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Sunda~August28,2005 . ~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

New Orleans flees, ·.
braces, prajrs as·

Scholarship
awarded,Aa

HOLZER CLINIC

\.

monstrous Hurricane .
Katrina bears down, A6

Bringing you the latest Healthcare News

·Meigs 911 proposal modeled after Vmton County's

SPORTS.

POLYMYALGIA RHEUMATICA (PMR)
.

• Cleveland blasts
Blue Jays.
See Page ·B1

BY BRIAN

ch:lra·cteriz·ed by muscle soreanns, hips and
in adults over the age of 50.
a period of days to weeks.
is worse in the morning and
of inactivity: Activities involving raisto or above the shoulqer levels or
and thigh muscles arc ditli cu lt , such as,
jacket, brushin g the teeth. ·combing the
hair, getting out of bed or getti ng up from a low
cha ir.
Most of the time people cons ider this part of aging
process and do not seck medica l attention. Due to
widespread aching and absence of typical swoll en
Joints i! is sometimes difficult to diagnose clinical.ly. A simple blood test forinflapunation in the
appropriate clinical settin g is a ll that is required to
diagnose it, and quick response to steroids confinns the diagnosis. It is an inf1ammatory condition , certaj nl y treatable and po te ntially curable.
Although soreness and stillness ts usually felt in

REED

POMEROY
Meigs
County ·Commissioners' proposal to charge telephone customers a line fee for 911 service is not the avenue a
board-appointed 9i I committee recommended, but is
modeled instead after another
small county's system.
Earlier .thi s year, the Meigs
County 911 Committee recommended a half-percent
sales tax to finance a 911

the muscles. but inflammation is not in the mus-' ·.
cles . It is a form of arthritis and affects the bursae
(or sacs) around shou lder and hip j oints, and pain
in the arms and thighs comes from the nearby
joints. It is not transm itted from one to the,other.

A Rheumatologist is a sp'ecialist in musculoskeletl!l
disorders and arthri ti s and can make a proper diagnosis, whil e ruling out other s imilar conditi·ons,
and manage Jong-tenn steroid s to minimize the
.. s ide effects, while contro Hin g the sym ptoms with
Treatmen t is usually wi th low dose stero ids such as ·lowest dose of stero.ids.
predn isone I 0 to 15 mg a day. Usual arthritrs medicines such as Tylenol. Ibuprofen or Naproxcn are
not helpful. Typically. patients get a dramatic
improvement in their symptom s within a couple of
days, som etimes even with first dose. Treatment
can make a big difference in the life style and
fun ctionality of the affected individuals. Although
treatment is simpl e and predn isone is probably one
of cheapest prescription drug ava ilable, treatment
is usually of long duration, lasting from month s to
years. Most of the patients arc ex pec ted to taper o.ff
prednisone from 6 months a year, although some
patients do require treatment with very lose dose
ste roids for 2-3 years or so metimes even longer.
Long-term steroids should not be taken without
medicai supervision, due to their potential harmful
effects.

J.

8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

emergency dispatch service,
to operate from a new
$350.000 building, with 1014 di spatchers and a full-time
director paid $36,000.
The sales tax would ·generate approximately $500,000
per year for the 911 service,
according to the committee's
estimate. ·
The
co mmiss ioners,
instead, are proposing a 50cent per-line charge for all
local te lephone customers,
excluding wireless customers.
That ptoposal , which will go

before Meigs County voters · generated from a te lephone
in November, would generate line charge. Commissioner
approximately $40,000 per Mick
Davenport
.said
year, based on 7,000 land Thursday the Vinton County
telephone 'lines. ·
system operates on less than
Comm issioners said they Meigs County will generate
based their decision to seek from its telephone line
the phone line fee, in ·part, on charge, because of the lower
the apparent success of popul ation there.
Vinton County in operating a
In a repon to commission9,11 system from the sheriff's ers this spring, the 9 11 comdepa rtment there , usin g a mittee
commissio ners
part-time director who also appointed to exami ne the
works as a deputy sheriff. The requirements of implementVinton County system also ing the service . and the
operates solely on revenue options for paying for it said

Whos got school spirit? vve do!

'

A new
Endennologie
machine i:; now at
the main cli nic in
· Gallipolis, Ohio .
This n1achinc helps
loosen and
,rp &gt;·nm &gt;P Cellul ite
from your skin lay-,
to help give your

'

sk in ·a tig hter, less
pati en ts think it is like
wrinkled, dimpled
a dee p massage, and
appearance, especially we play relaxation
in the thighs,
mus1c so you can
'
abdome n and buttock · really fee l pampered.
area:;. We can a lso .
Ca ll 740-446-5225 for
treat arms and neck
an appo intment today!
with the sma ller
attac hm ents. Most of
our cndennolog ic

-

needs.
From her princ ipal's fund
Ha wk provides her stJ.Jdents
POMEROY - As most with a free student planner to
parents know by now, send- help them keep trac k of and
ing their kids back to school organ ize their assignments.
can put a serious strain on the From her principal's fund
fa mily budget.
Ku csma rccemly purchased
Bes ides clothing and acade mic
ac hievement
school supplies, parent s also medals for her students that
open thei r wallets for school passed state ac hievement and
fees throughout the year that profic iency tests last spring.
help pay for a variety of conHaw k's students are not ·
suma ble material s like athlct· charged for their workbooks ·
ic, art and lab supplies, work· however, nor are anv students
books, alid computer. discs.
at the cl~ mentary- thro ugh
Southern
Ele menta ry eighth grade leve l in the
charges a $20 classroo m fee Meigs Local Sc hool District
for each student to cover the according to Superintendent
expense of workbooks and William Buckley.
other consumable materials.
''W.e charge no fees at all."
"The ·workbooks are Meigs Intermediate School
expensive but are' onl y a part Principal Rusty Bookman
of what student fees cover, · said. "Students pay zero f&lt;Jr
although these fees in no way textbooks and workbook ~ and
begin to cov'er the miscella- they ~e t a free breakfast on
neous items that the school top of that to encourage them
provides," Southern Local to eat and start off on the rig ht
Schools
Supe-rintendent foot each day."
.
The state of Ohio does not
Robert Grueser said. "Ours
(classroom fee ) has not permii a district to charge for
increased in sr ile of increased textbooks although they can
costs. " "'
charge for workbooks.
Southern
Elementary
Eastern Local Sc hools
Princi pal Micke y Kucsma Superintendent Rick Edwards
said that the fee is charged to said that hi., district has not
keep the children from doing charged students for workfundrai sing throughout the books since the district conyear for those workbooks and so lidated eight years ago and
items Grueser referred to.
does not charge for them at
Meigs Middle School any level. elementary or secPdncipal Mary Hawk said ondary.
that her school .holds
Eastern
Elementary
fundrai sers in place of student Principal Jody Howard said
fees to help with the costs of th at some of her students pay
field trips to places like the the following school fee s: $3
Columbus Zoo, COS I or the for an an fee. $3 for a weekly
Di scovery reader fee, $1 for a ,computer
Avampato
Museum, and to bring in lab fee. The $7 ·is paid per stumotivational speakers.
dent per year. The fees vary
"Those things cost money. by grade and use of mate rial
especially with the way gas and some grade s don't have
prices are ri sing," Hawk said. the fees.
·:1 wish we didn 't ~ave to do
"Basically that's fo r confundratsers but that s JUSt part su mable materia ls li ke art
· supplies and computer disks:··
of it."
In fact a big part of public
school education is providing
for more student s with more
Please see Cost. AS

OBITuARIES .
Page AS

· • Vernon Ward Mitchell
• Douglass Ross Roush

• Iraq finishes new
constittution but without
Sunni approval in setback
to U.S. efforts.
See PageA2
• Transfers posted.
See Page A3
• Parkersburg arts and
crafts festival upcoming.
.See Page A3
• Community Calendar.
SeePageA3
• SEC lawyer critiques
Petro's handling of
investment warnings.
SeePage AS
• Faculty union approves
contract on eve of classes.
SeePage AS
• Poll shows Ohioans
split on whether Taft
should resign.
SeePage AS
• Judg~ says Somali
man's statements likely
will be admissible.
SeePage AS

Introducing
WEATHER

Non-Scalpel
Vasectomy is a safe and elfective method of contraception, The
no-scalpel vasectomy technique was developed in hopes of
redueing some of the postoperative symproms relaled to the
standard incision. Some studies have suggested that the
no-scalpel technique is quicker and has fewer complications than
the standard incision technique.

The rising cost of sending
kids back to school
BY BETH SEROENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSEN TINEL.COM

INSIDE

Advanced Treatments in
Endermologie are Now Available

the sales tax is ·.. the only foreseeable way the commiuee
has found to fund and continue tO . Qperate a COUnt y•Wide
E91 1 system."
·
· 'The 9 11 commiuee recommends the creation of a new.
separate agency to run 91 1...
Other counties in the area.
includ ing At hens. Gallia and
Hocking counties. finance
their 9 11 service through a
sales · tax for that purp&lt;&gt;se.
Meigs Count y is one of on ly
five counties in the state without a 911 dispatching service.

.

.

With footba ll season having
begun over the weekend for
· ail three district schools.
scenes like ·\his one from
Southern High School's
rece nt pep rally are once
again fa mil iar sights. Above:
Here students proudly display the "spirit stick " after
screaming the loudest and
showing the most spirit in
the gymnasium before the ir
footba ll game. Right: During
the pep rally, not only footbail players were recognized
· but students in c ross-co un~
try, golf, volleyball, cheerleading and the band who
played the 1970's classic
"Free Ride " under the direction of Band Director Chad
Dodson who is pictured per~
form ing with his students.

Sentinel microwave winner

•
Beth Sergenl/photos

f·_'

The No scalpel vasectomy technique is now being offered by
Holzer Clinic Urologists:
C~ong M.

Dotallo on Poco A&amp;

Kim, MP and Nicolette Jones, MD

Deadline looming for loan applications

INDEX
SEcnoNs - 12
Calendars
2

Classifieds

HOLZER
CLI~IC

r,,,

A-It ·c /i&lt;. a/
c ·/ft. "!ICC:.,_,
I c&gt;c-.:.1!
.
.. C..~uiJI"'!-

A:3
B3-4

Comics

8s

,Dear Abby

A:3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

~

Everywhere . .

PAGPS

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© .:1005 Ohlu Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY
Small.
non-farm, agriculture-dependent businesses and ag ricul ture cooperatives located in
several Southeastern Ohio
countie s including Meigs
and Gallia are being reminded by the U.S . Small
Business
Adm ini stration
(S BA ) that time is running
out for them to apply for
federal disaster loans.
The deadline is Sept. 12.
The disaster declaration was
made to help fanns recover
from damages and losses to
crops caused by excessive
rain and tlooding that

occurred Sept . 8-26, 2004.
According to a relea se
from the SBA, el igible small
businesses may qualify for
loans of up to· $1.5 m1lhon at
2.9 percent interest rate wil h
loan terms up to 30 years.
Eligibi lity for the program is
based on the size and type of
bu siness and it fina ncial
resources. Lo)ln amo unts and
term are set by the S BA and
are based upon each appl icant's financ ial conl'lition.
It was pointed ou1 that
under the disaster declaration, SBA cannot pro vide
loans to agricu lture produc-

ers nor to non-agricu lt ure
dependent businesses.
"SBA-can help these small
businesses overcome their
econmnic injuries by offering . these working capital
loans, but the ·help can't S\an
Charlene Hoefllch/ photo
until they apply." said hA Melissa Mullins of 112 Maple Place. Pomeroy. was the winner of
Acting
Di saster
~ rea
a microwave oven from The Daily Sentinel awarded in a drawing
Direc10r Frank Skaggs.
from those registering at the newspaper's booth in the commer- ·
He sa id interested business ciai building during the Me1gs County Farr. Here she accepts her
owners should contact SBA g1ft from Jason Patterson. The Sentinel's circulation district man.by ca llin g 1-800-359-2227 ager. Winners of cartoon umbrel las in the drawing were Janet F.
for more inforn1ation and to
obtain a loan . applica tion. Hill, Racine; Rose Prunty, Syracuse; Opal Wigal . Middleport: Gary
Information is also on Jhe Knopp, no address: Ronald E. Hensley. Pomeroy: Jean Wright,
SBA's
website
at Pomeroy: Sam Hawley. Rac1ne; Julie Tillis. Rutland; Tonya Balser,
'Pomeroy, and Lorre Hili, Long Bottom.
w,ww.sba .gov/disaster.

. '

•f

�•

WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

Iraq finishes new constitution but without Sunni approval in setback to U.S. efforts
BY ROBERT H. REID
ASSOCJ.4.TED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD. Iraq - lruqi
negol!ators tlnished the new
constttutton Sunday .tnd
referred 11 to the voters but
wnhout the endorsement of
Sunnt Ar.tb~. a maJOr setback
lor the U S. strategy to lure
Sunms away from the 111Surgency and hasten the d.ty U S
troops can go hoine.
The abse nce o l Sunm Arab
endorsement, alter more than
two months of mtenstve negottattons, ratsed lears of more
vm lence and set the' stage lor
a bitter poltttcal ftglll ahemJ ol
an Oct 15 n.tttonwtde referendum on the dou11ncnt
A pohttca\ hattie ,t\ong reli gwus and eth 111c lmcs thre.ttened to ,h,n pen Ulll1mun,d
dl\· iSI011S at.! tllllC whe-n 1Cl.ltl011S

dll10IH!.

Sunnt

Ar.tb\

till'

.tnd

S hu les.

Ku""

be WOPi.Cil lllg
Sunn1 negotiator-. deln ered

dppedl tO

thetr reJCl ll•lll 111 .t JOtn t 'tatemen! ,honlv alter the draf t
wa' submitted tn p.trlt.unelll
They br.md~d the Jm.tl ve rsiOn ,...,

AP Photo

JJlcgH Jmme · dnd

The head of the lraqt Conslttu!IOnal Commtttee Humam Hammudt , center, talks to the members of Iraq's constttutton drafttng
.tsked the Ar.ib Uague. the commttlee dunng thetr meetmg Sunday Members of constttu!lon drafttmg commtttee stgned the draft constttutton Sunday after
UnMd Nalloth .md .. ullenM- some amendments Shiite commt ttee member Khaled ai'Atttyah 'satd. The draft now goes to the Iraqi people tn an Oct 15 reft!On.tl om.m t!..tllons .. to Inter- erendum .
ve ne .t~.tltht the document ·
lntcr\cntton ts unltkely . !ton of the document When tekVISton th.tt the constttutton widesptead purges of Sunnis lion wtll be defeated. Sunnis
howevet. .tnd no ftlllhet Ptc'ldent J,tl.tl T.dab.lnt s.tt d .. dto~fted under the supervtston from government JObs and have the m&lt;~onty in at le.tst
amenumenh to the dt aft .t~e· th.tl .tl -Yd\VCI W.IS til. sentol ot the occupiers'" would public ltfe.
four provinces
po"tbk under the law. ,,,d .t t!OH'rnme nt c:)tticJ~tls lllclutl- dtvtde Iraq .tnd benefit Israel
Defeat of the constitutton
The padiament speaker.
lcg.tl expert on the Lltalttng '"g Deputy Pr11ne M1111SICr
MaJOr deal -breaker tssues who was not pan of the Sunm would torce ne'w electtons for
comnune~. Hu "e111 Add.th
Ahm.td Ch,tl.tbt how led wtth 111clucled federalism , lr&lt;~q' s n e~otta ttng team, '"'d the · a parliament that would begm
.. \ thlllk If thiS Cllll,li iUIIOI1 l.tuL!IHe r
tdentlly m the Arab world and Shutes and Kurds should have the draltmg process from
pds scs ds it 1s. It wtl l \\O!'L' Il
··fh c conslltullon " left to references
to
Saddam been more accommodatmg to scratch II the constttutwn ts
evcrythmg 111 the Lllllllll)' mu pet'lp le to appt ovc 01 Hussem 's Sunm-dommatcd the mmonty The Shute- approved, electiOns for a fully
said Saleh ai -Mutl.tq . .t Su11111 ICICCI II. .. said Ta\dbant. a Baath Party
Kurdish bloc won 22 I of the constttultonal parliament will
negolt!IIOI
Kurd "I hope that L&gt;UI people
Sunnts fear ledeiahsm 275 Nattonal Assembly seats be tn December
Prestdent Bush '''l"es sed will o~ccepl 11 desptle some would lead to the breakup of because many Sunms boyCommun,tl tensiOns have
dis,tppotntmellt
th.ll
the ll.tv,s ..
rise n since the Shiite-domithe counlly into a Kutdtsh coiled the Jan 30 election
''1 think to them, they won nated
government
was
Sttnllts dtd 1101 ' ' ~n on but· A top Sunm who dtd .tttend notlh and Shtite south.
pinned hi s hopes m'ithe reler- the eete mnn y. p.ttli .tm en t deprive Sunnts of Iraq 's vast the electton . so tt ts an announced Apnl 28 Both
epdum. sdymg 1t ~vv.t s d cllanct: 'pe.1ke1 H.tJII11 al-H.mo~nt , otl wealth concentrated .11 the opportunuy to them to get Shiites and Sunms accuse the
lor Ir.1qts to "set the Joullcla- 'a1d he thought the hn.tl doc- oppostte ends ot the country. whatever they want." a\- other of a'5assmatmg memIIOn tor a perm.tn~nt It dLJI umelll co111amed "too much and open the door to !raman Hassant told reporters. "If I bers of the nval sect. Shiites
government ··
teligwn· am! too lillie protec- tnlluence m the Sh11te south. was in the1r camp. I would and Kurds donunate the government security services,
M;my ke y Sh11te leaders h.tve been mme generous.,
But the depth of dtstllu&lt;~on­ uon of wo mcm · nghts
Although
too
k
re!u~e
in
Shiite-dommatSunnts
account
while most insurgents are
mcm over the eh.trter tn the
Desplle Jasi-111 11IUie c:once'for
only
20
percent
of
Ir.tq"
s
believed to be Sunnis.
Sunn1 cstab i~Shm enl extended "ons hom the m.tjOtll y ed lr,m &amp;lflng Saddam's rule
For the Umted States, one
beyuml the 15 negol tato". Sh11te' .md Kutds. the Suntris The consll tutton identifies estunated 27 million people.
v,ho were .tppm nted to the , ,uu the uocument thre.tt~ne d Ir.tq .ts .m Is lam tc ~ blll not they sill\ can derail the constt- of the lew stlver linings 111
conslttUIIOn,d C011111111tCC 111 the unlly ol Ir.tq and lis pl.1ce .tn Ar.tb - country, a conces- tullon 111 the reterendum due the biller constitullonal
sum to the Kurds and other to a concession made to the debate IS that tt convmceu
June undet U,.S pt eS'u te
tn the A' ab "'arid
ai-Shdmm.tn. non-Ar.tb mmonues
Kurds m the 2004 mtenm many Sunms that they made
The country's Sunnt vtee ' lbr.thtm
constilutton.
If Lwo-thtrds of a profound mtstake by boySunnts
also
y.,anted
no
refspokesman
of
a
leddtng
tnsur·
pre , idenl. Ghazi .d -Yawer,
did not show up .11 .1 Sunday gent group. the hlamtc Army ere nce to Saddam's p.trty. voters m any thtee provinces cottmg the Jan 30 election
ceremony marktng comple- in lta4. 'atd on AI-J,11ceta fc ,um g th.tt would lead to reJect the chru Ler. the constita- and should take part in the

·Reuters TV soundman killed in Baghdad
.BAGHDAD, lra4 (AP) -A tan from the scene. and the inciReuters televtston sound tech- dent was bemg investigated
nictan was kill ed and a camMacDonald satd Reuters
eraman was mjured Sunday had not heard from Khadem
whtle trymg to cover a smce 1\c was detatned and
Baghdad gunbau\e mvolvmg could not lmd out where he
msurgents and U S troop' wa' bemg held
Police said the men were fired
At ,, news confe rence , a
on by Amencan forces Reuters correspondent asked
Wa\eed Khaled. 35, was · L S Ambassador to Iraq
ktlled and cameraman Hatder Zalmay Khaltlzad about the
Khadcm was wounded whtle tncident . say mg U S. soldtet s
dnvmg to the scene of the 'hot the men.
clash m the western Baghdad
Kha It lzad re &gt;ponded that
dtstrict of Adtl. said Al,t&gt;tatr mtlttary operauons were not
MacDonald, Reut ers" chtel an exact sctence and ''somecorrespondent m Baghdad
limes n11stakes are made"
The two appear to ha ve been
' \! they are nwde, we t'nvestarge ted by a smper. and tt gatc and then report on our
Khadem was detamed by U.S. Jmdmgs ... he smu.
troops after betng shot.
In a story on the Reuters Web
MacDonald smd.
stte, Global Managmg Edt tot
MaJ Mousa Abdul Kanm of Da' id Schlesmger said, · Th1s
the Ghazaltyah police said tragic inctdent must tmmedtU S ' soldiers opened ftre on · ately be tnvesttgated thoroughthe two men near Umm al- ly and unpar11ally.
Qura mosque
"A brave 10urnalist has lost
A statement tram the U S hts hfe and another has been
Army's Task Force Baghdad wo unded and det,uned when
satd troops responded to an thetr on ly actions were as proattack on an Iraq t poltce con- fesstonals reportmg the facts
voy that killed and wounded and 1m ages of the war We are
several offtcers
deeply saddened atthts Joss •·
"One civtltan was killed and
Waleed IS survtvcd ~y a 7another was wounded by small- year-o ld daughter and hts Wife.
arms tire during the attack," the who IS four months pregnant.
statement said "After d1scov- . Schlesmger later told The
enng an abandoned car wtth Associ ated Press 111 London
explosives matenal, weapons that Khadem was sttll m cusand a cell phone. utllts began tody more than 12 hours after
·
searehmg the area for the terror the mctdent
suspects who were beheved to
"We would ltke to have h1m
have fled on foot."
out to talk to htm and have him
Task
Force
Baghdad cared for," he satd.
Iraq is complam (requently
spokesman Lt Col .Robert
Whetstone said US troops about U.S. troops ftring at
evacuated one wounded CIVl i· ciVIlians near checkpoints and

othet loc.lltons, and Pnme
Mimster Ibrahim a\-Jaafari
satd he had ra1sed the issue
wtth Amencan authorities
U.S offlctals blame the
problem on a nse in SUIC'Ide car
bombi11gs that have •killed
dozens of Amencan troops in
recent months
In March, U S. troops mtstakenly killed an Italian mte\hgence
agent and wounded ru1 Italian
joUI nahstdnving to the Baghdad
airpon after the Journalist was
freed following a month as a
hostage of msurgents.
U S. forces killed two
Reuters cameramen dunng the
111vas10n of Baghdad in 2003,
when a tank shell was fired at
the Palesllne Hotel where they
were based.
A thtrd Reuters cameraman
was killed by a sntper in
Ramad1 111 November 111 unexplamed ctrcumstances The
.tgency satd II was seek111g an
explanatiOn from the U S.
command.
Last week. Reuters called for
the United States to release 36year-old news cameraman Ali
al-Mashhadam, who was be10g
detamed by the U.S. mthtary
after bemg taken 1010 custody
111 Iraq two weeks earlier.
Reutets satd the U.S mtlttarv
has refused to g"e reasons tor
hi s arrest and detention
At least 52 journalists and 21
media support workers have
been ktlled as a result ol hosttle
actton while covenng the war
111 Iraq s111ce March 2003.
accordmg to the New Yorkbased Comm tttee to Protect
Journalists.

No suspects emerging in Suge Knight shooting
MIAMI (AP) - Poltce had
no suspects Sunday m the
shootmg of rap mogul Suge
Kntght at an MTV award,
pany - a typtcal development in the strcci-JUSllcc
world of rap
Kmght. 40. was shot once
m the upper nght leg short ly
after mtpmght SatUiday at a
star-studded bash hosted by
Kanye We" He was scheduled f01 surgery to remm e ,,
bullet from hts leg cll1d tep.ur
a broken bone

N poltce report described
the shooter only as a black
male weanng a pi~k shirt
.. We ate mterviewmg all the
wune'Ses we can to hopeful ly develop a co mposlle. ·
Mtamt
Beach
polt ce
' pokesman Bobby Hernandez
,atd
·
He told The Mt.tm t Herald
that ' the tll':esltg.IIIOn w.ts
hemg hampered by wllneS&gt;e,- unwtl lmgncss to t.tlk ··we
don't have any physt c.Ii
de&gt;e11pl1011 We don't knov,

ho w many subjects were
mvolved. which ts mmd bogglt ng, wllh all those people
_around.'" Hernandez satd
A group of Kmght's fn ends
wa11111g at the hospital &gt;atd he
wa' alert and t.tlkattve after
th€ shoaling. Hts all orneys
told ho,pnal otltctal' not to
rele,tse any mform.ttHIII on
his condtlt0!1. satd hosp tt,tl
' pokeswoman Laune 0\tv,,
K111ght' ' attorne y m Lo'
An~ e le ,. Dermot Gtven,. dtd
not-return cl telephone c.tll

political process.
So few Sunms were elected
that their constitution negotiators had to be appointed.
reducmg their intluence on
the commtttee. Sunni clerics.
who were at the forefront ol
the boycott campatgn, are
now urging their followers to
vote - although agamst · the
constttullon
The radtcal Shute clenc
Muqtada a\-Sadr, who has
considerable inlluence, has
broken with"other Shiites and
spoken out against the constitution.
The 'document mcluded
some relatively mmor amendments that the Shiites offered
after Bush urged compromise
They mcluded stnking the
word "party" from the phrase
"Saddam"s Baath Party,'"
whtch could enable a future
B.tath Party to emerge, and
letung a future parliament
work out rules for Implementmg federalism
Shetk Humam Hammoudt,
a Sh"ute and chairman of the
drafting committee, said 5
milhon cop1es of the consttlutton will be ctrculated nationwide m food allotments each
Iraqi famtly recetves monthly
from the government. Unlike
the January elections, Iraqis
will not be allowed to vote
outs1de the country because of
the difficulty 111 applying. the
three-province veto. Many I raqts acknowledged
they did not know enough
about the constitution to fonn
an opmton, but Ibrahim
lssam, a 28-year-o\d Sunm
chemical engmeer, satd he
was p]eased because lraqts
now have a legal basts to
organize thetr lives and will
be able to restore secunty and
111 ttme hve a normal
hfe.
"If something wrong was
inside the text. I am sure that
free Iraqis wt\1 choose the
ri ght thmg on October's referendum." Issam satd
For Khansaa Dawoud, 62, a
Shiite, the main concern. was
the government's mabiiity to
provide baste services such as
Jater and electrictty. She satd
the document wtll dtvtde Iraq
"Thank God few lraqts
have electrlctty to watch the
nonsense ," she smd.

Bigger French role in U.S. war on
terrorism heralds wanning ties
DUBAI,
Umted Arab
Emirates (AP) - As the gomg
gets tougher for the U.S military m Afghanistan and elsewhere m the regton, one ally
has stepped up desplle a recent
strammg of ties: France.
Pans has signiftcantly
boosted its military presence
m Central
Asia
and
Afghanistan, plus m nearby
seas, as both it and Wash10gton
nurture thetr buddmg rapprochement after a biller
falling out over the Iraq war.
French fighters have been
tlymg sorites under U.S command lll Afghani stan smce
Aug. 16, and France also took
command this month of an
international naval task forc e
on terronsm-related p~trols in
the seas between the Horn of
Africa and Paktstan.
France has kept about 900
troops 111 Afghanistan since
2003. mcludmg 200 Special
Forces soldiers tlghting alongstde the Americans Its air
force penodtcally has JOined
the U S.-led coahuon smce
takmg tts btggest ·role tn the
war's opemng weeks tn 2001,
when France had 5,500 troops
m the regiOn.
"'It's France's wish to show
that we are cooperat111g in the
tight against terror and In suppan of you 111 Afghanistan,"
satd French Atr Force Col.
Gtl\es Mtchel, who oversees
hts country's au force role m
the theater. "We told the
Amencan&gt;. ' If you need some
assets. we will provtde them.'"
A French Defense Mtnistry
otfictal. speak mg on condttion
ol anonym u y 111 \me with
French custom, satd Pans was
determmed to keep battlmg
tc rron sm m the wake ol the
Sept II attacks and was
mcreasmg tis rmhtary cooper.tlionm A fghamstan to support
next month·, landmark Iegtslattve elections
.. We had a very clear post lt(ln when 11 comes to Iraq,.. , he
P.tns -based o fttcta~ said
.. Th,it has nothmg to do v.nh
our ti ght agamst terronsm.
wnh Fr.mce worktng v, nh our
Amencan CGJieagues .. on the

NATO-led
InternatiOnal
Secunty AsSlStance Force
Since earlier this month ,
French Mtrage-2000 fighters
have been tlymg alongstde
U.S. Atr Force A-10 Warthogs
to asstst American and Afghan
gtound troops near Kabul,
Ghazm, Delaram and Qalat,
satd Capt Davtd Small ,
spokesman lor U.S. Central
Command Air Forces 111 Qatar
Mtrage FI-CR tlghters also
are hand\111g reconnaissance
mtsstons. shootmg mtelh gence vtdeo and imagery for
targettng purposes. while
French cargo planes supply
bases 10 the theater.
· A pair of French C-135
tanker planes, a vers1on of the
Boe111g 707, are running air-toatr refueling for Mirages and
Belgian and Dutch F-16s. By
month's end, French tankers
also will be refuehng U S AIOs. said M1chel
"From the U.S. side, having
their different types of aircraft
at our disposal cenamly beneftts us," Small said. "It relieves
some of the stress on the other
atrcraft. Hav111g the Mirages
there also provides a different
skill set.''
France 's current deployment is us largest smce the
Afghan ca mpaign 's · early
days. Michel Satd from
Afghamstan's Bagram air
base. It mcludes some 500
French pilots, atr controllers
and ground crew who arnved
this month at U.S -operated
bases
in
Afghamstan.
Tajiktstan . Kyrgyzstan and
Qatar
But even as it takes a larger
role alongside the United
States 10 Afghanistan, France
has not dtluted its oppositiOn
to the U.S.-Ied 111vas1on of
Iraq. a policy that enraged
Amencans and led to boycotts
of French products.
The bad blood even harmed
military ties. espectally aftet
US
Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld dended
Fr.mce as pan of"old Eurc?pe ..
Now at the n11111ary and point cal
levels.
Pans
and
WasHmgtpn are dusting olf

thetr old friendship, said the
Brookings
Institution's
Michael O' Hanlon.
"U S.· France mihtary ties
have always been good, except
for a brief penod when
Rumsfeld sought payback
over Iraq." O'Hanlon said.
"And more generally, there's
even an effort to mend fences
at a pohtlcallevel "
French and U.S. officials
make clear that France sllll
takes no direct role m Iraq.
But the French-led sea
patrol s between Pakistan and
the Horn of Africa mdirectly
bolster the U.S mission there
by preventing sea-borne aid for
lraqt insurgents or Gulf-based
terrori sts allied wllh them.
Up to a dozen French ships
patrol the seas around Arabia,
East Afnca.Iran and Pakistan,
halting suspect vessels head·
ing for the Strati of Hormuz,
whtch guards the entrance to
the Persian Gulf - and Iraq
France's current commanil
ot the naval task force , which
IS under overall U.S. control, IS
lis 1thtrd . . Warships (rpm
Geqnany, Pakistan, Canada,
Bntain and the lJnited State s
also ,participate in three
regional task forces.
France's air force deployment 111 Afghanistan started
Aug 6 and will last three
months, operating under the
pnmary command of ISAF It
also mcreased its role in the
U.S.-Ied Operation Endunng
Freedom, putUng aircraft
under U.S command when
they are avatlable
None of the stx Mirage 2000
pilots flying close air support
for U S ground troops have
dropped bombs since they
stan ed !lying etghtto I0 weekly mt sstons Aug 16, each time
spendmg about three hours
over Afghamstan.
"We remmd the bad guys
that they mtght get a bomb on
the head tfthey're not careful,"
warned Michel. who is an old
hand at joint mtssions with the
U.S mditary, llymg a French
lighter t,n the 1991 Gulf War
and HI NATO-led operation s 111
Bosma and Kosovo

BY THE BEND·-

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Augusi"29, 2005

Community Calend~r
.Public meetings

.'

Monday, Aug. 29
POMEROY Veterans
Service CommiSSion. 9 a.m.
at office, 117 Memonal
Dnve, Pomeroy.
Thesday, Aug. 30
POMEROY -The Meigs
County Board of Elections
will hold a meetmg at 8.30
a.m. at the oft1ce The Board
will certify the validtty of
candidate pelltions
Wednesday, Aug. 31
ATHENS - A Regton !4
workforce mvestment CEO
consortmm wtll be held at 10
a.m. at the OU Inn , Athens

annual reumon of the descen·
dants of Abraham and Mary
Wtll Bahr will be held at the
Long Bottom Comm1-1nity
Center. Take covered dishes,
ptqures, silent- auction Items
and memories Tableware will
be provided. The meal IS at
noon with games and fellowship to follow
Sunday, Sept. 4
MASON - The annual
Johnson tamtly reumon wtll
be held at I p.m at the Mason
Ctty Park 111 Mason, W. Va.
Take a covered dtsh and Hem
for the auction

Birthdays'

Wednesday, Aug. 31
PORTLAND
Gayle
Price will observe his 95th
Saturday, Sept. 3
birthday on Aug 31. Cards
LONG BOTTOM - The may be sent to him at 57995

Reunions

S.R. J 24, Portland, Ohw
45770
Thursday, Sept. 1
RACINE -· Clara Mae
Sargent will be 86 on Sept I
Cards may be sent to her at P 0 .
Box 236, Racine, Ohio 45771

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Aug. 29
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club. 7 p.m.. Pomeroy
Library Grading semmar will
begin at 6:15 with. Buffalo
ntckels the subject The ANA
gradmg gmde IS out and
should be here tor the meetmg.

County Health Department
wtll conducl a Chtldhood
lmmumzatwn Clime from 9
a.m.to II a.m. and I p.m. to 3
p.m. Please bring child 's shot
records and medical cards if
applicalJie A $5 00 donation
is appreciated but .!1ol
requtred All chtldren must be
accoll!panied by an adult.

School events

Thesday, Aug. 30
POMEROY - A concert ol
prayer for the 2005-06 school
year will be held at 7 p.m. at
the Metgs H1gh School cafetorium The Sixth annual evenlis
sponsored by the Mtddleport
Mini sterial A~socmtton A All
teachers,
ad mmtslrators.
school personnel . students and
Thesday, Aug. 30
p1arents are asked to J0111 in the
POMEROY - The Meigs concen ot prayer

Other events

School reunion held
POMEROY - The 8\ st
annual Hayes. Young and
Holiday School Reunion was
held Aug 14 at th~ old school
grounds with 70 m attendance
A basket lunch was served
' at noon wtlh Roger Hayes asking the blessmg. A remembrance at Joe Ha:yes who
passed away lhts year was
observed
Theresa Shaffer ga~e an
update on her daughter Tracy,
a mtssiOnary nurse 111 San
Salvador, El Salvador Tracy
will be mamed to Douglas
Escalantt in Et Salvador on
Sept. 17 •
·
Chen and Steve Smith and
their children Alexta. Steven
and Cameron have been home
for two years and will be
go111g back to Guyanna on
Sept. 15 They are missionaries there.
Craig Dougan gave a report
of the Hayes reumon held Ill

West Chester, Pa. on Aug 5-7
It was a celebratiOn of 300
years of the Hayes family in
Amenca.
Robert Chaney told about
gomg wtlh hts grandparents,
John and Mmnie Chaney.
when he was a child to pick up
people m the ~ommumty and
take them to someon~·s house
for church servtces
Lloyd Blackwood gave out
ptctures of the Old Holiday
School and studems who
attended there. Dale Colburn
&lt;~nnounced the I l6th observance of the Burlmgham
Decorauon Day next year
Gifts were presented to the
oldest, Virg111i&lt;1 Gibson, the
youngest. Darby Mugrage .
and the one who traveled the
farthest. Steve and Chen
Smith The winners of the
melon drawing wete Jyl
Caldwell
and
Sharon
Sw111dell.

John Stephens gave a recitation on "The Resembrance of
Quakers" and there was a
quiz Darren Hayes gave
recitattons, "Changing Ltght
Bulbs" and "'The Last Word,"
Tamt
Dougan
sang
"One .Day at a Time" and
"Blue Eyes Crymg in the
Ram" and Cratg Dougan sang
"God Bless Amenca" follov,·
mg by group smgmg of
"Amazmg Grace.' Steve
Smtth had the closmg prayer
Games were p layeu
Attending were Roger and
Dea Hayes, Jeremy Hayes, Jyl
Caldwell, Jason, Natascha and
Brooke Hayes, Debbte and
Christy Arnold, ,Susan, Mason
and Mnchell Metts, Tamt
Dougan and Clara Warnke .
Dale and Patty Arnold of
Albany . Brent. Camille. Clay
and Cameron Bolin of
Rutland. Garo\d and Gladys
Gilkey of Athens. John and

Garoldene , Stephen, Steve.
Kathy and Steven Dougan .
Ned, Sharon and Jacob
Swindell of Shade.
Ste' e and Valerie Arnold of
Glouster; Cecil 0. Bnckles,
Lloyd Blackwood. Y1rgmi.t
Gibson. Glayds Cummgs,
Dale Colburn, Kandtce and
Abby Legg, Darren. Carley.
Alica and Lexa Hayes. Darby
Mugrage,
Mark, Diann,
Bntnee and Kelsey Sauters,
Raben and Gladys Chancy,
Leon and Chnstme Sauters
and Theresa Shatter ot
Pomeroy; Chuck and Flora
Karns and Margaret Wolle ol
Logan: Steve , Chen, AleXIa,
Steven and Cameron Smith of
Hazelwood, Mo ; Bob and
Brenda, Miranda and Trevor
of Farmer&gt;ville, Linda Hayes
of Middleport. Richard Gtlkey
of Clifton. W Va . and Leroy
and Lavona Sauters of
Ravenswood, W Va.

Transfers posted
POMERbY
- Me1gs
County Recorder Kay Hill
reported the following transfers in real estate:
Harold L. Newell, Betty E.
Newell , to Rusty Ray
I,.awson, deed, Chester
Robert C. Salser to Thelma
B Salser, aft1davtl, Sutton
Floyd H. Cleland, Elberta
C. Cleland, Jennifer D.
Lavender, to Home Eq
Servi cmg
Corp.,
TMS
Mortgage, Inc., The Money
Store,
shenffs
deed,
Rutland
Donna Mane ,Bogard to
Deborah Dailey, Douglas
Hauber, Denise Dawson,
Scott Hauber, John Bogard,
Jr., deed, Lebanon.
Tony Rockhold, Knstma
Rockhold, to Columbus
Southern Power, easement,
Olive.
Thomas P. Avis, Judith N.
Avis, to Columbus Southern
Power, easement, Orange.
. Ernest H Calaway, Teresa
L. Calaw~y. to Columbus
Southern Power. easement.
Orange.
Charles Arthur Rllchte to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement. Chester
J.
Buckley,
Thomas
Stephanie K Buckley, to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement. Chester
Jennifer L Dow, Todd A
Doczi,
to
Columbus
Southern Power. easement ,
Chester.
Edward M Turley to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement, Chester.
Ralston D. Hemsley to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement, Sutton
Clarice
M.
Erwm,
deceased, to Don M. Erwin.
Michae l C: Erwm ,' deed .
Village ol Middleport.
Don M. Erwm. Cathy G
Erwm, Michael C. Erwm.
Myrna L. Erwm, to Kenneth
W. Walker. Cyhnda A
Walker, deed. ;v'illagc of
Middleport .
Raymond Furbee, Grace
Furbee. to Joseph K. Reeder,
Dtana L. Reeder, deed,
Lebanon .
, Timothy W Bentz, Pamela
G. Bentz. Pamela 'L. Bentz.
to U.S Bank, sheriff's deed.
Village of Pomeroy.
Edward D. Anderson to
Richard L Legg, Conm~
Legg, deed. Salem.
Clara Jean
Bradlord.
deceased, · to Mtchae I K.
«rBradford. deed, Sutton.
Jea n Stout to Davtd R
Stout, Peggy A. Stout. deed.

PageA3

Ma1k E. Proft1tt, Nola R
Village of Syracuse
Shem Hart, Randy Hart, to Proffitt. Linda C. Davis.
TTS Rentals, Inc., deed, Clyde T Davis. Karen E
Hawley, Karen Weaver,
Village of Middlepon.
J&amp;M Lands, Inc. to Thomas A. Hawley, to
Charles L. Mulholland, Joyce Michael J. Weeks, Angela C
Weeks, deed, VIllage of
L. Jacks, deed, Columb1a
Robert Grayson Ashley, Syracuse.
Kenneth Howe Kent, Sr.,
deceased, to Paula J
Whitlatch, Robert G. Ashley, Stella L. Kent, to Oh10 Power
Jr. , Paula Jayne Ashley, affi· Co., easement, Rutland.
Robert L. Wmgett to OhiO
davit, Village of Mtddleport.
Paula Jayne Ashley. Paula Power Co., easement, Village
J. Whnlatch, Robert G. of Syracuse.
Roben L. Imboden, Dmnna
Ashley, Jr., Mtchelle Lee
Ashley, to Jeremy D L. Imboden, to Ohio Power
Hartson, deed, Vtllage of Co .. easement, Rutland.
E.
Lunsford.
Rtcky
Middleport.
Jeanette
Lunsford.
to Ohw
David E. Miller to James T
Power
Co.,
easement ,
Farris, deed, Rutland.
-Charles D. Millirons to Salisbury.
Betty I. Moore to OhiO
Karen Adruns. David Adams,
Power Co . easement, easedeed. Chester.
Eumce Rose, Ellis Rose. to ment.
Richard 1-lagerty, Dorothy
Lola Maxine Hubbard, deed,
Hagerty, to Ohio Power Co.,
Salisbury.
Earline Facemyer, Earline easement, Salem.
M1ckey C Wtlliams, Robm
Lawson . Bernard Lawson ,
Bernard Lay.,son. to Lola A Williams, to Ohio Power
Maxme Hubbard. Maxine Co .. easement, Chester.
Trudy J. Lyons. Matthew J
Hubbard, deed, Salisbury.
'
Lyons,
to Oh10 Power Co.,
Iva Je,m Rose, Olen Rose,
to Lola Maxtne Hubbard , casement, Chester.
Jonathan Rees, Mtchelle
Maxme Hubbard. deed,
Ree
s. 10 Ohio Power Co ,
Salisbury.
Bonme Litton, Bonmc easement. Letart
Wendy A Wilfong to Ohw
Robens, Kenneth G. Roberts,
Co .. easement, Olive
Power
to Lola Maxme Hubbard.
Carter P French, Carolyn
Maxme Hubbard. deed ,
S. French. to William B
Salisbury
Sttversville Commumty Buck. P,atncia J Buck, deed.
Church to Tuppers Plam~­ Village of Middlepon
George
Horak ,
Rose
Chester Water Dtstnct. nght
Denison.
Barbara
Smith
,
ot way, Lebanon.
Robert Eldon Bowen. Robert Smith. Ruth Barga ,
Joyce Bow'en, to Phillip A. Jerry Barga, Donald Horak,
Bradbury. Mary L. Bradbury. to Robert P. Meter, Martlyn
S M e i~r. deed, VIllage of
deed, Chester.
Brad A Markm. There'a Pomeroy
Harley McDonald, Ahc1a
M. Guthne. Rt chard A
K.
McDonald. to Dustm J.
Hagerty. Dorothy Haget1y. to
Laune K. Allman. deed. Butcher, Jesstca R. Butcher.
deed, Salisbury.
Columbta.
Robtn Kelly 10 Henry E.
Howard Davis Hi ve ly,
Emma
Rose
Howard D Htvely. C tth y ' Hugg ms.
Hively. to Marty G Wy,mt. Hugg ms Bancroft. deed.
Carron H · Wyant, deed, Columbid.
Wtlma Eynon. deceased. to
Sctp!O.
Donna F.tye Barley to Sybil Rtflle. cerl!ftcate.
Tommy Smtth , Naomt Smuh, Orange.
James Barker to HSBC
deed, Rutland
Rtsa Sayre to Rtchard A. Bank USA to Ciugroup
Barnbart, Jr. , M1~hele L. Mortgage Loan. shenlf 's
Barnhart.
Rtchard
A. deed. Village of Syracuse
Elm a I Louks. d~ceased. to
Barnhart. deed, Sctpio.
Otts Layne. Mary A Carol A Taylor. James D.
Layne, to Adam P Lillie, Louks. Mary Jane Armes.
.
Shilo D
Ltllle. deed , cen ttlcate. Sutton.
Duane D. Duffield to
Salisbury .
Monty R. Hart. Pmtla L. Brenda K. Call. deed.
Hart. to Janet Angela Krider. Rutland
Pamela J Blackston, Bruce
deed , Raqne
Raben D Lepley. Judtth A. W. Blackston. to Peggy A.
Lepley, to Barry W. Hart. Johnson. deed, C:hester
Nancy H Rue. Charles V.
deed. Lebanon.

Monday,•August 29, 2005

Counteifeitgift ring still
sparkles in wife eyes

s

"
DEAR ABBY.
My husband
gave me a beautiful dtamond
and sapphtre ring lor our
anmvcrsary Because it was
too large, I took tt to a Jeweler
who has worked on many
pieces for me After Jook111g at
the nng, he asked me where 11
came from I told him it was a
gtft from my husband
When I asked the Jeweler
why he asked. he mformed me
that the sapphtre was synthetIC and the ':diamonds'' were. m
fact. cubic zircoma I wa s
shocked, and now I don't
know what to do I'm not certam whether or not to tel l my
husband . I don't want him to
think I don't like the nng, 111
case he knew what he was purchasmg It IS beaulltul , and I
Will Jove wearmg ll regardless However, tf he bought
the nng thmkmg 11 was the real
McCoy. he may have spent a
lot more on tllhan 11 IS worth
Becau se my hu sband has
always given me exqmsite
JCWehy. I suspect he doesn't
know Should I share tht s
mfo nnation wtth hun or keep
, my mouth shut? - STUCK
IN STONE MOUNTAIN.
GA
DEAR STUCK· Tell your
husband that you took the ,nng
to the Jeweler to have It SIZed
and what he told you Assure
htm that you love ll and w2nt
to keep ll "'regardless" He
may have bo ught 11 from the
Home Shoppmg Network, or
he may have been taken
advantage ol Etther way. 11
Wtll clear the air
DEAR ABBY Over the past
few years. I ha' e noltced an
increased number of restaurants putting the silverware 111
a napkin and then sett111g the
rolled napktn on a b.tre table I
have sl'!en thts at both casual
dmmg restaurants and even
some fm e dmmg establtshments
I was taught . to place my
napkm on my lap as soon as I
sit down, but I don't ltke leavmg my silverware on the bare
table. I have ttted placing the
silverwate on the bread plate,
creallng an awkward pile that
is not conducive IQ eatmg
bread, especially when buller
gets m~olved . When there ts
no bread plate, I have resoned
to plac111g my silverware on a
sugar packet- a faux pas. but
I'd prefer that to leavmg my

Dear
Abby

silverware on a bate Iahl e.
What should I do tile next
tune I encounter thts ,nuatlon 1 - GERM -PHOBIC IN
SAN DIEGO
DEAR GERM -PIIOBIC
A~k your sen er lor some atr,,
cloth napktns "'you c.tn .. create" your own pl.tcem.tt II
you I mcely) ex pre"' our concerns .to your serve1 rnos t
re staurants wtll hap ptl)
accommodate your teq ucq
Alternauvely, you can hnng
your own &lt;;ltsposable p.tper
placemat wilh you I Bu 1 "
package at the supenn,n ke t
and keep 11 in your cat J
DEAR ABBY Next week I
go back to school J' m only II.
and J' m scared to ~o to nuddil'
school I mts s everyone .u 111 )
old school I nms mv b~''
fnend We met when we WCie
6. She tsn't gomg to mtddlc
school.
I feel so sad, like cvet yt htng
h.ts changed D1d 11 e'er IMppen to you when you were Itt tie? - GOING TO MIDDLE
SCHOOL
DEAR QOING: Yes. as a
matter of fact. 11 d1d I was a
couple of yem solder than you
when my parents lef t the
Midwest and moHd to
Californt,t Let me share wtth
you what I learned lrom the
e~penence Although changmg schools c.tn be scary. It can
also be the start of a gre&lt;1t
adventure. Change Is a tact of
l1fe Plea&gt;e don 't Jet 11 make
you sad. because tt's usuall y
for the better Trust me
P S And JUSt because you
aren't at the same sc hool does·
n't mean you won't spend
tune wllh your lnend anymore.

Rue, Jr. to Nancy H Rue,
transfer upon death, Olive
Ktm Hayman to Kelly
Dear Abby is written by
Hayman, deed, Letart.
Abigail Va11 Burell, also
Kenneth Rife to Kenneth
k11own as Jea11ne Phillips,
W R1fe, Sandra R1fe, deed,
and was formded by her
Rutland
mother, Pauline Plrillips.
Donald
L
Bennett,
Write
Dear Abbv at
MarJorie S Bennett, Marge
www.DearAbby.com
P.O.
Bennett, to Federal NattOnal
Box 69440, Los A11geles, CA
Mortgage Corp , sheriffs
90069.
deed, Olive.
Margte
B.
Grueser.
decea sed, to Patnck B
Grue ser, deed, Village of
Rutland
James B. Petllt, Tamtlene
K Pettit, to John F Stephens.
Ladona G Stephens, deed.
VIllage of Mtddleport.
E.
Maxme
Gaskill,
deceased, to Stephen H
Coats.
Christme Coats
Mcintyre. certificate. Vtllage
of Middlepon
- E. Maxine Gaskill to
Stephen H Coats, eertiftcate,
Vtllage of Mtddlepon.
James E Lucas to Truman
R Hall , deed, VIllage of
Rae me.
Jerry W Davenport. Ga1I
Davenport, to TP-CWD, Audnonna Pulltns, daughter of Tom and Stacte Pullms of Long
Bottom, has been awarded a scholarship to the Rto Grande
right of way, Salisbury.
Communtty
College . The Board of Trustees scholarship proCarroll
While, Joyce
VIdes
$500
for her to attend Rto Grande It was presented to
White , to TP-CWD, nght of
her at the Metgs County Fatr. Two Commumty College repre
way, Letart.
sentattves presented 1t to the Eastern student. cente r. It
exptres one academtc year after the- date of her graduatton
from htgh school

or

Scholarship awarded

Parkersburg
arts and
crafts festival
•
upcomtng

PARKERSBURG - The
43rd Annual Harvest Moon
Ans and Crafts Festtv.tl will
be held on Sept 17 and I R.
10 a.m lo 6 p m each day at
the Parkersburg Ctt y Park
Approxtmately
200
exhtbitors wtll di splay cralts,
there w1ll be 1t1·e entertamment , children wtll do makeand-take projects. there wtll
be face pamtmg, and other
actiVIties
AdnllSsion ts $3 general.
$2 for senwrs. and no charge
for those I0 and under The
event 1s held to ratse money
for the Wood County
Recreation Commtssion and
all proceed' go toward the
running of program s throughout the year.
For mm-e m(omwru&gt;ll. mrarsha/1@ ll'oodr&lt;'CI'I'alrmr. com 01

304-424·3457 r 13 3 or,.,,.,/ 10
at u u lt

H oudrT:'t

rr.•atinn cr m1

l
- - - fnntt!'l'nunlstrii.!'&amp;.Corn • C.U 317. 796.4083 fur more _.to.

i

�/

OPINION

'I)le Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

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

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

·TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. Aug. 29. the 241&gt;1 day of 2005. There are
124 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight m History.
_
On Aug. 29, 1944, 15.00b American troops marched down the
Champs Elysees in Paris as the French capital cominued to celebrate its liherallon from the NaziS.
On this date:
In 1533, the last lncan King of Peru. Atahualpa, was murdered
on orders of Spantsh conqueror Franci sco Pizarro.
In 1632. English philosopher John Locke was born in
Somerset.
In 1877. the second presiuent of the Mormon Church.
Brigham Young. died m Salt L1ke City. Utah.
.
In 1943. responding to a clamp&lt;lown by Nazi occupiers,
Denmark managed to sculllc most of its ~a val ships.
In 1957, South Carohna Sen. Strom Thunnond (then a
Democrat) ended a tihhuster against a civ1l rights bill after talk- '
. ing for more than 24 hours.
In 1965, Gem1ni Five, carrymg astronauts Gordon Cooper and
-Charles ("Pete") Conrad, splashed down in the Atlantic after
eight days in space .
In 1981 . 'broadcaster and world traveler Lowell Thomas died
in Pawling. N.Y. at age 89.
· .
In 1987, Academy Award-winnipg actor Lee Marvin died in
Tucson, Arizona. at age 63.
Ten years ago : At the O.J . Simpson murder trml in Los
Angeles, without the jury present. tape recordings of police
detective Mark Fuhnnan were played m which Fuhrman could
be heard spoutmg racial mvectives.
Ftve years ago: President Clinton ended a four-day trip to
Africa with a brief v1sit to Cairo, where he sought the help of
President Hosni Mubarak in pursuing a peace deal between
Israel and the Palestinians. Pope John Paul the Second laid down
moral guidelines for medical research in the 21st century,
endorsing organ donation and adult stem cell study, but condemning human cloning and embryo experiments
One year ago: Tropical Stann Gaston made landfall in South
Carolina at near-hurricane strength. Protesters ftlling 20 city
blocks peacefully swarmed Manhattan's streets on the eve of the
Republican National Convention to demand that President Bush
be turned out of office. A car bomb at the office of a U.S. secu. rity contractor m Afghamstan killed abOut· ten people, including
three Americans. Closing ceremonies were held in Athens,
Greece, for the Olympic games.
Today's Binhdays: Actor-director Lord Richard Attenborough
is 82. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz ., is 69. Actor Elliott Gould is
67. Movie director William Friedkin is 66. Movie director loel
Schumacher is 66. TV personality Robin Leach is 64. Actress
Deborah Van Valkenburgh is 53. D'lJlcer-choreographer Mark
Morris is 49. Country musician Dan Truman (Diamond Rio) is
49. Singer Michael Jackson is 47. Actress Rebecca DeMornay is
43. Singer Me'Shell NdegeOcello is 36. Rhythm-_and-blues
singer Carl Martin (S hai) is 35. Actress Carla Gugino is 34.
. Actor John Hensley is 28. Rock musician Davtd Desrosiers
. (Simple Plan) is 25. Rapper A+ is 23. Actor Jeffrey Licon is 20.
Thouglit for Today: ."It am' t enough to get the breaks. You
gotta know how to use 'em." - Huey P. Long, American politician (1893-1935).

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--·---

........
I

----·-· .

Unpowed, if unemployed,
Michael Graham issued a
thought-provoking ' challenge as hi s atnime o'n 'The
O'Reilly Factor" ran down
to a break. The topic under
discussion was the conservative radto .host's firing by the
Washington , D.C. , radio stalion WMA:L - egged on by
the terrorist-linked Council
on
American
Islamic
Relauons (CAIR ) - for
having made his case, logically, forcefully, even regret·
fully that "Islam is~ terrorist

organization ··
Before
di sc ussing
Graham 's final word s on
"O'Reilly." it' s wonh men·
tioning that Graham's argument linking terrori sm to
Islam
is
posted
at
JewishWorldReview.com in
a column he wrote after the
second
London
Underground
bombing .
Sure, the stand-alone scare
quote ("1. is a T.O .") collides
)lead-on with 21st-ce ntury
sensibili ties. but Graham
builds hts argument careful- ·
ly. He makes the polillcally
incorrect kind' of sense, supporteu by fact (e.g., more
than .QJie in four BritiSh
Muslims-saiu they wouldn ' t
tell police of a planned terronst attack) and observation (Islamic teachings drive
terrori st jihad). that the
open-eyed child in "The
Emperor's New Clothes"
would instantly recognize.
But not his bosses at WMAL
- not, 11 seems, after CAIR
objected. When Graham
refused to "apologize," the
ABC-DISney-owned station

Diana

West
---lired him .
All of which is what he
went on "0 ' Reilly'' to discuss. offering a factually reasoned discours11 on the controversy. (Good stars, conceded an outgu nned Bill
O'Re11ly.) And then. in dosmg, Graham said this: "(!)ell
me one terronst attack that's
going to be stopped becau se
we stopped this· conversa'tion" - that is, by WMAL
taking Graham off the air. ,
An intere sting notion.
WMAL ts no Depanment of
Homeland Security, but
g1ven the li ne the radio station
dec1ded
Graham
cro"ed over global terrorISm (lihad) and its central
role m Islam. mayhe it 's
worth wondenng whether
we are su rer becuuse
·Michael Graham isn' t pursu ing his on -air line of inquiry.
Surely, we are more ''sensi tive," meamng more guarded, even nervous .about what
is currently permissible to.
say, at least ·according to
CA IR's enforcers. Even so.
ending a conversation abou t
Jihad and Islam doesn' t enu
IslamiC jthad. Nor does culling the talk abo ut links
between Islam and terromm
cut the links between Islam

and terrorism. The 'fact is,
the train of logic , doesn't
change its destination no
matter how many of us radio stations, pundits, academics, politicians - hop off.
Still. thank~ to WMAL,
maybe we really are better
, protected, at least agail)St the
sharp edges and noxious corners of reality. This reality
includes the fa ct !hat what
we know as " terrorism" i;
directly linked to the central ity of jthad (holy war) and
dhnnmitude (non-Muslim
inferiority ) in Islam, no
hij acki ngs necessary. But
spare us: We live in u poliu .•·
call y correct country, one 1n
wh ich the U.S. State
Department deo.:lares 19 the
world
that
Ameri cans
"believe we are part of one
human family, and that the
enemy of· that family are
those who use the name of
rcligio11 to pursue a violent
and ltatclu l 1deo logy that
reall y goes against (v.hat) ..
any person of fa ith believe&gt;
in. nP matter what that fat tlt
is ."

gion because it is a religion.
Secure from the trulh. we
see only libeny and justice
m any constitution because It
is a constitution. Our o~
pro,blem s
slem · from
"extremi sm," which not onLy
defines nothing, but also
offends no one. Or does it?
Out of Greal Britain thb
month came a communique
tram nearly 40 Muslim leaders and gro ups. Their message'! In part to renounce th.e
Jahe l of "cx tre mi sm."· They
wrote: "To equate 'extremis m· with the aspirati ons or
M1"l""' for Sharia laws in
the ~·1u s llln world or the
desi 1e "' see un ifio.:ation
towards a Caltphate m the
Muslim ldnds ... is inaccu·
rate and disingenuous . 'It
1nd1ca1cs Ig norance of what
Shari a i, and . what 'a
Caliphate is and wtll alienak:
and victim ize the Mu slu1t
communily unnecessarily."
In other words, not onl~
does terrori sm have nothing
to do with Islam. as WMAL
seems to have determined,
but
shana
(repressive
lslam rc law) and the
cali phale (Islamic empinl)
have noth1ng to do witll
ext remi sm, as Britain's
Mushm
leaders
have
exp lained. Clearly. our
voc.t hulary 1s shrinking as
fast the ranks of bold tal~­
show hosts But isn 't there
so much more to talk about'.'
(D"'"" We" rs" cu!wllni.H
{01 The Woshi11gtull Time~.
She c'aiT be COITtacred vr(l

. CHESHIRE - Vernon Ward Mitchell , 73 , Cheshire, died
Saturday Aug. 27, 2005 at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
He was born Sept. 22, 1931 in Addison, the son of the
late John H.. and Loshi a Boggess Mitchell. Vernon was
' retired from the International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers Local 968 with over 50 years of service.
'' Bestdes his parents he was preceded in death by his wife.
Janet Dent Mitchell. a brother Delbert Mitchell , brother-in' laws, Paul Taylor and Robert Hayman.
He is surv ived by brothers, Kenton (Sarah) Mitchell, Pat
(Sue) Mitchell, Merlin (Lmda) Mitchell , Darrell (Carolyn)
·Mitchell ; sisters Arlene Taylor and Shirley Hayman, and a
sisiter-in-law, Katherine Mitchell .
Services will be I p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2005 at the
Middleport Chapel of Fi sher Funeral Home with Rev. Mark
Morrow offtciating. Friends may call from 12 p.m. until
time of the serv1ce. A private burial will follow at Gravel
Htll Cemetery m Ches hire .

'Douglas Ross Ro.ush

But what if. as MichaeL
Grahmn roughl y wondered
aloud. the y1olem and hale·
ful ideology runs through
Islam Itself? In Amen ca
today. 11 is considered better
to &lt;: ut the mike. 'eek ing not
the truth, but rather a kmd or
sccunty from the 1ru1h. Once
the su rvival strateg1es of
rcalpoh t1k arc traded 111 for
!he ptpe dreams ot pretendpolitik, such security even
feels safe. at least for a time.
Protected agamst realu y,
we see only good in any reli · diaum ve,,t @ veri ~O!I. n et. )

TAKE
METO

•

YOUR

LEADER.

Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks .
'53 55
~6 Week s
.. 1 10710
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . '214.21

-

. LETART, W.Va . - Residing at Lakin Nursing liome,
J.-akin, W.Va . since 200 1, DoL1glas R. Roush of Letart, WV,
93 , passed away Aug . 27. 2005.
He was born Oct. 13 , 1911 to· the late Van L. Roush and
'Kelsie Capehart Rou sh·. He was a graduate of Point
Pleasant High School in 1931 and a member of Union
United Methodist Church.
He is sufVIved by six children, Douglas (Lili) Roush Jr.,
Oak Hill, Ohio; Hamtlton Ross (Carolyn) Roush, Mason ;
Patricia Noel, Pomeroy ; Jani ce (Leroy) Darling, Ocala.
·Fla.; Nancy (Ron) Woodard , New Haven ; and. Debra
Roush, Letart ; a sister, Attarah Dewhurst, Letart ; s1ster-in·
. law, Eileen Foreman , Lorain, Ohio; grandsons, Herbert
-Noel, Middleport; Shane Roush, Mason ; Ronnie Wood&lt;lrd,
New Haven ; granddaughters : Kimberley (Michael )
Burkhart ,
Englewood.
Ohio;
Melissa
Rou sh,
'Lancaster,Ohio; Linda McKinney, Pomeroy: Rachel
. Bennett, Valley Bend, W.Va. ; Jennifer (Ed) Arsuffi. West
Jordan , Utah; Jana (Ryan) West, Sandy, Utah; 12 greatgrandch ildren ; five nephews; and four nieces.
Mr. Roush started with Roush Poultry Company. During
'World War II. he had a government contract cutting and
transporting pulp wood. He worked at Mari etta Barge
Company. TNT Plant , and Atom,ic Plant, Piketon, Ohto.
Owner of Roush Construction Company, he in stalled
water and/or sewer lines: Ill Ohio - Middleport, Kyger
Creek Plant , South Point. Wheelersburg. Gallipolis and
. Kan auga Drive·- In Theater. in We st Virginia, former
Vanadium Plant , Panasote Plant, Philip Sporn.
Mountaineer. Fairmont, Pinch. Parkersburg, Ravenswood.
Ripley. Pineville, Lubeck, Big Sandy River Road, West
Hamhn. Morgantown, County Rte . 15 Sandhill Road, Rte .
33 Mason County, Wood County A1rport, Spencer, and
Mason Drive-In Theater.
After retiring from construction, Mr. Roush started Rou sh
Berry Farm later convertmg it into a vegetable farm and
took ll daily to ,market in Charleston, W.Va .
He was preceded in death by wife, Nannie Foreman
Roush . · brother, Percy Roush , sisters, Violet Roush and
Virginia Kay.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday, Aug . 31 , 2005
at I p.m. at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home with Pastor
Greg Collins officiating. Visitation will be' Tuesday, Aug.
30, 2005 from 6 to 9 p.m.
Burial will be at Umon Cemetery, Letart. W.Va.

Judge says Somali
man's statements likefy
will be admissible
,.

(

"
' '

Letters to the editur ure H-elwme. They should be' less than
300 words. All letters ure mhject to editing, must l&gt;e "gned,
and im;lude addreH and telephone number. No unsigned let·
ters will be published. Let1ers should be in good taste,
·addressing rssue.1·, notpenmwlilie,. Letlers nf thanks 10 o rganizarions amlmdil'lduals wi/lrwt be accepted for publica/ron .

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reponer: Bnan Reed. EKI. 14

.~Obituarie~

Vemon Ward Mitchell

Don't put that in your mouth

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Pomeroy,

. Monday, August 29, 2005

Realpolitik vs. pretendpolitik

The Daily Sentinel

Department extensions are:

PageA4 ·

~onday,August29,2005

The headache woulun 't go
away. Nauseated, my temples throbbing under the
wet washcloth draped over
my eyes, I asked my husband for aspiri n.
Tad
Swallowing two pills. I
Bartimus
absently thought, " Gee ,
these feel too big."
· An hour later, . my
_ headache was gone · but my
heart was pounding. my
legs trembled, and my eyes 10 tesl my reaction.
wouldn' t focus Wuh a poke
Yet how often do any of
in the ribs. I woke Dean up. us read the labels ol· the
"What did you give meT' drugs we' re ingesting·&gt; Like
The pill bottle's unfamil- most people, if I glance at
iar label revealed I'd con- the warning label and am
sumed a double dose of a not about to operate heavy
high-powered amphetamine- machinery (When am !?), I
caffeine-aspirin dru g we don ' t ex pect any side
were later told was sold effects. My sensors, don ' t
Qnl y by prescn ption in focu s until there's a recall
Hawaii Accidentally, my and perhaps a death .
hu sband had given me a
I was among 20 million
kind of "speeu" he 'd !~ ga il y people around the wotld
bought at an airpon kitJSk in who rehed on Vioxx hetore
Alaska. I'd compoundeu the Merck pulled it off the marproblem by consuming it ket last year after dimcal
without question because trials revealed it posed hean
I'd trusted him.
risks compared with a
We were both dumb.
placebo.
We should have carefully
My experience with these
read the labeL Then we two different drugs, ingested
should have cross-checked unde r different circum mgrcdtcnts to make .sure stances, convmces me I
thai nothmg confli cted with cmt't ,, trust anyone to keep
my prescript iO n meui&lt;:a- me safe from bad medicine.
llons. If there were no red nol even myself.
But each of us mu st still
flags, I should have taken a
~i n gl e "experimental" dose
be I00 percent proactive

about our own health and seven men who voted I0 to
safely and demand cons1ai1t 2 agai nst Merck in the
accountabi lity from govern- Angleton,
Texas.
trial
ment regulatory agencies. entered the jury hox as ordi drug compan1es, retail oul- nary citizens charged with
lets. pharmacists and care- mind-boggling task. For six
givers legally charged wit h weeks they li stened to
keepmg us that way. As I ex perts, waded through
know tirst-hand , even well- thousands of pages of evimeaning loved ones make dence ~ some of it htghly
mistakes.
technical - and debated
The recent $253.4 million vigorously amoitg them . veruict against Merck for selves as they strugg led to
&lt;~ ll cge dl y hiding Vioxx ·,
do the ri ght thing.
cardiac nsks goes a long
In the end, they decided ·
way toward putting drug Merck - which so ld $22 ·
manufacturers on notic-e that bi llion worth of products
they cannot lie. cover up or and earned $6 billion of
even hedge about the dan, profit last year negli·
gers of .thei r produl'ls. If gently cost Rober! Ernst hjs
they suspect trouble with a hfe.
dru g, they must hall sales
In a post-verdi ct interview
immedjately. or fi nd them- with The New York Times,
selves - as Merck does Derrick Chizcr said he and
fac rng thousands of lawsutls his fe llow jurors &gt;~warded a
like tha1 won by Robert ],1rge puniti ve damage to
Ernst 's widow.
warn dru g companies they
The Texas jury whi ch must be honest · about their
found Merck liable for medicines' risks.
Ernst 's May 200 I death
'' Respect us. that 's the
after he took Vioxx said the message,'' Chizer sa1d.
company's internal docu- ".Respect us...
ments convinced !hem the . Merck's lawyers ceflaml y
pharmace'uucal · giam knev. should.
about Vioxxs caruiac ri,k,
I LoR on ·to ltWw.tadbarhut lud th at information rimu.\· crm1 to rt'ad dailv
from pallellls.
crmsfnu:tiou updates o1r
Merck maimains it acteu TAD'S BLOG. You may also
responsibly and plans to wrire to Tad do Tire Wome/r
appeal the Ernst verdict.
Syndicirte. P.O. Box 10169.
The . five women and Cn/rm1bia. Mo. 65205.)

a

..

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

SEC LA'WYER CRITIQUES PErRO'S
.

'

'

HANDUNG .OF INVESTMENT WARNINGS
COLUMBUS . (AP)
Federal officials were surprised when they notified
Ohio Attorney General Jim
Petro that the state's fund for
injured workers was paying
too much in brokerage fee s
and Petro didn't take action,
a Securities and Exchange
Commission lawyer said.
The SEC turned to Petro
after 16 months of warnings
to the Bureau of Workers'
Compensation went unheeded, attorney Diane Dalliani s
of the federal agency's
Chicago regional office told
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer
on Friday
- "The SEC can't tell the
attorney general what to do,
but ceflainly we were disappointed by the response and
the inaction," said Dallianis.
one of the agency's attorneys
on the case. "Why wouldn't
they care when constituents'
money is at stake?"
Kim Norris, spokeswoman
for the attorney general's
office , sa1d Petro, as attorney
for the BWC , collected information from the bureau first.
Thai information conflicted
with the SEC's warnmgs,
Norris said, addmg that the
SEC did not respond to

requests for funher proof of
what it called a •·possible
abu'se of \Jiscretion."
The SEC lirst advised the
bureau !hat qversees the
insurance fund for injured
workers that it was overpaying on brokerage fees during
a 2002 investigation.
Dallianis informed Petro's
office in 2004 after the
Bureau
of
Workers '
Compensation failed to look
into the high com missions it
was paying Ohio firms on its
investment
transactions.
according to do cuments
released Thursday.
The bureau has been mired
in an ongoing state government sc andal that started
with revelation s of ri sky
investments in rare coin s anu
led to the di1, covery of $300
million in losses.
Since the SEC warmngs
public.
were
made
Democrats have lined up to
take a swing at Petro, a candidate in next year's gubernatorial race.
"A t the time when we' re
looking for some kind of
oversight within the BWC,
the attorney general Ghooses
to look the . other way,"
House Minority Leader Chris

Redfern sa id . "It 's very disconcerting."
Senate Minority Leader
C.J . Prentiss has suggested
that Petro overlooked the
fees becau se of campai gn
contributions from the brokerage firms involved.
. Man Cox, .a Petro political
advi ser, said the attorney
general has taken no contri butions from those brokers. •
Petro simply has been caught
in the finger-pointing that
has dogged the state since as
much as $ 13 million of the
bureau's investment in rare
coins was reponed mi ssmg:
Cox said.
"I fully believe that Jun
Petro acted properly-," Cox
told The Assocmted Press on
Saturday.
Dalliani s sa1d in her letters
thai the firm s offered no ser·
vices that warranted the high
commissions the y were
receivmg.
The bureau patd 6 cents
per share between 2002 and
2004. Ave rage fees tn Ohio
111 the pas! four years huve
been hetween 4.H cents and
5.3 cents
Messages for Norris and
Dalhams were left Saturday
by The Associated Press.

F acuity union approves contract on eve of classes Poll shows
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) happy with the agreement.
The agreement also must Ohioans split
Strikmg
faculty
at
"I think t.he strongest sen- be ratified by the school's
Youngstown
State timent and most general sen- board of tru stees The on whether Taft
University ratified a contract timent is disgust," Guzell board's imernal affairs comwith the school Sunday said. "Even those who voted mittee on Saturday approved should resign
night. hours· before fall
classes were to start.
The YSU-Ohm Education
Association· voted 182 to
119 10 approve the deal ten'
tatively agreed to on Friday:
School officials sa1d classes
Wot!ld go on as scheduled
on Monday.
"This contracl allows for
our faculty to continue to
receive competitive salaries
and benefits and introduces
for the lirst time employee
contributions to health care
costs," Youngs town State
President David Sweet said
in a release.
"It allows the univefSlty to
maintain a balanced budget
and to be in a position to
respond to future financial
demands."
Chief faculty negotiator
Stanley Guzell said the
union approved the threeyear deal because members
felt a strike would do
irreparable harm to the university, but they weren't

United States as a refugee.
COLUMBUS (AP)
Prosecutors accuse him of
Statements by a Somali man
in which authorities said he obtaining travel documents
admitted to falsifying imm[', in 1999 by telling officials he
gration documents and plan- planned to vis1t Germany and
ning to blow up a Columbus- Saudi Arabia when he actualarea shopping mall likely ly went to a military-style
will be allowed 'at his trial, a training camp for terrorists in
MOSCOW (AP) A
Ethiopia.
plane carrying two U.S.
federal judge said.
Federal agents arrested senators was detained for
U.S.
District
Judge
Algenon L. Marbley also Abdi on Nov. 28, 2003 , after several hours Sunday while
criticized the arrest of convicted al-Qaida operative trying to leave Russia,
Nuradin Abdi, saying federal lyman Faris told them Abdi before being permitted to
agents needed a warrant, but suggested shootmg up a leave the country for
Ukraine,
according
to
said that would not discount shopping mall.
Agents
testified
they
were
. the statements Abdi made
spokesmen for the lawmaklater· with a lawyer at his unable to get a warrant for ers.
1he arrest because informaSens. Richard Lugar, Rside.
· Marbley said Friday that he tion leading them to have Ind., and Barack Obama,
would issue a final opinion probable cause was classified I· D-111., who had been visitwithin two weeks on a and they wanted to act before ing
storage
sites for
defense motion asking to bar .the holiday shopping season. weapons of ·mass destrucAbdi's attorney, Mahir T. tion, were held at an airAbdi's statements to investigators from his trial set for , Sherif, argued Abdi 's arrest pan in the Ural Mountam
was illegal and he was city of Penn for several
' next month.. ·
· Abdi, 33, has pleaded inno- coerced ·and mistreated.
hours but were allowed to
Investigators said A·bdi was
cent to charges of conspiring
to aid terrorists and lymg to polite and cooperative during
gain politi cal asylum in the the interviews.

for it were disgusted with
it."
Guzell, a business professor, said the pay raises in
the contract - 3 percent m
the first year and 3.5 percent
in the two following years
- weren 'I enough to cover
intlation, and amounted to
even less because of health
care contribution s.
Faculty members will contribute I 5 percent of their
salary, for family health care
premiums and .75 percent
f01 single coverage when the
agreement starts next year.
YSU was the only public
university in Ohio that did
not require such contribu tions, the univ~~ si ty said.
Youngstown
State
has
13,000 students.
Union members decided in
a voice vote Saturday night
to delay the vote on the proposed agreement for a day.
The union represents about
380 full-time faculty members.

a resolution recommending
that the boaru ratify the
agreement.
A date for the board 's vote
hasn 't been schedul ed, -umversity spokes man Walt
Ulbncht said.
A strike by the )'SU
Association of Class11led
Employees remamed unresolved, and the school was
Aegotiating with the umon
late Sunday night. It represents 400 ground skeepers.
custodial workers. clerk s.
.secretaries , cafeteria work ·
ers, computer programmers
and olher empl oyees.
Union president Chri stine
Domhoff said she was hopef ul they would reach an
agreement before the stan of
classes . The union turned
down one university proposal on Sunday.
The unions struck over
economic issues including
disputes over the cost of
health insurance and pay
raises.

1\vo U.S. senators held at Russian Coffee reported
airport for several hours, released

Cost

Palestinian suicide bomber
wounds two in Israel in first
such attack since ,Gaza pullout
BEERSHEBA, Israe l (AP)
A Palestinian suicide
bomber struck outside an
Israeli bus station during
morning rush hour Sunday,
critically wou~ding two
·guards and raising tensions
following Israel's eviction of
settlers from the Gaza Strip
and r,ans of 1he West Bank.
Pa estinian
leader
Mahmoud Abbas condemned
lhe attack as terrori snt and
urged
Israel to sho~
restraint. It was the first sut.cide attack since Israel completed the pullout , · and
'Palestinians linked it to
'Israel's deadly arrest raid in
a West Bank refugee camp

In other developments
Saturday. !he Toledo-area
coin dealer who managed the
comp
bureau
worke1s·
inve..,tmen ls in ntre coi ns
continued to push for Gov.
Bob Taft 10 ret1 act statements
in v.hich he acc used Tom
Noe of conceal in~ his
in volve ment in the mvestments
Noe \ lawye1 sent a news
rel ease that contended at
least 16. member.&gt; of Taft 's
senior staff. '" well as
numerous othe1 officia ls,
knew about the arrangement.
He al so contends Noe and
Taft spoke of the fund in a
locker 10om .It In ve rn ess
Club in Toledo dunng a May
13, 200 1. golt out1n g.
Taft's spokesman. Mark
Rickel. has repeatedl y maintamed the governor did 'not
learn of the com in ves tments
until rcad1ng newspaper
reports about them 111 Apnl
of thi s year.
"What the governor meant
when he said Noe concealed
rs thai Noe did not -tell him
persona lly ahoul the coin
Investment," and did not disclose the investments when
he was appointed to two slate
boards. R1ckel said Saturday.

from PageA1

to be top source
of antioxidants

leave after talks between
U.S. and Russian officials.
"I am in Ukraine with
Sen. Lugar," Intelligence
WASHINGTON (AP) Committee
Chairman When the Ink Spots sang "I
Richard Lugar's spokesman, . love the java jive and it loves
Andy Fisher, said in a me" in 1940, they could not
message sent from a per- have known how right they
sonal messaging device were.
Sunday afternoon.
Coffee not only helps clear
He said Russian officials the mind and perk up the enerrefused to let the plane gy, it also provides more
take off fo~ three hours healthful antioxidants than any
and insisted on boarding it. other food or beverage in the
"They did not. The border American diet, according to a
patrol ,finally got orders to study released Sunday.
Of course, too much coffee
let us go," Fisher. sa1d.
• "We were treated just can make people jittery and
even raise cholesterol levels. so
fine," he said.
food.expens stress moderation.
The finding's by Joe A.
our policy," Eastern High Vinson, a chemistry professor
School Principal Jon Lmdner at the Unive rsity of Scranton. .
said about the expenses relat- in Pennsylvania, gi'e a healthy
ed to wood shop. drafting . boost to the warnung beverwelding and computer repair age.
classes among others.
. "The point is, people are getFinancial eligibility guide- ting the most antioxidams from
lines establi shed by each beverages, as opJ?.Dsed to what
school determine if the you nught think.' Vinson said
school fees can be .waived for in a telephone interview
•
a student.
The
National
Retail
Federat1on in Washington .
THANKS
D.C. recently said that the
price tag for families with
PARKER INC.
chtldren in elementarv and
for buying my
secondary schools i ~ expected to hit $13.4 billion nationMarket Pen .of Rabbits
Wide .
at the 2005 Me1gs
County Fa ir

Edwards sa1d about the
charges.
The three high schools in
Meigs Coumy charge classroom fees though not for all
classes. With a wide assortment of curriculum at the
last week.
I
Nearly 12 hours after the' high. schoo l level fees .are
attack, an Islamic Jihad offi- detennined by the class and
cial claimed responsibility the material s.
"We do have fees for some
and said the bomber came
materials
that have to be
from Beit Umar, a village
near the southern West Bank replaced . year to year. that' 's
city of Hebron.
Israeli media reponed that
the bomber came from the
southern Hebron hills, the
section of the West Bank
across from Beersheba. After
a double suicide bombing
The Dailv Serrtinel
killed 16 in I he city a year .
Subscribe
today • 992-2155
ago, work on a separation
barrier along the West Bank
www.mydailysentinel.com
in that area was to be speeded up, but the line there
remains largely unfortit1ed.

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

Thanks,
Randy Davis

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
majonty of Ohioans believe
Gov. Bob Taft 1s domg a poor
job and hrs cnm1nal conv iCtions were senous. but the
stat e IS split on whether he
shou ld re sign, accord mg to a
poll released Sunday 1n The
Pl a1n Dealer.
Fifty- seve n percenl of
respondents rated Taft' s performance in nrtice as poor.
Th1rty-nrne percent rated as
very senmis Talt's four mi sdemeanor ethi cs conviction s
lor fadin g to report gi lts and
golf mtungs. and anmher 32

percent sal d they were somewhat scnous.
But when asked II Taft
should res1gn. res pondent s
were spill. wnh 46 percent
saying he should and 44 percent saymg he should not.
Ten percent sa1d they weren ' t
sure whether the governor
should leave office.
Taft 's spoke sman, Mark
Rickel , says the gove rnor
will not re sign
"The governor has never.
governed by polls." Rickel
said.
The poll of 625 randomly
chosen re_glStered voters was
commi ssioned by The Plain
Dealer and conducted Aug .
2ti-2 7 - by Mason-Dixon
Polling &amp; Research of
Washington. D.C.. The sur·
vey has a marg1n of error of
plus or mmus 4 percentage
points
Only 2 percent of re spondent s rated Taft's performance as excellent. with· 13
percent saying he's doing a
good job and 27 percent a fatr
job.
Ten percent of respondent s
said Taft's convtcttons were
not senous. and another 18
percent satd they were not
too senous.

Keeping Meigs
County .
informed
The Daily Seritinel

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The Daily Sentinel

nees.

New
Bv ALLEN G. BREED

PageA6

NATIONAL··

•

•

as

Faxon wins Buick Championship, Page B6

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW ORLEANS - Amon strous Hurricane Katrina hnrreled toward New Orle&lt;tll&gt; tm
Sunday with 160-mph wiml
and a threat of a ~8-fout stonn
surge , forcing a mantlatun•
evacuation of the below-se;ilevel city and prayers for those
who remained to face a doomsday scenario.
" Ha ve God on ytnlr side.
·definitely have GoJ on your
side," Nancy Noble said as she
sat with her puppy and three .
friends in six lanes of one-way
traffic on gridlockcd lmerst;ltr
I 0. "It 's very fri ghtening ."
Katrina intensified into a
C&lt;!tegory 5 giam over the
warm water of t_hc . Gulf uf
Mexico, r~aching top wrnds or
175 mph before wcakc11i11 g
'
AP Photo
slightly on a path to "hit Nc11 Residents along Alabama's ·Guif"Coast trailer their boats off Dauphin Island , Ala., in advance
Orleans
aruuud
~ un rist
Mo nday. That wmlid make it of Hur ricane Katrina ma king landlall Sunday
the ci ty's first direct hit in ..)() mean s tu leave and an untold southeast of New Orleans. The balcony 'above Bourbon
years and the illl"t powerfu l nu mb~ r of tourists' were storm was moving toward the Street , fe stooned with gold,
storm ever to slam the cit y.
stranded hy the closing of the north-oorthwest at about I0 purple and green wreathes as
Forecaste r" w~1n1~d that airport. so the ci ty arranged mph and was ex pected to turn Katrina's first rains pelted hi s
Mississippi and Abharn;1 were busc~ to take people to 10 last- toward the north. A hurricane shaved head.
also in dan~er hecausc K;nrina re.sort shelters. includ ing · the warning was in effect for the
"I was going to the
was such a big stilrm. w1th hur- Supcrdomc.
Superdmi1e
and then I saw the
north-central Gulf Coast from
ricane- for ce w ind ~ extending
For years. forecasters ha ve Morgan City. La., to the two-mile .line," the 42-yearup to I05 mi lcs from the ce n- warnedof t l1 ~ ni ~ lllmal'e tlood- Alabama-Florida line.
old musician said. '.'1 figure if
ter. In addition to tile winds. the ing _:r b1g &gt;torrn cnuld bring to
Despite the dire predictions, I'm going to die , I'm going IQ
storm packed the potential fur New Ork'""· a bnwl -shaped a group of residents in a poor die with cold beer :ind my best
a surge of 18 to 28 feet , _,()_ fnut city bounded by tile half-mil e- neighborhood of central · New. buds.''
·
waves anti as much as 15 inch- 11·i dc Mississippi River and Orleans sat on a porch with no · Airport Holiday Inn manages of rain .
mas.sivc Lake Pontchartrain.
ear, no way out and, silrpris- er Joyce Tillis spent the morn"The conditions hove to he·
ing calling her 140 guests to
As much as I0 feet below sea ingly. no fear.
absolutely pcrkct to hci\;e a k1·cl in "spots. the city is as the
"We' re not evacuating," said tell them about the evacuation
hurricane become this strotH! ." mcrc·v of a network of le vees. Julie Paul , 57. "None of us order. Tillis, who lives inside
National HurricallL' Ccnlcr cana(s and puinps to keep dry . . have any place to go. We 're the flood zone, also called her
Director Max Mayfield. nnt Sc ientists predicted Katrina counting on the Superdome. three daughters to tell them to
ing that Kat rina may yet he cou ld easily overtake that That's our lifesaver."
get out.
more powerful tlian tile la.st levee system. swamping the
"If I'm stuck, I'm stuck,"
The ·
70,000-seat
Category 5 storm . l'!'l~'s city under a 30-feet cesspool of Superdome, the home of foot- Tillis said. "I'd rather save my
Hurricane Andrew. wh ich at tox ic chemicals. human waste ball 's Saints, opened at day- second generation if I can.:·
.1OS mph leveled pans of South and even coffins that could break Sunday, giving first priBut the evacuation was slow
Florida. killed 43 people and leave more than I million peo· ority to frail, elderly people on going. Highways in Louisiana
caused $31 billion in d :n n;1~c. pic l1omclcss .
'
walkers. so 11ie with oxygen and Mi ssissippi were jammed
"h's ~apable uf caus ing c:lla"All indications arc that this . tanks. They were told to bring all day as people headed away
strophi c damage : · Mayfield is absolutely worst -case see- enough food , water and medi- from Katrina's expected land·
said. "Even wel l-built stn lc- nario."" Ivor van Heerden , ci ne to last up to five days.
faiL All lanes were limited io
tures will ha ve tremendous deputy dire ctor of the
on
"They told us not to stay in northbound . traffic
damage. Of cou r se ~ what we· re Loui siana State University o~r houses bec.ausc it wasn't Interstates 55 and 59, and
really wo rried about is the loss Hurricane Center. said Sunday safe." said Victoria Young, 76. westbound on 1-10. At the
of lives.
aft ernoon.
who sat amid plastic bag s and a peak. 18,000 vehicles an hour
"New Orleans may never be
Jefferson Parish President metal walker. "It's not safe were streaming out of souththe same.··
·
Aaron Broussard said some ' anywhere when you're in the eastern Louisiana.
By even ing. the firs t squal ls, who have ridden out previous shape we're in."
'T m expecting to come back
driving rains and li ghtnin g storms in the New Orleans area
Fttter residents waited for to a slab," said Robert F.riday,
began hitting Ne.w Orleans. A niay not be so lucky this time. hours in the mu~gy heat and who didn't bother boarding up
grim Mayor C. Ray Nagin ear''I'm expecting that some then pouring ram to get iii, his home in suburban Slidell.
lier ordered the mandatory people who are die-hards will clutching meager belongings La .. before driving n01th to
and crying children. By night- Mississippi. "We may not be
evacuation for his city of die hard," he said.
· 485.000. conceding Katrina's . Katrina was a Category I fall: . at least 8,000 refugees corning back to anything, but
storm surge push ing up the storm with 80-mph wind when were safely inside, seated in at least we'll becoming back."
By Sunday . night , most
Mississ ippi Ri ver wou ld it hi t South Florida with a the stands because of fears the
major highways were cleared
swamp the city's system of soggy punch Thursday that lield could llood.
In the French Quarter, most out and state police warned
levees, floodin g th e bowl - fil1oded neighborhoods and
shaped city and causing poten- left nine people dead. It bars that stayed open through that late escapes would be
. qrengt hened rapidly in the the threat of past hurricanes impossible after high winds hit
tially months of misery.
"We are facing a storm that Gu lf of Mex inl as it headed for were boarded up and the few elevated expressways over the
peopl e on the streets were bat- surrounding swamps.
most of us have long feared ... New Orleans.
Hotels filled up quickly as
By II p.rn" EDT, Katrina 's tening down their businesses
he said. "This is"a once-in-aeye was about I05 miles south and getting out. But a few evacuees headed away from
lifetime event."
the coast. In Orange. Texas,
·
As manv as IOOJK)O inner- oft he mouth of the Mississippi stragglers remained.
more than 90 people who
Ri
ve
r
and
170
miles
southTony
Peterson
leaned
over
a
city resident s didn ' t have the

Katrina moves In

Monday, August 29, 2005

Hurricane Katrina is .moving

toward the coast as a massive
storm with a potential storm

Monday's games
llolleyball

surge of 28 feet.
•

•• • •

•

•

· ·· ~ · .

· -- ·

'

•• 0

.

Hunicane

- ~ -

Katrina
• • ••

••• • • • • • • •• • •

••

•

·

-

·

.

.

.. .

..

· ~ ·

NNW
11 mph

EOT

o 0 o oo o o o w•

&gt;

4:30p.m.

·

South Gallia, Buffalo at Point Pleasant
(Hidderl VaJkly), 4 30 p.m.

' ~-

' ,_-,, I' /

'

.
."'

1. Pm
. .
TlaiJ,
..ARK.

l1" "' f ~ ·

fI /•

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.....

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'•

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. : Miss, ·. ALA.. . . ,

·{l ,~ M~i-~

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t

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1 p.m._..
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..... 1.. ......... . . ..
..........

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.,.,.

/

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...

'N\

GA.

··\.,
'·

Monday... Partly cloudy. A
slight chance of showers an\l
thunderstorms in the afternoon. Hi ghs in the mid 80s.
East winds around 5 mph .
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Monday
night •••Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers and thu nderstorms. Lows
in the upper 60s . Light ;111d
variable wi nds. Chance of rain

Flum.

5nCM

10.

dcrslonm. Lows in the upper
60s . Chance of rain 70 percent. .
Wcdnesday....Showers with
a chance of thunderstorms in
the morning ... Then showers
likely with a chance of thunctcrstorms in the afternoon.
High., in the upper 70s. ·
Wednesday ni,::,1t ... Mostly

.

'

'

''

'

8 p.m:· ' , ·-

0 100

_sun. ...,..~:':;

0100km
85" ,

cloud y in the evening .. .Then
becoming partly cloudy. A
30 percent .
ch;lllce of showers and thunThesday•.. Mostly . cloud )
with a chance of shml cr' ami .deN orm s. ·Lows in the lower ·
thumJerstorms. Hi ghs in the 6(b-. Chance of rain 50 percent .
lower 80s. Ea~t winds around 5 Thur.sday and · thursday
mph. Chanc,c of rain 50 percent. night. •. Pltrtly cloudy. Highs in
Tuesday njght: .. Sho \\c r' · the upper 70.s. Lows in the
likely with a chance of thun- lower f\Os .

I

'GaiMa Academy at Ohio VBIIey Christian,
5:30p.m.
. Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 5:30 p:m.
Girts SOCCer
.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville,' 7:30 p.m.
Golf
TVC HOOting at Forest Hils, 4:30p.m. ·
SOuth Gal~a. GaDia Academy at Wellston
(Falrgreens), 4:30p.m.
Meigs at Poin1 Pleasanl(Hidderl v,;kly), 4:30

Frlday, Slplembor 2
Football
.

.

N&amp;lsorwille·Yolil at River Valley
Wheelersi&gt;Jry al Gall~ Ac-.y
Meigs at Athens
South Gallia at Green
Eastem at Zane Trace
Symmes Valley at Southam
Point Pleasant at Sissonville
Wehama 81 Federal Hocking
College Soccor
Aulx.Jrn Montgomery at Rio Grande, 3 pm.
.
Ccllego llolleyball
R~ a1 AoberlS Wesleyan lnvi\atioo,;, TBA
College
Country
Rio at Shawnee State Invitational, 4 p.m.

SOURCES: NOAA; We 1a ~ AP
USGS
' ·
couldn't lind hotel rooms settled in at the First Baptist
Church, where activities were
set up for children. The First
Presbyterian Church \vas set to
open once that reached ,I 00.
and vete ri narian cl inics prepared to take in pets.
Evacuatiotl orders were.also
posted along the Mississippi
and Alabama co;tst. and in barrie r is land s of th e Florida
Panhandl e, wh e r~ cras hin g
waves swampcJ some coastal
roads.
Mi ss issippi 's 11oating casinos packed up their chips ltnd
clo sed.
The
Nuclear

The Daily

Regulatory Commiss ion said
the Waterford nuclear plant
about 20 miles we st of New
Orleans had also been shut
dO\vn a) a precaution.
New Orleans has not taken a
major direct hit from a hurri'cane since ·Betsy blasted the
Gu lf Coast in 1965 . Flood
waters approached 20 feet in
some areas. fishing villages
were llattcned, and the storm
surge left almost half of New
Orleans unde1' water and
60.000 residents homele ss.
Seventy-four people died .in ·
L.ouisiana. Mississippi and
Florida.

Seh~inel

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ID

I c'urre ntl y

Cr&lt;Ju

-~-

Hannan at Montcalm

llolloyboll
SoutherrvBelpre at Walertord, 1 p.m.

Oak HiiVEastern at Gallia Academy, 11 a.m.
Soccor
logan at Galia Academy, 1 p.m.
Nicholas County High School at Point
Pleasant. 1 p.m.
Gl'lta Soccer
Nicholas County High School at Point
Pleasant. 11 a.m.

CIUII Country
Gallia Academy, River Valley at warren
Invitational, 10 a.m.
·
.
College Soccer
Mobile at Rio Grande, 2 p.m.
Womens Colklge Soo::er
Rio Grande st Urbana, 1 p.m. '

Sports Briefs

Alcohol, cigarette
taxes fu~l sports
project funding
CLEVELAND (AP)
"Sinners" have been saints
for Cleveland sports fans .
So-called "s in taxes" on
alcohol and cigarettes have
provided $238 million for a
ballpark and basketball arena
since they were enacted 15
years ago.
When the tax package
passed in 1999, opponents
said that Cuyahoga County
residents would respond by
cutting back on drinking and
smoking. hur!ing funding for
Jacobs Field and ,Gund
Arena.
But revenue from the alcohol tax remained relatively
stable during the first 15
years. Funding from the cigarette tax still is strong, even
though smoking· is down.
The projects ran over bud,
get, but the taxes helped
lessen the blow on county
coffers, Cuyahoga ~ounty
has covered about $87 million of the cost.
The original taxes expired
recently, but voters approved
a ten-year extension that will
help Cleveland pay off debt
on Browns Stadium.
The extension, which
expires in 2015, is expected
to continue bringing in close
to $15 million in annual revenue.

Contact Information

.\·~

:0

· •

Saturday, Soplamber 3

r-----------------------------,
1

ThulWday, Slplember 1 ·
llolleyball
Jadtsorl at Gallia Academy, S:H p.m.
Rodr Hill at River Villley, 5:30p.m.
OVCMannan at Southern, 5:55p.m.
Soccor

v

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Wedneodoy, August 3t

p.m.

I

ol-Columbul 110'111' I

f..,...

Gb1a.Soccer
Winfield at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.
GoH
River Yalley, Portsmouth, Wahama at GaBia
Academy (a~side). 4 30 p.m.
TVC Hocking st Oxbow, 4 30 p.m.

"'·.

Sl"trrJrM

CNCS at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Gallla AcadeiTTy' at Warren. 5 p.m.

·

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

Monday, Aug. 29

a-t,

-

Athens at Gallia. ~. 5:15p.m.
Ct1esapeake at OVCS, 5:30p.m.

.

Ohio weather

__

lUesday, August 30
llolloyba/1
SCUh Galia/Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.

o Ow • ; • • ~

- - - . Projected peth
.' .......... ...' Window of movement
Hurricane watctl
Hurricane warning
..,.,
Tropical stonn warning

.

Golf
TVC Otlio at Brass Ring, 4:30p.m.
SEOAL at Brass Ring, 4:30p.m.
F~l1and al Poinl Pleasant (Hidderl Valkly}.

Asot8p.rn.

• o 0 , ... , o o•o• o , _, o oo wo o o • ~ • 0 0 ' ' o o ooo o o , ., , o , o

~ "l'

aves at Ironton St Joe, 5:3::1 p.m.

100mph

Local Weather

. o Qa.a•~-~~•

-

Belpre at Eamem, 6 p.m.
South Gallla at Oak: H~l. 6 p.m.
Ohio VBlley Christian at Fairland, 5:30p.m.

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_Clarett will be released by Broncos

G.'.LLIPOLIS- A.tch~dule'ot ~pcoming college
and high school vartity sporting · ~nls involving
teams from IJaMia, Meigs and Mason counlies.

~--------~-------------------

8ul'll'ly Pl CliUtf

MLB Standings, Page 82 '
Johnson wins inallgunl Cleveland Open, Page 82
Ketr wins Wendy's LPGA crown, Page B6

Monday, -August 29,2005

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

· .J

Larry Crum, Sport• Writer
(304)675· 1333. ""'· 19

Ierum 0 mydailyregister.com

.,

'

AP photo

Rookie running back Maurice Clarett, from Ohio State, runs
the ball in a drill during the first day of training camp at
Broncos headquarters in Denver during this July 29 photo.

DENVER (AP) - Maurice.--ttnti-1..._Tuesday, which is the
Clarett's first stab ar.the NFL deadllll'e for NFL teams to cut
will end the same way his last rosters to 65 playe rs. The
two seasons on the sideline Broncos were off Sunday and
to
practice
did: no carries, no yards, one scheduled
Monday.
big disappointment
The pending release ma~ks
Unable to practice much or
a
disappointing · start to. the
play at all during the preseason, the former Ohio State NFL career of Clarett, who
standout will be released , by missed two years of football
the Denver Broncos later this after leading the Buckeyes to
week, hi s agent said Sunday. the national title in 2002.
He got in trouble with the
"The kid calh~d me and let law ·and was suspended for
me know they're going to let the 2003 season. At that point,
him go," Steven Feldman said he hadn 't been out of high
in a telephone interview with school long enough to be eliThe Associated Press.
gible for the NFL draft, so he
Clarett's pending release sued in federal court to
also was
reported by become eligible and eventualESPN.com on Sunday.
,
)y lost that case.
Broncos spoke sman Jim
While sitting out the 2004
Saccomano said the team did- seaso n, Clarett turned on
n't plan to release anybody Ohio State, alleging coach

Jim Tressel arranged for him
to ge t passin'g g rades, cars and
money for bog us summer
jobs. An NCAA investigation
fail ed to verify any of
'
Clarett 's accu sation,_
He wa.s a bust at the NFL
scout ing co mbir~c anti mus t
thought he wou ld be a low
draft pick. if a draft pi ck at all.
The Bronco,, whu ha ve a hi'tory or producing great runners from deep in the dra ft.
surpri sed llli1n y by picking
him in the third round.
At the time. coach Mi ke
Slianah&lt;jn ·said Clarett's sordid past didn't bother him.
"First of all. I think you
don't get too caugh t up in
that ," Shanahan said. ··r know

Please

s~

Clarett. Bl

Major LEague Baseball- AmErican LeaguE .

Boone, Blake-lift Tribe past Toronto._, 4-1
TORONTO (AP)- If the
Cleveland Indians played
like this at home. they'd be
well ahead in the AL wildcard race.
Casey Blake and Aaron
Boone homered, and Jake
Westbrook pitch~d into the
seventh inning to lead .the
surging Indians to a 4- 1
victory over the Toronto
Blue Jays on Sunday.
Cleveland is one game
behind the New York
Yankees and a half-game
back of the Los Angeles
Angels in the wild-card
race. The Indians are 41 27 on the road, compared
to 32-31 at horne .
"We definitely have to
improve at home," Blake
said. "We have the same
approach. It's just the way
it has gone this year."
The ·Indians have won
nine of II overall and are a
major league 'best 19-7
since July 31.
Blake and Boone didn't
have an explanation for
why they're so much better
on the road. ·
"You'd like that home
record to be a little higher,"
Boone
said.
"Hopefully, we can get a
little over .500 at home
and keep pushing on the
road."
The Indians went 5-2 on
their road trip _to Tampa
Bay and Toronto. They
return · home to play
Detroit" on Monday.
"We've put ourselves in
a good position· going into
this last month now. We
just have to keep going;"
Boone said. "This was a
good road trip for us."
Reed Johnson drove in
the lone run for the Blue

Please see Lift. B2

.Boyer, 12
others cut
·by Browns

AP photo

Cleveland _Indians closing p1tcher Bob Wickman, back, is congratulated by Indians ·catcher
Victor Martinez after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays , 4-1, dunng AL action on Sunday in
Toronto, Ont

CLEVELAND ( AP)
Linebacker! Brant Boyer, a
12-year veteran who missed
last season because of a foot
inj ury. was o ne of 13 players
released by the Cleveland
Brow ns on Sunday.
The clu b also cut punter
Derrick Frost. giving _Kyle
Rich ardso n the starting JOb.
The 34-year-o ld Boye r
was one of four linebackers
released :along with Justin
Kurpeiki s, Sherrod Coates
and undraft ed rooki e Kevin
Harri son .
Other . players released
included offensive linemah.
Javiar Col lin s, quarterback
Lang Ca,mpbel l. defen sive
lin eman Corev Jack son.
. safety James 'K ing. wide
receiver Lance Moore,
offensive lineman Clint
Stit.:kdorn. tight end Keith
Willis and kicker Tyler
' Jones.
Boy er s igned w ith the
Brown s as ·a free agent in
200 I after spend ing six seasons · with Jackso nville. He
mat ched a career-high with
RO tackles in 200J and was
one of the club's top special
teams players.
Howe ver. he gut hurt in a
pre seaso n
scr immage
again st Buffalo last summer
and was placed on injured
reserve .

•

Major LEaguE BasEball -

National LEaguE

Griffey reaches milestone
in Reds win over Pirates
PITTSBURGH (AP)
Ken Griffey Jr. was puzzled
when he was presented with
a
baseball
after
the
Cincinnati Reds' 7-2 victory
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
After I ,000 extra-base hits,
it must be tough to keep ·
track.
Griffey hit his 534th career
home run to tie Jimmie Foxx
for 13th place on the all-time
li st and slug~ed his I ,OOOth
extra-base hit to help the
Reds win their fourth straight
game.
"He's one of the best to
ever play the game," Reds
manager Jerry Narron said.
"He's still one of the better.
playe~s in baseball today,
still in that elite group today.
But he's in that elite -group
' with anybody who's ever
been out there on the lield.
It's a lot of fun · to watch
him ."
Griffey went deep against
•

Pittsburgh starter Kip Wells
in the fourth inning for his
33rd homer of the season and
fourth in as many ga mes,
then doubled in the siJCth to
hit the four-digit milestone.
He has 430 doubles and 36
triples.
·
But Griffey said he only
remembers his accompl ishments when told of them by
club officials. That's why he
was surprised when the Reds
gave him the ball he hit into
the right-field corner.
"I really don't worry about
streaks and things like that,"
Griffey said . "I just want to
go about things concentrating on each of my at-bats,
and what happens. happens. I
don't reall y go up there
thinking about any of that."
Griffey also extended his
hitting streak to 14 games'.
The 12-time All-Star has hit
.458 (27-for-59) during the
stretch. with I 0 multi hit

..
'

,.

ga mes.
.
Luke Hu.dson pitc-hed six
strong innings for his fifth
win in six starts. Hudson (66) allowed one run and three
hits. while walking four and
striking out seven. He has
not give n up more than three
earned run s in a start si nce
Jul y 16 against the Chicago
Cubs when he dropped to 15. Since then , his ERA has
dropped from I 0.05 to 6.36.
"I kept my head up the best
I could during that tough
stretch." Hudson said. "I
knew I was capable of having success . I was able to
make. good pitches when I
had to today."
Felipe Lopez had two
RBi s
and
Edwin
Encarnacion added two · hits
and two runs for ·the Reds,
who have won four straight
and 14 of their last 16 on the

Please see Reds, Bl

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds' Ken. Griffey Jr. hits a home run in the fourth
inring against the P1ttsburgh Pirates Sunday in Pittsburgh .

�'

.'
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Standin2s
American L.eagua

•

E11t Dlvlelon

W L

Pet

Boeton

74 54

576

New York
TDronto
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

73
ISS
61
55

.566
500
413
420

56
65
68
76

GB
I ',

10
13 ';

Central Olvitlon
W

Chicago
Cleveland
Minnesota

L

79 48
73 58
68 62

GB

Pet
62~

557
523

8
12 ',

DetrOit
Kansas C1ty

62 66
484
42 86
328
Witl Division
WL
Pet

73 ss
Oakland
Los Angeles
73 57
Texas
61 68
Seattle
55 74

17

''1

37 ',
GB

.566

''

562
473

12
18

426

Sunday's Games
Cleveland 4. Toronto 1
N V YankeE's 10 Kansas C1t&gt;y 3
Oakland 10, Baltimore 3
Boston 11 , Detro•t 3

Texas 2. Mmnesota 1

~

Tampa Bay 2. LA Angel s 1
Seattle 9, Ch1cago Wh•te SoN. 2
Today 's Games
Oaklan d tSaarloos 9 6) at Baltimore
(Bedard 6-5) 3 05 D m
Tampa Bay (McClung 5 7) at Boston
{Clement 11 -3} 7 05 p rn
DetrOit (Bonderma/1
14- 10) at
Cleveland (Eiarton 7-7) 7 05 p m
Chtcago Wht te Sox (Bue hrl e t4 6) at
Texas (Domtnguez 1-3) 8 05 p m
Mtnnesota (Baker 1-1) at Kans as Ctty
(Carrasco 5-7), 8 10 p rn
N Y Yankees (Mussma 12-81 at
Seattle (A Frankltn 6-14), tO 05 p m

Andrew Johnson wins
inaugural Cleveland Open
CLEVELAND (A P) - Andrew
Johnson won the inaugural
Cleveland Open on Sunday.
shooting a 4-und~r 67 to da11n
hts tir'i Nationw td c Tour tttle by
three strokes.
- Johnson . a nati ve ot' Carme l.
In d .. was lied lor the lead heading into th e ltn al round and
bcl'geyed ' the lt r" hok But he
fintshe d w1 th 'even htrdies and
three b(&gt;ge}' Sund.1y to w1n ea stly.
John soJL who shOl a co ursere~ otd 61 .11 Ston eWat cr Golf
C lu b un S.ttu tJ.ty. earned
$S I .000 to llllllp from !50th to
-+I ,I o n the mo ney li st wtt h
$95 ,0X9 Th ~ top 20 .11 the end of
, the season "i ll earn 2006 PGA
tour c.tt d-.
"E \ a ybody

was probably
tht nk 1ng ' He shot 62. he c.tn't do
tl ag&lt;~ in':., Johnson s&lt;ti d "M.tybe
that helped me tod.ty But e.t rl y

Reds

GS
1

5
6

7

GS
14 '
19
20 ',
20
29

GS
5
5
7
13

Sunday's Games
St LOUIS 6, Washmgton 0
Cmctnnatt 7 Ptllsbu rgh 2
· Atlanta 5 M•lwaukee 2
Chtcago Cubs 14, Flortda 3
San Dtego 4, Colora do 3
San Franctsco 4 N Y Mets 1
LA Dodgers 1 Houston 0
Ar1zona 10 Phtladelphta 5
Today's Gamea
Ctncm natl
(Ra Ori tZ
8·9)
at
Plftsburgh (Maholm 0-0) 12 35 p m.
St LOUIS (Carpenter 18·4) at Florida
(A J Burnell 12-7) 7 o5 P m
Washmglon {Patterson 8-4) at
Atlanta (Sosa 9·2). 7 35 P m
L A Dodger's (Houlton 4-7) at
Chtcago Cubs (J W1ll1ams 4-6) 8 05

pm
Anzona (Au Orttz 4-8) at San 01ego
{WWilltams 6· 10) 1005 Pm
Colorado (B Ktm 3- 10) at San
Francisco (Ca m 0-0) 10 15 p m

fromPage81
Jays, who have lost eight of 10 to fall
to 65-65.
Blake homered off Josh Towers (1010) 10 tie the game at I -all in the third,
and Boone homered off Towers in the
seventh to give Cleveland a 4-1 lead.
"Those just happened to be perfect
mi stakes for those hitters. Those two
home runs. 'they aren't very good hitters. Nothing for noth ing, but they are
httting 240 for a reason," Towers
sat d.
Westbrook ( 13-13) has gone 7- I
over hi s last eight starts. He allowed
one run on etght hits, while strikmg
out three and walkmg one m 6 1-3
innings.
"The way the year started out my
goal was to get to .500," said
Westbrook. who was 6- I 2 at one
pomt. "Now my goal has changed. "
Bob Wickman pitched the nmth for
hts 34th save in 39 chances as the
Ind tans won despite being outh tt 8-6.
Towers, wh O"' had won three of his
previous four decisions, allowed four

runs three earned on five hits in
seven innings.
"It looks hke a halfway decent line
but the fact that I made four mi stakes
and they jumped all · over them for
extra-base hits, tt's just not acceptable, " Towers said. "Those home runs
were not acceptable, bad pitches in
great counts for me."
Toron to's Gregg Zaun and Enc
Hinske hit consecutive singles in the
seco nd before Johnson gave Toronto a
t-0 lead with an RBI single.
Blake homered over the .center-field
wall in the third, his I7th.
Jhonny Peralta led off the fourth
with a double and scored on Travis
Hafner's double . Hafner advanced to .
third when Johnson's throw from right
field hit him and trickled into the outfield . Victor Martinez follow ed with
an RBI grounder to make it 3-1.
' Boone hit hts 12th homer in the seventh , a towenn g shot mto the second
deck 111 left.
Notes: Erni e Whtll's daughter sang
the national anthems. Whitt is
To ro nto's ftrst base coach. The first
10,000 fans received an Ernie Whitt
DH Hafner has
bobbl ehead.
reached base safely tn 94 of I05
games.

wad
Well s h ~ l d Cmcinnati hit less lor three tnntng s before
G11fky connected to stratght away cent e1 Two 11111ings
latet. G11 l'fe y doubl t;9 do wn
the II Qht -lteld !me.
,G nfley' s h1t s were all
Ctnc tnn all could muster
helore a tv, o-run seventh .
Lopet uoubl ~ d wtth two outs
to sco re Encanldcion .md
Jason LaRue reac hed on an
error, chasmg Well s ( 7 - 14)
Wells. pushed up a day tn the
rotation because ol an 1n1ury
to starter Z.tch Duke. allowed

three runs -. two earn ed on four htt s, whtle walkmg
th r~e and stnkmg out five .
•
" I thought Ki p was outstandmg," Pmttes manager
Lloyd McClendon satd. " He
threw the bat! e ~tremely
well , parttcularly on short
rest "
The Reds took a 3- 1 lead
when reliever Mtle Gonzalez
walked Adam Dunn with the
ba ses loaded to score Lopez.
Cincinnati added two more
runs in the eighth on an RBI
double by Jacob Cruz &lt;tnd
Lopez's sacnfice fly. Sean
Casey htt a two-run shot in
the ninth for a 7-2 lead.
"We ' re playmg re al good
baseball nght now," Casey
satd. "The bottom lme is we

Todd . Coffey pitched two
score less umings to earn his
ftrst career save for the Red s,
who moved to six games
under .500- the closes( they
have been to the break-eve n
point .smce May 3 \~hen they
were 10- 16.
" If we keep playing the
way we at e and keep winning, there ts no .reason to
thmk we wtll not be up· over
.500 by the end of the season," LaRu e satd "We are
really looking forward to this
final month."
Notes: When Jack Wil son
looked at strike three to end
the fourth inning, it marked
the ftr st pme in 72 plate
appea ran ces th e Ptrates
shortstop had struck out. It

was the longest such streak of
his career and had been the
longest active streak 111 the
majors. He previously stru ck
out Aug. 7 .. With I ,534
career RBi s, Griffey is within
three of tying Joe DtMaggio
for 38th on the all-time list in
that categoty. ... Jason Bay
stol e second and third base in
the fourth inning. He rs 16for- ).6 .in stolen base attempts
thi s seaso n .. . The Reds
assured themse lves of winning the series, which condudes Monday afternoon .
They have won five series in
a row away from Great
Amencan Ball Park and have
not lost a senes on the road
since being swept June 28-29
in St Louis.

anothet leam "
defending Claret! to the
Clatett came to Denyer and media.
said he simply wanted to start
Clatett stopped tal king to
over and blend in. He talked reporters. In one of hi s last
a good game, but his chances interviews, he told the
of makm g the team were hun Denver Post he wanted to be
earl y in trainmg camp when wtth the Bro ncos, but "tf I get
he inJured ht s groin and cut, it I don't have a place
missed nearl y two weeks of here, it won't be my first setpractice.
back "
Some teammates quesClarett was ltsted ttfth on
~ioned Clarett\ commitment
the depth chart behind Mtke
to rehabilitating the groin and Anderson. Tatum
Bel.),
as the mi ssed practices ptled Quentin Griffin and Ron
up,
Shanahan
stopped Dayne. who is having a good

camp Shanahan did not play
Clarett in any of Denver' s
three preseason games.
") think at this potnt, rm
sure the Broncos did what
they thou ght the y needed to
do," Feldman said .
Asked if hi s client was
completely healthy. the agent
said, "I'm certain he is."
As for the future: "1' m not
real confident of anythmg at
th10 pomt." Feldman said .
"We' II see what happen s

are gettmg real good starting
pitchmg. It you get that and
some tt mely htttmg, you win
ball games."
Pittsburgh, whtch has lost
ft ve in a row and etght of
nme, took a 1-0 lead in the
first when Cratg Wilson doubled home Jason Bay. Wilson
v.as activated earlier in the
day after mi ssing 40 games
because of a broken bone in
ht s hand .
The Ptrates' other run came
on Humberto Cota's home
run to lead off the seventh
Pittsburgh out-htt the Reds 87, but left nme men on base.
"We had some opponumttes offensively but couldn 't
ge t tt done," third baseman·
Ty Wi gg mton satd.

$400.000 bonus m exchange
lor mcenttves that could have
eatned him up to $7 million
ove1 fou r years.
from Page 81
If a tea m claims him off
waivers. it will a" ume the
terms
of the contract More
the situ.ttion. what 's haplike
ly
is
tiMt Cl,trett will clear
pened. Hi ' s la t~ is clean and
we ' te givtng htm an opportu- waivers. become a free agent
and stgn a new deal.
nit y"
'')' d love to see someone
Claren made the unusual
move of agt;eemg to a con- ptck up the contract:'
. tract that included no signing Feldman said. "The way the
bonus. H.: rehn4uished what mcenrives in the contract are ,
v,ould ha v~ bee n about a he wo n' t ge t them wtth

Clarett

now."

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Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC SALE
Notice is
hereby
given
that
on

September 9, 2005 at
11 ·00 a.m. at Meogs
Industries.
send sea led bids to '
Executive
Director
(BIDS)
Meigs
Industries, Inc
P.O. Box 307 • 1310
Carleton Street
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
(8) 25, 26, 28, 29, 30,
31, (9) 1

3, 2005 at
10:00 am . a public
sale will be held lor
the purpos&amp; of satiS-

fying a landlord's lien
on the contents of
self-service storage
rooms. The goods to
be sold are described
generally as household. The rooms will
be opened for viewIng Immediately prior
to solicitation of bids.

Bayll28
Name: Gary Moore
Address: 33509 L-ong
Run Road, City: Long
BoHom, Ohio 45743
Terms of the sale will
be cash or certified
tund.
Hill's Sell Storage
29670 Bashan Rd .,
Ra~ine, OH 45n1
8-18, 25, 29
Public Notice
Meigs ·
tnclustrles
Incorporated will be
accepting bids tor the
following vehicle:
1996
Dodge
Van
Serial
No.
2B7KB31Z9TK11B410
- V-8 with wheatchalr
!Iff
Malgl
tnduotrloa
reMrveo the right to
ra)acl'any and all' bldo
or Mil tp tho hlghllt
bidder Individually,
which over brtngo tho
hlghlll return to
Mllgo lndullrlel, Inc.
Vehicle will bloold II
11 condition.
To lnopect vanlclo
during normal bU&amp;I· ,
nou houra, call 1·
740-992-6681 . Blda
will be open on

•

\ll:rtbune - Sen-t inel - lRe tster
C L A S S I F I E D.

(_

Public Notice

Public Notice
CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM ANY OF THE
OFFICES . OF THE
DEPARTMENT
OF
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Btd dOcuments may
be secured al the
office or The Meigs

County

34110
Fa1rgrounds
Road , Pomeroy, Ohio

45769 ;
Phone
Number 740-992-2911
for

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals lor
'he Apple GroveDorcas and Johnson
Road Paving Project
will be received by
the Meigs County
Commissioners
at
their off1ce at The
Meigs
County
courthouse , Second
Stteet, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 1.15 p.m.
Local
T1me ,
September 8, 2005
and then opened and
read aloud.
The protect provides
ror paving 35470 L.F.
of Meigs
County
Road 28 Apple GroveDorcas Road In Letart
and
Sutton
Townahtpa and 4490
L. F. o!Townahlp road
631 Johnoon Road Iii
Letart Townthlp In
Melgt County. The
engineer'• estimate
tor thlt project Is
5307 ,450.00 .
DOMESTIC
STEEL
USE REQUIREMENTS
AS SPECIFIED IN
SECT!O~ 153.011 OF
THE REVISED CODE
APPLY TO THIS PROJECT COPIES OF
SEC:rtON 153.011 OF
THE REVISED CODE

Engmeer,

a

S10.00

non-

relundablelee.
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
either a b1d bond 1n
the amount of 1 0"/o of
the

btd

amount w1th a

surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs
County
Commissioner or by
certified
check,
cashiers check , or let·

on your home delivered
subscription!

Public Notice
solvent bank In the
amount of not less

than 10% of the bid

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
belovv~ and drop off or
mail it vvith a
copy -of your photo ID.
~ .all :ipolh' l!ih'ltl~ utrtbune

amount in the favor of
the aforesaid Meigs
County

Commissioner. B1d
bonds
shall
be
accompanied
by
proof ot Authority of
the offictal or agent
signing

the

bond.

Bids shall be sealed
and marked as Bid
for
Apple
GroveDorcas and Johnson
Road Paving Project
and mailed or delivered to:

Meigs

County

Commissioners

The Meigs County
Courthouse , Second

~oint ~leaiSant

•eg:t:tSter
The Daily Sent:inel

Street Pomeroy, Oh10

'

45769
(8) 26, 29, (9) 6

ter of credit upon a

Help Wanted

~unba~ «tttte~ -~ettt1tnel

Help Wanted

\ VAi\TED: Posit tOll' a\ l:ulal:tlc to J \ld_,t

an tndt\Jdual wtlh mentul returd cltt on who
re..,1dc' 111 the Metg' County

hrs (1 1ve-111) 3- 12 pm Mon. 5-7.30
am/&gt;-12 pm Tuc,, 5-7 30 mlt16-12 pm
Wcdrfhurs: 5-7:31'lam Fri ; sleep-over
reqwrcd Excellent benefit package.
mcludmg msurancc and pa1d ume off
2) 28 hrs 2 30- 8 pm Monrrues, 2-6 pm
Wed!Thur;; 3-11 pm Fn , Mu•I have high
school diploma or GED, valid driver' s
license, three year' good dnving expenence and adequate automobtle insurance .
$7 25/hr. Send resume 10:
Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
or e-mail to: beyecsuv@yahoo.com.
Deadl1ne lor applicant&gt;: 8/31/05.
P;e-cmployment drug Ie,tu\g
E ual 0 ortunll\ Em lo cr

.

.----------Subscriber's Name

''

--------------

I ) -10

Address
City/State/Zip
Phon_e ~-----'----'------------•

Malt or drop off thla coupon along '
with a copy of your photo ID to
0
• Ohio Valley Publishing P -0 - Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

•

•

·--- ------------------------------·

-1 ----

"

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M~ l p

Monday thru Friday
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HOW IQ WRITE Al':t A0

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\ \ \Ot \I t \II \ I..,

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I~.,t___\ •ro•'A•r;;m·m·-· -'

How you can have borders and graphics
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POLICIES Ohlo Vllllty
rttti'V•tlht right to edit, rettct, or ·u nctl tny t d at any tlmt . Errort mutt~ rtporltd on tht flrtt day of pu~•ca!IQn and
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any lo.t or t xptnH that retultt from tht publication or oml.. lon of tn advtrtltem.nt Correction w1U be mtdt ln tht tlrtt tva Uablt .clition • Bo• number
.,. tlwayt contldtntlal. • Current rat. Cllrd tpplltt. • All rttl
tdvtrtlttmtntt lfl tubject to the Federal Ftlr Houtlng Act of 1968 • Thlt
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tdl m•tlng EOE tlllndardt. Wt will
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• Start Your Ads With A Ke\lword • Include Complete
Detcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlatton•
• Inc:lude Phone Number And Addre•• When Needed
• Ads Should Aun 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

•t•t•

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
www.comlca com

lwright@ic .net

r·-------.,1
..
Bobt8tl ~t ttens to giveaway

Call (740)245-9037
Free K1ttens 10 good home
740-992-1426
( 30~)675-81

83

Pregnant Stamese mother
Htmalayan kit·
ten · to
good
home
(740)446 -4529

Cat , 8mth old

r
4

110

PoMEROY/MIDoLE
Ftrst lime yard sale···-·
Furntture,A. ntlques, Crocks

Yard Sale September 2nd &amp;
3rd
Baby Boy Name
Brands
On
Happy
Foun..d Jack Ru ssel l while Hollow{New Lima Road
and brown race no latl tat· End) Nice statnless clothes.
too In nght ear, found on Older Boys Items &amp; mise
• Indian
Run
Road toot Jtll Weaver 740-742·
• Reed svi lle
740-590-0231 1011
_ (cell) or 740·667..0230

r

WAmW
TOBIN

Found 18rge dog 1n Racine
Send your phone number
Wanted HJ76 Nova 2 or 4
and d1scnptton of dog to P:O
ddor lor parts
(74 0)256Box 87 3, Racme Oh to
1445
45771

'N O

CLASSES
' COL TRAINING

• fiNANCING AV.-ILABLE
~LACEMENT

ALLIANJ::E
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEV ILLE, VA.

1-800·334-1203
tOO WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts,
wood 1tems
To $480/wk
Matertals prov•ded
Free mformallon pkg 24Hr
801-426-4649

4x4 's For Sale ....................., ........................ 725
Announcement ..... ....................................... 030
Antiques ....................................................... 530
An established bu~iness tn
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Gallipolis
IS looktng lor one
Auction and Flea Market........ .., ..., ............ 080
lltgh ly moltvated sa lesperAuto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
son w•th a strong work ethiC
Auto Repair ..................................... . ......... no
W 1010 our company Are you
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
looking for tutl ·ttm e wo rk?
Boats I Motors for Sale ..................... ..., ... 750
Are you looktng for a perma Building Supplies ........................ ............... 550
nent full-t1me pos tl!On? Are
Butlness and Buildings ............................. 340
you Interested In unltmtted
Business Opportunity ................................ 21 0
earntngs
po1enttal? All
Buslnlls Training ............................, ......... 140
repl te!i Wi ll be kapl tn stnct
Campers&amp; Motor Homes, ..., .... , ............... 790
confidence
Send your
Camping Equtpmant ................................... 780
resume
1
0
Cl...A
Box 569, r:lo
Card• of Thanks ................, ......................... 010
Gall1pohs Tnbune, PO Box
Child/Elderly Care .....................................:. 190
469. Gall tpolis, OH 45631 .
j!!!actrlcai/Ralrigeratlon ..............,.... ,,,., ,,.... .840
Equipment lor Rent........................ .. ......... 480
An Excellent way to ea rn
Excavating .. _.............................,.................. 830
money The New Avon
Farm Equ lpmenL....................................... 61 0
Call Manlyn 304·B82 -2645
Fanfta 1m Rent. ........................................... 430
Are you looking for a change
Farms tor Sale .................... , ....................... 330
1n j~OU r nurSlng? Fuii -Jime or
For Lease ........._........ ,_,. ............................... 490
Part-11me. AN neede d tor
For Sal a....................................... ·-·.............. 685
growtng
home
health
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 59D
agency
Flextble
scheduling
Fruits I Vagotables .......................... ......... ..680
Furnished Rooms ........................................450 .co mpetlt111e wages wtth benefits Call toll lree 1·666·
General ttaullng ...........................................eso
36811 00
Giveaway.....................................................040
Happy Ads ................................ ,...................050
Are you IOokn'lg for a stable
Hay I Graln ..........................._.......:..............640
JOb? G1ve us a calli You
llltp Wanted .......................: ......................... 110
could earn up to SS/hour
Homelmprovemente ...................................81D , plus bon~s. We also offer
Homes tm Sala .............................. , ............ 310
pakl tra1n1ng . hOlidays, and
Household Goods ....-.................................. 510
vaca110ns Full or pari tt me.
Houaeslor Rent ........... _, ............ ,_., ............ 4t0
day and eventng sh1fts
In Mamortam ..,..._.........................................020
avatlable Call today !
Insurance ...................................:................. 130
Hln-463-6247
Lawn I Gorden Equlpmenl-....................... 660
' ext. 2457
Llveatock.....-................................................630
1-oat and Found ........................................... 060 ·
l-ola&amp; Acraage .............. , ............................ 350
Mlac:ellaneous,,...................... : ..................... 170
Mlac:ellaneous Marchandise....................... 540
OUTSIDE SALES
Moblle Home Repalr ............-....................... 860
R EPRE SENT ATIVf:.
Mobile Ijames lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homulor Sale ................................ 320
The
Galltpolts
Oa lty
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Tr tbune Is accephng
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
resumes for a full ltme
Musical Instruments ................ _................. 570
outskle sates represet11a, Personals .. :.......... ,....................................... 005
t1Ve to JOin our sales team
Pets for Sale ...................................... ......... 560
and to mana~ an estab·
Plumbing I Heallng .......................... , ........ 820
ltshed account list whtle
Professional Services, ,... ,..... ,,_, .................. 230
calling on new accounts
Radio, TV I CB Repair ............................... 160
The successrul candtdate
Real Eallte Wanted ..._................................. 360
wtll be a dtsctpltned, se lf·
Schools tnstrucllon ......................,,,,,.,, ......150
motiVed team player that
Seed , Plarit I Fertilizer ,_, .......................... 650
understands the tmpor·
'sHuatlono Wantad .........-...._..................... -.. 120
lance
ol
developing
Space lor Rent ............................................. 460
strong, mutually behef tSporting Gooda ........................................... 520
lci al busmess relaljon·
SUV'o lor Sale ..............................................720
shtps wtth our customers
'Trucks lor Sale .. , ........................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
The ~a l candidate will
Vans For Sale..........................., ...................730
have sale e~~:penence For
Wanted to Buy .................. ........................... 090
confidential
.ntervtew.
Wonted to Buy- Form Supplles, ................. 620
please send resume end
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
oo11er leHer to Gallipohs
Wanted to Rant.. .......................................... 470
Dally Tnbune Att n Jirn
Yard Sale- Gallipolis............ , ..... ,, ............072
Freeland , 82S Third Ave.
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Gallipo li~. Oh10 45631
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleaaant................................ Q76

Galllpoltl Career Coltega
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446-4367
1·800·21 4·0452

4 Sale 9 Am Home on
ac re w/garage , near AKZO
$95 ,000 (304)675-5026

.

EXPEAIENC6 'I ECESS AR'i

' JOB

3BA Ranch, 2 car garage
pool, ctt)l schools, $00,000
3460 SA 218, Galilpolts.
OH, (740)256·1962

l

• FULL TIME

• ENROLL ING NOW

'

Concealed Ptstot Class
September 3, 9 00 am VFW
Mason WV Ph (740) 6435555, Cell (740)416·3329

tOO

LEARN
TO
DRIVE

Clolhtng Tools,Hospttat bed
and More. September 1 to
September 3
South 5th
Mtddleport

'.

ito

l

HELP WAN'tlll

I l1ro

HElP WANJID

~---'
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR

OH EOE

SF/OF/EOE
HR Otandenr:nealrhcare com

AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Shtrley Spears 304675 ·1 42~

DRIVE
Famtly·Ortented Carner wt th
loads out of Jackson, OH
needs OTA dnvers to pull
refnger ated trailers 1n the
east halt ot the U S
• Weekly Pay
• Late Model Fretgh tl1 ner
Condos
• No ForceO NYC

LICENSED SOC IAL

WOilKER

Scenic Hilla Nursing
center
311 Buckridga Road
Bidwell, OH 45614
Ph 7401446-7150 . ......,
Fax 7401446-2438
Email:
admln.thnOtandemhealth

Overbrook Rehab tlttahon
Center IS now accepting
resumes for the position of
Director of Soctal ServiCfls
The qualified cand tdate
must be a LSW posseSSing
strong verbal and wr itten
communication
sktlls
MedtCaid , Medtcare and
cara.com
MDS knowledge Long te rm
care expenence pre1erred
SF/OF/EOE
but not requtred Qua lified
HACtmndonmcalthcare com
send
cand1dates
may
resumes to Charla Brown·
McGutre,
RN
LNHA.
Admtmstrator 333 Page
Street , Mtddleport, Ohto Someone to care for elderly
female Preler non·smoker.
45760, EOE
re terences, 45 vrs at older,
weekend 1&gt;h1ft
(740)446,
3496 9am-5pm ask tor

State - Cerlilted L tnk
approved chtldcare has
1m medtate ope ntngs lor
ages 6· weeks&amp; up call
She lly 304· 675·2343 lor·
more details

II\\\( 1\1

r

iO

"

Truciri,
Or1vers
Needed
Henderson. WV based cam·
NE PrDJ&amp;et Manager for er tookrng lor expenenced
• Homettme on weeke nds
salary pos1t1on Lead tea m Class A COL Dnvers
• $!?00 S!Qn on ~nus
ot assistants 1n reset ot retBII Interested
parhes
call
displayS lor home Improve· (304)675-7&lt;34
ment reta t!er Crew mgmt
Blue Velvet Transport
and planogram exp a must Wan ted· Medtcat Office
Call Bob at 800-652-2362
Trvl may be up tQ 3 wks AsSi stant wtth expenerlCe tor
Expenses pd -1 per dtem phySICian othce A UniQue
Drive~ Needed:
COL Dr•vers wdlmg to'dnve Must possess reliable1rans- posllton requ 1nng lmowllor local ready-mtx-concrete portall0n Send resume to edge of computers and data
jardan JustusOresourcep co entry- also !CO and CPT
company Expenence IS
cadtng Reliable transporta
preferred but not necessary m or lax to 886-50 1-7972.
liOn needed No weekends
Onver must be Willing to 00
POSTAL JOBS or holidays reqwed
pre-matntenance on lrueks
&amp; equ1p ment. yard work &amp; $ 15 9.4·$22 56/hr, now htr - Benel•ts avai lable Sa,lary
For application &amp; tree negotiable wtlh expenence
other miscellaneous chores.
Expeoence operattng eqUip- government lOb Into, call A flexible employer Ma11
ment &amp; extra sktlls such as Amencan Assoc. of Labor, resume to CLA Bo'll: 568 C/o
241t1rs Gallipolis Tribune PO Box
1-9 13·599·822 6.
weld1ng a plus
• 469 Gallipohs OH 45631
emp serv
Call!304 )937·3410

Ol't'OKJlJNm'

60 ven.dnlg mach.nes/
e~~:cellent locatton
all for $10,995
800·234-6982

oNOTICEo
HI O VALLEX, PUBLISH
NG CO recommends th a
ou do business wi th peo
le you know, and NOT I
end money through th
all until you have tnves tt
ated the ollerin

t

Ml:lNEl'

mLoAN

orro.,., Smart. Con1ac
M OhiO DIVISIOn 0
manc tal
lnstttuiiDrr'
!! tee ol
Consume
Ha1rs BEFORE you rel1
once your home o
btatn a loan BEWAR
1 requesrs tor any larg
dvance payments o
ees or tnsurance Cal
he OftiCe of Consume
IIMs toll tr ee at 1·866
78·0003 to learn 1f th
orlgage
broke r o
ender
IS
properl
ICensed (ThiS tS a putlll
ervtce ann ouncemen
rom the Ohto Valle
Pubhsh1n Com an )

I'IIOH~lOML
SER\1L1-,;

• Full benefit package

•no

8USINm'i

ABSOLUTE GOLOMINE'

u..

• 95% no touch fretght

, To [)o

I

·-------· '
and
Compu ter
Aepa tr
Troubleshoot Web Des 1gn
Netwo rktng , Programmmg
Burld New Systems Restore
Wtndows Vrrus Removal
Ph oneH740·992·7903
Ohio Valley Home Health http·l/www geoc 1t 1es com/ho
Inc , htrtng Full Ttme AN's tdamn32934 / Ematl hot·
Competitive Wages, Mileage damn32934@ yahoo com
and benefits 1nclud1ng health
Insurance
Apply at 1480 lntertor/EI'&gt;Iertor
Pamltng
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis or and
Power
Washtng
phone toll free 1-866-441· Reas onable rates, refer·
1393
Expandtng tnto ences, exper tenced Free
Mason County, WV
WV es ltmales Call (740)742 AN's encouraged to apply
2m3 or (7 40)645- 2638

Expenenced Pizza Shop
workers for growtng bustl'l9SS Ap ply 1n person Only,
Scen1c Htlls Nurstng Center Jtmanetti 's Ptzza , Buckeye
a Tandem Health Care Htlls Ad , A10 Grande
Factllly, ts seek1ng a dynam•c tndtvtdual to work d.rectly Galllpolts Career College IS
seektng
an Paramedi CS
wtth the Otrector ot Nu rsmg presently
&amp;
EMT s
ms
tructor
who
can
teach
needed Apply at 1354
The tdeal candtdate Will posMicrosoft Off tce classes. A Jackson Ptke, G&amp;lhpohs
sess
mtmmum of a bachelor's
Treat ment
. curren t AN professtona l ctegre e
ts
reqUired Aes1den!lal
licen se
Interested candtdates ca n Factllty for boys now htnng
. Long term andlor sub· fax or ema11the1r resumes to Direct Care Workers Pay
446-41 24 or Jdanlckl @ga l- based on expenence. patd
acute nurstng expenence
hpohscareercolle ge com
1nsurance (7 40}379-9083
•Mtn 3yrs 1n Gerlatrtcs
.Proven teade rshtp abth ly HEALTHCARE SERVICES 9am-3pm, Mon-Frt
and excepltonal people sktlls GROUP
The
largest
. Proltc te nt
m Oual1ty prov1der of housekeepmg SOCIAl. SERVICE ASSISTANT
Improvement
and laundry servtces to the
• Knowledge of regulatory long term care tnd ustry •s Scenic Hllls Nursmg Center
a Tandem Hllalth Care
and state col')'1pl tance
looktng lor el'&gt;penenced Fac11ity, 1s seektng a Soc1al
hOusekeep tng/
laundry
We oller an excellent work supervtsors If you want to Servtce Asststant Mtmmum
environment. great benefitS grow w1th a well eslabltshed 1 ·year e11pertence 1n longterm care Abt lit)l to assess
and much morel Please publicly
he ld
company restdent needs and Impleapply to
please tax resumes to 614· ment p lan of care and coor734-9754 or call 1-800-804 - dtnate dtscharge planntng
Scenic Hills Nursing
0551 ext 93
process
Must · possess
Centar
Help Wanted ---Overbrook knowledge ol state and fed·
311 Buckrldge Road ,
regulations
Center 1s currently accepting eral
Bidwell, OH 45514
Understand
in
g
ol gen atrtc
appltcatrons
tor
Pa!I·Ttme
Ph 740/446-7150
LPNs for the 7am to 7pm populatiOn and behavmr
Fax 7401448-2438
shtft Pl ease come 111 and ltll management mod tllcatton
Email:
admln.ahnOtandemhealth out an apphcahon at 333 Some cltmcal know ledge
Page Streel. Mtddleport, praterred Please apply to
care.com • '.:."'!"

OF NURSING

WANITD

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY !SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtn'
1-888·582-3345

10 \I 1-.1\11
"j:lji::=;:::::===::;
.,r10

HO\IF~
fOR SAL£

mRSALr
For Sale
Clayton Stera
28 x56 Doublewtde Modula1
Horne wtlh 10 x26 movable
front-porch
Bu yer Must
Move Hom e to thetr Site 3Bedrooms MBR wtth full
bath and 6' Soaker Tub 2Acl'l Bedro oms w1th full bath
lncl ude,s
all
upgrade
Appl iances
also
Relngerator Was herJDr)ler
1n Mud Room Ltv1ngroom
has 45 Surround Sound TV
System wtth 6 ch anger
CD/OVD player All wmdO\'I
treatments and 3-ton 3600
• BTU Heat-Pump Prtces at
$44 900
For tn formatton
and vtewtng call (304 )675·
7137, 1f no answer leave
message wtt h name and
phone number

Great Used 1994 14x70 3
Local comp any offenng "NO, Bedroom, 2 Bath Includes
DOWN PAYMENT" p ro- heat pumP Call (740)385·
grams lor you to buy your 2434
home Instead ol renttng
New 3 BR Home Onl y
' 100% fmancu'lg
' Less than perfect credtt $1 89/mo Includes ale dehv·
ery and set up (740)385
accepted
• Payment could be the 4367
same as re nt
--------1
Ntce , Used
14x64
2
· L
Mor I gage
oca ors
Bedroom Only $4995 Call
(74013 67· 0000
(740 )365·0698
Cape Cod Home 21B5 Sq
Ft 2 1/2-Bath, 3-BR, 2 Car STATE ROUTE 554, BID·
Garage &amp; Carport, Double WELL: New 4 bedroom 2
Driveway on 1/2 acre lot 2 bath manu factured nom e
yrs old Hardwood floors Featu res IIVtng room lamtly
Pr1vate Drtve
$145 000 room wtth ftreplace and
located 397 Honeysuckle "BONUS · room Corner lot
Ln .. Gallipolis Ferry, WV Above ground pool wt th pool
house Ready for move-1n
(304)593-2664
PR ICE D
UNDER
APPRAISAL''
(740)4 46·
3218

·Gr

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Ia
• ubJee&gt;t to lhe Federal
Fair Houaing Aet ol 1968
which makes 11 lliegllllo
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlneHon bited on
111ce, co lor, r11llgion. MX
temlllal1tatue or national
origin, or arr; intenti on to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
dla&lt;:rlmlnatlon.''

THEISS ROAD, VINTON
Brand new 3 bedroom 2
bath manufactured home
Completely set and ready
lor move-tn Features 11v1ng
room fam11v room and
bea.llltful sky ill k1tehen
DRASTICALL'f REDUCED 1
Call (740)446-3570

r

Lms&amp;
ACR£..\ GE

1 Acre vwtlh otd ttouse Jm1
south ot Pt Pleasant on At
2 $1ti 000 , 740)256 5522

This newtpaper will not
knowingly eccept
adVertisement• for 11111!
est•t• whieh Is In
violation of the law Our
reader• are hersby
lnfQrmed thetall
dwellings advertised In
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity baset

2 65 acres 3 100 so ft
ba rn. ct ty water electnc.
septi C city schools 2 miles
south of Galltpohs on Rt
216 Prtme 1ocat1on wont
la.sr
$55 ODD sertous
tnQUIIIeS Vnly
(740)44 1·

Newly remodeled 3 or 4
bedroom house central atr
ful.l- basement. hardwood
floo rs detached garage
large covered pat10 lanced
back
ya1d
$69 500
(7 40)709·1 382

1Buy Homes- Local person
buys hOmes Confidential
Outck cash Jtm 740·9926300 No calls atter 9
IH'\I\1\

~

7333; . . . - - . . . , . - -...
RFAL E.'TATI:o

\VA'TEO

At 2 N 3br. Full SIZe
Basement all Bnck 1 Car
Garage (304) 895-3 129

www.orv .com
Home Ustings
Ltst your home by calhng
17401446-3620
Vu~w

photosltnfo onhne

t's a Stealtl 4 bedroom 2
ath , 2 car garage New
aven, WV Code 5505 or
au 304 882·3368

1\101111£ How:s

Bedroom House m
lor Rent No Pets
S400 Month S400 Oepos1t
(304 )67 5·5332
Syrac~Jse

1 bearoQm nouse
11
Garl teld Ave ' Galhpohs
SJQQ rmo (740)441-0194,
(740)441-1184

z

1 posstbly
Bedr oom
House 1n , New Haven
S300 'm onth $275 depoSrl "'
No Pets (304)882·3652

FOR SAI.E

2 hOuses 1 IS ' bedroom
S900fmonlh 1 IS 3 bedroom
27 Acres. ooUblewtde . 3 $550fmonth plus depostt...
bedroom
2 bath
Lg _17_40_&gt;2_5_6_·6_1_52_ _ __
Outbutldtng LG Shed Long 2·3 bedroom at H40
Hollow Ad 1n Letart $65.000 Cha th am S450m o plus
after 2pm (304)895-8770 or depoSit &amp; ut thttes Leave per(304ls93-8139
' sonal
tnlorm atlOI'I
a1
5 Horr.es under SIO 000
Wtll dehver (7401385-7671

112 Pleasa n· Street 3
Bedroom. 1 1 2 Baths
Famlly Room D•ntng Room
Full Basement Storage
Bldg. Garage New Central
Atr Cond New Wtndows
(304)675-4034

MOBILE H O\IES

HOME'i
FOR SALE

4yr old 2-story Cotomal on 3
acres, app rox 1900 sq ft ,
Gall tpo lls Cit)/ School dis·
and Scnoots t2748
tnct Green Township. 3
bedroom: 2 bath, 2 car
garage Master bedroom Is
28x24 W/Jacuzzl tub and prl·
DIRECT TV 3 roo m wtlh vale balcony $ 120.000 00
Tlvo FREE 145 channels (740)446-7029
only $39 00 pe r month Ask
4yrs old 3br 2ba wtth lt rehow to get FA EE HBO
place, on , 5 acres In counMAX, and home entertaintry $89 900 (740)709·1 166
ment system Call 800·523·
7556 for detarls
Anentlon !

HELPWANJH)

YARDSALE-

._pll rro
L~SlliUCDON
~

v.ww gal!ipo 1 11Ctreerco l ~r;,• wm
Acc•ed1te o Member AcC&lt;idtllflQ
Council for Independent Colleges

I \\1'1 0\ \II- '\1
~11n HI"

YARDSAU:

L

"""P'']&gt;O''I

150-.iiiiSCHiiiiiooiiiiiiu;lii·

Absolute Top Dollar U S .
Foun d Older, male, while
Poodle, lound on Rio Stiver and Gold Coms,
Seeki ng Female Compamon GraMe campus (740)245- Proolsets, Gold Rings Pre·
40
to
50
POSSible 7182 , daytlma
1935
US
Currency,
Comm itme nt Send l!.etter.
Soh tatre Dtamonds· M T S
Ph No Picture
~ Lost Chocolate lab ptJppy Com S1'1op, 151 Second
551 Cons tit ution Dnve, approx tmately 4 months old. Avenue, Gall tpolls, 740-446
Wlnche ster KY 40391
• last seen on Landaker Road 2842
1
call
740 -992 -7037
Reai-Eatale Wanted·Local
GJVFAWAV
Rewardll
person lookmg lor a home to
LOST In t he Stiver Brtdge buy
All cash
Metg s or
3 Flu ffy whrte Kittens, 1 Plaz a, cash from paycheck, Oall!a No double·wtde or
lor
honesty mo dular 740··416·3130
Solid Slack one 7 weeks old reward
(740)667-4007
Beaullful (304)862·3236

Fuel Tan&lt;

County, OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
lRegtster
mrtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) .992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To
992·2157

CLASSIFIED INDEX

or. older?

'

September

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Word Ads

from Page 81
4

on I was really, really nervous.
The first drive felt like ,the head
cover was still on the club "
Keoke Cot ner fired a 6-under
65 to move into seco nd plac~.
Tom Scherrer and Dicky Pt ide
tied for thtrd , fint~ htn g at 10under 274.
~
Matthew Jon~ started the day
ti ed wtth Johns(in. but posted a ·2nver 73 to sltp it)W a tte tor sixth.
Th e 33-ye&lt;~r-o lu Johnson was
strug glin g before he came to
Clevela nd thts · week . He had
mi ssed the n il 111 nine of hi s 15
starts 111 hts f1 rst fu ll seaso n on
the Na ti onwt dc Tour
" You stt 111 yo ut hotel roo m
~ach n tg ht and JUs t pray yo u
won ' t have to work again .'' he
satd of the expe nence. " It ts such
a fine line 1n go lf be tv, ee n who ts
m.tktng no mon ey and who ts
making a million dollars."

Lift

Monday, August 29, 2005

'

National League
East Dlvtsion
w L Pet
Atlanta
'74 56
569
Ph lladelphta
70 61
534
Flonda
69 61 • 53 1
New York
68 62
523
67 63
515
Washmgton
Central Division
W L
Pet
83 48 • 634
St LoUIS
68 62 523
Houston
64 67
489
Mtlwaukee
62 68
477
Ch tcago
Cmcmnat t
62 68
477
Pittsburgh ' 54 77
41 2
Weal DivttiOn
W L
Pet
San Diego
64 65
496
Anzona
60 72
455
59 7 1 454
Los Angeles
44 2
San Franctsco 57 72
51 79
392
Colorado

Monday, August 29, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

(740 )446-2515

3 bearoom 1 bath House on
Bud ChatM $400 OeDOSII
CLEAN SWEEP SALE Lot S42 5 Month No Pets
model clearance All remam- (304)675 2708
1ng 2005's mu st go to make
· room tor new hOmes under House fm Rent Pt Plea scnt
const11JCMr SAVEl SAVE• $400 !304)675·5540 ()'
SAVE' OAKWOOD HOMES (304)675·40l:4. ask tor
GALLIPOLIS Call 1740) 446· Nancy Homestead Aeat,tv
Broke1
3093

�\_

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

~

ra

lr

~

1r

VANS

Doberman Pups, Black &amp;
Tan, 2 Female, 2 Males. no
papers. Parents on Premis·
es, 1st shots &amp; wormed
S00.798· S250 (304)675·8196 after

Phillip
AldEtr

' 998 Dodge Grand Caravan
ES. White, Tan leather, quad

I

seats. rtal' AJC, New tires,
loaded,
$6100
080.

North

(740)441-Q135
2000 phavy Aslro Van , Scyt
Good Condition, New Ti1eo,

r4tJ=UHI

SP!\CE

nlR Rmr

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

•

A63
5 4
Q' 6 3

•

H 54 2

41800 SR #7

1

1•

Designed to Heat Your Home
and Your Hot Water!

45783
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med ;
Medicare .Sup. • Cancer • Accident

L--------"

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

:2 Bedroom trailer in Tuppers jSIO
" Plains
Has nice porch .
• $300.00 rani plus deposit
· ond utilities. 740-667 -3487.

Houst:HOIJJ

- --

GoollS

' 2 bedroom. AJC , very n1ce.
no pets, in Gallipolis.
(740)446· 1409 or (740)446·
2003

:3 bedroom mobile home
•rent
in
the
: I740)2S6-6S74

Appliance

lor

in Henderson, WV
Preowned applicanes sta rti ng &lt;tl
3 bedroom Tra1ler in Letart $75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we do serviCe work on all
all $350 month $250 deposit
Make and Mode ls (304)675·
(304)882 -28S8
7999
Available September 1st.
2BD w/new carpet , NC. Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
12~~:24
front
porch Chapel Aoad, Porter. Ohio.
$300/mth.
$300/deposlt (740)446-7444 1·877· 830Rutland
area.
Mike - 9 162. Free Estimates, Easy
tinancing, 90 days same as
(740)742-2595
cash . Visa/ Master Card
Beautiful · river v1ew 1n
Dnve· a- little sa\le, a lot.
Kanauga. Ideal for 1·2 peo·
pie. No pets, please. Thompsons Applian ce &amp;
. Applications being taken . Repalr-675·7388. For sale ,
Call (740)441-0181
re -condi t1o'f1ed au tomatic
wast1ers &amp; dryers. refrigera·
For' ren1 in New Haven , ,
tors, gas und electric
newly remodeled 3 Oedroom
ranges. air condition ers, and
mobile home. ale. fu lly fur · wringer washers . Will do
nished, include s dishwasher, wid . micro &amp; TV, cable repairs on maJo r brands in
hookups in all bedrooms. al l shop or at your hOme.

utilities. pai(including cable.
$1 t5 each 'Per week lor 2

i

03 Jayco Eagle '3411 .. fifth
wheel. 12ft slideout, many
e~o:tras .
(740]339-0218 or
(740)367 -7252, see at 4132
Addison P1ke
Your ProStar Trailer Dealer.
Carmichael ~quipmont Inc. 2001 Jayco De signe r Series
27RKS, 5th Wheel . lots of
(740)446-2412
accesSories
$21,000

I

\11\,\

l o\ tll!l

'- I "Ill'.

(304)67S-2246

$500 Demonstration Bonus·

2003 Coachman 24FT, TI,
Bath. AC. Furnace. Sleeps
5, $9,000 (304)675·1444

Let us demo a John Dee.re Z
Trak or X Series All-Wheel
Steer on your lawn and
roceive an e~o:tra $500 off our
already discounted prices.
ume
offer.
Limited
Carmictlael E~u i pment Inc.

tO

IMPIUJVt.Mt:r~·ls

~10

Get A Jump

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

on
SAVINGS

Al.JI'OS

Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references lur·
for reni!'JrS, {330)336-5708 Buy_ or
se ll . Al\lerinel
nlshed . E stablished 1975.
or 330·464-9424
Antiques. 1124 East Main
Call . 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Nice 3br, 2ba, wilti C/A _Call on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· 01 Pontiac Grand ·AM , ' 5-0870, Rogers Basement
Speod,
AC
,
good
Gas
992-2526 . Ru ss Moore .
(740)256· 1417
Mile age, looks Sharp , Wate rprooling.

renters. $100 each per week - -

3

r'
~

APAtmi1EN1~
FORRt:NT

1 and 2 bedroom apannients, furnished and unfur,
·nished,

security

deposit

)equired, no pets, 740-9922218.

M~.";L'ELL\N iXllJS

$4,900 (740 )441 -8241

li!1!!'------.-,
Lr__E.x.~.~•.~.n.NG-..-J

or

MERl11ANDISE

(304)67S·7998
·
1965 Mustang PaatbaCk __
55 Gal. Aquarium w/acces· Rangoon Red extenor; black
Dltchif19(Trenchlng
sories. matchmg stand, interior, 6 cycle , 3 speed, air
Ser.~lce
farge Fish , Albino Frog all conditioning, radio. good
4~~:4 Commercial Ditch-Witch
driver.
Rust
free
AZ
car.
for $175 (304.)882·3236
with si~o:-way blade, DiggingPrice: $19,000.00. Hill's
Depth

740-99i-2975

2 bedroom apt. on SA 160
FuKy remodeled, central air.
washer/dryer hookup. stove
&amp; refrigerator included.
$460/mo
(740)441·0194 ,
(740)441 · 1184.

740·9 49·2217

5949

2 bedroom. 1 ~'th , water
paid. $350 month. 5350
security
deposit . . Call
(740)446-3481 .

4 room, bath, W/0 hoo~up,
• Porter/ Kanauga
Area .
Water. sewer. trash paid.
References. (740)367·7015.

17401367· 7746

CARPENTER
SERVICE

1994 Chrysler LHS, Runs
Great $ 1500. (740)256·
o

S
. 002
::=:._·- - - - - - -

j

_

r

o

lurnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992--6215 wv flJ61]':;
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex

Cornarston•
Elacll'h:al
S.rvlca
• FOR ALL YOUR
ELElTRJCAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS
• CARPENTRY
• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 38244

I

INSTALLED
to 101 Ul
Optional Upgrades Avail able:
Argon Gas &amp;Heal Mirror

WEl.COt&lt;\t:. TO

~1-\00L '1(~,

Phone
(740) 992-5232
SxiO, IOxiO,
IOx 15, 10x20,
lflxJO

y .

~..t:..

~

i'R~~"t~ll

,,
··~

LOOKII'\G
Vl'\\:U ) .
YOVR SEA\:)7 i

;,..

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

Hupp· , :,; .

Janel Jeffers

IMPORTS

33795 Hiland Road

Pomeroy, Ohio

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech·street

Middleport, OH
992·J194
or 992·66J5

••

COO L

Parts

To ME, IT LOOK S. MORE

then another from your hand. Deceptive
ducKs demand dispatch.

To THE

-

"

!&gt;KUll 1

v--

PEANUTS

7411-9Y2-70 I } or 740-992-5553

Rt•slock iotg /.air Modt•l S.. /va,gtr
IHid ;trtel· Ha rkel Pa rls

6VES5 WI-lAT. C&gt;IARLIE BROWN ..
I l.tAVEN'T 1-lEARD TI-lE COVOTES
HOWLIN6 FOR TWO DAYS ..

M-Fri X:J0-:\:00

Sat. X:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

MAYBE THE'I'
KNEW IT WAS
eOT14EKIIN6 'I'OU

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICnON
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

I-lOW WOULD A BUNCI-1
OF CO'I'OTES KNOW TI-IAT
TI4EI~ NI6~TTIME 1-10WLIN6
"~·~~ DEP~E551N6 ME'

I E~PLAINE~
ITTOTI-1EM ..

.'

got you
17·1 7- 17 - $275 ton (While 11.1W4' list)
• Excellent 81l11nced Ferilliilr
S·UREA • $205 ton t op dren your field cob meal
with T.M. salt. S5.7511001b. big
Airway &amp; Rotowick pasture

•
:SUNSHINE CLUB

·renovato,. rtnlal a...al1ablt.
:\l11.~ hromn Cnmpc~:~t

44.1 '~ Su~· b&lt;&gt;an Mcul ) I.U5 UHJIIh

A,·allublr

.

IIi \fJrcHdt•r hng~il"\ Ul' ailuhl ~ for 11\t
. paslurt- n.•um utor\ &amp; !&gt;a&gt;dt'.., auli lahlt 11.1
Lin-mt'd IIJ!rnnumil&gt;l 1111 \Ia lT amiluhll' fnr l'tmsultin'l-

140-992-1611

Shade River AG Service, lnc
35537 St Rt 7 N

Stop &amp; Compare

~

Pomrroy, Ohio 45769 ·

ADVERTISE

· ~lemix(s

~leasant

l\egister

(304) 67'5-1333
1984 Chevy P1ckup. 4x4 ,
ano1ne and transmiSSIOn
goOd, body ro ugh, $1200.

..

--------- ~ 1 -

. t:OENERAL
CONTRACT! Nt:;
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
1
' 1nsured''
Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
• Leave a message

~

f

.Li-J&lt;.~~~- ~1----1

IN THIS SPACE
FO.R $52 PER MONTH

/Mt-ti ME PVPPIESI

TRIMMIN!O &amp;

~~
f

(740) 446-2342 .
(740) 992-2155

01~&amp;

•

· Wolktr coort hoooa

alternator.
(740)339 -

'
-rHANK GOODNE'55 MY
PoRK CHOPS AR!i- ReADY

I ;

•

mixes

STANLEY TREE

i

••
•
••

Hill 's Self
Storage

BAUM LUMBER

29670 Bashan Road
Racine . Ohio

Scorpion Tractors

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'JC30'

" Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size -+Whee l Drive Tractor
wilh 30hp &amp; ~Ohp Kubota Engines

Hours

BAUM · LUMBER

45771
740-949-2217

7:00AM-8:00PM
1 14 1

me

S~.

Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

pd

~-~~

I

--

~~~::::..:::::::::::::~

..

Now Available At

:: '('£?, 'lbll.t:o looK T~\..~
•
,,• ~------------.,...,

..

,,.
•.

,,•

..
..
•.••
,,
..•
,.

---

ducks are all well and good, but it is

.Astro-,"~ Graph .

LIKE AN OVERWEIGoHT
SOCIAL STUQIE'S TEK.+4·
ER CARRYIN"G A t-!U6E
P ILE OF HOMEWOiii::K
WHICI-( ~E"'.S ABoUT TO
DROP ON US llk,E A

HAMMEll.

the heart king.
never heard
Suitably duped, St;:~uth ·le'd a diamond to
dummy's queen aild played a heart to hi s
jack, but West ·produced the king . cashed
his long spade, cind exi ted with a diamond .
stranding declarer in his hand to lead away
from the ace-queen of clubs.
Note that if West lakes the first heart trick,
South will use dummy's diamond queen to
lry the club finesse, with satisfying results
from his po1nt of view.

no good hesitating, extracting .first one·card

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH

· G&lt;rnm shepard &amp;collie

The Daily Sentinel

led to South's

These

·

mixes

w•luipolis llailp ~hbunr

played
Boone
Pantyhose
pi(:tees
color
31 Those .
47 Nlne-top&lt;~ople
·fiver's cry
35 AH~r end
50 ~ Dawn
37 Ruraladdr.
Chong
38 Mullah 's
52 Alt.
teKt
39 Normal
41 Humerus
neighbors
42 Bard 's

·

~

Whaley's Auto

Sec Brent ur Brian 'Whaley

"Middleport's only
SeiHtor.age" ·

THAT

"" CLOUD '-O;&gt;K'&gt;)
:
LIKE A.
• DRAGON.

•••
••

· Nomgion elk hound
· Yellow lObs &amp;rt!r ic~tr

(

this

I

"~BIG NATE

711J·992·3 9

Twin Ai\lers Tower 1s accept- AKC' Registered !em. Bp~ter (740)446·2815
ing applications for waiting 7 months old, lawn color.
list for Hud·subsized . 1· br. and has had all shols. 1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee.
apartment, call 675-6679 $200.00 740·992· 1912 Or $3000 OBO. Call 17o40)286B523 aHer 6pm
416-541 0
EHO

f'.R[

10 )(( IFTI-\EKE-...
1\R[ PRIZES, LIKE.
. 01-1 OPRA!-\ I

•

Meigs Ca111ty D~ound
and !!'9!• afrtcnd or lile.

1997 Ford Expedition XLT,
new brakes
&amp; rotors .
Plat1num 4 plugs. banery

.

-CL~:'hov M'l -;;
TI\KE 'lOUR ::£1\TS!

eo.s. odop! from lite

r

""

STOP mr&gt;-T 1v-11-\Y

Tf\(. Fl ~~T D!&gt;-.Y
01'11-\E- NE-W ~

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1·800-291-5600 740·992·4119
www.qualitywindowsystems.com •

JiNEWIOEA

'"l

740-167-0544
740-367·05J6

L--oririHiiiiRiiSiti'AL~E··-•

· --~

lence

bird

Parl(ar who

If you get my meaning . inexperienced
defenders are less likely than declarer to
duck a key trick. It is easier to make a
deceptive holdup play when you can see
both halves of your army. But there is a
basic defensive tenet: 11 declarer taKes a
losing finesse that he will repeat, duck.
Today's. deal highlights a Key reason for

CELEBRITY CIPHER

or

&amp; Plumbing

oRoofing • GuUtrl
' o Vlnyt Siding &amp; P11lnting
o Patio 1nd Porth Decks
We do it all except

PETI

Townhouse
apartments, 1'0 wk old Labs. Registered
and/or small hOuse..s FOR $75 each . Call (304)675·
RENT. Call (740)44 1· 11 11 2503 or (740)247·21 t7
ior appl ication &amp; information
5 AKC M1m Dachshutid
Downtown 2 Bedroom , AIC.
Puppies, Black &amp; tan , short
No
Pets,
References.
hatred. Lea.,.e Message
Deposit. (740)446-0_139
(304)895· 3299 or {740 )446·
'
Furn.ished upstairs, 3 rooms 7292
&amp; baltl . Clean. ref. &amp; dep.
AKC
Golden
Aetr1ever
reqUired. No pets. (740)446·
Puppies, 1st Sliots &amp;
151 9
Wormed, Mother/ Father on
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· premises.
$250
each .
room apartments at Village (7 40)&amp;43-()()13
Manor
and
A1versJde
. Apartments in , Middleport. AKC Min1ature P1nscher .
From $295·$444 . Call 740- Tail's Dock, Dew Claws .
lsi
992-5064. Eqyat Housing Ready September
(7 40)388· 8788
Opportunities.

New Garage•

o Etectr~

i!OOFING
BEAUTIFUL
APART"18. Colors
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
·
"30yr.
warranty
in writing
PRICES AT JACKSON
"Prolessionatlnslallation
ESTATES. 52 Westwood
• Free Estimates
Drive frorri $344 to $442.
740-596-2909
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-44 6-2568.
Equal ftl':'""-"""!~--:cONVENIENTLY LOCAT·ED • AFFORDABLE!

Room Addiliont &amp;

' RemodeJing

person
Wading

h-1---+-

and immedialely played a heart to his
queen. West ducked liKe someone who had

$219

10x10x10x20

YOUNG'S

1997 Honr;ta Civic 109,000
mi. After market acces·
series, 38+ mpg. Clean ,
Large Print Western Se ll or black/blaCk. Call ' (740)441 "Trade (304)675-5516 after c9. 86
:__:_:5~--'----~Spm
- - - ' - - - - - - - - - - 1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr.. 4
NEW AND USED STEEL c:yl. 76,000 miles. $3.000
Steel Beams. p1pe Rebar OBO, no reasonable otter
For · Concr'ete.
Angle . refused. must se ll. Call
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel (740)441-0712.
Grating
For
Drains, '--'---------~
1999 Ford Taurus . power
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
.
windOws. power locks.
. Scrap Metals Opefl Monday, $2800. (740~·0425

r

(;&amp;R SANITATION
.U5fl l B:1 ilcv Run Rd .,
1\lnJt:ro", 011

661 Third, Gallipolis. 2 bed·
room. unll:lmished, no pets Tuesday. WedneSday &amp;
Deposit &amp; rent $300. Leave Fr1day. Sam-4:30pm. C losed 2000 Kia Sephia&gt; 4 door,
message (740)245. 9595 .
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp; automatic, 27.mpg , 72 ,000
·
Sunday. (740)446-7300
miles. good condition. $800
Apartment · for rent. 1·bed· ijft~~,.;:.;..;.;..;..;.;._, in brakes, filters, tires, belts
TOOm. located 1205 Ohio St.
BliiiJliN(;
etc. tuneup. Make excellent
Pt. Pleasant, $300/month, L-;,
· _,;;Sui'I'I~-.1-Jo-'o;;;,' _.j car for coll ege. Asking
water sewage included ..,
$47[)9 OBO. (740}441·9378.
Block. brick, sewer pipes.
(304)675-6668
15
TJUiCKS
windows. lintels,' etc. Claude
Apt for Rent. Beech S1ree1
Winte rs. Rio .Granoe. OH L.---FORii
' iiloiSiiAu:liiiii;.Mleklleport. One Bedroom.
Catl740·245·5121 .
furnished, utilities paid, ref·
erences. ·74{)-992-0165 .
DAVIDSON METAL

Houslng Opportunity.

4 y~ of Rdi&lt;~blc Service
tKccp Ymn M1•11cy Loculi

1740)645 -0ZOS

JET
2 bedroom apt. on SA 850.
AERAT ION MOTORS .
Brand New. Central air
stove &amp; refrigerator includ- Repaired , New &amp; Rebu11t In
ed , washer/dryer hookup Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1$700/mo. (740)441-0194. 800-537-9528
(740)44 I •It 6&lt;1 .

Website :

Extra long Twin Bed, Quality www.hillsresto.com
Mattress. great tor tan per·
1990 Ford Taurus. good
son. $200. (304)882·2494
condition, runs great. Great
For Sale· lift chair, (740)992· work car!
$500 OBO

(~ent! Ar.m s/Ownu·
Opnator 740-~)92-3174
*Weekly Trash Sl!rviJ:c

baddle
Cloaemouthed

ace

Vin yl Double Hung

ff;=.=======l !

PnmcmV. Oil

to 5'6". Gas,
2 Bd. Apt . available in DP Ultra GYM PAC complete Automotive Classic Car
Water, Cable, Ele c tr ~c &amp;
weight
lifting
workout
center,
Restoration
&amp;
Parts,
Inc
Middleport.
No pets .
'--~------'
Bashan · Road , Drain lines (304)576·9005
g o. 29670
$300.00.
Call :888·514 · $180 080, must
(740)441.·0135
Radne,
Oh1o
45771
Phone
0192. Huo approved.

l

.Storage

We ~f'rvil"f' •m•.fl muil1'~
2U4 Cunlku St1cc1

up

WINDOW SUPER SALE

$3t111Bebete on
ell Supper

Gravely
Tractor Sales
&amp; Service

22 Tech~iques
23 Feels awful 43
24 Cut of meat
25 Not taken in
by
44
26 Gas or oil
27 Novelist
45
~ Goey
28 Jacket style
29 Tear to ' 46

permitted to win the trick, he continued w1th
the spade jack , the bottom card of his trio .
Declarer took the th ird spade with dummy's

~

Bu sln~ ...
n ot our sh:1ellne ."

==

and bullets - no, they're little gifls, con tain·
ing meanings!"

High and Dry

" Ldwn and G.Arden
T ractors •"t!" our

Ea!il
All pass.

chants

form of commun1cation 1 Conversation isn't

t:mne By B t'eJre

. wntrect.,.

1.,--•llitlillllirOSIIAiiUil:'-_.1

~omas'

56

,......,__,_

The straightforward auction

ouNn _,.

Jldnntitgeote

as a voice

being in th ret;l no-trump. Weslled Ihe spade
king, the top card of h1s sequence_ When

740-44!)-9777

·--

55 Make a '
tunnel

Wel~verHd

just crosstire where you shoot and get shot
. at! Whe re you've got Ia. duck for your lite
and aim to k1llt Words a.ren'l on ly bombs

HALP YA, BUMSTEADS ·-ONE'S SEEN THAT OL'
BOY FER YEARS

2150 Eastern Ave .
Gallipolis, OH 45631

HOME

North
3 NT

•

TRI -STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

Sales • Parts • Service

·t1 FARMHAND

Both

West

13 Pamplona
cheer
14 Poetic

45

The meanmgful play .

30 Yrs. Ex:p. • Ins. Owner: ROnnie Jones

''

KlngKutt•r

A QJ 1

Pass

48 Prleal'l
vntmenl
49-51 Yuckl
53 Moo goo
-pan
54 Twangy,

lenglh
57 Feminine
16 Senate vote
ending
17 Church
58 Salamander
readings
19 Out-and-out
DOWN
21 FBI
acronym
1 Droll
22 Whiz
2 Wicket
. 23 Oahu
3 Cravings
welcome
4 It may be
26 Meat lockQr
good or bad
30 Phyalc&amp;
5 Distinct
particles
p&lt;~rlods
31 Egyptian
6 Pull dOwn
boy-king
7 Racer A.J. 32 Brunched
8 Not Into the
33 Set ablaze
wind
34 "- So Shy" 9 Grizzly or
35 Erelong
Kodiak
36 Swim gear 11 Lively dance
39 Capsize
12 Low card
40 Stuffed
18 Long sighs
animal
20 Caddie's
4 I -Nimitz
offering

In his famous ''Portnoy's Complaint ." Phil1p'
Roth wrote, "The English language is a

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMEMT.INC.

. ..... _

¥

2 NT

1 How ~?
4 Conlllner
1 Morvy
10 "Sheila"
alnger
Tommy11 Cut off

is to duck

f&lt;WIWIWI

' ObCc.dee"i

1 4 2

Opening lead: • K

Top · Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

sa

..., IU\Itl "

I

ANHQlli'"S

Advertise
in this
space
for
$52 per .
month

•

Suuth

Tree Service

For more inrormation call
740-992-3824 or 740-667-0338

country

•I•KJ 93

. AQ

K-4 Open House
Aug. 25th at 7:00 PM

Warehouse

9 g 2

• A K J 10

_Now enrolling students ror the
2205-2006 school year.
Grades K-4 through 12

liNDA'S PAINTING
(7401 985-4180

•

Soutb

JONES'

River Valley Christian Academy

Let me do i ~ for youl

------

• 5 4

Vulnerable:

No Lawn To Small
Call 742-2595
Rlder-Push-Weedeatlng
.O Wner Operated

Pri\lata Mobile Home Space
country. $300/mo, $150 in Centemuy Close to
Green School (740)4 46 - ---'---'--------'-deposit. Application s now
be ing
accepted .
Call 4053
\II l.(l II\ \PI...,I
(740 )388·0462 lor more

East
• I0 8 5
• 10 6 3

10 7 6

42 More frooty

lldvorb

0!&gt; K Q J 9
¥ K 982
•

ACROSS

15 Expound at

Dealer: South

HARMON
LAWN CARE
.2 Bedroom Trailer 1n the

West

740-667·0700 1·BBB·HUPP2l4

8A~''iiURKE 7

Pnme Commerc1al SpaCe at
: 14x70 trailer tor rent, $300,
Spring Valley Plaza. 3,000
-$250 for deposit, Hud
sq tt Call (740)446-3481 .
: approved , (740)742-2714

: MONTY

1~-:.~r~u~ppers Plains,

WOODBURNING
FURNACE

08 2!J.-05

•
•

'$5,200 080 (304)576-2934

House for Rent in - Point
Pleasant (304)675-6224 ·

Information.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

- -- - - - -

I

j

Tl)e Daily Sentinel • Page BS

1996
Plymou th
Grand
Voyager, 7-passenger, air,
good condition. no rust. w,ell
malnten"anced. (740)256·
6647

•School District, A~o~ailable (614)595·7773 or
,Oct. 1at, 740·416-1687. 4686 .
s,oo
.(740)753-2595
Tara
Townnouse Pit Bull PuflPies tor sale. Full
Attt&gt;ntlonl
.. Apartments. Very .Spacious. Blooded. No Papers, 5150
·local company offering ~No 2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 112 each. (740)388 -8901 or
:DOWN PAYMENT" pro- Bath, Adu11 Pool &amp; Baby (7o40)38a-8596.
.grama for you to buy your Pool, Patio, Start $385/Mo.
No Pets,
Lease Plus
;home inst&amp;ad of renting.
• 100% financing
Security Deposit Required,
' less than pertect credit (740)367·7066.

• Payment could be the
same as rent.
___
Mortgage
locators.
(740)367-0000

www.myda.llysentinel.com

-_;t\LLEY OOP

FORSAu:

3 bodooom, 2 lull bath, 2 IIY- Immaculate
apartment
;tngtoomt. dining, large Walking distance to URG.
·kttchen. basement, large Recently remodeled. 2BR
;fenced N:ck~ard, Southern new private deck. $400/mo.

accepted

,Monday, August 29, 2005

www.rnydailysentinel.com

·by Luis Campos
Celeoril)&gt; Clptw!r cryp1ograms 918-Ctealed lfom QUOtatiOnS by tamoU$ people , put and PH!Stlnt
·
Each l1t~r 111 ttle cipher,s!f!nds 101 anotner· ..

Today's clue: L equals P

"R W' E

SRW

WOWGO

PWXVRIYGZ

LKYOWG

LKYOWC

SRW

SRYS'E

NYIW·

N W X W G Y. S A T X , "
TU

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WOWG

10
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XAVZKYME

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -" Acting !s enforceO compassion . You enter the skin
ol another person wtlhout Judgment. " - Susan S~randon

'lllrthdo,y:

TUeaday. Aug . 3D, 2005
By Bernice Bede Oaol
TakA a hard look at any proposals
which are brought to you in th e year
anead by persons who have always
treat ed you fairly and' honestly. What
you know can be b onded togall1er
with th eir knowledge for a successful
endeavor_
VIRGO (Aug . 2 3 -S8pt . 22)- Assume
a more active role today In a joint venture that has been appearing to be
flatte ning ou l. :You are better equipped
int e llect ua lly and creatively than your
as sociates !O give if rTJomenfum
LI BRA (Sept . 23-0cl. 23) ~ II you are
prepared to objecllvetY reveal a ll the
facts and details concerning a serious
matter. assocllo}t es co uld help you
solve a problem for which you've been
unable to find the answer.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -N ov. 22) ~ You
won"l b~;~ greedy nor w ilt you be looK·
ing tor a handout, but you'll let it be
known to those wllh whom you deal ,
that you expect lull ana 'just compensat ion for services r endered toaav.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1) Til ere's no chance that you wili simple
coast today hoping thing s wilt work
out your way. a lthough II may look that
~ay to otherSI . In fa c t , your energy IS
turne~ l n~ard lor g reater force.
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22-.Jan _ 19) Conditions co uld taka a turn to r the
baUer to day in two separate situ ations
which have caused yo u co ncern
Although th ey arog unrelated, they may
merge and begih to dovelail lOr
s trengt h
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fab. 19) - Vour
reasoning powers are quite astute
today as you look ~lealh the surla co ·
for deep und e rstanding . Vour Ideas
rmd wprds will end up carrying a greal
OOal ot weight with o th e r s.·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - The
c hances ol gotting me type of terms
you desire in finan c ial or business
dealings today are better than u sual.
Vou:11 s tick to your guns and wall
' Things o ut un.l ll others' come to agreement
ARIES (Marc h 21- April 19) - You a1a
likely to fare bolter today Jn a il your
a ffairs If you l AKe a tong-range view ot
things Jather lh a n on have momentary
!hou~;~ht s . Take the time
to looK
benealh the s ur1oco o t events or phe nomena
TAURUS
(A);;!.rit 20·May 20) Secrecy enh ances your c h ances lor
s uc cess today. espec ially when il
comes to new tdeas . Time will allow
you to visualize what you want . lll en
be ' ablo 10 w ork th 1ngs ou t botore
unveiling Them
GEM INI (May 2 1·.Jun8 20)- Mane rs
that you negotiate through solid indepth discussions with Tho parties
involved today will turn o ut to be
something tar grander than the Initial
s1gnals indicate . Talk th 1ngs ~u l in ·
deta.ll
C ANCER (June '2 1·July 22) Your
singleness ot I hough! will make lt p ossible lor things to shih In your laver
today In o rder tor you to success fully
tull1ll two ambitlou's objecTives that you
have been hop ing t o linaliLe.
LEO ·(July 23 -AUg _ 221 ~ Creative
concept s lhat you env ision can be
accomplished and brought Into being
at lhls time. Th is w ill be especially true
II you surround yoursetf with talented
and resourceful people.

SOUP TO NUTZ

I

KIPPUC

11~· 1r=

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~

~ T-A Y C

j!

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beat. He is very willing to do al-

.-

·ih•:-r-T_w,.I,_A~R-'E=-r-1/ most /i,~y~hing fbr a buck but

• ,. I' I ., I () Ctm!ol~f~
•

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the ck1.1dle ~1.101ed
the fYII3~on g WQ&lt;dl
I•om· t:ep No 3 bl'!lcw.

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PRINT NUMS£REO tEllERS IN

1H!Sf SQUARES

UNSCR~MBt! lETTERS TO

GET ANSWER

I' I I
_

,

,

SCUM-lETS ANSWERS

Victim - Pulpy·- Notch - Feebly- HUMB~E
"I always remember how stamps sltek lc themselves,"

the starlet chirped, ·and that's how I rema1r.

H UI~SLE

•

ARLO &amp; J'ANIS

'--":"

l
l THOUC.HT I'D ~LifOIJT OF
!'&gt;O....E.TH IOO U:?'&gt; CWORTAIII£.

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 29. 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Fresh violence and
rhetoric unlikely to
torpedo momentum
for Mideast pe~ce,_ A2

Kerr wins Wendy's ~hampiollShip for Children
DUBLIN !AP)- Cristie Kerr
took a moment from her victory celebrat ion to do some
cheerleading for the U.S.
Solheim Cup team.
"Forget the win for a secand," Kerr said after making
clutch par p.utts on the final
two holes to win the Wendy's
Championship for Children on
Sunday. ''I'm reall y ex~;ited
about how our team is going
into the Solheim. We're look ing for eac h other on the
leaderboards."
Kerr could be found right at
the top pcrsevcrt'no ·'espt'te
challenges from P~t J -iurst.
Annika Sorenstam anu Paula
Creamer.
".People don't · rcai 1'-z'' J10 ,..
difficult it is to win." said Kcr; ·
who picked up her second win
of the year and the sixth of her
career. "Winning · is a Jcameu
behavior. That's what 1 did
today. 1 relied 0 11 my experi ence and my patience. and I
was able 'to hang on."
Kerr fi ni shed at 18-under
270, one shot ;iheucl of

·~":

Creamer and Sorenstam.
Creamer, , the third-round
leader, had a'7! and Sorenstam ·
a 66, matching the day's low
round.
Moment&gt; after clinching the
win, Kerr was announced as
No. 1 on the points list for the'
U.S. Sol heim Cup team. She
wi ll be joined by Creamer and
Hurst _ wid will be playing
against Sorenstam _ at the
biennial competition with
Europe on Sept. 9 _11 at
Crooked Stick in Carmel, Ind.
Kerr purred the l7th 10
remain in front. making a IOfoot putt after· chipping past
the pin from over the green.
"That's about as big a putt as
you can make to save par."
Kerr said .
·
She rolled' in a 4-foot putt on
the final hole.
'
"The putt 011 18, I just trmtcd 1nv line. " shcsaid.
Hu;·st sh,trcd the lead with
Kerr as she stepped tu the final
tee. B(tt her drive was far to the
rigl1t and ended up in a ditch

lined with trees. Taking an directly behind her, drove Into
unplayable lie, she took four the fairway on 18 and hit her
drops the first three were not iron approach about 30 feet
within the allotted two club- from the pin. Her first putt
lengths from· where the ball came up 4 feet shan, leaving
went in the trees. Her founh her a slippery downhill putt to
drop hit on the back ed~e of win the tournament. After nailthe wooden tee she stuck 111 the ing the putt, she pumped her
ground to mark the drop dis- fist.
tance and caromed back deepAsked if she had staked a
~r into the overh angin~ bushes claim as America's top pro,
and trees.
·• Kerr said, "I can 'tell you my
Hurst punched out into a mom probably thinks that, and
trap and then hit her founh my dad."
shot to the right frin~e on the . Hurst's closin.g 70 left her at
par-4 18th, two-puttmg from 272 and !ted wtth Jeong Jang.
60 feet.
who closed with a 67. Karrie
· "''m not going to dwell on Webb (70) and Soo-Yun Kang
it." Hu rst said, her daughter (72) were at 27 3. with Michele
standi ng nearby in a USA Redman alone at 274 after a
cheerleader outfit. "I'll move 72. U.S.' Women's Amateur
on: What can I do' You can't champion Morgan Pressel fingo back."
ished with a 70 and was at 278.
The U.S. Solheim team was
Creamer, who clinched the
taking a bus immediately after LPGA rookie of the year
the lournamenr to go to award with her tie for second,
lndianaforapracticeroundon began the day with a oneMonday. Hurst said she might stroke lead over Kerr and
drown her sorrows with her Kang . Kerr pulled even by hitteammates.' .
ring a 5 1/2-fqot birdie putt on
Kerr. playing in the ·group · the par-4 second hole.
'

'

BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) Matt Kenseth's season was in
shambles two months ago, hi s
chance s of raci ng for the
Nexte! Cup title slim to none.
A frantic late-season surg~
has changed everything.
Kenseth used his first victory in more than a year to inch
closer to the Chase for the
championship. , winning at
Bristol Motor Speedway on
Saturday night in dominating
·
fashion.
Kenseth started from the
pole and Jed a whopping 415
of the 500 laps to win for the
first time since March 7,
2004. After s truggling for
more than a year, Kenseth has
turned it on the past two
months and vaulted from 20th
in the standings to II th.
"Our performa nce has been
better and you knew we had a
fast car when we're on the
pole," said Kenseth, whu has
started on the pole just twice
in hi s career. "This feels great.
I haven' t been in Victory Lane
i.n a long time.''
The top I0 drivers in the
standings after the Sept. I0
race in Richmond make the
Chase. and Ken seth's victory
now has him II points out of
the film! qualifying position . .
''I had all but written off our
AP photo c h~nces to get in three race s
Matt Kenseth celebrates in victory lane after winning the . ago," car owner Jack Rou sh
NASCAR Sharpie 500 on Saturday at Bristol Motor Speedway said . "I was thinking 'building to next year' all the way.
in Bristol. Tenn .
·

'
~0.11

• Lady Eagles win opener.
See Page B1
' AP photjj

&lt;t'&lt;.,

time and cou ldn' t avoid getting caught up in Jarrett' s
accident. Harvick ·desperately
needed a stro ng finish to
make the Cha se, but ended up 1
finishin g 37ih and will almost
cenainly'rniss the cut.
But in a sign·of.total frustraRichard
tion with his
Childress
Ra cing
team,
Harvi ~; k reportedly refused to
get back in the car after his
crew made enough repairs to
get the Chevrolet back on the
·
track.
Harvick. who has declined
to di sc uss contract negotiation s with Childress until he is
ceriain the team is improvin~,
had · retreated
to
hts
motorhome while the new
worked on the car. When it
was ready. he wus nowhere to ·
be found. so the team considered using Scott Ri ggs to fini.sh the race.
Harv ick eventually returned
to the car. but after starting
the night 14th in the points, he
is now 16th.
Asked if he was angry that
Jarrett 's a\: I ruined his playoff
hope s. Harvick didn't place
blame.
"We don't deserve to be in
the Chase anyway." he ·
snapped.
Dale Earnhardt Jr.. the
defending race champion. finished ninth. But he's 15th in
the standin gs, a long shot to
make the pk1yoffs. -

~----

....... __

.

· ~·

Are Coming To The.

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio State. Football
.coach Jim Tressel is predicting
The Buckeyes will
for the
National Championship this year.

WATCH FOR IT THIS SEPTEMBERI

i •

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAlLYSENTIN EL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• William Cruickshanks

INSIDE
• North Korea delays
resumption of nuclear
talks, blaming U.S..
See Page A2
• Poll: Support for Patriot
Act shrinks ttie more
people know about it.
See Page A2
• Sayre descendants
hold reunion.
· See Page A3
• Meigs woman named
outstanding employee.
See Page A3 .
.
•Transfers posteq__)
SeePageA3
• Despite base-closing
vote, supporters not resting.
See Page AS
• Judge dismisses lawsuit
filed over long election lines.
SeePage AS
• Leaking rail
forces
Cincinnati evacuatibn.
SeePage AS
• Two striking unions
reach 'ligreements ·
with university.
SeePageA6

POMEROY
- Three
months after $20.000 was
reported missing from the
Meig s County . Sheriff's
Department, the Ohio Bureall
ofCriminalldemitication and
Investigation has .yet to
release any information about
who might have stolen it.
Sheriff Robert Beegle said
Monday he is unaware of the
status of the state-run investigation -into the missiA g
inoney, which was first discovered mi ssing on May li. At
that time, Beeg le asked the
state's major crimes uqit to
investigate the case and interview suspects be\:ause, he
said, he wanted no appearance of a cimflict of interest
in the investigation. Beegle
has maintained since that time
that he wants no information
about the investigation's findings until it is completed.
The cash from two separate

drug investigations was being
held in an evidence room at
the sheriff's department and a
locker in the booking area.
One of the criminal cases
associated with the cash evidence - that against Elisha
"Lacey"
Dick-ens
of
Middleport, has now been
concluded and the defendant
sent to prison.
Beegle said some employees of his department have,
submitted to polygraph examinations relating to the case,
and others - have refu sed.
Middl epon police oftlcers are
also subjects of the investiga~
tion , because pan of the missing cash origin.ated from a
Middleport cri minal qse and
was being stored at the sheriff's department without
Beegle's k'riowledge.
Beegle said the investigator
in charge of the probe is also
involved in a number of other,
cases. and has been ·testifying
in coun cases.

i,

Brian J. Reed/ photo

Danny Gheen of Ghe.!'n's Painting applies a coat of a special
durable plastic-type finish on the shower in the Meigs County
Jail. Renovations at the jai l continue ·as Sheriff R9bert Beegle
proceeds with plans to re-open the facility.

'Beegle lays off two deputies Friday
Bv BRIAN

Oetatto on Pogo AE;

'
2 SECI10NS12 PAGES

'Calendars

A3

Classifieds

· 83-4

Gomics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials ·

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

Weather

J.

REED

ffREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

: INDEX

B Section

A6

© 2005 Ohi~ Valley PubliShing~·

for everyone involved.
She sai.d that throughout
the gradLtation and prom season, the Council worked in
cooperation with . the · Meigs·
County Sheriff's Office with
funds provided from Ohio
Parents for Drug Free Youth
to
increase
compliance
check s and hi ghway crui ser
visibility
to di scou rage
teenage drinking.
, "For the 2005 prom and
graduation season, our com-

munity lost no young people allow a person under the age
in accidents as a result .6f of 2 1 to remain on !heir propalcohol or drug cons ump- .e11y white consuming or pus-:
. sess ing alcoholic beverages
tion," sbe commented.
The program for which can be prosecuted and face
fu nds have been awarded is· jail sentencing. fine s and/or
"Paren ts Who Host, Lose The los&gt; ofproperty.'' she warned .
Most," Busho'ng said the
"Wi th the cooperation uf
~ampaig n 's message seeks to community
parent&gt;.
ove rturn parents' ideas of guardians. and adults, we &lt;:an
"safe drinking" and educate help make the· 2006 school
them about the &lt;:onsequences yea r fun filled and tragedyfree for our children,'' she
of breaking the Jaw.
"Par.ents who knowin gly concluded.

Racine Fall Festival coming s·oon

Beth Sergentjphoto

One of the parade participants gets into the spirit of autumn at last year's Racine Fall Festival.
This year's festival is Sept. 10 at Star Mill Park. The parade begrns at 10 a.m.

f&gt; Y BETH

WEATHER

,,

\\\.\~'"'~~~~~ihtwn1oul•'•"'

"4H), 1

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ear

BUC EYES

tiJ

parties following football
games but other fall events
that "making available or
serving · alcohol · to teen s
under thei r own supervision
or in their home is against
the law."
Sharon Bu shong, Council
·spokesperso n, advises that
" Hostin g a party whsre
alcohol is available f to
underage youth is ilkgal
and can pose serious h¢altb
risks and legal ramifi caions

Beegle: No word from b\
BCI missing money pro e

...

CROMWELL,
'conn . told he received a sponsor's
Vander Walt is playing ·on a majur medical, aml that \
I am now."
(AP) - Brad Faxon's per- exemptio n to the Bui ck tour with a medical exemp- where
,
sisten&lt;:e at the Buick Championship. He decided · lion after a wrist injury limThe field played under
Championship finally paid to turn pro and earned. ited him to 12 events in drizzly conditions all day
off.
$ 177 .7.13 in his PGA Tour 2004 , hi s rookie season. He and the rain-softened green s
He rolled in a 3-foot debut.
needed to earn just over resutted in · low number s ·
birdie putt on the first playFaxon thought he would $448,000 over ·the nex t early. That allowed severa l
off hole Sunday. and beat he hom e 'ooner than later seven tournaments to keep to catch. . Rose. who bega n
South . African Tjaart va n earlier in the week . He hi s card for this year. No the day with a four stroke
der Walt for his fir st victory made the 36-hole cut on the worries now for the' 30- lead at 12-under. Rose didsince 2001.
number and was back in hi s year-o ld , who pocketed n' t make a move until late
Faxon tied the co ur&gt;c hot el room packing up $464,400 for finishing sec, in the day. He birdied two
record in regulation witil a Friday afternoon while ond 011 Sunday.
of the last four holes .
.. 1 guess now f can piay a
9-under 61. a per sp nal best wai tin g to hear if he made
'"I knew I had to go out
for the 44-year-old . He it.
little more," van dcr Walt and play a ~ood round and
stayed close to hom e for hi s
"Thi s wcls really kind of
eighth PGA Tour ,·ict&lt;lry. · out of the blue.'' he said. saip. "Yo u work so hard to make it mine," Rose said.
earn'ing a $714. 000 pay- "The first twu days I pia) ~d get out here and then you "G uy s are shooting 61 and
AP photo
OK. Then something hap- get hurt. It's not a nice feel- 64 from behind you, so I
check.
Brad
Faxon
raises
the
trophy
after
winning
the
Buick
The . Rhode Islander has pened yeste rday where all ing. The (tour) was nice needed to keep it mov in g
Championsh,ip
in
Cromwell,
Conn
..
on
Sunday
.
.been a mainstay at thi s :-Jew the puth started goi ng in ." enough to work with me on forward."
England
tournament.
On Sunday. not onl y did
appearing 22 times. Hi s best hi .s putb fall but he took
finish had been an eighth in advantage · of a couple of
1996.
favnrabl.c ruling s to save
" People get excited about par on the last two hole.s.
ByckEyes
thi s tournam ent and I Jove When his tee shot on No. 17
-""'!' - . . . .... '1...., ...1
_....,._
pla yi ng close . tn ilome." rolled about -10 ya rds down
~
~i
Faxon said. "Nobody on a cart path and damaged the
iltloiC'dord;'::iali:r:ad~,;:,~be:"
· tour would ever tell you ball. Faxon go t to pull out a
anyth ing differently . My ne\v ball and plac·e his drop.
......
father came today. my aunt. ' On the playoff hole both
Byck Eve~ _
my uncle. my &lt;:uus ins arc hit great second shots.
..
here. Great friends are here.
Fa~nn drove into the left
.
~·
It' s ju't awesome.''
fairway bunker and had !69
~
··:~
•. --- . "'!!"!!"
/
Van der Walt shot a 6-l yards to the hole and stuck
Sunday ahd birdied the final his 7-iron approach 3 feet
two holes to tie Faxon at from th e cup. Van dcr Walt.
14-under 266 and force a untlappable all week at the
playoff back to the 434- TPC at River Highland s,
...... -:.~.~
..~,~.~~
...:!!
..,".!~"'~'!''* - ..
yard pa(-4 18th.
dro ve it right down the mid. ...... . .
••
Third-rounder
leader die to w_ithin 134 yards. His
Ju stin R'ose (69) fini .shed approach l;langed off the
c~mpete
one stroke out .of the play- flagstick and rolled' ju&gt;t
off. while former Brltish over nine fee t from the cup.
Open champion Ben Curtis The pla)ers high -fived eac h
(69), Jerry Kell y 177) ;ind Dthcr as tilcy wa lked up the
NCAA runner-up Michae l I Rtil fairwav 10 an ovation .
Putnam (li3J were all at I 2
Van dcr Walt pu,shed hi&gt;
under.
birdie putt rigilt then stood
Putnam had · been at bad and v.atched as FaxDn
Meri o·n L"t ~,week fm the coolly mlled hi s in for th e
U.S. Amateur when he was "in .

Bv CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

I?OMEROY - If you are
even thinking about serving
alcohol at a post-football teen
party at your home, better
think again.
The Meigs County Family
and Children First Council,
in partnership with Ohio
Parents for Drug Free Youth ,
wants to remind parents making preparation s for not only

Christie Kerr ho.ld s the Wendy' s ChampiOilShip fo r Children aft~r
winni ng with a tournament total 18-under par Sunday in Dubli~ .

-,

111'-.l•\\ , \l•.l'-.l :: u

Council warns against serving alcohol to teens

SPORTS

I

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

)nii'\IS•\ol.,),l

But they've go t it turned I think it was a good points
around now. It's going to be a day for us."
horse race."
The only driver to drop out
Ken seth agreed :
of the top I 0 after Bristol was
"! thought' we were tiut of Jamie
McMurray,
who
it;" Kenseth said of the Chase. dropped to 12th.
"There's still a couple races to
Meanwhile .
the
ra ce
go, but we're a lot closer. wreaked havoc on many driWe'll just · go to California vers on the bubble of making
(next week) and give it all that NASCAR 's Chase - and
we can. If we can run like some of it was inte ntional.
(this) the last two races, we ' ll
Dale Jarrett , who started the
make it."
·
race II th in the points. lost
Jeff Bunon was second and ground midway through the
was followed by Greg Bif!le race when contact from Ryan
and Ricky Rudd.
Newman sent him spinning.
Rusty Wallace, in his final Apparently seeking payback,
race at his favorite r:ice track. Jarrett later made a sharp ri ght
fini shed fifth . Wallace is retir- turn into Newman to wreck
ing at the end of the season both of their cars. ·
and had hoped to mark hi s
NASCAR
ruled. · that
final Bristol race with a win. Jarrett 's move was intentional
Instead, he leaves with nine and penalized him two laps.
wtns,
most•
among The in~;ident dropped Jarrett
NASCAR's active drivers .
to 14th in the standi,ngs. and
"It was a good top five fin- · he'll need a fltriou s rally over
ish, I'm happy with it ," the final two qualifying
Wallace said. "I fought for it events to get into the playoffs.
and it was a good, strong finNewman, who started the
ish."
night clinging to the eighth
Jeff Gordon, who is making spot in the sta ndings. dropped
a . desperate push for the one spot to ninth.
Chase, finished sixth. It
"Mine was unintentional.
pushed him into the top 10 for His was i.ntenti onal, that was
the lirst time since June, and obvious," Newman said . ·' I
if the four-time series cham pi - sure didn 't expect him to
on can stay there fortwo more retaliate like that. "
races he will be eligible to
.Jarrett left the track without
nice for the title .
commenting.
The biggest loser . was
"I' m real happy with the
comeback," Gordon said. "It's Kevi n Harvick. who was in
a solid day, a solio finish and the wrong place at the wron g

Faxon wins Buick Championship in playoff

'·

-.

Kenseth wins at Bristol, strengthens Chase bid.

.

Cinclnnati mayor's
race includes·98
Degrees singer, A6

POMEROY - Financial
restraints have forced Sheriff
Raben Beegle to lay. off two
deputies in his depanment;
leaving him, he said Mondpy.
with a "skeleton force."
· Deputies Rick Smith and
Andy Myers were laid off the .
force effecti ve Friday, and
will likely remain off the job
through the end of the year.
Beegle said. The layoffs leave
Sheriff Beegle'will only eight
officers on his force -one
per shift.
·
''I knew at the beginning of
the year that I w~uld .be shon
on funds for salaries. but I
hoped to be able to reopen the
jail and use fund s saved from
housing to help pay sai:Jries."

RACINE - The signs that
summer is ending ca n be
found in the ttpcoming Labor
Day Weekend. the start ef
h·igh sc hool football season
and the announcement of this
year's Racine Fall Festival for
Sept. 10 at Star Mill Park.
The annual festival kicks
off at I0 a.m. with a parade
followed by the crowing of
the queen iu noon at the park.
The live music arid entertainment begins at 12:15 p.m : and
ends at 6 p.m.
Ihe entertainment lineup is ·
heavy on bluegrass and
i.ncludes the groups Rocky
Mountain Bluegrass and
Northwest Territory which
both peTformed at last year 's
festival, and newcomers Buck
&amp; Company. The Big Bend
Cloggers will also take the
stage at 2 p.m.
Northwest Territory is a
Submtt1ed photo .
quanet which has been per- . The group Northwest · Territory will . re,visit the Rac1ne Fall
forming · since 1989 and is Festival this year as part of the lineup of bluegrass and clogfrom Shreve. The group per- ging acts perform1ng throughout the day.
forms bluegrass. . gosp~l.
country. fiddle tunes. breakNortliwest Territorv will to the-area. bringing their own
downs and original composi- perform at J p.m. and at 5 unique brand oT bluegrass to
tions. Family humor and what p.m.
the public . They will perform
is desoribed as a "fast -paced"
Rock y Mountain BluegraS&lt; at II a.m. and I p.m.
stage presence is also part of from Parkersburg , W. Va.
Please see Festival. AS
thetr repertoire . ·
.
have become frequent
visitors
,

.
Eastern student to attend leadership conference

Beegle said Monday.
"I issued the layoffs very
reluctantly. but I had no
choice," Beegle said.
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
Because iail renovations
HOEFLICH@MYDAil
YSENTINEL.COM
have taken so long to complete, and because the state
TUPPERS PLAINS
has not yet authorized him to
re-open the jail. th-ere ,are no Lonnie Westfall. a ·&gt;eve nth
funds left to transfer from the grader at Eastern Junior high
housing line into the salaries School. has been · selected to
line. He said yesterday he is attend th e Junior National
Conference
in
not sure if ~dditional layoffs Leaders
Washil)gton.
D.
C
..
Oct.
1-6.
will be necessary between
. The youth. nominated . by
now and the end of the year.
Beegle said a number of ' his sixth grade teacher. Krista
factors have contributed to hi' Johnson. and chosen for his
depanmental budget shortfall, Jeaders,hip at&gt;ility and acade-·
other than a delay in re-open- mic achievement (an all-A
ing the jail and a large hum- honor roll qudent). will be
ber of pri soners in cou nty one of 2(Xl outstanding midtustody. The ri si ng cost of dle sc hoo l st udents from
, acros' the United Swtc at the
leadership conference.
Please see Deputies. AS

..

'

The goal of the conference
themcd "The Legaev of
Amerimn ·Leadership·· 'is to
introduce young people to the
rich ~radition of leaders hip
throughout American history.
while helping students develop their own leadership sktlls.
"The aim of the Junior
National Young l:eade"
Conference ·is to in&gt;pire &gt;Illdents to recognize their own
leaders hip ~ kill s. measure
their skill- against those of
current and former leaders
and return hl1111C "ith ne"found eonfidc·nce in their
ability to e .xerci~e po..;iti\ e .

Please s¢4! Student. AS

l,.onnie Westrall

•

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