<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4445" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/4445?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T00:16:36+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14372">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/56dba6ca229bd631738ca19409ef6d79.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7257e73ba683f02b55185310a3e37aee</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="15437">
                  <text>Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Porbnan resigns as
budget director, A2

78 killed in Baghdad
mosque bombing, A6

BY DoUG

fERGUSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS•'

OAKMONT. Pa. - Jack
Nicklaus figures at least one
of his major championship
records is safe.
Tiger Woods left Oakmont
having squandered another
chance to win a major while
playing in the last group,
unable to make but one birdie
in the final round of the U.S.
Open despite having a short
iron for his approach to the
green on a half-dozen occasions.
The next opportunity maybe will be at
Carnoustie for the British
Open, where he is the twotime ·defending champion.
And if he does show up, it
will be his first major as a
father. His wife is due sometime between now and then.
Nicklaus had his first child
when he was an amateur, so
he won all 18 majors with
children.
"l think that (record) is
probably in pretty good
shape," Nicklaus said earlier
this year.
·
The magic number has
always been 18 for Woods,
who effectively launched his
assault on the Nicklaus
benchmark when he won
four straight majors endi_ng
with the 2001 Masters, gtving him six at age 25, and he
hasn't hit too many dry spells
· since then.
This is not one of them.
Sunday at Oakmont was
his fourth straight major in
the final group, an incredible
statistic that gets forgotten
because the U.S. Open was
his second straight major as a·
runner-up.
AJmost as impressive as
the 18 majors for Nicklaus
are the 19 times he finished
second.
Is it possible Woods can
reach that record before the
other?
It seems preposterous now,
because Woods has 12 trophies and only four consolation prizes. What the last year

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SPORTS

AEP says commitment to Meigs IGCC is unchanged

AP photo collar around the green, and
Angel Cabrera of Argentina. winner of the 107th U.S. Open Golf Championship, jokes with he had to make an 8-foot par
Tiger Woods, left, at the Oakmont Country Olub in Oakmont, Pa. Sunday.
putt just to stay in the game.
Even without trophies,
has shown, however, is that thing.
been atop the leaderboard or Woods hasn't lost his myswinning starts with putting
And maybe th at's what within two shots seven times. tique.
yourself in position, and no awaits Woods.
He has lost the last two
He had to hole a shot from
one has done that better, not
The shocker was not that majors to guys who hardly fit the 18th fairway at Augusta
even close.
he missed the cut at Winged the protile of Tiger slayers. National to force a playoff
"My last four majors," Fool last year for the first One was Zach Johnson at the with Johnson, and the normal
Woods said, ticking off his time in a major, but that it Masters, Who made all the guy from .Cedar Rapids,
record, " I, I, 2, 2. Not terri- took 10 years for it to happen. birdie putts that Woods did- Iowa, started havin~ abnorble~ but it could have been a Woods is 12-0 in the majors n\ The other was Angel mal. thoughts watchmg from
little better."
with at least a share of the 54- Cabrera at Oakmont, who hit the locker room.
In an age of instant gratifi- hole lead; one of these times, all the iron shots that turned
"Before he hit it, I'm like,
cation, it can be difficult to he won't win. It happened to· out badly for Woods.
' He's done stranger things;:·
see' the big picture.
Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer,
Cabrera, playing four Johnson said. "The guy is a
What made Nicklaus such even Ben Hogan.
groups ahead of Woods, was phenom."
a dominant force in the
There have been 29 majors in the fairway on the par-4
Woods only needed a sinmajors was that he was usual - when Woods trailed going II th and stuffed his shot into gle birdie over his final three
ly around the top of the into the final round, and he Z feet for birdie. Woods was holes at Oakmont to force a
leaderboard on the final still hasn't won from behind. in the bunker and fanned a playoff, and as . Cal&gt;rera
round, finishing second by
"I haven't gotten it done," shot that found the bunker, watched from the clubhouse,
making a mistake ('63 he said .. "Put myself there. leading to his only bogey on ' he was·making plans for one
British Open), getting out- and haven't gouen it done." the back nine.
more round of Oakmont in a
played (Lee Trevino, Tom
Th.al will change, too.
From the first cut of rough playoff.
Watson), or simply having
What separates Woods on the 15th, Cabrera cut a , But it didn't happen.
too much ground to make up from everyone else in the shot toward .the flag that
Woods did well to two-putt
in the final round ('64 game is the number of times stopped 3 feet behind the flag for par on the 244-yard 16th
Masters).
·
he gives himself a chance, for a birdie that ultimately hole. His best chance came at
During a quarter-century of and those are starting to pile was the difference. Woods the 17th, a par 4 where the tee
contending in majors, he has up in alarming fashion. In the had a similar lie and put it box was moved to the front
experiencedjustaboutevery- last I0 majors, Woods has over the flag, into a shaggy and 'hole played 306 yards.

Indians hammer Phillies, 10-1
BY ToM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - Cliff
Lee followed his return
from the disabled list with a
more important comeback.
After a rough start to the
season, the left -hander ·
finally looks all right.
Lee shut down the NL's
highes t-scoring team and
Kelly Shoppach hit a threerun homer off Cole Hamel s,
with
leading the Cleveland
CLEVELAND (AP) Indians to a !0-1 rout of the
With
a few gawking
Philadelphia Phillies 'on
Phillies
surrounding him,
Monday night.
Charlie
Manuel
pointed to
Lee (4-4 ), in jured and
the
spot
where
Mark
inconsistent most of thi s ·
McGwire
dented
the
season, improved to I 0-1 in
Budweiser
sign
in
left
interleague play. He won
for just the second time in fi eld al Jacobs Field and
six starts, allowing one run · recalled the time Big Mac
and fiv e hits in seven nearl y put one into the
innings - his longest start street.
Philadelphia's manager
since May 8.
"I didn' t do my job there remembered ·towering
for a while," said Lee, who homers by Albert Belle,
missed all of April after long ones by Jim Thome ·
getting hurt early in spring and Cleveland's miracutraining. "But now I'm lous comeback in 200 I
starting to get where I want against Seattle, when the
to be. Hopefully, I can Indians • overcame a 12carry this over and .keep i1 run deficit.
Fond memories of great
rolling."
.
hitters
and great games
Shoppac h, batting .552
flood
ed
back to Ma.nuel
(16-for-29) in his last eight
on
Mqnday
as he returned
games, co nnected ·in the
to
Cleveland
for the first
second inning off Hamel s
time
since
he
was fired as
(9-3), the NL's only ninethe
Indians
manager
in
game winner. The left-ban der was roughed up for six 2002.
Manuel spent nearly 15
runs ~nd eight hits in five
years with the Indians innings.
Shoppach added an RBI many as the .club's
double in the sixth, Jason beloved hitting coach Michaels homered in the before replacing Mike
seventh · and
Grady Hargrove as manager in
Sizemore had two hits, two 2000.
steals - giving him a
career-hi~h 22 and luck."
Ryan Howard hit his 15th
scored twice as the recently
homer
for Philadelphia in
up-and-down
Indians
the
sixth
.
. improved to 8-9 in June.
Lee began the season on
About the only thing that
didn't go Cleveland's way the DL with an abdominal
was Casey_ Blake's hitting strain, but uniil recently he
streak, wh1ch ended at 26 hadn't'pitched up to expecgames - .the longest in the tations and had heard so
majors this season. Bl ake, from disappointed manager
who went 0-for-3 and was Eric Wedge. Lee, though.
hit by a pitch, was on deck had little trouble with the
when Josh Barfield fli ed Phillies.
out to end the eighth .
He worked in a curveball
"I wanted it to end," and chan.geup with hi-s fastBlake deadpanned. "Reall y ba II , a mixture the Phillies
it just wasn't in the cards. couldn ' 1 handle.
That's why that streak (Joe
Lee's early season strug,DiMaggio's 56-gamer) is gles had weighed on him
so amazing. It takes a lot of more than he publicly

Charlie not sorry
about parting
Cleveland

admitted.
"He was fru strated after
the games," Blake said. "I
told him, ' You're thinking
about it too much.' He's
now pitching like we' ve
seeu him before."
The Indians backed Lee
with sparkling defense.
Barfield made a diving
stop at second base and
threw out Chase Utley from
his knees in the fourth. In
the sixth , right . fielder
Franklin Gutierrez snagged
Aaron Rowand 's liner as he
cras hed into ·the padded
wall. And in the · seventh,
Lee threw a one-hopper to
shortstop Jhonny Peralta,
who fielded it, stepped on
second and threw to first
for a double play.
"We had some chances to
score, but we couldn't get
the hit to get us a couple of
runs," said Phillies manager Charlie Manuel, · who
made hi s return
to
Cleveland for the first time
since being fired as Indians
manager in 2002. "We hit .
some balb hard, but their
outfielders made so me
good plays. Give them
credit."
Lee's wildness had him
in momentary trouble i.n the
fifth. ·The Phillies loaded
the bases when Lee hit two
batters - both on 0-2
pitches - but he got Shane
Victorino to line out to first
basemen Victor Martinez .
Shoppach 's · third homer
was dtsputed by Manuel
and Rowand, who argued
that the ball didn't clear the
19-foot-high wall in center.
But TV replays showed
Shoppach's shot glance off
the metal railing before
falling back to the field.
Hamels was annoyed
with his choice of pitches
to Shoppach, and . he was
equally di sturbed by hi s
overall performance.
"I had thrown him two
changeups in a row and
then l threw a third one,'~ he
said . 'That 's something I
need to learn from . I should
have thrown him something
else. It ticks me off.
"When you give up five ·
runs in ·th e fir st two
innings, you don ' t put
yourself in. a good spot and
you don't put your team in
a good spot."

Woods chose 3-wood 311d
found the right bunker, where
it looked as though h~ would
at least give himself a decent
look at birdie. He said the
ball caught a tiny rock in the
bunker, taking off just
enough spin that it rolled paSt
the flag, down the bank and
off the green.
'
Even as Woods faced a
tricky lie between the frrst cut
of rough and the deeper stuff
along the 18th fairway, ~
had only a wedge in his hand:·
Cabrera was asked if .he
thought Woods would make
birdie, and his answer needed
no interpretation."
.
"Si," the 37-year~old
Argentine said.
"Tiger can birdie any hole.
He's the No. 1," Cabrera later
said through a translator:
But not at this major. And
not at the last major.
"Finishing second is never .
fun," Woods said.
· But it's not all bad, either.
And over the course of his
career, it's bound to happen
more often.

J. REED

Construction could be
moved up if a favorable
Supreme Court decision is
POMEROY +- In a filing rendered and cost recovery
Monday with the Publ ic is approved.
Utilities Commission of
An AEP auomey filed a
Ohio, American Electric status report with the PUCO
Power said plans to move on its proposal to build ·an
operation of its Great Bend IGCC clean-coal. generating
plant to 2017 is due to the plant on property the compauncertainty or the Ohio ny owns in Lebanon
Supreme Court's ruling on Township, the same day AEP
challenges to proposed cost filed documents with the
recovery. but said "the land- Public Service Commission
scape for· building new gen- of West Virginia to proceed
eration in Ohio re mains with construction of a $2.23
uncertain."
billion "twin" project to be
BY BRIAN

• Reds beat Oakland.
SeePage B1

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Jobless figures
record decline ·

built in Mason County. There
are no projected regulatory
hurdles in West Virginia, and
that plant could be operating
as soon as 2012.
"The projected 20 17 in-service date for the Ohio plant in
no way demonstrates a reduction in the companies' commitment to the (Ohio) project," the Monday tiling said.
"The 2017 in-servi ce date
recognizes the uncertainty of
the Supreme Court opinion.
(AEP) would plan to move
up the 2017 date upon receiving a favorable Supreme

Skate palll,

Court of Ohio opmion and
necessary cost recovery regulatory approvals in Ohio."
"As AEP has consistently
stated, it ·will not proceed
with construction of ari
IGCC generating facility in
any location in the abse nce
of assurance of cost recovery. The companies believe
that the prudent course is to
postpone their next substantive filing in this proceeding
until this uncertainty is sufficiently resolved."
"The companies intend to
make their Phase II cost

recove ry ' filing upon a
favorable Supreme Court of
Ohio opinion."
The Office of the Ohio
Consumers Council and an
industrial energy users group
has challenged the Public
U tili t i e ~ Com niission of
Ohio's decision that allows
recovery of $23.7 million
from customers for the Front·
End Engineering and Design
study for the project. l11e
opponents of the PUCO's
dec ision argue that state law
does not allow cost recovery
for generation projects.

to Star
BY BETH SERGENT

BY KEVIN KELLY

8 SERGENT®MYDAILYSENTI NEL. COM

KKELLY®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RACINE
GALLIPOLIS - While
Improvement's to Star Mill
unemployment was up
Park and just how to build
slightly in Gallia County,
the new skate park in Racine
surrounding counties experidominated the discussion at
enced a drop in their jobless
the recent meeting of Rac ine
rates during May, the Ohio ·
Village Council.
Department of Jobs and
Council honored Allen
Family Services has found.
and Denna Tucker and Jerry
ODJFS released last
and Dixie Wolfe of the
Page AS
month's county-by-county
Racine Youth League for
• Connie Belle Black,'71 jobless data Tuesday, noting
their efforts in not only the
no change in the state's
youth league but working
• Pearl DeWeese, 100
unemployment rate.
with council and taking care
• Harry Osbome, Jr., 84
Gallia County, reported at
of the park in general.
• John Steenbergen, 93 5.6 percent unemployment
Tucker reported that once
in April, rose one-tenth of a
the money becomes availpercent to 5.7 in May. Meigs
able for the new lighting a1
County's rate dropped twothe ball field he wants to
tenths of a percent, from 8:6 I .IJ ~I,f,~;:,;;:ll
"put
someone to work" and
,... ..percent in April '"to 8.4 the
have it done by spring.
following month.
Clerk -Treasurer
Dave
• Anny considers
The trend continued in
Spencer said members of
for longer combat
area counties as Athens saw
the youth league should get
tours if troop buildup
its rate also fall two-tenths of
a wish list of what they need
a percent from 5.6 in April to
to complete the project so
lasts into next year.
5.4 in May. Jackson's figure
that it can be bid out. Tucker
See Page A2
.fell significantly by 1.3 perwas a'iso asked to approach
• Announce honor
cent, from 8.8 in April to 7.5
. contractors about getting
percent in May.
more estimates for the proroll. See Page A3
Lawrence County was
ject.
The latest est imate was
• Mission report on
down two-tenths of a percent
arou nd $48,000 and so far
Palestinian refugee.
to 5 perce nt last month.
Racine has rece ived around
Vinton
County's
rate
fell
by
$20,000
in Communi ty
See PageA3
nearly 2 percent, from 9.4
Block Grant
Development
• Firefighters flush
percent in April to last
money for the project with
. cat from storm drain:
month's 7.6. Washington
·the grant money becoming
County fell by three-tenths of
available in November.
See Page A3
a percent, from 5.2 percent in'
Tucker
hopes the project
• Family Medicine:
April to 4.9 percent in May.
wi ll be done fo r spring.
Water in ear canal can
Ohio's unemployment
Council asked Southern
was 5.7 percent in May,
rate
High School Baseball Coach
eause 'swimmer's ear'
unchan~ed from April, the
Ryan Lemley to see if the
infection. See Page A5 state said.
.
district or athletic boosters
• 'For the Record.
"The labor force held
can contribute to the project
Beth Sergent/ photo
steady
in
May,"
said
ODJFS
since the school athletes will
. See Page A5
Director Helen Jones-Kelley. Mayor J. Scott Hill (far left) presents Jerry and Dixie Wolfe , Allen Tucker from the Racine be using the field.
• Baby found miles
Youth League with certificates of appreciation for their work at Star MiH Pa rk. Also recog·
Please
see
Jobless,
AS
nized but not pictured, Denna Tucker.
·
Please see Star Mill. AS '
from pregnant

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

woman's disappearance.
See Page AS

WEAmER

Fully enclosed conveyor
proposed for Ohio 124

Racine considers new
sexual predator ordinance
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT @MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2 SEC110NS- 16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars·
Classifieds

A3 ·
A3
B4-6

Comics

B7

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section

AS

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Beth Sergenl/ photo

This section of the fully enclosed beltline connected to the Broad Run Mine in New Haven,
W.Va. above W.Va. 62 is said to be similar to what Meigs Point Dock wishes to place above
a section of Ohio 124 in relation to Gatling Ohio'~;&gt; proposed coal mining operation in the
Racine area. The photo which ran in yesterday's Sentinel with a stor.y on the Ohio
Depar.tment of Transportation's consideration of Gatling and Meigs Point Dock's road consent permit pictured a section of "covered" beltlinE! on the Broad Run Mine site. not the
fully enclosed section which crosses the roadway pictured above.
·

•

RACIN E -AI Racine
Village Council 's .request.
Racine Police Marshal
Curtis Jones has presented
council with an ordinance
prohibiting sex offenders on
vi llage owned land used for
park or recreation activities.
The ordinance states the
"registered offender" wi ll
be prohibited from "park
.facilities" defined as ··all
land and buildings owned or
co ntrolled by the Village of
Racine and used for park or
recreation purposes. incl uding, but not limited to, the
Star Mill park, and all
parks. playgrounds. ball
fields and boat landings.
If passed no registered
offender · is to enter these
facilities or be within 1,000
feet of the properties, excepl
and only to the extent necessary, to a!lend public
meeti ngs.
The ordi nance now goes
to Doug Little, village solicitor for review. If approved
by the solicitor, it then must
receive three readings by
counci I and a final vote on

the ordinance before it can
be passed into law 30 days
after the final vote.
.
Dave
Clerk -Treasurer
Spencer re ported the village
has an upcoming Federal
Emergency Management
Agency rFE MA l review for
projects receiving money
from the 2004 nooct event.
Spencer . said he will be
showing proof of payment,
purchase and completion of
projects by July . 6 . .
· Representl)ti ves from FEMA
wi ll then arrive in the village
to verify the work done at
sites including (but not limited to) Star Mill Park's walking' track and ball tields.
Spencer reported the village's two-year audit is
nearly complete.
· Spencer reported the vi llage received a bid for the
replacement of two overhead doors at the village's
utility garage. The bid
includes two 10 by 12-feet
doors. three windows, plus
jams for $3,265. A motion
was passed to pay for the
doors if Spencer fee ls
· finances can absorb it.
Please see Rllclne, AS

'

�The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA2
Wednesday, June 20·,

2007

AND MARCY SUGAR

BY ANNE FLAHERTY

Family of 4 found dead in apparent

murder-suicide at popular park .
BY TERENCE CHEA

Police identified the other
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
victims as Morrissey's wife,
Dr. Mamiko Kawai, 40, and
ORINDA, Calif. -A man the couple's daughters,
apparently distraught over Nikki Morrissey, 8, and Kim
financial problems shot his Morrissey, 6. The girls were
wife and two young children found in the rear seat of a car
to death before turning the and the adults on the ground
gun on himself at a popular . nearby. All had been shot to
park in tbe hills east of San death, and a .357 Magnum
Francisco Bay, police said.
revolver was found at the
An officer responding scene, Anderson said.
Monday night to a report of
Detectives searched the
fireworks going off found family's Berkeley home to
1he bodies at a remote area ensure there were no other
of Tilden Regional Park, in victims, ·he said.
the East Bay area between
The parking lot al the
Berkeley and Orinda.
Mineral Springs picnic area
A note found at the scene. was sealed off Tuesday
apparently written by Kevin · morning while workers
Morrissey, 51, indicated he cleaned up the crime scene.
was distressed about money The area was reopened to
difficulties at the ski n care the public by noon,.
practice he ran .with his Anderson said.
wife, East Bay Regional
The park, just east of the
Park Police Chief Timothy University of California,
Anderson said.
Berkeley campus, covers
"It sure does look like it nearly 2,100 acres of streams,
was a murder-suicide," canyons and eucalyptus
Anderson
told
The groves in the otherwise
Associated Press.
densely populated East Bay.

..

AP photo

President Bush, center, announces his choice of former Iowa Rep. Jim Nussle, right, to replace outgoing White House
Budget Director Rob Portman, left, Tuesday, in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington.

Porbnan resigns as·budget director, to
be replaced by fonner Iowa Rep.·Nussle
BY TERENCE HUNT

ist in. a Congress polarized
by partisanship, Ponrhan
managed to win friends and
WASHINGTON
allies among Democrats.
White House budget direcSen. Kent Conrad, 0 tor Rob Portman announced N.D., chairman of the
hi s resignation Tuesday, Senate Budget Committee,
joining a lengthening list of said he regretted Portman's
senior officials heading for resignation. "He is a person
the exits in the final I 1/2 of credibility and decency
years of President Bush's that commanded respect on
administration.
both sides of the aisle,"
Bush chose former Iowa Conrad said. But he withRep. Jim Nussle, one-time held praise from Nussle.
chairman of the House
"Mr. Nussle has a reputaBudget Committee, as tion, deserved or not, of being
Portman 's
successor. an intense partisan, quite difDemocrats said Nussle's ferent from Rob Portman,"
nomination could ruti into said Connad, who said he's
obstacles.
already heard concerns about
NussJe·, 46, ran for Iowa the nomination from about a
governor in 2006 and lost. half-dozen senators. "There
He has been serving in Iowa are going to be issues with
as an adviser in former New this confirmation." .
York
Mayor
Rudy
Giuliani's campaign for the
Republican
presidential
nomination.
Nussle 's .
appointment is subject to
Senate confirmation.
"There's no finer man in
public service than Rob
Portman," Bush
sa1d.
"Fortunately we've found a
good man to succeed him."
"I won't let you down,"
Nussle promised Bush. "I
won't let you down."
Portman, in a telephone
interview, made it clear he
might seek a return to elective office, either by running for governor of Ohio
or for the Senate.
He said he was leaving for
personal reasons. His family
has remained in· Cincinnati
and he has been commuting
home on weekends for 14
years.
"I need to be home more.
I've.got three kids ages 12 to
17. It's just been very hard to
spend as much time wilh
them and Jane as I need to at
this time of my life," he said.
Democrats said Portman
would not fare well in politics. "Portman's going; to
have a hard time ever running
again in Ohio after spearheading a Bush economic
agenda that caused Ohio to
bleed jobs and failed to turn
around Ohio's economy,"
said Chris Redfern, chairman
of the Ohio Democratic
Party. "Voters wiJI . clearly
reject that record."
· As head of the Office of
Management and Budget,
Portman ran an agency that
touched every major spending decision in the government. He said he was
known by some nicknames:
"Doctor No. Tightwad . .
Budget hawk. Penny-pincher, and some not suitable for
television audiences."
A six-term congressman
from Cincinnati, Portman
left &lt;:;apitol Hill to join the
Bush administration two
years ago as trade representative and was named budget director a. little more
than a year ago to replace
Joshua Bolten when Bolten
became White House ·chief
of staff.
In Congress, Portman was
a top liaison between Jawmakers and the Bush White
House, working !Jehind the
scenes from his posts on the
Budget Committee and the
powerful tax-writing Ways
and Means Committee.
Despite being a.GOP loyalAP WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT

Since Democrnts won con- himself as a member of the
trol
of Congress
in "Gang of Seven," a group of
November, a number of top young Republicans who
administration ofticials have demanded changes in the
announced their resignations. methods the Democrats
Among those leaving or gone used to run the House.
are White House counselor
House Republican Leader
Dan Bartlett, chief White John Boehner, R-OhiQ,
House attorney · Harriet praised Nussle's selection.
Miers, political director Sara "House Republicans ·are
Taylor, deputy national secu- committed to sustaining any
rity adviser J.D. Crouch and presidential veto over excesMeghan O'Sullivan, another sive spending by Democrats,
deputy national security and I look forward to workadviser who worked on Iraq. ing with Jim in that effort
Defense Secretary Donald this year," Boehner said.
Rumsfeld was forced .out
Nussle served three terms
immediately after the elec- as chairman of the House
tion as the unpopular war in Budget Committee, where
Iraq dragged on.
he favored budget plans that
Nussle is a former courity accommodated Bush 's tax
prosecutor. He was first cuts as well as the spending
elected to Congress in 1990, restraint that conservative
and quickly distinguished . Republicans advocated.

infonn her that there are
natural deodorants (available at health-food stores
and other places) that do not
contain either of these suspect chemicals.
Dear Annie: I read the
Jetter from "Disapr,ointed in
Louisville, Ky.,' whose
husba nd doesn't want a
vasectomy. I am 78 and had
a vasectomy when I was 31.
My late wife, who was an
RN, asked me to have one.
It greatly increased and
improved our sex life, and
we were active and intimate
until she passed away.
I am getting married
again very soon, and I can
assure you that our sex life
will be wonderful. My
vasectomy had no effect on
my ability to perform.
So, Kentuckians, heed the
info, and have the man get
off his duff and get 10 the
doctor pronto. He will only
regrerthat he didn't get the
procedure . sooner.
· Florida
.
Dear Florida: Thanks for
the testimonial - and congratulations on your upcoming marriage. It sounds like
you will make your new
wife very happy.
Annie's Mailbox is written .by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
· and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Public meetings
. Thursday, June 21
POMEROY Meigs
County Commissioners will
meet at 9 a.m. Thursday
instead of I p.m.

Clubs and
organizations
VVednesday,JunelO
TUPPERS PLAINS Community meeting, 7 p.m.,
to discuss annual fall festival,
Tupper.&gt; Plains Firehouse.
POMEROY - Monthly
to:-vnship clerks' meeting,
6:30 p.m., Pomeroy Library
conference room.
Saturday, June 23
HARRISONVILLE
Masonic
Harrisonville
Lodge #411 will hold a
friendship night at 7 p.m.,
for anyone ,interested in
learning about Masonry and
how to become a member.
Thesday, June 26
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.
RACINE - · Racine Area

Community Organization, Sunday and 6th Annual Josh
6:30 p.m., Star Mill Park. Adams ·Memorial Run at
Potluck.
Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene. Sunday school at
9:30 •a.m.. followed by
10:45 a.m. worship service.
Dinner
before run. Special
Saturday, June 23
si
nging
by Just for Now. ·
DARWIN -M ilhoan
Speaker
Bryan Lawrence.
family reunion, II a.m. to 3 lnformation
.at 667-3197.
p.m. , Ohio Valley Christian
Monday,
june 25
Assembly. Meat provided.
MIDDLEPORT
Bring salad, vegetable or Vacation Bible SchooL
dessert and drink. 992-3921 Bradford
Church of Christ,
or 446-3296. All descen- 9 a.m. - II :30 a.m. 1hrough
dants of Marion Aldo and June 28. Classes for
LuGy
Belle
Hoselton preschool through teens.
Milhoan invited.
POMEROY - Vacation
Sunday, June 24
Bible School, sponsored by
REEDSVILLE- Biram- Enterprise U.M.C. and
Hay man reunion will be Pomeroy Church of Christ
held at Forked Run State will be held from 9-11 A.m:
Park, I p.m. bask,et dinner through June 29. The Joca- . ·
in shelter #2.
tion has been changed· to
· HENDERSON, W.Va. - Pomeroy Church of Christ,
Reunion of descendants of West Main Street. .
Sam
and
Melvina
Birchfield, with basket dinner at noon, Henderson,
W.Va. Community Building.
Monday, .June 25
TUPPERS PLAINS
Meigs County TB staff at '
Tuppers Plains firehouse, 5- '
Sunday, June 24 ·
6 p.m. Tests read 5-6 p.m.
REEDSVILLE - Biker Wednesday.
·

Reunions

Other events

Church events

Firefighters flush
cat from storm drain:
'
.

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. lhrough the 10- to 12-inch Parkersburg. A visitor to the
(AP) - It took two fire pipe that the feline rushed shelter was signing adoption.
trucks, five firefighters, into the hands of Firefighter papers Tuesday afternoon. ·
several animal rescuers and Kevin Siers, who was
Siers and state Fire,
about 250 gallons of water standing inside a manhole. Marshal Sterling Lewis said .
to rescue a toughly 2"We had about an hour it's not uncommon for fire
and a half of fun," Siers said departments to attempt such
pound kitten.
Animal control officers Tuesday. "J&lt;;verybody was rescues.
tried coaxing the gray tabby pret\y tickled" when the cat
Firefighters have re scued .
iguanas. off of telephone
out of a storm sewer drain emerged.
After a very frightening poles, snakes out of. sewer
with encouraging words and
day
and night, the kitten pipes and cats out of trees,
food Monday afternoon
more relaxed on Siers said.
seemed
before giving up after about
Tuesday and was warming
It's just part of their
an hour and a· half.
Parkersburg firefighters up to ~umans, said Dan nature, Lewis said.
"Firefighters will go try to
tried banging tools on one Hendrickson with the
Humane
Society
of
save
anything."
end of the pipe and flashing
lights Monday night near
the
Parkersburg-Belpre
Rosier, Amanda Smith, Bridge in hopes of driving
Merissa Snyder, Steven
Stewart, James Story, Alexa him out tho other end, but
Venoy,
Patti
Vining , that didn't work either.
It wasn' t until firefighters
Richard Well , Eric Wood.
Grade 12: Natane Adams, flushed about 250 gallons
Dakota
Arms,
Daniel of water- enough to wet · Subscribe today • 992-21.55 • www.mydallysentinel.com
Bookman, Ashley Demoss, the kitten's paws
Charles
Eblin,
Dane ·
Eichinger, Andrew Games,
Kayla Grover, Jessica Haggy,
Brittany Haning, Keilah
· Public awareness camPaign
Jacks,
Kyle
Kinnan,
Subject:
Underage Drinking
Gabrielle Kruskamp, Sarah
Target
audience:
Parents of teens
Lantz,
Jessica
Lyons,
Objective;
Inform
parents that:
Christina Miller, Shawn
Don't
be
•
It
is
illegal
to
host
or allow leen drinking
Ogaz, · David
Poole,
a
party
to
parttes
'"
your
home.
Raymond Reynolds, Amanda
tcc:nage drinking. • It is unhealthy for anyone under age 21 to
Schartiger, Bobbi Smith,
.
dnnk.
Jessica Smith, Krysta Stitt,
• It is unsafe and illegal for leens to drink and
lt's!'Pinst
Michael Wheeler, Kasey
drive.
·
the
law.
Winter, AsWey Zielinski.
• Parents can be prosecuted under the law.
• Everything associaled with a violation, such
as personal·property, can be confiscated.
•
I ndem"e
, Orinkin".... l.aw1
What parents should know:
Things you can do as a parent:
ducted the meeting with
• As a parent, you cannot give alcohol to your.teen's
• RefuSe to supply alcohol to anyone under 21.
prayer. The group recited the
friends under the age of 21 under any ci rcumstance,
• Be at home when your teen has a party.
• Make sure that alcohol is nOt brought into your
UMW Purpose. Members even in your own home, even with their parent's
pennission .
home or property by your teen's friends.
reported 60 friendship calls.
• You cannot knowin gly allow a person under 21, other • Talk to other parents about not providing alcohol at
The secretary's and treasurihan your own child . to remain in your home or on
other events your chi ld will be allending.
er's reports were given.
your propert y while consuming or possessing alcohol. • Create alcohol-free opportunities and activities in
The prayer calendar birthyour home so teens wi ll feel welcome.
day card was signed by all Jf you bre•k the taw:
• Report underage drinking to local law enforcement.
members for Helen Sheperd • You can face a rnax.imum sentence of siKmonths in
from Waanbaatar, Mongolia, jail and/or a $·1 .000 line.
A program of
• Others can sue you if you give alcohol to anyone
who is in mission work.
Drug-Free Action Alliance
under 21, and they. in turn, hurt someone, hun
Marlene Donovan and
With support from the Ohio Department of
themselves
or damage property.
Lori Morrison were reportAlcohol and Drug Addie! ion Services
• Officers can take any alcohol, money or property
ed 10 have health issues .
The next meeting will be used in committing the offenSe.
July I0.

POMEROY Meigs
High School announced the
names on the fourth quarter
honor roll:
Grade 9: Tyler Andrews,
Lauren Barnes, Jacob Dunn,
Autumn Ebersbach, Dale
Ellis, Shawntay Garnes,
Darby Gilmore, Alyss
Green, Scott Kenriedy,
Bobby King, Jessica Might.
Grade 10: Jamie Bailey,
Brittany Black, Clayton
Bolin, Chad Bonnett, Megan
Bush, Crockett Crow,
Kenneth Delong, Jennifer
Fife, Amanda Gilkey, Amber
Hockman, Lian Hoffman,
Jessica Holliday, Matthew
Hosken, Lilly Jacks, Morgan
Kennedy,
Christopher
Kimes; Cara . Lawl~~s.

Morgan Lentes, Max Little,
Jahnna Lydic, Courtney
Mayes, Shayna Morgan,
Lindsey Myers, April Oiler,
Erin
Perkins,
Ripley
Raubenolt, Calee Reeves,
Ri.ce,
Chelsea
Brian
Smallwood, Caitlin Swartz,
Kimberly Swisher, Eric
Tolar, James Welsh, Catie
Wolfe.
Grade 11: Michael Ball,
Jacob Barnes; Amy Barr,
Talisha Beha, Brittany
Chapell, Mason Conde,
Emily Davis, Brandon
Dodson, Robert Foreman,
Jr., Rebecca Hanstine, Kyle
Hoover. Haakon Jahr,
Bradley Jones, Jacob Jones,
· Kirk Legar, Shane Milhoan,
Brian Pullins, Joseph

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel .

Fact Sheet

Mission report on Palestinian refugee

· First,Page- Week of June 24th
for four weeks thru week of July 15th
·FREE house spot color in your ad!
•Sign up for 4~EEKS and get
aFifth Week ,fREE
•The page goes on-line for a
week.on our popular web site!

..
'

1Block1214" liD 0111$11

ALFRED .
Thelma
Henderson presented the mission report, "Dreaming of a
Land Where People Practice
Peace," from Response magazine, when the Alfred
·United Methodist Women
met recently at the church.
Nora
Carmi
is
a
Palestinian Christian refugee
who was dispossesses in
1948 in Jerusalem, and has
been striving for 60 years to
comprehend
how
the
·Palestine/Israel conflict has
become such a long, complicated and unresolved issue.
As a Palestinian, she can
accept and welcome the
Jewish people taking
refuge in her homeland
because of their persecution in Europe. She thinks
it is incomprehensible that
God's Promised Land is
misused and monopolized
to impose Jewish. sovereignty over others.
The Promi ~ed Land today
holds the fate of two peoples
of three faiths: Palestiruans
and lsraeiis, Jews, Christians
31\d ·Muslims are linked in
life and death. She dreams of
the Promised Land becoming the Promising Land - a
land where people learn and
practice the things that make
for peace.
Helen Wolf presented a

Clark birth
'
POMEROY
-

Shauna
Clark announced the birth of
her daughter, Addisyn Riley
Clark, on June 13, 2007, at
O' Bleness
. Memorial
Hospital in Athens.

•

•

2007

Announce honor roll

.

Special Spot COLOR pages
kicking off the summer season.

•

Dear Annie: I am the
mother of a 9-year-old girl,
"Tandy." She has been
friends with a group of girls
almost since birth, but this
year (third grade) has been
terrible.
Tandy attends private
school as well as church
with these girls. One of them
is very mean-spirited and
constantly telling the othens
not to play with m&gt;' daughter. I have tried talking to the
mother of this girl but have
~otten nowhere. Her attitude
ts "kids will be kids."
I know it's normal for
friendships to change
through childhood, but how
do I explain this to my sobbing daughter? It breaks my
heart to see her get off the
bus crying because someone
wouldn't play with her or sit
next to her on the bus. How
do I handle this.?. -'Kellie
Dear Kellie: It's a shame
that these girls are so nasty
and have parents who refuse
to teach them that such
behavior is wrong. You cannot turn these girls into' better human beings, so you
need to work on your
daughter's response.
Don' t sympathize too
much, or Tandy will see
herself only as a victim. Be
as positive and as empowering as you can. Tandy is not
too young to understand
that those who demean others are on a power trip, and
can only build themselves
up by dragging someone
else down. And worse, they
feed off her reaction. Help
her see that lhese immature
girls are not worth her time,

energy or emoiional investment. Teach her to ignore
them and to find other, more
decent, classmates to
befriend. h 's a hard road,
but in the long run, she will
be better off and can hold
her head up with pride.
Dear Annie: I just finished reading the letter
about the young girl who
needed to use deodorant.
What do you do when the
problem is your 60-year-old
supervisor who think~
· deodorant causes cancer?
. Some days, the · odor. is so
strong, you can smell her
'from another room.
1 We have gi'ven "Meg" gift
with
scented
baskets
deodorants and lotions, but
she doesn't u~e them. We
· once spoke to her supervisor, thinking there might be
a ·physical or mental problem that should be
addressed. Things got marginally better for a while,
but now they are worse than
\ever. I hate to go running
back to her boss, as Meg is
already under a lot of pressure. Any suggestions? Asphyxiated at Work
Dear Asphyxiated: There
were some studies done a
few years ago that looked
for links between cancer
and aluminum chlorohydrate in antiperspirants, and
parabens in both antiperspirants · and · deodorants.
According to the National
Cancer Institute, the results
were inconclusive and no
concrete evidence was
found. We hope you have
the courage to take Meg
aside, privately, and say she
is likely unaware that she
has a noticeable body odor.
To ease her . concerns,

Wednesday, June 20,

Community Calendar

Cold shoulder demands empowerment
BY KATHY MITCHELL

PageA3

BY THE BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX .

Army considers need for
longer combat tours if troop
·buildup lasts into ~ext year .
other departments helped
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
more in rebuilding Iraq.
Sen. Joseph Liebennan said
WASHINGTON - The he was surprised during a
Army
is
considering recent trip to Iraq to see how
whether it will have to many soldiers were tasked
eMend the combat tours of with "nation-building."
troops in Iraq if President . "I wish every American
Bosh opts to maintain the could see what the U.S.
recent buildup of forces Army and others are doing
through spring 2008.
to rebuild the government,
Acting Army Secretary the health care system, the
Pete Geren testified Tuesday education system, to secure
that the service is reviewing the neighborhoods'," said
other options. including rely- Lieberman, 1-Conn. "Bur
ing more heavily on Army some of that, in the best of
reservists or Navy aM Air all worlds. should frankly
Force personnel, so as not to be done by people from
put more pressure on a other departments of our
stretched active-duty force.
gove rnment."
Most soldiers spend 15
State
Department
months in combat with a spokes man
Sean
guaranteed I2 months home, ~cCormack said Tuesday
a rotaiion plan that has infu.' . that Secretary of State
riated Democrats because it Condoleezza Rice had
exceeds the service's goal of accepted a request by Ryan
giving troops equal time Crocker, the U.S. ambashome as in combat. In com- sador in Baghdad, to "beef
ing weeks, the Senate will up the economic and politivote on a proposal by Sen. cal sections" of the embassy
Jim Webb, O-Va .. that would with more Arabic-language
restrict deployments.
speakers and mid- tosenior" lt's too early to look into level foreign service offithe next year, but for the cers to supplement the
Army we have to begin to existing work force.
plan," Geren told ihe Senate
"He says he needs these
Armed
Services things, we're going to get
Commiltee. "We have to them for him," McCormack
look into our options."
told reporters. "We're going
'Army .spokesman Paul to get him what he needs."
Boyce said, "If the future · There are currently only
. were to requtre such an . I0 U.S. diplomats in
option, it would be the last Baghdad, including Crocker,
option on the list."
who are fluent in both writ- .
Gen. David Petraeus, Iraq . ten and spoken Arabic, the
war commander, suggested State Department says.
Sunday that conditions on
Geren said . the decision
the .ground migh1 not be s1a- made earlier this year to
ble enough by September to extend tours from 12 to I5
justify a drop in force lev- months was intended to
els, and he predicted stabi- ensure soldiers were guaranlizing Iraq could take a teed one year at home.
decade. Earlier this year, Previously,
soldiers
Bush ordered the deploy- deployed for I 2-month
ment of some 30,000 addi- cycles but were unsure when
tional troops as part of a they would be sent 'back.
"lfelt it was the best of the
massive U.S.-led security
push around Baghdad and two tough choices to make . ...
the western Anbar province . . That decision I believe was
There are about 156,000 the right one," Geren said.
U.S. troops in Iraq.
The Senate panel is expect·
When asked by .Senate ed to approve Bush's nomiArmed Services Committee nation of Geren as Army secChairman Carl Levin, D- retary, replacing Francis
Mich .. whether maintaining Harvey who was pushed out
the force buildup would amid a scandal on deplorable
affect soldiers' 15-month conditions at Walter Reed
combat schedules, Geren Army Medical Center.
said he was unsure and cited
Lawmakers said they also
"numerous options" avail- were concerned about the
able, including a "different Arm)''s ability to care for
utilization of the Guard and soldters suffering from
Reserve" and relying on the post-traumatic stress syndrome and brain injuries.
other servtces for help.
"We're committed to tilling
Geren said the Army is
the requirements that the beginning an effort to educombatant commander asks," cate senior military officers
Geren said. "We have been on how to identify sympable to do so up until now, and toms. And last week, the
we will continue to do so."
Army contracted to hire 200
The Army assessment more metltal health profescomes as Democrats say .. sionals, increasing·such staff
they are already dissatisfied by more than 20 percent.
with the existing policy.
Despite the hiring push,
"Who was talking for the Geren said it. will still be
well being and the health of tough to find people who
'the soldiers when this specialize in tre.atment of
requirement was put down?" the disorder, particularly in
asked Webb, referring to the rural areas where many milIS-month combat tours. itary bases are located.
"We have stressed a work
After four years of combat,
the strategy in Iraq cannot force of the medical profes"justify doing this to the sol- sionals in the mental health
diers in the Army and the area that was already short
families back here," he said. and we've stressed it more
Geren also said it "would with deployments," Geren
ci:rtainly be valuable" if said.

The Daily S~ntinel

program, · "Shine, Shine,
Shine.'' The leader and
members · participated in
readings and Scripture from
Matthew, John, I John, and
Isaiah. We are encouraged
to shine and discover ways
we can show God's light to
the world. The program
closed with the group reading the Benediction.
Seven members were present. Henderson offered
,prayer before the meal ,
served by Wolf. Vice
President Ruth Brooks con-

o zer 1n1c es 1rg1n1a,
Gastroenterology is Our Specialty...
Specializing in the function &amp; disorqers of the
Digestive System

•
•
•
HOLZER
CLINIC
WEST VIRGINIA

Gastroenterolgy
Liver Disease
~ndoscopy

304~675.4498
Marc Subik, MD .

�Th~

Daily Sentinel

'• --

....

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
(740) ~92·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress sltall make no law respecting an.
establishment of religiot1, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridgit~g the freedom
· of speech, or of tlte press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitio"
the Goverrurrent for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. June 20. the 171st day of 2007.
There are 194 day s left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 20. 1893. a jury in New Bedford, Mass. , found
Lizzie Borden innoce nt of the ax murders of her father and
stepmother. ·
On this date:
In 1756, in India. a group of British soldiers was imprisoned in a suffocating cell that gai ned notoriety as the
"Black Hole of Calcutia"; most died. (However, the exact
circumstances of this incident - such as .the number of
prisoners, originally put at 146 - are disputed.)
. In 1837, Queen Victoria acceded to the British throne fol lowing the death of her uncle, King William IV.
In 1863. West Virginia became the 35th state.
In 1943, race-related rioting erupted in Detroit; federal
troops were sent in two days later to quell the violence that
resulted in more than 30 deaths.
In 1947, Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel was shot dead at the
Beverly Hills, Calif.. mansion uf his girlfriend. Virginia
Hill , apparently at the order of mob associates.
In 1947, President Truman vetoed the Taft-Hartley Act,
but had his veto overridden by Congress.
In 1967. boxer Muhammad Ali was convicted in Houston
of violating Selective Service laws by refusing to be drafted. (A li 's conviction was ultimatefy overturned by the
Supreme Court).
In 200 I. Houston resident Andrea Yates drowned her five
children in the family bathtub, then called police. (Yates
was later convicted of murder, but had her conviction overturned; she was acquitted in .a retrial.)
Ten years ago: The tobacco industry agreed to a massive
settlement in exchange for maJor relief from mounting lawsuits and legal bills. The summit of industrialized nations
opened in Denver, with -Russia taking its p)ace as the new
eighth partner. A jury in Trenton, N.J., ordered the death
penalty fur Jesse K. .Timmendequas, whose rape and strangling of his 7-year-old neighbor, Megan Kanka, led to the
creation of "Megan's Laws" requii\Jtg that communities be
notified of sex offenders in their 4'-ldst.
·
Five years ago: The U.S. Supreme Court declared that
executing mentally retarded murderers was unconstitution•
ally cruel.
One year ago: The U.S. military recovered the boobytrapped bodies of .two . missing soldiers in Iraq. ~apanese
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi announced the withdrawal of Japanese ground troops from Iraq . National
Guardsmen rolled into New Orleans to reinforce a depleted
police department and battle a surge in violence. Dan
Rather reached an agreement with CBS News to leave the
network after 44 years. The Miami Heat won their first
NBA title, beating the Dallas Mavericks 95-92 in Game 6.
. Thought for Tod'ay: "The art of progress is to preserve
order amid change and to preserve change amid order." Alfred North Whitehead, English philosopher ami mathematician (1861 -1947).
'

PageA4

OPINION

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

AI Sharpton is an amazmg man. He will never be
s1lent. Whatever the news
story. he will find an angle.
Wherever the largest contingent of cameras happens
to be gathered. he will be
there.
There he was running for
president; there he was
attacking three innocent
kids from Duke on erroneous charges of rape;
there he was being the
moral arbiter of what
should be heard on the
radio.
How does he du. it''
In truth, that's not Jhe
most interesting question
- finding where news
cameras are is not brain
surgery - tru st me. I do it
for a living. The real question is: Why the heck do
we care what Sharpton
thinks'
We keep running to him .
We keep listening to him .
Most recently. he commandeered the news cycle of
Paris Hilto_n's jail travails
(and even met wit h Los
Angeles County Sheriff
Lee Baca). Opinions vary
on Paris - love her. hate
her, feel bad for her. be

I
Kathryn
Lopez

indifferent to her - but
surely, we can all agree ·
that Sharpton has nothing
of interest to say about her?
We need to remember
-that Sharpton is not the
civil rights leader he claims
to be. He lacks credibility.
Serious people shouldn ' t
li sten to or court this buffoonish publicity hound .
So here's a refresher course
in the History of Sharpton..
Recall some proper nouns:
Tawana Brawley; Freddy's
Fashion Mart. Keep them
in your wallet · in case
you're ever tempted to listen to The Rev. AI.
When most Americans
think of someone who represe nts th e opposite of
racial harmony, a name like
former. Ku Klux Klan
leader David Duke probably comes· up. But some-

how AI Sharpton gets to be
a good guy - even though
he dragged the names of
six innocent white men
through the mud. in the
phony rape case of Tawana
Brawley back in 1987.
Sharpton gained notoriety
through the rape charges
made by .teenager Brawley;
it was subsequently discovered through a grand-jury
hearing that all of her
charges were completely
m~de up yet Sharpton
has never apologized for
his involvement in the horrendous case.
In 1995, a dispute broke
out concerning Freddy's
Fashion Mart on I 25th
Street in New York. The
white, Jewish owner was
accused of driving a black
storeowner out of business.
Sharpton held protests
aga inst
him,
and
announced - as protesters
yelled about "bloodsuckers" - that ·~ there is a systemic and methodical strategy to eliminate our people
from doing business off
I 25th Street. I want to
make it clear ... that we
will not stand by and allow
them to move this brother

~o

that some white interloper can expand his business." A Sharpton deputy
announced: "We're going
to see that this cracker suffers. Rev. Sharpton is on
it." A protester, . three
months later, would walk
in there with a pistol and
burn the store down,
killing eight. I wouldn't go
so far as to blame the
deaths
directly
on
Sharpton, but he didn 't
help matters.
There's more, but this
should be enough of a trip
down memory lane for any
reasonable person to wonder: Why does anyone listen to this man? Why does
anyone go to him for guidance or healing or any
other nonsense? Why don't
Democrats ostracize him?
Paris Hilton seems willing to ask forgiveness,
regretting the bad example
she's setting for young
girls. I'd sooner ask her for
advice than Sharpton's.
(Kathryn Lopez is the
editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalreview. com). She can be contacted at klopez@ nationalreview.com.)

Letters to the editor are welcome. The)• should be less
than 300 words. All leiters are subject to .editing. must be
signed, and include address wtd telephone munbn No
unsigned letters will be published. Lettei's should be in
good taste, addressing issue;'. nor personalities. Letters r!(
My "Check Engine" l·ight
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- 1s on again. So I urilatched
ed for pllblication.
· the hood and took a look.
Sure enough, it was st ill
there. It looked good. too.
Right where it's supposed
to be. In the middle. Lots of
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
hoses and wires and belts
Ohio Valley Publishing
all over the place. They
Co . .
Correction Policy
were a little dirty; but hey, I
Our milin concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
live on a dirty street. You
throu9h Friday. 1_11 Court Stre~:~ t ,
~be accurate. If you know of an error
have
to expect a Iittle dirt
Pomero y, Ohio. '
Second-class
might get under the hood.
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
That's enough checki ng for
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
me. Still, the light wouldn 't
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Send
address
correcPostmaster:
go
out. Where\ the ·'OK, I
Our main number is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
checked
it" button ?
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, OhiO 45769 .
Of course', that would be
Department ex,enstons are:
too
easy. I' ve fallen into t~e
Subscription Rates
"Check
Engine" scam and
By carrier or motor route ·
News
there
's
no
escaping it.
One month.
'1 0.27
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12 One year
'115.84
"What wuld cause ' the
Daily
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
'Check Engine ' li ght to go
Senior
Citizen
rates
on?" I asked my mechani c.
Reporter: Beth, Sergent, Ext. ·13
One month
'10.27
"Oh, lots of things One year
'103.90
my
kid starting college-, the
Advertising
SubscntJers Shaukl remit in advance
wife
buying new living
Outside Sales: Dave Harris. EKt. 15 direct to the Dally Sentinel. No sub·
room furniture, that vacascription by mail Permitted in areas
Outside Sales: Brenda Oavis ..Ext 16 where home carrier servicE! is avaiition we want to take to
CiasaJCirc.: Judy Clark, EKt. 10
able.
DisneyWorld, my daughter
deciding to marry . that
Mall Subscription ·
bonehead she's bee n seeing
General Manager
lristde Meigs County
- it all depends. You'd
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
have to bring it in."
26 Weeks
'64.20
.52
Weeks
'127.11
"Is it OK for me to keep
E-mail: ·
driving
it?'' I asked .
.news@ mydailysenlinel.com
Outside Meigs County
"Sure, I don 't need the
13 ,Weeks
'53.55
money that fast. "
Web:
26 Weeks
'107.10
"I kind of meant would it
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysentlnel.com
be safe fo'r me to drive it or

2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

VVhy do we still look to AI Sharpton?

Hany Osbome. Jr.

·

The Dail~ Sentinel • Page As

FAMILY MEDICINE

Water in ear canal ~an cause 'swimmers ear' infection

Question: Every summer
POMEROY - Harry Osborne Jr., of Pomeroy, passed one of my kids gets swimaway June 16, 2007, at the age of 84.
mer 's ear. What causes this,
Harry was born ~une 5, 1923 in Pomeroy, son of tlie late , and can I do anything to preHarry Sr., and W1lma (Hess) Osborne. He lived in the vent this problem besides
not allowing swimming?
Pomeroy and Long Bottom area all of IU s life.
Answer: Acute otitis
He operated the concession, bait shop and boat rental at
the Forked Rl!n Siate Park, Long Bottom, for over 14 years. externa, commonly called
Harry was m the 4th Division Marine Corp. World War "swimmer's ear,', is an
II Pac1fic Area; Battle of ORI, Namir, Marshall Islands, infection of the outer ear
Battle of Saipan and Marian&lt;~~ Island and received two canal. It is usually bacterial
in origin, but it can also be
Purple Hearts.
caused
by a fungus. While .it
H: was a member of the Carpenters Union 650 and 1159,
is
a
very
commori infection
Mann_e .Corps League, American Legion 40-8, Disabled
in
children
between the ages
Amencan Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Am Vets
of
7
and
12,
anyone at any
Pomeroy Post 773, Meigs County Beagle Club and Bend
age
can
come
down with
Area CARE, Mason, W.Va.
·
'
this
malady.
He is survived by his wife of 30 years, Mary Anns
Swimmer's ear is five
Osborne; a son and daughter-in-law, Bill and Jean Osborn~
of Reedsville; two granddaughters, Lorre (Corey) Hill of times more likely to occur
Chester and Kelly (Tim) Epling of Reedsville; two great in swimmers than nongrandchildren, Emma Epling and Treyton Hill ; a sister, Mrs. swimmers, hence the name.
Carrol (Vema) Snowden of Gallipolis; a brother, Louis W. This infection is frequently
Osborne of Melbourne, Aa.: ·and a special fishing buddy, a one-sided problem, but it
Charles Zerkle of New Haven, W.Va. ; stepchildren: Linda can affect both ears. Water
and Bob Osborne, Roger arid Brenda Arms, Gene and Patty from bathing can also cause
Anns, Don and Candy Arms, Ron and Brenda Arms and Bob ·swimmer's ear.
The ear canal is the perand Lynn Arms; several grandchildren, nieces and nephews.
fect
place for bacteria and
Harry was preceded in death by two sisters, Mildred
fungi
to grow. It is warm,
Harris and Mary Sauvage.
·
·
dark
and
moist. Normally
A remember~ce celebration will be held from 4-6 p.m.
earwax
and
oils in the ear
Saturday, July 7, 2007, for family and friends at the home
canal
protect
it,. but getting
of Bill and Jean Osborne, Ohio 681 Reedsville.
water in your ear while
swinuning can cause these
to wash off. This causes the

Deaths

ear canals to dry out which
makes them more susceptible to infection.
Swimming in water that is
untreated ,..-- such as lakes,
rivers or streams - can
bring infectious bacteria
directly into your ear canals.
However, even if you swim
in "clean" . chlorinated
pD?Is, you can still get an
mfection because of the
extra drying effect that
treated water has on the delicate skin inside your ear.
If you could see the infection inside your ear canal, it
probably wouldn't look
much worse than a minor,
slightly red scratch - like
what you occasionally .see
on your arm or face. But
these scratches can be quite
irritating inside the ear
because you have very little
tissue padding between the
skin, and the cartilage and
bone underneath. When the
infected skin in the ear
canal swells up, it creates
painful pressure.
It's not surprising, then,
that pain is usually the
symptom that brings the
swimmer's ear sufferer into
the doctor's office. The per-

son may comment to the
Drying the ear canab with
doctor that tbe pain is made a hair dryer set on the very
worse by chewing or wig- lowest heat level can somegling the ear. He or she times be of benefit. There
might also complain of itch- are also severa l over-theing, some drainage from the counter ear .drops th at you
ear and mild hearing loss. ~a n use before and after you
There are usually no sys- swim to help prevent otiti '
temic symptoms like fever externa. But, if your prevenor runny nose.
tive measures fail and you
Acute otitis externa is do develop an infection. yo u'
easily treated by using ·pre- need a trip to the doctor to
scription antibiotic ear ·get the appropriate diagnodrops for several days, sis and treatment.
avoiding swimming or getting water in the ear, and
Family Medicine® is a
usin~ over-the-counter pain weekly column. To .~ubmit
medication. . Occasionally questions, write to Martha A.
an outer ear infection can be Simpson, D.O., M.B.A .,
associated · with a deeper Ohio University College of
middle ear infection. In Osteopathic · Medicine, P.O.
these cases, oral antibiotics Box l/0, Athens, Ohio
will be needed as well.
45701, or via e-mail to readPrevention is the best way e.rquestions@familymedi:
to deal with swimmer's ear. · cinenews.org. Medical inforSome people do seem prone mation in this column is proto this problem. If you are vided as an educatimwl serone of these folks. there are vice only. It does not replace
a few things you can do to the judgmellt of yuur perdecrease the likelihood of sonal pl1ysician, who should
an external ear canal infec- be relied 011 to 'diagnose and
tion. You can .try to avoid recommend
treatment
getting water in your ears for any medical conditiom.
while swimming by using Past columns are available
ear plugs or a tight-fitting online at .www.familymedibathing cap.
cinenews.org.

John William Steenbergen
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -Mr. John William
Steenbergen, 93, retired employee of Monsanto and resident of Columbia, Tenn., formerly of Point Pleasant, died
on Thursday, April 19.
A memorial graveside service will be conducted at II
a.m., Saturday, June 23, 2007 at Lone Oak Cemetery in
Point Pleasant with Rev. John Holland officiating. Crow. Hussell Funeral Home is charge of arrangemen.ts.

Connie Belle Black
SYRACUSE - Connie Belle Black, 71, of Syracuse
passed away at her residence on June 19, 2007.
Arrangements will be made at a later date and are under
the dire~tion of the Fisher Funeral Home.

Peart DeWeese

AP photo
These images provided by the U.S. Postal Service shows the five 41-cent postage stamps showing lighthouses. The
stamps feature . from left, Diamond Head light, Five Finger Islands Light in Alaska, Grays Harbor light in Washington.
Umpqua River Light in Oregon and St. George Reef Light in California.

War, peace embMiied in sr.11115 honDii• Pac•c liahlhouses

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Pearl Herdman Deweese,
Bv RANDOLPH
100, died June 19, 2007, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
·
E. SCHMID
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
Funeral will be held at II a.m. , Friday, June 22, 2007, at
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, with Rev.
WASHINGTON
Herman Jordan officiating . . Burial will follow in Pine
George Larsen jumped out
Grove Cemetery, Leon, W.Va.
Visitation will be helll one hour prior to the service at the of bed and pulled . on his
funeral home. Online condolences may be expressed to the jeans, thinking an earthquake was shaking Hawaii's
family at crowhussell@ suddenlinkmail.com.
Diamond Head lighthouse,
where he worked as a Coast
Guard rad1oman.
But it wasn't nature: War
arrived that Sunday morning, Dec. 7, 1941, as
Japanese bombers swept in
to attack the nearby Pearl
•
Harbor Navy base.
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle
Lar-sen ran outside to s.ee
reported that the following men were arrested on secret what was happening
indictments returned by the Meigs County Grand Jury:
three torpedo planes roared
• Anthony Miller, 30, South Williamson, W.Va., on a overhead. He could see
charge of theft of copper from the Meigs Mine property.
smoke · rising from the
• Curtis Neigler, 22, Syracuse, on a drug charge.
Naval station and plumes of
• Michael Searls, 26, on charges of robbery and theft at seawater blasted into the air.
the Beacon store:
To many people lightAll three men are in sheriff's custody pending appear- houses conjure up a lonely
ances in Common Pleas Court.
life in an out-of-the-way
location, but that wasn't the
case at Diamond Head, one
of five Pacific lighthouses
POMEROY -A complaint for damages was filed in being commemorated on
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Grange Mutual new postage stamps and
Casualty Co., Columbus, against Linda A. Dickens, Pomeroy. postal cards.
The 41-cent stamps and 26cent cards feature Diamond
Head Light, Five Finger
Islands Light in Alaska, Grays
POMEROY -. Actions for dissolution of marriage were Harbor Light in Washington,
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Terry
Brewer, Portland, and Ttacy Brewer, Pomeroy; Robert
Eugene Day, Pomeroy, and Christine Elizabeth Marie Day,
Albany; and Meli ssa J. Cottrell, Gallipolis, and Douglas R.
-Cottrell, Gallipolis.

For the Record

Arrested

as

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 20,

Civil suit

The mechanical bull
Jim
Mullen

do I need to have you look
at it right away?"
··1 never thought of it that
wav. -Let me think . I'm
sure it's safe. What 's the
worst that could possibly
happen? Your car suddenly
stops dead on the interstate
while an IS-wheeler full of
steel girders going 65 is
tail gating you ? You would" 't even feel it. By the way,
have you filled out that
donor card on the · back of
your license? Not that
there'd be many good parts
left, but what's left of your
skin could still be used to
help many people. Don't be
se lfi sh.
·
. " A thousand ·things
could make that ' Check
Engine' light go on, from
something as . simple as a
loose gas cap to a leaky
head gasket. I' m guessing
leaky head gasket bec.ause I
j ust bought a condo in
Boca."
'.

"But is it dangerous to sophisticated equipment
drive with that 'Check and years of training."
Engine' light .on? Please.
"The kid at the parts store
Give. Me. An. Answer." · said he could do it."
"I hate to get into . the
"Did I say years of trainhypothetical. It could mean ing? I meant 15 minutes.
so many things: it could But he can't fix it." .
mean that your car is no
"I'm trying to figure out
longer . under warranty ; it how much this is going to
could mean you're line for cost me."
an oil change; it could
"What can I tell you. It
.mean that you should bring could run anywhere from a
it back to the dealer so he day at the spa for the wife
can show you all the new to a new paint job for my
stuff in his showroom that house. Somewhere in that
will make that piece of range. But don't worry, I
junk you're driving now won't do any work unless
look like a Third World jit- you approve it."
. ney; it could mean that the
"Maybe it'd be cheaper
'Check Engine' light needs to buy a new car than to
to be replaced."
keep throwing money at
"So you're saying ·it's this one. Eight hundred
just a big scam?"
here, 600 there, jfs starting
. "Not at all. It's probably to add up. Haven't you
that catalytic thingamajig replaced everything on this ,
that reduces emissions. I'm car at least once?"
pretty sure you can 'r pass
"Hardly. You 've still got
inspection if that's not the original back seat. And
working."
the ashtray and cup holders
"But you're the inspec- work fine. Are you sure
tor."
·
you want to take such a
"Yeah, it's funny how drastic step? keep it anoth·
that works. 'It's almost like er year. My kids want those
J could make up anything I iPhones."
wanted to about your car
(Jim Mullen is the author
and you'd have to pay it to of "It Takes a Village Idiot:
. get that light to go off."
Complicating the Simple
"There's no way I. can . Life" and "Baby's First
check it myself?"
Tattoo. " You can reach him
"Please . This takes at jim_mullen@myway.com.)
·-

·- --

-

------

Dissolutions

Jobless

Divorce
POMEROY - A divorce action was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Eugene Arms, Pomeroy,
against Patti K. Arms, Rutland.
.
·
often warp and. twist over
· time. Martin suggested
using all concrete for
longevity and to avoid
from PageA1
future maintenance costs
that come with prefabricatIn regards to the .skate ed skate parks.
'
park, Brewce Martin,
Council was considering
· Rutland resident and owner a prefabricated park mountof Skatopia voiced his opin- ed on a concrete slab but
ion on building a park that now it has asked 1\Ai-tin to
is maintenance free and one . come back with a drawing
that will last. Martin, who is and estimate using all con-currently working with the crete forms. Martin said he
same contractor who built would return at the next
the skate park in Athens, council meeting.
cautioned against using a
"We want to move on this
prefabricated design due to ri~ht away," Mayor J. Scott
deterioration problems:
Hill told Martin.
Martin suggested pou_ring
Racine plans on spending
the obstacles out of concrete around $40,000 on the skate
. as opposed to the prefabri- park, using grant money it
cated pieces mounted.to the received from the state earconcrete which he said · lier this year.

Star Mill

from PageA1
"Total employment stayed
about the same as in April
with slight gains in service- ·
providing employment offsetting marginal losses in the
goods-producing sector."
The number of workers
unemployed in Ohio in May

Racine

Umpqua River Light in
Oregon and St. George Reef
Light in California.
The stamps and cards go
on sale nationwide Thursday.
Other lighthouses, including
those on the East Coast and
Great Lakes, have been featured on past sets of stamps.
Dan E. Peckham served at
both Umpqua and Five
Finger lights as a Coast
Guard chief petty offic&lt;'t.
"five Finger Light is so
isolated, located all alone on
about an acre of rock," said
Peckham. "I missed my
family a lot. The crew and I
stayed busy scraping and
painting and doing ·everything we .could to care. for
and preserve the Five Finger
Light. It was the least we
could do - its tour of duty
.is a lot longer than ours."
He recalled a cruise ship
going aground near Five
Finger iii 1982, an isolated
area where a crew of four
manned the light for a year.
"We made about 40 gallons cif coffee," he recalled,
and collected every blanket
and first-aid kit that could
be found in case the crew
and passengers had to be
brought to the lighthouse.
As it turned out, there were
enough ships in the area to
was 342,000, up · from
339,000 in April as the size
of · Ohio's work force
increased by 20,000 workers to 5.42' million.
(The Associated Press
contributed to this story.)

r----------Now Open
-

For Business
Monday,

June 18, 2007

Larsen passed the message
along, but there was little lh ;~ l
could be done to' help.
A passenger ship that hall
left the night before radioed
in to ask what was going on
and L1rsen replied that they
were under attack bv
unknown planes- th e Coast
Guardsmen were afraid to
say .Japanese planes. becau.'e
of diplomatic issues, he said
in a telephone interview.

ArutL
ESTABLISHED 1895 .

Vegas Weekend
June29 &amp; 30
Call now for tickets and details
Casino Night June 29 7-IOpm
win areal ~rizes!
Movie "Viva Las Vegas"
June 30 at 2 em
Vegas Legends Concert
June 30 at 8 pm
· featuring Dwight Icenhower
&amp; more
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

L
MEIGS COUNTY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
2007 GOLF SCRAMBLE
RIVERSIDE GOLF COURSE
Thursday, June 28, 2007
Our format will be 4 person scramble with a semi·blind draw.
Bring your own partner! Teams will Qe paired based on two __· _·

person entries. with only one player less than a 10 handicap.
Prizes will be awarded tor 1st. 2nd and
3rd place team s with other prizes for
additional contests. Also. tt could be

day... to make that Hole·ln·One

and win a spectacular prize!

• Closest to Pin
• Longest Drive
(Men &amp; Women)

• Longest Putl
• Skins Game
• Door Prizes

from PageA1
. Mayor J. Scott Hill
reported from May 1-31 , the
village pumped ju~t over 4
million gallons of water
using the new water treatment plant. Hill estimates
with the old syst~m the
pumps ran 23-24 hours a
· day but with the new system
:the average is seven-! 0
hours a day. On average the
system pumps 250 gallons
per minute, averagi ng
120,000 gallons per day.

remove the people, though
some had to be taken for
medical care by helicopter.
He's delighted with the
idea of having the lights on
postage stamps.
"I think it's kind of cool,
to recognize the old sentinels built back in the sailing days," Peckham, . of
North. Bend, Ore., said in a
telephone interview.
Larsen, of Novato, Calif.,
says working as a radioman
at a lighthouse was a "gravy
job," at least until the
bombs started falling.
Even then he wasn't sure
what was happening. He
thought it might be Army .
war ga111es, even though it
was Sunday.
He could see the red ball
insignia on the planes lll)d ·
knew it wasn't U.S. Navy, but
thought it might be Army in
disguise. But when local radio
stopped regular programming
the lighthouse crew realized
what was going on. ·
A fishing boat called in saying an Army pilot must have
gone crazy and was attacking
them and they were sinking.

• Cash Pot
• Tickets Raffle

Portland Plant
·McDade Rd.
Portland, OH
l·740-843-5293

Includes Food &amp; Beverages
$65 per person
Contact: Michelle Donovan
740-992-5005 .•
mlchelle@melgscountychamber.com

..,
- ·

~

I' '
' .

f.-:-

'

'

�' .

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

AROUND THE

Wednesday, June 20,2007

.
More gyntS emergmg to

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD - A truck
bomber attacked a revered
Shiite shrine in the heart of
Baghdad on Tuesday,
killing at least 78 people
and wounding more than
200 in a resumption of
Iraq 's relentless sectarian
slaughter. The mosque's
turquoise dome survived,
but the blast buried some
worshippers and badly
burned others.
Northeast of the capital, a
force of 10,000 U.S. soldiers firing artillery and
using heavily armored
and
Bradley
Stryker
Fighting Vehicles fought
their way through western
Baqouba and other ai-Qaida
sanctuaries
in Diyala
province. U.S. helicopters
and jet fighters flew cover.
In all, 142 people were
killed or found dead in sectarian violence Tuesday, a
toll reflecting carnage associated with the months
before the U.S. security
crackdown in the capital
began Feb. 14.
The Pentagon is required
to issue an initial assessment of the operation next
month, and Gen. David
Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, will report
in
September. . The
Democratic,-con trolled
Congress set those reporting
deadlines to pressure the
White House and American
military leadership to make
quick progress in curbing
violence here so U.S. troops
- now 155,000 - can be
pulled away from the
increasingly unpopular war.
American commanders
have said there will be positive results by September
but that any return to normalcy requires years.
President Bush has even
spoken of the U.S. mission
· in Iraq in terms of the 50plus-year American ..troop
presence in South Korea.
Tuesday's bombing was a
setback. It. was the deadliest
single attack in Iraq since
April 18, when at least 127
civilians were killed when a
bomb detonated in a parked
car at a mostly Shiite market in central Baghdad.
Police said a truck piled
high with electric fans and
air conditioners delivered
the. huge bomb at the
Khulani mosque. The powerful explosion in the busy
commercial district cut deep .
into Iraq's Shiite community on-just the second day

AP photo

Iraqis gather at the damaged Khillani mosque, a main .Shiite mosque in centr~l Baghdad. Iraq . Tuesday. A truck bomb
struck a Shiite mosque Tuesday in central Baghdad, killing 75 people and woundmg·more than 200, even as about 10,000
u.s. soldiers
northeast of the capital used· heavily armored Stryker and Bradley f1ght1ng vehicles to battle the1r way mto
.
an ai-Qa1da sanctuary.

.

to Earth to restore justice to
after authorities · lifted a the attack.
Karim Abdullah, the 35- humanity.
four-day curfew in the capital.
·
year-old owner of a nearby
Police and officials at aiThe vehicle ban had been clothing store, said he was Kindi, !'man Ali. ai-Sadr,and
imposed to prevent revenge on his way to pray at the Medical City hospitals said
attacks after a bombing last mosque when the explosion at least 78 people we re
week brought down twin caused liis motorcycle to · killed and 218 were woundgolden minarets at the wobble under him.
ed, adding that the toll could
important
Shiite
ai"I stopped in shock as I rise as bodies were pulleu
Askariya shrine in Samarra, saw the smoke and people from the debri s. The otfi north of the capital. A on the ground. I saw two or cials spoke on condition of
bombing that destroyed the three men in flames as they anonymity because they
golden dome there-on Feb. were getting out of their feared retribution.
26, 2006 set in motion the .car," he said.
The U.S. military said the
sectarian bloodletting that
AP reporters said gunfire bombing was a sui cide
has sundered the sectarian rattled through the district attack and that its unit in the
fault line in Iraq.
. after police said the truck · area recorded 35 kill ed and
Tuesday's bombing was exploded in a parking lot 65 wounded at al-Kindi
presumed to have been car- near the mosque. A courtried out by a Sunni attacker yard wall collapsed, and a hospital. The military did
because the target was a · building just inside the not check other facilities for
Shiite mosque. The Khulani . mosque compound was dead or wounded.
Lt. Col. Scott Bleichwehl.
mosque's imam, Sheik · turned to rubble. The
a
military spokesman in
Saleh ai-Haidari, said mosque sanctuary was
Baghdad.
said the truck was
bombing was particularly slightly damaged.
deadly because worshippers
The Khulani mosque is loaded with propane tanks
were just leaving a prayer named after a much-revered and that a suicide driver detserv1ce.
Shiite figure who, according onated his bomb when the
"This attack was planned to lhe sect 's tradition, was vehicle became stuck trying
and carried out by sick one of four . "earthly" to drive over a curb. It was
souls," ai-Haidari told The deputies anointed by the impossible to reconcile the
Associated Press by tele- Imam Mohammed ai- difference in the police and
. phone. He said his office Mahdi, who disappeared in military accounts about the
and the room above col- the 9th century. Shiites truck's cargo, or whether
lapsed but that he was not in believe
the
so-called the bombing involved a
the mosque at the time of "Hidden Imam" will return parked truck or a suicide

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER_

BEIJING - China plans
to build a highway on the
side of Mount Everest to
ease the Olympic torch's
journey to the peak of the
world's tallest mountain
before the 2008 Beijing
Games, state media reported
Tuesday.
·
Construction of the road,
budgeted at $19.7 million
. would turn a 67-mile rough
paih from the foot of the
mountain to a base camp at
17,060 feet "into a blacktop
highway fenced by undulating guardrails," the Xinhua
News Agency said.
Xinhua said construction,
which would st&lt;irt next
week, would take about four
months. The new highway
would become a major
route for tourists and mountaineers, it said.
An official from the
Secretariat of the Tibetan ~ov­
emment, who declined to ~i ve
his pame, confirmed the project was planned, but refused
to give any details. Tibet and
Nepal are the most commonly
used routes up the mountain.
In April, organizers for the
Beijing Summer Olympics
announced ambitious plans
for the longest torch relay in
Olympic history an
85,000-mile, 130-day route
that would cross .five continents and reach the 29,035foot summit of Everest.

Taking the Olympic torch to well maintained the road is,
the top of the mountain, seen climbers must ascend slowby some as a way for Beijing ly to give them · time to
to underscore its claims to acclimatize to the steadily
Tibet, is expected to be one of dropping oxygen levels.
the relay's highlights.
Although he acknowledged
China says it has ruled Tibet that the bumpy, dusty ride up
for centuries, although many to base camp on the north face
Tibetans say their homeland of the mountain helps to make
was eSsentially an · indepen- "you feel like you're in ·the
dent state for most of that middle of nowhere," he was
time. Chinese communist reluctant to criticize the plan.
troops occupied Tibet in 1951,
"I can't make a decision
and Beijing continues to rule to say it's good for me to be
the region with a heavy hand. alone. That's hypocritical,"
The day before the route Yiesturs said. "I know it
of the torch relay . was would be nice to have less
announced by the Beijing people there, but that 's selforganizers of the Olympics, ish."
five Americans unfurled
Viesturs
added
that
banners at a base camp call- climbers who prefer trekking
ing for an independent Tibet. to base camp already choose
The five from the · to approach the mountam
Students for' a Free Tibet from . the Nepalese side,
group, were briefly held and where there is no road.
then expelled from China.
Mark Bam, the director of
OffiCials from the Beijing Cornell University's Center
organizing committee did not for the_ Environment, said
immediately return phone the environmental impact of
calls asking for comment.
new roads m relat1vely pns- ·
Ed Viesturs. one of the tine areas is more severe
. most accomplished 'American than in places where similar
climbers, said he thought a infrastructure already ex1sts.
paved road, as opposed to the
Roads; in general, are a
current dirt one, might make minor source of pollutants,
access to base camp easier for he said, like tire dust. oil
tour groups, but he did not and the pavement itself. .
think it would affect climbers
The most s1gruficant consignificantly.
cerns in ~ch projects, how"lt's not going to matter to._ ever, is that they create "the
a climber whether it's paved opportunity for further
or not," he said. "Big deal." development," Bain said,
Viesturs, who has sum- like the need for .a parkmg
mined Everest six times, lot atthe end of the road and
noted that no matter how then perhaps a restaurant.

Amer ica n

~c n e ral s

se nt

a~ainq th e "insurgent- held
city of Falluja h 2 112 years
ago. The operation began
Monday. and hy hue
Tue sday 1he military had
reported onl y one American
death . · a Task Force
Lighming soldier killed by
an ex plosioll near hi s ve hicle. Two soldiers were
wnundcu.
A second sold ier from the
Jrd Infant ry Di vis ion dieu
in a roadside bom bing south
of Baghuad on Monday. the
military saiu in a second
stateme nt. Three were
wo unded in that attack.
Earlier Tuesuay, the military
said a soldi er was kill ed by
small arms fire during combat in eastern Baghdad on
Monday. ·
The deaths brought lo at

\0
l)\S\1\a~ .

OJl

Athens, OH 45701
800-466-4687
740-592·1972

M-F 8:00-5:00, Sat. 9:00-4:00

pt11np up the gray-haired set
Bv MADLEN READ

xear.

ASSOCIATED PRES S WRITER

On[JIO
·
ispJa.,

"

e Specialize In Houses!
Heating, Cooling, Foundations,
Porches, Garages, Septics

Let Us Build Your New Home From The Ground
·
"Where You Get Your Mo 's Worth"

Up·R&lt;~

w&amp;;J
· ~

AP photo

Marshall Kahn and his wife Melanie exercise at the Nifty After Fifty gym in Whittier, Calif,
Monday, June 11.
club," said John Atwood,
who runs Healthfit and the
consulting
firm
Club
Management Group, which
advises small or mid-size
clubs. "There was very little
of this in the '90s."
The business potential is
huge, and expanding. Club
50, a .fitness chain for the
over-40 crowd that has
mushroomed to more than
40 franchises since it began
in 2003, points out that
seniors control more than
70 percent of the country's
disposable income.
And the oldest of the baby
boomers, born between
1946 and 1964, started turning 60 last year. in less than
25 years, there will be more
.than 71 million 65-yearolds, twice as many as there
were in 2000; according to
the National Association of
Area Agencies on Aging.
The U.S. health club
industry pulls in about $16
billion in annual revenue,
according to data from the
International
Health,
Racquet &amp; Sportsclub
Association. Over the last 20
years, the number of people
with Club memberships has
more than doubled and the
number of clubs has nearly
tripled, IHRSA's data shows.
It's not only the growing
number of retirees and their
spending power - it's also
their schedule. In the late
morning and early afternoon, when most gyms are
nearly empty, those that are

WEST PALM BEACH.
Fla. - A federal jury on
Tuesday awarded $5.5 million
to the father of a man who
died while wearing a drug
patch made by two Johnson &amp;
Johnson subsidiaries.
The jury in U.S. Disuict
Court in West Palm Beach
found
that
Janssen
. Pharmaceutica Products and
ALZA Corp., both New
Jersey-based businesses, were
liable in the death of Adam
Hendelson, 28, who died in
2003 while wearing the companies' Duragesic patch.
The patch delivers controlled doses of the powerful painkiller fentanyL
Hendelson had suffered
chronic hip pain after a car
accident and wore the patch
on his arm, according to Jim
Orr,
attorney
fqr
Hendel son's father, Lee,

7J million to 7.9 million . .
Larger chains, such as
Bally Total Fitness and
Gold's Gym, in recent years
have been trying to sign up
more baby boomers through
campaigns using older people in their advertising. Some
have paired up with
SilverSneakers; a fitness program started in 1992 offered
through · health insurers to
people with Medicare. New
York-based fitness · chain
Equinox has also seen more
seniors signing up, especially
older women, said Carol
Espel, Equinml's national
director of gmup fitness.
But a big lure for some
people of the senior-focused
clubs is the notion of fitting
in - what tlie fitness chain
Curves for Women appealed
to among females - and
not worrying about measuring up to the 25-year-old
·Adonis doing bench presses
at the machine next to you.
"I've been working out in
gyms since high school,"
said Healthfit member
Horace Aikman, a 53-~ear­
old landscape . architect.
"And to be honest with you,
I've reached the point in my
life where I want to be working out with people my age."

CHICAGO - A deadly
gene's path can hide in a
family tree when a womari
has few aunts and older sisters, making it appear that
her breast cancer struck out
of nowhere when it really
came from Dad .
A new study suggests
thousands of young women
with. breast cancer - an
estimated 8,000 a year in
the U.S. - aren't offered
testirtg to identify faulty
genes and clarify their medical decisions.
Guidelines used by i.nsurance companies to decide
coverage for genetic testing
should change to reflect the
findings . said study coauthor Dr. Jeffrey Weitzel of
City of Hope Cancer Center
in Duarte, Calif. Testing can
cost more than $3,000.
"lnteresti.ngly, it's about
Dad," Weitzel said. Half of
genetic breast cancers are
inherited from a woman's
father, not her . mother. But
unless Dad has female relatives with breast cancer, the
faulcy gene may have been
passed down silently, without causing cancer. (Men can
get genetic breast cancer,
too, but it's not common.)
Weitiel said dociors often
overlook the genetic risk
from the father's side of the
family.
The study, appearing in
Wednesday's Journal of the
American
Medical
Association, looked at the
genetic test results from 306
women diagnosed with
breast cancer before age 50.
None of the cance~
patients in the study had a
family history of breast or
ovarian cancer.
Among the women with
plenty of female relatives,
about 5 percent had BRCA
gene mutations. But among
those with few sisters and
· aunts older than 45 (when
breast cancer would be likely to appear), almost 14 percent had mutations of the
genes BRCAI or BRCA2.
That suggests that these cancer patients were unaware of
their genetic mutations

because there were so few
women in the family to signal a cancer risk.
The researchers· defi-ned
few female relatives as
fewer than two on either the
father's or mother's side of
the family.
,
Women who were adopted
and don't know their family
medical history should be
aware of the findings,
Weitzel said. Women whose
female relatives died young
before breast cancer had time
to show up also are affected.
When such a woman gets
breast cancer before age 50,
she should getja genetic test,
said Dr. Noah Kauff, a cancer geneticist at Memorial
Sloan-Kettering
Cancer
Center in New York. That
would help her decide
whether to have the unaffected breast or her ovaries
removed to prevent more
cancer. Kauff was not
involved in the research, but
wrote an accompanying edi- .:
tori a!.
"The study allows physicians and patients to make
an argument to insurance
. carriers tljat, although there's
not a family history of breast ·
cancer, it's still reasonable to ·
test and it should be a covered benefit," Kauff said.
G~netic testing helps a
woman choose her next
medical steps . A wornan
with breast cancer who has
a BRCA gene mutation has
a four times greater risk of
developing cancer in the
other breast and a I0 times
greater risk of ovarian cancer than does a woman·with
breast. cancer who has no
BRCA gene mutation.
Some women witb a family
history of breast cancer
choose to have a BRCA
genetic test so they can decide
whether to reduce their cancer
risk by removing their ovaries
and breasts before.any cancer
appears. Drug therapy and
monitoring with annual MRI
tests offer alternatives. ·
Testing the genes of more
women would cost more
money, but Weitzel said that
.won't add significantly to
health care costs and will
prevent cancer in some of
the women.

Barb Nakanishi, RD, lD, CDE
Oinical Dietitian

"Be heart smart!
Meals low in saturated and tram fat, and high in fiber, can help reduce risk
factors as,;,:1ciated with heart disea•c. I provide personalized nutrition
assessment and counseling to help my patients achieve and maintain a
healthier lifestyle. Talk to your doctor about a referr&lt;¥ ro my classes Our staff
at O'Bieness abo offers free and low-cost screenings for risk factors of heart
.

ng Th{l l='lmily .
July 4th In

JUNE 2.6
KARAOKE W/KIP

SATURDAY, JUNE 30TH

•

Coin ~how
~ing

A Heartbeat Away
An affiliate of the O:Sieness Health System

At
Dusk!!!!!
g:g0-5:50

O'Bionoa Hoar! Senllcoc

MiddiG~ott

~irewotk!l
~lnale

DJ

out our weekly lineup!

screenings, call O'Bieness Community Rel ations at 591-9300. "

&amp;Com{! Csh!btatg

TUES~AY,

CR 7 A • POMEROY, OH
740-992-7986

I

J1sealc and stroke. For more information ahout heart health and oun

Saturday June 23rd

Ch~ck

popular among the grayhaired set are bustling.
"The average age at
health clubs just went up to
37 years old, Here (at
Healthfit), the average age
is 53. In the middle of the
day, the average age is
· about 80," Atwood said.
An older client's goals are
a bit different from those of
your typical gym hound.
Sure, many want to lose
weight, but they are particularly focused on improving
their posture, lowering their
cholesterol, increasing bone
density a~ainst osteoporosis, alleviating joint pain
and avoiding falls.
"They're not in it for the
same things as· the 35-yearolds,"
said
Keith
Wrightington, who runs
FitWright. "They just want
to feel better."
A senior-focused gym
requires
senior-focused
equipment and a seniorfocused staff. Many of them
are hiring only fitness coaches with bachelor's or master's
degrees in subjects like kinesiology, and keep in regular
contact with members' primary care physicians to stay
on top of tlleir medications.
That's not to say that other
clubs aren't drawing in the
older set. One-third of
IHRSA's more than 4,000
clubs have senior programming, the associanon said,
and between 2000 and 2005
the number of members over
the age of 55 climbed from

who filed the lawsuit on tanyl in his system at the
behalf of his son's estate.
time of his death.
"The evidence was overTuesday's verdict was the.
whelming .that they knew ftrst in a federal case against
they were manufacturing the makers of the patch. Orr
patches ... that were leaking said he knows of up to 30 othfentanyl gel," Orr said . ers flied around the country.
Tuesday, adding that the
Last year, a Houston jury
drug is I00 times stronger awarded $772,500 to the
than morphine. "Despite that daughter of a woman who
fact, they were releasing the. died after wearing the patch.
product out into the market- At the time, Alza said it was
place. The jury result says confident in the safety of
that that's not acceptable."
the product.
His son was found dead at
The Food and Drug
his computer.
Administration announced in
A spokesman for Janssen 2005 that it was investigating
and Alza said the companies 120 deaths among users of
were considering an appeal. · patches that emit fentanyl
"We sympathize with the and warned patients to be
Hendelson family over their sure to use the powerful narloss," said spokesman Greg cotic properly to avoid acciPanico. "However, we dis- dental overdose. While at
agree with the jury's verdict least some of the deaths
and we're considering our appeared to have been acci- ·
options for an appeal."
. dental, the agency at the time
Orr said tests showed said it was probing whether
Hendelson had at least three there were also factors relat· times the lethal dose of fen- · ed to the product's quality.

ul,hboun.d
.

Bv CARLA K. JOHNSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

. .

Bv BRIAN SKOLOFF

Ext. Hours: .June 18-22 Only Open til 8pm

Breast cancer genes can be
hidden in Dad's side of the
family; more genetic "tests urged

AP BUSINESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Marshall
Kahn attends a gym with
yoga, tai chi and Pilates
classes, weight training and
treadmills. It also has a driving simulator, where members can keep their skills
from deteriorating.
The gym, Nifty After
Fifty, is one of many fitness
centers popping up around
the country aimed at serving
older clients.
"I'm 80, my wife is 48. So
I have to stay fit," said Kahn,
who signed up at one· of the
company's four Los Angeles
locations earlier this year
and pays about $50 per
month to work out three
times a week. "I joined a
gym about three or four
years ago, and I didn' t like it
at my age - it was young,
noisy and frenetic. They
were doing all these crazy
things I c(luldn't participate
in. Here, I'm not· intimidated. I'm more inclined to go."
When it comes to designing a gym, it's not all about
attracting the hard bodies
anymore, and when it comes
to senior .fitness, there's
more out there than ·water
aerobics. As more of
America's baby boomers
start entering their 60s, more
startup gyms are homing in
on a more mature market.
"As we get older, we.' re sort
of intimidated about going
into a 25,000 square-foot gym
with rock music and people in
tight leotards and muscle
bulging from every aspect of
their ~ shirts," said 74year-old Sheldon Zinberg,
who opened Nifty After Fifty
last
Nifty After Fifty plays softer music than the typical
gym, and uses smooth, air
pressure-driven equipment
for strength training as
opposed to your typical metal
weights. So does Healthfit, a
club based in Needham,
Mass., where paintings adorn
the walls and the average
client is over SO. FitWright
- a club that opened last fall
in Dedham, Mass., which has
seen particular interest
recently from people in' their
60s and 70s - offers a special "gentle yoga" class for its
less limber members.
"I think more than half the
calls I get, and there's no
regionality to this. are about
doing a senior-only health

20, 2007

Federal jury awards $5.5M in
Johnson &amp;Johnson drug patch case

COLE'S
MOBILE
HO
ES
· · 15266 u.s. 50 East

·China plai)S highway frorp foot
of Mount Everest to base camp to
help with Olympic torch relay
BY SCOTT McDONALD

dri \'er.
Six of those ki llecJ li ved in
a house behind the mosque.
a police official said .
Twen ty ci1rs were incinerat·cd 'and 2~ _,hops damaged.
The US. military operalion in Di y;lia province. an
ai-Qaiua baslion. ma tched
in · size I he force that

'

.

least 3,530 the number of
U.S. military personnel who
. have died since the beginnin o oT the Iraq war in
Ma~ch 2003, according to
an AP count.
Additionally. Jraqi forces
- about. 5,000 Iraqi soldi e r~ and 2,000 paramilitary
pol ice - joined the battle in
Divala province, accordmg
to · Mo hammed ai -Askari,
the
defe nse
minisity
spokc,man . .
.
T!1c U. S. commander m
11lc i·cgion. Maj. Gen.
Benjamin Mixon, _sa1d a
combined U.S.-Iraq1 force
of about 3.500 soldiers and .
poli(e were operating in
Baqouba proper, a city of
about 300.000..
.
--we began last ni ght with
large-scale air assaults moving by helicopter to surpnse
the enemy with a large
oround assault before. dayfight. We've had initial
good success . .. . There's a
lot of work left to be done,"
he told CNN .
· The military said at least
22 militanls had been killed
by daybreak.
.
In southern Iraq, pohce
and hospital oflkials said
the death toll reached 35 in
clashes that continued into a .
'second day between Mahdi
Army fighters and Iraqi
security forces in Nasiriyah, .
about 200 miles southeast
of Baghdad.
Authorities said about
150 people were wounded.
They declined to be identified because they feared retribution . Most of the casuallies were pDi ice or militiamen. A delegation from radical Shii1c cleric Muqtada
a i-Sadr's ' office arrived in
1he ci1.y to try to end the
fi ghtin g. according to the
city council.
A curfew was imposed on
Nasiriyah on Monday. and
remained in effect.
At sundown Tuesday in
Bag hdad, militants fired a
volley ol' mortars into · the
U.S.-guardeu Green Zone.
Five crashed' to earth near
the office of Prime Minister
Nouri ai -Maliki and one
slammed into a structure ·
adjacent to the American
post exc hange slore.
No casualties were immediat ely
reported.
The
American Embassy confirmed that the Green Zone
h•id been hit by mortar or
rocket fire hut provided no
details.
AssiJciated Pre,\',! News
/?,Ksearch Center in New
Ytirk cnntri/Juted 'to this
report.

Wednesday, June

•

78 KillED IN BAGHDAD MOSQUE BOMBING
BY STEVEN R. HURST

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

7:go ~reo
Phil Ditt &amp;the

,,

'

�'The Daily Sentinel

OHIO

Baby found on doorstep miles from
' 'S disa..ppe
. ar'·ance
re.gnant woman

P

gators in Stark County.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
At a late afternoon news
co nfere nce. Stark County
CANTON - A couple auth orities reiteratrd that
who found a newborn baby the y had no su.spects in
in a basket on their porch, Davis' disappearance.
45 miles from where a pregChief Deputy Rick Perez
nant woman vani shed , said his office had not done
believes it is more likely the a DNA test to see if the baby
baby came from someone was Davis' and decli ned to
familiar with the wife's comment on whether they
work· as a nurse than from wo uld 'conduct a test.
the missing woman .
"At this time, we're still
The infant girl was sleep- continuing our investigation
ing in a wicker basket. her with the Way ne Counry
umbilical cord tied off with a sheriff's office, and the rest
rubber band. when Don of it's part qf an investigaRedman and his wife Sue tion I'm not at liberty to
returned
from
dinner · speak about." Perez said.
Monday evening to their
The sheriff's department
rural home south of Wooster. released a surveillance camDon Redman speculated that era photo of Davis' pushing a
the baby was left by someone shopping cart with 2-year-old
who knew his wife's back- son Blake at an Acme super-ground as a nurse and board market in North Canton. The
member at a local free clinic. time on the cambra reads
"My wife has been a 6:24 p.m. Wednesday, about
school nurse and has deal t three hours before her mother
with young females in a last spoke to her.
confidential manner over a
Bobby Cutts Jr., the father
number of years." Redman of Davis' son and unborn
said. "We don't feel at this girl. had an amicable rei apoint that there's any cu n- tionship with her, said a felnection (with the missin g low officer who accused
woman)."
investigators of mishanA DNA sample was taken dling the case.
Tuesday from the infant and
The 30-year-old Cutts, a
given to Stark County Canton police officer, is
authorities investigating the cooperating in the search
disappearance of Jessie for Davis. authorities say.
Davis, said Thomas Maurer, Cutts is devastated by her
sheriff in nei ghborin g disappearance and is a good
Wayne County.
father who shared parenting
. Maurer also did not duties with Davis, said John
believe there is a connection Miller, president of the
between the full -term baby Canton patrolman's union.
and the missing woman. He
Cutts juggled parenthood
said a doctor determined with. the demands of his
that the baby was less than patrol job on the · midnight
24 hours old.
shift, Miller said.
"We're using every caution
"He's a good officer. He's
we can" to identify the baby got no problems at work. He
or eliminate the possibility treats people well," Miller
that she is related to Davis, said.
who is due July 3 with a baby
Cutts, who is estranged
girl, Maurer said.
from his wife with whom
· Davis. 26. was last heard has at least one child, has
from Wednesday when she declined com1nent and is
spoke to her mother by now on leave from his job.
phone from her home in
In 1998, . he pleaded no
nearby North Canton in .. ..~&lt;on test to a disorderly cqnnortheast Ohio.
duct charge and was senMaurer said ·the baby tenced to three years' profound was dressed in a bation after a former girlsleeper. The wicker basket-- .friend accused him of
co ntained a blanket, a can of breaking a door jamb and
baby formula and a bottle forcing his way into their
containing formula, but home, causing her to fear
there was no note, h~ said.
for her safety, according to
She was taken to Wooste r a police report from nearby
Community Hospital, where Jackson Township.
DNA from the girl was colAuthorities
searched
lected using a mouth swab, Cutts' home in Canton in
said Maurer, · who said he northeast Ohio over the
drove the sample to investi- weekend
and
again
BY JOE MILIClA

Page AS
Wednesday, June

20, 2007

Local Weather .

Wedne s day Sunny
Highs in the ~~~er 80s:
North winds 5 to I 0 mph.
Wednesday
night...
hidden under a mattress.
Monday night.
Mostly
clear.
Patchy
depse
Davis, who planned to Canton police officials
fog
after
midnight.
Lows
in
name her unborn daughter accused Cutts of giving the
the
lower
50s.
North
winds
Chloe, was reported miss- gun to his cousi n for protecing on Friday when her tion and said Cutts was around 5 mph in the
mother, Patricia Porter. lying when he reported the evening .. . Beco ming light
went to Davis· house to · gun stolen.
and variable.
check on her and found her
Thursday... Sunny. Patchy
arbitrator
A . federal
grandson, · Blake, alone, ordered the city to reinstate dense fog. Highs in the mid
wearing a dirty diaper in a the officer, saying Canton 80s. Southwest winds
home with furniture askew. police had not proven the around 5 mph.
A pool of bleach·was on the allegation .
Thursday night..;Partly
bedroom floor, and the concloudy.
Lows in the upper
Associated
Press
tents of Davis' purse were reporters Rachel Hoag and 50s. West .winds 5 to I0
scattered in the kitchen.
Matt Leingang in Columbus mph.
Blake told investigators: conllibwed to tl1is report.
Friday and Friday
"Mommy was crying.
Mom my broke the table.
Mommy's in the rug."
Her cell phone and a comforter were missing.
Davis'
family
has
declined to talk about her
relati onship with Cutts. Her
father, Ned, held back tears
Tuesday in an interview,
sayi ng he's trying to block
out all emotion and focus on,
his daughter's safe return.
''I'm a dad that wants hi s
daughter back," he said.
Miller accused the Stark
County Sheriff's Office of
~vaiting too long to retrieve
Davis' cell phone records.
The sheriff's department
has not discussed whether
any clues have been found
in the records and, during a
Tuesday news conference,
Perez gave no answers to
repeated questions about the
delay in checking them.
Cutts is active in the community and coaches youth
baseball, basketball and
football , Miller said. He
feels he is being wrongfully
scrutinized in the media.
"Watch anythi rig on TV;
and they 've got him guiliy,"
Miller said.
About two years after his
conviction in the disorderly
conduct case, Cutts was
hired by the Canton Police
Department.
·
"I feel very contident in
recommending this applicant
for the job," wrote Canton ·
police , Lt. T~omas R.
Thomas, who conducted a
background check on Cutts.
Thomas wrote that the mis,
dem~anor shouldn 't be he.ld
against Cutts because he
cooperated wi!h authorities
and ended his relationship
with his 'then-girlfriend.
Cutts ' personnel file also
shows he won an appeal to
overturn his firing in 2003
when authorities conducting
a drug raid on his cousin's
homefound Cutts' handgun

night... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 80s. Lows 10
the lower 60s.
Saturday and Saturday
night .••Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 80s. Lows in the mid
60s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Sunday... Partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Sunday night through
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
60s. Highs in the upper
80s.
1\Jesday ... Partly sunny.
Hot with highs around 90.

Company fined ·$17,000 after fatal accident
CINCINNATI (AP) -A · tion of the plant- in New
waste management compa- Miami, in Butler County.
ny has been fined for safety
Cincinnati-based Rumpke
violations following an of Ohio Inc. has agreed to
accident two .months ago at pay a $17,000 fme, reduced
its tire-recycling plant in from
a recommended
which a worker lost an ann $25,000 on condition the
and later died.
company corrects all violaThe federal Occupational . tions and pay the penalty by
Safe~y
and
Health June 28. Five violations were
Administration said it found corrected during an OSHA
seven violations of safety inspection of the plant after
regulations during an inspec- the April accident in which a

tire shredder jammed.
The company agreed to
install protective railings
around some of the equipment, along with other safeguards.
· The company said details
aren't known about .the
exact cause of the accident. .
· Temporary worker Scott
Johnson, 56, died Saturday
after 52 days in Miami
Valley Hospital in Dayton.

•

URI

Inside
Local Sports Briefs, Page B2
Miami mourning another loss, Page B2
Philadelphia downs Tribe, Page BJ

Wednesday, June 20, 2007
LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A sdledule ol ~college
and hql school varsity spo.1ing 9Y911ts fflolvng
teM16 lrcm Galia and Meigs ooo.ries.

Thursday'• game
LaglonBaaeball

Basketball camps at Rio Grande great for future players
STAFF RI;PORT
. SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Athens Jr. at Gallia, 6 p.m.

Frtdav'• Qlmtl

LaglonBaaeball
Meigs at Logan, 6 p.m.

Saturday'• P'DII'
Legion Baaeball
Gallia at McArthur (OH), noon
Meigs at Pari&lt;ersburg (DH) , I p.m.

Wedntsdav. June 21
Legion Baaeball
Gallia at Meigs, 6 p.m.·
·

Tri-County
Juniors complete
second round
BY

FRANK CAPEHART

SPORTS CORRESPONDEtjT

RIO GRANDE - Hi gh school,
middle sc hool and elementary
school students from all around the
region are visiting the University
of Ri o Grande/Rio Grande
·Community College this summer
for the numerous athletic camps
and special programs.
Rio Grande offers classes and
special workshops for studen.ts of
all ages in the summer, and also
presents a wide variety of athletIC camps.
The men's basketball program at
Rio Grande, for exampl e, holds sev-.

Redmen
Basketball

era! weeks worth of camps for teams
and players from around the region.
One pan of the men's basketball
team 's summer programming is the
Shoot-outs that Ri o Grande holds,
inviting teams to play games against
other teams from around the region
at the one-day events. Rio Grande
holds six of the Shoot Outs during
the summer, and they draw teams
from around Ohio, West Virg.inia
and Kentucky who want the chance
to play four games in one day.

Griffey makes more history, Reds down A's

MASON , W.Va.
BY JAIIIIE McCAuLEY
Another hot day produced
AP SPORTS WRITER
similar competition as the
Tri-County Juniors . traOAKLAND, Calif.
versed the Riverside Golf Ken Griffey Jr. sure seems
Course to reach the .mid- primed for a successful
point of the 2007 season.
return trip to Seattle.
Spirited play with keep
Griffey hit his 582nd
shot-making brought about · career home run and 19th of
some good scoring, some the season, leading the
reversals of the fu st week Cincinnati Reds to their first
. and created some tight races regular-season victory over
in various age groups.
the Oakland Athletics in
Once again , only three eight tries with a 5-2 win
15-17 bracket players teed Tuesday night.
up for the second round.
Griffey 's solo shot off
However, Chris Long of Oakland starter Chad
Point . Pleasant fashioned a Gaudin gave the slugger
nifty two-over 37 to capture I ,652 career RBi s, tying
the first place Fruth trophy. him with Tony Perez for
Will Garrison of Point col- 18th place on the all-time
lected 41 strokes to grab the list. It also was Griffey's
runner-up trophy for the SOOth RBI in eight seasons
week.
with the Reds.
With both Long and
The home run, which
Garris&lt;;m now having won a drew Griffey within one of
match apiece, that division Mark McGwire for seventh
is' a dead heat for the crown place on the career list,
as each player has 18 points. staked rookie Homer Bailey
Adam Roush placed third to a 4-0 lead in the third
on the day.
inning.·
Much the same scenario
Bailey (2-0), impressive
highlighted the 13-14 age in just his third major
group. Opie Lucas ~f ~oint _ league start, didn't allow.,a
· l'Ieasatlt carded a sohd 41 to hit until Mark Elli s singled
eacn weeki~ fust place hon- to start the tifth and only
ors, while Nick Saunders of yielded . two total on the
Gallipolis shot a runner-up night. It was reliever Todd
score of 43 to gain the sec- Coffey who gave up Kurt
ond place Fruth trophy.
Suzuki 's first · career home
Saunders, who won the run in the eighth.
season opener, now holds a
David Weathers recorded
·slim one point advantage the final fQur outs for his
over Lucas in their division . 14th save in 16 chances.
Close behind them at 13
Griffey -;set to make his
points, Steven Thiss of first appearance in Seattle
Gallipolis collected 49 this weekend since leaving
strokes for third. David the. Mariners after the 1999
Michael of Crown City was season - connected for his
fourth and Caleb Craft fifth. seventh homer in his last 12
games.
Gaudin
(6-2)
Please 5ee Golf. Bl
became the 369th different
pitcher to surrender a home
run to the 37-year-old
Griffey.
AP photo
Javier Valentin doubled in
19th homer of
a run and hit a sacrifice fly Cincinnati Red s ' Ken Griffey Jr. (3) celebrates with tea mm(lte Adam Dunn aft er hitting
a home run off Oakla nd Athletics ' Chad Gaudin in the third inning of a baseball game
Please see Reds, Bl
·
Tuesday in Oakland , Cal if.

SATURDAY
JUNE23rd

vur tnas1re.

.

Furniture, Appliances, Household Items.

49491 St Rt 681
Tuppers Plain

Fri. Jun. 22 - After 12 pm
Sat. June- 23 9·2 pm
S. 2nd Middleport,.OH ·

Buckeyes'
early games
to kick off
·at noon
COLUM BUS (A P)
Ohio State's fir st two
games this fa ll against
Youngstown State and
Akron will be televised on
the new Big Ten Network
and
will
,lll8i.. kick off at
..J.III'
r-.~~~- noon.
jiiJ
Game
1. times have
'.; __ ._/ n.o now
been
se t for seven
of the Buckeyes' 12 games.
The Buckeyes open their
!18th yea r of football on
Sept. I at home against
Youn gstown State. The following week, th ey host
Akron.
The Big Ten Conference
announced last month that
Ohio State 's games on
Sept. 15 at Washin gton and
Oct. 20 ~t home against
Michigan State would .start
at 3:30p.m. The Buckeyes
play 8 p.m . games at
Minnesota on Sept. 29, at
Purdue on Oct. 6 and at
Penn State on Oct. 27.
The Washington and
Michigan State games will
appear on ABC, wi th the
other three on eit her ABC.
ESPN or ESPN2 .
The Big Ten Network is
working on
reac hin g
agreements with all carri ers, although it currentl y
has contracts with onl y
DirecTV and AT&amp;T along
with a loca l agreement
with
Buckeye
Cab leSystem . in Toledo.
Ohi o. It is sc hed uled to
launch programming In
August

OJ'\" ·

HUGE 3 Family Yard Sale
June 18-25
Women, men &amp; children clothing
&amp; much more. Rain or shine. ·

3 miles out SR 143, first drive
way to the left. Look for signs

Scorellne

Fax -

eXt. 33

t -74D-446-3008

E· mall- sports@mydailysentinel.com
Soorts Staff

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

Larry Crum, Sports Wrller
(740) 446-2342, ext 23
Ierum C mydailyregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
bwaltersCmydallytribune.com

JOHN

NADEL

AP'SPORTS WRIT ER

(5 p.m.·t a.m.)

t -740-446-2342

.

trying to peddle the video to
t11 edia OUtletS told the New
York Times thev were talkLOS
ANGELES
ing with Brya1it when one
Intentional or not, Kobe decided to take a photograph.
Bryant seems to be doing and some video, but they
everything he can to pres- didn 't believe Bryant was
sure the Los Angeles Lakers . aware the y were film ing.
into trading him.
According to the Times.
So far, it doesn't appear to the video lasts 24 seconds be working.
an interesting coincidence
The latest twis t in the since Bryant wears No. 24
Bryant saga in volves an and his personal web site is
amateur video of the nine- www.kb24.com.
time All-Star denouncing
The Lakers passed up a
general . manager Mitch possible opportunity to
Kupchak and teammate acqui re star guard Jason
, Andrew Bynum.
Kidd from the New Jersey
Lakers spokesman John Nets at the trade deadline in
Black said the team was February because they didcontacted about the video n't want to part with the 19before Bryant' first requested year-old Bynum - a 7-footto be traded on May 30. .
er taken with the IOth over" It doesn't change our all pick in the draft two
stance at all ,' ' Black said a years ago.
day after saying essentially
"Are you kidding me?''
the same thing - that the Bryant says m the video
team has no plans to trade . before using several profanthe two -time defending ities in add ing that the
NBA scoring champion.
Lakers should "ship out"
"These people called us Bynum.
about a month ago, they told
Bryant also spoke in negaus they wanted to sell it, we tive tones about Kupchak .
told them we had no interest Bryant called the Lakers'
in buying it," Black said. front office "a mess" in a
'That's the end of the story. radio interview the day
There's been no funher con- before first making public
tact between them and us." his desire to be traded.
Kupchak declined further
The Times said the video 's
comment. saying. "I think owners turned down an offer
enough has been said."
from a Lakers fan to buy it
A spokesman for the men and keep it private. Instead,
BY

ComAcrUs
OVP

8 am-3 pm

College Football

·Kobe pressuring Laker~ for trade

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)
- Ken Griffey Jr. hit his
582nd career home run and
19th of the season Tuesday
night, a solo shot off
Oakland starter Chad
Gaudin that gave the slugger I ,652 career RBis.
His latest RBI tied him
with Tony Perez for 18th
place on the ·all-time list,
and it also was his SOOth
RB.I in eight seasons with
the Reds.
Griffey -set to make his
first return to Seattle this
weekend since leaving the
Mariners after the 1999 season - connected for ·his
seventh homer in his last 12
games .and gave the Reds a
4-0 lead. Gaudin became
the 369th different pitcher
to surrender a home run to
the 37-year-old Griffey.

treaSirt. Stl• 1111 Ill UVIII Cll ftlll-

June 22 &amp; 23

Please see Camp. Bl

SOOth RBI as Red

•re. lie mM's trash Is another ma1's

Antiques, collectables, glassware
tables and more great stuff!
Some linens &amp; clothing.

CIS

around the region.
Many of the teams that visi t Rio
Grande for the summer events are
also coached by Rio Grande alumni.
Frenc h said there is a long list of
schools from southern Ohio and all
around the region coached by Rio
Grande graduates. and he is always
proud to have them back on campus
with their teams.
Rio Grande also holds the annual
Big Red Basketball Camp every
summer for individuals ages 10-15.
"It's a very intense week of basketball," French said. He calls the camp
an "old- school throwback" style of

year, picks up

lleslde Cremeans Funeral Home
In Racine ·
Girls anti IIIah cletblna,llloks. tavs. 1111

Moving Sale

"It 's good to play against teams
and players you don't usually play
against during th e season," said
Clay Garrett, a player from Eastern
Brown.High School. Teammate Kurt
Davis said he also enjoyed the experience of playing in one of the Shoot
Outs at Rio Grande. ·
" It helps us come together as a
team," Davis said.
Ken French, head coach of the
men 's basketball teaqi at Rio
Grande, said that the Shoot Outs
give high school teams the chance to
work together in the summer to
improve their skills, and also to gain
more game experience playing
against other talented teams from

Griffey Jr. hits

811 Elm Street

Yard Sale

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

AP pholo

Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant, left, signs hi s contract in
this July 15, 2004, file .photo at the team's training faci lity
in El Segundo, Calif. Intentional or not, Kobe Bryant seems
to be doing everything he can to pressure the Los Angeles
takers into 'trading him.

\

----- - ----

the newspaper said. they
plan tu make it public by the
end of the week provided
enough money can be raised
throu gh Web donations, then
charge $1.99 through their
Web site.
.
Lakcrs owner JeiTy Buss
spoke with Bryant by telephone a.day after the trade
request arid issued a statement say ing: ''We wi ll continue to pursue every avenue ·
possible to improve our
team with (Bryant ) as the
cornerstone...
Owner and player met
face-to-face last Friday in
Barcelona, and whi le 'Black
declined to reveal details,
the Los Angeles Times and
Riverside Press-Enterprise
quoted sources as saying
Bryant still wanted out.
On the day he made his
initial trade request, Bryant
backed off somewhat after
speaking with Lakers coacll
Phil Jackson, although that
turned out to be a temporary
stance.
Jackson told the Los
Angeles Times. he believes
Bryant will remain with the
team.
··
"He's made a decision that
he fee ls justified to hold one th.at I've questio ned that he has reasons to leave
the Lakers." Jackson wrote

Please see Kobe. Bl

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Miami in mourning for
the third·time in a year
BY THE AssOCIATED PRESS

For the third time in one
year, Miami University is
grieving the death of a former head football coach.
Terry Hoeppner. the coach
at Indiana the past two years
after spending six years in
charge of the RedHaw kS,
died Tuesday of complications from a brain tumor. He
was 59.
Bo Schembechler, the iegendary Michigan coach.
died the day before the second-ranked . Wolverines'
clash with No. I Ohio State
last
November.
Schembechler was 40-17-3
as Miami 's head coach from
1963-68 before moving on
to Michigan.
Former Miami coach
Randy Walker died June ·29,
2006, of a heart attack. He
had been the head coach at
Northwestern , and during
his nine years at Miami had
been one of Hoeppner's
mentors.
"I lost a friend and someone 1 learned a Jot from in
our time at Miami,"
Hoeppner said shortly after
Walker's death. "He is a
great man, a great family ·
·man and a great person.
Words cannot express how
much I will miss him."
Now those same sentiments are being expressed
by others who knew
· Hoeppner.
Pittsburgh quarterback
Ben
Roethlisberger, a
Findlay,
Ohio, native
recruited to play at Miami
by
Hoeppner,
called
Hoeppner a role model.
"Coach Hoeppner has
inspired me to be who I am
· today," he. said in ·a statement. "He has been a/second
father, a teacher and a
friend. He believed .in me
and I owe everything to him
for where I am in life."
Current Miami coach
Shane Montgomery also felt
the sting of loss.
"Everybody knew what a
great coach he was, but he
was a great person," said
Montgomery, who also
played quarterback for

APphoto

Indiana coach Terry Hoeppner looks on during the second
quarter of a football game against Wisconsin in this Sept.
30, 2006. file photo. Hoeppner, 59, died Tuesday in a
·
f
f
Bloomington hospital rom complications rom a brain
tumor, a university spokesman said.
Hoeppner and was his assis- left to take the Northwestern
tant at Miami. "He was a job.
great person to be around. He had a record of 48-25
He was a coaches' coach and in his six ye!lfS with the
a players' coach and had a RedHawks. His 19 years as
great attitode about every- an assistant and head coach
thing."
are the longest tenure of any
After two brain surgeries coach in program history.
in the past 18 months,
With Roethlisberger at
Hoeppner spent the last four quarterback, Hoeppner's
months on medical .leave. 2003 Miami squad went 13He died at 6:50 a.m. at I, won MAC divisional and
Bloomington Hospital with conference championships
his family at his side, and beat Louisville 49-28 in
Indiana officials confirmed. the GMAC Bowl. The
"I know he was fighting RedHawks finished No. I0
until the last day, and that's in the final Associated Press
just the type of person he po11 , their highest ranking to
was," Montgomery said. end a season.
"We're going to miss .him. ·Dan Dalrymple, the New
I'm going to miss him as Orleans Saints strength and
both a coach and a friend." condit·ioning coach, was on
The 59-year-old Hoeppner staff at Miami for most of
was born in Indiana and Hoeppner's career there.
went to high school and col"He had unbridled enthulege there, but was steeped siasm and a zest for life and
in Miami's football tradi- coaching," Dalrymple said.
t.ions. He came to Oxford, "He has touched the lives of
Ohio, as an assistant coach numbers of players and his
in 1986, became assistant legacy will go on because of
head coach from 1993-98 the type of person he was.
and then took over as head He had an impact on everycoach in 1999 when Walker one he met."

ers came . Griffin Stanley,
Benjamin Freeman and
Jacob Leach who tied for
sixth.
Some new faces in the I 0and-under division tightened co mpet ition · in the
group. First place winner'
with 46 was Dares Hamid
of Gallipolis, just two
strokes better than Jacob
Hoback. Third place went
to Ryan Schenkelberg,
while Jacob Massile earned
fourth place. Jn the overall
standings, Massile heads
the division with 12 points,
Hamid Fallows at I 0,
Hoback has eight with
Schenkelberg shows 'six.
In the ladies division,
Miriam Gordon of West

Columbia chalked up a 57
to barely edge ahead of
Libby Leach from Cheshire
by only one point. Kel sey
Albright of Point Pleasant
was a mere two strokes
back at 60, while Alyssa
Cremens of Mason grabbed
fourth with 62. Overall,
Albright holds first spot at
16, Leach is second with 14
and Gordon has 13 points:
The next nine-hole round
comes on Monday, June 25
at Cliffside in Gallipolis.
Registration for the event
begii)S at 8:30a.m. with teeoff at 9 a.m. All area players
are encouraged to attend.
Cost is just $10 per pl ayer
which covers green fees ,
lunch and awands.

gram also holds a camp for
students ages 6-9 on the Rio
Grande campus, and holds
another camp for students
ages 6-9 in Huntington, •
W.Va.
"Every kid improves during the camp," French ~aid.
These camps draw indi victuals from Cincinnati and all
around the tri-state area.
The men's basketball
camps at Rio Grande have
been drawing more students
than ever before, and
French said he attributes the
rising popularity in a large
part to the hard work of his
assistant coaches, Thad
Haines, Cain Vandall and
Reggie Williamson.
"I love the opportunity to
work with young kids,"

Haines said. He learned a
lot by going to basketball
camps when he was growing up, and he sees it as a
way to "pay it forward" by
working w1th area children
and young adults in camps
today.
"I get to share my passion
for the game," Haines said.
For more information on
the men's basketball camps
or on the other athletic
camps offered this summer
by Rio Grande, call the athletics office at 1-800-2827201. Fpr additional information on summer programming, athletics and the
wide range of academic and
professional
programs
offered by Rio Grande, log
onto www.rio.edu

from Page Bl
Some ten 11-12 bracket
players made things exciting in this. division. Bryce
Saxon of Gallia posted a 50
to win weekly top spot honors, just one stroke better
than first week wmner
Brady Curry of Gallipolis
who grabbed the runner-up
trophy.
Right on their heels was
Eric Albright of Point
Pleasant with a 53, just
ahead of Crown City's Gus
Slone in the tight scoring
chase. Just behind the lead-

Camp
fromPageBl
camp, as the coaches stress
team play and fundamental
skills on offense and
(fefense.
"We're trying to help the
kids get better," French
said. The coaches work the
kids hard, but rnake sure
they have fun and enjoy
their time at camp too.
'They ·learn a Jot about
themselves," he said,
adding that he is able to see
the campers
improve
through all of their hard
work.
The mep 's basketball pro-

"It was discussed again,

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Middleport Little League
Tourney set for July 7

Pomeroy baseball tourney
set for July 10

MIDDLEPORT - There will be a double-elimination little league baseball tournament held in Middleport starting on
Saturday, July 7.
All participants will receive a t-shin and
there will be both individual and team trophies presented.
No traveling teams or all-star teams will
be permitted into the tournament.
There will also be a Homerun Derby on
the last day of the tournament for anyone
who hits a homer during the tournament.
For information contact Dave Boyd at
590-0438: Tanya Coleman at 992-5481;
Mike Miller at 416-5301: or Tim Ebersbach
at 416-7934.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy Youth
League will be hosting a baseball tourna- .
ment starting Tuesday, July 10 for all boys .
ages 9-10. For more information call Ken at
740-992-5322 or 740-416-6648; or Tony at ·
740-992-4067.

Rotary Mile returns this
Juiy to Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Rotary
Club will sponsor its annual Fourth of Jul y
Rotary Mile on Wednesday, July 4.
Runner will meet 5:30 p.m. at the Shake ·
Shoppe on 2nd Ave .. and each competitor
must have a completed registration form
with them .

POMEROY - The sign-up date has been
extended for the Meigs Flag Football
League that will be held this fall. The league
RACINE - The Southern High School
is being organized by former NFL star Mike weight room is now open from noon to 2
Bartrum, along with cooper~tion from the p.m.. Monday-Friday and all football play· National Football League.
ers are urged to attend.
The new date is June 15, and has been
extended because of a busy month of May
for most people.
· ·
"May has been a busy month", Dave
MASON, W.Va. -· The Wahama Athletic
Harris said, who is helping with the league. Boosters are sponsoring a 3-on-3 basketball
"With baseball, school graduations and the tournament at Wahama High School on
Bartruni and Brown Football Camp."
July 14.
·
The league will stan on August 1 and the Saturday,
There
is
a
girls
division
(9-12),
as well as
season will be for s ·weeks. All practices and
boys
divisions
(6-8,
9-12)
and
an
IS-andgames will be held the Meigs High School
over
division.
practice field.
·
Contact Lisa Gardner at 304-593-6928.
"We will have a large practice sometime
Space
is limited.
the second half of July, with a draft coming
the end of July," Bartrum said. "Practices
will start the middle pan of August, with the
first game starting on A~gust I st."
The league is open to boys and girls ages .
•OR·
kindergarten through sixth grade, and the
cost IS $30 for each player and $20 for each
addition family member.
OAK HILL - The Oak Hill Athletic
For more information on the· league con- Boosters will hold their annual 3-on-3 bastact Banrum o~ Harris at 740-541 ~ 1222.
.ketball tournament on Sunday, Jul y I, 2007.
Registrations will start at 9 a.m. and
games will begin at 10 a.m. ·
The categories are: 3-4 grade boys; 3-4
GALLIPOLIS - The 0.0. Mcintyre grade girls; 5-6 grade boys: 5-6 grade girls;
Park District has openings for two teams for 7-8 grade boys; 7-8 grade girls; 9-12 grade
an adult Coed softball league.
boys; 9-12 grade girls; and adult.
Games· are played at Racoon Creek
Teams may either pre-register or register
County Park on Thursday evening begin- the day of the competition.
ning June 21.
For more information call 6R2-3949 or .
Players must be at least 18 years of age. 682-3094. Mail form and entry fee to: 3-onFor more information please contact 3 Toumament,270 Mill Street, Oak Hill , OH
Mark Danner at 446-4612 ext. 255:
45656.
.

Wahama 3-on-3 tourney

OHHS A
, .B
thlebC OOSters
hOSt'Ing 3 3 basketba11·
tournament on July 4

COed softball teams needed

CLEVELAND (1\P) - wasn't overly impressed in a 2-for-41 sluinp, hit a . Blake on a groundout.
Ryan Howard enjoys hitting with the distance.
solo homer in 'the second.
"Jose's popularity is good
at Jacobs Field.
. "As long as it's over the , He added an RBI single in with me as long as he gets·
Howard hit a 451-foot wall, it. doesn 't matter how the fourth.
·
people out," Manuel said.
Stanford allowed six runs
After Jimmy Rollins starthomer and drove in four far it goes, whether it's 600
runs,
leading . the feet or 401 feet," he s~id.
and six hits in 6 2-3 innings. ed the game with a bunt sinPhiladelphia Phillies over
Kendrick , a 23-year-old He struck out three, walked gle, Utley was hit by a pitch .
the Cleveland Indians 9-6 right-hander making his one and hit two batters.
with one out. Howard fol- ·
Tuesday night and helping second major league stan,
''There were three pitches, lowed with a line drive sinKyle Kendrick to his first allowed three runs and five · I wish I could have back," gle that hit off , Garko's
major league victory.
hits in six innings. Called up Stanford said. "The double glol(e at first base.
Howard had an RBI single from Double-A Reading on to Burrell, the 0-2 to
With two outs. Burrell ,
in a three-run first, homered June 13, he made his debut Howard and the 0-2 pitch who has been in a seasoninto the second deck in right that day against the Chicago that hit (Shane) Victorino lorig slump, doubled to ceoin the third off Jason White So)( and didn't get a (in the seventh)."
ter for a 3-0 lead. Burrell
Stanford ( 1- 1) and added a decision. He also allowed
With the Indians trailing had been hitless in his last
two-run double in the ninth three runs in six innings in 6-3, Jason Michaels hit a 12 at-bats and was batting
off Roberto Hernandez. Of that game.
two-run single with two .150 (20-for-133) in his last
Howard's last 27 hits, 13
"I guess you can say it's outs and the bases loaded in 48 games.
1
have been home runs.
happened a little bit sooner the eighth off Mike Madsen.
Following Garko's s ing!~
Howard also homered and than I thought, but it's here
Jose Mesa relieved and in the fourth, David .
had two hits in Monday 's and I'm trying to make was booed by Cleveland Dellucci drove in a run with
opener of the three-game something out of it," he fans who haven't forgotten a fielder's choiCe groundseries.
said.
he pitcher blew the save for out, but left when he injured
"So far, it's been pretty
"I felt like Kyle did a the Indians in the ninth his left hamstring making a
nice," he said of his two good job," manager Charlie inning of Game 7 of the headfirst dive into first base.
games in Cleveland. "It · Manuel said. "His poise is 1997 World Series against . Dellucci was on the ground
looks like a big ballpark, but good and he pitched well." Florida, which Cleveland for a couple of minutes and
the ball carries a little bit · Slumping Pat Burrell hit a lost in II innings.
had to be helped from the
APphoto better, especially when you two-run double in the first,
Mesa, signed by the field .by two trainers.
Philadelphicl' Phillies' Ryan Howard doubles home two runs get it toward the lines."
imd Chase Utley added a Phillies on June 9 after
"It's going to be a DL sitoff Cleveland Indians pitcher Roberto Hernandez in the
Howard's long· home run two-run single off Aaron being released by Detroit, uation," Indians manager :
ninth inning to pace the Phillies to a 9-6 win in a baseball came on an 0-2 pitch with Fultz in the seventh.
. quieted the fans a bit by Eric Wedge ·said. "It's just a "
game Tuesday in Cleveland . .
one out in the third, but he . Ryan Garko, who entered retiling pinch-hitter Casey matter how extreme it is." ·

Court upholds rejection of Bengals stadium suit
BY DAN SEWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

whether
there is an
antitrust
problem
with the
N F L' s
co ntroI
over its
number of

CINCINNATI
An
antitrust suit claiming officials and taxpayers were
pushed into financing a new
Notebook
stadium to keep the Bengals
in Cincinnati was filed after
time had run out, a federal teams and cities.
Sutton added: "The counappeals court ruled Tuesday.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court ty, like all local governments
of Appeals three-judge panel competing to attract profesunanimously agreed with a sional sports teams, underfederal district judge who stood thts reality long before
dismissed the suit filed by . it entered the May 1997
Hamilton County against the lease and understood the
Bengals and the NFL leveraging truth that goes
because it was not filed with it: The only thing worse
within a four-year statute of than having a losing team is
limitations.
hav.ing no team - no team
. County voters approved a for the community and its
half-cent sales tax hike in political leaders to ·support
1996 for the $450 million and no reason to say:
Paul Brown Stadium, which 'There's always next year."'
opened in 2000. A 30-year
Hamilton County commislease was signed in 1997. sioner Todd Portune, who
The antitrust lawsuit was initiated the lawsuit, said
filed in 2003.
officials would consult with
By dismissing the suit, the their attorneys, but were
courts dido 't rule on the unhkely to pursue further
county officials' claims that legal appeals in their .effort
they were victimized by to get a more equitable deal
monopoly power. Appeals with the Bengals.,
~he Bengals _called the
Judge Jeffrey S. Sutton
wrote that the 6th Circuit rulmg a vmdtcatron for the
panel didn't need to decide club and the NFL.

"The final chapter has
been written on the lawsuit
... and as a community, we
can now tum toward solving
today's challenges," Mike
Brown, Bengals owner and
president, said in a statement.
NFL spokesman Brian
McCarthy 'said the league
had no comment on the latest ruling.
In its appeal, the county
contended officials were
misled into thinking that the
Bengals' finances were so
bleak they needed a new stadium to survive, and didn't
find out until 200 I that the
team was profitable. The
appeals court cited many
earlier reports and comments about the Bengals'
profitability and about NFL
tactics in gaining new stadiums and favorable leases.
"With red flags flying, the
county instead moved forward with negotiations and
signed the stadium lease,"
the court said.
While the Bengals finished their first season in the
new stadium with a 4-12
record, the court said, "It is
Hamilton County tliat claims

it was the real loser because
it signed a lease with the
Bengals for the stadium that
it now calls 'unconscionable."'
Portune said the court rulrngs are disappointing
because they don't . decide
the key issues.
"It seems that every judi,
cia! authority that has taken
a look at this agreed that it is
.a terrible deal. But rather
than acting on those aspects,
they have instead hung their
hats on a technicality," he
said.
.
He said the stadium terms
have helped p'ush the county
into a financial crunch, facing deficits of $200 million
or more.
The appellate opinion
recounted the history of pro
football in Cincinnati, saying the Cincinnati. Celts
were the first team in 1921,
"lqng before lckey Woods
shuffled across the end zone,
long before Kenny Anderson
and Boomer Esiason led the
Bengals to Super Bowls
XVI and XXIII (a team from
another circuit, the San
Francisco 49ers, won both
games)."

Montoya goes road racing; Analyzes Hamilton's success
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- I t won't be hard for Juan

Special Spot COLOR pages
kicking.off the summer season.
First Page- Week of June 24th
for four weeks thru w~k of July 15th
.

.

.-

)

·..

.

.· ·FREE house s·pot·_cplor in your ad!
· ·Sign~ up for 4W~~KS and get

aFifth Week ~AEE
'

.

.

Pablo Montoya to improve
on last week's result at
Michigan - all he has to do
is avoid finishing last. ·
Problem is, anything
short of a victory might be
considered a disappoint:
· ment.
Montoya, who . finished
43td on Sunday for the
worst showing of his shun
NASCAR career, heads to
the ·road course in Sonoma,
Calif., this weekend expected to score his first Nextel
Cup victory.
The former Formula One
star is regarded as one of
the top road racers in the
world, and solidified that
reputation by winning the
Busch Series road race in
Mexico City earlier this
season. But in Sonoma,
he'll be racing against
NASCAR's very best and a
handful of ringers.
"He was phenomenal in
Mexico, absolutely phe- .
nomenal," said veteran
Mark Martin, who is sitting
out the race. "Obviously
(I'm) going to be watching
' with great excitement and
enthusiasm to see ho·w he
stacks up ... with the best of
the best, all of the best of

vers nave had this season.
Hendrick has used . an
intense testing program to
rack up I 0 wins through the
first IS races.
"There's n\)t rituch you
· can do about it," he said.
"We are backed up in the
fab shop, we are behind.
And how do you get on
pace? Yotl can't just go and
hire 30 new people. If it's a
business, you can 't. If it's a
hobby, you can."
Compounding the problem is that Montoya has yet
to drive the course at
Sonoma. He'll have roughly
two hours of track time to
AP photo
figure out the course before
Juan Pablo Montoya, of Colombia, celebrates winning the qualifying, and doesn 't
NASCAR Busch Series Mexico 200 .auto race in Mexico City, have many people he can
in this' March 4 file photo.
turn to for advice about the
"So I am not going to get layout. Ganassi teammate
the best."
Montoya insisted the involved with what every- David Stremme has yet to
expectations come only one thinks the result will race at Sonoma, and Reed
Sorenson has raced just
from the media, not his own be. "
once
there.
Montoya
is
being
realisteam, and was nonchalant
"I
don't know what to
about any pressure he might tic, knowing that his Chip
Ganassi Racing team lags expect," he said. "We show
be under to win.
_"Everybody e)(pects me behind NASCAR 's elite up, gotta learn the track and
to go out there and win, and teams. He was disheartened then we' II see."
He's not too worried
I don't care, to be honest," at a recent road test at
International about figuring out the
he said. "Those races are so Virginia
long and anything can hap- Raceway when he arrived course, and said his reputapen. You can get tangled in the only Ganassi car, tion in Fl was as-one of the
with somebody and l\,11 of a only to see Hendrick faste st learners whenever
sudden you are 20th, and it Motorsports bring five cars. the series went to a new
It's a complaint many dri - track.
takes awhile to come back.

APpholo

New Mexico State coach Reggie Theus cuts down the net in
this file photo after his team defeated Utah State in the
Western Ath letic men's basketball . tournament championship game Saturday, March 10. The Sacramento Kings
have 'agreed in principle to hire Theus as head coach, a
team spokesman said Tuesday.

Kings name Theus coach
Golden State coach coaxed
just 33 victories from a frac~
_ _ _:_________ tured locker room filled with
The Sacramento Kings grumpy veterans - most of
reached an agreement in prin- whom are under contract for
ciple Tuesday with Reggie next season.
Theus to become their new · Kings assistant coach Scott
coach, ending a meandering Brooks, and Los Angeles
two-month search for Eric Lakers assistants Brian Shaw
-Musselman's replacement.
and Kun Rambis also got sec. Kings spokesman Troy ond
interviews
with
Hanson said the dub plans to Sacramento owners Joe and
introduce Theus, the New Gavin Maloof, who reportedMexico State coach and a for- ly picked Musselman after the
mer Kings player, at a news coach wowed the brothers in
conference Wednesday.
an interview last summer . The Kings' search pro- just as Theus apparently did
gressed slowly and deliber- last Friday at the Maloofs'
ately after the dub's first los- casino in Las Vegas.
ing season since 1998.
Theus ·will leave New
Sacramento nearly hired Stan Mexico State after a historic
Van Gundy two weeks ago · two-year run. The long-sufbefore he chose ·the Orlando fering · Aggies finished 25-9
Magic, while veteran coach last season, capping the
.Larry
Brown
recently NCAA's biggest turnaround
expressed interest in the in the past two seasons by
opemng.
winning the WAC tournament
The Kings instead chose and playing in the NCAA
Theus, a well-liked 13-year wumament for the first time
NBA veteran - though he since 1999.
has almost as much e)(periTheus, a two-time All-Star
ence playing a coach on tele- from UNLV, joined the
vision as in real life. Theus, Kansas City Kmgs during
who transformed the New the 1983-84 season ;wd
Mexico State program into an moved along with the fr'l'l'nNCAA tournament club in chise to Sacramento in 1985.
just two seasons on the He was the Kings' secondAggies ' sideline, has never leading scorer during their :
coached in the NBA.
inaugural year in Northern
Musselman was fired April California, then led the club ·
20 after one season that began in scoring during the next
with his arrest on a drunken- two seasons before he was
driving charge. The former traded to Atlanta.

'

.. .

,.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www .mydailysentinel.com

Howard leads Phillies past Indians, 9-6

SUS Weight room ,open

it's really up to Phil ,"
Kupchak said. "We' d like to
from Page Bl
extend his existing arrangement." Jackson spent three
m jn ·, e-mail published hours in the office Tuesday,
Tuesday. "However, it's my a week after surgery on his
unshakable feelin g that left hip. He had right hip
Kobe will be a Laker next replacement surgery last
October - when training October.
"I think he'll be fine,"
camp opens."
Kupchak
said. "It's unusual
The 61-year-old Jackson
to
have
two,
that's a little bit
has one year left on his $30
of
a
concern.
He should be
million, three~ year contract.
in
much
better
shape this
Kupchak said he has had
ta lks with Jackson regard- year than a year ago."
Bryant has a no-trade
ing an extension since the
clause m his contract,
season ended.

Golf

2007

Sports Briefs

Meigs Flag Football League

meaning he would have a
say in where he goes should
the Lakers ultimately make
such a decision.
Several messages left for
Bryant's
agent,
Rob
Pelinka, haven' t been
returned. Pelinka told
ESPN.com late last week
that his client's position
"remains unchanged. Kobe
would like to be moved."
Bryant, who turns 29 in
Augus!, has four years
remaining on his contract
worth
$88.6
million,
although he can terminate
the deal in two years.

Kobe

Wednesday, June 20,

www .mydailysentinel.com

: , ··i-lhe page ;g0e8 on~llne for a
. w~k·.on. o~r _
pof,utir:~eb. site!
.

.,

.

',

•.

111tck l214" _.... SJO
Call for more information· Space is Limited

740-446-2342 •740-992-2155 ' 304-675-1333

Phillips also made a nice
backhanded stop to start
Travis Buck's inning-ending double play in the thitd,
fromPageBl
and made a diving catch on
Jack Cust's liner to finish
and Alex Gonzalez added a the fourth.
Bailey, a 21-year-old
two-run
single
for
went a seasonright-hander,
Cincinnati, which got three .
best
seven
innings and
great defensive gems from
allowed
only
Mark
Kotsay's
second ,baseman Brandon
sixth-inning RBI double
Phillips.
· ·
Phillips chased down Dan after Ellis' hit. Bailey struck
Johnson's
bouncing out three and walked four in
grounder that got past first a 93-pitch outing, then
baseman Jeff Comne, then Coffey entered and gave up
hit Bailey at {irst for the Suzuki's one-out solo shot
third out of the second. to left.

Reds

' ,,

Gaudin saw the end of his
streak of five straight win- .
ning decisions, picking up
his firs,t loss in 10 starts
smce a 4-1 defeat to Tampa
Bay on April 27.
He allowed four runs on
seven hits in 6 2-3 innings,
struck out four and walked
two. Gaudin gave up only
two hits after Grrffey 's
home run -just the fourth
longball against him in his
first 85 innings this season.
Notes: Athletics C Jason
Kendall got the day off.
Suzuki started and batted

ninth .... The Reds called
closer Eddie Guardado,
recovering from reconstructive elbow surgery,
back from his rehab outing
after his back became stiff
during an inning of work
for Triple-A Louisville on
Monday. Guardado will \,
likely rejoin the team
Friday in Seattle . .. . Reds
RHP Bronson Arroyo had
his start pushed back to
Sunday, and Kyle (..ohse
will start Saturday. Arroyo
hasn 't won since May 6,
going 0-6 in his last eight
starts with a 7.83 ERA.

,

BY GREG BEACHAM
AP SPORTS WRITER

Hendrix Heating &amp; Cooling
, ---,
------

Heating, Cooling,
-1 bryant
Refrigeration,
Restaurant
Equipment,
Plumbing, Electrical
• Residential &amp; Commercial

740-667-3316. 800·853-3110

.......

Tuppers Plains, OH

OH#32596

JlftiCD"

WV#028439

�' .

'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel .

WednesdRy, JUlie

www.mydailysentinel.com

20, 2007

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~rihune

For Tiger as afather, biggest issue might be privacy ·Huggins names th~rd
BY DOUG FERGUSON
AP GOLF WRITER
OAKMONT.
Pa.
Perhaps the mo st famou s
photo of Jack Nicklaus as a
father came from the 1973
PGA Championship.
He had j u st completed a
68 in the second round at
Canterbury w hen 4-year-old
Gary, the fo urth o f ni s fi ve
children, ran onto the gree n
and into his arms Nicklaus
walked off the 18 th g ree n
clutching hi s son with one
hand and hi s putte r with the
o the r.
Two days la ter. he won the
PGA to break the record for
most majors.
Don't expect that to happe n to Ti ger Woods.
Fatherhood won't stop o r
eve n s lo w hi s pursuit o f
Nicklaus' 18 professional
majors Woods a lready has
show n that life-chang in g
moments. suc h as marriage
or the death of hi s father.
haven 't changed a thing
about hts domma nce tn the
game.
Far more difficult to imagine ts a w arm and fu zzy
photo of his family in public.
Woods became a father
Monday
mornmg
m
Orlando. Fla., when hi s
wife, Elin, gave birth to a
daughter they named Sam
Alexi s Woods. The ne ws
was announced on hi s Web
stte, leaving out such detail s
as he ight and weight and
when she was born .
" Pictures of Sam Alexis
Woods will be made avml able shortly," it said beneath
a short note from Wood s.
The big question is when
anyone will see thi s child in
public.
Woods can rare ly go anywhere at a go! f to urnament
without getting pounded by
the press and the public, and
sometimes hi s peers.
He draws such a c lear line
between private and public
that Woods won ' t reveal hi s
schedule until a week· before
a g ive n tourna m e nt. He
doesn ' t let anyone except his
fnend s instde ht s home,
even before he got married.
The name of hi s yacht says it
all - " Pnvacy."
Ditto for ·hi s wife, a onetime model from Sweden,

AP photo
In a ftle photo Ttger Woods celebrates wtth wtfe Elln
Nordegren after winning the 88th PGA Championship golf
tournament at Medinah Country Club Sunday, Aug. 20,
2006, in Medimih. Ill. Wood's wtfe gave birth to thetr firs{
child, a daughter Sam Alexis Woods , early Monday.
who will tum and walk away U.S Open, needi ng a 30from , a conversation when foot birdie putt on the last
she sees a group of photog- hole to fo rce a n 18- ho le
raphers pointing cameras at playoff Monday. It mig ht be
her.
the one time, m hinds ight,
There was one moment in Woods didn't mmd settling
South
Afriq
at
the for second.
Presidents Cup when Woods
Eight years ago. Phi I
had just lost a match and Mickelson was a bout to
was standing behind the become a father when he
17th green at Fancourt with missed a 25-foot btrdi e putt
his wrfe, watching his team- on the 72 nd hol e at
mates. A dozen photogra- Pinehurst ~o 2 th at wou ld
phers began taking pictures have forced a playoff agamst
Payne Stewa11 . His daughter
of them, and Woods finally was born th e ne~t a ft e rnoo n.
Everyone
knows
th e
stepped in front of his wife
and barked, " You · got Micke lson children becau se
e nough, already?"
they are dressed to the nines
Imagine how much more when they run ou t to the
protective he will be of hi s 1St h . The except ton was T he
C ha mpions hip ,
daughter, or any other chi!- Pl ayers
dren who follow.
when Amy and the kids wete
The great coincidence tn '
San
Otego.
and
about thi s birth was the tim- Micke lson had to settle for a
mg.
.
hug from Butc h Harmo n.
Woods' daughter was born
The only tune Elm ;woods
the morning after he finished was a promine nt part o f the
second by one shot at the picture was last s umme r at

Hoylake, and o nl y because
Wood s WaS a blubbering
mess of tears haymg captured hi s first victory si nce
the death of his father.
Elin once talked about
w ives and chi ldre n going out
to the 18th green to celebrate
v ic tory, and while s he
thoug ht it was "very cool,"
she had a hard time doing it
herself because " it's just not
my personality."
For o ther players, children
arc part of their careers, trave ling to tournaments, caddying at the Par 3 Tourname nt
at the Mas ters.
Ernie Els wants hi s 8 -yearold daug hte r Samantha to
watch him play at least nine
holes during the weekend so
she has an understanding of
what he does for a living.
Few moments were more
chanmng than the Amencan
Ex press Championship in
Ireland in 2004, when
Samantha had a s ketch
book, like he r mother, drawing pictures of every hole
Els played .
Els was working hi s way
up the leaderboard in the
third round, walking up the
fairway,
whe n
e ig hth
Samantha pressed up against
the ropes and ·waved wildly,
as if she were watching a
parade.
Woods is so protective of
his private life, it is difficult
to imagine a llowing hi s
child or children to be at a
to urn a me nt lest they fee l
part o f the .c irc us.
That's some thing Ntcklaus
never faced . Hi s stardom
came during the era of
Sports
Illu strated ,
not
Peop le magazine.
Nicklaus had to cope with
Palmer, Trevino and Watson.
Woods has Nikon. Canon
and Kodak .
Will childre n make him
any different?
It was never a problem for
Nicklaus, whose firs t child
was born a lte r he won the
196 1 U.S. Amateur.
"You can ' t practice all day
lo ng." Ntcklaus satd earlier
thi s year. " You get your
work done and prepare .
You ' ve got plenty o f time
for a family, and plenty of
time to play golf. That 's not
a bt g dea l Tiger will do just
fine. "
·He might be even better.

assistant coach at wvu

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(A P) We st Virginia
men 's basketball coach
Bob Huggi ns has completed his staff with the htring
of his third and final assistant coach.
Larry Harrison will join
the Mountaineers after
spending this past season
as a scout with the N BA's
Was hington
Wizards,
Huggin s
announced
Monday,
Harrison was the head
coach at the University of
Hartford from 2000 to 2006
and
was
named
the

CLASSIFIED

American
E a s t
Conference
Coach of the
Year before
resigning
that post.
He has 16 years of expe•
rience as a college assistant, including eight with
Huggins at Cincinnati.
Harrison says he's excited about coaching at WVU
and
reuniting
with
Huggins .
Harrison joins fellow
WVU assistants Billy Hahn
and Erik Martin .

Galli a
County,
OH

interest," Tracy said of Snell
(6-4), who has allowed only
three earned runs in three
starts in June to lower his
ERA to 2.63.
Snell was bothered that
many in Pittsburgh have
taken such an interest in his
kitchen mis hap.
"You know how you are
cleaning the stove and your
finger touches a burner? I
got a little bit of a blister and
everyone is making a big
deal out of it," Snell said.
" People have done worse
than I did."
Such as John Smoltz. The
Atlanta Braves pitcher once
infamously burned his chest
after ironing his shirt while
he was still wearing it.
Sammy Sosa, the Texas
Rangers
s lugger,
once
missed a game when he was
with the Cubs after injuring
hi s back while sneezing.
Clint Barmes, now with
Colorado's Triple-A team,
broke his collarbone carrying deer meat. Rickey
Henderson missed several
· games after he got frostbite
- in August - from sleeping on an ice pack.
And former Mariners
closer Kazuhiro Sasaki went
'on the disabled list in 2003
with badly bruised ribs after he tripped while carrying luggage up s tairs.
Those are just a few of the
baseball 's peculiar mishaps.

£:mt!!

~o Place

.,._ __;,._ _ _ _ _ __:O::r..:.F.;;
ax;;.l,;,;o

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho \'mage of Pomeroy
desires to sell certain
real estate located on
Butternut Avenue In
Pomeroy Village, The
properly for sale is
best described In a
warranty deed record·
ed In Volume 15 pages
657 &amp; 519. The other
property for sale Is
best described in a
quiH:Iaim deed recordQd In Volume 282 page
389.
Sealed bids shall be
accepted until 12:00
pm on Monday, July 9,
2007. All bids should
be seated and clearly
marked Real Estate
Bid on the outside of
the envelope and submilled to the Village
Clerk, 320 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769.
(5) 30, (6) 6, 13, 20 (7) 5

complaints
were
received, and the lotlowing draft, proposed,
or final actions were
Issued. by The Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency
(OEPA) last week.
"Actions" Include the
adoption, modification,
or repeal of orders
(other than emergency
orders); the Issuance,

denial, modification or
revocation of licenses,
permits, leases, variances, or certificates;
and the approval or
disapproval of plans
and
specifications.
"Draft Actions" are
written statements of

the

director

of

Environmental
Protection ' s
(D~rector 's )

respect

intent with
to
the

Issuance, denial, etc.
of a permit, license,

order, etc. Interested
persons may submit
Public Notice
written permit, license,
order, etc . Interested
PUBLIC NOTICE
persons may submit
The Lebanon township written comments or
Trustees will hold a request a public meetpublic hearing on the Ing regarding draft
budget of Lebanon actions. Comments or
township lor the yea public
meeting
2008. This meeting will requests must be subbe held on June 30, mitted within 30 days
2007 at 7 p.m. at the of notice of the draft
Township , Butlding action.
"Proposed
prior to the regular Actions " are wntten
meet~ng . The budget statements
of the
will be available for director's Intent with
lnapeciiOn at the respect
to
the
Clerk's home June 20, issuance, denial, modi2007 thru June 30, fication, revocation, or
2007 by appointment renewal of a permit,
only. Regular meeting license, or variance.
will follow the public Writlen comments and
hearing
requests for a public
Lebanon
Township meeting regarding a
Trustees
proposed action may
Garry·Smilh, President be submitted within 30
. Doneld Dalley, Vice days of notice of the
President
·
proposed action, An
Robert Sellers, Trustee adjudication hearing
Dorothy , Roseberry, may be held on a proFiscal Officer
posed action If a hear(6) 20
Ing request or objection Is received by the
OEPA within 30 days of
Issuance of ·the proPublic Notice
posed action. Written
Public Notice
comments, requests
County: Meigs
for public meetings,
The following applica- and adjudication hearllons and/or verified Ing requests must be

Vour Right to

Knn_. ~

sant to: Hearing Clerk, 0612012007
Ohio Environmental Receiving
Waters:
Protection
Agency, Yellowbush Creek
P.O.
Box
1049, F a c i I I t y
Columbua,Ohlo43216· Descrlptlon:Wastewate
1049 (Telephone: 6t4- r
644-2129).
"Final Identification
No.:
Actions: Are actlono of OIL0145/598525
the director which are ·Antldegradatlon projupon Issuance or a act as defined by OAC
alated effective date. 3745·1 ·05· An excluPursuant to Ohio sion or waiver Is not
Revised Code Section applicable. Requests
3745.04, A final action to be on the interested
may be appealed to the parties mailing list
Environmental Review should be submitted
Appeals Commission within 30 days to Ohio
(ERAC)
(Formerly EPA·Division of sur·
know
as
the face Water, Attn: PPU,
Environmental Board SOW. Town St., P.O. Box
of Review) by a person 1049, Columbus, OHio
who was a party to a 43216-1049.
proceeding before the (6) 20
director by filing an
appeal within 30 days
of notice of the final
Public Notice
action. Pursuant to
Ohio Revised Code NOTICE OF SECOND
Section 3745.07, A PUBLIC HEARING
Final Action Issuing, The Meigs County
denying, modifying, Commissioners Intend
revoking, or renewing to apply to the Ohio
a permit, license, or Department
of
variance which Is not Development, for fundpreceded by a pro- lng under the FY' 2006
posed action, may be C o m m u n 1 t y
appealed to the ERAC Development Block
by filing an appeal Grant (CDBG) Formula
within 30 days of Allocation Program,
issuance of the final and
the
CDBG
action. ERAC appeals, Community Distress
accompanied by a $70 Program,
federally
filing fee which th funded
programs
ecommlssion In it dis- administered by the
cretlon may reduce If State. Meigs County Is
by affidavit the appel- etlglble for up to
lant demonstrates that $128,000 of F1scal Year
payment of the full 2007 CDBG Formula
amount of the fee funding and up to
would cause extreme $300,000
CDBG
hardship, must be Community Distress
f1led
with : funding, provided tho
Environmental Review County conducted its
Appeals Commission, first public hearing to
309 South Fourth Inform citizens about
Street, Room 222, the CDBG program,
Columbus, Ohio 43215. how It may be used,
A copy of the appeal what activities are ell·
must be served on the glble, and other lmpordirector within 3 days tant program requireafter tiling the appeal menta.
with the ERAC.
A second pubtlc hearApplication
for lng will be held on
Antldegradatlon Thursday July 5, 2007
Project
at 1:00 P.M. at the
County
Gatllng Ohio, LLC- Meigs
Yellowbush Mine
Courthouse, Pomeroy,
State Route 124
Ohio to give citizens
Sutton Township OH
an opportunity to
Date: review and oomment
Action

- ----------

Publi c Notices in N e'-"spopers.
Delivered Right to Your Door.

on the County's pro· poaQd CDBG FY' 21J!l7
posed CDBG FY' 2007 Formula
Allocation
Formula
Allocation Program Application.
pro)ect.
Wrlttan comments will
Based on both citizen be acceptQd uniiii:OO
input and locsl offl· P.M., July 5, 2Q07, and
clals' assessment of may be mailed to the
the
County's Meigs '
County
Community needs, the Courthouse, Pomeroy,
County Is proposing to Ohio 45769.
undertake the follow· If a participant will
lng Formula Allocation need auxiliary aids
CDBG activities for (Interpreter, Braille or
Fiscal Year 2007:
taped material, antsACTIVITY:
tive listening device,
Olive Township· Parks other) due to a dlsabiiiand Recreation CDBG ty, please contact
Formula
Funding : • Gloria Kloes, Clerk,
$19,750.00
Total prior to July 5, 2007, at
Project: $19,750.00
(740) 992·2895 In order
NATIONAL
OBJEC· to ensure thai your
TIVE :AREA LMI
needs will be accomACTIVITY:
Tuppers modeled. The Meigs
Pla•ns Sewer District- C o u n t y
Water and Sewer Commissioners office
F a c i I 1 t I o s is handicepped acces·
C D B G F u n d I n g : slble.
$20,000 Total Project: Mlck·
Davenport,
$16,300 - T.P. Sewer President
Distrlct·Total Project Meigs
County
Cost: $46,300
Commissioners.
NATIONALOBJEC- (6) 20.
TIVE:LMI
,...--,.----.
ACTIVITY:
Village of Racine-Parks
and Recreation
CDBG
Funding:
$25,000 - Other Funds:
$24,900· Racine Youth
League· Total Project
$59,900.00 NATIONALOBJECTIVE. LMI
NOMA
ACTIVITY:
Bedford
WHAT YOU~I
Township·
Street
I m p r o v e m e n 1s
STYlf...
C D B G F u n d 1n g :
$24,050.00
Other ·
Funds:
$28,650.QO·
Bedford
Towns~ip
NATIONAL
OBJECJIVE: LMI
ACTIVITY:
Lebanon TownshipPublic Rehabilitation
C DBG F u n d In g :
$18,2000.00
Other
... THE
Funds: $0 NATIONAL
OBJECTIVE: LMI
A C T I V I T Y:
HAS
Adtplnlstration and
Fair Housing
SOMETHING
CDBGFormula $26,000
(Admin.: . $1,400 • Fair
FOR YOU!!
Housing :$12,000).
Citizens are encouraged to attend this
meeting on July 5,
2007 to express their
views and comments
on the county's pro·

. If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the &lt;:oupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

c§allipolts ~allp Qt:ribune
~oint ~leasant B.egiuter
The D.aily Sentinel

6unbap tltimes -6enttnel
~-------------------------------

Subscriber's Name _______

Address - - - - - - - - , - - - City/State/Zip _ __ _ _ _ __
Phone_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mall or drop off this coupon along
with i copy of your photo tD to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 451131

··················-------------

446-3008

Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HQW IQ WRITE AN AD

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Oeadiflrt!4
Dlsolay Ads

•POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publlohlng reservn
tht rightto edn,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must B
oporWd on the fin1

of publcatlon an
he Trlbun•Sentlnel
agloter will b
eaponalblo for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
the error and on
e first Insertion. W
hall not be liable fo

ny loaa or expeila
at reautta from th
ubllcatlon or omla
ion of an advertise
ont. Corrections wll
made In the flnl
valleble edition.

Current rate car

pplleo.
All

Real

Estat

dvertlsements

ar

ublect to the Fedora
air Housing Act o
g&amp;a.

ccept1

only hel

anted eds meettn

OE otandarda.

~r

\\\111

r

\t I

Ill \1\

GMENIS

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m .

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday f9r Jnaertlon
In Next Dav•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

Bualneea Daye Prior To
Publication
.
Sundey Display: 1:00
Thurwday for Sunday•

trrn:

1

to Good Home 304·
562·82t6
Male Kt!ten, 6 wks old, fray
and wMe, kept mdoors, free
neutenng, please call 304895 8854
Puppms to gtveaway 304·
675·5361

Free

To good home only, lull
blooded S1benan Husky 1
year old male Needs room
to run 446·2284

4x4'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement... .... ,.................................... b30
Anllquea .......................... ............................. 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Ftaa Market. ...... ,..................... Q80
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ................................................ ,770
' Autos for Sale ............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ....... ................... 750
Building Supplies ..................................... 550
Buslnets and Buildings ............................. 340
Bush~eaa Opportunlly ............................... ,.210
Business Training ............. ,......................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ..... ,..................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thsnfes ..........................................OIO
Child/Elderly Cars. .................... ,. ................ 190
Electrtcat/Refrlgerallon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent... ..................................480
Excavallll!f................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment. ............ ,, ..................... ,,, ... 6tO
Farms for Rent. .......................................... ..430
Farms for Sate ........................................... , 330
For Lease ........... ......................................... 490
For Sale .................... ................................. 585
For Sate or Trade,........................................ 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Glveaway ...................................................... 040
Happy Ads ...................... .............................. oso
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help wanted ................................................. ! t 0
Hollie tmprovements .. ,................................ 810
Homes for Sate ............. ,.... ,..... ,................... 31 o
Household Goods ....................................... 5t0
Houses for Rent .......................................... 4tO
In Msmorlam ................................................ 020
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Llvestock...................................................... 630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................350
Miscellaneous ............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise ........... ......... 540
Mobile Home Repair .................. ................ 860
Mobile Homes for RenL ...... ...................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ............................. .320
Money to Loan ............................................ 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers....................... .740
Musical tpstruments ................................... 570
Personats ..................................................... 005
Pets for Sole ................,............................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heallng .................................... 820
Proleaalonal Servlces ................................. 230
RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repalr ...................... ,........ 160
Real Eotate Wanted ........................... ,......... 360
Schooll Instruction .....................................I 50
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Sttuatlono Wanted ..................................... .. 120
Space lor Rent ............................................. 460.
Sporting Gooda ...........................................520
SUV'I for S.le .............................................. 720
Trucks tor Sele .......................... .................. 715
Uphotatery .......................................... ,........ 870
Vano For Sate ............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. tao
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sat. Galllpolla ................................... .Q72
Ylrd Slt.Pomeroy!Middle......................... 074
Y1rd S.fe-PL Pteatsnt ................................ 076

ro

"-----

kltncarlyl~comeast.net

multicolored 4# female Shih·
Concealed &amp; Carry Class, Tzu. 1am11y pet, reward,
NAA Cert lnst Bam Sharp, (7 40)992·2954
6123, Mercerville Ftre Dept
256·6514,
ema1l· Lost Stamese m1x cat m the
::SI:iiarfke:.t,;;@,;;:m;;bo:;;X;;;CO:;;m;;..._., Btdwell area near Amby rJ.. n
tn
$100 Reward call388-8298
or 645·4877 or 388-9130
GIVEAWAY
Lost· 6 yr old mate Beagle
2 beauttlul tame ktllens on Rockspnngs Ali , reward
brother &amp; Stster, 4·5 wks old offered for return. (740)992·
to a good home very playful 2762 leave message
30H75·2634
Lost 6 month old blacX male
3 10-week old ktttens 1 pup-recently neutered-near
male/2 females Indoor Crank's Vet Ctmc/Rt,35
tratned 740·843·5131 leave answers to "Ltl Btt"· call6743085
message tf no answer

6 Week old ktttens to good
homes 256·8884
Free ktttens=9 6 &amp; 4 weeks
old, litter tramed, LONG
HAIRED, EASY TO HAN·
OLE 740-985-4244
-M-al-e-B-nn-dlo-4--5-m_o_n_
lh_o__ld

POUCIES. Otllo Vlftty Publllhktg I'Hel'nS the right to edit, reJect, or cancel any ltd at any lime Enora must be reported on the lira! day of
Trlbune-SentlneJ..Aegl.t• wiM be~ for no more tMn the eo.t of thtl ,,.ea oceu~ by the error and only the tl rat Insertion Wa
.-.y 10.1 Of expenM that rHUHI from the publlciUon or amlsalon of en advltftll8fMnt Correction will be rn1u:t. in the firat available l!dlllon
. . atwty• ecnfidMltWI. • CurNnt rlltt Clrd IlPPI•· • All rul ul8te edvet11stmentl lrt tubje(:t to the Federal Fair Houa1ng Act at 1968
ICCIPh only help Wlnted Ids rntltilg EOE atanct.rds. Wt wiH not knowii\QIY accept 1ny sdvertlslng m vlo'lllon ol the lew

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I LOSI tn Mtddleporl on 6/13,

3 ktttens, 10 weeks old,
(740)949-921 7

'fo
'/lo~y 1'AAI 'fHI&gt; NtJMBj;:~
St\~~ ~OVI~ MAY Bfi
A. C.W$'\o 1'\\~ NUN\~~

Or I--IV~'&gt; I'V~ VSGD

0

"

y ARil SllEGALLII'OUS

·-oiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiii;..,,
@

~

2007 by NEA, Inc.

ro

Hru&gt;WANllill
NowHiring!

110

Ht:LPW~NIHl

The Metgs Local School
D•stnct 1s currently seek•ng
applicatiOns from cerhfted
applicants lor Boys Varstty
Basketball Coach, Boys
Asststant Varstty Basketball
Coach. Boys Jumor Varstty
Basketball Coach Boys
Mtddle School Wrestling
Coach (2 post1tons)
Wrestling Coach and M•tldle
School Wrestl mg Coach
Applicants must certi1icalton
requtrements of Oh10 fm
puptl.acttvtty superv•sor and
CPR Deadline for appl1c'l
!tons ts June 25, 2007
Persons tnlerested should
send a tetter ot mterest to
Wilham
L
Buckley
Supenntendent P01 Box
272, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769

Sole, 214 1':':::~------., ll'l!l'".__ _ _ _...., ~~-----.,
Magnolta Dnve, behtnd 1110
1 1110 Hw&gt;WANml 11 110 8El1'WANI'ID
Domtno's Ptzza, June 21st, .
HELP WANTED . •
• .
22nd, 23rd Ram or Shme
Frt/Sat 6/22-23, 9·4 103
Desk Clerk needed at Holzer Senior Care Center
Ltncoln Ptke Bass Wood,
Budget Inn 260 Jackson Unit Manager Position
$300.00
lures, stove, household
Ptke Looktng for a person
HIRING BONUS who 1s motivated, great If you are tnterested tn JOin·
ttems, jewelry, etc
communlcanon skillS and a mQ our Restdent Centered
MowlQ Sale, 6/22 8a-4p &amp; SSSSS5SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS pos1t1ve attttude Please Nursing Team we have a
6/23 Sa-noon, 101 Basttam [I
lull ttme opemng tor a Unit
apply withtn
Dr Gallipolis, corner of 4th &amp;
Manager We are a 70 bed
Bastraru D•shes, lmens,
ELEC CONTROLS ENGI·
long term cat'e nurstng
Chtstmas decor, paho !urn, II
NEEA Defense program laetlity located aboot hall a
c!Ofhes (baby 6mon-18omn)
needs hands-on engineer mile from Holzer Medical
tots morel
for PLC programm1ng
Center 1n GallipOI$
, ·;I
[•,
$18 46-$32 60/hr, now htr- :~~:::~~~ Sk~~e&amp; ~~;~~~~ g~:~~te, Pol:emo~~;~;·
(RSLogtX I RSView), htgh
Thurs. Fn, Sat, Sam-? 4409
15
speed
data
acquts1t10n,
elecUmt Manager Requirements tng Patd Tramtng provrd~ apply m person to ftll out an Garages Free estimates Call
Bulav•lle Prke 5 ptece bed·
ed For application and tree appltcatton , No phone calls, 304-633·1230
tncal
test
eQuipment,
heavy
RN
w1th
one
year
of
room sutte. k1tchen table Ea rn $8.50/hr FT +
government JOb tnfo, call 107 North Thtrd St , Aacm&amp;, ---~---­
and automated
genatnc experience
and 4 padded chairs, metal Weekly Bonus Potential equ1pment
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1- OhiO
Carpentry, patntmg, drywall
control
systems
BSEE +
preferred
storage bms, tWtn tubs, tool
35 years eJCpenenced, quali11 I' 1 1. Inbound &amp;
related expenence or equ1v· We offer competlttve wages 91 3·599·8244, 24/hrs emp
box for pickup metal wheel. . Outbound
I, ,:•
ty workmanShiP For small
POST OFFICE NOW
alent des1red UTRON, Inc and Employment benel~s serv
lot of mtsc
HIRING
tobs call Steve at (7 401388.
www untrol'llc com FAX 703·
1ncludtng
John Sang Ford Lincoln
Avg Pay S20/hr or
8071
4
369-5298
Mercury
YARIJ SALE1
$57K anooatly
Apply
N
ow.
Start
Soon
*Expenence
Pay
Has
a
positton
open
for
an
PoMEROYiMIDDIJ:
EIJ.El'l Appllcattons Are
Do you need a Handy Man
t ·888 IMC -PAYU
Automottve Techmcran We lncludtng Federal Benefits to f•x Porches, Roofs, Water
"Regular Rate Increases
Betng
Accepted
For
An
LPN
and
OT,Paid
Tra1nmg,
(I iJ68- -\62· 7296)
are looktng for an mdrvrliual
37019 Rockspnngs Ad, Fri
Compotltive Starting Pay 'Tuition Retmbursement
Ptpes AJack-of-all-Trades
Vacahons-FTIPT
Job
ext.
t 931
·urntorm
Allowance
that has a well rounded
Ju ne 22, 9-?, Lots of
So 10 Speak Call meal 304·
Paid VacatKJn, Paid Meals.
1
800-584-1775
E11t
#8923
knowledge about automo·
vi\'. l'l.l tlfc·c' st on .com
clothes, jumor. womens,
Discounts,
Insurances "Heattll'Dentai!Ltfe Ins
675·5857
U
SWA
"D1sab1l1ty Insurance
live repatr Ford Motor
mens, !urn and mtsc ttem~
Available
Interested
Company tratntng wtll be -R&amp;_J_];-,-,ck-,-n-Le_a_dt-ng-Th
'PDOPay
-e Interested In culttng trees
lOG-WORKERS NEEDED Appl&gt;cants May Apply Datly
9
{Vacatt&lt;Wtioliday/PTO)
provtded and 1s on gong
around fence ltnes tn yards
Yard sale. 612 1-6/22 (Thurs Assemble crafts, wood 9-4, Raven'swood Care
401 k (after 1 year)
We offer a competrttve com· Way R&amp;J Truckmg now or any other part propetty
&amp; Fnday), 9am-?, 35670 SR tlems To $480/wk Matenals Center, 1113 Washtngton
Htrtng
at
our
New Haven
pensaiiOn plan and our benWtll leave nothmg be'lmj
tli
7.111ilo~ts~o;.lm"'!i~sc;..._ _...., provtded Free lnfo'rmalton St, Ravenswood, WV PINM otop by and oee uo
efit package trlCiudes health VN Termmal For Aegtonal Call for a free estimate 645 (304)273·9236
FAX
Hauls·Dump
Orv
1
year
~~
pl&lt;g 24Hr 80 1·428·4649
at ~ Colonial Drive,
insurance. 401K reltrement.
5938
References Required
BlclweU, Ohio or give
dtsabihty mswance and hie OTR venftabte exp Call 1
800-462-9365
ask
for
Kent
1,~--ooiiiiiiiliit_ _.. A Ott &amp; Gas Broker Full-hme Lcensed PractiCal Mary Shuler, DON, o call
Lawn mowtng Rates by the
tnsurance If you are hred of
Absolute Top Dollar US Company IS looktng lor an Nurse lor a communtty at 74Q-446.5001 or Barb worktng for someone thatts RegiStered Nurse at Mason lOb. not the hour Call Paul
Peterson, Director of
not workmg lor you or want Cou111y Health Department @ (304)675-2940
Stiver and Gold · Cotns, admm asst for the GallipOliS group home for people wtth
Human Resources for
to better yourself, contact Appltcattons antt lOb Lawn-Care Servtce Mow,ng
Prootsets, Gold Rmgs, Pre· offtce Candtdates should be MD/DO tn Bidwell Hours
Servtco Manager Jtm
1935
US
Currency, sell slarters and posses 9am·Spm M-F Current LPN Long Term Care a call at
descnpuon can be obtamed &amp; Trtmmtng Call (7401·111
organrzattonal sktlls, Ltcense and Pharmacology
7411-441-3401
Thomas
Sohtatre Diamonds· M T S good
at
2t6 5th St Pt Pleasant t333 or (7401645·0546
profictenltn
Word,
Excel
and
required
Com Shop, 151 Second Outlook Knowledge of lanli certlftcahOn
EOE
Salary
$10
50/hour
Need someone to take em·
.Avenue, GaiUpohs, 740·446·
descrtpttons and !tile exp 1s EJCceltent benehts package
of you or a loved one the••
2642
R
oofers
Metal
rooftng,
s•
d~
,
a plus Must have a h1gh 1nctudlng
Health/Dental
tng and EPDM Top pay and call (7401446·7 t65 ot
Wanted Scrap metal cars, dtptoma and some college Insurance and paid leave
(740)441·9232 I have good
beneltts 724·229·8020
WORKER
SOCIAL
expenence
preferred
Equal Opportun~y
t1me Pre-employment drug
buses, ptpe, farm equtp ,
references
Overbrook
Center
ts
now
Employer
etc Will ptck-up and pay Please call Andrea Healy at testing Send resume to
Super B Motel accepltng
accepting
resumes
lor
the
11'1\CI \1
.
746-446·6800
or
lax
to
740Buckeye
Communtty
304·593·1904
postttons of D1rector of apphcattons for part ttme ~:;;;;;;~~----,
44&amp;6802
Servtces PO Box 604, - - - -- - - - Soctai
BllSINf~
Services The quail- desk clerk Mtdntght and 10
Wanted to Buy Property on
Jackson, OH 45640 MACHINIST For manual t ed cand•date
evenmg
shtfts
are
reqwred
must
possess
1
Lower Ftve Mtle Ali or Jtm AVON! All Areas' To Buy or Deadhne for applicants
Please apply rn person NO
OPI'()I{Il'"'fl'
Htll Ad, area 304·593·3281 Sell Shorloy Spears, 304· 6/22107 Equal Opportunity 18thes, .milling machmes, strong verbal and wntlen PHONE CALLS
saws, radral dnlls Must be commumcatton
sk1lls,
leave message
675·1429
Employer
able to hold tolerances to Medtcatli, Med1care and - - - - - - - oNOTi lft
· wor k an d MDS knowledge Long term Wanted Optometnc Asst tn
I \11'1 Cl' \ II"\ I
Gal11a County Council on 00005• tn 1rna
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBLISH·
Bartender
needed
Pomt
Metgs
Co
oHtce
E~epenence
"'I I{' It I ...,
Resource accura IeIy cut vanous male . care expenence prelerred
lNG CO recommends
::::;,:;;;;;;;;;;;
_ _ _ _., Pleasant Moose Lodge Agmg/Semor
Center 1s currentlyaccepnng female and buttress threads but not required Qualtfted preferred, must have com- that you do bus1ness w•lh
apply rn Person
appltcallons
for Nutntton Must read drawings and candtdates may send puler trammg, be detailed people you know and
HEIJ' WANTil&gt;
A1de1Meal
Transporter
and make parts to specrficaUon resumes 10 Charla Brown· onented and able I work tn a NOT to send money
CASHIER WANTED at Twm substitute cook Must have
G-Code lies1red Lilt tructc: McGutre, AN
LNHA ,last paced enwonment through the matl until you
--,
Oaks Gas Station, Ftve
An Excellent way to earn Pomts.
Restaurant valid drtvers ltcense and operatton a plus UTRON, Admmlstrator 333 Page Send resumes ) to Dally have mveshgated thP.
money The New Avon
Expenence Preferred &amp; tnsurable nsk Must be able Inc WNW utromc com FAX Street. Middleport, OH, Senttnel, PO Bbx 729·30, oHenng
Pomeroy On 45769
45760 E0 E
Call Mantyn 304·882-2645 Helpful, Mtntmum wage, to read, wnte and follow 703-369·5298
(740-992·4250)
dtrectrons Needs to ass1st 1n
John Sang Ford Lincoln - - - - - - - - food preparation, clean up
Computers 4 U IS seektng a and be a substttute meal
Mercury
Needs three IOdtVlliUals Computer Tech for part trme dnver and cook. EOE. ~ly
that are rnterested tn a 1ead1ng to full ume work You Senior Resource Center
career as an AutomOtive must be prof1c1en$ tn com· 1165 State Route 160,
Consultant We are looking puter reparr. dependable an Galltpol1s, Oh 45631 Phone
for Individuals that are out honest' Bnng resume tn 74Q.446·7000
gotng, self mottvated and person to Computers 4 U, Help wanted at Darst Aduh
pro!esstonal We have one Inc 303 Ma1n Street. Potnt Group Home. some lifting.
of the best compensation Pleasant WV 25550 or call 7-5 shift, 740-992-5023
plans tn the tndustry and a tor dtrect10ns al 304-675·
T•uck Dnvers COL Class A
oonems package that has 5282
health •nsuraoce. 401 K ---------:--:-:-:-- Aequtred, m1nimum of 5
dnving
exp
reltrement, dtsab1lily and life Courtside Bar and Gnll now years
on
tnsurance If you want to seektng lutltrme gnll and fry EJCpenence
ears an e~~:cellent ltvmg and cooks Great pay m a great Overde1menstonal loads
betler yourself, contact Pat env•ronment ~ust be hard Must have good dnvtng
work•ng and reliable Apply record Earn ~ to $2.000
H~l or Bnan Ross
tn person at 308 2nd Ave or weekly For applicatiOn Call
TJS
call 441 -9371 to set up an (304)722-2184
~-F
... "' '""'~'""
B30am-4pm
&lt; . . ..... .
1ntervtew

4 Fam•ly Garage

'.

r

I

~ '

I

·, ...... . ......

"'lt o

I'

1.._------,.J

:I

~

-·~

-

c

l!f'.

0

www.comics.com

I

Bonus
If you are mterested mJOin·
40 hours a week
tng our Restdent
Up to $8 50thour + bonuses
Center Nurstng Team we
have a lull t1me opentng lor Make calls you believe 1n'
the tollowmg posthons
Can on behall ot conservauve
Poht1cal org~mza t1ons
'RN
'LPN
Patd vacattons, pard holt'STNA
days and patd tra1ntng
Holzer Sen1or Care Center
ISthe only nursmg home tn Full benefits package and
401 ·K
the area to place 1n the top
$300 Hiring Bonus
3% on the Ohto Family
Satlslac1Jon Survey
conducted by the Oh•o
Call today to schedule an
Department of Agng
tntervtew
We offer competitive
t -sn-463.&amp;247
wages and employment
ext, 2321
benefits tnclud1ng
Wanted Drrect SuperviSIOn
WNW mfooston com
employees to oversee male
• Expenence Pay
- - - - - - - - youth tn a staff secure res1
"Regular Rate Increases OTR Onvers needed Must denttal envtronment Must
• Un1lorm Allowance
be at least 24 yrs old and pass physrcal ltalntnrJ
• Heatth/OentaVlrfe Ins
have 3 yrs expenence Apply requtrement Pay b"
· Dtsabtltty Insurance
1n person at 2204 Jackson expenence Call (740):.J , ~
PDO Pay
9083 between .9-3 Mon-Fn
Ptke
(VacatJon HolldayiPTO)
150
• 401 k (after 1 year)
ScHooL~
OOiRU&lt;..1lON
• Tuttion Aermbursement Overbrook Center ts currently seekmg a beauttctan lo Iw-oiiiiiiiiiiiiliili-rl
work part ttme mlhe factltty's
Please slop by and see us beauty salon Candtdates Gallipolis Career College
at 380 Colonial Drive, should possess a valid man- [Careers Close To Home)
Blclwell, Ohio or give
agtng cosmetolog•sl license Call Today' 740-446-4367.
Mary Shuler, OON, a call Salary ts based on commts1·800·214·0452
at 740-446-5001 or Barb ston Interested candtdates www oalhpol1scareercoHege c~ 1n
Peterson, Director of
should complete an appltca- Accred1ted Member AcrrP.dL!in\1
CounCil for Independent Cottages
Human Resources for
Long Tann Cere a call at liOn at 333 Page Street, atld Schools 12748
7411-441 -3401 .
M-•d-dl-ep_o_"_
· -0-H.,---4-5-76-0 iil1 i80
'i:~=W~AN:;;..IID-.-....,
EOE.
,
ToDo
Equal Opportunity
Part ttme secretarrat help • - - - - - --"
Employer
needed at J D Drttltng
A·OK-Corrats &amp; Barn s
---IR_S_;_J_;O_B_S__ Company Ractne, Onto, Metal Rooltng, Shtngles,

Of

1st sale Old 160 Porter Ad
across from Foodland Btg
vanety. farm machtnery,
_91_ass_w
_a_re_,_1 'n_e~
ns_,0_ 1_'__

Hru&gt;WANJm.

$300 Hiring

· I'M ~GtiNNI~

r
IJl2

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
S,~
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
f.!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address Vfhen Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

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

CLASSIFIED INDEX

'·

l\egister

Sentinel

Word 'Ads

We will rot knowln
accept any advar
loement In vlolailo
fthelaw.

UEILI
OTICES

~rihune

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregtster.com

ca•T;~::;... (74o&gt; 446-2342 (74o&gt; 992-2156 (304} 675-1333

newapape

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

classified@ mydat)ytribune .com

Snell ~ready tired of
cooking injury attention
SEATTLE (AP) Jan
Snell doesn ' t want to be
added to baseball 's list of
freak mjuries. He says he
didn ' t burn a finger on his
pitching hand while cooking
chicken - he did it while
cleaning the stove.
" I was done cooking. I
was cleaning the edge of the
burner," Snell, a husband
and father of one said
Tuesday.
The injury caused Snell to
miss hi s sc heduled start
against the Seattle Mariners.
Tom Gor~e lanny started on
normal rest instead, after
Snell burned his right index
finger after preparing a
g rilled chicken salad last
week . The resulting blister
o n the inside of the finger
had a barrdage covering it
after Snell completed a long
bullpen session Tuesday.
Snell wtll start Saturday at
the Los Angeles Angel s
m stead.
Pirates manager Jim Tracy
said Snell's finger " bli stered
pretty good." The team
feared having him make the
start Tue sday night could
have caused the blister to
tear, because the seams of
the ball rub off it on nearly
every pitch.
" We ' re erring on the side
of caution. If he ·tears skin
off, we risk losing him for a
long period of time. And I
don't think that's in our best

- Sentinel - l\egister

p

- - -

-

'

,

--

-··- -

-

-

·

-

�..
www.mydailysentlnel.com.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Wednesda~June20,2007

www.mydallysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP
Oooble , lot 16x60, 2006
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
Trailer 2br, 2ba, Laundry fo&lt; Rent. Meigs Coonty, In
Borrow Smart . Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office
of
COnsumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
obtain a loan. "BEWARE
of reQuests tor any large
advance payments of
tees or insurance. Call the
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs tal free at 1-866278-Q003 to learn rr the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
is
properly
lk:Snsed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley

~--..A.- WllAilliJSrill
'

.

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vinyttshingte.
Must se•. Only $25,995 with
delivery. Call (740)3854367

nished, and houses in
Pomeroy and Middlepor1,
security deposit required, no
pets, 740-992-2218.
:________
2 bedroom apt, stove,

New 3 ~oom homes from refridg .,
$214.36 per month, Includes Deposit
many upgrades, deliwry &amp; $350.

herring

Johnson's Tree

Service

__

(740)446-7620, i,~~;;.;..,..,
...-&lt;Jp.(740)385-2434
(740)441 -9872. (740)7091
9 ______ ~
Nice used 3 bedroom home ~95:..1.:.
.
~nytlshingle. Will· help with 2 BR , 1 112 oath on Jacl&lt;son
delivery. 740-385-4367
Pike. $450/mo + deposit $ For Old Auto Batteries 1·
Ref. required, no pets. Call

OWNER FINANCING
Nice 3J2 singlewides

From $1 ,800 _ ,
payment

Scott (740) 828·2750

TUIINED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?

$2.50ea, 100+ SJ.ooea,

250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT·
TERY TERMINAL 1-800·
2 BR Apt near Rodney area. 796-6797
WID. fridge, stove induded.
No pets! Call 446-1271 or For Sale Wood &amp; Metal
709· 1657. Dep/ISI mon req. Shop Tools may trade.
440-4051

4RM &amp; Balli, stO'Ie ,!ridge, - - - - - - utilities paid, upstairs, 46 For Sale- hard maple fire·
Olive
St.
No
pets. wood, (740)992·5326
$450/mornh. 446-3945
---~----

1-1188·582·3345
I~ I \I I " I \I I

Top • Trinl• ~Yuling • St""'f'
Grinding • Budwt Ttud•

....,.,..,.._

lntl.nd • Fr• E.t'-'"
1.... ,...,

July 19, 20071o 'July 21, 2007
$250/person
Private jet transportation from
Cha~eston, WV
Accommodations
(based on double occupancy)
At Tropicana Casino &amp;.Resort
Beachfront &amp; On the Boardwalk
Aetums directly to Cha~eston , WV
Must be 21 years of age
(No refunds)
Please contact
PVH Community Relations,
to make reservations
(304) 675·4340, Ext. 1326
Gladly accept cash, check, credit
cards and money orde rs

$3 ,000 Firm 304·576-2667

No Fee UN&amp;ss We Win!

_

C.l!lpolis, OH 45631
~r... c.r.

Atlantic City
Getaway!

water,
trash. Clark Chapel Ad, Bidwell,
required, Rent OH. (740}388-0173

99

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Rooting, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

· Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Local Conlractor

740-367.0544
Free Estimates

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

North

MONTY

• J 10 9 8
• • 2
+A94
.. 10!186 '

r]amih} l•):tmM•

0366

70 Pine Strecl • Gallipoli s
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Wise Concrete

South
Pass

0~\·ncr-

Rick Wise
740-992-5929
740-416-1698

2•

*Experienced
References Available'
Call Gary Stanley .@
Horse
Prop.
40x80
· lnsulated&amp;heated barn w/10
box stalls/ 4 BR living quar·

Ofi,
\

ns ... J:'V~ r~fN A~OUNI&gt; Tti~
6LOI~

Tti0U5ANI&gt;5

OF

TIM~5!

Hardwood Cablne(fy Alld FurnHire

BARNEY
BUT IF '(A

www.tlmberaeekcabllletl')'.coas

HURR'( '(OU
CAN STILL
KETCH ...

l ~"-t&gt;

l DOK'T &amp;LlE~E Ii-I
tf\~J

&amp; SKt:.PtiCN.!

7

11\t&gt;..LP-.RKE.'( 1

rf~ . . .,&gt;~:"i"11'!B'I'!!!M":~•
.

FOR SALE
1999 GMC Sonoma good
gas m1leage &amp; air, runs

good.

O% Financing· 36 Mos. 221 1.

avai lable now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero Tuma 8

i

$2,800.

740-992·

SUVs

on John L--·Fii'OiiR;,SiiA:;:L;,:E;.,_.J
Carmichael ...,

5 .99% Fixed Rate
Deere

.Galors

Equl:&gt;men1 (740)446-24 12.

TDD# 1-800-750-0750
Equal Hou,ing Opponunit}

dition , $10900. 388-8 125

i

Help Wanted

VANS
FOR SALE

Kiefer Built· Valley-BisonHorse
and
Livestock
Trallera·
Loadmax·
95 Plymouth van, air, auto
Gooseneck . Dumps, . &amp;
6. $1500 OBO. 740-256·
Utility· Aluma Aluminum 1652
Trailers- B&amp;W Gooseneck
Parts. «! MOTORCYCI.ES/
Trailers.
WHEEI.EI!S

Help Wanted

1989 Yamaha Venture,
Tractor MitsuDushi Buck S· I300cc, full dress. excellent
2 Bdrm., 1112 bath, $350M, Commercial building •For 470, 4-wh.dr.. 1BHP,diesel, condilion, $3,975 (304)675·
Rent" 1eoo square feet , off Compact Tractor, very gOOd 451 o
Pomeroy area. J R. 740_ _ _ _ _ __
street
parking . Great loca~ eood .. $2.2oo. 992-3065.
243-5811 .
tion!. 749 Third -\venue in
2001 Kawasaki Elimina1o1
2 Br , NC, Very nice, Gallipolis. Rent $375/mo.
125, garage kept. mini
Jotnson Mobile Home Part. CaWWayne (404)456-3802 ,
cond ., 682 miles , $2000.

r~

740-440·2003 or 440-1409

20070oubie'Mde
3BR, 2BA,
· Delivered &amp;Set $39,999.
The Home Show,
Ashland, Ky.
Toll· tree 1188-928-3426
SPECIAL .FHA FINANCE
Program $0 Down, If you
own Land or use Family
land We own the Bank your

Appr0\181l606-474-6380 ·

(740)949· 1006

Prime commercial space for 2 Gentle riding pon~a', $225
3 BR, 14x70, Addaville rent at Sprlngvalley Plaza. each. pretty gaited riding 2005 H.D.Sott Tail custom
Sctlool district. 740-367-. Gall645-2192.
mar~t rides great. $4SO. maroon
w/emoossed
or 367-7272
·
flamas.1 of 200 made .aoo
361

n62.

38R on fomlly pari&lt;. Water

·r

an(! trash sflrvice included. ---._

.neo .

WANim
TO
IGNr

new,pr~ce

miles
since
6 Donkeys·5 female, 1 white $21,500, call tor d~tails-740 ·

No pots. Deposn required.
male. Call 740.·256-9247 or ~
94,;;9o;·2:;:2;;,1;,;7·-~,..-740-441·7033 .
LA.NOOWNERS-NEED 740-256-6504
"""Bo TS' &amp; MO'ID'~
EXTRA FARM INCOME?
I"A·
~
ArAKIMF1'lrs
We have responsible sports· 7 Young Angus BullS.
mR SALE
FOR JGNr
men looi&lt;Jng lo lease hunl/ng Excellent Breecl ng, Top
---._
property in this area. Performance.
Pnced MIXum 23ft , VB alpha 1. 94 ,
3 Rms &amp;bath. WID !lookup, Midwest Trophy Leases Inc.· R ·e a s o n a b I Y . open bow, below book,
clean, No pets. 4.46-1519
(304)'532-6015 or 1·800· www.•slaterunang us .com, Great Stlape $10500. 740698-1073 .
(740)2116-5395 • :
256-2660

r

fiE'(, LOOK,EVER'(~OD't'!

nus KID BROUGI-lT A

DVWt.ttl'c

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

6ALL TO CAMP~

WI-IAT ARE 'r'OU GONNA
DO WITH THE BOWLING
BALL, KID?

446-0007 .

Pl easan l Va ll ey Hqspila l. is curren tl y
accep1ing re sumes for a Con11nuni1 y
Relalions Secrclary. Experience in word
processing applicari.IJns . .gruphic design
applicat ions anJ other general compuler
skill s. General secrelarial experience
required. Gene ral kn ow ledge of
photography. ·Su perior comm uni cative
and interpersona l ski lls. Mus! be ah le to
work weeke nds. evening&gt; and holidays if
needed.
Send resu mes 10:
Pleasanl Vallcy.Hospilal
c/o Human

R c~ou rc e~

2520 Valley Dri ve
Poinl Pleasant. WV 25550
fax 10 (304) 675-6975 or &lt;tpp ly·on line al
www.pvalley.org .
AAIEOE

L.-------------...1

11 Home, &gt;n

orific
42 Hot drink

book

34 Noted
Hamlet

the phone

54 Riviera

summer

portrayer

13 Salon

·36 Advanced

deals

to

find ~~ if that contract is

a

MIKE

MARCUM

ROOIIN&lt;, &amp; Hl· ~IOIJIJI~&lt;. ( ll .
Rubber Roofmg . Room Addition s. Decks. Sh111q te~
Siding. Willdows. Pole Barns. Garages.
Insu ran ce Work. Res1denh&lt;tl &amp; Cornt'lerCI:ll
30 Years
Experience

Free E~lima l e~

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217

slie11 $'x1 o·
to 1D'x30'
Hours
7:00AM -8:00PM

HERE (Q'.1t,S /IIY
~NNf.R DA1t, EDIUA
\

UJ!\s r rn c rr&lt;"
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Agains11hre8 no-lrump, Wesl leads lh8
heart live.
5'-!&gt;pose Soulh lakes lhe first Irick. If
Easl has an ace, Soultl musl play on
Easl's ace-suit lirsl. II he' atlacks lhe
wrong suit West can win and lead his
second heart, eslablishing Easl's sun
while he, EaSI, slill has his ace as an
entry. Bul iT South does not win !riel&lt; one,
he is safe for sure.

AstroGraph
-

'lllrthdot&lt;:

Thursday, June 21, 2007
By Bernice Bede Osol
Conditions that have a dir&amp;et bearjng
upon your work or career will be quite
promising tor you In the year ahead. Your
chances for bettering yourself In .work·
related situalions will be heightened and
rewarded acco rdingly.
, CANCER (June 21 -Juty 22) - Don't
waste your lime on petty activities
because you tend to operate botter in
areas where your targets are meaningful.' Pursue objecllves that assure large
returns lor ef1o r1 expended.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Trust your
ttlinking and have lailh in your assessments of the co nditi on~ at hand . If you
keep a positive mind-set, you will see
windows of opportunities where others
only see problems.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- You should
be able to comfortably alter a ticklish situation with one who shares a joint interest with you . Do it now white the conditi~ns sup~X~rt what you're attempting to

All Types
Work

26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimates

GARFIElD

.......~IV9:1011M:IIIII
SIIUrdiV 9:00 B -12:01 Ill

I

PAYING TOP PRICES FUR

'
I

.....ln .......

ICIII F.- Ctlrr111 PriCIII
NOTICE :
LANDOWNERS IN MEIGS
AND GALLIA COUNTIE S
W&lt;!stern land Servrce s. Inc. ,1 leader 1n (ld .111d

G&lt;ts ell:plornfiOtl and dev('IOpment wouldltkf' tn
exlend the offer of an Oi l nnd Got~ Ll'a ... e r"
l hosc lnndowncrshnincral owner;; w1lhm

Mo ~''-l

and Ga ll ia Counties. Over 40 .000 acre!&gt; 111 II•'-.•·
areas have alrea dy been lea se d ;,nd ;~•r
preparing to be developed. II you 11avc• rur--,•,pd
th e chance to be involved in thr~; vr-'l''"' '

" ZYLXL

VXL

YVAALRT

MLVXT

VRS

JLRZGXWLT

UYLR

MLVXT

YVAALR ."

WR

RDZYWRB
UYWJY

• JVXKDT

PGLRZLT
PREVIO~S SOLUTION - "Character is wllal you are in the dark."
• Dwight Moody
' A man's character is his fate."· Heraclilus

'~!::~~, S©\\~llA -lG"E~s·

WOlD
GAM I

- - - - - - liottd ~y CLAY R. POllAN --.---.....--

Reorrongo Tenors of tho
0 four
~rambled words b•
low ro forln four simple

words ..

,---!,.

·r-r.U..,Nr-A""'IP::-TE_T

. I' I 1 I I .
2

R Y N0 I

I I IT
0 0 AT U

~
;';

One not so smal1 fellow
to his

pal, "I got a check

"' back from the bank marked

I
1-:--,lr-:,,,-~~~:-~r-,,-.-1 0
~~ E VN I R

insufficient funds. How can

a bank nol have enough -----?"
Complete the chu&lt;:kle quoted
•
•
by lil"ng In tilt milling wcrds
l.....I.-.1-..J.-.1-..J.'--oJ you denlop from S1ep No. 3 below.

'&amp;

ARLO &amp;JANIS

Concrete

••n•m
Clls •llllllllmWilllls
t:aiiiVIIc c.n.ters •C...

TcxJsy'sclue: P equals F

factor- Olfer Drown - Wisdom - FOR !be WORST
lady
her W«&lt;ding,
hope
for the best be prepared FOR the WORST." .
.

SUNSHINE CLUB

II 1\ I'&gt;
lll'\l/{ 1 II

Manley's
Recycling

by Luis C8mj)os
Celebrity Cipher crytmgra"ns •• erealtd from quotalion:s by famous people. past an:I!Jesent
Each lett« tniN ciphef SIMds lor 8llOiher

o

740·245-04J~

Licensed &amp; Bonded

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Deal with
PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
others in a thoughtful, diplomatic man·
.
.
THESE SQUARES
ner. which will instill a desire in them to
treat you similarly. With each party willing
A UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE UTTERS
to cooperate, your joint affairs ~ill turn
\11 TO GET ~NSWER
out well.
SCORP IO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - Those
ugly tasks that , up unt~ now, you've been
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS ij ~ 11- 1
reluctant to tackle because you felt they
were just too challenging or demanding
c
will not be th at lhreatening for you. Move
on them now.
Granny
to
young
planning
"You should
SAG ITTARIU S (Nov. 23·Dec. 2 1) ·
but
Others will revere any compliments you
extend because they'll recognize that
what you say is what you truly mean . and
you're not simply voicing niceties for the
e ffects.
CA PRI CORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) Event s will play e ~nd in how your
a ffairs turn out, but it'll all be good.
Things should work out to your complete
satlsfact'ion. especially if th'ere Is something personal at stake.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Thinking
big iS something that usually comes natural to you. What looks like a grandiose
scheme to others w111 be well within your
~capa biliti es to carry out and find success.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Again,
your material prospects will be favorably
trending to your liking . Something that
doesn't took possible to otners w111develop for you through a rather circuitous
route..
,
ARIES
(March 2 1-April
19) Something new and different might
attract your fancy. It will be worth explorIng to see if it could possibly be the pur·
veyor of an opportunity that can be
developed and nurtured.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) -The good
ttlat befalls you might not come through
your own eftorte but from events or happenings over which you have little or no
control. Make the most of what's handed
to you.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - A friend
wlttt whom you are presently Involved
may be destined to play an active role In ·
your personal affairs. Your pal will put
himself out for you, •• you once did for
him .

141-192-3894

Community Relations Secretary

lure
41 Delhi hon-

end

change.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ol . 23) -

5113 MUI Sl• Mllldlepan, 01 DO

v-

4

PEANUTS

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

111 4/l mo_pd

03 Dodga Oakota SX T 4x4.
59000 mites, excellent con-

period
45 Comic-strip

where /he side with the balar~;e ol power
does not ))ave an el)hl-card or better
major-suit fit. Then we usually
in
three no-trump, bul we are sludying

G

We Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

P'BUT Tf.l.m, I'I'\ "-

FOR. TO\)!\'i

Stop &amp; Compare

TRucKS

Pass

spades. Now Norlh assumes South has
six or seven points. If so, North wishes to
be in game - bul which game? Spades
mighl be a 4·3 Iii. and North does no/
have a hflllrt slopper lor lhroe no-lrump.
North solves lhe prot;em by cue- bidding
his opponenl's suit. II North had hearts
stopped, he would have bid no-lrump
himsell. By bidding lhree hearts, he asks
his partner ~ he can guard hearts. (If
South does nol haw a heart slopper, he

'iOU~ 1-\0RO:,(.OPE:.

P'i\BSOLUtEL'&lt; NOT!

740-992-1611

15

Pass

Pass

at

43 Hlslcrical

19 Cliffside
nests

marathon

tries to do something int~ll ige nt!)

BIG NATE

opportunity biiHI.

East

••

are looking

(2 wds.)

ble, and South advances , with two

Ct&gt;.PRt CORN"'l
1\Nt&gt; WE. Tt.Nt&gt; tO

P'Sf.l.t&gt;-LL

rude,. are hereby
Informed thll all

we

2 Do a

42 Succinct

request

the three-level to determine wtlether

THE BORN LOSER

Taking applications for
1 Bedroom Apartment
Seniors 62 y~ars of age or older,
handicapped/disabled regardless of
age. Apartments each have ran ge,
refrigerator, A/C, on-si te laundry,
community room and 24 hour
mai ntenance available.
Office Hours: Mon . Tue. Thurs.
10 am - 2 pm
Call or Come by our office localed
al 2070 St. Rt. 124
(740) 992-6419

This week,

Ill

three no-trump was playable. But wllen
an opponent bids your weak sun, how do
you lind OUI if partner has a stopper
there?
Aner East's weak IW&lt;rbid is f(j/owed by
1w0 passes, North makes a lakeOUI doo·

w~

Thla newaptper will~~
knowingly ICCtpt
tdvlf11ttment• for re11
el1ate which leln
violation of the law. Our

Pass

1 - Plaines,

3 Coli. course 20 Merchant
Shrieks
4 Spoken
22 Think high- 47 Famous
5 Dah partty of
lithograph.....
24 Noltoo
er
' 6 Meal on a
swill
48 Berlin
Slick
25 Part of an
pronoun
buildings
7 "- never
ear
~-9 - -Mag non
35 Variety
fly"
26 Trace of
50 Type
37 And, to Fritz 8 Brownish
smoke
of parrot
38 Flakes olf
songbirds 27 Young lady 52 Grass-skirt
39 Batuga
9 Prospect lOt' 28 Long-hanaceeuory
product
gold
died toot
53 Monaieu~s
40 Get the pic· 10 Wrap up
29 Ore deposH
wine

Cue-bid their suit
to ask for a stop

wajs

RFALE.WATE

·water Edge
of Syr~cuse

Pass

DOWN

• doomed because a weak suit.
The las! lwo days, in unconlesled auctions, aHer North and Soulll had found a
minor-surt fil. lhenhowed stoppers al

Please leave messa,,e

aub}tct to the Federal
Fair Housing Aet of 1968
which m~kealt Illegal to
advtrtiH "any
preference, llmltlltlon or
discrimination baaed on
race, color, rt~Hglon, MX
faml!lal atlltua or natJon~~l
origkl, or any intention to
make any auch
preferenCe, Nmlt.tlon or
· dltcrimlnatlon." '

Dbl .
3•

19 Sum up
21 Elbow
23 -choy

go along
30 A Genhwin
31 "Big Blue"
32 Texas
ballplayer
33 Round

Opening lead' • 5

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

ters' 43 acres.446-3844 LJM

In ttlll newspaper Ia

North

Pass
. Pass

3 NT

7&lt;10-742-2293

All rwlnt.teltdvertltlng

West

17 tapltalize
on
58 · Glisten
18 Tavern fare

27 Trendy
28 Refuselo

Dealer: East

All type s o f concfC.)c

alreams

56 Dishonesty
57 Fioggy

26 Very tittle

Vulnerable: Both

Trimming

*lmured

• ·A 7

• 8 52

740-653·9657
:::=~==:::::===:;~===:::
~======~
Stanley Tree-

*Prompt and Quality
~0 Hy-line camper. 31ft .
Work
Stove/fridge/microwave/WID
. $4000, OBO. Call304·615- *Reasonable Rates

• 76 3

.. 53 2

&amp; Removal

Ameracuanas, Blacfc; Jiants

304-593-5073

• • 3
9 KJ 10974

• 7 6 4 2
Y A Q3

H&amp;H
Guttering

Laced Wyandotles. Golden $13800. 304-638·8058 or
Laced
Wyandottes, 638·5800

dwellings advertised in
thi1 newspaper are
available on an equal

win

48 Yuckier
geometry 51 Change
14 Natural gas
slowly
component 55 Small

15 Stuck-up
16 Towheads

South

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

740-367.0536

Pullets for Sale 3 months 05 Starcraft 28ft, large slid·
old, Whil e Rocks, Silver lng awning, new Condllioo,

06-21HP7

. AKQ
• 8 6
e K Q J 10
•K QJ. 4
East

West

Seamless Gutters
Roofing. Siding , Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded .

t

FISh without
scales

12 Father of

740-416-5555 , leave massage.
-------Mollohan Furniture. Great
selection for a Great price.
Drive a tittle , save a 1ot1 202

r=

43

1 Not loolt
44 Notch
forward lo
shape
6 Smoked
46 Just bafely

Alder

condition, white, side by
callaner Spm 304-nJ-5109 1 and 2 bedroom apart- ~ . ice and water in the

ments. fumislled and unfur· door. $450. Call675-4921 or

ACROSS

Phillip

1 block from Mason Levy

or 304-675-8893

N.EA Crossword Puzzle

'

BRIDGE

BULLETIN
. BOARD

Room, Porch, Heat Pump, town, No Pets, Deposit Dining set Including table &amp;
Garage, Car port. Sklfage Required, (740)992.5174 or 6 chairs and hutcll bulfet
$350. GE Fridge in e.:ceUent
building, Fenced corner lot. (740)«1-()110.

Pubishing Company)

t~l

·--lliiiiiiiit--

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

J

I

I

•

GRIZZWELLS

6U~~.Il&gt;

·soUPTO NUTZ

'lbUM~
~~

AWor YoU~

V6t'I7\0\ol~ ?'

please contncl the local ofl1ce :ll l·\0 .flfd ;iliiiJ
Dan '! miss thi s opporlun11y I a p&lt;Hit&lt;op.tlf' ''' ,,,..
developmen t of '{OUt na l lHill resour u•o.., ,~.., 'N''II

as the poten tml l ar rncrP.,l'-o !fl9 \lOUt
persona l in come

i

I'

'

�•

Page BS • The D.iily Sentinel -

www .mydailysentinel.com

'

China plans highway
from foot of Mount Everest
•
to base camp to help with Olympic torch relay

The Scoreboard

•

BEIJING (AP) - China
plans to build a highway on
the side of Mount Everest to
ease the Olympic torch's
journey to the peak of the
world's tallest mountain
before the 2008 Beijing
Games, state media reponed
Tuesday.
Construction of the road.
budgeted at $19.7 mi II ion
would turn a 67-mile rough
path from the foot of the
mountain to a base camp at
17,060 feet "into a blacktop
highway fenced by undulating guardrails," the Xinhua
News Agency said.
Xinhua said conmuction.
which would start next
week, would take about four
months. The new hi ghway
would become a major rouie
for tourists and moun~
taineers, it said.
An official from · tl
Secretariat of the Ti be n
government. who dec! ined
to give his name. confirmed
the project was planned, but
refused to give any details.
Tibet and Nepal are the most
commonly used routes up
the mountain.
In April. organizers for the
Beijing Summer Olympics
announced ambitious plans
for the longest torch relay in
Olympic history an
85,000-mile, 130-day route
that would cross five continents and reach the 29,035foot summit of Everest.
Taking the Olympic torch
to the top of the mountain,
seen by some as a way for
Beijing to underscore its
claims to Tibet, is expected

to be one of the relay's high- ping oxygen levels.
lights.
Although he acknow iChina says it has ruled edged that the bumpy. dusty
Tibet for centuries, although ride up to base camp on the
many Tibetans say their north face of the mountain
homeland was essentially an helps to make "you feel like
independent state for most you're in the middle_ of
of that time. Chinese com- nowhere." he was reluctant
munist troops occupied to criticize the plan.
Tibet in 1951. and Beijing
''I can't make a decision to
continues to rule the region say it's good for me to be
with a heavy hand.
alone. That's hypocritical.''
The day before the route Viesturs said. "I know it
of the torch relay was would be nice to have less
announced by th~ Beijing people there. but that's sclforganiierS of the Olympics, ish."
five Americans unfurled
Viesturs
added
that
banners at a base camp call- climbers
who · prefer
ing for an independent Tibet. trekking to base camp
The five, from the already choose to approach
Students for a Free Tibet the mountain from the
group, were briefly held and Nepalese side, where there
then expelled from China.
is no road.
Officials fron:1 the Beijing
Mark Bain. the director of
organizing committee did Cornell University's Center
not immediately return .for the Environment. said
phone calls asking for com- the environmental impact of
ment.
new roads in relatively prisEd Viesturs. one of the tine areas is more severe
most
accomplished than in places where similar
American climbers, said he infrastructure already exists.
thought a paved road, as
Roads, in general. are a
opposed to the current dirt minor source of pollutanls.
one, might make access to he said, like tire dust. oil and
base camp easier for tour ·the pavement itself.
groups, but he did nut think
The most significant conit would affect climbers sig- cerns in such projects. however, is that they create "the
nificantly.
"It's not going to matter to opportunity for further
a climber whether it's paved development," Bain said,
or not," he said. "Big deaL" like the need for a parking
Viesturs, who has summit- lot at the end of the road and
ted Eve(est six times, noted. then perhaps a restaurant.
that no matter how well
Phil Powers. executive
maintained the road is, director of the American
climbers must ascend slowly Alpine Club, said he also
to give them time to accli- was concerned the road
matize to the steadily drop- would be going into an "arid

,

'
'-.
Wedn~sday, June 20, 2007'

Standin~

East Division

w

American League

and fragile environment."
"Any time the margins of .
the wildernesses of the
world get encroached upon.
we get concerned," Powers
said.
Matt Schonwald. the
North America program
director
for
MountainMadness. co m,
said Everest, at least on the
Tibetan side. is no longer the
pristine environment many
1magme.
"The sancti ty left that
mountain a long time ago,"
he said. "The north side is
already being exploited by
poorly equipped people.
That's the tragedy - not the
road."
!r. local climbing ofticial
praised the plan.
. " It is a good thing for the
local development and the
local ·~ople. because more
mountain
touri sts and
climbers will be attracted to
the region." ·said Zhang
Mingxing, general-secretary
of
the
Tibetan
Mountaineering
Association.
"The road now is a very
shabby. People . have to
spend one day to get the
base from the foot of the
mountain .
Mountain
climbers will be able to save
their energy for climbing;"
Zhang said.

Pet
Boston
.643
New YOrk
35 33 .515
Toronto
33 36 .478
Tampa Bay
31 37 .456
Baltimore
29 40 .420
Central Division
L
Pet
Cleveland
41 29 .586
Detroit
41 29 .586
Minnesota
35 34 .507
Chicago
29 38 .433
Kansas City.
29 43 .403
West Division
Pet
L
los Angeles
45 26 .634
Oakland
38 '32 .543
Seattle
35 31 .530
Texas
26 44 .371

w

w

GB
9

11 · ~
13
15 1 1

GB
5 ',

10 .)
13

GB
6 ·,
7 •..
18 ·,

Tuesday's G'ames
Detroit 15. Washington 1
Philadelphia 9, Cleveland 6
L.A. Dodgers 10, Toronto 1
Minnesota 9. N.Y. Mets 0
BOston 4 , Atlanta 0
St. louis S. Kansas City 1

Florida 7. Chicago Wh ite Sox 5'
Chicago Cubs 5. TaKas 4
Colorado 3, N.Y. Yankees 1
Cincinnati 5. Oakland 2
Tampa Bay at Arizolla . tate
Baltimore at San Diego, lat_
e
Pittsburgh at Seattle. late
Houston at LA _Angels , late
Wednesday's Games
Florida (Mitre 2-3) at Chicago White Sox
(Garland 4·4) . 2:05p.m .
Cincinnati (Belisle 5-5) at Oakland

L
31
34
34
38
41

Pet

.551
38
.528
38
.521
37
Phila6elphia
.472
Florida
34
.423
30
Washington
Central Division--.
w t Pet
40 31 .563
M~waukee
Chicago
32 37 .464
31 37 .456
St. lOUIS
Pittsburgh
30 39 .435
Houston
30 40 .429
Cincinnati
28 44 .389
NewYOO

Ea~Divlalon

L
45 25

Drawing for
patriotic afghan, A3

National League

Atlanta

West Division
Pet
L
40 28 .588·
San Diego
Los Angeles
40 30 .571
Arizona
40 31 .563
Colorado
36 34 .514
San Francisco 30 4() .429

w

GB
1 .'
2
5 ·,
9

I

•

GB
7
7 ·,
9
9 ·,
12'7

GB

a1

-.

.

1
1 •'
5
11

1ne

MiddlepQrt • PQmeroy, Ohio

Tuesday's Games
Detroit 15, Washington 1

:; o('l '\IS•\ol.:;r. . '\• • '.!.:!h

Phtladelphia 9. Cleveland 6 .
LA. Dodgers 10. Toronto 1
Minnesota 9, N.Y. Mets 0
Boston 4, Atlanta 0
t-,4ilwaukee 6, San Francisco 2
St. Louis 5, Kansas City 1
Florida 7. Chicago White Sox 5
,Chicago Cubs 5. Te)(8S 4
Colorado 3, N.Y. Yankees 1
Cincinnati S, Oakland 2
Tampa Bay at Arizona , late
, Baltimore at San Dii!(JO, late
I Pittsburgh at Seattle, lale
Houston at L.A. Angels. late

SPORTS
•

"'"' m)d.til) " '"il""t'" "'

I Ill R!--ll\\ '. . Jl ''\I ·.:.! J.:!OO-

Revitalization decision expected by month's end

• Oakland beats Reds.
SeePage 81

Wednelday's Games
San· ·Francisco (lito 6-7) at Milwauk99
(FV!oar_
gdas(Ms-_11), 22:035) apl.mC.htea
. go White Sox
n a 1re -

(Ganand 4-4), 2:05p.m.

.(Haren 8-2). 3:35p.m.
Cincinnati (Belisle 5·5) at Oakland
Tampa Bay (Shields 6-1) at Arizona (Haren 8-2) . 3:35p.m.
(Owings 4-1). 3:40p.m
Tampa Bay (Shields 6·1) at Arizona
Philadelphia (Lieber 3·5) at Cle¥eland (Owings 4-1). 3:40p.m.
(Sabathia 9-2) . 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Lieber .3-5) a:t Cle¥eland
Detroit (Sonderman 7..()) at Washington (Sabalhia 9-2), 7:05p.m.
Detroit (Sonderman 7-Q) at Wash ington
(Bacsik 1·4). 7:05p.m.
L.A . Dodgers (Kuo 1-1) at Toronto (Bacsik 1-4), 7:05p.m .
(Halladay 7-2). 7:07 p.m.
L.A . Dodgers (Kuo t -1) at Toronto
Minnesota (Baker 1-2) at N.Y. Mets (Halladay 7-2), 7:07p.m.
(O.Perez 7-5), 7:10p.m..
Minnesota (Baker 1-2) at N.Y. Mets
Boston (Tavarez 4-4) at Atlanta (Car1yle · (O.Perez 7-5), 7:10p.m.
1-1). 7:35p.m .
,
·
Boston (Ta¥arez 4-4) at Atlanta (Carlyle
Kansas City (Mech'e 4-6) at St. Louis 1·1), 7:35p .m.
.
(Weltemeyer 2-1) 8:10pm
Kansas C1ty (Meche 4-6) at St. lou~
·
c~bs (MarquiS
· · · 5-3)
· at l exas (Wellemeyer
2-1). 6:10p.m .
Ch1cago
Chicago Cubs (Marquis 5-3) at Taxa§
(Loe 2-6). 8.35 p.m,
(Loe 2·6). 8:35 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pethtte 4-4) at Colorado ·N.Y. Yankees (Penitte 4-4) at Colorado
(Fra.nCIS 6-5). 9:0~ p.m.
.
(Francis 6·5}, 9:05 p.m.
·
·
Balt1mor~ (Guthne 3-1) at San D1ego Baltimore {Gulhrie 3-1) at San Diego
(Germano 5-Q), 10:05 p.m.
(Germano 5-Q), 10:05 p.m.
· Pittsburgh {Maholm 3-9) at Seattle Pittsburgh (Maholm 3-9) at Seattle
(Weaver 0-6). 10:05 p.m.
(Weaver D-6), 10:05 p.m.
-.
Houston (Rodriguez 4-6) at LA Angels Houston (Rodriguez 4·6) at L.A. Angels
(E .Santana 5-7). 10:05 p.m.
(E .Santana 5-7). 10:05 p.m.

Associated Press writer
Sarah DiLorenzo tn New
York contributed to · this
report. ·

Icenhower joins Vegas
Legends concert, B3

J.

Director for Buckeye Hill s.
has worked with the
Middleport Deyelopment
MIDDLEPORT
Group to file the second preCommunities planning to application through the
seek downtown revitaliza- Middleport
Community
tion funding through the Association. Zoller said the
Ohio
Department
of state development office
Development should be noti- plans to notify applicants by
fied of eligibility next week. June 29 as to whether they
The Village of Middleport will be invited to file a full
filed a second pre-applica- application in October.
tion for funding last month,
The ~nding pre-applicathrough Buckeye Hills- tion is the village's second.
Hocking Valley Regional A pre-application filed with
Development
District the development departMelissa Zoller, Devc;lopment ment a year ago was denied
BY BRIAN

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENT1NEL.COM

because the Meigs County
Community Improve ment
Corporation was the applicant and not enough business owners in the downtown shopping district were
CIC members.
If this pre-application is
approved, the village will be
invited to file a full application for $300,000 in Tier II
downtown
revitalization
funds through the Ohio
Department of Development.
That application would be
due in October.
A gram award through the

downtown revitalization
program would be used to
develop a co mprehensive
streetscape, -which might
include benches, lighting
and other decorative elements, and to match funds
for · building owners in
Middleport who wish to
complete cosmetic facade
improvements and code
upgrades to their buildings.
Farmers
Bank
and
Savings Co. has committed
funding through low-interest loan~ to those business
owners who wish to make

building
improvements.
Downtown Revitalization
Coordinator
Michael
Gerlach is now meeting
with business people to
detennine a leve l.of interest ·
in participation .
Paul Reed. president of
the Development Group .
said only two building and
business owners have said
they wi II not participate at
any leve l. All others have
expressed illlerest in completing some degree of
building
improvements
through the program.

Cooling
assistance, air
conditioners
.available
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENT1NEL.COM

OBITUARIES

-

Page AS
• Connie B. Black, 71

INSIDE

11046
ZERO-TURN LAWN TRACTOR

GT 2542
HEAVV-'DUTV GARDEN TRACTOR

THE TANK~ M60 HEAVY-DUTY
PROFESSIONAL ZERO- TURN RIDER

• Exclusive Synchro- technology provides
zero-turn maneuverability so you can
finish up to 50% faster

• Heavy-dul"y shaft drive
• 42" twin-blade mowing deck

• 60" Co"'mand · Cut System·· triple-blade
mowing deck
·
·
• 27 HPt Kohler• Command• V -Twin OHV
engine or 25 HPt Kawasaki,. V -Twin
OHV engine
·

• 20 HP' Kohter• Commancr' V -Twin
OHV ensine

• Unique steerable front axle with steering
~and foot-pll'dal control are easy to
use and let you mow straight -lines on hilts
• 46" triple - blade 3-in-1 mowing deck
• 20 Hf&gt;1 Kohler• Courage- V -Twin
OHV engine

• Cast-iron transmission with heavy - duty
hydrostatic pump

• Foldoble, fully adjustable high-back
suspension seat
.

• 3- ant! 5-year limited warranty***

• 3-year limited commercial warranty•••

S89tMONTH*

S228tMONTH*

• Holzer Hospice
to host teen
volunteer orientation.
See Page A3
• Meigs honor
rolls announced.
See Page AS
• aves announces
scholarship winner.
See Page AS

--

WEATHER

~ ~~N£t1;~ PRIU AJDVISft1~
S94tMONTH*

ZERO
ZERO
INTEREST
DOWN PAYMI!NT

POR h

/

BIKER SUNDAYS

UCNTHS•

'Come to Jesus'
on tlvo wheels

Details on Pap A8

INDEX
2 SECfiONS -

rTWHENVOU

'

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
8880 UNITED LANE • ATHENS, OH 45701
740-593-3279 OR 1-800-710-1917
MON - .FRI 9:00AM 6:00PM • SAT 9:00AM -- 5:00PM ·

16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds ·
Comics

B4-6
B7

Editorials

·A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

B3

Sports
Weather

B Section
AS

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
"&lt;1&gt; FIXED MCNTHLY PMf..IB-~T$ FOR :l6 MCNrHS &amp;NO INTEReST FOR 36 MONTHS.
k'onl:h11 P..ayroonts for 36 MM i hG &amp; No ln.terl!!SI for 36 Month'S. V•bd or\ purc hiL$es -cA qualify ng C~ Cadet prod.x.b and the Cub Cadet Cornrn.•··clal TANK/ENFORCER mad!! by tJ/JO/ID M
C·ed:t Card oonsumer eK;r;:ount. On promo purch«ne, fiMAd montt&gt;iy poaymenl~ equal •o l!J6th o f If\ I al proml purcha:5e- bffiOunt ere r~~d un1 11 E&lt;xpwa trOI'\ or termrna.11on o f prnmof'l()fl, but
M ftna~e c hlt' Sf!!l w ill be asU!ssad il. (1) ~omo purchase paid .n full in 36 ll'onths.. {2) any ,.,.N~:-mum rl"ttO'\1hi'Jo' pcl)'f"f'ents on account paid v.then due . ar.d C3) account balbn.Ce dou oot •:.ceed credil
lrrT&gt;~ t. Olhe· .,.. r:Joe, p: ol"l'Q I"T)!Jy be Wrntna11!Q, On .all promot1100&lt;1l otters. :1-1andiard termt. appt-y to non· promo purc:hat'es. opll.oo al cN!rs.e~ and etcN
.st1ng, .ec:coUI'l t:s. A s of 3/23/(J'l'. varrlble APR'$ : 18991J,
&amp; on all accoun1s in !Mf,.JII. 2J.W*r. Min1mum. F~Mnc-e Charge $'1. Sub,e&lt;:t eo awovat b y GE MtlMy Bewr*.
"""" PT'fXtuq Prlt@ - Mco1hly pa)·ments do not r!!:flecf aw&amp;IC~bh! t8JC.el!- or doM'I p.IJ)'IT'IE!n.1s .-..auat r@~8t l ptices &amp;rP ~e-1" by deale• ind may '118!1'; .
Ta,.;e.s. fre1ght. M1up ~nd N!ndltns &lt;:: h.-ge,: fmiY be i1Kkt!1iona1 ~m" may very ._.,dets. svl&gt;,tect to hfr&gt;cled avatLib•l ty
........ ~yo~ loc:M I !ridependen1 Reta~r for ~lted w.a n a1\ty det;eils. &lt;:erf.am lltn ita,ion s_ and re-slr-K:tio t~ti &amp;pply.
SpMl t!t .U ions are s ubJOCI 10 cMngt: w~thout notice. im~S; ma·,- no( t e-neoct deateot" tnvenrOt'y i!JI'd/or um1 specrh&lt;a! ions.
(1) F u«!d
.!! Pow"'

t as rated by"engirle manufacturer

'

t t r~M $200 Pre.patd Vrw Card f. an be- used 8!\lllrywtll!rll!!! Visa debit caHh tiff! ac ce pled . Your card s tS.S-..~ed by C 1t.ank N ..O., parsuartl to a'11Cilfi-Sil' f rom V1s..rt U .S A . trv~ E~Ctif\4 ,s J Ct1t Catr~pany . S200 Prepa.:d
V 1se-Car-d oHer- ·ntM throUgh 9103107 See your local lod~e~ Relatler tn r dP.i&lt;t •ls:.
,
HASCAA• '" a r~g1Uered tr&amp;dfmark of !he _NattonM Assoc,ahon of Stoc k Car Aul a R.~tc:mg 'ne

------

Ilz'/111
,,., '"t-rJ.r•J
... ~'7• •.·

POMEROY
With
$193,000 in funding for air
conditioners and $36.000 in
funds to pay electric bills, the
Galli a Meigs . Community
Action Agency (GMCAA) is
ready to assist eligible applicants with the Emergency
Summer Cooling Program
which ends on Aug. 31 or
until funds are depleted.
In its third week of op~{a­
tion, the program has · distributed 88 air conditioners
and around $7 ,000 on electric bill s to tho se eligible for
the assistance.
,..
"It's been very busy anct
.,
the demand is great,"
·"
Sandra Edwards, emerge.ncy services director for
Summer officially begins today. Cotton Hamilton ,
GMCAA said.
'·;:-··· ..
6, of Racine, is enjoying his summer vacatio n.
Edwards added the proso far, playing T-ball for the Racine Li'l
gram's funding is slightly
Lowriders, spending time at London Pool, and
less than last year though
ptaying
in the park . He was enjoying the play-_ .
she anticipates it will be
grouna at Dave Diles Park in Middleport yesteradequate to meet tne public's need. The air condiday. Also a part of summer is hanging out by the
tioners 'are 6,000 BTU's and
pool, like these swimmers hanging out in the
are energy efficient with a
shallow
waters of the kiddie pool in Syracuse.
..
'30-day warranty. For those
Children's swimming lessons are being offered
who received air conditionat the London Pool from Ju ly 9-20. The cost for
ers in the past who qualify
the two week sess ion is $35, payable the first
to receive another, it must
day of the class. To register for the·class cal l
be three full years before a
992-5418 or visit th e London Pool.
new air conditioner can be
Brian J. Reed. Beth Sergentjphotos
awarded. For example, if
you received an air conditioner this June, it would be
June ·2011 before you would
be eligible to receive a new
air conditioner.
lnco nie eligible persons
musr make an appointment
with GMCAA by calling
between 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
each Friday at 992-6629 for
Meigs County and 367-7341
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
for Gallia County. Annual
income eligibility for one
REEDSVILL E - Between now and
person in the household is
October. there are at k&lt;tSt three Bike Sunday
$17,867, two persons
events planned throughout Meigs Count y.
$23,957, three persons.
retlecring a nmr-tradiiional approach to the
$30,047 , four persons,
tradition ·of Chri&gt;ti an it y.
$36,137, . five persons,
Biker Sundays are planned on July 21 at
$42,227 and six persons,
The Bethel Wo'rship Center. Oct. 7 at the
$48,317. For households
with. more than six members,
Syracuse Natarene Church and this Sunday,
· the Eighth Annual Biker Sunday at
add $6,090 per member.
There are two types· of
. Reedsville·,, Fellow ship Church of the
house holds that may be
Naz&lt;\rene wi ll take place complete with speassisted: An income eligible
cial sing ing and speaker 13ryan Lawrence .
household with a member
Sunday school starts at 9:30 a.m. \vith the
Bath Sergent;photo
who has a current qualify- Bi.ker Sunday events are becoming more popular in the area like this one worship service beuinnin~ at 10:45 a.m.
ing medical condition I
A potluck clinne~· will&lt;immediatdy fol breathing disorder verified from lpst year's Biker Sunday at the 'Syracuse Nazarene Church. This low. The church i&gt; providing the main
Sunday, the Fl)llowsh.ip Church of the Nazarene in Reedsville will hold it's ·
Please see Cooling, AS
own Biker Sunday followed by the Sixth Annual Josh Adams Memorial Ride.
Please see Sundays. AS

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="531">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9982">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="15439">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="15438">
              <text>June 20, 2007</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="630">
      <name>black</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="315">
      <name>deweese</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1202">
      <name>herdman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="132">
      <name>osborne</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4177">
      <name>steenberger</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
