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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 31,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2006

Fidel Castro steps down
temporarily because of
intestinal surgery, A2.

With little effort, Big Ben Summertime heat and NF~
has Steelers fans fired up c~~~. ~r~.~! ~t'"'~~~~ ~~~ j~~~~
Ben Roethlisberger only
needed to show up at training camp to get Steelers fans
fired up.
They screamed in delight,
yelled out his name, asked
him to slow down so they
could snap more pictures.
"They were loud, and they
were cheering for any little
thing that happened," coach
Bill Cowher said of the
10,000-plus fans watching. a
practice that couldn't have
been more routine, with a
few passing and blocking
drills and not much else.
That Roethlisberger was
back with his teammates~
throwing passes to firstround draft pick Santonio
Holmes and gelling a bit of a
scare when he banged his
right thumb off a lineman 's
helmet, was anything but
ordinary.
The youngest quarterback
to win the Super Bowl is less
than two months removed
from. a potentially tragic
motorcycle accident that
easily could have ended his
life, and having him back on
the field so soon is more
than the Steelers and their
fans could have expected.
"I got the arm loosened
up, and the body. and proved
a lot of people wrong,"
Roethlisberger said.
No wonder the fans were
so eager to see him wearing
a helmet again - even if it
wasn't the kind of helmet
that might have lessened the
severity of the injuries in
that Jurie 12 crash, when he
broke his jaw, nose and
some orbital bones.
It was evident many of the
fans gathered on St. Vincent
College 's hillsides were
focusing on Roethlisberger's
every move during two-hour
practice that was uneventful
except when his pass protection broke down on one play
and his right thumb struck
left guard Alan Faneca's helmet.
Roethlisberger grimaced
for a play or two, talked with
trainer John Norwig, then
· jumped back into the drill as
if nothing .had happened.
"He hit his thumb on a
helmet so it's good, he's
back into football," Cowher
said. "He looked fine."
Felt fine, too, according to
Roethlisberger.
"I felt real comfortable,"
he said. "The body feels real
good, the head feels good, so
it was a good day. This is the
first time I've thrown in

ture making it feel like I05 them selves.
degrees. the Titans hit the
The New York Jets, for
As a coach. Marv Levy field in full pads for the first example, practiced twice on
alwa&gt;"s ran relatively e&amp;sy time in training camp Friday, then had only one
traimng camps. He's doing Sunday afternoon.
session on Saturday - in
the same as Buffalo's new ·.' Haynesworth was treated 95-degree heat. ·
general manager, although inside the Titans' locker
But what was scheduled to
that didn ' t keep the Bills room al Austin Peay State be a session of a little over
from havin g the first player University and did not two hours turned into three
hours because Eric Mangini
of the NFL pre,eason to be return.
hospitalized for neat-related
.. Albert went real hard - at 35. less than half
problems.
early in practice and got Levy's age - was dissatisTlwt wa' John McCargo, diny," coach Jeff Fisher fied with the practice. He
Buffalo\ -~.:,md pick 'in the said. "We're not going to kept having the offense rerun
first round and the 26th over- take any risks there, so we plays and twice had the
all choice last April. The took him in to cool him off" teams run laps around the
295-pound defensive tackle,
Stringer's death also led to ·field - something more
was taken Saturday to a hos- a gradual change in policy common to high school
.pita! in the Rochester, N.Y., by coaches, including cut- coaches than those in the
area, thou~h he was back at a ting down on two-a-day NFL.
light pract1ce on Sunday.
practices in the heat. Many
;'Yesterday I didn't think
"He just overextended coaches now alternate ses- was very good. It was the
himself." said hi s agent, sions - two on one day, hottest day that we've had in
Hadley Engelhard.
· then one the next. And more four years, according to our
"Overextend" ·is a word teams schedule practice at trainers. I think that it
that man.Y NFL teams have night, when it's cooler.
showed," Mangini sa id
been trymg to avoid since
"It was (lifferent in the old Sunday. 'The heat is a good
the death of Minnesota days," says the 80-year-old thing. I hope we get a lot of
offensive tackle Korey Levy, the Hall of Farner who heat because as I've told the
·Stringer five years· ago from took over as Buffalo 's gener- players we have got to learn
heat stroke.
al manager this year, nine to play in all the different
The concerns may be espe- years afte.r retiring as the . elements."
cially important right now, Bills' coach. "I'll even go
Other coaches are well
when most of the country is back in my experience to· aware of the problems heat
engulfed b~ a heat wave that Division Ill. Then if you had can cause- especially those
is blamed lor as many as 141 a drink if water during prac- · in hot climates.
deaths in California. High tice you were a sissy : ' You
"We give a test to all the
tempera~ures and humidity shouldn't drink water. Come guys that is mnscle mass,
in the East and Midwest are on. Get tough.' We might body fat and hydration,"
expected to continue well think it's not that demanding Miami '' Nick Saban said.
into next week.
to go twice a day. but it's nut "Almost 100 percent of the
NFL spokesman Greg easy. These g_uys are. big, tal- time when a guy has high
Aiello said Sunday that no ented. they re m shape. body fat he has low hydranew guidelines had been sent We 've just to get them ready tion. That 's not good for
to teams before camps this for the season."
.
player safety in the climate
season, but that those · The existence of team we have to work in. We have
strengthened after.Stringer's workouts and minicamps structured programs to bring
death in 2001 were still in throughout the ollseason them down."
force. They ensure that play- also has contribllted to fe:-'ler
Nothing works perfectly in
ers be monitored regularly two-a-days.
any sport.
• by medical personnel and
"Guys would come to
Last summer, Thomas
that water and other drinks to camp to get in shape some- Herrion, a lineman with San
help avoid dehydration are at times in those days," said Francisco, collapsed and
the practice facilities.
Bills coach Dick Jauron, an died after an exhibition game
The Tennessee Titans NFL safety from 1973-80. in Denver, a conte'st played
opted for caution Sunday by "It was different, very differ- in 60-degree temperatures.
letting defensive tackle ent. There are better medical An autopsy determined that
Albert Haynesworth leave insights and training insights Herrion died of heart dispractice early with heat- now than there were then."
ease. not of any heat-related
related dizziness. With
New coaches often work problem.

,

AP photo

Pittsburgh Stealers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger. left,
teases about a golf swing as coach Bill Cowher smiles
before the start of practice at the Stealers training CilmP in
Latrobe, Pa. on Sunday.
months, so I've got to ease
my ann into it a little bit but ,
no, I didn't hold back."
Two more first-round draft
picks · got deals done on
Sunday.
. The St. Louis Rams
agreed to. terms cornerback
Tye Hill, the 15th overall
selection. Contract terms
.were not immediately available for Hill, who missed the
first six practices. Coach
Scou Linehan said the Rams
would get the fOrmer
Clemson player to training
camp as soon as possible
and expected him on the
field for the first of two
workouts on Monday.
The Seattle Seahawks and
first-round draft choice
Kelly Jennings agreed on a
multiyear contract - two
days after he was due to
report to training camp. The
31st overall pick in April 's
draft will compete for a
starting job.
Late Saturday night, No. 2
pick Reggie Bush agreed to
terms with the Saints and
Ernie Sims, the ninth pick,
came to a deal with the
Lions. That left only two of
the to p-I 0 picks unsigned.
One of them was Matt
Southern
Leinart,
the
California quarterback, who
fell to Arizona at No. 10.
Leinart's
agent,
Tom
Condon, was talking with
the Cardinals, who begin
workouts Monday.
Donte Whitner, the No. 8
pick by Buffalo, also was
unsigned.
Bush agreed to a six-year

deal, but had trouble finding
an immediate flight from
Los Angeles to Mississippi's
capital city and was again
'absent from training camp
Sunday.
"I'm kind of shocked he's
(coming) here this early, but
I'm glad, al)d I'm sure the
rest of the team is glad Baby
Matrix is here," said wide
receiver Joe Horn. who
came up with the "Baby
Matrix" nickname for Bush.
"You ever seen "The
Matrix" ... when he's dodging those bullets&gt; That's
Reggie Bush. I thought of
that because it was real.
That's what I was seeing out
there. I mean, the guy's phenomenal with his moves and
the way he runs with the
football. It's fact."
Sims reported to the Lions
on Sunday after getting
word from his . agent
Saturday night.
"I was lying down and trying to get some rest, just in
case I would be practicing,"
the linebacker from Florida
State said. "I had mixed
feelings - I really wanted
to be out here, but I didn't
want to be under this sun."
The 6-foot, 221-pound
Sims missed the first two
days of training camp. He .
made an immediate impact
Sunday, cracking fellow
rookie Brian Calhoun with a
forearm to the head on his
first play.
"That felt good," Sims
said. "I couldn't unload on
him like I wanted, but it was
. nice to get a lick in."

NFL

final nine games.
"Anything that we have
to do is just some mtnor
adjustments. and
s o m e
cleaning
out," said
Tucker,
who said
Notebook he his leaning. toward
having the procedure. "My
goal is being there the first
game of the season."
The
Browns·
need
Tucker, who has been
their steadiest and healthiest lineman the past few
seasons. Earlier thi s week ,
the club lost center
LeCharles Bentley, their
prized free agent signing,

left Sunday with Nance's
staff.
The 53-year-old Levy is a
from Page Bl
partner at Covington &amp;
Burling in Washington,
which is where Tagliabue
and labor. Like Tagliabue, worked when he was electhe is close to Gene Upshaw, 1 . ed comm issioner. He has
the ·NFL's union head, and '--~ been the lead counsel .in
was ..clo'sely involved in the several recem court cases,
delicate talks last March . including the one involving
that led to an extension of Maurice Clarett, in which a
the collective .bargaining decision to ' let the Ohio
State running back enter the
agreement.
Nance is managing part- draft a year before league
ner of the -Cleveland office rules stipulated was overof Squire Sanders &amp; turned on appeal.
Dempsey. The only black
The 54-year-old Reynolds
finalist, the 52-year-old has been vice president of
handled the negotiatio~ for Fidelity's management trust
the city when the Browns company and held several
returned to the NFL in 1999 executive jobs with the firm
and was the lawyer for the before that. He has heen in
group that developed the his current job since 2000.
construction of the new
The 51-ye&lt;tr-old Shattuck.
Bro.wns Stadium. A me s- who began hi s career as an
sage seeking comment1 was in vestme nt banker, worked

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J. REm

unleaded gasonline has less revenue from the tax .
placed an added burden on The cou.nty has ~een a tenthe operation," Triplett said. percent drop in gas tax revPOMEROY - Oil prices "Then, another of the enue in the past year,
that have put the cost of biggest expense~ for the Triplett said.
gasoline over the $3 mark department is the bitumiPaving materials are
have also caused an added OIJlls material used for petroleum based. For all the
financial burden for local paving and road repairs, and difficulties experienced by
governments charged .with those· prices have increased the county highway departmaintaining roads.
dramatically."
ment, the township trustees,
Meigs County Engineer
The third hit, Triplett said, . who operate on a shoestring
Gene Triplett said the high comes from a decrease in in the best of times, are
cost of petroleum products gasoline sales to the gc:neral dealing with an even greater
have caused a "triple public. Retail gasoline buy- hardship.The high cost of
whammy" problem for his ers pay a tax which, in turn, bituminous materials forced
depar~ment.
funds highway department all 12 of the county's town"Fuel is a major expense operations. When people ships to forego du st control
for this department, so the buy less gasoline, the high- on roads under their control
high cost of diesel fuel and way department receives this summer.
BY BRIAN

The . material used by
trustee&gt; to control dust on
their roads incre&lt;;sed from
$1.20 per ton ,;.,t sum mer to
$2 this summer -· an
increase the townships cannot afford.
''A lot of the townships
really strugg led wi th the
cost last year. and it went up
so much that no township is
doing dust co ntrol · this
year:· Triplett said.
Triplett said trustees in one
township - Orange- been
creative, using seal slripS
with a cheaper emul&gt;ion
material and gravel 011 top of
it in order to control du st.

BREEOOMYDA\lYSENTINEl.COM

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ruth Elaine
Lambert Mouming, 83

Gamp site will give fairgoers an opportunity to see what life was like for the

Welchtown
Road fire
destroys home

Conf~derate general, the impact of
the actual raid on Meigs and sur-

Racine

Please see Fair, AS

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- ------------------------·-------

2 SECTIONS ~ 12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

Bs-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

&lt;\

:,.td• V.F&lt;'! II'.'•' ':'":1&gt;'1";,- '"• t..::,.,'!!:loiN

·-·" ·.. :.o""" '"'~ -1111•

INDEX

Obituaries
Sports

YOU CANTW ANY BtTTER~

B Section

Weather

A3

© 20o6 Oh;o Va.llcy Publishing Co.

•

POMEROY- A fire that
began late Sunday night
destroyed a house and left
one person homeless.
Pomeroy
firefighters
received the call at II :54
p.m. Sunday and responded
to 32195 Welchtown Road,
a Dequaise residence.
Pomeroy Chief Rick
Blaettnar . said when his
department arrived the fire
bad already reached the roof
and the structure was fully
engulfed. fjJ:efighters from
both
Pomeroy
and
Middleport used around
12,000 gallons of water to
put out the blaze, making
several trips to the hydrant
near Water Works Park .
Blaeunar said a Mr.
Dequaise, who was home at
the time of the incident, didn' t appear to have sustained

Please see Fire,

A~

BREC urges
c·onservation
a.s demand
nears peak
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

BY BETH SERGENT

aJB CADET RETAILER Km

POMEROY - .With all
the sobering news about
substance abuse in Meigs
County, many residents are
looking for a way to help
and one way. may be
becoming a mentor through
the
Meigs
County
Mentoring program offered
by
Health
Recovery
Services, Inc. of Athens.
For the past five years the
program has been trying to
educate, empower and
encourage the youth of
Meigs County at Meigs
Middle School and the
~astern
Local School
District. This year the program hopes to expand into
the Southern Local School
Dlstrict.
Although the program is
for any middle-school-aged
child. it has focused on atrisk kids. Middle-schoolagcu children are particularly targeted because they are
vulnerable to peer pressure.
From 1-5 p.m. two days a
week at Meigs Middle

• U.N. Security Council
gives Iran until end of
August to suspend
uranium enrichment.
See Page A2
• Hysell family holds
reunion. See Page A3
• OU announces
new IT security plan.
See Page A3
OVP file photo
Civil
War
reenactors
on
horseback
will
stage
a
battle
scene
at
the
Meigs
County
Fair.
3
p.m.
on
Saturday
of
fair
week.
• Alkire named
office manager.
See Page A3
• Middleport men
rounding counties, where the troop s
BY CHo\RLENE HOEFUCH
cavalry during the Civil War.
arrested in railroad
HOEFLICHl.'MYOAILYSENTI NEL. COM
Saturday's activities will begin at were trying to go, ancl the route they
theft. See Page AS
I2:30 p.m. with Mike Church showing took. will be given by Darrell
POMEROY
For
the
first
time
uniforms
of Confederate and Union Markejohn who portrays General Please see Mentoring. AS
• Carbon dioxide
Civil War reenactors will be coming to ·cavalry · members followed by a I :30 Morgan in local reenactments.
from fire leads rescuer5
the Meigs County Fair for a presenta- p.m . .presentation by Bob Vance who
The tinale will come when the reento men in mine.
tion on period lifestyle and a demon- will sound the bugle to demonstrate actors saddle up their horses and stage
stration of battle skills during the 1860s. the communication it provided . to a battle at 3 p.m. Saturday in front of
See Page AS
The reenactors and 20 to 30 horses direct 'o!Ctions to be taken by the troops the grandstand .
• O'Bieness Memorial
will arrive at the fairgrounds on Friday during times of war.
At 7 p.m. there will be public Civil
Hospital to offer childbirth evening, Aug. 18, and set up camp
At 2 p.m. a talk on John Hunt War ball in the small animal barn in
down by the draft horse barn. Thtt Morgan, the person, his role as a
class. See Page AS
the midway area.

BSERGENT!IMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

YOUR LOCALLY OWMED

Triplett said the cost of
bituminous materials has
not yet caused a Liecrease in
road maintenance work on
the county level.
The cost of hot mix paving
material has increased from
$38 per ton' a year ago to
$51.25 per ton this summer.
That cost is for material "in
place." or laid on the road by
the contractor.
Triplett said his department pays ahout the same
cost for fuel. as the retail
consumer, less the federal
gasoline tax - $2.57 per
gallon now, with a 42-cent
state fuel tax.

Bv BETH SERGENT

•Hu¥y-liily drrt! sy1tem wit.
cast-iron~ and wlieel n»&gt;oB
•Convnerci~ air f~ralion sy~em
• 3-year limil~ COIII!Ieftial WIITIIl~"'

ZERO DOWN

"t.11 t"''"''""' '"'"

Mentoring
program
in need of ·
volunteers

WEATHER

fi'UIIllle wi~ lodoot plis

111

Fuel costs put hurt on county engineer, trustees

SPORTS

Meigs Fair to feature Civil War reenactors

for the season after he tore
a patellar tendon in his
left knee during practice.
"Ryan- knows his body,
he 's looking at the big picture ,"
Browns
coach
Romeo Crennel said. '' If
he doesn't feel like it's
getting good enough, he
might want to get it taken
care of before the games
start."
While Tucker is · out,
third -yea r veteran Kirk
~hambers is getting the
bulk of work with the
first-team offense.
Tucker started all 16
games at right tackle
last sea.son. In 2003, he
was the only offensive
player to participate in
every snap.
at Bankers Trust as vice
chairman and was chairman
of the board at Deutsche
Bank in Baltimore before
JOimng
Constellation
Energy. which ranks I 25th
on the Fortune 500 list and
owns energy-related businesses that had Sl7.1 billion
in revenues in 2006.
In addition to Rooney and
Richardson, the other members of the selection committee arc Woody Johnson
of the New York Jets, Jerry
Jones of Dallas, New
England's Robert Kraft, AI
Davis ,of Oakland, Kansas
City's Lamar Hunt and
Mike
McCaskey
of
Chicago.
The ages of the ' candidates all retlect the desire of
the committee to hire a new
coml)1issioner who could
serve for a length of time
similar tu Tagliabue's.

\..

INSIDE

Thcker leaning toward surgery
BEREA (AP) - Browns
right tackle Ryan Tucker
likely will have minor
surgery on his left knee but
expects to be back in time
for Cleveland' s season
opener ·Sept. I 0 against
New Orleans.
Tucker missed his second straight day of practice Sunday to rest his
knee, which. flared up during Friday's practice .
The 31-year-old said a
decision on whether to
have arthroscopic surgery
would be made Monday.
An MRI revealed cartilage
damage, the result of years
of wear and tear on the
same · knee Tucker i njurcd
· in the 2004 season and
'caused him to miss the

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wilson, miniature
horses compete
in first show, A3

Submitted photo

Last week the Racine and Syracuse Volunteer Rr~ Departments had their hands fu ll with a·
tully engulfed house fire along Ohio 124 in Antiquity. The house, which sits on property
owned by Chuck and Debbie Johnston, had been unoccupied for several years and besides
knocking out a telephone line no other dwellings were affected. No injuries were reported
from the 15 firefighters from Racine or from the three firefighters from Syracuse who
assisted. The incident remains under investigation .

..

RIO GRANDE - Heat
indices predicted to be at or
above lOll degree s this
week will result in a nearrecord air conditioning load
on th e Buckeye Rural
Electric
Cooperative
( BREC) system .
Co-op nmnbcrs are being
asked to conserve electricity
between tlte hours of 3 and
7 p.m. to help avoid se tting
a new peak.
BREC spokesman Steve
Oden said the peak alert
warning doesn't mean there
· i' a shonage of power.
Rather. the cost of electricity muy be driven up by high
demand . Consumers will
continue to he · charged for
the peak event as a wholes~ilc
general ion
passtil rough. even when consumption retunis to normal.
"Mayne lhe hest way to
explain th~ effect of peak
Jcm;:ind i~ to imagine that
every time you were hungry
fur a ha111burger from your
favorite restaurant. they

Please see Peak. AS

�.The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

casnsteps·
BY

PageA2
Tuesday, August 1, 2006 ·

Community Calendar

temporariiV because

ANITA SNOW

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

HAVANA
Fidel
Castro, who took control of
Cuba in 1959. rebuffed
repeated U.S. attempts to
· oust him and survived communism's demise almust
everywhere else, temporarily relinquished his pre&gt;idential powers tu his brother
Raul un Mondav night
because of surgery."
~
The Cuban leader said he
underwent surgery after stlffering
gastrointestinal
bleeding, apparently due to
stress from recent public
. appearances in Argentina ·
and .Cuba, according to . a
letter read live on television
by, his secretary, Carlos
Valenciaga.
"The operation obligates ·
me to undertake several
weeks of rest," said the letter. Extreme stres s ''had provoked in me a sharp intest inal crisis with sustained
bleeding that obligated me
to undergo a complicated
surgical procedure. "
Castro said he was temporarily relinquishing the
presidency to his younger
. brother and successor Raul,
the defense minister, but
said the move was of ·'a provisional character.·· There
was no immediate appearance or statement by Raul
Castro.
It was the first time in his
decades-long tenure that
Castro has given up power.
though he had been affected in the recent past with
occasional health problerns. The calm delivery of
the
announcement
appeared to signal that
there would be · an orderly
succession to Raul should
· Fidel become permanently
incapacitated.
The announcement drew
· cheering crowds in the
streets in Miami . People
waved Cuban flags on Little
Havana's .Calle Ocho,

AP Photo

Cuban Pres1dent F1del Castro, left, and his brother, Minister of Defense Raul Castro, attend a Cuban Parliament session
in the Palace of Conventions in this July 1. 2004. file photo in Havana, Cuba. It was announced Monday that Fidel Castro
has temporari ly relinquished presidential power to his brother Raul due to illness.
shouting "Cuba. Cuh&lt;1,
Cuba," hoping that the end
is near for the man most of
them con&gt;ider to be a ruthless dictator. Many of them
fled the communist island
or have parents and grandparents who did.
TIJ+: elder Castro asked
that celebrations scheduled
for his 80th birthday on
Aug. 13 be postponed unti I
Dec. 2, the 50th anniversary
of Cuba's Revolutionary
Armed Forces.
Castro said he would al so
temporarily delegate his
duties as first secretary of
the Communist Party of
Cuba to Raul, who turned

75 in June and who has been
Streets in J1avana, includ- Slttlllg at outdoor cafes.
taking on a more public pro- ing the coastal Malecon Signs on the plaza's colofile in recent weeks.
highway where young peo- nial buildings put up during
In power since the tri- ple often congregate, were a recent Cuban holiday said,
umph of the Cuban revolli- typically quiet late Monday. "Live on Fidel, for 80
. tion on Jan. I, J 959, Castro In Old Havana, waiters at a more.
has been . the world's popular cafe were momen"We're .really sad, and
longest-ruling head of gov- tarily stunned as they pretty shocked," said lnes
·ernment. Only Britain 's watched the news. But they ·Cesar, a retired 58-year-old
Queen Elizabeth. crowned quickly got back to work metal worker. "But everyin 1.952, has been head of and put on brave faces.
one's relaxed, too. I think
state longer.
"He' II get better, without he'll be tine."
The "maximum leader's" a doubt," said Agustin
When asked about how
ironclad rule has ensured Lopez, 40. "There are really she felt having Raul Castro
Cuba remains among the good doctors here, and he's at the helm of the nation,
world's five · remaining extremely strong."
Cesar paused and said one
communist countries. The
In the nearby Plaza Vieja, word: "normal."
others are all in Asia: China, Cuban musicians continued
A leading Cuban governVietnam, Laos and North to play for customers- pri- ment opponent in Havana
Korea.
marily foreign tourists ·said she believed Castro
11

·

Public
meetings

Masonic hall. Charter· to be
draped
for
Margaret
Amberger, Dori' Koenig,
and Lillian Demoskey.
Members to wear white.
TUesday, Aug. 1
Thursday, Aug. 3
CHESTER -Chester
- · Southern
.
RACINE
Township Board of Trustees
Athletic
Boosters,
high 7
regular monthly meeting, 7
p.m., school cafeteria. ·
p.m., Chester Town Hall.
Friday, Aug. 4
ALFRED Orange
POMEROY
THE
. Township Trustees, 7:30
PERT
Chapter
74
of
Meigs
p.m at the home of fiscal
County will meet at I p.m .
. officer, Osie Follrod.
. POMEROY . Meigs at the Meigs County Senior
High School freshmen ori- Citizens Center. Guest
. entation, J I a.m to 4 ~&gt;.m . speakers will be representaTuesday and Wednesday. tives from Aetna and
For more information call Medical Mutual Insurance
Companies. This is not· a
992-2158.
luncheon meeting.
Wednesday, Aug. 2
Saturday, Aug. 5
REEDSVILLE -Olive
SALEM CENTER Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., Olive Township Star Grange #778 and Star
Garage.
Junior Grange #878 potluck
PAGEVILLE - Scipio supper at 6:30 p.m. fol, Township Trustees will lowed by meeting at 7:30.
meet at 6:30 p.m. at the · Craft judging. Final plans
Pageville town hall.
!'or fair display. All memThursday, Aug. 3
bers are urged to attend.
. POMEROY - Salisbury·
. Township Trustees , 6:30
p.m., town hall .
·
MIDDLEPORT
Monday, Aug. 7
. Village Council Ordinance
Southern
RACINE
Gommittee, 3 p.m., council
High
school
cheerleading
chambers.
clinic, grades 9-12, 9 a.m. to
I p.m. Aug. 7, 8 and 9.
Southern Elementary gym.
Attendance mandatory to ·
learn tryout requirements.
Call Jodie Harrison. 949 TUesday, Aug. I
4112.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge #363,
· F&amp;AM , monthly business
meeting. Bring non-perishSunday, Aug. 6
able food items for Grand
Masters food bank program. . COOLVILLE
All Master Masons invited. Evangelist Mike Wingfield
speaks about current events,
Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS Islam, Israel. and Iran in
Eastern Music Boosters, 7 meetings 10 a.m., II a.m.
p.m., high school band and 6:30p.m. on Sunday at
room. Finalize fair booth Grace Brethren Church, 7
· p.m. on Monday and 7 p.m:
plans.
CHESTER Chester on Tuesday. Color slide preCouncil 323, Daughters of sentations 15 minutes prior.
America, 7:30 p.m. at the Information at 667-3710.

must be gravely ill to have
stepped aside temporarily.
"It's almost the same as
death, " Martha Beatriz
Roque said in a telephone
interview. "No one knows if
he' ll even be alive Dec. 2
when he's supposed to celebrate his birthday."
In Washington, White
Ho.use spokesman Peter
Watkins said: "We are monitoring the situation. We
can't speculate on Castro's
health, but we continue to
work for the day of Cuba's
freedom."
Castro rose to power after
an armed revolution he led
drove out then-President
Ful2encio Batista. The
United States was the first
country to recognize Castro,
but his radical economic
reforms and rapid trials of
Batista supporters quickly
unsettled U.S. leaders.
Washington eventually
slapped a trade embargo on
the island and severed
diplomatic ties. Castro
seized American property ·
and businesses and turned
to the Soviet Union for military and economic assistance.
. oti April 16, 1961,
Castro declared his revolution to be socialist: The foJ:
lowing day, he · humiliated
the United States by capturing more than 1,100
exile soldiers in the Bay of
Pigs invasion.
The world neared nuclear
conflict on Oct. 22, 1962,
when President John F.
Kennedy announced there
were Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba. After a tense .
week of diplomacy, Soviet
leader Nikita Krushchev
removed them.
Meanwhile, Cuban revolutionaries opened 10,000
new schools, erased illiteracy, and built a universal
health care system. Castro
backed revolutionary movements in Latin America and
Africa.

Youth events

Clubs and
organizations

NICK WADHAMS

YOUR AD INSIDE ACOMIC STRIP
'

•

CHESTER - The first
annual · Hysell (Ed and .
Lydia) reunion was held on
June 25 at the home of Mike
and Chris Martin in Chester.
Following a covered dish
meal, new .officers were
elected. They are Ed
Vandall, president; Betty
Jean Sparks. vice president;
and Jane McManus, secretary-treasurer. A donation
was taken and it was decided to hold the reunions on
. the last Saturday in June.
Next year it will be held on
June 25.
Prizes were given for the
one that drove the farthest,
Charles Hysell; the oldest,
: Mauretta Miller; married the
longest, Don and Frankie
Hunnell; the moSt children
present Barbara Hysell.
· Prizes were given to all the
children that attended.
Attending were Ron and
: Maxine Martin, Metropolis,
Ill.;
Mary
McAngus,
Pomeroy: Dora Nissen,
: Megan · Nissen, Megan
Nissen, Virginia Beach , Va.; .
Charles Hy~ell, Kariel
Hysell, Brenda Hysell, and
Brandon Hysell, Ostrander;
Bob and Betty Sprarks,
Delaware; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Vandall, Indiana; Amber
Amrine, Marysville; Tara
Baxter, Chris Jenkins and
· Nancy Hastings, Ostrander.
Lisa Dudgeon, Sean and ,
Sara Dudgeon , Harold
Hysell , Pat Shill, Ashley:
Joe and Angie · Weeks,
Syracuse; Barbara Wyatt.

Cardington; · Danielle and
Sam Shain , Dalton Layne ,
Racine; Paula Hubbard,
Delcware; Abe, Sue, and
Kip Grueser, Rutland,
Madalyn ·
Sandifer,
Grantville, Pa., Carol Ising,
Charleston, W.Va., Brian,
Michelle. Gabrielle, and
Arielle
Beeler,
Long
Bottom.
Jenny and Dwight Fi.sher,
Noffolk,
Va .;
Gloria
Johnson, Belpre; Kristen.
Austin, and Faith TopiJing,
Bea Jay Conkel, · and
Destiny Sublett, Waverly:
Diana Coates, Chelsea and
MacKenzie
Pierce
,
Pomeroy; Helena . Warden
and Tony Darst, M&lt;1son,
W.Va., Suzanne, Tom, and
Shayla
Kibble,
Long
Bottom; Mike, Chris, and
Vinson ·Martin, Chester;
Jane McManus and Dave
Jones, Ripley, W.Va.
Shannon
and
Chris
Imboden, · Middleport; Don
and Frankie Hunnell,
Pomeroy: Mike and Teressa
Sines, Ostrander: Mary and
Bob Justice, Cardington;
Dick and Diane Hood Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va. ; June and
Ron Mitchell , Delaware,
Kevin and Kevin Jr. Wyatt
Ash'ley,
Sherry · Sosa.
Delaware: Jen and Dwight
Fisher,
Norfolk.
Va.:
Margaret Wyall, Pomeroy ;
Clifford Wyatt. New Haven.
W.Va.;
Brett
Wyatt.
Pomeroy: Roy Wyatt ,
Cardington: and Maw·etta
Miller, Chester.

Alkire named office manager
Pam Alkire has been
named ·office manager at Pay Day
Express in
Gallipolis. She is a
2005 spring quarter
graduate of
Gallipolis Career
College.where she
earned an associate's of applied
business in accounting degree . She currently resides with
her husband John in
Racine.

To place an ad please contact:
Dave or Brenda
at 992-2155
'

The Daily Sentinel

•

Submitted photo

,.
w

•

•

•

Tuesday, August 1,

20.0 6

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Counseling may be last resort for this marriage
BY KATHY MITCHEll
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: -, have been
married to "Mike" for 10
years. This is a second marriage for both of us, and we
each have one teenager from
our previous marriages. ·
When I met Mike , in
addition to a great physical
attraction. I was totally won
over by the way he seemed
to accept everything about
me, but in retrospect, I can
see the problem s started
even before we married. I
just ignored them.
Mike has a temper, and
though he has never been
physically abusive, he was
verbally abusive to me and
to my son. He constantly
put him down, always comparing him unfavorably to
his own child, berating and
belittling him in front of
others. If I said anything,
the response always was,
"Get over it."· I don' t know
exactly how it happened,
but I did just that - I got
over it and over him . My
heart shut down , and I lost
all desire for any physical
contact with him.
The problem is that now,
when I am ready to walk
out, my son has found .a way
to deal with Mike, and their

relationship has reached a
point where they both seem
satisfied
and
happy.
Unfortunately, I am not. I
cannot forgive Mike for the
way he treated us in the past ,
1 cannot forgive myself for
allowing him to treat.my son
the way he did, and I am
totally incapable of reigniting the love. and passion I
felt for him. I barely tolerate
him. When he touches me, I
want to scream.
Mike knows I'm at the
edge. He told me he would
kill himself if he lost me .
That guilt is 'what keeps me
here . I know he is trying
now, but I just don 't care
anymore. What can l do? Cold Heart
Dear Cold Heart: You
shouldn't stay with Mike
because he's manipulating
you or because your teenage
son now gets along with
him. Your son will be leaving the nest soon, and then it
will be just the two of you.
You have .to determine if
Mike's efforts to be a better
person are enough to rekindie your feelings. To do
that, you must forgive yourself as well as Mike and see
what's left. Please go with
him for counseling and find
out before you give up.
Dear Annie: Where does

text messaging rank on the IS yuite common in your
etiquette sca le? My hu s- niece's generation. and it
band's niece gave birth and probably didn't occur to her
decided to text us. Everyone that you wouldn't see the
else in the family was message. Now let it go and
called. We, however. got the enjoy the newest addition to
· me ssage two weeks later the fami ly.
when we heard through
·Dear Annie : I'd like to
other family members that commen t about company
we were the ·only ones who that comes too often and
lnissed tht;. blessed event.
· stay s too long . We had
Our teenagers are the only · friend&gt; like that. and after a
ones who use text messag- while, it became obnox ious.
ing un our phones; and we The last time. as they ·were
never think to check tho.se leaving. I sweetl y said ,
messages. We certainly did- "Now it's my turn- tu visit
n't ex pect any important you- and you simply canfamily announcements to be not co me here umil 1 have
sent tu us that way.
returned the visit." They-, of
We have since visited this course. agreed, and l ·have
niece and our now ·3-week- · not seen them since. old 'gn;at-niece and men- Love My Peace ~nd Quiet
tioned that it would have
Dear Love My Peace:
been ni ce to have been We're impressed.
informed sooner &lt;md more
Annie's Mailbox is writdirectly. Are we wrong? ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Having a Text Timtrum in Marcy Sugar, /01rgtime ediCalifornia
tors of tile Amr Landers
Dear Text Tantrum: Text column. Please e-mail your
messaging is actually equiv- questions to anniesmailalent to e-mailing, which is box@comcast.nel, or write
fairly acceptable. Of course. to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
if your niece phoned every- Box ll8190, Chicago, /L
one else, she shou.ld have 60611. To find out. more phoned you as welL And we about Annie's Mailbox,
hope, if she is sending and read fealr(res by other
announcements, that she Creators Syndicate writers
doesn't
text
·those. and cartoonists, visit the
However. in her defense, we Creators Syndicate Web
will say that text messaging page at www.creators.com.

'

SPOHSORtO BY 1\SPC · AM

new IT

HYSELL FAMILY
'HOLDS REUNION .

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

UNITED NATIONS - ·
The U.N. Security Council
passed a resolution Monday
giving Iran until Aug. 31 to
suspend uranium enrichment or face the threat of .
economic and diplomatic
sanctions. ·
Iran immediately. rejected
the council action, saying it
wm1ld only make negotiations more difficult concerning a package of inccnti ves offered in June for it to
suspend enrichment.
c
"All along it has been the
persistence of some to draw
arbitrary red lines and deadlines that has closed the
door to any compromise,"
Iran's
U.N.
said
Ambassador Javad Zarif.
"This tendency has singlehandedly blocked success
AP Photo
and in most cases killed
Iran
's
United
Nations
Ambassador
Javad
Zarif
addresses
proposals in their infancy.
"Thi'S approach will not · the U.N . Security Council at U.N. headquarters Monday.
. lead to any productive out: come and in fact it can only egy in pluce to "send a com- substanti ve proposals that
mon message. a unified we made last month."
·exacerbate the situation."
After the resolution was
Because of Russian and message tu the Iranian leadership."
adopted.
Zari f told the
· Chinese demands , the text
hy
Britain,
France
'
Drafted
counci I it had no legal legit: was watered down from
and
Germany
with
U.S.
imacy to demand Iran sus: earlier drafts, which would
backing.
the
resolution
folpend
uranium enrichment
:have made the . threat of
lows
u
July
12
~1greement­
and
reprocessj·ng.
He
sanctions immediate. The
by
the
foreign
ministers
of
repeated
Iran's
claim
that
it
draft
now
essentially
thaNe
four
countries,
plus
has
every
right
to
pursue
: requires the council to hold
; more discussions before it Russia and China - to refer !lUclear technology and
Tehrmi to the Security docs not want to develop
· considers sanctions.
Council
for not responding nudear weapons.
The draft passed by a vote
to
the
incentive&gt;
package.
Tehran said last week it
of 14-1. Qatar, which reprcThe
ministers
asked
that
would reply to the Western
. sents Arab state' on the
. council, cast the lone dis- council members adopt a incentive package on Aug .
re~olution making Iran 's sus22, but the council decided
. senting vote.
pension
of
enrichment
activto go ahead with a resolu: Thou gh it was nut '"
: tough as early proposals. the ities mandatory. The resolu- tion and not wait for Iran 's
: resolution does &gt;pell m1t tion includes that demand response.
On Friday, Iran again
; clear steps the council can and calls un all states "to
• take toward sanctions if Iran exercise vigilance" in pre- called for int~rnational
, venting the transfer of all negotiations on its nuclear
•• doesn ' t obey.
• "It's a strong resolution:· goods that could be used for ambitions and said it. was
· President Bush said in Iran 's enrichment and ballis- considering the incentives.
Western nations have dis· Miami. He thanked U.S . tic missile programs.
Diplomats said the threats missed the idea of such
. allies who back~d the re&gt;o. lution ,
say1ng,
''The spel led out in the resnlutj,on talks without a halt to ~ran 's
: Iranians must hear loud and would be revoked if Iran uranium enrichment.
• clear that the world is intent agrees to the package of
The United States and
some nf it.s allies accuse
:on working together to incentives.
"It doe:-. not mean an cnu · Iran of 'eeking to produce
: make sure. that they do not
: end up . witl1 a nudear to Lh~: ncgoti 'ation~ and we high ly enriched uranium
weapon or the know- how to reaffirm the proposal&gt;.'', and plutonium for nuclear
· huild a nuclear weapon."
Fr&lt;mcc's U.N. Amba.~&gt;ador weapons. Tehran maintains
He called the re,oltition a Jean-Murc de La "Sabliere it &gt; nuclear program ili purerel1linder to Americans that saiu . "We appeal to Iran to ly pe,u:cful and aimed at
the United States ha&gt; u .mat - po&gt;itivcly re&gt;ponJ to the gc n~ratin g electricity.

PageA3

Church events

·u.N. Security Council gives Iran until end
of August to suspend uranium enrichment
BY

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

,,

..

Submitted photo

Cathy Wilson and her miniature horse, Mischief, take a break between classes at the show in Columbus.

Wilson, miniature horses compete in first show
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Cathy Wilson of Point Pleasant and
her miniature horses, Mystic Bit of
Mischief and Rowdy's Star Dust,
recently competed in their first
showing at the Ohio Sta.te Fair
Shetland/AMHR World Show at
Columbus, Ohio, July 18-19.
Miniature horses from several
California,
states,
including
Oklahoma, Arkansas, New York and
Michigan, and Canada were in attendance at this event.
Wilson received second place m
adu!.t showmanship, third place in

miniature yearling halter mare. and
third place in solid color stallion/geldings halter under 34 inches.
Wilson, who is a member of the
West Virginia Miniature Horse Club,
Mid-American Miniature Horse
Club and the American Miniature
Horse Registry Associ ation. is look·
irig forward to competing with her
horses in the first Miniature Horse
Show to be sponsored by the Mason
County Fair Saturday, Aug. 12.
She also 'is working on the third
phase of certification through the Delta
Society for pet therapy with her minis.

ATHENS -Today, Ohio University
Chief Information Officer Bill Sams
announced a comprehensive plan to
strengthen the overall information technology function at the university.
The 20-point action plan, "Blueprint
for Building a World-Class IT Function
at Ohio University," will involve all
aspects of the uni~er s ity's computer services: technology, business strategy and
process. and or~anization and governance . The 20 imtiatives outlined in the
blueprint will be accomplished over the
next nine to 12 months.
Some hig~lights from the blueprint
include:
• Implementing a perimeter firewall
that will filter Internet traffic to protect
computers outside of the central cluster
from hacker attacks.
• Classifying data by the level of security required.
• Reducing the use of Social Security
numbers within the university and
encrypting those that are required.
• Reorganizing the centra! IT organization to establish clear roles and respon&gt;ibilities, to focus on meeting user needs
and to facilitate teamwork.
·
• Restructuring the IT Leadership
Counci'l to expand the involvement of
. key groups in the ·approval of projects
and the establishment of priorities.
The total estimated cost of implementing
this blueprint is between $5.5 and $8 million. Ohio University's Board of Trustees
'recently approved $4 million to suppo11
this eflort and other options are being
explored for the balance of the funding.
The blueprint can be found online at:
http ://www .ohi o.ed u/out look/0506/July/61l-056a.cfm.

Local Weather
TUesday... Mostly sunny:
Wed.nesday ... Mast I y
Hazy ... Hot. Humid with sunny with a slight chance
highs in the mid 90s. West of showers and thunderwinds 5 to 10 mph.
storms. Hot. Humid with
TUesday night... Mostly highs in the upper 90s. West
clear. Humid with lows in winds 5 to 10 mph . Chance
·the lower 70s. West winds 5 of rain 20 percent.
Wednesday night...Mostly
to
10 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light clear with a slight chance of
and variable.
shpwers and thunderstorms. ·

c
cory...

Local Stocks
ACI- 37.94
AEP-36.12
Akzo- 55.52
Ashland Inc. - . 66.51
BLI-16.16
Bob Evans - 27.54
QorgWarner - 60.00
CENX- 30.87
Champion- 7.36
Charming Shops -'- 10.32
City Holding- 38.75
Col- 53.37 •
DG -13.42
ouront- 39.66
Federal Mogul - .36
USB- 32.00
Gannett - 52.12
General Electric -32.69
GKNLY- 4.70
Harley Davidson - 57.00
JPM -45.62

Kroger- 22.93
Ltd.- 25.16
NSC- 43.42
Oak Hill Financial - 25.85
OVB -'- 25.15
BBT -41.99
Peoples - 29.99
Pepsico - 63.38
Premier -'- 14.98
Rockwell .::... 61.-98
Rocky Boots- 11.07
Sears- 137.25
Wai-Mart - 44.50
Wendy's - 60.16
Worthlnaton - 20.42
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

1

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·•soo shopping cord wilh FICO nedit score up to 630, and punhase of a used
vehide over 56,000 Dealer contribution may offecl final prite.

�/

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Tuesday, August 1,-2006

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel Pence-Hutchison bill creates hope on immigration
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting .the
free 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 HISTORY
Today is Tuesday. Aug. l, the 2l3th day of 2006. There
are 152 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History: Fony years ago, on Aug. 1,
1966, 25-year-old Charles Joseph Whitman went on a
shooting rampage at the University of Texas clock tower in
Austin, killing 14 people with a high-powered rifl'e .
Whitman, who had also murdered his wife and mother
hours earlier. was gunned down by pbli~e.
On this date: In ·1714, Britain's Queen Anne died; she
was succeeded by George J.
In 1876, Colorado wa?ndmitted as the 38th state.
In 1894. the First Sino-Japanese War erupted, the
result of a dispute over control of Korea ; Japan 's army
routed the Chinese.
..,.
In 1914, Germany declared war un Russia at the onset uf
World W;~r I.
In 1936, the Olympic games opened in Berlin with a ceremony presided over by Adolf Hitler.
In 1944, an uprising broke out in Warsaw, Poland,
against Nazi occupation, a revolt that lasted two months
before collapsing.
In 1946, President Truman signed the Fulbright Program
into law, establishing the scholarships named for Sen.
William J. Fulbright.
In 1946, the Atomic Energy Commission was established.
In 1981, 25 years ago. the rock music video channel
MTV made its debut.
Ten years ago: In a political victory for President Clinton,
a federal jury in Little Rock, Ark. , acquitted two Arkansas .
bankers of misapplying bank funds and conspiracy to boost
his political career. (The jury deadlocked on seven other
counts.) At the Atlanta Olympics. Michael Johnson broke
·his world track record by more than three-tenths of a second. winning the 200 meters in 19.32 seconds.
Five years ago: The Federal Trade Commission cleared the
way for PepsiCo to acquire Quaker Oats for about $13.4 billion in stock. Pro Bowl 'tackle Korey Stringer died of heat
stroke, a day after collapsing at the Minnesota Vikings' training camp on the hottest day of the year.
One year ago: Saudi Arabia's ruler. King Fahd, died; Crown
Prince Abdullah, the king 's half brnther, became the country's
new monarch. President Bush used a recess appointment to
install John Bolton as ambassador to the United Nations,
bypassing the Senate after a testy ~tandoff with Democrats.
Baltimore Orioles first baseman Rafael Palmeiro was suspended for lO days following a positive test for steroids.
Today 's Birthdays : Cartoonist Tom Wilson (retired creator of "Ziggy") is 75. Actor-comedian Dom Deluise is 73.
Fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent is 70. Rapper Chuck
D (Pub iii: Enemy) is 46. Rapper Coolio is 43. Rock singer
Adam Duritz (Counting Crows) is 42. Country singer
·George Ducas is 40. Actress Tempest! Bledsoe is 33.
Thought for Today: "Middle age snuffs out more talent
than ever wars or sudden deaths do."- Richard Hughes,
Welsh author and dramatist ( 1900-1976).

Ruth Mouming

A chance encounter i,..
Jacoby declared the Pence- ' Rights Act requirement that
the lobby of the National
Hutchison proposal "a wei- election ballots be printed
Press Club suggests that
come initiative" and "an in languages other than
it's possible - not likely,
imponant opening gesture" English.
but possible - that immithat "could breathe new life
Pence
quoted
gration reform could pass
.
Sensenbrenner as telling
into the debate."
MortOn
this year.
But,
Sharry
added,
"We
him that ·'the Republican
Kondracke don't think it will work and Party
Prospects . are
grim
is against illegal
because
House
it won't pass. For us, it's immigration
and · no~
Republicans seem dug in
not ~ood policy. It does not against legal immigration,''
on their plan to fight illegal
provtde a path to citizen- and
inferred
that
immigration, period, while
ship
for
people
who
are
Scnsenbrenner
might
supseemed. to narrow at least
the Senate wants to comone gap, and Pence indicat- here and those who will be port green cards fo(
bine border and workplace
"rebooted'' illegal immi-ed that he thinks more con- comiilg."
enforcement with work
Thc
''dea
l-breaker"
for
grants.
vergence is possible.
permits and an opportunity
was
PenceAfter li stening tu Pence;
Earlier in the day, Pence Jawb y
for illegal immigrants to
hi
son's
failure
to
Sharry
told me he thinks
Hutc
and . Sen. Kay Bailey·
become legal residents and Hutchi son,
R-Texas. iticrease th e number of that Pence is ''earnest and
citizens.
unveiled their new proposal green cards available at the gutsy, but perhaps too optiThe two sides s.eem to be
designed to unify Hou se . end of the road. Currently, mistic," especially in hi s.
a chasm apart. House con- and Senate Republican s. U.S. law provides for only prediction that hard-line
servatives are convinced Their idea is to toughen bor- l ,500 green cards per year opposition can be held to 20
that a hard line on immigra- der security and employer . for low-ski ll immigrants, to 30 Republicans .
tion is necessary to tum out sanctions for a two-year whereas an
estimated
"The prevailing consenRepublicans . in
the period before other mea- 700.000 cross the border to sus
among ·
House
November elections and . sures kick in. Then, illegal work and 5fMl.OOO stay in (Republicans) is that being
keep · Congress in the immigrant adults from Latin the United States.
tough on illegal immigraGOP's control. And the American countries would
But during the conversa- tion is a great base-turnout
Bu sh White House, GOP return home for a brief peri- tiun 111 the pres' club lobby. issue for the midtenns and
moderates
and
most od. undergo background Pen ce s&lt;tid he favors a might just save them ,"
Democrats - whether on checks, obtain legal work green-card expa nsion and Sharry said. He also said
principle or a desire to visas at privately run "Ellis indi cated that he thought that such a stance would be
court the fast-growing Island Centers" and be eli- House GOP leaders and "a historic blunder in the'
Latino vote - insist on gible to return to the United most
rank-and-file long run" by alienating
"comprehensive" reform States for up to six two-year Republicans would follow Latinos, a growing demothat gives qualified illegal employment periods.
their leaders in supporting a graphic group.
immigrants a chance to
Moreover, he said, while
After 12 years, they and phased-in co mprehen sive
legalize
their
status. family members would be bill. ·
"backroom discussion&amp;" are
Conservatives denounce eligible for a new visa but
Even though conservative under
way
among
this as "amnesty" for law- not be · eligible for socia l hard-liners have referred to Republicans, there are none
breakers.
bill
as
offering yet involving Democrats,
serv·ice benefits. Five hi .s
Informal talks between years after that. they could "amnesty," Pence said that whose support would be
the chambers are under stay in the United States "i f you leave the country necessary to pass a compreway, with major input from on the "X,Change" visa, and get ri ght with the law ~ hensive bill, especially in
the White House, but return home (and collect if you, in effect, reboot ~ the Senate.
House conservatives are payroll taxes they'd paid) it's not amnesty if, 17 years
Among Democrats , Sens.
holding field hearings or apply for permanent later. you apply to be here Edward Kennedy (Mass.)
instead of cooferencing residency (a "green card") permanently. "
and Ken Salazar (Colo.) are
with the Senate, and only and be eligible for eventuHe said he thought that, eager for a dear - though
five weeks remain on the al citizenship.
even thottgh Republicans Kennedy said he opposes
legislative
calendar
Sharry and Jacoby, who voted 203-17 in December Pence's bill - but other
between the end of the favor the Bush/Senate for an enforcement-only . Democrat s may prefer to
August recess and the time approach, were at the immigration bill (o ne of see Republicans fail to
in October when members National Press Club for which made being illegal a deliver results on an issue
leave town to campaign.
their o~n event, releasing a felony ), on!y 20 to 30 of his they've elevated to the top
Despite all this, there's a new poll showing that 71 colleag ues would resist a of the nation's agenda.
glimmer of hope. Leaving a percent of likely voters sup- properly constructed com"I'd say Pence's move
press club event Tuesday port such a measure, includ- prehensive bill.
and the White Hou se comon a nonimmigration mat- ing
73
percent
of
And he indicated that . a mit men! to a result ups the
ter - his proposal for a Republicans.
leading supposed hard- chances from about 10 pershield laY.! · for journalists
By 55 percent to 33 per- lil)er, Hou se Judi ciary cent to maybe 25 percent,"
- conservative Rep. Mike cent, according to the Chairman
Jim Sharry told me . "So, it's a
Pence, R-Ind., ran ·into two bipartisan
Tarrance Sensenbrenner,
R- Wis., big deal, but a big mountain
leading advocates of com- Group/Lake Research sur- might well support such a to climb."
prehensive reform, Frank vey, voters prefer passing a bill. As evidence, he cited
As I said, there's a glimSharry of the National bill this year that includes Sensenbrenner's decision to mer.
Immigration Forum and whai critics deride as lead opposition this month
(Morton Kondracke is
Tamar · Jacoby of the "amnesty" to pass·ing no to an amendment by Rep. executive editor of Roll
Manhattan Institute.
legislation at all.
. Steve King, R-lowa, which Call, the newspaper of
Trading opinions, they
At their event. Sharry and would have lifted a Voting Capitol Hi//.)

The Daily Sentin~l

..

Nat
Hentoff

not so sure.
After they were proved
right In their skepticism,
years later, in Jerusalem, I
was walking through the
Yad Vashem Museum of the
Holocaust. In one of the
rooms, l saw in detail, a
record of a post-Holocaust
· mass murder of Jews, about
which I'd never heard adding to the 3 million
killed by the Nazis in
Pola'nd . They had returned.
after the war. to their former
homes in Poland ; and those
who had taken their homes.
along with other Jew-haters,
decided to finish off these
surviving . imrudet's. Poland
has since eX.pre.1sed deep,
convincing repentance . But.
when it happened. the world
was silem.
Years alter that, writing of
the world 's silence before
and during the genocide in
Rwanda - with the considerable research help of the
"frontline" documentary
"Ghosts of Rwanda" (April
l , 2004, on PBS) - I found
that Kofi Annan, then head
of peacekeeping at the
United Nation s, had ordered
Gen. Romeo Dallaire, U.N.
Foice
Commander in
Rwanda, not to intervene.
although Dallaire had
advance word of what was
to happen and could have
stopped it.
·
And from President Bill

Clinton, at the time, came
orders
to
the
State
Departmet'tt not to usc the
word "genocide" in answer
to reporters ' 4uestions
about our refusal to intervene. Four years after the
corpses had fill ed the rivers
of Rwanda, Clinton speaking in Rwanda , said: " All
over the world there were
people like me sitting in
offices, day after day. who
did not fully appreciate the
depth and speed with
which you were being
engulfed by this unimaginable terror."
Then why was the Stl\te
Department ordered by the
White House to avoid the
dread word "genocide,"
which might well have
impelled many .Americans,
in 1994, to ask why we did
not ge t involved .
Now. thinking of this
doomsday chrO!licle of
world leaders who have
been silent during massive
crimes against humanity on
their watch, l am depressed
and puzzled at why ~
when know ledge of the
genocide in Darfur cannot
be escaped - so many
Americans are indifferent.
Yes. there have been rallies. and a persistent network of \m~rican humanrights ' · '., ists. But. aside
fmm the.u, among the millions fiercely opposing our
involvement in Iraq. I see
·and hear no public. organized horror at the killings,
in Darfur. And frolh~fhose
Americans who never mi ss
an opportunity to attack the
gove rnmen t of Israe l. that
fury does not encompass
the Khartoum government
of Sudan.
Among my own family,

friends and acquaintances,
the reaction - when l
speak of Darf~r ~ is mostly only polite attempts at
showing concern. Often
there is no reaction at all ,
as if l were an utterly , boring Ancient Mariner with a
tale of t.he suffering that
befell hi s crew when he
shot an albatross. (Today's
Ancient Mariner is The
New York Times' Nicholas
Kristof. who keeps br.inging us the naked truth of
these endless Kristallnachts
in Darfur.)
For all l know, there are
occasional sermons in our
places of worship about
Darfur; but there are no rising , insistent, . horrified
winds and gales of protest'
around this country to shake
the timbers of Congress imd
the White House.
Is there nothing meaning-.
ful the world's most powerful nation can do'' Well ,
with what's going on in the
Mideast, and the coming
midterm elections here, that
question isn't being asked at
all.
Meanwhile,
Jan
Egeland, head of the U.N.'s
humanitarian ·operations,'
says uf Darfur: "l think
we're headed toward total
chaos. Our peop1e in the
field are increasingly desperate. "
·
This fall, will any candidates of either party even
mention Darfur in their
campaign?
(Nat Hemojf is a nationally .renow11ed awhoritv on
the First Amendme/11 -and
the Bill of Rights and aurlwr
of many books. including
"1/ie War on the Bill of
Rights and the Gathering
· Rnistance" (Seven Stories
Press. 2003 ).

then
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Ruth
MIDDLEPORT - Two
Elaine Lambert Mourning
Middleport
men
were
83, departed this life,
and
charged
in
the
arrested
Monday, July 3 1, 2006 at
theft of propen y from the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Norfolk/Southern railroad
after a lengthy illness.
property
at Hohson.
She was born on Oct. II.
Accardi ng
to
·[922 at Pomeroy to the late
Everett and Geneve Russell
Lambert.
She retired after 36 years
as vice,president of the
Bv BRIAN FARKAS
Elyria Savings and Trust
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Co. of Elyria, Ohio where
she had lived for 60 years
MAMMOTH. W.Va.
before returning to this area
Two men who became lo-t
in July 2004.
.
in a closed underground
She was preceded in death
Ruth Elaine Lambert
coal mine while searching
by her husband, Andrew
Mourning
for scrap metal 10 se ll were
"Carl" Mourning, Aug. 30, .
found by rescuers who fol2002 whom she married April4, 1942. Also she is preced- lowed carbon dioxide emited by two sisters, Helen D. Johnson and Elizabeth ted by a fire they built to
Vaughan, and an Infant brother, Leo Dale Lambert.
keep warm.
- Surviving are one · brother, Gene (Ann) Lambert,
Franklin Johnson, 44, ahd
Pomeroy, and sisters Margaret Haning, Pomeroy, Mary Glen Edelman. 35. both of
Grover, Pomeroy, and Jo Anne Gillogly, Albany; a sister- the Cedar Grove area, hun ;
in-law, Mary (George) Price, Long Bottom, and brother-in- kered down in the mine and
law, James (Carol) Mourning, Middleport, and several built the fire after their
Nieces and Nephews.
flashlight failed. They didOf comfort, Ruth was baptized in Christ in previous n't have any food but there
years, but will sadly be missed by family and friends. was water in the mine to
Many special days were made much happier for others by drink, State Police Trooper
l st Class R.H. Green sa id.
her generosity.
.
Re scue crews found
Special friends are Laura Lawhorn, Madelon and Burt
Johnso n and Edelman at
Bruehler and Reta and George Humelstine of Elyria.
Special thanks to the caring staff of Overbrook about 9: 15 p.m. Monday
about 3,000 feet in side the
Rehabilitation Center.
Graveside Services will be held on Thursday, Aug. 3, mine, following a four-hour
2006 at l p.m . at Meigs Memory Gardens with Don search. They were last seen
Lambert, a nephew, to officiate. A private family visitation Saturday but were not
reported · missing until
will be held at Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Zion Church Monday,, Green said.
"Both of them are covof Christ, c/o Ida Murphy, 37931 St. Rt. 143, Pomeroy,
ered
with coal dust,'' Green
Oliio 45769.
said.
Online condolen,ces may be sent'to www.fisherfuneralHe said Johnson told the
homes.com
rescue crews, "Thank you
for the rescue.''
The men were treated at
good, according to Oden ..
the scene and then taken to a
"Little thing s, such as local hospital. Green said
setting your air conditioner both men would face
thermostat to 80 degrees or charges but that he could
from PageA1
turning off the swimming not say what those charges
charged you for a pound of pool pump in the afternoon, will. be until after police
ground beef in stead of a will really help, " he consult with prosecutors.
said."Water heaters, hot
The mine, which is owned
patty," he said.
"When the power grid is tubs, pools, air condition- by Mas sey Energy Inc.,
in a peaking situation, kilo- ers, and ovens are vora- closed in 1993. It is located
watts that have to be pur- cious kilowatt-hour gob- in the unincorporated comchased in excess of base blers. Fortunately, th~se
demand are very costly," devices are thermostaticalOden added. "The demand ly controlled. Consider
amount you pay going for- turning your water heater
ward from a peak event will down lO degrees and
cause P.ower bills to refrain from using large · WESTLAKE (AP) - A
amounts of hot water until bar waitress checking to see
mcrease.
· if a woman was legally old
Oden said electric bills later in the evening.
enough to drink was handed
"Try
to
get
by
without
from this summer's heat
wave will be larger due to turning on the stove or oven her own stolen driver 's
in the afternoon," Oden license, which was reported
' higher consumption.
said
. "Keep curtains and missing weeks earlier,
"However, we expect to
window
blinds closed to . police said.
see bills go down in
"The odds of this waitress
September and October reduce the effect of radiant
recovering her own license
with seasonal temperature heat from the sun."
"If we understand that defy calculation," police
declines," he said. "What
we don't want is for our electric bills have a demand .
members to pay higher component and take steps to
demand rates in the shoul- conserve .during peak perider months due to a new ods, this will translate into
peak of record set during dollar savings and relieve
the summer. This is why some pressure on the power
we are asking for their p'lants and transmission
cooperation."
grid," he added. .
BREC's system is likely
For more information,
to peak during the afternoon visit the BREC Web site at
and early evening period . www.buckeyerec.com and
This is when energy conser- click on the "Customer
vation can do the most Service" tool bar option.9

Middleport Police Chief
Bruce Sw1ft. Chad Wise
and Caleb Shuler were
charged in Meigs County
Court with
receiving
sto len property. They
appeared be fore Judge
Steven L. Story and were
relea,ed on bond.
Swift said the depanment

is also investigating a series
of complaints of vandalism
to vehicles on South Second
Avenue. Larry Compston
reported that hi s 2004
Nissan had been struck on
the rear hatch with an
unknown object, causing .
light damage . Norman
Hysell reponed that the side

window of his 2002
Chrysler van had been broken out. and Matt Stewan
reponed that his vehicle had
been keyed earlier in the
month .
The department is also
investigating the theft of a
DK bicycle from Angie
Kerr of Sycamore Street.

Carbon dioxide from.fire leads rescuers to men in niine

Peak

AP Photo

Emergency crews gather near the opening to an abandoned Massey Energy mine Monday
to search for two men reported missing in Mammoth, W.Va. Glen Edelman , 39, and
Franklin Johnson, 45, both of Cedar Grove, W.Va., have been reported missing since
Saturday near the mine.
munity of Mammoth. about
25 mil es southeast of
Charleston.
Massey had barricaded
the mi.ne's entrance several
miles away and had done
everything it could to keep
people out of the closed
operation. Green said. But
Johnson and Edelman
managed to get into the
mine by crawling through
a hole in .the ground that
looked like "a groundhog
hole ," he said.
Re scue crews had to use

an excavator to enlarge the .for scrap metal, she said.
hole so they could enter the
"We didn't think nothing
mine, he said.
of it," Holly Johnson said.
''I'm just relieved that . "He's always looking for
they're OK." said Ray ways to get money. to pay
Wilkinson, Johnson's room- the bills and eat."
mate.
Shane Harvey, a Massey
Johnson's -sister-in-law, lawyer, said rescue crews
Holly Johnson, 26, said he found tools and copper ·
stopped at her . house l"iring in the mine.
Saturday morning to borrow
"We hope there is tres·
a flashlight.
Franklin passing charges. It's very
Johnson told his brother dangerous to break into a .
Jimmy, who is Holly mine. They really risked
Johnson's husband, that he their lives for very little,"
was going to the mine to look Harvey said.

Bar waitress asks for ID, gets stolen·driver's license back

· Daifur: Edge of the abyss

Every morning, checking
the news from Darfur, I see
the utter helplessness and
hopelessness of the black
African Muslims in that
ravaged part of Sudan.
While the world is otherwise occupied: "Darfur
LETTERS TO THE
Violence Worsens · After
EDITOR
Peace Deal." "(Darfur)~ Is
Letters ro the ediior are welcome. They should be less Most Dangerous Place in
than 300 words. All /e//ers are subject to editing, must be the World for Children."
signed, and inclt~de llddress and telephone number. No "Escalating Tribal Tensions
unsigned tellers will be published. Leiters should be in (among rebels) Fuel New
I{OOd taste. addressil1g issues, not personalities, Leiters of Darfur Attacks."
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be acceptMy own feeling of useedfor publication.
lessness after writing so
many columns about the
mass murders and rapes by
the Sudan government's
enablers of genocide, the
Janjaweed, brings me back
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
to my childhood - IistenOhio Valley Publishing
ing on the radio continually
Correction Polley
Co.
to
CBS's William Shirer
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every aHernoon, Monday
through Friday, 11~ Court Street
from Hitler's Berlin.
be accurate. lf you know of an error , Pomeroy, Ohio.
second-class
I was 13 when I first
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid a1 Pomeroy.
heard about Kristallnacht
992-2156,
Member; The Associated Press and
when , on Nov. 7, 1938.
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
as
Martin Gilbert tells in
Postmaater: Send address correcOur matn number Is
his new book with 'that
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ollio 45769.
title
(HarperCollins):
Department extensions are:
"Hitler youth rampaged
Subscription Rates
through Jewish neighborBy carrier or motor route
hoods across Germany,
News
One month
'1 0.27
leaving
behind them a horEditor: Charlehe Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'123.24
rifying trail of terror and
Dally
so•
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Senior
Citizen
rates
.".
destruction
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month
'9.24
I was afraid for the Jews
One year
'103.90
there; and in passing, for
Advertising
Subscnbers shook! remn in advance
myself in then largely anliOutalde Sales; Dave Harris; Ext 15 direc..'l to the Daily Sentinel, No subBoston, where it
Semitic
scription by mail permitted In areas
Outalde Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
was dangerous for Jewish
where home carrier service is availClaooJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
able.
kids to go out alone at night.
Then gradually, chi,llingMall Subscription
ly, came news of what
General Manager
Inside Melgo County
to be , known as the
came
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext . 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
Holocaust. Surely the
26 Weeks
'64.20
52
Weeks
'127.11
world,
I thought. would
E-mail:
intervene . The elders in
news@ mydailysentinel .com
Outolde Melgo County
my neighborhood - many
13 Weeks
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of whom, like my father,
Web:
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had escaped from the
52 Weeks
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pogroms in Russia - were

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Tuesday, August 1, 2006 ·

•

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157"

www.mydailysentinel.com

Capt. Guy Tutner said
Monday. ·
Maria Bergan, 23. of
Lakewood, was charged
Sunday night with identity
theft and receiving stolen
propeny. She was arrested
at her horne in suburban
Cleveland and was jailed in
Westlake to await a court
appearance.

ATHENS - Expectant
mothers and their birth
coaches or companions are
encouraged
to
attend
0' Bleness
Memorial
Hospital 's childbinh class
Sunday, Aug. 6 from 2 p.m.
to 6 p.m.
The location of the ·class
will be in lower level room
010. First-time parents, as
well as experienced parents,
will .learn what's new in
maternity care. Expectant
parents will also learn the
stages of labor and delivery
and what to expect before
and after the baby is born.
The class focuses on
breathing and relaxation techniques a~ well as other painrelief options. The class also
provides information about
hospital procedures and variations of labor. An introduction

Mentoring

•

Fire
from PageA1
injuries from the fire though
he was not sure if the man
was transported by emergency personnel for any
other injury. No firefighters
were injured.
The Pomeroy squad set
up a "rehab" unit at the
scene, keeping firefighters

••

hydrated as the humidity
and heat became a factor.
Pomeroy
firefighters
arrived back in quarters at
3:19 a.m., three and onehalf hours after the call ·
came in. "
No word on how the tire
staned and it remains under
investigation.
Pomeroy responded to the
scene with three trucks and
14
firefighters.
while
Middleport assisted with one
truck and live firelighters

Moosehead Saloon, but
her companion provided '
her name.
The waitress said she had
lost her wallet July 9 at a bar
in Lakewood.
The victim also had a
credit card stolen. The
stolen card has been used to
make $1,000 in purchases,
Turner said.

·o'Bieness Memorial Hospital
to offer childbirth class

'

tion and a face to face
interview.
"Last year we had a few
from PageA1
college age kids as well as
high schoolers that were in
the
in middle
School (one day a week at schoolprogram
who returned. and
Eastern) students meet with people from the Meigs
their mentors at the school, Senior Center," Zarcaro
they have a snack and do said of last year's diverse
homework while working volunteers who helped
in groups with include a mentor around 40 kids
mentor. After homework county wide.
the kids participate in a les:
Whether kids in the menson on a variety of issues loring program are strugrelated to alcohol or drug gling o~ not Zacaro said it
prevention education, life can have1 a positive influskills ·or some kind of char, ence in their life .
acter building.
"It lefs kids know someHealth Recovery Services one cares about the,
then provides the kids with believes in them and offers
transponation home .
them a chance to realize that
Allison Zarcaro, the pro- they can have success in
gram's coord.inator, said whatever they
want,"
background checks are . Zacaro explained.
If you would like to voldone first on volunteers
followed by fingerprint- unteer call 589-3680, ext.
ing, a completed applica- 109.

The 22-year-old waitress, whose name was not
released, called police .last
week and said she had
been handed her own
stolen driver's license by a
woman trying to prove she
was 21. The woman, who
became suspicious of the
delay as the waitress went
to call police, fled the

to the maternity services at
O'Bleness will include a tour
of the O'Bieness Binh Center.
The class is free of charge
and will be held six times
on alternating months this
year. For more information
or to register, call the
O'Bieness Birth Center at
(740) 592-9275.

Aill~!4

The Ariel Summer Theatre Presents

SHOW BOAT
Aug. 25 &amp; 26 8 PM Nightly
www.arleltheatre.org
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis,.OH
740-446-ARTS (2787)

IJ ~ ·{7~~~~~s~~OVP ftle photo

Bob Vance will demonstrate how different calls on the bugle
wete used to communicate with troops the actions to be
taken in battles.
the cavalry will exceed 300
moumed riders going over
the trail followed by Morgan from Page A1
from Wilkesville to Portland
where the infamous Battle
of
Buftington Island took
The reenactors' visit to the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds place. The Sixth Qhio
and
Second
will give fairgoers a small- Cavalry
Virginia
Cavalry
are
scale view at what will take
place \vhen Morgan's Raid involved in planning for the
II across Meigs County Raid which is expected to
t;tkes place Sept. n-fO. At attrac t reenactors from
that time it is expected thar across the country:

Fair

PILOT

Will you be able to afford
your child's college
education?
Better get started on your homework.
Steve Musser, Investment Advisor
Representative
,
(740) 992-3381 or (800) 454-1096

Jefferson Pilot Securities
Corporation
Member NASD I SIPC
[n the offices of Dow~ing-Childs Insurance,
196 East Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio ~576
'

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinelcom

Tuesday, August I , 2006

Inside
Indians fall to Red Sox, page B2

• ·n "

•
'

... ....
.. - .

,
'

''

'

.,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel _

'

Thesday, August I, 2006

•

'

I
.
.
. .'
'

'

'

I'

.
'

. - - .. ..-

0

Reds
deal for
pitchers

Th ey
don't pay
me enough

and I'm all
dressE'd up ...

{I:* c?

0

To

· aclverdle.Ia
this space

Call
The
Daily Sentinel
992-2155

Gizmos ~ ~a~~ets BREAKFAST GUN
Pressing trigger G) activates feather tickler('Dwhich stimulates egg
production (D. Egg slides down shoot hitting release pin@)
hammer strikes egg @allowing yolk to enter launch c:hamber@)
Weight of yolk rele(lses spring pistonQ) piston motion
turns gear train@which throws fuel piston . r '
1
forward@sending alcohol to atomizer@ . . · , ; '
Fuel is ignited when passing egg
, ·.
triggers lever action[]) resulting in
A

They all appear on this page
plus once more somewhere

match head strike @
Egg is flash cooked ;
as it passes through I
blast of flame @.
\

SPORTS BRIEFS

Big Bend Girls
Fall Softball to
hold registration

~~illl'li't;~~

&gt; _ .... ,:;... _

~~i'

··--·..r"·-'

'

.

Standard military cook gear first declassified
after the "great egg debacle of 95" when four
army cooks held off a division of seasoned,
but hungry, regulars using the Breakfast Gun
in a training exercise.

............ _

.m. underhill ,,

ftl~ - ~~!!illlliMIIII

~

Here are some typical mistakes.
Next week I'll show you how you can get
lots of variation with this method.
.p."'" ,,

o&gt;J

Having all the
parts di sconnected

'----::==::::__

· stash ; facial form betwe.en cheeks, above mouth,
under and behind nose (not a mustache }

·c.l

.'

,---"'---(~. ~. &lt;~
_j!l~'
-'

Not having'!he
_L_ _j_,::stash go behind
the nose
Having the-cheeks
separate from the siash,
forming 4 smile lines •

MIDDLEPORT - ' The
Big Bend Girls Fall
Softball League will be
holding
registration
Monday,
July
31,
Saturday,
August
5,
Monday August 7 and
Saturday, August 12.
The Monday registrations will be held from 6
p.m. to 8 p.m. and the
Saturday registration days
will be held from 9 a.m. to
noon . All registrations will
take
place
at
the · ·
Middleport Park shelter
house.
The league is beginning
its second year and is open
to girls ages I 0- 13 from
Athens. Gallia, Mason and
Meigs counties.
For more information ,
call Bryan Swann at 4163171, Jeff Johnson at 3786476 or Bruce Nottingham
at 882-2504.

Lady Lasers
to hold tryouts
COLUMBUS - . The
Lady Lasers, a girls fast- .
pitch softball team, will be
holding tryouts for the following age groups: 18 and
under, 16u, 14u, 12u, lOu
and 8u. ·They will be held 9
a.m. Sunday, Aug. 13 at
Berliner Park.
Visit www.eteamz.comiladylasers for more infOrmation.

All-star fast pitch
softball.tourney
planned
MIDDLEPORT ._ The
Middleport Youth League
will host an all-star girls fast
pitch softball tournament
August 5-6. It is o~n to
girls in three age grQ.Ups,
16-and-under, 14-and-under
and 12 -and~under.
To register, call 590-0438,
992-7717 or 992-7747.

Sluggers to hold
open tryouts
GALLIPOLIS - Open
tryouts for the 2007
Gallipolis Sluggers 12 and
under baseball team will
be he ld in August. Call
Phil Bailey at 740 2455725 or Brad Graham at
740 245-5625 for information . Deadline is August
27.

~izmo~ ~- 'a~~ets
FLIP BOOK FUN

CoNTACT US
Scorellne ts p.m.-1 a.m.)
1-740-446-2342 ext 33

OVP

Fax - 1·740-446·3008
. E·mell - SJXlr1s@mydailysentinet.com

SIK&gt;rtL.S.llll
CAREFULLY CUT OUT
EACH FRAME. STACK IN
WITH N 1ON TOP. PINCH
WITH FINGERS OR USE BINDERCUP.
FLIP WITH THUMB FOR ANIMATION FUN .

PARENTAL SUPERVISION ADVISED

-

IECOIEIIOISE

CINCINNATI (AP)-The
Cincinnati Reds acquired
left-bander Rheal Cormier
from . Philadelphia
on
Monday and right-hander
Kyle Lohse from Minnesota
in an attempt by the NL wildcard leader to bol ster its
pi tching staff. ·
Cincmnati sent 23-year-old
right-hander Justin Germano
to the Phillies and 22-yearold right-hander Zach Ward
to the Twins.
In other recent trades, the
Reds obtained closer Eddie
Guardado from Seattle and
relievers Gary Majewski and
Bill Bray from Washington.
The 27-year-old Lohse is
2-5 with a 7.07 ERA in eight
stm1s and 14 relief appearances. In h'is six-year major
league career, all with the
Twms. Lohse is 51-57 with a
4.88 ERA. and has made five
postseason appeardnces
The 39-year-old Cormier is
2-2 with a 1.59 ERA. He is
7! -63 with a 4,01 ERA in 14
seasons with St. Louis,
Boston. Montreal and the
Phillies.
As part of the trade,
Cormier agreed to a one-year
tontract extension through
2007. a deal that contains a
club option for 2008.
'' It's a great opportunity for
me to pitch for a team that is
in the hunt for the postseason,'' Cormier said. ~~ I
enjoyed my time here. I wish
it could've included a playoff
1
run."
Gern1ano, obtained from
San Diego last year, was
· &lt;:ailed up by the Reds to start
Saturday night's game at
Milwaukee, a 6-3 loss. He
was then optioned back to
Triple-A Louisville.
.·
Ward was the Reds' thirdround pick in 2005, and was
7-0 with a 2.29 ERA in 18
stans and two relief appearances for Class A Dayton.
Germano appeared in two
games this season for
Cincinnati. going 0-1 with a
5.40 ERA. At Louisville. he
wa; 8-6 with a 3.69 ERA in
19 games ( 18 starts).

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
t740) 446-2342, e1&lt;1. 33
bsherman 0 mydailytribune.com

. Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
t740) 446-2342 , ••• 23
bwaltersC myda11ytribune ,com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342 , ••• 33
Ierum 0 mydail)'register.com

to
Ohio picked fourth in East Division
DETROIT (AP) - Luke
Getsy and Garrett Wolfe
squared off last year in what
turned out to be the most
thrilling championship game
in
Mid-American
Conference history.
Getsy 's 36-yard touchdown pass to Domenik
Hixon with I 0 seconds to
play gave Akron a 31-30
victory over Northern
Illinois.

· The dramatic finish overshadowed Wolfe's 270 yards
rushing, the highest total
ever achieved in a Division I
conference-championship
game.
The Zips and Huskies are
both overwhelming selections to make it back to Ford
· Field for tlie Nov. 30 title
game, according to the conference's preseason media
poll released Monday.

"That was a fun ride," said
Getsy, who then threw for
455 yards and four touchdowns in a 38-31 loss to
Memphis in the Motor City
Bowl. "Akron's never been
known (or getting much fan
support in the community,
but that all changed las t
year. It was unbelievable."
Akron finished the regular
season with a 6-5 record and
only made it to the championship game by winning a
Please see MAC. Bl

MAC
Mid-American Conference
Preseason Media Poll

Results of the

Mid-Americ~n

Conference preseason media poll released Monday.

EAST
1. Akron , 282 points {35 lirst·place
votes).
2. Miami (Ohio), 235 (11 ).

3. Bowling Green. 196 (2).
4. Ohio, 176 (2).
5. Kent St., 97
6. Bullato, 64.

WEST
1. N. lllfnots, 2B6 points (39 first-place
votes).
2. Toledo. 244 (1 0).
3. W. MiCh1gan. 172 (1).
4. Cent. Michigan , 155.
5. Ball St., 120..
6. E. Micl'11gan, 73.

CHAMPIONSHIP GAME WINNER
1. N tltlnois, 37 votes.
2. Toledo, 8.
3. Akron, 3
4. Miami (Ohio), '1.
4. (li e) W. Michigan, 1...

Trades: Maddux dealt to Dodgers; Soriano stays put
Bv RoNALD BLUM

honest wit h you," Maddux
Said . .;It came down tO the
las1 minute. I'm excited to
NEW YORK Greg . he going to LA .. but at the
Maddux was dealt to the Los same time sad about leaving
Ange les Dodgers 111 the Chicago. I need to try to get
btggest deal be lore hase· rinht wi th mv new team and
ba ll 's non -waiver . trade try to pitch we ll for them ."
deadline Monday whtlc the
Maddux stat1ed the season
Washington Nationals sur- 5-0. hut the 40-y_ear-old
pnsed so me teatm hy hold- right-hander has won only
111,1! onto Alton so Sonano.
four games .since and is 9-11
A .127-gamc wumer and overall \Vith a 4.69 ERA in
four-tim.: Cv Yuun~ Award 2~ stans.
winner. Maddu.x wt~i,cd his
"He 's not what he was
' no-trade clatiSe ;mel ac,·epted when he was win ning Cy
the trade to Los An~eles. You ng Awards. but we still
who se nt Gold Glove think ' he has the ability to
infielder Cesar 17luris to the pitch and win games.':
C ulls. Chicago is giving $2 Dodgers general manager
million to the Dod ge rs '" Ned Colletti said. "He's
part uf the trade.
•
probttbl y one of the smartest
Maudux: who spe nt hi s playe rs I've ever been
first seven sea""" with the around. I think he'll find a
Cubs. returned to Chicago _way.
oefore the 200-1 season after
Los Angeles, laS! in the
II years with tile At lanta tightl y grouped NL West,
Braves . He uot his 300th also acqu ired shortstop Julio
win and 3.0lJOth stri,eout Lugo from the Tampa Bay
AP photo
with tlie Cubs.
Washington Nationals' Alfonso Soriano stands on first base after walking against the Los
"I am very su rprised to be
Please see Trades. B:l
Angeles Dodgers in the sixth inning of a baseball game Saturday in Los Angeles.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

�Tuesda~August1,2006

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

www.mydallysentlnel.com

MAC
from Page Bl
t1ebreaker over Miami and
Bowlmg Green, so the Z1ps
don't belteve they have
many laurels to sn on.
"''m a little surpnsed we
were even ptcked f1rst,"
sa1d Akron coach J.D
Brookhart. "We are the
defendmg champs, and
we· vc got a lot or starters
back , but this IS a very
tough d1viston"
The Ztps received 35 ot
the 50 first-place votes 111
the East, w1th M1ami ( II),
Bowhng Green (2) and
Ohw (2) sphttmg the rest.
Northern llltnots was
even more popular, getting
39 votes to win the West.
Toledo (I 0) and Western
M1Ch1gan (I) got the others
The Huskies were also a
solid choice to wm the title
game, getting 37 votes
Toledo was second with
eight votes and defendmg
champ10n Akron had only
three, with M1ami and
Western M1chigan getting
one ap1ece.

\!Crtbune - Sentinel - l\e

Much of that is due to one
player- Wolfe. He led the
MAC With• I,580 yards
rushmg and 17 touchdowns,
despite only playmg nme
games. Along with h1s big
day at F01 d F1eld, he had a
277-yard, five -touchdown
game agamst
Western
Michigan and rushed for
245 yards m a one-point
loss at Northwestern.
··1 wish I could take credit
for him," sa1d Northern
lllinOJs coach Joe Novak.
"But you can't coach
instincts, and he's the best
instinctive runner I've ever
been around."
Wolfe said it was hard for
him to even watch the Super
Bow I two months after losmg to Akron
"It was great for the MAC
to have (former Miami QB)
Ben Roethhsberger wm the
Super Bowl," he said. "But
I was watching the game,
and all I could see was Ford
F1eld and think about
Akron .
"That game was hke
something from ESPN
Classic, and we lost. That's
been our whole mol!vation
his summer We want another shot"

Ortiz lifts Red Sox over Indians
BY

HOWARD ULMAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON - No matter
how d1re the SltUUIIOil
appears for the Red Sox.
there 's always B1g Pap1.
David Ortiz did 11 ag.atn
Monday mght, hilling a
game-ending,
th1 ee-Jllll
homer m the mnth mmng to
give Boston a 9-8 v.in ove1
the Cleveland lnd1ans that
kept the Red Sox 111 sole
possessiOn of f1rst place 10
the AL East
"The whole mning we're
JUSt th10k10g, Jet's JUSt get
David to the plate,'' manage1
Terry Francona sa1d.
Ort1z, v. ho also hll a solo
homer in the third, got his
second game-end111g hll 111
three days and fifth of the
year. It was h1s 12th m four
seasons with Boston, most
m the ma1ors du,r111g that
span He leads the b1g
leagues With 37 home runs
and I05 RBls, and he t1ed a
club record with 14 homers
10 a month
"You've got to do what
you've got to do," Ort1z
smd "L1ke I satd betore. the
worst thing that cdn happen
1s the p1tcher genmg you
out"

Unt1l h1s one-out dnve to
center field, the day hadn't
been gomg well tor the Red
Sox
They dtdn't make .t tr.tde
before the 4 p.m EDT deadhoe for nonwaiver deals
They also placed nght ftelder Trot N1~on on the lhsabled list. lost catcher Jason

there.''
Kyle Snyder (3-2) got the
Will with 4 1-3 mnmgs of
one-hll rel1ef after replacmg
Wells
"'I've never pitched 10 a
game that's made me feel
tillS v.ay," smd Snyder, who
had been scheduled to start
Tuesday mgtlt. "All I was
trying to do was give us an
opportumty to come back
and wm th1s game at the tail
end and I'll be darned if
D&lt;tvld Ortiz dtdn't step up to
the plate and do it agam."
Blake htt a leadoff homer
in the second, a sacrifice' fly
111 the third and a three-run
homer 111 the fifth that put
Cleveland ahead R-6. Blake
has 14 homers and three
two-llome1 gL~mes this season
He was 111 nght fteld when
Ot t1z ended the g.une
"'You're thmking, he can't
do tt agmn," Blake satd
"'The guy's unbehevable "
Vat itek depa1 ted w1th a
twisted left knee m the th1rd
alter runnmg to second base
the
previOus
mnmg
Francona replaced hun with
Doug Muabcllt.
"Tek Iought me on 11 a Illtie hit,'' sa1d Francona, who
gave no md1ca!lon about
how much t1me Vantek
1111ght miss "I'm JUSt trymg
to be cautious."
Boston scoreu 111 each ol
the f irs t foUl innings dga111st
out." Clevel,md llltll1age r st.trtcr Paul Byrd
The Red Sox went up 2-0
Enc
Wedge
satd.
"'Ob\!Oll'ly. that " a very in the first on Loretta's sinspec!dl hitter th&lt;~t came up gle .md Ram1rez's 29th

Vantek to a knee lllJUry and
watched DaVId Wells allow
e1ght runs 111 4 2-3 mmngs m
his first start in two months
Since hurtmg h1s nght knee.
"N1ghts like thrs can mean
a lot to a team," Francona
saiu.
Boston took a one-game
lead over the idle New York
Yankees with help from
homers by Manny Ranmcz
and W!I y Mo Pen a
The winning homer followed a single by Alex Cora,
a walk to Kevin Youkili s and
a pupout by Mark Loretta It
came on a 2-0 count agamst
Fausto Carmona Cl-5 ) and
helped the Red Sox oveJcome two homers and five
RBis by Casey Blake
''The guy had to make a
pllch .tt the ume 01 get the
bases loaded and havmg a
hitter l1ke Manny" cumtng
up. OrtiZ' s&lt;11d "I JUSt go out
the1e
w1th
the same
app10ach that I always go
See a p1tch and h1t 11 "
It was Ott1z's et~hth
career game-ending holner.
seventh w1th the Red Sox
and th1rd th1s year And
that's JUSt m the tegular season - he also h.1s two
gamc-end111g homers 111 the
postseason
C.mnona v.&lt;ts 111 the game
bec.tuse the lnutans tmded
closer Bob Wtckm.m to
Atlanta on J ul) 20.
"He's a strone -mmded kid
and he's go111g~ 10 tigure 11

homer Cleveland went
ahead 3-2 10 the second on
Blake's homer and a two-run
double by Kelly Shoppach
The Red Sox came back
wtth two runs 111 the second
on a two-run tnple by Pena,
who was a double short of
the cycle.
The lndtans jumped ahead
5-4 w1th two runs 111 the
third on a single by Jason
Michaels, an RBI double by
Trav1s Hafner and Blake's
sacnf1ce fly
Boston went back on top
when Ort1z, m the fourth,
and Pena, in the fifth,
slammed the first pitch of
each inning for solo homers.
Then Ortiz finished the
game oft wnh h1s spectalty.
"I smd. 'He's not gomg to
do it ag&lt;~in."' Pena smd, "and
he d1d 11 "
Notes: Varitek made his
I.OOOth appearance as a
Cdtcher, rankmg h1m I06th
on the career hst Carlton
F1sk, who played w1th
Boston and the Chicago
Wh1te Sox, IS the career
leader wllh 2,226
Bytd
struggled for hts second
stratght stall
Ramirez
extended h1s hlltmg streak to
16 games, his longest m SIX
years with Boston, and
broke a tie for 27th place
wuh Jtm Thome v.ith his
464th homer .. The lndmns
are 0-7 agamst Wells since
their last wu1 against h1m on
Oct I. 2000. .. RHP Jason
Johnson wtll be recalled
lrom Tnple-A Pawtucket to
stall 111 place ol Snyder on
Tuesday mght

Saban turns down invitation to dine with Bush
DAVIE , Fla (AP)
When the White House
extended an inv!latJon to
dine with Pres1dent Buslt.
Dan Manno accepted, but
Mtamt Dolph1ns coach
N1ck Saban smd no.
Saban sm d hts obligations at tra111mg camp took
pnonty over the chance to
spend an evening with the
pres1dent Pollttcs weren't
a factor, he stud .
" It was really " tou gh
deCISIOn ," Sa ban' sat u, I
Monday "] feel hk e my
first responsibility IS our
team That in no way d!slespects the tmponance of
the opportuntty I would
have loved to have had to
spend dinner w1th the president."
Dolphms uetenstvc end
Jason Taylor sa1d he also
turned down a chance to
attend becau se the dmner
Sunday mght conflicted
with team meetings on the
second day ot tramtng
camp
The d1nner took place at
Joe's Stone Crabs, a lanumark Miami Beach restaurant. Among those JOtnmg
Pres1dent
Bush
wete
Manno. a former Dolphtns
yuarterback and dn NFL
Hall of Famer, and Ntck
Buontconll , Jun M,111u1ch
and J1m Kitck , mcmhe" of

re&lt;~cl to hiS dectsJOn to
decltne''
''I'd rather this not
become a public 1ssue ,
beca use I don't lhtnk I eve n
told her, to be honest wtth
you." Saban sa1d 'Now
that you mentiOn 11. llhtybe
I should we.u a helmet
home tomght."
Saban satd he v.ould
have cherished du11ng With
the president
"It's a great expenence,
but 11 's a personal expenence,'' he said "And my
obhgauon 1s to these players nght now,
"Once we commit to
camp, I'm out of everythmg It helps me With the
precedent of sayi ng, 'Th1s
1s what I'm doing, this is
what I'm committed to,
and 1 don 't have to make
exceptions for anything or
anybody."'
Taylor sa1d Manno invited him to the dmner.
"It 's great to be able to
do some thmgs hke that,
but I've got an obligatiOn
here," Taylor said "I've
got a job to do and a
responsibility."
Taylor and other playe1s
sa1u they weren't surpnsed
that Sab,m tolu the Whne
Ilou se no
dtd S.th,tn·, wtk
"He', " loothtill guy."

the 19 72 Dolphtm te.tm
that .tchteved the only perIcc! sea,o n 111 league history
Manno. Buomcontt and
M.utdtch took thetr w1ve'
Ma11no s,ud he was hon ored tu be mcluded but
declined futthet comment
Among t~e othet guem
were &lt;~ctor Andy Gat eta
,tnd l,J ntvtsion host Mano
KtcutzbcJger, known as
Don Fr.1ncisco Top1cs of
&lt;:on,et sallon
tnduded
mov1es, the 1972 Dolphins
&lt;t nd Manno's achievements, but httle politics,
Ku ck satd
"It was a preuy wild feeltng to know you're havmg
d1nner w1th the most powerful person m the most
powerful country," Kuck
satd ·'Us ually 11 costs you
$20.000 to get close to the
pres1dent."
Regard1ng Saban's decision not to attend. K11 ck
smd "I ltnd 1t hard to
imagtne turntng down the
prestdent"
A Dolphms spokesm&lt;~n
sa td Sab&lt;tn opted agamst
accepttng the lnVttaliUrl Ill
pall hec.mse the dmner
c·onlltlled wtth a Vl'll by
,m undtscln,ed out-o f-tow n
eouest who addrc"cd hts
t ell Ill

Ho11

safety T1&lt;tvares Ttllman
satd ·'H e' ll t.1ke us over
the prestdent any day."
When asked tf he 's a
poltu ca l person, Saban
shunk hts head but satd h1s
best fnend grow ing up was
Joe Manchm, now governor of West Y1rgtma.
" I can't even tell you
what h1s pohtJcal deal1s, to
be honest w1th you," Saban
said. "But he's my tnend."
As coach at Louisiana
State, Saban met Bush
when the team vistted the
White House after winning
the 2003 nat1onal championship. And while at
Mtchigan State he met
President Clinton, who
took advantage of Saban's
hospitality during a break
between
a
mor!io\ml'
fundraiser and an after~t9on
commencement speech.
"They took over our
facility building , so he had
an office there," Saban
said. "I'm working m my
off1ce, he's in the other end
of the buildmg . Two secret
serv1ce guys come down
and ~ay, 'Hey coach, can
we use your couch?
Pres1dent Clinton doesn't
have a couch. He wants to
take a nap ·
" I Sdld ' ure My cla1m to
t.une io; tiMt he took a nap
on my l'OLrch "

Trades
from Page Bl
Devil Rays lor nunor league
third baseman Joel Guzman
and
outftelder
Serg1o
Pedroza
Earlier, the Cubs traded
infielder Todd Walker and
$350,000 to San Diego for
minor league right-hander
Jose Ceda.
Soriano, an All-Star left
fielder, is batting 286 with
32 homers, 64 RBls and 26
stolen bases in his first season w1th Washington after
coming over m a trade with
Texas last offseason.
"We felt the best deal we
could make is no deal for the
franchtse," general manager
Jim Bowden said. "He wants
to stay in D C and did not
want to be traded."
Soriano, who makes $10
milhon th1s year, can become
a free agent after the season.
"I'm happy," Soriano said.
"It will be more easy to focus
on playing every time
because 1t passed I was very
excited they wanted to keep
me here. . I love my teammates, too. I thmk they were
happX to see me walk m
here.'
While Sonano stayed put,
there were 12 trades in all
Monday, mcludmg four by
the P!ltsburgh Prrates Teams
can sl!ll make trades, but
players must first pass
thtuugh wmvers.
After stellar setup man
Duaner Sanchez dislocated
h1s p1tchmg shoulder in a taJo
acctdent, the NL East-leadmg New York Mets qmckly
replemshed thetr staff by
acyumng
Roberto
Hernandez and Oliver Perez
f10m Ptttsbur~h for outtielder Xavier Naay
Sanchez was ndmg m a
cab that got 111 an accident
near the team's hotel m
Flonda late Sunday mght,
the Mets smd
They expect to learn m
about a week whether
Sanchez needs surgery. If he
does, the nght-hander would
miss the rest of the season potentially a huge blow to
the club's World Senes
hopes
If not, he could return in
September, according to geneml manager Omar Minaya.
New York had hoped to
land a top starting pitcher
"We had some pretty big
things on the table, especially late yesterday," Mmaya
sa1d. "Unfortunately, they

Landis
from PageBl
But the result showing
synthetic testosterone does
not need to be confirmed
with a second test, satd Dr.
Gary Wadler, a member of
the World Anti-Doping
Agency and a spokesman
for the American College of
Sports Medicine.
"The rules say that u IS a
violation, but 1f you can
show that the athlete had no
fault or no stgnltlcant fault,
there could be a mitigation
of the sanction," Wadler
told the Ttmes. "No matter
how it got there, the athlete
has to show how it got mto
hts or her body It could

didn't pan out."
Pittsburgh also sent righthander K1p Wells to Texas
for m1nor league pitcher
Jesse Chavez; outfielder
Craig Wilson to the New
York' Yankees for right-hander Shawn Chacon; and first
baseman Sean Casey to
Detroit for right-hander
Bnan Rogers.
On Sunday, the Yankees
got nght fielder Bobby
Abreu and pttcher Cory
Lidle from Philadelphia for
four minor leaguers. They
hope to get outltelders Gary
Sheffield and Hideki Matsui
back from the disabled hst
before the end of the season.
''I think we're better
equipped to run the rat race
here in the final two months,
but the competition is so
fierce ," general mana&amp;er
Brian
Cashman
sa1d.
"Obvmusly, all of us try to
put ourselves and our teams
111 a postllon to separate ourselves from the pack, but I'm
not sure anybody did that."
AL East-leading Boston,
which began the day a halfgame al1ead of the Yankees,
d1dn't make any moves.
"We were asked over and
over agam for our young
pitchers," ~eneral manager
Theo Epstem said "As much
as we desperately wanted to
help our team, it would have
been shortsighted to sacnfice
our plan."
Star shortstop M1guel
TeJada also stayed put m
Baltimore
"I told them before that I
don't want to go anywhere.
If I'm gomg to win, I want to
win here," said Tejada, who
IS signed through 2009.
Texas acqutred infielderoutfielder Matt Stairs from
Kansas City for right-hander
Joselo Diaz.
Cmcmnatt, contmumg to
remake !Is pitching staff,
obtained left-hander Rhea!
Cormier from Philadelphia
and right-hander Kyle Lohse
from Mmnesota. The Reds
sent 23-year-old right-hander
Justin Germano to the
Ph1llies and 22-year-old
right-hander Zach Ward to
the Twms.
/In other recent trades, the
~eds obtamed closer Edd1e
Guardado from Seattle and
relievers Gary Majewski and
B1ll Bray from Washmgton.
"I would have loved to
have th1s bullpen at the start
of the season," manager
Jerry Narron sa1d.
Atlanta dealt struggling
pitcher Jorge Sosa to St.
Louis for nght-hander Rich
Scalamandre.
have been sabotage or coniammated d1etary supplements, or somethmg else,
but they have to prove how
the testosterone got there."
The T!lnes said Landis
was in New York on
Monday night and could not
be reached for comment
Testosterone is a naturally
occurnng male hormone
that is banned when it is
found in a ratio greater than
4: I to another hormone,
ep1testosterone. ,
Oscar Pereira of Spain,
who fimshed second overall
m the Tour de France,
would be declared the winner if Landis lose~ the Tour
de France title. It would be
the first ttme in the history
of the Tour of France that
the winner has been disqualified for doping.

~ter

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·PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
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POLICIES Ohio VsMty PubHthlng ,...,.,,, thti right to edit. reject, or ancelanr ad at an~ time Error~ mull De r•portad on the fil'lt
ol
Trtbune-Sentinei-Rtglltw will be rnpon1ibtllor no more then thto colt of th1 1pece occupied by thl •rrOf tnd only ti'lellrttlntertion
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110
1

YARDSALE

kttncarlyle@}comcast

baby

4

4x4's For Sate ........................................725

Announcement.............. ........ .............. 030
Anttques .......................................................530
Apartments lor Rent .................. , ........... 440
Auction and Flea Market... ........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......................... 760
Auto Repair ........................... .................no
Autos lor Sale......... .... ........ .... ........... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sate ............................, 750
Building Supplies...................................550
Business and Bulldtngs .......................... 340
Business Opportuntty .................................210
Business Training ................................ 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ....................... 790
Camping Equipment ...................., ............ 780
Cards of Thanks...... ... . ....... ............ 010
Child/Elderly Care.. . ... .. ................... 190
EtectricaVRelr!geralion .............................. 840
Equipment lor Rent . ........ . . .............. 480
Excavating ............................................... 830
Farm Equipment. .....................................610
Farms tor Rent..... . .......... . ...............430
Farms tor Sale........ . . ........ . . ............ 330
For Lease .................................... , ............. .490
For Sate................... ...........
. ............. 585
For Sale or Trade.... .......... .. ................590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ....................................580
Furnished Rooms.................. . ........... ....450
General Hauling.. .................................850
Giveaway..................................................040
Happy Ads.............. ........... . .......... . ....050
Hay &amp; Grain...... .... ........... .. .................... 640
Help Wanted ............................................... 110
Home Improvements ................................. 81 0
Homes lor Sate ......................................... 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
HOUIIIIOr Rent .........................................410
In Memoriam .........................,................... 020
tnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment... ................... 860
Livestock............................... .. ..................630
Lost and Found ......................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreege ......................................... 350
Mtscettaneous.............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise.......... .. ........ 540
Mobile Home Repair......... ..... .... . ....... 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent... .............:.............. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sate..................... . ....... 320
Money to Loan.......................................... 220
Motorcycle&amp; &amp; 4 Wheetera .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ........... , ................. 570
Personals ..............................................005
Pels tor Seta ............................................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ................................... 820
Prolesstonot Services ..............................230
Rodlo, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanted ................................ 360
Schools lnstructlon ..................................... 150
Seed, Plant II Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ...................................... 120
Space lor Rent. ......................................... 460
Sporting Goods ......................................... 520
SUV'a tor Sate... ... .. ... :...... . .................... 720
Trucks for Sate.... ..... .............................. 715
Uphotstary ............................,...................... 870
Vans For Sate......... ......................... .. ....... 730
Wanted to Buy.... ... ................................. 099,
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ................ 620
Wanted To Do ........................................ 180
Wanted to Rent... ......................................... 470
Yard Sale· Gafllpolls.................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middla ............. .. ...... 074
Yord Sale·Pl. Pleosant ................................ 076

wv

At1ent1on

© 2006 by NEA,

riO

Inc

I L,I__".E.u.·W·A·i'lfED-_.II

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assamble crafts
woOd 1tems
To $480/wk
Matenals pro111ded
Free mformahon pkg 24Hr
801 428 4649

A 9 year company IS lookmg
for a well mot1vated HVAC
mdlvtdual Must have a least
1 year hands on expenence
m tnstallatlon Pay 1s based
on expenence II Interested
call (740)441·1236 and
Depot Street Rutland July leave message w•lll recap·
31 thru Aug 3 furmture l10n1st
mce school clothes, lots - - - - - - - AVQNI All Areas' To Buy or
more 740· 742·2242
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
G•gantlc Garage Sale Aug 675·1429
3 and 4 Cathy C lar~ res1- - - - - - - - dence Tackerv111e Road
Aacme 9 00--? Furniture
washer,
dryer
miSC,
clo!hes

Rutland F1re Stalton Thu rs
&amp; Fn , Aug 3rd &amp; 4th Avon
baby clothes toys 1eans
SIZe 22
Yard Sale I Aug 3rd 9 00
5 00
Lots and LOIS
Teaford 305 Tyree Bl11d,,
Rac1ne

Burger King of Gallipolis
now htrmg
all
shiftS
Compet111ve wages, fle:&lt;rble
schedules msurance ava11
able, uniforms provided For
tntervtews pick up appllca·
!IOns at 65 Upper R•ver Ad
GallipoliS OH

lO

Nogoda

• NO EXPERIEN!,;E NECESSARY
• FULL TIME Cl.AS!&gt;ES
'CDL TRAINING
• FINANCING .1.\IAILABLE
• JOB Pl..ACEMENT
' ENRO..LING NOW

ALLIANCE

1-800-334-1203
_... an1anc9tri1Ctortraller cnm
Dom•no s P1zza Now Hmng
Safe
Dnvers
Po•nt
Pleasant
Galltpohs
&amp;
Pomeroy locatiOns Apply 1n
Person

-------TransportatiOn dnver need·
ed for tOO bed sk1Uad nurs·
mg tac1hty Provided trans
2842
portat1on
for physician
Wanl to buy Junk Cars appomtments consults etc
(304 )773-5004
Must halle good dnvtng
uspan
ea
a 11age 1 record en1oy working wllh
uylng all metals at to
residents and tam1hes
nces Call for more 1nfo
Pos1t1on IS part·llme, state
nces 304-593 1904
tested nursing assistant preferred
not
reqUired
I 111'1 11\ Ill \1
Interested applicants sllould
apply
•n
person
to
-. 1 k\ ll I ...,
Roctc;spnngs Rehab Center,
36759 Aockspnngs Road
Pomeroy
Oh1o 45769
E.111end1care
Health
Servtces Inc , IS an equal
An Excellent Wfro/ to earn
opportumly employer thai
money The New Avon
encourages
workplace
Call Manlyn 304 882·2645
diversity MIF DN

r·o

Hu.PWi\N'fiD

I

8LJSINE'\S

~==O:I:,'U;K:I11Nr1;:1:~

FEDERAL
$1567·$2619/hr, now hlr·
mg For application and free
governement lOb 1nfo, call
AmBltcan Assoc of Labor 1
913·599·8042 24/hrs emp
serv
Gallipolis Ferry man needs
ride to/from Moutaineer
Plant $50/wk Wort: hours
M-F
7a-3 15p
Call
(304)675·6782

Healthcare Services Group
the nat1on's larlile&amp;t prov1der
of laundry and housekeepmg ser11lces for long term
cere .IS currently seek1ng
laundry and housekeep•ng
managers In the Galhpohs
and Pomeroy areas If you
w8nt to grow with an established publicly held company
fax rastJ me to 614-5770125

St Jude Children's
Research Hospital

•!• No Sales Quotas!
0:• No Prev1ous
E)(perience Necessary!
..;. Comprehensive
Tra1mngs
•:•ProlessJonal
Workmg
Env1ronment
•:•Weekly Pay &amp;
Bonuses
.:OPius much more

R&amp;J TRUCKING

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH

Leadtng The Way

lNG
recommends
lhat you do bustness v.1th
people you know and
NOT to send money
tnrough the mat I unt 11 you
have mves11gated I he

-------Oh10 Valley Home Health,
~ F II Time AN
1 h
nc 1r1ng ovr U
F 11 T
d' p 1 T
u
1me an
ar
•me
comparable With expert CNA, STNA, CHHA PCA
ence Please contact Patt1 and Per D1em OT, ST
(740)388-9515 or preferably Accepting appltcallons for
tax resume to (740 )388· LPNs Compem 1ve Wages
9530 EEO Employer
and
Benellls
1nclud 1ng

,11aca11on and other benefits
Toalnmg also prov1ded 11
tnterested
please
call
1740)441 1377 or ''401992·
0990

health
msurance
and
Mtleage Apply at 1480
Jackson Ptke Galhpolis or
~.
Avenue, p om 1
24 '5
' J al.l\spn
Pleasant WV or phone toll
I ree 1· 866 44 ,• '"9"'
o.J .J

'"""'--,
r- - " "
SHOP

CLASSIFIEDS

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtn•
I B88 582 3345

I&lt; I \I I 'I \II
10

+

•Great Hours
40 howslweek lull
11me
•Great Benefits•
Pa1d 1ra1mng
vacat1ons and holidays
•Great Job!
Call on behall of the
Nat•onal Allie
Association and help
prolecl ou r 2nd
Amendment nghtsl

4bd FORECLOSURE' Only
$20 9001 For llstmgs 800
391·5228 ext F254

116 S Park Dr 5br 2ba 2·
story b1·level deck above
ground pool call 304-675
7808 after/Spm
2 homes for sale close to
town c1ty schools 1 3 bM
room ranch 2 baths newly
' temodeied elec heat CIA
c•ty water
1· olde1 3 bedroom 1 112
bath large family room gas
he&lt;JI &amp; cook•nQ
CIA
(740 ).46 3907 (419t565
4137

Call Today•
1·877-463·6247
ext. 2311

~=ww=w=m=loc=ISI:on:c:o:m=

1150
b .."., ....... ,...
~
"""~
L.,-.il.i"&lt;Silorrtlli i UOiC.:.n•o•'loo.J.
~

5 year old Coloma! on 3
acres approx 1 900 sq ft 3
bdr 2 ball•s. 2 car garage
mas ter bdr 1s 28.1124 w1th a
JaCuZZI tub S125 000 V1ew
onhne
at
or11b com
(7 40]446- 7029
5bd FO RECLOS URE• Must
Sell $33 000' For l1stmgs
800·391 ·5228 ext F254
AHentlont
Local company offenng NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams tor you to buy your
home mstead of renting
• 100% f•nancmg
Less than perfect credtl
accep1ed
' Payment could be the
same as rent
Morlgage
(740)367 0000

Locators

By owner· appt only 3 acres
on nver 48R 2b laundry
rm 1st fl 2 k11chens tr &amp;
back porches pat1o 2 car
gar All br1ck 40 .11SO barn
18x24 work sHop wb stove
&amp; elec &amp; wa Boat dock concrete dr 6 m1 so of Galhpohs
on SA 7 (740)441 0596

Aeg1slersd Denial Hygenl1st
lOOking for parl·tlme work 1n
Ma son Gallla or Me1gs
County Contact at PO Box
56 Pomt Pleasant WV

We have What You
Are Looking Fort

ll..iiextiiil.1ii9iti41i1. . .

Pan
Operators,
Dozer
Operators All operators
need f1ne gradtnn m1n1mum
~
2 years expenence Pay

Home
He1lth
Aides·
Looking for dependable and
canng staff to ass•sl the eld·
er!y with home care needs
We offer tle.lllble sCheduling

Truck
dnver
needed
Henderson WV based CDL
L•cense &amp; 2 years e.11pen
ence MVR reqUired Call
(304)675 7434
::._:..:..:_______
Wanted CDL Onver B
L1cense
w1lh
tanker
endorsement
Aeg1onal
routes Start and stop m
Gall1polls
everyday
$10 55/hr (740)245 5514

Call NOW lo apply
by phone I
-Sn-4&amp;3 -6247
1

Ohto Valley Home Health,
Inc h1nng for Part Ttme and
Full T1me CNA ST!I,lA
CHHA. PCA Compet1t111e
Wages and Benefits lnclud
mg heallt1 1nsu rance and
M1leage Apply at 1480
Jackson Pike Gallipolis or
2415 Jackson Avenue. Po1nt
Heavy Equipment Operator, Pleasant WV or phone toll
•
Site Trucks , COL preferrad, free .
_
1 866 441 1393

PR.on~IONAL
Srn~ ICES

Edwards Supenntendent at
740 667 6079

•Great Pay!
Up to 58/hour
bonuses

l1nanc1ng available Pnce
reduced (740)742 2376

co

A&amp;J Truck•ng now Hlnng at
our New Haven WV
Term1nal For Regtonal
Hauls-Dump D•v 1 year

Come see why
lnfoCISIOn was wted
one of the 2006 "Top
Ten B"t PIICII to
• Work In Ohio!"

4 bedroom 2 balh on SA
279 near Centerv1lle, 100%

cc__:___:___ _ _ _- '

:;Pu;b:IIS~h:m:g:C:om:p:':"Y:I=~

EXP
OH and WV Coal
Miners needed'
Send
resume to David Stanley
Consultants, Coal Mmer.
152 Roush Circle, Fa1rmont,
WV 26554 or Fax to 304534 -3917 or go to DSCLLC com to apply Online

3BA House for sate Pretty
Clean Cedar Street
FP
Central heat'a1r, Furntshed
K1tchen Ctly Schools Call
740 446 9961 $118 000

•NOTICE•

OTR
otlenng
venfiable exp
~;:=::===~
Call1·800·462-9365 ask for ~
DRIVE
Jo1n the Avon team Local
Kent
MONt:\
Can - - - - - - - lU LoAN
Do you have a Class A Corporate trammg
(740)379-9422 to start today Res Care/Middleton Esta tes ~=======~
COL?
w111 be hmng a tull·t•me
Immediate
driving for only $10
Adm1n1strat•ve pos liOn Must
Opportunities available
uNOl'ICt;**
10 Microsoft
whh Canton, OH Carrier to Local Home Health Agency be prof•c•ent
and
Excel
S&amp;rvlce our, Jackson, OH RN· Part or Full T1me- Able Word
Borrow Smart Contact
to provtde supervtsory, fill 1n ApplicatiOns WI II be Ia ke n at
account
where needed we provide 8204 Carla Dn11e 8 00-4 00
the Oh•o DIVISIOn of
F1nanc1al
lnsl•tuMn s
vacat1on day sh1Pt hours M F
•Weekly pay
f
mlntmel weekends and Res Care IS an Equal Office
of Consumer
•Hoapltallzatton and 401 K many more benefitS Please Opportumty
Employer Affa1rs BEFORE you ref••LIIte model equipment
send Resume 10
FIM/DN
nance your home or
•No NYC or canada
oblmn a loan BEWARE
•
T k
1 p
Famtly Semor Care Inc
.a 1ng app 11cao~ons or rep of requests for any large
•95% no touch freight
PO Box 707
Cook Apply "I persoo
d
a vance paymen 1s o1
•Hometlme on most week~ ~~G~a~lhp~o!lls~
.~
O~H4~56~3·1· J1menett• s P1zza RJO 1ees or •nsurance c a lllh e
ends
Grande
01'••ce o1 c onsumer
Now Hiring ALL
.::.:_::__::.:______
•$500 Sign On Bonus
Shl"a
Affalr5 toll free at 1-866
n
The Eastern Local Schvol
1
278-0003
to learn 1f the
Earn up to $8/h r
D1str1ct IS seek•ng qualified
Must be at least 23 yrs old
mortgage
broker
or
candidates to t1ll vacanc1es
have a valid Long form DOT
Join the Fastest
for the following pos111ons
lender
IS
properly
phys1cal and ha11e 2 years
Intervention Spec•ahsl With licensed [ Th•s IS a public
Growtng Company 1n
OTR expenence Ask lor
Townl Make calls tor
MD Cerhll cat•on/L•censure
semce announcement
Bob
EducatiOnal
A•de
from the Ohio Valley
some oltlle na11on s
lead1ng non-prof1t
Interested
candidates
1-8[)()-652-2362
orgamzanons lndudmg
should
contact
R1ck

POSTAL JOBS

TRACTOR· TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

Absolute Top Dollar US
Silver and Gold Co1ns
Proofsets Gold A1ngs Pre1935
US
Currency,
Sol•tatre Dtarnonds M TS
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenua Gallipolis 740 446

www comics com

110

IIELPWAI'IfEil

Back to school Sale OneDay AtJgusl 3rd Quality
clolhtng for pra teen girls &amp;
boy s
957 Broadway
Mtddleport

Huge Sale• 2nd·5th, 1/4
mde past 5 Pornts llems
from unpa 1d storage unlls In
Mason Girls dothes small
6X, furmture tools table
saw toys, AC gas grill,
Lawn Boy Mower other
1terns
-----,--::--,-Hugh Yard Sale Thursday
Aug 3rd 2 m11es South of
Tuppms Pla1ns on lett The
Grate Residence

LOIS

Peoples Federal Credit
Un1on IS an equal opportun•·
ty employer

books, Jewelry wacker set,
household clothtng and lots
more Good Sale

CLASSIFIED INDEX

_.

Peoples Federal
opemng new branch 1n Pt 190 CHIUl/EUlERI y
Pleasant
Postt1ons ava•l·
CARt.
able
Branch Manager
Loan
Bonme s Pnvate Chlldcare
Off1cer Teller E~~:penenced
Now
has
Openmg
preferred Full benefit pac~
Conven1ently located by new
age SuOm•t resume With h1ghway on SAT 7 Call740·
salary •equ•rements to 985-4326
Peoples Federal Crad•t
Umon 419 First Allanue
south Nllro
251 43 ~~-...- - - - .

-------3 Fam1ly Yard Sale 8/3 !l/4
{TI1u rs &amp;Fn) 9·3 Des•gner
Maternity Clothes baby and
Male English Po•nter Call children s clothes LOis of
(740)441·0405
mtsc 11ems-too numerous
to men110n
35670 Stale
Pitt Bull Pupptes (304)675· Route 7
4869 or (304)675 7371
4 Famtly Aug 3rd and 4th
Two Sylvester k1t1ens to grve C orn er Broad wy
a and Vt ne
away, litter lramed Call 51 Aac•ne 9 00 to 3 TV
00
(740)446·4769
d1s1'1es, furniture b•kes toys,

FOUND Black dog young 5 Fam11y Sale Thurs 3rd and
female, purple collar Oshel Fn 4th 5 m•les out 325,
Road (304)675·4027
DanVIlle Area Shtrley Jude
Lots of every
)We will not knowln
Lost Jad&lt;: Russell Terrier res•denls
thing pnced lo sell
y accept any advar
NO
laement In viotatlo
Centenary area Reward Junk
;;;";"•;;;
low;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;!J Children's Pet (740)446
9666 or (740)441·0200
Aug 1-2. lOam-? 300
Broadway St Mtddleporl
Clothes, Household and
Mtsc

Ho~m;

!'OR SALE

ASSISted liVIng or total care 3 BA 1 tlalh 1 1/2 story
for your loved one m my house
basement, heal
home Mary (740)388 0118 pump w•th propane furnace
lg eat 1n kttchen with oak
ouse-cau .. Halr carec to
cabmets
12x24 dmmg
lnisabled Shut-Ins
Cuts
room large concre1e front
Ser11
lyl es Man•cures
porcll back deck 111nyl s•d·
~~~as Belpre to Athens, tng 2 car carport shade
tddleporl &amp; 1n between trees 1 acre flat lawn 1 m11e
~a ll Jenny 740 378·6482 south of R1o Grande
18 years expenence
SB5 900 Phone !740)2 45·
Cred•l
5811

Free Reg Male Yellow Lab
Born 11 111 105 (740 )446
8822

r

WA~llll
· ' - - •1iii0iiiD&lt;iii&gt;_
I 100

Pans Salesperson wanted
Computer expenence and
knowledge of farm equtp
men!
preferred
Salary
negobable depending 011
expenence
Health
Insurance pr0111ded Send
resume to CLA Box .ill c/o
GallipoliS Tnbune PO Bo.11
469, Gall1pohs OH 45631

BeautHul, fnendly 1 112 yr ~mil,..~~~--...,
old Male Beagle Needs ~·
YARD SALE·
good hOme (304)675·2209
PoMEROY/MIDDLE
lea11e message
11474 Pleasanton
Ad
Black Lab mtx, 7 month Athens (off new 33) ten minNeeds good home Dog utes from Pomeroy Fn·Sat
food , dog bo.11 free Cal! 8m· 3pm multi family pnced
::.17.:,40::.138::.:8::.·1.:.57~0.:__~- lo sell

LosrFOUNDAND

HELP WANfED

·

:o:

YARIJ SALE·

hold •Tems, toys ,
tlems, m1sc

net

I

Spending more than $200 ~--iiGiiiAiiLLiiiiPOiiiLISiiii-"
on Ax? We can help' Call ~
337 Roush Lane 8/3/06
Today 1-866·290-7373
6/5/06
Baby·plus SIZe
GIVF.AWAY
(womens) clothes house

rL.-------'·I

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bualne•• Day• Prior To
Publlc:.tlon
Sunday Dl8play: 1:00 ·-.,,oolr
Thuraday for Sunday• •

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

·--~

r

Jai

Now you can have borders and graphics
"'-&gt;
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

• All ada must be prepaid'

• Shirt Your Ads Wlttl A Keyword • Include Compl111te
Ouc:rlptlon • Include A Prlc:e • Avoid Abbreviation.
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 D•v•

rI

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Djsplav Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mond•y-Frlday for lnaertlon
In Next Day'• P•per
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

AP photo
Cleveland Indians catcher Kelly Shoppach and Boston Red Sox's Doug Mtrabellt appeal to home plate umptre C.B Bucknor
who calls Mtrabellt out trymg to score on Coco Cnsp's smgle to cen.ter fteld dunng the third mning of their baseball game
at Fenway Park m Boston MonFJay.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Tuesday, August t, 2006

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Js
subJect to the Faderal
FaJr Housing Act of 1968
whieh makes It 1ttega1 to
edverUse Many
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color religion, sax
lamlll1! at1tu1 or nation1f
origin, or any lnlenticn to
makt any auch
preference, limitation or
discrimination.'
Thla newapaper will not
knowingly accept
advertiaemants tor rasl
estate whlth Is In
violation of the law Our
readers are hereb~
lntormed that all
dwett1ngs advertised in
thiS newspaper are
available on an equal
opportumty bases

---

2 or 3 bedroom house for
sale or land contracl 1670
Lincoln He1ghts Pomeroy
(740)992·585a
-3-b-ed-ro_o_m_2-ba-lh-w•thij;;
place 40x60 barn R10
Grande area On 8 flat aces
House tor Sale •n SyractJse
$120 000 (740)709·1 166
two bedroom w1th ba1h

Bedroom
2 Baths attached garage and oase
menl
An estate sa le
Basement large deck dou· $
Phone (740 )992
70 000
ble garago 306 Second
36 90
Ava ,
Middleport ~&lt;o~--::---::---::­
S63 000 00 740·992 2571
Mason Co Rebel A1dge Ad
2 m11es trom Hannan H•gh
COUNTRY LIVING School 3 bed/ 2 balh ~ car
(Careers Close To Horne)
LJ11mg
AM!
Oy Owner 2 acres, new garage
Cai1Toctay •740 446 4367
fanch 4 bdrms 2 baths m F1replace 2 ac Land LIVed
1 800·214-0452
dry wall stage less than 1 yr 1n 2 months s~o 000 down
WfiYI galhpollscareercol ege com
w1ll
Fmance
lrom Galt1pohs S74 500 Owner
Accred1led Member Accred 1111g
(304)562
5840
(304)552
Owner
F1nanang
(740)489
Courtell lor l~dapeudenl Collt:~gt'S
9146
0756
ana Sct!ools 12748

Concealed P1slol Class
OhiO WV Aug 5 2006
$75 00
9 OOam VFW
Mason WV Ph (740)843
5555.
-------Gallipolis Career College

3

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

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

riO

~~

1

For Sale

r

www.mydailysentlnel.com

A~~E

Hot.5tl!
FUR

RENT

1r

Mercerville building lot for In Syracuse 4 Bd.--1 Bath, Immaculate
close to schools. G'ood
home
site.
$16,0'M.
1740)256·1553, i740)339·
9236.

In Syracuse- .2.800 sq tt
quality bwh mul1i-level brick
home, maintenance tree
Nice quiet neighborhood. 34 bedrooms, 2 112 bath, with
hardwood trim throughout.
U-shaped kllchen witt) 40' of
cabinets. Wood burning lire
place. 2 l/2 car detached
garage. N1cety landscaped
.60 acre lot . Immaculate

r

RfAL Fsri\1E

I

r•o

'-w--·FllR-,;;RENriilli--,J

740-441-5171 . Shown by
...,
appt. only
- - - - - - - -· 2 bedrooin house lor rent In
House lor sate. 4BR, 2BA, Kanauga $425 per month,
full basement. Green atten· S425 Cteposit plus utilities.
dance area $130,000. Call (740) 446·4107.

New 2 bedroom house in appreciate.

:2:_80:.:1_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Small house for rent In
Middleport. $400.00/plus
dep. Call 740·992·3823.
Available August 151.

j

MOB!ORILERIM!:IOMtli

(740)446.7633

room. good carpet, tile lloor
in kitchen. Fren ch doors
open to master bedroom,
·
· b ff
k
Jacuzzi 1u , o s1reel par ·
1ng. Payment Sround $5SO
Per month . 740 ·367·7 129.

---

F'OR SALE

1

.

16x80 trailer, .2bdrm, 2ba.
dream kitchen w/all appli·
an(;es,
12x16 (;Overed
porch, plus shed. Rented
land near Green.(740)339·
3429.
2000 16,80 Clay1on . VI·n·.a
Y'
Siding, Shingle Roof, Heat
Pump, New Carpet, 6 oth &amp;r
homes on Lot. Call for
(740)388 0000
P· ·
fi Cing.
.
.
days,
(740)388·8017·
evenings, (740)794 -0460·
cell. (740)645·6 t50- cell.
2002 Redman Double Wide
28x70 !50,000 starting
Price Call 1or mfo anytime
(304)882-3057
.2007 28x80 w/ game room .
Only $59,995. Includes 1ree
· delivery &amp; set up. Call
1740)385-2434.
9 1 j3reezewood 14..:70 3
bedroom-. 1 bath, total elec·
tric. Call (740)256-6667.
Great used 3BR home only
$9,995. Will help with deliv·
ery. Calli740)385-7671 .

r

FARMS
FOR SALE

ACREAGE
1.75 Acre Lot
Maaonco.WY
Rt. 2 Box 127,
Leon, WV 25123
Approx. 500!
Road Frontage
Utilities Available
$11 ,000
i3o4)295-9090

cab

works

Phillip
Alder

great

798·4686..
Large, Newer 2 Bedroom

•

FRUITS &amp;

H1ll's Self
Storage

ROGER HVSELL
GflRHGE

29670' 8ashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740·949- 2217

Auto &amp; Truck

VEGITABLFS

unit with I car attacahed
garage. 1/ery quiet neighbor· Canning tomatoes picked,
hood, $450/mo, ReferenceJ Rowe Farm, bring your
Deposit , No Pets, · No
Smoking Inside, (740)4462801
--------Modern 1 bedroom apt.

~P,-ho:--n_e:--:i_7_40:--J-44_6~·0_3_oo_.__

owen containers, (740)247·
4292

Peaches U Pick. Bring
conta1ners , SA 7 south,
Gallipolis, OH Raynor's.

I \H\1...,1 1'1'111 -.
North 3rd Ave., Middleport,
,\ I I\ I -, t !It I\
2 bedroom, 1urnlshed,
deposit &amp; previous rental
FARM
references required , No
EQUIPMENT
74 0 9 9 2 0 16 5
___
.::
8N F d
Rent.
. or tractor. good condlRooms
for
Cons1ruc11
' on
workers tlon $2,000. (740)446·4734.

r.1D

For rent Nice 2 bedroom Bath, AdlJII Pool &amp; Baby
.2·3
bedroom
on mobile home in CCluntry Pool, Patio. Start -~A251Mo.
Neighborhood Road , no Homes. $325 + deposit.
·
No Pels. Lease
Plus
1nside pets, $400 plus (740 )385 . 4019 .
Security Deposit Required,
(740)367-7086.
deposit,
references .
(740)446-6890 anytime.
Mobile home s~es for up to
16X80 in Country Homes. Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
.2BR home- Vinton 51. $375 (740 )385 . 4919 .
lng applications for waiting
mo. + sec. dep. YolJ pay utili· :.:..:::::::::...::;:.::.._ __
list foi' Hud·suOsized , 1- br,
ties. Gas heat. {740)446- Mobile Home siles for lJP to
apartment, call 675-6679
16K80 in Country Homes.
3644.
Equal Housing Opportunity
- - - - - - - - i740)385·4019.
2BR house· Gartield Ave. :.:..::.::.c::::_.:.:_:_:__ __
\II IH 11\\llhl
$460 re nt &amp; sec. dep. 3BA Trailer .28R in Mercerville. 'ii~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
house- LeG rande Blvd. For sate, 3BA doublewtde
$600 rent &amp; sec. dep. You oft Teeris · Run . Possible
. ,... ,..,.,.~
•
d ng. (740)256· 8132 ·
L---.O"""""iiiiliii;.,II1!,J
pay utilit ies. Lease &amp; refer- nnan

John Deere 1 ft. No Til Drill
for
rent.
Carmichael
Equipment (740)446·2412.

r16

HOUSDIOW

.

Hours
7:00AM ;. 8:00PM

r

garage, a11 app 1·lances. c1ose

2 bedroom Apar1ment avail· owner.
able in Syracuse. S200
~US
month. (740 441 "0310 ·
deposil $350 per month ~---MEiii"iiRiiCHANDiiiiiiii1Si·iir_.l
4 10 5 Bedroom Home in rent. Rent includes water,
JET
No Pets.
Mason,
$42 5/monlh . sewer, trash
AERATION MOTORS
$300/deposit.
No Pels Sufficient income to qualify.
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
740 -378·61 11.
(304)882·3652
S1ock. Celt Ron Evans, 1--------APARTBEAUTIFUL
800·537·9528.
4BR neuse for rent on State
AT
MENTS
BUDGET
Acute 75. $650/mo. plus
PRICES AT JACKSON NEW AND USED STEEL
dep. Call (740)446·3644 for
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
Info.
Drive !rom $344 to $442 .
Concrete,
Angle,
~--.A-tte
nl-lo_n_l- - - Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call For
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
EqlJal
Local company offering "NO 740-446-2568.
Grating
For
Drains.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- Housing Opportunity.
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
grams for you to buy your Brand new 2 Bedroom Scrap Metals Open Monday,
home instead of renling .
Apartments Washer/dryer Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
' 1OO"k financing
hookup, stove/refrigerator" Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
' Less than perfect credit lnCiudeQ.
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
accepted
Also available units State Sunday. (740)446-7300
' Payment could be the
Route 160. Call for details - - - - - - - - same as rent. ·
1740)441-0194 Of (740)441 - Side by Side Refrigerator
Mortgage
Locators. 1 184.
$60, Kenmore Dyer $50,
1740)367-0000
&amp; Chair
$100
Sofa
(304)773·5356
Clean, pretty, 3BR hClus e for
10 Holzer Hospital. S750

1

House lor rent
740·992·5858

YOU BL~Iill
YOUR COVER

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furniture

lrametessdumptrailer. 19B3
pickup.
-------2002 Toyota Camry 4 .cyl
$ 12,900
.200.2 Toyota Camry V6
$ t 2,900
200.3 N!'ssan Alll·ma 2.5S

OBO.

740-94~·2693.

740 446 9200
t

.

2459 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpolls

ROBERT
BISSELL

Van_ Excellent condition,
loaded, TVNCA, captains
seats. towing package
ASking
$7,300.
Call
(740)367-0622.

COISTIICTION

40 MoroRC\'CLI~'
$13.690
.l
~
2003
HClnda
· Accord
4 Wm.-rLERS
rll'l~
(loaded) $17,900
2005 Ford Mustang
6
.2002 Harley Davidson, ·
$ 16,900
Electra Glide Classic, 6.600
miles, like new with lots ol
Four Seasons Auto Sales
Chrome $16,000 (304)675{740)441-8585.

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

v

140-992-1611

8 1 ~2

IIIIIs
l 0\( Rl II

JEST LAYIN' THAR
'SIDE TH ' ROAD .!1

1'0\SIIH l 110\

Concrete Removal
and

Re~llaco•me,nl

All '1\ioes 0

THE BORN LOSER

26 Years Experience

'TI-\\~ ~EW TK{&gt;..\L MIX YOU""!

David Lewis

50U6\-i\ \~ QUIT£
T~TY, GL"-1:&gt;'&lt;~!

740-992-6971

Stop &amp; Compare

:r,;~~~~~~~~~~~~F~rei&lt;~~~~

pYOU Mt:f&gt;..N, Tf\"-1 131\G
OF 5\ Kt&gt; :&gt;E.Et&gt; ?'

i

I

r

93 Columbus Rd.

r•rwrliesiii
andSons .·
~

ctM

All type• ot rooffng:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
DownspolJt

t

FREE
-.

ESTIMATES

(740) 949-1405

A

NATE"~

OKAY,

THAT SOUNDS
BETTER THAN
MY "T UI&lt;. N

f"AINT FRESCOES IN
THE TRI'.DIT10N OF
THE ITALti'.N
RENAISS-'\NCE.

Advertise
in this
space
for
554 per
month

I'LL ADM I

WE MADE A MUSIC
VIDEO, PID INTAGLIO
PRINTMAKING, AND
LEARNED HOW TO

A Roc"'

INTO A
PAPER·
WEIG.HT ..
PROJECT

ON
'FAMI LY
FUN 01'-Y,"

WE WENT
TO T HE
LOU VRE.

PEANUTS
MMBE YOu'D BETTER JUST
CALL I-tER ON THE PI-lONE ..

Cornerstone
Construction

SUNSHINE CLUB

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER.
MONTH

(H£.$TE-R. IZl C,OO THINk
(aviR!TfRS WIU f-IA'R
~~

Ea:*S1

GARFIELD

Charleston,
South Carolina

J'I..AH, 1.-AH, I.AH, I.AH,
L.AH, L.AH ...
'-----.

~I.AH,

,; I.AH,
L.AH

GUESS WH0'6
TAKEN UP
NEEP!.-EPOINT?

Storage
The only slorage units within

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

.

'

.h

992-2155

GRIZZWELLS

YOUNG'S

.•

,The Daily_Senti~el

20
22
23
24
25

2li
28

30
31

32

Decides
Wild feline
Junior's dad
Moby Dick
pursuer
Ext1nct bird
Treasured
Flash ot
lightning
Eiect~cal
units
Supplant
Toy on

48
49
50
52

53
54
~7

58

a string
37 Whimper
011 cartel
L.ake

39
45
47

59

Stole
founder
Baroness
Karen
Trails
behind
Psychic's
inlro~2-)
Hum
Srrup base
Percent
ending
Old card
game
Firs1-down
yardage

Nasser dam

over-

charges,

domain

slangily

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeb1y Cipher cryptograms 1111 aealed from.qll0tlti0r1S l!y larnou! ~ . pasl aM pitSe~l.
~ leiter in llle ~ siBnds!Of anoth&amp;r

Todsy's clue: Tequals P

"KEE ZJCKD EUAG

YO LZG TEKOGL

UX VYMO YA OYCKD . " - KHMUGDOG
IIUFZ "LZYJBZLX ZKNG OY
-

FEKIIG

VYYLZG

XGW ."

EJFG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' llry 10 keep myself in lhe beS1 ol company and my

horsas inthe worst of company."- Jockey agent Lenny Goodman

CARPENTER
MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE RoomSERVICE
A.ddltlona I
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

O~To

H161-1Et&gt;-.

Remodatlng
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
RoollntJ &amp; Gunera

Jetiers ei ,~.
leur l:torn:,led wore) bt·
low IC torm four sim~le words.

E~TioH

T ARS AY
0 G M0 L

I I I ll
R Af I R

"'0

"If you can learn from other "
people's misiAkcs," the professor

I' I TT~ -•
I

I

lectured his class, ''you most

.....--5- 0-X_U_D_E...:....,1 dcfmitely will be -··-."

.' I I I ., I1

1
.

•

.

9

PIINI

9.

GET A&gt;ISWlR

.

.

G)

Comoitre rhe chuckle ::vo:eC

.

bv MIIIIQ 1n rne mtUHIQ •otdl

)'011 dtvtlo~ hom

&gt;&lt;UM8!~!0 l(! IERS
IN !H!S£ SQU~RI S

UNICI~MBlE lETIERS 10
•

I

'N't\~~t: DO 'loU

I

SCUMI.ETI ANIWIRJ 1131106
Mynlc- Stole - Wbiff- Nether - THEY WERE

Keyno1e speakers al convenlions can ralk on and on and
say lillie. I ihinlc lhat more people woukl be smaner if
ihty didn'l already think THEY WgRE.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ

6o To At'?L-Y
fbR A

~HO\.A~·

sl\lf'"

I

Tf-linl&lt; &lt;,bu Me~n To

S&lt;l!f, •DoN 'T /"'ESS
Wl'il-1 TEXAS':

wv 036725

V.C . YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy Dt1w
2J Yu~r~ Loc.11 Expe11ct1r"

If •,

•

•

''"'tl N~. J btlew

I

proud ot.

..l

Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

Wednesday, Aug. 2, 2008
By Bernice Bede Oaot
It isn't always possible to profit tram
lhings we truly enjoy doing, but this cau l~
be the case fo r you In the year ahead.
You mlghl ger the chance 10 make
money and have a wondertut time doing
so in the process.
LEO (July 23-A.ug . 22) - In order to
complete everything you star! , you must
put limitations on what y9u hOpe to
accomplish. Taking on a great deal may
be ambitious, butlhat could turn out to
be nonproductive.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-'Sepl. 22) - Instead of
trying to verbally rectify erroneous per·
ceptiorls others have about you, physi·
ca lty se t the e..:ample you'd like others to
see. It'll right any Injustices they falsely
haVe o1 you.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23) - Be vigilant
because someone who Is an e..:per1 at
manipulating and using others for hislhE!r
purposes could targ et you , Unless you're
forewarned, you could fall victim.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Be extra
careful you don't do anything that could
offend someone importan t to you. You
may leal a little fun behavior is harmless,
but !he other person could take great
offense by it.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) -You
always have a choice between viewing
things positive ly or negatively, and lite
will go the Way you choose. Oon'llet your
Imagination envision fa ilure where sue·
cess is a real possib ility.
CAPRI CORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Volunteering financial advice Is always a
nsky business at best, and it should be
avoided at all cost. If your tip is use d and
ta ils, you could be held acco untable In a
hetty manner.
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - There
are plenty of times when you have rigid·
ly set ideas regarding the way you want
some\h1ng done, but it may be the wrong
time lo hold firm to lhem. Be cooperative
and fte•ible.
PISCES {Feb. 20·March 20) - It isn't·
always wise to att empt to copy another's
success in the same eKact manner,
because condit1ons are continually
changing \ You may discover this lor your·
self.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19) ....i..Try not to
get caught up In any financial Involve·
m"ent you conside r to be risky, especially
1f people about whom you know tlt11e con·
trol lhe deal. It could cost yOu plenty.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) ..... An old,
unresolved disagreement between you
and your mate could rear Its ugly her,d
again, especially if another slar1s to poke
his/her nose in your affairs and stir up a
touc hy subject once more .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ·Obviously,
you won't have any trouble handling
labors ot love, but when you're required
to perform a taSk or assignment you dis·
l1ke. shoddy work habits co uld leave the ir
man.; on you .
.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - Your
earning polentlal Is qui te good, but how
you go about acquiring your" goals may
not receive ihe accolades It would under
oth er means. Do only what you can be

Pallo and Porch O.Cka

"Middleport's only
Self-Storaxe"

I~~Tl\\AT

HEIJE!t ~\IT

WOlD
GAM I

110.1 ~~ C!Af A. 'OIL.AN

0 ar.~rtt:nse

HEY, 1&lt;.1!&gt;
\o/Ar.IT TO
SIGN UP
FOR 'CAMP

BUS TRIP FROM
PVH

,,

Early on July 4, I was slaving over a hot
laptop . keyboard, playing bridge at
Online
Bridge
Base
(www.bridgebase.com). Luck.ily, lhe first
couple ol deals got my brain inlo gear
because the next f1ve contained instructive pClin ls. Get ready!
Board 3 (roiated lor convenience) was a
card-play exercise thai was mistimed by
several declarers - but not my oppo·
nent. You reach four hearts. West leads a
tow spade. You play tow from the dummy,
East winning with his ace and shifting to
the club jack. West takeS this Irick with
hi s ace and return s a club to the
dummy's queen. How Woutd you contin·
ue?
North is worth about two-and-a-half
hearts on the second rolJnd . South is
right to make a game-try, but I much prefer three clubs to lhree hearts. Here,
over three clubs. North might bid four
hearts, or perhaps would fudge with
three diamonds. To be honest, four
hearts is no great shakes as a contract,
bu1 everyone bids game on any excuse
these days.
You must draw trumps for the loss of
on ly one Irick there and establish your
cl tibs. At trick four, call for the heart jack.
Hete East will probably cover with the
king, If so, win with your Bee and ruff a
cl lJ~ on the board. Then play another
trump , being delighted to see East produce the nine. West wins with his queen,
but_-;J eve rything is lJnder control dummy's heart eight "will remo\le West's
tast trump, and your clu bs are ready to
rlJn .
Those who went down !ailed to ruff a
club early enough and ran out of hand ·
entries.

BIG NATE

I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional litetlme guar·
antec. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Wa1erproofing .

clac;kers

Answer lo Prevloua Puzzle

~:~~:t;~~ S@R~lA-~tttt~·

Refngerator, S1nk and stove. ~~~!;!:::;::;;;::;~~!_!::::::::~
Used two t1mes. Can be • i ~'LL!J!:ll:l.!:
~
.2003 T&lt;ihoe-LT. 10,000
miles, Garage kept. All seen 3 miles OUI Sandhi11
Road · on left. or call .
accessories
included.
Satellite Radio &amp; On Star 13040675·22 17
R~sid~nlial • Comnwrcial • G~nerot Contracling
~ IIHHI ~
Like New (304)675·3753
Pai nlin g • f&gt;nor~ • Windnw ~ • Dct:ks
• Sidi n ~ • Rnnftng • Rmm1 Atldi1 ions • Remodeling
4x4
·
10
HOllE
WV 038992
• Plumhing • F.ICl'lrkul 740-367.0544
FoR SAI.t:
~U'IIOVEM~'Nls
,_,.,;,;;,;;;,;,;
_ _jiorl OH 38244
• AccouJH it: Ceiling
740-339-3412

House for rent. Wilt be avail·
able July 15th. Newly renovated , nice quiet neighborhood. Can show on nolice.
The Tan Shak call (740)446·
7425 1or an appt

September 29, 2006 to
October 2, 2006
Includes transportation,
1
. . o1tel. breakfasts &amp; tn111""'
$320/person (double)
$310/person (triple)
$300/person (quad)
$450/person (single)
to make reservations
please contact PVH
Community Relations
(304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326
LIMITED SEATS!

· A TWENNY

WELL, LOOKIT
TH' BOUNCE IN
YORE STEP 1!
WHAT'D YA
DO -- FIND
A MAGIC
CURE-ALL

;;;;;;;;;~;R;;i:::~~--~

99 Chevy Astro Conversion

2004 Hi-Low 2211 Camper
w/awning .
Sleeps 6.
Balhroom
&amp;
showe r,
AC IFurnace.. Ki1Chen wl1h

.' '

BARNEY

www.-...eekcobtnet..y.eom
t

All pass

51 Mattreu
·
parte
1 Amusement 55 Tlkkanen
4 Poker
of hockey
holding
56 Become
8 Us. Novak
limp
11 Type ol woH 6D Cambodia 's
12 l1ilnd neor
locale
Conllcl
61 - 0 1 0 0
13 Pllofo dlr.
62 - 111111D11on
14 Fluno
63 Sushi
around a lo1
Ingredient
15 Ground corn 64 Approves
I 6 011 drilling 65 Gas In B91s
plaHonn
66 Ready
17 0vfl'aCI
19 MaJor artery
DOWN
21 C!Ote kin
23 Tiny 11118
1 · Sudo
24 Build on to
2 Cancel
. 27 Night attire
3 Swallow
29 Pocketed •
domiciles
33 Cu~lvate
4 F1nlah
34 Poet' a black
a- ·
35 Feng5 Pub pint
36 "Watl!boy" 6 TimberSandier
wolvas' org.
38 Muse of
7 The One-L
hlllory
L.ama
40 Denver hre. 8 Deborah
41 Fatigue
ot old fltms
42 Up above
9 Rolling 43 Saull- (rlch)
. Marie
10 MHZ part
._. Thaltemple 11 Not sm.
46 Legal matter
or med.
48 Befly dance 18 Patrick's

to Aug.1 ·

,y CI'IAStNG
A CAll!
'· .

·

P&amp;s

From July 4

~

2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Limi ted, $10,500. Loan
value $14,500. (740)367·
7762 or (740)367·7272.

1991 Ford 150, 302 motor,
new tires, many new parts, 4
Wheel
Drive
$1.400
1304)675-1739

No Pets.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Beds
• Wheelchairs

. • Hospital

4x4

1995 Dodge Caravan V-6 .
Auto. Decent ove r all condi·
Uon, dependable. $895.00

Dealer: West

Opening lead: • 6

FoR SALE

2003 Ford Mustang. bright
yellow, e..:cellent condition 200.2 Yama ha Vstar 1100
"---iiFOIIRii.liSiiAiiliiLE
._..,I
----,
44,000 miles. $8,200 OBO Classic, 5,500 miles, black,
new condition. leath er bags,
$5001 Cars &amp; Trucks! Police (740)709-1989.
50mpg, $5.000 . (740)245·
Impounds lrom $500! For
5934.
listings ,800-391 -5227 x3901 So 's Classic Cars
1988 24 Cavali er convert$500! POliCE IMPOUNOSI ible: 1993 AS Cavalier con· HO~DA 'S from $500! Police
Cars/TruCks !rom $500! For vertible; 1991 Ford Mu stang Impounds. Ta..: Repo'sl For
listings 800-391-5227 x3901 5.0, VB convertible 1997 listi ngs 800·391-5227 ext.
C548.
02 PT Cruiser Touring, ldw Olds Cutlass. 2001 Suwki
street
bike,
750
actual
250
miles, like new, auto, $7995,
C\MPERS &amp;
(740)742·3020 or 740·992· mies. Other to choose lrom.
MOIORHOMES
1740)2 45-0045,
cell
:3:_39:_4'------'----1740)208·0028
1997 35 ft. Hitch Hiker 5th
1993 Honda Accord S2.995
Wheel with 2 slide outs.
1997 Honda Accotd $4,995
l&amp;l Auto Sales
1998 Ford Explorer · 4K4
01 Neon 4dr. $3,500; 95S10 Excellent condi tion. awn ing,
S3,995
a1r conditioning &amp; much
4x4 new molar $3,500. 98
1998 Toyota Camry $5,995
more. $11.900. Cell phClne
Chevy Cavalier 4 dr $25.00;
2000 Grand Am GT $5,995 96 Dodge Grand Caravan 1?30)234-1573.
2002
Hyundai
Ac cent
$2 .800; 86 Jeep Cherokee
$6.900
$900. Buy here pay here. 91 2003 Log cabi n camper,
2003 Kia R1o $6,900
Buick Century : 92 Ply. sleeps 6. Brand new.
2004 Ford Taur us $7,950
Sundance: 98 Sunfire. Have 1740)446-6783.
2004 Chev. Impala $9,995
many more. Buy here pay
here. On 325 South oH 141 . 2003 Wildern ess 31--G
Ca mper, Tow package t4 fl .
(740)379-2354
slide, sleeps 6. Look and
15
make offer call F 40)· 742·
TRUCKS
2323.
mRSALE

House for Rent 2br. $275
plu s Utililies. No pets, Ref
Deposi t. (304)675-4874

I.
a•

740-446-0007 Toll Free 871'·66'1·011071
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

VANS
FoR SALE

8

Vulnerable: North-South
Soulh
West
F..ast
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

i

LIVB-n:x: K
•~--------" ~~~l4~~~~7e83~am

ofo J I 093

•

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIP.IIENT
• Portable Oxygen
• CPAP

• Hl"'ios
• Homefill

•

A 7 S4
K 9 .
10 7 5

oloK876 5

"oXY&lt;IDr

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jom~s

r

•
•

Q 8 Q3
Q63
Q94 2

.. l ... 11

Delivering Doily *One Stop Shop*

~

East

•
•
•

South
.. 'J 10 9
• A 10 5 4

• Nebtilizers

Ii

West

olo A 2

(7.r- •~~: I ••

Top - Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

i10

iiO.

1\0;~ilr s~l'~ u

Tree Service

New John Deere Compacts
ALJTOS
and 5000 Series Utility tra c·
FOR SALE
tors @r A. Fixed for 36 ·--ioiiii.iiiiiiiio-rl·
months through John
Deere Credit. Ca rmichael 2002 MerclJry Mounta1neer.
Loaded with only 48,000
Equipment (740)446·2412
miles.
Quality John Deere Hay 2002 Ford Lighting F150
Equipment for less-round ptck up 30.000 miles. Call
balers. - square ba lers &amp;
(740)2 56· 1245
evening s
mower conditioners @4.7%
and weekends.
Fl·xed •- r 48 monlhs lhro h
IV
ug -~------John·
Deere
Credit
2002 Monte Carlo pa ce car.
Carmichael
Equipment
Excellent condition. loaded.
740)446
.2412
1'l'J:r:-..;,;·;,..;;.·____, 1984 39 112 ff . Ty· Biook

i

"' Q 4

MONTY

Kahn'KHologna SJ.051 b Honl"y H am S&gt;i.70 lb
Turkey Bre.-.sl54.851b
Sw lu C he ut' S4.05 1b
F«!th Muu&lt;~rl"li.l $6.59lb
Hummus S5.59 1b.
Pilsta Sal old $3.50 lb.
Ami&amp;h Pot~lu Sil.lad SJ.U lb.
'" Drive Thru Fur Lm;.-.1 Tom.ttoes and oth er Produce"
119~ lit ter o( Pepsi , Diet Pepsi or Mt. Dew

JONES'

John Deere Mini Excavator/
Tractor Loader Backhoe/
Skid Steers. Carmichae l
Equipment (740)446·2412

r

• K2
• J 8 72
tAKJ 63

Qell &amp; Hfke cy

992-5682

41

o

Trailer for rent: 2 bedroom, New Sofa &amp; Loveseat. $ 400;
$325 per month, S325 Sofa
&amp; Chair,
$350 ;
deposil
plus
utilities.
3 Bdrm, Parri sh Av(tnue.
Recliner, $200. Open 9am(740)446·4107
$675/month &amp; $675/DD,
3pm Sat , Mollohan's, .202
·
Cl k Ch
A d p
Available now. (304)617· Trailer Lot for rent on Pale
ar
ape1 oa , orter,
1456 or (304)674-4687
Cal Rd . $175. 1740)446· Ohio.
1740)388·0173;
IF
1740)446 7444
3 bedroom, 2 bath, near c4,.,10r7·.- - - - - _ _ _ , - - - - - - - - - - Holzer.
$650/ mo . plusr
r.
AalrrMENIS
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
FOR RENT
Repair-6 75·7388. For sale,
deposit No pets, no smok·
ing in house. {740)245- " - - - - - - - - - re-conditioned automatic Quality horse and livestock
9880, (740)645·3836.
1 and 2 bedroOm apart· washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- trailers now available at
-3--4- B_R_ho
_m_
e_,-G-eo-.-C-re- ek ments, furnished and unfur- tors, gas and electric Carmichael Equipment. New
nished, security deposit ranges, air con ditioners, and dealer for Valley and
Rd .- Non Smoking rental·
I
W
Kielerbui lt
Horse
and
sec.
dep.
Ca
ll
required , no pets, 740·992· wr nger washers.
ill dCl
600/mo.
$
·
· b d - Livestock Trailers . Many
22 18.
· repa~rs on mator ran s 1n
17401446 _3644
options available· steel , alu·
shop or aI your home.
.
1
BR
apl
in
Spring
Valley.
minum.
dressing rooms, liv·
3bd HUO hamel Buy for
$ 15,9001 For Listings 800 . WID hookups. HUO/PRC
i
ANnQUES ·. ing quarters. (740)446·241 2.
1
accepted. Call (740)446•
F
39 1•5228 x 1709
- - - - - - - - - 0834/(740)339·0362.
Registered ull Blood Does
3bd HUO home! Blly lor .:C:.:'-C'-C:_.:.:_.:.:..c:c__ 8
II
A. ·
&amp; Bucks (304)675 •4316
2 bed rm apt. rg . &amp; ret. W &amp; uy or se .
tvenne
IR\ \-.1'1 11{1 \IIO\
$16,000! For Listings 800- 0 hookup, large &amp; clean; no AntiqlJes , 1124 East Main
_39_1_·5_2_2_8_•_17_0_9_ _ _ _ pets. In city $425 mo. plus on SR.124 E. Pomeroy, 740Auras
3Bdr + 2 112 ba ths, 2 car dep &amp; util. {7401441 -0596 _ 99.2-2526. AlJSS Moore,

ences required. (740)4463644 for ~pplication .

oo•~

08-0I~

.North

6.16 f.a§t Maln St
Polll(&gt;roy,OH
740-Wl..fil21

c .. n Ahud For D•lly Sp«ialt 992·6121
Try O ur Bruk.f• l
Bn!.-.klnt Ji;~nl &amp; C hll!e ae Bolles $1.75
Breakb5t TomildOt'8 2152.00
Sausa.se Biscuit $1,7!
SaUsil.ge BIKUit wiG ravy iZ.SO
Donuts, Tumovers &amp; l•tt!ces
35t cup of triflee 7-8.-.m'

3 miles west or
Pomeroy,OH
on State Rt. 124

to10'dlJ'

'

-~
·
~· ~"'

Repair

Slzti8'x10'
I '

... JULY MONTHLY SPECIALS .. •

~--oiiiiliij,iiiiii;.,..,i ~~;;;;:~"i';;'·~
~·pd;~~~~5!i~ii~

Have some hauling to do?
Carmichael
Equipmentyour source for Quality
goosenecks, dumps and util·
!ties. Your dealer for Prostar
and Load Trail trailers.
17 40)446-2412

36 acres +or- with 1.1000 on
the Ohio River, appro..:
2,400tt on State Route 7 &amp;
Valley View Dr. 3/2, C.H. &amp;
air, ·to room house, barn
59'~79 ft
shop w/.220. rent. Cedar Sueet. $750+
$265,000. 740 256·6868.
utlliUes. Call 740·446·9961.

Lors&amp;

ACROSS

t-800- $500.00 firm . (740)446-1960

$150.00 per week, utilities
paid. Kil chen privileges.
740-992·3569,
740·99.20031 , or 304-882-3449
:-------Tara
Townhouse
Apar1ments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2

.s

NO DOWN PAYMENT even
with less than perfect cr,edit
is available on this 3 bedroom 1 bath home in
Middleport Corner lot. vinyl
siding, fireplace in living

r

$399fmo. 4·12

(614)595-7773 or

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

2

I_P_e"-·~1___&gt;_~-___

2 bedroom house lull size.
basement $450 month, 2 bedroom in Family Park.
Lovely starter or retirement 53
50 deposit. (740)44 1- Water &amp; trash service
home in country. Nice neigh·
Included. Call (740)441 ·
0583 , 1740)256 718 ,
borhood. 2 Bedroom, LA .
7033.
OR, Kitchen. 1 Beth, .6 acre, .2 bedroom house in - - - - - - - - $58,000.00. i740)446·2801 Pomeroy. $450 pluS' uti1iltes. 5 14l':70 trailers for rent. Call
lor more info.
No pets.
References &amp; 1740 )367· 7762 • (740 )446 Deposit. 740;992·5502.
4060 or (740)367·7762.
Nice, 3 bedroom, .2 bath. 1.5
story, gas lireplace, AC, nice
flat lawn, not quite an acre,
nice covered porch, large
building included. that could
be used for a business or
workshop. Located 1 mile
from new Gallia Co. local
schools. (740)388·0301

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

try lienlng. Must see to' 100 watt guitar head &amp; crate

Gallipolis. Ctea"n and comWi\NnD
lorlable Central air, laundry
~~---;,;;:liillii0-..,1. - room , also New 1 Bedroom
House, Call 1or details
Need to sell your home? (740)441·0194 or (740)441·
Late on payments, divorce, 1184
JOb transrer or a death? t _:.::::::._
· -----can buy your home. All cash NeWer 3 Bedroom. 1 Bath,
and quick closing. 740416 _ attached garage, Good
Neighborhood, No Pets,
3130.
Aelerence
&amp;
Deposit
required. No
Sffioking
Inside. $500/mo. (740)446·

~;::::;::::==~
~~~~~o;rice ~~ 9 .~~lit~~~
HOUSIS

,,

www.mydallysentinel.com

bedroom Kimbel Artist Console Plario,
Newly remodeled, all elec- apartment In th8 country. good condition. $500 call
tric. Country setl!ng with Big New carpet &amp; cabinets, 1304)675·2217
yard/trees and shrubs. $650 freshly painted &amp; deoorated,
Month. Call 740-843-5264. W/0 hookup. Beautiful coun- Marshall 8100 val~~astate

sale. 4.745 acres SA 218

r MOBILEHOMES

1r

Tuesday, August 1, 2006
ALLEY OOP

MINICAL
INsi'RUMINI1i

\

�,
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 1,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2006

Jo}' among Cuban ~xiles
gtves way to questions
about Castro's illness; A2

Browns' WinsloW:
'Now is my time'
BEREA (AP ) - Kellen
"There i &gt; no mystery in he smashed into the ground .
"My knee was all banged
Win slow's
seri ous
leg my mind . ~know what I can
injuries and nearly 11\'D ye6rs do out there," he said . "I' ve up," he said, "the size of a
of watching from the side- watched fi lm of 'myself, I basketball when I was in the
line robbed him of speed and h:Jven' t lost a step. I' m just hospital. It was huge. I was
tired of l1earin g what paten- crying and all th at, but never
perhaps a touch of talent.
There isn' t an ounce of' ti&lt;il l have. I know what I can was there any doubt in my ·
do. and I'm re ady to get on mind that I would be back ."
bra vado rni"in~. though.
Cleveland\ •~ifted rece·iver the lield and do it ."
The crash came just as
stil l belie'"' rhere is no one
Winslo w, however. said Winslow was full y recovqu itt' li ke him . . _
he's never going to be 100 ered after breaking hi s leg in
'"I hal•' '·' be brush ... percent because of the mag- th e second game of his rookWin,lo" .11.1 "ith a smile. nitude of his ri ght knee ie season . While tryin g to
" But I tlrinh my 90 perc ent is injury, which required sever- recover an onsides ki ck at
still better tl1an every ti ght al surgenes and was comph- Dallas, Winslow broke his ·
end out the re.''
cated by a staph tnfecuon.
right libula and missed 14
" It is going 10 be hard to games.
Relaxed. mature and eager
to get back on the field for gel back to full, I00 perThen · came the crash, an
the Browns, Winslow spoke cent," he said. "I think, me
accident that didn't help a
openly and candidly Monday being 90 percent or someabout hi s comeback from a where around there - some player already fighting an
2005 motorcycle accident days it differentiate s - 95 off-the-field image as a hotthat nearl y ended hi s promis- pei·cent, 85 percent. 80 per- head and a troublemaker.
Winslow 's
teammate s,
ing NF L caree r.
ce nt, but you just have to
howe
ver,
paint
a
very differBrad Sherman/photo
During a 15-minute inter- play it by ear."
New Hannan head football coach Wayne Richardson encourages a player to pus11 himself view,
the
23-year-old
Winslow has looked as ent picture of him. Not only
harder during dril ls Monday in As'hton, W.Va .. Monday was the f1rst day of high schoo( fo ot- revealed that his medical set- qu ic k as ever in training do they marvel at his physiback s were much more camp. After catching a pass cal prowess and work ethic.
ball practice in West Virginia.
.,evc re than were ever di s- last week, he put a shoulder but the Browns see Winslow
cl osed; that he' ll never be fake on Gary Baxter that as the consummate teamcmi-tpletely recovered from dropped the Browns' top mate.
"I think th at the whole
his knee injury : that he cornerback and drew cheers
recently marri ed hi s long- from the crowd mid hoots 'soldier' thin g was blown out
time girl friend. Janelle; and from players.
of proportion," said quarter'' He's definitely special,'' back Charlie Frye. "Kellen is
that the public's perce ption
of him - mostly based on Baxter said. ·
a great guy and ge1s along
infamous
"I'm
a
soldier"
But
if
he's
not
100
percent
his
with everybody on the team.
BY LARRY CRUM
pleased with the depth that
" We are small in numbers
LCRUM@MYDAILYR EGISTER, COM we lnok l ike w~ arc ~ oin !2 to but t hey haV L' h~ e n work ing comment following a loss in as he says, how can Winslow Everybody respects him and
they look at him as a leader.
ha ve. th ey work hard 7md on weight s and are bi g on coll ege at Miami - is inac- say he hasn't lost a step'
"Well , about two practices He just plays the game with
ASHTON . WVa. - Yes. seem exc ited abo ut pl ay- heart. I want them to have cur~lt,y.
Hi s two-year ordeal has · ago, I had a long run." he a lot of passion."
that's ri ght. it is that time of ing."
pri de:· said Ri chardson. "i
strengthened
Winslow phys- said. "I didn 't get cau ght. I
year.
Monday's practice " rw 65 thin k the re can be changes
Brown s coach Romeo
icall
y
and
spirituall
y. He bet- thought I was going to get Crennel said Win slow is
It's that time of year where pl aye rs , huw up to lift by wha t they Jo on the field
ki cb trade in their air condi- we ights. run drill s a nd spri nt and the way they conduct ter appreci ates the blessings caught. That's how I gauge mi sunderstood.
tioning and te1ev ision for a --10 yards to de termine the th emse lves and not g iving around him . He has grown as myself. I haven ' t lost a step.
"Sometimes, one state a man: There has never been Some day s, I feel real good . ment that a guy makes gets
helmet and shoulder pad s qL_ri ckcst of the bunch. And . up.
and a grueling monlh long th e ti mes pu t dow n c&gt;n
·' J want to see the kids any doubt about his won- some days I don 't feel so pushed out of proporti&lt;,m.
, workout begins. separating Monday could prove key. as arter th ~ first quarter without drou s athlei ic ability. now good . The two years off and Then he gets tagged as being
the men fn,&gt;m the b&lt;&gt;ys in a Sa fford tweak; hi s usual th eir heads clown . wal ki ng th e versatile 6-l'oot-4. 248- aH the surgeries I had to go 'that guy," ' Crennel said . ':) ·
tes t of mental will and phys- smash mo uth fo oth:rll for &lt;tn olf the field, 1 warlt ·them to pounder appears to trul y be a throu gh takes its toll."
think some of the things that
complete package.
At first, Winslow was
ical determination .
· offense thai more cl osel y hal'e pride."
"I had to climb a lot of reluctant to . divulge many happened in college stuck
That 's right - it's football rese mbl es West Virginia
Rich ardson brin gs wi th
with him. He is not a negatime.
U r~ rversr t y and It s spread him a new att itude. want ing mountains to get over this detail s about hi s injuries tive guy. I haven't found him
On one of the hottest davs oll cnse.
. . to not onl y res tore pride injury." he said. "It wasn ' t from the crash. which took to be a bad person or a guy
of the summer, boys fro-m
"l lrkel he prospects ol th" h&lt;rck in the football pro- j ust one wall. I' ve been place while he was attempt- who you wouldn 't want to be
high schools all aero" th e team. rt r.s obvro usly all rela- gram. btl! bac k in th e school. through a lot these past two ing stunts on his hi gh-pow- around."
erect bike in a secluded parkmu untain state took to th e trve to who you play and He has big hopes of brin gi ng years."
Winslow knows as long a s.
Despite . the missed time, ing lot.
practice fields with hope s nf hnw goou they arc. but over- the crow1.b hack to the
he's
healthy and productive,
Later. he said that in additouchdowns and um.lefeated ali i am lik ing it so far.'· s&lt;ri d stand., along with brin gi ng Winslow remains confident
he' ll approach the star status tion to the infection, which he'll be able to put some di s~
seasons. But before any of Safford.
win s back to the schoo l.
tance between himself and
Also takin g the fiel d durthat can take place. they
And on the first day of proj ected for him when caused him to lose 30 the past. ·
.
mu st first prepare them- ing the heat uf the ·dHy was a practice. the new attitude . Cleveland selected the son of pounds, he fractured his
"Some
things
happen for a
a
Hall
of
Fame
tight
end
with
femur.
tore
two
ligaments
se lve s away from th e Wahama White Falco n seemed to be piryinl,! oil.
reason,"
he
said.
"Now is my
the
No
.
6
overall
pick
in
seCLrring
his
knee
cap
and
crowds and marching bands s qu ~1d which return s .rftcr
For the 17 kids in att en- 200-1.
sustained other injuries when time. I'm ready to go."
with instead the sounds of ... tru gg.l ing throug h a hrutal dan ce on rhe fi rst dav of
roaches yelling an d pads 2005 schedule. Li kc Point practi ce. each see med detercrunching.
Pl ea\i llll. Wa h am~1 hopes mined to make changes in
And just like the rest of that th is could be a spec ial the way the team conducts
the state, Mason County\ year fo r th e prog ram as husiness nn ;md off the fi eld.
liwn took to the fields. some cuach EJ Crom lev tries to And ri ~ ht th ere on the side
~
.~
~
'"'
'
'
'
l
bri ght and early · and som e get hi s Wh ite Falcons soar- pushin g the ki ds to be the
working late into the ni ght. ing hi gh once :tgain .
best was a liery Ri chard "li'Point Pleasant was one of
Bu t as the heat _o f the day
And alth ough the win s
the first to brave the earl y passed and afternoon gave may nnt come ri ght a w~y.
ntorning humidity. traver'- way to evening. out came a as th ~ sc hoo l loses a handing mounds of construction uiffc rcnt animal the ful n f reg ul ars o n th eir
work on the new hi gh _,c hool Wildcat. With a different schc.dol c tn consoli dation .
to make the first practi&lt;:e of "iwagge r than in yea r\ past. the attitude is bei ng pu t
the season . And with cual: h Hannan Hie h School took
int n p lace to ge t th e b;ill
Steve Safford s itt i n ~ fnur th e field in t lte late evenin g
uocr thinus
to
t"
wins short uf200 in his .le nd wilh hopes of a new start to rollinut= for bi bb
co
me.
year at Point' Pleasant and go along \\ ith a ne w sc hool
Now all that' is left fQr
40th overal l. he hope'· he w1U r1ew head coac h.
Han
na n and th e rest of t'he
can do special things with
And for a team that has
this young. fast squad.
ju st one win in the past three sc hoo h in th e ~ta l e o f We st
··we have a good turn out vea rs. Hannan ', footha ll V irgin ia i~ to wai t. beca u ~e
. ur IS
and like usual. on the fiN ic·am looks like a daunt ine in ju st a few. :-.h nrt weeks.
day of practi ce we get a heat ta' k for ;rnyone to take ove(, hi i h school foot ball will ·
aJ visory and we are hav ing but as k nc" w acl1 Wayne he upo n us and eac h team
to be very careful with how Ri chardsn n, and you will see w il l g..;· t a ~hi lllL'C to make
w~
approach it." said _I Lh l why he is tq1 tp tile chal - th e lo ng days of th e sum rll
Safford. "I will say that! am lenge.
mer fi na ll y pay off.

•
SPORTS
• Dodgers blast
Cincinnati. See Page 81

\

'

THURSDAY, AUG ST 24, 2006
• MEIGS • EIS'rERN • SOIJ'rHERN

Tigers acquire Sean Casey
bee n

Chri&gt;. but

h~ ·,

Page AS
• Milford 'Mick'
Garfield Gilbert Sr.
• James C. Lawhom

Beth Sargent/photo

INSIDE
•· Lifeline screening
coming to Pomeroy.
See Page A3
• Girl Scout judging
finalized. See Page A3
• Union, Century
Aluminum reach
tentative contract
agreement.
See Page AS

WEATIIER

~c u!Tli ni!."

l'a~cy

grew

up

tlh.· Ti!2Ct'\

hchind Carlo'-..,

Guil len\ .3~4.
Casey al\u gives the Trgc rs
a Je.fe n"iivc upgrade ove r
Shel ton. ;r conve rted catcher.
SliL·Iton made ;r key L'JTor in
Sunday\. 6-4 I n,;;;~ to thl'
Twrns. while Casey is a
career -'ll)) IIelder and lr&lt;IS
not had an error this year.
l'.i&gt;C). a three- time 1\llStar. n11&gt;scd 'ix weeks with
tv.n fractu re' in hi&gt; lower
hack aft er being hurt April l4
;n rd sm ou t Pi ttsburg h's last

The f irst
ur hi . .

lllo&lt;..t

ha~cman

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT&lt;Il'MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY- Okay, so it wasn't as
dramatic as Old Faithful blowing its
top but the water main break on
Butternut Avenue was bad enough to
destroy a substantial amount of the
street and provide motorists with a
small lake to navigate around for several hours on Monday night.
Personnel from the Pomeroy Water
Department arrived on scene Monday

Reed: Revitalization
efforts have made
Middleport stronger

night and worked from 7 p.m. to mid- line in less than an hour. Repairs on
night just to shut off the water.
the line began at -7 a.m. yesterday and
Once the workers made it through · were completed at around ll :30 a.m .•
the dirt, mud and muck they found a restoring service to what Spaun called
nine-foot section of the water main's an "isolated amoun't of customers,"
eight-inch ca~t iron pipe had been some of which were in the Lincoln
blown away. Shannon Spaun and Hill area. Tnose customers were withRobert Klein of the water department out water only overnight.
said it more than likely happened due
Now the problem of refilling and
to the age of the pipe that had simply repaving the street is facing the viideteriorated over time.
lage . The pressure of the water caused
It was estimated that 500,000 galPlease see Break. AS
lons of water ran through the bUsted

AEP offers tips o~ controlling
energy use and costs

Proliding Care
for the Whole

Rc:ds. Jr iving _in
ru ns 111 four of his seven full

:-.ea...;on.., in Ci ncinn ati . He

was a such a popul ar player
while in Cinci nnmi that he
\~a.., uivcn thl' r1ic kname
"
'The Mayor."
Rogers. considcrcu a fringe
pro, peel. was J-:~ wi th a 2.39
ERA in 37 ;rppc:rrance' at
J)ouhlc -A f-.rie thrs _,ca,on. A
l it h-rou nd draft pick 111
2003, he moved into th e
bu llpen last seaso n after pretwo gaml'" with a . . . tra i neJ .v iou o., ly hcirtg a "tarter.

ADVERTISING ,DEADLINE· Thursday, AUGUST 19; 2006- 5:00P.M.

Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
For More Information

mbe 1\atlp ~enttnel
-

GB. Corn, MD
2410 Jefferson Avenue • Point Pleasant , WV
Board-certified in Family Medicine

BY BRIAN J. REEO
BREEOOMVDAI~YSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT - The
Mipdleport
Poljce
Department will begin
enforcement
of codes
against overtime parking and
i.ts other parking ordinances,
Chief Bruce Swift said.
"The department is going
to crack down on parking
violations in an attempt to
correct problems that have
become a .priority here,"
Swift said. "The enforce·
ment effort will encompass
the entire village, and
parking citations ' 'Wj II be
issued anywhere a violation is observed."
Swift said police will be
watching for overtime
parking, parking in the
wrong direction, parking in
loading zones, parking on
Please see Parklna. A5

Southern
raises lunch
prices, hires
personnel

&lt;&gt;

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTINELCOM

Please see Energy, AS

Please see Southern, A5

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAtlYSENTtNEL.COM

~p~ nt

vv itll the
HS or more

l'U !"I...'L' f

Middleport
to enforce
parking
·codes

POMEROY While
American Electric Power
expects to have enough
electricity to meet t~e heavy
demand for power these hot
day s, they are offering some
tips on using energy wisely
to help control cooling costs
as temperatures rise.
As thermometers registered temperatures in the
high-90s Tuesday and the
forecast was for more of
the &gt;ame the rest of . the
week, Kevin E. Walker,
AEP Ohio president anp
chif'f operating officer,
spoke of the challenges for
many households. "We
encourage our customers
to explore ways lo better

Bv BRtAN J. REm
Detalto on Page A6

said he lived in Addison
for six months.
" I know how important
power plants are to the econf
amy o that area," he said.
PI
c
an s 10r building new
1ntegrated
Gasification
Combined Cycle plants at
both the Mountaineer plant
in Mason County and anether in Meigs County demonStrate American Electric
Please .s ee FutureGen, AS

RACINE - Like Eastern.
and Meigs before it,
Southern Local Schools will
be raising its lunch prices
for the 2006-07 school year.
This week the Southern
Local School Board voted
to raise elementary school
lunch prices from $1 .65 to
$1.75, and high school
lunches from $!.75 lo $2.
The board also · hired the
following certified staff for
the 2006-07 school year:
Chad Dodson, district music
· teacher effective April 24 at
Step 0; Keith Carter, LD
special education teacher at
Southern Elementary at Step
four Masters plus five years;
Marcia Weaver as LD special education teacher at
Southern High School al
Step five plus 20 years:
Jennifer Holt, district guidance counselor at Step 0

BREEO@MYDAtlYSENTINEL.COM

~

A3

in

Domhrowski ,aid. "We Pittsbu rgh and is lookin g l(&gt;rtlmuglll it wou ld benefit him ward to 1Jiaying f(,r manager
to go h;rck to Trip le-A. and Jim Ley land. who began
when we talkc J to hi m tod;iv. m;maging the Pirates when
Ire didn'r di.s;rgrec. He' ll tie C."ey was :r youngq er.
hac l-. wi!h u' '\nmet imc thi ~ · C'~1scv wa.' the Pirates'
year.
hig hcst:paid player at $8.5
Whi le Casev docs not ha;c milli on. with the Reds pickShe lton\ pmicr - the .&gt;2- ing up $1 milli on of hi s
year-old ha&gt; lUSt three ho me salary . The Pirat es traded
run' and IX. extra- base lli ts lc l't-liandcr Dave Will iarm to
thi' ,c,t,on- he will im mc- the Reds fur Casey during the
dia tcly llcc:ome o ne of the off"""on hut later chose not
IJH)....,{
patient hitter~ II) lO altCnlpl tO Si gn Ca~C)' to a
Dclroit\ h~J t tin:!. urdL·r. Hi" m11l tiyear cOI Ilrttc l. Ca:-.cy i ~
.377 on-ha:-.t IX~~c~nw~c thi'-1 sign~d through this ~ca-,o n.
"L'&lt;I'-1.lll ran~" sc~.·oJH..I ;.Jtnotl \2.

Water main break bursts -through Butternut

.INDEX

ri ght rihcrgc mu,cle.

would affect the dam.
Information
gathered
from the building of the first
plant, to be located in either
Illinoi's or .,.exas, should
''
prove that a FutureGen
plant would not affect the
dam, Mudd said.
Mudd, now the chairman
of the national alliance,
knows this area well. having begun his career as an
engineer on the Gavin
plant in Gallia Coun,ty. He

Shannon Spaun
(left) and Robert
Klein of the
Pomeroy Water
Department
work on repairing damage
caused by a
water main
break on
Butternut
Avenue that left
some major
damage to the
street.

MIDDLEPORT - The design
firm DLZ is expected to present a ·
proposed streetscape plan for
Middleport's downtown shopping
district
next month, and Fanners
2 SECrtONS - 12 PAGES
Bank and Savings Co. will make $2
million
available to downtown busiAnnie's Mailbox
. ness owners who wish to improve'
Calendars
A3 the appearance of their buildings.
The Middleport Design Review
Classifieds
82-4 Board will select a color palate for
downtown buildings on Friday, as
Comics
Bs the downtown revitalization committee plan s another step in its
Editorials
A4 beautification efforts.
Paul Reed, president of Farmers
Obituaries
As Bank and the Middleport
Development Group. said the bank
Sports
B Section will offer the improvement loans at
Chortono Hoefttch/photo
two percentage points below the
Tuesday was the hottest day of the summer. The
Weather
A6 prime lending rate.
thermometer at Farmers Bank in Pomeroy registe'red
© 200&amp; Ohio Valle)' Publishing Co.
Please see Stronger, AS
98 degrees at 4:30 p.m.

I

l i~~

"I really do think those site also mjssed the qualifysites are still outstanding ing criteria for size.
locations for companies to
Mudd said the Alliance
build power plants in the did not want to risk any posfuture," Mudd said .
sible dela-s in the construe'
Both the Lakin site in tion of the $1 billion ex perMason county and t he pro- imental facility. He said the
·
county site injection of ca.Plon dioxide
pose d Me1gs
were eliminated early in into deep geological formaconsideration for the site of tions created the possibility
the experimental FutuneGen that an intervenor could
plant for their proximity to have delayed the project by
the Racine Locks and Dam arguing that FutureGen
and stale parks. The Lakin could not know how it

OBITUARIES

Part rv.lih· .Yea A
Special FallS r's
. ft..e •
Ports
VIew Edition#

"We

BY TtM MALONEY
TMALONEY®MYDAI LYREGISTER.coM

-

Be Sore To Be .

DETROIT (AP) - Tl1e
Detroit Ti gers acqu ired tirst
baseman Sean Casey from
the Pittsburgh Pi rates on
Monday for ·minor .leag ue
pitcher Brian Rogers.
Casey, a career .30-1 hitter.
is expected to provide muchneeded offen se from the left
si de as the Tigers try for their
first postseason appearance
since 1 9~7 and their fi rst
wi nning record since 199:1.
"We like Sean Ca,ey a
great &lt;leal." Tige rs pres idcllt
Dave Dombrowski said.
" l-Ie's :1 solid major leag ue
hitter and he's solid at first
base. He makes us a lillie bet ter ri ght now."
.
To make room fo r Casey
on the roqer and in the lineup , Det roit optioned fir'l
base man Chris Shelton to
Tripl e-A· Toledo. Shelton i'
hitting .277 with 16 home
runs an d 45 R BI ~.
Shelton had a 'pectacular
April . hit ting J26 with 10
homers and a franchi,cren&gt; rd 19 extra-base hi ts. hut
is hitting .260 , ;nee then witl1
six homer' - anu he is strik ing out more than once every
fou r at-hah.

•

CEO: FutureGen not done with Mason, Meigs
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Mason and Meigs
.
h
b
coun t Jes may ave een
ell. m•"nated from const'derath e f.1rst FutureG en
! t'on &lt;o
' r
plant, but remain highly eligible for a likely second
wave of construction, said
Mike Mudd, chief execuof the
live
officer
Ft!tureGen Alliance.

Football practice officially
begins acro~s West Virginia

2006 FALL 'SPORTS
PREVI
·.·.

Veteran returns to
Europe to tell his story
for documentary, A6

• Heart disease
• Lung disease
• Diabetes
• Minor skiq surgery
• Work physicals
• Sports physicals

67~1100

'

'·'

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