<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4505" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/4505?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-11T16:08:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14432">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/7c9aabdd35feddc160512eb611c995d3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1fc761165fa98ee4013f53444636fa9b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="15617">
                  <text>Page B6- The Daily Senti nel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, August 2 1, 2007

Mud volleyball
· at the fair, A3

FUN, GAMES AND PUZZLES

Officials gather to dedicate
new MOVC wing, As

Gizmos

.,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o CI ·. :'I:TS • \ ol. :;-. :'IJo.

Not recommended for homes
with vicious cats.

CH~~~~MATIC MATTR~~~

.I

• Reds win.
SeePageB1

park. Bid specifications may
be picked up at the Racine
Clerk Treasurer's Office at
RACINE
Racine the Racine Municipal
Village Council will begin Building. Only "qualifiedtaking bids for its skate park skate park contractors" with
beginning on Friday and references can Submit bids.
ending at 9 a.m. on Monday,
Council, Clerk Dave
Sept. 10.
Spencer and Mayor J. Scott
The sealed bids will be Hill have already said the
opened and read af 7: 15 project is moving forward
p.m. on Sept.. i 0 at council's and will be completed, the
regular monthly meeting.
question is when.
Council wishes to build a · This year Racine was
concrete skate park as approved for $65,000 in
opposed to a fabricated state capital improvement
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT&lt;iPMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

' I

. I

. I!

'i
I'

'' '

l

!
1.

'""' · "' ~ d .otl"'' "';,, 1., ... ,,

Racine taking bids for skate park

SPORTS

When Rusty "Sore back" Wilson couldn't get a
good nights sleep he created the

\\' I· ll:'I:J:Sll \\ .. \l '(;UST :.!.:.! , ~007

:.!11

ADVERtiSERS VISIT:

IIZMISADS.COM

money for Star Mill Park,
money it has already
received. Racine has plans
on dividing these funds
between updating the park's
outdated playground equipment and 1ostalling the skate
park. The skate park will be
constructed wnh around
$45,000 of that state money.
The village attempted to
receive
Tony.
Hawk
Foundation grant money but
was asked to resubmit the
application for the next round
of funding. At that time, the

village applied to the foundation with the intention of constructing a pre-fabricated
park but that decision has
now shifted to a totally concrete park. The village plans
to reafply for the grant.
Hil previously stated the
longevity and low maintenance of a concrete structure
are what the village desires
for the project meant to be
used not just by young people in the Racine area but the
entire county and surrounding counties. When built, the

Welcome back!
WINKY

the CHEESE

skate park will be the first of
its kind in Meigs County.
The skate park 'will si_t
inside Star Mill Park near
the basketball courts.
As for the bidding
process, council ·has the
right to accept the lowest
bid or select the best bid for
the intended purpose and
reserves the right to reject
any and all bids.
For more information on
submitting a bid for the
skate park, call Spencer at
949-2296.

July's

jobless
rates dip
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

INSIDE

\
Draw right
over mistakes

'I

.,..' I I

Students in the Meigs .and Southern Local
School Districts return to classes today while
students who attend Eastern Local Schools
return tomorrow. Yesterday was the first day of
school at Carleton School and a big day for
these preschoolers .

.,

.,--~
•,

I

I
; :

·'

·i'
I

'I

' I'

• Gointj organic.
See Page AS
• UM women send
cards, make donatiOns.
See Page A3 .
• Pie bake-off and
~ospel Singing.
. See Page A3
• Ohio University
ranks fourth nationally
· in graduation rate.
See Page A&amp;
• Bethel plans
'Youth Explosion.'
See Page A6

II
II

Note, how the head floats above the shoulders.
If you connect it with t~e spine , you'll tend to place
it in the same place rigid place each time. Think out
where you want the head relative to the shoulders
and use the ellipses to indicate which way it's facing.

WFA1HER

Detail• on P.,. A8

Unscramble the letters to form ordinary words. Then place them in the
crossword grid. Then unscramble the circled f'@( ... .j
letters to form todays coded message.
·&amp;;ldf.(

INDEX
2 SECnONS -

Qjo[ .. ,fE fKff@ii trTrlOI @ O.I'AIRTC 1'.0E ILr·l !sTNiol

&amp;orrrrrmoJYrnrrJ91 09TJEfNI'PTRroiPror n oJ

QfoCTAJRJtisrr r r r lei G:for CAfKrsJNicl'sl r r
@,@[ [ Jl'ItiA['rli:IHIR[ToJ (IToJ [ fEIUQIErstur I
()Jfor CAJURIVr r ]T fJol @Jo.rt ICIAINftlol I I I
@ofT fslRITIA ftk:llf lol Q.jo[l [ TMIS[b[AJAJRI
(!Jol IE !'NIT lEis Is I I I

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

82-4

Annie's Mailbox

lol
lol
lol
lol
lol

·Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

009DeJ

Weather

B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio Volley l'&gt;fbliohing Co.

-

. --- -l - - -

,.

Beth Sefllenlfphotos

Two
different
•
vtews on
the Harry
Potter books
BY

RACHB. MARnNDALE

INTERN, THE DAILY SENTINEL

POMEROY- In light of
some controversy, two
Meigs County women,
both teachers with church
affiliations, have expressed
differing views on the
Harry Potter books and
whether they are suitable
reading for children.
Patty Asbeck, first and
second grade· teacher at the
Mid-Valley
Christian
School in Middleport, feels
that the books teach children practices that God
warns about in the Bible.
She said the books portray
good and evil within the
context of witchcraft.
However, Carly Hayes,
junior high reading teacher
at Eastern Elementary, feels
that the books are simply
entertainment and do not
teach children to engage in
witchcraft. She wonders
why people disapprove of
Harry Potter books while
approving of other fantasy
and magic books.
The Harry Potter series ·
has · received challenges,
making it number cine on
the · American Library
Association 's list of 10
"Most Challenged Books of
the 21st Century," between

Please see Views, A5

"

GALLIPOLIS - Along
with the rest of Ohio, unemployment in the state's
southeastern section was
down during July.
County-by-county jobless
rates were released by the
Ohio Department of Jobs
and Family Services on
Tuesday, showing that
unemployment in Gallia
County for last month was
at 5.9 percent aiJd Meigs
County's was 8.7 percent.
Both were a reduction
from June, when Gallia's
rate jumped to 6.7 percent'
and Meigs' increased to 9.8
percent.
Lower rates w~re seen in
surrounding counties, where
July's figure for Athens was
5.8 percent, down seventenths of a percent from
June's 6.5 ; Jackson had 7.1
percent, down 1.2 percent
from 8.3 in June; Lawrence
was at 5.5 percent, down
seven-tenths of a percent
PluH see Jobless, A5

Tough track a hit with fairgoers
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFliCHIII&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - The grandstand was full and fairgoers
lined the fence and watched
from the hillside as trucks and
dune buggies ran a muddy
track and hurdled over mounds
of dirt before splashing into a
pond at the first-ever tough
track competition held at the
Meigs County Fair.
The hundreds of spectators
clapped and cheered as the
vehicles circled the created
infield track of obstacles some in good time, others not
so good because they got stuck
along the way. Kenny Buckley,
Fair Board vice president, said
it was the largest crowd he' d
seen at a competition in years
at the fair. And the Fair Board
has already promised "it will
definitely be back next year.".
Prizes in the production and
non-production classes were
$300 for first, $250 for second,
$175 for third, $ I 00 for founh,
and $50 for those placing fifth
through lOth.
The first five place winners
in the production class were
Ricky Smith of Athens, first;
Ted Linscott (no · address
given), second; Greg King ,
third; Joe Hill of Athens,
fourth ; and Tim Stout. (Joe
Bob, Jr.) tifth.
Winners in the first fi ve
places in the non-production
class were Greg Smith of
Chauncey, first; Joe Kri vest of
Athens second; Larry Goble of
The Plains, third; Neil Giles of
Athens, founh ; and Emmett
Sanders of Albany, fifth.

Above: Greg Smith of
Chauncey was the dri·
ver of this yellow buggy
which took first place
in the non-production
class.

Left: This water pond
was the last thing drivers had to go through
to reach the finish line.
Charlene Hoeftlch/photoo

..
•

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

WoRLD

.

PageA2

Hurricane Dean heads towkd Gulf of Mexico
oil installations after slamming Yucatan

Community Calendar
Church events

Crews continue to recover debris from the collapsed interstate bridge on Tuesday in
Minneapolis. With all of the victims recovered, federal investigators gave state transportation officials clearance Tuesday to pull away the concrete deck of the collapse'd interstate bridge, but they want to move slower on the steel underpinnings to give certain
·parts more scrutiny.

Federal officials clear way for debris
·removal at Minnesota bridge collapse site
BY BRIAN BAKST
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

1
I

., .
'

'
'i

.,.,
.,
'' I
" I
.,
.,., '
'..
·',.
I

.,' I :

MINNEAPOLIS - With
all the victims believed to
have been recovered, federal
investigators gave state
transportation otficials clearance Tuesday to pull away
the concrete deck of the collapsed interstate bridge.
The cleanup and rebuilding steps kicked into a higher gear a day after divers
pulled the body of construction worker Gregory ~ olstad
from the Mississippi River,
about three weeks after the
eight-lane bridge fell Aug. I.
"This community . will
now be on the road to recovery," U.S. Transportation
Secretary Mary E. Peters
said at a briefing near the
collapse site.
Before all 13 known victims were accounted for,
crews had proceeded deli·
cately with debris removal.
Cranes and other heavyduty equipment are now
being moved in to extract
bigger pieces.
With the recovery operation over, officials gave
reporters and TV cameras
their first close look at the
collap&amp;e site Tuesday.
Much of the bridge decking still lies in broken pieces
across the river, but all the
vehicles have been removed
except for a truck belonging
to the construction crew that
was working on the bridge
when it collapsed.
A pedestrian bridge was
reopened just a few hundred
feet downstream from the
collapse site, giving gawkers a better view. Still closed
is a bridge that runs parallel
to the interstate . bridge; a
city spokesman said a decision on when to reopen it

would come in a few days.
National Transportation
Safety Board Chairman
Mark Rosenker, who joined
Peters, said parts of the
southern approach span and
the concrete deck could be
cleared away. Investigators
want crews to move more
slowly on the steel underpinnings of the bridge.
Construction cranes are
being shipped into the col. Iar.se site on barges, They
W.tll be used to extract massive chunks of concrete
from the bridge deck lying
,in the river and blocking the
channel for boats. The
chunks of bridge are being
moved to two sttes, one just
upriver and the other iust
downriver, where they' II be
available to investigators.
The NTSB will have a
crew on site into November,
Rosenker said, but most of
his staff has ret1,1rned to
Washington to do lab an~y-,
sis using comwter · mod!jls
arid more closely inspect
parts already collected.
Those include some of the
bearri-tying gusset plates, but
ROS;CJiker C81!tioned reporters
against too much focus on
· those as a cause of the collapse. "There's more to it than
the gusset plates," he said.
The city, county and state
became eligible for more federal assistanCe for the recovery from the Interstate 35W
collapse when President
Bush declared an emergency,
the White House said.
Officials said the federal
. relief money would be used
to cover costs racked up by
the search and rescue efforts,
security at the bridge site, lmd
overtime for law enforcers.
Gov. Tim Pawlenty said
the declaration applies to
certain rescue costs before

Aug. 15 and comes with the
expectation that there will
be some local matching dolJars. But he; said he planned
to ask Bush to loosen some
of the restrictions and
lengthen the aid window.
Bush, after a briefing from
federal and state authorities
on the bridge collapse, said
the federal government will
use its power to accelerate
the recovery.
"Our job now is to cut
through the bureaucracy, as
best as possible, and get the
people down here a new
bridge," Bush said from the
Minneapolis/St. Paul Air
Reserve Station. He was
headed to a Republican
fundraiser.
Bush commended those
who have led recovery
efforts, including military
divers who have searched for
bodies. He met with about 20
of the divers to thank them.
"The spirit 'that caused tbe
recovery ··to be well coordinated is the very same spirit
that's going to cause this
briqge to ·get reb!lilt," Bush
promised.
Plans for rebuilding took
another step forward when
the Minneapolis City
Council scheduled a public
hearing that is needed
before it can sign off on the
construction. That meeting
will be held Sept. 20, said ·
Mayor R.T. Rybak.
"We will move as expeditiously as possible," he said.
The new bridge is expected to carry I 0 lanes of traffic
and be built to accommodate
a light rail. transit line in the
future. The federal govern- .
ment has authorized $250
million toward the project,
but it won't cover the
enhanced features required
for the potential rail line.

'

'I

Bush says it is up to Iraqi people to
determine the fate of their government
BY DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•'

'

MONTEBELLO, Quebec
- President Bush offered a
tepid endorsement of the
Iraqi
government
on
Thesday, yet brushed off a
Democratic senator's call
for the ouster of Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
Bush acknowledged his
frustration with Iraqi leaders' inability to bridge political divisions, but he said
only the Iraqi people can
decide whether to sideline
the troubled prime minister.
"Clearly, the Iraqi government's got to do more ,"
Bush said at the close of a
two-day North American
summit with the leaders of
Mexico and Canada.
The Sept. 15 deadline for
Bush 's next progress report
to Congress is fast
approaching, leaving the
president little time to show
that his U.S. troop buildup
is succeeding in providing
the enhanced security the
Iraqi leaders need to forge a
unified way forward.
In a speech Wednesday to
the Veterans of Foreign Wars
convention in Kansas City,
Mo., Bush will argue that the
troop buildup is,helping bring
former Sunni .insurgents into
the fight against al-Qaida and
clearing terrorists out of
heavily populated areas.

"Our troops are seeing this back to the United States to
progress on the ground, and visit Minneapolis for a
as they take the initiative fundraiser and update about
from the enemy, they have a the Interstate 35W bridge
question: Will their elected collapse.
leaders in Washington pull
In his VFW speech
the rug out from under them Wednesday, Bush will comjust as they are gaining pare today's war against
momentum and changing the extremists with the militarists
dynamic on the ground in of Japan and the communists
Iraq?" Bush says in his pre- in Korea and Vietnam. · In a
pared remarks. The White speech next Tuesday at the
House released· excerpts of annual American Legion
the speech Thesday evening. convention in Reno, Nev., the
On Monday, Sen. Carl president will put the war in
Levin, D-Mich., chairman of Iraq in the regional context of
the Senate Armed Services the Middle East.
Committee, said there is
In the aftermath of
broad frustration with inac- Japan's surrender, many
tion from Iraq's central gov- thought it was naJive to
ernment. Levin, whn recently help the Japanese transform
returned from Iraq, urged the themselves into a democraIraqi Parliament to oust ai- cy, Bush will tell the VFW
Maliki' and replace his gov- conventioneers. He ·said
ernment with one that is less cnucs also complained
sectarian and more unifying. when America intervened to
And Sen. John Warner, R- save South Korea from
Va., a former Armed Services communist invasion. And in
Committee chairman and an Vietnam, Bush said, people
inlluenfial voice on military argued that the real problem
affairs, joined with Levin in was America's presence
issuing a statement saying · there, "and that if we would
that while Bush's military just withdraw, the killing
buildup in Iraq had "pro- would end."
duced some credible and
"The advance of freedom
positive results," the political in these lands should give us
outlook was dim.
confidence that the hard
Bush spoke at a news con- work we are doing in the
ference in Montebello, Middle East can have the
Quebec, with Mexican same results .we have seen in
President Felipe Calderon Asia - if we show the same
and Canadian Prime Minister perseverance and sense of
Stephen Harper before flying purpose," Bush said.

Wednesday, August 22,

Put a stop to this betrayal now

United Methodist Church to
host season's first Fifth
quarter party following the
Southern .Tornado home
game, 10 p.m. to midnight.
free to youth in grades 6 to
12. Food and games.

TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 , regular
meeting, 7 p.m.
POMEROY - American
Cancer Society
Meigs
County Advisory Board, regular meeting, noon, basement
conference room Pomeroy
Library, lunch provided, new
members welcome, call 9926626, ext. 24 for RSVP.
POMEROY -Alpha Iota
Masters Chapter wi[J have a
Thursday, Aug. 23
RACINE
- Special luncheon, II :30 a.m. at the
meeting of Pomeroy/Racine Wild horse Cafe.
RACINE
Racine
Lodge # 164 for degree
work and examinations. · American Legion Auxiliary,
Any member with work in Post 602 , will have its annuany . degree that needs al picnic, 6 p.m. at the hall.
returned can do so at this Take a covered dish and
meeting.
your own table service.

Clubs and
organization

Schools

Other events

Mud volleyball

.

UM women send cards, mak.e donations

ALFRED - A mtsston
report at a recent meeting of
the Alfred United Methodist
Women titled "Open Heart
. Open Eyes, Open Spirit,"
dealing with ways to be
more open with people was
given by Thelma Henderson.
The artie le she read was
by Beth Richardson in the
Response magazine. When
Richardson mistook a country-music icon for a homeJess person, she realized she
was letting her prejudices
and assumptions block her
. ability to really see those
~ around her. She took this as
a sign to work on herself
and to be open to the ways
God is tr)'ing her. These
practices of openness
mclude the following:

PLAN
NOW TO
.
BEA PART OF IT
WITH OUR
COUNTY WIDE
YARD SALE
PACKAGE
.

~ Daughters

I:

I

Your Ads Will Run

Wednesday, Aug. 29
Thursday, Aug. 30
Friday, Aug. 31
01,1

a Special1&gt;age.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45631
740-992-2155

Open Heart - We are to
~\ave an awareness of others
and God's Spirit by turning
away from our inward focus
and being open to others.
Open Eyes - We are to
open our eyes and see others with the clear vision of
the Spirit, such as a small
child's smile.
.
Open Spirit- This needs
to be nurtured by daily spiritual practices, such as
prayer, · spiritual reading,
meditation and rest and
retreat.
Asie Follrod shared sev·eral readings about age. The
group heard correspondence
from Bishop Augh about the
Miracle Offering for the
Global Aids Fund and a letter from the Rev. Steven

Putka about the United program titled "World Thank
Methodist
Children's - Sustainers of Life." She
Home. The group agreed to read the focus statement and
send a donation to the UM said a prayer. The ~roup parChildren's Home.
ticipated in the Lttany, and
The secretary and treasur- all read the ending prayer.
er's reports were given. Members are to bring their
Eighty-nine friendship calls world thank offering to the
were made. The . women next meeting in the jars they
signed a prayer-calendar made last year. The next
birthday card for Karen meeting will be Sept. II. .
Ujereh of Dakar-Fann,
Henderson gave prayer
Senegal, who is an adminis- before the meal served by
trative missionary. They Sarah Caldwell.
alsd' signed a card in memoThe group gathered at the
ry of Dale Windland.
· church. with Mary Jo
The Festival of Sharing Barringer, Ruth Brooks,
wasdiscussed; members are Mary Jo Buckley, Sarah
to bring kits to the next Caldwell, Osie Follrod,
meeting. Kits are to be sub- Thelma Henderson, Florence
mitted by the week before Spencer, Janice Weber and
Sept. 29.
Helen Wolf present. plus a
Mary Jo Barringer had the guest, Arianna Buckley.

of America loses a member

CHESTER- The loss of
· a member, Betty Biggs,
was noted by Chester
. Council 323 Daughters of
America at a recent meeting and arrangements were
made to drape the charter
for her at the September
meeting. Members are
asked to wear white.
At that meeting also
members will ballot on a
· new candidate.
In other news about members it was noted that Marty

Rose had twin girls, JoAnn
Ritchie had surgery, Laura
Mae Nice remains in the
hospital with a broken hip.
and Scottie Smith is home
from the hospital.
Jean Welsh presided the
meeting, which included
the pledge to the Christian
Flag; a reading of John 15.
verses I 0- 12; the Lord's
Prayer was given in unison
as was the pledge 10 the flag
and 1he singing of 1tie
National Anthem.

Good of Order served
cake and ice cream. The
meeting was followed by a
cake walk won by Helen
Wolf.
Attending were JoAnn
Ritchie, Mary Holter,
Everett Grant, Charlotte
Grant, Ruth Smith, Jean
Welsh , Opal Hollon,
Es1her
Smith,
Doris
Grueser, Helen Wolf, Julie
Jo
Fleming,
Mary
Barringer, Gary Holter and
Opal Eichinger.

Birth announced
ATHENS - James and
Chyanna Walters of Athens
announce the first of a son,
Michael Duane Walters,
born Thursday, tlrug. 9, at
O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital in Athens.

wives and children are out for
the evening - "just to talk."
They call me "darling,"
"sweetheart" and other
endearments. If the situation
were reversed and my bushand made private calls to a
young widow, I would be
furious. And when I see these
men, they always greet me
with a big hug. Yuck.
Other than moving and
leaving no forwarding
address, what can I do? I
feel forced into a very distasteful situation. Any suggestions?- L.
Dear L.: Some married
men mistakenly believe they
are doing yoU·a favor by providing the male companionship you are lacking. Assert
yourself. When they phone,
say, "Thanks for your concern. I' II tell ·Betsy' you
called. I'm sure she'll want
to know how caring you've
been. Bye." And hang up. If
they reach out their arms for
unwanted hugs, put one
hand up and say, "Good to
see you," and immediately
move on to greet someone
else. If they make serious
advances, let them know you
will inform their wives. That
should do it.
Dear Annie: I couldn't
stop laughing at the letter
from "Daniel," and his rant
about "beck and call."
. As ·a former English
teacher (I'm now 64 years
old), I got in the habit (in my
younger days) of correcting
people as they spoke. I lost
TONS of friends that way. It
wasn't until one kind person
told me about this quirk that I
didn't even recognize. I fixed
it and have never been happier. I even tolerate sentences
that end. with a preposition.
-A Fan in South Carolina
Dear Fan: We are so glad
this is something up with
which you have learned to
put. Thanks for writing.
Annie's Mailbox is written
by Kathy Mitclu!U and Marcy
Sugar, longtime editors of
the Ann l.JJnders column.
Please e-IRLlil your questions
to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's
. MailbrJx, P.O. Box . 118190,
Chicago, IL 60611. To find
out more about Annie's
MailbrJx, and read features
by other Creators Syndicate
writers and cartoonists, visit
the Creators Syrulicate Web
.page at www.creators.com.

A Free Power Packed Seminar
Spa~ Is Limited Reserve Your Seats Now
By Calling 888-840-2212
The Time of the End Seminar is coming to Point Plea, ant
(Friday, August 24th) and ending (Saturday Sept. 15th).
This FREE Power-Packed Bible Prophecy.Seminar will be
provided twice a day so all will have time lo attend
(Times are Ham &amp; 7pm) and will be held on (Mondays,
Thesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays). This Seminar
·will provide you with the information needed to undemand
how major world evenls relate to the Time of the End. These
Seminars are designed for the whole fami ly, and busy people
who wall! solid facts! The Book of Revelation made dear!
Opening Weekend Topics Are:
(Ancient Middle East Prophecies-Friday, August 24th)
(Why So Much Suffering'! Saturday, August 25th)
Morning Sessions·will include a Free Light Lunch At Noon.
- And Their Will Be Childcare (ages 5-9) For
The Evening Sessions.
Location: Krodell'ark
H wy 2 North, Point Pleasant, WV

Ohio Needs Science Teachers!

Do you have a four year science degree and would like a license to teach?
OR

Do you have a middle childhood science teaching license, but would like to teach high
school?
This program includes:
• free tuition
• keep your current job
• night and weekend classes
• Praxis II support
• finish program in a year

Pie bake-off and
Gospel Singing
CARPENTER
The
August
Community-Wide
Fellowship will be held from
6-8 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 21i, at
the Carpenter Baptist Church,
at 30711 St. Rt. 143 in
Carpenter. Activities of the fellowship evening will include
gospel singing by Beth
Sowble. and a pie baking contest with judging. For more
information call Pastor Whitt
Akers at (740) 591-1 236.

2007

ANNIE'·S MAILBOX

Monday, Aug. 27
POMEROY - The OhBY KATHY MITCHELL
Kan
Coin
Club
will
meet
at
AND MARCY SUGAR
Saturday, Aug. 25
7 p.m. at the Pomeroy
POMEROY
-The
Library. The coin show is
Dear Annie: .1am 36 years
Hysell Run Community
set
for
Oct. 7.
old,
and my wife, "Lori," is
Church of Hysell Run road
Thesday,
Aug.
28
32.
We
have two pre-teen
will host a "super Saturday"
CHESTER
- Shade children. I love my family and
back to school . party for
River Lodge will a special would do anything for them.
children, I to 4 p.m. There
meeting, 7 p.m. for purpose
About a month ago, Lori
will be bounce stations,
of conferring entered and I started to have some
tacos in a bag, corn hole
apprentice degree on three issues. The phone bill came,
game, and "dunk the pastor"
candidates. Refreshments.
and Lori hid pan of it from
events. All children invited.
me. When I.asked her where
For more information call
the rest was, she said she
' 742-3171.
must have filed it. When the
current
phone bill came, she
Thursday, Aug. 23
did
the
same thing. I did
HARRISONVILLE
Blood pressure checks for some lookin~ around and
Friday, Aug. 24
senior citizens, II a.m. , found out Lon is talking, texting and e-mailing another
RACINE
- Racine
Harrisonville Church.
man at all hours of the day.
When I confronted her, she
broke down and started to cry,
saying they are just friends.
But, really, Annie. She talks to
him up to five times a day,
always when I'm at work or
otherwise not around. I say
there's more going on.
Lori had a previous flirtation, and it took nine months
for her to realize that the grass
was not greener somewhere
else. She says she doesn't
want to lose me or hurt the
kids with a divorce, but she
won't stop talkin!l to this man.
She told me he is leaving
town at the end of the summer
and then she will only be able
to e-mail him. That doesn't
make it any better for me.
I love my wife with all my
heart, but I don 't know what
to do. -Midwest
Dear Midwest: Your wife
is fooling around,· and
whether it's a physical affair
or an emotional one, it is still
a betrayal of your trust and
your marriage vows. Don't
be so nice. All communication with this man must stop,
and insist that Lori go with
you for marriage counseling.
She needs to understand
what commitment means,
and that the consequences of
her t1irtations can do major
damage, not only to you, but
to your children.
Dear Annie: I am a recent
widow in my mid-30s. I have
been dismayed and repulsed
"'
Cha~ene Hoelllch/photo by the behavior of some of
The mud volleyball tournament held Saturday night at ttle Meigs County Fair was a popular finale to a warm week of junior the husbands of couples we
fa ir activities. Before the teams went into competition and the tough track races began, the players ran through the mud were close friends with.
hole which had been created for the truck and dune buggie competition.
·
Since my husband's accident, these couples have been
very supportive, and although
I welcome calls from the
wives, the men phone me
from work or when their

destination. The storm surge hurricane passed over the
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
COVered almost the entire Mayan communities, which
town in waist-deep sea water. are the . poorest on t~e
peninsula,"
MAJAHUAL, Mexico Dean weakened over land Yucatan
Hurricane Dean swept but was expected to strength- Calderon said before leavacross the Yucatan peninsu- en as its eye moved over the ing Canada on a flight to
Ia Tuesday, toppling trees, Bay of Campeche, home to Chetumal. to assess the
power Jines and houses as it more than I 00 oil platforms damage.
Mexican officials said they
bore down on the heart of and three major oil exporting
Mexico's oil industry. ports. The sprawling, west- were making slow progress
Glitzy resorts on the Mayan ward storm was projected to down nearly impassable
Riviera were spared, but slam into the mainland unpaved roads to reach these
vulnerable Mayan villages Wednesday afternoon with places. In less isolated towns,
were exposed to the full renewed force near Laguna people emerged to survey
fury of one of history's most Verde, Mexico's only nuclear toppled trees and downed
power lines crisscrossing
intense storms.
power plant.
President Felipe Calderon
"We often see that when a llooded streets.
"If only the government
said no deaths were immedi- storm weakens; people let
would
lend us a hand," said
ately reported in Mexico, down their guard completely.
Georgina
Hernandez, 59,
after Dean killed 13 people You shouldn't do that," said
in the Caribbean. But drivmg Jamie Rhome at the U.S. whose three children all lost
rain, poor communications National Hurricane Center. their ho111es in the town of
·
and impassable roads made "This storm probably won't Los Limones.
Dean's
.path
takes
it ,directit difficult to determine how become a Category 5 again,
isolated Mayan communities but it will still be powerful." ly through the Cantarell oil
faied in the sparsely populatAt 8 p.m. EDT, Dean had field, Mexico'nnost produc.ed jungle where Dean made winds of 80 mph and was tive. The erltire field's OJ?Cralandfall as a ferocious centered about II 0 miles tions were shut down just
Category 5 hurricane.
·
west of Campeche. It was ahead ofthe storm, requcil}g
"It wasn't minutes of ter- moving west at 20 mph, the daily productjon by 2.7 milror. It was hours," said National Hurricane Center lion b~ls of oil and 2.6 billion cubic feet of,natural gas.
Catharine Morales, 30, a said.
.
native of Montreal, Canada,
While 50,000 tourists were
who has lived in Majahual safely evacuated from resorts
for a year. "The walls felt on the Yucatan peninsula,
like they were going to many poor Indians closer to
explode."
the storm's direct path
One of a handful people to refused military orders to
ignore military orders to leave their homes, according
evacuate, she weathered the to Gen. Alfonso Garcia, who .
storm in her new .brick- was running shelters in
walled house with her bus- Felipe Carrillo Puerto, 60
band and ?-month-old baby. miles northwest of Majahual.
Winds. of 165 mph - with
·Troops evacuated more
gusts ·.,of 200 mph, faster · , than 250 small communithan the take9ff, speed , of. ties, and 8,000 people took
·many passenger jets- blew refuge in 500 shelters, said
out windows and pulled · .Jorge Acevedo, a Quintana
pieces frbm their roof. ·
·· 'Roo state · spokesman.
Hundreds .of hollies were OChers turned nway soldiers
collapsed in Majahual when wit~\ machetes .and refused
Dean's eye passed almost to leave, but some of them
directly overhead, crumpling changed their minds when
steel girders, splintering the winds and rain intensiwooden structures and wash- fled, he said.
ing away about half of the
Little was known about
immense concrete dock that , the thousands who rode .out
transformed the sleepy fish· the storm in low-lying coming village into Mexico's munities of stick huts.
"I'm really worried the
second-busiest cruise· ship
BY MARK STEVENSON

AP plloto

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

I

'

.

For details contact: School of Education, University of Rio Grande, Rio Grande, OH
45674. Phone number: 740-245-7328 or 1-800-282-7201 or email: sl!ulati@rio.edu
Informational meetings: August 27@ 6 pm in Anniversary Hall303
September 4 @ 6 pm Anniversary Hall303
Smfte! Now you can own !he ptcrure of lt1at unforgettable
moment captured in the newspaper. Photos become timel86s
when framed or printod on a mug or mouse pikl .
Visrt

and click the blue button.

This is program funded lhrough a grant from Ohio 'Department or Education in
collaboration with Ohio Board or Reagents.
I

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

WoRLD

.

PageA2

Hurricane Dean heads towkd Gulf of Mexico
oil installations after slamming Yucatan

Community Calendar
Church events

Crews continue to recover debris from the collapsed interstate bridge on Tuesday in
Minneapolis. With all of the victims recovered, federal investigators gave state transportation officials clearance Tuesday to pull away the concrete deck of the collapse'd interstate bridge, but they want to move slower on the steel underpinnings to give certain
·parts more scrutiny.

Federal officials clear way for debris
·removal at Minnesota bridge collapse site
BY BRIAN BAKST
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

1
I

., .
'

'
'i

.,.,
.,
'' I
" I
.,
.,., '
'..
·',.
I

.,' I :

MINNEAPOLIS - With
all the victims believed to
have been recovered, federal
investigators gave state
transportation otficials clearance Tuesday to pull away
the concrete deck of the collapsed interstate bridge.
The cleanup and rebuilding steps kicked into a higher gear a day after divers
pulled the body of construction worker Gregory ~ olstad
from the Mississippi River,
about three weeks after the
eight-lane bridge fell Aug. I.
"This community . will
now be on the road to recovery," U.S. Transportation
Secretary Mary E. Peters
said at a briefing near the
collapse site.
Before all 13 known victims were accounted for,
crews had proceeded deli·
cately with debris removal.
Cranes and other heavyduty equipment are now
being moved in to extract
bigger pieces.
With the recovery operation over, officials gave
reporters and TV cameras
their first close look at the
collap&amp;e site Tuesday.
Much of the bridge decking still lies in broken pieces
across the river, but all the
vehicles have been removed
except for a truck belonging
to the construction crew that
was working on the bridge
when it collapsed.
A pedestrian bridge was
reopened just a few hundred
feet downstream from the
collapse site, giving gawkers a better view. Still closed
is a bridge that runs parallel
to the interstate . bridge; a
city spokesman said a decision on when to reopen it

would come in a few days.
National Transportation
Safety Board Chairman
Mark Rosenker, who joined
Peters, said parts of the
southern approach span and
the concrete deck could be
cleared away. Investigators
want crews to move more
slowly on the steel underpinnings of the bridge.
Construction cranes are
being shipped into the col. Iar.se site on barges, They
W.tll be used to extract massive chunks of concrete
from the bridge deck lying
,in the river and blocking the
channel for boats. The
chunks of bridge are being
moved to two sttes, one just
upriver and the other iust
downriver, where they' II be
available to investigators.
The NTSB will have a
crew on site into November,
Rosenker said, but most of
his staff has ret1,1rned to
Washington to do lab an~y-,
sis using comwter · mod!jls
arid more closely inspect
parts already collected.
Those include some of the
bearri-tying gusset plates, but
ROS;CJiker C81!tioned reporters
against too much focus on
· those as a cause of the collapse. "There's more to it than
the gusset plates," he said.
The city, county and state
became eligible for more federal assistanCe for the recovery from the Interstate 35W
collapse when President
Bush declared an emergency,
the White House said.
Officials said the federal
. relief money would be used
to cover costs racked up by
the search and rescue efforts,
security at the bridge site, lmd
overtime for law enforcers.
Gov. Tim Pawlenty said
the declaration applies to
certain rescue costs before

Aug. 15 and comes with the
expectation that there will
be some local matching dolJars. But he; said he planned
to ask Bush to loosen some
of the restrictions and
lengthen the aid window.
Bush, after a briefing from
federal and state authorities
on the bridge collapse, said
the federal government will
use its power to accelerate
the recovery.
"Our job now is to cut
through the bureaucracy, as
best as possible, and get the
people down here a new
bridge," Bush said from the
Minneapolis/St. Paul Air
Reserve Station. He was
headed to a Republican
fundraiser.
Bush commended those
who have led recovery
efforts, including military
divers who have searched for
bodies. He met with about 20
of the divers to thank them.
"The spirit 'that caused tbe
recovery ··to be well coordinated is the very same spirit
that's going to cause this
briqge to ·get reb!lilt," Bush
promised.
Plans for rebuilding took
another step forward when
the Minneapolis City
Council scheduled a public
hearing that is needed
before it can sign off on the
construction. That meeting
will be held Sept. 20, said ·
Mayor R.T. Rybak.
"We will move as expeditiously as possible," he said.
The new bridge is expected to carry I 0 lanes of traffic
and be built to accommodate
a light rail. transit line in the
future. The federal govern- .
ment has authorized $250
million toward the project,
but it won't cover the
enhanced features required
for the potential rail line.

'

'I

Bush says it is up to Iraqi people to
determine the fate of their government
BY DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•'

'

MONTEBELLO, Quebec
- President Bush offered a
tepid endorsement of the
Iraqi
government
on
Thesday, yet brushed off a
Democratic senator's call
for the ouster of Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
Bush acknowledged his
frustration with Iraqi leaders' inability to bridge political divisions, but he said
only the Iraqi people can
decide whether to sideline
the troubled prime minister.
"Clearly, the Iraqi government's got to do more ,"
Bush said at the close of a
two-day North American
summit with the leaders of
Mexico and Canada.
The Sept. 15 deadline for
Bush 's next progress report
to Congress is fast
approaching, leaving the
president little time to show
that his U.S. troop buildup
is succeeding in providing
the enhanced security the
Iraqi leaders need to forge a
unified way forward.
In a speech Wednesday to
the Veterans of Foreign Wars
convention in Kansas City,
Mo., Bush will argue that the
troop buildup is,helping bring
former Sunni .insurgents into
the fight against al-Qaida and
clearing terrorists out of
heavily populated areas.

"Our troops are seeing this back to the United States to
progress on the ground, and visit Minneapolis for a
as they take the initiative fundraiser and update about
from the enemy, they have a the Interstate 35W bridge
question: Will their elected collapse.
leaders in Washington pull
In his VFW speech
the rug out from under them Wednesday, Bush will comjust as they are gaining pare today's war against
momentum and changing the extremists with the militarists
dynamic on the ground in of Japan and the communists
Iraq?" Bush says in his pre- in Korea and Vietnam. · In a
pared remarks. The White speech next Tuesday at the
House released· excerpts of annual American Legion
the speech Thesday evening. convention in Reno, Nev., the
On Monday, Sen. Carl president will put the war in
Levin, D-Mich., chairman of Iraq in the regional context of
the Senate Armed Services the Middle East.
Committee, said there is
In the aftermath of
broad frustration with inac- Japan's surrender, many
tion from Iraq's central gov- thought it was naJive to
ernment. Levin, whn recently help the Japanese transform
returned from Iraq, urged the themselves into a democraIraqi Parliament to oust ai- cy, Bush will tell the VFW
Maliki' and replace his gov- conventioneers. He ·said
ernment with one that is less cnucs also complained
sectarian and more unifying. when America intervened to
And Sen. John Warner, R- save South Korea from
Va., a former Armed Services communist invasion. And in
Committee chairman and an Vietnam, Bush said, people
inlluenfial voice on military argued that the real problem
affairs, joined with Levin in was America's presence
issuing a statement saying · there, "and that if we would
that while Bush's military just withdraw, the killing
buildup in Iraq had "pro- would end."
duced some credible and
"The advance of freedom
positive results," the political in these lands should give us
outlook was dim.
confidence that the hard
Bush spoke at a news con- work we are doing in the
ference in Montebello, Middle East can have the
Quebec, with Mexican same results .we have seen in
President Felipe Calderon Asia - if we show the same
and Canadian Prime Minister perseverance and sense of
Stephen Harper before flying purpose," Bush said.

Wednesday, August 22,

Put a stop to this betrayal now

United Methodist Church to
host season's first Fifth
quarter party following the
Southern .Tornado home
game, 10 p.m. to midnight.
free to youth in grades 6 to
12. Food and games.

TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 , regular
meeting, 7 p.m.
POMEROY - American
Cancer Society
Meigs
County Advisory Board, regular meeting, noon, basement
conference room Pomeroy
Library, lunch provided, new
members welcome, call 9926626, ext. 24 for RSVP.
POMEROY -Alpha Iota
Masters Chapter wi[J have a
Thursday, Aug. 23
RACINE
- Special luncheon, II :30 a.m. at the
meeting of Pomeroy/Racine Wild horse Cafe.
RACINE
Racine
Lodge # 164 for degree
work and examinations. · American Legion Auxiliary,
Any member with work in Post 602 , will have its annuany . degree that needs al picnic, 6 p.m. at the hall.
returned can do so at this Take a covered dish and
meeting.
your own table service.

Clubs and
organization

Schools

Other events

Mud volleyball

.

UM women send cards, mak.e donations

ALFRED - A mtsston
report at a recent meeting of
the Alfred United Methodist
Women titled "Open Heart
. Open Eyes, Open Spirit,"
dealing with ways to be
more open with people was
given by Thelma Henderson.
The artie le she read was
by Beth Richardson in the
Response magazine. When
Richardson mistook a country-music icon for a homeJess person, she realized she
was letting her prejudices
and assumptions block her
. ability to really see those
~ around her. She took this as
a sign to work on herself
and to be open to the ways
God is tr)'ing her. These
practices of openness
mclude the following:

PLAN
NOW TO
.
BEA PART OF IT
WITH OUR
COUNTY WIDE
YARD SALE
PACKAGE
.

~ Daughters

I:

I

Your Ads Will Run

Wednesday, Aug. 29
Thursday, Aug. 30
Friday, Aug. 31
01,1

a Special1&gt;age.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45631
740-992-2155

Open Heart - We are to
~\ave an awareness of others
and God's Spirit by turning
away from our inward focus
and being open to others.
Open Eyes - We are to
open our eyes and see others with the clear vision of
the Spirit, such as a small
child's smile.
.
Open Spirit- This needs
to be nurtured by daily spiritual practices, such as
prayer, · spiritual reading,
meditation and rest and
retreat.
Asie Follrod shared sev·eral readings about age. The
group heard correspondence
from Bishop Augh about the
Miracle Offering for the
Global Aids Fund and a letter from the Rev. Steven

Putka about the United program titled "World Thank
Methodist
Children's - Sustainers of Life." She
Home. The group agreed to read the focus statement and
send a donation to the UM said a prayer. The ~roup parChildren's Home.
ticipated in the Lttany, and
The secretary and treasur- all read the ending prayer.
er's reports were given. Members are to bring their
Eighty-nine friendship calls world thank offering to the
were made. The . women next meeting in the jars they
signed a prayer-calendar made last year. The next
birthday card for Karen meeting will be Sept. II. .
Ujereh of Dakar-Fann,
Henderson gave prayer
Senegal, who is an adminis- before the meal served by
trative missionary. They Sarah Caldwell.
alsd' signed a card in memoThe group gathered at the
ry of Dale Windland.
· church. with Mary Jo
The Festival of Sharing Barringer, Ruth Brooks,
wasdiscussed; members are Mary Jo Buckley, Sarah
to bring kits to the next Caldwell, Osie Follrod,
meeting. Kits are to be sub- Thelma Henderson, Florence
mitted by the week before Spencer, Janice Weber and
Sept. 29.
Helen Wolf present. plus a
Mary Jo Barringer had the guest, Arianna Buckley.

of America loses a member

CHESTER- The loss of
· a member, Betty Biggs,
was noted by Chester
. Council 323 Daughters of
America at a recent meeting and arrangements were
made to drape the charter
for her at the September
meeting. Members are
asked to wear white.
At that meeting also
members will ballot on a
· new candidate.
In other news about members it was noted that Marty

Rose had twin girls, JoAnn
Ritchie had surgery, Laura
Mae Nice remains in the
hospital with a broken hip.
and Scottie Smith is home
from the hospital.
Jean Welsh presided the
meeting, which included
the pledge to the Christian
Flag; a reading of John 15.
verses I 0- 12; the Lord's
Prayer was given in unison
as was the pledge 10 the flag
and 1he singing of 1tie
National Anthem.

Good of Order served
cake and ice cream. The
meeting was followed by a
cake walk won by Helen
Wolf.
Attending were JoAnn
Ritchie, Mary Holter,
Everett Grant, Charlotte
Grant, Ruth Smith, Jean
Welsh , Opal Hollon,
Es1her
Smith,
Doris
Grueser, Helen Wolf, Julie
Jo
Fleming,
Mary
Barringer, Gary Holter and
Opal Eichinger.

Birth announced
ATHENS - James and
Chyanna Walters of Athens
announce the first of a son,
Michael Duane Walters,
born Thursday, tlrug. 9, at
O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital in Athens.

wives and children are out for
the evening - "just to talk."
They call me "darling,"
"sweetheart" and other
endearments. If the situation
were reversed and my bushand made private calls to a
young widow, I would be
furious. And when I see these
men, they always greet me
with a big hug. Yuck.
Other than moving and
leaving no forwarding
address, what can I do? I
feel forced into a very distasteful situation. Any suggestions?- L.
Dear L.: Some married
men mistakenly believe they
are doing yoU·a favor by providing the male companionship you are lacking. Assert
yourself. When they phone,
say, "Thanks for your concern. I' II tell ·Betsy' you
called. I'm sure she'll want
to know how caring you've
been. Bye." And hang up. If
they reach out their arms for
unwanted hugs, put one
hand up and say, "Good to
see you," and immediately
move on to greet someone
else. If they make serious
advances, let them know you
will inform their wives. That
should do it.
Dear Annie: I couldn't
stop laughing at the letter
from "Daniel," and his rant
about "beck and call."
. As ·a former English
teacher (I'm now 64 years
old), I got in the habit (in my
younger days) of correcting
people as they spoke. I lost
TONS of friends that way. It
wasn't until one kind person
told me about this quirk that I
didn't even recognize. I fixed
it and have never been happier. I even tolerate sentences
that end. with a preposition.
-A Fan in South Carolina
Dear Fan: We are so glad
this is something up with
which you have learned to
put. Thanks for writing.
Annie's Mailbox is written
by Kathy Mitclu!U and Marcy
Sugar, longtime editors of
the Ann l.JJnders column.
Please e-IRLlil your questions
to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's
. MailbrJx, P.O. Box . 118190,
Chicago, IL 60611. To find
out more about Annie's
MailbrJx, and read features
by other Creators Syndicate
writers and cartoonists, visit
the Creators Syrulicate Web
.page at www.creators.com.

A Free Power Packed Seminar
Spa~ Is Limited Reserve Your Seats Now
By Calling 888-840-2212
The Time of the End Seminar is coming to Point Plea, ant
(Friday, August 24th) and ending (Saturday Sept. 15th).
This FREE Power-Packed Bible Prophecy.Seminar will be
provided twice a day so all will have time lo attend
(Times are Ham &amp; 7pm) and will be held on (Mondays,
Thesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays). This Seminar
·will provide you with the information needed to undemand
how major world evenls relate to the Time of the End. These
Seminars are designed for the whole fami ly, and busy people
who wall! solid facts! The Book of Revelation made dear!
Opening Weekend Topics Are:
(Ancient Middle East Prophecies-Friday, August 24th)
(Why So Much Suffering'! Saturday, August 25th)
Morning Sessions·will include a Free Light Lunch At Noon.
- And Their Will Be Childcare (ages 5-9) For
The Evening Sessions.
Location: Krodell'ark
H wy 2 North, Point Pleasant, WV

Ohio Needs Science Teachers!

Do you have a four year science degree and would like a license to teach?
OR

Do you have a middle childhood science teaching license, but would like to teach high
school?
This program includes:
• free tuition
• keep your current job
• night and weekend classes
• Praxis II support
• finish program in a year

Pie bake-off and
Gospel Singing
CARPENTER
The
August
Community-Wide
Fellowship will be held from
6-8 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 21i, at
the Carpenter Baptist Church,
at 30711 St. Rt. 143 in
Carpenter. Activities of the fellowship evening will include
gospel singing by Beth
Sowble. and a pie baking contest with judging. For more
information call Pastor Whitt
Akers at (740) 591-1 236.

2007

ANNIE'·S MAILBOX

Monday, Aug. 27
POMEROY - The OhBY KATHY MITCHELL
Kan
Coin
Club
will
meet
at
AND MARCY SUGAR
Saturday, Aug. 25
7 p.m. at the Pomeroy
POMEROY
-The
Library. The coin show is
Dear Annie: .1am 36 years
Hysell Run Community
set
for
Oct. 7.
old,
and my wife, "Lori," is
Church of Hysell Run road
Thesday,
Aug.
28
32.
We
have two pre-teen
will host a "super Saturday"
CHESTER
- Shade children. I love my family and
back to school . party for
River Lodge will a special would do anything for them.
children, I to 4 p.m. There
meeting, 7 p.m. for purpose
About a month ago, Lori
will be bounce stations,
of conferring entered and I started to have some
tacos in a bag, corn hole
apprentice degree on three issues. The phone bill came,
game, and "dunk the pastor"
candidates. Refreshments.
and Lori hid pan of it from
events. All children invited.
me. When I.asked her where
For more information call
the rest was, she said she
' 742-3171.
must have filed it. When the
current
phone bill came, she
Thursday, Aug. 23
did
the
same thing. I did
HARRISONVILLE
Blood pressure checks for some lookin~ around and
Friday, Aug. 24
senior citizens, II a.m. , found out Lon is talking, texting and e-mailing another
RACINE
- Racine
Harrisonville Church.
man at all hours of the day.
When I confronted her, she
broke down and started to cry,
saying they are just friends.
But, really, Annie. She talks to
him up to five times a day,
always when I'm at work or
otherwise not around. I say
there's more going on.
Lori had a previous flirtation, and it took nine months
for her to realize that the grass
was not greener somewhere
else. She says she doesn't
want to lose me or hurt the
kids with a divorce, but she
won't stop talkin!l to this man.
She told me he is leaving
town at the end of the summer
and then she will only be able
to e-mail him. That doesn't
make it any better for me.
I love my wife with all my
heart, but I don 't know what
to do. -Midwest
Dear Midwest: Your wife
is fooling around,· and
whether it's a physical affair
or an emotional one, it is still
a betrayal of your trust and
your marriage vows. Don't
be so nice. All communication with this man must stop,
and insist that Lori go with
you for marriage counseling.
She needs to understand
what commitment means,
and that the consequences of
her t1irtations can do major
damage, not only to you, but
to your children.
Dear Annie: I am a recent
widow in my mid-30s. I have
been dismayed and repulsed
"'
Cha~ene Hoelllch/photo by the behavior of some of
The mud volleyball tournament held Saturday night at ttle Meigs County Fair was a popular finale to a warm week of junior the husbands of couples we
fa ir activities. Before the teams went into competition and the tough track races began, the players ran through the mud were close friends with.
hole which had been created for the truck and dune buggie competition.
·
Since my husband's accident, these couples have been
very supportive, and although
I welcome calls from the
wives, the men phone me
from work or when their

destination. The storm surge hurricane passed over the
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
COVered almost the entire Mayan communities, which
town in waist-deep sea water. are the . poorest on t~e
peninsula,"
MAJAHUAL, Mexico Dean weakened over land Yucatan
Hurricane Dean swept but was expected to strength- Calderon said before leavacross the Yucatan peninsu- en as its eye moved over the ing Canada on a flight to
Ia Tuesday, toppling trees, Bay of Campeche, home to Chetumal. to assess the
power Jines and houses as it more than I 00 oil platforms damage.
Mexican officials said they
bore down on the heart of and three major oil exporting
Mexico's oil industry. ports. The sprawling, west- were making slow progress
Glitzy resorts on the Mayan ward storm was projected to down nearly impassable
Riviera were spared, but slam into the mainland unpaved roads to reach these
vulnerable Mayan villages Wednesday afternoon with places. In less isolated towns,
were exposed to the full renewed force near Laguna people emerged to survey
fury of one of history's most Verde, Mexico's only nuclear toppled trees and downed
power lines crisscrossing
intense storms.
power plant.
President Felipe Calderon
"We often see that when a llooded streets.
"If only the government
said no deaths were immedi- storm weakens; people let
would
lend us a hand," said
ately reported in Mexico, down their guard completely.
Georgina
Hernandez, 59,
after Dean killed 13 people You shouldn't do that," said
in the Caribbean. But drivmg Jamie Rhome at the U.S. whose three children all lost
rain, poor communications National Hurricane Center. their ho111es in the town of
·
and impassable roads made "This storm probably won't Los Limones.
Dean's
.path
takes
it ,directit difficult to determine how become a Category 5 again,
isolated Mayan communities but it will still be powerful." ly through the Cantarell oil
faied in the sparsely populatAt 8 p.m. EDT, Dean had field, Mexico'nnost produc.ed jungle where Dean made winds of 80 mph and was tive. The erltire field's OJ?Cralandfall as a ferocious centered about II 0 miles tions were shut down just
Category 5 hurricane.
·
west of Campeche. It was ahead ofthe storm, requcil}g
"It wasn't minutes of ter- moving west at 20 mph, the daily productjon by 2.7 milror. It was hours," said National Hurricane Center lion b~ls of oil and 2.6 billion cubic feet of,natural gas.
Catharine Morales, 30, a said.
.
native of Montreal, Canada,
While 50,000 tourists were
who has lived in Majahual safely evacuated from resorts
for a year. "The walls felt on the Yucatan peninsula,
like they were going to many poor Indians closer to
explode."
the storm's direct path
One of a handful people to refused military orders to
ignore military orders to leave their homes, according
evacuate, she weathered the to Gen. Alfonso Garcia, who .
storm in her new .brick- was running shelters in
walled house with her bus- Felipe Carrillo Puerto, 60
band and ?-month-old baby. miles northwest of Majahual.
Winds. of 165 mph - with
·Troops evacuated more
gusts ·.,of 200 mph, faster · , than 250 small communithan the take9ff, speed , of. ties, and 8,000 people took
·many passenger jets- blew refuge in 500 shelters, said
out windows and pulled · .Jorge Acevedo, a Quintana
pieces frbm their roof. ·
·· 'Roo state · spokesman.
Hundreds .of hollies were OChers turned nway soldiers
collapsed in Majahual when wit~\ machetes .and refused
Dean's eye passed almost to leave, but some of them
directly overhead, crumpling changed their minds when
steel girders, splintering the winds and rain intensiwooden structures and wash- fled, he said.
ing away about half of the
Little was known about
immense concrete dock that , the thousands who rode .out
transformed the sleepy fish· the storm in low-lying coming village into Mexico's munities of stick huts.
"I'm really worried the
second-busiest cruise· ship
BY MARK STEVENSON

AP plloto

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

I

'

.

For details contact: School of Education, University of Rio Grande, Rio Grande, OH
45674. Phone number: 740-245-7328 or 1-800-282-7201 or email: sl!ulati@rio.edu
Informational meetings: August 27@ 6 pm in Anniversary Hall303
September 4 @ 6 pm Anniversary Hall303
Smfte! Now you can own !he ptcrure of lt1at unforgettable
moment captured in the newspaper. Photos become timel86s
when framed or printod on a mug or mouse pikl .
Visrt

and click the blue button.

This is program funded lhrough a grant from Ohio 'Department or Education in
collaboration with Ohio Board or Reagents.
I

�... • ,.

!"

- ,' ..·· ..

~

.

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

. {740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.myclallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or: of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Go!'ernment for a redress ofgrievances.
.:... The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
TOOily is Wednesday, Aug. 22, the 234th day of 2007.
There are 131 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Aug. 22, 1787, inventor John Fitch demonstrated his
steamboat on the Delaware River to delegates of the
Continental Congress.
On this date:
In 1485, England's King Richard Ill was killed in the
Battle of Bosworth Field, ending the War of the Roses.
In 1846, Gen. Stephen W. Kearny proclaimed all of New
Mexico a territory of the United States.
.
In 1851, the schooner America outraced more than a
dozen British vessels off the English coast to win a trophy
that came to be known as the America's Cup.
· In 1904, Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping was born in
Sichuan province.
In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Vice
President Richard M. Nixon were nominated for second
terms in office by the Republican national convention in
San Francisco.
·
In 1968, Pope Paul VI arrived in Bogota, Colombia, for
the start of the first papal visit to Latin America.
In 1978, President Jomo Kenyatta, a leading figure in
Kenya's struggle for independence, died; Vice President
Darnel Arap Moi was sworn in as acting president.
In 1985, 55 people died when fire broke out aboard a
British Airtours charter jet on a runway at Manchester
Airport in England.
In 1989, Black Panther co-founder Huey P. Newton was
shot to death in Oakland, Calif. (Gunman Tyrone Robinson
was later sentenced to 32 years to life in prison.)
Today's Birthdays: Author Ray Bradbury is 87. Heart
surgeon Dr. Denton Cooley is 87. Retired Gen. H. Norman
Schwarzkopf is 73. Broadcast journalist Morton Dean is
72. Writer Annie Proulx is 72. Rockabilly singer Dale
Hawkins is 71 . Baseball Hall-qf-Famer Carl Yastrzemski is
68·, Actress Valerie Harper is 6 7 .. Football coach Bill
Parcells is 66. CBS newsman Steve Kroft is 62. Actress
Cindy Williams is 60. Musician David Marks is 59.
Country singer Holly Dunn is 50. Rock musician Vernon
Reid is 49. Country singer Collin Raye is 47. Actress
Regina Taylor is 47. Country singer Ricky Lynn Gregg is
46. Rock singer Roland Orzabal (Tears For Fears) is 46.
Rock musician Debbi Peterson (The Bangles) is 46. Rock
musician Gary l:.ee Connor (Screaming Trees) is 45. Singer
Tori Amos is 44. Country singer Mila Mason is 44.
Rhythm-and-blues musician James DeBarge is 44. Tennis
player Mats Wilander is 43. Rapper GZA!The Genius is 41.
Actor Rick Yune is 36. Rock musician Paul Doucette
(Matchbox Twenty) is 35. Rap-reggae singer Beenie Man is
34. Singer Howie Dorough (Backstreet Boys) is 34. Actress
Jenna Leigh Green is 33. Rock musician Jeff Stinco
(Simple Plan) is 29 ..
Thought for Today: "The individual says, 'My crowd
doesn't run that way.' I sa;r. don ' t !:On with crowds."Robert Henri, American art 1st ( 1865- 1929).

'

VVednesday,August22,2007

PageA4

'An unequivocal success story'

Wednesday, August ·2 2, 2007

Leave ·the 'wo' out of womens issues
It's the summer of 2007 ,
and I have breaking news:
Women are liberated.
It's true. Just ask media
mogul Oprah. Or presidential candidate Hillary. Or
Speaker of the . House
Nancy. I thought of these
women
after
Ellen
Goodman's column in the
Boston Globe made me
think of myself.
In a piece complaining
about the ratio of male to
female political bloggers, '
Goodman wrote: "It's not
that women are invisible.
There are 'women's pages'
on the Internet. Technorati
counts more than II ,000
'mommy blogs.' There are
'women's issues' blogs like
the funny and bracing
Feministing."
She continued, "But this
is not just about counting,
not just about diversity-bythe-numbers. It's about the
political dialogue - who
gets heard and who sets the
agenda." She cites a female
conference organizer who
worries, '"Are we going to
do the same thing we've
done all along, but with
computers? Or will we create a new institution that
allows for marginalized

MSNBC's "Hardball" .and
former panelist on CNN 's
·:capital Gang," best-selling author, advisBr to many
a politico, lawyer and political hand in her own right.
Kathryn
Additionally, there are
Lopez
quite a number of strong
female personalities on the
mainstream politi cal net
both behind the scenes and
voices?"'
out in front. Just as there
I hate to spoil a good girl are a good number ' of
cry, but at National Review women with opinions who
Online, I not only have a get heard on talk radio, seen
voiCe;, but I am the key on TV and read in opinion
agenda-setter. And I have magazines and columns
been either the principal or like Michelle Malkin.
primary decider as
Valuable time is often
President Bush might p11t it wasted in the commentari(whose senior advisers read at, in studies and in hearnationalreview.com) - for ings bean-qounting the perthe better part of a decade.
centages of women on cor1 don't know if you've porate
boards, ·
in
ever been to our site -the Hollywood studios, higher
cyber child of the influeo- education, Congress and on
tial
National
Review, op-ed pages. Number disfounded by William F. parities can often be
Buckley Jr. in 1955 - but explained not by discrimiit's no "women's issues" nation but by free choice,
place, only as mucli as something• iiberal feminists
women's
issues
ARE · claim to he fans of. Many
American issues.
women reading this column
And I'm 'oot the only may be just as good or
female exec at the National much better at writing or
Review. One of our most opinion-making than any
public faces is Kate man or woman they ' re
O'Beiroe, a . regular on reading or watching on

Officials gather to de~icate n.ew MOVC wing

talking-heads
shows
tonight. But maybe they
chose to raise kids instead
of taking that slot on Fox
News or getting that editing
job or starting that blog site .
Choice happens .
Sen. Hillary Clinton, ON. Y., could become president of the United States.
But she's not going to win
by trying to guilt men into
it, by arguing that her election is a civil-rights movement in itself. She'll
become · commander-inchief if she commallds on
the campaign trail, tackling
the war, health care and
education. She won't win
by playing gender games.
My reaction to Goodmanlike complaining is: It's
2007, you live in the United
States. You have a pen,
phone and Internet connection . Stop whining. It's
unattractive. If you want to
have an ·impact, just work,
That's how the guys do it.
That's how we gals do it.
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National · Review
Online (www.nationalreview.com). She can be contacted at k/opez@nationplreview. com.)

BY DIANE POTTORFF
. OPOTTORFF@MYDAJLVREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Local, state and
federal officials, along with
community members, gathered Tuesday &lt;tt the Marshall
University Mid-Ohio Valley
Center in Point Pleasant for
a dedication and celebration
of the center's new wing.
"This center has gone
from an acorn to an oak,"
Donovan Combs, dean of
the School of Extended
Education, said during the
ceremony, adding that the
center started nearly 15
years ago with just II students and has grown to
serve more than 3,000.
"And we are continuing
to grow," he said. ·"If you
build it, they will come."
Combs continued by saying the center's continued
growth called for additional
space, and with the support
of the university, state and
federal leaders and the community, MOVC was able to
expand last winter to
include a new wing that
houses nursing and science
laboratories and classrooms.
U.S.
Congressw,oman
Shelley Moore Capito
joined Marshall University
President Stephen J. Kopp
in dedicating the new sci. ence and nursing wing. The
$3 million, 8,100 squarefoot addition increased the
size of the 7-year-old center
by 50 percent.
Kopp described MOVC
as "an unequivocal success
story and a testament to the

'

l

GOODNESS. WHO KNEW THAT FOOTBALL WOULD
CREATE SOMEONE WITH THE APPETITE ·FOR ·
WATCHING THE INFLICTION OF PHYSICAL PAIN..

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
In a story, call the newsroom at (740)

992·2156.

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street,

Pomeroy, bhio.
Second-class
postage paid at Pomeroy. ·
Member: The Associated PresS and

the Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number Is

(740) 992-2156.

Poatmaater: Send address corrections to The Deily Sentinel, 111 Court

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

· Department extensions are:

.

News
Editor: ChMene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Roporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13

Subscription Rates

By carrier or motor route
One month
' 10.27
One year
'1 15.84
Dally
50'
Senior Citizen rates
One month
'1 0.27
One year
'103.90

Advertising

Subscribers should ramd in advance
direct to the Daily SentineL No sub,
' scription by mail permiHed in areas
Outalde.Saln: Brenda Davis, EK116 whare home carrier service is avaiiCI...JCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.
Outllde Salel: Dave Harris Ext. 15

General Manager
Cha~ane

Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E-mail:
newsOmydallysentinel.com .
Web:

www.mydailysentinel.coril

Mall Subscription
Inside Melga County
13 Weeks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
'127.1 1
Oulslde Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26Weeks
' 107.10
52 Weeks
'214.21

power of universi ty-community partnerships."
"This celebration speaks
well of Marshall University
and its partnership with the
community," Kopp said.
"MOVC is a successful testament of what happens
when the university and·the
community works together."
Capito said she was glad
to see th at MOVC has
excelled in not only building the expansion, but also
with its programs - not
just with the hospital, but by
serving high school students
who are enrolled in the
dual-credit program.
"This is a good way to
hook the students into college," she said. "This place ·
is a community mix of traditional, second-career and
non-traditional students."
She said statistics show
that the United States is
falling behind the rest of the
world in science and math
and that she is pleased that
MOVC emphasizes its studies in science and nursing,
which will help students get
a job in the future.
School officials view her
role in securing a $250,000
modernization grant as an
integral part of making possible the latest in technical
equipment for nursing
Classrooms, computef labs,
interactive equipment and
wireless communication .
"I am proud to see this
state-of-the-art nursing and
sci'ence wing come to
Marshall's Point Pleasant
center,"
Capito
said.
"Marshall prides itself on its
educational experience, and

difference in the lives and
caree r opportunities for our
students.'
Other financial help to
construct the new wing
came in the form of a loan
from Ohio Valley Bank.
"This is a tremendous facility," Steve Chapman, ch3irman of the OVB auditing
committee and a Marshall
gra~ua~, .said. "M!ifS~all
Uruverstty ts a great lllSUnttion, and this center was
needed in this area. It
a'
lot to the people of Mas,on
and Galli a counties."
Chapman also said ·the
facility and edu~ti~ system
1s a factor m bringmg ~
try to the area because coD}panies want to know what'
programs are offered before
they decide to build here.
Homer Preece, director of
the center, has watched the
program grow from its
mfancy.
"This center has a I 00
percent passage rate, and
·our graduates have ~ood
careers," Preece said. 't'l'm
so proud that we can offer .
the very best facilities to our
hardworking students."
Preece said he was pleased
by the turnout of the commll· .
mty, faculty members · and
students who were.present.at
the ceremony. He added !hal
the commumty's support haS ,
been fantastic and that the'
center employees have ·
worked hard to get the facility to where it is now.
He said future gr«?Wth is:
expected, with Move·
hoping to offer additional
programs in the coming
semesters.

means

Dione Pottortl/photo

A ribbon ·cutting and dedication ceremony took place Tuesday for the Marshall University
Mld-Ohio·Valley Center's new wing. Pictured from left are Homer Preece, MOVC director; AI
Lawson , JD, FACHE and chief executive officer of Pleasant Valley Hospital; John Sang,
Board of Advisors; Stephen J. Kopp, Marshall University president; Congresswoman Shelley
Moore Capito; and Donovan Combs, d~an of the School of Extended Education.
this facility enhances that
experience to a whole new
level. I look forward to coniinued success for Marshall
and its students in Point
Pleasant."
·
John San~, a member of
the
. advtsory
board ,
remarked on the economic
development MOVC has on
Mason, Gallia, Meigs and
the surrounding counties
and its long-term effect of
keeping youth in the area.
He said when students leave

to go to coijege, they usual- will greatly benefit the
ly nave to go elsewhere to region. He added that the .
find ·eJUployment. But if hospital and community
they g6 to· school here and already have benelited from
. get their degrees, they want the center.
That
sentiment
was
llJ stay .in the area. .
'echoed
by
Kopp.
·Alvin ~· .Lawson, ~D.
"We could not have asked
FACHE, ·', chtef execullve
officer of ,Pleasant Valley for better partners than the
Hospital, said the hospital is leaders of Mason County
Pleasant
Valley
happy to be associated with and
Marshal~ . University. · By Hospital," he said. "f ain
working to$ether, the facili- .proud of our faculty and
staff here and know that
ti~ .can bnng programs. to
the community college that together we are all making a

1

l

.. : '·

Report 'rmds shortcomings

GOING ORGANIC

in workers' comp program
.

on-the-job injuries that
COLUMBUS (AP) The state's insurance pro· became too costly to the
gram _for injured workers bureau's insurance fund, the
·
did nothing improper when report said.
Under the structure set up
it artiiifArily reduced worker
compensation rates for by former Workers' Comp
James
some companies using little administrator
criteria or documentation, Conrad, the decisions were
the Ohio inspector general made' by one person -John
said . in a report issued Romig, the former chief of
employer services. Romig
Tuesday.
State law allows the Ohio "w1elded almost imperial
of
Workers' power" at the bureau,
Bureau
Compensation to grant Charles' report said.
companies rate appeals, and . Compames that made
administrators have leeway their rate requests through
to arrive at those decisions, state representatives or senusually
received
the report · by Inspector ators
quicker action, but Charles
General Tom Charles said.
The investigation set out said that's common at most
to determine if political state agencies.
One lawmaker, state
influence played a role in
rate reductions· for some Sen. Jeffry Armbruster, a
Republican from suburban
companies.
·c...~ene Hoelllch/photo
Rate
appeals · were Cleveland who left at ,the
Many families are tuming to organic produc~s as a way of escapiing the pOtentially harmful requested by employers that end of 2006 because of
effects of pesticides. Chris Sheeham of Rive' Road ; Stewart, operates Willow Run Organics . had been removed from the term limits, violated ethics
and sells his organically-grown vegetables at farmers' marl!et, rte has come several times bureau 's group-rate dis- laws by lobbying the
count program because of bureau for lower premito the Middleport Farmers Market held every Friday on ·the lot adjacent to Diles Park.

I
'

I
'

I

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Letters to the editor are welcome. Tirey should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

urns on his gas station
business, the Le'islative
Inspector General s office
found in June.
The case has been
referred to prosecutors.
Armbruster has denied
wrongdoing.
Charles recommended
that the bureau tighten its
policies on appeals and give
equal consideration to all
requests, whether they are
made through lawmakers or
not. Charles also urged the
bureau to apply industryapproved standards to make
the group-rate program .
more equitable.

'A'-,
c

If'
.

~

Q('

...

~

I

':l'
I("

I
y,··

....... .....
-~

~

.

,Cl,

1:1

•

\

.'

,

)I&gt;

··' .~
, ._~... . .. .... .!t:r

_..........__

PUFOR.\UM; ,\KlS Ctmt:

Captain Fantastic
Comic Book adventure

August 25 .&amp;- 26

Views

Runaround Sue
The guy who sued his dry
cleaner ·for $54 million for
losing a pair of pants has
been quite an inspiration to
.me. Right now, I'm thinking
of suing my barber for $60
million. I wouldn't have
even thought about it if it
weren't for the pants man.
I told Billy that I wanted
my hair short but not THAT
short. And what does he do,
he goes and cuts it THAT
short. I took pictures. I've
got the evidence. What does
he think - that my hair
grows on trees?
It was very important that
I look good that day
because it was the first day
of my $75 million suit
against Carl, my auto
mechanic. If I had looked
better, I might have won the
case. I might have been a
little sharper on the witness
stand if I wasn't so
depressed about not looking
my best.
Personally, I like Carl and
I hated to sue him, but he
said he would have my car
back on Tuesday, and it
wasn ' 1
ready
until
Wednesday. I was planning
to take Sue to the movies
that Tuesday night, and we
couldn't go. So I'm really

goes wrong in my. life. Oh, my next -door neighbor
sure, blame the victim. I'm mixed in with my mail yesthinking of suing the com- terday, which means I carpany that prints the form. ried the extra weight of that
envelope from the mailbox
Who can read that stuff?
It wouldn ' t surprise me at on the front porch to the
Jim
all to find out that the judge kitchen where, much to my
Mullen
and Carl are in cahoots. Carl horror, I discovered it. The
probably fixes the judge's extra weight could have
Lexus. Billy probably cuts gi veo me a heart attack. I'm
the judge's hair. That's the sure I pulled a muscle carryonly suing Carl for the price system for you, always ing all that extra weight. I
feel a pain in my neck, a big
of the movie tickets. The cheating the little guy.
rest of the money is legal
Normally, I would have pain. It took quite a while to
fees.
been depressed. I would calm myself down after that
.I'm representing myself, have given up, but I asked brush with death .
and - sorry; Carl - my myself, "What would Pants
!may need years of phystime is very expensive. I Man do?'' Would he give ical therapy - in one of
wanted to be compensated up? NO! Would he say this those German spas, say,
for all the pain and suffering is silly, get a real job? NO! Baden-Baden. If that dqesI had gone through. For He fights on. And so will I.
n't work, and I have a feeling
it won't, a trip to China
example, Sue said she
That waitress that deliberwould divorce me if I sued ately gave me the regular for some acupuncture might
my barber and my mechan- soda instead of the diet .be in order. But I don' t
ic. I'm thinking of suing her she's getting a bill for $40 know how many new cases
for saying that, but I know million. I know it was delib- I can take on right now. I'm
we haven't got $60 million, erate because she gave me a having trouble finding a
so what's the point? It's not look that said, "What's the new barber and a new
worth my time. You just point of ordering a diet soda mechanic. Business must be
have.lo tet some things go.
if you're ordering fried good. They all say they 're
Unfortunately, they threw clams with French fries and overbooked and can' t take
out my case on a technicali- coleslaw." Just never you on any new customers.
ty. Apparently, I had signed mind. missy.
(Jim Mullen is the author
some form when I picked
of
"It Takes a Village Idiot:
This morning I slapped
up the car, and in the tiny, our letter carrier with a Complicating th e Simple
sneaky print it says that the $100 million suit. This one Life" and "Baby's First
mechanic is not responsible should be a slam dunk. I Tattoo. " You can reach him
for every little thing that found a letter addressed to at jim_ mullen@ myway.com.)

from PageA1
2000 and 2005 . 2004 was
the first in five years that the
series was absent from the
annual
"I 0
Mos1
Challenged Books" list. A
challenge is a "formal, written complaint" made in "an
attempt to remove or
restrict" a book from school
curriculum or a library collection because of its content, according to the ALA's
website, www.ala.org.
Asbeck read the first book
of the Harry .Potter series,
and said that was enough

Jobless
from PageA1

~:

.!
\

'

'· :
·,
'

from June 's rate of 6.2;
Vinton had 7.2 perc em,
down I. I percent from 8.3
in the previous month; and
Washington posted 5.2 percent, down four-tenths of a
percent from 5.6 in June.
Ohio' s
unemployment
rate was 5.8 percent in July.
down from 6. I percent in
june, the state said.
Counties with unempl oymcnl rates below 5 percent
included
Clermont,

for ber. She noted that the ·
Bible speaks against sorcery
and witchcraft, and quoted
several scriptures including
Gal. 5:19-20 they "shall not
inherit the k\ngdom of
God."
"The Bible takes this very
seriously," Asbeck said.
"It's not a fun-and-games
thing." She added that she
has no problem with fantasy, and she agreed the book
does deal with good and
evil but in the contest of
witchcraft. "Unlike C.S.
Lewis' 'The Lion; the
Witch and the Wardrobe,' in
which witches are not portrayed in a good light,
Row lings portrays both the
good and evil sides of

Potter books. She named
witchcraft," she said.
. Hayes, on the other hand, other fantasy books and also
has read all the Harry Potter classics which contain
books and her daughter is magic as well: C.S. Lewis'
on the fourth one. "She's Chronicles of Namia and
never tried to jun:Jp on a Mary Poppins. She wonders
broomstick and fly,' Hayes what is the difference
said, because she knows between those stories and
that, like the magic in Little the books in question.
"I don 't understand why
Mermaid, "obviously, none
of this can happen." The people can bash one book
series "doesn't say, 'Go out and not keep the same arguand practice witchcraft, ment for the fantasy genre,"
she said. She asked why
kids,"' she added.
Hayes said she under- people are tolerant of one
stands where opponents of thing and intolerant of
the books are coming from. another. She said she feels
However, she noted that frustration over having not
people have not debated been able to talk with peoThe Wizard of Oz, with its ple who oppose the books
ruby-slipper snaps and such, yet have not read them.
Hayes has a collection of
as they have the Harry

Clinton,
Delaware,
Fayette, Franklin, Geauga, ·
Holmes, Logan, Mercer
(the lowest at 4 percent),
Union, Warren and Wayne .
In addition to Meigs, counties with jobless rates over
8 percent were Huron ,
Monroe , Morgan, Noble
and Pike, the highest at 8. 7
percent.
The number of workers
unemployed in Ohio in July
was 344,000, down from
363,000 in June as the size
of Ohio's work force fell by
8,400 to 5.4 millio n, accgrding to lhe DJFS .
"The labor market data

showed mixed results in
July," Helen Jones- Ke lley,
ihe agency's director, sa id
in a statement. "Although
the unemployment rate

•

declined in July. ·overall
employment
also
declined.''
(The Associated Press
colllributed to this story.)

factasy books in her classroom at school. The students love Harry I:'otter
and other fantasy books,
she said.
"Kids think it's fun," she
said, adding that the fantasy
books are a "purely entertainment industry."

Youth &amp; Adult Talent Contest

September 1

Ducktona, Sept. 8
Haw You Adopted Yoor DU&lt;b7
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Galllpolla, OH (740) 44&amp;-AR18

helping you

Make
the

Most
of Life

Your ability to hear affects the quality of the life
· you lead. We want our patients to enjoy
the best quality of life possible. That's why we
offer a range of services to ensure that your
hearing is the best that it can be.

Now accepting new patients at our Athens Olllce

Aryeh Gorenstein, MD
and Anil Gokhale, MD
Board Cenified in Otolaryngology (ENT).

•

Call today for a consulwtion.

Thank You

Facemyer Forest Products
for 6uging mg 2007 Markgt £am6.
Morgan Burt

594-6333
1-800-451-9806
499
Mlucl """'
l.lll&lt;N, OH 45'70t

.

'

�... • ,.

!"

- ,' ..·· ..

~

.

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

. {740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.myclallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or: of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Go!'ernment for a redress ofgrievances.
.:... The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
TOOily is Wednesday, Aug. 22, the 234th day of 2007.
There are 131 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Aug. 22, 1787, inventor John Fitch demonstrated his
steamboat on the Delaware River to delegates of the
Continental Congress.
On this date:
In 1485, England's King Richard Ill was killed in the
Battle of Bosworth Field, ending the War of the Roses.
In 1846, Gen. Stephen W. Kearny proclaimed all of New
Mexico a territory of the United States.
.
In 1851, the schooner America outraced more than a
dozen British vessels off the English coast to win a trophy
that came to be known as the America's Cup.
· In 1904, Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping was born in
Sichuan province.
In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Vice
President Richard M. Nixon were nominated for second
terms in office by the Republican national convention in
San Francisco.
·
In 1968, Pope Paul VI arrived in Bogota, Colombia, for
the start of the first papal visit to Latin America.
In 1978, President Jomo Kenyatta, a leading figure in
Kenya's struggle for independence, died; Vice President
Darnel Arap Moi was sworn in as acting president.
In 1985, 55 people died when fire broke out aboard a
British Airtours charter jet on a runway at Manchester
Airport in England.
In 1989, Black Panther co-founder Huey P. Newton was
shot to death in Oakland, Calif. (Gunman Tyrone Robinson
was later sentenced to 32 years to life in prison.)
Today's Birthdays: Author Ray Bradbury is 87. Heart
surgeon Dr. Denton Cooley is 87. Retired Gen. H. Norman
Schwarzkopf is 73. Broadcast journalist Morton Dean is
72. Writer Annie Proulx is 72. Rockabilly singer Dale
Hawkins is 71 . Baseball Hall-qf-Famer Carl Yastrzemski is
68·, Actress Valerie Harper is 6 7 .. Football coach Bill
Parcells is 66. CBS newsman Steve Kroft is 62. Actress
Cindy Williams is 60. Musician David Marks is 59.
Country singer Holly Dunn is 50. Rock musician Vernon
Reid is 49. Country singer Collin Raye is 47. Actress
Regina Taylor is 47. Country singer Ricky Lynn Gregg is
46. Rock singer Roland Orzabal (Tears For Fears) is 46.
Rock musician Debbi Peterson (The Bangles) is 46. Rock
musician Gary l:.ee Connor (Screaming Trees) is 45. Singer
Tori Amos is 44. Country singer Mila Mason is 44.
Rhythm-and-blues musician James DeBarge is 44. Tennis
player Mats Wilander is 43. Rapper GZA!The Genius is 41.
Actor Rick Yune is 36. Rock musician Paul Doucette
(Matchbox Twenty) is 35. Rap-reggae singer Beenie Man is
34. Singer Howie Dorough (Backstreet Boys) is 34. Actress
Jenna Leigh Green is 33. Rock musician Jeff Stinco
(Simple Plan) is 29 ..
Thought for Today: "The individual says, 'My crowd
doesn't run that way.' I sa;r. don ' t !:On with crowds."Robert Henri, American art 1st ( 1865- 1929).

'

VVednesday,August22,2007

PageA4

'An unequivocal success story'

Wednesday, August ·2 2, 2007

Leave ·the 'wo' out of womens issues
It's the summer of 2007 ,
and I have breaking news:
Women are liberated.
It's true. Just ask media
mogul Oprah. Or presidential candidate Hillary. Or
Speaker of the . House
Nancy. I thought of these
women
after
Ellen
Goodman's column in the
Boston Globe made me
think of myself.
In a piece complaining
about the ratio of male to
female political bloggers, '
Goodman wrote: "It's not
that women are invisible.
There are 'women's pages'
on the Internet. Technorati
counts more than II ,000
'mommy blogs.' There are
'women's issues' blogs like
the funny and bracing
Feministing."
She continued, "But this
is not just about counting,
not just about diversity-bythe-numbers. It's about the
political dialogue - who
gets heard and who sets the
agenda." She cites a female
conference organizer who
worries, '"Are we going to
do the same thing we've
done all along, but with
computers? Or will we create a new institution that
allows for marginalized

MSNBC's "Hardball" .and
former panelist on CNN 's
·:capital Gang," best-selling author, advisBr to many
a politico, lawyer and political hand in her own right.
Kathryn
Additionally, there are
Lopez
quite a number of strong
female personalities on the
mainstream politi cal net
both behind the scenes and
voices?"'
out in front. Just as there
I hate to spoil a good girl are a good number ' of
cry, but at National Review women with opinions who
Online, I not only have a get heard on talk radio, seen
voiCe;, but I am the key on TV and read in opinion
agenda-setter. And I have magazines and columns
been either the principal or like Michelle Malkin.
primary decider as
Valuable time is often
President Bush might p11t it wasted in the commentari(whose senior advisers read at, in studies and in hearnationalreview.com) - for ings bean-qounting the perthe better part of a decade.
centages of women on cor1 don't know if you've porate
boards, ·
in
ever been to our site -the Hollywood studios, higher
cyber child of the influeo- education, Congress and on
tial
National
Review, op-ed pages. Number disfounded by William F. parities can often be
Buckley Jr. in 1955 - but explained not by discrimiit's no "women's issues" nation but by free choice,
place, only as mucli as something• iiberal feminists
women's
issues
ARE · claim to he fans of. Many
American issues.
women reading this column
And I'm 'oot the only may be just as good or
female exec at the National much better at writing or
Review. One of our most opinion-making than any
public faces is Kate man or woman they ' re
O'Beiroe, a . regular on reading or watching on

Officials gather to de~icate n.ew MOVC wing

talking-heads
shows
tonight. But maybe they
chose to raise kids instead
of taking that slot on Fox
News or getting that editing
job or starting that blog site .
Choice happens .
Sen. Hillary Clinton, ON. Y., could become president of the United States.
But she's not going to win
by trying to guilt men into
it, by arguing that her election is a civil-rights movement in itself. She'll
become · commander-inchief if she commallds on
the campaign trail, tackling
the war, health care and
education. She won't win
by playing gender games.
My reaction to Goodmanlike complaining is: It's
2007, you live in the United
States. You have a pen,
phone and Internet connection . Stop whining. It's
unattractive. If you want to
have an ·impact, just work,
That's how the guys do it.
That's how we gals do it.
(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National · Review
Online (www.nationalreview.com). She can be contacted at k/opez@nationplreview. com.)

BY DIANE POTTORFF
. OPOTTORFF@MYDAJLVREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Local, state and
federal officials, along with
community members, gathered Tuesday &lt;tt the Marshall
University Mid-Ohio Valley
Center in Point Pleasant for
a dedication and celebration
of the center's new wing.
"This center has gone
from an acorn to an oak,"
Donovan Combs, dean of
the School of Extended
Education, said during the
ceremony, adding that the
center started nearly 15
years ago with just II students and has grown to
serve more than 3,000.
"And we are continuing
to grow," he said. ·"If you
build it, they will come."
Combs continued by saying the center's continued
growth called for additional
space, and with the support
of the university, state and
federal leaders and the community, MOVC was able to
expand last winter to
include a new wing that
houses nursing and science
laboratories and classrooms.
U.S.
Congressw,oman
Shelley Moore Capito
joined Marshall University
President Stephen J. Kopp
in dedicating the new sci. ence and nursing wing. The
$3 million, 8,100 squarefoot addition increased the
size of the 7-year-old center
by 50 percent.
Kopp described MOVC
as "an unequivocal success
story and a testament to the

'

l

GOODNESS. WHO KNEW THAT FOOTBALL WOULD
CREATE SOMEONE WITH THE APPETITE ·FOR ·
WATCHING THE INFLICTION OF PHYSICAL PAIN..

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
In a story, call the newsroom at (740)

992·2156.

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street,

Pomeroy, bhio.
Second-class
postage paid at Pomeroy. ·
Member: The Associated PresS and

the Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number Is

(740) 992-2156.

Poatmaater: Send address corrections to The Deily Sentinel, 111 Court

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

· Department extensions are:

.

News
Editor: ChMene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Roporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13

Subscription Rates

By carrier or motor route
One month
' 10.27
One year
'1 15.84
Dally
50'
Senior Citizen rates
One month
'1 0.27
One year
'103.90

Advertising

Subscribers should ramd in advance
direct to the Daily SentineL No sub,
' scription by mail permiHed in areas
Outalde.Saln: Brenda Davis, EK116 whare home carrier service is avaiiCI...JCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.
Outllde Salel: Dave Harris Ext. 15

General Manager
Cha~ane

Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E-mail:
newsOmydallysentinel.com .
Web:

www.mydailysentinel.coril

Mall Subscription
Inside Melga County
13 Weeks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
'127.1 1
Oulslde Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26Weeks
' 107.10
52 Weeks
'214.21

power of universi ty-community partnerships."
"This celebration speaks
well of Marshall University
and its partnership with the
community," Kopp said.
"MOVC is a successful testament of what happens
when the university and·the
community works together."
Capito said she was glad
to see th at MOVC has
excelled in not only building the expansion, but also
with its programs - not
just with the hospital, but by
serving high school students
who are enrolled in the
dual-credit program.
"This is a good way to
hook the students into college," she said. "This place ·
is a community mix of traditional, second-career and
non-traditional students."
She said statistics show
that the United States is
falling behind the rest of the
world in science and math
and that she is pleased that
MOVC emphasizes its studies in science and nursing,
which will help students get
a job in the future.
School officials view her
role in securing a $250,000
modernization grant as an
integral part of making possible the latest in technical
equipment for nursing
Classrooms, computef labs,
interactive equipment and
wireless communication .
"I am proud to see this
state-of-the-art nursing and
sci'ence wing come to
Marshall's Point Pleasant
center,"
Capito
said.
"Marshall prides itself on its
educational experience, and

difference in the lives and
caree r opportunities for our
students.'
Other financial help to
construct the new wing
came in the form of a loan
from Ohio Valley Bank.
"This is a tremendous facility," Steve Chapman, ch3irman of the OVB auditing
committee and a Marshall
gra~ua~, .said. "M!ifS~all
Uruverstty ts a great lllSUnttion, and this center was
needed in this area. It
a'
lot to the people of Mas,on
and Galli a counties."
Chapman also said ·the
facility and edu~ti~ system
1s a factor m bringmg ~
try to the area because coD}panies want to know what'
programs are offered before
they decide to build here.
Homer Preece, director of
the center, has watched the
program grow from its
mfancy.
"This center has a I 00
percent passage rate, and
·our graduates have ~ood
careers," Preece said. 't'l'm
so proud that we can offer .
the very best facilities to our
hardworking students."
Preece said he was pleased
by the turnout of the commll· .
mty, faculty members · and
students who were.present.at
the ceremony. He added !hal
the commumty's support haS ,
been fantastic and that the'
center employees have ·
worked hard to get the facility to where it is now.
He said future gr«?Wth is:
expected, with Move·
hoping to offer additional
programs in the coming
semesters.

means

Dione Pottortl/photo

A ribbon ·cutting and dedication ceremony took place Tuesday for the Marshall University
Mld-Ohio·Valley Center's new wing. Pictured from left are Homer Preece, MOVC director; AI
Lawson , JD, FACHE and chief executive officer of Pleasant Valley Hospital; John Sang,
Board of Advisors; Stephen J. Kopp, Marshall University president; Congresswoman Shelley
Moore Capito; and Donovan Combs, d~an of the School of Extended Education.
this facility enhances that
experience to a whole new
level. I look forward to coniinued success for Marshall
and its students in Point
Pleasant."
·
John San~, a member of
the
. advtsory
board ,
remarked on the economic
development MOVC has on
Mason, Gallia, Meigs and
the surrounding counties
and its long-term effect of
keeping youth in the area.
He said when students leave

to go to coijege, they usual- will greatly benefit the
ly nave to go elsewhere to region. He added that the .
find ·eJUployment. But if hospital and community
they g6 to· school here and already have benelited from
. get their degrees, they want the center.
That
sentiment
was
llJ stay .in the area. .
'echoed
by
Kopp.
·Alvin ~· .Lawson, ~D.
"We could not have asked
FACHE, ·', chtef execullve
officer of ,Pleasant Valley for better partners than the
Hospital, said the hospital is leaders of Mason County
Pleasant
Valley
happy to be associated with and
Marshal~ . University. · By Hospital," he said. "f ain
working to$ether, the facili- .proud of our faculty and
staff here and know that
ti~ .can bnng programs. to
the community college that together we are all making a

1

l

.. : '·

Report 'rmds shortcomings

GOING ORGANIC

in workers' comp program
.

on-the-job injuries that
COLUMBUS (AP) The state's insurance pro· became too costly to the
gram _for injured workers bureau's insurance fund, the
·
did nothing improper when report said.
Under the structure set up
it artiiifArily reduced worker
compensation rates for by former Workers' Comp
James
some companies using little administrator
criteria or documentation, Conrad, the decisions were
the Ohio inspector general made' by one person -John
said . in a report issued Romig, the former chief of
employer services. Romig
Tuesday.
State law allows the Ohio "w1elded almost imperial
of
Workers' power" at the bureau,
Bureau
Compensation to grant Charles' report said.
companies rate appeals, and . Compames that made
administrators have leeway their rate requests through
to arrive at those decisions, state representatives or senusually
received
the report · by Inspector ators
quicker action, but Charles
General Tom Charles said.
The investigation set out said that's common at most
to determine if political state agencies.
One lawmaker, state
influence played a role in
rate reductions· for some Sen. Jeffry Armbruster, a
Republican from suburban
companies.
·c...~ene Hoelllch/photo
Rate
appeals · were Cleveland who left at ,the
Many families are tuming to organic produc~s as a way of escapiing the pOtentially harmful requested by employers that end of 2006 because of
effects of pesticides. Chris Sheeham of Rive' Road ; Stewart, operates Willow Run Organics . had been removed from the term limits, violated ethics
and sells his organically-grown vegetables at farmers' marl!et, rte has come several times bureau 's group-rate dis- laws by lobbying the
count program because of bureau for lower premito the Middleport Farmers Market held every Friday on ·the lot adjacent to Diles Park.

I
'

I
'

I

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Letters to the editor are welcome. Tirey should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

urns on his gas station
business, the Le'islative
Inspector General s office
found in June.
The case has been
referred to prosecutors.
Armbruster has denied
wrongdoing.
Charles recommended
that the bureau tighten its
policies on appeals and give
equal consideration to all
requests, whether they are
made through lawmakers or
not. Charles also urged the
bureau to apply industryapproved standards to make
the group-rate program .
more equitable.

'A'-,
c

If'
.

~

Q('

...

~

I

':l'
I("

I
y,··

....... .....
-~

~

.

,Cl,

1:1

•

\

.'

,

)I&gt;

··' .~
, ._~... . .. .... .!t:r

_..........__

PUFOR.\UM; ,\KlS Ctmt:

Captain Fantastic
Comic Book adventure

August 25 .&amp;- 26

Views

Runaround Sue
The guy who sued his dry
cleaner ·for $54 million for
losing a pair of pants has
been quite an inspiration to
.me. Right now, I'm thinking
of suing my barber for $60
million. I wouldn't have
even thought about it if it
weren't for the pants man.
I told Billy that I wanted
my hair short but not THAT
short. And what does he do,
he goes and cuts it THAT
short. I took pictures. I've
got the evidence. What does
he think - that my hair
grows on trees?
It was very important that
I look good that day
because it was the first day
of my $75 million suit
against Carl, my auto
mechanic. If I had looked
better, I might have won the
case. I might have been a
little sharper on the witness
stand if I wasn't so
depressed about not looking
my best.
Personally, I like Carl and
I hated to sue him, but he
said he would have my car
back on Tuesday, and it
wasn ' 1
ready
until
Wednesday. I was planning
to take Sue to the movies
that Tuesday night, and we
couldn't go. So I'm really

goes wrong in my. life. Oh, my next -door neighbor
sure, blame the victim. I'm mixed in with my mail yesthinking of suing the com- terday, which means I carpany that prints the form. ried the extra weight of that
envelope from the mailbox
Who can read that stuff?
It wouldn ' t surprise me at on the front porch to the
Jim
all to find out that the judge kitchen where, much to my
Mullen
and Carl are in cahoots. Carl horror, I discovered it. The
probably fixes the judge's extra weight could have
Lexus. Billy probably cuts gi veo me a heart attack. I'm
the judge's hair. That's the sure I pulled a muscle carryonly suing Carl for the price system for you, always ing all that extra weight. I
feel a pain in my neck, a big
of the movie tickets. The cheating the little guy.
rest of the money is legal
Normally, I would have pain. It took quite a while to
fees.
been depressed. I would calm myself down after that
.I'm representing myself, have given up, but I asked brush with death .
and - sorry; Carl - my myself, "What would Pants
!may need years of phystime is very expensive. I Man do?'' Would he give ical therapy - in one of
wanted to be compensated up? NO! Would he say this those German spas, say,
for all the pain and suffering is silly, get a real job? NO! Baden-Baden. If that dqesI had gone through. For He fights on. And so will I.
n't work, and I have a feeling
it won't, a trip to China
example, Sue said she
That waitress that deliberwould divorce me if I sued ately gave me the regular for some acupuncture might
my barber and my mechan- soda instead of the diet .be in order. But I don' t
ic. I'm thinking of suing her she's getting a bill for $40 know how many new cases
for saying that, but I know million. I know it was delib- I can take on right now. I'm
we haven't got $60 million, erate because she gave me a having trouble finding a
so what's the point? It's not look that said, "What's the new barber and a new
worth my time. You just point of ordering a diet soda mechanic. Business must be
have.lo tet some things go.
if you're ordering fried good. They all say they 're
Unfortunately, they threw clams with French fries and overbooked and can' t take
out my case on a technicali- coleslaw." Just never you on any new customers.
ty. Apparently, I had signed mind. missy.
(Jim Mullen is the author
some form when I picked
of
"It Takes a Village Idiot:
This morning I slapped
up the car, and in the tiny, our letter carrier with a Complicating th e Simple
sneaky print it says that the $100 million suit. This one Life" and "Baby's First
mechanic is not responsible should be a slam dunk. I Tattoo. " You can reach him
for every little thing that found a letter addressed to at jim_ mullen@ myway.com.)

from PageA1
2000 and 2005 . 2004 was
the first in five years that the
series was absent from the
annual
"I 0
Mos1
Challenged Books" list. A
challenge is a "formal, written complaint" made in "an
attempt to remove or
restrict" a book from school
curriculum or a library collection because of its content, according to the ALA's
website, www.ala.org.
Asbeck read the first book
of the Harry .Potter series,
and said that was enough

Jobless
from PageA1

~:

.!
\

'

'· :
·,
'

from June 's rate of 6.2;
Vinton had 7.2 perc em,
down I. I percent from 8.3
in the previous month; and
Washington posted 5.2 percent, down four-tenths of a
percent from 5.6 in June.
Ohio' s
unemployment
rate was 5.8 percent in July.
down from 6. I percent in
june, the state said.
Counties with unempl oymcnl rates below 5 percent
included
Clermont,

for ber. She noted that the ·
Bible speaks against sorcery
and witchcraft, and quoted
several scriptures including
Gal. 5:19-20 they "shall not
inherit the k\ngdom of
God."
"The Bible takes this very
seriously," Asbeck said.
"It's not a fun-and-games
thing." She added that she
has no problem with fantasy, and she agreed the book
does deal with good and
evil but in the contest of
witchcraft. "Unlike C.S.
Lewis' 'The Lion; the
Witch and the Wardrobe,' in
which witches are not portrayed in a good light,
Row lings portrays both the
good and evil sides of

Potter books. She named
witchcraft," she said.
. Hayes, on the other hand, other fantasy books and also
has read all the Harry Potter classics which contain
books and her daughter is magic as well: C.S. Lewis'
on the fourth one. "She's Chronicles of Namia and
never tried to jun:Jp on a Mary Poppins. She wonders
broomstick and fly,' Hayes what is the difference
said, because she knows between those stories and
that, like the magic in Little the books in question.
"I don 't understand why
Mermaid, "obviously, none
of this can happen." The people can bash one book
series "doesn't say, 'Go out and not keep the same arguand practice witchcraft, ment for the fantasy genre,"
she said. She asked why
kids,"' she added.
Hayes said she under- people are tolerant of one
stands where opponents of thing and intolerant of
the books are coming from. another. She said she feels
However, she noted that frustration over having not
people have not debated been able to talk with peoThe Wizard of Oz, with its ple who oppose the books
ruby-slipper snaps and such, yet have not read them.
Hayes has a collection of
as they have the Harry

Clinton,
Delaware,
Fayette, Franklin, Geauga, ·
Holmes, Logan, Mercer
(the lowest at 4 percent),
Union, Warren and Wayne .
In addition to Meigs, counties with jobless rates over
8 percent were Huron ,
Monroe , Morgan, Noble
and Pike, the highest at 8. 7
percent.
The number of workers
unemployed in Ohio in July
was 344,000, down from
363,000 in June as the size
of Ohio's work force fell by
8,400 to 5.4 millio n, accgrding to lhe DJFS .
"The labor market data

showed mixed results in
July," Helen Jones- Ke lley,
ihe agency's director, sa id
in a statement. "Although
the unemployment rate

•

declined in July. ·overall
employment
also
declined.''
(The Associated Press
colllributed to this story.)

factasy books in her classroom at school. The students love Harry I:'otter
and other fantasy books,
she said.
"Kids think it's fun," she
said, adding that the fantasy
books are a "purely entertainment industry."

Youth &amp; Adult Talent Contest

September 1

Ducktona, Sept. 8
Haw You Adopted Yoor DU&lt;b7
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Galllpolla, OH (740) 44&amp;-AR18

helping you

Make
the

Most
of Life

Your ability to hear affects the quality of the life
· you lead. We want our patients to enjoy
the best quality of life possible. That's why we
offer a range of services to ensure that your
hearing is the best that it can be.

Now accepting new patients at our Athens Olllce

Aryeh Gorenstein, MD
and Anil Gokhale, MD
Board Cenified in Otolaryngology (ENT).

•

Call today for a consulwtion.

Thank You

Facemyer Forest Products
for 6uging mg 2007 Markgt £am6.
Morgan Burt

594-6333
1-800-451-9806
499
Mlucl """'
l.lll&lt;N, OH 45'70t

.

'

�PageA6

COMMUNI1'Y

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,August22,2007

Ohio University ranks fourth
nationally in graduation rate
krHENS - According
to U.'S. News &amp; World
Report 's annual guide to
cofleges released last
week, Ohio University 's
graduation rate performance was founh out of
257 ranked national universities and a full 18 p~rcent hi~her than predicted.
This IS the third year in a
row the university has made
it into the top I 0 .in this category.
The magazine plugs years
of data frOm hundreds of
schools into a complex
model to forecast what graduation rate an institution
should expect. . The model
controls for such factors as
entering student characteristics and institutional expenditures per student.
U.S. News predicted that
Photo COUI'tnJ of violet 8rm
Ohio University's graduaLast week those.thunderstorms did more than throw down some rain, they also took down tion rate should have been
tree limbs like this one. The tree limb fell on the home of Paul Searls on North Main Street 53 percent; instead, it was
in Rutland, leaving behind damage and creating quite a sight for the locals.
71 percent.
•
"A measure like this tells
you that our students are
much more successful than
comparable students at comparable schools," said Joe
Brennan, executive director
of communications and marketing, and co-author of a
fonhcoming research paper
on college rankings. "It is a
direct indicator that we are
doing better than almost any
university in the nation at
helping our students achieve
their promise." .
Brennan credits Ohio
University's dedication to
exceptional undergraduate

Poultry Market Pens make sale

education for its ability to ratio, freshman acceptance
rate and financial resources),
beat the odds.
"Ohio's graduation rate trending up or down someperformance is so far above what but not enough to be
the predicted rate because of statistically significant.
many things we do well here,
"'The university position in
but the most significant fac- the overall and state rankings
tor is the human factor," he was about what we expectsaid. "I credit the talented ed," said Mike Williford,
faculty members who work · associate provost for instituclosely with students to tional research. "We did well
ensure their success. We in other measures they use,
have an exceptional staff. We such as aluflllli giving and
have innovators who took an the fresh)Ran acceptance
early lead in undergraduate rate. Add those to our high
research and applied learn- graduation rate perfonnance,
ing. This also shows that our and the university held its
students are very dedicated own in the rankings."
to their studies." .
Williford also noted that
In the overall U.S. News Ohio University took the lead
rankings, Ohio University among the three Ohio top-tier
held its relative position universities on other imporfrom last year, tying at 112 tant quantitative measures.
with five other institutions - For instance, 44 percent of
- Florida State University, Ohio University classes had
Loyola University Chicago, fewer than· 20 students comUniversity of Dayton, p3red with 35 percent at both
University
of
South Miami and Ohio State. And
Carolina Columbia and 84 percent of Miami
University of Oregon. (Ohio University faculty members
University ranked I lOth last were full time compared with
year, but because of ties this 90 percent at . Ohio
year, rankings skipped from University, which tied with .
108 to 112.)
Ohio State on that measure.
Among 164 national pubTo arrive at its rankings,
lie
universities,
Ohio U.S News and World Repon
University's ranking ·stayed calculates a score for each
· the same. It placed 52nd school using 15 variables,
nationally and third in the such as retention rates, facstate, following Ohio State ulty resources, surveys of
University and Miami . peer-institution administraUniversity.·
tors, admission selectivity,
Ohio University remained financial resources, alumni
about the same as last year in giving and graduation rate
other ranking ca!egories performance.
(such as peer assessment,
To see complete rankings,
retention, student-faculty go to http://www.usnews.com.

•.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
BroWDS QB race ro&amp; on, Page Bl
No. 756 going tn audion, Page B6

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Jurrjens pitches Tigers past Tribe
BY LARRY UQE
M' SPORTS WIIITER

al-

DETROIT - Comerica
Park is a long way from
Curacao.
Jair Junjens pitched comfonably for the Tigers in
front of almost 43,000 fans
Tuesday night - as if
everyone was behind him
back home in the Dutch
Caribbean islands.
Junjens allowed one hit in
his second major league
start and Detroit got consecutive homers from Magglio
Ordonez and Carlos Guillen
to edge the Cleveland
Indians 2- I in the opener of
a key three-game series.
"I m going to remember
this for the rest of my life,"
Junjens said.
The right-hander outpitched Fausto Carmona and
carried a no-hit bid into the
sixth inning until Jhonny

LocAL ScHEDULE ·
POMEROV ~ A-

h~

8Chool Vlf"'ify 8pOtting llll8fltS lr'M:liYng teams
lrom Moigo Coonly.

Ihyrasiq, Aug

GoH

23

Belpre al Meigs (Riverside G.C.), 4:30

p.m.
Eastern at Miller {Forest Hills G.C.), 4:30

Peralta homered with one play in," Cleveland's Casey
out for Cleveland's only hit Blake said. "Every game
from now on means someof the game.
For the. first t.ime in fran- thing.".
chise history, the Indians'
The 21-year-old Jurrjens
lone hit was a home run. The ( 1-1) walked four and struck
last time they had only one out one in 6 2-3 innings.
hit was April 15 in a 2-l win
"For a young kid, he's got
over the Chicago White Sox. a good arm," Blake said.
When Tigers manager Jim
Carmona does, too.
Leyland came out of the · The 23-year-old right-han- ·
dugout to replace Jurrjens, der, who beat Junjens in his
the pitcher puffed out his big league debut last week,
cheeks. exhaled and walked retired his first 12 batters
off the mound to a standing before Ordonez and Guillen
ovation.
homered to start the fifth.
"My phone is going to go
"He could've thrown a nocrazy tonight," said Junjens, hitler," Blake said. "They
addin~ the game was tele- probably hit four balls hard
vised m Curacao. "It's just a and two of them were
dream come true."
homers."
Joel Zumaya, just off the
Ordonez went to the oppodisabled list, and two other site field' on an 0-1 pitch,
relievers helped Detroit driving \he ball over the wall
hang on to pull within a half- in right~enter.
game of the AL Central"For him to do what he did
leading Indians.
PI- see Tribe, B6
''That was a fun game to

APphoto

Cleveland Indians' Kenny Lofton , right,disputes a called
third strike with home plate umpire Lance Barksdale in the
ninth inning of their 2·11oss to the Detroit Tigers in a baseball game Tuesday in Detroit.

p.m.
;
SOuthern at Federal Hocking (Oxbow
C.C.), 4 :30 p.m.

Vickcould
still face
charges in Va.
state court

' FddiV. Aug 24

F-II(TVC)
Melg&amp; at Oak Hill, 7:30 p.m.
Symmes Valley at SOulhern, 7:30p.m.
Alexander at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.
Warren at Belpre, 7:30p.m.
Athens at Nelsonville--York. 7:30p.m.
Unloto at Vinton County, 7:30p.m.
Wellston at Jack&amp;on, 7:30p.m.
Federal Hocking al Caldwell, 7:30p.m.
Zanoovll~ Maysville at Millet', 7:30p.m.
Berne Union at Trimble, 7:30p.m.
Waterford at Wahama (W.Va.), 7:30 p.m.

BY WRY O'DEU
ASSOCIATED PRESS WIIITER

Stfurdllfr, Aug. 26

Bethel plans 'Youth E~plosion'
TUPPERS PLAINS
The Bethel Worship.
Center youth are hosting
'Yhat it calls a "~reat, positive teen expenence' for
not orily all the teens and
families of Meigs County
but the surrounding counties as well.
. , _.
The event . is from noon
until 9 p.m. on Saturday at
Bethel Worship Center.
Fisher Funeral Homes bought the grand champion pen of market pou ltry from Mn. r"~'n
Tucker for $950. Adam McDaniel, representing the funeral homes, is pictured with
Tucker, Poultry Princess Breanna Hayman, Fair Queen Tina Drake and Poultry Prince
Justin Morris. This photo was misidentified in Monday's edition and Morris' name was
unintentionally omitted.

Local Weather

Admission is free to the
event and will feature
musical
groups
Nicodemus,
Andrew
Francis, Crashing Jericho,
and Dunamis to name a
few. Christian Illusionist
Phil Luckydoo will be perfqrming from 3-4 p.m.
CeRE drama team will be
performing in the afternoon
to bring the art of music

videos to life. Special
speakers Brandon Bartee
from Teen Mania and Jason
Simpson are two of the presenters fof"the day.
Youth Explosion is a presentation of the Outer
Limits and Frontliners
Youth Ministries of Bethel
Worship Center. There will
be concessions for food and
souvenir vendors.

Rough game? Sbalns and sprains?

. . . . do you do •bout It?

Wednesday ... Mostly
sunny with a slight chance
City/Region
of showers. A slight chance
Forecast lor Wednnday, Aug. 22
High I Low temps
of thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Hot. Humid with
highs in the lower 90s.
South winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
84°168°
Wednesday night...Partly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening. Humid with
Mllnlfleld •
lows around 70. Southwest
ee· 157•
winds around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
*Columbua
20 percent.
91° 167•
Thursday...Mostly sunny
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hot with highs in the mid
90s. Southwest winds 5 to ,
I 0 mph. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Thursday night... Partly
cloudy with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 70s. South
Cloudy ~
~ Aurries ~ !at
winds around 5 mph. Chance
of min 20 percent.
Partly~ ~ ~~~ ""' ~
C1oudy
~rs ~ R&amp;Jn
• *
Snow
oe . . .
· · Friday and Friday
night .•• Partly cloudy. Hot.
Weather l..lndergroond • AP
Highs in the upper 90s.
Lows in the upper 60s.
40 percent.
Sunday••• Partly sunny.
Saturday••• Mostly sunny.
Saturday night••• Mostly Highs in the lower 80s.
.
A chance of showers and cloudy with a chance of
Sunday night through
thunderstorms in the after- showers and thunderstorms. Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
nopn. Hot with highs in the Lows in the upper 60s. Lows in the lower 60s.
lower 90s. Chance of rain Chance of rain 40 percent.
Highs in the mid 80s.

Today's Forecast

•

6

=·

Oft'wed In ~unction with Ohio Vllley
Pl1yslclans the Saturday Spotts Clnlc will
be open during the fell Sports SIISGn.
Most lnsur1MIS1 Including AETNA,

are accepted.

General Electric (NYSE) - 38.311
·Harter.Oavkloon ( NYSE) - 56.71
JP Mor&amp;an (NYSE) - 46.20
Kro&amp;er (NYSE) - 26.15
Umltod Bran do ( NYSE) - 22.09
Norfolk Southem (NYSE) -

52.U

Oak Hill Rnanclal (NASDAQ) 31.76
. Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
DAQ)- 26.00
BBT ( NYSE) - 40.38
Poopln (NASDAQ)- 27.87
Pepsico ( NY5E) - 68.45
Premier (NASDAQ) -14.25
Rockwell ( NYSE) - 68.08

Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 10.01
Roral Dutch Sholl - 73.38
Saara Holdlnll (NASDAQ) 141.25
Wai·Mart (NYSE)- 43.70
WandJ'a INYSE) - 32.10
Worthington (NYSE) - 20.66
Dally stock reports are tho 4
p.m. ET cloolng quotoa of tranaactlonslor AUII. 21, 2007, provided bJ Edward Jonoa ftnanclal
advlaoro loaac Millo In
llalllpolls at (740) 441·9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleaoant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

740.441.4100
or 740.441..7410
.
.
Beginning: Saturday, August 25
When:
8 a.m. to 12 .noon
Where:
Ohio valley Physldans
420 Sliver Bridge Plaza

Please see Vli:k, 11

Dlttd• Aug 28
Volleyboll
Meigs at River VaMey, 6 p.m.
South Gallla at Eastern, 6 p.m.

GoH

Meigs al Nal8onvlllo·York (Forest H~ls) ,
4:30p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern (Pine Hills
G .C.), 4:30p.m.
Triinblo .al S0ull1em (Pine HHia· c;,u,j, " I ·
4:3(fp.m. .. ..
.

Blue Jackets, Peca
agree to terms on
1-yeardeal

Kurt Busch crosses the finish line to win the NASCAR Nextel Cup 3M Performance 400 at Michigan International
Speedway In Brooklyn, Mich., on Tuesday. The race was run after being postponed for two days because of rain.

. COLUMBUS (AP) The Columbus Blue Jackets
agreed to terms on a oneyear contract with free
agent center Michael Peca,
a newspaper reported.
. Peca, 33, a two-time winner of the Frank J. Selke
Trophy as the NHL's best
defensive ferward, spent
last season with Toronto.
He had four gpals and II
assists in 3~ ~ames before
breaking his nght leg in a
collision with Chica~o
defenseman
hm
Vandermeer last December.
The injury forced Peca to
miss the rest of the season.
Peca told The Columbus
Dispatch in a story posted
on its Web site Tuesday
night that Blue Jackets general manager Scott Howson
~pproached him after negotiations with the New York
Rangers b~oke down last
week.
Howson was an assistant
general man!lger with
Edmonton when Peca
. played for the Oilers two
years ago.
. Messages seeking comment from Howson and
Peca's agent, Don Meehan,
were left by The Associated
Press.
Peca has 164 goals and
245 assists in 728 career
games with Vancouver,
Buffalo, the New York
Islanders, Edmonton and
Toronto.

OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 a.m.I
1·74()..446-2342 ext. 33
Fox- 1-740-446·3008
:E-mail- sportsOmydailysentlnal.com

SIXIri.I.$1Afl

•.

Brad Sherman, $!)orte Editor
'{74{)) 446·2342. ext. 33

bsherman 0 mydallytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
{740) 446-2342, ext. 23

·

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
{740) 446 -2342. ext. 33

bwalters@mydBilytribune.com

~~~

.

Ierum Omydailyregister.com

Kurt Busch wins rain-delayed event at Michigan
BY MIKE HARRIS
/&gt;P AUTO RACING WRITER

BROOKLYN, Mich.
Kurt Busch won for the second time in three races, .prevailing in a . rare Tuesday
NASCAR event after two
days of rain postponements
at Michigan International
Speedway.
In wmning the 3M
Performance 400, Busch
resumed his late-season
charge to a spot in the
Chase for. the Nextel Cup
championship.
The 2004 Cup champion
solidified his berth in the
12-man lineup for the
upcoming Chase, holding
off Martin Truex Jr. in the
closing laps for the 17th win
of his career.
NASCAR's top circuit had
never run on a Tuesday dur-

ing the modern era, which
began in 1973.
The race was originally
scheduled to be run Sunday,
but two days of rain kept the
cars off the track. Other than
a 32-minute fog delay
Tuesday after the first 10
laps, the race was run withoutany more weather prob!ems.
A spin by Greg Biffle with
just two laps remaining sent
the race into overtime. But
. Busch, driving a Dodge for
Penske Racing, easily pulled
away from Truex s DEI
Chevrolet when the green
fla~ waved for a two-lap
spnnt on lap 202.
Busch, who didn't take his
first lead until lap 101 and
wound up leading four times
for 92 laps, beat Truex to the
finish by 0.495 seconds about eight car lengths on

the high-banked, 2-mile
oval.
There were two cautions
in the ·last 13 laps and Busch
stayed on track with worn
tires while some of the cars
chasing him pitted for fresh
rubber. But he made two
perfect restarts.
"It was tough," Busch
said. "You know, I've got to
thank the fans who stuck it
out on a Tuesday to see a
~reen - white-checker (finIsh). We put it on for them
here at the end, all the
restans, all of the ~uys on
different strategy, It really
was a tough , hard-fought
win ."
Rei.\lning Cup champion
Jimm1e Johnson finished
third, followed by Matt
Kenseth, Denny Hamlin,
Dave Blaney, June race winner Carl Edwards, Brian

Reds scalp Braves, 8-7
8Y JoE KAv
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Blame it
on the ballpark. Or, maybe
the humidity was .the problem. Perhaps it was the
strike zone.
Whatever the cause for the
Braves' latest loss, the outcome is clear: Atlanta is
looking up from its deepest
hole of the season.
Brandon Phillips hit a solo
homer and a ti~breaking single in the sixth inning
Tuesday night, leading the
Cincinnati Red&gt; to an 8-7
victory. The Braves fell a
season-high six games
behind the New York Mets
in the NL East, and couldn't
quite agree on the reason
why.
"In this ballpark, anything
can happen ," manager
Bobby Cox said.
No lead lasted for long at
one of the majors' most hitAP phoio
ter-friendly ballparks. There
Cincinnat Reds' Norris Hopper gets congratulated by teammate Jason Ellison, reft, after the were three blown leads on a
hot , sticky ni ght.
Reds beat the Atlanta Braves 8-7 In a baseball game in Cincinnati Tuesday.
--- -~:::.-,.....

•

Please see Busch, 82

Monday. Aug, 27
Volleyblll
Belpre al Easl&lt;lrn, 6 p.m.
Southern at Hannan (W.Va.), 6 p.m.

CoN'rAcrUs

For more lnformltlon:

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSEI - 46.83
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 73.49
Aohland Inc. (NYSE) - 56.88
Bill Lots ( NYSE)- 25.88
Bob Evano (NASDAQ)- 34.20
BorgWarnor (NYSE) - 81.93
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) 44.23
Champion (~DAQ) - 5.42
Channing Shops (NASDAQ) 9.14
City Hokllrlll (NASDAQ) - 37.28
Collllll (NYSE) - 88.28
DuPont (NYSE)- 47.75
US Bank (NYSE) - 32.68
llannett (NYSE) - 48.82

SATURDAY MORNING SPORTS CLINIC

Vickers, Bobby Labonte and
Tony .Stewart, last week's
winner on the road course at
Watkins Glen.
With just three races
remaining until the stan of
the' 10-race stock car playoff, Busch remains 12th m
the standings, 33 'points
behind
Truex.
Dale
Earnhardt Jr. jumped past
Ryan Newman, Busch's
Penske Racing teammate,
into 13th, but a slow pit stop
late ip the race cost him a
top-10 finish as the fan
favorite wound up 12th.
"This was a great win,"
said Busch, who broke a 51 race winless string two
weeks ago at Pocono. "It just
backs up what we did at
Pocono.'
Series leader Jeff Gordon,

RICHMOND, .Va.
Michael Vick's legal troubles might not end with his
guilt~ plea to a federal dogfightmg conspiracy charge.
The NFL star still faces
the possibility of prosecution m state coun, where the
punishment
could far
exceed the
ma:(imum
five years
in prison
that
he
could get
from U.S.
District
J u d g e
Vlck
Henry
Hudson.
Local prosecutor Gerald
Poindexter has said he likely will p'ursue charges
against Vick, who has plummeted from local hero to
high-profile symbol of animal abuse in the four
months since authorities
first raided his Surry
County property. According
to Poindexter, the . case
could go before a county
grand jury that is scheduled
to convene Sept. 25.
Poindexter did not return
phone messages left by The
Associated Press at his
office and on his cell phone
Tuesday.
Among the state laws
Vick could be charged with
violating are those ag~inst
dogfighting and animal cruelty. Both are felonies punishable by up to five years
in prison.
"The real question is how

\'all.,... II
Eastern at Meigs Preview, 6 p.m.
C1'911 Countly
Southern, Meigs, Eastern at River Valley
Early Bird lnvlle. 10 a.m.

- ..

·:..:r:---~~ -

'
...-.:;.;;..-............... ---..-~··· - - ---

Ph.illips' solo homer in the
fifth helped the Reds come
from two runs down to tie
the game at 7. He broke the
tie an inning later with a
run-scoring single off Peter
Moylan (4-3), who hit two
batters during the Reds' goahead rally.
Moylan had trouble gripp~ng the ball on a humid
mght.
"The ball just kept slipping out of my hand,"
Moylan said. "I've never
had that happen before."
Cincinnati 's bullpen has
been among the majors'
worst all season, but held up
this time. Left-bander Bill
Bray (3-0) allowed only one
hit ·in I 1-3 innings, and
David Weathers pitched
around a single and a walk
to get the final three outs for
his 26th save in 31 chances.
"The offense has done a
great job battling back and
keeping us in ballgames,''
Bray said.
Please see Recl1, 118

--~·------ · ----

�PageA6

COMMUNI1'Y

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,August22,2007

Ohio University ranks fourth
nationally in graduation rate
krHENS - According
to U.'S. News &amp; World
Report 's annual guide to
cofleges released last
week, Ohio University 's
graduation rate performance was founh out of
257 ranked national universities and a full 18 p~rcent hi~her than predicted.
This IS the third year in a
row the university has made
it into the top I 0 .in this category.
The magazine plugs years
of data frOm hundreds of
schools into a complex
model to forecast what graduation rate an institution
should expect. . The model
controls for such factors as
entering student characteristics and institutional expenditures per student.
U.S. News predicted that
Photo COUI'tnJ of violet 8rm
Ohio University's graduaLast week those.thunderstorms did more than throw down some rain, they also took down tion rate should have been
tree limbs like this one. The tree limb fell on the home of Paul Searls on North Main Street 53 percent; instead, it was
in Rutland, leaving behind damage and creating quite a sight for the locals.
71 percent.
•
"A measure like this tells
you that our students are
much more successful than
comparable students at comparable schools," said Joe
Brennan, executive director
of communications and marketing, and co-author of a
fonhcoming research paper
on college rankings. "It is a
direct indicator that we are
doing better than almost any
university in the nation at
helping our students achieve
their promise." .
Brennan credits Ohio
University's dedication to
exceptional undergraduate

Poultry Market Pens make sale

education for its ability to ratio, freshman acceptance
rate and financial resources),
beat the odds.
"Ohio's graduation rate trending up or down someperformance is so far above what but not enough to be
the predicted rate because of statistically significant.
many things we do well here,
"'The university position in
but the most significant fac- the overall and state rankings
tor is the human factor," he was about what we expectsaid. "I credit the talented ed," said Mike Williford,
faculty members who work · associate provost for instituclosely with students to tional research. "We did well
ensure their success. We in other measures they use,
have an exceptional staff. We such as aluflllli giving and
have innovators who took an the fresh)Ran acceptance
early lead in undergraduate rate. Add those to our high
research and applied learn- graduation rate perfonnance,
ing. This also shows that our and the university held its
students are very dedicated own in the rankings."
to their studies." .
Williford also noted that
In the overall U.S. News Ohio University took the lead
rankings, Ohio University among the three Ohio top-tier
held its relative position universities on other imporfrom last year, tying at 112 tant quantitative measures.
with five other institutions - For instance, 44 percent of
- Florida State University, Ohio University classes had
Loyola University Chicago, fewer than· 20 students comUniversity of Dayton, p3red with 35 percent at both
University
of
South Miami and Ohio State. And
Carolina Columbia and 84 percent of Miami
University of Oregon. (Ohio University faculty members
University ranked I lOth last were full time compared with
year, but because of ties this 90 percent at . Ohio
year, rankings skipped from University, which tied with .
108 to 112.)
Ohio State on that measure.
Among 164 national pubTo arrive at its rankings,
lie
universities,
Ohio U.S News and World Repon
University's ranking ·stayed calculates a score for each
· the same. It placed 52nd school using 15 variables,
nationally and third in the such as retention rates, facstate, following Ohio State ulty resources, surveys of
University and Miami . peer-institution administraUniversity.·
tors, admission selectivity,
Ohio University remained financial resources, alumni
about the same as last year in giving and graduation rate
other ranking ca!egories performance.
(such as peer assessment,
To see complete rankings,
retention, student-faculty go to http://www.usnews.com.

•.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
BroWDS QB race ro&amp; on, Page Bl
No. 756 going tn audion, Page B6

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Jurrjens pitches Tigers past Tribe
BY LARRY UQE
M' SPORTS WIIITER

al-

DETROIT - Comerica
Park is a long way from
Curacao.
Jair Junjens pitched comfonably for the Tigers in
front of almost 43,000 fans
Tuesday night - as if
everyone was behind him
back home in the Dutch
Caribbean islands.
Junjens allowed one hit in
his second major league
start and Detroit got consecutive homers from Magglio
Ordonez and Carlos Guillen
to edge the Cleveland
Indians 2- I in the opener of
a key three-game series.
"I m going to remember
this for the rest of my life,"
Junjens said.
The right-hander outpitched Fausto Carmona and
carried a no-hit bid into the
sixth inning until Jhonny

LocAL ScHEDULE ·
POMEROV ~ A-

h~

8Chool Vlf"'ify 8pOtting llll8fltS lr'M:liYng teams
lrom Moigo Coonly.

Ihyrasiq, Aug

GoH

23

Belpre al Meigs (Riverside G.C.), 4:30

p.m.
Eastern at Miller {Forest Hills G.C.), 4:30

Peralta homered with one play in," Cleveland's Casey
out for Cleveland's only hit Blake said. "Every game
from now on means someof the game.
For the. first t.ime in fran- thing.".
chise history, the Indians'
The 21-year-old Jurrjens
lone hit was a home run. The ( 1-1) walked four and struck
last time they had only one out one in 6 2-3 innings.
hit was April 15 in a 2-l win
"For a young kid, he's got
over the Chicago White Sox. a good arm," Blake said.
When Tigers manager Jim
Carmona does, too.
Leyland came out of the · The 23-year-old right-han- ·
dugout to replace Jurrjens, der, who beat Junjens in his
the pitcher puffed out his big league debut last week,
cheeks. exhaled and walked retired his first 12 batters
off the mound to a standing before Ordonez and Guillen
ovation.
homered to start the fifth.
"My phone is going to go
"He could've thrown a nocrazy tonight," said Junjens, hitler," Blake said. "They
addin~ the game was tele- probably hit four balls hard
vised m Curacao. "It's just a and two of them were
dream come true."
homers."
Joel Zumaya, just off the
Ordonez went to the oppodisabled list, and two other site field' on an 0-1 pitch,
relievers helped Detroit driving \he ball over the wall
hang on to pull within a half- in right~enter.
game of the AL Central"For him to do what he did
leading Indians.
PI- see Tribe, B6
''That was a fun game to

APphoto

Cleveland Indians' Kenny Lofton , right,disputes a called
third strike with home plate umpire Lance Barksdale in the
ninth inning of their 2·11oss to the Detroit Tigers in a baseball game Tuesday in Detroit.

p.m.
;
SOuthern at Federal Hocking (Oxbow
C.C.), 4 :30 p.m.

Vickcould
still face
charges in Va.
state court

' FddiV. Aug 24

F-II(TVC)
Melg&amp; at Oak Hill, 7:30 p.m.
Symmes Valley at SOulhern, 7:30p.m.
Alexander at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.
Warren at Belpre, 7:30p.m.
Athens at Nelsonville--York. 7:30p.m.
Unloto at Vinton County, 7:30p.m.
Wellston at Jack&amp;on, 7:30p.m.
Federal Hocking al Caldwell, 7:30p.m.
Zanoovll~ Maysville at Millet', 7:30p.m.
Berne Union at Trimble, 7:30p.m.
Waterford at Wahama (W.Va.), 7:30 p.m.

BY WRY O'DEU
ASSOCIATED PRESS WIIITER

Stfurdllfr, Aug. 26

Bethel plans 'Youth E~plosion'
TUPPERS PLAINS
The Bethel Worship.
Center youth are hosting
'Yhat it calls a "~reat, positive teen expenence' for
not orily all the teens and
families of Meigs County
but the surrounding counties as well.
. , _.
The event . is from noon
until 9 p.m. on Saturday at
Bethel Worship Center.
Fisher Funeral Homes bought the grand champion pen of market pou ltry from Mn. r"~'n
Tucker for $950. Adam McDaniel, representing the funeral homes, is pictured with
Tucker, Poultry Princess Breanna Hayman, Fair Queen Tina Drake and Poultry Prince
Justin Morris. This photo was misidentified in Monday's edition and Morris' name was
unintentionally omitted.

Local Weather

Admission is free to the
event and will feature
musical
groups
Nicodemus,
Andrew
Francis, Crashing Jericho,
and Dunamis to name a
few. Christian Illusionist
Phil Luckydoo will be perfqrming from 3-4 p.m.
CeRE drama team will be
performing in the afternoon
to bring the art of music

videos to life. Special
speakers Brandon Bartee
from Teen Mania and Jason
Simpson are two of the presenters fof"the day.
Youth Explosion is a presentation of the Outer
Limits and Frontliners
Youth Ministries of Bethel
Worship Center. There will
be concessions for food and
souvenir vendors.

Rough game? Sbalns and sprains?

. . . . do you do •bout It?

Wednesday ... Mostly
sunny with a slight chance
City/Region
of showers. A slight chance
Forecast lor Wednnday, Aug. 22
High I Low temps
of thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Hot. Humid with
highs in the lower 90s.
South winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
84°168°
Wednesday night...Partly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening. Humid with
Mllnlfleld •
lows around 70. Southwest
ee· 157•
winds around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
*Columbua
20 percent.
91° 167•
Thursday...Mostly sunny
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hot with highs in the mid
90s. Southwest winds 5 to ,
I 0 mph. Chance of rain 20
percent.
Thursday night... Partly
cloudy with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 70s. South
Cloudy ~
~ Aurries ~ !at
winds around 5 mph. Chance
of min 20 percent.
Partly~ ~ ~~~ ""' ~
C1oudy
~rs ~ R&amp;Jn
• *
Snow
oe . . .
· · Friday and Friday
night .•• Partly cloudy. Hot.
Weather l..lndergroond • AP
Highs in the upper 90s.
Lows in the upper 60s.
40 percent.
Sunday••• Partly sunny.
Saturday••• Mostly sunny.
Saturday night••• Mostly Highs in the lower 80s.
.
A chance of showers and cloudy with a chance of
Sunday night through
thunderstorms in the after- showers and thunderstorms. Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
nopn. Hot with highs in the Lows in the upper 60s. Lows in the lower 60s.
lower 90s. Chance of rain Chance of rain 40 percent.
Highs in the mid 80s.

Today's Forecast

•

6

=·

Oft'wed In ~unction with Ohio Vllley
Pl1yslclans the Saturday Spotts Clnlc will
be open during the fell Sports SIISGn.
Most lnsur1MIS1 Including AETNA,

are accepted.

General Electric (NYSE) - 38.311
·Harter.Oavkloon ( NYSE) - 56.71
JP Mor&amp;an (NYSE) - 46.20
Kro&amp;er (NYSE) - 26.15
Umltod Bran do ( NYSE) - 22.09
Norfolk Southem (NYSE) -

52.U

Oak Hill Rnanclal (NASDAQ) 31.76
. Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
DAQ)- 26.00
BBT ( NYSE) - 40.38
Poopln (NASDAQ)- 27.87
Pepsico ( NY5E) - 68.45
Premier (NASDAQ) -14.25
Rockwell ( NYSE) - 68.08

Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 10.01
Roral Dutch Sholl - 73.38
Saara Holdlnll (NASDAQ) 141.25
Wai·Mart (NYSE)- 43.70
WandJ'a INYSE) - 32.10
Worthington (NYSE) - 20.66
Dally stock reports are tho 4
p.m. ET cloolng quotoa of tranaactlonslor AUII. 21, 2007, provided bJ Edward Jonoa ftnanclal
advlaoro loaac Millo In
llalllpolls at (740) 441·9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleaoant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

740.441.4100
or 740.441..7410
.
.
Beginning: Saturday, August 25
When:
8 a.m. to 12 .noon
Where:
Ohio valley Physldans
420 Sliver Bridge Plaza

Please see Vli:k, 11

Dlttd• Aug 28
Volleyboll
Meigs at River VaMey, 6 p.m.
South Gallla at Eastern, 6 p.m.

GoH

Meigs al Nal8onvlllo·York (Forest H~ls) ,
4:30p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern (Pine Hills
G .C.), 4:30p.m.
Triinblo .al S0ull1em (Pine HHia· c;,u,j, " I ·
4:3(fp.m. .. ..
.

Blue Jackets, Peca
agree to terms on
1-yeardeal

Kurt Busch crosses the finish line to win the NASCAR Nextel Cup 3M Performance 400 at Michigan International
Speedway In Brooklyn, Mich., on Tuesday. The race was run after being postponed for two days because of rain.

. COLUMBUS (AP) The Columbus Blue Jackets
agreed to terms on a oneyear contract with free
agent center Michael Peca,
a newspaper reported.
. Peca, 33, a two-time winner of the Frank J. Selke
Trophy as the NHL's best
defensive ferward, spent
last season with Toronto.
He had four gpals and II
assists in 3~ ~ames before
breaking his nght leg in a
collision with Chica~o
defenseman
hm
Vandermeer last December.
The injury forced Peca to
miss the rest of the season.
Peca told The Columbus
Dispatch in a story posted
on its Web site Tuesday
night that Blue Jackets general manager Scott Howson
~pproached him after negotiations with the New York
Rangers b~oke down last
week.
Howson was an assistant
general man!lger with
Edmonton when Peca
. played for the Oilers two
years ago.
. Messages seeking comment from Howson and
Peca's agent, Don Meehan,
were left by The Associated
Press.
Peca has 164 goals and
245 assists in 728 career
games with Vancouver,
Buffalo, the New York
Islanders, Edmonton and
Toronto.

OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 a.m.I
1·74()..446-2342 ext. 33
Fox- 1-740-446·3008
:E-mail- sportsOmydailysentlnal.com

SIXIri.I.$1Afl

•.

Brad Sherman, $!)orte Editor
'{74{)) 446·2342. ext. 33

bsherman 0 mydallytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
{740) 446-2342, ext. 23

·

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
{740) 446 -2342. ext. 33

bwalters@mydBilytribune.com

~~~

.

Ierum Omydailyregister.com

Kurt Busch wins rain-delayed event at Michigan
BY MIKE HARRIS
/&gt;P AUTO RACING WRITER

BROOKLYN, Mich.
Kurt Busch won for the second time in three races, .prevailing in a . rare Tuesday
NASCAR event after two
days of rain postponements
at Michigan International
Speedway.
In wmning the 3M
Performance 400, Busch
resumed his late-season
charge to a spot in the
Chase for. the Nextel Cup
championship.
The 2004 Cup champion
solidified his berth in the
12-man lineup for the
upcoming Chase, holding
off Martin Truex Jr. in the
closing laps for the 17th win
of his career.
NASCAR's top circuit had
never run on a Tuesday dur-

ing the modern era, which
began in 1973.
The race was originally
scheduled to be run Sunday,
but two days of rain kept the
cars off the track. Other than
a 32-minute fog delay
Tuesday after the first 10
laps, the race was run withoutany more weather prob!ems.
A spin by Greg Biffle with
just two laps remaining sent
the race into overtime. But
. Busch, driving a Dodge for
Penske Racing, easily pulled
away from Truex s DEI
Chevrolet when the green
fla~ waved for a two-lap
spnnt on lap 202.
Busch, who didn't take his
first lead until lap 101 and
wound up leading four times
for 92 laps, beat Truex to the
finish by 0.495 seconds about eight car lengths on

the high-banked, 2-mile
oval.
There were two cautions
in the ·last 13 laps and Busch
stayed on track with worn
tires while some of the cars
chasing him pitted for fresh
rubber. But he made two
perfect restarts.
"It was tough," Busch
said. "You know, I've got to
thank the fans who stuck it
out on a Tuesday to see a
~reen - white-checker (finIsh). We put it on for them
here at the end, all the
restans, all of the ~uys on
different strategy, It really
was a tough , hard-fought
win ."
Rei.\lning Cup champion
Jimm1e Johnson finished
third, followed by Matt
Kenseth, Denny Hamlin,
Dave Blaney, June race winner Carl Edwards, Brian

Reds scalp Braves, 8-7
8Y JoE KAv
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Blame it
on the ballpark. Or, maybe
the humidity was .the problem. Perhaps it was the
strike zone.
Whatever the cause for the
Braves' latest loss, the outcome is clear: Atlanta is
looking up from its deepest
hole of the season.
Brandon Phillips hit a solo
homer and a ti~breaking single in the sixth inning
Tuesday night, leading the
Cincinnati Red&gt; to an 8-7
victory. The Braves fell a
season-high six games
behind the New York Mets
in the NL East, and couldn't
quite agree on the reason
why.
"In this ballpark, anything
can happen ," manager
Bobby Cox said.
No lead lasted for long at
one of the majors' most hitAP phoio
ter-friendly ballparks. There
Cincinnat Reds' Norris Hopper gets congratulated by teammate Jason Ellison, reft, after the were three blown leads on a
hot , sticky ni ght.
Reds beat the Atlanta Braves 8-7 In a baseball game in Cincinnati Tuesday.
--- -~:::.-,.....

•

Please see Busch, 82

Monday. Aug, 27
Volleyblll
Belpre al Easl&lt;lrn, 6 p.m.
Southern at Hannan (W.Va.), 6 p.m.

CoN'rAcrUs

For more lnformltlon:

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSEI - 46.83
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 73.49
Aohland Inc. (NYSE) - 56.88
Bill Lots ( NYSE)- 25.88
Bob Evano (NASDAQ)- 34.20
BorgWarnor (NYSE) - 81.93
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) 44.23
Champion (~DAQ) - 5.42
Channing Shops (NASDAQ) 9.14
City Hokllrlll (NASDAQ) - 37.28
Collllll (NYSE) - 88.28
DuPont (NYSE)- 47.75
US Bank (NYSE) - 32.68
llannett (NYSE) - 48.82

SATURDAY MORNING SPORTS CLINIC

Vickers, Bobby Labonte and
Tony .Stewart, last week's
winner on the road course at
Watkins Glen.
With just three races
remaining until the stan of
the' 10-race stock car playoff, Busch remains 12th m
the standings, 33 'points
behind
Truex.
Dale
Earnhardt Jr. jumped past
Ryan Newman, Busch's
Penske Racing teammate,
into 13th, but a slow pit stop
late ip the race cost him a
top-10 finish as the fan
favorite wound up 12th.
"This was a great win,"
said Busch, who broke a 51 race winless string two
weeks ago at Pocono. "It just
backs up what we did at
Pocono.'
Series leader Jeff Gordon,

RICHMOND, .Va.
Michael Vick's legal troubles might not end with his
guilt~ plea to a federal dogfightmg conspiracy charge.
The NFL star still faces
the possibility of prosecution m state coun, where the
punishment
could far
exceed the
ma:(imum
five years
in prison
that
he
could get
from U.S.
District
J u d g e
Vlck
Henry
Hudson.
Local prosecutor Gerald
Poindexter has said he likely will p'ursue charges
against Vick, who has plummeted from local hero to
high-profile symbol of animal abuse in the four
months since authorities
first raided his Surry
County property. According
to Poindexter, the . case
could go before a county
grand jury that is scheduled
to convene Sept. 25.
Poindexter did not return
phone messages left by The
Associated Press at his
office and on his cell phone
Tuesday.
Among the state laws
Vick could be charged with
violating are those ag~inst
dogfighting and animal cruelty. Both are felonies punishable by up to five years
in prison.
"The real question is how

\'all.,... II
Eastern at Meigs Preview, 6 p.m.
C1'911 Countly
Southern, Meigs, Eastern at River Valley
Early Bird lnvlle. 10 a.m.

- ..

·:..:r:---~~ -

'
...-.:;.;;..-............... ---..-~··· - - ---

Ph.illips' solo homer in the
fifth helped the Reds come
from two runs down to tie
the game at 7. He broke the
tie an inning later with a
run-scoring single off Peter
Moylan (4-3), who hit two
batters during the Reds' goahead rally.
Moylan had trouble gripp~ng the ball on a humid
mght.
"The ball just kept slipping out of my hand,"
Moylan said. "I've never
had that happen before."
Cincinnati 's bullpen has
been among the majors'
worst all season, but held up
this time. Left-bander Bill
Bray (3-0) allowed only one
hit ·in I 1-3 innings, and
David Weathers pitched
around a single and a walk
to get the final three outs for
his 26th save in 31 chances.
"The offense has done a
great job battling back and
keeping us in ballgames,''
Bray said.
Please see Recl1, 118

--~·------ · ----

�Page 82 •

lhe Daily Sentinel

Continental Airlines pulling
name otT Meadowlands
NEWARK. N.J. (AP)
Conune.ntal A trli nes Inc. has
decided to opt out of its deal
fo r its name to appear on the
home of th e NBA's New
Jersey Nets and the NH L's
Ne w Je rsey De vils, the
are na's owner said Tuesday.
The Meadowlands building
has
been
called
Continental Airlines Arena
for 12 years, but the New
Jersey Sports and Exposttion
Authonty satd tt ts hunting
for a new company to put its
name o n what ts now
Continental Airlmes Arena.
~kesman for Houstonb
ontmental, which has
a maJor presence at Newark
Liberty International Auport,
satd an opllon in its conuact
allows tt to opt out following
a major change. The Devils.
one of the arena's mam tenants , is leavm$. this fall for a
new home m Newark.
"The current arrangement
remruns m effect until the
NJSEA de stgnates a new
sponsor."
satd
Dave
Messmg , a Contmental
spokesman "We have had a
rewardmg relallonshtp wtth
the arena and are happy to
continue to ha ve our nrune on
1t unul a new sponsor takes
over."
. George Zoffin~er, CEO of
't he authority, satd the state

would get a better deal with a
new sponsor because the c urrent contr, ct pays only $ I J
million annually, with half
the fees bemg patd through
rurhne Uckets.
"We thmk this is a real
opportumty for u s to tmprove
our cash flow," he said.
The authority satd it is
seekin g bids by Sept. 24
from companies mterested in
procuring the naming rights.
Zoffinger s aid the N ets
w1ll help m the effort. The
basketball team, which plans
to move to New York City's
Brooklyn borough,
has
signed a lease tc;&gt; P,iay at the
Meadowlands untd 2012 but
can opt out earlier, Zoffinger
d
sa~~ said he expects the
Meadowlands facthty to
command a premium pnce,
based on other recent naming
rights deals.
Barclays
Bank
PLC
announced in January tt
would spend a s much as
$400 nullion over the next 20

4

Busch

•

from PageBl

on a late stop and also fell
out of contention.
"I made a mistake on that
pll stop late in the mce and
that probably cost us about
five spots," said Earnhardt,
who had to start from the
rear of the 43-car field after
his team changed the transmtssion on his No. 8 Chevy.
"But we ran good, came
from the back, passmg cars
and racing everybody. That
was fun.
Truex, Earnhardt's tewnmate who also ran second
here in June, was a bit frustrated fmishing be~ind.
Busch, the driver closest to
him in the battle for the
Chas·e.
"I wanted it so bad I could
taste it back there behind
Kurt," Truex said. "I felt
like last time we probably
had the car to beat. This
time we didn't. Thts time
we had good strategy and a
good car there at the end."

•

years to put its name on the
new pro basketball arena
planned as the Nets' future
home tn Brooklyn. The
18,000-seat facility designed
by the architect Frank Gehry
will be called The Barclays
Center.

f

I
'

'

'

•

'

who started from the pole,
was in the top live most of
the day before some late
problems rele¥ated him to a
27th-place fintsh.
Gordon ' s crew had to
make a qmck repair on a
loose nap along the edge of
the No. 24's rear wmdow
dunng a late pit stop, costing the four-time Cup
champion several positions.
He then spun mto the infield
because of a detlating tire
and fell out of the lead lap
after getting stuck in the
grass left soft and muddy by
the hea'\ly rains of the past
two days.
Earnhardt, desperately
trymg to make his way into
the Chase hneup, was also a
top- 10 car mpst of the day,
but he slid through his ptts

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

www .mydailysentinel.c:om

VVednesda~August22,2007

Browns QB race rolls on with no fmish iii sight
BEREA (AP) - From flippmg a coin to ftlling m blanks.
C leveland's starting quarterback dnuna has turned again.
During his post-pracu ce
ne ws
bnefing
Tuesday,
Bro wns
coach
Romeo
Crennel said he '!lay delay
nanung a starter unul the week
before. his club's Sept. 9 season opener agrunst the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
He has narrowed his choice
to two candidales: Charlie
Fry.e and a mystery man.
'It's Charlie ... and Yes,"
teased Crennel, who has
Derek Anderson, Brady Quinn
and Ken Dorsey 'to choose
from.
"Who' s the other one?'' he
was asked.
"Who do you want it to be?"
Crennel said with a laugh.
"Bmdy," a reporter said.
"If you want it to be that,
then it can be that for you,"
Crennel said.
Who knows. It could be that
for the Browns soon, too.
Crennel's vague reply came
one day after he named Frye
as his starter for Satl)rday's
game at Denver, the club's
third exhtbittOn game and

Vick
fromPageBl
much overlap there would
be between anything the
local prosecutor would
charge and what the federal
prosecutors charged," said
Linda Malone, a criminal
procedure
expert
and
Marshall-Wythe
Foundation professor of law
at the College of William
and Mary. "There are some
limitationspn duplication."
The feoeral charge is
conspiracy to travel in
interstate commerce in aid
of unlawful activities and
conspiracy, to.' sronsor a
dog in ap .anima fighthtg
venture. Malone said the
state dogfighting · charges
probably would not be con·
sidered dupli-cative.
"The essence of the conspiracy charge is the agreement" between Vick and
his
co-conspirators,
Malone said.
Three Vick associates
have pleaded guilty to the
consptracy charge and said

anothe( chance for any of
Cle veland's QBs to step Ill'
and prove ~·s worthy of
being a No. 1.
So far, Frye and Anderson
have failed to impress their
coaches or Browns fans, who
are_clamoring to see more of
Qumn.
The rookie from Notre
Dame threw two fourth-quaeter touchdown passes agamst
Detroit m his NFL debut on
Saturday rught. Quinn went
I 3-of-20 for I55 yards and
played wtth potse and confidence, something neither Frye
nor Anderson has shown
much of dunng the past two
weeks of thelf ongoing derby.
Crennel said Qumn wtU get
more playing time a~runst the
Broncos, but wouldn t specify
when or how much But
another strong showing could
move Quinn past Anderson on
the depth chart- if he hasn' t
passed him already.
Quinn played down hts
debut, which came agamst a
Lions defense of third and
fourth strmgers.
"I don't want to make it
more than what it was," he
said. "I was JUSt a guy out

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e ster

there ttying to help his team a chance to show if he can
come back and wm That is make all the throws, he cerreally what it was."
· rainly has the other quarterBut it could be much more if backing dulles down pat. On
Frye doesn't flaJ bener this Tuesday, Q umn de nected
week and i Quinn, who praise about his leadershtp o n
missed I L days of training the two TO drives to his teamcamp m a conuact holdout. mates
conunues to progress.
"They did a great job of
Crennel, who resorted to a focusing," he said "I think
coin toss to dectde whether they knew what they had m
Frye or Anderson would start front of them. If anythmg, 1
the exhibition opener, was JUSt tried to communicate the
asked what conclusions could best•1could and tried to be the
be made from not yet nammg geneml out there."
a Week I starter.
As for who wtll lead the
"Well. tt changes and tt can Browns against the Steelers,
change," he said. " With thi s Quinn doesn't think his holdcompetition that we' ve had out has htm hi s chances of
which has been a good competition - wtth Frye being the s~i~~uld never say never,"
starter for this game, our flfSt he srud . ..1thmk tt is still someopponent might have to wonE
der who the quarterback is what of a competition. ven
going to be. They might have tho ugh the starter has been
to prepare for two guys, which announced for this game, I
could be an advantage for us." th\'jk guys are ~ill co~~g,
Qumn has qu~ekly gained stt trymg to s ow w t ey
ground on Frye and Anderson. can do .
Frye has a 69.4 ratmg,
''The roster hasn' t been set
Anderson' s ts 54.3 and netther and tlus isn't week one yet for
of the QBs has led the Browns the NFL. We have two weeks
to a touchdown while Quinn is left of hard work m our camp
2-for-2 on scoring drives.
and we'll see where things go
And while Quinn hasn' t had from there."

Vick provided virtually all hts client is fully aware that
the gambling and operating he could be facing a long
funds for the "Bad Newz ~tretch in prison.
Kennels" dogfighting enter"Michael's been fully
prise. Two of them also said apprised of all angles, all
Vick participated in execut· aspects," Wtlliams said.
ing at least eight underper·
Lead defense attorney
forming dogs, raising the Billy Martin announced
possibility of the animal Vick's decision to change
cruelty charges.
his earher not guilty plea in
Convictions on eight ani- a statemerrt Monday, saying
mal cruelty counts could Vick was ready to "accept
result in up to 40 years in full responsibility for his
prison if five-year terms for actions and the mistakes he
each count were imposed td has made."
run consecutively. Each
It's still unclear whether
dogfighting count could run all this will end the career of
the sentence up even higher. one of the NFL's most {!az.
Vick, 27, will enter his zling players.
plea agreement Monday. A
NFL commissioner Roger
jlOVemment official, speak· Goodell could rult: by the
tng
on
condition
of end of the week, but will
anonymtty because the probably wait until Vick
terms are not final, told the ,
·
Th
AP that prosecutors will .~ actually ~nters ht~ plea
e
recommend a sentence of · league ts , watllng for a
one year to 18 months. report by tts own observers,
However, Hudson is not a group headed by • Enc
bound by that recommenda- Holder, a former deputy
tion or by federal sentenc- U.S. attorney general.
ing gutdelines that will qall
"The commissioner has
for less than the five-year , rwt decided o~ a speci~c
maximum.
ltmetable on Mtchael Vick s
James
D.
"Butch" status," league spokesman
Williams Jr., one of Vick's Greg Aiello said Thesday.
Vick has been barred
five defense attorneys, said

CLASSIFIED

E-mail
class1fled @myda1lytribune.com

22, 23, 24, 26, 27' 28, 29,
30.

Public Notice

·'
'I

'~·

'
,.

•'

MEIGS
COUNTY
BOARD OF ELEC·
TIONS
JOB
POSITION·
DEPUTY DIRECTOR
The Meigs County
Board of Elections Is
looking to fill the lull·
time
position of
Deputy
Director.
Candidates must be
affiliated with !he
Democratic Party.
You must reside within
Meigs County, must
possess at least a high
school diploma or
attainment of the
equivalency of a high
school diploma (GED).
College level educalion to desired, but
specialized training In
the varlouo aapects of
election administration
11 molllllvored.
'Experience operating
voting machlneo and
othor automated office
equtpmont.
•succeuful and offlclont dollblls managamont,
lnctudtng
use of valor dotabooo
with
tho
Ohio
Secretary of 8tato
'Ability to uH, tntor·
prot and apply oloctlon
low terminology and
languogt.
'Abltlty to rocolvo and
tmpltmont
aoalgn·
mtntaand tnotructlono
for board mtmbora
and Sacrotory of
Sllla'o offtco.
'Ability to communi·
cote eflllcttvely, both
orally and written
'Strong orgontuttonol

skills and aHentlon to
detail.
'Familiarity
with
human resources, pollclea, and practices.
'Familiarity with han·
dllng budgsts and publie appropriation 'of
lunda
'Ability to convey or
••change InformatiOn
Including
giving

Racine, Ohio
PP• 19-00242
Prior Deed Reference:
Volume 95, Page 733
Appralled
at
$18,000.00. Terms of
aale: Cannot be oold
for tesa than 213rda of
the appraised value.
10% down on day of
sate, ca1h or certHied
check, balance due on

assignments or dirac· conflrmat1on of sale.

lion to board person·
nel.
'Ability to be adaptable
and to perform In
atreeeful or amergency
situations, and ability
to conduct self at all
Hmea In a professional
and courteous manner.
Written applications
and resumes accepted
until August 27, 2007
by 4:00 p m. at the
board office located at
117 E. Memorial drive,
Ste. 1, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
(8) 5-t 20, 21, 22,23,24
------Public.Notice
------Sheriff Sales
Case Number 06CV132
LaSalle Bank National
Assoc. Plaintiff VS
Jerry Copplck et. at
Defendants
Court ol Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from oald
court In the above entt·
lied action, I wilt
••pose to sale at publie auction on the fronl
otop1 of the Mol(ll
County Court Hoult
on Friday Soptambar
14, 2007 at tO a.m., ol
ootd day, the lollowlng
dHcrlbod real eotato:
Sttuatod
In
tho
Townohtp ol Sutton,
County of Mtlga and
Stoto of Ohio:
Bttng Lot No. 85 In tho
Incorporated VIllage ol
Roclno.
Bald promloeo alao
known 11 404 4th
Street, Racine, Ohto
45nt
PPN: 111-00242.000
Currant Owner: Jerry
Copplck
Property At:
404
Fourth Street

J

The appraisal did
Include an Interior
axamlnlllon of the
house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for
the
Plaintiff
John D. Clunk
5801 Hudaon Drive,
Suite 400
Hudson, Oh 44236
330.342-82113
(8) 8, 15, 22

being 72 rods east of
the North West corner
of Lot No. 1165);
Thence South 3" Weal
a distance of 36.5 rods,
mora or leas, along the
Weal line of lot owned
by Herbert Williams, to
the center of State
Route No. 680; Thence
North approximately
38'West18 rods, more
or lass, to Southeast

49.50 feet to a point;
2. North 45' 54' 49'
Weal a distance of
128.21 feet to a pj)lnt;
3. North 50' OS' 37'
West a distance of
119.29 feetto a point;
Thance leaving said
centerline North oo·
09' 02' East a distance
of 386.05 leal to the
principal point of
beginning, conlalnlng

corner of land owned 2,3875 acres, more Or

by Dr. Formerly owned loss, subJect to all
by Ira kibble; Thence legal easements and
North 21 .6 rods, more rtgllta-of-way.

Offtee lloar~

'

and are lor the rlelermlnatlon of angles
only.
The .above description
was prepared from an
actual survey made on
the 28th day of July,
1994, by c. Thomaa
Smith,
Ohto
Professional Surveyor,
# 8844.
Audltora Parcel No. 09005n.OOO
,
Reference
deed
Votuma: 135, Page 783,
Melga county Official

Sun Aug 26th at 9 00 am
41h &amp; Main , Hartford, WV
am · Registration- coffee &amp;
10:00 am · lunch &amp; B1ke Show

from trammg camp by the
NFL , and Goodell ha s
asked th e Falcons not to
take any actwn until the
league rules
Goodell can suspend Vick
under the NFL's personal
conduct pohcy. While the
league hasn't said whether a
potential suspension would
be concurrent with Vick's
prison sentence, tt probably
would take effect once he is
released from custody.
That means Vick likely
would miss both the 2007
and 2008 seasons.
The Falcons in 2004
stgned Vick to a 10-year,
$1~0 million contract - at
the time, one of the largest
m NFL htstory. The bonus
and guaranteed money he
recetved in hts contract
totaled $44 mtllion. and the
team might try to reclaim
part of that
Vick also has lost lucrati vc contracts with sponsors.
Rawlings,
Nike,
Reebok and Upper Deck are
among the companies that
have either ended contracts
wtth him or stopped sales of
his merchandtse.

Desa"'pth)n • Include A Price • Avakl Abbreviations
1 Jndude Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

I,

*POLICIES*

\\\01 \ 1 I \ II

r

\ I"

rI
~

ANNOUN!l'MENfS

Mason Co. Fairgrounds
At. 62N.
Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30 PM)

675:-5463

HeipWanted

Help Wanted

HelpWented
'i

.

®

.

'

Pleuant Valley HNpltalliJ currently
aceeptlna n1um• for a ptlrt-tlme

Pleasant Valle) Hospital Home Medical
Equipment Is currently accepting
resumes for a full·ttme, dayshift
Rosplratory Therapist. Must be a
graduate of an approved Respiratory
Therapist program. Must be licensed or
eligible for licensing in the states of
West VIrginia and Ohio.

Phannacy Technician. Succeutul
completion of WV Board of Pharmacy
approved tHIIinlelan tralntna proaram
or equivalent. State-real•trallon or
Natlonal-eertlftc:atlon tertlftcate a1 a
Pta.rmacy technician preferred.

At lent l080 houri

a1

a pharmacy

technician trainee. Two yean feharmacy
technician experience pre erred.
Hoapltal experlem:~t~ preferred.

.

Submit Rc:Humc to
Pleasant Vali-a Hospital,
c/o Human elioun;:es
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleaunt, WV, 255!0
ru to 304-67!-697!
or apply online at www.pvalley.org
A.A/EOE

I

tlwaye

Curr.nt

oml11lon tn

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Lo..1AND
FOUND

0
LOST In Patnot area
Blonde, blue eyed bob
(l
tailed (M) 8 month old
Husky No quesllons asked
•
we JU'st want htm home
Large reward tor tnfo M3adtng
to his recovery or for htm
Please cafl740·379·2175 "
LOST Male Rat Terner,
orange collar, Bowmans
Run area Companton of
Elderly Man Aeward 949·
7100
- - - ----Missmg SinCe 8- t &amp;07
While Male Adult English
Bulldog Very fnendly, famrly
2634
dog Has one bottom tooth
To grveaway to good home that slrt:ks out In vrclnrty ol
www.comlcs.com
Ct 2007
female cat has had all shots SA 588 &amp; McCormrck Rd
and spayed recently at Dr
Reward If returned 740
1T'lll""'------,
Cranks 304-675-2634
645 8418
1110
11110
11110

Ir

tr~D

r

Aet

1988 •Thl''"""''',.l

I.

""'r------'"'1

HELPWAmllD . .

JIEu&gt;WAmllD ..

LPN's Rocksprrngs Nursmg OverbrookCenter IS current STUDENTS FOR- THE NA
and Aehabtlrlalton Center IS ly seek1ng a beautiCian to PROGRAM Rockspnngs
looking for a few dedtcated wmk In the factllty s beauty Nursmg and Rehab1Htalion
people to become a part of salon C!Jndrdates should Center IS located 5 m1les
our team We are a 100 bed possess a 11alld Ohio man· from Pomeroy and 20 min·
skrlled lac1111y located 5 agrng cosmetologtsl license utes hom Athens and
mrtes from Pomeroy Thrs rs Salary ts based on commrs Albany We currently are
a 20 mtnute commute from s1on Interested candidates seektng tndrvtduals rnterestAthens arw:l Albany We JUSI should contact the admrn1s· ed rn attendrng our 75 hour
recently rnstalled a state of trator at (740)992·6472 Nursrng AssiStant Program
the art on hne documents· EOE-Overbrook Center par- whtch wtll startsometrme In
tion system for the nursing tiCipates m the Drug Free September This class ts
free of charge and begins
assistants which reduce Workplace Program
paper work trme consider
w1th 2 volunteer days that
ably We oHer compeliltve Overbrook Center Is current Will allow you to see what
rates health dental and ly accepting applications for the JOb conststs ol first hand
VJSton 10surance as well as a a lull trme 7pm 7am LPN We allow 12 students per
40fK plan Our company fullt1me 3pm·3am and 7am· class so they 1111 up QUickly
offers a turt1on rermburse· 7pm STNA posrt1ons Also Please come rn and comment program ftr LPN to AN avaJiable part t1me STNA plete an applrcatron rf rnterwtlh no walltng pertod for posrttons Interested applt· ested or call Cathy
tU!Iton Stop by and fill 001 cants can prck up an applr- Scarberry at 740 992-6606
an appbcat!on and recetve cat1on or contact Holh e Rocksprmgs Is an equal
an mterVIew Monday Bumgarner LPN Staff opportumty employer
through Fnday between 9 Development Coordtnator @
AM and 4 PM orcall and ask (740)992 6472 MF 9ASP
for Debbie Wayland Staffrng at 333 Pege St Middleport,
Coordinator 740·992-6606 Oh EOE &amp; a participant of
Rocksprmgs ts an equal the Drug Free Workplace Lrght Oak cabinets top 158"
opportunity employer
Program
bonom 160" very good con·
Mason taborers, expertence Part-Trme Cook/Helper dttlon
Butcher block
and transportatiOn reqUired needed for 100 bed sktlled Counter $800 FIRM 245
740-245 9323 betwee n nursing facility Interested iisiiis06r-;:-:-~:-:---,
sam . apm or 740-645 8686 applicants shOuld apply to 1180
WAN'JlD
unttl 10pm
Rocksprings Rahabrlrtatron
TO Do
;:;;;;_.:__-:--:- Center 36759 Rockspnngs · - - - - - - ·
Nail Tech Be Your Own Road, Pomeroy, OhiO
All types, ol Home
Boss, Choose Your Own 45769
Hoursrr Low Room Rental Elttendrcare
Health Repatrs&amp; 1mprovements
New
Equip ment Servrces Inc IS an equal Oualtty work latr rates Call
Established Cltents call or opportuntty employer that RICk 740 274-a338
stop m at, ATIITUDE S encourages
workplace -:-:-- -::---;::--:SALON &amp;TANN ING, 33105 diverSity MIF ON
Heaven Scent Cleantng
H1land Road Pomeroy, - - - - - - -- House Cleanrng Ser11rce at a
Ohto, (740)992 2200
POST OFFICE NOW
reasonable prrcer Call !Of;1ay
HIRING
at
740·446·3881 leave a
NURSING ASSISTANT AD
Aockspnngs Nursrng and
Avg Pay $20/hr or
message
Rehablhtahon Center Is
$571&lt; annually
looking for a few dedrcated Including Fedaml Beneftts Lawn mowtng Rates by the
JOb not the hour Frae
people to become a part ol
and OT Patd Trarnlng,
Esttmates Call Paul @
our team We are a 100 bed
Vacatrons FT/PT
(304)675 2940
skilled faclhfy located 5
1·866·542-1531
mites from Pomeroy Thts IS
USWA
Clean
a 20 m1nute commute !rom :-:--:--:--:-:--:-:::- ProfeSSIOnally
R&amp;J
T
ruckrng
Leading
The
Ol
lrce!H
ouse
ctea
nlng
Athens and Albanu We 1ust
Rates
recentr.. tnstalled 'a state of Way R&amp;J Trucktng now Reasonable
the art'' on l!ne documenta· Htnng at our New Haven References 740-446 2262
t1on S"slem f01 the nursrng WV Termrnal For Reg10nat -- -- - - - '
Hauls Dump Orv 1 year Reliable, dependable, and
assistants
whtch reduce OTR
verifiable exp Call 1 expertence State tested
paper work 11me consider 800·462·9365
ask tor Kent Nursmg Assistant, wtll do
ably We offer compellltve
Pnvatc duty m your home
rates, health, dental and
Sales Position
Nursrng Facllrty or Hospital
vrs1on rnsurance as well as
MFG Homes
So
rf you need time off or
a 401K plan Our company
An outstandtng
oHers a twt1on rermburse
opportuntly for the rtght JUSt need an break, I'myour
person, You can Contact me
ment program lor NA to LPN
d1
person
at 740-~16·5212
or
With no warhrrg perro or rm Prater Sales experrence (740)992 0810 If no answer
ltatton We are a low lrfl Otfer 5 da~ work week
please leave messag6
lacltly whtch has reduced
Excellent benetrts
our back. InJuries to almost 0
Emarl resurne
We have 1 poSitiOn opened
r760@claytorr net
on all 3 Shifts
Stop by to schedule an rntervrew
and fi ll out an appllcatron
NoWalk Ins Please
Melrssa Day Care,Batley
and rece111e an rntervrew b,.,;=====d Run Road Pomeroy has
Monday through Frtday Temporary Full trme openrngs tor chrldren wrtlrng
between 9AM and 4PM Teachers Ass1stant $6 20 to work nrghts and week
Rocksprrngs ts an equal hour MF/dayt1me Send ends a t.:~;e pts county or pn
opportunity employer
resume 10 Early Educatron
StatiOn 2122 JeHerson Ave
Pt Pleasant WV 25550
Tudors BISCUit World Mason 10
BUSINt~
Omum 'Nm'
1ocat1on IS now hrnng for "--riiii.iiiiiiriiiii;,;.r
managers bakers cooks '
and cashr(HS Apphcalrons 3 young Shel11es (pups
are avar!able at the Porn! grown up 'l 1 female 2
Pleasant and Gallrpohs toea males AKC pArents ons1to
Irons or send a resume to pre fly sable &amp; ~~ hrt e $100
2322 Jackson Ave Potnt each Good mdoors Alball)
(740)698 6049-,pr 740 517
Pleasant, WV2 55 5~
1659

Be Your Own Boss, Choose P."~=~~~~~ Help wanted-Part l!me
$200 Reward lor rnto on lost •
Your
Own
Hours, Earn S$$ working only a adm1nistraltve assistant, to
This newspape
Dachshunds puppy 3
YARD SAU:..
Independent managtng casfew hours per day!
work Wtlh Off!Ce manager,
ccepts only hel
metologlst 60% commtsslon
NEEDED
months old, redchsh bro"'n
GALLIPOLIS
average 15·25 hours per
anted ads meetln
Lost In Actamsv~ le Ad area
or booth rental, 10%tamrng
IMMEDIATELY
week Job descriptton to
close to Bob Evans cabrns Cleaning out Multi fam tly,8- sales, 10% onf retarl
free
OE olandsrds
1nclude
but not hmhed to
Point
Pleasant
Regt
s
ter
1 1
Belongs 10 9 Year Old b"""'I 23-25 9 6 SR 141 to Lincoln tannmg certr1ca ron, ree
answe11ng the phone, work·
MOTOR
ROUTE
We Will not knowtng
Please call740·245 9565
parking m a very ntce
1ng wrth custolflers, schedul·
Prke cross Northup Brrg fol- upscale salon near matn
CARRIER
rng and orgamzrng concrete
accept any adver
1
446
0444
FOUND On August 19 sets c:NJ Signs ·
hlghwau new equipment,
lament In vtola11
- - - - - - -'
and SIone orde rq,• dsI Pal~
...,,.
f the law,
of keys on bike tratt call to Movtng Sate Fnday 8.4, sun room, na11 &amp; spa room
1ng bucks operaltng dlg1tal
LEON AREA
wetltJ! scales, batchrng con~~~~~~~~,d~en~1~,1y~74~0:·4~4~1-~050:0_ Saturday
8-4 59~9 SR 141, Call or stop rn at ATII- PAYS $9011-$950
Galllpobs, Qh baby clothes TUDES SALON &amp; TAN·
crete wtth automated com
0·6 months, g1rt clothes 2- NING 33105 Hrland Road,
per month
puter batch program and
CLASSIFIED INDEX
3T womens clolhes 7 10_ Pomeroy, Oh•o (740)992·
general cteanmg of office
4x4's For Sale .. ... ................................... 725 sm lrg, couch &amp;chair. baby 2200
Contact: David Hill
area
Famlltanty w1th
Announcement ........................................... 030 toys, ndrng toys car seat
Polnl Plaaaant
OurckBooks
(accounting,
Antiques ............................ ·· ................... sao and sw1ng much more
~-:--:--::--::-:-::-:Register
mvolctng, rnventory, etc),
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Direct Care Staff Mtddleton
200 Ma1n St
word and Exce I programs a
Auction and Flea Market. .......................... 080
WAN'l'F.D
Estates IS now hlrlllQ dtrect
Po1nt
Pleasant,
WV
bonus PaYbasod on ~pe·
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
TO BUY
care staH You wdl be part of
304-675·1333 ex120
rtence an d s'"''' 11 1eve1
Auto Repair............. ................................. 770
a team that provtdes servlcWOr""· ass1gnmen1 a1
Autoa for Sale............................................. 710
es to rndtvtduals w1!h mental HURRY' THIS OFFER Pr~mary
"""
bu PI 1 bu1
Absolute
Top
Dollar
US
WON'T
LAS!
LON~
A
I
750
BoaIs &amp; Motors Iar Sa&amp;.............................
uvurts rg an ,
mu st
retardation and develo,..,_
"
billy
ft
I
rt I
a ulldl ng Supp II88........................................ 550 Stiver and Gold Cams, mental drsabrlrtres We prohave ex1 t '•·
o repo
PI en1os
a us Iness an d Bulldl ng&amp;............................. 340 Proolsets Gold Rings, Pre v1de on the 1oo tramtng II Forget what you Millwood or LaJ\m
Currency, you would like to take
Bu.I ness 0 ppor1 U nlty .................... .. ........... 2,0 1935 US
have heard about requtred Contact Valley
a us Iness Tran
I Ing....................................... 140 Solitaire Diamonds- MTS advantage of this opponum
Brook Concrete Corporate
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790 Cotn Shop 151 Second ly, """U mall applll at 8204 Telemarketing!
Off1ce
at Lakin, VoN call
1
Camping Equlpmen1 ................................... 780 Avenue, GallrpolJS 740-446· Carta
~~ Or Monday
'
thru
Fnday
(304)n3-5519 to schedule
Carda ol Thanks .......................................... 010 2842
B00·4 oo An Equal lnloCts1on has JUst celebrat· Interview
ed 25 years of excellence as - - - - - , - - Child/Elderly Care ...... ,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,, 190
E
ElectrlcaURefrlgeratlon ............................, .840 Buy1ng Grnserrg Fresh Root ~~:~~nrty
mp1oyer
a I 1need dlslnbutors klr the Trl·
:~~n~~~~~s~~~:~ ua tty County Make brg money
Equipment for Rent ....................,,,,,, ... ,, ......480 alter Sept 1 Dry Root after
whrle helpmg others in your
Excavatlng ................................................... 830 Sept 15 Call for pnces &amp;
spare
lime Call 740 .367.
Farm Equlpment. .........................................610 details 740 274 0326
COL •No conecttons
Drrvers needed
Farms I°r Selnt
R ............................................. 430 Property to butld home tn Dnvers
7886
wtllmg to drrve for
FarmLs 1or 8 e ........................................ ···· 330 Gallta County Prefer 5-10 local ready mrx company •No Product Satea
Light Farm work, butldtng
For ease ............................................. ······490 acres, h1gh and dry Call one poS!1 on open al two (2)
lance
&amp; weed-eattng 3041
You
will:
For Sale..................................... ············ ·585 Marty collect @ 321-453
For Sale or Trade.................. ........ .......... 590 1351 evenrn9s
plants Expertence ts pre •RenawiUpgn~de NRA 458·1727 Call after 9pm
Fruita a. Vegetables.............. .... ............. 580 _ _ _..::..____ ferred but not necessary Membershfpa
Furnished Rooms .................. ..................... 460 Snapper mower wtheavy Dnver must be wrllrng to do •FundraiM for Nonproftbl
General Haullng ...........................................850 cast steel deck, w/powerunit pre·ma1ntenance on trucks
Customer
Giveaway ..... ..............................................040 0 11 rtght rear wheel butlt and equrpment, yard/plant •Inbound
Happy Ads .................................................... 050 before 1995 call George and other miscellaneous Service
Hay &amp; Grain ............................... ............... ..640 collect (740 )985 3967
chores Expertence opera!·
Help Wanted . ......................................... 110
mg equ•pment and extra lnfoCrsron offers up to
Looking for a
Home lmprovement$...................................81 0
skrlls such as weldtng a plus $8 SOJhr and a $300 Hiring
convenient schedule
Homes for Sale..................... ...... ..... .. 310
Starttng pay based on expe Bonus!
while your child 11 In
Household Goods ............... ..
510
rrence.and dnvmg record
Houses for Rent ................ .... ········ · .410 1110
Benet1ts rncludrng health Call today to f1nd out morel
school?
In Memoriam ............................................ · .020
lbLP WA.vn.TJ
rnsurance available after 1·888-IMC·PAYU ext. 2321
Take Inbound/Customer
meetmg
empl oyment - -- - - - Insurance ............................... ···· ··········· · 130 ·
Serv1ce calls for a vanety
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ....................... 660 Accepting apphcat tons for requ11ements Call Valley Foster Parents Needed
ol
Ll vesIOC k · · ·· ······ .............................630
Brook Concrete corporate homes needed rn Mergs &amp; Christian mlnlstnes Also
· ..............060 lull &amp; part trme paremedtcs oHtce at (304)773·5519 to Gall1a County lor youth 0
LOSI an d Foun d.................... ........
make Outbound calls for
1"'
Lots &amp; Acreage .... ...................................... 350 We nave a benefits package schedule an rnlerv1ew
thru 18 Oh10 provrdes the non-profrt organ.zatrons
ScHOOL'
Miscellaneous ........................................170 available Apphcallons can
1 nng ou recerve reem
Caboose
~-.;IN!&lt;iiiii;rNilli
Ulo,·iiniioii~_.l custom
Miscellaneous Merchandlae.......................540 be obta tned fro m Mason 1"'"-"??':r.:::::::-:--"1 ~~s~e~t of $30 to $40 ~
---.
Concessron
Tra1ier
Full
Part
Time
Oay
Shift
Mobile Home Repalr ....................................860 County
EM S
91 1
urlvers:
day patd resprte and sup
krlchen
30
Long
1
976
Gallipolis
Career
College
(Bam·
t
30pm)
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420 Emergency Or rve Po•nt
BONUSES!!
port tor youth placed 10 your
(Careers Close To Home) Semphore Call for more
$7.00 • $7.25/hr
Mobile Homes tor Sal8................................320 Pleasant WV 25550 or you
home Train ing begtns
1nlonnatron (740)388 9327
Call
Tod&lt;~y ' 740 446-4367
Money to Loan ............................................. 220 can call 304 675 6134
Plus great pay, home·ttme, September 9th at Albany
or
emarl
1
800
214
0452
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
benehts 100% PAID
ca ll oasrs Fostercare toll
Full Time Evening
puppy1ovecJ@
aol
com
WWW gAIII)OiiSCdfCOrtofleg.e COt!
Musical Instruments ............................... · 570 An Excellent way to earn health/trlc ms Aegrorral free, 1_877_325'-iSSB
Shill
AccredHeCl MOfTJI:Jor Au ad l •n~
Personals ,,, . ....................................... · ..005 money The New Avon
Runs 1 yr Tractor Trl Exp
COOI'\:11 lo lotlct'lnrJ.cr! CollcQ~
(1 45pm 10 45pm)
•NOTICE•
Pets for Sale ............................................ · 560 Call Mantyn 304 882-2645 L...;R;;;e;o.;;
q.B;;;66c•';2;;9;;;3:_1;;;74.-3;;;5__, Help wanted Darst Adult
and School\ 12748
$8.50/hr
OHIOVALLEYPUBLISHPlumbing &amp; Heating ............................ ··· .820 -,---_,-c::--:::---:-Group Home, weekends a
IN G CO recommends
Professlon{ll Services ...................... · ··· ···~~~ Appalachian Trre Produc1s Temporary Full trme Frllrng musl (740)992·5023
lhal you do busrness w1lh
$300 Hiring
RadkJ, TV &amp; CB Repair ..................... ··· · ·
lookrng tor a COL Orrver wrth Clerk Dutres w111 mclude
people you know and
Real Estate Wanted · · · ················ ······· .l&amp;O
Off Aoa d T1re expe r~;;~o
1"- ce personne1 F1109
I
In'l'oce
I Looking For Opportunity?
Bonus!
150
NOT to send money
Schools Instruction
· · .. ······ · ······
t 11 1 9
b f1 1
AI
d
Profe ssronal
Field
5
through the matl um11 you
Seed'
Plant
&amp; Fertilizer ····························6
l
~
ok
:~g
1
:
pe~~
t
t~e
sa~
O
C
rde~ng!Marn:arnr~g
&amp;tree
Representatrve
wanted
lor
Situations Wanlecl , .. .. .. ... ......... . ........120
Call nowto schedule your
have tnvestrgated the
Space for Rent
. .. ........... . .....460 person Prot&lt; up application Supplres Ass1s1wrth Human Pomt Pleasant Galhpotrs
rnterv'ew
oHerrng
Sporting Goods
.................... 520 at Pt Pleasant Store Man Resource Tasks and must surroundrng areas Proven
1-aBB·IMC·PAYU
SUV's for Sale . .
.....720 Frr 8am-5pm
be profrc1ent m M1crosolt sates hack, broad product
1_88_462_7298
Opportunrhes
vaccum
Word and Mrcrosoft E.:ce'l n portfoliO
management
Truck. ror sale .............. ......................... 715
cleaner
&amp;candle
makrng
Job
alt1.1921
II
Upholstery
................................... 870 AVON• All Areas• To Buy or you would like to take opportunrtres,
exce en!
busrnesses many
VHS
vans For Sale. .
. .. ..............730 Sell Shrrley Spears 304· advantage ol these opportu· 1ncome potentral and bene· L..~w~WW-In,;:;looC;::;'";;;on,;;;com
:;;,;.~
Vldeos&amp;Movreposters367
Wanted to Buy
.
........................ ... 090 675 1429
mtres you may apply at 8204 hts k&gt;r those who qualify
wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620
Carla Drrve Gallipolis Ohto Woodmen ol the World Ltle McCiures Resta urant ( ~~~;,;;:;;;:~~~~:X~=7=7~~:,.:;0~
6 1~2i0o.;;;;;..--Wanted To Do .... ....................................... 180 Full Trme r.ook pay com Monday thru Friday 8 OOam Insurance Society Omaha Galhpohs Only) now h"mg r
Wanted to R,nt .... ..................................... 470 mensurate wtlh experrence 4 OOpm No telephone calls Nebraska Resumes to 2 part &amp; fu ll trme · daysh1Jt
Yard Sale- Gallipolis ......... .... ............... ... 072 Apply rn person Holrday lnn wrll be accepted An Equal Players Club Drtve Sutte avtulable Apply between 10
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle ................ ........074 of Gallrpolts No phone calls Opportun1ty
Employer 10t Charleston WV 253 11 and 11 AM Monday
Saturday
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ............................... 076 please
V'M!ON
or call 304·342 5021
968.

•~------_.!

YARDSALE

violation

not

kttncarlyl~omcut.net

Loot Cot "'""' ' " m••"'l
from MeatlowbrOOk area Gray
stnppad wrth white mmen paws
He answers to Spank)' and writ
be afrakl $50 reward Call 304

Border Collie appr&lt;»&gt; 1
yr old, Spayed shots utd,
good house dog, vet ref reQ
740·256·1866
-------Free to good home, 6 week
old mu(ed puppres 740·367·
0624
'-'-- - - -- -Free 13 month old Male
black Lab Call 740·2450153
------To gtveaway female 4
months old kmen, very play·
ful and fnendly 304·675·

r

trl

In

SLliOOIS
INsrRUCilON

(F)

ertlaements a
ubject to the Fedsra
elr Housing Act o

Now you con have borders and graphics
ILJ
added to your classified ads
{.~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing riH!'V• tM fight to edit, ~. or e~~ncel 1ny sd 1t sny time Errors must bl rsported on thtl flr~t dly of
lfltK.Int-&amp;entlnei-Reglsttr wll be Ntponllblt tor no more tt.n 1M cost of 1M spact occupied by tM tn'Or tnd onty tht tlret Insertion Wt shell
any 1oM or sxpen .. that r. .ultt h"om tM pu~le.tlon or
of
1dvertiHmtnt Correet lon will 1)41 msdt ths first IV1II1ble edition. • Box
art
confldenUet, •
rate Clird tP9il11 • AM 11111 •tate advertiHmentt
to lhe l"tdflrsl Fstr Houtlng
of
ttancUfds. We will
I
of the law

.r,:
"-------.,1

r

rw em~:JU.\

I

...

I

®

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
8U8Ineu Day• Prior To
Publlca.tlon
sunday Dlaplay: 1:00 p.m.
Thuraday for Sunday•

Cur;cealed &amp; Carry Class
NRA Certrlted Instructor,
One day 12 hour CCW 675 1571 or 304 675·0579
Class $100 Bam sharp Please helpl
Sept 1 Mercerville Flrfl - - - - - - - Dept 740-256-6514 Email Lost· black &amp; lhtrtte male
"'":l"i:!lte:I.Y:O:&gt;n::bo;::x;;:oo::m::.._., Husky, Manual Ad , Letart
area, $50 reward, (740)247·
GIVEAWAY
2151

Hetp Wanted

PHARMACY TECHNICIAN

Display Ads

• All ads must be prepaid'

AD • Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Only a few seats left!
SeP.tember 5· 7
$295/person Based on uu,,u,.,
occupancy State room taxes
w1ll be applied to cred1t card at
check-In Includes flight, hotel
accommodations, luggage
&amp; transfers
Private jet leaves from
Charleston, WV.
Must be 21 years of age.
Cash, credit cards, checks,
money order and payroll
deduct1on accepted
No Refunds'
LIMITED SEATSII
To make reservations
please call
PVH Community Relations
(304) 675-4340 ext. 1326

Motorcross Race
Sat. 8/25/07
6:00PM

Websites.
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydallyseintinel.com
www mydallyreg1ster com

Oeatl~irec

Dally In-Column : i:oo p.m .
Monday-Prlday for Insertion
In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• PBJH!!r

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

TUNICA
MISSISSIPPI
The Grand Casino

Pentecostal Lighthouse

Records.

Current
owner;
Melissa D. Johnson Et.
At.
Property at:
54210
State Route 681
Reedsville, Ohto
PP#09-005n.ooo
Prior Deed Reference;
Volume t35, Pogo 783
Appraloed
at
125,000.00. Torma of
aola: cannot be ootd
lor IllS than 213rds of
tho appratltd value.
10% down on day of
oatt, ca1h or cartlfftd
check, balance dut on
confirmation ol oale.
Tha appratHt dtd
Include an Interior
•nmlnatton of tho
hOUH.
Robert E. Bttgte,
Mttga County Sheriff
Attorney lor the
Plaintiff
Lerner Sempoon •
Rothfuu
120 E. 4th StrHI 8th
Floor ,
Cincinnati, Oh 45202·
4007
813-241-3100
(8) 8, 15, 22

Word Ads

~

or less, to the north Bearings are assumed

line of lot No. 1155;
Thenca East along
North line of Lot No.
1185,a distance of 12.8
rods to the place of
beginning.
The above described
root estate Is more
accurately described
by aurvey as follows:
- ' ' - - - - - - being a tract of land
Public Notice
transferred to Margaret
Groaonlckle, Et AI. 81
Sheriff Sale
recorded In official
Caaa Number 07CV025 records book 2 at page
Walla Fargo Bank NA 623, Meigs County
Plaintiff VS
Recorders
Office,
Melisse D Johnson et Meigs Coun,y, Ohio,
al Defendants
also being a pert of 180
Court of Common acre lot No. 1165,
Pleas, Meigs County, Townohlp·4 · North,
Ohio.
Range-11·West, Olive
In pursuance of an Township,
Malga
order ol aate to me County, State of Ohio
directed from said and mora particularly
court In the above entl· described ao follows:
tlad action, 1 will Beginning at a 5/8"
oxpoee to sale at pub- Iron pin eel which
lie auction on the front anumed to bear North
slaps of the Meigs 811'40'00' Eut a dlo·
County Court House lance of 976.80 feet
on Friday, Sepllmber from the Northweot
14, 2007 ot 10 a.m., of corner oflald 180 aort
aald dey, the following lot No. 1185, Towlllhlp
doacrlbed real eetota: 4, Range 11;
Sltwotod In the Slota of Thtnct along thtl north
Ohto, County of Molgo lint oflald lot no.1181
and tn tho Townahlp of North 811' 40' 00" !alia
Olive.
dtotanco of 211.20 fHt
Being 2.23 ocra, more to a 618" Iron ptn ttl:
or laoa, out ol tho Thenca leaving Hid
Northwoll corner Of lot North llno South DO'
No. 1185, aacllon a, 28' 21" Eaat paning
town 4, range 11 and through 1 !/$" Iron ptn
boundod doocrlbed 11 111 at 1 Dlotanca Of
lotlowo:
571.24 leel and gotng I
Boglnntng 8.00 rodo total dtellnca of 801.24
w..t of tho common lett to 1 point In thtl
corner of lando owntd canttrllna of State
by J. W. Emrick T. Route • 881;
Kibble, Sarah M. Kibble Thenco along Hid can·
and
Harbert terllna tho following
Wllllamaon on the thrse couraaa:
North line of lot No. 1. North 41 ' 20' oo·
1165 (this aame point Weal a dlotance of

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

To Place
\!Crtbune
Sentinel
l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report
Form 990 PF lor the
Kibble Foundation,
Futtr,
Bernard V.
Truotee Ia available for
public Inspection at
Bernard V. Fultz Law
Office, 111-1/2 West
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
during regular bual·
nasa houralor s period
of 180 daya oubse·
quenl to publication of
this notice.
(8)15, 16,17,19, 20, 21,

www.mydallysentlnel.com

°

Suhm!l Re sume to·

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Re.•murces
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV, 2SSSO
fa• to 304-675-6975
or apply online at www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

FINO A J B R A NEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSJFJEOS

•

"

�Page 82 •

lhe Daily Sentinel

Continental Airlines pulling
name otT Meadowlands
NEWARK. N.J. (AP)
Conune.ntal A trli nes Inc. has
decided to opt out of its deal
fo r its name to appear on the
home of th e NBA's New
Jersey Nets and the NH L's
Ne w Je rsey De vils, the
are na's owner said Tuesday.
The Meadowlands building
has
been
called
Continental Airlines Arena
for 12 years, but the New
Jersey Sports and Exposttion
Authonty satd tt ts hunting
for a new company to put its
name o n what ts now
Continental Airlmes Arena.
~kesman for Houstonb
ontmental, which has
a maJor presence at Newark
Liberty International Auport,
satd an opllon in its conuact
allows tt to opt out following
a major change. The Devils.
one of the arena's mam tenants , is leavm$. this fall for a
new home m Newark.
"The current arrangement
remruns m effect until the
NJSEA de stgnates a new
sponsor."
satd
Dave
Messmg , a Contmental
spokesman "We have had a
rewardmg relallonshtp wtth
the arena and are happy to
continue to ha ve our nrune on
1t unul a new sponsor takes
over."
. George Zoffin~er, CEO of
't he authority, satd the state

would get a better deal with a
new sponsor because the c urrent contr, ct pays only $ I J
million annually, with half
the fees bemg patd through
rurhne Uckets.
"We thmk this is a real
opportumty for u s to tmprove
our cash flow," he said.
The authority satd it is
seekin g bids by Sept. 24
from companies mterested in
procuring the naming rights.
Zoffinger s aid the N ets
w1ll help m the effort. The
basketball team, which plans
to move to New York City's
Brooklyn borough,
has
signed a lease tc;&gt; P,iay at the
Meadowlands untd 2012 but
can opt out earlier, Zoffinger
d
sa~~ said he expects the
Meadowlands facthty to
command a premium pnce,
based on other recent naming
rights deals.
Barclays
Bank
PLC
announced in January tt
would spend a s much as
$400 nullion over the next 20

4

Busch

•

from PageBl

on a late stop and also fell
out of contention.
"I made a mistake on that
pll stop late in the mce and
that probably cost us about
five spots," said Earnhardt,
who had to start from the
rear of the 43-car field after
his team changed the transmtssion on his No. 8 Chevy.
"But we ran good, came
from the back, passmg cars
and racing everybody. That
was fun.
Truex, Earnhardt's tewnmate who also ran second
here in June, was a bit frustrated fmishing be~ind.
Busch, the driver closest to
him in the battle for the
Chas·e.
"I wanted it so bad I could
taste it back there behind
Kurt," Truex said. "I felt
like last time we probably
had the car to beat. This
time we didn't. Thts time
we had good strategy and a
good car there at the end."

•

years to put its name on the
new pro basketball arena
planned as the Nets' future
home tn Brooklyn. The
18,000-seat facility designed
by the architect Frank Gehry
will be called The Barclays
Center.

f

I
'

'

'

•

'

who started from the pole,
was in the top live most of
the day before some late
problems rele¥ated him to a
27th-place fintsh.
Gordon ' s crew had to
make a qmck repair on a
loose nap along the edge of
the No. 24's rear wmdow
dunng a late pit stop, costing the four-time Cup
champion several positions.
He then spun mto the infield
because of a detlating tire
and fell out of the lead lap
after getting stuck in the
grass left soft and muddy by
the hea'\ly rains of the past
two days.
Earnhardt, desperately
trymg to make his way into
the Chase hneup, was also a
top- 10 car mpst of the day,
but he slid through his ptts

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

www .mydailysentinel.c:om

VVednesda~August22,2007

Browns QB race rolls on with no fmish iii sight
BEREA (AP) - From flippmg a coin to ftlling m blanks.
C leveland's starting quarterback dnuna has turned again.
During his post-pracu ce
ne ws
bnefing
Tuesday,
Bro wns
coach
Romeo
Crennel said he '!lay delay
nanung a starter unul the week
before. his club's Sept. 9 season opener agrunst the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
He has narrowed his choice
to two candidales: Charlie
Fry.e and a mystery man.
'It's Charlie ... and Yes,"
teased Crennel, who has
Derek Anderson, Brady Quinn
and Ken Dorsey 'to choose
from.
"Who' s the other one?'' he
was asked.
"Who do you want it to be?"
Crennel said with a laugh.
"Bmdy," a reporter said.
"If you want it to be that,
then it can be that for you,"
Crennel said.
Who knows. It could be that
for the Browns soon, too.
Crennel's vague reply came
one day after he named Frye
as his starter for Satl)rday's
game at Denver, the club's
third exhtbittOn game and

Vick
fromPageBl
much overlap there would
be between anything the
local prosecutor would
charge and what the federal
prosecutors charged," said
Linda Malone, a criminal
procedure
expert
and
Marshall-Wythe
Foundation professor of law
at the College of William
and Mary. "There are some
limitationspn duplication."
The feoeral charge is
conspiracy to travel in
interstate commerce in aid
of unlawful activities and
conspiracy, to.' sronsor a
dog in ap .anima fighthtg
venture. Malone said the
state dogfighting · charges
probably would not be con·
sidered dupli-cative.
"The essence of the conspiracy charge is the agreement" between Vick and
his
co-conspirators,
Malone said.
Three Vick associates
have pleaded guilty to the
consptracy charge and said

anothe( chance for any of
Cle veland's QBs to step Ill'
and prove ~·s worthy of
being a No. 1.
So far, Frye and Anderson
have failed to impress their
coaches or Browns fans, who
are_clamoring to see more of
Qumn.
The rookie from Notre
Dame threw two fourth-quaeter touchdown passes agamst
Detroit m his NFL debut on
Saturday rught. Quinn went
I 3-of-20 for I55 yards and
played wtth potse and confidence, something neither Frye
nor Anderson has shown
much of dunng the past two
weeks of thelf ongoing derby.
Crennel said Qumn wtU get
more playing time a~runst the
Broncos, but wouldn t specify
when or how much But
another strong showing could
move Quinn past Anderson on
the depth chart- if he hasn' t
passed him already.
Quinn played down hts
debut, which came agamst a
Lions defense of third and
fourth strmgers.
"I don't want to make it
more than what it was," he
said. "I was JUSt a guy out

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e ster

there ttying to help his team a chance to show if he can
come back and wm That is make all the throws, he cerreally what it was."
· rainly has the other quarterBut it could be much more if backing dulles down pat. On
Frye doesn't flaJ bener this Tuesday, Q umn de nected
week and i Quinn, who praise about his leadershtp o n
missed I L days of training the two TO drives to his teamcamp m a conuact holdout. mates
conunues to progress.
"They did a great job of
Crennel, who resorted to a focusing," he said "I think
coin toss to dectde whether they knew what they had m
Frye or Anderson would start front of them. If anythmg, 1
the exhibition opener, was JUSt tried to communicate the
asked what conclusions could best•1could and tried to be the
be made from not yet nammg geneml out there."
a Week I starter.
As for who wtll lead the
"Well. tt changes and tt can Browns against the Steelers,
change," he said. " With thi s Quinn doesn't think his holdcompetition that we' ve had out has htm hi s chances of
which has been a good competition - wtth Frye being the s~i~~uld never say never,"
starter for this game, our flfSt he srud . ..1thmk tt is still someopponent might have to wonE
der who the quarterback is what of a competition. ven
going to be. They might have tho ugh the starter has been
to prepare for two guys, which announced for this game, I
could be an advantage for us." th\'jk guys are ~ill co~~g,
Qumn has qu~ekly gained stt trymg to s ow w t ey
ground on Frye and Anderson. can do .
Frye has a 69.4 ratmg,
''The roster hasn' t been set
Anderson' s ts 54.3 and netther and tlus isn't week one yet for
of the QBs has led the Browns the NFL. We have two weeks
to a touchdown while Quinn is left of hard work m our camp
2-for-2 on scoring drives.
and we'll see where things go
And while Quinn hasn' t had from there."

Vick provided virtually all hts client is fully aware that
the gambling and operating he could be facing a long
funds for the "Bad Newz ~tretch in prison.
Kennels" dogfighting enter"Michael's been fully
prise. Two of them also said apprised of all angles, all
Vick participated in execut· aspects," Wtlliams said.
ing at least eight underper·
Lead defense attorney
forming dogs, raising the Billy Martin announced
possibility of the animal Vick's decision to change
cruelty charges.
his earher not guilty plea in
Convictions on eight ani- a statemerrt Monday, saying
mal cruelty counts could Vick was ready to "accept
result in up to 40 years in full responsibility for his
prison if five-year terms for actions and the mistakes he
each count were imposed td has made."
run consecutively. Each
It's still unclear whether
dogfighting count could run all this will end the career of
the sentence up even higher. one of the NFL's most {!az.
Vick, 27, will enter his zling players.
plea agreement Monday. A
NFL commissioner Roger
jlOVemment official, speak· Goodell could rult: by the
tng
on
condition
of end of the week, but will
anonymtty because the probably wait until Vick
terms are not final, told the ,
·
Th
AP that prosecutors will .~ actually ~nters ht~ plea
e
recommend a sentence of · league ts , watllng for a
one year to 18 months. report by tts own observers,
However, Hudson is not a group headed by • Enc
bound by that recommenda- Holder, a former deputy
tion or by federal sentenc- U.S. attorney general.
ing gutdelines that will qall
"The commissioner has
for less than the five-year , rwt decided o~ a speci~c
maximum.
ltmetable on Mtchael Vick s
James
D.
"Butch" status," league spokesman
Williams Jr., one of Vick's Greg Aiello said Thesday.
Vick has been barred
five defense attorneys, said

CLASSIFIED

E-mail
class1fled @myda1lytribune.com

22, 23, 24, 26, 27' 28, 29,
30.

Public Notice

·'
'I

'~·

'
,.

•'

MEIGS
COUNTY
BOARD OF ELEC·
TIONS
JOB
POSITION·
DEPUTY DIRECTOR
The Meigs County
Board of Elections Is
looking to fill the lull·
time
position of
Deputy
Director.
Candidates must be
affiliated with !he
Democratic Party.
You must reside within
Meigs County, must
possess at least a high
school diploma or
attainment of the
equivalency of a high
school diploma (GED).
College level educalion to desired, but
specialized training In
the varlouo aapects of
election administration
11 molllllvored.
'Experience operating
voting machlneo and
othor automated office
equtpmont.
•succeuful and offlclont dollblls managamont,
lnctudtng
use of valor dotabooo
with
tho
Ohio
Secretary of 8tato
'Ability to uH, tntor·
prot and apply oloctlon
low terminology and
languogt.
'Abltlty to rocolvo and
tmpltmont
aoalgn·
mtntaand tnotructlono
for board mtmbora
and Sacrotory of
Sllla'o offtco.
'Ability to communi·
cote eflllcttvely, both
orally and written
'Strong orgontuttonol

skills and aHentlon to
detail.
'Familiarity
with
human resources, pollclea, and practices.
'Familiarity with han·
dllng budgsts and publie appropriation 'of
lunda
'Ability to convey or
••change InformatiOn
Including
giving

Racine, Ohio
PP• 19-00242
Prior Deed Reference:
Volume 95, Page 733
Appralled
at
$18,000.00. Terms of
aale: Cannot be oold
for tesa than 213rda of
the appraised value.
10% down on day of
sate, ca1h or certHied
check, balance due on

assignments or dirac· conflrmat1on of sale.

lion to board person·
nel.
'Ability to be adaptable
and to perform In
atreeeful or amergency
situations, and ability
to conduct self at all
Hmea In a professional
and courteous manner.
Written applications
and resumes accepted
until August 27, 2007
by 4:00 p m. at the
board office located at
117 E. Memorial drive,
Ste. 1, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
(8) 5-t 20, 21, 22,23,24
------Public.Notice
------Sheriff Sales
Case Number 06CV132
LaSalle Bank National
Assoc. Plaintiff VS
Jerry Copplck et. at
Defendants
Court ol Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from oald
court In the above entt·
lied action, I wilt
••pose to sale at publie auction on the fronl
otop1 of the Mol(ll
County Court Hoult
on Friday Soptambar
14, 2007 at tO a.m., ol
ootd day, the lollowlng
dHcrlbod real eotato:
Sttuatod
In
tho
Townohtp ol Sutton,
County of Mtlga and
Stoto of Ohio:
Bttng Lot No. 85 In tho
Incorporated VIllage ol
Roclno.
Bald promloeo alao
known 11 404 4th
Street, Racine, Ohto
45nt
PPN: 111-00242.000
Currant Owner: Jerry
Copplck
Property At:
404
Fourth Street

J

The appraisal did
Include an Interior
axamlnlllon of the
house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for
the
Plaintiff
John D. Clunk
5801 Hudaon Drive,
Suite 400
Hudson, Oh 44236
330.342-82113
(8) 8, 15, 22

being 72 rods east of
the North West corner
of Lot No. 1165);
Thence South 3" Weal
a distance of 36.5 rods,
mora or leas, along the
Weal line of lot owned
by Herbert Williams, to
the center of State
Route No. 680; Thence
North approximately
38'West18 rods, more
or lass, to Southeast

49.50 feet to a point;
2. North 45' 54' 49'
Weal a distance of
128.21 feet to a pj)lnt;
3. North 50' OS' 37'
West a distance of
119.29 feetto a point;
Thance leaving said
centerline North oo·
09' 02' East a distance
of 386.05 leal to the
principal point of
beginning, conlalnlng

corner of land owned 2,3875 acres, more Or

by Dr. Formerly owned loss, subJect to all
by Ira kibble; Thence legal easements and
North 21 .6 rods, more rtgllta-of-way.

Offtee lloar~

'

and are lor the rlelermlnatlon of angles
only.
The .above description
was prepared from an
actual survey made on
the 28th day of July,
1994, by c. Thomaa
Smith,
Ohto
Professional Surveyor,
# 8844.
Audltora Parcel No. 09005n.OOO
,
Reference
deed
Votuma: 135, Page 783,
Melga county Official

Sun Aug 26th at 9 00 am
41h &amp; Main , Hartford, WV
am · Registration- coffee &amp;
10:00 am · lunch &amp; B1ke Show

from trammg camp by the
NFL , and Goodell ha s
asked th e Falcons not to
take any actwn until the
league rules
Goodell can suspend Vick
under the NFL's personal
conduct pohcy. While the
league hasn't said whether a
potential suspension would
be concurrent with Vick's
prison sentence, tt probably
would take effect once he is
released from custody.
That means Vick likely
would miss both the 2007
and 2008 seasons.
The Falcons in 2004
stgned Vick to a 10-year,
$1~0 million contract - at
the time, one of the largest
m NFL htstory. The bonus
and guaranteed money he
recetved in hts contract
totaled $44 mtllion. and the
team might try to reclaim
part of that
Vick also has lost lucrati vc contracts with sponsors.
Rawlings,
Nike,
Reebok and Upper Deck are
among the companies that
have either ended contracts
wtth him or stopped sales of
his merchandtse.

Desa"'pth)n • Include A Price • Avakl Abbreviations
1 Jndude Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

I,

*POLICIES*

\\\01 \ 1 I \ II

r

\ I"

rI
~

ANNOUN!l'MENfS

Mason Co. Fairgrounds
At. 62N.
Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30 PM)

675:-5463

HeipWanted

Help Wanted

HelpWented
'i

.

®

.

'

Pleuant Valley HNpltalliJ currently
aceeptlna n1um• for a ptlrt-tlme

Pleasant Valle) Hospital Home Medical
Equipment Is currently accepting
resumes for a full·ttme, dayshift
Rosplratory Therapist. Must be a
graduate of an approved Respiratory
Therapist program. Must be licensed or
eligible for licensing in the states of
West VIrginia and Ohio.

Phannacy Technician. Succeutul
completion of WV Board of Pharmacy
approved tHIIinlelan tralntna proaram
or equivalent. State-real•trallon or
Natlonal-eertlftc:atlon tertlftcate a1 a
Pta.rmacy technician preferred.

At lent l080 houri

a1

a pharmacy

technician trainee. Two yean feharmacy
technician experience pre erred.
Hoapltal experlem:~t~ preferred.

.

Submit Rc:Humc to
Pleasant Vali-a Hospital,
c/o Human elioun;:es
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleaunt, WV, 255!0
ru to 304-67!-697!
or apply online at www.pvalley.org
A.A/EOE

I

tlwaye

Curr.nt

oml11lon tn

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Lo..1AND
FOUND

0
LOST In Patnot area
Blonde, blue eyed bob
(l
tailed (M) 8 month old
Husky No quesllons asked
•
we JU'st want htm home
Large reward tor tnfo M3adtng
to his recovery or for htm
Please cafl740·379·2175 "
LOST Male Rat Terner,
orange collar, Bowmans
Run area Companton of
Elderly Man Aeward 949·
7100
- - - ----Missmg SinCe 8- t &amp;07
While Male Adult English
Bulldog Very fnendly, famrly
2634
dog Has one bottom tooth
To grveaway to good home that slrt:ks out In vrclnrty ol
www.comlcs.com
Ct 2007
female cat has had all shots SA 588 &amp; McCormrck Rd
and spayed recently at Dr
Reward If returned 740
1T'lll""'------,
Cranks 304-675-2634
645 8418
1110
11110
11110

Ir

tr~D

r

Aet

1988 •Thl''"""''',.l

I.

""'r------'"'1

HELPWAmllD . .

JIEu&gt;WAmllD ..

LPN's Rocksprrngs Nursmg OverbrookCenter IS current STUDENTS FOR- THE NA
and Aehabtlrlalton Center IS ly seek1ng a beautiCian to PROGRAM Rockspnngs
looking for a few dedtcated wmk In the factllty s beauty Nursmg and Rehab1Htalion
people to become a part of salon C!Jndrdates should Center IS located 5 m1les
our team We are a 100 bed possess a 11alld Ohio man· from Pomeroy and 20 min·
skrlled lac1111y located 5 agrng cosmetologtsl license utes hom Athens and
mrtes from Pomeroy Thrs rs Salary ts based on commrs Albany We currently are
a 20 mtnute commute from s1on Interested candidates seektng tndrvtduals rnterestAthens arw:l Albany We JUSI should contact the admrn1s· ed rn attendrng our 75 hour
recently rnstalled a state of trator at (740)992·6472 Nursrng AssiStant Program
the art on hne documents· EOE-Overbrook Center par- whtch wtll startsometrme In
tion system for the nursing tiCipates m the Drug Free September This class ts
free of charge and begins
assistants which reduce Workplace Program
paper work trme consider
w1th 2 volunteer days that
ably We oHer compeliltve Overbrook Center Is current Will allow you to see what
rates health dental and ly accepting applications for the JOb conststs ol first hand
VJSton 10surance as well as a a lull trme 7pm 7am LPN We allow 12 students per
40fK plan Our company fullt1me 3pm·3am and 7am· class so they 1111 up QUickly
offers a turt1on rermburse· 7pm STNA posrt1ons Also Please come rn and comment program ftr LPN to AN avaJiable part t1me STNA plete an applrcatron rf rnterwtlh no walltng pertod for posrttons Interested applt· ested or call Cathy
tU!Iton Stop by and fill 001 cants can prck up an applr- Scarberry at 740 992-6606
an appbcat!on and recetve cat1on or contact Holh e Rocksprmgs Is an equal
an mterVIew Monday Bumgarner LPN Staff opportumty employer
through Fnday between 9 Development Coordtnator @
AM and 4 PM orcall and ask (740)992 6472 MF 9ASP
for Debbie Wayland Staffrng at 333 Pege St Middleport,
Coordinator 740·992-6606 Oh EOE &amp; a participant of
Rocksprmgs ts an equal the Drug Free Workplace Lrght Oak cabinets top 158"
opportunity employer
Program
bonom 160" very good con·
Mason taborers, expertence Part-Trme Cook/Helper dttlon
Butcher block
and transportatiOn reqUired needed for 100 bed sktlled Counter $800 FIRM 245
740-245 9323 betwee n nursing facility Interested iisiiis06r-;:-:-~:-:---,
sam . apm or 740-645 8686 applicants shOuld apply to 1180
WAN'JlD
unttl 10pm
Rocksprings Rahabrlrtatron
TO Do
;:;;;;_.:__-:--:- Center 36759 Rockspnngs · - - - - - - ·
Nail Tech Be Your Own Road, Pomeroy, OhiO
All types, ol Home
Boss, Choose Your Own 45769
Hoursrr Low Room Rental Elttendrcare
Health Repatrs&amp; 1mprovements
New
Equip ment Servrces Inc IS an equal Oualtty work latr rates Call
Established Cltents call or opportuntty employer that RICk 740 274-a338
stop m at, ATIITUDE S encourages
workplace -:-:-- -::---;::--:SALON &amp;TANN ING, 33105 diverSity MIF ON
Heaven Scent Cleantng
H1land Road Pomeroy, - - - - - - -- House Cleanrng Ser11rce at a
Ohto, (740)992 2200
POST OFFICE NOW
reasonable prrcer Call !Of;1ay
HIRING
at
740·446·3881 leave a
NURSING ASSISTANT AD
Aockspnngs Nursrng and
Avg Pay $20/hr or
message
Rehablhtahon Center Is
$571&lt; annually
looking for a few dedrcated Including Fedaml Beneftts Lawn mowtng Rates by the
JOb not the hour Frae
people to become a part ol
and OT Patd Trarnlng,
Esttmates Call Paul @
our team We are a 100 bed
Vacatrons FT/PT
(304)675 2940
skilled faclhfy located 5
1·866·542-1531
mites from Pomeroy Thts IS
USWA
Clean
a 20 m1nute commute !rom :-:--:--:--:-:--:-:::- ProfeSSIOnally
R&amp;J
T
ruckrng
Leading
The
Ol
lrce!H
ouse
ctea
nlng
Athens and Albanu We 1ust
Rates
recentr.. tnstalled 'a state of Way R&amp;J Trucktng now Reasonable
the art'' on l!ne documenta· Htnng at our New Haven References 740-446 2262
t1on S"slem f01 the nursrng WV Termrnal For Reg10nat -- -- - - - '
Hauls Dump Orv 1 year Reliable, dependable, and
assistants
whtch reduce OTR
verifiable exp Call 1 expertence State tested
paper work 11me consider 800·462·9365
ask tor Kent Nursmg Assistant, wtll do
ably We offer compellltve
Pnvatc duty m your home
rates, health, dental and
Sales Position
Nursrng Facllrty or Hospital
vrs1on rnsurance as well as
MFG Homes
So
rf you need time off or
a 401K plan Our company
An outstandtng
oHers a twt1on rermburse
opportuntly for the rtght JUSt need an break, I'myour
person, You can Contact me
ment program lor NA to LPN
d1
person
at 740-~16·5212
or
With no warhrrg perro or rm Prater Sales experrence (740)992 0810 If no answer
ltatton We are a low lrfl Otfer 5 da~ work week
please leave messag6
lacltly whtch has reduced
Excellent benetrts
our back. InJuries to almost 0
Emarl resurne
We have 1 poSitiOn opened
r760@claytorr net
on all 3 Shifts
Stop by to schedule an rntervrew
and fi ll out an appllcatron
NoWalk Ins Please
Melrssa Day Care,Batley
and rece111e an rntervrew b,.,;=====d Run Road Pomeroy has
Monday through Frtday Temporary Full trme openrngs tor chrldren wrtlrng
between 9AM and 4PM Teachers Ass1stant $6 20 to work nrghts and week
Rocksprrngs ts an equal hour MF/dayt1me Send ends a t.:~;e pts county or pn
opportunity employer
resume 10 Early Educatron
StatiOn 2122 JeHerson Ave
Pt Pleasant WV 25550
Tudors BISCUit World Mason 10
BUSINt~
Omum 'Nm'
1ocat1on IS now hrnng for "--riiii.iiiiiiriiiii;,;.r
managers bakers cooks '
and cashr(HS Apphcalrons 3 young Shel11es (pups
are avar!able at the Porn! grown up 'l 1 female 2
Pleasant and Gallrpohs toea males AKC pArents ons1to
Irons or send a resume to pre fly sable &amp; ~~ hrt e $100
2322 Jackson Ave Potnt each Good mdoors Alball)
(740)698 6049-,pr 740 517
Pleasant, WV2 55 5~
1659

Be Your Own Boss, Choose P."~=~~~~~ Help wanted-Part l!me
$200 Reward lor rnto on lost •
Your
Own
Hours, Earn S$$ working only a adm1nistraltve assistant, to
This newspape
Dachshunds puppy 3
YARD SAU:..
Independent managtng casfew hours per day!
work Wtlh Off!Ce manager,
ccepts only hel
metologlst 60% commtsslon
NEEDED
months old, redchsh bro"'n
GALLIPOLIS
average 15·25 hours per
anted ads meetln
Lost In Actamsv~ le Ad area
or booth rental, 10%tamrng
IMMEDIATELY
week Job descriptton to
close to Bob Evans cabrns Cleaning out Multi fam tly,8- sales, 10% onf retarl
free
OE olandsrds
1nclude
but not hmhed to
Point
Pleasant
Regt
s
ter
1 1
Belongs 10 9 Year Old b"""'I 23-25 9 6 SR 141 to Lincoln tannmg certr1ca ron, ree
answe11ng the phone, work·
MOTOR
ROUTE
We Will not knowtng
Please call740·245 9565
parking m a very ntce
1ng wrth custolflers, schedul·
Prke cross Northup Brrg fol- upscale salon near matn
CARRIER
rng and orgamzrng concrete
accept any adver
1
446
0444
FOUND On August 19 sets c:NJ Signs ·
hlghwau new equipment,
lament In vtola11
- - - - - - -'
and SIone orde rq,• dsI Pal~
...,,.
f the law,
of keys on bike tratt call to Movtng Sate Fnday 8.4, sun room, na11 &amp; spa room
1ng bucks operaltng dlg1tal
LEON AREA
wetltJ! scales, batchrng con~~~~~~~~,d~en~1~,1y~74~0:·4~4~1-~050:0_ Saturday
8-4 59~9 SR 141, Call or stop rn at ATII- PAYS $9011-$950
Galllpobs, Qh baby clothes TUDES SALON &amp; TAN·
crete wtth automated com
0·6 months, g1rt clothes 2- NING 33105 Hrland Road,
per month
puter batch program and
CLASSIFIED INDEX
3T womens clolhes 7 10_ Pomeroy, Oh•o (740)992·
general cteanmg of office
4x4's For Sale .. ... ................................... 725 sm lrg, couch &amp;chair. baby 2200
Contact: David Hill
area
Famlltanty w1th
Announcement ........................................... 030 toys, ndrng toys car seat
Polnl Plaaaant
OurckBooks
(accounting,
Antiques ............................ ·· ................... sao and sw1ng much more
~-:--:--::--::-:-::-:Register
mvolctng, rnventory, etc),
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Direct Care Staff Mtddleton
200 Ma1n St
word and Exce I programs a
Auction and Flea Market. .......................... 080
WAN'l'F.D
Estates IS now hlrlllQ dtrect
Po1nt
Pleasant,
WV
bonus PaYbasod on ~pe·
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
TO BUY
care staH You wdl be part of
304-675·1333 ex120
rtence an d s'"''' 11 1eve1
Auto Repair............. ................................. 770
a team that provtdes servlcWOr""· ass1gnmen1 a1
Autoa for Sale............................................. 710
es to rndtvtduals w1!h mental HURRY' THIS OFFER Pr~mary
"""
bu PI 1 bu1
Absolute
Top
Dollar
US
WON'T
LAS!
LON~
A
I
750
BoaIs &amp; Motors Iar Sa&amp;.............................
uvurts rg an ,
mu st
retardation and develo,..,_
"
billy
ft
I
rt I
a ulldl ng Supp II88........................................ 550 Stiver and Gold Cams, mental drsabrlrtres We prohave ex1 t '•·
o repo
PI en1os
a us Iness an d Bulldl ng&amp;............................. 340 Proolsets Gold Rings, Pre v1de on the 1oo tramtng II Forget what you Millwood or LaJ\m
Currency, you would like to take
Bu.I ness 0 ppor1 U nlty .................... .. ........... 2,0 1935 US
have heard about requtred Contact Valley
a us Iness Tran
I Ing....................................... 140 Solitaire Diamonds- MTS advantage of this opponum
Brook Concrete Corporate
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790 Cotn Shop 151 Second ly, """U mall applll at 8204 Telemarketing!
Off1ce
at Lakin, VoN call
1
Camping Equlpmen1 ................................... 780 Avenue, GallrpolJS 740-446· Carta
~~ Or Monday
'
thru
Fnday
(304)n3-5519 to schedule
Carda ol Thanks .......................................... 010 2842
B00·4 oo An Equal lnloCts1on has JUst celebrat· Interview
ed 25 years of excellence as - - - - - , - - Child/Elderly Care ...... ,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,, 190
E
ElectrlcaURefrlgeratlon ............................, .840 Buy1ng Grnserrg Fresh Root ~~:~~nrty
mp1oyer
a I 1need dlslnbutors klr the Trl·
:~~n~~~~~s~~~:~ ua tty County Make brg money
Equipment for Rent ....................,,,,,, ... ,, ......480 alter Sept 1 Dry Root after
whrle helpmg others in your
Excavatlng ................................................... 830 Sept 15 Call for pnces &amp;
spare
lime Call 740 .367.
Farm Equlpment. .........................................610 details 740 274 0326
COL •No conecttons
Drrvers needed
Farms I°r Selnt
R ............................................. 430 Property to butld home tn Dnvers
7886
wtllmg to drrve for
FarmLs 1or 8 e ........................................ ···· 330 Gallta County Prefer 5-10 local ready mrx company •No Product Satea
Light Farm work, butldtng
For ease ............................................. ······490 acres, h1gh and dry Call one poS!1 on open al two (2)
lance
&amp; weed-eattng 3041
You
will:
For Sale..................................... ············ ·585 Marty collect @ 321-453
For Sale or Trade.................. ........ .......... 590 1351 evenrn9s
plants Expertence ts pre •RenawiUpgn~de NRA 458·1727 Call after 9pm
Fruita a. Vegetables.............. .... ............. 580 _ _ _..::..____ ferred but not necessary Membershfpa
Furnished Rooms .................. ..................... 460 Snapper mower wtheavy Dnver must be wrllrng to do •FundraiM for Nonproftbl
General Haullng ...........................................850 cast steel deck, w/powerunit pre·ma1ntenance on trucks
Customer
Giveaway ..... ..............................................040 0 11 rtght rear wheel butlt and equrpment, yard/plant •Inbound
Happy Ads .................................................... 050 before 1995 call George and other miscellaneous Service
Hay &amp; Grain ............................... ............... ..640 collect (740 )985 3967
chores Expertence opera!·
Help Wanted . ......................................... 110
mg equ•pment and extra lnfoCrsron offers up to
Looking for a
Home lmprovement$...................................81 0
skrlls such as weldtng a plus $8 SOJhr and a $300 Hiring
convenient schedule
Homes for Sale..................... ...... ..... .. 310
Starttng pay based on expe Bonus!
while your child 11 In
Household Goods ............... ..
510
rrence.and dnvmg record
Houses for Rent ................ .... ········ · .410 1110
Benet1ts rncludrng health Call today to f1nd out morel
school?
In Memoriam ............................................ · .020
lbLP WA.vn.TJ
rnsurance available after 1·888-IMC·PAYU ext. 2321
Take Inbound/Customer
meetmg
empl oyment - -- - - - Insurance ............................... ···· ··········· · 130 ·
Serv1ce calls for a vanety
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ....................... 660 Accepting apphcat tons for requ11ements Call Valley Foster Parents Needed
ol
Ll vesIOC k · · ·· ······ .............................630
Brook Concrete corporate homes needed rn Mergs &amp; Christian mlnlstnes Also
· ..............060 lull &amp; part trme paremedtcs oHtce at (304)773·5519 to Gall1a County lor youth 0
LOSI an d Foun d.................... ........
make Outbound calls for
1"'
Lots &amp; Acreage .... ...................................... 350 We nave a benefits package schedule an rnlerv1ew
thru 18 Oh10 provrdes the non-profrt organ.zatrons
ScHOOL'
Miscellaneous ........................................170 available Apphcallons can
1 nng ou recerve reem
Caboose
~-.;IN!&lt;iiiii;rNilli
Ulo,·iiniioii~_.l custom
Miscellaneous Merchandlae.......................540 be obta tned fro m Mason 1"'"-"??':r.:::::::-:--"1 ~~s~e~t of $30 to $40 ~
---.
Concessron
Tra1ier
Full
Part
Time
Oay
Shift
Mobile Home Repalr ....................................860 County
EM S
91 1
urlvers:
day patd resprte and sup
krlchen
30
Long
1
976
Gallipolis
Career
College
(Bam·
t
30pm)
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420 Emergency Or rve Po•nt
BONUSES!!
port tor youth placed 10 your
(Careers Close To Home) Semphore Call for more
$7.00 • $7.25/hr
Mobile Homes tor Sal8................................320 Pleasant WV 25550 or you
home Train ing begtns
1nlonnatron (740)388 9327
Call
Tod&lt;~y ' 740 446-4367
Money to Loan ............................................. 220 can call 304 675 6134
Plus great pay, home·ttme, September 9th at Albany
or
emarl
1
800
214
0452
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
benehts 100% PAID
ca ll oasrs Fostercare toll
Full Time Evening
puppy1ovecJ@
aol
com
WWW gAIII)OiiSCdfCOrtofleg.e COt!
Musical Instruments ............................... · 570 An Excellent way to earn health/trlc ms Aegrorral free, 1_877_325'-iSSB
Shill
AccredHeCl MOfTJI:Jor Au ad l •n~
Personals ,,, . ....................................... · ..005 money The New Avon
Runs 1 yr Tractor Trl Exp
COOI'\:11 lo lotlct'lnrJ.cr! CollcQ~
(1 45pm 10 45pm)
•NOTICE•
Pets for Sale ............................................ · 560 Call Mantyn 304 882-2645 L...;R;;;e;o.;;
q.B;;;66c•';2;;9;;;3:_1;;;74.-3;;;5__, Help wanted Darst Adult
and School\ 12748
$8.50/hr
OHIOVALLEYPUBLISHPlumbing &amp; Heating ............................ ··· .820 -,---_,-c::--:::---:-Group Home, weekends a
IN G CO recommends
Professlon{ll Services ...................... · ··· ···~~~ Appalachian Trre Produc1s Temporary Full trme Frllrng musl (740)992·5023
lhal you do busrness w1lh
$300 Hiring
RadkJ, TV &amp; CB Repair ..................... ··· · ·
lookrng tor a COL Orrver wrth Clerk Dutres w111 mclude
people you know and
Real Estate Wanted · · · ················ ······· .l&amp;O
Off Aoa d T1re expe r~;;~o
1"- ce personne1 F1109
I
In'l'oce
I Looking For Opportunity?
Bonus!
150
NOT to send money
Schools Instruction
· · .. ······ · ······
t 11 1 9
b f1 1
AI
d
Profe ssronal
Field
5
through the matl um11 you
Seed'
Plant
&amp; Fertilizer ····························6
l
~
ok
:~g
1
:
pe~~
t
t~e
sa~
O
C
rde~ng!Marn:arnr~g
&amp;tree
Representatrve
wanted
lor
Situations Wanlecl , .. .. .. ... ......... . ........120
Call nowto schedule your
have tnvestrgated the
Space for Rent
. .. ........... . .....460 person Prot&lt; up application Supplres Ass1s1wrth Human Pomt Pleasant Galhpotrs
rnterv'ew
oHerrng
Sporting Goods
.................... 520 at Pt Pleasant Store Man Resource Tasks and must surroundrng areas Proven
1-aBB·IMC·PAYU
SUV's for Sale . .
.....720 Frr 8am-5pm
be profrc1ent m M1crosolt sates hack, broad product
1_88_462_7298
Opportunrhes
vaccum
Word and Mrcrosoft E.:ce'l n portfoliO
management
Truck. ror sale .............. ......................... 715
cleaner
&amp;candle
makrng
Job
alt1.1921
II
Upholstery
................................... 870 AVON• All Areas• To Buy or you would like to take opportunrtres,
exce en!
busrnesses many
VHS
vans For Sale. .
. .. ..............730 Sell Shrrley Spears 304· advantage ol these opportu· 1ncome potentral and bene· L..~w~WW-In,;:;looC;::;'";;;on,;;;com
:;;,;.~
Vldeos&amp;Movreposters367
Wanted to Buy
.
........................ ... 090 675 1429
mtres you may apply at 8204 hts k&gt;r those who qualify
wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .................. 620
Carla Drrve Gallipolis Ohto Woodmen ol the World Ltle McCiures Resta urant ( ~~~;,;;:;;;:~~~~:X~=7=7~~:,.:;0~
6 1~2i0o.;;;;;..--Wanted To Do .... ....................................... 180 Full Trme r.ook pay com Monday thru Friday 8 OOam Insurance Society Omaha Galhpohs Only) now h"mg r
Wanted to R,nt .... ..................................... 470 mensurate wtlh experrence 4 OOpm No telephone calls Nebraska Resumes to 2 part &amp; fu ll trme · daysh1Jt
Yard Sale- Gallipolis ......... .... ............... ... 072 Apply rn person Holrday lnn wrll be accepted An Equal Players Club Drtve Sutte avtulable Apply between 10
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle ................ ........074 of Gallrpolts No phone calls Opportun1ty
Employer 10t Charleston WV 253 11 and 11 AM Monday
Saturday
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ............................... 076 please
V'M!ON
or call 304·342 5021
968.

•~------_.!

YARDSALE

violation

not

kttncarlyl~omcut.net

Loot Cot "'""' ' " m••"'l
from MeatlowbrOOk area Gray
stnppad wrth white mmen paws
He answers to Spank)' and writ
be afrakl $50 reward Call 304

Border Collie appr&lt;»&gt; 1
yr old, Spayed shots utd,
good house dog, vet ref reQ
740·256·1866
-------Free to good home, 6 week
old mu(ed puppres 740·367·
0624
'-'-- - - -- -Free 13 month old Male
black Lab Call 740·2450153
------To gtveaway female 4
months old kmen, very play·
ful and fnendly 304·675·

r

trl

In

SLliOOIS
INsrRUCilON

(F)

ertlaements a
ubject to the Fedsra
elr Housing Act o

Now you con have borders and graphics
ILJ
added to your classified ads
{.~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing riH!'V• tM fight to edit, ~. or e~~ncel 1ny sd 1t sny time Errors must bl rsported on thtl flr~t dly of
lfltK.Int-&amp;entlnei-Reglsttr wll be Ntponllblt tor no more tt.n 1M cost of 1M spact occupied by tM tn'Or tnd onty tht tlret Insertion Wt shell
any 1oM or sxpen .. that r. .ultt h"om tM pu~le.tlon or
of
1dvertiHmtnt Correet lon will 1)41 msdt ths first IV1II1ble edition. • Box
art
confldenUet, •
rate Clird tP9il11 • AM 11111 •tate advertiHmentt
to lhe l"tdflrsl Fstr Houtlng
of
ttancUfds. We will
I
of the law

.r,:
"-------.,1

r

rw em~:JU.\

I

...

I

®

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
8U8Ineu Day• Prior To
Publlca.tlon
sunday Dlaplay: 1:00 p.m.
Thuraday for Sunday•

Cur;cealed &amp; Carry Class
NRA Certrlted Instructor,
One day 12 hour CCW 675 1571 or 304 675·0579
Class $100 Bam sharp Please helpl
Sept 1 Mercerville Flrfl - - - - - - - Dept 740-256-6514 Email Lost· black &amp; lhtrtte male
"'":l"i:!lte:I.Y:O:&gt;n::bo;::x;;:oo::m::.._., Husky, Manual Ad , Letart
area, $50 reward, (740)247·
GIVEAWAY
2151

Hetp Wanted

PHARMACY TECHNICIAN

Display Ads

• All ads must be prepaid'

AD • Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Only a few seats left!
SeP.tember 5· 7
$295/person Based on uu,,u,.,
occupancy State room taxes
w1ll be applied to cred1t card at
check-In Includes flight, hotel
accommodations, luggage
&amp; transfers
Private jet leaves from
Charleston, WV.
Must be 21 years of age.
Cash, credit cards, checks,
money order and payroll
deduct1on accepted
No Refunds'
LIMITED SEATSII
To make reservations
please call
PVH Community Relations
(304) 675-4340 ext. 1326

Motorcross Race
Sat. 8/25/07
6:00PM

Websites.
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydallyseintinel.com
www mydallyreg1ster com

Oeatl~irec

Dally In-Column : i:oo p.m .
Monday-Prlday for Insertion
In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• PBJH!!r

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

TUNICA
MISSISSIPPI
The Grand Casino

Pentecostal Lighthouse

Records.

Current
owner;
Melissa D. Johnson Et.
At.
Property at:
54210
State Route 681
Reedsville, Ohto
PP#09-005n.ooo
Prior Deed Reference;
Volume t35, Pogo 783
Appraloed
at
125,000.00. Torma of
aola: cannot be ootd
lor IllS than 213rds of
tho appratltd value.
10% down on day of
oatt, ca1h or cartlfftd
check, balance dut on
confirmation ol oale.
Tha appratHt dtd
Include an Interior
•nmlnatton of tho
hOUH.
Robert E. Bttgte,
Mttga County Sheriff
Attorney lor the
Plaintiff
Lerner Sempoon •
Rothfuu
120 E. 4th StrHI 8th
Floor ,
Cincinnati, Oh 45202·
4007
813-241-3100
(8) 8, 15, 22

Word Ads

~

or less, to the north Bearings are assumed

line of lot No. 1155;
Thenca East along
North line of Lot No.
1185,a distance of 12.8
rods to the place of
beginning.
The above described
root estate Is more
accurately described
by aurvey as follows:
- ' ' - - - - - - being a tract of land
Public Notice
transferred to Margaret
Groaonlckle, Et AI. 81
Sheriff Sale
recorded In official
Caaa Number 07CV025 records book 2 at page
Walla Fargo Bank NA 623, Meigs County
Plaintiff VS
Recorders
Office,
Melisse D Johnson et Meigs Coun,y, Ohio,
al Defendants
also being a pert of 180
Court of Common acre lot No. 1165,
Pleas, Meigs County, Townohlp·4 · North,
Ohio.
Range-11·West, Olive
In pursuance of an Township,
Malga
order ol aate to me County, State of Ohio
directed from said and mora particularly
court In the above entl· described ao follows:
tlad action, 1 will Beginning at a 5/8"
oxpoee to sale at pub- Iron pin eel which
lie auction on the front anumed to bear North
slaps of the Meigs 811'40'00' Eut a dlo·
County Court House lance of 976.80 feet
on Friday, Sepllmber from the Northweot
14, 2007 ot 10 a.m., of corner oflald 180 aort
aald dey, the following lot No. 1185, Towlllhlp
doacrlbed real eetota: 4, Range 11;
Sltwotod In the Slota of Thtnct along thtl north
Ohto, County of Molgo lint oflald lot no.1181
and tn tho Townahlp of North 811' 40' 00" !alia
Olive.
dtotanco of 211.20 fHt
Being 2.23 ocra, more to a 618" Iron ptn ttl:
or laoa, out ol tho Thenca leaving Hid
Northwoll corner Of lot North llno South DO'
No. 1185, aacllon a, 28' 21" Eaat paning
town 4, range 11 and through 1 !/$" Iron ptn
boundod doocrlbed 11 111 at 1 Dlotanca Of
lotlowo:
571.24 leel and gotng I
Boglnntng 8.00 rodo total dtellnca of 801.24
w..t of tho common lett to 1 point In thtl
corner of lando owntd canttrllna of State
by J. W. Emrick T. Route • 881;
Kibble, Sarah M. Kibble Thenco along Hid can·
and
Harbert terllna tho following
Wllllamaon on the thrse couraaa:
North line of lot No. 1. North 41 ' 20' oo·
1165 (this aame point Weal a dlotance of

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

To Place
\!Crtbune
Sentinel
l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report
Form 990 PF lor the
Kibble Foundation,
Futtr,
Bernard V.
Truotee Ia available for
public Inspection at
Bernard V. Fultz Law
Office, 111-1/2 West
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
during regular bual·
nasa houralor s period
of 180 daya oubse·
quenl to publication of
this notice.
(8)15, 16,17,19, 20, 21,

www.mydallysentlnel.com

°

Suhm!l Re sume to·

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Re.•murces
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV, 2SSSO
fa• to 304-675-6975
or apply online at www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

FINO A J B R A NEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSJFJEOS

•

"

�~nesda~August22,2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www. mydallysehtinel.com

ALLI;Y OOP

NEA

;:**;N;O;T;I;C;E:*:*~

8e P1no,

Galllpollo, Now I.,
WIII
•ollof-.,;
b'i sal
ioiiloii
1he• hlgh- ' HUD HOMES! 3bd only Tara
Town house Canning
tom atoes
roof, heal pump, eleclrlcal, 2 eot bidder, 111t mldenco of 11 S,2101 More · 1-4bd Allar1monts. Vllry Spaclooa, plcked'plcl&lt; own, incradiblo
BR. Oouble Lot, $72,000. thl tate Ecl1h Jlvi&lt;len, local· ftomtl IVIIIIblll From 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2 com , cucumbers, Rowe
{740)441.0720
od at 383 N. 3rd Ave., 1111/mol
SlW!n,
Awk Pool &amp; ~ Farms, (740)247-4292
Middl...,rt· Friday Anguli 20yroeK. For llattnga Pool, Patio, S1art S42Molo.
919 Vine Street.. Racine, 3 31 , 2007, at 2~00p.m .. The 100 lit 410111f144
No Peta, Laue Plus Pick your own canning
bedroom, 1 112 bath ranch, home will be open for vtawSecurity ,Dopoolt Required, lornaloM, bell peppetl, hoi
1000 sq. ft., onecar garoga, lng one hour {1 :00 p. m.) Ott SR 141, 3BR, 2BA, (740)446-J481.
~TomatoeaU1&gt;uc:l&lt;- .
314 aero lewl lot. 1740)416- prior 1o bidding. Minimum oppllancao, buarnenl, 1 car
ol, f'll&gt;pors
SM&gt;ud&lt;et.
39n
Bid: $34,000.00, 1740)992· garage, 1600/mo plus Twin Rtvoi.Tower le accopt- Tr"ffl'* · - a l l , e mlteo f""lJ~o':'h~n~IQ~D'I''s~T~ree"""".,
- -- -- - - 6689
dapooit. {814)226-0859
Wig applicatlor11 b' wHW&gt;g of Gal~ oil S.R.
S I
Alllntlont
~ ~ u~ •. ~r-•IIN C8
p ~ 3BR
1 Ba h - ~ ~-~. 1· br, .:.
1 4il1r-""'!~~--""''
--- Local company offering ' NC XTREME SAVINGS\ Owr ro ..,,
•
I · lj)lrtment,lor
the •
DOWN PAYMENr pn&gt; 2.000 squara loot home b' Downtown Gallipolis. Very eldorly/dloablod call 875·
FiJR ~
~-~
llfOmB lor you to buy your lessthan$40/sq. ft. CIIIThe :"~A~.~~ 6879 . Equal
Housing
home instead or renting.
Home Show - Barboursville
Opportunity
• ,........,.,_

lnii~UIIon'a
Ollico of Consumer
AllliiHFOREyourafi·
nanc:e your holno Of
1 loon. BEWARE
of ~ b' any targa
Ftnonclll

::-:-=:-""-=-- --

lldvance

p.eymonts ol
taoo"' lnouranoo.
Call the
of

Consumer

Alfolro toll ftoe at l-1!66278-0003 to learn if the

• 100% financ ng
mortgage
broker
or
lender
18
properly

llcenlod.

pe~

' Loss than

~cc:::nl

(This

Is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Vatley

crodil

could be the

M

·

H

I

iaiir..O....;.::----.,
.""'. . ""

pets/srnol&lt;lng. Util~lts not
Included. &amp;45-6378 ask for

~

~SAlE~ • iliKell~f-:M":OB"""""""'
~":u:-~--...,1
~ ·~

__

1

FOR RENr

.

Ji1JR lb.Nr
Commercial building "For
Morlgage
Locators. 198ol Schun.z 14x70, 2BR, 1
Rem" 1800 squaraleet, off
(740)367-0000
Bath, 9110 acre, minutes
street parking. Great toea. S&lt;lHS • - 000 2 Br , /lJC, Very nloo with
r----=~--., lrOJn New
, ~u.
.
tionl 749 Third Avenue In

same 88 rent.

Publlsnlng Company)

r ........... 1 , r
:

i

atH8B·736-3332

~~~--~~-~--.,

i
1.--------..1

;:;;:::::==~
Sot~

74()..446-2000 or 446·1409

MTD

BUILDERS
304-675-4907

lUAIIED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888-582-3345
~~ I

\ I I ' I \I I

I.

lll!lll"'"_":'!'__...,_...,

r

Ho11m;

iO

ftlR SAJ....E
~...-.-...

Thia newtpaper will not
knowlngty eccept

0 Down even with less than·
pe;fect credlls available on
this 3 bedroom, 1 bath

ldvertiHmentl for reel
11tatt which Is in
violation of ttM ltw. Our

home. Corner lot, fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740-367-7129.

104 · •,a1um

0

dliCrlmlnetlon."

-

. . hereby
Informed that ell
dwlllln111 odvortlood In
thf1 OOWIPIPiriTO
evelllbtl on 1n a~~utl

N

r.
ew
-"'
HIIJin.WV 3bdl2ba. Ranch,
opportunity beiH.
lg.ounroorn, 2 car gar. great
area. D; 304-675-3637 E; For sale/land contract. 3 BA
•••
••2•2334
~
hOuse In Gallipolis. WID
2 Story Brick House 4 Sale 4
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths,
LR,FR,DR. Kitchen. Approx. .
3/4 acres, above ground
Add.
pool. Located L~ns
,.
Mason. Asking $140,000
304-675·2165

r

.._

mymldwathome.com

garage

GALLIPOLIS Looking tor a good preFONCioaurel Buy for owned home? Many to
IU,8001
5%dn, choose from 01 Tlte Home
aoy..es%. More local Show • Bart&gt;ouravtlle. 1homollrom Sltlllmol For 688·736-3332

-:======::;

r

e

OPERATING
ROOM

'rECHNIGIAN
PleuantV.Uey

H01pholls currently
aeeeptJna applications

lor a Su11kal

Th:luJoloclat. Graduate

or accredited surgical

tectmology program or

equlvaleat experience
requlnd.
. CST or CST eligible.

To apply, contad
Pleasant Valley
Hoopltsl,

Human Resoun:es,
2520 VOJley Dr.
Pt. Pl..ant, WV
.255!0, (304) 675-4340,

ruresume to
{304) 675·6975
www.pvalley.org

"'========
_

(3) Houses lor Rent- (2)'2
Bedroom, ( 1) 3 Bedroom
w~h 2 Bath, (740)446-251 5,
~(7:-40-')_64_5_·1_646_._ _ _ _
-

~t~.c~~r~~:~l:~~~

New Haven, 4+ acres, 3 br., required. Cell 446 _2468

i

Call

Beautiful Apte. at Jackson Pole

8 2_

rt men

2SR, 1BA house $450tmo, •Central heat &amp; AlC
also 2BR, 1BA trailer •Washer/dryer hookup
$300/mo. Botharelocated in •Tenantpayselectrlc"
Rio Grande.
740·3B8·9958, lea"" e
message.

fir

(304)882-3017

30x50x10

oe-.1-ive_r~y

1937)716-1471
Winchester Model 37-A,
16ga., 30" Full, Rare Barrell
length, Excellent, S145: Also
Square FrY Skillet 1768 with
Glass Cover, both skliiet and
cover marked Griswold
Rare, $225. 1740)533-3870

PETs

n&gt;R Su.E

"~--oaiiiiiiiiiiiia-,.1
9 week old CKC tamale
Yorkshire terrier puppies.
First shots, wormed, dew
claws removed and tails
docked. They are on solid
puppy chow and paper
t~ained. $600. (740)441 7 .
B
6
marziee@ localnet.com

IT

Adorable Pug puppies
Fawn, Registered, Shots &amp;
Wormed . lOwks old, Mason
Area $450 443-350-4011

866-564·8679

WANTED
Part-lime positions available to assist an
individual with menial retardalioo
in Middleport .
1) 30 hrs: Sat. 3 pm- 8 am Tues : daytime
hOurs off, sleep over required .
2) 28 hrs; 3· 12 pm Mffu./Wed.
Must have high school diploma or GED, valid
driver's license, three years good driving
experience an~ adequate automobile
instjfance. $7.50/hr.
Se'nd resume to:
Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box604
Jackson, OH 45640
Deadllna lor applicants:

8124107
Pte-employment drug 1estlng.
Equal Opportunhy. Employer.

No rental assistance avail· $300, AKC Pekingese $350.
able at this time. Aems start vet 9hecked. 740· 256: 1664

at $310 month. Equal
Housing
Opportunity.
f740l 446-3344
Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartment New carpet &amp;
cabinets, freshly painted &amp;
decorated. WID hookup.
Beautiful country selling.
Must see to appreciate.
~17_4.::01.:.38.:..7.:·0000==----- $400/mo. 1614)595·7773 or
For sale or rent. 3BR, newly 1-800·798-4686.
painted. 5 miles from New 2BR
apartments.
Centenary. 8 miles from Rio Washer/dryer
hookup,
Grande. Oep req. 740-379- stove/refrigerator inCluded.
2540
Also, units on SR t60 . Pets

Australian Shepherd pup·
pie s. Black &amp; White and Red
&amp; White, $125 each.
(740)245·5984 or (740)645·
4833
•
Blue Healer puppies, 4
male, 2 female , $50 each.
740·256·6360
Miniature Pinscher CKC
Reg. Black I rust, 1 F $300 4
M
$250. 8wks old,
Wormed,shots, tails doCked.
740·367·0210 if no answer
leave mest age.

House for rent in Pomeroy Walcomel {740)441-0194 .
$325 per Month plus dep. Nice clean 2 bedroom. w/d
740·742· 1903.
h00 k
up. no pets, ref 7 piece Drum Set, Arst Act.
House lor Rent/Sale . 3 BR. required conveniently local· GOOd Shape $100 304·674. 1 BA, 1/2 basement, Spring ed 304-675-5162
0080

rili'i"'i-.;l;r.o'A'Oa-..,,...====-=.,

Valley Area, $550/mo, HUDI
96500
.., ;

~:~::6~:~

3•
Pass

Pass
Pass

FRANK

SHOP CLASSI~I~DSI

'&amp; EARNEST
T~f

C.ANl&gt;IPATfS A~f
A LOT '-IICf US •••
ANSwf~S. fO~
T~f· FAQ'S.

BARNEY

Work
*Reasonable Rate s

H31'Mod Ca~newy And Furmture

'Experienced
References Available!

Call Gary

Stanley @

YOUN G'S

J&amp;L

CARPENTER
SERVICE
fioom Addltfone a

Construction
• VlnYt .Siding
• Replacemenl

··

Windows

Remocllllng
Hew Gertgee
ElectOO.I • Plumbing
Rooflnt I Guttera
VInyl Siding • PelntiiMI
P•tlo tnd Porch Deckl

qq,• 621
I'(
1

•

,.

111

I

t

y
I'

Fertllb:er

Puzzle

N-It&gt; ~0'\'1-\t.R W.ll'lv '"q
't'OU BOK!-&lt;E.D ~ ·

Pole Bulldlnga

l 'i''

' '

742-2332

I..ADY BUGS
BUGGING YOU?

[40
4~=CLEJ;/ I
~
1998 . Kawasa~i

Volcoo,

Black,
Soddlebags,
Windshield, Low Milas,
ExceHent Condition, $300CI.
{740)446·6172, 1740)256·
6251 _

.54
·55
56 Outmoded
DOWN
1

Mora

delicate
2 Computerchlf maker
3 Val amenity
(2 wda.)
4 !lots a
move on
5 Survey
choice

6
7
8

16

once

When Paris
sizzles

43 Bqel

44
45

22 Sameater
24 Adml,.(a
oound

26 Tiny

Rare"*** opening
Accomp.ony· 27 Submit

9 Before
10
11
12

18 Hurnorlot
- Bombeck
20 Beg Plldonl
2t Inca l:mpl111,

47

cape

ROI!tllljle,
In Venice
Identify ·
Shih's

kingdom

48 Mme. Qlucfl
ol opt111
49
50

28 Jetty
30 Foersome

centers

GreokP
L-cH~-t

111111
51 Tlra ,....

au,. -

marriage
31 Query
Augment
37 Old
Jaguar kin
Chryaler
Diamond or
model
Simon
39 Junka
Olympic
41 Buoy
dream
lnHCta

52 Syrup-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

....

-

111TIIIILI

NIIUI

David Lewis

McCormick's
Extermination Inc.

Commerclll a RNidlnrill
Vo~r l.ocll Termite 1
,... Control

\'; tN THERE ...

eom.,....,

740-992-6971

'

"'TICKET

STUB FMM "'
501&lt;- ORIOLES

(740) 682-6244
740 418-7509

""""'/

GAME ...

We Deliver To Youl
•

t

Home Oxygen

• Portable Oxygen
PEANUTS

•

Homer.ll System
• Helios System

{]amlbj,• Ce};i'lCJ4~•
..

SEE~ 'r'OLI

~~JIP.!P.!!,.,•

2005 H.D.Fat Boy custom
maroon

241 Years Experience

Free

2003 Harley
Davidson
Heritage
Sift-Tall,
Anniversery Edition, 6,100
miles. stage 1 kit, pipes &amp;
crash bars, excellent cond.
$14,0DO 304-773·2081 or
304·593-0000

ON

-- ----

&amp;

w/embossed

flames,1
of 200 made,SOO
miles
since
now, price
$19,000 080 call for

r

THIS

HAVE FtVE TOE5
FOOT AND FIVE

IF THERE'S A Pl.A¥-OFF, 11M
IN TROU6L.E .~

. IT'S A TIE!

TOES ON THAT FOOT ..

'MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

70 Pine Street • GaUipolls
441i-0007

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

.......-:-.,

MoroRHOMFS

I

---

FOR SALE

I

COUIH
Shade-lov·
lng plants
Fuoe unit
Scallion

spiders. 11nls &amp; wasps.

82 Wilderness Travel Trailer,
24'. lui~ equipped, sloops 8,
great cond , $2500 . 388·
1992 GMC Safari Van front
8260 after 6pm .
&amp; rear air, !3J:C. cond. $2,800
--------------304 -675•5831
95 30ft Fleetwood Terry,
excellent cond, Sleeps 6-8.
91 Dodge 350 Rom wagon.
12
passengers,
white, Call 740·286-8729 or 740·
91000 miles, looks and runs 577-7629
good. $2500. 446·9278
.... 11{ \11! ...
92 Ford Aerostar XLT,
Loaded, Runs Good, Looks
Good,
181.000
miies,
$2300. Call after 5pm
{740)386-9096
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
.
WM~R~GB
~
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references fur·
ni&amp;tled. Established 1975.
2001 Harley Davison 883
Sportster, 6200 miles,
0870, Rogers Basement
Asking $5000. {740)245· Call 24 Hrs. {740) 446·
Waterproofing.
5984 or (740)645·4833

r404

53

Treatment tor la~ugs.

~~~~:":"----':'"'!

VANS

52 Zigzag

II you play chess, 10 find tho best move,
you must think ol it. And at 1ha bridge
ta~e. to ftnd the correct call or card. you
must think of it . Consider as many· possl·
bllitles as possl~e .
In this deal , there are several possible
lines of play in three no-trump after West
leads a spade . What are thay? Which is
best?
' ro!Jnd of the auction,
On the second
North had an unpleasant rebid. He did
not went to call two hearts with such a
weak five-card suit. And to bid !'14rtrump
required a spade stoppe r. So he was left
with raising to three diamonds. South,
though, knowing that nine tricks are liSll·
ally easier to win than 11, plumped lor
three no-trump.
South has six top tricks. He could imme·
dlatsly ploy a dub to the board, hoping
for 8ither a 3-3 ch.b split or the diamond
finesse lo work. Note that this would fall
with this layout.
Or he could cross to dummy with a heart
and take tho diamond finesse - also

It's thai time ol year forfaJ I
treatment seM;e good for 90
day&amp;. August thru October

87 Jeep Cherokee 4 4 , details-740-949-2217 .
Runs good. $600. Great ~;;r-:::value for the price. Call740CAMPERs &amp;

~

:,QRR"( 10 ll)l]~mJl'T...

Owner:

2005 Dodge Stratus SXT ,
4DR, Pwr Windows &amp; locks,

r

""q

JamtaKHIOOII

U111&lt;•

~=-=---::----

441 ..a582

E'I-W!&gt;E 11'£, CII.IE F-

Room Additions ·

Ill

Plant In a
• awamp
38 Vexea
40 Bronte
horolna
Jane41 Ma. L.ande11
42 Oriental

An-toP...- Pua1o

Jain the
chorUa
Savory
ameli
News otory

he coUld make thO contract with a
by Luis Campos
third plant Based on the bidding, Easl
rMetritfCi~
~$are
aMI:ed from ~l:lns ~ lamout people. put n ~­
was almost certain to hOld the ckJb ace.
ta::h l!!ll:tll' In the dpher llandS ""anou..
South srould play a heart to dummy's·
• Tod8y'saue:CequllsU
·
king, then call lor the club three. How
can East defend?
. "RDUOURP PBEDRA SMD ETBP SMD
II East wins wfth his dub ace end returns
a spade, South collects two spades, two
OAB NDMKT NMOJ, NAURA, 0,11 TUQB
hearts, two diMnOnds and three clubs .
OABV RDBJUO, DABW BGBKOCEYYW
Ait9rnatlvely, If East plays a low club,
South takes the trick with his queen,
then turns to diamonds (throwing "' SUKJ." • FBOBD CPOUKMG
dummY's jack under the king on the sec- 1
ond round, just in case they are breaking
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Nobody has a more sacrad ot;lgation to obey the
4·1 ), winning two spades, two hearts,
law than tho sa who make tho law.· · Jean Anouilh
four diamonds and one ck.Jb.

THE .BORN LOSER

and

49

flower
36

Or

Decks

'l

The third takes
some thinking

18 Underwater
ahocker
19 Enthralled
23 Solemn
eromloe
25 How do I
love-?"
26 Explode
29 Old caHie
town
32 Goof it up
33 Teahouoe
attire
34 Coronas
35 Sheggy

UI)SUccessful.

Garages

WV038725

V.C . YOUN G

Mushroom
$35A Scoop
T·Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Sfe!i,

Roollng

auto, air, 140,000 mites,
runs good $2,600 304-882·
3652.

x

NO · •..lUGHAID'S SCIENCE PROJECT IS
DUE!! TH' WHEELBARROW WILL BE
AT SCMOOL
ALL DAY

Please leave messa e

2000 Dodge Neon, standerd, $1800 060. 740-256·
~12:::3:.:._
3 _ _ _.,--_ _
c
2002 Ford TaurUs, 3 ltter,

.,;iij4iil!iii4iiii;;.,
FOR 8,ull ...

OH, NO !!
DID YA
' HURT YORE
BACK i'!

740-742-2293

4x~, Lift Ktt, Big Tires, Nloe,
$4900: 1995 Chevy S-10,
V6, Auto, Ext. Cab, $2600.
Many more to chooee from!
KC Auto Safes, 1740)4489172, {740)286-8251.

r_.·

BE NO
MEAVY LIFTIN'
FER ME TODAY,
'
EL !!
THAR'LL

www.--........_b!Mtr7_

*Insured

=0.::60.:..:.:304=
-BBc.2_·_28_15_ __
~fter 4:30pm
1996 Chevy Camero, VB,
Auto, $3200: 1999 Cftevy
MOO!@ Cano, Nlca, $3200:
199:i FO&lt;d Escort, Loaded,
One Owner, $1500; 1993
Pontiac G--• Am, Cold A",
··~
"
$1,500: 1996 Jeep (!rand
Cherokee, 4 door, 4x4,
$3900; 1995 Toyota pickup,

fi5909
r~-'":"o:--...,

P~Ofi~AMMfl&gt;

&amp; Removal

1900 Pontiac
Convertible, needs e lot of
work, but runs, make an
offer, cell {740)992· 1082'

I

T~fY ~AVf

/

*Prompt and Quality

'
Sunbird

t• t•

Opening lead: • 9

Trimming

I,,•II!!II•FORiiilioSALEiiiii;;;,_.,l

~u~~:~:~:

--$6__.4_9_5--F-ro_•__

r

Pass
Pass

Stanley Tree-

~~ ~I \ 1111'-.

COOK MOTORS

~-~2-0469

Barns

2t
3 NT

51000 miles. $7900 449·
7665
_
_ _ _ _ __ __

3 bedroom house · in
•
Pomeroy, large &amp; very clean,
1 112 bath, e/c, hardwood
GOT LAND?
floors. full basement w/2 car ~------- AKC Cocker Spaniel, Choc,
Owner finacing if garage. small back yard, Gradoua living 1 and 2 Male 11 months. loves kids.
$635, 1740)949-2303
Bedroom Apts. at Village $350. 740·6tl2·6092
you own your
Manor and Riverside Apts. in - - - - - - - 3 br. house In Pomeroy, Middleport. from 327 to AKC Registered Brittany
land!
stove &amp; refrigerator fur· $592. 740 _992 _5064 . Equal Puppies, 4 mares. Orange &amp;
nished, (6t4)491-4850
Housing Opportunity.
White, excellent hunting and
lield trial biOOdines. $500.
3br, 2ba House for sale on Honeysuckle
Hills Call for more inlo. 388·9021
- - - - - - - - At 2 North approx. 1 acre Apartments now accepting
Help Wanted
(3041695·3129
applications lor 1 BR Apls. AKC SheHie Collie pups,
Real Estate

AHentlonl
Local company offering ~No
DOWN PAVMENr programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting .
' IOOOA:.financing
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Locators.
Mortgage

\"l't

with war·
•· L
1
JET
ran.,. aw pr ce~ are posted
on eall vehk:tes. $2500 to
AERATION MOTORS
•
Repaired, New &amp; RebuiH In $7500. Slop or call74().4463 br. large apartment, $425 Stock. Call Ron Ewne, 1• ::01_0_3_ _=-:---plus deposit &amp; utilhies, 3rd 800-537-9528.
Escorts, Cavaliers,
02
st., Racine, (740)247 -4292
S
Focus, 04
unflre, 03
4RM &amp; Bath. $tOYO ,fridge, NEW AND USED STEEL Taurus, 14) 4l&lt;!l's, All priced
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar to sell (740)446 7278
utilities paid, upstairs, 46
'1!iF·.;;,;~.;;;.·;;;.;;.....,
For
Concrete,
Angle, g
Oli\10
St.
No
pets. Ch
I Fl
[.· 15
TR•~&lt;
anne ,
$450/month. 446-3945
at Bar, Steel
FOR~S.u~:~
Grating
For
Drains,
~
Apartment for rent , 1·2 Driveways &amp; Walkwavs . L&amp;L
Bdrm, remO&lt;Ielod, now car- Scrap Metals Open Monday. 02 Ford F-150, ext. cab, 4x4,
pet, stove &amp; trig., water, Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; VB, 93,000 milee, runs &amp;
sewer, trash p.d. Middleport. Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed looks good, $8900: 92 Ford
$425.00. No pels. Ret. Tshursday,
Saturday
&amp; Ranger, Ext. Cab, good
required. 740.843-5264.
unday. (740);446--7300
shape, $1400. (740}245-

P

Save
Thousands!
Clearance on lot models. all
1·888-736·3332. The Home
Show Barboursville, 5898 At
60.

No Reasonable
Offer Refused!
Serious Inquires

$300 dep.. (740)423· 1234
2br.
on 5th Street Pl.
Pleasant $375 aSk for Don
(304)593-1994

1br, House inin walking
New Haven,
Eltatei.
everything
dis- DrM!,
from 52
$365Wistwood
to $560.
great
view,
$53,000, lance, no pets, $300 month,
304882·3021 ,740·441-9331 $300 depos~ 304_
Equal
3562 740-446·2568.
Housing Opportunity. This
New home in Gallipolis. 2br, 2 bed'oom executive house. institution is an Equal
2 bath w/whirlpool tubs, new construction, fully fur· Opportunity Provider and
large LA on 3 acres m/1, nished, new refrigerator. Employer.
$87,500. 740-446·7029
stove~ dishwasher, washer &amp;
dfyer, large wrap around CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Ranch Style Brick Home, 2 porch, lull basemen~ 1 car ED &amp; AFFORDABLE\
bedrooms. 1 bedroom extra garage, total electric with Townhouse
apartments,
large, 2 full baths, on 2 1/2 central air, very spacious, andlor small houses FOR
acres, 3 miles from Point private drive with parking, RENT. Call (740)441·1111
Pleasant. Owner relocating, $975 per month, serious for appticatipn &amp; information.
Must sell. Photosldetails
online
at calls only {740)949·2303
Ellm V'leW
localed
•
•
www.orvb.com (cOde "7137) 2 br. Pomeroy, $375 per mo.
A
t
8
S
or cal 1 304·675·4235 asking plus dep., no inside pets,
$128,000
(740)742-1903
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments

========--====::::::::::::;
Help Wantad

2 bedroom apt. in downtown
Pomeroy, elc., gas &amp; water
paid, $375 month, no pets,

s

or Apply on.Jine at
AAIEOE

s

~
Apt.
riO·
--------

--~----- ~re~~c!~~lg·~~~:~~~~
washer, hot tub outside,
Help Wanted

c

LoJs

2ba

local llatlnga call 80tJ.55i-

~

1 bedroom furnished ""t In Game 304·593-1284
d
Po
- ·
----~--own1own
meroy, e1c.,
bu
gas &amp; water, cable paid,
ustom lit solid oak enter·
unit
wfTV,
350 per month, no pet, tainment
$300 dep, 17401423- 1234
52Lx22Wx45H, $150 060,
1740)992-7891
·
lng rOOJn, kitchen, large lam·
Why Pay rent???
1 BR Apt In Spring valle~
ily room, control air, gas heat
Cleylon Single Wldeslll
WID Hookups, (740)339· For Sale Nordic track. Skiing
and 1 fireplace. Add~lon of a
Sterting at $22S.OO
0382
machine, adjusllng drawing
·
th WAc
~=------- table wltools and swivel
large Florida room compermon
· · ·
2 Bd
Apt do I
pletely cedar opens onto
Call today!!!
rm
wn own stool 304-675-5096
patio &amp; pool area. Heated In
Gallipolis,
renovated,
spa·
888
1·
·928-3426
cr·ous k"chen I I t ft
HUGE SA"INGS ON ·g-ound pool enclosed by pri·
ll
' am na e oor
·•
vacy lancing end land· l!rlll!"-~-""'!~-., throughout, private enr..
ARCH STEEL
scaped. Finished 2 car
&amp;
$575 mo inclu,dos water,
BUILDINGS,
garage attached to house
ACREAGE
sewer &amp; garbage, No Pats,
3 Repo8 Left,
end finished &amp; heated 3 car
Cal\1740)709-1690 lor"""'·
25•• 42 ,x &amp; 35,,40 ,

unattached. tO acres ror sale .lOCated on
5 br., 3.5 ba., ranch on Crew Excellent condition ready to Broad Run Road, in New
Rd., $145,000, 1740)416· move in. $255,000.00, Call: Haven,
WV
$34,500
4765 pre-approved buyers
only.
'
Midway Or.,
- - 502
LeGrande
Blvd, New HBven, WV 3 bed· . ~;=::;~===~
b
Gallipolis. Quiet• neighbor- room, I bat h, f·'l
~ asement,
hood, 3BR, 2 BA, Rec. large lot 304·773-5492
lloiH&lt;l;
Robin, LR with FP. Florkla
FOR RiM
room, fenced yard , inground HUO HOMES! 3bd only .__ _oiiiiiiiii,_-'
More
1-4bd
pool, hot tub, 2 storage S13,2501
homea IYIUibltl From $198Jmol Buy 3bd HUD
bldgs, all appliances, taw
$199/mot
5%dn, homot 5%dn, 20yro•ll%.
interest &amp; assumable loan
·~~«• •109
For Ll1 fl nga _,.~
available. Cell (740)446- 20yrs08%. For ll•tlng• :.:1709
4486 or (740)645-2355
800-55&amp;-4109 xF144

•F284

r

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740 65 9657
' 3-

FOR
t
..
_ _ _oiiiiiiiiiiio-,J
Many Items less than 1 yr 1993 Ch9\lrolet Cavalier 2
old. 740-645-2441
d
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
oor, red, runs good, $1 ,200

lor Rent, Melga County, In
town, No Pets, Depostt ___ ,.~ ,
Required, {740)992-5174 or
Nlca used 3 bedroom hOme {740)441.0110.
$For Old Auto Batteries 1·
vlnyVShlngle. Will help with - - - - - - - - ,.- 249 S3.ooea, 250+ S4.00ea.
1 and 2 bedroom llj)&amp;rt· THE BATTERY TERMINAL
.dell,.ry. 740-385-4367
ments, furnished and unfur· 1-800-796-6797
nished, and houses In - - - - - - - - OWNER FINANCING
PO&lt;neroy and Middleport, 4 Marsholl Football Season
Nic9 312 singlewides
security deposit required, no Pasaes $100each Does not
From $1,600 down
pets, 74()..992·2218.
Included Marshall vs WI/U

•••e

5bd

RFNr

Eas&amp;

Insured &amp; Bonded

[o Auros

. .I

t
·-------.1
-..'MUZUIII

North

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Siding, Gut1ers

R'IIII""-M:-.....O;;;;~

Taking applications for 38R, Moving Sole: Sleeper sofa,
2BA on Cora Mill Rd. 4 miles keyboard Wlstlind, stainless
from Rio Grande off 325.
steel bar w/matching stools,
245·5822
serving cart, matching arm
"11~~---chairs, dressers, bookAI'AJmiiENIS
shelves, office furniture.

$293 •

connection
$1500
down
$400fmo ex- rent
$4 75/mo.
Also 1 BR In Gallipolis $750 New 3.8edroom homes from
down S200/mo or rent $214.36 per month, lndudes
many upgrades, Clellvery &amp;
$250/mo.Call Wayne 404·
181-up. 17401385•2434
456-38021or Into.

~:~,::2::;.

I I~\

$49,989

IIW 21111 U ..

Wise Concrete

West

Guttering

Priced
Reasonably.
www.slaterunangus.com,
{740)286-5395

• 5 z
• A tO 9 4

Sou&amp;b

r

YebeedrlinghYoluf ng AngEus e,u,lls,
r
e ers.
xce ent
Brooding, Top Performance.

• QJ

Dealer: North
Vulnerable : North-South

H&amp;H

2008

• . QJJ 063

t A K1094
• Q &amp; 52

Pigs 7 wks old, ·eanty

Gooos

• 9 8 7 4
• 10 9 8 5
• Q&amp;3
• 8 7

• 7 2

':;7:4:0:·;3~6;7;·0~5:3:6~

-,Ch~lei&lt;.:..e.:..n.:..s,.:..2
.::Red=-Bo-ne_c_oo_n
dogs . 245·5822

aon

. AK

Free Eatlmatea

ftlms
Llttfo finger
FM together
Lollloooe
Moderated
Bumptlnto
SUihl-b.or

11 Woody's

Eas&amp;

...

11
12
13
14
15
16

lOOp

Soulb

7 40·367·0544

Produ~ers,

various ages 7 prices. 304 •
882-3345

I

....,..u.......

Fiber

oa-22-01

West

Local Contractor

Pet Qual~ Gokling Alpeces.

Good

16xBO with vinylfshingle. Racine araa, 2 br., electric
Must sell. Only $25,995 with heat, w/d hookup, living
•
-u....
· delivery. Call (740)385·4367 room, dinning room, kitchen,
""""""""
I lull bath, carpon &amp; porch,
In town, nice neighborhood, · - - - - - - ·
closo to high sci&gt;OO, S400 Berber . Carpel, $5.95/yd:
dep., $400 mo., Includes Vln~ , $4.96/yd, DrMI-a-l~o
NEW
4 Bed
water, sewer &amp; garbage, Seve atot, Mollollan Carpet,
ava~able
Sept.
8th, 76 Vine St, Gallipolis, OH.
(740)949-2217
{740)446-7444

1L

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

D!YWall,

1.---roiiliRENriiiii
. . .rl .,_______pi

MONTY

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Remodeling, Room
Additions

appliances. some furnish- view, near Rae Crk. 4844 CaH S.S.2192.
ings, oul building, lg/COY9rod Core Mill Rd. $3851$300 E;rlll!'-"':'::"'....- - . ,
deck. 14x70 , 3br , 2 lull ~de-'-pos.,...-~--6_14_·_948
_·330_7__
WANmJ
bath, Central/Air $18,000 MObile Homes for Rent In Pt.
740-245-0054,
304-675- Pleasant and Gallipolis --.
2581 , 304-593·1660
Ferry, caU 304-675-3423 or Professional Couple , 2-3Br,
2ba, Raneh HOfne in Pont
For Solo 2003 16JC80 Mobile 304-675.()631 before llpm
Pleasant, no pets, quiet resHome, set up on Remed lot. Nice 38A. 2BA, Gallipolis idontial .area, nice home
Many extras 304-895-3129
City . School
District. 304·437-3655 . between·. 9·
Great used 2005 3 bedroom $450/month. 740·256-1417
.

Fro sole by owner. partial~
remodeled 4BR, 2 1/2BA,
3 br., 21ull blh., 20x38 great- laryo LA, Kitchen, DR, new
rOOJn, cia, blacktop drive, lg. central air · New furnace.
parki~ a~aa, all new win·
new
rooI/shingles,
all
dows/doors/rool &amp; saptic, replaced
2 years ego. 112
lemlnated ftan:fwOOd ftoore acre.
Price
reduced
2.. ' above $47,500. 740-388·9376
throughout,
gr01.11d pool , additional spot
,
G
(P7BY
enat
40m)82
for mobile home, on 1 acre,
2750
House lor sole In Recine
. ary
·
for only $115,000. near St. area. Approx. 4 acres, ail
AI. 143 &amp; St. At. 7,
professlonall~ landscaped. Trailer for sale, $2,000 ,
Pomeroy, Oh., 1740)696Ranch styte house with 4 17401992
1227
bedrooms, iving room, din·
-~
4br, 2ba, 1800 SP FT. finished basement, Brick front,
attached garage, living
room, dining room, tamily
room, utility room 16x32 in
ground pool, covered concrete patio, 6ft privacy fence,
great neighborhOOd and
location, Mount Vernon
Avenue Point Pleasant
$1!;9,900 1304)593-6469

Rear Tlne nner 18"

Alder

• KJ S

~ (e):J1ij4:1 .

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows, .
Electric, Plumbing,

1 Suaplcloua

6 Ma. bavta of 48

• 5%
9 A K 6 43
• J 8 7

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

46

Phillip

North

CONSTRUCTION

Call Wayne {404)456-3802

2000 Oa kwood Freedom :-:--:-=-=-=-~=--­
Mobile Home for sale. 93 12x70 2br, WID hookup, Prime commercial space ror

_,_

C~tWm ~

•

TE~......
~rWI/
IOOy\,!1.
L~~63near CORNER STONE
~~
I \ II I -.1 I '1'1 II ..,
,\ I I\ I '- II II h

Includes washer. dryer all storage, porch, lg yard, nice rent at Springvalley Plaza
All rul"tlte advtrtlslng
In this newlpiptr II
subfec:t to the Ftdtral
Felr Houtlng Act of taee
which mlkH it llltgll to
adverttH "an~
prtlerene~, Hmltltion or
dltcrimlna!lon bated on
race, color, tlllglon, Hll
llmillll ltltUI or natlonel
origin, or anv Intention to
mekeany suctl
preference, limitation or

F
or Sale: Approx imately
240.788 bdllt. Standing

-·-~~ ~'- ·~-

..,,_,m

,. . ,_,

aleU1h

ACROSS

Bath:

llom&gt;w Small. Contact
111t Ohio Division of

Olllco

Crossword

BRIDGE

SUNSHINE CLUB

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
74D-94g.2217

r SAID. T~IS IS

ROBUT .
BISSELL
CINSTIUmDI

A 5TI(I&lt;- UP~

STK~UP, WMW!

1HIS IS A)Tl(K-UP(

'

• New Homes
• G~rages

• Complete
Remodeling

J40·9&amp;2-1m
Stop &amp; .Compare

~=;;;:::::::~~===~==~

GARFIELD

Manley's
Recycling

SORRY
IA81)UT OUR
TONIGHT,

•w•..

1113 II Ill·
•n.n 45111
7.....2.....
... IIII.IIfiMIItil-.6. . .

.............2:11 ..

····-·-.........
,PIYIIIII TOP PIICES Ill
CIIIMic Cllllrlln.

e...

lllltn.......
ICIII'tl Clii•IPrlclll

.

.

GRIZZWELLS

~~T1b
~A

ClUS

IT WAS
PIFFERENT

I'VE NEVER SEEN A
RESTAURANT RON 001'
OF FOOJ;~ BEFORE

Thui'Hiy, Aug. 23, 2007
By Bemlce Bade 0.01
One of the grea1est assets you'll•have Is
an awareness of how ·the picture In life
can qutcldy change. Having this complete understanding giV88 you a sense of
timing for taking action that leads 10 success
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - · It may
seem that your lnterets might have to
take a backseat to almost everyone you
know both at home and at work . It won't
help to get angry about It, just grin and
bear It
UBRA (Sept . 23·0ct. 23) - SUtx:lue
incllrlations to make over In your own
Image those With whom you share your
time . tt you can't appreciate them tor who
they are, sometNng may bB lacking In
you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -Take care
not to be overly lnltuenced by an associ·
ate or acquaintance who has a habit of
taking speculative risks and claims
always to be a biQ wlnn8r. lt may be wishf41 thinking.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) - As
long as you stay within your own llmlta!lons. you should be able to handle a
matter better on your own than turn ing it
over to another. There's no guarantee he
or she can do It better.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22·Jan . 19) Foolishly Olierestimating your own abifl·
ties could cause you to bite ott more than
you can chew. Should you get Into some·
thing way over your - head, don't be
embarrassed to call tor help.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) .- It you
overextend yourself in a business proposition and lind that you're losing far more
money than you had ant icipated, It might
be best to cut your losses Instead of
coughing up more.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) - Be careful not to take your frustrations out on
loved ones just because you feel outmaneuvered by the outside world and don't
know wl'iat to do about II . Let time handle
things.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) - Don't be
embarrassed to bring in someone who
lias expertise with somethlnQ beyond
your scope of knOW"Ied98. If you try to
work on the issue on your own, you'll
only have to scrap lt.
.
TAURUS (Apri120-May 20)- You're Nke·
ly to lind yoursell In an embarrass ing
position if you hang out with those who
hsv9 money to burn on frivolous activities . Find something else to do thai Isn't
so expensive.
GEMINI (May 2t.June 20) -Although
you are usually: an Etf&amp;yQolng person,
you are likel)' to taka offense with soma·
one you believe Ia narrowing your tree·
dom and limiting your action. Watch your
temper.
CANCER (June 2t.July 22) - Unleaa
you keep your mind on what you are
dOing , you could bOtch up an Important
job and then act 11.1 If 11 11 everybOdv
e111'1 leult . Bener Mid your tongue;
you 're going 10 need IIIOCIIIII .
LEO !July 23-Aug. 221-111/0U como oH
to others u btlng much tmlntr, bttter
or greater then they art, dOn't ce tur·
pr1atd It they begin to ltlt your atrtngthl
and put you on the tpot morw than once.
SOUP TO NUTZ

l

A PRINT NUMsERED lEnERS
':1 IN THESE SQUARES

SCIAMUTS ANSWIIS

a~ 11 ~o 1

Unkind- Occur- Peony~ Quaittt- ANCIENT
"I remember my childhood," the lldy mUMCI to ber tiatd. "It's
dtat time in your tife wlteo you lbittk 1t1yooe over 30 Is
ANCIENT."
ARLO&amp;JANIS

I ~Jte.D eoxe,5 ro PACIC €&gt;1UFI'
10 TAKE. !ll lUE. DORM'

�~nesda~August22,2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www. mydallysehtinel.com

ALLI;Y OOP

NEA

;:**;N;O;T;I;C;E:*:*~

8e P1no,

Galllpollo, Now I.,
WIII
•ollof-.,;
b'i sal
ioiiloii
1he• hlgh- ' HUD HOMES! 3bd only Tara
Town house Canning
tom atoes
roof, heal pump, eleclrlcal, 2 eot bidder, 111t mldenco of 11 S,2101 More · 1-4bd Allar1monts. Vllry Spaclooa, plcked'plcl&lt; own, incradiblo
BR. Oouble Lot, $72,000. thl tate Ecl1h Jlvi&lt;len, local· ftomtl IVIIIIblll From 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2 com , cucumbers, Rowe
{740)441.0720
od at 383 N. 3rd Ave., 1111/mol
SlW!n,
Awk Pool &amp; ~ Farms, (740)247-4292
Middl...,rt· Friday Anguli 20yroeK. For llattnga Pool, Patio, S1art S42Molo.
919 Vine Street.. Racine, 3 31 , 2007, at 2~00p.m .. The 100 lit 410111f144
No Peta, Laue Plus Pick your own canning
bedroom, 1 112 bath ranch, home will be open for vtawSecurity ,Dopoolt Required, lornaloM, bell peppetl, hoi
1000 sq. ft., onecar garoga, lng one hour {1 :00 p. m.) Ott SR 141, 3BR, 2BA, (740)446-J481.
~TomatoeaU1&gt;uc:l&lt;- .
314 aero lewl lot. 1740)416- prior 1o bidding. Minimum oppllancao, buarnenl, 1 car
ol, f'll&gt;pors
SM&gt;ud&lt;et.
39n
Bid: $34,000.00, 1740)992· garage, 1600/mo plus Twin Rtvoi.Tower le accopt- Tr"ffl'* · - a l l , e mlteo f""lJ~o':'h~n~IQ~D'I''s~T~ree"""".,
- -- -- - - 6689
dapooit. {814)226-0859
Wig applicatlor11 b' wHW&gt;g of Gal~ oil S.R.
S I
Alllntlont
~ ~ u~ •. ~r-•IIN C8
p ~ 3BR
1 Ba h - ~ ~-~. 1· br, .:.
1 4il1r-""'!~~--""''
--- Local company offering ' NC XTREME SAVINGS\ Owr ro ..,,
•
I · lj)lrtment,lor
the •
DOWN PAYMENr pn&gt; 2.000 squara loot home b' Downtown Gallipolis. Very eldorly/dloablod call 875·
FiJR ~
~-~
llfOmB lor you to buy your lessthan$40/sq. ft. CIIIThe :"~A~.~~ 6879 . Equal
Housing
home instead or renting.
Home Show - Barboursville
Opportunity
• ,........,.,_

lnii~UIIon'a
Ollico of Consumer
AllliiHFOREyourafi·
nanc:e your holno Of
1 loon. BEWARE
of ~ b' any targa
Ftnonclll

::-:-=:-""-=-- --

lldvance

p.eymonts ol
taoo"' lnouranoo.
Call the
of

Consumer

Alfolro toll ftoe at l-1!66278-0003 to learn if the

• 100% financ ng
mortgage
broker
or
lender
18
properly

llcenlod.

pe~

' Loss than

~cc:::nl

(This

Is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Vatley

crodil

could be the

M

·

H

I

iaiir..O....;.::----.,
.""'. . ""

pets/srnol&lt;lng. Util~lts not
Included. &amp;45-6378 ask for

~

~SAlE~ • iliKell~f-:M":OB"""""""'
~":u:-~--...,1
~ ·~

__

1

FOR RENr

.

Ji1JR lb.Nr
Commercial building "For
Morlgage
Locators. 198ol Schun.z 14x70, 2BR, 1
Rem" 1800 squaraleet, off
(740)367-0000
Bath, 9110 acre, minutes
street parking. Great toea. S&lt;lHS • - 000 2 Br , /lJC, Very nloo with
r----=~--., lrOJn New
, ~u.
.
tionl 749 Third Avenue In

same 88 rent.

Publlsnlng Company)

r ........... 1 , r
:

i

atH8B·736-3332

~~~--~~-~--.,

i
1.--------..1

;:;;:::::==~
Sot~

74()..446-2000 or 446·1409

MTD

BUILDERS
304-675-4907

lUAIIED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888-582-3345
~~ I

\ I I ' I \I I

I.

lll!lll"'"_":'!'__...,_...,

r

Ho11m;

iO

ftlR SAJ....E
~...-.-...

Thia newtpaper will not
knowlngty eccept

0 Down even with less than·
pe;fect credlls available on
this 3 bedroom, 1 bath

ldvertiHmentl for reel
11tatt which Is in
violation of ttM ltw. Our

home. Corner lot, fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740-367-7129.

104 · •,a1um

0

dliCrlmlnetlon."

-

. . hereby
Informed that ell
dwlllln111 odvortlood In
thf1 OOWIPIPiriTO
evelllbtl on 1n a~~utl

N

r.
ew
-"'
HIIJin.WV 3bdl2ba. Ranch,
opportunity beiH.
lg.ounroorn, 2 car gar. great
area. D; 304-675-3637 E; For sale/land contract. 3 BA
•••
••2•2334
~
hOuse In Gallipolis. WID
2 Story Brick House 4 Sale 4
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths,
LR,FR,DR. Kitchen. Approx. .
3/4 acres, above ground
Add.
pool. Located L~ns
,.
Mason. Asking $140,000
304-675·2165

r

.._

mymldwathome.com

garage

GALLIPOLIS Looking tor a good preFONCioaurel Buy for owned home? Many to
IU,8001
5%dn, choose from 01 Tlte Home
aoy..es%. More local Show • Bart&gt;ouravtlle. 1homollrom Sltlllmol For 688·736-3332

-:======::;

r

e

OPERATING
ROOM

'rECHNIGIAN
PleuantV.Uey

H01pholls currently
aeeeptJna applications

lor a Su11kal

Th:luJoloclat. Graduate

or accredited surgical

tectmology program or

equlvaleat experience
requlnd.
. CST or CST eligible.

To apply, contad
Pleasant Valley
Hoopltsl,

Human Resoun:es,
2520 VOJley Dr.
Pt. Pl..ant, WV
.255!0, (304) 675-4340,

ruresume to
{304) 675·6975
www.pvalley.org

"'========
_

(3) Houses lor Rent- (2)'2
Bedroom, ( 1) 3 Bedroom
w~h 2 Bath, (740)446-251 5,
~(7:-40-')_64_5_·1_646_._ _ _ _
-

~t~.c~~r~~:~l:~~~

New Haven, 4+ acres, 3 br., required. Cell 446 _2468

i

Call

Beautiful Apte. at Jackson Pole

8 2_

rt men

2SR, 1BA house $450tmo, •Central heat &amp; AlC
also 2BR, 1BA trailer •Washer/dryer hookup
$300/mo. Botharelocated in •Tenantpayselectrlc"
Rio Grande.
740·3B8·9958, lea"" e
message.

fir

(304)882-3017

30x50x10

oe-.1-ive_r~y

1937)716-1471
Winchester Model 37-A,
16ga., 30" Full, Rare Barrell
length, Excellent, S145: Also
Square FrY Skillet 1768 with
Glass Cover, both skliiet and
cover marked Griswold
Rare, $225. 1740)533-3870

PETs

n&gt;R Su.E

"~--oaiiiiiiiiiiiia-,.1
9 week old CKC tamale
Yorkshire terrier puppies.
First shots, wormed, dew
claws removed and tails
docked. They are on solid
puppy chow and paper
t~ained. $600. (740)441 7 .
B
6
marziee@ localnet.com

IT

Adorable Pug puppies
Fawn, Registered, Shots &amp;
Wormed . lOwks old, Mason
Area $450 443-350-4011

866-564·8679

WANTED
Part-lime positions available to assist an
individual with menial retardalioo
in Middleport .
1) 30 hrs: Sat. 3 pm- 8 am Tues : daytime
hOurs off, sleep over required .
2) 28 hrs; 3· 12 pm Mffu./Wed.
Must have high school diploma or GED, valid
driver's license, three years good driving
experience an~ adequate automobile
instjfance. $7.50/hr.
Se'nd resume to:
Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box604
Jackson, OH 45640
Deadllna lor applicants:

8124107
Pte-employment drug 1estlng.
Equal Opportunhy. Employer.

No rental assistance avail· $300, AKC Pekingese $350.
able at this time. Aems start vet 9hecked. 740· 256: 1664

at $310 month. Equal
Housing
Opportunity.
f740l 446-3344
Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartment New carpet &amp;
cabinets, freshly painted &amp;
decorated. WID hookup.
Beautiful country selling.
Must see to appreciate.
~17_4.::01.:.38.:..7.:·0000==----- $400/mo. 1614)595·7773 or
For sale or rent. 3BR, newly 1-800·798-4686.
painted. 5 miles from New 2BR
apartments.
Centenary. 8 miles from Rio Washer/dryer
hookup,
Grande. Oep req. 740-379- stove/refrigerator inCluded.
2540
Also, units on SR t60 . Pets

Australian Shepherd pup·
pie s. Black &amp; White and Red
&amp; White, $125 each.
(740)245·5984 or (740)645·
4833
•
Blue Healer puppies, 4
male, 2 female , $50 each.
740·256·6360
Miniature Pinscher CKC
Reg. Black I rust, 1 F $300 4
M
$250. 8wks old,
Wormed,shots, tails doCked.
740·367·0210 if no answer
leave mest age.

House for rent in Pomeroy Walcomel {740)441-0194 .
$325 per Month plus dep. Nice clean 2 bedroom. w/d
740·742· 1903.
h00 k
up. no pets, ref 7 piece Drum Set, Arst Act.
House lor Rent/Sale . 3 BR. required conveniently local· GOOd Shape $100 304·674. 1 BA, 1/2 basement, Spring ed 304-675-5162
0080

rili'i"'i-.;l;r.o'A'Oa-..,,...====-=.,

Valley Area, $550/mo, HUDI
96500
.., ;

~:~::6~:~

3•
Pass

Pass
Pass

FRANK

SHOP CLASSI~I~DSI

'&amp; EARNEST
T~f

C.ANl&gt;IPATfS A~f
A LOT '-IICf US •••
ANSwf~S. fO~
T~f· FAQ'S.

BARNEY

Work
*Reasonable Rate s

H31'Mod Ca~newy And Furmture

'Experienced
References Available!

Call Gary

Stanley @

YOUN G'S

J&amp;L

CARPENTER
SERVICE
fioom Addltfone a

Construction
• VlnYt .Siding
• Replacemenl

··

Windows

Remocllllng
Hew Gertgee
ElectOO.I • Plumbing
Rooflnt I Guttera
VInyl Siding • PelntiiMI
P•tlo tnd Porch Deckl

qq,• 621
I'(
1

•

,.

111

I

t

y
I'

Fertllb:er

Puzzle

N-It&gt; ~0'\'1-\t.R W.ll'lv '"q
't'OU BOK!-&lt;E.D ~ ·

Pole Bulldlnga

l 'i''

' '

742-2332

I..ADY BUGS
BUGGING YOU?

[40
4~=CLEJ;/ I
~
1998 . Kawasa~i

Volcoo,

Black,
Soddlebags,
Windshield, Low Milas,
ExceHent Condition, $300CI.
{740)446·6172, 1740)256·
6251 _

.54
·55
56 Outmoded
DOWN
1

Mora

delicate
2 Computerchlf maker
3 Val amenity
(2 wda.)
4 !lots a
move on
5 Survey
choice

6
7
8

16

once

When Paris
sizzles

43 Bqel

44
45

22 Sameater
24 Adml,.(a
oound

26 Tiny

Rare"*** opening
Accomp.ony· 27 Submit

9 Before
10
11
12

18 Hurnorlot
- Bombeck
20 Beg Plldonl
2t Inca l:mpl111,

47

cape

ROI!tllljle,
In Venice
Identify ·
Shih's

kingdom

48 Mme. Qlucfl
ol opt111
49
50

28 Jetty
30 Foersome

centers

GreokP
L-cH~-t

111111
51 Tlra ,....

au,. -

marriage
31 Query
Augment
37 Old
Jaguar kin
Chryaler
Diamond or
model
Simon
39 Junka
Olympic
41 Buoy
dream
lnHCta

52 Syrup-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

....

-

111TIIIILI

NIIUI

David Lewis

McCormick's
Extermination Inc.

Commerclll a RNidlnrill
Vo~r l.ocll Termite 1
,... Control

\'; tN THERE ...

eom.,....,

740-992-6971

'

"'TICKET

STUB FMM "'
501&lt;- ORIOLES

(740) 682-6244
740 418-7509

""""'/

GAME ...

We Deliver To Youl
•

t

Home Oxygen

• Portable Oxygen
PEANUTS

•

Homer.ll System
• Helios System

{]amlbj,• Ce};i'lCJ4~•
..

SEE~ 'r'OLI

~~JIP.!P.!!,.,•

2005 H.D.Fat Boy custom
maroon

241 Years Experience

Free

2003 Harley
Davidson
Heritage
Sift-Tall,
Anniversery Edition, 6,100
miles. stage 1 kit, pipes &amp;
crash bars, excellent cond.
$14,0DO 304-773·2081 or
304·593-0000

ON

-- ----

&amp;

w/embossed

flames,1
of 200 made,SOO
miles
since
now, price
$19,000 080 call for

r

THIS

HAVE FtVE TOE5
FOOT AND FIVE

IF THERE'S A Pl.A¥-OFF, 11M
IN TROU6L.E .~

. IT'S A TIE!

TOES ON THAT FOOT ..

'MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

70 Pine Street • GaUipolls
441i-0007

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

.......-:-.,

MoroRHOMFS

I

---

FOR SALE

I

COUIH
Shade-lov·
lng plants
Fuoe unit
Scallion

spiders. 11nls &amp; wasps.

82 Wilderness Travel Trailer,
24'. lui~ equipped, sloops 8,
great cond , $2500 . 388·
1992 GMC Safari Van front
8260 after 6pm .
&amp; rear air, !3J:C. cond. $2,800
--------------304 -675•5831
95 30ft Fleetwood Terry,
excellent cond, Sleeps 6-8.
91 Dodge 350 Rom wagon.
12
passengers,
white, Call 740·286-8729 or 740·
91000 miles, looks and runs 577-7629
good. $2500. 446·9278
.... 11{ \11! ...
92 Ford Aerostar XLT,
Loaded, Runs Good, Looks
Good,
181.000
miies,
$2300. Call after 5pm
{740)386-9096
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
.
WM~R~GB
~
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references fur·
ni&amp;tled. Established 1975.
2001 Harley Davison 883
Sportster, 6200 miles,
0870, Rogers Basement
Asking $5000. {740)245· Call 24 Hrs. {740) 446·
Waterproofing.
5984 or (740)645·4833

r404

53

Treatment tor la~ugs.

~~~~:":"----':'"'!

VANS

52 Zigzag

II you play chess, 10 find tho best move,
you must think ol it. And at 1ha bridge
ta~e. to ftnd the correct call or card. you
must think of it . Consider as many· possl·
bllitles as possl~e .
In this deal , there are several possible
lines of play in three no-trump after West
leads a spade . What are thay? Which is
best?
' ro!Jnd of the auction,
On the second
North had an unpleasant rebid. He did
not went to call two hearts with such a
weak five-card suit. And to bid !'14rtrump
required a spade stoppe r. So he was left
with raising to three diamonds. South,
though, knowing that nine tricks are liSll·
ally easier to win than 11, plumped lor
three no-trump.
South has six top tricks. He could imme·
dlatsly ploy a dub to the board, hoping
for 8ither a 3-3 ch.b split or the diamond
finesse lo work. Note that this would fall
with this layout.
Or he could cross to dummy with a heart
and take tho diamond finesse - also

It's thai time ol year forfaJ I
treatment seM;e good for 90
day&amp;. August thru October

87 Jeep Cherokee 4 4 , details-740-949-2217 .
Runs good. $600. Great ~;;r-:::value for the price. Call740CAMPERs &amp;

~

:,QRR"( 10 ll)l]~mJl'T...

Owner:

2005 Dodge Stratus SXT ,
4DR, Pwr Windows &amp; locks,

r

""q

JamtaKHIOOII

U111&lt;•

~=-=---::----

441 ..a582

E'I-W!&gt;E 11'£, CII.IE F-

Room Additions ·

Ill

Plant In a
• awamp
38 Vexea
40 Bronte
horolna
Jane41 Ma. L.ande11
42 Oriental

An-toP...- Pua1o

Jain the
chorUa
Savory
ameli
News otory

he coUld make thO contract with a
by Luis Campos
third plant Based on the bidding, Easl
rMetritfCi~
~$are
aMI:ed from ~l:lns ~ lamout people. put n ~­
was almost certain to hOld the ckJb ace.
ta::h l!!ll:tll' In the dpher llandS ""anou..
South srould play a heart to dummy's·
• Tod8y'saue:CequllsU
·
king, then call lor the club three. How
can East defend?
. "RDUOURP PBEDRA SMD ETBP SMD
II East wins wfth his dub ace end returns
a spade, South collects two spades, two
OAB NDMKT NMOJ, NAURA, 0,11 TUQB
hearts, two diMnOnds and three clubs .
OABV RDBJUO, DABW BGBKOCEYYW
Ait9rnatlvely, If East plays a low club,
South takes the trick with his queen,
then turns to diamonds (throwing "' SUKJ." • FBOBD CPOUKMG
dummY's jack under the king on the sec- 1
ond round, just in case they are breaking
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Nobody has a more sacrad ot;lgation to obey the
4·1 ), winning two spades, two hearts,
law than tho sa who make tho law.· · Jean Anouilh
four diamonds and one ck.Jb.

THE .BORN LOSER

and

49

flower
36

Or

Decks

'l

The third takes
some thinking

18 Underwater
ahocker
19 Enthralled
23 Solemn
eromloe
25 How do I
love-?"
26 Explode
29 Old caHie
town
32 Goof it up
33 Teahouoe
attire
34 Coronas
35 Sheggy

UI)SUccessful.

Garages

WV038725

V.C . YOUN G

Mushroom
$35A Scoop
T·Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Sfe!i,

Roollng

auto, air, 140,000 mites,
runs good $2,600 304-882·
3652.

x

NO · •..lUGHAID'S SCIENCE PROJECT IS
DUE!! TH' WHEELBARROW WILL BE
AT SCMOOL
ALL DAY

Please leave messa e

2000 Dodge Neon, standerd, $1800 060. 740-256·
~12:::3:.:._
3 _ _ _.,--_ _
c
2002 Ford TaurUs, 3 ltter,

.,;iij4iil!iii4iiii;;.,
FOR 8,ull ...

OH, NO !!
DID YA
' HURT YORE
BACK i'!

740-742-2293

4x~, Lift Ktt, Big Tires, Nloe,
$4900: 1995 Chevy S-10,
V6, Auto, Ext. Cab, $2600.
Many more to chooee from!
KC Auto Safes, 1740)4489172, {740)286-8251.

r_.·

BE NO
MEAVY LIFTIN'
FER ME TODAY,
'
EL !!
THAR'LL

www.--........_b!Mtr7_

*Insured

=0.::60.:..:.:304=
-BBc.2_·_28_15_ __
~fter 4:30pm
1996 Chevy Camero, VB,
Auto, $3200: 1999 Cftevy
MOO!@ Cano, Nlca, $3200:
199:i FO&lt;d Escort, Loaded,
One Owner, $1500; 1993
Pontiac G--• Am, Cold A",
··~
"
$1,500: 1996 Jeep (!rand
Cherokee, 4 door, 4x4,
$3900; 1995 Toyota pickup,

fi5909
r~-'":"o:--...,

P~Ofi~AMMfl&gt;

&amp; Removal

1900 Pontiac
Convertible, needs e lot of
work, but runs, make an
offer, cell {740)992· 1082'

I

T~fY ~AVf

/

*Prompt and Quality

'
Sunbird

t• t•

Opening lead: • 9

Trimming

I,,•II!!II•FORiiilioSALEiiiii;;;,_.,l

~u~~:~:~:

--$6__.4_9_5--F-ro_•__

r

Pass
Pass

Stanley Tree-

~~ ~I \ 1111'-.

COOK MOTORS

~-~2-0469

Barns

2t
3 NT

51000 miles. $7900 449·
7665
_
_ _ _ _ __ __

3 bedroom house · in
•
Pomeroy, large &amp; very clean,
1 112 bath, e/c, hardwood
GOT LAND?
floors. full basement w/2 car ~------- AKC Cocker Spaniel, Choc,
Owner finacing if garage. small back yard, Gradoua living 1 and 2 Male 11 months. loves kids.
$635, 1740)949-2303
Bedroom Apts. at Village $350. 740·6tl2·6092
you own your
Manor and Riverside Apts. in - - - - - - - 3 br. house In Pomeroy, Middleport. from 327 to AKC Registered Brittany
land!
stove &amp; refrigerator fur· $592. 740 _992 _5064 . Equal Puppies, 4 mares. Orange &amp;
nished, (6t4)491-4850
Housing Opportunity.
White, excellent hunting and
lield trial biOOdines. $500.
3br, 2ba House for sale on Honeysuckle
Hills Call for more inlo. 388·9021
- - - - - - - - At 2 North approx. 1 acre Apartments now accepting
Help Wanted
(3041695·3129
applications lor 1 BR Apls. AKC SheHie Collie pups,
Real Estate

AHentlonl
Local company offering ~No
DOWN PAVMENr programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting .
' IOOOA:.financing
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Locators.
Mortgage

\"l't

with war·
•· L
1
JET
ran.,. aw pr ce~ are posted
on eall vehk:tes. $2500 to
AERATION MOTORS
•
Repaired, New &amp; RebuiH In $7500. Slop or call74().4463 br. large apartment, $425 Stock. Call Ron Ewne, 1• ::01_0_3_ _=-:---plus deposit &amp; utilhies, 3rd 800-537-9528.
Escorts, Cavaliers,
02
st., Racine, (740)247 -4292
S
Focus, 04
unflre, 03
4RM &amp; Bath. $tOYO ,fridge, NEW AND USED STEEL Taurus, 14) 4l&lt;!l's, All priced
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar to sell (740)446 7278
utilities paid, upstairs, 46
'1!iF·.;;,;~.;;;.·;;;.;;.....,
For
Concrete,
Angle, g
Oli\10
St.
No
pets. Ch
I Fl
[.· 15
TR•~&lt;
anne ,
$450/month. 446-3945
at Bar, Steel
FOR~S.u~:~
Grating
For
Drains,
~
Apartment for rent , 1·2 Driveways &amp; Walkwavs . L&amp;L
Bdrm, remO&lt;Ielod, now car- Scrap Metals Open Monday. 02 Ford F-150, ext. cab, 4x4,
pet, stove &amp; trig., water, Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; VB, 93,000 milee, runs &amp;
sewer, trash p.d. Middleport. Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed looks good, $8900: 92 Ford
$425.00. No pels. Ret. Tshursday,
Saturday
&amp; Ranger, Ext. Cab, good
required. 740.843-5264.
unday. (740);446--7300
shape, $1400. (740}245-

P

Save
Thousands!
Clearance on lot models. all
1·888-736·3332. The Home
Show Barboursville, 5898 At
60.

No Reasonable
Offer Refused!
Serious Inquires

$300 dep.. (740)423· 1234
2br.
on 5th Street Pl.
Pleasant $375 aSk for Don
(304)593-1994

1br, House inin walking
New Haven,
Eltatei.
everything
dis- DrM!,
from 52
$365Wistwood
to $560.
great
view,
$53,000, lance, no pets, $300 month,
304882·3021 ,740·441-9331 $300 depos~ 304_
Equal
3562 740-446·2568.
Housing Opportunity. This
New home in Gallipolis. 2br, 2 bed'oom executive house. institution is an Equal
2 bath w/whirlpool tubs, new construction, fully fur· Opportunity Provider and
large LA on 3 acres m/1, nished, new refrigerator. Employer.
$87,500. 740-446·7029
stove~ dishwasher, washer &amp;
dfyer, large wrap around CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Ranch Style Brick Home, 2 porch, lull basemen~ 1 car ED &amp; AFFORDABLE\
bedrooms. 1 bedroom extra garage, total electric with Townhouse
apartments,
large, 2 full baths, on 2 1/2 central air, very spacious, andlor small houses FOR
acres, 3 miles from Point private drive with parking, RENT. Call (740)441·1111
Pleasant. Owner relocating, $975 per month, serious for appticatipn &amp; information.
Must sell. Photosldetails
online
at calls only {740)949·2303
Ellm V'leW
localed
•
•
www.orvb.com (cOde "7137) 2 br. Pomeroy, $375 per mo.
A
t
8
S
or cal 1 304·675·4235 asking plus dep., no inside pets,
$128,000
(740)742-1903
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments

========--====::::::::::::;
Help Wantad

2 bedroom apt. in downtown
Pomeroy, elc., gas &amp; water
paid, $375 month, no pets,

s

or Apply on.Jine at
AAIEOE

s

~
Apt.
riO·
--------

--~----- ~re~~c!~~lg·~~~:~~~~
washer, hot tub outside,
Help Wanted

c

LoJs

2ba

local llatlnga call 80tJ.55i-

~

1 bedroom furnished ""t In Game 304·593-1284
d
Po
- ·
----~--own1own
meroy, e1c.,
bu
gas &amp; water, cable paid,
ustom lit solid oak enter·
unit
wfTV,
350 per month, no pet, tainment
$300 dep, 17401423- 1234
52Lx22Wx45H, $150 060,
1740)992-7891
·
lng rOOJn, kitchen, large lam·
Why Pay rent???
1 BR Apt In Spring valle~
ily room, control air, gas heat
Cleylon Single Wldeslll
WID Hookups, (740)339· For Sale Nordic track. Skiing
and 1 fireplace. Add~lon of a
Sterting at $22S.OO
0382
machine, adjusllng drawing
·
th WAc
~=------- table wltools and swivel
large Florida room compermon
· · ·
2 Bd
Apt do I
pletely cedar opens onto
Call today!!!
rm
wn own stool 304-675-5096
patio &amp; pool area. Heated In
Gallipolis,
renovated,
spa·
888
1·
·928-3426
cr·ous k"chen I I t ft
HUGE SA"INGS ON ·g-ound pool enclosed by pri·
ll
' am na e oor
·•
vacy lancing end land· l!rlll!"-~-""'!~-., throughout, private enr..
ARCH STEEL
scaped. Finished 2 car
&amp;
$575 mo inclu,dos water,
BUILDINGS,
garage attached to house
ACREAGE
sewer &amp; garbage, No Pats,
3 Repo8 Left,
end finished &amp; heated 3 car
Cal\1740)709-1690 lor"""'·
25•• 42 ,x &amp; 35,,40 ,

unattached. tO acres ror sale .lOCated on
5 br., 3.5 ba., ranch on Crew Excellent condition ready to Broad Run Road, in New
Rd., $145,000, 1740)416· move in. $255,000.00, Call: Haven,
WV
$34,500
4765 pre-approved buyers
only.
'
Midway Or.,
- - 502
LeGrande
Blvd, New HBven, WV 3 bed· . ~;=::;~===~
b
Gallipolis. Quiet• neighbor- room, I bat h, f·'l
~ asement,
hood, 3BR, 2 BA, Rec. large lot 304·773-5492
lloiH&lt;l;
Robin, LR with FP. Florkla
FOR RiM
room, fenced yard , inground HUO HOMES! 3bd only .__ _oiiiiiiiii,_-'
More
1-4bd
pool, hot tub, 2 storage S13,2501
homea IYIUibltl From $198Jmol Buy 3bd HUD
bldgs, all appliances, taw
$199/mot
5%dn, homot 5%dn, 20yro•ll%.
interest &amp; assumable loan
·~~«• •109
For Ll1 fl nga _,.~
available. Cell (740)446- 20yrs08%. For ll•tlng• :.:1709
4486 or (740)645-2355
800-55&amp;-4109 xF144

•F284

r

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740 65 9657
' 3-

FOR
t
..
_ _ _oiiiiiiiiiiio-,J
Many Items less than 1 yr 1993 Ch9\lrolet Cavalier 2
old. 740-645-2441
d
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
oor, red, runs good, $1 ,200

lor Rent, Melga County, In
town, No Pets, Depostt ___ ,.~ ,
Required, {740)992-5174 or
Nlca used 3 bedroom hOme {740)441.0110.
$For Old Auto Batteries 1·
vlnyVShlngle. Will help with - - - - - - - - ,.- 249 S3.ooea, 250+ S4.00ea.
1 and 2 bedroom llj)&amp;rt· THE BATTERY TERMINAL
.dell,.ry. 740-385-4367
ments, furnished and unfur· 1-800-796-6797
nished, and houses In - - - - - - - - OWNER FINANCING
PO&lt;neroy and Middleport, 4 Marsholl Football Season
Nic9 312 singlewides
security deposit required, no Pasaes $100each Does not
From $1,600 down
pets, 74()..992·2218.
Included Marshall vs WI/U

•••e

5bd

RFNr

Eas&amp;

Insured &amp; Bonded

[o Auros

. .I

t
·-------.1
-..'MUZUIII

North

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Siding, Gut1ers

R'IIII""-M:-.....O;;;;~

Taking applications for 38R, Moving Sole: Sleeper sofa,
2BA on Cora Mill Rd. 4 miles keyboard Wlstlind, stainless
from Rio Grande off 325.
steel bar w/matching stools,
245·5822
serving cart, matching arm
"11~~---chairs, dressers, bookAI'AJmiiENIS
shelves, office furniture.

$293 •

connection
$1500
down
$400fmo ex- rent
$4 75/mo.
Also 1 BR In Gallipolis $750 New 3.8edroom homes from
down S200/mo or rent $214.36 per month, lndudes
many upgrades, Clellvery &amp;
$250/mo.Call Wayne 404·
181-up. 17401385•2434
456-38021or Into.

~:~,::2::;.

I I~\

$49,989

IIW 21111 U ..

Wise Concrete

West

Guttering

Priced
Reasonably.
www.slaterunangus.com,
{740)286-5395

• 5 z
• A tO 9 4

Sou&amp;b

r

YebeedrlinghYoluf ng AngEus e,u,lls,
r
e ers.
xce ent
Brooding, Top Performance.

• QJ

Dealer: North
Vulnerable : North-South

H&amp;H

2008

• . QJJ 063

t A K1094
• Q &amp; 52

Pigs 7 wks old, ·eanty

Gooos

• 9 8 7 4
• 10 9 8 5
• Q&amp;3
• 8 7

• 7 2

':;7:4:0:·;3~6;7;·0~5:3:6~

-,Ch~lei&lt;.:..e.:..n.:..s,.:..2
.::Red=-Bo-ne_c_oo_n
dogs . 245·5822

aon

. AK

Free Eatlmatea

ftlms
Llttfo finger
FM together
Lollloooe
Moderated
Bumptlnto
SUihl-b.or

11 Woody's

Eas&amp;

...

11
12
13
14
15
16

lOOp

Soulb

7 40·367·0544

Produ~ers,

various ages 7 prices. 304 •
882-3345

I

....,..u.......

Fiber

oa-22-01

West

Local Contractor

Pet Qual~ Gokling Alpeces.

Good

16xBO with vinylfshingle. Racine araa, 2 br., electric
Must sell. Only $25,995 with heat, w/d hookup, living
•
-u....
· delivery. Call (740)385·4367 room, dinning room, kitchen,
""""""""
I lull bath, carpon &amp; porch,
In town, nice neighborhood, · - - - - - - ·
closo to high sci&gt;OO, S400 Berber . Carpel, $5.95/yd:
dep., $400 mo., Includes Vln~ , $4.96/yd, DrMI-a-l~o
NEW
4 Bed
water, sewer &amp; garbage, Seve atot, Mollollan Carpet,
ava~able
Sept.
8th, 76 Vine St, Gallipolis, OH.
(740)949-2217
{740)446-7444

1L

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

D!YWall,

1.---roiiliRENriiiii
. . .rl .,_______pi

MONTY

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Remodeling, Room
Additions

appliances. some furnish- view, near Rae Crk. 4844 CaH S.S.2192.
ings, oul building, lg/COY9rod Core Mill Rd. $3851$300 E;rlll!'-"':'::"'....- - . ,
deck. 14x70 , 3br , 2 lull ~de-'-pos.,...-~--6_14_·_948
_·330_7__
WANmJ
bath, Central/Air $18,000 MObile Homes for Rent In Pt.
740-245-0054,
304-675- Pleasant and Gallipolis --.
2581 , 304-593·1660
Ferry, caU 304-675-3423 or Professional Couple , 2-3Br,
2ba, Raneh HOfne in Pont
For Solo 2003 16JC80 Mobile 304-675.()631 before llpm
Pleasant, no pets, quiet resHome, set up on Remed lot. Nice 38A. 2BA, Gallipolis idontial .area, nice home
Many extras 304-895-3129
City . School
District. 304·437-3655 . between·. 9·
Great used 2005 3 bedroom $450/month. 740·256-1417
.

Fro sole by owner. partial~
remodeled 4BR, 2 1/2BA,
3 br., 21ull blh., 20x38 great- laryo LA, Kitchen, DR, new
rOOJn, cia, blacktop drive, lg. central air · New furnace.
parki~ a~aa, all new win·
new
rooI/shingles,
all
dows/doors/rool &amp; saptic, replaced
2 years ego. 112
lemlnated ftan:fwOOd ftoore acre.
Price
reduced
2.. ' above $47,500. 740-388·9376
throughout,
gr01.11d pool , additional spot
,
G
(P7BY
enat
40m)82
for mobile home, on 1 acre,
2750
House lor sole In Recine
. ary
·
for only $115,000. near St. area. Approx. 4 acres, ail
AI. 143 &amp; St. At. 7,
professlonall~ landscaped. Trailer for sale, $2,000 ,
Pomeroy, Oh., 1740)696Ranch styte house with 4 17401992
1227
bedrooms, iving room, din·
-~
4br, 2ba, 1800 SP FT. finished basement, Brick front,
attached garage, living
room, dining room, tamily
room, utility room 16x32 in
ground pool, covered concrete patio, 6ft privacy fence,
great neighborhOOd and
location, Mount Vernon
Avenue Point Pleasant
$1!;9,900 1304)593-6469

Rear Tlne nner 18"

Alder

• KJ S

~ (e):J1ij4:1 .

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows, .
Electric, Plumbing,

1 Suaplcloua

6 Ma. bavta of 48

• 5%
9 A K 6 43
• J 8 7

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

46

Phillip

North

CONSTRUCTION

Call Wayne {404)456-3802

2000 Oa kwood Freedom :-:--:-=-=-=-~=--­
Mobile Home for sale. 93 12x70 2br, WID hookup, Prime commercial space ror

_,_

C~tWm ~

•

TE~......
~rWI/
IOOy\,!1.
L~~63near CORNER STONE
~~
I \ II I -.1 I '1'1 II ..,
,\ I I\ I '- II II h

Includes washer. dryer all storage, porch, lg yard, nice rent at Springvalley Plaza
All rul"tlte advtrtlslng
In this newlpiptr II
subfec:t to the Ftdtral
Felr Houtlng Act of taee
which mlkH it llltgll to
adverttH "an~
prtlerene~, Hmltltion or
dltcrimlna!lon bated on
race, color, tlllglon, Hll
llmillll ltltUI or natlonel
origin, or anv Intention to
mekeany suctl
preference, limitation or

F
or Sale: Approx imately
240.788 bdllt. Standing

-·-~~ ~'- ·~-

..,,_,m

,. . ,_,

aleU1h

ACROSS

Bath:

llom&gt;w Small. Contact
111t Ohio Division of

Olllco

Crossword

BRIDGE

SUNSHINE CLUB

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
74D-94g.2217

r SAID. T~IS IS

ROBUT .
BISSELL
CINSTIUmDI

A 5TI(I&lt;- UP~

STK~UP, WMW!

1HIS IS A)Tl(K-UP(

'

• New Homes
• G~rages

• Complete
Remodeling

J40·9&amp;2-1m
Stop &amp; .Compare

~=;;;:::::::~~===~==~

GARFIELD

Manley's
Recycling

SORRY
IA81)UT OUR
TONIGHT,

•w•..

1113 II Ill·
•n.n 45111
7.....2.....
... IIII.IIfiMIItil-.6. . .

.............2:11 ..

····-·-.........
,PIYIIIII TOP PIICES Ill
CIIIMic Cllllrlln.

e...

lllltn.......
ICIII'tl Clii•IPrlclll

.

.

GRIZZWELLS

~~T1b
~A

ClUS

IT WAS
PIFFERENT

I'VE NEVER SEEN A
RESTAURANT RON 001'
OF FOOJ;~ BEFORE

Thui'Hiy, Aug. 23, 2007
By Bemlce Bade 0.01
One of the grea1est assets you'll•have Is
an awareness of how ·the picture In life
can qutcldy change. Having this complete understanding giV88 you a sense of
timing for taking action that leads 10 success
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - · It may
seem that your lnterets might have to
take a backseat to almost everyone you
know both at home and at work . It won't
help to get angry about It, just grin and
bear It
UBRA (Sept . 23·0ct. 23) - SUtx:lue
incllrlations to make over In your own
Image those With whom you share your
time . tt you can't appreciate them tor who
they are, sometNng may bB lacking In
you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -Take care
not to be overly lnltuenced by an associ·
ate or acquaintance who has a habit of
taking speculative risks and claims
always to be a biQ wlnn8r. lt may be wishf41 thinking.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) - As
long as you stay within your own llmlta!lons. you should be able to handle a
matter better on your own than turn ing it
over to another. There's no guarantee he
or she can do It better.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22·Jan . 19) Foolishly Olierestimating your own abifl·
ties could cause you to bite ott more than
you can chew. Should you get Into some·
thing way over your - head, don't be
embarrassed to call tor help.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) .- It you
overextend yourself in a business proposition and lind that you're losing far more
money than you had ant icipated, It might
be best to cut your losses Instead of
coughing up more.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) - Be careful not to take your frustrations out on
loved ones just because you feel outmaneuvered by the outside world and don't
know wl'iat to do about II . Let time handle
things.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) - Don't be
embarrassed to bring in someone who
lias expertise with somethlnQ beyond
your scope of knOW"Ied98. If you try to
work on the issue on your own, you'll
only have to scrap lt.
.
TAURUS (Apri120-May 20)- You're Nke·
ly to lind yoursell In an embarrass ing
position if you hang out with those who
hsv9 money to burn on frivolous activities . Find something else to do thai Isn't
so expensive.
GEMINI (May 2t.June 20) -Although
you are usually: an Etf&amp;yQolng person,
you are likel)' to taka offense with soma·
one you believe Ia narrowing your tree·
dom and limiting your action. Watch your
temper.
CANCER (June 2t.July 22) - Unleaa
you keep your mind on what you are
dOing , you could bOtch up an Important
job and then act 11.1 If 11 11 everybOdv
e111'1 leult . Bener Mid your tongue;
you 're going 10 need IIIOCIIIII .
LEO !July 23-Aug. 221-111/0U como oH
to others u btlng much tmlntr, bttter
or greater then they art, dOn't ce tur·
pr1atd It they begin to ltlt your atrtngthl
and put you on the tpot morw than once.
SOUP TO NUTZ

l

A PRINT NUMsERED lEnERS
':1 IN THESE SQUARES

SCIAMUTS ANSWIIS

a~ 11 ~o 1

Unkind- Occur- Peony~ Quaittt- ANCIENT
"I remember my childhood," the lldy mUMCI to ber tiatd. "It's
dtat time in your tife wlteo you lbittk 1t1yooe over 30 Is
ANCIENT."
ARLO&amp;JANIS

I ~Jte.D eoxe,5 ro PACIC €&gt;1UFI'
10 TAKE. !ll lUE. DORM'

�Page B6 •

J

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

\

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Beijing officials: 4-day traffic ban cleared the air
BY CltR•lOPIIER BooEEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WlliTER

BEIJING - Despite a
persistent gray haze, officials said Thesday an exercise that removed more
than I million private vehicles a day from Beijing's
gridlocked streets was a
success that could mean a
clearer sky during next
summer's Olympics .
Humidity and wind conditions kept the pollution
from dispersing, but the air
during the four-day drill
would have been much
worse without the vehicle
restrictions,
said
Du
Shaozhong, the deputy
director of the Chinese capital's
Environmental
Protection Bureau.
"The test was successful.
These four days the wind
speed was slow, while the
humidity and temperature
were high," Du told
reporters, noting that a gray
sky doesn't necessarily
mean pollution is bad.
. Air
pollution
has
emerged as a key problem
for Beijing as ir gears up
for the Olympics, to be held
Aug. 8-24, 2008. Jammed
traffic and the possibility of
political protests by critics
of the communist regime
are also concerns, although
venue construction is firmly on schedule.
International Olympic
Committee
President
Jacques Rogge warned during. a visit this month that
the competition schedule
might have to be juggled on
days when pollution was
particularly bad.
. The government's own
statistics showed that the
air quality during the test
rated among the top 10

Reds
fromPageBl
The Braves have gone
only 19-18 since the AllStar break and lost four
games . in the standings . .
They lead the NL in road
battmg average, but weren't
able to make another big
night by the offense hold
up.
Phillips had three hits,
and Jorge Cantu drove in
three runs with a double
and single, helping the
Reds overcome deficits of
3-0 and 7-5.
Cantu was traded to the
Reds from Tampa Bay on
July 19 and was called up
from the minors on
Monday after Jeff Conine
was traded to the Mets.
"'I'm starting over,"
Cantu said. "The past is
the past. Let's leave it like
that. A fresh start is always
a good thing. I even told
my dad when I got traded,
I feel like I'm breathing
better. Now, here we go."

Tribe
from PageBl
with that pitch was pretty
special stuff," Indians manager Eric Wedge said.
Carmona (14-8) gave up
only three hits in eight
innings. He struck out five
and walked none.
"What gets lost in this
game is Carmona was fantastic," .Leyland said. "The
guys were remarking that
his stuff was tremendous."
Zumaya also was pretty
good, pttching for the first
time since May I. He threw
in the high 90s and retired
the only batter he faced. He
had been on the disabled
list with a ruptured tendon
in his ri~ht mtddle finger.
"It's mce to see that name
in the lineup card,"
Leyland said. "I wanted to
get him in and out. It was
perfect."
Fernando
Rodney
pitched a hitless eighth and
Todd Jones worked a perfect ninth for his 32nd save
in 37 chances.
Detroit' s defense helped
Jurrjens all night.
Second baseman Placido
Polanco, who missed the
P.revious six games with an
•Illness, wa·s in perfect position - shallow right field
- to catch Travis Hafner's
liner in the second inning.
In the sixth, Guillen went

"'

worst days of the month so
far - and slightly WOrse
that the same period a year
ago.
The traffic ban removed
1.3 million private vehicles
from the capital's perpetually gridlocked streets each
day. Additional buses and
subways were added !\S residents turned '' to public
transportation, car pools
and taxis.
Cars with even-numbered
license plates were ordered
off roads Friday and
Sunday, and vehicles with
odd-numbered plates were
banned
Saturday and
Monday. Emergency vehicles, taxis, buses and other
public-service
vehicles
were exempt.
Organizers of the Beijing
games bave not said exactly what they will do to
reduce traffic and emissions during the 2008
Olympics , but they are
expected to employ something similar to the scheme
just tested. Vehicle restrictions are expected to be
more . elaborate, with special bus lanes are to be set
up for athletes and officials.
Beijing had an air pollution index of between 93
and 95 during the test days,
the city's environmental
protection bureau said on
its Web site. According to
the State Environmental
Protection Agenpy, an
index below I 00 indicates
excellent or good condi·tions.
"As the air quality during
these four days reached the
national standard, it was fit
for all activities, including
sports ;" Du said .
the index hit 116
Tuesday after the test and
was II~ on Aug. 16- the

day before the trial began, surname as Li. She said she
the Chinese statistics usu'ally drives 2-3 times a
showed.
week.
Officials said a reading of
A cab driver, who only
between I0 I to 200 indi- gave his surname as Wang,
cates slight pollution and said his business did not
people with heart and respi- increase significantly, but
ratory conditions are told to he thinks the controls
avoid exenion and outdoor should be in place beyond
activi ties.
the Olympics.
"I think it's good to reguEarlier in the month, the
pollution index had dipped late by license plate numas low as 42 and generally ber. 1 think they should do
hovered in the 70s or 80s in it tong-term, so there's no
the first two weeks of congestion," he said.
August.
Traffic controls are just
Chris Miller, director of one way Olympics organizthe global warming cam- ers have tried to clear the
paign at Greenpeace , said skies. Officials have spent
the car ban was a step ih the billion~ ·of dollars closing
right dir11cti on for China, factories and moving others
but he doubted whether it out of the city. Frenzied,
showed any real commit- around-the-clock construemen! to improving air qual- tion to modernize Beijing
it~;This is a short-term will be curtailed ahead of
solution to what is a very the g~mes next summer.
acute and long-term prob- · BetJmg ts part.tcularly
tern . In some ways it just focu sed on .combating parhighlights how serious the Ucle pollutiOn, whtch can
problem really is," he said. cause breathm~ _Problems
"They will probably be and r~duced vtstblhty. That
able to get air pollution to P.olluuon ts caused by emlsat least semi-acceptable st.ons fro~ power pl~nts,
levels for a couple of weeks dtesel engmes and wmdat Olympics sites in and blown dust,. H1gh ozone
around Beijing, but the levels, whtch occur on
question is why can't they su~ny days when mtrogen
then figure out how tci oxtdes and hydrocarbons
make that happen every emitted by car tailpipes,
day?" Miller said.
·
power. plants .and factories
Beijing residents praised react m the a1r, are also a
the traffic controls saying problem.
they were necessary to ease
Zhai sa!d the restrictions
gridlock. Zhai Shuanghe, w~re wtdely respected,
an official with the city With only 5,648 cars found
.
traffic management bureau, in,;iolation.
said average traffic speeds
It demonstrates the great
on main roads rose just consciousness and civilizaover 53 percent, to about 27 lion of Beijing citizens," he
mph.
said.
"I thought it was very
good. There was an irnme- . Associated Press Writer
diate effect on the traffic," Lily Hindy in New York
said a woman who gave her contributed to this report.

Brian McCann led the
Braves with a two-run
homer off starter Bobby
Livingston, who gave up
seven runs in only 4 2-3
innings. McCann had a
grand slam in the opening
game of the series at Great
American Ball Park,
where he is 15-for-32
career with five homers.
There were plenty of hits
to go around in this one.
Mark Teixeira singled
home a run in the first
inning to get it going ,
extending his tear since he
joined the Braves in a
seven-player swap with
Texas on July 31. The first
baseman has driven in a
run in 14 of his 19 games
with Atlanta, piling up 26
RB!s overall.
Braves left-bander Jo-Jo
Reyes, called up from
Triple-A to start the game,
tasted only 2 2-3 innings.
The Reds scored five times
in the third, when Reyes
walked three batters to set
the rally in motion.
Cantu 's two-run double
made it 5-3.

Reyes implied that plate
umpire Gerry Davis had a
small strike zone that contributed to his problems.
·"I felt good out there
today," Reyes said. "I
threw the pitches I wanted
to thro~. I got more outs
than (w11l .~how up) m the
box score.
.
Andruw. Jones tnpl~d
~o.me a ~atr of runs to tte
It m the f1fth, and McCann
followed with his second
homer in two games.
Phillips hit a solo homer
off Ron Matlay in the
fifth, and Cantu singled
home another run to tie it
at 7 later in the inning.
Phillips broke the tie an
inning later with his single
to right field - Jeff
Francoeur threw Jeff
Keppinger out at the plate
as he tried to score from

.deep into the shortstop hole
to make a backhand stop
and rob Blake of a hit with
an off-balance throw after
Kenny Lofton walked and
stole a base.
"That was a great baseball
~me," Leyland said. "I
guess it's easy for me to say
that because we won."
Notes: The last time the
Indians were part of a fourhit game was April 18,
1971,
against
the
Washington Senators. ...
Wedge said LHP Aaron
Laffey
would
start
Saturday against Kansas
City. Laffey, currently with
Triple-A Buffalo, is 1-1
with a 5.73 ERA in two
starts with Cleveland. His
record in Buffalo is 9-3
with a 3.08 ERA. ...
Leyland said LHP Andrew
Miller will start Friday
against the Yankees and
Roger Clemens in the
opener of a four-game
series in Detroit. Miller is
on the 15-day disabled list
with a hamstring strain, but
was impressive in a three- ·
inning
rehabilitation
appearance with Triple-A
Toledo on Monday night.
... Detroit 3B Ryan Raburn
started ahead of Brandon
Inge, but was replaced by
lnge in the seventh .... The
teams are sc heduled to play
one more series after this
one ends Thursday, with a
three-game set Sept. 17-19
in Cleveland.

second on the hit.
Notes: The Braves put
LHP Chuck James on the
15-day DL because of
· tightness in the back of his
pitching shoulder. James
was originally scheduled
to. start on Tuesday. .. .
They · also gave RHP
Tanyon Sturtze his unconditional release. He hasn't
made it back from shoutder surg~ry last year. ...
OF Norr!s Ho~pe~ led ?ff
the Reds f1rst m~mg with
hts 14th bunt ~mgle: ; ..
The Reds haven t dec1de~
who w1ll take LHP Phtl
Dumatrait's spot i~ the
rotatmn .. He was opttoned
to the mmors Tuesday and
replaced by rehever Kuk
Saarloos. .. . Keppinger
extended his hitting streak
to a career-high 10 games.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,11( I '\ 1"1•\ul. , --. :\o

''''" •• · .lt~l•-..••• 1 •• "1. •II•

For111er t~cher sentenced.on drug charge

··High school football
.previews. See Page 81

· Hans~n . 32, will begin
his SEPTA Center sentence
in ~ October. He was senPOMEROY - Nathan tenced in Meigs County
Hansen was sentenced to a Common Pleas Court earlisix-month confinement in er this month.
the
Southeastern
In June, Hansen pled
Probationary
Treatment guilty to corrputing another
Alternative Center in with drugs, a founh-degree
Nelsonville after pleading felony, carrying a maxiguilty to charges he provid- mum sentence of 18
ed a minor with drugs.
months in jail. and a maxiBY BRIAN J. REED ·

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1\P photo

Bonds' 756th home run
ball is going to auction
dent of SCP Auctions.
.The ball from Bonds '
755th home run hit Aug. 4
SAN FRANCISCO - in San Diego also wilf be
No. 756 is going to auction. for sale on the site. The
Barry Bond~' record- same company sold the .
breaking home run ball will balls from Bonds' 700th
be sold online, and fortu- homer and No. 715 that
nate fan Matt Murphy fig- passed Babe Ruth .for sec·
ures to be a half-million ond place last season.
dollars richer.
Everyone involved hopes
The 21-year-old New the buyer of the historic
York man said Tuesday he balls is willing to at least
had no choice but to sell share them for a period of
the ball - several people time - if not .donate 'them
told him he would be taxed altogether - with the Hall
·on the valuable s.ouvenir if of Fame in Coopers!own,
he holds onto it.
N.Y.
. "It wasn't hard. It was
"I really hope the person
s1mple math. I'm upset by who does buy it is in posithe decision I liad to tion to loan it," Murphy
make," Murphy said. "I said, a security guard close
wanted to keep it. I'm by him during a news conyoung. I don't have the . ference at a restaurant near
bank account. ... !t would the ballpark. "Two weeks
have cost me a lot more to ago, history was made. I
keep it."
was lucky enough to be in
Bonds
broke
Hank the house."
Aaro·n·s record of 755 with
Murphy plans to share at
a shot into the right-field least some of the proceeds
seats on Aug. 7 against the with a friend who attended
the Giants game with him.
Washington Nationals.
Sotheby's/SCP Auctions They were in iown for
will handle the sale at brief stopover on a trip to
ww_w.~cpauctions . com Australia w~en Murphy
begmnmg Aug: 28 and wound up w1th the lucky
gmng through Sept. 15. prize.
The starting bid has not
Murphy left the ball in
been determined, and auc- safekeepmg with a bank in
tion officials estimated the San Franctsco during his
ball would bring at least more than weeklong trip to
$500,000.
Australia. He returned to
"This is the most historic the Bay Area on Sunday to
baseball ever to be sold," make arrangements for the
said David Kohler, presi- ball.

a

Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
or call 992·2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.

1 Col. X 3" Weekday
$19.35
Sunday ,
$29.61

2 Col. x 4''
Weekday
$51.60
Sunday
$78.96

OBITUARIES
· Page AS
• Ruth .Helen Cross, 84
..•.~~~ St~ams, 84
· ·. •, Kenneth Well, 57

• GAR ladies lay
wreath at PorUand
park monument.
See Pege A3
• Locai woman
graduates with honors.
See Page A3
• Longaberger
consultants attend
annual meeting.
See Page AS
•· For the Record.
:See Page AS
• Rodders Car Club
. show to fill Poinrs Main
: Street. See Page A&amp;
• Law You Can Use.
·See Page AS

Lacal

Auditor finalizes
'Women's Health Day'
begins journey in Portland second-half settlement

WEATHER

2 Col. x 2"
Weekday
$25.80
Sunday

16 PAGI!S

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Places to go

B3

Sports
Weather

RUTLAND Susan
Baker has resigned her position as Rutland's fiscal officer with Sewer and Water
Clerk Joyce Frye stepping
.into Baker's shoes.
Council
"regre.tfully"
accepted Baker's resignation
which she said was due to
added ~esponsibilities at her
full tiine job as Middlepon
Village Clerk as well as a
health crisis in the family.
, Baker said she just didn't
have enough time to devote
i'
to her duties in Rutland.
Baker was hired last year
on '"II part.,time basis and
works Ill!. l.cJ'' 2-:Qa·ir~peif&lt;ldc~t;
.
two week P·
·
Council
give Frye,
who has
workin$ with
Baker, the opportumty to
step into the fiscal officer's
job by increasing her hours
from 60 hours per pay period
to 80. Baker also agreed to
help Frye make the transition by offering free training.
Brandon Hannlnll on Strata Jete A Tumln
Council also accepted the
resignation
of
Councilwoman
Amber
Snowden who resigned her
seat after moving to Athens
'.
STAFF
REPORT
Hanning,
the
16-year-old
son
of
On
Aug. 12 Hanning competed at
to pursue her education at
NEWSIIMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
John
and
Kathie
Hanning
of
Pomeroy,
the
NBHA
Colonial Nationals in
Oh10 University.
·
was
reserve
champion
in
the
youth
Lexington,
Va.
and was named Youth
One of Baker's last offiPOMEROY
Brandon
Hanning
of
competition
in
both
2005
and
2006.
Reserve
Champion
for the third year
cial duties was to prepare
. a' row.
Pomeroy
was
the
winner
of
two
state
He
and
his
horse,
Strate
Jets
A
10
the 2008 budget 'which
He is currently being sponsored by
council approved: The bud- championships at the recent Ohio Turnin, won cash prizes for each of
State
NBHA
competition
held
at
the
their
qualifying
and.
finals
races
over
N
utrena,
the official feed of the
get projects the v11lage may
Roberts
Arena
in
Wilmington.
the
weekend,
two
halters,
two
trophy
NBHA;
Jennifer
and Mike McBride,
have a general fund which
First
he
won
the
2007
Ohio
NBHA
saddles,
and
two
Wild
Cards
to
the
Shade
River
Ag
Service;
Angie Dahse,
is $13,000 in the red at the
Youth.
Championship
and
then
a
few
World
Championships.
The
pair
are
Four
Seasons
Veterinary
Clinic; and
end of 2008. To put this fighours
later
ran
the
fastest
time
of
the
only the ·second in the history of the Lynnie
Anderson,
BioZyme
ure in perspective, the genweekend
to
win
the
2007
Ohio
State
NBHA
to
win
both
the
youth
and
open
Incorporated.
Hanning's
farrier,
Mike
eral fund was nearly
Open
Championship.
championships
at
the
~tate
finals.
Douglass,
keeps
his
horse
ready
to
run.
$60,000 in the red in 2006.
Council discussed the
water tank fund which has
$2,220.93 in it at this time.
The money was accumulated by collecting $1 per
water customer per month.
The fee has since been disSTAFF REPORT
continued after council
BY BE1H SERGENT
Dexascan screenings to test for
NEWS@MYOAILYSEN TI NEL.COM
voted not to install the water
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM
Osteoporosis risks.
tank. Counci I has decided,
Holzer Medical Center will be
POMEROY - Meigs County townships
after consulting the state
POMEROY "Women's doing free cholesterol and blood received a quarter-million dollars and villages just
auditor's office, to use that Health Day" which is being sugar testing, while Pleasant
money to recoup costs the sponsored by the Meigs County Valley Hospital will be doing over $100,000 in the distribution of secohd-half
village incurred during the Cancer Initiative (MCCI) will free hemoglobin blood iron tests. real estate taxes. .
Meigs County Auditor Mary Byer-Hill reponed
development of the project. offer health screenings, many of
Linda
King
and
Joyce
Brown
the
figures from the distribution, based on a total
Mayor . April
Burke them free or low cost, on of The OS(,) Extension Office
of
$3
,657,544.71 in real estate taxes paid for the
informed council the United Wednesday, Sept. 5 at the will be available to discuss
second-half
of 2007 collections.
States Postal Service will be Portland Community Center.
women's
nutrition
and
how
to
The
county
general
fund · received
paying for the relocation of
Appointments
and
screeneat
healthy.
$427.653.7lfrom the settlement. The general fund
the Rutland Post Office's
ings
will
be
given
from
9:30
Andrew
Brumfield,
exercise
pays
for operation of courthouse offices and the
sewer grinder to its new
to
noon
and
I
p.m
.
to
3:30
physiologist
with
the
Meigs
sheriff's
department. based on appropriations made
a.m.
location.
in
January
by Meigs County Commissioners.
on
Ser.t.
5.
County
Health
Department,
p.m.
Burke announced the vilOther
transfers
from the real estate collections
A
mobtle
mammography
will
be
there
to
discuss
how
lage received a $1 ,000 donawent to the followin g special revenue departtion from the Bartrum screening unit from the Ohio exercise can impact a person's. ments:
Real Estate Assessment. 94,364,
State
University
will
be
availhealth.
He
will
be
calculating
Brown Foundation for
Real Estate Tax Assessment and
Delinquent
able
by
appointment
with
some
body
mass
indexes.
repairs or equipment needed
Collection
(Treasurer) , 3,287.76, DRETAC
Meigs
County
women
qualifyThere
will
also
be
an
"ask
a
for the Rutland Civic Center.
(Prosecuting
Attorney), 3,287. 75. Tuberculosis,
Village offices have still ing for low or no cost mammo- nurse station" available at the
EMS,
158,329.64,
MR/DD.
not _moved to the log cabin grams. Call Norma Torres 992- event for general health related 34,831.11,
345.473.69,
and
Board
of
Health,
75.450.06.
2161
to
make
an
appointment.
·
questions.
due to a leak. Councilman
Warrants were issued to townships in the following
RSVP volunteers will also be
Jake Thomas said offices Women with health insurance
amounts,
totaling $257,462.34: Bedford. 7,210.02:
helping with the event which
need to be moved by winter will also be accepted.
Chester,
3
I ,534.83; Columbia, 22,706.88; Lebanon,
In addition to the mammo- will visit the F.eedsville Fire
to cut down on utility costs.
13,250.18;
Letart, 13,829.27; Olive, 11.080.56;
Councilman Lowell Vance grams, the Ohio University's Department on Oct. 9 and the Orange, 23,735.59;
Rutland, 36,043.36; Salem,
County
Health
said he knew someone who Community Service Program Meigs
18,123.92:
Scipio.
12,655.21;
and Sutton. 24.933.91.
will
give
pap
smears
and
pelvic
Department
on
Nov.
8.
could fix the leak and would
Village
distributions
totaling
$ 103, 196 .9 1:
exams
by
ap~ointment
only.
The
event
is
meant
to
take
look into repairs.
Middleport,
25,269.2
1;
Pomeroy,
39.522.58;
Councilman Dean Harris Call Janice Smtth at 1-800-844- free health screenings and serRacine,
14,542.79;
Rutland.
4.562.13:
Syracuse,
moved and council voted to 2654 to schedule an appoint- vices 10 the people, making
ment and find out if you qualify them available in areas where . 19.300.20.
send a letter to Village for
low or no cost services.
School districts , totalin g 2,090, 7 18.03 :
Solicitor John Lentes asking Women with health insurance there normally are limited
Alexander,
210.8 10.19: Eas tern, 364, t t 0.32:
health care choices.
him to respond to village
Meigs,
823,433.13;
Southern. 638,417.02:
also be accepted.
In addition to these services.
concerns or resign. Burke will
River Rose from O'Bleness
University of Rio Grande, 36,809.79; and Tri ·
Please see Rutland, AS
Hospital will be giving free
Please 'see Health, AS
County JVS , 17,137.58.

.

INSIDE

2 SBCFIONS -

Sunday $59.22

was placed on administrative leave when he was first
charged In February. As a
term of his plea bargain
agreement and his sentence,
he is restrained from
employment or volunteering with minors .
Because Hanson pled
guilty to a drug offense, his
operator's license was suspended for six months.

BY BE1H SERGENT

INDEX

Weekday $38.70

the charge of contributing to
the delinquency of a minor.
The sentences were suspended and Himsen was
ordered to complete the sixmon.th SEPTA program.
Hansen was a nine-year
teacher at Meigs High
School, and resigned his
position after he was
charged providing marijuana to an underage girl. He

BSERGENTIPMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detail• on P81• A8

2 Col.
x 3"
•

mum fine of $5,000, and
contributing to the delinquency of a minor. a firstdegree misdemeanor, with
a maximum sentence of six
months and a maximum
fine of $1,000.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
sentenced Hansen to 18
months on the charge of
corrupting another with
drugs, and six months on

Baker resigns
as Rutland
Fiscal Officer

BY JANIE MCCAULEY
AP SPORTS WRITER

· Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.

Borders and Arlwork

\l ( , l Sl ....!.:~ -~ ·uo -

SPORTS

Matt Murphy, 21, smiles as he is photographed with Barry
Bonds' record breaking 756th home run ball at a news conference in San Francisco on Tuesday. The ball will be sold
online, and Murphy figures to be a half-million dollars richer.

SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...

1 Col. x 2" Weekday
$12.90
Sunday
$19.74

llll R~l•\'

''

•

Meigs County Fair hThank You" Ads

2 Col. X 5"
Weekday
$64.50
Sunday
$98.70

Foothills Festival
features musicians,
artists, B3

Fall Sports Guide
inside today's Sentinel

B Section

A8

© 0007 Ohio Valley PubUshlng Co.

- - - - -- - - -·· - - -

..__ _ _

~

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="533">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9984">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="15619">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="15618">
              <text>August 22, 2007</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
