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                  <text>Puny Pluto gets the

Man fed up with teens

boot as astronomers
approve a new definition
for planets, As

sneakin11 around house
charged m shooting, A2

ne
Middleport o Pomeroy, Ohio
;)0 t'I:N'IS • \ 'ol. ;;h. "&lt;o. 1:1

\\\\\\ ,lll)dail)"'"lirod.&lt;olll

HUU,\Y, :\1 1(;lJST :!5. :!006

ARC grant award allows Rio project to proceed

SPORTS
'Does tear Hocking
Division apart.
See Page 81

o

J.

Improvement Corporation
for the construction of a
I 0,000 square-foot educa· POMEROY - Approval tion facility which will · be
of a grant from the leased am.l operated by Rio
Appalachian . Regional Grande Community College.
Commission will allow con"The expanded classroom
struction to proceed on a space will enable the school
new $.2 rrnllion Meigs to offer even more quality
Center for the University of programming to a greater
Rio Grande/Rio Grande number of students."
Community College.
Strickland said. ;'This
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, expansion is also a valuable
D-Lisbon,
announced economic development tool
approval of the grant to the for Meigs County."
Meigs County Community
The expanded facility
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Commissioners
approve E-911
resolution
Bv BRIAN

J.

will allow Rio Grande to Middle School and Meigs
increase course offerings In High .
School
at
55 per semester from six Rocksprings, on property
per semester in the firs t to be provided to the CIC
year. add I 0 bachel or's by the Meigs Local Board
degree courses in three of Education.
years, add five master's
The school district hopes
degree courses in class- the new center's proximity
room teaching. expand to Meigs High School will
associate degree programs afford more Meigs stuand add a general studies dents the opportunity to
certi fie ate program.
enroll in the post-secThe new center will ondary education option,
replace a facility on Mill which allows high school
Street in Middleport. It will juniors and seniors 1he
be .located between Meigs opportunity to enroll in

free college-level course•
while qill completing their
high school diplomas.
Meigs County Economic
Development
Oirfl'lilr
Perry Varnadoe said- ihe
process ·of completing final
design plans and awardi ng a
bid for construction could
not be completed until the
grant was received . He said
earth moving is expected to
begin before the end of the
year. and should · take
bellveen nine months and a
year to complete.

Welcome back!

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Lester Ohlinger, 53
•David Proffitt, Sr., 71

INSIDE
,..•.

www.mydailysentinel.com

• Page24

Fall Sports 2006

• To receive help
with drug costs,
residents musi apply.
See Page 'A2
• Middleport Court.
See Page A2
• Ashley gets chosen
for national office.
See Page A3
o Chester gardeners
plan open meeting.
See Page A3
• Meigs Land Transfers.
See Page A3
·o Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• Shine: Lighting
candles in the darkness.
See Page A6
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Greek police stage
massive hunt for ·
stolen 'miracle' icon.
See Page A6

WEATHER

POMEROY - Meigs County
Commissioners held a second
public hearing Thursday on a proposed telephone line charge for
Enhanced 911 service and will
seek approval of the charge in the
November general election.
If-voters approve it, the 50-cent
monthly telephone fee will be
assessed on all lelephone lines in
the county, and will generate
approximately $35,000 to operate
the system. Meigs County is the
only county in the state without
E-911 or plans lo implement it,
Commissioner Jim Sheets said.
"We're looking at this proposal .
as adequate to · fund arid operate
;£-911," Commissioner Mick
Davenport said. "If it appears
insufficient later, we'll take
another look at other options for
funding it."
Davenport said the recommendation of a 911 committee. that a
one-percent sales tax increase be
used to fund the service, was
deemed excessive, in that it
would have generated nearly a
half-million dollars for the system •·s operation.
Beth Sergent/photo
Commissioners have based
Despite
summer-like
temperatures
kids
across
Meigs
County
are
now
offic
ially
back
in
school
,
some with more
their plan for a 911 system on that
·enthusiasm
than
others.
Yesterday
students
of
the
Southern
Local
Schools
District
were
busy
learning
new .locker
of Vinton County, which uses a
50-cent telephone line charge to combinations. homerooms and most importantly, what school bus to get on at the end of the day.
fund 911 through the sheriff's
depart;ment. The Vinton County
system is funded on a lower budget than the Meigs system would
have available, and has .served
the needs of the county's residents, Davenport .said.
Please see E-911, AS

night football

Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDP.IL)'SENTINELCOM

Meigs Local
hires additional
personnel

'•

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"

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Pace A2

.. .

Saturday ·Morning
Sports Clinics

HOLZER
CLINIC

Local Caring;

740.446.5244
. .

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2 SECI'IONS -

August 26- October 28
9:00am
Sycamore Branch

Medical Excellence.

.

INDEX

Early morning &amp; late evening appointments

NEW Cold l ascr Treatment
,

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t6 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A3
. Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A6-7
Movies
J\5
NASCAR
B8
Obituaries
J\5
Sports
B Section
Weather
A2
© ooo6 Ohlo Valley Publishing Co.

'

Ohio 833
repave begins
with sidewalks

POMEROY - Several teach-.
ers and . other personnel were
hired · to wmplete the staff in
schools of the Meigs Local
school at this week's meeting of
the Board of Educatiop.
Rachelle Lutz was 1hired as a
special education teacher and
Pamela White as a first grade
teacher, both at the Meigs
Primary School. Vicki Hughes,
Sandy Walker, Penny Ramsburg
and Barbara Mathews Crow were
employed as mentors on supplemental contracts at a salary designated in a negotiated agreement.
Hired as aides to assist with
health-handicapped studenls for
the school year were Koletta
Fridley, Donna Shato, and Lisa
Schenkelberg.
·
Employed as substitute teachers for the school years to be used
on an ·as-needed basis were
Eleanor Blaettnar, Camille Bolin,
li se Burris, Teresa Carr, Amy
Clark. Bill Downie. Randall
Fulks. 'Jeannette Orate, Vicki
Griffin , Mary Hill , Melissa
· Holman, Autumn Lisle, Cindy·
Please see Melcs. AS .

'·

'

Beth Sergenljpholo

Supporters of Meigs Marauder varsity football were out in full force yesterday, showing their school spirit by attaching 53 football-shaped signs to the guardrail near the
football field in Pomeroy. The footballs bear the name s of varsity players, coaches
and managers. Parents and athletic boosters helped bring back the stakes/signs
after a five-year absence. Here. Jim.Soulsby attaches one of the signs to the guardrail
as did Greg Smith. Jimmer Soulsby, Robert Ramsburg and Tony Hawk . The Marauders
play bak Hill at .home tonight.

POMEROY - No doubt
many motorists and pedeslrians hav.e nmiced workers
replucing portions of the
sidewalk in downtown
Pomeroy which is in fact the
beginning of the repaving
process of Ohio 833.
Although the downtown
sidewalk&gt; currently receiving an upgrade' were handi cap accessible, they do not
meet -the Ohio Depurtment
of Transportation's new
specifications according to
Pomeroy
Village
Admini strator
John
Anderson. These upgrades
include decoralive brick
inserts.
The cost of the sidewalk
upgrades is included in the
Ohio 833 repaving job
which is being funded sole·Jy by ODOT. The sidewalk
upgrades are being done by
subcontractor
Oglesby
Construction.
Inc . of
Norwalk. ODOT sold the
· repaving job to Shelly
Materials ,
Inc.
of
Thornville
which bid
$437.313.46
for
the
Pomeroy job, falling below
the engineer's project estimate of roughly $550,000.
Paving will cover an area
of around 2..1 miles beginning .2 miles not1h of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and
Please see Repava, AS

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LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

dmg

To receive

no penalty or waiting period_
There is no cost or obligation
to apply, so anyone who
thinks they may be eligible
should fill out an application
as soon as possible.
Meigs County residents
can apP,ly at a Social
Security office, over the
phone by calling Social
Security at 1-800-772- I 213.
and online at www.socialsecurity,gov.
Assistance is also available by calling the Ohio
Senior Health Insurance
Information
Program
(OS HII P) at I- 800-6861578 or 1-800-MEDICARE
( 1-800-633-4227;
TTY
users should call . 1-877486-2048).

Man fed up with teens sneaking
around house charged in shooting
JoANNE VIVIANO

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WORTHINGTON - A
carload of teenage . girls
sneaking around an old
house across from a cemetery, chasing rumors of
ghosts - it could have been
a Nancy Drew story, until
the gunfire.
When the car drove off,
one of the girls slumped in
her seat, shot in the head
and shoulder, her blood on ·
her friends' clothes.
The man· who was
charged with shooting her
said he didn't mean to hun
the girls. But he said they
were juvenile delinquents
and shouldn't have been
trespassing,
Allen S. Davis, a 40year-old who lives in the
house, was arrested the day
after th'e Tuesday night
shooting, which critically
injured Rachel Barezinsky,
17.
Davis
appeared
Thursday morning
in
Franklin County Municipal
Court where bond was set
at $500,000 on five counts
of felonious assault, one
charge for each girl.
Barezinsky remained in
critical condition Thursday
at Ohio State University
Medical Center, a nursing
supervisor said_ Her aunt,
Tina Wedebrook, told
reporters Wednesday afternoon that the girl had
surgery to relieve · swelling
in her brain and had been
able to squeeze visitors' ·
hands, but was having trouble moving the left side of
her body.
Davis' home had a reputation at the high school for
being haunted by ghosts and
witches, and students have
been daring each other to
knock on the door or go in
the yard, police Lt. Doug
Francis said.
Davis, a self-employed
nonfiction writer who lives
with his 64-year-old mother, said he prepared the
rifle
after
numerous
instances of trespassing but
didn't
know
until
Wednesday that teens considered his house haunted.
"It's really something
how homeowners defend
themselves and the way the
laws are written, we 're the

Friday, August 25, 2006

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Friday, Aug. 25

•

•
Youngstown •
80" I 58'

Mansfield •
84" I 60"

Dayton&lt; ~

86" 160"

Clnctnnali
• 90" 162"
Portsmouth •
90' 160'

••

0

•
, VV VA
Q:l2006 Wundorgrou&gt;d.

~

r___:)
Partly

Cloudy

Cloudy

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~

Flurries ,..:~
loestorms
. , .,_ ~ ~ ~
/?-;
~'·
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-"·
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• ••••
Showers / ·,./
RSJn·
• •
Snow
......

'C__ _::,)

Thunder·~

Weathef Underground ; AP

Local Stocks

Don't f&lt;lrget to say "Thanks"

thanks

f '"o.\'. . . .~,. ii".;;.. ...

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport. S 165, failure to
following appeared Tuesday comply; Raymond Klein,
before Middleport Mayor Pomeroy, $165, failure to
comply: Tammy Staats,
Sandy Iannarelli:
Mohler, Reedsville, $I 65, failure to
Kenneth R.
Middleport. $90, stop sign; comply; Casey Dunfee,
Harley McDonald, $455, Pomeroy, $75,
speed ;
failure to appear, fictitious Jeremiali Bentley, Pomeroy,
tags, failure to comply: Lisa $340 1failure to control, leavBolin, Middleport , $365, ing tHe scene of an accident:
OVJ suspension: Kevin Charles Ellis, Letart, W Va,,
Harris, Middleport, $165. $90. stop sign violation.
failure to comply.
Forfeiting bonds: Eric A.
Pearl
Brunton , Bare, Langsville , $495;
Middleport, $455, license Stephen Jewell, Middleport,
suspension. failure to yield, $90: Mary Dioguardi, New
$455; Matthew Brown , Marshfield, $82.

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PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www_mydailysentinel.com
Borders and Artwork may vary.

•

..

Monday, Aug. 28
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m., 117 Memorial Drive_
Tuesday, Aug. 29
POMEROY - Special
meeting of Meigs County
Board of Elections, 8:30
a,m .. to certify petitions

and issues for general elections. board office in
County Annex. Regular
meeting to immediately
follow.

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

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

.

'

Church events
Friday, Aug. 25
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner, 4:306:15 p.m., Middleport
Church of Christ Family
Life Cener, school supplies
a'nd some cloth\ng given
away as well.
Sunday, Aug. 27
CHESTER Gospel

Friday, August 25, 2006

Young wife must take
assertive, action

sing (bluegrass ' style) 10
a,m., Chester Church of the
Nazarene, featuring Just For
Now.

department all take staggered breaks, and l can't eat
lunch with them . Sometimes
Dear Annie: I am 24 I just wander in the halls or
years old and have been hide out in the bathroom_
married for five years to a
I have considered &gt;uggestMonday, Aug. 28 ·
man
in
his
40s,
I
don't
love
ing
that my company desigPOMEROY - OH-Kan
Coin Club. 7 p.m. Pomeroy him and don't think I ever nate a "friendship table" for
really did .
the many new employees,
Lihrary,
I was underage when I met but I worry they would won"Jerry.'' I hated Jiving with der what kind of reject they
my stepl'ather and wanted hired_ Please help, because,
out. Jerry came along and apparently, I need new social
promised to take care of me. ski lls _-The New Person
I knew he had been married
Dear New Person: Within
the 50th anniversary of the twice · before and couldn't a company. it is not unusual
death of the last living have more kids. but thought to be unfamiliar with anyone
Union vet~ran, Alben I was OK with that-. When I other than your immediate
Woolson. was commemo- realized I wasn't, he tried to co-workers. No one expects
rated. A tour to Gettysburg get his vasectomy reversed. you to join a group at the
was taken where his monu- but that didn't work_ Jerry cafeteria table. Go out to eat,
won't consider adoption.
bring a book or newspaper to
ment was re-dedicated.
Last
year.
Jerry
needed
read,
or stop at someone's
A highlight of the convention was a banquet of 350 back surgery. This year he table, saying. "I hope you
people at the National Civil quit his job, and started a don 't mind if I join you_
War Museum and a tour of business, but it is a flop. We Which department do you
the facility. One -real son of have no money. He has gouL work in?" If the conversation
a Union veteran attended I just can't stand it anymore. lags. pull out the crossword
I want to have children and puzzle. (By the way, your
the banquet.
Di splays included many not he married to an old man "friendship table'' idea is
original artifacts of Union who isn 't able to support cute, and the company might
Gen. George Custer and the . me _ He bores me to death. think you are both clever and
key to Libby Prison where We don't Jiko any of the perceptive to think of it.)
Dear Annie: I am writing
many Union prisoners were same things, And I hate his
She
is
an
old
witch.
,
about
the woman whose 77mother.
interned in Richmond.
Everyone told me not to year-old mother insists on
Virginia , during the war.
marry Jerry. but I wouldn't leaving the oven light on
listen. The last time I tried to when she bakes cookies. I
leave him. I thought he was also am 77 and bake with
going to kill himself so I my oven light on. I like to
went back. I don't know see the progress of the bakwhat to do, I want out so bad_ ing without having to open
on the culinary use of herbs Do you have any advice?- the oven door (which lowand edible nowers_ She will Asking for Help in Georgia ers the heat in the oven),
share tricks and tips on harDear Georgia: Honey, and !lipping the light switch
vesting and storing trea- you are ..a walking warning off and on is a nuisance_
sures from the garden for label. It's time to see a
Ai 77, it iseasyto'forgetto
use in every day cooking.
lawyer. You are too young to turn the oven off after you
Chester Garden Club be married, and you are with finish baking. By leaving the
members are to take finger Jerry for all the wrong rea- light on, it reminds me to
foods and door prizes. ·
sons_ You also may have turn the oven off when I am
valid grounds for an annul- finished_ Please tell this
ment since Jerry cannot have daughter to get off Mom's
children and refuses to adopt. back. Baking cookies sounds
Jerry can get counseling good right now. I think I'll
to help him deal with your bake up a batch with the
leaving. And you· should oven light on, as usual. take the time to learn how to M.C. in Riverside, Calif.
George W. Price. Mary F. be self-sufficient and indeDear M.C.: By all means,
Price, to William Harvey pendent before ·you attach leave the light ~n. And have
Price, David Dale Price. yourself to anyone else.
a cookie on us.
Penny
Elaine
Mullen.
Dear Annie: I started a
Annie's Mailbox is writDeborah Jean Howard, James new job a t'ew weeks ago ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Randall Price, deed, Olive.
and feel Iike I'm back in Marcy Sugar, longtime ediCharles W. Morrison to high school. That is, I am tors of the Ann Landers
Carolyn Y. Cristopher, mortified every time I go column. Please e-mail your
Maynard Christopher. deed, . into the cafeteria. l feel like questions to anniesmail·
Olive.
an outcast, with no one to sit box@comcast.net, or write
George Bcarhs, deceased. with, and worse. I don't to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
to Frances A. Bearhs. know how to cliange it
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
Emma Jean Webster, certifiI have tried to sit with oth- · 60611. To find out more
cate, Scipio_
ers, especially someone sit- · about Annie's Mailbox,
Frances Anna Bearhs to ting alone, but the conversa- .and read features by other
Emma Jean Webster. affi- tion goes nowhere and it Creators Syndicate writers
davit. Scipio.
seems like I'm intruding. I and cartoonists, visit the
Emma Jean Web,ter. am· too shy to sit with a Creators Syndicate Web
deceased. to Kim B. Neal, group. The people in my page at www.creators.com_
Kit R_ Neal. Jeffrev Lee
Neal, certificate, Scip.io_
Dorothy M_ Jenkins . ·
deceased. to David M_
·Jenkins. certificate.
Mary 0. ' Folmer to Mary
0. Folmer, Kelly Lea
Bluegrass Style
Rebecca, deed, Village of
·Racine.
Jerry R_ Alshire, Sr.,
Donna J. Alshirc, to Travis .
Sunday, August 27th 10 AM
L. Gibson. Trisha L (iibson,
Morning Service
deed, Village of Syracuse.
Meriam · Gla1e to Joshua
Featuring:
Glaze, Llccd. Salisbury.
Charles William Cornell,
Just For Now
Patricia Cornell. Patsy K.
Cornell, to Patsy K_Cornell,
deed. Sutton/Village of
Chester, OH
Syracuse_
Carol A. Taylor to James
Farley, deed. Village of
BY KATHY MITCHELL

Clubs and
·organizations

AND MARCY SUOAR

Ashley gets chosen for national office

*Columbus

~7· I 62" &lt;:_____:)

v~

f"::?...-..

L___:)

on her arm and passengers
in the back seat also discovFriday... Mostly sunny. thunderstorms. Highs in the
ered blood, police said. Hot with highs in the lower upper 80s. Lows in the
They saw Barezinsky had 90s. Southwest winds 5 to upper 60s. Chance of rain
collapsed in the front pas- 10 mph.
30 percent.
senger's seat and drove until
Monday... Partly cloudy
Friday night ... Mostly
they could flag down two deaL Lows in the nlid 60s. with a chance of showers
police officers, The other Southwest winds 5 to I0 and thunderstorms. Highs in
girls were not injured.
the lower 80s. Chance of·
mph,
Davis told officers he was
Saturday.•. Mostly sunny. rain 50 percent.
aiming for the car's tires Hot with highs around 90. - Monday night ... Mostly
from his first-floor bed- Southwest winds I0 to 15 cloudy with a chance of
room, police said.
showers and thunderstorms.
mph.
"He admitted to . never
Saturday night ... Partly Lows in the mid 60s.
calling the police, but it just ~loudy with a slight chance Chance of rain 50 percent.
· had been occurring and he of sho'wers and thunder,
Tuesday... Partly cloudy,
got frustrated and he was storms. Lows .in the upper with a chance of showers
upset saying someone tres- 60s. West winds 5 to I0 and thunderstorms. Highs
passed on his property and mph. Chance of rain 20 per- around 80. Chance of rain
he was protecting his prop- cent.
30 percent.
erty," Francis said.
Tuesday night ... Part!y
Sunday and Sunday
Hundreds gathered on the night... Partly cloudy with a cloudy. Lows in the lower
high school football field chance of showers and 60s.
Wednesday night for a vigil
for Barezinsky, a cheerleader at the school of about
I ,700 students.
"She's doing really well
for someone who had that
Kroger - 23.25
kind
of
trauma," ACJ- 34.75
ltd.24.98
AEP
-36.12
Barezinsky's mother, Amy,
NSC
-41.52
a nurse, told the crowd. Akzo- 56.24
Oak Hill Financial - 24.81
"I'm going to have to get Ashland Inc.- 63.73
BIG -17.89
OVB-25.30 ·
on
my
knees·
and
pray.
AP Photo
BBT-42.79
Bob Evans - 26.88
Allen S. Davis appears in a Franklin County Courtroom for a Maybe you guys could do BorgWarnar - 55.23
Peoples - 29.1Q
that, too."
bond hearing Thursday in Columbus. A teenager· was shot
Pepsico - 64.14
Betty Davis, 69, who CENX- 33 .• 95
Tuesday night in the head and critically wounded after taking lives around the corner Champion - 7.37
Premier - 14.80
part in a dare while out looking for ghosts at a house con- from Davis but said she is Charming Shops - 11.98
Rockwell - 57.59
sidered spooky by local teens, police said Wednesday. The not related, said he was City Holding - 37.96
Rocky Boots - 10.91
40-year-old who lives in the house was arrested the day after quiet and kept to himself. Col- 39.45
·
Sears - 144.01
the shooting. Davis, a self-employed nonfiction writer who Her children played with DG.---12.44
Wai-Mart - 43.70
lives with his 64-year-old mother, said he prepared the rifle him when they were DuPont - 39.69
Wendy's - 62.71
after numerous instances of trespassing but didn't know young, she said.
Federal Mogul - .37
Worthington - 19.58
until Wednesday that teens considered his house haunted.
Dally stock reports are the
USB32.43
She was surprised he
owned a gun.
Gannett - 55.07
4 p.m. closing quotes of
ones brought up on charges be gunshots, Francis said.
"I guess l'ast night was the General Electric - 33.85
the previous day's transacwhile the perpetrators get
As the girls' car drove last straw," she said. "I think GKNLY- 5.55
tions, provided by Smith
little or nothing," he said.
away from the house, the it blew everybody's mind it Harley Davidson - 58.00
Financial Advisors of
Barezinsky an'd two of driver noticed she had blood would come to this."
JPM -45.68
Hilliard lyons In Gallipolis.
her friends got out of their
car parked ncar the home
about I0 p.m. and took a
few steps onto the property,
Francis said_ They jumped
back in when a girl' in the
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER WITH A
car sounded the horn. and
they heard what they
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BYTHEBEND

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Community Calendar

Local Weather

POMEROY- Some 321 JOtn a Medicare drug plan assistance programs ever
people in Meigs County immediately and pay very sign up for them . Access to
could be eligible for help little out of pocket for their medications is critical to
health , so there is a special
paying for Medicare pre- medications,
Scription drug coverage but
These over 300 Meigs urgency to reach as many
have yet to apply for_ the County residents· are part of people who qualify for this
program that provides it, it an
estimated
113,535 prescription-drug subsidy as
. was reported in a release Medicare beneficiaries in possible and encourage
from the Medicare Rx Ohio (and 3J million bene- them to apply," said Jenny
ficiaries nationwide) who Camper of the Medicare Rx
Access Network of Ohio_
Toe low-income subsidy, also potentially qLialify for Access Network of Ohio_
To qualify. a person must
worth an average of $3,700 the subsidy but have yet to
a year for participants. apply. according to rough be on Medicare and have an
income
below
the annual
according to the Centers for estimates · by
·
$14,700
and
assets
limited
to
Medicare &amp; Medicaid Department of Health and
$11 ,500 (not including the
Services, pays-for all or part Human Services,
"Uilfortunately, people house or car) or $19,800 in
of the monthly premiums
and annual deductibles, fills who potentially qualify for income and $23,000 in
in · the coverage gap, and programs like this often are assets for a couple. Those
lowers the prescription co- challenging to reach_ Only who qualify can immediatepayments _People who qual- about a third of those who ly join a Medicare drug pl.an
ify, the release states, can qualify for government for coverage 111 2006, With .

BY

PageA2

POMEROY Emma newly installed national
The national convention
Ashley of Rocksprings has president, Phyllis Houston of the Ladies of the GAR . .
returned from Harrisburg, of Oregon,
was held in conjunction
Pa. where she attended the
Several resolutions origi- with the similar conventions
national convention of the nating from the Maj. of the Sons of Union
Ladies of the Grand Army Daniel McCook Circle Veterans of the Ci vii War.
of the Republic.
Ladies of the G.A.R. of the Auxiliary to the Sons of
She was delegate to the Middleport were approved the Civil War. and the
convention by virtue· of her by the national delegate Daughters
of . Union
position as president of the body. Those include oppo- Veterans of the Civil WaL
Ohio Department Ladies of sition to removal of crosses Keith Ashley brought greet.the G.A.R_ While there . from soldiers' monuments ings from the Military
she was elected to the in .government property, Order of the Loyal Legion
of the preservation of "In God of the U-5. to the Ladies of
National
Council
Administration,
which We Trust" on U.S. money, the G_A.R _ and the
oversees the finances of and support to have the Daughters
of
Union
the organization.
remainder of all Civil War Veterans of the Civil War.
·Her husband, Keith, was pension re.cords removed He also acted as pianist for
again appointed to the posi- from the U.S . Dept. of the Iauer for their opening
tion
of
National Veterans ' Affairs to the ceremonies.
Membership Director by National Archives_
During the convention,

Chester gardeners plan open meeting
CHESTER - The annual
open meeting of the Ch~ster
Garden Club will be held
Sept. 6 at · the United
Methodist Church in Chester.
The club traditionally
hold an open meeting in
September so that anyone
who thinks they might be

interested in belonging to Herb Guild and the Herb
a club can come and check Gardeners. both Athens
based, educational organiit·out.
This year's guest speaker zations. The Herb Guild, in
will be Linda Blazier, who its 23rd year, also cares for a
will be giving a program on public garden at The Dairy
herbs. Blazier is a Master Barn Cultural Arts Center
Gardener in Athens County; on Dairy Lane.
as well as a member of the
Blazier's program will be

MEIGS lAND
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hil.l
reported the following
transfers in real estate:
N_orma Bail Wilcox,
Kenneth W. Wilcox, to
David R. Wilcox, Darla
Williamson, deed. Village
of Middleport.
Leon Henson, Carolyn
Henson, to Lisa Pratt, deed,
Bedford,
·
G. Ruth Taylor, deceased,
to Gary L. Smith, Marvin E,
Taylor, certificate of transfer, Chester.
·Charlotte Smith, Gary L.
Smith, to Marvin E. Taylor;
deed, Chester.
Rober! B. Titus, Catherine
E. Titus, to Robert B. Titus,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
E. Imboden,
- Ernest
Wand'a J_ Imboden, to
Homer Laudermilt, Linda
Laudermilt ,
deed,
Sutton/Village of Syracuse.
Michael E Lester to
Federal
Home
Loan
Mortgage Co., sheriff's
deed, Salem.
Penny Hart, Gary Ha11, to
·Kevin Schall, Linda Schall,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Kenneth -Lee Slone to
Clifford
Slone.
deed.
Columbia.
Clyde Slone to Wanda
Lee Slone, deed, Columbia.
Patrick B. Morrisey,
Nancy L. Morrisey, to
Patrick B. and Nancy L.
Morrisey Trust. memoran dum of trust.
. Patrick B. and Nancy L.
Morrisev Trust, Patrick B.
Morrise·y.
Nancy
L.
Morrisey, to Carrie R.
Schagel, deed, Chester.
Patrick B, and Nancy L.
Morri sey Tru st, Patrick B.
L.
Morrisey,
Nancy
Morrisey, to Thomas P.
Morrisey, deed, Chester.
Kenneth D. Cooke to E. Jean Cooke. affidavit ,
Village of Middleport.
Joseph
E.
Maier.
deceased, J. Eugene Maier,
deceased, Gene· Maier.
deceased.
to
Melody
botsnn, certificate of transfer, Bedford.
Vicki L. Sharp to Melody
Dotson. deed. Bedford_
: Homer Mills, Jr. , Diana
Mills . to City National
j3ank, deed, Sutton.
City National Bank to
Rocky R. Hupp, Carol
Hupp, deed, Sutton.
Brooks
to
Lucretia
Rodn ey William Brooks,
'agreement to extinqui.sh life
estate. Columbia.
Rodney William Brooks,

Carol J. Brooks. to Andrew
A. Brooks, Amanda J.
Brooks, deed, Columbia.
Michael K Canan, Vicki
L. Canan, to Columbus
Southern Power. easement,
Salisbury.
Richard White , Lori
Buckley, to Columbus
Southern Povkr. easement,
Salisbury.
Corbett
R. Caudill,
Margaret A. Caudill, Corbett
Caudill Chipping, Robert L
Caudill, Debra E. Caudill, to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement, Salisbury.
Carl W. McDade, Robin
D. McDade, to Columbus
Southern Power, easement.
Bedford.
John W. Lemasters to
Anna L Lemasters, deed,
Columbia.
Linda S_ Morris, Robert
Morris, to Donald Cheadle,
deed. Columbia,
Lester Milford Hawk.
deceased , to. Nancy B.
Dorsey, affidavit. Orange .
Edwmd D, Anderson to
Clean Combs, deed, Salem.
Jean Cooke. E. Jean
Cooke, to Gary Bates.
Linda Bates, deed. Village
of Middlep011.
Gladys
Eileen
Fife.
deceased, to Robert D. Fife,
deceased , certificate of
transfer,
Village
of
Middleport .
Virginia L Pennington to
Ina C. Meadows. deed,
Village of Middleport.
Lois L Evans. Lois Evans,
to Henry S. Mo(rison, deed.
Scipio.
Heather Cleland, Charles
M,_ Cleland, Jr.. to Don
Pooler. Bonnie Pooler,
deed , Chester.
Six River Partners to John
A. Rafferty, Lucy F
Rafferty, deed, Letart.
Jon R_ Cottrill , deceased,
to Correna L. Cottrill. certificate, Salem_
· Lawrence Bush Trust

SFERS

Agreement to Connie Mac
Tucker, deed, Letart.
Gardner L. Wehrung,
Patricia .· L. Wehrung, to
Cheryl Lehew, deed, Village
of Pomeroy,
Craig C. Foley, Ruth C.
Foley, . Ruth Foley, to
Mayford L Cook, Erne J.
Douglas_ deed , Orange.
· Ellsworth J. Holden, Jr.,
Ann F Holden1 to State of
Ohio, easement, Scipio.
· Thomas .A_ McMahon,
Gale L. McMahon, to State
of Ohio, easement, Scipio.
Donald Lambert, Jr.,
Rosemary Lambert, to
Geraldine Harris, deed,
Salem.
K.
Wolford,
Judy
deceased, to Roy Wolford,
affidavit, Sutton.
Roy Wolford, Mark 0.
Wolford, to Laura R_ Lee,
deed, Sutton,
Jason Rankin, Kelly E
Gruber. to Brian J. Duffy;
Beth C. Duffy, deed, Salem.
Charter Communications
to Cebridge Acquistion,
deed, Salisbury/Village of
. Pomeroy.
Guy D_ Webb to Roger L.
Murphy, deed, Olive, ·
LP. Morgan Chase Bank.
Equity One, to William k
Taylor, deed, Village of
Pomeroy.
Kenneth R_Frecker, Mary
A. Freckcr, to Timothy D.
Buckley,
Paula
Jean
Buckley, deed. Orange.
Sue
Hager.
Pamela
deceased, to Chester Bruce
Hager, affida,·it, Orange,
Randall
S.
Rllsse ll .
Cynthia L Russell , to First
.of Steel Mountain, sheritl\
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
to
Denise
Smith
Wachovia Bank. sheriff's
deed , Village of Pomeroy.
Edmond
Cooper.
Annabelle
Schneider
Cooper, to Franklin Real
Estate Co., sheriff's deed.
Lebanon.

Gospel Sing

Chester Nazarene Church

Syrac~se.

Danie I G _ Wooten ,
Theresa M. Wooten , Brenda
K, Willis. Brenchi K_
Wooten. to Brenda K_ ,
Willis. deed. Columbia .
I
Edith
Marie
Greer.
deceased. to Sherman F
Greer, affidavit. Columbia. •
Mark F Norman. Laur&lt;~
L Norman, to Edward
Patterson. deed. Village of
Pomeroy,
Keith Chaffee, dec.eased.
to Daniel Chaffee. Timothy
Chaffee.- Ken neth Chaffee.
certi ficate , Orange.

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�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION
Bv NAHAL TOOSI

TODAY IN HISTORY

Daily Sentinel

r

them as prenuptial agree~ ments.
AI-Hibri, a law professor
at the University of
Richmond, Va., said the
contracts also help couples
prepare for the challenges
of married life.
"Couples need to define
their relationship as they
enter the marriage. so that
they do not get disillusioned later,'' ai-Hibri said.
'·They· need a meeting of
the minds on what their
fam il y life will look like.
The contract helps them do
that by discussing the issues
up front."
It 's generally accepted
that Islamic law gives
women the right to property
and financia l independence
within marriage. Some
Muslims scholars contend
women are not even obligated to do housework.
·These and other details
about running a hou se can
be specified in the contract.
Negotiating the agreement, "brings an air of real ity and rationality to a
process that is often fraught
with emotion," said Aminah
McCloud, professor of
Islamic Studies at DePaul
University in Chicago.
McCloud's own marriage
contract says that her husband must accompany her

when she travels and that
she is not obligated to cook .
Much of the negotiation
involves the "mahr," whose
dollar value ranges widely. .
Some Muslim women
consider the gift archaic in
an age when women can
earn their own salarie s.
Others, however, view, it as
a symbol that .the man values the woman, similar to
an engagement ring; it's
also a gift that is hers alone.
Maryam Sayar and her
husband, of Cortlandt
Manor. N.Y., kept their contract simple, specifying
only the "mahr." The y
haven 't even told their families what it was.
"We both know one
another so well, we have an
understanding," said Sayar,
26, and a law school graduate. " I feel like there will
not be any breach of any
sort, because he understands my expectations . of
life and from the marriage
. as well. I similarly have an
understanding of his expectation s of life and mijr·
riage ."
Beyond the "mahr," the
marriage contract can help
address concerns about certain practices allowed in
Islam, even if the behavior
is forbidden by U.S. civil
law.

being called conservatives,
but eventually agreed to be
described as "neoconservatives. "
In the early 1970s, a
group of young conservaWilliam
tives led by Paul
Rusher
Weyrich, Richard Viguerie
and Howard Phillips began arguing that a large
number
of
formerly
country cousins who called Democnltic
blue-collar
them;elves "libertari ans." workers were ripe for
The libertarians had been recruitment by the conse~v'
around fo r a while. Their atives on the basi s of their
big obsession was govern- social values (the family,
ment, which they wanted to etc.), which were under
.keep a' small us possible. l)eavy attack from the left.
The co nservatives had con- They were labeled the
siderable sympathy fur this "New Right," and their
view. but thought there was analysis was correct: In
mort' to con!'-crvatism than 1980, millions of former
just that. Moreover. the lib- Democrats backed Reagan.
ertarians· antagonism to
Meanwhile. in 1978 a libgovernment action kept eral move (subsequently
e11dors ing abandoned) to eliminate
them
from
whokheartcd ly
govern-. the tax deductibility of reliment . measures needed to gious schools. so alarmed
win the Co ld War.
politically
quiescent
Things mcked along thi s Christians that they orgaway ulllil the rnid-1960s, nized themselves for politiwhen a small but influen- cal action. Thus was born
tial group of liberals and the '' Reli gious Right."
leftists mostly New
In or about 1986 (there is
Yorker.s - got fed up with some dispute over the exact
liberal acquiescence in the year), a group of conservaantic s of the noi sy New tives who disliked the
Lcf1 (especiall y in oppos- interventioni st foreign poliin g the Cold War) and cies and alleged indifferbroke with liberalism alto- ence to big government
~cthcr. This group, led by
that was being displayed by
Irving Kristol ant.l Norman the neoco nservatives, fero Podhorelt. long resisted ciously denounced . them,

Obituaries
DavidW.

Puny Pluto gets the boot as astronomers
approve a new definition for planets

Sr.

David W Proffitt, Sr. , 71,
of
Racine.
died
on
Wednesday, Aug. 23, 2006,
at his home.
He was born Jan . II,
1935. in Pomeroy, sun of
the late Joseph at\d Dorothy
Wolfe Proffitt. He wus a
former head mechanic for
the Ohio Departmc·ht of
Transportation's garage at
Chester.
Surviving are his wire:
Lola J. Pioffin of Racine;
a daughter. Linda Fisher
and her husband , Bruce. of
Racine ; sons, David "Bill"
Proffitt and his wife. Janella, and Jackie Proffitt, all of
Racine ; sisters, Suzanna Bush of Portl and and Nancy
Holsinger of Racine; three grandchildren: Felicia See,
Carrie White and Richard White; special children:
Brian and Kelly Katona and their daughters, Courtney
and Kay lee . ..
Funeral will be held at II a.m. on Saturday. Aug. 26,
2006 at Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood, W.Va. with
Rev. Doli Walker officiating. Burial will follow at Meigs
Memory Gardens. · .
Friends may visil the funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. on
Thursday and Friday.
Condolences may be e-mailed to the Protlin family at
roush I us2000@ya hoo.com.

Lester Ohlinger
Lester Marion "Skeeter" Ohlinger, 53, of Racine,
passed away peacefully at his residence following an
extended illness.
He was a member of Saint Paul Lutheran Church in
Pomeroy. He was employed for more than 31 years at
American Electric Power 's Gavin Plant.
He was born in Gallipolis on July 4. 1953, son of the late
Marion Kenneth Ohlinger and Coraletta Faudree Henry of
New Haven, whn survives.
\
In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by hi s
grandparents, Lewi s and Celestine Faudree and Lester
and Svilla Ohlinger; nephew, Cliff Cook; and stepfather,
·
.
Danny Woolcock.
Ohlinger is survived py his wife of 31 years, Carolyn
Hughes Ohlinger of Racine; two daughters, Amber
Ohlinger of Racine, and Tanya (Rob) Ervin of Well ston,
Ohio; his sen, Aaron Ohlinger of Racine ; his mother,
Coraletta "Sitty" (Earl) Henry of New Haven; his brother,.Timothy ·(Sondra) Ohlinger of Cannonsburg, Ky.; two
sisters, Jill Luvelley and her fiance, Brent Watts, of New
Haven, and Christie (John) Manuel of New Haven; four
grandsons, Colton, Caden and Cyan Ervin and Jaxon
Ohlinger; father-in-law and mother-in-law, James and
Opal Hughe s of Mason ; sisters and brothers-in-law,
Connie (Bruce). Goodnite of Point Pleasant, Judy (Lee)
Richards of Leon and April (Jamie) Carter of Dry Fork,
Va.; several nieces and nephews and many friends and
co-workers.
Visiting hours will be 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. today at
Anderson Funeral Home, with a celebration of life service
at 8 p.m. today. A memorial service will be held at II a.m.
Saturday at Saint Paul Lutheran Church in New Haven,
with the Revs. Rob Ervin and Sherri Hoffman officiating.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to
the Saint Paul Lutheran Church in either Pomeroy or New
Haven . An online registry is available by , visiting
www.andersonth.com .

GALLIPOLIS - Registration for the fall quarter at
Gallipolis Career College is now open and will continue
through the Oct. 2 start date.
Early registration is encouraged to avoid being closed out
of a particular class and/or missing important financial aid
deadlines, such as the Ohio Grants, whose deadline for
application is September 29.
Information about program s, classes, scheduling, financial aid assistance, procedures, etc., may be obtained by
calling 446-4367 or 800-214-0452:

--

-·

------

Correction
POMEROY
Members of "Delivered" the Meigs
County Chapter of the Christian Motorcycle Association
meet at 9 a.m .. the second Saturday or each month at
Common Grounds Coffee Shop, formerly R&amp;G Feed on
West Main Street.
retroactive to Aug. 21.
Resignations
accepted
were from Lynn McCarley.
special education teacher,
from PageA1
for retirement purposes;
Carrie
Wick line as a substi·
Parker, Gnmt
Abbott,
lute
secretary
due 10 other
Ladonna Stewart, Gay
Perrin , Nathan Robinette . employment; and Palli
Ryan Sleight, Michelle Arms as a bus· uriver.
During the meeting the
Smith ,
Janice
Weber,
Angela Weeks, H. Craig board also accepted a grievWehrung ,
Roxanne ance settlement in the
Williams. Carrie Wood, amount of a $1,000 payDeborah Woods, Mila ment from the district to
Woods, Beverly Davis, Cora Alben Loftis.
Following the regular
Barry McCoy, and Denni s
meeting , Board members
Flaherty. ·
moved
into executive sesCarlos McKnight was ·
hired as a fiull-time bus dri- sion for a cominuing discusver for the school year sion on negotiatioti s.

Meigs

.Keeping
Meigs County
. informed
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Subscribe today

992-2155

.Ill
'if _
f

,/1'

Bv WILLIAM J. KOLE
ASSOCIATE.() PRESS WRITER

PRAGUE, Czech Republic
-Pluto, beloved by some as
a cosmic underdog but
scorned by astronomers who
considered it too dinky and
distant, was unceremoniously
stripped of its status as a planet Thursday.
The
International
Astronomical Union. dramatically reversing course just a
week af1er floating the idea of
reatlirrning Pluto's planethood and adding three new
planets to Earth's neighborhood, downgraded the ninth
rock from the sun in historic
new galactic guidelines.
The shift will have the
world's teachers scrambling
to alter lesson plans just as
schools open for the fall term.
"It will all take some explanation, but it is really just a
reclassification and I can't see
that it will cause any problems," said Neil Crumpton,
who teaches science at a high
school north of London.
"Science is an evolving subject and always will be."
Powerful new telescopes,
experts said, are changing the
way they size up the mysteries of the solar system and
beyond. But the scientists at
the conference showed a soft
side, waving plush toys of
.the Walt Disney character
Pluto the dog - and insisting that Pluto's spirit will live
on in the exciting discoveries
yet to come.
;'The word 'planet' and
the idea of planets can be
emotional because they're
something we learn as chit,
dren," said Richard Binzel,
a professor of planetary science at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology,
who helped hammer out the
new definition.
"This is really all about
science, which is all about
getting new facts," he said.
"Science has ·marched on ....
Many more Plutos wait to
be discovered."
Pluto, a planet since 1930,
gut the boot because it didn't
meet the new rules, which say
a planet not only must orbit
the sun and be large enough to
assume a nearly round shape,
but must "clear the nei~hbor­
hood around its orbit.' That
disqualifies Pluto, whose
oblong
orbit
overlaps

*""

\\, I
' ~'

7la.4
Roadside Hot
, ""'-.
Spot
." "' ~ "rlf
1/(Mht~.

AP Photo

California Institute of Technology astronomy professor Mike Brown responds to questions
from the media in Pasadena, Calif. Thursda, after the International Astronomical Union in
Prague, seen on the screen in the background, demoted Pluto as a planet to a dwarf planet Brown discovered 2003. UB313, also known .as Xena. which IS bigger than Pluto and
was also named a dwarf planet by the union.
Neptune's, downsizing the
solar system to eight planets
from the traditional nine.
Astronomers have labored
without a universal definition
of a planet since well before
the time of Copernicus, who
proved that the Earth revolves
around the sun, and the
experts gathered in Prague
burst into applause when the
. guidelines were passed.
Predictably,
Pluto 's
demotion provoked plenty
of wistful nostalgia.
"It's disappointing in a
way, and confusing," said
Patricia Turnbaugh , the 93year-old widow of Pluto dis:
coverer Clyde Turnbaugh.
"I don't know just how
you handle it. It kind of
sounds like I just lost my
job," she said from Las
Cruces, N.M. "But I understand science is not something that just sits there. It
goes on. Clyde finally said
before he died, 'It's there.
Whatever it is. It is there."'
The decision by the !AU,
the official arbiter of heavenly objects, restricts membership in the elite cosmic
club to the eight classical

representatives
of
CompManagement, Inc .,
the county's workers' compensation adminstrator, to
from Page A1
discuss savings re'alized
Commissioners hope to from the county's efforts to
use funding through the manage claims, safety proAppalachian
Regional grams and return to work
The
county
Commission and a state E- options.
employs
Vicki
Cundiff
as
911 fund, .fed by a cellular
the
county's
workers'
comtelephone line charge. to
purchase equipment for the pensation coordinator.
The county saved $70,000
system. It would be operatin
workers' compensation
ed through the sheriff 's
premiums this year through
department.
its
efforts in controlling
Other business
claims
and missed time by
Commissioners awarded a
$1 ,325.1 o bid to Sports injured .employees.
Commissioners also:
Supply Group of Jenkintown,
•
Approved appropriaPa. for new bleachers at the
adjusllJ~ents
as
ball field at General tions
requested
by
Clerk
of
Hartinger Parkt The bleachCourts
and
dog
warden.
ers and new lights which are
• Approved payment of
now being installed at the
park were tinanced through bills in the amount of
the village's half-million B'ol- $! ,738,377.48 .
• Approved a resolution
lar Community Development
County
Block Grant Community authorizing
Engineer
Eugene
Triplett
Distress grant.
to
proceed
with
a
paving
The village also hopes to
complet.e restroom repairs at project on Bas~an Road,
the park through the grant: from Morning Star Road to
The grant has ti nanced new Ohio 248.
• Approved a resolution
fire equipment and firehouse repairs. renovations to vacaung a portion of Peach ·
the freight depot in Dave Fork Road and transfering
Diles Park, slum and blight another portion of the road
clearance activities and side- to Salisbury Township. The
portion will be re-named
walk repairs:
Commissioners met with Cycle Hill Road .

E-91t

GCC opens fall
quarter registration

loudly abandoned the conservative movement altogether, and called themselves
"paleoconservatives." Most of their names
are not nationally familiar,
but ·Pat Buchanan probably
belongs in (or somewhere
near) this group, since he
favors Ameri-ca First isolationism and trade protectionism (tariffs).
Finally, in 2000 Bill
Kristol and a handful of
younger neoconservatives
began advocating a combination of a tough foreign
policy and a lean, but muscular, domestic government
that they have dubbed
"national greatness conservatism." Just how far they
will get, it is still too early
to say.
So there 's a brief guide to
the zoo that the conservative
movement
has
become. As for liberalism, .
far from proliferating, it is
hanging on by its fingernails .. Have you noticed
that the liberal s don 't even
have the guts to use ,the
word " liberal" to describe
themselves and their ideas?
They prefer to use "progressive" instead . Well,
who can blame them?
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
. Claremont In stitute for thi!
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

2006

Local Briefs

Conservatism 101: A checklist

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~The

Friday, August 25, 2006

Friday, August 25,

American Muslim women assert righis in Islamic marriage contracts

the wtimun .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
lsl&lt;tmic law experts who
111 Court street • Pomeror, Ohio
ad''UL'&lt;tte for beuer treat(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740 992·2157
NEW YORK - Should ment for women say the
www.mydallysentlnel.com
anything go wrong in her t.locumenl s c&lt;tn help them
marriage, Zaynab Abdui- assert righb under religious
Razacq is confident her law that have long been
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
rights will be we)l-protecl· played down by men .
ed. Her husband has guar- Advocates contend their
Jim Freeland
anteed il - in writing.
approa'h is well within
Publisher
The young Muslim cou- !slami&lt;: law, even though
ple chose a path advocated skeptics say lhe inlerpretaCharlene Hoeflich
by Islami c. schol&lt;trs con- tiott is too inlluenced by
cerned about women's Weslern thinking.
General Manager-News Editor
rights: drawing up a
The contract is especi&lt;llly
Muslim marriage contract meful in the ·united States,
that takes into accounl where Mtlslim, come from
modern needs.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
a variety of ethnic backAbdui-Razacq's agreeestablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
ment states that she is in grounds and follow uiiTerent customs anu levels of
·free exercise thereof; or abridging· the freedom of charge of the household observance. The document
finances and that if her husspeech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- band abuses Iter in "any can accommodate views
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
dimension of wellness" slie ranging from liberal to concan automatically divorce servative.
Governmen.t for a .redress of grievances.
Karamah. an organization
him. He stipulated that he
of
Muslim women lawyers
could make household decibased
. in Washington. is
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution sions without interference
from in-laws and other rela- developing a ·'model'' marriage conlract that can be
tives .
adjusted
to meet the
"At the. outset, we agreed
requirements
of family law
these are thin gs that are
Today is Friday, Aug. 25, the 237th day of 2006. There pretty importa nt to us·; · said in different parts of the
are 128 days left in the year.
Abdui-Razacq, 29, who country. said Azizah alToday's Highlight in History:
live s in Decatur, Ga., and Hibri. a fo under of the
On Aug. 25, 1944, during World War II, Paris was lib- married three years ago . .
group, whose name. means
erated by Allied forces after four years of Nazi occupation.
The conlract has long "Liignity" in Arabic. In the
On this date:
·
been a Muslim tradition . Uni1ed States. civil law
In 1875, Captain Matthew Webb became the first person Most, however, conta.in just governs divorce. but judges
to swim across the English Channel, getting from Dover, one key provision, that' of have taken Muslim marEngland, to Calais, France, in 22 hours.·
the "mahr," a gift usually of riagc contract&gt; into considIn 1916, the National Park Service was established with- money, thai the man gives eralion. sometime s viewing
in the Department of the Interior.
In 1943, U.S. forces overran New Georgia in the
Solomon Islands during World War II.
In 1950, President Truman ordered the Army to seize
control of the nation 's railroads to avert a strike.
In 1956, human sexuality researcher Alfred Kinsey died
in Bloomington, Ind., at age 62.
.
·
In 1981, the U.S. spacecraft Voyager 2 came within
63,000 miles of .Saturn's cloud cover, sending back pictures of and data about the ringed planet.
In 1998, retired Supreme Court Justice Lewis F. Powell
died in Richmond, Va., at age 90.
Ten . years ago: President Clinton began a whistlestop
train tnp in Huntington, W.Va., that would take him to the
Democr&amp;tic national ~onvention in Chicago.
Five years ago: Mette-Marit Tjessem Hoiby, a single
mother and former waitress. married Norway's Crown
Prince Haakon in Oslo. Rhythm-and-blues singer Aaliyah
was killed with eight others in a plane crash in the
Bahamas; she was 22.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Van Johnson is 90. Actor-producer Mel Ferrer is 89. Game show host Monty Hall is 85.
Actor Sean Connery is 76. Actor Page Johnson is 76. Talk
show/game show host Regis Philbin is 75. Actor Tom
Skerritt is 73. Jazz musician Wayne Shorter is 73. Movie
director Hugh Hudson is 70. Actor David Canary is 68.
Movie director John ·Badham is 67. Filmmaker Marshall
Brickman is 65. Rhythm-and-blues singer Walter Williams
(The O'Jays) is 64. Actor Anthony Heald is 62. Actress
Anne Archer is 59. Rock singer-actor Gene Simmons is
, 57. Actor John Savage is 57. Country singer-musician
Henry Paul (Blackhawk) is 57. Rock singer Rob Halford
is 55. Rock musician Geoff Downes (Asia) is 54. Rock
singer Elvis Costello is 52. Movie director Tim Burton is·
48. Actress Ally Walker is 45. Co~ntry singer Billy Ray
Cyrus is 45. Rock musician Vivian Campbell (Def
Leppard) is 44. Actress Joanne Whalley is 42. Actor Blair
Underwood is 42. Rap DJ Terminator X (Public Enemy) .is
40. Alternative country singer Jeff Tweedy (Wilco) is 39.
Actor David Alan Basche is 38. TV chef Rachael Ray ("30
Minute Meals") is 38. Country singer Jo Dee Messina is
36. Model Claudia Schiffer is 36. Country singer Brice
Long is 35. Actor Kel Mitchell is 28. Actress Rachel
BUson ("The O.C.") is 25.
Thought for Today: "Literature is news that stays news."
- Ezra Pound, American poet and critic (1885-1972).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

PageA4

You

Home National

Bank
for buying
my Da:try Market

Steer at the 2006
Meigs Co. Fair

Audrionna Pullins

planet s: · Mercury, Venus,
Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus and Neptune.
Pluto and objects like it
will be known as "dwarf
planets," which raised some
thorny questions about
semantics: If a raincoat is
still a coat, and a cell phone
is still a phone, why isn't a
dwarf planet still a planet?
NASA said Pluto's downgrade would not affect its
$700 million New Horizons
spacecraft mission, whi.ch
this year began a 9 1/2-year
journey to the oddball object
to unearth more of its secrets.
But mission head Alan
Stem said he was "embarrassed" by Pluto's undoing
and predicted that Thursday's
vote would not end the
debate. Although 2,500
astronomers from 75 nations
attended the conference, only
about 300 showed up to vote.
"It's a s·Joppy definition.
It's bad science," he said.
"It ain't over."
Under the new rules, two
of the three objects that
came tantalizingly close to
planethood will join Pluto
as dwarfs: the asteroid

Ceres, which was a planet in
the 1800s before it got
demoted, and 2003 UB313.
an icy object slightly larger
than Pluto whose discoverer, Michael Brown of the
California Institute of
Technology. has nicknamed
"Xena.:· The third object,
Pluto's
largest
moon,
Charon, isn't in line for any
special designation.
Brown, whose Xena find
rekindled calls for Pluto's
demise ~ecause it showed it
isn't nearly as unique as it
once seemed, waxed philosophical.
"Eit;~ ht is enough,'' he
said, jokingly adding: '·]
may go down in history as
the guy who killed Pluto."
Demoting the icy orb
named for the Roman god of
the underworld isn't personal
- it's just business - said
Jack Horkheimer, director of
the Miami . Space Transit
Planetarium and host of the
PBS show ''Star Gazer."
"It's like an amicable
divorce," he said. 'The
legal status has changed but
the person really hasn't. It's
just single again." .

Repave

Some of the milling and
paving work will not be
done during peak traffic
hours to minimize congestion downtown. Mayor John
Musser previously said
some of this work may even
be done at night.
In addition to new portions or sidewalk and a
smoother ride through
downtown, Anderson said
some manhole covers are
also due to be replaced as
welL

from PageA1
ending south of the intersecJion of Route 833 and Ohio
124 near Pomeroy Water
Works Park. With work
having begun this past.
Monday, Anderson guessed
the entire process would
take another two weeks,
weather permitting.
The Pomeroy repaving is
described as' a "regular mill
and fill process" that does
not require the asphalt surface
be
completely
removed.
Of
course
removal of old rails near
Wendy 's and Powell 's
Food Fair on East Main
Street . will be req uired to
complete the job.

A!!~·

The Ariel Summer Theatre Presents

SHOWBOAT
Aug. 25 &amp; 26 8 PM NightlY.
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The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS (2787)

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1:10 3:20 7:10 &amp; 9:20
ACCEPTED (PG13)
1:15 3:15 7:15 &amp; 9:15
SET UP (PG13)
1:10 3:10 7:10 &amp; 9:10
WORLD TRADE CENTER
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1:00 3:15 7:00 &amp; 9:15
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1:30, 3:30
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Dr. Kely K. ps HeJUkb.
CHIROPRAO"OR
Auto Accidents
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• ~111~1 Jn ,u ranc~~

• M~'ll c ~rc

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• A,·upurR'IIm·

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. 316 Washington St

Chlf&lt;l p Lt&lt;:~ur

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Ravenswood. WV

�•

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•
•

PageA6

FAITH • VALUES
·Greek police stage massive
Shine: Lighting candles in the darkness hunt
for stolen 'miracle' icon

The Daily Sentinel

" In the same way, let your
light so shine before others.
so that they n1ay see your
good works and give glory
to your Father in heaven."
(Matthew 5.16, NRSV)
A diseased and ~tarving
man lying on the .&lt;treet
would be a rather uisheart ening sight, to be sure .
· Seiling dozens. even hundreds, of people in such a
miserable state would be
alm ost overwhelming ...
especiall y if no one seemed
to care. You might be
tempted to think . "Well ,
what can l do?'' But one
tiny, little woman in
Calcutta, India answered
that ve ry question .
We know her, of course.
as Mother Teresa, whose
life exemplified in an extraordinary manner the.proverbial dictum that "it is better
to li ght one candle than
curse the darkness." And, if
we may play on a line from

Friday, August 25, 2006

Friday, August 25, 2006

Rev.
Jonathan
Noble
PASTOR,
TRIN ITY CHURCH ,

Shakespeare, "how far that
little candle threw its light!"
Indeed , we can honestly say
that candle still shines in the
world today.
This is ·really the better
part of what it means to
live out the life of Christian
faith - that is, shining the
light of heaven in a dark
and dying world, looking
forward to every sunrise
rather than s hakin~ our tlst
at the nigh t. It is hving life
so positively, in such uplifting goodness, that people
around can do nothing

other than thank God and
praise Him.
· Lightin~ candies in the
darkness IS what our Lord
commands and it need not
be all that difficult either.
For example, try being the
sort of person who makes
affirmallve and upbeat com- .
ments about other people.
For that matter. ask other
people about themselves
and then genuinely listen .
Smile when you say "good
mornin~" or "hello."
Pracllce prayer instead of
despair. Work rather worry.
Laugh instead of languishing in fear and hopelessness. Practice good man,
ners and common courtesy.
Love people and do things
for them .. . without being
asked and maybe even
without them ever knowing
it was you who did the good
deed! Send a note of thanks
to so meone for doing a
good job.

· Write a letter to the editor
praising the police and tire
departments as well as the
emergency rescue teams .
Look for constructi ve solutions to problems ... and
then actually put them to
work! 'fhere must be a million ways to let our lights
shi ne as Christians. We
could go on with a seemingly endless list of possibilities and suggestions, but
John Wesley summed it up
rather neatly when he said :
"Do all the good you can,
by all .the means you can, in
all the ways you can, in all
the places you can. at all the
times you can, to a.ll the
people you can, for as long
as ever you can." And to
that we. should add our
hearty "amen." In the coming days and weeks ahead,
then, may each of us (yes,
including the author) start
lighting candles rather than
cursing the darkness. Shine.

if it meant a brief moment of
relief from pain or even an
There was once a land ruled
extra sip of Mohjac's pecuby a wicked kina
called
liar drink. Sometimes,
• 0
Mohjac. although he wasn·' t
though, those most given to
Pastor
really a king but a usurper
laziness and ' vanity would
Thom
who had enslaved the people.
ultimately find in their vice,
Mollohan their own destruction.
Delighting in hi s power over
his subjects. he had heavy
Mohjac 's slave drivers,
iron collars clasped about
garbed with long, sombertheir necks and shackled them
. looking cloaks, would take
with burdensome chains that
the poor, hapless slave away
monos,
rubies
and
other
constantly rub):led sores in priceless ge ms. When inet and no one would ever hear
their weru-y flesh. With nearly by someone who refused from him again.
Even so, Abigail had
no bread with which to feed Mohjac's treacherous wine,
their famished bellies and no they would scorn them and become friends with a few of
water for their parched insult them. To those who the others who also refused
throats, they ever yearned for . became especially enam- Mohjac's wine. Narryl had
nourishment and rest for their ored with his false treasures, also begun to make friends
tired frames that were cruell y Mohjac would give whips with others, but most of
forced to work in Mohjac 's wi th which they themselves these had already been won
fields. He hap servants. too. could int1ict further pain and over by the wine and trinkets
this false king ... servants who · angui sh on those who were tossed their way. Soon
walked among the slaves, weaker than they.
Narryl began to be preoccugiving them a myste rious · One such slave was a pied with the rewards that he
drink that so intoxicated those young
woman
named perceived the others were
who drank it that thev became Abigail. She and her brother, receiving. Much to Abigail's
delirious and believ"ect them- Narryl, had lived under the sorrow, he began to indulge
selves well-fed and free from tyranny of Mohjac for so . more and more in Mohjac's
bondage, even laughing long that they d1dn 't know liquor himself and eventualsometimes at their own plight, any other way of life. They !y began to act as if he could
thinking it only a dream.
grew up as orphans, their not g'et enough.
"Narryl," Abigail would
Those who were especiltl· parents having deserted them
ly susceptible to Mohjac's in the midst of their own suf- call to him. "I miss our talks.
liquor were rewarded with fering and torment. All day Could we visit together after
worthless baubles, bits of long, every day, they labored our work is done tonight?"
Narryl always responded in
broken glass that might flash in workgroups, harvesting
the
same way: with a cold
and glitter to the dull stare of vi le tasting berries which,
their owners, but also cut though poisonous if eaten glance in her direction and a
·their fingers. Those to outright, were used in the shrug of his shoulders. "I
whom the little bits of glass making of Mohjac's wine. don't think so. I"m too busy.
were given became vain and Among the nearly 20 work- I've got plans with my
were convinced that the glit- ers in their group, most could friends." He would then turn
tering trinkets they held up not be trusted, prone as they away and ignpre her, imme·
to the gray skies were dia- were to betraying each other diately leaving after the day's

·{

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labor was done to join his
new friends , laughing and
drinking the drink of delusion
that Abi~ail so distrusted.
Abigatl 's best friend was a
girl called Anne. Always
cheerful,
even
when
Mohjac's servants were their
cruelest and other workers
their most foolish, she taught
Abigail songs that she knew
and spoke of amazing creatures that could sing and fly
high above the ground in the
blue sky (which neither
Abigail nor Anne had ever
seen for themselves since
Mohjac had banned blue
skies from the land).
As might be expected,
Mohjac's servants did not
like Anne much and accused
her of disrupting the work of
the other workers with her
songs. Because she was her
friend , Abigail also found
herself disliked as well, and
both were usua\lyc assigned
especially difficult places to
work, angry .tangled areas of
briars and brambles , littered
ground with sharp rocks, or
festering bogs of rancid
pools. And when the day was
done, they would return to
their quarters ... scratched.
cut, and covered with slime,
·their hurts making them
unpopular to all but
squadrons of persistent flie s.
Occasionally tits of malice
would beset the slave masters, leaving them especially
cunning in their cruelty. They
would send Abigail and

Ftllowship
Apostolic

one of several famous rei iATHENS, Greece (AP) Police set up roadblock &gt;and giou .-, 1cun.., in Greece .
launched helicopter searches where offering' are left by
for thieves who scaled a cliff worshippers who pray fur
and stole a 700-year-old reli - recovery frpm illne ss or
conception.
gious icon from a monastery successful
among: oth ~ r prayers .
in southern Greece.
Describin g the icon, which
The Icon of The Virgin
Mary, which believers credit mcasut'e~ J() by 20 inches. as
Bishop
with miracles, was reported " pricelc"." ·
missing Aug . 19 11t the• Ale xamlros said he be)ieveu
Orthodox
Christian the thieves had used climbmonastery of Elona, near the ing equipment to I'C ach the
town of Leonidio, about 185 mona.sterv. bu ilt into a clifft&lt;~c c. He ; ,mlthcy may have
miles south west of Athen,.
"This i' the worst thing been hidmg on the grounds
that cou ld happen to us, our of the building before it
church and our religion," dosed for the night.
Father Nik&lt;liat&gt;S Sarantis,
said Metropolitan Bishop
Alexandros of Mantineia a local priest. believe s the
theft was well planned.
and Kynouria.
''It is very diffi9u lt to
Thou sand s of worshippers visit the icon each year. dimb down from there. But
most around Aug . 15. an they clung to the ,rock li\.-e
Orthodox Chri stian reli- Satans:· he 'aid.
Three nuns arc currently
gious hoi iday in honor of
staying at the monastery ami
the Virgin Mary.
The stolen art work was reported the theft to police.

r

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Anne to vines and bushes
· that were ver)i nearly barren
a~d when they would come
back with sparsely filled baskets, the slave masters beat
them viciously. Afterward,
when the girl s would huddl e
together in a damp and drafty
shed, holding each others·
bloody and tear-streaked
bodies fur comfurt, they
could hear Mohj ac's servants
laughing and joking about
the pain that they had inflict-·
ed upon them.
We today are also living in
a land of shadowy slavery.
The slavery and bondage
· that people face today is
more subtle, perhaps, but it
is no less real than the one
described in this story. If
you think that this isn't really so. please consider the
problems that keep our society reeling . Violent crime
doesn ·t become less common, but more so, with even
less clear cause 1111d far more
creativity. Divorce is habitu- .
al and charac teristic of hu ge
numbers of families in
America while unmarried
cohabitation is normalized.
Abm1ions continue to still
be a matter of "choice" and
not a matter of "survival"
for babies. Suicide rates
have not decreased but have
increased. Intern et .crime,
such as identity theft, is carried out with astonishing
effectiveness and online
pedophilia is now an "industry." With our digit al calen-

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Church ol Jrsus Chrhl Apostdtk
Va.n7..mll.l t amJ Ward Rd .. Pastor: J a me~
M1lkr. S und&lt;~y S~.:hoo l - 10 .lfl a rn ..
E\ emng - 7:3U pm.
N.lur Valley

R11t!r Valle)
lf/ 3 S Jrd

SruJy

Emmanuel APQslolk Tabernaclf Inc.

Loop Rd otl New Lmlll Rd . Ru1land,
Serv kts: Su O 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m .

Thurs. 7:00 p .m ., P~~ tor Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly or God
P.O. Bmt 467, Dudding Lant. , Mu;;clll ,
W.Va., Pa~tor: Neil Tennant. Su nday
S ~:f\' ICe s- IU 00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
PageviUf F'recwlll B ~ pl lst Chur(:h
Pastor: Mike Harmon. Sunday School
9.:vJ to lO.JOum, Worship servtce. 10·3U
to I I 00 am . Wed . preac hing 6 pm
Ct~rPfnter Baptist Church
S_unday School - 9.30am . Prea~: hing
Semce IO:JOam. Evenin g Ser\'lc e
7 OOpm. Wedn esd~y Bible Study 7:00 prn ,
Interim ~reac h C:r - Flo}d Russ

Che:shl re Baptist Church
Pastnr: St e \·~ Little, Sunda} S..: hool : &lt;:1 :30
am. Mominl! Worship
10:.:10 am .
Wed11esd~y Ri blc Smd~ 6 JOpm , choir
prt1ct1ce 7 3LJ youth ~nd lhble ll udd1 e~
6 JO p.m . Thurs. I pm bnok study
Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
570 Gram St . Middleport. Sunday school
• 9 30 a.m ., Wunhip - II a.m. and 6 p.m..
Wednesdll)' Sen·1ce - 7 p.m 1',1stor: Gar)
Eliis
'
Rutland Flnt Baptist Chun:h
Sunday Schoo l - 9 30 a.m.. 'Worship 10:45 a.m .
Pomeroy Fir~! Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert. Ea~t Mam St .
Sunday Sfh 9:30am, Worship 10:30 am
First Southern Bapllst
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. L&lt;~mar
O'Bryan!. Sunday School - 9.30 a 111.
Wo r~h 1p - R· l5 a.m. 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m ,
Wedne5day Serv ices - HX) p.m.
Hrst Raplist ChuKh
Pa~ to r : Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St..
Middlepon, Sunday School - 9 15 am ..
Worship - 10: 15 am ., HlO p m .
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m .
Racine F1rn Baptist
Pastor. Joseph Godwin , inte rim p11stor .
Sunday Scho ol - 9.30 a m;, Worsh1p 10:40 a.m ., 7:00 p.m .. Wednesday
Services- 7.00 p.m.
Slh·er Run Bapll~l
Pastor: Joh n Swanson. Sunday School - ·
lOam., Wor~hip . Jla.m .. 7 00 p.m.
,Wednesday Sc:rv i ce~-7:00 p.m .
Mt, Union Baptillt
Pastor: Dennis Wea.,.er Sunday Sch ool9:45 am .. b ening - 6:30 p.m..
Wednesda)' Services - 6:30p.m.

(Tiwm Mollolran and his
fa"iily lwve ministerell in
southern Ohio the past II
years. He is tire pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church, whiclr meets on
Sunday momings at the Ariel
Theatre. He mny be reacl1ed
for comment~· or questim1s by
e-mail at pastorrllom @patll·
wayf(allipoliuom j.

Btthlehem Baptist Church
Greilt Bend, Route 124. Racme, OH,
Pastor. Ed Carter. Sunda~ School - 9:.1(}
a.m.. Su nd uy WorShlp · 10:30 a.m ..
Wedne~dll} Bible S_t udy - HXl p.m.
Old Bethel Free WIU Baptist Cbun:h
28601 St. Rt. 1, Middlepor1. Sunday
Semel! - 10 a.m., 6:00 p m , Thc~da~ ·
Scrvlces -6:00
Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt 143 just off Rt . 7. PasTOr: Re v.
Jame~ R. Ac ree , Sr.. Suntl&lt;1y Un if1ed
Savire , Worsh1 p - 10 30 a.m .. 6 p m..
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

·i'

-j'

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

••

; Music is the uni versal language.
~ Although the styles of mu,;ic 311d dance
, vary widely from one culture and
generation to the next. we all understand
1
the language of music anJ can intuitively
sense whether the music IS happy or sad,
• or whether it is coltveying any of a whole
host of possibl" emotions. In fact
sometimes musrc seems better able than
I· ward's to convey what
. we are really
·. feeling. Word&gt; are feeble symbols and
1 mere abstmction~. whereas music often
' seems to m0re directly express our true
· thoughts tmd feeli ngs. How fitting that
1 many of the P;alms tells us to praise God
with music and dancing: "Let them
praise his name with dancing. m••ki•w
melody to him with timbrel and
(Psalm 149:3) There are times
when we just cmmot ~.:ontai n
ourselves. and the cosmic tnusic tl1at is
all around us 'ings through us. At those
times, we almost lee\ as if we have to
sing or dance, and it is right and fitting to
do so.
Praise him witl1.trumpet sound:
praise him witJ1 flute i\nd hmp 1 Praise
him with timbrel and dance praise
him with strings ;md pipe'
-R.S .V. Psalm 150:3-4

DANCEANd '
SiNG TO
T~E

Vktory Baptist lndtpendent
525 N. 2nd St. Middle pon., Pastor· James
E. Keeiee, Wor~hip - !Oa.m., 7 p m ..
Wcd11csday SemCcs - 7 p.m.

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER'
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 mmut" from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156

"Still small enough to care"

Michelle Kennedy
Oir~c1or

LoRdi

~

(740t992-64ll

(740) 992-6472

Middleporl OH Fax (740.) 992-7406
!'llendh·

h &lt;.~m -

A IIIW.\ j l hl'll'

S pm

Open 7 J.1y s a WCL'k

llm11 e Cm1ked .\fl.'als &amp; Dnily Spccilll.\
Antlquily Baptist
Su nday Sc hool - 9:30 u m., Worship -

740-992-7713

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide i11 yau, ye slla/1
ask .wllal ye will, and it slla/1
be do11e !IIllO you.
]olm IS: 7 .

Sizes avarlable 5x10 to 10 x 2Q

The Appliance man
740·985·3561

992·1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

Mt. Murl~o~h 811ptist
fou rt h &amp; Main St , M1ddl epor1 P.1 ~ tnr:
Re\'. Gilbert Cra1 g. Jt, Sundn y Se houl 9:30 a m .. Worship - 10 :45 a IlL

Mi[[ie 's 1\,estaurmit

'J&lt;\ Home Bank for
Home People"

740-949-2217

Forest Run Bapllst- Pomero}'
Re\1 . Joseph Wood ~. Sundlly Schwl - 10
a.m • Worsh1p - I I 311 &lt;t m

Ilour~

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

Hills Self Storage

•'aith B11pli!ll Church
Rail road St . MoSt111 . Sunday Sl·hool - 10
a.m Wor ship
II a m.. 6 p m.
Wedne~tluy Sef\' l cc~ - 7 p.m. ·

Admi s~ it111"

740-949~221 0

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH
P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

of Mnrkrlin g and

333 Page Streel

~hmu

209 Third
Racine, OH

Ap.l~ loli c

Worship ·c cntcl.
Av(:., Mir.ldlepon , Re1 .
Michael Brudford . Pastor, Sunda)' W 30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 prayer. Wed. 7 pm Bibk

dars in hand , people toi l
away their lives, &lt;.lrinking in
the delusion that they are
working fur a better tomorrow for themsdve&gt;. But all
their busv-nc&gt;S and all thetr
successe' still leave them
empty. But ilpart from .Jesus
Christ. there is no real
meaning or real value in all
those activitie ' and accomplishments. Why settle for
the lies of the world'? Why
live the entirety of our live&gt;
only tu find in the end that
we had invested in nothing
at all? Let us turn to God
while we rnav and find in
Him the only genuine source
of life. hope. and pea~c.
"Give ear and come to Me:
hear Me, that your soul may
live. l will make an everlasting covenant wi th you .. .
Seek the LORD while He
may be found: ca ll on Him
while He is near. Let the
wicked forsake his way and
the evil man his thoughts.
Let him turn to the LORD.
and He will have mercy on
him, and to our God. for He
will freely ·pardon" (Isaiah
55:3a. 6-7 NIV ).

·r ·r

MIDDlEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
Middleport, OH
740-992·6128
Local source for troph1es .
olaaues t-shirts and more

190 N. Second St.

your light so shine before
, that they may sec your
• - -- " works and glorify your
I Father in heaven."
Matibew 5:16

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~
(740) 992 -327\1
~
Tol Free 1-877'583-2433
·'

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
A 11 Accou11ti11g &amp;
Fincmciul Suvices Firm

nIKE. Main Street • Pomcru)

c

(7 40 I Y4 -7270

..

10:45 u.m . Sunday E\ i!nmg 6 00 p m .
Dun Walker

p.m.

P..t~tur

Kulland Churrh or (;00
Pa~tor : Ron Heath. Sunda) Wor~ h1p . 10
..1 111 .. 6
p m . Wed ne~d a) St:J\ 1,;e., - 7
pm

Rutland Fm Will BapUst
Sakm St , Pas tor· Jam1e I nrtn er, Su nda)
School · 10 ~ . m .. E\ emn g - 1 p m..
WedneMlay Scf\'IL~s · 1 p.m.
Secflnd Rapli§t Churrh
Raveno;wood. WV. Sunday School 10 urn. M11rnin g '' O~ h i p II am E\ening - 7 pm .
Wcdne ~tl11)'

S)rat::use first Chu rt'h of God
Apple and St:J;und S t ~ .• Pa~tor : Re v. [)-dVJd
Ru ~~cll. ';;un day Sc hnnl ac1tl Worshtp- IU
a.m. E\ening Sen' i ce~- 6:30 p.m ..
Wednes.;!Jy Se rvict s- 6:JO p m.

7 ru n

Church of God or Prophety
OJ Wlu te Rd oft St Rt. H-.11 . Pastor. PJ
Chapman. Sunda y Sc hoo l . 10 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m.. Wed~~day Serv ices- 7
p.m.

Catholic
Saertd Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulbwy Ave , Pornerpy . 992-5898,
· Pa ~to r· R(' \' Walter E. H('in:t. Sal. Con.
4:45 ·5· 15p m.: Mass - UO p.m.. Sun .
Con. -8:45-9:15 a. m.. , Sun . Mass - 9 30
a m . Dmly Mas~ - 8·_\0 a.m

Congregational
Trinity Churd!
Second &amp; Lynn , Pomeroy, Pastor: Re\ .
Jonathan Noble. Wor~u p 10 1.5 a.m ,
SundBy School9: 15 a.m.

Church of Christ
Westside Chwth or Christ
33226 Child ren's Holll(' Rd , Pome roy, OH
Contact 740- 441 -1196 Sunda y morn mg
10.00 . Sun morn ing Bib le st udy,
follnwmg wOr o;htp. Sun . eve 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 7 pm

Episcopal
Grace Eplstopal Churth
320 E. Main St.. Pomeroy . Sunday School
and Holy Euchari ~t 11·00 a m. Re' '
Edwllrd Payne

Hemloc:k Grove Christian Cburth
Mmister: Larry Brown . Worship ·· 9:30
~-Ill Su nday Sd10ol - 10:30 a .m., Bible
Study- 7 p.m

Holiness
Community ChaNh
Steve Tome k, Mam Street ,
Rutland , Sunday Worsh1p--IO 00 a.m.,
Sunda)' Serv ice- / p.m.
Pa~o r

Pomeroy l:hurch or Christ
212 W. Muin St.. Sunduy School . 9:30
am ., Worship - IO:JO a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Servic~s- 7 p.m.

Danville Holinw Church
31057 State Route J25, Langs\'lle, -Pastor:
Victor Roush. Sunday school - 9 30 a.m .
Sunda~ worsh ip . 10:.10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wl:dnesda) pr~yer s~ rv ice - 7 p.m

Pomt!roy We!itslde Ch urch of Christ
33220 Chil dren 's 11om e Rd .. Sunday
Schnol · 11 am .. Worship - lila m. 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Se rv iceli - 7 p.m.

Cal\lary Pilgrim Chapel
Harri sunnl!e Ruad. 1 •a~tur. C hnrl t: ~
McKenzie , Sunday School 11:30 am .
Worship - 1I a m.. 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service - 7.00 p.m.

or

Mlddlepon ChuKh Christ
5th und Mam. PastM: AI Hartson ,
Ch1 l drcn~ Directnr; Sh11mn Sa)r~. Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughun. Sundoy Schoo l
-9. 30 a.m.. W01 Ship - H· lS , 10.30 a.m.• 7
p.m . Wednesday Scrv1ce§- 7 p.m.

Rose or Sharon Holiness Church
Creek Rd., Rutland. Pasto r Rev.
Dewey King. Sund11y M"hool- 9:30 a.m..
Sunday worshi p 7 p.m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7 p.lll.
Lead1n~

Keno l:hun:h of Christ
Worsh1p - 9:30 a.m . S11nda y Sch[ml 10: 30 a.m.. Pa s10r-Jeffrey Wallace.l st and
3rd Sundt~y

Pine Grove Bible Hollnes5 Chun:h
l/2 mil e oft Rt .1 25. P~to r Re\1, O' Dell
Munley. Sunday School
9 30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 30 p.m.,
Wednesday Stmce - 7:30p m.

Bearwallow Ridge Chun:h or Christ
Pn stor Bruce Terry. Sunday School -9.30
•.m

Worship - 1 0 :.~() a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Ser\I ICes - l:r ~tJ p.nt

\'Ve!lkyan Bible Iloilo~ Chun:h
75 Peilii St .. Middleport . Pastor: Ru:k
Bourne. Sunday School .' 10 a.m . Worsh lp
-10.45 p.m., Sunday E''e. 7 00 p.m,
Wednesday Sef\'ICe - 7:30 pm .

Zion Churrh of Christ
Pomeroy. fl armon\ldl e Rd (Rt.l43).
Pa stor: Roger Wat son. Sundoy School 9 ..10 a.m.. Worshi p - 10.3_0 a.m .. 7 00
p.m , Wednesday Se rv 1 ce ~ · 7 p m

Hysell Run Conununit_y Church
Pastor Re11. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
· 9:30a.m.. Worship . 10 45 a.m.. 7 p.m..
Th.ursday B1ble Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Tuppers Plain Cbun:b or Christ
Instru mental, Worship Serv1ce - 9 a.m .
Communion - 10 a.m.. Sunday School 10:15 a m.. Youth- 5.30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study We~ne!;(!ay 1 pm

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Chun:b
Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Sunda y School •
9:30 a.m .. Wonh1p - 10.30 a m. and 6
p.m.,Wednesday Semce • 7 00 p m.

Bradbury Church or Chrtst
MmistCr: Tom Runyoo, 39.558 Br1dbury
Road . Mt~dleport , Sunday School - 9:30

Latter-Day Saints

'·m
Worship - 10 30 a.m.

The Cbureb or Jaus •
Cbrllt or Latte...Da_y Saints

RuUaod Church or Cbritt
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship and
Communion : 10:30 a.m., Doh J. Werry,

St. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486.
Sunday School 10:20- ll ,a.m., Relief
Society/Priesthood 11 ;05-12 ·00 noon .
Sacrament Service 9- 10:1' li .m..
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thill'S.- I p.m.

M inist~r

Bud ford Church of Christ
Comer of St Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbu ry Rd .,
Mmistcr· Doug Shamblin , Youth Mmistn:
Bill Amberger. Sunday School - 9·30 a.m .
Worsh1p - 8 00 a rn., 10.30 a.m., 7:00
p m ,Wednesday Scrv1ces - 7:00 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove, Wor!!h1p- 9:00p..m., Sun d~cy
School - 10:00 a.m . Pastor: Jame~ P.
Brady

Hickor) Hills Churc:h of Christ
Tuppe r~ Plam~. Pastor M1ke Moore. Btble
class. 9 a.m. S~nda)'; worship 10 a.m.
Sunda y; 11-orsh1p 6·30 pm Sunday: Bible
c!as~ 7 pm Wed.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Waln ut and Henry Sts .. ,Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pastor: David Russell. Sunda y
School- 10.00 am., Worship - II a.m .
St, P11ul Luttleran Church
Cufner Sy~:amure &amp; Second St . Pomeroy,
Sun. School- 9 45 a.m.. Worsh1p - ll a.m

Reeds,llle Church of Christ
Pa stor· Pt11 hp Slllrm. Sunday School: 9:30
a.m.. Wor ship Service . !0:30 B.m ., Bibte
Study. Wednesd&lt;~y . 6 30 p.m.
De~~:ter

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
""orship · ll o.m P.Js1or: Richard Neuse
Bechtel United Methodlsl
New \;Iaven R1chard Nease. Pos10r.
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
p ray~:r and ll1blc Study.

Church or Christ
9 . ~0 am . Sunday worshi p

Sundu y ~d10ol
- !OJOam
The Church ur Christ.of Pomrroy
lnter~ec t ion 7 &lt;
md 124 W. Evangel ist
Oenm ~ Sargent. Su nd ay IJ1ble Study
9:30 a.m.. Worship: 10:30 am . and 6:30
p.m . Wcdnt:sdu y Bible Smdy · 7 p m.

Mt. Olin t:nit\11 Methcxllsl
Off 124 beh1nd Wil k.es'-'llle . Pa ~t o r Rev.
R11lph Spires. Sunday School - 9.30 a.m..
Wors hip - l0:30o'a.m . 1 p.m.. Thu r~da)
S e r\l i ce ~- 7 p.lll .

Christian Union
Hartford l:hurch ofC hri stln
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Y.J . Pa stor : Da~id Greer.
Sun day School • 4· 10 a m.. Wnn h1p ·
ICHO a.m .. 7: 00 p.m , Wetlne~da)
Sen.' ices - 7 00 p.m

Meiw,s Coopu11tive Parish
"'orthea~t l'hl\ter. Alfred. Pa ~tnr : Jane
Beatt1e . Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a .m..
Wlmhip - II am. 6: lOp.m.

Church of God ·

Chestl!r
Jane Beatt ie. Wo1 ~ h1p - I} n m ,
Sunday Schllol - 10 !l m . Thu rsday
Scrvkes - 7 p.m.

Mt. Mori11h Churc:h of God
\1 il e IIIII Rd . Rac1nc, ~as tor Jumc s
Sl1tll::rf1eld . .Sunday Sc hool - 9 4.5 a . m .~
.. We'-h1e:.d1t}' Se r' icq - 7

Pa ~t o r

·
ENCIES Inc.

LonR Bottom
Su nday Sc hool · 9.30 a.m.. Worship 10:30 a.m
Rn-dsvllle
_Worship · 9:l0 a m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. Ftrst Sunday of Month - 7:00
p m. S('rvice

Cbn:t,r Chu.rTh or lhl) Nazarene
Pastor: Re\1. Herbert Grate. Su nday Sc hool
- 9:30 am ., Worship - II 3.m . 6 p.m..
Wednesday Sefllice!i - 7•p m.
RDII&amp;nd Cburch of tile Nar..art'nt
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m . Worship 10.30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m., W((Jne ~ a f
Services- 7 p.m. Re\'. Mike Clark

ThpPers Plains St. Paul
Pa &lt;ito r Jane Heattte. Sunday School • ill
a.m .. Worship - 10 am .. Tuesday Services
· 7:30p.m
Central Cluster
Asbury (Syrac uscl. Pastor· Bob Robmson .
Sunday School - 9.45 a m , Wonhip - II
a. m .. Wednesday Set\lice§ - 7:30 p.m.

Other Churches
ANew~

(Full Golpel Cblii'Cb) Harrisonville.

Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshall .
Sunday Service, 2 p.m. '

Amu.lna Grve Cemmunity Cbun:b
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap, State Rt. 68 1.
Tuppen Plams , Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
. 6:30pm .. Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m.

EnterpriM
Pastor: Arlond Kmg . Sunday School 10:30 a.,n .. Worship - 9.30 a.m . Bible
S~ud y- Wed

7:30

flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rade r, Sunduy School - 10
a.m . Wcmhip - l l 11m

OasiJ Chi'Mtlan Fellowship
(Non-denorrunational feUo-.~hip)
Meeting in the Meigs Middle School
Cafetena Paswr: Ouis Ste,wart
1():00 am - Noon Sunday: lnfonnal
Wonhip,Children 's ministry

Fonsl Run
Pas1or: Bob Robin:o;on , Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m.

Commwdty of Chrhl
Portland -Rac1nt Rd .. Pastor· Jim Proffin.
Sunday School - 9:30 am .. Worsh1p ·
10:30 am ., Wednesday Services - 7.00
p.m.
. Bethel Worship Center
.19782 S.R. i, Reed~\11lle . OH 4S772 . 112
mile north of Eastern Schools on SR 7 . A
'Full Gm;pc:l Church, Pastur Rob Barber,
Associate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youth
Pasror SuZie Franc is. Sunday serv1ces
!0:00 am worshlp. 6:00 pm Family L1fe
Classes. Wed. Home Cell Groups 7:00
p m , Outer L1m 1 t~ Cell Group a.t the
church 6:30 pm to 8 30 pm

Healh (Middlcpon)
P~stur : Bria11 Dunham, Sundll)' School ·
9 30 a.m.. Worsh1p - II 00 a.m.

Minemllle
Pa§tor: Bob Robmson. Sunday School - 9
11. .m.• Worship •. 10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Sunduy' Schuol - 9 am: . Worship - 10 a.m.
Pomeroy
Brian Dunham . Worsh1p - 9:30
a.m.. Sunday School- 10.35 ~ -m
Pa .~w r

Ash Stmt Church
398 Ash St . Middlepun-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday Srhool - 9:30 am .. Morn1 ng
Worship - 10 JO a.m &amp; 7:00 pm.
Wednesda) Service - 7.00 p.m., Yout h
Serv1ce· 'i:oo'p.m.
Agape Lire Center
"Fui!-Gospe l Church", Pilstors John &amp;
Patty Wade. 603 Sttond A\e. Mason. T135017. Service time: Sunday 10 30 am ..
Wednesday 7 pm

Rock Springs
Past or: Kc1th Kader . Sllnday School - 9:1 5
a.m .. Warsh tp · 10 a.m .. Youth
Fellowshi p. Sunday · 6 p.m.

.

Rutland
Pastor. Rick Bourne, Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a m Worsh1p - IU:30 a.m . Thursday
Ser.'ices- 7 p.m.
· Salem Ce nter
Pastor· Wilham K. Marshall , Sunday
School - 10 15 a.m, Worship - 9:15a.m.,
Bible Study. Monday 7.00 pm
SnowvHie
Sunday School- 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m .

Abundant Graef R.F. I.
923 S. Third St .. Middleport , Pastor Teresa
Dnu, Sunday scr\' ICe. 10 a._!TI ..
Wc:dnesda)' service, 7 p.m.

Belbao)
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worsh1 p - 9 a.m., Wednesday'
Services- 10 a.m .
Cannel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds . Racine. Ohio.
Pastor. John Gilmore, Sunda}' School •
9:30 a.m .. Worship · 10:45 1.m. , Bibie
Study Wed. 1:00 p.m.

Fal1b FuU Gospel Cburtb
Long Bottom, Pastor. Ste\le Reed, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 am
and 7 pm .. Wednesday - 7 p.m.. Friday fe llowship sei\Iice 7 p.m.

llarrtlon'Uie Commanlty Chun:b
Putor: Theron Durham , Sunday - 9:30
a.m.1119 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Middleport Community Church

Mor..Jna Star
Pastor. John Gilmore. Sunday School - l l
a .m .. Worship- 10 a.m.

S75 Peul St, Middlepon , Pastor: Sam
Andenon, Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Evealnt - 7:30p.m .. We dnesday Servtce7:30p.m .

EutLetart
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School 9a.m., Worship - 10 a.m., ht Sunday
every month evening service 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday ·· 7 pm .
Radne
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Sunday School - 10
· a.m., Worship - II am.

Fallb Valley 'lilbernaclr Church
Dailey Run Road . Pastor: Rev Emmett
Raw son . Sunday Evening 7 p.m ..
Thursday Serv1ce - 7 p.m.
SyncUM Mission
1411 Bridgeman St.. Syracu~. Sunday
School - 10 a.m. Evening - 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Coolville Unlted·Melltodlst Parbla
Pastor: He l~ Kline. Cool\'ille Church,
Main &amp; Fiflh Sr., Sun . School- 10 a.m.,
Worship - 9 am , Tues Servlces - 7 p m.

Hazel Community Cbun:b
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Hurt. Su ntlt~y
School - 9 30 a.m , Worship- JO:JO a.m .
7:30p.m

Bethel Churtb
Township Rd , 468C, Sunday School - 9
am. Worship - 10 a.m .. Wednesday
Serv1ces- 10 a.m.

Dyuvllle Community Churth
Sunday School - 9JO a.m .. Worship Hl:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Hockingport Cbun:h
Grand Street. Sunday School - 9 30 a.m ,
Worship - lO:JO a.m . Pastor Phillip lk:ll

Morse Chapel Cbun:h
Sunday school - 10 a.m.. Wonh1p - II
a.m . Wednesday Sei\Iice - 7 p.m.

Torch Chun:h
Co. Rd. 63. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Faith GO!ipel Churrh
Long Bottom. Sunday School- 9 30 a.m..
Worshi p : 10.45 a.m, 7.30 p m ..
Wednesda) 7· JO p m
MI. Olive Community Chun:h
Pastor. Lawrence Bush. Sunday School 9·30 am , Evenmg - 6:30p.m . Wednedny
Service - 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Church of the Nauuene
Pas tor Allen fl.hd cap. Sund~y School •
9:JO a.m.. Wonhip 10:30 a.m.. 6 30 p.m.,
We dne sdt~ y Senice~ - I p.m.. Pastor:
Alle n M1drap
RtTdsville Frllowshlp
Chu rch of lhe Naurcne. Pastor: , Sunday
School - 9.30 a m.. Worship " 10:45 a.m .
7 p.m , We tlnt:)dil) Sei\II~'e s · 7 p.m.
Syracuse Chun:b of the Nua~ntl
Pustor Mlke Adi.:Jns, Sunday School· 9..10
10 JO a.m .. 6 p.m ,

Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hil and Rood. Pomeroy, P~stur. Roy
Hunter: Sunday Schoo l · 10 a.m.. Evemng
7 30 p.m.. Tuesday &amp; Thun.- 7:.10 p m.

Kmgshur} Rnatl . Pa~t m Rohert \ ance,
S11 nday s~·houl
I} \() J m . Wor&lt;ihlp
Se rVK t lO 30 J m L-.tnmg Se n 1ce 6
p.m
1-' rn-dooJ Gospt'l \ li!ision
BahJ Knnb. on Cu Rd ~ I . Pa,tor Re11.
Ruger Wtl! ford. Sunda} School 9:30
a m ,Wor,tup- 7 p.m
Whltr's Chapel Wesle}an
('ool vd le RI'J lld. 1':1stor· Kt: • Ph1 ll1p
Riden our. Sunday Schoo l
9 ~0 am ..
Wor;h1p - \0·30 a .m .. 'Wcdni!M.IJ) Sef'\'JCe
- 7 p.m.
F•ln-iew Kible Church
Letart. W Va Rt. J. Pnstur: Brian May.
Sunday School - 9.30 a.m.. Worship - 7.00
p.m.. Wed ne~a ) Bible Study . 7:00p.m
FaUh Felkn11shlp CrUSIIde for Christ .
1
Pastor: Rev Franli.hn D1 ck.en,, Serv1ce.
Friday. 7 p.m.
Cah•ary Rlhle Church
Pmnero} Pike. Co Rd .. Pas10r: Rev.
Blackwood , SuOOay Schoo l - lU Q a.m.,
Wor shi p 10 :30 a. m.. 7 ~ 0 p m..
Wetlm.:sduy Scrv1cc · 7 30 p.m
Stl\lersvllle Communlt, A.postolk
Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell. S und~~ \\ OIShip
· 6:00p .m.. Wedn esd o~ - 6:00 pm . Bible
Study
RrjoicliJg Llfr Church
500 N. 2nd A\1! .. Middkport . Pa&gt; tor.
M1ke Foremun Pastor Emeritus Lawrence:
Foreman. Wonh1p- 10:00 ~m
W('dnestlay SeT111Ces- 7 p.m.
CllRon Thbermtclr Church
Clifton . W .VB , Sunday School - Ill am ..
·· worship . 7 p.m.. Wedne sda~ Service - 7
p.m.
New Ufr Vktory Center
3 17 ~ George' Creek Road . Gallipohs. OH
Pa~tu r Bill St.ah::n . Sunday Sen tees- 10
a rn &amp; i p m Wcdnr ~ du y · i p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.
Full Go!ipel Churrh
of the Lh·i ng Sa \'ior
Rt.338 . -\.miqult) . Pa,tor Je)se Morns.
Semces: S 11 turdu~ 2:00p.m.
Sakm Community Chu rch
Back of We st Columhiu. \\o .Vu .om L1e\l ing
Ro&lt;Kl, Pa~lor . Chllrles Rou~h (J04 ' 675 221:18 , Sunday S ~ hoo l CJ ·JO ~m . Sunday
e~ening ~ ervice 7:00 pm . 8 1hl~ Study
Wcdnc:t&gt;Jay ~erv 1 c~ 7 00 pm
Hobson Christian FeUo~ship Church
Pastor. Herschel White . Sunday SchoollOam. Sunday Church ser.•ice 6:30·pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Restoration Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens. Paitor
Lonnie Coats, Sunday Worsh1p 10:00 am.
Wedne!tda)': 1 pm
Laogs\llllt Christian Cburch
Full Gospel , Pastor: Robert Musser,
Sunday Schoo l 9:.10 am .. Worship 10:30
am-7:00 pm . Wed. Service 7:00pm

Pentecostal
Pentet:ostal As&amp;embly
St RL 124. Racine , Tornado Rd . Sunda~
Schoo l - 10 a.m.. Eveni ng · 1 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen.'1ces- 7 p.m.

· Presbyterian
Harrisonville Presbyurlan Church
Pastor: Robert Crow. Worship - 9 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Pastor Jam~s Snyder, Sunday School 10
~ . rn. worship serv1ce 11 urn

Seventh-Day Adventist·
Mventh-Oay AdventiQt
Mulberry Ht s. Rd .. Pomeroy. Sa1urda}
Sef\·icc s. SabblJth School · ~ p m .
Wmh1p - \ p.m.

. United Brethren
Mt. Hermon United Brethrm
In Christ Churrh
Texas Comnwn1t y JM I I W1d ham Rd
Pa stor: Peter Martindale. Suntla~· School 9:JO a.m., Won.h1p - 10 -~ a.m., 7 DO
p.m. Wcdnc&lt;id iiY Scm c e~ - I 00 p.m.
Youth grollp meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sunduys
1 pm .

Eden United Brethren tn Christ
State Rqute 124. betv.e~n Reed~ ville &amp;
Hockmgpurt . Sunday S~hool - 10 a.m .
S11nda) Worship . II 0:1 a.m. We dnesday
Ser\lices - 7. 00 p.m .. Pa~ tu r- M Allam
'Will

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SOuth Deibel Community Chun:h
Siher R1dge- Pastor Lmda Damewood .
Sunday School · 9 a.m.. Worship Service
tO am . 2nd and 4th Suuduy
Carleton lnttrdenominatlonal Church

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WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

A Hunger For More
Part I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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�•
•

Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, August 25, 2006

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

lndilins wallop Royals, Page B2
NFL news, Page B3
USA hoops routs Sen~, Page B4

•

•

Friday, August 25, 2006

LocAL SCHEDULE

TVC Ohio golf

POMER:Jt - A achedule o1 upcoml'lg COIIeg&amp;
. .-ld high school va.rsty Sporting 8~/e~'lta irMMying
teams from~ ftia, Meigs lind f.ta5011 counties.

Rockets win
match three

TQday'a QlfDttl

Football

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 Waterforcl, 7:30p.m. .
River Valley at Southeastern, 7:30 p.m.
Eastern at Alexander, 7:30p.m.
SOuthern at Symmes Valley, 7:30p.m.

-

~loyball

Cross Lanes Christian at OVCS, 5 p.m.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTER S@MYDAIL't'TRIBUNE .COM

Bv BRYAN

WALTERS

BWALTERS&lt;!!&gt;MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Cross Lanes Christian at OVCS, 5:15
p.m.
.

Jackson at Gallia Academy, 1 p.m.

Aul-25
lltMiuftder

Nicholas County at Point Pleasant, 1

p.m.

Gl~o

Soccer

Nicholas County at Point Pleasanf, 3
p.m.
Cro11 Country

Raider Early Bird Invitational, 9 a.m.

Athens at .,.,~,.-,h,
Gallla Academy at '""'"""
Oak Hill at SOuth Galli&amp;,
Be~re at .Eastern, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Fairland, 5:30p.m.

Soccer

· Ironton St. Joe at QVCS, 4:30p.m.
Gall
Gallla Academy, River Valley, South
GaiDa, Point Pleasant at Cliffside, 4:30

p.m.

TVC Ohio at Fairgreens, 4:30 p.m.

,
'•··,

'

''

,'

Eastern to host
volleyball preview
versus Meigs

•

'

,,

''

'

&lt;11-

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern will host a volleyball preview against countyrival Meigs on' Saturday at
the Eastern High School
Gymnasium,
The host Lady Ea~les and
Lady Marauders wtll have
competitions between their
respective 7th !lrade, 8th
grade, freshmen, JUnior varsity and varsity programs.
The event is a tune-up for
the upcoming . season and
the junior high squads will
kick things off at 5:30 p.m.

hill. IS
st. MIII'Y's

POMEROY- Southern's
one-two combination of
Patrick Johnson and Bryan
Harris left the rest of the TriValley
Conference
Hocking
Division
field looking
up
Thursday as
the
host
Tornadoes
claimed a
14-shot victory at Pine
Hills Golf
Club.
SHS posted a team
total of 161
in the third
Hocking
contest, led
b
y
Johnson's
medalist
round
of
N. Carroll . even par 34.
Harris was
one shot off the pace with a
35, finishing as individual
runner-up,
Jake Hunter and Alex .
Hawley both fired rounds-of
46 to conclud~ the scoring,
Taylor Deem and Zach Ash
also shot rounds of 53 and
57, respectively, for the
Purple and Gold,
, Eastern, with a 'team tally
of 175, was next, followed

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern senior Patrick Johnson chips on to the No, 9 green during Thursday's TVC Hocking
contest at Pine Hills Golf Club in Pomeroy. Patrick fired an even-par 34 to earn medalist
honors, leading the Tornadoes to a 14-stroke victory,
·
by third-place Trimble with
a 176,
Nathan Carroll paced the
Eagles with a 39, while
Michael Owen and Jacob
Warner
followed
with

Cross Country

rounds of 41 and 43 respec- and Craig Jones, respectivelively. Nick Schultz con- ly.
eluded the Green and White
The Tomcats were led by
scoring with a 52,
Brandon Mingus with a
EHS also had scores of 53
and 55 from Kyle Edwards Please see Hocking, Bl

JACKSON Wellston
became the third seperate
team in as many chances
this season to win a TriValley Conference Ohio
Division
golf match,
defeating
the field by
I h r e e
strokes
Wednesday
at Franklin
Valley Golf
Club.
T h e
Legar
Golden
Rockets
fired a team sc1!re of 164,
three shots ahead of runnerup Belpre, Meigs finished
third with a 168, one shot
back uf the Golden Eagles,
Each of those three
schools now have a victory.
Belpre's Wes Cooper
earned his second medalist
honors of the year by firing
a three-over par 37. Kirk
Legar of Meigs was one
shot off the individual lead
with a 38, while Wellston's
LB. Wilson came in third
with a 39.
Be~ides
Legar,
the
Marauders received ·scores
of 42 from both Steven
Stewart and Dan Bookman,
Joey Blackston rounded out
the scoring with a 46,
Dustin Vanlnwagen and
Tyler Andrews also fired
rounds of 48 and 56, respecPiease see Ohio. Bl

r · sc~aniilng At It's Best!

Early Bird
Set for ·
Saturday
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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lltWIIterfanl

'

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CHESHIRE Cross
country season, for both
varsity and junior high, gets
underway Saturday morning with the 1Ith annual
River Valley Early Bird
Invitational.
The first race begins at 9
a,m, with junior high girls,
while junior high boys, varsity girls and varsity boys
will follow in approximate~
Jy 30 to 45-minute intervals,
The 2.5 mile course is
shorter than those later in
the season and a good one
for which runners to start
the season, · At the same
time, though, it is one of the
most challenging · courses
around,
·
"Hilly," is the one word
River Valley ·coach and
event. organizer Ed Sayre
used to describe it. "It is one
of the most difficult courses
in the Southeast area," he
said,
No male runner has ever
broken 14 minutes, Only
one female has ever broken
18 minutes, that was Gallia
· Academy standout Sarah
Wiseman,
While challenging for
the runners., it's also fan
friendly,
'The spectators love it
because of the figure eight,
they get to see the kids."
Please see Early, 82

CoNrAcrUs
OVP Scorellne

(5

p,m.·t a.m.t

1·740·446-2342 ext. 33
Fox- t-740·446·3008
E·mlll- sportsCmydaU~senlinel.com
Sports Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
bsherman@ mydailytrlbune.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23 .
bwalters@ mydaltytribune.com

Larry Criam, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33

.r

lcrumOmydailyreglster.~om

APphoto

Cincinnati Reds' Eric Milton works against the San
Francisco Giants in the first inning of a baseball game
Thursday in San Francisco,

Reds double up Giants
Bv

JANIE McCAULEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO
David Ross' solo homer
broke a tie with two outs in
the
eighth · and
the
Cincinnati Reds rallied from
a three-run deficit to beat
the San Francisco Giants 63 on Thursday night
Russ connected against
Vinnie Chulk (0-2) with a
drive to left for the NL wild
card-leading Reds, who
began a season-long tOgame road trip against contending NL West teams by
pulling within .0004 of firstplace St Louis in the NL
Central (5238 to .5234),
Ryan Franklin (5-6) got
the final out in the seventh
for the win as Cincinnati
gained a half-game on idle
San Diego for a I 1/2-game
edge in the wild-card race,
David Weathers pitched the
ninth for his lOth save in 16
chances,
Edwin Encarnacion drove
in two runs for the Reds on
a cold August evening at
San Francisco's waterfront
!.

'

ballpark, where the tirstpltch temperature was 58
degrees, Juan Castro hit a
two.-run single in the ninth
off Mike Stanton for the
Reds' final runs,
Pedro Feliz hit a two-run
homer and Randy Winn
added a solo shot, but the
Giants didn 't score a run
after the second inning .
· San Fr!fncisco bad won
eight of I 0 to get back in the
playoff chase after the
Giants seemed out of it following · their fifth straight
loss Aug , 13 at Los Angeles
to fall 7 112 games behind in
the NL West race. The
Giants now trail divisionleading Los Angeles by 4 ·
l/2 games, and the Giants
are five games back in the
wild-card chase, ·
Trailing 3-0, Encarnacion
singled in a run to get the
Reds on the board in the
sixth, The ball bounced
slightly in fronr of second
and over the bag and rolled
under lunging second baseman Ray Durham, · Ken
Please see Reds, Bl

Pleasant Valley Hospital is proud
to introduce yet another innovative
firsLthe 64-Siice CT Scan.
The scan is painless and enables
our physicians to detect heart
problems sooner
this

TOSHIBA
Valley Hospital
12.83.

YHOSPITAt

fl;;lu, ttalfclari

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, August 25,

'

25, 2006

10-2 record.
However. he's most prourJ
of wtmt can't be measur~c!·
With a game on the line, '''
wants to take charge.
" You have to be able t.l
lead," he said. "You' vc got
I 0 other guys looking at
you. The most family-oriented or team-oriented portion
of a football game is when
everybody's in the huddle.
Everybody's attention is on
one thing. There can be
IQ5,000 screaming fans and
everybody in the huddle is
all centered and focused on
one thing. That's a beautiful
thing."
It wasn't so long ago
Smith was barely visible.
Justin Zwick won the job
when he and Smith were
· redshirt sophomores, and it
was Zwick who took almost
every snap in the first five
games of the 2004 season.

He hasn ' t vacated the job
since, except for an NCAA
two-game suspension (the
2004 Alamo Bowl over
Oklahoma State and . last
year's opener against Miami
of Ohio). It was determined
he accepted about $500 from
a team booster. He repaid the
. money to charity and apologized.
T~e Buckeye s lost two
games early last season, to
eventual No. I Texas when
Smith was just coming back
from his suspension, and a
narrow loss at Penn State.
They won their tina! seven
AP photo
games, with Smith 's confi- .
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, left, calls in a play
quar· dence and ability growing.
terback Troy Smith during the fourth quarter at Michigan
The highlight came when
Stadium in Ann Arbor, Mich., in this Nov. 19, 2005 photo. he rallied Ohio State on the
Late in a loss at Iowa· - nursing a shoulder injury, road to beat Michig·an 25-21.
which dropped the Buckeyes Smith started the next game The key play was frenzied
pass by Smith to a leaping
to 0-3 in the Big Ten Smith entered the game and and the Buckeyes won. Then Anthony Gonzalez that set
up Antonio Pittman's lastplayed well. With Zwick the next, another win.

to

SANTA CLARA, Calif.
Rice. who will turn 44 in
CAP) - Jerry Rice spent October, hasn't played since
some of his favorite days on parting ways with the
the green practice fields next Broncos before last season,
to the railroad tracks that run holding his first retirement
conference
last
behind the San Francisco news
49ers' training complex.
September in Denver. He
That's where Rice honed spent three seasons in
his game over countless Oakland after leaving the
hours ·as he became the 49ers, then played a final
NFL's most prolific receiver year with the Seattle
- and that's why he felt Seahawks.
those fields were an appro"He played with a burning
priate place to say hi s latest passion that the NFL had
goodbye to the sport he rev- never seen before," York
olutionized.
said. "It's great to see him
Rice signed a one-day back with the 49ers."
contract to retire with the
Rice became a vagabond
San Francisco 49ers on in his final years, still
Thursday, officially ending searching for another chance
the receiver 's matchless to prove he hadn' t lost a step
career back where it began. in his 40s. But San Francisco
Rice, who scored more fans still remember Rice in
touchdowns than anyone in · his incredible prime. when
league history, shed no tears he made most of his I97
during a short signing cere- touchdown receptions while
mony on the fields at the playing for several powertraining complex opened in house teams and three Super
I988 by the 49ers, his team Bowl winners.
for the first 16 of his 20 sea"This is where I got my
sons.
start," ~ice said. 'This is
. The receiver wore his ring where my legacy is at. This
from the 49ers' 1989 Super · is where my heart got startBowl championship team on ed, and this is where I'm
a chain around his neck as he going to end it."
hugged his wife, Jackie, and
Rice's 208 total touchshook hands with San downs are 33 more than secFrancisco owner John York. ond-place Em min · Smith.
"I would like to put the Rice holds NFL records with
uniform on and run on that I ,549 receptions for 22,895
football field, but I think it's yards, and also holds the top
· time to move on," Rice said, ·single-sea son marks of
gesturing toward the fields I ,848 yards and 22 touchwhere the current 49ers were downs.
·
practicing. "I feel weLcome
Rice's tina! NFL contract
here . I feel like this is my was for $1,985,806.49 - a
home. and this is something sum suggested by his agent,
Jim Steiner, to reflect Rice 's
I'll never forget."

minute touchdown run.
Ohio State opens Sept. 2 at
home againq Northern
ltlinois. then goes on the
road against Texas . The
Buckeyes have only two
starters back on defense. But
Smith, Ted Ginn Jr. and
other stars return on offense,
and coach Jim Tressel is
reassured at having a leader
at quarterback.
"You want that guy in the
huddle," he said. "You want
that guy ... to make sure that
no one's talking but him and
everyone wants to hear what
he has to say. )t's fun to
watch Troy take charge."
Smith has matured from
the sophomore who complained not getting a fair
shot at starting. He graduated with a degree in communications this spring and is
now attending graduate
schooL

·Marte, Indians wallop Kansas City, 8-4
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The
Kansas City Royals just can't figure
out a way to beat the Cleveland
Indians.
Rookie Andy Marte had a careerhigh three RBis, and Victor Martinez
and Ryan Garko hit ninth-inning
solo homers to lead the Cleveland
Indians over the Kansas City Royals
8-4 Thursday night.
Before the ninth, Cleveland held
on to a precarious one-run lead.
"In a one-run ballgame headed
into the ninth inning. especially as
crazy as the games have been in this
ballpark, between us and Kansas
City, that was real big for us,"
Cleveland manager Eric Wedge said.
Wednesday night, the Indians
came back from a 10-1 first inning
deficit to defeat Kansas City 15-13.
Last season, they scored I I runs to
·beat the Royals in the ninth.
"I don't know how many times
that team has done that to us, but
plenty," Royals manager Buddy Bell
said. "It seems like we just can't stop
the bleeding when they start hitting
and scoring and things like that."
C.C. Sabathia (9-8) allowed four
runs - three earned - and I I hits
in eight innings, striking out seven
and walking two.
"He was strong, and he was
adamant about going out there after I
talked to him after the seventh,"
Wedge said.
Marte's RBI double in the eighth

AP photo

Cleveland Indians· Ryan Garko cele·
brates with third base coach Joel
Skinner as he rounds the bases after
hitting a home run during the ninth
inning of a baseball game Thursday in
Kansas City, Mo.
drove in Jhonny Peralta for a 5-4
lead. It was the only hit off Jimmy
Gobble (3-5) and the run was
unearned because Peralta reached on
shortstop Angel Berroa's throwing
error. Marte was 3-for;,4 and reached
base four times.
"I was ready for the mistakes,"
Marte said . .
After Martinez and Garko homered on consecutive pitches by

performance, when the
right-hander didn 't make it
out of the second inning in
the shortest outipg of his
from PageBl
career Saturday against the
Dodgers.
Griffey Jr. scored moments
Durham extended his
later from third on a passed season-best and team-high
balL Aller a walk to Adam hitting streak to 14 games
Dunn, Giants starter Brad with a leadoff doubl(\ in the
Hennessey gave way to second, then Feliz folKevin Correia. He got Rich lowed with a drive to left
Aurilia to pop out. After on a 2-2 pitch from Milton
Brandon Phillips drew a for his 2 Ist home run of.
walk, Correia struck out the se.ason.
Ross and starting pitcher
Wino hit Milton's second
Eric Milton.
pitch ofthe game over the
Encarnacion doubled in left-field wall for his I Oth
the tying run in the seventh. home run and second leadHennessey had a better off homer of the year.
Barry Bonds went .0-forshowing than his previous

Reds

Ohio
from PageBl
tively, for MHS.
Wilson was joined in the
wm by teall)mates Andy
Derrow, Chris Comer and
Todd Kisor with-respective
rounds of 40, 4 I and 44.
Travis Hayton ,was next
for BHS with a 42. followed by three scores. of
44 from Andrew Miller.

Drake Logston and Justin
Nickoson.
Both Alexander and host
Vinton County fired team
scores of 188, but the
Spartans prevailed in the
tie-breaker when Dillon
Barnhouse's 58 ehnded up
being three shots better
than Vikings' fifth-man
Seth Zinn.
Wes Bolin paced fourthplace Alexander with a 42 ..
while Bill Brenning led
· VCHS With a score of 44.
Nelsonville- York was

Ambiorix
Burgos,
Franklin
Gutierrez added an RBI single.
Burgos, who blew his 12th save
Wednesday night, gave up four hits
and three runs while getting . only
two outs.
"I tell you what I'm going to do,
I'm just going to keep sending him
out there," Bell said. "That's what
I'm going to do."
Hector Luna, who had four RBis
in· Wednesday's win, hit a run-scoring grounder in the second, but Mike
Sweeney's RBI single tied it in the
third. Luna hit an RBI single in the
fourth · and scored on Marte's tworun double - Cleveland 's fifth
straight hit - hut Sweeney pulled
the Royals to 4-3 with a, two-run
homer in the bottom half. Cleveland
acquired Luna from St. Louis July
30.
"Even though he's had results the
last couple games his at-bats have
been beyond that," Wedge said. ·"!
think he's starting · to feel like he
belongs over here."
Sweeney, who missed 88 gantes
while on the disabled list with a
bulging disk in his back, has homered in consecutive games after not
hit.ting any since April 28.
"I'll just keep grinding. I don't do
it for the boos. I don't do it fof the
cheers. I just go out and play my
heart out every night," he said.
Ryan Shealy's RBI single tied the
score in the. sixth.

3 with a walk.
Bonds, who hit his 725th
career homer Monday
night against Arizona and
had produced back-to-buck
multihit games for the first
time in two years, and
Griffey have a combined
I ,286 home runs - the
second most by two players in the same game
behind Hank Aaron and
Willie Mays (I ,355)' when
tlie Mets played at the
Atlanta Braves on July 17,
1973.
Bonds !lied out to
Griffey in center field to
end the first inning, then
Griffey hit a lly ball to
Bonds in left in the fourth.
last for the third consecutive match, firing a team
tally of 24 I.
Belpre - now with I 3
points on the season - .
retain s the overall Ohio
lead. Wellston moves into
second place with I 2
points, while the defending champion Marauders
fall to third with I I points.
Alexander is fourth
with five points, · followed by Vinton County
with four points.
The
fourth
Ohio

The Pirates bave four of Southern, like its country
their iop five runners back neighbor, will also be ale to
including last year's race field a full team on the boys
runner up Jacob Ruggles. side.
fromPageBl
Eastern will be Jed by
Also expected to compete
Aaron Martindale imd newfor
one
of
the
top
spots
is
Sayre said. "From one van- teammates Ryan Bell, comer Michael Owen, but
tage poin!, they can see the Trevor
Miller and Eli likely won't have enough
· kids on around 80 percent
individuals to register a
Gerlach.
of the course."
team score.
Two
of
the
top
finishers
Schools confirmed for the
for the host Raiders should
Coming off a state tournameet include River Valley, be Vince Weathersteiil, who ment
berth last season, and
Gallia Academy, South was lith last year, and with everybody back, Gallia
Gallia, Meigs, Eastern, Daniel Hill.
Academy is expected to run .
Southern, · Vinton Country,
Shane Plantz is back to away with the girls title. In
Fairland, Paul Blazer, lead Gallia Academy, which last year's race, the Blue
Alexander,
Jackson, took fifth last year. Steven Anjlels had the top thre.e
Chesapeake, Rock Hill and Call will be the lone runner fintshers in race winner
Portsmouth Notre Dame. · for South Gallia.
Lauren Adkins, Lee fl,\nn
On the boys side, defendMeigs will be able to field · Townsend · and
Carol
ing
champion a full team this- season, Fahmy. Aarika Stanley also
which thanks to an influx of fresh- broke the top I0 a year ago
Wheelersburg, ·
unseated three-time defend- men. Andrew O'Bryant and and Andrea Wiseman was
ing champion River Valley Morgan Kennedy ran the t"2th.
last season, is again one of course last year for the . Kimi Swisher, who was
Maroon
and
Gold. fourth last year, leads a very
the favorites.
f

Early

Notes: Bonds is second
on the career homers list
behind·Aaron's record 755,
561
while
Griffey's
homers are good for I lth
place .... Reds SS Aurilia
visited with fans and
enjoyed another return to
the city where he played
the first nine years of his
career before leaving after
the '03 season .... Correia
pitched on his 26th birthday .... A nilly rabbi was on
hand for the stadium's
Jewish Heritage Night. ...
winn has I I career leadoff
homers and six as a member of the Giants, _y,;ho he
joined !ast ' summer in a
trade from Seattle.
Division contest is slated for
Monday at
FairgreetlS Country Club
in Wellston. The event
will siart at 4:30 p.m.
· TVC Ohio Standings

Belpre
Wellston
.Meigs .
Alexander
V'mton Co.
N~ls-York ,

13

Rice signs ·1-day deal to retire with~· 49ers

APphoto

Wiele receiver Je.rry Rice smiles and answers questions after signing a one-day contract
with the San Francisco 49ers during a press conference at the 49ers football headquarters
in Santa Clara. Calif., on Thursday. The 49ers will holcl an official retirement ceremony for
Rice at a game in November.
first year in the league
( 1985), uniform number
(80), the current year ('06)
and a 49 for obvious reasons. The contract was
strictly ceremoniul, and Rice
won't actually be paid.
The 49ers will honor Rice
again during a game against
the Seahawks on Nov. 19 at
Candlestick Park, and his
No. 80 is expected to be
retired in the near future .
Rice joked that he might
have waited even longer for
this ceremony, but Bill

Wal sh, hi s former coach,
encouraged him to get
going.
"He wants to introduce me
into the Hall, and he said
he's going to pass away,"
Rice said.
Roger Craig attended
Thursday's ceremony. but
few players are left in the
locker room from Rice 's last
days with the dub. He was
carried off the field at
Candlestick Park on his
teammates' shoulders after a
game against Chicago in

2000.
Long
snapper
Brian
Jennings was one of the
players doing the carrying
- . and Jennings joked
Thursday that he was simply
trying to get into a photograph that would appear in
the Hall of Fame someday.
Rice has plenty to keep
him busy until that still-distant date in Canton, Ohio and most of his tasks are in
the public eye. After appearing on the reality -TV contests ''Dancing With the

Stars" and "Pros Vs. Joes."
he's pitching another show
in which he'll inspire down-·
trodden people and col'(lmunities.
"I haven't seen him very
much these days;" said
Jackie Rice, who lives with
their three children· in
Atherton, a wealthy Bay •
Area enclave: " He's out
there working. It's been
quite a whirlwipd of a year.
. It's great having him home
right now. The kids are
happy about it"
Rice also has time to hone
his near-scratch golf game,
and he has a Sirius satellite
radio show on footbalL
He sparked controversy at
49ers camp earlier in the
summer by saying No. I
draft pick Alex Smith is " not
the quarterback of the
future" for the 49ers, and
called for those who drafted
Smith to be fired-· presumably coach Mike Nolan, who
has the final say on San
Francisco's personnel decisions. Rice reversed those
comments later Thursday
during his show, saying
Smith was showing remarkable progress.
Rice would entertain
offers of a role in personnel
or coaching with the 49ers
- and though he would
have preferred to play forever. he insists his fans have ·
seen the last oi· him in stadiums.
'T m not going to pull a
Junior Seau ," he said with a
grin.

Browns conclude bizarre 2006 training camp Browns acquire center
Friedman from Bears

j(

BEREA (AP) Fans
signed in
screamed
for
Braylon
. the offseason
to
Edwards to sign just one
more autograph ~s training
hack up
camp ended Thursday for the
Bent I e y,
stun ned
Cleveland Browns.
Edwards made more than a
t h
e
few fans smile. Just like he
Notebook
B row n s
by retiring
already has for his coaches
and teammates.
two weeks after taking over
The wide receiver's rapid the starting job.
recovery from reconstructtve . -Running back Lee
knee surgery has been the Suggs was traded to the New
high poinr of an otherwise York Jets &lt;1t1d sent back Jess
bizarre and at times dismal than 24 hours later after failiraining camp that started ing a physical.
with an injury to center
-· Center Alonzo Ephraim,
LeCharles Bentley, the an emergency signing after
team's top free agent sign- Bentley's injury, was susing,
pended for the first four r~g­
. More injuries, an unex- ular-season games for violatpected retirement and a ing the NFL's substance
revoked trade followed, abuse policy.
putting a damper on the start· -Injuries to dependable
of coach Romeo Crennel's veterans, including offensive
second season.
tackle Ryan Tucker and cor"We've worked through nerbacks Gary Baxter and
some ups and downs, but Daylon McCutcheon, left the
overall I thought the camp Browns shorthanded.
was a good camp," Crennel
"I wouldn 't say weird.
said.
This is football," lmebacker
The Browns have been Andra Davis· saia. "We've
s~rambling to find a replace- seen injuries since I've been
ment for Bentley ever since here."
he screamed, "Not" and
Davis called it the most
grabbed his knee, tearing his competitive camp he's been
patellar tendon on the second a part of and didn't shy away
day of camp. ·
· from playoff talk concerning
Fittin~Jy, the team made a a team widely expected to
trade wtth the Chicago Bears finish last in the AFC North.
on Thursday for Lennie
"I think we are a playoff
Friedman, the eighth center team. Every one of the guys
to spend time on Cleveland's on the team believe we can
roster. .
comr.ete," he said. ''We
Some other strange tales aren t going through training
from Browns camp:
camp to shoot for .500."
-Center Bob. Hallen ,
Training ~:amp wasn't

··--

""'~~--

Bryan Walters/photo

Eastern senior Michael Owen taps in a putt on the ninth
hole "Thursday during TVC Hocking action at Pine Hills
Golf Club in Pomeroy.
·

Hocking
fromPageB:l
round of 41.
The other big story of the
night was Federal Hocking,
which scored its first
Hocking Division points in
I 3 matches. The Lancers,
behind a team score of 195,
finished fourth overall.
T)'ler Thompson led FHHS
with a six-over score of 40.
Waterford, with a 200,
edged out Miller for fifth by
one stroke.
. Southern also moves
ahead in the overall standings after three events. The
·' Does now hold a one-point
lead over the Tomcats, 13-·
12.
Eastern remains in third
place with II points, while
Waterford stays in fourth

with five points. Both
Miller and Fed Hock are
now tied for fifth with two
points apie(;e.
Johnson also becomes the
third different Hocking
medalist this season, joining Harris and Trimble's Ty
Barrett.
The fourth TVC Hocking ·
contest will be held
Tuesday at Lakeside Golf
Club in Beverly, with
Waterford serving as the
host school. Tee time is
slated for 4:30p.m.
TVC Hocking Standings
Southern
Trimble
Eastem
Waterford
Fed Hock
Miller

13
12
II
5
2

2
through 3 events

11

5

4
0

through 3 events

Marauders
Tornadoes
Ea les
I

'Rjversiae q~fj_ c""'"'

.
Route 1, Mason, WV
304· 773-5354
800-261-3031

without some positives, Jed
by the return of Edwards and
tight end Kellen Winslow Jr.
Edwards could play in
Saturday's exhibition game
at Buffalo. Crennel said it
would be a game-time decision.
Even the possibility that
Edwards could play is
remarkable. He's a couple
months ahead of schedule
following surgery to pepair a
torn right anterior cruciate
ligament and hasn't lost a
step.
·
Winslow, too. has been
impressive in his return from
a motorcycle accident and
has acqmred some neeued
humbleness in the process.
"Charlie, w])at's up with
that haircut?" said Wmslow,
mocking his buddy, quarterback Charlie Frye, during an
interview session with
reporters.
Fiyc remains a question
mark, but has given the
Browns enough confidence
that he can handle the starting job in his second season ,
. though signing a veteran
backup quarterback hasn't
been ruled out
"We wanted Charlie to
show that he had command
of the offense and that he
was a leader on the team."
Crennel said. ''It looks like
he will be able to do both of
those:·
Rookies also made an
impact on the Browns. Firstround
pick
linebacker
Kamerion Wimbley, who
signed in time for the St\lft Of

camp, has been impressive
along with
Iinebackers
D'Qwell Jackson and Leon
Williams.
The biggest ~urprise of
camp was fifth-round pick
Jerome Harrison, who looks
ready to he the change-ofpace back needed to com pie·
ment the bruising Reuben
Droughns.
"We have expanued our
offense a great deal from last
year," Frye said. "We have a
lot more plays added to the
playbook, and I think you
will see an exciting offense
when the season starts."
If Bentley's injury on the
very first snap ot team drills
was a bad omen, then maybe
the last play of camp was
sign of good things to come.
Winslow ran down the
middle of the field and
effortlessly caught a pass just
above his shoelaces. Fans
oohed and hoped for more to
come.
Notes: Former Browns
guard Gene Hickerson, who
was selected Wednesday as a
senior committee finalist for
induction into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame ,
attended the last day or training camp and said he was
surpnsed. by the honor. "I
never thought it would happen. I got lucky;· he sai d.
Hickerson blocked fur three
Hall of Fame running back s
during his career. including
Jim Brown. He wi II be
among 15 finalists voted on
by the hall's selection board
Fcb.3.
1

•

BEREA (AP) The
Cleveland Browns, who
have had problems at center
all training camp. acquired
~enter Lennie Friedman from
the Chicago Bears on
Thursday for a 2007 conditional draft choice.
Friedman has played in 65
games. including 32 starts at
guard and center, in seven
season~
with
Denver,
Washington und Chicago.
"I'm going to have to put
in a lot of overtime to catch
up to· spee~ with everybodr,
else that s been here,'
Friedman said. "Tiiere's no
question it's an exciting
opportunity."
He played in I0 games
with Washington last season
before being waived in
November. He signed with
Chicago and played in one
game as a reserve.
''It's good to have some
experience and depth at the
position," Browns. coach
Romeo Crcnnel said. '·He's a
tough-minded guy who will
give everything he has ."
Cleveland's trouble at center started when LeCharles
Bentley, the team's biggest
free agent signing in the onseason. suffered a seasonending knee injury on the
second day of traimng camp.
Backup center Bob Hallen
then abruptly retired with a
back problem and Alonzo
Ephraim was suspended for
the lirst four regular- season
games for violating the

NFL's substance abuse policy.
Ross Tucker, acquired in a
trade from the New England
Patriots, is now the Browns
starter.
Friedman, the eighth center to join the Browns' roster
this season. will have the
chance to · compete with
Tucker for the starting job,
Crennel said . .
Friedman has I0 career
starts at center, the last coming in 2004 with the
Redskins.
The Browns also waived
center Mike Mabry on
Thursday.
Notes: Cleveland Browns
owner Randy Lerner is set to
take over Aston Villa after a
rival group failed Thursday
to match his bid to buy the
Premier League soccer team.
A group Jed by Michael
Neville and Nicolas Padfield
could not better the·$ I I8.8
million bid Lerner made
Aug. 14 to buy Villa. one of
the oldest teams in English
soccer.
Villa, established in I874.
is one of four English teams
that have won the European
Cup- Europe's top competition. The team has slumped
recently, however, and hasn't
won the English league title
·
since I981.
Lerner is to replace chairman Doug Ellis, who has run
the team for more than 30
years and owns 39 percent of
the stock.

Palmer will play Monday night against Packers

12

good
Meigs
team.
Newcomer Devan Soulsby
is expected to compete well,
as is Jessica Holiday and
Megan Clelland.
Ashley Fitch is River
Valley's top runner, as she
will challenge for a spot in
the top 10. Senior Elaine
Householder is also expected to place well.
.
Beth Hysell returns . for
Eastern and will be joined
by newc·omers Kaylee
Milam
and
Alyssa
Newland.
A awards ceremony will
follow the event, and ts tentatively scheduled for II :30
a.m. on the football bleachers.
J.D .
Bradbury and
Deanie's Pizza, Wen&lt;;ly's of
Pomeroy
and
Holzer
Medical Cenier are sponsors of the event.

~y Sentinel• Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

Legend~ry WR Jerry

Troy .Smith:·A quarterback matures at Ohio State
COLUMBUS (AP) Two years ago. Troy Smith
was a sub hoping to get into
a game. A year ago. he was a
starter held out of the Jineitp
becau se he took money from
a booster.
Now he's entering hi s final
season. and the quarterback
for top-ranked Ohio State is
out to prove he's among the
nation's best players.
"It wasn't so long ago that
nobody wanted to talk to
me," Smith said.
Smith's name pops up in
the early Heisman Trophy
buzz. And when talk turns to
the Buckeyes' chances of
capturing their second
national championship in
five seasons, his name is
there agam.
His 2005 stats speak for
themselves: 16 touchdown
passes with only four interceptions, I I rushing TDs, a

2006

CINCINNATI (AP) Carson Palmer is ready to
play.
With his rebuilt knee
holding up in practice. the
Cincinnati Bengals quar, terback said Thursday that
he will play in the next pre. season game, stepping on
the field and taking a hit
for the first time since his
injary in the playoffs seven
months ago.
Pal mer is expected to
start against the Green Bay
Packers on ·Monday night,
when his left knee will get
its bigge st test yet.
"I'm going to play,"
Palmer said. "Nothing's
changed. We set out this
date a while back , and
everything's
been
on
schedule and I've been for•
tunate enough to progress
from day to day and week
to week. So", I' II be out
there for the first time this

year."
Palmer hasn't talked to
coach Marvin Lewis and
offensive coordinator Bob
Bratkowski about how
·..
much he wi II play.
When he jogs onto the
1

field at Paul Brown
Stadium on Monday night,
he'll have come full circle.
He was carted off the same
field on Jan. 8 after
Pittsbu'rgh 's · Kimo von
Oelhoffen hit the side of
his knee on his first pas s
during a 3 I- I 7 playoff Joss,
tearing two· ligaments and
causing other damage.
He has practiced with the
starting offense in minicamp and- training camp,
but sat out the first two preseason games because he
didn't feel ready to give the
knee its most crucial test
- seeing how it holds up
when he's going ftill-speed
and getting hit.
Now, he is.
'Til get hit." Palmer
said. · ''!'II get knocked
around a little bit. It ' ll feel
good because I haven't
been doing that in training
camp. I've been preparing
for that."
·
Teammates are eager to
see how he handles a test
that wi II have a lot of bearing on whether he plays the
season opener at Kansas
City on Sept. 10. Only ·a
setback in practice the next

couple of
d a y s
w o u Id
keep him
out.
1'know
I would
Notebook be
ncrvous, so
I'm assuming he's going to
be nervous," receiver T.J .
Houshmandzadeh
said. •
''It'll be intere sting. I'm
anxious to see how he'll
hold up. You don ' t want to
see him get hit , but you do
kind of want to see him get
hit to see him get up ."
Lewis has maintained
that unless Palmer plays in
two preseason games, he
.wouldn' t be ready for tile
opener. Teams play their
starters more in the third
presea son game. then taper
back in the last one to try to
avoid significant injurie s. ·
How Palmer feels after
Monday's game would
have an impact on . whether
h~ plays in the fimd preseason game four days later at
Jndi&lt;)napolis .
"It's a short week , so
we' 11 see how I recover
a.ft~r the game,'' Palmer
11

said. ~we ' ll decide that
week, depending on the
soreness and the swelling.''
Palmer is still getting
some swe lling in the knee.
which is typical for· that
type of injury. Palmer tore
two "ligaments and dislocated his .knee cap. Players
typically need eight to 12
months to fully recover.
·
"I'm sure with him mak·
ing the call to go out there ,
he's feeling pretty good
about him se lf. " running
back Rudi John son said .
''Th e thing ·we need to do is
make sure we block people
and protect him . . We 're
going to be going a little
extra harder to keep guys
off him, to make sure he
has a dean pocket and he
can step up and throw the
baiL"
Even if the knee is fine,
Palmer has a Jot of work to
do on his throwing. He got
into some had habits in the
offseason because of the
injury.
"It's going to be an ongoing proce" probably for a
year.", Bratkowski satd.
"Things are getting fixed,
and he's makin g strides ."

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�Page 84 • The Daily Sent:ir).el

Friday, August 25. 2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

USA Basketball routs Senegal, 103-58
SAPPORO, Japan CAP) - Now
comes the hard part.
The U.S closed a perfect week of
group play Thursday mght by routtng
Senegal 103-58 But wtth more
demandmg games ahead, one stumble
and thts young but talented team Will
be out of the hunt for the country's first
FIBA world championship tttle since
1994
The U.S wtll open the tournament's
medal phase against Australia, the
fourth-place ftmsher 111 Group C, on
Sunday 111 Sattama
"We came over here to wm the
gold." center Dwtght Howard smd
"The first game ts Su~day, and we can
start off on the right note "
The reward for winmng Group D ts
substantial: The Amencans won't have
to face Argentina or Spam unttl the
final. But there's a lot of basketball to
be played before then
"There wtll be some surprises," said
Senegal's Makhtar N'Dtaye, who
played in college at Mtchtgan and
North Carolma. "Argentma and Spatn
can bnng a lot of havoc "
The U.S faced only one tough test tn
Group D- Wednesday's 94-85 vtctory over Italy, whtch fmished second
The competition wtliimprove dramatically, although some teams aren't
famthar to the Amencans.
They know Austraha.n center
Andrew Bogut, who plays for the
Milwaukee Bucks. And they're wellacquatnted ~&gt;.tth Dallas star Dtrk
Nowttzkt, whose Gennan team could
meet the U S m the second round.
Nowttzki Itt up Angola for 47 points m
Germany's 108-103 tnple-overttme
vtctory Thursday
This is where the new U S scoutmg
department, created by managmg
director Jerry Colangelo, should pay
divtdends.
"We're gomg to be fam1har With
some of the players but not the teams,"
scoutmg dtrector Rudy TomJanovich
said
As Tomjanovich's scouts know. a
number of interestmg story hnes have
developed as the tournament moves to
Sattama
One of the big surpnses ts Angola,
which finished II th m the 2002 worlds
in Indianapolis. The Angolans' loss to
Germany dtdn' t take the luster off an
tmpresstve ftrst-round showmg.
"They have exceptiOnal qutckness
and great shooters at every posttton
and can really spread you out,"
German coach Dirk Bauennann satd.
"I thought we did an exceptional job .of
defending them. Give us credtt. We dtd
a good JOb offensively and defensively
"They really test you indivtdually
and as a team," Bauermann added.
"The combtna!Ion of thetr tndividual

Friday, August 25, 2006

Riley will return for
another title with Heat

MIAMI (AP)
Pat
Rtley decided agamst qliltung on top.
He 'd rather try to sta)
thete another year.
Rtley satd Wednesday
he ' II return as coach of the
NBA champion M1am1
Heat, endtng spec ulatton he
mtght ret1re at age 61, He'll
he on the stdelme when the
tttlc banner ts raiSed at the
season opener Oct 31
agatnst the Chicago Bulls.
"After wmntng the championshtp, I realized there's
always somethmg meanmgful that happens m your
lite that becomes the pnmary pmnl of your destmy," Rtley satd in a statement. "Winmng the champiOnship showed me that I
am deftnitely in the nght
AP photo
USA basketball players fool around on the bench dunng their 103-58 w1n over Senegal place, at the nght time,
m the World Basketball ChampJonshlp first round 1n Sapporo. northern Japan w1th the nght people l
can't watt to get started "
Thursday. From left to nght are Dwyane Wade, Carmela Anthony, and LeBron James
Rtley won h1s seventh
ab1hty and skills and thetr athlet1ctsm They ove1came' an e1ght pmnt deficit league title last season as a
make them very tough."
to beat detendmg ch,unpwn Serbta and player or coach, returning
Angola plays an exciting, up-tempo Montenegro R3-79 Thursday.
to the bench m December
style, averaging 90.2 pmnts Small forWtth NBA players Manu Gmobtlt to lead the Heat to their
ward O!tmpto CJpnano burned and Fabnc10 Obe1 to of San Antonio, llrst champtonshtp. There
Germany for :l3 pomts, hi tung 6-of-12 Carlos Deltmo ot Detroit and Andres have been no defectwns
3-pomt shots.
Noc1o111 of Chtcago, Argentma has thts summer from hts
Chma ts another up-and-comer loads of tront-hne talent But It also team's eight-man rotatton,
Three games mto the tournament, the has ,l sohd bench, wh1ch saw plenty ot although free-agent guard
Chmese looked dead. After losmg to action m the llrst round Argenlma won Gary Payton remams
Italy by 15 potnts and the U.S by 31, 1ts ftrst three games by an average of unstgned.
"'
the Chinese lost by three points m 37 pomts
"We've got most of our
overtime to Puerto Rtco. But the
"Argentm.t, they"1e the favonte," core guys back, and now
Chmese bounced back to beat Senegal TOITIJ.tnovich satd
we have the coach," satd
and then stunned Slovema 78-77
Argentina IS on course for a semtft- center Alonzo Mournmg,
Thursday on a buzzer-beating 3-point- nal showdo"n w11h Spam, wh1ch also who re-signed last week. "I
er by Wang Shtpeng
went 5-0 111 pool play That game
With those vtctones, the Chmese fm- would p1t the Spaniards' Pau Gasol thmk It's only ftttmg that
he comes back so we can
ished fourth tn Group D and ltved up to agamst Gmobi11 and fm:nds
all defend the tttle togethcenter Yao Mmg's guarantee that the}
If the seeds hold , the other setmfmal er.~·
would reach the second round Yao, the would ptt the U S. agamst Greece.
Riley left Miami on
76-69
tournament's leading scoret at 28 4 wh1ch defeated Tutkey
Wednesday
to t1y to Japan
pmnts, helped make tt come true by Thursday mght to v.tn Group C.
champi for
the
world
sconng 36 pomts agamst Slovenia
The Greeks' roster IS low on stdr
Chtna wtll face Greece tn Sattama on power bui has a good m1x of youth and onships and was unavailSunday
'"'
expenence G1eece has shown a knack able to the medta, the Heat
The Chmese have an eye on the tor pulling together m 11ght games, sa1d He last talked to
Betjtng Olymptcs, and advancmg to wmnmg by l1;e pmnts against reporters June 23 , the day
the second round of the worlds ts a b1g Ltthuama dnd by thtee .tgamst at the team's champtonshtp
parade
step
_ Austr,did
" I'm very excited," NBA
"I thmk beatmg those strong teams
G1eece " the tournament's we.tkest
ltnals
MVP Dwyane Wade
could gtve a btg boost to our cont1- reboundtng te,un. and It averages 19
dence and lay a 'ery sohd foundation turnove" &lt;1 g.une But the Greeh m&lt;tke smd !rom Japan "l couldfor our 2008 Olymptcs," Wang said up tor those dcliCI~ncie s by shootmg n"t see anyone else bemg
through an mterpreter "I thmk we are 57 percent f10m 1nsnie the :1-pomt ,Jrc the leader of our team comgomg to be a strong team."
"The scout we have has seen them mg mto next season, espeFew teams arc stronger than and has great 1espect for the players.'' ctally after wmning the
Argentina Like the US , the TomJanovich satd "Everybody that champwnshtp. So It JUSt
Argentmes swept through then group I've talked to says that Greece has a lot ftts, the idea that nght now
but needed to rally for one ; tctory of depth and that they're a good team " our whole team ts pretty

much commg back We're
exctted about that."
As recently as Manday,
center Shaqudle O'Neal
expressed concern about
Rtley 's status
"Yeah, it's an issue,"
O'Neal told NBA com at a
chanty golf event in the
New York area sponsored
by Mourmng.
Rtley, who ts also Heat
prestdent, returned as
coach Dec 12 when Stan
Van Gundy restgned for
personal reasons Mtamt
went 41-20 under Riley
during the regular season,
then beat Chicago, New
Jersey, Detrott and Dallas
in the playoffs
The title provtded vmdicatwn for Rtley, wtdely
questiOned after shakmg up
the roster a year ago and
then replacing Van Gundy.
"Coach made this champtonshtp happen He built it
and made us all beheve,"
forward James Posey said
this summer "You could
tell how much he wanted
thts one."
Riley found the season
draming phystcally and
emotwnally He postponed
htp-replacement surgery to
resume coachmg
and
hmped at ttmes m the ensumg months Early in the
playoffs, hts 96-year-old
mother, Mary, died near his
hometown of Schenectady,
N.Y.
It was Riley's fifth NBA
IItle as a head coach but his
ftrst smce taktng the
"ShowtJme"-era
Los
Angeles Lakers to the 1988
title. He won one title as a
player and another as an
assistant coach.
"I'd gn;e up SJX champtonshtps," a champagnesoaked Riley satd m the dm
of the vtctory celebration m
Dallas, "to get this one "
Rtley is second to Lenny
Wtlkens wtth I ,322 coaching vtctories, Including 171
in the postseason. He
stepped down as Heat
coach shortly before the
2003-04 season and was
replaced by Van Gundy,
who remams under contract
wtth the orgamzatton.

. . . . ._.

·~·g···

... "'-••·----... . . . . , . -.-..-.
~

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
Utribune
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l\egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or To (740) 446-3ooa
or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

and through Township
sory note, according to (If any) of Doris Taylor, 50 and 51 as shown on
Public Notice
Road 363 (Silo Road)
Mortgage its tenor, the condi- and
Jane
Doe, said map, thence w1th
Corporation,
whose tlons of a concurrent Unknown Spouse (If said line of Lincoln ADVERTISEMENT FOR as descr~bed below
last place of business mortgage deed given any) of Fred Taylor, Road, S. 27 dog. 36' BIDS
Located m Fractional
Is known as 7965 North to secure the payment decaaeed, whose last east 50 feet, thence Separate sealed B1ds Section 34 T-8-N, RHigh Street Suite 50, of said note and con- known address Is 323 w1lh the !Ina between for the pa1nt1ng of our 15W, Salem Township,
LEGAL NOTICE

Columbus, OH 43235- veylng the premises Condor
Street, lots 50 and ,52, S 62
8402, but whose pres- described, have been Pomeroy, OH 45769, dog. 24" west 200 feet,

ent place of business broken, and the same and whose residence thence N 27 deg 36"
Ia unknown wtll take
notice that on April 18,
2006 at 1 :54 p.m.,
HSBCBank USA, as
Trustee
for Merrill
Lynch
Mortgage

has become absolute.
The Petitioner prays
that the Defendant(&amp;)
named
above
ba
required to answer and
set up their Interest in

Is unknown, and, w•ll
hereby take notice !hal
you have been named
Defendants In a case
that on May 12, 2006,
FCI National Fund II,

west 50 feet; thence
wllh the hne between
said tots 50 and 51, N
62 dag. 24" E 200 feet
to tha place of beginn1ng. Parcel Number.

reject or cancel any

an e
an s oca
roups lnd1v1dual Art1sts fm
pen M1ke and Them
N1ght Opemng S6on Stat
heater Live En1erta1nmen
Po1nt Pleasant (304)542

ad at any time
Errors Must B
eported on the firs
ay of publication an

elevated storage tank the

ponslble for n

ore than the cost o
he space occuple
y the error end onl
he first lnsertloo W
hall not be liable to

ny loss or expens
hat resulls from th
ubllcatlon or omls
ion of an advertls
ant Corrections wll
made in the firs
vallab~

edition

Box number ads a
lways confidential

Current rate ca
pplles

)All Real Eslal
dvertisements ar

~

r

GIVEAWAY

mtersect1on

said real estate or be L LC, Successor In 16..00515

Chester Water D1stnct lowmg Townsh1p Road
Mortgage Loan Asset- forever barred from Interest To Alliance And that the defen- at the office located at 363 In a southerly
Backed Certificates, assorting the same, for Funding
filed
Its dants be raqutred to 39561 Bar 30 Road, direction for a distance
sarles 2002-HE1 flied foreclosure of aald Complaint In the Meigs set up any Interest that Reedsville,
Ohio of approximately 30

Investors,

Inc

lis Complaint In Case mortgage, the maraha~ County

10.00 feel to the point of tQrNo 06CV050 in the lng of any liens, and Common
Pleas, tses or be forever o'clock
a.m mlnus
Court
of
Common the sale of said reall Pomeroy, Ohio, Case barred; that upon the September 5th, 2006, A heanng wtll be held
Court

of you have In sa1d prom- 45772,

Pleas Meigs County, estate, and the proi Number being 06-CV· failure
Ohio alleging that the
Defendant(a) Merllage
Mortgage Corporation,
have or claim to have
an lnleraat In the real
eotala
datcrlbed
below:
Situated In the State of
Ohio, County of Meigs
and Village of Racine:
Being Lot Number
Sideen
(16)
and
Seventeen (17) In the
Myers Addition to the
Incorporated VIllage of
Racine, Meigs County,

ceeds of aald sale
appllad to the paymen,l
ol Petitioner's Claim In
the proper order of Its
priority, and for such
other and further relief
aa Ia Just and equltable.
The
last
date
of
Publication
Is
September 1, 2006.the
Defendant(&amp;) named
above are required to
answer twenty-eight
(28) days after the last
date of publication.

067 In aid Court praylng lor Judgment in the
amount of $33,516 04
together with accrued
Interest In the sum of
$20,884.65
through
may 5, 2006, plus Interest thereafter on the
principal balance at
the rate of 11 6% percent, per annum until
paid and
for
the
Foreclosure of the
mortgage and
any
Interest owned by you
on the real estate

State of Ohio, however,
all oil, gas, coal and
other minerals, with
tho rights of entry for
I he
purpose
of
prospecting, develop-

Arnovltz Co, L.PA
Peter
L.
Mehler,
Anorney at Law
Aftorney for PlaintiffPetitioner
P.O. Box 968

Jng, producing or oper- TWinsburg, OH 44087
atlng for the same and
the right of occupancy
In so far asia eaaentlal
to such prospacllng,
developing, operating
or producing, also
reserving to the stale
of Ohio the use of
atreamo
flowing
through sa1d lands or
abutting
upon
the
aama and so much of
the banks thereof, aa
may be necessary for
auch enJoying, and the
protection of such
streams from erosion,
contamination,
or
deposit of aedlment.
The Petitioner further
alleges that by reason
of default of
the
Defendanl(s) In the
peymant of a promls-

Hill,
Pomeroy,
OH
45769. A copy of the
legal description Ia
attached hereto and
marked as Exhibit "A"
Situated In the Village

of Pomeroy, County of

(330) 425-4201
Meigs, and In the State
(7) 28, (8) 4, 11, 18, 25, of Ohio, Being known
(9) 1
and daacribed on a
map
of
LINCOLN
HEIGHTS, made be
Public Notice
Breece
&amp; Carper,
Registered
Civil
IN THE COURT OF Engineers, Huntington,
COMMON
PLEAS WV doled October 17,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO 1942 a copy of which
FCI NATIONAL FUND wao Iliad In lhe office
II, L.L.C. SUCCESSOR of the Recorder of
IN
INTEREST
TO Meigs County, Ohio, on
ALLIANCE FUNDING the
17th
day
of
PLAINTIFF
December
1942,
VS
recorded In Plat Book
DORIS TAYLOR, et al
3, page 43, 44 as Lot
DEFENDANTS
51
Case No. 06-CV-067
And being more pertlcJudge Fred W Crow, Ill ularly described as folNotice by Publication
lows Beginning at a
To Doris Taylpr, Fred point in the westline of
Taylor, deceased, John Lincoln Road, at the
Doe, Unknown Spouse corner between Lola

said and then at sa1d oH1ce on th1s request at a

of

Defendants to pay or
cause to the paid the
sale Judgment within
three days from 1ts rondillon, that an Order of
Sala be lasued to the
Sheriff
of
Meigs
County,
Ohio,
to
appra1se,
advertise
and sell said real
estate, that lhe prem•ses be aold fee and
clear of all liens, claims
and Interests of any of
the parties herein; that
tho proceeds of sa1d

Ohio, reserving to the By: Relmerj Lorber &amp; located at 1624 Lincoln sale

be

until

applied

to

publicly opened and
read aloud
A copy of the spec"lcatlons
may
be
obtained from.

Salem
Township
Trustees on September

25 , 2006, at 6:00p.m. to
be held at the Salem
Tuppers
Plains- Township Fire Hall,
Chester Water D1stnct State Route124, Salem
Center, Ohio
"
39561 Bar 30 Road
(8) 25.
ReedSVIlle, OH 45772
(740) 985-3315
The Tuppers PlainsPublic Notice
Chester Water D1stnct

reserves the r1gtlt to
reject any and all Bids PUBLIC NOTICE
or to mcrease or A request has been
decrease or om1t any made to the Me1gs
1tem or ttems and/or C o u n t y
award to the lowest Commissioners, Meigs
and
best
BIDDER. County, Ohio, to grant
Each proposal must Southern Oh1o Coal
contain the full name Company permlss1on

Plaintiff's Judgment
and for ouch other
relief to which Plaintiff
Is entitled.
Said Defendants will of every person or
toke notice thai they company Interested In
are required to answer the same The Tuppers
said Complaint within Plains-Chester Water
twenty-e1ght (28) days Oistnct reserves the
after the date of last nght to wa1ve any
publicatiOn of thiS Informalities or irregu~
notice which will be larllles In the B1ddlng
published once each Howard
Caldwell,
week lor six succes- President
of
the
alve
weeks,
said Tuppers
Plainsanswer date be1ng the Chester Water Dlstnct
16th day of September, (8) 25, 27
2006, or Judgment will
ba rendered accordlngly
Public Notice
Dav1d
W.
Cliffe
(0059537)
PUBLIC NOTICE
Anorney for Plalnttff
A request has been
Waltman, We~nberg &amp; made to the Salem
Rals Co., LPA525 Vine Township
Trustees,
Street, Suite 800
Me1gs County, Ohio, to
Cincinnati, Oh10 45202 grant So~thern Oh1o
(513) 723-2200, fax Coal Company permis(513) 723-2230
sion
to
dcllffe@waitman com
constructtmstall a SOR
(8) 11, 18,25 (9) 1, 8, 15 11 HOPE p1pe under

I

public meeting of the

to constructllnstall two
SDR 11 HOPE pipes

under

and

through

County
Road
52
(Strongs Run Road) as
described below·

aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this wiilely read
sedion to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thallk
You, and place an
ad '1n Memory"
of a loved one.

ubJact to the Fadera
air Housing Act o

For more informa·
lion, contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

968

Salem Township,
f.u e1gs County, Ohio
Beglnn1ng at a po1nt 1n
County Road 52, 1900
feet
southwestefly
from the Intersection
of County Road 52 and
Township Road 363,

thence from said place
of bag1nnlng and following County Road 52
In
a southwesterly

dtrectlon of

approx1~

matety 160 feet to the
point of terminus.
A hearing will be held
on this request at the
Meigs
County
Comm1ss•oners Office,

530

®alhpoh~ lailp

.. ..... 310
510

. . 410

In Memoriam
...... 020
Insurance........ ... ......
• ... 130
Lawn &amp; Gardan Equipment........ .. ....... 660
Livestock. ... .. ..... . ... . •
.. ......... 630
Lost and Found. ..........
.. .. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage........... ............ . .. ......... 350
Mlocellaneous....... •
....... 170
Mlocellanaous Merchandise. . • • . • • 540
Mobile Home Repair .......................... 860
Mobile Homea for Rent
....... 420
Mobile Homes for Sate. ......... .. ... ....
320
Money to Loan ... .
......................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers..
..... ... ...
740
Musical Instruments ..... ........ .
• 570

.... . ..........1. ...... oos

Pets for Sate
..... 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing ... .......... • .. .......... 820
Professional Services • ...
. ............. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .....
.. • . .....
160
Real Estate Wanted .................................... 360
Schools Instruction
.... . ..... .. ..
150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fartlllzer .....
.. ......... 650
Situations Wanted
.......................... 120
Space for Rent... .
. .... • . . .. .... . .
460
Sporting Goods...... .. ......... .... ... ... ..
520
SUV' s for Sale .
.......
................... 720
Trucka for Sale........... ................. 715
Upholsfery. .. .....
...... ................... 870
Van a For Sale .
..730
Wanted to Buy.................... ... ....... ..
090
Wonted to Buy- Farm Supplies ................. 620
wanted To Do.... ...
180
Wanted to Rent.
...........................
.. .. 470
Yard sate- 'Gallipolis .•. •
.. ... 072
Yard sale-Pomeroy/Middle ...... •
. 074
Yard sate-PI Plaaaant.. ............................. 076

" on 35 T-8 N, R-15

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(304) 675·1333

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!304)458·1510

Houses for Rent................ ..•••... .. ..

l "'C!Iited m Fractional

0

•

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© 2006 by NEA, Inc

~R!;:d.f-1~~-::---, ~!'""------,
YARD SALE~~110
~~1~10!'""------,~~110

IQro

r

................ 440

ADON

0

YARDSAIEGALUI'OI.IS

·--i.illiiiiliiilliio_.l

. ... . . 030

MDS NURSE

COORDINATOR/

yARD SALE

Tree already cui down to
g1veaway lor firewood need Park1ng Lot Salelll Saturday
cui up (304)593-2759
August 26th Bam ? The
Mason Jar Antiques 408
l.osTAND
Ma1n Street Pt Pleasant
FOUND
wv 304 675-44 77

Homes for Sale ........ • ... .
Household Goods ..... ..

Personals

r

WotJt&gt;E;f. If IH6Pt:-'S

FtEA 1\t\RKET
Cross Creek Auct1on Buffalo
AuctiOn Saturday 7 pm Ron
Pnce &amp; mov1ng sale from
Eleanor
Bu ldmg IS
full Seat1ng for 200 Air
Conditioned Building We
gladly accept V1sa and
Master Card (304)937 2118
or (304)550·1616

I. .

·------_.t
.

HELP WANTED

A local f1nanc1al lnSUtUtiOI'l IS
seel\1ng a tullt1me collector
ThiS 1nd1V1dual must pos
sess good llerbal and wntten
commumcat1on slc.tlls ab11tty
to work with ex1s11ng loan
off1cers and Ch1ef Lending •
Offmer to develop an under
• NO E)(PERIENCE NECESSARY
standing of all aspects of the
• FULL TIME CLASSES
• COL TRA NING
Collection
Department
' FINANCING AVAILAI:li.E
Salary commensurate wtth
'JOB PLACEMENT
expenence Interested md1·
• ENROLLING NOW
v1duals send resume to
Edwards W Stines 211
ALLIANCE
West
Second
Street
TRACTOR TRAILER
Pomeroy
Member FDIC
TAAINlt-IG CENTERS
and Equal Opportun1ty
WYTHEVILLE VA
Employer

©IIDil.

An Excellent way lo earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver and Gold Cams
Prools~;~ts Gold R1ngs Pre·
1935
US
Currency
S0l1ta1re Diamonds M T S
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gall1pol s 740 446
2842

Are you· 55 or older? Paid
employment tra1mng for
mterested
IndiVIduals
Clencal food serviCe and
dnv1ng pos111ons available
Call the Sen1or Employment
Cenler (866)734·2301

Are you ~nteresled 1n a
1 11111 buy .Jl!nli Qam Call reward1ng pos1t1on? PAIS IS
currently accepting appllca
(740)388·9303
11ons lor part t1me evenmg
Want to buy Junk Cars shift d1rect care pos1t1ons for
(304)773 5004
the Mason WV and Pomt
Pleasanl WV prov1d1ng res·
Zuspan Metal Salvage Now 1dent1allcommun 1ty
skill
buy1ng JUnk cars buses tra1mng w1th 1nd1v1duals w1th
p1pe
I beam tm etc MRIDD H1gh school d1plo·
Mason WV 304 593 1904
rna or GED requ1red No
e&gt;epenence
necessary
I \11'1 0\\11 \I
Cr1mmal
background
check
\I I~\ H I ..,
~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;_ _ __, requ1red Must have reliable
110
transportation Hourly rate
HEI..Y WANUD
starting at $6 50$8 DO/hour

·------_.t

1

$ STNAs S
Sign On
Bonus
Arcad1a Nursing
Center 1s now h1nng STNAs
lor afternoons. and mght
shifts Full and part t1me
available Come JOin our
ca nng teamtt Please apply
1n person or call 740·667
3 t 56 Ask for Jane Casey

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood Items
To $480/wk
Matenals prov1ded
Free 1ntormat1on plc.g 24Hr
801 428 4649
A 9 year company s loolc.1ng
for a well motivated HVAC
mstaller
and
helper
Expenence 1S preferred Pay
is basad on expenence 1r
mterested ca ll (740)441
1236 and leave message
With recept1on1SI
Accepting appijcat1ons for
lull &amp; parHtme pararned1cs
We have a benefit package
available Applications can
be obtamed from Mason
County
Emergency
Serv•ca
Ambulance
AuthOrity 2309 JaCk$on
Allenue Pomt Ple asant WV
25550 or you can call 304
675·6134

HELP WANIED

1-800-334-1203
Wlf"

afaiiCII tractocr allm com

(er!Liird

~unmg

Ass1slanl

for full umc and tempor uy
(90da)) v.ork m t1 114 bed
long tem1 ~arc: Stak lacilll\
Full nme cn1ploymem otfrrs
an extensl\11: hcncfit jYdC kag~
mduJmg State Cl'. ll sei\· ICe

retirement earn ur 10 15 da) s
'~cat10n per 'ear I B d t)S ~1ck
!c:a\~ ru1d 11 l'illll pa•d hbh ·
doys heolrh 1l1fe msurance 1s
;nailab i ~ Salal) IS comm~n
su ratc wnh experience Must
ha\'e " CNA. ct&gt;rt&amp;ficatlon to
"'ork m West Vlf'&amp;lnta, and
must possess tither a GED or
hlKh 1chool diploma Con tact
Kimberly Billups ur Y1~kv
B.:rklc; at lnkm Hospl!al,
I akm, W\ at 304 675·081)0
ex1enston 124112 5, Monday
lhrough Fr1day 8 00 am -4 00 p m Lakm Hosp1tal 1s an
EE01A;'\ emplo\er
Lal..m
Hosp1tal conducts pre-employ
ment drugfakohol tesung

HELP WAo'lflEll

FtnanCial InstitutiOn Mason
County based Fll seeks
qualified manager who Will
report to lhe Board a
Oneclors Apphcan1s should
ha\/e a m1n1mum of three
years &amp;)(penance tn f1nanoal
mst1tutmn accountmg and
operatiOns A proven record
of dellvenng loan and
depoSit products w1tll a h1gh
degree of qua11ty serv1ce
sk1lls IS req uired The quail·
f1ed 1nd1v1dual should also
have fam111anty w1th regula·
tory compliance and quar
terly l1nancml reportmg
A hiQh degree of 1n111at•ve IS
requ1red to purse opportun1
tieS 1n the Mason County
community The candidate
should be goal ortentcd to
achieve the unlimited oppor
tumty We offer a competitiVe
salary Resumes should be
forwarded to
Pomt Pleasant Reg1ster
EB23 200 ...Ma1n Street
Po1nt Pleasant, WV 25550

HOME HEALTH AIDES
SIGN ON BONUS Home
Health Care of SE OhiO IS
currently hlmg home aides
competitive wages
Call
740·662-1222
HVAC Pos1110ns Available
With A Weii·EstabliShed
Athens Area Contractor

We Have Opentngs for a
Serv1ce Techn1c1an and an
Installer Must have 3 Years
Expenence and Clean
Drilling Record 80°~e ol
Call (30 4) 373 1011
Work m Athens Area
AVONI All Areas\ To Buy or - - - - - - - - Excellent Wages Based on
Sell
Shirley Spears 304 Cosmetologist needed Call Experience Send Detailed
675·1429
(740)446-7425
Resume To
Door to door sales people
needed
Great earnmg HVAC Positions
potent1al Selling Cable TV PO Box 363
and related samces Sales The Pla1ns Oh 45780

CASH

!XPRESS

$200
Pay Back $203
Borrow

Now Hiring
Manager &amp;
Ass1stan1 Manager
for GallipoliS Oh1o
E~ce ll ent Pay &amp;
Bonus Program
No Expenence Necessary
W1ll Tra1n
Fax Resume
(606)886 8908
Ema11 Resume
JaniCe kldd@cashtn com
Marketing Poaftlon for local
Medrcal
Equ1pmen1
Company You must be
lughly mot111ated exper1ence
preferred
Salary
+
Comrmssron
nego11able
Send resume to Bm 5A5.
clo Gallipolis Tnbune PO
Box 469 Galhpohs OH
4563t

expenence required 1 800
270-1780
-~---~--

Dnver
Flatbed
Owner Operators
•Avg $1 77 gross· loaded
m1le
•Avg $ J8pm fuel
surcha rge
•SSDO Orientation Pay
•Insurance Av$11able
•Flatbed Traalers Available
6 mo OTA exp reqwred
•Ask about our Oed1cated
Runs
866 713-2778
No experience?
Call 800-913-2778

POSTAL JOBS
$1567 S26191hr now h1r
ng For appllcat1on and free
governement JOb mlo call
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1
913 599·8042 24/hrs amp
serv

Quallftcat!Ons 1nclude a cur
rent AN license 1n Oh1o 2
years of long term care
e)(perlence, MDS expen
ence preferred Strong man
agement and commumca
t1on skllls are a mustl Pnor
supervisory e~tpenence We
offer compet trve pay ad a
comprehens1ve
bene111s
package 1nclud1ng 401(k)
With company match tUitiOn
assistance CV'ld morel
Please forward resume to
8onn1e McCa1n NHA or
Cheryl Bolen HR Heartland
of Jackson 8668 SA 93
Jackson, OhiO 45640
Fax 740 286 0295
V1s11 us onlme at
www Her mam&gt;Jcare com
EEOIDrug-Free E:mployer
People Strangth
Comm1tl'nent
Oh10 Valley Home Health
Inc h1nng for Full T•me AN
Full T1me and Part T1me
CNA STNA CHHA PCA
and Per D1em • OT ST
Accepting applications for
LPN s Compet1t1ve Wages
and Benef1ts 1ncludmg
health
1nsurance
and
Mtleage Apply at 1460
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis or
2415 Jackson Avenue Po1nt

Now Htnng F'r Cashiers
Fruth Pharmacy
2501
Jackson Ave Pt Pleasant
WV Please apply 1n Person

I

-

. ---

150

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
ING CO recommends
th a1 you do bus1ness With
people you knbw and
NOT to send money
through the ma11 until you
have 1nvest1gated the

:o~ff~er:rn:g:;;:::~

r

Concealed

Pistol

Class
Oh!O WV Sept g 2006
9 OOam VFW
$ 75 00
Mason WV Ph !740 l843
5555
-------Fa ll enrollment for new
Plano students now open
Inquire
(740 )446 2272

MONEY
10

...._

LoAN

Borrow Smart Contact
th e OhiO DIVISIOn Of
Fmanc1al
lnstEtutlon s
Olf1ce of Consumer
Alta rs BEFORE you refi
nance your home or
obte n a loan BEWARE
of requests lor any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance Call the
Olftce
ol Consumer
Affatrs toll free at 1 866
278 0003 to learn 1f the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
1s
properly
licensed 1Th1s ts a publiC
serv1ce announcement
from rne Oh10 Valley
Pubhshtng Co/Tipany)

PRom;stoN.u

ScHOOlS
INbTRlll'TION

applicants should pick up an :.
'"~'~
''.""".;.';".;.
.. "-'~
! ---~
appi1Cat1on at 333 Page 'ilO
Sl•eel Mrddleporl OH For
MISCI:lJANflJUS
further 1nformat1on please
contact Hollie at (740)992
6472 EOE
"89 Suzuk Far Boy muffler
-P-ar-I-T,-m- . - - t -ea-c-he_r_s Boored out many extras
$1 500 740 985 4258 90
AssiStant $6 70/hr Send
resume to Early Education Ford ProBe TuBro Chage(
Station 2122 Jeflarson Ave •n take with head 2 2i t 2
Pt Pleasant WV 25550
valve l$1 00000 740 985
4258
AI 35 Adult Book Store need ~-----:--­
Midnight Clerk Full t 1ma lazy T Royal Chaparral
(304)937·4900 Drug Test
Fam11y Resort Campground
membership
lor
sa le
Salesperson needed tor !304)372 6569
Janilonal Supply Compaoy
CommiSSIOn basad pay w11h New Lower Pr1ces on
established route Must have llmes1one a1 Rodney Stone
valid dnvors hcense and (740)2455316 R•ver Gravel
reliable transportation Send &amp; ~nd also ava lable
resume to Sparkle Supply !80
WANTED
LlC PO Bo&gt;e 278 Gall1pohs

r,O~H-45~6~3~1··_._._.. .~
We are now accepting
appl1cat1ons for one part
I ti;,.e clencal openmg
Applicants must have
computer expanence
and possess good typlng skills
To apply stop by the
Gallipolis Darly
Tnbune
825 Th1rd Avenue
Gallipolis Oh10 45631
Ann Kevtn Kelly

1!,"",;""""""""'..!1

LOOking lor a trustworthy
IndiVIdual for housecleaning
Approx 1 day per week
Reference
reqUif9d
1740)441 9593

ssoc1a\e or B S Deg:re •
elptul (but not required)
ust be profiCient m al
spects of computers (pro
ramm1ng helpful but no
eqwred) mclud ng bem
am1llar With Arc V1ew
rystal
Reports
an
ccess Must have prev1
us experience 1n the fol
ow1ng areas Emergen
1spatch ng
Emergenc
anagement SuperviSIO
nd working knO\vledge o
EMA Flood Plam progra
(helpful) and C1ty Styl
ddress1ng
programs
alary bellelils and schcd
le w1ll be discussed dur1n
nterv1ew
process
esumes w111 be accepts
ntll September tsl 2006
lease send or deliver al
esumes to Mason Count
t1 Center PO Bo&gt;e 38
01nt Pleasant WV 2555
he
Mason
Count

8USir&lt;F.SS

0PI'OtnUNrrY

SERHn:.'
ovzone
he Company that deliver
un Coolllghtmg Relro
xotlc terns e~c1tement o
hE- 60s and 70s Wlth
nodern day tw1sl For Mor
eta~ls ca ll 740 742 323
r 740 742 1066
Fo
rders call
1 866 550
232 V1s t Novzone a
ww novzone com

Charles
A
Murray
0_1",.0.,h_10_----:c--:-Pleasant WV or phone toll _G_a1_11P_
ommg Soon The Zon
lree 1 866 44 t l393
--::
Gallipolis Career College .,~1:!':!..~1:£!;ec_~~--'
_
Rehabllltfltlon (Careers Close To Home\ Soulmate.. l lC com1ng
Overbrook
Center 1s currently accepting Call Today 740 446 4367
Soon• For people who ar~
I 800 214 0452
applications for STNAs All
lookmg lor true love a
SOlllmfl.tes
740 742 3232
sh tts part-t1me No Phone wwWg.;~II;J04scareercolegec ~rn
Accrej,led Membet Acc1ed ling
Calls Please All 1nterested Counc11 !m 1 th;pench! 11 Col l~y~~ or 614 783 1232 Look•ng for

Local Domestic Violence
Shelter ~eeks part ttme
advocate for outreach servIces In Mason County Soc1al
serv1ces exper1ence pre
ferred Compet1tve salary
Please send resume w1th a
cover letter to PO Box 403
Hunt ngton WV 25708 post Wanted Direct Superv1s1on
marked no later than Aug Employees to oversee male
30 2006
youth m a staff secure res1
dent1al environment Musl
Local Electr1cal D1stnbutor pass a phys1ca1 tra1nmg
seekmg a pan hm e dnver requ1tement Pa1d benefits
must be 21 years Old with a Call between 9am 3pm
valid dnvers license Contact Man Fn to apply (740)379
West V1rg1n1a Electnc 1885 9083
Eastern Ave Gallipolis

www.malonecontrectors c
____
om
_ _ __
FEDERAL

oun v
en1er
IS
accept1n
esumes from potential can
1a1tes to f!ll the postt1on o
sslstant
91 1/EM
Th•s posltiO
eqUires
APCO
4
erttflcatl on
w
EAPONS Certification

1'P"

Are you 1nsp1reQ to help the
elderly hve life to the fullest?
Put your skills to use and
JOin HCR Manor Care lor a
challenging and rewarding
career!

• ~::;;:-------,

To good home black &amp; white
male &amp; lemale long ha"ed
krMns (304)675 8195

Home Improvements .......•...........•.......••... 810

MAKE
SOMEONE'S
DAY!

r•.o_HELP-•W•ANTED--•nl•,l:o~HELP=~W=A~NT!ll~=~ r'o

..

net

011'-1-( A liMN t':t A~ A
flli:J~~Ac¥- NAP·

Please call (740)446-2923
or return to 130 Basbam
Onve

Female Beagle m1x pup, 3
mo old very "' fnendly
Yard sale Fn Sat (Sun?) In
t740)379·9445
shelter
house
630
Free to good home all vac Skidmore Ad (off At 160)
mens
baby
c1nat1ons current many Women s
s1zes many colors of kittens matern1ty lawn turn1ture
pool toys/l,oats sometll1ng
(740)245-5186
for everyone I
Kittens tree to good home
1174
YARD SALECall (740)446 3510
I'oMEROY/MIDIJLE
Ttny Sliver &amp; black k1ttens,
male &amp; female parents on Sat
9 ? 43225 Smith
prem1ses (740)416·4015
Goegle1n Ad {off Flatwoods

Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories. • ... .... ... ..
760
Auto Repair .
... .... .. . .. 770
Autos for sate .
710
Boals &amp; MOtors for Sale .... ...................... 750
Building Supplies
•• 550
Business and Buildings. .
340
Business Opportunity.............. .. ........ 210
Business Training
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes • .... .. .
790
Camping Equipment......... .. ...... . .
... 780
Cards ofThanks . . .
.010
Child/Elderly Care.................... •
• 190
Electrical/Refrigeration
.. .. ..... 840
Equipment for Rent -·
.. 480
Excavating.....................................
.830
Farm Equipment..........
.. .. 610
Farms for Rent...........
.. .... 430
Farms for Sale
• .... • .. .................. 330
For Lease....
.490
For Sale........... ................ ...........
.. .. 585
For Sale or Trade. ..... .
. ....... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables...
.. •. 580
Furnished Rooms....... .. ..................... 450
General Hauling.......
.. .......... 850
Giveaway . .. .... ...... .
... 040
Happy Ads .............................................. 050
Hay &amp; Grain ......... ..
..
............ 640
Help Wanted......... •
...... • . 110

of

I

Beaulllul konens free IO good
home 8 wks old (740)367
7231

Apartments for Rent . ........

Township Road 363
County They Will be and County Road 52,
rece1ved
by
the thence from said place
Tuppers
Plains- of begmning and fot-

IHI alway• confldantlal • Current rllte card appllaa • All raal utile advertisements ara eubJeello the Federel Fair Housing Act of 1968
acoepta only help wantad ads muting EOE standard• We wlll not knowing I~ accept any adlllrtlalng In violation ol the law

1

Lost Pregnant S1amese cat
may have had kittens by
now Declawed $25 reward

~408::::=====~

Antiques........ . .. ...... .

at Lottndge 1n Athens

Sunday Dl•play· 1:00
Thursday for sundays

Nurse

Announcement

Thursday,

Publication

sunday In-Column: 1:00 P·"l·
For Sundays Paper

the right to edit

CLASSIFIED INDEX

on

Buslneee D•v• Prior To

In Next Day's Paper

kltncarlyle~comcast

"''lo-'.-.._••

September f 4, 2006 at
1:00 p.m
250,000 gallon elevat- Meigs County, Ohio
ed storage tank at Five Begtnn1ng at pomt 1n (8) 25 1 tc
Pomts 1n Meigs County Townsh 1p Road 363,
and our 50,000-gallon 1355 feet south from

All Display: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for Insertion

• All ads must be prepaid•

OhtoVallay

newspape
only hel
anted ads meelln
OE standards

County Courthouse,
100
East
Second
Street,
Suite
301,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Dally In-Column: ::1.•00 p.m.

Publishing reserves

he Tribune-Sentinel
will
b
agister

Now you can have borders and graphics
'-'
added to your classified ads
.s~;.
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

'

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

\'\\(){ '\C I \II \I"

*POLICIES*

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Prh:e • Avoid Abbrevlltlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Ron 1 Days

Items

4x4's For Sale....... . .......... ........................ 725

Mer1tage

o~arltir~

Word Ads

i1-. N c - Rpapers_

1:••

Webs1tes
www.myda1lytnbune com
www mydaiiysentlnel com
www myda1lyregister.com

E-mail
classifled@mydaiiytnbune com

flhelaw

1-t:if.!!.l-.11

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us

We will not knowing
y accept any adver
laement in vlotall
N••ti~·c,...

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CLASSIFIED

This
ccepts

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
J•••l:.l1c

www.mydailysentinel.com

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW

CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

1

foDo

Rep 5

-------TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1 888 582 3345
I~ I

310

\I I "i l \II

HOME-';
fOR SALE

2 bedroom home beaut1fu
9 9 acres
near
Waterloo OH $34 000
(740\532 7614

s te

2 story home 3 bed
room 2 Oath 2
garage 3 acres m1 5
m1nutes from Gallipolis
Photo/ nfo
onlme
www Qrvb com
Code
7186 or Call (740)446
7029

ca:

Hook n Go Local tra ler ~~~;;;;;;;;...,...,...,...,...,~
mov1ng 25 mile radws
1740)368-8228
Mag~c Years Day Care P1 e
School Inc Open1ngs ava1l
able now accepting Fall
Enrollment State Licensed
Putting Cn1ldren First"
(304\675 5847
2990 State Route 124
Syracuse out ol flood pla1n
Wanted
to
do 01110 Rwer v1ew 6 room 3
Houseclean1ng weekly &amp; Mdroom 1 1r2 bath 1 acre
biweeKly (740\446 1137 ref lot garage (740)992 7866
1f needed
(740)992 5776 (7 40)339
3363
Wetght No More
All
NatUral Nutrition
Fast
Easy We1ght loss Doctor 3 bedroom 1 story 1 112
Formulated
IndiVIdually bath gas heat c/a 2 car
1n
Middleport
Coached Programs
740.. garage
742-2092 ASK lot Da111d $72 500 t7401992-6926
Rob nson
Herba111e
Independent Otstnbutor
Attention I

Local company olfenng 'NO
DOWN PAYMENT
pro
10
8USlr'~'""
grams lor you to buy you r
OJ,'ORil 'NIT\
home 1nstead ol renting
• 1Q0°o fmancmg.
Less than perlecl creOit
For rent or sale 17 600 sq It
accepted
warehOuse on At 2 w1tl1 3
' Payment could be lhe
acres fenced m &amp; gated
same as rent
blacktop
parking
lot
Mortgage
Locators
(304)937-4127
(7&lt;0)367-0000
11\\\tl\1

!'::::"'"'-:-----,

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

,.

�\

Friday, August 25, 2006
ALLEY OOP
1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unlur·
nished, security deposit
required, no pets, 740 -9922218.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

'

'
NEA Crossword
Puzzle

BRIDGE

Newer roomy One Bedroom
with breakfast bar. Stove,
new refrigerator. Country
setting. First/last mo. rent
plus deposit 740-992·3543

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

OB-25-ol

Q 8 7 2

•

. 7 6 &gt;32

t

K 54

•

7

West
•

i:all
• A

6 4 3

• 9.
• Q J 10 9

•

A J 10 8

t

II B 3

4 1\ 109 5

. 8 5 432
South

4 bedroom, 2 bath. double
garage, pool , 2 acres .
Eastern School District.
740--992-3465 after 5:00PM

NO DOWN PAYMENT even
with less than petiect credit
is available oo this 3 bedroom 1 bath home in
Middleport. Comer tot, vinyl

~ siding, fireplace In living
room, good carpet, tile floor
in kitchen. French doors
open to master bedroom.
jacuzzi tub, oft street parking. Payment around $550
per month. 740·367-7 129.

2.

• CPAI'

• Helios
• Hometill

• HosJJilal Beds
• \\'hcl'ldmirs

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Keep the entry
for the winner

740·446·0007 Toll Free 877·669-0007

I \In I \ I 1'1'1 ll · ._,
,\ ll\1 ... 1()( "

Approx 3 acres, 2 house
si tes. Utilities x2, city water.
large solid 2 story barn.
approx t/2 mile our SR 218
Beautiful lot, city or county
SChOOlS. SeriOUS buyers
only $44K. (740)441 ·7333.

I

i

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441·1111
lor application &amp; Information.

MORDJO: HOMFli
~
tUKREN'f
.

2 Bedroom Trailer for rent14
Land for sale. Several 5 to · X 60 _ Trailer Lot for rent.
12 acre lois located in Gallla 740 _949 _2237 _
Co., Morgan Twp and Meigs
Co.. Salem Twp. Land con- 2 Bedroom Trailer. $400/mo.
tracts available. Some 5400 deposit. Call (740)367 restrictions. No ca lls a1te1 7762. (740)446-4060 or
9:00pm 1740)669·0143.
(740)367·7762.
Leon.WV- 2acres of and lor 2 bedroom, all elec1ric, A/C,
sate. (304')458·1032.
porch &amp; awning. Very, very
Mercerville building lot lor nice, no pets. In Gallipolis.
sale. 4. 745 acres SA 218 (740)446·2003 or (740)446·
clo:;e to schools Good 1409

Ellm View
Apartments
2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
51 I.10 1$'" 5 d
ar 0 a = an up.
Central heat &amp; air, WID
hook-up, coin operated
laundry, owner pays water,'
sewer &amp; trash .

(304)882·3017

home·
site.
$16,000. 2bdrm-2ba mobile home 'sit·
(740)256-1553 . (740)339· uated on a beatiluMy seclud- Furnished 'apt, 3 r.ooms &amp;
9Z36.
ad approx 1 ac lot with cov- bath, upstairs, clean, no
pets. Ref/deposit required.
Mobile Home lot for rent ered tront porch, back 74 446 1519
·
near Vinton. Call (740)441 - decklattached shed, lrutl 1 P)
tre~s and m~ch m~re, tocat- -:-G-ra-ci_ou_s_li-vi-ng-.-1-a-nd-2-bed11 11.
ed 1n Cheshire. W1ll rent for room apartments at Village
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson 1_450.00/mth+ $350/dep., , Manor
and · Rive rside
Mobile Home Park i!'l I me.IoI ren I. waIer &amp; Iras h)• Apartments in Middleport.
Gallipolis,
OH. Phone or sell fo_~ $451000. Must From $295-$444. Call 740(740)446·2003 or (740)446· see. Senous ·1nq. on1y, ca 11 992-5064. Equal Housing
1409.
740/441 -0nS.(II no answer, Opportunities.
leave
message)
-------R1:.1. f);r.-m
Honeysuckle
Hills
WANTU&gt;
For rent Nice 2 bedroom Apartments, Gallipolis, now
mobile home in Country accepting applications for 2
Need to sell your home? Homes. $325 + deposit.
Bedroom Apartments, No
Late on payments. divo1Ce. (740)385·4019. .
Rental AssiS1ance available
job transler or a death? I Large 2 bedrooms, stove,
at lhls lime. Rent starts at
can buy your home. All cash · rei.. washer &amp; dryer. no pets, $315/mo. Equal Housing
and quick closing. 740-416- dep. Patriot. \740)379-2540. Oppoounlty. (740)446·3344
3130.
Mobile Home sites for up to Immaculate 2 bedroom
;;::=::;;::::==~ 16x80 in Country Homes. apartment in the country.
C
i:l7:::4r0)~3.;.
85~·-40;.1.;.9•. - - - - , New ca rpel &amp; cabinets,
tre_shly painled &amp; decorated,
410
HOlJSE~
APAKIMENlS
W/0 hookup. Beautiful counnlR RENT
FOR RENT
try
setting, Must see to
·--iitiiioiiiilliio-,1 ~-------· appreciate
.
$399/mo.
House lor rent. No Pets Apt. for rani 2 or 3 Br. No
(614)595·7773 or 1-BOO·
740-992-5858
Pets.
798·4686 ..

·-------,J

r

· GetYoor

Like new liberglass top·
per fo r Toyota Tundra
Warehouse
FARM
w/6.5ft. bed·$500. Vinyl
EQUIPMENT
ca rgo box for full size
in Henderson, WV. Pre·
truck-$50.
(740)4 46owned Appliances starting 'KIEFER BUILT ' VALLEY · 0167 . ·
at $75 &amp; up au under
'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVE- ~~=~~==~
Warranty, also have recon- STOCK TRAILERS 'LOAD- Fl'
·aoosENECK,
~ SUVs
ditioned Big Screen TV's MAx
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
FOR SAU;
by Ron's TV (304)675·
7999
'ALUMA
'ALUMINUM " - - - - - - ·
TRAILERS "B&amp;W GOOSE· 2003 Chevrolet Trailblazer
HITCHES. EXT LT. 4WD. Third row
Electric cook stove, $75. NECK
Carmichael
Equipment
seat. Garage kept. Like new
Almond color, condition (740)44B-2412
condition.
$16,500 .
good. (740)446-7481 call
-D-ie-se_I_D_it_ch-W-itc_h_'n_re_n_c-he-r {740)446-7484 or (740)'441before 9:00pm.
wlth
bac~hoe $7,500 7411 ·
Sale sofa &amp; chair $350. SofB
(304)675- 3773
96 Chevy Suburban . 2 WD.
&amp; I. seat $400. Recliner
-J- - - - -C_/_H_/A_:_N_H_- -_ FM/CO, dual air, 3rd row
$200. Mollohan Furn. Clark 0 4240
3 15
Chapel Ad, Porter o wire-tie baler; round baled Saal, 2 sets' rims, dual
(740)388·0173.
Open straw. Call (740)256-6011 . exhaust $5,500 0 80. High
miles bu t runs great .
Saturday only.
- - - - - - - - - John Deere 10 ft. No Til Drill (614)554-4526.

i

ThOmpsons Appliance &amp; for
rent
Carmichael · 99 Chevrolet Suburban .
Aepalr-675·7386. For sate, Equipment (740)446·2412. loaded with leather interior,
re-conditioned automatic
John Dee re Mini Excavator/ new tires. good conditlpn .
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera· Tractor Loader Backhoe/ . $4,800. (740)446·6323.
tors, gas and electric
ranges, air condilioners, and Skid Steers. Carmichael
4x4
wringer washers. Wi ll do Equipment (740)446- 241 2
--FOR S,\I .E
repairs on major brands In New John Deere Compacts
shop or at ~·r horne
-:i-:~.;·
and 5000 Series U1il1ty tra c- 200 1 Jeep Grand Cherokee
M1sa:JuJ
tors CO% Fixed for 36 Limited , $10,500. · Loan
MEROlA= months through John value $14 .500 . (740)367__
. Deere Credit. Carmichael 7762 or (740)367-7272.
Equipment (740)446-2412
1· Craftmatic XL twin bed; 1
2002 Chevy Blazer 4wd 2
set- Ludwig drums; 1-4 ft. Quality John Deere Hay door automalic trans. 55,000
AC, power locks,
metal brake to bend tin· with Equlpmenl for less-round miles
balers, square balers &amp; power windows,' am/1m
stand. (740)441·2667.
- - - - - - - - mower conditioners @4.7% radio, cd player. in great con42 Blue &amp; Gold McCaw Fixed for 48 months through dition. $10,500. 740-(}45Deere
Credit. 3601
Feathers,
$35/cash John
Carmichael
Equipment
--------304
882
2436
( ) "
81 Dpdge 1/2 ton, 4x4 , 6 cyl.
740
446
2412
·
4 speed, Runs good .
Butcher block table wlwhite 1 &gt; •
$1.450. (740)446· 1655.
pedestat base, w/4 chairs,
excellent condition $150 call ___ ~ LJ~~·roCK
97 GMC 3500 4x4 , 5 speed,
(304)675·6937 leave mes6.5 l , turbo diesel . single
sage
•KIEFER BUILT ·vALLEY rear wheels, all new tires.

i

i

'

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

BUS TRIP FROM

Parking Lot Sale!!!
Over stocked with Antiques

September 29, 2006 to
October 2, 2006
Includes transportation,
llo,tel. breakfasts &amp; '""'"'·
$320/person (double)
$31 0/person (triple)
' $300/person (quad)
$450/person (single)
to make reservations
please contact PVH
Community Relations
(304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326
LIMITED SEATS!

Space needed for New Vendors

Sat. Aug. 26th Bam-?
The Mason Jar Antiques
·'408 Main Street.
Pt. ~leasant , WV
304·675-4477

REVIVAL
At The
Cheshire Bapt1st Church
with Tennessee Evangelisl
GREG LOCKE

Aug . 27 ·30 at 7 00 PM
Special Music Each Night
Public Welcome
Pastor Steve Little

PVH
Charleston,
South Carolina

HardWood.Cablneiry And Furn~ure
www.timbe:Rr-eekcabine-J.rY.t:Om

740.446.9200
ROBERT
BISSEll

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

CONmUCTION

Auto &amp; Truck
Repail'

• New Homes
• Garages

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH
on Slate Rt. 124

• Complete
Remodeling

140·992·1611

992-5682

Stop &amp; Compare

TH' BARLOW BOYS
ARE BACIC
T'GETHER !!

BUT THAR DEFINITELY
ON YODELIN' TERMS !!

THE BORN LOSER
I"\:-1~11-."\' (&gt;,

I

T~€. WUK£!-It&gt;'S"''

WU:.¥.. NE.

~~-'iOU

r\1&gt;,\) (\\

R.E.LI&gt;,X.!

CN:I

I"'1-\01-.! (.11-,K

l i((.LI&gt;.X '?' t't-'\ "- ~

P'1-'\0~\ I'E.OI'Lt ut'\WI~t&gt; 00 ~
T~E. W£E:.l(.C.t-lt&gt;... 1-'\'i ~U~Wit&gt;
...__,.. 1·~ 111 -·~ U~~Vt.L!&gt;!

BP-.':&gt;KE.T CA~E. !

WORK!

I

]

;
•
I

...... See
'-:

~

'

•BISON •HORSE &amp; LIVE·
Hot Tub for Sale (304)675· STOCK
TRAILERS •LOAD·
1732
MAX . 'GOOSENECK,
JET
ouMPs
a
uTILITY
AERATION ·MOTOAS
'ALUMA
'ALUMINUM
TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSE·
Repaired, New &amp; Aeb~ll In NECK .
HITCHES.
Stock. Call Ron E\lans, 1800·537 -9528.
Carmichael
Equipment

New Bow Flex Power Pro
with extra leg extension
$600 (304)675·4014
- - - - - - - -Trailer Hitch 6,00011: Trailer
wgt. 650 Tongue wgt., rating
fils Astro Van $50 (304)BB2·
2324

Pl:rs
FOR SALE

~

40l;j2412

Troy BUt TUier, low hours

~,·

Basset Hound Puppies, both
parents registered. 1 mate.
1 female, $200 each. Has
1st shots &amp; wormed
(304)675·4510
Miniature Pinscher CKC·
red/male
$350 .
AKC
blackltemate $400 Tail,
claw,
shots, • wormed.
(740)3B8·87BB

L:'l!:'l.!::HL:'LI!J!:l!:.l'.'"'w'"""n"'""t'e"""'s'"'•'"'t;~

I

~
•
~

~--oiFoiOiiRiiSiiiAiiUii:;._.l

°

Plymouth Duster $7,500 7'JO
1304)675·3773

11

•

A" types of roofing:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

il!
~,.,ESTIMATES ~
FREE

~!o~,!!!!~~.~J

We have too much of
a good thing.

Overstock Jewelry Sale
Over '1000 Items 50% Off
The Karat Patch
Diamonds-N-Gold

'

· Hupp

•

BIG NATE

'
PLUS. WE'D ONLY
HAVE ONE GOOD

i&gt;..O.Ct&lt;.ET.

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio
45771
740-9411-2217

Sizes'5'K10'' ·
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8:00 PM

PEANUTS
IF '(Oli'RE 601N6
BE RYl N6 OVER
PARIS, COULD I
I-I lTC~ A RI!'E?

HAVE A 60QD TIME !

IT'S AGAINST
REGULATIONS,
BUT I SUPPOSE
WE CAN DOlT.

1114/1 mo. pd

Rl!sidt'ntiul • Commrrcial• (;eru·r HI Cnnlrat•tinl--(
Pairlling • Dom ~ • \\'il\d1 1V. ~ • I k cb
• Siding • R,,,, fi11g • Rm,tll Add iLtllll.~ • Rcmmkllll);:
WV 038992
• Plumbing • Eh: ~,;tri c d 740-367-0544
OH 38244
• A.:nm~1 1r:: C~1l i1rg
740-339-3412

SUNSHINE CLUB

HIRAM, UJI.lii&lt;(S W
WAI&lt;fNG AID?

JONES'

Tree Service

1978
Coachman
Leprechaun
motorhome,
2tH .. has good motor. inside
needs work. Asking $2 ,000
OBO. If interested call
(740)441 ·1236, if no answer
leave message, 'ask lor
Janie.

l

Top • Removal • Trim

..----...

• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

GARFIELD

Shade River Wood Shavings
cu. ft. $3.99/Bag
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rl7 N ¥

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room A-dditions &amp;
Remodeling
New Ger•g••
Electrlcel &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gultera
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch DecJts
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy Ohm
25 Voars Local hpcnence
I I,

-------~---- · ----···

'

· Ohio 45769

Advertise
in this
space
for
ss4 pe~
month

Estab!ish1ng a winner but being unable
to cash it is one bridge nightmare.
Checking entries is so important. As a
simple eKample, suppose your trump
suit is A-Q-4-3 of hearts on the board
opposite K·J·10·6-5 in your hand. When
it comes time to draw trumps, they break
3-1. After removing the opponents'
fangs , whic'h trump will you ha\le left on
the board and which two In your hand?
Now look at the North and South hands.
Against your lour-spade contract, West
' leads the diamond queen . What would
be your plan?
You have four potential losers: one in
each suit Conceding tricks to their three
aces is unavoidable, but you can discard
dummy's losing diamond on a club winner in your hand, then ruff your third dia·
mond on the board.
l1 you win tMck one in hand and play a
club, West should win with his ace and
lead a second diamond . You win that on
the board, but are stranded. You call for
a heart, but East flies in with his ace a~
returns his last diamond - down one.
Instead, win tridt one on the board. You
drive out the club ace, win the diamond
continuation in your hand, and take that
vital diamond discard on a top club.
Then, with everything under control, you
play on trumps.
·
Finally, in that heart holding I asked you
about, usually you should keep the singleton queen opposite king-doubleton. In
this way, you have entry flexibmty. If you
need to get onto the board , you can lead
your low trump to the queen. tf you are In
the dummy, needing 1o ret~rn to hand,
you can overtake 1he queen with your
king.

I

Cornerstone
Construction

CAMPERS &amp;
Mmoa HoMFS

(740)446·7484 or (740)441· 2005 .28ft Dutchmen wlslide
out, bun~ and ex tras. Still
7411 .
under warranty $14,500.
2002 Ca11alier 4d, 5 speed, (740)367·7755.
59,395 miles $4,300; 1999
..,llnH I S
Taurus $3.700; 1998 Olds
Intrigue $3,400. We have ~,.....-"'"',.....---.,
Grand
Ams , Sunlires,
HOME
Saturns.
Neon,
S-10,
bWROVEMOO'S
Nissans, Toyota, Blazer,
Vans, Stratus. 3 months,
BASEMENT
3,000 mile warranty. Cook
WATERPROOFING
Motors, 328 Jackson Pike, Unconditional lifetime guar(740)446-0103.
antee. lOcal references lur-:-:c:-:-::-,.,------, nished. Established 1975.
2003 Ford Mustang , bright Call 24 Hrs . (740) 446yellow, elCcellent condition 0870, Rogers Basement
44,000 miles. $8,200 080. Watefproofing .
1740)709·1989.

~

and sons

.,\NS

t - 1986 Chevy- 8 passenger
van . VB, PS, PB, AC.
(740)441-2667

t

IMPORTS
Athens

i;~30;;:'---:.,~---,

1994 Mercury Villager Mini
Van . PL. PW. PS , New tires.
runs excellent. $2 ,000 Neg .
Wl:lr""-~A~•....
~---, Call 740-992·4272
.., • V'J
FOR SALE
40 MOTORCYOl~
4 WHF.EI..F.RS
$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS'
Cars/Trucks from $500! For 04 Kawasaki 700 Prairie
listings 800·39 1-5227 ~&lt;3901 4x4. Real tree hardwoods
r,amo, under warranty until
2 Cl1evy Cavalier, 4 dr, 03108 $4 500 (740)446
auto, air, CO, good condi- 7158
'
·
•
tion. $4,250. (740)446·1663
(leave message)
2004 Kawasa ki KFX 700 V
-,.,--c-~'-:,.,---- Force, low hours/like new
1933 Dodge Street Rod
Steel Bcxly $22,000, 1973 $4.200 (304)882·3160

1994 Honda Civic $500.
Police Impounds! For listAKC
Mini
Pinschers Ings eo0 -391-5227 ext.
Puppies. Males blactUrust, C548.
vet. checked. AKC Mini 2000 Chrysler Sebring
Schnauzer
Puppies Convertible Limited. Cloth
White/black. salt/pepper, top, leather, Infinity sound
black/silver. $400 each. system. Garage
kept.
740-696-1 085'
30mpg. New tires. $7,500.
AKC Registered Lab pup·
pies,had shots &amp; wormed,
Chocohlte &amp; Black,male &amp;
female $250.00 raady to go
304·773·5746 or 304·593·
2570.

front end, cl utch, pressure .
P.late, tl1rowout bearing, and
shocks. 17.500 firm . Ca ll
(7 40)591·1106.

•

; :F,tocky •'RJ"

YOUNG'S

Skate-A-Way Closing
Final Skate Party
Sunday 27th 1:00 • 5:00
Open THIS Fri. &amp; Sat.
7•30 · 1O:OO.o.m.

BARNEY

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
F R FR~
IMAT

r

r

·2S

....
----·-.,

Driveways &amp; WalkWjlyS. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, WedneSday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

BULLETIN

\'VII.'

·-··

=-

For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains,

With ADally

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Lvcall aw,ed. Wf care abrml

Whit hulkl .56 Twlllghl, to
pump

13

apoet

dopot~

57 Cotlltl~
58 Forest

pink

59 Cozy room
60 DICit, to
granddads

Mlnenl

14 Wriat bone
15 Amiable
16 Not In 111e
17 Phone

browsers

61 Vintaga .

playback

DOWN

19 Steel or

Astro- .
Graph

...,...,.......,

Saturdly, Aug. 26, 2006
By Bernice Bede Oaol
Beca·use of past efforts, your hopes and
aspirations can be elava1ed to new levels
in the year ahead. Once set in motion,
there will be no slopping ·all the major
improvements taking place in various
areas of yo ur lila.
VIRGO (Aug. 23:Sept. 22) - Reliability
may be · one of your more admirable
traits. When you give your word on doing
something for -another, no matter what
!he complications, you c:an be relied
upon.
LIBRA (Sept. 2~-0ct. 23) - Spending
quality time with old friends and participating In familiar activities will bring you
considerable pleasure. It is likE! wearing a
comfortable shoe that cannot be duplicated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - In order
to succeed . you won't haw to bulldoze
your way through critical developments.
But having a desire to help others and
keep ing your positive objectives in focus
will do the trick.
'
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Some type of special knowledge or
know-how you've acQuired over lime will
be put to good use in aiding a pal who
has a problem . It'll gain you admiration
and respect from your peers.
CAPRICORN (De&lt;. 2Z·Jan. 19) -You
may benefit from a situation initiated by
others. You'll ma'ke a contribution, but
your 1rWitat1on to participate will be more
in repayment for something you did in
the pa st
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - What
transpires in your relationsllips with others will help solidify even further a longstanding lriandshlp. It's with a person you
already consider a best frlen~.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- You have'
the ability to bring order and tranquility
into the lives of others. You'll make your
own determination on whe re your help is
required.
.
ARIES (March 21-Apri119) - Some of
y:our best opportunities for lultiltlng your
personal needs will come thrOugh
friends. Try to share your day with good
pals.
TAURUS (Aprii20- May 20)- Something
nice could take place that will prove to be
of material benefit to you. The first Indications these conditions are on their wey
should be visible now.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) • Tt19 light and
loving tou ch that you're so capable ol
punlng on life's serious side olthlngs win
be a we lcomed tonic for troubled people
around you.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- ThiEl can
be one of your bener days tor going on a
shopping excursion. You'll be senslble
regarding your purchases. yet have a
shrewd eye tor spotting Item!! that you 'll
love lor a long time.
1
LEO (July 23·AUQ. 22)- The more dlffl·
cult the aealgnmentt, the mort pride
you'll take In overcoming their campllca·
tiona. Things that Intimidate othera WOI')'t
frighten yo u.
·

SOUP TO NUTZ

I

~

•

I
•

- - - - - - - - - - --- ------- - ..

18 Help a

37 Garment

hoodlum

1 Curly·lealad 20 Allows
22 Sonnet kin
vaggla
22 Scoreboard
23 Chango
2 lied.
datum
colors
ataffere
23 PC
26 Checked lor 3 Skimpy
acronym
prints
4 Metallic
24 Morally
29F1ahroe
sounds
wrong
30 Eaay ga~
5 Buffalo's
25 Aclnlss
·

21 C':unHs

32 In no flme
34 Sprlngllke
36 .Part of MIT
38 -'degree

26 Puis on
27 Untold

7 Prepares

dough
8 Heat up
9 Guth~e .ol

39 Wordllo a

oong
41 Art stand

folk music
10 Depend
11 . Ruin, wHh

cooler

44 Moo goopan

"up"

llaw
40 loelan
42 SeH-d&amp;-

lense art
44 Wai'el

45 Reproduc:«&lt;
46 Drill here

and yon
47 Two flvu

lor-48 A quntion
of time
49 Statue ol 1

Tyne -

lake
6 Mythical
bird

43 CHrus

Delivering Daily *One Slop Shop*
90 510 Pickup, 4.3 64,000
on new Engine. As~ing
$1 .950 13041675-6713

East
Pass
Pass · . Pass

.

• Porlabie Oxygen

•,Nebulizers

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar

&lt;

K QJ

Opening lead: t Q

&amp; MEDICALEQUIP\IENT

Appliance

Must Seii·ASAP Prime location, 1+acre, 1500 Sq. Ft.
Triple AAA Home , living
room, tam1ly room. dining
room, &amp; extras $65,000
(304)593·0852

•

West North

AAA MODULAR ranCh
models $55,838 . Midwest
Homes (740)828-2750

House in Henderson, Large
Living and Dining Room.
Kitchen. Bath, 2 Bedrooms,
24x24 detached Garage.
Approx. 3 acres. $30,000
(304)675-6732

A 7 2

Pass
Pass

5 Room House with Bath, 3
lots, 1n Leon $30,000
Phone (304)674 -0 132

Country in the City, Two
1ncome producing houses in
Pt. Pleasant. One home
newly remodeled $20,000
for both (740)367-7760

t

Dealer: South
Vulnerable:-East-West

4bd, 2 bath. Only $32.900!
FORECLOSURE! For list·
ings 800-391 ·6_
228 e~o:t F254

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which Is In
vtolatlon of the lew. Our ·
readers are l'tereby
Informed ll'tal all
dwellings advertised In
thil newspaper ere
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

K J 10 95
K Q

•

4 rental houses ~ For Ssie"
'Good income pr oducin_g
properties. Great locat1on t
Prlce(s) are Negotiable .
Moti vated
Seiter!
In
Gallipolis. Call Wayne
(404)456·3802

All realestele adYertlslng
In thlt; newspaper Is
subject to the Fedet"el
Felr ttouelng Act of 1968
which makes It illegal to
adver11ae "any
prelerence, llmilallon or
dlacrlmlmitlon based on
race, color, religion, sell:
fl!lmllialstetus or national
origin, or eny Intention to
make any such
preferenc.t, limitation or
discrimination ."

•

Antwer 10 Prt\llout' {J'uzzle

4 Job -~ 53 Yodtler'o
• 8 Candy
anowtr
ohlpe
55 Toon light
11 Wide yawn
bulb
12

North

45 01181 fiction

48 Nol broken
1 Eur. alrtlno 52 Compoot

centuries
28 'indulge,

god

plus

50 Aoqulre
31 Paeta
.51 Hallum or
eltematlve
neon
33 Stanley
Cup org.

54 Company
VIP

35 Tie

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cel&amp;triy Cipher cryptograms art aeated from qootatkms ~ llrllQJS peopl&amp;. past ard pri!'Sellt
Each 1e1ttr in !he cipher stM:Is for 11101tler.

Today's clue: Wequals V

"YTOS

PTYRX

FNKXJR

K

DRS

VKX,

NKWR

FNKXJRI

ZHGR

NHY. "

•

TES

ST

SMV

KXI

PNRX

SNRV

NHY

SNRV

IT

YKMZRXR

ST

XTS

IHRSMHFN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'The joy ol my dan~ng is thai you never forget il's
an eternall~lity rite." -Gene Kelly

,::~:~~~' S©~4\\M-lGr..Z~t~· GAM I
14ift4
CLAY I, rOILAN - - - - - 0 lour
ltorranQG lellor1 ~f lht
ICreMbi..t word• bo·
WOIO

~,

low to

form fovr ~"'pit words.

S Ul Y T
1~ Is I

J

.
..

V E Y0 N

0

I

"A large family has a big
advanlagc,'' I infonned my single
• friend. "I never have to woll)'
r---:--:---:--,
L A Y K WE about what to do with · - . •

'IJI I
7

I

Ie

l-"1,1"1ei"'"11-,.I-TI;:-11rl
•

•

•

•

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Complete fht &lt;hu&lt;klo qvofed
by lilling in rhe missin9 words

'--L-'-..L-L......L.....J you de•elop I"""

~ PRINT NUMII£110 II
W lfTI!AS
.

t) UNSCRAMI!l!
ANSWER

fORI
•

"'P No. 3 b•l....

r r 1· r r I' r r 1
IIIIIIIII

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS &amp;1!4106

Common - Witch- Juror - Helder - TOMORROW
As my chiidreo app!IIICbcd me with multiple shopping
ba&amp;s, 1mused that the fillun: belongs to the young, but they
spend like then: is no TOMORROW. .

ARLO &amp; JANIS
'100 TAl.K

1'0 &amp;WE
T'ODA'!'f

'IE!&gt;,
Ht'!&gt;
fill€..

�'

'

Page B8 • The Daily Serllinel

" Friday, August 25, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

LiviNG

ALONG THE RIVER
.
Skate-A-Way:
Sunday open house marks rink's closing, Cl

Travel &amp; Destinations: By high road and
low road, a wee tasting of Scotland, D1

-

"' If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week. C/o The Gaston Gazette,
AI ltmel E-rl

"'......,~,.c~'*!.'-'· ~- 1'

4

:ntrl

Shorpie 'soo,

.........

7p.m.. ~

•
1

rood CIIY 2!50,
7:30 p.m., Friday

larger in his mirror - was avoiding
the mistakes that cost him those
other three races. Kenseth, 34,

1 Race: Sharpie 500
,

1 Where: Bristol {Tenn .) Motor
Speedway (.533 mi les), 500

~

laps/266.5 miles.

J!

1

was probably a little hard on hunself. In two of the three races he
mentioned , another driver- Kurt
Busch at Bristol . Gordon at
Chicagoland- knocked his No. 17
Ford out of the way. In the final 14
laps, Gordon tnmmed tne lead
from 2.072 seconds to .622. Finishing m positions 3·5 were Tony
Stewart, Kasey Kahne and Mark
Martih, none of whom ever led a
lap. Dale Earnhardt Jr. led 40 laps,
second only to Kenseth. but he
had to settle for si)(th. A key factor
in Kenseth "s favor was the fact
that. on a day in· whicl'1 more yellow
flags (10) waved than at any time
in Michigan International Speed·
way history, none occurred in the
final 37 laps.

When : Saturday, Aug. 26

1 Last year's wlnBer: Matt Kenseth
~

'!Nell....

~

~o.='Rel'=~~y"'-=:::Pilrls...,-,200==-.-~
9p.m .. ~

Qualifying record: Ryan New.
man, Dodge, 128.709 mph, March
2l, 2003.

o

1 Race record : Charlie Glotzbach.

Chevrolet, 101.074 mph. July 11,
1971.

• Last week: The 2003 Winston
(now Nextel) Cup champion has
another title in range, and Matt

•

1&gt; nwas soaJ&gt;Qpera week In
Michl(.an. Jeremy Mayfield, hBY'

lng been flred by Ray Evemham.
went public (In court, I!Ctualiy)
wlttl the "absenlae owner·
chllll8, whi~E;vemham responded by al~ng that May.
fiekl basically ·~ldn't try" In his
ftnal weeks as driver. New driver
Elliott Sadler wisely remained
-the fray.
1&gt; At this point In his career, k's

' appropriate to refer to Martin as

Kenseth's GFS Marketplace 400

:--.

victory was his third of the sea·
son. In Ken seth"s mind. though, he
should've won three more, and
what was foremost in his mind
over the final laps at Michigan International Speedway- as Jeff
Gordon's Chevrolet grew larger and

c

JlJ· Ji,

'

REED SORENSON

~ -JI
7111
;s:
Jr...l!=

-

• Rac:e : Food C1ty 250
• Where: Bristol (Tenn.)

Motor Speedway (.533
miles j. 250
laps/:133.25 miles.
• Whan: Fri tlc:;.. Aug. 25
•Last year's winner:
Ryan Newman
• • Qua!Hytng record:
Greg Biffle, Ford,
127.132 mph, March
26, 2004.

• Race record : Harry
Gant. Buick, 92.929

mph, April 4, 1992. ·

• Last week: Dale Earn-

hardt Jr. drove a Chevrolet to victory at Michigan
International SpeedWay.

&gt;,). '·' j , ,,,,,

I

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

• R11ce: O'Reilly Auto
Parts 200 Presented by
Valvoline
• Where: Bristol (Tenn.)

Ohio\ alit·~ l'uhlishing l'o.

Motor Speedway (.533
miles), 200 iapsfl06.6

• High school football
action. See Page 81

Mike Skinner
,
o Qualifying record: Ken
Schrader, Chevrolet,

l26.922 mph, Aug. 25,
2004.

• Race record: Travis
Kvapil. Chevrolet

88.8l3 mph, Aug. 20,
2003.

..-.

I Ji 1!:"'1'. II Jf·?Jl

I

Jl ._:_. ':..;..t~..r'

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No.

41

v
TARGET DODGE

E

•stry d ~Iring." He retired
from the Busch ~s at the

R

end of 2000 and reiumed

In
, 2004. Supposedly he was going
to retire from Cup competition at
the end of 2005, but he came

s
u
Earnhardt Jr.

beck for one more year. Now, he
seems likely to do~ again.

sist they aren't spending any

!loti, Terry

Labonte and Ricky

Rudd talking about giving lt an·

other whirl. Martin appears ready
rJlilke his third consecutiiJe
"one more year~ pronouncement.

to

Largely obscured by other rookies, Sorenson having nice debut
By Monte Dutton

ner ward Burton. who sat out

2005 but has been actively

seeking a ride all ~ar and never

actually retired.
• Michigan was loaded with con-

troversy. That being the case,
what, pray tell, is Bristol going
to belike?
I&gt; Another consequence of the

driver switch at Evemham Motorsports was public disclosure of
the relationship between Ray
Evemham and Craftsman Truck
Series driiJer Erin Crocker. Evern"
ham is separated from wife
Mary. In court documents filed in
North Carolina, Mayf1eld alleged
that Evernham had become an

absentee manager largely be-

cause of his .. close personal relationship with a female driver
he e,_es to dri110 in NASCAR's
ARCA, Truck and Busch Series.~

1&gt; Most everyone expected Sadler
to wind .up In Evemham's No.
19, but few expected the switch

to happen immediately. David
Gilliland became Sedler's suc·

oessor at Robert Yates Racing.

J&gt;WIIo'allot

-Matt
Kenseth cut
Jimmie Johnson's Nextel

CUp points

lead nearly in
half. He's fin-

, lshed In the
top 10 In 13
of the 23
..as arid led the most laps
fo( ~ third t!me this )'ear.
1&gt; Wllo'a not - It wasn't much
of a day for the Busch brotlr

ers. Kyle finished 39th and
· Kurt was 40th.

e PJ &gt; ~ hJ w. 1 ._,., 1 H'·'&gt;
'
""

-.

'&gt;!1,

.,

N!X1II. CUP
Jimmie John.On
2. Mall K8nseth
a. l&lt;evln Ha!VIck
!· Mark Martin
1.

••
••7.

'Tanv Stewart

Jeff Gol\lon
K~ Busch
Oen!Jl
Hamlin
•• Jeff Burton
••
10. Dale Earnhardt Jr.

.J ,

··!-"~

3,i65
·58
~ 311
·395

·106
. 434

. 443

· 445

·449
. 484

8usclt SERIES
1. Kevin Harvlck
2. Oen!Jl Hamlin

3,920
. 484

s. Carl Edwards

C486

4. Clint Bowver

. 585

J.J. Yel~
Paul Menard
Greg Biffle
K~le Busch

. 656
· 1022
. ~,05l
· 109l
· l,235
· l,236

••
••

'·

••t.

10.

Johnr)~ Sauter
Ken~

Wallace

TRIICK SERIES
TOdd Bodine
2.454
John~ Benson
·l44
3. David Reutimann
·194
. 239
4. Ted Mu!iJ:rave ·
Rick Crawford
· 255
Jack S~rague
' 302 '
••7. Tern:
. 306
Cook
. 3l4
David Starr
,· 315
Ron Hornada~
10. Dennis Setzer
· 391
ClwrsMAN

1.
2..

••
••
••

With less than two lap~ remaining in the Busch Series race at
Michigan. a tap from Earnhardt's
Che'w)' sent Edwards' Ford spinning
to the inside and, after contact with
another Chevy driven by Robby Gor. don, out of control. Edwards had

BROOKLYN, Mich. - At age ZO,
Reed Sorenson came 'to the Nextel
Cup Series with much to learn.
"I don't have a family at home to
take care of," said the young bachelor,
"so racing has pretty much taken
over."
It's· not easy for Sorenson to find
much recognition in a huge rookie
class, and Denny Hamlin's spectacu·
lar performance has obscured the
more modest accomplishments of oth·
ers, but Sorenson, from Peachtree
City, Ga., has had his moments to sa·
vor. He finished fifth on June 18 at
Michigan and became the first rookie
since Brendan Gaughan to lead a road
race when he spent two laps at the
front of the pack at Watkins Glen.
NASCAR's premier series can be
quite taxing, as Sorenson has learned.
He's also competing regularly in the
Busch Series.
"It's definitely been a little busier,
that's for sure, running both the
Busch car and the Cup car every
weekend," he said. "It makes life in·
teresting. It's pretty fun. You have
two chances every weekend to run
well and have a good time doing it.
We've had OK years in both cars.
We've had a pretty good last five
races in the Busch car. In fact, we've
got some really good tracks coming
up for us in the Cup car.
"You're at the track every weekend,
so your life is racing. You get here,
you practice, you race, qualify and
race for four days : A little bit more
testing this year than last year, and
two sponsors to try to keep happy. It
just kind of doubles everything this
year, and next year will be a little bit
easier."
Sorenson said it didn't bother him to
be racing in such a Raybestos Rookie
of the Year class of six. The others are
Hamlin, Clint Bowyer, Martin Truex
Jr., J.J. Yeley and David Stremme,

won it. Edwards, after limping to pit
road, droiJe back on the track and
bumped the side of Earnhardt's car
as the final lap was being run under
caution. ~I didn't mean to spin him
out.w said Earnhardt. ~I don't go
around wrecking people:
NASCAR Thlo Week's Monte

Dutton glveo hlo take: "Once again,
Edwards get wrecked, and onCe
again, it isn't his fault. At least this
one was In the Busch series:

title or 'Ultimate Tal'-er'
Who's America's Ultimate Tail-

gator? According to celebrity chef

•

Board
certifies
issues for
November
ballot

It's Cathy Phillips of Chincoteague Is-

land, Va. lifetime Products, which
manufactures folding tables and
chairs, hosted the championship at
Michigan International Speedway on

Aug. 19 and awarded Phillips a
$l0.000 cash prize, Finalists were

given 90 minutes to create their ultl·

mate tailgate celebnations, including

a three-course meal. Phillips prepared
a dish of scallops wrapped in bacon
and lemon mousse with fresh berries.
Her setup was designed to honor driv-

er Elliott Sadler. Judges Batall, Emle

lrvan and Richard Hendrickson based
Phillips' selection on the preparation
i!ind quality of food and decor.

Page AS
• Franklin Brinker
• Orville Lee Henson
• Ray. W. Lemley
• Eva Jean Roush ·
• Russell Wilkinson

BY BRIAN

INSIDE
• Campaign launched
to push early childhood
inHiatives. See Page A2
• Annie's Mailbox.
SeePageA3
• Funeral home gets
makeover. See Page AS
• Guest speaker.
SeePage AS

WEATHER

Only 20 years old, Reed Sorenson took over the No. 41 Dad!IB of Chip Ganassllhls season
after one full Busch Series season resulted In a pair of wins and 1 fuurth·plape mnklq.

who also happens to be.one of Soren·
son's two teammates.
"It's kind of cool, actually, with
everybody moving ·up," said Sorenson.
"I think every one of us had a little bit
different situation to deal with in each
organization. I have a rookie team·
mate, and our team hasn't won a race
in fow years now. We're trying to
build our organization where we can
get top lOs and top 'fives and then win
races. We're definitely getting a Jot
closer to that.

"Denny (Hamlin) has somebody like
Tony (Stewart) to rely on, and he won
a championship last year. We're try·
ing, as an organization, to get better
as a whole. I'm lucky to have Casey
Mears (his other teammate) there.
He's been a great help. We're just at a
different point as a team than some of
the other teams, but we're definitely
getting better."

•

Renewed optimism - Elliott
Sadler expects to do well in his
The Tony take - Tony Stew·
new role as driver of Ray art, who has won a champi·

.

Smith won the flrat
Jack Smith. driving a Pontia'c,
won the flrst race at Bristol Motor
Speedway on July 29, 1961. It was

New dealer, new attitude at Mark Porter GM Supercenter·

(he 16th of Smith's 2l victories in

what (s now the Nextel Cup Series.

He averaged 79.225 mph, whiCh is-

BY ' BETH SERGENT

n't far off Kurt Busch's average

speed, 79.427, 1n the most recent
race at the track. ·smith, originally
from Sandy Springs, Ga., died at age

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSE~TINEL.COM

76 on Oct. 17, 2001. Smith's career

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmduttonSO@aol.com

began with NASCAR's first official

race, on June 1949, at Charlotte
Speedway, a .75-mile dirt track. His
final race was a second-place fin ish
in Savannah, Ga., on Dec. 29, 1963.

onship under the old , full·sea· Busch Series victory, is offiCup drivers have won all but
son system and the Chase for· cially Sadler's replacement in two' of the season's 25 races to
mat, said he'&amp; good with the the No . 38 Ford, and his crew date, and Harvick has won five
system the way it is.
chief is going to be Todd Pal" en route to a 443-point lead in
"I think it turned out fine," rott, who directed Dale Jar- the standings.
'
he said. "I liked it the way (t rett's 1999 championship at
"They need to. quit griping
was, but, with .the old system, I RYR
and Jearn how to win," said
would've been worried every
Gilliland, 30, is from River- Harvick. "That's what all of us
week about where we stood . . side, Calif., and once served as had to do. This is not something
But now? I can't even tell how a crew chief for his father, that's new. It's just something
many points out of the lead Butch Gillilantl, who competed that's more widespread
(447) we are because I don't in a total of 10 Cup races in the through the media.
even know.
1991).99 time frame,
"I've al.ways been the type
"The good thing atiout the
David Gilliland won the Mei- tbat, if you get beat, you need
new point system is that it jer 300 at Kentucky Speedway to figure out why. That's what I
gives the good teams that have on June 17. It was the first vic- was do if I was them instead of
historically been in the top 10 tory by a non-Cup driver in a worrying about how we can try
the flexibility to try things, Busch Series event this year to be more COIIlpetitive with
knowing that if you have a bad and made its winner an getting rid of people. That's not
week, it's not going to be that overnight sens.ation. He has really the answer to things."
dramatic. The moral of the s~o- only competed in 10 Busch
ry is still the same: If you get races, and the victory is his
into that top 10, you better .only top·10 finish to date.
have your stuff ready to go for
Kensetb's win his 13th of cathat last JQ.week stretch and
reer- Kenseth's victory was
not have any mistakes, because
· his third this year and 13th
mistakes in that final, l•O·race
Let them eat cake - Run- overall. Kenseth, Dick Rathsprint will cost you big.''
away Busch Series points mann and Tim Richmond are
leader Kevin Harvick ex- tied for 46th all·time in victopressed little sympathy for the ries .
plight of-the series' specialists, ·
Back at the ranch - David i.e., the drivers who don't run
Contact Monte Dutton at
Gilliland, he of one spectacular Next~! Cup as well.
hmdutton50@aol.com

Submitted graphic

.

The groundbreaking ceremony for the new Gallia Academy High School will be held on Friday, Sept. 8 at 5:30p.m. at 2S55
Centenary Rd .. Gallipolis. The first 300 'in attendance will receive a commemorative Shovel.

NASCAR ,_at Brllltol

Details

on.Pace A6

INDEX
4 SECITONS- 24 PAGES

Around Town
A3
CelebriJ.tions
C3-4
Classifieds
D Section
Comics
insert
Editorials
A4
Movies
A3
Obituaries
As
Regional
A2,A6
Sports
B Section
Weather
A6
© 2006 Ohio

Valley Fubllshing Co.

POMEROY When
asked what sets his dealership apart from others,
Mark Porter, owner of Mark
Porter GM Supercenter
(formerly
Don
Tate
Motors), answered, "Me."
''I'm very hands-on,"
Porter said. "You deal with
the dealer when you deal
here. I've been involved in
over 50,000 car sales and I
know how 10 make a deal ."
Porter has been in the car
business since 1978 where
he worked in Columbus and
believes that experience and
automotive career gives him
an edge in a competitive
business. It also doesn't hurt
that he freely admits he.
likes to negotiate the deal

Please see Porter, A1

88th Sergent; photo

Mark Porter (pictured), owner of Mark Porter GM Supercenter in Pomeroy offers a new atti·
tude, new cars and a hands-on approach to making the deal happen for customers.

•

•

•

•

J. REEO

BR EEQ@MY DAllYS ENTI NEL.CO M

John t:lark/NA.SCA~ This Week

Evernham's No. 19 Dodge,
though he wasn't quite ready to
predict thai he would do what
his predecessor, Jeremy May·
field, had done a year JJgo.
Mayfield, now on the sidelines, won the GFS Marketplace 400.
"I come from a team that I'd
been with for three and a half
years," said Sadler, "so f've got
to switch my mentality around
a little bit. I've got to Jearn the
new faces, the new people, and
learn what different teams do.
I think that's going to be my
biggest learning.curve.''
Sadler expects there will be
no hard feelings between him
and his previous team, Robert
Yates Racing.
"Let liygones be bygones,
·and Jet their team move ahead
and Jet me move ahead," he
said. "I think it's going to work
out great for both of us.'' ·

•

OBITUARIES

Mario Batali and a panel of judges,

By Monte Dutton

BROOKLYN, Mich.- When
rookie Reed Sorenson was
asked about the "Car of Tomorrow," which NASCAR officials
were scheduled to test here on
Aug, 21, he delivered a few gag
lines with a style that would've
impressed Jay Leno.
"I think they're the ugliest
cars I've ever seen," he said. ''I
don't even want to get in it. I'll
wait until they make us next
year.
"They're pretty ugly. The
last time I drove one; I got into
the wall a little bit at Bristol
'and broke the piece of wood in
the front We had to go to
Home. Depot and get more
wood to fix 'er up . (Kevin) Har·
vick said at Martinsville that
the whole inside of his car
smelled like a campfire.''
Drum roll, please.

Ready to brea~ ground on new GAHS

Vlllllnla w- earn•

Sorenson among those who think 'Car of Tomorrow' is ugly
NASCAR This Week

presentation. Taft discu"ed th '
importance of education. whal jobs
require higher education. and the
. GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis average earning one can expect at
e1gh1h graders had a chance to dis- varying educational Ieve'-.
cuss their plans for the future with
One of the requiremems of Ohio
Governor Bob Taft during a panel Core requires all students to comdiScus sion Friday morning at plele four years of math , including
Gallia Academy High School.
Algebra II : three years of lab-based
In add ition to eighth graders, two science, including physical science
seniors joined the panel to di scu" and biology and one year selected
where they are, academically from disciplines of chemistry,
speaking, and their plans for pursu- physics. or higher-level biology;
.ing a higher educa1ion.
four years of English: three years
In part. the purpose ofTafl's visit of social sludies: and two years of
to Gallipolis was to discuss the new
education initiative the Ohio Core. foreign language.
If enacted, completing the Ohio
which, if enacted by legislature,
Core
would be a condition of
will establish a rigorous core cur- .
Mlchalle Miller/photo
riculum as the default standard for admission to Ohio's state-funded,
Governorr Bob Taft discusses the importance of education and the new edu· all of Ohio's high school studenls. four-year colleges and universities and remedial education will
cation initiative The Ohio Core with a panel. of eight graders and two seniors beginning with the class of 20 II .
at Gallia Academy High School on Friday.
With the aide of a powerpoint
Please see Taft. A1
BY MICHELLE MILLER

MM JLLER@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.CO M

been leadirt the race, but Earnhardt

NASCAR This Week

~ Meanwhile, still on the side-

lines is 2002 Daytona 500 win-

Edwards

Dale Earnhardt Jr.
vs. Carl Edwards

. .,. TO'JQt8 officials continue to inmore money than anyone etse,
1&gt;ut It's not nostalgia that has
drivers like Mark Martlt1, Bill fl.

s

SI.:)O, Vol. 40, No. :11

visns

Aug. 23

• Last year's winner:

Nashville Superspeedway in Gladevilte, Tenn.
"..vrr ~.- f?

1'&lt;111ll'I'O~ • \li&lt;ldll'prwl • (;allipolis • \uJ;ust 27,20116

SPORTS ·

miles .

• When: Wednesday,

• last race: Johnny Ben·
son, in a Toyota. won at

.:::..,..~

'

1)1 • l

.

•'

'
t•

3i3.Third Ave. •

1•4•~6-:26'i'3 ~Gallipolis, OH 45631
'

.\0

'

'~

POMEROY
Two
county-wide ballot issues
and a contested race for
Meigs
County
Commissioner will be
inducted on the general
eleclion ballol on Nov. 7.
The Meigs County Board
of Elections will mee t
Monday morning to certify
petitions for the election.
following Thursday's filing
deadline. according to Rit ~
Smith . Director · of ih,,
Board of Election&gt;.
At Thursday's regular
meeting. Meigs County
Com'mi,ioners approve,!
ihe placement, again, uf a
50-cent tel'ephnne lino·
charge on the ballot to help
establish E-&lt;J II service in
the county. The telephone
char~t·

would

cenerah~

approxim&lt;ilely $3{000 fo r
the service, to be operaied
in conjunction with the
county sheriff's d~panment :
II woukl also allow the
couniy In access funds set
'"ide at ihe \talc level
throu ~ h :t monthly fee
charged to ccllula1: ie l~­
ph011c CllSh1lllCrs.
The i"ue failed in last
No1·ember's clcclion.
The
Meigs
County
General Health Di&gt;tri.ct
seeks renewal of a one-mill.
five-year levy fo r cmrent
expcn&gt;es .
In the onlv contested race.
Meigs County Commissioner
Davenr.ort.
a
Mick
Democrat.
will
face
Republican
Ernest
E.
Spencer. Davenport is. seeking his third term in office.
Other candidaies Ol\ 'the
ballot are County Audi10r
Mary T Byer-Hill, Common
Pleas Court Jtidge Fred W.
Crow Ill. and Coumv Court '
Judge Steven L Stoiy who
arc unopposed.

Please see Ballot. A2

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