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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, July 25,

'

'

2005

Hornish bumps way to IRL victory~
WEST ALL1S, Wis. (AP) pion and coming off a victory
- Sam Hornish Jr. had to last week at Nashville. when
pass Daria Franchitti twice in Homish todched wheels with
the waning laps Sunday Marlboro Team Penske teambefore pulling away for a · mate Helin Castroneves ,
hard-earned victory in the sending the Brazilian driver
A.J. Foyt 225 at the into the wall and bringing nut
Milwaukee Mile.
another cauti0n !lag on lap
Hornish. a two-tin1e Indy 186.
Racing League champion. · Harnish re,taned fou rth
dominated early in · the race, when tile grw&lt;1 llag waved
but slipped back on a hot , again on lap 1\16. but ho
slippery trac·k before coming &lt;.JU\ckly pa.&gt;Sed series poi_nt&gt;
on strong at the end to grab leader Dan Wheldon fur third
his second win or the season rtacc . chased down and
and the 14th of his career. · passed Kanaan for second on
With tem peratures soarin g lap 20 I af1d bme down on.
into tl1c mid -'IOs. there were Franc hitti .
'
The two leaders touched
several cr,hhes. includin~
one hy rookk sensatioli wheels once as Horni'h tried
Danica Patrick. who came to get outside Franchini on
away uninjured.
lap 208. He finally did get tile
During the caution period lead on lap 2 11 and began to
after Buddy Rice crashed on pull away. But Horni sl1 's
lap 16 7, Andretti Green work was far from done as he
Racing diose to keep slid high into turn one on lap
Franchitti and reigning· 213, barely keeping from hitIndyCar Series ,champion ti iig the wall and allowing
Tony Kanaan on the track Franchini tu retake the lead.
while the rest of the leaders
But. with Franchini sti ll
pitted - hoping one of them trying dcsp~rately to conwotrld win by conserving serve
fuel.
Hon1ish
fuel to the end.
regrouped and chased him
It appeared .!he strategy down once more. easily
might work for Franchitti,the charging past on lap 217 and
defending Milwaukee cham· pulling away to win by 0.384

..

photo
Cleveland Indians' Victor Martinez. right, throws out Seattle Mariners' Michael Morse for the
final out in the ninth inning Sunday in Cleveland. Indians' pitcher Bob Wickman, left , watches.
The Indians won 6-3. · ·
· AP

Cleveland .doubles up Mariners, 6-3
CLEVELAND (APJ Kevin Millwood won for the
first time in five July starts
and Victor Martinez h.it a
three-iun homer. helping the
Cleveland Indians beat the
Seattle Mariners 6-3 Sunday.
Martinez had three hits. His
II th homer. off reliever JJ .
Putz in the seventh inning.
gave Millwood more runs
with one swing than the
Indians have averaged in the
right-hander's 18 starts.
Millwood (4-9) snappeu his
four-game ·losing ,;trcak. The
Indians had been shut out
three times and scored a total
of two runs in those games.
The right-hander. averaging
only 2.7 runs a game of support. gave liP two runs- one
earned - and three hits over
7 2-~ innir1gs. He walked tw.o
and struck out five.
Cleveland improved to only
5-12 since July 5.

Mariners starter Aaron Sele
(6-11) dr()pped liis sixth
straight start and remained
winless si nce mid-Jtllle as
Seatt le l'ost for the tifth time
111 ~ 1x games.
Jhonny Peralta singled
home a run to put Cleveland
ahead 1-0 in the tirst inning
- the first time Millwood
had a lead in 26 1-3 innings .
The right-hander promptly
gave it back. as Richie Sexson
hit a ~-2 pitch for his 23rcl
homer leadi1f-,l otJ the second.
That made Sexson 6-for-14
(.429) with three h'omers ai1d
nine RBis in his career
against Millwood. who reti red
the first baseman the next two
time's up - once on a foul
popup :rnd then on :r drive that
Coco Crisp caught at the base
·of the left-tield wall.
Seattle &lt;eored an unearned
run in the third to go ahead 21. Randy Winn hit a leadoff

advanced on a
~roundout and scored when
Adrian Be ltre 's two-out Iine
drive glanced off center fielder Grady Sizemore's glove for
an error.
Martinez singled to ,start the
sixth, took third on a double
by Ben Broussard and sco'red
on a sacritice !ly by Ronnie
Belliard to tie it at · 2. Casey
Blake delivered another sac
!ly ·otT Jtrlio Mateo to score
Broussard with the go-ahead
run .
Sele gave up three runs and ·
eight hits in 5 1-3 ' inn ings,
falling to 0-6 since-a 5-1 victory (lVer th e Phil&lt;~delphia
Phillies on June 15. The righthamler is 5-I 0 in his career
against Cleveland and has not
defe ated the Indian s si nce
Sept 7. 1999.
Beltre snapped an 0-for-14
slump with a homer in the
ninth oil Bob Wickman.
.·

from Page Bl
Martin , who may be extending his farewell tour another
year. both made , hurd
charges. Wallace even led
most of the last few laps and
made it seem possible he
could tie Bill Elliott for most
career. wins .at Pocono.
Busch pushed Walliice
hard and seemed poised to
take the lead when th e caution came out for debris
from Matt Ken seth 's car. so
Wallace kepi his spot up
front with 33 laps left.
Hi s car just didn 't have
enough left.
·
Jeff Gordon finished 13th
and Dale Earnhardt Jr. was
two laps off the leader in

Day PiCnic Held, A3

•

was onl' vf those 1hin g~ I

Car in Victory Lane.' '
T&lt;lllH" Scheckter wound
up third. fo llowed by
Kanaan , Wheldon and Bryan
Herta. the last driver on the
lead la p. Rookie Patrick
Carpenlier. was sevenrh, one
lap down to the leaders,
Patrick wa' &gt;ixth nnd running )t ron g wheit her car suddenl y spun out and slammed
hard 'rear-end l'irst into the
tlrrn two wall on lap 126.
Patrick. the onlv woman racing in the · tndyCar Series,
!'iaiJ she hild no warning
bet(l!'e the crash.

SPORTS
• Smith-agrees to $57
million deal. See Page 81

·Council accepts bid for repaving Pomeroy

32nd place as two of was mostly th e result of
NASCAR's most sucec&gt;SI'ul ovenrggress ivc
uri ving,
drivers are runriin~ out of NASC AR tri ed another
time to crac k th.c tr1p 10. i'n approach by installing a
NASCAR's chase for the. curb in side Tur:n 2 that
Nextel Cup Championship.
seemed to give some drivers
· Busch, who also won at and their tires tits.
Phoenix . had his seve nth
Gordon and Wallace were
top-five finish and success- among the dri vers who sti ll
fully navigated a Pocono . blasted the tra.:k\ cc\ndition
track that was sharply criti- · even after th e alterations.
cized by drivers thi' week- thopglr the curb and th e
small. patched turn faile d to
end.
NASCAR had the track gil'c the drivers any 'criou'
patched near the treacherous prohlems on Sunday.
tun'nel turn 'hefore the race
after it was d ~lmag ed in
,; ll· s pre tt y rough over
Saturdav\ ARCA stiick -car th ere." Mallin said.
'
When
Kvic
Bu sc h
race. ~.:ausing
sumc pre~racc
CO/Kern from ll few dri vcrs . sli.llllll!Cd int &lt;&gt; . the turn ·one
Th e track's rcputa'tinn. Widl with 50 laps left . it wus
alreauy took a hit after the first nia jor acc ident of
.June· .. ,. race when dri ve rs the race allJ.hrougbt oul the
were victirnized by blown or cauti11n. There were few tire
cut tire's.
woes though there were five
While so.n1e drivers said it stra ight debr is caution s. .

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8880 UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
(740) 593-3279 I (800) 710-1917 (TOLL FREE)

'-.

• Frank Cleland, 84
• Ruth Gilbert
• Arthur Strauss, 96

• Chautauqu1!'s collectible
Babe Ruth bear awarded.
See Page A3
• Local scouts off to
National Jamboree.
Se9 Page A3
• Golf Scramble Planned
for Health Center building
·fund. See Page A3
• Meigs native recipient
of faculty-staff contribution
award. See Page A3
• Local briefs.
Se9 Page AS
·• For the record.
Se9 Page AS .
• ExxonMobil-partners
with OU researchers.
'See Page A6
• County recognized
for claim management.
See Page A6
• . Retires from OVEC.
:See Page A6

www.tubcadet.com

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INDEX
Sr,c noNS -

THE SCIENCE OF mMMON SENSE.

12

P.• m:s

A3 .

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

B2-4
Bs

A3
A4

Editorials

I 1 'o fA¥ ynur .., r rruM P•l lf•r-• t~ JOUI dc f! ~~I • hr IW'&gt; "~"· '·••

'1'1"1'"'"''
.
;•I .,, .~ o.l•··~·e\l10UII'IOO••o~-•~•••• • ot"'aal•• •C t . f '""f'll0~'t11N

Deputies seize pot plants
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Sheriff's
deputies seized ma.rijuana
plants from two residences
while conducting other business . Sheriff Robert Beegle
reported Monday.
Beegle said deputies were
attempting to serve a bench
warrant on .vincent King of
Pomeroy, and found marijua- .
na plants growing, near the
rear of the residei1ce . King

BY CHARLENE HOEFl.ICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2

As

Obituaries
Sports

B Section
A(i

Weather
rc , :tOO,'} Ohin \'11IIL•y
'

In other council business:
The following renewal
levies were approved for the
November ballot: a 2-mil
levy for fire protection. a 1mil levy for general street
lighting. a 1-mil levy for the
cemetery.
Resolution 22.05 was
approved
transferring
$5,0()0 from the genera l to
the street fund.
Councifman
George
Wright
asked
Street
· Superintendent Jack Krautter
aboUt pliJcing sealer in cracks

Please see Repavl11g. AS

Middleport
council
considers
change in
health plan

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Village
Employees who do not ·participate in the village's health
insurance plan will be paid
more in wages~ if an ordinance
introdooed
to·
Middleport Village Council
is approved.
The first reading on the
ordinance took place Monday
evening. and two o.ther read- ..
ings will follow. The ordi·
nance provides a cash payment of $160 per month for
salaried employees and an
additional $ 1 per hour for
hourly employee s for · those
employees who choose not to
enroll in the plan.
· The . amount to be paid
those employees who opt out
nf the insurance plan dqes
not rellect the cos t of insurance
policy. but is ,;much
•
Brian J. Reed/photo
less,'' Fiscal Officer Susan
Pomeroy Councilman Jim Sisson and Robert Robie of Robie Construction of Pomeroy finished the concrete for a new basBaker sa id.
ketball court in the Sugar Run Park, located off Mechanic Street. The court. largely built with donated materials and labor.
Council President Stephen
is the first of several developments the village ~opes for the park, Sisson said, and donations and mater~als are be ing
Please see Council,.AS
accepted for the project.

was charged with possession
of marijuana, and served with
a warrant charging him with
disorderly conduct. ·
Deputies were investigating a complaint of loud
music at the Middleport
home of Chris Capehart, and
located 20 plants there,
Beegle said. The plants were
seized as e.vidence and
charges in County Court are
pending.

Plees!l! see Plants, AS

Meigs Countian .to be
honored as medical pioneer

Details on Page A6

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and general fund.
By purcha sing thy property as opposed to a lend-lease
arrangement the deed will
be trimsferred into the village 's name anu save on
property taxes.
Mayor John Mu &gt;scr said the
building wi ll be used for star.-ing a varie1y of village property including equipment,
salt, blacktop, gravel. street
lights. park benches and parking meters.
Council accepted a low bid
of $2650 for two garage
doors for the Spring Vttlley
Lane building .

BY BRIAN J. REED ·
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS

WEATHER

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE .
LANCASTER, OH 43130
(740) .653-2827 /(BOO) 710-1921 (TOLL FREE)

Streets. Also included is the
area · near the (lomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department.
The repaving project should
· begin in two weeks. or less.
Cou ncil al.so approved
· enter.ing into a mortgage
agreemen t with Associated
Fabricators to purchase a new
storage building on Spring
Valley Lane.
The property will cost the
village $750 per · month for
seven years and will be
financed through Associated
Fabricators. Payments will
be made via funds from the
street and water departments

OBITUARIES

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

•

·Street falls under the jurisdic·
tion of the Meigs County
Highway Department and
according to Mayor John
Musser will not be paved
.until next year. Musser did
indicate that the highway
department will be patching
East Main Street.
The following is an incomplete list of streets to be
repaved: Union Terrace,
Second.
Wolfe
Drive,
Fourth , Fifth, Seventh,
Sycamore, Condor, L.inn,
Court,
Fisher.
Wright,
Osborne, Las ley, Cherry,
Buckeye. and Mechanic

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BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTtNEL. COM

POMEROY - · The drive
through Pomeroy is about to
become a little smoother after
Pomeroy Village Council
accepted a bid for repaving
some of the village 's streets.
The bid, submitted by
Blacktop Corporation for
$156,091.25, was accepted at'
last night's council meeting.
Their b.id was $17,296 less
than the closest competitor.
West _Main · Street to the
Middleport corporation limit
will be repaved. East ·Main

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seconds - about three car
lengths.
The winner led a race-high
123 laps, giving team owner
Roger Pemike hi' sixth
Milwaukee victory.
"The car was a little hit of a
handful lbday with the heat
ami the ,li(mcry conditions."
Horni'h said. "There were a
lot of close calls out there.
It 's great to get a win for the
team but it's too bad that
Hcl io and I got toget ber. We
run each 11thcr hard and It

double.

Busch

..

'

~ubli;'hin~ Co.

POMEROY
Larry
Trivieri, an internationally
known e~pert and author, ,has ·
identified Sharry Edwards of
near Albany as one of the true
pioneers in the field of energy
medicine, spec itically the use
of sound as a diagnostic management tool.
•
One of Trivieri 's latest publications, Health on the Edge:
Visionary Views of Healing
ln the New Millennium.
includes a chapter about the
emerging fiefd of Human
BioAcoustics developed by
Shalry Edwards. a 1\)ng· time
proponent of alternative med-

icine and a life-lopg resident
of Meigs County.
Trivieri and other di gni taries will be in Athens for an
August conference that will
honor Edwards for her work
in developing a novel mathe matical model of frequency
biomarkers that are being
used to extrapolate data pertaining to inqividual health
and wellness.
"I've been very fortunate in
having worked with literally
hundreds of the world's •top
physicians and researc hers in
thi's field, "Triv.ieri says, "and
I know that answers and solutions exist right now for all f!f
the health problems currentl y

. Pleese see PlonHr, ·AS
'

EHS .freshntan to represent
Meigs in State Fair ,horse show
Bv CHARLENE HoEA.tCH
HOEFLICH@MYOAtLYSENTINEL.COM

CHESTER
· Alyssa
Newland who will be a
freshman at Eastern High
School this fall has qualified
to repre'se nt Meigs County at
the Ohio State Fair 4-H
horse show.
. She
will
be
there
Wednesday and Thursday
participating ir) the competition with her quarter horse.
"A Rock in My · Sock .:·
Newland and her equine part·
ner qualified in showmanship
and hunt seat equitation at the
P.A.S . qualitied' show held in
Jackson-on Jul y 16.
This will be Newland 's
second trip to the State Fair
to compete. In 2003 with her
horse. "All Americ·un Bow•·
she earned reserve chan1pion
showmanship ••grand champi on hunt seat equitation. and
received the "Ou tstanding
Youth of the Day"'award.
The 15-yeur-old is the
daughter of Grant and kinda
Newland and i' a member of
the Klassy Klovers 4-H Club.
"I've been riding since I
was old erlO.ugh to sit up:·
said Newland as she talked
about her experience in riding and 4-H work .

�'"

.

.

. .

Page.A2

The Daily Sentind

'

.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

_
White House warns Democrats not to ask for too many Roberts documents
BY JENNIFER LOVEN
ASSOCIATED P~ESS WRITER

WASHINGTON The
White House on Monday
warned Democrats not to
make extensive reques!s for
Supreme Court nominee )ohn
Roberts' legal writings i'n previous Republican administrations, saying many such documents are "out of bo~nds.''
· - 'Separately, the Supreme
Court nominee wa~d off
questions about _whether he
was a member of a conservative
legal
organization.
Roberts, on his fourth day
paying courtesy calls on sen' ators, hasn't answered question s since President Bush
' announced him - as is typical for nominees· - and one
· Democratic senator said the ·
matter wouldn't affect the
AP Photo
-confirmation. • ·
u.s.·supreme
Court
nominee
John
Roberts,
left,
meets
with
Sen.
Dianne
Feinstein,
D-Calif
.. at
With Bush's tirst chance to
shape the Supreme Court at her office on Capitol Hill, Monday, in Washington.
stake. the White House is
hoping to avoid the kind of as the Senate prepares to R,oberts was a lawyer in ' the D-Mass .. not a member of tl:le
showdown with Democrats dec ide whether to confirm White House counsel's office. commillee , was the fi r&gt;t to
over document requests th&lt;tl Roberts as Bush's replace- Under the first Preside nt urge the White House to
Ropert s' written
has stym ied Senate cuntirma- ment for retiring Ju stice Bush.· Roberts was pri ncipal release
record
"in
its entirety."
tion of some of the presi- Sandra Day O'Conno~~
deputy soli citor general. a
McClellan suggested that
dent's other high-profile
Democrats have offered no key position in the office that
nominees. Asked repe&lt;ttedly indication that · they plan an argues cases before the many - if not a ll - such
to sav whether the adminis- all-out battle against Roberts. · Supreme . Court on behalf of documents would .be withlleld, say ing that past admit]·
tration was open to making But &gt;ince his: two-year .tenure the administration.
Roberts' writings as a former on the federal bench has left · Some records already are istrations .have also concluded
admini stration lawyer avail- him with a limited public publicl y available at the they arc shie-lded by attorneyable, White House press sec- record: they have hinted they Reagan and Bush presidential diem privilege and privacy.
"We hope people wouldn't
retary Swtt McClellan &lt;~Void­ may seek memos. briefs and libraries. Others still need
make
such requests that they
clear&lt;ince
from
reprcscntaother
documents
he
wrote
ed saying "no" outright.
know
are considered out of
"We want to work with the while working for tw o tives of the current president
members of the Senate to Republican presidents to shed and former administwtions, bounds and that can't be fulmake_sure thtlt they have the more light on his· stands on as required by law, and filled because of those privacy issues," he said. .
appropriate information so such key issues as abortion, · archivists.
Sen. Joseph Lieberman, DThe
Senate
Judiciary
that. they qn do their job," the environment and federal
Committee has yet to make Conn., one of the centrists
McClellan said.
· jurisdiction.
Under
President
Reaga
n,
any request. Sen. John Kerry. who stopped an earlier Senate
The issue could be critical

fight over Bu sh's judicial ity to rule without "any extranominees, urged the White neou s points of bias." .
House to be flexible.
"There is not a lot of con"l'd hate to see us get into troversy surrou nding him .
a battle over whether the There just isn't,'' Feinstem
administration was going to sai d.
share documents instead of
Also Monday, the White
the basic question of is Judge House was unable to say
Roberts deserving of confir- definitively whether Roberts
mation to be. a justice of the was a member ot the
United
Stutes · Supreme Federali st Society, an influential legal group formed _to
Court." Lieberman said.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, top counter what its members
Democrat on the Judiciary saw as growing liberalism on
Committee, said material the bench.
.
written in confidence while · A 1997-98 leade rship direcserving in an administration tory for the Federalist Society
has been provided in the past lists Roberts as a steenng
- for instance by Reagan committee member in the
when he nominated William gro up 's Washington chapter,
H. Rehnquist for chief jus- The Washing\on Post reportlice .
ed. AI the time. Roberts was
But Norm Ornstein, a polit- . a partner in a private law
ical analyst at the American firm.
Enterprise In stitute think
Roberts has acknowledged
tank, said Democrats would participating
in
Federal
be making "a stupid tactical Society events, _but McClellan
error" to demand that all of said "He has no memory of
Roberts' memos be turned eve~ joini_ng or paying dues to
o~e r. "It clearly violates the the Federalist Society."
separation of powers," he
He did not li st the
said.
Federalist Society in a ques_And Sen. Dianne Feinstein, tionnaire he submitted to the
D-Calif., said the memos, Senate when he was nominalwhich require Roberts to ed for hi s Court of Appeals
argue the position of the seat in 200 I.
administration, aren't likely
"The Republican admini sto be very important "unless tration calls for a 'fair' con- . ·
it relates t\) confirming some- tirmation proces's, but how
thing that becomes a major fair can that process be if the
question."
.
nominee and the White
.In preparation for confir- House will not be frank with
mation hearings expected to the American people?" the ,
National
begin at the end of August or Democratic
beginning of September, Committee said in an e-mail
Roberts met Monday with sent to reporters.
But Feinstein said she did
five ' senators,
including
not ask Roberts about it. "It's
Lieberman and Feinstein.
Feinstein
emerged no_t a dispositive question, in .
impressed with Roberts' abil- my view,'' she said.

'·

. Police search for five Pakistanis as VVhite House .leaves door open
·· •
for recess appotntment qf Bolton
Sha-·I·m ei-Sheik attackprobe Widens
BYTERENCEHUNT

.

, BY SARAH EL DEEB
ASSOCIATEQ PRESS WRITER

SHARM
EL-SHEIK.
'Egypt Security forces
hunted through rugged desert
mountains Mond,ay for mili- _
tants suspected in the devastating bombings in thi s Red
Sea resort, and police
search~d for five Pakistanis in
their
investigatiqn
into
. Egypt's deadliest terror
' attack.
DNA tests were being .run
on two bodies that are possibly those of bombers, one
believed to be Egyptian, the
other a foreigner, a security
official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because
of the sensitivity of the
·
inquiry. ·
Investigators were trying to
determine who carried out the
string of blasts that struck a
luxury hotel and two other
locations within a 15-minute
period before dawn Saturday.
As many as 88 people were
killed, including an American
woman.
The government sacked the
heads of security in North and
South Sinai provinces - a
sign of the failures that may
have allowed the assault on
one of Egypt's most closely
guarded towns. Sharm is an
engine of the country's _v ital
tourism indu stry, a wmter
home of the president and the
venue for many IsraeliPalestinian summits.
Police launched their desert
sweep in two areas, Rouessat
and Khorum. some 25 miles
from Sharm, after getting a
tip that suspects may have
fled there, security officials
~aid. Tiley also sPoke on condition .of ·anonymity because
of the sensitivity ofthe probe.
Officials said Sunday that
four bombers were believed
to have been involved and
that three may have escaped,
but on Monday they suggested that more attackers · may
have 'been killed and the total
numtJer involved was unclear.
·Police at . checkpoints
around the resort circulated
ph01ographs of the five
Pakistanis, apparently among
a group of mne who came to
Sharm el-Sheik from Cairo
on July 5. at least two investigators' said.
They were identified as
Mohammed Anwar, 30:
Rashid Ali, 26; Mohammed
Aref, 26: Musaddeq Hussei n.
18: and Mohammed Akht&lt;\f.
30. Post.ers bearing thejr pictures and passport numbers
were put up around Cairo.
Officials did not say the

AP WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT

been accused of mistreaJing
subordinmes·and who has been
openly skeptical about the
U.N ., would hurt U.S. efforts
to work with other countries
on global matters. Tne admin•
istration says the tough-talking
Bolton is ideally suited to ,lead
an effort to overhaul the U.N.
bureaucracy and make it more
accountable.
·
Bush could put Bolton on
the job by exercising his
authority to make a" recess
appointment, an avenue available to the president when
Congress is in recess.
Lawmakers are expected to
leave Friday for a summer
recess and not return until
Sept. 7.
'
Under the Constitution, the
appointment would last until
the end of the next session of
Congress.

The attackers are believed rainmed into the Ghaiala
men were known to be conWASHINGTON
nected to· the bombings. One to have entered Sharm from Gardens hotel , two .miles Frustrated
Senate
by •
senior ofticial sa·id the men the north through little-guard- from the first attack. A body Democrats, the White House
had overstayed their visas and ed desert roads in pickup of a_ possible bomber found hinted Monday that President
that the search for them was trucks carrying explosi'ves, · there may be a foreigner, ofti- Bush may act soon to sidestep
cials said.
part o(a wider crackdown on security otficials said.
Con~ress and install embattled
Four minutes after the nommee John Bolton as
illegal activity in the wake of
One truck headed toward
the lberotcil Hotel , at the • Ghazala blast, a bomb in a ambassador to the United
the blasts.
Involvement of Pakistani s western end of Sharm el- ·knapsack went off in a park- Nations on a temporary basis.
in Saturday's attack . would Sheik, but got caught in traf- ing about 150 yards away
White House press secretary
imply an international hand fic in the Old Market, a from the hotel, ripping into Scott McClellan said Bush has
behind them, possibly al- neighborhood frequented by people running tow.ard the used his power for temporary
Qaida.
Egyptians. The militants hotel.
appointments when "he bas to
British authorities have abandoned the truck and detTwo
groups
claimed get people in place that have
been
seeking
several onated the blast at I: 15 a.m. responsibility for the attacks. waited far too long to get about
Pakistanis in connection to Investigators believe a body One of the groups warned in doing their business." He said
this month's deadly bombings found at the site may be one an Internet statement Monday that "sometimes there:s cbme
in London, and Washington of the bombers and is likely of a "total war" unless "Jews a point" when Bush has _decidhas raised the possibility that an Egyptian.
and Christians leave our ed -he needs to act.
'
both the London and Sharm
Bolton's nomination has
Ten minutes later, the sec- country within 60 days." The
attacks were planned· by ond truck bomb sped down statement was signed by the been stalled . for months.
Osama bin Laden's terror net- Sharm's main hig_hway and Holy Warriors of Egypt.
Critics say Bolton, who has
work.
Pakistani President Gen .
P-crvez
Musharraf
said
Monday that al-Qaida 's command and communication
system in his country has
been eliminated and that the
network could not h;jve
orchestrated attacks from
Pakistan.
"Is it possible in this situation that an al-Qaida man sitting here. no matter who he
is. may control .things in
London. Sharm el-Sheik,
Istanbul or Africa? This is
absolutely wrong." he said.
Hospital officials said at
least 88 people were killed
and about 119 wounded. but
the Health Ministry put the
death toll at 64. Hospitals said
the ministry count excludes
some sets of body parts.
South Sinai Governor
Mustafa Afifi said Monday .
We' ll deliver all the local happenings right to yourbpme. Stop by our office
that I 7 of the dead were' non-.
and subscribe to the Daily s'entinel for 3 months for only $30.19 and receive
Egyptians.
including
Westerners and citizens from ••
•••• a FREE comic 'umbrella*!
other Arab states ..
••
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Those killed included ••
(* Pa yment mu~ttx- m;dc in pcr:-.on at the Dail y Sentinel. Il l Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio in order to receive yo ur Free comic umbrell a. .
American Kristina Miller and
Quanlities are limited .
her British boyfriend. Kerry ••
••
Davies, who were celebrating
r----------------------~------,
her 27th birthday :when th~ ••
••
bombs went off.
Inve stigators in Sharm ••
••
were also pursuing a possible ••
••
"Your Hometown Newspaper" .
connection .to bombings in ••
••
I Drop thi :-. coupon off i~ our offi.:~ at Ill Court St.. Pomeroy. Ohio. with your payment and receive a FREE comic umbrella.
'I
October in two resorts further ••
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.
.
north, Taba and ~as Shitan. ••
that killed 34 people , includ: D _1 ha• e nul hecn a '"h'mhe,'m the P:"' .10 da) '- Endo,ed ;, my payment of S30.19 for 3 months of the Daii\-Se.,im'i
ing many lsrael js. DNA fr~m
the suspected bombers·
I current ly . . uh ...crilx· 10 the Do;Jy S&lt;.'ntint'(Enclo~d is m; pay~e~t of $59 .15 for a 6• month subscription.
remains were being compared
to samples from the parents
of five suspects sti ll at large .
Addrcw - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ :
from the Taba blam .
The Sharm bombin2s had
--------~---------------------------- 1
hallmark s of other al-QaidaPhtmc - - - - - - - -' - - - , - - . : __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____,~---------~
style operation' near1
Ll!Y,.,.,'n 0 Vis_a
Expiration Date,
Card #
. .
simultanous bombing' u'ing
a mix of technique\ . includ•___ .
0 Master~rd
·Expiratio n Date
•
Card#
.
ing vehicle-borne and other
bomb'·~··~···:xx::::::::::::::::::x::::::::::::t:::::::::

••

..••
••
••

.. :· ·
1

••••
••••
••

The Daily Sentinel

.

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:

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~

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PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July

26, 2005

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Church events

POMEROY VBS at
Zion Church of Christ, Ohio
143. 6:30 to 8:45 p.m.,
through July 29. Jerusalem
Marketplace is theme. Crafts,
Bible-time games, snacks,
music. Program practice and
pizza party Saturday morning
before closing program at 7
r. m. Information at 992-5195.
REEDSVILLE -· VBS at .
Ede'n
United
Brethren
Church, Ohio 124 beiween Reedsvi lle and Hockingport. The Seoul contingent preparing to leave for the National Jamboree.
6 to 8:30 p.m. through Jul y
29. "Kingdom of the Son" is
theme.

Wednesday, July 27
Tuesday, July 26
POMEROY - A reipresenSYRACUSE - Vacation
tative of Social Security will Bible school will be held
be at the Meigs Senior from 6 to 8:30 p.m. through
Citi zens Center at 9 a. m. to Friday at the First Church of
discuss
Medicare's
new God, Syracuse for ages I to
iprcscription drug benel1t. The 13. ."Power Up With Jesus~
benetit will he available to will be the theme. 'For more
everyo ne
enrolled , i11 · information call 992-1734.
Medicare . Some individuals
STIVERSVILLE
may be el igible for helip with Stiversville
Community
the costs · of the bene tit. An Church Bible school will be
afternoon session at I p.m. held Monday, Tuesday and
will be held at the Glouster Wednesday, 6 to 8 p.m. with a
Public Library.
wiener roast on Thursday.
''Kingdom of the Son" is the
Saturday, July 30
theme.
Saturday, July 30
PORTLAND - Lebanon
POMEROY - Hyse ll Run
DEXTER - Old Dexter
Towship Tru stees will meet at Communi ty Church VBS. 6- Church will have a communi·8 a.m. at .the township build- 8:30 p.m., through July 29. ty cookout at 6 p.m. at the
mg.
992-7036 to register or for . church. All food provided ,
information.
.everyone welcome. For more
RACINE
-St. · John information ' or directions call
Lutheran -Church VBS,
"Construction Zone," 6-8:30 742-2553.

Clubs and
organizations '

Tuesday, July 26
RACINE - Racine Area
Comm unit y
Organization
.potluck. 6:30 p.m .. _Star Mill
Park. New members welcome .
Thursday, July 28
" SYRACUSE .
The
Wildwood Garden Club will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at the _home
of Joy Bentley.

p.m., for pre-school through
grade 6. 992-2542 for information.
MIDDLEPORT
,
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene VBS. 6 to 8:30p.m.
through July 29. Theme
''Where Kids are Wild about
God ." Bicycles will be given
away. Cookout at 7 p.m.
Friday
concludes.
Information at 992-3191.

Sunday, July 31
CARPENTER
Homecoming at Carpenter
Baptist Church with morning
service at I0:30 a.m. with
speaker Robert Sanders, and
singer. Bob Siders. Dinner at
no&lt;Jn. and afternoon service
with the Builders Quartet and
Siders presenting special
musi c.

Submitted ptloto

Local scouts off to National Jamboree

ONA. W.Va. Forry
Scouts and leaders from
Tri-State Area Council.·
BSA arr ived at the National
Boy Scout Jambo[ee today
at Ft ·A.P. Htll. Na .
They will join 45.000
other Scouts and leade rs
from across the Ufiited
States for the nine-day
event. Most of today will
be taken up in processing.
reg istration and camp set
up. The Scouts face much
tighter securi ty than ever.
before entering the military
base.
All equ ipment had to be inspected ·
by local law enforcement.
. locked and sealed before

leav in); Camp Arrowhead in
Ona. W.Va. The eq uipment
truck seals cannot be tampered with before being
opened by US Army officials
at · the
N&lt;tt ional
Jat i\boree. The equ ipme nt
wi ll aga in he checked for ·
. explosives.
a~
it
IS
unluadcd .
Sn•uts wil l spend the day
selling up the camp~it~ in
I00 degree plu s h,eat at Ft.
A.P.. Hill located in eastern
Virginia. Leaders wi ll be
closely
monitoring
the
Scouts and insuring . that .
they consume large .quantities of water. · ·
Prior to leaving for the

National J:nnhor,·c both
Scours :tnd the ir parent'
were . instrm.'tl."d nn how tu

prepare to fac e the lieat and
hi gh humiui t), of "'""ral
plan eastern Virgtn ia _ The
Scours and leaders ancnding 'are from the Kcntuch

to\v n~

of
Catlctt :-.buri.
Argil lite . A'I1Iand
and
Blaine:
Pwc·tun ilk .
Chc,apcal-;c. Galltpoli .' and
Crown Cit y. Ohio and
Barbo'urS\·ilk. Kem"·a &gt;utd
Huntington. W. Va.
Prio r

to

attending

the

National Jamboree the con tingent :-.pent a dJy L"llllOe ing the New Ri' er and .t
day &lt;1t kings Dominion.

Chautauqua's collectible
Babe Ruth bear awarded
CHESTER - One of scv- · of Pomeroy.
numerous volunteers from the
era! prizes awarded by the
According to the registry at . Chester-Shade Association
Chester-Shade
Hi storical the Chester Courthouse, the and other organizations
Association on the clo sing Chautauqua was attended by helped out. That's what made
night of the Ohio ChauJauqua not only hundreds of people the entire week such a huge
and Chester Shade Days was from across Ohio, budrom 10 success," said Powell.
a collectable bear in Babe . other states. giving a boost to · "With the help of our inRuth attire made by the Ohio .. the county's tourism industry. kind and tinancial sponsors.
River Bear Co. in Middleport . · ''We certainly appreciate the Chester-Shade Historical
That bear was won by Ruby the support," said Mary Association was able to give
Vaughan of Middleport . Babe Powell, com mittee chairman, people of Meigs County and
Ruth was the baseball idol of noting that "people didn't let it's visitors the opportunity to ·
the Roarin g Twenties and was the rain dampen thetr spirits." have a great week of living
se lected by Susan Baker
She said many gro ups history presentatip ns," she
. owner of the Bear Co. for the pitched in to help make added.
one-of-a-kind costumed bear Chautauqua a success. "4-H
"The professional scholgroups ush, red, the Episcopal ars/actor and the Ohio
.. ' to mark the occasion.
Winner of· a Dr. Pepper church Women served the Humanities Council members
bicycle donated by the Pepsi VIP dinner, the Riverbend who were on site said that the
Cola Co. as part of their spon- Arts Council, the Pomeroy people here were so friendly
sorship
of 'the
Ohio Library, and the Meigs Senior and helpful that they would
Harmonica Champion ship Center hosted day time work- like to return to Meigs County
contest was Nicholas Burke shops by the performers, and for another event."

Meigs native recipient of faculty-staff contribution award
ATHENS - Kenneth L.
Hartung of Athens was the
recipient of the faculty -staff
contribution award for 2005
presented at the recent
College of business annual ·
awards banquet . .
The former resident of the
Chester community Hartung
has been executive director
of the Sales Centre at Ohio
University since Aug. I,
2003 . He tearhes sales arid
sales management as an executive in re sidence in the
Marketing Departmeiu of the
College of Business.
As executi ve director. he
leads a variety of initiatives
thai focus on undergraduate
sales education, sales research
and sales executive development at The Sales Centre, a
certificate program estabIi shed by the Board of in
1997.
Hartung's selection for the
award was made on the basis
of recommendations comi ng
from both staff and students.

Hi s recommendations from
Prior to returning to his
students included such com- · alma mater, he .worked · 20
ments as: "Every thing he years in sales, marketing and
does is a learning opportunity development, eight years in
for students . and everyone supply chain mati'agement,
who participates gains valu- and two years in busines s
able hands-on knowledge. l planning. He was a member
have never met a teacher who of a number of professional
cared so much about his-stu - and technical ·associations
dents succeeding in school an during his career including
life in ge neral as this teacher." The Society for Soft Drink
"The amount of effort he Technologists
and
the
puts into work every week is .In stitute
for
· Food
mcredible. He does an incred- Technologists.
ible job of organizing and
Hartun g also served on the
helping students in anyway Executive Committee of the
possible. always going ab~ve Board Directors of the
and beyond the call of duty., National
Cooperative
He has helped take The Sales Business Association located
Centre to the ne xt level Washington. D.C. and as
through hi s hard work and President and Past Chair of
dedication.' '
the Board of Directors o(
Hartu ng C\lrned both a Bridgehaven. a non-profit
bachelor degree in business agency thiu se rves the need s
administration ( 1969) and an of tht; · mentally ill in
MBA ( 1970) from Ohio Louisville. Ky.
University.
His
the sis
H arrun~ am! his wife.
research on dual bran~ing Jackie . have two dau2hters.
was_published in the Journal He is the sun of Laura Mae
of Retailing in I ~73.
Hartung Nice of Chester.

Golf Scramble"Planned for
Health. Center building fund
-

RAVENSWOOD. W.Va. The
Jack son
County
Community Health Center has
planned a golf ' scramble
fundm iser for Aug. 5 at the
Green Hill s Golf Course in
Ravenswood . Tee time is 9
a.m.
. .
The proceeds from the
scramble will go towards the
cost of constructing a new
. , bealth center building in
Raven swood.
Jackson
County
Community Health Center
(JCCHC) has purchased land
and will soon be breaking
ground on a new 8,000 square
foot medical center located on
Washington
Street .
m
Raven swood at the former
Ritchi~ property. ·, . •
All proceeds from the golf

sCrall]ble will be used toward
the new commu nit y health
and wellness center that will
allow the facility to ·better
serve the communities and
patients. The new medital.
facility will increase the num ber ·of physicians , clinical
staff, specialty care , state of
the art equipme·nt and provide
additional services not currently offered at the clinic.
. Th\ _mission. a representattve satd. ts "to tmprove the
health status of our communities by providing access to
quality preventive and primary care services regardless of
one's ability to pay. It is a si mple mission but an enormous
tasli. Our success is dependent
upon a lor of factors bur one
crucial element is the support

.

of our .arc;1 busi nessc:s and

fricmb:"
For the ~.,rr s.:ramhlc thae
is a S50 fc~istration fl"l." for
e&lt;tch indi,·id.ual that in,·\ud'''
18 hoks of ~olf. lunch and a
cart . Fi"L ;-,·cond &lt;md third
place: I onge&gt;~ drive &lt;tnd d&lt;J' est to the pin a\yarJs for hoth
front and back nine: und d,,._,r
prizes will be awarded at the
end of the golf toumament
Players will bt'. in teams of
four. Teams can ~ th nned
prior to regimation or at registration players can bl' placed
on a team . Mulligans will ~
available at the check-in table_
To register or to . recei\'C
·additional information. ~on­
tact Amy Haskin s or . Dee
Scritchfield at ~73-1033 or
Stan Sha,er at 27 3-258 1.

Submitted photo

Thes·e volunteers from Holzer Med ica l Center and Clinic assisted at the National Cancer
Survi~ors Day picnic.

Cancer Suryivors Day Picnic Held
RIO GRANDE -The lith
annual picnic in observance
of National Cancer Survivors
Day was held recently at the
Bob Evans :Farms shelter
house in Rio Grande.
Coordinator for the event,
Diane Young, RN, . BSN.
OCN, said, "The response w,e
receive from patients and
seei ng them bond with other
survivors and their families ts
overwhelming . The connection is amazing, and for us to
have the opportunity to share
in this event with them is
· truly a gift. "
.
Several volunteers from
Holzer Medical Center and
Holzer Clinic were on hand
to serve as hosts and the Bi g
Bend Cloggers pro,·ided
guests with ente rtainmen t.
Approximately 200 attended.
including patients. survivors.
family, friends and staff.
Volunteers for the eVent
included Beth Cochran. Paul
Cochran. Pat Davis. Aubrey
Donnet , Megan Donnet.

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Connie Fields, . Den)tilic Morgan Young , Nathan
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For more inft)nlla ti on about
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NOTICE OF A FIND_ING OF NO
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT
The USDA, Rural Development util ity- programs
(Rural Utilities Service) has received an application for financial assistance from the Tuppers
Plains- Chester Water District. The proposed project consists of the following : I) water lines; 2)
storage facilities ; 3) pumping stations, and 4)
related facilities. All of the proposed improvements are located within the Townships of lodi
a,nd Carthage in Athens. County, Ohio, townships
of Bedford, Orange, Sutton, Chester, lebanon,
letart in Meigs County, Ohio.
As required by the · National Environmental
Policy Act, the Rural Development utility program
(Rural Utilities Service) has assessed the potential
environmental effects of the proposed project and
has determined that the proposal will not have a
significant effect on the human environment and
for which an Environmental Impact Statement will
not be prepared . The basis of this determination
is a review of the environmental documen.tation
included and referenced in the Environmental
Assessment:
· Copies of the Environmental Assessment can be
received or ·obtained at USDA, Rural
Development, 7-1330 State Route 676, Suite A,
Marietta , Ohio 45 750-6799. Fo r furth e r information, please contact Christine Crowell Qr Gordon
Parker at (740) 3 73-7113 .
USDA Rural Development is an Equal Opportunity
lender, Provider, and Employer. Complaints of
discrimination should be sent to : USDA, Director,
Office of Civil Rights, Washington, D. C. 202509410 .
A general lo cation map of the proposal is sh~\1\in below.

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomero)', Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
•

Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or 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 Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

'TODAY IN HISTORY
Today IS Tuesddy. July 26, the 207th day ot 2005
There ,Jre_ 158 days left in the year
. Today·s Highlight in Hi story:
,
On July 26. I945. Wmston Church til restgned as
,Brtt,un s pmne mmister after hts tonservatives were
soundly defeated by the L1bor Party (Clement Attlee
bec,Jme the new prune mtmster)
On tht s date:
In 1775, BenJamin Frankhn became Postmaster-General
ln 1788, New York became the I I th state to ratify the
.U.S Conslttulton.
. In 1908, U.S. Attorney General Charles J. Bonaparte
tssued an order creating an 'invesugative agency that was
a forerunner of the FBI.
ln I947. Prcstdent Truman signed the Nattonaf Security
Act, creatmg the Dep.trtment of Defense, the Nattonal
Secunty Council, the Central Intellige nce Agency and the
Jomt Chtefs of Staff
·_ In !952, Adlat E. Stevenson was nommated tor prestdent by the Democratic National Convention m Chicago;
John J Sparkman was nomtnated tor vice president
In 1952, Argentma's first Ially, Eva Peron, dted 111
Buenos Atres at age 33.
In 1952. Ktng Farouk I of Egyp1 abdicated in the
wake of a co up Jed by Gamal Abdel Nasser
In 1953. Ftdel Castro began ht s revolt agamst
Fulgencto Batist,t wtth an unsucce"tul attacK · on an
army barracks 111 eastern Cub,J (Castro ousted Batista in
1,9 59)
In 1971. Apollo 15 was launched from Cape Kennedy
in Florida.
In 1990. President Bush sig ned mto Jaw the Amencans
wtlh Dtsabtllltes Act.
Ten years ago The Sen,lle voted 6'1-2'1 to unilateraflv
ltft the U.N embargo on ,trms shipments to Bosni,;.
Former Michigan Gov. Ge01ge W. Romney died at age
88.
Five years ago George W. Bush and ·hi s just-chosen
running mate. Dick Cheney . . set out on thetr first cam:patgn excurston rogetljer as they vtslted Cheney's former
hometewn of Casper, Wyo A federal Judge in New York
approved a $I 25 btllton settlement between Swiss banks
and more than a Jlalf nulhon plaint1lfs who alleged the
banks had hoarded money depostted by Holocaust victims.
, One year ago: The DemocratiC Party's 44th natiOnal
convention opened 111 Boston under extraordmanly tight
secunty; a parade of speakers castigated George W. Bush
as a prestdent who nHShandled the economy and bungled
the war on terror. Mohammed Mamdouh Helmi Qutb, an
Egypttan dtplomat held hostage by mthtants in Iraq for
three days. was released after successful negotiations.
Thought for Today "Government ts too big and tmportant to be left to the poltttcmns " - Chester Bowles.
Amencan. dtplomat, busmcssman, author - and politician
( 1901 -1986}

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EDITOR
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Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Tuesday, July 26, 2oos

Obituaries

Does· Bush really..back new energy, envjronmeni po_licy?
Amid all the partisan
rancor
that
besets
Washing'ton, it's worth
noting !hat somethmg
remarkable happened last
month: The Senate passed
a broad-gauge energy btll
by a vote of 85- I 2.
Whether it make s tt tnto
law depends on President
Bush.
The bill represents what
amounts to an emerging
nattonal consensus on
energy and the env iron ment - that to become
more energy-independent
and to combat cltmate
change, the United States
needs to "do it all."
That is, we need to produce · more domestic oil
and gas in the short run,
but also conserve energy
and tnvest tn cleaner and
more efhcient alternatives
that could dt sp lace fos sil
fuels ui conung decades not to m~ntion resronng
U S. Jeadershtp 111 cutttngedge technology
While Congress and
Bush have been wrangltng
about energy for ft ve years
-· and Bush has largely
tilted toward the otl and
outsiders
gas sectors have helped spark the new
consensus. They tnclude
General Electric CEO
Jeffrey Immel! and broadly bipartisan alliances such
as the Energy Future
Coalitton and Set America
Free, whtch include everyone from defense hawk
Frank Gaffney to liberal
former Sen Ttm Wtrth, DColo.
lmmelt appeared qt May
at George \Vashington
University along with
envtronmental
activist
Jonathan Lash of the
World Resource s In stitute
to announce a plan called
"ecotmagmation"
a
doubling of GE's research
budget for energy and
environmental technologtes and plans to produce
clean and efficient new
engines. turbines and
plants that l'tll b11ng 111
$20 b1llton tn revenues by
2010 •
Set Amenca Free, along
with
the
National
Re so urces
Defense
Counctl, a Jeadtng envt-

heavily skewed toward oil
and gas substdtes. it will
make .t mockery of hts
claims· 10 f;~vor a new era
tn energy technolbgy.
For sttre . the administraMorton
tion has been su ngy about
Kondracke lundtng energy research
dllcl development. Its budget ca ll ed for $6.7 btllion
Tn tax. breaks for energy
development
The House
ronmental gro up , is lobbying Congress to spend $ 12 btll calls for. $8 billion.
bilhon in five years to cut whtle th e Senate bill conrains $I 6 btllu;m
otl use m 'half by 2025
In one sense, th ere
The
Energy
Future
shoulun't
be too much rea CoalitiOn thinks spending
just $1 billion more over son tor . cheenng when
five years could produce Congress dcctdes to spend
11 '\ lot ol money to get
alternative luels favors ethanol and other somethtng done , espectally
biotuels that could through subsidtes. You
potenttally reduce otl coulu call tt easy bipartiimport s by 25 percent m sa nship when the two par20 years and significantly lies unite to throw btg
at
so mething,
teduce carbon dioxtue money
whet her it's American
Cnl!SS!Ons.
Even Bush ts· newly latmcts or seniors.
On the other. hand , 11
,tboard the bandwagon. at
least rheroncally. He satd wtll he a rnumph tf
recently that he accepts Ame11c.I fin ally has ,, vig.th,tt global temperatures orm" energy polic y after
are n sing and that human ye.trs of wrangling and
acttvtty ts responstble lor s ta gnatlo t~ . Bu sh proposed
the tncrease Once a strict d poltcy 111 200 I, skewed
otl -and-gas man, Bush has he,tvtly toward tradittonal
started toutmg hydrogen soutces. But he hasn't
fu el cells. biOdtesel. clean made tt a top pnonty until
coal and even solar power thts year, tmpelled largel:y
as energy sources for the hy poltllcally unpopular
g&lt;~so lin e pnces that won't
future.
In a speech last month . be affected by passage of
he said, "Can you imagtne &lt;IllY new bill.
walking down a road here
Crcdtt for the Senate btl!
111
the farmlands
of largely goes to New
Maryland, you see a guy Mextco's two Senators ,
growtng soybean s, you Republ1can Pete Domemci
say, 'Thanks, buddy, for and
Democrat
Jeff
maktng us Jess dependent Btngam \111, the chairman
on foreign sources ot and rankin g· member on
oil?"'
the En ergy dlld Natural
He also said, "I thtnk tt Resources
.Committee.
will be cool it your young who' wm ked out a package
son ts able to take a dri - that
achteves
much
ver's test in a hydrogen - (thou~h not all) of what
powered auromobtle that both ' parties had been
has got zero emtsstons, seek 1n g
and at the same ttme wtll
Mtsstng from the btll ts
make us Jess dependent on ;my m.mdate on the auto
hydrocarbons which we utdustry to ratse tuel effi.
have to tmport from lot - ciency s tand&lt;~rds . which
etgn countnes."
could have been an unpeBut Bush laces a se~ere tus for U.S. manufacturers
test of hiS dedication to to kmtckle down and trv to
new energy so urces as th e leapfrog J,tp ,lllese 'an d
Senate and Hmtse trv to European carmakers in
reconcile thetr hugely con- fuel -s &lt;~ving technologtes.
fltctm g energy btlls . It
Envtronmcntaltsts also
Bush puts hts clout behtnd protest that the Senate
the House btll, which ts defeated a mandatory cap

on carbon emtssions proposed by · Sens
John
~cCam. R-Ariz ., and Joe
Lieberman. D-Conn. Btn
the fact ts that no one ts
sure how the Untied States
could meet the ltmtts.
Instead , the chamber
passed a sense-of-theSenate resolutton spon sored by Bingaman saymg
that the Unned States one
day will cap emtsstons pvttmg the body squarely
on record that carbon
emtssions are responstble
for clunate change .
A member of the Senate
energy p,mel, Sen Lamar
Alexandet.
R- Tenn ..
dubbed
the
Senate's
approach " the new realism
conservation,
increased natural gas supplies, mcluding from o~er­
seas; relaunchmg nuclear
power and coal gasi!tcation •·
The. House-Senate conferen ce poses a btg test for
both
Bu sh
and
the
Republt ca n party They
can suck with old fuels
and limited action on the
climate front. or else
embrace the new consensus .
If they choose the past.
the Democrats are watting
and they have new
alltes in lmmelt and the
various bipartt san coalition s.
When the Democrats'
2008 prestdenual frontrunner, Sen . Htllary Rodham
Clinton, D-N Y, spoke m
Aspen, Colo .. on J.uly I 0.
she got media nottce for
ltkenmg Bush to Allred E
Neuman , Mad magazine's
'' What. Me Worry ?" character.
But the substance of her
speech was advocacy for
robu st ,sc ientific research
and other steps to regam
Amenca's technologtcal
edge. Democrats genera lly
have been behind the
curve m deve loping posi ltve ,tlternattves to Bush
poltcy. But when tt comes
to energy, Bush ts behmd
The Senate has gtve n htm
a chance to catch up
(Morton Kondracke IS
etecurive ed11or of Roll
Call, tire new'pape1 of
Capitol Hill. )

Free journalism versu~ government support
Amertcan
journaltsts
owe a debt to Kenneth
Tomltnson , chairman of
the Corporation for Public
Broadcastmg. a fervent
purtfter of those radto and
television programs from
liberal bias - particularly
the cleanstng of any criticism of the Bush · administration . He has taught us
journaliSts what we should
have already known : no
element of JOurnali sln
should seek or accept gov ernment funds , from any
admmtslratton.
Mr. Tomltnson has clearly shown that "political
orthodoxy" is not the ideological
monopoly
of
Mtchael
Moore .
MoveOn org,
George
Soros or Al Franken But
those communicators do
not have the heavy hand of
governme nt to poltce publi c speech 111 order 10 help
strengthen their political
goals.
As what George Orwell
might have called the B1g
Brother of the publtc
broadcasting
system,
Tomlinson paid $I 4,700 ol
public funds to Fred
Mann. a " researcher," to
monitor present and past
public broadcastmg shows
hy Bill Moyers, Tavi s
Smiley. David Brancacc to ,
Dtane Rehm (of whom Mr
":oml1nson professes to be
''a great admtrer"), and
even the Wttly conservative Tucker Carl son. (His
guests too " proved" to be
suspect )
If Mann or another
·t researcher'' is to be patd
to do an encore. I expect
Nauonal Publi c R.1d10 's
:·Morntng Ed1t10n .. - ,,
source of man y of m y
news leads ~ co uld be
inc,luded for its illuminat-

utive orders were doing to
the Btll of Rights But I
was ,Jiso a guest on
Wilham Buckley's "Firtng
Line" when It was on PBS
- a prog(am I wish was
Nat
back there agam. And curHentoff
rently, Wall Streer Journal
editors and writers can
tnslt ucltvely be "seen and
heard every week on PBS
Moreover. each night , on
ing June 20 report of Mr "The New sHour with Jim
Mann's methodology for Le ht er" there ts 1ntense
ferretmg out lefti sts
JOUsltng between ltberals
NPR reporter David &lt;~nd consenat1ves
Folkenfltk noted that Fred
Tomltn son ts being so
Mann "sorted people who ham-h,mded Ill hiS miSSIOn
appeared as guests on the to protect the Bush admm shows mto three camps· tstratJon from dread diverconservauve. ltberal and sity of tdeas that l, would '
When thtnk someone at the
neutral "
Washington Post reporter Whtte House - or among
Robin Wright showed up the Republtcan leadership
on "The . Dtane Rehm Ill Congress - would be
Show." Mr. Mann 's invcs- &lt;~t least embarrassed. After
tigattve experttse m&lt;trked ,JIJ. fhe prestdent has sa td
her down as a ltberal The
we should pride ourse lves
proof, according to Mann
''Ms Wright' s viewpotnt that in thi s constitutional
d e mo ~ r',Jcv
. . our l!Over n wa, that US ime iligence
was geared to ftght tttc mcnt ts " tran sparent."
Cold War and dtd not Furthermore. 11 is demean adapt to the new threat of tn g to such forcefully
arttculate administralton
terronsm ..
poltcy makers a:, Donald
He llo?
Worse yet. as Folkenfltk Rumsfcld , Condo l eezz~
added. Tucker Carbon wa' Rt ce and John Negroponte
a ho st of interest to Mdnn to tmpl y that they need
becau se on ht s show. there Ke nn eth Tomlin so n to
were " more ltberal guesh butler them agamst conthan conservat tves." Could llasiJn g v1ews on pub1ic
11 be that Tucker Carlson hrnadc.Jsting programs.
Tomlin,on,
however.
wanted to make fun ol
seems to have no ltmns to
them'?
To dtscover that Btl! hts sense of hunself as a ,
Moye rs. on hts weekly comma nder of the presi hour. w,ts not an admirer dent's Praet orian Guard.
of the Bu sh admintSir.ttion . He has successfully nian &lt;~gcd to tn stall Patrtcta
ts like. 111 the old phrase.
"shootmg ducb tn a bar- Ham son as the new CEO
rel ., I wa~ a gue s1 on that anu prcstdent at th e
'.hQ" once. cttJn g the tLiln- Cnrpor,Jtion fo r Public
age that certain sections ol BHMJcdstmg. Her credits
Jo[ tht&gt; presttgltlus post th ~ Pat110t Act and sub,e,&lt;.J uent admi~tstration exec- as trthun e of the free flow
o f diverse views to the

.

~

'publi c - tnclude her prevtous se rvices as co-chatrwoman of the Republican
Party!
It ts as tf George Soros
were to become edttor-inchtef at the Assoctated
Press.
Long ago, during my
unformed youth, 1 was
speakmg on a panel as an
anti -Communis't (havi ng
read Arthur Koestler's
"Darkness at Noon " when
I was 15) but wondenng
about the posstbtlilles of
''democratic socialism." A
ltbertartan on the panel
asked me how long 1
thought a free press would
tlounsh ' under any kmd , pf
soc taltsl government. Like
a clap ot thunder, I was
awakened from my fantasy.
Now,
under
a
Republican administration.
"publtc'' broadcastmg is
bemg mvesttgated as tf we
were subJeCt to so statist a
government that we must
be in sulated f.rom in sufft ctent apprectation at rhts
admini stration 's virtues.
This would be (arcical if 11
weren ' t actually happen ing . But I am grateful to
TQmltnson for tllummating
the sticky strings thai
cm.ne wtth gove rnment
financtal support of the
press - whtch must be
free to be free .
(Nat Hen I&lt;~[( ,, u
natimw/11'
renou ned
authorll\' un rlu• Fu;sr
Amendment and rh e Bill of
R1ght1 and aurlwr of &lt;e\··
erall&gt;!lob, urclluiiiiS " The
War on tile Bill of R1gh11
and
the
Garhel'l/18
R~sll'ra rt ce" ( Se1·en S• or1e1·
Pre\.1, 2003 ). )

Arthur Strauss
RACINE - Arthur J Strauss, 96. Mtddlepon, passed away
on Sunday, July 24. 2005, at Rocksprings Rehabtlitatton
Center, Pomeroy.
He was born on Oct. 16, I908, in Pomeroy, son of the late
John and Margaret Kloes Strauss
_He retired from the railroad and became the owner/operator
of .the former Twm Ctty M&lt;tchme Shop. He was a member of
Mtddleport Masomc Lodge #363. the Scottish Rite Valley of
Columbus and the Shnne Club. He enjoyed many years as a
member of the G&lt;trden Club &lt;tnd was 1101~d for hi s rose garden. Hew as a member ot Pomeroy Trinity Church
In addttton to hts patents, he was preceded m death by his
wtfe, whom he marned tn November, I934, Beulah Forquer
Strauss who passed away_m May 1997. He was also preceded by three brothers, Wtlltam, Charles and Otto Strauss.
He ts survtved by clnse friends, Davtd and Chene See,
Mtddleport; three nteces , and a sister-in-law Clarice
Strauss. Pomeroy.
'
Servtc~s will be held at I p m on Wednesday. July 27, 2005,
at.the Mtddleport Chapel of Ftsher Fun1-ral Home. Officiating
wtll be Re\ Les Hayman and bunal will be m Beech Grove
Cemetery Friends n_~ay call on Wednesday from I I :30 a.m.
unttl ttme ot the servtce at I p.m. at the funeral home ·
On-ltne condolences may be sent to I'Ww.fisherfuneralhomes com

Frank Cleland
RACINE - Frank Cleland. 84, Walnut Street, Racine ,
passed away at I .10 p m. on Sunday. July 24,2005, at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
He was born Jan 23. I921. 111 R&lt;tcine. son of the late Okey
and Blanche Man uel Cleland. He was teltred as postmaster
of the Ractn e Post Office, having served for 31 .years as
postmaster He served seve n years as mayor of the Village
. of Ractne, I' as a member of Racine First Baptist Church for
47 years, a veteran of the U.S. Army during World War II
and was a n1ember ot the Ract)1e Amencan Legton Post
#602, and a 54-year member of the Pomeroy~ Racine Lodge
#461, F&amp;AM.
Survi~ing are hts wtfe. Delores Woodgerd Cleland, whom
he marned Aug 26. I938. m Catlettsburg, Ky., two daughters,
Evelyn (Btll) Btady of Gallipolis and Maralyn Capretta of
Racme ; a son, Steve (Pauletta) Cleland of Houston, Tex. ; and
10 grandchildren Ktm Hill , Todd Taylor, Von Taylor, Leslie
Taylor, Jvaunha Neigler, Lon Black, Aaron Young, J.F. Young.
Vmcent Cleland and Ryan Cleland, I 9 great grandchildren
-and three great-great grandchildren A son-in-law, Ivan Powell
of Racme, also survtves
Bestdes hJS par~nts , he was preceded til death by hts daughter, Carolyn L Powell , and a brother, Walter Cleland.
Servtces wtll be held at I I am. on Thursday, July 28.
2005, at R.Jt:me Ftrst Bapltst Church with his grandson, Rev.
Aaron Young, offtctating. and bunal following at Letart
Falls Cemetery
Ftiends may call from 6 to 9 p.m on Wedne sday and an
hour prior to the service at the church
Mtlitary gr,tveside rites wtll be conducted by Racine
American Legion Post #602 and Tuppers Plams Veterans of
Foretgn Wars Post #9053

2005 STATE FAIR PARTICIPANTS
POMEROY - 4-H Club
members selec ted on the
basis of excellence to take
their, proJeCts ·to the Ohio
State
Fair have
been
announced by the Metgs ,
County Extenston Offiee.
The members and thetr
proJects are as follows:
Athletic
Day:
Etin
Patterson , You' re the Athlete
Bicycle
Day
Baylee
,Collins, Bicycle Adventure
II; Brenna Holter,. Btcycle
Adventure Ill .
Creattve Ans Qay: Sarah
Engle, Sentor.
Dogs. Hayley Aanestad.
Dog Obedience, beginner,
Tyle[ Brothers, Dog Care. Oog
Grooming and Handling, and
Dog Obedience , beginners;
Breanna Hayman, Dog Care.
Engineenng Day: Zack
Newell, ATV.
Engineenng
Weldtng
Day· Craig Hensley.
Engmeermg
Small
Engmes and Lawn Care:
Phtllip Ktng, Crank tt Up,
Katlyn Sauvage, Warm ,tt Up.
Famtly Ltfe Day: Kayle
Lawrence. Growmg on My

MASON, W.Va. - Ruth E. Gilbert died Fnday, July 22,
2005, at Dade City, Fla.
Arrangements are under the direction of Fogelsong-Tucker
Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va. and will be announced upon
completton

Local Briefs
Plan water interruption
POMEROY - Tuppers Plams-Chester Water District will
interrupt water servtce from 9 a.m. to 2 p m OQ Wednesday
from Pomeroy Pike Road between Ohio 7 and Flatwoods
Road. includmg Warehouse Road, for a water ltne ex tens ton .
Once servtce ts restored, customers wtll be under a boil
advisory until 4 p.m. on Thursday

COLUMBUS - As the
2008 presidential campaign
takes shape, candtdates in
early primaries m Iowa and
New Hamp shire will have to
tune their messages with an
ear · ' toward
Ohio
in
November. a Democratic
cainpatgn consultant satd
Monday.
Ohi9 was ptvotal 111 both
the 2000 and 2004 clecttons,
givmg Pres1dent Bush the 20
electoral votes he need to wm
last year On Monday, four
potential candidates 'for the
Democratic nomination· te stdrove thetr stump speec hes
before a crowd of hundreds
attending the summer meelmg at the Democratic

Houchms presided at the
meeting m the absence of
Mayor Sandy Jannarelh.
Council authorized Mayor
Sandy Jannarelli to apply for
fundmg through the Ohto
Publtc Works Commission
Issue 2 paving program and
to enter tnro agreements
requtred for fundmg. The resolulton was approved on an
emergency basis.
Counctl also passed a resolutton naming street and alley
repairs a ''top priority" for the

'Pioneer
· from Page A1

For the Record

Arrests

Plants

'

POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff Robert Bee(lle
reported the following were served with summons m Metgs
County Court: Terrie Brewer, Syracuse, menacmg threats ;
Rose Kmg, Pomeroy, disorderly conduct; Vince King,
Pomeroy. disorderly conduct; Rodney Grueser. Pomeroy,
passing bad check~ .

from Page A1
m the road near Sacred Heart
CHurch . Krautter satd he
would do i1.
Musse r thanked Me.igs
County Engtncer Gene
Tripplet, Pullins Excavating
and Raben Robt and crew
for donating thetr help and
supplies 111 revamptng Sugar
Run Park. Thi s help includ -

Teens" On the Road to
Ftnanctal Success, level II.
Natural Resources: Morgan
Tucker, Fishmg for the
Beginner_ Garrell Ritchte,
Let's Explore the Outdoors I;
Daniel Buckley, Exploring
Our Forests; Dame! Buckley,
Sate Use of Guns; l-Iaileigh
Bush. Baste Archery.
Photography Day. Jenmfer
Reed, Adventures with Your
Camera - A. Tma Drake,
Adventures
with
Your
Camera - B
Science Day· Mallory Htll,
The Normal Ammal; Mlfanda
McKelvey, Ammal Health;
Benjamm Tillis, . Rockets
Away, Jumor, Enn Foreman,
Science of Flight. Junior
Sci f Determmed Project
Day . Ashley Ltfe, ' Self
Detenmned ,
Junior;
Courtney Kennedy, Self
Determined, Semor
Woodworking
Day:
Bra,ndon King, Measunng
Up (Jumor); Wade Colhns,
Makmg the Cut (Jumor);
Nathan Cook, Making the
Cut
(Semor),
Whitney
Thoene , Fmtshmg Up

Leadershtp Co unctl at a ·DLC's new chatrm ,m, and
Vtrginta Gov Mark Warner
downtown hotel.
all
patd tnbure to Oh10,
Sen s. Hillary Rodham
Cltnton of New York and where each wtnmng candtEvan Bayh of Indiana, Gov dare si nee I 960 has go ne on
Tom Vtlsack of Iowa, the ro capture the Whtte House.

Sen Tom Carper of Delaware
also spoke to the group.
"Oh10 has become the most
cnttcal state in politics In
some ways, tt's Iowa and
New Hampshire in the primanes and Ohto in the general" election. satd Greg Haas,
a · Democrattc consultant
who's worked on pres1dential
campatgns for more than 30
years "The test both pantes
are gomg to say ts. ' Does tl
play in Ohto?'"
Haas, who ts helptng
Columbus Mayor Mtchael
Coleman m the Democrat's
campatgn for governor next
year, got hts stan on George
McGovern ·s presidenttal campaign in I972 and worked on
the successfu l campatgns of
Jimmy Caner m I 976 and Bill
Cltnton Ill I996.

Debbte
Cundtfl
ot
Sycamore Street expressed
concern about neighbors who
have and plan ro breed
Burmese
pythons
She
encouraged council to constd·
er an ordmance prohtbitmg
exotic snakes in the vtllage.
She said the snakes grow
up to 200 pounds and 25 feet
in length, and pose a threat to
the community, particularly
children in a nearby childcare
center. Houchins said counctl
will discu&gt;.S the issue with the
village attorney.
"We will look into it, but
there is a problem. because tf
we make the ordinance now,
we'll probably have to grand-

father those two snakes m,"
Houchms satd.
Woody Call expressed
concern wt!h the snakes,
also, and dtscussed problems
with dangerous dogs on
Sycamore Street.
Counctl also:
• Approved approprialtons
requests as su)lmitted by
Baker, for the income tax ,
ch:rk and mayor 's office line
ttems in the general fund.
• Authonzed payment of
btlls m the amount of
$3,280.61.
Also
attending
were
Council members Kathy
Scott, Robert Robmson. Jeff
Pekcham and Shawn Rice

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

facing our natton . The propnetary technologies that she
(Edwards) developed have
the potential to revolutionize
J
not only medicine. but also
our understanding of who
and what we are as human
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle repon- bemgs. For thts reason, I
ed the following arrests: .
mcluded Shany in my book
• James A. Wells, Long Bottom, on a parole violation.
• Robin Wood, MiddleP.?n. on a charge of cnmmal damaging. Heallh on the Edge. The
• Ellis Myers, Langsvtlle. on a charge of domesltc violence. exciting work she is domg is
• Jessica N1cholson, McAnhur, on a bench warrant alleging truly a "healing for the new
mtllennium' "
aggravated robbery.
.
Sharry Edwards, M.Ed ..
• James Westjohn, Springfjeld, on a bench warrant alleging
locally known for her mnov•
gross sexual imposition.
ative
approach to health and
• Richie Long, Middleport, on a bench wanant alleging
wellness.
bases her work on
intimidation of a cnme victim witness and assault
• Debra Henry, Pomeroy, on a bench warrant for domestic the principle that the body
has the abi lity to diagnose
·
violence.
• John Hunnell. Syracuse, on a bench wanant alleging
domestic violence.

Served

Rtddle, Alex Amos. I Spy m
the Kuchen , Garrell R1tch1e.
Mmt Meal Magic.
Home Decoratmg and
Des1gn:
Sammantha
Cummins. Adventures 111
Home
Ltving,
Autumn
Hauber, Designmg lnt.enors,
Sarah M&lt;~nindale. Your F1rst
Home Awav from Home.
· Horses • Adnan Bolin.
Hannah Helgese n. Mtranda
McKelvey
and
Alyssa
Newland.
International Day Whttney
Thoene,
And
My
World".People and Customs
of the World
Leadership Day: Brady
Bisse ll , Leadershtp Sktlls
You Never Outgrow I, Haley
Perdas. Leadership Sktlls
You Never Outgrown II.
Audnonna Pulltns, One-onOne; Whttney Thoene, MulttLevel Teen Leadcrshtp.
Money Maneuvers. Brenna
Holter. · Becommg Money
Wise, leve l I, Ryan Davts,
Becoming Money Wtse, level
II , Ehzabeth' King. Teens .On
the Road to Financtal Success,
level I; Halite Rtchard,

BY JOHN McCARTHY

from Page A1

Ruth E. Gilbert

Own, Sarah Hubbard, Growing
with Others, Eric Wood,
Fmmly History Treasure Hunt
Fashion Revue· Kayle
Lawrence . Sew tor Others:
Shandt Beaver. Fun wtth
Clothes, Lindsey Houser. It 's
Ttme for Clothmg II ; Alyssa
B,tker. It's Tune for Clothtng
Ill. Shaw'nella P.ttterson ,
Ready Let's Sew, Heaven
Westfall , Frugal Fashtons ;
Cheyenne Beaver, Joytul
Jumper; Amanda Roush,
Clothes tor Mtddle School;
Lmdsey Houser. 'Clothes for
l;!tgh School and College.
Audrionna Pullins. Lounging
Apparel, Tma Drake, Dressup Day Wear; Kelsey Holter,
Outer Layers, Brenna Holter,
Tops for Tweens.
Food and Nutnuon Day:
Andrew Btssell ' and Ryan
Davts, You're the Chef.
Sarah Jenktns, The Global
Gourmet; Haley Perdas. Let's
Bake Quick Breads; Rebecca
Chadwell, Janae Boyles,
Brady Bissell, Meals 111
Mmutes; Morgan Hall. The
Outdoor
Chef.
Baylee
Collms. Tyler Barber. Lartssa

Ohio vital to 2008 campaigns·of both parties

Council

Deaths

Repaving

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

from Page A1

Other issues:
Deputies are investi g.ning
a burglary at the home ot
Bobby
Smallwood
of
Langsville. Entry was made
by ""emoving a wmdo" atr
conditiOner
A handgun. cash
pounng
concrete, and a vehtcle
ed
regt stratt on
smoothing, leveling and plate were reponed stolen .
reseeding the dtrt and donatLester Shultz. Racine ,
_mg the pipe for the basket- reponed his home was broball backboards
ken mto and weed trimmers.
All,;.._members of council tool boxes and a metal detecwere present for the meeting tor were stolen. Entry was
with the exceptions of made by cutting a chain on
Counctlman Jtm 'Sisson and the rear door of the residence
Counctlwoman Ruth Spaun.
Deputies recovered a 1995
Council was JOIIled by Oldsmobtle reponed stolen m
Clerk · Trea surer
Kathy Jackson County. W Va. It was
Hyse ll.
Krautter
and recovered near the mtersecPomeroy Chief of Pollee tion of Leadine Creek Road
and McE ihmny'Htll Road and
Mark E. Proffitt .

AP Photo

Columbus Mayor Mtchael Coleman makes openmg remarks to
the Democrattc Leader"shtp Counctl Monday m Columbus.

vtllage. tn keepmg wtth a recommendation of a market
and retail-based survey
recently completed for the
vtllage 's downtown re~ital­
tzation project.
Council also voted to
match 26 percent of the cost
of the project, wnich could be
as
much as $50,000,
Houchins said, which will
hkely come from other grant
funding sources. Manley
voted against the motion.
Councilman Roger Manley
voted against the pavmg project resolution', its approval
on an emergency basis. and
the resolulton declanng street
repatrs a pnonty of counctl

and prescribe for ttself nanobactena. wa~ a well - future of our health system
through Vocal Proltltng.
recetved topic at a nation,li holds To respond to thts concern he wanted "to speak to
Examples of Edwards' conference last summer
ex
pens m the vanguard to lind
work that brought her to the
Edwards has not only
out
from them where thetr
attention of TriVIen included decoded the frequenctes
toxicity evaluatiOnS for associated wtlh nanobactena research is leading us.''
Hts search for a legttimate
World Trade Center engt- but has demonstrated a pre-'
leader
m the fteld of sound
neers and firemen who dtctable mathematical relaworked at ground zero, the ttonship of tooth plague to therapy lead htm to Edwards
development of a computer- the early warmng stgns of and her company. Sound
ized pre-screening for vacct- heart dtsease assoctated l'ith Health. whrch ts located in
Albanv (www.soundhealthnation nsk factors and pam nanobacteria mvasion
relief through the presentaAt that cqnference. Roman mc cotit ). Forthe past 25 years
tton of Jow-frequtncy brain . Chrucky,
MD
credus Edwards has been known in
entramrrient.
Edwards' decoding of the fre- thts commumty as a person
Over the last two years, as quencies of nanobactena wtth "ho ts al" ays on the edge of
the results of BtoAcoustic helpmg hts body reverse not change and mnovation.
Larry Tm ten. Jr ts a Jeadresearch have increasmgly only his hean condttton bul
mg
\Hiler and edttor 111 the
caught the attention ot agen- hts prostate cancer as well .
•
tield
ot holtstic -and alternacies that have mvned
Trivieri noted in the forward
Edwards to work with a of Health on the Edge thdl hts l!\e nicdtcme. wtth ·aver 30
wtder range of frequency interviews wtth the twelve years of personal ~xperience
based health related para- experts in the . book were m explonng techniques for
dtgm s. Her work with destgned 10 help hun answe"r optimal wellness and human
pathogens.
particularly the questton as to what the Iran sformation
turned over lo West Vimjma
authonttes. Beegle satd In other matters, Beegle
reported that ht s office ts
mvcstigating the following
en me repon s
• Patncta Bissell , Rutland.
reponed theft of two 1.500pound bales of l'ta9
• Joshua
Johnson,
Langsvtlle. reponed the theft
of a 2004 KFX Kawasakt tourwheeler from Ius res1den ce.
• Vtckte Hobbs. Pomeroy.
reported the theft of a lawn
mower from Meigs Memory
Gardens.
.
• Ttna Booth , Rutland .
reponed the theft of an XBox and two Sony P!ay
Station vtdeo games and
lllOI'IC&gt; from her residen~e .
• Eber Ptckens, Jr.. Syracuse.
reponed the theft of rwo btcycle&gt; frot'n his propeny One
wa:, recovered by deputtes,
mtotheF is sttllt111 S~III g

...
Information Needed

~-----..._- ~------+c

-+c

-+c

Civil War Scholars need information
on the 7th Ohio Volunteer Calvary Co.
K and Meigs County Civil War
contributors. Names of interest, but
-+c not limited to: Braley family, Thomas -tc:''
Brunker, R. Downing, Israel Garrard,
·
Joel Higley and William McKnight.
Items of interest: pictures, letters,
news clippings. documents, records,
etc. We will be in Meigs County
August 7,8 and 9. Contact Don Maness
at 870-926-1415 or 870-972-3616 or
ewail dmaness @astate.edu.

-tc: .
-tc:
- t c : - - - -- -tc: - - -- - -tc:

~

�. ' ..

'

PageA6

'

BUSINESS
:Cornwell Center renovation County recognized/or
and construction underway claim management
The Daily Sentinel

ATHENS - The development of · the Cornwell
Center for Cardiovascular
and Diabetes Care is underway. The project includes
major renovation as well as
.:onstruction of a 5,000square-foot addition to
O'Bieness' former medical
office building attached to
the hospi taL Renovation
and construction will provide 15,500 square feet of
space in the new center on
t~e first floor of the hospitaL Renovation began in
May 2005 and construction
preparation·· for the .foundation of the addition began

this month.
diopulmonary rehabilitation
The center will combine program in conjunction
a variety of diagno&gt;tic and with WeiiWorks at Ohio
treatment procedures , as . University, cardiovascular
well as educat ion for · testing, and diabetes care
patients wi.th cardiovascular and education.
.'
conditions and/or diabetes,
The center is named the
conditions that are often Cornwell
Center
for
related, The center facility Cardiovascular and Diabetes
will feature ·a low-risk Care in honor of Foster B.
catheterizatio.n laboratory and Helen W . Cornwell,
for cardiac and vascular long-time Athens residents.
procedures ·- not previously The project is partially
available in the area - as funded by a bequest from '
well ·as physician offices the · late Foster B. and
· and Helen W. Cornwell estate.
for
cardiology
endocrinology. Other serThe completion of the
inc-lude new Cornwell Center · is
vices
will
O'Bieness' HeartWorks car- expected by mid 2006.

ExxonMobil partners with OU researchers
ATHENS - Exxon Mobil them at these scalding tem- have been sent to the institute
has contracted the Institute peratures. even without water. from places as disparate as
fur Corrosion and Multiphase
"We don't know how these Vietnam, Oman, Uzbekistan
Technology. part of the Fritz acids cause corrosion without and Australia.
,
J. ·and Dolores H. Ru ss water," said Daniel Gulino,
"Ohio University has the
~allege of Engineering and associate professor of chemi- largest facility and ski lled
-Technology
at
Ohio cal engineering and associate researchers with considerable
University, to research corro- dir~ctof of the institute. "But experience - it's a unique
sion within oil relineries to that"s what we're hoping to facility in the world,'.' C)ulino
the tune of almost $1.2 mil- find out."
said.
"That's
why
lion.
ExxonMobil wants to use ExxonMobil sought out our
This fall , the university and this research to prevent a type expertise."
~xxonMobil will sign a three- ' of corrosi~n that is little
The Fritz J. and DOlores H.
year contract guaranteeing understood and to date has Russ College Gf Engineering
$680,000 in cash and been dealt with largel~ by and Technology educates
$500,000 worth of equipment continual replacement ot cor- well-rounded professional s
to the institute. The equip- roded piping with new pipe, with both technical and teamment will become the proper- an expensive solution.
. project skills. The Russ
ty of the university when the
For more than a decade, College offers undergraduate
contract ends in 2007 .
Ohio University researchers and graduate degrees across
In exchange for the money have worked with a consor- the traditional engineerin'g
and equipment, several Russ tiumofthe world's 12 1eading , spectrum and in technology
College faculty. graduate stu- oil companies to come up , disciplines such as aviation,
dents. and technicillnS will with new ways to deal with computer sc ience and indusconduct research into the . the corrosion of pipelines that trial technology. ·
ways certain acids found nat- carry crude oil to refineries,. Research are'ls currently
urally in crude oil corrode the often across hundreds of receiving significant funding
pi ring and equipment inside miles of land 'and ocean lloor. include avionics, fuel cells. ·
oi retineries.
This newest project dealing bioengineering, oil and gas
Generally speak ing. corro' with corrosion inside refi ner- pipeline corrosion, and cnvi. sion in oil pipelines is an elec- ies represent s a step into new ronmental pipes and culverts .
Named for alumnus Fritz
trochemical process involving research territory,
And with it s extensive Russ and his wife. Dolores,
attack of the metal by an acid.
which means that water must series of simulated pipelines the Russ College is home of
be presen t Water withtn the in which to study corrosion, the Russ Prize, one of the top
oil is unavoidable when the Ohio University boasts the three engineering prizes in the
oil is extracted from beneath . largest research facility of its world.
the ocean , and any steel kind in the world. Its experFor more information, visit
pipeline carrying oil from an tise is sought from all corners www.ohio.edu/engineering
offshore platfo~m to an of_ .the ~lobe . Requests for &lt;http://www.ohio.edu/engionshore refinery ts subjeCt to tnformatton about corros1on neenng&gt;,
corrosion.
Within a refinery, however,
the oil is heated to nearly 600
degrees Fahrenheit as the
refining process begins. and
any water present is boiled
out. Yet corrosion ·is still
observed to occur, and the
culprit is a class of organic
acids which are harmless to
pip~s at low temperatures but
wh1ch begtn to eat through

POMEROY
- Meigs
County was recognized by
CompManagement Health
Systems, Inc., it s Man11ged
Care
Organi;zation ,
for
achieving a Degree of
Disability
Management
score of 147.03 percent.
The DoD M score mea'
sures the number of lost
work d'ays associated with

T~esday, July 26, 2005

Namedto .
Peoples board
MARIETTA - Jeffrey W.
Franz of Ashland. Ky. and
David L. Mead of Marietta
have been named directors of
Peoples Bank , N.A.
.
Franz is the owner of the.
Franz Group, LLC, a holding
. company for several rea)
estate. development and
i llvestment compani es . Mead
·is an associate prolessor of

USB- 30.41
61.79

AT&amp;T - 19.27
BU - 12.52
Bob Evans· - 23.91
BorgWamer - 58.35
Champion - 4·. 12
Charming Shops - U.65
City Holding - 37.92
Col - 47.86
DG -20.is
DuPont - 44.04 '
Federal Mogul - .7650

Gannett - 74.18
G41neral Electric GKNLY - 4.650
Harley Davidson JPM- 35.44
Kroger 19.55
Ltd • .-23.54
NSC - 34.51
Oak Hill Rnanclal

.
34.77

54.00

29.30
OVB BBT -

25.87
42.29
Peoples
27.80
Pepsico - 54; 57

Premier 12.01
Rockwell - 53.82
Rocky Boots - 30.00
RD Shell - 61.06
SBC - 23.83
.
Sears - 158.44
wai-Mart - 49.45
Wendy's - 45.79
Worthington - 17.40
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis.

nnel
Th~sday,

July _
26 b
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It's going to be a humid and .
cloudy
morning .
Temperatures will rise from
75 to 91 by late this morning.
Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH
from .the southwest.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
.
It should continue to be
humid and cloudy. There
might be a bit of rain around
the area. Temperatures will .
stay near 95 with today 's high
of 96 occurring around 4 p.m.
Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH
from the southwest.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midr!ight)
Expect a humid evening.
You will see light rain. The

rain should start by II p.m.
The rain should reach 0.04
inches by this evening.
Temperatures will fall from
90' early this evening to 82.
Skies will be partly cloudy to
cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH
winds from the west.
Overnigh( (1-6 a.m.)
A humid and cloudy
overnight. Light rain is fore:
casted . The rain should reach
0.08 inches by this overnight.
Temperatures will hold steady
around 76 with today's low of
74 occurring around 6 a.m.
Winds will be I0 MPH from
the west turning from the
southwest as the overnight
progresses.

Wednesday, July 27
Monring (7 a.m.-Nomr)
, It's going to be a humid and
cloudy morning, There could
be a sprinkle or two .
Temperatures will linger at
77. Winds will be 10 MPH
from the southwest turning
from the northwest us the
morning progre sses .
Aftenroon (1-6 p.m.)
It should remain humid and
cloudy. There is a slight
chance we could see some
rain. Temperatures will hover
at 79. Winds will be 5 to 10
MPH from the northwest
turning from the north as the
afternoon progre sses.

CHESHIRE
Paul D.
Hesson,
a- maintenan.ce
supervisor at the Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation 's Kyger
Creek Plant, retired July I
following more than 38 years
of service with the company,
announced · Ralph
1::..
Amburgey, Plant Manager.
He sson joined OVEC in ·
'1967 as a laborer, and was
promoted to his current posi tion in 1994. He and his wife,
C:arol~n , livein Letart, W.Va.

·viSit us

•

•
•
•

Checking

Unlimil«i :~-"''"'"".
No tee on~™
another bankl*
.
.
unumlted'L!se ot ~:~·rtouCh-rOrie-reien ,
No fee Check·c.arct ~ ~ credit OR debit!
Free Automatic BHI Pay .ttv¢u9h 20b5! 'Ji .
Direct deposit rec~rnencted..bi,Jt not .required!.

Ohio Valley Publishing
newspapers
(Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, The Daily
Sentinel, Point Pleasant
Register) are in the proeess
of collecting fall sports
schedules and picture day
information in preraration
for our annual Fal Spons
Previews.
If you haven't done so
already, athletics directors
and/or coaches should send
that information to us as
soon as possible. Call (740)
446-2342 ext. 33; fax it to
1-740-446-3008; or e-mail
to :
sports@mydailytribune .com.

Sports ·Brit:fs

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Athletic Boosters will
meet 8:30p.m. Wednesday at
Memorial Field House . This
organization 'Will be concerning all spbrts at Meigs High
School.

Men's softball
tourney planned

UC assistant
coach acquitted of
drunken driving

on

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
University of Cincmnati assistant basketball coach says he
hopes to return .to work now
that a jury has lound him innocent of drunken driving .
Keith LeGree was suspended intletinitely tollowi ng his
arrest in March~ He claimed a
sleeping disorder caused him
to fall asleep at the wheel of his
Chevy Blazer, and that he had
bot been drinking. ·
..
_A
Hamilton
County
Municipal Coun jury deliberfned about five mmutes on
Friday before acquitting him of
driving under the· influence.

.'

...

'rwr- 9fp-~- . 'flvWi-,8-k,-i-~1
'

Attention: fall
coaches, ADs

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Youth League is planning a
men 's softball tournament
July 29-3 1.
Teams are currently being
accepted. For more information, contac.t Eben Pickens.
Jr. at 992-5564.

I' •

•,

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio State quarterback Troy
Smith did not break any
NCAA rules when he ,missed
a class to attend a football
camp
sponsored
by
Tennessee Titans quarterback
Steve McNair this summer,
the school said Monday.
Ohio State athletic department officials spent six ·
weeks probing Smith's attendance at the June football
camp in Nashville, Tenn,

Meigs boosters
meeting set

•· NO I'YII'Ir&gt;tt
• . No'

Retires
from OVEC

Ohio State quarterback cleared of rqles violation .

1

Farmers Free Checking Includes:

•

Tuesday, July 26,2005

Workers
Compensation
claims in comparison to
similar injuries for employers with similar operations.
The firm also recognized
Vicki Cundiff, who coordinates the county's workers'
compensation internal management, for the framewokr management and finan ce in
for efficient management of the Department of Eco nomics
·
claims.
at Marietta College.

Farmers Bank Has A Great New FREE Checking Account!

•

NBA offseason moves, Page B6

.

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·

NCAA rules prohibit playof studenters from att~nding educationathlete
al or charitable activities if
employ ment," Ohio
they miss class and do not get
S t a t e
written permission from the
s pokesman
school 's athletic director.
Steve Snapp
But ·because Smith was
said. " It was
hired to be at the ca111p. his
not a promopre se nce fell outside the
tional
or
scope of NCAA rules, the
educational
school said . .
Smith
activity."
·
" It was something that he
The camp
was employed to do, so it
paid
for
Smith's
overnight
falls underneath the category

a'commodat ions .- his on ly
form of payment, Snapp said .
The NCAA and the Big Ten
said on Monday they agreed
with the sc hool 's findings.
Bu1 Smi th still may fac e a
reprimand from coach Jim
TresseL
"Anvtime a student-athlete
mi sse ..: a class, it is unacceptable," Tressel said in- a statement. "Troy understands how
I feel about the situation and
knows there will be conse-

quences."
Tressel will lik ely address .
th e i" uc further at a
Thursday news conference,
Snapp &gt;aitl.
'Last year,. Ohio State suspended Sm ith from the
Alamo Bow l for accepting
about $500 fr9m a teain
booster. The NCAA al so suspended him for the Alamo
Bowl along with the ~005
sea&gt;on opener against Miami
(Ohio).

Smith agrees to
$57 million deal
With top pick's deal done, run
of- signings expected to follow
Bv DAVE GOLDBERG
ASSOC IATED PRESS

NEW YORK - Alex Smith, the
first pick in April's draft, agreed to
terms Monday on a six-year, $57
million deal with the San Francisco
49ers.
Smith will receive a guaranteed
$24 million, a lawyer familiar with
terms of the deal told The
Associated Press on condition of
anonymity.
The agreement is expected to set
off arun of signings of first-round
draft picks.
The only other first-rounders to
agree to terms are _defenstve tackle
Mtke Patterson wnh Philadelphia,
and oftenstve ltneman Logan•
Manktns, taken by Ne"': England
l'l'th the 32nd and last p1ck ot the
ltrst round .. Both stgned deals
Monday. .
,
Sm1th 1s expected to compete
immediately with Tim. Ratl:!Y for
the startmgquarterbackjob wrth the
49ers, who finished 2-14 in 2004
and have gone consecutive seasons
without making the playoffs for just
the second time since 1980.
The 49ers are counting on Smith
to grasp their new version of the ·
West Coast offense quickly after
playing mostly out of the shotgun
for two years at Utah. They are hoping he can lx; the key piece as the
franchise tries to re~ain the level of
dominanc~ it had w1th Joe Montana
and Steve Young under center.
After. winmilg five Super Bow~s
and playmg m nme NFC champtonshrp games in 14 years with those

Hall of Fame
quarterbacks,
the
49ers
have made it
to the NFC
title
game
·
only once 10
the last I0
seasons, los·
G
mg to reen
More Training
Bay at the Camp News, 82
end- of the
1997 season.
Smith and
new coach Mike Nolan have their
work cut out. The 49ers have little
proven talent at receiver: San
Franci sco signed veteran Johnnie
Morton earlier this offseason to join
Brandon Lloyd. Amaz Battle and
2004 No. 1 ptck Rashaun Woods.
. Monon and tight end Eric
Johnson are the only Niners
receivers with more than 60 career
receptions.
Smith who left Vtah after his
junior ,;c;ason, led the Utes to their
first BCS bowl win, a victory over
Pittsburgh in the Fiesta Bowl. '(hey
finished 12-0 and were ranked
founh in The Associated Press poll.
This past sea~on, he completed
185 of 280 passes for 2,624 yards
with 28 touchdowns and just four
interceptions. He also rushed · for
563 yards and IOtouchdowns in the
regular seawn. He tinished fourth
in the Heisman Trophy voting.
Smith, who is repr,esented by
Tom Cohdon, will get $4 million
more guaranteed money than Eh
Manning, last year's tirst pick over' Please see Smith, B&amp;

,

""

AP photo

San Francisco 49ers rookie quarterback Alex Sm ith looks for a receiver during
paSsing drills in Sa~ta Clara, Calif., 1n this May 6 file photo. Smith agreed to terms
·Monday on a six-year. $57 million deal with the 49ers .

Mason Co.
back in state
tournament
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM @M\'DAILYREGISTER.COM

PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
- It was a hard fought weekend, but the Mason County
American Legion team managed to come out on top and
earn a berth in the state
legion ioumament Sunday.
To get there. Mason
County· (21 - 15) had to go
· thfough Parkersburg Post 15
(12-2 1) to gain a spot in the
tournament , winning the best
of three series Sunday with a
7-1 victory.
However, winning the
seri~s did not come easily.
Mason County entered the
Area Tournament confident
and showed just that with a
15-5 victory Thursday to gain
a one-game edge over
Parkersburg. Saturday, however, was a different story.
Up 4- 1 heading into the
ninth inning, Mason County
blew its three run lead, allowing Parkersburg to rally and
· gain the 6-4 victory. tying the
:;erics at one apiece . ·
P.ost 15 came into game
• two prepared and jumped to
an early 1-0 lead in the second inning. Mason County
answered with a four-run
founh inning to regain the

AP photo

USA's Michqel Phelps starts in the men's 200 meter freestyle
at the World Aquat•cs Championships Monday in Montreal.

No morning flop:·
Phelps advances
.easily this time.
BY

.

'
P,\UL NEWBERRY

Hac kett. who already won
gold in the -10() free. was top
qualifier at I minute. -17 .88
MONTR EA L
Michael second'&gt; - keepi ng himself
Phelp' didn." t wash out this ·on track for a delayed showdown wi,th the \\Wid· s hest
time.
One day after llnpping in ..,\\"llllll1CL
Phdps won his heat and
the preliminaries of the -!!Ximeter
frcc't~k.
Phclp' \\a . . 'ccond Li.\IC..,l n\·era Jl Jt
.6,SSOCIATED PR ESS

Larry Crum/OVP lite
Mason County's Dale Kestner throws a pitch dunng game
one of the Area Tournament against Parkersburg on
Thursday; July 21. Post 23/ 140 wrapped up ~ state tour·
nament berth with its 7·1 win over Parkersburg Sunday.

•

bree7r:d into the -"l'mifinal" of
the 2!Ml fr,'e "&lt;II the W,&gt;rld

I

-1~.5J

· Hackett anJ Phelps were
Swim,ming CIMmpinn,hip, on 'uppo,cJ t•&gt;face off in the 400
Monda) .
Please see Phelps, a&amp;
star
Granl
Australian

�'

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel
'

The comeback b~gins:
~·Williams rejoins Dolphins
'By

STEVEN WINE

ment."
At a team meeti ng Sunday
after playe rs reponed for camp.
Wilhams spoke brielly and
apologized tor the 11npac t
caused by hts retirement a year
ago las t weekend. The Dolphms
went tnto a nosedtve and linished 4-12. thetr worst season
since the 1960s
"There were thmgs a bout ltte
that l wanted to explore o utside
of football. and I had never h,td
the c hance," Wtlltams smd at a
news conference after practice
" I realize by makmg that dec iston, l affected the temn m a
negattve way and upset a lot of
fans.
"I'm very regretful that pea-

It ~om~s

re.1r.

Willhtnb saul he no loni!er
smoke!\ n. He laces a four-gal11c

on

suspell,ion at the stat1 of the
season for VIO),ntng the NFL
suhst.tnce abuse poiK·y.
" Bemg an NFL player. I had a
roblem wtth some at the ntles
wa,n·t very comfon.tble wult
tt ••md I decided to walk aw.ty
fwm1t. .. Wtll~&lt;tms s.ud. "Bein~
.twa y ,md havtng a c hance t~&gt;
Jc,un a lot .tbout myself. I realil~d th.n freedom ts having the
str~ngth to be 111 any situation
;md t&gt;c content with that situation
Detcnstve end J,tson Taylor.
Cllttcal uf Willt,uns wht:n th~
~ru~ i'Sue '"ti,tced last ye,u.
s. ud he constders the matter
closetl.
" I don't think he needs to talk
to us about 11 ," Taylor sa td " It's
none uf our busine~s. He l'atl
deal ~~&lt; ith thtn$s howe,er he
wants Just don t lea ve agam"
After Wtllmms vam~ h ed last
Jul y, he ltved in a tent· ttl
Australia, s tudted holtsu c medt cine at a Caltfomta school and
spent a month at a yoga center
111 India, becommg c enifted "'
an mstructur.
Does he regret the deciston to
sit out last season?
" It 's hard to regret tt mvself,
JUSt because I had an incredibl e
year," he smd " I ~ot to do pretty much all the thmgs mmy ltfe
that I never thought I ~~&lt;ould do
ot I had a c hmtce to do So tor
men was very fullilltn g."
Fullilltrig but les~ tillmg: He
lost 30 pounds on " vegetanan
dtet and took the field Monday
at 213, well below hts listed
weight of 226 on the 2004 preseason roster.
He's no longer btg enough for
the '-'01 khorse rb le he ""umed
tn 2002-03, and he\ not eve n
assured of s tmtmg . As a hedge.
Saban took Auburn's R o nm e
Brown wtth the No, 2 over.tll
pt ck Ill the Apnl dratt
Brown. trontc,tlly. w.ts the
nmnm g back absent Monday
He h&lt;~ s yet to stgn.
Wtlltams said he mtssed lootball .utd his teammates ),,,t ye,tr.
but money also mnmat~d hun
to return. A court found tltc
1998 Heis mmt Ttophy winner

as being very

set I tsh

So I

Jo ol fl:J

Williams

11 (' g .It I \ t!

Iy

tmp.tcted ..
H1 :.. worLb of rontr it ion
o.,;eemed to s.ltl'dv tc~unm . ttes.
mcludmg
celller
Seth

tvh.:Kinnev, v.ho

.t

yl! ..tr al!u

call ed Wtfltams a qutttcr
'
" In the team mccttng, he did
whdt he had to dll .. Mcl&lt;;inney
satd " He's ,t 111,111 ,tbo'tu 11
We 'rc all bem¥ men about it.
Nobody i~ holdmg ,my grud~es
We a ll want h 1111 back He s ,,
great player ..
Locker-room teasmg helped
lighten the mood. players said
Defenstve tac kle Larry Chester
noted Wtlltams • long, scraggly
beard and multtdtrectional hmrdo.
''Guys were ~ay mg he looked
ltke a ltttle homeless g uy,"
Chester smd. "It was all in fun"
Williams said he found the
warm reception from teammates surpnsmg.
"It's awkward, you know""
he said. "So many th ings have
been tloaung around, you JUSt
never know what to expect •·
His return overshadowed
Sab.m on the new coach ·s first
day a t cam p. It was Saban who
reached ou1 to Wtlltams m
Jmmmy. lay mg the g rou ndwork
for the runntng bac k 's comeback .
When W11li.uns retumed to
the tield. ne;rrly ,, thousand tans
were on hand til humtd. 85degre~ ' unshme His n.tme dlld
number 34 were sttll mtsstng
from a rostet IJ&lt;utdo ut &lt;In
oversig ht. a te,un oftictal s,ud.
But a dozen l.tns wore No 34.
jerseys. the same ones sold for
halt pn~e 111 South Flonda last
fall.
When a pass p,tttem sent hun
spnnttng tow.trd the st;md s. the
crowd cheered, prompttng hun
to grin He s miled agam later
when he stepped to a lectern to

answer questions from

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~~uJJ)__Bo~!en Memona.!_9 entr~'l91ewoo_d,

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both July 29
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both July 29
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both July 2"='9,__,__
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_Q_a~~~ •. ~~~ _
bot~ July 24 ___ _
New _England Patriots
Q11!ene Stad1um
'Foxboro Mass
July 20, July 28
New York ,Jets
Hofstra Un~v~rSIIy _ .. ------ __ ~~mpstead , NY _
b_oth Ju ly 2_~ ____ _
O~ktand Ra•d~rs
__Naea_'{altey_~ar~l9tt -------~a_p_!J, Calif"'
_____ J.l:!.!i: £.5..LJJ:!lY...?L_
P!!ISbl!!gh SteeJers ___ St V1nc!Jnl College
Latrobe Pa
both July 31
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Char~ers Park
San D1ego Calif
J~IY. 25 ~ J_
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na::"U'-'n':'lv_,e,rs,IILY-,--....!:FC'ta,g._,s,ta,ff":
, A~
bOth July 31
~ll_an_ta Fa~~o~s-~
_ f~~9'l Tr~ln!._J'!g.f_I~C 11!f1_ ___ ~ f!owe~ry!)~a_nc_~ _Ga ----~ ~oth July 25
Woff!Jrd College
Spartanburg1 S C.
_ ~_2!_h J~y_ 2~----~
Carolina Panth~rs
Chicago Bears .__
Oilve~t..'-"
N-'!:az~a!!r:".e!!
ne'!..!!U~n'."'vc__ _ _ __!;!B&lt;J.OU'!'r!'b&lt;J.Dn~n~alll'ss,.~ll"-'l---__!b~o!!!lh.'.,!Ju'!'I'LY.;:2~
4 _ __
Dallas Cow~oys
Marnott ReSideQ_ce Inn
Oxnard, Calif
___bol_h_':!l:!~g~---~tr~lt_ Lipn~ ________ blpns Tr_aln~..rllt.fa~
·~--- Alle.Q Pa!_!tl_~_!~.!:!_ ____July 25j July 29
Green Bay Pacf!ers
St. Norbert College
De Pare, W1s
July 25, July 27
Mlnn~eota Ylktnge
M1~nesota Stat~_ Un1~
_ ~a~~~~~~ ~1nn
• _poth_ ~!Jiy_ 2~ .
PI!•_\!.Q~!t-~~-1i~lnta
Sa1nts Complex,__ _ _-,-_ _'."M!!e!!!ta!!"~'e;o.J,L,.a'-._ _ _ ____cb,o,oth"-"J"ul,_y.:2':8_ __
~aw '!9:~Glanta ______ Umvers1ty o!..~A!o;lb!!!a!!
nYL_ _ _ ___!A~Ib&lt;;~Ja~n!lYI.·N!!c'Y"=-______!!b&lt;J.OI'!.h~J~u!!Jiy~2.o;9!....,_ _
P_!111a_dalphl~- Eaglet
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___B~~hl~_t:l-~m ~ .Fa
. . . . . . . . ."'Ju,_,l_y 2~1 Aug
St. Louie Rams
Rams Park
St Lou1s, Mo
both July 28
§a_n_Fran_cJa.~~-494!_r_l _ -- ~.§1-~r~_Cs&gt;J!!el~x-------------- Santa Cla_r~_9_"!.1~-.
both JuJy 29_ __ _
~e~ttle_S_ea~a.w~e _____ .Ea§tern. V:Ji!si}l!]gto!l. !JQ!.~ ----~----9_Q~.!:..~Y~-~~~~-~------JuJ:;.}6.1 J_L:J!Y~L IfTampa Bay Buccaneer• Disney's W1de World of Sports
Lake Buena V1sta , Fla
bo!h July 28
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both July 31

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Oklahoma, was taken in the
second round (34th overall) by
the Brown s, who ltke hiS versattltty and could use htm at
cornerback Last season, Pool
was named All-Big 12 a fter
lead mg the Sooners wtth 92
tackles as .tlree safety.
The
Browns
picked
M c Millan, a three-year staner
at Kan sas. m the fifth round
( I 39 th overall). As a semot. he
had a career-high seven sacks
In 46 career games tor the
Jayhawks , he had 15 sacks.
McMtllan is expected to play
outside
linebacker
in
Cleveland's new 3-4 defense .
Both Pool and McMtllan
wtll play special teams this

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neutered short~a1r, very
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For 1nformat10n lead1ng to
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any lo.. or axpenaelhal rea ulta from the publication or omission of an advenlaament Correction Will be made tn thallrst awallabl&amp; eSltion
are atwaya conftdenllal • Current rate card applies. • All real estate advenlaementa are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act ol 1968
accept• onl~ help wanted ada meellng EOE alandarda. We will nol knowingly accepteny advertiSing lh vlolat1on ollhelaw

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110

B1ggest Yet Fund Aa1ser &amp;
Yard Sale· 9am-5pm New
Haven Hgts , Fr1·Sat 291h30th 4 store display cases,
churns &amp; stone 1ars old p1e
sate (very n1ce), very, very
much more, round oak
tables rare 2 prong p1tch
fork yes we have the Bull oil
lamp , lots more to be donated, \Jery rare cooK1e Jars

So 'IHAT'5

WftAT

orpoSI'I SLE 1"t-IVM!!&gt;S
AR6 f'.. Ft.
0
D

Movmg Sale 22-23 24
Baby clothes. appliances
electroniCS, much more• SA
-681 West t 6 miles from 33
740-992-3462 for more Info
Thursday &amp; Fnday 9 OOAM-?
35670 SR7 New tools
housewares, hash vegeta·
bles, lois ot m1sc ttems NO
clothes
\\'ANTED

L---.iroliloiB•U\•'-_.1
Absolute Top Dollar US
1-U.
S1tver . and Gold Coms
Proolsets Gold R1ngs Pre1935
US
Currency
tCI 2005 by NEA , Inc.
Sol1ta1re Diamonds· MT S
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740·446· 110
2842
HEU'WANI'W

fjfWr-

YARil SAUll'oti1EROV/MIDilt.E

Lookmg to rent or buy on
land contract old house 1n Banking Opportunity
Community Action Is seekFound black !em Lab w1th '-.-liiiiliiiiiitliiiiiiiiiiiiiPI the country w1th 3 bedrooms Local off ce of reg onal bank g an EPP/HWAP CLERK
1
111
1
red collar and small choker
or tra1ler w1th tot or some se~tks qualified md1v1dual for tor the Ut1l1ty Program
chain 740-742-2535
Ra1n or sh1ne Yard sale acres Shlt1 worker needs part·t1me
pos1110n
of Energy
&amp;
Bwld1ng
July 30 only 9 OOA M ··? qwet area Call 740 949 Customer
Servtce
lnspect1on
Weath
enzat1on
Lost 7/16 at the Health Many M1sc 1tems 365 Gran1
1081
Represen tatlve
(teller) exper1ence preferred Good
Dept Yellow cat With orange Street Middleport
st r~pes 740-245-9740 441·
Real-Estate Wanted-Local Essentia l skills mclude read1ng, wmmg compre0538 740-441·2896
person look1ng for a home to excellent commumcaiiDn hension organ1zat1onal and
Ouy All cash Me1gs or customer serv1ce and computer sk1tls a MUST
Gallia No dout:SJS·Wide or cross·sttlllng ab1lllleS Must Send or delrver resume and
be able to eHectlvely man- references to GMCAA
CLASSIFIED INDEX
modular 740-416 3130
age cash drawer process attent1on Sandra Edwards
4x4's For Sale .............. , ... .. ............ 725
I \ 11'1 0\ \fl \I
and balance vanous types of 80~0 N State AClute 7
Announcement .... .. ................................ 030
-.;
I
R\
HI
-.;
"-transactions
Must be avail· Chesh1re Oh10 45620 by
Antiques ...................................................... 530
;,;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;..;;..._ _~ able to worl&lt; varymg nours 4 OOpm on 811105 GMCAA
Apartments lor Rent. .......... ............... 440
110
between 8 00 and 5 00 1s an EOE
Auction and Flea Market.... .................. ..080
HI::IJ•WAN"(ll)
Monday- Thursday
800- ~-------Aulo Parts &amp; Accessories ........................ 760
6
00 Fnday and Saturday
COOL TRAVEL JOBS
Aulo Repau ........... ................................... no
a
00 12 00 If you are a flex - Hmng lO·adventurous g~rls
Autos for Sate ..................................." ........ 7t0
1ble team player who likes a and guys to travel all mapr
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale .... .. ............. 750
challenge
submit yciur US c11ies and resort areas 1
Building Supplies ................................. 550
'esum. by e meol to On 10b tramtn"~ No Slipen·
LEARN
Business and Buildings ...... ....................... 340
caree(s@pebo com or by ence
needed
Business Opportunity .................. ............... 210
TO .
fax to (740) 568·1427 Transportation and lodgmg
Business Trammg ....................................... 140
Competitive wages and ben· prOvided
Dally/weekly
DRIVE
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ............. ... ... . 790
''package
bonuses
Sharp people
..
Camping Equipment ........ .... ... .. ...... 780
'
Start Todayt 800 701 t442
Cards of Thanks ... .. ...............................010
• NO Elii'EHIENCE NECESS ARY
•
FULL
fii.4E
CLASSES
Bookkeeper
wantod
Horne Health care of SEQ 1s
Child/Elderly C~re ....................................... t 90
• COL TRAINING
lmmed1ate openmg Part · currently accept 1ng appllca·
Etectricai/Relrlgeration ............................... 840
• FINANCihG AV~ ILABLE
t1me·Hours and days off fleX · t1ons fo r AN s and Aides
JOe PLACEMEt-11
Equipment for Rent.. ............. ...................480
• ENROLLING NOW
1ble Salary based on expen- Compeltt1ve wages &amp; bene·
Excavating...... .. . .. ..:...... .... ... ............ 830
ence
Back.ground
m I1IS 1·866·368-l 1oo Toll
Farm Equipment ..................................... 610
account mg &amp; Outckbooks Free
Farms for Rent. ............................................ 430
ALLIANCE
preferred Contact Jack R1fe
Farms for Sale ......................................... 330
TRACTOR-TRAILER
Treasurer (740)446-4653 or Housekeeping /Laundry
For Lease ...................................... 490
TRAIN ING CENTERS
(740)446-9010 cell phone postiiOn ava1lable at Arbors
For Sate... .... ........ ........ .. .................. 58S
WYTHEVILLE VA
(7401339-2450
of Gallipolis 170 Pmecrest
For Sale or Trade ....................................... 590
Or Gallipolis No phone
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .................................. 580
1-800-334-1203
calls pleas.e
BURGER KING
Furnished Rooms ............ ....... ,.......... ... 450
--~-----MANAGEMENT
General Hauling .... ..................................... 850
Maple Grove Cab1netry IS
tOO WORKERS NEEDED
OPPORTUNITIES
Giveaway ....................................................040
seek.1ng an honest, depend·
Assemble crafts
Happy Ads .................................................... 050
able indtvtdual for full or part
wood
11ems
Hay &amp; Grain...................................... ... ... .640
11me work. EKpenence 1n
To
$480/wk
Hatp Wanted ..................... ............ ............. 110
ca01neV counlertop work,
Matenals prov1ded
Home lmprovements ................................... B10
labncatiOnl Installation pre
Free
information
pkg
24Hr
Homes for Sate ............................................ 310
, !erred Appl"t 111 person 9084
80f.42B-4649
Household Goods ...................................... 51 0
St Rt 218 (740)256·1275
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
All sh1fts m all depar1ments,
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
cooKs, waitress. and deliv· We seek career ortented Need help fo r Parkinson s
Insurance ........•... .•, ..~............................. ...... 130
ery Apply 1n person P1zia Individuals who Will strive to patient m Maryland L1ve 1n
Le:wn !: G!rden EqulpiT!ent ..... ~ ,..
... &amp;80
m:s co .. ~tc:: hems .&amp; If
~Ius, 00~ Jaci-&amp;Cii PikG
achieve the best m customer e)(.penses paid, plus salary
Llvestock ......................................................830
Gallipolis
satisfaction anct tearn work Need dnvers !1censes Call
Lost and Found .......................................... 060
If you Mve a des1re 10 be (740)288·0290, leave mes·
An
Excellent
way
to
earn
· Lots &amp; Acreaga ............................................ 350
successful w1th a goal dnven ..
money The New Avon
Mtacailaneoua .............................................. 170
sa;:g:;;•;,._ _ _ _ _. .
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645 and grow1ng company. we •
Mtacallonaouo Merchandtoa .................... ...640
ott health , den1al, life 1nsur·
OUTSIDE SALES
Mobile Home Repair ...................................860
AVON! All Areast To Buy or ance, prescnpfiOn card
REPRESENTATIVE
Mobile Homes for Rent .............................. 420
Sell Shirley Spears 304- Demus program pa1d veca·
Mobile Homes for Sola...............................320
675·1429
t1ons 40fK and manage- Tile Gallipolis Dally
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
RN'SILPN'S needed lor 100 ment apparel Advancement Trtbune Is acceptmg
Motorcycloa &amp; 4 Whaelora . ....................... 740
bed sKilled nursmg facility from wtth1n If you are mter- resumes for a . lull lime
Muatcollnatrumenls ...................... ............ 570
wl1h
excellent opportunity ested 111 Gallipolis OhiO or outs1de sates representa·
Poroo~als ..................................................... 005
and rewarcMg experience Charleston WV area apply tlve to ]om our sales team
Pete for Sale .... ........... .............. :............... 560
Great
stan rates end excel- In parson the Burger Kmg and to manage an estab·
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
lent
oppqrtunlty
lor challeng· restaurant located a1 the llshed account list while
Profeoolonel Services............................. ..230
lng
and
rewarding
experi- OhiO River J=llaza Gallipolis calling on new accounts
Radio, TV &amp; CB Rapatr .............................. 160
ence
Great
start
rates
and or mall resume to Burger The successful candidate
Real Eatata Wanted ..................................... 360
excellent regulatory oomph· K1ng, 65 Upper RIVer Ad w111 be a diSCiplined, self·
School a tnetructlon ................................... 150
ance
history In terested GallipoliS OH 4.5631 or fax motived team player that
Saed , Plant &amp; Ferttllzar .............................. 650
candidates
should apply to 304·529·0055
understands the ImporSituations Wanted ....................................... 120
Aocksprmgs
rahab illlation
as 1er wt exper1ence
tance ot devetopmg
Space for Rent ............................................ 460
Center. 36759 Rocksprings
pply In person Thoma
strong , mutually benel1·
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
Road.
Pomeroy
Oh10
o-Il
cente
r
Gatll
pOII!i
clal
bus1ness relatiOnSUV'o for Sale .............................................. 720
45769 E~tt end 1Care Health
H
shipS w1tll our accounts
Trucks for Sale ............~. ..... ............ . ....... 715
Serv1ces. Inc tS an equal
Upholstery ............................................... 870
opportunity emp loyer that HelpWanted Area franchise The 1deat cand1date wilt
Von a For Sale ............................................. 730
encou
rages
worf(place motorcycle/ ATV dealersh iP have sale exper!enc" For
Wanted to Buy ......................................... 090
lltrlng all pos1t1ons qenca.l conhdent1al mteiVtew
'
dwers1ty
M
/F
DN
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supptlea .................. 620
Sales &amp; Mecha.mcs Send
Wanted To Do ........................................... 180
Full Ttme Help Wanted At 35 resume to CLA 573 c/o please send resumt and
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Adult Video &amp; Book Store Gallipolis Oa1ly Tnbune PO cover letter to GaWipolis
Yard S'ale· Gallipolis .................................. 072
Even1ng slllft &amp; M1d1'11Qilt Do BOK 469, Gallipolis, OH Oa1!y Trlb\Jne Attn: J1m
Freeland , 825 Thtrd A.ve
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ...................... 074
Not Call Store
Call 45631
Gallipolis Oh10 45831
Yard Sale-Pl. Pteaoant .................... ........ 076
1304)549 569S

•

ParamediCS &amp; EMT s
needed Ap ply at 1354
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis
Person to he lp w1th
Parkinson s pat1ent for room
and board Call (740)245
5078
- P0
- 5-IT-IO_N
_S- AV_A
_I_L_A_B_lE-cIMMEDIATELYI
Earn up to SS/hourl
we also offer
•Med1caiN 1son
•Pmd VacatiOns!Hohdcys
•Paid Tratmng
•Weekly pay + bonus
Call Today
1-877-463-6247 ext 2457

Ray &amp; Sons Complete Car
Cleanmg Help Wan led
must have valid Dnvers
L1cense {304)675·7375
AN/LPNS-- Overbrook cen
ter IS currently accept1ng
appl1cat1ons for LPNS and
AN'S 7A 7p ,and 7p 7A
Shifts are ava llab~e If you
are 1nterestecl please come
m ancl !Ill out an app11C8tlon
at 333 Page Street
Middleport or ca ll and
$peak
Wit h
Holl1e
Bumgarn er LPN Sta!f
Development EOE
Room atlendant needed for
housekeepmg Apply m person at Holiday Inn 577 s 1
At 7N Gallipolis No phone
calls please
STNA S Overbrook Cente1
IS cunently accepllng app h·
cat1ons lor lull·t1me STNA S
7A 7P and 7P 7A and 3A
3P--·- -ShiftS are avail·
able It you are 1nterested
please come 1n and 1111 out
an appllcat1on at 333 Page
Street Middleport Please
No PhOne calls EOE
Wireless Gallery now hmng
full and part t1me help Cell
phone e•pflnP.ncA "halpful
but not necessa ry For 1nter·
vtew conSideratiOn call
(606)928 1608 or ema11
wlretassgallery@ zoom1nter·
net net or ma1tresume to PO
Box 6792 Hunt1ngton WV
25773
Under new 'man agement
Heating &amp; Coo11ng bus1ness
IS lookmg tor 1nsta11ers W1th
1 year of hands on and a
1echmcat ol 1 year Salary
depends on expe rience
Send resume to HVAC PO
Box 572 Kerr OH 45643

The
Athens-Me1gs
Educational Se1v1ce Center
IS seek1ng a HEAD START
BUS DRIV ER 1n lho Clay
Area 1n Gallia County
M1n1mum of H1gh School
diploma or eqUivalent
reqUifed AeqUIIes CDL
w1lh schoo l bus class1hca
lion Prev1ous bus dnv1ng
expenence and work1ng w1lh
preschool Children pre·
!erred Ability to lilt 30 lbs
Must be w1ll1ng to part iCipate
m
drug/alchol testmg
Preference g1ven to qual1f1ed
presenl or past Head StaJ!
paren ts and employees
ThiS PQSit lon has Board
approved benefitS SuOm1t
letter of Interest resume an d
refe rences to Jolln D
Costanzo/ SupenntenCe nl
Athens Me1gs .Educational
Serv1ce Center PO Box 664
Pomeroy, Oh 10 457G9
Apphcat1on deadline Noon
July 29 The AM ESC IS an
Equa l
Opportun1ty
Employer / Prov1de r
The
Attwns·Me1gs
EducatiOnal Serv1ce Center
IS seekmg HEAD START
BUS MONITOR 1n the Clay
Area m Ga lila County
Mm1mum ot H1gh SchOol
diploma or egUivalefll
reqwed Prev1ous experience 1n early cnlidhood setting preferred Ab1i1ty lo lift 3
0 lbs Prelerence g1ven to
qual111ed or past Head Start
parents and employees
Th1s po~1t1on has Boat el
approved oenef1ts Subm1t
leiter of 1n1erest resume
and references lo Jolln D
Costanzo supermtende nt
Athens Me1gs Educa11onal
Serv1ce Cen1e1 PO Box
684 Pome10y Oh10 45769
Appilcat1on deadline Noon
July 29 The AM ESC IS an
Equal
Oop01tun1ty
Employer1Prov1der
150

0!'1"llR'I1JNfl \
oNOTI CE •

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lN G CO recommends lha
ou do busmess w1th peo
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
ma1IUnl1l you have 1nvest1
ated the offer1n

l\lo'l \

220

IU )Jl\N

**!II 0 '1' 1( ' 1·: **
Borrow Smart Con tac
he OhiO DIVISIOn 0
F1oanc1al InstitutiOn
ff1ce ol Consume
tta1rs BEFORE you ref!
ance yow hon1e a
bta1n a loan BEWARE
t requests tor any ta rg
dvance payments o
ees or 1nsu rance Call
he Ofi1Ce ol Consume
lla1rs toll tree a\ 1 866
78·0003 to learn 1! the
moflgage broker o
lender
1s prope r!
licensed (Tnts 1s a ~ubl 1
t:l-rv1ce announcemen
rom lhe Oh1o Valle
Publ1shn1 Com an )

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1n1

He8·582 3345
~I

II I.SI \II

~to

How:;

1401 Cedar St 3 Bedroom
1 1'2 Bath Corner lot new
Root move-1 n cond1tron
nel'. Carpet .,snd Floortng
Storage 8U1Id1ng Ful'lc()d 111
Back. Yard (304)675 7708

2 BR house 111 Pomero~
GallipoliS Career College 740 992 5502
(Careers Close To Home)
Jack.son
Call Todayl 740 446·4367 2036
Gal11polls OH Very nwe
1·800·214·04:;.2
home updated lhroug'"lout 3
www ga li,ool•s ll&lt;ee•colle~e ccon
1
A(Cfed l ecl ~1e.nber A cc•~ d 1 nq BR 1 1 2 bath s on 3 J acre
Council far 111C!CC1efldl'nl Cclleges level lot LA DR FA K11
and School· 1274B
UT 2 car detdclled garage
w1th storage bldg 1g decl..
170
w1tn 9azebo S. much more
Mtsc: I,I.L\\1 (" ''
..__ _ _ _ _ _....... . $137900 (740) 146·--1720
alte1 5 30
FREE Home
DIRECTV
ente rta1nment
System 3 ' Bedroom 2 Bath
FRE E EqUipment and lnslall F1reptace In the country on
up to four rooms 145 chan 1 6 acres $95 000 Call
nels S29 00 a month Ask 17401709 116€
How to get FREE HBO
MAX and STARS 1·800 JBR 1 1!2 batn Ra nch 2 crtr
garage 1n ground oool
523 7556 for df!ta11s
Greer s.chOol d stnct
\\\vrm
$115000 (i40)446 1619tor
.
ToDo
photos &amp; mOte 1nlo.rmat10n

ltao

b!lO WWY'f

OHK
Clean1ng
&amp;
PowerNash1ng Cant Keep
Up Your T'O Do list too Bt~"'
Let Us HELP You l We II
Clean·R·Up &amp; Get R·Done
We
Clo
All
Ae Side n t 1a 118 us 1ne ss
t n s1de ' Outs 1de
0811y1Week.ty•Monlhly 740
985 3639 or 740-416 1B23

All real eslalf! adver1 1smg
m thli newspaper IS
subject to !he Fede1al
Fau Housing A.cl ol1968
wh1ch mak.es 11 Illegal to
adverttse any
preference , llm1tallon or
dlscrlmmallon based on
race colof, rellg1on sex
lamlllal status or natio nal
origin, or any lnteni10n lo
make any such
preference, limi!BIIon or
duscnmmat1on
·
This newspaper Will not
knowingly accept
advertisements lor real
estate which IS tn
v1olat10n of the law Our
readers are heteby
mformed !hat all
dwethng&amp; adverttsed m
!hiS newspaper are
available on an equal
opportumty bases

ranch style home on
aoes ol la'ld 3 bed
toom 1 fi bath large 11vmg
room w1th beaut1ful hand
pa1nted room lo';lt/1 beautiful
hand pa1n1ed mur1al on wal
N ew
tefngerator stove
washer dryer 1ncluded Nev.
Pt&lt;OI1.'-'IONAI.
hot wa1er heater 111 base
St H.\ IllS
mem Total eleclnc ho1ne 36
years old A steal at
Cakes by Ka1hy· wedd1ng &amp; S59 900 13922 St Rt 160
an occas1on also Karaoke V1n1on Oh1o Call Harold al
call (740)992 -0723 af1er ERA Realtors 1740)384
3pm
5177

~ 11001 ~"

Concealed P1stol Class
Now form1ng Augusl 13 at
VFW Mason WV Oh10 &amp;
WV &amp; all legal states Call
740·843-5555

SALt

Bl 1SINI-.\."i

mR S\1 E

Ji\STkl '&lt;. "llON

Hoi\11-"
111K

10

www com1cs com

lwnght@1c.net

r

10
Ht 1.1' WANil.Ll

l'oMt.~OV/Mllltll.E

FOUND

£•

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

YAJWSALE·

Now you can have borders and grophics
~~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
S1. 00 for large

All Display: 12 Noon :z '
Buslne5s Days Prior To
Publication

Dally In-Column: &lt;1:00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

A Keyword • Include Complete
lndude A Price • Avoid .\bbreviatlons
Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed

4

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Displav Ads

Det~rlption •

To Help Get Response...

a

Charlie Frye, a thtrd-round
ptck. as the only holdouts.
Cleveland general manager
Phil Savage has talked with
Edw,trds'
agent,
Lamo~t
Smtth, m the past two week s,
but the sides re mam apart.
Smtth and Savage dtd not
return phone mes sages on
Monday
The Bwwns aren't alone in
their inabtlity to sign their top
ptck pnor to traming camp On
Monday. the New Englaltd
Patriots became the lirst team
to stgn a lirst-round pick by
reaclung a live-year deal wtth
guard · Logan Mankin s, the
32nd overall pick m 2005
Pool, a two-year staner at

Oeacl~irM

::iiiN-:T~Q~WWERUICT~EllAu;NiJA~D!~.~S:ta~rt~V~o:u:•~A:d:s~W:Ith

Browns sign two more rookies;
Edwards, Frye remain unsigned
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns stgned two
more roo kte dratt ptck s to co nIt acts Monday, hut have yet to
reach .t deal wtth first-round
selection Br.ty lon Edwards
The wtde recetver may mtss
the stan of trammg camp.
The club reac hed de.tl s wtth
d e fe n&lt;t ve b,tck Bradney Pool
.md defenstve line man Davtd
M cM tll &lt;l n Pool received a
five-yew deal and McMillan
"gned fot four. FiLhtnci.tl
tenm were not dtsclosed .
• The Btowns. who o p e n
traming ~;unp on Frtday 111
suburban Berea. have stgned
stx of theu e tght pick s wtth
E dwatds ,tnd quarterback

Word Ads

Monday ·t hru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

AP

SOURCE NFL

.md ordered htm to repay tlte
te,ml .$8.6 null ion

Are you 65

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mann
CountlesUke
NoOne
Else can!

ROOKIES ,

FACILITY

Cleveland Browns
~_!l~r ~~onc~s ____

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The 2005 NFL season fUSt kicked off with the start of tralnmg camp. The f~rst
rookie camp opened July 20. lor the New england Patnots. All camps Will be
under way by Aug 1

cluster 111 breach of contract hy rellring.

ot reponers, never hts tavonte
acttvtty a nd something he had-

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Gatling readY tor the opening •cllon

f

dll

,tpology to all
the
people
who
well!

2005

NATIONAL•FOOTBALL LEAGUE

n't done in 19 months
When the topic turned to hts
ndmttted use of manjuana.

pie were hun
m the process
of me domg
that. I do
tze that to a
lot of people

ASSOCIATED PRESS

DAVIE. Ra. - Back 111 the
Miamt Dolphms ' ba~kfield
Monday, Ricky Williams made
all the nght moves
Ftrst. he showed up. Then· he
reached the end zone on his fit st
carry, smiled at c heenng fans ,
apologized for leavmg the tem11
in the lurch, said he was done
wtth dope and cal ml y submmed
to a medta Interrogation reg.rrding hi s surreal one-ye;rr retirement.
One questton - the titst one
momentarily stumped hmt .
though: Why du.l he return''
" Why'&gt; Why'&gt; l don' t know. I
don' t know," he satd
Uh-oh. TillS roller-coastet
ride still seems a httle n c ke ty
Greeted with hu gs trom
teammate s and cheets from
fans, Wtlliams returned to the
Dolphins for thetr opemng
training camp practice Monday
under new coach Ntck Saban.
Lming up for hts first play si nee
the 2003 season. Wtlltams took
a handoff from Gus Frerotte
and sprinted 20 yards to the
goalltne
But there was no defense on
the field, and Williams ts sure to
meet suffer reststance in the
weeks to come as he tries to
regain tavor and reclann a startin¥,job.
'Look. we're ktnd of tn the
mk-takmg busme ss," Saban
said "I've talked to the team
about tt. I thmk everybody ts
accepting of hi s abthty and
respectful of him as 3 competitor. I thmk everybody ts anxtous
to see that he is commt tted and
to evaluate hts leve l o l commn-

Tuesday, July 26,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Lov cl ~

2 34

38 R2Batt1 nodular s11
uated on 11 5 &lt;~cres All
appli l'ln~ es 1ncluded excep'
washer drver 100°o dr y
wall qual lv cahmet$ wood
work. Slock.ed pond 15
m1II?S to R1oley PI Pleasant
o• Toyota St05 000 080
call (30J ~75 4429
New

Spill Level House for Sale
2913 Broolr. On\e Pomt
Pleasan All Eleetnc 2000
Sq Ft WD ~lOW' 2--l A.G
Pool ..Ox 112 LJt S79 900
I3041675·8993

www.orvb.com
Home Listings
L1s )OUI home by calling
(740)446-3620
V1ew photos 1'1IO online
Its,, Stc.-11'' J ocdroom 2
!Jail' 2 ca1 garagf' New
Ha\'€1"1 WV Code 6505 or
ca11110J )882 3368
320 :\lutUtl Ho\n:_-..o
HlKS\Ir

1999 14x80 Oa"-wooo
Freemont 3 bedroom 2
batl'ls . mde1:J 1nmg and
AC 1ncluded Very clean
read, 10 go Pr1ce neg sen
ous .::a Is only (740)388
85 13 l?-10)388 8017

n e QCI ! • ~~

tnompson 132/

5 Homes under $1 0 000
Wol de IV € ! (740\3$5·7671

3bl 2ba pool ~arage stor·
age bldg
appliances
St30 000 5 m11es from 33 97 Fleetwooo 1 4 x7~ total
elecll c W11 help w1tn oell'll
on .At681 (7401592 ·0426 ery
lnclwdes central a1 Only
M9 Mossma1 C•rcle Po1nt $1 0 995 Call i74 \385·
Pleasant WV N•ce hOme '~621
w1th many upuates 111 1 ce
qUiet ne1ghborrood 3BR 1 Lke new 1999 Schull t 6x8n
t am able to stay w1th elderly ba•n full basement Mo . . e n rnob1le home 3 bedroom ?
or hand•capped person A(1y condlt10n ~ S8F 900 Ca!1 oath5 porch vnclerpmru'1g
525 000 1740'255 1984
Sh1lt any day w•thln 25 mile l304)675 680-t afte1 5 30
rad1as at Pomerov Contact
AHentlonl
Na . . . 1 ~x:1 0 3 ceorooM 2
740·992·3568 any t•me
Local
comoan}
ofle (lng NO Dalh Only S198 63 oe1
Wanted Front desk clerk Have a S TN A licence
DOWN PAYMENT oro month Call Elaone \740)385
Apply 1n person at Holiday pw OUI.n/EIJ)ERn
grams tor vou to ouy vour 243-0
tn n· GallipOliS No phOne
C -\.RE
'lome mstead of renung
· 100°1) l1nancmg
Nev.. 3 BR Horne On!\
calls please
SchoOls startmg' W1ll care · Less than perfe('t c·~.:J1t S189 mo' 1nc1uOes a c dell\·
fo r yOur little one while yo~.. acceoted
erv and set uc (7 401385· Pa}rne~"t c.;lUid be t~e -'36teach Call (7 4 0~446-4680
sal"'\e as rert
ne ere
omE?
Mortgage
Locato1S
-sR
2B
A.
...
R
K·tche"
7
1740136 ·0000
Defk&amp; Bu d ngs A r See a
Courtry Sett1ng 2 3.,.mlles E-:.7!:.6_oO:.'!'~'e"-1c:R~c_ _ ___J
'rom Holze, New .1 Tra11er 1982 3 bedroom 2
Batns oatr C A stove rei d1sn
BedrooM
2
F11epmce
S'.25 000 'oi.RShcr Si 500 ~7 4 0\441
l- .t0 l388·622E ~~.:.o J.ll Cl'?76 or ('401645-673J

t..-------""

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

1.124

�Tuesday, July 26, 2005
Pf:rs

'

Tuesday, July 26, 2005
ALLEY OOP ·

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

FORSAU
Offlce Buiktlng w/'2. ap!rt~
•ments on 2nd Ave, in
:Gallipolis. Avg . rental of
.apartment~. $1 .200/month.
"'Price $120,000witl consider
J.and contract w/money

BRIDGE

Pleasant Valley Apartment CKC registered Pomeranian 1994 Lincoln Town Car. 2001 Ford Wind star 4Dr. V6
Condltlon , Clean Loaded $7995.00. 1993
for 2BA, 3BR &amp; 4BR ., w~s old, coat Is light gin- (304)458-1935 or (740)709- Buick Regal 2Dr. V6 Auto Atr
'
Applications
are
taken ger, vet checked ~nd au vac- 6424
$1995.00. Riverview Motors
2 blocks abov~ McDonalds
Monday thru Friday, from cinations are current. ·$400
1996 Pontiac Grand Pri~~:, Pomeroy, Ohio (740-992 ·
9 :00 A.M.-4 PM . Office is Call 1740)44 1-7216.
'
$1,500. 1740)441 ·8976 or 3490)
Located at 1151 Evergreen
---'------(740)645-6734.
Drive Point Pleasant , WV
96 Oodge·Ca rava n. auto,
Phone No. 1s (304)675·
1997 Honda Civic 109.000 AJC, PW,"" ALB, 3.3 engtne
5806 E.H.O
mi. Aller market acces- $2,500
'f Buy Homea- Local person Tara
Townhouse For Sale: Chocolate Lab sories, 38+ mpQ . Clean. 75 Dodge Tradesman 200
.buys homes. ConFidential , Apartments, Very Spacious, Pups. 8 weeks old. $100.00 black/black. Call ,(740)441· Van , Auto 318 engine
$1,000 1304)675-5562
: ~uick cash. Jim, 740-992· 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 t /2 cl7:_4:.:0::l9:.:9:.2·. :62:.2:,7_,-::--:- 9865
...6300. No calls after 9.
, Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Full blooded Cocker Spaniel
1998 Plymout h Breeze
M&lt;YIOKCY(.Ux/
Pool, Patio. Sfart $385/Mo. puppies. 12 weeks old, 1
f( l ' 1\J"
74,000 miles, runS great, ...._4 WHEElERS
,
No Pets. Lease Plus male, . 3 female $ 100,
G,ruise,
tilt,
air,
$2.300
OaQ.
Security Deposit Required, (304)773-5687
1740)256-9031 or (740)256· t995 Yamaha Virago 1100
j410
Hnus•:s .
1740)446·3481.
=~..:.::.::.,--:---::::: 1233.
V·tw in .
Yellow.
·
Schnauzers, Miniature, Ah:C
goldlw/maroon trim. lots ot
fol)R RJ.Nr
SPACE
males. Salt &amp; pepper, 2
1999 Chevy Metro 4 dr.. 4
chrome. $3,600 . Original
FOR RENl'
shots, vet chec ked . $300.
cyi
. 76,000 miles. $3,000
,BOO
Chestnut
Streel, L.o--rirriiiitiiiiiiriril--" (740)696-1085.
owner (740)446· 1662.
080. Call (740)441..()712.
Gallipolis. OH , 3 Bdrm, 1 · Downtown Office Space- ? &amp;!:~;;.;;.~;.;..-::---,
2001 Custom Pan zer, 2000
Bath . f.ir, WID hooKup. room suite $650/mo: 1 room
FRurrs &amp;
2000 Honda Accord LX 4 miles.· St3.800:
2003
Relridg &amp; Stove iricluded . oflice- $225/mo.: 2 room
Vu; ETAHU~
door. 118.000 miles. good Hundred Annv. Heritage,
City . School. $475 month , suite S250/mo. Secunty
Con dition , $9,000. (740)709· 600 miles. $17,000 : 2000
$400 deposit. No pets. Ref. 'de'!Jos1t requtred . You pay Sweet Corn for Sale
Oyna Wide Glide .. 16.000
- Required (304)675·6453
- utiliiias. Atl spaces very nice. Incredible &gt;Jarlety BK Farms 1094.
2001
Chevy
cavalier
2
dr,
miles,
$11 ,500;
2003
Elevator Cali (740)446·3644
6
2 bedroom house on
••
Hundred Annv. Road King ,
K
00
AIC.
23,800
,
'l)"t
,
I
.
5/sp.
lor appointment
1 \t n t ..., , t'l ' ll l '
Neighborhood
AoaO ,
1999
Buick
Le$abre, Gold Key package w/$7000
S. II\ I \ I IIi 1,
Gallipolis.
$425/mo. For Lease: Ottice or retail
~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;;..--., , loaded, clean: 67,000K, e~~:tra chrome , 300 miles,
(740)441-0194 or (740)441- spaces tn very good condi·
10
$5,100. {740)379-2748
$17 ,900; (740)992-6520,
1057.
•
FARM
. 740-992·2670
!ton. Downtown Oalllpolis.
Approx . 1600 SQ. II . eact1 . i "--.i'Wiijilil~il
'ii'liENiiitl'•rl 2002 Ford Taurus V6 Shar~ 2002 Harley Davidson
2 BR house located m
or 2 ba ti'1S . Lease price ...,
40,000
miles-$7995.00. Sotttatl Deuce. many extras.
Gallipolis. $400 month plus
negotiable to encourage $500 Demonstration Bonus· 1990 Olds Cutlass Supreme ,Great · shape, 5.000 miles,
deposit. No pets, reference
new
business
Call Let us demo a John Deere Z 4 Ooor·$ 1495.00 River view $i7,000 firm . (740)441 ·
required . Call (7 40)44 1·
(740)446-44.25 or (740)446- Trek or X Series Al l-Wheel Motors 2 biQcks above
9816
"'"0110 or (740)99:25174 ask
Steer on your lawn and McDonalds. Pomeroy, Ohio.
'
3936
:tor Jay.
-2002 Yamaha 125 L, FMF
rece1ve an e~~:tra $500 oft our (740-992-3490)
· 3 Bedroom House close to
already d1scourited prices. ;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ exhuast pipe, $1450.00
:town . $500/mo plus depQsit.
Limited
ttme
otter. 95 Tracer, 4 cyl.·5 speed new 740-992-2762
10
HOUSEHOUl
References ReQUired. Call
Carmichael Equipment Inc tires, AIC, e~tra clean
COOIXS
inside/out. N1ce paint. runs 2003 Honda 250EX $-750 in
' (740)256-657 4
(740)446·2412
•'
great. $ 1.500. (740)669·
4 room house and bath
0302.
. ~easonable rent. (740)446·
Are now taking Applica tions puppy, female, 2.5 pounds, 9 Good

'

' '

'

·-------.,1 r__

i

~ort

Hupp Insurance
41800 SR #7

.'11111

I

Mobile Homes •
Barns • Porches

Residential • Commercial
ENERGY EffiCIENT

Home

Will's ATV

Parts
Owner
J2119 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

45769
(740) 992-2432
Emuil:jwi1145769
@ya hoo.com

M yers Tree
Se..-vi ce

2000 Aerolote 23 loot.Fully
Equt. Like New. $7999 .
740-992·5963

House lor Aent in Point
Pleasant (304)675·6224
AntiQue maple
suite.
Numbered Cushman
House for rent in Pomeroy.
Classic Creation. 2 twins,
no pets, (740)992-5858
dresser. desk, mirror,' night
f42'l MOIII1£ Ho~u.:s stand, select comfort mattress , $1 ;200. (740)446·
FOR RENf
8325

2001 Jayco Des1gner Series
27RKS. 5th Wheel. Lots of
$21 .000
acce ssories
1304)675·2246
1999 Dodge Ram truc k V8,
black &amp; silver, 87,000 actual
miles has camper top .
i740)256-6505.

Colema n Camping Trailer
12FT. 2 King Beds, $4,995
ca ll tor Details (304)675-,
1731

'I H\- 11 I"

2 bdr. 2 ba. no pets. Rio B
or
sell . Riverine
Grande area. $400 mon th, A~~ques. 1124 East Main
$400 dep. (740)367- 7025.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740.
2 bedroom. Af.C. ver~ nice. 992·2526.
no pets, 1n Gallipolis. owner
(740)4 46·2003.

Russ

• lnsured-Fne
Estimates

• Senior C itizen
discount ·
740-992 ·2621
.Ill Ytar. E.\['1:0\'llo.\'

STANLEY TREE
TI!IMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• AfforcJable Rates ·
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley
740-742·229l

Moore ,

• Leave a message

38r. Trailer w/refridg &amp;
Stove ,washer
&amp;
dryer
Included (304)576-2934

TaM.tng Appllcattons lor 2
Bedroom Mobile Home. No
Pets, $275/mo. includes
~ater .
$200
deposi t
(740)446-3617

APAKJi\.1EN1~

' !'OR RENf
.'1 and 2 bedroom apart ments. lurn1shed Snd uniUI·
~ni shed. se.curity deposit
requ1red, no pets. 740·9922218.
1 bedroom aparimen! m
Gallipolis near Wai -Mar t
Ut1lihes tncluded. (740)245·
5555
1 bedroom Apt. Potnt
Pleasant. 1 bedroom House .
, Gallipoli s, HUD (740)4462200 or {740)709-0062
2 bedroom apt, newly
remodeled . SA 160, JuSt
past
Holze r
$460/mo.
(740~41·0194 or (740)441·•
1057.

BEAUTJFUi..

I

I

Direct TV equipm&lt;nt w/Oish

&amp; 2 TVIO units for. $50 each; 6 yr. old Quarter mare. Exc.
iike new Sony Play Station Morse, exp: ride r. agile lleet.
One w/20 games (some light touc t1 , bright, reining
brand new not opened) $60; trained! trail _e~~:P,; Good
several like· new boOnV bloodlines. Askmg $3,500.
bo~~:es . (740)949·2543
(740)441 ·10 13.
evening
calls only.
lnvacare Ly n~~: 3 mobillty
scooter-used less than lyr. ,APHA Reg . Mare._5 yrs old,
List $2,545, sell $750. New $1 .000 includes all tar.k. Call
controller, speed control. 2. (740)446-6689.
new batteries. (74 0)446·
For Sale Anglo Arabian
4561 .
Gelding Horse. Byrs old.
JET
good Trail Horse $1,200
AERATION MOTORS
) 3041675-6540
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
.
Stock Can Ron Ev ans 1- For sale: 2 reQIS1ered mmia·
800-537-9528 .
'
ture Yearling Colts, $400
eacl1. a 4o) 367• 001 B.

r

Concrete.Removal
and Replacement

.~~~;~~ Qf 11:
Contre~ Workl
25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740~992-6971

Insured
I Ill .

Fret.• Eslimales

,••.

Top • Removal • T,im
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

l~;:;Jl;~~r_j

740-367·0544

740·367·0536

'---------'

1989· Chevy 4 WHOA, original owner. $2999. 740992·5963
"

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

1999 Chevy Suburban 4x4,
good condition, loaded, new
tires.
Asking
$11 ,000 .
(740 }441 . 0658 or (74 0)7091931 .
--------986 lsuzu Trooper. Mud

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

~v~~Y

. TIMe!

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Oftice: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883
. POWER WASHING
(Commercial and Reiidenti&amp;l)

Mobile Homes, HOUses, Log Homes, Decks, Drivf'ways.
Side:wvalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreas_ing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Tra1ler s,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
.
Special rat es t.o Tru cking_ an d Dump Trucking Compantes.

LAWN CARE DIVISION
(Comrnef(ial and Residential)

Mowin_g, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilizati on 1
Spraymg of fen ce lines. l eaf Removal, as well as small
land scaping jobs such as planting and mulching

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

BARNEY
PARSON, WHAT
THEY DON'T MAKE
ST. PETER MAKES NO ~!STAKES IN
A MISTAKE AN'
HEAVEN, JUGHAID !!
SENDS ME TO
TH' WRONG
PLACE _-.." ''''\
?

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Parents
on
(740)4-41-9865.

7"'0·949·2217 .

premises. t967 Ptymoutt1 Satellite.
small block, -4-apeed. new

Born 4/3/05 Pit bull puppies, interior.
well mannered . Parents on 1Q72
Dodge
prem1ses. B1g dogs $100 (304)675-3n3
each (740)44 6-0B7).
1985 Pontia c Trans-Am ,
CKC 'Gotden Retriever pup - 5spd, 305 H.O , ooly 55,000
PieS tor sale 5250 Wormed miles, viper blue, t-tops ,
and 1 ltrst
shots , Call e~~:cellent Shape. (740)446·
0350
J740l388·B965
1989 Pontiac: Grand Pnx.
one owner. 157.000 miles.
runs OOOCI- Phone (740)3670397 or [7401645-()Q21

f~

. THE BORN LOSER
~ '{0\J

WILL AAI/t. TO PP.,'( (&gt;.,
'i'N~t'\IY- F\1/E:C;IOlll\1:. "'.
K 1'\f'..L\Y

lurnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 wv 036725
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Yeartloc!ll Ex rlence

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUCDDN
• New Homes

• Garages .

• Complete .
Remodeling

740-992-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

ftE I

II' l. fli'.DTWEWiY·fiiJ(WCKS,

T

I WO\Jlt&gt;l-.1'1

,

sa.'.

For more Inform•·
tlon. contlld your
local Ohio Vtlley
Publlshlna office.

Roclij "RJ"

• -~U.Bf . ,.

IMPORTS
Athens
Whaley's Auto
Parts

St Rt68 1 Darwin, OH ·
740-992-701 3 or 740-992-5553 ·

PEANUTS

Restocking l.a~c Model Saln•ge
and .4rtcr Markt•t Parts

7

BACK FROM
WHERE?

See Brent or Brian Whaley.
M-Fri 8:30-) :00

i

HAVE YOl! BEEN AWAV
WHO ARE '(OU ?WH'r' TELL ME?
WHAT TOOK '(QU 50 LQN6 ?

15 THAT ALL
YOU HAVE
TO SAY?

DID YOV
BRING ME
ANVTI-IING?

Sat 8:30-Noon
Sun, Closed
High

cost

got you

17-17-17,
$265 lon (While Suppy Last)
• Mushroom Compost

Available
$35 - 1,000 lbs Approx. weight

18 spreader buggies available for use
Airway pasture renovators and seeders
available to rent.
licensed agronomist on staff available for

consulting.
SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE
35537 St Rt 7 North , Pomeroy. Ohio

'

It&lt;,! THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
GRIZZWELLS

The ,Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~oint ~Ieasant ll\eglster
(304) 675-1333

296.0 Bashan Road
Racine, OhJO

45771
740·949-2217

-Sizea s:x10'
to 10'x30'

Pass

Pels::;

• J

Th e year ahead coul(j be-coma a very
adiva one tor you socially. Ghan.c es
ara you'll meet some new people
who'll play important ro les Jn your lite.
Many will usher in opportunities, but a
Jew others could brin g some probterns. •
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) - ' People
cou ld get off on the wrong toot today
causing a number of compa nions 10
beCome quite temperamental Betoro
you can blir1k. trivial issues co uld gel
to la!Jy blown out of proportion .
V tRGO ·(Au{J. 23-Sepl. 22) - Unless
you m ake a concE;~ rted effort lo be
comptelety thorough and methodic~ !
when going about your worK today,
anything you do in a slipshod fashion
w ill have to be completely redone .
,. LJBRA
(Sept . 23-0ct . 23)
Determ ine. your own priorities tod ay.
otherwrse someone else witt do so tor
you. tnstaad of acComplishing_ your
own ends you'll be str ivtng to meet
goats that are of no real value Ia you .
SCORPIO (Oct . 2 4 -N ov. 22) - Be ing
the best and strJv ing to win are noble
aspirati.o ns. but if the only way you
can meet your goal is to do so at the
expense o t othars . you writ end up
with a shallow vic lory.
SAG in "AAIUS (Nov. 23·Deo . 2 1) - Jt
could prove embarrassing tor you
today il you allow yourself to gel into
,.a d rscussion regarding a matter about
"whtch, rn reatitv. you know little . Don't
try to pass yourself off as an author~ ­
Oy

ADVERTISE ·

St~xage

Pass

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan t 9) When doin,g business wilh others
l oday. evan If they're friend s. make
sure evarythJng is on the up and up
and take nothing tor grante d Insis t
upon proof that they'll s'and behind
. what they sell.
AQUARIU S (Jan 20-Feb 19, Nothrn9 much of value rs likely Ia be
gauned today rt you attempt to put
together a bus•ness deal •n a social
sethng . It's one of lhasa days when
•t's besl 10 do so under !he p roper
condilions .
PI SCES (Fep. 20- March 20) It
could be more essential than 1usual
·that you keep your wits about you at
a ll · t1me s Ieday. IJ a problem artses or
a c rlsJs occurs. reserve your judg· •
men! un·tll all the !nets have bean
ge.lhered
ARIES (Marcil 2 1-April 19) - U you
he.ve any hope or Keeping your budg·
e l •n a he Al thy ·condotion, you 'd t&gt;eller
s ta r t tnml'l'l lng the no nessentm l
eJCpend•tures today from yoLrt everydey spend•ng ' ha~rt s Get thtngs 1n
contr&lt;1l.
TAURU S '(April 20-May 20) Be
e.~~:lremely careful as to whom you tell
some famoly secrets In the hands ot
tho wron'OJ person whb has a grudge
against you. events c;;an be distortQd
and used against you or your lam lty
G EMINI (May 21 -June 201 - Don 't
thtnk you 're immune tram being criti·
clzod yourself should v,ou sta r! finding
taull WITh otllers today. What goos •
around comas e.round . and you'll get
exBctly wt1at you put out.
C ANC ER (Ju ne 2 t ·July 22) FinEtncial maners cou ld be t rtcky
tOday. so they mi..rst be handled with
the wrsdom ot Solomon Don 'I get
ca reless or do anything •rralional
when It cornea to handling your hard
earned lunda.

'fHE l-AWN

Hill's Se lf

Pa ss

Wedrieedey, .July 27, 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol

1'1..1- &lt;:~() MOW

~allipolis JJBatlp tlr:rlbune
(740) 446-2342

North
1 :"'T

-...~ ,

WEl-L., 1 GUE55

SOMfONf'S
DAY! .

Eltst

Pass

~Graph

GARFIELD

MAKf

West

In the stock market, you hope to buy low
and sell higher. At the bridge table, sometime s we must make a small investment,
paying Up one trick to get two in return as 1n this d~al. You ar~ South, lhe ·declarer in four hearts. Wesl leads lhe spade
jack: queen, ace, live. East shifts to the
diamond queen, which you take with your
ace. How wo_uld you contillue?
Soulh might have ope ned two clubs .
Although one doesn'l ollen make this bid
with only 18 titgh-card poinls, lhis· hand
has nine winners (six nearts, one diamond and two clubs I and delensive lricks.
Nollhal il would happen here, but the risk
in slarting wilh two clubs is thai the oppo. nents compete and have the auction at
lour spades before it gets back to South.
One oplion is io cash the two top ttumps.
II the queen drops, you are home. But il
the queen doesn'llall. you will surely lose
one tr~k in each suit
II is better to accept th e loss ol one tru mp
trick in order to guarantee one spade trick
and no c!ub loser. So, atlric;k three , lead a
low hE!arttoward the dummy. 11 is possible
that West will play low, letting you wih with
the heart nine, cash the spade Ktng. clis· ·
carding a minor~su1t loser, draw trumps,
and collect an overtrick. But even if West
does rise with hi s heart queef1 , then cash
the diamond king , and plays 'another d1a·
mond, you ruff and, lead a heart ·to the
bbard's jack, ga1n1ng access to the spade
king . You gather one spade, six hearts,
one diamond and two clubs.

BIG NATE

buylnc or selllnc
Items: yo.u can use
this widely .read
section to wish

"'n

o1

~Astro- ·

tren't only for

You, 1nd plac• 1n
td
Memory"
of 1 loved one.

A A K

enhancer

56 Tries to
lind out
borrower
57 911
18 Constructs
responder
20 Curves
58 Drink wrth
22 Dinny 'a
scones
rider
· 23 Miners dig It
DOWN
24 Impaneled
one
1 Renown
V - Rico
2 - Khayyam
3C Primates
3 Fiery heap
31 Pivot
4 Clergy
32 Chinese
member
dynasty
, 5 Take hold of
34 Feminine
6 Point a
principle
weapon
35 Gels stuck 7 Slicker
36 Left, 11 sea
8 Misfortunes
37 String
9 Fontanne's
of rosaries
husband

19 Talks
fondly
21 Small bird
24 Leno
of late night
25 Go - smoke
26 Gambler 's
town ·
27 Fierce
feline
28 You, once
29 Skiff movens
31 OPEC
carriers
33 - degree
35 Thi~ken,

40 Son

barrier

'

39 Makos
coleolew
41 Play tho
guitar
42. carvey·

·

of "Woyne'a
Worid""
Seine alta
Overly
docile
The braaa,
lor ahon
Si1 lor a
por!raH
Epic
Crack pll'!f

43

44
46

47
48
51

as pudding

41 Thai woman
breakers
36 Appeal
42 Facial
13· Roundabout 38 Treacherous
feature
way~
ones

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos ·
Celeturty Cipher qptograms are created tram quolabons by lamous people past~ prtsent
Eacn letter tn the cipher starods Ia anotr'er

Today's clue: V equals T

" ECHYJ
XLIAJ

HR
HR

BFLV
BFLV '

BLCCJT

KUA

ELK.
Z.J.V ."

SANNJVV

" LTKVFHTZ
HVR

KUA

BUCVF

ECHYJ ."

FLXHTZ
OULT

F .LR

MHMHUT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "1hope all this won 't change me. I would like to stay

Wabtite:

-"-,"'-'W.h_
_ 111_"_'_"_0_
.co_m
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•

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A

provide 1 lhtnk
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i

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pooHion
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of indio
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ctouds
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apartment , ca ll 675-6679 $150 each Calf a40)388·
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£EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

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SELF STORAGE

tires. runs good, Moo OBO.
2002 Yamaha Aaptor 660cc,
NEW AND USED STEEL Horses and tack lor sale, $3,800 Good condition
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar $2.200 OBO. call (740)992· 1740)446· 1237.
For
Concrete ,
Angle , 6255
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
HAY &amp;
Gratmg
For
Drains. ~
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Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L L~---~RA:::,;:IN
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Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Cu tting
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 2nd
Friday, sam-4:30pm. Closed r
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Thursday.
Saturda~ &amp; I I l l \ ,\ I' \ Il l I \ I 'ol II
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6 male reg lslered Golden
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1740)416·2793
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Nice 2BR mobile home for
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16
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Mr 5::.o"TT &gt;

�·Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 26, 2005_:

www.mydallysentinel.com ·

.'

Cavaliers pointing to·Jaric at guard
8Y ToM

WITHERS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND
The
Cavaliers' low-speed pursuit
of a much needed point guard
has taken a sudden turn.
With free agent Sarunas
Jasikevicius agreein~ to a
three-year contract with the
Indiana Pacers, Cavaliers
general manager · Danny
Ferry has one less option to
choose from in his search to
fill the Cavaliers' most problematic position the past few
years.
But restricted free agent
Marko Jaric could resolve
Cleveland's pressing backcourt needs.
Jaric, who has played the
past three seasons with the
Los Angeles Clippers, will
visit with Cavaliers officials
on Wednesday, his agent Bill
Duffy said Monday.
·
Jaric had been expected in
town last week, but his
stopover was delayed - perhaps because of the club's

interest in Ja&amp;i kevi cius, a - the Cavs could have more the Cavs could go after
European su perstar who was money to offer Jaric, who is Damon Jones or Damon
also the best man at 'the wed- thought to be seeking a deal Stoudamire.
ding ·ofCavs center Zydrunas worth $5 million per year.
It see med as if Jasikevicius
llgauskas.
The Cavaliers also could would become the Cavs'
"Marko would be a nice fit make a trade, and the addi- third Lithuanian player. joinin Cleveland," Duffy said. • tion of ~arshall would seem ing llgauskas and 19-year"Danny Ferry has been very to indicate the team has con- .old
. Martynas
assertive in his interest. We ' ll sldered dealing forward . Andriuskevicius, acquired in
see what happens."
Drew Gooden. Ferry also has a draft night trade with
Duffy said there are several assets in small forwards Luke Orlando. ·
other teams courting the 6- Jackson and Sasha Pavlovic
But Jasikevicius, who
foot-7 Jaric. who will report- to use in any possible deal. ' scored 28 point s to lead
edly
visit Denver on
Ferry, who took over the Lithuania's upset of the
Tuesday. Utah , too, is Cavs last month. had to United States at the Athens
believed to be after Jari c resort to Plan B to get Olympi&lt;.:s last summer.
after ·losing
o ut
on Hughes after . Michael Redd dec ided to sign with the
decided to stay with the Pacers. He thinks Indiana is
Jasi kevici us.
The Cavaliers, who started Milwaukee Bu cks. . And closer to winn ing an NBA
the summer with $28 million while Jas ikevicius is a better title than Cle veland.
•
to spend on free agents. have · outside shooter than Jaric,
"It was an extremely tough
already agreed to deals with the Serbian would bring the decision and one -he labored
guard Larry Hughes (five Cavs more versatility, and over for several days." said.
years. $60·million) ll gauskas along with . the 6-foot-5 his agent. ·Dough Neustadt.
(five years. $50 million) and Hughe s, give Cleveland one "He saw Cleveland as an upforward Donyell Marshall of NBA's biggest backcourts. and-coming team · and it
(four .years, $22 million). ·
The 26-year-old Jaric aver- would have been great to
With the possibility of next aged 9.9 point s, 6.1· assists play with 'Z. · But he sees
season's sal'ary cap going as and 3.2 rebounds last season. Indiana as a tested playoff
high as $52 million - the He missed 30 games with team and one that can win an
league will announce the foot and hip injuries.
NBA championship tn the
final number later this week
If Jaric signs elsewhere, next few years."

.Pacers sign European star Jasikevicius
Free agent point guard Sarunas
Jasikevicius, considered ,Europe's most
NBA -ready pl'ayet, has agreed to a
three-year contract with the Indiana
Pacers. his agent said Monday:
Jasikevicius turned down offers from
Utah and Cleveland, agent Doug
Neustadt said.
·
If he had signed with the Cavaliers.
the 6:foot-4 Lithuanian, who helped
Maccabi Tel Aviv win its second
straight !Ouroleague title last season,
would have been reunited with
Cavaliers All-Star center Zydrunas
Ilgauskas. Jasikevic iu s was the best
man at llgauskas' wedding last year.
"It was an extremely tough decision
and one he la bored over for several
days ." Neu stadt sa id. " He saw
Cleveland as an up-and-coming team
and it would have been great to play
with ' Z.' But he sees Indiana as a tested playoff teani and one that can win an
NBA championship in the next few

Sarunas Jaslkevlclus
years."
Jasikev'icius should help the Pacers
offset the loss of Reggie Miller, who
retired after la st season. Indiana,
knocked out of the Eastern ·Conference
quarterfinals in six games by Detroit,
also will get Ron Artest back from suspension next season and will be among
the favorites to win it all.

Jasikevici us was pas sed over . by
NBA general managers the ·past few
years, failing to get a significant contract offer. But the former Maryland
guard re-opened some eyes after scoring 28 points and making t!uee 3-pointers down the stretch as Lithuania upset
the United States last summer in
Athens.
Now that Jasikeviciu s has signed
elsewhere, the Cavaliers, who are in the
market for a point guard, are likely to
zero in on free agent Marko Jaric. The
6-foot-7 Jaric averaged 9.9 points, 6.1
assists and 3.2 rebounds in 50 games
for the -Los Angeles Clippers last sea·.
son .
The Cavs, who went into free agency
nearly $28 million under the salary cap:
have already ' reached dea ls with
llgauskas , guard Larry Hughes and forward Donyell Marshall. Teams can
begin signing players Thursday.

American
Natalie
Coughlin, who won five
medals· in Athens, was top
in the J 00 backqualifier
from Page Bl .
stroke at l :01 .25, though far
off her world record from
free Sunday night, but the th(ee years ago. She was
20-year-old American stu n- followed by )apan's Reiko
. ningly failed to escape the Nakaiflura, while American
morning preliminaries.
Je(i Moss also advanced to
With Phe~ps out of the the semifinals with the 13thway and Jan Thorpe skip- best time.
ping the championships,
" It was exactly . what I
Hackett fi nail y won the 400 needed to do." Coughlin
title that eluded him at the said. "I wanted a good swim
last three wor.ld champi - and good turns. That's all l
onships. as well as the was focusing o~."
Athens Olympics.
Australian world record
Each time, Hackett fin- holder Leisel Jones led
ished second to Thorpe.
If Hackett and Phelps get qualifying for the 100·
through the 200 semifinals brea~tstroke, posting a time
Monday night. they'll face of I :07.26. The next two
each other in , Tu~sday's spots went to Jess ica Hardy
and Tara Kirk of the U.S .
final.
"I would have liked to
"I feel better than I did
yesterday morning," Phelps have gone slower than that,"
said, managing a smile. "I Jones said. ''A I. :08 would
just wanted to come into have been good enough."
But she was pushed by
today and win my heat. That
Hardy,
sw imming in the
was the big goal."
next
lane.
The 18-year-old
Phelps did win a g&lt;Jld on
the first day of swimming as American was just behind at
part of the U.S. 400 free 1:07.34.
"The Australians and
. relay team, giving him a
Americans
love racing each
chance to match his sevenother,"
Jones
said, "so it's
n1edal haul from the 2003
always good to have an
championships
10
American next to you ."
Barcelona.
Aaron Peirsol. who swept
But his pursuit of eight
medals - the total he piled · the ·rrn:n 's backstroke events
up at the Athens Olympics, in Athens, coasted into the
semifinals of the I00 back
including ' six golds· ended with a di smal perfor- · with the top time , 54.41.
Aristeidis Grigoriadis of
mance in the 400 free .
Greece
was second and
"l'in starting to get back
on track," said Phelps; who American Randall Balthird.
"I still have a lot to go."
only managed the 18thPeirsol
said. "It was a good
fastest time in the 400 prelims. "What happened yes- race . We're all just trying to
get into the se mifinals .
terday, tnat's behind us. "
Hackert is eager to go There will be a lot fas.ter
head-to-head with Phelps, swimming tonight. It's kind
adding the 200 w an already of a backstroke thing. No
grueling program for a one wants to try too hard in
chance to swim twice the morning."
Peirsol was at the center
against 'the Amedcan. Now,
it will be their only meeting of controversy ip Athens.
After an easy win. in the 200
in an individual event.
"Coming out after last back. 'he was disqualified
njght, which was a big day, for an illegal turn. The deci I was a little tired but I need- sion was overturned a halfed to back it up," Hackett ' hour later, giving him back
said. "I felt comlortable in the gold medal.
"I just caused too much ·
that heat. I didn' t put out too
inuch emotion and energy. It drama last time," Peirsol
was great."
quiP.ped.

Phelps

Sports Announcements

Smith
from Page Bl
all, who received $20 million from the New
York Giants. Manning also is represented by
Condon.
·
Smith's deal. according to the lawyer. . is
expected to average $8.25 million compared to
about $7.5 million tor Manning.
Miami had been waiting for Smith to sign
before completing its deal with running back
Ronnie Brown, taken second overall. Brown is
expected to stan for the Dolphins; then could
alternate with Ricky Williams. who sat out last
season, when Williams returns from a drug suspension after the'first four games 9f the season.

Williams reponed to .the Dolphins on
Monday.
Hours before Smith agreed to terms with the
49ers, Dolphins defensive end Jason Taylor said
the team was anxious for Brown to arrive in
camp.
"He's got to wait until the business pan of it
gets straightened out," Taylor said atier the
Dolphins' first training-camp practice. "I think
everyone understands why he's not here. It's
part of the game."
Dolphins coach Nick Saban also indicated he
wasn·\ surprised Brown was not at the first practice, espeeially because Miap1i was the. first
temil to fonnally open training camp. The
Dolphins play their first preseason game on
. Aug. 8. pan of the reason they began practice a
bit earlier than usual.

Mason
fromPageBl
lead and looked as if i.t was
once again state tournament
bound.
But Parkersburg had something to say and put· on its
ninth-iimjng heroic.s to seal
the win and force a game
three for the title benh.
Topping the hitting stats
was Jon Ullomn who had two
hits including a home run and
three runs batted in . Zeb
Reed posted a double in ·the
·game and Josh Whitlock
managed to post a triple.
Pitching for Post 23/140
was . Whitlock. who went 8
2/3 innings giving · up 'ix

•

runs, five hits and six walks all posting two hits a piece.
with eight strikeouts in the Phalen J?Osled a hit with two
loss.
RBI S With Ullom, Zeb Reed
Sunday's game . three and Whitlock also posting a
proved to be a different story. hit a piece.
Mason County now travels .
Led by Ullom on the mound,
Mason County cruised to a 7-. to Beckley for ~arne one of
I victory and a state title the state Amencan Legion ·
1'0
a.m.
benh for the second straight Toun\ament
year.
Thursday a~ainst defending
Ullom pitched in 7 2/3 ·Slate champ10n Morgantow.n.
The tournament features
innnings. giving up one run .
three· hits and one walk eight teams. Berkeley. South
behind nine strikeouts in the Charleston, Barboursville.
Moundsville.
win. Caleb McCoy came into Elkins,
the final inning and only Beckley. Morgantown and
' allowed one hi 1 to get the Ma~on County, in a double
elimination format which
save.
To add to the quality pitch- runs throughout the week.'
ing , Mason County 's bats
Mason County will leave
were swi nging as welL Dale for Beckley noon on
. Kestner posted three hits in Wednesday with tournament
'the . game with Tyler . Hern. . games being played ' at
Woodrow
M cCo~ and Kamero.n Sayre
. . Wil son Field .
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
_,uti:\IS•\ni .,). J "\••

• BG, Toledo picked
to win MAC divisions.
See Page B1

\\ .11) "\ I ~ IJ\\ ,. UI\ ~ p-, :! uo .•

·

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
A
Middleport man is charged
with eight criminal counts in
Meigs County Court in connectmn w1th a burglary on
Park Street, and ftve have
been arrested on drug charges
after a weekend search of a
Rutland Street home revealed
drugs and drug paraphernalia.
Matthew S. Yonker, 2 1,
was arrested over the week-

-

"""w u l.uhwul111dt t1111

police report burglary; drug arrests

end and arraigned Monday Entry was ll)ade by removing
before Judge Steven L. Story. a window ai r conditioner.
He is charged with four Swift said. Among the items
. counts of theft of checks. missing ~ere a safe, which
fifth-degree felonies, and one contained over $ 1,000 in
. count each of forgery and change, DVD players, persafecracking , fourth -de gree sonal checks and miscellafelonies, b\lrglary, a second- _ neous jewel ry ite ms.
degree felony, and theft . a
Yonker remains in custody.
first-degree misdemeanor.
Story set bond at $50,000
According to Middleport cash, with I0 perce nt allowed .
Police Chief Bruce Swift, the
Swift said oflicers with his
charges relate to the July 9 department, assisted by other
breaking and entering at the law enlorcement agencies, exeScott Harri son residence. cuted a search w•u-rant of the

Charl ~s

J. Thomas residence on
Rutl:111d Street, and charges
have been nled a~ainst live.
Charged were; Ctwrl es J.
ThOitJas. 44. Tresa Thonius, 42.
and Anthon y Thomas. 26, all of
Middlepon, Kara Forbes, 19.
Letan. W Va. , and Betty Holter.
· age unreponed, Pomeroy.
Charles and Tresa Thomas
were cha~ged with posse"ion
of crack cocaine. permitting
drug abuse, and endangering
children; Anth ony Th0111as
with those charges. as ~e ll as

·Mus Band camp goes on.as temperatures soar
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH @M YDAILY SENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Frank Cleland, 84
• Ruth Gilbert, 74
· • Lawrence Lawson, 78 .

INDEX
. 2 SECTIONS -

t6 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics ·

B7

Dear Abby

A-,
·'0

'

Editorials
Obituaries

BE SURE Y()UR BUSINESS IS
A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
· FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

-' :t-

Mi~dleport

SPORTS

Details on Page AS

...

.

.

WEATHER

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Specicd Meigs County Fair Preview Edition.
.This Year's Edition Promises To· Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Ever! Look For this ·Special
Edition In Your Friday, August 12th Paper.

/

'·

• For the record.
See Page A3
• Alfred UMW
meets, plan projects.
See Page A3
• Local briefs.
See Page A5
• Artist registraiion forms
ready for Foothills Festival.
See Page AS

seeking candidates for the
MIDDLEPORT The
position of Head Girls Big Bend Youth Football
Basketball Coach for the League will be holding sign2005-06 season.
ups for Pee Wee football and
cheerleading
Saturday
[nterested persons s hou ld in July from every
10 a.m. to J p.m.
contact Pam Douthitt, for all teams in all areas.
Athletics
Director,
or
Si~-ups will be held at the ·
Principal Jon Lindner at old JUnior high stadium in
(740)
985-3329
or . Middleport.
Superintendent
Ri.ck
For additional information ·
Edwards at (740) 667-397.8. contact Erica Dowell at (740)
Resumes and/or letters 'o f 843-1 046 or Samantha
interest can be faxed to· Folmer at (740) 9924042 · .
Eastern High School at
(E-mail your camps. clinics
(740) 985-3778 or Eastern .or league registrations ro
Local School District at isports@mydailytribune.com
(740) 667-3978.
or fax them to 446-3008.)

NASA returns to
space after 2. 1/2
years,A6 .

Evans autographed
Steak House display
pieces available, A3

INSIDE

BasketbaU
Eastern seeking Football
MYL to host 3-on- basketball coach BBYFL football
TUPPERs PLAINs - sign-ups Saturday
3 tournament
Eastern High School is
. MIDDLEPORT - A 3-on3 double elimination basketball tournament will be held
on Saturday, August 13, at
General Hartinger Park.
Proceeds from the tournament .will go towards the
Middleport Youth League.
Check-in during the day of
ihe tournament is 9 a.m. and
the games will start at 10 a..m.
Registration . forms are
available at Locker 219 in
Middleport,
Middleport
Trophies and Tees or the
Recreation Center in Athens.
. For more information, contact Britt Dodson at (740)
992-1122. '
.

'

.

Sports
Weather

A4
As
B Section
A8

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POM EROY - The temperature was moving up as
the sun was bfating down but
the Meigs High School band
members didn 't seem to
notice as they concentrated
on foll owi ng instructions
from director Toney Dingess.
Tue sday was the second
day of band camp and the 90
members were intent on what
they needed to learn before
football and competition season begi ns. They played their
instruments and execute\~ formations .a~ Din gess walked _
among them giving encom-·
ugement. making corrections
and changes, even offering a
bit of constructive criticism,
all the while maintainmg his
usual mild manner.
·
This is the second year lor
Charlene Hoenlch/ photo
an
at-home band camp. It
Longtime band director Toney Dingess and his assistant David Deem review format ions for the
band 's "Music of Paul Simon" to be first presented on Aug. 26 when the Maurader footb all stancd Monday morning and
team takes on GaHia Academy.
·
Please see.Band, AS

AEP restores
service to 7SO
Meigs customers
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - More than
750 Ameri~an Electric Power
customers in Meigs County
were without power on
Monday evening and part of
Tuesday, after a stonn interru"pted electric service in
areas throughout the county.
AEP ex pected · service to
be restored to those custonners late Tue sday. Most
of those customers were in
the Middleport , Pomeroy'
and Racine areas. where
strong, winds and severe
lightning brought down
power lines and toppled
trees. causing damage to
electrical equipment.
At the height of the storm.
AEP estimated that more than
96,000 custo'mers were without power throughout the
state - 18.500 in the Athens
area,
which
includes
Pomeroy and othe r Meigs
Cou nty communities.
Al:.P Spokesman ieff
Rennie said yesterday afternoon that only 18 customers
in the Pomeroy area were sti II
without power. and that their
service should be restored by
II p.m. last night. Those customers were "scattered"
throughout
the
county.
Rennie said .

Please see Arrests. AS

Seniors
and
• •
survzvzng a
heat wave
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYS ENTINEL. CO M

POMEROY - Yesterday,
the National Weather Service
once again issued a heat advisory for Meigs County with
high
te mperature s
and
humidity combining to make
it feel well over 100-degrees,
pulling everyone. especially
children and the elderly at
risk for heat-related illnesses.
Meigs Count y Senior Center
Aclivities Director Debbie.
'Jones said attendance to the
center had dropped considerably Monday and Tuesday.
"They are heeding the
warning," Jones said about
the heat advi sory. "We are
encouraging the one.s that do
come to the center that when
they go home not to do things
like mo w tl1e grass and stay
in because it can wait."
Jones added that the meals
on wheeb drivers are also
checking · on their 166 cusLarry "Lee" Drake. 34. will sexual conduct .with another. tomers throu ghout the county
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
appe~r before Judge Fred W. wi thout disclosing tha t he for heat -related stress as are
Crow Ill on Sept. 12 for sen- had tested positive as a carri- the center's home health aides.
"A lot of times. that meals
· POMEROY - A Pomeroy tencing on two counts of er of the HIV virus. the virus
on wheels driver is the only
nmn accused of infecting hi s aggravated assault and one which causes AJDS.
ex-lover with the HIV virus count of attempted aggravatThe fe lonio us assaul t person that cIie nt sees all
admitted to three reduced ed assault . He was indicted in Charge contained in the day ... Jones said.
Seniors ar~ especiall y suscharges in Meigs County · February on a sing le count of indictment against Drake was
ceptible
to heat-related illCommon
Pleas
Court feloniou ~ assa ult , alle gin g
ness because of other health
that he knowingly engaged in
Please see Drake, AS
Tuesday.
problems and the normal
phy siological changes of
aging . Their abili tv to sense
l1eat "can be impaired as can
their ability to sweat and disBY KEVIN KELLY
charge execs; body heat.
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Poor circulation may be one
barrier to discharging excess
GALLIPOLIS More
hody heat.
than 500 gra ms of crack
· Meigs County Health
cocaine and over $3.600 in
Depart ment Director of
cash was seized by local
Nursing Sherrv Weese recomillends
!)lal sei1ior' wear light
authoritie.s from an Ohio 218
c lothing. a\'oiJ long sleeves
residence near Gallipolis late
and stay hydraled by avoiding
Monday. Gallia . County
caffeine
whid1 means avoidSheriff David L. Martin said.
inf! caffeinated tea.
Martin said the seizure of
~'It s hetter than nothing."
more.than I pound of the sub~.
Weese
said about drinkino
stance is the second biggest in
tea with caffeine. "but decaflocal history. The fjrst. which
feinated tea is a better choice.
occurred near Centenary last·
They should drink Gatnrade
February and also 'resulted in
or water and also avoid alcoseveral arrests, netted 690
holic bcYcral.!C\.··
grams of crack.
Weese adJcu thai sign&gt; of
It is also the second drug
he at-related illnesses are
raid conducted by the sherhcaJcic hc . nausea and chills.
iff's office .in a week . The
Other signs include extreme
f::nii!u~ . lllll;t~Cie Jt'hcs. fe,·er,
July 20 raid at ·an Evergreen
claiumv
,J.,in. rapid pul·se,
residence also resulted 'in
Kewln Kelly/ photO
three arrests and the forfei- Gallia County sheriff's Detective Chad Wallace. left .. and. Capt. vnmiting . Sign~ thai n'1ay prel_·cJr a · heat · _•;trnke indude
ture of drogs and cash ..
~ohn Perry check crack cocaine. cash and a handgun taken from
an Ohio 218 residence late Monday that also yielded two arrt;sts.
Please see. Heat, AS
Please see Raid. AS

Plea agreement reached in Drake HIV case

Deputies seize 500 grams of crack in raid

Call
DAVE or BRENDA
at · 992-2155
FOR MORE INFORMATION

The ·Daily Sentinel
.,
,_

a charge of receiv.ing stolen
property; Forbes with possession of crack cocaine. possession of a cont roll ed substance.
possession of drug paraphernalia, forgery, and labeling.
and Holter w.ith possession of
crack cocai ne.
Swi ft said officers with the
Meigs County
Sheriff's
Department and canine unit
and Syracuse· Poli ce Officer
Ryan Hill ass isted in the

w

•

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