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iunba~ lim~ ·itntintl
,

Meigs/Mason
storyteJJing getting
underway, A3

Some vegetables are also a feast for the eyeS
BY LEE REICH
FOR THE ASSOCIAT£0 PRESS

..

GARDENING

Look around your vegetable garden: Aren't some
of these plants pretty
enough to be grown as ornamentals, perhaps in the·
flower garden or shoulderto-shoulder with shrubbery?
Imagine, if you will, a
twining vine with sprays of
scarlet flowers poking out
from lime-green foliage.
The plant. scarlet runner
bean, is so attractive that
you might consider the edible pods as merely incidental until you taste their rich,
meaty flavor.
Asparagus is another vegetable as pretty as it is toothsome. The feathery leaves
provide the perfect backdrop for bright flowers red geraniums or deep-blue
delphiniums, for example.
That feathery backdr()p
does have to wait until harve'st is over, in early July,
but then the new foliage
fills in quickly. ·
And keep in mind vegetables' many lovely hues.
Flowers need not be the
only source of eye-catching
color in your flower bed.
For bright red or yellow
stalks,
plant
the
BrijlhtLights variety of
Sw1ss chard. No need to
sacrifice the show when
harvesting chard, because if
you cut just the plants' outer
leaves, the inner ones
· remain to grow and show.
Rhubarb is another ornamental edible. Rhubarb has
dark-green leaves, larger
'\ill.

than dinner rlates, splayed
OUt in a whor on the ends of
red leaf stalks. Equally decorative are the foaming
white flowers sitting atop
the flower stalks.
Silvery leaves are always
welcome in the flower garden, blending well with all
colors. Seakale is an
uncommon vegetable but
it's tasty and has silvery,
scalloped leaves and sprays
of pale yellow flowers. The
leaves of this cabbage relative need to be kept in the
dark for a while to make
them tender and tasty. Just
cover new growth in spring
with a flowerpot.
Seakale is perennial, so
after a few meals or· it in .
spring, remove the flowerpot and let the sun shine in
so that the leaves can develop, along with clusters of
pale yellow flowers.
Finally, for a pretty vegetable that usuallY. 1s just
admired in the w1ld along
the edges of fields, we have
Jerusalem artichoke.
Each year the knobby
roots, with taste and texture
like a combination of white'
potato and water chestnut,
sprout stalks six feet high,
or more.
The show begins in early
fall, when each branch on
those stalks is capped by a
sunflower-like bloom about
the size of your palm. If you
~row Jerusalem artichoke
tn your flower garden,
there's no need to 'sacrifice
any flowers to harvest the
tubers -just wait until the
flowers fade.

.

,

.

AP PhotOI

Two Bright Lights Swiss chard plants are shown In this
undated photo. No need to sacrifice the show when har- Seakale, shown in this undated photo, is an uncommon
vesting chard, because if you cut just the plants' outer vegetable but it's tasty and has slivery, scalloped leaves
leaves, the inner ones remain to grow and show.
and sprays of pale yellow flowers.

Otlcon • Delta

Who thinks of planting
flower seeds this time of
year?
Not many gardeners. Yet
now is an ideal time to plant
perennial ; flower seeds.
They' II qnly grow leaves
and stemf this year - but
next year and in years · to
come they will be showered
with blossoms.
The fact is, you need
plenty of plants to make a
bold show with any kind of
J'&gt;erennial flower. You could,
of course, just drive over to
the nursery and fi II up your
trunk with 15 potted
columbine, oriental poppy
or delphinium .plants.
But a single seed packet
of any of tnese flowers
could give you enough
plants for the whole neighborhood. Furthermore, if
it's pink poppies you want,
or only deep-blue· delphiniums, you might not find
these particular colors at a
nursery. A much wider
selection is available as
seeds than as plants.
So look around at other
gardens and at your own
garden and decide just what
perennial flowers you want
to grow. Deciding what to
plant may be the hardest
part of growiug perennial
flowers from seed.
To keep an extra-close
eye on your seedlings, plant
the seeds in pots or, even
better, old plastic cell packs
of the type in which nursery
seedlings are sold. Before
sowing. fill your containers
'

'•

POMEROY - Tbe deadline for bids on the old
Pomeroy Junior High School
property has been set for
noon on July 20.
Last month Pomeroy
Village . Council decided on
an Ollfn bidding process with
the nghtto refuse any bids on
the nearly 1.8 acre lot.
Council signed an agreement

SeePageB1

.

;

'

You're ~n Denial ••• .,
YouTeiiYourself'Tou Don't Need lt•.~·.
You Feel To~\Young
For·lt...
.,,
You're Not 'eady For lt...
~_7,.,. ~·

. ·. t~

_trou"' ¥t. w. u.c~ro Feel The ~· w.r ~..,

INSIDE
• 'Iraqi politicians calt on
cMiians to ann themselves
after viOlent weekend
•

claims 220 lives.

See Page · A2

ed
• In wake of botch
terror ptot, Scottish
Muslims fear retaliation;

.
d
revenge attacks
. reporte ·

See Page A2

.

..] Resentment is·sign .. -. .
.
,
of hngenng depressiOn.

See P11ge A3
· • AtlaU contest set
• g
for Aug. 18 1 ·

See Pllge A3 .

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• Vouchers offer stability
,
I'
to Cleveland s Catho IC
schools~ See Page AS
• Hamilton County
·t;"S sa more kids
a utho
. n "' . Y .
us1ng guns 1n cnmes.
See P11ge AS
• Israeli Cabinet
.
approves release of
250 Palestinian prisoners,
Off1·c·1ats say·
See · Page AS
• Service organization
donates equipment
to O'Bieness .
~Page AS
• State looks to recoup

........:HliiJNifC

..d

/Htuf'tdi•

·~!l•rkllatt

Ptr

.. :liYS!Q:QI

a

sale of lots on Butternut
Avenue.· Those seoled bids
will be accepted until noo!)
today. The location of these
properties is described aS
warranty deed recorded in
volume 15, pages 657 and
5) 9, as well as property
described in quit-claim deed
in volume 282, page 389.
Council meets at 7 p.m:
tonight for its regular session:

M.A., CCC·A
Owner &amp; Audiologat

877-237-7716

Left: A wellness center was

recently opened at the
Syracuse Community
Center. Here Barbara and
Jim Lawrence and June Lee
look over a weight machine.
Tours of the building were &lt;J
part of Sunday's program.
Cha~ene

Hoeftlchfpholoo

See Page A5

WEATHER

Details on Page A3

Chartene Hoell?ehf photos

Calendars

Diane McVey

Above: Ruth Strode of
. Grove City, sister of Bob
Wingett; looks at the
Syracuse Community Center
plaque unveiled during
Sur\day's dedication. She
was joined by John Bentley,
president of the Center
Board.
·

cost of tire dump cleanups.

The Rutland Nazarene Church took first place in the religious float category with its entry
shown here.

2 SEertONS- 12 PAGES

--.n

Farmers Bank at a fixed
interest rate of 3.79 for six
months to finance both
asbestos removal and the
demolition.
Pullins
Excavating demolished the
building for $38,840 while
Winston
Saunders
of
Gallipolis removed the
asbestos for $4,700.
In addition·to the Pomeroy
Junior High School lot, the
village is also advertising the

~uidance in some of the project work, and presented a
slide presentation of accomSYRACUSE - Tributes plishments over the past sevof praise for Robert L. era! years.
Wingett's role in establishing
Speaking on behalf of
the Syracuse Community Syracuse Village Council,
Center and the unveiling of a Joy Bentley descnbed
plaque in his memory high- Wmgett as an "architect of
lighted an appreciation and the village." She spoke of his
recognition program Sunday. skill in grant writing, of his
More than a hundred peo- persistence in getting funds
pie gathered in the gymnasi- for , development, and his
urn of the Center to join in leadership 10 getting things
celebrating the contributions done. When first working
of the late Mr. Wingett who with him, Bentley said she
in 2002 bought the old became a "willing follower
Syracuse school building ,for because of his intelligence, ·
$79,000, gave it to the :Vll- his wisdom, his integrity, his .
!age, and then assumed ihe generosity and his compasleadership to tum it into a sion for others."
· commumty center.
But above all, she saifl, the
Upon his death, the ~igns quality she most admired was ·
of 'leadership fell to John "his magnanimous spirit. He .
. Bend&amp;y ..who presi(,l~at· · neverw!Hited,qredit orreoog:...·
Sunday's
celei:lration. nition, but was always quick
Bentley described ~ingett as to give others credit and
"a man who loved hts family, encouragement."
his friends and this communi- The brass J?laque ~ounted
ty," and talked, about how on the ':"all JUSt outs1de_the
project after proJect to reno- gymnas1um
descnbes
vate the building was com- Wingett as "a man of vision,
pleted under Wingett's direc- whatever he could visualize,
lion.
he could create." It tells about
"Bob developed many the purchase of tbe building
plans for this Center and has for a Commu~ity Center, li~ts
now entrusted us to, carry h1s .ac~mphshments. ':"h1le
through wtth them, satd servmg as grants adnumstraBentley, describing it as an tor f?r Syra.cuse Village, tells
"awesome task."
of h1s role m other orgaruzaHe recognized members of tions and: communities, and
the Board of . Trustees, defines. his l~g~~y as_ be1~g
acknowledaed !herr fwthful- one wh1ch will remam With
ness and s'Poke of the thou- us because his fingerprints
sands of vol~nteer hours. they are deeply ~ssed upon this
spent working on proJects. commumty.
He thanked Syracuse Mayor
Refreshments of cake, ice
Eric Cunningham for provid- cream and punch were
ing needed equipment and served.

INDEX
GAIIIIQI.

marked "junior high property
real estate bid" en the outside
of the envelope and submitted to the Village Clerk, 320
East Main Street, Pomeroy,
45769.
The old school which was
built in 1929 was demolished
this past November after
1
asbestos abatement was
•'made to the structure. In
September of last year cooncil borrowed $50,00Q from

BY CHARt.ENE HO£fUCH
HOEFl?CHII'MYDAILYSENT?NELt:oM

.

Growing perennials from
seed offers you wide
choice and abundant yields
with moistened, sifted potting soil.
As with vegetable seeds,
perennial flower seeds each
have their own germination
requirements. You might
find this information on the
seed packet or in the seed
catalog, along with information about how long you'll
be drumming your fingers
waiting to see sprouts.
Neither gayfeather nor
anise hyssop seeds, for
instance, like to be more
than slightly covered, and
both sprout quickest at temperatures from the 50s F to
the 70s F. Lupin seeds also
like that temperature range,
but need to be nicked with a
file so they can absorb
water, then given a good
covering of soil.
Soak planted containers
in a pan of water, cover
them to hold in moisture,
and then settle in for the Big
Wait.
By late summer, those
seeds will haye sprouted
and the seedlings will be
ready to tra.nsplant out to
their permanent homes in
the garden. With cooler,
moister autumn weather
around the corner, plants
will need little care be)\ond
an initial watering-in. This
timing allows roots enough
time to grab tight hold of the
soil before winter.
One problem with growing perennials from seed is
trying to figure out what to
do with all the extra plants
you're bound to get from
even a single seed packet.
You may end up in the nursery business yourself.

BSERGENT®MYOAILVSENT?NELCOM

with . the
Community
Improvement Corpor~tion
back in 2004 giving it ftrSt
option to match any bids on
the property.
·
Mayor John Musser had
previously estimated the
property is wortl\ at least
$150,000. However, council
decii!ed against placing a
minimum bid' on the property.
Bids should be clearly

Bob

AP plloto

BY LEE REICH

BY Bmt 5ERGEHT

• Federer wins fifth
straight Wimbledon !Hie.

.... ·"&gt;,

Admit It!
.

*

Deadline set for bids on Pomeroy Junior High property

SPORTS

Fully grown
dee!HJiue
delphiniums
are shown
in this
url'dated.
photo. If
it's pink
poppies you
want, or
only deepblue de~
phlniums,
you might
not find
these
particular
colors at a
nursery. A
much wider
selection is
available as
seeds than
as plants.

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Rutland 4th of ·
July festivities, 1\6

A

3

B3-4

Classifieds
Comi~

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section

A3

© 2007 Ohio Valley PUblishing Co.

Rutland's celebration attracts a crowd
BY

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND - People
lined the streets of Rutland
Saturday for the Fourth of
July parade kicking off a day
filled with entertctinment ,
good food and fun activities
in the park and Climaxing
with a late- night giant fire works di splay.
ll was the Rutland Fire

- - - - -·- -·- - · - - - - - - - - - - ' - - -

Department's annual ox
roast and patriotic celebration marking Independence
Day. ·~o ur Soldiers, Our
Freedom" was the theme of
the parade where entries featured red. white and blue
decorations, and the Meigs
Band played patriotic music.
day
included
The
matches
by
wrestling
Feli stic
Championship

Wrestling, the Big Bend
Youth Football League operating a dunking booth,
music by Requ,iem and
Swamp Jeuce,. and food,
concession and game booths
attracting plenty of patrons.
Trophies were awarded to
first and second place winners in several categories of Many bicycles decorated in red, white and blue, were in the
parade but the one taking the top spot in the judging was
Please see Rutland. A5
ridden by little Tessa Coates'.

•

�NATION • WoRLD

The Daily Sentinel

'

220- BY ROBERT H. REID

•-

'

•

In wake of botched terror plot,
Scottish Muslims fear retaliation;
revenge
attacks reported
.

ployment, poverty, and alcohol and drug abuse are
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
shared by the community,
GLASGOW, Scotlancl .not divided along racial
In the· entire row of stores, lines.
the oply one that was targetGlasgow's Muslims are
ed - the O!!f that still smells now wondering if all that
of smoke - is owned by a will change as British police
man of Pakistani descent.
continue to thread together
Shafiq · Ahmed said van- elements of the recent failed
dais. rammed a car into his terror attacks.
"One Stop Shop" conve·
Two Muslims allegedly
nience store, then set a fire rammed a Jeep Cherokee
- an assault . disturbingly packed with gas cylinders
reminiscent of the attempted and gasoline into the termiterror attack just days earlier na1 building of Glasgow's
on the @!!port of this gritty airport on June 3Q. Bilal
Scottish City.
Abdullah, a 27-year-old docPolice are investigating tor born in Britain and raised
the alleged attack and others in Iraq, was charged Friday.
as part of an apparent back- Kafeel
Ahmed,
from
lash against Glasgow's Bangalore, India, was
Muslims since the failed air· believed to be !)riving the
port ·assault and attempted jeep. Hospitalized in critical
car bombings in London. At condition with' severe burns,
least 24 incidents are being · he has no.t been charged. Six
probed, from graffiti oli a others remain in custody
.mosque to fu:ebombed busi· over that plot and a pair of
nesses.
failed car bombs 24 hours
.. , As he cleaned the soot earlier in London's theater
from his charred store, · disttict.
Ahmed, who moved to
The plot unraveled just
Britain ~ an infant, hoped days before· the anniversary
' theattacjConhisfamilybusifth 1 1 7 2005 trail ·1 "·"'
ness was~'! raci!llly motivat- ~ttac:~ ~l.iondbn: wh!~
~.. After , ~O~ peace_ful years four British,bom Muslims
m Scotlluf~. the tdea that, blewthemselvesupontrains
some may no l~nger ~el-;; and a bus, killing 52 people
come h~ and his Scottish- and injuring more than 700.
born ch)ldren ts ~tghly England's Muslims have
~~omforta?le.
complained of unwelcome
I .hav~n t ,got w&lt;;&gt;rds . t~ scrutiny, even alienation and
descnbe . •t II'!! hopmg Its violence, since the 2005
no.t retalianon, !Juned, ~I. attacks.
s3ld Sunday, 10 ~. \htck
"After 1n it was not that
Glasgow ac~ent. It s ,a bad for Muslims here," said
shame ~o thmk you c~n t lmran Ali, a 22.year-old in
work wtth people and enJOY Pollokshields, the most pop·
the company of people and
instead have to orry"
ulous . Muslim d~strict of
· 10
· Muslun
": encla~es
·
Glasgow.
"It's gomg to be
. Unlike
worse now."
10 northern England, Astan
. .
Muslims in Glasgow do not
John !'letlson, one _of
live in complete isolation. Glasgow 5 most semor
White customers are com- police. officers, told The
mon in curry restaurants and Associated Press that. they
ethnic
grocery
stores. have made 25 arrests 10 the
Glaswegians wearing the 24 attacks they suspect. were
colors of the local soccer · revenge for the atrport
team, the Glasgow Rangers, assault. But he also pomted
share the sidewalks with out that for every attack,
Muslim community elders there ~ere hundreds more
clad in the long tunics and expresSl~JIS of support for
matching baggy trousers tra- S~?tland s 60,000 Mu.~tms.
ditionallyworninPakistan.
We showed ~esthence
Like Muslim communities that some other.nations don:!
across Britain, there is have the c_apactty to show,
seething resentment in Netlson s~d.
.
Glasgow at the British govAhiiled s store .ts on a row
ernment's foreign policy. of. shops that mcludes a
The Iraq war the alliance Chinese take-out restaurant,
with the United States and a: a betting shop, a kebab
perception of one-sidedness restaurant, a bank, a post
10 the Israel-Palestinian con- office and a pub, The
flict all fuel hostility. Butter- Princess. Plywood boards
rorism in the name of Islam no"' cover part of his storeis abhorred in equal mea- front.
sure.
·
Robert Wishart, who lives
·Efforts to breed divisions opposite, said he was awak·
have not fared well in ened by a bang early
Glasgow. In the former Thesday morning, and saw
industrial towns of northern from his bedroom window
England where · much of that a silver car had smashed
Britain's Asian diaspora is in!o the shop front. Five
settled, the far right British nunutes later, the car was set
National Party with its on ftre by a man who arrived
fiercely anti-Muslim rhetoric in another car with an
has made inroads. But in accomplice. They then sped
Glasgow _ Scotland's most off.
.
populous Muslim city_ the
"He's always been a
BNP has hardly any pres- friendly guy," Wishart said
ence. Problems of unem- of Ahmed. "We all get on."

AP photo

A U.S. Army soldier escorts a suspected ai-Qaida member in Baqouba, Iraq, sund~;~me.
33 suspect_s. were arrested m a JOint U.S. and Iraqi overnight raid Sunday.
·
· _ ,,, ·
1

Baghdad and on the capi·
tal's not·~hern doorstep.
In a JOrnt statement, U.S .
Ambassador Ryan Crocker
and U.S. mthtary commande.r Gen. Davtd Petraeus
satd the attack a.gamst the
Turkoman Shutes was
"another sad example of
the nat.ure of ~he. en~m&gt;'
and th~tr use of m~tsc:tnu·
nate ~t&lt;;&gt;lenc~. to ktll mnocent Citizens.
Turkish military air
ambulances evacua!ed 21
people wounded 10 the
attack for treatment in
Turktsh, hospttals •.. the
country !\ Foretgn Mtmstry
said. Turkey feels special
responsibility for its ethnic
brethren,
the Turkoman,
h
k
w o speak a Tur ic Jan·
guage:
Dunng a news conference Su~day in Baghdad,
al-Bayali cnttctt;~d the
security
·situation
in
Armili, saying its police
force had only 30 members
a11~. that the ln~erior
·Mmtstry
had
fmally
responded to requests for
reinforcements only two
days before the attack. .
In the absence of enough
security forces, al-Bayati
sai~ authorities should helP,
restdents "arm themselves'
for their own pr~te_c!ion.
The call for. CIVlb.ans to
take up arms tn therr own
echoed
defense · was
Sunday by the CO)Intry's
Sunni Arab vice president,
Tariq al-Hashemi, who
said all Iraqis must "pay
the price" for terrorism.
"People have a right to
expect from the govern·
ment a~d security ~ge~cies
pr9tectlon for theu hves,
land, honor and property,"
. al-Hashemi said m a statement. '~But_ in the case of
(thw) mab1hty_. the people
have no cho1ce but to
take
up
their
own
defen se:"
He sa1d th~ governme~t
s!Jould ~rov1de communi·
ties wll. '!Ioney, weapons
·and trammg and "regu-

late their use by rules of
behavior."
Another
prominent
Sunni lawmaker, Ad nan
al-Dulaimi, said , Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki
had failed to· provide services and security but he
stopped short of . saying
his followers would seek
to topple the Shiite-led
government in a no-con·
fidence \'Ole .
•
. The CBS Evening News
reporte_d Sl!turday that a
large block of Sunni Iraqi
politicians will ask for a
parh~mentary vo!e of no· conf1dence agamst a!Maliki' s government on
July 15.
"The
situation
has
become. terribly bad," al·
Dulal'!'l
. told
The
Assoctated Press. "All
options are open for us.
We are gomg to study the
situation thoroughly, and
we are going to look into
the possible measures
whic)i go with the inter•
ests of. the Iraq1 people.
We .. will also consider
whether to keep on with
the government or not."
But Iraq's national
security adviser, a Shiite,
insisted that the government still .e njoyed broad
support and he warned ·
_agamst any . e.ffort to
rer.Jace al-Mahkt.
.
'I can tell you one
thing that after Maliki,
there is goin~ to be the
hurricane
10
Iraq,"
Mouwaffl\k
al-Rubaie
told . CNN's
"Late
Edition." " This is · an
extremely
important
point to . make across and
to the Western audience
and to the Arab audience
as well as the larger
Musli":~ audience."
The tdea of or~anizing
local communities for
their own "defense has
caught on here in recent
months following the
s~ccess of Sunni Arab
tr1be s m Anbar province
that took up arms to help

drive ai-Qaida f~om 'their
towns and villa~es .
U.S. and Iraqt officials
~ave said they hope to
I"!lplicate the "Anbar
model" el~~~where il) the
country, allleit under government supervision arid
control. '
On Sunday, Lr. Gen. Ali
Gheidan said the Iraqi
army planned to raise
volunteer
forces
in
Diyala province, where
U, S. and Iraqi forces
have. driven . al-Qaida
fighters from part of the
.capital of Baqouba. He
sa1d more than 3 ,800 vol·
unteers had already been
recruited.
"Their mission will be
like the police, workin~
under the Iraqi police,'
Gheidan told reporters .
"They work as a protection for each area and
they will only be fro~ the
restdents of that area.
Their role is to hold onto
territory after it has been
cleansed by the military."
U.S. commanders have
long believed the key to
restoring security was the
ability of Iraqi forces to
hold on to areas. cleared
by American troops.
Several senior U.S. offi·
cers have questioned
whether the Iraqi police
and arm&gt;' were capable of
preventmg
insurgents
from returning once the
Americans had left.
Local defense forces
would offer a way to
compensate for weaknesses in the Iraqi police
and army but wtthout
car.e ful co~trols, the systern cou-ld backfire by
promoting more· militias
tn a country already
awash in weapons .
Also · Sunday,
the
British Defense Ministry
announced the death of a
British soldier who was
wounded Saturday in the
big~est British offensiye
aga1nst Shiite militias
this year.

..

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles...

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1

1 Simply send your baby's

: Age
I Parents

: photograph along with the coupon
I to the left with your pa)ment of
$10, and we'll do the resL

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MaD or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Oil45769
Deadline ror submission,
Friday, July 20

Sentinel
1ll Court SL Pomeroy, OH

Resentment is sign of lingering depression
BY KAniY MITCHELL
AND MAlleY

The
World
Atlatl
Association has created a
standardized contest in
which people all over the
world can compete in the
same contest and their
scores can be compared. The
International
Standard
Accuracy Contest (ISAC)
consists of 10 throws, ftve at
15 meters and five at 20
meters. This would have
been the effective hunting
range in ancient times.
In Albany there will be
instructions, demonstrations
and state contests all day,
but World Atlatl Association
rules mandate that a com·
petitor can only throw one
ISAC a day. On Saturday
world -competitions will be
at 2 p.m. and on Sunday they
will start around II a.m.
There
will
.11lso
be
International Atlatl Society"
competitions and Ohio
Atlatl Association contests
both days.
Barnett said many world
ranked atlatlist live in
Pe~nsylvania, Ohi~ and
lndtana. The. 2006. tnterna·
Ilona) ranktngs mcluded
many southern Ohio com petitors. Ray Strischeck of
Athens tinished 5th in the

23, Suzi "Mama Waples; and
Aug, I, Donn!! Wilson,
Middleport.

world and ' Mike Glenn of
Lucasville finished 6th.
Other local men that were
world ranked in addition ·to
Barnett include Mamerto
Tindongan of Albany who
finished II th , Alan
Tindongan of Albany (318)
and Randy Wood of Rutland
(44th).
In the women's division
Margie
Tachok
of
Wintersville finished 4th in
the world while Cynthia
Tindongan and Debbie
Andrews, both of Albany,
finished 5th and 18th. In the
youth• division, (children
under 16), II year old Torin
Tindongan firiished 7th
while 15 year old Joannah
Tindongan finished 17th in
the world.
For the entire month of
August there is an atlatl display at the Wells Public
Library in Albany. There on
display will be locally made
atiatls as well as ancient artifacts from the Albany area.
TheWells Public Library is
open till? p.m. Monday thru
Thursday; 5 ~.m. on Fridays
and open )til 3 p.m. on
Saturdays.

Public meetings
Tuesday, July 10
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees
have a budget hearing at 7
p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Elections,
regular meeting, 8:30 a.m.
at the office.
CHESTER - Chester
Township
Board
of
Trustees, special meeting, 7
p.m. at the Chester Town
Hall for the purpose of conducting a budget hearing.

cent.
Thursday and Thursday
night...Mostly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 80s. Lows in the
mid 60s.
Friday
through
Sunday ... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s. Lows
around 60.

O zer

Si,lbscribe today

992-2155 .

will

Wedn~y, July

11

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m ..,
conference room, Meiig~· : .
County Health Department. "

Monday, July 9
SYRACUSE - Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
covered dish dinner and
membership drive, 6 p.m.,
Riverview
Bed
and
Breakfast Inn, RSVP, 9922311.
CHESTER
- Shade

River Lodge 453· special
meeting, 7 p.m., to confer
Entered Apprentice degree
on one candidate. All
Masons · ·
invited.
Refreshments .
Tuesday, July 10
POMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce,
businessminded luncheon, noon,
Pomeroy Library, Subway
of Pomeroy catering, Sen.
Joy Padgett speaking,
RSVP 992-5005.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Music Boosters, 7
p.m., high school music
room. Fair booth dis·
cussed.
Thursday, July 12
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:15
p.m., with annual award of
scholarships.
Monthly
stated meeting follows. All
Master Masons invited.
Refreshments.
RACINE - Ohio River
Producers (FFA alumni),
regular meeting, 7 p.m., at
the home of Ronnie and
Leanna Beegle; in case of
rain the meeting will be
moved · to
Portland
Community Center.

Church events
Monday, July 9
MIDDLEPORT
Weslyan Bible Holiness
Church,
Pearl
Street,
Middleport. Bible school, 6
to 8 p.m. July 9-13. Steve
and Angie Tomeck in charge.
Friday, July 13
MIDDLEPORT - First
Presbyterian
Church,
Middleport, Bible School,
July 13, to to 8 p.m. and July
14, 9 a.m. to I p.m.
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel sing at the Faith Full
Gospel Church, S.R. 124,
Long Bottom, 7 p.m. featur·
ing contemporary Christian
music
by
"Portal.·~
Refreshments.
Monday, July 16
TUPPERS PLAINS
Bible school will be held at
the St. Paul Methodist
Church in Thppers Plains
July 16 to 19, with sessions 6
to 8:30p.m. each day. Theme
will be Avalanche Ranch.
Children
kindergarten
through sixth grade are invit·
ed. On Th~ay a horse and
cart will be there to provide
rides for the children.

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Keeping
_ Meigs
., · ,County
.: it1f9rmed. ·
The Daily Sentinel

(thecompassionatefriends .or front s the co-worker with :a
g), an organization for par- message that an unwillingents whose children have ness !O manage his disability
died. The toll-free number is could have employment
1-877-969-0010.
consequences, it may violate
Dear Annie: Yesterday, I the individual's legal rights
received a gift from my under the Americans with
daughter, who is a darling. I Disabilities Act and create
looked it up on the website liability for the employer. lf
where she bought it and saw the employer reasonably
~at sJu: paid ~5 plus ship- believes the
co-worker
pmg. Its descnbed accurate· poses a direct threat in the
ly enoug~ as a !ittle ceramic workplace, the employer
·holder with tuhp bulbs that may arrange to have the coare supposed to bloom 1f I worker examined by the
water them correctly.. But .r employer's health care
cou!d have made the 1dentt- provider.
calttem myself for $3.
All of us can do more to
I .hate to tell her how ensure that America's work·
che~p tt looks, because I places reflect the fairness we
don t wan,t her to feel bad, value. Visit www.eeoc.gov
~ut I don t ~ant her to .get for more information about
npped off, etther. I e-mwled the
Americans
with
the company, and they sent Disabilities Act and other
an automated reply. What employment rights and
would you do? - Florida responsibilities. - Michael
Mom
C.
Fetzer,
District
Dear Flo~lda Mom: You Director,
U.S. Equal
can take a ptcture of yourself Employment Opportunity
!lext to the planter ~d send Commission,
Dallas
It to your daughter With your District omce
thanks. That way, if it's not
Dear Michael Fetzer:
what she ordered, she can Thank you for the excellent
complain to the florist. information. We think the
Otherwise, we must assume co-worker was more conyour daughter knew what cerned thai the man was
she was buying. Be sure to going to injure himself
water it.
fall'
h h'
Dear Annie·. "Concerned
mg, or t at IS staggering
might be misinterpreted at
in Connecticut" was uncom- meetings, either of which
fortable with a disabled co- merits addressing.
worker representing the
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
company at meetings. She ten by KJJlhy MitcheU and
believes the co-"':orker's · Marcy Sugar, longtime edifailure to deal wtth his tors ofthe Ann Landers colimpairment reflects a refusal amn. Please e-mail your
to accept reality and a lack questions to anniesmailof leadership.
box@comcast.net, or write
Unfortunately,
those to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
views reflect an all-too- Box 118190, Chicago, IL
common bias against work- 60611. To find out more
ers with disabilities. There about Annie's Mailbox and
are no indications from read features by ~ther
"Concerned" that the CO· Creators Syndicate writers
worker 1s unable to perform and cartoonists visit the
any essential function of his Creators Syndicate Web
job. If management con- JHige at www.creators.com, ·

Community Calendar

Clubs and
organizations

Monday ...Sunny ...Hazy.. . . Wednesday ... Partly sunny.
Hot with highs in the mid A chance of showers and
90s. Southwest winds 5 to I 0 thunderstorms in the after·
mph.
noon. Highs in the tnid 8Qs.
Monday
night... Partly Chance of rain 40 percent.
cloudy. Hazy. Lows in the
W e d n e s d a y
mid 60s. South winds around night...Mostly cloudy with a
5
mph
in
the chance of showers and thun·
evening ... Becoming light derstorms. Lows in the upper
and variable.
60s. Chance of rain· 50 per·
Tuesday ... Partly sunny r-.r-r--.---,.--..-withachanceofshowersand

showers and thunderstorms .
Lows in the upper 60s .
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph. Chance. of rain 40 percent.

5uuR

De
c . ga~
. ar 11om; This h~s ve~
little to do With ~ s childr.en and e~erythmg to do
wtth your gnef. You are ternbly depressed. Counseling
af
h
ter su.c a tremendol)s_loss
take~ ll!'le, .and somelimes
med1c~uon, m order for YO!J
to believe y~u can expe.n·
~nc~ . happmess th agam.
xp am to ~ at . your
re~entment. of. hts children
Will, pass m lime, but you
don t want .them .to suffer
because of 1t. De~ ~hould
take over the '!'~J~nty of
chtld-~lated actiVlttes, and
the children. can be told that
you are. trymg your. best to
deal With rou~ gnef an~
your behavior IS not the1r
fault. Meanwhile, contact
The Compassionate Friends

Local weather

:~~~;~~:~!~~~~~~st~

I Baby's Name

.

Tom In Mi hi

Brown

Monday, July 9, 2007

.ANNIE'S .MAILBOX.

Dear Annie: I have been
married to a wonderful guy
for si)t years, and I love him
very much. T()e problem is,
"Dean" has two children.
My daughter died a tragic
death last year, and since
then, I have not wanted to be
around kids or take care of
my stejx:hildren. Everything
agitates me, and I just want
to leave and start a new life.
Dean is the greatest guy in
this world and treats me like
a queen. I try to keep this all
inside, but I know my cold·
ness and lack of interest
shows. My heart says · to
move out and start over, but
I know my sadness will
never end and 1 would miss
Dean too much. On the other
hand, if 1 stay, 1 am in
extreme misery day after
day, and no one deserves to
be around me. I went to
counseling but it didn't
help
'
.
What should I do? _

Atlatl contest set for Aug. 18-19

winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance

ASpecial supplement to highlight babies,
Ages new~orn to four years old.

Baby Edition
to be published
Friday, July 27

MIDDLffi'()Kf - Summer
progrnms of st~lling spou..
sored by the Riverllend Arts
Council with grant funding
from the Ohio River Border
Initiative, will be~ln · on
Wednesday and contmue for
four consecutive weeks.
The programs called "Stories
at the River's Edge" to feature
a different professional storyteller each week have been
planned by local storyteller
Donna Wilson. Tiley will be
held at Dave Diles Park in
Middleport at I0:30am. and at
the Mason Rivertiont Park in
Mason, W. Va at 1:30p.m.ltis
suggested that those attending
- and all ages are invited to
the free event - bring lawn
chairs or blankets to sit on.
. Wednesday's progrnm will
feature Appalachian stoiyteller
Adele Browne. She will share
folk )ales, Appalachian, OOe·
time· fairy and original fanllly
- stories for children and adults.
Browne is originally from Clay
County, W. Va but now lives in
the Hocking Hills.
She is an Artist-iu..Schools
with the Greater Columbus
Arts Council, Dairy Bam Arts
Council in Athens and OOPS
(the Ohio Order for the
Preservation of Storytelling)
and Storytellers of Central
Adele
Ohio. She has been teUing stories for over 20 years locally will be July 18, Susanna
"Granny Sue" Holstein of
and regionally.
Other summer storytellers Jackson County, W. Va.; July

~~h~e;:~~~~s9o. ~~~th:~t~

In the Daily Sentinel

• Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here

Meigs/Mason storyt~rnng
getting ·underway

POMEROY -The Ohio
Atlatl Association and the
Vietnam
Veterans
of
America Chapter 100 will
hold their 8th annual Atlatl
Contest in Albany, Aug. I 819, at the Albany Riding
Club (fairgrounds) at the
comer of State Routes 681
and 32.
Pomeroy resident Steve R.
Barnett, an atlatist ranking
15th in the world, who is
treasurer of the Ohio Atlatl
Association , announced the
event which will include
demonstrations and instruction as well as competition.
Barnett said atlatl is an
ancient hunting system
claimed to be over 30,000
years old. He described the
atlatl as a flexible stick,
about two feet long, that is
used to propel 6 foot or
longer spears with great
speed and accuracy. The
atlatl was used almost
everywhere in the world.
Today the atlatl is still
used all over the world but
mainly for sport and re&lt;;re·
ation, according to Barnett,
noting that It is used for
hunting in .some states but
currently is illegal to hunt
with in Ohio.

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

Monday, July 9, 2007

BY TARIQ PANJA

' AS SOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.· BAGHDAD
Pfominent Shiite and
Sunni politicians called on
Iraqi civilians to take up
~rms to defend themselves
· after a weekend of vio· ·
lence that claimed more
than 220 lives, including
60 who died Sunday in a
surge of bombings and
shootings around Baghdad.
· The calls reflect growing
fru stration with the inabili·
~y of Iraqi security forces
to
prevent
extremi st
attacks.
· The weekend deaths
i-ncluded two American
soldiers one killed
Sunday in a suicide bomb·
\n~ on the western out·
sk1rts of Baghdad and
another who died in combat Saturday in S,alahuddin
· pro vi nee north of the capi·
tal, the U.S . command
said. Three soldiers were
wounded in the Sunday
blast.
•
Sunday's deadliest attac)&lt;.
occurred when a bomb
struck a truckload of newly
recruited Iraqi soldiers on
the outskirts of Baghdad~
killing 15 and wounding
20, . a police official at the
· nearest police station said
on condttion of anonymity
because he was not autho·
rized to release the information.
Also Sunday, two car
bombs exploded near
simultaneously
in
Baghdad's mostly Shiite
Karradah district, killing
eight people. The Jirst · det ~
onated at 10:30 a.m. near a
closed restaurant, destroying ~tails and .soft drink
stands. Two passe£s-by
were killed and eight
wounded, a police official
said.
About five minutes later,
the second car · exploded
about a mile away near
shops selling leather jack·
ets and shoes. Six people
were killed and seven
wounded, said the official,
who also spoke on condition of anonymity because
he was not authorized to
talk to the media.
. The
Karradah . area
mcludes the offices of the
Supreme Islamic .Council
in Iraq, the biggest Shiite
party in parliament, and is
considered among the
~afest parts of the capital.
Elsewhere, a bomb hidden under a car detonated
Sunday at the entrance of
Shorja market - a mostly
S_hiite area of central
)laghdad that has been hit
repeatedly by insurgents killing three civilians and
wounding five, police said.
Police also reported they
found the bodies of 29 men
Sunday scattered across
Baghdad - presumed victims of sectarian death
squads. Four other people
were killed Sunday in sepa·
rate shootings i.n Ba~hdad,
police said on conditton of
anonymity because they
were not supposed to
release the information.
The string of attacks in
the Iraqi capital showed
that extremists can still
unleash strikes in the city
oespite a relative lull in
violen ce here in recent
weeks
amid
the U.S. offen·
.
.
s1ves m and around
Baghdad.
: But the bloodshed in the
Baghd~d area paled · in
companson to the carnage
Saturday when a truck bomb
pevastated the public market
in Armili, a town north of the
capital whose inhabitants are
inostly Shiites from th.e
rurkoman ethnic minority.
There was still confusion
over the death toll .
: Two police officers Col. Sherzad Abdullah and
Col. Abbas Mohammed
Amin - said 150 people
were killed. Other officials
put the death toll at 115.
Abbas al -Bayati, a Shiite
Turkoman lawmaker, told
reporters in Baghdad that
130 had.died.
.
· Regardless of the precise
figure , the attack was clearly
among the deadliest in Iraq
in months. It reinforced suspicions.
that
al· Qaida
extremists we re movi ng
north to less protected
regions beyond the U.S.
securit y cra c kdown in

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinel

'

220- BY ROBERT H. REID

•-

'

•

In wake of botched terror plot,
Scottish Muslims fear retaliation;
revenge
attacks reported
.

ployment, poverty, and alcohol and drug abuse are
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
shared by the community,
GLASGOW, Scotlancl .not divided along racial
In the· entire row of stores, lines.
the oply one that was targetGlasgow's Muslims are
ed - the O!!f that still smells now wondering if all that
of smoke - is owned by a will change as British police
man of Pakistani descent.
continue to thread together
Shafiq · Ahmed said van- elements of the recent failed
dais. rammed a car into his terror attacks.
"One Stop Shop" conve·
Two Muslims allegedly
nience store, then set a fire rammed a Jeep Cherokee
- an assault . disturbingly packed with gas cylinders
reminiscent of the attempted and gasoline into the termiterror attack just days earlier na1 building of Glasgow's
on the @!!port of this gritty airport on June 3Q. Bilal
Scottish City.
Abdullah, a 27-year-old docPolice are investigating tor born in Britain and raised
the alleged attack and others in Iraq, was charged Friday.
as part of an apparent back- Kafeel
Ahmed,
from
lash against Glasgow's Bangalore, India, was
Muslims since the failed air· believed to be !)riving the
port ·assault and attempted jeep. Hospitalized in critical
car bombings in London. At condition with' severe burns,
least 24 incidents are being · he has no.t been charged. Six
probed, from graffiti oli a others remain in custody
.mosque to fu:ebombed busi· over that plot and a pair of
nesses.
failed car bombs 24 hours
.. , As he cleaned the soot earlier in London's theater
from his charred store, · disttict.
Ahmed, who moved to
The plot unraveled just
Britain ~ an infant, hoped days before· the anniversary
' theattacjConhisfamilybusifth 1 1 7 2005 trail ·1 "·"'
ness was~'! raci!llly motivat- ~ttac:~ ~l.iondbn: wh!~
~.. After , ~O~ peace_ful years four British,bom Muslims
m Scotlluf~. the tdea that, blewthemselvesupontrains
some may no l~nger ~el-;; and a bus, killing 52 people
come h~ and his Scottish- and injuring more than 700.
born ch)ldren ts ~tghly England's Muslims have
~~omforta?le.
complained of unwelcome
I .hav~n t ,got w&lt;;&gt;rds . t~ scrutiny, even alienation and
descnbe . •t II'!! hopmg Its violence, since the 2005
no.t retalianon, !Juned, ~I. attacks.
s3ld Sunday, 10 ~. \htck
"After 1n it was not that
Glasgow ac~ent. It s ,a bad for Muslims here," said
shame ~o thmk you c~n t lmran Ali, a 22.year-old in
work wtth people and enJOY Pollokshields, the most pop·
the company of people and
instead have to orry"
ulous . Muslim d~strict of
· 10
· Muslun
": encla~es
·
Glasgow.
"It's gomg to be
. Unlike
worse now."
10 northern England, Astan
. .
Muslims in Glasgow do not
John !'letlson, one _of
live in complete isolation. Glasgow 5 most semor
White customers are com- police. officers, told The
mon in curry restaurants and Associated Press that. they
ethnic
grocery
stores. have made 25 arrests 10 the
Glaswegians wearing the 24 attacks they suspect. were
colors of the local soccer · revenge for the atrport
team, the Glasgow Rangers, assault. But he also pomted
share the sidewalks with out that for every attack,
Muslim community elders there ~ere hundreds more
clad in the long tunics and expresSl~JIS of support for
matching baggy trousers tra- S~?tland s 60,000 Mu.~tms.
ditionallyworninPakistan.
We showed ~esthence
Like Muslim communities that some other.nations don:!
across Britain, there is have the c_apactty to show,
seething resentment in Netlson s~d.
.
Glasgow at the British govAhiiled s store .ts on a row
ernment's foreign policy. of. shops that mcludes a
The Iraq war the alliance Chinese take-out restaurant,
with the United States and a: a betting shop, a kebab
perception of one-sidedness restaurant, a bank, a post
10 the Israel-Palestinian con- office and a pub, The
flict all fuel hostility. Butter- Princess. Plywood boards
rorism in the name of Islam no"' cover part of his storeis abhorred in equal mea- front.
sure.
·
Robert Wishart, who lives
·Efforts to breed divisions opposite, said he was awak·
have not fared well in ened by a bang early
Glasgow. In the former Thesday morning, and saw
industrial towns of northern from his bedroom window
England where · much of that a silver car had smashed
Britain's Asian diaspora is in!o the shop front. Five
settled, the far right British nunutes later, the car was set
National Party with its on ftre by a man who arrived
fiercely anti-Muslim rhetoric in another car with an
has made inroads. But in accomplice. They then sped
Glasgow _ Scotland's most off.
.
populous Muslim city_ the
"He's always been a
BNP has hardly any pres- friendly guy," Wishart said
ence. Problems of unem- of Ahmed. "We all get on."

AP photo

A U.S. Army soldier escorts a suspected ai-Qaida member in Baqouba, Iraq, sund~;~me.
33 suspect_s. were arrested m a JOint U.S. and Iraqi overnight raid Sunday.
·
· _ ,,, ·
1

Baghdad and on the capi·
tal's not·~hern doorstep.
In a JOrnt statement, U.S .
Ambassador Ryan Crocker
and U.S. mthtary commande.r Gen. Davtd Petraeus
satd the attack a.gamst the
Turkoman Shutes was
"another sad example of
the nat.ure of ~he. en~m&gt;'
and th~tr use of m~tsc:tnu·
nate ~t&lt;;&gt;lenc~. to ktll mnocent Citizens.
Turkish military air
ambulances evacua!ed 21
people wounded 10 the
attack for treatment in
Turktsh, hospttals •.. the
country !\ Foretgn Mtmstry
said. Turkey feels special
responsibility for its ethnic
brethren,
the Turkoman,
h
k
w o speak a Tur ic Jan·
guage:
Dunng a news conference Su~day in Baghdad,
al-Bayali cnttctt;~d the
security
·situation
in
Armili, saying its police
force had only 30 members
a11~. that the ln~erior
·Mmtstry
had
fmally
responded to requests for
reinforcements only two
days before the attack. .
In the absence of enough
security forces, al-Bayati
sai~ authorities should helP,
restdents "arm themselves'
for their own pr~te_c!ion.
The call for. CIVlb.ans to
take up arms tn therr own
echoed
defense · was
Sunday by the CO)Intry's
Sunni Arab vice president,
Tariq al-Hashemi, who
said all Iraqis must "pay
the price" for terrorism.
"People have a right to
expect from the govern·
ment a~d security ~ge~cies
pr9tectlon for theu hves,
land, honor and property,"
. al-Hashemi said m a statement. '~But_ in the case of
(thw) mab1hty_. the people
have no cho1ce but to
take
up
their
own
defen se:"
He sa1d th~ governme~t
s!Jould ~rov1de communi·
ties wll. '!Ioney, weapons
·and trammg and "regu-

late their use by rules of
behavior."
Another
prominent
Sunni lawmaker, Ad nan
al-Dulaimi, said , Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki
had failed to· provide services and security but he
stopped short of . saying
his followers would seek
to topple the Shiite-led
government in a no-con·
fidence \'Ole .
•
. The CBS Evening News
reporte_d Sl!turday that a
large block of Sunni Iraqi
politicians will ask for a
parh~mentary vo!e of no· conf1dence agamst a!Maliki' s government on
July 15.
"The
situation
has
become. terribly bad," al·
Dulal'!'l
. told
The
Assoctated Press. "All
options are open for us.
We are gomg to study the
situation thoroughly, and
we are going to look into
the possible measures
whic)i go with the inter•
ests of. the Iraq1 people.
We .. will also consider
whether to keep on with
the government or not."
But Iraq's national
security adviser, a Shiite,
insisted that the government still .e njoyed broad
support and he warned ·
_agamst any . e.ffort to
rer.Jace al-Mahkt.
.
'I can tell you one
thing that after Maliki,
there is goin~ to be the
hurricane
10
Iraq,"
Mouwaffl\k
al-Rubaie
told . CNN's
"Late
Edition." " This is · an
extremely
important
point to . make across and
to the Western audience
and to the Arab audience
as well as the larger
Musli":~ audience."
The tdea of or~anizing
local communities for
their own "defense has
caught on here in recent
months following the
s~ccess of Sunni Arab
tr1be s m Anbar province
that took up arms to help

drive ai-Qaida f~om 'their
towns and villa~es .
U.S. and Iraqt officials
~ave said they hope to
I"!lplicate the "Anbar
model" el~~~where il) the
country, allleit under government supervision arid
control. '
On Sunday, Lr. Gen. Ali
Gheidan said the Iraqi
army planned to raise
volunteer
forces
in
Diyala province, where
U, S. and Iraqi forces
have. driven . al-Qaida
fighters from part of the
.capital of Baqouba. He
sa1d more than 3 ,800 vol·
unteers had already been
recruited.
"Their mission will be
like the police, workin~
under the Iraqi police,'
Gheidan told reporters .
"They work as a protection for each area and
they will only be fro~ the
restdents of that area.
Their role is to hold onto
territory after it has been
cleansed by the military."
U.S. commanders have
long believed the key to
restoring security was the
ability of Iraqi forces to
hold on to areas. cleared
by American troops.
Several senior U.S. offi·
cers have questioned
whether the Iraqi police
and arm&gt;' were capable of
preventmg
insurgents
from returning once the
Americans had left.
Local defense forces
would offer a way to
compensate for weaknesses in the Iraqi police
and army but wtthout
car.e ful co~trols, the systern cou-ld backfire by
promoting more· militias
tn a country already
awash in weapons .
Also · Sunday,
the
British Defense Ministry
announced the death of a
British soldier who was
wounded Saturday in the
big~est British offensiye
aga1nst Shiite militias
this year.

..

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles...

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BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Oil45769
Deadline ror submission,
Friday, July 20

Sentinel
1ll Court SL Pomeroy, OH

Resentment is sign of lingering depression
BY KAniY MITCHELL
AND MAlleY

The
World
Atlatl
Association has created a
standardized contest in
which people all over the
world can compete in the
same contest and their
scores can be compared. The
International
Standard
Accuracy Contest (ISAC)
consists of 10 throws, ftve at
15 meters and five at 20
meters. This would have
been the effective hunting
range in ancient times.
In Albany there will be
instructions, demonstrations
and state contests all day,
but World Atlatl Association
rules mandate that a com·
petitor can only throw one
ISAC a day. On Saturday
world -competitions will be
at 2 p.m. and on Sunday they
will start around II a.m.
There
will
.11lso
be
International Atlatl Society"
competitions and Ohio
Atlatl Association contests
both days.
Barnett said many world
ranked atlatlist live in
Pe~nsylvania, Ohi~ and
lndtana. The. 2006. tnterna·
Ilona) ranktngs mcluded
many southern Ohio com petitors. Ray Strischeck of
Athens tinished 5th in the

23, Suzi "Mama Waples; and
Aug, I, Donn!! Wilson,
Middleport.

world and ' Mike Glenn of
Lucasville finished 6th.
Other local men that were
world ranked in addition ·to
Barnett include Mamerto
Tindongan of Albany who
finished II th , Alan
Tindongan of Albany (318)
and Randy Wood of Rutland
(44th).
In the women's division
Margie
Tachok
of
Wintersville finished 4th in
the world while Cynthia
Tindongan and Debbie
Andrews, both of Albany,
finished 5th and 18th. In the
youth• division, (children
under 16), II year old Torin
Tindongan firiished 7th
while 15 year old Joannah
Tindongan finished 17th in
the world.
For the entire month of
August there is an atlatl display at the Wells Public
Library in Albany. There on
display will be locally made
atiatls as well as ancient artifacts from the Albany area.
TheWells Public Library is
open till? p.m. Monday thru
Thursday; 5 ~.m. on Fridays
and open )til 3 p.m. on
Saturdays.

Public meetings
Tuesday, July 10
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees
have a budget hearing at 7
p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Elections,
regular meeting, 8:30 a.m.
at the office.
CHESTER - Chester
Township
Board
of
Trustees, special meeting, 7
p.m. at the Chester Town
Hall for the purpose of conducting a budget hearing.

cent.
Thursday and Thursday
night...Mostly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 80s. Lows in the
mid 60s.
Friday
through
Sunday ... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s. Lows
around 60.

O zer

Si,lbscribe today

992-2155 .

will

Wedn~y, July

11

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m ..,
conference room, Meiig~· : .
County Health Department. "

Monday, July 9
SYRACUSE - Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
covered dish dinner and
membership drive, 6 p.m.,
Riverview
Bed
and
Breakfast Inn, RSVP, 9922311.
CHESTER
- Shade

River Lodge 453· special
meeting, 7 p.m., to confer
Entered Apprentice degree
on one candidate. All
Masons · ·
invited.
Refreshments .
Tuesday, July 10
POMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce,
businessminded luncheon, noon,
Pomeroy Library, Subway
of Pomeroy catering, Sen.
Joy Padgett speaking,
RSVP 992-5005.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Music Boosters, 7
p.m., high school music
room. Fair booth dis·
cussed.
Thursday, July 12
CHESTER Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:15
p.m., with annual award of
scholarships.
Monthly
stated meeting follows. All
Master Masons invited.
Refreshments.
RACINE - Ohio River
Producers (FFA alumni),
regular meeting, 7 p.m., at
the home of Ronnie and
Leanna Beegle; in case of
rain the meeting will be
moved · to
Portland
Community Center.

Church events
Monday, July 9
MIDDLEPORT
Weslyan Bible Holiness
Church,
Pearl
Street,
Middleport. Bible school, 6
to 8 p.m. July 9-13. Steve
and Angie Tomeck in charge.
Friday, July 13
MIDDLEPORT - First
Presbyterian
Church,
Middleport, Bible School,
July 13, to to 8 p.m. and July
14, 9 a.m. to I p.m.
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel sing at the Faith Full
Gospel Church, S.R. 124,
Long Bottom, 7 p.m. featur·
ing contemporary Christian
music
by
"Portal.·~
Refreshments.
Monday, July 16
TUPPERS PLAINS
Bible school will be held at
the St. Paul Methodist
Church in Thppers Plains
July 16 to 19, with sessions 6
to 8:30p.m. each day. Theme
will be Avalanche Ranch.
Children
kindergarten
through sixth grade are invit·
ed. On Th~ay a horse and
cart will be there to provide
rides for the children.

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•
•
•

Keeping
_ Meigs
., · ,County
.: it1f9rmed. ·
The Daily Sentinel

(thecompassionatefriends .or front s the co-worker with :a
g), an organization for par- message that an unwillingents whose children have ness !O manage his disability
died. The toll-free number is could have employment
1-877-969-0010.
consequences, it may violate
Dear Annie: Yesterday, I the individual's legal rights
received a gift from my under the Americans with
daughter, who is a darling. I Disabilities Act and create
looked it up on the website liability for the employer. lf
where she bought it and saw the employer reasonably
~at sJu: paid ~5 plus ship- believes the
co-worker
pmg. Its descnbed accurate· poses a direct threat in the
ly enoug~ as a !ittle ceramic workplace, the employer
·holder with tuhp bulbs that may arrange to have the coare supposed to bloom 1f I worker examined by the
water them correctly.. But .r employer's health care
cou!d have made the 1dentt- provider.
calttem myself for $3.
All of us can do more to
I .hate to tell her how ensure that America's work·
che~p tt looks, because I places reflect the fairness we
don t wan,t her to feel bad, value. Visit www.eeoc.gov
~ut I don t ~ant her to .get for more information about
npped off, etther. I e-mwled the
Americans
with
the company, and they sent Disabilities Act and other
an automated reply. What employment rights and
would you do? - Florida responsibilities. - Michael
Mom
C.
Fetzer,
District
Dear Flo~lda Mom: You Director,
U.S. Equal
can take a ptcture of yourself Employment Opportunity
!lext to the planter ~d send Commission,
Dallas
It to your daughter With your District omce
thanks. That way, if it's not
Dear Michael Fetzer:
what she ordered, she can Thank you for the excellent
complain to the florist. information. We think the
Otherwise, we must assume co-worker was more conyour daughter knew what cerned thai the man was
she was buying. Be sure to going to injure himself
water it.
fall'
h h'
Dear Annie·. "Concerned
mg, or t at IS staggering
might be misinterpreted at
in Connecticut" was uncom- meetings, either of which
fortable with a disabled co- merits addressing.
worker representing the
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
company at meetings. She ten by KJJlhy MitcheU and
believes the co-"':orker's · Marcy Sugar, longtime edifailure to deal wtth his tors ofthe Ann Landers colimpairment reflects a refusal amn. Please e-mail your
to accept reality and a lack questions to anniesmailof leadership.
box@comcast.net, or write
Unfortunately,
those to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
views reflect an all-too- Box 118190, Chicago, IL
common bias against work- 60611. To find out more
ers with disabilities. There about Annie's Mailbox and
are no indications from read features by ~ther
"Concerned" that the CO· Creators Syndicate writers
worker 1s unable to perform and cartoonists visit the
any essential function of his Creators Syndicate Web
job. If management con- JHige at www.creators.com, ·

Community Calendar

Clubs and
organizations

Monday ...Sunny ...Hazy.. . . Wednesday ... Partly sunny.
Hot with highs in the mid A chance of showers and
90s. Southwest winds 5 to I 0 thunderstorms in the after·
mph.
noon. Highs in the tnid 8Qs.
Monday
night... Partly Chance of rain 40 percent.
cloudy. Hazy. Lows in the
W e d n e s d a y
mid 60s. South winds around night...Mostly cloudy with a
5
mph
in
the chance of showers and thun·
evening ... Becoming light derstorms. Lows in the upper
and variable.
60s. Chance of rain· 50 per·
Tuesday ... Partly sunny r-.r-r--.---,.--..-withachanceofshowersand

showers and thunderstorms .
Lows in the upper 60s .
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph. Chance. of rain 40 percent.

5uuR

De
c . ga~
. ar 11om; This h~s ve~
little to do With ~ s childr.en and e~erythmg to do
wtth your gnef. You are ternbly depressed. Counseling
af
h
ter su.c a tremendol)s_loss
take~ ll!'le, .and somelimes
med1c~uon, m order for YO!J
to believe y~u can expe.n·
~nc~ . happmess th agam.
xp am to ~ at . your
re~entment. of. hts children
Will, pass m lime, but you
don t want .them .to suffer
because of 1t. De~ ~hould
take over the '!'~J~nty of
chtld-~lated actiVlttes, and
the children. can be told that
you are. trymg your. best to
deal With rou~ gnef an~
your behavior IS not the1r
fault. Meanwhile, contact
The Compassionate Friends

Local weather

:~~~;~~:~!~~~~~~st~

I Baby's Name

.

Tom In Mi hi

Brown

Monday, July 9, 2007

.ANNIE'S .MAILBOX.

Dear Annie: I have been
married to a wonderful guy
for si)t years, and I love him
very much. T()e problem is,
"Dean" has two children.
My daughter died a tragic
death last year, and since
then, I have not wanted to be
around kids or take care of
my stejx:hildren. Everything
agitates me, and I just want
to leave and start a new life.
Dean is the greatest guy in
this world and treats me like
a queen. I try to keep this all
inside, but I know my cold·
ness and lack of interest
shows. My heart says · to
move out and start over, but
I know my sadness will
never end and 1 would miss
Dean too much. On the other
hand, if 1 stay, 1 am in
extreme misery day after
day, and no one deserves to
be around me. I went to
counseling but it didn't
help
'
.
What should I do? _

Atlatl contest set for Aug. 18-19

winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance

ASpecial supplement to highlight babies,
Ages new~orn to four years old.

Baby Edition
to be published
Friday, July 27

MIDDLffi'()Kf - Summer
progrnms of st~lling spou..
sored by the Riverllend Arts
Council with grant funding
from the Ohio River Border
Initiative, will be~ln · on
Wednesday and contmue for
four consecutive weeks.
The programs called "Stories
at the River's Edge" to feature
a different professional storyteller each week have been
planned by local storyteller
Donna Wilson. Tiley will be
held at Dave Diles Park in
Middleport at I0:30am. and at
the Mason Rivertiont Park in
Mason, W. Va at 1:30p.m.ltis
suggested that those attending
- and all ages are invited to
the free event - bring lawn
chairs or blankets to sit on.
. Wednesday's progrnm will
feature Appalachian stoiyteller
Adele Browne. She will share
folk )ales, Appalachian, OOe·
time· fairy and original fanllly
- stories for children and adults.
Browne is originally from Clay
County, W. Va but now lives in
the Hocking Hills.
She is an Artist-iu..Schools
with the Greater Columbus
Arts Council, Dairy Bam Arts
Council in Athens and OOPS
(the Ohio Order for the
Preservation of Storytelling)
and Storytellers of Central
Adele
Ohio. She has been teUing stories for over 20 years locally will be July 18, Susanna
"Granny Sue" Holstein of
and regionally.
Other summer storytellers Jackson County, W. Va.; July

~~h~e;:~~~~s9o. ~~~th:~t~

In the Daily Sentinel

• Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here

Meigs/Mason storyt~rnng
getting ·underway

POMEROY -The Ohio
Atlatl Association and the
Vietnam
Veterans
of
America Chapter 100 will
hold their 8th annual Atlatl
Contest in Albany, Aug. I 819, at the Albany Riding
Club (fairgrounds) at the
comer of State Routes 681
and 32.
Pomeroy resident Steve R.
Barnett, an atlatist ranking
15th in the world, who is
treasurer of the Ohio Atlatl
Association , announced the
event which will include
demonstrations and instruction as well as competition.
Barnett said atlatl is an
ancient hunting system
claimed to be over 30,000
years old. He described the
atlatl as a flexible stick,
about two feet long, that is
used to propel 6 foot or
longer spears with great
speed and accuracy. The
atlatl was used almost
everywhere in the world.
Today the atlatl is still
used all over the world but
mainly for sport and re&lt;;re·
ation, according to Barnett,
noting that It is used for
hunting in .some states but
currently is illegal to hunt
with in Ohio.

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

Monday, July 9, 2007

BY TARIQ PANJA

' AS SOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.· BAGHDAD
Pfominent Shiite and
Sunni politicians called on
Iraqi civilians to take up
~rms to defend themselves
· after a weekend of vio· ·
lence that claimed more
than 220 lives, including
60 who died Sunday in a
surge of bombings and
shootings around Baghdad.
· The calls reflect growing
fru stration with the inabili·
~y of Iraqi security forces
to
prevent
extremi st
attacks.
· The weekend deaths
i-ncluded two American
soldiers one killed
Sunday in a suicide bomb·
\n~ on the western out·
sk1rts of Baghdad and
another who died in combat Saturday in S,alahuddin
· pro vi nee north of the capi·
tal, the U.S . command
said. Three soldiers were
wounded in the Sunday
blast.
•
Sunday's deadliest attac)&lt;.
occurred when a bomb
struck a truckload of newly
recruited Iraqi soldiers on
the outskirts of Baghdad~
killing 15 and wounding
20, . a police official at the
· nearest police station said
on condttion of anonymity
because he was not autho·
rized to release the information.
Also Sunday, two car
bombs exploded near
simultaneously
in
Baghdad's mostly Shiite
Karradah district, killing
eight people. The Jirst · det ~
onated at 10:30 a.m. near a
closed restaurant, destroying ~tails and .soft drink
stands. Two passe£s-by
were killed and eight
wounded, a police official
said.
About five minutes later,
the second car · exploded
about a mile away near
shops selling leather jack·
ets and shoes. Six people
were killed and seven
wounded, said the official,
who also spoke on condition of anonymity because
he was not authorized to
talk to the media.
. The
Karradah . area
mcludes the offices of the
Supreme Islamic .Council
in Iraq, the biggest Shiite
party in parliament, and is
considered among the
~afest parts of the capital.
Elsewhere, a bomb hidden under a car detonated
Sunday at the entrance of
Shorja market - a mostly
S_hiite area of central
)laghdad that has been hit
repeatedly by insurgents killing three civilians and
wounding five, police said.
Police also reported they
found the bodies of 29 men
Sunday scattered across
Baghdad - presumed victims of sectarian death
squads. Four other people
were killed Sunday in sepa·
rate shootings i.n Ba~hdad,
police said on conditton of
anonymity because they
were not supposed to
release the information.
The string of attacks in
the Iraqi capital showed
that extremists can still
unleash strikes in the city
oespite a relative lull in
violen ce here in recent
weeks
amid
the U.S. offen·
.
.
s1ves m and around
Baghdad.
: But the bloodshed in the
Baghd~d area paled · in
companson to the carnage
Saturday when a truck bomb
pevastated the public market
in Armili, a town north of the
capital whose inhabitants are
inostly Shiites from th.e
rurkoman ethnic minority.
There was still confusion
over the death toll .
: Two police officers Col. Sherzad Abdullah and
Col. Abbas Mohammed
Amin - said 150 people
were killed. Other officials
put the death toll at 115.
Abbas al -Bayati, a Shiite
Turkoman lawmaker, told
reporters in Baghdad that
130 had.died.
.
· Regardless of the precise
figure , the attack was clearly
among the deadliest in Iraq
in months. It reinforced suspicions.
that
al· Qaida
extremists we re movi ng
north to less protected
regions beyond the U.S.
securit y cra c kdown in

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

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•

-OPINION

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
'

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging t~e freedom ·
·of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. ponstltutlon

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, July 9, the I90th day of 2007. There
are 175 days left in the year.
·
1oday's Highlight in History:
·
·
On July 9, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was
read aloud to Gen. George Washington's troops in New
York.
On this date:
In 1540, England's King Henry Vlll.had his six-monthold marriage to his fourth wife, Anne of Cleves, annulled.
In 1816, Argentina declared independence from Spain.
In 1850, the 12th president of the United States, Zachary
Taylor, died after serving only 16 months of his term.
In 1896, William Jennings Bryan delivered his famous
"cro ss of gold" speech at the Democratic National
Convention in Chicago.
In 191 R, 101 people were killed in a train collision in
Nashville, Tenn.
In l 944, during World War II, American forces secured
Saipan as the last Japanese defenses fel~.
·
.
In 1951 , President Harry Truman asKed Congress to formally end the state of war between the U.S. and Germany.
In 1986, the Attorney General's Commission on
Pornography released the final draft of its report, which
linked hard-core porn to sex crimes.
Five years ago: The Senate voted to entomb thousands of
tons of radioactive waste inside Yucca Mountain in the
Nevada desert. rejecting the state's fervent protests.
Speaking in New York, President Bush dilled for doubled
prison terms and aggressive policing to combat fraud and
corruption in corporate America. African leaders launched
the African Union, an ambitious new body intended to pull
the beleaguered continent out of poverty and conflict. To
the boos of disappointed fans, the All-Star game in
Milwaukee fir1ished in a 7-7 tie after 1-l innings when both
teams ran out of pitchers. Academy Award-winning actor
Rod Steiger died in Los Angeles at age 77.
Today 's Birthdays: Actor-singer Ed Ames is 80. Singersongwriter Lee Hazelwood is 78. Actor James Hampton is
71 . Actor Brian Dennehy is 69. Actor Richard Roundtree is
05 . Author Dean Koontz is 62. Football Hall-of-Famer O.J.
Simpson is 60. Actor Chris Cooper is 56. TV personality
John Tesh is 55. Country singer Dayid Ball is 54. Rhythmand-blues singer Debbie Sledge (Sister Sledge) is 53. Actor
Jimm y Smits is 52. Actress Lisa Bane s is 52. Actor Tom
Hanks is 51. Singer Marc Almond is 50. Actress Kelly
McGillis is SO. Rock singer Jim Kerr (Simple Minds) is 48.
Actress-rock singer Courtney Love is 43. Rock musician
Frank Bello (Anthrax) is 42. Actor David O'Hara is 42.
Actor Scott Grimes is 36. Actor Enrique Murciano is 34.
Rock musician Dan Estrin (Hoobastank) is 31. Actor Fred
Savage is 31. Country musician Pat Allingham is 29.
Actress Megan Parlen is 27. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Kiely Williams (31w) is 21 .
,
Thought for Today: "A good storyteller is a person who
has a good memory and hopes other people haven 't;' Irvin Cobb, American humorist ( 1876- 1944).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Correction Policy

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to

Published every aHemoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error
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Monday, July 9, 2007

CLEVELAND (AP) · the Roman Catholic
Diocese of Cleveland considers closin~ churches
because of limited finances
and shrinking congregations, the state's voucber
program has helped stabilize enrollment at the diocese's city schools.
The program, which
allows students to :!]&gt;PI y
taxpayer money toward
tuitton at private schools,
started in
1995. for
Cleveland and was later
· expanded to include lowperforming school districts
statewide.
More than 80 percent of
students in at least seven
Catholic elementary schools
in Cleveland use vouchers
to attend.
Vouchers have kept
Catholic school classrooms
filled with students, but the
program is still not enough
to cover the full cost" of
sending a student to a diocese-run
school,
said
Margaret Lyons, superintendent of the Cleveland diocese's schools.
"Positive enrollments stabilize a school," she said.
A~

!&gt;f

.

CINCINNATI (AP) Cases in which juveniles
were accused of using guns
more than doubled in·
Hamilton County between
2002 and 2006, a trend that
aUthorities blame on several
factors, including the easy
availability of firearms and
a lack of conscience among
many kids.
·
·
"It used to be homicides
were committed .by people'
aged 18 to 35, then it
dropped to 16 to 28,"
Cincinnati Police Chief
Thomas Streicher said.
"Now we talk about kids as
young as 12 and 14."
In 2002, there were 248
cases in which minors were
accused of using guns. That
rose to 587 cases last Y-ear,
according to Hamtlton
County Juvenile Court statistics .
One out of every 45 cases
in which a juvenile was
arrested in 2002 involved a
gun. In 2006, one out of
every 22 cases involved a

it can be implemented. The
SEC has stalled in issuing a .:
decision on the proposal.
Those fighting such
change argue that smaller. ·
companies may be unable to ·
meet quorum requirements
without the broker votes. ·
Also of concern is whether :
retail investors even know
they are entitled to vote in
col-porate elections if they
have bought stock through .
brokers. ·
Still, those reasons aren't
convincing enough to keep .
the status quo. Change does- .
n't have to be an all-or-noth- .
ing fix .
The way to j!:O may be to ·
allow proportwnal voting,
where the broker uses the
voting instructions given by
other retail · investors as a
proxy to detennine how to
vote with shares that have
no 'instructions. Or investors
could give general voting
instructions when they buy a
stock with a broker.
Brokers have the "fiduciary responsibility to act in the
best interest of their clien.ts
and the general belief is that
is not happening much of
the time,'" said Patrick
McGurn, senior ,vice president and special counsel ·at
the proxy advisory firm
Institutional Shareholder
Services.
That's exactly the view of
rnan y shareholders
at
CVS/Caremark. They eventually got their way, but others might not unle ss the
rules shift in their favor.

...

Bv JOSEF FEDERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .

'

••

gun, statistics show.
a county sends to the state
·
for
loelQJp, the less money it
Firearms aren't difficult
for a 13- or 14-year-old to receives for drug'lmd menfind: they're sold on the tal-health treatment prostreet, taken in burglaries grams.
and car break-ins, bought at
In 2002, the state gave
gun ·shows and traded for Hamilton County $4.2 mildrugs, Streicher said.
lion for treatment pro!P"ams.
Older teens teach younger This year, the county ts getones how to use the guns, ting just $2.3 million for
·which are then used for rob- those. programs, causing
beries, for protection or to waitin~ lists for treatment.
settle disputes, officials
"We ve had to cut prosaid.
·
grams the last three or four
Terry Weher, who heads years," said Thomas Lipps,
the Hamilton County public the presiding judgt; at the
defender office's JUVenile county's Juvemle Court.
division, said he sees
The most violent crimes
minors every day who face that involve minors are
mandatory time for using a often carried out by homeless runaways who resort to
gun.
.
Prosecutors .won't agree robbing people to eat and
to less than one to three survive, Streicher said.
Some children don't
years in a juvenile prison,
county prosecutor Joe appear to feel shame over
their actions, he said.
Deters said. ·
"They've never been
It costs $219 a day to hold
a child in the Ohio loved, never taught to love,
Department of Youth never tau~ht the difference
Services. Under state spend- between nght and wrong,"
ing rules, the more juveniles Streicher said.

Israeli Cabinet approves release of 250
Palestinian prisoners, officials say

.

haven't told them how to
vote
This issue has ·become
more pronounced with the
recent adoption by many
comr,anies of "majority
vote '
policies,
which
requires director candidates
to receive a majority of
"yes" votes to be elected.
"This case was Exhibit A
for why the voting process
needs to be reviewed," said
Bill Patterson, who was part
of the figjll against Headrick
as the executive director of
CtW Investment Group, an
arm of Change to Win, a
coalition of labor unions.
"We should not be seating
directors wheri they don 't
receive a majority vote." ·
But the full-court press by
labor unions, pension funds
and other institutional
investors will only get this
issue so far. Like the case of
CVS/Caremark, they can
create a publicity nightmare
for companie~ , but it is up to
regulators to officially alter
how voting is done.
The
Securities
and
Exchange
Commission
plans to propose new rules
this summer on shareholder
ri ghts in corporate proxy
voting.
Chairman
Christopher Cox said at a
congressional hearing in
June that the broker vote
issue will be considered.
Already, tlie New York
Stock Exchange has proposed blocking brokers
from voting in director elections, but that requires the
approval of the SEC before

Catholic schools located in
high-pe'!of!lling
public
school districts because the
program is limited to children who are seenng 10
leave poorly performing
systems.
That raises the prospect of
suburban parish schools
being shuttered in the next
few year.s while the city's
Catholic schools remain
open - evi:n though half
the childre(l attending
Catholic , schools . in
· Cleveland are non-Catholic.
Lyons said the schools
accer,t poorer students who
aren t Catholic because
"Catholics are taught they
are responsible. for those ·
who are less fortunate."
Ohio taxpayers e~vid~
more than $16 IDIIIIOn 1.n
tuiti11n vouchers for more
than 5,500 Cleveland children to attend parochial
schools for the 2006-2007
school year. Vouchers
received renewed funding
in the two-year state budget
signed by Democratic Gov.
Ted Strickland last week. ·
Opponents say vouchers
take money that shoul(j go
to public schools.

County authorities say
· more kids using guns in crimes.

\

. macy benefits manager
Express Scripts Inc., which
had offered a higher selling
NEW YORK - Activist . price in a hostile bid. CVS
CVS/Caremark Corp. share- eventually rais,ed its offer
holders can finally claim and
fi nail y
bought
victory in a controversial Garemark in March for
director vote that revealed about $26.5 billion.
so much of what's wrong
Headrick won re-election
with today's corporate elec- at the annual meeting,
tions.
req:iving 606 million votes,
At issue is how sharehold- or 57.2 percent of the total
er voles get tallied for proxy vote, by . the company's
proposals and director elec- count. But activists claimed
tions. Investors want only the contest was swung by an
their actual .vote&amp; to .count, estimated 264 million votes
while companies often cast by brokers, which they
include votes from brokers , assume largely supported
for dien'ts who may not the company. Take that
have given voting instruc- amount out of the total, they
tions.
said, and his win falls under
Those votes tend to fav.or the majority threshold of 44
companies - like it did for percent.
CVS/Caremark's tally of
The company said lt does
votes for directors at its May not know how many brok.e r
9 annual meeting. That uninstructed votes were cast
enraged shareholders like for or against a given direcCaiPERS, the big pension tor, according to spokesfund for California state woman Carolyn Castel.
workers, the state Treasurer
On
Monday
night ,
of North Carolina and a CVS/Caremark announced
union-backed investment that Headrick had chosen to
group, who said this way of retire from the board. The
voting has to stop.
company declined to elaboThe immediate target of rate further on his departure.
their wrath was -director
Whatever the reason ,
Roger Headrick, who they shareholder groups say it
claimed didn't keep their gives them momentum to
best interests in mind when press regulators to strip the
serving as lead independent voting power of brokers in
director at Caremark during what they allege is "legaltakeover talks with CVS.
ized ballot stuffing" in corAs evidence, they cited porate elections. They .are
the big money and job pro- targeting cases where brotections offered to Caremark kers have the discretion to
leaders as part of the deal, · vote as they like because
while the company refused their clients - those who
to negotiate with rival phar- own the 'actual shares

"However, vouchers do not
cover the costs, so schools
still need to find resources
to supplement vouchers,"
Catholic schools are
being shuttered in large
cities across the country,
and that's hurtin~ , lowincome students, swd Clint
.Bolick, director J)f constitutional litigation at the
Goldwater Institute, a libertarian-leaning think tank
based in Phoenix.
"To the extent that vouchers have helped Catholic
schools stay open in
Cleveland and Milwaukee
and elsewhere, that's a godsend for children," he said.
The
eight-county
Cleveland
diocese
is
expected to reduce the number of parishes by as much
as 20 percent in the next
three years. But because the
closings are in the planning
stages, it's not clear whether
a church would be closed or
merged while its aff.il.iated
school stays open.
The diocese bas 231
parishes and 144 schools,
mcluding 34 schools in
Cleveland. Vouchers can't
be used in most suburban

Hamil~on

.•,'
':

ALL BUSINESS: CVS/Caremark director
election highlights troubles with broker-voting.rules

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Vouchers offer stability to
Cleveland's Catholic schools

might get a clue. But, very despite what he calls his "sig-:
ominously, Spencer's Web sile pificant personal 009y count
is being blocked by assoned of terrorists and insurgents
organizations which, accord- killed or captured"), only pering 10 his readers, continue to sonal animus can explain :
P.Uvide
access to assorted pro- alarm over the Islamic institu- ·
·olana
Jihad s!tes. Spencer reports tion of jihad (let alone dhim- .
·. west·
he's "never received word of mitude). "Alternatively," he
so many organizations ban- Wrote, ''you may think lslaJ!I
ning this site all at once." contains illiberal and danger· These include the City of ous tendencies."
link 10 Islam."
Chicago, Bank of America,
I may think? I do think Nbv~ mind that the link is Fidelity Investments, GE .IT, ''tendencies" such as jihl)d and
.
JPMorgan Chase, Defense dhimmitude. "Again," he said,
dQclrinally accurale. Better 10 Finance
. . · and . Accounting "you're entitled to that
acoonimodate niol'tlll threat
..
without identjfyiq its Islamic Services and now: a. federal view.... "
".
T
hat
view"
is increasingly
roots. Jnste11i.L defending e!"ployee m Dallas illfonns
absent at the top, where Islam .
their nations. .:..!.. for Starters, ~· the fede~ govtroment.
stopping Islanlie ·immigration .· ··Reason . ~IVel)? Some itself is politically and strategi:
and with it, ftilljli'!lgressiort of · Internet proVIders ~!11 the cally beside the r.oint..
.!Slari!ic law iniO Western soci-' facrnally-based, meticulous Consider current military
etie8 - ouh:iires have deci&lt;t- analysis on display at jihad- thought, as expressed by Lt.
ed 10 pretend Islam isn't there · watch.Org to be "hate speech." Col. Kilcullen: Typical !error- _ .
at all. . .
·
· This should sel)d Orwellian ists, he wrote, are "driven by ·
In 'the Ibewa, the effort is shivers Up society's sp~e, but, . fundamentally non-religious
mis~g to the point of ~arnungly, .such ~o~ to motivatiqnal factors." I wonfarce. Joel Mowbray, writing jihad analystS are mcreasmgly der which non-religious motivational . factors inspirep
at the Power Line blog, noted the nonn.
Glasgow's
terror-docs to ,
that The New York Tunes has
Case in point: Objecting to a
scream
"Allab,
Allah" 'While
identified Britain's Muslim recent column characterizing
ranuning
a
flaming
car into
teirorlsts as "South Asian peo- .his views as being nmH:omthe
airport.
ple" - which, considering prehending or indifferent to
Of course, it. ~ets worse.
Britain's largest South Askm jihad, U Col. David Kilcullen,
Debate
now drvides the
population is Hindu, is beyond senior
counterinsurgency ·
absurd, "Diverse group adviser to our forces in Iraq, Pentagon over a new lexicon
allegedly in British plot," the wondered in an e-mail for Centcom. At stake is the
Associated Press reported, whether I "may not . like Islamic tenn 'jihad" itself,
missing that unifying Islamic Muslims, and that's your whic.~ could become officially
thread. "All eight detainees choice." It was a long e-mail verboten within the ranks of
have ties 10 health service," - one of several - but even the fighting force .that is actuwrote the Toronto Star, "but these few words convey the ally supposed to defeat it.
genesis of terror scheme still increasingly prevalent viewThis might leave us speecheludes investigators."
point that discounts the doctri- less, but it better not shut us
If they. read Robert nal centrality of Islam to jihad up.
Spencer's jihadwatch.org, the violence convulsing the world
(Diana West is a columnist
essential daily compendium of from lraq to London. In the for The Washington Times.
jihad and dhimmi news, they mental no-jihad zone (and, in She can be contacted via
Lt. Col. Kilcullen's case, dianawest@ verizon.net.)

.

Wl¥W.mydailysentinel.com

2007

'"

AP BUSINESS WRITER

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Q: Who is winning the really important war of ideas the one between the West and
itself?
A: Not the side that understands jihad as a foundational
Islamic ins!itution.
.
This is nothing new. From
9111 forward, the yeoman
effort of eliles has been 10
wrench ' 'Islam" away from all
acts of jihad. But now, particularly after the Lomjon and
Glasgow 111tacks, their efforts
have achieved a deeper level
of denial and worse, broader
consensus.
The new British prime minister, Gordon Brown, has
directed ministers to omit
"Muslim" when discussing
(Muslim) 1erroriSm. And forget the gerreric "war on terror;"
even that pathetic phrase is off"
limitS. (This has abSolutely
nothing to do with Brown's
unctuously stated goal to make
!3ritain "the gateway for
Islamic finance.") The new
Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith,
refers 10 British Muslims as
"communities" - maybe a
prelude to not mentioning
them at all. Both have done the
"perversion of a great faith"
dance to enlightened applause,
taking cues from the unpublished "EU Lexicon," which
reportedly nixes such "offensive" phrases as "Islamic terrorism." British literary lions
couldn't
agree
more.
Philosopher John Gray and
historian Eric Hobsbawm
recently said on British television that even the word
"Islamist" was "unfair"
because "it implied a strong

Bv RACHEL BECK

Letl§[.LfO the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 3()() words. All leiters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephdne number. No
unsigned .letters will be published. Letters should be in
go(!d, taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organiza1ions and individuals will not be accept.-ed for publication. ·

Monday, July 9,

Making jihad go away

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

Page.A4

JERUSALEM The
Israeli Cabinet on Sunday
approved the release of 250
Palestinian prisoners, officials said, m the government's latesi gesture of support for moderate Palestinian
President Mabmoud Abbas.
However, the officials said
Israel had still not finalized
the list of prisoners to be
treed or the timing of the
release. Palestinian officials
said they were disappointed
Israel wasn't coordinating
the release with them.
Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert agreed to the prisoner release at a June 25 summit with Abbas as part of
Israel's strategy of bolstering
the Palestinian leader in his
standoff against Hamas militants.
Israel also has transferred
more than $100 million in
frozen tax funds to Abbas,
and pledged to ease travel·
restrictions on Palestinians
in the West Bank.
"We want to use every
means that can strengthen
the moderates within the
Palestinian Authority, to
encourage ihem to take the
path that we believe can create conditions for the start of
meaningful discussions,"
Olmert said in a televi sed
statement at the opening of
the meeting:
Israel is holding some
10,000 Palestinian prisoners.
The prisoner release
would be the first since
February 2005, when Israel
freed 500 in a simi Jar move
aimed at bolstering Abbas,
who had just won election as
Palestinian president.
Olmert said none of the

prisoners "have blood on
their hands"- Israeli tenninology for people involved
in deadly attacks. He said the
release had· been cleared
with Cabinet ministers and
security officials.
Cabinet
mmtsters
approved the release by a
vote of I 8 to 6, government
spokesman David Baker
said.
The partiCipants said
Olmert wants the release to
be more than symbolic.
Israeli media said Olmert
over the weekend had rejecteli a list dominated by people who were scheduled to
be released soon and ordered
a new list to be drawn up.
After the June 25 surrunit
in Egypt, Israeli officials had
pledged a quick release. But
the move has been delayed
because of wrangling with
security officials over who
should be freed.
Saeb Erekat, a top aide to
Abbas, urged Israel to coordinate the release with the
Palestinians. "We have not
been consulted on this
relealle," he said, adding that
Israel has rejected calls to
convene a joint committee of
prisoners.
The Palestinians have
urged Israel to release some
of the most prominent prisoners, including Marwan
Barghouti, a top official in
· Abbas' Fatah movement
who is serving life sentences
for involvement in five murders.
Israel has rejected calls for
Barghouti's release, though
Olmcrt has said the prisoners
will come from Abbas' Fatah
movement.
Riad Maliki. the infonnation minister in Abbas ' new
government, said he expect-

ed the 250 prisoners to be
fonner military men from
pro-Fatah security forces. "If
tt was in our hands to chose
... we would have chosen a
group that more fairly represented
the body
of
Palestinian prisoners, from
all.f.litical groups," Maliki
SaJ •

.

Israel is interested in
strengthening Abbas, a moderate who {avors peace talks,
following Hamas' violent
takeover of the Gaza Strip
last month. The 'fightin!J in
Gaza has left Palestimans
with two rival governments
- the isolated Hamas rulers
in Gaza, and Abbas'
Western-backed emergency
government in the West
Bank.
In
Gaza,
Hamas
spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri
said a release of Fatah prisoners signaled that Abbas is
collaborating with Israel.
"He should have refused any
release unless it includes all
Palestinian prisoners," he
said.
Hamas has been demanding the release of hundreds
of prisoners in exchange for
an Israeli soldier it captured
more than a year ago. Israel
has a long history of lop- ·
sided prisoner exchanges to
bring captured or fallen soldiers home.
Olmert said he .is "con.vinced beyond doubt" that
the upcoming release would
not hurt the chances of
returning the soldier, Cpl.
Gilad Shalit, or bringing
home two other soldiers caP.tured by Hezbollah guemllas a year ago. He said
"maybe it will even create an
atmosphere that will facilitate the process relating their
release."

Submitted llhoto

From left, Lynn Gedeon, Pat Blaschak and Rita Oberholzer of The Plains' QUOTA branch presented O'Bieness Memorial Hospital with a new TTY machine. The device aids telephone
communication for those with speech and hearing disabilities.

Senllcell _ _ _ _ _ ...........
ATHENS - The Plains impairments can communibranch
of
Q{,IOTA cate lelephone messages one
International service organi- of three ways; by directly
zation recently donated a new connecting 10 another TTY
TI'Y (leletype) machine 10 machine, by connecting 10 a
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital central ~lOr who can
for use by people with hear- relay the
message 10 the
ing and speaking disabilities. person on e other end, or by
QUOTA, developed in utilizing the machine's syn1919 as the first international thesized voice which rums.the
women's service organiza- typed text iniO verbal speech.
tion, has purchased tlte new
"We're certainly excited
TTY· machine to replllce an and appreciative 10 QUOTA
outd•(e4 model. By using the · for donating this equipment,"
machine's keyboilrd; persons said
Deborab
Shaffer,
with hearing and speech Director of Development for

O'Bleness. "Although our
TrY machines do oot get
used on a frequent basis, they
are extremely valuable to
those with impaired communications abilities. If it helps
just one of our patients or visiiOrs relay a message 10 a
friend or loved one, then it has
been wonh the irivestinell!."
For more infonnation, visit
www.QUOTA.org or call the
O'Bleness
Community
Relations department at 5929300.

State looks to recoup cost of tire dump cleanups
COLUMBUS (AP) more than 41 million scrap
State environmental offi- tires, recovering very little
cials are seekin~ to recoup · of the 'cost from the owners
at least $23 IDillilln spent of dump sites, the newspacleaning up illegally dis- per reported.
carded tires from dumps
It's a problem many states
aroupd Ohio, a newspaper wrestle. with, said Chris
Newman, who coordinates a
reported Sunday.
Ille~ally dumped tires are scrap tire cleanup program
breedmg grounds for dis- for the U.S. Envuonmental
ease-carryipg insects and Protection Agency.
fuel for diey, hard-to-extin- ·
"They're not rich people."
guish fires. Cases involving Newm1111 said of dump owndump owners who fail to ers.
pay for cleanups have been
Polluters often claim
sent to Oh10 Attorney bankru~y, allowing them
General Marc Dann for to avotd reimbursing the
review, The Columbus state, said Bob Large, who
Dispatch said.
supervises the state EPA's
Smce !998, Ohio has program. 1!1 some cases, the
spent $27 million removing state places a lien on their

.
Ohio s tire removal pro- ·
gram is funded by a $1 fee
on all new tires sold in the
state. The program, which
began in 1998, raises about
$7 million a year.
About 4 million illegally
dumped tires remain in
Ohio, Large said. In many
cases, recycled tires are
turned into landfill liners,
mud flaps, rubberized
mulch and radiator hoses.
Ignoring the problem isn't
an option, Large said.
In 1999, a fire involving 4
million scrap tires at Ohio's
largest stockpile, Kirby Tire
Recycling in Wyandot
County, burned for six days . .
propert~.

l

Midwest leads nation in
volunteering, government study says
BvSTEPHEN
OHLEMACHER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
spirit of volunteerism is
thriving in the heartland, but
not so much on the coasts.
Midwesterners are more
likely to volu.nteer their
time than are people elsewhere in the United States,
according to a government
study
being
released
Monday. The highest rates
were in the Minneapolis-St.
Paul metropolitan area,
where more than four in I 0
adults volunteered.
"It's 1 really
about
Minneapolis' commitment
to the quality of life," said
Michael Weber, president
. and chief executive of
Volunteers of America of
Minnesota. "If you look at
the entire society, it says we
will give back to the community and take care of our
society."
The Corporation for
National and Community
Service, a federal agency,
used Census Bureau data to
determine th;; share of people age 16 and older who
had volunteered their time
in the previous year.
The study provides threeyear averages, for 2004
through 2006, for the 50

Rutland
from PageA1
the parade, as follows:
Non-religious: Rutland
Lil Lady Reds coached by
Todd Davidson, first; Paul
Anderson, second.
Four-wheelers: Angela
Keesee, first; Cole Adams,
second,
Walking unit: Cub scout
Pack 240, first; Amber
Pierce, second. ·

largest metropolitan areas.
Minneapolis-St. Paul was
followed at the top by Salt
Lake City; Austin, Texas:
Omaha, Neb.; and Seattle.
Las Vegas had the lowest
volunteer rate, 14.4 percent.
It was ~oined at the bottom
by Miami: New York:
Virginia Beach, Va.; and
Riverside, Calif.
Nationally, 26.7 J?I?CCent
of adults in 2006 swd they
had volunteered in the previous year. That compares
with 28.8 percent in 2005
and 20.4 percent in 1989.
More than one-third of
. the people who volunteered
in 2005 stopped in 2006.
"Volunteering has a leaky
bucket,"
said
Robert
Grimm, an author of the
report. "Many times people
drop out because the activities are not challenging
enough or they're not substantial enough."
In Minneapolis, Weber
said his organization :ov?rks
hard to make sure acttvtues
are well organized, meaningful to the community and
rewarding to volunteers.
"The person goes away
saying, 'I feel good, I made
a difference today,"' Weber
said.
The study said several
demographic and social factors appear to contribute to

higher volunteer rates:
• Short commutes to
work, which provide more
time to volunteer.
• Home ownership, which
promotes attachment to the
community.
• High education levels,
which
increase
civic
involvement.
• High concentrations of
nonprofit organizations providing opportunities to volunteer.
Volunteering can have a
"positive,
substantial
impact on the life of a
youth" or it can help an
older person remain at
home mstead of moving
into a nursing home, said
Grimm, director of research
and policy development for
the federal agency.
"Volunteering is not
something that's just nice to
do, it's necessary to ·solve
important community problems," he said.
. Les
Kuivanen
of
Minneapolis volunteers at
an elementary school with
other retirees from the manufacturing
company
Honeywell International.
The retired engineer said
is
more
volunteering
rewarding when the activity
matches his skills.

Best
overall
float:
Harrisonville 411, Masonic
Lodge; first: Rutland Lil
· .....--·...,.-c-=
fr.'U'OR;\flhG ARn n:~nl
Lady Reds coach.ed by
101
Jeremy Coleman, second.
1sney S
Bicycles; Tessa Coates,
Dalmatians Kids
first; Emily Graham, secLive Moskal Adventure!
ond.
July t4, IS, Zl &amp; l2
Religious floats : Rutland
Salata pm, suo atJ pm
Nazarene Church, first;
SIO &amp; $7
Hysell Run Community
Sign up now forspedll
Church, second.
Antique cars: Amold
"PUPPY PARTIES"
Priddy fust; George Wright,
presonted prior to each show
second.
. 1----..:S:.:;.S_.pe.:.:r..:&lt;.:.:hi.:.:ld~-~
Horses: Gracie Hill, first;
Box ontce: 428 2nd Ave.
Adrian Bolin, second.
Galllpotta, OH 1740144&amp;-ARTS

o·

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�The Daily Sentinel

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-OPINION

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
'

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging t~e freedom ·
·of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. ponstltutlon

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, July 9, the I90th day of 2007. There
are 175 days left in the year.
·
1oday's Highlight in History:
·
·
On July 9, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was
read aloud to Gen. George Washington's troops in New
York.
On this date:
In 1540, England's King Henry Vlll.had his six-monthold marriage to his fourth wife, Anne of Cleves, annulled.
In 1816, Argentina declared independence from Spain.
In 1850, the 12th president of the United States, Zachary
Taylor, died after serving only 16 months of his term.
In 1896, William Jennings Bryan delivered his famous
"cro ss of gold" speech at the Democratic National
Convention in Chicago.
In 191 R, 101 people were killed in a train collision in
Nashville, Tenn.
In l 944, during World War II, American forces secured
Saipan as the last Japanese defenses fel~.
·
.
In 1951 , President Harry Truman asKed Congress to formally end the state of war between the U.S. and Germany.
In 1986, the Attorney General's Commission on
Pornography released the final draft of its report, which
linked hard-core porn to sex crimes.
Five years ago: The Senate voted to entomb thousands of
tons of radioactive waste inside Yucca Mountain in the
Nevada desert. rejecting the state's fervent protests.
Speaking in New York, President Bush dilled for doubled
prison terms and aggressive policing to combat fraud and
corruption in corporate America. African leaders launched
the African Union, an ambitious new body intended to pull
the beleaguered continent out of poverty and conflict. To
the boos of disappointed fans, the All-Star game in
Milwaukee fir1ished in a 7-7 tie after 1-l innings when both
teams ran out of pitchers. Academy Award-winning actor
Rod Steiger died in Los Angeles at age 77.
Today 's Birthdays: Actor-singer Ed Ames is 80. Singersongwriter Lee Hazelwood is 78. Actor James Hampton is
71 . Actor Brian Dennehy is 69. Actor Richard Roundtree is
05 . Author Dean Koontz is 62. Football Hall-of-Famer O.J.
Simpson is 60. Actor Chris Cooper is 56. TV personality
John Tesh is 55. Country singer Dayid Ball is 54. Rhythmand-blues singer Debbie Sledge (Sister Sledge) is 53. Actor
Jimm y Smits is 52. Actress Lisa Bane s is 52. Actor Tom
Hanks is 51. Singer Marc Almond is 50. Actress Kelly
McGillis is SO. Rock singer Jim Kerr (Simple Minds) is 48.
Actress-rock singer Courtney Love is 43. Rock musician
Frank Bello (Anthrax) is 42. Actor David O'Hara is 42.
Actor Scott Grimes is 36. Actor Enrique Murciano is 34.
Rock musician Dan Estrin (Hoobastank) is 31. Actor Fred
Savage is 31. Country musician Pat Allingham is 29.
Actress Megan Parlen is 27. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Kiely Williams (31w) is 21 .
,
Thought for Today: "A good storyteller is a person who
has a good memory and hopes other people haven 't;' Irvin Cobb, American humorist ( 1876- 1944).

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Monday, July 9, 2007

CLEVELAND (AP) · the Roman Catholic
Diocese of Cleveland considers closin~ churches
because of limited finances
and shrinking congregations, the state's voucber
program has helped stabilize enrollment at the diocese's city schools.
The program, which
allows students to :!]&gt;PI y
taxpayer money toward
tuitton at private schools,
started in
1995. for
Cleveland and was later
· expanded to include lowperforming school districts
statewide.
More than 80 percent of
students in at least seven
Catholic elementary schools
in Cleveland use vouchers
to attend.
Vouchers have kept
Catholic school classrooms
filled with students, but the
program is still not enough
to cover the full cost" of
sending a student to a diocese-run
school,
said
Margaret Lyons, superintendent of the Cleveland diocese's schools.
"Positive enrollments stabilize a school," she said.
A~

!&gt;f

.

CINCINNATI (AP) Cases in which juveniles
were accused of using guns
more than doubled in·
Hamilton County between
2002 and 2006, a trend that
aUthorities blame on several
factors, including the easy
availability of firearms and
a lack of conscience among
many kids.
·
·
"It used to be homicides
were committed .by people'
aged 18 to 35, then it
dropped to 16 to 28,"
Cincinnati Police Chief
Thomas Streicher said.
"Now we talk about kids as
young as 12 and 14."
In 2002, there were 248
cases in which minors were
accused of using guns. That
rose to 587 cases last Y-ear,
according to Hamtlton
County Juvenile Court statistics .
One out of every 45 cases
in which a juvenile was
arrested in 2002 involved a
gun. In 2006, one out of
every 22 cases involved a

it can be implemented. The
SEC has stalled in issuing a .:
decision on the proposal.
Those fighting such
change argue that smaller. ·
companies may be unable to ·
meet quorum requirements
without the broker votes. ·
Also of concern is whether :
retail investors even know
they are entitled to vote in
col-porate elections if they
have bought stock through .
brokers. ·
Still, those reasons aren't
convincing enough to keep .
the status quo. Change does- .
n't have to be an all-or-noth- .
ing fix .
The way to j!:O may be to ·
allow proportwnal voting,
where the broker uses the
voting instructions given by
other retail · investors as a
proxy to detennine how to
vote with shares that have
no 'instructions. Or investors
could give general voting
instructions when they buy a
stock with a broker.
Brokers have the "fiduciary responsibility to act in the
best interest of their clien.ts
and the general belief is that
is not happening much of
the time,'" said Patrick
McGurn, senior ,vice president and special counsel ·at
the proxy advisory firm
Institutional Shareholder
Services.
That's exactly the view of
rnan y shareholders
at
CVS/Caremark. They eventually got their way, but others might not unle ss the
rules shift in their favor.

...

Bv JOSEF FEDERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .

'

••

gun, statistics show.
a county sends to the state
·
for
loelQJp, the less money it
Firearms aren't difficult
for a 13- or 14-year-old to receives for drug'lmd menfind: they're sold on the tal-health treatment prostreet, taken in burglaries grams.
and car break-ins, bought at
In 2002, the state gave
gun ·shows and traded for Hamilton County $4.2 mildrugs, Streicher said.
lion for treatment pro!P"ams.
Older teens teach younger This year, the county ts getones how to use the guns, ting just $2.3 million for
·which are then used for rob- those. programs, causing
beries, for protection or to waitin~ lists for treatment.
settle disputes, officials
"We ve had to cut prosaid.
·
grams the last three or four
Terry Weher, who heads years," said Thomas Lipps,
the Hamilton County public the presiding judgt; at the
defender office's JUVenile county's Juvemle Court.
division, said he sees
The most violent crimes
minors every day who face that involve minors are
mandatory time for using a often carried out by homeless runaways who resort to
gun.
.
Prosecutors .won't agree robbing people to eat and
to less than one to three survive, Streicher said.
Some children don't
years in a juvenile prison,
county prosecutor Joe appear to feel shame over
their actions, he said.
Deters said. ·
"They've never been
It costs $219 a day to hold
a child in the Ohio loved, never taught to love,
Department of Youth never tau~ht the difference
Services. Under state spend- between nght and wrong,"
ing rules, the more juveniles Streicher said.

Israeli Cabinet approves release of 250
Palestinian prisoners, officials say

.

haven't told them how to
vote
This issue has ·become
more pronounced with the
recent adoption by many
comr,anies of "majority
vote '
policies,
which
requires director candidates
to receive a majority of
"yes" votes to be elected.
"This case was Exhibit A
for why the voting process
needs to be reviewed," said
Bill Patterson, who was part
of the figjll against Headrick
as the executive director of
CtW Investment Group, an
arm of Change to Win, a
coalition of labor unions.
"We should not be seating
directors wheri they don 't
receive a majority vote." ·
But the full-court press by
labor unions, pension funds
and other institutional
investors will only get this
issue so far. Like the case of
CVS/Caremark, they can
create a publicity nightmare
for companie~ , but it is up to
regulators to officially alter
how voting is done.
The
Securities
and
Exchange
Commission
plans to propose new rules
this summer on shareholder
ri ghts in corporate proxy
voting.
Chairman
Christopher Cox said at a
congressional hearing in
June that the broker vote
issue will be considered.
Already, tlie New York
Stock Exchange has proposed blocking brokers
from voting in director elections, but that requires the
approval of the SEC before

Catholic schools located in
high-pe'!of!lling
public
school districts because the
program is limited to children who are seenng 10
leave poorly performing
systems.
That raises the prospect of
suburban parish schools
being shuttered in the next
few year.s while the city's
Catholic schools remain
open - evi:n though half
the childre(l attending
Catholic , schools . in
· Cleveland are non-Catholic.
Lyons said the schools
accer,t poorer students who
aren t Catholic because
"Catholics are taught they
are responsible. for those ·
who are less fortunate."
Ohio taxpayers e~vid~
more than $16 IDIIIIOn 1.n
tuiti11n vouchers for more
than 5,500 Cleveland children to attend parochial
schools for the 2006-2007
school year. Vouchers
received renewed funding
in the two-year state budget
signed by Democratic Gov.
Ted Strickland last week. ·
Opponents say vouchers
take money that shoul(j go
to public schools.

County authorities say
· more kids using guns in crimes.

\

. macy benefits manager
Express Scripts Inc., which
had offered a higher selling
NEW YORK - Activist . price in a hostile bid. CVS
CVS/Caremark Corp. share- eventually rais,ed its offer
holders can finally claim and
fi nail y
bought
victory in a controversial Garemark in March for
director vote that revealed about $26.5 billion.
so much of what's wrong
Headrick won re-election
with today's corporate elec- at the annual meeting,
tions.
req:iving 606 million votes,
At issue is how sharehold- or 57.2 percent of the total
er voles get tallied for proxy vote, by . the company's
proposals and director elec- count. But activists claimed
tions. Investors want only the contest was swung by an
their actual .vote&amp; to .count, estimated 264 million votes
while companies often cast by brokers, which they
include votes from brokers , assume largely supported
for dien'ts who may not the company. Take that
have given voting instruc- amount out of the total, they
tions.
said, and his win falls under
Those votes tend to fav.or the majority threshold of 44
companies - like it did for percent.
CVS/Caremark's tally of
The company said lt does
votes for directors at its May not know how many brok.e r
9 annual meeting. That uninstructed votes were cast
enraged shareholders like for or against a given direcCaiPERS, the big pension tor, according to spokesfund for California state woman Carolyn Castel.
workers, the state Treasurer
On
Monday
night ,
of North Carolina and a CVS/Caremark announced
union-backed investment that Headrick had chosen to
group, who said this way of retire from the board. The
voting has to stop.
company declined to elaboThe immediate target of rate further on his departure.
their wrath was -director
Whatever the reason ,
Roger Headrick, who they shareholder groups say it
claimed didn't keep their gives them momentum to
best interests in mind when press regulators to strip the
serving as lead independent voting power of brokers in
director at Caremark during what they allege is "legaltakeover talks with CVS.
ized ballot stuffing" in corAs evidence, they cited porate elections. They .are
the big money and job pro- targeting cases where brotections offered to Caremark kers have the discretion to
leaders as part of the deal, · vote as they like because
while the company refused their clients - those who
to negotiate with rival phar- own the 'actual shares

"However, vouchers do not
cover the costs, so schools
still need to find resources
to supplement vouchers,"
Catholic schools are
being shuttered in large
cities across the country,
and that's hurtin~ , lowincome students, swd Clint
.Bolick, director J)f constitutional litigation at the
Goldwater Institute, a libertarian-leaning think tank
based in Phoenix.
"To the extent that vouchers have helped Catholic
schools stay open in
Cleveland and Milwaukee
and elsewhere, that's a godsend for children," he said.
The
eight-county
Cleveland
diocese
is
expected to reduce the number of parishes by as much
as 20 percent in the next
three years. But because the
closings are in the planning
stages, it's not clear whether
a church would be closed or
merged while its aff.il.iated
school stays open.
The diocese bas 231
parishes and 144 schools,
mcluding 34 schools in
Cleveland. Vouchers can't
be used in most suburban

Hamil~on

.•,'
':

ALL BUSINESS: CVS/Caremark director
election highlights troubles with broker-voting.rules

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Vouchers offer stability to
Cleveland's Catholic schools

might get a clue. But, very despite what he calls his "sig-:
ominously, Spencer's Web sile pificant personal 009y count
is being blocked by assoned of terrorists and insurgents
organizations which, accord- killed or captured"), only pering 10 his readers, continue to sonal animus can explain :
P.Uvide
access to assorted pro- alarm over the Islamic institu- ·
·olana
Jihad s!tes. Spencer reports tion of jihad (let alone dhim- .
·. west·
he's "never received word of mitude). "Alternatively," he
so many organizations ban- Wrote, ''you may think lslaJ!I
ning this site all at once." contains illiberal and danger· These include the City of ous tendencies."
link 10 Islam."
Chicago, Bank of America,
I may think? I do think Nbv~ mind that the link is Fidelity Investments, GE .IT, ''tendencies" such as jihl)d and
.
JPMorgan Chase, Defense dhimmitude. "Again," he said,
dQclrinally accurale. Better 10 Finance
. . · and . Accounting "you're entitled to that
acoonimodate niol'tlll threat
..
without identjfyiq its Islamic Services and now: a. federal view.... "
".
T
hat
view"
is increasingly
roots. Jnste11i.L defending e!"ployee m Dallas illfonns
absent at the top, where Islam .
their nations. .:..!.. for Starters, ~· the fede~ govtroment.
stopping Islanlie ·immigration .· ··Reason . ~IVel)? Some itself is politically and strategi:
and with it, ftilljli'!lgressiort of · Internet proVIders ~!11 the cally beside the r.oint..
.!Slari!ic law iniO Western soci-' facrnally-based, meticulous Consider current military
etie8 - ouh:iires have deci&lt;t- analysis on display at jihad- thought, as expressed by Lt.
ed 10 pretend Islam isn't there · watch.Org to be "hate speech." Col. Kilcullen: Typical !error- _ .
at all. . .
·
· This should sel)d Orwellian ists, he wrote, are "driven by ·
In 'the Ibewa, the effort is shivers Up society's sp~e, but, . fundamentally non-religious
mis~g to the point of ~arnungly, .such ~o~ to motivatiqnal factors." I wonfarce. Joel Mowbray, writing jihad analystS are mcreasmgly der which non-religious motivational . factors inspirep
at the Power Line blog, noted the nonn.
Glasgow's
terror-docs to ,
that The New York Tunes has
Case in point: Objecting to a
scream
"Allab,
Allah" 'While
identified Britain's Muslim recent column characterizing
ranuning
a
flaming
car into
teirorlsts as "South Asian peo- .his views as being nmH:omthe
airport.
ple" - which, considering prehending or indifferent to
Of course, it. ~ets worse.
Britain's largest South Askm jihad, U Col. David Kilcullen,
Debate
now drvides the
population is Hindu, is beyond senior
counterinsurgency ·
absurd, "Diverse group adviser to our forces in Iraq, Pentagon over a new lexicon
allegedly in British plot," the wondered in an e-mail for Centcom. At stake is the
Associated Press reported, whether I "may not . like Islamic tenn 'jihad" itself,
missing that unifying Islamic Muslims, and that's your whic.~ could become officially
thread. "All eight detainees choice." It was a long e-mail verboten within the ranks of
have ties 10 health service," - one of several - but even the fighting force .that is actuwrote the Toronto Star, "but these few words convey the ally supposed to defeat it.
genesis of terror scheme still increasingly prevalent viewThis might leave us speecheludes investigators."
point that discounts the doctri- less, but it better not shut us
If they. read Robert nal centrality of Islam to jihad up.
Spencer's jihadwatch.org, the violence convulsing the world
(Diana West is a columnist
essential daily compendium of from lraq to London. In the for The Washington Times.
jihad and dhimmi news, they mental no-jihad zone (and, in She can be contacted via
Lt. Col. Kilcullen's case, dianawest@ verizon.net.)

.

Wl¥W.mydailysentinel.com

2007

'"

AP BUSINESS WRITER

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Q: Who is winning the really important war of ideas the one between the West and
itself?
A: Not the side that understands jihad as a foundational
Islamic ins!itution.
.
This is nothing new. From
9111 forward, the yeoman
effort of eliles has been 10
wrench ' 'Islam" away from all
acts of jihad. But now, particularly after the Lomjon and
Glasgow 111tacks, their efforts
have achieved a deeper level
of denial and worse, broader
consensus.
The new British prime minister, Gordon Brown, has
directed ministers to omit
"Muslim" when discussing
(Muslim) 1erroriSm. And forget the gerreric "war on terror;"
even that pathetic phrase is off"
limitS. (This has abSolutely
nothing to do with Brown's
unctuously stated goal to make
!3ritain "the gateway for
Islamic finance.") The new
Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith,
refers 10 British Muslims as
"communities" - maybe a
prelude to not mentioning
them at all. Both have done the
"perversion of a great faith"
dance to enlightened applause,
taking cues from the unpublished "EU Lexicon," which
reportedly nixes such "offensive" phrases as "Islamic terrorism." British literary lions
couldn't
agree
more.
Philosopher John Gray and
historian Eric Hobsbawm
recently said on British television that even the word
"Islamist" was "unfair"
because "it implied a strong

Bv RACHEL BECK

Letl§[.LfO the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 3()() words. All leiters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephdne number. No
unsigned .letters will be published. Letters should be in
go(!d, taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organiza1ions and individuals will not be accept.-ed for publication. ·

Monday, July 9,

Making jihad go away

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

Page.A4

JERUSALEM The
Israeli Cabinet on Sunday
approved the release of 250
Palestinian prisoners, officials said, m the government's latesi gesture of support for moderate Palestinian
President Mabmoud Abbas.
However, the officials said
Israel had still not finalized
the list of prisoners to be
treed or the timing of the
release. Palestinian officials
said they were disappointed
Israel wasn't coordinating
the release with them.
Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert agreed to the prisoner release at a June 25 summit with Abbas as part of
Israel's strategy of bolstering
the Palestinian leader in his
standoff against Hamas militants.
Israel also has transferred
more than $100 million in
frozen tax funds to Abbas,
and pledged to ease travel·
restrictions on Palestinians
in the West Bank.
"We want to use every
means that can strengthen
the moderates within the
Palestinian Authority, to
encourage ihem to take the
path that we believe can create conditions for the start of
meaningful discussions,"
Olmert said in a televi sed
statement at the opening of
the meeting:
Israel is holding some
10,000 Palestinian prisoners.
The prisoner release
would be the first since
February 2005, when Israel
freed 500 in a simi Jar move
aimed at bolstering Abbas,
who had just won election as
Palestinian president.
Olmert said none of the

prisoners "have blood on
their hands"- Israeli tenninology for people involved
in deadly attacks. He said the
release had· been cleared
with Cabinet ministers and
security officials.
Cabinet
mmtsters
approved the release by a
vote of I 8 to 6, government
spokesman David Baker
said.
The partiCipants said
Olmert wants the release to
be more than symbolic.
Israeli media said Olmert
over the weekend had rejecteli a list dominated by people who were scheduled to
be released soon and ordered
a new list to be drawn up.
After the June 25 surrunit
in Egypt, Israeli officials had
pledged a quick release. But
the move has been delayed
because of wrangling with
security officials over who
should be freed.
Saeb Erekat, a top aide to
Abbas, urged Israel to coordinate the release with the
Palestinians. "We have not
been consulted on this
relealle," he said, adding that
Israel has rejected calls to
convene a joint committee of
prisoners.
The Palestinians have
urged Israel to release some
of the most prominent prisoners, including Marwan
Barghouti, a top official in
· Abbas' Fatah movement
who is serving life sentences
for involvement in five murders.
Israel has rejected calls for
Barghouti's release, though
Olmcrt has said the prisoners
will come from Abbas' Fatah
movement.
Riad Maliki. the infonnation minister in Abbas ' new
government, said he expect-

ed the 250 prisoners to be
fonner military men from
pro-Fatah security forces. "If
tt was in our hands to chose
... we would have chosen a
group that more fairly represented
the body
of
Palestinian prisoners, from
all.f.litical groups," Maliki
SaJ •

.

Israel is interested in
strengthening Abbas, a moderate who {avors peace talks,
following Hamas' violent
takeover of the Gaza Strip
last month. The 'fightin!J in
Gaza has left Palestimans
with two rival governments
- the isolated Hamas rulers
in Gaza, and Abbas'
Western-backed emergency
government in the West
Bank.
In
Gaza,
Hamas
spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri
said a release of Fatah prisoners signaled that Abbas is
collaborating with Israel.
"He should have refused any
release unless it includes all
Palestinian prisoners," he
said.
Hamas has been demanding the release of hundreds
of prisoners in exchange for
an Israeli soldier it captured
more than a year ago. Israel
has a long history of lop- ·
sided prisoner exchanges to
bring captured or fallen soldiers home.
Olmert said he .is "con.vinced beyond doubt" that
the upcoming release would
not hurt the chances of
returning the soldier, Cpl.
Gilad Shalit, or bringing
home two other soldiers caP.tured by Hezbollah guemllas a year ago. He said
"maybe it will even create an
atmosphere that will facilitate the process relating their
release."

Submitted llhoto

From left, Lynn Gedeon, Pat Blaschak and Rita Oberholzer of The Plains' QUOTA branch presented O'Bieness Memorial Hospital with a new TTY machine. The device aids telephone
communication for those with speech and hearing disabilities.

Senllcell _ _ _ _ _ ...........
ATHENS - The Plains impairments can communibranch
of
Q{,IOTA cate lelephone messages one
International service organi- of three ways; by directly
zation recently donated a new connecting 10 another TTY
TI'Y (leletype) machine 10 machine, by connecting 10 a
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital central ~lOr who can
for use by people with hear- relay the
message 10 the
ing and speaking disabilities. person on e other end, or by
QUOTA, developed in utilizing the machine's syn1919 as the first international thesized voice which rums.the
women's service organiza- typed text iniO verbal speech.
tion, has purchased tlte new
"We're certainly excited
TTY· machine to replllce an and appreciative 10 QUOTA
outd•(e4 model. By using the · for donating this equipment,"
machine's keyboilrd; persons said
Deborab
Shaffer,
with hearing and speech Director of Development for

O'Bleness. "Although our
TrY machines do oot get
used on a frequent basis, they
are extremely valuable to
those with impaired communications abilities. If it helps
just one of our patients or visiiOrs relay a message 10 a
friend or loved one, then it has
been wonh the irivestinell!."
For more infonnation, visit
www.QUOTA.org or call the
O'Bleness
Community
Relations department at 5929300.

State looks to recoup cost of tire dump cleanups
COLUMBUS (AP) more than 41 million scrap
State environmental offi- tires, recovering very little
cials are seekin~ to recoup · of the 'cost from the owners
at least $23 IDillilln spent of dump sites, the newspacleaning up illegally dis- per reported.
carded tires from dumps
It's a problem many states
aroupd Ohio, a newspaper wrestle. with, said Chris
Newman, who coordinates a
reported Sunday.
Ille~ally dumped tires are scrap tire cleanup program
breedmg grounds for dis- for the U.S. Envuonmental
ease-carryipg insects and Protection Agency.
fuel for diey, hard-to-extin- ·
"They're not rich people."
guish fires. Cases involving Newm1111 said of dump owndump owners who fail to ers.
pay for cleanups have been
Polluters often claim
sent to Oh10 Attorney bankru~y, allowing them
General Marc Dann for to avotd reimbursing the
review, The Columbus state, said Bob Large, who
Dispatch said.
supervises the state EPA's
Smce !998, Ohio has program. 1!1 some cases, the
spent $27 million removing state places a lien on their

.
Ohio s tire removal pro- ·
gram is funded by a $1 fee
on all new tires sold in the
state. The program, which
began in 1998, raises about
$7 million a year.
About 4 million illegally
dumped tires remain in
Ohio, Large said. In many
cases, recycled tires are
turned into landfill liners,
mud flaps, rubberized
mulch and radiator hoses.
Ignoring the problem isn't
an option, Large said.
In 1999, a fire involving 4
million scrap tires at Ohio's
largest stockpile, Kirby Tire
Recycling in Wyandot
County, burned for six days . .
propert~.

l

Midwest leads nation in
volunteering, government study says
BvSTEPHEN
OHLEMACHER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
spirit of volunteerism is
thriving in the heartland, but
not so much on the coasts.
Midwesterners are more
likely to volu.nteer their
time than are people elsewhere in the United States,
according to a government
study
being
released
Monday. The highest rates
were in the Minneapolis-St.
Paul metropolitan area,
where more than four in I 0
adults volunteered.
"It's 1 really
about
Minneapolis' commitment
to the quality of life," said
Michael Weber, president
. and chief executive of
Volunteers of America of
Minnesota. "If you look at
the entire society, it says we
will give back to the community and take care of our
society."
The Corporation for
National and Community
Service, a federal agency,
used Census Bureau data to
determine th;; share of people age 16 and older who
had volunteered their time
in the previous year.
The study provides threeyear averages, for 2004
through 2006, for the 50

Rutland
from PageA1
the parade, as follows:
Non-religious: Rutland
Lil Lady Reds coached by
Todd Davidson, first; Paul
Anderson, second.
Four-wheelers: Angela
Keesee, first; Cole Adams,
second,
Walking unit: Cub scout
Pack 240, first; Amber
Pierce, second. ·

largest metropolitan areas.
Minneapolis-St. Paul was
followed at the top by Salt
Lake City; Austin, Texas:
Omaha, Neb.; and Seattle.
Las Vegas had the lowest
volunteer rate, 14.4 percent.
It was ~oined at the bottom
by Miami: New York:
Virginia Beach, Va.; and
Riverside, Calif.
Nationally, 26.7 J?I?CCent
of adults in 2006 swd they
had volunteered in the previous year. That compares
with 28.8 percent in 2005
and 20.4 percent in 1989.
More than one-third of
. the people who volunteered
in 2005 stopped in 2006.
"Volunteering has a leaky
bucket,"
said
Robert
Grimm, an author of the
report. "Many times people
drop out because the activities are not challenging
enough or they're not substantial enough."
In Minneapolis, Weber
said his organization :ov?rks
hard to make sure acttvtues
are well organized, meaningful to the community and
rewarding to volunteers.
"The person goes away
saying, 'I feel good, I made
a difference today,"' Weber
said.
The study said several
demographic and social factors appear to contribute to

higher volunteer rates:
• Short commutes to
work, which provide more
time to volunteer.
• Home ownership, which
promotes attachment to the
community.
• High education levels,
which
increase
civic
involvement.
• High concentrations of
nonprofit organizations providing opportunities to volunteer.
Volunteering can have a
"positive,
substantial
impact on the life of a
youth" or it can help an
older person remain at
home mstead of moving
into a nursing home, said
Grimm, director of research
and policy development for
the federal agency.
"Volunteering is not
something that's just nice to
do, it's necessary to ·solve
important community problems," he said.
. Les
Kuivanen
of
Minneapolis volunteers at
an elementary school with
other retirees from the manufacturing
company
Honeywell International.
The retired engineer said
is
more
volunteering
rewarding when the activity
matches his skills.

Best
overall
float:
Harrisonville 411, Masonic
Lodge; first: Rutland Lil
· .....--·...,.-c-=
fr.'U'OR;\flhG ARn n:~nl
Lady Reds coach.ed by
101
Jeremy Coleman, second.
1sney S
Bicycles; Tessa Coates,
Dalmatians Kids
first; Emily Graham, secLive Moskal Adventure!
ond.
July t4, IS, Zl &amp; l2
Religious floats : Rutland
Salata pm, suo atJ pm
Nazarene Church, first;
SIO &amp; $7
Hysell Run Community
Sign up now forspedll
Church, second.
Antique cars: Amold
"PUPPY PARTIES"
Priddy fust; George Wright,
presonted prior to each show
second.
. 1----..:S:.:;.S_.pe.:.:r..:&lt;.:.:hi.:.:ld~-~
Horses: Gracie Hill, first;
Box ontce: 428 2nd Ave.
Adrian Bolin, second.
Galllpotta, OH 1740144&amp;-ARTS

o·

•

•• •

�'

The Daily Sentinel

FESTIVITIES

. .. ..
.

PageA6
MOnday, July 9, 2007

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

MLB Standings, Page B2

Choi wins AT&amp;T tourney, Page Bfi
Bryant wins U.S. Senior Open, Page B6

Monday, July
9, 2007
.,

... """' """" """"
GAWPOLIS -

~

--

A &amp;et'le4Jie d ~ colo

onds ahead 6f Busch.
trip to Victory Lane since McMurray said. "And you
Jt denied Busch a shot al a 2002 when he scored his wait so long to win. Every
·
rare double victory - he won only career victory as a driver out here can tell you
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. · the rain rescheduled Busch replacement driver for an how special il is. I started
-Jamie McMurray ended a Series race 12 hours earlier injured Sterling Marlin at crying, and I said, 'Why are
Tuttd111'a aamw
Legion BIIHboll
massive losing streak in dra- - but finished second in the Charlotte. The win came in you cryinf' Because I was
Gallla vs. Portsmouth at Minford HS
malic fashion, beating Kyle main event. He then blamed a McMurray's second career so happy.'
(DH), 5 p.m.
Bu~ch ~y a bumper I? the lack Qf cooperation from his start, a NASCAR record,
Kurt Busch finished third
Wtdotldly't ptmt
firush hne of _the Pepsi 400 Hendrick Motorsports team- and anointed him as the and was followed by Carl
1..e91on BIIMboll
mateS'·for failing to help him sport's newest star.
on Saturday mght.
Edwards, Gordon and Greg
Beverly at Meigs, 6 p.m.
But expected success Biffle.
McMurray snapped a 166- win t'fie race.
as
followed
race winless streak by drag
"There were a few oppor- never
Clint
Bowyer,
Matt
struggled Kenseth, Kasey Kahne and
racing with Busch for much· tunl~es for them to get McMurray
of the final two laps at berund me and push me," through the next four sea- Jimmie Johnson rounded out
'
Daytona
International Busch said. "Especially (Jeff sons. Those down times the top 10.
The
cars Gordon), he chose not to do were not lost on him in an Tony Stewart was denied a
Speedway.
appeared to .touch several so and stayed up high and emotional Victory Lane.
chance to climb lhe fence for
times on their final trip helped another Roush car."
"I always s.aid for five a third consecutive year
.LAS VEGAS (AP)
. around the famed track, and
McMurray, one of the years, however long, there when he wrecked with teamTop pick ·Greg Oden's sec- McMurray nosed across the Roush Fenway Racing dri- would never be another vicond summer league game finish line a mere 0.005 sec- vers, benefited with his first tory
Like
Charlotte,"
with the Portland Trail
Blazers was better than his
first, but still not up to the
bi~ profile center's expectations.
1\vo
after he was
BY CHRIS l.atOURITES
10 fouls in
AP SPORTS WRITER
20 minutes,
Oden had . WIMBLEDON, En~land
13 points, - Roger Federer hit an
f i v e overhead smash to capture
rebounds his fifth straight Witnbledon
and nine title. He then collapsed to
f, o u I s his kn'ees in jubilauon and
Sqnd!!Y in a reli~f- just as Bjoni Borg
72-68 loss used to do.
to ·
the
Federer played - and
Dallas won - his first five-setter
Mavericks. in a Grand Slam fimil, beat·oden
Summer ing nemesis Rafael Nadal 7league rules alloY!: for 10 . 6 (7), 4-6, 7-6 (3), 2-6, 6-2
~flionals.
Sunday for his II th major
'.:."I felt more comfortable, title.
but we lost so it doesn 't
Federer is the first man to
matter," Oden said. "I'm all win five straight titles at the
about winning."
All England Club since
Oden picked up his ninth Borg did it from 1976-80.
foul with 3 minutes, 23 The Swede watched the
seconds to play, bqt didn't match from the Royal Box
foul out. Fouling out twice, with other past champions,
with double the amount of and applauded as Federer
fouls at his disposal from fell to the ground after his
this winter at Ohio State, smash on match point.
After Federer left the
would have been embarrassing, he said.
court. he and eo~g "The guys tell me it won't exchanged hugs and smiles ··
be like this during the regu- in front of the board that
lists tournament champions.
Piease see Oden, 81
Federer's name had already
been added to the list for
2007.
"Thank you for coming
CoNrAcrUs
out," Federer told Borg. ·
"Not at all. Sure," Borg
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.· I a.m.)
answered.
1-740·446·2342 ext. 33
Federer stretched his
record
grass-court winning
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
streak
to 53 and his
E-rt\111 - sports.@mydallytrlbune.com
Wimbledon
winning streak
Sporto S(aff
to 34. He is tied for third on
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor the career list with Borg and
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
Rod Laver at II major titles,
b&amp;hermanOm~dailytrlbune.com
trailing Pete Sampras' 14
and Roy Emerson's 12.
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23 •
"Each one is special, no
Ierum 0 I'TIVdallyreglster.com
doubt," Federer said. "To
hold the trophy is always
AP photo
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
Switzerland's·Roger Federer holds up the trophy after defeating Rafael Nadal to win his fifth
(7~0) 446-2342, ext. 33
Please 111 Federer, 81
bwalters@mydailytrlbune.com
consecutive Men's Singles Championship on the Centre Court at Wimbledon on Sunday.
lrwoM-lg ~ frtm Ga~ia and Meigs~-

Todoy'j gemt
Legion BIIHball
Meigs at Chillicothe, 6 p.m.

BY JENNA FRYER .

N&gt; AUTO RACING WRITER

Oden better in
second summer
league game

Chi- Hoeftlchjphotoo

Everybody loves a parade and hundreds of people lined the streets to watch the belated
July 4 one held In Rutland Saturday. Leading the way was an honor guard of legionnaires
from the Ell Denison Post in Rutland and the Drew Webster Post in Pomeroy.

McMurray ends 166-race winless streak at Daytona ·

Concession and game booths filled the Rutland Park where there was something for evefy.one to see and enjoy. Festlvalgoers could enjoy cotton candY or ice cream, riffling through
displays of coins, or spinning the wheel for a ~rlze as Briar Rupe Is doing tfre.

·Federer wins 5th straight Wimbledon title

.....'lr• "· .. ....
•
''~

.. . . .. .

..

...

Taking second In the religious float category of the parade, was the Hysell Run Community
Church's entry.
You can't have a parade without a band and again this year Toney Dingess, director, took
his Meigs Marauder Band to the Ru~land celebration.

-· ,.~\!~Er.:JJ.
~~;~t:)~~

"e.·

'

'f~on
·

. U1 .

e

™

. .

Hearing Aid Center

~:l
~

t·

)

t

l

Limited to the }lrst :!5 CalltrB!

Paul McDaniel
was just one
of many who
decked their
horses in red,
white an blue,
and brought
them to town
for the July 4
celebration.

t
.-r
,,

Tuesday, July 1Oth
9 a.m. - 4 p.m. :r
Wednesday, July 11th 9 a.m.· 4 p.m. ~

!I
-I

i'·

,J.
I•

i

l

·I
;

t
!

i

Jl

I

..

Listen to today's most advanced hearing aids f
in a real-world sound environment.
. .j
This~ a better way to experience better hearing. j

The popularity
of four-wheelers was evident in
Rutland's 4th
ofJuly parade.
A dozen or
more all decorated for the
occasion participated.
Among them
was Brody
Dellavalle of
Langsville.

Listening to "beepsfl is no way to find out how your hearing instrument will soun~. Yet f·
that's all you can expect from most in-{)ffice hearing tests and fittings. Bellone has a•bctterf
way. We've replaced the beeps with birds. And crowd·noise. Sounds like real life. This is !
not a hearing test. It's more like a test drive. It's new! AND ONLY BELTONE HAS IT!! i
One of the most advanced patient-focused fitting syste1ru1 available today. Before you leave i
our office, you'll know what your hearing aid will sound like in the real world.
'
i

i

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SAVE
$1000 OFF

J

I Any Bellone Sys1em.
I Cannot Be Combined I
1WHh Other Dlscoun1s 1
L.&lt;!.~~~~.:!·.J

......
1'111

11121 I Tills.

.......
·- ,.
.......

~BeltonerM
Hearing Aid Center
1312 Eastern Avenue
Gallip~lls_, Ohio
J

.c

-----

Reds wiggle ~:
past D-backS
in 11 inning~..
..
BY

JoE

KAY

•.

AP SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI - Maybe
it's the new manager;
Maybe it's jusl the law of
averages.
::
There's no clear-cul
explanation
for
th~
Cincinnati Reds' weeklong
revival, which reached ari
upbeat conclusion Sunday
with an 11-inning, 4-3 victory over the slumping
Arizona Diamondbacks. -:
Scot! Hatteberg's two-mit
single, his fourth hit of the
game, gave the Red~ ~eii
firs! four-game wmmng
streak of the season and left ·
them 5- L under interim
manager Pete Macka(lin;
who took over for JerrY.
Narron a week ago.
The change shook things
up in the short-term.
:;
"It's something showing
signs of management not
afraid to make some
changes," said Hatteberg;
who had · a solo homer and
three singles. "We've
played poorly. The first
thing that goes is usually the
manager, but players soon
follow. So maybe it's a collective wake-up.''
The Diamondbacks are
dazed heading into the All"
Star break.
Arizona has lost five
straight- matching its sea-·
son high - and eight of
nine overall. After beirig
tied·for first place in the NL
West ori June 27, the
Diamondbacks have slipped
to third in large part because
they can't get clutch hits.
• They got one in the ninth
to prolong the game, but
couldn't get another to win
it. Kirk Sa~.rloos (1-4)
induced a double play that
scuuled an Arizona tlireat in
the top of the II th and followed a familiar pattern.
· "We don't do anything
early, and we come back in
ihe eighth and ninth before
losing it late," .manager
Bob Melvin said. "We've
got to find ways to get
more competitive at-bats
early in the game."
P11111 HI Reds, 11

�'

The Daily Sentinel

FESTIVITIES

. .. ..
.

PageA6
MOnday, July 9, 2007

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

MLB Standings, Page B2

Choi wins AT&amp;T tourney, Page Bfi
Bryant wins U.S. Senior Open, Page B6

Monday, July
9, 2007
.,

... """' """" """"
GAWPOLIS -

~

--

A &amp;et'le4Jie d ~ colo

onds ahead 6f Busch.
trip to Victory Lane since McMurray said. "And you
Jt denied Busch a shot al a 2002 when he scored his wait so long to win. Every
·
rare double victory - he won only career victory as a driver out here can tell you
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. · the rain rescheduled Busch replacement driver for an how special il is. I started
-Jamie McMurray ended a Series race 12 hours earlier injured Sterling Marlin at crying, and I said, 'Why are
Tuttd111'a aamw
Legion BIIHboll
massive losing streak in dra- - but finished second in the Charlotte. The win came in you cryinf' Because I was
Gallla vs. Portsmouth at Minford HS
malic fashion, beating Kyle main event. He then blamed a McMurray's second career so happy.'
(DH), 5 p.m.
Bu~ch ~y a bumper I? the lack Qf cooperation from his start, a NASCAR record,
Kurt Busch finished third
Wtdotldly't ptmt
firush hne of _the Pepsi 400 Hendrick Motorsports team- and anointed him as the and was followed by Carl
1..e91on BIIMboll
mateS'·for failing to help him sport's newest star.
on Saturday mght.
Edwards, Gordon and Greg
Beverly at Meigs, 6 p.m.
But expected success Biffle.
McMurray snapped a 166- win t'fie race.
as
followed
race winless streak by drag
"There were a few oppor- never
Clint
Bowyer,
Matt
struggled Kenseth, Kasey Kahne and
racing with Busch for much· tunl~es for them to get McMurray
of the final two laps at berund me and push me," through the next four sea- Jimmie Johnson rounded out
'
Daytona
International Busch said. "Especially (Jeff sons. Those down times the top 10.
The
cars Gordon), he chose not to do were not lost on him in an Tony Stewart was denied a
Speedway.
appeared to .touch several so and stayed up high and emotional Victory Lane.
chance to climb lhe fence for
times on their final trip helped another Roush car."
"I always s.aid for five a third consecutive year
.LAS VEGAS (AP)
. around the famed track, and
McMurray, one of the years, however long, there when he wrecked with teamTop pick ·Greg Oden's sec- McMurray nosed across the Roush Fenway Racing dri- would never be another vicond summer league game finish line a mere 0.005 sec- vers, benefited with his first tory
Like
Charlotte,"
with the Portland Trail
Blazers was better than his
first, but still not up to the
bi~ profile center's expectations.
1\vo
after he was
BY CHRIS l.atOURITES
10 fouls in
AP SPORTS WRITER
20 minutes,
Oden had . WIMBLEDON, En~land
13 points, - Roger Federer hit an
f i v e overhead smash to capture
rebounds his fifth straight Witnbledon
and nine title. He then collapsed to
f, o u I s his kn'ees in jubilauon and
Sqnd!!Y in a reli~f- just as Bjoni Borg
72-68 loss used to do.
to ·
the
Federer played - and
Dallas won - his first five-setter
Mavericks. in a Grand Slam fimil, beat·oden
Summer ing nemesis Rafael Nadal 7league rules alloY!: for 10 . 6 (7), 4-6, 7-6 (3), 2-6, 6-2
~flionals.
Sunday for his II th major
'.:."I felt more comfortable, title.
but we lost so it doesn 't
Federer is the first man to
matter," Oden said. "I'm all win five straight titles at the
about winning."
All England Club since
Oden picked up his ninth Borg did it from 1976-80.
foul with 3 minutes, 23 The Swede watched the
seconds to play, bqt didn't match from the Royal Box
foul out. Fouling out twice, with other past champions,
with double the amount of and applauded as Federer
fouls at his disposal from fell to the ground after his
this winter at Ohio State, smash on match point.
After Federer left the
would have been embarrassing, he said.
court. he and eo~g "The guys tell me it won't exchanged hugs and smiles ··
be like this during the regu- in front of the board that
lists tournament champions.
Piease see Oden, 81
Federer's name had already
been added to the list for
2007.
"Thank you for coming
CoNrAcrUs
out," Federer told Borg. ·
"Not at all. Sure," Borg
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.· I a.m.)
answered.
1-740·446·2342 ext. 33
Federer stretched his
record
grass-court winning
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
streak
to 53 and his
E-rt\111 - sports.@mydallytrlbune.com
Wimbledon
winning streak
Sporto S(aff
to 34. He is tied for third on
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor the career list with Borg and
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
Rod Laver at II major titles,
b&amp;hermanOm~dailytrlbune.com
trailing Pete Sampras' 14
and Roy Emerson's 12.
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23 •
"Each one is special, no
Ierum 0 I'TIVdallyreglster.com
doubt," Federer said. "To
hold the trophy is always
AP photo
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
Switzerland's·Roger Federer holds up the trophy after defeating Rafael Nadal to win his fifth
(7~0) 446-2342, ext. 33
Please 111 Federer, 81
bwalters@mydailytrlbune.com
consecutive Men's Singles Championship on the Centre Court at Wimbledon on Sunday.
lrwoM-lg ~ frtm Ga~ia and Meigs~-

Todoy'j gemt
Legion BIIHball
Meigs at Chillicothe, 6 p.m.

BY JENNA FRYER .

N&gt; AUTO RACING WRITER

Oden better in
second summer
league game

Chi- Hoeftlchjphotoo

Everybody loves a parade and hundreds of people lined the streets to watch the belated
July 4 one held In Rutland Saturday. Leading the way was an honor guard of legionnaires
from the Ell Denison Post in Rutland and the Drew Webster Post in Pomeroy.

McMurray ends 166-race winless streak at Daytona ·

Concession and game booths filled the Rutland Park where there was something for evefy.one to see and enjoy. Festlvalgoers could enjoy cotton candY or ice cream, riffling through
displays of coins, or spinning the wheel for a ~rlze as Briar Rupe Is doing tfre.

·Federer wins 5th straight Wimbledon title

.....'lr• "· .. ....
•
''~

.. . . .. .

..

...

Taking second In the religious float category of the parade, was the Hysell Run Community
Church's entry.
You can't have a parade without a band and again this year Toney Dingess, director, took
his Meigs Marauder Band to the Ru~land celebration.

-· ,.~\!~Er.:JJ.
~~;~t:)~~

"e.·

'

'f~on
·

. U1 .

e

™

. .

Hearing Aid Center

~:l
~

t·

)

t

l

Limited to the }lrst :!5 CalltrB!

Paul McDaniel
was just one
of many who
decked their
horses in red,
white an blue,
and brought
them to town
for the July 4
celebration.

t
.-r
,,

Tuesday, July 1Oth
9 a.m. - 4 p.m. :r
Wednesday, July 11th 9 a.m.· 4 p.m. ~

!I
-I

i'·

,J.
I•

i

l

·I
;

t
!

i

Jl

I

..

Listen to today's most advanced hearing aids f
in a real-world sound environment.
. .j
This~ a better way to experience better hearing. j

The popularity
of four-wheelers was evident in
Rutland's 4th
ofJuly parade.
A dozen or
more all decorated for the
occasion participated.
Among them
was Brody
Dellavalle of
Langsville.

Listening to "beepsfl is no way to find out how your hearing instrument will soun~. Yet f·
that's all you can expect from most in-{)ffice hearing tests and fittings. Bellone has a•bctterf
way. We've replaced the beeps with birds. And crowd·noise. Sounds like real life. This is !
not a hearing test. It's more like a test drive. It's new! AND ONLY BELTONE HAS IT!! i
One of the most advanced patient-focused fitting syste1ru1 available today. Before you leave i
our office, you'll know what your hearing aid will sound like in the real world.
'
i

i

l

SAVE
$1000 OFF

J

I Any Bellone Sys1em.
I Cannot Be Combined I
1WHh Other Dlscoun1s 1
L.&lt;!.~~~~.:!·.J

......
1'111

11121 I Tills.

.......
·- ,.
.......

~BeltonerM
Hearing Aid Center
1312 Eastern Avenue
Gallip~lls_, Ohio
J

.c

-----

Reds wiggle ~:
past D-backS
in 11 inning~..
..
BY

JoE

KAY

•.

AP SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI - Maybe
it's the new manager;
Maybe it's jusl the law of
averages.
::
There's no clear-cul
explanation
for
th~
Cincinnati Reds' weeklong
revival, which reached ari
upbeat conclusion Sunday
with an 11-inning, 4-3 victory over the slumping
Arizona Diamondbacks. -:
Scot! Hatteberg's two-mit
single, his fourth hit of the
game, gave the Red~ ~eii
firs! four-game wmmng
streak of the season and left ·
them 5- L under interim
manager Pete Macka(lin;
who took over for JerrY.
Narron a week ago.
The change shook things
up in the short-term.
:;
"It's something showing
signs of management not
afraid to make some
changes," said Hatteberg;
who had · a solo homer and
three singles. "We've
played poorly. The first
thing that goes is usually the
manager, but players soon
follow. So maybe it's a collective wake-up.''
The Diamondbacks are
dazed heading into the All"
Star break.
Arizona has lost five
straight- matching its sea-·
son high - and eight of
nine overall. After beirig
tied·for first place in the NL
West ori June 27, the
Diamondbacks have slipped
to third in large part because
they can't get clutch hits.
• They got one in the ninth
to prolong the game, but
couldn't get another to win
it. Kirk Sa~.rloos (1-4)
induced a double play that
scuuled an Arizona tlireat in
the top of the II th and followed a familiar pattern.
· "We don't do anything
early, and we come back in
ihe eighth and ninth before
losing it late," .manager
Bob Melvin said. "We've
got to find ways to get
more competitive at-bats
early in the game."
P11111 HI Reds, 11

�Monday, July 9, 2007
Page B2 • The [)aily Sentinel

www.mydailysentineLeom

www.mydallysentlnel.com

MDnday, July 9. 2007

~rtbune-

SentinelCLASSIFIED

Blue Jays outlast ·cleveland, 1-0
TORONTO (AP) - Ale~
Rios is headed ·to San
Fran cisco on a high note.
: Rios hit an RBI single in
the ninth inning to lift the
Toronto Blue Jays over the
Cleveland Indians 1-0
Sunday.
: "That's a ~rfect way to
~nd him off to the All-Star
8ame," Blue Jays manager
Iohn Gibbons said of Rios,
who also will compete in
Monday night's Home Run
Derby in San Francisco.
• Reed Johnson hit a one8ut double in the ninth, chaslilg Cleveland starter Paul
~yrd.
Rafael Betancourt
came on to face Rws, who
lined a 1-1 pitch up the middle.
, "II' feels good to end the
~st half of the season with a
win," said Rios, who is battlng .294 and leads Toronto
with 17 homers and 53
RBis.
~ Byrd (7 -4) allowed four
~it s, struck . out two and
walked none in his longest
AP photo
~uting of the season, but was Cleveland ·Indians· shortstop Jhonny Peralta, top, forces out
llpset with himself for a Toronto Blue Jays' Royce Clayton at second, but fails to
defensive miscommunica- complete the double play, during third Inning baseball action
tion that led to Johnson's on Sunday in Toronto.
double down the first-base
line.
(Johnson) can do with that is hadn't allowed a hit until the
Byrd didn't realize that shoot it to the right side of fourth inning, when· he
first
baseman
Victor the field. I thought Vic was noticed his teammates were
Martinez was guarding playing back. I made a poor staying away from him in
against the bunt and playing pitch. I'll think about that all the dugout.
· level with the bag, rather night."
"I knew the ball was comthan behind the base.
Blue Jays starter Josh ing out pretty good," he said.
"''m e~tremely disap- · Towers retired the first 17 . "I was JUSt concentrating on
pointed," Byrd said. "With batters he faced before Josh putting up zeros."
him in, I would never throw Barfield singled to left in the
Towers struck out four and
a cut-fastball off the plate sixth.
walked none over eight-plus
Towers didn't realize he innings ~ his longest s.tart of
because the only thing

theo season. He's 2-0 with a
3. 26 ERA in his past three
starts.
"He's on a little bit of a
roll right now, Gibbons said.
"The last three starts have
been very good."
Indians manager Eric
Wedge said his team looked
anxious against towers.
"We weren't very good
against him, that's for sure,"
Wedge said. "He did a good
job moving the ball around,
mixed all his pitches. He
took it to us."
Towers, who also gave up
a two-out single to Trav1s
Hafner in the seventh, was
replaced by Scott Downs
after Barfield led off the
ninth with a broken-bat single to center.
Grady Sizemore tried to
advance Barfield with a sacrifice, but Downs fielded the
bunt and threw to second in
time for the out.
Jeremy Accardo (2-3)
came on to face Casey
Blake, who reached on third
baseman John McDonald's
error to put runners on frrst
and second. Martinez struck
out and Hafner walked,
loading the bases for Jhonny
Peralta. Accardo fell behind
3-0, then struck Peralta out
with three straight strikes.
"It's tough to come all the
way back like that,"
Gibbons said. 'IJeremy has
really thrived in that role."
The teams combined for
27 runs and 45 hits in the
fitst two games of the series,
but offense was ' at a premium Sunday.

Bay, Pirates,.' breeze past Chicago, 6-2
BY ALAN ROBINSON
AP SPORTS WRITER

PITTSBURGH - · Jason
Bay, slumping for more than
a month, hit a two-run home
run off Cubs ace Carlos
Zambrano while driving in
four Pirates runs, and leftbander Shane Youman held
Chicago to two runs over six
innings in Pittsburgh 's 6-2
victory Sunday.
The Cubs were one of the
majors' hottest teams with
II wins in 13 games before
dropping two of three to the
Pirates, who go into the AllStar break off a modest
surge of four consecutive
series victories and five wins
in si~ games against division
rival s
Chicago
and
Milwaukee.
The Pirates are 40-48 at
the break, eight games
below .500 but much
improved from their 30-60
of a~ason ago. The Cubs
are 44-43 after going their
final nine games before the
break Without a homer their longest such streak
since going I 0 in a row in
mid-July 1988.
Zambrano was 4-0 previ(msly at PNC Park and was
1-1 with a 3.05 in nine road
Starts this season, but one
bad inning did him in. Nate
McLouth walked and Xavier
Nady had a two-out single in
tbe third ahead of Bay's 13th
homer and only his second
in 25 games, a drive into the
tenter-field bullpen.
: Bay, an All-Star game
~tarter in Pittsburgh while
hitting 35 home runs last
season, was 1-for-24 before
homering for the first time
~nee June 22 against the
Angels. The slump began in
early June and caused Bay's

Federer

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Pittsburgh Pirates' Freddy Sanchez (12) and Adam LaRoche (25) score·on an eighth-Inning,
two-run, ,bases-loaded single by Pirates' Jason Bay against the Chicago Cubs during baseball action in Pittsburgh on Sunday. The Pirates beat the Cubs 6-2.
batting average to tumble
from .314 on June I to .250
before his hOme run.
Zambrano would seem to
be a difficult pitcher to face
while in a slump, but Bay is
12-for-33 (.364) with five
home runs, four doubles and
16 RBis against him. Bay
also had a two-run single in
a four-run eighth against
Bob Howry after the Pirates
loaded the bases with none
out on sil)gles by Freddy
Sanchez, Adam LaRoche
and Nady.
Zambrano (10-7) limited
the Pirates to four hits over
seven innings - they had
two harmless singles m the
fourth - but still lost for the
first time in four decisions.
He also missed out on what
would have been an NL-

leading II th victory, losing four batters on base against
to the Pirates for the second Youman in the sixth, but
time this season.
Ramirez grounded into a
Youman is 2-0 since being double play and · Fontenot
called up from Triple-A grounded out to end the
Indianapolis for his only two inning.
career victories, furthering
Shawn Chacon replaced
the Cubs' problems against . Youman and retired all six
left-handed starters, who are batters he faced before Matt
14-8 against them. He Capps pitched the ninth in a
allowed plenty of base run- non-save situation.
ners - eight in s i~ innings
Notes: The. Pirates have
- but worked his way out
·of major problems with min- won six of eight series ....
imal damage several times. The Cubs had won four conAramis Ramirez, Mark secutive series .... Cubs SS
DeRosa and Mike Fontenot Ryan Theriot and 2B
singled in succession to load Fontenot were · ·College
the bases with none out in World Series-winning teamthe second, but Youman got mates of Youman's at LSU
the •next two hitters after in 2000 .... Zambrano had
Angel Pagan hit a sacrifice won his last six road decitly. DeRosa doubled as the sions .... Chicago came into
Cubs put three of their first ,the series winning 21 of 31.
nology, which made its
debut at Wimbledon this
year, to great elfect. One
time, a call reversal in the
fourth set infuriated Federer
so much that he complained
to the chair umpire after
being brokef! for the fourth
time.
"It' s killing me today,"
Federer said after sitting
down
during
the
changeover.
In the fust set, Federer
converted his third break
point in the second game,
defensively returning a hard
serve from Nadal and
watching the Spaniard net a
forehand.
In the tiebreaker, Federer
jumped ahead 5-2 and
thought he won the set on
his third set point when.
leading 6-5, but Nadal challenged a call and "Hawk~ye " showed his shot was

m.
Federer wasted another
set point at 7-6, but finally

.

won with a backhand volley
after Nadal sent a backhand
into the net at 7-7.
Nadal broke Federer at 54 to win the second set, converting his first set point
with a backhand winner.
The Spaniard then pulled
within two points of doing
the same in the third set,
coming back from 40-love
to deuce. But Federer used a
pair of volleys to hold to 5-

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Prlday for ln-rtlon
In Next Day's Paper
.!li'Uf!d••• ln•Column: 1:00 p.m.

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

CINCINNATI (AP) Rookie right-bander Homer
Bailey was optioned to the
minors Sunday so the
Cincinnati
Reds'
top
prospect can keep pitching
over the AU-Star break.
The ' Reds called up
infielder Pedro Lopez from
Triple-A Louisville to take
his roster spot and give the
team some depth while it
struggles with injuries.
The 21-year-old Bailey
gave up onlr two hits and a
run in five Innings of a 5-4
victory . over Arizona on
Saturday ni,ght. After getting
hit hard in liis two previous
starts, he fixed a flaw in his
delivery and looked to be
back on track.

For the second day in a
row. one of the NL's worst
bullpens blew a late lead
before the Reds recovered.
They pulled off their first
sweep of the season and
their first over Arizona
since 1999.
During Narron's days, a
bullpen ·meltdown usually
meant another chin-dropping loss. It hasn't been that
way so far under the new
management.
· "More than anything, it's
a blow to everybody when a
manager gets· fired," said
Mackanin,. who was the
Reds' advance scout until
last week. "It's no fun. It's
like a wake-up call to
everybody."
Edwin Encarnacion started
the decisive rally by drawing
a leadoff walk from Jose
Valverde (0-2) in the lith.
Encarnacion stole second,
David Ross walked and
Norris Hopper grounded into
a forceout at second, bringing up Hatteberg.
The first baseman had
opened the Reds' first inning
with a homer. He ended it by
slapping a single to left field
on the first pitch he saw from
the Diamondbacks' Ail-Star
closer. His teammates huddled around him and celebrated after he touched frrst
base.
"Guys have been playing
loose and having fun," starter
Harang
said.
Aaron
"Everybody's been contributing in their own way;"

Oden

some frustration with a
backboard-rattling
dunk
that resulted in a technical
for hanginjl on the rim. He
fromPageBl
finished w1th four blocks.
"I need to start bringing it
lar season," said Oden, who
to
guys and establish how I
scored four Roints in the
will
in the regular seafinal minute. 'They are try- son,' play
5.
Oden
said.
Nadal was again two ing out new guys (referees)
Oden
played
with more
points from the set while who are trying to make a energy and aggression,
leading 6-5, but after he put. good impression."
coach
Nate
Oden had six points, three Portland
a forehand into the net,
McMillan
said.
Assistant
Federer served an ace and rebound's and three fouls in Monty Williams is coaching
then finished it off with a 14 first half minutes. He the summer team. but
service winner. Federer was picked up his first foul 36 McMillan has attended bOth
broken again to open the seconds into the game, but games.
fourth set, and Nadal added appeared more comfortable.
"Wh~t I really want him
another break to take a 3-0 He had three fouls in the to do is get his feet wet and
first 2:59 Friday and spent have some fun," McMillan
lead.
"It was such a close most of the game on the said. "These guys. are all
match," Federer said. "I told bench.
fighting for jobs and he
Rafa at the net he deserved
The 7-foot, 250-pound already has one . He's goi ng
it as well. I'm the lucky one Oden had three blocks in to see the best from everytoday."
the first quarter and took out body."

•

l

•

r

ANNouNCEIIHNTS

tI

~oo:

AU ot.piBy: 1.3 Noon a
Bu•ln.- Daye PriOr TO
PubiiCIItlon
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.
Ttlu~ay for •unday•

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Sending him to Louisville
will allow Bailey to stay on
schedule.
"It wouldn't have happened without the Ail-Star
break," general manager
Wayne Krivsky said. "He
wouldn't have pitched until
eight or nine days from now.
He understands completely." '
.
By bringing up the 23year-old Lopez, the Reds
shored· up an injury-thinned
roster. Outfielder Josh
Hamilton sprained his wrist
on Saturday night, a few
hours after utility infielder
Juan Castro went on the 15day disabled list with a partially tortl ligament in his
throwing elbow.

Harang allowed only one
run ·aver the first eight
innings - a solo homer by
Chris Young - before turning a 3-1 lead over to David
Weathers. The closer had
converted his last six oppcir~
tunities and 17 of 19 overall,
and has been the only
dependable reliever on the
staff.
He couldn't get the last out
to close it out.
Jeff Salazar singled with
two outs and came arou11d on
Miguel Montero's double to
the wall in left-center.
Orlando Hudson, who was
out of the starting lineup getting some rest before his AilStar trip to San Francisco,
pinch-hll and tied it with a
single to right.
It was a rare clutch hit for
the slumping Diamondbacks,
who are. battin~ .144 ~ith
runners m sconng .position
over their last 14 games and
last in the league in that cat~­
gory overall
·"I know we had a stretch
there when we won a lot of
those one-run and two-run
games, but right now we're
struggling," catcher Chris
Snyder said. "Hopefully we
can get through the break,
get back on Friday and start
the second half strong."
Hatteberg and Ross had
solo homers off right-hander
Yusmeiro Petit, who was
called up on July 3 when leftbander Randy Johnson went
on the disabled list again
with a bad back. Petit struck
out a career-high eight Reds
in five innings, including all
three batters in the fourth.
The Reds struck out 16
times overall, matching their
season high.

sunday• Paper

AD. • St.rt Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Compleh

Reds send Bailey to minors

fromPage~l

game of the rriatch.
"If Rafael had won one of
these, I think maybe now
fromPageBl
Rafael would be the champion," said Nadal's coach,
Toni Nadal.
the best thing."
Nadal had been trying to
· Federer beat Nadal for
emulate
another of Borg's
only the fifth time in 13
feats
by
winning
the French
meetings. The Spaniard has
(lefeated Federer in the past Open and Wimbledon in the
two French Open finals to sap1e year.
Nadal, who played two
spoil his bid to complete a
other
five-set matches in a
career Grand Slam.
"Five titles in .a row, so, tournament plagued by rain,
fantaStic," said Nadal, who was on the court for the sevalso lost to Federer in last enth straight day.
After taking a 4-1 lead in
year's final. "Well, anyway,
I Jose today, but I (played a) the fourth set, the Spaniard
called for a trainer to treat
great two weeks."
Federer saved four break his right knee. Although he
)ioints early in the fifth set, returned with tape below
two at 1-1 and two at 2-2. the knee cap, it didn't seem
Then, ·leading 3-2, Federer to slow him.
converted a break point
Federer finished with 24
with a forehand winner after aces, 65 winners and 34
a 14-stroke rally that pro- unforced errors. Nadal had
duced some of the best 50 wi nners and 24 unforced
shots of the match.
error~.
It was · Federer's first
Nadal also used the '
break since the second "Hawk-Eye" replay tech-

----

E·ll!lil
classified@mydailytribune:com

Reds

· AP photo

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�Monday, July 9, 2007
Page B2 • The [)aily Sentinel

www.mydailysentineLeom

www.mydallysentlnel.com

MDnday, July 9. 2007

~rtbune-

SentinelCLASSIFIED

Blue Jays outlast ·cleveland, 1-0
TORONTO (AP) - Ale~
Rios is headed ·to San
Fran cisco on a high note.
: Rios hit an RBI single in
the ninth inning to lift the
Toronto Blue Jays over the
Cleveland Indians 1-0
Sunday.
: "That's a ~rfect way to
~nd him off to the All-Star
8ame," Blue Jays manager
Iohn Gibbons said of Rios,
who also will compete in
Monday night's Home Run
Derby in San Francisco.
• Reed Johnson hit a one8ut double in the ninth, chaslilg Cleveland starter Paul
~yrd.
Rafael Betancourt
came on to face Rws, who
lined a 1-1 pitch up the middle.
, "II' feels good to end the
~st half of the season with a
win," said Rios, who is battlng .294 and leads Toronto
with 17 homers and 53
RBis.
~ Byrd (7 -4) allowed four
~it s, struck . out two and
walked none in his longest
AP photo
~uting of the season, but was Cleveland ·Indians· shortstop Jhonny Peralta, top, forces out
llpset with himself for a Toronto Blue Jays' Royce Clayton at second, but fails to
defensive miscommunica- complete the double play, during third Inning baseball action
tion that led to Johnson's on Sunday in Toronto.
double down the first-base
line.
(Johnson) can do with that is hadn't allowed a hit until the
Byrd didn't realize that shoot it to the right side of fourth inning, when· he
first
baseman
Victor the field. I thought Vic was noticed his teammates were
Martinez was guarding playing back. I made a poor staying away from him in
against the bunt and playing pitch. I'll think about that all the dugout.
· level with the bag, rather night."
"I knew the ball was comthan behind the base.
Blue Jays starter Josh ing out pretty good," he said.
"''m e~tremely disap- · Towers retired the first 17 . "I was JUSt concentrating on
pointed," Byrd said. "With batters he faced before Josh putting up zeros."
him in, I would never throw Barfield singled to left in the
Towers struck out four and
a cut-fastball off the plate sixth.
walked none over eight-plus
Towers didn't realize he innings ~ his longest s.tart of
because the only thing

theo season. He's 2-0 with a
3. 26 ERA in his past three
starts.
"He's on a little bit of a
roll right now, Gibbons said.
"The last three starts have
been very good."
Indians manager Eric
Wedge said his team looked
anxious against towers.
"We weren't very good
against him, that's for sure,"
Wedge said. "He did a good
job moving the ball around,
mixed all his pitches. He
took it to us."
Towers, who also gave up
a two-out single to Trav1s
Hafner in the seventh, was
replaced by Scott Downs
after Barfield led off the
ninth with a broken-bat single to center.
Grady Sizemore tried to
advance Barfield with a sacrifice, but Downs fielded the
bunt and threw to second in
time for the out.
Jeremy Accardo (2-3)
came on to face Casey
Blake, who reached on third
baseman John McDonald's
error to put runners on frrst
and second. Martinez struck
out and Hafner walked,
loading the bases for Jhonny
Peralta. Accardo fell behind
3-0, then struck Peralta out
with three straight strikes.
"It's tough to come all the
way back like that,"
Gibbons said. 'IJeremy has
really thrived in that role."
The teams combined for
27 runs and 45 hits in the
fitst two games of the series,
but offense was ' at a premium Sunday.

Bay, Pirates,.' breeze past Chicago, 6-2
BY ALAN ROBINSON
AP SPORTS WRITER

PITTSBURGH - · Jason
Bay, slumping for more than
a month, hit a two-run home
run off Cubs ace Carlos
Zambrano while driving in
four Pirates runs, and leftbander Shane Youman held
Chicago to two runs over six
innings in Pittsburgh 's 6-2
victory Sunday.
The Cubs were one of the
majors' hottest teams with
II wins in 13 games before
dropping two of three to the
Pirates, who go into the AllStar break off a modest
surge of four consecutive
series victories and five wins
in si~ games against division
rival s
Chicago
and
Milwaukee.
The Pirates are 40-48 at
the break, eight games
below .500 but much
improved from their 30-60
of a~ason ago. The Cubs
are 44-43 after going their
final nine games before the
break Without a homer their longest such streak
since going I 0 in a row in
mid-July 1988.
Zambrano was 4-0 previ(msly at PNC Park and was
1-1 with a 3.05 in nine road
Starts this season, but one
bad inning did him in. Nate
McLouth walked and Xavier
Nady had a two-out single in
tbe third ahead of Bay's 13th
homer and only his second
in 25 games, a drive into the
tenter-field bullpen.
: Bay, an All-Star game
~tarter in Pittsburgh while
hitting 35 home runs last
season, was 1-for-24 before
homering for the first time
~nee June 22 against the
Angels. The slump began in
early June and caused Bay's

Federer

-- ---- ----·--

,_-

To Place
~ribune
Sentinef
l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday••• · or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
675-5234

Oeaellfiru
Word Ads
Qlsplay Acl•

Pittsburgh Pirates' Freddy Sanchez (12) and Adam LaRoche (25) score·on an eighth-Inning,
two-run, ,bases-loaded single by Pirates' Jason Bay against the Chicago Cubs during baseball action in Pittsburgh on Sunday. The Pirates beat the Cubs 6-2.
batting average to tumble
from .314 on June I to .250
before his hOme run.
Zambrano would seem to
be a difficult pitcher to face
while in a slump, but Bay is
12-for-33 (.364) with five
home runs, four doubles and
16 RBis against him. Bay
also had a two-run single in
a four-run eighth against
Bob Howry after the Pirates
loaded the bases with none
out on sil)gles by Freddy
Sanchez, Adam LaRoche
and Nady.
Zambrano (10-7) limited
the Pirates to four hits over
seven innings - they had
two harmless singles m the
fourth - but still lost for the
first time in four decisions.
He also missed out on what
would have been an NL-

leading II th victory, losing four batters on base against
to the Pirates for the second Youman in the sixth, but
time this season.
Ramirez grounded into a
Youman is 2-0 since being double play and · Fontenot
called up from Triple-A grounded out to end the
Indianapolis for his only two inning.
career victories, furthering
Shawn Chacon replaced
the Cubs' problems against . Youman and retired all six
left-handed starters, who are batters he faced before Matt
14-8 against them. He Capps pitched the ninth in a
allowed plenty of base run- non-save situation.
ners - eight in s i~ innings
Notes: The. Pirates have
- but worked his way out
·of major problems with min- won six of eight series ....
imal damage several times. The Cubs had won four conAramis Ramirez, Mark secutive series .... Cubs SS
DeRosa and Mike Fontenot Ryan Theriot and 2B
singled in succession to load Fontenot were · ·College
the bases with none out in World Series-winning teamthe second, but Youman got mates of Youman's at LSU
the •next two hitters after in 2000 .... Zambrano had
Angel Pagan hit a sacrifice won his last six road decitly. DeRosa doubled as the sions .... Chicago came into
Cubs put three of their first ,the series winning 21 of 31.
nology, which made its
debut at Wimbledon this
year, to great elfect. One
time, a call reversal in the
fourth set infuriated Federer
so much that he complained
to the chair umpire after
being brokef! for the fourth
time.
"It' s killing me today,"
Federer said after sitting
down
during
the
changeover.
In the fust set, Federer
converted his third break
point in the second game,
defensively returning a hard
serve from Nadal and
watching the Spaniard net a
forehand.
In the tiebreaker, Federer
jumped ahead 5-2 and
thought he won the set on
his third set point when.
leading 6-5, but Nadal challenged a call and "Hawk~ye " showed his shot was

m.
Federer wasted another
set point at 7-6, but finally

.

won with a backhand volley
after Nadal sent a backhand
into the net at 7-7.
Nadal broke Federer at 54 to win the second set, converting his first set point
with a backhand winner.
The Spaniard then pulled
within two points of doing
the same in the third set,
coming back from 40-love
to deuce. But Federer used a
pair of volleys to hold to 5-

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Prlday for ln-rtlon
In Next Day's Paper
.!li'Uf!d••• ln•Column: 1:00 p.m.

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

CINCINNATI (AP) Rookie right-bander Homer
Bailey was optioned to the
minors Sunday so the
Cincinnati
Reds'
top
prospect can keep pitching
over the AU-Star break.
The ' Reds called up
infielder Pedro Lopez from
Triple-A Louisville to take
his roster spot and give the
team some depth while it
struggles with injuries.
The 21-year-old Bailey
gave up onlr two hits and a
run in five Innings of a 5-4
victory . over Arizona on
Saturday ni,ght. After getting
hit hard in liis two previous
starts, he fixed a flaw in his
delivery and looked to be
back on track.

For the second day in a
row. one of the NL's worst
bullpens blew a late lead
before the Reds recovered.
They pulled off their first
sweep of the season and
their first over Arizona
since 1999.
During Narron's days, a
bullpen ·meltdown usually
meant another chin-dropping loss. It hasn't been that
way so far under the new
management.
· "More than anything, it's
a blow to everybody when a
manager gets· fired," said
Mackanin,. who was the
Reds' advance scout until
last week. "It's no fun. It's
like a wake-up call to
everybody."
Edwin Encarnacion started
the decisive rally by drawing
a leadoff walk from Jose
Valverde (0-2) in the lith.
Encarnacion stole second,
David Ross walked and
Norris Hopper grounded into
a forceout at second, bringing up Hatteberg.
The first baseman had
opened the Reds' first inning
with a homer. He ended it by
slapping a single to left field
on the first pitch he saw from
the Diamondbacks' Ail-Star
closer. His teammates huddled around him and celebrated after he touched frrst
base.
"Guys have been playing
loose and having fun," starter
Harang
said.
Aaron
"Everybody's been contributing in their own way;"

Oden

some frustration with a
backboard-rattling
dunk
that resulted in a technical
for hanginjl on the rim. He
fromPageBl
finished w1th four blocks.
"I need to start bringing it
lar season," said Oden, who
to
guys and establish how I
scored four Roints in the
will
in the regular seafinal minute. 'They are try- son,' play
5.
Oden
said.
Nadal was again two ing out new guys (referees)
Oden
played
with more
points from the set while who are trying to make a energy and aggression,
leading 6-5, but after he put. good impression."
coach
Nate
Oden had six points, three Portland
a forehand into the net,
McMillan
said.
Assistant
Federer served an ace and rebound's and three fouls in Monty Williams is coaching
then finished it off with a 14 first half minutes. He the summer team. but
service winner. Federer was picked up his first foul 36 McMillan has attended bOth
broken again to open the seconds into the game, but games.
fourth set, and Nadal added appeared more comfortable.
"Wh~t I really want him
another break to take a 3-0 He had three fouls in the to do is get his feet wet and
first 2:59 Friday and spent have some fun," McMillan
lead.
"It was such a close most of the game on the said. "These guys. are all
match," Federer said. "I told bench.
fighting for jobs and he
Rafa at the net he deserved
The 7-foot, 250-pound already has one . He's goi ng
it as well. I'm the lucky one Oden had three blocks in to see the best from everytoday."
the first quarter and took out body."

•

l

•

r

ANNouNCEIIHNTS

tI

~oo:

AU ot.piBy: 1.3 Noon a
Bu•ln.- Daye PriOr TO
PubiiCIItlon
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.
Ttlu~ay for •unday•

• All ad• mu1t be pn11181d'

DeKriptlon • lndude A Price • AVfHd AbbreviMion•
• Include Phone Number And Add,.. When ,.....
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Sending him to Louisville
will allow Bailey to stay on
schedule.
"It wouldn't have happened without the Ail-Star
break," general manager
Wayne Krivsky said. "He
wouldn't have pitched until
eight or nine days from now.
He understands completely." '
.
By bringing up the 23year-old Lopez, the Reds
shored· up an injury-thinned
roster. Outfielder Josh
Hamilton sprained his wrist
on Saturday night, a few
hours after utility infielder
Juan Castro went on the 15day disabled list with a partially tortl ligament in his
throwing elbow.

Harang allowed only one
run ·aver the first eight
innings - a solo homer by
Chris Young - before turning a 3-1 lead over to David
Weathers. The closer had
converted his last six oppcir~
tunities and 17 of 19 overall,
and has been the only
dependable reliever on the
staff.
He couldn't get the last out
to close it out.
Jeff Salazar singled with
two outs and came arou11d on
Miguel Montero's double to
the wall in left-center.
Orlando Hudson, who was
out of the starting lineup getting some rest before his AilStar trip to San Francisco,
pinch-hll and tied it with a
single to right.
It was a rare clutch hit for
the slumping Diamondbacks,
who are. battin~ .144 ~ith
runners m sconng .position
over their last 14 games and
last in the league in that cat~­
gory overall
·"I know we had a stretch
there when we won a lot of
those one-run and two-run
games, but right now we're
struggling," catcher Chris
Snyder said. "Hopefully we
can get through the break,
get back on Friday and start
the second half strong."
Hatteberg and Ross had
solo homers off right-hander
Yusmeiro Petit, who was
called up on July 3 when leftbander Randy Johnson went
on the disabled list again
with a bad back. Petit struck
out a career-high eight Reds
in five innings, including all
three batters in the fourth.
The Reds struck out 16
times overall, matching their
season high.

sunday• Paper

AD. • St.rt Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Compleh

Reds send Bailey to minors

fromPage~l

game of the rriatch.
"If Rafael had won one of
these, I think maybe now
fromPageBl
Rafael would be the champion," said Nadal's coach,
Toni Nadal.
the best thing."
Nadal had been trying to
· Federer beat Nadal for
emulate
another of Borg's
only the fifth time in 13
feats
by
winning
the French
meetings. The Spaniard has
(lefeated Federer in the past Open and Wimbledon in the
two French Open finals to sap1e year.
Nadal, who played two
spoil his bid to complete a
other
five-set matches in a
career Grand Slam.
"Five titles in .a row, so, tournament plagued by rain,
fantaStic," said Nadal, who was on the court for the sevalso lost to Federer in last enth straight day.
After taking a 4-1 lead in
year's final. "Well, anyway,
I Jose today, but I (played a) the fourth set, the Spaniard
called for a trainer to treat
great two weeks."
Federer saved four break his right knee. Although he
)ioints early in the fifth set, returned with tape below
two at 1-1 and two at 2-2. the knee cap, it didn't seem
Then, ·leading 3-2, Federer to slow him.
converted a break point
Federer finished with 24
with a forehand winner after aces, 65 winners and 34
a 14-stroke rally that pro- unforced errors. Nadal had
duced some of the best 50 wi nners and 24 unforced
shots of the match.
error~.
It was · Federer's first
Nadal also used the '
break since the second "Hawk-Eye" replay tech-

----

E·ll!lil
classified@mydailytribune:com

Reds

· AP photo

Websttes·
www.mydallytrlbune.com
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I

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

How you can have borders ,and oraphlcs
~
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If"!\
Borders $3.00/per ad
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Graphics SOC for small
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-

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

..

"'""""""'"' ""'·

~,r.·IIEU'-·W.·~--·.1 ~.,•_...,';.~-Do
1
..._.l ~.,r'_....~_s.w;_,_..
6

kltncarlyloQcomcaot.net

1

Lost malechocolale L.ab.lasl
seen with orange collar in

Opening for Cratters.Cratt Middleport area. 304-593sale Sept 15th at Ughlhouse 0117 or 992-3882 evenings

r

Assembly
of God in 11:1:11'""~~---.,
Gallipoli~ $20.00 • space.
WANDD
C811Deborah,740·386-3340. ~
TO BUY

r~·

I

GIVFAWAV
Absolule Top Dollar: u.s.
-Sliver and Gold Coins,
4 black Kittens , 1 gray 7 .Proofseta. Gold Rl0gs, Preweeks old 304·937-3348
1935
U.S.
Currency,

0

Solitaire Oiamon&lt;ls· M.T.S.
4 male kittenS to a good Coin. Shop, 151' Second
home. Black with white Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446markings. 7&gt;4().379·2981
2842.
I \ 11'1 I l\ 'I I \ I
6 week old kittens. 740·441·

7667

0
0

" I ll \ I! I "

Free klttet'\6:1&lt;9 6 &amp; 4 weeks
old, litter trainetl, LONG
HAIRED, EASY- TO HAN·
OLE. 740·985·4244.

Part Siamese, male, very
frientlly. Orown cat call ~56·

All

Real

www.comlcs.com

9031

r

Eatal

dvertlaementa ar
ubleclto the Feda111
air Houalng Act o
968.

•

Locators.

,.,_,
~

Cl2007 by NEA, Inc.

LffirAND

FOUND

Lost 7·3 2007.Norweiglan
Elkhound Puppy Male-5 M
old Harley collar wlflames.
Long Hotlow,Pomeroy.992 1036, 740·591 ·0023 .

newepape
ccepll only . hel
anted adl meetln
OE 1t1ndard1.

LOST DOG : Small Greg &amp;
White Female Dog, Lost
near 3rd Ave, GallipoliS, Sun
6/24. Answers to Katie,
Reward Offered. (614)271-

we wiK not know In
accept any ad
IHmant In vlalatlo
the law.

All INI-10 -~~~~
In th11 '*"Pill*' II
subfHt to the Fedsrll

F•lr Hou1lng Act of 11158
wtllch mak.. lt IIIIQ.IIIO

5888

Hvertl" ''sny
pt""'lllot, llmttltlon or

dllcrlmlnllon biMcl on

CLASSIFIED INDEX

NOt, color, ~ ' MX

flmtla.lttatua or nltkln81

.

.

'

. ..

· orlgln, or ..,.tm.ntlon to

.

lor Rent ...................., .............. 440
and Flea Market ............................. oao
Parts &amp; Acceaaorlea .......................... 760
Aopalr .................................................. 770
Sale .............................................. 7t 0
lor Sale ............................. 750

mlki.,YIUCtt
100WOJIKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts. wood
ilems.To $480/wk Materials
provided. Free inform8tlo n
pkg. 24Hr. em-428-4649

ptlllllhn•n:e, llmbtion or
dlacrlmlnatlon ...

Thle iiiWJprper will not

krlowlllfiY ....,.

rdw.rtlrtmentl for fftl
.-..which Is In

--""'-ood
""Y

~-of

Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Opportunity .................................21 0
Training ....................................... 140

the low. Our

lntonnlc:l that rll
-lingo
In

Homes .......................... 790

th~

... 780

nrnpeper.,.

a81ilbltJ on 11n equrl

o""""nlty - ..

Equipment lor
· .
Excavatlng ........... ....................................... 830
Farm Equlpmenl .......................................... 61 0
Farms lor Rent .............................................430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Loaae ..................................................... 490
For Sale .. ,, .. ..................................................585
For Sale or Trade ......................... ................590
Fruno 1o Vegetables .....................................580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Hauling ...........................................850
Glvaaway......................................................040
1HIP.PY Ado............... .....................................050

and Found ...
.
1o Acreage ............................................ 350
. " "
..... 170
Merchandise .......................540
Home Repair ......... ,, .........................860
Homes lor Ronl. ..............................420
Homes lor Sale ...............................320
to Loan ............................................. 220
1 &amp; 4 Whelllers ..........................740
rna•rrurna•lt• """" ............ "'"'" ....... 570

Full time &amp; Part time

posi-

tions available at The Karat
Patch Oiamonds-N-Gold,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Looking for
individuals that are outgoIng, self-molivated and professional. Resumes &amp; applications accepted in person
ask tor Jeannie or fax 740.

446·3606.
Overbrook Center is currently accepting applications lor
STATE TESTED Nursing
Assistants. Full Time and
Par t Time positions aYailab4e. Interested applicants
can piCk up an application or
contact Hollie Bumgarner. R&amp;J Trucking leading The
LPN Stalf Development Way R&amp;J Trucking now
Coordinat or

@740-992- Hiring at oui New Haven,

6472 M-F 9a-5p at 333 Page Wv Terminal. For Regional
St., Middleport, Oh EOE &amp; a Hauls-Dump Div. 1 year
participant ot the Drug-Free OTR verifiable el(p. Call 1Workplace Program.
800-462-9365 ask lor Kent

�Monday, July 9, 2007
Monday, July 9, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

AL~YOOP
1990 Clayton MH, located at
157 Green Terrace, can
leave
MH
there
at
$141fmonrh lot rent which
inClu des water/trash. n&amp;wly
remodeled. new carpet, rleW
GE sto ...e and fridge, FP.· 2
large BA w 2 lull Baths.
New underpwn1ng. Has tror1t
and back po rcn, 2 metal ou1
buildings 8lC10 and 14x20.
Must see to appreciate.
Asking $19900. 740·446·
0826 or 645·1296

2 Br. Rutland, $375 per M
plus deposit. 742-1903.
3

Bedroom

House

2BR near Rio Grande,ha&amp;
fri dge, stove, W/0, wafi(
trash, sewer. 2BA
in
In Gallipolis has 1ridge/atove.

Modern t'Bedroom apt. Call
446-0390
-------New 2BR apartments.

r.

hQQku'p, lllr-""':~....":"'-.,

Syreouse. $500/month ,.. Qultt areas. No R81S. -Ref. Washer/ttrytr

~;~~si~~~-=:~~ ~~:~;: ~;, 740-446-1271 or 709· ~::::::::-:!;~";'~~
_o2_~5
_ ______

CKC Toy Rat Terriers. Choc
&amp; White, 1st shots, tails
docked. Asking $250. 3799515 or 645·6857

...

\r~,

er:

COOK MOTORS
328 Jack!KIO Pike, Gallipolis
Quality cars, trucks ' and
vans with warranty. 2000
Foc:.us 43,015 miles $3800.

7~103

,·

Ir""r"'""....

ServiCe .

f'Oci

2698. attar 4 p.m.

93 Clayton 2 Bd . ~ bath ' ?coopted
range , ret . dish washe r, new . Payment could be the
carpet , mint cond. Sl 1,500 same as rant .
Firm. Serious calls only.740- Mortgage
Locators.
740)367 0000
645·0072 ,or.740·441-9320. 1
·

r

worth~

OWNER FINANCING
. 312 sing 1ewid es
N1ce
From $ 1,800 down

u~..-

M

,:z:_=

OBI'OILERtu.ru

payment

i

I

I

:.:Ce:.:ll:.:3:.:79-:.,2:.:7:.:98'----.....,-Kiefer BUilt- Valley-BisonHQtse
and
Livestock
Trallaro·
loedmax·

02 Yamaha V-Star, 6500
miles, $1500 In extras, like
new. Asking $5200. 740·
846-2399
-------Gooseneck,
Dumps, &amp; 2000 Hondo 3:jll Rancher.
Ufllity- Aluma Aluminum
Tnlller1- B&amp;W Goosenec;k Electric shift, gently rode,
Hitches-Trailer
Parts. excellent condition. $2400.
Carmichael
Trailers. Call 741).245·5934
(740)446-2412

Local Contrac;tor

740.367.0544
Free Estimates

i .ro... --·

Lw-..OiiCREAiiiilliGiiE'-_.1
~

l!r•

HOUSEHOLD
Gool:ti

~

I
.r

$19,000

pet, stove &amp; frig ., water,
seMr, trash pd. Midcleport.·
No pets. Ref.
$425.00.
required . 740.843-5264.

7 AOHA Registered Quarter

• Horseslorsaleortrade. Call

Apts.ll Jacbon

~~:~~~m 5:3tl5W~s=

APAlnMENls

740·446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.· ThiEl
Institution Is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
E 1
mpoyor.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
ED • AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or email hotJsas FOR
RENT. can (740)441-1 111
lor application &amp; information.
..,.

~

Property tor ssJe located in
Spring Field Twp., Left Fork
Rd. City school district being
apprO&gt; 27 Acres more or
le ss. Will sell as a whole or
di~de. Rura l water avaWable.
$75,000 740·245·5060

lor Rent, Meplgs County, In
town , No
ets, DepoSit
Required, (740)992·~174 or
(740)441-0 110.
-------1
2
and
bedroom apart·
ments, furn ished and unfur·
nished, and houses In
Trailer lot for rent Just above Pomeroy end Middleport,
Addison on At. 7. Call 7.4o.
security depoSit required, no
36Ha7a
pets, 740·992·2218.
Rl \ I \1 "1 BA. nice walk to Wei·Mart.

Ellm View
Apartments

I

cl~e

•

r

MlniLANFolts

Mfliai.oom;

446·3702
- - - - - - - - -c--c----3 Br.,$395 Mplus Ut.,Plus Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave,
Dap., av. 1st of M. 3rd St. Gallipolis,
Upstairs,
1
Racine. 740·247-4292.
Bedroom, No Pets, A:l utili·
lies peid, (740)446·9523

Ora~;loua

Uvlng 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Man O\ and Riverside Apts. in
Mi ddleport, l rom $327 to
$592. 740·992·5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. •

Stories at the River's Edge
10:30 a.m. • Middleport

Dave Diles Park
1:30 p.m. • Mason
Lottie Jenk's Memorial

Heavy Duty wheelchair.
75 .00 ee 1446.2098

s

JET
AERATION MOTORS
R
1
N &amp; RebuHt In
epa red, ew
slock. c all Ron Evane, 1·
""28
~ 7 -&lt;7W •

aoo-••

-------NEw AND
S11iEL
Steal Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel

~~~

'w-lllliiiiiiiil-rl

c

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I"'(7•10-lllitiAiilll'aiiiiiiiiio_pll
•uRSALE
.

. . . ..

_..iiiiiiiiiiil-.,1

-19-99
-Ch
- fN'I
-M-on-te-0a r-lo
158,000 miles Loaded $3044...\
675-7934
" " AKC Yorkie tJllppies 3 2001 Jeep Grand CherOkee
small male $900, 3 small Larado , Good Condit ion,
female $700., 2 10'.\ltl;s old low Miles. $9500. (740)845male $500 shots &amp; vet 8326
checked up to date 304-895 - - - ' - - - - - - 3926
2004 Ford Mustang GT, 5
- - - - - - - - speed,leather.52kmlles,leat
AKC Reg ., Bl•ck l ab her, loaded,to many extras
Puppies. $150.00... 740-742· 'to list, Call {740)379·2298

-~

Middleport, North 4th Ave., 2 _le..,._me_sas_ge.
br. lurnished apartment, AKC registered 3 yr old
deposit &amp; relere nces, rio Boston Terrier tomato $150
pets, (740)992-{&gt;165
740-367-7933

~~~~~~;;;&amp;-,

r

95 Coachman
24H
5th
wheelar
wlhilch Ind
. Dining

• s~de. Canopy. Sleeps 4·6.

19911 Eagle Talon 92000
Woodwortdng , Tools, Jet, miles. 1 own er. Excellent
Oelta and Craftsman, also, condition $4000 negotiable.
Walnut and Cherry lumber 245 •5466
phone 304-675·2246
-------1998 Olds 88, 4 Door,
n•~
$1995, (740)882-7512
....

~~sY.ttn:t"~nllng

PatloandPoroh-kl

wv 036725

ve..

Pole
Barns 30 " 40 x 10' 1986 Chevy Caprice, eKe.
Oelvared &amp;·Erected $8,595 cond. dependable call after
plus
Sales Tax . Call 6pm 304 675-4510 cell813(937)718·1471 www.nall on·
.
widepolebarns.com
365-1928

i

Room Acldttlon• &amp; ·
R1modellng
NowOarafllo
Eltonlcel &amp; Plumbing

"·v&amp;

3 7~2706

Very nice! Pulls wl 112 ton.
$5900. 9alllp area. 740245·9214 or 645·0873
AT
CHESHIRE:
2004
Nomad·North Trail 34' with
hyd., Extended section.
Camper nearly as new.
$12,500 Neg. Gall David,
(606)571-94411, Russell, KY
'I I~\ II I '

• .---~-----.,

r'0 . •·-~--

aMI"'LLV~""

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

• A K

Wise Concrete
Owner- Rick W ise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

Soulb
3NT

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

. TtiiS 'AIL~ 'OMPANY P~O~~AM

.

'UII&gt;e IS W0ttT!4LeSS! ALt.
IT SAYS ,s MY S't40W
vilLI..

leON

SOM~TIM~

rerweeNa

.,.__ ANI&gt; IZI

BARNEY

www.tt.as'bw w erkc•bJaetrr"..-•

GUARD DOG OL'
BULLET IS !!

VInyl Siding

•Windows
Replacement
•• Decks
Roofing

•
•
•

G
arages
Pole·Bulldlnga
Room Additions

0

wner:
Keesee 11
742·2332
r~~=~~;~
James

$35AScoop
T·Post 611. $3.29
Wide Vliriely of
Lawn Seed,

FertUizer and
Showmaster Show
Feeds

IT'S CALLED

"'STEAl.TN

MODE"'
•·

HE AIN'T
~IE~_&lt;ON

St. Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains, OH

..
'

Full Service Auto Repair

MAW!!

~i

BDPP AutO CEITER
740-667-3177

•

Oil Change, Tune-Up, Engine
o·lagnos
. u:s, Full Brak e servlee,
. . A'If
Conditioning Recharge &amp; Repal~,
Alignment, Custom Exhaust

,r

Jeff BisHD, Mana11er

houses and duplexes, garages,
porches. All concrete flatwork
including patios, driveways
and sidewalks.

.

.

,

THE BORN LOSER

"Gt.N:,'(~ C.OT 50 IMI&gt; /&gt;..T 11'£, ""~ "'"~51l.E. ~~tHO 'ioo '(t.t1' ""i-(o..,801 ~~~ ~ ~

,_ LDT! ..-· ""r- :.~(1

~~~ Slet&gt; ~.IJER_
~TO

t&lt;"f. """"'' ~ !

Reliable &amp; Experienced
Call Dennis Bryant

PEANUTS
IT'S CALLED,
•Tf.IE SAME
OLOTHIN6"

CALL THE AD
A6ENCV BEFORE
IT'S TOO LATE

• New Homes

45771

740-949-2217

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
_paily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri_-County Marketplace!

I I 1\ i '

SUNSHINE CLUB

( l l \ l I\ I I I

I I( I\

~ BIG 5£!tA)(£ LA&amp;
CLAIMS 1He:Y 5£X(e:SSFULLY .
CJDfJED A~SGXJrTO

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
t&lt;.

..

..

·· A,Il' ~Of · ~'_\.

'
Cllttciett
...
\ Wow.~·
. ....../,,&gt;.
,~. .

SHOP
26 Years Experience ·
David Lewis
CLASSIFIEDS
740-992-6971
lnourod
FOR
Eatlm1tes
BARGAINS
Manley's
EVERY DAY Racycllng
NOTICE OF BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Office ol Conlracts
Legal Copy Number:
070375

.rfi.IJ. .R-1.111
I•IIIIIJI:. . .12:11111 .

.......

!IYIIGTIP PIICIS.
-IACIII·-••nll
CIIIMICIIII:alin•C.• ·

___J

the OOOT Office of
Contracls unlll 1 D:OO

740·446·2342

www .mydai~tribune.com

304-675•1333
740-992-2155
ri'w.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentineLc:om
I

\

1 CAN HISAA MY
&amp;TOMACH ROARIN~

:;Aii&gt;K'•o.i· qualified bidders at

Joint jleasant ltgister The Daily Sentinel

FACT

GARFIELD

71H112-3114

• • • •, . . . . . . . .

13

document

38

Move~

F1111lly·

room gear

lurllvlly
39 Dr81n,
t9 p - flllia
IUIIII'JIY

· pua • one ltean • · three clubs
· pess. Now North would hiWo hlo two
eyes firmly set on three no-trump. If he
did bid the no-lrump game, he WOUld
proballly win 81113 tr1ctta alter a lovrda·
mond leed. But lje ~ bid three die·
rnonde 1o show sometiW1g In thel IIUH
• end to ask lor help In spades, 10111ch
South cannot SI.!'PIY· South WO&lt;Ad oontinue Mlh lour clubs. Then a pua by
North would be a good view.
What "-"'&lt;~ at the kay Iaiiie? South
opened wt111 a Gambling Three NoTrump, showing a solid IOVOn-card or
longer minor Mth oo side ace or kl'!l). (n
Is not cuotomary 1o haYe a wid when
making thla bid.) Nor11t, thinking his pan·
ner heel a belarx:ed 25-27 points, ~
majeotlcally to ....,n no·trumpl East
otrangely - and luc:tdly - did not dou·
ble. This controct coold ha\18 been

game atlln1as.

AstroGraph
..... .....W.:

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Co~otrtya;.,oypiOgnmsn-.,lrom-•OV'""""-·
""' .. EICII'-« ~ I'll ~ U'cleiOr ardhlt'

·

I

Todly'a duo: Fequals V

"XFXONDPWN RVKW PU
CX SY

DXVKT SKTON.

IXOHXVFXY
VA'Y

KPA

BKTXO, VA'Y CPAVFBAVPK. "
• IVAHLXO OPTXO HGXCXKY
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I don1 know 11nyone who curses the way IN!y tlo
on 'The Scpranos'. Nolin 11n lldan household.' · D11nny Aiello

'::~:!' ecr:~c4llA-Ltt.~s·
_ _ _..;..._ 1•11d
L 'OilAN
lol1on ol tho
0
be~ClAY

11010
tall

~----

R111mrno•
four ~Mmblad words
low to form f011r Jlmplt worda.

'

Clttferenca

dllrupt1on.

sVflChronlzed. It gives you a definite
edge 0\18r all competitors. Belkrve In
yourselt'and act in accordlnce with your
Instinct&amp;.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - Someone
who has bean "good to you may be In
need of some encouragement You IN
just the person who can reawakan th'peraon'a sense of self-confidence and
esteem.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Believe In
yourself because you have the ability to
accomplish big thlnga. Your keen lmlgl·
natton and resourcetulnese give vou 1
faculty tor getting around obllructlone
others can't.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221you will clearly be protective of your seH·
lnleres!S, you neverthelesa will be con·
cemed about !he welfare of others. Thl1
trumpe and e~ecusea any wronga you
might commit.
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- This
could be one ol your better days tqr not
only acquiring what you ~ after but , In
doing so, accomplishing much lor those
with whom you're lrl\/Oived. Focus fully on
meaningful goals.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Mix
as much as you can witn·creative peopM:
because their innovatiVe thinking will
Influence your abilities aa
You'll
each Induce 1he other to look at thlnge
differently.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) Intelligent planning on yOur part can yield
bigger rewards than ueual, making thla a
much more productive day wnan It
com.es to the financial yleJde you can
gamer. Opportunity knocf&lt;s.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mereh 20) - What
makes you much more popular with
lriende Is your natural tendency to •••
only !hair virtues and not thtlr tauttl. That
Is what we •• wlstl tor oul'lttvts.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Something that Ia personally Important 1o
you m.y tum out far bener than you h•d
dared to hoptt. Once you get a h•ndte on
It, however, don't leave any looee enda
hanging to trip you up.
TAURJS (Aprll 20.May 20) - Be an
lttentlve lllllf'ter when w, 1he company or
IOfl'leone who 11 known k)r hill or her
•blllty to handte ·tntnp well . Vou may
IMm IOI'Mthing valuable tnlt you oan
1pp!y to your own aftatr~.
GEMINI(May 21-Junt 20) -YoUr wor1&lt;·
rotatoct atlolra lOOk OkOOPtlonllly gcoct for
ldvlnotmenl lnd f'IIW81'01 11 thll 111M,
bUt kHp lo ycK.II'M" what )'01.1 Ire doing
dlffwrenlly that m11kect thlt poNible. The
leu Hid, tlw better.

CABT H

I 1 I I"
1

N0 0 UR

,._

"If you lake lhe credil tllr the
rain," lhe man lectured, "you
,._I '
• must nol be surprised if you are
r---::-'::=-::-"::'""':'-:---1
R E Cl) A L blamed for lhe ---·-··."

Is I I ·I

I

0

I

~

I
I I' I I : G

t
Comp lete tha cnvckfo quotod
'--...l-'-..1.-.L.-.L..-L-.-'·
by' filling In tho missing word&lt;
you devtlcp fron) slap No. 3 bolow.

e
€)

PiiNl NUMBERED tEllERS
IN lHESE SQUARE S
UNSCRAMALE
Gff ANSWE~

mms 10

I
.

SCRAMW'S ANSWERS 1· ' • o1
1•
lester - Haven - Rainy- Chosen· RICHEST
Anot S!l smart coed to her date, "Is it !rue lhat the one wilh ~­
mOSt IIIOIIC~·~ the RICH&amp;m"
ARLO&amp;JANIS

we•.

····lldllllft. •• 45'180

$f!aled ptopools will l---~ICIII!!!flr!!:!ll:li~IWI!!I'I'I~I~II!I
be 'accepted from pre-

'br 4}alhpo'hslallp ~ribunr

SEV~Ah_AS

AMATfu&lt;:Cf

Free

Public Notice

~'f:!ty"

Cloudllll

Pepperoni
tulllllnce
Sheridan
1 - , rlgltll
33 01...m1ng 51 Halhlrply
8 SutpiciOUI
vote
53 Bullllllly
8 v..,.for 35 Hockey
Cllchtr
10 l.egll
t.lnt

Steiner.
At hlo Iallie, South heel pleyed In tour
clubs, making exactly after a spade laad:
pluo130.
Four hearts Is laydown !of North·South,
but that takes some blddng.
A"normal' auction WO&lt;Ad begin one club

A-

••ssELL

Racine , Ohio

Sl

.•

llr. Hyde

n

Instincts and logic are so harmonlouaty

("Jamihj ...'!'•)":"•"'l"-!13P.4!1'1':....

29670 Bashan Road

.~ ....
34~-c-m:..

m their Uvea. Your
Instincts will prevail.
CANCER (June 2t-July 22) Aaeoclales w&amp;ll be watching yoy cloHty,
OQI becaUH you're doing anything MUng
but because you're doing a grat dM.t
right. They'll want to Imitate how you

ROBERT

Stop &amp; Compare

-Ulre

dell. What would be a 'nonnar auctlon'l
This deal occurred during a dupliCato at
the North Saa111e Bridge Club. was
118111 to Tile Bridge WOfld magozlne
(www.brldgeworld.com) by Harry

LEO (July 23--Aug. 22) - BecauM your

I

27=

r--'"

&lt;M~rcome

l

23=..

lNiy
oheller
U.V ono
Rllllly bid
Ubyrlnllt
H11 1

ma~herlylfatherty

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill Systeni
• Helios System

I~

Seya

21

59 lhln cut

II8Y8n oo-tn.mp. What would
you foa!l7
When you h8Ye decldled, look a1 the lull

a

We Deliver To You I

l ( } \. . . . I

57 Foul up
58W. -rally

By llemloe OoGI
There oould be a sub8tantllll improve~nt In your lofluence over peeN, e.peclalty If vou utiHze your natural dellre to
nurture all the tittle things that can makll

(740) 742-2377

Hi ll's Sel f
Storage

55 Annoy

llollwobe tie 40
24 IINr'llool 41
25 CIIIIJ)e
DOWN
topper
42
2e lll..ty
43
1 Fellow
1111111!11
lwtcka
2 FWml ... l 27 Illite-- 44
24 NoatfiPIF 3 Dry
lor ~I
45
- 28
4Tllllllclat
30 Squealer
Exe~~~lvely 47
5 Z'.elly lip
31 Study
of,.,.
2t HW!ky-dory 6 C.uetlc
32 Miller or
48

27&amp;,...&gt;

~.July 10,21107

lllllll•••••..

JU·912-1m

Allpau

55 Flory gem

Wamingf look only at West's hand.
South opens ·three no-lrump. Alter you
pua, Nor11t, not walling on ceremony,

G

..

BIG NATE

446-0007

• Complete
Remodeling

East

7NT

You must select
from four suits

- or truotra11ng-

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • GalliJiolis'

• Garages "

Nortk

dlelea1ed by .10 trlcl&lt;s with a diamond
leed, but underatandallly Wtllll aelected
the heart nine, aoo declarer immediately
claimed !of plus 1,520. Brlilge to an easy

CIISTIICTIII

REACH 3 COUNTIES

West
Paas

Opening lead: ??

r - -.....,.--.,~
J&amp;L
Contractor available for quality
cons1rueI'IOn
construct,·on on tum key' s1·ngle

.

Q J 10 7 5 I

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Nellber

types of concrete

Rocky Hupp·Owner

WATERPROOFING

r-::-::~===::-=::-:-=-:-::::":=:'%===~

·-

• J 2 .

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

BASEMENT
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
cal 24 Hrs. {740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
waterproofing.

• J 52

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

Hardwood ca.,necrr And FftHUre

52~111d
!owl
..
5411111c
14 Cinelli dill
of Zolro
-

East
4 AQI 8

.740-446-0007 Toll Free S'ri-6$-0007

Please leave messa e

Mercrulser, tandem axle
tr~ller wibrakes, good cond.
740.25H160
-------89 Baylner 27ft. New V-8
351 OMC Eng. Fridge,
billy goats. 75% $125. 50% stove,
bathroom/shower.
ii$1~00~.,.7,.40,.·2~5H~~15~2--, Sloops 4-B, tandem axle
trailer
wlbrakes,
great
01"
lhape. 741J.258-6160
..,._ _ _
GiwNiiiiiiit-_.1 - - - - - - - '
93 Marada 21ft. 4.3 V-6
u Mock Feed, shelled corn Mercruloer, tandem axis .
$5,20/50 lb. &amp; horse crunch
trailer wibrakes. great condl·
$7.22150 lb.. &amp; more. tton. 740256-6160
iliiiiiiiillle-741J.698.Q911
.
------One man Baas boat · trolling
Craftsman Aiding Mower, m ~"' + trailer. S375· 080

18HP Kohl
E 1
44
Grating
For
Drains,
er ngne, .
7
Drtveways &amp; Wai&lt;ways, L&amp;L Inch cut, $500. 1 40)682·
7512
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednes~y &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Cloeed

2966, If no answer, please

no pets, (740)992-0165

~

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Work

*Reasonable Rates
'' lnsured ·
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293

'*-

· 15 Skywllkor'l
guru
16 Seep
4 K 63
17AnyWDIMII
• B 8 76
• 53
Podium
.• J61 2
o AQta7 5 18 felluNs
4 B8
• 3
20 Quiet
Soulb
22 Rollover

w,.t

*Prompt and Quality

I

......,...n

12 Sldppora'

• 6 4

MONTY

rfamihJ l•t\'@4:•
All

0'1-GH'I

• 10 7.
.
•AKQI04 . ,
t K 10 3

I

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

for

lloAllii'OR&amp;c~~

Norlll

:==7=41J.l1=5=3=·9=65:7=~ ;=~~===~~~~~~~=~

18ft Alum. Starcraft Boat,
"'
Bore Goats, full blooded &amp; 85HP Mercury. Outboard
percentage. The price 18 Motor, Raft , Uta jackets &amp;
rlg~t. 367-7755
much more Included. lets ot
new maintenance. Aeklng
Fori Sala 13 month old eon $2500000 (740)256-1289
$200 '"'·895·3943
·
~
.:_Ge"'n-tle.:.2yf_:cold.:._Oc:.u_art:...a_r"Po-ny-. 88 Wellcroft 2011. V·8 360

nmSME

Immacu late 2 bedroom
apartment New caJpet &amp;
cabinets, ~~~shly painted &amp;
decorated, WfD hookup.
..JBeautiful country seHing.
Must see to appreciate.
$400/mo. (614) 595·7773 o r
1-800· 798-4686.
- - - - -- - Middleport Beech Sl, 2 br.
turnished apartment, utilities
paid, ~e posil &amp; reterences.

call

•RENTALS •SALES
SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

I

49 Hole lllllllr
50 , _ . -

llncy

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, GutterS
lnsurod &amp; BondfJd

Gorgeous Palomino Mare,
Bay
Mare,
Appaloosa
Geldng, .All broke to ride,
Top Quality/Warranty Milton $250-$600. (740)367·n60
Fl M SIS
88 kl
606-326·0m Red Reg. percen1age boer

1500 Coupon
Hot 1\lb Outlit 11

-Th_u_rs-da_(740)446-7300
y_,_s._t_ur_de_y_ _
&amp;
Sunday.

·

I

··- -

useo

• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
Utilities paid. Oep. req . No • Central heat &amp; A/C
-'l'l~-~---.,
pets. $550/month. 245·5555
"to
HOUSES
or441·5105
+Washarldryerhookup
FOR Rmr
•Tenant peys electric
2
"'------·
(304)882-3017
bedroom apartment down·
town Pomeroy $150 plus
S1741mol Buy 3bd HUD utiltties, (740)992-75 11
•

2 BR, 'w iD n'ool,·up, ~ to
coll ege. 740-286· 5789 or .

$160; Sofa &amp; Loveseat sets,
$400; Drive a little· save a
lo1, Mollohan, 202 Clark
Chapel Rd, Bidwell . 388·
iOili17ro3"!':'"""'~~....~

OBO

detalla-740.949-2217.

after 7pm 740 2"'.:- 6003
Bdrm., remodeled, new car- Full Size MaHress &amp; BIS,
·
• ;;;~~~;~-

Horse
Prop. . 40lC80
fOR 1bNJ
lnSulated&amp;heated ba rn w/1 0
box stalls/ 4 BR )Mng quarters/ 43 acres.446-3844 LIM 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments

homel
5%dn, 800.559-4109
20yrs II 8%.
f .. llltlngo
~~:1709.
------1 poss1bly 2 Br House in
New Haven. 5325/ month,
$325/deposit No Pats.

i
I---

""'l!r-0....,---...:..,

Equal Housing Opportunity
Apartment for rent, 1_2 ..,

'-:-""----c---

r

Call

senior and Disabled People.

Mobile homes for rent ,
55 acres more or lass, Middleport area. no pets, BoauUiul
call740·256·9247 (740)992·5858

sae.ooo.

Income.

(304)882·3121 avatlallle""

:::::111
d1cl1lon

11 Rocky

H&amp;H
Guttering

~245·5984,

s:

8 PINing

740-367-0536

Accepting applications for 2 street parking. Great locaBA, 1 BA apt, stove, fridge!, tionl 749 Third Avenue In
W/0 included. Water &amp; Galllpolls. Rent $350/mo.
Garbage paid. No pets, very Cell Wayne (404)456-3802
nice, clean 8: attractive.
$500/mO, 1st mo + $500 ·Prime commercial space for
c.-.1 aile PI
Sec.dep. required. Awil8ble rent at ......,r ngv
Y aza. M86S"ey Ferguson 150 2001 Harley Davidson
.
App.ly
wi1hin.
Call645-2192.
7116107
1743
Tractor
with
loader, Sportster 883,' 4200 miles,
Centan~ Ad, Gallipolis. No
WANI'ED
International
574,
165 Me1al Flake Blue, $4800.
Massey
Ferguson,
28-4
_Ph_on_•_a_ll_s_P I_
••_..
_·_~ ~,_ _ ~.
·
(740)64 5Internati onal , 9N Ford,
Apartment available now

$550/deposit740-416-3342 . adjusted

Lors

6)~~~

·Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks, •
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Riverbend Apls. New H...n Responsl ~e TN hunter look· (740) 28~522

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE.
Program $0 Down, If you 740·446·2003 or 446-1409
own Land or use Fam11y
land We own the Bank your Beautiful River View in
Approved 606·474·6380
Kanauga· Ideal for 1 or 2
""11:-"-::--~-., people. reterences, No pets,
&amp;
Loc. 5 mi. from Gavin.
A
17401441,0 181

(304)882·3652

,YR

throughout lncluijing brond
FOR RENT
new kitchen and bath.
1
Starting at $405. Ca.IIIOday! 'Commerciat· building "For
1 304 1~ 73 • 3344
Rent" 1600 square teet, off·

L..------.1 ~oh~~~ M~~ie ~:~a ~~c~:

r

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

0% Financing· . 36 Mos.
available now on' .John
1Win Rivers Tqwer Is accept- Oeare -Z Ttak Z.O Tuma &amp; 91 Chevy Ext cab 4X4,
ing appllcatklns tor w•ltlng 5.11% E.ixed Rata on John excellent .true!&lt; !of .the year,
llsllor Hud·subslzed, 1· br,
rust,
apartment ,for
the Deere ..Gatora Carmichael clltan but has
ld 1 l d' bl d
11 ·67" Equlpm,ent {740)446-2412.
A HIDDEN TREASURE I e er Y ISS e ca
•..6679
E
1
H
1
Laurel
Commons
rt . qua
ous ng 4•xo4• PTO trrigation pump,
0ppo n""
Apartments. Largest In the
u .. ,
900/ft 4• hose w/rail gun, 1
areal Be8utitully . renovated
""''CE
acre per setting, 1• per t"tovr.

WV. Now accepting -t"",..
::~orrtlica· 1ng 1o lease your tand or New Holland 273· square 2005 H.D.Fat Boy
1 bcustomd
16xao Trailer. 3br, 2ba, tlons for Hud·SubSidized, farm for hunting. Please call baler. good corldiUon . maroon
w em osse
located on 15 acres In Pt. one Bedroom ants. utilities 423·748-7045 or email
f1ames.1 of 200 made.BOO
""
$2700. 740·256-6522
·
1
·
Pleasant,
$550/month. included. Based on 30% of rdavisCMUSFIBER .com
m1 1es
s nee new,prtce

scott (740) 828 •2750

r

4x4
FoR SAu:

(740)446-3481 .

For rent or for sale 2 BR
Great used 2005 3 bedroom
Nice Remodel ed Home in
46x80 wi th vinyll shingte .
Must sell. 0 nly S25.995 with town, No Pets, R9h0'181ed,
deiNery. Call (740)385·4367 All
new carpet. Gall
(740)446·7425
New 3 Bedmom homes lrom ' - - ' - - - ' - - - - $2 14 .36 per •nonth, Includes House for Rent 3 bad10om,
many upgrades, delivery &amp; furnished, New Haven, WV
sel·up. (740)385-2434
$400 month call aHer 4Pm
304·n3-9507
OBC Modular (LXM503)
Special
order
only In Pomeroy House for rent! 3
52,840.00delivered to your Bd.,2 bath, newly remod·
location.
Cole's Mobile eled, total electric. 740·843·
Homes 4 miles East of 5264.
-------Athens on Rt 50132 . PH: Large 4 bedroom house In
800·466·4687 or 592-1972.
Pomeroy, very clean, newly
· M·F, 8· 7, Sat.: · 9 to 4 . . remodeled, new cabinets,
"Where you gal your new carpet, (740)949-2303
money's

:· ' : =

Security 1Jopos1t Required,

· l ess than perfeot credtt

ACROSS . 41 Kid
. l!'lnl!!!!l!!llllll
..llllll!l
1 a.. II
43 Bull, o.g.

Phillip
Alder

3·4 bed.oom home
1
Fumlsh8d
'
~. COm, ..:·.---=~~-...,
-:"'"'='...._,
waler"•rash{sewer
••'d.
~-·
Home ,~·
~•eet r !
~
J hnson 'sree
T
w
......
..
......W'"' N ~ 0
r.
o
I utll""""
Syracuse. $500 Pus
$400imo+dep.
Y4o.es2• Apt., ,,._ '"' o. ~. llj). awlllllte at Mlf(ean rarm;
---------:..17_
40:.:1:.:99:.:2_
·7:.:51_1_ _ _ _ 9243 oi 988-t130
&amp; ..- . 741).992.()1~. eentw,ry R&lt;l&amp; William.Ann d . .
_
--•o.aetpolls, OH 48831
AHendon!
- - - - - - - . - Tara
Townhouse
c.,......n..c..
Loca l company offering •No 4RM &amp; Bath, stove .fridge, Apar1menta Very Spacloua,
1999 Mei'QJry Mountaineer,
1'11f!•l)h·~·awn.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· utl~lties pajd, upetal"'- 40 2 Bedr~a. CIA, l l/2
4WO, 1~,000 mKes, E:wc.
.:::."!~~
1998CiaytonSpiritlllotsot grams for vou ro buy your Ohve
St.
No
pets. Bath
Aduh Pool· &amp; Baby~~~~~-":'~~-., Cond ., Sunroof, Power
740·•·u...,
ext1as axcallant condttion. home 1nstead of renting.
$450/month. «6-3945
Patio, Start $425/Mo.
Leather
S~ats, $6200
740 245..()344 after 5:
Must be moved. Call 949· · 100% tinanclng
No ~s •. Lease Pfus
~o...o.;;;.:;;;;;,::;;;;:::;:;.-..1

,!OR

NIA Cro11word Puzzle .

BRIDGE

=.~~~ 0~

r

~

Welcome! (740)441-&lt;1194.

6
In 2BR apts, r!il1rom Holzer. New·u-·-

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

a .m. on August 1,
2007. Projecl 070375 II
located In Meigs county, S.R .- 1~.00 and Is
a Resurfacing (2-Lane)
project. The date set
lor completion of this

'"""

...
'·

SOUPTONUTZ

-1&lt;

·I ltillff,IW IAl lb
1-N 1\at!D IN
1\aLF 8'1 HtTnwa a
BIPc.l&lt;: OF WOoD...

work shell be as set
forth in the bidding
proposal. Plans and
Specifications
on
fila in the Departmenl

are

or Transportation .

(7) 9, 16

.'
-~--__;_

____ _ -- - --·----------'-----------:-----'--------

�Monday, July 9, 2007
Monday, July 9, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

AL~YOOP
1990 Clayton MH, located at
157 Green Terrace, can
leave
MH
there
at
$141fmonrh lot rent which
inClu des water/trash. n&amp;wly
remodeled. new carpet, rleW
GE sto ...e and fridge, FP.· 2
large BA w 2 lull Baths.
New underpwn1ng. Has tror1t
and back po rcn, 2 metal ou1
buildings 8lC10 and 14x20.
Must see to appreciate.
Asking $19900. 740·446·
0826 or 645·1296

2 Br. Rutland, $375 per M
plus deposit. 742-1903.
3

Bedroom

House

2BR near Rio Grande,ha&amp;
fri dge, stove, W/0, wafi(
trash, sewer. 2BA
in
In Gallipolis has 1ridge/atove.

Modern t'Bedroom apt. Call
446-0390
-------New 2BR apartments.

r.

hQQku'p, lllr-""':~....":"'-.,

Syreouse. $500/month ,.. Qultt areas. No R81S. -Ref. Washer/ttrytr

~;~~si~~~-=:~~ ~~:~;: ~;, 740-446-1271 or 709· ~::::::::-:!;~";'~~
_o2_~5
_ ______

CKC Toy Rat Terriers. Choc
&amp; White, 1st shots, tails
docked. Asking $250. 3799515 or 645·6857

...

\r~,

er:

COOK MOTORS
328 Jack!KIO Pike, Gallipolis
Quality cars, trucks ' and
vans with warranty. 2000
Foc:.us 43,015 miles $3800.

7~103

,·

Ir""r"'""....

ServiCe .

f'Oci

2698. attar 4 p.m.

93 Clayton 2 Bd . ~ bath ' ?coopted
range , ret . dish washe r, new . Payment could be the
carpet , mint cond. Sl 1,500 same as rant .
Firm. Serious calls only.740- Mortgage
Locators.
740)367 0000
645·0072 ,or.740·441-9320. 1
·

r

worth~

OWNER FINANCING
. 312 sing 1ewid es
N1ce
From $ 1,800 down

u~..-

M

,:z:_=

OBI'OILERtu.ru

payment

i

I

I

:.:Ce:.:ll:.:3:.:79-:.,2:.:7:.:98'----.....,-Kiefer BUilt- Valley-BisonHQtse
and
Livestock
Trallaro·
loedmax·

02 Yamaha V-Star, 6500
miles, $1500 In extras, like
new. Asking $5200. 740·
846-2399
-------Gooseneck,
Dumps, &amp; 2000 Hondo 3:jll Rancher.
Ufllity- Aluma Aluminum
Tnlller1- B&amp;W Goosenec;k Electric shift, gently rode,
Hitches-Trailer
Parts. excellent condition. $2400.
Carmichael
Trailers. Call 741).245·5934
(740)446-2412

Local Contrac;tor

740.367.0544
Free Estimates

i .ro... --·

Lw-..OiiCREAiiiilliGiiE'-_.1
~

l!r•

HOUSEHOLD
Gool:ti

~

I
.r

$19,000

pet, stove &amp; frig ., water,
seMr, trash pd. Midcleport.·
No pets. Ref.
$425.00.
required . 740.843-5264.

7 AOHA Registered Quarter

• Horseslorsaleortrade. Call

Apts.ll Jacbon

~~:~~~m 5:3tl5W~s=

APAlnMENls

740·446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.· ThiEl
Institution Is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
E 1
mpoyor.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
ED • AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or email hotJsas FOR
RENT. can (740)441-1 111
lor application &amp; information.
..,.

~

Property tor ssJe located in
Spring Field Twp., Left Fork
Rd. City school district being
apprO&gt; 27 Acres more or
le ss. Will sell as a whole or
di~de. Rura l water avaWable.
$75,000 740·245·5060

lor Rent, Meplgs County, In
town , No
ets, DepoSit
Required, (740)992·~174 or
(740)441-0 110.
-------1
2
and
bedroom apart·
ments, furn ished and unfur·
nished, and houses In
Trailer lot for rent Just above Pomeroy end Middleport,
Addison on At. 7. Call 7.4o.
security depoSit required, no
36Ha7a
pets, 740·992·2218.
Rl \ I \1 "1 BA. nice walk to Wei·Mart.

Ellm View
Apartments

I

cl~e

•

r

MlniLANFolts

Mfliai.oom;

446·3702
- - - - - - - - -c--c----3 Br.,$395 Mplus Ut.,Plus Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave,
Dap., av. 1st of M. 3rd St. Gallipolis,
Upstairs,
1
Racine. 740·247-4292.
Bedroom, No Pets, A:l utili·
lies peid, (740)446·9523

Ora~;loua

Uvlng 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Man O\ and Riverside Apts. in
Mi ddleport, l rom $327 to
$592. 740·992·5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. •

Stories at the River's Edge
10:30 a.m. • Middleport

Dave Diles Park
1:30 p.m. • Mason
Lottie Jenk's Memorial

Heavy Duty wheelchair.
75 .00 ee 1446.2098

s

JET
AERATION MOTORS
R
1
N &amp; RebuHt In
epa red, ew
slock. c all Ron Evane, 1·
""28
~ 7 -&lt;7W •

aoo-••

-------NEw AND
S11iEL
Steal Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel

~~~

'w-lllliiiiiiiil-rl

c

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I"'(7•10-lllitiAiilll'aiiiiiiiiio_pll
•uRSALE
.

. . . ..

_..iiiiiiiiiiil-.,1

-19-99
-Ch
- fN'I
-M-on-te-0a r-lo
158,000 miles Loaded $3044...\
675-7934
" " AKC Yorkie tJllppies 3 2001 Jeep Grand CherOkee
small male $900, 3 small Larado , Good Condit ion,
female $700., 2 10'.\ltl;s old low Miles. $9500. (740)845male $500 shots &amp; vet 8326
checked up to date 304-895 - - - ' - - - - - - 3926
2004 Ford Mustang GT, 5
- - - - - - - - speed,leather.52kmlles,leat
AKC Reg ., Bl•ck l ab her, loaded,to many extras
Puppies. $150.00... 740-742· 'to list, Call {740)379·2298

-~

Middleport, North 4th Ave., 2 _le..,._me_sas_ge.
br. lurnished apartment, AKC registered 3 yr old
deposit &amp; relere nces, rio Boston Terrier tomato $150
pets, (740)992-{&gt;165
740-367-7933

~~~~~~;;;&amp;-,

r

95 Coachman
24H
5th
wheelar
wlhilch Ind
. Dining

• s~de. Canopy. Sleeps 4·6.

19911 Eagle Talon 92000
Woodwortdng , Tools, Jet, miles. 1 own er. Excellent
Oelta and Craftsman, also, condition $4000 negotiable.
Walnut and Cherry lumber 245 •5466
phone 304-675·2246
-------1998 Olds 88, 4 Door,
n•~
$1995, (740)882-7512
....

~~sY.ttn:t"~nllng

PatloandPoroh-kl

wv 036725

ve..

Pole
Barns 30 " 40 x 10' 1986 Chevy Caprice, eKe.
Oelvared &amp;·Erected $8,595 cond. dependable call after
plus
Sales Tax . Call 6pm 304 675-4510 cell813(937)718·1471 www.nall on·
.
widepolebarns.com
365-1928

i

Room Acldttlon• &amp; ·
R1modellng
NowOarafllo
Eltonlcel &amp; Plumbing

"·v&amp;

3 7~2706

Very nice! Pulls wl 112 ton.
$5900. 9alllp area. 740245·9214 or 645·0873
AT
CHESHIRE:
2004
Nomad·North Trail 34' with
hyd., Extended section.
Camper nearly as new.
$12,500 Neg. Gall David,
(606)571-94411, Russell, KY
'I I~\ II I '

• .---~-----.,

r'0 . •·-~--

aMI"'LLV~""

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

• A K

Wise Concrete
Owner- Rick W ise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

Soulb
3NT

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

. TtiiS 'AIL~ 'OMPANY P~O~~AM

.

'UII&gt;e IS W0ttT!4LeSS! ALt.
IT SAYS ,s MY S't40W
vilLI..

leON

SOM~TIM~

rerweeNa

.,.__ ANI&gt; IZI

BARNEY

www.tt.as'bw w erkc•bJaetrr"..-•

GUARD DOG OL'
BULLET IS !!

VInyl Siding

•Windows
Replacement
•• Decks
Roofing

•
•
•

G
arages
Pole·Bulldlnga
Room Additions

0

wner:
Keesee 11
742·2332
r~~=~~;~
James

$35AScoop
T·Post 611. $3.29
Wide Vliriely of
Lawn Seed,

FertUizer and
Showmaster Show
Feeds

IT'S CALLED

"'STEAl.TN

MODE"'
•·

HE AIN'T
~IE~_&lt;ON

St. Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains, OH

..
'

Full Service Auto Repair

MAW!!

~i

BDPP AutO CEITER
740-667-3177

•

Oil Change, Tune-Up, Engine
o·lagnos
. u:s, Full Brak e servlee,
. . A'If
Conditioning Recharge &amp; Repal~,
Alignment, Custom Exhaust

,r

Jeff BisHD, Mana11er

houses and duplexes, garages,
porches. All concrete flatwork
including patios, driveways
and sidewalks.

.

.

,

THE BORN LOSER

"Gt.N:,'(~ C.OT 50 IMI&gt; /&gt;..T 11'£, ""~ "'"~51l.E. ~~tHO 'ioo '(t.t1' ""i-(o..,801 ~~~ ~ ~

,_ LDT! ..-· ""r- :.~(1

~~~ Slet&gt; ~.IJER_
~TO

t&lt;"f. """"'' ~ !

Reliable &amp; Experienced
Call Dennis Bryant

PEANUTS
IT'S CALLED,
•Tf.IE SAME
OLOTHIN6"

CALL THE AD
A6ENCV BEFORE
IT'S TOO LATE

• New Homes

45771

740-949-2217

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
_paily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri_-County Marketplace!

I I 1\ i '

SUNSHINE CLUB

( l l \ l I\ I I I

I I( I\

~ BIG 5£!tA)(£ LA&amp;
CLAIMS 1He:Y 5£X(e:SSFULLY .
CJDfJED A~SGXJrTO

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
t&lt;.

..

..

·· A,Il' ~Of · ~'_\.

'
Cllttciett
...
\ Wow.~·
. ....../,,&gt;.
,~. .

SHOP
26 Years Experience ·
David Lewis
CLASSIFIEDS
740-992-6971
lnourod
FOR
Eatlm1tes
BARGAINS
Manley's
EVERY DAY Racycllng
NOTICE OF BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Office ol Conlracts
Legal Copy Number:
070375

.rfi.IJ. .R-1.111
I•IIIIIJI:. . .12:11111 .

.......

!IYIIGTIP PIICIS.
-IACIII·-••nll
CIIIMICIIII:alin•C.• ·

___J

the OOOT Office of
Contracls unlll 1 D:OO

740·446·2342

www .mydai~tribune.com

304-675•1333
740-992-2155
ri'w.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentineLc:om
I

\

1 CAN HISAA MY
&amp;TOMACH ROARIN~

:;Aii&gt;K'•o.i· qualified bidders at

Joint jleasant ltgister The Daily Sentinel

FACT

GARFIELD

71H112-3114

• • • •, . . . . . . . .

13

document

38

Move~

F1111lly·

room gear

lurllvlly
39 Dr81n,
t9 p - flllia
IUIIII'JIY

· pua • one ltean • · three clubs
· pess. Now North would hiWo hlo two
eyes firmly set on three no-trump. If he
did bid the no-lrump game, he WOUld
proballly win 81113 tr1ctta alter a lovrda·
mond leed. But lje ~ bid three die·
rnonde 1o show sometiW1g In thel IIUH
• end to ask lor help In spades, 10111ch
South cannot SI.!'PIY· South WO&lt;Ad oontinue Mlh lour clubs. Then a pua by
North would be a good view.
What "-"'&lt;~ at the kay Iaiiie? South
opened wt111 a Gambling Three NoTrump, showing a solid IOVOn-card or
longer minor Mth oo side ace or kl'!l). (n
Is not cuotomary 1o haYe a wid when
making thla bid.) Nor11t, thinking his pan·
ner heel a belarx:ed 25-27 points, ~
majeotlcally to ....,n no·trumpl East
otrangely - and luc:tdly - did not dou·
ble. This controct coold ha\18 been

game atlln1as.

AstroGraph
..... .....W.:

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Co~otrtya;.,oypiOgnmsn-.,lrom-•OV'""""-·
""' .. EICII'-« ~ I'll ~ U'cleiOr ardhlt'

·

I

Todly'a duo: Fequals V

"XFXONDPWN RVKW PU
CX SY

DXVKT SKTON.

IXOHXVFXY
VA'Y

KPA

BKTXO, VA'Y CPAVFBAVPK. "
• IVAHLXO OPTXO HGXCXKY
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I don1 know 11nyone who curses the way IN!y tlo
on 'The Scpranos'. Nolin 11n lldan household.' · D11nny Aiello

'::~:!' ecr:~c4llA-Ltt.~s·
_ _ _..;..._ 1•11d
L 'OilAN
lol1on ol tho
0
be~ClAY

11010
tall

~----

R111mrno•
four ~Mmblad words
low to form f011r Jlmplt worda.

'

Clttferenca

dllrupt1on.

sVflChronlzed. It gives you a definite
edge 0\18r all competitors. Belkrve In
yourselt'and act in accordlnce with your
Instinct&amp;.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - Someone
who has bean "good to you may be In
need of some encouragement You IN
just the person who can reawakan th'peraon'a sense of self-confidence and
esteem.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Believe In
yourself because you have the ability to
accomplish big thlnga. Your keen lmlgl·
natton and resourcetulnese give vou 1
faculty tor getting around obllructlone
others can't.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221you will clearly be protective of your seH·
lnleres!S, you neverthelesa will be con·
cemed about !he welfare of others. Thl1
trumpe and e~ecusea any wronga you
might commit.
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- This
could be one ol your better days tqr not
only acquiring what you ~ after but , In
doing so, accomplishing much lor those
with whom you're lrl\/Oived. Focus fully on
meaningful goals.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Mix
as much as you can witn·creative peopM:
because their innovatiVe thinking will
Influence your abilities aa
You'll
each Induce 1he other to look at thlnge
differently.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) Intelligent planning on yOur part can yield
bigger rewards than ueual, making thla a
much more productive day wnan It
com.es to the financial yleJde you can
gamer. Opportunity knocf&lt;s.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mereh 20) - What
makes you much more popular with
lriende Is your natural tendency to •••
only !hair virtues and not thtlr tauttl. That
Is what we •• wlstl tor oul'lttvts.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Something that Ia personally Important 1o
you m.y tum out far bener than you h•d
dared to hoptt. Once you get a h•ndte on
It, however, don't leave any looee enda
hanging to trip you up.
TAURJS (Aprll 20.May 20) - Be an
lttentlve lllllf'ter when w, 1he company or
IOfl'leone who 11 known k)r hill or her
•blllty to handte ·tntnp well . Vou may
IMm IOI'Mthing valuable tnlt you oan
1pp!y to your own aftatr~.
GEMINI(May 21-Junt 20) -YoUr wor1&lt;·
rotatoct atlolra lOOk OkOOPtlonllly gcoct for
ldvlnotmenl lnd f'IIW81'01 11 thll 111M,
bUt kHp lo ycK.II'M" what )'01.1 Ire doing
dlffwrenlly that m11kect thlt poNible. The
leu Hid, tlw better.

CABT H

I 1 I I"
1

N0 0 UR

,._

"If you lake lhe credil tllr the
rain," lhe man lectured, "you
,._I '
• must nol be surprised if you are
r---::-'::=-::-"::'""':'-:---1
R E Cl) A L blamed for lhe ---·-··."

Is I I ·I

I

0

I

~

I
I I' I I : G

t
Comp lete tha cnvckfo quotod
'--...l-'-..1.-.L.-.L..-L-.-'·
by' filling In tho missing word&lt;
you devtlcp fron) slap No. 3 bolow.

e
€)

PiiNl NUMBERED tEllERS
IN lHESE SQUARE S
UNSCRAMALE
Gff ANSWE~

mms 10

I
.

SCRAMW'S ANSWERS 1· ' • o1
1•
lester - Haven - Rainy- Chosen· RICHEST
Anot S!l smart coed to her date, "Is it !rue lhat the one wilh ~­
mOSt IIIOIIC~·~ the RICH&amp;m"
ARLO&amp;JANIS

we•.

····lldllllft. •• 45'180

$f!aled ptopools will l---~ICIII!!!flr!!:!ll:li~IWI!!I'I'I~I~II!I
be 'accepted from pre-

'br 4}alhpo'hslallp ~ribunr

SEV~Ah_AS

AMATfu&lt;:Cf

Free

Public Notice

~'f:!ty"

Cloudllll

Pepperoni
tulllllnce
Sheridan
1 - , rlgltll
33 01...m1ng 51 Halhlrply
8 SutpiciOUI
vote
53 Bullllllly
8 v..,.for 35 Hockey
Cllchtr
10 l.egll
t.lnt

Steiner.
At hlo Iallie, South heel pleyed In tour
clubs, making exactly after a spade laad:
pluo130.
Four hearts Is laydown !of North·South,
but that takes some blddng.
A"normal' auction WO&lt;Ad begin one club

A-

••ssELL

Racine , Ohio

Sl

.•

llr. Hyde

n

Instincts and logic are so harmonlouaty

("Jamihj ...'!'•)":"•"'l"-!13P.4!1'1':....

29670 Bashan Road

.~ ....
34~-c-m:..

m their Uvea. Your
Instincts will prevail.
CANCER (June 2t-July 22) Aaeoclales w&amp;ll be watching yoy cloHty,
OQI becaUH you're doing anything MUng
but because you're doing a grat dM.t
right. They'll want to Imitate how you

ROBERT

Stop &amp; Compare

-Ulre

dell. What would be a 'nonnar auctlon'l
This deal occurred during a dupliCato at
the North Saa111e Bridge Club. was
118111 to Tile Bridge WOfld magozlne
(www.brldgeworld.com) by Harry

LEO (July 23--Aug. 22) - BecauM your

I

27=

r--'"

&lt;M~rcome

l

23=..

lNiy
oheller
U.V ono
Rllllly bid
Ubyrlnllt
H11 1

ma~herlylfatherty

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill Systeni
• Helios System

I~

Seya

21

59 lhln cut

II8Y8n oo-tn.mp. What would
you foa!l7
When you h8Ye decldled, look a1 the lull

a

We Deliver To You I

l ( } \. . . . I

57 Foul up
58W. -rally

By llemloe OoGI
There oould be a sub8tantllll improve~nt In your lofluence over peeN, e.peclalty If vou utiHze your natural dellre to
nurture all the tittle things that can makll

(740) 742-2377

Hi ll's Sel f
Storage

55 Annoy

llollwobe tie 40
24 IINr'llool 41
25 CIIIIJ)e
DOWN
topper
42
2e lll..ty
43
1 Fellow
1111111!11
lwtcka
2 FWml ... l 27 Illite-- 44
24 NoatfiPIF 3 Dry
lor ~I
45
- 28
4Tllllllclat
30 Squealer
Exe~~~lvely 47
5 Z'.elly lip
31 Study
of,.,.
2t HW!ky-dory 6 C.uetlc
32 Miller or
48

27&amp;,...&gt;

~.July 10,21107

lllllll•••••..

JU·912-1m

Allpau

55 Flory gem

Wamingf look only at West's hand.
South opens ·three no-lrump. Alter you
pua, Nor11t, not walling on ceremony,

G

..

BIG NATE

446-0007

• Complete
Remodeling

East

7NT

You must select
from four suits

- or truotra11ng-

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • GalliJiolis'

• Garages "

Nortk

dlelea1ed by .10 trlcl&lt;s with a diamond
leed, but underatandallly Wtllll aelected
the heart nine, aoo declarer immediately
claimed !of plus 1,520. Brlilge to an easy

CIISTIICTIII

REACH 3 COUNTIES

West
Paas

Opening lead: ??

r - -.....,.--.,~
J&amp;L
Contractor available for quality
cons1rueI'IOn
construct,·on on tum key' s1·ngle

.

Q J 10 7 5 I

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Nellber

types of concrete

Rocky Hupp·Owner

WATERPROOFING

r-::-::~===::-=::-:-=-:-::::":=:'%===~

·-

• J 2 .

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

BASEMENT
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
cal 24 Hrs. {740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
waterproofing.

• J 52

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

Hardwood ca.,necrr And FftHUre

52~111d
!owl
..
5411111c
14 Cinelli dill
of Zolro
-

East
4 AQI 8

.740-446-0007 Toll Free S'ri-6$-0007

Please leave messa e

Mercrulser, tandem axle
tr~ller wibrakes, good cond.
740.25H160
-------89 Baylner 27ft. New V-8
351 OMC Eng. Fridge,
billy goats. 75% $125. 50% stove,
bathroom/shower.
ii$1~00~.,.7,.40,.·2~5H~~15~2--, Sloops 4-B, tandem axle
trailer
wlbrakes,
great
01"
lhape. 741J.258-6160
..,._ _ _
GiwNiiiiiiit-_.1 - - - - - - - '
93 Marada 21ft. 4.3 V-6
u Mock Feed, shelled corn Mercruloer, tandem axis .
$5,20/50 lb. &amp; horse crunch
trailer wibrakes. great condl·
$7.22150 lb.. &amp; more. tton. 740256-6160
iliiiiiiiillle-741J.698.Q911
.
------One man Baas boat · trolling
Craftsman Aiding Mower, m ~"' + trailer. S375· 080

18HP Kohl
E 1
44
Grating
For
Drains,
er ngne, .
7
Drtveways &amp; Wai&lt;ways, L&amp;L Inch cut, $500. 1 40)682·
7512
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednes~y &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Cloeed

2966, If no answer, please

no pets, (740)992-0165

~

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Work

*Reasonable Rates
'' lnsured ·
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293

'*-

· 15 Skywllkor'l
guru
16 Seep
4 K 63
17AnyWDIMII
• B 8 76
• 53
Podium
.• J61 2
o AQta7 5 18 felluNs
4 B8
• 3
20 Quiet
Soulb
22 Rollover

w,.t

*Prompt and Quality

I

......,...n

12 Sldppora'

• 6 4

MONTY

rfamihJ l•t\'@4:•
All

0'1-GH'I

• 10 7.
.
•AKQI04 . ,
t K 10 3

I

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

for

lloAllii'OR&amp;c~~

Norlll

:==7=41J.l1=5=3=·9=65:7=~ ;=~~===~~~~~~~=~

18ft Alum. Starcraft Boat,
"'
Bore Goats, full blooded &amp; 85HP Mercury. Outboard
percentage. The price 18 Motor, Raft , Uta jackets &amp;
rlg~t. 367-7755
much more Included. lets ot
new maintenance. Aeklng
Fori Sala 13 month old eon $2500000 (740)256-1289
$200 '"'·895·3943
·
~
.:_Ge"'n-tle.:.2yf_:cold.:._Oc:.u_art:...a_r"Po-ny-. 88 Wellcroft 2011. V·8 360

nmSME

Immacu late 2 bedroom
apartment New caJpet &amp;
cabinets, ~~~shly painted &amp;
decorated, WfD hookup.
..JBeautiful country seHing.
Must see to appreciate.
$400/mo. (614) 595·7773 o r
1-800· 798-4686.
- - - - -- - Middleport Beech Sl, 2 br.
turnished apartment, utilities
paid, ~e posil &amp; reterences.

call

•RENTALS •SALES
SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

I

49 Hole lllllllr
50 , _ . -

llncy

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, GutterS
lnsurod &amp; BondfJd

Gorgeous Palomino Mare,
Bay
Mare,
Appaloosa
Geldng, .All broke to ride,
Top Quality/Warranty Milton $250-$600. (740)367·n60
Fl M SIS
88 kl
606-326·0m Red Reg. percen1age boer

1500 Coupon
Hot 1\lb Outlit 11

-Th_u_rs-da_(740)446-7300
y_,_s._t_ur_de_y_ _
&amp;
Sunday.

·

I

··- -

useo

• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
Utilities paid. Oep. req . No • Central heat &amp; A/C
-'l'l~-~---.,
pets. $550/month. 245·5555
"to
HOUSES
or441·5105
+Washarldryerhookup
FOR Rmr
•Tenant peys electric
2
"'------·
(304)882-3017
bedroom apartment down·
town Pomeroy $150 plus
S1741mol Buy 3bd HUD utiltties, (740)992-75 11
•

2 BR, 'w iD n'ool,·up, ~ to
coll ege. 740-286· 5789 or .

$160; Sofa &amp; Loveseat sets,
$400; Drive a little· save a
lo1, Mollohan, 202 Clark
Chapel Rd, Bidwell . 388·
iOili17ro3"!':'"""'~~....~

OBO

detalla-740.949-2217.

after 7pm 740 2"'.:- 6003
Bdrm., remodeled, new car- Full Size MaHress &amp; BIS,
·
• ;;;~~~;~-

Horse
Prop. . 40lC80
fOR 1bNJ
lnSulated&amp;heated ba rn w/1 0
box stalls/ 4 BR )Mng quarters/ 43 acres.446-3844 LIM 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments

homel
5%dn, 800.559-4109
20yrs II 8%.
f .. llltlngo
~~:1709.
------1 poss1bly 2 Br House in
New Haven. 5325/ month,
$325/deposit No Pats.

i
I---

""'l!r-0....,---...:..,

Equal Housing Opportunity
Apartment for rent, 1_2 ..,

'-:-""----c---

r

Call

senior and Disabled People.

Mobile homes for rent ,
55 acres more or lass, Middleport area. no pets, BoauUiul
call740·256·9247 (740)992·5858

sae.ooo.

Income.

(304)882·3121 avatlallle""

:::::111
d1cl1lon

11 Rocky

H&amp;H
Guttering

~245·5984,

s:

8 PINing

740-367-0536

Accepting applications for 2 street parking. Great locaBA, 1 BA apt, stove, fridge!, tionl 749 Third Avenue In
W/0 included. Water &amp; Galllpolls. Rent $350/mo.
Garbage paid. No pets, very Cell Wayne (404)456-3802
nice, clean 8: attractive.
$500/mO, 1st mo + $500 ·Prime commercial space for
c.-.1 aile PI
Sec.dep. required. Awil8ble rent at ......,r ngv
Y aza. M86S"ey Ferguson 150 2001 Harley Davidson
.
App.ly
wi1hin.
Call645-2192.
7116107
1743
Tractor
with
loader, Sportster 883,' 4200 miles,
Centan~ Ad, Gallipolis. No
WANI'ED
International
574,
165 Me1al Flake Blue, $4800.
Massey
Ferguson,
28-4
_Ph_on_•_a_ll_s_P I_
••_..
_·_~ ~,_ _ ~.
·
(740)64 5Internati onal , 9N Ford,
Apartment available now

$550/deposit740-416-3342 . adjusted

Lors

6)~~~

·Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks, •
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Riverbend Apls. New H...n Responsl ~e TN hunter look· (740) 28~522

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE.
Program $0 Down, If you 740·446·2003 or 446-1409
own Land or use Fam11y
land We own the Bank your Beautiful River View in
Approved 606·474·6380
Kanauga· Ideal for 1 or 2
""11:-"-::--~-., people. reterences, No pets,
&amp;
Loc. 5 mi. from Gavin.
A
17401441,0 181

(304)882·3652

,YR

throughout lncluijing brond
FOR RENT
new kitchen and bath.
1
Starting at $405. Ca.IIIOday! 'Commerciat· building "For
1 304 1~ 73 • 3344
Rent" 1600 square teet, off·

L..------.1 ~oh~~~ M~~ie ~:~a ~~c~:

r

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

0% Financing· . 36 Mos.
available now on' .John
1Win Rivers Tqwer Is accept- Oeare -Z Ttak Z.O Tuma &amp; 91 Chevy Ext cab 4X4,
ing appllcatklns tor w•ltlng 5.11% E.ixed Rata on John excellent .true!&lt; !of .the year,
llsllor Hud·subslzed, 1· br,
rust,
apartment ,for
the Deere ..Gatora Carmichael clltan but has
ld 1 l d' bl d
11 ·67" Equlpm,ent {740)446-2412.
A HIDDEN TREASURE I e er Y ISS e ca
•..6679
E
1
H
1
Laurel
Commons
rt . qua
ous ng 4•xo4• PTO trrigation pump,
0ppo n""
Apartments. Largest In the
u .. ,
900/ft 4• hose w/rail gun, 1
areal Be8utitully . renovated
""''CE
acre per setting, 1• per t"tovr.

WV. Now accepting -t"",..
::~orrtlica· 1ng 1o lease your tand or New Holland 273· square 2005 H.D.Fat Boy
1 bcustomd
16xao Trailer. 3br, 2ba, tlons for Hud·SubSidized, farm for hunting. Please call baler. good corldiUon . maroon
w em osse
located on 15 acres In Pt. one Bedroom ants. utilities 423·748-7045 or email
f1ames.1 of 200 made.BOO
""
$2700. 740·256-6522
·
1
·
Pleasant,
$550/month. included. Based on 30% of rdavisCMUSFIBER .com
m1 1es
s nee new,prtce

scott (740) 828 •2750

r

4x4
FoR SAu:

(740)446-3481 .

For rent or for sale 2 BR
Great used 2005 3 bedroom
Nice Remodel ed Home in
46x80 wi th vinyll shingte .
Must sell. 0 nly S25.995 with town, No Pets, R9h0'181ed,
deiNery. Call (740)385·4367 All
new carpet. Gall
(740)446·7425
New 3 Bedmom homes lrom ' - - ' - - - ' - - - - $2 14 .36 per •nonth, Includes House for Rent 3 bad10om,
many upgrades, delivery &amp; furnished, New Haven, WV
sel·up. (740)385-2434
$400 month call aHer 4Pm
304·n3-9507
OBC Modular (LXM503)
Special
order
only In Pomeroy House for rent! 3
52,840.00delivered to your Bd.,2 bath, newly remod·
location.
Cole's Mobile eled, total electric. 740·843·
Homes 4 miles East of 5264.
-------Athens on Rt 50132 . PH: Large 4 bedroom house In
800·466·4687 or 592-1972.
Pomeroy, very clean, newly
· M·F, 8· 7, Sat.: · 9 to 4 . . remodeled, new cabinets,
"Where you gal your new carpet, (740)949-2303
money's

:· ' : =

Security 1Jopos1t Required,

· l ess than perfeot credtt

ACROSS . 41 Kid
. l!'lnl!!!!l!!llllll
..llllll!l
1 a.. II
43 Bull, o.g.

Phillip
Alder

3·4 bed.oom home
1
Fumlsh8d
'
~. COm, ..:·.---=~~-...,
-:"'"'='...._,
waler"•rash{sewer
••'d.
~-·
Home ,~·
~•eet r !
~
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Syracuse. $500 Pus
$400imo+dep.
Y4o.es2• Apt., ,,._ '"' o. ~. llj). awlllllte at Mlf(ean rarm;
---------:..17_
40:.:1:.:99:.:2_
·7:.:51_1_ _ _ _ 9243 oi 988-t130
&amp; ..- . 741).992.()1~. eentw,ry R&lt;l&amp; William.Ann d . .
_
--•o.aetpolls, OH 48831
AHendon!
- - - - - - - . - Tara
Townhouse
c.,......n..c..
Loca l company offering •No 4RM &amp; Bath, stove .fridge, Apar1menta Very Spacloua,
1999 Mei'QJry Mountaineer,
1'11f!•l)h·~·awn.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· utl~lties pajd, upetal"'- 40 2 Bedr~a. CIA, l l/2
4WO, 1~,000 mKes, E:wc.
.:::."!~~
1998CiaytonSpiritlllotsot grams for vou ro buy your Ohve
St.
No
pets. Bath
Aduh Pool· &amp; Baby~~~~~-":'~~-., Cond ., Sunroof, Power
740·•·u...,
ext1as axcallant condttion. home 1nstead of renting.
$450/month. «6-3945
Patio, Start $425/Mo.
Leather
S~ats, $6200
740 245..()344 after 5:
Must be moved. Call 949· · 100% tinanclng
No ~s •. Lease Pfus
~o...o.;;;.:;;;;;,::;;;;:::;:;.-..1

,!OR

NIA Cro11word Puzzle .

BRIDGE

=.~~~ 0~

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~

Welcome! (740)441-&lt;1194.

6
In 2BR apts, r!il1rom Holzer. New·u-·-

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

a .m. on August 1,
2007. Projecl 070375 II
located In Meigs county, S.R .- 1~.00 and Is
a Resurfacing (2-Lane)
project. The date set
lor completion of this

'"""

...
'·

SOUPTONUTZ

-1&lt;

·I ltillff,IW IAl lb
1-N 1\at!D IN
1\aLF 8'1 HtTnwa a
BIPc.l&lt;: OF WOoD...

work shell be as set
forth in the bidding
proposal. Plans and
Specifications
on
fila in the Departmenl

are

or Transportation .

(7) 9, 16

.'
-~--__;_

____ _ -- - --·----------'-----------:-----'--------

�•
~e B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, July 9. 2007.

Choi wins Woods' inaugural tou~ament

AP photo

K.J. Choi holds the trophy after winning the AT&amp;T National

golf championship Sunday in Bethesda, Md.

BETHESDA, Md. (AP) - Five
weeks ago KJ. Choi received a tropby from Jack Nicklaus: On Sunday,
he got one from Tiger Woods.
The biggest name in South JS:orean
golf was again the prized guest at a
go If party thrown by an American
star, punctuating an adventurous back
nine with a great bunker shot on his
way to a three-stroke victory over
Steve Stricker at the inaugural AT&amp;T
National.
Choi shot a final-round 68 for a 9under 271 total to win for the sixth
time on the PGA Tour, the most victories by an asian-born player, and
his · $1.08 million first-place check
matched the one he ·got for winning
Nicklaus' Memorial last month.
This week, Woods joined Nicklaus
and Arnold Palmer as players to host
a tour event. The event was a red,
white and blue spectacle surrounding
the Fourth of July, but Choi added to
the international flair, attracting a
substantial gallery of local KoreanAmericans that cheered him in his
native language.
One fan held a si¥,n with a Korean
flag with the words 'Go Tank," a reference to the nickname Choi earned
after powerlifting 350 pounds as a
95-pound boy at age 13 .. He's also
known for learning the game from a
golf instructional book in Korean that

featured pictures of J;lickfaus, a ~resent from a physacal education
teacher who thought the teenage Choi
might have a gift for the game.
There's lfow no question that ChP.i,
37, has that gift. He wavered with
three bogeys early on the back nine,
jostling with Stricker atop the leaderboard, QUI Choi steadied himself with
a 12-foot birdie putt at the 15th to
take a two-shot !&lt;:ad.
That shot was worth two fist pumps
from Choi's usually even-keeled
demean~r. but the celebrati~n was
bigger at the 17th. where Ch01 holed
from the greenside trap for a birdie.
Choi took off his visor, retrieved the
ball and threw it into the crowd,
assured that he would be the one to
win the trophy that was a replica of
the Capitol buildin¥,- with flags of all
50 -states' engraved m the sides.
Stricker was among several possible contenders who struggled with
the bumpy greens on a sweltering day
at Congressional Country Clu~.
Stricker had three bogeys on the back
nine to finish with a 70. Mike Weir
(74) also got close before three consecutive back~nine bogeys. Jim Furyk
(69) was in 1Jte hunt before going 2
over after the tum.
·
-The third-round leader was Stuart
Appleby at 9 under - two shots
ahead of Choi - but he collapsed by

-dropping six.strokes in his first seven
holes. The free fall began when the
Aussie put his tee shot beyond a ca{l
path .at the par-3 No " 2, where he
carded a double bogey after missing a
4-foot putt for bogey. Appleby shot a
40 on the front nine and a 76 for the
day, finishing in a tie for third. at )
under.
. .. .
Woods was never really ID contention in his own tournai11ent. His
putter lethim down on T~llr.s.day (73)
and Saturday (69), ani! h[s 66 on
Friday wasn't enoug~ to compensate.
Seven strokes behmd ~s Sundat
dawned, Woods played a.final round .
of even-par 70 tha~ was more celebra,
tory than competitive, as many m the
crowd of 37,211 thanked him for
bringing the PGA Tour back to the
Washington area after the long-run~
ning Booz Allen Classic was pulled
from the calendar last year.
"I didn't get a 'W,' so that was {rus:
!rating in that sense," said Woods,
who finished tied for sixth at 2 under.
"But thi.s tournament in general haS
been a bigjler success than anyone:
could have Imagined."
.
..:
Choi rejlained his stride. with a 2~~
foot birdie putt at the 12th, tying
Stricker at 8 under. Stricker's bogeY.
at the 14th gave Choi the solo leadj
but Choi gave it back by' missing
from 8 feet for par at the 13th.
'·

~iddleport

.
;; o&lt;:I· '\ l S•\ol. ;; t. , '\o .:!;J•I

SPORTS

I

t

woo

'*-

·• All-stars buzzing about
Bonds.
. See Page B1

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Howard Samples
• Elsie Dodderer

INSIDE
• Iraqi leaders wam
again~ qui~~ U.S.

pullout as·pm§Sure
mounts on WhHe House.
See Page A2
• Troops storm Pakistan
mosque comix&gt;und after
surrender talks fail.
See Page A2
• Dozens of wildfires
ravage the West; rain falls
on South Dakota fire that
killed homeowner.
See Page A2
• Oberlifl gets $4.5M
grant to promote student
, service. See Page AS
• Bush administration,
Ohio governor continue
to spar over Guard.
See Page _AS
• New Guantanamo
commander sees value
in detention camp.
See Page AS
• Avalanche Ranch
VBS. See Page AS

Details on Page A6

Office of.EaJnornic and
Wowkforce DeW!Jopnent

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

lo~~

Busch wasn't surprised when he had no help
getting past McMurray on
the final two laps, and he
said he "got blown off' by
Gordon when he tried to
. congratulate him on Victory
Lane.
"I' m the outsider lookid'g
in," said Busch, who is
leaving the team at the end
of !he season to make room
for Dale Earnhardt Jr. 'l)
guess the bliss is over a'f
Hendrick Motorsports."

Andy Francis -from .instrumentalist

to composer

POMEROY - When the
Eastern High School seniors
were selecting a band number to
be pia yed at their graduation in .
May,
they
chose
"A
Recapitulation of a Time -Once
Known," an original composition by Andy Francis.
Francis had composed the
music earlier dedicating it to the ·
EHS Concert Band for use at its
spring concert. After writing the
music and before the spring concert, Francis, an EHS graduate
now completing his junior year .
at Ohio University, came to the
high school twice to rehearse it
with the band students and then
directed the selection at the
§Pri!:l.JLCOnCf.l'!.: The seniors w(!ft;so tmpressed they as~ecfffiat tlie
composition be played at' their
graduation.
.
The OU music major has composed several songs, according
to Cris Kuhn, band instructor at
Eastern. She described francis
as "extremely talented.~} She
said he played percussion in the
Eastern band for six years ~efore
going to Ohio University and
now plays in several bands and

209 Butternut Avenue from
Victor Young in the amount
of $2, I00. The village paid
$6,000 total to tear down a
total of two houses, one on
each lot. Council approved
accepting both bids for the
lots.
Council approved repairing, again, the concrete near
the Mulberry Community
Center where flooding has
"blown out" a culvert. The

Please see Pomeroy, AS

Eastern School
.Board approves
contracts
STAI=F 'REPORT
NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local Board of
education approved supple·
mental contracts for the
upcoming school year and
Andy Francis, summer school staff at its
an Ohio
recent regular meeting.
University
The board approved the
music major.. following supplemental con-.
tracts for tbe 2007-08 school
works on a
Angie
Rigsby,
composition. year:
Elementary Student Council
Co-Advisor; Carly Hayes,
Elementary Student Council
· ~~Advisor;
Howie
Caldwell ;~ , -·
· A'Si\i~tit
Basketball Coach; Rbdney
Ash, Assistant Junior High
Football Coach; Brigham
Ash, Volunteer Junior High
Football Coach; Kim Hupp;
Reserve Volleyball Coach;_
Debbie Weber, Varsity
Assistant Volleyball Coach;
Jerry Burdette, Junior· High
Girls' Basketball Coach;
John Burdette, Junior High
"
Girls' Basketball · Coach;

Please see Francis, A'S

Pluse -

Eutem, AS

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

liP photo

mate Dennr; Hamlin as the
two were eading the race
just 14 laps in. Stewart, the
two-time defending race
·
fi · h 38
d
wmner, mts ed
th an
Hamlin was last in 43rd.
"We've got two guys whu
are very competitive, running up front, we've got real
g~od cars and this is some.:
thmg tbat can _happe~,
team owner Joe Gibbs Said.
"It's just _one ?,f those unforlunate thmgs.
Busch thought his own
situation was unfortunate as
he pondered his secondplace
finish
while
M;cMurray celebrated.
The four Hendrick drivers
- Busch, Gordon, Johnson

months ago about restoring
the property on which a
home suffered fire damage
but felt nothing had been
done to improve the property. Ervin later countered
with an offer to have the
home ready for occupancy
by Dec. 31 but that agreement was rejected.
Council received one bid
on its lot at 207 Butternut
Avenue from Kenny Kline
in the amount of $4,000, and
received one bid for its lot at

Emerson Drive tickets and
backstage passes giveaway

Jamie McMurray celebrates after winning the Pepsi 400
auto race at the Daytona International Speedway in Daytona
Beach, Aa·., on Saturday.

fromPageBl

period of five years and
mclude a ·one mHI fire levy
estimated
to generate
$15,432.23 and a 1.9 mill
current .expenses levy estimated
to
geperate
$28,321.25.
Council also approved the
lowesi of three btds at a cost
of $3,450 to remove
asbestos from a vacant home
located at 234 Lincoln
Heights which is also scheduled for demolition. In May
council approved a bid from

Pullins Excavating for
$4,200 to tear the home
down but the testing prior to
the demolition revealed
' asbestos~n the el!.terior shingles.
Resident Alan Ervin
doesn't own but has a land
contract for the property and
previously asked for a time
extension on improving the
property which was ultimately denied. Before the
denial Mayor John Musser
said he spoke with Ervin 22

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINoL.COM

BY CHARLENE HOEruCH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATHER

Daytona

.

"""·"'~do~il""'"i·~t·l.n""

II I·Sil\\ .1[ "1.\ tO , :!oo -

POMEROY - Last night
during its regular session,
Pomeroy Village Council
approved moving forward
with placing two renewal
levies on the November ballot. '
Council asked ClerkTreasurer Kathy Hysell to
begin the process of placing
the renewal levies on the
ballot both of which are for a

I

and C~sey Mears - were
all at the front late in the
race and had to pick and
choose their spots on the
track. But Busch often
seemed to be on his own, as
Johnson and Gordon took
turns 1ining up behind
Mears when he was leading,
then working together on
the outside as Busch stayed

• Pomeroy, Ohio

POMEROY APPROVES RENEWAL LEVIES FOR BAllOT

NASCAR truckt'driver Watson fades, Bryant wins U.S. Senior Opett]Aaron Fike arrested on
drug-related charges

HAVEN. Wis. (~P) Tom Watson gave as
Whistling Straits took away.
In the end, Brad Bryant
was left with the biggest
MASON
(AP)
- Toyota Sequoia, Mason moment of his career - and
the second-biggest finalNASCAR Craftsman Truck police said in a release.
Series driver Aaron Fik~ Fike'. drives the No. I round comebatk in a U.S.
was arrested in an amuse- Toyota' Tundra for Red Senior Open.
Bryant shot a 4-under-par
ment park parking lot 'after Horse - Racing in the
68
in stiff winds and seanng
authorities found a sub- Craftsman Truck Series. He
90-degrecl'
heat on .Sunday to .
stance believed to be heroin is eighth in points .with
take
advantage
of yet another .
in his sport utility vehicle;, 1487, ,Jti6 behind series
·
senior
open
collapse by
police said.
leader 'Mike Skinner.
Mason police said Fike,
"We are working with Watson and win his first
24, and his fiancee, NASCAR to obtain further senior major.
"I've always been a jourCassandra Davidson, were information on the incident
neyman,
and to come out
arrested Saturday afternoon and will release more inferon charges of possession of mation as the facts become here and beat a couple 'of the
bert&gt;iil and drug parapher- available to ', us," . team best players in the world on a
like today is near-miracnlilia. Bond hadn't been set owner and·general manage_r day
ulous, actually," said Bryant,
and both remained in Mike DeLoach said in a who won only once in more
Warr~ County ·Jail late statement.
than two decades on the PGA
Sunday.
Mason police Ill~ investi- · Tour before finding recent
APphotp
Police officers at Kings gating, and drug" analysis success on the Champions Brad Bryant holds up the championship trophy on the 18th hole after winning the U.S.
. Island amusement park in results from th'e Miami Tour. "I w~ pretty good."
Senior Open golf tournament Sunday at Whistling Straits in Haven, Wis. Bryant shot a 1;
suburban Cincinnati called Valley Regional Crime
..::
Bryant said he was fortu- under 6B to win the tournament by three strokes.
..
Mason police after noticing Laboratory are pending, nate that both Watson and
Watson's misfortunes paid . north of Milwaukee.
suspicious activity in Fike's police said.
Loren Roberts, who came No. 14.
But
Watson
just
kept
slidoff
for the 52-year-old And because the winds
into Sunday three shots
ing
something
J;lryant
said
Bryant.
He finished third on were blowing mostly out of
behind Watson, played poor- he . was "blissfully unaware the Champions
Tour money the west - and not off th6
ly on the same day.
of'
until
he
asked
his
caddie
list
last
year
with
two victo- Jake - in 90-degree temper::
"It was -really scripted for
Tom Watson," Bryant said. about the leaderboard 911 t!Ie · ties, and won again earlier atures, players, IIJ)&lt;\ ,fiii!SJ..f~lt
"The winds, the heat, it was 18th hole. Bryant finally this _year at the . RegiOns like they, were:':s~pg ~rr
broke througlt with a bi1:die :~~ru:ty . Class~c .
m front of a hau'~ihY~.·,@'
really his day."
on the par-5 16th hole to take _BII'IIIlngham,.Aia., ~ ~ay.
hours.
. •If.') , 0: .
It certainly appeared that the lead for gOod.
.
_, Bryant
took.
ho~e
Bryant was ort~ of only .
way early on as Watson, who
,
Bryant
teared
up
afterwatd,
:
~70,000
for
the
VIctory.
Has
five
players to shoot , un_~
had finished second in three
saying
he
alw~ys
w.anted
;rc
.
:
ameback
on
the
fmal
day
.
o
f
par
Sunday,
and only fom:
10
of the previous five senior
semor oy;,n ~as second finished under for the to~~
opens, shot I under on tbe do somethiiig ··big with '. hls ,:Jthe
1'? Allen Doy e s '!Ictory from ment.
children
around
to
.
w
itness·
it,;;.·
front nine and began the back
"I
think
thi
al'fi
..
he''
·
:·.nme
shots
back
m
the
2005
"The
conditions
w~re
nine with a birdie to go to 9
.
s qu 1 tes,
tournament.
tough," Watson sil)d. ''~'Tbil}i
under for the tournament.
Said.
· Bryant also was , the only were not easy, but you siJou.ld
But then came the collapse,
'?Yatson shot a 6-over 78 to player to shoot all four be able to hit a fairway•)11'1tli',q
as Watson frittered away six fimsh I um_ler for the tourna- rounds at par or better at a 3-iron like on'No. 13." ' ·'\ ,.
strokes in the space of five ment, behmd Bryant, . Ben Whistling Straits CO!IfSC that
For all his su.ccess in liJa.l·~or.
holes, a stretch that included Crenshaw at 3 under and got harder all the toljl1lament tournamems · . oJ1-,,~the ·P.~
two double-bogeys.
Roberts at 2 under.
progressed.
·
Tour, Wats()tr :hi!SJ\,ever
"I hit the ball in the rough
"He played so good
"He's !Wt some game," a U.S. Serilor Qi:ie))'• ilti~
.· . ·
too many times, and today I· through the stretch to get to 9 Watson said. "He's got more tries. He finis~ ?se&lt;:.;~ul(l..,Th
got my just reward," Watson under, and ~n the double garne than I do."
three of the Pri&lt;~IIS ·five;
said.
bogey at II JUSt absolutely
The winds whipped up for most recently ii{fi'\J:ntqf:~
But Bryant couldn't killed him," Roberts said of the second straight day to partisan crowd in'·hiS;-i\Omi;
pounce right away, missing a Watson. "Tom ..bad ·&amp;OJP.e l)old. scores down at t~e ,~tate of Kan~JIS
ihe' ~~al
I 0-foot par putt on the 12th struggles. He hit a c66ple Scothsh-style course that sits ·round of last year's seiltor
hole for his frrst bogey of the loose tee shots, and putted on the banks of Lake open, when Watson lost to
day and bogeying again at poorly."
Michigan about an hour Doyle.

Summer reading
program will close
with a splash~ As

Rutland parade
winners,A3

HeLZER
HEALTH SYSTEMS

*

~Home "

~ National

., Bank

;'h,:uSI(n:.·~-::!1

A Home Bank For Home l'e&lt;tp!f,.._

12: PAUHS

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3
A4
As

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio Valle)' Publishing Co.

ROCKSPRINGS - The Meigs County Fair has teamed up
with the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce and local businesses to give away two front row seats along with two backstage
passes to see Emerson Drive perform at the fair at 8 p.m. on Aug.
15.
Michelle Donovan, director, Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce said local businesses are being encouraged to purcha&lt;ie two season tickets to the fair which are $15 each for the
Emerson Drive giveaway. Customers visiting participating businesses can sign up, free of charge, for the free passes. EaGh business will draw a winner for the passes and these wmners will tl1en
be placed in a larger dmwing for the front row seats and backstage
pa~ses to the concert. This dmwing will be made by the fair board.
Call Debbie WaLo;on for infonnation on purcha,ing tickeL' at

Middleport pool

Middleport pool ends June with deficit

ties and pizza for the concession stand.
Last month, Riffle said
MIDDLEPORT -The many of the season's major
Middleport Pool ended its expenses were necessary to
tirst full month with an oper- operi the pool , including
ating deficit of nearly - paint and concession stock.
992-6059.
$6,000.
He said the pool's tinancial
"This was a way to suppon both local businesses and the
At village council's regu- perfonnance would improve
upcoming fair," Donovan said about the promotion which Watson lar meeting on June 25, by the end of the month. and
proposed.
·
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker that the pool would be able
• Emerson Drive returns to the fair with their first number one reported June pool revenue to 'remain open through the
single "Moments"· having recently climbed the country charts. at $7,309, and expenses ·of middle of August.
Also un their most recent album ''fountrified"_the band cut aver- $13,202, with an actual fund
Village Council approprision of the Charlie Daniels B~d hit "Devi I Went Down to balance of $9,000.
. ated no new funding fur the
Georgia," a long-time crowd favorite often played during their
Revenue included $1,989 pool's operation this year. It
live shows. 1l1e band's latest album was produced by Alabama's in concession sales, $'! ,026 began the operating season
Teddy Gentry and also contains the top 20 single "A Good Man." in admission fees, $490 in with a $12,000 carryover
In 2()(12 the group cracked the top five in America with "I proceeds from swimming balance from last year.
Should Be Sleeping" and "Fall Into Me." They are also know for lessons and rental fees, and Riffle has said $10,000 to
their high energy live show which incorporate country and rock $3,804 in private donations. $15,000 would be required
ffiUSIC .
,
Expenses included $2,536 to carry the pool through the
In addition to Wato;on, questions about tl1e giveaway may also for chlorine and other chem- week of the Meigs County
be directed to Donovan at 992·5005.
icals, payroll expenses. utili- Fair, when the pool closes
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

·•

for the year.
.
The village has been banking on a transfer of $1,500 in
donations collected several
years ago toward the construction of a skateboarding
facility in General Hartinger
Park. which never materialized. The funds have been
informally com mitted to the
pool operat.ion by those who
raised the funds , but the
money remains in a privately-held bank account.
Last summer, Meigs
County
Commissioners
gave $~0,000 in the form of
free passes through the
Department of Job and
Family Services' Abstinence
Builds Character Program.
The count y al so provides
Please see Pool, AS

•

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