Condltloo, Gara~ .
kept, Reese Hitch, Sway
bar. 446-1266

.IMI"IW ......,.w~.-._...,

'
'

•Decks

76 Air
condklon 304·674'·0006 or
30'1'593-3933 $5,800 OBo'

riO

.·

Hill·s Sc lr

• Roilflng

·~::;F;=;;;;
Stream, 31FT, great '

tra~iSS/00.-sO~oOO ·-

YEP, AN' WE
JEST KEEP ON

TH' COST OF UVIN'
WENT UP AG'IN !!

''
'
:::::::~~!! .;
Constr1;1etio~

Pa10 ·Pass

1 Feet-food

40 UncltUin
. 41 Merry
42 JcUifrdtln

-a

~

.1

4t

ACROSS

Oou conlidenca irom every pore.
But on some de818, tt is Important to try
to control !rumps -as in thlo deal. How
would I"" pi8y in lour spadea after Wut
heart, Eat winning w11h hll kfng

BARNEY

".........,,.., lid ,..,...

Auto, $2400: t993 Ford ~
Escort. 1 owner, $1400;
1998JeepGrai1dCherokeo, 05Honda450A, LowHoure.
$3900:
1998
Dodge $4500. Call 740-416-7055.
Caral'l!n, $2400: 1998 Leave Message.
Ka)'lasaki Vulcan 800,
Saddlebags, · windshield, 2004 Sportster · B83 XL
$J200; 1992 Chevy S·tO, w/shield, Engine Guard, ·
y6, Auto, s1200, t 997 Forward foot controls, pull
Chevy Cavalier, 52500 . ~ back H Bar, _Two Seater,
(740)446-8172
Foot pegs, sissy bar, $5000.
(740)245·5027
2000 Black Grand IW GT, :1.006 Honda Gold Wing
VS, Rain Air, Sunroof, CD. $4,000 in accessories. Paid
91,000 miles. $5,600.00. $24,000 new.. $19,SOO. Call
74_0_'94
_
::-9-_9008
_.,.· _ _ _ _ 740·387-7129.
2003 Dodge Stratus, 2 door, :-:---:-:-:--- - 2007 Honda Rancher. 420
4 cy/, Auto, Air, Sunroof,
ES/4x4
paid $5,300 asking
93 000 11 14500 080 '
(74' 0l256mes,
304·675·37t1
_33
:__ ..:..,._·_t2
_ _ __
2004 Saturn Jon 5!!Q!l

ca"

r

0

P~~Fett

lw-lliiiiiij,iiijo-pl "--titiiiiiiiiiiiot_.l

I

r

' wt

0

=-=-=-=-

In Loving
Memory of

NEA Crossword Puzzle

32 Porter and

Opening lead; • 5

740-653-9657

r

Pass

. 4• ·

Insured &amp; Bonded

13

West · North
Pus 1 NT

••

Seamless Guners
Rooling, Siding, Guners

01
Hyundal
Accent 1998 Eddie Bauer Explorer,
Hatchback. 5 speed trans, Good chnd. new tires 740.
65,310 mNos, JIOOd · condi· 645·8262
1Jcn. needs cataly11c convert·
er. Asking $3200. Call 740·
709·6339.
-03_-n_a_uru_s_.-a-ut_o_$-3900-.-0-4
t992 GMC S fan Ml I"
Sunfire, auto $5200, 91 Olds
a
n van
front
&amp; rear air, Captain•.
$t 450 98 Tiburon, $2200
•
· chairs eKe. cond. $t .soo'
72_7_8 _ _
_and_mo_re_
. ..s_-_
4-11 •
·
30 75 5831
1999 Ch.=.. .... Monte Carlo,

K J 5

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

3.

.lrr-...:.----,

A

8

•

H&amp;H
Guttering

•
AERATION MOTORS
Pomeroy, 2·3 br. apt or
Rep81
red, New &amp; Rebulh In
house, partllilly furnished,
HUO approved.; near paf'l(, - - - - - -- - Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· r.:r--~----.,
800·537-9526.
no pets, (740)992-6886
Gnocl... Living 1 and 2
iii._.l
Pretty, 3BR, 1 Bath. Bedroom Apts. at Villa9e NEW AND USED STEEL
·Downtown Gallipolis. Very Manor and Riverside Apts.ln Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Concrete,
Angle, 8Ft dl1c $400, 7 112 Tye
close to Washington Elem. Ulddleport, from $327 to For
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Paoture, Pleeoer no 1111
and GAHS. $695.
Grating
For
Drains drtR $&amp;,000 IJC ' row No
No smoking. Ulili1ies not Housing Opportunity.
Nice 2 Bedroom Apartment Drlll8ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Till com planter S1,500
Included.
in Point Pteesant with all Scrap Metals Open Monday, Andy Sigler 304-837-2018
645·6378 ask for Kelly
k~ohen appliances gas fUr· Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Taking a!'pl ication$300s
, 3BRde
. No nace. NC and washer Dryer Friday, Sam-4:30pm: Closed Clearance on round bale
pets. 1o 751mo,
p. hookup, $350. + $200 Thursday, . Saturday &amp; teeders, starting at $t25.0~
446"36 t 7
Deposit 304-675·6375 · or Sunday. (740)446-7300
and up. End 01 season on 6
M
H
804-6n-8621
finiShing mowers as low as
OIIIJ.E OMFS
0 Frick Sawmill with bfower, $899 and up. Fall sale on
FOR RENT
brush"""•
' . . . t O'&amp;
Nice Clean
furnished l belts and pipes. Sawdust
'"""'P 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 ,
~
bedroom Apartment. $350 Bucket. No Sunday Cells. t5' "~1Je
"" suppi ee IastN
. ow
00 l4K70 38R, 2BA for rent. month Deposit required 3149 Nebo Rd, f'atrlot, Oh
is the best tim&amp; to buy grad·
$450/dep. $4351 a month. (304)675·2970
er blades. ~fore !he snow
304-1175· 7911
· - - - - - - - - Saw to% off regular price comes 4', 5', 6~ 7' &amp; · s·.
Now Accep!ing ~plicatlons on all Vent Free Gas Heaters Hurry they won't last tong at
1118 Cora Mill Ad, Central at: Valley V•ew Apartments, (Propane
or
Natural) the discoonted prie&amp;. ..liJl''s
Air, 2BR, Very QOOd neigh· 800 St Ate .325, Thurman, Aluminum Fiberated Paint Farm Equipment tnc. 2150
borllOod, $395/mo, sva1lable Ohio 45685, (740)245-9170, (Clreat tor Mobile Homes) 5- Eastern Ave. GaJMpolis 740·
Oct. 1, (740)245·5211
t -2 Bedroom Apartments IJII. Buckal $36.95. Sta· 440.9777
2 Br , AJC, Very nice with with _appliances fu~~ished. Kool ~hlle Elastomertc ~oof ' ar~-----,
porch in Gallipolis. No pe1s. On Site Laundry faclhly. Call Coating !-gel. Bucket
LMSTOCK '
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 for details or pick up $7e.59. BPS Barn &amp; Fence
•
c....:....:..:::..:.:.:.:..:::...:.:.:..:.=_ Application at the rental 011 Base Paint~ Barn Red)
2BR on private Jot, Addison office. Possibility ol rental 51181. Buckel $89.9!1. We 2 Jersey Milk Cows recently
Twp, ~o Rent ,&amp; $400 assistance. Equal Housing carry Pittsburgh Paints &amp; fresh, lots . of milk.
Oepo~it; 2BR on private lot, Opportunity. TDOif 419·526· Sikkens Finish for al your Reasonably priced. 740very_OIC8, quiet, scenic area, 0466. -rhis lns1itution is an coating needs.
245-9044
Addison Twp, $5~/rent, equal Opportunity provider,
Paint Plut H•rdwere .
$550 Daposil (740)645· and Employe~
304-t76-4084
3413 or (740)645·3592
Syr Old Registered Black
IIIli"-_,~---. Angus Bul304-456;t083
2BR, 1BA, CA, Dishwasher.
P£rs
1624 Chatham Ave.
L,----iiiiiiiSiiAUliiiio-,.1 -Boa-rG-oa-ts-fo-rS-a-Je_B_u_cks_&amp;
3BR, 2BA. CA. large deck.
l 00% &amp; down 304·
3696 BulaviJJe Pike. Both
AKC Germe
Sh h d 675-5906 '
. n
ep er 'T.;rn::=-r.::;o:"l'!::::"l!ll
homes are extra nice. 740· : : - - - - - . . , . . - - - Puppies, BlacM. &amp; Tan, $350- IF
446·4234 home or 74Jl:208· Tara
Townhouse males, $300-females 304· ~:~!:~~oA~:a~n';;";,:us.
'-'786=1.::ce:;;ll:...- - - - - Apartments., Very Spsclous, 773·6062. cell 304·593· ~~-Ill7:,o4;;;,0·645:::,;-4;:;999:::.,_ _.
93 t4&lt;80 MH In GallipoliS 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 tl2 4287
F
SR B
Bath, Adult 'Pool &amp; Baby ::--:-.,...,-----erry, 3 , 1.5 A, 2501mo Pool, Patio. Start 1425/Mo. Blonde &amp; White 5 week old
+ $80 lot rent and $100 No Pets, lease Plus puppies and their 2 year old
deposit. No central Air. Call Seauity Deposit Required, parents, part lab and retrievAtrll:ti
.:;
304:..;..:·8..c
75:.-3:.1.::29:...._ _ _ 17401446.348 t .
er. 441-t417 after 5pm
•-..oFOiiiRiSiii.w!iiii-.,.1
Mobile Homo for Rent, 2 BR, - . , - - - - - - - - CKC Toy Poodle puppies,
A/C, HUO Approved, Total Twin Rivers Tower is accept- females. Shots and wormed. 95 Ford Contour. 4Cyl, auto.
Etectrlc, Renllncludes trash, ing appMcalions for waiting Males $250 Females $300. air. $1000 OBO. 74()..2561233
water &amp; BBwer. $325fmo, list for Hud-subsized, 1· br, 740·256-3168
$325 deposi, Call(740)992· apartment,for
the
.:;5839=..:.for;...•::P:::.Pt;;,..- , . . - - - alderly/disabled call 675·
Mobile Homes lor Rent 6679
Equal
Housing
located o1f Sandhill Road Opportu~ty
call 304-675 3423
=..:..:.:..:.:.:..:...:..:.___ Very nice apartment for rent
Small 2BA MobUe Home in in FlomerC1f, great neir;tlbor~
Johnsons Mobile Home hood, quiet. Newly remodPark. 740-446·2003 or 446· eled. New appliances. 2
:':t4'-"0:::.9-,---=--::-:- Bedrooms., 1 bath. Central
Trailer for rent, 3BR, 2 BA. Air &amp;Hest. Call 992-9784 or
CaH 367·n62 or 446--4060 992-5094 for more details.

111 Memory

• Free Delivery

Owner- Rick W~
740-992-5929
740-416:-J698 '

Locel Contrecto•

-

i

~ 24hr. Emergency Service

• Many More Items

Additions

Townhouse
apartments., I'm buyir1g old Milk Bottles ~
aRnErJ/NTor 'cmJall1 ~ s •• tF R and Pomeroy Ink bottles, ...";-tiiiiiiiiiioo_.l
· •.
• 1
. 11 (740)992 5088
fO!' applicatiOn &amp; informat1on.
Cocker Spaniels, 6 w1u3 old,
MRU~
females, purebred, both
MERaiANJlN:. parents on premises, $125.
(740)387-7231
.Nice clean, 2BR, 1BA.
92 CASE 580 SuperK -~-..,.---·$500/dep. Fridge &amp; Stove, .•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments Backhoe, vary good. condl· Kittens · 6wks old. Siamese·
WfO hook·up. Must see! CaM •Central heat &amp; AIC
lion, low hours. $18,000. Himalayan. $50 each. Call
days-740-709·1285 or eves·
740· 441 .()727
Call 7'"709·9420
740-446-3272
•Washerldryer hookup
--~------ - - - - - - - •Tenant pays electric
&amp; Love seal $200, Miniature Pincher Pups, 2
Off SR 141 , 3BR, 2BA,
(304)882-30 17 Couch
OueensetMaHress$75, Ph. Black/Tan females, $300
appliances, basement, 1 car
304-675--5015
each. 8 weeks old.
garage, $500/mo plus
----JET
_ _ _ _ (740)388-6124
dapoell.(614)226-0859
.

°

LOCSity Owne!l and Operatad '

Soffit, Decks,
D6ors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room

can

AQ983
West
Eoa1
• 93
• J 10 7 5
•Q165Z
.AK94 3
• 10 3
• KJ l
• 7 6 4'
• 10 z
South
•AKQ41

f.\ONTY

Roofing, Siding,

i..-----..,
7~754

•uu

.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Entertainment

86

• J 10

·--·--

Table &amp; Chairs. End Table,
eenter. All for $150.

Mort~

•

Full and King Size
Bedspreads for sale, $2:0
esohl Inquire at 1he fioiJdly
IM of Gall~ 7~
0090
-------New sofa &amp; kNe seat, $400,
New Khchen table/ 4 · char
t
1179.95 . Mollohan ·~._rpe
202 Clali&lt; Chapel Rd.
BJdwell, OH (740)388.()173
Mon·Frl 9a_.., Sat 9a-3p.
Stove,

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5 ;·

BRIDGE

Commorclal building 'for
Rtnl" 1800 oquare foot, o1f
ltrtet parking. Great locationl 749 Third A......., In
Galllpol~. Rem $300/mo.

Pleasam $375 ask for Don
_(304-'-)8_1_2·_43_50:---- ,
Coke Sign, Coke Lamp,
Apartment for rent, 1' 2 Barber chair, Ttunks, Green
Bdrm., remodeled, new car· Glass. Presaed Glass, Shot
pet, stove &amp; trig.. water, Glasses, Chicago Bulls
~er. trash pd. Middleport . Glasses, Raggedy Ann
$425 ·00 · No pets. Rei. books, Sidewalk Scale,
reQuired. "740' 843- 5264 ·
Military Folding Batttetleld
Beautiful Apte. at Jlckton Organ, Much Misc., Call
Eotatea. 52 Westwood (740)992·4197
Drive, from $365 to $560. H- U_G_E_Bo
-nJ_e_an_d_St_on_ewar
__e
740-446'2568 .
Equal
T
Auction: Oct. 5th, 6pm, Old
Housing 0 pportunity. his Glory
Auction
House
institution Is an Equal Middleport,
Oh.
Opportunity Provider and Consignments welcome, .
_Em_p~oyer
__
. - - - - - (740)992·5088 Listing at:
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· http~/www. auctionzlp.c:omll
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
Jstlngs/3428tt .hlml

17 144 1

www.mydallysentl~.com

WE L DL

.

"• "We know who inYeUicd
"'~ eleclrici1y ," the wise IDIJI said, "but ;

r--::-~:-:-::--:-:--"-, whoever iuveott:d tbe meter is ibe

C I L CI N

I

one who made the----."

f--~r-"11-TIT!"']r-"1]--l G)

Complete the chu&lt;klo quo&lt;ad
'hv fill;ng 1~· the mll!ing w«ds
'-'-'-~-.J-'-1......1---:-' rou d"'tloo fro,. •top No. 3 b01ow. •

e 'PliiNI NUMifRIO LITTERS IN
IHISf SQUARfS

6 UNSCRAMm
A80VI LITTERS
TO GfT ANSWER

' '

Tr1·1· .r1

I IIIII

SCIAM-UTS ANSWERS '~2 ~ -o 1
Physic: - Yeast - bt1et - Yonder - HELI'ED
Oood wolds to Uve by: "The only people wldt whom you
should try to even wldt aw lltole who bave HELPeD you." · ·

Icc

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�.Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel .com

Tuesday,,

Deadline·approaching
for Environmental
Quality Incentives
Program funding, A(;

OHIO VALLEY"
BANK.
lnelde Foodland
lnllde W.Jmart
Pomeroy

238

-~we.

-

446·2168
441-357 5

2145 EMtem Ave. -

100 w. Moln St.

----

992-2357

www.ovbc.com
Weel(2
Winner
J.ohn Grate

--

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o ( l.:\ ' 1~ • \'ol. :;- '".f.&gt;

~Letart.WV

• Meigs' Stewart
advances to Division II
districts. See Page 81

HOLZER :CLINIC

2. ________________~

We,re Everywhere You Are!
•. ,J·

3. __________________

·

BY BRIAN

Pharmacy

Open m-F 9amo..7pm
Sat9am-1pm

Closed Sunday

(740) 992-'1536
www.f'oodf'alrmk.com

9 . __________________

:O. BITUARIES
.

10 •._________________

Page AS
• Michael Queen, 31
• zetta M. Ritchie, 87
, .•, .

11.'---------------------13 . _________________

See Page A2 .
• 4-H club meets.

S8e Page A2
• Meigs County Court
news. See Page A3
• Hunter education
class. See Page A3
• O'Bieness to offer
community CPR

··

See p

A3

tra1mng.
age
• Police looking at OU
profe~or's death
ibl h · id
as poss e omiC 9 ·

NAME: ______.,--_ _

See Page AS

• For the Record.

ADDRESS: ____________

AS
See P
age

• G~izens Corps Group
collecting school

PHONE: ____________

I. See page A5
suppleS.

Each Thesday through Dec.U, a numbered game will
appear In each participating merchant's ad.
Indicate your pick of winners and write It beside tbe
correspoodlng number.
·
Entries must be dropped off at the:
Gallipolis Dally Tribune or mailed to:
Football Smackdowo
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's contesl. Tbe prize will be awarded
weekly on the basis of most winners selected correctly
and In case of ties, winner will be determined by blind
draw. You must be 16 years of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per week.

WEATHER

Detallo on

p.,._ AB

INDEX

OXYGEN I RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES

• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery·
• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis, OH

740- 446-0007

RACINE
The
Southern Local School
Board recently approved
personnel for its two, mlljor
grant awards which are the
federal $1 million Grant to
Reduce Alcohol Abuse
(GRAA) and the $1 million
21st Century Grants from
the Ohio Department of
Eduaatiori. .
Using fu(lds from the
GRAA which is to . benefit
, stUdel\ts .ill 1111 tb,ree dis:tricts, the boatd hired

Ron's Trophies
...414EI&amp;ICST
,, ,.._
"'••'l.un~

2 SI!CllONS -

Annie's Mailbox

A2

Calendars

181 Seccrld ffle.

Classifieds

c •rois.(Jt 45631

(7~--

12 PAGI'S

(740) 448 441)

Q.538.7674

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries
?

Sports
Weather

B Section
A

6

© , 007 ohio Volley Puhllshins c...

specialist at $30,000.
Barbara Koker was hired.as
a fiscal assistant for the 2 1st
Century and GRAA grants
continent up(Jn grant afunds
and not to . exceed $7,000
per year.
.
The following cenified
staff were hired as after
school tutors two days a
week for 30 weeks at $22
per hour from 3:30 p.m. to
5:30
not to exceed
$2,64 . Funds for these
wages will come from tbe
21st Century Grant for a
contract penod of Oct. lMay 25, 3008. Hired were
Vicki Hill, Lori Hill, Misty
Rollers, Doi:ma Sayre,
Chi sty ·Essick, Beth Bay,
Patti Struble, Meg Guinther.
The following classified
staff were hired as aides for
four days a week for 30
weeks at $9.54 per hour
fron\ 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
not to exceed $2,850. Funds
for these wages will also
come from the 21st Century
Grant for tbe period from
Oct. 1-May 25, 2008. Hired
were Mmdy Patterson,
Debbie Allen, Jo Ann
Willford, Charlie Wolfe,
Kim Sampson.
The board also approved
an e'valuation contract for
tbe GRM grant with Ohio
University and Dr. Heather
Alvarez m the amount of
$30,000 per year, contingent upon the renewal of
grant funds to pay for that
contract.
In other persomiel news,
the following supplemental
positions for the 2007-08
school year were approved:
Don Dudding, high school
student council, $420.32,
ECHO, $361.48, variety
show, $481.27, high school
mentor, $1,050.80; Kyle
Wickline, boy's junior varsity basketball, $1,922.96;
Marcia Weaver, senior
class advisor, $105.08;
Alan Crisp, girl's varsity
$3,204.94;
basketball ,
Cindy Ginther, junior high
cheerleaders, $1,202.12;
Katie Sayre, junior varsity
softball coach, $1,202.12;
April King, freshmen class

8.m.

Please see Southern, AS

•

they are closed out when
fines and costs are paid.
The system also allows
the village to more easily
issue bench warrants and
other documents, and
records fine and costs payments as they are received .
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
appointed a committee of
Craig Wehrung, Jean Craig
&amp;nd Miller to study the job
responsibilities al]d the
amount of time required to

Ple•se see Andenon. AS

U.S. Senate
legislation to
address local
water issues
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Among the longtime members recognized for 50 or more years members at f:le~th
Church were left to rlgtit, Sonny Wli!I!,.J.anet H!irrl!!, l:tl!len Byer, Charles Byer1 Bop ~yer
and Roger Morgan. .
··
::
..
.
. , •
.
..
.
..
·a··

t&lt;.. · ' ·

·', ·

. .· ·· ·

'd
. i
• n
· g

14 . _________________

Specialists In:

cases· while entering a large
catalog of inactive cases
and other older records into
the system. One employee
is now handling the mayor's
·
court work.
Miller said the clerk's job
primarily involves entering
mayor's court data into a
special computer P.rogram
which allows the VIllage to
perform
state-mandated
reporting duties for the
Ohio Supreme Court. The
system tracks cases from
the time they are file? until

======-·==,·=
·=
b
~.~in:w~.:k!.~d''~':~~~~·:,,~:, ·u·. ·e
ath Ch
. _. urch·"~
_e
· ·· . ·. . .\·,_ e .rates
INSIDE
lion · spec1ahst at $35,00(1,
. .
.. ·
..
• Artexhib~taklng
~c'l:ll~t~::U$38~n~~:t
-·buiJ•
's .1OOth
anniversary
· place Saturday.
Cara Bullington, prevention
.
.
. ·
.. ,

12.'--------------------.,...

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, INC.

jeb responsibilities of a
mayor's court clerk. At
council's meeting on ~ept.
10, council denied a request
to hire Dispatcher Jim
Brewer as a court clerk,
until it could be determined
how many hours are
required to perform the job.
Presently, a police department dispatcher is paid for
performing the job on a
part~time basis while also
working as a dispatcher, but
Miller said it is a struggle to
keep up on current court

8SERGENTOMVOAILY~ENT1NEL.COM

8.~----------------

'l~
a

The search for ·a new
a91JJinistrator will beg~,
although . some council
members indicated a return
· to tbe Board of Public
Affairs system might be
considered. Regardless, the
village needs someone on
staff who is certified by the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency iii operating sewer systems. .
In other business, council
met with Lt. Jeff Miller of
the Middleport Police
. D~partment regarding the

.BY Bmt SER81NT

7.,_______________~------

OXYGEN

"""·"'"l..ul,-.uluu·l """

Southern
hires grant
personnel

6. __________________

675

REED

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Village
AdministratQr
Bradford
Anderson has resigned.
Meeting Monday evening,
village council . accepted
AndersQn's
resignation.
Anderson, in a letter to
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli, said
he· plans to pursue higher
education and other career
opportunities. His resignation is effective Oct. 5.

5. __________________

. Zl!ll\1ilq.·b..:·ftltiiltnc..... ..,.. ...........

J.

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

4. ____________________

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
lit
o•
n. r-+ i R.,t........

1\ I l l ' I-,!)\\ . -,I I'll \IIIII{ 2h . -! oo-

Anderson resigns as Middleport administrator

SPORTS

1..__________________

Lady Eagles
down Meigs ·
in four, Bt

· ~ CH• .. "NE Hoii'LICH
DT

""-

','H()EAJCHOMYDAILYSaNnNEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT .
Seventeen longtime members, all witb 50 or more
years in church . service,
were recognized as a part of
the recent celebration markIng tbe lOOth anniversary
dedication of the 1907
building of Heath United
Methodist Church.
In the group were Jeanne
Ann Bradbury, Charles Byer,
Helen Byer, Bob Byer,
Elizabeth Hawley, Janet
Harris, Barbara Hegler,
Sarah
Klontz,
Roger
Morgan, Rush Philson,.Carol
Tannehill, and Roscoe Wise.
The
Rev.
Thomas
Hanover, Foothills District
superintendent, was speaker
for tbe morning service at
the church pastored by the
Rev. Brian Dunham.
In addition to longtime
member recognition, other
features of the services
included special music by
Joann Robinson, organist,

C""rlene Hoeftlchfphoto

Special music was presented by the Riverbend Community
Band directed by Toney Dingess during the evening service
of the celebration commemorating the 100th anniversary of
the Heath United Methodist Church building.
and Deborah Wood, violin- the Grant Lodge of the
ist, and the Ri verbend State of Ohio.
Former pastors of the
Community Band directed
by Toney Dingess, along church returning for the celewith a commemoration of bration were recognized, disthe cornerstone setting on plays of remembrances
Sept. 3, 1906 by Steve through the years were feaHarrison, . District Deputy tured, and a dinner was servl(d
Grand Master, on behalf of prior to tbe evening service.

FACELIFT

Reedsville mobile mammography
unit in need of additional clients
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

REEDSVILLE - The
upcoming
"Women's
· Health Day" on Tuesday,
Oct. 9, at the Reedsville
Fire Department is in need
of women to sign up for free
or low-cost mammograms
from The Ohio State
University's James Cancer
Mobile
Center ·
Mammography Unit.
There must be at least I 0
more ladies signed up for
the mammograms in order
to get the mobile mammogmphy unit to the location
and so far the numbers are
below expectations which
means the ladies already
signed up for the test may
Brlan J. Reed/photo
not be able to receive it.
A fresh coat of paint can make a lot of difference in the
The visit from the OSU
appearance of a building, as seen on this storefront in mobile unit has been
downtown Middleport. Men were working from a second· arranged by the Meigs
County Cancer Initiative
story balcony Tuesday afternoon.

.,

POMEROY -A $1 million waterline extension
designed to serve two
propopsed power plants in
southern Meigs County and
a study \o prevent flooding
in tbe region are included in
legislation approved by the
U.S. Senate on . Monday
evening.
The Water Resources
Development
Act
Conference Report passed
the U.S. Sen11te by J! vo.t.e pf.,
81 to 12. The coilference
report authorizes funding
for several southeast Ohio
projects requested by U.S.
Senator
George
V.
Voinovich, a conferee and
member of the Senate
Environment and Public
Works Committee.
This is the first WRDA bill
to be passed by the Senate
since 2000, when Sen.
Voinovich was Chairman of
the Transportation and
Tnfrastructure.Subcommittee.
"National investment in
water resources has not kept
pace with our level of economic
expansion,"
Voinovich said. "If the steep
decline in federal investment persists, our continued
economic· expansion and
environmental improvements will be threatened."
"This is a big step forward
to help address the challenges we face as a nation
and in many of Ohio's communities with water quality,"
Voinovich
said.
"Cleaning up our lakes and
streams is critical to "
improving our nation's
water quality. 1 urge the
president to sign this bill
Ple•se see Wder, AS

(MCCI) and its "Think
Pink" grant from the Susan
G. Komen Breast Cancer
Research Foundation. The
"Think Pink': grant allows
qualifying Meigs County
women between the ages of
40-49 to receive free mammograms and for those who
don't fall into this age range
"Think Pink" coordinator
Norma Torres has other
low-cost or no-cost options
for the client.
In addition, those ladies
between the ages of 40-49
who qualify for a free mammogram also qualify for
gasoline cards used for
transportation to the OSU
mobile unit.
The mobile mammograms are just one of several health screenings being
brought to the community
during MCCI's and "Think

Ple•se SH Clients, AS

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="534">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9985">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="15703">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="15702">
              <text>September 25, 2007</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3632">
      <name>stump</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
