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---~~-~-~----------- ~. ·-~----~~~- -~-----:---,--,--~---~-------------""'!'"'----

Gospel music
at the Gallia Co.
Jr. Fair,A7

T.O. misses flight to
Bengals camp, Bt

ti
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

PVH Emergency
Care Center
receives Level
IV trauma
designation
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTIN~LCOM

. POINT PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Pleasant Valley
Hospital
tecently
received their permanent
status to be a Level rv
a na center. according
Lawson , President
and Chief Executive
Officer.
"Pleasant
Vallev
Hospital has a long tradition of prod ding excellent care to trauma
patients," said Lawson.
"By pursuing the Level
TV designation. and 1
meeting or exceeding
these statewide standards. we are formalizing
our commitment to continue to provide high
quality trauma care to our
community."
A trauma center is a
categorization of hospital
resources \\hich identifies it as capable of handling trauma patients and
enables emergency medi'cal services' providers to
transpott pat~ents to the
most apprCJpriate medical
facilities. Trauma centers
lassified as levels I.
~ and IV depending
eir resources, admissions. staff. research and
education involvement.

.I

Hill to change plea in· homicide, drug case
t
By BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Brandi
Hill will appear before
Jud!!e Fred W. Crow Ill
Monday to change her
plea to aggravated vehicular homicide and drug
charges.
Hill's jury trial set for
this month was postponed and her case

removed from the court's
active docket after she
was apprehended by law
enforcement earlier this
month. She faces two
counts of aggravated
vehicular homicide. possession of cocaine and
operating a motor vehicle
under the influence.
She is now also
charged with failure to
appear after her arrest

earlier this month near
the Vinton County line.
H~r. S I ,000 personal recogmzance bond was
in~creased to include an
additional $50.000 si.1rety
bond and a S I 00.000 recognizance bond and she
remains in jail.
An entry filed in her
court file sets a hearing
for a plea ~hange on
Monday. Hill is reprc-

sented
by
Pomeroy. mjured her and passenger~
Attorney Charle~ Knight. in other Yehicles.
Hill is charged with the
Hill allegedly failed a
the deaths of a pa~senger. June drug test and admitStephanie English. and ted to using dru~c:; \\ hile on
Robert
Harrison
of probation and on bond for
Pomeroy. driver of anoth- the pending charges and
er vehicle in a 2009 auto missed a pre-trial hearing.
accident on Ohio 143
She is also being sought
Authorities believe she in Licking County. where
\vas under the influence of she sen cd time prior to her
cocaine when she caused an-e~t in the double fatality.
the accident. which also for a probation violation.

Southern
approves
personnel,
contracts
Bv BETH SERG'ENT
BSERGE~T€-IAYDAILYSENTINEL COM

RACINE - The mo~t
recent mcetine: of the
Southern LocafBoard of
Education
consisted
mostly of the following
per~onnel aJ]d contract
i~~ues.

l

Please see PVH. Al

Bash begins

WEA1HER

Above: Before a backdrop of pleasure boats
Josh Buskirk of Coolville, a guitar virtuoso,
opened an evening of free entertainment in
Pomeroy's riverfront amphitheater kicking off the
three-day Big Bend Blues Bash. Music by artists
from across the area gave audiences a variet~ of
country blues and jazz in the picturesque setting
on the Ohio River.
High: 86.
Low: 61.

Charlene Hoeflich/photo

•

Right: The first day of the Big Bend Blues Bash
drew to a close yesterday with music, boats and
the cult of cornhole. Here, young onlookers
watch as dozens of teams compete for big
money on the parking lot.
Beth Sergent/photo
2 SECrtONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Faith
NASCAR

Sports

16 P,\GFS

A3

Bs-6
B7

A4
As-7
B8

B Section

© 2010 Ohio \ 'alley PubJi,hm~: Co.

li.IJJ.I !I! I.! I!II '

The Maples celebrating 25· years
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY The
25th anniversary of the
opening of The Maples, a
home for -.;enior and disabled citizens, was celebrated Tuesday with a
dinner party at the facility.
· Attending were many
of the 48 residents. mem-

bers of their familie~ and Elvi~ karaoke and golf
friends. along with the putting contests. Alice
management
· team 'Wamsley. '"ho lives at
including the Board of The Maples and is an
Directors of which Bill officer of the Resident
Young is president. Other Council, was given a speboard members are Chris cial service award in
Tenaglia. Beth Sh.tver, recognition of her work
Eleat;or Thomas. Bill for maintaining plantings
Nease, Velma Rue and there. along with other
contributions
toward
Wesley Karr.
Entertainment included making life more enJOY-

Contact one of our lenders today!

-

farmers
Bank

tl

Pomeroy- 992-2136
Tuppers Plams- 667-3161

Galltpolis - 446-2265
Mason 77J.6400

Point Pleasant- 674-8200

able for the restdcnts.
A presentation was also
made to special guests,
John
and
Karen
Matthews, fonncrl) \Vith
Silverheel Management.
the agency v. hie~ manages The Maples.
Years of residency certificates went to Carol
Please see Maples, Al

The Board accepted the
resignation of Katrina
Spurlock: as one on one
care aide at Carleton
School: Jeff Beaver v.. a~
hired as head custodian in
i:\~,;~,;Ordan~e '' ith the Ohto
A~&lt;;ociation of Public
School Employee's negotiated agreement Kathy
Miller \\&gt;aS hired for midda) vocational bu~ route
on a supplemental con·
tract in the amount of
S 1.700; Katie Dime! was
I hired as a math teacher at
, a rate per Southern Local
Education Association,!
agreement; accepted the
resignation of R) an
Lemle) as assistant varsitv
football
coach:
Vt'illiam BelT) was hired
on a supplemental contract at a rate per SLEA
a!!reement for assistant
\ arsitv football coach for
the 20 I 0 season.
Approved a purchase
sen ice agreement with
Ed Ba_,k~r in. the a~ount
1 of $3_,)00 lor Jul) I · June 30. 2011: \Oted to
continue the math coach
prooram with Ti·icia
~!cR:ickle from the general fund - the S l grant
was not approved.
ApproYed accepting
the High School 21st
Ccntun':" Grant for the
20 I 0-1·1 school year in
the amount of $I 985&gt;80
as well ~h a contract with
:\1cGuirc and Associates
a~ presented for services
to the High School 21st
CentLtl"\ ~Grant. In the
past. th'is grant has funded the After School Kids
Program.
ApprO\ cd revised temporar·y appropriations in
the amount of $9.5 million: approved the following bids for 20 I 0-11
Please see BOE, A1

~·

�~

Friday, July 30,

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

--~

--

www.rnydailysentinel.com

2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Blobs of algae overtaking some Ohio lakes, ponds Meigs County Fair
Bv
tickets on sale

with rashes and stomach
illnesses that officials
suspect was linked to the
TOLEDO Slimy algae.
blobs of algae like the
Water tests detected a
ones that have polluted liver toxin called microOhio's largest inland lake cystin that went away
are now being found in within a few days, said
some small lakes and Tina Badurina. a spokesponds. On Lake Erie, woman for the YMCA of
algae blooms are popping Central Ohio, which
up in growing numbers operates the camp.
earlier than in past years.
Algae blooms are a
Researchers think it's problem for some private
because it has been hotter owners of ponds and
and rainier than usual and lakes even though they're
a sign of things to come. still uncommon, said Bill
Lake Erie has been Lynch, an Ohio State
plagued for years by University
Extension
blue-green algae, but now researcher who studies
there's growing concern aquatic management.
"It is increasing every
about smaller Jakes following the discovery of a year and can be a health
toxic algae that caused risk to humans and anistate regulators to warn mals," he said.
Older ponds
with
people not to eat any fish
or touch the water from muddy bottoms tend to
Grand Lake St. Marys in . release more phosphorous
that depletes oxygen so
western Ohio.
The discovery of algae they are at greater risk of
in a lake at summer camp algae blooms, Lynch said.
The greatest risk is to
near Bellefontaine in
western Ohio Jed camp small pets and livestock
organizers to ban swim- that drink from contami"Just
ponds.
ming for two weeks after nated
15 children came down because an algal bloom is
JOHN SEEWER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

fndiana's health departpresent doesn't mean toxins have been released. ment said last \Veek that
but you shouldn't take five of nine reservoirs
any chances," Lynch said. that it monitors have high
Algae has been detected levels of all!ae that could
at two state park lakes this caus~ health problems for
including
summer - Bun Oak in swimmers.
southeast Ohio and Grand rashes and nausea.
"It's been bao the last
Lake St. Marys. said Mike
Shelton, a spokesman for three years," said Lenore
the
state's
natural Tedesco, director of the
Center for Earth and
resources department.
Tests have not yet deter- Environmental Sciences at
mined whether there are Indiana University-Purdue
toxins in the water at Burr University Indianapolis.
She thinks the algae
Oak State Park so the state
has posted advisories blooms in the Midwest
telling swimmers to avoid aren't going away soon.
"The challenge is
the algae, Shelton said.
Weather is suspected to nobody knows what to
be a reason ·why algae do," Tedesco said. '"There
blooms are showing up isn't one source and there
earlier and more frequent- isn't one solution.''
ly. Heavy rains wash polReducing phosphorous
lutants into waterways that feeds the algae is one
and then hot weather solution. but doing that
~
makes conditions ripe for isn'tsosimple.
Much of the phosphoalgae
growth'.
Temperatures have topped rous that ends up in the
90 degrees on 13 days in lake comes from farm
ferti!Jzers that are spread
July in northwest Ohio.
Other states, including onto farm fields and then
Indiana, 111 inois and washed away by rain.
Wisconsin. have had sim- Leaking septic systems
ilar problems in recent and storm runoff in cities
also adds to the pollution.
years with inland lakes.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH~ MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
Season and membership tickets for
the 20 I 0 Meigs County Fair to be held Aug. 16-21 on
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds a e now on sale
The price for season tickets which are sold only,
individuals and not to a company or organizatio
$16. while the price for membership tickets whic
qualities the holder to run for the fair board or to vote
on membership, is $17.
Purchase of either a season or membership ticket
provides free admission to the grounds and free
admission to grandstand events, as do 4-H tickets.
However. season ticket holders which includes 4-H.
must pay '!&gt;5 each day they attend the fair to ride on
the mechanical rides all that day.
Those who pay the $8 admission at the gate entitles
the purchaser not only to enter the fairgrounds, but to
ride all day and attend grandstand events free.
Children under two are admitted to the fairgrounds
without char~. but must pay to get on the rides.
Membership tickets may be purchased from any
Fair Board member or at the Meigs County Extension
Office, Memorial Drive. Pomeroy.
Season tickets may be purchased at Baum Lumber
Co .. Chester: TNT Pit Stop. Middleport; SwisherLohse Pharmacy. Pomeroy, Gloeckner's Restaurant,
Pomeroy: Darwin Grocery. Darwn. Taz's Marathon,
State Route 7, Pomeroy: McDonalds, Pomeroy, the
Extension Office, Mulberry Heights. Pomeroy: Reed's '
Country Store. Reedsville, Dettwiller Lumber Co,
Pomeroy; Hill's Citgo, Racine; Rutland ~Department
Store. Rutland: By the Way Country Store , Langsville:
Farmers Bank. Pomeroy: Farmers Bank, Tuppers
Plains, and Kings Hardware. Middleport.

----------------~·
For the Record
911
POMEROY - Meigs County 911 dispatched these
calls for emergency assistance:
Wednesday
9:03 a.m., Cremeans Road. Rutland, unknown emer-gency: 2:04 p.m.,Art Lewis Street, diabetic emergency:
5:28p.m .. Minersville Road, diabetic emergency.
5:32 p.m., Silver Ridge Road. fall: 7:10 p.m., Ohio
124, Middleport. rapid heart rate; 7:48 p.m., Ohio 7,
Reedsville, difficulty breathing; 8:13p.m., Martin Stret. ~
abdominal pain: 11:04 p.m., Powell Street, diabetic :
emergency; ll :06 p.m., Fifth Street, Racine, seizure.
Thursday
12:11 a.m .. Park Street. difficulty breathing; 1:55
a.m .. Yellowbush Road, difficulty breathing.

Probate
POMEROY - Judge L. Scott Powell issued marriage licenses:
• Ton) Lynn Forester, 44. Jacklyn Marie GloydLong Bottom.
• Richard Kelly Stitt. 21. Vinton, Amanda
,
Martin. 23, Midleport.
,
• Brent Allen .Hensley, 23, Courtney Renee Angus ..
22. Tuppers Plams.
• Travis Houston Chtldress, 26, and Brittany
Michelle Hughes. 21. Middleport.

Submitted photos

Above: Many of the 48 residents, their families and
friends, along with management personnel attended
The Maples 25th anniversary party.
Right: Bill Young, president The Maples Board of

Directors, presents a certificate to Alice Wamsley in
recognition of special contributions to the facility and
its resident program ..

Common Pleas
POMEROY - Clerk of Courts Diane Lynch
included these proceedings in the Common Pleas
public record:
Civil
• Action for foreclosure filed by Farmers Bank and
Savings Co .. against Danny K. Harrison, and others.
• Foreclosure granted to Peoples Bank. N .A.,
again~t Brink) F. Seth.
Criminal
• Ben Kauff sentenced to one year in prison on
indictment charging non-support of dependents. second count dismissed. $1.741 in child support an-earages ordered paid.

Maples from Page~~
Marie Spaun, Nora Nitz,
Jimmie Cummins, Betty
Crites, Barbara Tatterson.
Pam Moore, Kenny and
Cheryl
Lee.
Henry
Thorne, Jean Thomas
and Hazel Oliver, five
years or more.

Hall and Opal Tyree,
over 20 years; Sampson
Hall, over 15 years:
Raymond and Betty J.
Cook, Thomas Tucker,
John Lego and Ted
VanCooney, 10 years or
more; and Larry Powell,

BQE from Pag~ Al
tered
by
Hylant
Administrative Services,
effective July l - July 1,
2011 with an annual pre- •
mium of $22,853 for $2
million I occurrence and
$4 million aggregate
coverage.
Approved the use of
HB 412 for the purpose
of calculating the textbook/materials and capital and maintenance set
aside
requirements;

school year fuel,
Burlile
Petroleum;
bread/bakery, Heiners;
tires,
• Malone
Warehouse; milk/dairy,
Btoughtons.
waive
Voted
to
instructional fees for
2010-11 school year;
authorized district property, fleet, liability and
violence insurance coverage through Ohio
School Plan adminis-

approved contract with
Auditor of State's office
in amount of $22.900 for
fiscal year 2010 auditing:
approved payment of
$1 ,815 to Ohio School
Comp for group enrollment and administration
of. workers comp claims.
approved
superintendent's bond in the
amount of $20.000 from
Reed &amp; Baur Insurance
for Aug. 1- Aug. I. 2013:

r---~~~==~~~~=-~~~~--~~·

WATE

36
students
were
approved for open enrollment in the upcoming
school year.
All members of the
SLBOE were present for
the recent meeting. The
next SLBOE meeting is
set for 8 p.m .. Aug. 9 in
the high school media
room.

ROB

MON. • WED. ·FRI.

5:30 ·6:30
Chris Poe - instructor • $5.001"r person

Kountrv Resort Camparound
44706' Resort Rd. - Racine,'bhio
740-992-6488
www.krccamping.com

PVH from Page Al
The Level IV designation is important to
Mason County because
trauma patients will now
receive a higher level of
care - more than the
standard care in emergency rooms with no
trauma designation.
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital has worked for
several years to get the
staff trained and collect
appropriate date to com
plete the process. James
Toothman, DO. Clinical
Coordinator and Medical
Director
of
the
Emergency Care Center,
and Jackie Stewart, RN,
Nurse Manager, were the
team leaders of the initiative.
A Level IV designation
verifies
that
Pleasant Valley Hospital

has the expertise and
resources to provide
quality care to trauma
patients. At PVH, trauma professiOnals are
available 24 hours a day
to respond to trauma
emergencies, and nurse
clinicians attend each
trauma patient throughout the day for care
advancement and coor-

..,

dination. Trauma data is
collected and entered
into a registry database
for quality improvement
and injury prevention
initiatives.
"Pleasant
Valley
Hospital is proud to be
part of the state's trauma
system for the better care
of
patients,"
said
Toothman.

August 16-21
Amusement Rides

700 W. Main St. • Pomeroy,OH
740-992-2891

,

�The Daily

lffiy TIHIIE

S~ntinel

PageAa
Friday, July 30, 2010

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Geo still on the go
State Sen.
Jimmy
Stewart's
faithful, famil1995 Geo
m, a vehi
cle he drives
• all over the
district,
recently rolled
over 500,000
miles at the
Ohio
Statehouse.
Stewart said
the car has
seen him
through seven
election campaigns and is
known as the
"staff car:'
Stewart said
he prefers the
more economical Prizm
which gets 34
miles per gallon, and "it's
paid for," he
pointed out.
Stewart also
saidhe
• cently purchased new,
80,000-mile
tires for the
car which
means he
hopes to be
on the road
for a long time
to come.
Submitted photo

Meigs County Forecast
Frida}: Sunny, with a
high near 86. Calm wind
becoming east around 6
mph.
Friday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 61. Calm wind.
urday: A slight
e of showers and
derstorms after I 0
Mostly cloudy. with
a high near 86. Calm
wind. Chance of precipi"tation is 20 percent.
Saturday Night: A

slight chance of showers
and thunderstorms before
1 a.m. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 64.
Light northeast wind.
Chance of precipitation
is 20 percent.
Sunday: A
slight
chance of showers and
thunderstorms
after
noon. Partly cloudy.
with a high near 88.
Chance of~precipitation
ts 20 percent.
Sunday Night: Pattly

cloudy, with a low
around 64.
Monday:
Mostly
sunny. with a high near
89.
Monday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low
around 66.
Mostly
Tuesday:
sunny, with a high near
91.
Tuesday · Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a low

30.08
Collins (NYSE) - 57.01
DuPont (NYSE) - 40.51
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.94
Gen Electric (NYSE)- 16.15
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 27.01
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.21
Kroger (NYSE)- 21.15
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 25.48
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 55.93
Ohio Valley Bane Corp (NAS-

DAQ)- 20.32
BBT (NYSE) - 25.05
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 17.45
Pepsico (NYSE) - 64.89
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.78
Rockwell (NYSE) - 54.61
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 8.04
Royal Dutch Shell - 55.98
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 68.78
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 51.06

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 36.10
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 59.15
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 51.71
Big Lots (NYSE)- 34.17
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.07
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 42.48
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-9.81
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.52
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.43
City Holding (NASDAQ) -

Hooking up can create a
meaningful relationship

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
started
seeing
my
boyfriend this year after
we hooked up at a patty. I
thought this was totally
normal, until I was talking to a friend at a different college who told me
that no one dates after
hooking up, and that I
shouldn't trust this guy.
because he's just using
me. She told me that I . Dr. Joyce Brothers
should only date someone who's willing to go
out on traditional dates.
Dear S.D.: ,A lot of
but I think it's awkward. spouses are in your posiIs it true that hooking up tion when it comes to
is a bad way to start a taking care of the kids.
relationship, and that this There are plenty of things
won't work out? - P.Y.
that can help. but the
Dear P.Y.: Hooking up main thing is trying to
- or the practice of focus on the positive.
casual sexual encounters You can miss your wife
that
usually
occur and \Vish she was around
between people who are but learn to be happy
strangers or acquain- \'r'hile she's traveling. not
tances, with no commit- just sitting at home mopment to a future relation- ing and waiting for her to
ship - is taking over tra- return home. For one
ditional dating as the thing. you can ask your
norm of sexual interac- friends for their help. If
tion· on many college they know you're in
campuses. In contrast. in charge of the kids for the
traditional dating, the week. they might ask you
man usually takes the and the kids over for an
more active role, which extended
play date,
can feel awkward to a lot relieving some of the
of women who aren't stress on you. Or invite
used to simply being the friends you never
reactive. This doesn't have a chance to see over
mean that you have to for dinner and a movie.
rule out dating entirely.
You also can appreciate
though - in this day and the alone time - whether
a~e. you can feel free to
it's catching up on a proinitiate a first date.
ject like cleaning out the
You shouldn't feel con- garage. or simply getting
::;trained by your friend's to watch your favorite TV
advice. There are gender show without interrupdifferences in the prefer- tion. You're also the boss
ence for hooking up and while your wife is away,
dating - more women which means that you
than men prefer to date in don't have to factor in
around 68. Chance of
a more traditional style another opinion when it
precipitation is 30 perbut according to a recent comes to misbehaving
cent.
study in the journal Sex kids. what to make for
Wednesday: A chance
Roles. both genders see dinner or what time to go
of showers and thunderthe same attractions and to bed. You may not realstorms. Mostly cloudy.
pitfalls in either method. ize hov. focused you are
with a high near 91.
In this study. the number on your family's needs
Chance of precipitation
of hook-ups in the previ- until you take a moment
1s 30 percent.
Wednesday
Night: ous two years was nearly to reflect o·n how vou
Partly cloudy, with a low double the number of first would do things if "left
dates, so- don't feel that entirely on your own.
around 69.
Thursday:
Partly you are alone in this ten- And when vour wife does
dency. In this study. both get back, (f you·\'e been
sunny. with a high near
genders preferred dating able to spend the . week
91.
to hooking up when look- focusing on yourself.
ing for a long-term rela- you'll be much happier to
tionship, but that doesn't rub her feet and listen
mean hooking up pre- sympathetically to her
cludes a healthy and tales of hotel beds an9
happy relationship. It's up lost luggage.
to you to decide whether
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worthy and worth your
Daily stock reports are the 4
time
and interest.
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for July 29, 2010,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
in Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441
and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Community Calendar
Clubs and
. ganizatio(ls
Tuesday,Aug.3
MIDDLEPORT
Regular stated meeting

of Middleport Lodge 363,
7:30 p.m., Past Masters
Night. Bring non-perishable items for food bank.
Refreshments at 6:30.
Friday, Aug. ~
POMEROY -- PERl
74, meeting 1 p.m. at the
Mulberry
Community
Center. Lunch at 12:30
p.m. Michael Gerlach to
speak on the history of
Meigs County.

Public
· meetings
Friday, Aug. 30
PORTLAND
Lebanon
Township
Trustees, regular meeting
ublic budget review,
., town hall.
•
Monday, Aug. 2
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, 7
p.m., village hall.
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees
meet 5 p.m., office building.
Tuesday, Aug. 3
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. at the township
garage.

Wednesday, Aug. 4
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health
meets at 5 p.m. in the
health department conference room.
Thursday, Aug. 5
POMEROY - Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors will
meet in special session,
10 a.m. at the district
offit:e at 33101 Hiland
Road to discuss employee health insurance.

Reunions
Sunday, Aug. 1
PORTLAND
VanMeter Reunion, din-'
ner at 1 p.m., Portland
Park, bring lawn chair,
covered dish, old photographs to share.
RUTLAND - Annual
Davis reunion with basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.,
Rutlan~ Fire Department.

Bingo follows lunch.
Sunday,Aug.8
ALBANY
86th
Hayes-Young and Holiday
School reunion, 1 p.m.
potluck dinner, at the old
Holiday School grounds,
Gilkey Ridge. Bring photos, genealogy information, entertainment.

Sunday, Aug. 1
The
POMEROY 80th birthday of June
VanVranken will be celebrated with an open
reception in her honor
from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
New Beginnings United
Methodist Church in
Pomeroy.

Youth events

Other events

Monday, Aug. 2
POMEROY- Vacation
Bible School, 6-8 p.m.,
Carleton
Church.
"Seaquest" is the theme.

Monday, Aug. 2
REEDSVILLE
Tuberculosis Clinic staff
Olive
Township
at
Firehouse, 5-6 p.m. for
skin tests, and 5-6 p.m.
Wednesday to read. The
public is eligible, including
those requiring tests for
volunteer work at the fair.

Birthdays
Friday, July 30
PORTLAND
Gertrude Lehew will
observe her 90th birthday on July 30. Cards
may be sent to her at
53460 County Road 31 ,
Portland,Ohio 45770.

'"fhe Vaughan Age1\ey
Pl'(l\ idlllg ,, "orld of choice m in~ur. nee

• Horne • Auto
• Health &amp; more
· Asblee E11sh:n

740-992-9784 or 877-992-9784
505 Mul
Hei
Oh 45769

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers:
My wife goes out of
town a lot for business,
leaving me with the kids
and the house. The kids
don't mind as much as I
do, and have gotten better as they're getting
older about helping out
around the house and
with the younger two. So
I'm getting by, but I still
get stressed when faced
with
the
looming
prospect of a week-long
trip. Do you have advice
to make it easier on
myself when my \Vtfe IS
out of town? - S.D.

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• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse Barns
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
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740-985-4141
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The .Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 30, 2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

. Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
CotrgJ•ess shall make tto law •·especting att
establislmrent of religion, 01· prohibiti ttg tlze free
exet·cise Jhereoj; or abridgin,{! the freedom of
speech, ar of the press; or the r(t,!lzf £?{the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Governmeut for a redress of grievattces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TOI)AY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, July 30, the 211th day of 2010.
There are 154 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 30.. 1945, during World War II, the
Portland class heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis,
which had just delivered components for the atomic bomb that would be dropped on Hiroshima, was
torpedoed by a Japanese submarine; only 316 out
of some 1,200 men survived the sinking and .sharkInfested waters.
On this date:
In 1792, the French national anthem "La
Marseillai,se", by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle, was
first sung in Paris by troops arriving from Marseille.
In 1864, during the Civil War, Union forces tried
to take Petersburg, Va., by exploding a gunpowderfilled mine under Confederate defense lines; the
attack failed.
In 1918, poet Joyce Kilmer. a sergeant in the
165th U.S. Infantry Regiment, was killed during the
Second Battle of the Marne in World War I. (Kilmer
is perhaps best remembered tor his poem "Trees.")
In 1932, the Summer Olympic Games opened in
Los Angeles.
In 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a
bill creating a women's auxiliary agency in the
Navy known as "Women Accepted for Volunteer
Emergency Service"- WAVES for short.
In 1960, the recently founded American Football
League saw its first pre-season game, in which the
Boston Patriots defeated the host Buffalo Bills 28-7.
In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed
into law the Medicare bill, which went into effectthe
following year.
In 1975, former Teamsters union president Jimmy
Hoffa disappeared in suburban Detroit although presumed dead, his remains have never been found.
In 1980, Israel's Knesset passed a law reaffirming all of Jerusalem as the capital of the Jewish
state. The Pacific Island nation of Vanuatu became
in&lt;;lependent of joint British-French rule.
In 1990, British Conservative Party lawmaker lan
Gow was killed in a bombing claimed by the Irish
Republican Army
.
Ten years ago: President Hugo Chavez of
Venezuela won a fresh six-year term in a landslide
re-election.
Five years ago:.President George W. Bush was
pronounced "fit for duty" after a checkup that
showed that the 59-year-old commander-in-chief,
an avid mountain bike rider. had lost eight pounds
since his last physical exam in December 2004.
One year ago: Harvard scholar Henry Louis
Gates Jr. and the Cambridge, Mass. officer who
arrested him for disorderly conduct at his home,
Sgt. James Crowley, had beers with President
Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden at
White House to discuss the dispute that unleashed
a furor over racial profiling in America.

Listen to military
•
leadership on START treaty
BY JOHN CASTELLAW

Recently President Obama and
Russian • President
Dmitry
Medvedev sigr.ed the New
Strategic Arms Reductions Treaty
(START). a measure designed to
mutually and veri{iably reduce
U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals. Specifically. it would
reduce U.S. and Russian warheads by approximately one third
and would continue and strengthen the verificatio•1 regime that has
allowed the inspections and surveillance that have informed U.S.
intelligence
about
Russian
nuclear forces for decades.
The treaty is now before the
Senate
Foreign
Relations
Committee and may come before
the full Senate for a vote on ratification this summer.
Over the last se\ era! months.
America ·s military leaders and
national security experts - from
both Republican and Democratic
administrations - have testified
before Senate committees, all
with the same message: the
treaty's modest mutual reductions
and strengthened verification
regime improve our national
security. and the Senate should
ratify the treaty.
On the benefits afforded by the
treaty. Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mik.e
Mullen was clear: "Through the
trust it engenders. the cuts it
requires. and the flexibility it preserves. this treaty enhances our
ability to do that which we have
been charged to do: protect and
defend the citizens of the United
States."
Secretary of Defense, Robert
Gates. made it clear that Admiral
Mullen was not alone: ''The New
START Treaty ha-. the unanimous
support of America's military
leadership." he wrote.
Testimony in favor of the treaty
has also come from . former
Secretaries of Defense James
Schlesinger and William PelT),
former Secretaries of State James
Baker and Henry Kissinger and

Thought for Today: "An efficient bureaucracy
is the greatest thrf]at to liberty." - Sen. Eugene
McCarthy (1916-2005).

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing. must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You• letters will not be accepted for publication.

Security
former
National
Advisors Lieutenant General
Brent Scov.·croft and Stephen
Hadley.
In fact. 30 high-level national
security experts from acn?ss the
political spectrum - including
Colin
PO\-vell.
Madeleine
Albright. Frank Carlucci. Chuck
Hagel and John Danforth - pub1ished an open letter in support of
the treaty.
One of the most compelling reasons for ratifying the treaty is the
enormous risk involved in failing
to do so. Rejection of this treaty
would amount to voluntarily giving up our decades-old capacity to
keep tabs on the Russian arsenal.
As General Kevin Chilton.
STRATCOM Commander. testified, "If \Ve don't get the treaty.
(the Russians) arc not constrained
in their development of force
structure and . .. we have no
insight into what they're doing.
So it's the \Vorst of both possible
worlds."
Some who oppose the treaty
have repeatedly raised concerns
that the treaty somehow limits
U.S_ missile defense capabilities.
Again and again. Secretary Gates,
Admiral Mullen and others have
assured Senators that those concerns are unfounded and that the
treaty does not limit missile
defense.
Director of the Missile Defense
Agency, Lieutenant General
Patrick O'Reilly. v.·as even more
einphatic. stating that. "Relative
to the recently expired START
Treaty. the New START Treaty
actually reduces constraints on
the development of the missile
defense program."
Despite the remarkable bipartisan consensus in support of the
treaty. its fat~ in the Senate is
hardly assured.
Republicans on the Foreign
Relations Committee may well
set the tone in determining
whether the bipartisan supp01t the
treaty enjoys among the military
leadership and national security
expetts is reflecteLI in the Senate.

Senator Richard Lugar. R-Ind ..
Ranking member of the committee, has announced his supp01t for
the treaty and called for its prompt
Senators
Jim
ratification.
DeMint. R-S.C., and James
Inhofe. R-Okla .. have announced
their opposition. Those undecided are Senators Bob Corker, RTenn .. Johnny Isakson. R-Ga.,
James Risch. R-Idaho. John •
Barrasso. R-Wyo., and Roger
Wicker. R-Miss.
The importance of the treat}
demands
a
statesmanlike
approach to this debate. As the
vote approaches, the pressure to
politicize the issue will increase.
But this is an issue that should be
above politics. The expert consensus is clear. and those who wot
disregard the facts and the adv'
of our nation's military leaders
in an attempt to make politica
hay do so at the risk of our national security.
The undecided members of the
Senate
Foreign·
Relations
Committee deserve recognition
for the seriousness with which
they have approached this debate.
Having weig~ed the issue, let us
hope they. along with the rest of
the Senate. decide to stand wtth
our nation's military leadership
and the combined experience of
security experts from Republican
and Democratic administrations
alike when it comes time to vote.
As Secretary Gates noted. "For
nearly 40 years. treaties to limit or
reduce nuclear weapons have
been approved by the U.S . Senate
by ~trong bipartisan majorities.
This treaty deserves a similar
reception and result - on account
of the dangerous weapons it
reduces, the critical defense capabilities it preserves. the strategic
stability it maintains. and. abo.
alL the security it provides to t
American people."

(John Castellaw is a 36-vear
retired US Marine Corps general.
noH' li1·ing on his family farm in
Crockett County.. Tenn.)

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(usPs 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Friday,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy. Oh10.
Second-class postage paid at
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Department extensions are: Postmaster; Send address correc·
tions to The Daily Sentinel. P.O.
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Box 729. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext: 14
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Circulation Manager: 740·446·
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General Manager
Charlene.Hoeflich, Ext. 12

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Friday, July 301 2010

10·45 a.m. Suoda) Evcntng • b:UO p.m.
Pastor. Don 1\aJker

Rutland free 1\111 Bapti\l
SJiem St Pbll•r hd Batn&lt;) • Sunda)
Sdtool 10 d.m llen•ng I p.m

Church of .lc'u' Chri1t A1101lolic
\an/.andl and \\ani Rd . P·l'tor. l;unc
\Iiiier, Sunday Sehoul
10. \[\ "m.
E1eumg • 7:.l0 p m

\\edn~ . . day Stf'\'lce~."'

Rher \'alit)
R11er \'aile) Ajl&lt;'&gt;l&lt;&gt;lir 1\oohip Center
873 S. 3rd A1e . \lldJkport. Re1
~hchael Bradford. Pa&lt;tor Sunda) 10: lO
a.m Tue, , 6:30 pra)&lt;r Wed. 1 pm Btble
Stud)'
Emmanuel Apo;tolic lahcrnaclt Inc.
loop Rd off '\c\\ l.ima Rc Rutland.
Sem,·c,, Sun 10.00 a.m &amp; 7·)1) 'l.m ..
Thurs. 7:00 p.m.. Pa&gt;tor .\lam- R lluuon

Assembly of God
Libert) .~s;embl) of God
P.O. Box -107. Dudding lane. \ta,on,
1\ .\'•.. Pastor \jell Tennant Sund•)
Sen ICC.' IO:O(L .m and 7 p m.

Pa~e•ille Free11ill Baptbt Church
PNor Floyd R&lt;.m. Sunda)' SdiO(&gt;i 9:&lt;0tu
10.3() dm. 1\oi"&gt;htp lef\ t&lt;r 10:30 to II 00
am. We.J. pre;u:hmg 6 pm

•

Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
570 Grdnl St. \ttddlopM. Sunda) ''h09l
-9:30a.m .. Wor;h!J) II .l.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\·1.:e • 7 p.tn Pa,tol Gory
Ellis
Rutland Fir-1 Baptilt Church
Sunda) School · 9.:&lt;0 a.m .. llol'\htp
10:45a m.
Pomeroy f'!"' Bapti\t
Pa,tor Jon Brocken. l"''t \lam St..
Sunda) Sch. 9:30am. Wol'\htp 10:30 am
First Southern Bapti•t
41872 Pomerty Pike. Sunda) School 9:30a.m .. Wo"h1p 9:~5 am &amp; 7·00 p.m,
Wedne-Ja~ Sen·ice' - 7:QC p.m. Pa,tor·
Dand Brainard
Fi,...;t Baptist Church
Pastor· Bill) Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
\liddlepon. Sut•da) School 9· I' a 'll ..
1\\mhip
10·15 am., 7·0L pm
Wedncs&lt;la) Sen ice-7:00p.m
Racine Fir-t Baplist
Pastor· Ryan Eaton. pa,ror • Sund..y
School -9:30a.m., 1\·or,htp 10:40 am
6:00 p m.. Wednesda) Serv1ccs • 7:00
p.m.

•

Sil,er Run Baptist
Pastor John Swanson, Sunda) School
lOam \~or~hip • IIB.m. 7:00 ll m
WedncS&lt;Ia) Scn·ice,. 7:(X) p.m.
\11. Lnion Baptist '
Pallor· DenniS Weaver Sunda) S•hool9:45 a.m .. Eventng
6:30 p m •
Wedne'lla) Sen·icc&gt;. 6JOpn1.
Bethlehem Bapti~t Churth
Great Bend. Route 124. Racu1e, OH.
Pa,tor: , Sunda) School 9:30 a.n.,
SunJa) l\or-h1p 10:30 a.m. : Wedneld")
Btble Stud) · 7:00p.m.
Old Bethel free \\'ill Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt . 7, \liddlcport, Sunda)
Service • 10 a.m . 6:00 p.m • l'ue~&lt;la)
Sen ice&gt; -6:00
Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt. 143 ju&gt;r ofl Rt 7 Pa,tor· Re1
James R. Acree, Sr, Sunday Un11ted
Service 1\'or,hip • 0:30 .1.m., 6 p.m.
1\ednelda) Sen·""'. 7 p.m.
\'iciOr) Baptisllodependrnt
525 .\ 2nd St. \liddleport. Pa,tor· lame'
E. Kee,ee. Wor&gt;h1p IOa.m. I p.m.
1\edne..da) S.rvice'- 7 p m.

•

Faith Bapti&gt;l Church
Railroad St .. \lason. Sunda) School - 10
a.m Worship • II a.m . 6 p m.
Wedne,day Sen·tce&gt; • 7 p.m.
Iiorest Run Baptht· Pomero)
Rev. Joseph WoOds, Sunda) School - 10
am. Wul'\hlp · II 30 ~~~~-

"t. .lloriah Baptist
Founh &amp; .\lain St., \ftddleport. Sunda)
School 9:30a.m. WOI'\hip. 10:45 a.m.
Pllstor· ~., . \l1chael A Thomp&gt;&lt;.m, Sr.
\ntiquit~

Sunda) School

Bapti't
9:30 a.m .. Worship •

p.m.

Stcnnd llaptilt Chu ·ch
RaiCII\IIoOO, W\. Sunda) School ' am
• ~lomtng \\01'\htp II am E'C~tng I pm,
1\cdne&gt;&lt;.lav 7 p m
Fir-t Baptist t'hur.·h nf \la&gt;on, \\ \
(lndeptndent llap: st
~R 65~ and lnd•"on St Pa&gt;tor Rt'bert
Gr.d), Sunua) school 0 .1m \lonung
chu ,h II am. Sunc.a' c1 c•11nc ~ Jm, 1\c",
Btole Stud) 7 pm

Catholic
S;tcrcd Heart Cathnlk Church
16 \lulloerr) A1c , Pomcro1, 992 &lt;R4S,
Pastor. Re1 \\alter E lktnl. Sat lon
ol.45 5.15p.m.• \Ia,~- &lt; 30 p m Sun.
Con R.45 9:15 • m... Sun. :.Ia" . 9 ~0
a.., Darly \Ia's S.30 d m.

Church of Christ

Baptist

Cheshire Bapti't Church
Pastor. Ste\'e L1ttle, '411-36'·7801, H
740-992-7'4~. C. 740-6-15-~5~7 Sunday
School: 9:30am. \lommg l\'or-h1p: IO:lO
am. Youlh &amp; Bi~l&lt; Buddie' 6;:\0 pm.
choir pracuce 7:30; Spe,·1al da)' of month
I. L;tdie, of Grace 7 pm 2nd ~lunda). 2.
\len\ Fellowship 7 pm 3rd Tue,_

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Apos one

Carpenter Independent Bapti1t Church
Sunda) S&lt;:hool • Y:.10am, l'reachmg
Service iOJOam. Erenmg Sm ce
7.00pm, \\'eJne,Ja) Bibl&lt; Stud) 7.00 pm.
Pastor:

..

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www.myd~ilysentinel.com

F~llowtshio

•

- - ·-

\\e\1\ide Church nf Chri;t
''226 Chtldren\ Home Rd. Po&gt;mero}. 011
Contact 740-992- 'lK47 Sunua) mormng
10:(10, Sun mormng B ~lr stuJy;
followm2 1\or,hlp, Sun c1&lt; 6:00 pm.
Wed btble ,tud) 7 ~m
Hemlock Grme Chriltian Church
\ltn"ter larr) Bro" n, 1\or.htp 9JO
a.m. Sunoa) School • 10·10 a 111 • Bible
StUd) 7p.m.
l'omcro) Church of C1ri1t
21 ~ \\ Mat. M 5un~ay ~t;hool Y.IO
a.m .. 1\orship 10,10 am.. ~ '.Ill
\\ eJne&gt;da) Sen tee' 7p.m
Pomcro) \\estside Church of Chrht
'.1.1226 Chtldren\ Home Rd. Sunda)
School· I l.m,. Wor-h•p ·!C. m ~p.m.
1\\:anes&lt;ia) Sc.-. ICC'· 7 p.m.
\liddleport Church of Christ
&lt;th .1nJ \Ia n, Pa,tor AI Hartson,
Ch1ldrens Dtrcctnr Sharun Sa)re, Teen
Director Dodg&lt;r laughan. Su.da) School
• 9.30 d.m. 1\or&gt;hir- S:IS. 10·30 a.m. 7
p.m . 1\'cdncs&lt;ia&gt; Scr1 i&lt;e, • 7 p m

:'ott. \lorlah Church of God
Rd .. R.1c·ne. Pa!&gt;tor· James
Satterfield Sunda) School 9:45 J...m ..
E\elll!l~ (&gt; p m. 1\eJnc'lla) Sm ~~s I
p.m
Rutland Church of God
PJ1tor lal'l) Shreffler. Sund,l) 1\or,htp
10 un . 6 p.m .. 1\cdnesda~· Ser~tce~ 7
p.m .
~ltle Hu

S) racu.&lt;t Fir.t Churd1of (,od
Apple •nd Su:ond Sb Po,t&lt; R,ev ()."
R " 1 Sunday School 111d \\nr,hrp· l
a Ol bentng S~'VIl'CS• 6:l() &gt; tr.
1\ cdne;da) Semce' 6: i() p.m

Church of God nf Prophet)
OJ 1\'h•tc Rd off Sr Rt. 160, Pastor. PI
Ch.pman. Sunday S-:hool
10 .m
\lorshtp II" n1 \\&lt;-&lt;Inc &lt;day Sm 1C&lt;' 7
p'll

Congregational
Trinil) Church
P.l,tur- Rc\. lum Jnhn\,.un SeC't.1nd &amp;
L)nll, Pomero). Pa&gt;tor . \\'or-h1p 10:2~
a.m.•

Episcopal ·

Grace F.pi'topal Church
326 E \lain St. Pom&lt;rtl).
Eu~han't

II 10 a.m. Sunda)
Wed. Rev. Le,Jic Flemming

&amp;

lloly
5:30 pm

Holiness
Communi!) Church
PNor· St~\t Tomek. \lain Street,
Rutland. Sunday llorshtp 10:00 ,1 m..
Sunda) Sm·icc· 7 p.m
Dam ille floline" Church
Bnan Baile) Sun&lt;la) 'ch110l • 9 ]() • .m..
Sunda) llllt'ltip - 0:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wednesday pra)er 'crvtce · 7 p.m.
Cahary Pilgrim Chapel
Hat&lt;I\Oil\llle Road. Pa'lnr: Charles
McKenlle Sunda) S.:ht10l 9·10 a.m.,
11,,.,h1p • II a.m 7:00 p.m. Wedne,day
Semce · 7:00 p.m.
Ro,c nf Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutland, Pastor· Re1.
De"c) Kin~. Sunda) school· 9::10 am.,
Sunda} 110r,hrp -7 p.m .. Wed11e&lt;.da)
pra1er meetmg· 7 p~m.
Pine Gro\f Bible Holine" Church
Sunda)
School 9 .iO a.m. Wol'\htp 10:30 a.m ..
~:00 p.m. ll'eune..da) Scm« 7:00·p.m.

Bcar\lallo" Ridge Church nf Chri1l
Pa,tor·Brucc Tel'l). Sunda} Sthool 9:3()
a.m.
llor,htp • 0:10 am. b:10 p.m
Wedrte&gt;Oay Scr&gt;JC&lt;s . b:10 p.tc

\\ e;leyan Bible Holiness Church
7;. Peat! St .. Middlepon. PJ\Ior Dtoug
Sunda) School 10 a:rn. 1\or&gt;hip ·
10·45 p.m., Sunda) he. 6:00 p.m ..
Wedne,da) Service· 7·00 p.m.

c.,,,

Zion Church of Chr11t
Pomero). llarnson\·rlle Rd ('Rt 143'
Pa,tor· Roger War-on. Sunday S.:'lool
9:30 a.m .. Worship · IO·lO a 'll. 7 00
p.m., Wcdnc..dJ) Scrv ce' • 7 p.m.

Hy,ell Run Communi!~ Church
ra,tor Rev larry Lemley ~unda) School
- 9: JO a.m .. 1\or,hip . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m ..
Tlruflday Htble Stud) and Youtb 7 p.m.

Tuppt"rs Plain Chul'&lt;'h or\hri&lt;t

Po:hlor Gkn \kCiung. Sunaay S.,;hool

' 2 mile nt1 Rt. 325. Pa\tor:

laurel Cliff Free \lethodist Church

llrndhuQ Church of Chri1t
\lin~&lt;ter: Ju,,m Rou,h. 1955! l!radl&gt;ul')
Rt1ad .\ltddlepor Sunda~ Sc1ool • 9: &gt;O
a.m.
Wor-htp 10:.10 • m
Rutland Church of Chri&lt;l
Sunda) School • 9:~0 a 'll. Worsh1p and
Commun1on · 10:30 a.!", Da\ld
\\i,em3n. Mim,ter
Bradford Church of nri&gt;t
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bmdtlury Rd ...
Yout~ \l1nist~r· Btll -\mloerg.r Sunda~
School · 9·10 ~-Ill 1\or,hip • $:0: .m .
IO:lO a.m 7;00 p.m.,\\'ednesJ y Sen •cc'
7:00p.m.
Hickor) Hills Church of Chrilt
Tupptl'\ Platns. Pa,tor \like \IL •rt, Bible
das'. 9 am Sunday wor'h p 10 a.m.
Sunda); wor&lt;h&gt;p n:&gt;O ~Ill Sunia): Bible
cia" 7 pm 1\'eJ
Reed"illc Church ofC1ri't
Pa&gt;tor Jack C11igro,e, Sunda} Sch,,ol.
9·.10 a.m .. Wo"htp Senrc&lt;. 10:30 a.m ..
B1ble Stud). \\edne,day. 6'30 p.m.
De\tcr Church nf Chri&lt;t
Sunda) school 9: &lt;o .m., Sunda) \\Of'&gt;hlp
· IO:lOa.m.
The Church of Christ of P~mero~
lntersecuon 7 and I~-I 1\ E' an~eli't.
Dennis Sar~ent. Sunday Btble Study
9:3o d.m . 1\ol'\hip: 10·30 d rr and 6: 1()
p.m .. Wedne,da' Bible Stud) . 7 p.m

Christian Union
Hartford Church nf Chri't in
('hri,tian t nion
Hanforu W\a .. Pa&gt;~or: .IItke Puckett.
Sunda) School - 9·30 a.m . W r.h•p
10:30 "m 7·UO p.m, '.\edn&lt;sda)
Set&gt; ices· 7.00 p.m.

Church of God

• 7·'(1 p.Jll.

Central Clu~ter
\,bur) (SyracuseJ_Pa~~or· Bob Robinson,
Snnda) School • 9:45 o.nt, Wol'\hlp II
am., 1\edne,da) Ser&lt;it:e~ ·7:30p.m.
Flah1ood,
Pawr Dewa)ne Stuuler. Sunda} School
10 am . Wol'\htp • II a.m
t'orc;t Run
PNor Bob Robtn,on. Sunda) School· 10
d.m .. IVO!'\htp • 9 a.m.
Heath C\liddleport)
Pa-tor: Bnan Dunh.1m. Sunda) School
10:00 a.m .. \\o"h1p • II :00 am
Asbur) Syracuse
Pa~~or. Bob Robmson. Sunday School •
9:30a.m .. Wor,hip • 10.30 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Suntla) School 9 a.m .. Worship. 10 a.m.
Ne" Beginning&gt; Churcb
Pomeroy
Pastor Brian Dunham, Worsh1p
a.m., Sunday School· 10:45 a.m.

9:25

1057 Srat\:' Rout~ t2.;;,,long:.vUe, Pa:.ror.

Keno Churlh of Chrilt
1\'(&gt;r,hlp • ~ W a.m . Sunda&gt; School
10:\0 a.m... Pmor-Jctfre1 ll'lli3te 1st "nd
'lr~ Sunda)

Jn,trwnental. ll'or&gt;hrp Senrce 9 a.m.
Communion J(l '' m...Sund.1} Sc~ool •
O·l5am. Youth s.io mSunda1.Bble
Srud) 1\ edne,da~ 7 pm

Pastor: Denlil '&lt;ull, Wor&gt;hip • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
LongBottom
Sunda) School • 9JO o~.m.. Wor&lt;hip •
IO.JOJ.m
Recd"ille
lluf\hip • 9:iO a.m SunJa) School
10:30 a.m .. First Sunda) of \lonth • 7.00
p.m. ~en 1ce Pa,wr· Gene Ooodwm
Tuppers Plains St. Paul
P J&lt;to· J11n ( orb111. Sunda) School - 9
~ n., llor&gt;h1p iP am. Tucsda) Sen tees

9·10 aJn. 1\nr&gt;htp

10:30 a.m. and 6
pJJJ ..WeJne,day Semce. 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Church of Jest"
. l'hri;t ofl.atter-Da) Saini\
St. Rt 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sund.•y School 10:20·11 am Relief
Society Prie&gt;thood II ;05·12 00 noon.
Sacrament Sernce 9-10:15 am ..
Homrmakmg mt.--cting, I~r Thur~. 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove. l\o"h1p • 9:00 &amp;.m .. Sunda)
Sehoul· 10:00 .1.m Pa,tor:
Our Sal iour l.utheran Church
ll'alr.ut nd Hcnr) Sh .. RJ1cnwood.
\\ \'~. Pa,tor· Da11d Ru"dl Sunday
Sch&lt;x•l 10:00 •.m .. 1\'or,hlp - II ;t.m
St. Paul Lutheran Church
C&lt; mer S~e &gt;More &amp; Sewnd St, Pomero),
Sun. School· 9:45a.m .. ll'o11hip • II a.m

United Methodist
Graham l'nited .\lethodi;t
\\or~h1p II J.m. PNor: Richard \case
'
Bechtel Lnited :\fethodl't
\ew Haven, R1chard 'llea,e, Pastor.
Sunda) w,)fshrp 9:.10 a.m. Tue&gt;. 6:30
prayer and lltbk Study
\11. Olhe l'nited 'lethodist
00' 124 behtgd 1\tlke&gt;ville, Pastor Rev.
Ralph Spir&lt;.',, Sundav School • 9:30 a.m ..
Worsh1p 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m., Thursda)
Sc1V1ce~ • 7 p.~n.

Rock Sprin~s
Pastor. Dewa~ne Stutler Sunda) School·
9:00 a.m .. 'Worship · 10 am .. Youth
~ello\\,htp. Sunda)' · 6 p.m. Early Sunday
wor,htp 8 .1m. Lenora l.erfheit
Rutland
Pa,tor: John Chapman. Sunda) School •
9:30a.m .. Worship- 10:30 a.m., Thursday
Semce&gt; 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Paslor· William K. \1ar-hall. Sunda)
School 10:15 a.m. Worship· 9:15a.m .•
Btble Stud\: \fonda) 1 :00pm
Snow,ille
Suqda} School - 10 a.m .. Wor;hip. 9 am.
Bethany
Pastor: John Rozewrcz. Sunday School •
tO 3 m.. Wo"hip • 9 a.m . 1\'edne..da}
Sen icc' · 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sutton
Cannel &amp; 8a1han Rds. Racine Ohio,
Pa&gt;tor John Rolew icz. Sunday School
9:45 ~.m .. Worship - II 00 a.m . . Bible
Stud) lied. 7:30p.m.
.\lorning Star
P."ror· John Roze'"'l· Sunday School .
IJ a.m .. Wol'\hlp·IOa.m.
Ea\ll.etart
Pa&gt;tor: Bill \larshall Sunda} School •
9a.m Worship - 10 a.m , bt Sunday
C\'CI) ntonth evening 'emce 7:00 p.m.:
Wedne'lla) , p.m.
Racine
Pastor. Rev. \\ tlham ~larshall. Sunday
S•hool
10 a.m.. Wol'\hlp • I I
a.m.\\edne&gt;day Sen·ices 6 pm: Thur Bible
Study 7 pm
Cool\'ille l'nited \lethodist Parish
Pa,tor· Helen Khne. Coolville Church.
\1atn &amp; ~'ifth St. Sun. School· 10 a.m ..
Wol'\hip • 9 a.m .. Tue,. Sen tee&gt;, 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
To\\nship Rd .. 468C. Sunday School· 9
a.m. Wor&gt;hip
10 a.m .• Wednesda~
S.niCe\ 10 ~.m.
Hockin~port Church

Kathr)n \\11e~. Sunday School • 9:30
a.m .. 1\ot"&gt;hip • IO:iO a.m.. Pa;ror Phillip
Bdl
Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63. Sunda) School 9:30a.m ..
Worship • I0: 30 a.m.

Nazarene
Point Rock Church of the 'iazarene
Route 689, Albany Re1. lloyd Grimm,
pa,tor. Sunda) School 10 am; worhsip
sell tee 11 am, e1cning ,en-ice 7 pm. Wed.
pn.~er me\!ting 7

pm

\liddleport Church of the !'lazarene
Pa,tor· Leonanl Po11'e11. Sunda~ School 9: lO a.m .. Wol'\hip 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m ..
Wcdne,day Scrvtce' 7 p.m.,

Parhh
'llorthe.&gt;&lt;t Clu&gt;ter. Alfrtd. Pastor· Gene
GO&lt;&gt;d\\111, Sunda) School • 9:30 a.m ..
\lot~hip • II a •n .. 6:30p.m.

Reed.willc Fcllo\\ship
Church of the \azarene. Pastor: Rus;ell
Car&lt;on . Sunda1 School • 9:30 a.m ..
Worship. 10:45 a.m .. ' p.m., Wednesday
Sen·ices- 7 p.m.

Che,ter
Pa,tor Jun Cor~ttt, Wol\htp • 9 a.m ..
Sunda) School
10 a.m. , Thurs&lt;iay

S) racu'e Church of the Nazarene

\lei~s Cooperati\e

Sel"\1~(!\

7p.m

Joppa

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .. Wo"hip ·
10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m . l~d Serv1tes • 7 p.m.
Pomero~

Church of the :'olazarene
PNor Jan l~vender, Sunda)' School ·

9·30 a.m., Wof'hip • 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednesday Sef\ices • 7 p.m.
Che~ter Church of the Nuarene

Pastor· Re1 Warren Lukens, Sunday
School • 9 10 a.m., Wor,hip • 10;30 a.m .•
Sunday e\emng 6 pm
. Rutland Church of the 'iazarene
Pastor: George Stadler, Sunday School •
9:30 am .. Wo,...;hip • 10:30 a.m .. 6:30
p.m .. llednc,da~ Sci" •e • 7 p.m.

Other Churches

fajniew Bible Churcti
letart. WVa. Rt. I. Pastor: Brian May,
Sunday School· 9:30a.m., Worship. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday B1ble Study. 7:00p.m.
Faith Fello~&lt;shfp Crusade for Christ
Pastor· Rev. Franklin Dickens. Ser&gt;ice:
Friday. 7 p.m.
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .. Pastor: Rev
BlackwoOd, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
Worshrp 10:30 a.m 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Ser&gt;ice ·7:30p.m.
Sthers&gt;ille Community Church
Sunda) School 10:00 am. Sunday Wol"ihip
11:00 am. Wednesdocy 7:00 pm Pastor·
Bryan &amp; MiS&gt;y Dailey

Oasi~ Christian fello\\ship
(.\on-denominational fellcwship)
Meeung tn the .\!ergs Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor· Chris Stew an
10:00 am • Noon Sunday; Informal
ll'ol"&gt;hip, Chtldren 's miristl)
Community of Christ
Ponland-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Jim Profritt,
Sunda} School 9:30 a.m .. Worshtp 10:30 a.m .. Wednelday Ser~tees 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Wo,...;hip Center
39782 St Rt 7. 2 miles south ofTuppers
Plains. OH ~on-dcnominattonal 11ith
Contemporary Praise &amp; Wor~hip. Pastor
Rob Barber, Assoc Pastor Karyn Dav1s.
Youth Director Bett)' Fulks. Sunday
service&gt;: 10 am Wol'\hip &amp; 6 pm Family
Ltfe Classes. Wed &amp; Thur n•ght Life
Group&gt; at 7 pm. Thur. morning lad1es'
life Group at 10. Outer L1mil\ Youth l1fe
•Group on Wed e1ening from 6:30 to 8:30.
Visit us onhne at""' w.bethelw:.org.,

Ash Slreet Church
398 Ash St .. "'iddlepon-Pa&lt;tors ~lark
\lorrow &amp; Rodne) Walker Sunday
S•hool • 9:30 am .. Morning Worship •
10:30 a.m. &amp; 6:30pm. Wednesday Sen•ice
-6:30p.m .. Youth Servtce· 7:00p.m.
Agape Life Center
"Full-Gospel Church'', Pastors John &amp;
Patt) Wade. 603 Second Ave. Mason, 773·
50 7. Sen ice ttme: Sunday '0:30 a.m ..
Wedne..day 7 pm

Faith Full Gospel Church
long Bottom. Pastor: Ste\'e Reed. Sunda)'
School • 9:30 a.m. Worship 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p m., Wednesda) · 7 p.M .. Friday ·
fellowship scrvrce 7 p.m.
Harrisonville Community Church
Pastor· Theron Durham, Sun!ay • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wednesday· 7 p.m.
~liddleport

Carleton Interdenominational Church
Kingsbury Road. Pastor· Roben Vance.
Sunday School • 9;30 a.m .. Worshtp
Sm1ce IOJO a.m. E1ening Service 6
p.m.
Freedoll) Gospel \fission
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31, Pastor: Rev.
Roger Willford, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m. Wor,htp· 7 p.m.
White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolvtlle Road, Pa;ror: Rev. Charles
:\1anindale, Sun. School • 9:30 a.m ..
Wol'\hlp-10:30 am .. Wed. Service· 7 p.m.

Common Ground :\lis1ions
Pal!oi": Denn" Moore &amp; Rick little
Sunday 10:00 a.m.
Team Jcsu~
Pa,tor- Eddie Baer. Sun. Wonhtp II am
333 \1echanic St. Pom!ro)
Ne" Hope Church
Old Amencan legron Hall,
Founh A•e .. ~1iddleport,Sunday 5 p.m.
Sy racu-e Community Church
2480 Second St. Syracuse. OH
Sun. School 10 am, Sundy ni~ht 6:~0 pm
Pa&gt;tor· J~ Gwmn
A r\ew Beginnin~
(Full Gospel Church) Harrisonville.
PastOl'\: Bob and Kay \!~hall.
Thurs. 7 p.m
Amazing Grace Community Church
Pastor: \~a)ne Dunlap. Stat&lt; Rt 681.
Tuppers.Piatns, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm .. Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m.

Abundant Grace
923 S. Thtrd St., .\f1ddlepon. Pastor Teresa
Da1is. Sunday sernce, 10 a.m.,
1\'edne&gt;day service. 7 p.m.

!0 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

Rejoicing Life Church
500 ~. 2nd Ave .• Middlepon. Pastor:
M1ke Foreman. Pastor Emeritus Lawrence
Foreman. Worshtp- JO:OO am
Wednesday ServiCes. 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton. W.Va .. Sunday School • 10 a.m.,
Wo"hip • 7 p.m., Wednesday ServiCe • 7
p.m.
Full Gospel Church
of the Li~ing Savior
Rt.338. Antiquity. Pa.tor· Jesse Moms,
Ser&gt;ice&gt;: Saturday 1:00 p.m.
Salem Community Church
Back of West Columbia, WVa.om Lieving
Road, Pa&gt;tor· Charles Roush (304) 6752288. Sunday School 9:30 am. Sunday
evening ~en·ice 7:00 pm, Bibly Study
Wednesda) service 7:00pm
Hobson Christian Fello\\ship Church
Pastor Herschel Whtte. Sunday School·
10 am. Sunday Church ~ervtce • 6:30 pm
Wed nelda)' 7 pm
Restoration Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road .• Athens. Pastor:
lonme Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 am,
Wednesday: 7 pm
House of Healing Ministries
St. Rt. 124 Langsville, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pa.tors Robert &amp; Robena
\1usoer, Sunday School 9:30 am . •
Worsh1p 10:30 am · 7:00 pm. Wed.
Semce 7:00pm
Team Jesus Ministries
Pastor Eddte Baer. Meetmg J33
\lechanic Street, Pomeroy, OH.
Ser&gt;ice every Sunday II :00 a.m

Pentecostal
Pentecostal A&lt;&lt;embl}
Pastor: St. Rt. 124, Racine, Tornado Rd.
Sunday School • JO a m.. Evening - 7
p.m., Wedne..da) ServiCes· 7 p.m.

515 Peari St.. Middlepon . Pasror: Sam

Presbyterian

Ande"on. Sunday School 10 a.m .•
E1ening ·7:30p.m. . Wednesday Serv1ce •
7:30p.m.

Harrisonville Presbyterian Chur:cb
Pastor: Re' Da\'id Faulkner. Worship •
~
9:00a.m. Sunday

Community Church

Faith \'aile) Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev. Emmert
Rawson. Sunday Evening 7 p.m .•
Thursday Ser. ~~ • 7 p.m.
Syracuse :\fission
1411 Bridgeman St .. Syracust. Pa.tor ·
Re1. Roy Thompson. Sunday School· 10
a.m. Evening· 6 p.m .. Wednesda) Semce
- 7p.m.

•

Hazel Community Church
Oft' Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Hm, Sunday
School · 9:30a.m .. Wor&gt;hip. 10:30 a.m ..
7:30p.m.
D)csville Communit) Church
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m .. Worship •
10:30 am .. 7 p.m.
\forse Chapel ChuNh
Sunda) school- 10 a.m .• Worship · II
a.m .. Wedne&gt;&lt;lay Service· 7 p.n.
Faith Gospel Church
long Bottom. Sunday SchOOl· 9:30a.m ..
Worshtp • iOA5 a.m., 7 30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

~fiddleport Presbyterian
Pa,tor: James Snyder. Stlnda) School 10
a.m., WOI'\hip SCMCe 11 am

.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Adventist
\tulbel'l) Ht&gt;. Rd .. Pomero) Saturday
Services: Sabbath School . 2 p.m.,
Worsh•p 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon United BrethNo
in Christ Church
Texa. Community 36411 Wicl,ham Rd,
Pastor: Peter \1artindale. Sunday School·
9:30 a.m.. Worship • 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Sen ices • 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meetmg 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 p.m.
Eden United Brethren in Cbrist
State Route 124, between Reedsville &amp;
Hockingport, Sunda) School · 10 a.m ..
Sunda) Worship. 11:00 a.m. Wednesda)
Semces • 7:00 p.m .. Pastor- ;\1. . .dam
Will

Full Gospel LighthOU\e
.1.\045 Hiland Road. Pomeru). P4&gt;tor: Ro)
Hunter, Sunday School- 10 a.n., &amp; 7:3.0
Wedne'llay Evening 7·30 p.m ..
South Bethel Community Church
Sih·er Ridge· Pastor linda Damewood,
Sunda\ School 9 a.m., l~or&lt;bip Sef\tce

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·-· ·-----~......---·-------------

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July

You can be better
For the uninformed, on the
outdoor bulletin board at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church here
in Pomeroy is found the following
statement:
"Whoever you are. you can be
better." This is one of the most
succinct yet eloquent expressions I've ever come across!
Now, allow me to punch this
up a bit, with a special emphasis on the word "can." As in,
you CAN "be better" - and,
indeed, you will be IF you
choose to be better. Otherwise.
there is no one this side of
heaven who can change you.
The power to change resides
within each of us individually.
and only within us. Of course
there are those who might harbor the desire to change someone else but, honestly folks.
this in itself is nothing more
than a selfish "pipe dream.''
Certamly, there arc certain
things over which we exercise
sufficient control so as to be
able to change them. Then'
again, there likewise are
things which arc beyond our
power to control
Consider the "Serenity
Prayer." This simple prayer
would have the person giving
the prayer asking for "the
serenity to accept those things
he or she cannot change, the
courage to change the things he
or she can and, lastly. the wisdom to know the difference.''
To be able to distinguish
between the possible and the
impossible allows us to conserve our time and our energy.
vis-a-vis foolishly squandering
them in some vain pursuit.
Again, as the sign says ...
"You can be better." This ushers in a couple of questions,
such as - "Do I want to be
better?" And, "What am I willing to do for myself in orde~ to
be better than I already am?
Thirdly, since we arc talking self-improvement. let us
ask ourselves if we are willing to allow God to intervene
in our lives as our partner in
the change process itself and, if so, what are we willing
to let go of so He truly can
help us to become better'?
In truth, "control freaks"
don't like to surrender control
of anything, least of all their
own lives. Therefore, let's not
expect them ta become better
but. rather. bitter - as they
"kick against the goads" the
Lord is Himself obliged to
leave well enough alone unless
and until they ask Him to intercede on their behalf. (There are
times when God allows us to
"have it our way.'')
"You can be better." Not necessarily perfect, and certainly
not in an ethical and practical
sense of the term . Sti ll, there
indeed is the real and attainable

3 0 , 2010

A Hunger for More
Jason sat behind the wheel of

his black GI\1C Sierra feehng a
sense of disbelief as he monitored the progreo;;s of an ant
clinging desperately to his
windshield. The small insect
was being buffeted by the air
passing ovcr the window as the
large pickup traveled at 45
miles per hour down the
straight stretch of country road,
Tom Johnson
yet it had not )Ct been blmvn
away. The ant had probably
fallen off a branch of the
goal of "Christian perfection'' crabapple tree that had
- i.e .. of becoming perfect in stretched over the vehicle at the
a spiritual. Christ-like manner. building site he had just visited.
(Talk to your Pastor.)
While the ant's determination
You say you trust God. to hold on was amazing: Ja~on
Show me your faith - show was more Interested and even
me in and through your daily perplexed by the fact that its
life that you ··tove the Lord plight had trig~ercd a wa\e of
your God with all your heart compassion Within himself. It
and soul, and with all your . was just an ant, after all. right'?
mind and body:·
When he had first seen it, his
More to the point do some- initial reaction \Vas to tum on
thing about it. If you love God the wiper blades and knock it
and trust God then you \\ill off. But he unexpectedly felt
obey God - and by this sim- sorry for it and thought that the
ple act the world will know wind would knock it off anyyour love of God is genuine way. But it didn't. The little ant
and abiding.
somehow managed to hang on.
Otherwise, save your talk. When Jason reached a straight
"Idonwannahearit!" I doubt stretch where he normally
speed up to fifty or so, he held
God does. either.
"You CAN be better" - but back surprisingly reluctant to
it's entirely up to you. So tell see it go. He had once read
me. Mr. and Mrs. American about ants, their colonies and
Christian - "how deep is your habits. and remembered that if
Christian faith?" Is it skin-deep. an ant ~omehow \\ andcred or
or is it deeper - heart and soul wus placed in another colon) 's
deep? The deeper the better. for territory. the offending ant
such is the essence of commit- would be quickly and ruthle:-.sly
ted soldiers of the Cross.
di:&gt;patched by "guards'' of the
The hymns I hear you sing. ri"al ant colony. So even if he
do you sing them from the didn't smash it with the windheart or by rote. because you shield. the little ant \\as
like the tune or because the doomed anyway should it blow
words speak to your heart of away and land intact anywhere
God's love for you? A mis- but its O\Vn home.
sionary once said God holds
Jason couldn't believe he was
us accountable as much for feeling this way ... about an
the words we sing c:s for the insect. But a sti II. small voice
words we speak. Do you mean seemed to speak in his mind,
what you sing? Here's hoping "But what about Randy?"
Randy ... an hourly employee
you always sing with joy.
enthusiasm. and true devotion. that worked for Jason on a lot of
"You CAN be better." his new buildings. Jason rarely
There is a distinct difference got to know his employees very
between an oak board and oak well. In fact, Randy had been
plywood: the former is solid with his construction firm for
in its compositiOn. and its months. )et Jason knew almost
integrity obnoJs: oak ply- nothing about him, except where
wood, on the other hand. has he lived ... sort of. He knew he
the thinnest of veneers on lh ed in a nm do\\ n house outeach side. Sand too hard and side of town but e1ther had never
that veneer is compromised.
seen his house. or had not realSome Christians I've met ized it was Randy's at the time.
are like that: those \\ ith a
Actuall). Jason knew that his
shallow faith are easily upset: employees generally \ iewed
rub them the wrong way, and him as something of a snob and
"Uh-oh." Those whose faith maybe even a jerk. but it didn't
is rock-solid are reliable, bona bother him much. It was his
fide allies Are you up for company after all, and he said
some spiritual betterment? what he \\anted the way he
Give God the go-ahead; wanted, not much caring about
you'll be glad you did.
the pressure he put on his wort..(Rev. Thomas Johnson is ers or their families' lives.
pastor of Triniry Church in Jason suddenly realized that he
Pomeroy, Ohio.)
viewed his employees more-or-

Thorn Mollohan
less as d1~interestedly as he normallv viewed the jn~ects on the
ground.
Jason was abruptly aware of
the glaring contradiction in his
life. Jason profe:-;sed to be a
Christian. He was (usually) a
faithful attender, a tither. and
even served as a leader on committees in the church. Yet, there
was an appalling lack of compassion and even of interest in
other people .. . especially if
those people were somehow
''beneath him."
He absentmindedly followed
the road. bis eyes glating over
for a moment as all these
thoughts ran through his mind.
He focused his vision back on
the windshield and saw that the
ant had final!\ blown off . ..
beyond recall.· And he thought
about employee. . who had come
and gone through his life, neighbors he had had. and business
associates with whom he no
lon!!er had reason to remain in
· contact. Did he know \\here they
stood \\ ith God? Could he say
that he had ever thought about
them as an) thing other than a
mean::- to an end for his business
and himself? Had he ever real!\
thought about their lives, their
p~in, or their need for the hope
that he publicly professed to possess? Not really. And so many
were gone. blown out of his life
by the winds of change . . .
beyond recall. never once hearing from Jason the news that
God loved them enough to send
His Son to die for them.
Jason suddenly pulled off to
the side of the road. It was the
strangest thing. and he could
hardlv belie\e it about himself.
but he began to \veep. There was
a terrible brokenne. . s in hb heart
and life ... a \\eight of regret and
shame. all becau e of a single
ant stru!!glin!! to din!! to life on
the face~of hiS windshield.
"Lord.'' he prayed. ''I confess
to You that r,e been proud and
calloused. I've been selfish and
. .. stupid. Jf anyone has a right
to look upon another as just a
bug. it would be You looking at
me. I mean. You are God! But
You loved me and Your Son
died for me."
A car drove past but Jason
ignored it. "Please forgive me

for ... m) pride ... and the fact
that I didn't !o.hare eternal life
with people.'' Grief flooded
over him as he uttered this. The
thought became almost unbearable that he had had chances .
share the message of God 's lo
with people and opportun ities
to, in a sense, help spiritually
save lives. He didn't even notice
that the car that had passed by.
an old run down. Chevy sedan.
had stopped. pulling a few yards
in front of his truck.
1 he still. small voice seemed
to speak again ... "If we confess our sins. He is faithful and
just and will forgive us our sins
and purify us from all unrighteousness" (l John I :9 NIV).
There was a tapping at the
wmdow and Jason looked up. It
was Randy. His weathered face.
...o baked by exposure to the sun,
ltlade him look far older than
thirt). Jason turned away. wiped
his eyes. and looked back again,
rolling his window down.
"1 \~as head in· over to the other
site and seen you sittin' here. Is
something wrong?'' R andy
asked. his eyes showing that he
was both puuled and concerned
by finding Jason this way ..
Jason almo . . t laughed . Ho.
do' you tell someone that yo
\\ere crying over an ant? '·I
don't knO\\ ... he said. "I don't
think so ... at least not now."
He looked at Randv hard.
"Randy, why d"on 't we go
ahead and take lunch right now.
You and I can go over to Bob's:
I'll buy,'' he s&lt; 10. Surprise
washed over Rano v 's face and
he paused a brief ~oment.
"t.:h... sure!" he said.
''You're the boss." Randy headed back to his car. gpt in. and
pulled out.
Jason followed and smiled. "I
don't ha \'e to tell him the part
about the ant. do I. Lord?" he
prayed aloud. "The main thing
is that I stmt treating him like
he's something more than a bug;
he's a man . . . a brother-to-be
and Jesus died for him. But if
You'll open the door, God, I'll
sure tell him about Your Son:·
And he did.
"The Lord is not slow in
keeping His promise, as son.
underl:&gt;tand slowness. He
patient with you. not \\antin 6
anyone to perish. but e\eryone
to come to repentance.. (2 Pater
3:9 NIV).
(Tiwm Alol/ohan and lzisfamilv have ministered in southern
0/uo the past 15 years and is
the awhor of The Fail)' Tale
Parah/e\. He is the pastor of
Pathll'ay Community Church
ami may be reached for commint.\ or questions by email at
pas ron hom@ pathwayga/lipo1is .COlli.)
Copyright © 2010, T hom
Mollohan.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride inour community

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Friday, July 30,

GOSPEL MUSIC AT THE FAIR
Southern gospel
music will be featured on Tuesday,
Aug. 3 at the 61 st
annual Gallia
County Junior Fair.
Gallia County
group The
Concords will take
the stage at 8 p.m.
on Tuesday followed by nationallyknown gospel
music family The
Pfeifers at 8:30
p.m. Tuesday is
Religious and
Senior Citizen
Night at the fair.

Ellis to be guest speaker at New Haven
NEW HAVEN. W.Va. - Dr. Bill Ellis will be the
guest speaker at the First Church of God. located 5th
and Layne Street in New Haven. on Sunday. Aug. I
at 9:30a.m.
Ellis has been a speaker for conventions, conferences, ministers meetings, missions conventions.
evangel_istic meetings, youth conventions and on
college campuses throughout the United States , on
all the major continents and in many nations.
Kitty Ellis will be the guest ~oloist. She sang with
the Springfield Symphony Chorus (Springfield.
Ohio), the Anderson University Choir. the Christian
Brotherhood Hour Choralaires. the Doug Oldham
Singers and has been featured as a soloist with
choral groups on numerous radio and television stations. She will be singing in the Sunday morning
vice. She has also been a soloist for world contions and conferences in many other countries.
•
The church's congregation warmly welcomes the
general public and friends of Bill Ellis to this jervice.

New City Singers, Karen Polcyn
featured at Gospel in the Park
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - The New City Singers and
Karen Polcyn will be the featured groups for the Friday.
July 30 edition of the Gospel in the Park concert series.
The concert begins at 7 p.m. at Gallipolis City Park.
Those attending are encouraged to bting lawn chairs.
The concert will be canceled in case of rain.

Gospel sing at Riverfront Park
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - A gospel sing with
the Miller Family and the Gospel Bluegrass
Gentlemen is planned for 8 p.m., Friday. July 30 at the
Point Pleasant Riverfront Park, Point Pleasant. W.Va.
The public is invited.

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PageA7 ·

The Daily Sentinel

Church Notebook

__

2010 ·

The battle
of words

Last week we dealt
with the power of
words. Words are very
powerful in nature.
Words produce and
harvest its fruit 'every
time. In other words,
Words
materiali.Le.
Some people argue this
subject very heavily
not realizing the truth
therein ..
In other countries.
particularly in Israel.
where we all came
Submitted photos
from by the way, they
have always believed
in the power of words
since day one. They
recognize that words
create life, death, both
good and bad emotions
and words also create
contracts. Words are
pre-painted pictures.
Words are pre-created
contracts .
With this in mind. let
us consider a scripture
in the Bible that brings
about this truth. For
those of you that like to ·
double
check
my
research (and I advice
every reader to do so
and not simply take my
word for what 1 say or
write). let us look at
Chapter
17
of
1
Samuel.
Though there is a
tremendous amount of
information in this particular chapter, the
only thing I want to
point out is the battle
that took place between
Goliath and the armies
of Israel and then the
battle between Goliath
and David.
For 40 days and
nights Goliath defied
the armies of Israel. In
verse 8 he said: "Am I
a Philistine and you
servants
of
Saul?
Choose a man for yourself and let him come
down to me . If he is
able to fight with me
Fun in the Son at Rodney Pike COG
and kill me, then we
RODNEY. Ohio - Rodney Pike Church of God will will become your serhost Fun in the Sol' Day from 4-8 p.m. on Saturday, vant, but if I preYail
July 31. The event is open to kids ages 4-12 and their · against him and kill
parents. T)1e day will feature games. prizes and food. him, then you shall
For infonnation or to register. call 245-9518. Rodney become our servants
Pike Church of God is located at 440 Ohio 850 at the and serve us. ·•
junction with Jackson Pike. Infom1ation i&lt;&gt; available on
Every time King Saul
the church . Web site at ww\\·.rodneypikecog.org. The
and
his army heard
event is sponsored by WIRED Children's Ministries.
these
words.
they
became
dismayed
and
Ice cream social at Christ UMC
afraid. Why? Because
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - Christ United Methodist they became intimidatChurch will host ar, ice cream social from 5-7 p.m .. ed by not only the statSaturday. July 3 I. Hot dogs, cake, pie and ice cream will ue of this man Goliath,
be served. The church is located at 9688 Ohio 7 S., .but also by the words
Gallipolis .
that he spoke. He spoke
words of fear and
Faith Valley homecoming this Sunday defeat. H is defeat
would make the entire
GALLIPOLIS. Ohio - Faith Valley Community army of the Philistines
Church will host homecoming services on Sunday, servants to Israel. What
Aug. 1. Rev. Randy Parsons \\1ill preach and sing dur- powerful words of coning the 10 a.m. service. Dinner wilJ be served at noon tract. Do you see that?
in the fellowship hall. Bro. Truman Johnson will
DaYid hears th1s man
preach and God's Ambassadors will sing during the
and
decides to fight
afternoon service at 1:30 p.m. For information, call
Pastor Junior Preston at 446-7851. The church is him fearlessly. Then
David comes to the batlocated on Bulaville Pike.
tlefield and confronts
Goliath
and served him
Gloryland Believers, Genesis
noticed by saying:
coming to Gospel in the Park
"You come to me with
GALUPOUS. Ohio - The Gloryland Believers a sword, a spear and a
and Genesis will be the featured groups for the Frida;. javelin. but I come to
Aug. 6 edition of the Gospel in the Park concert you in the name of the
series. The concert begins at 7 p.m. at Gallipolis City· Lord of hosts. the God
Park. Those attending are encouraged to bring lawn of the armies of Israel.
chair&lt;&gt;. The concert will be canceled in case of ram. ; whom you have taunt-

Alex Colon
ed. This day the Lord
will deli"v~r you up into
my hands, and I will
strike you down ·and
remo\'e your head from
you ... " (v.45-46).
Guess what happed?
David
defeated
Goliath.
The Holy
Spirit went to work on
behalf of David, the
one who was no match
to Goliath. David's
words and confidence
in Jehovah made him
mote than a conqueror
that day.
I also want you to
notice one more thing .
In the N~w Covenant,
you find Jesus being
tempted by the devil
for 40 days and nights.
And the fight that Jesus
put up with was almost
identical to the one battle that David foun'd
himself in. Both temptations. both battles
were simply battles of
words.
They
were
words of fear, insecurity, inferiority in order
to make these two men
doubt their identity,
and to get them to
serve their enemy.
Words can cause you
to bend and bow in
defeat. But words v.ill
also get you to stand up
straight with shoulders
back in confidence that
He who began a good
work in you will perfected until the day of
Jesus' return.
Every battle you
fig.ht is first a battle of
words and then a battle
of the issue itself. In
other words, words are
what makes or breaks a
battle. And often times
the greatest battles are
the ones found between
our ears.
You must understand
that according to the
Bible, if you are a child
of God. You are more
than
a
conqueror.
Remember that life and
death are fn the power
of • the
tongue.
Therefore, use your
tongue to speak the
right words. Speak
words of life. encouragement. wisdom and
direction. Speak good
\vords that defeat the
e\·il around you. This is
how Jesus taught us to
fight. Therefore. battle
and defeat your enemy
with the right kind of
words - God's Word!
Make it a great week!
( Re\·. Alex Colon is
pastor of Lighthouse
Assembly of God in
Gallipolis, Ohio. On the
Internet at www.lagohio.org.)

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Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Past problems
for company at
heart of oil spill

2010

Ariz. files appeal as Sheriff launches new sweep
BY AMANDA LEE MYERS
AND JACQUES BILLEAUD
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BATTLE
CREf~K.
~lich.
(AP)
A
PHOENIX
The
Canadian compan) whose showdO\\ n O\cr Arizona's
pipeline leaked hundreds immi¥ration Ia\\ played
of thousands of oil into a out 111 court and on
Michigan river hoasts on Phoenix\ sun-splashed
its \\'Cbsitc of bl'ing "an streets on Thursday. as the
industry leader 111 pipl'line state sought to reinstate
safety and integrity •·
k~y part-; of the measure
A decade's \\Orth or and angry protesters
leaks. an explos1on and chanted that they refused
regulatory
'JOiatwns to ''lh.e in fear." Dozens
throughout the Great Lakes were atTested.
region and el C\\hcre in the
A federal judge's deciU.S. suggest othcn' ise.
sion ada) earlier to block
Enbridge Inc. or its affil- the strict Ia\\ 's most coniates have been cited for trovel'l)ial clements dido 't
30 enforcement action
dampen the raging immi.since 2002 b) the Pipeline gration debate.
and Hazardous Materials
The judge has been
Safety Admimstration threatened. Protesters raJthe U.S. Department of lied in cities from Los
Transportation's regulah&gt;- 1 Angeles to ~ew York.
I)' ann.
The sheriff of the state"s
In a warning letter sent most populous county
Jan . 21, the agency told ' 'owed to continue targetthe compan) it may h~ne ing illegal immigrants.
violated safct) codes by l.awmakcrs or candidates
i mpropcrly monitoring in as many ·as 18 states
corrosion in the pipclinc say they still want to
responsible for the mas- push similar measures.
sive spill .Monday in
Along the U.S.-Mexico'
Talmadge
Creek. u border. life continued as
w aterwa\ in Calhoun before. "ith officials
Count)
Marshall sending back people who
Township that flo\\ s into ""ere captured \\ hile
the Kalamazoo River.
attempting to cross.
The
Em ironmental
In Phoenix. hundreds of
Protection Agenc) esti- the law's opponents
mated the spill at more massed at a downtown
than 1 million gallons of Jail, beatmg on the metal
oil. sa) ing It had tra\elcd door and forcing sheriff's
25 miles do\\ n-.tremn. The depuues to call for backup.
state estimates 11 has tra\- Officers arrested at least
elect 35 miles. Gov. 32 people. and dozens
Jennifer Granholm wamed , more were detained elseof a "traged) of historic where throughout the day.
proportions" should it tmvActivists focused their
el an additional 80 milcs rage at N1aricopa County
and reach Lake :\1ichigan Shedff Joe Arpaio. the
and the vacation commu- 78-year-old ex-federal
nitics that tlcpend on it.
drug agent known for his
Steve
Wuori.
an immigration S\Vccps.
Enbridgc executive vice
Outside his downtown
presidelll, said the compa- office. marchers chanted
'rly was doing maintenance ''Sheriff Joe. we are here.
all along the pipeline. but We will not live in fear."
the section at the Jeak site One was dressed in a
was not scheduled for par.icr-mache "Sheriff
replacement.
Joe"' head and prison
After bein~ criticized for garb. Arpaio said he'd
dra~ging their feet in their continue with a Thur~da)
mitml response to the sweep.
Monday spill. compan)
"I'm not going to be
officials have pushed the intimidated
and
message that they're doing stopped." he said. "If I
all they can to clean and have to go out and get in
contain it. l~bridge CEO the car. I'll do it."
Patrick D. Daniel again
Acti\ ists. armed with
apologized Thursday to \ideo cameras and aided
the residents of Calhoun by others listening to
County "for the mess that police scanners. roamed
we have made'' to the river the county's neighborand ncarb) propertics.
hoods, saying they were
"We take full responsi-J ready to document any
bility and we will be here deputies
harassing
until you arc happy in this . Hispanics.
community." Daniel saicl.
In Tucson, between 50
"We still have a huge job I and 100 people on both
in front of us. there's no side~ of the issue gathdoubt about that."
ered at a street comer.
On Thursday. hundreds About 200 protesters
of worker.; and contractors blocked a bus) Los
\\ent to work on the oil Angeles
intersection.
\\ith more than 12,000 feet \\ ith police arrested
of containment and absorp· about a dozen who were
tion boom. 14 'ikimmcr&gt;. linked with plastic pipes
43 vacuum trucks and a and chains.
In New York. about
number of tanker trucks.
exca\ators and other 300 immigrant advocates
trucks. Enbridge said.
rallied near the federal
Health officials went courthouse in lower
door-to-door to advise Manhattan.
1'Csidents in about 30 to 50
"It's one step closer for
homes near the spill to us, but I think the fight is
evacuate because of air still ahead:· said Adelfa
quality concern~. Calhoun Lugo. a 56-year-old
County health official Jim Mexican-born Brooklyn
Rutherford said. lie said resident who joined the
health officials wcrc protest. "If we don't fight
advising rcsitlenb of this in Arizona. this antiabout 100 homes ncar thc immigrant feeling will
river that use well water spread across-the country."
to u~e bottled \\atcr for
Since Wednesdav\ rutdrinking and cooking.
ing, U.S. District· Judge

's

Friday, July 30,

Don Bartlettillos Angeles Tlmes/MCT

Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio talks about planned sweeps to round up tile·
gal immigrants in Phoenix, Arizona, on Thursday, despite the ruling by a federal
judge blocking most of the state's controversial new immigration law.

has
Susan
Bolton
received thousands of
phone calls and e-rnails.
Some \Vcre positive. but
others \\ere "from people
venting and who have
expressed their displeasure in a perverted \\ay."
said Dadd Gonzales. the
e.S.l\lar~hal for Arizona.
GonL.ales said his
agents arc taking some of
the threats to Bolton seriously. He wouldn't say
how many there were or
whether any threats were
coming from recognized
hate groups. He refused
to discuss any extra securitv measures. which
U.S. marshals routinely
pro\ ide federal judges.
The protest~ came as
Gov. Jan Brewer appealed
Bolton's ruling to the 9th
U.S. Circuit Courl of
Appeals in San Francisco.
The governor. who
hired lawyer~ to defend
the law in court. hopcs the
court will act quickly. saying illegal immigration
remams an ongoing crisis.
Arizona has more than
400,000 illega1 itnhli£rants. and its border
with MeXICO is awash
with smugglers who funnel narcotics and lmmtgrants throughout the
U.S. The Ia" 's supporter::. say the influx of illegal migrants drains vast
sums of money from ho. pitals, education and
other services.
The Obama admi111s-

tration has decided to
send National Guard
troops to the border states
to help federal agents
with security.
Along the U.S.-Mexico
border in punishing temperatures of more than
100 degrees Thursday.
two immigrants climbed
a fence and fled on foot.
"hile a third threw rocks
in the direction of Border
Patrol a!!cnts. The officers arre'Sted them. Ne\\
deportees congregated
around Nogales.
The Arizona National
Guard officials say they
hope to have 524 troops
in place by the end of
September. Troops are
expected to arrive at the
border in New ~texico
and Texas by midAugust. and California
officials have estimated
an Oct. 1 deadline to
have
troops
fully
deployed there.
In Phoenix. demonstrators had promised nonviolent civil disobedience.
and they gathered in front
of the sheriff's office b)"
the hundreds. blocking
traffic antl swarming
~round
several cars
:caught'in"'the Pr-otest.
Police moved in to trv
to allow the drivers to
leave. as the crowd shouted. "We will not comply."
0' er the next hour. the
crowd sur!!ed, chanted.
yelled and some protester:-.
forced the arrests. They

then moved on the to jail.
As Arpaio held a news
conference. he got a telephone call. and he told
the caller: "0 K, we· re
going to divert our
deputies down in front of
the jail ... What you do.
anybody that resisb. )OU
put 'em in our jail. We're
going to lock 'em up."
Then he turned to
reporters: .. As I said.
\\e'rc not going to allow
our jails to be held
hostage by these activish.
so they're going to jail.
''And if \\e have to put
200 in there, that's "here
they're going." he said,
adding that the sweeps
would continue.
Du~ing the swecps,
deputies usually flood an
area of a city - in some
cases heavily Latino
areas - to :-.eek out traffic violators and arrest
other alleged lawbreakers. Sixty percent of the
nearly 1.000 people
arreste·d in the sweeps
since early 2008 ha\ e
been illegal immigrants.
~ay

sei1.ures. Although the
department has declined
to detail its invc~tigation,
t\rpaio believes it centers
on hi-; sweeps.
The agency's ci~
··
rights attomeys and im
tigators were in Phoent
Thursday as part of their
probe. DOJ spokeswoman
Xochitl Hinojosa said.
She declined to comment
on the ~tat us of the inquiry
or ans\\ er anv other questions.
In October 2009. when
the federal ~O\ ernment
stripped Arpaio of his
po" er to let I 00 deputies
make federal immigration
an-cst5., he launched another sweep the next day.
Unable to make arrests
under a federal statute.
the sheriff instead relied
on a nearly 5-year-old
state law that prohibib
immigrant smuggling.
The elements of the
new Jaw that took effect
on Thursday \\ill likely
aid Arpaio in his immigration efforts.
In
her temporary
injunction.
Bolton
delaved the most co.
tcntious provisions oft
law, including a section
that required officers to
check a person·., immigration · status \\ hile
enforcin!! other laws.
Bolton indicated the
federal goYemment's case
has a good chance at succeedin~g in its argument
that federal immigration
law trumps state la\\.
But she allowed police
to enforce the law's bans
on blocking vehicle traffic \\hen seeking or
offering da) -labor~ ser\ ices and a revision to
the smuggling ban that
lets offkers stop drivers
if they suspect motorists
have broken traffic laws.
Bolton also let officers
cnfon:e a ne\\ prohibition on driving or. harboring illegal immigrants in

deputies

furtherance of their ille-

cacially
profile
Hispanics. Arpaio says
deputies approach people
onl) \\hen the) have
probable cause.
The
Justice
Department launched an
investigation of his office
nearly 17 months ago
over allegations of discrimination and unconstitutional sean.:hes and

gal presence.
•
Opponents of the l
said the rulin!! ends
strong message to other
:-tates hoping to replicate
the law.
But a Republican lawmaker in. Utah smd the
state will likely take up ;a
similar law anvwa\ \\hen
their legislati\·e sessions
start up again in 201 I.

Critic:.

('-1!1 COWt~YVt/tWtent to

t-o provtde the h . you
qua!/ty Ortho
. tghest
ava/lab!e d 'Pedtc care
an to ens
your recover; .
ure
rap/d but
y IS not only
and
. as COI1.1fortab{e
pa!n -free as poss/b!e.
tS

S/ncerely~

Steven M.• M1Z''rer~ MD
SWteu.,

Steven M. ~dler, MD
:e GaiHpol s

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Rio to host Fall Baseball Academy, Page B2
Browns camp starts Saturday, Page B3
Local Sports Briefs, Page B4

Friday, July 30, 2010

Winebrenner continues to lead Riverside Seniors
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MASON, W.Va. Mick
Winebrenner of Racine. Ohio
has a total of 74.5 points to lead
the second half of the Riverside
Senior Men's Golf League.
Winebrenner
leads
Chet
Thomas of Patriot, Ohio, by two
points and Pat Harbour of
Letart. W.Va., by three and a
half points.
A total of 86 playt:rs wert: present on Tuesday making up 20
teams of four players and two
three-man teams. This made 20
points available for the winners.
The low score of the day was

A-~od

59 ( 11 under par) by the team of
Ken Whited, Tim Howard.
Dave Seamon. and Jack
Maloney.
There was a four way tie for
second place with a score of 60
( 10 under par) between the
teams of Pat Harbour. Bob
Stewart, and Bob Hysell. Carl
Stone. Bob Hill, Bob Avery, and
Tom Fisher, Steve Safford. Bill
Arnott. Bill Winebrenner. and
Clyde Janis, and Jim Gress,
Glen Johnson, Chet Thomas,
and Ed Debalski.
The closest to the pin winners
were Don Corbin on the ninth
hole and Earl Johnson on the
17th hole.

2010

MEN'S SENIOR
LEAGUE STANDINGS

Mick Winebrenner
Chet Thoma~
Pat Harbour
Ed Debalski
Ken Whited
Bob Hysell
Kenny Greene
Haske! Jones
Bob Humphrey
Don Corbm
Bob Edgar
Rick Ash
' BillArnott
Carl Stone
Paul Maynard
Pat Williamson
Skip Johnson

74.5
72.5
71 .0
69.5
64.0
62.5
61.0
60.5
59.5
58.5
54.0
53.5
52.5
52.0
52.0
51.5
51.0

,

Claude Proffitt
Earl Johnson
Bill Winebrenner
Jim Gordon
Bill Yoho
Willis Dudding
Gary Minton
Paul Lanham
Bob Stewart
Dick Dugan
Tom Duncan
Bob Hill
Tom Fisher
Jim Mitchell
Don Waldie
,..
Clyde Jarvis ·
Ed Coon
Bobby Joe Roush
Ralph Sayre
Butch Bookman

49.5
49.5
49.5
49.0
49.0
48.0
47.5
47.5
47.5
47.0
45.0
45.0
44.0
44.0
44.0
43.5
43.0
42.5
42.0
41.5

shut ·out in Cleveland, remains at 599

Yankees hold
off late rally
by Indians
CLEVELAND (AP)
Alex Rodriguez
drove in
t h r e e

Orioles hire
Buck
·Showalter
as manager

Oswalt
:approves
deal to
Phillies

r u n s

. 11

without
hitting
his 600th
homer
and the

N e w

Y o r k
Yankees
used
a
Se\enrun sev-

PHILADELPHIA
(AP) - There's a new
BALTIMORE (AP)
Roy in town - and he's
- Buck Showalter was
e n t h
an ace. too.
hired to manage the
Three-time All-Star
inning to
Baltimore Orioles on
Roy Oswalt ga\e his
beat the
Thursday, his latest
OK to a trade from
C I eve-.
rebuilding project in a
Houston to Philadelphia
land
Indians
11-4
or league career full
on Thursday, becoming
Thursday
night.
em.
the latest star pitcher to
Dustin Moseley ( 1-0)
owalter's
first
join the hard-charging
won
his
first
start,
game will be Tuesday
Phillies.
night at Camden Yards allowing a run and four
After getting Roy
· against the Los Angeles hits over six innings as
Halladay
in the offseaNew York took three of
Angels.
son,
the
t~ o-ti me
four
in
a
lopsided
series
Baltimore had the
defending
NL
champiworst record in the that saw A-Rod extend
ons
got
Oswalt
anq a
majors at 31-70 going his homerless streak to
sizable
amount
of
cash
into Thursday night seven games.
from the Astros for
against Kansas City and
Robinson Cano con. pitcher J .A. Happ and
is headed toward its nected for his 20th
two speedy prospects,
13th straight losing sea- homer
just
after
I
outfielder
Anthony
son. The Orioles fired Rodriguez
grounded
• Gose and shortstop
manager
Dave out harmlessly in the
Jonathan
Villar.
Trembley on June 4 and seventh. That started a
Houston then traded
replaced him on an string of nine straight
Gose to Toronto.
interim basis with Juan Yankees reaching safeOswalt joins a rotaSamuel.
ly with two outs. Curtis
tion
that
includes
··Buck
Showalter's Granderson
and
David Pokress/Newsday/MCT Halladay. acquired from
proven track record Rodriguez each had 1n this July 22, file photo, the New York Yankees' Alex Rodriguez drops his bat att.er
Toronto in the offseamakes him the right two-run singles - both hitting his 599th career home run in the seventh inning against the Kansas City
son. and Cole Hamels,
choice for manager of off Joe Smith - in the Royals at Yankee Stadium in New York. A-Rod has been stuck at 599 home runs the 2008 World Series
the Orioles," president seven-run rally.
since then.
MVP. Oswalt is schedof baseball operations
uled to make his debut
Andy MacPhail said in
.
.
for the Philhes on
statement.
"We
a
Friday night. starting at
e\ e Buck's ex tenWashington.
experience and
"We're trying to do
e pertise will be a
what
we can to get back
T.O. practices with
major benefit to us as
to the World Se~ies and
Bengals
for
first
time
we look to.wards a more
\\in it," Phi !lies general
successful future."
manal!cr Ruben Amaro
GEORGETOWN,
Ky.
Samuel will return to
(AP) - Terrell Owens
Jr. said. ·:To have Roy
his job as the team's arrived fashionably late,
Oswalt. Ro) Hallada)
third-base
coach. received a white jersey
and additional!) Cole
Baltimore went 16-31 with his favorite number.
Hamels. Joe Blanton
with him in charge.
and got a smattering of
and K\ le Kendrick, we
"It's been a good applause for doing even
stack ·ourseh es up as
experience,''
Samuel the simplest thing.
one of the best rotations
Every catch was an
said.
"These
guys
in baseball."
played for me hard. I event.
This was the second
A few thousand fans
know the record doesn't
straight
vear the Phi !lies
reflect that, but I thank showed up for Owens·
mad~ a ~ajor trade for a
first
practice
with
the
rhe guys for that."
pitcher in the days leadThe rest of the Cincinnati Bengals, who
ing up to ,the July 31
signed him to a one-year
0rioles' coaching staff deal
deadline. Last season.
on
Thursday
will stay intact. Gary evening. then got a
they got Cliff Lee and
Allenson. the interim glimpse of what the 36he boosted them to
third-base coach, will year-old receiver has left.
another NL pennant resume his spot as man''He hasn't slowed
Lee was then sent to
ager
at
Triple-A down,'' said quaiterback
Seattle in a separate
Norfolk.
Carson Palmer, who
deal on the same dav the
Showalter's
move worked out with Owens
Phillies
acquired
was first reported by in Califomia this month.
Halladav.
where
he ''He's a guy that's kind of
"I'm ·
excited,"
as an analyst. ageless and he's still got a
Halladav said. ''lt savs a
lot
left
in
the
tank."
·
s
last
television
lot that this team is dedOwens enjoyed the
appearance was on
kated to winning."
reception - fans cheerMonday.
The Phillies took a
ing every catch and
' "My job with ESPN screaming his name to
se\ en-game
winning
allowed me to follow lure him over for autostreak into Thursday
this organi1ation close- graphs when the two-hour
night's game against
ly over the last several workout ended.
Arizona. Philadelphia
, and although the
"I think this team is
began the day 3 '? games
current record may special," · Owens said. "I
behind Atlanta in the
seem to indicate other- really feel that there is
Charles Bertram/Lexington Herald-Leader/MCT NL East.
wise, I see enormous something around the cor- Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Morgan Trent, right, breaks up ,a pass i~tended for
St. Louis also had
teammate Chad Ochocinco on the opening day of the Bengal s fall trammg camp
Please see Oswalt, 84
Please see Orioles, 82 Please see 8engals, 83 at the Toyota Stadium in Georgetown, Kentucky, Thursday.

4

I

l

.

T.O. misses flight to Bengals camp

f

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pitino tells jury he hoped to keep tryst secret
LOUISVILLE,
Ky.
(AP) - Rick Pitino,
worried that his wife and
kids would find out he
had a one-night stand
with a woman he met in a
bar,
acknowledged
Thursday that he didn't
immediately tell police
about demands for cars,
cash and housing in order
to keep the tryst secret.
The Louisville basketball coach told jurors he
kept quiet for nearly two
months, hoping he could
"contain" the damaging
information.
Intimate
details
emerged over the past
two days as Pitino, ~7,
testified against the
woman, Karen Cunagin
Sypher, at her federal
extortion
trial.
He
recounted the sex, the
threatening calls he said
left him "sick to my
stomach" and strongly
denied allegations he
raped Sypher.
Pitino had to pause,
look down and gather
himself Thursday as he
told jurors the hardest
part of the case: telling
his family about the 2003
affair after he rep01ted
the alleged extortion
demands to the FBI in
April2009.
Pitino, who coached in
the NBA before taking
over at Louisville in
200 1, said his best two
years came when his son
Richard served as an
assistant. But as the
secrets came out, the
partnership had to end.
Richard Pitino wound up
taking a job at the
University of Florida.
"When I had to suggest
to him to move on, it was
very difficult," Pitino

said.
Pitino and defense
attorney James Earhart
frequently cut each other
off during Thursday's
questioning, and the tension escalated as Earhart
pushed Pitino to address
the rape allegations.
The coach interrupted,
saying he was "here to
give the truth." Earhart
retorted, "I bet you are."
"I dQn 'l fear the truth,"
Pitino said.
"Neither do
we,"
Earhart shot back.
S.ypher, 50, has pleaded not guilty. She filed a
rape report with police
after she was indicted last
year, about six years after
she and Pitino had sex in
an empty restaurant a few
hours after they met.
Authorities have said her
rape claim lacked merit,
and no charges were
filed.
Pitino
told jurors
Wednesday and again
Thursday that Sypher initiated the sex by whispering to him and unzipping
his pants when he got up
to leave. He said they had
sex "very briefly" and
called the liaison "unfortunate."
Sypher
watched
Pitino's testimony closely but showed no reaction. Some jurors began
fidgeting as Earhart
questioned Pitino about
that night and whether
Sypher was raped.
Pitino cut off one question by saying Sypher
didn't protest as they had
sex.
Earhart asked why
Pitino didn't address the
rape allegations during
several meetings with
Sypher.

"The truth is, you until 2007. when she ·
never at one time chal- sta1ted making claims of
lenged the fact that you rape and talking about
raped her,'' Earhart said.
wanting a car and a
"I didn't have to chal- house.
lenge it because it wasn't
"It just came out of the
true." Pitino said.
blue," said Tim Sypher.
They sparred again who speaks with a heavy
when Earhart asked accent from his · native
Pitino why he told Massachusetts.
Sypher the phone calls
Jurors
also
heard
would stop if she denied Sypher's version of
they had sex.
events when prosecutors
"You're probably not played a never-broadcast
proud of the fact that you TV interview of her rape
asked someone to lie,'' claim.
Earhart said.
No one else has testi"I never asked some- fied to witnessing the
one to lie,'' Pitino said.
sexual liaison after hours
The coach's testimony at an upscale ftal ian
was the first time he's restaurant. The owner
talked publicly in detail said he left for the night
about the relationship. after showing Pitino and
Pitino portrayed Sypher Sypher how to get out
as the aggressor. and sev- through a self-locking
eral witnesses said she door. Pitino 's driver said
was flirty and persistent
he didn't see or hear anywhen she approached
thing
because he had
Pitino at the 'restaurant.
stepped behind a partial
Sypher~ ex-husband
and longtime Pitino aide, wall to leave the couple
Tim Sypher, told jurors some privacy.
Prosecutors showed
Thursday afternoon that
Pitino called him • in the jury a handwritten
August 2003 with a note from Sypher that
request to help Karen asked for cars. housing
Sypher, then known as and money, which Tim
Karen Wise, find coun- Sypher said he delivered
seling and medical treat- to Pitino.
"I really didn't know
ment after she said she
what
was in there. I don't
was pregnant.
Karen Sypher ultimate- know," Tim Sypher said.
ly had an abortion in "She's nuts.''
When Pitino's testimoAugust 2003 at a clinic in
Cincinnati. Pitino gave ny ended, he had spent
her $3,000 for medical about six hours on the
insurance, about $430 of witness stand. His attorwhich was used to pay ney. Steve Pence, said
for the abortion, Tim "Pitino would return to
recruiting later in the day.
Sypher said.
"This matter. certainly
Tim and Karen Sypher
started dating shortly his portion, is behind him
after and were married now." Pence said. 'Tm
less than a year later. Tim very proud of coach
Sypher said his ex-wife Pitino in how he handled
was fine around Pitino this."

Orioles

hired well in advance
and given time to put
the Diamondbacks in
posltlon to contend
once they started playing in 1998. He was
fired after the 2000 season, and Arizona won
the World Series the
next year.
A
former
minor
league player who
never made it to the
majors. Showalter is
known for a strong will
and an obsession with
fundamentals, details
and preparation - he
would often sleep in his
office when there was a
day game following a
night game.
·'The biggest thing
about Buck is that he ·s
the most prepared guy
I've ever been around
and he doesn't leave a
lot of things to chance. I
like Buck," said pitcher
Kevin Millwood, who
played for Showalter in
Texas.

Showalter also does catcher Matt Wieters
not tolerate players act- said. "We're all going
ing like stars, even if to have to pull together
they are top talents. He and play better as a
feuded
with
Alex team. Maybe this will
Rodriguez in 2003. give us a little bit of a
when they were togeth- more continuous face at
er in Texas.
the head."
Showalter's last year
The Orioles interas a manager was 2006 ·viewed former major
with the Rangers. His league managers Bobb)
overall record is 882- Valentine
and Eric
833 in 11 years.
Wedge, ex-Baltimore
In
Baltimore. catcher Rick Dempsey
Showalter faces an and Samuel before setespecially tough task.
thng on Showalter.
The once-proud franMacPhail wanted to
chise has fallen on hard ha\e a manager in place
times since reaching the this season, to give the
playoffs in 1997, usual- newcomer a
better
ly finishing far behind chance to evaluate the
rich AL powers Boston talent in Baltimore.
and the Yankees. No MacPhail joined the
one pitcher currently on franchise in June 2007.
the Orioles has more
Trembley was one of
than four victories this four managers to be
year and no hitter is at fired this year. Kansas
City's Trey Hillman,
.300.
"It doesn't matter Arizona's A .J. Hinch
who the manager is. the and Florida's Fred i
players are going to Gonzalez also were dishave to play better," missed.

fromPageBl
potential
with
this
club," Showalter said in
a statement released by
the team. ''I look forward to the challenge of
competing
in
the
American League East.
Baltimore is a tremendous baseball town with
passion and pride in its
club. and my family and
I look forward to making it our new home."
Showalter is a twotime AL Manager of the
Year,
winning ·the
award in 1994 with the
New York Yankees and
2004 with Texas. Both
times, he had taken
over teams and guided
their turnarounds.
The
54-year-old
Showalter also was the
first manager in the history of the Arizona
Diamondbacks. He was

Visit us online at
www.mydailysentinel.com

BRENT WHALEY

BRIAN WHALEY

~WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
40205 SR 681, Shade, Ohio 45776
740-992-7013 • 740-992-5553

Friday, July 30, 20io

Rio baseball to host
Fall Baseball Academy
RIO GRANDE. OhioThe University of Rio
Grande Baseball Fall
League is no more .In its
stead is the new University
of Rio Grande Fall
Baseball Academy. Like
the fall league. the baseball
academy will be on
Saturday's
beginning
August 28 and ending on
October 2.
Rio Grande head baseball
coach
Brad
Warnimont explained the
reasoning behmd making
the switch to an academy.
"We are replacing the fall
baseball league with the
fall ba&lt;&gt;eball academy. We
decided to make this
change to focus on mstruction and fundamentals:·
Warnimont said. "The
players will receive individual instruction from our
players and staff, and will
be provided with an evaluation of strengths and
weaknesses at the end of
the academy."
The schedule for the
academy is as follows:
10 a.m. - 12 p.m. Offense, defense. and
base-running fundamentals.
12 p.m. - 2 p.m. -

Police: Ex-NBA player
Wright shot to death
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)
- Former NBA player
Lorenzen Wright. whose
body was found in the
woods outside Memphis.
was shot to death and the
case is being investigated
as a homicide, police said
Thursday.
Family members had
said Wednesday that
police told them Wright's
body had been found near
an apartment co·mplex.
Police delayed confumation, awaiting an autopsy
that confirmed the identity based on dental
records, authorities said in
a statement. The Shelby
County medical examiner's office reported that
Wright died of a gunshot
wound, police said.
Wright, a 34-year-old
Memphis native. was last
seen around midnight
July 18. His family filed a
missing person report
with police on July 22.

_("):.

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August 27th &amp; 28th
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on Sheets Farm

New Construction and
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but investigators said as
recently as Monday that
they didn't suspect foul
play.
Police said a 911 call
was placed from Wright's
cell phone early on July
19. Investigators deter- ·
mined the call came from ·
the area where the body
was found and on
Wednesday searched the
woods and found Wright.
The 6-foot-ll Wright
played 13 years in the
NBA for the Los Angeles
Clippers, Atlanta Hawks.
Memphis
Grizzlies.
Sacramento Kings and
most
recently
~
Cleveland'
Cavali
Wright left the Univers
of Memphis early for
,
NBA. and the Clippers .
made hlm a lottery pick
with the No. 7 selection
overall.
He averaged 8 points
and 6.4 rebounds in 778
career games.

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Games.
The Rio Grande Fall
Baseball Academy will be
for boys in 7th grade
through high school. The
cost IS $250 per player.
Checks should be m.
payable to the Univer
of Rio Grande Baseb .
Fund.
Hitters will start with a
1-1 count when they come
to bat and will swing aluminum bats. In the past,
wooden bats were used for '
the Fall Baseball League.
The teams will be divid- •
ed up on the day of the ·
game with open substitutions and all OHSAA
Rules will apply. In case
Of raifl, inStruCtiOn Will be I
moved indoors if needed.
Interested players need
to bring cleats. tennis shoes
(for the batting cage),
glove. pants and a bat.
Registration is available
online at www.rioredstorm .com on the baseball
page. You will also have
to fill out the waiver form •
also located on Rio's base- ·
ball page.
For more information
contact Coach Warnimont
at 740-245-7486 or by email at bradw@rio.edu .•

www .goldlggers.us

Repairs Done in
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Friday, July 30, 2010

-

..

-----...--------~-·--· -.~----~---~-----

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel .com

Browns report to training camp Saturday Beng·als
B v JEFF 5CHUOEL
JOURNAL REGISTER

FUJITA LEADS NEW
UNIT OF LINEBACKERS

Scott Fujita, the former New Orleans Saint
now playing for the
vns. was so devoted
s former home that
arch he donated 25
percent of his Super
Bowl ~:heck to help
restore the marshlands
ruined bv Hurricane
Katrina. ·
The Browns are not
looking for a donation
from Fujita. They are
hoping he can shore up
the run defense v. ith his
solid 6-5. 250-pound
muscular body.
He is the most important addition to the
group charged with the
task of swallowing up
opposing
running
backs.
Fujita lined up inside
in the Browns 3-4
defense during minicamp, but he can abo
play ou tside lineba~o:kl.!r.
The same holds true for
Chris Gocong. the lineer acquired from
Eagles along w1th
cornerback
Sheldon
Brown.
Gocong
lined
•
up outside in minicamp
and can play inside.
"It remains to be seen
(where I line up)."
Fujita said, "We have a
lot of linebackers right
no\\ who can play a lot
of different positions. 1
think a lot of us ha\ e a
'lot of \ersatility and
that's going to be one of
the big strengths of this
defense."
Kamerion Wimbley
and David Howens
were the starting outside linebackers and
D'Qwell Jackson plus
Eric Barton the starting
inside linebackers in the
season opener last year.
Wimble) was the only
one of the four still 'at
original position b)
"'nd of the season.
on ending injuries
to Jackson (pectoral
tear) and Barton (neck)
forced Mangini to move
Bowens and Jason
Trusnik inside.
Jackson is healthy
and ready to go. He has
a chip on his shoulder
the size of a large tree:
he was forced to stgn a
one-year tender a(ter
expecting a multi-year
contract.
Wimbley, traded to
Oakland for a third
round pick (used on

!

.
I

Colt McCoy). led the
Brmvns with 6 .5 sacks
last year.
Where his sacb v. ill
come from in 20 I 0 is a
legitimate
question:
Fujita and Gocong each
had one sack last ) ear.
A player to keep an
eye on is :\1arcus
Benard. He v.on"t start.
but he could be a designated pas rusher. He
played in six of the
final eight games last
year
'' ith
limited
chance~ and had 3.5
sacks in the final four
games.
Matt Roth. as 1s
Jackson. is tn his contract vear. He wanted to
be tnided and wasn't, so
he really has motivation
to play well. He played
in six games with the
Browns last year after
being picked up on
wahers
from
the
Dolphins.
David Veikune is one
more linebacker with
something to prove. He
'"as lost Last season.
Part of the blame for
that is on the coaches.
He was a defensive end
in college (Hawaii) and
the Browns worked him
at ins1de and outside
linebacker. He pla)ed in
I0 game~ last year and
never made a tackle.
Veikune got heavy
last year and was pushing 270 pounds. He lost
20 pounds and is concentrating on inside
linebacker. He and fellow second-year linebacker Kaluka !vlaiava
v. ill back up Jackson
and Fujita.
Rogers goes on PCP
lbt
Defemive
linemen
Shaun Rogers and C .J.
Mosley plu:-. cornerback
Coye Francies will start
training camp on the
BrO\\ ns
Physically
Unable to Perfonn list.
a league source said
Tuesday.
Rogers finished the
2009 season on injured
reserve with a broken
leg and Mosley \vas on
I.R. with an ankle
injury. Neither participated in spi"ing practices or m1nicamp. Both
worked with trainers

rehabbing from their
injuries.
Franc1es' tnJury is
unknown. The econdyear cornerback did
practice in minicamp
and intercepted two
passes ,
Players on the P.U.P.
list do not colll.t against
the 80-man training
camp roster and ca11 not
practice.
They can be act i vatcd
from P.U.P at any time
~uring camp. If they
tart the regular season
on P.U .P. they must
remain there a minimum of six weeks.
In other news, the
Browns confirmed signing rookie safety T.J.
Ward. · The secondround draft p1ck s1gned
a four-year contract,
leaving top pick Joe
Haden as the only
unsigned draft choice.
C AN B ROWNS' YOUNG
RECEIVERS GROW UP?

Can a du111ge in quarterbacks transform a
receiving corps from
looking mediocre on a
good day to one that
can help win on
Sundays?
The Brov. ns' brain
trust is counting on it.
A year ago the
Browns entire group of
wide rece1ver~ caught a
total of five touchdown
passes, and three of
those touchdm\ ns v. ere
scored b) Mohamed
~1assaqu01. It wa not
the kind of production
to in~p1re poets to create snazzy nicknames.
such as ''The Smurfs"
from the Washington
Redskins of 1982. m:
''The Thrc~ Amigos"
from
the
Den\ er
Broncos from I&lt;J87 -92.
Ne\erthelcss.
the
Browns stabk of wide
receivers i.s basically
the same group as last
year
~1as:-.a&lt;.Juoi,
Brian Robiskie, Chansi
Stuckey
and
Josh
Cribbs \\ith the addition
of
rookie
Carlton
Mitchell and 14-year
veteran Bobby Engram.
Gone from the group is
Mike Furrey. who at the
end of last season was
more valuable as a free
safety.
Browns
president
Mike Holmgren studied
the roster bequeathed to
him and decided the
problem
with
the
Brown~ last year was
not at wide receiver but
at quarterback. Perhaps

Sports &amp;riels

introductory news conference after the morning
practice.
~
The news conference
from Page Bl
he concluded even Jerry
had to be rescheduled for
Rice could not catch ·
after the evenin!! ses:-.1on
passes if they fi r~t hit ner forth b. team. With me becau!'.e Owens missed
being here. (it) ha~ really hi!'. redeve fli!!ht.
the ground five yards in created
a buzz. I think the
With 'Owen!'. showing
fron t of him.
guys feel the energy."
up late. Bl) ant wa!'. a
The addition~ of Jake
The energy came a bit focus of the Ben!!als'
Delhomme and Seneca late.
morning workout ~ for
Wallace have done
Owens missed an his knee. not his number.
wonders for Robiskie. oYernight night that
He had surgery for tom
The only similarity in would have brought him cartilage m his left knee
Robiskie from his rook- to town t.'arlier in the day. during training camp with
Ie season to the mini- allowing for a proper Tampa Bay last year. He
introduction. Instead. he was limited to 39 catches
~o:amp lust month is. he
caught
a later flight, for 600 vards and four
st11l wears 80 on his jersey. He looked sure of rolled in less than an hour touchdowns. ;rhe Bengals
before an evening prac- signed him to a $28 milh1mse lf in minicamp tice
and quickly su1ted up.
lion deal. hoping he
and developed good
He and buddy Chad would
provide another
chemistry
with Ochocinco were the last
threat
with
Delhomme. That chem- two to jog onto the field, outside
istry never solidified drawing loud applause. Ochocinco.
Bl)·ant backed off
between Robiskie and Owens
occasionally
workouts
last month
the quarterbacks last waved to the fans in becau e the
muscles
appreciation,
but
played
it
season.
primarily
around
the
left
knee
didbecause Coach Eric low-key throughout the n't feel strom! enou!!h. He
practice.
Mangini
alternated
So began the TO-and- went through drillttentaBrad) Quinn and Derek
tively on Thursday. never
Ocho
era.
Anderson even· other
"It\ a circus," Palmer running at tull :speed.
series m search for a said. "Him and Chad.
"The onlf thing I'm
starter last year.
them being them. It's struggling '' ith right now
1s just being comfortable
Neither Robiskie nor funny. I was laughing.''
Massaquoi. the likely
Palmer know.; that and mentally just putting
starters, would speak ill Ov.·ens has a reputation (the left foot) down and
of Anderson or Quinn. for turning on his qualier- doing what I want to do
Massayuoi
looked back. Owens got a chance "''ithout thinking. 'Oh. I
uncomfortable
when to join the Bcngals in pa1i might feel pain:" Bryant
because Palmer lobbied ~aid. "That s my biggest
put on the spot.
to
sign him after wutching hurdle right now."
"Jake throws the ball
Bengals coach Marvin
their
. workouts
in
very
accurately."
Le\\
is
insisted
that
California.
~1assaquoi said m mini"1 think Carson being Bryant's knee problem
camp. " I 'm excited that quarterback that can had nothin!! to do with the
about working with get the ball up and d~lwn decision to si!!n Owens.
him."
the field at any g1ven Bryant isn't so~sure.
''If I owned the team. I
Stuckey hopes to ben- pomt on the field - that
efit from a full training makes my mouth water," would definitelv !!O after
camp and season with Owens said. '"I've lon~ed the best player;, if pos:-.ithe Brov. ns. On Oct. 7 to have a quarterback ltke ble. especially with the
situation they acquired
last vear he was Carson.''
him.'' Bl)•ant said. '·I def~ow
he's
got
him.
Got
acquired from the Jets
\\Ould have went
inite!)
his
favorite
number,
too.
in the trade that sent
after the guy."
Owens
wore
his
cu:-.Braylon Edwards to the
Running back Cedric
No. 81 at practice.
bright lights and big tomary
part of a deal he made Ben...,on fully participated
city. Stuckey thought it \Vith the previous owner. in the workouts. Benson
would be an easy Receiver Antonio Bryant met last week \\ ith NFL
adjustment. It was not.
Ro!!er
got the number when the comm1ss1oner
Cribbs could be the Bengals cho~c him over Goodell about his offseaslot receiver. If the Owens in the offseason. son arrest in Texas on a
Browns can figure a giving hiin a four-year charge of misdemeanor
Benson
is
way to get him the ball deal. Bryant agreed to assault.
accused of punching a bar
in open space he can do give up h1s number.
"I'm a realist." Bryant employee. a charge he has
what he does as a punt
"I said, 'Hey. man. denied.
said.
and kick returner ...
Benson hasn't heard
l'm
not
going to make no
Cribbs and Wallace will
an)thing
more from
big
spectacle
about
it.
make the Wildcat lethal.
Goodell.'' ho could dbciYou've
got
a
bigger
!egaEn!!ram adds a veter- C) and a number than I pline him.
an presence to the ros- do. I''e been on several
"We had a !!Ood talk. a
ter. Even if he does not 'teams like you. but I've good ses&lt;;ion." Ben on
make the final cut he chansed my number ~cv­ sard. ''I gues~ no ne\\ s IS
can help Mitchell. the eral t1mes. You've had the good news.''
Notes: CB Leon Hall
sixth-round draft pick ~arne number.
from South Florida.
"1 don't need your did conditioning instead
Ironically. Mitchell and money." Bryant said. "All of practicing. Hall said he
Engram could be com- I want you to do is take slightlv hurt hi:-. IO\\er
petmg for the fifth care of one of 111) little back ·durin!! a recent
programs in workout. .. :- OT Andre
receiver spot if Mangini league
Miami.
Send
them a small Smith. the team\ firstkeeps only five with the
donation
and
we' II go round pick last year, \\ill
fourth spot going to
concentrate on conditionfrom there."'
Cribbs.
ing the first few \veeks of
First.
Owens
had
to
Jake
Allen
and
camp . .Smith broke his
It
wasn't
as
easy
as
anive.
Johnathan Haggerty arc
left foot last Sept. I. limittwo young. receivers planned.
The Bengab expected ing him to six games. and
who will flash in train- him to show up early in had offseason surgery....
ing camp.
the day. take his phy. . ical TE !ennaine Gresham.
and sign his one-year con- the team'&lt;; top pick this
tract \Vhile the rest of the year. mi...,sed the first
team held its first work- pracuce in a contract disj out. They scheduled an pute.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------guard slot.
Marshall says
The
Cavaliers
Sessions says
he'll compete
for playing
•
time

I NDEPENDENCE.
Ohw (AP) Point
guard Ramon Sessions
i:-.n 't gomg to let hts
friend Mo Williams go
unchallenged on the
court this year.
Sessions and 7-footer
Ryan Hollins were
traded
by
the
.Minnesota
Timberwolvcs to the
Cleveland
Cavaliers
for troubled guard
Delonte West earlier
this week, marking the
Cavs' first post-LcBron
James personnel move.
The
24-year-old
Sessions told the media
Thursday that he plans
to
compete
with
Williams. his
best
friend and mentor. for
Cavs' starting point

MORE LOCAL
NEWS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.
Subscribe todav.
992-2/55

~ales

Sessions savs he's
going to compete and
pia) hard. He and
Williams
became
friends
when
they
played
with
the
Milwaukee
Bucks
together. Both Sessions
and Hollins say they
are excited to join the
Cavs and join new
coach Byron Scott's
up-tempo offense.
West pleaded guilty
in Maryland earlier this
month to weapons
charge-;.

1\'l arshall set
to start
single-game
ticket sales

start Aug. 5 at the Cam
Henderson Center ticket office or by phone at
800-843-4373.
Tickets are available
for home games with
Ohio
Cniver,ity.
Universit\ of Central
Florida, UniversitY of
Texas Rl Paso.· th~
Univers1ty of ~lemphis
and Tulane UniYen:iity.
Marshall says only
season til:ket holders
can bu v tickets f"or the
Friend; of Coal Bowl
against West Virginia
Unhersll) on Sept. 10
in Huntington.

HUNTINGTO~.

Cleveland
Cavaliers name
4 assistant
coaches

W.Va.
(AP)
Marshall
University
says single-game foothall tickets are about to
go on sule.

CLEVELAND (AP)
The
Cleveland
Ca\ alieril have named
four a~sistcmt coaches.

740-992-7028

m6

INGELS.
.

CARPET
}'Ork I ngels, Owner

175 North 2nd Ave • Middleport, OH

announced Thursday
that Paul Pressey. Chris
Jent. Jamahl .Mosley
and Joe Pruntv will be
joining the team.
Pressey has 27 seasons of NBA experience- and comes to
Cleveland from the
New Orleans Hornets.
~losley joins the Cavs
after five seasons with
the Denver Nuggets.
He played professionally for in Australia.
Spain and Korea.
Prunty comes from
the
Portland
Trail
Blazers and brings 14
years of NBA coaching
experience to the team.
Jent is returning to
the Cav~ for hts :-.econd
season as an assistant
coach.

Hrs-Mon..Sat9-5
Sunday Closed

106 W. Main Street, Pomeroy, OH • 740-992-1702

www.weavingstitchesgiftshop.com or on Facebook

DE1?1f\MI1t1LER
JiwJ'/aful LUMBER cmtP.m
634 E. Main St., Pomero) OH
740-992-5500

Pine Hills Golf Course

Announces
NewOwner Special

Tuesday Nlght-18holes wltb cart $12.50
l.......--~tllght-3pnr Dark $18.00
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-6312

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Oswalt
from Page Bl
been bargaining for
Oswalt. He had a notrade clause in his contract and could· decide
wlwthcr to accept any
deal.
·''He's pretty excited
about coming here,"
Amaro said. ::The fact
that Roy came to
Philadelphia with really
no great demand, that
says~ something about
the guy."
'
O~w-alt, \Vho spent his
entire
career
with
Houston. requc:-.ted a
trade in Ma).
''We salute what Roy
did for the organization
and the contributions
that he made here over
the course of his career
in an Astros uniform
and his profile here 1s
significant," Astros general manager Ed Wade
said. "At the end of the
dav. "' e have to do
wh· t's best for the.
Houston Astros. You
can "t make a deal like
this as a favor to a pla)er. In this case I think
we served everybody's
purposes with what we
did."
Phillies closer Brad
Lidge, who played \Vith
Oswalt in Houston.
spoke to his former
teammate for about 20
minutes on Wednesday
night.
·:He wanted to know
about Philadelphia and
the city." Lidge said. "I
told him it's been great.
Smce I've been ~here.
it's been one -of the
more
unbelievable
things I've ever seen. I
don :-t think he needed a
lot of selling on the
idea. He ""'anted to play
for a winner.
''It
was
probably
going to happen anyway. Phill) sells itself
right now. "It doesn't
take a genius to figure
out \.Vhat we're doing
and what we've done.
This is where you want
to be if you want to get
a ring.''
The
32-year-old
Oswalt was 6- I 2 despite
a
3.24
ERA
for
Houston. The Astros
were shut out in five of
his 20 starts.
The righty helped the
Astros get to the 2005
World Series. but they
are far out of playoff
contention this _,year.
Oswal t is 4-0 in the
postseason.
Oswalt is 143-82 with
a 3.24 ERA in 10 teasons \vith the Astros. He
is due about $5.33 million the rest of this season from h1s $15 million salary and is owed
$16 million in 2011 .
Oswalt's contract has a
$16 million
mutual
option for 2012 with a
$2
million
buyout.
Amaro said the team
sweetened the buyout.
but ~·ouldn 't consider it
a "s12:nificant" amount.
The Astros seemed set
to send about $11 million to the Phillies as
part of the deal. Amaro
declined to specify the
amount.
"That was an important part of this," Amaro
said. "We wanted to
keep some level of flexibility so we can continue to field a championship-caliber
team.
Yes. the money did
make a difference."
· Happ has made one
start after missing three
months with an elbow
injury. The 27-year-old
lefty \Vent 12-4 with a
2.93 ERA and finished
runner-up for the NL
Rookie of the Year·
award last season.
"This is all I've ever
known," Happ said. '·I
had an idea driving to
the ballpark it might be
the last time. It was
emotional."
The 19-year-old Gose
is fast, stealing_ 36 bases
and hitting .263 for
advanced
Class
A
Clearwater. The Astros
then traded Gose to
Toronto for Triple-A

www.mydailysentinel.com

first
baseman
Brett
Wallace _._ a 23-yearnld who hit .30 I with 18
home runs and 61 RBis
at Las Vegas.
Wade said
Lance
Berkman
remains
Houston·~' starting first
baseman and he's "not
anointing" Wallace as
the future starter.
' "Wr.: had a chance to
go out and get a gu)
\Vho's a really solid hitter. who has got a
chance to be a ~really
gooJ b1g league player.'' Wade said. "But
Lance is our firs( baseman."
Villar. also 19. stole
38 bases and batted
.272 for Class A
Lakewood.
The
Phillies
and
Astros are not strange
trading partners. Wade
was Philadelphia's GM
from 1998-2005. and
Amaro served as an
assistant under him. In
the 2007 offseason.
Wade dealt Lidge to
Philadelphia. Lidge was
a perfect 48 for 48 in
save opportunities and
helped the Phillies win
the World Series in '08.
"We obviously have
very good friendship
and he's obviously been
a pretty Important person in my life." Amaro
said of Wade. "I will
tell you this was by no
means easy."

a

' ·.

."

Friday, July 30,

2010

local Sports Briefs
Meigs Middle School
Football Helmet Fitting

For more information or to register contact Josh
Fogle at 740-667-9730.

3rd Annual Southern
Basketball Golf Scramble

ROCKSPR INGS, Ohio -There will be a 7th anc.!
8th grade ·football meeting and helmet fitting at the
Meigs Local Field House on Saturday. J uly 31, at 9
a .m . All students must have a spotts J1hysical before
beginning conpitioning. forms will be available at the
meeting.

RACINE, Ohio -- Southcm Basketball will host a
four-man golf scramble on Aug. 7 at River1:.ide Golf
Club in Mason. W.Va. The scramble will be an 8:.
a.m.· shotgun start. The format is br ing your o
team, \\· ith only one player under 8 handicap with
'
total team handicap of 40 or abo\ e.
The co~t is $60 per person ($240 per team) with
optional cash pot, ~ki n s, and mul ligan purchase.
Prizes ol first, second. and third finishes will be
awarded. Additional prizes for longest putt. longest
drive, and closest to the pin will be presented.
Beverages and food \viii be provided.
To enter please contact head coach Jeff Caldwell at
740-949-3 I 29.

Meigs Middle School Volleyball
'

ROCKSPRINGS. Ohio - Meigs Middle School
7th grade volleyball practice will begin on
Wednesday, Aug. 4. from 6-8 p.m. Meigs 8th grade
volleyball practice will begin on Monday. Aug. 2. All
students must have physicals to participate.

3rd annual Eagle Sk road
race to be held Aug. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio - The third annual
Eagle 5k Road Race and Walk and the one mile fun
run will be held on Saturday, Aug. 7, beginning at
8:30 a.m. at the St. Paul United Methodist Church in
Tuppers Plains. Ohio.
The run is sponsored by the Eastern Athletic
Boosters. with registration beginning at 7 a.m. at the
Tuppers Plains ball fie lds . The entry fee is $12 before
A ug. 4 or $15 on the day of the race.
The race w ill begin at the St. Paul United Methodist
Church and will be run in the sun-ounding ~treets and
roads . Awards w ill be given to the top three male and
female overall fi nishers and the top three male and
female finishers in the one mile fun run. T-shirts will
be given to the first 75 registrants.
Divisions for both male and female runners will be
by age, 14 and under. 15-18. 19-25.26-35.36-49, and
50 and over.

1

MYL Fall Ball signups
MIDDLEPORT. Ohio - The Middlepo•t Youth
League will be holding Fall Bal l signups for both
boy~ and girls - ages 5-16 - from noQn unti l 3 p .m .
on Saturday.August 7. and Saturday.August 14, at the
Middleport ball fields.
For more information. contact Dave Boyd at 5900438.

MYL teen co-ed softball .league
MIDDLEPORT. Ohio - T he Middlepott Youth
League \Viii be holding a co-ed softball league for
boys and girls - ages 13- J8 - throughout the mo.
of August. For more information. contact Jackie
at 4 I 6-1261 or Tanya Coleman at either 992-5481 or
416-1952.

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POLICIES: Ohio Vllley PuDIItlllng reservee tne right to edit, rejtcl. Of ca~lany ltd at eny time. Errora mUll bt reported 011 tht ftrat day of publication and the
Trlb~er11nei.Jlf!'i)later Will bit responsrble tor no more lllan the COlli oftll! epece occuplec! by lhe trrorend only the flrllft*rtiOn Weahall 1101 bt liable for
ant loca or expenco that rtotJits from lhe publication or omlselon ol an advertiMment. Comctl011 "'" bt mlldtln lht llrll available tdlllon. • Box number edt
art a 1101ye confidential. • CwentrMe taro appllta. ·All reel ectate ld•ertleementa are tub~ to 1he Fldttll Fair Hol.letng Act ot 1988 ·lbi$ ntW8pilptf
accept&amp; only help Mnted adt mt411ng EOE standards. We Will not knowingly acoept any ldVOIIItlng In viOIIIIOfl ot the law Will not bt rtspOnlibte fOf any
errn~ln en ad taken over tne phore.

400

There's
Something

Absolute Top Dollar
Stlver/gold co•ns ary
101V14KI18K
gold
Houses For Rent
jewelry. denta gold pre
1935 US currency
sets 1b•, $375 month "
proof IT'll"!
diamonds MTS Com Syr-.:use
Depos t
Shop 1 51 2nd Ave,..,e HUD approved
No
Ga pol s 446-2842
Pe~s
304-675·5332
Recreational
Vehicles

1

weekends
0265

Everyone
The...

CLASSIFIEDS!!

740·591·

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers

Readyaur
newspaper and learn
something today!

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Local Sports
• Community
Calendar
... and much more.

®allipolis 11Batlp ~ribune
~oint ~Ieasant l\egister
The Daily Sentinel

m:imes -$entinel

Notices

NOTICE
OHIO
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail until
you have investigating
2 BR Addison Area no
the offering.
pets, ref req $425/mo
$425
dep.
May
t-&gt;1ctures tnat
co1s1der rent to own
have bee'h
w/s;l'lall down payment
mobt o home only 740. placed in ads at
367·7025
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
Sales
within 30 days.
Any pictures
"The ProctoMI!e
that are not
D•fference·
picked
up will
• Sl and a deed s all
be
you need to Ol'm you
dream home Csll Now'
discarded.
Freedom Homes
888·565·0 167
Wanted
Mobtle Home
28R
water, sewer, trasr pd.
No pets, Johnson's
Mobile Home Park
740·446·3160

J
&amp; J
Painting.
Interior/exterior,
power
washing,
homes.
garages,
barns.
Free
Help Wanted·
estimates.
General
Refjrences
available. 304-912·
WANTED:
Part•ttme 7689
poslt•ons avatlable to
GREEN
LAWN
assist lnd•v•dt.&lt;:ls wtth
304·675·
rr~enta1 retardatiOn at a Mow1ng
group home 1n B dwell: 1610 or 304·593·
1) 21 hrs 8 3Qa·3:30p 1960 No job too btg
Tu'W/Th 2) 27.5 hrs. or smali
3·3Q.11p F., 10a-8p.
Sat 1·9p Sufi H gh
SCI'Iool dtpiOMafGED, 300
Services
vo: d driver's I cense
and throe years good
dnvtng
expenence
required.
S8 97'hr,
Financial
after tratnlng,
Pre·
employment
Drug
FAST IRS
Test1ng. Send resume
lo: BucKeye Communtty
BELIEF
Servtcos, PO. Box 604,
Do you owe over
Ja:kson, OH 45640 or
$10000 to the IRS?
e-mail
to
Settle Out Over Due
~~ahoocom
Taxes for Less
,
Doadhne
lor
1-888·692-5739
applicants:
'7/30/10
Ecual
Opportunity
Employer.
Home Improvements
6000

~unbap

200 Announcements

CB.fDIT_CABQ

Giveaway
chest
freezer woli&lt;s 740·
446-1062

Employment

FIND
BARGAINS
EVERY DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

NOTICE Borrow Sma_rt.
Contact
tho
Ohio
Division of Financial
Institutions Office of
Affairs
Consumer
BEFORE you ref1nance
your home or obtain a
loan.
BEWARE
of
requests tor any large
advance payments of
fees or Insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Afftars toll free at 1·
866·278·0003 to learn
If the mortgage broker
or lender Is properly
hcensed. (Th•s is a
publiC
SeMCe
announcement from the
Ohto Valley Publishing
Comoanyl

Lawn Service
600

1

Rentals

=Rv;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
Sorv1ce at Carm•crae1
Tra•lers
740·446·3825

Manufactured
Housing

Merchand•se

Appliances

Money To Lend

In

900

Financial Services

Buried In Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultation.
1-877-264-8031

For

4000

Financial

RELIEF

Log HoMe style apt
2BR, 1BA, CIA, no
pets Lease rE'/dep
$500 IT'O 140·446·2801

Want To Buy

1000
·

Now you can have borders and graphics
...,..
addedtoyourctassifiedads
..( ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
f!1
,~
Graphics 50¢ for small
ta
$1.00 for large

Merchandise

Farm Equipment

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers

Farm Equipment

900

Have you pnced a Jot n
Deere ately? You II be
surprtsed Creek out
our used Inventory at
www CAREO.com
Car'lltchae! Equ piTent
74Q-446-2412

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 9:00 o.m.
All Dasplay: 12 Noon 2
Monday-Fndoy for Insertion
Bu11iness Days Prior To
In Next Day's Po per
Publication
Sunday In.Columm 9:00a.m. Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Friday Fo• Sundays Paper
Thursday for Sundays Paper

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

GET YOUR CLASSIFJED liNE AD NOTICED

Best Lawn Care now
accepting new lawns
740·645-1488

Animals

Equipment/
Supplies
EqUipment must go 2
wet station 2 hair
dryers 2 Amish wood
shelves 1 salon mat
2 stylist chairs 1
bed/
arthritic
aromatherapy 740645·8599

..._;;;;;;;;;;F;;;u;;;m;;;itu;;;re;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
""
For sale 2 Burkline
recliner
rockers
w/heat &amp; massage. 1
green &amp; 1 blue $150
ea. Exc. condition
740·245-0900
For Sale Sectional
sofa $300 recliner
$50 oak coffee table
&amp; 2 end tables $50
all good condition
7 4()..446· 7 41 0
Miscellaneous

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call
Other Services
Free pupp•es Dash
Ron Evans 1·800hound (weiner dog)
537-9528
Pet Cremations. Call
jack russell mixed.
7 40·446·37 45
740·379·2282
\ 200·Eisenhower one
DIRECTV
dollar coins, 1971-79
$2.45 ea. Must buy
For the best TV
Kittens to giveaway.
experience,,
3 .yellow males 2 all, 1966 Red Seal
upgrade from cable calico females. 740· one hundred dollar
bill, nice $145. Also
to
446-8567
10· Silver certificate
DirecTV today!
five dollar bills, 1934
Packages start at
Found 2 large blond &amp; 1953. 17- red Seal
$29.99
hair dogs, on St. At. two
dollar
bills,
1-866-541-0834
554,
Morgan 1928,1953
&amp;
63
Townsh•p, may have $187 for all. 740-533QlS.H
been lost for several 3870
days. 740-367-7737
Plant your fall mums
Best Offer Ever! Over
&amp; asters early for· a
120 Top Channels
only $24.99/mo. for
Free
puppy
1/2 better
chance
to
one year. Call Now
Beegle
male
5 come back next year.
1-888·688·5943
months old 740-446· Different colors &amp;
Dlsh Network
4355
varieties. Ready to
go. 3 for $10.00. No
Bulldog Sun . sale.s. Yoders
YQ!YAGE • English
AKC reg., Greenhouse 10 miles
Unlimited local puppies,
DOB 6·1·10, vet ck., west of Galliplis on
and long
ready now. 7 40·696· SR141
Pets

NEIWOBK

distance
calling for only
$24.99 per
month.

1085

Yard Sale

Draken Terriers' CKC
Registered
Jack
Russ~ll
Terrier
Get reliable phone
puppies. Tri-colored
servtce from
rough coat male, tri·
Vonage.
colored &lt;~Smooth coat
Call Today!
female.
Shots,
1-877-673-3136
wormed ,
docked.
References
Professional Services available. 304·675·
7071
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
700
Agriculture
SSI
No Fee Un'ess We
W1nl
Farm Equipment
1·888·582·3345

PUMPING
SEPTIC
Gailia Co. OH and
Mason Co. wv. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
800·537-9528

Security

AJll
Free Home
Basement
Waterproofing
Security
Unconditional hfet•me ·
$850 Value
guarantee. Local
with purchase of
references lurntshed.
alarm monitoring
EstabliShed 1975. Call
services from ADT
24 Hrs. 740-446..()810,
Security Services.
Rogers Basement
Call1-888·274·3888
Waterprooftng.

Garage sale: Sat 9·3,
203 Kineon Dr , boys
omo-2t,
jumparoo.
bassinet, bouncers,
full bed, dresser,
misc.
sale
Yard
Longaberger,
men,
womens clothing. hot
dogs w/sauce. much
more. Fri &amp; Sat 8·5.
138 Buhl Morton Ad

3 Family yard sale.
girls, womens all
sizes, baby stuff,
home decor, misc.,
2007 Model B7610
• 1.
1414
7130 81
KUBOTA tractor with Scenic Or Vinton
belly mower and 48•
Roto Tiller $9,950 or 3 Family Yard Sale
080. call 740-256· Fri &amp; Sat 8·4. 80
1836 evenings alter Windsor Dr Gallipolis
6pm
Yard sale Sat July
31.
1686 Lincoln
STIHL Sales &amp; Service Pike B-2 only. tv &amp;
Now
Available
at stand, band saw,
Carmichael EquipMent
clothing, toys, crafts,
740·446·241 2
lots more
Garden

&amp; Produce

Tomatoes,
squash,
hot &amp; sweet peppers,
canners ptcked or
you pick own, 740·
247-4292

•

large
yard
sate.
Baby items, tools ,
tons of name brand
clothes, tv. 1.9 out
Raccoon Ad off 218.
Fri&amp; Sat

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
Yard Sale

www.mydailysentinel.com

land (Acreage)

Houses For Rent

Yard sate Fri &amp; Sat 9· 38 acres for sale in
5
2404 Mason County. Good
Neighborhood Ad
hunting
&amp; good
bu1lding site. Also,
1st yard sale of good access. 304·
summer. Fri &amp; Sat. St 674·3627
Rt 588 In RIO ~~~~~~~
Real Estate
Grande. Solid oak 3500
Rentals
entertainment center,
house hold, n1ce
clothing
Apartments/
Townhouses
Yard sale Sat only ~~~~~;;;;;;;;;-.
Watson Ad Chesh~re 2BR APT Close to
9·?
Holzer Hospital on SA
160 CIA. (740) 441·
Yard sale Sat 8 •2 0194
ra1n or Shine. 1,8 ~C~O~N~VE~N~IE~N~T~L~Y-&amp;
miles out Georges LOCATED
Creek from RT7. n1ce AFFORDABLE!
bunk/loft
bed, Townhouse
and/or
w/dresser &amp; desk, apartments,
· b'k
1 small houses lor rent.
dirt 1 e, motorcyc e, Call 740-4 41-1 111 lor
&amp;
electronics,
tools, application
lamps, tv, clothing, mlormatlon.
glass ware, &amp; misc.
Free Rent Special
Ill
Fri &amp; Sat, 2.5m out
Georges Creek on 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
Johnsons Ridge, 2nd up, Central Air, WtD
hookup, tenant pays
house on L. plus sz
etectnc. Call between
womens, boy Q-12m,
tools,
Coca-Cola. the hours of 8A·8P
EHO
Home
lnt,
Ellm View Apls.
Tupperware
304 882 3017
&lt; l
"
1st time yard sale, TWin Rivers Tower IS
Sat only, comer of accepting applications
30th St. &amp; Anniston for w8111ng list for HUD
subsidized,
1·BR
Dr. Pt. Pleasant,
apartment
for
the
Name brand clothes elderly/disabled,
call
&amp; household Items.
675·6679
Going out business
sale- everything must
go. God's N.E.T. 260
Mulberry
Ave,
Pomeroy, 9am-4pm 1 BA, stove &amp; ref.
Friday &amp; Saturday
furn. 2nd fl., NC,
State
St.
258
Yard sale, July 30· 5400/mo 5400 dep.
31,
2nd
house 740·446·3667
behind Laurel Cliff ~-~---Attractive,
Church
unfurnished,
one
Yard
sale
3206 bedroom apt. 2nd
Howard Ave. Sat 8·4 floor, comer Second
and Pine. No pets.
July 31, 8 am-? 2806 References required.
deposit.
Birch
Ave.,
Pt Security
Pleasant.
Many $325 per month,
name brand clothes. water included. call
740·446·4425
or
All items $1 each.
740·446·3936.
Huge 5 family yard Tara Townhouse Apt.
sale. clothing all 2BA 1.5 BA, back
sizes, baby items, &amp; patio,
pool,
misc. 3318 Howard playground. No pets.
ave. 9·3 Sat
$450 rent. 740·6458599
Recreational
1000
Vehicles Apartment for rent 1
BA 1 BA furnished
WID AC $500/mon +
Boob / Accessories dep. All utlities pd.
24• Pontoon Boat call 740·446·9595
FIRST MONTH
with ra1se-up top 50
FREE
HP Yamaha Engine
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.
with trailer $4,000.
$
&amp;
or trade 740·446·
385
7327 740-256-1270. UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
18' Bayliner Cody NC, WID hook-up,
Cabin
w/Tatem
ten·
trailer, inboard motor,
ant pays electric
Volvo HP 125, 6 life
EHO
&amp;
Ellm VIew Apts.
jackets,
ski's
304·882·3017
tubes, 740·992·41 03
can be seen ay ~lm_m_a_c_u~la-te-~2~B~A
39730
Lee
Ad., apt. in country, new
Pomeroy, Oh
carpet and cabniets.
Freshly
painted,
Campers I RVs &amp;
appliances,
WID
Trailer•
hook-ups,
2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
photos
at
www.carmichaeltrajle
~
740·446·
2412

water/trash
paid.
Beautiful
country
setting,
only
10
minutes from town.
Must
see
to
appreciate $425/mo
614·595·7773

'!'o:""r7_4_o-64~5~·~59~5~3~~

3br. apt. $450 &amp; 1 br.
apt.
$350
plus
For Sale 1196 35• utilities &amp; deposit.,
Fleetwood Bounder 3rd St Racine 740·
Motor Home NC, 247·4292
must sell due to ~--~-:---­
health,
740•256• Clean, efficient, 1
BR,
conveniently
6412
located. Reference.
Motorcycles
Deposit. No pets.
304·675-5162
and
BR
2008
Suzuki
2
Bouevard cSO t Black apartments for rent
11 k miles $SSOO. near downtown Point
740 446 3300
'
'
Pleasant. All utilities
Want To Buy
paid. No pets. Call
304·360·0163.
Oilers now buying ~-~~~~­
junk vehicles 740· Spring Valley Green
388 •0011 or 7110 • Apartments 1 BA at
$395+2 BA at $470
441 _7870
Month. 446·1599
2000

Automotive

Commercial

Office Space for rent,
417 2nd Ave. rear,
private parkang lot
1968-Ford
Two
SSOOmth, +deposit.
Fairlanes. 304-576·
caii740-446·1761
2046, Cell 304·593·
ask for Jennie.
2448
Houses For Rent
Real Estate
3000
Sales 2BA, 88 Garfi,eld,
$425/$400 deposit +
For Sale By Owner ult. 740·645·1646
Classic / Antiques

2 BA, Rodney area,
6 apts $158.000
WID, ref 4 stove inc,
rent $2030 mo, 740·
NO pets, dep &amp; ref.
446·0390
req. call 740·446·
1271 or 740·709·
Houses For Sale
1657.
Disabled American ..--~~-~-:­
Veteran w/leukemia 1
BA
Cabin,
needs to sell 23 acre appliances furnished,
farm
in
western utlit1es pd. Thurman
Meigs Co., because area. Also 2 BA. apt
unable to kept it up. 740-286·5789
or
74 0 44 1 3 702
Private setting, older ~
~--:-__·___-:-~
house w/ lots of Newly
remodeled,
updates,
new 4BA, 80 Locust St
kitchen, 2 new baths, Gallipolis, no pets.
carport, new septic, Kim
740-441-1202
$87,500 call 740· or ~una 304·674·
742·2752.
3170

House for rent 2BR 2
BA energy efficient
home w/ uti! ty room
&amp; 20'x20' garage.
Green twp. $600
mon + dep. 740-446·
0666
House for rent 1 BR
22 N Main st Pt
Pleasant.$425 mon +
dep 740·794-0040
.....- - - - - Extra nice 2 BR.
house 2 BA finished
basement, carport,
river view. Adults
only, no pets, no
smoking.
740-446·
4506
Spring Valley Area,
3BR, 11/2 BA, no
pets. no sR'loking,
$650/mo +dep. 740·
645-3836
Rental

homes

available
call
Wiseman
Real
Estate 740-446-3644

Accounting /
Financial

Help Wanted •
General

Seasonal
Tax
Professional needed
1n Me1gs County.
Eam extra mcome
lind a new career
become
full·t1me
assoc1ate. We will
tra1n. Send resume
or 1ndicat1ons of
mterest to:
Dally
Sentinel, PO Box
729·5, Pomeroy, Oh
45769

Dnving
instructor
needed. Must pass
background check,
work eve/weekends.
Drop resume off at
Gall1pohs AAA off1ce
or fax attn AI 740·
351 ·0537

~~~~~~~

Cashier I Clerk

~S~M~IT~H;;;;;C~H~EV~A~O~L~E~T
BUICK is looking to
hire
an
Office
assistant With title
work and cashier
experience a plus.
Basic computer skills
required.
Must be
mature
and
dependable.
Good
t pus
1
pay an dbene fIs
a welcommtg Apworkl
env~ronmen .
py
in person to Smith
Chevrolet Buick 1911
Eastern
Ave.

2 br. house, 1 br
apartment. both have
central air &amp; heat, No
pets or smoking, call =G:=a:=lli~po:=li=:s:=O:=H:=.~=
740•992. 3823
Child/Elderly Care
House &amp; mobile
home
for
rent,
Racine arec.. 740·
949·2237

Full·time
non
smoking babysitter
needed in my Mason
Co. home 304 •633 •

~------ 3682
Pomeroy- 3 br. near ~:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~
Super
Value, Drivers &amp; Delivery
stove/ref fu,nished,
w/d
hookl-up, Truck
dnvers
$500/mo, 740·992· needed. Flat beds
6886
and dump trailers
apply 1n person at
House for rent in 935 Pinecrest Drive
New
Haven.
1
possible 2 BR. $300 Tractor trailer dnver
rent &amp; $300 dep. No needed, must have
pets. 304·674-3181
Hazmat Edorsement
d
t
en
resume
o
Human Resources,
PO
Box
705,
~~~~~~~ Pomeroy, Oh 45769
=
Rentals
~=:=:=:=:=:=:==~
~=~~--=Education
Nice 16x80, for rent,
3 Bedroom, 2 bath,
Country
setting. Full-time lieacher's
740-339-336€: 740· Assistants.
M·F
Daytime ·
Hours
367 _0266.
$7.85/hr.
Limited
Send
2 br. mobile home in benefits.
Racine. $325 a mo., resume by Aug 4,
$325 dep., 1 yr 201 0
to
Early
lease, No pets, No Education
Station
calls after 9pm, 740· 817 30th St., Pt.
992·5097
Pleasant wv 25550

s

=======

CASHLAND
Now hinng full lime
Cash
Amenca
Associate
position
excellent pay, benefit
PKG. included. Cash
handling &amp; customer
service required Log
t0
0n
cashamerica.com
under careers to
apply.
:---~-~~
Representative
for
charity.
Operate
scheduled
fundra1s1ng events at
grocery/department
t
sores
OUISId e Ihelr
exiblsl grReetmg h the
pu 1c.
eps
and
out help mfo and
offer
patriotiC
merchandise for a
donatiOn. Mst have
car. Be w1lling to
travel.
Camp/Expenses
paid
Seniors
weclcomed! .email
resume
to
jely@veteransoutrea
ch.com or call 866·
212·5592
Energetic person or
couple to assist with
operation of modern
dairy
to
'nclude
milking,
calves,
he1fers, and crops.
Hous1ng and utilities
part of package. Fax
resume to 304·372·
5385.

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Specializing in Insurance Jobs including,
storm, wind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding,
Decks, Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; Insured

304-773-5441
or 304-593-8458
o,,ner: Sam Smith, Mason, WV

r--_;,---------:-:--:-~~":""1

HRS Repall'' 1-740-992-3061
20+ yrs exp

YOUNG'S

Sen''c
"1OSt Heat'mg &amp;'
I es ·'
Cooling System (including
HeatpumpsJ and Controls
rankles~ Hot Water Heater
Ch
R I
ange-OUts 1 ep 3CCIDCntS.
Whole House Water Purifier~
(helps against
C8 intake)
-

CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling
· • Nc\\ Garages • Electrical &amp; J'Jumhing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
• \1nyl Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and
Porch Deck~ wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-(,215 740-59 1-0195

Flat 45.00 hrl) Rate+ 10.00 Trip Chrg

Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years local Experience

Stanlev Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

ROBfRT Bl88fLL
CO~STRUCTIO~

* Prompt and Quality Work

• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

* Reasonable Rates

* Insured *Experienced
References Available!
Caii.GaQ' Stanley

740-992-1671

Ceu740-591-8044

Stop &amp; Compare

Please leaYe message

Law Enforcement

Sales

33 Years Experience

WV#040954 Cell 740-416·2960
740-992-0730

==----~~~-

The
Middleport
Pohce Department 1s
takmg
applicat1ons
for
a
part-lime
dispatcher.
Applications can be
picked up at. the
Police Department at
237 Race Street,
Middleport.
Applications must be
returned by August
2, 2010. No Phone
Calls Please EOE

Formerly Robies Construction

FAMilY OWNED AND OPfRATfD

Rick Price · 17 yrs. Experience

~:=:===~:=:=~

RAVE:SS\VOOD

LEWIS

CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

ne

Jjwe CDII't help JOU
Wifl
find you the help you 11eed

CONCRETE CO~STRUCTI07\
'

Auto Accidents • \\ ork
Injuries • ~eck &amp; Back Pain•
Shoulder. Arm, Hip &amp; Leg
Pain • Headache~ • :1.1 assage
Therapy • Acupuncture

Ne11: Extended hours: .H·F

.

Sat &amp; nenings emergencies
M

tl

A

Concrete Removal and Replacement

All Types Of Concrete Work
30 Years Experience
Dr. Kcll} K.
.Jonc,, D.('.

td

304-273-5321

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimates

316 Washington St. ·Ravenswood

Medical

;;;;:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Crewleaders wanted

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;=;;;;;

to work w1th adults
with developmental
disabilities to prov1de
janitorial and lawn
ma1ntenance
services. Expenence
preferred. Must have
a valid Oh10 dnver's
license and high
school diploma or
GED. Send resume
to: Meigs Industries.
Inc. P.O. Box 307,
Syracuse,
01-1
45779

Fam11y
Medicane
Off1ces In Gallia &amp;
Jackson Co. seek
ReceptioniStlbacl&lt;
off1ce, FT/PT, skills
requared,
resume
only 7 40-441·9800

Two 3BR 14' wide
mobile
homes
$2,000 each Must
SELL OR TRADE
ASAP. Nice sound
umts that neej some
mmor repair 304·
675-3952 daytime M·

F.

I

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Service I Bus.
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9000
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CLOSEOUT! Save
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HRS REPAIR 740·
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Employment Chicken
is
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992-3061
taking
applications
for Shift Managers.
Accountine I
Qualified applicants
Miscellaneous
Financial
must
be
dedicated,hard
Tax
Experienced
working and h1ghly Jones Tree Serv1ce
Professional needed
mot1vated. Must be complete tree care,
in Meigs County.
willing to follow and stump gnnd1ng, bucket
Extra income, flexible
truck &amp; crane Ins·
enforce all policies Worker Comp. 740..
hours,
1elping
and procedures and 367.0266,
740..339·
others, possible full·
be a team player We 3366
time,
ongoing
offer
competitive
train1ng.
Send
wages, based on
resumes
or
expenence and pa1d ~A-em
-od
-:e,~
wo
-rk
-:-. -sm~
aJ1
tndications of interest
to:
Daily Sentinel, weekly. Apply 1n JObs, fence painting
person
at2206 odd Jobs, concrete
PO Box 729·17,
Upper River Road, 304·593·6569. ask for
Pomeroy, Oh 45769 Gallipolis
Matthew.

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;

· Myers Paving Inc.
Now Selling and Delivering
Limestone.
Will blacktop driveways;
parking lots, sealing
driveways, Tar &amp;Chip

1-304-675-2457
1-304-786-0319
1-304-593-0639

eat£ Marcum Construcuon
Commercial &amp; Residential

• Room addition~ • Roofing • "'"''"~''"II
• G~neral Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
flarns • Vin~ I &amp; \\ ood Fencing
Foundation'

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., long Bottom, OH
740·985·4141
740-416·1834
Full~ in\urt'd
Frl'c t:.'tim ut~ · 25+ ~cars e:~.pcrirnn:

1\ol uffiliall'l •ulh

\h~r \larrurn

"1111111111111111111111111 1111111111111 Ill•

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BULLETIN BOARD
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
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~
9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! •

EXPERIENCED .
BARTENDER

rl.OO'king For,
ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

Position availpble immediately
for qualified bartender for
Eagles Aerie #2171, located in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Resume to
P.O. Box 427
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
No phone calls
Help Wanted

THE
CLASSIFIED$
aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a lbank
You, and place an
ad .,In Memory"
of a loved one.
For more informa·
tion, contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

We haYe an immediate

MAKE
SOMlONl'S
DAY!

~allipolisl\ailp ~ribune

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

l)oint ,l9Irasnnt l\rnistrr
(304) 675-1333

H&lt;Mofm: ,\ HN11&lt;tddi111:1

opening for a part-time
customer service position at
our Gallipolis location . A
successful applicant must be
people oriented. pleasant
telephone etiquette,
professional and dependable.
Must have experience in
computers. and enjoy
working with numbers. and
the ability to work well in a
fast paced atmosphere.
For employment
consideration,
send resume to:
Pam Caldwell
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Help Wanted

'' A place to Call Home"
FOSTER PARENTS NEEDED
IN YOUR COUNTY!!!
$30·$45 A day for the care
of a child in your home.
Can be single, married, or
"empty nest". Call Oasis
to help a child find a place to
call.home.Training begins at
Albany
August 7. Call 1-877-325·1558
for More information or
to register for training

Sealed bids will be
accepted for fur·
nlshlng all labor,
materials
and
equlpment necessary to complete a
project known as
Emergency Power
Facllllles at the VII·
lage of Pomeroy
Water Office, 660
East Main Street,
Ohio
Pomeroy,
45769 until1 :00 PM
on Friday August 6,
2010. The project
consists of the sup·
ply and Installation

of generators at
Wastewater Pia
and Collection Sys·
tern. Bid specHicatlons
will
be
available at the
Pomeroy Water Of·
flee. The VIllage
Council
reserves
the right to accept
or reject any or all
bids.
Village of Pomeroy
Paul Hellman, VII·
lage Administrator •
Pomeroy, Ohio
(7) 16, 23, 30

�Friday, July 30, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD

NO. WE L05T SATTL.E

PRACiiC5 'fESTeRDAY
AND THE GeNERAL.
WAS FURIOUS

.FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Watch
1 Steam
parts
6 Drive off 44 Markets
11 Flared
45 Nounshes
dress
12 Limber
DOWN
13 Like some 1 Briefcase
2 Burglar
shoes
deterrents
14 Winter
quaff
3 Treat
15 Annoy
4 Unified
28 Colorful
16 Yonder
5 Washing- 10 Inclined
17 Producer's
bird
yacht
ton
dream
30 Ham18 Family
footballer
6 Entered
23 Early auto
med
19 Dallas
24 Distress
it up
sch.
Indy
20 Make fun
7 Freud
call
31 Compulof
topic
26 Get rid of
sion
21 Purpose
8 Accelerate
with
33 Derby
deception
prize
9 Preco22 Morale
27 Dark39 Zero
24lgnored
cious
the limit
Plaza
haired
41 "Norma
25 Sawbuck
resident
martens
27 ManhatNEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send 54 75 (ch~klm o.) to
tan area
Thomas J&lt;r..cph Book 1. PO Box 536475, Orlando, fL 32853-6475
29 Chopped
10
up
32 Live and
breathe
33 Bleachers
part
34 Outback
runner
35 Feedingtime need
36 Hold
32
37- favor
38 Beef cuts 35
40 Take to a
38
soapbox
42 Chuck's
sister, on
"Chuck"
7-30

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Oc 'jou KNOW WHAI
l: LIKE TO Do ON
VACATION?

..., GUESS I WAS WRONG ... MISERV' OOE6N
LOVE COMPANV'."

ZITS

Jerry Scott and J1m Borgman

MI(~TG~MI(

FAC6Ba?l'!

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

. ~coNCEPTIS
SUDOKU
..-.
.
.
'

. -: . . .
., I

·. by Dave ·Green
•

~

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9

Han·· 5-Dynmnic; 4-Posifm:;

~

1 4 7

6 4 2

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1
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Tire Star,; Slrou tlrt' Kuul of Day You II

•

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"I hit the ocean!"

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·-·

3 4 8

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

~ 9 G

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0£1.

HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for fnd.n~ julv
30,2010:
•
•
'fhi.., year, you will be opcrung
many new doors, but, of cour;c, the
Implication will be that some door;
mil close. You might not have the ron·
trol you desire in many in--tanCL"',
whid1 could c1usc you ~ub:it.mti.1l di&lt;&gt;comfort. Be ~ady to opt•n doors and
move p~t issue-. Often, you willlx·
drin~n by strong feelings. Be cn~ful
when you are like this; you could
· become acddent·pronc. If you nrc :-&gt;in
glc, your de&gt;irability b clc.tr. I lowcvcr;
a foreigner or soml.'Onc very, different
could occupy your thoughts a.; he or
she pops in and out of your life. If you
arc attached, work on more established ways of e:-.p~"sing your feelings. Gear thl.!m out rather than let
them build. ARIES i-m' t boring.

~· ·

~

~-Arli'Tilgc;

1-Drfficrtlt

ARIES {:vtan:h 21-Apri119)
*** Listen to your inner voice,
ancl don't inter.1ct \\ith others more
than necessary. Bypa"" mcctin~ until
late afternoon. )ou'll fl.'Cl OO.t as you
wa\'t' hello to the \H'Ckend. At the
same time, the Moon ._Jides into \'our
stgn. '!(might: Yes, the world is your
oy.. ter.
TAURUS (April 20-l\1,1\' 21)
****'Use the daylig~t hours to
tht• max. You could be shocked b\'
everything that goes down in )'\)Ur
immediate environment. Atkmpt to
distance your.;clf .:md g.1in insight.
Push could come to slim'l.' bchw&lt;:n
,\..,sociates. Trv to o.;tav out ot it.
Tonight: 111e ks" said the better.
GEM~I (l\lar 22-Junc 20)
**** You mu.o.;t say ''yes" to
being .1leader during times that you
wish did not exist. Someone ) ou cnre
about a)ldd get downright fink\: You
might wonder why thi" is happcnlllg.
fonight let go of your problems.
&lt;:.ANCER Qunc 21-Jul) 22)
***** lJndeEStanding C\'Oh'l.'S to
a new level. How vou h.mdle &lt;;&lt;&gt;m&lt;.&gt;·
one' ._ difficult &lt;1ttitude and demanding
nature defines a problem. 111osc in
dlarge will h.we a tcndcnC\ to .1ct tn
unanticipated w.ws. Iomght Jhc Je.1d
phlyer.
LEO Quly 2)-Aug. 22)
****You an• the mastl!r of n.•l,1tin~ should y\m cl1oose to ncccpt tlu,.,
mJe. Dealing with what you might
hear .md with anger t,lkl'S t,1lent. i\-. ,,

re&lt;rult, vour perspective of a key person change-... lonight rake off ASAP.
VIRGO (Aug. 2.3-Sept. 22)
*'**** U?ferring to others needs
to LOme naturallv, a&lt;&gt; vou shall ~An
undcrst;mding of hm~· tough someone
could be to dc.1l \\ ith emerges. You
might \\".1nt to Sputnik out of the situ,,tion. Tonight: With a favorite pcrwn.
LIBRA (St•pt. 23-0d. 22)
****You could be a lot more
mtcns&lt;• than you realize. Your ability
to undcrstat:~d what others arc doing
wnw:-&gt; through, but with a great deal
of fntstration. You might feel limited,
but know thnt you can break past
these fcclings.1onight: Don't be alone.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
**'* * Your creativity will be even
more mcrgized if you mobilize your
anger or frustratton. There are solutions, but you mtbt want to find them.
Allow your;clf to brain-.torm and
bnng the correct solution fon\'ard.
Tomght: Put your feet up.
SAGITTARIUS (1\:ov. 22-Dcc. 21)
**** Anch,lring in on ba:-.ie:;
could be mo~ tmportant than you
thought. Certainly, you could be gaining a pcn.pectivc you might have
\\i&lt;&gt;hcd newr occu!Tt'd. Realize what
is h.1ppcning. l:nde~tand what is
going on in your immediate 9rc1e.
Tonight: Let your hair dt)Wn as only
you C&lt;lrl.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
* Kl'CP .1 convc~ation moving, cn:n if you nught be speechless
on sonw kvel. You \\ill have a wav
and ,tylc of ctmmumicatino-. Don't get
int&lt;l a difticult situ.1tion with a boss.
Hm\ &lt;lllt quick!;: lonight I lead home
cl!ld be happy that it b the weekend.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
* *** You might \Vant to open up
and di&lt;;au;-. what is lu1ppening, as an
outrageous "ituation could chan~e
radically. Undcrst.md what is qomg on
in } our immediate circle. )Co;, there are
a lot uf huthc.Kb. 10night Go \\ ith the
unexpected.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
*'* *'* You Ml~ m pnme shape,
m.-.king v. hat you \'&lt;ant happen.
Listl•n to your 1nner voire. You cannot
hold on to some things. Learn tt) let go
gr.1ciou-.ly. '\partner could be chalJrnging plur beliefs. ·ronight Go \\ith
th.• uncxpectl.&gt;d.

* **

facq~tl'liuc Bi~ar JS.o/1

flrt• Jntmll't

at Jrt tp:l/urww.jncJiuclmdngar. com.

�-----------------------Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

2010 NASCAR SPRINT
CUP SCHEDULE AND
STANDINGS

•

Feb 6 - x BudweJSer Shoot01J1 (l&lt;EIIM
Harvlc:k)
Feb t 1
x·Gatorade Duel 1 (J7mNI
Jot&gt;nson)
Feb II
x Gato;-ade D~oel 2 (Kasey
Kahno
Feb. 14
Daytona 500 (Jam1e
McMurray)
Feb :11 ~Auto Club 500 (J1mm1e
• Johnson)
Feb 28 - Shelby Amencan. Las Vegas
(J1mm1o Johnson
Mar:h 7
Kobeh Tools 500 (Kurt Busch)
Mard&gt; 21 -Food City 500 Brstol Tenn
(.mrruo Jol"!nson)
.March 28- Goody a Fast Pam Retiel
o600 Mart nsvilo. 1/a Denny HaM II"!)
&lt;Ap&lt;n 10- Subway Fresh Fif 600
Al/Oildale AtiZ (Ryan Newman)
Apr~ 18 - Samsung Mobile 500 Fort
Worth Texas IDenny Hamlin)
Aprol 25 - Aarons 499 Talladega, Ala
(KeYlll HatVlCk)
May 1 - Heat!' Calhoun 400 ''bchmon&lt;f.
Va (Kylo BusCh)
May 8 - Southerr 500, Darlington S.C.
!Denny Hamltn)
•May 16- AutiSm Speaks 400, Dover,
•Oel (Kyle Bus,h)
May 22 - x·Spnnt Sl'owdown, Concord,
N.C. (Marttn Tru x Jr.)
May ~ - x-NASCAR Spnnt AII·Star
Race.~._9oncon~ N C (Kurt Busch)
May ow - Cocli.Cota 600 Concord N.C.
• (KurtB~)
6 - G ette FUSion ProGroda 500.
Long Pond Pa (Denny Hamfin)
• o 13- He wa Good' Sour CreaM
DtpS 400 BIOOklyn 1.\.'ct&gt; (Denny Ham"')
;JUne 20 Toyotal$ave Mart 350.
;:sonoma Cahf (Jimm.e Johnson)
;June 27 Lenox lndust11a1 Tools 301 .
.J,.oudon N H (JIIIVTliO Johnson)
uly 3 -Coke Zero 400 Powered By
Coca·Cola, Daytona BenCh, Fla. (Kevtn
Harviek)
\July 10 -J.IfoLOCk.com 400, Joliet, Ill.
CDavtd Reuttmann)
July 2'S
B~ckynrd 400, Indianapolis
[Jar1e McMurray)
Aug •
Pe~nsy1Var1a 500. Long Pond.
Po
.Aug 8 - Heluva Good' Sour Cream D ps
oat The Glen 'tlntkirls Glen N Y
oiWij 15 - Carbx 400 Brooklyn MICh
&lt;Aug 21 - I
TOOlS Ntghl Race Bnstol
Tenn
Sep 5 - Labor Day ClaSSIC 500
Hampton Ga
p 1 1 - Ric:hmond 400 Richrlond. Va
Sep 19 - Sylvanta 300 Loudol'l, N H
Sep 26- AAA 400, Dover Del
.oct 3 - Price ChOpper 400, Kansas
City. Kan
Oct 10 - Pepsi Ma• 400, Fontana, Calif.
~t. 16 - NASCAR Banking 500,
Concord N c.
Oct 24- TUMS Fast Rehel 500.
Martln,ville. Va
Oct 31
AMP Energy 500, TaOadega,
Ala
Nov 7
L011e Star 500. Fon Wol'lh
Texas
Nov 14
A! zona 500, Avondale Anz
Nov 21 -Ford 400 Homesteac! Fla
x-ronpotnts race
2010 Driver Standings
t Kevin Harvdl, 2 920
2 Jolt Gordon 2 736
;J Denny Hamlm 2 660
~ J mm10 JohnSon 2 659
5 Kurt BuSCh 2 658
6 Kyle Busch 2.630
7 Joff Bunon, 2 615
8 Man Kcnse:h 2 573
9 Tony Stowart 2.544
10. Garl Edwards, 2,496
11. Greg Biffle 2.462
• 2 Chnt Bowyer. 2,446
1 '.1 Mark Martin 2 384
14 Da e Earnh~rdt Jr 2 353
1• Ryan Newman 2 299
16 Jamte McMurray 2 295
17 Kasey Kahne 2 290
18 Davtd Reu!l!ll8M 2 269
19 Joey Logano 2 241
20 Mar1in Truex J 2 145

• .:uno

2010 NATIONWIDE SERIES
SCHEDULE, STANDINGS
Fob 13 DRIVE4COPO 300 Clooy
Stowart
Feb 20 Stater Bros 300 IKyta Busch)
f cb. 27- SniT's Town 300. las Vegas
(Kevin Harvtck)
March 20 - Scotts Turt BuHder 300
(Jusnn AIIIJRier)
April 3 - Noshvtlle 300, L.ebanon, Tenn
(Kevtn H~rvlck)
Apr II - Bashes Supermar1&lt;ets 200
Avondale, Anz (Kyle BuSCh)
Ap 19- ORa ty'Auto Pans 300, Fort
Wol'lh Texas (Kyle B\ISCh)
April25- Aarons 312 Ta ;ac!ega Ala
Brad Kese!owski
April 30 - Bubba Burger 250 RJchmbnd
Va (Brad Kesebwski)
May 7 - Royal Purple 200 Darlinglon
'S.C. (Dennv Ham m)
May 15 - He uva Good 200 Dover, De
lKyto Busch)
May 29 -TeCh-Net Auto Service 300.
Col'cord, N C (Kyle BuSCh)
June 5
Federated Auto Parts 300.
Lebano~. Tenn !Brad Keselowski)
June 12
Me11er 300. Sparta, Ky. (Joey
Logano)
June 19
Bucytus 200, Elkhart Lake,
Wts (Cart Edwards;
June 26 - Ne"" Ergland 200. Loudon
"t.J.H (Kyle Busch)
July 2 - Subway Jalapeno 250. Daytona
Beach FJa (Dale Earnhardt Jr
July 9 - Dollar General 300, Jofiel II
(Kyle Busch)
July 17 - I.IISSOOO Illinois Dodge Dealers
250 Madison I (Cart Edwards)
July 24 - Kroger 200 ndianapo4ls (Kyle
Busch
July 31 -US Callolar 2&lt;;(), Newton.

owa

Aug 7 - Zoppo 200 at The Glen, Watkins
Glen NY
.Aug 14 - Cat1ax 250 Brooklyn, Mich.
.A\Jll 20 F'ood Ctty 250, Bnstol, Tenn.
Aug 29 - NAPA Auto Pans 200,
Montreat
Sep. 4 - Atlanla 300. Hampton, Ga.
Sep 10 - Vtrgtnltl 529 College Savings
250. Ricl&gt;mond Va
Sep 25
Dever 200, Dover Del.
Oct 2 - Kansas Lottery 300 '&lt;ansas
City Kan
Oct 9 - Campmg World 300 Foc&gt;tana.
Ca f
Oct 15 Dollar Gene:-al300 Concord.
"lC
Oct 23 - G teway 250 MadiSOn II
"lov 6 - O'Rerlly Auto Pans Chal e&lt;'g8,
Fort Worth Texas
";ov 1'3 - Anzona 200 Avondale, Arz
"lov :20- Ford 300 Homestead. Fla.
2010 Driver St1ndings
1 Brad Keae1owsk1 3,189
2 CaM Edwards. 2.984
3. Justtn A!lgater. 2.691
4. Kylo Buath 2.681
5 Paul Menartl, 2,505
6 Kev n Harviek, 2 434
7 Stove Wallace. 2 338
0. Brendan Gaughan 2 277
9 Trowr Bayno 2 205
10 Jason Lefll r 2 16'
11 Reed Sorenson 2 112
12 .M1Y Logano 2 108
• 13 Brian 5c tt. 2 103
14 M
AMott 2 079
15TonyR
2041

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, .July 30, 2010

! Indy

shows Childress team
back on top in NASCAR

Bv

CHRts JENKINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

INDIANAPOLIS - If
anybod)
needed morl!
1
e\ idcnce to confirm that
Richard C'hilclr~ss Racing
i~ back a~ a KASCAR
power brok~r, Sunday's
organ ization-\vide romp
at th~ Indianapolis Motor
Speedway could be
1 Exhibit A.
Spnnt Cup point:Jeader Kevin Harvick
finished second for RCR.
onl)
Jamie
trailing
~1cMurray. His car. like
Harvick ·s. wa:-. pO\\ered
by a motor built b) the
t-::a rnha rd t-C h il dress
Racing engine shop.
Harvick's teammates
\\eren't far behind. with
Clint Bowyer in fourth
and Jeff Burton in sixth.
Pablo
And
Juan
Monto)a. who led much
of th~ race before 'getting
::.huffled back on a late p~
strategy decision and
subsequent crash, also
had an ECR engine.
After falling from its
perch as a per~nnial contender in NASCAR.
Richard Childress· team
has been on the rebound
since
last
year's
Brickyard race.
"From last \ear to thi:-;
point. it's • a 180.''
Han·ick said. ''It's a lot
easier and more exciting
and everybody has a lot

better mindset coming to
the race track than we did
last year. In the end. you
work just as hard to run
last as you do to run first.
To see the reward that the
guys arc getting and we
all get from running better is a lot more fun."
Nobody could blame
Childress for thinking
about quitting racing after
Dale Eamhardt. his lon!!time friend and star driver.
died at Daytona in 200 I .
Childress pressed on:
That's \\hat Dale would
want. he told himself.
Childrc:-.s took on
investors. helping him
mnk~ a commitment to
improving the team's
engineering department.
He navigated sponsorship issues and kept
Harvick from leaving
despite public squabbling
over his contract.
The
team
finally
appeared to be on the
upswing in 2007 and
2008. but took a significant st~p backward last
year. when all four drivers "'er~ shut out of victory lane and missed the
Chase for the Sprint Cup.
Now Childress appear:-.
to be solidly back on top.
·'The guys on the team
... at RCR are just racers." Harvick said. "You
don't have a huge
amount of guys that are
just. I guess. engineer-

ing-based. would be the
most polite way to put it.
Everybody ha-. raced at a
lower level and likes to
be a part of doing well
and the way that we function at RCR is very blue
collar and I like that."
It 's shaping up as a
potential championship'
sea-.on for Harvick. who
leads Jeff Gordon by 184
points after Indy.
Han•ick's stellar sea~on
has been playing out
somewhat under the radar
because he has two victories,
while
Jimmie
John-.on and Denny
Hamlin have five each.
The
often-outspoken
Harvick doesn't mind
being outside the spotlight.
"Absolutely. that makes
things a lot easier." he
said. "It lets us focus on
what we need to focus on.
The attention and the
things that have or haven't
come with that don't really matter to us as long as
we're getting the results
on the race track."
Burton and Bowyer are
contenders. too: if the
Chase started today. both
drivers \\'Ould be in.
The team is building
better cars - and better
engines. in a joint venture
with Dale Earnhardt Inc.
The company also provides the engines in the
c-ars McMurray and
Montoya drive for the

Earnhardt Ganassi Racin!!
team. which is the result
of a merger bet\veen Chip
Ganassi's team and the
racing side of DEI.
After lnd). Ganassi
sounded like a satisfied
customer.
"I want to thank
Richard for giving me the
29 engine this weekend.
He gave me the 29 and
the 31 cngines:· Ganassi
joked after ~1c~1urray's
win, referring to the car
numbers for Harvick and
Burton. ··r tell him that
every "'cek. you know.''
With the champio:1ship
a real po-.sibility. Harvick
still wants to see continued improvement. But he
marvels at the progress
the team has made.
"It's pretty hard to put
it in pcrspecti\ e just for
the fact that last vear we
were. at best. a midpack
car on a good dav:·
Harvick said Sunday.
"(Last )Car':-. Brickyard)
was kind of the turnaround where 11 started.
and where last year we
got our ne\\ cars. And
even today when I say we
had a top-five car and
\\ flS capable of \\inning
because we took a chance
and were able to run fa:-.t
enough to have a chance.
with our cars last year we
couldn't even take that
chance because the)
weren't fast enough."

Auto Racing
Glance
SPRINT CUP
PENNSYLVANIA 500

I

S1to Long Pond. Po
Schedule Fric!ay practtce (Speed
noon 1 30 p m . qual1tytng (Speed,
3 3().5 p. ), E~turday. pmcti~
(Speed 9 3(1-1' am II am -12·30
pm) S nday ce pr. CESPN 1
.530pm
Track Pooono Raceway trta"{!~ 2 5

•

NATIONWIDE
U.S. CELLULAR 250

ILipS

Latt yur. Btad KeseiOYiskl passed
Kyle Busct wtlh etghllaps leh and
held on to Wlr" t; e tnaugural
NattOnwfdo •aco .11 the track
Last week: Busc race&lt;! to his hftl'
Vldory 1n hiS, t SIX NationWide
Slans nd etghth of the year hoklmg
off Carl Edwards a1 0 Re y Raro.o.-ay
Park C :'l')()r"t Inc!
Fullacta: B ICh 'las 38 Nalionwida
one second behi"ld Marl&lt; Martr
-48 on the care&amp;f list Busch 'sn'1
runnlng lot the chan"pionsh!p a'"er
taking the season trtle last year.
Kesetowsl&lt;l has a 20S-polf1t lead over
second place wards • Miehao
Annett driving the No 15 TCiyQ!a 'or
Germatn Racing IS from Des Momes.
Next race: Ztppo 200 at the Glen,
Aug 7 Watkins Glon International,
Watkins Glen N Y
Online; ht1p www nascar com

Briefs: Roush transferred to Mayo Clinic
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ROCHESTER. J\tiJut.
- .t':ASCAR team owner
Jack Roush has been
transferred to the Mayo
Clinic following surgery
on facial injuries he ,ustained in a plane crash in
Wisconsin.
Roush Fcn\\ay Racing
said in a statement
Thursda) that Roush \vas
taken to the ~layo Clinic
on \\'cdnesday and i~ in
serious but stable condition. The team does not
say what kind of injuries
he has from the accident
Tuesday night.
Roush's
pa:-.senger.
friend Brenda Stricklin.
was treated and rele&lt;&gt;sed
from a Wiscon:-.in hospital Wedncc;day afternoon.
Roush was attending
the Exp~rim~ntal Aircraft
annual
Association's
AirVenture in Oshkosh.
Wis. The a\·iation buff
abo survived a crash in
2002.

Tony Stewart and
Jim Boeheim team
for hoops win
SYRACUSE. N.Y.
NASCAR dri\'er Tony
Stewart has something in
common with Syracuse
basketball coach Jim
Boeheim - thev can
both shoot hoops. •
In
an
appearance
Wednesda)
at
the
Cannelo K. Anthony bas-

ketball center at S) racuse
University, Stewart. who
"as bu1n ami

'ai~t:u

Labonte hired to
replace Ambrose
at JTG in 2011
HARRISBURG. K.C.
- JTG Daugherty Racing
has hired Bobbv Labonte
to
replace • Marcos
Amhro:-.c next season.
Labonte's hiring to
drive the No. 47 Toyota
was made Wednesday. a
day after the team said
Ambrose was moving on.
Labonte
~won
NASCAR 's top championship in 2000 for Joe
Gibbs Rarmg His last
victory in the Spnnt Cup
s~rics was in 2003 for
JGR. and he's moved
around a good bit since
then.
He started this year with
TRG ~1otorsports but terminated the contract in
June. He drove a fe\v
races for Robby Gordon.

740-742-2511
1-800-837- 217
""'' .rutlandbottlcgas.com
Gallipolis • The Plains • .Jackson
Torch • I
• :\JcConncls\ illc • Rutland

TopNASCAR
owners hold town
hall meeting

Construction, Inc.
General &amp; Mechanical Contractors
Robert W. McMillan
President

Rt. 1 Box 119, Old Town Road
Point Pleasant, WV

CAMPING WORLD
TRUCKS
POCONO MOUNTAINS
125

Site l..o:lg PQnd Pa
re-energize the sport.
Schedule Friday l'lllc!J&lt;:e Speed
S
3().7 P."" Sal~orday qua
KASCAR has histori(Specxl 1 (). 1 • A.m ) r:tco 1 p.tl'
callv been run bv the
Spee&lt;' 1230-Jpm)
four1ding France family I Tt ck Pocono Raceway (tnargte 2
as a dictatorship. and I Roce dlalan~e: 125 rntles, 5G 'aps.
Last year: naugural •ace.
although
participants
la$1 week. Ron Hornaday raced to
could off~r opinions. the 1J hts
l1rs1 victory o! the year O:l'd
senes·reCC"rd 46th lead ng 129 ol
mling family made all the
200 laps at 0 Re :Y Raoewa Park
decisions. It was some'Pie tour·llme senes champtO!"'
enapped a 22-tace winless streak
what bene" alent. though.
V.O
hls k; l'l!l victory Bl the track
and the late Bill France~Jr.
Fast facta: Spml Cup dr!Y8&lt;$ Oe:Yty
Hamin K
Kahne ard Ellie:'
ttaditionall) hosted an
Sa er ""8 .,
t. ld H
ckiv.:lg
annual fi:-.hing trip folthe "lo. • 5 T&lt;1(018 lor B: y Ba!leoo
Mnt0&lt;$!X)!I
s 'o&lt;..r SP11nl C&lt;Jp ' •
lowing the July race in
tor s a! the
k Todd Bodine
Da) tona in which dri\ ers
leads 11 o eeason stnl'dings, '77
potr'IS ahead ol Aric A mrrola
Muftrand 0\\ ners could raise
truek quallybg Wll be used 'or the
question~ and concerns
fir&amp;l t1me to ~ term1ne the starttng r
lineup '"he trucks wtll be released 1r
away from the race track.

CHARLOTTE. t\' .C.
- The top team owners
in NASCAR set their
indi' idual agendas aside
for a unified brainstorming session on how to cut
costs and help revive the
auto racing industry.
"We're all stakeholders
Jeff Gordon has
in this thing. and we all
ne'•'
spotter this
want to know ''What can '
"
we do to make this better? weekend at Pocono
How can we save some
money and help the
CHARLOTTE. ~.C.
shO\\ '!' .. team owner Rick - Jeff Gordon will haw
Hendrick
told
The a new spotter slatting thb
Associated Press on weekend at Pocono
Wednesday.' the day after Raceway. a move the
representatives from about team believes will help
10 race teams gathered at the four-time NASCAR
Hendrick Motorsports to champion
snap
the
discuss ideas.
longest losing streak of
The meeting was an his career. ~
offshoot of the '·town
Hendrick Motorsport.s
hall'' style sessions hired Jeff Dickerson on
~ASCAR has been holdWednesday.
moving
ing with competitors quickly to grab the spotsince earl} last season to ter after he unexpectedly
give drivers and teams an parted ways last week
opportunity to discuss the with
Kyl~
Busch.
issues facing America ·s Dickerson had been with
No. I racing series. Busch s1nce his early
L nable to shake the slide days at HMS. and the driin both attl!ndance and ver
often
credited
TV rat111gs. 1\ ASCA.R Dickerson for guiding
·and its participants have him on the track to se,er'=
been ~vorking together to al \'ictories.

~ci-~tl~tic

Rutland Bottle Gas
Serving you for over 60 years

in

Indiana, chatted "'ith
Bocheim about former
Indiana coach Bob Knight
and auto racing, then
teamed with Boeheim to
\\in a shooting contest.
' Bocheim ~ said
he
thought he was going to
have to ghe Stewart a
shooting les~on. but
"he':-. got good form.
He's a lot better at this
than I v. ould be dri\ ing a
race car. 1· cl be in the
wall on the first turn."

made hb 600th career
start for Phoenix Racing
carlici lhb momh at
Daytona. and is now temporarily back with TRG.

•

Slle Nov.1on Iowa
Schedule F day prac:tic&amp; GU&amp;Ii!yrg Sallr.day 7 30 p."1 IESPN2 7·
1.30 "
Ti'acl&lt; owa Speedway vat, 0 875
m1 1
Race distance. 218 75 es 250

I

8$)

opprox1mately 25·second ,ncrements
lor thlltr two a1- runs. The qualilymg
order w be set by t:WerlmQ the dt vers posruons .. 1/'(l lll"lal pradiC9
Ne•t race. ~
v le 200 Aug. 7
Nas v Superapee&lt;tway G.adevi!le
~""
Onllno http rwww nascar corn

FORMULA ONE
HUNGARIAN GRAND
PRIX
Slle B~japest Hungary
Schedule Fnday. pract ce \Speed 8·
9 30 am ), Saturday pract1ee. qual~
lytng (Speed 8 9:30 a m ), Sunday.
'iCO, 8 81"1' (Speed. 7;30-10 a.M.
230·5 p.m.)
Track Hungaronng 0road coun;e,
272 lOS)
Race distance: 190 53 miles 70
•
;&gt;S

Last year: M&lt;. ran s Lev.1S Har!ltor
I"&amp;C8d I the
I ol hiS two 20('9 VICI&lt;&gt;nes Fe!l'a s Fe:.pe Massa sustalned
Ulllllle
tracru &amp;S.., ~
....nen he r as on 'he helmet by
and crashed rru; a tJre t..mief
Last week: Fernando A onso wo:
tre Germ Grard P'iX after Ferrar
ordered Fe pe Massa to 111119 hrs
team ato the lead Fe ran was ,I od
$100,000
Fast !acts: Hamuton, the w1nnet n
Turkey and Canada, loads the sea·
son standings wllh 157 Mclaren
teammate Jenson Button ( 143) rs
second fOllowed by Red Bull s Mark
Webber 1 1o) and SebastJan Vetlel
136) and AIO: o 123).
Nex1 race: Be 9 ar&gt; Grand P x Aug
29 C rw~ de Spa-Fra~t.ar-ps,
Spa Francorthamps. Belgulrn.
Online I'll+' v.ww 1 u1a 1 corn

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