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                  <text>Page b-6- Sunday Times Sentinel

Middleport • P.omeroy • Gailipolis, OH • Point Plea~ant, WV

Sunday June 17, 2007

Ignoring Hamas ·
protests, Abbas swears
in emergency Cabinet,
ouda~
'nrllitia,A2

I

Edwards wins
at Michigan, Bt

•

Planting Pri~e In Gallipolis!
The Gallipolis In Bloom
comm.i ttee is greatful for all of
the hard work and pride
demonstrated by everyone in
the community. Together
Everyone Achieves More! We
make a great TEAM.

.Our flowers, landscaping,
ground ·cover, .cleanliness &amp;
community involvement will
~e judged on June 22-23!

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

:,o I

110:\ll" .. II '\I· IX.

I'\ IS'\ ul ·•" · '\u. :!-'.1

'""'·"'~dail~'&lt;'lllllu· l ,.., 11 ,

:!1111-

Residents voice concerns over coal mine

SPORTS
• Cabrera wins US
Open. See Page 81

BY Bml SERGENT
BSERGENT®MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Joanne Wilson
• Franklin Sutherland
• Kimberly Staats
• Carol 'L. Parsons
• Maxine Fultz

will be built and if the structures will be strong enour,h to
hold the sludge "forever. '
Young also requested a
. RACINE . - During an
mfonnal conference held by_ botanical survey on local
the Oh10 Department of plant life, had questions about
Natural ReS?urces (ODNR) _1mpacts on local cemeteries
rocord~ testimony was ~en and historical sites. gas wells,
fromc1t1zens w1shmgto vmce compensation for property
concerns .or suppo~ of the damage and devaluation of
coal mmmg operauon pro- homes near the mine an
po5ed by Gatling Ohio. ·
accounting of how the mine's
&lt;?D~R
1s currently waste will be stored, theques.rev1ewmg the company's tion of imminent domain and
applicatio'nfora.roomandpil- mining overlapping with a
lar coal extraction operation landfill
proposed
by
centrally
located
on American Municipal PowerYellowbush Road outside of Ohio for a coal-fired power
Raci~e .
..
plant in Letart Falls.
Ehsa Young of Racme forYoung also disagreed with
malty requested ODNR findings from the Ohio
extend the comment period Environmental · Protection
on the pennit application by Agency and Anny Corps of
30days. Young srud the "inad- Engineers that found the mine
equate" hydr~\ogy m~ppi~g would have "no impacts on
on the permit doesn t hst water sources." She said there
existing springs and "this was no chance for public
alone merits" an extension on input on this particular "intethe comment period. She also grated process."
Beth Sergent/photo
satd she was concerned nothYoung also said multiple · Officials from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources listen to residents give testimoing in the pennit addresses
.
ny during an informal conference on the coal mine operation proposed by Gatling Ohio ceohow the mine's slurry ponds
Ple1se see Mine, AS
trally located on Yellowbush Road out,side of Racine.

BIG BEND AG DAVS

INSIDE

Gallipolis, Ohio
First Pla'ce - Floral.Display

• Romney. us.es

...,

organization; aavertising
to build lead in early
voting states. .
See Page Aa
• Taylor graduates.
See Page A3

America In Bloom, 2006

Become Part of the TEAM/ Many Thanks To These Community-Minded Sponsors!
Alice &amp; Edward Dachowski, Jr.
Angeell Accounting Assoc.
Anna Jenkins
Anonymous
Barbara Scott
Bill Jenkins
Bob Evans
Bob Evans Fann - Ray McKinniss
Bob Hood
Bob's Market
Bobette Braxton
Bonnie Penix
Bossard Library
Boy's Home of Ohio
Brandon Enoch
Brandon Ferguson
Brandon Pasquale
Bridge Club
Business and Professional Women
Carol·O'Rourke
Cliffside Golf Course · Bobby Kincaid
Clyde &amp; Rosemary Evans
Convention &amp; Visitors Center
D. Dean Evans
Daniel &amp; Edna Whitely
Danny Hamblin
Davison's Landscaping
DeShawn Coleman
Diles Hearing Center
Dorothy Casey
Doug Wetherholt
Dr. William B. Thomas Optometrist, Inc.
Earl and Rosethal Tope
Eastl1\an Foodland
Eddie Waggoner
Elks Club
Emblem Club
Eno-$aii-On 4H Club
Farmers Bank - Tracy Call
Floral Fashions - Melvin Biars
French Art Colony · Carrie Napora

Gallla City Schools - Jim Craft. &amp; Lance Clifford
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce
Gallia County Commission - Justin Fallon
Gallipolis Career College
Gallipolis City Commissioners
Gallipolis City Employees
Gallipolis City Garage Jim Davis, Dave Walter and Staff
Gallipolis City Pool - Robin Lane and Staff
Gallipolis Dally Tribune - Michelle Miller
Gallipolis Garden Club
Gallipolis Lions Club
Galllpol!s Sewer Plant - John Westfall, Mgr.
Gallipolis Water Plant - Brent McCreedy, Mgr.
Gene and Janet Johnson
Glenda Skinner
Gordon &amp; Donna Goble
HC Clinic Founi:lation
Historical Society Members
Holzer Clinic
Hope's Helping Hands
J.E. Morrison &amp; Associates ·
Jean Abels .
Jeff Nelson
Jeffrey &amp; Marsha Smith
Jenny Shirey
Jessie Russell
Jevon Holman
. Jim's Farm Equipment
Job and Family Services
John Gee
John Sang Ford Lincoln Mercury
John Strauss, Jr., DDS, MS, Inc.
Johnson's Super Market
Julie Sh~ts
Junior Womens Club
Justin Metz
Keep Gallla Beautiful - Roger Walker
Kenneth Kyger, DDS
Kyger Dental Associates, Inc.
· Lori D. Church
·

Margaret Evans - Judge, Municipal Court
,Mark Smith - Pontoon Boat Provider
·
Mary L. Rusk
Michael and Katrina Northup
Mr. Vigue and Class
Mrs. Bobble Holzer .
Nancy Mullins
Norris Northup Dodge, Inc.
· Oak Hill Banks
Odie O'Donnell
Ohio Valley Bank -Diana Parks
Ohio Valley Check Cashing &amp; Loan
Our House
Park Front Diner
Patricia Mills
Paul &amp; Virginia Davies
Paul Davies Jewelers
Pauline Wetherholt
Phyllis Sheets
post Office
Red Rollen Garage
Retail Merchants Association
Richard Stephens, Extension Agent ·
Sandee Saxon
Saundra &amp; Herman Koby
Sherwin Williams
Skyline Lanes
SmithGMC
Smith SuperStore
State Street Management, LLC
SuperS
The French Art Colony - Saundra Koby
The Purple Turtle • Karen Smith
The Wiseman Agency, Inc.
Thomas and Barbara Munro
Thomas Moulton, Jr.
Thomas Tope
Tom &amp; Nancy Childs
Veterans Memorial - Steve Swords
Visitors Center - Bobby Hood
Wiseman Real Estate, Inc.

•

·• Report Supreme
Court rtllings taking
longer. See Page AS
• 'Diabulimia': Some
diabetic girls skip insulin
in dangerous effort to lose
weight. See Page A6

WEATHER

.Details on Pace A2

Antique tractors and
other agricultural
machinery, displays of
arts and crafts and
other farm-related ·
exhibits t&gt;rought people to the Rocksprings
Fairgrounds Saturday
for the first-ever Big
Bend Antique Ag Days.
The weekend-long
. event wa~ sponsored
by the Mejgs County
Fair Board and the Big
Bend Farm Antiques
Club. In addition to ·
interesting displays
like vintage tractors,
the free event also
included live musical
entertainment and a
Sunday tractor pull
featuring antique
machines.
BdonJ.

Reed/~

State hir~ computer security expert
BvMATTREED

. payments from the state - about I,200
records. Sixteen of those records contain
.Calendars
A3 - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - banking information. he said.
COLUMBUS - Thestatehashiredacom- Strickland said the Ohio Department of ·
Classifieds
B3-4 puler security expert who specializes in civil Commerce on Monday would send letters to
criminal cases to determine the Iikeli- .banks, credit unions and other financial instiComics
Bs and
hoodofsomeonegettingaccess tothedataon tutions alerting them that customers' infora stolen backup storage device, Gov. Ted mationmayhavebeencompromised.
Annie's Mailbox
A3 Strickland
said Sunday.
Previously, it was revealed the device conMatthew
Curtin,
34,
will
begin
Monday
tained
and Social Security numEditorials
A4 reviewing what's already known is on the bers oftheall names
64,000 state employees. It also
whose theft was revealed on Friday. contained bank account information about
Obituaries
As device,
Also on Sunday, Strickland said the device the state's school districts and Medicaid
Sports
B Section contained the names and case numbers of the providers and information about 53,797 peostate's 84,000 welfare recipients, who face "a pie enrolled in the state's pharmacy bene tits
Weather
A6 .remote threat of identity theft," and the management .program and the names and
names and federal tax identitication number
Please see Security. AS
© 20070hlo Valley Publishing Co. of ~endors that receive payroll deduction
'

2 SECilONS -

12 PAGES

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

. ..

'

- .

Day campers explore

Meigs County history
Bv RACHEL MARTINDALE
SENTINEL INTERN

POMEROY
-"My
Home's in M~igs County" was
the theme of the IOth annual
chiidren 's Meigs County history ~aye amp, held in the
Nolan Annex of the Meigs
County Museum in Pomeroy/
Eighteen children attended
the four-day camp where they
made crafts, played games,
heard guest speakers and took
field trips. Patty Cook and
Maxine Whitehead, members
of the Meigs County
Historical Society's daycamp
committee, led the activities,
with Margaret Parker, Robin
ParkerandAngieParkerofthe
Museum staff, and Cassie
Turner and Linda King of the
Meigs County Extension
Service assisting.
Group singing of patriotic
songs led by Whitehead
opened each morning session
beforetheprogramst&lt;irted.On
Monday, the students started
work. on Meigs County wall

·----

-- -----+'1

Patty Cook presents certificates to thOse attending day camp
during an awards program to wrap up the four.Uay event at
the Meigs Museum. Parents and grandparents attended.

•

hangings. dmwing pictures of
county historical sites, transponation - such as a Civil War
horse and a mill! truck, and
other scenes on felt material.
The day campers tie-dyed tshins that spon the words "My
Home's in Meigs County"
inside the shape of Meigs
County. The children also ereated five-genemtion genealo- ·
gy charts and loured the museurn.
On Tuesday, the group, all
wearing their tie-dyed t-shins,
tookafieldtriptothelocksand
dam at Reedsville. ·They
walked over the river on top of
thedamandthroughthetunnel
underneath. Later that afternoon, they went on the Valley
Gem sternweeler in Marietta.
On Wednesday·rimming the
children li stene~ to model
train
collectors
David
Robinette and his son, Nathan,
. talk about their hobby, and that
afternoon made train depots
.
-Please see C.mpers, AS

--------~-- ·-------

�.,..

NATION •

WoRLD

IGNORING
' PROTEStS, ABBAS S
EMERGENCY CWINET, OU11AWS
BY KARIN LAUB
ASSOCIATED PRES.S WRITER

I

I
i

..

.RAMALLAH, West Bank
- Ignoring Hamas' vehement protests, Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas
on Sunday swore in a new
government without his
political rivals, outlawed
Hamas militias and said
he' II push hard for a restoration of foreign aid to the
Palestinians after a punishing IS-month boycott.
The blockade of Hamasruled Gaza intensified, ·
meanwhile, as Israel halted
fuel shipments. A run on
fuel , bread and other basic
supplies intensified, driving
the price of a bo:( of
Marlboro cigarettes - a
reliable gauge of shortages
- up by a third.
Hamas seized control of
Gaza last week after five
days of intense fighting
against forces loyal to
Abbas' Fatah. The takeover
AP plloto
prompted Abbas to dissolve Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, also known as Abu Mazen, right, shakes hands
a Fatah-Hamas coalition with former Fatah cabinet memt&gt;ers during a swearing in ceremony for the new government
government and appoint a at Abbas headquarters in the West Bank town of Ramallah, Sunday. Abbas on Sunday
new Cabinet excluding the swore in an emergency CatJinet, to replace the Hamas·Fatah coalition he dismantled after
Islamic group.
· Hamas took control of Gaza t&gt;y force. The Cabinet is led by respected economist Salam
The hurried swearing-in Fayyad, who will also serve as finance minister.
ceremony of the new
Cabinet left the Palestinians the Palestinian legitimacy ate forces headed by bought half a pack of the
effectively witJ:! two govern- and its institutions."
President Abbas will be able cheap locally made ."Jamal"
. ments- the Hamas leader- · However, Abbas' attempts to form a solid government brand. He tned to pace himship headed by deposed to assert control only deep- administered
by
the self because it might be his
Prime Minister Ismail ened the Palestinian divi- Palestinians," Olmert said last.
Haniyeh in Gaza and the sions. In Gaza, Haniyeh in a speech to a Jewish conThe Israeli fuel company
new Cabinet . led by the called the new government ference.
Dm Alon said Sunday it was
Western-backed economist illegal and insisted he
He indicated that Israel cutting of fuel surplies
Salam Fayyad in the West remains in power. "The could ease travel restrictions · immediately to Gaza s gas
Bank. .
national unity government on the West Bank and stations. The company is the
"The fi(st priority of our asserts here that we are ful- release Palestinian tax sole provider of gasoline to
government is security and filling our duty according to . receipts frozen after the Gaza.
the security situation," our Jaw," he said.
Hamas-led
government
Dor Alon will continue to
Fayyad told reporters. "The
In the showdown, much took power last year.
ship fuel to Gaza's electricimission will be difficult and of the international commu,
The situation in Gaza is ty power plant, the company
hard, but not impossjble."
nity, includin~ the U.S., the expected · to dominate said, but about 30 percent of
Fayyad, an independent,· . European Umon and mqder- Olmert's meeting at the Gazans have been cut off
will retain his post as ate Arab states, is backing White House on Tuesday.
from the electric grid
finance · minister and serve Abbas. Declarations of supIn an interview Sunda.Y,
as foreign minister in the · port were likely to be fol- the top U.S. diplomat tn
emergency ~ovemment. lowed soon by a resumption Jerusalem
satd
that
The small C~bmet is domi- of foreign aid. to the Washington will fully supnated by independents, Palestinian Authority, which port Abbas' new governincluding human rights was cut when Hamas took ment and resume aid.
activists and business peo- office last year. The saneU.S. Consul General
pie.
tions have caused wide- Jacob Walles said Abbas'
In his speech, Fayyad spread suffering in the government represents both
stressed that the government Palestinian areas.
Gaza and the West Bank,
represented Palestinians in
"The first ~oal we are even though "it's true now
the West Bank and Gaza. working to achteve is to end that (it) does not have a
The· Palestinians claim both the siege and have a unique great ability to influence
areas for a state, but the relationship with all the events in Gaza."
• 26.5 P1'0 HP. 3-Cylinder
internal strife has endan- nations," Abbas said after
"We're not going to lose
gered that ~oal.
swearing in the new sight of the need to begin a
Indirect Injection UquldAddressmg
the Cabinet.
process between Israel and
Cooled Dl""cll!ngine
Palestinians in Gaza, he
Both Israel and the United the Palestinians to resolve ·
• Choice of Tronsmiseloo
said: "You are in our hearts, States already have said the· fundamental problems,
• Optional Grand Cab wilh
and . the top of our agenda. they will work to bolster · but before we can do that I
DelulW Fealurel
The dark images, the Abbas, while isolating think we need to get the
shameful things that are Hamas. The U..S., EU and (Palestinian) house in order
alien to our traditions ... are Israel · c&lt;msider Hamas, first,' ~ he told the Associated
not going to stop us." It is which has killed hundreds ·Press.
"time to work together for of Israelis in sqicide bombThe isolation of Gaza has
Palestine," he said.
ings, a terrorist group.
raised fears of a humanitariAbbas cleared the way for
In New York, Israeli an crisis, because its borders
the Cabinet to take power Prime
Minister Ehud have been closed by Israel
by issuing a decree· that Olmert · said the new and Egypt.
annulled a law requiring the Palestinian
government
In Gaza, ·panicked resigovernment to be approved would have a "genuine part- dents stocked up, fearing
by parliament, whtch is ner" in Israel.
growing shortages of food,
dominated by Hamas. He
"I think that despite what fuel imd other staples.
also issued a decree outlaw- has happened in the last two
With cigarette prices soaring Hamas' militias "due to days there is ... a genuine ing,
sandwich
seller
their military coup against opporfunity that the moder- . Mohammed Sheik said he

,•

Romney uses organization, advertising
to build lead in early voting states
BY GLEN JOHNSON
· ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BOSTON - Forg~t the
national polls for Mitt
Romney.
Slowly, methodically, the
Rep~blican presidential contender has seized the advantage in the early states that
count, relying on a solid organization, $4 million in advertising and an aggressive
approach.
It'' propelled him to the top
of polls in the caucus and primary sites of Iowa and New
Hampshire, and laid the foundation for what some analysts
argue is 'greater success.
"Mitt Romney is now positioned as the front!.runner for
the nomination." said Scott
Reed, who managed Bob
Dole's 1996 presidential
campaign. "There's a long
way to go,. but to date he's
running the most logical,
thought-out, structured campaign. He's marching in the
right cadence, he's raising the
money, he's spending it wiser •
and he seems to be on track."

· Romney continues to trail with Southern evangelicals
former New York Mayor who consider the faith a cult.
Rudy Giuliani, Sen, John
And
then
there's
McCain of Arizona and even Massachusetts, a state wellfonmer Sen. Fred Thompson known for its liberal tradition,
of Tennessee - who ha~ yet · which may be a particularly
to fonmally declare his candi' hard sell in conservative cirdacy - in national polls of cles. Romney's resume there
the Republican contenders.
is thin - just one tenn as
But recent surveys show governor. .
the former Massachusetts
governor leading in the first · Romney was campaigning
states to vote, bolstering his in Iowa this weekend, his
strategy of using momentum II th trip to the lead caucus
from strong showings in state and among the most of
Iowa and New Hampshire to any candidate. Romney has
push him ahead in South also outpaced his rivals with
Carolina and Florida a week eight visit~ to ·neighboring
later. In rJpid-fire succession, New Hampshire, where he
at least 15 states from New has a summer home; and I0 ·
York to California hold con- to South Carolina, another
tests Feb. 5 that will likely state where he just won a
straw poll among Republican
produce the GOP nominee.
The path is far from easy women.
Unlike others, though,
foF Romney, who has been
Romney
is now on his second
dogged by criticism that he
has switched positions on and third meetings with top
abortion, embryonic stem cell political leaders in the early
research and gay rights voting states. His :·Ask Mitt
issues critical with GOP con- .Anything" town . hall meetservatives. He also is vying to ings with the public have
become the first Mormon become a campaign trJil stapresident, a potential prqblem ple. '
·

'

'

..

I

PageA2 .
~onday,Junet8,2007

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

IN

Community Calendar
Public
·meetings

'

because of infrastructure humanitarian cases to cross.
damage caused by the fight- The restrictions have creating, and.they rely upon gen- ed a chaotic scene at the terminal.
erators for power.
"We aren't allowed to let
Shipments into the territory dried up during last them in," said military
week's fightmg, and work- spokesman Shlomo Dror.
ers at Gaza's only fuel wareIsraeli Channel 2 TV
house said reserves had showed scenes of women
already run out. Palestinian and children stranded at the
health officials warned the terminal. "We want to enter
fuel shortage could immobi- Israel. If they don't, Hamas
lize ambulances and prevent w!ll slaughter us," an old
food and medicine deliver- woman screamed hysteriies.
cally.
"The results will be Gaza
In southern Gaza, meanin full darkness, with no while, 15 members of
cars," said Asef Hamdi, a Hamas' militia guarded the
worker at a Gaza gas sta- empty Rafah border crosstion. Palestinian official ing into Egypt. Officials
Saeb Erekat appealed to said about 100 people
Israel and the international remained stranded on the
community not to cut off Egypt\an side of the border,
suppljes
to • Gaza. waiting to return to Gaza.
"Residents must not be pun- Most of the people are Fatah ·
ished for the bloody coup men who fled during the
staged by Hamas," he said. infighting, and Egypt has
Israeli Foreign Ministry refused to grant them
spokesman Mark Regev refuge.
·
said Israel was aware of the · More than 50 people have
humanitarian dangers fac- returned to Gaza in the past
ing the Gaza Strip. "No one, two days after receiving
including Israel, wants to promises of amnesty from
accentuate hardship that Hamas.
already exists in Gaza as a .
result of the internal ·conflict," he said. But he said
Israel has not yet figured out
a way to deal with the
Hamas rulers of Gaza.
Meanwhile, about 300
Gazans remained trapped at
the Erez border crossing ·
with Israel, hoping to
escape Hamas rule, Israeli
• '11!1! :wn Tocllttlcala._.
officials said. Nervous pro•Meaoging • keep,..,-~~~~
•tOt.qii~-MihWibmel '
Fatah security officials at
• Custom Stitt Ptgl · ntw~ , _..., &amp; motel
the border ordered cameramen not to film their faces,
~"j~;A;;;:-up,., 6J( lttsJN1'
( .Surf
a~ children slept on their
, . juf&lt;tl_;~
mpther's laps and on the
.... ut&gt; Onllnol www.Loolllllt.o
floor.
Israel said it was only letting the staff of international organizations, people
with special permission and

Monday, June 18
ATHENS - Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest
Gro11p, 7 p . m. ~ Athens
County Extension Office.
Program on Emerald Ash
Borer. Cindy Burskey, community relations officer for
the project of the Ohio
Department of Agriculture,
will speak. 593-8555 for
information.
LETART
-Letart
Township trustees will meet
· at 5 p.m. at the office buildmg.
ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury Township trustees
will meet at 6:30p.m. at the
town hall.

Melissa Taylor

. taylor graduates
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.
Melissa Jean
(Burdette) Taylor recentl·y
graduated from Marshall
University.
She received a master of
science . degree in nursing
with a concentration as a family nurse practitioner. She
graduated at the top of her
class, receiving the John
Morton Outstanding Nurse
Practitioner Student Award,
and maintained a 4.0 grade
point average.
Taylor has been employed
at Cabell Huntington Hospital
for nine years and currently is
awaiting a date for her state
board examination.
She is the wife of Richie
Taylor of Point Pleasant. She
:: is the daughter of Linda
• Jordan of Mount Alto and
Ron (Lori) Burdette of St.
Clairsville, Ohio. Her grandparents are Milford and Jean
Jordan of Mount ·Alto and
Ronald and Jessie Burdette of
Leon.

Reunions
Saturday, July 23
DARWIN · - Milhoan
family reunion, II a.m. to 3
p.m., Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly. Meat provided.
Bring salad, vegetable or
dessert and drink. 992-3921
or 446-3296. All descendanis of Marion Aldo and
Lucy
Belle
Hoselton
· Milhoan invited.

Wednesday, June 20
RACINE - Financial
Planning
Supervision
Commission, 10:30 a.m.,
Southern High School ·
media room.

Clubs and
organizat!ons

Sunday, J11ne 24
REEDSVILLE - BiramHayman reunion . will be
held at Forked Run State
Park, I p.m. basket dinner
in shelter 2.

Church events
Monday, June 25
BRADFORD -Vacation
Bible School, Bradford
Church of Christ, 9 a.m. II :30 a.m. through June 28,
classes
for
preschool
through teens.

Thesday, June 19
CHESTER
- Past
Councilors
Club
of
Daughters of America
#323, 7:30 p.m., Mas9nic
Wednesday, June 27
Hall. Take sack lunch and
CHESTER
Leona
drink for exchange, and Machir will observe her
gifts for games.
90th birthday on June 27.
RUTLAND
The former r.esident of
Rescheduled meeting of Chester and Point Pleasant,
Leading
Creek W. Va., now resides at the
Conservancy District board, Rocksprings Rehabilitation.
4 p,m., due to scheduling Center. Cards may be sent
conflict.
to her at 39761 Sumner
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
Wednesday, June 20
45769.

Birthdays

• 23 HP, 3-Cytinder. Liquid·
Cooled Diesel Engine
• Hydrost..tic Po~er Steering
• H5T Tranmtission
• Quid Atla&lt;:h/Oelach
lnlegroled Loader .
and Backhoe Standard
• ~versible- SUspen.-.ion Seat

BY MICHAEL HILl

person's largest investment,
so they're cautious. 'I'm
putting alcohol in there?
ALBANY, N.Y. ~ Steve What!? Are yoll kidding?'"
Williams does what millions said Christian King, whose.
of American motorists can't: Mobil stations in Albany and
Fill up on cheaper, ethanol- 70
miles
north
in
based fuel from a local gas Warrensburg are the only
station.
ones in New York offering
Advocates,· · including E85 to the public.
farmers a'nd President Bush,
E85 is cheaper than re~ular
Isabella Patterson
have offered E85 - a blend unleaded gasoline . . Kmg's
of 85 percent ethanol and station near the University at
gasoline - as an affordable Albany recently retailed E85
way to help the nation grow for $2.599 a gallon versus
itself toward energy inde!JCn·
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. dence with a cleaner-burning $3.149 for regular unleaded.
- Bob and Adria Patterson of fuel. They would like to see But since ethanol has less
Point Pleasant would like to more people like Williams, energy than gasoline, fuel
announce the birth of their first who filled up his 2003 Ford economy drops I0 percent to
15 percent when cars run on
child.
Explorer with E85 on a E85.
Isabella Grace Patterson was recent morning.
Michelle Kautz, deputy
hom Jan. 29, 2007, at 10:37
But there's a big hitch for director of the ethanol coalip.m. at Holzer Medical Center this fuel of the future. There
in Giillipolis. She weighed 8 · are too few pumps. While tion, said E85 needs to be
pounds, 7 ounces and was 21 there are about 5 million priced proportionately less
than standard gasolme to
mches long.
"flexible fuel" vehicles on provide the value to drivers.
Welcoming her home are U.S. rmids that ·can handle
maternal
grandparents, E85, there are only 1,145 She said ethanol prices tend
to be lower in the Midwest
Charles and Marsha Frecker of public stations that offer the com
belt, but higher on the
Racine, and paternal grandpar- fuel nationwide, accordin(l to
coasts
because of transportaents, Robert and Patricia the National Ethanol Vehicle tion costs.
There are no
Patterson of Point Pleasant.
Coalition.
pipelines
to
transport
Also welcoming her home is
The nation's roughly ethanol, so the fuel has to be
her aunt, Maria Douglas of 167,000 retail gas outlets
or shipped by rail.
Racine; uncle, Bryan Patterson have been slow to invest the trucked
New
York
officials tried to
of Barboursville, W.Va.; and
tens
of
thousands
of
dollars
it
give
E85
a
boost
a
adopted grandparents, Bo and takes to add E85 -especial- series of incentivesthrough
last
year
Mickey Patterson of Gallipolis
ly when certification for the under former Gov. George
.Feny, W.Va., and Boxer and dispensers
is in limbo and the Pataki, who made ethanol a
Yvonne Swisher of Point
market js so new. Many dri- signature
environmental
Pleasant.
vers don't even know their issue. New York waived the
recent-model flexible fuel roughly 40 cents a gallon in
cars
can handle E85.
state gasoline taxes, offered
...-..
"A lot of times a car is a to pay up to 50 percent of the
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Spouses insecurity borders on paranoia
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY

SUGAR

Dear Annie: "Susan~ ' and I
have been married for three
years, and while we love each
other, the end may be near.
Susan was cheated on in a
previous relationship, but has
made no effort to get past it,
and she is entirely convinced
I have been having affairs. (I
have always been I00 percent
faithful.)
In her obsessive witch
hunt, Susan has opened my
mail, checked my cell phone
and computer history and followed me when I run errands.
She sees "evidence" of my
unfaithfulness everywhere. If
I balk at shopping with her,
it's so I can stay home and
chat online with anonymous
women. If my nightly walk
with the dog lasts I 0 minutes
too long, it's because of a tryst
at the dog park.
I am a nurse and wear
gloves all day, ~ but Susan
believes the odor of latex
means I was handling a condom. I soiled a shirt once and
came home we.aring a scrub
top. She assumed it was to
hide lipstick stains. If I leave
work late because of a patient
crisis, she thinks I've met
someone. If I'm too exhausted for sex after a 12-hour
shift, it means I've been fooling around in the linen closet
at work. There are other
absurd examples, but you ~et
the idea. Yet she doesn't think
·she's obsessive.
We've tried couples and
individual counseling, to no
avail. Susan is seeing a psychiatrist, but the antidepres-

sants haven't helped. I have to be bending over in front of
been extremely tolerant up to her. This is neither funny nor
this point, but it's bordering,. innocent. It is abuse. And, in a
on psychological abuse, and I courtoflaw, it could easily be
can't put up with it any seen as assault.
longer. Any suggestions? Oneofthese days, Penny is
Unjustly Accused, Tried going to slap someone who
and Convicted
will not find this behavior
Dear Accused: Susan 's amusing. and she will end up
insecurity borders on para- in court. If convicted, she will
noia. If her psychiatrist is have a police record .
unaware of her obsessive
As thedirectorofadomesbehavior, you should inform tic violence shelter, I can
the doctor and ask that it be assure you that if Penny did
addressed at their next ses- .that to one of our clients, I
sion, and also explain how would encourage that person
close you are to walking out. to press charges immediately.
If Susan refuses to work on No one ,has the right to slap
her problems, you may need another
individual
to distance yourself for the whether in "fun" or in anger.
sake of your own mental Penny is looking for trouble.
health.
and if she keeps up thi s
Dear Annie: My sister is behavior, she is sure to find it.
getting married in July, and Sandra C. Becker,
they are deciding whether or Executive Director, Help
not to open the wedding gifts and Emergency Response
at the reception. She says Inc., Portsm~mth, V11.
..
"no," and her fian!le says
Dear Sandra Becker:
'.'yes." All of us have a differ- Many readers wrote and
entopinion. Can you help?- expressed similar sentiments
Confused Bridesmaid in about Penny. Thanks for
Kansas
making it clear that there
Dear Kansas: It is not a could be ·legal repercussions
good idea to open the gifts at as well as social ones.
the reception. It may embarAnnie's Mailbox is writrass some of the guests, and it ten by Kathy Mitchell and
becQmes much more difficult Marcy Sugar, longtime edito keep track of things when tors of the Ann Landers colboxes are opened, ribbons are umn. Please e-mail · your
scattered and cards fall out. questions to anniesmailGifts that are brought to the box@comcast.net, or wrjte
reception should be placed on to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0.
a table set up for that purpose Box 118190, Chicago, IL
and opened later, at home.
60611. To find out more
Dear Annie: Upon read- about Annie's Mailbox, and
ing the letter from "Bozo's read features by other
Husband," I felt compelled to Creators Syndicate writers
write. Bozo's wife, "Penny," and cartoonists, visit the
thinks it is hilarious to slap the Creators Syndicate Web
behind of whoever happens
. . page at www.creators.com.

Many cars take ethanol, but only a trickle at the pumps

. Patterson birth

BX24

~onday,Junet8,2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

•

TUPPERS. PLAINS Community meeting, 7
p.m., to discuss annual fall
festival , Tuppers Plains
Firehouse.

PageA3

installation costs for station
owners up to $50,000, and
approved a law giving stations the legal right to sell
alternative fuels from outside
distributors.
Despite all the effort, King
in May became the frrst station owner in New York to
offer E85 to the general public. Ralph Bombardjere of
the New York · State
Association of Service
Stations and Repair Shops
sai(l his members have been ·
slow to sink money into dispensers and tanks because of
"unknowns" in the market.
''They shy . away from
making . the investment
because no one knows how
much r,roduct they're going
to sell, ' he said.
.
Oi I companies have done
little to promote E85, which,
after all, is a product ·they do
not make. But' consumers can
still buy the alternative fuel
at "branded" stations selling
gasoline from big oil comr.anies, like the Albany MobiL
Exxon Mobil Corp. allows
E85 sales at bnmded stations
as long as long certain conditions are met, such as making
sure the E85 is clearly
marked as a non-Exxon
Mobil product, said company
spokeswoman Prem Nair.
She said the company wants
to make sure motorists don't
accidentally fill up with a
fuel their vehicle cannot handle.
''This is a product that we

cannot testify to because we
don't manufacture or supply
them," ·said Nair, who was
aware of about 20 branded
Exxon Mobil sites either selling E85 or planning to.
Complicating mat!ers is
that
Underwriters
Laboratories has been undergoing a lengthy review since
October to see if E85 dispensers are worthy of the UL
seal. The widely respected
safety and standards lab - .
the little, round "UL" mark
appears on everything from
smoke detectors to cribs was concerned that ethanol
could .corrode fuel dispensers. Stations can still put
the pumps in with local
approval. But a lack of certification ·- and the attending
potential of liability issueshas had a chilling effect.
"The UL decertification
has hindered us significantly," Kautz said.
Some larger retailers were
close to adding a significant

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number of E85 fueling stations before October, she
said, but "once they heard of
the UL decertification. they
stopped."
In New York, the UL move
sidetracked a plan to offer
E85 at 10 rest stops in the
New York State Thruway by·
.th~ end of this year. One unit
in New Baltimore sits
unused, and construction in
nine other places has been
halted as the Thruway ·
Authority awaits certification.
The morithslong certification process has been frustrating for ethanol backers. In
March, 14 farm-state senators urged UL to certify the
. dispensers.
·
John Drengenberg, manager of consumer affairs at UL.
said E85 certification is a priority. But he stressed that it's
not like approving a new
toaster since they have to create a new set of safety standards.

Marc Subik, MD

CORl--

1

./

1

r

�.,..

NATION •

WoRLD

IGNORING
' PROTEStS, ABBAS S
EMERGENCY CWINET, OU11AWS
BY KARIN LAUB
ASSOCIATED PRES.S WRITER

I

I
i

..

.RAMALLAH, West Bank
- Ignoring Hamas' vehement protests, Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas
on Sunday swore in a new
government without his
political rivals, outlawed
Hamas militias and said
he' II push hard for a restoration of foreign aid to the
Palestinians after a punishing IS-month boycott.
The blockade of Hamasruled Gaza intensified, ·
meanwhile, as Israel halted
fuel shipments. A run on
fuel , bread and other basic
supplies intensified, driving
the price of a bo:( of
Marlboro cigarettes - a
reliable gauge of shortages
- up by a third.
Hamas seized control of
Gaza last week after five
days of intense fighting
against forces loyal to
Abbas' Fatah. The takeover
AP plloto
prompted Abbas to dissolve Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, also known as Abu Mazen, right, shakes hands
a Fatah-Hamas coalition with former Fatah cabinet memt&gt;ers during a swearing in ceremony for the new government
government and appoint a at Abbas headquarters in the West Bank town of Ramallah, Sunday. Abbas on Sunday
new Cabinet excluding the swore in an emergency CatJinet, to replace the Hamas·Fatah coalition he dismantled after
Islamic group.
· Hamas took control of Gaza t&gt;y force. The Cabinet is led by respected economist Salam
The hurried swearing-in Fayyad, who will also serve as finance minister.
ceremony of the new
Cabinet left the Palestinians the Palestinian legitimacy ate forces headed by bought half a pack of the
effectively witJ:! two govern- and its institutions."
President Abbas will be able cheap locally made ."Jamal"
. ments- the Hamas leader- · However, Abbas' attempts to form a solid government brand. He tned to pace himship headed by deposed to assert control only deep- administered
by
the self because it might be his
Prime Minister Ismail ened the Palestinian divi- Palestinians," Olmert said last.
Haniyeh in Gaza and the sions. In Gaza, Haniyeh in a speech to a Jewish conThe Israeli fuel company
new Cabinet . led by the called the new government ference.
Dm Alon said Sunday it was
Western-backed economist illegal and insisted he
He indicated that Israel cutting of fuel surplies
Salam Fayyad in the West remains in power. "The could ease travel restrictions · immediately to Gaza s gas
Bank. .
national unity government on the West Bank and stations. The company is the
"The fi(st priority of our asserts here that we are ful- release Palestinian tax sole provider of gasoline to
government is security and filling our duty according to . receipts frozen after the Gaza.
the security situation," our Jaw," he said.
Hamas-led
government
Dor Alon will continue to
Fayyad told reporters. "The
In the showdown, much took power last year.
ship fuel to Gaza's electricimission will be difficult and of the international commu,
The situation in Gaza is ty power plant, the company
hard, but not impossjble."
nity, includin~ the U.S., the expected · to dominate said, but about 30 percent of
Fayyad, an independent,· . European Umon and mqder- Olmert's meeting at the Gazans have been cut off
will retain his post as ate Arab states, is backing White House on Tuesday.
from the electric grid
finance · minister and serve Abbas. Declarations of supIn an interview Sunda.Y,
as foreign minister in the · port were likely to be fol- the top U.S. diplomat tn
emergency ~ovemment. lowed soon by a resumption Jerusalem
satd
that
The small C~bmet is domi- of foreign aid. to the Washington will fully supnated by independents, Palestinian Authority, which port Abbas' new governincluding human rights was cut when Hamas took ment and resume aid.
activists and business peo- office last year. The saneU.S. Consul General
pie.
tions have caused wide- Jacob Walles said Abbas'
In his speech, Fayyad spread suffering in the government represents both
stressed that the government Palestinian areas.
Gaza and the West Bank,
represented Palestinians in
"The first ~oal we are even though "it's true now
the West Bank and Gaza. working to achteve is to end that (it) does not have a
The· Palestinians claim both the siege and have a unique great ability to influence
areas for a state, but the relationship with all the events in Gaza."
• 26.5 P1'0 HP. 3-Cylinder
internal strife has endan- nations," Abbas said after
"We're not going to lose
gered that ~oal.
swearing in the new sight of the need to begin a
Indirect Injection UquldAddressmg
the Cabinet.
process between Israel and
Cooled Dl""cll!ngine
Palestinians in Gaza, he
Both Israel and the United the Palestinians to resolve ·
• Choice of Tronsmiseloo
said: "You are in our hearts, States already have said the· fundamental problems,
• Optional Grand Cab wilh
and . the top of our agenda. they will work to bolster · but before we can do that I
DelulW Fealurel
The dark images, the Abbas, while isolating think we need to get the
shameful things that are Hamas. The U..S., EU and (Palestinian) house in order
alien to our traditions ... are Israel · c&lt;msider Hamas, first,' ~ he told the Associated
not going to stop us." It is which has killed hundreds ·Press.
"time to work together for of Israelis in sqicide bombThe isolation of Gaza has
Palestine," he said.
ings, a terrorist group.
raised fears of a humanitariAbbas cleared the way for
In New York, Israeli an crisis, because its borders
the Cabinet to take power Prime
Minister Ehud have been closed by Israel
by issuing a decree· that Olmert · said the new and Egypt.
annulled a law requiring the Palestinian
government
In Gaza, ·panicked resigovernment to be approved would have a "genuine part- dents stocked up, fearing
by parliament, whtch is ner" in Israel.
growing shortages of food,
dominated by Hamas. He
"I think that despite what fuel imd other staples.
also issued a decree outlaw- has happened in the last two
With cigarette prices soaring Hamas' militias "due to days there is ... a genuine ing,
sandwich
seller
their military coup against opporfunity that the moder- . Mohammed Sheik said he

,•

Romney uses organization, advertising
to build lead in early voting states
BY GLEN JOHNSON
· ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BOSTON - Forg~t the
national polls for Mitt
Romney.
Slowly, methodically, the
Rep~blican presidential contender has seized the advantage in the early states that
count, relying on a solid organization, $4 million in advertising and an aggressive
approach.
It'' propelled him to the top
of polls in the caucus and primary sites of Iowa and New
Hampshire, and laid the foundation for what some analysts
argue is 'greater success.
"Mitt Romney is now positioned as the front!.runner for
the nomination." said Scott
Reed, who managed Bob
Dole's 1996 presidential
campaign. "There's a long
way to go,. but to date he's
running the most logical,
thought-out, structured campaign. He's marching in the
right cadence, he's raising the
money, he's spending it wiser •
and he seems to be on track."

· Romney continues to trail with Southern evangelicals
former New York Mayor who consider the faith a cult.
Rudy Giuliani, Sen, John
And
then
there's
McCain of Arizona and even Massachusetts, a state wellfonmer Sen. Fred Thompson known for its liberal tradition,
of Tennessee - who ha~ yet · which may be a particularly
to fonmally declare his candi' hard sell in conservative cirdacy - in national polls of cles. Romney's resume there
the Republican contenders.
is thin - just one tenn as
But recent surveys show governor. .
the former Massachusetts
governor leading in the first · Romney was campaigning
states to vote, bolstering his in Iowa this weekend, his
strategy of using momentum II th trip to the lead caucus
from strong showings in state and among the most of
Iowa and New Hampshire to any candidate. Romney has
push him ahead in South also outpaced his rivals with
Carolina and Florida a week eight visit~ to ·neighboring
later. In rJpid-fire succession, New Hampshire, where he
at least 15 states from New has a summer home; and I0 ·
York to California hold con- to South Carolina, another
tests Feb. 5 that will likely state where he just won a
straw poll among Republican
produce the GOP nominee.
The path is far from easy women.
Unlike others, though,
foF Romney, who has been
Romney
is now on his second
dogged by criticism that he
has switched positions on and third meetings with top
abortion, embryonic stem cell political leaders in the early
research and gay rights voting states. His :·Ask Mitt
issues critical with GOP con- .Anything" town . hall meetservatives. He also is vying to ings with the public have
become the first Mormon become a campaign trJil stapresident, a potential prqblem ple. '
·

'

'

..

I

PageA2 .
~onday,Junet8,2007

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

IN

Community Calendar
Public
·meetings

'

because of infrastructure humanitarian cases to cross.
damage caused by the fight- The restrictions have creating, and.they rely upon gen- ed a chaotic scene at the terminal.
erators for power.
"We aren't allowed to let
Shipments into the territory dried up during last them in," said military
week's fightmg, and work- spokesman Shlomo Dror.
ers at Gaza's only fuel wareIsraeli Channel 2 TV
house said reserves had showed scenes of women
already run out. Palestinian and children stranded at the
health officials warned the terminal. "We want to enter
fuel shortage could immobi- Israel. If they don't, Hamas
lize ambulances and prevent w!ll slaughter us," an old
food and medicine deliver- woman screamed hysteriies.
cally.
"The results will be Gaza
In southern Gaza, meanin full darkness, with no while, 15 members of
cars," said Asef Hamdi, a Hamas' militia guarded the
worker at a Gaza gas sta- empty Rafah border crosstion. Palestinian official ing into Egypt. Officials
Saeb Erekat appealed to said about 100 people
Israel and the international remained stranded on the
community not to cut off Egypt\an side of the border,
suppljes
to • Gaza. waiting to return to Gaza.
"Residents must not be pun- Most of the people are Fatah ·
ished for the bloody coup men who fled during the
staged by Hamas," he said. infighting, and Egypt has
Israeli Foreign Ministry refused to grant them
spokesman Mark Regev refuge.
·
said Israel was aware of the · More than 50 people have
humanitarian dangers fac- returned to Gaza in the past
ing the Gaza Strip. "No one, two days after receiving
including Israel, wants to promises of amnesty from
accentuate hardship that Hamas.
already exists in Gaza as a .
result of the internal ·conflict," he said. But he said
Israel has not yet figured out
a way to deal with the
Hamas rulers of Gaza.
Meanwhile, about 300
Gazans remained trapped at
the Erez border crossing ·
with Israel, hoping to
escape Hamas rule, Israeli
• '11!1! :wn Tocllttlcala._.
officials said. Nervous pro•Meaoging • keep,..,-~~~~
•tOt.qii~-MihWibmel '
Fatah security officials at
• Custom Stitt Ptgl · ntw~ , _..., &amp; motel
the border ordered cameramen not to film their faces,
~"j~;A;;;:-up,., 6J( lttsJN1'
( .Surf
a~ children slept on their
, . juf&lt;tl_;~
mpther's laps and on the
.... ut&gt; Onllnol www.Loolllllt.o
floor.
Israel said it was only letting the staff of international organizations, people
with special permission and

Monday, June 18
ATHENS - Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest
Gro11p, 7 p . m. ~ Athens
County Extension Office.
Program on Emerald Ash
Borer. Cindy Burskey, community relations officer for
the project of the Ohio
Department of Agriculture,
will speak. 593-8555 for
information.
LETART
-Letart
Township trustees will meet
· at 5 p.m. at the office buildmg.
ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury Township trustees
will meet at 6:30p.m. at the
town hall.

Melissa Taylor

. taylor graduates
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.
Melissa Jean
(Burdette) Taylor recentl·y
graduated from Marshall
University.
She received a master of
science . degree in nursing
with a concentration as a family nurse practitioner. She
graduated at the top of her
class, receiving the John
Morton Outstanding Nurse
Practitioner Student Award,
and maintained a 4.0 grade
point average.
Taylor has been employed
at Cabell Huntington Hospital
for nine years and currently is
awaiting a date for her state
board examination.
She is the wife of Richie
Taylor of Point Pleasant. She
:: is the daughter of Linda
• Jordan of Mount Alto and
Ron (Lori) Burdette of St.
Clairsville, Ohio. Her grandparents are Milford and Jean
Jordan of Mount ·Alto and
Ronald and Jessie Burdette of
Leon.

Reunions
Saturday, July 23
DARWIN · - Milhoan
family reunion, II a.m. to 3
p.m., Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly. Meat provided.
Bring salad, vegetable or
dessert and drink. 992-3921
or 446-3296. All descendanis of Marion Aldo and
Lucy
Belle
Hoselton
· Milhoan invited.

Wednesday, June 20
RACINE - Financial
Planning
Supervision
Commission, 10:30 a.m.,
Southern High School ·
media room.

Clubs and
organizat!ons

Sunday, J11ne 24
REEDSVILLE - BiramHayman reunion . will be
held at Forked Run State
Park, I p.m. basket dinner
in shelter 2.

Church events
Monday, June 25
BRADFORD -Vacation
Bible School, Bradford
Church of Christ, 9 a.m. II :30 a.m. through June 28,
classes
for
preschool
through teens.

Thesday, June 19
CHESTER
- Past
Councilors
Club
of
Daughters of America
#323, 7:30 p.m., Mas9nic
Wednesday, June 27
Hall. Take sack lunch and
CHESTER
Leona
drink for exchange, and Machir will observe her
gifts for games.
90th birthday on June 27.
RUTLAND
The former r.esident of
Rescheduled meeting of Chester and Point Pleasant,
Leading
Creek W. Va., now resides at the
Conservancy District board, Rocksprings Rehabilitation.
4 p,m., due to scheduling Center. Cards may be sent
conflict.
to her at 39761 Sumner
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
Wednesday, June 20
45769.

Birthdays

• 23 HP, 3-Cytinder. Liquid·
Cooled Diesel Engine
• Hydrost..tic Po~er Steering
• H5T Tranmtission
• Quid Atla&lt;:h/Oelach
lnlegroled Loader .
and Backhoe Standard
• ~versible- SUspen.-.ion Seat

BY MICHAEL HILl

person's largest investment,
so they're cautious. 'I'm
putting alcohol in there?
ALBANY, N.Y. ~ Steve What!? Are yoll kidding?'"
Williams does what millions said Christian King, whose.
of American motorists can't: Mobil stations in Albany and
Fill up on cheaper, ethanol- 70
miles
north
in
based fuel from a local gas Warrensburg are the only
station.
ones in New York offering
Advocates,· · including E85 to the public.
farmers a'nd President Bush,
E85 is cheaper than re~ular
Isabella Patterson
have offered E85 - a blend unleaded gasoline . . Kmg's
of 85 percent ethanol and station near the University at
gasoline - as an affordable Albany recently retailed E85
way to help the nation grow for $2.599 a gallon versus
itself toward energy inde!JCn·
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. dence with a cleaner-burning $3.149 for regular unleaded.
- Bob and Adria Patterson of fuel. They would like to see But since ethanol has less
Point Pleasant would like to more people like Williams, energy than gasoline, fuel
announce the birth of their first who filled up his 2003 Ford economy drops I0 percent to
15 percent when cars run on
child.
Explorer with E85 on a E85.
Isabella Grace Patterson was recent morning.
Michelle Kautz, deputy
hom Jan. 29, 2007, at 10:37
But there's a big hitch for director of the ethanol coalip.m. at Holzer Medical Center this fuel of the future. There
in Giillipolis. She weighed 8 · are too few pumps. While tion, said E85 needs to be
pounds, 7 ounces and was 21 there are about 5 million priced proportionately less
than standard gasolme to
mches long.
"flexible fuel" vehicles on provide the value to drivers.
Welcoming her home are U.S. rmids that ·can handle
maternal
grandparents, E85, there are only 1,145 She said ethanol prices tend
to be lower in the Midwest
Charles and Marsha Frecker of public stations that offer the com
belt, but higher on the
Racine, and paternal grandpar- fuel nationwide, accordin(l to
coasts
because of transportaents, Robert and Patricia the National Ethanol Vehicle tion costs.
There are no
Patterson of Point Pleasant.
Coalition.
pipelines
to
transport
Also welcoming her home is
The nation's roughly ethanol, so the fuel has to be
her aunt, Maria Douglas of 167,000 retail gas outlets
or shipped by rail.
Racine; uncle, Bryan Patterson have been slow to invest the trucked
New
York
officials tried to
of Barboursville, W.Va.; and
tens
of
thousands
of
dollars
it
give
E85
a
boost
a
adopted grandparents, Bo and takes to add E85 -especial- series of incentivesthrough
last
year
Mickey Patterson of Gallipolis
ly when certification for the under former Gov. George
.Feny, W.Va., and Boxer and dispensers
is in limbo and the Pataki, who made ethanol a
Yvonne Swisher of Point
market js so new. Many dri- signature
environmental
Pleasant.
vers don't even know their issue. New York waived the
recent-model flexible fuel roughly 40 cents a gallon in
cars
can handle E85.
state gasoline taxes, offered
...-..
"A lot of times a car is a to pay up to 50 percent of the
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Spouses insecurity borders on paranoia
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY

SUGAR

Dear Annie: "Susan~ ' and I
have been married for three
years, and while we love each
other, the end may be near.
Susan was cheated on in a
previous relationship, but has
made no effort to get past it,
and she is entirely convinced
I have been having affairs. (I
have always been I00 percent
faithful.)
In her obsessive witch
hunt, Susan has opened my
mail, checked my cell phone
and computer history and followed me when I run errands.
She sees "evidence" of my
unfaithfulness everywhere. If
I balk at shopping with her,
it's so I can stay home and
chat online with anonymous
women. If my nightly walk
with the dog lasts I 0 minutes
too long, it's because of a tryst
at the dog park.
I am a nurse and wear
gloves all day, ~ but Susan
believes the odor of latex
means I was handling a condom. I soiled a shirt once and
came home we.aring a scrub
top. She assumed it was to
hide lipstick stains. If I leave
work late because of a patient
crisis, she thinks I've met
someone. If I'm too exhausted for sex after a 12-hour
shift, it means I've been fooling around in the linen closet
at work. There are other
absurd examples, but you ~et
the idea. Yet she doesn't think
·she's obsessive.
We've tried couples and
individual counseling, to no
avail. Susan is seeing a psychiatrist, but the antidepres-

sants haven't helped. I have to be bending over in front of
been extremely tolerant up to her. This is neither funny nor
this point, but it's bordering,. innocent. It is abuse. And, in a
on psychological abuse, and I courtoflaw, it could easily be
can't put up with it any seen as assault.
longer. Any suggestions? Oneofthese days, Penny is
Unjustly Accused, Tried going to slap someone who
and Convicted
will not find this behavior
Dear Accused: Susan 's amusing. and she will end up
insecurity borders on para- in court. If convicted, she will
noia. If her psychiatrist is have a police record .
unaware of her obsessive
As thedirectorofadomesbehavior, you should inform tic violence shelter, I can
the doctor and ask that it be assure you that if Penny did
addressed at their next ses- .that to one of our clients, I
sion, and also explain how would encourage that person
close you are to walking out. to press charges immediately.
If Susan refuses to work on No one ,has the right to slap
her problems, you may need another
individual
to distance yourself for the whether in "fun" or in anger.
sake of your own mental Penny is looking for trouble.
health.
and if she keeps up thi s
Dear Annie: My sister is behavior, she is sure to find it.
getting married in July, and Sandra C. Becker,
they are deciding whether or Executive Director, Help
not to open the wedding gifts and Emergency Response
at the reception. She says Inc., Portsm~mth, V11.
..
"no," and her fian!le says
Dear Sandra Becker:
'.'yes." All of us have a differ- Many readers wrote and
entopinion. Can you help?- expressed similar sentiments
Confused Bridesmaid in about Penny. Thanks for
Kansas
making it clear that there
Dear Kansas: It is not a could be ·legal repercussions
good idea to open the gifts at as well as social ones.
the reception. It may embarAnnie's Mailbox is writrass some of the guests, and it ten by Kathy Mitchell and
becQmes much more difficult Marcy Sugar, longtime edito keep track of things when tors of the Ann Landers colboxes are opened, ribbons are umn. Please e-mail · your
scattered and cards fall out. questions to anniesmailGifts that are brought to the box@comcast.net, or wrjte
reception should be placed on to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0.
a table set up for that purpose Box 118190, Chicago, IL
and opened later, at home.
60611. To find out more
Dear Annie: Upon read- about Annie's Mailbox, and
ing the letter from "Bozo's read features by other
Husband," I felt compelled to Creators Syndicate writers
write. Bozo's wife, "Penny," and cartoonists, visit the
thinks it is hilarious to slap the Creators Syndicate Web
behind of whoever happens
. . page at www.creators.com.

Many cars take ethanol, but only a trickle at the pumps

. Patterson birth

BX24

~onday,Junet8,2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

•

TUPPERS. PLAINS Community meeting, 7
p.m., to discuss annual fall
festival , Tuppers Plains
Firehouse.

PageA3

installation costs for station
owners up to $50,000, and
approved a law giving stations the legal right to sell
alternative fuels from outside
distributors.
Despite all the effort, King
in May became the frrst station owner in New York to
offer E85 to the general public. Ralph Bombardjere of
the New York · State
Association of Service
Stations and Repair Shops
sai(l his members have been ·
slow to sink money into dispensers and tanks because of
"unknowns" in the market.
''They shy . away from
making . the investment
because no one knows how
much r,roduct they're going
to sell, ' he said.
.
Oi I companies have done
little to promote E85, which,
after all, is a product ·they do
not make. But' consumers can
still buy the alternative fuel
at "branded" stations selling
gasoline from big oil comr.anies, like the Albany MobiL
Exxon Mobil Corp. allows
E85 sales at bnmded stations
as long as long certain conditions are met, such as making
sure the E85 is clearly
marked as a non-Exxon
Mobil product, said company
spokeswoman Prem Nair.
She said the company wants
to make sure motorists don't
accidentally fill up with a
fuel their vehicle cannot handle.
''This is a product that we

cannot testify to because we
don't manufacture or supply
them," ·said Nair, who was
aware of about 20 branded
Exxon Mobil sites either selling E85 or planning to.
Complicating mat!ers is
that
Underwriters
Laboratories has been undergoing a lengthy review since
October to see if E85 dispensers are worthy of the UL
seal. The widely respected
safety and standards lab - .
the little, round "UL" mark
appears on everything from
smoke detectors to cribs was concerned that ethanol
could .corrode fuel dispensers. Stations can still put
the pumps in with local
approval. But a lack of certification ·- and the attending
potential of liability issueshas had a chilling effect.
"The UL decertification
has hindered us significantly," Kautz said.
Some larger retailers were
close to adding a significant

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number of E85 fueling stations before October, she
said, but "once they heard of
the UL decertification. they
stopped."
In New York, the UL move
sidetracked a plan to offer
E85 at 10 rest stops in the
New York State Thruway by·
.th~ end of this year. One unit
in New Baltimore sits
unused, and construction in
nine other places has been
halted as the Thruway ·
Authority awaits certification.
The morithslong certification process has been frustrating for ethanol backers. In
March, 14 farm-state senators urged UL to certify the
. dispensers.
·
John Drengenberg, manager of consumer affairs at UL.
said E85 certification is a priority. But he stressed that it's
not like approving a new
toaster since they have to create a new set of safety standards.

Marc Subik, MD

CORl--

1

./

1

r

�.

Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishimnt 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 ofgrievances.
'.

- The First Amendment to ttie U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, June 18. the I 69th day of 2007. There
tire 196 days left in the year.
·. Today's Highlight in History:
. On June 18. 1940. during World War II, British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill urged his countrymen to conduct
themse lves in a manner that would prompt future generations 10 say. "This was their tinest hour."
On this date:
: In 1778. American forces entered Philadelphia as the
British withdrew. during the Revolutionary War.
.. In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte met his Waterloo as British
~nd Prussian troops defeated the French in Belgium.
In 1857. Henry Clay Folger. the founder of the Folger
Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., was born in New
York City.
In 1928. Amelia Earhart became the tirst woman to fly
across the Atlantic Ocean as she completed a journey with
pilots Wilmer Stultz and Louis Gordon from Newfoundland
to Wales in about 21 hours.
In 1948, the United Nations Commission on Human
Rights tinished drafting an internationat' Declaration of
Human Rights.
In 1979, Ptesident Carter and Soviet President Leonid I.
Brezhnev signed the SALT II strategic arms limitation treaty
in Vienna.
·
·
ln ' i983, astronaut Sally K. Ride became America's frrst
woman in space as she and four colleagues blasted off
.aboard the space shuttle Challenger.
'· Ten years ago: The Southern Baptist Convention called for
·a.boycott of the Walt Disney Co., protestin~ what the con.'\lention callt;d its "gay-friendly" policies. Sirhan Sirhan
.failed in his tenth bid for parole in the assassination of Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy. Irineo Montoya, a Mexican laborer, was
;&lt;lKecuted by the state of Texas for a 1985 killing despite
protests by the Mexican government.
: .: One year ago: Bishop Katharine Jefferis Schori was eiect~tl the tirst female presiding bishop for the Episcopal
&lt;:hurch, the U.S. arm of the global Anglican Communion.
Phil Mickelson's bid for a third consecutive major ended
with a shocking collapse on the tinal hole, giving the U.S.
Open to Geoff Ogilvy.
· : Today's Birthdays: Actor Ian Carmichael is 87. Columnist
:'fum Wicker is 81. Rock singer-composer-musician Sir Paul
· McCartney is 65. Movie critic Roger Ebert is 65. Actress
"Constance McCashin is 60. Actress Linda Thorson is 60.
'Actress Isabella Rossellini is 55. Actress Carol Kane is 55.
,Rock singer Alison Moyet is ,46. Country singer-musician
·Tim Hunt is 40. Rock singer-musician Sice (The Boo
Radieys) is 38. Rhythm-and-blues singer Nathan Morris
.(Boyz II Men) is 36. Actress Mara Hobel is 36. Rapper Silkk
:r~e Shocker is 32. Actress Alana de Ia Gatza is 31. Country
•smger Blake Shelton ts 31. Actress Renee Olstead is 18.
~ Thought for Today: "Frailty, thy name is no longer
:Woman." - Victor Riesel, American labor journalist ( 1913p995).

.,!
' '

I
I

Now that the president has
tried to. revive the comatose
Senate amnesty bill, at least
as big a quesiion as whether
he can bring it back 1o life is
why on earth he would want
to'!

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

~ · · .}

~onday,Junet8,2007

Sure, he wants a win
because he hasn't had one
lately. Sure, he wants a
(gulp) legacy because it's
that clock-ticking time in his
second tenn. But why this
particular attempted win,
which his political base sees
only as betrayal? Why this
hoped-for legacy, which
would eliminate him from
any conservative pantheon'!
"It's a very emotional
issue." That's what the president says by way of
describing the acid turmoil
his "comprehensive" immigration reform push has
caused, particularly among
conservatives. He's right on
one level, but I get the
impression he makes the
pomt to. dismiss his opponents' objections as Volcanic
eruptions of feeling, rather
than legitimate and reasonable arguments.
At the same time, immigration reform is a very
emotional issue for Bush
himself. Too emotional. .
When it comes to illegal
aliens - in particular, illegal aliens from Mexico the man seems to be governed by his gut. And that, ·
of course, is no way to govern.
I say this having gone
back over the immigration
ftle that has.piled up during
this administration. A strong ·

Diana ·
West

emotional thread connecting
Bush to the issue comes
h. h
·
b
h
1 roug
stones a out is
beloved
Mexican-born
housekeeper/nannies. and
through stories about his
political associates with
Mexican roots. such as
Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales, or campaign aide
Israel Hernandez, ""whom,"
Newsweek noted last year,
"Bush hired after hearing his
family story."
Bush just loves those
family stories. No one needs
a shrink's couch to imagine
the inspiring effect of immigrant success stories on an
Establishment scion. like
Bush, who, while he may
have had to struggle for his
Texas .twang, never had to
struggle for much else - at
least anything essential.
From the big chair un the
hacienda porch, with that
"sense of Southwestern
noblesse"
Newsweek's
Howard Fineman fancifully
attributes to Bush's possible
notion of himself as a hacendado (landowner), the president's admiration seems to
know few bounds. "When
you grow up in Texas like ... ·
I did," Bush recently told
McClatchy Newspapers,

"you recognize the decency
and hard work and humanity
of Hispanics."
·
~ lovely testimonial, but
hardly a criterion on which
to offer amnesty to some 12
to 20 million illegal aliens.
even if they are mainly
Hispanic. Half the world's
population are undoubtedly
jl!sl as decent, hard-working
and humane, but that doesn't qualify the non-Hispanic
billions (who haven't broken innumerable U.S. laws)
for citizenship -·at least not
yet
But the rosy - better,
hazy- view
from the
hacienda porch doesn 't take
this in. Instead. Bush not
only imagines comprehensively reforming the illegal,
mainly Hi spanic millions
into citizens, but also
"assimi lating" them into
Americans. The president
doesn ' t seem to have
noticed that the multicultural states of America long
ago junked the "assimilation" process as being·
uEurocentric,'" "racist" and

worse. Nope, he's still talking abou t "this system 's
capacity to assimilate newcomers" as though it's the ·
Statue of Liberty's birthday
- her 50th birthday in
1936. This "capacity to
assimilate," he says, "has
been one of the great, pow.erful traditions of America.
It works. and it will work
this time."
It will? Question from
McClatchy: "Do you think
.we assimilate immmigrants
as well as in previous

wavesT'
Bush's
answer:
''Absolutely."
Obviously, · Bush hasn't
ridden a rush-hour bus
where ·no English is spoken,
or listened to a ~usiness
office recording asking
"oprima el numero dos."
But not even the presidential
bubble excuses him from
failing to notice the cultural
transformation this country
has undergone over the past
half ce ntury. From his inviolate state of oblivion, Bush
views "a backlash against
newcomers" as being the
only conceivable threat to
the assimilation process and more. "I am deeply concerned about America losing
its soul," he said, bemoaning
the country 's opposition to
illegal - illegal - immigration. "I am worried that a
backlash to newcomers
could cause our country to
lose its great capacity to
assimilate newcomers."
America's soul has been
gasping for survival for
ages. This has nothing to do
with Bush's "backlash"
bogeyman-which, frankly, ·
sounds .like another slap at
Americans who want . U.S.
sovereignty upheld. Maybe
Bush is just being emotion:
al. But it's clear where his
emotions lie, and it's not
with conservatives. And I
don 't think they stop at the
border, either.
(Diana West is a co/um11ist
for Tl1e Wasl1ington Times.
She can !Je conracted via
tliww 11 ·est@veri w nnet.)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

I
I

!!thanLetters
to the' editor are welcome. They should &amp;e less
300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be

I'

uigned, and iticlude address and telephone number. No
:unsigned letters II' ill be published. · Letters should be in
!good taste, addres.,ing issues, nor personalities. Letters of
•thanks to organizations and individuals will nor be acceptted for publication.

I

DAN RATHtR ACtUS~~ CBS OF TARTIN6 UP lTG NB'/5CAST

)_:

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Mall Subscription
Inside Melga County
13 Weeks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
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Frankiit
VIENNA, W.Va- Franklin Lee Sutherland 30, of Vienna,
W.Va, died Thursday, June 14, 2007, as the result of an accidental drowning in Meigs County.
Local arrangements were handled by Cremeens Funeral
Home, Racine . .

READERS' VIEWS
When system
worked
Dear Editor:
People
are
smart. ·
Americans are among the
world's tinest and brightest ·
leaders
in
medicine,
surgery, architecture, engineering, 1&gt;cience, the .military· and many other vocations.
People are not so smart
when it comes to the subject
of government and in what
arrangement it functions
best. The ramifications of
changes we have made in
the last several decades are
both deep and profound.
Our founding fathers gave
to us what can be described
as a representati ve democracy.. This government functions through an assembly
of senators and congressmen who are elected by the
citizens of voting age. It is
expected that the general
public can select representatives who are· smart, above
reproach, and that they will ·
take these qualities to the

office to which they are
elected.
In those days, and for a
long time thereafter, the
system worked well. When
those elected fell short of
doing the job they could be
replaced by the voters at the
next election. There was
trust and respect for the
office and the1r representative. That is, until the· people wanted to get involved
directly in what was .done
and how it was done.1
An effective' to.pJ to
accomplish this change was
the taking of polls of a small
percentage of the public by
the media. This was popular
since everyone wants to
express their opinion
regardless of how well or
ill-informed or misinformed
they may be on the subject.
What quickly developed
was that the poll results
were used by the media to
apply pressure upon our
r e. p r e s e n t a.t i v e. s .
Broadcasting companies
hired news .readers, sometimes called anchors, at
very high salaries, to tell the
citizens and their represen-

tatives how they felt on any
subject. Sounded like a true
democracy, didn't it?
What slipped by tlie ways ide was that we traded
decision mal\:ing by the
elected representative, who
we thought were well
informed, for that of a
cross-section of the general
public who may know little
if anything on the subject of
the poll upon which they
were expressing their opinion.
·
The folks of paragraph
one succeeded because they
. followed knowledge rather
than opinion . That was truly
smart.
Bob Weedy
Logan

Buy local
Dear Editor:
Kudos to · the Meigs
County
Chamber . of
Commerce and to it's director Michelle Donovan for
their recent push to convince local restaurants to
buy local produce (Jtine II
article "Chamber chal-

lenges support of farmers
market.")
In a nation that seems to
have forgotten all of the
benefits of supporting your
neighbors and friends; · its
nice to see that someone has
the ingenuity and foresight
· to recognize opportunity
when . she
sees
it.
Supporting local farmers
frees up produce from God
knows what ch'emicals and
poor quality standards.
Supporiing local farmers
creates local jobs and brings
a· sense of pride into the
community. Less u'avei for
produce trucks means
cleaner skies, safer highways and less fuel spent
getting food to distant markets.
·
It's sad that "protectionism" is seen as· a bad word
these days. Meigs County's
business community and
patrons should feel safe
knowing that Ms. Donovan
is· working hard to protect
·rhem.
·
Ben Bryant
lAncaster
iformerly of Meigs
County)

· Q.: Do journalists have a
right to keep their sources
confidential'!
.
·
A.: Most states, including Ohio, recognize some
form of a "reporter's privilege" that allows journalists to refuse to disClose
their confidential sources,
The .Ohio legislature has
enacted statutes called
"shield ·laws" that protect
print and broadcast journalists from being compelled to disclose the identity of their confidential
sources. Ohio courts also
have recognized a constitutional protection for
nonconfidential
notes,
drafts, video outtakes and
other non-published or
non-broadcast materials.

MIDDLEPORT- Kimberly Staats, 44, Middleport, passed
away on Saturday, .June 16, 2007 at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
· .
She was born on July 27, I%2 in Levittown, Pa., to Don
Drenner of Pipersburg, Pa., and the late SaraJyn Harmon
Drenner. She was a homemaker.
She was preceded in .death by her mother and a brother,
Kevin Drenner.
She is survived by her father; her husband, John .Staats,
Mtddleport; and a son, Trevor Nichols, Pennsburg, Pa
Service will be held at the eonvenience of the family.
Arrangements are being handled by the Fisher Funeral Home
in Middleport.

Carol L Panons
Carol L. Pars&lt;&gt;ns, 67, of West Columbia, died Saturday, June
16, 2007, at her daughter's home in Point Pleasant. .·
Funeral services will be II am. Thesday, June 19, 2007 at
Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant. Burial will follow at Forest
Hills Cemetery. Aatrock; W.Va .. Friends may call from 6-9
p.m. Monday, June 18,2007, at the funeral home. ·

Q.: Who is covered by
the privilege?
A.: Journalists are covered by the privilege, but
"journalist" is defined differently by different courts
and state statutes. Ohio's
shield laws define a journalist as a person "engaged
in the work of, or connected with, or'employed by" a
broadcast station (radio or
television) or newspaper
or press association for the
purpose of gathering, editmg · and publishing or
broadcastin~ news, Courts
in other junsdictions have
more broadly defined a
journalist as someone who
is gatherin~ news with the
intent to disseminate it to
the public.

Maille Fultz

criminal trial when the
criminal defendant's Sixth
Amendment rights to a fair
trial are in dan$er. In civil
lawsuits in wh1ch a party
seeks testimony or · documents from a journalist
concerning non-confidential sources, Ohio courts
sometimes require tbe
journalist to disclose the
mformation if. the party
seeking the inform~tion
can show it is relevant, it
cannot be obtained from
alternative sources, and
there is a compelling interest in obtaining the information.
State shield laws provide
protection only in state
court or state proceedings,
not in federal court or
against a subpoena from a
federal grand jury1There is
no federal shield law to
protect journalists from
being forced to disclose
their confidential sources.
Although Congress considered a bill in 2006 that
would have created a federal shield law, the bill
was not brought to a vote.
Q.: What can happen if
a journalist refuses a court
order to divulge a source?
A.: . A judge can . find
the reporter in contempt of
court and send the reporter
to jail or impose a fine. In
some cases, judges have
ordered fines of several
hundred dollars per day to
punish. the journalist for
defying a court order.
Former New York . Times
reporter Judith Miller
spent 85 days in jail in
2005 for refusing to identify a confidential S9Urce to
a federal grand jury,

Q.: Is it true that news
reporters never have to
POMEROY - Maxine Swan Price Fultz, Pomeroy, i?assed reveal their sources?
A.: No; the privilege is
away on Sunday, June 17,2007, at her residence followmg an
generally
not absolute in
extended illness.
most
states.
Ohio's shield
She was born July 10, in Long Bottom, daughter of the late
Q.: What are · the
laws
may
not
protect a
Harry and Ethel (Nohe) Swan. She was a member of the
Pomeroy United Methodist Chureh and Middleport-Pomeroy reporter who is asked to implications of having a
Rotary Club. She was a graduate of the Bliss Business College reveal confidential sources reporter go to jail for
in Columbus and started work as a secretary for Bernard Fultz to a grillld jury or in a refusing to identify a conLaw Offices in 1959.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her first
have several additional files
husband, Clarence Price; a brother, Marvin Swan; and a sister,
that are so complex that it ·
Mary Jo Moser.
.
will take some . time;"
Surviving are her husband, Bernard Fultz, Pomeroy; a
Strickland said at a
from Pa~A1
daughter, Pat Jordan, Cookeville, Thnn.; her pdchildrcn:
Statehouse news conference
K.clfy (Gus) Vallen, Middletown, and Jodi (Joe) Vaughan.
on Sunday - his third in
Portland, Oregon; great grandchildren, Anthony and Kathryn Social Security numbers of threedays.
.
Vallen; Step daughters: Elizabeth KelloliS, Wonhington, about 75,532 dependents.
Cur:tin founded Interhack
Barbara McManus, Cincinnati, and Becky Parsons of
Strickland again said that Corp. in Columbus 10 years
Gallipolis; a niece, Marilyn (Tom) Anderson, Middleport; a he has no reason to believe · a~o. "We make the bad guys
nephew; Bill Swan Columbus,
the information has been giVe up," the company says
Pallbearers are Gus Vaughan, Tom Anderson, Bill .Swan, compromised because get- on its Web site. Curtin said
Horace Karr, Hal Kneen, and Roger Dillard.
ting 1t requires special equip- he would have a better idea
Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday, June 19, 2007, at the ment and expertise. He also on how someone could get
Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Rev. Brian has issued an executive order access to information on the
Dunham officiating. Burial will follow in Sand Hill Cemetery. to change the procedures for device on Monday.
Friends may call two hours prior to the service at the funeral handling
state
data . . "We've just, just gotten
home.
Strickland illld Curtin said started," Curtin said Sunday.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Pomeroy United the analysis of what's on the "By tomorrow, I'll . have
Methodist Church, 112 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio device should be finished on some insight and have my
45769, Holzer Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio Monda~
·
hands around it."
45631-1563 or Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club, c/o Fisher
''The analysis of the data is
The State Highway Patrol
Funeral Homes, P.O. Box 151, Middleport, Ohio 45760. ·
nearly complete, but we also announced Sunday that

.from Page A1
land owners believe they own
the coal ri~hts to property
where Gatlmg Ohio says It
owns them. Young said she is
aware ODNR doesn't get
involved in these types of disputes but as a· tax-funded
agency she felt they had an
obligation to research the
issues when in dispute or give
landowners more time to fmd
it on their own.
· Also speaking against the
mine was Albert Proffitt of
Yellowbush Road whose
property is directly !~Cross
from where the operation will
sit. Proffitt also shared many
ofYoung'sconcernsincluding
pollution, coal dust and possi-

Campers
from PageA1
out of construction paper,
built candy train engines, and
made dioramas. The diararnas
were shadowboxes of construction paper, popsicle
sticks, pipe cleaners and plastic figunnes, ali housed in
shoe boxes.
·
Later, the children did coal.
bluing, urnking crystals in little jars. these they formed by
mingling bluing, amm(\nia
and salt (without iodine) in a
jar. During the Great
Depression, families made
those as a source of income,
Cook said. Afterward, the
·children played croquet in a
grassy area across the street
Players formed teams with
coaches and paired up, taking
turns.

On Thursday, the last day of

Report: Supreme
Court rnlings
·taking ,longer

LAw You CAN USE

POf!IT PLEASANT, W.Va - Joanne Rainey Wilson, 75;
of Pomt Pleasant, W.Va, died Saturday June 16 2J.XJ7 at
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Cen~ in fulnt
Pleasant.
·
'
Funeral will be at I I a.m., Wenesday, June 20, 200'1, at the
Cro~-Hussel1 Funeral Home, Point Pleasant. Burial will follow m the Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleasant VISitation will be
he!~ from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Online &amp;
Mml condolences may be sent to the family at
crowhussell@ suddenlinkmail.com.

Mine

I

,'

www.mydailysentinel.com '·

Obituaries

Wm-l.l&lt;ATIE COURIC

i

I

)londay,Junet8,2oo7

Is 'decency' enough for citizenship?

_The Daily Sentinel
111

. . .... ,

.PageA4

OPINION.

Jbe Daily Sentinel

,.

fidentialsource?
A.: In 1972, the United
States Supreme Cour~
CLEVELAND (AP)-The
found that journalists have
no privilege that allows averagetimetheOhioSupreme
them to refuse to testify Court·takes to issue rulings after
before .federal grand juries, it hear.; oral arguments in acase
In that decision, the increased by 40percentoveria
Supreme Court found that two-yeM period. a newspapc(
"the public has the right to · analysis published Sunday
every man's evidence" but found.
The(Cieve!and)PiainDealer
also conceded. that "without some protection for analysis found that cases averseeking out the news, free- aged five months between
dom of the ~ress could be arguments and thecourt'sdecieviscerated. The court sionsin2004,butthatinuc:astd
recognized the important to seven months last year. The;
function of the news media court doesn't hear arguments in
in digging out the truth the majority of cases that axnc
and spreading that truth to before it
lnonecase,twomenwhohad
the public. The news
.
spent
16 years in prison fa'
media fulfill a watchdog
crimes
in which they eventually
role over government and
were
cleared
had to wait nearly
serve as the conduit that
one
y=
after
arguments before
ensures a free flow · of
the
court
unanimously
onieted
information to the public.
new
trials
for
both
of
them.
A journalist's digging for
Randy Resh was acquilled
information often begins
and
the prosecutor dropped
with confidential sources
charges
against Robert Gondor
and,
without
those
in
the
1990rapeandmurderofa
sources, the public is less
likely to know what elect- Portage County woman.
ed officials and non-elect- Resh's lawyer thinks the wait
ed decision~makers are was too long.
"If you saw the oral argudoing.
ment, all seven justices ... wen:
lAw You 1Can Use is a clearlydisturbedbytheconvic- ·
weekly consumer legal tions, yet it took a Wl8nimous
inforlfUJtion column pro- court, with no dissents and no
vided to this newspaptr by separate concurrences, 11
the Ohio State Bar months to come back with a
Association and the Ohio decision," saidColllliiOOsattorState Bar Foundation. ney Jim Owen, who represent·
This article was prepared edResh.
ChiefJusticeThomasMoyer
by Monica L. Dias, an
agrees,
but adds there is little he
attorney
with
Frost
can
do
about
it. ·
Brown Todd LLC in
"Any
justice
who has a patCincinnati who specialtern
of
taking
a
longer
period of
izes in media issues• .
time
than
others
knows
the ·
Articles appearing in this
court's
concern,
they
know
the
column are intended to
chief
justice's
concern,
they
provide broad, general
information about the know the concern of their collaw. Before applying this lc;agues," Moyer said "But one
inforlfUJtion .to a specific thing we ha.ve to remember is
of the justices is an indelegal problem, readers are . each
pendently
urged to seek advicefrom official." statewide elected
·
an attorney.

Security

a post office box had been
established in Columbus in
hopes that the storage
device would bC returned
anonymously.
The device - listed in a
police report from suburban
Hilliard as being worth $15
- was reported stolen
along with a $200 radar
detector, out of the car of
22-year-old Jared llovar, a
college senior making
$10.50 an hour in his state
job. Ilovar is an intern with
the Office of Management
and Budg~t assigned to
work on the state's $158
million
payroll
and
accounting
sr.stem.
Telephone and e-mail messages seeking comment
were left for Ilovar.

ble losses to his hay crop used somebody destroy it and take ion, in Mason County where
·tofeedhissister'scattle.
itawayfromme."
Gatling operates the Broad
Guy
Rose,
whose Run Mine in New Haven,
Proffitt's sister ·Lola has
property near and below Lebanon. Township P.roperty W.Va.
where the slurry ponds will sit has been in his family since
"It's been a very positive
and Albert was also concerned ·right a(ter !he Civil War, reit- ex~rience so far," Fowler
about her safety and any evac- erated Albert's concerns and smd of Gatling's role in the
uation plan.
added his own about mining community across the river.
~'People in this iuea do not . being done under churches
Nancy
Pedigo
of
need or deserve what's hap- and cemeteries, loss of prop- · Yellowbush Roaa quespening," Proffitt said. "An erty and guestions ab&lt;iut the tioned Fowler's "interests"
engineer built the ntanic but it affect on 'wells. ·
saying he had done testing
still fail~.'~
Greg Fowler of Point for Gatling in Meigs County
Lola, also of Yellowbush Pleasant, W.Va. who is also in regards to water wells.
Road, was concerned about -· director of the Family Pedigo's husband Jay also
the ponds on her property Resource Center in Point testified at the hearil)g, voic- ·
which provide water for her Pleasant, spoke in support of · ing concerns about the
cattle and how they may be Gatling, saying the company impact on water supplies,
affected. BothLolaandAlbert had been. a "tremendous concerns about increased
talked about their connection help" to the community in traffic on Ohio 124, flooding
totheirpropertiesdatingback Mason County, W.Va. and procedures to claim
several generations.
Fowler added the negative damages if damage occurs.
"I too am totally against perceptions of having a coal
The conference was to
this,'' Lola said. "I haven't mine rna community was not gather and record testimony
worked all my life to have the perception, in his opin- by ODNR. Those submitting

questions at the conference
or in writin$ will have
answers, in wnting, 60 days
from the date of the conference.

camp, the children finished
their crafts. After a snack, they
listened to guest speaker
Ralph Bailes tell about ·the
Racine locks and dam. They
decorated cupcakes for use
later that day, enjoyed more
games of crochet, and played
red rover.
Parents and grandparents
joined their children for an ·
awards ceramony to conclude
the daycamp program. Patty
Cook reviewed the week's
activities and asked the children what they had enjoyed.
Students said · they had
enjoyed making genealogy
charts ·and visiting the locks
and dam and pla:ff croquet.
"I liked going
y, really
high u_p,'' Lara Perrin said. ·
Whitehead led the children
in singing "Dixie", a patriotic
song they had learned during
the week. Cook gave a certificate to each student who had
participated. After refreshments, including the cup-

. ... . "'•·

cakes decorated earlier, those
attending the awards program
walkedncxtdoorwhereevezy
child's artwork was displayed.
The daycamp was sponsored by the Meigs County

Historical Society and
planned by the sOciety's daycamp committee, Patty Cook
and Whitehead who have
assisted all I0 years, Cassie
Turner arid John Bentley,
trustee.

AruEL

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.,

Monday,·
June 18,2007

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June29&amp;30

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win great enzesl
Movie "Viva Las Vegas·
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CONGRATULATIONI

Meigs Archery Team$

Well Done
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From the crew at
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Pomeroy,OH
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ESTABUSHEO 1895

Jfor A Job
Hctatlng, Cooling,

Strickland said Ilovar
mistakenly left the device in
a vehicle parked outside an
apartment when it was SUI,)"
posed to be taken into li11
home as part .o f a protocol in
place since 2002.
Sol Bermann, chief privacy officer at state Office of:
Information Technology,
called Curtin one of tl!~ .
country's foremost data
security ex~erts.
.
"It's a thtrd-party valida·
·tion of our work. It s impor·
tan! that someone double- .
checks for us so that nothing .
is missed."
...... . .
The state is expected .to
pay $50,000 to Curtin, who
satd he doesn't know how
long his. investigation will
take.

.

~

.

., '

�.

Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishimnt 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 ofgrievances.
'.

- The First Amendment to ttie U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, June 18. the I 69th day of 2007. There
tire 196 days left in the year.
·. Today's Highlight in History:
. On June 18. 1940. during World War II, British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill urged his countrymen to conduct
themse lves in a manner that would prompt future generations 10 say. "This was their tinest hour."
On this date:
: In 1778. American forces entered Philadelphia as the
British withdrew. during the Revolutionary War.
.. In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte met his Waterloo as British
~nd Prussian troops defeated the French in Belgium.
In 1857. Henry Clay Folger. the founder of the Folger
Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., was born in New
York City.
In 1928. Amelia Earhart became the tirst woman to fly
across the Atlantic Ocean as she completed a journey with
pilots Wilmer Stultz and Louis Gordon from Newfoundland
to Wales in about 21 hours.
In 1948, the United Nations Commission on Human
Rights tinished drafting an internationat' Declaration of
Human Rights.
In 1979, Ptesident Carter and Soviet President Leonid I.
Brezhnev signed the SALT II strategic arms limitation treaty
in Vienna.
·
·
ln ' i983, astronaut Sally K. Ride became America's frrst
woman in space as she and four colleagues blasted off
.aboard the space shuttle Challenger.
'· Ten years ago: The Southern Baptist Convention called for
·a.boycott of the Walt Disney Co., protestin~ what the con.'\lention callt;d its "gay-friendly" policies. Sirhan Sirhan
.failed in his tenth bid for parole in the assassination of Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy. Irineo Montoya, a Mexican laborer, was
;&lt;lKecuted by the state of Texas for a 1985 killing despite
protests by the Mexican government.
: .: One year ago: Bishop Katharine Jefferis Schori was eiect~tl the tirst female presiding bishop for the Episcopal
&lt;:hurch, the U.S. arm of the global Anglican Communion.
Phil Mickelson's bid for a third consecutive major ended
with a shocking collapse on the tinal hole, giving the U.S.
Open to Geoff Ogilvy.
· : Today's Birthdays: Actor Ian Carmichael is 87. Columnist
:'fum Wicker is 81. Rock singer-composer-musician Sir Paul
· McCartney is 65. Movie critic Roger Ebert is 65. Actress
"Constance McCashin is 60. Actress Linda Thorson is 60.
'Actress Isabella Rossellini is 55. Actress Carol Kane is 55.
,Rock singer Alison Moyet is ,46. Country singer-musician
·Tim Hunt is 40. Rock singer-musician Sice (The Boo
Radieys) is 38. Rhythm-and-blues singer Nathan Morris
.(Boyz II Men) is 36. Actress Mara Hobel is 36. Rapper Silkk
:r~e Shocker is 32. Actress Alana de Ia Gatza is 31. Country
•smger Blake Shelton ts 31. Actress Renee Olstead is 18.
~ Thought for Today: "Frailty, thy name is no longer
:Woman." - Victor Riesel, American labor journalist ( 1913p995).

.,!
' '

I
I

Now that the president has
tried to. revive the comatose
Senate amnesty bill, at least
as big a quesiion as whether
he can bring it back 1o life is
why on earth he would want
to'!

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

~ · · .}

~onday,Junet8,2007

Sure, he wants a win
because he hasn't had one
lately. Sure, he wants a
(gulp) legacy because it's
that clock-ticking time in his
second tenn. But why this
particular attempted win,
which his political base sees
only as betrayal? Why this
hoped-for legacy, which
would eliminate him from
any conservative pantheon'!
"It's a very emotional
issue." That's what the president says by way of
describing the acid turmoil
his "comprehensive" immigration reform push has
caused, particularly among
conservatives. He's right on
one level, but I get the
impression he makes the
pomt to. dismiss his opponents' objections as Volcanic
eruptions of feeling, rather
than legitimate and reasonable arguments.
At the same time, immigration reform is a very
emotional issue for Bush
himself. Too emotional. .
When it comes to illegal
aliens - in particular, illegal aliens from Mexico the man seems to be governed by his gut. And that, ·
of course, is no way to govern.
I say this having gone
back over the immigration
ftle that has.piled up during
this administration. A strong ·

Diana ·
West

emotional thread connecting
Bush to the issue comes
h. h
·
b
h
1 roug
stones a out is
beloved
Mexican-born
housekeeper/nannies. and
through stories about his
political associates with
Mexican roots. such as
Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales, or campaign aide
Israel Hernandez, ""whom,"
Newsweek noted last year,
"Bush hired after hearing his
family story."
Bush just loves those
family stories. No one needs
a shrink's couch to imagine
the inspiring effect of immigrant success stories on an
Establishment scion. like
Bush, who, while he may
have had to struggle for his
Texas .twang, never had to
struggle for much else - at
least anything essential.
From the big chair un the
hacienda porch, with that
"sense of Southwestern
noblesse"
Newsweek's
Howard Fineman fancifully
attributes to Bush's possible
notion of himself as a hacendado (landowner), the president's admiration seems to
know few bounds. "When
you grow up in Texas like ... ·
I did," Bush recently told
McClatchy Newspapers,

"you recognize the decency
and hard work and humanity
of Hispanics."
·
~ lovely testimonial, but
hardly a criterion on which
to offer amnesty to some 12
to 20 million illegal aliens.
even if they are mainly
Hispanic. Half the world's
population are undoubtedly
jl!sl as decent, hard-working
and humane, but that doesn't qualify the non-Hispanic
billions (who haven't broken innumerable U.S. laws)
for citizenship -·at least not
yet
But the rosy - better,
hazy- view
from the
hacienda porch doesn 't take
this in. Instead. Bush not
only imagines comprehensively reforming the illegal,
mainly Hi spanic millions
into citizens, but also
"assimi lating" them into
Americans. The president
doesn ' t seem to have
noticed that the multicultural states of America long
ago junked the "assimilation" process as being·
uEurocentric,'" "racist" and

worse. Nope, he's still talking abou t "this system 's
capacity to assimilate newcomers" as though it's the ·
Statue of Liberty's birthday
- her 50th birthday in
1936. This "capacity to
assimilate," he says, "has
been one of the great, pow.erful traditions of America.
It works. and it will work
this time."
It will? Question from
McClatchy: "Do you think
.we assimilate immmigrants
as well as in previous

wavesT'
Bush's
answer:
''Absolutely."
Obviously, · Bush hasn't
ridden a rush-hour bus
where ·no English is spoken,
or listened to a ~usiness
office recording asking
"oprima el numero dos."
But not even the presidential
bubble excuses him from
failing to notice the cultural
transformation this country
has undergone over the past
half ce ntury. From his inviolate state of oblivion, Bush
views "a backlash against
newcomers" as being the
only conceivable threat to
the assimilation process and more. "I am deeply concerned about America losing
its soul," he said, bemoaning
the country 's opposition to
illegal - illegal - immigration. "I am worried that a
backlash to newcomers
could cause our country to
lose its great capacity to
assimilate newcomers."
America's soul has been
gasping for survival for
ages. This has nothing to do
with Bush's "backlash"
bogeyman-which, frankly, ·
sounds .like another slap at
Americans who want . U.S.
sovereignty upheld. Maybe
Bush is just being emotion:
al. But it's clear where his
emotions lie, and it's not
with conservatives. And I
don 't think they stop at the
border, either.
(Diana West is a co/um11ist
for Tl1e Wasl1ington Times.
She can !Je conracted via
tliww 11 ·est@veri w nnet.)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

I
I

!!thanLetters
to the' editor are welcome. They should &amp;e less
300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be

I'

uigned, and iticlude address and telephone number. No
:unsigned letters II' ill be published. · Letters should be in
!good taste, addres.,ing issues, nor personalities. Letters of
•thanks to organizations and individuals will nor be acceptted for publication.

I

DAN RATHtR ACtUS~~ CBS OF TARTIN6 UP lTG NB'/5CAST

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The Daily Sentinel
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Frankiit
VIENNA, W.Va- Franklin Lee Sutherland 30, of Vienna,
W.Va, died Thursday, June 14, 2007, as the result of an accidental drowning in Meigs County.
Local arrangements were handled by Cremeens Funeral
Home, Racine . .

READERS' VIEWS
When system
worked
Dear Editor:
People
are
smart. ·
Americans are among the
world's tinest and brightest ·
leaders
in
medicine,
surgery, architecture, engineering, 1&gt;cience, the .military· and many other vocations.
People are not so smart
when it comes to the subject
of government and in what
arrangement it functions
best. The ramifications of
changes we have made in
the last several decades are
both deep and profound.
Our founding fathers gave
to us what can be described
as a representati ve democracy.. This government functions through an assembly
of senators and congressmen who are elected by the
citizens of voting age. It is
expected that the general
public can select representatives who are· smart, above
reproach, and that they will ·
take these qualities to the

office to which they are
elected.
In those days, and for a
long time thereafter, the
system worked well. When
those elected fell short of
doing the job they could be
replaced by the voters at the
next election. There was
trust and respect for the
office and the1r representative. That is, until the· people wanted to get involved
directly in what was .done
and how it was done.1
An effective' to.pJ to
accomplish this change was
the taking of polls of a small
percentage of the public by
the media. This was popular
since everyone wants to
express their opinion
regardless of how well or
ill-informed or misinformed
they may be on the subject.
What quickly developed
was that the poll results
were used by the media to
apply pressure upon our
r e. p r e s e n t a.t i v e. s .
Broadcasting companies
hired news .readers, sometimes called anchors, at
very high salaries, to tell the
citizens and their represen-

tatives how they felt on any
subject. Sounded like a true
democracy, didn't it?
What slipped by tlie ways ide was that we traded
decision mal\:ing by the
elected representative, who
we thought were well
informed, for that of a
cross-section of the general
public who may know little
if anything on the subject of
the poll upon which they
were expressing their opinion.
·
The folks of paragraph
one succeeded because they
. followed knowledge rather
than opinion . That was truly
smart.
Bob Weedy
Logan

Buy local
Dear Editor:
Kudos to · the Meigs
County
Chamber . of
Commerce and to it's director Michelle Donovan for
their recent push to convince local restaurants to
buy local produce (Jtine II
article "Chamber chal-

lenges support of farmers
market.")
In a nation that seems to
have forgotten all of the
benefits of supporting your
neighbors and friends; · its
nice to see that someone has
the ingenuity and foresight
· to recognize opportunity
when . she
sees
it.
Supporting local farmers
frees up produce from God
knows what ch'emicals and
poor quality standards.
Supporiing local farmers
creates local jobs and brings
a· sense of pride into the
community. Less u'avei for
produce trucks means
cleaner skies, safer highways and less fuel spent
getting food to distant markets.
·
It's sad that "protectionism" is seen as· a bad word
these days. Meigs County's
business community and
patrons should feel safe
knowing that Ms. Donovan
is· working hard to protect
·rhem.
·
Ben Bryant
lAncaster
iformerly of Meigs
County)

· Q.: Do journalists have a
right to keep their sources
confidential'!
.
·
A.: Most states, including Ohio, recognize some
form of a "reporter's privilege" that allows journalists to refuse to disClose
their confidential sources,
The .Ohio legislature has
enacted statutes called
"shield ·laws" that protect
print and broadcast journalists from being compelled to disclose the identity of their confidential
sources. Ohio courts also
have recognized a constitutional protection for
nonconfidential
notes,
drafts, video outtakes and
other non-published or
non-broadcast materials.

MIDDLEPORT- Kimberly Staats, 44, Middleport, passed
away on Saturday, .June 16, 2007 at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
· .
She was born on July 27, I%2 in Levittown, Pa., to Don
Drenner of Pipersburg, Pa., and the late SaraJyn Harmon
Drenner. She was a homemaker.
She was preceded in .death by her mother and a brother,
Kevin Drenner.
She is survived by her father; her husband, John .Staats,
Mtddleport; and a son, Trevor Nichols, Pennsburg, Pa
Service will be held at the eonvenience of the family.
Arrangements are being handled by the Fisher Funeral Home
in Middleport.

Carol L Panons
Carol L. Pars&lt;&gt;ns, 67, of West Columbia, died Saturday, June
16, 2007, at her daughter's home in Point Pleasant. .·
Funeral services will be II am. Thesday, June 19, 2007 at
Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant. Burial will follow at Forest
Hills Cemetery. Aatrock; W.Va .. Friends may call from 6-9
p.m. Monday, June 18,2007, at the funeral home. ·

Q.: Who is covered by
the privilege?
A.: Journalists are covered by the privilege, but
"journalist" is defined differently by different courts
and state statutes. Ohio's
shield laws define a journalist as a person "engaged
in the work of, or connected with, or'employed by" a
broadcast station (radio or
television) or newspaper
or press association for the
purpose of gathering, editmg · and publishing or
broadcastin~ news, Courts
in other junsdictions have
more broadly defined a
journalist as someone who
is gatherin~ news with the
intent to disseminate it to
the public.

Maille Fultz

criminal trial when the
criminal defendant's Sixth
Amendment rights to a fair
trial are in dan$er. In civil
lawsuits in wh1ch a party
seeks testimony or · documents from a journalist
concerning non-confidential sources, Ohio courts
sometimes require tbe
journalist to disclose the
mformation if. the party
seeking the inform~tion
can show it is relevant, it
cannot be obtained from
alternative sources, and
there is a compelling interest in obtaining the information.
State shield laws provide
protection only in state
court or state proceedings,
not in federal court or
against a subpoena from a
federal grand jury1There is
no federal shield law to
protect journalists from
being forced to disclose
their confidential sources.
Although Congress considered a bill in 2006 that
would have created a federal shield law, the bill
was not brought to a vote.
Q.: What can happen if
a journalist refuses a court
order to divulge a source?
A.: . A judge can . find
the reporter in contempt of
court and send the reporter
to jail or impose a fine. In
some cases, judges have
ordered fines of several
hundred dollars per day to
punish. the journalist for
defying a court order.
Former New York . Times
reporter Judith Miller
spent 85 days in jail in
2005 for refusing to identify a confidential S9Urce to
a federal grand jury,

Q.: Is it true that news
reporters never have to
POMEROY - Maxine Swan Price Fultz, Pomeroy, i?assed reveal their sources?
A.: No; the privilege is
away on Sunday, June 17,2007, at her residence followmg an
generally
not absolute in
extended illness.
most
states.
Ohio's shield
She was born July 10, in Long Bottom, daughter of the late
Q.: What are · the
laws
may
not
protect a
Harry and Ethel (Nohe) Swan. She was a member of the
Pomeroy United Methodist Chureh and Middleport-Pomeroy reporter who is asked to implications of having a
Rotary Club. She was a graduate of the Bliss Business College reveal confidential sources reporter go to jail for
in Columbus and started work as a secretary for Bernard Fultz to a grillld jury or in a refusing to identify a conLaw Offices in 1959.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her first
have several additional files
husband, Clarence Price; a brother, Marvin Swan; and a sister,
that are so complex that it ·
Mary Jo Moser.
.
will take some . time;"
Surviving are her husband, Bernard Fultz, Pomeroy; a
Strickland said at a
from Pa~A1
daughter, Pat Jordan, Cookeville, Thnn.; her pdchildrcn:
Statehouse news conference
K.clfy (Gus) Vallen, Middletown, and Jodi (Joe) Vaughan.
on Sunday - his third in
Portland, Oregon; great grandchildren, Anthony and Kathryn Social Security numbers of threedays.
.
Vallen; Step daughters: Elizabeth KelloliS, Wonhington, about 75,532 dependents.
Cur:tin founded Interhack
Barbara McManus, Cincinnati, and Becky Parsons of
Strickland again said that Corp. in Columbus 10 years
Gallipolis; a niece, Marilyn (Tom) Anderson, Middleport; a he has no reason to believe · a~o. "We make the bad guys
nephew; Bill Swan Columbus,
the information has been giVe up," the company says
Pallbearers are Gus Vaughan, Tom Anderson, Bill .Swan, compromised because get- on its Web site. Curtin said
Horace Karr, Hal Kneen, and Roger Dillard.
ting 1t requires special equip- he would have a better idea
Funeral will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday, June 19, 2007, at the ment and expertise. He also on how someone could get
Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Rev. Brian has issued an executive order access to information on the
Dunham officiating. Burial will follow in Sand Hill Cemetery. to change the procedures for device on Monday.
Friends may call two hours prior to the service at the funeral handling
state
data . . "We've just, just gotten
home.
Strickland illld Curtin said started," Curtin said Sunday.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Pomeroy United the analysis of what's on the "By tomorrow, I'll . have
Methodist Church, 112 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio device should be finished on some insight and have my
45769, Holzer Hospice, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio Monda~
·
hands around it."
45631-1563 or Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club, c/o Fisher
''The analysis of the data is
The State Highway Patrol
Funeral Homes, P.O. Box 151, Middleport, Ohio 45760. ·
nearly complete, but we also announced Sunday that

.from Page A1
land owners believe they own
the coal ri~hts to property
where Gatlmg Ohio says It
owns them. Young said she is
aware ODNR doesn't get
involved in these types of disputes but as a· tax-funded
agency she felt they had an
obligation to research the
issues when in dispute or give
landowners more time to fmd
it on their own.
· Also speaking against the
mine was Albert Proffitt of
Yellowbush Road whose
property is directly !~Cross
from where the operation will
sit. Proffitt also shared many
ofYoung'sconcernsincluding
pollution, coal dust and possi-

Campers
from PageA1
out of construction paper,
built candy train engines, and
made dioramas. The diararnas
were shadowboxes of construction paper, popsicle
sticks, pipe cleaners and plastic figunnes, ali housed in
shoe boxes.
·
Later, the children did coal.
bluing, urnking crystals in little jars. these they formed by
mingling bluing, amm(\nia
and salt (without iodine) in a
jar. During the Great
Depression, families made
those as a source of income,
Cook said. Afterward, the
·children played croquet in a
grassy area across the street
Players formed teams with
coaches and paired up, taking
turns.

On Thursday, the last day of

Report: Supreme
Court rnlings
·taking ,longer

LAw You CAN USE

POf!IT PLEASANT, W.Va - Joanne Rainey Wilson, 75;
of Pomt Pleasant, W.Va, died Saturday June 16 2J.XJ7 at
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Cen~ in fulnt
Pleasant.
·
'
Funeral will be at I I a.m., Wenesday, June 20, 200'1, at the
Cro~-Hussel1 Funeral Home, Point Pleasant. Burial will follow m the Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleasant VISitation will be
he!~ from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Online &amp;
Mml condolences may be sent to the family at
crowhussell@ suddenlinkmail.com.

Mine

I

,'

www.mydailysentinel.com '·

Obituaries

Wm-l.l&lt;ATIE COURIC

i

I

)londay,Junet8,2oo7

Is 'decency' enough for citizenship?

_The Daily Sentinel
111

. . .... ,

.PageA4

OPINION.

Jbe Daily Sentinel

,.

fidentialsource?
A.: In 1972, the United
States Supreme Cour~
CLEVELAND (AP)-The
found that journalists have
no privilege that allows averagetimetheOhioSupreme
them to refuse to testify Court·takes to issue rulings after
before .federal grand juries, it hear.; oral arguments in acase
In that decision, the increased by 40percentoveria
Supreme Court found that two-yeM period. a newspapc(
"the public has the right to · analysis published Sunday
every man's evidence" but found.
The(Cieve!and)PiainDealer
also conceded. that "without some protection for analysis found that cases averseeking out the news, free- aged five months between
dom of the ~ress could be arguments and thecourt'sdecieviscerated. The court sionsin2004,butthatinuc:astd
recognized the important to seven months last year. The;
function of the news media court doesn't hear arguments in
in digging out the truth the majority of cases that axnc
and spreading that truth to before it
lnonecase,twomenwhohad
the public. The news
.
spent
16 years in prison fa'
media fulfill a watchdog
crimes
in which they eventually
role over government and
were
cleared
had to wait nearly
serve as the conduit that
one
y=
after
arguments before
ensures a free flow · of
the
court
unanimously
onieted
information to the public.
new
trials
for
both
of
them.
A journalist's digging for
Randy Resh was acquilled
information often begins
and
the prosecutor dropped
with confidential sources
charges
against Robert Gondor
and,
without
those
in
the
1990rapeandmurderofa
sources, the public is less
likely to know what elect- Portage County woman.
ed officials and non-elect- Resh's lawyer thinks the wait
ed decision~makers are was too long.
"If you saw the oral argudoing.
ment, all seven justices ... wen:
lAw You 1Can Use is a clearlydisturbedbytheconvic- ·
weekly consumer legal tions, yet it took a Wl8nimous
inforlfUJtion column pro- court, with no dissents and no
vided to this newspaptr by separate concurrences, 11
the Ohio State Bar months to come back with a
Association and the Ohio decision," saidColllliiOOsattorState Bar Foundation. ney Jim Owen, who represent·
This article was prepared edResh.
ChiefJusticeThomasMoyer
by Monica L. Dias, an
agrees,
but adds there is little he
attorney
with
Frost
can
do
about
it. ·
Brown Todd LLC in
"Any
justice
who has a patCincinnati who specialtern
of
taking
a
longer
period of
izes in media issues• .
time
than
others
knows
the ·
Articles appearing in this
court's
concern,
they
know
the
column are intended to
chief
justice's
concern,
they
provide broad, general
information about the know the concern of their collaw. Before applying this lc;agues," Moyer said "But one
inforlfUJtion .to a specific thing we ha.ve to remember is
of the justices is an indelegal problem, readers are . each
pendently
urged to seek advicefrom official." statewide elected
·
an attorney.

Security

a post office box had been
established in Columbus in
hopes that the storage
device would bC returned
anonymously.
The device - listed in a
police report from suburban
Hilliard as being worth $15
- was reported stolen
along with a $200 radar
detector, out of the car of
22-year-old Jared llovar, a
college senior making
$10.50 an hour in his state
job. Ilovar is an intern with
the Office of Management
and Budg~t assigned to
work on the state's $158
million
payroll
and
accounting
sr.stem.
Telephone and e-mail messages seeking comment
were left for Ilovar.

ble losses to his hay crop used somebody destroy it and take ion, in Mason County where
·tofeedhissister'scattle.
itawayfromme."
Gatling operates the Broad
Guy
Rose,
whose Run Mine in New Haven,
Proffitt's sister ·Lola has
property near and below Lebanon. Township P.roperty W.Va.
where the slurry ponds will sit has been in his family since
"It's been a very positive
and Albert was also concerned ·right a(ter !he Civil War, reit- ex~rience so far," Fowler
about her safety and any evac- erated Albert's concerns and smd of Gatling's role in the
uation plan.
added his own about mining community across the river.
~'People in this iuea do not . being done under churches
Nancy
Pedigo
of
need or deserve what's hap- and cemeteries, loss of prop- · Yellowbush Roaa quespening," Proffitt said. "An erty and guestions ab&lt;iut the tioned Fowler's "interests"
engineer built the ntanic but it affect on 'wells. ·
saying he had done testing
still fail~.'~
Greg Fowler of Point for Gatling in Meigs County
Lola, also of Yellowbush Pleasant, W.Va. who is also in regards to water wells.
Road, was concerned about -· director of the Family Pedigo's husband Jay also
the ponds on her property Resource Center in Point testified at the hearil)g, voic- ·
which provide water for her Pleasant, spoke in support of · ing concerns about the
cattle and how they may be Gatling, saying the company impact on water supplies,
affected. BothLolaandAlbert had been. a "tremendous concerns about increased
talked about their connection help" to the community in traffic on Ohio 124, flooding
totheirpropertiesdatingback Mason County, W.Va. and procedures to claim
several generations.
Fowler added the negative damages if damage occurs.
"I too am totally against perceptions of having a coal
The conference was to
this,'' Lola said. "I haven't mine rna community was not gather and record testimony
worked all my life to have the perception, in his opin- by ODNR. Those submitting

questions at the conference
or in writin$ will have
answers, in wnting, 60 days
from the date of the conference.

camp, the children finished
their crafts. After a snack, they
listened to guest speaker
Ralph Bailes tell about ·the
Racine locks and dam. They
decorated cupcakes for use
later that day, enjoyed more
games of crochet, and played
red rover.
Parents and grandparents
joined their children for an ·
awards ceramony to conclude
the daycamp program. Patty
Cook reviewed the week's
activities and asked the children what they had enjoyed.
Students said · they had
enjoyed making genealogy
charts ·and visiting the locks
and dam and pla:ff croquet.
"I liked going
y, really
high u_p,'' Lara Perrin said. ·
Whitehead led the children
in singing "Dixie", a patriotic
song they had learned during
the week. Cook gave a certificate to each student who had
participated. After refreshments, including the cup-

. ... . "'•·

cakes decorated earlier, those
attending the awards program
walkedncxtdoorwhereevezy
child's artwork was displayed.
The daycamp was sponsored by the Meigs County

Historical Society and
planned by the sOciety's daycamp committee, Patty Cook
and Whitehead who have
assisted all I0 years, Cassie
Turner arid John Bentley,
trustee.

AruEL

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Restaurant
Equipment,
j)lumblng, Electrical
Residential &amp; Commercial

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.,

Monday,·
June 18,2007

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win great enzesl
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CONGRATULATIONI

Meigs Archery Team$

Well Done
At
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From the crew at
Unique Antiques
Pomeroy,OH
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ESTABUSHEO 1895

Jfor A Job
Hctatlng, Cooling,

Strickland said Ilovar
mistakenly left the device in
a vehicle parked outside an
apartment when it was SUI,)"
posed to be taken into li11
home as part .o f a protocol in
place since 2002.
Sol Bermann, chief privacy officer at state Office of:
Information Technology,
called Curtin one of tl!~ .
country's foremost data
security ex~erts.
.
"It's a thtrd-party valida·
·tion of our work. It s impor·
tan! that someone double- .
checks for us so that nothing .
is missed."
...... . .
The state is expected .to
pay $50,000 to Curtin, who
satd he doesn't know how
long his. investigation will
take.

.

~

.

., '

�-1
I

'

PageA6

REGIONAL

pte Daily Sentinel

'Monday; June 18, 2007

•

Report: Wealthy businessmen
among those 'getting fann subsidies·
COLUMBUS (AP) for a variety of activities:
Farmers who made millions including crop production
in business· and real estate and conservation efforts.
deals are among more than One program, for example,
80,000
Ohioans
who gives lump sum payments
r,eceived nearly $1.5 billion based on the history of a
in crop and conservation farm 's performance, with no
subsidies from the federal restrictions on which crop is
government in the past four grown and no requirement to
years, a newspaper reported grow anything at all.
The payments, which are
Sunday.
legal
and available to all who
The government payments are detailed in a new qualify, are being scruti'·database from the U.S.· nized in Congress, which is
Department of Agriculture, reviewing the politically
making it possible to track sensitive farm bill. For
payments directly to indi- years. critics have tried to
viduals, rather than to busi- end the payments, calling
nesses and cooperatives. them a waste of taxpayer
according to a story pub- money.
One proposal would
lished by The Columbus
award subsidies only to
Dispatch.
·
The top three subsidy farmers with less than
recipients in Ohio were $200,000 in annual adjusted
farmers Dale, David and gross income.
"The payments themFred Hendren, who got a
combined $1.9 million, the selveli are for services ren1 Dispatch
said.
Fred . dered," said Adam Sharp,
Hendren, his son David and director of national affairs
brother Tom were involved for the Ohio Farm Bureau
in lucrative land deals se'ver- Federation. "The theory of it
al years ago, selling acreage being ·stuffed into pockets
in New Albany, near for profit is not the case."
The program was estab·
Columbus, for more than $5
lished to ensure ·a stable,
million.
Brothers Charles and secure and affordable food
Ronald Rivers, Fayette · supply - and it's worked,
County farmers whose Mid- Sharp said.
Ben Lilliston, communiOhio Chemical company
was sold in 1994 for $19 mil- cations director for the nonInstitute
for
lion in cominon stock and profit
$28 million in preferred Agriculture and Trade
stock, got nearly $1 million Policy, objects to subsidies.
Food companies and
in subsidies, the newspaper
agribusinesses should pay
reported.
Subsidies; which began in farmers a fair price for their
the 1930s as a response to products, Lilliston said. The
dire economic conditions, group advocates legislation
fall into more than a dozen to establish price floors and
categories and are awarded create a reserve program.

.That way, he said, ·farmers
would not need to rely on
taxpayer support.
Under the current farm
bill, every person receiving
subsidies must report adjusted gross i'ncome to the
USDA. To qualify, income
from activities other than
farming can't exceed an
average of $2.5 million over
the previous three years,
Borland said.
'
Charities, churches and
certain government agencies
also benefited. The Wolfe
family, which owns and publishes the Dispatch, received
nearly $500,000 through its
Agricultural Lands Inc., for
farmland it owns in Madison
County. The money, which
was split among 13 family
members, goes toward farm
operations, the newspaper
said.
The 4-H Cainp Palmer
near Fayette, in Fulton
County, got $42,269 in a
conservation reserve program, the newspaper said.
St. Philip Episcopal Church
in Circleville received
$1 7,763, _ the YMCA of
Central Ohio got $15,348
and the Newport Sportsman
Club in Fort Loram1e took in
$13,980.
JeffDick, interim manager
at 4-H Camp Palmer, said
the camp's share of government subsidies included
money that helped develop
programs and improve facilities.
"The good thing is that it's
guaranteed income," he said,
calling the money a small
portion of the organization's
annual budget of $550,000.

Accused
southwest Ohio man
.
under house arrest since 2003

Indians scalp Braves, Page B2

Bl
..

Pennsylvania wins llig 33, Page-B6

could affect his' case.
sheriff's deputies if he
"''ve put up with this for moves past the from... door,
so long because I don't want onto the back porch or into
to walk away from it," Tuttle the garage.
said. 'Tvc done nothing
Tuttle said he went to
wrong."
work for the FBI in 200 I
Every time hi s trial is after he was caught hacking
delayed, Tuttle has asked to into a New York brokerage
be released. But every time, firm 's computer system. He
judges have turned him said his deal to avoid prosedown.
cution required him to work
Before Tuttle's case, one •as an informer for the gov·
year was the longest anyone emment.
had been confined to their
But prosecutor Kevin
home in Hamilton County. Hardman said Tuttle's FBI
"This guy definitely holds work did not include breakthe record," said Bruce ing into the county's com·
Taylor, who runs the elec- puters in 2003 or keeping at
Ironic monitoring program least I0 images of child
for Sheriff Simon Leis. · . pornography on his computIn the last four years, er.
Tuttle has become engaged,
Prosecutors said they
had a daughter with hi s wanted the house arrest to
fiance and gained 50 keep him away · from chitpounds. Hours of playing dren because of the porno~­
VIdeo games and watchmg raphy charge, and they sa1d
television each day in his they' ll seek a prison senhome near this CinCinnati renee if Tuttle is convicted.
suburb isn't particularly
Trial is now scheduled for
healthy, he said.
August.
''[ never really got into
"We might have to dust off
vicjeo gaines before," he some files, but we're ready,"
said. "What else do you Hardman said.
have to do?"
Tuttle said he 's resigned to
A battery-powered 2-inch being stuck in !he house for
by 2-inch black ·box is at least a few more months.
strapped to Tuttle 's ankle"As sad as it sounds," he
part of an electronic moni- said, "I don't think it will
loring system that alerts end soon."

Local weather

Mooday ... Mostly sunny. 70 percent.
Friday
oight...Mostly
Hot with highs in the mid
Tuesday night. .. Mostly ·clear. Lows in the lower
90s. Southwest winds cloudy with showers and 60s. Highs in the mid 80s.
around 5 mph.
thunderstorms' likely. Lows
Saturday and Saturday
Mood!lY night ... Mostly in the lower 60s. West night...Partly cloudy. A
clear. Lows in the upper winds 5 to I0 mph. Chance chance of shower.s and
60s. South winds around 5 of rain 70percent.
·thunderstorms. Highs in the
mph
in
the
Wed oesday ... Mostly mid 80s. Lows in the upper
evenin~ ... Becoining light sunny. Highs in the lower 60s. Chance of rain 30 perand vartable.
\
80s.
cent.
Tuesday ... Partly sunny
Wednesday night and
Sunday ... Partly sunny
with showers and thunder- Thursday ... Mostly clear. with a chllnce of showers
storms likely. Highs in the Lows in the mid 50s. Highs ~nd thunderstorms. Highs
upper SOs. Southwest winds in.the mid 80s.
m the upper SOs. Chance of
lions much earlier," said
Bv JIM ELLIS
Jacq Allan, 26, of 5 to 10 mph. Chance of.rain
30 percent.
Thursday
night
through
rain
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Ann Goebel-Fabbri, a clini· London, is a diabulimic.
cal psychologist at the , When recently interviewed,
,-.
.,,, '
Like many teenage girls, Joslin Diabetes Center in she said she had not taken
Lee Ann Thill was obsessed ·Boston.
her insulin shots for two
_with her appearance. A diaThe American Diabetes weeks and rarely takes them
betic, she was already suf- Association
has
long r~gularly. She weighs 42
fering from bulimia- forc- known about insulin omis- pounds less than she did a
ing herself to throw up to sion as a tactic to lose year ago.
lose weight. But it wasn't weight. But "diabulimia" is
Allan is stuck between
enough, and she'd recently a term that has only cropped two fears: taking insulin,
put on 20 pounds.
· up in recent years and is not which may lead to weight .
. Then one day at a camp a recognized medical con- gain, and the damage her
·for diabetic teens, she heard dition,
said
Barbara destructive compulsion is .
counselors chew out · two Anderson, a pediatrics pro- doing to her body.
girls for practicing "diabu- fessor at Baylor College of
'T m terrified of insulin,"
limia" - not taking their Medicine in Houston.
Allan said. "Every morning
insulin so they could lose
Type I diabetes is a disor- I wake up and th1nk maybe
weight, one of the conse- . der in whiCh the body's own I should go to the hospital."
quences of uncontrolled immune syste·m attacks
Diagnosed with Type I
diabetes.
insulin-producing cells in diabetes nearly three years
Don't you realize you the pancreas. People with ago, Allan said she can feel
could die if you skip your this disease produce little or the constant, sky-high sugar
insulin? the counselor no insulin. so they take in her blood. Her list of ail·
scolded. Don't .you know shots of the hormone daily. · ments - chest pain, heart
you could fall into a coma
It differs from Type 2, the palpitations,
muscle
or damage your kidneys or form associated with obesi- cramps, bacterial infections
your eyes?
.
ty and which accounts for and lower back pain - are
But that'.s not what regis· about 90 to 95 percent of all not the usual health probtered with Thill, who has diabetes.
lems of a twenty-someType I, or juvenile diabetes.
Insulin is vital for deliver- thin~.
Instead, she focused on thi s: ing glucose from the blood"I m constantly worried
Skipp.ing insulin equals stream to the body's cells. that my eyes are going to
weight loss. For the next 17 Without insulin, cells starve go, but they seem relatively
years, diaqi.tlimia was her even while the bloodstream OK for the moment," she
compulsion.
becomes burdened with too said. "I always wonder if
"I took , ju st enough much glucose.
this will be the day that
insulin to function ," said
When Type I diabetics some major organ fails. I
Thill, now 34, of Magnolia, skip or reduce their insulin, kind of want something to
N.J.
they risk falling into a coma hafpen because then maybe
Today, she worries about or even dying. Blindness, I' I stop."
.
the long-term damage that amputations and kidney
Gwen Malnassy, 21, of
may have come from her failure are some of the long- Santa Monica, Calif.,
weight obsession. At 25, a term complications that can detailed her struggle with
blood vessel hemorrhage' in develop.
diabulimia for three years
her eye required surgery. At - · Warning signs fo.r diabu- in a diary she posted on the
28, doctors told her she had limia include a change in Internet.
damaged kidneys.
eating habits - typically
"If you don 't think it will
'T m fearful for the someone who eats more but happen to you, don' t fool
CALL 740-446-2345 OR 800-634-5265
future," Thill said. "I feel still loses weight -,--- low yourself," writes Malnassy,
very strongly that had I energy and high blood- diagnosed with diabetes at
taken care of myself. I sugar levels, Qpebel-Fabbri 9, in her final entry II
could have lived as long as said. Frequent urination is months ago. "I believed the
anyone without diabetes. I another signal. When sug- same:"
·
don't think that's going to ars are high, the kidneys · Do.ctors
• People seem to 111Jmble more ftequGntly.
• Your family complains that you play lhe TV
·diagnosed
hap(&gt;Cn now."
work overtime to filter the Malnassy with both anorex• 'lllu hear, but have trouble understanding
too loudly.
• Dtabulimia is usually excess glucose from the ia and bulimia at 13, she
all the wads in a conversation.
• You have been told that you speak too loudty.
· practiced by teenage girls blood.
said.
• 'lllu ellen asl! people to rape~t lhemseties.
• You experience ringing in your aars.
l!fld young women, and it
This purging of sugar
"I would look at magamay be growing more com- from the body througli the zines and ,think that if I
If,..
••Y of t6ese sympfo~ms you need a FREE IIHrf111 '"'·
moo as the secret is ~idneys is similar to some- looked like the models, I
IUIIH lOIS OIIUSF fAIWAIP
lflrf DIAFifSS CAlif lfiRJI·
exchanged on Internet bul- one . with bulimia, who would have more friends
S~fiiiG
IS
lfllfWNGI
llfARING IS lfLIEVIIIGt
letin ·boards for diabetics binges and then purges, or and be more popular,"
·and those with eating dis or- vomits, Anderson said. _ Malnassy said in a recent
dcJl. One e.xpert who has Studies show that women interview.
studied the phenomenon with Type I diabetes are
She began withholding
estimates that 450,000 Type twice as likely to develop insulin ·at 17 after learning
1 diabetic women in the an
eating
11isorder. of the practice during a docUnited States - one-third Ironically, good diabetes tor's visit and continued
which .withholding insulin off and
of the total - have skip! management,
requires a preoccupation on until last year.
or shortchanged t
AnyB·--~
insulin to lo~e weight an
with food, counting carboMalnassy continues in her
cannot
a. Comblnld
are risking _a coma and an hydrates and following a online diary: "I will say i~
With Oilier DICOUnll
diet, may lead some to form again. Reach out; get help.
early death.
Pmloua Oidira.
· "People who do this an . unhealthy association Do not fall; do not let the
'
behavior wind. up with with food, Goebel-Fab)Jri disorder consume you. It's a
miserable way to exist."
severe diabetic complica-, said.

'Diabulimia': Some diabetic girls.skip
lnsulin in dangerous effort to lose weight

~

•

,.

The Daily Sentinel

. .fUD Utke, Page B2

.

MILFORD (AP) -A man
accused of hacking a computer an d . storing child
pornography ,possessor has
spent almost four years
cooped up in his parents'
southwest Ohio home - 'by
far the longest period of
house arrest ever served in
Hamilton County, authorities said.
Jesse . Tuttle, 27, was
charged in 2003 with hacking ,into the county's computer system and storing
child pornography on his
home computer. Tuttle said
the charges st~m from computer work he was doing as
an FBI informant.
·
But prosecutors disagreed,
and charged him with crimes
that could land him in prison
for as long as 80 years. He
began his house arrest when
prosecutors wanted to prevent him from attending a
computer conference in Las
Vegas in 2003. ·
Tuttle has pleaded not
guilty, and his trial was postponed more than a dozen
times while he switched
lawyers. His current lawyer,
Daniel Burke, has delayed
the trial several more times
while the Ohio Su.preme
Court considers another
child pornography case th!lt

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LocAL ScHEDULE
PdMEAOV - A liChedulo o1 upoomng college

""'t;g.-""""--Today'• Qlmt•
leam6 fran

Gala llld Meig&amp; IXUitiea.

Legion Baseball
Meigs at Athens. 5 p.m.
1\.lud'V'I QIIDII

SOUI'HERN OHIO SPRINf DOUBLEHEADER

Skyline and K-C double up for two-day weekend
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

LeglonBaoeball
Gal~a

STEWART Skyline
Speedway in Stewart, Ohio
Thursday'• game
and K-C Raceway will team
Legion Baseball
up for a 410 outlaw sprint car
Athens Jr. at Gallia. 6 p.m.
double header this June 22Fdd•'•aamu
23 weekend' at the two MidLegion Baoeball
Ohio Valley dirt tracks. In
Meigs at Logan, 6 p.m.
addition, Skyline will be runr
.
Salyrdly'• 9'""' .
ning full programs in Late
Loglon-111
Models Friday plus other
Gallia at McArttlur, noon
Meigs at ParkerSburg, 1 p.m.
regular divisions. Friday's
Skyline feature · will pay
$1,200 to win and at K-C the
race will pay $5,000 to win
as part of the "NIGHT THE
STARS COME OUT' 410
sprint/Late Model double7,
header.
The Sprint cars will make
MIDDLEPORT - There
their
return to the 3/8 mile,
will be a double-elimination
semi-high
banks of Skyline
little league baseball tournament held in Middleport
starting on Saturday, July 7.
All participants · will
receive a t-shirt and there
will be both individual and
team trophies presented.
Bv DouG FERGUSON
No traveling teams or allPO' GOLF WRITER
star teams will be permitted
into the tournament.
OAKMONT, Pa.
There will also be a
Unlikely
champion.
Homerun Derby on the last
Familiar
scenario.
day ·of the tournament for
Angel Cabrera hit all the
anyone who hits a . homer
right
shots to hold off Tiger
·
during the tournament.
Woods
and Jim Furyk by a
For information contact
on
a Sunday of surstroke
Dave Boyd at 590-0438;
vival
at
the U.S. Open,
Tanya Coleman at 992shooting
a
I,under-par 69 at
5481; Mike Miller at 416- ·
brutal.
Oakmont
and giving
~30 I; or Tim Ebersbach at
Argentina
its
first
major
416-7934.
championship in 40 years.
And for the second
straight major, Woods
played in the final group
and ·couldn't deliver in the
POMEROY - The sign- clutch.
Woods squandered birdie
liP date has been extended
with his wedge and
chances
for the Meigs Flag Football
his
putter,
and Furyk paid
League that will be held this
for
a
risky
choice
of driver
fall. The league is being
on
the
306-yard
17th
hole
orgamzed by former NFL
and
fell
out
of
the
lead
with
star Mike Bartrum, along
with cooperation from the a bogey.
That left Cabrera as the
National Football League.
The new date is June 15, winner, and yes, he signed
and has · been e11.tended for the right score. .
The only other Argentine
because of a busy month of
to
win a major was Roberto
May for most people .
de
Vicenzo in the 1967
The league will start on
· August I and the season British Open at Hoylake. He
will be for 8 weeks. All was equally famous for
practices and games will be signing for the wrong score
held the Meigs High School a year later at· the Masters,
practice field.
keeping him out of a playThe league is ope·n to off.
boys and girls ages kinder·
"It is very difficult to
garten throu~h s1xth grade, describe at the moment," an
aild the cost 1s $30 for each elated · Cabrera
said.
player and $20 for each . "Probably tomorrow, when
addition family member.
I wake up with this trophy
For more information on beside me, 1 will realize I
the league contact Bartrum 'won the U.S. Open."
or Harr1s at 740-541-1222.
Cabrera made his share of
mistakes - everyone did on
this brutally tough course
outside Pittsburgh - but he
overcame late bogeys on the
16th and 17th holes with a
perfect tee shot and a par
that
gave him the victory.
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Youth League will
Please see Angel, 81
be hostmg a baseball tournament starting Tuesday,
July 10 for all boys ages 910. For more information
call Ken at 740-992-5322 or
740-416-6648; or Tony at
BY JENNA FRYER
AP AUTO RACING WRITER
740-99Z-4067.
.
at Athens. 6 p.m.

Meigs at Belpre, 5:30p.m.

Speedway for the first time
since the 1997 season when
then-owner Lou Hubbard
tried to renew sprint car racing in the area with two years
of regular racing. Skyline
had is rescheduling this event
from a rain-out on June 8,
when .cars from as far away
!rom New Jersey had signed

Middleport Little
League Tourney
set for July

mous names batt! ing at the
speedway
enroute
to
National Sprint Car fame
were J.D. Leas, Mack
Clingan, Steve Ungar, Gus
Linder, and Wayne McGuire.
McGuire's nephew Josh
McGuire won the MACS
series show at Skyline a
month ago.
Many of the top outlaw drivers ·from the Midwest are
expected to be on hand for
the big money this weekend.
Additionall)l. many local drivers will be competing in the
late model and stock car
ranks.
·
Skyline's new owner-promoter Brent Steele has made
marked improvements at the
facility, and if successful.
with the sprints expresses 11n
interest to continue future

two-day excursions with
Ohio Valley Speedway and
K-C Raceway.
The Skyline Speedway is a
3/8 mile, high-banked, red
clay oval, located just 4.1
miles off of State Route 50
and 32 on Athens County
Road 53/Bethany Ridge
Road. For more information
m.
about the speedway visit
In the 1960's and 1970's
www.skylinespeedway.net or
Bv JoE KAY
Skyline . Speedway was the
call
the race day pliorie 740AP SPORTS WAITER
hotbed of open wheel racing
662-4111; or 740-707-3197.
int he Midwest with such
K-C Raceway is located
CINCINNATI - Two
stars as Larry Dickson, Larry
12
miles
south
of
months
had passed since
"Boom Boom"Cannon,
Chillicothe,
Ohio
off
SR23
Kevin
Millwood
won a
Bubby Jones, ' Sheldon
two
miles
out
Blain
game.
More
than
a
year
had
Kinser, Don Nordhorn, Jan
gone
by
since
Marlon
Byrd
Highway. For further inforOpperman, and Jack Hewitt
mation call 740-289-4114 or hit a big league home run.
passed through victory lane
The last time the Texas
740-663-4141, or visit the
on their way to Indy 500
fame.
K-C .website. at www.kc- Rangers won a series on the
road? Felt like forever.
raceway.com
Some of the more infaMillwood and Byrd had
their · personal
breakthroughs on Sunday, leading
the Texas Rangers to an 114
victory over
the
Cincinnati Reds that decided a se ries between the
worst teams from each
league.
"I just was glad we took .
the series," Byrd said.
"That's the big thing."
At this point, both teams
will take whatever they can
get. For the Rangers, it was
a . blowout on a hot afternoon that was void of history.
Sammy . Sosa pinch ~ hit
and ·grounded into a forceout, leaving him one homer
away from becoming the
fifth to reach 600. Byrd took
his place in right field and
had a breakout game, help·
ing the Rangers take two of
three in tlie matchup of bottom dwellers.
"It wasn't Sammy, but I
tried to do what I could,"
Byrd said.
The Rangers (26-43) won
a road series for only the
second time this season the other came in Houston
from May 18-20. The Reds
(27-43) lost another at home
- they 're 14-23 overall at
Great American Ball Park .
- despite hitting nine
homers in the series.
The Rangers pulled away
with four runs in the ninth
off one of the NL's worst
bullpens. The Reds had one
of their three errors in the
inning.
No wonder they are
where they are ..
"You don't want to be
looking up at everyb,ody
else;" Ken Griffey Jr. said.
"Everybody's trying to get
better. We ' ve done some .
good things here . We'.ve
done some bad things here."
Adam Dunn provided the
few good moments with
AP photo two homers off Millwood
Angel Cabrera of Argentina hugs the winner's trophy after his victory in the 107th U.S. (3-6), who struck out a seaOpen Golf Championship at the Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pa . on Sunday.
Please see Reds, Bl
Cabrera won the tournament 5-over-par 285.

Rangers
rough up
Reds, 11-4

An Angel wins a devilish U.S. Open

Meigs Flag
.
Football League

J?omeroy youth
baseball tourney
set for July 10

Edwards snaps 52-race winless streak
'

BROOKLYN, Mich.
Carl Edwards won · four
races in his first full season,
finishing an impressive third
GALLIPOLIS The in the Nextel Cup standings.
That quick success made
Gallipolis R9tary Club will
Edwards
believe wins would
sponsor its annual Fourth of
be
easy
to
come by. Instead,
July Rotary Mile .on
it
took
him
19 months to
Wednesday, July 4.
race
his
way
back into
Runner will meet 5:30
Victory
Lane.
·
p.m. at the Shake Shoppe on
He finally did it Sunday,
2nd Ave., and each competitor must have a compfeted overcoming an early speedregistratiqn form with them. ing penalty and holdin~ off
Martin Truex ·Jr. to wm at
Michigan
International
Speedway and sn&lt;~p his 52CoNrACI'US
race Nextel Cup ·Winless
streak.
OVP ScoreLlne t5 p.m.·1 a.m.)
"It was very difficult to
1-74tl-446·2342 e&gt;rt. 33
stay composed, especially
when Martin was closing
FIX~ H41H46-3008
in,"
Edwards -said .. "To me,
E-moll- sportsOmydallysonlinol.com
second place would have
:lil2r!LSlatl
felt the same as chopping off
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor my arm. I wanted to win.
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
That's it."
bsherman 0 mydaitytribune.pom ·
But Truex, who has not
finished lower than third the
Larry Crum, Sporta Writer
(740)446-2342.~ . 23
past thr~ races, brushed the
Ierum 0 mydaltyr&amp;glster.com
wall in the closing laps and
Bryan Walters, Sporta Writer lost his momentum. It cost
him a chance to run down
(740) «6-2342, ~ - 33
bwallon1 0 mydallylribune.com
Edw,ards, who handily beat

RotaryMDe
returns this July

Truex to the line to grab hi's
first win since Nov. II ,
2005, at Texas.
"Is it really over?"
Edwards excitedly asked his
crew as he closed in on the
finish line.
Edwards celebrated his
fifth career Nextel Cup win
with his trademark backflip
off the window ledge of his
car. He then shared an emo·
tion.al hug with crew chief
Bob Osborne, who was with
him in 2005 but was moved
off the crew for most of
2006. The two were reunited
at the end of last season.
"It's been a long time, for
both of us," Osborne said. "I
know he's been dying to get
back in the winner's circle.
He's extremely competitive,
awesome race car driver. So,
you know, Carl Edwards, I
would go to battle ·for him
any day."
Edwards then ~Ieefully
took a pair of sc1ssors to
team member Tom Giacchi's
shaggy beard, clipping off a
chunk of hair that had been
growing since the two
vowed in late 2005 that
Giacchi wouldn't ~have uritil
Edwards' next win.
"When they made that

silly wager. I had no idea it ·
would be this long," car
owner Jack Roush said.
."Carl and Bob won four
races the first year. I was
even surprised it took this
long to get it going this
year.''
The victory gave Roush
his second win of the season
- first since Matt Kenseth
won Feb. 25 at California- ·
and temporarily sidetracked
Hendrick Motors ports' sea··
son-long
domination.
Hendrick ·cars have won I0
of the IS races this season.
Roush, who has company
headquarters in nearby
Livonia,, makes winning at
Michigan a priority for all
his drivers and he celebrated
twice this weekend Travis Kvapil also won the
Truck Series race Saturday.
Edwards' victory was only
$e second of the year for
Ford, and it snapped a 13- ·
race winning streak for
Chevrolet. No other manufacturer has won a race this
season.
"Ford has given us every
APphoto
technical support, all the
Carl
Edwards
celebrates
in
the
winner's
circle
after
w·inning
money that we've asked for
the Citizens Bank 400 at Michigan International Speedway
Pluse see Edwards, Bl in Brooklyn, Mich . on Sunday.
·

�-1
I

'

PageA6

REGIONAL

pte Daily Sentinel

'Monday; June 18, 2007

•

Report: Wealthy businessmen
among those 'getting fann subsidies·
COLUMBUS (AP) for a variety of activities:
Farmers who made millions including crop production
in business· and real estate and conservation efforts.
deals are among more than One program, for example,
80,000
Ohioans
who gives lump sum payments
r,eceived nearly $1.5 billion based on the history of a
in crop and conservation farm 's performance, with no
subsidies from the federal restrictions on which crop is
government in the past four grown and no requirement to
years, a newspaper reported grow anything at all.
The payments, which are
Sunday.
legal
and available to all who
The government payments are detailed in a new qualify, are being scruti'·database from the U.S.· nized in Congress, which is
Department of Agriculture, reviewing the politically
making it possible to track sensitive farm bill. For
payments directly to indi- years. critics have tried to
viduals, rather than to busi- end the payments, calling
nesses and cooperatives. them a waste of taxpayer
according to a story pub- money.
One proposal would
lished by The Columbus
award subsidies only to
Dispatch.
·
The top three subsidy farmers with less than
recipients in Ohio were $200,000 in annual adjusted
farmers Dale, David and gross income.
"The payments themFred Hendren, who got a
combined $1.9 million, the selveli are for services ren1 Dispatch
said.
Fred . dered," said Adam Sharp,
Hendren, his son David and director of national affairs
brother Tom were involved for the Ohio Farm Bureau
in lucrative land deals se'ver- Federation. "The theory of it
al years ago, selling acreage being ·stuffed into pockets
in New Albany, near for profit is not the case."
The program was estab·
Columbus, for more than $5
lished to ensure ·a stable,
million.
Brothers Charles and secure and affordable food
Ronald Rivers, Fayette · supply - and it's worked,
County farmers whose Mid- Sharp said.
Ben Lilliston, communiOhio Chemical company
was sold in 1994 for $19 mil- cations director for the nonInstitute
for
lion in cominon stock and profit
$28 million in preferred Agriculture and Trade
stock, got nearly $1 million Policy, objects to subsidies.
Food companies and
in subsidies, the newspaper
agribusinesses should pay
reported.
Subsidies; which began in farmers a fair price for their
the 1930s as a response to products, Lilliston said. The
dire economic conditions, group advocates legislation
fall into more than a dozen to establish price floors and
categories and are awarded create a reserve program.

.That way, he said, ·farmers
would not need to rely on
taxpayer support.
Under the current farm
bill, every person receiving
subsidies must report adjusted gross i'ncome to the
USDA. To qualify, income
from activities other than
farming can't exceed an
average of $2.5 million over
the previous three years,
Borland said.
'
Charities, churches and
certain government agencies
also benefited. The Wolfe
family, which owns and publishes the Dispatch, received
nearly $500,000 through its
Agricultural Lands Inc., for
farmland it owns in Madison
County. The money, which
was split among 13 family
members, goes toward farm
operations, the newspaper
said.
The 4-H Cainp Palmer
near Fayette, in Fulton
County, got $42,269 in a
conservation reserve program, the newspaper said.
St. Philip Episcopal Church
in Circleville received
$1 7,763, _ the YMCA of
Central Ohio got $15,348
and the Newport Sportsman
Club in Fort Loram1e took in
$13,980.
JeffDick, interim manager
at 4-H Camp Palmer, said
the camp's share of government subsidies included
money that helped develop
programs and improve facilities.
"The good thing is that it's
guaranteed income," he said,
calling the money a small
portion of the organization's
annual budget of $550,000.

Accused
southwest Ohio man
.
under house arrest since 2003

Indians scalp Braves, Page B2

Bl
..

Pennsylvania wins llig 33, Page-B6

could affect his' case.
sheriff's deputies if he
"''ve put up with this for moves past the from... door,
so long because I don't want onto the back porch or into
to walk away from it," Tuttle the garage.
said. 'Tvc done nothing
Tuttle said he went to
wrong."
work for the FBI in 200 I
Every time hi s trial is after he was caught hacking
delayed, Tuttle has asked to into a New York brokerage
be released. But every time, firm 's computer system. He
judges have turned him said his deal to avoid prosedown.
cution required him to work
Before Tuttle's case, one •as an informer for the gov·
year was the longest anyone emment.
had been confined to their
But prosecutor Kevin
home in Hamilton County. Hardman said Tuttle's FBI
"This guy definitely holds work did not include breakthe record," said Bruce ing into the county's com·
Taylor, who runs the elec- puters in 2003 or keeping at
Ironic monitoring program least I0 images of child
for Sheriff Simon Leis. · . pornography on his computIn the last four years, er.
Tuttle has become engaged,
Prosecutors said they
had a daughter with hi s wanted the house arrest to
fiance and gained 50 keep him away · from chitpounds. Hours of playing dren because of the porno~­
VIdeo games and watchmg raphy charge, and they sa1d
television each day in his they' ll seek a prison senhome near this CinCinnati renee if Tuttle is convicted.
suburb isn't particularly
Trial is now scheduled for
healthy, he said.
August.
''[ never really got into
"We might have to dust off
vicjeo gaines before," he some files, but we're ready,"
said. "What else do you Hardman said.
have to do?"
Tuttle said he 's resigned to
A battery-powered 2-inch being stuck in !he house for
by 2-inch black ·box is at least a few more months.
strapped to Tuttle 's ankle"As sad as it sounds," he
part of an electronic moni- said, "I don't think it will
loring system that alerts end soon."

Local weather

Mooday ... Mostly sunny. 70 percent.
Friday
oight...Mostly
Hot with highs in the mid
Tuesday night. .. Mostly ·clear. Lows in the lower
90s. Southwest winds cloudy with showers and 60s. Highs in the mid 80s.
around 5 mph.
thunderstorms' likely. Lows
Saturday and Saturday
Mood!lY night ... Mostly in the lower 60s. West night...Partly cloudy. A
clear. Lows in the upper winds 5 to I0 mph. Chance chance of shower.s and
60s. South winds around 5 of rain 70percent.
·thunderstorms. Highs in the
mph
in
the
Wed oesday ... Mostly mid 80s. Lows in the upper
evenin~ ... Becoining light sunny. Highs in the lower 60s. Chance of rain 30 perand vartable.
\
80s.
cent.
Tuesday ... Partly sunny
Wednesday night and
Sunday ... Partly sunny
with showers and thunder- Thursday ... Mostly clear. with a chllnce of showers
storms likely. Highs in the Lows in the mid 50s. Highs ~nd thunderstorms. Highs
upper SOs. Southwest winds in.the mid 80s.
m the upper SOs. Chance of
lions much earlier," said
Bv JIM ELLIS
Jacq Allan, 26, of 5 to 10 mph. Chance of.rain
30 percent.
Thursday
night
through
rain
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Ann Goebel-Fabbri, a clini· London, is a diabulimic.
cal psychologist at the , When recently interviewed,
,-.
.,,, '
Like many teenage girls, Joslin Diabetes Center in she said she had not taken
Lee Ann Thill was obsessed ·Boston.
her insulin shots for two
_with her appearance. A diaThe American Diabetes weeks and rarely takes them
betic, she was already suf- Association
has
long r~gularly. She weighs 42
fering from bulimia- forc- known about insulin omis- pounds less than she did a
ing herself to throw up to sion as a tactic to lose year ago.
lose weight. But it wasn't weight. But "diabulimia" is
Allan is stuck between
enough, and she'd recently a term that has only cropped two fears: taking insulin,
put on 20 pounds.
· up in recent years and is not which may lead to weight .
. Then one day at a camp a recognized medical con- gain, and the damage her
·for diabetic teens, she heard dition,
said
Barbara destructive compulsion is .
counselors chew out · two Anderson, a pediatrics pro- doing to her body.
girls for practicing "diabu- fessor at Baylor College of
'T m terrified of insulin,"
limia" - not taking their Medicine in Houston.
Allan said. "Every morning
insulin so they could lose
Type I diabetes is a disor- I wake up and th1nk maybe
weight, one of the conse- . der in whiCh the body's own I should go to the hospital."
quences of uncontrolled immune syste·m attacks
Diagnosed with Type I
diabetes.
insulin-producing cells in diabetes nearly three years
Don't you realize you the pancreas. People with ago, Allan said she can feel
could die if you skip your this disease produce little or the constant, sky-high sugar
insulin? the counselor no insulin. so they take in her blood. Her list of ail·
scolded. Don't .you know shots of the hormone daily. · ments - chest pain, heart
you could fall into a coma
It differs from Type 2, the palpitations,
muscle
or damage your kidneys or form associated with obesi- cramps, bacterial infections
your eyes?
.
ty and which accounts for and lower back pain - are
But that'.s not what regis· about 90 to 95 percent of all not the usual health probtered with Thill, who has diabetes.
lems of a twenty-someType I, or juvenile diabetes.
Insulin is vital for deliver- thin~.
Instead, she focused on thi s: ing glucose from the blood"I m constantly worried
Skipp.ing insulin equals stream to the body's cells. that my eyes are going to
weight loss. For the next 17 Without insulin, cells starve go, but they seem relatively
years, diaqi.tlimia was her even while the bloodstream OK for the moment," she
compulsion.
becomes burdened with too said. "I always wonder if
"I took , ju st enough much glucose.
this will be the day that
insulin to function ," said
When Type I diabetics some major organ fails. I
Thill, now 34, of Magnolia, skip or reduce their insulin, kind of want something to
N.J.
they risk falling into a coma hafpen because then maybe
Today, she worries about or even dying. Blindness, I' I stop."
.
the long-term damage that amputations and kidney
Gwen Malnassy, 21, of
may have come from her failure are some of the long- Santa Monica, Calif.,
weight obsession. At 25, a term complications that can detailed her struggle with
blood vessel hemorrhage' in develop.
diabulimia for three years
her eye required surgery. At - · Warning signs fo.r diabu- in a diary she posted on the
28, doctors told her she had limia include a change in Internet.
damaged kidneys.
eating habits - typically
"If you don 't think it will
'T m fearful for the someone who eats more but happen to you, don' t fool
CALL 740-446-2345 OR 800-634-5265
future," Thill said. "I feel still loses weight -,--- low yourself," writes Malnassy,
very strongly that had I energy and high blood- diagnosed with diabetes at
taken care of myself. I sugar levels, Qpebel-Fabbri 9, in her final entry II
could have lived as long as said. Frequent urination is months ago. "I believed the
anyone without diabetes. I another signal. When sug- same:"
·
don't think that's going to ars are high, the kidneys · Do.ctors
• People seem to 111Jmble more ftequGntly.
• Your family complains that you play lhe TV
·diagnosed
hap(&gt;Cn now."
work overtime to filter the Malnassy with both anorex• 'lllu hear, but have trouble understanding
too loudly.
• Dtabulimia is usually excess glucose from the ia and bulimia at 13, she
all the wads in a conversation.
• You have been told that you speak too loudty.
· practiced by teenage girls blood.
said.
• 'lllu ellen asl! people to rape~t lhemseties.
• You experience ringing in your aars.
l!fld young women, and it
This purging of sugar
"I would look at magamay be growing more com- from the body througli the zines and ,think that if I
If,..
••Y of t6ese sympfo~ms you need a FREE IIHrf111 '"'·
moo as the secret is ~idneys is similar to some- looked like the models, I
IUIIH lOIS OIIUSF fAIWAIP
lflrf DIAFifSS CAlif lfiRJI·
exchanged on Internet bul- one . with bulimia, who would have more friends
S~fiiiG
IS
lfllfWNGI
llfARING IS lfLIEVIIIGt
letin ·boards for diabetics binges and then purges, or and be more popular,"
·and those with eating dis or- vomits, Anderson said. _ Malnassy said in a recent
dcJl. One e.xpert who has Studies show that women interview.
studied the phenomenon with Type I diabetes are
She began withholding
estimates that 450,000 Type twice as likely to develop insulin ·at 17 after learning
1 diabetic women in the an
eating
11isorder. of the practice during a docUnited States - one-third Ironically, good diabetes tor's visit and continued
which .withholding insulin off and
of the total - have skip! management,
requires a preoccupation on until last year.
or shortchanged t
AnyB·--~
insulin to lo~e weight an
with food, counting carboMalnassy continues in her
cannot
a. Comblnld
are risking _a coma and an hydrates and following a online diary: "I will say i~
With Oilier DICOUnll
diet, may lead some to form again. Reach out; get help.
early death.
Pmloua Oidira.
· "People who do this an . unhealthy association Do not fall; do not let the
'
behavior wind. up with with food, Goebel-Fab)Jri disorder consume you. It's a
miserable way to exist."
severe diabetic complica-, said.

'Diabulimia': Some diabetic girls.skip
lnsulin in dangerous effort to lose weight

~

•

,.

The Daily Sentinel

. .fUD Utke, Page B2

.

MILFORD (AP) -A man
accused of hacking a computer an d . storing child
pornography ,possessor has
spent almost four years
cooped up in his parents'
southwest Ohio home - 'by
far the longest period of
house arrest ever served in
Hamilton County, authorities said.
Jesse . Tuttle, 27, was
charged in 2003 with hacking ,into the county's computer system and storing
child pornography on his
home computer. Tuttle said
the charges st~m from computer work he was doing as
an FBI informant.
·
But prosecutors disagreed,
and charged him with crimes
that could land him in prison
for as long as 80 years. He
began his house arrest when
prosecutors wanted to prevent him from attending a
computer conference in Las
Vegas in 2003. ·
Tuttle has pleaded not
guilty, and his trial was postponed more than a dozen
times while he switched
lawyers. His current lawyer,
Daniel Burke, has delayed
the trial several more times
while the Ohio Su.preme
Court considers another
child pornography case th!lt

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leam6 fran

Gala llld Meig&amp; IXUitiea.

Legion Baseball
Meigs at Athens. 5 p.m.
1\.lud'V'I QIIDII

SOUI'HERN OHIO SPRINf DOUBLEHEADER

Skyline and K-C double up for two-day weekend
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

LeglonBaoeball
Gal~a

STEWART Skyline
Speedway in Stewart, Ohio
Thursday'• game
and K-C Raceway will team
Legion Baseball
up for a 410 outlaw sprint car
Athens Jr. at Gallia. 6 p.m.
double header this June 22Fdd•'•aamu
23 weekend' at the two MidLegion Baoeball
Ohio Valley dirt tracks. In
Meigs at Logan, 6 p.m.
addition, Skyline will be runr
.
Salyrdly'• 9'""' .
ning full programs in Late
Loglon-111
Models Friday plus other
Gallia at McArttlur, noon
Meigs at ParkerSburg, 1 p.m.
regular divisions. Friday's
Skyline feature · will pay
$1,200 to win and at K-C the
race will pay $5,000 to win
as part of the "NIGHT THE
STARS COME OUT' 410
sprint/Late Model double7,
header.
The Sprint cars will make
MIDDLEPORT - There
their
return to the 3/8 mile,
will be a double-elimination
semi-high
banks of Skyline
little league baseball tournament held in Middleport
starting on Saturday, July 7.
All participants · will
receive a t-shirt and there
will be both individual and
team trophies presented.
Bv DouG FERGUSON
No traveling teams or allPO' GOLF WRITER
star teams will be permitted
into the tournament.
OAKMONT, Pa.
There will also be a
Unlikely
champion.
Homerun Derby on the last
Familiar
scenario.
day ·of the tournament for
Angel Cabrera hit all the
anyone who hits a . homer
right
shots to hold off Tiger
·
during the tournament.
Woods
and Jim Furyk by a
For information contact
on
a Sunday of surstroke
Dave Boyd at 590-0438;
vival
at
the U.S. Open,
Tanya Coleman at 992shooting
a
I,under-par 69 at
5481; Mike Miller at 416- ·
brutal.
Oakmont
and giving
~30 I; or Tim Ebersbach at
Argentina
its
first
major
416-7934.
championship in 40 years.
And for the second
straight major, Woods
played in the final group
and ·couldn't deliver in the
POMEROY - The sign- clutch.
Woods squandered birdie
liP date has been extended
with his wedge and
chances
for the Meigs Flag Football
his
putter,
and Furyk paid
League that will be held this
for
a
risky
choice
of driver
fall. The league is being
on
the
306-yard
17th
hole
orgamzed by former NFL
and
fell
out
of
the
lead
with
star Mike Bartrum, along
with cooperation from the a bogey.
That left Cabrera as the
National Football League.
The new date is June 15, winner, and yes, he signed
and has · been e11.tended for the right score. .
The only other Argentine
because of a busy month of
to
win a major was Roberto
May for most people .
de
Vicenzo in the 1967
The league will start on
· August I and the season British Open at Hoylake. He
will be for 8 weeks. All was equally famous for
practices and games will be signing for the wrong score
held the Meigs High School a year later at· the Masters,
practice field.
keeping him out of a playThe league is ope·n to off.
boys and girls ages kinder·
"It is very difficult to
garten throu~h s1xth grade, describe at the moment," an
aild the cost 1s $30 for each elated · Cabrera
said.
player and $20 for each . "Probably tomorrow, when
addition family member.
I wake up with this trophy
For more information on beside me, 1 will realize I
the league contact Bartrum 'won the U.S. Open."
or Harr1s at 740-541-1222.
Cabrera made his share of
mistakes - everyone did on
this brutally tough course
outside Pittsburgh - but he
overcame late bogeys on the
16th and 17th holes with a
perfect tee shot and a par
that
gave him the victory.
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Youth League will
Please see Angel, 81
be hostmg a baseball tournament starting Tuesday,
July 10 for all boys ages 910. For more information
call Ken at 740-992-5322 or
740-416-6648; or Tony at
BY JENNA FRYER
AP AUTO RACING WRITER
740-99Z-4067.
.
at Athens. 6 p.m.

Meigs at Belpre, 5:30p.m.

Speedway for the first time
since the 1997 season when
then-owner Lou Hubbard
tried to renew sprint car racing in the area with two years
of regular racing. Skyline
had is rescheduling this event
from a rain-out on June 8,
when .cars from as far away
!rom New Jersey had signed

Middleport Little
League Tourney
set for July

mous names batt! ing at the
speedway
enroute
to
National Sprint Car fame
were J.D. Leas, Mack
Clingan, Steve Ungar, Gus
Linder, and Wayne McGuire.
McGuire's nephew Josh
McGuire won the MACS
series show at Skyline a
month ago.
Many of the top outlaw drivers ·from the Midwest are
expected to be on hand for
the big money this weekend.
Additionall)l. many local drivers will be competing in the
late model and stock car
ranks.
·
Skyline's new owner-promoter Brent Steele has made
marked improvements at the
facility, and if successful.
with the sprints expresses 11n
interest to continue future

two-day excursions with
Ohio Valley Speedway and
K-C Raceway.
The Skyline Speedway is a
3/8 mile, high-banked, red
clay oval, located just 4.1
miles off of State Route 50
and 32 on Athens County
Road 53/Bethany Ridge
Road. For more information
m.
about the speedway visit
In the 1960's and 1970's
www.skylinespeedway.net or
Bv JoE KAY
Skyline . Speedway was the
call
the race day pliorie 740AP SPORTS WAITER
hotbed of open wheel racing
662-4111; or 740-707-3197.
int he Midwest with such
K-C Raceway is located
CINCINNATI - Two
stars as Larry Dickson, Larry
12
miles
south
of
months
had passed since
"Boom Boom"Cannon,
Chillicothe,
Ohio
off
SR23
Kevin
Millwood
won a
Bubby Jones, ' Sheldon
two
miles
out
Blain
game.
More
than
a
year
had
Kinser, Don Nordhorn, Jan
gone
by
since
Marlon
Byrd
Highway. For further inforOpperman, and Jack Hewitt
mation call 740-289-4114 or hit a big league home run.
passed through victory lane
The last time the Texas
740-663-4141, or visit the
on their way to Indy 500
fame.
K-C .website. at www.kc- Rangers won a series on the
road? Felt like forever.
raceway.com
Some of the more infaMillwood and Byrd had
their · personal
breakthroughs on Sunday, leading
the Texas Rangers to an 114
victory over
the
Cincinnati Reds that decided a se ries between the
worst teams from each
league.
"I just was glad we took .
the series," Byrd said.
"That's the big thing."
At this point, both teams
will take whatever they can
get. For the Rangers, it was
a . blowout on a hot afternoon that was void of history.
Sammy . Sosa pinch ~ hit
and ·grounded into a forceout, leaving him one homer
away from becoming the
fifth to reach 600. Byrd took
his place in right field and
had a breakout game, help·
ing the Rangers take two of
three in tlie matchup of bottom dwellers.
"It wasn't Sammy, but I
tried to do what I could,"
Byrd said.
The Rangers (26-43) won
a road series for only the
second time this season the other came in Houston
from May 18-20. The Reds
(27-43) lost another at home
- they 're 14-23 overall at
Great American Ball Park .
- despite hitting nine
homers in the series.
The Rangers pulled away
with four runs in the ninth
off one of the NL's worst
bullpens. The Reds had one
of their three errors in the
inning.
No wonder they are
where they are ..
"You don't want to be
looking up at everyb,ody
else;" Ken Griffey Jr. said.
"Everybody's trying to get
better. We ' ve done some .
good things here . We'.ve
done some bad things here."
Adam Dunn provided the
few good moments with
AP photo two homers off Millwood
Angel Cabrera of Argentina hugs the winner's trophy after his victory in the 107th U.S. (3-6), who struck out a seaOpen Golf Championship at the Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pa . on Sunday.
Please see Reds, Bl
Cabrera won the tournament 5-over-par 285.

Rangers
rough up
Reds, 11-4

An Angel wins a devilish U.S. Open

Meigs Flag
.
Football League

J?omeroy youth
baseball tourney
set for July 10

Edwards snaps 52-race winless streak
'

BROOKLYN, Mich.
Carl Edwards won · four
races in his first full season,
finishing an impressive third
GALLIPOLIS The in the Nextel Cup standings.
That quick success made
Gallipolis R9tary Club will
Edwards
believe wins would
sponsor its annual Fourth of
be
easy
to
come by. Instead,
July Rotary Mile .on
it
took
him
19 months to
Wednesday, July 4.
race
his
way
back into
Runner will meet 5:30
Victory
Lane.
·
p.m. at the Shake Shoppe on
He finally did it Sunday,
2nd Ave., and each competitor must have a compfeted overcoming an early speedregistratiqn form with them. ing penalty and holdin~ off
Martin Truex ·Jr. to wm at
Michigan
International
Speedway and sn&lt;~p his 52CoNrACI'US
race Nextel Cup ·Winless
streak.
OVP ScoreLlne t5 p.m.·1 a.m.)
"It was very difficult to
1-74tl-446·2342 e&gt;rt. 33
stay composed, especially
when Martin was closing
FIX~ H41H46-3008
in,"
Edwards -said .. "To me,
E-moll- sportsOmydallysonlinol.com
second place would have
:lil2r!LSlatl
felt the same as chopping off
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor my arm. I wanted to win.
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
That's it."
bsherman 0 mydaitytribune.pom ·
But Truex, who has not
finished lower than third the
Larry Crum, Sporta Writer
(740)446-2342.~ . 23
past thr~ races, brushed the
Ierum 0 mydaltyr&amp;glster.com
wall in the closing laps and
Bryan Walters, Sporta Writer lost his momentum. It cost
him a chance to run down
(740) «6-2342, ~ - 33
bwallon1 0 mydallylribune.com
Edw,ards, who handily beat

RotaryMDe
returns this July

Truex to the line to grab hi's
first win since Nov. II ,
2005, at Texas.
"Is it really over?"
Edwards excitedly asked his
crew as he closed in on the
finish line.
Edwards celebrated his
fifth career Nextel Cup win
with his trademark backflip
off the window ledge of his
car. He then shared an emo·
tion.al hug with crew chief
Bob Osborne, who was with
him in 2005 but was moved
off the crew for most of
2006. The two were reunited
at the end of last season.
"It's been a long time, for
both of us," Osborne said. "I
know he's been dying to get
back in the winner's circle.
He's extremely competitive,
awesome race car driver. So,
you know, Carl Edwards, I
would go to battle ·for him
any day."
Edwards then ~Ieefully
took a pair of sc1ssors to
team member Tom Giacchi's
shaggy beard, clipping off a
chunk of hair that had been
growing since the two
vowed in late 2005 that
Giacchi wouldn't ~have uritil
Edwards' next win.
"When they made that

silly wager. I had no idea it ·
would be this long," car
owner Jack Roush said.
."Carl and Bob won four
races the first year. I was
even surprised it took this
long to get it going this
year.''
The victory gave Roush
his second win of the season
- first since Matt Kenseth
won Feb. 25 at California- ·
and temporarily sidetracked
Hendrick Motors ports' sea··
son-long
domination.
Hendrick ·cars have won I0
of the IS races this season.
Roush, who has company
headquarters in nearby
Livonia,, makes winning at
Michigan a priority for all
his drivers and he celebrated
twice this weekend Travis Kvapil also won the
Truck Series race Saturday.
Edwards' victory was only
$e second of the year for
Ford, and it snapped a 13- ·
race winning streak for
Chevrolet. No other manufacturer has won a race this
season.
"Ford has given us every
APphoto
technical support, all the
Carl
Edwards
celebrates
in
the
winner's
circle
after
w·inning
money that we've asked for
the Citizens Bank 400 at Michigan International Speedway
Pluse see Edwards, Bl in Brooklyn, Mich . on Sunday.
·

�Page B2 • The Ddily Sentinel

BY J• LmcE
N&gt; SPORTS COUMIIST

AP photo

Atlanta Braves' Andruw Jones dives for double hit by Cleveland Indians' Jhonny Peralta in
the sixth inning of a baseball game on Sunday in Cleveland.

Indians scalp Atlanta, 5..12
CLEVELAND (AP) Fausto Carmona's sharp
sinker gave the Cleveland
Indians a needed lift.
Carmona (8-2) pitched
seven-plus innings to help
the Indians avoid a threegame sweep with a 5-2 win
over the Atlanta Braves on
Sunday.
"It was another great performance by Fausto," said
manager Eric Wedge, who
believes the 23-year-old
should be an All-Star. "I do
think he deserves to make it.
He's earned it."
Casey Blake exten~d the
majors' longest hitting streak
of the season to 26 games for
Cleveland, which won for
. only the third time in eight
games and remained in first
place in the AL Central.
Chipper Jones got his
2,000th hit for the Braves,
losersof10oftheirlast 15.
"It's a pretty cool number," Jones said. "It's one of
the numbers you reach when
you've been around a long
time. My next goal is to
work on the next thousand,
but I don't know if I' II play
that long."
Jones, 35, got his .first hit
as a pinch hitter in his first
career at bat on Sept. 14,
1993.
Scott Thorman ruined
Carmona's bid for his second
career shutout by hitting his
eighth homer to lead off the
eighth inning. Carmona then
issued his only two walks
and was replaced by Rafael

Edwards

Betancourt.
The Braves tliled to get
Willie Harris lined an RBI their first road sweep of an
double into the right-field AL opponent since taking
comer to make it 5-2. It was three games at Boston on
the first of 18 inherited June 28-30, 2002. Two
baserunners to score against Atlanta errors helped the
Betancourt this season.
Indians take a 5-0 lead with a
The right-hander came four-run sixth against Kyle
back to strike out Edgar Davies (3-6).
Renteria, who went 0-for-4
Victor Martinez singled
one day after going 5-for-5 and went to third on a double
iri' the Braves' 6-2 win on by Jhonny Peralta to rightSaturday. Jason Michaels center. Ryan Garko then hit a
made a diving catch in left to check-swing bouncer that
take a hit away from Chipper first baseman Thorman mis· Jones and Betancourt struck played, allowing both runout Andruw Jones to get out ners to score.
of the inning.
"It was a tough hop,"
"That was the only break-. Thorman said. "It really
in~ ball I threw," Betancourt stinks because Kyle pitched
said of the called strike over well and it was the deciding
the outside comer that ended play of the game. I wish I
the threat. "But J-Mike made had it back."
an awesome play. Just
One out later, Franklin
great."
Gutierrez singled ·home
Joe Borowski worked the Garko. Gutierrez stole secninth for his IOOth career ond, went to third ·when
save. He is 20~for-22 in save · catcher Brian McCann threw
chances this year.
.wildly for another error, and
Carmona ~ave up two runs scored on a grm.mdout by
and five hus, striking out Josh Barfield.
five to improve to 6-0 in day
Michaels' two-out RBI
games, which leads the single gave Cleveland a 1-0
majors. He opened the sea- lead in the fifth.
son in Cleveland's rotation
Chipper Jones' milestone
only because of an injury to hit was a line-drive single in
veteran Cliff Lee, but is 8-1 the second. He needs three
in II starts since losing his doubles 10 join Hall of
season debut April 13. That Farner Eddie Murray and
was his· lith straight loss Chili Davis as the only
over two seasons and switch hitters to collect
dropped his career record at 2,000 hits, 400 doubles and
the time to l: II. 1·
350 home runs. Jones has
"He has a bright future. I 369 career homers, two
was really impressed with behind Braves legend Dale
him," Chipper Jones said.
Murphy.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. .was
fifth to give ·DEl two 'cars
in the top fl ve, and the
showing moved him into
fromPageBl
Chase for the champiOQship contention. He's
to help us put.in equipment 12th in the standings _
and be competitive With the where he was before a 100 _
other manufacturers, with
the other teams," Roush point penalty last month
knocked him down to 14th
said. "They, deserve more, _ and is trying to end his
and I'm just embarrassed time at DEI on top.
that it took us this long to
Earnhardt, who agreed to
really celebrate it with Carl a five-year deal this week to
and· the guys."
drive
for
Hendrick
Truex, who had his first Motorsports starting next
victory two weeks ago at
Dover, finished second after season,
congratulated
Truex, his teammate.
"Martin did good, he did
overcoming a spin on the
backstretch I00 laps into such a good job today. That
the race. Truex, who led 54 tearri has found something
laps before the early spin
1 · h
ak
and has climbed to I Oth in mig t sne over there
and find out what it is,"
the series stan~ings, heaped Earnhardt said. "We had a
praise on his Dale Earnhardt good car. We were as good
ln~itte:~ a great day for as anybody at the end of the
us," he said. "The team. did race,just ran out of laps."
·
Kyle Busch, who is losing
another awesome JOb. 1 his ride at Hendrjck to make
~~~~ ~~-:ea!v~eha'd~~ ~:: room for Earnhardt, was
road. Awesome race car, sixth and wa,s followed by
and probably the best Kevin · Harvick , Jainie '
·engine I've ever had. Guys McMurray and series points
lire doing great, man, and leader Jeff Gordon, who
I'm loving life right now."
was ninth and the last driver
1\vo-time series champi- on the lead lap.
on Tony Stewart, winless
Michael Waltrip, racing
this season, was third. for just the third time this
Stewart had a strong car in season,. was a surprising
practice Saturday, but an I Oth and even led one lap.
accident
with
David He was with the · leaders
Gilliland caused heavy most of the race, and was
damage and he wasn't sure lapped with one lap to go.
how good his car 'would be
"It's just a great, great
during the race.
feeling to run that well,"
He was supposed to start · said Waltrip, who has failed
41st, but defibers.teiy hung to qualify 12 times this seaback at the green flag to fall son.
into 43id place at the start.
"Overall,
I' m very
"With what happened (in pleased. My guys are rusty,
practice)' and where we but you'd never know it. It
qualified, It was two strikes was a hpt day and I hadn't
aaainst us," Stewart said. "I got to race this much, but I
lriade surC'I went across the felt just as good at the end
-start-finish line in 43rd, so as I did in the beginning.
wherever we ended up I
"When the checkered fell
could say we went from then I felt hot, tired and glad
dead last. From 43rd to it was over."
.
third is a pretty good day."
·Defendin~ series cham. Casey Mears, on a roll pion Jimmte Johnson had
since his first career win been running in third, but
on May 27, was fourth and ran out of ~as seven laps
the highest finishiag from the fintsh and wound
Hendrick driver.
up 19th.
- -~r

Monday, June 18, 2001

www.mydailysentlnel.com

l#lcome to our world, Tiger, if only for a day

•

· ~

Monday, .June t&amp;. 2007

www.mydailysentmel.com

...- ·-

. Angel
fromPageBl
Even so, this major will
be remembered for gaffes
by the guys chasing him.
Woods, ·a runner-up to
unheralded Zach Johnson at
the Masters, played the final
32 holes at Oakmont with
only one birdie. He missed
a birdie putt from 6 feet on
the 13th, and the only clutch
putts he made on .the back
nine were for par.
"He put a ·Jot of pressure
on Jim and I, and we didn 't
get it done,'' said Woods,
who closed with a 72 and
extended his dubious streak
of never winning a major
when he wasn't leading
going into the final round.
Furyk, the 2003 U.S.
Open champion who grew
up in western Pennsylvania,
ran off three straight birdies
on the back nine and was
tied for the lead when he
opted to hit driver on the

Reds
fromPageBl
son-high · 10 batters to get
his first victory since April
13. Millwood was sidelined
by a pulled hamstring last
month, and had gone 0-5 in .
his last seven starts.
"I think that's the kind of
outing he needs to get
going," Rangers manager
Ron Washington said. "It's
nice that the. roll he was on
finally got turned around
go in~ the other way."·
Mtllwood made a few
small changes in his de.livery - keepin$ his back
straighter, for mstance and got better as the game
went along. He struck out
the side in the sixth. '
"I made some changes,
some minor changes,"
Millwood said. "I felt the
longer the game went on, I

OAKMONT, Pa. - The
bargain is rarely this simple.
Make birdie at either No.
'17 or 18 and force a playoff.
Birdie them both and the
U.S. Open trophy rides
home in the back seat of the
car that carried Tiger Woods
out onto Hulton Road late
Sunday afternoon and away
from Oakmont Country
Club.
,
No matter what club he s
holding, on'7 he settle~ over
a shot, there s nobody m the
game you woul~ ratl_ler put
money on. Yet JUSt like the
final round at the Masters
two mo~ths ago, whe~. he
played m the final pam~g
and held his fate m his
han~, Woods was flat out of
magic. .
And l_tke Augusta, too,
where winner Zach Johns&lt;?n
fimshed be~ore Woo:&lt;Is did
and wouldn t take his eyes
off a locker room TV to be
sure there were no more miracles, about-to-be-crowned
U.S. Open champion Angel
Cabrera sat glued in front of
a television set in the clubhouse.
Woods • final stab at a tie
was a triple-breaking 30footer above the flag with
eight feet of break to the
cup.
"It's not like 1 could hit it
inside right, firm," Woods
said, the hint of a smile playing on his lip.s. "It was a putt
I had to die, and if it gets
anywhere below the hole it
could run off the ridge."
It was never close.
Instead he tapped in for a 2over-pa'r 72, a 286 tota} and
a tie for second with Jim
Furyk.
In the last four majors,
Woods has gone 1-1-2-2, a
remarkable run for anyone
else. But alongside the
dozen majors that make up
the most glittering resume in
pro golf are now 30 in which
Woods has failed to win
commg from off the pace.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
CLASSI .F IED
'

Asked whether it was fair to rqllied. "You say Aupsta is
bold that against him; be bard, yeah. but IIIey have flit
blinked.
s~ where they put tile
"Well," be said simply. "I pms."
haven't.
"The putts · I bad tbat I
"I haven't gotten it done. lmcw I could make - leftPut myself there," Woods to-right, right-to-left, '~~hill
added, his voice lowering, - I pow=d them iii tbcre,"
"and haven't gotten it done." Woods said. "But I bad so
It's easy in hindsight to many breaking putts that it
pick a ·half-dozen shets that waS hard to keep my spcc:d .
would have made the differ- and line. and I kept wonying
ence. Woods said he would- about my pace and make
n't go there, either_ at least sure I didn't have a second
not anytime soon.
putt."
· "I felt like I hit the ball
True as that was, the
pretty good all week," he explanation was also a bit
said, and the numbers too neat.
backed him up.
At No. 3, Woods bladed a
Woods led the field in chip shot from behind the
greens in regulation, practi- green, chunked the one after
cally siaging a clinic that and made 6, his only
Saturday by hitting every double-bogey of the toumaoneoftheflrst 17enrouteto ment.AtNo. l3,hemisseda
a 69 that left him trailing 6-footer for birdie, one of
third-round leader Aaron · the rare times Woods hasn't
Baddeley by two and sent a holed a putt he absolutely
chill down the collective had to have. At No. 14,
spine of the rest of the field. pumped up and hitting
After just one hole wedge, he flew the flag and
sunday, ·11 was aPParent h3d to settle ~or
the 'ourth of
''
''
why. Woods made a noncha- eight straight closing pars.
l~t par and Bad~eley made
The shot that stuck most
tnple-bogey. Right ~bout vividly in his memory, ·
then, a sense of deJa vu though, was a bunker shot at
enveloped everyone out on 17. When he dug his feet
the course - save Tiger into the sand, he was 6-over
ht?,Jself.
and Cabrera was in the clubJust because Badds made house one stroke better.
7 on the frrst hole, we s!JII
"I hit a nice bunker shot,
recalled, "but
ha.ve ..17 , more t.o go, " ,he too," "'oods
''"
said. Its not hke they re unfortunately wh~n I hit. it, I
handing out '!)e trophy on could tell it caught a rock on
the first green.
my wedge. And I heard a
, WhatTiger knew then was 'cling,' you know? And
somethmg the numbers when it came out, I was hopwould reveal afterward as ing, 'Please, still have the
well. Though he three- spin on it that I felt.'
putted only once, Woods
"But it didn't," he added.
still ended up ranked 41st on "It released on through."
th~ gre~ns. The cris~n~ss
Woods made just three
with which he was strikmg birdies in the final two
the ball, Woods knew, was rounds, just one in the last
matched by how uneasy . he 32 holes. Not even Tiger
felt all weekend standmg Woods can always fly past
9ver putts on Oakmont's the obstacles that trip up the
slick surfaces.
rest of i.ts, find the missing
A questioner hadn't even piece of the puzzle or simply
finished asking "Are these forge a new one. Sometimes
the hardest ... " before Woods life is j)Jst that hard.
cut him off.
So welcome to our world,
"Without a doubt," he Tiger, if only for one.day.

I ••

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OTIAWA (AP)- Brandon
Watson extended his hitting
streak to 43 games, breaking a
95-year-old
International ·
League record with a base hit
in the Columbus Clippers' 9-8
loss to the Ottawa Lynx on

Sunday.
Watson hit a leadoff single
off J.D. Durbin in the sixth
and finished 1-for-5 m
Clippers' B-inning loss.
Jack Lelivelt set the IL
record for the Rochester

May
15 lb. male dog,
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Stephen Ames ope-ned
with a 12-foot birdie and
looked strong until he
hooked a tee shot into the
ditch on the seventh, tried to
play out,' finally chopped it
to the right rough short of
the green and walked off
with a triple bogey.
Steve Stricker poured in
birdie putts on the fifth and
sixJh holes to join the lead
and closed out his front nine
with two good pars for a 34.
But he pulled his tee shot
into a bunker on No. I 0, had
to play out sideways, then
three-putted for double
bogey.
Paul· Casey was iri such
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par-3 sixth that he played
backward, away from the
green, chipped short of the
green and took triple bogey
on his way to a 43 on the
· front nine.
Furyk finally stumbled
with careless shots on the
lith and 12th, only to run
off three straight birdies to
get back in the game.

got more comfortable with
it. That was not exactly
what I wanted, but it's
something I can build off."
Byrd hit a solo homer his first since last July 4 and doubled off the centerfield fence for two more
runs off Bronson Arroyo (28), who matched his career
high by losing his sixth
straight decision.
Arroyo hasn't won since
May 6, going 0.6 in his last
eight starts with a 7.83
ERA.
"I don't feel strong, but I
feel ~ood," Arroyo said.
"Nothmg's bothering me. I
don't feel like I have as
much zip on my fastball,
and that can pose a problem."
Spectators tried to cool
themselves with hand-held
fans on a wilting, 92-degree
afternoon. The 31 ,162 came
to see a rarity - a matchtip
of two 500-homer players.
One hardly played, and the

other didn't do much.
The 38-year-old Sosa was
out of the starting lineup
after a night game. He
homered in the series orener for No. 599, and wit get
his next swing at 600 on
Thesday in Chtcago against
his former Cubs. ·
Griffey singled, walked,
struck out twice and flied
out, leaving him at 581
career homers. Griffey led
the Reds to their only victory in the series by hitting a
pair of homers Saturday
night.
Michael Young had a pair
of run-scoring singles for
the Rangers, extending his
hitting streak to a seasonhigh 10 games. The shortstop has a .348 career avera$e in interleague play, the
highest of any player with
300 plate appearances. .
Both starters had big
.problems in a 29-minute
first inning that featured 16
batters, 57 pitches and four

runs in all. The Rangers
needed only 11 pitches to
pile up three runs off
Arroyo, who gave up a runscoring single to Young and
a two-run double to Byrd.
Dunn hit a two-run
homer in the third and
added a solo shot in the
fifth, leaving him with a
team-high 19 overall.
Dunn is 8-for- I 7 against
Millwood with six homers
and five strikeouts.
Notes: It was the 12th
double-~igit strikeout performance by Mlllwood,
his first since Sept. 3 last
season against Cleveland.
... It was the 19th multihomer game of Dunn's
career, nis third this season . ... Reds 28 Brandon
Phillips was hit on the left
hand by one of Millwood's
pitches in the first inning.
He . stayed in the game
through the fourth, then
left for precautionary Xrays that were negative.

I.-it

~

lar&amp;leash. 985·3669. bloode

Hustlers in 1912.
Watson played 35 major
league games in 2005 and '06,
batting .176..
The Clippers are the
Washing,ton Nationals' _TripleA affiliate.

club, but hopped along the
line of first cu.t and deep
rough, and his approach ran
some 30 feet by the flag.
His birdie putt was just long
and right, and Woods again
was the last man to leave
the 18th green at a major, no
trophy in hand.
Cabrera mi~ht not have
been the winner anyone
expected, especially at
Oakmont, w,hich has produced U.S. Open champions of the highest caliber.
But he earned his victory
against the best.
Cabrera delivered a 1-2-3
knockout during a difficult
week. A birdie on his final
hole Friday caused secondranked Phil Mickelson to
miss the .cut in a major for
the first time in eight ye,ars,
and he was even stronger
down the stretch with
Woods and Furyk, No. I
and No. 3 in the ;o,vorld, both
poised to catch him.
Six players had at least a
share of the 'lead at some
point, but not for long.

; ....... ........

found :Chester-- -area-late

record

11th, where the tees were
moved up. He hit so far and
enough left that he had no
angle to the pin, and the lie
was so deep that he didn't
even reach the green. His 8foot par putt caught ..the lip
and spun away.
Needing birdie on the
final hole, Furyk dropped
the club after contact, and
his long putt · never had a
chance.
Cabrera, who had two of
just eight sub-par rounds in
the tournament and finished
at 5-over 285, was in the
clubhouse watching two of
the best players in golf try
to catch him.
As poorly as Woods hit
the ball in the final round,
he only needed one birdie
over his final three holes to
force a playoff. Woods· hit
3-wood off the 17th tee into
a deep b,unker, but he
couldn't keep it on the
green and had to make a 7footer for par.
His tee shot on the 18tn
looked good when it left his

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CLASSIFIED INDEX

110

1

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IUU" nn~~•....,

Applications Are
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Competiuve Startmg Pay
Patd Vacahon, Paid Meals,
Discounts.
Insurances
AVailable . ,
Interested
Applican1s May Apply Daily
100WORKERS NEEDED 9·4. Ravenswood Care
Assemble crafts, wood Center, 1 t 13 Washington
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provided. Free information (304)273-9236
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pkg. 24Hr 801-428-4649
Aefer~nces Required.

4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlques ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
An Excellent way to earn Full-t1me UcenS&amp;d Practical
Auction and Flea Market............. ,...............
money. The New Avon.
Nurse for a •community
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ................ .......... 760
Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
group home for people with
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or MD/DD inM ~~ell. Ho~rs
Autos for Sate .............................................. 7t0
SelL Shirley Spears, 304 . 9am-5pm · . urrent LPN
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Ucanse and Pharmacology
675 _1429 .
Building Supplles ........... .............................
cerUf1cat1on
reqwred.
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
$10.50/hour
Bartender &amp; Cook Wanted Salary:
Business Opportunlty .................................210 ·
App~ with in Elks Lodge, ExceUent benefits package
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
406 2nd Ave, Gallipolis.
including
Health/Dental
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
lpsuranca and paid leave
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
CASHIER WANTED at Twm ttme. Pre-employment drug
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
O~ks Gas Station , F111e testing. Send resume to
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Pomts,
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Elactrlcat/Refrlgeratlon ................................840
Expenence Preferred &amp; Services. PO Box 604,
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Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
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Deadline for applicants
Farm Equlpment... .......................................610
Computers 4 Is seeking
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Farms lor Rent. ............................................430
Computer Tech for part time Employer
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FruHs &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
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Group Homo, some lifting,
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cooks. Greal pay 1n a great
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enw?nment M~st be hard The
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workmg and reliable Apply Educational Service Center
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
in person at 308 2nd 'Ave or has an ANTICIPATED poSt·
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
can 441·9371 to set up an tion opening for an Itinerant
lnsurance .................................................. ... 130
interview.
Preschool
Special
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 680
Desk Clerk needed at Education TeaCher in Athens
Llvestock......................................................630
County to' the 2007 •2008
Budget Inn 260 Jackson
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
p 1ke. Look1ng for a person School Year.. Appllca~ts
Lots &amp; Acreage ............. ;.............................. 350
who 18 motlva1ed great must hold a 1181od Early Child·
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11
commuriicat1on skills and a .
nterventiOO peel~ 15
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positive attitude Please LCe
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Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
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Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
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~qn pr prekindergarten With
Mobile Homes It' Sate ................................ 320
Desk Clerk needed at EB'frvy
Education
of
Money to Loan .................................. ........... 220
Budget Inn 260 Jackson Handicapped (EEH) valida·
Pike. looking for a person lion on either Certificate. A
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Whaetars .......................... 740
Mustcat Instruments ................................... 570
who is motivated, great Supplemental license for
communication skills and a the Early Education of the
Personals ..................................................... 005
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
positive attitude Please HandicapN'Id
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•·
Plumbing .&amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
apply within.
obtained for a candidate
="-.:....:.:..::..____ who
has
Professional Servlces.:............................... 230
8
ELEC.
CONTROLS
ENG!·
Certilicatel\.icense
in Pre·
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
NEER Oe1e~se pro~ram kindergarten or Special
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Edu cation . Th1s position is a
needs hands-on
Schoqls tnstructl0 n ..................................... 150
9·month corltract with full
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850 torS P.LC/
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1
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A ~ , · 9 benefits Salary will be
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1
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acquiSition,
e
ecbased on expenence and
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Space for Renl ............................................. 460
tn~l
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rftlflcatlon/ licensure
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equipment and automated
to salary sched·
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ule.
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tener Col 1n 1aenrzest
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Vans For Sale................ ~ ..............................730 ,
703
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Wanted to Buy ............ , :.............................. 090
369 5298
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507
Richland
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppltes .................. 620
Super 8 Motel now accept· Avenue Su1te 1108. Athens,
Wanted Tel Do ................................ :: ............ 180
ing applications for house· Oh 45701 . AppHcation
Wanted to Renl ............. :.............................. 470
keepers. Must be reliable Deadline June 27, 2007
Yard Sale- Galllpolls....................................072
and able to work flexible 3 30 pm. The AMESC is an
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle,.........................074
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We offer competitive
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Athens-Me1gs Educational
Mary Shuler, DON, e call
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507
at 740-446-5001 or Barb Please stop by and'" Ul 1- -- - -- - 1 Service
at 310 Colonial Drive,
Richland
Avenue ,
Peterson, Director of
Human Resources for
Bidwell, Ohio or give
l"nc.
Sulte•108, Athens , OH
Mary Shuler, DON, 1 call
45701
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at 740-446-5001 or Barb
Massive increase of
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Peterson, Director of
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Truck Drivers COL Class A
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Wanted: D1rect Supervision
Applicants must be certi· ::::.::_______ ~o.....;"""~·;;;Pr;oim,;,;•;;;inc;oco•m-_. employees to oversee male
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an
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Needs three individuals
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physical
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1
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of the best compensation should complete an applies- puler training, be detailed
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10 J.ohn
mterest
Middleport. OH 45760 fast paced enwonment .
Costanzo,
E.O.E.
Send resumes to Daily
Athens-Meigs EducatiOnal retirement, disability and life - - - - - - - Sentinel. PO Box 729·30.
Service
Center,
507
insurance. If you want to
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�Page B2 • The Ddily Sentinel

BY J• LmcE
N&gt; SPORTS COUMIIST

AP photo

Atlanta Braves' Andruw Jones dives for double hit by Cleveland Indians' Jhonny Peralta in
the sixth inning of a baseball game on Sunday in Cleveland.

Indians scalp Atlanta, 5..12
CLEVELAND (AP) Fausto Carmona's sharp
sinker gave the Cleveland
Indians a needed lift.
Carmona (8-2) pitched
seven-plus innings to help
the Indians avoid a threegame sweep with a 5-2 win
over the Atlanta Braves on
Sunday.
"It was another great performance by Fausto," said
manager Eric Wedge, who
believes the 23-year-old
should be an All-Star. "I do
think he deserves to make it.
He's earned it."
Casey Blake exten~d the
majors' longest hitting streak
of the season to 26 games for
Cleveland, which won for
. only the third time in eight
games and remained in first
place in the AL Central.
Chipper Jones got his
2,000th hit for the Braves,
losersof10oftheirlast 15.
"It's a pretty cool number," Jones said. "It's one of
the numbers you reach when
you've been around a long
time. My next goal is to
work on the next thousand,
but I don't know if I' II play
that long."
Jones, 35, got his .first hit
as a pinch hitter in his first
career at bat on Sept. 14,
1993.
Scott Thorman ruined
Carmona's bid for his second
career shutout by hitting his
eighth homer to lead off the
eighth inning. Carmona then
issued his only two walks
and was replaced by Rafael

Edwards

Betancourt.
The Braves tliled to get
Willie Harris lined an RBI their first road sweep of an
double into the right-field AL opponent since taking
comer to make it 5-2. It was three games at Boston on
the first of 18 inherited June 28-30, 2002. Two
baserunners to score against Atlanta errors helped the
Betancourt this season.
Indians take a 5-0 lead with a
The right-hander came four-run sixth against Kyle
back to strike out Edgar Davies (3-6).
Renteria, who went 0-for-4
Victor Martinez singled
one day after going 5-for-5 and went to third on a double
iri' the Braves' 6-2 win on by Jhonny Peralta to rightSaturday. Jason Michaels center. Ryan Garko then hit a
made a diving catch in left to check-swing bouncer that
take a hit away from Chipper first baseman Thorman mis· Jones and Betancourt struck played, allowing both runout Andruw Jones to get out ners to score.
of the inning.
"It was a tough hop,"
"That was the only break-. Thorman said. "It really
in~ ball I threw," Betancourt stinks because Kyle pitched
said of the called strike over well and it was the deciding
the outside comer that ended play of the game. I wish I
the threat. "But J-Mike made had it back."
an awesome play. Just
One out later, Franklin
great."
Gutierrez singled ·home
Joe Borowski worked the Garko. Gutierrez stole secninth for his IOOth career ond, went to third ·when
save. He is 20~for-22 in save · catcher Brian McCann threw
chances this year.
.wildly for another error, and
Carmona ~ave up two runs scored on a grm.mdout by
and five hus, striking out Josh Barfield.
five to improve to 6-0 in day
Michaels' two-out RBI
games, which leads the single gave Cleveland a 1-0
majors. He opened the sea- lead in the fifth.
son in Cleveland's rotation
Chipper Jones' milestone
only because of an injury to hit was a line-drive single in
veteran Cliff Lee, but is 8-1 the second. He needs three
in II starts since losing his doubles 10 join Hall of
season debut April 13. That Farner Eddie Murray and
was his· lith straight loss Chili Davis as the only
over two seasons and switch hitters to collect
dropped his career record at 2,000 hits, 400 doubles and
the time to l: II. 1·
350 home runs. Jones has
"He has a bright future. I 369 career homers, two
was really impressed with behind Braves legend Dale
him," Chipper Jones said.
Murphy.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. .was
fifth to give ·DEl two 'cars
in the top fl ve, and the
showing moved him into
fromPageBl
Chase for the champiOQship contention. He's
to help us put.in equipment 12th in the standings _
and be competitive With the where he was before a 100 _
other manufacturers, with
the other teams," Roush point penalty last month
knocked him down to 14th
said. "They, deserve more, _ and is trying to end his
and I'm just embarrassed time at DEI on top.
that it took us this long to
Earnhardt, who agreed to
really celebrate it with Carl a five-year deal this week to
and· the guys."
drive
for
Hendrick
Truex, who had his first Motorsports starting next
victory two weeks ago at
Dover, finished second after season,
congratulated
Truex, his teammate.
"Martin did good, he did
overcoming a spin on the
backstretch I00 laps into such a good job today. That
the race. Truex, who led 54 tearri has found something
laps before the early spin
1 · h
ak
and has climbed to I Oth in mig t sne over there
and find out what it is,"
the series stan~ings, heaped Earnhardt said. "We had a
praise on his Dale Earnhardt good car. We were as good
ln~itte:~ a great day for as anybody at the end of the
us," he said. "The team. did race,just ran out of laps."
·
Kyle Busch, who is losing
another awesome JOb. 1 his ride at Hendrjck to make
~~~~ ~~-:ea!v~eha'd~~ ~:: room for Earnhardt, was
road. Awesome race car, sixth and wa,s followed by
and probably the best Kevin · Harvick , Jainie '
·engine I've ever had. Guys McMurray and series points
lire doing great, man, and leader Jeff Gordon, who
I'm loving life right now."
was ninth and the last driver
1\vo-time series champi- on the lead lap.
on Tony Stewart, winless
Michael Waltrip, racing
this season, was third. for just the third time this
Stewart had a strong car in season,. was a surprising
practice Saturday, but an I Oth and even led one lap.
accident
with
David He was with the · leaders
Gilliland caused heavy most of the race, and was
damage and he wasn't sure lapped with one lap to go.
how good his car 'would be
"It's just a great, great
during the race.
feeling to run that well,"
He was supposed to start · said Waltrip, who has failed
41st, but defibers.teiy hung to qualify 12 times this seaback at the green flag to fall son.
into 43id place at the start.
"Overall,
I' m very
"With what happened (in pleased. My guys are rusty,
practice)' and where we but you'd never know it. It
qualified, It was two strikes was a hpt day and I hadn't
aaainst us," Stewart said. "I got to race this much, but I
lriade surC'I went across the felt just as good at the end
-start-finish line in 43rd, so as I did in the beginning.
wherever we ended up I
"When the checkered fell
could say we went from then I felt hot, tired and glad
dead last. From 43rd to it was over."
.
third is a pretty good day."
·Defendin~ series cham. Casey Mears, on a roll pion Jimmte Johnson had
since his first career win been running in third, but
on May 27, was fourth and ran out of ~as seven laps
the highest finishiag from the fintsh and wound
Hendrick driver.
up 19th.
- -~r

Monday, June 18, 2001

www.mydailysentlnel.com

l#lcome to our world, Tiger, if only for a day

•

· ~

Monday, .June t&amp;. 2007

www.mydailysentmel.com

...- ·-

. Angel
fromPageBl
Even so, this major will
be remembered for gaffes
by the guys chasing him.
Woods, ·a runner-up to
unheralded Zach Johnson at
the Masters, played the final
32 holes at Oakmont with
only one birdie. He missed
a birdie putt from 6 feet on
the 13th, and the only clutch
putts he made on .the back
nine were for par.
"He put a ·Jot of pressure
on Jim and I, and we didn 't
get it done,'' said Woods,
who closed with a 72 and
extended his dubious streak
of never winning a major
when he wasn't leading
going into the final round.
Furyk, the 2003 U.S.
Open champion who grew
up in western Pennsylvania,
ran off three straight birdies
on the back nine and was
tied for the lead when he
opted to hit driver on the

Reds
fromPageBl
son-high · 10 batters to get
his first victory since April
13. Millwood was sidelined
by a pulled hamstring last
month, and had gone 0-5 in .
his last seven starts.
"I think that's the kind of
outing he needs to get
going," Rangers manager
Ron Washington said. "It's
nice that the. roll he was on
finally got turned around
go in~ the other way."·
Mtllwood made a few
small changes in his de.livery - keepin$ his back
straighter, for mstance and got better as the game
went along. He struck out
the side in the sixth. '
"I made some changes,
some minor changes,"
Millwood said. "I felt the
longer the game went on, I

OAKMONT, Pa. - The
bargain is rarely this simple.
Make birdie at either No.
'17 or 18 and force a playoff.
Birdie them both and the
U.S. Open trophy rides
home in the back seat of the
car that carried Tiger Woods
out onto Hulton Road late
Sunday afternoon and away
from Oakmont Country
Club.
,
No matter what club he s
holding, on'7 he settle~ over
a shot, there s nobody m the
game you woul~ ratl_ler put
money on. Yet JUSt like the
final round at the Masters
two mo~ths ago, whe~. he
played m the final pam~g
and held his fate m his
han~, Woods was flat out of
magic. .
And l_tke Augusta, too,
where winner Zach Johns&lt;?n
fimshed be~ore Woo:&lt;Is did
and wouldn t take his eyes
off a locker room TV to be
sure there were no more miracles, about-to-be-crowned
U.S. Open champion Angel
Cabrera sat glued in front of
a television set in the clubhouse.
Woods • final stab at a tie
was a triple-breaking 30footer above the flag with
eight feet of break to the
cup.
"It's not like 1 could hit it
inside right, firm," Woods
said, the hint of a smile playing on his lip.s. "It was a putt
I had to die, and if it gets
anywhere below the hole it
could run off the ridge."
It was never close.
Instead he tapped in for a 2over-pa'r 72, a 286 tota} and
a tie for second with Jim
Furyk.
In the last four majors,
Woods has gone 1-1-2-2, a
remarkable run for anyone
else. But alongside the
dozen majors that make up
the most glittering resume in
pro golf are now 30 in which
Woods has failed to win
commg from off the pace.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
CLASSI .F IED
'

Asked whether it was fair to rqllied. "You say Aupsta is
bold that against him; be bard, yeah. but IIIey have flit
blinked.
s~ where they put tile
"Well," be said simply. "I pms."
haven't.
"The putts · I bad tbat I
"I haven't gotten it done. lmcw I could make - leftPut myself there," Woods to-right, right-to-left, '~~hill
added, his voice lowering, - I pow=d them iii tbcre,"
"and haven't gotten it done." Woods said. "But I bad so
It's easy in hindsight to many breaking putts that it
pick a ·half-dozen shets that waS hard to keep my spcc:d .
would have made the differ- and line. and I kept wonying
ence. Woods said he would- about my pace and make
n't go there, either_ at least sure I didn't have a second
not anytime soon.
putt."
· "I felt like I hit the ball
True as that was, the
pretty good all week," he explanation was also a bit
said, and the numbers too neat.
backed him up.
At No. 3, Woods bladed a
Woods led the field in chip shot from behind the
greens in regulation, practi- green, chunked the one after
cally siaging a clinic that and made 6, his only
Saturday by hitting every double-bogey of the toumaoneoftheflrst 17enrouteto ment.AtNo. l3,hemisseda
a 69 that left him trailing 6-footer for birdie, one of
third-round leader Aaron · the rare times Woods hasn't
Baddeley by two and sent a holed a putt he absolutely
chill down the collective had to have. At No. 14,
spine of the rest of the field. pumped up and hitting
After just one hole wedge, he flew the flag and
sunday, ·11 was aPParent h3d to settle ~or
the 'ourth of
''
''
why. Woods made a noncha- eight straight closing pars.
l~t par and Bad~eley made
The shot that stuck most
tnple-bogey. Right ~bout vividly in his memory, ·
then, a sense of deJa vu though, was a bunker shot at
enveloped everyone out on 17. When he dug his feet
the course - save Tiger into the sand, he was 6-over
ht?,Jself.
and Cabrera was in the clubJust because Badds made house one stroke better.
7 on the frrst hole, we s!JII
"I hit a nice bunker shot,
recalled, "but
ha.ve ..17 , more t.o go, " ,he too," "'oods
''"
said. Its not hke they re unfortunately wh~n I hit. it, I
handing out '!)e trophy on could tell it caught a rock on
the first green.
my wedge. And I heard a
, WhatTiger knew then was 'cling,' you know? And
somethmg the numbers when it came out, I was hopwould reveal afterward as ing, 'Please, still have the
well. Though he three- spin on it that I felt.'
putted only once, Woods
"But it didn't," he added.
still ended up ranked 41st on "It released on through."
th~ gre~ns. The cris~n~ss
Woods made just three
with which he was strikmg birdies in the final two
the ball, Woods knew, was rounds, just one in the last
matched by how uneasy . he 32 holes. Not even Tiger
felt all weekend standmg Woods can always fly past
9ver putts on Oakmont's the obstacles that trip up the
slick surfaces.
rest of i.ts, find the missing
A questioner hadn't even piece of the puzzle or simply
finished asking "Are these forge a new one. Sometimes
the hardest ... " before Woods life is j)Jst that hard.
cut him off.
So welcome to our world,
"Without a doubt," he Tiger, if only for one.day.

I ••

Gallia
County ·

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE
kltncartyla@comcast.nat
John Song Fonl Uncoln

l\llrOury
Has a pOSi1IOo open for an
Automotive Technocian. We
are kx:*ing br an individual
that has a wetl rounded
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Company traintng will be
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We offer a competiti¥8 compensation plan and our bon·
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Insurance, 401K retirement,
dtsability msurance and life
insurance. If you are tired of
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Fomd: set of keys Whea1on

Ad t SA 554

area. For more
-

OTIAWA (AP)- Brandon
Watson extended his hitting
streak to 43 games, breaking a
95-year-old
International ·
League record with a base hit
in the Columbus Clippers' 9-8
loss to the Ottawa Lynx on

Sunday.
Watson hit a leadoff single
off J.D. Durbin in the sixth
and finished 1-for-5 m
Clippers' B-inning loss.
Jack Lelivelt set the IL
record for the Rochester

May
15 lb. male dog,
Pomeranian/Spitz mix? col·

Stephen Ames ope-ned
with a 12-foot birdie and
looked strong until he
hooked a tee shot into the
ditch on the seventh, tried to
play out,' finally chopped it
to the right rough short of
the green and walked off
with a triple bogey.
Steve Stricker poured in
birdie putts on the fifth and
sixJh holes to join the lead
and closed out his front nine
with two good pars for a 34.
But he pulled his tee shot
into a bunker on No. I 0, had
to play out sideways, then
three-putted for double
bogey.
Paul· Casey was iri such
bad shape in a bunker on the
par-3 sixth that he played
backward, away from the
green, chipped short of the
green and took triple bogey
on his way to a 43 on the
· front nine.
Furyk finally stumbled
with careless shots on the
lith and 12th, only to run
off three straight birdies to
get back in the game.

got more comfortable with
it. That was not exactly
what I wanted, but it's
something I can build off."
Byrd hit a solo homer his first since last July 4 and doubled off the centerfield fence for two more
runs off Bronson Arroyo (28), who matched his career
high by losing his sixth
straight decision.
Arroyo hasn't won since
May 6, going 0.6 in his last
eight starts with a 7.83
ERA.
"I don't feel strong, but I
feel ~ood," Arroyo said.
"Nothmg's bothering me. I
don't feel like I have as
much zip on my fastball,
and that can pose a problem."
Spectators tried to cool
themselves with hand-held
fans on a wilting, 92-degree
afternoon. The 31 ,162 came
to see a rarity - a matchtip
of two 500-homer players.
One hardly played, and the

other didn't do much.
The 38-year-old Sosa was
out of the starting lineup
after a night game. He
homered in the series orener for No. 599, and wit get
his next swing at 600 on
Thesday in Chtcago against
his former Cubs. ·
Griffey singled, walked,
struck out twice and flied
out, leaving him at 581
career homers. Griffey led
the Reds to their only victory in the series by hitting a
pair of homers Saturday
night.
Michael Young had a pair
of run-scoring singles for
the Rangers, extending his
hitting streak to a seasonhigh 10 games. The shortstop has a .348 career avera$e in interleague play, the
highest of any player with
300 plate appearances. .
Both starters had big
.problems in a 29-minute
first inning that featured 16
batters, 57 pitches and four

runs in all. The Rangers
needed only 11 pitches to
pile up three runs off
Arroyo, who gave up a runscoring single to Young and
a two-run double to Byrd.
Dunn hit a two-run
homer in the third and
added a solo shot in the
fifth, leaving him with a
team-high 19 overall.
Dunn is 8-for- I 7 against
Millwood with six homers
and five strikeouts.
Notes: It was the 12th
double-~igit strikeout performance by Mlllwood,
his first since Sept. 3 last
season against Cleveland.
... It was the 19th multihomer game of Dunn's
career, nis third this season . ... Reds 28 Brandon
Phillips was hit on the left
hand by one of Millwood's
pitches in the first inning.
He . stayed in the game
through the fourth, then
left for precautionary Xrays that were negative.

I.-it

~

lar&amp;leash. 985·3669. bloode

Hustlers in 1912.
Watson played 35 major
league games in 2005 and '06,
batting .176..
The Clippers are the
Washing,ton Nationals' _TripleA affiliate.

club, but hopped along the
line of first cu.t and deep
rough, and his approach ran
some 30 feet by the flag.
His birdie putt was just long
and right, and Woods again
was the last man to leave
the 18th green at a major, no
trophy in hand.
Cabrera mi~ht not have
been the winner anyone
expected, especially at
Oakmont, w,hich has produced U.S. Open champions of the highest caliber.
But he earned his victory
against the best.
Cabrera delivered a 1-2-3
knockout during a difficult
week. A birdie on his final
hole Friday caused secondranked Phil Mickelson to
miss the .cut in a major for
the first time in eight ye,ars,
and he was even stronger
down the stretch with
Woods and Furyk, No. I
and No. 3 in the ;o,vorld, both
poised to catch him.
Six players had at least a
share of the 'lead at some
point, but not for long.

; ....... ........

found :Chester-- -area-late

record

11th, where the tees were
moved up. He hit so far and
enough left that he had no
angle to the pin, and the lie
was so deep that he didn't
even reach the green. His 8foot par putt caught ..the lip
and spun away.
Needing birdie on the
final hole, Furyk dropped
the club after contact, and
his long putt · never had a
chance.
Cabrera, who had two of
just eight sub-par rounds in
the tournament and finished
at 5-over 285, was in the
clubhouse watching two of
the best players in golf try
to catch him.
As poorly as Woods hit
the ball in the final round,
he only needed one birdie
over his final three holes to
force a playoff. Woods· hit
3-wood off the 17th tee into
a deep b,unker, but he
couldn't keep it on the
green and had to make a 7footer for par.
His tee shot on the 18tn
looked good when it left his

l!iill

POLICIES: Ohio Valier Publehlng ~the dQht lo edit, Nftct. or CMCIII...,. 8d .t .ny
Emn mue1 be~ on it.. lim
Trtbuw Soolkwl R g'
wll be 1 ;
"b for no more 1hln 1hl COli ot thltpeC~ occuplld br the WfOf' lnCI ant, the first inMftion.
. , lou
lhM ,_..from 1M P'
t!o ••~ of .a
eon.ct1on wtl be nlldeln the tnt ~•Uable edition. • Bo•
are . . . . CCMi . . . . ltl&amp; • Curnnt ,.._ c.nl
• AI rMI ....._ ........,... . .
to U. ~ F•r Houllng Act Of 1961. • Thll
Wt wll nollmOMngly KCepl
tn wiolttion of the law.

• SUrt Your Ads With A Keyword • lndude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avokl AbbreviMionl
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• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Pan tirne secretanal help Gallipolis ca,.. College
needed at J.D. Drill ing (Careers Close To Home)
CDmpany. Rac1na. Ohio. Call Today! 740-44&amp;4367.
secretarial skiMs &amp; computer
1·800-214-()452
knowledge are required, - ga~reellXIIIoge com
appty in person to fil\ out an Accredited Member Accreottng

application, No phone calls,

Lost Siamese mtx cat 1n the
Bidwell area near Amby Ln.

www.comics.com

$100 Reward. dall388-8298
or 645·4677 or 388-9 130

meetllngjl

L.r_...%,.ANilll.,uuv...,.._,

Wanted Scrap riletal cars
buses, pipe, ,farm equip. ,
vlo~otlonfl etc Will pick·up and pay.
304·593·1904.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

110

1

u ........ u,.~.a.Prl:'l'\
IUU" nn~~•....,

Applications Are
Beif19 Accepted For An LPN
Competiuve Startmg Pay
Patd Vacahon, Paid Meals,
Discounts.
Insurances
AVailable . ,
Interested
Applican1s May Apply Daily
100WORKERS NEEDED 9·4. Ravenswood Care
Assemble crafts, wood Center, 1 t 13 Washington
·items.To $480/wk Materials St . Ravenswood, WV
provided. Free information (304)273-9236
FAX .
pkg. 24Hr 801-428-4649
Aefer~nces Required.

4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlques ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
An Excellent way to earn Full-t1me UcenS&amp;d Practical
Auction and Flea Market............. ,...............
money. The New Avon.
Nurse for a •community
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ................ .......... 760
Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
group home for people with
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or MD/DD inM ~~ell. Ho~rs
Autos for Sate .............................................. 7t0
SelL Shirley Spears, 304 . 9am-5pm · . urrent LPN
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Ucanse and Pharmacology
675 _1429 .
Building Supplles ........... .............................
cerUf1cat1on
reqwred.
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
$10.50/hour
Bartender &amp; Cook Wanted Salary:
Business Opportunlty .................................210 ·
App~ with in Elks Lodge, ExceUent benefits package
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
406 2nd Ave, Gallipolis.
including
Health/Dental
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
lpsuranca and paid leave
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
CASHIER WANTED at Twm ttme. Pre-employment drug
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
O~ks Gas Station , F111e testing. Send resume to
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Pomts,
Restaurant Buckeye
Community
Elactrlcat/Refrlgeratlon ................................840
Expenence Preferred &amp; Services. PO Box 604,
Helpful, Minimum wage, Jackson,
OH
45640
Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
(740-992-4250)
Deadline for applicants
Farm Equlpment... .......................................610
Computers 4 Is seeking
6122107 . Equal Opportunity
Farms lor Rent. ............................................430
Computer Tech for part time Employer
Farmti lor Sale ............................................. 330
leading to full ttme work. You G
-a
- ll-ipo:·_-s -C-on-ve-n-ie_
n1_S_
to-re
11
For Lease ..................................................... 490
must be proficient in com·
accepting
applications
for
For Sale ........................................................ 585
puter repair, dependable an Store Manager. ·convenient
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
honest! Bring resume In
·
store expenence preferred
FruHs &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
person to Computers 4 U,
Inc
303
Matn
Street.
Po1nt
Salary
and benefits at inter·
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
view. Send resume 10
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Pleasant, WV 25550 or call
for diracllons at 304-675· Manager, PO Box 306 ·
Glveaway ......................................................040
Vinton. OH 45686.
5282
Happy Ads ....................................................
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help wanted at Darst Adult
Cour1slde Bar an d GrIll now
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Group Homo, some lifting,
I
seekmg full t1me gnll and ry
Home lf11provements ...................................810
7·5 &amp;hiH. 740·992·5023.
cooks. Greal pay 1n a great
Homes lor Sate ............................................ 310
enw?nment M~st be hard The
Athens-Meigs
Household Goods .................................... ... 510
workmg and reliable Apply Educational Service Center
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
in person at 308 2nd 'Ave or has an ANTICIPATED poSt·
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
can 441·9371 to set up an tion opening for an Itinerant
lnsurance .................................................. ... 130
interview.
Preschool
Special
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 680
Desk Clerk needed at Education TeaCher in Athens
Llvestock......................................................630
County to' the 2007 •2008
Budget Inn 260 Jackson
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
p 1ke. Look1ng for a person School Year.. Appllca~ts
Lots &amp; Acreage ............. ;.............................. 350
who 18 motlva1ed great must hold a 1181od Early Child·
Mlscellaneous .... .......................................... 170
'
hood 1
11
commuriicat1on skills and a .
nterventiOO peel~ 15
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
positive attitude Please LCe
lce~se., or ~eaedchmg
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
.apply within
rtlnca e tn specla
uca·
Mobile Homes for Rent ............................... 420
·
~qn pr prekindergarten With
Mobile Homes It' Sate ................................ 320
Desk Clerk needed at EB'frvy
Education
of
Money to Loan .................................. ........... 220
Budget Inn 260 Jackson Handicapped (EEH) valida·
Pike. looking for a person lion on either Certificate. A
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Whaetars .......................... 740
Mustcat Instruments ................................... 570
who is motivated, great Supplemental license for
communication skills and a the Early Education of the
Personals ..................................................... 005
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
positive attitude Please HandicapN'Id
may
be
•·
Plumbing .&amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
apply within.
obtained for a candidate
="-.:....:.:..::..____ who
has
Professional Servlces.:............................... 230
8
ELEC.
CONTROLS
ENG!·
Certilicatel\.icense
in Pre·
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
NEER Oe1e~se pro~ram kindergarten or Special
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Edu cation . Th1s position is a
needs hands-on
Schoqls tnstructl0 n ..................................... 150
9·month corltract with full
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850 torS P.LC/
1
1
(R Logut
A ~ , · 9 benefits Salary will be
SHuallons Wanted ....................................... 120
1
data
acquiSition,
e
ecbased on expenence and
speed
Space for Renl ............................................. 460
tn~l
test eQUipment, heavy.
rftlflcatlon/ licensure
Sporting Goods ...........................................520
equipment and automated
to salary sched·
SUV'a for Sale ..............................................720
ule.
SJuohbm
It
tener Col 1n 1aenrzest
Trucks for Sale .............:.............................. 715
1o
0
0
081
0
Upholllery ................................................... 170
alent desired. UTAON, Inc Superintende~t.
Athens:
Vans For Sale................ ~ ..............................730 ,
703
www.untron1c.com FAX
' Meigs Educational Service
Wanted to Buy ............ , :.............................. 090
369 5298
.
Center,
507
Richland
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppltes .................. 620
Super 8 Motel now accept· Avenue Su1te 1108. Athens,
Wanted Tel Do ................................ :: ............ 180
ing applications for house· Oh 45701 . AppHcation
Wanted to Renl ............. :.............................. 470
keepers. Must be reliable Deadline June 27, 2007
Yard Sale- Galllpolls....................................072
and able to work flexible 3 30 pm. The AMESC is an
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle,.........................074
· shifts. Apply in person. NO Equal
·Opportunity
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleaslnt ................................ 076
PHONE CALLS.
Employeri,Providar.

sso

u

..

11110

EI.....J.eri

oao

,,

® 2007 by

a

oso

s ·

engm~er
~~·gra)m~~n~

~~~::a~:~:~ ~S~~~v~

''

~:COrding

11110

inc.

------MACHINIST For manual
lathes, m111ing machines,
saws, radiat drills. Must be
abte to hOfd tOlerances to
.00005• in fine wortc. and
accurately cut various male,

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

AIIQ. Pay $20/hr or

liDl'WANilD

I

SOCIAL
WORKER.
Overbrook Center IS now
accepting resumes for the
positions of Director of
Social Services. The qualified candidate must possess
strong verbal and written
communication • skills,
Med1caid. Medicare and

c..

·Now Hiring!

Hiring
Bonus

r-------

- - - -- -

Do you need a Handy Man
to fix Porches, ROOfs, Water
Ptpes A Jacl(-of·all-Trades.
So to Speak Call me at 304·
675-5857

------George's Ponable Sawmtll.
now selling Tomatoe Stakes
_ca_ll_304~·6-75_-1_9_sr_._ _
Interested 1n cutttng trees
around tence hnes, m yards
or any other part property
Will leave nothmg behind
Call for a free est1mate 645_59_38
_ _ _ __ _
Lawn mowing. Rates by the
job. no1 the hour. Call Paul
_c_(_304_1:_67_5_·2_94_o_
. ·_ _
Lawn-Care Service, Mowmg
&amp; Tnmming . Call (7~0)44t 1333 or (740)645·0546
II\\\(

°· b=~~~:Ua::~~::s
Supermten~ent,
Hill or Brian Ross.

AMESC is an Equal
.., t ....... . .......
0 P P 0 r ~ u n 1 1 Y _ _:__:c..........:..__
EmployeriPrOVJder.
R&amp;J Trucking Leading The
Way A&amp;J Trucking now
OTR Drivers needed. Must Hiring at our New Haven,
be at least 24 yrs old and WV Terminal. For Regional
haw 3 ~rs eJI:perlence. Appty Hauls-Dump Olv. 1 year
in person at 2204 Jackson OTA verifiable &amp;lq). Call1 ·
Pika.
. 800-462·9365 ask ror Kent

Assistants Par1 t1me positlons availab4e.. interested
applicants can pick up an
application 01' contact HolMe
Baumgarner, LPN, Staff
Development Coordinator CD
74().992-6472 M·F 9a·5p at
333 Page St.. Mlddlepon,
OH. EOE &amp; a participant Df
the Drug-Free Workplace
Program.
·

minimum
High School
D1ploma/GED, knowledge in
carpentry &amp; housing materials. ab+e to preform of trwn
in weatherization procedures. Current valid drivers
license required. Salary
$7/hr full time w~h benefits.
Request an applibation at
SCAC HAD 540 Fifth Ave,
Huntington, WV 25701 EOE

I

\I

!!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

riO

B~.srr..~

:::0Pro::KI1JNJIY:::
•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
that you do bus1ness w1tl1
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail unt1l you
have investigated the

r

::off;•r:in:g· ====~
MONtY

r__..;,TO_Lo_AN-~

• - - - - - -. .

**N.OTIC"'**
-=-

Borrow Sniart. Contact
the Ohio Divis1on of
Fmancial
Institution's
Off1ce
of
Consumer
Affarrs BEFORE you refi·
nanc e your heme or
obta1n a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or Insurance. Call the
Off1ce
of Cons umer
Affairs toll free at 1•866·
278-0003 to learn if the
mortgage
broker
or
lander
rs
properly
11censed (Thts is a publiC
serv1ce announcement
from th e Ohio Valley
Publlshmg Company) ·

.

11

~\hens,
~5701 .
:~:a~ ~Oep~~~~~ ~ne

I

Colleges

~~

A-QK-Cooals &amp; Barns
Metal Roofing, Shingles,
Concrete.
Remodeling.
Decks ,
Pole
Barns.
Garages.Free estimates Call
304-633-1230

PRIME

ca

~~

$57K annually
tnclud1ng Federal Benefits
and OT,Paid Training,
Vacatioos-FTIPT
1-800·584·1775 Elll •8923
USWA
Carpentry, pa1ntmg. drywall,
35 years experienced, qual!·
Roofers . Metal roofing, sid- ty workmanship. For small
1ng and EPDM Top pay and tolls call Steve at (740)388·
benerrts . 724·229-8020
8071

femaleandbuttressthreads. MDSknowledge. long term
Must read drawings and care e~eperience prelerred
" - - - - - - - " - - - - - - - make parts to specification. but not requ1red. Qualified
G-Code desired. Uft truck candidates may
send
operation a plus. UTAON. resumes to Charla BrownCenter
Holzer Senior
Inc. www.utrooic.com FAX: McGune,
AN,
LNHA,
Unit Manager Posldon
703-369-5298
Administrator, 333 Page
If you are Interested in join- - - - - - - Street. Mtddleport. OH.
45780
ing our Ae&amp;ident Centered
. E.O.E.
Nurs1ng Team we have a
The
Athens ·Meigs
lui time opening lor a Unit If you are Interested in join·mg our ReSldent
Ectucational S8rv1ce Center
Manager. We are a 70 bed
$300
Center Nursirlg Team we
has an ANTICIPATED posi·
long term care nursing
have
a
full
time
opening
for
110n opening , as Assistant
fac1lity located about haH a
the following pos~ions
Superintendent to perform
mile from Holzer Medical
40 hours a week
'RN
Up 10 $8.50/hour .. bonuses supervisory functions for the
Center in Gallipolis.
'LPN
Reg1on 16 SchOOl Improve•sTNA
Make
calls
you
beli9'119
inl
'
ment
Team (RSIT). This IS a
Unit Manager Requirements
Holzer Sen1or Care Center
RN w11h one year of
Call on behalf ol oonser~attve
Full Ttme, twelve month (12)
is the only nursing home 1n
Political organtzatJOns
Pcsition
w1th
Board
ger1atric experience
the area to place tn the top
approved
benefits.
preferred.
3% oo the Ohio Fam11y
Patd vacations, paid holi·
Applicants. should have
We offer competitive wages
Satisfaction Survey
days 8nd paid training .
demonstrated ability to pro·
and Employment benefits
conducted by the Ohio
Full benelits package and vide leadership on a
InClUding.
Department of Aging.
401 · K
Regional bas1s for School
We offer competitive
$300 Hiring Bonua · l m p r o v e m e n t .
'Expenence Pay
wages afl(l employment
Qualifications : Must have a
"Regular Rate Increases
Masters
Degree
in
benefits including:
"TUition Reimbursement
Call today to sch9dule an
Educat1on
and
a
"Uniform Allowance
in\er~iew.
• Experience Pay
"Health/DentaVUfe Ins.
1-877'-463-6247
Certilicate/Ucense m at
"Regular Rate Increases
least one of the following·
"Disability Insurance
ext. 2321
• Uniform Allowance
Supermtendent, PrnlCipat,
'PDOPay
www.lnfociSion.com
• Health/OentaVUfe Ins.
SuperVIsor. Salary w1ll be
(Vacatlon/Holrday/PTOI
• Disability Insurance
determ1ned by expe118nce
401 k (after 1 year)
PDO Pay
and ce rtifica tion/licensure.
(Vacahon Holiday/PTO)
pteeae atop by and tee ua
OTR, Regional,
Submi11eHer ol onterest and
• 401k (after 1 year)
resume
to
John
D.
at 380 Colonial Drive,
•
Tuition
Reimbursement
Flatbed,
Reefer
&amp;
Costanzo,
Supenntendent,
Bidwell, Ohio or glv1
Tanker Drtvera
Athens-Me1gs Educational
Mary Shuler, DON, e call
Center,
507
at 740-446-5001 or Barb Please stop by and'" Ul 1- -- - -- - 1 Service
at 310 Colonial Drive,
Richland
Avenue ,
Peterson, Director of
Human Resources for
Bidwell, Ohio or give
l"nc.
Sulte•108, Athens , OH
Mary Shuler, DON, 1 call
45701
A.pphcahon
Long Term Care a call at
74()-441-3401
at 740-446-5001 or Barb
Massive increase of
Deadlme: June 22. 2007,
Peterson, Director of
busmess from local
3;30 p.m. The AMESC is an
Human
customers/ Looking for
equal
opportunity
... Reaources for
Long ,erm
re • call at
ex.I'IQrienCBd and
Emptoper/Provlder.
7'" "'1 3401
~
•
.
non-sx.m:uisnced drivers.
•-·
Truck Drivers COL Class A
Dr!ytr Jpb Interview•
Equal Opportumty
Equal Opporturlity
MOn., 6118 108m-5:30pm Required, minimum of 5
drtvmg
exp.
years
Employer
Employer
at Reel Roof Inn
Expenence
@n
1000 Acy Ave.
Overdetmenslonal loads
- - - - - -IRS JOBS
JICkaan, OH 45&amp;40
Must have good dnvmg
The
Athens-Me1gs $16.46-$32 .60/hr., now hirAppty &amp; get qualified
record. Earn up to $2,000
~ducatl?nal ~rvice Cen(12e)r ing. Paid Training Is providon the lpotl
weekly. For application Call
1s ant1c1pa1mg two
ed. For application and free
Strong Frei'ght Network
Teacher position openings
(304)722-2184
M-F
al !he Alternative School In ~~=~:a~~:~ ~~bo~~~!
Blue Cross Insurance
8:30am-4pm
Ath
Co
to h
417-343·1303
ens
unty, r 1 e 2007· 913-599-8244 24/ttrs amp
200 8
School
Year serv:
'
·
·
800-248-n35
Wanted: D1rect Supervision
Applicants must be certi· ::::.::_______ ~o.....;"""~·;;;Pr;oim,;,;•;;;inc;oco•m-_. employees to oversee male
f19d'
d
Jorin Sang Ford Lincoln
youth in a staff secJ.Jre resinlc&amp;nse
as
an
Intervention SpecialiSt Of be
lktrcury
Overbrook Center is current- dential environment. Must
.g1'bl e
t0 . ge1
Needs three individuals
"'
physical
training
e!1
a
ly seeking a beaut""1an
to pass
Supplemental Lteense. Both
that are interested l[l a
work part time In the facility's reQuuement. Pay based on
positions would be 9 month
career as an Automotive
bea• •+u salon. Candidates experience Call (740)379·
•
Consultailt. We are lOOking
"''
contracts
wl~ . Board
should possess a 11alid man- 9083 between 9-3 Mon-Fn
lor individuals that are out
1
"""'' 1 I'
------b
I1Is • Sal.
a~ P rbeoveb dsedene
ag ng cosmet""'Vts tcense. wanted: r....tometrlc Assl.ln
• ry
on
expenence
going, seW mo1ivated and
5al
· based
""
8
WI
ary IS
on oommls- Meigs Co. office. Experience
and certification/licensure professklnal. We have one sion . Interested candidates preferred, must have comaccord1ng , to t.he salary
of the best compensation should complete an applies- puler training, be detailed
~chedule. Submtt latta~ of plans in the industry and a lion at 333 Page Street, oriented and able t work in a
10 J.ohn
mterest
Middleport. OH 45760 fast paced enwonment .
Costanzo,
E.O.E.
Send resumes to Daily
Athens-Meigs EducatiOnal retirement, disability and life - - - - - - - Sentinel. PO Box 729·30.
Service
Center,
507
insurance. If you want to
Overbrook Center is current- Pomeroy. Oh 45769.
Richland Avenue, Suite ears an excellent Mvlng and ly accepting applications for
•nos,
' Oh
better yourseH, contact Pat STATE IE.SJED Nursing Weatherization Technician

HnPWANim

=

~ioNorth Third St. Racme IIIlO

info call 740-368-8966

Clippe~' Watson breaks IL hit streak

(.~

addedtoyourclassifiedads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for large

PROt-1-~0NAL

SERYiru

L.-----~
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582-3345
l{i \I I \ I \I I

=r;;,;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;..-...,

"

10

H0!\iFS

FOR SALE

"---iiiiliiiiiiiiiow
o Down even with less than
perfect credil1s available on
1h1s 3 bedroom , 1 bath
home Corner lot, fireplace,
modern kitchen. tacuul tub .
Payment around $550 per
month. 740-367-7129
------104 Tatum
Dr.
New
Haven WV 3bd'2ba. Ranch ,
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. great
area O; 304-675·3637 E;
304·882 -2334
-~----­

3 BR t BA on about 11
acres in Green iWp,Jact&lt;son
Pike , Gallipolis School
District. Gas heat 446·7525

�•/

'

Monday, June 18,2007

3. BA, 1BA, Large Family
~oom. fridge, WID, Large
lot. Close to Hofzer. CaU
4041-5826 or 446·9664
'
3)ld
GALLIPOLIS
l'oracloourel
Buy
for

~=====::;
OWNER
FINANCING

f\ke 312 singlewides
From$1 ,800-.,
paymen1
Scon (740) 828-2750

'-------..1

$50,900! On~ $404/mo., 5%
"'· 20yrs 11 9%. For listings
mJ 800·559-41 09 xF254
Radman Ooublewide 70x2ll,
3br, 2ba, call for Info
3BA 2 s Ba1hs LR oR S45.ooo JOol-liB2·3057
. .room , 20x20
'
.game• - - - - - - - Family
2 car garage, 3 car SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
outbuilding, t acre. 4 miles Program SO Down, 11 you
out
Bulaville
Pike . own l-and 01 use Fllmily

room.

I,H•UO-HOIIIIIiiiiiitESI 4bd oltly
$155/mo., 3bd $181/mo..
More 1-4bd homes avail·
able . 5% oo, 20 yrs 0 8%.
Forliotings 1-800-55!1-1109
x F144.
In"""- House lor renl! 3
80.. 2 balh. newly romodeled, tolal elactric. 7~
5264.
:::::::....._____
Large 4 bedroom house In
" " " -· uery clean, r-'1'
remodeled, new cabinets,
new carpet, (l40)94~2303

j

$174.000.00/ Negotiable. Land We""" the Bani&lt; your
(740)446-8050
Approved 606474-oJBO
~

Local co~::::~;!.ng"NO t A~~

All ,_, ntlte advertising
. in this newspaper is
· ·.ubject to the Federal

F'ltlr Housing ACI Of 1968
which makes it Illegal to
ldvertl_.. "any
pNference, limitation or
dlacrtmlnltlon based on
race, ~or, religion. sex
famltlal st.tu1 or nlll:ion•l
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
diKrtminetion."
. Thia newsp1per will not

knowingly accept

edvertisement• tor rut

Htatewflictlisin
'
violation
or the law. Our

readers are hereby
Jnfonnedthatall

. ._.llnga advertised In
thla riewspaper are
•v•llable 0 ~ an equal
opportunity bases.

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

For·salellat"ld contract. 3 BA
house in Gallipolis. W!D
.
$ 50
connectiOn
1 0 down
$400/mo. Also 1 BA in
Gallipolis
$750
down
$200/mo. Call Wayne 404459-3802 for information.
HUD HOMES! 4bd · only
$155/mo., 3bd $181 /mo.,
More 1·4bd ' homes avail·
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs @ 8%.
~r listings 1·600·559-4109

x F144.
fireplace . frig .. stove. dishwasher , hot tub outside,
great
view:
$55,000,
(304)882·3021
·
Newly built home in Green
Twp. on King Rd off
Neighborhood Rd . .Approx
1200 sq.ft. 3 acres. m/12 BA

....,, ~·

FOR.5AI.M

Pl&gt;meroy area. J. R. 740- ~~

I

G) r

good.

i2217·

$2,800.

R~c~c7:::.::,_

&amp;....;·;.;'"::.:::,_.::::-;:;:;;"':;;-::.....1

lllRSM.E

I

r•·-·-·~;::-'~

74().992·

SUVs

lllR~

· OIU113l
~Trwc..

1Q GMC Sonoma """"
""""""
gas mileege &amp; air, runs

$1500. 4&lt;18-3634

•T(3'04);a~~17

Johnson'S Tree
Service

• .,...,._...,

.r

n~ . "~

miles, $10900. 740-256-

9 A' It 7
• • $'

West

• I B6 4
t Q76I

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

I

r

r

rld

I

Hardwood CDII!Hry And FumHure

I

.Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removai -

=

... THE

HAS
SOMETHING

_ i

~-'

For rent or tor sale 2 BR
Ni'ce Remodeled Home in
town. No Pets, Renovated.
All ne_w carpet, Call
(740)446·7425
-----'-:--For Rent: Brick hOuse in
Mercerville, 1BR Apt, all util·
ities &amp; cable paid in Crown
City. (740)256·8132

HOP
CLASSIFIEDS

:..P::.I•e.:sa.:n.::.l_____
Kieler Buill· Valley-BisonHorse
anQ
livestock
Trllltl'l·
LoadmaxGooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
Utility- Aluma · Aluminum
TraUm· B&amp;W Gooseneck
Hitches- Trailer
Parts.
C
Ih
li 'I
arm c ael
raters.
(740)446·2412

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISDICD81
• New Homes
• Garages

Tractor _Mitsubushi Bu~ S·

SHORE WUZ

PITCMER !!

LOOI&lt;S BRAN'-NEW !l

A LONG TIME
AGO!! .

LOOK IT
HOW
'!'OUNG

H&lt;.KmiOLD

Mollohan Furniture. Gl'eat
selection -for a·Gre.at price.
Drive a little, save a loti 202
Clarl&lt; Chapel Ad, Bidwell,
OH. (740)388-Q173
,
Top of the line sofa, never
used, less than 6 mo. old,
$600;
Howa·rd
Millers
Grandfather Clock, less than.
6 mo old, $600, (740)446·
1981
'

Reg Quaner Horses for sate
Peppy· Sanbager ·and King
breeding. Call740·25&amp;6003
::aH-ije~r7;.:P;;m;;.
.
IV ·

r

!!

lb. &amp; horse crunch
$$5.20/50
7.22150 lb., &amp; more.
11

THE BORN LOSER

'LooK. M TP.f. W"'-'1 '{1.\ES( 'ICIJ~ pt I'F.EF~~~~Qi££1(.10"''
!Tf-1~~ J.lO

Pt:0R£.

t.~

Ql.ED'J

~Ct. TO IT!

,...NO;I&gt;U-J{, YO~ JU~T Ol.t&gt;!"''

I'll.

OL!&gt; 5CJ.IDCX..!

10

14ft trailer, 16ft 2 axle trail·
er, 3 hot-water power washers, blueprint cabinet. 6452729 or 379-2544

For Sale Wood &amp; Metal 1969 Rally Sport Camero,
Shop Tools may trade . 350 eng, 5 ·speed. good
$3,000 Firm 304·576·2667 shape $3,000/0BO

'====:=::::=:;==--=======~

2006 Trailer
20'. , excellent
20,000#, For Sale· hard maPle . fire- electric_
winch
wood, (740)992·5326
condillon SJ,ooo 304·675·

79~

1991 Ford Explorer XLT. 9"
lift, 33" tires, nerl bars,
146,000 ry~~es, Auto, PW,
PL. $2900 DBO. (740)339·
2070

t-lerley Davidson Golf Cart, 1995 Corvette, Red, auto·
gas engine, runs good $900 malic, new wheels and tires
304-675-3824
$10,000. Call 740-446·1 062

JET
AER..VION MOTORS' .
Repaired, New &amp;Aeb..tih In
Stock. Gall Ron Evans, 1600-537·9528.
-------~il0..-1 NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete ,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For ' Drains,
.Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Cklsad
Thursday, Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

1997 Chevy Blazer for sale.
Body in good shape and
runs really well. Blue Books
at $3,900 will accept $2,500
Call304-675-1379
94 Ford Tempo, 4DR , l&gt;ue,
AC, tinted windows , spoiler.'
front wheel drive. rims,
eKcellent gas mileage
$2000. 740-645-6474 days,
740-256-1020 nig~ls.
Black 2005 Pontiac G6,
loaded, warranty, less that
13000 miles. $17500 _ 740·
24&amp;-9880/740·645·2336

Help Want.ed

Help Wanted

THE 00515
STOI'PIN6 ••T141S·
BE TI4E

ARE "1'011 SURE "1'011 IIAVE

;:::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::;

26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740·992·6971

GARFIELD

I

I

i

l011

1 'I•:Hh

e~pl'""'""' diHI d•·~d•,P""'"'

o·~t&lt;."•HI

IIH •

!l lff'l

q l .111 ();'

;no;~s

;dr(•;~d~

b•,Pn

t,.n,&gt;r:-11

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I nevsr wony aboo! diets. The only carrotalhll
interesl me are lhe number you got in a diamond.' • Mae WISI
,

..........

P HUCM "r

with -

When asked how be mentally
: sla)'ed in the pme, !he athlete
~ replied, "Coacentnnlion comes
out of acombination of
P AN H E 0
coofldeftee IIIII;.-,~

I

I' I I I I' ·~~~~ICW&amp;
'=
dJ:f! IIIIIit~"lllaloW.
I' 12 I' r I' rI
.6
I II II IJ

L-L. .....1-..1-.L..o.l......l

IIIII

~ PRINT N\Mfl£0 t.ElTEtS IN

THESE .SColUAilfS

.

UNscw.tlE AIOVE UTTERS
TO Gfl ANSWER

SCRAMUTS ANSWW

I,.,,~,

•

11fEYSAY.~

ARLO&amp;JANIS

.-brdalnlnt-lrom I joint Vlntllll Ill ..tlent. lllinll
mollvallclhotdo 1 big - ·

BOUPTONUTZ

...

tiH

.,,,&lt;!

prr; p;H illq to IJP ell"-''' "I'Pd It Y"~' 11;we '"I' ·, 1
C hiliiCP fu IH' I'IV!JIV!•d 111 1tl!S Vl''llt

the

piPa-.;e cnnt.wt th " '":.11 ollie•· .11 l.ln .J.tr, •dH•'
lJ&lt;:il I •nr•;•, JIH•, "J!I'"'Itn"IY 1., p ... tu . tp.l!&lt;· 1· 1 IIH
d•"; t ·I •'P""'t' l '.d V"tll lldlol' II ,, .•

,,., ,1( &lt; •,

' "

i•'ll

•"- It" · P"l&lt;·ioli.lllt•r ""'""'·'''' I t'" '"
pt•l '&gt;O IL II ""!Hilt

'

1-

u-u

hhu-~-w.ey-~-TimYMY
Phllolopbor to elisa, "Mala wu bom witb IWO eyes
llld one IIIOIIIh. That il10 IIIey CUI -twice u much •

!St.0\~4

"'I)

Cow'll•"-.. 0-..rr .JOOf1 1i .u ,,, , "'

h;-~v ('

EFEZFLNWD JVIIVZFYN

~

ur

tiHI..,l' landowiH'I"•Il\lllf'raluwn•:'~ w1P1111 '.l•··q"

illld G.lllr;t

YPYDX XIIP YWNX." • BWRTPZ SySP

to flO! In wtlh • "" "'
your
·
aapaolally
101nt0nt1 whdli atwllyl PI ad IOIYI.
He or

QRIUWELLS

,·;uul&lt;ll&lt;~·

.111 11 1&gt;.1',

XW YP, SIX UFDDFDB TZFPDEN llYN

halpNIInlormJillon
to """ wllti you,
TAURUS (Ap~l IOoMiy 10) - II I ooworkor II 11 omblllouo u you oro, your

NOTI CE:
LANDOWNER S IN MEI GS
AND G ALLIA CO UNTI ES

c

"UFDDFDB llYN YFtUVAN YPVDX VIGil

aha mlghl hove -

(===~

\'Jo·•· l f'lll l diHJ SPIV't:C&lt;.,

Todl)"s a :Geqce~~

• good -

111... 111 Clls •llllllltiiMWIIIIII
I:IIIIJUC lilnlltii'S •~~~-

c;,,,,

f&amp;tl""' " " ' - -"'""""·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 21) Should cl........- worront H, you'll
roly on your lnvontiYo ·one~ naaou10111ut
- t o corry tho day lor you. Onk&gt;okaro
who ,........-saw you in Action before will
m~~rvel at the Edllon In you.
CAPRICORN (Dac. 22-Jin. 19) Condlllona In gonoiOI oontlnua lo ba
extraordinarily favorable for you.
ttowewr, It might lAke a dlly or two more
1o apprlciate tho Impact lhalo ....,..
ar. having on you.
ACUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fab. 19) - Savorol
f r - cculd ba playing a far moro ban·
eltclal role In your oflalra thon thoy might
have provlouoly. A palwllo'H halp you tho
moa1 may bo aomoone you jual mot
rocorotly.
.
PISCES (Fob: 20·Mon:l1 20) Conoamlng an ondoovor tloafolmportont
to you, yoUr continued auooeu will bl
avtdant onoo ogaln. Tho you. ·
mada yaalorclay will bring your halrl'l
dMIM.
,
ARIES (MatCh 21-Aprilli)- Hmlghtbo

45771

!,YIIIG TOP PIIClS Rill

'

can.

740-94~2217

Pleasanl Valley Hospi lal is · c,urrcmly
acceplin g resumes for a Community
Relaliuns Secmary. Experience in word
process ing applications, graphic design
applications and other general computer
ski ll s. General secrelarial experience
~equired. Genera.! knowledge of
pholography. Superior communicative
and _irtlerpersonal skills. Mus1 be able to
work weekends, evenings and holidays if
needed.
·
Send resu fl\CS to:
Pleasanl .Vlllley Hospital
eta· Human ~esou rccs
2520 Valley Dri ve
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
fax (o (304) 675-6975 or apply online at
w.ww.pvalley.org.
AA/EOE

to-

*'

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio

............12:.....

policy

-1

I

Community Relations Secretary

by Lull Campos

Cllobttltlrtlw-n.-ltom-b¥'""""-·""' .. _

·AstroGraph

tho pa.-r
_ . . In
.
may
ba -·
.......allhough
Dna dynamic
parflcular oould hold oulo hand ol frilo)dohlp. T111coR.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bapt. 22) - '111u'H bo
· oxceptlonally moumoful, avon · wllen
placed undor
001-11. Whal
olhoro may conoldor aa baing In a bind,
you'll - aa o opr1ng1&gt;oa111 to - your
Ingenuity for gain.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ~ lnalaed of
following o tighlly wllttan ocrlpl, be 11
lpontanecn.a u you can, eapeclally If
you have a topic of lmpo- to .._
CUll wtlh Otlws. Some of the ideal )"'U
ed-llb wiU prove to be your
onee.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Onco
. ogoJo, Lldy Lucl&lt; Wtll ba hanging oround.
doing all aha con to holp l m - your
financial poeltlon. You can facilitate
lhlngo avon moro ao by doing all th01 you

lfW?

-lllllllfi ..II. . DHI.II

:Jaor.~~._

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ltl8 illrangih ""''·

wilh bell doflnte Soulh mlltll gum lhe
trumpe lo make llvo ctube.)
Wael leada lhe lptlda _ ,: two, lack.
king. 'lbu 11M lop Irides: one
lptlda (Irick one), two '-11. two dia·
monds ond. two ctube. 'lbu can got lhe
lricka from cllbt, bul mu8l make
sure lhol Easl cannot gain lhe lead; Ofh.
orwlte, he wiH puah a lflldo 8lriJghl
lhrough your queen. Play 1 dub 10
dummy's king. Here, you end wtlh 1o
lrlci!J. Bul _,. n Eaal were YOitl In
ctlbt, your contr1c1 WOUld 111111 be lllle.

not • -

EVER'(THIN6? I 'fi.IOII611T
"(OU WERE 6011-16 TO 8RIN6
YOUR BOWLIN6 BALL. ..

ILMT's

Hill's Self
Storage

Manley's
Recycling

37 Faalblt

llteNBA

opporlun-.,.

SUNSHINE.CLUB

Insured
Free Eatlmat~

~r&gt;;l

-.t-

.

Pleasant Valley ' Hospilal is currently
accepting resumes for a full time (all
shifts) Reg istered Nurse in the ICCU
Department. Applicants mu st have a
·currenl Wesl Virginia license: Previous
ICCU experience preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Poinl Pleasant, vyv 25550
fax to (304) ()75-6975 or apply online ai
www.pvalley.org.
AAIEOE

::.al

491toem.,
K-

or

A·~

00 Dodge Neon $2795, 92
Jeep Wrangler $2900, 98
For.ct Windstar $1995, 95
DOOoe Caravan St295. 02
Chavy S·1 0 Blazer $4295,
01 Dodoe work van $2000,
Ford . Ranger $2600, 96
Chevy 1-ton Truck $3600.
B &amp; D Auto Sales, Hwy 150
• _
740 446 6865

110111

35 Nolordlnery

"'"*""'

PEANUTS

RN ICCU NURSE

34 Brlllla

• GalriMIII

Frooh opporlunitleo ""' · - tho boat
In you, one! lhfl OOUkl
bring you mony fun with
new lrtOnoa ~on llcllva - I n ol
lhlngo one! ba a jolnor.
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20)
~
you lhlnk of u . _ baing ... be lucl&lt;y to• you. In hlo har
oompany,lool&lt; tor waya to join- with
Wha-rH 1o thlo pat10n praaant1y'CANCER (Juno 21-July 221 • Lorglr·
than-UIUOI
hovarlng ol
your worl&lt; or carearlt conoamod, ond ona "' mora oould llllok to
you. Ba INdy to """"' on lhlngo onoa
thoy-.
LEO (July 23-AIIg. 22) aII

l&gt;t'Y!

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

'

28 Davenport 46 T'll30 Trickle
ch'11111
32 Gold 1'-..d 47 .........

10~

11

Go sight·
uelng

'lllood.y, Juno11, 2007
ly lomloe- Ooal

;::::::::::::~'~·:.~·

- - - - - - -.6x12 enclosed blacl&lt; trailer,
$1500; 5x10 utilily !tailer,
$400; 5x10 utinty trailer, 03 Ford Taurus, 54,000
$500. (614)595·7773 or
miles. $5900 080. 740-256·
t ·BOO· 798·4686
1618

For S&lt;ie: Gasoline welder,
390 AMP Chrysler motor.
Used very little. Asking
$1000. Call· between Sam
and Spm. 441 ·3061

'1&gt;/&gt;.Y

.,_,_·· .
.,.
., : ·, : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ;

t'IJR SALE
1..---iiliiiiiiO..-J

0111
27

-a

.

PAAIIIC.

u•~

Put

nul-

43 Vllllllll
hoe1
44 Grwd'e
COUiin
45 Coolt In 1
wok

O
. ....Uidlt:

BIG NATE

446-0007

1

••

lalner
24 Shampoo
lddlllve
25 Cilllor
26 Ahll1 or

Wlt8n WI Itt bleldlng, WI a!Waye fly 10
roach a1 leatl a game conlracl.
WI. w1n do lhlt, nWI haVe a
ma)or-t~~H Ill, we charge Into lour heerta
or lour lfiiM r ,we do no1 haVe a
ma)or-t~~H Ill, wt ltHr towanllttH nolnlnp. We bid live ol I minor only when
we are confldont lhlt lhtH no-frump,
lour helrta and lour epadaa are unmak·
able. Bul aomelimot, once we haVe
rrinor-tulllll, we •
be
uncortaln tlbaulllveo n&lt;&gt;trump. How do
wolnvMIIgato- no-frump'a vllbitlly?
l.aolc 81 lhe Soulh hand. 'lbu open one ·
ckb ond par1ner reapondl- clube, a.
imH flllle showing ll\oeilMI8 c:Uls, aome
11)-12 polnll (elghlloaOII), ond no lour·
calli or lOnger ma)or. Wltal WOUld you do

helrta,

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

0!·!

N - Eut

Put

you convert lo llveo no-lnlmp. (Noll lhlt

~··t'1d*•
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

HAY &amp;

....,
livest(ldl; Feed, shelled corn

'

$ For Old Auto Bat1eries 199 $2.50oa, 100+ $3.00ea,
250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT·
TERY TERMINAL 1-800·
796·6797

'!""----.

L__...;G;iiRAIN:;;:·,;._.,J

= .r

•rill!-~---.---,~

JIJne 23 &amp;
Registration 8 am
Luncheon
Pastor Steve Little
All

5 Dtlll coin
I Col....
Cfldlt
7 Guy'a IIIII
• Colllctont'
lltml

-Is it no-trump
.or no-trump?

OF SCHOOL I ---....
it&gt;I'IORf'IPW!

.• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System·
• Helios System ·

3 lrlllnd

are lhlnldng tlbout - no-tru,.,,
bul can lhe oppot1enll caah 1oo many
111ar1 ll'ldll? Since you do no1 knOw.
l8bld lhtH dlamondl, wl'ich llhowe a
81opper In lhlt lUll. Md when Norlh
relums lhe compllmenl wilh lhrae

We Deliver To You I
"Women's Retreat
· Theme- My Sister's shoes"

4=ub

eo.m-·.
latlncla

nacl?

WE WUZ

Showmasler Show
Feeds ·

2

41 Atllncl
42 " - ' t

'lbu

Stop &amp; Compare

nr-":':'-.;..;--_, - - - - - - - -

~

HER PAW'S SHOTGUN

'f'EP,THAT

WEDDIN'

748-992·1811

i

BHutfful Aptl.lt JICkeon
Eltlttl. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 to $560.
74Q-446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opporlunily. This
institution is an Equa!
Opportunity Provider arid
Employer.
Cl
ean quiet spacious 18 A,
·
stovelfrig,
country setting,
no petS/smoking, firsVIast
mo+dep $350 992-3543
New 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
Also, units on SA 160 _Pets
(
Wei
1 7401441 0194
coma
•
.

Fertlllzer and

• Complete
Remodertng

A HIDDEN TREASURE! · - - - - - -... 470, 4·wh.dr.,1BHP,dtBSBI,
Compact ~rector
very good
11
laurel
Commons LANDOWNERS-NEED
'
200
52
992
Apartments. Largest in lhe EXTRA FARM INCOME? cond., • ·
"3085 ·
areal Beautifully renovated We !lave responsible sportsthroughout ·including brand men looking to lease hunting
~
new k~chen and b~lh. property in this area. L.o~----•-_.1
Sta~ing at $405. Call today! Midwest Trophy Leas~s Inc. 2 Gentle riding ponies, $
225
(JOo1)273·3344
(304)532·6015 or 1·800· each. pretty galled riding
Apartment for rent, 1-2 698·t073
mare, rides· great. $450 .·
Bdrm., remodelad, new car·
367-7760
pet, stove &amp; trig., water,
sewer,.trash pd. Middleport.
6 Donkeys-5 female, 1 white
$425.00. No pelS . . Ref.
Gooos
male. Call 740-256-9247 or
required. 74.0-843-5264.
740.256·6504

r10

ELVINE'( FOUND

Mushroom Compost
$3SAScoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed,

t A KJ

•AJIBI

twm

river
23 Dye con-

Allt.m"'

!!!!!!!!!!::::~ .

BARNEY

FOR YOU!!

4RM &amp; Balh. stova .fridQB, Commercial building "For
3·4 bdrm, 2 bath, stove, utilities P'id, upslairs, 46 Rent" 1900 square feel, off
St ·
No
pets · street p_arking. Great IDcarefrig, w/d hookup, pool and Ol ive
outbuilding: $650 mo. plus $450/month. 446-3945
lion! 749 Third Avenue in
utiiMies and $650 deposit.
Gallipolis. Rent $375/mo.
Short or long term lease
Call Wayne (404) 456-3802
available.
References
Prime commercial space for
require&lt;!. NO PETS. 740·
rent at Springvalley Plaza.
379·2317 for application.
+
. C IMr
C811645-2t:92ANIID.IbNf
• •
i:iiir.;..;.;.~----,~
3BR, 2BA, Appliances, Near
Holzer
$650/mo
plus

, looalllfw

Opening lead: • 7

CARPENTER
SERVICE

L,---liiiiiiilmfiili-,1

DOWN

??

TtfiS MV6T BE A PVTTING %00.

17
call
..,.
11 VCR maker 40 Thigh22 Siberian
Cite, In Ill

• KQ B

Well

8autlo

1

10

sw.·

t 10 I I

• Q 7'

Dealer: South
Vulnerlble: Neither

I.

I

I

a

• J1

•QJIOS

• I 2

Wise Concrete

rr:

•Ktol52
Eul

• A 10 8 7 5

r7amiht I•B•ta4:•

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

2

I

Nice used 3 bedroom hOme ---~---,
vinyl/shingle. Will help with House for Rent In Pt.
deUvery. 740·3B?·4367 .
Pleasanl 304-675-6224

,.

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

1

04 Nissen XTerra 49000

·- -

........

• 4 2

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

~~S~~

Great uS&amp;d 2005 3 bedroom
isxeo with vinyl/shingle.
Must sell, Only 525,995 with
&gt;elivory Ca'lf (740)385 •367
"'
·
·
-.
New3Bedroomh0mes from
5214.36 per month, Includes
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
set·up. (740)385-2434

vans wilh ~rranly.-Prioad

--..,

-10--

Phillip
Alder

' 1oseii.Thisisour121h
Anniversary. Slop by or call
740-446-0103
'

r1!1

RIA Croaaword Puzzle .

BRIDGE

243-51111 .
(F) Boston Tonier $50, (M) ~16!11r:B--~--....,
_ _______
•
Pug s2oo. (F&gt; Pekinges•C
~
RDOting,
,. s I·d·mg,
.~mtiBierlnAU11and
.
"•~
-~
$200, 4 Boston Tenier/Pug
•~~
s·
0 k
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
lenoad in yard. $37S.OO 8
Swks, $50/each. 379.2467 ~-· i'oiORiiiiiSw;liiiiiiioo_.l
Offit, BC S,
month$200.00deposit. 740 _ - - - - - - - -.
Doors, Windows,
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007
Gnaclouo Uvlng 1 and 2 AKC Golden Retri111111r pup- _1980 clloYY Van .
Good Electric, Plumbing,
949.2025 .
::2:..::::::._____ Bedroom Apts at Vlllaoe pies. $200. 741)-643-2234 wort&lt;
van.
Runo good.
Drywall,
2 Br
AIC, Very nice, Manor and Riverside Apts. in
$600
7
2025
R ~;., 1·
R m
Johnson Mobile Home Perk. Middleport, from 5327 to AKC Mini Pinscher puppies
.00. 40·949·
Bm....,e tng, 00
All'lypes of concrete
Additions
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 $592. ?40-992-5064 . Equal re d• choc ., bl ; AKC M'1111· gs Plymouth van , air, auto vOwner· Rick Wise
Housing Opportunity. This Dauschund puppies, br. 6 , s 1600 080. 740.256 .
Local Contractor
740-992-5929
3BA on family pari&lt;. Water inslitution is 811 Equal dapple, bl. dapple, bl; AKC 1652
740-367..()544
and trash service Inducted. Opportunity Provider and Shehie puppies (2 males) n'.:~:':"-----""':.,
Free Estimates
740-416-1698
No pets. Dopcsil required.
slw; AKC Standard Poodle r«J4W
MaroR~~OR;/
..
740-367..()536
:._74:;:044~1~-7~033;;.....- - . , _E_:_mployer..:.__·- -- - - puppies, bt., cr., apr.; all vet
ll-.-...:J
• L----.:...----..;..:,.;_..J
APARlMDliS
Honeysuckle
Hills checked call for prices,
lllR lbNr
Apmmenis now accepting (740)696-1085
1980 1&lt;2, 400, 2
cylin·
'-.-..:;~---_.! applications for 1 ·and f!BA
....,
apts. No rental assistance AKC Reg. YOJkie 1 yr. old der... Runs good. S4oo. iir::i~;;;;,;;;H~o;;~;;IE;;;;;;;~
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments available at this time. Rent M.,adorable,51bs .,crate Firm ... 740-742-2422 ·
IMI'RoVEMfMS ,
tor R8nt, Meigs County, In starts at $3 10 month. Equal trained.house broken.up to
2001 Kawasaki Eliminate
55 acres more or less. town. No Pets, Deposit Housing
Opportunity. date. $500. 740-742-2868.
125 . . garage kept, mint
$69,000. Call 740·256·9247 Required, (740)992·5174 or 1740)446-3344.
BASEMENT
(7401441·0110.
:..".....:_ _ _ __ _ CKC Cocker Spaniel pup· cond ., 682 miles, $2000,
Horse
Prop.
40xBO ~------- Middeport, Beech St., 2 br. pies, black, buff, chocolate. (740)949-1006
Unconditional lifetime g~o~arWATERPROOFING
lnstJiated&amp;heated barn w/10 1 and 2 bedroom apart· furnished apartment, utilities
.
Chocolate spotted Ready 2005 H.O.Soft liat'l .....
~·stem antee.
local relererx;es furbox stalls/ 4 BR living quar· ments, furnished and unfur· paid, deposit &amp; references , July 1 304-67 5-4243 ·
maroon
w/embossed nished. Established 1975.
terS/ 43 acres.446·3844LJM nished. and houses in nQ pets, (740)992-Q165
CKC Reg. Boxer pups, .7 ftames.t or 200 made,800 Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Pomeroy and Middleport,
wks. old,1 fawn F.2 brlndkl miles since new,price 0870, Aogers Basement
JUAL "-"'~n:
s~•rity
· depost't requt'red, no Mt·ddl~· North 4th Ave 2
•·
W
"~
·•·"·
·• M, 1~0-667· 3502,304·481· $21 ,500, call for delails-7'!": Waterproofing.
AlVIl.D
pets, 740-992-2218.
br. furnished apartment, 5264 _ $400.
1;94:'l9~-2~2-17•.~~:---,
·
deposit &amp; references, no
Approx. 1·3 aCJes i1 Green 2 bedroom apt, stove, pels, (740)992-Q165
.BoATS &amp;SM!JfORS
refridg.,
wate'r,
trash.
:..__.;..:.._
_ _- : - - - Toy Poodle. (F) apricot. Reg.
or
Springfield
Twp,
Applehead Chihuahua, Reg ·
lllR AI£
•
·
(740)645·8686, (740)245· Deposit required, Rent Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 446- Blue. Quality Fathers Day ; $350.
(740)446-7620, ,3736
babies. 645-69B7
9323
(740)441·9872, (740)709· - - - - - - - Muum 23ft, VB alpha 1. 94,
www.Uml&gt;o....,..keab~Aetry•..,,.
,., . · ·
b
b 1
b k
; : : : : : : : : : : : : . -9.5::1.::.9_ _ _- - : - - apartment,
New Haven, 2
br.
lufOIShed
M
open
ow,
e
ow
00
'
references · &amp;
lNICAL
Great Shape $10500. 740bed
Ap · · A ·
............mnNTS
2
room
I. tn aetna deposit, no pets, (740)992· L-.,;;"il;i;"',:::"~~_.J 256·2660
:
riO.
$375.00 a f.A. $200.00 0165
iir~:;:::;~---::--.,1
H~
l"' .. u~ &amp;
deposit
Includes
water,
HoHon
H378,
Intermediate
Moro....,.,.........,H
FOR JbNr
R o•~ . ·.
~-..:;~---.,1 sewer, trash. 740-949-2025. Tara
Townhouse French Horn for sale.
,.._,....,
Apartments,
Very
Spacious,
Excellent
condition.
$1300
$155/mol Buy 4bd HUD 2 BR 1 112 bath on Jackson
A
,
'
2 Bedrooms, C/ ; .1 1/2 OBO, call446-7783
05 Starcraft 28ft, large slid·
YOUNG'S
home! 5% dn, 20yrs @ 8%. Pike. $450fmo + deposit. Bath, Aduh Pool &amp; Baby
ing awning, new condition,
For Listirlgs 800-559.4f109 Rei. required. no pets. Call Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
$13800. 304·638-8058 or
_•1_7_o9_ _ _ _ _ _ _
44::-6-4::-_o5_1_-::---'- No Pels. Lease Plus
638-5800
.2 BA Apt near Rodney area. Security Deposit Required,
l:'.t.nl.•
-------1 Bdrm. HOUSE tor $450
I'l'lft!Y•
2002 Springdale 5th wheel
Room Additions &amp;
WID, fridge, stove ·induded. (740)367·7086.
•Prompl and Qualify
Remodeling
Mnth., Includes all utilities &amp; No pets! Call 446- 1271 or
Camper 26ft. w/slide out.
trash . J.R. 740-243·5811 . 709 1657
TwinRiversTowerisaccept·
Sleeps 6·8 asking $10,000
Work
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
- -- -- - - · Depltst mon req. ing applications for waiting
304·675·6338
0% Financing- 36 Mos.
*Reasonable Ra1es
Roofing &amp; Gutters
3 bedroom House in 2 BR, Newly Carpeted, list tor Hud-subsized, 1· br, available now on John
Vlriyl Siding &amp; Painting
*Insured .
Middleport $400 .00 a month Freshly painted. W~lki ng apartmenl.for
the D!M're Z Trak Zero T...-na &amp; 97 Hitchhiker Discovery. 34
Patio and Porch Oec:ks
*Experienced
$200.00 deposit. 740-949- distance to UAG. Private elderly/disabled call 675- 5.99% Fixed Aate on John l /2ft, 5th wheel ca mper
WV038725
2025.
entrance
and
d~ck. 6679 Equal
Housing Deere Gators Carmichael made by NU-WA. 1 Double
References Available!
V.C. YOUNG Ill
- - - - - - - - $400/mo, (6141595 _7773 or Oppo~unity
Equipmenl (
_
_ slide and 1 single slide plus .
7401446 2412
Call Gary Stanley @
3 Bedroom House · in 1_800 _798 _4686
~·;;.;.;;~~--....,
extras that will go with this
992-b2t5
::&gt;(Ill( I(JY OhH
Syracuse. $500/month +
SPAtt
1952 Ford 8N Drive it Home unit. Excellent shape. Asking
740-742-2293
LJ~(.II
l 'o( ,Jif ~ pr••('Hl
deposit No Pets. (304)675· 3 Rms &amp; bath. W/D hookup,
fOR RENT
3. hHch, PTO, See H @ 7B St6,500. Call after 6pm 740Please leave messa e
5J32 weekends 740-591· clean, No Pels. 446-t519
~~------_.1 Burdelte Addition Pt. 208·0507 or 256·1243

2.fullbail1swlwhirlpootubs. deposit,
(740)245-9880,
Iorge LA .' Asking 87,500. (740)645·3836.
7
7029
l!0·44S·
4 Br:, 2 bath home on
Sale by Ow~er. 3BR 2BA, Mulberry Ave., central air,
nt}wty remodeled house gas heat. &lt;;all 740 . 992wlbas.ement. 4 miles out 33 14 .
· 21B. $98000. 256-1336
-------M
H
AtllfiUonl
local company offering wNO
1
~
• DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams for you to boy your
Double lot t 6x60. 2006
home instead of renting.
Trailer 2br, 2ba, · laundry
'100% financing
Room, Porch, Heat Pump, • Less than perfect credit
Garage, Car port, Storage accepted
building, Fenced corner lot. • Payment could be the
1 blOCk. from Mason Levy same as rent.
·
caM after 5pm 304-773-5109 Mortgage
Locators.
or 304-675·8893
(740)367.0000

I

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

328 Jac1cson Pike
OuaJity
' cars. trudui iQI

Ellm View
Apartments

• W -/&lt;i'yef hOOiwp

www.mydallylenUnel.com

coot-

COIIYEHIEHTLY LOCAT· Pole Bams 30X40ll10'
ED l AFFORDABLE!
Delivered &amp; Ereclad $8,595
lbwnhouse
.......nments, plus Sales Tax. Call
- ' FOR (937)7111-1471 www.nafion.
ard'or &amp;mall houses
RENT. Col fl40)«1-1111 widepolebom~com
lor application &amp; informalion. _ _:________
Slale Quarfers 99-06, mint
Elficienci aparimenllor rent condition. 740-208-0090
in Middlaport, $250 a monlh
..__ ; .
. I
plus dopoott, (740)992-M49 Treadmill ~ uery lilt e,
:..__;:..__.;.......;._ _ _ computer desk, table &amp;
chairs, 4 p1ece btua living
loom, Ioiii of olher fumltttre
.
304-67&amp;-3988
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments Trey Buitt Hoarse Appn;lx ~
•Central heat &amp; ~
6 Hrs total ~- Asking

0265

flOw Haven, 4+ acres.!3 br.,
2 ba. , total eIect., gas log

i

fOR'IbNr

I

12Bdrm., 11/2balh,$350M,

DOWN PAYMENr programs lor you to buy your 10.66 acre~ t594 Norlhup
homeinsteadotrenting·.
Rd.inGreenTwp. GwliaCo..
" 100% financing
24x48 barn, recent SUMy,
• less than perfect cre:cJit no restrictions, beautiful
accepled
hoose location. all utilities on
• Payment could be the si te . $79.900. (937)382·
same as rent.
4n5, (937)605·3581
Mortgage
Locators. - -- - - -- {740)367-oooo
3 acres of Land tor Sale on
Sandhill Ad. across from
Beautifui·Middlepon home' Krebs Chapel S30.000 304·
38R, 2BA. full basement. 895-3929
Many NEW featuoesll Must - - - - - - - seethisane!740-4 16-1 548 4+- acres for Rent in
r---~---, Gallipolis Ferry off Crab
Cree~ has Septic, &amp; Wolf.
also looking lor Female
Companion to share 'Uving
EKpenses 304-674-4658

=

MOIIIU fb,m;

llonclly, June 18, 2007
ALLEYOOP

\

�•/

'

Monday, June 18,2007

3. BA, 1BA, Large Family
~oom. fridge, WID, Large
lot. Close to Hofzer. CaU
4041-5826 or 446·9664
'
3)ld
GALLIPOLIS
l'oracloourel
Buy
for

~=====::;
OWNER
FINANCING

f\ke 312 singlewides
From$1 ,800-.,
paymen1
Scon (740) 828-2750

'-------..1

$50,900! On~ $404/mo., 5%
"'· 20yrs 11 9%. For listings
mJ 800·559-41 09 xF254
Radman Ooublewide 70x2ll,
3br, 2ba, call for Info
3BA 2 s Ba1hs LR oR S45.ooo JOol-liB2·3057
. .room , 20x20
'
.game• - - - - - - - Family
2 car garage, 3 car SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
outbuilding, t acre. 4 miles Program SO Down, 11 you
out
Bulaville
Pike . own l-and 01 use Fllmily

room.

I,H•UO-HOIIIIIiiiiiitESI 4bd oltly
$155/mo., 3bd $181/mo..
More 1-4bd homes avail·
able . 5% oo, 20 yrs 0 8%.
Forliotings 1-800-55!1-1109
x F144.
In"""- House lor renl! 3
80.. 2 balh. newly romodeled, tolal elactric. 7~
5264.
:::::::....._____
Large 4 bedroom house In
" " " -· uery clean, r-'1'
remodeled, new cabinets,
new carpet, (l40)94~2303

j

$174.000.00/ Negotiable. Land We""" the Bani&lt; your
(740)446-8050
Approved 606474-oJBO
~

Local co~::::~;!.ng"NO t A~~

All ,_, ntlte advertising
. in this newspaper is
· ·.ubject to the Federal

F'ltlr Housing ACI Of 1968
which makes it Illegal to
ldvertl_.. "any
pNference, limitation or
dlacrtmlnltlon based on
race, ~or, religion. sex
famltlal st.tu1 or nlll:ion•l
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
diKrtminetion."
. Thia newsp1per will not

knowingly accept

edvertisement• tor rut

Htatewflictlisin
'
violation
or the law. Our

readers are hereby
Jnfonnedthatall

. ._.llnga advertised In
thla riewspaper are
•v•llable 0 ~ an equal
opportunity bases.

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

For·salellat"ld contract. 3 BA
house in Gallipolis. W!D
.
$ 50
connectiOn
1 0 down
$400/mo. Also 1 BA in
Gallipolis
$750
down
$200/mo. Call Wayne 404459-3802 for information.
HUD HOMES! 4bd · only
$155/mo., 3bd $181 /mo.,
More 1·4bd ' homes avail·
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs @ 8%.
~r listings 1·600·559-4109

x F144.
fireplace . frig .. stove. dishwasher , hot tub outside,
great
view:
$55,000,
(304)882·3021
·
Newly built home in Green
Twp. on King Rd off
Neighborhood Rd . .Approx
1200 sq.ft. 3 acres. m/12 BA

....,, ~·

FOR.5AI.M

Pl&gt;meroy area. J. R. 740- ~~

I

G) r

good.

i2217·

$2,800.

R~c~c7:::.::,_

&amp;....;·;.;'"::.:::,_.::::-;:;:;;"':;;-::.....1

lllRSM.E

I

r•·-·-·~;::-'~

74().992·

SUVs

lllR~

· OIU113l
~Trwc..

1Q GMC Sonoma """"
""""""
gas mileege &amp; air, runs

$1500. 4&lt;18-3634

•T(3'04);a~~17

Johnson'S Tree
Service

• .,...,._...,

.r

n~ . "~

miles, $10900. 740-256-

9 A' It 7
• • $'

West

• I B6 4
t Q76I

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

I

r

r

rld

I

Hardwood CDII!Hry And FumHure

I

.Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removai -

=

... THE

HAS
SOMETHING

_ i

~-'

For rent or tor sale 2 BR
Ni'ce Remodeled Home in
town. No Pets, Renovated.
All ne_w carpet, Call
(740)446·7425
-----'-:--For Rent: Brick hOuse in
Mercerville, 1BR Apt, all util·
ities &amp; cable paid in Crown
City. (740)256·8132

HOP
CLASSIFIEDS

:..P::.I•e.:sa.:n.::.l_____
Kieler Buill· Valley-BisonHorse
anQ
livestock
Trllltl'l·
LoadmaxGooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
Utility- Aluma · Aluminum
TraUm· B&amp;W Gooseneck
Hitches- Trailer
Parts.
C
Ih
li 'I
arm c ael
raters.
(740)446·2412

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISDICD81
• New Homes
• Garages

Tractor _Mitsubushi Bu~ S·

SHORE WUZ

PITCMER !!

LOOI&lt;S BRAN'-NEW !l

A LONG TIME
AGO!! .

LOOK IT
HOW
'!'OUNG

H&lt;.KmiOLD

Mollohan Furniture. Gl'eat
selection -for a·Gre.at price.
Drive a little, save a loti 202
Clarl&lt; Chapel Ad, Bidwell,
OH. (740)388-Q173
,
Top of the line sofa, never
used, less than 6 mo. old,
$600;
Howa·rd
Millers
Grandfather Clock, less than.
6 mo old, $600, (740)446·
1981
'

Reg Quaner Horses for sate
Peppy· Sanbager ·and King
breeding. Call740·25&amp;6003
::aH-ije~r7;.:P;;m;;.
.
IV ·

r

!!

lb. &amp; horse crunch
$$5.20/50
7.22150 lb., &amp; more.
11

THE BORN LOSER

'LooK. M TP.f. W"'-'1 '{1.\ES( 'ICIJ~ pt I'F.EF~~~~Qi££1(.10"''
!Tf-1~~ J.lO

Pt:0R£.

t.~

Ql.ED'J

~Ct. TO IT!

,...NO;I&gt;U-J{, YO~ JU~T Ol.t&gt;!"''

I'll.

OL!&gt; 5CJ.IDCX..!

10

14ft trailer, 16ft 2 axle trail·
er, 3 hot-water power washers, blueprint cabinet. 6452729 or 379-2544

For Sale Wood &amp; Metal 1969 Rally Sport Camero,
Shop Tools may trade . 350 eng, 5 ·speed. good
$3,000 Firm 304·576·2667 shape $3,000/0BO

'====:=::::=:;==--=======~

2006 Trailer
20'. , excellent
20,000#, For Sale· hard maPle . fire- electric_
winch
wood, (740)992·5326
condillon SJ,ooo 304·675·

79~

1991 Ford Explorer XLT. 9"
lift, 33" tires, nerl bars,
146,000 ry~~es, Auto, PW,
PL. $2900 DBO. (740)339·
2070

t-lerley Davidson Golf Cart, 1995 Corvette, Red, auto·
gas engine, runs good $900 malic, new wheels and tires
304-675-3824
$10,000. Call 740-446·1 062

JET
AER..VION MOTORS' .
Repaired, New &amp;Aeb..tih In
Stock. Gall Ron Evans, 1600-537·9528.
-------~il0..-1 NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete ,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For ' Drains,
.Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Cklsad
Thursday, Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

1997 Chevy Blazer for sale.
Body in good shape and
runs really well. Blue Books
at $3,900 will accept $2,500
Call304-675-1379
94 Ford Tempo, 4DR , l&gt;ue,
AC, tinted windows , spoiler.'
front wheel drive. rims,
eKcellent gas mileage
$2000. 740-645-6474 days,
740-256-1020 nig~ls.
Black 2005 Pontiac G6,
loaded, warranty, less that
13000 miles. $17500 _ 740·
24&amp;-9880/740·645·2336

Help Want.ed

Help Wanted

THE 00515
STOI'PIN6 ••T141S·
BE TI4E

ARE "1'011 SURE "1'011 IIAVE

;:::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::;

26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740·992·6971

GARFIELD

I

I

i

l011

1 'I•:Hh

e~pl'""'""' diHI d•·~d•,P""'"'

o·~t&lt;."•HI

IIH •

!l lff'l

q l .111 ();'

;no;~s

;dr(•;~d~

b•,Pn

t,.n,&gt;r:-11

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I nevsr wony aboo! diets. The only carrotalhll
interesl me are lhe number you got in a diamond.' • Mae WISI
,

..........

P HUCM "r

with -

When asked how be mentally
: sla)'ed in the pme, !he athlete
~ replied, "Coacentnnlion comes
out of acombination of
P AN H E 0
coofldeftee IIIII;.-,~

I

I' I I I I' ·~~~~ICW&amp;
'=
dJ:f! IIIIIit~"lllaloW.
I' 12 I' r I' rI
.6
I II II IJ

L-L. .....1-..1-.L..o.l......l

IIIII

~ PRINT N\Mfl£0 t.ElTEtS IN

THESE .SColUAilfS

.

UNscw.tlE AIOVE UTTERS
TO Gfl ANSWER

SCRAMUTS ANSWW

I,.,,~,

•

11fEYSAY.~

ARLO&amp;JANIS

.-brdalnlnt-lrom I joint Vlntllll Ill ..tlent. lllinll
mollvallclhotdo 1 big - ·

BOUPTONUTZ

...

tiH

.,,,&lt;!

prr; p;H illq to IJP ell"-''' "I'Pd It Y"~' 11;we '"I' ·, 1
C hiliiCP fu IH' I'IV!JIV!•d 111 1tl!S Vl''llt

the

piPa-.;e cnnt.wt th " '":.11 ollie•· .11 l.ln .J.tr, •dH•'
lJ&lt;:il I •nr•;•, JIH•, "J!I'"'Itn"IY 1., p ... tu . tp.l!&lt;· 1· 1 IIH
d•"; t ·I •'P""'t' l '.d V"tll lldlol' II ,, .•

,,., ,1( &lt; •,

' "

i•'ll

•"- It" · P"l&lt;·ioli.lllt•r ""'""'·'''' I t'" '"
pt•l '&gt;O IL II ""!Hilt

'

1-

u-u

hhu-~-w.ey-~-TimYMY
Phllolopbor to elisa, "Mala wu bom witb IWO eyes
llld one IIIOIIIh. That il10 IIIey CUI -twice u much •

!St.0\~4

"'I)

Cow'll•"-.. 0-..rr .JOOf1 1i .u ,,, , "'

h;-~v ('

EFEZFLNWD JVIIVZFYN

~

ur

tiHI..,l' landowiH'I"•Il\lllf'raluwn•:'~ w1P1111 '.l•··q"

illld G.lllr;t

YPYDX XIIP YWNX." • BWRTPZ SySP

to flO! In wtlh • "" "'
your
·
aapaolally
101nt0nt1 whdli atwllyl PI ad IOIYI.
He or

QRIUWELLS

,·;uul&lt;ll&lt;~·

.111 11 1&gt;.1',

XW YP, SIX UFDDFDB TZFPDEN llYN

halpNIInlormJillon
to """ wllti you,
TAURUS (Ap~l IOoMiy 10) - II I ooworkor II 11 omblllouo u you oro, your

NOTI CE:
LANDOWNER S IN MEI GS
AND G ALLIA CO UNTI ES

c

"UFDDFDB llYN YFtUVAN YPVDX VIGil

aha mlghl hove -

(===~

\'Jo·•· l f'lll l diHJ SPIV't:C&lt;.,

Todl)"s a :Geqce~~

• good -

111... 111 Clls •llllllltiiMWIIIIII
I:IIIIJUC lilnlltii'S •~~~-

c;,,,,

f&amp;tl""' " " ' - -"'""""·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dac. 21) Should cl........- worront H, you'll
roly on your lnvontiYo ·one~ naaou10111ut
- t o corry tho day lor you. Onk&gt;okaro
who ,........-saw you in Action before will
m~~rvel at the Edllon In you.
CAPRICORN (Dac. 22-Jin. 19) Condlllona In gonoiOI oontlnua lo ba
extraordinarily favorable for you.
ttowewr, It might lAke a dlly or two more
1o apprlciate tho Impact lhalo ....,..
ar. having on you.
ACUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fab. 19) - Savorol
f r - cculd ba playing a far moro ban·
eltclal role In your oflalra thon thoy might
have provlouoly. A palwllo'H halp you tho
moa1 may bo aomoone you jual mot
rocorotly.
.
PISCES (Fob: 20·Mon:l1 20) Conoamlng an ondoovor tloafolmportont
to you, yoUr continued auooeu will bl
avtdant onoo ogaln. Tho you. ·
mada yaalorclay will bring your halrl'l
dMIM.
,
ARIES (MatCh 21-Aprilli)- Hmlghtbo

45771

!,YIIIG TOP PIIClS Rill

'

can.

740-94~2217

Pleasanl Valley Hospi lal is · c,urrcmly
acceplin g resumes for a Community
Relaliuns Secmary. Experience in word
process ing applications, graphic design
applications and other general computer
ski ll s. General secrelarial experience
~equired. Genera.! knowledge of
pholography. Superior communicative
and _irtlerpersonal skills. Mus1 be able to
work weekends, evenings and holidays if
needed.
·
Send resu fl\CS to:
Pleasanl .Vlllley Hospital
eta· Human ~esou rccs
2520 Valley Dri ve
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
fax (o (304) 675-6975 or apply online at
w.ww.pvalley.org.
AA/EOE

to-

*'

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio

............12:.....

policy

-1

I

Community Relations Secretary

by Lull Campos

Cllobttltlrtlw-n.-ltom-b¥'""""-·""' .. _

·AstroGraph

tho pa.-r
_ . . In
.
may
ba -·
.......allhough
Dna dynamic
parflcular oould hold oulo hand ol frilo)dohlp. T111coR.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bapt. 22) - '111u'H bo
· oxceptlonally moumoful, avon · wllen
placed undor
001-11. Whal
olhoro may conoldor aa baing In a bind,
you'll - aa o opr1ng1&gt;oa111 to - your
Ingenuity for gain.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ~ lnalaed of
following o tighlly wllttan ocrlpl, be 11
lpontanecn.a u you can, eapeclally If
you have a topic of lmpo- to .._
CUll wtlh Otlws. Some of the ideal )"'U
ed-llb wiU prove to be your
onee.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Onco
. ogoJo, Lldy Lucl&lt; Wtll ba hanging oround.
doing all aha con to holp l m - your
financial poeltlon. You can facilitate
lhlngo avon moro ao by doing all th01 you

lfW?

-lllllllfi ..II. . DHI.II

:Jaor.~~._

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ltl8 illrangih ""''·

wilh bell doflnte Soulh mlltll gum lhe
trumpe lo make llvo ctube.)
Wael leada lhe lptlda _ ,: two, lack.
king. 'lbu 11M lop Irides: one
lptlda (Irick one), two '-11. two dia·
monds ond. two ctube. 'lbu can got lhe
lricka from cllbt, bul mu8l make
sure lhol Easl cannot gain lhe lead; Ofh.
orwlte, he wiH puah a lflldo 8lriJghl
lhrough your queen. Play 1 dub 10
dummy's king. Here, you end wtlh 1o
lrlci!J. Bul _,. n Eaal were YOitl In
ctlbt, your contr1c1 WOUld 111111 be lllle.

not • -

EVER'(THIN6? I 'fi.IOII611T
"(OU WERE 6011-16 TO 8RIN6
YOUR BOWLIN6 BALL. ..

ILMT's

Hill's Self
Storage

Manley's
Recycling

37 Faalblt

llteNBA

opporlun-.,.

SUNSHINE.CLUB

Insured
Free Eatlmat~

~r&gt;;l

-.t-

.

Pleasant Valley ' Hospilal is currently
accepting resumes for a full time (all
shifts) Reg istered Nurse in the ICCU
Department. Applicants mu st have a
·currenl Wesl Virginia license: Previous
ICCU experience preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Poinl Pleasant, vyv 25550
fax to (304) ()75-6975 or apply online ai
www.pvalley.org.
AAIEOE

::.al

491toem.,
K-

or

A·~

00 Dodge Neon $2795, 92
Jeep Wrangler $2900, 98
For.ct Windstar $1995, 95
DOOoe Caravan St295. 02
Chavy S·1 0 Blazer $4295,
01 Dodoe work van $2000,
Ford . Ranger $2600, 96
Chevy 1-ton Truck $3600.
B &amp; D Auto Sales, Hwy 150
• _
740 446 6865

110111

35 Nolordlnery

"'"*""'

PEANUTS

RN ICCU NURSE

34 Brlllla

• GalriMIII

Frooh opporlunitleo ""' · - tho boat
In you, one! lhfl OOUkl
bring you mony fun with
new lrtOnoa ~on llcllva - I n ol
lhlngo one! ba a jolnor.
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20)
~
you lhlnk of u . _ baing ... be lucl&lt;y to• you. In hlo har
oompany,lool&lt; tor waya to join- with
Wha-rH 1o thlo pat10n praaant1y'CANCER (Juno 21-July 221 • Lorglr·
than-UIUOI
hovarlng ol
your worl&lt; or carearlt conoamod, ond ona "' mora oould llllok to
you. Ba INdy to """"' on lhlngo onoa
thoy-.
LEO (July 23-AIIg. 22) aII

l&gt;t'Y!

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

'

28 Davenport 46 T'll30 Trickle
ch'11111
32 Gold 1'-..d 47 .........

10~

11

Go sight·
uelng

'lllood.y, Juno11, 2007
ly lomloe- Ooal

;::::::::::::~'~·:.~·

- - - - - - -.6x12 enclosed blacl&lt; trailer,
$1500; 5x10 utilily !tailer,
$400; 5x10 utinty trailer, 03 Ford Taurus, 54,000
$500. (614)595·7773 or
miles. $5900 080. 740-256·
t ·BOO· 798·4686
1618

For S&lt;ie: Gasoline welder,
390 AMP Chrysler motor.
Used very little. Asking
$1000. Call· between Sam
and Spm. 441 ·3061

'1&gt;/&gt;.Y

.,_,_·· .
.,.
., : ·, : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ;

t'IJR SALE
1..---iiliiiiiiO..-J

0111
27

-a

.

PAAIIIC.

u•~

Put

nul-

43 Vllllllll
hoe1
44 Grwd'e
COUiin
45 Coolt In 1
wok

O
. ....Uidlt:

BIG NATE

446-0007

1

••

lalner
24 Shampoo
lddlllve
25 Cilllor
26 Ahll1 or

Wlt8n WI Itt bleldlng, WI a!Waye fly 10
roach a1 leatl a game conlracl.
WI. w1n do lhlt, nWI haVe a
ma)or-t~~H Ill, we charge Into lour heerta
or lour lfiiM r ,we do no1 haVe a
ma)or-t~~H Ill, wt ltHr towanllttH nolnlnp. We bid live ol I minor only when
we are confldont lhlt lhtH no-frump,
lour helrta and lour epadaa are unmak·
able. Bul aomelimot, once we haVe
rrinor-tulllll, we •
be
uncortaln tlbaulllveo n&lt;&gt;trump. How do
wolnvMIIgato- no-frump'a vllbitlly?
l.aolc 81 lhe Soulh hand. 'lbu open one ·
ckb ond par1ner reapondl- clube, a.
imH flllle showing ll\oeilMI8 c:Uls, aome
11)-12 polnll (elghlloaOII), ond no lour·
calli or lOnger ma)or. Wltal WOUld you do

helrta,

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

0!·!

N - Eut

Put

you convert lo llveo no-lnlmp. (Noll lhlt

~··t'1d*•
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

HAY &amp;

....,
livest(ldl; Feed, shelled corn

'

$ For Old Auto Bat1eries 199 $2.50oa, 100+ $3.00ea,
250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT·
TERY TERMINAL 1-800·
796·6797

'!""----.

L__...;G;iiRAIN:;;:·,;._.,J

= .r

•rill!-~---.---,~

JIJne 23 &amp;
Registration 8 am
Luncheon
Pastor Steve Little
All

5 Dtlll coin
I Col....
Cfldlt
7 Guy'a IIIII
• Colllctont'
lltml

-Is it no-trump
.or no-trump?

OF SCHOOL I ---....
it&gt;I'IORf'IPW!

.• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System·
• Helios System ·

3 lrlllnd

are lhlnldng tlbout - no-tru,.,,
bul can lhe oppot1enll caah 1oo many
111ar1 ll'ldll? Since you do no1 knOw.
l8bld lhtH dlamondl, wl'ich llhowe a
81opper In lhlt lUll. Md when Norlh
relums lhe compllmenl wilh lhrae

We Deliver To You I
"Women's Retreat
· Theme- My Sister's shoes"

4=ub

eo.m-·.
latlncla

nacl?

WE WUZ

Showmasler Show
Feeds ·

2

41 Atllncl
42 " - ' t

'lbu

Stop &amp; Compare

nr-":':'-.;..;--_, - - - - - - - -

~

HER PAW'S SHOTGUN

'f'EP,THAT

WEDDIN'

748-992·1811

i

BHutfful Aptl.lt JICkeon
Eltlttl. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 to $560.
74Q-446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opporlunily. This
institution is an Equa!
Opportunity Provider arid
Employer.
Cl
ean quiet spacious 18 A,
·
stovelfrig,
country setting,
no petS/smoking, firsVIast
mo+dep $350 992-3543
New 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
Also, units on SA 160 _Pets
(
Wei
1 7401441 0194
coma
•
.

Fertlllzer and

• Complete
Remodertng

A HIDDEN TREASURE! · - - - - - -... 470, 4·wh.dr.,1BHP,dtBSBI,
Compact ~rector
very good
11
laurel
Commons LANDOWNERS-NEED
'
200
52
992
Apartments. Largest in lhe EXTRA FARM INCOME? cond., • ·
"3085 ·
areal Beautifully renovated We !lave responsible sportsthroughout ·including brand men looking to lease hunting
~
new k~chen and b~lh. property in this area. L.o~----•-_.1
Sta~ing at $405. Call today! Midwest Trophy Leas~s Inc. 2 Gentle riding ponies, $
225
(JOo1)273·3344
(304)532·6015 or 1·800· each. pretty galled riding
Apartment for rent, 1-2 698·t073
mare, rides· great. $450 .·
Bdrm., remodelad, new car·
367-7760
pet, stove &amp; trig., water,
sewer,.trash pd. Middleport.
6 Donkeys-5 female, 1 white
$425.00. No pelS . . Ref.
Gooos
male. Call 740-256-9247 or
required. 74.0-843-5264.
740.256·6504

r10

ELVINE'( FOUND

Mushroom Compost
$3SAScoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed,

t A KJ

•AJIBI

twm

river
23 Dye con-

Allt.m"'

!!!!!!!!!!::::~ .

BARNEY

FOR YOU!!

4RM &amp; Balh. stova .fridQB, Commercial building "For
3·4 bdrm, 2 bath, stove, utilities P'id, upslairs, 46 Rent" 1900 square feel, off
St ·
No
pets · street p_arking. Great IDcarefrig, w/d hookup, pool and Ol ive
outbuilding: $650 mo. plus $450/month. 446-3945
lion! 749 Third Avenue in
utiiMies and $650 deposit.
Gallipolis. Rent $375/mo.
Short or long term lease
Call Wayne (404) 456-3802
available.
References
Prime commercial space for
require&lt;!. NO PETS. 740·
rent at Springvalley Plaza.
379·2317 for application.
+
. C IMr
C811645-2t:92ANIID.IbNf
• •
i:iiir.;..;.;.~----,~
3BR, 2BA, Appliances, Near
Holzer
$650/mo
plus

, looalllfw

Opening lead: • 7

CARPENTER
SERVICE

L,---liiiiiiilmfiili-,1

DOWN

??

TtfiS MV6T BE A PVTTING %00.

17
call
..,.
11 VCR maker 40 Thigh22 Siberian
Cite, In Ill

• KQ B

Well

8autlo

1

10

sw.·

t 10 I I

• Q 7'

Dealer: South
Vulnerlble: Neither

I.

I

I

a

• J1

•QJIOS

• I 2

Wise Concrete

rr:

•Ktol52
Eul

• A 10 8 7 5

r7amiht I•B•ta4:•

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

2

I

Nice used 3 bedroom hOme ---~---,
vinyl/shingle. Will help with House for Rent In Pt.
deUvery. 740·3B?·4367 .
Pleasanl 304-675-6224

,.

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

1

04 Nissen XTerra 49000

·- -

........

• 4 2

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

~~S~~

Great uS&amp;d 2005 3 bedroom
isxeo with vinyl/shingle.
Must sell, Only 525,995 with
&gt;elivory Ca'lf (740)385 •367
"'
·
·
-.
New3Bedroomh0mes from
5214.36 per month, Includes
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
set·up. (740)385-2434

vans wilh ~rranly.-Prioad

--..,

-10--

Phillip
Alder

' 1oseii.Thisisour121h
Anniversary. Slop by or call
740-446-0103
'

r1!1

RIA Croaaword Puzzle .

BRIDGE

243-51111 .
(F) Boston Tonier $50, (M) ~16!11r:B--~--....,
_ _______
•
Pug s2oo. (F&gt; Pekinges•C
~
RDOting,
,. s I·d·mg,
.~mtiBierlnAU11and
.
"•~
-~
$200, 4 Boston Tenier/Pug
•~~
s·
0 k
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
lenoad in yard. $37S.OO 8
Swks, $50/each. 379.2467 ~-· i'oiORiiiiiSw;liiiiiiioo_.l
Offit, BC S,
month$200.00deposit. 740 _ - - - - - - - -.
Doors, Windows,
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007
Gnaclouo Uvlng 1 and 2 AKC Golden Retri111111r pup- _1980 clloYY Van .
Good Electric, Plumbing,
949.2025 .
::2:..::::::._____ Bedroom Apts at Vlllaoe pies. $200. 741)-643-2234 wort&lt;
van.
Runo good.
Drywall,
2 Br
AIC, Very nice, Manor and Riverside Apts. in
$600
7
2025
R ~;., 1·
R m
Johnson Mobile Home Perk. Middleport, from 5327 to AKC Mini Pinscher puppies
.00. 40·949·
Bm....,e tng, 00
All'lypes of concrete
Additions
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 $592. ?40-992-5064 . Equal re d• choc ., bl ; AKC M'1111· gs Plymouth van , air, auto vOwner· Rick Wise
Housing Opportunity. This Dauschund puppies, br. 6 , s 1600 080. 740.256 .
Local Contractor
740-992-5929
3BA on family pari&lt;. Water inslitution is 811 Equal dapple, bl. dapple, bl; AKC 1652
740-367..()544
and trash service Inducted. Opportunity Provider and Shehie puppies (2 males) n'.:~:':"-----""':.,
Free Estimates
740-416-1698
No pets. Dopcsil required.
slw; AKC Standard Poodle r«J4W
MaroR~~OR;/
..
740-367..()536
:._74:;:044~1~-7~033;;.....- - . , _E_:_mployer..:.__·- -- - - puppies, bt., cr., apr.; all vet
ll-.-...:J
• L----.:...----..;..:,.;_..J
APARlMDliS
Honeysuckle
Hills checked call for prices,
lllR lbNr
Apmmenis now accepting (740)696-1085
1980 1&lt;2, 400, 2
cylin·
'-.-..:;~---_.! applications for 1 ·and f!BA
....,
apts. No rental assistance AKC Reg. YOJkie 1 yr. old der... Runs good. S4oo. iir::i~;;;;,;;;H~o;;~;;IE;;;;;;;~
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments available at this time. Rent M.,adorable,51bs .,crate Firm ... 740-742-2422 ·
IMI'RoVEMfMS ,
tor R8nt, Meigs County, In starts at $3 10 month. Equal trained.house broken.up to
2001 Kawasaki Eliminate
55 acres more or less. town. No Pets, Deposit Housing
Opportunity. date. $500. 740-742-2868.
125 . . garage kept, mint
$69,000. Call 740·256·9247 Required, (740)992·5174 or 1740)446-3344.
BASEMENT
(7401441·0110.
:..".....:_ _ _ __ _ CKC Cocker Spaniel pup· cond ., 682 miles, $2000,
Horse
Prop.
40xBO ~------- Middeport, Beech St., 2 br. pies, black, buff, chocolate. (740)949-1006
Unconditional lifetime g~o~arWATERPROOFING
lnstJiated&amp;heated barn w/10 1 and 2 bedroom apart· furnished apartment, utilities
.
Chocolate spotted Ready 2005 H.O.Soft liat'l .....
~·stem antee.
local relererx;es furbox stalls/ 4 BR living quar· ments, furnished and unfur· paid, deposit &amp; references , July 1 304-67 5-4243 ·
maroon
w/embossed nished. Established 1975.
terS/ 43 acres.446·3844LJM nished. and houses in nQ pets, (740)992-Q165
CKC Reg. Boxer pups, .7 ftames.t or 200 made,800 Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Pomeroy and Middleport,
wks. old,1 fawn F.2 brlndkl miles since new,price 0870, Aogers Basement
JUAL "-"'~n:
s~•rity
· depost't requt'red, no Mt·ddl~· North 4th Ave 2
•·
W
"~
·•·"·
·• M, 1~0-667· 3502,304·481· $21 ,500, call for delails-7'!": Waterproofing.
AlVIl.D
pets, 740-992-2218.
br. furnished apartment, 5264 _ $400.
1;94:'l9~-2~2-17•.~~:---,
·
deposit &amp; references, no
Approx. 1·3 aCJes i1 Green 2 bedroom apt, stove, pels, (740)992-Q165
.BoATS &amp;SM!JfORS
refridg.,
wate'r,
trash.
:..__.;..:.._
_ _- : - - - Toy Poodle. (F) apricot. Reg.
or
Springfield
Twp,
Applehead Chihuahua, Reg ·
lllR AI£
•
·
(740)645·8686, (740)245· Deposit required, Rent Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 446- Blue. Quality Fathers Day ; $350.
(740)446-7620, ,3736
babies. 645-69B7
9323
(740)441·9872, (740)709· - - - - - - - Muum 23ft, VB alpha 1. 94,
www.Uml&gt;o....,..keab~Aetry•..,,.
,., . · ·
b
b 1
b k
; : : : : : : : : : : : : . -9.5::1.::.9_ _ _- - : - - apartment,
New Haven, 2
br.
lufOIShed
M
open
ow,
e
ow
00
'
references · &amp;
lNICAL
Great Shape $10500. 740bed
Ap · · A ·
............mnNTS
2
room
I. tn aetna deposit, no pets, (740)992· L-.,;;"il;i;"',:::"~~_.J 256·2660
:
riO.
$375.00 a f.A. $200.00 0165
iir~:;:::;~---::--.,1
H~
l"' .. u~ &amp;
deposit
Includes
water,
HoHon
H378,
Intermediate
Moro....,.,.........,H
FOR JbNr
R o•~ . ·.
~-..:;~---.,1 sewer, trash. 740-949-2025. Tara
Townhouse French Horn for sale.
,.._,....,
Apartments,
Very
Spacious,
Excellent
condition.
$1300
$155/mol Buy 4bd HUD 2 BR 1 112 bath on Jackson
A
,
'
2 Bedrooms, C/ ; .1 1/2 OBO, call446-7783
05 Starcraft 28ft, large slid·
YOUNG'S
home! 5% dn, 20yrs @ 8%. Pike. $450fmo + deposit. Bath, Aduh Pool &amp; Baby
ing awning, new condition,
For Listirlgs 800-559.4f109 Rei. required. no pets. Call Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
$13800. 304·638-8058 or
_•1_7_o9_ _ _ _ _ _ _
44::-6-4::-_o5_1_-::---'- No Pels. Lease Plus
638-5800
.2 BA Apt near Rodney area. Security Deposit Required,
l:'.t.nl.•
-------1 Bdrm. HOUSE tor $450
I'l'lft!Y•
2002 Springdale 5th wheel
Room Additions &amp;
WID, fridge, stove ·induded. (740)367·7086.
•Prompl and Qualify
Remodeling
Mnth., Includes all utilities &amp; No pets! Call 446- 1271 or
Camper 26ft. w/slide out.
trash . J.R. 740-243·5811 . 709 1657
TwinRiversTowerisaccept·
Sleeps 6·8 asking $10,000
Work
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
- -- -- - - · Depltst mon req. ing applications for waiting
304·675·6338
0% Financing- 36 Mos.
*Reasonable Ra1es
Roofing &amp; Gutters
3 bedroom House in 2 BR, Newly Carpeted, list tor Hud-subsized, 1· br, available now on John
Vlriyl Siding &amp; Painting
*Insured .
Middleport $400 .00 a month Freshly painted. W~lki ng apartmenl.for
the D!M're Z Trak Zero T...-na &amp; 97 Hitchhiker Discovery. 34
Patio and Porch Oec:ks
*Experienced
$200.00 deposit. 740-949- distance to UAG. Private elderly/disabled call 675- 5.99% Fixed Aate on John l /2ft, 5th wheel ca mper
WV038725
2025.
entrance
and
d~ck. 6679 Equal
Housing Deere Gators Carmichael made by NU-WA. 1 Double
References Available!
V.C. YOUNG Ill
- - - - - - - - $400/mo, (6141595 _7773 or Oppo~unity
Equipmenl (
_
_ slide and 1 single slide plus .
7401446 2412
Call Gary Stanley @
3 Bedroom House · in 1_800 _798 _4686
~·;;.;.;;~~--....,
extras that will go with this
992-b2t5
::&gt;(Ill( I(JY OhH
Syracuse. $500/month +
SPAtt
1952 Ford 8N Drive it Home unit. Excellent shape. Asking
740-742-2293
LJ~(.II
l 'o( ,Jif ~ pr••('Hl
deposit No Pets. (304)675· 3 Rms &amp; bath. W/D hookup,
fOR RENT
3. hHch, PTO, See H @ 7B St6,500. Call after 6pm 740Please leave messa e
5J32 weekends 740-591· clean, No Pels. 446-t519
~~------_.1 Burdelte Addition Pt. 208·0507 or 256·1243

2.fullbail1swlwhirlpootubs. deposit,
(740)245-9880,
Iorge LA .' Asking 87,500. (740)645·3836.
7
7029
l!0·44S·
4 Br:, 2 bath home on
Sale by Ow~er. 3BR 2BA, Mulberry Ave., central air,
nt}wty remodeled house gas heat. &lt;;all 740 . 992wlbas.ement. 4 miles out 33 14 .
· 21B. $98000. 256-1336
-------M
H
AtllfiUonl
local company offering wNO
1
~
• DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams for you to boy your
Double lot t 6x60. 2006
home instead of renting.
Trailer 2br, 2ba, · laundry
'100% financing
Room, Porch, Heat Pump, • Less than perfect credit
Garage, Car port, Storage accepted
building, Fenced corner lot. • Payment could be the
1 blOCk. from Mason Levy same as rent.
·
caM after 5pm 304-773-5109 Mortgage
Locators.
or 304-675·8893
(740)367.0000

I

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

328 Jac1cson Pike
OuaJity
' cars. trudui iQI

Ellm View
Apartments

• W -/&lt;i'yef hOOiwp

www.mydallylenUnel.com

coot-

COIIYEHIEHTLY LOCAT· Pole Bams 30X40ll10'
ED l AFFORDABLE!
Delivered &amp; Ereclad $8,595
lbwnhouse
.......nments, plus Sales Tax. Call
- ' FOR (937)7111-1471 www.nafion.
ard'or &amp;mall houses
RENT. Col fl40)«1-1111 widepolebom~com
lor application &amp; informalion. _ _:________
Slale Quarfers 99-06, mint
Elficienci aparimenllor rent condition. 740-208-0090
in Middlaport, $250 a monlh
..__ ; .
. I
plus dopoott, (740)992-M49 Treadmill ~ uery lilt e,
:..__;:..__.;.......;._ _ _ computer desk, table &amp;
chairs, 4 p1ece btua living
loom, Ioiii of olher fumltttre
.
304-67&amp;-3988
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments Trey Buitt Hoarse Appn;lx ~
•Central heat &amp; ~
6 Hrs total ~- Asking

0265

flOw Haven, 4+ acres.!3 br.,
2 ba. , total eIect., gas log

i

fOR'IbNr

I

12Bdrm., 11/2balh,$350M,

DOWN PAYMENr programs lor you to buy your 10.66 acre~ t594 Norlhup
homeinsteadotrenting·.
Rd.inGreenTwp. GwliaCo..
" 100% financing
24x48 barn, recent SUMy,
• less than perfect cre:cJit no restrictions, beautiful
accepled
hoose location. all utilities on
• Payment could be the si te . $79.900. (937)382·
same as rent.
4n5, (937)605·3581
Mortgage
Locators. - -- - - -- {740)367-oooo
3 acres of Land tor Sale on
Sandhill Ad. across from
Beautifui·Middlepon home' Krebs Chapel S30.000 304·
38R, 2BA. full basement. 895-3929
Many NEW featuoesll Must - - - - - - - seethisane!740-4 16-1 548 4+- acres for Rent in
r---~---, Gallipolis Ferry off Crab
Cree~ has Septic, &amp; Wolf.
also looking lor Female
Companion to share 'Uving
EKpenses 304-674-4658

=

MOIIIU fb,m;

llonclly, June 18, 2007
ALLEYOOP

\

�Monday, June 18, 2007·

www.mydailysentinel.~om

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

\PeDDSylvani~ rolls past Ohio .at Big ~3 ·South·All-Stars
Cr D
. sh North' ·.50•7
HERSHEY, Pa. (AP) Bethlehem Liberty quarterback Dan Persa ran for two
touchdowns and passe'd for
another
to
lead
PennsyJvania to a 28-10
win over Ohio in the Big 33
Football
Classic · on
Saturday.
The
victory
gave
Pennsylvania an
11 -9
advantage over Ohio in
what might be the final
game of the series between
the two states. This is the
last year of Big 33's contract with Ohio, and it has
yet to be renewed.
Ohio took a 3-0 lead at
the 8:24 mark of the first
quarter when kicker Nick
Spadafore of Lincoln High
School connected on a 34yard field goal. Four plays

earlier, Michigan State
recruit B.J . Cunningham of
Westerville·South set up the
score with a 48-yard screen
from Zach · Collaros of
Steubenville
to
the
Pennsylvania 19.
Pennsylvania took its
first lead at the 10:07 mark
of the second quarter. Persa
cut back a quarterback
sweep, and ran 25 yards to
the end zone. State
College's Tom Kondash
kicked the extra point to
make it 7-3.
Ohio regained the lead at
10-7 with 2:18 left in the
half. Ohio quarterback
Perci Garner of Dover hit
Kyle Jefferson of Glenville
over the middle in stride.
Jefferson juggled the ball,
but gathered it in for a 57-

yard scoring pass.
Pennsylvania
quickly
moved 68 yards in just fo11r
plays to take a I ~-I 0 lead
with 48 seconds left before
the half. A quick 17 -yard
pass ftom
Persa to
Rochester 's Derek Moye
set up a 25-yard pass to
Northeast Catholic's Daryl
Robin son to the Ohio II.
On the next play, Persa
rolled to his left and
stepped into the end zone
for his second touchdown
of the night. Kondash's
kick made it 14-10.
Pennsy lvania extended
itsleadw21 - 10early in the
third period. A 42-yard
kickoff return by Robinson
to the Ohio 4 7 gave
Pennsylvania good field
position, but it had to punt.

However,
' Anthony
Wright of Maple Heights .
fumbled the punt at the
Ohio
10,
and
Pennsylvania's
Rontez
Miles recovered at the Ohio
17.
Two plays later, Persa
rolled left, then came back
right to find Rochester's
Derek Moye in the back of
the end zone for a 12-yard
score. Kondash kicked the
extra point at the 9:06
mark.
·
Pennsylvania took control on the first play of the
fo urth quarter. Southern
Columbia's Henry Hynoski
pushed in from the I five
seconds into the fourth
quarter, completing a· 64yard drive. Kondash added
his fourth extra poin~.

Pittsburgh survives scare from White Sox, 8-7
PITTSBURGH (AP) This is the way things are
going for the Chicago White
Sox: Even when they hit a
ball that looks like the go. ahead home run in the ninth
inning, they still lose.
Jason Bay's game-saving
catch robbed Jim Thome of
a three-run homer and
allowed the Pittsburgh
Pirates to escape with a
come-from-behind 8-7 win
Sunday afternoon.
Nate McLouth had a
career-high four RBls and
Jose Bautista homered and
had two RBis for the
Pittsburgh, which finished
its interleague homestand 42. The White Sox lost for
the 17th time in 21 games.
Chicago entered the ninth
' trailing 8-5. Thome came in
as a pinch hitter with two
runners on and one out and a
run already in before his
long drive to left' off Matt
Capps.
"I think all. of us were
blowing everything we
could to just try and get it
out," White Sox third baseman Josh Fields said.
· ·
· : Bay retreated to the 6-foot

wall and made the catch
while leaning against it. reiegating the play to a long
sacrifice fly.
"I didn't have it all the
way by any means," Bay
said. "The ball traveled a lot
further than I expected."
A young fan in the front
row backed off his pursuit
of the ball moments before
it landed in Bay's glove .
"I saw that kid, and I was
like don't do_it,'don 't do it,"
said McLouth, who was
running over from center.
"And luckily he stayed
away and Bay made the
catch."
Said substitute Pirates
manager' Jim Lett: "That
catch there was the gamewinner."
It was the most crucial
.part 1n ·nullifying a Chicago
comeback that preceded the
Pirates retaking the lead
from the White Sox, who
had a five-run fourth inning
and got two hits and two
RBis from Juan Uribe.
· "It was a good win for ils,
especially the way we battied back," said Lett, who
was in charge because man-

ager Jim Tracy was out of two-out .double against
town over the weekend to Javier Vazquez that scored
attend his son's college Wilson and Zach Duke, who /
graduation.
si ngled.
.
Jack Wilson scored three
The White Sox 's big
runs. and Xavier Nady's fourth inning featured seven
two-run single in the sev- consecutive productive atenth broke a 5-S tie and was . bats -· six hits and a sacrithe winning hit for fice fly. Paul Konerko's sacPittsburgh. .
rifice fly . scored ·Andy
Nady's line drive to center Gonzalez, Jermaine Dye
scored Bay and LaRoche to drove in Iguchi with a sin- ·
get reliever Shawn Chacon gle, Fields hit a ground-rule
(3-1) a win. Nick Mas set (2, double to right that scored
3) walked McLouth. with Dye .and Uribe doubled to
one out in the seventh. . · left to score Luis Terrero
Capps
allowed
two and Fields.
unearned runs in the ninth,
Though Chicago hit
but still earned his fifth Pittsburgh starter Duke hard
save. A.J. Pierzynski hit an that inning, Duke only
RBI single to score Fields allowed two baserunners in
before Thome's long fly his other five innings. He
made it 8-7. But Tadahito gave up five runs on eight
Iguchi flew out to end the hits with no walks and two
game.
strikeouts.
."I got a little bit ahead of
Bautista led off the bottom of the first with a home myself in the fourth inning,"
ru!l for the second time in , Duke said. "I W01Jld get into
six days with a drive just a good count and then not
inside the left-field foul make the right pitch, leave it
pole. It was the third time in too much down the middle
his career he led off a game and basically from that
with a homer. ,
, point on I said, Hey,l've got
Pittsburgh made it 3-0 in to stop this right here and
the second with McLouth's give my team a chance."

Pregnant woman
missing from home
.where 2-year-old
·son found alone, A6

More.dough for Phil
Dirt coneert, A3

. .

Chillicothe's Givens named MVP
COLUMBUS (AP) - lead at the end of the first
Chris
Givens
·of · quarter.
Chillicothe had six catches
The North finally broke
fpr 123 yards to .help lead through midway through
the South to a 50-7 win the third quarter when
over the North in the 62nd quarterback Charles Babb
annual North-South high of Alliance threw a 47school all-star football yard TD pass to Elyria's
game Saturday night.
Dan Noble, who will play
Givens, who is headed to college football at Toledo.
Miami of Ohio, had touch- But the South answered
down scores of 29 and 27 when Fairborn's Josh
yards in the first qu arter Copeland notched his secand was named the game's ond interception, returning ·
MVP.
this one 26 yards for a
· "All week, the South score and a 37-7 lead.
team was very loose,''
The South later added
Givens said. "We were touchdowns on a 27-yard
into each other and got pass from South l'oint's
along with each other very Chris Smith to Hilliard
well. I guess that was the Davidson's Bo Delande,
outcome of the game."
who plans to walk on to
The South capitalized on Ohio State. Pickerington
five North turnovers - Central's Jordan Jarell,
to
Central
including three intercep- ·headed
tion returns for touch- Michigan, capped the scordowns - in posting the ing with a 70-yard TD run
most lopsided win in the with I :46 left.
history of the series. The
Smith, who finished 5North offense ended up of-6 pass ing for Ill yards
with minus-4 yards total and two touchdowns, will
offense, including minus- play college football at
95 yards rushing .
Marshall.
" It was our defense,"
"It was· definitely excitsaid South coach Kev in ing," said Westerville
Fell
of
Wapakoneta . South's Rocco Pentello, a
"Chris Givens made those South defensive back
big plays early. Then we headed to Ohio State. "Our
had three defensive touch- front seven, they were just
downs.
dominant. All week we
''Our
offense
went saw them in practice. We
· against that defense · all knew they were going to
·week in practice and we come out and do that, but I
didn't gain a yard . . It's didn't know it would be
frustrating, I am sure, like that." f
.
when you're trying to run
The game eclipsed the
an offense and you can't North's 32-0 win in 1982
do anything."
as ihe most lopsided game
Centerville's
Tyler in the history of the rivalReplogle , an Indiana ry.
signee, had a 13-yard · The, North-South game is
interception return early in the nation's longest conthe game. Cincinnati tinuously running high ,
Moeller's Greg Jon·es, school football all-star
headed to .Michigan State, ·game. Despite Saturday
added a· 11-yard intercep- night's defeat, the North
tion return for a score in maintains a 36-23-3 lead
staking the South to a 30-0 in the all-time series.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio.
- o(l'\1'-;•\o l.-., h , :'\o · ·•·
•l
--

111'-,ll\\

·•

SPORTS
• Oakland gets by
Cjncinnati. See Page 81

·

11 ' ' 1I ,
,
I _ oo

" ''\ '

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Rennie conftrmed a repon
that AEP's proposed IGCC
plant, to be built in Meigs
County, might not be operational until 2017. AEP has
notified tbe Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio it will
not make any more additional filings for cost recovery, on the Meigs project
until the case rtow pending
in the state's high . court is

resolved.
A twin project planned
for Mason County, W.Va. is
still on schedule. There
have been no legal challenges in West Virginia, and
AEP now hopes to have
that plant running by mid20 12. The utility provided
revised timelines for both
plants in a regulatory filing
today in West Virginia.
.

The Office of the Ohio
Consumers Council and an
industrial energy users
group has challenged the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio's decision that
allows recovery of $23.7
million from customers for
the Front-End Engineering
and Design study for the
project. The op~nents of
the PUCO's dec1sion argue

I

1

I

BY DIANE POTTORFF
DPOTIORFF@MYDAILVREGISTER.COM

OBITIJARIFS
Page AS
• Kathryn Spencer
• Emma L. Bess

INSIDE
• American and Iraqi
f6rces begin drives to
oust militant gunmen
. from-Baghdad's flanks.

See Page A2
• Fathers honored
at church breakfast

See Page A3
• Eastern Elementary
honor roll.
. See Page A3
• When friendship
tums to being used.

See Page A3

FS 55 R Trimmer

considering impacts ot coal mine on
BY BETH SERGENT .
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE-TheOhioDepartmentof
Transportation (ODOT) is considering
comments from the public concerning
possible impacts to Ol)io 124 irt regards
to Gatling Ohio's proposed coal mining
operation and Meigs Point Dock's proposed conveyor beltline in the Racine
area.
Meigs Point Dock and Gatling Ohio
have requested a public road· consent
from ODOT for the installation of a con-

See Page A6

WEAtHER

Veraa1ile, .atraight
shaft trimmer
Consumer or light-duty
professional use
UPSQ TO:

NOW JUST

STIHL' '2499&amp;
...,;l_,.

Professional trimmer

Professional bike
handle trimmer

Ughtweight and powerful
l.ow emissions engine

Ughtweight and powerful
low emissi.ons engine

veyor beltline and to conduct surface
mining operations outside the right-ofway line but no closer than 20 feet of the ,
traveled portion of Ohio 124, respectively. ODOT is .specifically considering how the conveyor beltline and surface mining operations will affect the
roadway.
Two public meetings on the matter
. were held last Wednesday, June 6 at
ODOT's garage with public comments
being tape recorded by both ODOT and
officials from Gatling Ohio. ODOT
officials said those who had comments

124

arid questions, either at the hearing or by
mail, will receive answers in writing
from ODOT two weeks after the comment period closes on June 20. Written
comments or concerns about the impact
on Ohio 124.can be mailed to ODOT's
District I 0, Deputy Director Larry
Woodford, 338 Muskingum Drive,
Marietta, 45750.1435,
At the meeting, residents were
shown maps of the area where permission is being requested to conduct coal
Please see Mine, AS

Let's play the ·'Not
So NewlyweQ Game'
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSEN'TINEL.OOM

Comes equipped with deflector
kit for use with metal grass
blade or brush knife

1M y01r IOCII dtller lor IIIII IInt ol S'nHL trlmlltl'l. ,

EXCLUSIVELY AT YOUR LOCAL STIHL DEALER!

POMEROY - If you're
40, married and Want to
over
Details on Pap A6
win a trip to the Belterra
Casino Resort and Spa in
Belterra, Ind., you may want
to sign up to play the "Not So
Newlywed Game" through
the Meigs County Council on
2 SECDONS- l2 ·PAGilS
Aging..
Calendars
A3
The competition is free and
a total of 16 married couples
Classifieds
~3-4 are needed to compete for the
grand prize which is a, free
Comics 1
stay at Belterra and two
rounds
of golf.
.
Annie's Mailbox
A3
Beginning Tuesday, July
1
0
the first "heat" of tbe "Not
Editorials
A4 ' so'Newlywed
Game" will be
played
between
Obituaries
As Couples shouldfourbecouples.
at the
Meigs
County
Senior
Center
Sports
B Section
by I 0 a.in. that day. These
"heats"
will continue every
Weather
A6
Tuesday through July 31
where the winners of the four
© 0007 Oblo VaHey Publishing Co.

INDEX .

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street • Pomeroy

Bs

•

740~992-5500

Open 7 Days a week
stihlusa.com

Beth Serpnt/photo

·'

This section of the fully enclosed beltline connected to the Broad Run Mine in New Haven, W.Va. above W.Va. 62 is said
to be similar to what Meigs Point Dock wishes to place above a section of Ohio 124 in relation to Gatling Ohio's proposed
coal mining operation in the Racine area.

• Reunited sisters
launch effort to keep
mom's killer in prison.

FS. 90 Bike
HandleTrimmer

Are you re8dyba511HL.?

...

that. state law does not
allow cost recovery for
generation projects.
The FEED has bet:n completed, but AEP has been
working with the design
engineers in an effon to
reduce costs associated
with building the plant.
AEP has said it It will
take about four years to
build each plant.

Attorney
· general gets
·refund for
monument
customers

I

See Page A6

j, ,. ,.

AEP: Great Bend plant delayed to 2017
POMEROY -American
.Electric Power does not
expect its proposed · Great
Bend plant to be operational for at least 10 years,
due to delays from a legal
challenge pending in the
Ohio Supreme Court.
AEP Spokesman . Jeff

• Over 100 civilians,
police, Taliban militants
killed in big southem
battle: Afghan officials.
See Page As ·
• EHS names honor
roll. See Page AS
• Prosecutor: wife's
planning was deadly
for doctor-husband..

lll\d:nh ... 4· t llnu ·l

heats will then compete for
the grand prize on Tuesday,
Aug. 7.
·
Debbie Jones, activities
director at the Meigs County
Senior Center, said the idea ·
came about as something fun
to incof!J9rate couples of various ages as do many activities that happen at the senior
center.
Jones said the questions ·
will be "clean" and not too
"ornery." Although there will
be no Bob Eubanks, tbere will
.be a host asking questions like
· "What's the worst meal your
spouse·every cooked?" If you
know the answer to this ques!ion without asking, you may
come up a big winner on the
"Not So Newlywed Game."
Beth Serpnt/phoiO
Cal!Jonestoregisterbythe
deadline of July 5 at 992- Married 57 years, Leslie (left) and Allie Hawley of Cheshire
· 2161.In addition to ~grand are eligible to play the "Not So Newlywed Game· organized
prize, other prizes will be by Debbie Jones. (also pictured), activities director of the
awarded during the competi- .Meigs County senior Center. Married couples 40 and over
are eligible to play and win a trip to Belterra Casino and spa.
lion.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Customers of the
former Beautiful Memories
Mon11ments could soon possibly.&amp;eesomeoftheirmoney
returned to them courtesy of
West Virginia Attorney
General Darrell McGraw.
On Monday, McGraw's
office announced it had
reached a settlement of
$43,000 with the owners of
Beautiful
Memories
Monuments, Kenneth and
Vicki Hobbs. according to
Kimberly Stitizinger Jones of
the Attorney General 's
office.
According to a news
release, McGraw 's office
began investigating the company when the Consumer
Protection Division began
receiving complaints that the
company had unlawfully
accepted payments from customers for the purchase of
monuments to memorialize
their loved. ones wi~hout
delivering the goods and serVIces.
The refunds are for those
customers who purchased
their monuments in West
Virginia, Jones said.
"Consu~ers deserve to
receive the goods for which
they have paid in all cases,"
McGraw said, "Panicularly ·
ina case like this, the business
practices of Beautiful
Memories
Monuments
addedtothesorrowofalready
grieving family members."
The Hobbs owned and
operated
Beautiful
Memories Monuments in
Point Pleasant and Pomeroy,
Ohio. It was a business that
sold and set monuments for
its customers.
Earlier this year, the
Consumer
Protection
Division of the Attorney
General 's office began
receiving complaints from
customers who allegedly had
ordered and paid for monl)ments and services they had
not received. It was discovered the business had closed
and that the Hobbs' had
moved out of state.
The Attorney General's
office was not the only
agency receiving complaints.Customers also registered complaints with the
Point Pleasant Police
Department and the Ohio
Cemetery
,
Dispute
Resolution Commission,
along with the Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney.
Capt. Joe Veith has been
investigating the complaints ·
ofthosewhopurchasedmonuments in West Virginia.
Jones gave a lot of credit·to
Yeith for his persistence in
the possible criminal aspect
of the investigation.
"Capt. Veithdidagoodjob
investigating this case,"
Jones said , "We wouldn' t
have gotten this far so quickPlene see Refund, AS

----------------~-----.............-----------'---~---~ - - - "-

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