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I

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 28, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.coni

WithEmesto
threatening, Bush
visiting Katrina-ravaged
Gulf Coast, A2

Houston blasts Pittsburgh, 13-1.
PITTSBURGH (AP) Willy
Taveras has quite a streak going. Now
he'd like to see the defending NL
champion Houston Astros get on one,
too.
Taveras ran his hitting streak to 30
games during another excellent allaround game and Lance Berkman
drove in four runs, helping the Astros
rough up the Pittsburgh Pirates 13-1
Sunday for their third consecutive
victory.
Berkman, in a 5-for-45' slump
..
before getting six RBJs in the final
'
.
two games of the four-game series, hit
... 'i&gt; .J
a three-run homer in the fifth follow •
ing a run-scoring single in the first.
'
Taveras singled to start the game and
extend the longest hitting streak in
team history.
After the . Pirates won the series
opener Thursday, Berkman effectively
beat them in three consecutive games
to help get toe Astros out of a slide in
which they lost 10 of 13. Berkman
homered to support Roger Clemens'
5-1 victory Friday, then had a two-run
double to key a 7-4 victory Sa!unJay.
Berkman also could have easily had
another hit, but ~hortstop Freddy .
Sanchez was given an error for not
handling a sharply hit grounder up the
middle that scored Mike Lamb \luring
a three-run third.
"Usually when he drives in a bunch
of runs, we score a bunch of runs,"
manager Phil Garner said.
Taveras began each of the final
AP photo
three games of the series with hits Houston Astros' Lance Berkman, center, is greeted by teammates Chris Burke,
during the second longest hitting
left, and Mike Lamb after driving them in with a three-run homer against the
streak in the NL this season to Chase
Pittsburgh
Pirates in the fifth inning of a baseball game in Pittsburgh on Sunday.
Utley's 35-game run for the Phillies.
"It kind of blows me away a little
two-run double against reliever Britt
bit, but nothing is easy," Taveras said. completely got away. But this is an
aberration, with what we've been up Reames. Pirates starter Shawn
"The way the team is winning some
Chacon ( 1-2) was long gone by then
ball games , I'm real happy about that." to in the second half of the season.''
after giving up seven runs, five
Not
compared
to
the
Pirates'
history
Taveras reached base on hits or
earned.
in 4 1-3 innings.
walks 10 times in the series and stole since the early 1990s. it isn't. With
Jason Hirsh (2-2), a rookie rightfour bases. He is 45-of-129 (.349) one more loss; they will be two losing
hander making his fourth. career start,
seasons
away
from
tying
'the
Phillies'
during his hitting streak, getting Hits
major-league'record of 16 in a row bounced back from a 14-0 loss
in his first at-bat 14 times.
Tuesday to Cincinnati to pitch seven
from 1933-48.
"The pressure's off then. so I hope I
innings. He gave up one run and five
If
only
the
Astros
could
play
the
can get it every time in the first at·hits
in his second appearance in PNC
bat," he said. "''m not thinking that Pirates more often. They are I 0-3
Park in six weeks - he also started
much about it, it's hard to give a hit in against them and have managed their
the All-Star Futures Game on July 9.
only
two
modest
winning
'
streaks
·this
every game that you play. But now
Notes: Lamb had two hits, scored
month - one of four games, the other
I'm into it, I want to get a hit."
three
runs and drove in anoiher.
The Pirates assured themselves of a of three - mostly against the Pirates.
Chris Burke also scored three times.
14th consecutive non-winning season That four-game run Aug. 8- 11 includ- ... The Pirates fell below .500 since
. with their 81 st loss, looking exactly ed a three-game sweep of Pittsburgh the All-Star break at 20-21. They
like the last-place team they are with in Houston.
have losses of 14-1 and 13- I to
"We have to carry this home and Hou ston this month .... Pirates SS
one of their worst-played games of
the year. They had two errors, repeat- keep it going," Gamer .said as the Jack Wilson missed a third consecuedly made poor pitches in key situa- Astros finished up a 6-5 road trip. tive start because of a viral infectio!IS and let Taveras and Berkman "We've got a little something going tion .... The game was long since
generate runs nearly every time they for us right now."
decided, but CF Taveras made an
batted.
The Pirates decided to intentionally exceptional diving, face , in-the-turr ·
"Obviously. it wasn't a great day," walk Berkman during a four-run sev- cat.:h of Chris Duffy's fly ball into
manager Jim Tracy said. "We didn't enth but the damage was long since the left-center gap in the seventh ....
pitch well' early in the game ... and done, and Aubrey Huff followed with The start was delayed 62 minutes by
then the game got out of hand and an RBI single and Adam Everett had a light rain.

Indians

Brandon lnge doubled to reason we didn 'l is me,"
start the fifth and later _,.Lee said. "It's hard to win
scored on a sacrifice tly by ·when you're giving up a
Craig Monroe.
run almost every inning'."
Guillen hit his 15th
Notes: The Tigers have
homer in the sixth for a 5- hit 110 homers at Jacobs
I lead. The infielder is hit- Field, most by an oppoting .358 (34-for-95) with nent since the park opened
eight homers and 34 RBJs in 1994 .... Rogers is 16-16
with a 5.28 ERA in 55
in 26 games this month.
appearances,
Rodriguez hit a two-run career
homer, his . I Oth, off including 32 starts, against
Edward Mujica to make it Cleveland. He has pitched
7·1 in the eighth.
233 2-3 innings against the
· Lee fell to 0-4 this sea- lndiafJs .... Martinez has
son and 3-5 in his career hit .337, (29-for-86) with
against Detroit. The left- 14 RBI in 23 games in
hander allowed five runs August. .. , Hafner went land I 0 hits over 5 2-3 for-3 and is hitting .5()0 (9innings , striking out three for-18) \Vith two homers
without a walk. He is 1-4 and six RBis against
with 9.00 ERA over his . Rogers this year.... After
last eight starts, alltiwing the game, Detroit optioned
60 hits over 46 2-3 RHP Colby Lewis to
innings.
Triple-A Toledo and OF
."We had a chance to Brent Clevlen to Double-A
sweep the Tigers and the Erie.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vnl. 56, No. 15

.SPORTS
• Agassi extends career
by coming back to beat
Pavel. See Page 82
APphOIO .

Ochoa's 65 gives her 3shot victory at Wendy's
DUBLIN (AP)
If
Lorena Ochoa keeps this up,
soccer soon might be taking
a back seat to women's golf
in Mexico.
· Ochoa · oiltdueled Jee
Young Lee down the stretch,
pulling away with birdies at
the 13th and 14th holes, to
shoot a 7-under 65 and win
the Wendy's Championship
for Children by three shots
Sunday.
"In Mexico. soccer is
everything. Golf is, like, I
percent," the Guadalajara
native said with a laugh. "I
feel fortunate to have so
much support. It's oeen
great. I'm very proud to be
from Mexico. We're learning. ... It used to be soccer,
soccer, soccer. Now there's
also golf."
Ochoa and Lee , playing 'in
the same group, were tied at
22 under through 12 holes.
"It was like match play,"
Ochoa said. "It was a different feeling, to look at the
scoreboard and see everybody else three or four shots
behind." ·
But Ochoa hit an 8 iron to
6 feet and rolled in the birdie
putt at 13 and then spun a
wedge near the hole at 14
and made the IS-footer to
regain a two-shot lead. She
was never threatened again
as she parred out to finish at
24-under 264.
.
Only three players have
gone lower in a 72-hole
LPGA event in relation to
par. Two are Hall of Famers,
and the third almost certainAnnika
ly
will
be:
Sorenstam (27 under),
Karrie Webb (26) and Se Ri
Pak (25).
Lee, a rookie who began
the day two shots back of
Ochoa in second place, had
five birdies, an eagle and no
bogeys in her tirst 13 holes
- and still trailed:
·
"I don't think I lost
today," she said. "I enjoyed
playmg against a great player, a top player. .J didn't play
bad. She played better. I
learned a lot today."
The victory was the 24-

year-old Ochoa's third of the
season on the J,.PG A Tour.
She also has five seconds, a .
third, two fourths and . a
fifth-place finish in ·18
starts.
The $165.000 first-place
check raised Ochoa's earnings this year to $1,840,774,
moving her past Karrie
Webb and into first place on
the money list.
"That's the highest professional goal you can accomplish," Ochoa said. "But
right now it doesn't mean
anything. I have to go all the
way to November. That
would be a dream to accomplish."
. Ochoa, who leads the tour
in scoring average, has sh9t
66 or better 12 times this
season.
With earlier rounds of 67,
68 and 64, Ochoa had the
lowest 72-hole total on a
par-72 course this year By-....._
five strokes. She didn't have ' a bogey in the final two
rounds while going 15
under.
Lee closed with a 6-under
66 and shared second place
Stacy
at
267
with
Prammanasudh, who shot a

64.
.
"I played a ' great round of

golf - I didn't really make
any
mistakes,"
Prammanasudh said. "You
knew she (OI:hoa) · was
going to go out there and
play a great round, just
based on her career."
After rolling in an uphill
5-footer for par on the final
hole, Ochoa pumped her fist
and then ackn.owledged the
gallery surrounding the
green at Tartan Fields Golf
Club.
Ai Miyazato shot a 68 and
was. alone in fourth at 271 ,
with Diana D'Aiessio (67)
next at 273. Tied for sixth at
13-undcr 275 were Jeong
Jang (67), VVebb (69) and
Michele Redm.an (70).
Defending
champion .
Cristie Kerr closed with a 70
and was at 276 along with
Tina Barrett (68) and
Morgan Pressel (69).

Giants

had a two-run single in the
second and Durham ·had a
sacrifice tly in the third.
Pedro Feliz doubled
home a -run in the . fifth,
matching his career high
with 84 RBls. Bonds singled in a run in the sixth.
The Reds went 0-for-6
with runners in scoring
position. They were 2-for28. a11d hitless in their last
19 tries, during the series.
"They played a great
series against us," Reds
manager Jerry Narron said.
''In the last three games we
haven't done a whole lot.
We've b~e~ in this situation
before and we 'II see what

we ' re made of the next six in his second rehab start
games on the road."
with Triple-A Louisville.
Ryan Freel led off the . ... Reds I B Scott Hatteberg
eighth :with a single and went 1-for- 13 in the series.
reached second on Ken
Griffey Jr:'s one-out single,
but reliever Kevin Correia
THANK YOU .
got Edwin Encarnacion and
Adam Dunn on infield pop
Dr. Melanie
ups.
Griffey also doubled in
·Weese
extending his hitting streak
for buying my
to 12 games.
Notes: Bonds had at
2006 Market Hog
least two hits and scored
two runs in the same game
for. the first time since June
Jacob Pillow
14 in Arizona . .. . Reds
RHP
Gary
Majewski
pitcl)ed a scoreless inning

~~Iwoh~ iatlp lrt~nnr •The Daily Sentinel• ~oint ~lra~ant ~tRi~trr
cla·ssified@mydailytribune.com

4

t: Thank You t:
E Jim Rodgers E
t: Nationwide a
t: Insurance
t: for buying my ~
t: Grand Champion ~
t: Dairy Feeder at the ~
t: 2006 Meigs Co. Fair t:
t: K"trk p u,.,.ms t:
H

04

H

04
&gt;4
&gt;4

04
04
04

oc
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oc
oc
oc
oc
oc
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· Call today! (740) 446·2342

(740) 992·~156 (304) 675-1333 ·

work for you!

lsell-buy-rent-hire-findl Over 35,000 Readers every issue!

of Pomeroy -Village Council ments. The public chose
by Mayor John Musser.
these projects via surveys
Musser said the village that were circulated in late
hasn't received an official 2004 and 2005 of which
letter announcing the award nearly 900 were. completed.
but he was alerted of the
The project that came in
good news by Meigs at number one for the fundCounty
Grants ing, at least according to
Administrator Jean Trussell the residents, was street
who had filled out the repairs followed by demoliapplication.
.
tion of abandoned strucMusser said the village . tures, fire equipment and
couldn't spend any of the facilities, sidewalk repairs. .
money until Nov. I but
Eligible actiyities for the
Trussell advised him it may grant include public facilibe the spring of 2007 ties improvements such as
before the money begins to construction, reconstruction,
fund projects in the village. rehabilitation of infrastrucThe grant. money cannot ture in targeted areas of dis be spent downtown and is tress that do not fit within
meant solely for use in the criteria of other Ohio
neighborhoods for improve- Small Cities CDBG com-

·

petitive programs.
Pomeroy will have two
years to spend the money.
Clerk Treasurer Kathy
Hysell announced the vii!age is currently advertising
for demolition bids for the
Pomeroy
Junior
liigh
School with those bids set
to be opened on Sept. II.
Musser said if a bid is
approved
the
building
would probably be slated
for demolition in. late
October or. early November
to avoid conflict with the
Meigs High School football
season now underway.
In oth~r council business:
Council approved the
transfer of $8.0(.)0 from the

INSIDE
• Brutal Ugandan rebels
end their light, bringing
hope to beleaguered
central African nation.
See Page A2
• Hamilton birth.
See Page A3
• Southem hits school
year in high gear.
SeePageA3
~ Calendar of Events.
SeePageA3
• Authortties: Boy died
after being left in closet.
SeePageA3
• Law you can use:
Federal law restricts
activi)ies of debt
collectors. See Page AS
• Runway route changed
a week before crash in
Lexington, Ky.
See Page AS

WEATIIER

Details on Page A3

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- l2 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3·4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials
Sports

'

.

B Section

Weather
© 20o6 Ohio Valley l~blishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich/ photo

Ducky derby tickets went on sale this week. Here Betsy Nicodemus. Amanda Musser, and George Wright discuss plans
for prpmoting the event for the Pomeroy Merchants Association.

DUCKY DERBY TICKETS GO ON SALE
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY The . "adoption"
papers for rubber ducks to be entered
in the annual derby at the Sternwheel
Riverfest, Sept. 21-23, are ready and
the appropriate papers for "owning" a
numbered duck can now be purchased.
· The ducky d.erby, sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association, will
take place on the Saturday afternoon
of the festival with prizes to be awarded right after the race. Purchasers do
. '
not have to be present to win.

Candidates
named for Meigs
SWCD Board of
Supervisors

&gt;4
&gt;4

oc

BY BETII SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

general to street fund , and
approv ed adjusting the
2006 annual appropriations
in the genenil fund to pay
hair or the village'&lt; Bureau
of Workers Compensation
premium
wh ich
was
$22,500.
Co unci I approved the
promotion of Ann Norton to
supervisor of the Pomeroy
Water Office. Norton does
not receive a/ aise in salary
but will be offered family
coverage health insurance.
All members of council
were. present for the meeting as were Pomeroy Chief
of Police Mark E. . Proffitt,
Street Supe,rintendent Jack
Krautter and resident Bill
Kitchen .

. BY BRIAN]. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

H

;c
;c
~~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~j

Pomeroy awarded $300,000 Distress Grant

Soldier with
Meigs .ties
killed in
Sunday attack

H

o4

WW\\.m~dail)'l'nlinol.l'&lt;Jin

ll ' LSII \\ . .\l '{:l 'ST :.!&lt;),:.!Oil(&gt;

POMEROY
Dilapidated
properties,
bumpy streets and disgraceful sidewalks of Pomeroy,
your days are numbered
thanks to the news that the
village was awarded a
$300,000
Community
Development Block Grant,
or "Distress Grant" to
improve neighborhoods.
Okay, so not all dilapidated properties, streets and
sidewalks will be see this
mone)" though a portion
chosen
by
community
members, not council, will . .
The announcement was
made at last night's meeting

Lorena Ochoa. of Mexico. poses with the trophy after win·
ning the LPGA Wendy's Championship for Children golf tour·
nament Sunday in Dublin.

•JXIIIIXXIIIIIIIIIIII;~

matched the total he had
given up in his other five
appearances since being
traded from · Minnesota to
_from Page B1
the Reds on July 31.
"The main thing before
pretty good there."
· I've been able to get ahead
Hillenbrand went 8-for- with my fastball and loca16 'with five RB!s against tion ," Lohse said. "That
the Reds , snapping an 0- didn't happen today. They
for-15 stretch.
jumped on a lot of first
"The way he's swinging, pitch fastballs. I threw a lot
we've see that before ," of bad strikes."
Alou said. "He could carr~
In his previous outing,
a team for weeks. I don t Lohse pitched eight shutout
. believe this team is going mnmgs agamst Houston.
to slow down."
The Giants scored in
Kyle Lohse Cl -.1) allowed each of the first three
five runs and 10 hits in five innings. Durham hit an RBI
innings. The five runs single in the first, Vizquel

Eastern opens
with easy win, B1

•

~

hitting only .132 (19-for-76)
in 23 games in August.
Consecutive one-out singles by Jason Michaels,
fromPageBl
Travis Hafner and Victor
Martinez in the bottom half
make me pitch good."
tied it at I. Rogers allowed
Rogers struck out three only one hit and three walks
atid walked three. The lefty over the next 6 2-3 innings.
has yielded only three runs
"I got into a groove after
·over 19 innings during his the first," Rogers said. "I
win streak. The 41-year-old don't think I made any
All-Star had been 0-3 with a adjustments. I just got into
6.37 ERA in six second-half my pitching."
starts before topping Texas
Granderson doubled to
on Aug. 17 and pitching open the third and one eut
seven scoreless innings in a later, Thames - hitting
win over the White Sox five only .171 (12-for-70) over
days later.
his previous 24 games The Tigers· are 20-7 over- hit a 418-foot shot to center
all in games started by for his 23rd homer and 3-1
Rogers this season.
lead.
Granderson hit the third . ''I have to figure a way to
pitch of the game from Cliff keep the ball in the ballLee (I 0-10) over the wall in park," said Lee. who has
right-center for his 13th yielded a. team-high 25
homer. The rookie came in homers in 162 innings.

11.

POMEROY- Three candidates, including two
incumbents, have been nominated fqr two Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District
Board
of
Supervisors terms commencing Jan. I, 2007.
The candidates are Joe
Bolin, , Rutland·. Marco
Jeffers, Albany, and Nita
Yost. Racine. Two of them
will be elected at the M~igs
SWCD Annual Meeting and
Banquet which will be held
Sept. 26, 7 p.m. at. Meigs
High School.
.Bolirt and his wife, Janet,
reside on a 120-acre farm in
Rutland Township. They

Please see SWCD. AS

.

First prize this year will be $1,000 in
Meigs ,County Chamber of Commerce
bucks, second prize a $500 savings
. bond, third place a $200 bond and
third place, a $75 bond ..There will also
be dozens of small prizes. The
· Chamber bucks can be spent at any
business which is a member of the
Chamber of Cbmmerce .
Amanda Musser, new chairman of
the event. will be assisted in arrange· ments and sales by George Wright who
has been involved for several yeurs
and Betsy Nicodemus. Their goal is to
sell 1,000 tickets. The cost of each one

.

is $5 when puchased from a downtown
merchant or at the Chamber office or
$4 when turning in a special c,oupon
which will be published in The D&lt;tily
Sentinel by the Merchants Association
The ducks will be dumped into the
Ohio River in the area around Powells,
and the first duck to cross the fini sh
line along the parking lot wall will be
the grand prize winner. The ducks will
be retrieved as they cross for the
sequence of prizes.
The money raised goes into
Association projects like downtown
beautification. '

LANGSVILLE An
American soldier who grew
up in· Meigs County was
southwest
killed
in
Baghdad,
Iraq Sunday
afternoon.
Gary Jones of Malloon's
Run Road, Langsville confirmed the death of his son,
Joshua Jone,, 24. He was
killed by a sniper in southwest Baghdad between 3
and 4 p.m. Sunday. Jones
said Monday· morning a
representative of the U.S.
Army vi sited his home yesterday to relay information
about his son's death.
Jones attended Southern
High School. but had
moved to Georgia before he
completed his studies here.
He completed U.S. Army
basic training in May, 2004.
at Fort Knox. Ky., and went
to Iraq on Dec . 6, 2005.
Jone' ·
wife. Tiffany
White. lives in Chester with
relati ves. His mother. Sandy
Miller, lives in Nebraska. ·
Gary Jones said he was
unable to provide additional
information about the return
of Jones' body or other
de.tails. Jones said the fami'ly has received no information about the circumstances surrounding his
son ·s death or any arrangement&gt;.
Jones is the second Meigs
Coumy man killed in the
war in Iraq. Army Staff Sgt.
Roger Clinton Turner, Jr., a
Meigs High School gradu'lte , was killed in Balad in
early 200-L

'

.RaHway offers experience of/train robbery
NELSONVILLE - Most
everyone has read about the
great train robberies of the
wild ; wild west, but the
Hocking Vall,ey Scenic
Railway . is offering the
experience on Sept. 23.
The train will depart from
the Nelsonville depot on its
journey toward Logan on 6
p.m. The drama builds as
the ride gets longer and passengers begin to wonder if
the robbery is ever going to
take place. ,
Then just when it is least
expected, the 9th Virginia
Cavalry of Van Wert
charges from out of
nowhere on horse back with
guns blazing , the train
comes to a screeching halt,
the robb~rs board the train,
remove the strong box and
approac.h the passengers
i~tent on bagging some

'
Hocking Valley Scenic Railway

ing and 'for groups tlf over
loot. But doA't despair they board the train .
Rcs~rvations are sugge stbecause play money will be
Please see Train, AS
handed out to everyone as e-d because ol' limited ~eal ·

�~

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2 .

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday,August29,2006

·Brntal Ugandan rebels end
their fight, bringing hope to~
beleaguered central African nation
by the Ten Commandments.
U.N. officials estimate
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Kony's guerrillas kidnapped
some 20,000 children over
KAMPALA, Uganda The leaders of a shadowy the past 19 years, turning
rebel movement that ha's ter- the boys into soldiers and
rorized Ugandans for nearly the girls into sex slaves for
two decades went on local. rebel commanders. Rebel
radio · with a special attacks and atrocities also
announcement: . As of drove 1.7 million to flee
Tuesday, their war is over their homes.
The
International
- the Lord's Resistance
Criminal Court has issued
Army will stop fighting.
The rebels, notorious for arrest warrants for Kony
cutting off the tongues and and four other rebel leaders,
lips of innocent civilians, · but the Ugandan governenslaving tens of thousands ment has promised not turn
of , children and driving them over in return for an
nearly 2 million people end to the insurgency, which
from their homes, liave has killed thousands of
agreed to end one of the civilians. An exact death toll
most brutal, but least known is not known.
Human rights groups have
conflicts in the world.
Museveni's
They signed a truce with · condemned
the government Saturday amnesty offer, but the presithat gives rebel fighters dent argues peace is more
three weeks to gather at two important than an internavillages in largely uninhab- tional trial.
Kony, who has been seen
ited areas across the border
in southern Sudan, where in public only a handful of
AP Photo
they will be protected and times during the insurgency,
President Bush, right; takes a tour of a neighborhood damaged by Hurricane Katrina with Biloxi Mayor A.J. Holloway, right, monitored. The truce is to says he is innocent of the
on Monday in Biloxi, Miss. Bush suggested Monday that Washington may not be willing to send more than the $110 bil· take effect Tuesday morn- war crimes and crimes
lion already approved for a Gulf Coast still struggling to come back from Hurricane K&lt;!trinq's battering, and said a full recov- ing.
against humanity charges
"We don't expect.to see a filed by the International
e:y is likely to take years.
mass movement tomorrow," Criminal Co.urt.
Under terms of the truce,
Chris
Magezi,
army
spokesman for northern Kony and three other top
Uganda, said Monday. "The commanders wanted by the,
LRA (rebels) do not have international court are to
the confidence to move assemble along with their
openly, so they will proba- fighters, the group's top
bly go secretively in groups negotiator said Sunday.
and
gumbo
and
reassured
has
not
yet
been
spent.
the first day of a two-day
BY JENNIFER LOVEN
The truce does not include
·on
foot."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Don Powell, Bush's federGulf Coast visit to mark the state and local officials that
If
the
deal
holds,
it
will
be
details
on disarming the
one-year anniversary of the the federal government al Gulf Coast coordinator,
BILOXI,
Miss.
hurricane that still haunts would continue to help with also. warned in an interview a major breakthrough in rebels or integrating them
President Bush returned his presidency. It was his the rebuilding.
that no more money would pacifying the African region into Ugandan society. Those
· Monday·to the first scene he 13th jou'rney to the region , "I was just commenting flow to 'the region until there that joins nortl)ern Uganda, terms will be part of a final ·
saw a year ago of Hurricane and his first in three months. upon how·clean the beaches is proof that what has .been eastern Congo and southern accord to be nego)iated · at
Katrina' s devastation, and
His travels were shad- were," the president said at approved is being spent Sudan. Rebels from all three talks in Juba, Sudan, with
nations operated across the leaders of Sudan:s southern
declared "a sense of renew- owed by worries that a new the end of lunch. 'That was- welL
al" in the region still strug- tropical storm could bring n't a given a year ago. Now
Bush's itinerary looks a borders with impunity for region serving as mediators.
Teams of Ugandan offigling to come back from the the first test of his promise they speak to the hope."
lot like previous trips, many . decades until a peace accord
cials,
. rebels and African
halted
Congo's
civil
war
in
· storm's battering.
that the botched ,postThe Mississippi coastline of them criticized
featurUnion-appointed
military
2003
and
southern
Sudanese
"Amazing what the world Katrina response will not be here is much changed from ing too much stltged contact
officers
are
to
monitor
the
rebels
joined
Sudan's
govlooked like then and what it repeated.
Bush's last visit, when with supportive locals and
truce. They will report to the
looks like now," Bush said,
Tropical Storm Ernesto debris still hung from trees overly dominated by meet- ernment in 2005.
chief
mediator, southern
Peace
would
open
northmarveling at the air condi- cut a path through the and was stacked in large ings with officials. The
Sudan
Vice President Riek
em
U
¥anda
to
greater
oil
: tioning and electrical service Caribbean and put Florida piles. Some devastated Whit.e House released
· in the newly · constructed on emergency footing. structures remain in extreme · almost no information on and mmeral exploration as Machar.
Vincent Otti, deputy
home visible behind him. Forecasters believe Ernesto disrepair, but the stretch of where Bush was visiting well as allow hundreds of
leader
· of the Lord's
thousands
of
refugees
to
"People can't ima~ine what will emerge with some force beachfront property is taken until minutes before he was
Resistance
Army, spoke to
return
to
their
farms.
the world looked hke then." into the Gulf of Mexico later up by vacant lots where gra- too arrive, in part to lessen
The Lord's Resistance Mega FM, based in the
. When Bush first saw the this week.
c1ous antebelleum homes cumbersome security needs.
: neighborhood, it was littered
With Bush's image as a once stood, with a few new But the practice also has the Army was formed from the main northern U~and a town
· by debris of all sizes, cars in leader still tarnished by the or being-constructed build- result of further shielding · remnants of a · northern of Gulu, to provtde his men
trees and homes battered to halting federal response to ings and little debris in evi- him from more freely inter- Uganda rebellion that began with details of the ceasein 1986 after President fire.
bits.
. Katrina, the president wants
acting with residents.
Yoweri Museveni, a south"Otti called us yesterday
Bush said "there's still to make clear he has been dence.
didn't bring any new
Bush also was visiting a erner, overthrew a brutal and made all announcement
challenges." Other parts of fully engaged in planning aidBush
announcements or fresh Gulfport company that military junta.
to his fi~hters," David
the neighborhood, which is for Ernesto. Aides .noted he
policy
proposals.
builds
and
repair
boats
Joseph Kony, leader of the Okidi, station manager at
on\y rebuilt in patches, and a was briefed regularly ·over
So far, . Congress has before ending in New Lord's Resistance Army, Mega FM, said Monday.
woman he consoled on a trip the weekend.
.
here last year, demonstrated
Before leaving the White approved $110 billion in Orleans at dinner with state mixed northern J?Oiitics with "He told them to gather
just that. Sought out by the House Monday, Bush and hurricane. caid. The Bush and local officials. On religious mystictsm, declar- where the two main ·comWhite House to meet Bush top federal disaster officials administration has released Wednesday, he shifts gears, il1g himself a Christian manders are. They will then
again, she said · before his conferred on Ernesto in a $77 billion to the states, and.is to appear at political prophet fighting to rule this proceed together to the
remarks that she has come briefing led by Federal reserving the rest for future fundraisers in Arkansas and country of 26 million people assembly point."
far· but not far enough.
Emergency Management needs, but $33 billion of. that Tennessee.
Then, Bronwynne Bassier Agency R. David Paulison.
had returned from Alabama, White House spokeswoman
clutching trash bags, to Dana Perino said Florida
search the rubble of her for- had not requested federal
mer home for clothes for her assistance or support.
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER WITH A
young son. Sobbing unconA poll earlier this month
trollably, she told Bush she found
two-thirds
of
THANK YOU AD IN THE DAILY 'SENTINEL. ••
had lost everything.
Americans still disapprove
On Monday, newly mar- of the president's handling
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
ried and now Bronwynne of Katrina. Democrats are
Lesso. she said her old converging on the Qulf See Dave or Brenda at the ...
house has been demolished along with .Bush, intending
The Daily Sentinel
to a concrete slab, she lives to make the case !hal he and
in a FEMA trailer with her the Republican Party should
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH
husband and 3-year-old, and be held accountable for failis still trying to llgure out ing storm victims.
Ads must be paid for in advance.
how to get a job and
Democratic
National
whether she can rebuild.
Committee
Chairman
"When they take the Howard Dean said B~ sh's
FEMA trailers away, I don't promises of help for Kalriha
know what I'm going to vi,ctims and changes to the
do." she said in an ~mer- federal re sponse effort
view.
remain largely unfulfilled.
2 Col. X 4"
Still, like · many in
The president's first stop
Mississippi, where the was lunch at the Biloxi
response and rebuilding Schooner
Seafood
:",?T~ ·Coi&lt;Jt
·~
.~ii;; w:
• effort has gone better than in Restaurant, owned by Joe
Louisiana, Lesso doesn' t Lancon.
who recently
blame Bush.
reopened les s than two
"One year later,' he hasn't miles from where Katrina
I .
forgotten about us ," she destroyed his two other
1 Col. x 2" said.
· restaurants. Bush dined on
Bush came to Mississippi, fried shrimp, stuffed crab
BY KATY POWNALL

With Ernesto threatening, Bush
·visiting Katrin~-ravaged Gulf Coast

as

D&lt;Jn't forget to say w·rhanks"

.

2 Col. x 2"
Smile! Now you can own tile ptC1ure of that unbfgettable
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LoCAL ·• STATE

Community Calendar
Public meetings

provide refreshments.

Saturday, Sept. 2
Monday, Sept. 4
SALEM CENTER
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Star
Grange #778 and s·tar
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
Junior
Grange #878 potluck
at Syracuse. village hall.
supper, 6:30 p,m. followed
by meeting at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 5
HARRISONVILLE
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m., Harrisonville Lodge 411,
7:30p.m. Members dto take
Rutland Fire Station.
nonperishable food item.
Refreshments, 6:30 p.m.

PageA3
Tuesday,August29,2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

School events
Thursday, Aug. 29
TUPPERS PLAINS "Pray for School 2006"
Concert of Prayer, 7 p.m.,
Eastern Hi gh SchooL
Teachers, administrators,
school personnel, students
and parents invited,

Don't stoop to gossping in-laws' level
BY KATHY MITCHELl
AND MARCY SUGAR

have to stoop to their level. lion, co-founded by Sandy
It might help if you can . Puc and Cheryl Haggard. is
keep in mind that these a network of professional
backstabbing, gossipy peo- photographers who volunple raised that wonderful teer their time, artistry and
husband of yours.
images to families faced
Dear Annie: I'm a 13- with the loss of infants.
year-old girl, and 1 have a NILMDTS has over 800 ·
friend I'll call "Lindsey." affiliate photographers in
Both of us love to talk and five countries, all of whom
tell stories. The problem is create a lifetime uf memothat for every story I 1el1, ries in the moments followshe has to have one better ing birth, at no charge. It is
or more extreme.
our way of giving back in a
Most of Lindsey's stories positive and meaningful
sound made up. Once I told way.
her that in first grade, I cut
NILMDTS also provides
my long hair to chin length an online forum where famthe day after pictures. So ilies, parents, photographers
she said that in her old and health care providers
school (she .came to my can share their stories and
school in third grade). one support
one
another.
of her friends had hair down Readers can learn more at
to her wai st and she shaved www.nowilaymedownher head after pictures. I tosleep.org.
Gail
don't believe that one.
Mooney
&amp;
Sandra
How do I tell her "get Rodgers,
NILMDTS
real" without sounding Affiliate Photographers,
rude? -Second-Best
North Dakota
Dear Second Best:
Dear Gail and Sandra:
Lindsey needs the attention We checked out the Web
and admiration that her sto- site, and although it isn't for
ries bring, so she probably everyone, we found the
embellishes them · to seem photographs lovingly done.
more interesting. It's a sign We're sure it can provide
of immaturity. You can tell tremendous comfort for
Lindsey, gently, that some- parents who have suffered
times her stories sound such a loss.
made-up and this could hurt
Annie's Mailbox is writher reputation. (She will ten by Kathy Mitchell and
deny it, but may also tone it Marcy Sugar, longtime edidown.) Still, please stand by tors of the Ann Landers
her as your friend, so she . column. Please e-mail your
can learn that she doesn't questions to anniesmailneed to fabricate tall tales in box@comcast.net, or write
.order to feel appreciated.
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Dear Annie: After read- Box 118190, Chicago, lL
. ing the letter from "Mother 60611. Th find out more
to Three Angels,': whose about Annie's Mailbox,
triplets died shortly after and read features by other
birth, we had to let your Creators Syndicate writers
readers know about Now I and cartoonists, visit the
Lay Me Down To Sleep.
Creators Syndicate Web
This non-profit organiza- page at www.creators.com.

Dear Annie: I have been
married for ll years to a
wonderful husband. He
comes from a large family,
.and they all gather at his
home every
mother's
Sunday after church. The
.day usually begins by
catching up on weekly matters, but it later deteriorates
Tuesday, Aug. 29
into a gossiplbackstabbing
Thesday, Sept. 5
MIDDLEPORT
party.
I rarely visited on
MIDDLEPORT
Revival at the old Bethel
Sundays
with my husband
Middleport Lodge #363 ·Freewill Baptist Church
Friday, Sept. I
F&amp;AM monthly business south of Middleport at the and our two children
SALEM CENTER
Meigs County Pomona meeting, 7:30 p.m. Bring Route 7, Story's Run Road because of my distaste for
Grange meets at 7:30 p.m. non-perishable food items intersection, 7 p.m. through their behavior.
We recently moved out of
at Star Grange Hall located for Grand Master's food Sept. I. Pastor is Ralph
on County Road I, three bank program. All Master Butcher.
Evangelist, state, and I was "enlightinvited. Nor{llan Taylor. Special ened" by a fellow in-law
miles north of Salem Maso ns
about how cruel these famismg1ng.
Center. Star Grange wiII Refreshments.
ly members really are. I was
never naive enough to think
they didn't gossip about me,
but I am disappointed and
hurt
at the viciousness of
Clermont County home; he A local businessman put up
BY DAN SEWELL
the
comments
made in my
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .
was reported missing from a a $10,000 reward for inforpark in Hamilton County. mation leading to the child direction.
I have lost all respect for
CINCiNNATI- The fos- Deters said he was working or to anyone responsible for
my
in-laws and have no
ter parents of a 3-year-old with Clermont County his disappearanfe.
desire
to be frieRdly. If it
· developmentally disabled authorities, adding that · "I'm asking that anybody
boy were charged Monday . ·more charges are possible.
that saw me with my kids, were· up to me, I would
with causing his death ,
"We'll wait to see where or saw me, or saw Marcus, never visit again. Since this
nearly two weeks after the the investigation leads us," to please contact the author- isn't possible, how should I
foster mother's report that he said.
ities, the news, anybody .... • handle my future interacthe child disappeared trigThe Carrolls were arrest- anybody," Liz Carroll said tions, knowing that upon
gered a.massive search.
ed separately and jailed at an Aug. 22 news confer- my departure, the knives
Liz and David Carroll left Monday, he said. A message ence she asked Hamilton will be flung at my back?
Marcus Fiesel in a closet seeking information on their County authorities to - Grateful We Moved
when they went to a family court appearances and legal arrange. She said she wore FarAway
Dear Grateful: Since
reunion i11 Kentucky on representation was left the same clothes and pulled
Aug. 4, authorities said. Monday evening with the her hair back in the same these are your husband's
They returned home to find Hamilton County sheriff's style she had when she last family members, the best
saw Marcus in the park approach is to pretend you
him d~ad two days later- office.
nine days before reporting
The search, using heli- because she wanted to jog know nothing. Greet them
as you always have, visit as
. him missing - authorities copters and sophisticated witnesses'. memories.
said. David Carroll has been equipment, initially focused
Authorities had said they long as you can manage,
charged with burning his on a 5-square-mile area of searched the foster parents' and leave with a sririle . on
body.
Juilfs Park in Anderson home and property. Liz your face. You cannot conA Hamilton County grand Township. It was expanded Carroll was released from trol what they say behind
jury indicted the Carrolls on to other nearby wooded . the hospital a few days after your back, . but you don't
charges of involuntary areas and waterways with Marcus was reported missmanslaughter and endanger- searchers combing the areas in~, and the sheriff's office
ing children, and David at least five times, accord- satd the family had moved.
The
Carrolls
had
Carroll was charged with ing to the Hamilton County
expressed frustration last
gross abuse of a corpse.
sheriff's office.
RACINE - . Teachers to improve our other areas of the Federal Government and
When Liz Carroll said the
As time went on, authori- week about increasing
boy apparent! y wandered ties expressed concern that scrutiny of their story and often are noted for preparing academic content," said the No Cliild Left Behind
bill. The elementary school,
otT after she passed out in a the search was going to end background, which includ- their rooms and the1r lessons Wolfe.
ed
a
recent
domestic
viohowever,
is in ."school
He stressed that critical
long before the actual school
suburban Cmcinnati park badly. Police also openly
because of a heart condi- questioned why no witness- lence charge against David year begins, but this year the thinking skills are the driving improvement" status.
It was noted during the
lion.
es reported seeing Marcus Carroll that was dismissed. days prior io the beginning force behind success on the
They
gave
a
TV
interview
sessions
that the building
elementary
achievement
of classes were used for
Throngs of volunteers in the park.
in
which
Liz
Carroll
tearfulgoal
at
Southern
Element~
tests and the graduation tesi.''
poured out to he,lp authori"The first reaction is one
training time.
Southern was one of sev- . If a student is taught to think, is to reach effective school
ties in the search.
of absolute shock and just ly repeated her appeal for
"They let thousands of utter disappointment," said help.
eral schools that chose to on his own, a student will status, with special emphasis
on math and reading.
"We are extremely sad- incorporate a three-day pre- succeed," said Wolfe.
people look for this little Fred Buop. who worked in
'Principal Shawn Bush
Tricia Wolfe, the new
boy, knowing he was long the search effort as battalion dened and outraged about lude to the school year, havdead," Hami'lton County chief
with .Anderson the untimely death of ing qualified for a grant from math coach, hired and fund- spoke of the challenge facing
Fiesel," Jann the
Perry-Hocking ed by the grant monies, Southern Elementary, the
Prosecutor Joe Deters said. . Township Fire Department. Marcus
Heffner,
executive
director
He said the Carrolls took "Even though we had hoped
Educational Learning Center informed teachers about her improvements to be made
program. ·Southern was the and the staff's dedication to
time to plan out a story for the best, we had Rlanned of Butler County Children's to help cover expenses.
· before reporting Marcus for the worst; but it s still a Services, said in a news . Inclusion,
embedded only school of 30 eligible the task.
release. "Marcus was a assessment, critical thinking districts to qualify for the
The importance of comshock."
missing.
wonderful'
child
who
had
a
pleting
federal reduced and
A week after making her
Liz Carroll, 30, said she
skills, positive behavior, bus program which has operated
report, Liz Carroll made a was unconscious for about great deal of promise.. His safety, CPR raining · and in the Franklin County area free lunch forms because of
public plea for help in the 10 minutes. When she came death has devastated our ESIS training were all with much success for the the way it affects the dissearch, calling herself "an to, there were three toddlers entire. agency."
included in the Southern pro- past two years. Grant monies trict's economic status.
The
county
agency
conESIS training was preexcellent mother" and pro- nearby, but she said she told
gram. Mark Miller, new for the program flow through
fessing her love for the boy. people trying to help her tracted with Lifeway for superintendent, said that the the Perry-Hocking ESC The sented by SEOVEC for the
, Authorities were search- that she had four children .. Youth, a private organiza- "district · wanted to provide goal, it was noted, is to have purpose of instituting an on; ing Monday in rural Brown
·The other children, her 2- tiop that provides training quality training for the teach- math scores aild critical line grade book and atten. County for his remains, year-old son Bryce, 1-year- for foster parents and place- ers to expand their horiwns thinking skillt improve dra- dance system at the high
: Deters said. He declined to old foster child Bradley and ment for abused and and open their eyes to the matically by the end of the school.. Elementary teachers·
will record grades on-line
. discuss other details of the a 1-year-old child Carroll neglected children.
cutting edge strategies used program.
Michael
Berner,
director
this
year, and next year
Sandy
Clonch,
represent· investigation tha1 led to the was baby-sitting were safe.
in education today, but the
of
the
Sharonville-based
incorporate
the grade book
ing
the
Meigs
ESC,
reviewed
David
Carroll
said
teachers benefited and the
indictments.
Marcus had the mental abil· organization, told WCPO- students· should see the bene- the state report card with the and attendance portion of the
"You would not treat your
teaching staff. Southern program.
dog like this," Deters said.
ity of a child 12 to 18 TV that Lifeway did back- fit.
Open houses were held at
ground
and
police
checks
Authorities said the child months old. The boy joined.
Speakers mcluded Linda High School was rated as an
on
the
Carrolls
before
they
the
two schools on the day
was left in the· couple's the family about four
Ca~ to.
Remediation effective school and met
months ago and had a histo- became foster parents.
Specialist and · Certified AYP standards set forth by before classes started.
"We're all heartbroken up Inclusion Specialist froni the
ry of wandering off, Carroll
here," Berner said. "These West Virginia Department of
said.
The. search was called oii people passed muster; they Education .; AI Cote, Director
Aug. 19, but authorities said pulled the wool over every- of SEOCEMS and educathey were following leads . one's eyes."
tion liaison with Ohio
University; Brigette Stevens,
Certified PBS Specialist
from SEOSERC; and Sue
Nichols, Co-Director of
Project Access .
"We were fortunate to
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy 60s.
Northeast
winds
have
such a quality w.oup of
m the morning ... Then around 5 mph. Chance of
presenters," said M1ller. He
becoming partly cloudy. A rain 20 percent.
chance of thunderstorms . Thursday and Thursday went on to note that David
Showers likely in the morn- night...Partly cloudy. Highs Beavers, nationally renown
*One .Item Per Ad
ing... Then .a chance of in the lower ·80s. Lows in mathematics specialist is
* Personal Items - No Businesses
going to work with the math
Allliabeth Jayne Hamilton· showers in the afternoon. the lower 60s.
Humid with highs in the
Friday
through department in September.
* Must Advertise Price
Miller said that an $80,000
lower 80s. Northwest winds Saturday ... Partly cloudy
* Runs for (3 days)
around 5 mph. Chance of with a chance of showers grant the school was able to
Write yout Ad HERE (15 words or less)
and thunderstorms. Highs hire a math coach to supplePOMEROY - Ashley L. rain 60 percent.
ment
the
math
department
in
Hamilton announces the . Tuesday night.. Partly around 80. Lows in the
birth of her · daughter, cloudy with a slight chance upper 50s. Chance of rain an e!Iort to bring up math
scores.
Allizabeth Jayne, born at of showers and thunder- 30 percent.
Administrative assistant
Saturday night...Partly
Holzer Hospilll l on Aug. 20. storms. Lows in the mid
Scott
Wolfe with the help of
· She wei!Jhed 5 pounds, 9 60s. North winds around 5 cloudy with a chance of
ounces.
mph
in
· the showers and thunderstorms. school nurse Junie Maynard .
and other staff members
·
50
M~ternal grandparents are evening ... Becoming light
and
variable.
Chance,
of
rain
Lows
in
the.
upper
·
·
s.
assembled
the three-day
' Gerri and Charles Miller of
Chance of rain 40 percent.
"I think the teachers
·
sun d ay training.
. Raleigh , . N. C.; Brian 20 percent
wednesday
...
p
a
rtl
y
Sunday
and
all
walked
away with some
Hamilton of Coolville and
cloudy
with
a
slight
chance
night...Mostly
cloudy
with
valuable
knowledge
that they
maternal great-grandparof
showers
and
thunder·
a
chance
of
showers.
and
can
actually
use
in
the
classents, Gerald and Ellen
Rought of Pomeroy, Billia storms. Highs in the tower thunderstorms. Highs in the room. If there was one
Northeast
winds mid 70s. Lows around 60. theme we tried to . stress, it
Jones of New Haven, W. 80s
aro~nd
5
mph.
Chance
of ' Chance of rain 40 percent.
was "that we can't do the
Va.. Faye Wiggins of
Labor .
Day ...Partly same things that we did last
Minersville;
and rain 20 percent.
Wednesday
night...Partly
cloudy
w1th
a
chance of year. Our Math scores at the
Emmogene Hamilton · of
· Ad must be submitted on this coupon and
. Syracuse. The infant's sister cloudy with a slight chance showers and thunderstorms. elementary must come upmust be prepaid. Offer expires 8/31106
is Abbygayle Hamilton of of showers and thunder- Higlils in the upper 70s. that is the bottom line. And Our CLASSifiEDS will WORK for YOU!!!
we also have goals in place
storms. Lows in the mid Chance of rain 30 percent.
. Syracuse.
-

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Authorities: Boy died after being left in closet

Southern hits school year in high gear

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a ~edress ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 29, the 241 st day of 2006. There
are 124 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
· One year ago, on Aug. 29, 2005, Nurricane Katrina hit
the Gulf Coast near Buras, La.; the resulting floods devastated the city of New Orleans. More than I ,300 people died
in Louisiana while an estimated 300 Louisiana residents
died out of state; some 230 people perished in Mississippi.
Property damage estimates were in the hundr~ds of billions
of dollars.
On this date:
In 1533, the last lncan King of Peru , Atahualpa, was murdered on orders of Spanish conqueror Francisco Pizarro.
In 1632, English philosopher John Locke was born in
Somerset.
In 1877, the second president of the Mormon Church,
Brigham Young, died in Salt Lake City.
In 1943, responding to a clampdown by Nazi occupiers,
Denmark managed to scuttle most of its naval ships.
In 1944, 15,000 American troops marched down the
Champs Ely sees in Paris as the French capital continued to
celebrate its liberation from the Nazis.
In 1957, South Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond (then a
Democrat) ended a filibuster against a civil rights bill after
talking for more than 24 hours.
In 1965, Gemini 5, carrying astronauts Gordon Cooper
and Charles ("Pete") Conrad, splashed down in the Atlantic
after eight days in space.
In 1966, the Beatles concluded their fourth American
tour with their last public concert, at Candlestick Park in
San Francisco.
In 1975, Irish statesman Eamon de Valera died near
Dublin at age 92.
·
In 1981, broadcaster and world traveler l,.owell Thomas
died in Pawling, N.Y., at age 89.
Today's Birthdays: Actor-director Lord Richard
Attenborough is 83. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is 70.
Actor Elliott Gould is 68. Movie director William Friedkin
is 67. Movie director Joel Schumacher is 67. TV personality Robin Leach is 65. Actress Deborah Van Valkenburgh is
54. Dancer-choreographer Mark Morris is 50. Country
musician Dan Truman (Diamond Rio) is 50. Singer
Michael Jackson is 48. Actress Rebecca DeMornay is 44.
Singer Me'Shell NdegeOcello is 37. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Carl Martin (Shai) is 36. Actress Carla Gugino is 35.
Rock rnljsician Kyle Cook (Matchbox Twenty) is 31. Actor
John Hensley· is 29. Rock musician David . Desrosiers
(Simple Plan) is 26. Rapper A+ is 24. Actress Jennifer
Landon is 23. Actor Jeffrey Licon is 21.
Thought for Today: "In spite of the honestest efforts to
annihilate my '1-ity,' or merge it in what the world doubtless considers my better half (historian Thomas Carlyle), I
still find myself a self-subsisting and alas! self-seeking
ME." -Jane Welsh Carlyle, English writer (1801-1866):

·OPINION

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 29,

The manifest danger
Islamic radicalism presents to the United States
ought to be unifying
American
politicians
around programs to keep
the country safe. But their
behavior this summer
shows they prefer petty
partisanship.
A series of decisions
Congress must make in
September - particularly
on measures to authorize
the National Security
Agency's
Terrorist
Surveillance Program and
military tribunals for terrorist detainees - will
determine whether they
can find a common purpose.
The two sides should be
looking at each othe'r s'
agendas - the Democrats'
advocacy of homeland
security upgrades and
some conservalive ideas
on terrorist "profiling" to improve security.
And both should seriously
consider
the
prospect of creating a
domestic security agency
like Great Britain's MIS,
particularly given the
FBI's evident failure - as
in
The
reported
Washington Post this week
- · to adapt its criminal
investigation culture · to
antiterrorist intelligencegathering.
But, based .on the record ,
the prospects for cooperative action are not good.
The
minute
Britain
announced the arrest of
radicals planning to blow
up U.S. -bound airliners
over , the
Atlantic,
and
Republicans ·
Democrats began squabbling over what it meant
especially for their
·election
November
prospects.
Senate Minority Leader
Harry Reid, D-Nev., put
out a {Hess release declaring the plot "demonstrates
the need for the Bush
administration and the
Congress to change course
in Iraq and ensure that
we' re taking all the steps
necessary
to
protect
Americans at home and
across the world."
Republican
National
Committee Chairman Ken

www.mydailysentinel.com

Federal law restricts activities of debt collectors
Q.: A debt collector is
doing things that I think
are unfair. Are there limits
to what a debt collector
can do .when trying to collect debts?
A.: A federal law called
the Fair Debt Collection
Practices Act limits what
debt collectors can do in
attempting to collect consumer debt. In general, the '
. law does not apply to the
original creditor, but only
to third-party debt collectors and to companies who
buy an account after it has
been in default. These debt
collectors are prohibited
from doing things that are
unfair or deceptive in
attempts to collect a consumer debt. Examples of
things that may be unfair
and deceptive are: certain
types of obscene or abusive language or threats of
violence; many types of
false statements; threats
that the consumer will be
arrested or imprisoned;
using a fal se name; repeated phone calls made with
the intent to annoy, abuse,

lance program and after would get the Uni ted
President Bush made a fer- States involved in new
vent case that premature wars than the 57 percent
withdrawal from Iraq who are worried that
would be a moral and Democrats are weak on
strategic "disaster."
fighting terror.
Democrats think they
However. this week, a
Kaidlacte can gain the advantage by Gallup poll reported
declaring Iraq a diversion Bush's overall approval
from the "real" war on ter- · rating rose to 42 percent
ror ·against AI Qaeda and from 37 percent over the
the
Taliban, which they two weeks since ' the
Mehlman
responded,
say
they· d fight aggres- Lomlon plot was stifled
"In stead of focusing on
political
attacks,
we sively in Afghanistan and and, for his handling of
should focus on the fact with measures to protect terrorism, to 55 percent
that we are at war and U.S. ports, chemical plants from 47 percento
need every tool to win the and ai rplanes.
But for handling Iraq, he
As Democratic National remained mired at 36 perwar on terror. If Harry
Chairman cent. And a CBS/New
Reid had his way and Committee
Howard
Dean
put
it, ''We York Time&gt; poll showed
(had) killed the (USA)
PATRIOT Act and ended are bogged down , spend- Americans, by 51 percent
the terrorist surveillance ing half a trillion dollars in to 32 percent, don't think
program ,
authorities Iraq, which could be used Iraq represents a "major
would be less ablo to to do the things that the part" of the war on terror.
Democratic Party and the
uncover terrorist plots. "
. If the election hinges on
9111
Commission have
Had the terror plotters
"terror,"
Republicans may
not been stopped, I0 or so recommended, which is to win. If it's "Iraq" and
747s mi~ht have exploded make our airports and our things keep looking grim ·
in mid-a1r on Aug. 16, one nuclear power plants and there, it's a Democratic
reported target date. or our train stations safe here
advantage. That will frame
yesterday, Aug. 22, a por- at home."
the argument through
along
with
Reid,
tentous date in the Islamic
calendar. More people Democratic Sens. Carl November.
But, meantime, the two
might have been killed Levin, Mich :. and Jack
sides
should try to accomReed
,
R.I.
,
held
a
telethan those who died in the
Sept. II. 2001, terrori st phonic press briefing plish a few things. It was ·a
Tuesday making similar good sign that Reid, along
attacks.
If it had happeried , points and issued a state- with even liberal firebrand
would the catastrophe ment headlined "The Bush Rep . John Conyers, Dhave rou sed American Record of Failure: Not Mich. , responded \to ·
politicians to halt their Getting the Job Done in Taylor's NSA ruling ~
nonstop partisan warfare the War on Terror," which saying they agreed terrorin the realization that we chiefly protested the fail- ists should be wiretapped,
ure to capture Osama bin even if they said Bush had
are all in this together?
Laden.
Five years ago, Sept. II
started the warrantless
Republicans think they program illegally.
brought Americans together, including Republicans gain by calling the
Reid said in his teleand Democrats. But this Democrats "defeatists" on phone conference Tuesday
year, the evidence dismal- Iraq and by asserting that that Democrat s "stand
ly · suggests, an 8/16 or Democrats are ''weak" on ready to work with
because
they Republicans" on the NSA
8/22 would have intensi- terror
the
NSA
wiretap
opposed
fied the politicians ' fingerprogram and on authorizpointing.
. program and had qualms ing military tribunal s. for
The blame-casting has- about efforts to track ter- terrorist · captives follown't ceased despite a war in rorist finances through the ing the Supreme Court's ·.
Lebanon in which the international banking sys- . ruling that Bu sh's tribunal
Islamist radical group tem.
Who's actually gaining plan was uncon stitutional.
Hezbollah was the perThe Senate Judi ciary
ceived winner and as its in thi s ~truggle is hard to
Traditionally, Committee is due to consponsor, Ir.an, continued tell.
lead sider bills in September on
work on nuclear weapons. Republicans
The · danger to us all is Democrats in . public trust both programs. They will
mounting, but U.S. politi- on fighting terrorism by test whether American
cians. are thinking primari- margins of 25 to 30 points, politicians can respond to
ly about making partisan but recent polls have a common threat with
shown that advantage common purpose. Our
points.
enemies are watching.
They were at it again dropping to single digits.
(Monon Kondracke is
when U.S. District Judge
A Pew poll last week
Anna Diggs Taylor issued showed
that
more executive editor of Roll
a tendentious ruling strik- Americans , 69 percent, are Call, rhe newspaper of
ing down the NSA surveil- concerned Republicans Capiro/ Hill. )

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Local Briefs
Plan barbecue

or harass the consumer;
calling the consumer at
work after being told the
consumer is not permitted
to take such calls.

of payment if available. debt collector is filing suit.
The letter should also
REEDSVILLE -Olive Town&gt;hip Volunteer Fire
demand that the debt colQ.: What can l do if a Department will have its annual chicken barbecue at the
lector verify the debt and debt collector has violated township firehouse in Reedsville. Chicken, mashed pota·
mail the result to you. You the FDCPA?
toes, baked beans, cole slaw, dessert and drink will be
should keep copies of the
A.: The FDCPA allows served for $6, beginning at II a.m.
Q.: Can debt collectors letter, return receipt, and consumers to file a lawsuit
demand · payment from any response from the debt against debt collectors for
other people such as my collector. Until the debt violations of the FDCPA.
family members?
·
collector verifies the debt If you can prove your case,
SYRACUSE -Syracuse Church of the Nazarene will
A.: Generally, debt col- and sends you the result, -you may recover any actuhold
its seCond annual Biker Sunday at I 0:30 a.m. on Oct.
lectors can only contact · the debt collector must al damages and in addition,
I,
with
third parties in an attempt stop attempting to collect.
up to $1,000 in statutory speaker.Pastor Steve Col)lbs of Leave a Mark Minist~ies as
to obtain a debtor's contact
damages plus attorney fees
information. Debt collecand court costs.
tors should not contact ,.Q.: How can I make the
third parties to inform debt collector stop calling
Law You Can Use is a
them of the debt or to me?
weekly consumer legal
attempt to make the debtor
A.: Send a letter by cer- information column propay.
tified mail to the debt col- vided as a public service
lector as described above. of the Ohio State Bar
Q.: What should I do if a Provide your name, the Association. This article
Bv DAN SEWELL
Liz Carroll. 30, said she
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .
debt collector is trying to account number and your was
prepared
by
was unconscious for about
col!e·ct on an account I phone
number,
and Mansfield atlorney Greg
10 minutes. When she came
CINCINNATI -The fos- to, there were three toddlers
have already paid?
demand that the debt col- Reichenbach.
Articles
A.: Within thirty days of lector stop calling you. If appearing in this column ter parents of a missing 3- nearby. but Carroll said she
the first written communi- the debt collector calls you are intended to provide year-old developmentally told people try ing to help her
cation from the debt col- after receiving your letter, broad, general informa- disabled boy were charged that she had four children.
lector, send the debt collec- the debt collector has vio- tion about the law. Be re Monday in his death. and the
The other L'hildrcn. her 2tor a certified letter, return lated the Fair Debt applying this information foster father accused of year-old son Bryce. 1-yearreceipt requested. This let- . Collection Practices Act. to a specific legal prob· burning his body.
old foster child Bradley and
Liz and David Carroll Jr. Kelly. I. a child Carroll was
ter should identify you and Remember, however, that /em, readers are urged to
your account, state your the only collection alterna- seek advice from an attor- are accused of leaving baby-sitting. were safe .
Marcus Fiesel in a closet in
objection, and attach proof tive then available to the ney.
The search was called off
their Clermont County home Aug. 19. but &lt;iuthorities said
just east of Cincinnati while they were following up leads
they went to a family they received. A local busireunion in Kcntuck~ on . ness man put up a $1 0,000
Aug. 4, said Hamilton reward for any information
County
prosecutor Joe leading to the . child or to
Bv JEFFREY McMURRAY injured co-pilot who was are not respon sible for
The bodies of the 49
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
anyone responsible for his
pulled from the cracked making sure pilots are on victims were take·n to the Deters.
Investigators
believe
the
disappearance .
the right runway, said meqical examiner's office
cockpit.
boy
was
dead
when
the
couLEXINGTON, Ky. Liz Carroll made a public
Authorities also planned John Nance, a pilot and in Frankfort for autopsies.
Investigators
in
the to prepare a full report on aviation analyst.
Kentucky's chief medical ple returned home two days plea Aug. 22 for help in
Comair jet crash that the pilots , including what
"You clear him for take- examiner,
Dr. Tracy later, Deters said. The cou- finding Marcus.
killed 49 people are look- they did on and off duty off and that's the end of Corey, was uncertain how ple reported the boy missing
"I'm asking that anybody
ing into whether changes for several days before it," Nance said. ~'It's not long it will take to identi- from a Hamilton County that saw me with my kids, or
made to a taxiway during the crash, which was the the duty of the controller fy all the victims. Comair parkAug. 15.
·saw me, or saw Marcus, to
A Hamilton County grand please contact the authoria repaving project' a week worst U.S. plane disaster to baby-sit every flight . It had not released a passenago confused the pilot and since 200 I.
would have been great it ger manifest and said it jury indicted the Carrolls on ties, the news, anybody ...
caused him to turn onto
All discussions between he or she had, but they was seeking permission charges of involuntary anybody," she said at a news
the wrong runway.
she
asked
the plane and the control h11ve other duties up from victims' families to manslaughter and endanger- conference
ing
children,
and
David
Federal aviation offi- tower were about a take- there."
Hamilton
County
authorities
release the names.
cials said Monday they off from the main strip,
The FAA said a second
Medical examiners used Carroll was charged with 19 arrange.
were also looking at such Runway 22, · which is air
David C.arroll said Marcus
traffic
controller medical
and
dental gross abuse of a corpse.
David Carroll took the had the mental ability of a
things · as runway lights, · 7,000 feet long, National would be added to the records, personal effects
markings and signs for Transportation
Safety weekend overnight shifts and in some cases finger- boy's body to rural Brown child 12 to 18 months old.
clues to what could have Board member Debbie at the airport beginning prints to help identify County and burned it, Deters Marcus joined the family
said. A search for the about four months ago and.
misled the pilots, as well Hersman.
next weekend. Agency bodies, Corey said.
as anything else that
Somehow, the com- spokeswoman
Laura
Some victims were remains was launched had a history of wandering
changed the configuration muter jet ended up on Brown declined to give a starting vacations, while Monday. Deters declined to off, he said. The child once
other details of the left the home of his biologioi appearance of the air- Runway 26 instead - a reason for the decision.
others were returning to discuss
investigation.
cal parents in Middletown in
port.
According to a NASA work after traveling.
cracked surface about
The
Carrolls
were
arrested
the middle of the night and:
Both the old and new 3,500 feet long that forms database, a twin-engine
Attorney Les Morris separately
and
jailed
did the same thing while livtaxiway routes cross over an X with the main run- jet taxied to the wrong and his wife, Kay Craig
Monday,
he
said.
ing with other foster parents.
the short runway where way and is meant only for runway at Lexington in Morris, had been headed
The boy's disappearance
Authorities said they
Flight 5191 tried to take small planes. Aviation November 1993 and the to an ; Alaskan cruise.
off before crashing into a experts say the CRJ ·1 00 tower called to tell them Marcie Thomason, an triggered an intenstve search searched the foster parents'
that brought hundreds of home and property m addi~rassy field and bursting would have needed 5,000 about their mistake. The
accountant
in
Washington,
mto
flame,
Airport feet to get airborne.
pilot reported that the D.C., was heading home volunteers. Liz Carroll had tion to the other areas. The
Executive
Director
Both runways at Blue confusing runway inter- after returning to her told authorities that Marcus foster mother was released
Michael Gobb told The · Grass Airport .have lights section contributed to the native Kentucky for a wandered away from her in from the hospital a few days
a suburban park after she after the boy disappeared,
along the edges, although incident.
Associated Press.
.
wedding
shower
in
her
passed out because of a heart and the sheriff's departmenc
"It's slightly different the · ones on the longer
The ' NTSB will re-cre- honor.
condition.
than it used to be," said runway are much higher ate the pilots' last 72
said the family had moved. .
Thomason
normally
The search, using heli·
Charlie Monette, presi- intensity. The long run- hours, focusing on fatigue flew
to Washington copters and sophisticated
dent of Aero-Tech flight way also has lights in the and stress issues, Waldock out ofback
Louisville.
high-tech equipment along
school at the airport. center. In the days leading said. Agents will review
"I guess she wanted to with hundreds of volunteers,
"Could there have been up to the crash, those run- how many flights the
some confusion associat- way center lights were not pilots made, how much get back early and .took initially focused on a 5ESTABLISHED 1895
ed with that? That's cer- working, according ·to a rest they had, any medica- the flight to Atlanta,'' said square-mile area of Juilfs
J.
David
Smith,
a
friend
Park in Anderson Township.
notice
the
Federal tion they took and even
tainly a possibility."
French City Chorus
It was later expanded to
It was unclear whether Aviation Administration whether they had coffee of her. family.
Sweet Adelines Concert
Among Other victims. other nearby wooded areas
the Com11ir pilots had sent to airlines.
that morning.
Saturday, Sept. 9
waterways
with
Hersman said the NTSB were a newlywed couple and
been to the airport si nee
Hersman told a news
7:30
the changes to the taxi conference that investiga- has interviewed the lone starting their honeymoon, searchers combing the areas
Fall classes begin the
tors were "looking into controller on duty at the 'a director of Habitat for at least five times, according
route.
.
week of Sept. )0
Lowell Wiley, a flight reports about any work time , reviewed records Humanity International , to the Hamilton County
Register Now
instructor
who
flies that had been done at the and transcribed the data an owner of a thorough- sheriff's department.
Ballet, Modern, Juzz,
However, as time went on,
almost every day out airport, what might have and voice recorders·. She bred horse farm and a
Ballroom, String, Acting,
Lexington, said in an approved, what might said information retrieved University of Kentucky authorities expressed conStage Makeup, Puppetry,
cern that the search was
. interview that he was con- have been proposed and from the cockpit · voice official.
Women's Aerobics
The only survivor, first going to end badly. Police
fused by the redirected what might have been recorder indicates that the
Call 740-446-ARTS
James
M. .also openly questioned why
taxi route when he was completed. Anything that preflight preparations had officer
The Ariel-Dater Hall
Polehinke,
remained
in
no
witnesses
reported
seeing
been
"consistent
with
normight
have
changed
the
with a student Friday tak428 Sec. Ave. Galli~~tis, OH
critical condition Monday Marcus in the park.
740-446-ARTS 2787)
ing off from the main run- configuration or appear- m.al operations."
at
the
University
of
At the airport. flights
ances of the airport."
way.
"When we taxied out ,
According to the NTS B ·were back to normal Kentucky Hospital. Police
Bryan
Jared
we did not expect to see a database, there have been Monday. The daily 6 a.m. officer
burned
his
own
arms
barrier strung across the four accidents caused by Lexington -to- Atlanta
the
broken
reaching
into
old taxiway," Wiley said. pilots taking off · on the tligl,lt took off safely.
"Obviously there is cockpit to poll him out.
wrong runway worldwide
"It was a total surprise."
The crash in Lexington
some
anxiety when someInvestigators planned to since 1982.
was
the deadliest in the
"It's not common," Bill thing · like this happens,
use a high truck to simulate the pilots ' view of the Waldock, aviation safety but it . is not something U.S. since Nov. 12, 200 I,
at Embry- that would stop me from when American Airlines
runways and taxiways in professor
Aeronautical going," said Mark Carroll, Flight 587 plunged into a
their efforts to determine Riddle
why the jet turned onto a · University in Arizona. 47, a· computer consultant residential neighborhood
shorter runway before "It's right up there with from Lexington who was in New York City, killing
boarding the flight to 265 people, including five
dawn Sunday. The lone lightning strikes."
on the ground.
Air .traffic controllers Atlanta.
survivor was a critically

Biker Sunday

Foster parents charged
in death ofmissing boy:

Runway route changed a week bifore crash in Lexington, Ky.

Arut:L

Dr. Bill Cosby: Master teacher
Dyson, who accuses Cosby
of "blaming the poor" for
the .current political and
economic f&lt;;Jrces that are
widening the gulf between
the poor and the rest of this
country.
Dyson chooses to ignore
that Cosby is trying to move
black people to restore the
energy, the momentum of
the civil-rights movement to
deal·witli those institutional
and political breeders of
. inequality.
What is missing, however, from "Enough" is another book - or a documentary series on National
Public Radio written and
hosted by ·Williams - to
show what is actually happening now, across the
country, by black communi'ty leaders, teachers, young ·
organizers, parents, preachers, politicians not beholden
to party lines, who go
beyond slogans and memories to bring back alive not
just the words and the tune
of "We Shall Overcome,"
but the true grit of' those
who made a difference then
- but knew there was so
much more to do.
In 1937. a former slave
told what it was like in 1865
(during the Emancipation):
"Hallelujah broke out ...
Everybody went wild. We
all' felt like heroes, and
nobody had made .us that
way but ourse lves."
(Nat Hen /off is u nation·
ally t-elw 1n1ed autluwity on
tile First Antemlnwnt wtd
tile /Jill of Rig/us and alii/tor
uf' llllill)' /mob, including
"The War on rhe Bill of
Rights and the Gathering
Resistance" (Seven Stories
Press. 2U04).) ·

2006

LAW YOU CAN USE

Congress foces tests: Can parties fight terror together? .

When I was growing up,
Williams emphasizes in
speaking about his book , is
national black leaders were
also educators for ·us all:
the popular culture of "too
Roy Wilkins (NAACP),
many of our young black
Whitney Young (National
'people. It tells our young
Urban League) and A.
minds, searching for a
Nat
. LETTERS TO THE
Philip Randolph · (labor
strong and proud racial
Hentoff
organizer and compelling
identity, that real blackness
EDITOR
integrationist). Today, howcomes with hard, cynical
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less ever, Jesse Jackson and AI
'gangsta' attitudes and
than 300 words. Allletrers are subject to editing, must be Sharpton are not of that
dressing like a convict with
signed. and include address and telephone number. No leadership quality - func· Rustin, a key strategist for your pants hanging down. It
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in tioning more and more · as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. offers images of women ...
good taste, addressing issues, nor personalities. Letters of self-promoters than educa- · Like Cosby, the prizes for getting their sense of selfthanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepttors.
Bayard were education that worth from dressing like
ed for publication.
But Dr. Bill Cosby (Ph.D. works, upwardly mobile ·· oversexed toys for boys ."
in education, University of jobs and a culture of selfBut Cosby, as Williams
Massachusetts) has become respect based on achieve- points out in "Enough," is
a
major,
forthright ment.
urging "people to invest in
spokesman for what can and
"Black politics (now)," their neighborhoods by not
(USPS 213-960)
must be done to carry for- writes Williams, "is still putting up with crime, even
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
ward the work of earlier . delined by events that took if it is committed . by their
Co.
Correction Polley
generations of black leaders place 40 years ago ... As a own children or the boy
Our main concern ·in all stories is to Published every afternoo~, Mond&lt;)y
in what A. Philip Randolph result, black politics is para- next 11oor, (and) he called
through Friday, 11 1 Court Street,
called "America's · unfin - lyzed. Late 20th-century for poor people to get guns
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio,
Second-class
ished (civil rights) revolu- black politics grew out of a out of their community ...
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
tion."
youthful. vibrant civil rights
''He told neighbors to
992-2156.
MEimber: The Associated Press alld
Cosby's spirit and ener- movement ... (while) today watch out for all the chilthe Ohio Newspaper Association. •
Postmaster: Send address correcgizing candor cours_es national black politics is dry drcn in the community and
Our main numbEir is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cou/1
through an important new and dusty with age."
not to be 'scared' to tell the
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
book - Juan Williams's
What
has
stirred
up
a
lot
parents
and the police when
Department extensions are:
"Enough: . The
Phony of 1hat dust, and continues children are running wild."
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One month
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52 Weeks
' 127.11
America's Civil Rights - "the crime, violence, oration of self-detc rminaE·mall:
Years, 1954-1965."
school dropouts, out-of- tion has led to the reviling
news@mydailysenlinel.com
Outside Meigs County
Williams's rallying cry, wedlock births ... among of Cosby by such black crit13 Weeks
'53.55
"Enough,"
would have black youths left behind by ics as University of
Web :
26 Weeks
•to7 .10
gladdened the heart of my civil rights reforms."
Pennsylvania humanities
52 Weeks
'21 4.21
www.mydailysentinel.com
friend, the late Bayard
A corollary
blight, professor Michael Eric

T~e

PageA4

SWCD
from PageA1

'

have four grown child~en
and nine grandchildren. He
is a member of the Masons,
Scottish Rite, Shriners,
National Rit1e Association,
Star Grange, Meigs County
Local 'Emergency Planning
Committee, Community
Improvement Committee,
and is a Rutland Township
Trustee.
He has been an SWCD
Supervisor since January,
1992, and serves on the
Buckeye Hills Resource
and
Conservation ·
Development Council and
Ohio
Mineland
the
Partnership.
Jeffers and his wife,

Jackie, reside on a 900-acre
dairy farm in Columbia
Township which he operates
with his brother and father.
They raise dairy and beef
cattle, hay and corn. They
.have three children.
He is a member of the
Columbia
Township
Volunteer Fire Department,
the Republican Central
Committee and is a
Columbia
Township
Trustee. He has been an
SWCD Supervisor since
· January, 1992.
Yost and her husband,
Chuck, have four children:
Carson, Stephen, Hannah
and Olivia. They operate a
250-acre dairy farm in
· Sutton Township ·with a
mixed herd of Jerseys and
. Holsteins and replacement
heifers. They also raise hay
and corn. She is a 1978

graduate of Meigs High
School and a member of the
Racine Grange.
Anyone who is a resident
from PageA1
of Meigs County or owqs
property in Meigs County, 30. Fares for the trip are
and i ~&gt; over 18 years of age, $18 for adults , $16 for
can vote in the election. senior citizens 60 and over,
Votes can be cast at the and $14 for children ages 3·
annual meeling or via 12 . The train will wind its
absentee ballot. Absentee way through the ' valley
ballots can be requested in glong the Hocking River to ·
writing beginning Sept. 5 Haydenville and then on to
and no later than Sept. 22. cast Logan over a century
Absentee ballots will also old right-of-way listed in
be available at the Meigs the National Register of
SWCD office at 33101 Historic Places.
The length of this ride is
Hiland Road, Pomeroy, and
about
22 miles and. lasts ,
will be accepted un,til2 p.m.
approximately 2 hours. The
the day of the election .
Tickets for the annual Hocking Valley Scenic
banquet ana meeting are Railway has been a family
available for $12 . at the friendly destination for the
SWCD office or from any past 34 years, serving the
SWCD' employee or board Hocking Hills Area of
Southeaste.rn Ohio.
member.

Call ·
Cory...

Train

1 1·1,~nHm
DONWOODINC_
AUTOMOTIVE
hi~DUGU!lnU.Ii~l~l

1m~U1re~~~lOOUII~m
*Get aSSOO Walmart
~ng spree whh the prilltl

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500 shopping wrd w~h FICO credilscore up lo 630, ond pu11hose of o used
vehide over $6,000. ~oler coniribu1ion moy offecl finol prite.

1
'

�'

Inside

•
Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

-· ··
I

I

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Bl

The Daily S~ntinel

Scoreboard, Page B2

•

• CaD The Dally Sentinel

1

c::::~:::~~~~::::::

....
·.·'' ----...'•..·.·

\

'

..

'

.

_.'""'

'fuesday, August 29, 2006

.·---------.J
---,

~

LocAL SCHEDULE

*
'

POMEROY ~

'
'
'
I
' ... - . '
~

A sd18dule of upcoming COllege

and higl school varsity &amp;!)Offing IWents invav.ng
· teams !rom Gallia, Mgigs and Mason oount~

Tuesday's QRmet

Volleyball
Eastern at South Gallia, 5:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan, 5:15p.m.
OVCS at Chesapeake, 5:30 p.m.

*

you made the mess
· you clean It up

Soccer

South Point at OVCS, 5:30p.m
Sissonville at Poi nt Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Sissonville at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m..
Golf
Gallia Aca demy, River Valley at
Cliftside, 4:30 p.m.
TVC Hocking at Waterford. 4:30 p.m.
Women's College Soccer
Pv1ount Verno n at Rio Grande, 4 p.m.

To
advertise in
this space
. Call
The Daily
.Sentinel
992-2155

eh . ~

©m. underhill

Wednesday 's games

Golf
TVC Ohio at Brass Ring, 4:30p .m.
Women's College Soccer
Blueheld College at Rio Grande, 4 p.m.

BIO LUMIN
NT
'F LASHLIGHT

Thursday's aames
Volleyball

River Valley at Fairland, 5:30p.m.
Southern at South Gallia. 6 p.m.
Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Vinton Co ., 6 p.m.
Soccer
OVCS at Gallia Academy, 5:30p.m.
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Golf
TVC Hocking at Trimble, 4:30p.m.
Wahama at Gallipolis, 4 p.m .
River Valley at Chesapi:lake, 4:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Point Pleasant, 4 p.m.

'Pure natural
light
adverti!ie in this space call

W~i·
Th~y

all ap~ar on this page
plus once more somewhere
I

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155 .

CD

Pressing Button
flips open the
.. .
. most recent Issue of Play Bug Magazine
excHing
firefly G) thus activating flashlight. ·

0

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\

Replacement fireflies
sold separately

Frlday't gamBB
Football
Gallia Academy at Vinton Co. 7:30p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Nelsonville-York, 7:30p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 7:30p.m.
Hannan at Symmes Valley, 7:30 p,m.
College Soccer
Rio at Auburn-Montgomery tourney, TBA
Colleg"" ·tolleyball
Aio Grande at Manetta tourney, TBA
College Cross Country
Aio Grande at Shawnee State, 5 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Baxter back
at practice
for Browns
BEREA (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns added a
mi ssin~ comer piece to their
defensive puzzle Monday.
Cornerback Gary Baxter
practiced .for the first time
since strammg h1s le~t ~c­
toral muscle in an exh1bttlOTI
Aug. 10 against Philadelphia,
and proclaimed himself ready
for the Sept. l 0 season opener against the New Orleans
Salnts.
.
pushing it as best I
can and I felt really good,"
Baxter said after coming off
the field. "I think - well, I
know l will be ready for the
first game ."
That's great news for the
Browns, who are already
without cornerback Daylon
McCutcheon, their surest
tackler and the most experienced player in their secondary. McCutcheon had
arthroscopic knee surgery
Aug. ·1 and it's unclear when
he' ll be ready to play.
McCutcheon was expected
to battle with Leigh Bodden
for the starting job on the left
side .
But
even
if
McCutcheon was 100 percent, Bodden may have beaten him out · after bemg
arguably the Browns' top
player in training camp.
While Baxter was out, Pete
Hunter and Ralph Brown
filled in at right comerback,
but both have been burned
for long passes in Cleveland's
past two exhibition games.
"If we can get a Gary
Baxter back on the tield, I
think it would help solidify
the position," Browns coach
Romeo Crennel said. "In the
meantime, we're takif!g a
look at guys like Ralph
Brown. I think he can come
in and do some things. He's
not Gary 'Baxter. particularly
when Gary is healthy and cao
play. We have to deal with
those things and we understand where we are.".

"''m

.. ·...
""\

..

These images show that if you apply baby face
proportions to any character you get cuteness. This
demonstrateS'the universal law of cuteness. Next week
we'll age our character from baby to toddler.

Redwomen
go 1-3 to
open season

mzmo~ ~ ~a~~els
FUP BOOK FUN .

OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

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EACH FRAI,IE. STACK IN
WITH # 1 ON IDP. PINCH
WITH FINGERS OR USE BINDER CLIP.
FLIP WIT.H THUMB FOR ANIMATION FUN.

PARENTAL SUPERVISION ADVISED

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E·mall- sports@mydallysenlinel.com

SJ&gt;Oilo.S.Iall

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

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
{740)446·2342, ext. 23
bwalters@mydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Wrller
{740)446·2342 , ext. 33
Ierum @ myda i lyregisler,com

STAFF REPORT ·
SPORTS@MYOAILY SENTINEL.COM

BY MARK WIU.IAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

TUPPERS PLAINS - This latest battle of the Eagles ·
wasn't muc)l of a battle at. all .
.
Eastern's Lady Eagles had little t~ouble defeatmg the
Belpre Lady Eagles 3-0 in interd1v1 s1onal Tn-Valley
Conference volleyball action on Monday. The defendmg
TVC Hocking champs won by scores of 25-7, 25-5 and 25-

DEARBORN, Mich.
The University of Rio
Grande. Redwomen volleyball team went 1-3 at the
Early Bird Tournament at
the University of Michigan- 9.
.
I
It
was
the
season
opener
for
both
clubs
as
high
school
vo
Dearborn over.the weekend.
Brannon
Hayman
Winebrenner
Rio ( 1-3) played stiff ley ball began for many teams all across the state on Monday.
Eastern jumped out to a big early lead 111 the ftrst game and three while assist leader Brittany Bis;el l added two points.
competition on Friday
against NAJA pre-season never looked back.
. .
Hayman and Darcy Winebrenner had .five kills each .to
No. 13 Georgetown (Ky.)
Jillian Brannon led the way with 20 points followed by 19 pace the winners . Weber added three k1lls and a block.
College and the host school, from Katie Hayman. Erin Weber added 13 and Kel s~y Brannon also had a kill.
Michigan-Dearborn, a vast- Holter seven. Morgan Wery and Amanda Eason ch1pped tn
Eastern is at South Gallia today.
ly improved and senwrladen team.
The Red women .were also
without the services of one
of their key freshmen as
Kari Rodgers was unable to
play due to injury.
In the opening match, Rio
lost a hard-fought contest
with Georgetown, 25-30,
and
27-30.
24-30
Sophomore outside hitter
The 2006 Pomeroy
Jessica Rodgers led the
Diamondbacks recently won
offense with nine kills while
their litt le league cham pifre shman Me!lan Wills folonship wrth a perfect 16-0
lowed up With • eight and
season. In front from left
senior outside hitter Jessica
are
Billy Duvall. Joey smith ,
Veach tallied five.
Jeffrey Roush. Cole Turner
Je ssica Rodgers was also
and Austin King. In middle
busy on the defensive ~nd
are Taylor Gilkey, Chris
recording
20
d1gs.
· Folm er, Cody Mattox, Dustin
Freshmen libero Summer
Ulbrich and Dustyn Lee. In
Rinehart matched Rodgers
back are coaches Tony
with 20 digs while . Veach
Gi lkey, Keith. Mattox and
posted 18 and sophomore
Bri an King. Not pictured is
setter Randi Rodgers had 15
digs.
Raymond Granat.
Randi handed out 30
Submined photo
assists in her first match as

League
Champs

Please see Rio. B6

Meigs win heats up ·
Ohio Division standings

CT Scanning At It's Best!

BY lARRY CHUM
LCRUM@MVDAILVREGISTER.CDM

JACKSON- At the midpoint of the season, the competition is really heating up atop the Tn-Valley Conference
Ohio Division as the defendmg champ10n
Meigs Marauders became the first repeat
winner of the season, defeatmg Belpre by
10 strokes to move into the second place
slot in the conference race Monday at
Fairgreens Country Club.
·
The Marauders posted a strong.l57 team
score while Belpre and medahst Wes
Coop~r placed second with a 167. Wellston
was just behind with a score of. 174: followed by Alexander with a 185, Vmton
.County with a 196 and Nelsonville- York
with a 244.
.
With the win, Meigs jumps Wellstl:!n !n
the Ohio. Division standings to be wnhm
one point Belpre who has 17 pomts
through four matches. Meigs has 16
points ·while Wellston ( 15 ), Alexander (7),
Vinto~ County (5) and Nelsonville-York
(0) round out the running order. .
The Marauders win was sparked by a
strong showing from the four, scorers, as
Steven Stewart and Joey Blackston shot
just under the 40 mark with a 38 and 39
respectively, wh1le Ktrk Legar and Dan
Blackston Bookman chimed in with a score of 40
apiece. ·
.
·
.h
Dustin Vanlnwagen also competed w1th a 45 along Wit
Tyler Andrews who shot a 64 for MHS. .
.
Gooper led all scorers with a 37 for Belpre and grabbed
medahst honors.
.
.
Meigs and the rest of the TVC-Ohio competttors Will .
return to the links Wednesday in Logan at the Brass Rmg
Golf Club.
· ·
·

tl(

tk lfl'ea

Pleasant Valley,Hospital is proud
to introduce vet another innovative

-

first... the 64-Siice CT Scan.

Rio women's soccer
falls 9-1 in opener
BY MARK WtU.IAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEl

Co:NTAcrUs

Eastern opens with easy win

GREENBURG - It was a
tough opening to the season
for the University of R1o
Grande Redwomen soccer
team, losing on the road at
Seton Hill 9-l on Saturday
afternoon .
It was the first of two
straight difficult contests for
the fledgling program, only
in its' second year of vars1ty
competition. Seton Hill ( 10) was runner-up in the
American
M1deast
Conference North Division
a year. ago and pl~yed like it
in rollmg to the VICtory over

Rio Grande (0-l ).
&gt;Seton Hill stormed to a 50 advantage before the
Redwomen were able to get
on the board with an unassisted goal by sophomore
forward Beth Hoffman 111
59th minute.
The Griffins · returned
high-scoring forward Nicole
Perger from last year's team.
Perger tallied 18 goals and
eight a~sists a season ago
and against Rio Grand~ she
picked up where she left off,.
netting a haHnck.
Stephanie Zangrilli added
two goals and one assist to

Please ,ee Soccer. 16

The scan is painless and enables
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�•

PageB2

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesda~August29,2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com

'Orrtbune - Sentinel -

Tuesday,August29,2006

•

PRO BASEBALL
American League

G8

New York

W
77

L
52

Pet
597

Boston

71

60

542

Toronto

69 62

7
527 9

Baltimore
Tampa Bay

59
52

454
397

18'l
26

Cantr11l Division
Detroit
M1nnesota
Ch•cago
Cleveland
Kansas C•ty

W
82
76

7'8

L
49

Pet
626

GB

53

589

5

54

585

61 69 469
47 85
356
West DIVISIOn
W L
Pet

G8

Texas

75
69
67

56
63
65

573
523 6'1
508 8 i

Seattle

62

69

473

Oakland
Los Angeles

13

Sunday's Games
Detro•t 7 Cleveland 1
Toronto 10 Kansas C1ty 6

a

N Y Yankees 11, L A Angels 8

Seattle 6 Boston 3
Texas 3 Oakland 0

Monday's Games
Cleveland 6 Toronto 4

Monday's Games
Oakland 9 Boston 0

Oakland 9 Boston 0
Seattle 2 L A Angels 0

Tuesday's Games
(Robertson

National League
WLPctG8
C1nctnnat1
67 65
508
San Otego
66 65 504
Phlladolphta
65 65
500

11 10) at NY

Yankees (Wang 15-5) 7 05 p m
Toronto (Chacm 6·3) at Cleveland
(Sabathta 9·8), 7 05 p m
Balttmore (A lopez 9 13) at Te~~;as
(Millwood 12 9) 8 05 p m
Tampa Bay (Fossum 6·5) at Chtcago
While Sox (Garcta 12 8) 8 05 p m
Kansas Ctty (Redman 7 8) at Mtnnesota
(Garza1·2} 810pm
Boston (Beckett 14 8) a! Oakland
(Saar1oos 6 6) 1D 05 p m
l A Angels (Weaver 9 1) at Seatlle
(Washburn7-~2) 1005pm
Wednesday's Games
Basion al Oakland 3 35 p m
Toronto at Cleveland 7 05 p m
Detrott at N Y Yankees 7 05 p m
Balttmore at Te~~;as 8 05 p m
Tampa Bay at Chtcago White Sox 05
pm
Kansas Ctty at M.nnesota 8 10 p m
LA Angels at Seat11e 10 05 p m

a

National League
East Division
W L Pet
New York
80 49 620
Phlladelphta
65 65 500
Flonda
64 66 492
61 68 473
Atlanta
Washtngton
55 75 423
Central Division
W L
Pet
69 6(\ 535
St Louis
Crnctnnatt
67 65 508
Houston
63 68 481
62 69 473
Mtlwaukee
54 n
412
Cl'\lcago
51 81
386
Ptttsburgh
West Division
W l
Pc1
Los Angeles
69 62
527
66 65
San Dtego
504
49E;
San FranCISCO 65 66
64 67
489
An zona
Colorado
61 69
469

GB

15 .
16 ,
19
25 ,

GB
31

7
8
16
19 1,

GB
3
4
5
7'h

Sunday's Games
Atlanta 13 Washmgton 6
Florida 4 Mtlwaukee 3
Phtladelphta at NY Mets ppd Rarn
Houston 13 Ptttsburgh 1
Colorado 6 San Otego 3
San Franctsco 8 Ctncmnatt o
L A Dodgers 6 Anzona 3
St Louts 10 Ch1cago Cubs 6
Monday's Games
NY Mets 8 Philadelphia 3
Pittsburgh 11, Chtcago Cubs 6
Florida 4, Milwaukee 2
Anzona 7 San Otego 4
L A Dodgers 6, Ctncmnat 5

Monday's Games
N Y Mats 8 Phtladelphta 3
Arizona 7 San D1ego 4
LA Dodgers 6 Ctnc•rynalt 5

0
0
0
0

Pet
667
333
333
333

PF
47
51
42
53

PA
59
60
54
61

TRANSACTIONS

PRO FOOTBALL
National Football League
Preseason Glance
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
WL T Pet
PF PA
New England 2 t0667 94 29
1 2 0 333 49 60
Mtam•
1 2 0 333 37 43
NY Jets
030000 61 78
Buffalo
South
WL T Pet PF PA
210667 65 51
Houston
210667 70 61
Jac.ksonvtlle
lndtanapolis
1 2 0 333 61 63
0 3 0 000 32 74
Tennessee
North
W L T Pet PFPA
Ctnctnnalt
3 0 0 100011151
2 1 0 667 47 53
Cleveland
Baltimore
1 2 0 333 43 57
Ptttsburgh
0 3 0 000 30 54
Weal
WL T P&lt;;t PFPA
Oakland
4 o o 1 000 76 :33
I Denver
2 1 0 667 65 44
I San D1eg0
2
0 667 51 47
Kansas City
1 2 0 333 30 53
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
PF PA
Dallas
3 0 0 1 000 57 17
NY Gtants
3 0 0 1 000 47 23
Phtladelphla
2
2 0 500 56 50
1
Washtngton
0 3 0 000 17 87
South
W L T Pel
PF PA
3 0 0 1 000 50 33
Caro"na
Atlanta
2 1 0 667 56 67
1 New Orleans 1 2 0 333 40 70
Tampa Bay
1 2 0 333 44 45
North
W l T Pet PF PA
1
Mmnesota
2 1 0 667 60 33
Chtcago
1 2 0 333 54 54
DetrOit
1 2 0 333 39 54
Green Bay
1 2 0 :333 58 75

T

Thursday a Game
Carolina 19 Mlamt 10
Friday 's Games
Mtnnesota 30 Baltimore 7
NY G1ants 13 NY Jets 7
Philadelphia 1ti, P1ttsburgh 7
Anzona 23. Chtcago 16
Oakland 21 Detrotl 3
Saturday's Games
Cleveland 20 Butfalo 17
lnd•anapol•s 27 New Orleans 14
Dallas 17 San Franc1sco 7
Atlanta 20 Tennessee 6
Jacksonville 29 Tampa Bay 18
New England 41 Washtngton 0
Kansas Ctty 16 St Lou1s 12
San Otego 31 Seattle 20
Sunday's Game
Denver 17 Houston 14
Monday's Game
Cmcmnah 48 Green Bay 17
Thursday, Aug 31
Buffalo at Delrott 7 30 p m
St Louts at Mtam1 7 30 p m
Carolina at Ptltsburgh 7 30 p m
Jacksonville at Atlanta 7 30 p m
New England at NY Gtants 7 30 p m
Mtnnesota at Dallas 8 p m Balltmore at Washington 8 p m
Tampa Bay at Houston 8 p m
Chtcago al Cleveland 8 p m
New Orleans at Kansas C1ty 8 30 p m
Oakland at Seattle 10 p m
Denver at Anzona 10 05 p m
Friday, Sept 1
Tennessee at Green Bay 4 p m
Phtladelphla at NY Jets 7 p m
Cmcmnalt at lndtanapolls 7 p m
San D~ego at San Franctsco 10 p m

m

Wild Card Glance
American League
WLPc1G8
Mtnneso\a
76 53
589
585
76 54
Ch1cago
71 60
542 6
Boston

Balt1more 5 Tampa Bay 4
Chrcago Wh•te Sox 6 M1nnesota 1

Detrott

Weat
W L
Anzona
2 1
St Louis
1 2
San Franctsco 1 2
Seanle
1 2

a

East Division

71
79

Tuesda~ s Games
ChiCago Cubs (Zambrano 14 5) at
Ptnsburgh (Maholm 6 10) 7 05 p m •
Phlladelphta (Myers 9 6) at Washtngton
(Armas 9} 7 05 p m
San Franc•sco (Schm•dt 10-7) at Atlanta
(T Hudson 10-10} 7 35 p m
Mtlwaukee (Ohka 4·3) at Houston
(Oswah 10 8) 05 p
Florida (Olsen 10·7) at St Lou s
(Mulder 6-6) 8 10 p m
N Y Mets (Trachsel 13-5) at Colorado
(B Kim 7-9), 9 05 p m
San Diego (Young 9·5) at Anzona
(En Gonzalez 3·5) 9 40 p m
C1nctnnat1 (Mtllon 8·7) al LA Dodgers
(Hendnckson 5·14) 1010 p m
Wednesdays Games
Chicago Cubs al Ptltsburgh 12 35 p m
1 San D1ego at Anzona 6 40 p m
Phtladelphta at Washmgton 7 05 p m
San Franctsco at Atlanta 7 35 p m
Milwaukee at Houston 8 05 p m
Flonda at St LOUIS 8 10 p m
N Y Mets al Colorado 9 05 p m
Cmctnnatt at LA Codgers 10 10 p m

I

Mond'!Y'I Sporte Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON REO SOX-PurChased the
contract of 18 Carlos Pena from
Pawtucket ot the IL Placed LHP Jon
Lester on the 15·day DL, retroactiVe to
Aug 24 and OF Adam Stern on the 60·
day OL
SEATILE MARINER$--Called up RHP
1 Jon Huber from Tacoma of the PCL
I TORONTO BLUE JAYs-Recalled INF
Russ Adams from Syracuse of the IL
OptiOned INF Ryan Roberts to Syracuse
National League
CHICAGO CUB5-Achvated 1B Oerrek
Lee from the 15-day DL Optioned INF
Buck Coats and RHP Jae Kuk Ryu to
Iowa of the PCL
CINCINNATI REDS-Agreed to terms
w1th C Javter Valentm on a one year con
1 tract extensiOn through 2007 AcqUired
RHP Tim Bausher from the Boston Red
So)( for RHP M1ke Bums
HOUSTON ASTROS--Recalled INF
Enc Brunttett and C Humberto Quintero
j irom Round Rock of the PCt OptiOned
C J A House and AHP Chns Sampson
I to Round Rock
1
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Opttoned
tNF Danny S.andovat to Readmg of the
EL
PITISBURGH PIRAT.E5-P1aced LHP
Mtke Gonzalez and
LHP Tom
Gorzelanny on the 15 day DL
Destgnated RHP Bnn Reames for
ass1gnment Purchased the contracts of
RHP Marty Mcleary and RHP Brian
Rogers and recalled RHP Jonah Bayliss
1 frorri Indianapolis of the IL
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ARIZONA CAADINALS-Wa1ved DE
Kenny Ktng RB Roger Robinson 08
Rohan Davey K Ntck Novak P Fred
1 Capshaw and ..t.B Lawrence Ptnson
I Placed DE Anton Palepol on Injured
reserve
BUFFALO BILLS- Waived OL Aaron
Gtbson OT Dylan McFarland DE

I
I

I

1

CLASSIFIED

Joshua Cooper DB James Belhea, DB
Rob Lee K Nicholas Sana WR Chns
Denney WR Martin Nance and OS Kltff
Southaaatern Ohio Athletic League
Kmgsbury
North DIYIIIon
CLEVELAND BROWNS-Watved TE
ALL
SEOAL
Paul Irons RB Chrts Barclay P Kyle
PF
W-l
PF
PA
W·l
Basler DL Ja Waren Blair OS Lang
27
0-0
0
0
1·0
Warren
Campbell K Jeff Chandler OL Atlas
53
0-0
0
0
1-Q
Zanesv1lle
Hernon LB Kenny Kern WA Brandon
16
D-0
0
0
01
Athens
Rtdeau and 08 James Thornton
0
D-0
0
0
0·1
Logan
DALLAS COWBOYS-Waived WA I Marietta
13
D-0
0
0
0·1
LaShaun Ward CB Lenny Williams S
South Dlvl1lon
ALL
Justin Benault, WA J A Tolver and K
SEOAL
PF
W·L
PF
PA
W-l
Tyler Frednckson
14
Chl!llcothe
0-0
0
0
1·0
HOUSTON TEXANS-Wa1ved WA
30
00
0
0
1·0
Gallla Academy
Dertck Armstrong, LB Barren Green S
24
Ironton
0·0
0
0
1-Q
Ramon Walker TE Patnck Hape G Mtke
28
0·0
0
0
10
Jacksoo
Bnstel DE Jolin Chtck DT Oevartck
71
0
0
0
0
1-Q
Portsmouth
Scandrett RB Damten Rhodes , WR
Kendnck Starling WR Donovan Morgan
Friday, September 1
Frlday'l resulll
S Anthony Floyd CB Earthwtnd
Athens at Metgs
Nelsonvtlle-York 56, Athens 16
Moreland and LB Saleem Rasheed
Logan at ChUIIcothe
Chtlhcotne 14, Brookhaven 5
Placed KR Jerome Malhts on the physt·
Gallta Academy at V1nton Co
G Academy 30 Shendan 13
cally unable to per1orm list
Ironton at Olentangy ltberty
Ironton 24 Wheelersburg 21
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS-WaiVed WR
Jackson at Waverly
Lancaster 38 Logan 0
Monttese Culton WR Ashlan Dav1s Dl
Marietta at Cambndge
Parkersburg S 28 Martetta 13
Ph1H1p Ale)(ander, DL Jason Dav1s DL
Portsmouth al Portsmouth West
PortsmoUih 71, Chesapeake 4-4
Mark Word OT Kader Drame Dl Justin
Warren at Phtlo
Warren 27 Belpre 6
Brown 08 Shannon Fttzhugh, DB
Zanesville at Newark
Zanesville 53 Whltehall13
Jammal Lord and TE Joey Hawkms
Saturday's result
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-WaiVed K
Jackson 28 Wellston 7
Selh Marler WR Troy Edw~rds and WA
Felton Huggtns
Ohio Valley Conference
1 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Placed RB
All
ovc
Pnest Holmes and S Wilham Bartee on
W·L
PF
W-l
PF
PA
the physically unable to perform list
1-Q
30
Coal Grove
WaiVed LB NICk Reid WA Kyle Brown,
1·0
18
Atver Valley
WR Darrell Hill, WR Scott McCready,
0-1
44
Chesapeake
0·0
0
0
WR Craphonso Thorpe CB Just1n
D-1
28
Fatrland
0·0
0
0
Perk1ns CB Jerald Brown QB Jeff
D-1
24
Rock Hill
0-0
0
0
D-1
7
Smoker G Steve Franklm G Peter
0-0
0
0
South Patnt
Heyer G Tyler Landa TE Adam
F.rlday, September 1
Friday's results
Johnson TE Robert Docherty and DT
Chesapeake at Wayne
Portsmouth 71 Chesapeake 44
Aanon 01Kon
Coal Grove 30 Lawrence Co 6
Fa1rv1ew et Coal Grove
1 OAKLAND AAIDERS-5tgned QB Jeff
Portsmouth W 35 Fatrland 28
Wmfteld at Fatrland
George Wa1ved TE Marcellus Atvers
Atver Valley at Nelsonville·York
A1ver Valley 18 Southeastern 12
OL Rod Green OS Regg1e Robertson
Wheelersburg at South Po1nt
Tols1a 33 Rock Hill 24
DB Raymond Washington K Davtd
Johnson Central 35 S Pomt 7
Ktmball and P Glenn Pakulak
1
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES- Acqwed
WA Dante Stallworth from the New
Tri·Valley Conference
Orleans Satnts tor LB Marte Simoneau
Ohio Division
and a condl\tonal2007 fourth-round draft
All
TVC
p1ck
W·l
PF
W·l
PF
PA
1
PITISBURGH STEELERS-Beleased
, ,0
29
Ale)(ander
D-0
0
0
DB Zach Baker, K Mark Brubaker OT
10
49
MetgS
00
0
0
1-0
56
Ntck Hagemann G Grayling Love FB
Nelsonville-York
00
0
0
1·0
26
V1nton County
0·0
0
Doug Eastick C Kyle Andrews, LB
01
6
Belpre
Malcolm Postell and WR Isaac West
01
7
Wellston
Placed OT Ullsh Booker on the in1ured
Hocking Division
reserve
ALL
TVC
ST LOUIS RAMS-Placed
Claude
W·l
PF
W·l
PF
PA
Terrell on tn]ured reserve
t 0
14
Southern
0·0
0
0
SEATILE SEAHAWKS--Stgned TE
00
0
0
10
12
Waterford
Leonard Stephens Wa1ved S Shaunard
0·1
21
Eastern
00
0
0
Harts S Brandon Haw, CB Regg1e
Federal Hockmg
00
0
0
' 0·1
0
Austin CB Larry Fraz1er Of Alex
01
0
Miller
0·0
0
0
Guerrero, FB Ran Carthon, LB Evan
00
0
0
01
0
Tnmble
Ben1amm, C Taylor Schmid\ G Jeff
Friday, September 1
Friday's ruutta
Bollon, TE Ketth Willis P Gabe
Alexander at Tnmble
Alexander 29 Eastern 2,
Undstrom, WR Taco Wallace, WR Tony
,I
Fort Frye at Belpre
Warren 27, Belpre 6
Brown, WR Keenan Howry and QB
Athens at Me1gs
Me1gs 49, Oak Hill 6
Glbran Hamdan
I
Rwer Valley at Nelsonvtlle·York
Nelsonville-York 56 Athens 16
Gallta Academy at Vinton County
Vtnton County 26, Unloto o
TENNESSEE TITAN$-Signed QB
Caldwell 6, Federal Hocking 0
M1nford at Wellston
Kerry Collins
Maysville 41, Miller 0
South Gallia at Eastern
WASHINGTOIN AEDKSINS-Wa1vecl P
1 David Lon1e
Federal Hocking at Wahama
K Tyler Jones. OL Jon
Southern 14 Symmes Valley 1
Millersport at M11ler
Berne Umon 20 Tnmble 0
Alston, Ol Jim Jones QB Casey
Fronher at Watertord
Waterford 12 Wahama 0
Bramlet D.B Anc W1IUams OS Antuan
Spturday, September 2
Edwards TE Robert Johnson TE Calen
Saturday'• result
Jackson 28 Wellston 7
Southern at Notre Dame
Powell, Dl Chns M1neo, DL Karon A1ley
and LB Kev1n Stmon
,
Non-League I Other
1
HOCKEY
ALL
National Hockey League
1
W-L
PF
PA
ANAHEIM
DUCKS- Re signed
D
10
39
7
South Gall1a
Bruno St Jacques to a one year con
0·1
7 o.
39
Hannan
tract
01
20
28
Po1nt Pleasant
BOSTON BRUtNS-S1gned LW T J
0 1
0
12
Wahama
Trevelyan to a mulltyear contract
Frlday, Seplember 1
Friday's
re1ults
LOS ANGELES KING5-Named Bobby
South Galha 39, Hannan 1
South Gall1a at Eastern
Walls rehabtlttatton tratner
Waterford 12, Wahama 0
Federal Hock1ng at Wahama
COLLEGE
Hannan at Symmes Valley
Rtpley 28 Potnt Pleasant 20
NCAA-Named Karen Mornson d~rector
SISsonville at Po1nt Pleasant
of gender tmllal1ves and student·athlele
j well bemg
MOUNT
ST
JOSEPH-Named
Melanee Atkinson women s basketball
coach

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

PA

6
13
56

36

PA

5
13
21

7

1

o-o
o-o

1

I

o
o

44

Call TOday...

o-o
o-o

o
o

o
o

HOW IQ WRITE AN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - If Andre
Agass1 keeps th1s up, It's
gomg to be absolutely
exhausting For htm , for h1s
opponent, tor h1s tans, for
everyone at the U S Open
Knowmg each ttme he
steps on the court could be
h1 s last match as a pro,
Agasst clearly does not
want to go gently, and he
kept overcomlng def1c1ts
Monday mght, pushmg hts
36-year-old body around
Arthur Ashe Stadium for 3
112 hours
Eventually, Agasst managed to wm the ftrst match
of hts hnal tournament,
commg back to beat Andrei
Pavel of Roman1a 6-7 (4),
7-6 (8 ), 7-6 (6), 6-2 before
an Open-record mght sesswn crowd of 23.736.
Agassl's eyes welled up
w1th tears as he served out
the "hnal potnt after mtd·
ntght
"I want to be here real
bad, for the whole two
weeks," Agass1 told the
crowd dunng a postmatch
mtervtew. "I really want to
leave my best stuff on the
coun ... I'm very proud of
th1s day, and l'm glad tt
gets to happen agam "
There were moments,
though, when ttlooked as if
Agasst would be b1ddmg
ad1eu for good After he
lost the f1rst set, for example. And especially when he
fell behind 4-0 m the third
set, causmg h1s wtfe, former star Steffi Graf, to pace
a b1t
"I thou~;ht, " Pavel sa1d,

PA
21

8
16

0

o
o

27
28

PA

7
0
29

6
41
20

Current rate car
pplles
Real
Estat
dvertlaamenta ar
ub)ect to Ule Federa
air Housing Act o
968

www,mydailysentioel.com

"'I have h1m ,.

Yet that's when Agasst
found the energy and shots
to
reverse
thtngs
Comc1dence or not, he went
on a ltve-game run shortly
after motionmg to h1 s
coach. Darren Cah1ll, to
bnng htm mo're t1ghtly
strung rackets It also was
around that t1me that Pavel

(8), 7-6 (6 ), 6-2'
AP photo

3.

Roddick, who ended a
I0-month title drought after
teaming w1th Connors ,
JOined four other past Open
champiOns who reached the
second round L1ndsay
Davenport, Justme HeninHardenne,
Svetlana
and, of
Kuznetsova
course, Agassi - bad back,
9· 7 re&lt;.:ord th1s year, and all.
Next for Agasst IS a
match agamst eighlh-seed·
ed Marcos Baghdaus of
Cyprus, a 21-year-old player who reached the
Australian Open fmal and
W1mbledon semifinals th1s
year He should be a sterner
test than Pavel
Agasst won the Open in
1994 and 1999, part of h1s
collectiOn of e1ghl Grand
Slam titles, and was the
runner-up tour ume s,
mcludmg last year. When

I

Agass1 won that ftrst U.S
Open champ10nshtp, h1s
blond hair was long and
tucked under a ballcap, hts
shirt was a loud purple, and
he wore a pmk1e nng and
dangling earnng
Hard to believe that same
person was under the lights
at Arthur Ashe Stadium on
Monday. Look at AgaSSl
now. shaved head, country·
club-ready whtte outfit, and
the beaded necklace that
reads, "Daddy Rocks,"
made by h1 s son. Both of
Agass1's children were in
the stands; m the fourth set,
Graf was us1ng a video
camera, just like any parent
on an ouung with the k1ds
Agass1's father was there,
too, as was hts brother Phtl
" It would be mce tf he
wms, but It's not Important
really," Phtl Agasst satd

before the match. "Even tf
he loses love and love, tt
won't put a damper on
everything he's done
Everyone IS here, the whole
off1ce and the whole famtly"
Agasst stepped out of the
locker room, dropped h1s
racket back on the carpet
and took a few moments to
stretch After walkmg out
on to the court to a rousmg
ovauon, he shared a hug
wnh Kmg, who handled the
com toss.
"You're going all the
way!" came a shout from
the stands.
After trottmg back to a
baseline tor the prematch
warmup, Agass1 paused ,
glanced around the arena
and took u deep brealh.
He knew, alter all, th1s

moment would arrive. It
was time to take 11 all in
Once play began, the
beseechmg cnes of "Let's
go, Ahhn-dray !" could, m
theory, have been for either
compelltor Just to make it
absolutely clear how the
crowcj felt, one man yelled
out in the second tiebreak·
er: "There's only one
Andrei"
Late 111 the second set,
some fans began applaudmg Pavel's faults, and the
chatr umpire repeatedly
asked for quiet. As Pavel
presctently put 1t before·
hand "I hope there are
gomg to be f1ve or stx peo·
ple cheering for me "
The flash bulbs popped
from the start, dunng
warmups, between games,
between points. Dunng
potnts, even

Ohio Valley
Publishing resenl'es
the rlghtiO edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time
Errors
Must
B
eported on the ft
of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
eglater
will
b
etponalble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
the error and onl
he ftrsl Insertion W
hall not be liable to

)'8oJt: number ads a
lways confidential

1

won 6-7 (4), 7-6

*PDLICIES*

made In the firs
vallable edition.

I

Andre Agass1 of
the United
States pumps
his fists after
defeatmg Andrei
Pavel of
Romama at the
us Open tennis
tournament 1n
New York,
Tuesday. Agassl

~

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OecultitM
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And Agasst provtded
some
ptcture-perfect
moments, glimpses of h1s
glonous past, of the player
who's won 60 smgles utles
He smacked 17 aces at up
to 125 mph . He took as btg
a cut as you'll ever see on
some groundslrokes, as
though puttmg whatever
energy he mtght have lett
into each swmg. He used
what was often considered
h1s trademark, the hard-htt
return , to gain the advantage at t1mes One example.
He turned around a 123
mph serve with a backhand
return nght al the baseline
that Pavel couldn't handle,
g1vmg Agasst a 9-8 edge m
the second tiebreaker
Yet it was also clear why
he dectded to announce two
days before the start of
Wimbledon, 111 late June,
that th1s would be his
farewell event Over and
over, Pavel would end
points wtth short drop shots
that Agass1 wouldn't even
chase Agassl double-fault·
ed eight ttmes. And as
much ol a baseline tactician
as Agasst always has been,
11 was Pavel who had the ,
better of many of thetr
lengthy
~roundstroke
exchanges, wmning 14 of
21 points that lasted I 0
strokes or longer.
Still, on one of those
points, Agass1's defense
was enough that Pavel
satled a backhand long lo
end the second set. Agasst
pumped h1s ftst toward
Cahill and others in the
players' bolt, then shook hts
racket in Graf's directwn.
The speclalors rose m
unison, staying on their feet
and applaudmg throughout
the changeover. When it
was ume to start the third
set, Agasst skipped out to
the baselme, loeking down·
right childlike.
"He's the man nght now,"
Pavel said "I Wish him
well. I hope he can ~o all
the way He deserves 11."

'

newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ar:la meetln
OE standards
we will not knowing
accept 1ny adver
lsement in vlolati

\\\PI \1 I 'II \ I \

r

ANNoUNOMMS

992·2157

All Dllplay: 12. Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Daya Prior To
Publlatlon
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thuraday far Sundaya

be prepaid•

POLICIES· Ohio Velley Publishing ,....rvu tht rt~t to tdll, rtt-c', or ea~ eny ad 111: 1ny time Error• mu11 IMI repor1ld on the flret cily ot
Trlbune-Sen!lnei-Aegleter will be rnponetbil fiH" no mGfl then the c011 of the IPBI occupied by the .,-or end only thel!ret lneer11on We
eny lo:M~e or 111penM that multi from ltM pubMcatlon or o""ealon of en a&lt;tvtr1Jeement Correction will be made In the fire! lllellebl• .clition
are elw1~ confldenllat • Current r81:1 card apptiM • All ,..I ..tate edvert!Mmente .,.
to the Fttdllret Fair Houatng Act or 1968
eda
I
Nnd1rd1 We will
I
Ylo1111on of tht lew

WANI'ID
To Do

I:r;::;Y:ARD:;S:AJ£=:

an e
an s oca
roups lndtvtduai-Artlsts fo
pen Mtke and Them
lght Opemng Soon Stat
heater, Live Entertmnman
01nt Pleasant (304)542

08

GIVF.AWAY

r

i1

YARD SALE·

=
"

~--oiGiiAWPOLLSiiiiiiitiliiiloo,.l

E
0

'
Garage Sale Rain or Sh1ne
4466 SA 554 Thursday &amp;
Fnday Ll\llrtg room sutte
treadmill mens womens,
boys g1r1s &amp; baby clothes,
Infant car seat toys ndlng
lawn mower go cart end
tables coffee table lamps &amp;

"

t

;

.s"
lli

Overbrook RehabilitatiOn
Center ts currently accepting
applications
lor
HouseKeeping oi Laundry
part lime positton All1nter
ested applicants should p1ck
up an appllcatton at 333
Page Stree1 Middleport
OH For further tn1ol'mat10n,
please contact Lmda at
(7401992·6472 E 0 E

®

lfl

HoMEN
FOR

Hook-n-Go Local Hatler
mov1ng 25 mile rad1us
(740)368 8228

,••iltl!fi"-EiliEffi

~~-------· lots of mise
----1 male Boston Terner/ Garage sale· Thursday·

Magic Years Da~ Care Pre
School Inc, Opentngs ava11
able now accepting Fall
Enrollment State Licensed
~Putlmg Children Ftrst "
(304)675 5847
Wanted to Do Housmg
Cleaning (740)339 0537
(740)339-0546

m•x 4 yr old male Elhew wtth stand clothtng, lots of
Point (740)44l ·0405
miSC Items

Weight No More
All
Natural Nutrition
Fast
Easy Weight Loss Doctor
Formulated
lnd tvldually
Coached Programs
740742·2092 ask for Dav1d
Robmson
Herbaltle
independent Distnbutor

Free to good home, all vac· Good School Clothmg mise,
cmaiiOns current many home mtenor, furniture 1
s•zes, many colors of kittens mile below dam 8131/06 1 4
(740)245-5186
Yard/Mov1ng Craft Bustness
K1ttens free to good home Sale Fnday/Saturday 330
Keeler Ad off Bulav!He Ptke
Call (740)446 3510
Chnstmas crafts Baby tod
dler boy &amp; gtrl clothes and
much morel
Found
Chocolate
Lab
PoMEROY!MmoLE
Male, Duly Ad area Please
call (740)446·4043 to 1dent1·
Bakers Tanner Run Sept
ly
1st and 2nd 740 949 2723
Furniture
appliances
Chnstian books, etc Ratn or
Sh1ne

LOST Male Bassett Hound

Huge Sale Lots of clothes
and mtsc 31st 1st 2nd 1!4
Bud Chattin area needs
Mads Reward (J04 }895 . mile from ParMar on 833
Dtll Aes1dence Pomeroy
Multt Fam11y Yard Sale
Noble Summt and Neece
Road Sept 1s1 and 2nd

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale........ • ................................ 725

.... . . .

....

030

Antiques ............ , ....................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent • . ... ...... . •.......... 440
Auction and Flea Markel.. ........... . . . .. 980
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .. •................. 760
Auto Repair.....................
...•.•. • .•• 770
Autos lor Sale
...................... 710
Boats 6 Motors lor Sale.. .
750
Building Supplies • ..••
• ................550
Bustnusand Bull~tngs.. ...
• .340
Buslnus Opportunity
........................ 210
Buslnoas Training .....
.. .• 140
Campara I Motor Homas ....................... 790
Clmplng Equipment.....
••• 780
Corda of Thanks .................. .................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ......
.. ... I 90
EtoctrtcaURelrlgeratlon .......................... 840
Equipment lor Rent....
• .................. 480
Excavating....... • ........ ••
••.. •............ 830
Farm Equipment.. .................... , .............. 610
Farms lor Rant,........... •.......:.... .••.. ..... 430
Farms lor Sale ............................................ 330
For Leese .................... , .................... 490
For ~ale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade .................................... 590
Fruits 6 Vegetabtea .................................... 580
Furnlohed Rooms ... ............................. .... 450
General Hauling .......... .............................. 850
Giveaway.................................................040
Happy Ada •
.. .............................050
Hay &amp; Grein .. ...............................................640
Help wanted ..............................................110
Home lmprovementa ...................................810
Home• lor Sola ........... ............................ 310
Household Goods .... .............................. 510
Houses lor Rent......... . ...
•••• .. ............ 410
In Memoriam ....................................... 020
Insurance......
........ .. .......................... 130
Lawn ll Garden Equipment... .................. 660
Livestock ..............................................630
Lost and Found ........ •• . ....... • ......... 060
Loll 6 Acreage ....................................... 350
Mtscallaneouo.... .. ....... • .• •• .....
. •• 170
Mlscellaneoua Merchandlae.. • ........
• ..540
Moblla Home Repair............ • .... • •....860
Mobllo Homeo lor Rent............. • .......... 420
Moblla Homes lor Sate......... ........ • .. .. ... 320
Money to Loan...... .............. • •. .... • ••
..220
Motorcyeleo &amp; 4 Wheelers .................... 740
Muotcat Instruments ............................. 570
Parsonala.. ......... . .. ............................ 005
Pels lor Sate ......................................... ... 550
Plumbing &amp; Healing .................................. 820
Prolusional Sarvlcea......... • ...... • .... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ... ....................... 160
Real Eatato Wanted ... ,... . ............ ......... 360
Sehooto lnotrucllon .................................. I 50
Sood, Plant &amp; Fertilizer ................... 650
Slluatlono Wanlad .................................. 120
Space lor Rani. .. ........
. ............... 460
Sporting Good• ........ ,, ....................... 520
SUV's tor Sale.........
•••••
.......... 720
Trucko lor Sale •. .. ................................ 715
Upholstery.... . ... .......
.. .... 870
Vans For Sole.. ..... ................................... 730
Wanted to Buy...........
.................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ................ 620
wanttld To Do .... .....
. ...... .. ......... 180
Wanted to Rant .......... ........................... 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis ................................ 072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle ..................... 074
Yard Sate-Pl. Pleasant . ........ .. ........... 076

1

~~

www comtcs com

&lt;C1 2006 by NEA, Inc .

Y&lt;IRD SAI£·

074

Found M1xed Female Dog
Approx 1yr old Good
natured tnendly &amp; lovable
(740)256 111 t to 1r:lent11y

RN NURSES

Sepl 1st &amp; 2nd Mtddleport
corner of Ma1n &amp; Front St
furmture clothing, home fur·
nlshlngs crafts etc 9 5
Yard Sale 1 1/2 m1le out
Story s Run Hobson Sept
1st and 2nd Large 5 famtly

r__

,..I.

'!,.ANTEDiiiBiiiiiN
....

Absolute Top Dollar US
Sliver and Gold Coms
Proofsets Gold Rmgs Pre·
1935
US
Currency
Sollta1re Dtamonds M T S
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gat11polls 740 446
2842
I wtll buy ~
(7401388 9303

.c.ar:&amp;

Call

Want to buy Junk Cars
(304)773-5004
Zuspan Metal Salvage Now
buy1ng tunk cars buses
pipe
l·beam
tin
etc
Mason WV 304-593 1904
! \ 11'1 II\ \11 \ I

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1IO
1•

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1•110

HF.IJ' WANIU&gt;

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. •

IIFLPWANI'ID

I~;~~;;~~~

~~~10

..

Clinical Supervtsor/QMRP
FT. salary w1th benef1ls
Must be profiCient 1n
FORGET what you
Mtcrosott Word Excel wtth
have heard about
good organ~zattonal skills
telemarketing
Must have a BS in Human
Our professtonal
Serviced field w•th a mtm·
environment has
mum of 2 yrs e)(penence
enabled us to become
Wllh MR/00, two yrs 6f prothe leader 1n the
gressW..ely responsible manTeleserv1ces Industry
agement
expenence
lor over 20 years
Work1ng
knowledge of
Federal State and local regBeneftll hldude.
ulations concerntng serv~ees
Up to $8 hour a
to persons With MAIDD
generous bonus plan
Must present an openness
401·K, health benefits,
to learn, develop sktlls and
weekly pay pa1d vaca
promote poslttve change
t1on and paid holidays
Responstble for overall oper·
atlons of assigned servtce
We spectallze In
sites, tncludtng staff budgmaktng calls for the
et
compliance
w1th
NRA Paid lratmng is
Stale/Federal RegulatiOns
provided so no
Wtil manage two 1-bed
previous experience Is
m
group
homes
needed
Chesapeake. OH assure
actl\le lreatment,
dally
callt-Bn-463-6247
supervision ot consumers
exl. 2331 to Hnd oul
and staff assure adherence
why our emplOyees
to regulations and policies
are sattsfled
Must be able to travel
between serVIces sites
An Excellent way to earn staying overnight tf neces
sary Supervise 4·person
money Ths New Avon
management
team and
Call Martlyn 304·88:2 2645
direct care staff to achieve
service, clinical and financial
AVONt All Areas! To Buy or
ob}ectlves within general
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
resource and reimburse·
675 1429
ment models
Contact Cindy Ptnkerman
Nurse
HR a1 740 867-3051 lax
A New Point of VIew

Are you Inspired to help the resume to 740·867·3181 or
elderly ltve life to the fullest? e
m
a
I
Put your sKills lo use and

Hw WANTFD I

jotn HCR Manor Care for a
. challengtng and rewarding
Cosmetologist needed Call
career I
(740)446-7425
100 WORKERS NEEDED
MDS NURSE
~ Assemble crafts
FEDERAL
wood Items
COORDINATOR/
To $480/wk
POSTAL JOBS
ADON
Materials provided
$15 67·$26 19/hr, now hlr·
Free tnformatlon pkg 24Hr
lng For appllcatton and tree
Qualifications lncl ud e a cur80 1·428-4649
governement job Info call
rent AN ltcense In Ohio 2 American Assoc 01 Labor 1•
A 9 year comp any 1s looking years o1 long term care
913-599-8042, 24/hrs emp
lor a well motivated HVAC
experience MDS experi· serv
Install er
artd
helper ence prelerred Strong man·
Expenence Is preferred Pay agement and communlca- -:-:--~--::.,---:c=-=:Is based on expenence II han sk1ns are a musll Prior HOME HEALTH AIDES
Interested call (740}44t · superv1sory expenence We SIGN ON BONUS Home
t236 and leave message otter competiUve pay ad a Health Care of SE Ohio Is
comprehensive
baneflls currently htrlng home aides·
with recepttonlst
package Including 401(k) competitive wages
Call
With company match, tutt 1on 740·662·1222
assistance and morel
-------HVAC Positions Available
With A Well-Established
Please forward resume to
Athens Area Contractor
Bonnie McCain NHA or
Cheryl Bolen HA Heartland
We Have Openings tor a
of Jackson, 8668 SA 93,
• NO EXPEA ENCE NECESSARY
• FULL TIME CLASSES
ServiCe Technician and an
Jackson. OhiO 45640
'CDL TRAINING
Fax 740·:28SMD295
Installer Must have 3 Years
'FINANCING AVAILABLE
"JOe PLACEMENT
E~perl8nce
and Clean
Vtstt us onhne at
ENROLLING NOW
www ha manorcare com Drlvtng Record 80% of
EEO/Orug·Free Employer Work In Athens Area
EKcellent Wages Basad on
ALLIANCE
E~~;perlence Send Detailed
People Strength
TRACTOR TRAILER
Resume To
Commitment

©IID!b

TR AINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1-800·334·1203

At 35 Adult Book Store need HVAC Pos1ttons
Midnlt)ht Clerk Full t1me PD Bo• 363
The Platns Oh 45780
(304)937-4900 Drug Test

HElPWANI'ID

Local Electncal DIStributor
seek•ng a part t1me dnver
muS1 be 21 years old with a
valid dnvers license Contact
West Vtrgtma Electnc I 885
Eastern Ava , GallipoliS

Pleasant Valley Hospttal
Is currently accepting
resumes for Full t1me·
Registered Nurses
Applicants must have a
current West Vtrgmta
license Fle111ble
scheduling, excellent
salary, holidays health
Insurance single/family
pian dental plan, life
Insurance vacation
long-term d1sabtl1ty and
rettrement
Send resumes to
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dnve
POint Pleasant WI/
25550
(304)875-4340

Lookmg for a trustworthy
AAIEOE
tndlvtdual for housecleaning
Approx 1 day per week
Reference
requ1red Wanted Direct Superv1ston
(740)441·9593
Employees to oversee male
youth tn a staff secure reSI
LPN's PAN and Casual r:lsntlal enwonment Must
Contact Angie McMillin at pass a phys1cal tra1mng
Middleton
Estates, requirement Paid benefits
(740)446·7148 or (740)446 Call between 9am 3pm
4914 or faK resume to Mon-Fn to apply (740)379·
(740}446 0136 An EOE 9083
FfMION.
-------We are now accepttng
Marketing Po1ttlon lor IDCBI
applications for one part
Medical
Equipment
t•me clencat opemng
Company You must be
Applicants must have
htghly motivated, e)(penence
computer experience
preferred
Salary
+
and possess good typ·
Commission,
negottable
lng skills
Send resume to Ek»c ~.
To apply stop by the
c/o Gallipolis Tnbuns PO
Gallipolis Dally
Box 469 Gallipolis OH
Tribune
45631
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis Ohio 45631
Needed Contract labor for
Attn Kevin Kelly
local home tmprovement
company Soma experience
would be beneficial
Pay
SCHOOlS
based upon job and axporl·
ltlm!IJCilON
ence Please call {740)992·
5094
Concealed Pistol Class
Ohto WV Sept 9 2006
current Job?
$75 00
9 OOsm VFW
Were looking fer
Mason WV Ph (740)643·
dependable employees
5555,
to work In lhe Gallipolis
areal
Fall enrollment for new
$7.0041125/hr
Plano students now open
Inquire
(740)446-2272
C811 for the natiOn's lead· Charles
A
Murray
lng non-prollt organize·
GaUipolls Ohio
t1ons We offer patd train·
tng, holidays and vacaGolllpolll car.. College
!Ions
(Careers Close To Homo)
Calt Todayl 740-446-4367
Apply today by oalllng
1-800·214-0452
~,L 7 ... liiOl
wwwgalipolltcaln!COII&amp;gl Ct)m
1740 ,_.,.-...:: _,
Toll Free
Accrldlted Member .e.ccreditln~;~
Cour.cll lor t~nt Collllil••
;.H,.Ina-483-82i0iioiii4ii7-oroll 1nd Scnoota1274B
•

u.....

Ohio Valley Home Health
Inc h1rlng for Full Ttme AN
Full Time and Part Time
CNA, STNA CHHA PCA
and Per Diem OT, ST
Accepting applications lor
LI?N'a Competitive Wages
and
Benellta
lncludmg
health
Insurance
and
Mileage Apply at '1480
Jacksoo Pike Gallipolis or
2415 Jackson Avenue Point
Pleasant 'WV or phone toll
free 1·866·441·1393
--------OverbrooK fVhab'ltta1ion
Center Is currently accepting
applications for STNAs All
shifts, part-t1me No Phone
Ca!ls, Please All Interested
applicants should plcf.; up an
apphcatton at 333 Page
Street Middleport OH For
further Information please
contact Hollie at (740}992·
6472 EOE

. . ..... . . . . ...
~

176

1

ll ... _ ............. ...,..

·rs I

LY~ULIU'IUJL

"89" Suzuki Fat Boy muHier
Boored out many extras
$t,SOO 740·985-4258 "90"
Ford ProBe TuBro Chager
1n take with head 2 2(12
valve)$1 000 00 740 985·
4258
Lazy T Royal Chaparral
FamHy Resort Campground
membership
for
sale
{304)372·6569
Lift Chair lor sal~ E1tc
_ •
Cond
740 742 3167
New Lower Prices on
Limestone at Rodney Stone
(740)245 5316, Atver Gravel
&amp; Sand also available
--------Tn ~le Load of firewood
$350 A Load
740·949
2195

1190

~~y

SALE

2 story hOme, 3 bed·
room 2 bath 2 car
garage 3 acres m1 5
mtnutes 1rom Gallipolis
Pholo/mlo
online
www or11b com
Code
7186 or Call (740)446
7029

Housekeepmg over 6 years
exp Honest and rehable
Call ('140)379 2896

Pak1ngese mtx small 1nstde Friday
9 00 8 00
Little
dog (740)379·2467
Kyger Ad Turn at AVHS
-3yr- o-ld_m
_e-le- AK_C_
BI-ac_k_l_a_
b Kenmore fng $75 scroll saw

~ii;;ilh~e~l~ow:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:,l 3399

Announcement.. .

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!illl
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~

r

• All ads must

• Sbirt Your Ad1 With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• lndude Phone Number And Addrea When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 DaYt

Successful Ads
Should InclUde These Items
To Help Get Response •••

I

- a 32-year-old ranked
77th who hadn't played a
hard-court match since
March - wa~ visited by a
tramer because of stomach
cramps and diarrhea.
Agass1 got lo a thtrd
tiebreaker, then dommated
the fmal set It was a ftttmg
way to cap a day that celebrated three ot the sport's
most s1g111ficant figures
Before Agass1's match, the
U.S. Tennts Assocmt10n
rededicated its faciltty,
nammg It the Btiiie Jean
Kmg Nat10nal Tenms
Center
And
J1mmy
Connors was on the scene,
too,
coaching
Andy
Roddtck and soakmg m the
adoration.
Rodd1ck enlisted Connors
last month, after a thirdround exit at Wtmbledon,
and the partnershtp appears
to be paymg off. so far.
Roddtck says hts attttude
can't help but be improved
w1th
the
enthus1asttc
Connors m hts corner, and
the 2003 U S. Open cham·
pion began th1s year's last
major by beatmg Florent
Serra of France 6-2, 6-1, 6-

,

Dally In-Column: 1;00 p.m.
Mond•v·Prlday for lnaertlon
In Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

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

Agassi extends career by coming back to beat Pavel
BY HOWARD FENDRICH

or Fax To

446-3008

6
12
71
35
33
35

o

!

or Fax To

PA

j

I

Websnes.
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytnbune.com
E·ma!l
www
classiljed@ mydallytnbune .com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydallyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
l\egtster
To Place
'Orrtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 {740) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333
myda11ysent~nel.com

I

.o

Galli a

28

·

2990 State Route 124
Syracuse out of tlood pla1n
Oh1o Atver VIew, 6 room 3
bedroom 1 1/2 bath 1 acre
lot garage (740)992 7866
(740) 992-5776 (740)339·
3363
3 bedroom 1 story 1 1/2
bath gas heat, c/a 2 car
gara!ije
1n
Mtddleporl
$72 500 (740)992 6926

I

4 bedroom 2 bath double
Jenny's Home Hair Caret
garage pool 2 acres
For Dtsabled Shut Ins Call
Eastern School 01stnct
740 378 6484
740·992·3465 after 5 OOPM
Loris Daycare, accepting
chtldren of all agss State
&amp; prtvate pay accepted
State Route 124, (740)992·
7676

4 rental houses 4 For Sale"
Good tncome producing
proper\les Great localtont
Prtce(s} are Negollable
In
Motivated
Seller!
Gallipolis
Call
Wayne
(404)456·3802
4bd 2 bath Only $32,9001
FORECLOSURE• For hsl
mgs BQ0-391·5228 ext F254

For rent or sale 17 600 sq ft
Attentlont
warehouse on AI 2 wtth 3
Local
company
offer1ng ~ NO
acres fenced 1n &amp; gated
lol DOWN PAYMENT" pro
blacktop
parkmg
grams lor you to buy your
(304)937 4127
home tnstead of renting
• 100% l~nancmg
oNOT!Cb
• Less than perfecl credit
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
accepted
lNG CO recommends ' Payment could bEj the
that you do bustness w1th
same as rent
people you know and
Mortgage
locators
NOT to send money
(740)367 0000
through the matl unt1l you
have Investigated the Bank-Owned 2800 Sq Ft
offenng
Home 2 car garage plus 3
car detached garage near
Pomt Pleasant $224 900
M1ke Slack Old Colony
mLoAN
GMAC Realty (304)542

r

MoNEY

5686

Borrow Smarl Contact
the Ohto Dlvtsion of
Ftnanclai
Institutions
OH1ce
of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you ref1
nance your home or
obtain a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
OHice
ol Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1 866
278·0003 to learn If the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
Is
properly
licensed (Thts Is a public
service announcement
!rom the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Feo Unless We W1nl
1-886 582·3345
I ~ I \I I ,., I \II

All real estate advertlelnij
In thla newspaper le
aubj.ct to the Feder11
Fair Houelng Acl of 1988
which meke1 It lllegel to
edvertl.. "eny
preftii'Wict, llmltetlon or
dlagrlmlnetlon bliNd on
race, color, religion, Hll
temlllel atltua or national
origin, or eny lnt.nllon to
m1tc1 any 1uch
pr.flf'ltlctl, llmlhltlon or
dllcrlmiMtlon '
Thll newapaper wm not
knowingly accept
ldvertleementa tor ,..11
eahlle whlch 11 In
vloletlon o1 the IIW Our
r11dtr1 are hereby
informed th.t all
dwelling• advertleed In
thla newtp.eptr 1re
IYIIIabte on en equel
opportunity baaea
NO DOWN PAYMENT oven

•"11""-""!'~---., with less than perfect credit

rlD

HOMES

Is ava•table on th1s 3 bed
room 1 bath home In
·
Mlddlepon Carner lot vinyl
sldmg ftreplaco tn ltvtng
room good carpet, 111e floor
tn kitchen French doors
open to master bedroom
JSCUZZI tub off street park
lng Payment around $550
per
month 740 367 7129
1997 bl level house 2 car
garage wtth 7 acres JBA 2
MootLEHoM~
bath 40x20 pole barn,
FOR
12x20 deck pond heat
pump Me1gs/Gallta hne
$140 000 Call (740)742 2003 3 Br 2 Bath 28 X 60
Redman
double
Wide
1154
S11tmg on
1 3 acres
Concrete walKS and porch
Beauttful 3BA home wrap es
landscaped
shade
around porch, downtown trees country sottmg on S R
GalltpoiiS
City Schools 143, Me1gs County Asktng
$118 000
Call 740·446· $82 500
9961

•••timiiiiRtiSiiAiiLEilo•rl

SALE

_,,~---------------:-r--------

�Tuesda~August29,2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

ALLEYOOP
Blnk Owned 14X70 Mobile
Horntl. with half acre land,
ntiBI
Ftolnt
Pleasant,
$1&gt;4,900, Mike Slack.. Old
Colony
GMAC
Realty

3 bedroom 1n Gall1polis.
Great locatlonl W/D conn.
$309/month, $1 00/deposlt.
No pets.
1 bedroo~ in Gallipol is.
(~)542·51l88
Greatt ocationl $1 79/month,
StOO!depos•t. No pets. Call
Clttn well maintained 95 Wayne (404)456 -3802.
Clayton, 1Cx70, all electric,
3 bf. 2 bath , complete with 3BR hoose· LeGrande 81\ld.
apptlances, washer dryer. $600 rent &amp; sec. dep You
CJrtalne, new blinds heat pay utilities. Lease &amp; referpump with central. air, 2 en ces requ1red. (740)446·
porches, new underpinning 3644 for application
$16.000 OMO (304 )593·
6Q7 or (304)675·8668
4 br House in New Haven.
$500/month + $400/deposit.
Great vsed 3BR home only No Pets (304)882-3652
$9,995. Will help with de l1vtxy. Call (740)385·7671 .
4·5 bedroom, ·2 bath, 3,000
sq.lt
H~rdwood
lloors
New 2006 Clayton sln- through out the house.
·glewidee starting at $1 99.84 Wat er/trash paid · Call
per month. Trade-ins wei· (740)446 _742 5
comes. Call (740)385-2434. :._..:.__ _ _ _ _ _
j
40d HUD hOme! Buy for
Lors &amp;
$20.900! For Listings 800·

r

1

' E-_.1 :.:.._::.:.:....:....:.:..___
391"5228 x1709
,i.w--A-LliD\iiiiiiit;II
Anentlonl
1.75 Acre Lot
Local company .offering "NO
Mason Co. WV
DOWN PAYMEN T" pro·
At 2 Box 127.
grams tor you to buy you•
Leon, wv 25123
home instead of renting.
Approx. 500'
' t OO% financing
Road Frontage
• Less than pertect credit
Utllfties Available
accepted
s9;995
• Payment could be the
(304)295-9090
same as rent.
Locators.
43 Beautiful acres-Nichols Mortgage
Road, Rutland. Oil· and gas ( 740)~7.0000
well. Free gas, lots of deer
and turkeys. $65,000.00.
74M42·2233
__:_.....:...:_:_ _ _ _
Approx 3 acres. 2 house
sites. Utilities x2, city water.
large solid 2 story barn.
approx 112 mile our SA 218
Beautiful lot, city or county
schools. Serious buyers
only. $44K. (740)441-7333.
Land for sale. Several 5 to
12 acre lots located in Gallia
Co., Morgan Twp and Meigs
Co., Salem Twp. Land con·
tracts
available.
Some
restrictions. No calls after
9:00pm (740)669·0143.
Mercerville t&gt;uilding lot for
sale. 4.745 acres SA 218
close to schools. Good
home
site.
$!~ . 000 .
(740)256·1553. (740)339·
9236.
Mobile Home Lot for rent
near Vinton. Call (740)441 -

11t1.
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
Mobile Home Park in
Gallipolis,
OH. Phone
(740)44&amp;2003 or (740)446·
1409.

Clear{) pretty. 3BA house for
rent. Downtown. $695 +
utilities Call 740-446·9961 .
For rent or s ale- country
hOme, 7 acres. 3 bedroom. 2
bath , wid, stove &amp; retrigeralor call(7401408·2140
---'----'--Hartford, WV, clean, 2 bedroom . 1 bath. $350 month,
References.
Deposit
requ1red. (304 )576-4037
House for rent.
740-992-5858

No Pets.

:_:_::.::.:=:_ _ _ _
Nice 3 BA home In Spring
Valley. N1ce yard, no pets, 1
yr lease. Taking ,apps. $600
mo. Call Dave@ (740)441·
01t4.
-------Taking applications for
rem odeled 3 bedroom
house. NO PETS. $375/mo,,
$300/dep. (740)446·36t7.

r

MOFOBILR~I!_~t~

I

Esrxn:

FORRENI

r

Downtown Apartment: 3
bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths. cer't·
tral air, carpet/hardwood
floors, appliances Including
washer/dryer
provided.
Ample storage available.
Oepoalt required. Call
(740)«6-7654.

Phillip
Alder

Warehouse
In Henderson, WV.

at $75 &amp; up all under

Nortb

ments, furnished and unfur·
ni sl'led, security depoalt
required, no pets, 740·9922218.

Warranty, also have recon--

•
•
•
..

I beclroom, upstairs unfur·
nished . apartment with
range, refr. disposal and
garage. 136 First Ave. rear.
Deposit and reference .
(740)446-2561 .

tBA apt, all utlliries &amp; cable
pd. $400/month , in Crown
City. FOf sale doublewida.
112 acre . (740)256-8132.
2 Bedroom Apt Centenary
Road ,
appliances,
washer/dryer hookup. no
pets, (740)446-9442 after
5:00pm.
2 bedroom, 1 bath._ water
pa id, $350 mont~ . $350
security
deposii
Call
(740)446·3481 .
:._:c.:..:.:._::..:.:.:.:.__ _ __
2BR Apartment, Newly
Renovated in Historical
Downtown Gallipolis with
great v•ew of Pario;., Central
HI A, All Wood Floors, Large
Bath w/ Tub &amp; Shower.
Includes
Range,
Refrigerator &amp; D•shwasher.
High ceilings . large windows
with custom shades that let
in lois of light Call(740)709·
16:.:90
_
.:..__ __ _ _ _ _

ditioned Big Screen TV's

by Ron's TV (304)1757V99

Ellm View
Apartments
2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
Starting at $3B5 and up
Central heat &amp; air, WID
hook-up, coin operated
laundry, owner pays water,
sewer &amp; trash .

.(304)882-3017
Furnished apt. 3 rooms &amp;
bath, upstairs. clean. no
pets. Aef!deposit required.
(740)446· t519 .
-------Gracious ll11ing. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepair-675·7388 . For sale,
re-conditioned automati c
washer's &amp; dryers. re'trigera·
·tors, gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

r

1184

• Portable Oxygen
• Helios
• Homenll
• Nebulizers

.PIYI.liPPIIcEIIII

SPACE
FOR RENT

JACKSON
Commercial· building ~For
Aenr 1600 square feet, off
street parking. Gmat. locationt 749 Third Avenue in
GaHipolis. Rent "Negotiable"
Call Wayne (404)456-3802

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam 14:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
Sunday. (740}446-7300

&amp;

Downtown
Commercial
Retail space lor Rent. $4001 New, Lrg. Outdoor Stone &amp;
month.
Upstairs Office Metal Fireplace. Nice! $250
Suites lor Rent $125/ month 080. (740)245·0610
~ou pay the Utilities. Call -0-v-er-s~iz_e_:_B_Iu-e--L-ea-1-he-r
• (703 )528' 0617
Recliner Chair, good condi-

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
10
HOUSEHOLD
Townhouse
apartments,
GoJus
ndl
II h
FOR
a
or Call
sma (740)44t-t111
ouses
RENT.
lor application &amp; information. Sale sofa &amp; chair $350. Sofa
&amp; I Seal $400 A.cll·ner
Twin Ri11ers Tower iS; ae&lt;;ept·
·
·
$200. Mollohan Furn. Clark
ing applications for waiting
list for Hud-subsized, 1· br, Chapel Ad, Porter 0 .
apartment, call 675-6679 {740)388·,0173.
Open
Equal Housing Opportunity Saturday only.

·-------,J
r

For Rent· Nice 2 SA, 2 Bath
Mobile Home in Gallipolis.
$450 per month · plus
deposit.(740)645·7765

2BA home· Vinton St. $375 Mobile Home s1tes for up to
mo. + sec. dep. You pay utili- 16x80 in Country Homes.
ties. Gas heat . (740)446· (740)385·4019.
3644.
Mobile Homes for Rent,
38A home- SA 554 , Bidwell, Located in GallipoHs Ferry,
$575/mo seC dep all elec Poini Pleasant and Mason
(740)446·3644.
call(304)675·3423

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
C:ONTRACTING

Aurn;
!UK SALE
Apartment Building with 2
Apartments , 3 bedroom,
upstairs, 2 bedroom down·
stairs. Front lo1 Included.
560.000 080 (304)576·
2040

2000 Chrysler Sebring
Convertible Limned . Cloth
top, leather, Infinity sound
system . Garage
kept.
30mpg. New tires . $7,500.
(740)446-7484 or (740)441·
7411.

2002 Cavalier 4d. 5 speed,
59,395 miles $4,300: 1999
Tiiurus $3,700; 1998 Olds
lntngue $3,400. We ha~e
. New root! Motivated S&amp;Herl Grand
Ams,
Suntires,
Call Wayne (404)456-3802. Saturns,
Neon ,
S-10,
Nissans, ToYota, Blazer,
I \R\1 ""I 1'1'1 II...,
Vans. Stratus. • 3 months,
,\ 11\JI,f()( ~
,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 3,000 mite warranty. Cook
iO
FAKM
Motors , 328 Jackson Pike.
'
EQUJI'MENT
(740)446·0103.
~ow....,;~2002 Mercury Mountaineer.
'KIEFE~ BUILT 'VALLEY Loaded with only 48,000
'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVE· miles.
·
·
STOCK TRAILERS 'LOAD· 2002 Ford Lighting F150
MAX .
'GOOSENECK.
pick up 30,000 miles. Call
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY {740)256-1245 evenings
'ALUMA
'ALUMINUM
TRAILERS •B&amp;W GOOSE· and weekends.
NECK
.
HITCHES.
Carmichael
Equipment
1

r

• Prompt &amp; quality

Middleport. OH
IOxiOxiOx20

SIGN ON BONUS
Arcadia Nursing Center is now hiring
STNA's for afternoon and night shifts.
Full and Part lime
positiorls available

(740)4411-2412

"Insured"

740-742-2293

r

Hardwood Cabiletl'f And Furn~U~re

Come Join .Our Caring Team!
Please apply in person or
Call 740-667-3156
Ask for Jane Casey

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(1(!~~

~R

SAY GOOD
LU&lt;;:K TO A FISHERMAN, rWEEZY, IT'S
TH' KISS OF DEATH !!

1
1A59 St Rt. t60 ••

CONSTRUCTION

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
3 miles west of

• Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp;Compare

LINE !!

j

I

~

u.....L..c:..JJ

I L-._,i,_L..JJ.

THE BORN LOSER
I'"f\1&gt;..\'P'&lt;

992-5682

MON\1

,..

"'I

1\0WC.OM£ H\E.Il.E.'S Oi'lL'I FIVE.
C.N'I~ ON. 'lOUR CI-J&lt;.E. ?

e.1 RTI'\t&gt;l&gt;.'l,

,..Wil.CJ-.1 'I'OU R~KJ.l. f.. CXRIN~
t--.C£,'&lt;OV'RE. 1&gt;\l.LOWE.I&gt; TO
~T1\RT C.OVt-1111-16

e,'( \)E..CJ\1)(.5 !

door automatic trans. 55,000
miles. AC. power locks.
power windows, am/fm
radio. cd player. in great condition $10,500. 740-6453601

G

BIG NATE

Answer to Previout Puzzle

n.-

source

~arolyl

12 Bird of prey
13 Way up
there
15 Grassy field
16 Mariner's
hello
17 First name

52 L.ong lor
55 .. 2001 ..
computer

56 Rice wine
57 Scmoponnll
All.~

58

59 W·2 Info
In jan
60 Story line
18 Pub throws 61 Big clock In
20 Wined and
london
20
dined
22
21 Stump
DOWN
23 Costa- Sol
23
24 Turn
1 Jeii·O ring
24
pancakes
2 Extent
25
27 Maraud
3 Fruh tree
29 Exasperate 4 Dalai
26
32 Charged
. Lama's city 28
particles
5 Pleesecr
29
33 Plays a role
sigh
30
6 Couple
34 Summer in
France
7 Firmament 31
35 Won- S01JP 8 Ea~y
36 Dellneale
Invention
36
. 37 Getzor
9 To theKenton
(Sully).
37
38 Ave. ,
10 Gawk at
41
crosser&amp;
14 Possessed
43
39 - - 19 Recipe
40 Comoamts.

T-men

44 TO pasaer•
Shredded 45 Hot drinks
46 Sorts
ch..se
Mill around 46 Moby
Tantrums
Dfck s foe
Stolen
49 Garden
goods
grsen
Small hotels 50 Panache
CPA'snii:Ord 52 Roadie gNI
Old pros
53 Mountain
Oregon,
pass
to Yves
54 Insurance
TV warrior
gp.
princess
Memorable
decades
Char
Where
Seville Is

What I.e.

means

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
tAJiebrity Clphef cryptograms~ Ct&amp;ated !rl)lll quolol!ons b) famous ~le. past an.:1 p-&amp;s~~nt
E.DII&amp;~er !0 the ciphtl sta'"Jds lor ano1tler

TOday's clue: 0 9{jUals 8

"VD
-

IHO

VMNOH

HIKAP

V.

SPMRXN

SPIR

OFOHNTR

TRZO

SVMZO."-

VO

XRTV."

··spa

GOBTHO PO

VMNO

FIR

NAOIXN

HTGOHS GORZPKOE

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Courage and g1ace is a iormidable mi~ure . The
only place to see il is the bullnng." - Marlene Dietrich

AstroGraph
"'bur 'lllrtlldotY:

·

~~~:~~~T S© Rc:tl }A-~ -e. ~s

- - - - - - ldi!td ~y CLAY

WOlD
GAM I

l PCil.&amp;N - - - - - -

Oqeattonge leiTers of th•
lour &gt;Ciomblod •word1 be·
low 10 lorm lour slmplo words.

Wedneada~Aug.30,2006

TO

IMPORTS
Athens

All types of roofing:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

'i;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;"

.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740·949-2217

BUS TRIP FROM
PVH
Charleston,
South Carolina

'(OU

HAT THERES
1\ REASON
THESE
ITEMS ARE
IN THE
f;ARGAIN

H1ll's Self
Storage

1978
Coachman
Leprechaun
motorhome,
21ft., has good motor, inside
needs work. Asking $2,000
OBO. II interested call
Hereford bull calf. born (740)441-1236. if no answer
3116/06. Dark red, great 4-H leave mess~Jge, ask for
steer or herd sire. $800. Janie.
(740)256·1365.
2005 28ft. Dutchmen w/slide
out, bunk and ex1ras. Still
l!l~10
A~
under warranty. $14 ,500 .
(740)367·7755.
FOR SALE

?

PEANUTS
''' Wf!AT A CURIOUS
FEELING,' !&gt;AID !~LitE

'' S~E li/AS NOW
ONL'r' TEN
INCilE5

"

'' NOW 5~ E WAS

MORE THAN. NINE
FEET ~IGH .. .''

'''~OW CAN I
I-lAVE DONE T~/5?'

51-iE THOUGI-Il"

•• I MUST BE
6ETiiNG SMALL ·
AGAIN:."

~ Cornerstone
!!i:f
;·;; li Construction
Residential • Commercial • General Contracting
Pnimin~ • Doors • Windows • Decks
• Sillin1: • Rouhng • Room Additions • Remodeling
WY 038992
• PlUmbing • ElcL:tricul 740-387.(1544
OH 382-M
• Aco;;oustill Ceiling
740·339·3.. 12

SUNSHINE CLUB

. JONES'

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

Schne~o

GARFIELD

'

•
'

"-

Marksman Dog Food
$9.99 501b Bag

.

' ''

,,

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

.

', ,,;1 Ni:y.l

CARPENTER
SERVICE

\

The Daily Sentinel

Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
New Gmrages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
VInyl Siding &amp; Painiing
Patio and Porch Decks
036725

.992~21.55 '
'

wv

V.C. YOUNG Ill
2~

fi

992 6215
Pomeroy Oh10
Yf'ars Locnl Expcor1enc e

01

Advertise
in this
space
for
ss4 per

month

IT'&amp; A
RERUN

0

0

0

i

.nI~".

~~~Q~-I· c~·=1~~==j

35537 Sl Rt 7 N ¥Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
.
740-98 • 31

YOUNG'S

~

1 THINK.l'L.L. &amp;TARE OFF
INTO SPACE ANP PA~,iPREAM

Shade River AG Service, Inc

'

The first World Schools Pairs
Championship, for players born after
Dec. 31 , 1985, drew an entry of 68 pairs
from 20 countries. The youngest competitor was 11-year·old Anna Christa
Ege, who partnered 12-year-old Amalie
Koch-Palmund - they learn early in
Denmark.
Ege 's. one-club opening bid was debatable because she would have had no
good rebid over a one-spade response
One no-trump with a doubleton jack-four
of diamonds is unappealing, and rebid·
ding A-0-7-3-2 is even worse.
Manv Souths would jump to three no- ·
trump or lour hearts on the second
round, being impressed by their 13
points. But that hand has nine losers
(one spade. 1wo hearts, three diamonds
and three clubs). This suggesfs that
South should pass out two hearts! So
making a· game-try was a sensible com promise. (Be wary of 4-3·3·3 distribution
when you will be in a suit contract.)
Against three hearts, one would have
expected West to lead the spade jack,
but he selected an imaginati11e diamond
seven, East taking dummy's jack with his
queen. Thinking that South had ducked
her diB.mond ace, East shifted tO a
spade, Which ran to the board's queen.
Now declarer could have discarded
dummy's remaining diamond and taken·
10 tricks, but she ran the heart qu'een to
West's king, lost a trick to the diamond
ace, and won the next spade play with
her king. South drew trumps and led a
club to dummy's queen. That lost to the
king, but declarer had her nine 1ricks.
Plus 140 was wonh 44 match points out

usted?
41 BIJnvned out
Travel guide 42 Narrow Inlet
Back
44 SWill brand
Question
47 Msooo'a PI
starter
51 Gymnullcs
Copper
coach -

oi66 .

C 2006 HoMe

All the Paper Packs you can
play for $25.00
Guaranteed $99.00 a game
Guaranteed $500.00
Coverali could be higher
depending on crowd
Early Bird starting at5 pm

I

I

I

Pomeroy,OH
on State Rt. 124

7·

2002 Chevy Blazer 4wd 2

tv:~~

American Legion
Middleport
September2 6:30pm

WELL, THEN.

4x4
FoR SALE

$5001 POLICE IMPOUNOSI
Cars!rrucks trom $500! For
Conn. Alto Saxophone. listings 800-391·5227 x3901
Have Beginner Books and
BASEMENT
Nl&gt;W Reeds. Good Sh~ps 02 Chevy Ca\lalier. 4 dr,
WATERPROOFING
auto, air, CD, good condi $400.00 740·949·2453.
tion. $4,250. (740)446·1663 Unconditional lifetime guar·
antes. Local references fur(leave message)
nished. Established 1975.
1994 Honda Civic $500. Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Canning Tomatoes. Picked Pollee Impounds! For list- 0870, Rogers Basement
or pick your own. 740·247· Ings 800·391·5227 ext. Waterproofing.
C548.
4292.

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

·t BREAIC A
J!

ROGER HVSELL
GARAGE

• New Homes
• Garages

99 Chevrolet Suburban ,
loaded with leather interior,
new tires, good condition .
$4,800 (740)446·6323.

r

BARNEY

.

ROBERT
BISSEll

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

School players
come in all ages

·www.~kea'blnetry.eom

740 446

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: t

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

• Leave a message

1999 Dodge Durango,
JD 4240 C/H/ A; NH 315 Excellent Condition, all
wire-tie baler; round baled leather, DVD entertainment
straw. Call (740)256-601 1
center, remote start, -all
power. (740)446-9395
John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill
for
ren1 .
Carmichael
Equipmen1(740)446·2412. 2003 Che11rolet Trailblazer
EXT L'T. 4WD, Third row
John Deere Mini Excavator/ seat. Garage kept. Like neW
Tradtot Loader Backhoe! condition.
~. $16,500.
Skid Steers. Carmichael (740)446-7484 or (740)441 ·
Equipment (74-0)446-2412 · 7411 .

Ii

Purebred Golden Retriever
puppies, Vet checked, first
shots, parents &amp; pre11ious
pup on premises, reference
on pre11ious litters, temales
$200.
males
$150,
(740)662·0364

I •
3¥

.....

lion $125 (304)675·4318
leave message
. New John Deere Compacts
PETs
and 5000 Series Utility lractors @ 0% Fixed for 36
FOR SALE
months
through
John
Deere Credit. Carmichael
2 female Boston Terriers, 4 Equipment (740)446-24t2
months old $100. (740)379Quality John Deere Hay
2467.
Equipment for less-round
2
male
Miniature balers. square· balers &amp;
Dachshund puppies,
1 mower conditioners @4.7%
shorthair red &amp; 1 longhair Fixed lor 48 months through
black/tan, 11et checked John
Deere
Cred•t
(304)593·3li:!O
Carmichael
Equipment
(740)446·2412.
AKC
Mini
Pinschers
Puppies. Males bladJrust 1
vet. checked. · AKC Mini
Schnauzer
Puppies.
Whitetblack·, salt/pepper,
black/silver.
$400 each.
740-696-1085

(740)368·8788

Vulnerable: Neither
Sou1h , West Norlb East

992-3194
or 992-6635

Call Gary Stanley

,.,.,

Dealer: North

97 Beech Street

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

Basset Hound Puppies, both
parents registered. 1 male,
1 female, $200 each. Has
.1st shots &amp; wormed
(304)675·4510
Angus · Cattle Auction
Miniature Pinscher CKC- Labor · Day Monday. Sept.
red/male
$350.
AKC 4th: Circle B Farm, LLC. Us
black/female $400. Tall, At 35 Southside, . WV
claw,
shots,
wormed. (304)675·6053

$ STNA'S $

'OU!

MUlEfS
SELF STORAGE

work

.. K 10 8
South
• AK7
¥ AJ 72
• 8 5 3
.. J 9 4 '

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

AKC Pomeranian Pups, 3
Male. 3 Female, wormed,
$350.(740)368·8642.

Help Wanted

MONTY

08-29-D!i

Q6
Q9 8 5
J 4
AQ73 2
East
• 8 43 2
• 10 3
t K Q 10 6

West
• J 10 9 s
¥ K64
t A97 2
.. 6 5

Delivering Daily *One Stop Shop*
740-446·0007 Toll Free 877-669·0007

Commercial building "For
1· Craftmatic XL twin bed; 1 Sale" 1600 square feet. oH
set- Ludwig drums; 1·4 f1 street parking. Great loca metal brake to bend lin· with tionl 749 Third Avenue in
stand. (740)441 .2667.
Gallipolis. Price "Negqtiable"

i

• CPAP
• Hospilal Beds
• Wheelchairs

Lccall owned. We cart about

,

;:i79jj8:0·4;,;6S;;,6;;;·~-----, - - - - - - --

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dri11e tram $349 to $44~.
Walk to shop &amp; mo11ies. Call
740-446·2566.
Equal
~H.:.o".:.':.:in:!g~O:.:p.:.po.:.rt.:.u::.n:.:i1yc.·_ _

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

.,...,

I
~ ~~

From $295·$444. Call 740.
992-5064 Equal Housing
Opportunities.
____

_ _ _.,____

APARTBUDGET

-..........-_.. ..

...

Pecan wood dlnlno room
table, four chairs, hutch
$300; 1960's Walnut Danish
bookcase bed . matching
dresser "and chest of drawers. $275; 1940's Four
poster bed, matching dresser and stool $275. (740)2455488 before 1Opm.

Honeysuckle
Hili&amp;
Apartments. Gallipolis, now
accepting applications tor 2
Bedroom Apartments, No
Rental Assistance available
Hot Tub for Sale (304)675·
at lllis lime. Rent starts at
1732
$315/mo. Equal Housing
Opportunity. {740)446-3344
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Immaculate 2 bedroom Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
apartment in the country. . Stock. CaU Ron Evans, 1•
3 bedroom. 1.000 sq. fl. apt. New carpet &amp; cabinets,
Gallipolis, OH, located in freshly painted &amp; decorated, 600 ' 537 ' 9528 ·
town .' $650/mo., reference
WID hookup. Beautiful coun- Kenmore Radiant Free
R
·
u
required. No pets. {740)44i- try seHing. Must see to s ~
0110or(740)992-5174.
appreciate.
$ 399 /mo. tanUing ange$ Wllh se ·
cleaning oven, 100 OBO.
Apt. f0nent 2 or 3 Br.. NO (614)595·7773 or 1~800· (740}245-0610
PetS,
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT

1

4
8
11

Pre·

1 and 2 bedroom apart·

2-3 br house in New Haven, For rent Nice 2 bedroom
$425/month,
+ mobile home in Country
.$300/deposit,
No Pets Homes. $325 + deposit.
(740)385·4019.
.(304)882·3652

Help Wanted

.ACROSS

Appliance

owned Appliances starting

Brand new 2 Bedroom
IV.rll
Apartments Washer/dryer
hookup, sto\le/refrigerator
included.
2 Bedroom Trailer for rent 14 Also available units State
X 60. Trailer Lot lor rent ROute 160. Cal! for details
740.949·2237.
(740)4:41-0194 or (740)441-

2 bedroom, 2 bath ,. new carRE'.L
pel &amp; v.nyl, $375; 3 bed·
room , 2 bath. garden tub,
WANfED
utility room, $475, deposit
Need to sell your home? required, (740)992 -7680
late on payments, divorce. S'yracuse.
;oo transfer or a death? I 2 bedroom, all electric, NC ,
can buv your home. All cash porch &amp; awmng. Very, w ry
and quidl closing 74Q-416·
nice, no pets. In Gallipolis
3130.
(740)446·2003 or (740)446·
Rl \ I \I ...,
1409.•

H!iv..'Fli

Nice 38A, 2 Bath,' Storage
Building. Large Deck, Green
Schools, $485/mo, $485
deposit.
(740 )4C6·9116,
(740)339·2541

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

GRIZZWELLS
V\:l '(d.l ~e.R A~ '(c\.I~EL'F
• 'flirt M"E ?" , . . . - - - -

By Bernice Bede Oeol
There will be some frus1ratiQns in the
year ahead, but if you don't toSs in the
towel, 1hey'tl have lit11e effect on you. By
staying the course, 1ime could even ere·
ate some drama1ic developments that
will benefit you greatly.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Because
you will get 1he opportunity to ,operate
freely from encumbrances. i1 will anable
you to ge1 a better handle on situations
over which you've recently had a weak
grip.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Conduct
your affairs in ways that attract the least
amount of .attention, and you will disCOV'er how much more effective you can be.
It will help you make the right mo11es.
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nw 22) - Your
warm wit and · Outgoing personality wilt
make your presence most welcomed by
all you encounter. You could be that ray
of sunsh1ne so many of your lriends
need right riow.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Chanc~s lor fulfilling your ambitious
objecJives look el(ceptionally good, but
only if you do not tip your hand to ri\lals
prematurely. Sa11e your most el(plosive
fireworks lor the finale.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - If
' you've been toying with the Idea of get1ing invol\led in a new group ac1ivi1y, such
as engaging in a sport or joining a 'club,
give it a try. If·competition is inwlved, all
the beUer.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. .19) - Even if
you do not initiate any changes yourself,
you tend 1o benefit from changes being
made where your work or career is concerned . Be alert for advantages, and be
prepared to go with the flow.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - When It
comes to subjeds or projects you'11e
studied in-depth, abide by your decisionmaking process. Your judgment is particularly .good , and all you need is a bit of
self·conlidence.
ARIES (March 21·April19) - Give priority to worl&lt; situations or arrangements
that concern making or sa11ing el(tra
money. Youf luck is fOcused in this area,
soo it beh00\195 you to make the most ot
it.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Try to
arrange your affairs so your time Isn't
to1ally dewted to merely all work or all
play. A well-balanced day will do wOn·
ders, providing you with a ·great deal of
~r~tlfication 1

GEMINI (May 21-June 20} -When oth·
ers see you doing all you posa!biy can to
help yourself accomplish a tough goal,
they 're likely to pitch in and lend a hand.
Welcome their.. support when you ge1 it.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Take the
pains 10 personally reorganize some·
thing in which you're presently ln\lolved
with a lew fri1nda. With your Interjection ,
It will fllnct!on better and make all partie·
!pants quite happy.
LEO (Jul~ 23·Aug . 22) - Chances are
you 'll get ae\leral good opportunities to
ma~e up tor any tinanoial downturns you
might have recently auffered. Ba enter·
prlelng baoau.. you mull earn what you
gat.

SOUP TO NUTZ

PH TE 0

'

•
I
•

NEHVA

0

1overheard two fellows chatting
I
at a wedding reception. One said 10
r - - - - - - - , the other, "Love is blind, but
G R E CL V marriage is the ....---."
7

G

N

~

I
f---,,..::..;1:,8.;,..:...:;1:...:.TI -i ()
09

ino

Compl01o
chuckle quo1ed
by f,lling in !he m1uing words
1-..J..-1-..1.-J-...1.--' you dt~ve lop from Jtep No. 3 below.

•

•

•

"

.

_

fJ tmm
P~INT NUMBERED II
SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 81l81ll6
Wisdom- Graft- Montl1- Govern ·I'RONT ROW
"Why is i~" I asked my friend, "that people will rush imo
the movie house and want lo sil in lhe FRONT ROW?"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�..
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

I

Tuesday, August

29. 2006

NTSB: Air traffic
controller had his back
turned when jet went down
the wrong runway, A2

•

BY J9E KAv
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Carson
Palmer aced the test.
With a brace prOiecting his
rebuilt knee, the Cincinnati
Bengals quarterback took
the hits, avoided the rush
and threw three touchdown
passes Monday night in his
first game back from the.
injury.
By halftime of the 48- 17
preseason victory over the
Green Bay Packers, Palmer
had convincingly made his
case that he ' II be ready for
the season opener.
"He hasn' t lost a thing,"
right tackle Wlllie Anderson
said. " He's our leader, and
he's back. That's got to
make any Bengals fan feel
real happy."
Showing no hesitation to
take a tackle or take off on a
scramble, Palmer completed
9 of 14 passes for 140 yards
and three touchdowns. It felt
like old times at jubilant
Paul Brown Stadium when
he pointed his right index
finger to the sky after his
second touchdown.
"I can't say I felt real emotional.'' Palmer said. "It just
felt like a business day, a
chance to get some work in."
Unless his knee swells in
the next few days, Palmer
will be on sc.hedule to start
in Kansas City on Sept. 10.
·his goal during a grueling
comeback that had overshadowed the franchise
since its playoff loss to
Pittsburgh on Jan. 8.
"He ·dropped back, he
rolled out, he got hit a few
times, he had a chance to run
the ball," coach Marvin
Lewis said. "He looked very
sood, very sharp. It's still
JUSt preseljSOn, but it's
encouraging ."

Palmer's return was the ter Rich Braham onto the
cornerstone of a buoyant tleld, entering through the
night for the Bengals, who same tunnel where he left on
are 3-0 in preseason for the a cart following his knee
first time since 1976 and injury Jan. 8.
have clinched their first winPalmer's first completion
ning preseason since 1988. went to Chris Henry, who
By contrast, a long-await- made a 66-yard reception on
ed Packers return quickly Palmer's 'lone pass ·in that
became a miserable night.
playoff loss to Pinsburgh.
Running back Ahman Kimo von Oelhoffen's
Green played iii his first shoulder slammed into the
~ame since he tore a tendon side of· Palmer's left knee
111 his thigh midway through after he released that playoff
last season. Green carried 8 pass, shredding ligaments
times for only 18 yards in and dislocating his knee cap.
the first half, unable to find
When Palmer let go of the
much room behind a line ball this time, he got tackled
featuring two rookie guards. for the first time since the
His longest run was 8 yards. injury. Green Bay's Kabcer
Mostly, it was another Gbaja-Biamila hit him
humbling visit for Brett . around the waist and took
Favre. who gets more reason him down, a tame but telling
to hate the place every time tackle.
he ·returns.
Palmer pppped right up.
Last season. Favre threw
felt good to get hit and
five interceptions - his to " Itknow
my knee could
career high in the regular
withstand
contact,"
season - and had the ball Palmer said. the
''They can talk
snatched from his hand by a
all
they
want
about you
fan who ran onto the tield in
to
go,
but until
being
ready
the closing minufes of a 21get
hit,
until
you get
you
14 loss in Cincinnati.
This time, he had the ball pressure on the knee from
tly out of his hand. during a another player, that's when
pass attempt on the opening you know you really feel
series, a fumble that Dexter confident about it."
Three plays later, Palmer
Jackson returned 29 yards
hushed
the stadium by
for a touchdown. He was
scrambling
II yards, then
intercepted on the next
series. and tripped and fell sliding safely on the side of
while dropping to pass in the his brace-supported knee. A
cheer of relief filled the stasecond quarter.
when he got up again. ·
dium
Favre played into the third
Then, Palmer siartedquarter, going 12-of-25 for
doing
what he did all last
162 yards with three sacks
and a touchdown fur the season. throwing .on-target
passes that gave the defen(l.Packers ( 1-2).
ers
little chance. After his
Palmer's
long-awaited
second
touchdown pass, the
return was high drama for
the crowd of 65,614 that usually serious Lewis shared
waved signs and sported No. a belly laugh with receiver
Chad Johnson on the side9 jerseys in support.
AP photo
The Bengals offense was line.
Cincinnati could laugh Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer (9) scrambles away from Green Bay Packers
introduced as a unit. Palmer
defender A.J . Hawk (50) in the first quarter of an NFL football game Monday in Cincinnati.
followed Anderson and ceo- again.

Sizemore has big day as Indians sneak.past Blue Jays
CLEVELAND (AP) Grady Sizemore couldn't be
playing much better if he
tried.
And if there's one thing the
Cleveland Indians' hustling
leadoff hitter is known for, it's
trying.
Sizemore homered, doubled twice and scored three
runs to help Paul Byrd bounce
back from a brutal outing, lilting the Indians over the
Toronto Blue Jays 6-4
Monday night.
The perpetually hustling
Sizemore, who in his second
full season has emerged as
one of baseball's rising stars,
leads the league with 75.extrabase hits, two more than
Boston's David Ortiz.
Sizemore also leads the

·Rio

league in runs (I 07) and doubles (46), is among the leaders
in several other offensive categories. If the center fielder's
uniform isn't dirty, then the
game probably hasn't started.
"If he's not the best allaround player in the lea$ue,
he's near the top," lndtans
manager Eric Wedge said.
"He's just a great all-around
player who works as hard as
anyon.e we have. One thing
people don't see is his mental
toughness. And· just the way
he plays the game, and the
effect it has on his teammates.
"I'll take him over anybody."

Ryan Garko added a pair of
RBI doubles off A.J. Burnett
(6-6) as the Indians, who hav.e
failed to live up to expecta-

Randi Rodgers dished out
15 assists and Veach was
11 -for- ll serving.
from Page Bl
On Saturday, Rio Grande
got its first look at an
American
Mideast
seller for the Redwumen Conference South Division
and went 10-for,-10 serving foe in Tiffin (2-2). Rio was
with one .ace.
sluggish in the loss, dropOverall, the serving was a ping the match in three
bright spot for Rio Grande straight, 16-30, 21-30 and
as. the Redwomen made 22-30.
good on 61-of 64 serves.
Urton ' and
Jessica
Veach was a perfect 16-for- · Rodgers led Rio with eight
16 with two aces and Wills kills each while sophomore
was lO·for-1 0. Wills also middle hiner Stephanie
notched one block and four Lapp added five. Jessica
bl9ck ass1sts 111 her llllllal . added '16 digs with one solo
collegiate outing.
block and two block assists.
Rio again came up a lillie
Rinehart was all over the
·short against Michigan- tloor on the . defensive end
Dearborn (3-1) in the sec- as she tallied 27 digs·to lead
ond match on Friday, losing the Rio defense. Rinehart
in straight sets, 24-30, 21- notched three aces in serv30 and · 18-30. Jessica ing the ball as well.
Rodgers and Wills were
Randi Rodgers delivered
again the kill leaders with 21 . assists and Veach
eight and seven respective- remained perfect in serving,
ly. Both players ·also tallied going 12-for-12.
10 digs and Wills was 14The Redwomen would
for-14 serving with one ace. not leave Michigan empty
the ha~ded as .. they collected
Rinehart
paced
defense with 16 digs while th~•r first wm of the season
senior Lindsay Urton added m the final match of the
· 13.
·
·
weekend
defeating

Soccer
from Page Bl
the Seton Hill cause while
Elaine Zavackas notched
three assists.
Seton Hill out-shot Rio
Grande 49-11.
Sophomore Sarah Sandlin
recorded six saves for the
Redwomen
while
Sam
Gilosnki posted fiw stops in
70 minutes and Eileen Tiano
I

lions following a 93-win sea- · of a bases-loaded jam and
son in 2005, improved to a worked a scoreless seventh.
m,Yor league-best 14-5 since Rafael Betancourt pitched the
Aug. 9.
eighth and Tom Mastriy hit a
Reed Johnson had three hits batter with two outs in the
for the Blue Jays:
ninth before getting his fourth
Byrd (9-6) didn't make it save in four tries since being
out of the first inning of his handed the closer's job.
previous start, getting banged
"Cabrera P,icked me up,"
around for nine runs - three Byrd said. 'I didn't deserve
earned - and eight hits at the win. He should have gotKansas City on Wednesday. ten it."
He escaped with a no-deciSizemore's 20th homer sion when the Indians, trailing he hit 22 last year- put the
10-1 after the first, rallied to Indians ahead 6-4 in the sixth.
win 15-13.
The 24-year-old, who plays
This time, the right-hander all out all the time, drilled a 2stayed around long enough to I pitch from Burnell over the
get a cheap win, allowing wall in center.
three earned runs and 10 hits
Six of Sizemore's last seven
in five-plus innings.
hits have gone for extra ba&lt;;es,
Fernando Cabrera replaced and his hard-nosed style has
Byrd in the sixth and got out made an impression on everyRochester in three gam~s .
30-19, 30-16 and 30-28.
Jessica Rodgers delivered
a complete game in the win,
notching 15- kills and 22
digs, she was 9-for-9 serving and 9-for-9 passing with
one solo block. Urton had a
strong for the second consecutive match as she had
double-figures in kills and
digs· with I0 and 12 respectively. Urton went 16-for16 in the serving department as well.
Will s also produced a
so11d game with eight kills,
22 digs and three aces en

added two saves in the final
· 2() minutes.
Next up for Rio
. will be the 2006 home opener against last year's runnerup in the AMC South
Division, Mount
on
Tuesday
Nalarene
(August 29). Kick-off is, set
for 4 p.m. at Evim Davis
Field.
Last year at Mount Vernon,
the Lady Cougars shut out
the Redwomen by the score
·
of 6-0.

one in Cleveland's clubhouse.
"I can't say enou*h about
Grady," said Byrd. 'Whether
he goes 0-for-5 or .5-for-5, he
plays the same way. He plays
hard. He dives, nsks injury.
.He signed a big contract at the
beginning of this season and I
don't think i(s a secret that
some guys, after they get a big
contract, get a little too comfortable. Not Grady.
"The way he plays the
game, you'd think he was in
the last year' of his contract,
not the first. Everyone on our
team should learn from him."
Sizemore, a favorite among
Cleveland's female fans, · is
commanding respect from
opponents as well.
"He's and up-and-coming
star," Blue Jays manager John

route to an 18-for-18 effort absence loomed large for
her young team, "Without
in serving the ball.
it
was Kari, we played extremely
Defensively,
Rinehart who shined the well, especially against
brightest as she tallied 35 Georgetown," Fields said.
digs and went 18-for-18 "I thought our defense was
passing .the ball. She also really good against them.
"But we were missing a
delivered three aces.
Randi Rodgers had 34 defensive player, we were
assists and 13 digs while also missing an offensive
Veach added six kills and ll player without Kari," Fields
digs to the winning effort. said.
Lapp also chipped in with
"Against UMD we played
six kills.
well the first two games, I
Rio Grande head coach was very pleas.ed with 'that,
Patsy Fields said she buttllen, Tiffin we just fell a
thought her team played part. we couldn't pass the
well, but that Kari Rodgers' ball," Fields added. "We've

0

:!0

Gibbons said. ''I've seen
enough of him in the last year·
to know that."
Sizemore took the praise in
stride.
"I'm just trying to improve
all the time," Sizemore said.
"There are a lot of things I '\
could do better."
,
Three doubles, two intentional walks and a sacrifice tly
helped the Indians snap a 2-2
tie and score three runs in the
fifth.
Sizemore led off with his
second double and scored
when
Jason
Michaels
thumped a two-base hit off the
!eli-field wall. The Blue Jays
put Travis Hafner on, am:l one
out later, Garko's RBI double
made it 4-2.
got to improve there.
"Rochester, we did come
back, so we showed that we·
can come back, I think
we're a team that's not
going to quit," Fields added.
"Overall I was pleased, it
was a tournameni where
we've got to come back and
lind out what we've got to
work on.
~
"Hopefully we can learn
from this."
• Rio Grande travels to
Marietta to compete in the
Marietta
College
Tournament over the weekend.

O'Bleness offers
new services at
Albany clinic, A6

\,.
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o (' l .r'l: IS • \'ol.

:&gt;(&gt; .

WEilN J.:SIIA Y , AUGUST 30, 2011b

:'llo . t h

"''"' .m~duil~"· ntinel.l'llno

Council, lawyer ·discuss options for demolition project

SPORTS
• Eastern beats South
Gallia. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
met with Solicitor · Jennifer
Sheets Monday evening to
discuss what recourse can be
taken to enforce the demolition order on a downtown
building.
Allan Irvin of Pomeroy
was given 30 days to demolish the condemned building
he purchased earlier this
summer from Jack Carsey.
The building remains standing, with one missing wall
and a snow fence surrounding the property.

,,

Irvin has maintained that
the building can be rehabilitated, and that he has the
financial backing to complete the work. Prior to council 's order to demolish the
building, Irvin was granted a
30-day extension of the condemnation order· issued by
the village's building inspector. The extension was granteel to allow him an opportunity to outline to the de~ ign
review board his plans for
repairing the building, and to
demonstrate financial ability
to complete the work.
No visible improvements have been made, and ·Irvin
has taken no steps to demol-

ish the buildinl? and reclaim
the site. The village considers it a safety hazard.
According to Sheets, the
village has little choice but to
demolish the building at its
own expense, and attach the
cost of demolition to the
county tax records, or collect
the cost through a civil lawsuit. The village ·cannot.
however, force Irvin to tender the cost of demolition,
nor can it impose a criminal
penalty or jail term for failing to do 'so.
.
"There is no criminal
penalty in the Ohio Revised
Code or village ordinances in
this case," Sheets said. "The

iss·ue before counci l i'
whether you can generate
suftlcient funds to demolish
it and how to collect the cost
from the owner.''
The village is already in
debt for ihe demolition oi' the
Mark V building, which was
directly across the &lt;tree!
from Irvin 's building, and
will likely not recover the
cost unless the owner. Kay
Platter, sells the property and
satisifies a first lien to
Farmers Bank and Saving's
Co.
·
Rex Darst, who owns the
property adjacent to Irvin's
also expressed concern about
his own liability in the event

or an inju ry from falling
debris from the huilding. He
and his wife. Brenda. Mayor
Sandy lannarell i. and Lenny
Tennant. divided the cost of
demolishing their building~
on the same block, which
were all condemned a month
hefore Irvin 's.
Other bu siness
Council Member Jean
Craig questioned the status
of rental unit inspections
promised as part of an
increase in rental fees
approved earlier this year.
She said council had been
assured that all rental units in
'

Please see Project. AS

OBITUARIES
Page AS ·
• Robert 'Jeff' Glass
• Dexter Odelf Erwin

,

..,.,.w.Both Sorgontjphoto

INSIDE
Submitted photos
• Polygamist fugitive
Evans walks around the field while waiting for another play between the Pittsburgh Steelers
Warren Jeffs arrested in
and the Vikings.
Nevada to face charges
of marrying off girls.
See Page A2
• SWCD fair winners
announced.
See Page A3
• Bethel Worship Center
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
schedules spiritual
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
. classes. See Page A3
POMEROY
When
• O'Bieness offers free
Meigs County's Evan Shaw,
heaHh screenings for
a senior at Ohio University,
women. See Page A3
was selected for a video pro· • Ohio's largest county to . duction internship with
National Football League
improve poll worker
(NFL) Films last spring, he
trainihg. See Page AS
thought it was "almost too
• Federal court lawsuit
good to be true."
· And now that he's beeo
challenges Ohio rating
there and back, he's more
rules. See Page A6
excited than ever about his

VIDEOGRAPHER SHAW RELA1ES
NFL INTERNSHIP ·HIGHLIGHTS

The 'Joy' of scrapbooking
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN£L.COM

POMEROY
"Yoi•
don't realize what you have
in life until. you see it on
paper." Joy Searles said.
Searles, 19, of Athens and
employee of Pomeroy' s
Makin Memories Scrapbook

Store is an amateur photographer and a pro at scrapbooking. so much so she
was chose n as one . of 25
finalists in a national scrapbooking coolest sponsored
by Basic Gray titled, "Be
Bold Album Contest."
Please see Joy, AS

career opportunities. In fact
he was given a try-out to
shoot four pre-season NFL
games- a first for_an intern
- and if he gets some good
footage will be hired to shoot
some games this year. the
first being a Steelers game in
Pittsburgh.
.He has also been hired to be
a camera assistant for the
Bengals and Browns home
games for this se!lson, and Evans shoots the Pittsburgh Steelers/MN ViGkings game.
was invited to return in While he had Zack Glaze of Pomeroy with him to assist and
·watch out for him as he concentrated on filming, Shaw took a
Please see Shaw, AS
hit from a Steelers player while crouching down to videotape.

WEAmER

·I

·~uo.u~
.

Joy Searles. employee at Makrn Memories Scrapbook Store
in downtown Pomeroy displays her award winning scra·pbook "Who I Am " which was picked as one of 25 finalists in
a national scrapbooking contest out of hundreds of entries.

Details on Page A6

'

Middleport paving

INDEX
'

FOtlball

Is

111118

pad

2 SECflONS -

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Obituaries

WITCH fOR IT AUGUST 31STI

1.2 PAGES

Calendars

Editorials
Sports
Weather

Beth Sergent;photo

The latest bureaucratic delay to repair Pomeroy's parking
lot wall is the argument over using new or old sandstone in
order to repair the .wall with its historic integrity in mind.

B Section

Wall of woes

A second layer of

asphalt is goin~.
on Middlepmt
streets and alleyways this week,
through a paving
project funded
through the State
Capital
Improvement
Program.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Jeru salem
has its Wailing Wall while
Pomeroy has its wall of
woes located on the village\
lower parking lot where
gapping holes indicate the
danger of collapse. danger
that may now cost the village $7.500 to repair II'J.len it
was to co~t it nothing. ·
Pomeroy had lined up

Brian J. Rood/photo

A6

© 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

..

+
•J

I00 percent funding for the
parking lot wall repair project est imated at around
$55,000 with 75 percent of
t~c cost covered by the
Federal
Emergency
Management Agency. 12 1/2

Pen.:cnt
.

comino0

from

Buckeye Hill s and the
remaining 12 112 percent
coming
from
the
Regional
Appalachian
Please see Woes, AS

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