<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4824" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4824?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T03:00:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14752">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1c639f78045718f3a854561fc54c76be.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4334077508bb7e54c04281b008b6af16</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="16575">
                  <text>•

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

Scoreboard
J

PRo

-

eo

10:05 p.m.
(Sa.....,. 4·1 ), 10:05 p.m.
(~ 9-8),

PRo FOOTBALL

Wedne&amp;day'a Games
Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
Minnesota at Baltimore, 7:05p.m.
QakiQnd at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.·
Texas at Tampa Bay, 7:15p.m.
Ctevetand at Kansas City, 8 10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Bosto,n at L.A. Angels, 10:05.p.m.

National Football League
Preseason Glance ·

National League
East Division

Now York
Philadelphia
Atlanta

w L

Pet

75 48 .610
82 62 500
59 65 .476
Ftorida
58 66 .468
Washington
54 71 .432
Central DIYislon

w L Pet
. 66 57 537
St. louis
Cincflnati
65 50 • .520
MHwaukee
59 65 .476
Houston
59 68 .4n
Ch&lt;ago
5371 .427
Pittsburgh
47 78 .376
Wast Division
w L Pc1
Los Angeles
66 59 .528
San Diego
. 63 62 .504
Arizona
62 63 .496
San Francisco
6085 .480
Colorado
59 65 .476

GB
13\
16'1
17 '~

22
GB
2
7~i
a
13 ~
20
GB
3
4
6
6',

Sunday's Games
Florida 4, Atranta 3
N.Y. Mets 2, Colorado 0
Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 1
Philadelphia 12t Washing1on 10
Houston 3, Mil\llaukee 1
St. Louis 5, Chicago Cubs 3
San Diego 2, Arizona 1, 1o innings
LA. Dodgers 5, San Francisco 2
Monday's Games
A~anta 3,

Pittsbur\11 0 ·

Florida 3, Washington 1
Cincinnati 4, Houston 3
Philadelphia 6, Chicago Cubs 5

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

East

(Maine 3-3), 7:10p.m.
,
Houston (Hirsh 1·1} at Cincinnati (Lohse
D-O), 7:10 p,m.

Pittsburgh (Chacon 1-1) at Atlanta
(Villarreal 9-1 ), 7:35 p.m.
,
Colorado (Cook 8-11) at Milwaukee
(Capuano 1D-8), 8:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Moyer D-0) at Chica90 Cubs
(O'Maltey 1.0), 6:05 p.m

LA. Dodgers (Hendrickson 1·5) at San
Diego (Peavy 6-12), 10:05 p.m.
AriZona {Webb 13-5) at San Francisco
(Coin 9-9), 10:15 p.m.
Wednesday's Games

Houston at Cincinnati, 12:35 p.m.
Atizona at San Francisco, 3:35p.m.
. Washington at Florida, 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis at N.Y. Mets, 7:10p.m.
Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 7:35p.m.
Colorado at Milwaukee, 6:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs, 6:05 p.IT!.
LA. Dodgers at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.

T
1 0
1 0
1 0
2 0
South
WL T
2 0 0
1 1 0
0 2 0
0 2 0

Miami
New England
N.Y. Jets
Buffalo

1
1
1
0

Houston
Jackson11ille
Indianapolis
Tennessee

Nonh
WL T

Cincinnali
Baltimore ·
Cle11eland
Pittsburgh

2 0 0
1 1 0
1 1 0
0 2 0
west
WL T
3 0 0
1 1 o

Oa"kland
Denver
San Diego
Kansas Cit')~

1 1 o
0 2 0

Pet PF PA
39 41
.500 53 29
.500 30 30
.500

.000 144 58
Pet PF
1.000 51
.500 41
.000 34
.000 26

PA
34

43

49
54

Pet PF PA
1.00063 34

.500 36 27
.5oo 27 36
.000 23 38
Pet PF
1.000 55
.500 48
.500 20
.000 14

PA
30
30
27
41

· NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East

WL T Pet PF PA
2 0 0 1.00043 10
2 0 o . 1.00034 16

Dallas
N.Y. Giants
Philadelphia
Washington

120 .3334043
020 .0001748
South
WL T Pet PF PA
2 0 0 1.00031 23
1 1 0 .500 38 61
1 1 0 .500 26 46

Carolina
Atlanta
New Orleans
Tampa Bay
•
Chicago
Detroit
Green Bay
Minnesota

San D~ 4, L.A. Dodgers 2
San Francisco 5, Arizona 0
TuHday'e Gamet
Washington (Bergmann D-1) at Florida
(J.Johnson 11-6), 7:05p.m
St Louis (Wea11er 5-13) at N.Y. Mets

WL

Arizona ·
St. Louis
San Francisco
Seattle

1 1 0 .500 26 16
North

WLTPetPFPA
1 1 0 .500 38 31
110 ·.5003633
1 1 0 .500 41 27
110 .5003026
West

WLTPctPFPA
.1 1 o .500 24 43
1 t 0 .500 39 44
1 1 0 .500 35 37

1 1

o

.500 33 30

Monday's Game
Oakland 16, Minnesota 13
Thursday's Games
New York Giants 17. Kansas City o
Baltimore 20. Philadelphia 10
Frtday't Games
Cincinnati 44, Buffalo 31
Cleveland 20, Detroit 16
Chicago 24, San Diego 3
.
Saturday's Games
Miami 13. Tampa Bay 10
Carolina 17, Jacksan11ille 10
Green Bay 38, Atlanta 10
New England 30, Arizona 3
Houston 27, St. Louis 20
New York Jets 27, Washington 14
Minnesota 17, Pittsl:lurgh 10
De(lver 35, Tennessee 10
Sunday's Games OaKland 23, San Francisco 7
Seattle 30, Indianapolis 17
Monday's Game
Dallas 30, New Orleans 7
Thursday, Aug. 24
Miami at Carolina, 8 p.m.

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE.LEADERS
,
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATIING- Mauer, Minnesota, .357:
Jeter, New Yo~ •. 336; Tejada. Baltimore.
Friday, Aug. 25
.330; MAamirez, Boston, .330; ISuzuki.
Pittsburgh at Pt,liladelphia, 8 p.m.
Seattle, .324: DeRosa, Texas. .322.
Arizona at Chicago, 8 p.m.
VWells, Toronto, .321_
RUNS-Sizemore, Clelleland, gg; OOrtiz,
Baltimore at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Boston, 93; Thome, Chicago. 93 : Harner.. .. New ~ork Giants a1 New York Jets, 8 p.m.
Ckweland 91 · Damon Ne York 91 .
Detr0i1 at Oakland, 10 p.m.
'
'
•
~
·
· '
Saturday, Aug. 26
8
~~~ 9 Toronto, S9; AAodnguez, New Cleveland at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
RB~rtiz, Boston, 117 : Hafner,
l~dianapolis vs. New Orleans at Jackson,
Cleveland. 110: Morneau, Minnesota , MISS., 7 p.m.
.
107· Giambi New York 101· MRamirez
Tampa Bay at Jacksonvtlte, 8 p.m.
Boston, 100;' VGuerrero,' Los Angeles, 98:
Atlanta at Tennessee, 8 p.m.
Ibanez, Seattle, 95.
San ~rancisco at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Hlrs-:ISuzukl. Seattle, 171: MYoung,
Washm_Qton at New E~gland. B p.m.
Texas, 165; Tejada, Baltimore. 164; Jeter,
St. LoUis at Kan~s City, 8.30 p.m.
N8w YCM"k, 160; Loretta; Boston, 155; Seattle at San 01ego, 11 p.m.
VGuerrero, los Angeles, 152: VWells,
Sunday, Aug. 27
Toronto 150
Houston at Den11er, 8 p.m .
OOUBLE~MYoung,
Texas,
44;
Monday, Aug. 26 .
.
Green Bay at Clnannati, 8 p.m.
Sizemore, Cleveland, 41 ; Matthews,
Texas, 39; Overbay, Toronto, 37: Lowell,
Boston, 37; Teixeira, Texas, 36; Youkilis,
TRANSACTIONS
Boslon, 33; DeRosa, Texas, 33; Beltre,
Saattle, 33.
Monday's Sports Transactions
TRIPLEs-crawford. Tampa Bay, 12:
BASEBALL
Sizemore, Cle11eland. 9: JoLopez, Seat11e,
American League
7; Teahan, Kansas City, 7: !Suzuki,
BOSTON RED SOX-Qptloned RHP
Seat11e, 6; Podsednik, Chicago, 6.
Craig Hansen to Pawtucket of the ll.
HOME RUNS-DOrtlz, Boston, 44;
Purchased the contract ol RHP Bryan
Hafner, Cleveland, 38: Giambi, New York,
C.ore~ from Pawtucket
36: Thome, ChicaQ&lt;J. 36; Glaus, Toronto. TEXAS RANGERs-REfcalled AHP Nick
34: Dye, Chicago, 34; MAamirez. Boston. Masset lrom Oklahoma of tile PCL.
34
Optioned LHP John Koronka to
STOLEN BASES--Figgins, Los Angeles ,
46; Crawfofd, Tampa Bay, 43: CPatterson, Oklahoma.
National league
Baltimore. 38: !Suzuki, Seattle, 35;
ATLANTA BRAVES-Optioned RHP
Podsednik, Chicago. 33; BRoberts.
Lance Cormier to Richmond of the IL
Battimote, 32; Jeter, New York, 26.
Recalled
INF Martin Prado from
PITCHING (14 Decistons)-Halladay,
Toronto, 16-3, .842, 3.1B; Urlano, Richmond
CHICAGO CUBs-Activated OF Freddie
Minnesota. 12-3, .800, 2.19; Garland,
Chicago, 14-4,
4.73: JoSantana. Bynum and LHP Glendon Rusch from the
Minnesota, 15-5( .750, 3.03; Wang, New 15-day DL. Placed "RHP Car1-os Marmot on
the 15-0ay DL. retroactive to August 19
Yo~. ~ 4 - 5, .737, 3.86: Schilling, Boston,
SAN OtEGO PADRES-Racatte&lt;j AHP
14-5, .737, 3.84; Muss1na , New York, 13·
Tim Stauffer from Portland Dl the PCL.
5,.722, 3.61 .
STAIKEOUTS-JoSantana, Minnesota, OptiotiSd AHP Jon A(f(lf1s to Pcrlland.
FOOTBALL
192; Bonoerman, Detroit'.' 163: Schilling,
Natlonill Football LHQlMt
Boston, 160; Kazmir, Tampa Bav, 155: ."
ARIZONA CARDINAls-Released WA
Musslna, New York, 150; Lackey, los
Angeles, 146: Uriano, Minnesota, 142; Damarius BilbO, DE Garren Mclntvre. QB
Jeff Otis, C Kyle Schml~ , TE Alex Shor
Haren, Oakland, 142.
,
SAVES-Janks,
Chicago,
35: and TE Andy Stokes. Activated FB James
FrRodriguez, Los Angeles, 34: TJones, Hodgins from the physically-unable-to·
Detroit. 34: Papelbon , Boston. 32; perform list.
CHICAGO BEARS- Wal\led LB Joe
MRivera, New York. 31 , Street, Oakland,
Odom. Placed QE Khari Long on injured
29; Ray, Baltimore, 28.
reserve Signed FB Quadtrine Hill and DE
Mike Mendenhall.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATIING-FSanchez. Pittsburgh, .349; CtNCtNNATI BENGALS- Ptaced CB
MICabrera, Florida . .339; Garciaparra, Los Rashad Bauman on injured reserve.
Mgeles, .330: Holliday. Colorado, .328; GREEN BAY PACKERs-Released P
Pujols, St. Louis, .326; CJones, Atlanta. B.J . Sander
anti . LB
Ke111n
.324; VIle~. Philadelphia, .320.
Schimmelr.nann
NEW YORK JETS-Waived WR Curtis
RUNS--Utley, Philadelphia. 103: Rollins,
Philadelphia, 100: Reyes, New York, 98: Williams and DE Val Barnaby. Signed TE
ASoriano, Washington, 95: Beltran. New Walter Aasby,
Yon&lt;, 93; Pujols, St. Louis, 91:. HaAamirez, SANFRANCtSCO 49EAS-Wai.W LB
Florida, 90.
David Dixon.
RBI- HoWard,
Philadelphia,
11 1;
WASHINGTON REDSKINS- Named
Bertunan, Houston. 103. Beltran. New Terry Bateman as chief marketing offi cer.

7

.n8.

2006

Ladies auxiliary
honors life

Lehman fills out team with experience

Yo111:, 101 : A./ones. Atlanta, 101 ; Pujols,
BASEBALL
St Louis, 98; M!Cabrera, Florkta, 89;
Wr~ght, New Yo111:, 88.
AIIIOriclnLMguo
HITS-Utley.
Philadelphia,
161:
Eoot Dlviltjon
MiCabrera. Florida. 152; FSanchez,
w L Pet GB
P1ffsburgh , t52. P1erre, Chicago, 152;
Now York
75 48 .610
Hollidav. Colorado, 150; Reyes, New York.
69 55 .556 6,
t47; ASoriano, Washington, 146.
Toromo
66 59 .528 10
DOUBLES-FSanchez, Pittsburgh. 44:
Baltimore
55 69 .444 20',
LGonza!ez, Arizona, 43; MiCabrera .
TIITCJO Bay
50 75 .400 26
Florida, 42, Zimmerman, Washington, 38;
Central Dtvlelon
Rolen , St. l.Quis, 38; Atkins. Colorado. 37;
w L Pet GB
NJohnson , ~ash1ngton . 37.
Detroit
45 .640
TRIPLES-Aeves, New York, 15; Pierre, ·
Chicago
73 51 .589 6\
Chicago, 12: Sulli11an, Colorado, 10:
Minnesota
n 51 .585 7
DRoberts. San D1ego. 9:. Lofton, los
Cleveland
56 67 .455 23
Angeles. 9: SFinley. San Francisco. 9:
Kansas City
45 81 .357 35'·1
01-fudson, Arizona, 8; VizQuel , San
Wast Division
Francisco, 8.
w L Pet GB
HOME AUNS-Howar~ . Philadelphia.
OoJdanc:t
71 54 .568
43: ASoriano , Washington, 41 : Dunn,
loiAngoles
66 59 .528 5
Cincinnati. 37: Pujols, St. Louis, 36;
Taxas
65 61 .516 6~
Beltran. New Yo~ . 35: Be~man. Houston,
5ea1tie
56 58 .452 14',
34; ARamirez, Chicago, 30.
· STOLEN BASES--Reyes, New York, 50~
. SUndOy's Gtomeo
Pierre , Chicago, 43; HaAamirez, Ftorida,
Texas 7, Detroit 6
39; DRoberts, San Diego,. 36; Flopez,
Cleveland 9. Tampa Bay 4
Washing1on . 32; Furcal. Los Angeles. 30:
Toronto 9, Baltimore 2
ASoriano. Washington. 30.
OoJdanc:t 6, Kansas Ci1y 4
PITCHING
(14 Decisions}-Webb,
Minnesota 7, Chicago Whrte So;.; 3
Arizona, 13·5, .722, 2.93; CZambrlino,
L.A. Angels 3, Sea1tie 2
· ChiCago, 13-5, .722, 3.34: Trachsel, New
N.Y. Yankees 8, Boston 5, 10 innings
York, 12-5, .706. 4 .79; Penny, Los
Monday's Gamea
Angeles, 13-6, .684. 3.70: Carpenter, St.
N.Y. Yankees 2. Boston 1
Lou.is,
12-6.. 667, 3.05; TGiavine, New
Detroit 7, Chicago WhHe Sox 1
YOfk, 12·6, .667, 3.~2; MBatista, Arizona,
Oakland 12, Toronto 10
1~5 .. 667, 4.52.
Tampa Bay 4, Texas 3
.
STRIKEOUTS- CZambrano, Chtcago,
Tuesday's Games
173:
Smaltz, Atlanta, 169: Harang,
Chicago WhHe Sox (Buehrte 1D-W) at
Cincinnati, 167: Pea'.')'. San Diego. 162;
Detroit (Rogers 1H), 7:05p.m.
Minnesota (Silva 8-10) at Baltimore Pettitte. Houston, 153; Schmidt. San
Francisco, 145; Capuan&lt;J, Jflilwau~ee ,
(Loewen 3-4). 7:05p.m.
· Oakland (Halsey 3-3) at Toronto (Burnett 141; Arroyo, Cincinnati, 141 .
SAVES-Hoffman , San Otego , · 32:
5-5), 7:07p.m.
Texas (Padilla 12-7) at Tampa Bay awagner, New York, 31 : lsringhausen, 51
Louis. 30; •Borowski, Florida. 28; Gordon.
(Kazmir 10-8), 7:15p.m.
Cleveland (Lee 1(}-8) at Kansas City Philadelphia. 27, Lidge. Houston. 26;
Turnbow, Milwaukee; 24; Dempster,
(OPerez Q-1), 8:10p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Karstens ()..{)) at Seattle ChiCago. 24.
Boston (Snyder 3-2) at LA Angels

Tuesday, August 22,

A'IVdrag
•
•
racmg
wmners
annolUlced, A7

members,A6

BY DOUG fERGUSON

ASSOCtATED PRESS
MEDINAH, Ill. - Tom
Lehman sorted through num( i
bers on a chart and the feeling in his gut, trying to
decide which two players
would help the United States ·
•
•
end a dozen years of
~
••
European dominf1nce in the
•
\!I I
Ryder Cup.
~
•
He simply wanted the best,
• I
and picked up some experi•
' I ""' '•• • , · (
ence (\long the way.
Lehman chose Stewart
Cink and Scott Verplank as
his two captain's picks
Monday morning, leaving
Davis Love Ill at home for
the first time since 1993 and
raising questions about how
much winning really mattered in the selection
AP photo
process.
U.S. Ryder Cup Captain Tom Lehman speaks during an announcement of the captain's
"I think what I'm wanting picks for the 2006 Ryder Cup Team as PGA of America President Roger Warren, left, looks
more than anything is a team on Monday at the Medinah Country Club in Medinah, Ill. Lehman named Stewart Cink and
that is just tough - strong Scott Verplank to the 12 man team for the 36th Ryder Cup matches that will be held Sept.
guys that will never give 22-24 in Kildare, Ireland.
up,'' Lehman said. "And it
The Ryder Cup is Sept. 22- Arran Oberholser (22) at
Studying ., his options
came down where Scott 24 at The K Club in Ireland. Pebble Beach; and Dean through the evening ·sunday
Verplank and Stewart Cink Europe has captured the cup Wilson
(23)
at
the after
the
PGA
made their decision for me ." seven of the last 10 times, International.
Championship, he narrowed
Cink, 33, was ooe of the including an 18 l/2c9 1/2
"There's not lot of guys his choices to six playe~few wild-card selections victory two years ago in doing a lot of winning, peri- Cink, Verplank, Love, Lucas
who showed signs of life Oakland Hills. .
od," Lehman said. "If I were Glover, Steve Stricker and
over lhe last few months,
Europe's team will not be only going to pick guys who vice captain Corey Pavin,
with three finishes in the top determined until after the have won, it would be a pret- who won at Milwaukee last .
five to climb to No. 12 in the BMW International Open on ty small list It's just kind of month for his first victory in
standings.
the nature of the.internation- 10 years.
·
· • · k He also was a cap-d Sept 3 in Germany.
tams
p1c
two
years
ago
an
."Clearly,
.,..om's
dec
'
sion
to
al
world
of
the
PGA
Tour
Gl
1
·11 b
1 ·
h Rd
''
.
,
over was the toug hest
Wl
e P aymg t e Y er go with experience provides nght now.
calL He was 14th in the
Cup for the third time.
the United States with balWith so many .!ntemational standings, but after opening
The 42-year-old Verplank ance, considering that there players m Amenca. Lehman · with a 66 at Medinah folwas a mtld surpnse.
are four rookies in their kept a separate list to show lowed with rounds of h-74
He was a leading. ca~di· · team," European captain Ian how Americans only fared in and closed with a 72 to tie
dale to be a ptck commg 1nto Woosnarn said . ... Both have PGA Tour events. For exam- for 46th.
the PGA Championship played Ryder Cup, World pie, Jonathan Byrd tted for
"There's times in your life
because of h1.s accu.racy off Cup and Presidents Cup golf 20t.h .. at . the
PGA when you have this gut feelthe tee and h1s putttng, two . for their country, and there- Champ10n~h1p. Counting ing about somebody, and you
key elements tn match play. fore will bring a lot of inter- only Amencans at Medmah, can't exactly put your finger
But he m1ssed the cut after national experience to he would have been,.tOth .. , on what it is and why,"
makmg two double bogeys Ireland."
On that .unoff1ctal hst, Lehman said. "At the end of
on the final three holes at
This U.S. team has seven Lehman satd Cmk would
. ·
Medinah. Verplank,. the first players who have won PGA have been sixth in the stand- the day ... not havmg played
player to make h1s ,Ryder Tour events this year, up ings, and Verplank would that well over the last thr.ee
Cup debut as a captam s p1ck from five players in 2004. have finished mnth.
.
months, I could n.ot .~~1te
in 2002, tinished 20th in the Part of that was due to a . "Winnin~ is . important," pull the tngger on htm,
standings,
revamped points system that Lehman said. "But every bit
Love has played on every
"I'm
so
pumped," emphasized how a player as important is when you're . Ryder Cup team smce 1993,
Verplank said. "I don't know fared in the year of the in the hunt, how do you per- the longest streak of any
how you can have a better matches, with a bonus for form? And 1 think these guys Amencan. But he ~as not
event than the Ryder Cup. I winning and quadruple performed well under the cracked the top 10 smce he
told Tom I was put on this points in the majors.
pressure."
los~ m t~e finals to Geoff
earth to play in things like
What made Lehman 's
Lehman had ·said all week Og1lvy m the Accenture
this."
.
pick&gt; intriguing is that Cink that the four rookies who Match Play Championship.
The lO who qualitied dur- hasn't won in two years, earned spots on his team An.d needing an eighth-pla~e
ing the two-year process while Verplankhasn't won in wouldn't make him look fimsh at Medmah to earn h1s
were Tiger Woods, Phil five.
exclusively at experience.
spot on the team, he shot 73Mickelson. Jim Furyk, Chad
Then again, Lehman 's
"Having that kind of expe- 76 on the weekend.
Campbell, David Toms, options were limited.
rience played into my think"Davis hasn't played well,
Chris DiMarco, Vaughn
Of the players who fin- ing," he said. "But 1 wasn't plam and s1mple," Lehman
Taylor, J.J, Henry, Zach ished between Nos. 11 and married to iL 1 was married said. "He's been injured.
Johnson and Brett Wetterich. 25 in the final standings, to picking the two guys. who He's still slightly injured.
Th.e 'last four have never o.nly four players had won I thought were going to With all the experience he
played in the Ryder Cup. and this year - John Rollins · make our team the best team, has and all he has accomTaylor has never competed (II) at the B.C. Open, Tim and those are the guys I · plished, I still want to have
in any fonn of match play.
Herron (17) at Colonial; picked."
·
guys playing well."

'

.. t.

'
r;.
..

: r' .:

. ' i"
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;n I I· !\I IS • \ 'ol. :;C&gt;, No .

SPORTS
• Reds blast Houston.
See Page 81 .

a

Browns' Edwards closing in on debut
BEREA (AP) - Browns
wide receiver Braylon
Edwards may be on the
verge of his exhibition debut
Returning to practice two
months before doctors predicted followfng reconstructive knee surgery, Edwards
has progressed to the point
where coach Romeo Crennel
is considering playing him in
Cleveland's preseason game
at Buffalo on Saturday.
"We' II have to see how
ihe practice week goes,''
Crennel said ~onday. "If
the week goes well and he
is feeling good, we might
have to give him one or two
reps to see if he can move
around against some different competition."
Edwards has been on a
speedy track to recovery
smce undergoing surgery in
early January to repair a
torn anterior cruciate ligament. He was expected to
need nine months of rehab,
but was back on the field in
less than seven.
The Browns have been
taking
it s low with
Edwards. trying to ease him
back to minimize the risk of
him having a setback. He's

looked quick during passing
drills but only recently
began taking part in contact.
During Monday's morning workout, Edwards
delivered a crack-back
block on rookie Kamerion
Wimbley.
"He's making
good
progress," Crennel said.
"The game is alway·s different. Your teammates know
what your issues are, but
your opponent doesn't care
what the issues are. We' re
being conservative and cautious, We'll give him a few
reps · when we .think he 's
ready,''
In the evening session,
Ed wards was not wearing a
brace ·on 'his right knee
when .he made a sprawling
catch in the back of the end
zone. Shortly after slipping
lhe brace back on, he made
a diving catch for a TD on a
ball that was tipped by linebacker Andra Davis.
Edwards is hoping he
doesn't have to wear the
brace during the season.
Crennel said he's not worried about any opponents

targeting Edwards' knee.
"I don't think they would
attack a body part, but they
might attack that particular
player," he said.
NUMBER
GAME:
Willie McGinest had mixed
emotions about hearing that
Junior Seau will wear his
No. 55 with New England.
Seau signed with Patriots
last week, just days after
announcing his retirement
from the San Diego
Chargers. He has worn 55
since his' .days at Southern
Cal. and before Seau took
that number in New
England, both he . and
Patriots
coach
Bill
Belichick called and 'asked
McGinest for his permission.
The request miffed the
Browns linebacker, who felt
the . Patriots' front offi~e
should have stepped in and
handled what he felt was an
uncomfortable situation.
"What if I had went to
San Diego? I don 't even
think that would have been
an option for me to ask for
55," McGinest said. "I think

they would have said, 'You
know what, you're a . great
player but we've got to put
this number to the side
because of Junior: And out
of respect I wouldn't have
asked for the number, I probably would have gone back
to my high school number
(95).
"So it's not something that
should have been left up to
Belichick or 1unior. I think
the organization should have
stepped up and made that
decision, you know, if they
say I'm somebody who
embodied what they represented in the past and helped
them get to and win championships."
McGinest said the conversation with Belichick was
awkward.
"We have a great deal of
respect for each other," he
said. "I have a lot of respect
for him and he told me the
same on the phone. At the end
of. the day, Junior started that
number at SC He's the reason why I was wearing the
number. He made it what it is
today and he passed it down
to me. He had his legacy
with it where he was, and I
created·mine where I w.as."

Droughns pleads not guilty in assault case
.

'
'

CENTENNIAL. Colo. · (AP) Cleveland Browns ,running back
Reuben Droughns pleaded not guilty
Monday to misdemeanor harassment
and assault charges that stem med
from &lt;1 disturbance with hi s wife .
A trial was set for Feb. 5 in
Arapahoe County Court
for
Droughns, who missed praciice
Munday in Berea, Ohio, to attend the
hearing . He is expected to practice
Tuesday.

Droughns is accused of throwing
his wife, Kellie, to the ground and
onto a bed before throwing her outside and locking the door during a
May 12 altercation at their suburban
Denver home.
Droughns, ,who played for the
Denver Broncos until a trade last
year, cou ld get six to I 8 months in
jail if convicted of assault, and up to
six months if convicted of harassment.

Days before his arrest on the
domestic charges, a jury in the
Cleveland suburb of Medina
acquitted Drou.ghns ()f drunken
driving. It determined that he was
not impaired by alcohol when a
state trooper stopped him Nov. I.
Droughns , who rushed for
I .232 yards last se ason , apologized in June for "bringing this
negative attention to the team
once again."

\\' 1·.11 N I·:S II.'\\', ,\ lJG lJST 2:1. 2006

II

J.

"" " "'"1.111 ) ,. . ., t ,,, 1 "" "

vields over 100

plants

Deputy Donny Mohler.
assisted by &lt;tn Athens
County officer, found shotSHADE .- Two men gun shell casings at the resic
were arrested late Monday dence, but abo saw marijuawhen officers investigating na plants through a window
a shooting incident discov- of the house. Accurding to
ered over a half-million dol- ileegle, a sea rch warhnt
lars worth of marijuana was executed and two growplanb in a Bedford ing rooms discovered on the
Township home,
ftrst and second floors or
Sheriff Robert Beegle Huffman's house .
said Gregory E. Huffman ,
Huffman . and Bailey
37, of Gilkey Ridge Road. returned while officers
Shade, and Jason Bailey, 32. were still on the scene .
Guysville, are in county Bailey w~s charged with
custody pending court driving under the ii1fluence .
appearances.
and pos·session of marijuaBeeg le said his depart- na.
Charges
against
ment was notified Tuesday Huffman are pending, but
of a shooting at Huffman 's will likely include felony
home. His live-in girl- cultivation and charges
friend, who ha s not been relating to the shooting,
identified, was admitted to althuugh Beegle said the
O'Bieness .
Memorial shooting might be deemed
Hospital and later tran sport- accidental following an
ed by medical helicopter to interview of the victim by .
a ·Columbus hospital for Athens County deputies,
Submitted photo
treatment of a superficial
Some of over 100 marijuana plants siezed from a Bedford Township home are pictured in
gunshot wound to the back.
Please see Probe, AS
a sheriff's department pboto, taken at the scene late Monday.
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSE"HINEL.COM

Superintendent
believes in
'Southern Pi:ide'

INSIDE

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

• God's Net distributes
school supplies.
See Page A3
• Named Sweet
Adeline of the Year.
See Page A3
• Prize winner.
See Page A3
·• Roadside Hot Spot
celebrates grand
opening. See Page AS
• Students graduate
from School cit Radiology.
.See Page A6
• Junior Fair pet show
winners. See Page A7
• UMW discuss
missions objectives.
See Page A7 .

Beth Sergent(photos

Ashley Saunders (standing) practices her number wtth Kerry Wood who plays her father Tevye in The River City Player's
upcoming production of "Fiddler on the Roof" opening on Labor Day weekend.

River City Players to revive 'Fiddler'

RACINE
- The
term
"Southern Pride" can conjure
many definitions but for Mark
Miller, new superintendent of
Southem Local Schools, the term
is a motto for the district to live by.
Although Miller served last
year as principal at Southern
High School, he
has been serving
as the district's
superintendent
since July with
hi s' first 'official
day being A,ug, I.
Still, many may
ask, "Hey, just
who is thi.s guy?"
Miller graduated from Buckeye South High
School in Ravland in 1988. He
went on to earn an associate of
art s Jeg ree from Ohio University
in 1990, followed by a bachelor
of arts in secundary education
with a major in social studies
comp. from West Liberty State
College in West Liberty, W. Va
just outside of Wheel in~ in 1992.
After working for a few year'
he returned to the University of
Rio Grande to earn ·his masters
Jegrcc in 2000. He then continued his aducation by earning his
administrative
certification
lhrough Salem International
Please see Southern, AS

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENl@MY DAI LYSENTIN EL.COM

WEATIIER

Details on Page A6 •

INDEX
2 SECrtUNS- 16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports ·
B Section
Weather
A6
© 2006 Ohio Vulley Publishing Co.

'

RUTLAND - The latest production of The River City Players (RCP)
will revive "Fiddler on the Roof."
one of the most famou s musicals ever
to grace the Great White Way and the
·one which will open the company's
sixth seas0n of productions.
Petfonnances will be held ~t 7
p.m., Saturday, Sept. 2 and at 2 p,m.
and 7 p.m .. on SLtnday, Sept. 3 at
Meigs Elementary School. Tickets
are $7 each and are un sale now at
F(lfmers Bank (also a sponsor of the
show), Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy.
The Ohio River Bea.r. Company.
Middleport Department Store and
the RCP building from II a.m. to I
p.m., Monday-Friday in Middleport.
The show, directed by Brian
Howard, will feature a cast of 40. a
live orchestra under the direction of
Darren Jackson 'of Mason, W.Va. and
plenty of singing and dancing. .
Kerry Wood of Racine is playing
the lead role or Tevye. Julie Reed
of Gallipolis will be playing hi s
wife Golde .
The show features a star tum in
Tevye, among the most memorabl e
roles in musical theatre. Its celebrated 'core by Jerry Bod and Sheldon
Harnick , features songs loved the
world over: "Sunrise, Sunset." "If I
Were
A Rich 'Man"
a11d
"Matchmaker:· to name a few.

Board members
discuss 2006
fair, look to 2007
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Actors Todd Tucker (left) and Kerry Wood run lines during rehearsal for
' Fiddler on the Roof" though its little Claire Howard who steals the scene.
Tickets are on sale now for the Rive r City Player's upcoming production.
"Fiddler On The Roof' has been
described simply as Broadway at its
very best. It opened on Broadway in
Scptcmbur 1964 ;md ran for 3.242
performances.
The year is !'905 and a Jewish
community in Tsarist Russia is trying
to eke out a livilig in its shtetl in the
village of Anatcvka. Tevye is a milk-

man who ha&gt;. a personal relationship
with God in whom he confides all .
He slrivcs, very hard, to keep up the
tradilion' of hi s f;tith. race and cui·
\LtrC . He ha, tiYc &lt;laughter,, itself a
prohlctn but what is more pre"ing is
trying to find hLisbands for the eldest
three children.
~lease

,.

see 'Fiddler; As

POMEROY - They didn't
describe the 2006 fair as the
"biggest or the best," but the
Meigs County Fair Board called
it a "guud fair overall" particularly in view of some problems
encountered early on.
Receipts were down just over
$\J.OOO from Iast year and the
lowest since 1999. 2005 was a
record year , with receipts ot
$107.578 while this year's
receipt total was $98,546. The
Soard members attributed the
lower attendan~e to the hot days
and the general economy in the
county, including the cost of gas
which cut into money for nonesse ntials. like takin~ in the
Meigs County fair.
~
Still. a' poimcd out hy Board
member Ken Buckley. all of the
pulls - horses. tractors and
truck s, and drag racing - went
Please see Fair, AS

•

�CoMMUNI1'Y

The Daily Sentiriel

MEIGS

Cou

PageA2
VVednesday,Au~st23,2006

COURT NEWS

Don't f&lt;lrget t&lt;l say "'I'hanks"

' POMEROY ·- First place winners in the various weight
categories of tractors in the pulls Thursday were as follows:
10.000, Tom Theiss; 6000, Stanley Moore ; 9500, Adam
Biehl; 10,500, Dave Diehl; 5000, Jason Butler; 9000, Tom
Th'eiss: 7500, Tom Theiss; 6000, Ed Butler.
Winner&gt; in the local yoke competition were Tim
Cremeans, first; Walt LiJUdermelt, second; Paul Will, third;
Josh Wamsley, fourth, and Tim Balr, fifth .

•

PageA3
Wednesday, .August 23, 2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX Community Calendar

POMEROY Meigs license; Holly J. Carter; lion: Eric J. Hjelmstad, McCoy, Huntington, W.Va., rized plates; Isaiah D. RiiTie, Steele, Hilliard, $30 and
County Court Judge Steven Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., $30 Vienna, W.Va.. $30 and $30 and costs, speeding; Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat costs, speeding; Patrick W.
L. Story recently processed and costs, speeding; Tamarra costs, speeding; William T. Amanda N. McKnight, belt violation; Larry J. Steele, Columbus, $30 and
the following cases:
C. Castillo-Parker, Dublin, Hoo k, Moresv l.lle , N.C., $50 Coolville, $30 and cos's,
Ritchie, Reedsville, $30 and costs, speeding;
'
.,., I'Steven
d pA.
Michael
R.
Adams, $50 and costs, speeding; and costs, speeding; Dave A. speedi'ng;
Royal
S. costs, littering; Brad R. Stefanowicz, ,e .or , a.,
Columbus, $150 and costs, Donald E. Casto. St. Mary's, Hubbard, Middleport, $30 McClean, Columbus, $30 Robinson, Middleport, $200 $30 and costs, speeding;
speeding;
Steven
E. W.Va., $20 and costs, over- and costs, insufficent life and costs, speeding; Kevin and costs, 10 days in jail, sus- Ladona G. Stephens, S(Jade,
Anderson,
Ravenswood, width violation; James M. jackets/boat; Donald R. M. Meenaghan, Fort Mill, pended, probation, no opera- $20 and costs, stop sign;
W.Va. , $30 and costs, seat Causey, Pomeroy, $20 and Huck, Huntington, W.Va., S.C., $30 and costs, speed- tor's license; Dennis A. Cathy
Sdtevens,
belt violation; Doris J. costs, traffic cont. dev./signs; $30 and costs, speeding; ing; Brandon K. Miller, Robinson, Syracuse, $200 Reynoldsburg, $39 an costs,
Arnold, Langsville, $300 KeiJ;ey
M.
Chap1nan, David
S. ·
Hunting, Pickerington, $30 and costs, and costs, 180 days in jail, probation, speedin~, $200
and costs, 180 days in jail, Sunbury, $50 .and costs. Tunkhannock, Pa., $30 and seat belt violation; Spencer 178 suspended, probation, and costs, probatiOn, no
177 suspended, probation, speeding; Scott A. Christ, costs, speeding: Laura K. J. Miller, Oak Hill, W.Va., domestic violence; Ross E. . operator's hcense; Greg
DWI and/or drugs of abuse ; Lewis Center, $50 and costs, Hysell, Cheshire, $20 and $30 and costs, seat belt vio- Rodman, Ostmder, $30 and Stewart, Pomeroy, $70, 30 ·
Grant L. Arnold, Pomeroy, speeding; Janice A. Click, costs, failure to control; lation ; Jason -E. Milliron, costs, speeding; John D. days in jail, suspended, pro-.
$30 and costs, speeding; Mount Alto, W.Va., $30 and · Matthew
Imboden, Middleport, $30 and costs, Rogers, Charleston, W.Va., bation, disorderly conduct.
James
W.
Arnold , costs, seat belt violation.
Middleport, $50 and costs, seat belt violation; Larry L. $30 and costs, seat belt violaJeremy
C.
Stone,
. Columbus, $50 and costs,
Jeremy D. Council, Oak posession; Robert L. •Isaacs, Mitch, Middleport, $50 and tion; Tommy L. Romine Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat
·speeding;
Adam
R. Hill, $200 and costs, 10 days G11ysville, $450 and costs, costs, fishing without valid Middleport, $25 and costs, belt violation; Guillerma.
Bankston,
Williamson, in jail, seven suspended, pro- · probation, phy. cont. veh. license; James W. Moncrief, · probation, $200 ' and costs, Suarez, Orlando, Fla., $50
W. Va., $30 and costs, speed- bation, no operators license; mtox; Donald W.• Jayroe, Bristol, Va., $30 and costs, 180 days in jail, suspended, and costs, speeding; Toby E.
ing; Joshua B. Barber, Earl M. Craddock, West Raleigh , N.C. , $30 and speeding; Clarence E. probation,
.
phy. Swartz, Pomeroy, $30 and
Augusta, Ga., $30 and costs, · Columbia, $300 and costs, costs, speeding; Adam I. Moran, Pomeroy; $300 and control/under/influence; costs, speeding; Kyvona N.
spe~ding; James C. Bate,
10 days in jail, seven sus- Jones, Gallipolis. $30 and costs, l 0 days in jail, seven Donald
W.
Ruckh, Thompson, Columbus, $30
Parkersburg, W.Va., $31 and pended, probation , DWI costs, speeding; Greg W. suspended, probation, reck- Pickerington,. $30 and costs, and
costs,
speeding;
costs, probation, speeding, and/or drugs of abuse, $:70, Jordan , Charleston, W.Va., less operation; Joseph M. M speeding; Christopher ·c. Rebecca J. Tillis, Rutland,
$350 and costs, 30 days in probation, . no taillights on $30 and costs, speeding; ottola, Galloway, $30 and Rupe, Reynoldsburg, $20 $130 and costs, speeding;
jail, 27 suspended, proba- vehicle; Anne Crowley- Paul E. Jordan, Little costs, speeding; Ashley A. and costs, stop sign: Justin Jared
D.
Trumbo,
lion, DWI and/or drugs of Hatton, Bexley, $30 and Hocking, $30 and ~osts, Musselman, Albany, $20 and M. Seymour, Middleport, Columbus, $30 and costs,
abuse, $200 and costs, 10 costs, speeding; Leslie N. speeding; Linda. F. Kane, · costs, seat belt operation; $4~ and costs, probation, speeding; John F. Vale,
days in jail seven suspend- Crump, Athens, $30 and Shade, $20 and costs, traffic Richard
A.
Olsen, speeding, $200 and costs, 10 Athens, $30 and ·costs, seat
ed, probation, no operators costs, speeding; Rebecca L. cont. dev./signs; Brandon L. Willowick, $30 and costs, days in jail, seven suspended, belt violation; Stacy L.
license, $25 and costs,. pro- ·Dargan, Apache Junction, Keams, Long Bottom, $30 speeding;
Jereme
A. probation, driving under fra. Wagner, McCallen, Texas,
bation, use of unauthonzed Ariz., $50 and costs, speed- ·and costs, littering; Zachary Osborne, Reedsville, $30 susp.; Timothy E. Shane, $50 and costs, speeding;
plates; Andrew T. Bauer, ing; Anthony G. Davis, L. Keylor, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, littering; Ronald Middleport, $50, probation, Chao Wang, Durham, N.C.,
Middleport, $50 and costs, Langsville, $100 and costs, and costs; seat belt viola- R. Otto, Statesville, N.C., disorderly conduct, $200 and $30 and costs, speeding;
speeding; Ralph J. Bland, 180 days in jail, 178 sus- tion;
Brad
A.King, $30 and costs, speeding; costs, 10 days in jail, seven Jamie
R. · . Ware,
Long Bottom, $200 and pended, probation, posses- Pickerington, $30 and costs, Juvencio
Pantaleon, suspended, probation, no Simpsonville, S.C., $30 and
costs, 10 days in jail, seven sian of drugs; Nicholas J. seat belt violation; Clara J. Portland, $330 and costs, no operator's license, $70 and costs, speeding; Joseph J.
suspended, probation, no Dimarino, Chester, Va., $150 Klein, . Pomeroy, · $35 and operator's license; Lin isM. costs, probation, equipment Wartes, Hansville, Wash.,
operators license; Oliver B·. and costs, headlights; Harley costs, three days in jail, sus- Parsons, Branchland, W.Va. , misue; Justus Shellenberger, $20 and costs, three days in
Bobbitt, Fayetteville, Ga., L. Drummond, Langsville, pended, probation , passing $20 and costs, traflic cont. Ludlow Falls, $30 and costs, jail, suspended, littering;
$30 and costs, speeding; $20 and costs, failure to con- bad checks; Tammy J. dev./signs; Lawrence R. seat belt violation; Debra L. Earnest Weese, Nelsonville,
Robb S. Bolar, Columbus; trol;
Douglas
Eblin, Klein,· Racine; $30 and Patten, Gahanna, $30 and Siek, Middlepon, $25 and $30 and costs, seat belt via'
$30 and costs, seai belt vio- Pomeroy, $135 and costs, ·casts. speeding; Raben K. · costs, speeding; George A. costs, probation, disorderly lation, $20 and costs, stop
lation; Nicholas A. Bolin, overload; Walter A. Ellis, Koone, Lancaster, $30 and Petta, Grand Haven, Mich., conduct; David L. Smidt, . sign; Gwendolyn Werner,
Racine, $30, seat belt viola- Rutland, $20 and costs, traf- costs, speeding; Peter M. $200 and cost~. probation, · Mishawaka, Ind. , $30 and Rutland, $35 and costs,
tion; David L. Boling, fie cont. dev./signs; Clay G. Kramer, Athens, $30 and no operator's license, $30 · costs, speeding; Bradley S. three days in jail, suspendRacine, $200 and costs, 30 Enslen, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speeding; Tanya L. and costs, probation, seat Smith, Middleport, $30 and ed, probation, passing bad
days in jail, suspended, pro- costs, seat belt violation; Lawson, Reedsville, $30 belt violation; Carolyn A. costs, seat (Jelt violation; checks; Catina L. Werry,
bation, obstructing official Noelle -E. Ferguson, Athens, and costs, speeding.
Petty, Columbus, $50 and Carla L. Smith, $30 and Pomeroy, $20 and costs, seat
business, $100 and costs, $30 and costs, seat belt violaAlaina S. Liller, Athens, costs, speeding; Eber 0 . costs, speeding; Jessica L. belt violation; Frererick E.
probation, failure to control; tion; An£1res I. Fernandez, $30 and costs~ speeding; Pickens, Syracuse, $30 and · Smith, Logan, $30 and costs, Werry, Pomeroy, $30 and
Neal
D.
Bonecutter,! Athens, $50 and costs, Mary
R.
Lombardo, costs, speeding; Ryan J. seat belt violation; Sabrina costs, seat belt violation;
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, 30 speeding; Raben R. Forester, Jackson, $30 and costs, seat Pinner; Tampa, Fla., $50 and D. Smith, Pomeroy, $25 and Shauna M. White, Rutland,
days in jail, suspended, pro- Racine, $50 and costs, three . belt violation; Brenda K. costs, speed!n!l; Christopher costs, headlights required; $30 and costs, speeding;
bation, aggravated assault; days in jail, suspended, pro- Mansour, Westerville, $20 M. Plato, Wrlhamsburg, Ky., Thomas C. Smith, Racine, Daniel S. Whittekind,
Arne!
S.
Booker, bation, passsing bad checks; and .
cosrs,
display $80 . and costs, headlights; $30 and costs, seat belt viola- . Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat
Midlothian, Va., $30 and Myles K. French, Bidwell, plaCes/valid sticker, $20 and Jayne E. Powell, Columbus, tion; Shana T. Snyder, . belt violation; Travis A.
costs, speedin~ ; Andrew R. $30 and costs, seat belt viola- costs, wearing earphones $30 and costs, speeding; Joel · Pomeroy, $50 and costs, Whobrey, Gallipolis, $300
Borgerding, Cmcinnati, $50 tion; Christopher W: Frye, while driving; Matthew J. A. Praete, Middletown, $30 headlights required; Michael and costs, 30 days ip jail, 27·
and costs, speeding; Aaron . Lowell, $30 and costs, seat Maple, New Philadelphia, and costs, speeding.
R. Sobieski, Long Bottom, SUSJ.lended, probation, DWI
T. Bowersock, Pomeroy, belt violation; Anthony A. $30 and costs, seat belt vioShawn Price, Cheshire, $50 and costs, probation, and/or drugs of abuse;
$30 and costs, speeding.
Garren, Vienna, W.Va., $30, lation; Betty S. Masten, $35 and costs, three days in · possession, $70, probation, Roger
D.
Willis,
Dennis E. Boyd, Pomeroy, speeding; Max L. Geary, Durham, N.C., $20 and jail, suspended, probation, open container; Matthew R. Washington, W.Va., $30 and
$200 and costs, 10 days in Middleport, $70, probation, costs, failure to register; · passing bad checks; George Somerville, Ravenswood, cost~, speeding; D;~vid A.
jail, suspended, probation, no . littering;
Margaret
D. · Zach A. Masterson, Powell, C. Ramsey, Syracuse, $100 W.Va., $30 and costs, seat WJtUg, Pomeroy, $100 and
operators license; John W. George, Middleport, $200 $150 and costs, headlights and costs, 30 days in jail, sus- belt violation; Buescher K. costs, 60 days in jail, probaBoyer, Albany, $30 and and costs, 10 days in jail, required;
Desirae
J. pended, probation, wrongful Spaulding,
Indianapolis, tion, attempt, $100 and
costs, seat belt violation; seven suspended, probation, Matherly, Athens, $30 and entrustment;
Drey
A. Ind., $30 and costs, seat belt costs, 30 days in jail, probaSean P. Braley, · Pomero;Y, no operator's license; James costs, speeding; Richard E. Rayford, Kernersville, N.C., violation; Wendy E. Spires, tion, possession of drugs;
$200 and costs, 10 days 111 W. Gibbs, Middleport, $25
jail, suspeneded, probation, and cpsts, probation, disor- McCart, Lanesville, Ind., $20 and costs, failure to reg- Carroll, $30 and costs, Kevin D. Yoder, Middleport;
and costs, seat belt vio- ister; Woodrow J. Richards, speeding;
Kenneth L. $20 and costs, seat belt-pasreckle~ operation; Brody A.
derly conduct; Bryan C. $30
lation;
·
Valerie
L.
Long
Bottom,
$200
and
Sprague,
Lancaster,
$30 and senger; Corey L. Yonker,
Browning, Cabin Creek, Gibson, Fairfield, $50 and
McClintock,
Shade,
$70,
costs,
10
days
in
jail,
suscosts,
speeding;
David
R. Pomeroy, $30, speeding;
W.Va., $50 and costs, speed- costs, speeding; Donald M. permitting drug ·abuse, $70, pended, probation, no opera- Stanley, . Patriot, $35 and
Richard R. Young, Racine,
ing; Terry E. Brumfield, Gilmore, Pomeroy, $70, profailure
to
register;
Jimmy
B.
tor's
license,
$100
and
costs,
·costs,
speeding;
Mary
E.
$500,
180 days in jail, 177
West Hamlin, W.Va., $200 bation, drug abuse, $1 00 and
McClure,
Pomeroy,
$30
and
15
days
in
jail,
suspended,
Stanley,
Albany,
$50
and
suspended,
probation, DWIand costs, 10 days in jail, costs, probation, failure to
costs,
speeding;
Pamela
·
J.
probation,
use
of
unauthocosts,
speeding;
Brian
C.
with
intox.
over
.10. .
seven suspended, probation, control, $1 00 and costs, prono motorcycle endorsement; bation, intox. pedestrian on
Pearl Brunton, Middleport, highway; Joshua N. Godby,
$25, probation, disorderly . Elyria, $30 and costs, seat
conduct; Sherri Brunton, belt violation.
. Middlepon, $25 and costs,
Mindy
A.
Grady,
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER WITH A
probation, disorderly con- Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
duct; Brent M. Bucknell, speeding; Walter B. Haggy,
THANK YOU AD IN THE DAILY SENTINEL. •• .
Avon Lake, $50 and costs, Rutland, $200 and costs, I0
speeding;
William
L. days in jail, seven suspendHere are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes ..
Burgess,
Ravenswood, ed, probation, no operator's
W.Va., $30 and costs, seat license, $30 and costs, proSee Dave or Brenda at the ...
belt violation; Mark C. bation, seat belt violation;
The Daily Sentinel
Brewster,
Huntin~ton,
William
G.
Hagler,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speed- Columbus, $30 and costs,
111 .Court Street, Pomeroy, OH
· ing; Steven Brogan, Olney, speeding; Judith A. Hale,
Md., $30 an4 costs, speed- Roanoke, Va., $30 and costs,
* Ads must be paid for in advance.
ing; Randy J . Brooks, speeding; Peggy M. hall,
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, 10 Racine, $110, no operator's
days in jail, seven suspended, license, $30 and costs, seat
probation, no operators belt . violation ; Joshua C.
license; ·Pamela S. Brown, ' Harkins, Vinton, $30 and
Hilliard, $30 and costs, costs, speeding; James A.
speeding; Weston W. Brown, Harrison, Columbus, $30
2 Col. X 4"
Blacklick, $30 and costs, and costs, speeding; Elyse
speeding; Susan R. Bums, A. Hatfield, Pomeroy, $30
Middleport, $30 and costs, and costs, seat belt violaspeeding;
Wesley
D. tion; Michael P. Haugh,
Burrows, Vincent, $30 and Columbus, $30 and costs,
costs, seat belt violation; speeding; Courtney E.
Belinda L. Bush, Letart, Heibel, Delaware, $50 and
W.Va., $300 and costs, 180 costs, speeding; Kelly D.
1 Col. X 2" days in jail, 174 suspended, Herman, Racine, $35 and
probation, DWI and/or drugs costs, speeding; Terry L.
of abuse, $25 and costs, pro- Herman, Columbus, $30
bation, stop sign; Dian H. and costs, speeding; · Todd
Byrum, Athens, $30 and W. Hildreth, Lancaster, $30
costs, speeding; Michael B. and
costs,
speeding;
Call, Pomeroy, $50 .and Michael J. Hill, Racine, $30
costs,. fishing w/out valid and costs, seat belt viola-

Tractor pull results
announced

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Self-absorbed couple
perplexes mother
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My son and
his wife have become• so
absorbed in their own problems and priorities that they
seem to have completely
lost interest in anything or
anyone else, including us.
When they visit, they talk
only about themselves and
their two daughters. If we
attempt to talk about things
gqing on in our lives, our
daughter-in-law will either
talk right over us or quickly
change the subject back to
their daily issues.
Our son is a good
provider, and our daughterm-law is a good mother,
housekeeper and cook. But
in all the years they've been
married, we 'ye detected an
increasing lack of interest in
anything but themselves.
Should I express. my feelings to my son and risk
insulting or hurting him? Or
should l let them continue
in their blissful ignorance
and not mention how we
feel about their lack of concern for others, especially
his parents? - Concerned'
Mother
· ,
Dear Mother: First, do
an honest appraisal of your
side of the conversation. Is
it possible , you talk a lot
about your problems, your
aches and pains, your financial
difficulties, yo4r
health? Many children don't
want to hear_these things,
and your daughter-in-law's
chatter may be her way of
heading you off at the pass.
· Even so, these . visits
should include more giveand-take. It's OK to tell your
son that his one-sided conversation makes him seem
rather self-absorbed. But if ·
you arc looking for a sympathetic ear, Sonny doesn ' t
appear to be a good candidate. We recommend developing your triendships, joining social organizations or
talking to a counselor.
Dear Annie: As a parent
with three teenagers, I am
shocked at some of the TV
reality shows, MTV videos,
morning radio shows and
Internet pop-ups. The filth
and fantasy have teens in
another world. I am totally
helpless
to . , prevent
immorality, obscenity and
vulgarity from occurring in
my own home hundreds of
times a day.
I have some ideas for reality TV, like "Sleepless in the
USA," a show about teens
having babies. Or "Teens
Left Behind," the ones
'

.

whose irresponsible behavior with alcohol. drugs and
reckless driving has killed
friends and family. Or perhaps "Sex in Our Ci'ties" interviews with teens who
are coping with STDs, HIV
and AIDS, and those who
have had abonions or given
babies up for adoption.
I would recommend
putting positive things on as
well. How about "American
Idols," which would recognize teens who have made a
positive . impact?
Or.
"Extreme Makeovers," about
families that have successfully struggled to stay together
without using alcohol, drugs
or getting divorced?
Our teens emulate actors,
sports stars and IT'usicians
who seem to compete to be
the most obnoxious. vulgar
and self-centered. I shudder
to think what parents of the
next generation will have to
put up with. - America's
Most Frustrated Mom
Dear Mom: We love your
ideas, but you are NOT
helpless. Most computers
and TVs offer parental control buttons and off switches. Use them.
Dear Annie: For the most
part, I agree with your
advice to "Price Tag." The
price tag should not be left
on a gill.
However, I will be honest
and tell you t.hat if it 's a gift
to a family member whose
preferences I am not familiar with , I will put the
receipt in an envelope and
tape it to the bottom of the
box. Items go on sale, and
many stores will only let
you return a gift at its original price if you have a
receipt. - Different View
in Baraboo, Wis.
Dear Baraboo: That's a
legitimate reason, but many
stores offer gift receipts if
you request one. This
allows the recipient to have
all th~ pertinent information
necessary for a full refund
or exchange, but the price is
hidden.
Annie's Mailbox is writtim by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0 .
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie~~ Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartooni..~ts, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Public
meetings

Tuesday, Aug. 29
'POMEROY - Special
meeting of Meigs Cou nty
Board of Elections. 8:.10
a.m.,
to certify petitions and
Thursday, Aug. 24
POMEROY Meigs issues for general elections.
Soil and water Conservation board office in County
District
Board
of Annex. Regular meeting to
~
Supervisors noon Thursday , immediately follow.
at the district office, 3310 I
Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport village finance
committee, 4 p.m., village
hall. Committee meets
Thursday,~g. 24
Thursdays preceding regtJPOMEROY- :;\lpha Iota
Iar council meetings.
Masters, ope1 ·ng day
MIDDLEPORT- Public brum:h. 10:30 a.m. home of
meeting to discuss neigh- Annie Chapman, High
borhood drug problems, 7 Street.
p.m., Middleport Church of
TUPPERS PLAINS Christ.
VFW Post 90'\3, 7 p.m .. at
hall.
Monday, Aug. 28
POMEROY -Veterans
POMEROY - Caring
Service Commission, 9 and Sharing Support Group
a.m., 117 Memorial Drive.
meeting. l p.m., Meigs

Clubs and
organizations

sweet
GALLIPOLIS - Mary
Madsen of Huntington,
W.Va. was named Sweet
Adeline of th e Year of
French Colony Chorus,
Gallipolis chapter of the
women's
barbershop
group Sweet Adelines
lnternationa I.
Madsen was chosen· for
the honor by French Colony
Chorus Director Susan
Russell for her effort in
helping to form the new
local chapter. Madsen and
Russell, along with Donna
Patrick, were members of
the Huntington , W.Va. chorus "River Magic" for many
years, when the three decided about two years ago that
the Gallia-Mason-Meigs
counties area needed a
women's barbershop group.
Their et'forts resulted in the
formation of French Colony
Chorus, which earned it s
offici~! Sweet Adelines
International charter in
April, .2005.
Madsen was chosen to
lead the new chorus as
Team Manager, a job she
has accepted for another
year at the request of the
chorus members who

X

God's Net distributes
school supplies

Borders and Artwork may vary:

•

Thursday, Aug. 24
RACINE
- Racine
Uniled Methodist Church
wil l serve its annual hackto-school breakfast for students. teachers and parents
from 7 to 8:30 a.m in the
churc h parking lot. The
free breakfast will include
donuts, sausage sandwiches. fresh fruit. milk and
coffee ..
Friday, Aug. 25
"MIDDLEPC)RT - Fccc
communi ty dinner. 4:306: 15 p.m.. Middleport

Reunions
Sunday, Aug. 27
PORTAND- Van Meter
family reun.ion will be held
at l p.m. at the Portand
Park.

School events
Thursday, Aug. 24
POMEROY - Meet the
team night, 5:30p.m. at Bob
Robens Field.

of the Year Clifford
-birth

Mary Madsen

appreciate her dedication,
·effort, and expe rienc~.
Madse n has held membersh ip. offices and chairs in
six choru ses over the past
22 years.
"One of the nicest things
about Sweet Auelines is the
friendships that are formed;
seeing old friends from
other parts of the country
when
att ending
International ,events. and
moving to new communi-

ti es where a group of in,tant
friends is provided through
the local barbershop group,"

Madsen s;iid.
"l have never see n a
group · of women embrace
the barbershop concept and
move so far. so successfully,
and so 4uickly a&gt; the F~ench
Colony Chorus has."
While French Colony
Chorus members attribute
their musical success to
Di'rector ·S usan Russell,
they also credit Madsen
with having the experience,
knowledge and drive to
preside as head of the business part of the new group.
while also serving as bass
section leader.
French Colony Chorus
presents its first annual
show. "Re union at Saint
· Adeline's Academy for
Girls," at 7:30p.m. on Sept.
.9 at the Ariel-Ann Carson
Dater Theater, Gallipolis.
Guests appearing on the
show bill will be "C rushed
Velvet,' ' a barhershop/doowop male· quartet from the
Charleston, W.Va. area, and
the French City Men's
Chorus of Gallipolis.
Information
can
be
obtained through chorus
contact, Bev Alberchinski,
at 446-2476.

GATLINBURG, Tenn. Sam and Carmen McTurner
Clifford of Gatlinburg,
Tenn. announce the birth of
a daughter, Audrey Margaret
CliH'ord, on Aug. 2 at Fort
Sanders Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are
Dan and Linda McTurner of
Racine. Paternal grandmother is Marsha Clifford
MacNamaria of Sanibel,
Fla. Maternal great grandmother is Margaret Yost of
North Carol ina.
The Cliffords also have a
son, David.

Prize winner
CHESTER
David
Gaul of Chester was the
winner of a Dr. Pepper bike
given away by the ChesterShade Historical Society at
the Meigs County Fair.-

Proud to be apart ofyour lif.e.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

OMEN

FOR

For women without health insurance, Medicare or Medicaid
FREE Pap Testing and Clinical Breast Exam
, Referral for a FREE mammogr.am (if recommended by physician)
services provided by Radiology Associates of Athens,
Athens Medical Laboratory and O'Bieness Memorial Hospital

To schedule an appointment,
call O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's
Community Relations Department.
(740) 592-9300
jn preparation for distributing school_ supplies Ke ith Rader,
director of the Meigs Cooperative Pans h. was out p1ckmg up
contributions to the program. Here he checks contents of
bags and bags of pencils, paper, crayons, markers, scis·
sors, glue ·and back packs, from Peoples Bank in Pomeroy
contributed by employees and the' public interested in seeIng that all children go to school with needed supplies. The
supplies were sorted at God's NET, packed' into grade-specific containers and given out to more than ;!50 children
'
Tuesday afternoon.
••
,..

2"

Church events

Churc:h of Christ Family
Life Center, school supplies
and some clothing given
away as well.
Sunday, Aug. 27
CHESTER Gospel
smg (bluegrass style) 10
a.m., Chester Church of the
Nazarene. featuring Just For
Now.

A FREE CLINIC BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

Charlene Hoentch/ photo

2 Col.

Senio• Center, discu"ion
will be experiences with
Al7heimer's Disease.
Monday, Aug. 28
POMEROY - OH-Kan
Coin CI(Jb, 7 p.m. Pomeroy
Library.

Appointments are limited , call now!
If'

O'BLENESS '
Memorial Hospital
55 Hospital Drive, Athens. OH 45701-2345

www.obleness.org

'

�)

·OPINION

The ·Daily Sentinel

The.Daily Sentinel

Evangelical writer Rick
Warren's latest sermon is on
(740) 992·2156 • !=AX (740) 992-2157
AIDS prevention. At a
www.mydallysenllnel.com
recen t AIDS confab Ill
Toronto. Warren, author the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
of the bestselling "The
Purpose-driven
Life"
Jim Freeland
(Zondervan,
2002)
Publisher
announced that the "Church
needs to take the lead in the
Charlene Hoeflich ·
greatest health concern on
General Manager-News Editor
the planet"- causing some
to club Warren the leader of
an upcoming AIDS "reformation."
What Warren is doing is
Congress shall make no law respecting an
divine. but not entirely new.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
He's putting a purpose-drifree exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of ven spin on the simplest
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- idea : "abstinence, be faithful and condoms" (ABC)ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
to replace the old, hasn'tGovernment for a redress of grievances.
quite-worked approach "safe sex" - with a much
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution more promising strategy for
saving at-risk people in
'
Africa. and everyone else
whose activities are liable to
expose them to HIY.
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 23, the 235th day of 2006.
Truth is, there's nothing
There are I 30 days left in the year.
mysterious about AIDS pre·
Today's Highlight in History:
vention . The ABC approach
On Aug. 23, 1927, Italian-born anarchists Nicola Sacco 1s the one that has shown
and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were executed in Boston for the results.
As
Harvard
murders of two men during a I 920 robbery. (Sacco and researcher Edward C. Green
Vanzetti were vindicated in 1977 by Massachusetts Gov. has phrased it , ''Uganda
Michael S. Dukakis.)
rocked the world of AIDS
On this date:
In 1754, France's King L-ouis XVI was born at Versailles. prevention by promoting
In 1775, Britain's King George Ill proclaimed the 'sticking to one partner' and
American colonies in a state of "open and avowed rebel- delaying the age of first
sex." He wrote earlier this
lion."
In 1914, Japan declared war against Germany in World year: "The broad trend in
Africa is tn fact toward
WarL
In I926, silent film star Rudolph Valentino died in New higher levels of monogamy,
fidelity and abstinence, and
York at age 31.
the
trend in HIV prevalence
In I939, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union signed a
non-aggression treaty in Moscow.
·
is incrementally downward.
In 1944, Romanian prime minister Ion Antonescu was We now sec HI V prevadismissed by King Michael, paving the way for Romania lence · decline 111 Kenya.
to abandon the Axis in favor of the Allies.
Zimbabwe, Senegal and
In 1982, Lebanon's parliament elected Christian militia
leader Bashir Gemayel president (However, Gemayel was
assassinated some three weeks later.)
In 1986, Gennadiy Zakharov, a physicist assigned to the
United Nations, was arrested by the FBI and charged with
espionage. (Zakharov's arrest was followed a week later by
the arrest of American journalist Nicholas Daniloff in the
Soviet Union.)
Ten years ago: President Clinton imposed limits on peddling cigarettes to children as he unveiled Food and Drug
Administration regulations declaring nicotine an addictive
drug. The same day, a jury in Indianapolis found cigarette
companies were not responsible for the lung cancer death
of a 52-year-old lawyer who began smoking at age five ..
Five years ago: California Congressman Gary. Cond1t, .
interviewed by Connie Chung on ABC, dented any
involvement in the disappearance of Charidra Levy. '
Thierry Devaux, a Frenchman using a motor-driven parachute, was arrested after becoming snagged on the Statue
of Liberty in New York Harbor. NATO soldiers streamed
into Macedonia as part of a mission to help end six months
of ethnic hostilities by collecting and destroying rebel
weapons.
One year ago: President Bush said he understood the
anguish of war protester Cindy Sheehan, but said fulfilling
demands like hers for withdrawal from Iraq would weaken
the United States. Israeli forces evicted militant holdouts
from two Jewish settlements, completing a historic withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and part of the West Bank. A
Peruvian airline.r crash-landed in the Amazon jungle,
killing 40 people. Actor Brock Peters died in Los Angeles
at age 78.
Thought for Today: "Man alone can enslave man." Simone Weil, French philosopher (1909-1943).

TODAY IN HISTORY

LET.T ERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

Publist'led e11ery i.rtemoon, Monday
Our main concem in all stories is lo
through Friday, 111 Court Street.
be accurate . If yoJJ ~now of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Svcond·class
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.

992·2156.

Member: The Associated Press and

the Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our mltln number Is
(740) 992·2156.

.
'
Department extensions are:

Po1tme11er: Selid address correc·
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Subscription Rates

News
Editor: Charlene HoeMich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. ·14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Advertising

By carrier or motor route
One month
'10.27
One year
'123.24
Dally
50'
Senior .Citizen rates
One month
'9.24
One year
'103.90
Subscribers showld remit in advance
dired to the Daiiy SentineL No sub·
scription by mall pennitted In areas

Outside Sales; Dave Harris. Ext. 15
Outllde Selea: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 ·where home carrier
ClauJCirc.: Judy Clark, EKt. 1o
at&gt;ta.

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E·mall:

news@ mydailysentinel.com

Web:
www.mydailysen.t1nel.com

servic~

minds, which is why
Church leaders are often
subjected to brutal rhetorical assaults. When AIDS
comes up in elite company.
will
the
discu ssion
Kathryn
inevitably tum to the dane
Lopez
gerous influence of the
Catholic Church, because it
doesn't condone condom
use. One British editorial
earlier
this
summer
probably other African declared, "The Pope should
countries as welL " Seeing a slow the spread of AIDS."
winner, the Bush adminis- The editorial acknowledged
tration has based its own that the Catholic Church
program for AIDS preven- runs "a quarter of the
tion in Africa on thi s ABC world 's AIDS treatment
approach. Green , who .centers," yet still admonknows Rick Warren and his ished it to abide by the
wife, Kay, (and will be commandment "Thou shalt
speaking at their .conference ·not kill" (i.e., embrace conin November). tells me doms or people will die , is
from South Africa that the · their argument).
message
Warren
has
Warren could help change
embraced is the key: "no things: The popular preachsex outside of marriage ... if er claims "a network of tens
both partners follow this. at thousands of churches
we will 'stop AIDS .'"
from all denominations tn
Warren seems to thor- 160 countries." As a preachoughly get that. He talks er, he 's a bit of a teddy bear
" transformation" : - a regular guy who even
about
"That involves saving sex talks about how he's
for marriage, training men uncomfortable pontifical·
to respect women, offering ing. He's a fresh, "kind and
treatment through churches , . gentle face without cenand encouraging individuals turies-as·a-dart-board bagto pledge themselves to one gage. He talks, first and
partner." And while this is foremost, about loving your
an old-school teaching, it neighbor. He's even got a
also has the potential to be friendly acronym for the
revolutionary.
Whether fight " C.H.U . R.C.H .~
you ' re a Kenyan or a Care for and comfort the
Bostonian, that's how real sick; Handle testing and
change happens .
counseling; Unleash a volFolks on all sides of con- unteer' labor force; Remove
tentious issues - especially the stigma; ' Champion
sex
know
that healthy behavior; and Help
Christianity has tremendous with nutrition and medicainfluence on hearts and . tions."

NOT

Cheesy, soft-serve, pop
religion? Maybe . But he's
got his heart in the right
place and has latched onto
the right evidence and isn't
setting out to reinvent the
wheel. Wendy Wright, president of Concerned Women
for America, sees Warren's
,J.tar-power entrance on the
AIDS-prevention scene as
only natural: "When the
glamour 'of AIDS activism
fades and fatigue sets in for
lack of success because of
failed policies, Christians
will still be toiling. It is
likely that they will rise as
the leaders, perhaps because
the pool will become smaller, but mo~e importantly
because they're providing
the solutions that work."
And, working with the
Global Fund for AID~.
Warren seeks to bring government and Hollywood
money along with the faithful on the ABC journey.
You don 't have to sing in
the same theological chorus
as Warren or even buy his
book to give him an
"Amen.". If Warren .can get
Bill Clinton, Angelina Jolie,
Bill Gates and Kofi Annan
cooperating with, say, the
Catholic Church and a myriad of other faith-based servants in doing what works
- changing behavior well, preach it, brother!
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor- of National Review
Online ( www.'flationalreview.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nationalreview.com.)

euDG lNG ...

Is avail-

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'32 .2.6
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
' 127.tt
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
't07.10
52 Weeks
'214.21

August 23,

2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Roadside Hot Spot celebrates grand opening Local Briefs
----~--------------------

Skate-A-Way open house
CHESTER - The closing of the Skate-A-Way roller
rink will be marked by an open house from I to 5 p.m.
on Sunday.
The roller rink has been a Me1gs County institution since
it first opened in March, 1956. It was built by the late
Marion and Porothy Cowdery and their daughter and sonin-law, Marilynn and Bob Trussell.
For many years, bus routes carried skaters from
Rutland, Harrisonville , Racine , Syracuse. Pomeroy,
Middleport and Coolville.
A history of the skating rink will be featured in the
Sunday Times-Sentinel's Along the River section this
·
weekend.

•

AEP. ~dvisory

POMEROY - A booming scrap metal market and the
dramatic increase in wire theft , has AEP Ohio officials
concerned . AEP Ohio is asking customers and the public
to report any suspicious activity near company facilities
to local law enforcement official s and 10 notify the company as welL
"We are see ing an increase in theft of copper, aluminum
and wire conductor from facilitie s across Ohio's service
territory," AEP President and Chief Operating Ofticer
Kevin Walker said. "This creates 'erious safety hazards and
service reliability issues for the company and customers .
We want t&lt;l raise public awareness of the dangers and consequences of this activity. We are also taking action to
apprehend and prosecute the thieves."
Walker said the activity often results in power outages.
endangers employees. Some thieves are cutting into
Submitted photo
energized power line &gt; and ~llher equipment that serves
An all day barbecue and prize drawings greeted a large crowd of well wishers when the Roadside Hot Spot officially opened customers.
its doors on US 33 in Portland, two miles from the Ravenswood, W.Va. bridge. Owned by Terry McNickle and Chris Wolfe ,
The company is deploying new secf1rity technology
the Roadside Hot Spot is a -convenience store, delicatessen and sells all grades of gasoline. "Terry and I guarantee that around its facilities and substations and marking proceour gasoline prices will be. as low as possible: Wolfe said. "We think this end of the county is destined for solid growth dural changes in how it stores wire and equipment not
.and so there's a need for this kind of business.:· The store employs eight people with the hopes of adding more with busi- already in usc.
ness hours from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Pictured at the grand open•ing (from left) Meigs County Commissioners Mick Davenport,
Jim Sheets, Wolfe, McNickle, Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle.

Benefit gospel sing

Southern
from PageA1
University in Clarksburg,
W.Va. in 2003.
Though he has only
worked in the district for
one year, Miller has 10
years of .classroom experience, a year as special education director, and a year as
high school principaL He
also has three years experience as an athletic director
and eight years experience
coaching at various levels
including head varsity baseball and softball. He's also
worked local teachers'
unions and as a mentor for
entry year teachers.
"The experiences which I
have gained as principal last
year are invaluable," Miller

explained. "I had the opportul)ity to work with members of the staff and community. I have developed
many relationships that will
be crucial to our district's
successes in the future." ·
Married to his wife
Kelley for II years, the couple have a son, Tyler, who is
nine and will be entering the
fourth grade, and a daughter. Brooklyn, who is six
and will be entering the first
grade. Both attend Southern
Elementary. . The family
resides in Syracuse.
"My children attend school
at the elementary, and I live
in the district," Miller said. "I
truly care about the students,
teachers, and community
members of the Southern
Local School District."
As superintendent Miller
. has identified the following
challenges facing the dis-

POMEROY - A benefit gospel sing will be held at 6
trict: The transition for .staff nity members whom he says
and students in regard to the . have already begun to work p.m. this Friday at Laurel Cliff Fr~e Methodist Church to
new administrative team; to make the new ·":hool year benefit the Third Annual Fall Harve st Gospel Sing Oct. 2021 in Rutland at the civic center. Featured singers for
new schedules at the ele- a success.
mentary and high school;
"We have to take ' pride' Friday's sing include Dan Hayman and Country
·
and The Financial Planning in our school, our work. and Hymntimers.
our achievements,'" Miller
Supervision Co!flmission.
Despite the issues Miller added. "The motto for the
is excited about his job and Southern Local School
the future of Southern Local District is 'Southern Pride.'
CHESTER- A bluegrass style gospel sing will be held
Schools.
We must all work together
"The future is bright and and take pride in our most at 10 a.m. this Sunday at the Chester Church of the
feature Just For Now.
it is a great time to be a 'tor- precious resource, the stu- Nazarene. The sing will
'
.
nado.'" Miller said. "The dents of Southern LocaL"
attitude has changed and so
Approximately 715 stuhas the belief systems. The dents are enrolled in the disstaff can't wait for school to trict thi s fall with 215 at the
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Church of Christ
start. We have an 'effective' high school and 500 at the will once again hold a free community dinner from 4:30high school for the first time elementary.
6:15 p.m . this Friday at its Family Life Center. Some
in school history. The dis''We may be a ·small dis- ·S(hool supplies and clothing will be given away along
trict will build from the suc- trict' when compared with with the dinner.
cess of last year so we may other Ohio districts by
become even more success- enrollment figures, but the
ful this year."
heart, desire, and pride
Miller is also pleased to makes us one of the largest
work with the local school and strongest districts in the
board, teachers .and commu- state," Miller said.

Gospel sing

Free community dinner

For the Record

Fair

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Police Department
received a complaint from .Roger Manley of Manley 's
Recycling and Storage that several storage units had been
broken into. Locks were pried off the doors. A Coleman
generator was reported missing.

.from Page A1

•

..

."WE WILL NOT
LEAVE IRAQ

I brake for jun~
Over the years, we've all
collected stuff that we are
ashamed to have in the
house. St)Jff that is too ugly
to keep, too expensive to
throw out - unfortunate
Christmas presents, out-ofdate furniture , wide paisley
ties we thought might come
back into fashion. So what
should we do With it? Take
it to the landfi II 0 Drop it off
at the Goodwill? Make a
trip 'to the recycling center?
Not a chance.
We'll spread it out on the
front lawn, put prices on it
and have a lawn sale.
It sounds like such a good
idea. A way to get rid of 6pound wooden tennis rackets, dented chafing dishes,
old, vinyl Carpenters '
albums , eight-track tapes,
battered recliners , fondue
pots that have never been
used, Dictaphones, coolers
in the shape of giant beer
cans; · beat-up copie., of
"Jonathan
Livingston
Seagull"; embroidered linen
pillowcases and stacks of
" Reader 's
· Digest
Condensed Books."
Unfonunately, it is the
exact same junk all our
neighbors are trying to get

~ednesday,

Investigation

UNTIL THEJOS
IS DONE. '1 · ·.-

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should .be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address .a nd telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be pubhshed. Letters should be m
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication. ·

Correction Polley

~ednesday,August23,2006

AIDS prevention? Simple as ABC

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Reader Services

PageA4

just have one 0 Or do spoons
in a dishwasher disappear
like socks in a dryer'
A cross-country ski exercise machine for $50. They
twisted their ankle trying to
Jim
learn
how to use it the day
Mullen
it arriveo and then gained 2 ·
pounds coiwalescing. Here
it is oUt in the front yard,
making them feel guilty
rid of. That's why lawn every time they look at it.
sales are held on the week- "'Buy me," it says, "gel me
end, so the entire mess out of their life.''
won't be confused for
Lawn sales are full of
garbage and accidentally kitchen gadgets that are so
collected.
specific no one ever uses
Me , I don"t just have them. A left-handed, deeplawn sales, I visit them. I fat, frog-leg fryer. A waffle
don 't go because I think I iron in the shape of Paul
will fittd an original copy of Prudhomme. A kiwi peeler
the
Declaration
of · - still in the box . "Grill
Independence
hidden Fish In Your Hotel Room
behind a $2 picture of dogs With the 'Fry It and Forget
playing poker, I stop !tl'" Where do these people
because I'm a s1ioop. stay? Motel 666' I don't
There' s nothing like pawing ever want to be in the room
through a table full of per- next to them.
son a! effects in the hot sun
Wooden skis and wheel ·
to leam how your neighbors chairs that were old in
spend their time, and how FDR 's
day,
h11rricane .
they spend their money. lamps. roller skates, TV
Junk on a folding table in tray tables, baby clothes.
the driveway speaks to me. You rarely find good colOne silver teaspoon . Did lectibles at the yard sales
someone steal . the other · selling baby's clothes. You
seven or did you always can either have children or
\

you can have nice things as
my mother used to tell us
all the. time. The fact that I
had seven brothers and sisters probably had something to do with it, too, but
it's not the kind of thing a
6-year-old would say back
to his mom.
Golf clubs. There are
always golf clubs at yard
sales. I saw a beautifully
balanced putter at one, the
lady running the show said
I could have it for a quarter.
I told her that brand new it
probably .cost $120. She
said she was glad it made
me happy, "because it never
made Hank happy."
"He doesn't play any

great and had good attendance. He also noted that
the Little Big Town performance was a "sell-out" filling the grandstand and
almost all of the reserved
.seating on the race track.
Other things were down
this year, like the sale of
inside and outside commercial space, the number
of performers on the Dew
Zone (hillside) stage, and
even the number of
exhibitors . All but three of
the I 35 camping spots
were taken this year. There
was little change in the
number of season tickets
sold, they reported.
Jim Watsoa commented
that we need to focus on the
good things which happened this year and begin to
look to changes and
improvements for next year.
He also noted that while the
heat may have kept some
away from the fair, it didn' t
stop Walt Manley, 93, who
annually travels the fairgrounds collecting cans to .
be sold with the proceeds to
go into a fund for the
Shriners Burn Hospital. " He
was at the fair every day and
even Sunday as exhibits
were being removed and the
rides were being tgrn
down," added Buckley.
As for the rides this year,
Board president Ed Holter
said losing the services of

'Fiddler'
from PageA1

Cha~eno

Bates Bros. Entcnainmcnt Fair. He also explained that
to another fair in another Tolve's emphasis has been
state created problem s late on smaller events, like street
in the season. "It meant that carnivals, and that the owner
we had to hunt aro111ld to is just now moving into fairs
find a new company to pro- and larger festival s.
vide the ride's,''
Holter did emphasis that
The new company booked all of the rides were safe and
for the fair was Tolve of had been inspected · by a
N~w krsey . which brought
state ride inspector and cerin 14 rides . There was no titled safe before the rides
ferris
wheel,
Holter
explained, because it was in
a state of being refurbished
and didn ' t get finished in
time for the Meigs County

siezed. Smith estimated the
value of the plants siezed at
over $500,000.
Growing
equipment ,
from PageA1
including light s, carbon
dioxide tanks, blowers. air
Deputy Rick Smith said conditioners and other evihe and fellow ofllcers siezed dence was abo sieLed .
33 large plants from the According to Smith, receipts ·
downstairs growing room, for some piece s of the
and 79 smaller cloned plants equipment place its value in
from the upstairs room. A the thousands of dollars.
large quantity of dried,
Huffman, a California
bagged marijuana apparent- native , has a prior record of
ly prepared for sale was also drug offenses, Smith said.

Probe

Hoeflich/ photo

Meigs County Fair Board members Jtm Watson, Ken Buckley and Ed Holter. left to nght,
review the final figures from the 2006 fair and discuss changes and improvements to be
made before next year's fair.
·

more?~'

''Not so much since he
died."
"Oh, J'm sorry."
"I'm not ," she said.
I. asked Sue if she'd sell
my golf stuff after I died.
"Jim, what makes you
think I'll wait that long?"
(Jim Mullen is the aurhor
of ':It Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating the Simple
Life" and "Baby 's First
Tattoo. " You can reach him
at,jim_mul/en@myway.com)

ences around the world with
its humor, warmth and honesty. It's universal theme of
tradition cuts across barriers
of race, class, nationaiity
and religion . leaving audi:
ences crying tears of laughter, joy and sadness.

opened on Monday.
As for next year. the
Board is already looking to
changes and improvements.
Some thought is being given
to introducing tough truck
competition, to . making
some changes in the bicycle
give-away program. and to
introducing more entertainment on the hillside stage.

Gosp~lSing
Bluegrass Style

Sunday, August 27th 10 AM

Meanwhile ,
Anatevka
itself is under threat The
Jews are being forced to
leave their homes and many
of them decide to go to live
in America where many of
them have friends and· relations. Tbat is to where
Tevye and Golde and the
two youngest children are to
go. Motel and Tzeitel,
Tyvey's daughters who now
have a child of their own ,
will join them.
Rich in histo rical and ethnic detail. "Fiddler On The
Roof ' ha s touched aud i-

,AruEL
ESTABLISHED 1895

Tilt Ariel Summer Thratre Presenls

·SHOWBOAT
Aug. 25 &amp; 26 8 PM Nightly
www.arieltheatre.org
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS (27871

,

9 out of 10
hearing aid
users report
·improvement
in their
quality of life.

Q~
, TY
~' .

. e

. I

'

How good is your quality of life?

..

Call today for an appointment
and complimentary demo.
499 Richland Ave., Athens, OH 45701
l

\

.

Morning Service
F.eaturing:
Just For Now

740-594-6333
' or

Chester Nazarene Church

Jt.

1·800~451 ~9806

Chester, OH

1':

"

•

~:

~·

·;

'.

�· The Daili Sentinel

PageA6

REGIONAL

)Vednesday,August23,2006

Local Weather
Today's Forecast
Forecast for Wednesday, Aug. 23

PageA7

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Augu!;)t 23, 2006

Junior Fair pet show winners
City/Region
Hrgh I Low temps

Winners in the recent
Junior Fair Pet Show
are as follows, front
row (from left) Brayden
Kopec for best rodent
with hamster Nibbles,
Jake and Jordan Roush
with third place best
dressed animal Pixie,
Naomi Hoffman best
miscellaneous animal
with her ferret Bear,
Chelsea Holter with
second place best
dressed animal with
dog Flash, Zach
Connolly for best dog
and most talented with
dog Harley; second
row (from left) Kiki
Osborne with first
place best dressed
animal Maple thll
bunny, Maryanne Reed
and Cookie the cat
which won for best cat.

Youngstown •

6---..

Mansfield •

F' A:.~

L___')

79' I 53'

Dayton• ~
~

77' 154'

v~

*Columbus

84' 157'

CINI!teno Hoeftlch/photo
Brian Schott and .Steve Bird race down the track in ATV drag
racing Saturday at the Meigs County Fair in the 500 cc 2
and 4 stroke with Schott taking first, and Bird coming in for
a close second.

83"1 58'

Ill

Cincinnati
• 86' I 57" .

v~ .Portsmouth •

Submitted photos
The VFW Ladies Auxiliary to Post 9926 officers for 2006·07 are, front row from· left, Garnett Varian, patriotic instructor;
Sherry Weaver, secretary; Rose Cummings, president; Wanda Imboden, chaplain; and back row. Judy Caruthers, junior vice
president and historian: Sue Roush, senior vice president; Jeannie Lobje, trustee: Donna Hall, treasurer; Carol McDaniel,
trustee. Not pictured is Patty Clendenin, conductress .and trustee ..

"A', ·{f!, . ' ,

86' 156'

·@

2006 Wunderground.

Ladies auxiliary honors life members
MASON, W.Va. - The
VFW Ladies Auxiliary to
Post 9926 of Mason presented Life Membership to
members Connie Enslen
and Marylin Leiper, at lhe
Aug. 15 meeting.
The VFW National Home
for Children is a non-profit,
private child· care agency.
The home provides support
for the children and families
of past and present service-·
men and women. The
National . Home provides a
long-term
program
designed for children who
come to the home without
their parents.
A short-term: goal-oriented prpgram is also available
for . sing parents and their
dependent children to
regain self-sufticiency.
The
VFW
Ladies
Auxiliary to Post 9926 bf
Mason also announced the
officers fo.r 2006-07. They
are Garnett Varian , patriotic
instrudor;
Sherry
Weaver, secretary; Rose
Cummings,
president;
Wanda Imboden, chaplain;

Weather Underground • AP

Wednesday .•. M os tl y
sumiy. Hi ghs in the mid 80s.
Light
and
variable
winds .... Becoming
north
around 5 mph in the afternoon.
Wednesday night ... Mostlv
clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
North winds around 5 mph.
Thursday ... Mo s tly
sunny. Highs in the mid 80s.
North winds around 5 mph.
Thursday
night
through
Friday
night ... Mostly clear. Hot.
Lows in the lower 60s.

Local Stocks
From left, Connie Enslen and Marylin Leiper recently received Life Memberships from VFW
Ladies Auxiliary President Rose .Cummings and Judy Caruthers, junior vice president and
National Home chairm;m.
Judy Caruthers, junior vice
president and historian;
Sue Roush , senior vice

president; Jeannie Lobie,
trustee; Donna Hall, treasurer; Carol McDaniel.

trustee. Absent were Patty
Clendenin,
conductress
and trustee.

Students graduate from School of Radiology
MARIETTA
The
School of Radiologic
Technology, sponsored by
Marietta Memorial Hospital
and in. affiliation with
Washington
State
Community
College
(WSCC), Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital and .St.
Joseph's Hospital, held its
2006 graduation ceremony
on Friday, Aug. II at
Graham Auditorium un the
WSCC campus.
Graduates have completed two years of full time
didactic classes and dinica:J experiences. demonstrating and documenting
knowledge, competence
and proficiency in the art
and science of Radiologic
Technology.
Didactic
classes were held at
WSCC, and each graduate
completed supervised cl inical experi!!nces and evaluations in the Radiology
Departments at Marietta
Memorial
Hospital ,
Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital and St. Joseph's
Hospital.
Eighteen
students
received the hospital 's
Certificate of Completion
of the accredited program
which allows them to sit
for the American Registry
of
Radiologic
Technologists certification
exam
to
become
a
Registered
Radiologic
Technologi sts [R ."J'. (R)].
They will also receive the
Associate of Applied
Science lA.A.S.j degree in
Radiologic
Technology
from WSCC for completion of the hospital 's certificate award requiremen ts
plus the optional additional
courses required for the
degree .
Graduates are qualified to
perform diagnostic radi ographic procedures and
may pursue additional training
in
Compu ted
Tomography
(CT.),
Magnetic
Resonance
Imaging
(M R.I. ),
Mammography, Nuclear
Medi cine . Oncology and
'

.

Highs around 90.
Saturday... Partly cloudy.
Hot with highs around 90.
Saturday night ... Partly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent. ·
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of shower&gt;
atid thunderstorms: Highs in
the upper 80s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Sunday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Low s in the mid
60s.

Included in •
the 18 graduates from the
School of
Radiologic
Technicology,
Marietta
Memorial
Hospital, was
Brandon
Ramsburg of
Middleport.
Submitted photo

ACI- 35.72
AEP-36.49
Akzo- 56.21
Ashland Inc. - 62.54
BIG -18.30
Bob Evans - 27.27
BorgWarner- 56.72
CENX - · 33.86
Champion- 7.43
Charming Shops - 12.23
City Holding - 38.71
Col-· 53.04
DG -12.63
DuPont- 39.74
Federal Mogul - .36
USB- 32.42
Gannett - 54.92
General Electric -33.96
GKNLY- 5.70
Harley Davidson - 58.641
JPM- 45.35
Kroger - 2.3.01

Ltd.- 25.76
NSC- 42.72
Oak Hill Financial 24.64
OVB -25.25
BBT- 42.93
Peoples - 29.55
Pepsico - 63.74
Premier - 14.35
Rockwell - 60.51
Rocky Boots - 11.05
Sears- 141.68
Wai-Mart - 44.07
Wendy's - 61.70
Worthington - 19.99
Daily stpck reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes.:
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by :
Smith Financial Advisors
of Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.
·

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

Dr. Kely K. )1tes Heatfcb
C'hi ropmcwr of the year

CHIROPRACTOR

I ')(J~

V.P. WV Chiropractic
Sll\.'IC\~

Memher of Amcra:~n

Auto Accidents
Worker's Compensation
• Sp~tn~ lniune"
• Medk:trc

Board of f't1 ren~ir
Profe~~ional!&gt;

20 )' r ~

• Moot lnsuroncc'
• Same diiYappL

316 Washington St

Ultrasound.
Individuals honored at the
graduation
cs:remony
include : Heather Farley,
Jennifer Ketelsen, Erica
Petty . and
Stephanie
Sullivan of Belpre; Stacy
Gillian of Coolville; John
Gebczy k of Marietta; Sara ·
Hoon of · Cutler; Misty
Viricem;
Nichol s, of
Brandon Ramsburg of
Middleport:
Kimberly
Queen · of Mineral Wells,
W.Va .; Michael Gaines,
Trista Kelley and Nathan
Walton of Parkersburg,
W.Va.: Nicole Armiger and
Jay Laverack of Vien~a.
W.Va.; Andrea Jones of
Walker,
W.Va.:
Erin
Rutherford of Washington,
W.Va.; and Alicia Morris of
Waverly, W.Va ..
The program accepts
applications for student
se lection from Dec . I
through Feb. 15 each year.
Selected students begin
courses
in
tech nica l
September and follow the
WSCC calendar. Program
informatiorial packets are
available upon request
from WSCC.

ALFRED - Osie Follrod
presented the program
"Between the Devil and the
Deep Red Sea," and Thelma
Henderson the mission
report, "Envisioning the
Future," at the recent meeting of the Alfred United
Methodist Women.
"Envisioning the Future,"
by Kyung Za Yim, president
of the Women's Division of
the
United Methodist
General Board of Global
Ministries, is the organization's theme in 2005 arid
into 2006. The question
was, "How can United
Methodist women be in
mission in ways relevant to
our times?"
From the meeting, they
learned to be willing ' to
change and be change
agents, because times have
changed, welcomed new
staff leadership, brought

Cubed Steak

Bacon

School Pizza

Ends &amp; Pieces

s

s 29
Lb.

Hot Dogs
Mr. Bee

Potato ·Chips

Green Peak

Bob Evans

Chicken Breast

s

89!
A&amp;W, Root Beer

· a~nanas

88

24 pk.
12 oz can

700 East Main Street • PO.MEROV, OHIO • 740-992-5252
STORE HOURS Mon. Thurs. Sun. 7 am • 10 pm • 7 Days A Week

CLI~IC

MediGJI Excellence.
Everywhere

31b.bag

· Fresh
Del Monte

Powell's

Local Caring·

99

R.C, Diet Rite,
Sunkist Orange,

10·11 oz.

HOLZEH

12 ct. pkg.

Cen Sea Cooked

Pork Spareribs Frozen Boneless

s

2/S

Pediatrics Department from the MetroHealth Medical Center. in
Claveland. Ohio, where he served as Chief Resident. Dr. Neely
received his Medical Degree from Case Western Reserve
University in Cleveland. Ohio and completed his Residency at
MetroHealth Medical Center. tn addition, Dr. Neely has completed
his Master of Public Health from Case Western Reserve University
Dr. Neely is Board Eligible and is a member of the American Academy
Pediatrics.

99
0 LB. BOX

12 oz. pkg.

'"u'"'Y· MO, MPH also recently joined the Holzer Clinic

Caryl Kimbler. .
.
Ruth · Brooks furnished .
frames for the certificates
the group received for
Mission Today, Five-Star
Giving and for being a Gold
Unit. The group was
encouraged to atten·d the
meeting,
"Resurrection
Women: A Spiritual Growth
Retreat," April 27-28, 2006
in Columbus.
The group made a donation to the McCurdy School
for a pre-school class.
The . group discussed a
writing campaign with letters to be sent to senators.
Topics included were support of immigant's rights, ·
smoke-free environment,'
the selling of water and
plastic bottles. global warning and raising the minimum wage.
The next meeting will be
Sept. 12 .

Ground Beef
Sirloin

0

She received her Medical Degree from the Marshall University
of Medicine in Huntington, WV and completed her Pediatric
IRer;idency at Geisinge&lt;.Health System in Danville. Pennsylvania.
. Cappelletti is Board Eligible and is a member of the American
IAc.~demy of Pediatrics.

do the fighting. ''Red Seas"
open and close at the
Lord's command, no one
else's : God will deliver us
from our predicaments, but
according to his purpose
for our lives.
Pastor Jane · Beattie had
prayer before the mea)."
served by Helen Wolf. Ten
members were present.
Mary Jo · Barringer, president, opened the meeting
with prayer, and the group
read the UMW Purpose.
The secretary's report was
read and I 02 friendship
calls were reported. Osie
Follrod gave the treasurer's report.
Members
signed
a
prayer calendar birthday
card for Sarah Har.kness of
Salem, Ore., who is in
evangelism/church community development. A
card was also signed for

Tony's Pepperoni ·

SuperiorsRavenswood, WV

together new strategies for
-developing leaders among
women in this country and
internationally, creat an
online community through
which existing members,
new members and especially younger women en find
expanded ways to participate in missions.
Follrod's program was
based on Exodus 14. She
described the worship center and had prayer to open
the program. She and the
group read about Moses ·
and the Israelites caught
between the Red Sea and
P~aroah's pursuing army.
Four timeless principles
are suggested in Exodus
14: It takes tight places to
break lifetime habits.
When hemmed in on all
sides, the only place to
look is up. If the Lord is to
get the glory, then He must

· Smithfield

t\cupllnl·turc

O•nlelle T. Cappelletti, MO recently joined the Holzer Clinic Pediatrrcs

Gallipolis (740)446-5371 Meigs (740)992-0060
·Jackson (740)395-8805 Pt. Pleasant (304)675-4498

UMW discuss missions objectives

USDA Beef

~xpcri~ n ~~

Whether your kids get sick O( simply need a well-check. Holzer Clinic has 1t
Pediatricians available 7 days a week, 365 days a year to care for them. That
way, your tiHte ones can grow up healthy and achieve their dreams.

Dr. Cappelletti and Dr Neely are both accepting new patients. They are seeing
J)lltients in Gallrpolis, Jackson. Meigs, and Pt Pleasant

Submttted photo

USDA Family Pack,

We're luept~ !jOUr R.t~.s ne~LtVt!j, .so ~ne!j
c~""' etcVIteve tVtetr ~reetvtA...s ...
De1&gt;artmer~t.

Villers, fourth.
Class 7, 500 cc 4 stroke:
· Travis Brotherton, first; ·
Byron Meeks, second;
David Kinney, third; and
Larry Hendershot, fourth.
Class 8, 800 cc 4 stroke,
single or twin cylinder:
Clayton Long, first; Davis
Kinney, second; Travis
Brotherton, third, and Jason
Dillon, fourth.
Class 9, 300 cc 2 stroke:
Shane Circle, first; Aaron
McCown, second; Kent
Varney, third, and Braxton
·
Thorla, fourth.
Class I0, 360 cc 2 stroke:
Brian Schott, first; Shane
Circle,
second;
Kent
Varney, third; and . Ryan
Hitt, fourth.
Class II, 500 cc 2 and 4
stroke: Brian Schott, first;
Steve Bird, second; Gary
Johnson, third, and Josh
Jenkins, fourth.
Class 12, 750 cc open:
Brian Schott, first; Josh
Jenkins, second; Steve Bird,
third; and Clayton Long,
fourth .
.
Class 13. 1500 cc open:
first , Brian Schott, first;
Josh Jenkins, second; Gary
Johnson, third; and Cody
Brightwell, fourth.

SAVINGS

Mcmht•r of Amcr1c~n
Ac aJ~my of Mcdkal

·• Al'upunct\Jre

=304-273-5321

· POMEROY -· Winners
in the ATV drag racing program at the Meigs County
Fair
Saturday
were
announced today.
They are as follows:
Class 0, I 00 cc youth
motorcycle: Jason ·Warner,
first; Travis Mitchell, second.
Class I, I00 cc youth :
Paige Griffith, first; Ethan
Casto, · second, Tanner
Thor Ia, third, .and Jala
Mace, fourth .
Class 2. Powder Puff: Jodi
Eddy, first; Cindy Bird, second; Peggy Winter, third;
and Gillian Wilt, fourth.
Class 3,· stock utility 4
stoke: Curt Smith, first ;
Trevor Shafer, second;
Adam Corn, third, and Eric
Spencer, fourth .•
Class 4, sport utility: Curt
Smith, first; Shawn Corn,
second; Chad Nelson, third,
and Eric Spencer, fourth.
Class 5, 360 cc 4 stroke:
Larry Winter, first; Darrin
Seevers, second; Craig
Coultrap, third, and Adam
Lavender, fourth .
Class 6, 416 cc 4 stroke:
David Kinney, first; Larry
Hendershot, second; Adam
Rowan, third, and Robby

••

3/S

Lb.

DOUBLE COUPONS: We will
double face valoe on
Manufacturers Coupons of 50rt or
less . No Cigarettes or Tobacco,
Single Coupons on this weeks
advertised items . Double Coupon

s

Shrimp
41-50 ct

99
1 Lb.

Little Debbie Sandwich
Crackers, Brownies, Nutty
Bars, Swiss Rolls, Honey
Buns or Oatmeal Creme
Pies

10/S
We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities On
Advertised Items
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS

WE ACCEPT: VISA, MASTER CARD, DISCOVER AND BANK
DEBIT CARDS • FOOD STAMP CARDS AND WIC VOUCHERS
(In applicable states)
Visit Us At www.foodfalrmarkets.com
)

�•

Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

'

~.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday,August23,20o6

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Royals crown Tribe, Page B2

Pirates rally past Braves, Page B3
Jones shocked by positive test. Page B4

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

United States topples
Slovenia, 114-95
BY BRIAN MAHONEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LocAL SCHEDULE
Sept. I
Atr.ens

POMEAOV- A schedule of upcoming ccilleQ6
and hilt! sch001118.rsity sporting evenls invol'tiing
learns from GaHta, Meigs and Ma.sor:J counties.

Today's qamas

Golf

SAPPORO, Japan
LeA ron James and the rest
. of the U.S. starters ;vere.
yanked less than halfway
through the first quarter.
. They hadn't done anything wrong; it was just time
for the second team to come
in.
That one was better than
Slovenia, too.
Using both units to wear
down and outrun the
Slovenians, the Americans
rolled to a 114-95 victory
Tuesday, remaining unbeaten and clinching a spot in
the round of 16 at the world
championships. ·
"It seems to favor our

team," Elton Brand saiu.
"You don 't have to pace
yourself at all because you
know you're going to get a
certain amount of minutes .
You know you're going to
be in there, and you know
you're going to play. So
once-- you're out there, you
play hard, and you can try to ·
wear down teams."
Dwyane Wade scored 20
points for the U.S . team (30), which plays Italy, al so
unbeaten in Group D. on
Wednesday. James added 19
in hi s most impre&gt;sive performance of the tournament.
James, Carmelo Anthony,
Dwight Howard, Chris Paul
and Shane Battier started the

Please see Topples, Bl

AP photo

USA's Shane Battier, below, battles for-a loose ball with Slovenia's Uros Slokar during their
first round game at the world basketball championships Tuesday in Sapporo, Japan.

Gallia Academy at Jackson , 4:30p.m.
TVC Ohio at Franklin Valley. 4:30p.m.
Tburaday)

Colts'
Simon
undergoes
knee
surgery

game~

· Soccer

•

Alexander at ,Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
OVCS at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Golf

South Galiia at POint Pleasant. 8:30a.m.
TVC Hocking at Southern, 4:30p.m.
Wahama at Ripley, 4 p.m
·

Sept. I
lit Rlwer

Fddqy's games
Footba.ll

Gallia Academy at Sheridan, 7:30 p.m.
Ripley at Point Pleasant 7:30 p.m.
Hannan at South Gallia, 7:30p.m.

Oak Hill at,Meigs, 7:30p.m
Wahama at Waterford, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Southeastern, 7.30 p m
Eastern at Alexandfr, 7:30p.m
Southern at Symmes Valley, 7:30p.m.

.

BY THE AssociATED

Volleyball
Cross Lanes Christian at OVCS, 5 p.m.

PRESS

Indianapolis defensive
. tackle Corey Simon is likely
to miss. a couple of more
weeks after having arthro:
Saturday's games
scopic surgery on his
Soccer
Jackson at Gllia Academy, 1 p.m.
injured
NICholas COunty at Point Pleasant, 1
left knee,
. p.m. ·
but was
Girts Soccer
•• f
' ••
Nicholas County at Poinl Pleasant, · 3
hopefu I
. ...
p.m.
he could
Cross Country
return for
Raider .Early Bird Invitational. "g a.m·.
the Colts'
Monday. AugYJ1.28
reg u I ar Volleyball
season
Athens at River Valley, 5 p.m.
opener.
Gallia Academy at Minford, 6 p.m.
Oak Hill at South Ge.JIIa, 5:30 p.m.
Notebook
"It was
Belpre at Eastern, 6 p.m,
just that ,
OVCS at Fairland, 5:30p.m. ·
'after
the
second
opi~ion,
we
Soccer
Ironton St. Joe at OVCS. 4:30 p.m.
thought it was best to go
Goff
that way,'' he said. "So we
Gallia Academy, River Valley, South .
took care of it."
Gallia, Floint Pleasant at Cliffsl~e. 4:30
p.m.
Simon liasn't practiced
TVC Ohio at FairgMens, 4:30p.m
since banging his knee Aug.
4.
AP photo
Coach Tony Dungy had
Cincinnati Reds' Scott Hatteberg, center, is congratulated by Ryan Freel (6) and Kyle Lohse, . right, after Hatteberg hit a onlv said that the Colts were
SPORTS BRIEFS
three-run home run off Houston Astros pitcher Jason Hursh 10 the second inning of a basebal l game Tuesday in Cincinnati. c:ot1sidering surgery for the
Catcher Brad Ausmus is behind.
former Pro Bowl defensive
tackle who signed a fiveyear deal last September.
At 300 pounds, Simon is
the biggest player on a
defensive line that is underGALLIROLIS
BY JOE KAY
·
Valley
Publishing- is Ohio
cur· vtctory
an d h"IS b"1ggest ova- reached the World Ser"tes t'or a b ou t . tl 1e 6 - foo t- 8 , ?50
_ , sized bv most. NFL stanrently seeking stringers to
·AssociATED PREss
tions since arrivitJg in a July the first time last season and pound Hirsh: He's big and
dards. known as a run ·
h 00 1 t
Jl trade with the Twins:
got swept· by ihe Chicago throws hard. Hirsh learned
helf cover hi~h sc
ootCINCINNATJ - Adam · After rallying in the eighth White Sox. Houston started the hard way what happen s &gt;tuffer. Simon is expected to
play a major - role in
batunderstanding
games thts faiL of the
·
ou· nn 's tht·c·e·t"Ltn hotner ·mmng
·
1·or a 4 -3 vtctory
·
· th•'~ s··cas·on 19-9, Otlly · to w hen a p1"t c I1er ma kes tm;·,.
111
ltldianapoli &gt;'
defensive
game of football,. passable completed an eight-run third the series opener, the Red' come apart.
takes· in the majors' most
tackle rotation that also
writing skills, ability to inning Tuesday night that got this one in hand -early by
The Astros have lost nine homer-friendly ballpark. .
includes Mo ntae Reagor
Brandon Phillips hit a solo
keep accurate statistics and swept the Cincinnati Reds to taking advantage of rookie of their last II. tumbling to a
and Raheem Brock, a conbaste computer word pro- their fourth straight victory, right-hander Jason Hirsh ( 1- season-low eight games homer iri the second, and
vened defen sive end who is
cessing skills are required.
14-0 over the
fading 2), rocked in his third big- . under .500 at 59-67. The lat- Hatteherg's three -run shot .
moving full-time to tackle
.league appearance.
e~t loss was their worst since made it 4-0. The Reds then
No travel outside the tri' Houston Astros . ·
this season.
county area (Gallia, Meigs.
Cincinnati hit four homers
Dunn started the third with an 18-3 defeat at Texas on chased him in the third by
Simon plans to sit out
Mason) will be necessary in all - Scott Hatteberg also a single off Hirsh and tin , May 21 last season.
stringing together five h,its Saturuay
against · New
for this temporary position.
had a three-run shot-. in its ished it with his 38th homer ·Cincinnati has dominated and a pair of walks. Hirsh
Orleans and if he misses the
All . those
interested most lopsided victory of the deep into the right-field the defending NL cham pi - retired only seven of the 21
preseaso n finale Sept. I
should
contact
Brad seaso n.
· stands off Dave Borkowski. ons, going 9-2 this season. · batters he faced. and threw again st Cincinnati, it would
The Reds are on their best Hirsh, a second-round draft Two of the · wins have been 80 pitches - only 44 strikes
. Sherman, OVP Sports
the seco nd straight
Editor, at (740) 446-2342 surge since they won their pick in June 2003 , gave up by II and 13 runs .
- in his brief stint.
year h e\ mi ssed the entire
ext. 33. If there is no first four games after the 10 runs in only 2 2-3
The only bri ght spot for
David Ross also homered preseason. T~e Colts first
answer, leave a message 1 All-Star break , a spurt that innings. · ·
.Housto n was Willy Taveras' off Borkow ski . . making it regular season game js
along with your contact I. has kept them in front of the
The eight-run
inning infield single in the third 13 -0 in. the fourth. Both , against the New York
information.
,·
·j. pack of NL wild-card con- matched
Cincinnati's · inning, wl1ich extended hi s teams started substituting Giants on Sept. I 0.
biggest · of the season - it ' hitting streak to 25 games liberally after the inning.
Writing samples can bee- tenders.
Panthers
mailed
to
Right-hander Kyle Lohs~ also had one durin g a 10·5 and mat ched Jeff Kent's
Lohse's three hils were
Steve Smith missed pracbsherman@ mydailytri- (1·0) gave up four hits in win in Atlanta on July 7.
club record from 2004.
.one shy of his. career total tice again Tuesday. this time
bune.com; faxed to 1-740- eight innings and had three
II was another demoralizComing into the game, the
Please see NFL, Bl
446-3008; or dropped off at "of his own. gelling his first ing loss for the Astros, who Reds knew only two things
Please see Blasts, Bl
one of our three location's:
Gallipolis (825 3rd Ave.),
Point l'lellsant (200 Main ·
St.) and Pomeroy (Ill
Court St.).
Soccer

Cross Lanes Christian at OVCS,
p.m.

s:ts

..........
.. ...
•

Sept. n
Fafrtand

Sept. 21

Millston

OcLI

Nelsonville-York

. OcL IS

· ~~t Aleunder

OVPseeks
football writers

Cincinnati blast Houston,.14-0 ·

mark

OcL20
lit VInton County

ComAcrUs
OVP Scoreline

Rockets rise above
Raiders, Blue Devils
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALl[RS@MY DAI l YTRI BUN E.COM

(5 p.m.-1 a.m.)

GALLIPOLIS Both
River Valley and Gallia
Fax- 1·740·446·3008
Academy had the home
· E-mail- sports@mydailysentinel.com
course advantage.
, ~Jl!li:!Li&gt;lt.tl
Wellston wasn't much of a
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor gracious guest.
(740) 446·2342. o.t 33
The - visiting
Golden.
bsherman@ mydailytribune .com
. Rockets, behind a team tally
of I73. took top honors
Bryan Yi&amp;lters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext 23
Tuesday at Cliffside Golf
bwalters@ mydailytribune.com •
Club in a tri-match ·against
the Raiders and Blue Devils :
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
WHS , which wa s four(740) 446·2342, ext 33
Ierum@ mydaityreglster.com
strokes better than RVHS,
1-740-446·2342 ext. 33

I

was
paced by
Andy
Derrow's round ol 40. while
Todd Kisor and LB. Wilson
firec;l rounds of 43 and 44
r~spectivdy. Casey Molihan
concluded Wellston 's scoring with a 4&amp;.
River Valley, which fired a
team score of 177, was led
tJy senior Ju sti'n r\olan's
medalist round of 17. Nolan
finished the day nne-Dver
par and was the only participant. to shoot a score under
40.

Please see Rise, 84

Autos ·
Motorcycles.
Recreational Vehicles
Boats
ATVs
Farm Tractors
·, 1

··--~

•

Great Rates -llwesome Terms · Fast Service

(Fa )Far ma-s
_ ·e.eu~

wwwJb.H. (.t,lrf!

_,_.,.._

·Pomeroy 991-1136
·Tuppe rs flla1ns 985· 3385
'G,,lllpolls H6·BANK

'Mason 77l-6400
*Polr1t·PJeasant 6 74--8200

,. "

,_,, .. i. ,'

'

'

'i'

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Kr
KANSAs

1S3S
CITY.

City crowns Indians, 5-2

Mo.

(AP) - Mark Teahen was
4-for-4 with a home run and
two doubles and scored the
go-ahead run on Victor
Martinez's throwin~ ,error
Tuesday night, leadmg the
Kansas City ft.oyal s to a 5-2
victory over the Cleveland
Indians.
Odalis . Perez (1-1) gave
up two runs and seven hits
in seven innings for his first
victory as a starter since
April 21 when he beat
Arizona while pitching for
the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Teahen hit a two-run
homer . in the first inning
and hit his second double of
the night in the sixth. He
bolted for an attempted
steal of third a moment later
and came home, making it
3-2, when Martinez's throw
sailed a couple of feet over
the head of third baseman
Andy Marte.
Since returning from a
27-game stint in Triple-A
on · June 3, Teahen has
raised his average from .195
to .295. The second-year
third baseman has hit in
eight straight games and in
the last 13 has scored 10
runs, hit six doubles and
three home runs, with eight
RBis.
Travis Hafner was 3-for-4
with two doubles to extend
his hitting streak to 13
games.
Cliff Lee (10-9) gave up
three runs and five hits in
six innin~s while taking his
first loss m five career decisions at Kauffman Stadium.
Lee, whose 18 wins last
year were the most by a
Cleveland lefty since 1988,
came into the game 4-0

Wednesday, August 23.

www. mydailysentinel.com

.

NFL
from PageBl
•
with an ingrown toenail.
Smith, who .Jed the NFL
in receiving last season, had
already missed 17 days after
straining his left hamstring
on July 29, the first day of
training camp. He returned
to practice last week, but sat
out Saturday's exhibition
game against Jacksonville
and did not practice
Monday.
He's questionable for
Thursday's preseason game
against Miami.
"Ideally, I'd want them all
in every game. But in this
case, we are just making
sure he is ready for the season opener when they start
counting the games," Fox
said. "He's day-to-day, and
we'll be cautious.''
Fellow starting rece1ver
Keyshawn Johnson al~o
missed practice for what
Fox called personal reasons.
He's expected to rejoin the

• '

-

Topples

team in the group. But the ahead 30-27 after one.
Slovenia.ns have lost consecutive
"We had to wake up a little bit.
games to the group co-leaders We came out a little flat," Wade
after beating Senegal on Saturday . said. "They came out very aggresfrom PageBl
in their world championships sive early. in the first quarter.
debut.
We've got a deep team: We can
game, but U.S. coach Mike
"We did our best, but once the bring different guys at them. Once
Krzyzewski sent Wade, Brand, Americans . started playing their we had the lead at the end of the
Antawn Jamison, Kirk Hinrich defense very strongly, that was first, we kind of took it from
and Joe Johnson out together mid- our problem," Slovenia's Saso there."
way through the first period.
Ozbolt said through a translator.
Slovenia was within four points
The second unit put a stop to
Sani Becirovic led Slovenia ( 1- early in the second before the
Slovenia's strong start, and both 2) with 18 points. Primoz Brezec Americans blew it open with an
groups contributed to the big run and Bostjan Nachbar each added 18-4 ruh, fueled by steals and
that blew open the game in the 15.
dunks. Jamison's basket after
second quarter.
. Running its offense crisply to Johnson's steal made it 55-37 with
Brand finished with 16 points, get open shots, Slovenia led 21-16 4:~0 left in the half, and the U.S.
and Anthony had 14. All but one after Rasho Nesterovic's follqw led 66-49 at the break.
shot with 2:47 left in the first
"It's a game of adjustments,"
of the U.S. pl~ers scored.
Slovenia, with four NBA play- quarter. Wade and Brand then Brand said. "They were executing
ers on its roster, was widely con- each had four points in an 11-0 very well. Once we stepped up our
sidered the second-most talented burst, and the Americans were defense and adjusted, we played
t
f

--·--·--- - - -

Blasts

better. Much better."
Slovenia shot 52 percent in the
first half, but the U.S. turned 16
turnovers - the Slovenians had
only 15 field goals - into 22
points. The Americans had 17
steals and forced 25 turnovers
overall, leading to 28 points.
James and Howard were among
the U.S. players who drew
"Oohs" and "Aahs" from the
crowd w.ith a series of pregame
dunks. Then the game started, and
the Americans really put on a
show.
The U.S. team had little trouble
gett ing the game to the fast pace
they wanted and had few problems even when forced to slow
down. Wade got behind the zone
to dunk an alley-oop pass from
Paul on one play, and the U.S.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

Ryder Cup serious stUff for the American teani, maybe too serious

Schoenewe1s kept the
bal.I from this save

CINCINNATI (AP) The first time Scott
Schoeneweis got into a
save situation, he made ·a
huge mistake.
He came in during the
eighth inning for Anaheim
in 2002, protecting a threerun lead. The Angels added
a run, and the left-hander
preserved the win.
The problem: He forgot
that because he entered the
game in a s'ave situation, it
counted as one.
"I didn't even know it
was a save, so I threw the
ball in the stands," he said
Tuesday.
He hasn't made the same
· mistake twice.
Schoeneweis kept the
AP photo ball from his fourth career
Cleveland Indians' Hector Luna is tagged by Kansas City Royals catcher John Buck at first save Monday night. He
base after being caught in a rundown on a failed attempt to steal second base during the pitched a perfect ninth ·
first inning of a baseball game Tuesday in Kansas C1ty, Mo.
inning to clos~ out. the
Cmcmnall
Reds 4-3 vtctowith a 3.67 ERA , in seven Hafner's second double put later thi·S week. He's been
ry
over
the
Houston Astros,
starts in Kansas City. He Michaels on third in the on the DL since Aug. 6 with
had two walks and struck sixth and Ryan Garko's sac- a sprained right ankle .... then made sure to keep the
.
Royals
IB
Doug b~!l as a m~mento;,
out five, matched his high- rifice fly made it 2-all.
I
kept
thts
one,
he
said.
est total since striking out
The Royals scored two Mientkiewicz will be examseven against the Royals on more m the eighth on Mike ined by a specialist this "I'm not big on personal
May 18- 17 starts ago.
Sweeney's sacrifice fly off week and there is no indica- milestones and stuff. If I
Perez, obtained in a trade Brian Sikorsky, and Joey tion when he might return was," I'd be a pretty sad
from a back injury. guy..
with the Dodgers on July Gathright's infield out.
~or the moment, he's all
25, walked one and struck
Cleveland center fielder Manager Buddy Bell satd
out four. He retired 10 in a Grady Sizemore was a last- he certainly will not be back smtles..
The ~eds got the 32row after giVIng up minute scratch from the before Sept. I. ... The
Hafner's double in the sec- starting lineup with 'stiff- Royals will throw three left- year-old reliever from
ond. Joe Nelson pitched the ness in the mid-back. He handed starters in this three- Toronto for a player to be
ninth for his third save in. struck out as a pinch-hitter game series .... Detroit's 4-0 ~amed last Wednesday, fillvictory over the White Sox mg a sudden need for a
· three chances.
in the ninth.
Martinez drove in Jason
Notes: Teahen ha's II hits officially eliminated the left-bander. General manMichaels wit.h the first in his last 19 at-bats against Royals .from the AL Central ager Wayne. !Uivsky made
Cleveland run with an Cleveland. ... The Indians race with 35 games remain- the deal after left-handed
infield out in the first, then hope to get OF Casey Blake ing.
reliever Kent Mercker suffered ·. a season-ending
elbow tnJury and left-handed closer. Eddie Guardado
was stdehned by a tender
1
forearm.
Association, said the tour- where their tournaments ments around the state·.
Guardado's . two-week
nament ball travels 5 to I 0 are played instead of
"The faster you swing at stay on the dtsabled hst
yards shorter than the ball putting limits on techno- the new balls, the farther means others are going to
logical advances in equip- they will fly. and it's not 5 have to close games.
he normally uses.
or 10 yards (farther), it's Manager Jerry Narron gave
"I am happy to see that ment.
Nicklaus, who grew up in 100 yards, 125 yards," said Schoeneweis his chance
someone is taking the bull
by the horns and is saying, the Columbus area, has Jim Popa, the association's Monday night because of
'Hey, our golf courses can- lengthened
Mdirfield executive director. "That's the way the Astros' lipeup
not handle .this golf ball,"' Village Golf Club in the what we're battling·. That's shaped up in the ninth .
Nicklaus, a critic of how Columbus
suburb
of what we think is ruining
"I'm not the closer,"
long modern balls go, said Dublin to 7,337 yards this the game, or going to ruin · Schoeneweis said. "We're
going to do what we can to
in an e-mail interview. "If year after it played at 7, I00 the game."
the USGA is unable to yards the first ·20 years of
Other amateur golfing hold the fort until Eddie
make an effort to move the the Memorial Tournament. associations are watching gets back. We're just trying
ball back, then we need to
Ohio
Golf the tournament this week. · to patch things together."
The
Narron will use various
do something on our own." Association organizes the
"Most changes in golf
in the role while
players
The
U.S.
Golfing Champions Tournament, come fro'm the amateur
Guardado
is on the mend.
Association, the national held
Tuesday
and sector, and most from the
governing body for golf, Wednesday at Windy Knoll grass roots," Popa said. He didn't hesitate to go to
and the PGA Tour have Golf Club in Springfield, "They don't come from the Schoeneweis, even though
opted to focus on lengthen- for winners from clubs, PGA Tour; they've go t a he'd never had more than
ing many of the courses associations and tourna- product they have to sell." one save any season during
his career.
"He''s done everything,"
Ward · had
targeted two preseason games, in Narron said. "He's been a
team Wednesday.
Linebacker Dan Morgan Friday's preseason game in which he was credited with starter, he's been a one-batter specialist, he's pitched
was held out of contact Philadelphia to make his just one tackle.
drills. Fox would only say return to game action, but
Drafted by the Saints long (relief) . He knows
he "got dinged" against the conceded that appears from Notre Dame, Watson what he's doing out there."
Well,
not
entirely.
unlikely. Ward said he had· I08 tackles and three
Jaguars on Saturday.
Steelers
would want to go through sacks in 17 games, includ- Schoeneweis spent his
Pro Bowl wide receiver an entire day's workout ing 14 starts, in two seasons entire career in the
Hines Ward .sat out the pain-free before playing in a with New Orleans. Packers . American League with
team's afternoon workout game. Wednesday would be
Wide receiver Marc Anaheim,- the White Sox
.Tuesday due to a strained his last chance. Bills
Boerigter, signed to a one- and Toronto. He doesn't
left hamstring.
. Linebacker
Courtney year deal on March 26, was know n\uch about some of
Ward missed the practice Watson, acquired in a trade released Tuesday after these NL hitters.
a day after returning to from New Orleans, was catching only one pa's for
''I'm just trying to make
workouts for the first time released by Buffalo.
!9 yards in two preseason pitches in the right spots,"
-in more than two weeks.
Also cut were offensive games. The 28-year-old he said. " I don't know what
The reigning Super Bowl tackle Matt Morgan, who Boerigter spent four seasons the right spots are to certain
MVP was out since Aug. 4 missed most of camp with a with the Chiefs, and had 39 hitters.
and missed the first two pre- hip injury, and defensive receptions for 697 yards and
season games. He left tackles LaWaylon Brown eight touchdowns.
Monday's practice early and Faafetai Thpa'i. It was
Giants
when he felt a twinge in the the second time Brown has
Linebacker
La Var
hamstring.
been cut by the Bills. He Arrington returned to prac"It is frustrating because I also failed to make the team tice, a day after a swollen
from PageBl
am doing everything (team last summer.
right knee forced him to
medical staff) is asking me
Watson\ release was a leave a workout. Arrington,
to do, but it's not healing up mild surprise (l.fter the Bills who signed a $49 million heading into the game. He
the way I want and the acquired him in an attempt contract as a free agent in also drove in a run with a
recovery time is not what l to bolster their depth. A for- the offseason, expects to bunt single - Houston miswant it be," Ward said. mer second-round draft play against the Jets on played his sacrifice attempt
during the big inning - and
"This is preseason. You pick, he spent most of train- Friday at Giants Stadium.
have to be smart about 11. I ing camp with the thirdHis knee is a concern. He scored the (irst two runs of
don't want to keep re-aggra- stringers and had limited has had two surgeries on it his career.
Notes: Slumping 2B
vating it."
playing time in Buffalo's in recent years.

23. 2006

2006

REdS NotEbook.

Tournament to use ball that limits distance
COLUMBUS (AP) Players teeing it up in 'for
the
first
Champions
Tournament this week
won't be hitting the ball as
long or high as they usually do, and Jack Nicklaus,
fQr one, thinks that's a
good thing.
All players will have to
use the same ball, one that
won 't travel as far as
today's most popular balls
that feature technology
some amateur golf associations fear will render some
courses obsolete for tournament play.
Alan Fadel, a former
state amateur champion
and ball committee chairman for the Ohio· Golf

Wednesday, August

"When I pitched againsi
Pittsburgh (on Friday), I
was just looking at the
scoreboard to see who was
up because I had no idea.''
The chance to save a
game that had a bearing on
the NL playoffs was a treat.
"As a middle reliever, it's
kind of like being on the
offensive line," he said.
"You don't get credit for a
whole lot of stuff."
WHERE'S WALDO?
Rich Aurilia has a new
name for himself- Waldo,
as in the popular children's
book where the main character moves around. '
On Tuesday, he was batting sixth and playing
shortstop for the eighth
time this season. He has
also started 27 games at
first base three at second
and 37 at third.
"Honestly, I've gotten to
the point now that I'm so
comfortable at the four different spots, I almos.t don't
care," he said. "I come to
the park, look at the lineup
card to see if I'm in there,
then I look to the right at
the little box next to it to
see where I'm playing.
Then I mentally get ready.
"The mental approach of
not caring actually helps
me. I show up, figure out
where I'm playing, then
just go do it. I feel comfortable everywhere."
He had four hits Monday
night, including a three-run
homer in the liighth that
started the comeback to
that 4-3 win.

.

RAMIREZ
SIDELINED:
Right-hander
Elizardo Ramirez had to
leave his start Friday for
Triple-A
Louisville
because of a sore shoulder.
A medical exam in
Cincinnati found no serious
lllJUry,
Krivsky
said
Tuesday.
Ramirez was optioned to
Louisville on Aug. 13 after
struggling to a 4-9 record
and 5.37 earned run aver- .
age.
COMEBACKER: Leftbander Chris Michalak was
expected to return to
Cincinnati on Tuesday
night, in time to start
Wednesday in the final
game of the series against
Houston.
Michalak returned to his
native Joliet, Ill., for the
funeral of his l 02-year-old
grandmother, who was
buried on Tuesday. He had
plans to work out while he
was gone.
"I know he was taking his
glove and a couple of
balls,"
manager Jerry
·
Narron said.
Craig Biggio batted sixth
the first time since Sept. 29
I 990 that he hit lower thar
third in the Astros' order. Ht
went 0-for-2, leaving him ir
a 1-for-16 slump on the trip
... In two starts and om
relief appearance, Hirsh haf
given up 17 earned runs ir
12. innings with six homers
... It was the Reds' most lop·
sided win since a 17-3 victo.
ry over Arizona on Aug. IS
last season.
·

was 7-of-11 from 3-point range in
the first 20 minutes.
Slovenia coach Ales Pipan sat
Nesterovic, Nachbar and Beno
Udrih, three of his NBA players,
to open the second half. They
watched as the Americans pushed
the lead to as much as 29 points in
the third quarter.
Pipan said his team played well
but "our mind was already on our
next game that is tomorrow
against Puerto Rico ."
The Americans shot 56 percent
from the field and were 10-of-20
from behind the arc. They are
averaging 115.3 points in the
tournament.
The Slovenians, who got within
II in the fmal minutes, got 14
points apiece from Nesterovic
and Jaka Lakovic.

BY TIM DAHLBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MEDINAH, Ill. - II was
just a coincidence that
President Bush and Tom
Lehman stepped before
podiums at the same time
Monday for televised news
conferences.
Bush was at the White
House discussing peace in
the MiddJe East. Lehman
was
at
the
PGA
Championship announcing
~is Ryder Cup captain's
picks.
World events,· of course,
are serious stuff. To some in
golf, the Ryder Cup seems
nearly as important.
So there was Lehman,
flanked by a couple of PGA
types in suits, giving the golf
world the breathless news
that kept most of them up all
night: that Stewart Ciflk and
Scott Verplank were his
picks to fill out the 12-man
Ryder Cup team.
"Their heart is the reason I
picked them," Lehman said
bfthe two.
You will, of course, hear a
lot about heart during the
next month as the United

States tries to snap a lo&gt;ing
streak in the only event that
can bring Tiger Woods and
Phil · Mickelson together
over a pingf)ong table .
There will, be plenty of
flag waving, tears shed, and
a lot of talk about guts and
courage. If you didn't know
these guys were going to the
Irish countryside to hit some
golf balls around, you might
think they were on their way
to Iraq.
Serious business indeed,
this Ryder Cup stuff.
So serious that next week
a private jet will whisk the
American players across the
pond to the K Club so they
can get a look at the course
where the actual battle - er,
competition- will play out.
.Tiger and Phil likely won't
be on board. It seems they
already had some commitments that will preclude
them from spending a few
days in Ireland bonding with
their new teammates.
Lest you think they're not
taking this seriously, though,
Lehman assures us they are.
"If I ever hear somebody
question Tiger Woods '

desire to be a part of thi&gt;
team again, I'm going to go
crazy," he said. -Tiger
Woods cannot wait to play in
this Ryder Cup."
That goes ditto for
Mickelson.
apparently.
Forget that players grumbled
he spent too much t1me
handicapping NFL games at
the cup in England four
years ago, or that he went to
another course by himself
when his teammates practiced together the day before
the last Ryder Cup.
With oil at $70 a barrel ,
t..e practice round trip figures to cost a fortune. But
money is nothing to the
PGA of . America, which
thinks nothing of . spending
lavish amounts to pamper
players in the style they 've
become accustomed to.
Lehman's idea isn' t new.
He wants to get some serious male bondmg going and
get the team to come together as a team.
"We're going to play some
go lf, we're going to do some
fishing. we're going to drink
some Guinness, we're going
to have some fun," Lehman
said.

" Sounds like a great plan.
But Lehman really uoe&gt;n't
need to go to all the bother.
Nothin~ wro11~ with some
fishing and beer drinking,
but Woods and Mi\:kelson
could spend a week doing it
and still probably wouldn't
talk to each other the next
day. Those marathon pingpong sessions at other Ryder
Cups. after all. didn't seem
to help them win any points.
Besides. there's only so
muc: h you can uo to mold
guys into a team who spend
the other I03 weeks every
two years trying to beat each
other's brains out.
The Europeans have an
advantage in thi&gt; anyway
because they spend a lot of
tune together drinking and
eating away from the course
on their close-knit tour. The
American stars. meanwhile.
go their separate ways when
their rounds are finished,
and often the on ly words
they speak on the course 1s
"Here 's vour card."
A loi · was made at
Brookline m the last
American Ryder Cup win in
1999 about how the team
pulled together on the final

day after heing inspired by a
&gt;peech the night before by
Bu;h that included a quote
from a soldier at 1he Alamo
who intended to tight until
the enu.
But what really happened
was that captain Ben
Crenshaw sent off hi s best
players
including
Lehman - early and they
got some momentum that
got the raucous nowd going
and seemed to shake the
European&gt;. And. if no1 for
two big putts by Ju stin
Leonard on the back nine,
the Europeans may have
won that one, too.
The American players
know what's at ,take, and
they know how much it
means in the world of golf.
They ' re representing their
country. and the last thing
they want is to be embarrassed the way the team was
when Hal Sutton's decision
Woods
and
to
pair
Mickelson together led to an
European rout at Oakland
Hills.
The United States has the
three best players in the
world on its team. while the
Europeans barely have one

in the. top 10 (Luke Donald).
It 'houldn't be that hard to

be a Ryder Cup captain
when the odds are stacked
like that.
Lehman said he sought out
legendary basketball coach
John Wooden among others
in recent weeks for advice
on how to coach this team.
He didn' t need to because
it's really simple.
Begin by canceling 'the
trip, and any lavi sh parties.
the week of the cup. Get
everyone a room in different
hotel s and don ' t let them
·near a pingpong table or
video game all week.
Tell them their tee times,
and throw them a sleeve of
Pro V l 's.
Then get out of the way
and let them play.
Who knows, it just might
work. Nothing else has for
the Americans recently in
the Ryder Cup.

Tim Di:•hlberg is a national
.1port.1 columni&gt;t for Tfre
As&gt;rJciated Press. Write to
. him a/ 1dc•hlbergap.org

Pirates rally past struggling Atlanta, 5~3 · Mop-topped Varejao
ATLANTA (AP) - The
Atlanta Braves keep talking
about the need for a long
winning streak instead of
putting·one together.
Freddy Sanchez and Jason
Bay hit consecutive runscoring singles in the eighth
inning Tuesday night, rallying the Pittsburgh Pirates
past the Braves 5-3.
"I thought we had the
game," Braves manager
Bobby Cox said.
Not quite.
Atlanta, which wasted a 2l lead, dropped 6 I/2 games
behind Cincinnati, the NL
wild card leader. Following
14 straight division titles,
the chances of making the
playotTs are dwindling for
the Braves (59-66).
Atlanta hasn't strung
together three straight home
wins since May 15- 18, when
the Braves won four straight
at Turner Field.
· The home frustrations
come one year after the
Braves tied for the NL's best
home record at 53-28. With
Tuesday night's loss, they
are 26-32 at Turner Field,
the second-worst home mark
in the NL.
"Regardless of whether
it's at home or' on the road,
it's a loss, but the home
thing is frustrating," Braves
first
baseman
Adam
LaRoche said. "We've all
said that. Losing at home
can be a little harder.''
· Even with the win, the
Pirates have the NL's worst
road record at 16-48. The
Pirates had lost eight of their
previous nine road games.
"It seems like lately things
are just not going. our way at
home," LaRoche said. " It
seems everything goes their
way - pitching, timely hitting, everything.''
Danys Baez (5-6) gave up

photo
Pittsburgh Pirates runner Jason Bay (38) celebrates with
first base coach John Shelby (31) after driving in the goahead run against the Atlanta Braves during the eighth
inning of a baseball game, Tuesday at Turner Field 1n
Atlanta. The Pirates won 5-3.
AP

one-out walks to Chris
Duffy and Jack W1l son in
the eighth, and Sanchez and
Bay followed w1th consecutive singles that put the
Pirates ahead 3-2. Sanchez
and Bay had been a combined 0-for-13 in the series
before their hits - both
grounders to right field.
"I was looking for the
ground-ball double play,"
Baez said. "Those ground
balls found the holes. I felt
great on the mound. It was

just one of those ni ghts. You
can throw the right pitches
and the ball goes in the hole.
There's nothing you can do
about it."
Cox said Baez was sweating so heavi ly the ball was
wet when he took it from the
reliever.
"It's hard to throw the ball
when it's wet.'' Cox said. "I
think that had something to
do with it.''
Xavier Nady and Ronny
Paulino added RBI sing les

for a 5-2 lead.
" l don't look at it as wins
on the road or wins at
hon'le," Sanchez said. "We
set ourselves up to try to win
the senes."
Damaso Marte ( 1-7)
earned his l'irst win since
May 24, 2005, by i'ecording
one out in the seventh. He
had .lost his previous eight
decisions.
Martin Prado hit an RBI
sing le in the e1ghth otl Matt
Capps ~ the rookie 's third
RBI in two games since h1s
recall- and Mike Gonzalez
pitched a pertect ninth for
his 22nd save without a
blown opportunity.
Jose Bautista hit an RBI
double in the fifth, but Tony
Pena Jr. tied it in the bottom
half with h1s first major
league homer in 21 at-bats
Follow1ng Pena's homer.
Shawn Chacon walked the
bases loaded before Brian
McCann hit into a double
play.
Marcus Giles. who missed
his fifth straight start with a
bruised left hand , led off the
seventh mning With a pinchhit double off John Grabow
and was sacrificed to third.
After an intentional walk to
Chipper Jones, Andruw
J01ies blooped a si ngle for a
2-1 lead.
Chaco n gave up one run.
three hns and f1ve walks in
fi ve innings. hilling two batters.
· Oscar Villarreal, makmg
his second start for Atlanta
afte r pitching 4 7 games ou t
of the bullpen, gave up one
run and toor h1ts in five
mmngs.
Notes: Chacon hit Ryan
Langerhans and Andruw
Jones with pitches in the
third and fourth innmgs ....
Pen a· s homer wa' Atl ant a's
sixth of the season hy pincll
hitters.

is Brazil's mane man
HAMAMATSU , Japan
(AP) - Anderson Varejao
wants to pass along a message to his new - and similarly hair-obsessed
Cavaliers teammate , Scot
Pollard: In Cleveland,
Varcjao is the hair guy.
The mop-topped Varejao,
starring tor Brazil at the
oworld championships in
Japan, 1s lookmg forward to
playing alongs 1de Pollard
next year. The two big men
are expected to muscle in on
Cleveland's opponents, and
perhaps scare a few hairstylists along the way.
Pollard, known for his
ever-changing 'dos and
length of sideburns, joined
the Caval1ers last week after
signing a one-year contract.
"I gl1e ss I've ~ot some
competition now. Varejao
said with a ch uck le, before
practicing Monday with the
Brazilians ahead of thei r
game Tuesday against
unbeaten Turkey.
Varejao. 23, is already
known in Cleveland for hi s.
hair. ln . February, the
Cavaliers had a W~ Night
promouon
at vUJcRen
Loans Arena.
•· Jt was, like. 23,000 people
wit h wigs. very
strange," Varejao said. " l
felt like I was look1ng in the
mtrror- many times.''
The extra attention must
have done him some good.
Coming olf surgery last
year - to correct a dama_ged ligament 1n his right
snou lder - Varejao wasn't
st1re w~at to expect when he
came back on a relfular
basis to the Iineup.
He played well during the
NBA playoffs. particu larly
in Cleveland's secondround loss in seven games
to the Detroit Pistons. He
had a career-best 16 points
intlle third game and led the

Rival Yankees double up Red Sox, 2-1
BOSTON (AP) - One
year and not even I 0
months. That's how long .the
afterglow from Boston's
first World Series title in 86
years lasted.
Older Red Sox fans have
long since returned from
visiting
their parents'
graves, where they carried
the· news to the generations
who never saw their team
win it all. The young know
what it's like to lose to New
York now, like their fathers
·
and grandparents did.
The Yankees completed
an uncommon but unequivocal five-game sweep of
Boston
on
· Monday,
reasserting the dominance
in the AL East that the Red
Sox had dared to challenge
over the past three years.
New York has turned a 3
1/2-game deficit in the division to a 6 l/2-~ame lead m
one month and left Boston
back in its old, familiar spot.
No. 2.
"Everything went about as
wrong as it could," Red Sox
manager Terry Francona
said after the Yankees took
the finale 2- l . "We certainly
didn ' t put ourselves in a
very good position. If we
allow it to devastate us, then

we weren't good enough in
the first place."
The Yankees have longdominated the Red Sox in
franchi se glory - it 's 26 to
six in World Series titles,
even after '04- but Boston
hoped it reversed that curse
with its unprecedented rally
from a 3-0 deficit in the
2004 AL championship
series. When they won the
World Series, Red Sox ge nera! manager Theo Epstein
was dubbed ''the boy
genius" and players who
played even the sma llest
part in the title were treated
like heroes. .
.
But Epste1n was Jeered
·with chants of "Way to go,
Theo !" this weekend by fa ns
angry the team stood pat at
the trading deadline while
the · Yankees got slugger
B';Jbby Abre4 and Monday's
wmner Cory L1dle.
..
Keith Foulke. who Iinished all four World Series
games. has been booed as he
stru ggles I~ colne back from
InJury. Senes MVP Man1~y
Ram1rez was assu!lled to li~
mahngenng when he lelt
Monday's game with leg
cramps.
"This game. has a way of
bringing you back when you

think you' re done, and also
humblin g you when you 're
going pretty well," said second baseman Mark Loretta,
new to Boston this year
said. "It's been an emotional
weekend. It's been physically challenging and emotionally challenging for both
sides. It's a little easier to
take if you're winning.''
It was 28 years ago that
the Yankees came to
Fenway in September with a
four-game deficit and left
tied for the division lead a series remembered in
baseball as the "Boston
Massacre ." New York ,
which had trailed bv as
many as 14 games. woi1 the
AL. East in a one-game playoff highlighted by Bucky
Dent 's popup that &gt;ettled
into the net above the Green
Monster.
.
The Red Sox hadn't been,
swept in a five-game series
'ince the Cleveland Indians
did it in 1954. The Yankees
swept Boston in five games
in New York in 195 I. and at
Fenway in '43 .
"A sweep in Boston ry•·
Lidle said, pausing before
breaking out in a big smile.
" Pretty awesome."
. After outscoring the Relj

Sox 47 -25 in four games
over three days and two
early mornings. !he Yankees
rediscovered their pitching
to win the sleepy series
finale at Fenway Park.
Lidle (2-2) pitched SIX
shutout innings in his th1rd
- and best - start since
commg tD New York. With
All-Star closer Mariano ·
Rivera un&lt;tvailable after
pitching two innings to win
Sunday ni ght"s game actually, it ended at I :26 .
a.m Monday
Kyle
Farnsworth pilchcd the
ninth for hi s second solve.
Yankees manager Joe
Torre shouted in the.
Yankees· . dugout
and
exchanged hearty handshakes with his coaches.
then hugged his players as
they came off the field .
Even they found it hard to
believe.
"It was ~motional." Torre
said. "When you're sitling
there , a manager\ drc:tm is
to have these guys . their
attitude . Th e guys that didn't play today - you had to
be in the dugout to hear the
support !hat the y gave each
other."

...

~

- -·

team in shooting from the
field for the f1rst three
games, going 14-for-20.
"It was good for me to
help the team." Varejao
said. "I finally had the
opportunity. and it was good
to help Cleveland have a
very good season."
Va.rejao is getting plentx
of court lime w1th Braz1l
here. and the shoulder is
behaving itself.
He tussled several times
with Milwaukee Bucks cen- . 1
ter Andrew Bogut in
Brazil's opening loss to
Australia. He also had a
in
solid
performance
Brazil's win over Qatar,
scoring 13 points and ge nerally runni ng the play whenever he was on the floor.
"l aJil sti ll doing a lot of
exercise, stretching, and tryi.ng to keep it loose,"
Varejao said of his shoulder.
'' It is very good, no pain."
The 6-foot-11, 265-pound
Pollard will give the
Cavaliers more inside
defensive strength alongside Varejao, who is 6-10
and weighs 240 pounds.
Pollard is known across
the NBA for his various
hairstyles, including a
mohawk, single and double
pony tails. a bald head and a
variety of hair colors.
Varejao, well, just has that
full head of long curly hair.
"l guess I've had it for
seven or eight years,"
Varejao said. ' 11 never curl
it. Its natural. l hardly ever
get 11 cut."
Cleveland coach Mike
Brown once paid Varejao a
compliment, but couldn't
resist taking a shot at his
mop.
"He has about the qui~k­
cst feet of any guy I know
that is 7 feet, or 6-l 0 and
some hair," Brown said this
year.

Rib Hot
SfltciAL

Advertise your item
of $1,0.00 or less
for ONLY $5.00
* One ltt:m Per Ad
* Personal Items - No Businesses
* Must Adverlise Price

* Runs for (3 days)
Write vour Ad HERE (15 words or less)

Ad must be submitted on this coupon and
must•he prepaid. Oft'er expires R/31/06

Our CLASSIFIEDS will WORK for YOU!!!

--~- - --

···--- ---·

- .. -- --

' .. . ---------

•

�•
'

Page'B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 23,

wWw.mydailysentinel.com

Gallia Academy earns draw with Athens
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMANOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CENTENARY - l!"s not
a notch in the win column,
but it was a huge victory fo r
the Gallia Academy soccer
program.
Eli Maher scored his second goal of the match in the
. 77th minute as the host Blue
Devils rallied to earn a 2-2
draw with powerfttl Athens
during the hi gh school sOdcer opener on Tuesday.
Maher scored the equalizer with 2:3 1 remaining in the
game .. He made a move to.
beat the defender, then blasted a shot passed the goalkeeper.
The score capped a roller
coaster second half that saw
Gallia Academy (0-0-1) take

1

the lead, only to surrender it
on back-to-back scores by
Athens (0-0- 1).
"We' ve never had a team
that could come back li ke
that,"
admitted
Gall ia
Academy coach Hayd n
Jones.
"We dido't actually win,
it's a moral victory, though.
We can surprise a lot of
teams this season, I think."
Gallia Academy was winless in ·the SEOAL last season and was outscored 63-1
in .those games. But so far
this season, the Blue and
White has won a pair of
scrimmage games as well as
tie of the elite soccer programs in the league.
Jones credits the turnaround to his players buying
into the team concept. "They

understand that soccer is
abou t playing as a team," he
said. ''We don't have individuals thi&gt; year."
Athens had I0 shots on
goal. and goal keeper Rex
McKinniss stopped eight of
them.
"He could have been the
man of the match tonight, in
that fi rst half he kept .us in
it," comme nted Jones.
"Also, it helps -to have . a
back li ne like that ... Shayne
·(Scarberry). Zac Wallen and
Mike Hackett all played out
their skins."
After a scoreless first half,
the Blue Devils claimed the
lead less than three min utes
after pl ay resumed; Maher
took the pass fro m Olivia
McGovern and beat the
keeper in the bottom left

corner of the goal.
1t was one of only five
shots on goal for the Blue
Devils.
Eight minu tes later, Brad
Bentley tied the game with
an assist from Dan iel
Marling fo llowing a scramble in front of the net. The
Bulldogs took the lead with
18:43 rema in ing ·when
Marl ing scored on a free
kick that deflected into the
net.
Maher's second score
eve1ied the match at 2-2;
then neither team had a good
scori ng chance the remai~­
der of the way.
Gallia Academy will look
for mo re success agai nst·
Athens
Coun ty
wheri
Alexander comes calling on
Thursday.

J

VVednasda~August23,2006

2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Point wins Cardinal crown
Bv LARRY CRUM
lCRUM@MYOAllYREGISTER.COM

POCA, W.Va. - The Point
Plca5ant gou· team was hoping
to make this season a learning
experience - and boy did
they.
The Black Knights learned
what it is like to step up and
play among the best teams in
the state, wmning the Cardinal
Conference
to urnament
Monday at the Scarlet Oaks
golf course in Poca. It was
Point Pleasants tirst ever conterence golf crown. ·
Point Plea,ant took ftrst with
a score of 34 2, seven shots

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

ahead of ' second place
Winfield who finis hed with :a
round of 342. Logan was third
with 350, followed by Herbert
Hoover (357), Stssonville
(375), Wayne (404) and Poca
(414)..
Chris Long led the way for
Poin t Pleasant, tying for
medalist with a low round 75
alo~ g with Sissonville's Matt
Sisson. Long also made the All
Cardinal Conference team
through his effort5.
Just behind Long was Curtis
Grimm who shot an 86 and
Eric Milhoan with an 88. Wtll
Garrison and J.T. Reynolds
each shot a 93:

C LA S S I F I E o·

· BY BOB BAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Marion Jones broke her
silence on her positive drug
test Monday, saying she was
startled by the result and
wants the second sample
examined quickly.
The five-time Olympic
medalist and four-time world
champion released a · statement through her new attorney, Howard Jacobs, who has
represented many athletes in
doping cases, including
Jones• former boyfriend Tim
Montgomery, the father of her ·
child.
"I was shocked when I was
informed about the positive
"A" sample," she said. "I have
requested that the testing of
my 'B' sample be expedited
and done as soon as possible.
"Only my lawyers have the
authority to speak on my
behalf in this matter, and I will
have no further comment until
the results of the 'B' sample
are released."
In a telephone interview,
Jacobs said he has not discussed with Jones how the
positive test might have come
about. He also noted the
results were supposed to
remain private until the "B"
sample was tested but were
improperly leaked to the
media. Jacobs also represents
Tour de France champion
Floyd Landis, who tested pos-

AP photo
American athlete Marion Jqnes holds up her five Olympic
medals for track and field events outside Sydney' s Ope ra
House, Australia in th is Oct. 1. 2000 file photo.
itive for elevated level s ·of
testosterone during the Tour.
.Jones' positive test for the
banned endurance enhancer
EPO came June 23 at the U.S.
Track &amp; Field Championships
in Indianapolis, where she
won the 100 meters, her 14th
national title but first smce
2002. If the backup "B" sampie is positive, the 30-year-old ·
sprinter faces a minimum
two-year ban from the sport.
Lon): dogged by doping
suspicwns, Jones vehemently

has denied using performance-enhancing substanc~s .
She withdrew from a meet in
Zurich, Switzerland, on
Friday, shortly before the pos,
itive test came to light.
Dick Pound, chairman of
the World · Anti-Doping
Association, said tests for
EPO have improved considerably recently.
"Up until 2()()(), we didn't
even have a test, much less a
reliable one;" l]e said in a telephone interview.

COunties Like

Noon.

Loans Inc

Plalntln
VS Paul Barthelmas
Dalandanto Court ol
Common Pleao, Meigs
County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an

day, the following
described Real Eatata:
Situated In tho Faction
Section 33, ·Town 6
Range 14, -Rutland
Township,
Melgo
County, State ol Ohio,
and baing more fully
described aa follows:
Commencing ala point
In the Northeast corner
of the ooutheast quarter of section 33, aald
point also baing on the
Welt line ol Fraction

order of sale lo me Section

described,
thence
North 88' 10' it" Eaot
along . lha grantor's
North property line
284.62 lee! to an Iron
pin, thence nortl11 ' 41'
49" West along the
Grantor's property line
117.74 lee1 ID an Iron
pin, thence North 78'
18' 24 EaB1 along the
Grantor's North proparty line, 50 23 feet to
an Iron pin .In the
Grantor's Northeast

33, Thence property

88' 18' 11"West Along
a line 366.93 feet to an
Iron pin In the gantors,
West property line and
west line of Frsclional
Section 33, Thence

directed !rom said
court in the above entllied action, I will
expose to oale at publie auction on lhe Iron!
steps ol the Meigs

Lol2 05-00462.006
Appraisal at: Lot ~ 7 ·
$25,000.00, Lot' *9
$28,000, lot #2
$28,000.00 Terms ol
sele: Cannot be sold

Ncrth 1· 41 ' 49" West County Court House for less than 213rds of

along the grantor's on Friday, Sept. 8, 2006 the appraised value.
Wast property line and at 10 A.M., of said day, 10% down on day of

the Wool line ol said the

following sale, cash or certified

fractional section 33 , described Real estate: check balance due on

120 00 feet to the point Three (3) . Lots sold confirmation ol sale.
ol beginning and con· separately.
The . appraisal did
lalnlng 1130 acres. Situate In the Township. Include an Interior
Prcel No 11-00423 00 ol Columbia, County of examination al the

corner, Commonly known as Meigs and State of house.

Robert

E.

directed form ·said South 1'4t'49" East Thence south 4'27' 49" 33356 Crouur Road, Ohio, to wit; Being Lot Beegle, Meigs County
court In the above anti· along the eaot line ol East
along
the Rutland, OH 4Sns
Number 7, Chestnut Sheriff, Atlt;~rney for
tied action, 1 will aald section 33, 673 Grantor'• Nortll prop- Currant Owner: paul Ridge Estates, a the Plaintiff Frank &amp;
expose to sale atpubllc teet mora,or less to an arty line, 92.82 teet to Barthelmss

auction on the front Iron pin In the
steps of lhe Meigs Grantor's Northwest
County Court Houoe property corner and
on Frld1y, Sept. 15, the real point of begin2006 at to A.M .• ol uld nlng lor the land herein

an Iron pin, thence
aouth 12' 09'05" East
continuing along uld
line, t 56.35 leal Ia an
Iron pin, Thence south

et

al restricted subdivision, Wooldridge Co LPA,

Property At: 33356
Crouser Rd, Rutland
Dh 45771 PP# 1t00423.000 Appraised
at $22,500.00 Terms ol

as the same Is delln- 600 South Pearl Street
eated on the record Columbuo, Ohio 43206·
plat in Plat Cabinet 19 614·227-1662
A &amp; B Record of Plats (B) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
ol Meigs county, Ohio.

sale : cannot be sold Parcel

lor less than 213rds ol
=H:e:tp::W:a:n:le:d=:..::=H=e=lp:W:::a:nt:e:d::;:....:::H::e:l:p:W::a:n::t::ed:::; ·tho
value.
10% appraised
down on day
ol
sale, cash or certified

~

No.

05-

00462.01 t Property
Addreaa;
Chestnut Vacsnt
Ridge Lol7,
Sub,
Albany, Ohio 45710.

check, Balance due on Situate In the Township

confirmation on oale. ol Columbia, County ol
The appraisal did not Meigs and State of

Include an Interior Ohio, to-wit: Being lot

PAT

examination

MANAGER

O'Bleness Memorial Hospital is seeking qualified
candidates for the position of Patient Relations Manager.
This full-time position is responsible for developing,
implementing, coordinating and evaluating patient
relations programs including; patient advocacy, patient
visitation. complaint management, grievance response,
service recovery, patient satis faction monitoring and
customer feedb ack. Qualified candidates will ha ve
exceUent interpersonal. written and verbal
communica tion skills and presentation skills.
Administrative experience in a healthcare setting or
comrnunityo rganiza tion as well as experience in conflict
resolution are preferred. Proficiency i,n the use of
personal computers and related software is required.
Associate degree is required; Bachelor 's degree in health
services ad ministration or related field is preferred. We
offer an excelent salary and benefit package. Applican ts
are asked to submit a letter of interest and complete
resume by August 25 to::
Human Resources
55 Hospital Dr.
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Athens, OH 45701
www.obleness.org
Phone: (740) 592-9227 Fax: (740) 592-9444

EOE

of

the Number 9, Chestnut

houoe. Robert E.
Beagle, Meigs County
Sheriff
Attorney lor the
Plaintiff
Lerner
Sampson &amp; Rothfuss,
PO
Box
5480
Cincinnati, Oh 4520t 5480 5t3-24t-3100
(8) 9, 16, 23
Public Notice

Ridge · Estates, a
restricted subdivision,
as the same Is dellnsated on the recorda~
plat In Plat Cabinet 19
A &amp; B Record of Plata
ol Meigs County,'Ohlo.
Parcel
No.
05·
00462.0.13 Properly
address: Vacant Lot 9,
Chestnut Ridge Sub,
Albany, Ohio 457t0
SHuate in the Township

ol Columbia, County ol
Malga County SheriH's Meigs and State ol
OHico
Ohio, to-wit: Being lot
Sherin · Robert E. Number 2, Chestnut
Bsegle
Ridge Estates, a
104 East Second restricted subdivision,
Street, Pomeroy, OH as the same Is · delln·

45769
Sherin Sales
Cue
Number
06CV034
Belmont Savings
Bank
Plalntln
vs
Cheri and Douglas
Campbell
Defendants
Court ol Common
Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio.
In Pursuance of an
order of sale to me

- - - - -- - - - ---------·---

aeted on the recorded
plat In Pial Cabinet 19
A and B Record of
Plats ol Meigs County,
Ohio Parcel No. 05·
00462.006 Property
Address : Vacant Lot 2,
Chestnut Ridge Sub,
Albany, Ohio 45710

Websjtes:
In One Week With Us
mydailytribu
ne.com
www.
E-mail
www.mydailysentinel.com
classified @mydailytribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyreg1ster. com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
\ll:ribune
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
ca~r;~::;... (74o) 446-2342 4o) 992-21s6 (304) 675-1333

Campbell

Property at Chestnut

Ridge Subdivision,
Albany, Ohio PP, Vee
Lot 7 05-00462.01 t , Vac
lot 9 05-00462.0t3 Vac

c1

446·3008

Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to s:oo p.m.

Ohio Valley
Publialllng reserves

the right to o&lt;llt,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.

Bryan Waheralphoto
River Valley's Justin No lan hits a ch ip shot on the ninth hole
during Tuesday's tri-match aga inst Gallia Academy and
Wellston at Cl iffside Golf Club. Nolan , with a one-over par
37 , was the medalist.
Travis Houck and Kyle
Hunter were next for GAHS
with scores of 44 and 48 ,
respectively, while Jordan
.· from Page Bl
Cornwell rounded out the
team scoring with a 50.
Craig Jagers was next for Corey Hamilton also shot a
the Silver and Black with a 51 for the Blue and White.
41 , while both Brandon
Chris Comer and l)rl~r
Burnette and Kayla Johnson King also had rounds of 47
rounded out the scoring and 51 , re spectively, · for
with rounds of 44 and 55 Wellston.
respecti vely.
River Valley returns to
Newcomer Ross Sharrett action at Cliffside Monday
also shot a 57 for the when it hosts a tri-match
Raiders.
against Point Pleasant and
Gallia Academy, which South
Gallia.
Gallia
posted a team total of 185, Academy return s to the
was led by Kamal Dayal's links today when it travels
seven-over par round of 43 . to Jackson.

Mu1t

Publication

• All ada must be prepaid"

To

good

home

male

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

Home lmprovaments .. .......... .. ................. .... B1 0

Homaolor Sale ............................................ 31 0
Houeahold Goods ....................................... 51 0
Houeaolor Rent ..........................................4t o
In .Memoriam ................................................ 020
Insurance ..................... :............................... t30
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ...,.................... 660
Llvastock...................................................... 630
lost and Found ...........................................060
lata &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous .............................................. t70
Miscellaneous Merchandlse .......................540
Mobile Home Repalr ....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................ 320
Money to loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelera .......................... 740

•allipolit JBail!' tltrtbune
~oint t}leatant l\.e«t•ter
The Daily Sentinel
~·

&amp;unbap tEtme• -6entinel
P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

'
Subscriber's Name _______

Musical Instruments ................................... 570

Personals..................................................... 005

Pats for Sala, ..... .......................................... 560

Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Professional Serlilces .........,,,,,,, ........... ...... 230

Address ____________

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
Real Eatete Wanted .....................................360
Schools lnstructlon ..................................... tso
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Sltutitlono Wa"ted ....................................... 120
Spacalor Rent .............................................4&amp;0
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV's lor Sale..............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery .................. ................................. 870
Vans For Sala........................... :...................730
Wanted lo Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620
Want~ To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Ront ............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolls........ , ..........................072
Yard Sala:Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant................................ 076

•
City/State/Zip _ _ __ _ _ __
Phone _____ _ _ _ _ _ ___
Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

-------------------------------·
....

-~.....

Silver and Gold Coms,
Proolsets, Gold Rings. Pre1935
U.S.
Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds: M.T.S.
Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740- 4462842 .

I \11'1

1'1 HAS'fo

·-

I
"'-

...

f,G

p~'f'fi t-~4 ON

W!;f t':j HT.
rr "'A-rs e.t"f'f(; R
"fi-I'AN \ {:)a,

ttO

u ....

"WANih1J

nr.LI'

·

ACareer wHh
Potential!
We 8l'e currenll y seeking applicants to help us
make calls regarding
conse rva tive Pollt •cat
issues and recruit supporters on behall of tne

NRA.
We otter:

a. Up to $8/hour
b. Generous weekly
bonus plan
c. Health benefits
d.
Paid
Training.
Vacations and Hol tdays
e. Both Fu ll-time and
Part-time shifls avtlil-

able
Let us snow yo~ wt1y
lnfoCialon was voted
one of the 2006 'Top
Ten Basi Places to
Work In Ohio"

..

Hll.P WoOO'ID .

I ~16

WANTED:
Full·lime
Licensed Practical Nurse tor
a commun 1ty group home for
people wtth MRIDD in
Bidwell. Hours 9am-5pm M·
F. Current LPN L•cense and
Pharmacology ce rtification
Now Hi r ir~g FT Cashiers.
requi red.
Salary:
250 1
Fruth
Pharmacy,
$10.50/t10ur. Excellent ben·
Jackson Ave, Pt. PleaSant.
WV Please apply in Person efits package including
Health/Dental
Insurance

Inc. hiring for Full Time AN,
Full Time and Pa rt Time
CNA, STNA, CHH A, PCA
an d Per Die m. OT. ST.
Accepting appl ications for
LPN's. Competitive Wages
and
Benefits includi ng
health
msurance
and
Mileage. Apply at 1480
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis or
2415 Jackson Avenue, Pomt
Pleasant WV or phone toll
free t-86 6 . 441 . 1393.

0
0
0
0

I

A 9 yea r company is looking
for a well mot•vated HVAC
insta ller
and . helper.
Experie nce is preferred. Pay
is based on experier~ ce. If
int erested call (7 40)441 ·
1236 and leave message
with recepuon'ist .'

111\o

HElP WAN'ITD

and paid leave time. PreOnio Va lley Home Hea ltn, employment drug lasting.

-..Jit\IC I \

l

l

Looking for a trustworthy
individual for nousecleaning.
Approx .- 1 day per week .
Reference
required.
(740)441 ·9593

o' \II\ I

r

on your home delivered
subscription!

~.--~ ~

no

k ltn c arlyle@comcast .net ,

neutered Dotson, 5yrs-old. L.,------.-J·
very loving &amp; housebroken , '
brown .
w/b ro wn
eyes, $ STNAa $
Sign On
(304)675-6578
Bonus. Arcadia Nursing
Ce nter is now niring STNAs
lor aflernoons and ntght
shifts. · Ful l and part ti me
ava ilable. Come join our
' Lost: 22 Browning Pistol. caring team!! Please appl y
Orcha rd Hill and 218 area. In person or call 740-667Reward. Call (740)446- 3156. Ask for Jane Casey.
1943.
- - ------ --------Lost. Pregnant Siamese cat , 100WORKERS NEEDED
may ha11e nad kittens by
Assembl e crafts.
wood iterns.
now. Decl awed. $25 reward.
Please call (740)446-2923
To S4801wk
Materials provided.
or return to 130 Bastiani
Free information pkg. 24Hr.
Drive
80 1·428-4649

Senior Discount*

.....

%~

Absolul e Top Dollar U.S.

Female Beagle mix pup, 3
mo. old, very fr iendl y.
(740)379·9445.

If so, you qualify for a

-

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Be.autifu l kitlens free to good bu yi ng junk cars , buses,
home. 8 wks old. (740)367- ptpe, 1-beam, ti n, etc.
Mason WV 304·593·1904.
7231

4x4's For Sole .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlquos ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................,.................. 440
Auction and Flea Market... ..........................oao
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repalr .................................................. 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Buslneos Opportunlty .................................210
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards ol Thanks .......................................... oto
Child/Elderly Care ........................................ t 90
Electric aVRelrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Renl .... .......................... ,...... 480
Excavating,..................................................830
Farm Equlpment.......................................... 610
Farms lor Rent............................................. 430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Leaoe ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................585
For Sale or Trade......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetebles..................................... 5BO
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng ...........................................850
Glveeway .... ,................................................. 040
Happy Ado .................................................... 050
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640
Help Wanted .................................................Ito

I

POLICIES : Ohio Velley Publl ah lng re aervaa the right to edit, reltct, or Clncela ny ad at any Ume. Errofl muet IMI reported on thellrat day ot
Trlbu.ne-S.nt ln.J·Ragl eler wil l be res ponelble lor no more Ulan the coai of ll)e epece occup ied by the error and only the tlrel ln..rtlo" . We
eny loll or t llpenM thsl r11ul t1 from fh1 pJJbllcatlon or oml11lon oltn ad vtrtltement. Correction will be med a In the flrstevellablsldltlon. • ~;,;~::':;~=:·
are eiWaye cont.l dentlel. • Current rate card appli11. • All r••l ..tete edv•rtlumsnte ere eubject to the F.citral Fa ir Housi ng Act of 1968. • Thle
,
only htlp want ed ad:t meeting ~OE l lendards. We will not knowi ngly eccspt sny sdvertlllng In vlol1tlon of the law.

I will buy JuM ~. Call
(740)388-9303.

GIVFAWAY

added ta your classlfted ads
Borders $3 .00/per ad
Graphics 50« for small
$ I . 00 for large

Sunday Display : 1 : 00 p . m .
Thursdav for Sui1days Pape1·.4

Want to buy Junk Cars
3 yr old male AKC Bl act; Lab (304)773·5004
mhc 4 yr old male Elhew - - - - . , - - -Point. (740)441-0405.
Zuspan Metal Salvage, Now

AreyQu 65
o·r·older?.·

~

UNCEMFNfS

an e
an s- oca
roups Indi vidual-Artists fo
pen Mike and Them
ight. Opening Soon Stat
heater, Live Entertainmen
oint Pleasa nt (304)542
408

r

Rise

.

r

rI

~

G

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

'il- 2..7

©

www .comics.com

'J1:®r

2006 by NEA , Inc.
10

An Excell ent way to earn
Ce rtified Nursing Ass istant
&lt;\-rl- 1h'n'r·:'r · 'n'r ~ 'r 'c
money. The New Awn.
for full time and temporar;·
l'r ·'rtt"U- 'r 'r 'r
Ca ll Mari lyn 304·882-2645
(90-r.lay) W(lfk 111 a 114 bed
lon g term care State facil ity.
Are you 55 or older? Pa id
Drivers: •
Full~tim~: employmenl o!Tets
employment traintng to r
Take back your home time!
interested
individual s. an extensive benefit -package.
Pl us great benelils &amp;
including State civ il service
Clerical , food service and
bonuses! Regional runs·
reti rement, earn up to 15 da}'!i
drivtng posit ions availabl e
1 year tractor trl exp. req.
vacntillll per year, 18 days sick
Call the Seni or Employment
866·293-7435
leaw aml I~ p l u~ pau.J holiCenter (866)734-2\30 f .
·'dr ,'t
days, health.'l it'c insurance is
,
)
)'r
'i'r
l'.'r -.:'1 l'r ·'r
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or avai lable. Sa lary i~ commen·i:'r+'r
1'r
·'r
r'r ·-'r ·'r ~'r 1'r
Sell. Shirl ey Spears, 304- surate with experience. Mu st
hu
e
.a
CNA
ce
rtification
to
675-1429.

work in

Wrst

nu1 ~ 1

CASH

i){PRESS

Borrow $200
Pay Back $203

Virginia, 11nU - - - - - - - -

pnut!l!i l'ithtr aG ED or
htgh n hool Uipluma. ((mlacl
Kimberly Billups ar Vicky
Berkley 111 lakin Hospital.
Lakin, WV :u J04-675-0860.
tKICMion 124 ' 125, Monday
through 1-' riday, 8 00 a.m. -1 :00 p.m. Lakin Hnspilnl is an
I~ E01 AA

emplo)' er.

Lakin

Manager &amp;
Asststant Manager
fo r Gallipoli s, Ohio.
EJo:ce llent Pay &amp;
Bonus Program
No Experience Necessary
Will Train
Fax· Res ume~
(606 )886-8908
Email Resume :
Janlce.k•dd@casntn .com
Busy medical office in
Mason . WV, looking for
receptionist and billing clerk.
Must have Medical Manager
e11perience. Salary negotiations wi ll dapencl on expertenca. Please call office 304773-5333 or lax resum e to
304-773-5885.

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$15.67.-$26.1 9/hr.. now nir·
ing. For application and free
governement job tnlo, call
American Assoc . of Labor 1913-599-8042, 24/hrs. emp.
se rv.

Hospital conducts prc--~mploy- H
__O_
M_E_ H_E_A-LT_H
_
mem drugfakohoi testing.

Now Hiring

tJ'

Now you can have borders and graphics

Display Ads

All Display:
Noon 2
Business Days Prior T o

Description • lndude A PriOI!! • Avokt Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addrus When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Days

ANNo

992·2157

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p .m .
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon

• Start Your Ad s With A Keyword • Include Complete

\\\01\1 I \II \I._,

Or Fax To

Oead'tirM

Word Ads

Current owner: Cheri &amp;

Douglas

Galli a

ElM C.nl

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Meigs County Shariff's
Office
Sheriff Robart E.
Bsegle
Sherin Sales
Caoe
Number
· 05CV093
Countrywide Homo

We Cov·-.4_..,
Melts, Galtllli

And Mison

i!II""- - - -- - --,----=O:..:.r.;,F;axii.iTo

Pound said he knows the
U.S. Anti-Doping Age ncy has
closely
watc hed
Jones
because of her ties to the Bay
Area
Laboratory
CoOJ?.I:rative.
'If it's all wrong it's really
unfo rtunate," Pound said,
referring to the suspicion surround ing Jones, "but people
have· a tendency to judge you
by the company you keep,
and there's clearly been ongoing discussions with USADA
which have never been satisfactorily resolved. All that we
hear is that the BALCO affair
is not over."
Long a critic of how USA
Track &amp; Field has handled
doping cases, Pound said he
believes
things
have
improved and gave credit to
Peter Ueberroth, chaim1an of
the U.S. Olympic Committee.
"He's prepared to step up
and say this is not what the
United States of Ameri ca
stands for," Pound said,
adding that he supports the
USOC's decision to ban
coach Trevor Graham from its
training facilities.
Graham is Jones' former
coach and the coach of Justin
Gatlin, the I00-meter coworld record holder and
Olympic gold medalist who
tested positive for testosterone
and other steroids in April.
Several athletes who tramed
·with Graham have tested positive over the years.

i~ter

A
_I_O-ES
SIGN ON BONUS Home

Cosmeto logist needed. Call Heatr n Care of SE Onio is
currenlty h1ring home aides(740)446-7425
competitive wages
Ca ll
Door to door sales people 740·662-1222
needed.
Great earn ing
potential. Selling .Cable TV HVAC Positions Avai lable
an d related services. Sales Wi tn A Well -EstabliShed
e11perience require d 1-800- Athens Area Cont ractor
270- 1780
"o "RI-V::E- - - - - - We Have Openings for a
Service Technician end an
Do you have a class A
Installer. Must have 3 Years
COL1 1mmedlate OTR driv·
Experience
and Clean
lng opportunities available
Driving Record . 80% of
with Canton, OH Carrier to
Wo rk 1n Athens Area .
aervlce o ur Jackson, OH
ExceHent Wages Based on
account.
Experience . Send " Detailed
Resume To

•Weekty PBV

•Hospitalization and 401 K HVAC Positi ons
. •Lata model equipment
PO Boll 363
Call to schedule an
•No.NVC or Canada
The Plains, Oh 45780
inte rview!
- - - - - - - - ' - - - •95% no touch freight
Carpenter wanted- on ly e11p, •hometlma on moat week· Local Elec trica l Distributor
person
need
apply. ends
seeking a part time driver.
(740)446-7039.
•$500 algn on bonus
www.l nfo claion .com
mu'st be 21 years old with a
valid dnvers license. Contact
Must be at least 23 yrs. old,
West Virginia Elect ric 1885
A local financial insti lution is
have valid Long form DOT
Eastern Ave.. Gallipolis.
seeking a full-time co llec10r.
physical and have 2 years
This Individual must posOTR experience.
sess good verbal and written
communicalion skills, ability
q)(uc f{)r[vcl Cfrj;tnsport
to work with existing loan
Ask fo r Bob
' NO EJo:PEAIEtlCE NECESSARY
officers and Chief Lending
'I'ULL·TIME CLASSES
• COl lHAINING
Officer to develop an under·
' FINANCING .-.v...tU.eLE
standing of all aspects of the
'JOB PLACEMENT
' ENROLLING N(JoN
Driver
Collection
Department .
Salary commensurate with
expe rience . lnleresled indiOwner Operators
ALLIANCE
viduals send resume to
•Av\i $1 .77 gross· loaded
TRACTOR· TRAILER
Edwards W Stlnas. 211
mile
TRAINING CENTERS
West
Second
Street,
•Avg. $.3Bpm fuel
WVTI']EYILLE. VA
Po meroy. Member FDIC
swrcharge
•
and Equal Opportun1ty
. •SSOO Orlentatlon Pay
1-800-334-1 203
Employer.
•Insurance Available
w..w. all&lt;ancwtr.u;t&lt;J&lt; tii ,~Pcom
•Fiatbed·Trailers Available
6 mo OTR exp. required
Local Domesti c V1olence
Accepting applic~tions lor
•Ask
about our Dedicated
Shelter seeks part hme
lull &amp; part-time paramedics
Runs
advocate for outreacn servWe have a benetit package
666-713-:i!na
ices in MaSon County. Social
available. Applicatio ns can
No expertence?
servi~s eJo:perience prebe obtained from Mason
can600-913·2n8
ferred Compet itive salary.
County
Emergency
Please send resume with a www.mal onecontra ctors.c
Ambulance
Service
om
cowr letter to PO Box 403
Authority 2309 Jackson
Huntington WV 25708 post -R-,- -A_du_I!-.B-o-ok-- , 0
-,-,-ne-ed
35
5
Avenue Point Pleasant WV
ma
r~ed
no
later
than
Aug.
f.,Mn
•ght
Clerk
Full
time
25550. or you can call 3042006.
30,
(304)937
-4900
Drug
Tesl
675·6 134.

t-877-463-6247 .
ext. 2321

r--:-::-:.:.:..:..:=---,

1-800-652-2362
Flatbad

___ __
,

~

Send resume to : Buckeye
Community Services , PO
Box 604. Jackson, OH
45640 _ Deedlme for applicants
EqtJal
8125106..
Opport unity Employer,

r;;;;;;;===-=~
We are now accepting
applications for one par1
time clerical Oflen ing.
Applicants must have
computer experience
and possess good typ-

ing skills.

AesCare

l ead .•ng

p

'd

I

To apply, stop by the
Gallipolts Daily
Tribu ne.
625 Third Avenue.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn: Kevin Kelly

rovt er
or
Individuals witn · Mental
Retardation/Developm enta l
Di sabil ities is accepting
applicati'ons tor Direct Care

Pr oI8s sio na Is
Qua lili calions: Va lid Drivers
License,
Hign
School
Dtploma or GED Apply in

BusiNIS'i

OProRTUNlfY

;:::;;;;::~
•NOTfCE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do business w1th
peop le YOtJ know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail until you
have investig ated l ne

r

:o~H~er=in:g:.:;:;===~
·M OM.'Y
10 LoAN

~-~:::;~~~~=~
**NOTICE**
Borrow Smar t. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Fi nancial
Institution's
Olftce
of
Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your nome or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
f
o requests for any large
advance . paymeni s of
fees or insurance. Call tne
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs toll ·free at i-866·
278-0003 to learn if tn e
mortgage
broker
or
lender
is
prop erly

~~=:;:===~

r.

150

l

ScHool. .~
IK,1 lCliCnON

person at Middleton Estates L.,-oiiiiiiiiillii.iii-.-J
8204 c~rta Drive , Galhpulis,
Oh io. No telepllone calls
Concealed Pistol Class
Oh oo, WV. Sept 9. 2006..

li censed. {This is a publi c
service anno u r~cement
from tne . Onio Valley
Publishing Company)

·;~=====~
l!:r
PROFE~ION.U.
S ERV!l'ES

1

$75 00.
9 OOa m. VFW : ; ; ; ; : : : :
Mason
Ph. (740)843- li
555 5.
-------Fall enrollment lor new
xc itement ol the 60's an
Piano students now open.
O's
wtth a modern da
Inquire
(740)446-22 72
Charles
A.
Mu rray, wist. For More details call:
40· 742·3232 Of 740·742
Gallipolis. Ohio.
1066. For orders call: 1
66-550-3232'.
Visi
Gallipolis Career Collage
Nov
zone
at
WWW.
NOV
!Careers
Close
To
Home)
Telephone
1ntervtewer,
ONE.COM
excel lent computer &amp; com- Call Todayt 740-446-4367,
oming Soon The Zon
1·800-214·0452
muntcatton sKills, full- ttme,
www ga llipC•ISCJrocrcottogo.com ~R:;:e:;:la::,
'l "'SI,orec•----~
no benefits. $10 per hour Acc rOdiiO O Memoo r AccrOdi ltng after 4 weeks training . S8 Councot foo Independent Colleges Soulmates u:.c comtng
pe r hOW during lratmng, tn and Sctx&gt;ots 1274B
Soort! For people who a1e
Pomeroy. start 1mmedtately.
l loo k•ng for true love . a
call Mark' 800-556·3583
· . M rst:l-l.LANEOC..:S
Soulmates. 740-742-3232
oun y
.
. or 614-783-1232 Looking for
ente r
tS
accep tin
Rep's
esumes from potential can "89" SuzuKi Fat Boy muffler,
ia1tes to fill tne posit1on o Boored aut. many e111ras.
TURNEO DOWN ON
$1,500. 740-985-4258 "90"
sslstant
911/FEM
Ford ProBe TuBro Chager. SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI ?
This pOSIIiO
No Fee Unless We Wi n!
APCO
4 in taKe wittt head, 2.2(12
1-888-582-3345
va lve)$1 :ooo oo. 740·985·
ertif1ca110n,
W
EAPONS i:::ertiticatiOn , 4258.
Rl \I I "i I \II
ssociata or B.S. Degre
180
.\.\'TED
I
elpful tOut not required).
1
HOMES
ust be profic1ent in al
•
,
FORSALE
spects of computers (proramming nelplul but no Hook-n-Go. Local trailer
moving 25 mile radius 2 bedroom home, beauttful
equired). including bein
site.
9 .9 acres.
near
(740)388·8228.
all) iliar with Arc-View
Waterloo. OH. $34,000
an
rystal
Repprls
Mag1c Years Day- Care-Pre· (740)532-7614 .
ccess MUst nave previ
~
us experience in the tot Schoolln c.. Openings ava•l- ~"""""'':"'...
able. now accepting Fall·
2 story home, 3 bed·
owing areas. Emergenc·
Enrollmen t 'State l1censed
room , 2 batn, 2 car
Dispatching, Emergenc
"Puning Children First"
garage , 3 acres mi., 5
anagement, Supervisio
(304}675-5847
minutes from Gallipolis.
nd worKing knowledge o
W~;~nted
to
do
Pho!o/if'1fo
online
EMA Flood Plain progra
www .orvb.com
Coda
Housecleaning, weekly' &amp;
(helpfu l) arJd City-Sly!
71 86 or Cal l (740)446ddressing
programs biweekly. 1740)446· 1137 ret
7029
alary. benefits and sclled . if needed .
le wi ll he discussed durtn
Ctuw/EJ.tl EKLY
nterview . .., process.
2004 mod. home 4BR, 2
CARE
esumes will be accepte
baths. on 34 acres. Must sell
ntil September 1st. 2006
before 23'rd. Call (740)41.8·
Please send or deliver at Dependa ble &amp; loving day 72i4, make an offer.
esumes to Mason Count
care
needed
FI!!Xible
11 Center. PO Box 38 . schedule. Call Chr1stina
(740)245-5790 or (740)7940356

wv.

Salesperson needed lor
Janl!orial Supply Company
Commission based pay w1th
established route . Must have
va l•d driver's license and
reliable transportati on . Seno
resume to Sparkle Supply
LLC, PO Box 278, Gallipolis.
OH 4563 1

i10

l

w

·--TiioliiDoiiill-ol

~~O

·------,..1
"!"...

======'----'

Tno McDonalds of Ga1 11pol•s
will be do m~ ope~ interviev.•s
tor prospe cttv e employees
inte rested
111
ga tnmg
employment al tne rebutlt
location in Gal l1pol1s Ohio.
Any inte rested pe rsons may
pick up an application and
be
interviewed
on
Wednesday Aug usl 23
2006. at the Po1nt Pleasant
Library from 10:00 am unttl
5:00pm
----.,---Wanted· Dire cr Supervlston
EmpiO'jees to oversee male
youth in a stall secure r~JSI denhal env1r0r'lment. Must

pass a physical lraimng
requiremenl P"d benelns.
Can belween 9am-3pm.
~ooi~Fri 10 apply. 1 7 40 1~ 79 :

Will do Cntld Care. Flat
Woods Road Area . Mon.
thru
Fr t. ,
6:00AM·
5:00PM.Call
740-992·
1821'

2990 State Route 124.
Syracuse. out of flood plain
Ohio River view. 6 100m, 3
HUSIN··~-~
bedroom, 1 112 bath , 1 acre
l'--r.:~·
lot , garage . (740)992 -7866,
L.,-oiOI'Iiiioi'iilR'tiiii1il
iNiiltTi
iioo
'
(740)992-5776, (740)339·
'
For rent or sale. i 7,600 sq H. 3363 .
warehot.Jsil on At. 2 w11h 3
acres, fenced 1n &amp; gale~ 3 bedroom, 1 story. t 112
blacktop
parlung
lot bath, gas heat Cia. 2 car
(3d4)93?·41 27.
garage.
m
M1ddleport
r - - -::;:;-;:'- -""1 $72.500. (740)992·6926

tl\1\lt\t

tO

r

FIND

A JOB

OR A NEW
CAREER IN
THE CLASSIFlEDS

4 tental houses ~For Sale"
Good 1ncome prodtJ ci ng
properties. Great location!
Price(Sf are Nagotiable
Mol1vated
Seller!
tn
G811ipolls
Ca ll
Wayne
(4041456·3802.

_ ____________
___
•
__:._

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

r::~s:::R*:H@::~:::::I~r~1~o--·~~H~~-~
···.--~Inr:~~RM~w·~~-~~~
-~·n·_~~nr:~--A·~·~·RlN--•r•.•.-.lr •rem--~H~~
~~w~-111~-~-----------------------------------=====~~~========~
~.·---G&lt;looiiiiiiiil-n ~n

-·
~ ·

NO DOWN PAYMENT even
with less than perfect credit
Is ava1lable on this 3 bedroom 1 bath home In
Middleport Corner lot, v1nyl
siding, fireplace In living
room, good carpet, t1ie floor

Need to sell your home?
Late on payments, divorce,
Job transfer or a death? I
can buyyour home. All cash
and Quick closing. 740-4163130.

2 bedroom apts 1- Porw,
Oh. $425; 1·Kanauga $450 .
Water, sewer, trash pd .
(740)446-4734, (740)367 7746, (740)367 -7015

I~ I \ I \I "

French doors C;==;;::===:,
r·d

AII'~Ji*Qf
Ccmc~W'erk
26 Years

I

Ellm View
Apartments

(304)882-3017 .

..:.::.:.c==-----

i

r

Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
FOASUE
ing applications for walling
list for Hud-subsized, 1· br,
apartment. call · 675-6679
Commercial build1ng "For
Equal Housing Opportunity Sale" 1600 square feet. off
S"•CE
street parking Great loca.-.....
tion! 749 Third Avenue in
..._ . .
Gallipolis. Price "Negotiable"
·~
2
New
roof! Motivated Seller!
Commercial building "For
C
IIW
0
Renr 1600 square feet. off
t \tnt "' 1'1'111 ...
street parking . Great loca,\ 11 \ l .... ll )( h.
llon1 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Rent ·"Negotiable"
1 bedroom , upstai rs unfurCall Wayne {404)456-3802
FAR\1
nished apartment with
EQull'rltENr
range. refr. disposal and Downtown
Commercial
garage. 136 First Ave. rear. Retail space for Rent $400/
Deposit and reference. month.
Upstairs Office •KIEFER BUILT "VALLEY
(740)446-2561
Suites lor Rent $125/ month 'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVESTOCK TRAILERS 'LOAD1&amp;2BR apts. downtown you pay the Utilities. Call
MAX
' GOOSENECK,
(7031528·06
17
across from park. newly renDUt.IPS
&amp;
UTILITY
ovated, central HI A, includes
•ALUMA
"ALUMINUM
water, sewer, garbage.
TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSE(740)709-1690.
NECK
HITCHES.
Equipment
Carmichael
2 bedroom apartmdnt, $295
(740)446-2412
per month plus utilities &amp;
deposit,
references
Read your
Diesel Ditch Witch Tr encher
requ ired, Th ird Street ,
and learn with backhoe $7 ,500
Racine. Oh. (740)247-4292
(304)675·3773

i

F(_)RI.REN''ifOi,...,J
iOi

96 Chevy Suburban, 2 WO,
FMICD, dlJal air, 3rd row
seat, · 2 sels rims , dual
exhauSI $5,500 080. High
miles but runs great .
(614)554-4526.
99 Chevrolet Suburb an ,
loaded with leather interior,
new tires, good condition ..
$4,800. (740)446-6323.

r

4x4

FOR SALE

2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Limited, $10.500. Loan
value $14,500. (740)3677762 or (740)367-7272.
2002 Chevy Blaze r 4wd 2
door automatic trans. 55,000
miles . AC, power locks .
power windows. am /fm
radio. cd player. in greal condilion. $ 10,500 . 740 .645 _
3601
~------81 Dodge 112ton. 4x4. 6 cyl.
4 speed, Runs good
$1 ,450 . (740)446·1655.
97 GMC 3500 4x4 . 5 speed .
6.5l, tu rb o diesel, single
rear wheels, all new tires.
1ront end. clutctl , pressu re
plate, throwout bearing, and
shooks. 57,500 firm . Call
17,;4,;.
01;;;5;;,91;.·;.11;.;0,;6·;...._ _....,
30
VANS

0

F

"

..__..;:.;O;;R;;"';;;II;;;;;E;.,.,J
..,
1994 Mercury Villager Mini
van. PL. PW, PS, New tires,
runs axcellent. $2,000 Neg
Call740·992-4272
.- l\ (ll'ORCVCLFN.
·
.,.,.
1

1978
Leprechaun

coachman
motorhome.

Local! · owned. Wt care about ou!

Hardwood ea•ine•ry And furniture
www.flml&gt;...,...tkcablnetr)'.eom

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpoUs

OKA'I',MAW,GO
AHEAD AN'

OH, PAW!! A
BRmGE !!

OPEN YORE
E't'ES !!

740-992-1611

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE .
Auto &amp;Truck
Repair
3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

THE BORN LOSER
L'l'\ ~'f:.\1-iC. ~ I'OT -oq
01' COfFEt- WOUL{?
'&lt;OU UK.E. 1&gt;.. &lt;.uP?

992-5682

Stop &amp; Compare

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
,
Unconditional lifet1me guartS
TRUCK~
antee. Local references fu r·
mshed. Established 1975.
HJRSAU:
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
85 CheV)' S-10 Truck. not 0870, Rogers Basement
Running, new Motor, good Waterproofing.
body, ser1ous Inquires only
(304)81 2·2385

ADVERTISE
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
FAST
RESULTS

:)P~~I&gt;I~GTOO MUCH \l~-oq
"'-~,- A.i TJ.I.E. cm:ff£ "'OIJSE.
\.AIEL'(, 1\F.£ 'lOLl !

~

992-2·155

10 5
7 _4

IMPORTS
("a"'."""'t."w9"m"'"9e"s9e"""l, •

Hill's Self
Storage

and Sons
..a~.

29670 Bashan Road

J::'
All types of roofing:
New or Repa1r
Seamless Gutter
DOwnspout

FREE
ESTIMATES

(740) 949-1405

Racine.

Ohto

45771
74D-949-2217

'J,Ei~ hto·~

-

· '-'· toJo;X3o' 1
Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

PEANUTS
T&gt;IERE AREN'T ANV ZEBRAS
AROUND 14ERE, MARCIE ..

'I'OU KNOW W~AT WE S~OULD
DO, MARCIE? WE S~OULD Sl6t&gt;J
UP FOR RIDING LESSONS ..

1/14/1 mo. pd

~L:!'"'I:I!:!L.1!:lJ:IL.11i11:1..~

Cornerstone
Construction
Resid~ntial

• Conimerdal • Genual C ontracting
Painting • Doors • Window:- • De~:ks
• Siding • Roo fi ng • Room Add 1 tio n ~ • Remodeling
WV 038992
• Plumhing. • Ek~·trk:al 740~367-0544
OH 38244
• 1\l:cnustk Ceil ing
740~339-3412

SUNSHINE CLUB

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

- Free Estimates

GARFIELD

Dog Food
SOib Bag

-'RiliNG .

IShade River Wood Shavings
1" '" ·~u • ft. $3.99/Bag
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

~RiliNG

-'RiliNG

(Jt)

~

Shade River AG Service, Inc
St Rt 7 N ¥ Pomemy, Ohio 45769

.,

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10xlOxlOx20
992-3194
or 992·6635
"Middleport's only
Seii-Siorage"

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions lc
Aamodellng
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Aoollng &amp; Gutters
Vi nyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pallo and Porch Oeckl
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy Oh1o
25 Years Ltlca • E~pcn..,nrr
II 'I

------ --···--·----------·---- ---=--- -

GRIZZWELLS
A ~1-\W R:lR YoUR.
~l.fT?. 'NA~'K~k ...

I

?DU\-\D~

\..IKE. '(OU

&lt;¥ll

'I'OUR

W*\t'l'&gt;

~

summons

13 Chefs' wear 56 Peevish
14

Tac~

DOWN

Sculpture

and dance

1 Frat leiter
2 Ov01slght

North
3•
Pass

planlatlon

3 Parka
4 Oltlls abode
5 Almost

Glveh .go

-

St. -·s lire

23 ''QuoV..."

grads

East
Pass

Pass

lbu'lllrtlldo!Y:

ThursdaY, Aug. 24, 2006
By Bernice Bede Oso1
In the year ahead, knowledge and
expertise acquired o.ver. the years will
give you the edge over others in your
career. It looks like something big could
be in the offing.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22)- Rewarding
results will ensue through interactions
with people you believe are smarl. You're
right to follow their lead, but only after
you've thought things through as well.
LIBRA (Sapt. 23·0ct. 23) - II you are
prepared to revea l all the unbiased facts
to a friend . this person , using a different ·
perspective, could help you solve a problem
·
SCOAPIO .(Ocl. 24-Nov. 221- You wori't
be greedy. nor will you be looking lor any·
handouts. However, people know that
you eJCpect honest co mpensation for
work or services rendered .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23~Dec. 21)- You
wiH be better equ1pped than your associates to handle conlusirig issues that are
important to the entire group. When leadership is required, step into the breach.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Let
your compassionate instincts not on!~
prevail but dominate. If there is someone
who needs your-help, do what you can to
assist this individual, even if it inconven·
iences ~au .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19} - A social
commitment you may have been trying to
dodge will surpnsingly turn out to be
quite fun . You'll be glad you Couldn't find
a way to get out ot it.
PISCES (Feb. 20- March 20) Someone whose support you thou ght
~ou ne eded could actually turn out to be ·
more of a hindmnce than a help. You'll
quick!~ discover th1
s when ·you 're forced
to do the job yoursell.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - Your first
thOughts aren't likely to be ~our best
ones. so don't lall in love with them. You'll
get smarter and smarter as time goes by.
and by nightfall you may turn ou) to oe a
sheer gen1us.
' · TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- Someone
might implement changes that you may
initially reject and/or resent . But don't
jump to conclusions because you'll like
them in the end.
GEMINI ( Ma~ 21-June 20)- lnstead of
holding firm . to your own ideas. liSten
attentively to your mate"s Input regarding
a matter of mut1,1al concern. Much to your
surprise, his or her views could be far
better than yours.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)- Get Your
work done as early in the da~ as possi·
ble while you're lresh and alert. As the
hours tick by, you 're l iket~ to become a bit
erratic and confused as to where you .
went to head
· LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) -Situations that
contain chancy elements could work out
well lor you early In the day, but all that
cou ld change by tate afternoon . When
you see things going awry, hang up your
tools ·

24 Broad-

6 Type

25 Even
260111!1

29 Betaugt11
32 Avg. size

Interest
gpo.
26 Boot upP."r 48 Party tray
27 Garlietd a
cheese
deer

canine
pal

miscellany

9 H01e, to

35 Qt. parta
36 Look after
38 Chnchefo

10

28

monsieur
Eacorted

. 30

11 Right,
12

-Rozelle
41 Woyto

Hn the road

49 Cobra

50

O'Neil

ollllmo

cousin
Emma In

"The
Avengers"

31 Apprehend 51 Wetland

on a map

40 Football's

47 Common

antlered

stvle
7 Winter
apple
a·Llti&lt;ary

lond

~Graph

SOUP TO NUTZ

18
19

34 Mombasa'o

John Paul Getty, who died In 1976, said,
"II you can actually count your · mona~.
then you are not really a rich man."
At the bridge tatle, if you can count your
lrlcks correclly and play for high enough
stakes, you might become ri ch. The
number 76 also relates to today's deal.
Do you know why? How should South
plan the play in four hearts af1er West
leads the spade queen?
Nortll's tllree-lleart respon se is a gameinvitati onal limit raise . He will (should!)
.always have at least four-card support \
(If ~ou have a book that says you may
make this bid with only three trumps,
give it to one of your opponents, adding·
how valuable you found it .) He would
normally have 10-12 total points. Here,
he has 11 llig"!_
-Card points and one
shorta ge point lor the doubleton d ub. He
would also have eiglli losers . Here,
these are three spades (never count
more than three losers In one suit), three
hearls, one diamond and one club.
There are Jour potential losers: one in
each suit 0 1 courSe, West might have
the diamond king, in which case there
would be no loser in -that suit. However,
that is only. a 50.50 shot.
lt is much better to try to eliminate that
pesky spade loser. Win the first trick and
play the diamond 10 to dummy's queen.
If it wins, lead a trump. But when the dia·
mond fi nesse loses to East's king and a
spade comes badr;, win that and pia~ a
diamond to dummy's nine. After that
card holds the trick, diScard your th ird
spade on tile diamond ace, then draw
trumps as quickly as possible.
What are the ·a priori odds that one dia·
mond fi nesse out of two will work? Right
- 76 percerJ!."
·

~

oqulrter

55 Airport

33 Frull drink

From year 76
to percentage 76

'

' NATE
BIG

'

The Daily Sentinel

7 "

~ Astro-

YOUNG'S

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR -YOU!!

BARNEY

;;;;;~~~~:~::::~;;R~·

IMPROVFJ\IENTS

.d$27.00 PER MONTH!
... THE

1'10 ICIDPING?!-/ YOV FAt::~l&gt;
YOU/l OwN
EXTINCTIOI'I11
..

Toll Free 8JJ-&amp;69·0ool
70 Pine Street • Gallipoli5 -

CAMPERS &amp;
MO'roR Ho~IES

ON·THIS PAGE FOR
AS LOW AS
I

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740·446-0007

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

•

West
Pass
Pass

6 Easily

17 Fictional

Opening lead: • Q

'-.oi4i.WioiiHiiEiii'EI;;Iiii~-·--

,.

'

South
1•
4. •

Delivering Daily *One Stop Shop*

• New Homes

K Q

Vulnerable: East-West

, CPAP
• Hospital Beds
• Wheelchairs

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

A Q 9

•

Dealer: South

·

• Nebulizers

.•

•
•

53 Like city air
54 Gorage

poet

16

• A
t KB432
. J865&gt;

&amp; .IIEOICU EQUIPMENT
• Portable Oxygen
• Helios
, Homefill

IO 8 7 4

South
4 AK4
.KQJ 960

~
OXYGEN

04 Kawasaki 700 Prairie
4x4. Real tree hardWoods
r..:amo, under warranty until
03/08 $4.500 . (7 40 )446·
7158
- - - - -- - 2004. Kawasaki KFX 700 V
Force. low hours11ike new
$4,200 {304)882-3160

2003 Ford Mustang, bright
ye llow, excellent condition
44,000 miles. $8,200 OBO.
(740)709·1989.

Like new fiberglass top·
per for Toyota Tundra
w/6 .5ft . bed·$500 . Vinyl
cargo boJC tor full size
truck-$50.
(740)4460167.

(/

•

53
J 76
A t O9 3

740-742-2293

Grills

52

15 Polo, e.g.

•
•
•

' Leave a message

E~ti m lll es

9 53 2

f:asl

Call Gary Stanley

740-992-6971

o&amp;-z3-o6

•

West
• Q J 10 8

"Insured"

brown
1 Romantic

12 Bump along

North

MONTY

49 Raddloh-

damaged
11 Achiever

•I
i I

03 white Chevy Tahoe Z71
Ext. warranty, loaded, exc.
condition. $21.000 080.
(740)992-5025 evenings.

21• . has good motor. inside
needs wo rk. Asking $2.000
2002 Mercury Mountaineer OBO. 11 interested call
Loaded w1th only 48.000 (740)441 · 1236, if no answer
leave message, ask for
m1tes. ·
2002 Ford Llghlif"!Q F150 Jan1e.
Sl R\ J( I .._
pu:;k up 30,000 miles. Call
(740)256-1245
evenings
0
and weekends.
HOME

90 S10 P1ckup , 4.3 64 .~00
on new Eng1_ne
_Askmg
$1,950 (304)675-6713

David Lewis
ln~ured

ADVERTISE YOU:R
BUSINESS

BUS TRIP FROM
PVH
Charleston,
'
South Carolina

.

r

·---iiii'Eii.iim;iiiiiiii._.J

r
r

I

close to schools. Good
FOR RENT
hOme
site.
$16,000 . - (740)256-1553. (740)339- · 1 and 2 bedroom apart9
236_.___·_· ~-- men1s, turnished and unfur__
Mobile Home Lot for rent nistled . security deposit
near Vinton. Call {740)441 - required , no pets, 740-992·
; 111 .
2218.
-'--------- --------Mobile Home Lot in Johnson t bedroom apt. Racine, OH.
Mobile Homo Park in Short drive from power
Galli polis, OH. Phone plants. $550/mo., utilities
(740)446·2003 or (740)446· included. No pets. (740)4411409.
0110 or (740)992-5174.

September 29, 2006 to
October 2, 2006
Includes transportation,
, breakfasts &amp;
$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!

I

I

Tuppers Plains
VFW #9053
.Friday Nights
Doors Open at 5 pm
Bingo starts ,at 7 pm ·

'

j

Experience

Free

L,•-.:;Evt-; ;F:;,'~:PI\•R:::~k-._.J ~.,r__m~s::.~~sA~~---.,JI

r

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt' &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

I I II I'
Ill,( Ill II
Ill,~ I Rl ( Ill"
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

-···--..

r

NEA Crosaword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Appliance

PIYIIIC TOP PRICES Fill

Reasonably priced log home
in Springfield Twp. Quiet,
nice
neighborhood.
Surrounded b~ !arm land ,
2BR, 1 bath, LA, DR , slorage bldg. Situated on 6
acre. (740)446· 280 1.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

Phillip
Alder

11111_........,.........

tion, 1+acrll, 1500 Sq. Ft.
Triple AAA Home
living
room, family room , dining
room, &amp; extras $65,000
(304)593·0852

www.mydailysentinel.com

ACROSS

3 bedroom, 1,000 sq. ft. apt.
Gallipolis, OH , located in
Warehouse
kitchen.
town. $650/mo., reference
3, 100 Sq.FI. Cape Cod 48R. · open to master bedroom,
required. No pets. (740)441~ 4bath, 40' ~~:50' Bi-level deck J8CUZZI luQ, oft street park·
H~
in Henderson , WV Pre0t to or (740)992-5174 .
that wraps arou·nd 27' above ing. Pa~ment around $550
fOR RF.Nr
owned Appliances starting
ground pool, full basement, per month 740-'367-7129. ~--ililii.iiiiiiiii.-,1 Apt for rent 2 or 3 Sr.. No at $75 &amp; up atl under
2.5 car garage, tots of
Warranty, also have reconBedroom
Two 110 4th Ave, 2 bedroom, LA, Pets.
extras. 1 acre. River Valley Three
Bathroom
Oversize
2
Car
OR,
eat-in
kitchen,
1
bath
ditioned
Big Screen TV's
School District, 15 minutes
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Storage Bldg ., $375/mo. $200/dep. Renter MENTS
AT
BUDGET by Ron's TV (304)675from Gallipolis. Must see to Garage
'appreciate was 5250.000 newer carpet and roof. 1/2 pays all utilities. Available PRICES AT JACKSON 7999
Reduced $235,000 (Neg.) Acre Lot We11 maintained immediately. (740)446-9061 . ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $349 to $448. Sale sofa &amp; chair $350. Sola
Muot Seal Call (740)367· Home. V1ne Street, Racine!
t Bdr furnished house in
740·949-80t0. 195.000.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call. &amp; I. se9.t $400 . Aeclmer
0126.
town. Utilities paid, ideBt for
740-446-2568 .
Equal $200. Mollohan Furn. Clark
MODIU: HOMES
construction worker. Call
Housing Opportunity.
Chapel Ad, Porter 0 .
4 bedroom, 2 bath , double
S
(740)368-0173.
Open ·
garage. pool, 2 acres. ·--oiFOiiiiRoiiiiAiiiLiiE--" ~
17_:4:cOI_:446.::_·0:.:9:.::68=.'-----.
Brand new 2 Bedroom Saturday on l~
Eastern SchOol Distnct.
2BR home· Vinton St. $37~
740-992-3465 after 5.00PM AAA MODULAR ranch mo.+ sec. dep. You pa~ utili· Apartments Washer/dryer
models $55,838. Midwest ties. Gas heat. (740)446· hookup, stove/refrigerator Thompsons· ApphafiCe &amp;
included.
~ Repair-675-7388. For sale,
4bd, 2 bath. Only $32 ,900! Homes (740)828-2 750
3644.
Also
available
units
State
re-conditioned automallc
FORECLOSURE! For listIngs 800-391·5228 eKt F254 Clean well maintained 95 3 bedroom in Gallipolis. Route t60. Call tor details washers &amp; dr~ers, relrlgera· 1 0
Clayton, 14x70, all elect r~ c , Great location! W/0 conn. (740)441-0194 or (740)441 · tors, gas and electric
ranges. air conditioners. and
5 Room House with Bath, 3 3 br. 2 bath . complete wilh $309/rnonth , $100/deposit. 1184.
wringer washers . Will do John Deere t 0 fl . No Til Drill
lots, in Leon $30,000 appliances, washer dryer. No pets.
clJrtains, . new blinds, heat 1 bedroom in Gallipolis. CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· repairs on major brands 1n tor
Phone 1304)674·0132
rent.
Carmichael
shop or at your home.
pump wi th central, air, 2 Great location! $179/month. ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Equipment (740)446-24t2.
Townhouse
apartments,
94 Fleetwood mobile home porches. new underpinning $100/deposit. No pets. Call
and/or small houses FOR
~lANEOUS John Deere Min1 E)(cavstor/
2BA, 14x40 total electric. 116.000 OMO (3041593- Wayne (404)456·3802.
RENT. Call (740)44t · 11 1i
MffiUIANDISE · Tractor Loader Backhoe/
New 32x24 Pole barn on 6437 or (304)675-8668
3BA home- SA 554, Bidwell,. for application.&amp; information: --;
approx. one ace (2 lots) on
Skid Siee rs.· Carmichael
Great lJSed 38R home only $575/mo. sec. dep; all etec.
554 in Bidwell. $36.500
42 Blue &amp; Gold McCaw Equipment (740)445-24t2
$9,995. Will help with deliv! (740)446-3644.
OBO. Call (419)782·0268
Fea~ers ,
$3 5/cash
ary. Call (740)385-767 1.
New John Deere Compacts
(304)882·2436
3BR house- LeGrande Blvd.
AAA MODULAR ranch LAND &amp; HOME PACKand 500 0 Series Ut1lity trac$600 rent &amp; sec.' dep. You
ButCher block table w/whlte tors @0% Fixed for 36
models $55,838 . Midwest AGES- 1st time buyers &amp;
pay utilities. Lease &amp; relerpedestal base. w/4 chairs, months thro ugh John
Homes (740)828-2750
FHA.
Midwest Hornes ences required. (7 40)446 eK.cellent cond1tlon $150 call Deere Cre dit. Carmichael
(740)828·2750
3644 lor application.
Attention!
(304)6937 leave message
Equipment (740)446-241 2
Local company offering "NO New 2'006 Clayton sin - 4-5 bedroom, 2 bath, 3,000
Hot Tub for Sale (304)675- Quality John Deere Hay
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· glewides starting at $199.84 sq.ft.
Ha(dwood
floors
2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
1732
Equipment for less-round
gr'ams lor ~ou to bu~ your per month. Trade-ins wel- throughout the
house.
Start1ng at $385 and up.
balers, square balers &amp;
home instead of renting .
comes. Call (740)385-2434. Watert1rash
JET
paid . Call
Central tieat &amp; air, .WID
mower conditioners @4.7%
• 100% financing
(740)446-74~5.
AERATION MOTORS
hook-up, coin operated
NEW
3
br
doublewides
from
FiiCed tor 48 ~nths through
• Less than pertect credit
Aepairad,
New
&amp;
Rebu1
lt
In
laundry, owner pays water.
John
Deere
Credit.
$269
mo.
Midwest
.
Homes
4bd
HUO
home!
Buy
for
accepted
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1sewer &amp; trash.
Carmichael
Equipmen t
$20,900t For Listings BOO·
• Paym ent could be th e (740)828·2750.
800-537-9528.
(740)446-24 t 2.
39H228 xt709
same as rent.
.NEW
SINGLEWIDE·
- - - - - - - - ;;.,;;:.;;.::.:;;.:.:;,_ _ _"
Mortcege
Locators. $2?,572 Midwest Homes
Attention!
Furnished ~pi, 3 rQOms &amp; NEW AND USED STEEL
(740)367·0000
(740)828-2750.
Local company offering ~No bath , upstairs , clean , no Steel Be ams Pipe Rebar . ..__ _L•I•V•I:S•rocK---·~
'
.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- pets. Ref/deposit required .
SINGLEWIDE·
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
NEW
grams for you to buy your :.17_:40:::)_:
44_:6:_-1:.::5_:
19::.__ _ _ _ Channel, Flat Bar, Steel •KIEFER BUILT •vALLEY
$22,572 Midwest Homes
home instead of renting.
(740)828·2750.
.Gracious living . 1 and 2 bed- Grating
For
Drains. •olSON •HORSE &amp; LIVE• 100% financing
room apartments at Village Driveways &amp; Walkwa~s. L&amp;L STOCK TRAILERS 'LOAD·
REPO'S I USED from ' Less than pertect credit
Manor
and
Riverside Scrap Metals Open Monday, MAX
·GOOSENECK.
$ 1,900 down
Midwest accepted
Apartments 1n Middleport. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
All rell ntate advertising
' Payment could be the
Homes (740)828·2750
From $295-$444. Call 740- Friday, 8am·4·30pm. Closed "ALUM A
• ALUMINUM
In thl1 news!)lper Is
same as rent.
992-5064. Equal Housing Thursda~.
Saturday
&amp; TRAILERS •s&amp;W GOOSE•ubJectto the Federal
LOTs&amp;
Mortgage
Locators. Opportunities.
S unda~. (740)446-7300
NECK
HITCHES.
F•lr Ho011n11 Aet of 1968
ACR!AGE
(740)367-0000
Carmichael
Equipment
which makea It Illegal to
Hills
(740~24 12
House for rent. No Pets. Honeysuckle
advertise "any
1.75 Acre Lot
740·992-5858
Apartments, Gallipolis, now ~
FUR SAIJ-;
1 R
p.-.ference, llm.ltatlon Of
Mason Co. WV
accepting applicatiohs for 2
dlacrlmlnatlon baled on
Rt. 2 Box 127,
Nice 3• BA home in Spring Bedroom Apartme nts, No AKC
Mini
Pinschers Tro~ Bill T1lier, low hours
l'llc:t, color, religion, sex
Leon. WV 25123
Valley. Nice yard, no pets, 1 RentS! Assistance available Puppies. Males black/rust.
famlllll 1tatua or nation•!
Approx . 500'
yr lease. Taking apps. $600 at this time. Rent starts at vet. checked. AKC Mini
9rfgtn, or any Intention to
Road Frontage
maka any auch
mo. Call Dave @ (740)441 · $315/md. Equal Housing Schnauzer
Puppies. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
preference, llmlletlon or
Utilities Available
0114.
Opportu nity. (740)446-3344 White/black.
saiVpepper.
Ali1'()1;
dlecrlmlnatlon.•·
$9,995
black/silve r. $400 each.
FUR SALE
MOBt'~Rn~~IES
H
1304)295·9090
Immaculate 2 badroom 740.696. 1085. ,
~------.,.1
Thlt newspaper will not
·v Al'.l'll
• apartment in the cou ntr~.
lmowlngly accept
Approx 3 acres, 2 Muse
New carpet &amp; cab1nets , AKC Registered Lab pup- $500! POLICE IMPOUNDS!
MlverUeementt for real
sites. Utilities x2, city water, 2 Bedroom Trailer, $400/mo, freshly palntad &amp; decorated, pies.had shots &amp; wormed. Carsrrrucks !rom $500 1 For
nl1te which lt ln
large solid 2 story barn, S400 deposit. Call (740 )367 _ W/0 hookup. Beautiful coun- ChocOlate &amp; Black,male &amp; hstirrgs 800-39t -5227 x390t
violation·of the lsw. Our
approx 1/2 mile Ollr SA 218. 7762 (740)446 4060 or tr~ setting. Must see to female $250.00 ready logo
·
02 Chevy Cavalier, 4 dr,
r11ders are hereby
Beautiful lot, city or county 1740 1367 7762
appreciate.
$399/mo. 304-773-5746 or 304-593·
·
auto, air, CD, good condiInformed that all
schools. Serious bu~ers - - - - - - - - - {6 14)595-7773 or 1-800- 2570.
dwelllnga .clvertlsed In
only. $44K. (7 40)441 -7333. 2 bedroom, all electric. NC, 798-4686..
lion. $ 4,250. (740)446- 1663
ttlil newtpaper are
porch &amp; awning. Ve ry, very - - - - - - - - - Miniature Pinscher CKC - ~(l=••:.:ve=::m~e=ssa~g:::el_ _ _ _
•valllble on an ~qual
For rent Mobile Home Lot, ni oe, no pets. In Gallipolis. Modern 1 bedroom apt. ·red/male
S350 .
A"KC
opportunity baaes.
Phone:
· 17401446-0390 .
· ale water and (7 o)
Rl 87 . Pr1v
black/female $ 400 . T1ai l, t933 Dodge Street Aad
4 446 .2 003 or (740)446sewer
$130
month
claw,
shots,
wormed. Steel Body $22,000, 1973
1409.
(30 4)675 _4138
Newer roomy One Bedroom (7401388 _8788
Pl~moutl' Ouster $7,500
COuntry in tile City,. Two
with
br9akfast
bar.
Stove,
(304)675-3773
For rent : Nice 2 bedroom
income producing t"louses in Land for sale. Several 5 to
mobile home in . Country new refrigerator. Country •Chihuahua · registered.
Pt. Pleasant. One home 12 acre lots located in Gai11a
setting. First/last mo. rent tiny apple head.
1979 Chevy van , new motor/
Homes. $325 + deposit.
newl~ remodetad . $20,000 Co., Morgan Twp and Meigs
plus depoSit 740-992-3543
•Tea cup Yorkl~. registered. w/ ctlai r liH, very good cond.
(740)385·40t9.
$1 000
·
tor both (740) 367-7760
Co., Salem Twp. Land conbaby-doll
face, qual1ty
'
·
babies.
(
o)
_
.
1998
Dodge
Stratus,
new
tracts available . Some Mobile home sites for up to fara
Townhouse
74 446 9428
tires. runs good $1 .000 .
House in Henderson, Large restri ctions No calls after 16JC80 in _Country Homes Apartments. Very Spacious.
(740)339·3709, (7 40)367·
Living and Dining Room, 9:oopm 1740 )669 _0143 .
(740)385 •4019 .
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
FRurrs&amp;
70t6
Kitchen, Bath, 2 Bedrooms,
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
VEGETABL!N
24x24 detached Garage. Leon,WV- 2acres of and for .Mobile Home sites for up to Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
1994 Honda Civic $500.
Approx. 3 acres. $30,000 sale. (304)458· 1032.
16K80 in Country Homes. No Pets, Lease Plus
Canning Tomatoes. Picked Police lmpoundsl For list(304)675-8732
Mercerville building lot for (7 40)385-40t9. ·
, Security Deposit Required, or pick your own. 740-247mgs 800- 391-5227 eJCt .
·~·-(740)367-7086.
·
4292.
Must Sell ASAP Prime loca- sale. 4.745 acres SA 218
!U"f\KIIYII'.l'llt~
C548.

in

Wednesday, August 23, 2006
AllEY OOP

a suspect

Courtroom

·J7

dozen

Torrential

area
52

Plant sci.

downpour

Placed In
39 Footrests
order
41 Silly
18 Pat11r.ature 43 Sovereign
20 Like a wet
docree
noodle
'44 Dellvera
16

aatorl
42 Prefix lor
''1rllllon"
46 Toke on
corgo
48 Portends

meaaage
45 Pert o! PGA

21 Face

22 Chances

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Ophef CJYJ1109rsms •9 craaled from (!UOtations by lamo~s peoPle. past and present.
Each letter In the cipiler smnds jor anolher

Today's c/ua: XequeiS K

"N GVND YGFVLI · FH

CLV JTC JNDXH

FL JTVL BTV GVHB CY BTV JCGDI
JNDXH

COB. "

JNDBVG JFLPTVDD

•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Solitude is the playlield ol Satan.·· V. Nabokov
"One can acquire every1hing in solitude- except charaC1er."- Stendhal

WORD
~~:!~~y
s~~~1J-&lt;Zt~s·
GAM I
- - - - - - - 14&lt;114 by CLA.T I. POILIN __;_ _ __
ltlltn
0 learrO"it
scrombi.C
foUl
low "' Ierro

lo•r

of . lht

,.rds be·
oooplo word.:

AT NEC
~------~----,~

CHOCU

I

"If you ihink the world owa
you a living," gramps told my

r.~--~~--,--1 ~
I

'---'--'-...1..-.1.--l ~

SiSler, "you will find il a hard debt

.----P-o_o_L-v-E---,1 10 ....... "

1 I I' I I
6

O C~plole

lht ch.clle quolod
by illlin9 in lhe m1uing wordt
'--'--'~-'--'--'-:--' you dtvelop lrom &gt;ltQ No. 3 below.
.

•

•

_

•

,

.::\ PIINT NUM8fRfO LElT(AS
r::l IN IH!SE SQUARES

E)

t

g~t':~~~~~ mms •o I I

l

5

IIIIII

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS lllli06
Opaque - Snack - Annoy - United - CAN SPEND
"They muSI be very ~ucccssfu 1," my sisler remarked aboul
her neighbors. "Why is that?" tasked. She smiled, "Why7
Becau$J !hey make more lllan their kids CAN SPEND."

ARLO &amp;JANIS
YACA1fOU 1e

~~,...o~r ov~ .

AR~kl'!' YOOI&lt;OIIJC..
TO ~~A~T IIJ lll!tOuT ,IIOV!IJG

10 1)1~ !!&gt;EACH~

�(
Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

-. ·'.....'•
' ..,.
'

Wedbnesday, August 23, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006 Fall Sports

--

-

space - Call The Dally Sentinel
992-21 55
.

'Showboat' docks
at Ariel this
weekend, B8

· Guide inside
today's Sentinel

'

,----------

--~··

'

'

•

'---··-···"'

•
I

lI

l

§catch]

back to
work boys

0

.

:.

'

0

bring in the
deaning crew

The
Daily

Sentinf"l

992-:!155

To advertise in this space call
The Dally Sentinel
992-2155

~izmos ~ 'a~~els

Thoy all appear on this page
plus once more somewhere
I

Midd!eport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)O

CFN'I'S • \'ol. ;,b,

As mouse chases
cheese G) he turns
_ tr~admill ®which

• Week 1 football
previews. See Page 81

©m. underhill

®. ·

Middleport
car lotdebate
•
•
ratses
zomng
questions

· R~plac~ment mice .,
'

~

. OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Lester Ohlinger, 53
• David Proffitt, Sr., 71
• Darrell Sellers, 66

•••

•• • •

over last year retlects t~ddi­
tional costs in salaries, utilities, fuel costs for the 28
buses which lransport students, and other expenses.
In the dislrict's five-year
financial forecast recently
released by Treasurer Mt~rk
Rhoncmus, tigures showed
a balance of $3 18,372 with
a projection of ending this
school year in J uhe, 2007,
with a deficit of $39,614.
The deficit, according lo
the financial forecast submitted
to
the
State
Department of Education at
the end of June shows a

Bv CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFUCH@MYO,AILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - · A revis.ed
temporary appropriations
for the 2006-07 fiscal year
in
the ·amount
of
$24,592,634 has been
approved by the Meigs
Local Board of Education.
The figure is an increase
over the 2005-06 permanent
appropriations which were
$24,210,872 of $3R I ,762.
Last year's figure was
750,000 less than in 200405 when it was $24,965,356.
The increase this year

' motion
~
. ' eXtender arms' firmly hold
mouth open @. Oral hygiene
.. made simple', made fun! ·
.

TIH IRSI).\\', ..\lJ(:lJST:q,

:\111. I:!

Lots of forehead
Our brains are preprogrammed
to see babies faces as cute, so if
we exaggerate their proportions
we get cute.

Small features

.....,__ Big ears, centered

on head
To advertise
in this space
CaiJ
992-2155

~~~,~~~~Features located
on lower half
of head
This is the universalla·w of cuteness, and it
applies to more than just babies. Next
week we'll see hoe applying these proportions can make anything cute

INSIDE
• Exhibil,ot Sept 11
photos opens at ground
zero. See Page A2
• Hayes, Young and
Holiday School reunion
held. See Page A3
• RiChmond top loser.
See Page ·A3
• O'Bieness offering
free prenatal and
breastteeding classes.
See Page A3
• OU graduates
accused of plagiarism
must appear before
panel. See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• Transfers posted.
See Page A6
• Family Medicine.
See Page A6
.
• Two tired computer
specialists sue OU.
See Page A7

BY BRIAN

WEATHER

growing deficit lhrough
20 I0, although it wa' pointed out that figures can
change and it all depends on
what amount of state aid
comes in and other variables.
"We're facing some real
challenges." said Buckley.
According to projected
figures
presented
by
Rhonemus in chart form. the
deficit at the end of tiscal
year 2007-08 will be
$866,349; at the end of fiscal
year 2008-09 it will be
$1,562, 107 and at the end of
tiscal year 20 I0, $2, 165, II 0.
The treasurer emphasized

BY BETH SERGENT

J. REED

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BREED@MYDAI LYSENTIN EL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
- A
used car dealer will be permitted to locate a sales lot in
Middleport 's downtown
business district, but the
decision by village council
last week has raised questions about zoning ordinanes and what they allow
in the downtown district.
'Last month. the planning
commision approved . Roger
Manley 's plans to locate his
business, Economy Auto
Civil War reenactors
Sales, on a lot he purchased
appeared before the grandon N011h Second Avenue.
stand at the Meigs County
The planning commission
determined that the current Fair Saturday for a program
and demonstration on batzoning restrictions do not
preclude a car lot, and that a tle skills during the 1860s.
The reenactors brought in
mobile home ordinance
several
horses with riders
does nol prohibit mobile.
office units such as· Manley in military attire for the presentation. Their battle
has placed on hi s lot.
Manley has faced opposi- scene, pictured above, was
preceded with a tal k on
tion to his. plans for a used
Confederate
General John
car lot since he purchased a
lot on South Third Avenue,
Hun t Morgan by Darrell
across from the former Ford
Markijohn , who portrays
dealership. Residents in Morgan, to those who gaththat neighborhood, which
ered in the ·grandstand. In
includes both homes and
the role of the Union
businesses, took their case
Cavalry Commander
to the village, and Manley
General Hobson was Bob
abandoned his plans to
Vance shown here getting
open his business there. his horse ready before movInstead, he re-sold the lot
ing onto the fairgrounds
and purchased the lot next
centerfield for the
to the Citgo service station
encounter.
downtown.
Charlene Hoefllch/ photoa
Residents continued their
opposition ; citing the zoning ordinance, which allows
a new car showroom out not

Hometown Market selected
for national competition
Bv BRIAN

Bv KEVIN KELLY

2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

CAREFULLY CUT OUT
EACH FRAME. STACK IN
ORDER WITH II 0~ TOP. PINCH
WrTH FINGERS OR USE BINDER CliP. •·
FliP WrTH THUMB FOR ANIMATION FUN. •

PARENTAl SUPERVISION ADVISED

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

Bs-6

·Annie's Mailbox

'

I

•

Comics

~7

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

B8

. Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© :&amp;oo6 Oh'o VaHey ~blishlng Co.

'

J.

REED

BR([O@MYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

KKELLY@MYOAILYTRIBU,E.CbM

INDEX

bargaining !able every yea,
of the contracl term to discu" sa lary, insurance and
other issues. As yet no contr&lt;Jci has been reached with
the non-certified (OAPSE)
employees in the district.
With the ''tlat line'" revenue and the increased costs
of opernlion, Buckley said
he foresees problems but
no1ed I hat the district is continuing to look at ways to
reduce operational costs. ·
"We can't count on anyone
to bail us ou1. and going into
th~ loan fund is not a pretty
picture," he concluded.

Morgan's Men
Association to
visit Portland
museum

.fiilf.:

July jobless
rates for
•
area Increase

Detail• on Poeo A6

that all ligures are projected
and could change as school
funding and operational
expenses vary.
While revenue is on a "flat
line." expenses conti nue to
climb, said ·the superintendent. He noted that currently
the district is "spending
more in insurance and henetlts than in salary.'' Under a
recentl y neg01iated contract,
teachers were given a two
percent salary increase over
the regular increases which
· they are given for years of
&gt;ervice. The contract provides for reiUrning to the ·

... ."" t.

Please see Zoning, AS

~izmos ~ ~a~~eh
FLIP BOOKFUN

"""·"')tlaihwnliol\'l.w"'

!!OO(t

School district's income flat, expenses climbing

MOUSEMATIC TOOTHBRUSH

~~:~;~·
;
,~~:.
~
~~'
' ·re.ulting in brushing_.

i~i'

.

SPORTS

To
advertise in
this space
Call

•
'

GALLIPOLIS - The.
late st set of unemployment
numbers for area counties
showed more 'people were
out looking for jobs in
July, as were o1her
Ohioans,
the
state
Department of Jobs and
Family Services has found.
Gallia County's unemployment rate was at 6. 7
percent last month, up twotenths of a percent from
June's 6.5 percent, ODJFS
reported this week.
Meigs Coun~y saw its jobless rate increase a full percentage point to 8.6 percent.
June's rate was 7.6 percent.,
Athens County's joble"Brian J. Reed/ photo
ness jumpeu 1.1 percent Richard and Wendy Hill, owners of Hometown Market.
from 5 percent in June to chat with Dennis Wolfe of Syracuse. The Middleport gro6.1 in July, while Jackson cery has been selected to represent the Ohio Small
County. rose three-tenths or Business Development .Centers in · the national Client
Success Story Competition .
Please see JDbless. AS
;

~

~

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport's Hometown
Market. owned by Richard
and Wendv Hill of Racine.
has been selected to represent the Ohio Small Business
Developmt'nt Centers in a
nationwidt' small business
success competition.
The store will represen t
Ohio in the Client Success
Story Competition. sponsored by America's Small
Business
Development
Cenler
Network.
The
ASBDC national competition
recognizes small business
owners who have realized
success atier receiving busine&gt;s counseling and training
through a local SBDC.
Lt. Governor Bruce
Johnson. who also serves as
director of the Ohio
Department
of
Deve lopment. announced
the 'upernuirkds selection.
"I would like to congratulale Hometown Market for it'
success in Middleport ;md
. Please see Selected. AS

"

PORTLAND
This
Saturday is a big day for the
Buffington Island Civil War
Museum located inside the
Portland Community Center
when around 90 members
of the · Morgan's Men
Association pay a visit.
Men
The
Morgan's
Association recently made a
$ 1,000 donation to the museum for its development. '
"We're honored that a
prestigious group like the
Morgan 's Men Association
is paying us a visit," Mil a
Raymond, president of the
Portland Community Center
Board said. 'T m so pleased
that lhey're interested in us
when you consider all the
other Civi l War sites and
organizations they could
throw their support behind."
Formed in 1868 in
Lexington,
Ky.
the
Morgan's Men Association
cunsbh of d~scendants of
General John Hunt Morgan
and the men who served ·
with him . Raymond, who
met wiLh the group thi s
spring. uescribed them as
prom01ing and supportin-g
Civi l War history as well as
others who have 1he same
mission. like the Buftington
Island Civi l War Museum.
The Association· will be
arriving at the Portland
Community Center around
II a.m. this Saturday for a
tour of the building, nearby
Buffington Island and to eat
lunch provided at the center.
The members wi ll be treated
Please see Museum, AS

Police evacuate
city block
after finding
.suspicious switch
Bv DIANE POTTORFF
OPOTIORFF@ MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - What started as an
inve,tigation into a local
church~ break-in esca lated
into evacuating residents
from their home after what
looked like ingredients to
make metha)nphetamine
lead inves-tigawrs to a suspicious switch.
·On Tuesday, I he investigation led to the arrest of
Edward Thacker. 32, on one
county of forgery and uttering. Lt. Joe Veith of the
Point
Pleasant
Police
Departm~nt. said. Though·
they found the ingredients.
they diu not find an actual
· .:ook. Offil.'crs are slil~ continuing their inve~tfgation
into a possible meth lab.
The day started with Point
Please see Evacuate,
AS
....

..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="520">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9971">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="16577">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="16576">
              <text>August 23, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
