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Page Do6 Sunday Times Sentinel

Middlepon • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday July I, 2007

.
I

Civil War

Older·farmers
changing agriculture,
rural comrnunities;A6

•
essay wmners
hQnored,A:J

•
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.
,1, 1

• All-Star starters Aamed.
SeePageB1

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G·&amp;

Two At This ·Prlctl ·

....U-11'1110

0BITUARIFS
Page A5
• Paul E. Hawk
• Helen F. Hunter
• Elizabeth
Jane Grinstead
• Kathleen J. Tillis

Silverado
. , 314

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2007 Chevy Aveo

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IIIC:III 7!41

4d,J;IIfl, ~Pia.,

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2At Tills Prl¢

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...,. 2007 Buick Lucerne
..

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2007 Chevy Cobalt ·
Alii, AC
ltaal7!18

2007 Chevy Trailblazer ·
•
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CINCINNATI (AP) - Alcollllrelated traffic accidents continue to
be a problem in southwest Ohio
despite an increase in police .checkpoints used to identify drunken 'drivers, a newspaper reported Sunday.
The checkpoints are popular with
Jaw enforcement agenctes hoping to
'deter drunken driving. Since
January 2006, 40 checkpoints in
counties in and around Cincinnati Hamilton, Warren, Butler and
Clermont - led to 261 DUl arrests,
according to an analysis by The
Cincinnati Enquirer.
That's 261 out of more than
17,000 vehicles checked, or about
one DUI arrest for every 67 vehi-

Stllrtlllg At

\\\\\ \ ll t\ d o~ l h , t· l t l r ntlt~nt

·on

cles, the newspaper said.
Chuck Strain, a Cincinnati
defense attorneY. who handles DUI
cases, dismisses · sobriety checkpoints as "mainly a publicity stunt
with lots of police overtime."
Ohio still had 462 fatal alcoholrelated crashes i1,1 2006, a figure that
is not trending downward, The
·
Enquirer said.
1
DU1 checkpoints are joint operations. Police departments and sheriff's offices usually combine forces
with the State Highway . Patrol,
which brings extra personnel and
expenise.
·
Federal and state grants help local

law enforcement agencies pay the
overtime for some officers, the
newspaper said.
Cincinnati Police Capt. Dan
Gerard said checkpoints cost about
$2,500 each . - but that's just for
overtime and doesn't include regular
salaries for officers. He argues the
expense is wonh it,- considering the
average person taken off the road for
a DUI arrest at a Cincinnati checkpoint has a blood-alcohol content of
0.155 - almost double the state's
legal limit of 0.08.
"I would be very, happy with zero
checkpoint arrests ' if it meant fewer
drunken drivers on the road, Gerard
said.

· Critics say druDken drivers can
easily avoid sobriety· checkpoints
because 1990 ruling by the u.s.
Supreme Coun required police to
announce the location of checkpoints in advance. The same ruling
also affirmed that properly conduct,
ed sobriety checkpoints do not vio•
late constitutional protections
against unreasonable searches and
setzures.
Most stops at checkpoints take
Jess than 40 seconds, The Enquirer
said. Only motorists suspected of
being impaired - based on erratic
driving. odor of . alcohol, slurred
speech or open bottles - are asked
to get of out of their cars.

a

Free concert,firer.wrk,
highlight Middleport :
July 4 celebration

' ._

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INSIDE
~~, ~ ~·-·~t~o..-~'

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• cush appreciates
'strong response' from
British government; more
air marshals on flights.
See Page A2
• Gillilan Reunion ..
See Page A3
• Local youth selected
for Delta Epsilon Iota
Society. See Page A3
• Sonshine Circle
makes donations.
See Page A3
• Midweek Fourth of
July means business
as usual for some .
. See Page AS
• State to remove Social
Security numbers from ·
Web eyite by fall.
See Page A6
• Judges strive to
keep up with science
in the courtroom.
See Page A6 ·

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE- The Racine
. Volunteer Fire Department
has organized the village 's
Independence Day activities
which include a parade,
chicken barbecue at the fire
department and fireworks,
all
taking place on
Wednesday.
"United We Stand" is the
parade's theme with the
line-up beginning at 9: 15
a.m. at Southern, High
· School. A flag disini. at
9:45 a.m. will also be
observed at the high school
shonly before the parade
begins at I 0 a.m. The parade
route will travel down Elm
Street, left on Third Street,
left onto Vine Stieet, left on
Fifth Street and right on Elm
Street back · to the high
school.
Parade prizes and spon- ·
sors include: Floats, first
place, $1 00 from Home
National Bank; second
place, $75 and ·third place,

The Fourth of July ·
parade In Racine
begins· at 10 a.m.
on Wednesday
followed by the
Racine Volunteer
Fire Department's
chicken barbecue.
Fireworks are set
to go off at 10
p.m.
Beth Sercontjphoto

2 SECTIONS -

Ple1se see Middleport. AS

•

Rutland's Ox Roast set for ·Salurday
BY BETH SERGENT

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3
A4
As

Editorials
Obituaries

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio Valley l'ublishing Co.
---4.--

...

BSERGENT@MYOAILVSENTJNELCOM

Local woman named
·GAR state president

12 PAGFS

MIDDLEPORT -A full
day of special events, concluding with a free concert
and fireworks display; is
planned for Independence
Day in Middleport.
It has been two years since
the community celebrated
July 4. In 2005, the celebration was canceled when village council refused to allow a
fireworks ·· display. Last year,
the celebration was rained
out.
The
.. , Middleport
· Deve1opment
Group,
Middleport
Community
Association and River City
Players all have a hand in
·organizing this year's celebration. The day's events will
begin with the unveiling of
the development group's
"Walk Into Middlepon's Past"
mural series. The first of four
murals, depicting historic
postcard scenes from downtown Middleport, will be
. unveiled on the Coates
Building on North Second
Avenue at a 2 p.m . ceremony.

Pleue sea Radne. AS

Emma Ashley

INDEX

REED

•

WEATHER

Details on Page A6

J.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Impala
MIRP $1!1,.1111111 $2,6111

•

BY BRIAN

lfllill To can

2007 Chevy Sierra 314

\10'\U\ \

Racine plans ~
Fourth of
July activities

2007 Gr.tC Acadia·

,.

'- '• .~;~

Report: Drunken driving still a problem ~espite ·om checkpoints

SPORTS

ummer II Down
..........· G·S

,f,

I "~ 10.... • \ol

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY E10ma
Ashley of Pomeroy will
serve another term as presof the
Ohio
ident
Department, Ladies of the
Grand Army of the
Republic .
She was re-elected to the
position during the annual
GAR
convention held
recently at the Franklin
County Veterans Memorial
Building in Columbus.
Other members of the
Maj. Daniel McCook

Circle of Middleport elected as state officers were
Jean
Hilton
of
Parkersburg, state treasurer: Emily Ashley of
Rocksprings , state chaplain ; and Rachel Dennis of
S'ugar Grove, state secretary, who was also named
as a delegate to the national convention.
At the convention, the.
Ohio Departmeni gave
special awards to the Maj.
Daniel McCook Circle No.
104 of Middleport for

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Please see GAR. AS

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RUTLAND- The Rutland
Fire Department's Annual Ox
Roast and patriotic activities
will be held this Saturday
beginning with a parade at 10
a.m. and ending at II p.m.
with a fireworks display.
The parade's line up is set
for 9 a.m. with fllll trucks and
larger floats lining lljl ar tile
grade school and all other
entries lining up at Depot and
Brick Streets. The theme for
this year's parade is "Our
Soldiers, Our Freedom" witll
awards from the parade being
given out at noon. Categories
for parade entries are horses,
religious, non-religious floats,
walking units, bikes and vehicles.
A flag rrusmg will take
place after the parade at fireman's park where the majority
of the activities take place.
Games are from noon to I
p.m. and include ring toss,
duck game, spinning wheel,
tic-tac-toe. basketball toss,
football toss, dart game and
others. At 2 p.m. t)le Rutland
Church of the Nazarene will .
Le organizing kids games with
prizes awarded for each game.
Bingo stans at I p.m. at the
bingo building. Also, begin·
ning at I p.m. is Belistic
Championshtp Wrestling. In
addition, the dunking booth
will be operated by the Big
Be.nd Youth Football League
the entire day.
This year's entertainment
includes the band Requiem
from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. followed
by the band Swamp Jeuce
from 1 p.m. until II p.m. after

-·~--·-------

File pho!o

The Annual Rutland Ox Roast kicks off at 10 a .m. Saturday
with a patriotic parade and encls at :f1 p.m. with a fireworks
display. Again this year one of the parae\l categories witt be
for decorated horses. like this one in last year's parade.
which the fireworks begin.
Throughout the day the
Rutland Fire Department will
be selling concessions. including it~ famous roast beef. hot
dogs, sloppy joes. nachos and
chee~. popcorn. ice cream.
sno-kones. cotton candy,

french fries and elephant ears.
Any and all vendors are
welcome for a cost of $10 per
space though no food or drink
vendors pem1itted. For ques-·
tions call Danny Davis at 742·
2372 or Anna Farley at 416599 1.

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PageA2

NATION • WORLD,.

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The. Dail
- y Sentinel

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BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July :z, 2007

PageA3
'

Monday, July 2, 2007 ·

•

.I .

Gillilan Retmion
BY JENNIFER LOVEN
ASSoCIATED PRESS WRITER

KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine - ·
Relations are rocky between '
President Bush and Russian
President VJ.adintir Putin, but they ·
began their overnight visit at the
Bush family 's seaside summer
home on Sunday with warm handshakes, lobster dinner and a hairraising spin through the Atlantic's
choppy waters.
The president knows what he
wants from the talks: Convince
Polin that a U.S. missile defense
system i'n Eastern Europe would
not threaten Russia. Bring the
Kremlin _behind tough new pe'nalties aimed at Iran's suspected
nuclear
weapons
program.
Generally defrost relations.
What the Russian president
seeks is less clear.
·
Putin requested an audience with
Bush on his way to Guatemala,
where Olympic officials are picking a host city for the 2014 winter
games. Bush aictes brac-ed for the
possibility of a surprise on the
scale of the one the Russian leader
dropped last month in Gennany,
on the missile defense dispute.
"Does Putin have something he
Ill' photo
plans to throw at Bush's feet?" Arst Lady Laura Bush, adjusts Russian President Vladimir Putin's collar as he arrives at Walker's Point Sunday In
wondered Sarah Mendelson, Kennebunkport, Maine for a meeting with President George W. Bush, right.
Russia policy expert and senior
fellow at the Center for Strategic Laura Bush, plus swordfish and I wouldn't go, and I wouldn'thave Republic and Poland, ex-Soviet
been invited," he said. "In politics, satellites that now are NATO
and International Studies.
blueberry and pecan pie.
Former President George H.W.
There was talk of early-morning as in sports, there is always com- members.
Bush collected Putin at a nearby fishing on Monday before an petition."
Moscow is not persuaded by the
airt?ort, accompanying him by infonnal meeting and appear.mce
Indeed; U.S.-Russian relations argument that the system targets a
hehcopter and then limousine to before reporters. The less-than-2:t. have slid to their worst point since possible future threatfrom Iranian
the stone-and-shingle compound hour get-together we-s ending with the Cold War.
nuclear missiles. The Kremlin
that's been in his family for over ..lunch.
,
An . anti-terrorism bond forged threatened to aim missiles at
J00 years. Emerging from the car, . "It's pretty casual up here, as after the Sept. II attacks has been Europe and denounced the U.S. as
Putin had a smile for the waiting you know, unstructured," Bush chipped at repeatedly. Disputes an irresponsible source of force.
current president, and kisses and had said as he' awaited Putln's deve1oped over the Iraq war, misAt a summit last month of world
large bouqets of flowers for first arrival, the water sparkling behind sile defense ' plans, the fate of economic powers, Putin surprised
lady Laura Bush and former first him and the sea breezes blowing. democracy in Russia, NATO Bush by proposing that the system
lady Barbara Bush.
"OK? It's been real," he said later, expansion to Russia's doorstep and instead use an old Soviet-era radar
The Bushes escorted Putin to the dismissing the media .horde that sntping.over what each side views facility in Azerbaijan instead of the
guest house where he was spend- came to see the meetings get as meddling in former Soviet Czech and Polish sites. It is an idea
republics.
that U.S. officials do not want to
ing the . night, and then showed off underway.
· • "
another perk of the propeny situatBoth s1des insisted there was no
There has been increasing coop- reject outright. But they have coned on a crag~y finger of rock. The set agenda and scant potential for eration on Iran and weapons pro- cluded it would not work as a subelder Bush Immediately piled his announcements. With expectations liferation.
.
• stitute, only perhaps as an early
son and the ·Russian leader lowered and the relaxed itinerary,
But Putin, appealing to national- warning supJ?Iemental component.
everyone clad in black heavy-duty Mendelso~ only somewhat joking~ ist sentiments in Russia and ea~er
The two s1des also are fighting
boatmg jackets - into his super- Jy tertned 11 ''the no-summtt sum- to re-establish his energy-ncb over Kosovo. The U.S. backs the
country on the · world stage,. Serbian province's desire for indepowered navy-and-white speed- · mit."
boat, Fidelity III, for about a 45Before leaving Moscow for the already was becoming 'more pendence; Russia sides with Serbia
minute tour. Afterward, two gener. U.S., Putin had said his ."very assertive. Things then took a bad and opposes it.
ations of Bushes and others dined good, I would say friendly'! rela- turn after the U.S. said in January
On Iran, Bus~ is seeking Putin's
with Putin on traditional Maine tions should create a positive it planned to build a missile backing for a third round of penaltreats: "lobster, what else?" joked atmosphere. "If it wasn't that way, defense system based in the Czech ties against Tehran for defying
&lt;

U.N. orders to halt · liranium
enrichment. Iran says the enrichment is intended for a nuclear
energy program. The .West suspects Iran wants t~ develop
nuclear bolQbS. ·
The U:S. has, begun discussing
with Security Council members a
·proposal to require all nations to
inspect cargo for illicit riuclearrelated shipments or arms coming
from or going to Iran and to freeze
assets of a number of Iranian
banks, a senior administtatipn official. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the
talks are in their initial stages.
Russ'ia and China previously
have balked at such measures, supporting more modest penalties that
have had little effect. But there are
signs the Kremlin may now be in a
more cooperative mood.
Stephen Sestanovich, an ambassador to former Soviet republics
under President Clinton, said the
issues are too technical and the
sides too entrenched for heads of
state to produce breakthroughs.
What Bush can accomplish, he
said, is soothing Russia's sl)nse it
has been ignored while making the.
case that tough talk is hurting
Moscow.
"This wouldn't be the worst
moment to call Putin on the kind
of rhetoric you've heard out of
Moscow
of
late,"
said
Sestanovich, now at the Council
on Foreign Relations.
The meeting is the only one
Bush has held with a foreign
in
Kennebunkport.
leader
Zbigiliew · Brzezinski, President
Carter's national security adviser,
criticized it as a "ridiculous"
reward for Putin's harsh stance and
an inappropriate setting for serious
talks. Nearly 2,000 dem\)nstrators,
too, protested the meeting and the
Iraq · war by marching toward
Walker's Point and chanting
"impeach, impeach, impeach."
Still it could be the last chance
for, as Mendleson carted it,
''rebooting the relationship."
Russia holds elections in March
to choose Putin's successor. Bush
is O\lt of office in 19 months. So
the only other time for the leaders
to get together is briefly on the
sidelines of a fall summit in
Australia of Asia-Pacific leaders.

Bush apprecinies 'strong response' from British government; more air marshals on flights
BY STEPHEN
OHLEMACHER

WASHINGTON
President
Bush
said
Sunday he appreciates the
new British government's
"strong response" to terrorist threats in London
and Scotlan.d that prompted the Umted States to
tighten airport security and
. add at~ marshals to overse~s ~1ghts.
It JUSt goes to show the
war agamst th.ese extremists goe~ on," Bush said as
he wa1~ed f?r. Rus.stan
President Vlad1m1r Putmto
arnve at the Bush famtly
hom~
. at
seas1de
~ennebunkport, Mame.
You never know where
they may try to strike, and
I appreciate the very strong
response that the Gordon

tigations were ongoing, eating a high risk of terror- cerned about is· the move"' is "another reason why we sometimes more in one
said American authorities ist attacks. The current merit of Europeans, includ- have put some 'additional destination,
sometimes
are running the names of national threat level is yel- ing people with European security
measures
in more ·in another destinathe suspects in Britain low, or the third highest, citizenship, into areas of place."
.
tion," he said.
through their databases to indicating an elevated South Asia to get trained
The U.S. increased the
"Going forward, w"e will
look for links to the United threat.
and get experience and number of air marshals ' on 'be doing some enhanced
States.
Chertoff said he does not then the prospect of these flights between the United air marshal work and. simiThose checks would plan to change those lev- people coming back to States and Europe last lar types of activities with
include watch lists such as els. "At this · moment we carry out operations in August and stepped up the respect to U.K. travel."
the no-fly list; any clue don't have a specific credi- Europe or in the . United pace over the past few
Britain's new prime min, that the suspects had ble threat against the States using Europe as a months, Chertoff said. Last ister, Gordon Brown, said
shared an address with United States," he said.
departure point," Chertoff August, British police his country was dealing
people in the U.S.; intelliBritain has raised.. its said.
foiled an alleged plot' by with terrorists associated
gence indicating. the sus- security alert level to the
"It's one of the reasons Musli!fl extremists to use with· •. al-Qaida. Chertoff
pects made calls into the highest possible level, we've been very focused liquid explosives to blow said, "If they are comfortU.S.; and other similar indicating terror attacks on increasing our security up as many as 10 flights . able in confirming that,
types of investigative may be imminent.
for people incoming from between the United States then that's fine. I have no
work.
Chertoff said he has spo- Europe. And that's some- and Britain. .
reason to disagree."
It was not immediately ken out for some time thing we're going to be
"We haven't singled out
A burning Jeep Cherokee
clear if counterterrorism about U.S. worries involv- looking at for the rest of Glasgow until a couple of rammed into Glasgow's
agencies had any hits or ing potential terrorist the summer," he said.
terminal
on
days .ago as a particular airport
connections.
,
threats originating .m
Chettoff said officials lo.cation for· focus, but SJ~turday. The day before,
Airp
· 'orts are at the sec- Britain and Europe':
are also concerned about there has been a strategy of police in London found
d f f'
·
h
"I
think
one
of
the
issues
tlie
possibility of a copycat mixing up the deployment two cars packed with
on o 1ve ~ecunty t. reat
we're
increasingly
conin the·u. S ., saying it of these air marshals, explosives.
attack
levels - orange - . mdl,.......................................................................................................

~i:~~.:a~~:~~~en~; ~~~~~

Hey Moms a.nd Dads,·Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles .. .

,, ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

Bush remarked hours
. after his homeland security
Chief said the administration was satisfied with its
current terrorism alert
level following an attack at
a Scottish airport and two
foiled car bombs in
London.
: "I think given what we
know now, we're comfortable that we're at the right
posture." Michael Chertoff
said during a round of talk
show appearances.
· U.S . airports and mass
transit systems are tightening security ahead of the
Fourth of July holiday and
more air marshals will
travel on overseas flights.
"We will be doing operations at various rail Joca- .
tions and other mass transit
location s in cooperation
wi tl) local authorities,
Again, not because of a
specific piece of credible
threat information , but
because we are going into
a holiday season . There
will be a larger number of IHal~y
people traveling," Chertoff
sa1d.
,
A . U.S. official, who
spoke on . condition of
anonymity while the inves-

Edition
be published
July 20

KYGER - The Reunion
of Elbert and Della Gillilan
was held June 10 at the
Kyger Creek clubhouse.
Lunch preceded socializing and ga.mes with prizes
being' awarded. Sixty-four
fll.mily members and friends
attended. Those present
included • Dplores . and
Raynl'lttd Donohue; Dennis,
Jonathan
Janet, · and
Donohue; Gerald and Linda
Donohue and · Rheannea
McDonald o( Harrisonville;
Gary, Linda, Jordan and
Isaiah Haynes .9f South
BloomfieW; Alun, Joseph,
Derek, Raymond and Dedra
Armstrong of Jackson;
Brenda Neutzling, Andrea,
and
Paxton
Whitlow
Neutzling of Bidwell; A. J.
and · Tanner Neutzling of
Pomeroy; Be a and Rex
Carlyle of Westerville; Mike
Carlyle, Robert and Vicki

,,

Shepherd and Tony Chaffin
of Columbus; Tim Caryle
and ~beryl deweiss of Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; . Richard
and Paula Cline of New
Lexington; Dakota and
Chelsey hi:lboden of Logan;
Josh Simpson of Athens;
Mark, Regina, and Tiffany
Simpson, Jake Warner and
Mary Lou. Hawkins of
Middleport; Lori, Rachael
ana Abi~ail Bearhs .Qf.
Pomeroy; · Diana, . Todd,
Brady, Haley and Ty Bissell
of Long ~oltom ; Janice
(Gillilan). Danner, Sandy
and Leroy Forester, James
Carver, Betty Spaun and
Zach Imboden of Racine;
Mary and Roy Gillilan,
Patricia Collins and Pete
s·nyder of Long Bottom;
Mildred Williams, Jan and
Cameryn Harmon and
Shiriey and Gerald Simpson
of Racine.
·

Community Calendar

Local youth
selected for
.
'

Dtilta Epsilon Iota Society
POMEROY- The Delta Epsilon Iota Academic Honor
Society has selec ted Cory W. Van Reeth for membership
in the local chapter at DeVry University in Columbus.
Van Reeth of Pomeroy is a 2003 graduate of Meigs
High School. He is the son of Gloria Van Reeth of ·
·
Pomeroy and John Van Reeth of Marietta.
He graduated Sunday, June 24, at Veterans' Memorial •
from DeVry University with a bachelor 's de.g ree in technical managen'lent. In 2006, Van .Reeth gl'aduated from
Washington State Community College with an associate's
degree in Computer Support Te, hnology.
·
Del til-Epsilon Iota was established in order to recognize
and encourage academic excellence in all fields of study.
The organization rewards outsJanding students through
financial scholarships, provides .leadership opportunities
to its members, and promotes the principles of dedication,
enthusiasm, and init•ative among students participating in
higher education throughout the U ni(ed States.
Students qualify on the basis of academic achievement.
ProspeCtive members must hav.e completed a minimum of
30 semester hours. at an accredited college or university.
while maintaining. a 3.30 cumulative grade point average
or a scholastic ranking within tlie top 15% of their class.
Delta Epsilon Iota's membership is comprised of outstanding scholars attending many of the finest colleges
and universities in tbe counlry. Organizational vision and
.. cutting edge resources have made the Society one of the.
leading academic development organizations, synony-:
mouswith leadership and excellence in academic life. ·

Township Trustees meet
in regular session, 7:30
Katelyn Hill (lnd Andrew Roseberry won savings 'bond· for
p.m .. township garage.
their Civil War e~says in a contest sponsored by the Ladies
SYRACUSE - Sutton
of the Grand Army of the Republic .
Township Trustees, regu'fuesday, July 3
MIDDLEPORT
lar meeting, 7 p.m.,
Regular monthly meeting Syracuse Village Hall.
of Middleport Masonic
RACINE - Reports on Center reenactment. It was
LETART FALLS Lo9ge #363, F&amp;AM. 7:30 Letart Township Trustees, several donations were give al noted that the picnic at th~
p.m. All Master Masons regular meeting, 5 p.m., the recent meeting of The Hazel McKelvey home wasmv1ted.
·
Sonshine Circle of the well-attended.
'
office building.
CHESTER
Chester
Bethany
Methodist
Church
The meeting opened with
MIDDLEPORT - , At the received a $75 savings
meeting 6:30 p.m.
held
at.the
church.
.
the
pledge to the flag .
recent Memorial Day cele- bond, Third place went to Lodge
'fuesday, July 3
with
potluck
picnic.
Also
Donations
were
made
to
the
bration for Cpl. Henry Andrew Roseberry for his District
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Relay for Life, to Friends of De,votions included Evelyn
13
Past
Dixon, Kyla Frank, presi- essay on Ulysses S. Grant..
Foreman's reading of two
Township Trustees, 6:30
dent of the Major Daniel He received a $50 savings Councilors. District Past p.m,, Pageville Town The Library, to a lacty whose poems by Helen Steiner Rice,
and District
house burned, and to women "God Bless America" and
McCook Circle Ladies of bond. It was noted that no Councilors
Hall.
meetinl)s.
Deputies
taking
chemotherapy and
the Grand Army · of the entries wen~ received from
ALFRED
- Orange radiation therapy, to whom "Thank God For Little
Installation
of
Distnct
Republic, announced the Meigs Elementary.
by Esterh Smith. Township Trustees, pub' the group gave two gas cards. Things."
winners of the organizations'
Both Hill and Roseberry officers
Members to wear white.
Plans were discussed for a Flowers were sent to Edna
first Civil War essay contest. attended the ceremony to Distrist members to be ins- lie budget hearing, 7:30
p.m., followed by regular float to be entered in the July Knopp, who had fallen and
The winner was Katelyn · honor Dixon as Meigs . dialled
meeting. at the home of 4 parade at Racine. The group broken her hip and leti elbow.
Hill of Southern Elementary County's last living Union
also decided to sell cook- A gift cenificatc was sent to
Clerk Osie Follrod.
for an essay about John veteran of the Civi,I War.
books at the fairgrounds on Mattie Beegle for her 90th
Brown. She received a $100 Both read their essays.
June 16 and to sell noodles birthday. The next meeting
savings bond. Second place Barringer was unable to
and cookbooks on July 21 at will be on July 12 and will
went to Gregory Barnnger attend, due to a recent
Monday, July 2
the Portland Community include election of officers.
of Eastern Elementary. He injury.
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Thursday, July 7
POMEROY Harry
Lodwick will be 80 years
old on July 7. Cards may
·uu .'£1F ·IJL
be sent to him adt 37842
•
' •
West
Shade
Road,
Subscrlbe
today
•
992-2155
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
,.,. '·
fund their child's European the area. Standards and Jaws
BY KATHV MITCHELl
vacation?
vary from state to state, and
AND MARCY SUGAR
This is not a needy fami- if the local agency is n9t
Dear Annie: I'm a single ly, and we feel put on the able to get involved, she
mom in my early 40s, very spot. I have heard of kids may be referred to approprifit, with no children current- doing car washes or yard ate resources. I know people
ly living at home. I recently work to pay for special trips, often do not want to cause
joined a running club in my but that's not what is going problems in their families,
community. In this club, I on here. Is it appropriate to but reporting is frequently
met a terrific guy. "Dane" is do this nowadays'' Most confidential and/or anonyin his late 40s, in excellent people around here are mous.
physical condition, funny, trpalled. - Baffied in New
Child Help USA provides
charming, a true gentll!man
24-hour hotline, 1-800-4and very handsome. He's "fi~!d Batlled: No, it is aA-CHILD
( 1-800-422financially sound and in a not appropriate. It is extor- 44531 (childhelp.org) and
·
good profession. Basically, tion. Don't Jet them intimidate
you
into
donating
if
you
offers
crisis
intervention,
he's the guy I wish I had met
don't wish to. Simply say, ·information, literature and
20 years ago.
Dane and I meet once a "Sorry, we can't contribute. referrals. All calls are
week to run on nearby run- We're sure Jeremy can find a anonymous and coofidenning trails with our group. part-time ~ob if he needs tial. - A Social Service
Worker
From the first glance, I extra cash. '
Dear Social Service
Dear Annie: I read your
·haven't stopped thinking of
to
"Concerned
Worker:
The sister and
response
him. I have fallen in love
Aunt,"
who
felt
her
niece
daughter
are
already seeing
with this guy. Once, I invited
was
being
inappropriately
a
therapist,
which
is a step in
him to lunch, since our jobs
are close. to each other. medicated for a diagnosis of the right direction, but if
v••"" &gt;••Curtt!•nr·v
things don't improve, we
During the meal, I asked mood disorder.
Some
very
important
hope
"Concerned"
will
.take
why his wife isn't at any of
our runs. He confided that issues arc being overlooked your advice ',a nd contact
· M~f!Y v•u.Coins
his wife is extremely obese here, particularly the state- Child Help USA.
and not into fitness. He also ment that her sister keeps
Annie's Mailbox is writadmitted that he would love her apartment "in such a ten by Kathy Mitchell and
. to have her companionship state that it looks like the ' Marcy Sugar, [o 11gtime edi- .
.F h A
•- d
1
when running, biking and ones on the news where they
1111 LUll
01
ers cobid·~~~
·
going on motorcycle rides: find dead animals." It could tors t e
.., .
•,
. t&gt;ftotos
.
be
dangerous
for
a
child
livumll.
Please
e-mail
your
A couple of weeks ago, I
.
.
questio11s to anniesmailran into Dane and his wife in ing in such a home. I. also bo.x@comca&amp;t.net, or write
a department store, and he am concerned that Mom's
was right. She is huge. I'm mental health issues affect to: An11ie's Mailbox, P.O.
Free coin to children · ., · ·
guessipg she weighs close to her ability to parent well, Box ll8190, Chicago, 1L
300 po11nds. He didn't say it, and that-there may be possi, 606JJ. To find out more
16 and under '
but I suspect he's not in a ble mental effects to the about A11nie's Mailbox, a11d
child.
read features by other
happy marriage .
'in your old coins
I
would
suggest
to
the
Creators Syndicate writers
;
Dane doesn't have a clue
1'·
appraisal!
how I feel about him . I've writer that she review these and cartoonists, visit the
f
L
flirted with him , but he issues with the appropriate Creators Syndicate Web
Door Prizes Every Hour
'
doesn't seem to notice, child .ProteTtion authority in page at www.creators.com.
although he always chooses
'
to run with me. If he knew
1
'SIGN UP
"
COUPON
how I felt, things could be
8:00AM
TO WIN
different between us. Should
I tell him? - Floundering
DOOR
in Florida
Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by
PRIZES!
Dear Floundering: You
do not have the right to
break up a marriage because
someone's wife is obese. If
HEARING AID CENTER
you want a man in your life,
1312 EASTERN AVENUE • GALLIPOLIS, OH
find one who is available. If
0
Tue., J~ly 3rd• (740) 446-2345
Dane wants to cheat on his
wife, he will let you know,
but we strongly urge you not
Call Toll Free
for an lmmediale appointment.
to encourage him, or more
The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist.
than your running shoes will
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
U"DER
be covered in dirt.
conversation is Invited to have a FREE hearing test to see if
~~Jlf®©llll®®
Syracuse
Dear Annie: What do
this problem can be helped! Bring this coopon with you for '
you tl:!ink of parents asking
740-992-6333
740-949-2210
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $125.00 value. .
.I
for $50 donations to help L

Clubs and
organization

Submitted photo

Sonshine Circle
makes donations

Civil War essay
winners honored

Public meetings

Birthdays

~parfofyour life.

ANNIE'S ·MAILBOX

No right to break up a marriage

t''';~,·

Coming

Friday, J

3, 2007

.·.·:::gMt~~~~~~=ncy
.·.

In the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
I

a

REE TO THE PUStl~ .

I

11on

I

ASpecial supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

·IrBaby's
or---------------------,
Name
1 •

1 Sunply send your baby's
photograph along with the coupon
I lo the left with your payment of
$8.50, we'll do the rest.

I

lAge
I Parents
l
I Address
lPhone

l
l
I
l

I Address will not be published 1

Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here

L--------------~-------J
Mail or deliver to:
I

BABIES! The Ga!Upolis Daily Tribune

P.O. Box 469, 825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Deadline for submission,
Friday, July 13

aj

~

,

,

~alltpolts
•

'7lr'l '{

~at

n
r
o71T" •b
~ rt Une
,,

•

1

wBe/tone

1
I
I
I
I
I

THE FUN BEGINS AT
IN THE IN THE lOBBY OF HOME
NATIONAl BANK IN RACINE!

I

1
I
I
I
I
I G)

1-800-li3~-526~

1

I

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825 Third

----------EE HEARING TESTS

*
tltsr
*.t
'1or
*

--------------'

I

•

I

--

FDi"i

----·-"'"

~ Home
© National

~ Bank

'

Racine

�-.

The Daily Sentitlel .

•

PageA4

OPINION

Monday; July 2, 2007

'Monday, July 2, 2007

Obituaries

Imam Bush strikes again

The Daily Sentinel.

State to remove Socia[ Security
nun:ibers from Web site by fall

.Local Briefs

Paul E. Hawk

Council reschedules

~

If anyone wants to know
why
Muslims the world
(74Q) 992·2156 • FAX (740} 992·2157
over teU pollsters the United
www.mfdallyHIItlnel.com
States is at war wilh Islam,
just read President Bush's
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
speech at die Islalnic Center
of Washington, especially
Dan Goodrich
the part' about Americanstyle religious freedom - in
Publisher
the president) w()l;ds, "what
we wish for the world."
Charlene Hoeflich
He began this way: "Poi'
General Manager-News Editor
those who seek a bue understanding of our country, they
need to loolt no farther than
here."
· - Congress shall make no law respecting an
No·.- not 'the mosque
establishment of religion, or prohibiting tlie
itself, but down the street it
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom occupies. ''This Muslim
centeL_s,its .qw~!!y ~Qwn the
of speei:h, or of the press; or the right of the "; road
frOm a synagogue, a
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition Lutheran church, a Catholic
parish, a Greek Orthodox
the Government for a redress ofgrievances. . chapel,
a Buddhist temple
.
- ·1
- each with faithful follow-The First A~ndment to the U.S. Constitution ers who Jll!iCtice their deeply
held beliefs and live side by ·
side in peace,'' f:he president
explained, standing in his
Islamically observant stock- .
Today is Monday, July 2, the 183rd day of 2007. There are ing feet before a . cool
182 days left in the year.
·
•
·•
Muslim audience. 'This is
Today's Highlight in Hislory:
what freedom offers: sociOn July 2, 1776, the Continental Congress passed a reso- eties where people can live
lution saying that "these United Colonies are, and of right and worship as they .choose
ought to be, free and independent States."
without intimidation, withOn this date:
out suspicion, without a
In 1807, in the wake of the Chesapeake incident, in which knock on the door from the
the crew of a British frigate boarded an American ship and secret police."
forcibly removed four suspected deserters, President
As one who has attended a
Thomas Jefferson ordered all British ships to vacate U.S. bar mitzvah at that synaterritorial waters.
gogue down the road, I have
In 1881, President James Garfield was shot by Charles J. news for the · president:
Guiteau at the Washington railroad station; Garfield died the Freedom, American-style,
following September. (Guiteau was hanged in June 1882.)
has changed. To enter, I
In 1926, the U.S. Artny Air Corps was created.
passed an anned ~ard holdIn 1937, aviator Amelia Earhart and navigator Fred mg an automatiC weapon
Noonan disappeared over the Pacific OceliJl while attempt· manning the door. Armed
ing to make the .first round-the-world flight' along the equa- guards like him .man many
tor.
.
In 1961, author Ernest Hemingway shot himself to death
at his home in Ketchum, Idaho.
In 1964, President Lyndon Baines Johnson sighed into
law a sw~eping civil rights bill passed by Congress.
In 1987, 18 illegal aliens were found dead inside a locked
boxcar near Sierra Blanca, Texas, in what authorities called
a botched smuggling attempt; a 19th man survived.
In 1994, a U.S. Air DC-9 crashed in poor, weather at
Charlotte-Douglas Intematioqal Airport in North Carolina,
killing 37 of the 57 people aboard.
··
Ten years ago: Actor James Stewart died in Beverly Hills,
Calif., at age 89.
·
One year ago: Conservative free-trader Felipe Calderon
defeated leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador ' by just
234,000 votes in Mexico's presidential election. Comic Jan
Murray died in Beverly Hills, Calif., at age 89.
.
Today's Birthdays: Country singer Marvin Rainwater is
• 82. Former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos is 78. Jazz·
musician Ahmad Jamal is 77. Actor Robert Ito is 76. Actress.
Polly Holliday is 70. Former White House chief of staff
John H..Sununu is 68. Actor Ron Silver is 61. Writer-director-comedian Larry David is 60. Luci Baines Johnson,
daughter of President Lyndon Johnson, is 60. Actor Saul
Rubinek is 59. Rock musician Roy ·Bittan (Bruce
Springsteen &amp; the E Street Band) is 58. Rock musician
Gene Taylor (The Blasters) is 55. Actress-model Jerry Hall
is 51. Actor Jimmr McNichol is 46. Rock musician Dave
Parsons (Bushj IS 42. Actress Yancy Bu.tler is 37.
Contemporary Christian musician Melodee De Vevo
(Casting Crowns) is 31. Sin~er Michelle Branch is 24.
Actress Vanessa Lee Chester IS 23. Actress-singer Ashley
Tisdale is 22. Actress Lindsay Lohan is 21.
· Thought for Today: "The American Revolution was a
beginning, not a consummation."- Woodrow Wilson, the
28th president of the United States (1856-1924).

111 Court Street • Pomeror, Ohio

Jue

.

TpDAY IN HISTORY

Diana

. West

· many sueh
such doors 10
cities. In fact, so common is
it for. religious worship to
require armed protection
todar that we miss the
iinphcations: "the degree 10
which freedom to worship
without fear in America has
been curtailed by the open~
ended threat of Buddhist
violence.
Whoops, sorry. I mean,
curtailed by lhe open-ended
threat of Greek Orthodox
violence.
was that
Catholic or Lutheran vioJence?
No, the peril to the synagbgue was and remains
Islamic \@lence. The resulting diminution of freedom is
a symptom of advancing
dhiiDffiJtude - the diminished cultural condition of
non-Muslims living in relation to Islam.
So, freedom of worship
ain't what it used to be. But
even in its terror-constrained
state, the spread of
American religious freedom
actually threatens teligiously .unfree Islamic cultures,
which, for example, consider "apostasy" - deciding
not to be Muslim - a capital crime.
But that threat is only on

or

RUTLAND - Rutland Village Council had rescheduled
Paul E. Hawk, 79, Long Bottom, died Friday, June 29,
its
regular session for 7 p.m., Tuesday, July 17 in council's
?00?, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
·
He was born Jan . 19, 1928 in Chester, Ohio, son of the - chambers.
late Milford and Addie Haselton Hawk. Mr. Hawk served
in the Army during the Korean War, was a member of the
VFW in Tuppers Plains; owned and operated a restaurant ·
in Chester, was a farmer and was and Avid Square
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village Council has resch~­
. •
·
Dancer.
uled its regular session for 7 p.m., Thursday, July 12 at vilHe is survived by : DauJlhters, Fern L. (Mike) Large, lage hall. .
·
Sidney, Ohio, Frances (Earle) Wood, Pomeroy, and Paula
Wood, Long Bottom ; grandchildren, Torn and Kim
'
Calaway, Tim and Randy Browning, Robyn (Chuck)
Parker, Eric, Chelsey and Jordan Wood; 13 great grandRUTLAND - In an article about potential sites for the
children; sisters, Maxine (Carl) Hunnell, Columbus,
Rutland
Post Office, a site was misidentified. One of the
, Ohio, Dorothy Hawk, Mount Vernon, Ohio, and Betty
(Bub) ' Stivers, Pomeroy ; brother-in-law, Darrell potential sites which was ultimately turned down was land
Hawthrone, Long Bottom; sister-in-law, Delores Hawk, owned bY. the Rutland Fire Department where the old
Long Bottom; a friend, Jenny Hedrick, Long Bottom, and Rutland Grade School used t()&lt;Sil, not land across from the·
·ru-e department.
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by
his wife, Betty J. tiawk, brother, Bob Hawk, and sister
Norma Hawthorne.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Tuesday, July 3,
POMEROY - The Meigs County Tuberculosis Office
2007, at Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy with Rev. Lamar will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Tuesday.
O'Bryant officiating . Burial will follow at the Mound
Cemetery in Chester. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m.
Monday, July 2, 2007, at the funeral home.
Online condolences may be sent to www.flsherfuneralMIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Freight Depot
homes.com
Committee will operate a concession stand at the depot in
•
Dave Diles Park during afternoon activities on Wednesday.
Hot dogs and drinks will be sold.

paper. Where Americans about the Cairo Declaration
actually become involved in of Human Rights in Islam
the Islamic world, sharia adopted !Jy the foreign min(lslamic law) is protected, as isters of the OIC in 1990. In ·
shockingly · attested by dire. contrast to the United
~haria's primacy in the Nation's 1948 Universal ·
~ American-fostered constitu· Declaration · of ,Human·
lions of Iraq, Afghanistan Rights, the Islamic" docuand.
the
.• Palestinian ment recognizes
only
· Authorit:t. The president human rights sanctloned by:
doesn't seem to .uoderstand sharia, - which, ·l!a8ically,
that. I don't think
...,. even leaves women . and
non·
··;
·
. ·
understands sharia, under Muslims without much m
whicb the primacy of •Islam terms of human rights.
is absolute, while other reliHmm. Might Sush ·- or ·
gions .are ''tolerated" at the anyone in · our leadership,
high cost of -dhimmitude. civilian or military ~ notice
Nearly six years after 9/ll , the unbridgeable cultural ·
nearly six years after first · differ~nces revealed by
visiting the Islamic Center these disparate notions of
- .and proclaiming "Islam human rights? Alas, probais peace" - President Bpsh bly not. Islam's still peace,
according to the president.
has leamed nothing.
In fact, his peroration on Those pesky "extremists"
freedom at the Islamic fighting jihad are not, he
Center mainly underscored said, "the true face of
"America's resnect · for the lsi ami'
Muslim faith here'at home."
There Imam BushJoes
Abroad, too. Even as he was again. "I am astonish by
asking Muslim leaders President I, Bush when he
(again)'·'to denounce oigani- claims !here is nothing in the
zations that use the veneer Quran that justifies jihad
of Islamic belief to suppon violence in the name · of
and fund violence," the Islam," jailed Islamic scholpresident announced that the ar Abu Qatada said under
United States would send an similar
circumstances
envoy to the Organization of almost six years ago. "Is he
the Islamic Conference some kind of Islamic schol(OIC), a global islamic sup- ar? Has he ever actually read
port group. "Our special the Quran?"
· envoy," the president said,
No. He's just leader of the
"will listen to and learn from Free World - a Free World
r11presentatives
from that has become less free
Muslim states and will share and more dhimmified on his
with them All]erica's views severely myopic watch.
apd values."
(Diana West is a columnist
What can the Free World for The Washington 1imes.
learn from the .Unfree She can be contacted via
World? Maybe something dianawest@verizon.net.)

WE

Council reschedules

Correction

TB office open

Plan concessions

Helen F. Hunter

Helen F. Hunter, 80, Vinton, passed away at 7:56 p.m.
Friday, June 29, 2007, at her home.
Born Jan. 7, 1927, in Blakely, W. Va., she was the
daughter of the late Fred and Edith Moore Durham. She
was a homemaker,
She married Bill F. Hunter on March 30, 1946, in
Greenup, Ky., and he preceded her in death on Sept. 18,
2006.
Surviving are her three dau~hters, Ann (Daniel) Foyet,
Barrington, Ill., Cini:\Y (Wilham) Nichols, New Llano,
La., and Lou Hemsley, Pomeroy; four grandchildre11.
Missy Hemsley, Jay Hemsley, Betty Anchors and Lori
FischeG eight great-grandchildren, James, Tia, Chad,
Cory, Shawn, Taylor, Bradley and Kailyn, and one greatgreat granokhild, Maddison .
Two sisters survive, Lida (Ernie) Jones, Wilksville,
Ohio and Loretta (Roland) Taylor, Sun City, Fla., a brother, Jack (Ruth) Durham, Caldwell, Idaho, and several
nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents and husband, she was preceded in death by a granddau~hter, Barbara Gehriche, three
sisters, Eloise Siders, Bernice Mullens and Katie Tucker,
and three brothers, Osborne Durham, Odd Durham and
Warren Lee Durham in infancy.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Saturday, July 7, 2007,
in the chapel of the mausoleum at the Meigs Memory
Gardens, Pomeroy with Rev. Sherman Johnson officiating. Entombment will follow. There are no calling hours.
Funeral arrangements are unde( the direction of the
Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis. Expressions of
sympathy may be sent to the family by visiting www.cre·
meensfuneralhomes.com.

WE

DON'T

DON'T
WANT
ANOIHER

WA~T

ilNO I ttER
VIETNAM

l~AQ!

BY RACHEL BECK
flJ' BUSINESS WRITER

NEW YORK -The buyLetters to the editor are welcome. They should be less out boom that helped fuel
than 300 words. All lellers are subject to editing, must be Wall Street's recent record
signed, and include address and telephone number. No rise may be stalling now
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
that debt invelltors who
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
· thanks to organizations and individuals will nol be accept· helped. finance .that surge
are starting to tum away.
ed for publication.
about
time.
It's
Bondholders had long ·put
themselves at risk by funding private-equity acquisilions that gave them few
(USPS
213-960)
protections
and seemed to
Services Ohio Valley Publishing .. put the sellers'
interests
• first. Now they want mo. re
Co.
·
Correction Polley
Published
every
aHernoon,
Monday
for their money, as seen by
Our main concem in all si'ories is tO
their recent demands for
through
Friday.
111 Court Stree1,
be accurate. It you know of an error
Pomeroy. Ohio.
second-claas
better terms in some big
l_
n a story, call the n&amp;.vsroom 81(740) postage paid o1 Pomeroy.
~ transactions.
992-2156.
Mem ber: Th
· e Associated Preas and
No doubt that ·nvestors
l
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
have been rattled by the
Pootmuter. Send address correeunraveling of other risky
Our main number Is
lions 1o The oany Sentinel, 111 Court
debt, namely the near-col(740) 992·2156.
Street. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
lapse of two Bear Steams
Department extensions are:
hedge funds that had big
Sut,Jscrlptlon Rate~
holdings in subprime mortBy carrier or motor route
News
One month
'1 0.27
·
Edttor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
been rising; thereby increasDally
50'
Rtporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
ing
the cheap borrowing
Senior Citizen rates
Roporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13
coSls that have been the
One monlh
'1 0.27
One year
'1 03.90
lifeblood of the recent
Advertising
. . ~ should romH " advenoe
takeover frenzy.
Oul81de Sales: Dave Harris, EKt. 15 ·.direct to lhe Daily Sentinel. No sub·
Corpora~ acquirers and
script ion by maN permitted In areas
buyout
firms have capitalOullilde Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carriEM" service Is avaiiized
on
low rates and the
CiuiJCirc.: Judy Clar1&lt; ; Ext. 10
able.
global liquidity boom to
finance acquisitions with
Mall Subscription
General Manager
huge sums of debt in addiInside Melga County ·
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.21:l
tion to the limited amounts
26 Weeks
' '64.20
of cash they had to put up.
52 Weeks
'127.11
E-mail:
The lower debt expenses
go, the more private-equity
news@mydailysenlinel.com
.
Outside Meigs County
firms stand to .profit.
13 Weeks
'53.55
Exhibit A is the $2.27 bilWeb:
26 Weeks
'107.10
lion
in net income reponed
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydaitysentinet.com
by
industry
giant

The Daily Sentinel
Reader

Wilson opens onice

~~~~\~a~~~:~~3~~~e;: D~~the last week or so, ;he

trend has be-come .more pronounced, starting with the
troubled bond sale to fund ·
the $7.75 billion buyout of
Thomson Corp.'s Thomson
Learning unit by Apax
Partners Worldwide and
OMERS Capital Partners, a
Canadian pension plan.
In response to in-.:es.tor
concerns, the company cut
the size of its debt offcri ng
to $1.6 billion from $2. 14 .
billion . It eliminated a proposed $540 million "payrnent-in-kind" floating rate
note, which would have
allowed it to pay interest in
additional bonds rather than

•

cash. It also boosted the
covenants on t~e loan portion of the deal, according
to KDP.
' Late Tuesday, underwrit·
ers. scrapped a large bond
and loan offering that was
intended to back the $7 billion buyout of Royal
Ahold's U.S. Foodservice
by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts
and Clayton, Dubilier &amp;
Rice. Already, the deal had
been restructured twice to
appease
investors'
demands, but that still didn't get it to the market.
As part of the changes,
$900 million had been shifted away from the' deal,
putting it back in the hands
of underwriters to be sold
later. The debt covenants
also were tightened to contain leverage and prevent
the buyout firms from issuing more debt to pay them- '
selves dividends or to make
acquisitions .
• Al so Tuesday, Catalyst
Paper Corp . postponed
indellnitely its own planned
offering, citing market conditions. Earlier in the day
the offering was scaled back
to $150 million from $200
million.
With more than $200 billion of corporate bond and
loan issuance expected in
the co min g months, marketwatchers will be looking for
signs of whether thi s "transition period'' becomes a
more pronounc ed credit
crunch, said Steve Miller, a
managing director in S&amp;P's
LCD Group.
· Cerberus
Capital

•

•

Management is expected to
seU bonds later this year to
fund its $7.4 billion
takeover of Chrysler COf(l.
First Data Corp., which IS
being acquired by KKR for
$29 billion, is expected to
price its bonds sometime
this summer, and TXU
Corp. will also try to sell .
$24 billion in bonds to
finance its $45 billion
takeover by KKR and Texas
Pacific Group.
Turbulence in the· debt
markets also could derail
plans by other private-equity
firms
to· follow
Blackstone's lead and go
public. If debt offerings are
fallin$ flat, that could be a
big signal that the buyout
boom is hitting a wall .
Stock investors seem to
be already questioning
Blackstone's
·valuation .
After a much-touted IPO on.
June 22, the stock now·
trades below its $31 a share·
offering price. ·
Should all this result in
the slowing of buyouts,
individual investors could
feel the pinch. Stock prices
have rallied in recent
months in part on the bet
that the most profitable
strategy was to let mo[!:
takeovers push the value of
holdings ever higher.
Sti II, none of what has
been going on is necessarily
bad news. "This wake-up
ca II allows us to focu s on
some ... of the market's
excess, " U.S Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson
said this week. He has that
right.

Ohio University
trustees reappoint
embattled president

Kathleen J. Tillis

.,

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GAR

,-.·

from PageA1

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being a ':gold circle." This
was achieved by the
donation of at least $1 per
member to the state president's project. In addition . a special award was
given to Brooks-Grant

Middleport
from Page A'f
Refreshments will . be
fo llowing
the
served
un~iling .

At 2:30 p.m. , Donna
Wil son will host a storytelling program at the
. Fa rmers Bank park area
near the "T." An afternoon
gospel sing will begin at
3:30 p.m. in Dave Diles
Park . The Commun1ty
Association will offer free
refreshments
and the
Freight Depot Committee
will sell concessions in the
park during the si ng.
Bob Graham plan s a coin
show and ex hibit of coin-

•
•

Camp No. 7 Sons of
Union Veterans of the
Civil War of Middleport
for donating over $100 to
the state president's pro·
ject.
The convention passed
two resolptions . One
asked for the cost of Civil
War pens.ion files to
remain at the current $37
rather
than
being
increased to the proposed

COLUMBUS (AP) - A previous years would have
midweek Fourth of July holi- given workers a day off for
day means lhat some Ohio the Fourth - are no longer
workers are taking the whole able to do so because of
week off, rather than just the slimmed down staff.
"Companies don't have a
usual day or two.
lot
of bench strength that they
About 93 percent of busican
rely on right now, so I
nesses will be closed oil the
think
for many people, it'll
Fourth, .the Society for
H11rnan
Resource just be that Wednesday that
they have off," said John
Management said.
Challenger,
chief executive of
But it will be business as
the
employment
consulting
usual for employees of comfmn
Challenger,
Gray and
panies with mternational ·ties
as they rewn to wqrk.
' Christmas Inc.
Even so, plenty of people
"People search (our dalaare
planning to hit the road.
!mses) from aU over the
A record 41.1 million
world, and, of course, most
will leave home
Americans
people don't celebrate the
during
the
holiday
period that
Fourth of July," said Eric
began
Friday
and
ends on
Shively, a spokesman for
July
8,
AAA
said.
That's
up
Chemical Abstracts Service,
slightly
from
the
40.8
million
which ~ublishes .scientific
inforrnauon and journals from who traveled last year, automobile association estimated
its Columbus office,.
But the . group said this
The same is true for local
year's increase is lower than ,
companies like AEP Ohio and last year's rise because of the
Worthington-based .Buckeye holiday's midweek timing.
Heating· &amp; Cooling, where
service is always needed.
1-1'\N C-t-i'r.
Buckeye technicians can
expect calls on lhe holiday
~
0
from people who are hosting
··· · "- .:o·
~
parties and need immediate
'~
'(""
.............
service, service manager
P'f'JIJOR.\li~G .\KTSCF.~ru
Diane Platt said.
Park National Bank branch- ·
Beat the Heat!
es in southwest and central
Melodrama Perfonnlll&lt;tS &amp;
Ohio will close at 7 p.m.
Theatre Tours July 5, 6, &amp; 7
Tuesday and reof'Cln at 7:30
Afternoons: I, 2 &amp; 3 pm
a.m. Thursday. It s a particus'JI!!r l!!l'SOD
larly busy time for banks,
Coming Soon!
with customers cashing
Disney's lOt Dalmatians Kids
beginning-of-the-month
Live Stage Production
retirement and government
July t4,1S, n &amp; 22
checks, said spokeswoman
ask about our Puppy Parties
Bethany White .
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
But an increasing number
Galllpollo,
OH (740) 446-ARTS
of companies - which in

MARIETTA-U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson, D-Brid~eport,
will host his first veterans telephone town hall meeting, to
share the news about the largest increase in Veterans spending in 77 years. To participate veterans should call 1-866447-5149, and use the PIN 13016.
.
The call will be held from 10:30 to II a.m. on Tuesday
from the American Legion Post 64, 8th and Wooster
Streets, Marietta.

Racine

$125
because
the
National Arc)li ves has
given no substantial reason for the increase . The
other resolution asked for
Congress to investigate
the actions of a business
digging a ditch across the
Harpers Ferry Civil War
Battle Park without the
permission of the U.S.
Park Service since no
legal action has occurred.

Immediately following
re lated memorabilia in
Feeneyparade,
Diles Park, beginning at the
Post
128,
2:30 p.m. Jie will also Bennett
offer historic photographs American Legion, will
and new nickel s in a free lead a flag -raising ceremony at the Middleport
drawing.
,
The traditional .(uly 4 Football Field.
The free concert will
parade will begin at 6 p.m.,
with lineup at 5:30. The begin immediate! y after
Michael Bartrum family the patriotic program, with
will serve as grand parade Katte Reed of Middleport
marshals. The parade will performin~ an opening act
line up in the municipal lot for Phil Dtrt &amp; the Dozers.
next to Family Dollar, and The free concert, at the
will proceed down . South football field , is sponsored
Third Avenue to Pearl by the River City Players.
Street. Parade entries will . Those attending are asked
be j udg{d and prizes to bring lawn chairs.
The
Community
awarded for best walking
unit, best float, best bicr- Association's fireworks
cle unit and best pet umt. display will follow the
Pre-registration for the concert and conclude the
day 's eve nts .
p~rade is not required.

Satta, Brunner's director of
business services.
The
online
records ·
involve forms flied as part
of the 'state's Uniform
Commercial Code. They
tecord debts and other
financial information used
by banks and creditors in
making loans and, by law,
must be posted on the
Internet within three · days
b 'h
f
· y t e secretary 0 state.
Brunner also plans to
spend about $200,000 to
replace the election-night
f
h
reporting system or t e
secretary of state's Web site.
Vendors will be asked to
create a system that can be
used by county boards of
elections that do not have
their own Web sites for
elel:,~~on results, she said,
Bedluse of the expected
interest in Ohio's results for
the 2008 presidential election, Brunner wants to
ensure the site can handle at
least 65 million hits on elec·
tion night.
There were 42 million
hits for the 2004 presidential election, she said.

Midweek Fourth of
July means business
as usual for some

Hosts telephone meeting

Elizabeth Jane Grinstead

Blackstone Group fl)r 2006.
But the tide has definitely
turned. Investors have
begun to balk at taking on
risky debt. They aren't
jumping into offeiings as
they were just months ago,
.and they are demanding better performance from the
companies, less · flexibility
on tl)e part of borrowers and
higher interest rates.
"The buyers of debt are
saying that lhings have just
gone too far," .said Kingman
p
·
h h d th
· enniman, w 0 ea s e
Montpelier, VII , bond
research
firm
KDP
I
t
t Ad .
I
nc .
nves
men
Since
March,visors,
19 companies have agreed to add
covenants to their loan deals
thai prevent them from
making financial or operalion
changes
without
investor consent, according
to Standard &amp; Poor's
Leveraged Commentary &amp;

COLI:!MBUS (AP) The job of removing all
Social Security numbers
from financial documents
posted on the Ohi_p secre:
tary of state's Web site will
be finished by September,
an agency official said. ·
The proces1&gt;- of eliminatin$. the numbers from 1.2
million business ftlings ·
began last year after former
Secretary of State Ken
Blackwell settled a lawsuit
brought by a trucker whose
Social Security number
appeared in forms on the
agency's Web site.
..
Secretary . of
State
Jennifer Brunner, who took
office in January and complained that not all of the
Social Security numbers
were being caught, requested more state funding to finish the job.
· The state's contract with a
new vendor, 3SG Corp. of
Dublin, calls for 100. percent of the forms to be
inspected and redacted.
"Once and for all, we
want to make sure !here are
no Social Security numbers
out there," said Debbie

MARIETTA- U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson, D-Briogeport,
will formally open his new district office in Marietta at a
ceremony from 4 to 6 p.m. on Tuesday. The office will
serve Meigs, Washington and ,Athens Counties. Please join
Charlie for goodies and conversation.
The office is located at 258 Front St., Marietta.

ATHENS
(AP)
Trustees at Ohio University
have
reappointed
the
school's embattled president
to the post for one more year. .
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- Elizabeth Jane Grinstead, 79,
Roderick McDavis has
of New Haven, W.Va., died Saturday, June 30, 2007 at the been dogged by budget
Pleasant Valley Hosital.
problems, the elimination of
Born on Jan. 29, 1928 at Haertford, W.Va., she was the sports teams, a plagiarism
daughter ofthe late Earl and Peramelia Roush Hoffman. scandal and computer-seenShe was a 1945 raduate of Wahama High School and was rity breaches. In May, some
employed as a store clerk.
faculty members and stuIn addition to her parents, she was prececeded in death dents said lhey no longer
by a son, Jeffrey Joe Grinstdead, a sister, Edna Hoffman, supported him.
and brothers-in-law, Jumbo Hall and Geroge Adam
The school's trustees gave
Macknight.
McDavis a positive perforShe is survived by sisters, Ethel flail of Nitro, W.Va., mance evaluation in re-electErnestine Macknight of Huntington, W.Va.; nieces, Sonya ing him on Friday.
Roush, Cheryl Cotton; nephews, George Macknight, Bill
"We believe that we
Hall, Bob Hall, George Hall, Charles Yonker, Bryan
Yonker, Nathan Yonker, and a spiecial friend, Gloria Belle
Roush of New Haven, W.Va.
Funeral services will be held at I p.m. Tuesday, July 3,
at the Foglesong -Tucker Funeral Home with the Rev.
Wiliam Bud Hatfield officiating. Burial will be in
fromPageA1
Hoffman Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeralliome
I 0 a.m. to I p.m. Tuesday.
$50, from Racine Volunteer
Fire Department. Awards of
$50, $30, $20 in the antique
tractors category is sponRUTLAND - Kathleen J. Tillis, 84, of Main Street, sored by Forest Run Ready
Rutland, Ohio, died Sunday, July I, 2007 at her re.sidence. Mix. Awards of $50,' $30,
Complete arrangemenls will be announced by Birchfield $20 in antique cars category
is sponsored by Star Mill
Funeral Heme, Rutland, in Tuesday's newspaper.

ALL BUSINESS: Bond investors cool to
risky debt offered,. up to fund buyout boom

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

·www.mydallysentinel.oom

remain on the right path for
moving this university forward, and are grateful of his
Wl)rk," said trustee Daniel
DeLawder.
The trustees based their
evaluation on progress made
on seven goals, including
improving communication
with faculty, strengthening
financial
control
and
irnpt'bvin$ academic integrity, a umversity statement
said.
The board would have
offered McDavis a raise if he
hadn't already pledged to
forego pay increases for fiscal 2008, DeLawder said.

~va·~t
~

Park Board members.
Awards of $25, $15, $10 in
the bicycles categories i5
sponsored by Dr. Mel Weese
and Dr. Doug and Tonja
Hunter. Awards of $50, $30,
$20 in the walking units category is sponsored by the
Racine Area Community
Organization. Trophies for
three ~laces in individual
horse nders and three places
for groups of horses and riders is sponsored by Libby
Fisher and Kathryn Hart.
Winners
will
be
announced
immediately
after the parade at the high
school. Parade information
can be obtained from
Marilyn Powell at 9492676.
Onoe again the fire
department will be serving
its chicken barbecue following the parade.
Fireworks begin
in
RaCine at 10 p.m.
There will be no frog
jump or activities at Star
Mill Park this year.

---------·-'

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I The lelia will be glvlll by a Ucenaed Hearing Aid Specialist. I
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ng Tho r:~mily
&amp; Como Celobt~te
July 4th In Middleport

,_.,.....:90
Unveiling

In Mini-Park

g:g0-5:50
Coin Show

•

1:
1

Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by .

~II'C!WOtkl:
~lnale

At
Dugkf!ft!
7:go ~I'C!e
Phil Dirt &amp;the

' 1

:

�.

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PageA6 ·

OHIO

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The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 2, 2007

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PEMB ERVILLE- Like
many farmers , Roger
Burtchin is approac hing an
age when others are think ing about re tiring.
But he has no plans to
stop planting corn and soy:
bea ns.
. " Farming's one o f those
thin gs that gets in your ·
blood," he said . " Even
when things ~e t tough. you
· still enjoy it. '
So many American farm ers are workin g longer
than ever before that one
in four is at least 65 years
old . Withirr the next
decade those older farmers
will be looking for someone to take over their operations and selling millions
of acres of land.
Much of that land will be
merged into bigger farm s
AP photo
with fewer people working Kevin Burtchin, left; is seen with his dad, Roger, 60, at Kevin's farm Thursday, May 31 near
on them. Rural communi- Pemberville. Burtchin, a retired teacher, said he expects that one day his son, Kevin, will
ties will lose even more take over the farm . His son works as a civil engineer and raises horomone-free cattle in his
young people, and a few spare time.
will struggle for survival.
equipment. They ask for
Some stores that sell trac- age age of America's esti- reached a critical point.
tors and fertilizer will suf- mated 2 million farmers is
Six percent of all farm the lowest bid and pit dealfer.
55 years.
operators are under age 35 . ers against dealers, reduc" You lose a farmer here
"There's a real cause for Two dec.ades ago they ing .profits, Althoff said.
As farms grow, their
or a farmer there, you lose concern,"
Hassebrook accounted ,for 16 percent
owners will buy supplies
your customer base," said said. "We need a new gen- of farmers.
At the same time, com' in bulk, said Jol\n Baker,
Burtchin, 60, who sits on · eration of farmers to rein'
the board that run s the vigorate farming and our puterized gadgets that can president of the National
steer a tractor and deliver Farm Transition ,bJetwork,
local grain elevator.
communities."
Schools and churches
P e n n s y I v a n i a , feed to hogs are helping which helps ~ginnin g
·,,
could close in •some towns; . Connecticut and Iowa are farmers
work longer. farmers.
"It
's
kind
of
the
Walkeep
farming
especially those isolated in among &amp;tates trying to help Many
the Plains, if family farms young farmers by offering because' they ·don ' t have a Martization of farming,"
consolidate and rural plip- low-interest loans and tax retirement plan. Others he said. "These huge farms
ulation ·drpps, said Chuck breaks and by pairing them simply don't want to give are not going to be buying
a lot of product from local
Hassebrook,
executive with established farmers .
up a•way of life.
director of the Center for
Dairy farmer Sarah
The effects of the older businesses."
The ·future is Jjkely to
Rural Affairs in Lyons, Mumm is just getting start- farm popullltion and conNeb.
ed on her own. The 23- soli9ation will hurt compa- bring two kinds of farms:
. "If you have a few peo- year-old has 50 cows and nie~ that supply farmers those that are vef.y large
pie who own everything, rents a barn for them near with seed and sell com- and produce mosl of the
crops and those that are
you have weaker commu- Lancaster, Wis.
bines and planters.
nities," he said.
But she's the exception
"The farm equipQJent small with a niche product
U .S . farmers produce in the industry.
dealer will have a hard such as cage-free eggs or
more food than any other
"I don ' t know a 'lot of time staying in business," habanera peppers and
country in the world and people who are starting . said Ken Althoff, who runs other ethnic vegetables
are tops il) corn, soybeans, fresh," s he said. "Only K&amp;A Farm Equipment in favored by immigrants.
"Farmers will still be
milk and cattle, according those who are taking over Strawberry Point, Iowa.
doing
farming, but on a
to a United Nations agri- the family farm."
Customers are dwinculture census.
Young people have been dling , and big operators much larger scale," said'
The most recent census leaving rural areas since with more bargaining Chris Henney, director of
by the U.S . Department of · the 1950s. But. many who power are seeking better policy development for the
Agriculture, conducted in · study agriculture feel the deals. They no longer Ohio Farm Bureau . "We'll
2002, shows that the aver- absence of youth has come in and buy new see it operated much more

.·'

Judges strive to keep up with science in the courtroom
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBU's - Judges
trying to keep up with scientific advancements say they
face difficult decisions in
determining what kinds of
evidence to allow into courtrooms.
As gatekeepers over what
testimony is heand by a jury,
judges mu st decide which
experts are relevam - and
which are truly experts.
Their concerns came to
light at a three;day science
seminar for judges at Ohio
State University that ended
Friday. The seminar was part
of a congressionally mandated program to train judges in
developing science.
Science training is necessary to counteract the effects
on potential jurors from popular television crime shows
like "CSI," said Judge
Stephanie Domitrovich of
the Court of Common Pleas
in Erie, Pa.
"Because of the CSI effect
and the public having these
raised expectations about
what they think about science, w~ as judges need to
be better gatekeepers."
Domitrovich said.
She said a juror in one o.f
her cases believed. based on
a "CSI" show, that handwriting experts could tell gender.
They can 't, Domitrovich
said.
The judges said it's important to bru sh up on science
so they are not taken ad vantage of by so-called "hire d
guns"- medical or sc ientific experts who are rewarded
with money or fame by the ir
.
testimony in a case.
"Is that valid stuff or did
he make it up to sell to the
highest bidder"" said Judge
Janet Burnside of Cuyahoga
County Common Pleas
Court in Cleveland. "Very
often if you don 't have scientific knowledge you 're
kind of throwing up your
hands."
Ever s in e~ ON A evidence
began to be used ex tensive ly

.

Scoreboird, Page 86
'

in the 1990s, science has
played a role in helping
determine. truth in the courtroom,
judges
said.
Increasingly, science may be
the main determinant of how
a case is resolved.
Ohio Supreme Court
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
pointed to a 2006 case
involving a woman who
sought widow's benefits
·under the state workers'
compensation act, claiming
her husb~nd's brain cancer
was caused by exposure to
chemicals while working at
a
paint
manufacturing
plaint.
Science could not determine that any chemical was
the direct cause of the cancer, the high court said.
"The absence of science
in that case was a controlling factor ," said Moyer,
who . wrote the majority
opinion and is vice chair of
a program that brought the

group of judges to the seminar.
Moyer predicts a future
where science plays a larger
role in the courtroom: couns
deciding whether parents
can choose the genetic
makeup of their child, parents who sue because the
genetic makeup didn't turn
out as promised, people getting a specific drug prescription based on their
genes.
" We ' ve always been
required to resolve important social issues that the
legislatures don ' t.resolve or
the people don't resolve on·
their own and they come to
the courts," Moyer said .
"And we're going to get
some very interesting and
dramatic cases."
Judges thel)lselves are
split on certain futuri stic
problems. Judges at the
seminar were 'given a hypothetical question: If a crimi-

nal tests positive for a set of
genes that make violent
criminal behavior four times
as ' likely, does he deserve a
lesser sentence or a greater
one?
While 69 percent said the
gene finding should make
no difference, 29 percent
said the defendant should
receive a longer sentence.
Two percent said shorter.

pe rcentage of
like a business."
rural
Ameri ca direc tl y
Finding enough young
farmers to take over for engaged in farmin g older operators shoul d not about 6. 5 percent - t hat
be a wo rry, and neither the loss of a fe w farm ers
should be the number of won 't wi)}e out ma ny
older farmers, said Robert tOWlb , he Said .
"The loss of a majo r
Taylor, who has taught
farm management and eco- manufacturing plant hai as
nomics for 46 ye ar s at much impact," Beauli eu
said. " Rural America is a
Purdue University.
Though in charge of the whol e lot different today
farm, a lot of older farmers than it was even a decade
aren ' t doing most of the ag o."
work, he said.
Farmer s say what h as
"They pretend they still been lost is a way of life.
A poll of Iowa farmer s
farm full time," he said .
"We ' ve got a bunch of old and their families foun_d
people who instead o f that· nearly all of them
going to Florida are sta y- think people in rural areas
in g here and saying they' re don ' t depend on ea ch
other like they once did.
farming. "
.
Mo st also said they
Mariy farms about
800,000 - have more than spend less time with
one operator, according to neighbors. and don't get as
the 2002 census . Some are involved in the communithe adult children of older ty, according to the Iowa
farmers or . their partners State University poll taken
who will likely take over in 2006.
the business when the
Those trends are sure to
older generation retires.
continue as the farm popu- '
"You just don't need to lation ages.
worry that they ' re· all ' "Some of those commugoing to die off," Taylor nities will survive·, but the
said.
nature of the community
Burtchin,
a
retired will change," said Lori
teacher, said he expects Garkovich, a rural sociolthat one day his son , ogist at the University of
Kevin, will take over the Kentucky. "Studies have
farm. His son works as a shown that indu strial
ci vii engineer and raises farm s change communihoromone-free cattle in his tie s in many ways ."
spare time.
"
Todd Stewart, who raisFarming full time isn' t e s hogs and cattle near
an option because of the Meadow Grove, Nep., and
costs of buying land and at 47 is afQon~ the
equipment.
"It's
the youngest farmers m the
biggest things holding area, said it's hard to find
guys back," the younger volunteers who will coach
Btirtchin said. "I'd love ·to ball teams or help out at
church anymore .
·do it for a living."
Rural residents shouldn't
"Towns are hurting ," he
panic about their survival, said. "The school is usualsaid Lionel Beaulieu, ly the first to go, then it's
director of the Southern the churches and then the
Rural Development Center town. There's going to be
in Starkville, Miss.
a lot of towns that will
There's such a small wither up and go away."

Birchfield descendants
have reunion
RACINE - DesceQdants
of Sam and Melvina
Birchfield held a reunion
Sunday, June 24, at the
Henderson
Community
Building, with a basket lunch
at noon.
Those attending were
Everett,
Charlotte
and
Michael Grant of Racine;
Shayne Davis, Debbie and
Marlin Samuel Evans of
Racine; Jean Smith and Bill
Fare of Charleston,. W.Va. ;
Jessica, Jenna and Becky
' Howell of Bremen; Eugene.
and Janey Birchfield of
Rutland ; Dream a Harvey,

Wes, Gail, Faith and Kaleb
Harbour of Proctorville; Reta
. France and Mike Stephens of
Brunswick, Ga.; Roy Young
of Dunbar, W.Va.; Leoma
Ballard and Deloris Gardner
of Belle, W.Va.; and Bob and
Teresa
Ross,
Randy,
Amanda, Blake and Alex
Birchfield of Crown City.
Several received gifts
including Roy Young, the
oldest man; Leoma Ballard,
the oldest woman; Jenna
Howell , the youngest girl;
Alex Birchfield, the youngest
boy; and Reta France, the one
who traveled farthest.

Local weather
Monday ... Sunny. Highs
in the lower 80s. Northeast
winds' around. 5 mph.
Monday night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 50s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Tuesday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 80s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Tuesday night...Partly

cloudy. Lows in the lower
60s. Southwest
winds
around 5 mph .
Wednesday . .. Partly
sunny. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Highs in the
upper 80s. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Wednesday
night
through
Thursday
night... Mostly cloudy with a

chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid
60s. Highs in the mid 80s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Friday .. .Partly
sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s,
Friday night through
Sunday ... Partly
,cloudy.
Low s in the lower 60s.
Hi ghs in the mid 80s.•

o zer 1n1c e.s 1rg1n1a,
Gastroenterology is o·ur Spe-cialty...
Specializing in the function &amp; disorders of the
Digestive System

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Liver Disease
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CLINIC
WEST VIRGINii\
I

304.675.4498
..
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I

..
I

Mmxtay, July 2, 2007
•

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY -A sehedi.Je o1

~college

teams
froot
Gallia,.,..,
and Meigs
001.1'11iee.
""
t'i!1'
""""
"""""'
""""' """"""'
Thetd•y'a goma

Legion But!&gt;oll
Meigs vs Portsmouth (at Minford HS),
5:30 p.m.
Wtdnud'Y'I MIDI

Legion SaHball
Meigs at Athens Fou rth ot July
Tourn ament, TBA

Thyrlday'a game
LeglonBallball
Gallia at Logan. 6 p.m.

PRo BASEBAlL

•

Narron fired by struggling Reds
BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Manager
Jerry Narron was fired
Sunday night by
the
Cincinnati Reds, who raised
their payroll and their expectations in the offseason only
to find themselves with the
worst record in the major
leagues.
"
The Reds became the· second team to chan~e managers
Sunday. Earlier m . the qay, .
Seattle's Mike. Hargrove
resigned.
.
Narron was the second big
league manager to be flfed
this season. Baltimore's . Sam
Perlozzo lost his job on June

18 after the last-place Orioles
couldn't shake another losing
streak.
The Reds have been far
worse, setting a pace for their
first I00-loss season since
1982. With no improvement
in sight and attendance starting to lag, the club decided to
dump its low-key manager.
The move came a few
hours after an 11-7 loss to the
St. Louis Cardinals that left
the Reds at 31-51, the worst
record in the majors. Advance
scout Pete Mackanin was
chosen interim manager.
Mackanin, 55, managed the
Reds' Triple-A team in
Nashville from 1990-92. He
was the Pirates' interim man-

ager for the final 26 games of
the 2005 season after Lloyd
McClendon was fired. •
Owner Bob Castellini and
general manager Wayne
Kriv sky declined comment
until a news conference on
Monday, a day off before the.
start of a honie series against
the San Francisco Giants.
The 51 -year-old Narron
tried to set a take-charge .
tone early · in the season ,
when he moved Ken
Griffey Jr. to right field and
dropped him out of his
accustomed spot at No. 3 in
the batting order. Griffey
didn' t like it, but Narron

Cincinnati
Reds manager
Jerry Narron
watches from
the dugout in
the second
inning of a
baseball game
against the .
Texas Rangers
in this June 16
file photo in
"
Cincinnati.
Narron was
fired by tl\e
· Reds on
Sunday.

Pluse see Narron, Bl

APphoto

·TheV aotlhllr Sl8lt In San Franclscl
A record 18.5 million ballo1s were cast lor the 78lh AII·S1ar game on
July 10 at AT&amp;T Park in San Francisco.

2007 MlB All-STAR TOP VOTE GETTERS
American
National

AP photo
Cleveland Indians' Jhonny
Peralta hits a solo home run
off Tampa Bay Devil Rays
pitcher James Shields.

Tribe wins .
low-scoring
battle
over
.
Devil Rays
CLEVELAND (AP) Cliff Lee would prefer
throwing fewer pitches to
getting more strikeouts. On
Sunday, the Indians ' leftbander did both.
Lee (5-4) struck out nine
in eight innings to win for
the third time in four starts,
and Cleveland defeated the
Tampa Bay Devil Rays 3-2.
"I'd rather get them all to
make an out on the first
pitch," Lee said. "A lot of
strikeouts today came on 12 counts so I kind of got
them early. That's why I
was able to go eight. I felt
strong enough to go ·back
out for the ninth, too."
Lee allowed one run and
four hits with two walks in
his longest outin~ since a
complete-game wm May 8,
· a span . of I 0 starts. He
fanned the side on 13 pitches in the first inning and
went on to tie his career
high for strikeol.\ls . in a
game.
"It was a real good effort
by Cliff," manager Eric
Wedge said. "He worked his
fastball on both sides of the
plate and had a good breakmg pitch. I loved the way he
bor~ down ."
Joe Borowski, pitching
for the fourth straight day,
gave up Delmon Young's
sacrifice tly in the ninth
before recording hi s 24th
save in 26 chances and 12th
in a row since May 13. He
has six. saves and a win in
his last seven outings.
Borowski was helped by
shortstop Jhonny Peralta.
who prevented the potential
tying run from getting to
second base with one out by
making a sweeping tag on
pinch-runner Dustan Mohr
. trying to steal.
'
"Jhonny turned my bad

AT&amp;T Park
Seating capacity:

4t ,503
Last name •
million votes

Bluegrass blend: crushed .
volcanic rock infiekl:

San Francisco Giants' Barry Bonds hits a fifth inning double against the Arizona
Diamondbacks during a baseball game Saturday in San Francisco . It was Bond's .376th
career double, tying him with Willie Mays, for the most doubles in San Francisco Giants history. The Giants beat the Diamondbacks 4-1.

rubberized waming track

(Votes rOtJnded)

AP

SOURCE: MLB

stanar,
QY RONALD BLUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS "

NEW YORK - Not only
is Barry Bonds going to the
All-Star game in his home
&gt;'ballpark, he'll be in the starting lineup.
· The San Francisco Giants
star overcame a 119,000vote deficit in the final days
of balloting and finished
123,000 ahead . of the
Chicago Cubs' Alfonso
Soriano on Sunday to claim
the third and final starting
outlield spot for the National
League.
"I'm at a loss for words
right now," Bonds said. "It
ju st means more 'cause I' m
at home. This is my town.

ThiS is my house . You can' t other cities following years
say enough .about being at of suspicion that ·he used
home. It's great. This is the performance-enhancing
one I'll remember all time. drugs.
This is the one I'll remember
"One guy will be a lot bi&amp;forever."
ger than e•1erybody else. Its
· At 42, Bonds will be the hi s
hometown,"
said
oldest All-Star starter. He Cincinnati's Ken Griffey Jr.,
tops Roger Clemens, who the top NL vote-getter. "He
was 41 years, II months at gets to have all the fun stuff
the 2004 game in Houston, and the press conferences. I
his hometown.
just !let to play."
Bonds, beading to his 14th
Wllh the game in his home
All-Star game and 12th as ,a park , Bonds figures to be the
starter, was the lone Giants . focus all week. He could be
player chosen for the July 10 one of the sluggers picked to
game in San Francisco -· participate
in
Monday
his first trip since 2004. Five night's Home Run Derby. If
home runs from tying Hank Bonds had been bypassed by
Aaron's record of 755 , . fans and players. the choice
.
Bonds is beloved in San
Francisco but booed in most
Please see All-Star, Bl

l

Griffey willing to let Bonds
have All-Star spotlight
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ken Griffey Jr. is glad to let
Barry Bonds have the All -Star attention.
The Cincinnati Reds right fielder was the National
League's leading vote getter in the fan balloting released
Sunday. It marked the 13th time .that he was voted onto
the team.
" It's always special by the fans and es pecially by the
players," Griffey said. "They're t)je guys who arehere
every day, day in and day out, and for them to pi ck me is
a great honor. It's going to be a lot of fun."
The best part: He won't be the center of attention.
Barry Bonds also got voted into the starting outfielder
for the game in San Francisco, which means that Griffey
wi II be reduced to a subplot.

Please see Spotllcht. B:Z

Hamlin gets first Nextel Cup victory of 2007 season
BY MIKE

I:IARRIS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOUDON, N.H': - A twotire gamble for Denny
Hamlin paid off with his first
NASCAR Nextel Cup victory of the season Sunday at
New
Hampshire
International Speedwar
Hamlin, last year s top
rookie, is second in the season points, but he's been
frustrated this season, leading laps and contending
without being able to take a
checkered flag in the first 16
race s.
It appeared he would fall
Please see Tribe, B:Z
short again" this time, with
Martin Truex Jr. , series
points leader Jeff Gordon
and Truex's teammate, Dale
CoNTACT
Earnhardt. Jr., all running
ahead of Hamlin late in the
OVP Scoreline (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
race .
t -740-446-2342 ext. 33
But the leaders made their
s ch~duled pit stops on
final
Fax -- 1·.740-446·3008
lap 255 durin g a caution
E-mail - sports@mydaitysentinel.com
period and Hamlin was the
Sports ShJtf
only one of the quartet to
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor take two fresh tires mstead of
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
four. He vaulted from fourth
bshermanQ mydailytribune.com
to first and stayed out· front
to
the end of the Lenox
larry Crum, Sports Writer
Indu
strial Tools 300.
(740).446-2342. ext 23
"It's amazing to fin all y get
lcrum@ mydallyregister.com
1a win." Hamlin said after '
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer winjling for the third time in
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
his b udding Cu)'! career and
bwalters@ myda.lly1ribune.com

•

Surlaces: Kenlucky

APpl10to

US

•

·B l

•

peopl~n

BY JOHN SEEWER

BY STEPHEN MAJORS

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

- - - - - - ,-

the first time since last July
at Pocono.
"We were back in sixth
and seventh most of the day
and the only shot we had was
to get track position," said
Hamlin, who now has seven
top fives and II top lOs this
season . "You know, two tires
worked for us earlier (in the
race) and we kind of' made a

note that anything inside of
120 .laps to go we were. going
to do two."
Hamlin has said he and his
team were working hard to
win races because the 12 drivers who qu alify for this
year's 10-race Chase for the
championship wi II be seeded, with each driver geiting
10 extra points .for each win

durin g the 26-race regular
season.
That was on Hamlin's
mind before his fin al stop on
Sunday.
"I feel like we're comfortable inside the Chase here
and we rolled the dice a little
bit," he said . "We knew we
could take some aggressive
cuts and try to get some extra

points for when the Chase
does start."
While Hamlin worked
hard to stay out front ,
Gordon was working over
Truex, trying hard to get by.
.The two Che vrolets spent a
lot of time side-by -side and
nose-to-tail until Gordon

Please see NASCAR. Bl

Thank You•••
·

Dr. loey Wilcoxon and staff wish to thank our
patrons for voting us the ._Best l:hlrepraeto~"
in the tri-county area. It has been an honor and a privilege
to have served the area for over 21 years.
I
We will strive to meet and beat your expectatio11s for
the years to follow.

--- . -- ... -

/Jr J~ · Wilcoxon

u a ~dicol a~wcialt! o(

PLEASA!wT VALLEY HOSPITAL

t·

�•

I

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Ludwic~

powers Cardi.nals p_ast Reds

CINCINNATI (AP) -· This
one deserved the yardstick
Rvan Ludwtek hit a solo
homer that landed above the
batter's eye - an Impressive
drive that everyone m the ballpark watched except him and added a three-run shot
Sunday, leadmg the St Louis
Cardinals to an 11-7 victory
over the Cmcmnat• Reds
Ludwick's two homers offset another notewonhy one by
Ken Gnfley Jr and left the
lljOSt lastmg memory on an
afternoon when the ball wa5
canymg well
'That one's probably in my
top five," srud Ludwick, who
now has 19 career homers in
the maJors and 140 m the
nunors "I've hit balls that
hard before, but m the nunor
leagues they don't measure
them. Here they happen to
measure them "
nus one came m at473 feet,
ued for the nmth-longest in
Great American Ball Park's
five seasons. Ludwick was
rounding the bases with his
head down when tt landed in a
nverboat-themed party area
above the batter's eye
"You knew it was gone, but

you weren't sure how far,"
left-bander Mike Maroth satd
"It got up there on the balcony
of the shtp. That's pretty
unpresstve'
1be- Cardmals oven:ame a
dtsappomtmg start by Maroth,
who gave up Gnffey 's 585th
career homer and left the
~arne after failin~ to get an out
m the fourth mrung
Instead, the latest addiuon to
the bullpen came through
agam.
Reliever Troy Percival (2-0)
got his second vieloly of the
senes, a triumphant return for
the fbrmer closer. The 37year-old reliever was out of
baseball for two years because
ol a bad elbow, but made a
comeback at the urging of several friends on the team
Throwmg a 90 mph fastball
that has surprised everyone,
Perctval pttched out of a threat
mthe fourth to get the vtctory.
In another dose of discouragement for the major
leagues' worst team. Reds
rookie Horner Bailey got hit
hard for the second slrllight
start. The defiriinj! moment
came in tlie thtrd, when
Ludwtck - playmg while

who took twO' of three 10 the
series The Reds remained
stuck with the worst record-m
the maJOrs affi 1-51 , on pace tO
lose I00 games for the first
l1IIje SDICC 1982.
Gnffey's three-run homer
left him one behind Frank
Robmson for stxth on the
caieer list andwas a prelude to
his matchup in the next senes
agamst San Francisco's Barry
Bonds
Netther starter made tt
through the founh mning, a
particular dtsappointment for
two teams near the bottom of
the league m pitching
The Cardmals got Maroth
from Detroit in a June 22 trade
to steady therr depleted rotalion. The left -bander gave up
five runs m his second start for
St Loms, rusmg the rotallon's
earned run average to 5 42,
worst m the Nl:.
The hard-throwing Bailey
(2-2) got hit hard for the second consecullve start, raismg
quesuons about his readiness
for the bt,\\ Jeagyes. The 21year-old pitcher has gtven up
tered"
13 htts, etght walks and 13
Chris Duncan added a two- runs in his last two starts, covrun homer for the Cardinals, ermg only 5 1-3 i!fuings

Juan Encamacton got a day of
rest - hit a knee-high fastball
mto the pany center
"It was a beaullful thing to
see," manager Tony La RusSjl
srud "He was clutch Plus, he
hit another one The way that
game was gomg, we needed
every one of them "
Ludwtck added a uebreakmg, three-run hOmer m the
founh. off Rtcky Stone, the
second multihomer game of
his up-and-down career. The
28-year-old outfielder has
played parts of seasons wtth
Texas and Cleveland, spendmg most of hts career bouncmg around the mmors
Hts famtly is part of
Cardmals lore His brother,
Eric. pttched for St Louis and
was one of three players traded to Oakland for Mark
McGwire on July 31, 1997
Ludwick IS still llymg to
find his way.
"I've been real mconsistent
here," satd Ludwtck, who was
called up May 6 'The good
games have happened to be at
good moments, when it's mat-

Bentley trying to conie back to Browns in '07
mg on the 'first full-contact
play of tratmilg camp last
July, expects to be on the
fteld for the Browns' ftrst
full workout on July 27
He called Browns coach
Romeo Crennel two weeks
ago to tell htm that he'd be
in camp and that he
planned to play thts season.
"I think he was shocked,"
Bentley satd "I think a lot
of people are."
The 27-year-old revealed
that he has undergone four
surgenes smce gelling
hurt, the fmal two operatiOns to clean out a staph
infection that ate away at
hts tendon and a vtrus that
became so severe that doctors considered amputating
h1s leg
,
"At one powt, I was so
stck they weren't sure I
was gomg to live through
the mght," Bentley satd
New York Gtants team
physictan Dr. Russell
Warren
performed
now"
Bentley's latest operatiOn
Bentley, who tore hts left m November, when more
patellar tendon while plant- staph was cleaned out and a
CLEVELAND (AP) Center LeCharles Bentley,
whose ftrst season with
Cleveland ended With a
frealkish knee mjury last
summer
that
became
mfected and threatened his
hfe and NFL career, plans
to play for the Browns this
season
The club's mar~;~uee freeagent stgmng m 2006,
Bentley satd Sunday that
he'll report to trammg
camp m a few weeks and
that his goal IS to be ready
for the season opener on
Sept
9 agamst the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
"It's unbelievable how
far I've come
the last
few months," Bentley satd
m a phone mterview from
Anzona, where he has been
rehabbmg and workmg out
for the past few months "I
feel so blessed to even be
In a position to thmk about
playmg again I've come so
far I'm not gomg to stop

•r

NASCAR
fromPage82
finally squeezed past seven
laps from the end of the 300lap race on the I 058-mtle
oval
Gordon, racmg with an
mtenm crew ch1el after
NASCAR suspended both
his and teammate Jimmie
Johnson's crew chiefs for
SIX weeks after thetr teams
were caught the prevtous
week at Sonoma wtth tile-

All-Star
from PageBl
would have been left to St
LoUis' Tony La Russa, the
NL manager
"I thmk when our staff got
together, we were not surpnsed at all that e1ther the
fans or the players were
gomg to vote him m and
that somehow we would put
htm on." La Russa satd.
"He's havmg a good year"
Sonano wasn't bothered
that fans voted Bonds to
start over htm Sonano sull
made 11 as a reserve
"Gomg to the All-Star
game means a lot to me,
~specially my firSt time
With the Cubs," he said
The Boston Red So~ and
AL champ10n DetrOit Ttgers
led all teams w1th five players selected Boston ts sendmg ftrst baseman Davtd
Ort1z, thtrd baseman M•ke
Lowell, outfielder Manny
Ramtrez and pitchers Josh
Beckett and Jonathan
Papelbon The Red Sox
could gam a stxth, with
reliever Htdeki OkaJima
among five players on the
Internet ballot for the final
AL spot
DetrOit had three players
elected to start for the first
tune smce 1983 (second
baseman Plac1do Polanco,
outfielder Maggho Ordonez
and
catcher
Ivan
Rodnguez). Pudge, a 14-

•

•

gaily modtfie&lt;J front fendets,
nearly chased pown Hamhn
The four-Ume senes
champton got nght up on
the rear bumper ol the
leader's Joe G1bbs Racmg
Chev¥ on the fmal turn.
Hamhn held on to wm by
JUSt 0 068-seconds - less
than a car-length - 10 the
eighth race and New
Hampshtre
debut
for
NASCAR 's new Car of
Tomorrow.
"You can't overdnve thts
car," Gordon satd of the btgger, bulk1er COT "The
harder I tned to dn ve, the
lime All-Star, was elected to
start for the 12th Ume.
Polanco ts a first-time AllStar
DetrOit's Justm Verlander,
who pttched a no-hitter thts
season, was ptcked for the
AL stall, and shortstop
Carlos Gmllen IS a reserve
The New York Mets (center ftelder Carlos Beltran,
shortstop Jose Reyes. closer
B1lly Wagner and thtrd
baseman Dav1d Wnght) t1ed
the Mtlwaukee Brewers
(closer Francisco Cordero,
ftrst
baseman
Pnnce
F1elder, shortstop J J Hardy
and pitcher Ben Sheets) for
the most players picked m
the NL The Brewers hadn' t
had four All-Stars smce
1983
Fans elected the starters,
except for the pttchers. and
.a record 18 5 mtlhon &gt;otes
were cast before Thursday 's
deadhne
Alex Rodnguez, with
3.89 mtllion votes, led fan
voung for the first ume ARod was ptcked for hts I I th
All-Star appearance, hts
lOth as a starter.
"It's hard to thmk about
that nght now," Rodnguez
satd Sunday after the
Yankees lost for the moth
lime m II games "But It's d
pretty neat expenence It
never gets old.'To be consistent for a long ume ts somethmg that I'm proud of"
Gnffey JUmped past
Beltran m the final days and
topped the NL wllh 2 99

portion of the deteriorated
tendon was removed
Following that procedure, Warren advtsed
Bentley to begin thinkmg
about life wtthout football
But Bentley, who signed
a six-year, $36 million free
agent contract wt th the
Browns to play for hts
hometown team, wasn't
ready to give up And after
l\ few weeks of workouts,
Bentley became convmced
he could make it all the
way back
"He (Warren) is a great
doctor," Bentley said. "But
doctors have told people
they have stx months to
hve and they go on to live
full lives for years. For a
while my wheels were
spmmng, ~ut I was determmed to malke 11 back."
Warren constdered a ftfth
operatiOn on Bentley m
early June, but after seemg
the two-time Pro Bowler's
Improvement tn May,
decided aga1nst 11
"He thought it was
remarkable," Bentley said
slower I went
"I fought so hard wtth
Martin there It was a great
battle and I had a lot of fun
racmg wtth h1m But we
used up a lot of our stuff, so
11 took me a couple of laps
once I got m front of hun to
~et readJusted and get back
m my rhythm"
Asked tf he thought he
could still catch Hamlin,
Gordon sa1d, "We were
runmng Denny down and
he was domg a great JOb at
the end. Those last two laps
he started watching hts
mmor and I thought we
mtllion votes, the etghth
time Griffey has led hts
league Gnffey 1S gomg to
hts 13th All-Star game, all
as a starter
The rest of the AL startmg
hneup has the Yankees'
Derek Jeter at shonstop, ARod at third, and the Los
Angeles Angels' Vlad1m1r
Guerrero and• Seattle's
lchtro Suzuki m the outfield
F1elde• and Los Angeles
Dodgers catcher Russell
Mar;tin were elected as firstlime All-Stars m the NL
Pluladelph1a's Chase Utley
topped voung at second
base
Whtle fans ptcked the
starters, player votmg determmed etght reserves and
etght pitchers m each
league
La Russa and Detrmt's
Jtm Leyland, the AL manager, each chose four posttlon players and three pttcl)ers
Voting runs through
Thursday on MLB com for
the final roster spot in each
league Competmg With
OkaJtma 10 the AL are
DetrOit•, pitcher Jeremy
Sonderman, the Angels'
Kelv1m Escobar, Toronto's
Roy
Halladay
and
M1nnesota' s Pat Neshek
The NL five are Pmsburgh
pitcher Tom Gorzelanny,
Houston's Roy Oswalt,
Anzona's Brandon Webb,
San Otego's Chns Young
and the Cubs' Carlos
I

"He thought I had made
enough progress that I didn't need another one (operatiOn). I've sttll got a few
more hurdles to overcome
but I've come so far
already."
Bentley pla~s to visit
Warren agam
before
returning to the field.
His unexpected return is
terrific news for the
rebuilding Browns, who
didn't thtnk they'd have
him for the upcoming season and weren't sure if the
former Ohto State star
would ever play for them at
all
"I'm sure people still '
don't know tf I'll be back,
and it's still probably gomg
to be a little wait and see,"
he said. "But tf I play one
more snap, that's one more
snap than a lol of people
ever thought I'd play.
"People are quick to want
to kill a dream. But a lot of
work and a lot of prayers
later I'm ready to play
again I've been blessed "

Tribe
from Page Bl throw into a great pfay,"
satd
catcher
Kelly
Shoppach, after Peralta
snared the· high-toss to the
nght-field stde of the bag,
then m one motton reached
behind him to tag Mohr on
the htp.
"I didn't think he tagged
me at all," Mohr said.
The lndtans won for the
sixth time in seven games
and extended the Devtl
Rays' season-worst losing
streak to seven games
Cleveland has won 10 of 14
overall and Tampa Bay has
lost 14 of 18.
1\vo Tampa Bay errors on
one play helped the Indtans
break a 1-all tie in the sixth
agamst James Shtelds (6-4),
who struck out 10m 6 1-3
mm.ngs but lost hts fourth
stratght stan.
,
Casey Blake and Peralta
began the go-aheail rally
wllh smgles Travts Hafner
then bounced a ball that
glanced off Carlos Pena' s
glove at first base. Second
baseman Josh Wilson barehanded it in the air and
threw behind Shields covermg the bag for the second
error, allowing Blake to
score.
"It was a tougher throw
for Josh," Devtl Rays lllllnager Joe Maddon satd. "It
carne off Carlos' chest. We
tried to make the play, but
we dtdn't"
Shtelds 'Stopped the
Indians from gelling more,
notching two more strikeouts around Hafner getting
caught stealing.
"I thought he pttched really well," Maddon said. "fie
did a nice job keeping his
composure. Striking out the
stde after he loaded the
bases in the second was
very impressive "
The Devil Rays' nghthander dtdn't issue a walk,

Spotlight
fromPageBl

I

"One guy will be a lot
btgger than everybody
else," Gnffey satd "It's hts
hometown. He gets to have
all the fun stuff and the
press conferences I JUSt get
to play The game is always
fun.
Some of the thmgs on
had a shot at htm."
the
field
and off the field
Truex got his first Cup
aren't
as
much
fun, but the
victory last month at Dover
game
ts
always
fun."
"Another almost, could of
The 37-year-old Gnffey ts
been day," he said. "Six
havmg
one of hts best seamonths ago I'd have been
sons
smce
he carne to hts
beggmg for a thtrd, but . I
hometown
team
in 2000. He
thought we had the car there
htt
hts
585th
career
homer
toward the end."
Truex wound up thtrd, fol- Sunday, a three-run shot
lowed
by
Earnhardt, during an II-7 loss to Saint
Johnson and Jeff Green, the LOUIS
Gnffey. ts one behmd
only other leader who gamFrank
Robmson for stxth on
bled on changmg two tires
on the fmal stop. Green the career list
Hts numbers translated
JUmped from 13th to fourth
mto
all those fan votes.
and stayed with the leaders
Griffey
ts hitting 292 with
to the end
22 homers - one behmd
Adam Dunn for the team
lead - and 53 RBls. He's
Zambrano
The top wnte-in \ ote
totals were for Detroit's
Curus
,
Granderson
(376,000) and Cmcmnat1 's
Josh Hamilton (151,000).
from PageBl
Some of the most notable
snubs mcluded NL MVP
Ryan Howard of the went ahead with the moves
Phtlhes, Atlanta shortstop
He also benched third
Edgar Renteria and New baseman Edwm Encamacton
' Jrk Mets pitcher John dunng an April game for fatlMatne
In
the AL, mg to run out a pop up
The tone may have
Gtanderson and Gary
changed,
but Narron couldn't
Sheffield ffilssed out desptte
overcome
a bullpen that led
excellent numbers
the
NL
m
losses ,md repeatHoward, who mtght paredly
fatled
to hold leads m
tiCipate 111 the Home Run
Derby, understood why he the late mmngs
Wtth the franchise headed
was bypassed
for
tts seventh strmght losmg
"I can't make 11 every
season
lis deepest slump
year," he sa1d "I was hurt m a - half-century
for part of the first half I Castelhm dectded to make
don t know if tftat's why I yet another managenal
d1dn 't make tt or not "
change. Smce wmning the
Ftelder satd he' ll take part World Senes m 1990, the
m the Home Run Derby
Reds have had seven man"That wtll be pretty cool. agers and made only one
I JUSt want to htt one f1rst. playoff appearance - em
That w1ll be" Jot of fun," he 1995 under Davey Johnson
srud
The Reds expected a return
Several perenmal All- to prommence when they
Stars Will be absent because moved mto Great Amencan
of subpar performances thts Ball Park m 2003, but tt dtdyear, such as Yankees closer n't happen They frred generManano Rt vera and Braves al manager Jtm Bowden and
center ftelder Andruw manager Bob Boone lTildway
through the season
Jones
Dave Mtley got the next
chance,
but was frred mtdAP Sports Writers Jay
way
through
the 2005 seaCohen m New York, Joe son Narron, hts bench
Kay m Cmcmnat1, lame coach, took over on an mterMcCauley m San Franctsco un basis and kept the JOb
and Andrew Seligman m after lead10g the team to a
Ch1cago contnbuted to thts 46-46 finish the rest of that
report
season

Narron

and affer opeumg the season
6-0, )las struck out 27
agrunst only one walk during hts losmg streak.
Shtelds' stuff frustr(lted
the lndtans. Jason Michaels
threw hts bat to the backstop after sinking out to end
the stl\th, and Shoppach
broke hts bat over hts knee
after whtfting to 'Start the
seventh
"I was throwmg a Jot of
cut faGtballs," Shtelds smd
"They weren't making any
adJustments on it so I kept
throwing 11."
Pena J?Ut the Devtl Rays
ahead wtth a two-out homer
m the second. Pena's 18th
homer of the season was
also hts 19th of hts career
agamst the Indtans and 12th
m 30 games at Jacobs Field.
The Indtans loaded the
bases wtth none out in the
bottom half, but Shields
struck out the bottom three
m Cleveland's order Shoppach, Ben Franctsco
and Josh Barfield - to
mruntain the 1-0 lead
Shtelds struck out two
more to start the third
before Peralta lied tt by hitting his 14th homer on a 2-0
pitch. Peralta had 13
homers aU last season.
Cleveland made it 3-1 in
the seventh. Francisco doubled With one out, finislllng
Shtelds • Shawn Camp got
Barfield to ground out, but
Grady Sizemore lined an
RBI single off lefty Casey
Fossum.
Notes: Tampa Bay OF
Carl Crawford had two singles to get withm two hits of
900 for his career. .. Lee
last struck out mne on June
6, 2005, at San Otego ..
Shtelds has 22 stnkeouts in
14 1-3 innings aga10st
Cleveland thts season . All
youngsters 14 and under in
the crowd of 30,41 0 got a
C C. Sabathta milt The first
three games of the senes
attracted 101,693 and
pushed Cleveland's total
home attendance over I
mtlhon.
htt ll homers since J11ne I,
a surge that made fans take
notice.
"Outstanding," manager
Jerry Narron satd. "He's
had a great first hall. The
btg thmg for us ts keeping
htm out there for 162
games."
A series of injuries hmlled htm to fewer than 112
games m five of hts seven
prevwus
season&amp;
10
Cinc10na11 He was picked
for the 2000 and 2004 AllStar games, ifut dtdn't play
because of InJUry
Thts would mark the first
lime he appeared m an AllStar game represent10g the
Reds
Gnffey got 2 98 mtllton
votes from the fans. Since
hts career started with
Seattle 10 1989, Gnffey has
received 44 4 mtlhon votes,
the most of any player m hts
h1story of fan ballotmg
"It means I'm old,"
Gnffey satd. "I started
young That's a whole lot of
people saymg , 'Thank
you "'

The Reds went 80-82 last
xear, the team's first under
Castelhm It wa~ thetr best
result smce 2000 and earned
Narron a two-year extensiOn
through 2008
Castelhm allowed the payroll to nse $10 million to $69
million this year, hopmg to
contend m the weak NL
Central He also allowed
Km sky to gtve $71 mtlhon
m contract extens10ns to
startmg pitchers Aaron
Harang and Bronson Arroyo,
the franchtse's "biggest
spendmg splurge smce 1t
brought Gnffey home m
2000
It all fell apart fast
The rotation started strong
but fmled Arroyo hds yet to
wm a game smce May 6,
left-bander Enc Mtlton has
had reconstructive elbow·
surgery,
and
h1ghly
acclaimed rookte Homer
Bailey has been roughed up
m hts last two stans
Bruley fruled to make 11
through the fourth mmng of
an 11 -7 Joss to St Louts on
Sunday that htghhghted the
Reds' shortcommgs They
made three more errors and
thetr bullpen turned a close
game mto another drubbmg
The Reds dectded to fire
Narron before a home senes
agrunst Barry Bonds and the
Giants Bonds is only five
homers shy of Hank Aaron's
career record, but none of the
three games was close to a
sellout - undersconng fa~s·
md1fference
·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentlnelp»m

Monday, J~y 2, 2007

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\\\r)l \&lt;I \II \ h

L.r__I'ERso
__

NALS
__

;..~I

'

t

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~:

Founcl

on June 29

on

Garfteld Ave Male chOcolate
Lab

'lou

P,l/1?{:(~1\12.

PRAY 740740 PRAY FOR

\'(\

s~ 10
\-\~'Ill' ~1 Off 'II~

no collar/tags 446

0381

AWII\

3 Fam1hes July 5 6 7 Sam
715 3rd Ave

to 4pm

THE USA @ 4 o clock GaQipolls Plus stze mens
everyday
0 clock

r

until

7·4·07·4· and womens clothes, name
brand boys dothes size 1o

to 36 young mens Avon-vm
tage collectibles electron
• tcs furniture and ant1ques
shoes and cleats

I

?lVFAWAY

__

15 cu tl Upnght Freezer
Older but runs Good 304 3 Famtly Garage Sale 285
882·2447
Mercerville Ad across !rom

7 ...

South Gallia HS July 2-3

4 kittens all males black from 9am • ?
and white to good homes
379 298 1
712 713 6 30·5 30 Lois ol

- - - - - - - - everything new Total Gym

~lhpoiiS on SA 78

Free puppms to a goodE-'::_e_:_rc:os_:_e_:__,6::_m_'
:_
__:le::..s_b_e_
low_

home Call 740 256 1059

Ktnons 3 F black w/orange July 2 3 Only 1778 George
&amp; white 1 M black w/little Ad In Bidwell
while Wtll be ready July 10
~C-al!"l4.;.41-·0~4.;.05;...,..._ _, July 3 4 5 KniCk Knacks
11
clothes m1sc 199 Hemlodt
Losr AND
Rd
9110 m1le out of
L~---FOiOUNDiiiii--pl. Evergreen

www comlcs.com

r
~

IIIO
.

I

r4

Found on McCormick Ad
YARD ~....:.• . .,.
around 6!22 Small black __ PoMEROYnnwut..r. •

n~,~

HILP"'""=

CLASSIFIED INDEX

ChlldiEiderty care ....,. ...

..... . .. ...... 190

Electrical/Refrigeration ,.... ....... .. ..... 840
Equipment tor Rant, . . .. .
.. 480
Excavating....... .... .. .. ......................... 830
Fann Equipment......... ......... . ....... ....... 61 o
Fanno tor Rent...
.... 430
Farms for Sale. ....
.. .......... . ......... 330
For lease....... ...
.. .. 490
For Sale
.
.. 585
For Sale or Trade ..... . ..... .......
..•. 590
Fruits &amp; Yegatables......
580
Furnished Rooms
.. 450
General Hauling.... ....... . .... ............ . ...850
Giveaway..
..040
Happy Ads
. . .....
.. ..050
Hay &amp; Grain • • ..... . ........ ..
..640
Help Wanted
110

Home Improvements.....

Homes for Sale.. • .....
Household Goods
Houses tor Rent .... . ....... .........
In Memoriam ....
Insurance
.
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. . .. ....
LtvestocJ&lt;..
Lost and Found.
Lots &amp; Acreage.. . ......... ...
Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous Merchandise... .
Mobile HQme Repair ..
Mobile Homes for Rent.
Mobile Homes tor Sale.....
Money to Loan .
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
Musical Instruments.
Personals
Pets tor Sale. ..... •••• •• ••
Plumbing &amp; Heating

..81 0

. 310
510
...... 410
. .020
. .. 130
. .. 660
630
. .060

350
170
540
860

.420
320
220
740
570
.. 005
560
820

Professional Services.....

230

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair.....
Real Estate Wanted
Schoata Instruction
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer..
Situations wanted.
Space tor Rent ...... .......
Sporting Goods ..
SUV's tor Sale ....
Trucks tor Sal8.. .. ....... .
Upholstery .
.
vans For Sale.. . . ... . .
Wanted to Buy . . . .
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .
Wanted To Do ...... ....... ...
Wanted to Rent .
..
Yard Sale- Gallipolis.. ... .....
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
Yard Sale-Pt Pfeasant

160
360

:150
. 650
120

460
520
•720
. 715
.. 870
730
090
620
180
. 470
. ...... 072
074
076

YARD SAl E·

Pr. PLF.ASANf
!,.............~
5 Farmly Yard Sale July. 2 34 9 am 1111 dark brand name
teen girl clothes 911.9fCISe
eqUipment
prom
dresses furmture
hous&amp;-

hold 1tems To much to menlion 3rd &amp; Adams St Mason

r

%~

Computers 4 U,1s sesknlQ a
Computer Tech for part l1me
lead ng to tull ttme work You
must be proflc1en1 In compuler repair dependable en
honest• Bnng resume 1n
person to Computers 4 u
Inc 303 Mam Street Pmnt
Pleasant WV 25550 or call

IRS JOBS
$18 46 $32 601hr

now htr

tng Paid Traimng Is provtd
ed For appl•cation and frae
government JOb mfo call

Com Shop

151 Second

Avenue Gallipolis 740 446·
2842

I '11'10\ \ II \ I
"'' H\ H I ...,

....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,
t 10_

I

HEll' W,oo'FD

'-------

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood
ttems To $480fwk Matenals
provided Free mtormat1on
pkg 24Hr 801 428 4649
A 011 &amp; Gas Bro ker
Company 1s lookmg for an
admm asst for the GallipoliS
off ce Candidates should be
self s tarters and posses
good organ1zattQnal SI&lt;IIIS
proficient In Word EICcel and
Outlook Knowledge of land
descnpt ons and t•tle e~~:p IS
a plus Must ~ h1gh
diploma and some
liege
expene nce
pref ned
Please call Andrea Healy at
740 446 6800 or fax to 740

~46 6802
Accepttng
Applications/Resume s for
secreta nat/
recept on•sl
pos111on Must be profiCient
1n QuiCk Books Pro Apply tn
person t 743 Centenary Rd
GallipoliS OH 45631 No
Phone Calls Please
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304 882-2645

AVON • All Areas• To Buy or
Sell

Sh1rley Spears 304
675 1429

apply n Person

who ts moli'wated gre et electncal ab1hl•es on call
communiCal on skills and a twiCe a month exper1ence
pos1t ve altitude Please requ•red E)(cellent beneht
·p~p~
~
ly_
w_
llh_,_______
package 401 K available
pwd hoi days, company pen
DRIVERS
Slon pa1d vacat1on Blue
Family Onented c._rner Cross/Blue Shield M~1ca1
based m Canton OH needs VISIOn Included Dental plan
Please contact
OTR drivers to pull refnger Bonuses
ated tra•lers to the South M1ke Gray at Campbell
Transportation Company at
and Ea'stern States
304 675 4545

f.clr" S8 50&gt;" 11· FT
1

VVcekty· Ron' IS

sssssssssssssssssss
SJOU 00

HIRING BONUS

sssssssssssssssssss
Trainmg Cl&lt;1ss bcg1ns
July 9fhl

CAL L

NUVJ 1

1-BBB·IMC-PAYU
(I 8fi8 -· Hi2 -7798)

Jobl'KI 1911
WI"I W.iil i OC ISiOI1 .COin

es 40 Per MlletAII Miles
•Late Model FreighHiner
Condos
•No New York City or
Cailada
•95% no touch freight

John Sang Ford Lincoln

Mercury
Needs three md•v•duals

that are Interested n a
career as an Automot1ve
Consultant We are looktng
for IndiVIduals that are out
•Medical Ins 6 401K
gomg self mol vated and
•Hometlme moat
professional We have one
weekends
of the best compenseiiOn
•SSOO Sign on bonus
plans n the ndustry and a
benefits package that has
health Insurance 401K
Must have a Class A COL
ret1rement diSability and lite
with 2 yearw experience
1nsurance If you want to
ears an excellent I v1ng and
Call Bob 11 800-652-2362
better yourself contact Pat
Mon Frl Bam 4Pm
Hill or Bran Ross

ELEC CONTROLS ENGI
NEEA Defense program
needs hands on eng•neer
tor
PLC
programm ng
(RSLog1x 1 ASV1ew) h1gh
John Sang Ford Lincoln
speed dala acqu 1s111on elec
Mercury
tncal test eqUipment heavy
equ 1pment and automated Has a pos t1on open for an
control systems BSEE + Automat ve Techn1c1an We
related expenence or equ v are look•ng for an Individual
that has a well rounded
alent destred UTRON Inc
knowledge about automo
www untron c com FAX 703
bve repa1r Ford Motor
369 5298
Company na1nmg Will be
prov1ded and 1s 011 QOJOQ
Help wa nted at Darst Adult
Group Home some l1f11ng We otter a compel t1ve com
pensafiOn plan and our ben
7 5 shitt 740 992 5023
eft package nctudes health
Immediate opening for Insurance 401 K retnemem
Installation/service techni
d1sabihty msurance and life
c 1an lor the secunty alarm
1nsurance 11 you are fired o1
CCTV survei llance f1eld
wol'k1ng tor someone that 1s
Cand1dates
shOuld
be
not work1ng for you or want
dependabl e hOnest and
to better yoursell contact
self starter capable of work
Serv1ce Manager J1m
mg on own Educa t on or
Thtmas
trammg
m ElectroniCS
tndustnal
Mamlenance
Computer
Tramm !f or
Network ng would be plus
•.z,. ..,
· - .
es Company w II tram qua11
I ed cand date Compet•t•ve - - - - - - - pay scale w1th possible ben Local home health agency
alit package For personal now h1r ng PCA CHHA
mterv1ew resp ond
wth CNA STNA Will tram If nee
resume to Consolidated essary Classes start Jut~
Secunty Systems
240 9th Call 740 441 1377

=..=::.::.._____

(740)446 2304

I,.,

serv

work ovet1tme some light

Bartender needed Pomt Upper
R1ver
OH
Pleasant Moose Lodge Gall pohs

oo mg or an
employer ilhil wit :
work WITH yo,,?

Amencan Assoc of labor 1
91 3 599 8244 24/hrs emp

!•Weekly Pay

Absolute Top Dollar u s
S1lver and Gold Co1ns
Proofsets Gold R1ngs Pre1935
US
Currency
Solitaire Diamonds M T S

NEA, Inc

L,.

July 2&amp;3 9·5 373 Roush Desk Clerk needed at hours a week Monday
lane Chesh 1re QH
Budget Inn 260 Jackson through Frrday wtllmg to
P1ke lookmg for a person

=------.;

~

lll.l0_ _ _ _ _ _,.111110
. .
IIEt.P WAJI1llJJ . -•IIELP--W•AN-l•ID_.J

and gray female dog Well
lor d1rect1ons at 304 675 - - - - - - - 3 Fam ily yard sate chll· 5282
groomed 645-7487
Job Title Towboat Otesel
dren teens adults,toys m1sc - - - - - - - Mechamc
mtntmum 40

4x4's For Sale. ..... .............................. . 725
Announcement .•••• . . •.•.
..••. 030
Antiques ...'.....
..... ...
• .. 530
Apartments tor Rani ........ ........ ............. 440
Auction and Flea Markel . .
.. ... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ..... . . ...... 760
Auto Repair...... ........... ..... ,,................770
Autos for Sale
... ......
. .. ~to
Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale • . ................... 760
Building Supplies ..................................... 550
Business and Buildings.... ....
... . B40
Bualnass Opportunity . ..... .................. 210
Business Training... ........ • ........ ....... . 140
campers &amp; Motor Homes . ....... ........ 790
Camping Equipment ................................. 780
Cards of Thanks ..... . ..... . . .. ...... 010

2007

r:':::-------, ,.,,..._____., ,...,._____...,

::..::.:::..::==-----

I

@

Road
45631

MACHINIST For manual
lathes mllhng mach1nes
saws radial dnlls Must be
able to hold tolerances to
00005" 1n hne work and
accurately cut vanous mate
female and buttress threads
Must read draWmgs and
make parts to specificatiOn
G Code des1red L1ft truck
operatiOn a plus UTRON
Inc www utromc com FAX

703·369 5298

_ _ __ _ _ _

Middleport Public Works IS
now tak1ng apphcat10ns for a
laborer Applical•ons can be
p1cked up ~~ the Publ c
Works 0~ 237 Race
Middleport
Street
Apphcat1on deadlme 1s 4 PM
on July 18 2007 EOE
Overbrook Center s current
ly accept ng appl1ca110ns for
STATE TESTED Nursmg
Assistants Full T•me and
Part T1me pos•hons ava1l
able lnlerested applicants
can pick up an appllcat•on or
contact Holl1e Bumgarner
LPN Staff Development
Coord nator
@740 992
6472 M F 9a 5p at 333 Page
St Middleport Oh EOE &amp; a
part1c pant of the Drug Free
Workplace Program
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20'hr Of
$57K annually
lncludng Federal Benefits
and OT Pa1d Tra1n1ng
•
Vacattons FPPT
1 866 542 t531
USWA

Scemc Hills Nursmg Center
s currently accepting apph
ca11ons for AN s and LPN s
Appf1cat•ons must possess a
current license •n the State
of Oh10 Potential applicants
conta ct
Dana
- - - - - - - sho uld
TOMATO Pickers Needed Harless DON at (740)446
7150 EOE
247-3901 or 247 2165

0\lerbrook Center located
@333 Page St Middleport
Oh1o IS pleased to announce
we will be holding an STNA
Class schedu led for July
Hours Will be Sam 4 30pm If
you are •nterested 10 jo101ng
our fnendly and dedicated
staff please stop by our
front off1ce Mon Fn 9am
5pm and fill out an appllca
hon Full lime and part t1me
pos•IIOns ava1lable to those
qualified IndiVIduals com
pletM"lg the class Applicants
rTMJst be dependable (at1en
dance IS a must) team play
ers with positive attitudes to
JOin us 1n proVIding outstand
1ng quaJ1ty care to our reSI
dents It you have any ques
t1ons
contact
Hollie
Bumgarner
LPN
Staff
Development Coordinator
@740 992-6472 Overbrook
Center IS an E 0 E and a
participant of the Drug Free
WorkjJiace Program
R&amp;J Trucl&lt;~ng Lead1ng The
Way R&amp;J Trucking now
H1r ng at our New Haven
WV Termmal For Aeg•onal
Hauls Dump Oiv
1 year
OTR verifiable exp Ca ll 1
800 462 9365 ask for Kent
The
Athens-Me1gs
Educational Serv1ce Center
has an ANTICIPATED post
lion openmg as literacy
Coordinator for Reg1on 16
State Support Team This IS
a Full T1me PositiOn
QualificatiOns At least five
years of successful read1ng
Instruction n classroom
Masters degree 10 educallon(Readlng
Special
Education or concentratton
tn L1~ rac y) approp nate
Ohio certification or beensure technology expen
ence{t e on lite manage
ment system email elec
tron1c presentation) and
access to technology after
Addi!IOnat
school hours
Preferred Prev1ous e)(penence as a SIRI•nstructor or
partiCipant and adullinstruc
tiOnal experience Length of
contract and salary will be
determined upon employment Submit letter of Inter
est and resume to John D
Costanzo Supenntendent
Athens Me1gs EducatiOnal
Serv•ce
Center
507
Avenue
Richland
SUtte#108
Athens
OH
45701
ApplicatiOn
Deadline July 6 2007 3 30
p m The AM ESC IS an
equal
opportunttv
Employer/Prov dar

The
Athens Me gs
Educat•onal Serv1ce Cente•
has ANTICIPATED pos1t on
as
Spectal
Educat•on
Consuhants lor Reg1on 16
State'Support Team These
are Full Tml9 Pos1t1ons
Qual ifications
Masters
m EducatiOn
degree
Special
Education
EducatiOn Admtmstrat1on or
appropnate related fi eld or
evidence of eqUivalency fiVe
years of successful classroom
teach1ng
school
plan
1mprovement
n1ng or related e.:penence
expert1se and/or s•gn1!1cant
leadershtp e~penence at the
d•stnct level license appropr!Bte to the •nd•v•duet s pro
fess•on and demonstrated
knowledge of
IDEIA and
NCLB Length ol contract
and salary Wil l be deter
mined upon employment
Sub1111t let1er ol1nterest and
0
resume
to
John
Costanzo Supenntendent
Athens Me1gs EducatiOnal
Serv1ce
Center
507
R1chland
Avenue
SUite#108
Athens
OH
45 7Q1
Application
July 6 2007
Deadl1ne
3 30p m The AMESC s an
equal
opportumty
Employer/Provider

We offer Great
Employment
Opportunltleg
Plus a $300
Hiring Bonusl
You could make calls you
believe m for many
Conservative Pohltcal
Organ1zat1ons
Plue we offer
• Full·tlme potlllons

40 hrliwt&lt;
• Up to $8 50/hr + weakly
bonua potential
• $300 Hiring Bonus
* Complete benetlla

package

• Paid vacatlonlholldaya
• Friendly, profelstonal

oHice environment
Call today for more
mJormai1on aboul starting
a new career With

lntoCtslon
1-877-463-6247
exl2301

r,ll:l50:-"-:Srn:--OOIJ-S--,

t..-oiiNlliil'mliiiiucnilili.iiDN-_.J
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today• 740 446 4367

1 BOO 214 0452
The
Athens Me1gs
EducaiiOnal Serv ce Center
www ga11pol sea a~ collage oom
has ANTICIPATED position Accred led Membe Accredillng
Coone I for lm:tependenl Coleges
ope mngs
as
School Ell1d schools 1274 9
Improvement FaCilitators for iilaor::::::~;:::;..--...,
Reg1on 16 State Support
W.o\.~

1

Team Th ese are Full T1mo
PositiOns
Qu ahftcaiiOns
Masters
degrees
1n
Educahon
Spec1al
Educati on
EducatiOn
Adm nlstratlon or appropn
ate related field or ev•dence
of equivalency and expert
1se and/or SIQnlflcant leader
shiP exper enc~ at the dts
!net level Length of contract
and salary w1fl be deter
m1ned upon employment
Subrrnt totter of 1nterest and
rasume
to
John
D
Constanzo Supermtendenl
AtMns-Me1gs Educatmnal
Servi ce
center
507
Richland Avenue Athens
OH 45701
Appl cation
Deadline July 6 2007 3 30

Lw---~-ooiDoiiio-.,J
'

A OK Corrals &amp; Barns
Metal Roofmg Shingles
Concrete
Remodel ng
Decks
Pole
Barns
Garages Free est mates Call
304 633 1230
lawn mow ng Rates by the
tab not the hour Free
Estimates Call Paul @

(304)675 2940

.:.:::..::.::...:=.::.:.::..:::_
Proless1onally
Clean
Ofl ,c e / Houseclaan n"Q
Reasonable
Rates
References (304)675 2208

p m The AM ESC IS an Wanted to Do Care g1ver
equal
opportunity W1ll care for elder!~ 1n the1r
Employer iProvlder
home
16 yrs
e.:p
- - -- - - - References
Available
The Craig Group needs out (740)388 9783 or (740)591
going Individuals to help with
9034
state-Wide campaign Make
II'\ \'\( I \I
$1-$2 ~e r s gnature &amp; up to
$500 weekly Please call ..,..;;.._ _._ _.....,
C hr•s at 740 25 1 7591 or
10
HIJSINFN'i
The
Athens-Me~gs e
m
a
I
I
0PPOH'n!r1.1TV
Educational Serv•ce Center dbanas@cra•ggroup com
has an ANTICIPATED pos1
110n opening as Early The Woda Group a leader
•NOTICE•
learmng
and
School 10 aHon:lable hous ng s cur
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
1 1
Readiness Coord•nator for rently searChing for a Full
lNG CO re commends
Regen 16 State Support T me Property Mamtenance that you do bus1ness w1th
1
Team Th•s IS a Full T1me Technic an 1n the Pomeroy
people you know and
Positton
Oualll•calions Oh area E~per ence w th NOT to send money
1
1
0
Masters degree n Early apartment , multi fam ty through the ma•l untW you
1
0
Childhood Educat on or compleKes s a strong plus
have mvest1gated the
Special
Preschool
Educat on at least th1ee Requ•rements
"Mamla•n property to a h1gh I!:
years of expenence 1n the
standard curb appeal
MoNt\
held of education or evt
• Ab lily to orgamze and pn
IU LoA."J
dance ot equiValency pre! or 11ze work
__
erence for 3-5 years of pnor
"Expenenced w1lh plumb
early ch1ldhood classroom
mg drywall pa1nt1ng electn
HNOTI£EH
and/or superv1sory e~~:pen
cal
ence and a liCense appro
"Must be able lo pass back
Borrow Smart Contact
pnate to the nd!VIdual s pro
ground check
the OhiO DIVISIOn Ol
less on Length of contrac1
Salary 1s defendant upon
Fmanc1al
lnslltu!IOn s
and salary will be deter
e)(per~ence We are an equal
Off ce
of
Consumer
mmed upon employment
oppo rtun•ty employer You
A!fa rs BEFORE you rei
Subml! letter of mterest and
may apply be ema1tmg
nance your home or
resume
to
John
D
dlarue @wodagroup com or
obta1n a loan BEWARE
Costanzo Supenntendent
by mcul to Alln D LaRue 8
ol requests for any large
Athens Me•cs Educational
5th Slre et Wheeling WV
advance payments ol
Serv1ce
Center
507
26003 or by laK Ia 340 214
fees or msurance Call the
R•chland Avenue
Su1te
0720 ~O E
Oft ce
of
Consumer
H108 Athens OH 45701
AffMs toll tree at I 866
Application deadline July 6
Truck Onver wtlh Class A 278 0003 to team if the
2007
3 30 p m
The
COL Local Haul1ng Mon Fn
fliOrt gage
broker
or
AMESC-1s an equal opportu
ho'11e every mght Rebable
lender
IS
properly
mty Employer Pr0111der
responsible mature Send l1censed (Th1s •s a public
The Crmg Group needs out resume to Dnver Resume
serv ce announcement
go.ng Ohio restdents to help P 0 8())1 655 GallipOliS Oh from the Oh o Valley
w1th statew1de campa1gn 45631
Pub! sh1ng Company)
Each person wil l make 1 to 2
dollars per stgnature &amp; up to
$500 weekly Call 740-251
7591 &amp; ask lor Chns or
e ma1t
db.inas@cralg
group com

lio=ff~":":9=::==~

i

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

�I

•

·,

..

Monday, July ~. i007
ALLEYOOP

Monday, July 2, 2007

'

,

www.mydallylentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
M&amp;J

Clunlng

EllmVIew ·

Service. 14•702becl-oom2fulbath, 14•70.vorynico3BA.2BA.

Buelneoa and Roeldontial, !*&gt;'Y remodeled. Now ctn- P&lt;ivacy In country. Meigs
• llcenled In Ohio and WV. Ira! air unit and furnace call School dist. $475 + dep.

c.n 304 4U 4604

1\INIID DOWN ON
IIIOC1AL 8El=URITY ISSI?
No Foe Unlm We Win!

'

1-1188·582·3345
I,! \ I 1 " I \ I I

e~
o Down ewn with less than
parfeict credt Is available on
this 3 bedroom, 1 bath
home. Corne&lt; lol. fireplace,

CKC Toy Ret Terriers. Choo 91 Chevy E•t cob 4X4,
&amp; WhHo, 1st shofl, tails Ol!Cellent tnJd&lt; tor the year,
- ~ $250. 379- dean but has some rust,
9515or845-ll857
runa great. 740-256-6180

Apartments

740-367-7143 or 741l-794- 85~ or 741l-7&lt;2·
0022 $9,000
3001. Available July 1.
• 2&amp;3 badmom opar11110jU
-:-:-:-::--:~=--:
•C«m!! hoot &amp; J1JC
1998 Clayton Spirit IILola of 2 Br , AIC, . Very nlco. ·-~Gyor hootll4&gt;
1
extras excellent condition. Johnlon Mobi6 Home Pant •Tenanl PlY' elictric
Must ba RIC)VO(j . COM 949- 7-2003or-..&amp;-1409
(304)182-3017
after 4 p.m.
3 BR, ~&lt;•70, Addlvlllo

:~ ~o':;: 81;;.:~:

on "'-'-·

j

11652

.

4

n-- z

'····· .

Ir

r

2005 H.D.Fat Boy custom
maroon .
w/emboased
flarnes.1 ol 200 rnade,BOO
miles

r

OBO

?? Seatay, 351 ,

call

S~s

lor

ond

8Jdatrailer.$t600.ol-46-m3
88 Weltcrart 2011. v.a 350
Mercruiser, tandem alde
trailer wlbralws. gOod cond.

93 Marada 21ft. 4.3 V-6
Mercruiaer, tandem axle
lraMer wJbrakes, great condl-

r

·~on.
74~"'.160
v~
"

CAMmls &amp;

MOJ'OR Ho!IM

$155/mo.. 3br1 $181/mo.. lnPomeroyHousetorrentl3 $425.00.
No pets. Ral.
,..._
required. 740-ft43.5264.
UULIU'J
1999 Ford Ranger XLT, 4,0
More 1-4bd homes avail- 8d.,2 bath, newly remodEngine,4x4Sup.Cab,5spd
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs 0 S%. elod, totalelectnc. 7~- Boeutlfut Apll. e t - Molohan F..nnure. Great AutomatiC, $6200. (740)446-

large LA. Asking 87,500:

I

74Q.446.7029
Updated 3 BA, 1 BA """"' 1 Bfl, Dillon Rd, Gallipolis.
In Pomerov with newer k.t- lndudes waterlb'ash. WID,
nace. water heater, pkJmb- stove and fridge, a cunene
lng &amp; elodric. Call Sandy set. wood floora, covered
COllins, Sole &amp; Bloom porch, 8• 8 ~dg $365/tnon+
Real1ors, 591·9202. $25,900 53 15 dap. call 258- 1106

Elloteo. 52 Westwood eetectlon tor a Grest price.
Dnve. lrorn $365 to $560. ortvo a little,....., alotl211'1
740·446·2588.
Equal Clarl&lt;
Rd. Bidwell,
Housing Opportunity. This OH 17~173
institution is an Equal r i ....,
Opportunitu Provider and
MlnvANiiDlli
"'
·
MDaw1JB:
Empla;er.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
SIOOCoupon
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
for appllcallon &amp; lntorma.tion.
Modem 1 BA Apt. Call 4463736

c•

r

1482

I .

lOR SAlE

·-----04 Nossan XTerta 49000
mHos, $10900. 740·256·
1618
·

Ho4'111b Outlet H
1999 Men:ury Mountaineer,
Top QualltyiWM811ty t.non 4WD, 102,000· miles, Exc.
Flea Mid SIS 606-326-&lt;lm Co d
s roof Pow

Le;th.~r

~~ats.' $ 620e~

2003 Exiss 3 Horse (740)245-0344 after 5:00pm
Gooaenacicli'alter, Excellent
cond. C811304·578·2201
~jr---:411-4:---,

FoR SAUl

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuln tn 02 Dodge Dakota 4•4.
Stock. COJI Ron Evans, 1· 79000 miles. As~ng $8500.
Day 645-7920, Evening 256800-537-9529.
NEW AHD USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Aobsr
For
Coocrete,
Angte,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For · Drains,
Orlvowtlys I Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tueeda~. Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (74())4&lt;46-7300
Old piano&amp;lots of sheet
mUSic $200 080, needs to

1M! moved. 5200 BTU IVC
never used $50. 446-3460
liM
Pole

Barns

30x40)(10'

Delivered &amp; Erocted $8,595
plus Sates TaM . Call

(937)718-1471 www.nationwidepoiebarns.com

r

AKC Boston Terrier Pups. 7
wks old, both male. Parents

on prem. with pOOigree, vet
chkd, shots, wormed. 740388-9325

AKCRog-.,(F ) 11
weeks

old.

Shots

and

wonnod. COJI 740-339-J600
AKC

Reg.,

Blact.

1~5

•MO~YOXYGEN~~

a

(fami/JJ lo!flijMI
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

-

HOME

·-iiitiiiiiiiiiiiiior'
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
un~
---••t
· 1 I""eti me guar·
Nn ona
nt
L 1 at
fu
a ee. oca r erences r·
nlahed. EstabMshed ·1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-66!1-0007

Wise

t•

AU types of concrete
Owner: Rick Wise

Pw
Pw

740-992,5929
740-416-1698

P•tlo 1nd POfCh o.ck1

.

WV038725

V.C . YOUN G Ill
\lli;_l

f'
,

J "

fl.Jl

1111 1&lt; y

ll ~ l '

il

I

I Jl1 '

f

'I"

t

1

•

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Skiing
• Replacement
Windows
• Rooting
• Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room AddiUons

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR 'llJU!!

-=======

Owner:
JamesKeeaeell
742-2332

Advertise in
this space
for no per
month

-;======:.....:======:;
Card ol Thank~

Card ol Thanks

I wish to thank friends, fa:mily and

my church family for all their
support during my recent Inness.
The food, flowers, cards, phone
calls and prayers were all
appreCiated. A special thank you to
Dr. Canady &amp; Associates at Holzer
Hospital. Pastor Jim Corbitt we
love you.
Sam &amp; Kas Seckman

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

lab portions

of

Olive

Puppies, $150.00 .. .741).742· Township Roads T73,
2968,._ If no answer, please T296, T1038, T1053,
leave message.
11054, T1055, T1056,
the
T1057
whhln
Purebred Shel1ie $150.00 Community of lllppers
each. First shots &amp; wormed Plaine and 915 L.F. of
no papers. 7-'0-698-G475. portlona of Orange

Townahlp Roads T296
and T1036 within the
Community of lllppera
Plains·. Tlto engineer's
estimate for this prol·
ectla $581,357.000.
DOMESTIC
STEEL
USE REQUIREMENTS
AS SPECIFIED IN SEC·
TION 153.011 OF THE
REVISED
CODE
APPLY TO THIS PRO·
JECT. COPIES OF
SECTION 153.011 OF
THE REVISED CODE
CAN BE DBTAIIIIED
FROM ANY OF THE
OFFICES OF T~E
OEPARTMENT
OF
ADMINISTRATIV'E
SERVICES.
Bid documents may be
aecured at tho office of
The . Melga County
Engineer,
. 34110
Fairgrounds
Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769;
Phone Number 740·
992·2911 lor a $10.00
non-refundable tee.
Each bid must be
accompanied by either
8 bid bond In the

BARNEY

H11nae• ca~le&amp;rr AMJIIIille

FELLEI&lt; SOLD ME A
I&lt;ACIN' PIGEON !!

www.ttr' c:VlMif.N' kate)..,.

BUM

HE IS, 'BUT
HE PREFEI&lt;S

NASCAR!!

NO GOOD AT
LONG
DISTANCE?

Rt. 7, Tuppers Plaine, OH

Full Service Auto Repair
Oil Change, Tune-Up, Engine
Diagnostics, Full Brake Service, Air
Conditioning Recharge &amp; Repair,
Alignment, Custom Exhaust
Rocky Hupp-Owner

ROBERT
BISSELl
CIISliiCtlll
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

THE BORN LOSER

~ !)1\:&gt;N'T K00W 'IOU 1-\t-.1&gt; m "''
\l{\'ER£SI'
I!&gt;I

Jelr BlsaeU, Manager
Compost
$3SAScoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29

'

35Nor'-er
36 Adopt
39Wu-

23 Prlncou
Lolo'o
4 Shalpened
brother
24 Conidl
up
s Hod a mort· ohoula
gage
25 Cinch
6 Btllboy'o
26 Have 1

bontll

1...,._

42 Bubble -

2 In I while
3 Variety

43 Conaon o1
Zeutt
44 "lied" (ff

"Odyuey"
45 h'o - mow
46 FUITJ Jldl

oily

meal

7 lloqgollan
-de..rl
&amp;Bouquet

9 Drlnko wilh

turoue

_,
11 Sturglo

a..m

1&amp; C.lltr'a

40 Southem 11.
vloltor
41 Method
12 Anuthetlc
42

39 Ttlbooa

27 lvon or
47 Bonn alngtl
Nlcholll
46 B 28Ch..,_of.
-51 r.ShOgun"
lorlng
29 Hurrfatd
eppsntl
31 Luning
Toworolte
35 Stare
37 Son'--

Lawn Seed,
Fertillz!!l' and
Showmaster Show
· Feeds
WE'VE GOT OTHER

Pt--"!S, NI\TE.

140·882·1611

REMEMBER,

SOP:R'(, DUDE.

CAN'T(;() TO
THE BEACH.

lUHdoy, duty 3, 20117
lly a.mlco- Ooot
Do not allOW youraelt to get dlaoouragad
H an endea.vor In which you're lnvollled
doee not gat off to an auaploloua etan.
Tenacity wm reap the rew.rdl you •re
ueklng.
·
·
CANCER (June 21.Juty 22)- It IIi beet
not to auume any new lndebtednell,
eapeeillly lf you are tl}tng to ild YQUnl&amp;lt
of an old obligation. 'rtlu may n.ver know
wf)an you add the atraw rhal breakS the
camel's back.

r

Stop &amp; Compare
Oti .. .R\GHT.

We Deliver To You I
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System
~ ....~."f'l'l:i"1"ri!'P.!§!P:I'I•a.

NO ONE CAN
ACCUSE you
OF VAIN
REPETITIONS,
CAN THEV, SIR?

'

,,,I

.,'

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gaiii~Us
446.,11007
'

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Before lOCUS·
lng another ol dragging h;la or her feet, be
sure·you're Doing all you can to aooom·
pUsh everything thai le!'&amp;Qulred ot you, or
. llat finger Mil end up pointing back at
. - - - - - - - - - . you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22)
THE PANCAKES wt:l\1~ 1 Occa•lonally, we all have 10 Pl!r'form
eome tasks Of" aaslgnments we find dllGETTING COLD.•
tlsteful, and tOday may be juat one of
thoee days lor you. It you smllelnatead ot
trown, lt'l make h easier.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-Qct. 23) the w•y between

Slay Oi.ll ol

two friends who are

In

lhe middle ol a oontl'O'Ver&amp;lal alluatlon
that neither Is likely to solve. Your Input
would compliCate manere, not resolve

them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)- You kOOW"
better than to allow a disagreement
between !amity members to be aired In
public, ao It you have anything to aay
about it, don 't let It happen. It'll make
everyone look bad.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - II Ia
always beat to be enooufllglng rather
than critical when oltlera G)(prese their
Ideas or plans In front of you; ao II thlala
the caee, make t:er11.ln your comments
are only conatructlve onee.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan, 19) Balore taking on a new long-term obtlgatlon, review your financial situation from
all angles to make sure II won't tum out
to be a hardship on yourself or othera .

SUNSHINE CLUB

H1ll s Se lf
Storage

GE£2 .. .A /JJf Cf RXD

AND SlUFF fr;ovl (111~
IS 1VIWIIJG CUT 1D Bb~~S

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4sn1
740-949-2217

-

......-J~P;J /

.•

Manlay'a

by Luis campos
Celel::tir, O!Nf ~tina •e Cl'lliad lrcrn Ql.dlkN by IIIOOUS peopt, J*l: Rill!'_.·
EUIIMtlll' In !he CiQhei Minds lOt Wll'ler.

Today's cllJe: Nequals 0
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YI'B

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BGVHXBKM WUWHGRY

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WXGZKL .

TWKDBX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Votive actieved success in your fiald when you
don1 know whtlher what j01J'r8 doing is work or play.' • Warren Beatty

.)

GARFIELD

1

ISIIIOU&amp;H

41110

BEWARE
OF'

. . . . . . . .12:11..

KARAOKE.

DOG

PIYIIITIPPIICES.

•

GRIZZWELLS
IF 1 TELL '/oU
SOME'T\-\lt-16

OSFLTY

I"

R EV E V

S CA B I

~

Q

;
N

I

"

1lbowing itiy bttlband my ann
load ofbags, [ explain'd dtat a
baigain wn.q something you

cln't use at a price ~~- cm t

• r::~:~~UMiERED I' I' I' I'
~ l _ll Qn'tl

. I.

AN)'MORE'r' .

ARLO&amp;JANIS

with whom
you're Involved feel manipulated or used,
they'll take a hike.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - If you
p(ace frivolOus activities ahead of your
responsibilities and duties, ii'H provide
you with a lot of fun, but It won't be worth
. what you'll lose. Your regrets could be
monumental.
·TAURUS (April 2Q-May 20) _._ Roll up
your sleeves and get gi:llng early,
bacause there aren 't likely to be any !Tee

rides. Wherever you want to go, you'll
haw to find • way to get there all on your
own.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Be prepared to deal with an Individual who has
an unyiek:llng peraon~llty, and you jult
might be able to handle this overbearing
peraon. Trying to reason with him or her
will be an exarcln In futility.

SOUP TO NUTZ

'loUR

1\AF

•

I

I' I' I' I' I' I
I I 1 I I ·1

the ~~ part of dinner is dessert. when you ' re too full 10 eat

fU!4~V ASOUT
WA~~E~ . CA~
YoU I&lt;~E'P IT
Ut41)~

1

Sc:v.M-lETS ANSWJIRS ; - 29 - o '
Revoke- Fr&gt;me - Zippy - Feline · ANYMORE
"Have you ever 001.iced," the woman asked her frieod, "!hat ·

care of youraelf. It persons

'lliAT I!IGN'S
NOT (!IC$

........ ru . . . . . . . ..

l'.i r f I I ll .

dOwn the line.
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-.Feb. t9) - It you
feel stymied by a lack ot suppon !rom
those you expect to cover your baCk , be
patient. II you remain calm . 'f'O'l'll be able
to persevere: if you panic, you're dead In
the water.
PISCES (Feb .•2o-March 20) - II'&amp; a mla·
take to believe 'Others wid do fhlrlaa for
you ltlat you're quite capable of t&amp;klng

Bacycllng
....

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Wide Variety or

Free

amount of 10% of the
bid amount wllh a
surety satisfactory to
1ho aforesaid Meigs
County Commissioner
or by certified check,
caahle111 check, or lot·
ter of credit upon a sol·
vent bank In tho
amount of not leas
than 10% ol the bid
amount In the favor of
the etoreoald Meigs
County Commissioner.
Bid bonds shall be
accompanied by Proof
of-Authority ol tho olfl·
clal or agent algnlng
the bond.
Bids shall be aaoled
and marked aa Bid lor:
Meigs County Paving
Project· Round 20 and
mailed or delivered to:
Meigs
County
Commissioners
The Meigs County
Courthouse, Second
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(6) 22, 25 (7) 2

All

Thle dosl occurr*l diilng a learn match
In England. Look at the Eatt hand. \llur
partner opens one heart After a pu1 on
your right, would you pose or respond
one opade?
Eeat pasaod CNer one heort, which Is
blzarre. True, bld&lt;lng night wort&lt; oot
badly, but to pose wl1h IHI diBI~Ilut\on
does not raat right. 'fbu oould go down In
one heart ond 1M! laydown lor game (or
slam!) In spades or dlarnonde · the situ·
auon lor East·West here. One hasn
would go down three or four; and live
spades ond live dlarnonde are laydown
(unt&gt;eotabte).
South should have passed out one
heart. Where were aJ the spade&amp;?
When South baloncod wtlh two ctube
and North raised very ceut\ou81y to three
duba, East should have ooa-l&gt;ld lour
duba to show his -ouHer, but pelhaps
alrald of a mloundenllandlng, he select·
od three diamonds- wrong!
Agalnit live cilbe, West lod the spede
ace and East played o discouraging two,
West, though, not expecting his partner
to have s1&gt; spada&amp;, tried 10 cash the
spade ~ng.' SOUih rutle&lt;l, knocked out
the ci&gt;b ece, and clalmetl;'.'
East ollould have signaled whh the
spade jack st tnck one. This unusually
high card would havo scroomed lor a
shill to thO higher-ranking side auh,
hearts.
1\me In tomofJOW lor the action at the
other table.

David Lewis
740-992-6971

NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS
S..led proposalo lor
the Melga County
Paving Prolect· Round
20 will be received by
the M.elgo County
Commloslonera
at
their office at The
Meigs
County
Courthouse, Second
Street, Pon ..roy, Ohio
45769 until 1:15 p.m.
Local Time, July 5,
2007, and then opened
and read aloud.
The project provides
lor paving 15, 940 L.F.
ot' Malga CR 17
Cotterill RCIIICI, 13,675
L.F. ot Melga CA 29
Bowmana Aun, and
33,211 L.F. of Meigs CR
32 Eagle Ridge Road
ond paving 5665 L.F. ol

••pus

DIIOn

happen.

26 Yeal!l Experience

NOTICES

"~:

Pl8s

gun

Mork Twain IBid: 'WhV shouldn1 truth 1M!
stranger than llctlon? Fiction, all,
has to make sense: ·
Yes! In \he bridge ctaesroom thO flCIIonal
deals are sane. althot,toh the reaults are
eornellmeslesa so. But when you get to
real deals st a tournamont, weir&lt;! things

740-667·3177

Remodeling
N.wG•rlfl•
ElectriCII I Plumbing
Roofing I Gutter•
VInyl Siding a.. P•lntlng

Pass

Eul

The weird world L..
of real-life bridge

St.

Room Addldon• a

North

cedi

20 Dog doya In 36 UHF port

Lunvnoxe• 22 Quick tum 41

1

23 Unlucky
gamblor
26 Guldlo .
30 Ann bone
31 Tollor'o old
32 Nuko
33 Green porral
34 Flngorprlnt•
lng nHd

Opening lead; • A

YOUNG 'S

Waterproofing

9
K Q 10 7

Weal

DOWN

Sclrlot
22 Runway
olghl

21

Vulllerable: East-Weal

740· 742-2293
Please leave messa e

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-

IU~

-· Q J to • "
• 8

Dealer: Weal

&amp; Removal

0870, Rogers ljasament

·-

17 Crept
19 Whocluntt

"•l'

Trimming

*Insured
E
.
d
xpenence
References Available!
Call Gary Stanle'y @

16~~·

t KB
•QJtOS42

740.653--9657
~=:::!!===;~~~!~~=~
~:;=:::;::=::;:=~

I•
IMPRoVEMtNTS
.

a

6J75432

•
"

'nsu'""
0 ·-•·•
,,
·~ &amp; i;NJ/\lCr\1

"'Prompl and Qualiry
k
Wor
*Reasonable Rates

A K 10 6

•l86S2
• a2
• A 3

Seamless Gufters
Rooting, Siding, Gut1ers

~~--~~~-..., •

SINs

MONTY

14 e::"duclo
15 Clumoy

But

West

I Stanley Tree-

1988 NomadCamper, twin
bunks &amp; lront bod. E•cellent
condlllon. Bathlw tub&amp;
shower.Pull-behind. 3dog
frick ;aw mill, make an offer.
949-2115.

I

I

riO

t A 7t
• K 91

P"'""'

10-Evwnono
11 Htindng
knife
13 Kind ol

:O'
Q.
"AUt

. •RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
.

H&amp;H

j

Molu!Eibml
IOilltENr

Free Estlmatee

89 BayNner 27H. New v-e
740·367-o536
351 OMC Eng. Fridge, ':::~:;:::;;::;::~
stove ,
ba1hrooml8hower. f
Sleeps 4-B." tandem a~a
trailer wlbrakes, great
Guttering
shepo. 740·256-6160
.

...,...,...tl

j

740-3&amp;7-o544

--'--::---:-=--::--:-:-::

j

2tullbathowlwhi~tubs

Local·~--ctor
"""''u•

740-256-8160

....

r

Roofing, Siding,
Soffil, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
E'ectn'c,
Plumbl'ng,
,.
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
A""'tl
'ons
uu•

I

j

For listings 1-800-559-4109 52&amp;4.
x Ft44.
------Large 4 bedroom house In
Newly buil hOme in Green Pomeroy, ·very clean, newty
Twp. on King Ad off · ramcx::le&amp;ed, new cabinets,
Neighborhood Rd. Approx new carpet, (740)9-49-2303
1200 sq.ft. 3 acres. rn112 BA

----.t

~--·---'i10.

CORNER STONl
~~~~;;:;;;~ CONSTRUCTION

Irlb

r.

QrWinf•
..... TIUOII
.,..,..
,,_......_.
~=~

new,prica

·-~a. Runs """" ta·•-m
.....,.., ·~

....,_,

·-"""iiiioiiiiiioio-"

since

·---

L- ·
I.

rjQ

0::::-:''
TopoofrtMo .......... .....

LwiiliiiiiiiiiiOii--,1
-

==· I

32

I

~41 W~~

modern kitchen, ~ tub,
•mr--~--~ $19,000
Payment SIOUnd $550 p&lt;r New 3 Bedroom homes rrom $250 Mo 1nc1 wa1 $200
., pels.
. 740-985er,
0
- ••ta.
LMngat1 Villa...;
and 2 r10
FARM
month. 740.367-?129.
$214.36
por
month,
Includes
~5.oalt-no
Badroom
meny _.des. delivery &amp; _
...~
11M Tatum or. New set-up. (740)385-2434
- - - - - - - ManorandfllvoraldeAptt.ln •-•~illiiiijiii
· iii-"

Haven.WV 3W'2tla Ranch, N"1
sed 3 bod oom homo M~:.._.'-• lor ~· M$51dd92.e ~:;.!."'!"_! E:.~ 0% Financing- 36 Mos.
1g
2
ce u
r
M.......,...... • area, no .,_.,.,
....,._,.iNY'f. 'fUCII avellab'e now on John
.sunroom, car gar. gTeat vinyl/shingle. WUI het!J with (740)092·5858
Houslng Opportunhy. Thla
~rak ·
- ~-·!
. orea. 0 ; 304-e75-3637 E; del- 740 , •• '""7
I Ill lion I
E I -·
- u ·~
~
R odelod 2b "1 "" no u
a sn
qua 1.811% Fixed Rete on John
SPECIAL FHA &gt;FINANCE H::::.rn. WV ~l5/month: ~nhy Provider and Ooere Oolon -Csrrnlchael
4
3 or bedroom house lor Program SO Down, H you RelarancesiDoposlt mpiclyer.
E~(740~24t2.
aafe in New Haven. The
La d
Fe 11
·
bathroom 18 ......,... rernod- own
n or use
m Y r~ired ~ Pets 304-57&amp; lmmacuta1e 2 bedroom
4506 Oeutz 45 HP• 3 ,.....
7
'"'"'
Land We own the Barlk your 4037
....,,
eted, ""'"'od 1ron1 porch, Approvod606-4 74-6380
,
opartment Now carpet &amp; llleeet. tndep. PTO dutch,
decl&lt; ~'lf&amp;g&amp;, lencad in ~--;...;..;~.....-::---,
Allulnmn'S .
freshly painted &amp; wat nnes. good shape.
bed&lt; yard, - central heat
Lors &amp;
.
FOR RINr
decorated, WID -~P- Asking $3800. 256-6309
and aJr, new crown molding
ACREAGE
• __
·
• ' Beautiful country setting . ....:......=.;__ _ _ _
and baseboards, new dish
Uult see to appt'&amp;Ciate. John Deer 5500 4WD, 73
waaher end 0\/en. Asking 1 56 Acres Ohio River 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom ~ S4001rno. (814)595-m3 or HP, cab, air, 540 loader,
'··-• below recent •nnralsal
for Rent, Meigs County, In 1-800-798-4686.
bucket, manure fork$, round
.....
frontage. Gas, Electric, town No Pets oeposH
nd
of 801&lt;. Call 304-882·3??3 Water on ~te. ol46-0974
'
'
bale tork, wry good cc ·
fCI' more details.
Required, (740)992·5174,..- Mldcleport, Boedl St .. 2 br. 741).256-8864
2 Acre B~g. lot on State (740)441.0110.
furnished aparlmant, utiiHiea
3bd
GALLIPOLIS
ld depoail &amp; fe
Kiefer .. Built· Valley-Bison7
1 and 2 bedroom apan- no
pa pets
' (740)992.0165
re renoea, Horse
and
Livestock
Forecloeurel Buy for Route · 304-675442! .
~toAn.o/ . 5% 4aores+locat9dat9617SR manta, fumi81ledhand untur'
· l'rlllle,.Loadmax$50,90010n~~mo
dn,
20yrs 0 8%. For htings
775 w/watar and elec nlahed, and ~uses 1n Middleport, North 4th AviJ., 2 GDO!eneck, Dumps, &amp;
call800-559-4109 MF254 • hookuPfor house plus barn Pomeroy and_ Mn:ktleport, br. furnished apartment, Utility· Alums Aluminum
and sm.btdg. Paved drlw securhy depooH required, no deposit &amp; relerences, no 'llollo&lt;a· B&amp;W Goosened&lt;
""1· Asking $21000_ 24s- pats, 740-092·2218.
pOta. 17401992.0185
Hitches· Trailer Parts.
Local compa"' offering "NO 5145, S&amp;rioos offers only.
BR
Apl,
WID
Hookups.
Carmichael
Trailers.
1
DOWN PAYMENr proacres
more
or
less,
Quiet,
WOOded
IOQatlon,
New
2BR
aporlmonts.
~(7_4d..:l446__
2•.,.1_2
_
_
-:-:-:
grams for you to buy )lOur 55
$69,000.
Call740.256-92-47
Free
Internet,
www.sprlndWasherlttryer
hookup,
MBS8ay
Ferguson
150
home Instead of renting.
valley-properties .com stove/refrlgefalorlnclucled. Tractor
with
loader.
• 1QO% finarldng
I{ I \. I \I "
(740)339.Q362
AlSO, units on SA 160. Pets International 574 , 165
'
• LBBS than perfect credit ~~=~~~~~ 2 IM!drooma, living room, Welcome! (740)44H194 · Massey Ferguson, g84
accepted
~chen 1 bath ap·-·nt T
•
h
International, 9N Ford,
• Payment could be the
IJot.S&amp;ci ..
Nl
•
'
ao ... ..,
ara
.own ouse ( )286-8522
same as rent
RINr
have
cenlral
air.
Furnished
Apa.rtmen18,
Very
Spacious,
740
1011
MCHtgage
Locators.
with couch, chairs, washer, 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
(740)367-QOOO
dryer, stova, microwave, Bath, AduH Fool &amp; Baby
LlvFsroi:K
$155/mol Buy 4bd HUO bods, dinning tabla and Fool, Patio, Start $4251Mo. · - - - - - - "
Beoutltui·Middlaport home! hamel S% dn, 20ym 0 8%. chatm $400 deposit. $450 a No Pets, Loaso Plu&amp;
.
5 miniature h01S8s. 1 Sial·
3BR, 2BA, full basement1 For Uslings 800-559-4109 month coli 304-882•2523
n..v..• A
1
112 car garage wtth a room x1709
- num- Becurtty
............... equ red, lion 2 mares 1 colt and 1
leaw a ma018ge end
,....._.,..
. ·C.:=
dwarf, 1o
C
1,
1740,......._
obow. Many NEW leaturesll ---::-:-:-:--:-:---:m.... wra
rna1e a11
~-..-a...v
8r
House
In
ber
~
not
at
home
1
•
1
2
Muat see ltlis onel 740-41&amp;
J~V~KHU~,
-::--:::::-:-:--:--:::-::- ·
388-8670
1548
Now Haven, $325/monlh, 3 Br.. S395 M ptue Ut.,Ptua TwllngnapptA~~rtoril~-~ngl·
"'·v&amp;
$325/daposlt No Pets. """
1st of M a~ St
~~~
-"
"'"
(304)882·3852
~..... av.
· '" · list lor Hud-IIUI&gt;olzod 1· b
GRAIN
' - - - ' - - - - - - Racine. 740-247-4292.
apartment,for
' th~ ___
1302 Hogg St, 2br House 3 Rms &amp; ·bath. WID hookvp, etdorlyldlsol&gt;od call 875· Uwstock Feed, shelled corn
-Central HeaUAC, 1 year clean, No pets. 446-1519
6679
Equal
Housing $5.20/50 lb. &amp; horse crunch
Lease, No Pets Security
·
Oppon ...
Depos~ Ty 304·675·4030 4RM &amp; Both, stove ,lridgo,
un..,
$7.22150
&amp;
AIINII_..Idnrll.. ng
utilities pald, upstairs, 46
SPACE
3 Bedroom House In Olive
St. "No
pels.
FOR RPNr
In this MWSpllper II
IUbftot to tht Flderll
Syracuse. $500/monlh + "$4501month. 448-3945
~
• 11111~-~----.
depoaH No Pete. (304)875·
•
·
F1lr Houlhlg Act of 11&amp;1
5332 weekends 740-591 CommlirCial building "For
which h lllofllll to
ldvwtl..... , ,
0265
Rent"...1900 oquare teet, oft L,-...,;-iii;;;,_.j
atreet poriOOg. Clraat 00.·
pelfl•••ce, llmltallon or
ttonl 749 Third Avenue In 03 Ford Taurus, 54,000
dlecrlmlnldon bued on
Local company offering "NO
r~e~, COlor, re~.-an
Gatllpollt. Rent $350/mo. miles. $5900 OBO. 740·256·
DOWN PAYMENr prohunlllllltatut or n811on~l
Call Wayne (404)456-3802 1618
origin, or any Intention ta
grams lor you 10 buy your
m~banysuch
home Instead of renting.
Prime commercial apace tor 1954 Chevrolet 210 2 Door
.,.,,...,ICt,llrnbtlon ar
' 100% finoncing
A, HIDDEN TREASURE! rent at Sprlngwlley Plaza'. 350 V·8 350 Automatic
diKrtmlnadon."
$13,500.00. (740)949-2909
• Less than pertect credit ' 'Laurel
Commons Call645-2192.
acceplod
Apartmente. Lorgast In the
W.
11990 Chevrolet lumina
T1tls "' PIP"' wtl not
• Payment could be the areaf Beautlfuly reOOIIBted
ArmD
Euro, 2-door, 1992 GMC
knowinglyOccept
10 RENr
throughout Including bram
rvr r.~~l same as rent.
4x4 Sierra 304-675-2929
Mortgage
Locators. new kllchen and bath.
Mtlltlwhlchlsln
(740)367.0000
Stoning at $405. Call today! LANDOWNERS -NEED 1995 Chevy Lumina, runs
YIDI.Uon of tht law. Our
........... heraby
For rant or lor sale 2 BA .(304)273-3344
EXTRA FARM INCOME? great. 446-9370
lntonnest thlt all
Nice Remodeled Home In Ap t
t
Ita~
We have responstbte sports· 87 Mt)rcury Sable, . runs
dweiUngs ldvert~Md In
town, No Pets, Renovated,
ar men ava
e now m8n looking to lease hooting
Rlverbend Apta. New Haven property In this luea. good, new parts. $375 080.
•• thll newtplpet' . . .
All new carpet, Call 'fo!V· Now accepting ~ca.· Mldweet Trophy Leases Inc. 140-446--2923
·
nallllble on en equal
-nhy-.
!740)446' 7425
tiona lor Hud·S~bSidlzod. (304)532·6015 or 1·600· 97 Ford Mustang. V-6 5
For Rent: Brk:k house in one Bedroom Apti. Ulllllet 8Q8-1073
d $2800. 740-379Fof salel1and contract. 3 BR Mercerville, 1BR Apt, all uti!- Included. Basad on 30% of
=~ 1'
house in Gampolls, WID !ties &amp; cable paid In CrOYm adjusted Income.
Call Respotlllble TN hunter took- ~riir.;.-:::---~
15
connection $1500 down cC::'hy=.17:..40::::)2:::58-8=1"32--:--:- (304)882· 3121 a'llliloble tor 1 to ·laaae
lend
TRUCKS
c
Senior and D-od People. ng .
your .
Of
lOR SAIE
$400/mo or rent $475/mo. HUD HOliES! 4bd only Equal Housing Opportunity rarm'lor hunting. P1iaa call L - - - - - - ·
Also 1 BA in Gallipolis $750 5155/mo., :3bd $ 181 /mo.,
423·748·7045 or email down $200/mo or rent More t-4bd homes avail- Apartment for rent, 1-2 rdaVIIOMUSFIBEA.com
1995 Ford F·250 Pictt-up
$250/mo.Call Wayne 404· able. 5% dn, 20 yrs 0 8%. Bdrm., remodeled, new cartruck good mechanical
456-3902forinfo.
For listings 1-800-559-4109 pel, stove &amp; frlg., water,
cond. 5.9 L 5 speed trans.,
HUO HOMESI 4bd only X F144.
sewer, trash .pd. Midd.laporl.
lkxmnn
S4000 Firm. 740-9-49-2127.

Serv~

'

Anowor to Piovio&lt;lo

1 HoiH&gt;Ig
morMI
4 Tropical
7 Acqulm

Alder

I

j

t998 - . , &amp; 2 acres. 3 SdiOCI dlarrk:t 741l-367·
•
FolSm:
bd. &amp; 2 baths~ New Urna ??ll2or36H272
oa'llwlf:
in Rutland for sale or rent. a••
-utl1u1 Dlo -r tn-~ ' In
-7~992-3514.
ntYV
Kanauga- td8al
for""'"'
1 Of 2
Wanted to Ex~nge or
Great used 2005 3 bedroom people, refefencet, No petl,
Trade Wlltem Books ao.t.
16x80 with vinyl/shingle. Loc. 5 mi. from Gavin. 0.,.. A1*t Malon lbr, tuly
· ·
Mustseii,On~$25,995with (740)441.0181
==:~~
delivery. Call (740)38!4387 -For
- rant
___2 -:Bedr--ooo-m-lrl-ller, 8187 Of 304-!IIH107 Attsr 5pm

--2334-

Phillip

Mini Doohihund pups Y8l
VAI6
&amp; wooned
FOR SMJ:
.
~ '7YIQ old $125 · - - - - - - · ·
7410.3811-0318 Morn&amp; Dad
('1~~~~;;1

2698.

7

ACRqSS

-- ---

·- - -- -'- --

�•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel:com

·Monday, July 2, 2007

Suspects in terror
plot identified as
Iraqi and Palestinian·
physicianss, A2 ·

National scoreboard
• 6. Atlanta 5, 10 innings
. ~lorida
St. Louis 11 , Cincihnali 7
York 107; BRobertB, 8allimore, 103; I Wasl'1ington 3, PiMsburgh 2
Pola~co, Detroit, 102; MYoung, Teus, ! Philadelphia s·. N.Y. Mets 3

.

•

OCabreta .
Los
Angeles,
110;
MOrdonez, Detroit, 109; Jeter, New

PRO BASEBALL ·
American League ·
e..t Dlvlelon
WLPctGB
Boston
49 31 .613
Toronto
39 42 .481 10'12
New York
37 41 .474 11
Baltimore
35 45 .438 14
"' Tampa Bay
33 47. 413 16
Centre! Dlvi•lon
WLPct . GB
Cleveland
49 32 605
Detroit
47 33 .588 ·n
Minnesota
42 38 525
Chicago
35 43. 449
Kansas City
34 48 .415
Weet Dlvlsloq
W L P"tt GB
Los Angeles
51 31 .622
Seattle
45 33 .577 4
Oakland
42 39 .519 8''1
Texas
34 47 .420 16 '~-,

98
Houston 12, Colorado 0
OOUBLES- MOrdonez. Detroit , 34 ; Chicago Cubs 5, Milwaukee 1
DOrtiz, Boston , 27; VGUerrero, Los. · San Francisco 13, ArlzonaO
' Angeles. 26; OCabrera . Los Ange les , I L.A. Dodgers 5, San Diego 0
24 ; Cano, New York, 23: Posada. New .
Monday'• Games
York , 23; AHill , Toronto, · _22 ; 1 Milwaukee (Suppan 8-7 ~ at Pittsburgh
Granderson, Detroit , 22; YouklliS , (\fan Benschoten 0·2), 7:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (L1Uy 6·4 ) at
Boston, 22 ; MYoung, Texas, ~2 .
TRIPLES- Granderson, Detroit, 15: Washington (Simontacchi 5-5). 7:05
I Crawford. Tampa Bay, 8; OeJesu ~ .
p.m
Kansas City, 6; TPena, Kansas City, 5; Philadelphia (Moyer 7-5) a1 Houston
Teahan , Kansas City, 5; Cora , Boston , I (W,Williams 3-10), 8:05p.m.
5; 5 are tied with 4.
(Webb 8-5) at St. Louis
1 Arizona
HOME RUNS-ARodriguez, New (Looper 6·6), 8:10p.m.
York , 28 ; Morneau. Minnesota, 20; , N.Y. Mets (Giavine 7-5) at Colorado
.
CPena. Tampa Bay, 18; Shetlield, 1 (Hirsh 3·7), 9:05p.m.
Detroit , 18; Rios, Toronto, 17; THunter. 1 Florida (Mitre 2·3) at San Diego
1 Minnesota, 17: Sexson . Seattle, 15:' (D.Wells 3-5), 10:05 p.m.
Konerko, Chicago , 15.
Atlanta (Smaltz 9·4) at L.A. Dodgers
1 STOLEN
BASES-BRoqerts, . (Lowe8·7).10:10p.m.
Baltimore . 25: Sizemore. Cleveland, r
Tueaday's Gamea
Seturday's Games
I 23;
!Suzuki, Seattle, 23; Crawford, I Milw. aukee ar Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m.
Oakland 7. N.Y. Yankees 0
Tampa Bay, 20: JLugo .. ~stan, 20; I Chicago Cubs at Washington. 7:05
Minnesota 8, Detroit 5
Lofton, Texas, 20: F1ggms, Los p.m
Tawas 5, Boston 4
Angeles, 19.
San Francisco at Cincinnati, 7:10p.m.
Cleveland 8, Tampa Bay 6
, PITCHING
(9
Decisions)N.Y. Mets at Colorado, 8:05p.m.
·
Baltimore 6, L.A. Angels 3
Bondarman. Oat roil, 9·1 •. 900, 3.58;
Philadelphia a! Houston , 6:05p.m.
Chicago White Sox 3, Kansas City 1, . Sabathia, Cleveland, 12·2, .857, 3.20; Arizona at St, Louis, 8:10p.m.
tO innings
I Beckett, Boston , 11 ·2. . 846, 3.37; Florida at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Seattle 8, Toronto 3
! Haren, Oakland, 10·2, .833, 2.20; 1 Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
Sund•y•s Gamee
I Verlander, Detroit , 9·3, .750, 3.18;
Halladay, Toronto, 9·3, .750, 4.27;
UAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Oakland 11. N.Y. Yankees 5
CleVeland 3, Tampa Bay 2
I KEscobar,
Los Angeles, 9·3, .750,
NATIONAL LEAGUE
1

1

1

~

Richmond

~~~~~~

I

Baltimore at Chicago White Sox, 8:11
p.m.
L.A. Angels at Texas, 8:35 p.m.
Toronto at Oakland, 10_:05 p.m.

MAJO~ LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LE"AGUE
BATTING- MOrdonez, Detroil, .369;
!Suzuki, Seattle, .365; Jeter, New York,
.338; OCabrera, Los Angeles, .337;
Posada, New York, .336; Polanco,
Detroit, .330; YoukiHs, Boston, .329.
RUNS-AAodriguez, New York, 74;
Sheffield, Detroit. 69; Sizemore,
Cleveland, 67; MOrdonez, Detroit, 65;
DeJesus.
Kansas
City,
59;
Granderson, Detroit, 58; Aios, Toronto.
58.
RBI-AAodriguez, New York, 79;
VGuerrero,
Los . Ange les,
73;
MOrdonez, Detroi t, 68: VMartinez ,
Clev&amp;land, 63; THunter. MinneSota, 63;
Sosa, Texas, 63; Morneau, Minnesota ,
61.
HITs-ISuzukl,
Seattle,
119:

I Milwaukee
I Chicago
St. Louis .

~31,'1

BAITING-Holliday, Colorado, .349;
I Delee ,
Chlcad'o, .346; OYoung ,
1 Washington, .340; MiGabrera, Florida,
.329; CJones, Atla nta, .327; Utley,
1 Philadelphia, .326; Renteria , Atlanta,
1 .324.
RUNS-Rollins, Philadelphia, 66;
HaRamlrez, Florida, 65; Uggla, Florida,
'1 64; Utley, Philadelphia, 59; Fielder.
Milwaukee, 57; JBReyes, New York,
56; Dunn, ClnclnnaU, 54.
I ABI-CaLee, Houston, 68; Fielder,

4

I

I

GB

.580 S\2
.500 9''
.462
l"l
Ptttsburgh
.432 12
1 Houston
3~7 .427 12 "'•,
· Cincinnati
31 51 .378 . 16~.
Weat Division
W L Pet GB
San Diego
46 34 .575
los Angeles
46 36 .56 1 1
Arizona
46 37 .554 1'h
Colorado
39 43 .476 8
San Francisco 35 45 .438 ""11

I

47
40
36
35

4
5

34
40
42
46

Saturday'&amp; Game•
.Milwaukee 13, Chicago Cubs 4
N.Y. Mats 8, Philadelphia 3
Atlanta 6, Florida 5
Colorado 5, Houston 0
Pittsburgh 7, Washington 2
Cincinnati 5, St. Louis 1
San Francisco 4, Arizona 1
San Diego 3, L.A. Dodgers 1. 12
innings
Suqday's Games

Uggta,tFlorida, 30; Holliday, Colorado,
29; DeLee, Chicago, 26: Church,
Washingto n, 24; AdGonzalez, San
Diego, 23; BHall, Milwaukee. 23;
ASoriano, Chicago, 23.
TRIPLES- Rollins, Philadelphia, tO:
JBReyes, New York, 8; Johnson,
Atlanta, 6; CGuzman, Washington, "6;
Pence, Houston,-"5; KMatsui, Colorado,
5: Amezaga, Florida, 5; OHudson,
Arizona, 5; Byrnes, Arizona, 5;
DRoberts, San FrancisCo. 5.
HOME RUNS-Fielder, Milwaukee ,
27; Dunn, Cincinnati, 23; Griffey Jr.,
Cincinnati, 22; Howard, Phi ladelphia,
19; Hardy, Milwaukee,. 18; Uggla.
Florida, 17; MiCabrera, Florida, 17.
STOLEN BASES-JBReyes, New
York, 40; Pierre , Los Angeles, 31;
HaAamirez , Florida, . 25; Victorino ,
PhiiS.delphia, 25: Taveras, Colorado.
20; Wright, New York, " 17; CHart.
Milwaukee, 16.
PITCHING (9 Decislons)-Pen ny, Los
Angeles, 10·1, .909, 2.00; Peavy, San

36 ·

~~ !~ ·!~~

JY,

8 ~,

.
.
36 49 .424 11
weet Division
W L Pet GB
Toledo
·
4
Indianapolis
~
~~
-~~~
2
4
Loulsvtlle
~
3 · 3
Columbus
;: ~ ·! ~ IO\t
·
Sunday's Games
Buffalo 8, Rochester 7, 10 innings
Charlotte 14, Pawtucket 2
Louisville 6, ColumbU6 0
Indianapolis 9, Richmond 7
s
""'lk B
12 o
1
crantolvni es- arre • ttawa
Syracuse 9, Norfolk 5
Durham 7, Toledo 5
Monday's Games
Charlotte at Pawtucket
Indianapolis at Louislliile
Richmond at Columbus
Rochester at Bu!falo
Scrantail'Wilkes-Barre at Ottawa
Syracuse at Norfolk
Toledo at Durham

• Milwaukee, 66: Utley, Philadelphia, 66;
1 Holliday; Colorado, 62: Howard,
1
Philadelphia, 57; MiCabre[a, Florida,
57: Hawpe, Colorado, 55
HITS- Holliday,
Colorado,
116;
HaRamlrez, Florida. 105; Byrhes,
Arizona, 105; Utley, Philadelphia, 103;
JBAeyes; New York, 103; Rollins,
Philadelphia, 101 ; Delee, Chicago,
100.
DOUBLES-Utley, Philadelphia, 31 ;

GB

I

5

Tuesday's Games
Charlotte at PaW1ucket
Indianapolis at Louisllille
Richmond at Columbus
Rochester at Buffalo
Scranton'Wilkes-Barre at Ottawa

.
1

~zr:~~~ ~~~h~~lk

p

I

S

RO OCCER

~ajor League SCccer
EASTERN CONFERENCE
w L T Pts GF GA
New England 6 3 4 22 24 16
·Kansas Cily
6 4 3 21 24 19
New York
6 4 3 21 24 16
D.C. United
6 4 2 20 22 17
Columbus
4 4 6 18 18 21
ChicagO
4 6 3 15 12 19
Toronto FC
·4 7 2 14 15 22
WESTERN -CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
FC Dallas
8 6 2 26 19 21
Houston
7 5 2 23 16 10
CO Chlvas USA 6 4 2 20 17 12

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.l 0

~

Amtrlcan League
BALTIMORE ORIOLEs-.:.-Pif.Ced RHP
Steve Trachsel on the 15-day DL
Purchased the contract of LHP Kurt
Birkins from Norfolk (IL).
BOSTON RED SOX-Placed RHP
Joel Pineiro on the "15·day DL, retroac·
live to June 28 . Purchased the contract
of OF J~.coby Ellsbury from Pawtuck'et
(ll).
E
0
CLEV LAN
INDIANS- Agreed to
-terms with OF-INF Bo Greenwell.
DETROIT TIGERS-Acquired RHP
Jose Capell an from Milwaukee for LHP
Chro·s Cody.

(

"I \i I"S • \ (d . ,)h . :\ (). :.!.; \-l

I' I

Sentinel to
publish
·on July 4
POMEROY The
Dailr ·Sentinel will be
published on Wednesday,
July 4. However. its business and advertising
offices will be closed in
observance
of
the
Independence Day holiday.
Regular business hours
resume on Thursday, July
5.

round draft pick . Signed 0 Dick .
NEW YORK YANKEEs-Purchased Tarnstrom and D Denis Grebashkov to
the contract of RHP Edwar Ramirez one-year contracts.
from
ScrantonWil kes-Barre
(IL). FLORIDA PANTHERS-Signed c
Optioned INF Chris Basak lo Brett Mclean to a three -year contract
ScrantonM'ilkes-Barre. Trantferred 1 and LW Richard Zednik and RW Radek
RHP Jeff Karstens from the 15-day to Dvorak to two-year contracts.
the 60-day DL.
MINNESOTA WILD - Traded G Manny
SEATTLE MARINEAS:-Announced Fernandez
Boston lor F Petr Kalua
10
the resignation of Mike Hargrove. man- and a
fourth-round draft pick. Re·
2009
Named J h McLa e
ger
agar.
o n
r n mana .
signed C Mikko Koivu and 0 Martin
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Placed RHP Skouta to multiyea r contracts.
A.J . Burnett on the 1~·day DL.
NASHVILLE PREDATORS-Agreed
Recalled RH_P Jesse Lltsch from to terms with C ScoH Nichol on a twoSyracuse (IL).
AI
H
TEXAS RANGERS-Purchased the yea r contract and 0 ex enry on a
cdntract of INF Oesl Relatord from one •yaar contract ·
Oklahoma (PCL). Optioned RHP scott J~~:YJ~~~:av DEVILs-Re-signed 0
Feldman to Oklahoma. Designed LHP
PHILADELPHiA FLYERS-S"
d C
John Koronka for assignment.
..
.
.
lgne
National LHgue
Dan1el Bnere to an Bight-year contract
CHICAGO CUBS-Recalled AHP and D Kimma Timonen and LW Scott
Rocky Cflerry from Iowa (PCL), then . Hartnell to she -year contracts..
placed him on the 15·day OL. Optioned
PITTSBURGH
. PENGUIN~-Re·
RHP Billy Petrick to Iowa, then recalled s1gned D Ryan Whitney to a s1x-year
him.
contract.
CINCINNATI RED8-Fired manager ST. LOUIS BLU~S-Signed F Keith
I Jerry Narron.
·
Tkachuk to a two-year contract. Re·
FLORIDA MAALIN5-0ptioned LHP signed D Barret Jackman to a one-year
Taylor Tankersley and OF Brett Q:arroil j contract.
to Albuquerque (PCL). Recalled RHP 1 SAN JOSE SHARKS-Signed C Joe
Lee Gardner from Albuquerque.
1 Thornton to a three-year contract
MILWAUKEE BREWERS- Activated extension through the ·2010-11 season.
LHP Chris Capuano lrom the 15-day TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-$igned RW
DL.
Michel Ouellet ro a two-year contract.
NEW YORK METS-Piaced , RHP
WASHINGTON CA~ITALS-Signed D
Jorge Sosa on the 15-day DL. Recalled Tom Pot/•to a lour·year contract.

I

I

SPORTs ·
• Serena Williams wins
on painful leg at
Wimbledon. S. P . B1

1

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREE!J@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
U.S.
Senator George Voinovich
met Monday with represen·tatives of three clean coal
projects under development
in the region at a working
session in Pomeroy.
Voinovich, State R~p .
Jimmy Stewart, R-Albany,
State Rep. Clyde Evans, RRio Grande, and others representing state and federal
offices, met with representa-

Cancer.
Resource
Center·
to move
BY BETH SERGENt

I

6SERClENTII'MYOAtLYS~NTINEL.COM

POMEROY
The
Meigs County American
Cancer Society Resource
Center is moving from the
Community
Mulberry
Center to . the Meigs
County
Health
Department.
By moving tbe center to
the health departme11t the
Meigs County American
· Cancer Society Advisory
Board felt it may be easier
·for clients to access the
. services. While at the
Mulberry
Community
Center there . were issues
with scheduling volunteers
and the hours the center
was open. Although the
board said it appreciated
Page AS
the donated space at the
Mulberry
Community
• Doris Blake
Center.
it
felt
the health
• Kathleen Tillis
department may be a better
• Edith Welch
fit.
Courtney Sim, advisory
• William D.
board member, !)aid Health
Will' Oh~nger
Commissioner
Larry
Marshall agreed to allow
the cente~ to share free
space at the health department. Clients to the cancer
resource
center will still
• After a month on
have access to wigs, prosCuban rations: 9 pounds
thetics, cosmetics and educational
materials. Clients
lighter and a new
·
can call 992-6626 for
appreciation for food.
information or referrals to
.See Page A2
free resources for cancer
patients and their care• Graduates basic
givers.
training.
Page A3
This discussion about
relocating the center came
up at the recent advisory
board meeting which
WEAmER
included ACS representative Julie Ellenwood giving the financial report
with $170 in memorials
and $1 ,I I0 from managed
rna il. EII en wood added
$52,253.63 was collected
from the Meigs County
Relay For Life (RFL).
Ellenwood congratulated
the
RFL • Planning
Committee, local survivors and teams for their
Detalll on Page AS
fund-raising
success.
According to Crisp, the
quoted figure should be an
approximate net amount
because &lt;l~sociated significant expen ses probably
2 SECriONS - 12 PAGES
have been remunerated .
announced the
Calendars
A3 MeiSim
gs County Cancer
Initiative, Inc. (MCC.ll is
Classifieds
B3-4 conducting
a membership
drive.
She
invitecl
advisoComi~
Bs ry board members
to
attend
a
picnic
meeting
at
Annie;s Mailbox
A3
6 p.m. on July 9 at the
Bed
and
Editorials
A4 Riverview
Breakfas t in Syracuse .
Obituaries
As Att endee s are encourage,d
to brin g a covered dish and
a
lawn chair. RSV~ to
B
Section
Sports
Carol Adam s at 992-2311 .
Sim also reported that
Weather
Please see Center, AS
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i·
I

W"kend :::~:I~~sactlons

41

Class of·' 67
reunites, A3

1

s~6

Charlotte

1

Seattle (F. Hernandez 4-4) at Kansas
.
City (Meche 5-6). 8:10 p.m.
1
National League
Baltimore (Bedard G·jf.) at Chicago 1
Eaet Division
While Sox (Buehrle 5-4), 8: 11 p.m.
W L Pet
Tor(:mto (Towers 3·5) at Oakland New York
46 34 .575
1 Atlanta
(DiNardo 3-4), 10:05 p.m.
43 39 .524
Tunday'l Games
Philadelphia
42 40 .512
Tampa Bay at Boston, 7:05p.m.
Florida
38 44 .463
Cleveland at Detroit, 7:05 p.m.
Washmglon
33 48 .407
Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05p.m.
· Central Division
Seattle at Kansas City, 8:10p.m.
W L Pet

4

AHP Mike Pelfrey from New Orleans of
the PCL .

. PHILADELPHIA PHILUE5-0ptloned
AHP Ge.off Geary to onawa (1~).
1 Purchased the contract or LHP J.A.
Happ from OHawa.
PITISBURGH PIRATES- Placed OF
Chris Duffy on the 15-day DL.
Purchased the contra'tt of INF-OF Matt
Kata from Indianapolis (IL). Designated
RHP Marty Mcleary for assignment.
!
SAN DIEGO PADRES-Placed OF
Milton Bradley on the 15-day DL,
retroactive to June 21.
SAN · FRANCISCO
GIA-NTSActivated OF Fred Lewis from the 15day DL. Designated INF Luis Figueroa
for assignment . Optioned OF Nate
, Schlerholtz to Fresno (PCL).
HOCKEY
I- ~
-. . .
Nalional Hockey L•e(iiue
A HE lM
DUCKS-Signed
o
Ma ieu Schneider to a two-year conIra .
A LANTA THRASHERS-Signed c
. Wh ite to a four-year contract. Re1 ~ned F Pascal Dupuis to a one-year
1 contract.
BUFFALO SABRES-Re-signed F
Adam Mair to.a three-year contract.
CALGARY FLAME9-Signod D Cory
Sarich to "five·year contract
C'AROLINA HURAICANE5-Signed c
Jeff Hamilton to a two-year contract.
CHICAGO BLACKHAWK$ S"gned C
- 1
Yanic Perreault to a one-year contract
COLUMBUS BLUE · JACKETS Signed D Sheldon Brookbank to a one·
year contract.
DALLAS STARS- Resigned D Sergei
Zubov.
DE,TROIT RED WINGS-Agreed to
terms with D Brian Rafalski on a fiveyear contract.
EDMONTON OILERS-Traded 0
Jason Smith and F Jaffrey Luput to
Philadelphia for D Jon/ ~ltkanen, G
Geoff Sanderson and a 2009 third·

I

1

L.A. Angels 4, Baltimore 3
3.32.
Tex.as 2 . Boston 1
STBU&lt;EOUTS-Bedard , Baltimore.
129; ~oSantana, Minnesota, 120;
Chicago White Sox 3, Kansas City 1
Sabath1B, Cleveland, 116_
: Matsuzaka,
seattle 2, Toronto 1
1 Boston, 110; Shields, Tampa Bay, 110;
Detroit 1, Minnesota 0
Monday's Games
I Burnett, Toronto, 106: Kazmir, Tampa
Te~eas (McCarthy .. 4·4) at Boston 1 Bay, 105.
.
.
, SAVES-FrRodnguez, Los Angeles,
(Gabbard 1·0). 7:05p.m.
1 2
B
lc:"1 Cl
1 d 24 p t
Minnesota {Bonser 5·4.) at N.Y.
4; orows ·
eve an •
; u z,
Yankees (Clemens 1-3), 7"05 p.m.
-~1at~e.5 D~~: "t J~~~~ap~~~~~g~~st;~:
Tampa Bay (Sonnanstlne 1·2) at
on •
rol ' ·
'
'
19; Reyes, Tampa Gay, 17.
Cleveland (Carmona 8·4), 7:05p.m.

•I

, Diego, 9-2, .818, 2.09: Harang , j Colcnado
4 7 4. 16 14 21
Cincinnati. 8-2 . .800, 3.80; BSheets, los Angeles · 2 5 3 9 13 16
Milwa'ukee, 10-3, .769, 3.19; CYoung, Real Salt Lake 1 5 6 9 11 19
I San Diego, 8-3, .727, 2.14; JSosa ,
~
I Ne_w York,_ 7-3, .700, "3. 92; _
Ham_
els, NOTE: Three points for victory, one
I Phllad~lph1a , 9-4, .692, 3.87, Mame, point for lie.
New York, 9-4 , .692, 2.74: Smaltz,
Atlanta, 9-4, .692, 2.98. ,
Saturday'• GameS
STRtKEOUTS- Peavy, San Diego, Houston 0, FC Dalla&amp; 0, tie
119; Hamels, Philadelphia, 116; Webb. Columbus 1, New Yo~ 0·
Arizona, 100; Harang, Cincinnati, 100; CD Chives USA 2, New England 0
CZambrano, Chicago, 94 ; Wolf. Los
Sunday'l Games
Angeles, ~3 : RHiU, Chicago, 90 ; Colorado 0 , Chicago 0, tie
CYoung , San Diego. 90: Smaltz . Toronto FC 1, Kansas City 1, tie
· Atlanta, 90.
o
Wedneaday 's Games
SAVES- FCordero, Milwaukee, 27 ; D.C. United at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Valverde, Arizona. 26·, Hoffman. 'San
CD Ch'1vas USA at FC oa11 as, a p.m.
Diego, 23; Saito, Los ~ngeles, 22;
Columbus at Colorado, 9:30p.m.
Fu~ntes, Colorado. 20, Dempster, Toronto FC at Real Salt Lake, 10 p.m.
1 Chicago, 16; BWagner, New York, 16.
Chicago at Los Angeles. 10:30 p.m.
I
·
·
Thuraday'l Games
International League
New York at Houston, B p.m.
{
North Division •
Saturday, July 7
W L Pel. GB
Rea iS~IILakeatCoJumbus , 7:30p .m.
Buffalo
46 35 .568
CD Ch1vas USA at New England, 7:,30
4 ~ ;: -~~~ 3
p.m.
I Scranton-WB
Rochester
;
·
~ ~lr
Toronto FC at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
7 45 ·451 .
Syracuse
'1.
Kansas City at Lot Angetes, 10:30
35 45 ·436 10
Pawtucket
p.m.
33 46 •418 12
Onawa
South Ol~lol~n
Gli
TRANSACTIONS

-.

lives from Atlantic Ene~gy
Ventures, Alperican Electric
Power
and , American
Municipal Power Ohio to
discuss those companies'
needs and how government
can ht:Ip meet those needs.
The meeting was closed to
the press and public.
The meeting is the second
Voinovich has hosted in
Meigs County this year. In
May, he held a roundtable
discu ssio~ with energy leaders, and proposed a study to

detennine how state, federal..
and local officials can work
with energy, producers like
AMP and AEP to assure
those companies' infrastructure and ~anpower needs are
met, allowing them to proceed with their plans to build
in the region. The study will
be funded through the ARC.
The meeting yesterday
was held to determine how
government at all levels "can
galvanize resources to assist
southeastern Ohio ·in secur-

ing a strong future of energy
leadership in clean coal technologies," Voinovich said.
AMP-Ohio and AEP plan
clean coal generating projects in southern Meigs
County. Atlantic Energy
Ventures plans a project in
Lawrence County that would
use coal to produce fertilizers.
Rep. Stewart said the local
infrastructure needs of those
companies planning to
locate here topped the dis-

cussions. He said AMP also
asked for assistance from
the state legislators in
securing an expansion of
the coal tax credit now
offered to other energy producers for using Ohio coal.
The $1 per ton credit does
not now apply to AMP.
AEP officials discussed.
their need for a trained
workforce to build and staff
its proposed IGCC power
plant, Stewart said.

NW~

Paying the Pi~r
.

.

Most people know
parking in downtown
Pomeroy during a
weekday requires
seine spate change.
However, if you do
receive a parking ticket the Pomeroy Police
Department maae it a
little easier to pay
that ticket by placing
steel boxes downtown
to accept payments.
Boxes are located In
front of Anderson's
Furniture Store and
the laund ry mat on
East Main Street and
across from Peoples
Bank on Second
Street. Ticket!' can no
longer be 'paid at
Video Touch on West
Main Street. Tickets
can also be paid at
the Pomeroy Police
Department. Pictured
is Pomeroy Meter
Maid Sandra Jhorla in"
front of one of the
new fine boxes outside of Anderson's.

classifies
storm as
tornado
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDII'MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LETART FALLS....:. The
storm which caused damage
to property and uprooted
trees in Letart Falls
Wednesday was the result of
a downburst from @tornado,
with winds up to 100 miles
per hour, , the National
. Weather Service confirmed.
· "The · Natioilal . Weather

Se{lliee in

Beth sergent/photo

Please see Tom1do, AS

Legal fireworks in Ohio Red, white and green
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY - Although there are several tempting fireworks out there that can be purchased in Ohio, only a few
can be legally discharged in the state.
The only type of fireworks that can be legally purchased
and set off in Ohio are trick and novelty fireworks. These
include items that smoke, sparkle, snap and snake.
Other lireworks, like those sold at fireworks stores
around Ohio can be legally purchased here, but you must
agree to take th~m out of Ohio to set them off. You m_ust
also be at least 18 years of age to buy the firecrackers and
bottle rockets but tiring them off within state boundaries is
prohibited.
·
It's a first-degree misdemeanor for non-licensed individuals to discharge fireworks in Ohio, to falsify an application when purchasing fireworks, or to possess them for
more than 48 to 72 hours without taking them to the designated out-of-state address. First-time offenders are subject
to up to a $1,000 fine and six months imprisonment.
Please see Flre-rk. AS

Police: Ohio college student hit .
by SlN, body pulled from river
ATHENS (AP) - An Ohio
University student died after
being struck by a sport utility
vehicle and knocked into a
river while walking on a
bridge, with authorities
unaware of his involvement
in the crash until his body was
recovered about 16 hours
later, police said Monday.
Abhishek Singh, 22, a graduate student from Faizabad,
India, was walking on the
sidewalk portion of the bridge
about II :30 p.in. Satu1day
night when the SUV ran a
traffic light and collided with
a car, police said.
The SUV spun onto the
sidewalk, striking Singh and
hurling him over a rail and
into the Hocking River. said
Athens police Lt. Randy
Gray. Singh lived in an apart-

ment complex near the area.
Witnesses were unaware
that a pedestrian had been
struck, Gray said. The bridge
has lights, but not directly in
the atea of the accident, he
said.
Authorities responding to a
report of a body tloating in
the river pulled Singh to the
shore Sunday afternoon about
Submitted photo
a half-mile east of the bridge. · •
You've heard of the "Hills Have Eyes: but how about trees?
Forensic evidence, including taillight glass on Singh's Around Snowville on Ohio 681 a set of trees not only have
clothing, led investigators to eyes but faces, party hats and patriotic colors for tomorrow's
conclude that Singh had been ' holiday. Janie Slater of Albany decided to paint the dead trees
hit by the S UV. Gray said. ·and make something useful out of them instead of letting '
The body was tran~ferred them continue to decay and be an eyesore along the road.
Monday to the Montgomery Inspired by an idea she saw on television, Slater turned the
c;ouuty coroner's oflice in renewable resource into what she calls "red. white and
Dayton . where an autopsy ,green" in honor of not only the holiday but recycling the usa.
will try to detem1ine ,if Singh fulness of the trees. However, it wasn't as easy as you think
was killed by the impact or if and required her nephew Josh Slater to climb onto a ladder
to make sure the tallest tree had its party hat on.
he drowned, Gray said.

'
-

'Chatle'Sti:itl~ ~

confirmed an EFI toma&lt;Id :
in the Letart area of,.· the
Ohio River Wednesday
evening," a news release
from the weather service
said. "The damage path was
about a mile long and up to
50 yards in width."
The storm caused damage
to both sides of the Ohio.
Numerous trees were down

- -.,·-- r

'·

·•

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