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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

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www.mydailysentinel.com

A familiar and friendly look to Carnoustie
BY

DoUG

FERGUSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

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• ..
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CARNOUSTIE, Scotland
- Tiger Woods hit puns with
one hand and held his
yarda~e book with the other,
studymg Camoustie on
Sunday as if he were seeing
this links course for the ftrst
time in his life.
· Considering what hap·
pened last time the British
Open came here, it all looked
sonew. ·
Gone was the rough, so·
thick at its foundation that it
was difficult to see the go.lf
ball, much less hit it: The
fairways were far more generous, nothing like Kapalua
or a resort course, but certainly wider than the country .
lane that players faced in
1999.
· Woods said it brought back
memories of his ftrst trip to
. Carnoustie ·- not 1999 in the
: British Open. but 1995 and
1996, when he played the
Scottish Open at Carnoustie
for his ftrst taste of links golf.
· "It looks really nice, really
fair," Woods said.
~ · Royal &amp; Ancient chief
· executive Peter Dawson,
who regretted how players
lambasted the setup m '99,
was among those to greet
Woods when he fmished his
: practice round. The conver. sation was private, but
Dawson appeared to be
pleased by what he heard.
It can't be considered a
major without complal:nts,
and certainly there was griping on a sunny, lazy afternoon along the North Sea.
"A bit too easy," David
Frost said. ·
Frost played in the secondto-last group in the final
round eight years ago,
despite. opening with an 80.
He wound up in a tie for seventh, finishing at I 0-over
294. He was among the few
who found no problem with
the tight fairways and rough
on steroids.
• He took far greater issue
with a course where he could
see his ball off the fairway
even as he stood on the tee.
"I think the fairways are
very wide and there's -no
rough," Frost said. "So, it's a

Loss
fromPageBl
runs and 37 hits in the first
lwei games of the series, the
Phillies were held in check
by Adam Wainwright (8-7).
He allowed six hits over
seven scoreless innings
against the highe,st- scoring
team in the National
League.
Philadelphia, with a 46-45
record this year, fell five
games behind the NL Eastleading New York Mets.
These Phillies had long
grown tired of answering
questions about I0,000 and
most fans seemed rather
detached from the number.
After all, what's one more
loss from a team responsible for countless more than
10,000 broken hearts?
"It's just another on~ as

Arena
fromPageBl

!.

for a score and Nagy threw
J1 TD pass to Groce to give
the Columbus lead for
: good.
· "We did what we had to
do," offensive lineman
Howard Duncan said.
:'They made a push, but we
stood strong."
' Greisen threw for 373
yards and eight touchdowns,
while
Chris
Jackson had II catches for
'174 yards for the Force
(15-3), .who lost their first
game at Philips Arena this
season.
"It's tough. It was just
tough," said Greisen, who
led the league in the touchdown (117) passes.
Jerald Brown returned
his second interception of
the game 54 yards for a
touchdown
to
give
Columbus a 21-7 lead in
the second quarter. ·
"That gave us tremendous momentum," Nagy·
said.
Even though tt.e Force
fell short of a title, coach
Doug Plank said the same
team will come back next
I

Even without tiny fairways
and deep rough, the defense
of Carnoustie and most links
courses are bunkers and
wind.
K.J. Choi, a two-time· winner on the PGA Tour this
year, played Saturday and hit
driver and wedge to the 18th.
He played Sunday afternoon
and hit a driver and a 5-wood
to the green.
Choi's memories from
1999. include playing in the
last round with Lawrie,
whose brilliant 67 to make up
a 'record 10-shot deficit was
overlooked by Van de
Velde's follies. And Choi
remembers Carnoustie as
being the toughest major he
AP photo has ever played.
U.S. golfer Tiger Woods tees off on the 5th hole at
Not right now.
Carnoustie golf course In Carnoustie, Scotland Sunday.
"You can hit the ball anyWoods was out practicing at Carnoustle golf course which is where and find it," Choi said.
holding the 2007 Open Golf Championship which starts "You can still see the ball."
Two-time U.S. Open
Thursday.
~
champion Retief Goosen tied
little bit of a total opposite to National, -att close.
for lOth in 1999 at 11 over
what it was in '99.'
But it is noticeable only by par, failing to break par any
Most players would cele- those who were here in 1999. of the four rounds.
brate this change.
Steve Stricker had the one
"Eleven over won't finish
"No, it's too lenient," Frost of the 102 rounds in the 80s
ago,
missing
the
lOth
this year," he·said with a
eight
years
said. "I just think it should
smile.
have been tighter."
cut. He played Sunday with
Goosen thrives on the
It's probably a good thin~ Jerry Kelly, his pal from
Jean Van de Velde isn 1 junior golf 10 Wisconsin, and toughest tests, but he fears
around this week to see was asked if Carnoustie the course setup at majors
have gone too far, and have
Carnoustie or he might really looked familiar.
"Yeah,
it
does,"
he
said.
talcen
some of the fun out of
be haunted by throwing away
"Except
for
the
rough
and
the
the
game
for players and
the British Open. With a mixwidth
of
the
fairways."
spectators
alike.
Carnoustie
tore of bad decisions and bad
He remembers narrow fair- was entertaining for all the
luck. he took .!riple bogey on
the final hole to fal.l into a ways that were 20 yards wrong reasons in 1999.
"You have nothing silly
three-man playoff that was wide, and only a dozen paces
between
mugh
lines
on
some
like
last time," he said. "The
won by Paul Lawri~.
holes.
R&amp;A
did a great job.''
It is ,difficult now to recon"The rough was very thick.
And it apparently did nothstruct the sad sequence that
cost Van de Velde the claret You were having a hard time ing to lessen the test of
getting it to the green," Camoustie, long considered
jug.
His second shot caromed Stricker ~aid. "Now, -the the toughest links course in
off the bleachers, back across rough is not bad at all. You the .world. Younger players
Barry Bum and into rough so can actual! y aim at the rough like Charles Howell HI and
Sean O'Hair were still
deep that the best he could do on some of the holes." ·
But he wasn't calling it a teenagers in 1999, watching
was chop it into the 6- foot
the fiasco on television.
wide bum. He took a drop in pushover. Far from it.
Engaged in a friendly duel
!3oth were pleasantly surgrass so mangled that he only
managed to get it over the with Kelly, Strick,e'r was pnsed to see that the rough
down one playin,g the 18th, at was not nearly as bad. But
stream and into a bunker.
That would not have hap- 499 yards and mto a slillht . what got their attention was
pened this week, because breeze. He hit a good dnve the 7,421 yards of course, the
there's so such thing as man· with a tiny draw that landed flapping flags in what the
gled rough right of the 18th in the first cut, giving him a Scots might consider only a
fairway, or hardly anywhere clean lie. From there, he had wee breeze, and bunkers
else at Carnoustie. In fact, the 237 yards to the hole and hit everywhere they looked.
area in front of the bum is 3-wood that landed on the · "I wasn't here in '99,"
mown closely,- not like the edge of out-of-bounds to the Ho:well said. "I thought it
front of ponds at Augusta left of the green.
was topgh."
far as I'm concerned," said. game West Coast road trip
81-year-old fan Ty Ayars, of when even the die-hards
Swedesboro, N.J. "They would have trouble staying
need pitching and until they awake to watch it.
get good pitching, they're
With two outs and the
not going to win a World bases loaded in the third,
Series any time soon."
Wainwright retired Chase
Fans don't have to be old Utley on a grounder.
enough to remember the · Philadelphia had runners
1950 "Whiz Kids" to have on first and second with
suffered. Take fan Andrew one out in the fourth, but a
Haines, 25, of Pitman, N.J., popup and a strikeout
who still can't shake the ended the threat. •
image of Phillies closer
The Phillies left the bases
M(tch Williams allowing loaded in the sixth.
the game-ending burner to
The Cardinals scored
Joe Carter that won the twice in the first inning off
1993 World Series for the Adam Eaton (8-6). Scott
Toronto Blue Jays.
Rolen, the former fan
"It's hard to be a Phillies favorite turned No. I target
fan," said Haines, wearing of the vicious boo birds,
a Phillies cap. 'They're the had an RBI in the third for
butt of a lot of baseball St. Louis.
jokes, and having I 0,000
Pujols hit a two-run shot
losses isn't helping any."
in the fifth that was folThe. Phillies blew their lowed by Chris Duncan's
chances
against 17th of the year for a 6-0
Wainwright to push back lead.
Pujols,
Juan
I 0,000 until their seven- Encarnacion and Adam
· year, ready to make a serious title run.
"These players have
shown enough willingness
to win," he said. "I feel
badly about this loss, but
falling behind early didn't
hel ."
~agy connected with
fullback Harold Wells on a
4-yard touchdown to give
Columbus a 35-21 lead in
the second.
The Destroyers added
another score before halftime but it was wiped out
by a penalty. With less than
a second left, Georgia's
Carlos Martinez attempted
a 47-yard field goal which
missed and bounced off the
left goal post net. Barre
caught it and returned it for
a
touchdown,
but
Columbus was called for
an illegal block.
Nagy said he knew the
f'orce was going to have a
surge sometime in the
game, but knew his team
could withstand whatever
was thrown at them.
"We have a lot of character in us," he said. "We
been through the tough
times. We're not looking to
just play in the championship.. We're looking to
win the ArenaBowl."

Kennedy each homered. in
the seventh to make it 9-0.
Ryan Ludwick hit a solo
shot in the eighth for a·IO0 lead.
Philadelphia broke up the
shutout in the ninth when
Michael Bourn hit his first
major league homer and
Utley added an RBI double.
Eaton, call him ".Mr.
10,000," allowed I0 hits
and six runs in four-plus
innings.
.
No true fan can ever forget the infamous 1964 collapse when the Phillies
. held a 6 1/2-game lead with
· 12 to play, only to blow the
National League pennant
by losing 10 straight. The
Cardinals won the pennant
by one game.
Chico Ruiz stole home
with Hall of Farner Ff(lnk
Robinson at the plate to
give Cincinnati a 1-0 victory and started the collapse

~onday,Julyt6,20o7

Pitching to Bonds
should make·some edgy
Pitchers come and go, but
Downing had the misfortune
of being on the mound for the
Rich Hill doesn't seem all Dodgers the April night in
that worried, maybe because 1974 when he served up a
he'~ been through it before. pitch that Henry Aaron hit
He was destined to become over the left-fteld fence. The
No. 714 before Juan Pierre home run was No. 715 for
climbed the center-field wall Aaron, breaking the revered
in San Francisco last year and mark long held by Babe
stole a home run from Barry Ruth.
Bonds.
·
No one remembers that St.
Pierre helped · Hill escape Louis pitcher. Vic Rase hi
being a historical footnote gave up Aaron's fJrst home
that night, but the experience run in 1954. And you would
was all a rookie pitcher could have to be a real baseball
want, and more.
geek to know that joumey''That was about as exciting man Dick Drago gave up
as it gels, I guess," Hill said. Aaron's lasi home run while
It could get a lot more toiling for the California
exciting for Hill this · week Angels in 1976.
when Bonds and the San
But
we
remember ·
Francisco Giants
visit Downing. And we'll remem-.
Chicago. He's just one of ber whoever is on the mound
many pitchers looking at the when Bonds breaks the
calendar and schedule while record, 00 matter bow tainted
wondering at the same time if by steroids that it might be..
his name will one day be
That sounds good coming
mentioned in the same sen- from a distance, but there are
tence as AI Downin~.
al..-eady signs that pitchers are
It probably won t happen becoming increasmg~y more
against the Cubs, but some- wary about pttchmg to
time over the next few weeks Bonds. Going into Saturday's
Bonds should be stepping to ~arne against the Dodgers, he
the plate with No. 756 possid hi 1
h
·
ble with each swing of the
ton y two orne runs m
his last 10 games whi.le being
ba~y now, that should be walk~ 18 times.
makint some pitchers in the
The inevitability of it a1.l
·
·
s
·
•
seems
be the prevai.ling
fimng me nervous. o tt s a attitude toamong
most pitchers
bit surprising that some like contacted in an informal surHill are treating it as though
it's the opportunity of a life- vey of future Giants oppotime.
,
nents over the last few days.
Just how much of that is They all read from preny
false bravado or merely much the same script, saying
supreme confidence is, of they bate to give up a home
course, debatable. SOIQe run to anyone but tl!at Bonds.
might al$0 be chalked up to
a great hitter and will get it
youthful ignorance .of what from someone.
the Ions-term implic~tions
Still, some can't help thinkare of gmng up the 'htstonc ing about their place in the
home run.
record book if they happen to
There's a reason Downing be on the mound when it
is remembered in baseball actually happens .
lore, and little of it has to do
"It's ~oing to eventually
with the 123 games he won in happen,' said Pittsburgh's
17 years of major league ser- John Grabow, whose team
vice or the three World Series goes to San Francisco on
he pitched in. He was once Aug. 10 for four ~ames. "If
known as the black Sandy you're in a situatton where
Koufax, and is regarded as you've got to pitch to him,
the ·first black starter for the pitch to him. But it doe~n't
Yankees, but his fame comes bother me ifl'd be the guy to .
from something he would. llive up the home tun. I'm
rather have not done.
, · JUSt trymg to get him out."

'

Quake in Japan ld11s at
least 9 people, causes
fire, radioactive leak at
nuclear plant, A2

.

Volunteers 'of
Chester Academy
work recognized, A3 :

BY TIM DAHL8EIIG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

.
...••
"•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,u( I '\ 1', .. \ul

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1\\\h . UI\tl d ih -.,ltlll •l l ' " t u

Patro

SPORTS •.
• Reds pound Braves.
See PageB1

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Police Patrolman John Kulchar was
transported to the hospital' after .a
Sunday morning accident involving
a police cruiser.
Police Chief Bruce Swift said

Kulchar avoided injury and was
released after an examination at
Holzer Medical Center. The 1998
cruiser Kulchar was drivin~ sustained moderate damage and ts disabled.
Kulchar was in pursuit of juveniles alleged.ly riding dirt bikes on
village streets when he struck a
loading facility at the Hobson rail

accident~

yards which was not visible due to
the dark conditions and high grass,
Swift said.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department investigated the accident, in keeping with standard procedure, Swift said. Kulchar was not
cited.
Swift said oii'ly. one of the juve-

niles was later apprehended folio~~
ing the accident.
,
:
According to Swift, the depart.menl has three cruisers. The weekend accident leaves only a 1998 aqp
a 2005 model fit for servic~.
although an assessment of the cruiser Kulchar was driving has not been
comple~ed to determine if it can be
repalfed.
·

Library
Celebrates
Book Release

Inspection
non-complianc~

. case referred ·
to solicitor -·,

BY RIICHEL MIIRTIIIIDALE
INTERN, THE DAILY SENTINEL

BY BRIAN

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• EdnaJ. Coe

INSIDE
• Iranian state-run
television shows footage
of'2 "detained • •
Iranian-Americans.
See Page A2
• Health First Care
Center moves to Castrop
Center. See Page A3
• Won't you come
home, brother?
See Page A3
• EPA proposes cleanup
plan for fonner tar plant.
See Page AS
• Obama money ranges
from bankers to small
donors as candidates'
fundraising gets closer
look. See Page AS
• Defense asks jury
to spare 1ne of wne
in murder-for-hire.
See Page A6
• Perspective: OSU
president greeted like
state's new governor.
See Page A&amp;

POMEROY -· The Meigs
County District Public
Library will throw its first
book-release party Saturday,
July 21. from 7-9 p.m. Thts
party · will celebrate the
release of the seventh artd
final book of the Harry '
Potter series, "Harry Potter
and the Deathly Hallows."
The party will take place
at the Pomeroy Library in
the downstairs meeting
room. The library will pro- .
vide refreshments and activ- ·
ities, including a Jeapordylike trivia game about the
series.
Two ~opi(:S o.f . the new ;' ,. .
..
.
Rachel Martlndato;plloto
book Wlhll bed gtvben awahy, . Librarians Brenna Call, left, and Emily San!jers display a Harry Potter book and a sign for
pFr7-pdurc fashe M . YC- . t e "'thq rfew·book;. S~nders plans to hdst more book- and movie-release parti"~ at the library.
nen s o 1 e etgs ounty
·
'·
.
·
·.
· '""'
.
District Public Library.
For tl)e public, the library rounding the series, library saiQ.
Participants may come in is ordering 10 copies of the staff had · expected one or
Sanders called the party a
costume as their favorite final book and has pre- two local people to chal- , trial run. She hopes to hold
characters from the books. ordered. four copies of the lenge the library's books, parties for other releases of
The library has set no age book on CD and two copies but no one has, Emily well-known
children's
is on cassette tape.
Sanders, the MCDPL's chi!- books and children's-bookslimit.
Registration
required.
In light of controversy sur- dren 's services coordinator, made-movies.

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

MIDDLEPORT - The ,
case of a rental property
owner who has refused to
comply with Middleport's
rental unit inspection program has been referred to
the village solicitor.
Village Council Member
Sandra Brown reported last
month the owner of I 0
rental units has refused to
allow Building Inspector
Randall Mu11lins to complete inspections of tti~
rentals and instructed lenants to do the same. Brown
said it is important thai
council support enforce;
mem of the program, which
was approved-last year .a~
begun in March.
"• ...
Fiscal Officer Sus;in
Baker said the case in ques~
tion has been turned over
Pomeroy Attorney Jei:miftit
Sheets for enforcemenl,

ta
.

Please see Inspection. ~
•

Juvenlles cause.scare

Bethel Biker Sunday rollsfor souls
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

TUPPERS PLAINS l'he
Bethel
Worship
Center's Second Annual
Biker Sunday will roll for
the sake of saving souls and
sharing fellowship this
Sunday in both Tuppers
Plains and Syracuse.
This multi-community
event begins in Tuppers
Plains at Bethel Worship .
Center where from 8:459:45 a.m. coffee and Amish
donuts will be served. Then,
the service begins at I 0 a.m.
with featured speaker Ben
SUbmlttlcl pllote
Priest. After the worship
Bikes
will
roll
into
Tuppers
Plains
this
Sunday
for
the Bethel
service, bikers (and civilians) will head out for the Worship Center's Second Annual Biker Sunday. The service will
take place at the center with food and games taking place at
Please see Bikers, A5
the Syracuse Community Center directly following the service.

WEATHER

.

Robert L. Wmgett Memorial Highway planned ~
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detail• on Pace

Office of Economic and
Workforce

.·

after

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

is

that still hasn't been forgot- 1980 World Series team.
He. now runs the "Boll's
ten or forgiven to this day.
Never knqwn as lovable BBQ" stand at Citizens
losers, cursed. or even Bank Park and said the
affectionately as bums, the Phillies woul&lt;;l win at least
Phillies had a big headstart one more championship .in
in earning this pitiable the next 125 years.
"They're not that far
total: They played their
first game on May l, 1883, away now," he said.
against the Providence "Tliey've been around a
Grays. Of course, the long time, so you're going
Quakers lost 4-3 and start- to accumulate the losses. I
ed 0-8 . They went on to know people are disap· lose 81 of 98 games in their pointed they won only one
world championship, but a
inaugural season.
It hasn't been all bad for catch here, a hit here, a
the Phillies. They haven't pitch there, we might have
lost 100 games since 1961, had more."
and they won the NL East
Notes: All four of Pujols'
three straight years from two-homer games this year
1976-78. Philadelphia lost have come on a Sunday....
the World Series in 1983 They wrote it: "Garland
and 1993, though it hasn't them with timeless lilies!
returned ·to the playoffs Although they are a bunch
since Carter's homer.
of dillies, Who give honest
Greg Luzinski (1970- men the willies. We still
1980) hit 223 homers for love them for their sillies.
the Phillies and was the Hail, The Phillies."
starting left fielder for the James Michener.

..

SYRACUSE -Syracuse
Village · Council recently
voted to rename Third Street
the "Robert L. Wingett
Memorial Highway."
Third Street, also known
as Ohio 124, runs the length
of the village and two
memorial highway signs
will be placed on each end

A6

·INDEX

of town along Ohio 124.
One sign will go on the
Minersville end, with the
other on. the end towards
Racine.
The
Meigs County
Highway Department will
construct the signs and the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation will pla&lt;:e
them to ensure they are not a
traffic hazard . No lime
frame has been announced

as to when this will happen
though a dedicati'0 n servic.e
wtll be planned.
Despite ceremoniousry
renaming Third Street I Ohici
124, no addresses will
.
change.
Councilwoman
Jox
Bentley brought the motion
to a vote before council
which unanimously vot~
Please see Wingett.. A5 .

2 SF.criONS - 12 PAGFS

•

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Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As
B Section

Sports
Weather

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© 2.007 Ohio Valle)' Publishing Co.
·y

·,f

A6

&gt;

Chester-Shade Days set for weekend:
Beth Sargenlfpllolo
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Yesterday two to three juveniles caused a scare when they HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
decided to swim the Ohio River. Sp~ctators called the
Pomeroy Police Department, worried the juveniles were
CHESTER - A picnic
struggling which caused a few boats to circle in the area Qf anll concert by the River
Crow's KFC 1 Long John Silvers. The juveniles allegedly Bend Community Band will
swam from the Mason, W.Va. side td the Pomeroy side and kickoff the weekend activiwere on their way back to Mason when spectators noticed ties of Chesler-Shade Days
them. The boys made it across to Mason side on their own at the restored·1823 Chester
where they continued to jump off a rope swing, continuing Courthouse and under a tent
to swim in the nver when the Pomeroy Police Department pitched on the Village
alerted the Mason Police Department the travelers had Commons.
returned to their jurisdiction.
The event being promoted
- - - - - - - - I'

•

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•

by the spon soring Chesler-'
Shade
Historical
Association as "the biggest
and best yet" will give visitors through programming
and exhibits a look into the
past. Events of previQu s
years such as the Civil War
program s and dance and the
contest to select the state
harmonica champion will be
included along with several
new things - a dulcimer
-

-

concert, a cornhole tournament, and a Sunday ·afternoon program of gospel.
bluegrass and country
music .
"Bring your own chain
and plan on staying all day
each day. " advised Mary
Powell ·who has been active
since the beginning of
Chester-Shade Day s. The
Please see Days, A5

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Page.A2

NATION • WORLD

the Daily Sentinel

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Tuesday, JUly 17, 2007

Community Calendar
BY KOJI SASAHARA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I,

''
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7KASHIWAZAKI, Japan
-· , A strong earthquake
shook Japan's northwest
coast Monday, setting off a
fire at the world's most
f'1'Werfu l nuclear power
plam and causing a reactor
10 spil l radioact ive water
into the sea - an accident
· not reported to the public for
hours.
·
The 6.8-mitgnitude temblor killed at least nine people and injured more than
900 as it toppled hundreds
of wooden homes and tore
3· foot-wide fissur~~ ih the
ground, Highways and
bridges buckled, leaving
ilfficials struggling to get
emergency supplies into the
region.
:some I 0,000 people fled
t() evac uation ce nters as
aftershocks raul ed the area.
lens of thousands of homes
were left without water or
power.
·The quake triggered a fire
iA an electrical transformer
and also caused a leak of
radioactive water at the
Kashiwaza ki
Kariwa
nuclear power plant, the
world's largest in terms of
electricity output ,
leak
was
not
·The
aimounced
umil
the
evening, many hours after
the quake . That fed fresh·
concerns about the safety of
·Japan's 55 nuclear reactors,
y;hich supply 30 percent of
tl)e quake-prone country 's
electricity and have suffered
a · long string of accidents
and cover-ups.
·About 315 gallons of
slightly radioactive water
apparently spilled from a
tank at one of the sprawling
. power complex's seven
reactors and entered a pipe
that flushed it into the sea,
said Jun Oshima, an e~ecu­
tive at Tokyo Electric Power
Co. He said it was not clear
whether the tank was dam~ged or the water simply

AP photO/Kyo® Ntwt

A railcar is seen derailed at Kashiwazaki train station after a strong earthquake roc~ed the
city in Niigata Prefecture (State), Japan. Monday. A 6.8-magnitude earthquake rocked
Japan 's northwest coast on Monday, killing at least five people.
spilled out.
Officials ~aid there was no
"significant ch1111ge" in the
seawater near the: plant,
which is allout 160 miles
northwest of Tokyo. "The
radioactivity is one-billionth
of the legal limit," Oshima
·
said of the leaked water.
Eliot
Brenner,
a
spokesman for the U.S.
Nuclear
Regulatory
Commission in Washington,
said tile agency told Japan's
government it was ready to
provide assistance if needed
but had not received any
request for help.
Brenner said he didn't
have details about the incident. But a U.S. nuclear
industry official, who spoke
on condition of anonymity
because the incident was a
Japanese affair, sald the
transformer fire and water
leak occurred in systems

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I

linked to different reactors. no immediate reports of
In Kashiwazaki city, the additional damage or casuquake reduced older build- alties.
Near
midni~ht,
ings to J?iles of lumber. Nine Japan's
Meteorological
pe&lt;)ple m their 70s and 80s Agency said. a 6.6-magni- six women and three men tude quake hit off the west
__; died, most of them coast, shaking wide areas of
crushed by collapsi11g build- Japan, but it was unrelated
ings, the Kyodo news .to the Niigata quake_to the
agency said early Tuesday. north and there · were no
Kyodo reported more than immediate repprts of dam900 J?COple were hurt, with · age.
,
injurtes including broken
The U.S. Geological
bones, cuts and bruises. It Surver put the intital
said 780 buildings sustained q11ake s magnitude at 6.6
damage, and more than 300 and the second at 6.8.
of them were destroyed.
First word of trouble at
"I got so dizzy that I could the Kashiwazaki Kariwa
barely stand up," said power plant was a fu-e. that
Kazuaki Kitagami, a worker broke out at an electrical
at a 7-Eleven convenience transformer. All the reactors
store in Kashiwazaki, the were either already shut
hardest.hit city. "The Jolt down · or automatically
came violently from JUst switched off by the quake.
below the ground."
The blaze was reported
The area was plagued by quelled by early .afternoon,
aftershocks, but there were and the power company

in the ' capital 160 miles
away and was alsO felt in
northern and central Japan.
Tsunami warnings were
isSiled, but the resulting
waves were too sm;~ll to
cause any damage.
As re scue crews · dug
through the rubble for survivors or more dead, focus
shifted to getting food and
water to evacuation centers.
Many roads were impassable, though bullet train service _ to nearby Niigata
resumed late Monday.
More than 60,000 homes
,in the quake zone were
without water, 34,000 lost
natural gas and 25,000 had
no e lectricity as of late
Monday afternoon, local
ofticial Takashi Takagi said.
Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe, whose ruling party is
trailing in the polls heading
into Jqly 29 parliamentar}'
elections, -ipterrupted a campaign stop in southern Japan
to go to the damaged area.
"Many people told me
they want to return to their
normal lives as quickly as
possible," Abe told reporters
in Kashiwazaki. "The government will make every
effort to help wiih recovery." .
Japan sits atop four tectonic plates and is one of the
world's most . earthquake·
prone countries.
In October 2004; a magnitude-6.8 earthqua)&gt;e hit
Niigata, killing 40 t&gt;eople .
and damaging mo(e. than .
6,000 homes. It was the
deadliest to hit Japan since
1995, when a magnitude-7.2
quake killed 6,433 people in
the western city of Kobe.
The last major quake to
hit Tokyo killed some
142,000 people in· l923, and
experts say the capital has a
90 percent chance of suffering a major quake in the
next 50 years.

announced . there was no
damage to the .reactor and
no release of radioactivity.
·But in the evening, the
company released a statement revealing the leak of
radioactive water, saying it
had taken all day to confinn
details of the accident. But
the delay raised suspicions
among environmentalists,
who oppose the government's plan to build more
reactors. '
"The leak itself doesn't
sound significant as of yet,
but the fact that it went
unreported is a concern,"
said Michael Mariotte at the
Nuclear Information and
Resource
Service,
a
Maryland-based networking
center for environmental
activists. "When a company
begins by denying a problem, it makes you wonder if
there's another shoe to
drop."
The accident comes as the
!lovernment is . discussing
imJ?roving the earthquake
resistance of such plants,
said Aileen Mioko Smith of
the Japan-based environmentalist group Green
Action.
Tbe fire indicated that
some facilities at nuclear
power plants, such as elect-rical transformers, were
built to lower quake-res,j~­
tance levels than otfter
equipment, like reactor
cores, she said.
·
"That's the Achilles' heel
of nuclear power plants,"
said Mioko Smith, who
pointed out that it took plant
workers two hours to put out
·
the transformer fire.
Economy, Trade and
Industry Minister Akira
Amari told the power company early Tuesday not to
resume plant operations
before niaking a thorough
safety check, Kyodo reported.
The quake, which hit at
10: 13 a.m., was centered off
the coast of Nii$ata. The
tre,mor made buildmgs sway

Public meetings
Mon'day, July 23
RACINE
- Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting,•8 p.m., high school
media room.

Clubs and
organizations
Themay, July 17
CHESTER
- Past
Councilors Club, Chester
Counci l 323, D of A, 6:30
p.m. Masoni~ hall.
POMEROY
· - Ladies
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, 2
p.m. at the Legion hall in old
Salisbury
School,
rear
'entrance.

and games to fo llow. Public
invited.

Reunions
Saturday, July 21
POMEROY Annual
Glaze family reunion will be
held at the home of Bill and
Louise
Radford
on
Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.
Family friends welcome.
Potluck dinner 12:30 p.rri.

Church events

Friday, July 211
HARRISONV ILLE
Hanisonville Chapter 255,
OES, having a I00 year celebration, . 7:30 ·
p.m.
Harrisoinville Masonic hall.
Worthy Grand Matron Susan
R. Dennis, Worthy Grand
Patron Frank B. Clifton, and
other guests from District 25
and across the state to attend.
Entertainment, history and
light refreshments. All Eastern
Star members welcome.

Saturday, July 21
REEDSVIllE- "Singing
For Jesus" at Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene, noon
to 7 p.m. Gospel music and
concessions. To perform:
Dayspring, Delivered, Never
Too Late, Rocky Mountain
Bluegrass, Sarah Conant and
New Image, Wayne and
Sheny Seymour.
· HARTFORD, W.Va. - A
benefit gospel sing will be
held adt the church of christ
in Christian Union at
Hartford, W. va, 6 p.m. David
Greer is pastor. Fetured
singers are Faith Valley Trio,
Faith and Dan Hayman, John
and Thelma Dolly, Brian and
Family Connections, . and
Melissa Jackson.

Saturday, July 21
SALEM CENTER -Fun
Night at Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878, with
snacks at 6:30 p.m. and fun

Sunday, July 22
RAClN E- Racine United
Methodist Church will
observe friends and frunily
day, II a.~. with an outdoor

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ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-: TEHRAN, Iran - Two
iianian-Americans detained
bere on national security
~barges appeared Monday
tor the first time on state
television, with one saying
i~ one of the brief video clips
t)iat his foundation may have
targeted Islam.
• The TV images followed
Iran's announcement this
month that fresh evidence
had pushed its judiciary to
launch new investigations
i'nto the cases of Haleh
f;sfandiari
and
Kian
Tajbakhsh.
:: State TV said the video
clips were a preview for a
longer
program
titled
''Under the Narne of
Democracy" that will ;~ir
later this week. Relatives
aild employers of Esfandiari
ahd Tajbakhsh denounced
the videos, saying they were
~:oe rced and illegitimate.
; Along with shots of the
Iranian-Americans, the pre view also showed archived
images of street violence and
p{otests, apparently from
!:fan and Eastern Europe.
: Esfandiari and Tajbakhsh
appeared ~ep ara tel y. They
both spoke in Farsi and
appeared to be in homes or
ol'tices.
: Tajbakhsh, an urban planiting consultan t with the
New York-based George
~oros
Open
Society
Institute, and Esfandiari ,
6irector of the Middle East
program at the Washingtonbased Woodrow Wil son
Inte rnational Ce'n1er for
Scholars, have been held in
Tehran's Evin prison since
being arrested separately in
~ay on charges of endan.
gering national sec urity.
Two
other
Iranian·
Americans fa ce similar
charges.
• Famil y members. col·
leagues and employers of the
four Iranian-Americans deny
the allegations. The U ,S.
~overnment has demanded
that they be released.
In one of the video clips,
Tajbakhsh, 45, is shown ·
reading fro m a piece of
paper. "The role of the Soros
foundation might have been
iargeting the world of
•

•

Islam," he says.
In
another segment,
Esfandiari
wore
what
arpeared to be the traditiona black cloak called a
chador. A man wearing
glasses was sho\\·n seated
across from her asking questions.
"I was an elen'ient in the
velvet
revolution
in
Georgia," Esfandiari said.
The TV did not elaborate or
explain the context in which
she said this.
But
the
Iranian
Intelligence Ministry has
accused her of trying to set
up networks of I.ranians with
the ultimate goal of creating
a "soft revolution" in Iran to
topple the hard-line Islamic
regime, along the lines of the
revolutions that ended communist rule in Eastern
Europe.
At another point in the
video, Esfandiari said:.
"Finding speakers has been

worship service at the picnic
she lte~ behind the church.
Dress is casual. Take a lawn
chair. Meat and drinks provided, take side dishes and
desserts to share. Water slide
for kids of all ages, 2 to 5
p.m.

State
Department
Sean
spokesman
McCormack said he had not
seen the footage, but he
renewed calls for the
detainees' release.
"These are peop Je who
have devoted large chunks
of their lives to building
bridges between the Iranian
and the American people, so
to prevent these kinds of
people from especially leavmg Iran really sends a negative message and is an unfortunate comment about the
nature of this particular
regime," McCormack said.
The spokesman also
renewed an appeal for infurmation about the whereabouts of Robert Levinson, a
former FBI agent who went
missing in Iran in March and
has not been heard from
since.
Iran in the past has
alle~edly forced detainees to
incmninate themselves pub-

licly on television.
Most recently in March.
British sailors detained by
Tehran for allegedly entering
Iranian territocy appeared in
videos during their captivity.
Britain accused Iran of using
the sailors for propaganda by
putting them on TV, where
they said they trespassed in
Tehran's waters. The crew
was freed after two weeks.
It was unclear if the program scheduled to air later
on state TV would also show
the other two IranianAmericans facing charges:
Parnaz Azima, a journalist
who works for the U.S.funded Radio,Farda, and AJi
Shakeri, a founding board
member of the University of
California, Irvine, Center for
Citizen .
Peacebuilding.
Shakeri is in prison, while
Azima is free but barred
from leaving Iran.
Speaking from his home in
Potomac, Md., Esfandiari's

husband, Shaul Bakhash,
said some of the claims
made in the video of his wife
were "absurd." Esfandiari
has never visited Georgia or
worked on issues related to
the country or Eastern
Europe, he said. Her work
organizing speakers and academics for conferences is
also not in dispute, he said.
"If that is all they can produce, it is pretty thin gruel,"
Bakhash said.
International human rights
groups, includin~ New Yorkbased Human Rights Watch,
have expressed deep concern
for the health of the detained
Americans- especially the
67-year-old Esfandiari.
The Wilson Center has
said that Esfandiari, who
was arrested while visiting
Iran to see her ailing mother,
has been held in solitary confinement without access to
her family, lawyers or international rights organization&amp;.

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...
In the Daily Sentinel

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

r----------------------,I

I Baby's Name

1

IAge

I

I

I

I Address

I

I Parents

1Phone

I Address will not be published
Your Baby's

Baby Edition
to be published
Friday, July 27

Age

Parents Names Here

•

.

1 Suoply send your baby's
'
photograph along with the coupon
1 to the left Wilh your payment of
$10, and we'll do the rest.

I The Daily
1

L------~---------------J
Mail or drlivtr to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline ror submission, .
Fridsy,July 20

•

Sentinel
111 Court St Pomel'(Jy, OH

•

Won't you come home, brother?
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Irear Annie: My dad is
87 years old, and Mom is
79. One of my brothers,
"Dylan, " has no,t been
home
in almost 12 years.
Monday, July 23
MIDDLEPORT - "Space He and his wife have no
Mission Bible Camp" vaca- children, and we are hi s
tion Bible school, Middleport wife's only family. You'd
First Baptist Church, 6-8:30 think she'd be close, but
p.m., July 23-27. Call 992- no. At one point, she told
2755 or 992-5003 to register. my parents that she doesn't
·POMEROY - Vacation understand why they keep
Bible School, 6 to 9 p.m., pressuring them to visit,
through July 27, First since they can't get away.
Southern Baptist Church, We all know better. She
41872 Pomeroy Pike, ''Game doesn't work, and Dylan
Day Central" is theme. has been with the same
Register
online
· at company for 20 years, so
you know darn well he
fsbcpomeroy.org.
gets
some vacation time.
POMEROY
Zion
They
even missed my parChurch of Christ, Route 143,
50th
wedding
vacation Bible school, July ents'
anniversary
party.
23-27, classes 6:30 to 8:45
We used to be a very
p.m. Practice and pizza on
close
family . Now, w ~
July 28, program at 7 p.m. on
Sunday, July 29 . Theme wonder if Dylan will bothAvalanche ranch with food, er to come to the funeral
games. and lessons. For when our parents - pass
more
information
call away. Probably not.
Is there anything we can
Kathryn Johnson, 992-5196.
,
do to get Dylan to come
home? My dad especially
misses him. We thought
about purchasing a 8. lane ·
ticket for him, but ylan
Wednesday, July 18
POMEROY
Bill told us they are afraid to
Matlack will observe his 91st fly and he won't use it. Any
birthday Wednesday. Cards advice? - · Estranged
may be sent to him at 34784 Sister
Dear
Estranged :
S.R. 7, Pomeroy, Ohio
Airplanes aren't the only
45769.
means of transportation. If
Dylan wanted to see his
faniily, he would find a
way. We don't know why
he avoids coming home,
but sometimes, the longer
one is away, the harder it is
to make the trip. You can
ask Dylan directly why, in
12 years, he hasn't tried to
see his aging parents, with
or without his wife, You

Birthdays

.

my role," a possible reference to her efforts to bring
prominent Iranians to the
U.S. to talk about the political situation in !.ran.
The Woodrow Wilson
Center said any "confessions" made by Esfandiari
- which Iranian state-run
television says it will air
later this week ·_ have no
legitimacy.
"Any statements she may
make without having had
access to her lawyer would
be coerced and have rto
legitimacy or standing," said
former Rep. Lee H.
Hamilton, president and
director of the Woodrow
Wilson Center.
The Open Society Institute
also said in a statement it
was "disheartened by the
, Iranian government's decision to stage television
footage of coerced statements" made by Tajbakhsh
and Esfandiari.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX .

Qt )Bailp

:Jranian state-run television shows footage of 2 detained Iranian-Americans
Bv NASSER KARIMI

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

also might make a trip to
his area on your own, to
see for yourself what is
going on and help break
the ice .
Dear Annie: I have a
problem with my husband.
He goes to the garage to
work on things from sunup
to sundown . He builds one
thing, and as soon as he is
finished, he immediately
starts · another project. He
says it's what he like s to
do.
If we do go somewh~re,
he talks only about hi s projects to me and everyone
else. There isn't one day he
doesn't open up the garage
to do something. I feel like
he's forgotten about me.
Maybe he's lost his mind.
He doesn't believe in co unseling, so I don't kn ow
what to do. What do you
su~gest '!
Garage
Widow
Dear Garage Widow:
It's possible, if your busband has always been like
this, that he has an obse ssive disorder. But it's more
likely that such complete
devotion to his projects, to
the exclusion of everything
else, indicates avoidance.
There's so mething your
husband does n't want to
deal with , and burying his
head in the garage allows
him to pretend everything
is OK. You can ask, gently,
how to help with what is
troubling him, or you can
leave him be . Either he will
come to a deci sion about
the situation- or you will.
If you think counseling
will help you work through
it, by all means, go without
him and get some help.
Dear Annie: I was saddened to read the letter
from
"Engaged
and
Alone, " whose Baptist par-

BrwiiUDevla

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111 COIIII-

Pll: (7401 ~111, Iiiii. 11
'""' 11411)-.:11117

David Schatz, George Morrison, Robert Ritchie, Dale Colburn, Terry Powers, Ron Grate, and
Greer Blosser were recognized for the 1,937 volunteer hours they have contributed to the
renovation of the Chester Academy by Mary Powell of the Chester Historical AssoQiation.
left, and Joann Ritchie of the Daughters of America.

M 1

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T,._. •'-'111 DIW)' . _ . . •....., T-. ,..._.
,...,.._,....._ • TdC.., ...' t

I.WifiDtil Dlil)o

Volunteers of Chester Academy work recognized
CHESTER - Volunteers
that donated I ,937 hours of
labor in the restoration of the
Chester Academy supplementing the work of hired
contractors were recentl y
recognized by the Chester
Shade
Hi storical
Association.
Presented certificat"s by
Mary
Powell
of the
Historical Association, and
Joann Ritchie representing
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of America, cosponsors of the J.&gt;roject, were
Dav id
Schatz,
George
Morriso n, Robert Ritchie,
Dale Colburn, Terry Powers,
Ron Grate , and Greer
Blosser.
According to Powell who
has been instrumental in getting grants and other funding for the renovation, many
others have assisted, She
noted that local contractors

ATHENS - Health First
Care Center, an affiliate of the
O' Bleness Health System, has
moved fmm its former location on Wesl Union Street to
the Castrop Center, Suite 200,
in the O' Bleness Medical
Park.
An open house for the pub·
lie wiII be held on Thursday,
July 19, fron1 5 to 6:30p.m. at
Health First's new location.
Refreshments wi ll be pmvid·
ed.
.
Five healthcare profession·
als at Health First specialize in
family practiFc and internal
medicine. Health First's
healthcare professionals are
Asha Yellamraju: MD; Imber
Coppinger, DO; Rebecca
Huston. 00: Jean Rettos, 00:
and Margaret Tonkovich, CNP
(Certified Nurse Practitioner).
Located in the Castrop
Center are offices for healthcare professionals and The

have , loaned equipment to
help with the project,
Chester people have loaned
vehicles and given their
time to hau l debris, and provided storage space for furappliances and
niture,
books..
Powell also reported that
other grou ps have assisted,
mentioning
the
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department, the Meigs
County Senior RSVP, the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation,
Chester
Volunteer Firemen and
Ladies Auxiliary. She noted
that when the Academy is
completed, it will allow for
the ex pansion of some educational programs in th at
building.
Several years ago a
$234,080 Save America's
Treasures
Grant
was
approved through the U. S.

Department of the Interior,
National Park Service.
Howeve r, to receive the
money a dollar-for- dollar
_match was required.
So far the Academy committee
has
matched
$ 163,400, some of which
has been in-kind dollar
value through volunteer
hours, $32,004, and equipment $16,319. Grants have
totaled $41 ,940, including
$ 15,000
from
the
Appalachian
Regional
Council; $2000 from Ohio
Hill Country, $17,400 from
Community Development,
and $6,200 from Modern
Woodman of America.
Grants approved but not
yet received include two
from the Ohio Cultural
Facilities Commission for
$25,opo each. Local fund
raisers and donations have
totaled $23, 127.

Annie's "Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtim e
editors of the Ann f..a!(ders·
column. Ple(lse e-mail
your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or
write to: Annie's._ Mailbox,
P.O. Box 118190, Chicago,
lL 60611. To find out more
about An11ie 's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

"1ii.

"'-'• • 1 aR~~M•illil

Submitted photo

ents refused to attend any
Catholic marriage ceremo·
ny.
My fat her was a B apti ~l
minister. Years ago, my sister "Amy" was engaged tu
"Tom," a Catho li c. Amy
wanted to be married in om·
Baptist churc h. Tom's fam "
ily graciously assented to
this. When Amy asked Da'd
to cond uct the rites, he
said, "I will, on one co ndi ~
tion: I insist th'l,t for the .
sake of Tom's family, you
also have a priest present to
bless the marriage."
On . her weddin g day;
Amy marched toward arr
altar where a Bapti st
preacher and Catholic
priest stood side by side . If
any co ngre ga nts wer.e
shocked, they did not
express it. Over the years,
Dad guided hi s tlock to be
as tolerant as he was. Just
thought you would like lo
see that not all people use
their religion as a "wedge "
instead of a "bridge ." - ·
Tolerant in the Midwest ,
Dear Tolerant : Your
dad sounds like a very special person . What a lovel,y
story.
.

''Here's
My
Card''

Special advertising supplement found
only in the
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~alhpoh~ Jlailp lrtbune

floint flleasant legister
This is a special sized supplement which will .be
published July 25th. Do you know how many phone calls
the Area Chamber of Commerce, as well as th'e
newspapers and otJ.ter businesses receive asking for the
name of a plumber, contractor, carpet cleaner, car repair
shop, etc. This special section will be easier to use than a
regular · directory and cards will be arranged by
category.
We will be glad to use the information on your business
card or we can create one for you.

•

Submitted photo

Misty Althouse, med ical records clerk for Health First Care
Center, files papers in the l)ractices' new office after moving
from its form er offices on West Union to the Castrop Center.
DrugS10re. as well as O'Bieness'
Rehabilitation
O'Bieness· laboratory and Center for physical and speech
imaging
satellites.
and therapy.

Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. ,We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is call 740-992-2155
Ask for Dave or Brenda.
Deadline will be July 18th
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NATION • WORLD

the Daily Sentinel

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Tuesday, JUly 17, 2007

Community Calendar
BY KOJI SASAHARA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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7KASHIWAZAKI, Japan
-· , A strong earthquake
shook Japan's northwest
coast Monday, setting off a
fire at the world's most
f'1'Werfu l nuclear power
plam and causing a reactor
10 spil l radioact ive water
into the sea - an accident
· not reported to the public for
hours.
·
The 6.8-mitgnitude temblor killed at least nine people and injured more than
900 as it toppled hundreds
of wooden homes and tore
3· foot-wide fissur~~ ih the
ground, Highways and
bridges buckled, leaving
ilfficials struggling to get
emergency supplies into the
region.
:some I 0,000 people fled
t() evac uation ce nters as
aftershocks raul ed the area.
lens of thousands of homes
were left without water or
power.
·The quake triggered a fire
iA an electrical transformer
and also caused a leak of
radioactive water at the
Kashiwaza ki
Kariwa
nuclear power plant, the
world's largest in terms of
electricity output ,
leak
was
not
·The
aimounced
umil
the
evening, many hours after
the quake . That fed fresh·
concerns about the safety of
·Japan's 55 nuclear reactors,
y;hich supply 30 percent of
tl)e quake-prone country 's
electricity and have suffered
a · long string of accidents
and cover-ups.
·About 315 gallons of
slightly radioactive water
apparently spilled from a
tank at one of the sprawling
. power complex's seven
reactors and entered a pipe
that flushed it into the sea,
said Jun Oshima, an e~ecu­
tive at Tokyo Electric Power
Co. He said it was not clear
whether the tank was dam~ged or the water simply

AP photO/Kyo® Ntwt

A railcar is seen derailed at Kashiwazaki train station after a strong earthquake roc~ed the
city in Niigata Prefecture (State), Japan. Monday. A 6.8-magnitude earthquake rocked
Japan 's northwest coast on Monday, killing at least five people.
spilled out.
Officials ~aid there was no
"significant ch1111ge" in the
seawater near the: plant,
which is allout 160 miles
northwest of Tokyo. "The
radioactivity is one-billionth
of the legal limit," Oshima
·
said of the leaked water.
Eliot
Brenner,
a
spokesman for the U.S.
Nuclear
Regulatory
Commission in Washington,
said tile agency told Japan's
government it was ready to
provide assistance if needed
but had not received any
request for help.
Brenner said he didn't
have details about the incident. But a U.S. nuclear
industry official, who spoke
on condition of anonymity
because the incident was a
Japanese affair, sald the
transformer fire and water
leak occurred in systems

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I

linked to different reactors. no immediate reports of
In Kashiwazaki city, the additional damage or casuquake reduced older build- alties.
Near
midni~ht,
ings to J?iles of lumber. Nine Japan's
Meteorological
pe&lt;)ple m their 70s and 80s Agency said. a 6.6-magni- six women and three men tude quake hit off the west
__; died, most of them coast, shaking wide areas of
crushed by collapsi11g build- Japan, but it was unrelated
ings, the Kyodo news .to the Niigata quake_to the
agency said early Tuesday. north and there · were no
Kyodo reported more than immediate repprts of dam900 J?COple were hurt, with · age.
,
injurtes including broken
The U.S. Geological
bones, cuts and bruises. It Surver put the intital
said 780 buildings sustained q11ake s magnitude at 6.6
damage, and more than 300 and the second at 6.8.
of them were destroyed.
First word of trouble at
"I got so dizzy that I could the Kashiwazaki Kariwa
barely stand up," said power plant was a fu-e. that
Kazuaki Kitagami, a worker broke out at an electrical
at a 7-Eleven convenience transformer. All the reactors
store in Kashiwazaki, the were either already shut
hardest.hit city. "The Jolt down · or automatically
came violently from JUst switched off by the quake.
below the ground."
The blaze was reported
The area was plagued by quelled by early .afternoon,
aftershocks, but there were and the power company

in the ' capital 160 miles
away and was alsO felt in
northern and central Japan.
Tsunami warnings were
isSiled, but the resulting
waves were too sm;~ll to
cause any damage.
As re scue crews · dug
through the rubble for survivors or more dead, focus
shifted to getting food and
water to evacuation centers.
Many roads were impassable, though bullet train service _ to nearby Niigata
resumed late Monday.
More than 60,000 homes
,in the quake zone were
without water, 34,000 lost
natural gas and 25,000 had
no e lectricity as of late
Monday afternoon, local
ofticial Takashi Takagi said.
Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe, whose ruling party is
trailing in the polls heading
into Jqly 29 parliamentar}'
elections, -ipterrupted a campaign stop in southern Japan
to go to the damaged area.
"Many people told me
they want to return to their
normal lives as quickly as
possible," Abe told reporters
in Kashiwazaki. "The government will make every
effort to help wiih recovery." .
Japan sits atop four tectonic plates and is one of the
world's most . earthquake·
prone countries.
In October 2004; a magnitude-6.8 earthqua)&gt;e hit
Niigata, killing 40 t&gt;eople .
and damaging mo(e. than .
6,000 homes. It was the
deadliest to hit Japan since
1995, when a magnitude-7.2
quake killed 6,433 people in
the western city of Kobe.
The last major quake to
hit Tokyo killed some
142,000 people in· l923, and
experts say the capital has a
90 percent chance of suffering a major quake in the
next 50 years.

announced . there was no
damage to the .reactor and
no release of radioactivity.
·But in the evening, the
company released a statement revealing the leak of
radioactive water, saying it
had taken all day to confinn
details of the accident. But
the delay raised suspicions
among environmentalists,
who oppose the government's plan to build more
reactors. '
"The leak itself doesn't
sound significant as of yet,
but the fact that it went
unreported is a concern,"
said Michael Mariotte at the
Nuclear Information and
Resource
Service,
a
Maryland-based networking
center for environmental
activists. "When a company
begins by denying a problem, it makes you wonder if
there's another shoe to
drop."
The accident comes as the
!lovernment is . discussing
imJ?roving the earthquake
resistance of such plants,
said Aileen Mioko Smith of
the Japan-based environmentalist group Green
Action.
Tbe fire indicated that
some facilities at nuclear
power plants, such as elect-rical transformers, were
built to lower quake-res,j~­
tance levels than otfter
equipment, like reactor
cores, she said.
·
"That's the Achilles' heel
of nuclear power plants,"
said Mioko Smith, who
pointed out that it took plant
workers two hours to put out
·
the transformer fire.
Economy, Trade and
Industry Minister Akira
Amari told the power company early Tuesday not to
resume plant operations
before niaking a thorough
safety check, Kyodo reported.
The quake, which hit at
10: 13 a.m., was centered off
the coast of Nii$ata. The
tre,mor made buildmgs sway

Public meetings
Mon'day, July 23
RACINE
- Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting,•8 p.m., high school
media room.

Clubs and
organizations
Themay, July 17
CHESTER
- Past
Councilors Club, Chester
Counci l 323, D of A, 6:30
p.m. Masoni~ hall.
POMEROY
· - Ladies
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, 2
p.m. at the Legion hall in old
Salisbury
School,
rear
'entrance.

and games to fo llow. Public
invited.

Reunions
Saturday, July 21
POMEROY Annual
Glaze family reunion will be
held at the home of Bill and
Louise
Radford
on
Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.
Family friends welcome.
Potluck dinner 12:30 p.rri.

Church events

Friday, July 211
HARRISONV ILLE
Hanisonville Chapter 255,
OES, having a I00 year celebration, . 7:30 ·
p.m.
Harrisoinville Masonic hall.
Worthy Grand Matron Susan
R. Dennis, Worthy Grand
Patron Frank B. Clifton, and
other guests from District 25
and across the state to attend.
Entertainment, history and
light refreshments. All Eastern
Star members welcome.

Saturday, July 21
REEDSVIllE- "Singing
For Jesus" at Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene, noon
to 7 p.m. Gospel music and
concessions. To perform:
Dayspring, Delivered, Never
Too Late, Rocky Mountain
Bluegrass, Sarah Conant and
New Image, Wayne and
Sheny Seymour.
· HARTFORD, W.Va. - A
benefit gospel sing will be
held adt the church of christ
in Christian Union at
Hartford, W. va, 6 p.m. David
Greer is pastor. Fetured
singers are Faith Valley Trio,
Faith and Dan Hayman, John
and Thelma Dolly, Brian and
Family Connections, . and
Melissa Jackson.

Saturday, July 21
SALEM CENTER -Fun
Night at Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878, with
snacks at 6:30 p.m. and fun

Sunday, July 22
RAClN E- Racine United
Methodist Church will
observe friends and frunily
day, II a.~. with an outdoor

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ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-: TEHRAN, Iran - Two
iianian-Americans detained
bere on national security
~barges appeared Monday
tor the first time on state
television, with one saying
i~ one of the brief video clips
t)iat his foundation may have
targeted Islam.
• The TV images followed
Iran's announcement this
month that fresh evidence
had pushed its judiciary to
launch new investigations
i'nto the cases of Haleh
f;sfandiari
and
Kian
Tajbakhsh.
:: State TV said the video
clips were a preview for a
longer
program
titled
''Under the Narne of
Democracy" that will ;~ir
later this week. Relatives
aild employers of Esfandiari
ahd Tajbakhsh denounced
the videos, saying they were
~:oe rced and illegitimate.
; Along with shots of the
Iranian-Americans, the pre view also showed archived
images of street violence and
p{otests, apparently from
!:fan and Eastern Europe.
: Esfandiari and Tajbakhsh
appeared ~ep ara tel y. They
both spoke in Farsi and
appeared to be in homes or
ol'tices.
: Tajbakhsh, an urban planiting consultan t with the
New York-based George
~oros
Open
Society
Institute, and Esfandiari ,
6irector of the Middle East
program at the Washingtonbased Woodrow Wil son
Inte rnational Ce'n1er for
Scholars, have been held in
Tehran's Evin prison since
being arrested separately in
~ay on charges of endan.
gering national sec urity.
Two
other
Iranian·
Americans fa ce similar
charges.
• Famil y members. col·
leagues and employers of the
four Iranian-Americans deny
the allegations. The U ,S.
~overnment has demanded
that they be released.
In one of the video clips,
Tajbakhsh, 45, is shown ·
reading fro m a piece of
paper. "The role of the Soros
foundation might have been
iargeting the world of
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Islam," he says.
In
another segment,
Esfandiari
wore
what
arpeared to be the traditiona black cloak called a
chador. A man wearing
glasses was sho\\·n seated
across from her asking questions.
"I was an elen'ient in the
velvet
revolution
in
Georgia," Esfandiari said.
The TV did not elaborate or
explain the context in which
she said this.
But
the
Iranian
Intelligence Ministry has
accused her of trying to set
up networks of I.ranians with
the ultimate goal of creating
a "soft revolution" in Iran to
topple the hard-line Islamic
regime, along the lines of the
revolutions that ended communist rule in Eastern
Europe.
At another point in the
video, Esfandiari said:.
"Finding speakers has been

worship service at the picnic
she lte~ behind the church.
Dress is casual. Take a lawn
chair. Meat and drinks provided, take side dishes and
desserts to share. Water slide
for kids of all ages, 2 to 5
p.m.

State
Department
Sean
spokesman
McCormack said he had not
seen the footage, but he
renewed calls for the
detainees' release.
"These are peop Je who
have devoted large chunks
of their lives to building
bridges between the Iranian
and the American people, so
to prevent these kinds of
people from especially leavmg Iran really sends a negative message and is an unfortunate comment about the
nature of this particular
regime," McCormack said.
The spokesman also
renewed an appeal for infurmation about the whereabouts of Robert Levinson, a
former FBI agent who went
missing in Iran in March and
has not been heard from
since.
Iran in the past has
alle~edly forced detainees to
incmninate themselves pub-

licly on television.
Most recently in March.
British sailors detained by
Tehran for allegedly entering
Iranian territocy appeared in
videos during their captivity.
Britain accused Iran of using
the sailors for propaganda by
putting them on TV, where
they said they trespassed in
Tehran's waters. The crew
was freed after two weeks.
It was unclear if the program scheduled to air later
on state TV would also show
the other two IranianAmericans facing charges:
Parnaz Azima, a journalist
who works for the U.S.funded Radio,Farda, and AJi
Shakeri, a founding board
member of the University of
California, Irvine, Center for
Citizen .
Peacebuilding.
Shakeri is in prison, while
Azima is free but barred
from leaving Iran.
Speaking from his home in
Potomac, Md., Esfandiari's

husband, Shaul Bakhash,
said some of the claims
made in the video of his wife
were "absurd." Esfandiari
has never visited Georgia or
worked on issues related to
the country or Eastern
Europe, he said. Her work
organizing speakers and academics for conferences is
also not in dispute, he said.
"If that is all they can produce, it is pretty thin gruel,"
Bakhash said.
International human rights
groups, includin~ New Yorkbased Human Rights Watch,
have expressed deep concern
for the health of the detained
Americans- especially the
67-year-old Esfandiari.
The Wilson Center has
said that Esfandiari, who
was arrested while visiting
Iran to see her ailing mother,
has been held in solitary confinement without access to
her family, lawyers or international rights organization&amp;.

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...
In the Daily Sentinel

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

r----------------------,I

I Baby's Name

1

IAge

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1Phone

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Your Baby's

Baby Edition
to be published
Friday, July 27

Age

Parents Names Here

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1 Suoply send your baby's
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photograph along with the coupon
1 to the left Wilh your payment of
$10, and we'll do the rest.

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Mail or drlivtr to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline ror submission, .
Fridsy,July 20

•

Sentinel
111 Court St Pomel'(Jy, OH

•

Won't you come home, brother?
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Irear Annie: My dad is
87 years old, and Mom is
79. One of my brothers,
"Dylan, " has no,t been
home
in almost 12 years.
Monday, July 23
MIDDLEPORT - "Space He and his wife have no
Mission Bible Camp" vaca- children, and we are hi s
tion Bible school, Middleport wife's only family. You'd
First Baptist Church, 6-8:30 think she'd be close, but
p.m., July 23-27. Call 992- no. At one point, she told
2755 or 992-5003 to register. my parents that she doesn't
·POMEROY - Vacation understand why they keep
Bible School, 6 to 9 p.m., pressuring them to visit,
through July 27, First since they can't get away.
Southern Baptist Church, We all know better. She
41872 Pomeroy Pike, ''Game doesn't work, and Dylan
Day Central" is theme. has been with the same
Register
online
· at company for 20 years, so
you know darn well he
fsbcpomeroy.org.
gets
some vacation time.
POMEROY
Zion
They
even missed my parChurch of Christ, Route 143,
50th
wedding
vacation Bible school, July ents'
anniversary
party.
23-27, classes 6:30 to 8:45
We used to be a very
p.m. Practice and pizza on
close
family . Now, w ~
July 28, program at 7 p.m. on
Sunday, July 29 . Theme wonder if Dylan will bothAvalanche ranch with food, er to come to the funeral
games. and lessons. For when our parents - pass
more
information
call away. Probably not.
Is there anything we can
Kathryn Johnson, 992-5196.
,
do to get Dylan to come
home? My dad especially
misses him. We thought
about purchasing a 8. lane ·
ticket for him, but ylan
Wednesday, July 18
POMEROY
Bill told us they are afraid to
Matlack will observe his 91st fly and he won't use it. Any
birthday Wednesday. Cards advice? - · Estranged
may be sent to him at 34784 Sister
Dear
Estranged :
S.R. 7, Pomeroy, Ohio
Airplanes aren't the only
45769.
means of transportation. If
Dylan wanted to see his
faniily, he would find a
way. We don't know why
he avoids coming home,
but sometimes, the longer
one is away, the harder it is
to make the trip. You can
ask Dylan directly why, in
12 years, he hasn't tried to
see his aging parents, with
or without his wife, You

Birthdays

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my role," a possible reference to her efforts to bring
prominent Iranians to the
U.S. to talk about the political situation in !.ran.
The Woodrow Wilson
Center said any "confessions" made by Esfandiari
- which Iranian state-run
television says it will air
later this week ·_ have no
legitimacy.
"Any statements she may
make without having had
access to her lawyer would
be coerced and have rto
legitimacy or standing," said
former Rep. Lee H.
Hamilton, president and
director of the Woodrow
Wilson Center.
The Open Society Institute
also said in a statement it
was "disheartened by the
, Iranian government's decision to stage television
footage of coerced statements" made by Tajbakhsh
and Esfandiari.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX .

Qt )Bailp

:Jranian state-run television shows footage of 2 detained Iranian-Americans
Bv NASSER KARIMI

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

also might make a trip to
his area on your own, to
see for yourself what is
going on and help break
the ice .
Dear Annie: I have a
problem with my husband.
He goes to the garage to
work on things from sunup
to sundown . He builds one
thing, and as soon as he is
finished, he immediately
starts · another project. He
says it's what he like s to
do.
If we do go somewh~re,
he talks only about hi s projects to me and everyone
else. There isn't one day he
doesn't open up the garage
to do something. I feel like
he's forgotten about me.
Maybe he's lost his mind.
He doesn't believe in co unseling, so I don't kn ow
what to do. What do you
su~gest '!
Garage
Widow
Dear Garage Widow:
It's possible, if your busband has always been like
this, that he has an obse ssive disorder. But it's more
likely that such complete
devotion to his projects, to
the exclusion of everything
else, indicates avoidance.
There's so mething your
husband does n't want to
deal with , and burying his
head in the garage allows
him to pretend everything
is OK. You can ask, gently,
how to help with what is
troubling him, or you can
leave him be . Either he will
come to a deci sion about
the situation- or you will.
If you think counseling
will help you work through
it, by all means, go without
him and get some help.
Dear Annie: I was saddened to read the letter
from
"Engaged
and
Alone, " whose Baptist par-

BrwiiUDevla

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111 COIIII-

Pll: (7401 ~111, Iiiii. 11
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David Schatz, George Morrison, Robert Ritchie, Dale Colburn, Terry Powers, Ron Grate, and
Greer Blosser were recognized for the 1,937 volunteer hours they have contributed to the
renovation of the Chester Academy by Mary Powell of the Chester Historical AssoQiation.
left, and Joann Ritchie of the Daughters of America.

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T,._. •'-'111 DIW)' . _ . . •....., T-. ,..._.
,...,.._,....._ • TdC.., ...' t

I.WifiDtil Dlil)o

Volunteers of Chester Academy work recognized
CHESTER - Volunteers
that donated I ,937 hours of
labor in the restoration of the
Chester Academy supplementing the work of hired
contractors were recentl y
recognized by the Chester
Shade
Hi storical
Association.
Presented certificat"s by
Mary
Powell
of the
Historical Association, and
Joann Ritchie representing
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of America, cosponsors of the J.&gt;roject, were
Dav id
Schatz,
George
Morriso n, Robert Ritchie,
Dale Colburn, Terry Powers,
Ron Grate , and Greer
Blosser.
According to Powell who
has been instrumental in getting grants and other funding for the renovation, many
others have assisted, She
noted that local contractors

ATHENS - Health First
Care Center, an affiliate of the
O' Bleness Health System, has
moved fmm its former location on Wesl Union Street to
the Castrop Center, Suite 200,
in the O' Bleness Medical
Park.
An open house for the pub·
lie wiII be held on Thursday,
July 19, fron1 5 to 6:30p.m. at
Health First's new location.
Refreshments wi ll be pmvid·
ed.
.
Five healthcare profession·
als at Health First specialize in
family practiFc and internal
medicine. Health First's
healthcare professionals are
Asha Yellamraju: MD; Imber
Coppinger, DO; Rebecca
Huston. 00: Jean Rettos, 00:
and Margaret Tonkovich, CNP
(Certified Nurse Practitioner).
Located in the Castrop
Center are offices for healthcare professionals and The

have , loaned equipment to
help with the project,
Chester people have loaned
vehicles and given their
time to hau l debris, and provided storage space for furappliances and
niture,
books..
Powell also reported that
other grou ps have assisted,
mentioning
the
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department, the Meigs
County Senior RSVP, the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation,
Chester
Volunteer Firemen and
Ladies Auxiliary. She noted
that when the Academy is
completed, it will allow for
the ex pansion of some educational programs in th at
building.
Several years ago a
$234,080 Save America's
Treasures
Grant
was
approved through the U. S.

Department of the Interior,
National Park Service.
Howeve r, to receive the
money a dollar-for- dollar
_match was required.
So far the Academy committee
has
matched
$ 163,400, some of which
has been in-kind dollar
value through volunteer
hours, $32,004, and equipment $16,319. Grants have
totaled $41 ,940, including
$ 15,000
from
the
Appalachian
Regional
Council; $2000 from Ohio
Hill Country, $17,400 from
Community Development,
and $6,200 from Modern
Woodman of America.
Grants approved but not
yet received include two
from the Ohio Cultural
Facilities Commission for
$25,opo each. Local fund
raisers and donations have
totaled $23, 127.

Annie's "Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtim e
editors of the Ann f..a!(ders·
column. Ple(lse e-mail
your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or
write to: Annie's._ Mailbox,
P.O. Box 118190, Chicago,
lL 60611. To find out more
about An11ie 's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

"1ii.

"'-'• • 1 aR~~M•illil

Submitted photo

ents refused to attend any
Catholic marriage ceremo·
ny.
My fat her was a B apti ~l
minister. Years ago, my sister "Amy" was engaged tu
"Tom," a Catho li c. Amy
wanted to be married in om·
Baptist churc h. Tom's fam "
ily graciously assented to
this. When Amy asked Da'd
to cond uct the rites, he
said, "I will, on one co ndi ~
tion: I insist th'l,t for the .
sake of Tom's family, you
also have a priest present to
bless the marriage."
On . her weddin g day;
Amy marched toward arr
altar where a Bapti st
preacher and Catholic
priest stood side by side . If
any co ngre ga nts wer.e
shocked, they did not
express it. Over the years,
Dad guided hi s tlock to be
as tolerant as he was. Just
thought you would like lo
see that not all people use
their religion as a "wedge "
instead of a "bridge ." - ·
Tolerant in the Midwest ,
Dear Tolerant : Your
dad sounds like a very special person . What a lovel,y
story.
.

''Here's
My
Card''

Special advertising supplement found
only in the
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~alhpoh~ Jlailp lrtbune

floint flleasant legister
This is a special sized supplement which will .be
published July 25th. Do you know how many phone calls
the Area Chamber of Commerce, as well as th'e
newspapers and otJ.ter businesses receive asking for the
name of a plumber, contractor, carpet cleaner, car repair
shop, etc. This special section will be easier to use than a
regular · directory and cards will be arranged by
category.
We will be glad to use the information on your business
card or we can create one for you.

•

Submitted photo

Misty Althouse, med ical records clerk for Health First Care
Center, files papers in the l)ractices' new office after moving
from its form er offices on West Union to the Castrop Center.
DrugS10re. as well as O'Bieness'
Rehabilitation
O'Bieness· laboratory and Center for physical and speech
imaging
satellites.
and therapy.

Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. ,We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is call 740-992-2155
Ask for Dave or Brenda.
Deadline will be July 18th
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OPINION

· The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740J 992-2157

.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene·Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY

·'

Today is Tuesday, July 17, the !98th day of 2007. There are
167 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 17, 1996, TWA Right 800, a Paris-bound Boeing
747, exploded and crashed off Long Island, N.Y., shortly after
leaving John F. Kennedy International Airport, killing all 230
people aboartl.
On this date:
In 1821 , Spain ceded Aorida to the United States.
In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, Spanish troops
in Santiago, Cuba, surrendered to U.S. forces.
In 1918, Russia's Czar Nicholas nand his family were executed by the Bolsheviks.
In 1944, 322 people were killed when a pair of ammunition
ships exploded in Port Chicago, Calif.
In 1945, President Harry Truman, Soviet leader Josef Stalin
and British Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill began meet·
ing at Potsdam, Germany, in the fmal Allied summit of World
Warn.
In 1955, Disneyland debuted in Anaheim, Calif.
Ten years ago: Woolworth Corp. announced it was closing its
400 remaining five-and-dime stores across ·the country, ending
117 years in business. President Bill Clinton noQlinated Army
Gen. Henry Shelton to be the next chainnan of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff. The space shuttle Columbia and its crew of seven
returned to Earth after a near-flawless 16-day science mission.
Five years ago: A double suicide bombing in Tel Aviv killed
two foreign workers and one Israeli. In Britain, a one-day strike
by_ 750,000 municipal employees closed schools, libraries and
recreation centers in their frrst national walkout in more than
two decades.
One yew ago: The shuttle I;liscovery and its crew of six
re(Umed home safely. A powerful earthquake sent a tsunami
crashing into a beach resort on Indonesia's Java island, killing
at least 600 people. Mystery writer Mickey Spillane died in
Murrells Inlet, S.C., at age 88.
: Joday's Birthdays: TV personality Art Linkletter is 95.
Comedian Phyllis Diller is 90. The former pn:sident of the
International Olympic Committee, Juan Antomo Samaranch, is
87. Jazz singer Jimmy Scott is 82. Actor Donald Sutherland is
72. Actress·singer Diahann Carroll is 72. Rock musician
Spencer Davis is 63. Rock musician Terry "Geezer" Butler
(Black Sabbath) is 58. Actress Lucie Amaz is 56. Actor David
· Hasselhoff is 5~,. i;&gt;inger Phoehe Snow is 55. Television producer Mark Burnett ("Survivor," "The Apprentice") is 47.
Actress Nancy Giles is 47. Singer Regina Belle is 44. Rock .
musician Lou Barlow is 41. Hip-hop singer Guru (Gang Starr)
is 41. Contemporary Christian singer Susan Ashton is 40.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Stokley Williams (Mint Condition) is
40. Actor Andre Royo is 39. Actress Biny Schram is,3_?. Actor
Jason Clarke is 38. Singer JC (PM Dawn) is 36. Rapper Sole'
is ~4.
Thought for J oday: "Modo et modo non habebant modum."
(By and by never comes.) - SL Augustine (A.D. 354-A.D.
430).
•

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Tuesday, July 17, 2007 .

. Tuesday, July 17,2007

Obituaries

Bloomberg needs 'post-partisan'policy agenda'

-The Daily Sentinel

: Reader Services

PageA4 .

·

ASPEN,
Colo.
Bloomberg
Michael
should have been here. At
the annual Aspen Institute ·
Ideas Festival last week,
he could have won influential recruits for his possible independent presidential campaign . basked
in glowing approval of
initiatives he 's taken as
New York mayor and
helped develop a wider
political agenda.
The festival is attended
mainly by rich social liberals of a distinctly entrepreneurial bent, who this
year
adored
former
President Bill Clinton and
disbelieved White House
aide Karl Rove as they
delivered equally dataladen tours of the policy
horizon.
I took no poll, but I'd
bet this crowd would love
Bloomberg for his
social views, hi s record of
achievement in New York
and his denunciations of
the dismal mire that partisan politics has created in
Washington , D.C.
Another _piece of evidence: The hands·down
hero of last year' s festival
was Joel Klein, the former
Clinton White Hou se aide
who now is Bloomberg's
revolution-making schools
chancellor and who said
he.' d support Bloomberg if
he ran for president.
If
he
does
run ,
Bloomberg doesn' t need
the money these CEOs and
philanthropists could contribute. He can afford to
self-finance his campaign.
But he could use their
endorsements to gain
credibility.
It would help, too, if
they got behind the
Umty08 third-party effort
that seems to represent
Bloomberg's best aven11e
to get on the ballot in all
50 states.
According to one of its

Mulun

Kola idee

founders ,
· Gerald
Rafshoon, Unity08 currently has 100,000 party
members, hopes to have I
million by late fall and
hopes· to have 10 million
participate in its Internet
nominating convention
next June .
" If I were Michael
Bloomberg," Rafshoon
told me, "I think it would
be ·best to be validated by
a eonstituency of 10 mil liori people rather than just
spending his own money."
Rafshoon emphasized that
he hoped other candidate s
would compete; but it's
clear that Bloomberg represents the best third -party
shot on the horizon.
Of course, it's a long
shot - partly because no
third-party candidate has
ever won the presidency
and
partly
because
Bloomberg so far doesn 't
represent the kind of. vivid
alternative that Teddy
Roosevelt did in 191 2 or
that even Ross Perot did in
1992.
Bloomberg is easily caricatured - even by himself
as a short,
divorced, Jewish New
Yorker, pro-choice , progay rights, anti-gun and
anti-smoking. . It's not
exactly the kind of pop. ulist profile that will light ·
praine
fires
across
America.
But Bloomberg does
have this going for him a heavy swatch of the
country is totally fed up
with zero-sum partisan
warfare . And he has a ster-

ling record as an innovative problem-solver at a
time when America has a
lot of problems that people want solved.
A Bloomberg candidacy
wouldn' t be necessary if
Democ,rats
·and/or
Republicans n.omimite a
nonpolarizing problemsolver with a hope of
reuniting the country, not
fu rther div iding it .
Let's hope that happens.
But, just in case,
Bloomberg should be
developing a compelling
agenda that can trump hi s
identity problems.
It needs to include a new
national security policy
that offe rs a choice
Republicans·
between
overreliance on military
force and Democrats'
·overreli ance on polite
diplomacy.
Bloomberg
needs to say what he' d do
about Iraq , Iran, Palestine
and Paki stan.
He does have .an energylenvirQnment · agenda ,
de signed to cut- New
York's carbon emissions
by 30 percent 'by 2030,
which Clinton praised at
the ideas festivaL
"All the press was about
the mayor's plan to charge
for the right to drive in
Manhattan," Clinton said,
"but 80 percent of emissions come from buildings
and just think how many
jobs you can create changing black tar roofs to
green. You 'can' t outsource
tho se jobs to India .·
Somebody 1s got to be in
that roof planting sod."
The Aspen festival produced · discussion of a
wealth of novel proposals
on h·e alth care reform ,
early childhood education ,
China policy and the global
economy
that
Bloomberg could have
absorbed for his agenda.
And he could have given
something
back

Edna J. Coe

Obama money ranges from bankers to small
donors as candidates' fundraising gets closer look

.

2004 ).)

given an opportunity to
make another appointment'
if the time is inconvenient. :
Under the statute, If ten-; .
ants fail to arrange or refuse :
to allow an inspection of ·
.their rental property, the :
building inspector has· ·
authority to enter the resi-: ·
dence, with a police war- · ·
rant. This case of non-com' :
pliance is the only instance :
of a landlord failing to com- · ·
ply with the ordinance to:
date.

harmonica workshop for
children who want to learn
the instrilment, the Buckeye
State Harmonica Club is
expected to be on the
Commons .Saturday to
entertain, and at 5 .p.m. the
Ohio State Harmonica
Championship contest will
get underway.
"Contestants will play
two numbers of their
choice each from a different m~sical genre - country, blues, folk, jazz, gospel
or rock but not classical,"
said Powell who is in charge
of the event co-sponsored
by the Historical Society,
Pepsi Cola Co., Swisher &amp;
Lohse Drug Store, and the
Buckeye Harmonica Club. .
Contestants can play diatonic or chromatic harmonicas for a maximum of five
minutes and can even be
accompanied by one instrument such as the piano or
guitar, she explained. As for
the judging it will he in five
categories: meter (timing),
expression of music a.nd
tone, clarity and quality of
pitch; technique meaning
method and skill ; difficulty
and mastery of music; and

stage presence. A jam ses- ·
sion with all of the contes- ·.
tants will be held immedi-"
ately while the judging ·
panel decides the. contest
winners.
Other afternoon activities will include the com· hole tournament at 2 p.m.
on the commQns and a talk
on Ci vii War spies by Jean
Hilton at 2:30 p'.m. at the
Courthouse.
Numerous
displays and demonstrations · by craftsmen will ·
take
place . on
the .
Commons on Saturday. As .
is tradition, a Civil War
ball in period costume with
Hilton as "Miz Rosebud"
the caller will conclude
Saturday's
activities.
Reenactors in the county
for the Civil War reenactment at ''Buffington Island
will attend the dance which ·
concludes at 10 p.m. when
the Courthouse if illuminated.
New this year beginning·
at I p.m. on Sunday is a
concert of gospel, country
and blue grass music by
the
Athens
County
Harmonica Club and Brian
and Family Connections.

J&gt;isney's 101
Dalmatians Kids

June B11ket

Highway Patrol

...

EPA proposes cleanup plan for former tar plaht
IRONTON (AP) - A
former tar plant along the
Ohio River will cost $8.5
million to $10.2 million to
clean up, according to a
proposed plan by the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency.
The 27 -acre former tar
plant area of the Allied
Chemical and Ironton Coke
site 'in southern Ohio was
added in 1983, along with
two other areas at the site,
to the EPA's Superfund
National Priorities List of
locations that release or
threaten to release hazardous substances, pollutants or contaminants.

Several plans to address gravel and other materials,
tar plant contamination the EPA said.
were
devel()ped
by
Also planned are proceHoneywell,
formerly dures wmed at protecting
Allied Chemical, and the public, future workers
reviewed by the EPA and wildlife to exposure
regional office in Chicago. following the cleanup.
The office announced
Honeywell is to conduct
Monday that it had pro- the cleanup under govern·
posed a plan and would ment oversight, the EPA
receive public comment said.
The two other areas of
through Aug. 14.
Plans include covering · the site, where industrial
contaminated soil with activity began in 1917,
landfill cap, diggtng out a were cleaned in the midportion of polluted sedi- 1990s.
ment in the Ohio River for
The tar plant closed in
disposal and covering 2000.
remaining polluted sediIroriton is about 100
ment with a mix of sand, miles south of Columbus.

"It's probably even a smaller
number than that."
The challenge for Obarna
now is to tum those donors
into a volunteer force that will
make a difference in early
presidential ·nomination rontests, especially Jowl!, New
Harnpshrre
and
South
Carulina
· Malbin said fonner Vermont
Gov. Howard Dean used such
grass-roots supporters effectively for fundraising during
his 2004 presidential bid, but
was unable to oonven them
into activists. President Bush,
on the other hand, was \ess
successful using the Internet to
raise money as he was in
building neighborhood networks.

Wingett
from PageA1
'

for the signs.
•
"It was appropriate
because I felt he was the
architect of the village,"
Bentley said, listing off projects Wingett had tieen

Inspection
from PageA1
Under the ordinance providing for the inspections,
those owners of rental properties who refuse to comply
with the inspection program
can be cited to Mayor' s
Court for non-compliance.
There are 131 landlords,
owning 396 rental proper-

Civil war among US. librarians

(Nat Hm tojf is a nationally renowned auth ority
on ilre First Amendment
and tire Bill of Rig/u s and
aur!ro r of many books,
includin g "The War 0 11 th e
Bill of Rig hts m1d th e ·
Gathe rin g
Resistm1ce" ·
(Se ven Stories P ress ,

ties in MiddleP.mt. Seventy
one of the vtllage's land·
lords live outside the village. Last year, village
council increased the annual
per-unit landlord file from
$10 to $20, in part to help
the village finance the safety inspections.
The inspection program
was instituted to.ensure that
rental properties are safe
and in good conditipn.
Tenants are notified by mail
of an appointment time, and

Forthe Record

(Morton Kondracke is
exec utive editor of Roll ·:
Call, th e ne wspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

that book collections in
their
libraries
were
burned.
And the ALA council- · .
in defiance of a Jan. 25 ,
2006 poll in the official
American Libraries e-mail
new sletter, AL Direct, in
which 76 percent of the
rank-and-file membership
urged emancipation continue s its refusal to
call for the rel ease of what
some ALA leaders deride
as ''so- call~d librarians."
Yet the libr'ary associations of Poland, Estonia,
Latvia, · the
Czech
Republic and Slovakia
have vigorou sly demanded their release. Those ·
countries know what it is
to live under communism.
At the ALA conference,
a Freadomista flyer ended
with a reminder from
Martin Luther King Jr.,
who se biography wa s
burned by Castro judges:
"In the end , we will
remember not the words
of our enemies but the
silence of our friends. "
The next time you vi sit
you r local library, you
mi ght express your suppo rt for the ex traordinarily
coura geou s independent
librarians whose devotion
to Cuban s' right to read .
have put them in these
gulags.
Next week: ~ow those
American librarians who
be lieve in everyone's right
to read can confro nt their
leadership and brin g hope
to Cuba's caged librarian s.

a new lift station and tank.
Despite this, his name isn't
on any of these structures in
the village.
Bentley added Wingett
was quick to acknowledge
other people when be was
alive witliout seeking the
acknowledgment for llim·
self, which is why the vi!- ·
lage is now doing just· ·
that.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER ·

l
struggle to free Cuba.
Despite these facts, the
delegates to the June ALA
conference were told in
the flyer that the American
Library Association, on its
Nat
Web. site arti-cle "Book
Hentoff
Burning in the 21 st
Century,"
repeatedly
refu ses to post the li sts of
books Castro burned after
Bearing such signs as the Independent Libraries
"Book Burning Is NOT A were started in 1998. They
solution to Cuba's Energy · were started in a couraProblems" and · "Ray geous and perilous answer
Bradbury (author of to Castro' s shameless lie
' Fahrenheit 451 ' ) Says: that
year . at
the
' Free
The
Jailed International Book Fair in
Librarians," '
the Havana: "In Cuba, there
Freadomistas also handed are no prohibited books,
out flyers that quoted the only those we do not have
core ALA policy : "The the money to buy."
American
Library
That reminded me of
Association believes that what Che Guevara told me
freedom of expression is . at the Cuban Mission to
an inalienable human right the United Nations when I
... vital to the resistance of asked him if he could
oppression ... and the prin- foresee a time - however
ciples of freedom of distant - when there
expression should be would be free ele.c tions in
applied by libraries and Cuba.
librarians throughout the
Guevara, who , in charge
world ." Another ALA pol- of a Havana prison, shot
icy cited on the flyers and killed many prisoners
"deplores the destruction of conscience, didn't wait
of libraries, library collec- for the interpreter to fini sh
Jion s and property."
before he burst into laughYet, as I have reported ter and said to me, "Free
previously, the ALA elections - in Cuba?" '
At the Washington meetignores that Cuban court
documents (validated by ing of the ALA , there were
Amnesty Internation al and co unt e rd emon str ator s
the
Organi zation
of with such signs as
American States) revea l " Defe nd
the
Cuban
that the entire collections Revolution !"''
and
of at least six independent " 'Independent ' Lib rari es
libraries were ordered Are A FRA UD!" One
de stroyed.
passerby - wearin g an
Among the burned pub- offic ial ALA identification
lications are the Universal tag looked at the
Dec laration of Human Freadomi sta s
signs,
Rights (not surpri singly) ; refu se d to tak e a fl yer and
a book on Martin Luther snarled, "I am on the other
King Jr.;
the
U. S. side."
·
Con stitution ; and a volThe govc r_n ing council
ume by Jose Marti , th e of the AL A says it has
father of Cuban indepen- ex pre ssed "deep conce rn"
dence, who was killed by about the jailed librarians
the Spani sh during that but re fu ses to recogni ze

directly involv~d in such as
the London Pool, the donation of the Syracuse
Community Center, securing land for the Syracuse
Municipal Buildin$ and
Fire DeJ!artment, equipment
for the flre department and
helping to secure numerous
grants, including the most
recent used to complete the
Syracuse water proJect with

candidates and is sitting atop
the largest amount of cash on
hand in either the Republican
WASHINGTON
or Democratic fields.
Democrat Barack Obama, ''It's really astounding to me
who has decried Wall Street thanhis underdog candidate is
profits and CEQ pay, has way oot ahead in fundraising,"
tapped a vein of ddn&lt;irs among said Michael Malbin, execubankers and financiers who tive director of the nonpartisan
have given generously and Campaign Finance Institute.
bel~ drive his successful "He's running neck-and-neck
presidential campaign sprint with everybody else in large
for cash.
oontributions. J{is advan~e
· POINT ROCK - A Galena man was airlifted to an area
Among the firms whose is in the small oontributions. '
hospital follo_wing a motorcycle accident Saturday on Ohio
gave the most to Obama, marching with
32, the Galha-Metgs Post of the State Highway Patrol employees
Obama
in
the
second quarter workers striking at a bote! in
reponed.
·
of
the
year
were
Lehman Chicago, said his financial
Mi~hael E. Tripp, 47, was taken to St. Mary's Hospital,
Brothers, Goldman Sachs, success is a function of
Huntmgton, W.Va. , by RealthNet following the 8:35 p.m. Citi~roup and JP Morgan. momentum.
accident in Columbia Township, the patrol reported.
Therr money, much of it the
"The.. fundraising is an
Troopers smd Tnpp was westbound when he failed to maximum donation allowed expression of the enthusiasm
navigate ~ sweeping right curve. The motorcycle went off
law, placed Obama in oom- at the grass-roots levels," he
the left stde of the road, where Tripp lost control. The by
petition with Sen. Hillary said.
m?torcycle re-entered the road and overturned, ejecting the RO&lt;\ham Clinton for high- So far this year, Obarna has
dnver.
dollars in her own collected $16.4 million in
The motorcycle had functional damage and Tripp was finance
backyard
of New York.
donations under $200 - that
cited for failure to controL
.
For Obama, the money rep- is 29 percent of his total pri•••
one side of a fundrais- mary election contributions of
RACINE - Samantha N. Brown, 18, 44766 Pomemy reselits
ing
and
support-building $56.8 million. The small
Pike, Racine, was cited for failure to control by the patrol equation. The
other is the donations have come in
following a one-car accident Saturday on County Road 7A. campaign's outreach
sniall through the Internet, in' the
Troopers said Brown was northbound at 11 :25 p.m. when donors - a concertedto
effort
to · mail and from those attending
the car she drove went off the right side of the road, trav- build a broad netWork of oona dozen rallies in cities
eled across CR 30 (Forest Run) and went into a creek. · tributors who give less than about
across
the oountry.
· The car had disabling damage.
$200.
Attendees oount toward the
The
campaign
has
built
that
250,000
donors that the camPOMEROY - Joseph P. DeMarco, 50, 315 Ash St.,
network
aggressively,
chargpaign
says
has amassed this
Middlepon, was cited for failure to control by the patrol ing $25 a person to attend raJ- year. So doitonline
following a one-car accident early Sunday on CR 24 lies and even counting buyers of merchandise purchasers
who pay
(Union Avenue).
Obama T-shins and bumper $20.08 for an Obarna T-shirt
Troopers said DeMarco was westbound, one mile east of of
stickers
as donors.
or $2.50 for a campaign placOhio 7, at 3:04 a.m. when the car he drove went off the
In
all,
Obarna
came
out
of
ard.
Campaign spokesman
right side of the road a.nd struck two large rocks.
·
the
first
six
months
of
the
year
Bill
Burton
said such small
The car had functional damage, according to the report.
as the top fwidraiser among all donors account for "less of
-----,--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - = - - - -- --=- half of I percent of all

I

The unassuming international champion of universal health care , Michael
Moore, was asked (New
York Sun, June 29)
whether, while filming
"Sicko," he inquired about
the condition of Cuban
journalist
Normando
Gonzalez, a political prisoner since 2003 . He has
contracted severe chroriic
illnesses while in a Castro
gulag . Moore answered
that he asked only about
Cuba 's health care.system
while he was there.
Ambng other suffering
prisoners in Cuban cells
who would have added
further dimension to
"Sicko" are independent
librarians, put away for .
more than 20-year sentences for the crime of
giving Cubans access to
books and other publications forbidden in state
libraries . Dr. Jose Luis
Garcia Paneque, for example. director of a Las
Tunas library, is not being
treated meaningfully for
mtestinal
problems,
hypertension and other
ailments.
The caged independent
librari ans we re, however,
at the center of a protest at
an Ameri can Library
Association conference in
Was hington in June. These
protesters are themselves
long-te rm members of the
ALA and ca ll themselves
Freadomi stas, in contrast
with Fideli stas (Castro
admirers) on the ALA's
governing counciL Th at
council steadfastly refuses
to de mand the immediate
release of Cuban freedomto-read librarians, whom
Amn esty
International
des ignates "pri so ners of
conscience." Indeed, the
coun oil voted dow n an
amendment to release
them .

"Obarna appears to be trying to put the two halves of the
circle together," he said.
In contrast, only 10 percent
of Clinton's $39.4 million in
primary contributions came
from donations of $200 or
less. About three-fifths of her
primary donations oome fium
donors who have given the
maximum $2,300 1or the primary, putting pressure on her
campa1gn to expand her donor
base. Clinton had $3 million in
debts at the end of the quarter,
but her $33 million cash on
hand
almost
matched
Obl\nia's money in the bank.
As. he builds up his grassroots, Obama is hardly ignoring big donors himself. Nearly
40 percent of his total
fundraising has come from
contributors who have given
d~?1~~; of those folks have the legal limit.
·
given othe(Wise," Burton said. During the frrst three

months of the year, donors
employed by the securities
and investment industries
gave Clinton $1.75 million
and Obama $1.38 million,
according to an analysis by the
nonpanisan Center for
Responsive Politics.
Clinton scored an early :
coup by winning the support
of Morgan Stanley CEO Jolm
Mack, a former Bush
fundraiser. Billionaire investor
Warren Buffett threw her a
fundraiser in New York in late
June. (Buffett says he plans to
have one for Obama as well.)
She made the cover of Fortune
above a headline, "Business •
Loves Hillary!"
Judging by the oompanies·
whose employees have given,
to his campaign, Obama
appears to have improved his
standing in the second quarter.
He received $139,810 fium
Lehman Brothers employees,
including $4,600 from company president Joseph M; ·
Gregory. Goldman Sachs
employees acco11nted for
$80,000 and Citigroup for .
$61,000 of his oontributions,
'his fmancial report for the
quarter shows.
.
The money comes even .;
though Obama's statements ·
have not always been kind to •
Wall Street He has called for
taxing anticipated future prof·
its of some financial managers .
at income-tax rates of up to 35
percent instead of the current' .
15 percent, the rate for capital
gains. It's a view embraced by •
other Democratic candidates
as well, including Clinton.

BY JIM KUHNHENN

COOLVILLE - Edna J. Coe, 77, of Coolville died
Mon~ay, July 16, 2007 at Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospttal , Parkersburg, W.Va. Arrangements will be
annouhced later by White-Schwarzel Funeral Home.

encouragement to frustrat·
ed high-roll ers that there
might be an alternative to
Washington 's incessant
partisan warfare.
At ano ther gathering
thi s
summer,
the
"Ceasefire! Bridging the
Political Divide" conference in Los Angeles last
month ,
Bloomberg
declared that "the politics
of partisanship and the
result ing inac tion and
excu ses have ·paralyzed
decision-making , especially at the federal leveL
"The big issue s of the
not being
day are
addressed - leavi 0 g our
future in jeopardy. We can
accept this, or we can say
'enough i ~ enough' .- and
together build a bright
futu re for our country," he
said .
'
Bloomberg' s best line in
a speech that could have ·.
used some clich, -deletion
was · that "Washington ·is ;
sinking into a swamp of
dy sfunction . No matter
who is in charge, sadly,
partisan ship is king ." That
would have gone over big ·
in Aspen.
Of course, it also has to
go
over
big
in
Albuquerque and Augusta,
Peoria and Plain sville .
Delivered by a New
Yorker, it has to be backed .
up by proposal s that will '
appeal
to
average ·
Americans - honest ones,
as Bloombe rg say s, that ·:.
reveal the downsides as ·
well as the upside s.
.
Bloomberg might never run, or he might run and :
lose. But if he just fashions an alternative agenda
and gives voice to "postr ·
parti sanship," he' ll be ·
doing the country a favor.

The Daily Sentipel• Page As

www.mydallysentinel.com

Days
from PageA1

SUbmitted photo

Lee Powell (left) of Powell's Foocl Fair represents one of many local and corporate sponsors
helping to support the Bethel Worship Center's Second Annual Biker Sunday. Organizer Jim
Boyer is also pictured.
mini stry that reaches the people to him and to
outlaw biker world and church.
Boyer said the Biker
people in all walks of life.
Sunday
is open to anyone
Tribe
of
Judah
uses
The
from PageA1
Luke 14.23 as inspiration: of any a~e whether they
"And the Lord said unto the · have a "b1ke, a wheel ~ar­
Syracuse
Community servant, Go out into the row, a unicycle or bring a
Center for a day con sisting highways and hedges and lawn chair." The festivities
of free food, games, a dunk- compel them to come in, that in Syracuse are also open to
ing booth, horseshoes,.vol - my house may be filled."
· the entire community and
Priest was once at a low not just those in their
leyball, basketball, Frisbee,
face _painting and more.
point in his life where he Sunday best. Blue jeans and
Al so in Syrac use, prizes attempted to kill himself T-shirts are appropriate
fro m Bob Evans, the Wild with a lethal dose of heroin attire as are dress pants and
Horse Cafe, Wal-Mart, gas but for some miraculous rea- dresses.
cards, biker Bibles, T-shirts, son, he didn't die despite his
"People are able to do
hats, · umbrellas
and efforts. At the point after the their thin~ imd let God do
Cincinnati Reds tickets will injection when he felt he his thing,' Boyer said about
be up for grabs as we ll as should be dying. he was out- the relaxed event. "Come as
side a church and gave his you are."
other goodies.
Boyer said this year's
"Last year was such a suc- life to Jesus whom Priest
event
was made possible by
cess because people came in says then appeared next ·to
and gave their life over to him, touching and literally several corporate sponsors
God and got saved." Jim healing him . From that and local businesses.
Bethel Worship Center is
Boyer. an organizer of the moment on, Priest changed
his life and eventually began located two miles south of
event said.
.
· Tuprers Pfains on Ohio 7.
Priest will be delivering hi s mini stry.
the message and is with
Bac k in the day Pr-iest Cal 667-6793 fo r more
Tribe of Judah Motorcycle may ' ve been an unlikely · information or go to
Minim ies lntcmationaL candidate to evangelize but ww w.be th e lwc@ w ind Priest runs the eva11gelistic that is what draws unlikely stream.net.

Bikers

•'

picnic on the Commons will
be held at 6:30 p.m. Friday
night followed at 7:15 p.m.
by the band concert, directed by Tone~ DinF,sS.
Saturday s activities will
get underway with an opening_ cerem.ony at 10 a.m. to
be unmedtately foll~:~wed by
the pet show chaued by ·
Pam Schatz and the pretty
b~by contest by Jean~:~ie
Rtdeno~r. .f!.t noon Metgs
County s Fmest, the .oldest
male and female · in attendance, wtll be selected and
honor~d. .
.
Agwn thts year there wtll
be a pie baking con!est followed later m the day by an
auction of the pies. Pies are
to be taken to the
Courthouse at 11 a.m.
Satur~ay. ~e entry_fee ts
two ptes which can elth~r be
of the same kmd or different, bu~ or~e must be a twocrust pte smce those.are the
on_ly ones to be JUdged.
Prizes to he awarded are
$20 for first, $1 5 for second, and $I 9 for third. At 4
p.m. at the Courthouse the
pies will be auctioned off
and the proceeds to go into
the maintenance and operation of the Courthouse.
New this year is a dulcimer concert to be held at
II :30 a.m. arranged by
Marlene Rinehart, a corn
hole tournament in two age
classes for children at 2
p.m. and throughout the
afternoon the operation of
the Shady Water Ole-Time
Photo and Clothing Rental
Shoppe.
The harmonica will again
play a big role in the activities of Chester-Shade Days.
At I p.m. there will be a

Uve Musical Adventure!

Wednesdlly

July 14, IS, 21 &amp; 22
Sat at 8 pm, Sun al 3 pm

7/1~/07

$10&amp;$7
Sign up ...,. ror special ·
''PUPPY PARTIES"

presented prior to each show
$5 per child
BoK Olflce: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

•

at the
Pentecostal
a!:!:ernbly

�•

,.

r

..

Jt

"'

...

'-

~

•

..

OPINION

· The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740J 992-2157

.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene·Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY

·'

Today is Tuesday, July 17, the !98th day of 2007. There are
167 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 17, 1996, TWA Right 800, a Paris-bound Boeing
747, exploded and crashed off Long Island, N.Y., shortly after
leaving John F. Kennedy International Airport, killing all 230
people aboartl.
On this date:
In 1821 , Spain ceded Aorida to the United States.
In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, Spanish troops
in Santiago, Cuba, surrendered to U.S. forces.
In 1918, Russia's Czar Nicholas nand his family were executed by the Bolsheviks.
In 1944, 322 people were killed when a pair of ammunition
ships exploded in Port Chicago, Calif.
In 1945, President Harry Truman, Soviet leader Josef Stalin
and British Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill began meet·
ing at Potsdam, Germany, in the fmal Allied summit of World
Warn.
In 1955, Disneyland debuted in Anaheim, Calif.
Ten years ago: Woolworth Corp. announced it was closing its
400 remaining five-and-dime stores across ·the country, ending
117 years in business. President Bill Clinton noQlinated Army
Gen. Henry Shelton to be the next chainnan of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff. The space shuttle Columbia and its crew of seven
returned to Earth after a near-flawless 16-day science mission.
Five years ago: A double suicide bombing in Tel Aviv killed
two foreign workers and one Israeli. In Britain, a one-day strike
by_ 750,000 municipal employees closed schools, libraries and
recreation centers in their frrst national walkout in more than
two decades.
One yew ago: The shuttle I;liscovery and its crew of six
re(Umed home safely. A powerful earthquake sent a tsunami
crashing into a beach resort on Indonesia's Java island, killing
at least 600 people. Mystery writer Mickey Spillane died in
Murrells Inlet, S.C., at age 88.
: Joday's Birthdays: TV personality Art Linkletter is 95.
Comedian Phyllis Diller is 90. The former pn:sident of the
International Olympic Committee, Juan Antomo Samaranch, is
87. Jazz singer Jimmy Scott is 82. Actor Donald Sutherland is
72. Actress·singer Diahann Carroll is 72. Rock musician
Spencer Davis is 63. Rock musician Terry "Geezer" Butler
(Black Sabbath) is 58. Actress Lucie Amaz is 56. Actor David
· Hasselhoff is 5~,. i;&gt;inger Phoehe Snow is 55. Television producer Mark Burnett ("Survivor," "The Apprentice") is 47.
Actress Nancy Giles is 47. Singer Regina Belle is 44. Rock .
musician Lou Barlow is 41. Hip-hop singer Guru (Gang Starr)
is 41. Contemporary Christian singer Susan Ashton is 40.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Stokley Williams (Mint Condition) is
40. Actor Andre Royo is 39. Actress Biny Schram is,3_?. Actor
Jason Clarke is 38. Singer JC (PM Dawn) is 36. Rapper Sole'
is ~4.
Thought for J oday: "Modo et modo non habebant modum."
(By and by never comes.) - SL Augustine (A.D. 354-A.D.
430).
•

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include a ddress and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication.

·_ The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley

(USPS 213-960) ·

Ohio Valley Publishing

· co.

Our main concern in all stories is to

Published every ' fternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomero y, Ohio.
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Tuesday, July 17, 2007 .

. Tuesday, July 17,2007

Obituaries

Bloomberg needs 'post-partisan'policy agenda'

-The Daily Sentinel

: Reader Services

PageA4 .

·

ASPEN,
Colo.
Bloomberg
Michael
should have been here. At
the annual Aspen Institute ·
Ideas Festival last week,
he could have won influential recruits for his possible independent presidential campaign . basked
in glowing approval of
initiatives he 's taken as
New York mayor and
helped develop a wider
political agenda.
The festival is attended
mainly by rich social liberals of a distinctly entrepreneurial bent, who this
year
adored
former
President Bill Clinton and
disbelieved White House
aide Karl Rove as they
delivered equally dataladen tours of the policy
horizon.
I took no poll, but I'd
bet this crowd would love
Bloomberg for his
social views, hi s record of
achievement in New York
and his denunciations of
the dismal mire that partisan politics has created in
Washington , D.C.
Another _piece of evidence: The hands·down
hero of last year' s festival
was Joel Klein, the former
Clinton White Hou se aide
who now is Bloomberg's
revolution-making schools
chancellor and who said
he.' d support Bloomberg if
he ran for president.
If
he
does
run ,
Bloomberg doesn' t need
the money these CEOs and
philanthropists could contribute. He can afford to
self-finance his campaign.
But he could use their
endorsements to gain
credibility.
It would help, too, if
they got behind the
Umty08 third-party effort
that seems to represent
Bloomberg's best aven11e
to get on the ballot in all
50 states.
According to one of its

Mulun

Kola idee

founders ,
· Gerald
Rafshoon, Unity08 currently has 100,000 party
members, hopes to have I
million by late fall and
hopes· to have 10 million
participate in its Internet
nominating convention
next June .
" If I were Michael
Bloomberg," Rafshoon
told me, "I think it would
be ·best to be validated by
a eonstituency of 10 mil liori people rather than just
spending his own money."
Rafshoon emphasized that
he hoped other candidate s
would compete; but it's
clear that Bloomberg represents the best third -party
shot on the horizon.
Of course, it's a long
shot - partly because no
third-party candidate has
ever won the presidency
and
partly
because
Bloomberg so far doesn 't
represent the kind of. vivid
alternative that Teddy
Roosevelt did in 191 2 or
that even Ross Perot did in
1992.
Bloomberg is easily caricatured - even by himself
as a short,
divorced, Jewish New
Yorker, pro-choice , progay rights, anti-gun and
anti-smoking. . It's not
exactly the kind of pop. ulist profile that will light ·
praine
fires
across
America.
But Bloomberg does
have this going for him a heavy swatch of the
country is totally fed up
with zero-sum partisan
warfare . And he has a ster-

ling record as an innovative problem-solver at a
time when America has a
lot of problems that people want solved.
A Bloomberg candidacy
wouldn' t be necessary if
Democ,rats
·and/or
Republicans n.omimite a
nonpolarizing problemsolver with a hope of
reuniting the country, not
fu rther div iding it .
Let's hope that happens.
But, just in case,
Bloomberg should be
developing a compelling
agenda that can trump hi s
identity problems.
It needs to include a new
national security policy
that offe rs a choice
Republicans·
between
overreliance on military
force and Democrats'
·overreli ance on polite
diplomacy.
Bloomberg
needs to say what he' d do
about Iraq , Iran, Palestine
and Paki stan.
He does have .an energylenvirQnment · agenda ,
de signed to cut- New
York's carbon emissions
by 30 percent 'by 2030,
which Clinton praised at
the ideas festivaL
"All the press was about
the mayor's plan to charge
for the right to drive in
Manhattan," Clinton said,
"but 80 percent of emissions come from buildings
and just think how many
jobs you can create changing black tar roofs to
green. You 'can' t outsource
tho se jobs to India .·
Somebody 1s got to be in
that roof planting sod."
The Aspen festival produced · discussion of a
wealth of novel proposals
on h·e alth care reform ,
early childhood education ,
China policy and the global
economy
that
Bloomberg could have
absorbed for his agenda.
And he could have given
something
back

Edna J. Coe

Obama money ranges from bankers to small
donors as candidates' fundraising gets closer look

.

2004 ).)

given an opportunity to
make another appointment'
if the time is inconvenient. :
Under the statute, If ten-; .
ants fail to arrange or refuse :
to allow an inspection of ·
.their rental property, the :
building inspector has· ·
authority to enter the resi-: ·
dence, with a police war- · ·
rant. This case of non-com' :
pliance is the only instance :
of a landlord failing to com- · ·
ply with the ordinance to:
date.

harmonica workshop for
children who want to learn
the instrilment, the Buckeye
State Harmonica Club is
expected to be on the
Commons .Saturday to
entertain, and at 5 .p.m. the
Ohio State Harmonica
Championship contest will
get underway.
"Contestants will play
two numbers of their
choice each from a different m~sical genre - country, blues, folk, jazz, gospel
or rock but not classical,"
said Powell who is in charge
of the event co-sponsored
by the Historical Society,
Pepsi Cola Co., Swisher &amp;
Lohse Drug Store, and the
Buckeye Harmonica Club. .
Contestants can play diatonic or chromatic harmonicas for a maximum of five
minutes and can even be
accompanied by one instrument such as the piano or
guitar, she explained. As for
the judging it will he in five
categories: meter (timing),
expression of music a.nd
tone, clarity and quality of
pitch; technique meaning
method and skill ; difficulty
and mastery of music; and

stage presence. A jam ses- ·
sion with all of the contes- ·.
tants will be held immedi-"
ately while the judging ·
panel decides the. contest
winners.
Other afternoon activities will include the com· hole tournament at 2 p.m.
on the commQns and a talk
on Ci vii War spies by Jean
Hilton at 2:30 p'.m. at the
Courthouse.
Numerous
displays and demonstrations · by craftsmen will ·
take
place . on
the .
Commons on Saturday. As .
is tradition, a Civil War
ball in period costume with
Hilton as "Miz Rosebud"
the caller will conclude
Saturday's
activities.
Reenactors in the county
for the Civil War reenactment at ''Buffington Island
will attend the dance which ·
concludes at 10 p.m. when
the Courthouse if illuminated.
New this year beginning·
at I p.m. on Sunday is a
concert of gospel, country
and blue grass music by
the
Athens
County
Harmonica Club and Brian
and Family Connections.

J&gt;isney's 101
Dalmatians Kids

June B11ket

Highway Patrol

...

EPA proposes cleanup plan for former tar plaht
IRONTON (AP) - A
former tar plant along the
Ohio River will cost $8.5
million to $10.2 million to
clean up, according to a
proposed plan by the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency.
The 27 -acre former tar
plant area of the Allied
Chemical and Ironton Coke
site 'in southern Ohio was
added in 1983, along with
two other areas at the site,
to the EPA's Superfund
National Priorities List of
locations that release or
threaten to release hazardous substances, pollutants or contaminants.

Several plans to address gravel and other materials,
tar plant contamination the EPA said.
were
devel()ped
by
Also planned are proceHoneywell,
formerly dures wmed at protecting
Allied Chemical, and the public, future workers
reviewed by the EPA and wildlife to exposure
regional office in Chicago. following the cleanup.
The office announced
Honeywell is to conduct
Monday that it had pro- the cleanup under govern·
posed a plan and would ment oversight, the EPA
receive public comment said.
The two other areas of
through Aug. 14.
Plans include covering · the site, where industrial
contaminated soil with activity began in 1917,
landfill cap, diggtng out a were cleaned in the midportion of polluted sedi- 1990s.
ment in the Ohio River for
The tar plant closed in
disposal and covering 2000.
remaining polluted sediIroriton is about 100
ment with a mix of sand, miles south of Columbus.

"It's probably even a smaller
number than that."
The challenge for Obarna
now is to tum those donors
into a volunteer force that will
make a difference in early
presidential ·nomination rontests, especially Jowl!, New
Harnpshrre
and
South
Carulina
· Malbin said fonner Vermont
Gov. Howard Dean used such
grass-roots supporters effectively for fundraising during
his 2004 presidential bid, but
was unable to oonven them
into activists. President Bush,
on the other hand, was \ess
successful using the Internet to
raise money as he was in
building neighborhood networks.

Wingett
from PageA1
'

for the signs.
•
"It was appropriate
because I felt he was the
architect of the village,"
Bentley said, listing off projects Wingett had tieen

Inspection
from PageA1
Under the ordinance providing for the inspections,
those owners of rental properties who refuse to comply
with the inspection program
can be cited to Mayor' s
Court for non-compliance.
There are 131 landlords,
owning 396 rental proper-

Civil war among US. librarians

(Nat Hm tojf is a nationally renowned auth ority
on ilre First Amendment
and tire Bill of Rig/u s and
aur!ro r of many books,
includin g "The War 0 11 th e
Bill of Rig hts m1d th e ·
Gathe rin g
Resistm1ce" ·
(Se ven Stories P ress ,

ties in MiddleP.mt. Seventy
one of the vtllage's land·
lords live outside the village. Last year, village
council increased the annual
per-unit landlord file from
$10 to $20, in part to help
the village finance the safety inspections.
The inspection program
was instituted to.ensure that
rental properties are safe
and in good conditipn.
Tenants are notified by mail
of an appointment time, and

Forthe Record

(Morton Kondracke is
exec utive editor of Roll ·:
Call, th e ne wspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

that book collections in
their
libraries
were
burned.
And the ALA council- · .
in defiance of a Jan. 25 ,
2006 poll in the official
American Libraries e-mail
new sletter, AL Direct, in
which 76 percent of the
rank-and-file membership
urged emancipation continue s its refusal to
call for the rel ease of what
some ALA leaders deride
as ''so- call~d librarians."
Yet the libr'ary associations of Poland, Estonia,
Latvia, · the
Czech
Republic and Slovakia
have vigorou sly demanded their release. Those ·
countries know what it is
to live under communism.
At the ALA conference,
a Freadomista flyer ended
with a reminder from
Martin Luther King Jr.,
who se biography wa s
burned by Castro judges:
"In the end , we will
remember not the words
of our enemies but the
silence of our friends. "
The next time you vi sit
you r local library, you
mi ght express your suppo rt for the ex traordinarily
coura geou s independent
librarians whose devotion
to Cuban s' right to read .
have put them in these
gulags.
Next week: ~ow those
American librarians who
be lieve in everyone's right
to read can confro nt their
leadership and brin g hope
to Cuba's caged librarian s.

a new lift station and tank.
Despite this, his name isn't
on any of these structures in
the village.
Bentley added Wingett
was quick to acknowledge
other people when be was
alive witliout seeking the
acknowledgment for llim·
self, which is why the vi!- ·
lage is now doing just· ·
that.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER ·

l
struggle to free Cuba.
Despite these facts, the
delegates to the June ALA
conference were told in
the flyer that the American
Library Association, on its
Nat
Web. site arti-cle "Book
Hentoff
Burning in the 21 st
Century,"
repeatedly
refu ses to post the li sts of
books Castro burned after
Bearing such signs as the Independent Libraries
"Book Burning Is NOT A were started in 1998. They
solution to Cuba's Energy · were started in a couraProblems" and · "Ray geous and perilous answer
Bradbury (author of to Castro' s shameless lie
' Fahrenheit 451 ' ) Says: that
year . at
the
' Free
The
Jailed International Book Fair in
Librarians," '
the Havana: "In Cuba, there
Freadomistas also handed are no prohibited books,
out flyers that quoted the only those we do not have
core ALA policy : "The the money to buy."
American
Library
That reminded me of
Association believes that what Che Guevara told me
freedom of expression is . at the Cuban Mission to
an inalienable human right the United Nations when I
... vital to the resistance of asked him if he could
oppression ... and the prin- foresee a time - however
ciples of freedom of distant - when there
expression should be would be free ele.c tions in
applied by libraries and Cuba.
librarians throughout the
Guevara, who , in charge
world ." Another ALA pol- of a Havana prison, shot
icy cited on the flyers and killed many prisoners
"deplores the destruction of conscience, didn't wait
of libraries, library collec- for the interpreter to fini sh
Jion s and property."
before he burst into laughYet, as I have reported ter and said to me, "Free
previously, the ALA elections - in Cuba?" '
At the Washington meetignores that Cuban court
documents (validated by ing of the ALA , there were
Amnesty Internation al and co unt e rd emon str ator s
the
Organi zation
of with such signs as
American States) revea l " Defe nd
the
Cuban
that the entire collections Revolution !"''
and
of at least six independent " 'Independent ' Lib rari es
libraries were ordered Are A FRA UD!" One
de stroyed.
passerby - wearin g an
Among the burned pub- offic ial ALA identification
lications are the Universal tag looked at the
Dec laration of Human Freadomi sta s
signs,
Rights (not surpri singly) ; refu se d to tak e a fl yer and
a book on Martin Luther snarled, "I am on the other
King Jr.;
the
U. S. side."
·
Con stitution ; and a volThe govc r_n ing council
ume by Jose Marti , th e of the AL A says it has
father of Cuban indepen- ex pre ssed "deep conce rn"
dence, who was killed by about the jailed librarians
the Spani sh during that but re fu ses to recogni ze

directly involv~d in such as
the London Pool, the donation of the Syracuse
Community Center, securing land for the Syracuse
Municipal Buildin$ and
Fire DeJ!artment, equipment
for the flre department and
helping to secure numerous
grants, including the most
recent used to complete the
Syracuse water proJect with

candidates and is sitting atop
the largest amount of cash on
hand in either the Republican
WASHINGTON
or Democratic fields.
Democrat Barack Obama, ''It's really astounding to me
who has decried Wall Street thanhis underdog candidate is
profits and CEQ pay, has way oot ahead in fundraising,"
tapped a vein of ddn&lt;irs among said Michael Malbin, execubankers and financiers who tive director of the nonpartisan
have given generously and Campaign Finance Institute.
bel~ drive his successful "He's running neck-and-neck
presidential campaign sprint with everybody else in large
for cash.
oontributions. J{is advan~e
· POINT ROCK - A Galena man was airlifted to an area
Among the firms whose is in the small oontributions. '
hospital follo_wing a motorcycle accident Saturday on Ohio
gave the most to Obama, marching with
32, the Galha-Metgs Post of the State Highway Patrol employees
Obama
in
the
second quarter workers striking at a bote! in
reponed.
·
of
the
year
were
Lehman Chicago, said his financial
Mi~hael E. Tripp, 47, was taken to St. Mary's Hospital,
Brothers, Goldman Sachs, success is a function of
Huntmgton, W.Va. , by RealthNet following the 8:35 p.m. Citi~roup and JP Morgan. momentum.
accident in Columbia Township, the patrol reported.
Therr money, much of it the
"The.. fundraising is an
Troopers smd Tnpp was westbound when he failed to maximum donation allowed expression of the enthusiasm
navigate ~ sweeping right curve. The motorcycle went off
law, placed Obama in oom- at the grass-roots levels," he
the left stde of the road, where Tripp lost control. The by
petition with Sen. Hillary said.
m?torcycle re-entered the road and overturned, ejecting the RO&lt;\ham Clinton for high- So far this year, Obarna has
dnver.
dollars in her own collected $16.4 million in
The motorcycle had functional damage and Tripp was finance
backyard
of New York.
donations under $200 - that
cited for failure to controL
.
For Obama, the money rep- is 29 percent of his total pri•••
one side of a fundrais- mary election contributions of
RACINE - Samantha N. Brown, 18, 44766 Pomemy reselits
ing
and
support-building $56.8 million. The small
Pike, Racine, was cited for failure to control by the patrol equation. The
other is the donations have come in
following a one-car accident Saturday on County Road 7A. campaign's outreach
sniall through the Internet, in' the
Troopers said Brown was northbound at 11 :25 p.m. when donors - a concertedto
effort
to · mail and from those attending
the car she drove went off the right side of the road, trav- build a broad netWork of oona dozen rallies in cities
eled across CR 30 (Forest Run) and went into a creek. · tributors who give less than about
across
the oountry.
· The car had disabling damage.
$200.
Attendees oount toward the
The
campaign
has
built
that
250,000
donors that the camPOMEROY - Joseph P. DeMarco, 50, 315 Ash St.,
network
aggressively,
chargpaign
says
has amassed this
Middlepon, was cited for failure to control by the patrol ing $25 a person to attend raJ- year. So doitonline
following a one-car accident early Sunday on CR 24 lies and even counting buyers of merchandise purchasers
who pay
(Union Avenue).
Obama T-shins and bumper $20.08 for an Obarna T-shirt
Troopers said DeMarco was westbound, one mile east of of
stickers
as donors.
or $2.50 for a campaign placOhio 7, at 3:04 a.m. when the car he drove went off the
In
all,
Obarna
came
out
of
ard.
Campaign spokesman
right side of the road a.nd struck two large rocks.
·
the
first
six
months
of
the
year
Bill
Burton
said such small
The car had functional damage, according to the report.
as the top fwidraiser among all donors account for "less of
-----,--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - = - - - -- --=- half of I percent of all

I

The unassuming international champion of universal health care , Michael
Moore, was asked (New
York Sun, June 29)
whether, while filming
"Sicko," he inquired about
the condition of Cuban
journalist
Normando
Gonzalez, a political prisoner since 2003 . He has
contracted severe chroriic
illnesses while in a Castro
gulag . Moore answered
that he asked only about
Cuba 's health care.system
while he was there.
Ambng other suffering
prisoners in Cuban cells
who would have added
further dimension to
"Sicko" are independent
librarians, put away for .
more than 20-year sentences for the crime of
giving Cubans access to
books and other publications forbidden in state
libraries . Dr. Jose Luis
Garcia Paneque, for example. director of a Las
Tunas library, is not being
treated meaningfully for
mtestinal
problems,
hypertension and other
ailments.
The caged independent
librari ans we re, however,
at the center of a protest at
an Ameri can Library
Association conference in
Was hington in June. These
protesters are themselves
long-te rm members of the
ALA and ca ll themselves
Freadomi stas, in contrast
with Fideli stas (Castro
admirers) on the ALA's
governing counciL Th at
council steadfastly refuses
to de mand the immediate
release of Cuban freedomto-read librarians, whom
Amn esty
International
des ignates "pri so ners of
conscience." Indeed, the
coun oil voted dow n an
amendment to release
them .

"Obarna appears to be trying to put the two halves of the
circle together," he said.
In contrast, only 10 percent
of Clinton's $39.4 million in
primary contributions came
from donations of $200 or
less. About three-fifths of her
primary donations oome fium
donors who have given the
maximum $2,300 1or the primary, putting pressure on her
campa1gn to expand her donor
base. Clinton had $3 million in
debts at the end of the quarter,
but her $33 million cash on
hand
almost
matched
Obl\nia's money in the bank.
As. he builds up his grassroots, Obama is hardly ignoring big donors himself. Nearly
40 percent of his total
fundraising has come from
contributors who have given
d~?1~~; of those folks have the legal limit.
·
given othe(Wise," Burton said. During the frrst three

months of the year, donors
employed by the securities
and investment industries
gave Clinton $1.75 million
and Obama $1.38 million,
according to an analysis by the
nonpanisan Center for
Responsive Politics.
Clinton scored an early :
coup by winning the support
of Morgan Stanley CEO Jolm
Mack, a former Bush
fundraiser. Billionaire investor
Warren Buffett threw her a
fundraiser in New York in late
June. (Buffett says he plans to
have one for Obama as well.)
She made the cover of Fortune
above a headline, "Business •
Loves Hillary!"
Judging by the oompanies·
whose employees have given,
to his campaign, Obama
appears to have improved his
standing in the second quarter.
He received $139,810 fium
Lehman Brothers employees,
including $4,600 from company president Joseph M; ·
Gregory. Goldman Sachs
employees acco11nted for
$80,000 and Citigroup for .
$61,000 of his oontributions,
'his fmancial report for the
quarter shows.
.
The money comes even .;
though Obama's statements ·
have not always been kind to •
Wall Street He has called for
taxing anticipated future prof·
its of some financial managers .
at income-tax rates of up to 35
percent instead of the current' .
15 percent, the rate for capital
gains. It's a view embraced by •
other Democratic candidates
as well, including Clinton.

BY JIM KUHNHENN

COOLVILLE - Edna J. Coe, 77, of Coolville died
Mon~ay, July 16, 2007 at Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospttal , Parkersburg, W.Va. Arrangements will be
annouhced later by White-Schwarzel Funeral Home.

encouragement to frustrat·
ed high-roll ers that there
might be an alternative to
Washington 's incessant
partisan warfare.
At ano ther gathering
thi s
summer,
the
"Ceasefire! Bridging the
Political Divide" conference in Los Angeles last
month ,
Bloomberg
declared that "the politics
of partisanship and the
result ing inac tion and
excu ses have ·paralyzed
decision-making , especially at the federal leveL
"The big issue s of the
not being
day are
addressed - leavi 0 g our
future in jeopardy. We can
accept this, or we can say
'enough i ~ enough' .- and
together build a bright
futu re for our country," he
said .
'
Bloomberg' s best line in
a speech that could have ·.
used some clich, -deletion
was · that "Washington ·is ;
sinking into a swamp of
dy sfunction . No matter
who is in charge, sadly,
partisan ship is king ." That
would have gone over big ·
in Aspen.
Of course, it also has to
go
over
big
in
Albuquerque and Augusta,
Peoria and Plain sville .
Delivered by a New
Yorker, it has to be backed .
up by proposal s that will '
appeal
to
average ·
Americans - honest ones,
as Bloombe rg say s, that ·:.
reveal the downsides as ·
well as the upside s.
.
Bloomberg might never run, or he might run and :
lose. But if he just fashions an alternative agenda
and gives voice to "postr ·
parti sanship," he' ll be ·
doing the country a favor.

The Daily Sentipel• Page As

www.mydallysentinel.com

Days
from PageA1

SUbmitted photo

Lee Powell (left) of Powell's Foocl Fair represents one of many local and corporate sponsors
helping to support the Bethel Worship Center's Second Annual Biker Sunday. Organizer Jim
Boyer is also pictured.
mini stry that reaches the people to him and to
outlaw biker world and church.
Boyer said the Biker
people in all walks of life.
Sunday
is open to anyone
Tribe
of
Judah
uses
The
from PageA1
Luke 14.23 as inspiration: of any a~e whether they
"And the Lord said unto the · have a "b1ke, a wheel ~ar­
Syracuse
Community servant, Go out into the row, a unicycle or bring a
Center for a day con sisting highways and hedges and lawn chair." The festivities
of free food, games, a dunk- compel them to come in, that in Syracuse are also open to
ing booth, horseshoes,.vol - my house may be filled."
· the entire community and
Priest was once at a low not just those in their
leyball, basketball, Frisbee,
face _painting and more.
point in his life where he Sunday best. Blue jeans and
Al so in Syrac use, prizes attempted to kill himself T-shirts are appropriate
fro m Bob Evans, the Wild with a lethal dose of heroin attire as are dress pants and
Horse Cafe, Wal-Mart, gas but for some miraculous rea- dresses.
cards, biker Bibles, T-shirts, son, he didn't die despite his
"People are able to do
hats, · umbrellas
and efforts. At the point after the their thin~ imd let God do
Cincinnati Reds tickets will injection when he felt he his thing,' Boyer said about
be up for grabs as we ll as should be dying. he was out- the relaxed event. "Come as
side a church and gave his you are."
other goodies.
Boyer said this year's
"Last year was such a suc- life to Jesus whom Priest
event
was made possible by
cess because people came in says then appeared next ·to
and gave their life over to him, touching and literally several corporate sponsors
God and got saved." Jim healing him . From that and local businesses.
Bethel Worship Center is
Boyer. an organizer of the moment on, Priest changed
his life and eventually began located two miles south of
event said.
.
· Tuprers Pfains on Ohio 7.
Priest will be delivering hi s mini stry.
the message and is with
Bac k in the day Pr-iest Cal 667-6793 fo r more
Tribe of Judah Motorcycle may ' ve been an unlikely · information or go to
Minim ies lntcmationaL candidate to evangelize but ww w.be th e lwc@ w ind Priest runs the eva11gelistic that is what draws unlikely stream.net.

Bikers

•'

picnic on the Commons will
be held at 6:30 p.m. Friday
night followed at 7:15 p.m.
by the band concert, directed by Tone~ DinF,sS.
Saturday s activities will
get underway with an opening_ cerem.ony at 10 a.m. to
be unmedtately foll~:~wed by
the pet show chaued by ·
Pam Schatz and the pretty
b~by contest by Jean~:~ie
Rtdeno~r. .f!.t noon Metgs
County s Fmest, the .oldest
male and female · in attendance, wtll be selected and
honor~d. .
.
Agwn thts year there wtll
be a pie baking con!est followed later m the day by an
auction of the pies. Pies are
to be taken to the
Courthouse at 11 a.m.
Satur~ay. ~e entry_fee ts
two ptes which can elth~r be
of the same kmd or different, bu~ or~e must be a twocrust pte smce those.are the
on_ly ones to be JUdged.
Prizes to he awarded are
$20 for first, $1 5 for second, and $I 9 for third. At 4
p.m. at the Courthouse the
pies will be auctioned off
and the proceeds to go into
the maintenance and operation of the Courthouse.
New this year is a dulcimer concert to be held at
II :30 a.m. arranged by
Marlene Rinehart, a corn
hole tournament in two age
classes for children at 2
p.m. and throughout the
afternoon the operation of
the Shady Water Ole-Time
Photo and Clothing Rental
Shoppe.
The harmonica will again
play a big role in the activities of Chester-Shade Days.
At I p.m. there will be a

Uve Musical Adventure!

Wednesdlly

July 14, IS, 21 &amp; 22
Sat at 8 pm, Sun al 3 pm

7/1~/07

$10&amp;$7
Sign up ...,. ror special ·
''PUPPY PARTIES"

presented prior to each show
$5 per child
BoK Olflce: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

•

at the
Pentecostal
a!:!:ernbly

�-.
.

'

•

.

OHIO

: The Daily Sentinel

-.....

.

~

·.

•

•

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

•

Tuesday, July 17,2001

.

•

PERSPECTIVE:

Old barn now reception hall

: OSU preside~t greeted like state's new governor
Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
COLUMBUS - There
was something mighty
·familiar about the selection,slash-coronation of Gordon
Gee as Ohio . State
University 's ne"w president
last week .
The buzz as rumors of his
return turned to reality. The
excited reception he got
walking to the podium after
trustees voted to hire him.
The st:nse of relief in a
crowded room of Ohio
State backers.
The state had seen it all
before, and just six months
ago. Gee's appointment to
the top academic job in the
state resembled nothing less
than Ted Strickland's landslide election as the state's
first Democratic governor
_ in almost two decades.
The immediate impression: there are two new
sheriffs in town.
"This, ladies and gentle·men, is Ohio State's time,"
Gee announced with religious-style fervor. With an
. equivalent energy being
: generated by Strickland, the
same could be true for the
state of Ohio.
Both are career public
servants . in their mtd,sixties. Both are populists with
moderate leanings. Both are
religious - Gee a devout
Mormon, Strickland a
Methodist minister. Both
stepped forward al ~time of
transition to replace capable
leaders who nevertheless
lacked a certain spark.
Strickland,
65,
a
Democrat,
served
in
Congress a dozen years
before deciding to run for
governor in a state where
Republicans held power for
more than a decade. He
replaced Gov. Bob Taft, a
two-term Republican who
suffered some of the lowest

~-IJefense . ask5 jury

to spare-- l!fo-ifwife in murderfor-hire

. BY JOE MIUCIA

shaken.
,~!ii;II'.Bf~!j lt'fliTER
Grant tollh the..jw:y -.that
Mc;xmda shouldn't get the
! AKRON -The mother of death penalty because she
' .a woman who. could become suffers from a personality disorder and the triggerman got
~just the third female on feder•al death row burst into tears just 17 1/2 years in prison.
·. Monday when asked how she
Grant said justice would be
~ would feel about her daughter served if her life is spared in
receiving such a punish!Jient. the death of Dr. Gulam
Dorothy Siiiouse testified Moonda,69.
·in U.S. District Court on
Donna Moonda's one-time
'behalf of Donna Moonda, 48, lover, Damian Bradford, 26,
· who was convicted earlier of Monaca, Pa., the trigger· this month of hiring her lover man and the prosecution's
to kill her wealthy husband in star witness, was ~tenced
a shooting on · the Ohio last week by Judg~vid D.
Turnpike.
. Dowd Jr., who is presiding at
: A jury will begin delibera- the sentencing phase of her
. tions. Wednesday on whether trial.
to sentence Moonda to life in
Grant pointed out that
prison or give her a death sen- Bradford could get out of
tence. A forensic psychologist prison before age 40 with
was to testify Tuesday about good behavior.
her mental state.
Given Bradford's sentence,
Smouse beld her compo- "It's simply not right and not
. sure on the stand, describmg just to impose the death
Moonda as a hardworking penalty in this case," he told
woman and loving daughter Jurors.
who took care of her mother,
Bradford admitted shooting
until defense attorney David the doctor in the side of the
Grant asked the 77-year-old head on May 13, 2005, after
about the death penalty with his wife pulled over ori the
his final question.
turnpike south of Clevelaild,
. "It would just break my · supposedly to let her husband
·heart," she said sobbing. "I take the wheel. He said
don't know what I would do." Donna Moonda promised
Moonda also cried as her him half of her multimillion
' :,,
: mother left the witness stand dollar inheritance.

~Local
.

l'
I'

I

colored cloths loaded with
marinated chicken, fruittion was when I .told the
kebobs and cheese - where
people of Brown that I was
SARAH CRUMP
livestock once slept.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
leaving" - then reduced to
"It's a major transforrnaa hush as he fought back
NEWBURY
It
started
lion
of this barn," said the
tears to say, "! thank all of
long
ago,
a
little
fatherly
Whiting's
neighbor, Penny
you for letting · me come
t~.asin~ tossed around the Tmunons, who admired big
home."
family
s farmhouse : "Katy," pink bows hanging from the
Strickland's election saw
Dan
Whiting
used to tell his rafters on the barn's lower
a back to the future flood ·of
only
dau~ter,
"we're going level where cocktails were
forrner aides to Democratic
to dance m the barn at your served. '"The last iime I saw
Gov. Richard Celeste ,..
it, there were goats housed
Celestials, as
they're wedding.'.'
The
little
blond-haired
girl
here.''
dubbed - to state governwould
scrunch
up
her
nose
at
Timmons provided the
ment. Gee's return hints at a
the
mere
notion.
Celebrate
bales
of straw for the hay
similar phenomenon.
day - the day - in.that wagon that carried the bridal
Front and center at Gee's her
big
old b11ilding with ;the party the two miles from
reintroduction last week unmistakable
of dlilry Newbury's Church of St.
was Herb Asher, his right- cows? Oh, no.whiff
Not a chance. Helen to the bam. Dan, in his
hand man his ftrst time
Whiting shared that st9fY tux, drove the John Deere
around; Jack Kessler, a for- over . and over S~tutf.i;v tractor that pulled the wagon
mer OSU trustee who evemng - searching ·. 11 - be decked with pink and
helped bring Gee to campus seemed, for how it ever came white streamers - along
in 1990; and Alex Shumate, true.
Ohio 87.
the leader of the current
For under the stars that
The leap from cow to wow
search committee and a night at Geauga COJIDIY's wasn't easy.
member of the committQe Sunrise Farm, between · a
The massive barn behind
that hired Gee 17 years ago. sweet-smellin~
apple Whiting's century-old home
For his part, Strickland orchard and JUSt-sproutmg along Ohio 87 dates to 1918.
believed things were so pumpkin f.atch, more than The building-'s lower level
down in the state he named 250 wei ,dressed guests housed cows for more than a
his election platform, plucked table assignments haif-cen tury until Whiting's
"Turnaround Ohio." He's off a clothesline strung father, Harlow, decided to get
betting his approach will across the barn's windows, out of the dairy business to
stem the tide of residents and packed into that aged concentrate on fruits and
abandoning Ohio and cow house to toast Katy and vegetables.
Blocks of hay typically
regenerate the state's ane- her husband of several hours,
filled the cavernous upper
mic economy, with unem- Tony Brent.
"I'll tell you, we did it one level. The space held upwan!
ployment perpetually abov.e
step
at a time," said Farmer of 4,500 bales, enough to
the national average.
·Gee talks of moving the Dan, looking dap);JC!' - ahd, keep the herd chewing for
university from excellence truth be told, a little out of months on end. It's safe to
to eminence and for good character - in a black tuxe- say an operation like that
maintains a presence long
reason: Ohio State, with do, as he welcomed guests.
Those
steps
included
evictafter
it &amp;huts down. ·
beefed up academic credenJust a few months ago, the
tials, the largest campus in ing scores of barn swallows,
moving
out
1,000
bales
of
barn
still held the - sniff,
the country and two nationstniw,
hand-scraping
enough
sniffresidue of its former
al runner-up titles in foot-.
whitewash
to
ffil
eight
SOlife,
the
odor absorbed deep
ball and · basketball, is on
gallon · trash cans, painting into the lay ers and layers of
the rise.
!he lower level with 75 gal- whitewash eoat ing the inteAnd where Strickland got lons of Wedding Cake White rior. On rainy days, it
a first chance, Oee gets a - and all that came after ·smelled as if the cows had
second - a bonus accord- straightening the old barn just moseyed off into a nearing to his backers.
with hydraulic lifts, tum- by field for grazing.
"This is a totally different buckles and cables.
In ·addition, years of farm
university than it was," says
"It leaned a bit," said Dan. clutter - Whiling called the
trustee Dimon McFerson,
But Saturday, playing host rusting agricultural contrap"and he's a totally different after spending Friday night lions his ''treasures"- filled
person than he was."
getting outside lighting to .the space where the cows
work, "I feel totally relaxed," once loitered.
he said.
.
Katy sdrveyed this scene
• HJs -- ·~estt• were ruu·"--f' .."after 1bl1y-'~·· slipped . an
complirneniS.-. and wonder engagement ring on her finGrant described her as a -· as they entered the barn, ger in October 2005.
hardworking
nurse-anes- j.«I'IJbllletJ;.·llildo-~'JIIIim.l"""!-... Wlth tha~g-dtieate.ned
thetist who went into a to party-bes.t. They were · down-on-the-farm wedding
depression &lt;jfter her father greeted with lables wtth rose. plan now ringing a harmodied and she then started
abusing drugs.
She lost her job in early
2004 .because of the drug
problem and when she met
Bradford in counseling she
(NYSE) - 45.29
General Electric (NYSE) was suffering from "depen- AEP
Akzil
(NASDAQ)87.78
'
40.12
..
.
dent personality disorder,"
Ashland
Inc.
I
1\IYSEI
HarleY-Davidson (NYSE) ~
Grant told the jury. He said 85.24
81.83
such a person is easily manip- Bll Lots (NYSE)- 29.42
JP Morean (NYSE) ulated and depends on others Bob Evans (NASDAQ)to make major decisions.
:~r (NYSE)- 29.17·
37.01
Assistant U.S. Attorney BorCWamer (NYSEI Umlted Brands (NYSE) :__
Nancy Kelley told the jury 94,25
27.27
that Moonda encouraged Century Aluminum (NASNorfolk Southam (NYSE) Bradford to kill her husband DAQ) "- 84.19 58,88
and paid him to do so. 'This Champion (NASDAQ) Oak Hill Financial (NASwas not a plan hatched in the 8.70
DAQ) - 23.30 '
heat of the moment," Kelley Channing Shops (NASDAQ) Phl_o Valley Bane Corp.
said.
-10.92
{NASDAQ) - ;l5
BBT (NYSE) _ 41•15
Prosecutors called Dr. City Holding (NASDAQ) Peoplll (NASDAQ)- 2&amp;.2a ·
Faroq Moonda, a nephew of 38.85
Pepsico (NYSE) ...,.. 66.99
the victim, to testify about the Collins (NYSE) - 73.34
Premier (NASDAQ) man he called "Doctor . DuPont (NYSE)- 52
'
Uncle," who influenced him US Bank (NYSE) - 33.20 · . 15.72
more than anyone in his life. Gannett (NYSE)- 54.95
Rockwell (NYSE) - 74.23

in
approval
ratings
American political history
as he failed to overcome
voter anger at a corruption
scandal and his own inability - despite a generally
commendable record - to
~enerate much excitement
m folks.
Stric~Jand had nowhere
to go but up, and the faot
that it may be a long climb
seems to have helped him
so far. His approval ratings
continue to rise, most
recently to 61 percent.
Gee, 63, likes to joke he's
held half the college presi- ·
dents' jobs in America. He
started at West Virginia
~-university when he was
just 37 years old. He then
rocketed through U.S. higher education, leading· the
University of Colorado
from 1985 to 1990, then
spent seven years at Ohio
State; two at Brown
University and seven more
at Vanderbilt University.
He
replaced
Karen
Holbrook,, the university's.
ftrst female president and a
leader who got much done
on campus but never
seemed to quite win over
. the university community.
Part of that might have been
her decision to crack down
on tailgating to quell postfootball game riots, a move
that won her praise nationally but naysayers within
the state. Part of it may
have been her lower-key
style.
Gee would have cut a
sharp contrast with whoever he replaced. He's a hornrimmed glasses, bow-tie
wearing lawyer who brings
an almost evangelistic style
of speaking to his appearances.
Within his first 45 seconds. at the podium he had a
crowded room roaring with
a joke about his troubled
years at Brown - "The last
time I had a. standing ova-

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-

Bv JOHN HORTON

nious "da-:da'da-da" tune in
her ears, sbe approached her
father: "Dad," she told him,
"if you really want to have it
here, you better start fiXing
the place up."
The scruhdown started
almost · immed~atel y and
ended just days before Katy,
26, a Chagrin Falls teacher,
and Tony, 31, a shm maker,
exchanged_.'.'! do~s:"'
A large pool of family an~
friends toiled on the conversion, ''investing countless
hours in the project. The
Whitings hired an Amish
craftsman to ·IJ&lt;ilp out, too.
Together, 11\e.): ieinodeled the
30-by-80-fO\)tJ&gt;ain ipto one
of the most· Uiliiiual party
centers arQIJI\d/ ' .•
;
The IW!keo1(er is nothing
short · of· astonishing. Kids
colored and p\ilyed in a calv:
ing stall, and near:the space
wbere gifts awaited Katy and
Tony, a shiny piJ!IlP sported a
floral wreath. An old-fash"
ioned pantry held weddin~ ·
favor Jars of tomato-pepper
or strawberry-champagnc,
preserves. Newly construct~
ed his-and-hers restrooms
were available in the old
milk house connected to the .
side of the barn.
,
Did it become the receRtion space of her dreams~
"Definitely," said Katy,
resplendent in a straple&amp;~
while gown, standing .whel'!l
cows once munched hay. "It
was worth all the work."
Dan· wouldn't say how
much the renovation cost,
only that it probably would
have been cheaper to hold
the wedding. at Cleveland'~
most expenstve party center,
There are no plans to rent out
the bam. Oilly the familY.
will use it for get-together&amp;
-a lot.
-:
"Dan wants all the cousins
to be married here," saicl
_Karen, Katy's mom. That's a
couJ)le of dozen brides and
grooms-to-be.
Mter a buffet of roast beef
and pork tenderloin in a tent
a short walk from the barn;
they adjourned to the marrlmoth· -hay · mow, its arched
rafters lined with white ·
lights. A hundred old canning
jars with candles ringed the
space, making the barn look
downright mystical.

Local stocks

Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 17.28
Royal Dutch Shall - 82.91'
Sears Holding 1NASDAQ) ...:
·..
155.71
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 49.84 •
Wendy's (NYSE)- 37.56
Worthington (NYSE)22.42
Dally stock reports are the'
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of '
transactions.for July 16,
2007, provided by Edward
fl
Jonet nanclal aclvlsora
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at .
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

..

~~

night... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s. Southwest winds
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Thursday .. .Partly sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the mid 80s. Chance of rain
50 percent. ,.Thursday night and
Friday ... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s. Highs in the
lower 80s. Chance of rain 40
percent.
nighi...Mostly
Friday
cloudy in the evening ... Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Saturday
through
Monday .. .Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 80s. Lows
around 60.

.'

Robinson,

INSIDE

Braves.

BY GEORGE HENRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

• Golfs best gear up for .
Bl1tish Open.

SeePageB2
SPORTS BRIEFS

Fall league

announces
sign-up times
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Youth League
will ·hold sign-ups for its
fall'league, whi~h includes
both baseball and softball.
teams.
The leagueis open to all
boys and girls ages 7-12 .
Sign-ups will be held
July 21 and 28 from 2-&lt;1
p.m., as well as on July 25
from 6-8 p.m . at the
Middleport ball fields.
For more information
call 580-0438; 416-9527;
or 416-5301.

ATLANTA
Griffey Jr. passed
Robinson for sixth place on
the career home run list,
and Cincinnati pitcher
Bobby Livingston went 4for-4 with an RBI in the
Reds' 10-3 victory over the
Atlanta Braves on Monday
night.
Griffey's 24th homer, a
three-run sho·t into the
right- field seats at Turner
Field, came off Atlanta
reliever Oscar Villarreal in
the second 'inning and gave
the Reds a 5-0 lead.
With
587
homers,
Griffey moved 15 behind
Texas' Sammy Sosa for
fifth place. Griffey gave
Cincinnati a 1-0 lead with
·an ·RBI single in the first.
Cincinnati called up
Livingston (2-0) from
Triple-A Louisville before
the game, and the left-bander allowed eight hits, two
. runs and two walks in five
innings. He struck out four.
All of Livingston's hits
were singles, including the
one in the third that made it
6-0.
with
one He
RBIwas
for 1-for-4
the season
entering the game. The last
Reds pitcher to go 4-for-4
in a game was John Smiley,
who had four RBis while
pitching Cincinnati to a 123 victory at Montreal on
June 7, 1993.
The Reds had lost three
of four on its current 10game road trip before
Livingston, whom the Reds

.
AP photo
Cincinnati Red's pitcher Bobby Livingston hits his fourth single of the night in the sixth
inning against the Atlanta Braves during their baseball game at Turner Field in Atlanta,
· B·
Monday. Catching for At 1anta 1!tf
nan Mccann.
claimed off waivers from
After Griffey' s RBI, from the Atlanta dugout to
Seattle last December; Davies walked Adam Dunn list an injury for Davies,
made his third start of the with the bases loaded, and . who missed a start last
season and first since win- Braves manager Bobby month with a strained
.ning 4-2 at Colorado on Cox had seen enough . oblique and spent nearly
Jun·e I.
Davies allowed two hits four months on the disThe Braves had won four· and three walks . He threw abled list in 2006 after
straight and 12 of 16, but just seven strikes in 21 undergoing groin surgery.
Atlanta starter Kyle Davies pitches.
The last Braves starter to
(4-8) failed to record an out
Team spokesman Brad leave a· game without a disand (aced just five batters. Hainje said .no call came closed injury and . not get-

ting an out was Len Barke'
in 1985.
.:
Andruw Jones cut tlie
Reds ' lead til 6-2 with 7;1
two-run single in the thif~
and a fielder 's choice RBt
in the seventh. ·
:::
Edwin Encarnacion hid
an RBI single in the fouril:J
to make it 7-2. In the fifth_,
Ryan Freel scored frorri
third on shortstop Edgar
Renteria's throwing error
to catcher Brian McCann,
and Dunn's RBI single th$
gave the Reds a 9-2 lead. ·.:
Livingston
walke~
Chipper Jones to load the
bases in the fifth, but lie
escaped the jam by strikirQ!
out Andruw Jones and Jeff
Francoeur and getting
pinch-hitter Matt Diaz tq
pop up.
.
The Braves stranded Jj
runners through eigbt
innings, and Francoeqi'
showed his frustration in
the fifth by arguing a calleq
third strike that earned hill).
an ejection from hom~plate
umpire
Angt;l ·
Hernandez.
•
Noles: Now in his eighth
year with Cincinnat4,
Griffey began the seas~
tied with Reggie Jackson
for I Oth place with 56:J
homers. Griffey played hi s
first II years for Seattle;
hitting 398 homers and
winning the 1997 AL MVP.
... Play was stopped for H
minutes in the fifth because
a few lights above the field
burned out. ... Atlanta used
four
pitchers
after
Villarreal. The Reds used
four after Livingston.

Teams stiU·being
accepted for allstar tournament
MIDDLEPORT - Teams
are still being accepted for a
Little League all-star tournament, for 11-12 year
boys, which will be held
July 21 and 22.
For more information call
580-0438; 416-9527; or
416-5301.

Ford named
new head coach
at Muskingum
NEW CONCORD, Ohio
(AP) - Gene Ford, a hall
of fame high school basketball coach, has been
named head coach at
Muskingum College, the
school said Monday.
AP photo
Ford, 54, replaces his
son , Geno Ford, who Cleveland Iodians' Victor Martinez reacts after hitting a sacaccepted ~job as an assis- rifice fly with bases loaded against Chicago White Sox pitchtant coach at Kent State er Boone Logan in the eighth inning of a baseball game,
University.
Monday in Cleveland. the White Sox won 11-10.
Gene Ford, who coached
for 25 years at a
Cambridge High School,
compiling a 400- 183
record and leading teams
to five state tournament
appearances , spent the
past two years as an assissave in 29 tries.
BY TOM WITHERS
tant at Muskingum under
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jenks got some help from
his son .
Konerko, whp made a diving .
He was inducted into the
CLEVELAND Paul stop in the hole at ftrst to take
Ohio
High
Schpol Konerko hit a three-run a leadoff single away from
Basketball
Coaches homer, highlightin~ Chicago's Ryan Garko. Pinch-hitter Trot
Association Hall of Fame nine-run sixth inrung, but the Nixon struck out, but
White Sox bare Iy held off Gutierrez _.singled for hi s
this spring .
Cleveland
for an 11-10 win fourth hiiAO keep Cleveland's
Muskingum
finished
(12-13, 6-12 Ohio Athletic over the Indians on Monday rally al(iie and stole second.
Josh Bartield then fouled
night.
Conference) last season.
out
behind home plate, allowKonerko' s 19th homer, off
ing
the
White Sox to avoid an
reliever Fernando Cabrera,
embarrassing
collapse.
was one of five extra-base hits
Konerko
was
robbed of at
in the sixth - Chicago's highCoNTACT US
least
a
double
and
maybe two
est-scoring inning of 2007 more
RB
Is
in
the
seventh by
OVP ScoreLine (5 p .m.-1 Lm.J that helped the disappointing Grady Sizemore, who
scaled
White Sox take out some frus1-740·446-2342 ext. 33
the
wall
in
left
-center
and
tration and open an 11-2 lead.
snagged
the
drive,
which
TV
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
But the Indians, as they've
replays
showed
ricocheted
off
done all season, roared back.
E-mail - sportSOmydailysentinel .com
the
Plexiglas
into
his
glove.
Cleveland got a three-run
Sport• Staff
Jim Thome had three hits,
homer
from
Franklin
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor Gutierrez in the sixth, and rookie Jerry Owens picked up
1740) 446·2342. ext. 33
then seored five times off four his first three career RBls and ·
bsherman@ mydailytri bune.com
Chicago relievers in the eighth Rob Mackowiak drove in
three - with two hits in the
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
to climb within one.
(740) 446·2342. ext . 23
White Sox closer Bobby sixth - for Chicago, which
lcrum Cmydailyregis1er.com
Jenks, though, finally ended entered the week I0 games
under .500 and 14 games
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer the Indians' bid for their 28th
come-from-behind win by
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
pitching the ninth for his 25th Please see Indians. B:Z
bwal1ers@mydailytribune.com

Indians' rally falls
short against Sox

weather
:

. Tuesday ..'.Partly sunny. A
· slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the upper
· 80s. Southwe st winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
hi n 20 percent.
Thesday night...Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening .. .Then a
chance of showers and thunderstorms after midnight.
Lows in the upper 60s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph
in
the
evening ...Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Wednesday ... Mo stly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Southwest winds 5 to I0
mph. Chance of rain 3D, percent.
Wednesday

Thesday,July 17,200t. .

OffiCI of Economic end
Workforct Development

.

'' Hom.e
·!!: National

!: Bank·

- - -•.-·-

- - - ____ _

\b ~enta
Blac k
_.__
- -- -_.:_:.;;.:-=~--=""---·
· ··---.=~=rc..-

- -----

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.

'

•

.

OHIO

: The Daily Sentinel

-.....

.

~

·.

•

•

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

•

Tuesday, July 17,2001

.

•

PERSPECTIVE:

Old barn now reception hall

: OSU preside~t greeted like state's new governor
Bv ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
COLUMBUS - There
was something mighty
·familiar about the selection,slash-coronation of Gordon
Gee as Ohio . State
University 's ne"w president
last week .
The buzz as rumors of his
return turned to reality. The
excited reception he got
walking to the podium after
trustees voted to hire him.
The st:nse of relief in a
crowded room of Ohio
State backers.
The state had seen it all
before, and just six months
ago. Gee's appointment to
the top academic job in the
state resembled nothing less
than Ted Strickland's landslide election as the state's
first Democratic governor
_ in almost two decades.
The immediate impression: there are two new
sheriffs in town.
"This, ladies and gentle·men, is Ohio State's time,"
Gee announced with religious-style fervor. With an
. equivalent energy being
: generated by Strickland, the
same could be true for the
state of Ohio.
Both are career public
servants . in their mtd,sixties. Both are populists with
moderate leanings. Both are
religious - Gee a devout
Mormon, Strickland a
Methodist minister. Both
stepped forward al ~time of
transition to replace capable
leaders who nevertheless
lacked a certain spark.
Strickland,
65,
a
Democrat,
served
in
Congress a dozen years
before deciding to run for
governor in a state where
Republicans held power for
more than a decade. He
replaced Gov. Bob Taft, a
two-term Republican who
suffered some of the lowest

~-IJefense . ask5 jury

to spare-- l!fo-ifwife in murderfor-hire

. BY JOE MIUCIA

shaken.
,~!ii;II'.Bf~!j lt'fliTER
Grant tollh the..jw:y -.that
Mc;xmda shouldn't get the
! AKRON -The mother of death penalty because she
' .a woman who. could become suffers from a personality disorder and the triggerman got
~just the third female on feder•al death row burst into tears just 17 1/2 years in prison.
·. Monday when asked how she
Grant said justice would be
~ would feel about her daughter served if her life is spared in
receiving such a punish!Jient. the death of Dr. Gulam
Dorothy Siiiouse testified Moonda,69.
·in U.S. District Court on
Donna Moonda's one-time
'behalf of Donna Moonda, 48, lover, Damian Bradford, 26,
· who was convicted earlier of Monaca, Pa., the trigger· this month of hiring her lover man and the prosecution's
to kill her wealthy husband in star witness, was ~tenced
a shooting on · the Ohio last week by Judg~vid D.
Turnpike.
. Dowd Jr., who is presiding at
: A jury will begin delibera- the sentencing phase of her
. tions. Wednesday on whether trial.
to sentence Moonda to life in
Grant pointed out that
prison or give her a death sen- Bradford could get out of
tence. A forensic psychologist prison before age 40 with
was to testify Tuesday about good behavior.
her mental state.
Given Bradford's sentence,
Smouse beld her compo- "It's simply not right and not
. sure on the stand, describmg just to impose the death
Moonda as a hardworking penalty in this case," he told
woman and loving daughter Jurors.
who took care of her mother,
Bradford admitted shooting
until defense attorney David the doctor in the side of the
Grant asked the 77-year-old head on May 13, 2005, after
about the death penalty with his wife pulled over ori the
his final question.
turnpike south of Clevelaild,
. "It would just break my · supposedly to let her husband
·heart," she said sobbing. "I take the wheel. He said
don't know what I would do." Donna Moonda promised
Moonda also cried as her him half of her multimillion
' :,,
: mother left the witness stand dollar inheritance.

~Local
.

l'
I'

I

colored cloths loaded with
marinated chicken, fruittion was when I .told the
kebobs and cheese - where
people of Brown that I was
SARAH CRUMP
livestock once slept.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
leaving" - then reduced to
"It's a major transforrnaa hush as he fought back
NEWBURY
It
started
lion
of this barn," said the
tears to say, "! thank all of
long
ago,
a
little
fatherly
Whiting's
neighbor, Penny
you for letting · me come
t~.asin~ tossed around the Tmunons, who admired big
home."
family
s farmhouse : "Katy," pink bows hanging from the
Strickland's election saw
Dan
Whiting
used to tell his rafters on the barn's lower
a back to the future flood ·of
only
dau~ter,
"we're going level where cocktails were
forrner aides to Democratic
to dance m the barn at your served. '"The last iime I saw
Gov. Richard Celeste ,..
it, there were goats housed
Celestials, as
they're wedding.'.'
The
little
blond-haired
girl
here.''
dubbed - to state governwould
scrunch
up
her
nose
at
Timmons provided the
ment. Gee's return hints at a
the
mere
notion.
Celebrate
bales
of straw for the hay
similar phenomenon.
day - the day - in.that wagon that carried the bridal
Front and center at Gee's her
big
old b11ilding with ;the party the two miles from
reintroduction last week unmistakable
of dlilry Newbury's Church of St.
was Herb Asher, his right- cows? Oh, no.whiff
Not a chance. Helen to the bam. Dan, in his
hand man his ftrst time
Whiting shared that st9fY tux, drove the John Deere
around; Jack Kessler, a for- over . and over S~tutf.i;v tractor that pulled the wagon
mer OSU trustee who evemng - searching ·. 11 - be decked with pink and
helped bring Gee to campus seemed, for how it ever came white streamers - along
in 1990; and Alex Shumate, true.
Ohio 87.
the leader of the current
For under the stars that
The leap from cow to wow
search committee and a night at Geauga COJIDIY's wasn't easy.
member of the committQe Sunrise Farm, between · a
The massive barn behind
that hired Gee 17 years ago. sweet-smellin~
apple Whiting's century-old home
For his part, Strickland orchard and JUSt-sproutmg along Ohio 87 dates to 1918.
believed things were so pumpkin f.atch, more than The building-'s lower level
down in the state he named 250 wei ,dressed guests housed cows for more than a
his election platform, plucked table assignments haif-cen tury until Whiting's
"Turnaround Ohio." He's off a clothesline strung father, Harlow, decided to get
betting his approach will across the barn's windows, out of the dairy business to
stem the tide of residents and packed into that aged concentrate on fruits and
abandoning Ohio and cow house to toast Katy and vegetables.
Blocks of hay typically
regenerate the state's ane- her husband of several hours,
filled the cavernous upper
mic economy, with unem- Tony Brent.
"I'll tell you, we did it one level. The space held upwan!
ployment perpetually abov.e
step
at a time," said Farmer of 4,500 bales, enough to
the national average.
·Gee talks of moving the Dan, looking dap);JC!' - ahd, keep the herd chewing for
university from excellence truth be told, a little out of months on end. It's safe to
to eminence and for good character - in a black tuxe- say an operation like that
maintains a presence long
reason: Ohio State, with do, as he welcomed guests.
Those
steps
included
evictafter
it &amp;huts down. ·
beefed up academic credenJust a few months ago, the
tials, the largest campus in ing scores of barn swallows,
moving
out
1,000
bales
of
barn
still held the - sniff,
the country and two nationstniw,
hand-scraping
enough
sniffresidue of its former
al runner-up titles in foot-.
whitewash
to
ffil
eight
SOlife,
the
odor absorbed deep
ball and · basketball, is on
gallon · trash cans, painting into the lay ers and layers of
the rise.
!he lower level with 75 gal- whitewash eoat ing the inteAnd where Strickland got lons of Wedding Cake White rior. On rainy days, it
a first chance, Oee gets a - and all that came after ·smelled as if the cows had
second - a bonus accord- straightening the old barn just moseyed off into a nearing to his backers.
with hydraulic lifts, tum- by field for grazing.
"This is a totally different buckles and cables.
In ·addition, years of farm
university than it was," says
"It leaned a bit," said Dan. clutter - Whiling called the
trustee Dimon McFerson,
But Saturday, playing host rusting agricultural contrap"and he's a totally different after spending Friday night lions his ''treasures"- filled
person than he was."
getting outside lighting to .the space where the cows
work, "I feel totally relaxed," once loitered.
he said.
.
Katy sdrveyed this scene
• HJs -- ·~estt• were ruu·"--f' .."after 1bl1y-'~·· slipped . an
complirneniS.-. and wonder engagement ring on her finGrant described her as a -· as they entered the barn, ger in October 2005.
hardworking
nurse-anes- j.«I'IJbllletJ;.·llildo-~'JIIIim.l"""!-... Wlth tha~g-dtieate.ned
thetist who went into a to party-bes.t. They were · down-on-the-farm wedding
depression &lt;jfter her father greeted with lables wtth rose. plan now ringing a harmodied and she then started
abusing drugs.
She lost her job in early
2004 .because of the drug
problem and when she met
Bradford in counseling she
(NYSE) - 45.29
General Electric (NYSE) was suffering from "depen- AEP
Akzil
(NASDAQ)87.78
'
40.12
..
.
dent personality disorder,"
Ashland
Inc.
I
1\IYSEI
HarleY-Davidson (NYSE) ~
Grant told the jury. He said 85.24
81.83
such a person is easily manip- Bll Lots (NYSE)- 29.42
JP Morean (NYSE) ulated and depends on others Bob Evans (NASDAQ)to make major decisions.
:~r (NYSE)- 29.17·
37.01
Assistant U.S. Attorney BorCWamer (NYSEI Umlted Brands (NYSE) :__
Nancy Kelley told the jury 94,25
27.27
that Moonda encouraged Century Aluminum (NASNorfolk Southam (NYSE) Bradford to kill her husband DAQ) "- 84.19 58,88
and paid him to do so. 'This Champion (NASDAQ) Oak Hill Financial (NASwas not a plan hatched in the 8.70
DAQ) - 23.30 '
heat of the moment," Kelley Channing Shops (NASDAQ) Phl_o Valley Bane Corp.
said.
-10.92
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BBT (NYSE) _ 41•15
Prosecutors called Dr. City Holding (NASDAQ) Peoplll (NASDAQ)- 2&amp;.2a ·
Faroq Moonda, a nephew of 38.85
Pepsico (NYSE) ...,.. 66.99
the victim, to testify about the Collins (NYSE) - 73.34
Premier (NASDAQ) man he called "Doctor . DuPont (NYSE)- 52
'
Uncle," who influenced him US Bank (NYSE) - 33.20 · . 15.72
more than anyone in his life. Gannett (NYSE)- 54.95
Rockwell (NYSE) - 74.23

in
approval
ratings
American political history
as he failed to overcome
voter anger at a corruption
scandal and his own inability - despite a generally
commendable record - to
~enerate much excitement
m folks.
Stric~Jand had nowhere
to go but up, and the faot
that it may be a long climb
seems to have helped him
so far. His approval ratings
continue to rise, most
recently to 61 percent.
Gee, 63, likes to joke he's
held half the college presi- ·
dents' jobs in America. He
started at West Virginia
~-university when he was
just 37 years old. He then
rocketed through U.S. higher education, leading· the
University of Colorado
from 1985 to 1990, then
spent seven years at Ohio
State; two at Brown
University and seven more
at Vanderbilt University.
He
replaced
Karen
Holbrook,, the university's.
ftrst female president and a
leader who got much done
on campus but never
seemed to quite win over
. the university community.
Part of that might have been
her decision to crack down
on tailgating to quell postfootball game riots, a move
that won her praise nationally but naysayers within
the state. Part of it may
have been her lower-key
style.
Gee would have cut a
sharp contrast with whoever he replaced. He's a hornrimmed glasses, bow-tie
wearing lawyer who brings
an almost evangelistic style
of speaking to his appearances.
Within his first 45 seconds. at the podium he had a
crowded room roaring with
a joke about his troubled
years at Brown - "The last
time I had a. standing ova-

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-

Bv JOHN HORTON

nious "da-:da'da-da" tune in
her ears, sbe approached her
father: "Dad," she told him,
"if you really want to have it
here, you better start fiXing
the place up."
The scruhdown started
almost · immed~atel y and
ended just days before Katy,
26, a Chagrin Falls teacher,
and Tony, 31, a shm maker,
exchanged_.'.'! do~s:"'
A large pool of family an~
friends toiled on the conversion, ''investing countless
hours in the project. The
Whitings hired an Amish
craftsman to ·IJ&lt;ilp out, too.
Together, 11\e.): ieinodeled the
30-by-80-fO\)tJ&gt;ain ipto one
of the most· Uiliiiual party
centers arQIJI\d/ ' .•
;
The IW!keo1(er is nothing
short · of· astonishing. Kids
colored and p\ilyed in a calv:
ing stall, and near:the space
wbere gifts awaited Katy and
Tony, a shiny piJ!IlP sported a
floral wreath. An old-fash"
ioned pantry held weddin~ ·
favor Jars of tomato-pepper
or strawberry-champagnc,
preserves. Newly construct~
ed his-and-hers restrooms
were available in the old
milk house connected to the .
side of the barn.
,
Did it become the receRtion space of her dreams~
"Definitely," said Katy,
resplendent in a straple&amp;~
while gown, standing .whel'!l
cows once munched hay. "It
was worth all the work."
Dan· wouldn't say how
much the renovation cost,
only that it probably would
have been cheaper to hold
the wedding. at Cleveland'~
most expenstve party center,
There are no plans to rent out
the bam. Oilly the familY.
will use it for get-together&amp;
-a lot.
-:
"Dan wants all the cousins
to be married here," saicl
_Karen, Katy's mom. That's a
couJ)le of dozen brides and
grooms-to-be.
Mter a buffet of roast beef
and pork tenderloin in a tent
a short walk from the barn;
they adjourned to the marrlmoth· -hay · mow, its arched
rafters lined with white ·
lights. A hundred old canning
jars with candles ringed the
space, making the barn look
downright mystical.

Local stocks

Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 17.28
Royal Dutch Shall - 82.91'
Sears Holding 1NASDAQ) ...:
·..
155.71
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 49.84 •
Wendy's (NYSE)- 37.56
Worthington (NYSE)22.42
Dally stock reports are the'
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of '
transactions.for July 16,
2007, provided by Edward
fl
Jonet nanclal aclvlsora
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at .
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

..

~~

night... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s. Southwest winds
5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Thursday .. .Partly sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the mid 80s. Chance of rain
50 percent. ,.Thursday night and
Friday ... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 60s. Highs in the
lower 80s. Chance of rain 40
percent.
nighi...Mostly
Friday
cloudy in the evening ... Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Saturday
through
Monday .. .Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 80s. Lows
around 60.

.'

Robinson,

INSIDE

Braves.

BY GEORGE HENRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

• Golfs best gear up for .
Bl1tish Open.

SeePageB2
SPORTS BRIEFS

Fall league

announces
sign-up times
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Youth League
will ·hold sign-ups for its
fall'league, whi~h includes
both baseball and softball.
teams.
The leagueis open to all
boys and girls ages 7-12 .
Sign-ups will be held
July 21 and 28 from 2-&lt;1
p.m., as well as on July 25
from 6-8 p.m . at the
Middleport ball fields.
For more information
call 580-0438; 416-9527;
or 416-5301.

ATLANTA
Griffey Jr. passed
Robinson for sixth place on
the career home run list,
and Cincinnati pitcher
Bobby Livingston went 4for-4 with an RBI in the
Reds' 10-3 victory over the
Atlanta Braves on Monday
night.
Griffey's 24th homer, a
three-run sho·t into the
right- field seats at Turner
Field, came off Atlanta
reliever Oscar Villarreal in
the second 'inning and gave
the Reds a 5-0 lead.
With
587
homers,
Griffey moved 15 behind
Texas' Sammy Sosa for
fifth place. Griffey gave
Cincinnati a 1-0 lead with
·an ·RBI single in the first.
Cincinnati called up
Livingston (2-0) from
Triple-A Louisville before
the game, and the left-bander allowed eight hits, two
. runs and two walks in five
innings. He struck out four.
All of Livingston's hits
were singles, including the
one in the third that made it
6-0.
with
one He
RBIwas
for 1-for-4
the season
entering the game. The last
Reds pitcher to go 4-for-4
in a game was John Smiley,
who had four RBis while
pitching Cincinnati to a 123 victory at Montreal on
June 7, 1993.
The Reds had lost three
of four on its current 10game road trip before
Livingston, whom the Reds

.
AP photo
Cincinnati Red's pitcher Bobby Livingston hits his fourth single of the night in the sixth
inning against the Atlanta Braves during their baseball game at Turner Field in Atlanta,
· B·
Monday. Catching for At 1anta 1!tf
nan Mccann.
claimed off waivers from
After Griffey' s RBI, from the Atlanta dugout to
Seattle last December; Davies walked Adam Dunn list an injury for Davies,
made his third start of the with the bases loaded, and . who missed a start last
season and first since win- Braves manager Bobby month with a strained
.ning 4-2 at Colorado on Cox had seen enough . oblique and spent nearly
Jun·e I.
Davies allowed two hits four months on the disThe Braves had won four· and three walks . He threw abled list in 2006 after
straight and 12 of 16, but just seven strikes in 21 undergoing groin surgery.
Atlanta starter Kyle Davies pitches.
The last Braves starter to
(4-8) failed to record an out
Team spokesman Brad leave a· game without a disand (aced just five batters. Hainje said .no call came closed injury and . not get-

ting an out was Len Barke'
in 1985.
.:
Andruw Jones cut tlie
Reds ' lead til 6-2 with 7;1
two-run single in the thif~
and a fielder 's choice RBt
in the seventh. ·
:::
Edwin Encarnacion hid
an RBI single in the fouril:J
to make it 7-2. In the fifth_,
Ryan Freel scored frorri
third on shortstop Edgar
Renteria's throwing error
to catcher Brian McCann,
and Dunn's RBI single th$
gave the Reds a 9-2 lead. ·.:
Livingston
walke~
Chipper Jones to load the
bases in the fifth, but lie
escaped the jam by strikirQ!
out Andruw Jones and Jeff
Francoeur and getting
pinch-hitter Matt Diaz tq
pop up.
.
The Braves stranded Jj
runners through eigbt
innings, and Francoeqi'
showed his frustration in
the fifth by arguing a calleq
third strike that earned hill).
an ejection from hom~plate
umpire
Angt;l ·
Hernandez.
•
Noles: Now in his eighth
year with Cincinnat4,
Griffey began the seas~
tied with Reggie Jackson
for I Oth place with 56:J
homers. Griffey played hi s
first II years for Seattle;
hitting 398 homers and
winning the 1997 AL MVP.
... Play was stopped for H
minutes in the fifth because
a few lights above the field
burned out. ... Atlanta used
four
pitchers
after
Villarreal. The Reds used
four after Livingston.

Teams stiU·being
accepted for allstar tournament
MIDDLEPORT - Teams
are still being accepted for a
Little League all-star tournament, for 11-12 year
boys, which will be held
July 21 and 22.
For more information call
580-0438; 416-9527; or
416-5301.

Ford named
new head coach
at Muskingum
NEW CONCORD, Ohio
(AP) - Gene Ford, a hall
of fame high school basketball coach, has been
named head coach at
Muskingum College, the
school said Monday.
AP photo
Ford, 54, replaces his
son , Geno Ford, who Cleveland Iodians' Victor Martinez reacts after hitting a sacaccepted ~job as an assis- rifice fly with bases loaded against Chicago White Sox pitchtant coach at Kent State er Boone Logan in the eighth inning of a baseball game,
University.
Monday in Cleveland. the White Sox won 11-10.
Gene Ford, who coached
for 25 years at a
Cambridge High School,
compiling a 400- 183
record and leading teams
to five state tournament
appearances , spent the
past two years as an assissave in 29 tries.
BY TOM WITHERS
tant at Muskingum under
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jenks got some help from
his son .
Konerko, whp made a diving .
He was inducted into the
CLEVELAND Paul stop in the hole at ftrst to take
Ohio
High
Schpol Konerko hit a three-run a leadoff single away from
Basketball
Coaches homer, highlightin~ Chicago's Ryan Garko. Pinch-hitter Trot
Association Hall of Fame nine-run sixth inrung, but the Nixon struck out, but
White Sox bare Iy held off Gutierrez _.singled for hi s
this spring .
Cleveland
for an 11-10 win fourth hiiAO keep Cleveland's
Muskingum
finished
(12-13, 6-12 Ohio Athletic over the Indians on Monday rally al(iie and stole second.
Josh Bartield then fouled
night.
Conference) last season.
out
behind home plate, allowKonerko' s 19th homer, off
ing
the
White Sox to avoid an
reliever Fernando Cabrera,
embarrassing
collapse.
was one of five extra-base hits
Konerko
was
robbed of at
in the sixth - Chicago's highCoNTACT US
least
a
double
and
maybe two
est-scoring inning of 2007 more
RB
Is
in
the
seventh by
OVP ScoreLine (5 p .m.-1 Lm.J that helped the disappointing Grady Sizemore, who
scaled
White Sox take out some frus1-740·446-2342 ext. 33
the
wall
in
left
-center
and
tration and open an 11-2 lead.
snagged
the
drive,
which
TV
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
But the Indians, as they've
replays
showed
ricocheted
off
done all season, roared back.
E-mail - sportSOmydailysentinel .com
the
Plexiglas
into
his
glove.
Cleveland got a three-run
Sport• Staff
Jim Thome had three hits,
homer
from
Franklin
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor Gutierrez in the sixth, and rookie Jerry Owens picked up
1740) 446·2342. ext. 33
then seored five times off four his first three career RBls and ·
bsherman@ mydailytri bune.com
Chicago relievers in the eighth Rob Mackowiak drove in
three - with two hits in the
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
to climb within one.
(740) 446·2342. ext . 23
White Sox closer Bobby sixth - for Chicago, which
lcrum Cmydailyregis1er.com
Jenks, though, finally ended entered the week I0 games
under .500 and 14 games
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer the Indians' bid for their 28th
come-from-behind win by
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
pitching the ninth for his 25th Please see Indians. B:Z
bwal1ers@mydailytribune.com

Indians' rally falls
short against Sox

weather
:

. Tuesday ..'.Partly sunny. A
· slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the upper
· 80s. Southwe st winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
hi n 20 percent.
Thesday night...Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening .. .Then a
chance of showers and thunderstorms after midnight.
Lows in the upper 60s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph
in
the
evening ...Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Wednesday ... Mo stly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Southwest winds 5 to I0
mph. Chance of rain 3D, percent.
Wednesday

Thesday,July 17,200t. .

OffiCI of Economic end
Workforct Development

.

'' Hom.e
·!!: National

!: Bank·

- - -•.-·-

- - - ____ _

\b ~enta
Blac k
_.__
- -- -_.:_:.;;.:-=~--=""---·
· ··---.=~=rc..-

- -----

:,-

�(

Page B:t • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.oom

Tuesday, July 17, 2007
•

· A wicked, wonderful day of weather
BY

DouG FERGUSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

I

' !

•

iI
!~
iI
It
'

I!

I.

. CARNOUSTIE. Scotland
- It was wicked one minute.
wonderful the n_ext.
; The rain and wind were so
~trong Monday morning at
tarnoustie that Tiger Woods
and Rod Pam piing didn't
e¥en bother with umbrellas,
and Woods took off his glove
when he lost feeling in his
fing finger. By the afternoon,
Henrik Stenson sat on the
~tde of the practice range trying to decide which sunglasses to wear.
~ "It can tum in a hurry,"
~had Campbell said. "We
~aw it today."
·:sweaters gave way to short
sl'eeves.
. Coffee sales slowed as fans
queued up at the ice cream
Sland.
:The weather is often the
'*st defense in links golf, and
ifs what makes the British
{&gt;pen so unique. Along with
being brutal, it can change
without notice, and sometifnes having the good end of
tiie draw can maner as much
aS raw talent.
: But it has been. on someWhat of a holiday since
AP photo
Woods • bid for the calendar U.S. Golfer Tiger Woods hits a iron into the 13th green at Carnoustie golf course, Scotlahd,
Grand Slam in 2002 ended in Monday. Woods was out practicing at Carnoustle golf course which Is hosting the 2001
a· blast of arctic wind and British Open Golf Championship starting Thunsday.
·
stinging rain at Muirfield that yard hole.
Williams said. "It could be and stopped in his tracks
sent him to an 81, still his
No telling how Mother worse tomoiTOw."
,. when he arrived at the green
highest score as a profession- Nature will behave when the
No one bothered practicing and found his ball a fuw yards
al.
British
Open
begins putts or chips" around the from the green.
~ Sure • there. has been the · Thursday or the rest of the greens because·the green was "I didn't get there," Woods
.occas10nal ram and a wee week. · '
too soft, and some of them said incredulously. "With a.4..
breeze, but nothing nasty:
Woods Pampling Howell had puddles on the edges. 11'00.
\
· Charles Howell III dtdn 't
'.
•
•
Even more stunning was
play his first British Open · Brett Qutgley and Robert Woods was duly impressed
until 2003 and has never real- Karlsson were among those when Pampling hit driver off the yardage he had with that
ly experienced a miserable who left nothmg to chance. the deck for his second shot 4-iron - II 2 yards to the
day on the links. Monday was Woods wa~ on ~e'ftrst te~ at (on a par4), and doubled over front, 128 yards to the hole.
At this point it became a.
the first full day of practice ~ a.m.,. his typtcal startmg in laughter when Parngling
for many players, and pre- tune d~nng pracuce rounds at hit a 2-iron to the 176-yard quest, not just to finish the
sented with the opportunity, the Bnush Open.
13th hole that didn't clear a round, but neither wanting to
Howell didn 't want to miss it.
Once he made the tum, he bunker !50 yards in front of yield anything to par. This
·"I didn't play that year at must have wondered why he them.
became an impossibility,
Muirfield and I don't know bothered.
But the joke was on Woods especially since Pampling hit
how it c~mpared," Howell
"One g?od t~in~ about at the 14th, a par 5 at 514 3-wood short of the green on
said. "I just wanted to play it ~oday ~~he ~ playmg m a ram yards known for the the next hole. The day earlier,
and see. And it was really Jacket, swmg coach Hank Spectacle bunkers some 65 it was a 3-wood and a 7-iron.
rough.lt Wi!S very rough."
Haney said. "He hasn't done yards in front of the greens
Memories of Muirficld for
. He played Camoustie on that all year.
.
that players usually can carry Woods?
Sunday and hit a 4-iron to the
The round was qmet and easily..But not on this day.
"Muirfield, by far, was
fourth·fairway and a 7-iron to quick. The harder the wind
Woods hit driver in the fair- worse than this," he said. "Do
the green. One day later, blew, the more the rain blew way and hit 2-iron short of the you realize it was 34 degrees
hands stuffed in his pockets sideways, the more fun they Spectacles, just left in a that day?"
as he practiced alone, Howell seemed to have.
sparse patch of rough. He
This wasn't exactly Aorida
hit a driver and a 3-iron to
"Good thing we're playing swung hard and watched his ·in summer, yet another reason
reach the green at the 412- today,"
caddie
Steve third shot over the bunkers, that Haney found it valuable

,,

'

m:rthune - Sentinel - Re

from PageBl

for his star pupil to face the
elements. Woods was grinding like it was the tournament
and he celebrated as if he had
won when his driver - yes ,
driver - barely reached the
green on the par-3 16th, traveling some 225 yards.
'.'That's what I'm tal~g
about, baby," he said.
Alas, his hopes of finishing
with pars were finished on the
18th, a 499-yard hole playing
into the full strength of the
wind. Woods tried to find a
way, hitting 2-iron to th~
adjacent 17th fairway, then
another 2-iron to clear the
Barry Bum. It went a tad too
far and disappeared into the
rough.
"He ain't making par from
there," Pampling said .
They were long gone when
the rain stopped and fog
rolled in, perhaps napping
when the sun burst out from
behind the clouds and the
British Open looked as it has
the last four years.
Phil Mickelson, a runnerup at Loch Lpmond on
Sunday, arrived late in afternoon wearing shorts and flipflop~. Campbell, who heard
the rain pelting his window
when he first woke up, headed out for a practice round
with the sun casting shadows
all around him.
Could any good have come
out of a three-hour struggle
against Mother Nature?
"You never know what you
might get around here,"
WOods said.
Peter Thomson would tend
to agree with that. The fivetime British Open champion
is the last player to win the
claret jug three straight times,
and he believes Woods can do
more than join him.
"He has a chance to win
eight in a row," Thomson
said.
"I'm serious about that,"
Thomson said. "I think
there's nobody that can beat
Tiger when he's playing his
best. Now, die only thing he's
got against him this year is
the weather, just like the
weather gets him at Muirfield
in 2002. The weather is very
unsettling."
Woods might now be a little more prepared this time.

behind in the AL Central.
The White So" improved to
2-3 on a crucial 11 -game road
trip that general manager
Kenny
Williams
has
promised to use as a barometer to decide whether or not to
break up his roster with
trades. &lt;
Tied 2-2 in the sixth, the
White .Sox sent 14 batters to
the plate and got nine hits,
their most in an inning since
getting 12 on June 20, 2006,
against St. Louis.
Rookie John Danks (6-6)
held Cleveland to five runs in
5 2-3 innings, making him 30 in his last six starts. The leftbander was ,pulled after giving up Gutierrez's homer.
Victor Martinez hlt a tworun homer for the Indians,
who fell one game behind idle
Detroit in the AL Central.
. AJ . Pierzynski opened
Chici!go 's S!Jfl!l: sixth with a
double off Oiff Lee (5-6) and
scored . on Mackowiak's
infield single. Oue out later,
Lee intentionally walked Juan
Uribe to face Oweris. The
light-hitting center fielder
grounded a two-run single. ,
l.ee was replaced by
Cabrera, who couldn't stop
the White Sox either. Uribe
scored on a sac fly .and
Thome doubled before
Konerko homered.
It was Chicago's major
league-leading 22nd homer in
July, one more than the White
Sox hit in all of June.
Pierzynski, Jermame Dye
aod Mackowiak all got··their
second hits of the inning
before Jensen Lewis made his
major league debut and fmally ended the outburst.
Down ll-5 in the eighth,
the Iodians loaded the oases
on three consecutive singles
before Barfield's groundout
brought in one. Boone Lo!lan
then replaced Ryan Bukvtch,
who walked Sizemore.
Casey Blake hit a grounder
that handcuffed'Uribe at short
for an error, allowing Jason
Michaels to score and keeping the bases loaded for
Martinez, whose sac fly made
it ll-8 .
After both runners moved
up on a wild pitch, Travis
Hafner nked a two-run single to nght to pull Cleveland
within a run. Rookie Dew on
Day got Jhonny Peralta tb
ground out on the ftrst pitch to
end the Indians' comeback.

,.

SHOP THE
CLASSIFIEDS.!
Help Wanted

®

Help Wanted

He,1p Wanted

Nurse Assistants

Pleasant Valley Hospital is
accepting applications for pursuing

asSistants to provide home care to

clients residing in Meigs, Mason , Gallia and
Athens Counties. Applicants should have one

year experience or received a nursing assistant
certificate of training or be state tested nursing
assistant.
·
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOnCE: Ia hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, July 21,
2007 11 10:00 a.m., a
public oale will be

held II 211 W. Second

St., ~y. Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Ia atlllng
lor caall In hand

or

:..THE

.FOR YOU!!

aale, and to wtthdraw

• E&lt;eellent Pay
• Mileage Reimbursement
• Flexible Scheduling

the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmera Bank
and
Savings

Company

Applications will be accepted 9:00a.m. lo
3:00)J.m . M-F a! lOll Viand St.,

reserves

tho right to reject any
or all bids submitted.

Pt. Pleasant, WV or appointments can be
scheduled 'at anotha' location by calling

The above described

304-6 75-7404 or 1-866-992-6916. Applicants

collateral will be sold

"11 la·whera Is", with

mny also contact this number for questions.

no

ANEOE

expressed

or

certllltd check the lo~

Implied

lowing coll..,.l:
2000 Chevrolet Impala

given.

2G1WF55KOY9376482

tion, or for an appoint-

The Farmers Bank
and
Savlnga
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reoerv11 the
right to bid at thla

ment to Inspect collateral, prior to sale date
contact Cyndle, Ken
or Randy at 992-2136.
(7) 17, 18, 19

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED: Part-time position
available to assist an individual
with mental retardation in Shade.
3-12pm MfTuNJ. Must have high
school diploma or GED, valid
driver's license, three years good
driving experience and adequate
automobile Insurance. $7.50/hr.
Send. resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604 Jackson, OH 45640
or e-maillo
beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 7/20/07.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

-----'• ------------------ -----

Help Wanted'

Help Wanted

NOW ACCEPI'ING RESUMES

Newspaper Reporter

·

RESJ'IRATORY THERAPIST
Pleasant Valley Medical Equipment is
currently accepting resumes for a full
time, dayshift Respiratory Therapist. Must
be a graduate of an approved. Respiratory
Therapist program. Must be licensed or
eligible for licensing in the states of West
Virginia &amp; Ohio.
Send resumes to:
PleiiSIInt Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550 ·
Or fax: 304-675·6975
Or apply online at:
www.pvalley.llfl

The Point Pleasant Register is seeking an
energetic and enterprising reponer to cover our
community. The successful candidate will be
active in reporting on local trends , happenings
and features , as well as supporting the rest of
the editorial team.
Reporters for the Point Pleasant Register

of

have a strong working knowledge
AP style,
can handle a camera and have a clean, clear
writing style. Previous newspaper experience
is preferred, but will cons ider a recent
journalism graduate . We ' re seeking writers
who understand community journalism and

thrive in a team·based environment.
If prodU&lt;:ing top-quality copy and working in
an energized newsroom packed with talent
appeals to you, please respond.
Email cover letter, resume , your best three·
clips and salary requirements to:
pcaldwell@mydallyregliter.com
You can also mail your infonnation to:
Pam Caldwell, General Manager
Point Pleasant Register
200 Main Street

Announcements

20 minutes from Memphis &amp; Graceland

September 5-7, 2007
$295/person
Based on double occupancy
Includes flight, hotel accommodations, luggage &amp; transfers

OH
Websites:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
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r----~p;;;;;,;;·~~V~
LIN
To Place
m:rthune
Sentinel
l\egt~ter
ca~f;~::; (74o&gt; 446-2342 (74o&gt; 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

...

.,..,.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:O:.:.r.;,F;,;,;,ax To

446-3008

CROSS POINTE
APTS

Must be 21 years of age
credit cards, checks, money
orders and payroll deduction
accepted. No refunds
LIMITED SEATS!

To make reservations please
call PVH Community Relations,
(304) 675-4340, ext 1326

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

AN~

r

r
I·

Golf Scramble

Acce~tini A~~!jcatjons

Holzer Center for
Cancer Care
Relay For Life

1 Bedroom apartments, Eligibility
based on income,
62 years of age or older,
handlcppedldisabled,
Regardless of age.
Handicapped accessible
This lnstllution Is ·an equal
opportunity provider, and employer.
On-Site manager &amp; maintenance.
Please call740-992-3055
TDD #800-855-2880

Held at Pine Hills Golf Course

Pomeroy, OH

July 28th
To sign-up call
(740) 992-6312
Ask f0r Mike

~~~~c!a~sh prize

•

Bualneaa Daya Prior To

In Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Publlc•tlon
Sunday Dl•play; 1:00

•

Thursday for Sundaya

• All ads must be prepaid'

~ou:D I

POUCIES: Ohio V.llev Publ!.hlng ruervn the right to tdlt, rtjeet, or Clnott 1ny lei at any Um.. Errors must be reporttd on the first dey o1
Trlbune-Stntinei-Regiltlr wll be rnpanltble tor na rriOI'e thin the cost ol the lpect ocwplecl by the error and only the tlrlt lnHrtlon. We
not be
any lOu or sxpen.. that mulls lrom tiM pubtlcrion or ornlulon of sn Mvwtlttment. CorrectiOn will be miCie In the tnt evllllblt edition. · BoX ·:~':;:,:::1
~ alway• conftdentllll. • Cwrent rate c.I'CI •ppllll. ·All rul "1111 ldVertleements . . subject to the Fedefel F.. r Houllng Act of 11161. ·This ,
I
sWNWdl. W• wtll not knowlngty accept snw advertlelng In vlolallan ot the lsw.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

r

my

GIVEAWAY

1

2 6wk old Female kittens.
Black with some orange:
441-0405

r

be based on qualifications
and ·
experience.
Applications must be able to
provide their own transportation. Submit letter of
int.erest to John D. Costanzo,
Superintendent , Athens·
Meigs Educational Service
507
Richland
Center,
AIIEinue, Suitelt1 08, Athens,
OH 45701 .
Application
Deadline: July 23, 2007.
The AMESC is an Equal
Opportunity
Employer/Provider.

YARDSALE

r.._...........

0

YARDSAU:·
GAILlPOUS

"'..

_.~

r ==

4 male pups. 1/2 Border Garage
Sale
1314
Collie 1!2. Blue Healer. 8 Neighborhood Rd. Tues
weeks old, wormed. 740· 7/ 17-Fri 7120 9·5.
2-5-6·_64_64________

1

Black Lab mht. Female. - spayed, loves the water. Call 1996 F·250 one ton pick-up,
740-388-3069
V·8, 4 sp.. runs good, tow
paokage, to be auctioned off
Pomeroy
Police
FREE 10 a good home by
Department,
July
21st,
at
Boarder (::ollie Mix, Female
2 years old, very good watch noon, can be seen at
Pomeroy
Police
dog,house broken.
Department, minimum bid
$650
LosT

r

AND
FoUND

1 - 17

~

® 2007 by NEA, Inc.

www.comics.com

New Middleport Flea Market

itO

every Sat. &amp; Sun, between - - ; : : - - - - - - - ,
Found at French 500 Fl ea Dollar Store &amp; Park. 740 .
Laborer. Earn as You t.eam .
Market: Lady's Watch. Call 645•7889
HEJ..p WANTED
Start building tor future now
1
to idenlify. 446-2763
~:::-..;.;.~':""'----,
• by joining our Professional
WANI'ED
Team and learn the skills to
TCi BUY
become a High Pressure
FOUND
at
Krodel
Cleaning
Maintenance
Campground on 713 female ....,
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
•1!1...._...,_.. · Technician. AU positions
dog, brown/blonDe red long Silver and 'Gold Coins,
require weekly TRAVEL out·
hair coat, no tail come to
side of AREA. Comparry
ProofSets,
Gold
Rings
,
PreCome
lind
out
why
campsite 56
provides lodning, transU.S.
Currency,
v1935
our
portation, and Per Diem.
Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
employees are
AVERAGE Starting wana
Found: Weedeater
on Coin Shop. 151 Second
u~
satisfied.
wl!h cost of benefits lncludEastern Ave on Friday July Avenue , Gallipolis, 740·446ed is $205.00 per field day
13. Call to identify. 740-367· 2842
worked , with a chance to
WE OFFER:
advance up to $283.00 per
King Stove burns coal and
$300 Hiring Bonus
~. used Kennel and Dog
field day worked . We pro•
Up
lo $8.50/hour
house 304-675-4243
vide paid training and
tProlessional, paid !raining
EXCELLENT
BENEFITS.
4x4's For Sale ................ .................... .......... 725
I \1 1'1 ( 1\ \ II '\ I
t Weukfy pay and banusas
Pre-Employment
DRUG
Announcement ••-..•....................................... 030
'
-.II&lt;\It I "
t Full Benefits
Anttques .........:............................................. 530
TEST and a valid Drivers
t Great Wo111 Environment
Apartment a lor Rent ................................... 440
License Is a plus, but not
Auction and Flea Market............................. OBO
requ ired. WE WILL BE TAK·
Full and Par! time
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
lNG APPLICATIONS ANO
Positions
INTERVIEWING ON JULY
Auto Repalr ................................................ .. 770
Day and Evening Shihs
23 AT THE BEST WESTAutos tor Sale .............................................. 71
Available
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ..........._................. 750
ERN INN, 701 W. MAIN ST.,
RIPLEY W.Va . FROM 9:00
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Call today to schedule an A.M. TILL 5:00 P.M. Please
Bustne.. and Bulldlngo ............................. 340
interview.
Buslneaa Opportunlty ................................. 210
Bring two 1ypes of idenliflca·
1-888-IMC-PAYU
lilt.
Business Training ....................................... 140
tlon with you. Send work
2321
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
history and day time phone
Cemplng F.qillpment ................................... 780
number lo TECHICIAN
Cards ol Thanks ........................................ .. 010
TRAINEE. P.O. BOX 565.
Cosmotologisi/Barber. Hair
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
MARIETIA, OHIO 45750
Stylist wanted for booth
Electrlcal1Refrlgeratlon ...... ... ...................... 840
rental at Michael &amp; Friends. EOE
Equipment for Rent ........_..................-........ .480

rL,------,.1

1111:1-~~

--------------- +

379·9145 or 446-0698

·-~- ·

Harbor Tugboat Pilot wanted
ror shihing loaded and
amply barges within fermi·
nal. Must have current towing license. For more lnfor·
mation
contact . Rudy
Pennock, 740-423-9803
Hardware clerk with experi·
ence in plumbing and alec·
trical. Send resumes to CLA
102 CIO Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, PO Bo)( 469,
Gallipolis OH 45631
An Excellent way to earn - - - - - - - - - - - money. The New Avon .
lnttruclor
Needed
Call Marilyn 304 _88 2.2645
Gallipolis Career College is
see king a full-lime instructor
'AVON! All Areas! To Buy or for its Office Adminis,rative
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· programs The qualified
applicanl must have experi·
675-1429.
100 WORKERS NEEOEO
Assembl e crafts. wood
items.To $480/wk Materials
provided. Free information
pkg 24Hr. 801-428-4649

GOOD PAY ING CAREER ence In a multitude of offiCe
OPPOR TUN ITY- Local Oil administrative applications.
A m1nimum of a Bachelors
and Gas Company looking De gree is required . Send
lo fill positioo of Land man or re sumes to jdanicki@gal·
Land Agenl in SE OH and
Western EV. Ideal candidate lipoli scareercol lege.com, or
is a self starter with basic mail to 1176 Jackson Pike,
Suite 312. Gallipolis, OH
computer knowledge. strong 4563 1.
commun1cation and negotia·
t1on skills who is willing to
IRS JOBS
$18.46·$32.60/hr .. now hir·
.
'd
ing. Paid Training IS prov• .
ad. For application and tree
government job info , call
Amencan As soc. of Labor 1·
913·599-8244 . 241hrs. emp.
finding out more about this serv
rewarding career, please
contact Dan Stevenson @
740•446. 6800 or fa;.: resume Mas on County EMS is
to 740 .446 _
accepting applications for
6802
Medics and EMT's lor more
Harris Steak house Now mformatJon ca/1675-6134
Hmng. (304)675-9726

-- · -·--·· .....-- -·--·-· ~

·

Courtside Bar &amp; Grill naw
..
.
.
h1rmg expenenc.ed wa1t staff
!servers. ~pply 1n person or
call to sch.edule an interview.
740·441·9371

trave l wit hin Ihe region
Knowledge of !egal descrip·
lion , prior sales experience.
ramilianly with the region
and local cou rtho use are a
plus. If you are interested in

.:. I_

l

/-...,..~..,..._._-._.--:--.._...:k:it::_::ncarlylef)comcast.net

LOST DOG: Small Greg &amp;
White Female Dog, Lost
As of July 9th, I Vaughn L. near 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, Sun
French will not be responsi· 6/24. Answers to Katie,
ble for any other debts otner ~ward Offered. (614}271·
than
own.
5888

Homes lor Sale .......................................... .. 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
In Men1orlam ......-... -..................................... 020
tnsurance ......................... ............................ 130
lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ................ ........ 660
Llvastock ...................................................... 630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
lots &amp; Acreage ........................ .............. . , .. .. 350
Mlscellaneous ..............................................170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr .................... ................ 880
Mobile Homes lor Rent ........ .. .................... . 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ............ ... ............ ..... 320
Money to Loan ......................,, ...... ............. .. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers.......................... 7.40
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals ......................................., .......... ... . DDS
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heattng .................................... B20
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp;CBRapalr .............. ................ . 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schools lnsiructlon ................................... ,. 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Space tor Rent ..................... ... .............. .. ..... 460
Sporting Goods .................. ......................... 520
SUV 'slor Sale .............................................. 720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale ............ ................... .............. .. 730
Wanted to Buy ........................ ..................... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppiles .................. 620
Wanted To Do .................. ....... ................ ..... 180
Wanted to Rent ... _................. ..... .................. 470
Yard Sate- Galllpolla .................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middlti .................... .. ... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

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Monday-Friday for ln. .rtlon

• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
·
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

Ohio Volley
Publishing rosarves
the right to edit,
refect: or cancel any
ad at any
I&gt;Errron
Must
on the

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and Qraphics
~
added to your classified ads
Borders$3.00/perad
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Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

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675-5234

Oea.clliirM

For Sunday• Paper

oso

Stories at the River's Edge
10:30 a.m . - Middleport
Dave Diles Park
1:30 p.m. - Mason
Lottie Jenk's Memorial

1100 Powell St.
Middleport, OH

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Dally ln-C:olumn: 1:00 p . m.

Home lmprovements ...................................810 ·

Announcements

.,

Wprd Ads

Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 6t0
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
Farms for Sale ......... -...... ... ..... ..................... 330
For Lease .......... _...... -...... ... .......................... 490
For Sale ...................................................... .. 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... SBO
Fumlshed Rooma ........................................ 450
General Hauttng ......... .................................. 850
Glveaway ...................................................... D40
Happy Ads ....................................................
Hay &amp; Graln .. ,., .......... ................................... 640
Help Wanted ........ ......................................... 110

jet leaves from Chaneston, WV

Polnt Pleasant, WV 25550

,,

Galli a
County

o

Tunica, Mississippi
THE GRAND CASINO

AA/EOE

warranty

For further Informa-

®

CLASSIFIED

~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------,
CLASSIFIED INDEX

' r====~~~::::::;j
Help wanted

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Indians

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
I

Tuesday, July 17,2007

Retail Managerial Personnel
position available. Send
resumes to CLA Box 101.
cJo Galli!X)IIs Tribune, PO
Box 469, Gallipolis, OH
45631 Must have vaKd driv·
ers license. auto insurance
and drug test required.
ScanIc Hills NUI'Sing
· CenIer
·
·
11 tl
for
ts accepttng app ca ons
STNA f
·
's or evemngs and
'd · hts If · 1
t d
m11 mg ·
1 1n ares e ,
P ease
con act
•ana
Harless at 740-446-7150.
=E.::O.::E___________

o·

A·OK·Corrals &amp; Barns
Metal Roofing, Shingles.
Concrete,
Remodeling,
Decks,
Pole
Barns,
Garages. Free estimates Call
304·633·1230
-------------George's Portable Sawmill,
don1 haul your Logs .to the
Mill just call 304-675·1 957.

Attention!
Local company offering "NN·
DOWN PAYMENr programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting . •
' 100% financing
• Less lhan perfect credit
accepted
' Payment could be the.
same as rent.
'
Lo cators.'
Mortgage
Lawn mowing. Rates by the
(7401367-0000
job, not .the hour, Free
Estimates. Call Paul @
Beautiful
3,100+SOFT.5
{304)675·2940.
I / 2Balhraom
Bedroomr3
Lawn-Care Service, Mowing house, 2 kitchens, 2 living
&amp; Trimming. Call (740)441 · rooms, 2. car garage wifh
workshop, oak trim ,. doors,
1333 or {740)645·0546
and
hardwood
floors
Mature female wil! babysit in throughout upstairs, 1/2 mile
my
smoke·lree
home. from rt33 and Meigs high·
Flexible hours. Daily or schoo l/junior
high. 2.5'
weekly rates . References acres+ $145,000 Firm . Call,
416·4765.
availabte. 304·674·3251

The
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center
has a position opening as
Elementary ED Educational
Aide-Athens County tor the
2007-2008 School Year.
This is a 9 month position
with Board approved bene·
fits. Applications must be
wiNing to be fingerprinted for
a criminal background
check, hold a valid educa·
lional aide license, passed

Michele's Daycare now
accepting ages 18 months
to 13 vrs., Hours Mo~Wed­
Fri., 6am-6pm Tues. &amp; Thurs.
6am
to
5pm,
Rutland/Harrisonville area

theParaprofessionaiTestfor
Educational Aides or have
the proper degraefcourse
work need&amp;d to meal State

call (740)698-0214 ask for
Michele
--------------Wanted · cleaning .jobs, will
clean houses &amp; offices &amp; will

re~uirements. Salary will be

based on qualifications and also mow small yards &amp; sit

experience. Submit letter of
interest to John D. Costanzo,
Superintendent.
AthensMeigs Educational Service
Cenler,
507
Richland
All8nue, Suite 11108, Athens,
OH 45701
Application
Deadllna: July 23. 2007.
The- AMESC is an Equal
Opportunity

with elderly at night, in
Rutland,
Pomeroy.
Middleport &amp; Chaster Ohio
&amp; in Ravenswood &amp; Mason
WV, call {740)949·2515
please leave message
II \ \ \! I \ I

r0

;,e;p::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
8~

OPPoRn..JNrry

;:::::::::~

Employer/Provider.

Security Officers needed in
New Haven, WV $7,66 per
hour, aM shifts, F.T &amp; P.T.
Must have clean record,
pass a drug screen and
background check. Ca ll 180&lt;J.27S-8359. M·F 8:30 lo
5:00 EOE MIF/DN

oNOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSH·
lNG co. recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and
NOT 10 send money

Beaulifui·Middleport hOmel
3BA, 2BA, full basement 1
112 car garage with a room
above. Many NEW features!!
Must see this one! 740·416·1548
.

-Gl

;===:;:==::::;
-

All real &amp;ltd Mlvertlal~
In this MWilpllper Ia .
aubjeclto the Federet
Fair Houllng Act of 1968
which maktalt Illegal to
• advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dltc::rlm'lneUon beMd on
race, color, religion, sex
flmlllal atatul or national
origin, or •nw Intention tomake any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination. "

The
Alhens·Meigs
This newspaper will not
Educational Service Center
knowingly accept
has a position opening for
adwartiHmenta tor real
an ED Teacher In Meigs
estate which Ia In
County tOr the 2007 ·2008 through the mail until you
violation of the taw. Our
School
Year,
Applicants
have
investigated
the
:::.:.::...::=~::.::::,.:____
readel'l IN hereby
Security Officers needed In must be cerlifiedllicensed as offering.
Informed that •II
New Hmn, WV. $7.66 per an lnter11ention Specialist or
dwellings achtertiled In ·
be
eligible
to
get
a
1!!1
hour, all shifts, F. T.&amp;P.T.
this newspaper Ire ·
MONEY
Must have clean record , Supplemental license. This
available on In equal :
opportunity bltel. ·
pass a drUg screen and position Is a 9·monlh eonlract with Board approved .,
ba_pk!J'Ound c:hecX. Call 1800-275-8359, M·F, 8:30 10 benefits. Salary will be . - - - - - - - - . for sale by owner, 5 rOO!T) (
based on e)(perience and
~5:.::00:.c·.::E.::O.::E.:::MIF::.::ID:.cN,:____
balh, new carpet, fireplace,
certification according to
basement,
dishwasher;
Super 8 Motel accepting salary schedule. Submit letapplications 'for part time ter of interest to John 0. Borrow Smart . Contact stove, freezer, new fronl
the Ohio Division of porch wllh railing with
employment. Person must Costanzo, Superintendent,
Financial
Institution's French doors, back patio,
be able to work llexible Athens-Meigs Educational
ONice of
Consumer concrete ingmund pool ~
hours and will be working in Service Center, 320 1/2
Affairs BEFORE you reli· 15~30, new filter. new pump.•
~ed respons~le person for different departments of the E;ast Ma1n Street , Pomeroy,
nance your home or
chlldcare.5/vanous
days motel. Clean driving record
Application obtain a loan. BEWARE small . porch on back witr"C
week, will include some Sal and criminal records a fTl.lst . OH 45701
Deadline: July 23, 2007, of requests for any large sliding doors. new cent ra~
nd S
_
645 1304
heal &amp; cooljng. road'
Apply in person. NO PHONE 3:30p.m. The AMESC is an
a
un.
advance payments of
CALLS.
Equal
Opportunity. fees or insurance . Call the lrontage 1.28 &amp; ac., carporl,
lree gas, 3 gas wells ,
Employer/Provider.
Office of Consumer (740}992·5616, 112. mile olt
OTR Drivers needed. Mus! TEACHING POSITIONS.
AMairs toll free at 1·866· Kingsbury, $120,000
be at laas1 24 yrs old and The Meigs County Board of
•
Retardation
&amp; --------------- 278-0003 to learn if the
have 3 yrs experience. Apply Mental
broker or
in person at 2204 Jackson Developmental Disabilities Wanted : Positions available mortgage
is
properly
has the following positions to assist individuals with lender
Pike.
available:
Multiple mental retardation at two licensed. (This is a public
se rvice announcement
Disabilities Teacher. Musl group homes in Bidw311:
-------------have current 11alid Ohio 1) 35hrs: 2·10p MfTu/Wffh
trom lhe Ohio Valley
POST OFFICE NOW
Publishing Companyj
Department of Education 2) 35hrs: 3:30· 11 p Wffh
HIRING
certification/licensure and
Avg . Pay, $20/hr or
2-11 p Fri. 10a·9p Sat
have or be el igible to oblain 3) 35hrs: 11p·8:30a Th ,
S57K annually
For Sa le by Owner· Green&gt;
l'ltornlSIONAL
lnduding Fede ral BAneflts lntervenlion Specialist vati·
Twp. Brick Ranch, 3BA, 1 s:
11p-9a Fri/Sal , 7p-9a Su
StxVJC~
dation In the · area of 4) 27.5hrs : 4-10:30p Fri. 98·
and OT,Paid Train[ng,
Bath , Newer heat pump
Moderataflntensive educe·
Vacalions·FTIPT
7p Sat, 9a-6p Sun
driveway and other. Asking
tiona! needs
Early MuSI have high school diplo·
TURNED DOWN ON
1-866·542· t 53 t
$110.00. (7401441 ·0611
Childhood
Special ma/GED. valid
drivers SOCtAt SECURITY fSSI?
USWA
Education Teacher. Mus! license and three years
No Fee Unless We Win!
For sa le/land conlract . 3 BR
current
Ohio good driving experience.
1-888·582·3345
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - have ,
hou se in Gallipolis, WlfJ.
R&amp;J Trucking Leading The Department ot Education $7 .50/hr. Pre-employment
conneclion $1500 dowr.
Way R&amp;J Trucki ng now certification/licensure and Drug Testing. Send resume ~;;;;:;;;;;;:::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ $400/mo or renl $475/mo:
Hiring at our New Ha11en, have Or be eligible to eblain to: Buckeye Community
0
Ho~
Also I BR in Gallipolis $750.
WV Terminal. For Regional Early Childhood Intervention Services, PO Bo)( 604,
JoOR SALE
down $200/mo or ren r
Hauls-Dump Div
1 year Specialist 118iidation. Sand Ja~son, OH 45640 or email
$250/mo.Call Wayne 404 -·
OTR ver~iable exp. Call 1· resume and a copy of teach· to : be~ecserv@yahoo.com . 0 Down even with tess than 456·3802 for info
ing license by July 19th to:
800·462 ·9365 ask lor Ken!
Deadline lor applicants: perfect credit is a 11ailable on
Carleton School , 1310 07120/07. Equal Opportunity this
3 bedroom . 1 bath House lor sale in Aacme.
Carleton
Street,
P.O.
Box
- ' - - - - - -- - - - - -Employer.
home Corner lot. fireplace. area. Appro~ . 4 acres. al~
;;,~;;.;;.;...._ _ __ ,
·professionally landscaped.'
RE CEPTIONIST needed lor 30t. Syracuse. OH 45779
50
ScHooLs
modern kitchen . tacu.!'zi lob. Ranch style house with ,(
busy office in Gallia County. The
Athens·Meigs
•·-UCllON
Payment around S550 per
w111 be responsible lor
month. 740 _367 _7129
bedrooms. living room , din-•
Educational Center has a L.w-.i""'iOiir.iiil
answering phones, provid· position openings for sup· ,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - ing room , kitchen. large tam -:
ing customer service, basi c pori staff to work with the Gallipolis Career College 4 BR house. 2.5 baths, 1 ily room . central air. gas heatdata entry arid oth er general
(Careers Close To Home) acre, 1 car garage . gaze~o. and 1 fireplace Add1ti on ol a·
clerical dutieS. Must have a Region 16 State Support Cat! Today! 740-446-4367.
motor , nome
hookup large Flonda roo m com·
Team.
Applications
should
good altitude. be 118ry
1-800·2 14-0452
Morni ng Star Ad 1n Racine pl etety cedar . opens onto
possess e)(cellent orgeniza·
dependable, friendly and tiona! skills, ability to work - .\jlll1ipoiSCIIUl81college cbm Aski ng $135,000. Call 225· palio &amp; pool area. Heale d in
ground pool onclosed by pfltrust-.yorthy. Computer skills well with staff and public, Accrtdiled Memt&gt;e1 Accrediting 264-1055
vacy fenc1ng and land·
required . Resum es must be ability to multi -task, excellent Cooool ~ lndependOnl College$
typed and professional
eno Schools 1274 e
Sbd
2ba
Gallipolis scaped. Finished 2 cat.
math
skills,
computer
Send resume to:
7D M
Foreclosure!
Buy for garage atlached to house'
skills(Microeoft Word , Excel.
l'lL"ELLANF..otJS
$84,9001
5%dn, and finished &amp; healed 3 ca2
Receptionist
etc.). typetkeyboard 45
PO BOX 63
garage
unattached ·
20yra
@8%.
More
homes
wpm , and have experience
Gallipolis, OH 45631
with multHine phone sys· 5 grave plots tor sale in from $199/mol For local EJ~ce ll ent condition ready IO
tams. These position S will Rite 's Cemetery. Addison llatlnga call 800-559-4109 mo11e in $255,000.00, Call·
(740)949·2217
xF254
Pike. Call 367·0f7t

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Page B:t • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.oom

Tuesday, July 17, 2007
•

· A wicked, wonderful day of weather
BY

DouG FERGUSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

I

' !

•

iI
!~
iI
It
'

I!

I.

. CARNOUSTIE. Scotland
- It was wicked one minute.
wonderful the n_ext.
; The rain and wind were so
~trong Monday morning at
tarnoustie that Tiger Woods
and Rod Pam piing didn't
e¥en bother with umbrellas,
and Woods took off his glove
when he lost feeling in his
fing finger. By the afternoon,
Henrik Stenson sat on the
~tde of the practice range trying to decide which sunglasses to wear.
~ "It can tum in a hurry,"
~had Campbell said. "We
~aw it today."
·:sweaters gave way to short
sl'eeves.
. Coffee sales slowed as fans
queued up at the ice cream
Sland.
:The weather is often the
'*st defense in links golf, and
ifs what makes the British
{&gt;pen so unique. Along with
being brutal, it can change
without notice, and sometifnes having the good end of
tiie draw can maner as much
aS raw talent.
: But it has been. on someWhat of a holiday since
AP photo
Woods • bid for the calendar U.S. Golfer Tiger Woods hits a iron into the 13th green at Carnoustie golf course, Scotlahd,
Grand Slam in 2002 ended in Monday. Woods was out practicing at Carnoustle golf course which Is hosting the 2001
a· blast of arctic wind and British Open Golf Championship starting Thunsday.
·
stinging rain at Muirfield that yard hole.
Williams said. "It could be and stopped in his tracks
sent him to an 81, still his
No telling how Mother worse tomoiTOw."
,. when he arrived at the green
highest score as a profession- Nature will behave when the
No one bothered practicing and found his ball a fuw yards
al.
British
Open
begins putts or chips" around the from the green.
~ Sure • there. has been the · Thursday or the rest of the greens because·the green was "I didn't get there," Woods
.occas10nal ram and a wee week. · '
too soft, and some of them said incredulously. "With a.4..
breeze, but nothing nasty:
Woods Pampling Howell had puddles on the edges. 11'00.
\
· Charles Howell III dtdn 't
'.
•
•
Even more stunning was
play his first British Open · Brett Qutgley and Robert Woods was duly impressed
until 2003 and has never real- Karlsson were among those when Pampling hit driver off the yardage he had with that
ly experienced a miserable who left nothmg to chance. the deck for his second shot 4-iron - II 2 yards to the
day on the links. Monday was Woods wa~ on ~e'ftrst te~ at (on a par4), and doubled over front, 128 yards to the hole.
At this point it became a.
the first full day of practice ~ a.m.,. his typtcal startmg in laughter when Parngling
for many players, and pre- tune d~nng pracuce rounds at hit a 2-iron to the 176-yard quest, not just to finish the
sented with the opportunity, the Bnush Open.
13th hole that didn't clear a round, but neither wanting to
Howell didn 't want to miss it.
Once he made the tum, he bunker !50 yards in front of yield anything to par. This
·"I didn't play that year at must have wondered why he them.
became an impossibility,
Muirfield and I don't know bothered.
But the joke was on Woods especially since Pampling hit
how it c~mpared," Howell
"One g?od t~in~ about at the 14th, a par 5 at 514 3-wood short of the green on
said. "I just wanted to play it ~oday ~~he ~ playmg m a ram yards known for the the next hole. The day earlier,
and see. And it was really Jacket, swmg coach Hank Spectacle bunkers some 65 it was a 3-wood and a 7-iron.
rough.lt Wi!S very rough."
Haney said. "He hasn't done yards in front of the greens
Memories of Muirficld for
. He played Camoustie on that all year.
.
that players usually can carry Woods?
Sunday and hit a 4-iron to the
The round was qmet and easily..But not on this day.
"Muirfield, by far, was
fourth·fairway and a 7-iron to quick. The harder the wind
Woods hit driver in the fair- worse than this," he said. "Do
the green. One day later, blew, the more the rain blew way and hit 2-iron short of the you realize it was 34 degrees
hands stuffed in his pockets sideways, the more fun they Spectacles, just left in a that day?"
as he practiced alone, Howell seemed to have.
sparse patch of rough. He
This wasn't exactly Aorida
hit a driver and a 3-iron to
"Good thing we're playing swung hard and watched his ·in summer, yet another reason
reach the green at the 412- today,"
caddie
Steve third shot over the bunkers, that Haney found it valuable

,,

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m:rthune - Sentinel - Re

from PageBl

for his star pupil to face the
elements. Woods was grinding like it was the tournament
and he celebrated as if he had
won when his driver - yes ,
driver - barely reached the
green on the par-3 16th, traveling some 225 yards.
'.'That's what I'm tal~g
about, baby," he said.
Alas, his hopes of finishing
with pars were finished on the
18th, a 499-yard hole playing
into the full strength of the
wind. Woods tried to find a
way, hitting 2-iron to th~
adjacent 17th fairway, then
another 2-iron to clear the
Barry Bum. It went a tad too
far and disappeared into the
rough.
"He ain't making par from
there," Pampling said .
They were long gone when
the rain stopped and fog
rolled in, perhaps napping
when the sun burst out from
behind the clouds and the
British Open looked as it has
the last four years.
Phil Mickelson, a runnerup at Loch Lpmond on
Sunday, arrived late in afternoon wearing shorts and flipflop~. Campbell, who heard
the rain pelting his window
when he first woke up, headed out for a practice round
with the sun casting shadows
all around him.
Could any good have come
out of a three-hour struggle
against Mother Nature?
"You never know what you
might get around here,"
WOods said.
Peter Thomson would tend
to agree with that. The fivetime British Open champion
is the last player to win the
claret jug three straight times,
and he believes Woods can do
more than join him.
"He has a chance to win
eight in a row," Thomson
said.
"I'm serious about that,"
Thomson said. "I think
there's nobody that can beat
Tiger when he's playing his
best. Now, die only thing he's
got against him this year is
the weather, just like the
weather gets him at Muirfield
in 2002. The weather is very
unsettling."
Woods might now be a little more prepared this time.

behind in the AL Central.
The White So" improved to
2-3 on a crucial 11 -game road
trip that general manager
Kenny
Williams
has
promised to use as a barometer to decide whether or not to
break up his roster with
trades. &lt;
Tied 2-2 in the sixth, the
White .Sox sent 14 batters to
the plate and got nine hits,
their most in an inning since
getting 12 on June 20, 2006,
against St. Louis.
Rookie John Danks (6-6)
held Cleveland to five runs in
5 2-3 innings, making him 30 in his last six starts. The leftbander was ,pulled after giving up Gutierrez's homer.
Victor Martinez hlt a tworun homer for the Indians,
who fell one game behind idle
Detroit in the AL Central.
. AJ . Pierzynski opened
Chici!go 's S!Jfl!l: sixth with a
double off Oiff Lee (5-6) and
scored . on Mackowiak's
infield single. Oue out later,
Lee intentionally walked Juan
Uribe to face Oweris. The
light-hitting center fielder
grounded a two-run single. ,
l.ee was replaced by
Cabrera, who couldn't stop
the White Sox either. Uribe
scored on a sac fly .and
Thome doubled before
Konerko homered.
It was Chicago's major
league-leading 22nd homer in
July, one more than the White
Sox hit in all of June.
Pierzynski, Jermame Dye
aod Mackowiak all got··their
second hits of the inning
before Jensen Lewis made his
major league debut and fmally ended the outburst.
Down ll-5 in the eighth,
the Iodians loaded the oases
on three consecutive singles
before Barfield's groundout
brought in one. Boone Lo!lan
then replaced Ryan Bukvtch,
who walked Sizemore.
Casey Blake hit a grounder
that handcuffed'Uribe at short
for an error, allowing Jason
Michaels to score and keeping the bases loaded for
Martinez, whose sac fly made
it ll-8 .
After both runners moved
up on a wild pitch, Travis
Hafner nked a two-run single to nght to pull Cleveland
within a run. Rookie Dew on
Day got Jhonny Peralta tb
ground out on the ftrst pitch to
end the Indians' comeback.

,.

SHOP THE
CLASSIFIEDS.!
Help Wanted

®

Help Wanted

He,1p Wanted

Nurse Assistants

Pleasant Valley Hospital is
accepting applications for pursuing

asSistants to provide home care to

clients residing in Meigs, Mason , Gallia and
Athens Counties. Applicants should have one

year experience or received a nursing assistant
certificate of training or be state tested nursing
assistant.
·
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOnCE: Ia hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, July 21,
2007 11 10:00 a.m., a
public oale will be

held II 211 W. Second

St., ~y. Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Ia atlllng
lor caall In hand

or

:..THE

.FOR YOU!!

aale, and to wtthdraw

• E&lt;eellent Pay
• Mileage Reimbursement
• Flexible Scheduling

the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmera Bank
and
Savings

Company

Applications will be accepted 9:00a.m. lo
3:00)J.m . M-F a! lOll Viand St.,

reserves

tho right to reject any
or all bids submitted.

Pt. Pleasant, WV or appointments can be
scheduled 'at anotha' location by calling

The above described

304-6 75-7404 or 1-866-992-6916. Applicants

collateral will be sold

"11 la·whera Is", with

mny also contact this number for questions.

no

ANEOE

expressed

or

certllltd check the lo~

Implied

lowing coll..,.l:
2000 Chevrolet Impala

given.

2G1WF55KOY9376482

tion, or for an appoint-

The Farmers Bank
and
Savlnga
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reoerv11 the
right to bid at thla

ment to Inspect collateral, prior to sale date
contact Cyndle, Ken
or Randy at 992-2136.
(7) 17, 18, 19

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED: Part-time position
available to assist an individual
with mental retardation in Shade.
3-12pm MfTuNJ. Must have high
school diploma or GED, valid
driver's license, three years good
driving experience and adequate
automobile Insurance. $7.50/hr.
Send. resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604 Jackson, OH 45640
or e-maillo
beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 7/20/07.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

-----'• ------------------ -----

Help Wanted'

Help Wanted

NOW ACCEPI'ING RESUMES

Newspaper Reporter

·

RESJ'IRATORY THERAPIST
Pleasant Valley Medical Equipment is
currently accepting resumes for a full
time, dayshift Respiratory Therapist. Must
be a graduate of an approved. Respiratory
Therapist program. Must be licensed or
eligible for licensing in the states of West
Virginia &amp; Ohio.
Send resumes to:
PleiiSIInt Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550 ·
Or fax: 304-675·6975
Or apply online at:
www.pvalley.llfl

The Point Pleasant Register is seeking an
energetic and enterprising reponer to cover our
community. The successful candidate will be
active in reporting on local trends , happenings
and features , as well as supporting the rest of
the editorial team.
Reporters for the Point Pleasant Register

of

have a strong working knowledge
AP style,
can handle a camera and have a clean, clear
writing style. Previous newspaper experience
is preferred, but will cons ider a recent
journalism graduate . We ' re seeking writers
who understand community journalism and

thrive in a team·based environment.
If prodU&lt;:ing top-quality copy and working in
an energized newsroom packed with talent
appeals to you, please respond.
Email cover letter, resume , your best three·
clips and salary requirements to:
pcaldwell@mydallyregliter.com
You can also mail your infonnation to:
Pam Caldwell, General Manager
Point Pleasant Register
200 Main Street

Announcements

20 minutes from Memphis &amp; Graceland

September 5-7, 2007
$295/person
Based on double occupancy
Includes flight, hotel accommodations, luggage &amp; transfers

OH
Websites:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
classitied@~~::~ribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS www.mydailyreglster.com
r----~p;;;;;,;;·~~V~
LIN
To Place
m:rthune
Sentinel
l\egt~ter
ca~f;~::; (74o&gt; 446-2342 (74o&gt; 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

...

.,..,.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:O:.:.r.;,F;,;,;,ax To

446-3008

CROSS POINTE
APTS

Must be 21 years of age
credit cards, checks, money
orders and payroll deduction
accepted. No refunds
LIMITED SEATS!

To make reservations please
call PVH Community Relations,
(304) 675-4340, ext 1326

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

AN~

r

r
I·

Golf Scramble

Acce~tini A~~!jcatjons

Holzer Center for
Cancer Care
Relay For Life

1 Bedroom apartments, Eligibility
based on income,
62 years of age or older,
handlcppedldisabled,
Regardless of age.
Handicapped accessible
This lnstllution Is ·an equal
opportunity provider, and employer.
On-Site manager &amp; maintenance.
Please call740-992-3055
TDD #800-855-2880

Held at Pine Hills Golf Course

Pomeroy, OH

July 28th
To sign-up call
(740) 992-6312
Ask f0r Mike

~~~~c!a~sh prize

•

Bualneaa Daya Prior To

In Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Publlc•tlon
Sunday Dl•play; 1:00

•

Thursday for Sundaya

• All ads must be prepaid'

~ou:D I

POUCIES: Ohio V.llev Publ!.hlng ruervn the right to tdlt, rtjeet, or Clnott 1ny lei at any Um.. Errors must be reporttd on the first dey o1
Trlbune-Stntinei-Regiltlr wll be rnpanltble tor na rriOI'e thin the cost ol the lpect ocwplecl by the error and only the tlrlt lnHrtlon. We
not be
any lOu or sxpen.. that mulls lrom tiM pubtlcrion or ornlulon of sn Mvwtlttment. CorrectiOn will be miCie In the tnt evllllblt edition. · BoX ·:~':;:,:::1
~ alway• conftdentllll. • Cwrent rate c.I'CI •ppllll. ·All rul "1111 ldVertleements . . subject to the Fedefel F.. r Houllng Act of 11161. ·This ,
I
sWNWdl. W• wtll not knowlngty accept snw advertlelng In vlolallan ot the lsw.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

r

my

GIVEAWAY

1

2 6wk old Female kittens.
Black with some orange:
441-0405

r

be based on qualifications
and ·
experience.
Applications must be able to
provide their own transportation. Submit letter of
int.erest to John D. Costanzo,
Superintendent , Athens·
Meigs Educational Service
507
Richland
Center,
AIIEinue, Suitelt1 08, Athens,
OH 45701 .
Application
Deadline: July 23, 2007.
The AMESC is an Equal
Opportunity
Employer/Provider.

YARDSALE

r.._...........

0

YARDSAU:·
GAILlPOUS

"'..

_.~

r ==

4 male pups. 1/2 Border Garage
Sale
1314
Collie 1!2. Blue Healer. 8 Neighborhood Rd. Tues
weeks old, wormed. 740· 7/ 17-Fri 7120 9·5.
2-5-6·_64_64________

1

Black Lab mht. Female. - spayed, loves the water. Call 1996 F·250 one ton pick-up,
740-388-3069
V·8, 4 sp.. runs good, tow
paokage, to be auctioned off
Pomeroy
Police
FREE 10 a good home by
Department,
July
21st,
at
Boarder (::ollie Mix, Female
2 years old, very good watch noon, can be seen at
Pomeroy
Police
dog,house broken.
Department, minimum bid
$650
LosT

r

AND
FoUND

1 - 17

~

® 2007 by NEA, Inc.

www.comics.com

New Middleport Flea Market

itO

every Sat. &amp; Sun, between - - ; : : - - - - - - - ,
Found at French 500 Fl ea Dollar Store &amp; Park. 740 .
Laborer. Earn as You t.eam .
Market: Lady's Watch. Call 645•7889
HEJ..p WANTED
Start building tor future now
1
to idenlify. 446-2763
~:::-..;.;.~':""'----,
• by joining our Professional
WANI'ED
Team and learn the skills to
TCi BUY
become a High Pressure
FOUND
at
Krodel
Cleaning
Maintenance
Campground on 713 female ....,
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
•1!1...._...,_.. · Technician. AU positions
dog, brown/blonDe red long Silver and 'Gold Coins,
require weekly TRAVEL out·
hair coat, no tail come to
side of AREA. Comparry
ProofSets,
Gold
Rings
,
PreCome
lind
out
why
campsite 56
provides lodning, transU.S.
Currency,
v1935
our
portation, and Per Diem.
Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
employees are
AVERAGE Starting wana
Found: Weedeater
on Coin Shop. 151 Second
u~
satisfied.
wl!h cost of benefits lncludEastern Ave on Friday July Avenue , Gallipolis, 740·446ed is $205.00 per field day
13. Call to identify. 740-367· 2842
worked , with a chance to
WE OFFER:
advance up to $283.00 per
King Stove burns coal and
$300 Hiring Bonus
~. used Kennel and Dog
field day worked . We pro•
Up
lo $8.50/hour
house 304-675-4243
vide paid training and
tProlessional, paid !raining
EXCELLENT
BENEFITS.
4x4's For Sale ................ .................... .......... 725
I \1 1'1 ( 1\ \ II '\ I
t Weukfy pay and banusas
Pre-Employment
DRUG
Announcement ••-..•....................................... 030
'
-.II&lt;\It I "
t Full Benefits
Anttques .........:............................................. 530
TEST and a valid Drivers
t Great Wo111 Environment
Apartment a lor Rent ................................... 440
License Is a plus, but not
Auction and Flea Market............................. OBO
requ ired. WE WILL BE TAK·
Full and Par! time
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
lNG APPLICATIONS ANO
Positions
INTERVIEWING ON JULY
Auto Repalr ................................................ .. 770
Day and Evening Shihs
23 AT THE BEST WESTAutos tor Sale .............................................. 71
Available
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ..........._................. 750
ERN INN, 701 W. MAIN ST.,
RIPLEY W.Va . FROM 9:00
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Call today to schedule an A.M. TILL 5:00 P.M. Please
Bustne.. and Bulldlngo ............................. 340
interview.
Buslneaa Opportunlty ................................. 210
Bring two 1ypes of idenliflca·
1-888-IMC-PAYU
lilt.
Business Training ....................................... 140
tlon with you. Send work
2321
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
history and day time phone
Cemplng F.qillpment ................................... 780
number lo TECHICIAN
Cards ol Thanks ........................................ .. 010
TRAINEE. P.O. BOX 565.
Cosmotologisi/Barber. Hair
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
MARIETIA, OHIO 45750
Stylist wanted for booth
Electrlcal1Refrlgeratlon ...... ... ...................... 840
rental at Michael &amp; Friends. EOE
Equipment for Rent ........_..................-........ .480

rL,------,.1

1111:1-~~

--------------- +

379·9145 or 446-0698

·-~- ·

Harbor Tugboat Pilot wanted
ror shihing loaded and
amply barges within fermi·
nal. Must have current towing license. For more lnfor·
mation
contact . Rudy
Pennock, 740-423-9803
Hardware clerk with experi·
ence in plumbing and alec·
trical. Send resumes to CLA
102 CIO Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, PO Bo)( 469,
Gallipolis OH 45631
An Excellent way to earn - - - - - - - - - - - money. The New Avon .
lnttruclor
Needed
Call Marilyn 304 _88 2.2645
Gallipolis Career College is
see king a full-lime instructor
'AVON! All Areas! To Buy or for its Office Adminis,rative
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· programs The qualified
applicanl must have experi·
675-1429.
100 WORKERS NEEOEO
Assembl e crafts. wood
items.To $480/wk Materials
provided. Free information
pkg 24Hr. 801-428-4649

GOOD PAY ING CAREER ence In a multitude of offiCe
OPPOR TUN ITY- Local Oil administrative applications.
A m1nimum of a Bachelors
and Gas Company looking De gree is required . Send
lo fill positioo of Land man or re sumes to jdanicki@gal·
Land Agenl in SE OH and
Western EV. Ideal candidate lipoli scareercol lege.com, or
is a self starter with basic mail to 1176 Jackson Pike,
Suite 312. Gallipolis, OH
computer knowledge. strong 4563 1.
commun1cation and negotia·
t1on skills who is willing to
IRS JOBS
$18.46·$32.60/hr .. now hir·
.
'd
ing. Paid Training IS prov• .
ad. For application and tree
government job info , call
Amencan As soc. of Labor 1·
913·599-8244 . 241hrs. emp.
finding out more about this serv
rewarding career, please
contact Dan Stevenson @
740•446. 6800 or fa;.: resume Mas on County EMS is
to 740 .446 _
accepting applications for
6802
Medics and EMT's lor more
Harris Steak house Now mformatJon ca/1675-6134
Hmng. (304)675-9726

-- · -·--·· .....-- -·--·-· ~

·

Courtside Bar &amp; Grill naw
..
.
.
h1rmg expenenc.ed wa1t staff
!servers. ~pply 1n person or
call to sch.edule an interview.
740·441·9371

trave l wit hin Ihe region
Knowledge of !egal descrip·
lion , prior sales experience.
ramilianly with the region
and local cou rtho use are a
plus. If you are interested in

.:. I_

l

/-...,..~..,..._._-._.--:--.._...:k:it::_::ncarlylef)comcast.net

LOST DOG: Small Greg &amp;
White Female Dog, Lost
As of July 9th, I Vaughn L. near 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, Sun
French will not be responsi· 6/24. Answers to Katie,
ble for any other debts otner ~ward Offered. (614}271·
than
own.
5888

Homes lor Sale .......................................... .. 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
In Men1orlam ......-... -..................................... 020
tnsurance ......................... ............................ 130
lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ................ ........ 660
Llvastock ...................................................... 630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
lots &amp; Acreage ........................ .............. . , .. .. 350
Mlscellaneous ..............................................170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr .................... ................ 880
Mobile Homes lor Rent ........ .. .................... . 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ............ ... ............ ..... 320
Money to Loan ......................,, ...... ............. .. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers.......................... 7.40
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals ......................................., .......... ... . DDS
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heattng .................................... B20
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp;CBRapalr .............. ................ . 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schools lnsiructlon ................................... ,. 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Space tor Rent ..................... ... .............. .. ..... 460
Sporting Goods .................. ......................... 520
SUV 'slor Sale .............................................. 720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale ............ ................... .............. .. 730
Wanted to Buy ........................ ..................... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppiles .................. 620
Wanted To Do .................. ....... ................ ..... 180
Wanted to Rent ... _................. ..... .................. 470
Yard Sate- Galllpolla .................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middlti .................... .. ... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

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• Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
\\\01 \ t I \I I \ I "'

675-5234

Oea.clliirM

For Sunday• Paper

oso

Stories at the River's Edge
10:30 a.m . - Middleport
Dave Diles Park
1:30 p.m. - Mason
Lottie Jenk's Memorial

1100 Powell St.
Middleport, OH

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Dally ln-C:olumn: 1:00 p . m.

Home lmprovements ...................................810 ·

Announcements

.,

Wprd Ads

Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 6t0
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
Farms for Sale ......... -...... ... ..... ..................... 330
For Lease .......... _...... -...... ... .......................... 490
For Sale ...................................................... .. 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... SBO
Fumlshed Rooma ........................................ 450
General Hauttng ......... .................................. 850
Glveaway ...................................................... D40
Happy Ads ....................................................
Hay &amp; Graln .. ,., .......... ................................... 640
Help Wanted ........ ......................................... 110

jet leaves from Chaneston, WV

Polnt Pleasant, WV 25550

,,

Galli a
County

o

Tunica, Mississippi
THE GRAND CASINO

AA/EOE

warranty

For further Informa-

®

CLASSIFIED

~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------,
CLASSIFIED INDEX

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Help wanted

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Indians

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
I

Tuesday, July 17,2007

Retail Managerial Personnel
position available. Send
resumes to CLA Box 101.
cJo Galli!X)IIs Tribune, PO
Box 469, Gallipolis, OH
45631 Must have vaKd driv·
ers license. auto insurance
and drug test required.
ScanIc Hills NUI'Sing
· CenIer
·
·
11 tl
for
ts accepttng app ca ons
STNA f
·
's or evemngs and
'd · hts If · 1
t d
m11 mg ·
1 1n ares e ,
P ease
con act
•ana
Harless at 740-446-7150.
=E.::O.::E___________

o·

A·OK·Corrals &amp; Barns
Metal Roofing, Shingles.
Concrete,
Remodeling,
Decks,
Pole
Barns,
Garages. Free estimates Call
304·633·1230
-------------George's Portable Sawmill,
don1 haul your Logs .to the
Mill just call 304-675·1 957.

Attention!
Local company offering "NN·
DOWN PAYMENr programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting . •
' 100% financing
• Less lhan perfect credit
accepted
' Payment could be the.
same as rent.
'
Lo cators.'
Mortgage
Lawn mowing. Rates by the
(7401367-0000
job, not .the hour, Free
Estimates. Call Paul @
Beautiful
3,100+SOFT.5
{304)675·2940.
I / 2Balhraom
Bedroomr3
Lawn-Care Service, Mowing house, 2 kitchens, 2 living
&amp; Trimming. Call (740)441 · rooms, 2. car garage wifh
workshop, oak trim ,. doors,
1333 or {740)645·0546
and
hardwood
floors
Mature female wil! babysit in throughout upstairs, 1/2 mile
my
smoke·lree
home. from rt33 and Meigs high·
Flexible hours. Daily or schoo l/junior
high. 2.5'
weekly rates . References acres+ $145,000 Firm . Call,
416·4765.
availabte. 304·674·3251

The
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center
has a position opening as
Elementary ED Educational
Aide-Athens County tor the
2007-2008 School Year.
This is a 9 month position
with Board approved bene·
fits. Applications must be
wiNing to be fingerprinted for
a criminal background
check, hold a valid educa·
lional aide license, passed

Michele's Daycare now
accepting ages 18 months
to 13 vrs., Hours Mo~Wed­
Fri., 6am-6pm Tues. &amp; Thurs.
6am
to
5pm,
Rutland/Harrisonville area

theParaprofessionaiTestfor
Educational Aides or have
the proper degraefcourse
work need&amp;d to meal State

call (740)698-0214 ask for
Michele
--------------Wanted · cleaning .jobs, will
clean houses &amp; offices &amp; will

re~uirements. Salary will be

based on qualifications and also mow small yards &amp; sit

experience. Submit letter of
interest to John D. Costanzo,
Superintendent.
AthensMeigs Educational Service
Cenler,
507
Richland
All8nue, Suite 11108, Athens,
OH 45701
Application
Deadllna: July 23. 2007.
The- AMESC is an Equal
Opportunity

with elderly at night, in
Rutland,
Pomeroy.
Middleport &amp; Chaster Ohio
&amp; in Ravenswood &amp; Mason
WV, call {740)949·2515
please leave message
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8~

OPPoRn..JNrry

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Employer/Provider.

Security Officers needed in
New Haven, WV $7,66 per
hour, aM shifts, F.T &amp; P.T.
Must have clean record,
pass a drug screen and
background check. Ca ll 180&lt;J.27S-8359. M·F 8:30 lo
5:00 EOE MIF/DN

oNOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSH·
lNG co. recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and
NOT 10 send money

Beaulifui·Middleport hOmel
3BA, 2BA, full basement 1
112 car garage with a room
above. Many NEW features!!
Must see this one! 740·416·1548
.

-Gl

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-

All real &amp;ltd Mlvertlal~
In this MWilpllper Ia .
aubjeclto the Federet
Fair Houllng Act of 1968
which maktalt Illegal to
• advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dltc::rlm'lneUon beMd on
race, color, religion, sex
flmlllal atatul or national
origin, or •nw Intention tomake any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination. "

The
Alhens·Meigs
This newspaper will not
Educational Service Center
knowingly accept
has a position opening for
adwartiHmenta tor real
an ED Teacher In Meigs
estate which Ia In
County tOr the 2007 ·2008 through the mail until you
violation of the taw. Our
School
Year,
Applicants
have
investigated
the
:::.:.::...::=~::.::::,.:____
readel'l IN hereby
Security Officers needed In must be cerlifiedllicensed as offering.
Informed that •II
New Hmn, WV. $7.66 per an lnter11ention Specialist or
dwellings achtertiled In ·
be
eligible
to
get
a
1!!1
hour, all shifts, F. T.&amp;P.T.
this newspaper Ire ·
MONEY
Must have clean record , Supplemental license. This
available on In equal :
opportunity bltel. ·
pass a drUg screen and position Is a 9·monlh eonlract with Board approved .,
ba_pk!J'Ound c:hecX. Call 1800-275-8359, M·F, 8:30 10 benefits. Salary will be . - - - - - - - - . for sale by owner, 5 rOO!T) (
based on e)(perience and
~5:.::00:.c·.::E.::O.::E.:::MIF::.::ID:.cN,:____
balh, new carpet, fireplace,
certification according to
basement,
dishwasher;
Super 8 Motel accepting salary schedule. Submit letapplications 'for part time ter of interest to John 0. Borrow Smart . Contact stove, freezer, new fronl
the Ohio Division of porch wllh railing with
employment. Person must Costanzo, Superintendent,
Financial
Institution's French doors, back patio,
be able to work llexible Athens-Meigs Educational
ONice of
Consumer concrete ingmund pool ~
hours and will be working in Service Center, 320 1/2
Affairs BEFORE you reli· 15~30, new filter. new pump.•
~ed respons~le person for different departments of the E;ast Ma1n Street , Pomeroy,
nance your home or
chlldcare.5/vanous
days motel. Clean driving record
Application obtain a loan. BEWARE small . porch on back witr"C
week, will include some Sal and criminal records a fTl.lst . OH 45701
Deadline: July 23, 2007, of requests for any large sliding doors. new cent ra~
nd S
_
645 1304
heal &amp; cooljng. road'
Apply in person. NO PHONE 3:30p.m. The AMESC is an
a
un.
advance payments of
CALLS.
Equal
Opportunity. fees or insurance . Call the lrontage 1.28 &amp; ac., carporl,
lree gas, 3 gas wells ,
Employer/Provider.
Office of Consumer (740}992·5616, 112. mile olt
OTR Drivers needed. Mus! TEACHING POSITIONS.
AMairs toll free at 1·866· Kingsbury, $120,000
be at laas1 24 yrs old and The Meigs County Board of
•
Retardation
&amp; --------------- 278-0003 to learn if the
have 3 yrs experience. Apply Mental
broker or
in person at 2204 Jackson Developmental Disabilities Wanted : Positions available mortgage
is
properly
has the following positions to assist individuals with lender
Pike.
available:
Multiple mental retardation at two licensed. (This is a public
se rvice announcement
Disabilities Teacher. Musl group homes in Bidw311:
-------------have current 11alid Ohio 1) 35hrs: 2·10p MfTu/Wffh
trom lhe Ohio Valley
POST OFFICE NOW
Publishing Companyj
Department of Education 2) 35hrs: 3:30· 11 p Wffh
HIRING
certification/licensure and
Avg . Pay, $20/hr or
2-11 p Fri. 10a·9p Sat
have or be el igible to oblain 3) 35hrs: 11p·8:30a Th ,
S57K annually
For Sa le by Owner· Green&gt;
l'ltornlSIONAL
lnduding Fede ral BAneflts lntervenlion Specialist vati·
Twp. Brick Ranch, 3BA, 1 s:
11p-9a Fri/Sal , 7p-9a Su
StxVJC~
dation In the · area of 4) 27.5hrs : 4-10:30p Fri. 98·
and OT,Paid Train[ng,
Bath , Newer heat pump
Moderataflntensive educe·
Vacalions·FTIPT
7p Sat, 9a-6p Sun
driveway and other. Asking
tiona! needs
Early MuSI have high school diplo·
TURNED DOWN ON
1-866·542· t 53 t
$110.00. (7401441 ·0611
Childhood
Special ma/GED. valid
drivers SOCtAt SECURITY fSSI?
USWA
Education Teacher. Mus! license and three years
No Fee Unless We Win!
For sa le/land conlract . 3 BR
current
Ohio good driving experience.
1-888·582·3345
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - have ,
hou se in Gallipolis, WlfJ.
R&amp;J Trucking Leading The Department ot Education $7 .50/hr. Pre-employment
conneclion $1500 dowr.
Way R&amp;J Trucki ng now certification/licensure and Drug Testing. Send resume ~;;;;:;;;;;;:::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ $400/mo or renl $475/mo:
Hiring at our New Ha11en, have Or be eligible to eblain to: Buckeye Community
0
Ho~
Also I BR in Gallipolis $750.
WV Terminal. For Regional Early Childhood Intervention Services, PO Bo)( 604,
JoOR SALE
down $200/mo or ren r
Hauls-Dump Div
1 year Specialist 118iidation. Sand Ja~son, OH 45640 or email
$250/mo.Call Wayne 404 -·
OTR ver~iable exp. Call 1· resume and a copy of teach· to : be~ecserv@yahoo.com . 0 Down even with tess than 456·3802 for info
ing license by July 19th to:
800·462 ·9365 ask lor Ken!
Deadline lor applicants: perfect credit is a 11ailable on
Carleton School , 1310 07120/07. Equal Opportunity this
3 bedroom . 1 bath House lor sale in Aacme.
Carleton
Street,
P.O.
Box
- ' - - - - - -- - - - - -Employer.
home Corner lot. fireplace. area. Appro~ . 4 acres. al~
;;,~;;.;;.;...._ _ __ ,
·professionally landscaped.'
RE CEPTIONIST needed lor 30t. Syracuse. OH 45779
50
ScHooLs
modern kitchen . tacu.!'zi lob. Ranch style house with ,(
busy office in Gallia County. The
Athens·Meigs
•·-UCllON
Payment around S550 per
w111 be responsible lor
month. 740 _367 _7129
bedrooms. living room , din-•
Educational Center has a L.w-.i""'iOiir.iiil
answering phones, provid· position openings for sup· ,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - ing room , kitchen. large tam -:
ing customer service, basi c pori staff to work with the Gallipolis Career College 4 BR house. 2.5 baths, 1 ily room . central air. gas heatdata entry arid oth er general
(Careers Close To Home) acre, 1 car garage . gaze~o. and 1 fireplace Add1ti on ol a·
clerical dutieS. Must have a Region 16 State Support Cat! Today! 740-446-4367.
motor , nome
hookup large Flonda roo m com·
Team.
Applications
should
good altitude. be 118ry
1-800·2 14-0452
Morni ng Star Ad 1n Racine pl etety cedar . opens onto
possess e)(cellent orgeniza·
dependable, friendly and tiona! skills, ability to work - .\jlll1ipoiSCIIUl81college cbm Aski ng $135,000. Call 225· palio &amp; pool area. Heale d in
ground pool onclosed by pfltrust-.yorthy. Computer skills well with staff and public, Accrtdiled Memt&gt;e1 Accrediting 264-1055
vacy fenc1ng and land·
required . Resum es must be ability to multi -task, excellent Cooool ~ lndependOnl College$
typed and professional
eno Schools 1274 e
Sbd
2ba
Gallipolis scaped. Finished 2 cat.
math
skills,
computer
Send resume to:
7D M
Foreclosure!
Buy for garage atlached to house'
skills(Microeoft Word , Excel.
l'lL"ELLANF..otJS
$84,9001
5%dn, and finished &amp; healed 3 ca2
Receptionist
etc.). typetkeyboard 45
PO BOX 63
garage
unattached ·
20yra
@8%.
More
homes
wpm , and have experience
Gallipolis, OH 45631
with multHine phone sys· 5 grave plots tor sale in from $199/mol For local EJ~ce ll ent condition ready IO
tams. These position S will Rite 's Cemetery. Addison llatlnga call 800-559-4109 mo11e in $255,000.00, Call·
(740)949·2217
xF254
Pike. Call 367·0f7t

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Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

r ~~ l...ro_.~~-lbM--~II::IItii'"':":MoBILE_Ji(ll_JbM~HOMES r
........,I

HUO HOIIE81 Sbd only 84 Sohultt. 3 BR, I 112 BA. 2 rHNtoom axecutiYe house,
UI,IIOO. More 1-4bd $7500. 339-4510 aftor Spm. new construction. fully fur1\omee evall1b .. l from - -- - - - - - nlshed, new refrigerator,
.,...,. . ,
5%dn, Great used 2005 3 bedroom slovo, &lt;ishwasher, wuher&amp;
20yraft1"4. For llatlnge 16xBO with llinyllshingle. dryer, large wrap around
Must sell,
I00-65HIOSixFI44
$25,995 with pordl, full basemen!. 1 .. ,

"::0:~;
n S yracuse - 2800 sq.ft 1

Nice 2 BR furrished trailer
water paid, no pets.
$375/month + $375/deposlt.
Cal441-o829
- - - - - - -Nice clean 2 llr. 1 ba. In

garage, lola! oloc:lrk: wllh Hartford, Clop.
central air, very spacious, required, no pets

I

quallly bull1 mulli-brick
home. ma!ntt:tnance lree.
Nice quiel neighborhood. 34 bedrooms, 2 112 balh wi1h
NEW
411ed
• - rdwood tr' lh - "
om
lm
rou.,-..
U·shaped kilchen '"lh 40' ol
.
cabinals. Woodbumlngfire·
place. 2 112 car delached
--~~~~~
garage. NiCely landscaped
•-•
.60 acres lot. Immaculate
"Condition. Low utilities.
••••••IMI!UJII
"setiiog prk:e $219,000. Call
140·4~1 -5171 . Shown by mymldwlltt\ome.com
app1 only.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _. .

2008

$Q,189

.&amp;..•

~-us can740-992-4197.

u....,

New .Haven, 4+ acres, 3 br.,
2 1&gt;4., Iota! elect, gas log
~ce, trig ., stove, dish· '
·washer, hot tub outside,
greai
$53, 000,
304B82-3021,740-44t -9331

~ow,

New Haven, 4+ acres. 3 br.,
2 ba .• tota1 elect., gasd. log
h
1
flr 18
ep ce. 1rg
., stolle, IS wash er, ho1 tub outside,
S53,000,
great
view,
3C4882-3021 ,740-441 -9331

~nyVshlngle. Will help wilh
delivery. 740-385·4367

OBC Modular (LXM503)
special
o1der
only
52,840.00deliverecl to ~r
locallon.
Cole'o Mobllo
Homes 4 miles East or
Athens on At· 50132. PH:
atJG-466-4687 or 592·1972.
M·F, 8-7. Sat.: 9 tO 4.
"Where you get your
money's worth'
,......;._ _ _ _ __,
OWNER FINANCING

New home in Gallipolis.
b h 1 hi 1 .....
ab
v~, Ia2 a~R ww
rpovl
tu.,r;o, rga
on 3 acres
nvl, $87,500. 740-446-7029
Older lrame home. 3BR ,
1BA, LR , DR, Galley
kllchen,
basement.
.25acres, CA/heat. Call .
448-6271

Nice 312 singlewides
From$1,800down
t

Scon

your

We own -4
the Bank
Ranch Style Brick. Home, 2 Land
Approved
606 74 _6380
bedrooms, 1 bedroom extra
large, 2 full baths. on 2 112
Lors &amp; ·

cal~

00

2 balh, naar

''

month,

2 BR hou$e In Kanauga.
$425/monlh + $4251-1

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•Ji(ll-·RFNr-"""""""''~

lloui!How

.._
__oiGooosililiil;.,-

1.999 Tracker $3500. Many
others In Block. Slop or oall
For sate; Kitchen range &amp; 740-&lt;U6.0103
'
hood $250, 2 maple bar
stOOls $35, Gun cabinet ,.,--,:--:--,:-:---:$125. Cail740-441-8299
Lively's Auto Sales. 96
Hyunda Elantra SW, 4cyl,
Full Size Manress &amp; IllS, auiO w/00, $1000. 91 Ford
S$400
180; SofaO...,_&amp;Lcwa
lltllsaatsets; AangerPU,3.0V6, $1000.
: nvv a e- save a 388-9303 9107 M-Sal.
lot, Mollohan, 202 Clark
Chapet Fld. Bidwell.
Tlux::Ks

town, No Pets, Deposit
Raqulred, (740)992-5174 or
{740)441.()11 0.

~~RH:;. r,~;:':;

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Mulc:BANolsE

t..-rorriliiliiiiOI--"1 :~;~;.1.::Rates

. -,·.

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Laurel
CommOns
Apartmenls. Largesl In lhe
areal Beautifully renovated
lhroughoul lncludlng brand
new kitchen and bath.
Sl rtlng 1 $405
llloda 1
a
a
· a
Y
(304)273 3344
•
Accepting applications for 2
BR, 1 BA apt, stove, 1rldge,
WID included. Wa.ter &amp;
Garbage paid. No pets, 11ery
nice, clean &amp; atiracli11e.
$500/mo. 1st mo + $500
Sac.dep. required. Ava'llable
7/16107. App'·
w"hr
'n.· 174'
'Y
'1
"'
Ganlenary Rd, Gallipolis. No

c

For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Fief Bar, Sleel
Grallng
For
Drains,
Dnveways&amp;W.Ikways.L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
'
Friday Sam-4·30pm Closed
Thursday.
Satu rday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

85,000 miles, 4WD, Towing
Pkg, 3rt! Row, Good Cood:,
$8500. (740)446-9664

r

JOCI&lt;aon

V,

Used Wolle Tanning Bed, 16
FOR~ALE
new bulbs $900. Price nego- , .,_ _rrirriiiiiiiiiiirro-~
Hable. Call 606-424-2348
I'm
95 Pl·-.,..,ulh van. air, auto V'"~
6 $900 080.740-256-1652
FOR
~

r

SALE

Housing Opportunlly. This
institution Is an Equal
Opportunity Prov.l der and
Employer.

I

MOTORCY~
.;. ~'
4 WIIEilUliS

411

sage

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·

ED a AFFOADA8LEI
Townhouse

.

apartments,

and'or small houses FOR
RENT. Cell (740)441·1111
lor app lication &amp; information.

1992 Harley
Davidson
Springer,
low
mileage,
'
excellent shape , new tires,
call anytime, (740)992·6027

EllmView
Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroom apanments

Senior Discount*

•Washer/dryer hookup

•Tenant pays electric

E&gt;&lt;lres Included,

J&amp;L
Constructa'on
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement

,

Decks

• Garagsa
• Pole Buildings
' Room Additions

Owner:

Jamea Keesee II
742 _~ 332

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Mushroom

Compost

$3SAScoop

T·Post6ft. $3.29

Wide Variety or
Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and

Showmasler Show

Wise Concrete
740-992·5929
740·416-1698

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-Midd_le_po
_r1_
, B-eedl--S'-1-.,

-2b~r.

1.,------· r

=~~~~~~~~~ 2:~~-

furnished apartment, utilities 7 AQHA Registered Quarter
paid, deposit &amp; refarences, Horses for sale or trade. Call
no pets, (740)992-0165

after ( pm. 740-256-6003

Middleport. North 4th Ave .. 2 Red Reg. percentage boer
br. furnished apartment, billy goalS. 75% $125. 50%
deposit &amp; references, no _s~
100
r. 7-40-·-:256~·8-15~2---,
pets, (740)992·0165
HAY &amp;
. r&lt;n.. .....
Modem 1 Bedroom apt. Call ...,_ _
446·0090
Hay wanted:wlll mow and
New 2BA apartments.
dean field for the hay, also
hookup,
Washer/dryer
want to buy Troy Bill tiUer.
stove/refrigerator lnclue19d.
446-1052
.
Also. units on SR 160. Pets
I!~ \\o.,l'nR 1 \I 14 )\
Wel come! (740)44 1-0194.

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City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ __
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New Haven 1 Br. Furnished
Apt., has WID, No Pets, Dep.
&amp; references. 740-992-0165.
Taking applica tions for
Modern 2 BR , No pe ts,
$295 /mo
includes
water/sewer. $200 deposit.
(740)446-3617
-------Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, Adull Pool. &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Pl us
Security Deposit Required.
(740)446-3481 .

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'--rrrii'ORriiiiiiSM.EiiiOir-,.J

1949 Dodge Coronet 4-door
sedan ,
76,000
miles.
Includes spare lransmission, a lew parts.. repair and
·· parts books. serv1ce history.
Howard Mullen, 740-9923782
1968 Pontiac Grand Prix,
also e riding lawn mowe r.
Ask tOr Jr. Phone 256-1102

CAMPERS &amp;·

I

M&lt;YI'OR HOMES
2002 Hornet 30ft , sleeps 6.
centra l air, furnace, talephone &amp; cable hookup, exlarge bathroom , water filter,
AMJFM CD player w/ pia·
neer speakers, gasfelec
refrigerator, microwave, 4
burner gas s1ove w/oven,
one owner aSking $9.000,
740-446-0969

97 Yellowstone travel trailer
32ft. sildeoul $6500. 740256·8138

AT
CHESH IRE :
2004
Nomad-North Trail 34' with
hyd., _E11tended section.
Camper nearly as new,
$ 12.500 Neg. Ca ll David,
(606)57 1-9448 . Russell , KY

for
$90
per

month

I
BARNEY

llaNnH C*lleCI'J And Flrliaie

HEY, JEDGE --DON'T
THIS FALL UNDER
•cRUEL AN'

W"WW'.tlaalltaea r· akcabiMbJ~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J

UNUSUAL

on

" I I~\ II I "'

1994 Plymouth Acclaim,
75000 miles. Former Gov't
BASEMEtfl'
car. Exc. Cond! $2500 080 .
WATERPROOFING
Moving oversees &amp; MUST
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptUnconditional liJetime guarSELL/. Call740- 794-0290
Ing applications for waiti ng
antee. Local references fuclist for Hud-sutlsized, 1- br, 95 Pontiac Sunlire $1500 nlshed. Established 1975.
apartment,lor
the 080. 98 Cavalier $220 0
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446elderly/disabled call 675- 080. 01 Ca11alier $3650
0870, Rogers Basement
6679
Equal
Housing 080. 00 GT Mustang $7000 Waterproofing .
Opponunlly
080. 256-6169

Eut
Pass
All pas s

43 Tmnc cone

T-1•
32 P•t.
Huce
brand
34 " Vol"

10 C..V.n

or Unllld
13 Pocket
brHd
15 Phony

48 DrljHiry
fobrlc
48 , _..

hl8.

52 eom.on.
54 Exclttment

..

(2 - . )

duclco

'

blncHid . ,
41 Lib weight .
50 Shwuwr _;·
51 ilollon'o
·
IUIMIIr

Pa~91anl NO&lt;th, -

An0

ralaod to four opadel. Al1ho&lt;Jgl East led .
lhe club jade, which West ruffed, the
conlrBct could i10I be beaten. Norlh loot
one &amp;pa&lt;le, one heart andlhe rulf. Hla
diamond loaar ,.oappearod on Soulh's

,.....

740·667-31'n

•

lou~h

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

THE BORN LOSER
l':iou'vE &amp;a~ 1\ L\ HLE

~

J liTER'&lt; LII.\E.L-'1. ~i&gt;.I'S
'IOU 51\0UL-t&gt; CUi Bt\C.II.. Qt.\
'&lt;OU~ COFFEE

Jeff Bissell, Manage!'

Contractor available for quality
construction on turn key, single
houses and duplexes, garages,
porches. All concrete flatwork
including patios, driveways
and sidewalks.

F;-ou 1'\IG.I\i ~"e:." wm~? PL IXJI.I'\ f\t\\IE." CAFfE.It-iE. ~
PROe&gt;U:f'o\, 6L-~t&gt;'IS/
PI&lt;:0&amp;£11\ 1-iOW ...\N&lt;f.(o.WII.'I
"'-'&lt; C.OFfE.E ~t&gt; l'U. AAIJ€. f&gt;..

I

Iill I 1\K.E ...

WF'€1~ ~lD\!

~-if) .

So lhe match came down 10 lhe leecl by
Tahir Masood,.West lot Paiclslln, agalnal
lhree no-trump. II he c:11ooe a heart,
Pa~stan WClUicl win the IIIIo; II a diamond, India would lake lha gold madals.
,Well, he selee1od the &lt;lamood 10. Aloke
sa&lt;flu (South) won wllh his oce, cashed
his spade ace, and played another
S(lflde. EvtniU81~, after Imperfect die-

G ..........,:
AstroGraph

&lt;. HECKING
OUT THE

Y"'RD SALE.
L~'5TIN&amp;S 1•

We Deliver To You I
PEANUTS

~ ....~l'!'·"t"i!f1t'!ij!'J'!!8~:"'•

VERI( STRAN6E .. SOMEBODC(

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

SPILLED BIRDS ALL OVER
j~jE VAAD ..

'

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'l

Wednesday, July 18, 2007
By Bernice 9ede Osol
There Ill • 1trong po11lb llity that
advancement can be made In ')'OUr chosen fteld of endeavor, but It might happen
more by h8ppenstance than bV skill
alone. it ooutd come about through a
unique chain of ewntt.
CANCER CJune 21..July 22) - Things
you flnd to be ot great lntereel might not
be equally desirable to your friends.• If
you lnstet upon engaging In them, plan to
do ao alone becauee your pals aren't apt
to be supportive.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - This ie: not one
of .thoae daya Yttlere you'll dO well handling something for another because
things you attempt to do ror this person
could easily go wrong. WOOf. only on your
own affairs.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Partnaring
with another for a oommOn cause could
be more dlsadllantagequl than beneflclal. Put aside any proj8ct: that requires
help and apply your efforts atrlctly on
lone lobs.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Spend your
time on arrangements lnttlated by another rather than on tome1hlng you personally want done. You'll find It far more ben·
eflclal than anything you do only for youreelf.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-No~. 22) -

SUNSHINE CLUB

· H1ll s Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Raci ne, Ohio

45771
740-949-2217

I I 1\ I '&gt;

I

&lt;l

'\I IU I I

I&lt; l'\"

I~

I I II ! l'\

Concrete Removal

and

Replacement

l\U~~ . QJ .,(' · ··­

Con~te.· !\'ork -

•

26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free

~·

Eatlmata1

Manley's
Racycllll'ig
IIIIIIIISt. ·-•n.OIWH
7*HI2-3194
_ _.,...llt.H-..:00111
.............12:81 ..

by Luis Campoli

Ceietrty Cipher Cl)'l:t9am• n Cflllld li!Jn.~iocla br 1~~ra~~ ~. 1*11 lf'CIIJ.wt
Ec:h letler ~ tbedpher llandl Ia mi.-

You'll
have an abundance of energy waiting to
be channeled In a positive manner, so
choose to spend your time with persone
who are as ind~rlous and productive u
you are.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc . 21) You're likely to be moat effac!lve when
you are able to work on projects that can
be aecompf!lhed epeedify. Tedious taska
are likely to reduCe your lniarests and
productivity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Try to
go after something that Ia meanlngtul
because It's all In your head as to what
wnl either encourage or dlaoourage you
to achilwe 8liCC:eu. 'mu need to be motivated.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Having
a direct lnwtvement with a good associate for a conatructlve purpoae will bring
you ttle greatest satlstaetiof"'. tf you can't
do anything with another. do something

TodoY, clus: Iequals S

" L'W BNUBLX HN THYLSJ WO
HIYMCULKO . JZ&amp;CLSZSZYY HSTO
KFULEZV LS KFZ XBUA . TLAZ
MZTZUO , " • BTXHCY FCPTZO
PREVKJUS SOLUTION - 'Besides~ · loyally, discipline, heari and n;nd,
c:on~ls lhe kaylo alllhe locks. · Coach Joe Pate100

tAll
'=~:~· S@~~lA-4t.~sClAT
_ _ __

WOlD

-

lly

I,~_...

O~oarrongo
ocrambled
lour
low 10 form

I

1

lo11&gt;u ol fh1
words b.
four slm~l1 words .

KOSTCY
2

1111 1
!IV S E N

1 I I' I
3

"
0

E L NI T '
"

I I' I' I

~

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O!HJONE

l' ll a ll 9
8 i.fl
P11 tNr N(J,'J.flfP ED I
![RS

A ramous.millionaire lold a
group of people, "'llle secrel of
business success is to know

something lhat nobody ---- -----''

G)

tht chi.ICkfe quoted
In th• mi~Jng words
yov deyelop from srap Na. 3 below.
Compl1to
by filling

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

' - 1b - o1

Jockey - Prime - Lunch - Parish - PIANO
"I have noticed," lhe old gent rnusod, " thallhere are too
many people willing to carry the bench when they should :
be moving the PIANO."
-

ARLO&amp;JANIS

for another.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marct'l 20) - A penson
who likes you a lot may offer some very
good advice. Yet there is a strong pouiblllty you might chooae to Ignore II, just
because it doesn't fit In with what you
want.
ARI ES (March 21·April 19) -Stick to
so lo deaKnge that are of a commercial
nature. Vou should have a degree of auc·
ceu. but be sure to steer clear of anyone
who could muddle your affairs.
TAUFUS (April 20·t.Ae.y 20) - Shoutcl
you lind yourself In ttl• company of
someone who makes you feel a bit
uneaay or uncomlortabla, thert mty be •
good retton tor If. Con11nue to atudy thiS

GARFIELD

.EZ..J THINK
_.. .. 1101..17'5
.JEAL.OO!i OF YOU

CELEBRITY CIPHER

otlb.

carding, declarer loolc 11 lrloka, gMng
India another Imp andlha win by two. It
was thai close.

BIG NATE

Reliable &amp; Experienced
Call Dennis Bryant
(740) 742-23n

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios Syst¢m

three duba ovor

two no-trump, en artlllctal call !hal . hlo parlnar, Raahld Jallr, to ~be hi&amp; ·
hancllu~har. Soulh bid lhree opades 10
show hla lhree-Oa,a IIUpllOII, and Norlh

PUNISHMENT 0 ?

TAW&lt;IN&lt;ir TO
Ar/JAIN,
YOU?

PlYIIIG lOP PIICES RIB
llllllfiiiiiCIRI·••••mWHIII
CIIIIIUC .......... .
IUIIJiS ... IInl
IIIIIIIW Cli •• Pr1c1sJ

SAVINGS

Tom Sewyor
cloy - P
6 Plano
26 With lk~l
lupporl
27 ilnlm
7 lla,
IOUnd
Llncheetor 29 Elllnct bird
olfllmt
30 Yolclnlc
8 twmleu lie
duot
9 VIlle
31 Whore

haVe

-11JUn'IIDIII

in this
space

9 NT

24 Coveled
owardo
28 Mo.
lllllngsr
30 JIUnty
33
· 34 Port ,_
KIIMM
35 Sp.titlll
38 -........,
:17 F-or
Beet
38 Broom rider
3t Ambush .
41 Renoir
..-

In !he Peek Fraans 141h Asia &amp; Middle
East Bridge Championships, played two
mooths ago In Karachi, Pakllllan, the
open learns flnal carne doWn 10 the
IOO!h and last board. You
K-9-5-43 of hearls and Q-1 ll-H-7 of diamonds.
'!bur side passes lhroughoul. The bidding, 91artlng oo 'fOUl rlghl, goes one
club· ooe &amp;pa&lt;le - two no-trump (18-19
points) - three no-lrul!1l - paaa. Would
you lead a haa~ boca11011 you normally
lead a rnator rathll' 1t1an a minor, or a
dlanoncl becauselhatsult Is stronger'~
Allhla polnl, lncla led by one lnlsmallonal ~ point, haYing gained 11
Imps on the poevloua deaL 10 lake the
lead.
In the olher mom, Saralaraz Khan, lhrl

S
Bl SB.l

Advertise

t•

North

India wins on
an opening lead

. .. ~, /~-#"~\--- -~ .......... - _ ........._,, ....., _ _..___.. ~~--.:..,. ..

740-992-1m

3t Riiny
oiO Compoeu,. olllro
ohannal
42 Lowell the
3 Blnalo- 22 Pollet
-.,
4 WI- I
23 Drying
44 Unluclcy
brulh
oven
llombltr
5 Polly, to
25 "Wool" on 45 Fml-

low

an.n......

Opening lead: '?

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1 Bun.to
hockey pro 18 "Selome
2 H11111burger
s-"

bylhepool

• Ai 5

West
Pass
Pass

DOWN

Wading bird

Gerbil, e.g .
18 Fitting
20 Mllce.lnto

21 Uo

SCIUlli .

Dealer. South
Vulnerable: Both

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

I. ••

• JIO!f642

• A K 3

r---~--...,

2005 H.O.Fal Boy cuslom
maroon
w/embossed
flames, 1 of 200 made,SOO

~ Bo~lllR&amp;S~~

I

'

mila~

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

I

I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '• • • • • • ;Jf .

.''' 1r u•, In .11 E&gt;,J( •tll l c

·-

• Q J.
• J'

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17

• AK8 7

ROBERT

p•···---------- -- ---···········-

469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

C il lO

miles
Since
new,prlce . . . . . . . . . .. .
0% Financing- 36 Mos. $19,000 080 call tor
available now on John delalls-740-949-2217.
Deere Z Trek Zero TUITII &amp;
·'
. Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave, 5.99% Axed Ra1a on John'
Gallipolis,
Upstairs,
1 Oaara Gotoro Carmichael 2006 HO Electra-glide Ullra
Bedroom , No Pets, All utili- ~qulpment (740)446-2412. Classic i500 miles. $18,000
.,...
ltll
ties paid, (740)446·9523
negotiable.
740-379-22BO
•
New
Homes
·
Kiefer Built- Valley-BisonGarage Apan. Mason 1br, fully Horse
and
Livestock
Garages
tumlshed, utUies paid, $450/mo, TtalltraLoadmax~
&lt;;omplete
S3501dep. Alillllillr&amp;ncas. 304-593- Goosen"eck, Dumps, &amp;
Remodeling
8187 or 304-593-6107 Aner spm . Utility - Aluma Aluminum
1988 Celebraly, cuddy
Graclou• Uvlng 1 and 2 Trallere- B&amp;W Gooseneck
cabin, 4.311ter engine. Call
Bedroom Apts. at Village HitchesTrailer
Parts.
740-992-7143.
Manor and Riverside Apts. in Carmichael
Trailers.
Stop &amp;Compare
Mlddlepo rl, !rom $327 lo ;_17:;4;.:
0)_44_6-·2-4-12---..,
5592. 740·992-5064. Equal
-~----,--Housing Opportunity.
LfvEsrocK
40 HP Mercury Outboard

Joint Jlea~ant 1\egt~ter
The Daily Sentinel
6unba~ Uti me~ -&amp;enttnel

ID to

490

Hall runnors, U-plcl&lt;, $15.00 - - - - - , - - - , : - bu.·, 2 mf. off 7 Lead((Jg. 2005 H.D. Road King
Creek, Orehel's, (740)742• Custom Deluxe M backrest
and windshield. 2700 actual
miles. SlsSoo. 645-7441
I Unl ..,1 1'1'1 II ..,
,\ I I\ I .., I I II 1...

t'UW,.,

JBailp «rtbune

Mall or drop off this coupon along

I IH'IU\'

• Roofing

• $4000 ooo, (740)256 -91 24

(304)882-3017 . jjjri;10;;;;;;;F.QuJfllloo';;;::F~•;;;;;ou;;;;;;;;;;;;

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

: Address - - - -----,--- - - -

Vn;m:Alll£';

99] G2"l
1-'

"

•Central heat &amp; fJJC

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

: Subscriber's Name _ _____ _

I

.......~--,

FRurrs &amp;

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Windows

::-::-:-:---:-:-::--,:-2000 Honda 350 Rancher.

li!ll!r""""'~

WV 036725

I

Jacf( Russell pupplas, 1
Female and 1 male $125.00
aach. 740 _742 _2233.
Elactrlc shift, genlly rode,
excellent concl~ion, $2400.
Lab puppies lor Sa le Call 740..245-5934
Wormed &amp; shots, 7 wks,
black &amp; brown 304-895- ------,:--~
3274 or 3()4,593·3702
2004 Honda 4x4 Foreman,

r

0

miles, great shape, clean.
$5300. Ca/1740-379-2723

• K J

All types of con~rete
Owner- Rick Wise

7

• ROom Addlttona a
Remodeling
• New G,,.,..
··•
: :::r~:'~ • :,~:1ng
, VInyl Skiing 6 Painting
•PIIID and Porch Decka

• 8 4 3

47 -In the
bog I
41 Dlllnll
50 Sport group

out
53 c.mtvlll
8 Hllljiful
ride
11-buy 55 Sumo
(2-.)
.56 Economlll
12 Ayla'o
- -Smith
CI'Mior
57 SeH-eem
Jlln 58 at. ......
13 Mound
51 Fill blf'llme
14 llldftlt.... 60 Dathtd
16

• 876

Si. Rt. , liUP""r8 Plains, OH

--,:---::::-:--:--:::::=
2001 Jeep Cherokee. 95000

52 Westwood pies, tir:co!Or, male &amp; or race. $1,200 flrm Call
!rom s:l6 5 10 s56o. female, morelnlo. (740)742- 416-2620.
740-448-25 68.
Equal ' 0526, oo answer leave mes-

'

'I bl I
a e.

va1

East

70 Pine S t reet • Gallipolis
740-446-11007 Toll Free 877-66!1.1)007

A HIDOEN TREASUREit steel Beams, Pipe Rebar 1998 Ford Expe&lt;ltlon XLT,

Baallllful Apto. 11

a

•·

machine
&amp; craftThunderbird
Hams 304- . "41i116-r1,;,4;,;,72._""':'"':"'---,
Call740-742-2293
Gary Stanley @
674-0155,1988
4x4
$1 BOO on• 674 4657
'
· ~·
·
FOR SALE
L!!!~~~,!!!!~~
NEW AND USED STEEL · - - - - - - - -

onve,

If so, youq

~efenences A

- - --.,.---- -good condlllon, ale, pb, ps,
Lg. womens .clothes, sewing good MPG , $2,950, 740·

West
•K 9543
• Q 10 9 8 7

r

Eatat••·

: Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box

MONTY

740·367·0536

For sale· Baagle hound pup- 2000 CR250R Ready to ride

with a copy of your photo

~:f3;$5't{

07-1 747

• Q53

SALE

(740)992-5656

I

emv=,mg, oom

~res,

(740)949-2698 a~er 4pm

1

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

4 B!Nchtilo

• A 10
• 5 s"

Trimming
R
I
&amp; emOV8

-ss•

1

R ,. S'"''
oo,mg, lulng,
Soffit, Decks,

1 Bribe

Alder

• Q 10 7 8 2

I

o.

•alltpoli~

{]amiJJJ l•)flij!:l

388-r5

AKC AegiSiered Mlnlalure
Schnauzer puppies $400.
Ready 7/21/07. "740-388·
9370
-------CKC Cooker Spaniel puppies black &amp; butt 304-6754243

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

i304)8B2-3652

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Phillip

North

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

OuaUI)' ciro, lruoko ano
vans with warranty.· 2002
Focus 43,015 miles $3900.

55 acres more or less, 3 BR MH In Cheshire. Total
tu...L.
• $69,000. Ca ll 740·256·9247
efec.
$425/month
+
$425/deposit and utilities.
1997 Oakwood ow 28x54,
441-2707
3BR Am. 2 full bath, garden
Beautiful Allier View in
tub, dishwasher, stove,
HOUSF.S
to
2
Kanauga- Ideal r 1 or
refridg, Buill in microwave
1
FOR RENI'
people, re erences; NoGpe~s.
induded, Ce ntral . Air, all
loc. 5 mi. 1rom
allin.
alec. 2 decks, Outbuildings,
(7
44 0181
Bx1
3 ~ Pool. MuSI be $174/mol Buy 3bd HUD _ 40_l_1_-- - - , - - - Phona Calls Please.
moll6d Asking $43,000 740· hornet 5%dn, 20yra @ 8%. MH for rent. 28 R. S450/renl
•109
Apartment for re nt, 1·2
446-0969
For II • Ungs ~ and $450/deposit. Addison
Bdrm., remodeled, new carx1709.
Twp. Caii.367-D654 or 645t998 Clayton Mobile Home - - - - - - - - 3413
pet, stove &amp; !rig., water,
14x50. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 1 possibly 2 Br House in - - -- - - - - sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
great co ndi1ion, must· be New Haven. $325/month, Mobile homes tor rent , $425.00. No pets. Ref.
moved,
12
thOusand, $325/depos/1 No
Pe1s. Middleport area, no pels, required. 740-843-5264.

r•

'lrJ!Qii~~~fliii'l

nos

j

I

- - - - - - --

1 and 2 Dedroom apartments. furnished lilld unfur·
Doors. Windows,
·nished, and houses In 0173
FOR SALE
Electric, Plumbing,
Pomeroy and Middleport, .:.Ks;..n..:.mor_e_smoolh
_ ___op-ra_ngn_ ~.,_ _rrririiiiiiiiiiilo•~
OnA.U..:~'',
1
-------•J .. " "
3 bedroom, 2 full bath, 2 security deposit required, no- w/ overt Less than l yr old. 2001 Dodge 3500 4X4 quad R
_..,_,.
R
pel 7 . n 992 2218
~••
•ml
.
story house, half acre yard,
&amp;, "tv•
•
White, great condition. o..c:a~, 59
· 24 118•- cum
Ad"'l'll'
u, ons
lull basement. central ale,
.
Moving oveJSeas am:tMUST turbo diesel 6 sp. 5" lift 38"
hardwood floors, plenly of
SELL! $350 080 Call 740- parnell! jones din grip
·
parking, $735 per month, Internet 1740')645-4846
794..()290
5" chrome stacks, edge
F- Eatlm-·a
(740)949·2303
' ·
comp bolt 7112/n DVD play·•-:-:--:---:::-:--:-- 2 BR, W/0 hookup, doaa to
MlscwANJ;oos
pioneer stereo system.
4 bedroom, 2 story house, college. 740..286-5789 or
800 wan sound system, ':=::;;,;;::=~
very spacious &amp; clean, new 44f-3702
·
chrome nerf bars , brush
carport, large bedroom, eat$ For Old Auto Batteries 1- guard, diamond plate too!
in kitchen w~h nhew cablnEQ, 2BQ. nea.:: Rio Grande,has 99 $2.soeB. 100+ $3.00ea, box wlbed rails. K&amp;N air fil$685 per mont • (740)949-, fridge, stove, WID, water, 250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT- 1er, AC, PW, PB, Tow pack·
2303
trash, sewer. 2BR In TEFIY TERMINAL 1-800- age w/elec btake, 3 pod
Seamless Gut1ers
Attention/
GallipOlis has fridge/stove. 796-6797
QBLIQBS, one owner asking RcJOfii rl!l,, Siding, Gutters
Quiel area~ No pets. Ref.
$20,000740~0969
lnsurod&amp; Bondsd
Local COI!'jlany offering ' NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- Aeq. 740-446-1271 or 709740-653-9657
1657
$500 Coupon
grams lor you to buy your - ' - - - - - - - HotThbOultetll
home instead of renting.
2BR aptsl 6 ml from Holzer. Top QualliyiWarranty Mitton 79 11on Cab &amp; Chassis, 82
• 100% financing
WalerArash/sewer
pold. Flea Mkl SIS 606·326·0m Chevy Pickup. 82 Chevy
• Less !han perfect credll $400/mo+dep.
740-682Van,
CaN
after
5pm
aocepled
9243 or 988-6130
8' weathered oak fence (740)446-3243, (740)446' Payme nl could be lhe - - - - - - - - boards. $1 &amp; $2 . 367-m7
4338
same as rent.
4RM &amp; Bath, stove ,fridge,
JET
l!jr-~SUV:::':::":"'S---, Pl'ro1npt and Quality
Mortgage
Locators. utilities paid, upstairs, 46
AERATION UOTORS
FOR
Work
74
_1_ 0_)_
36_7_
·oo_oo____ Olive
st. 446-3945
No
pets. Sl~
Repaired,
Rebuih In
$450/month.
GallNew
Ro &amp; E
For renl or for sale 2 BR
.........
n vans, 1• 199B Chevy Blazer, runs
Nice Remodeled Home in
800-537-9528.
good, lOOkS good, V-6, very

1In7-,
4_
0I_44ll
_ -7-:
425-:--:---:-::
2 tra iler lots tor rent near _
Pomeroy
House for renti3
Racine, $250 a mQnth,
Bd.,2 balh, newly remod740 992 2458
(
)
eled, t0181 electric. 740-843------3 acres 5 112 miles out C5FJ
264
1r"
. :':':~~~~:-1
Redmond Rfdge 304-593M~o~-~
3707
·~ .....,.,
- - - - - -- • -. .lliiiiiiiiiiio-,1
1
5 Acres MIL along Old
Covered Bric!Qe Ad. Located 2 Br • AJC, Vary nice,
in Ewing1on, Vinton Counly, Johnson Mobile Home Park.
OH. Call606·353·0990
740-446-2003 or 446-1409

MOBIURILESI_I~

depostt.

Syracuse. $500/month +
deposit No Pets. (304)675·
5332 weekends 740-591 0265

Musl
localedsell. Pholos/delails
online
at
WWW.o-~.com (code '7137)
'""
4
or call 304·675· 235 asking
$126,000

ground pool wtdeck, can
now won't last long,
(740)992·24'9

~~ for

Ill ....,......_

iirr~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Racine, $400 1

$400

1 &amp; 2 Bedi'OOfll A.partments
fof Rent, Meigs County, In

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

A
!Own, No Pols, RellO'Iated,
~--roiiiiiCREAiiiiiiiGEiiio-rl All new carpet, Call

schOO~&amp; Iown, largaabove

""" .....,.,,.,,..

:.:17.,;;40;;;)992
..-.·2-456~--""1

"C

ancl~lilies. 441·2707

3 miles !rom Poinl
Plee.sanl. Owner relocating,

· Sy ra cusebeautiful
4
bdrom, 2 balh house,
secluded, yet close lo

Gall Woyne (40&lt;4~-38Q2

NEA Crouword Puzzle
ACROSS

wananl)', Powor overyllllng.
$17000. Mewing MUST SELL!
Call 740794-0290

Stanley Tree-

(';"~7:8-2750

.__ _ _ _ _ __,
SPECIAL FHA .FINANCE
Program $0 Down, If you
own Land or use Family

acre~

2001 Toyola Molrlx 16000
mileS. Exc. Cond. Still under

Gallipolis. Rent 1325/rno.

ref. Prl- ........;.rei•'

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

BRIDGE

private drlw with parldng, men. :r14-578-1037
~ al ~ Plaza. COOK IIOTOftS
Cl\1645-2192.
51,100 per month., serious
~ (740) 94 9-2303
llallar for rent, 3 bedroom.,
328 JadclorT Pl&lt;s, ~~

3 Dd,coumry sening, 4 mi.
from Albany, Meigs local
Schc&gt;ms. $550/month plus
ut.Dep.req.740-698--1815 or
74()-416-1103.
· :-::-:---::---:·~-m House ·,n
13

Middleport-In town, out of New 3 Bed room homes rom
flood plane Brick Home $214 .36 per month , Includes
Excellent Location..6 Acre ·many upgracles, delivery &amp;
Apx 4000 sq 118Fims 3 Br 2 set-up. (740)385-2434 "'
112 Bth 2 fire Places 2· - --,:--:---,:---,:-Nice used 3 bedroom home
G rages L0 1 0 1 Sl
a
s
orage.

&amp;

~ l· l!ll:ro~-~:-~--.....,

COmmerctat building •For
Flent" 1800 !WJISra feet, oft
street parking. Great locallonl 749 Tlllni AYIDIHI In

$375.00 a

Tuesday, July 17, 2007
ALLEY OOP

Tuesday, July 17, 2007.

pel'lon clonty.

·

GEMINI
(May 21·June 20)
D isappointment wiM be In the of1ing if you
attempt to take on llOn)ethlng you know
It beyond your lim itations. Tackle only
!holt ob}ectl\ltla thai are within your
capiblllllea.

GRIZZWELLS
LAfT Hl6\-ll' I ~~~~~ A~
W&lt; wm ~~Dr---·
""' A\-1 I~A~P

YdN I

1lf-\j

~¥.,~1.~

Af\P IT W/&gt;.'7

SOUP TO NUTZ
ENeR'I

~Fjjti&lt;e

aN avali!NC\Ie
INNOC'e~Ce.

f'.:M'v\..'1

IN

f'Wl~

~I

Shop
Closslfleds!

-- - #·- ·- -·

--------·- ------------'----- ---:--

�. -.
Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

t

~

I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

r ~~ l...ro_.~~-lbM--~II::IItii'"':":MoBILE_Ji(ll_JbM~HOMES r
........,I

HUO HOIIE81 Sbd only 84 Sohultt. 3 BR, I 112 BA. 2 rHNtoom axecutiYe house,
UI,IIOO. More 1-4bd $7500. 339-4510 aftor Spm. new construction. fully fur1\omee evall1b .. l from - -- - - - - - nlshed, new refrigerator,
.,...,. . ,
5%dn, Great used 2005 3 bedroom slovo, &lt;ishwasher, wuher&amp;
20yraft1"4. For llatlnge 16xBO with llinyllshingle. dryer, large wrap around
Must sell,
I00-65HIOSixFI44
$25,995 with pordl, full basemen!. 1 .. ,

"::0:~;
n S yracuse - 2800 sq.ft 1

Nice 2 BR furrished trailer
water paid, no pets.
$375/month + $375/deposlt.
Cal441-o829
- - - - - - -Nice clean 2 llr. 1 ba. In

garage, lola! oloc:lrk: wllh Hartford, Clop.
central air, very spacious, required, no pets

I

quallly bull1 mulli-brick
home. ma!ntt:tnance lree.
Nice quiel neighborhood. 34 bedrooms, 2 112 balh wi1h
NEW
411ed
• - rdwood tr' lh - "
om
lm
rou.,-..
U·shaped kilchen '"lh 40' ol
.
cabinals. Woodbumlngfire·
place. 2 112 car delached
--~~~~~
garage. NiCely landscaped
•-•
.60 acres lot. Immaculate
"Condition. Low utilities.
••••••IMI!UJII
"setiiog prk:e $219,000. Call
140·4~1 -5171 . Shown by mymldwlltt\ome.com
app1 only.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _. .

2008

$Q,189

.&amp;..•

~-us can740-992-4197.

u....,

New .Haven, 4+ acres, 3 br.,
2 1&gt;4., Iota! elect, gas log
~ce, trig ., stove, dish· '
·washer, hot tub outside,
greai
$53, 000,
304B82-3021,740-44t -9331

~ow,

New Haven, 4+ acres. 3 br.,
2 ba .• tota1 elect., gasd. log
h
1
flr 18
ep ce. 1rg
., stolle, IS wash er, ho1 tub outside,
S53,000,
great
view,
3C4882-3021 ,740-441 -9331

~nyVshlngle. Will help wilh
delivery. 740-385·4367

OBC Modular (LXM503)
special
o1der
only
52,840.00deliverecl to ~r
locallon.
Cole'o Mobllo
Homes 4 miles East or
Athens on At· 50132. PH:
atJG-466-4687 or 592·1972.
M·F, 8-7. Sat.: 9 tO 4.
"Where you get your
money's worth'
,......;._ _ _ _ __,
OWNER FINANCING

New home in Gallipolis.
b h 1 hi 1 .....
ab
v~, Ia2 a~R ww
rpovl
tu.,r;o, rga
on 3 acres
nvl, $87,500. 740-446-7029
Older lrame home. 3BR ,
1BA, LR , DR, Galley
kllchen,
basement.
.25acres, CA/heat. Call .
448-6271

Nice 312 singlewides
From$1,800down
t

Scon

your

We own -4
the Bank
Ranch Style Brick. Home, 2 Land
Approved
606 74 _6380
bedrooms, 1 bedroom extra
large, 2 full baths. on 2 112
Lors &amp; ·

cal~

00

2 balh, naar

''

month,

2 BR hou$e In Kanauga.
$425/monlh + $4251-1

j

r

f11D

•Ji(ll-·RFNr-"""""""''~

lloui!How

.._
__oiGooosililiil;.,-

1.999 Tracker $3500. Many
others In Block. Slop or oall
For sate; Kitchen range &amp; 740-&lt;U6.0103
'
hood $250, 2 maple bar
stOOls $35, Gun cabinet ,.,--,:--:--,:-:---:$125. Cail740-441-8299
Lively's Auto Sales. 96
Hyunda Elantra SW, 4cyl,
Full Size Manress &amp; IllS, auiO w/00, $1000. 91 Ford
S$400
180; SofaO...,_&amp;Lcwa
lltllsaatsets; AangerPU,3.0V6, $1000.
: nvv a e- save a 388-9303 9107 M-Sal.
lot, Mollohan, 202 Clark
Chapet Fld. Bidwell.
Tlux::Ks

town, No Pets, Deposit
Raqulred, (740)992-5174 or
{740)441.()11 0.

~~RH:;. r,~;:':;

r

I·'·

Mulc:BANolsE

t..-rorriliiliiiiOI--"1 :~;~;.1.::Rates

. -,·.

I

::---: :-:- : : -- -::---:-

r .

I

Laurel
CommOns
Apartmenls. Largesl In lhe
areal Beautifully renovated
lhroughoul lncludlng brand
new kitchen and bath.
Sl rtlng 1 $405
llloda 1
a
a
· a
Y
(304)273 3344
•
Accepting applications for 2
BR, 1 BA apt, stove, 1rldge,
WID included. Wa.ter &amp;
Garbage paid. No pets, 11ery
nice, clean &amp; atiracli11e.
$500/mo. 1st mo + $500
Sac.dep. required. Ava'llable
7/16107. App'·
w"hr
'n.· 174'
'Y
'1
"'
Ganlenary Rd, Gallipolis. No

c

For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Fief Bar, Sleel
Grallng
For
Drains,
Dnveways&amp;W.Ikways.L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
'
Friday Sam-4·30pm Closed
Thursday.
Satu rday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

85,000 miles, 4WD, Towing
Pkg, 3rt! Row, Good Cood:,
$8500. (740)446-9664

r

JOCI&lt;aon

V,

Used Wolle Tanning Bed, 16
FOR~ALE
new bulbs $900. Price nego- , .,_ _rrirriiiiiiiiiiirro-~
Hable. Call 606-424-2348
I'm
95 Pl·-.,..,ulh van. air, auto V'"~
6 $900 080.740-256-1652
FOR
~

r

SALE

Housing Opportunlly. This
institution Is an Equal
Opportunity Prov.l der and
Employer.

I

MOTORCY~
.;. ~'
4 WIIEilUliS

411

sage

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·

ED a AFFOADA8LEI
Townhouse

.

apartments,

and'or small houses FOR
RENT. Cell (740)441·1111
lor app lication &amp; information.

1992 Harley
Davidson
Springer,
low
mileage,
'
excellent shape , new tires,
call anytime, (740)992·6027

EllmView
Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroom apanments

Senior Discount*

•Washer/dryer hookup

•Tenant pays electric

E&gt;&lt;lres Included,

J&amp;L
Constructa'on
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement

,

Decks

• Garagsa
• Pole Buildings
' Room Additions

Owner:

Jamea Keesee II
742 _~ 332

r~;:::;:::::~==:::
Mushroom

Compost

$3SAScoop

T·Post6ft. $3.29

Wide Variety or
Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and

Showmasler Show

Wise Concrete
740-992·5929
740·416-1698

r_

r

-Midd_le_po
_r1_
, B-eedl--S'-1-.,

-2b~r.

1.,------· r

=~~~~~~~~~ 2:~~-

furnished apartment, utilities 7 AQHA Registered Quarter
paid, deposit &amp; refarences, Horses for sale or trade. Call
no pets, (740)992-0165

after ( pm. 740-256-6003

Middleport. North 4th Ave .. 2 Red Reg. percentage boer
br. furnished apartment, billy goalS. 75% $125. 50%
deposit &amp; references, no _s~
100
r. 7-40-·-:256~·8-15~2---,
pets, (740)992·0165
HAY &amp;
. r&lt;n.. .....
Modem 1 Bedroom apt. Call ...,_ _
446·0090
Hay wanted:wlll mow and
New 2BA apartments.
dean field for the hay, also
hookup,
Washer/dryer
want to buy Troy Bill tiUer.
stove/refrigerator lnclue19d.
446-1052
.
Also. units on SR 160. Pets
I!~ \\o.,l'nR 1 \I 14 )\
Wel come! (740)44 1-0194.

r

I

I

I

I
I

1

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I

I

: Phone,________ ______
I
.I

I
I

I

:

• • • • • • • •I

New Haven 1 Br. Furnished
Apt., has WID, No Pets, Dep.
&amp; references. 740-992-0165.
Taking applica tions for
Modern 2 BR , No pe ts,
$295 /mo
includes
water/sewer. $200 deposit.
(740)446-3617
-------Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, Adull Pool. &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Pl us
Security Deposit Required.
(740)446-3481 .

r

O

•""""'iiiirii-·

A~

'--rrrii'ORriiiiiiSM.EiiiOir-,.J

1949 Dodge Coronet 4-door
sedan ,
76,000
miles.
Includes spare lransmission, a lew parts.. repair and
·· parts books. serv1ce history.
Howard Mullen, 740-9923782
1968 Pontiac Grand Prix,
also e riding lawn mowe r.
Ask tOr Jr. Phone 256-1102

CAMPERS &amp;·

I

M&lt;YI'OR HOMES
2002 Hornet 30ft , sleeps 6.
centra l air, furnace, talephone &amp; cable hookup, exlarge bathroom , water filter,
AMJFM CD player w/ pia·
neer speakers, gasfelec
refrigerator, microwave, 4
burner gas s1ove w/oven,
one owner aSking $9.000,
740-446-0969

97 Yellowstone travel trailer
32ft. sildeoul $6500. 740256·8138

AT
CHESH IRE :
2004
Nomad-North Trail 34' with
hyd., _E11tended section.
Camper nearly as new,
$ 12.500 Neg. Ca ll David,
(606)57 1-9448 . Russell , KY

for
$90
per

month

I
BARNEY

llaNnH C*lleCI'J And Flrliaie

HEY, JEDGE --DON'T
THIS FALL UNDER
•cRUEL AN'

W"WW'.tlaalltaea r· akcabiMbJ~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J

UNUSUAL

on

" I I~\ II I "'

1994 Plymouth Acclaim,
75000 miles. Former Gov't
BASEMEtfl'
car. Exc. Cond! $2500 080 .
WATERPROOFING
Moving oversees &amp; MUST
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptUnconditional liJetime guarSELL/. Call740- 794-0290
Ing applications for waiti ng
antee. Local references fuclist for Hud-sutlsized, 1- br, 95 Pontiac Sunlire $1500 nlshed. Established 1975.
apartment,lor
the 080. 98 Cavalier $220 0
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446elderly/disabled call 675- 080. 01 Ca11alier $3650
0870, Rogers Basement
6679
Equal
Housing 080. 00 GT Mustang $7000 Waterproofing .
Opponunlly
080. 256-6169

Eut
Pass
All pas s

43 Tmnc cone

T-1•
32 P•t.
Huce
brand
34 " Vol"

10 C..V.n

or Unllld
13 Pocket
brHd
15 Phony

48 DrljHiry
fobrlc
48 , _..

hl8.

52 eom.on.
54 Exclttment

..

(2 - . )

duclco

'

blncHid . ,
41 Lib weight .
50 Shwuwr _;·
51 ilollon'o
·
IUIMIIr

Pa~91anl NO&lt;th, -

An0

ralaod to four opadel. Al1ho&lt;Jgl East led .
lhe club jade, which West ruffed, the
conlrBct could i10I be beaten. Norlh loot
one &amp;pa&lt;le, one heart andlhe rulf. Hla
diamond loaar ,.oappearod on Soulh's

,.....

740·667-31'n

•

lou~h

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

THE BORN LOSER
l':iou'vE &amp;a~ 1\ L\ HLE

~

J liTER'&lt; LII.\E.L-'1. ~i&gt;.I'S
'IOU 51\0UL-t&gt; CUi Bt\C.II.. Qt.\
'&lt;OU~ COFFEE

Jeff Bissell, Manage!'

Contractor available for quality
construction on turn key, single
houses and duplexes, garages,
porches. All concrete flatwork
including patios, driveways
and sidewalks.

F;-ou 1'\IG.I\i ~"e:." wm~? PL IXJI.I'\ f\t\\IE." CAFfE.It-iE. ~
PROe&gt;U:f'o\, 6L-~t&gt;'IS/
PI&lt;:0&amp;£11\ 1-iOW ...\N&lt;f.(o.WII.'I
"'-'&lt; C.OFfE.E ~t&gt; l'U. AAIJ€. f&gt;..

I

Iill I 1\K.E ...

WF'€1~ ~lD\!

~-if) .

So lhe match came down 10 lhe leecl by
Tahir Masood,.West lot Paiclslln, agalnal
lhree no-trump. II he c:11ooe a heart,
Pa~stan WClUicl win the IIIIo; II a diamond, India would lake lha gold madals.
,Well, he selee1od the &lt;lamood 10. Aloke
sa&lt;flu (South) won wllh his oce, cashed
his spade ace, and played another
S(lflde. EvtniU81~, after Imperfect die-

G ..........,:
AstroGraph

&lt;. HECKING
OUT THE

Y"'RD SALE.
L~'5TIN&amp;S 1•

We Deliver To You I
PEANUTS

~ ....~l'!'·"t"i!f1t'!ij!'J'!!8~:"'•

VERI( STRAN6E .. SOMEBODC(

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

SPILLED BIRDS ALL OVER
j~jE VAAD ..

'

-~

,.-;J

'l

Wednesday, July 18, 2007
By Bernice 9ede Osol
There Ill • 1trong po11lb llity that
advancement can be made In ')'OUr chosen fteld of endeavor, but It might happen
more by h8ppenstance than bV skill
alone. it ooutd come about through a
unique chain of ewntt.
CANCER CJune 21..July 22) - Things
you flnd to be ot great lntereel might not
be equally desirable to your friends.• If
you lnstet upon engaging In them, plan to
do ao alone becauee your pals aren't apt
to be supportive.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - This ie: not one
of .thoae daya Yttlere you'll dO well handling something for another because
things you attempt to do ror this person
could easily go wrong. WOOf. only on your
own affairs.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Partnaring
with another for a oommOn cause could
be more dlsadllantagequl than beneflclal. Put aside any proj8ct: that requires
help and apply your efforts atrlctly on
lone lobs.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Spend your
time on arrangements lnttlated by another rather than on tome1hlng you personally want done. You'll find It far more ben·
eflclal than anything you do only for youreelf.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-No~. 22) -

SUNSHINE CLUB

· H1ll s Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Raci ne, Ohio

45771
740-949-2217

I I 1\ I '&gt;

I

&lt;l

'\I IU I I

I&lt; l'\"

I~

I I II ! l'\

Concrete Removal

and

Replacement

l\U~~ . QJ .,(' · ··­

Con~te.· !\'ork -

•

26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free

~·

Eatlmata1

Manley's
Racycllll'ig
IIIIIIIISt. ·-•n.OIWH
7*HI2-3194
_ _.,...llt.H-..:00111
.............12:81 ..

by Luis Campoli

Ceietrty Cipher Cl)'l:t9am• n Cflllld li!Jn.~iocla br 1~~ra~~ ~. 1*11 lf'CIIJ.wt
Ec:h letler ~ tbedpher llandl Ia mi.-

You'll
have an abundance of energy waiting to
be channeled In a positive manner, so
choose to spend your time with persone
who are as ind~rlous and productive u
you are.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc . 21) You're likely to be moat effac!lve when
you are able to work on projects that can
be aecompf!lhed epeedify. Tedious taska
are likely to reduCe your lniarests and
productivity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Try to
go after something that Ia meanlngtul
because It's all In your head as to what
wnl either encourage or dlaoourage you
to achilwe 8liCC:eu. 'mu need to be motivated.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Having
a direct lnwtvement with a good associate for a conatructlve purpoae will bring
you ttle greatest satlstaetiof"'. tf you can't
do anything with another. do something

TodoY, clus: Iequals S

" L'W BNUBLX HN THYLSJ WO
HIYMCULKO . JZ&amp;CLSZSZYY HSTO
KFULEZV LS KFZ XBUA . TLAZ
MZTZUO , " • BTXHCY FCPTZO
PREVKJUS SOLUTION - 'Besides~ · loyally, discipline, heari and n;nd,
c:on~ls lhe kaylo alllhe locks. · Coach Joe Pate100

tAll
'=~:~· S@~~lA-4t.~sClAT
_ _ __

WOlD

-

lly

I,~_...

O~oarrongo
ocrambled
lour
low 10 form

I

1

lo11&gt;u ol fh1
words b.
four slm~l1 words .

KOSTCY
2

1111 1
!IV S E N

1 I I' I
3

"
0

E L NI T '
"

I I' I' I

~

...'

O!HJONE

l' ll a ll 9
8 i.fl
P11 tNr N(J,'J.flfP ED I
![RS

A ramous.millionaire lold a
group of people, "'llle secrel of
business success is to know

something lhat nobody ---- -----''

G)

tht chi.ICkfe quoted
In th• mi~Jng words
yov deyelop from srap Na. 3 below.
Compl1to
by filling

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

' - 1b - o1

Jockey - Prime - Lunch - Parish - PIANO
"I have noticed," lhe old gent rnusod, " thallhere are too
many people willing to carry the bench when they should :
be moving the PIANO."
-

ARLO&amp;JANIS

for another.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marct'l 20) - A penson
who likes you a lot may offer some very
good advice. Yet there is a strong pouiblllty you might chooae to Ignore II, just
because it doesn't fit In with what you
want.
ARI ES (March 21·April 19) -Stick to
so lo deaKnge that are of a commercial
nature. Vou should have a degree of auc·
ceu. but be sure to steer clear of anyone
who could muddle your affairs.
TAUFUS (April 20·t.Ae.y 20) - Shoutcl
you lind yourself In ttl• company of
someone who makes you feel a bit
uneaay or uncomlortabla, thert mty be •
good retton tor If. Con11nue to atudy thiS

GARFIELD

.EZ..J THINK
_.. .. 1101..17'5
.JEAL.OO!i OF YOU

CELEBRITY CIPHER

otlb.

carding, declarer loolc 11 lrloka, gMng
India another Imp andlha win by two. It
was thai close.

BIG NATE

Reliable &amp; Experienced
Call Dennis Bryant
(740) 742-23n

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios Syst¢m

three duba ovor

two no-trump, en artlllctal call !hal . hlo parlnar, Raahld Jallr, to ~be hi&amp; ·
hancllu~har. Soulh bid lhree opades 10
show hla lhree-Oa,a IIUpllOII, and Norlh

PUNISHMENT 0 ?

TAW&lt;IN&lt;ir TO
Ar/JAIN,
YOU?

PlYIIIG lOP PIICES RIB
llllllfiiiiiCIRI·••••mWHIII
CIIIIIUC .......... .
IUIIJiS ... IInl
IIIIIIIW Cli •• Pr1c1sJ

SAVINGS

Tom Sewyor
cloy - P
6 Plano
26 With lk~l
lupporl
27 ilnlm
7 lla,
IOUnd
Llncheetor 29 Elllnct bird
olfllmt
30 Yolclnlc
8 twmleu lie
duot
9 VIlle
31 Whore

haVe

-11JUn'IIDIII

in this
space

9 NT

24 Coveled
owardo
28 Mo.
lllllngsr
30 JIUnty
33
· 34 Port ,_
KIIMM
35 Sp.titlll
38 -........,
:17 F-or
Beet
38 Broom rider
3t Ambush .
41 Renoir
..-

In !he Peek Fraans 141h Asia &amp; Middle
East Bridge Championships, played two
mooths ago In Karachi, Pakllllan, the
open learns flnal carne doWn 10 the
IOO!h and last board. You
K-9-5-43 of hearls and Q-1 ll-H-7 of diamonds.
'!bur side passes lhroughoul. The bidding, 91artlng oo 'fOUl rlghl, goes one
club· ooe &amp;pa&lt;le - two no-trump (18-19
points) - three no-lrul!1l - paaa. Would
you lead a haa~ boca11011 you normally
lead a rnator rathll' 1t1an a minor, or a
dlanoncl becauselhatsult Is stronger'~
Allhla polnl, lncla led by one lnlsmallonal ~ point, haYing gained 11
Imps on the poevloua deaL 10 lake the
lead.
In the olher mom, Saralaraz Khan, lhrl

S
Bl SB.l

Advertise

t•

North

India wins on
an opening lead

. .. ~, /~-#"~\--- -~ .......... - _ ........._,, ....., _ _..___.. ~~--.:..,. ..

740-992-1m

3t Riiny
oiO Compoeu,. olllro
ohannal
42 Lowell the
3 Blnalo- 22 Pollet
-.,
4 WI- I
23 Drying
44 Unluclcy
brulh
oven
llombltr
5 Polly, to
25 "Wool" on 45 Fml-

low

an.n......

Opening lead: '?

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1 Bun.to
hockey pro 18 "Selome
2 H11111burger
s-"

bylhepool

• Ai 5

West
Pass
Pass

DOWN

Wading bird

Gerbil, e.g .
18 Fitting
20 Mllce.lnto

21 Uo

SCIUlli .

Dealer. South
Vulnerable: Both

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

I. ••

• JIO!f642

• A K 3

r---~--...,

2005 H.O.Fal Boy cuslom
maroon
w/embossed
flames, 1 of 200 made,SOO

~ Bo~lllR&amp;S~~

I

'

mila~

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

I

I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '• • • • • • ;Jf .

.''' 1r u•, In .11 E&gt;,J( •tll l c

·-

• Q J.
• J'

...

17

• AK8 7

ROBERT

p•···---------- -- ---···········-

469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

C il lO

miles
Since
new,prlce . . . . . . . . . .. .
0% Financing- 36 Mos. $19,000 080 call tor
available now on John delalls-740-949-2217.
Deere Z Trek Zero TUITII &amp;
·'
. Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave, 5.99% Axed Ra1a on John'
Gallipolis,
Upstairs,
1 Oaara Gotoro Carmichael 2006 HO Electra-glide Ullra
Bedroom , No Pets, All utili- ~qulpment (740)446-2412. Classic i500 miles. $18,000
.,...
ltll
ties paid, (740)446·9523
negotiable.
740-379-22BO
•
New
Homes
·
Kiefer Built- Valley-BisonGarage Apan. Mason 1br, fully Horse
and
Livestock
Garages
tumlshed, utUies paid, $450/mo, TtalltraLoadmax~
&lt;;omplete
S3501dep. Alillllillr&amp;ncas. 304-593- Goosen"eck, Dumps, &amp;
Remodeling
8187 or 304-593-6107 Aner spm . Utility - Aluma Aluminum
1988 Celebraly, cuddy
Graclou• Uvlng 1 and 2 Trallere- B&amp;W Gooseneck
cabin, 4.311ter engine. Call
Bedroom Apts. at Village HitchesTrailer
Parts.
740-992-7143.
Manor and Riverside Apts. in Carmichael
Trailers.
Stop &amp;Compare
Mlddlepo rl, !rom $327 lo ;_17:;4;.:
0)_44_6-·2-4-12---..,
5592. 740·992-5064. Equal
-~----,--Housing Opportunity.
LfvEsrocK
40 HP Mercury Outboard

Joint Jlea~ant 1\egt~ter
The Daily Sentinel
6unba~ Uti me~ -&amp;enttnel

ID to

490

Hall runnors, U-plcl&lt;, $15.00 - - - - - , - - - , : - bu.·, 2 mf. off 7 Lead((Jg. 2005 H.D. Road King
Creek, Orehel's, (740)742• Custom Deluxe M backrest
and windshield. 2700 actual
miles. SlsSoo. 645-7441
I Unl ..,1 1'1'1 II ..,
,\ I I\ I .., I I II 1...

t'UW,.,

JBailp «rtbune

Mall or drop off this coupon along

I IH'IU\'

• Roofing

• $4000 ooo, (740)256 -91 24

(304)882-3017 . jjjri;10;;;;;;;F.QuJfllloo';;;::F~•;;;;;ou;;;;;;;;;;;;

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

: Address - - - -----,--- - - -

Vn;m:Alll£';

99] G2"l
1-'

"

•Central heat &amp; fJJC

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

: Subscriber's Name _ _____ _

I

.......~--,

FRurrs &amp;

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Windows

::-::-:-:---:-:-::--,:-2000 Honda 350 Rancher.

li!ll!r""""'~

WV 036725

I

Jacf( Russell pupplas, 1
Female and 1 male $125.00
aach. 740 _742 _2233.
Elactrlc shift, genlly rode,
excellent concl~ion, $2400.
Lab puppies lor Sa le Call 740..245-5934
Wormed &amp; shots, 7 wks,
black &amp; brown 304-895- ------,:--~
3274 or 3()4,593·3702
2004 Honda 4x4 Foreman,

r

0

miles, great shape, clean.
$5300. Ca/1740-379-2723

• K J

All types of con~rete
Owner- Rick Wise

7

• ROom Addlttona a
Remodeling
• New G,,.,..
··•
: :::r~:'~ • :,~:1ng
, VInyl Skiing 6 Painting
•PIIID and Porch Decka

• 8 4 3

47 -In the
bog I
41 Dlllnll
50 Sport group

out
53 c.mtvlll
8 Hllljiful
ride
11-buy 55 Sumo
(2-.)
.56 Economlll
12 Ayla'o
- -Smith
CI'Mior
57 SeH-eem
Jlln 58 at. ......
13 Mound
51 Fill blf'llme
14 llldftlt.... 60 Dathtd
16

• 876

Si. Rt. , liUP""r8 Plains, OH

--,:---::::-:--:--:::::=
2001 Jeep Cherokee. 95000

52 Westwood pies, tir:co!Or, male &amp; or race. $1,200 flrm Call
!rom s:l6 5 10 s56o. female, morelnlo. (740)742- 416-2620.
740-448-25 68.
Equal ' 0526, oo answer leave mes-

'

'I bl I
a e.

va1

East

70 Pine S t reet • Gallipolis
740-446-11007 Toll Free 877-66!1.1)007

A HIDOEN TREASUREit steel Beams, Pipe Rebar 1998 Ford Expe&lt;ltlon XLT,

Baallllful Apto. 11

a

•·

machine
&amp; craftThunderbird
Hams 304- . "41i116-r1,;,4;,;,72._""':'"':"'---,
Call740-742-2293
Gary Stanley @
674-0155,1988
4x4
$1 BOO on• 674 4657
'
· ~·
·
FOR SALE
L!!!~~~,!!!!~~
NEW AND USED STEEL · - - - - - - - -

onve,

If so, youq

~efenences A

- - --.,.---- -good condlllon, ale, pb, ps,
Lg. womens .clothes, sewing good MPG , $2,950, 740·

West
•K 9543
• Q 10 9 8 7

r

Eatat••·

: Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box

MONTY

740·367·0536

For sale· Baagle hound pup- 2000 CR250R Ready to ride

with a copy of your photo

~:f3;$5't{

07-1 747

• Q53

SALE

(740)992-5656

I

emv=,mg, oom

~res,

(740)949-2698 a~er 4pm

1

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

4 B!Nchtilo

• A 10
• 5 s"

Trimming
R
I
&amp; emOV8

-ss•

1

R ,. S'"''
oo,mg, lulng,
Soffit, Decks,

1 Bribe

Alder

• Q 10 7 8 2

I

o.

•alltpoli~

{]amiJJJ l•)flij!:l

388-r5

AKC AegiSiered Mlnlalure
Schnauzer puppies $400.
Ready 7/21/07. "740-388·
9370
-------CKC Cooker Spaniel puppies black &amp; butt 304-6754243

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

i304)8B2-3652

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Phillip

North

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

OuaUI)' ciro, lruoko ano
vans with warranty.· 2002
Focus 43,015 miles $3900.

55 acres more or less, 3 BR MH In Cheshire. Total
tu...L.
• $69,000. Ca ll 740·256·9247
efec.
$425/month
+
$425/deposit and utilities.
1997 Oakwood ow 28x54,
441-2707
3BR Am. 2 full bath, garden
Beautiful Allier View in
tub, dishwasher, stove,
HOUSF.S
to
2
Kanauga- Ideal r 1 or
refridg, Buill in microwave
1
FOR RENI'
people, re erences; NoGpe~s.
induded, Ce ntral . Air, all
loc. 5 mi. 1rom
allin.
alec. 2 decks, Outbuildings,
(7
44 0181
Bx1
3 ~ Pool. MuSI be $174/mol Buy 3bd HUD _ 40_l_1_-- - - , - - - Phona Calls Please.
moll6d Asking $43,000 740· hornet 5%dn, 20yra @ 8%. MH for rent. 28 R. S450/renl
•109
Apartment for re nt, 1·2
446-0969
For II • Ungs ~ and $450/deposit. Addison
Bdrm., remodeled, new carx1709.
Twp. Caii.367-D654 or 645t998 Clayton Mobile Home - - - - - - - - 3413
pet, stove &amp; !rig., water,
14x50. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 1 possibly 2 Br House in - - -- - - - - sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
great co ndi1ion, must· be New Haven. $325/month, Mobile homes tor rent , $425.00. No pets. Ref.
moved,
12
thOusand, $325/depos/1 No
Pe1s. Middleport area, no pels, required. 740-843-5264.

r•

'lrJ!Qii~~~fliii'l

nos

j

I

- - - - - - --

1 and 2 Dedroom apartments. furnished lilld unfur·
Doors. Windows,
·nished, and houses In 0173
FOR SALE
Electric, Plumbing,
Pomeroy and Middleport, .:.Ks;..n..:.mor_e_smoolh
_ ___op-ra_ngn_ ~.,_ _rrririiiiiiiiiiilo•~
OnA.U..:~'',
1
-------•J .. " "
3 bedroom, 2 full bath, 2 security deposit required, no- w/ overt Less than l yr old. 2001 Dodge 3500 4X4 quad R
_..,_,.
R
pel 7 . n 992 2218
~••
•ml
.
story house, half acre yard,
&amp;, "tv•
•
White, great condition. o..c:a~, 59
· 24 118•- cum
Ad"'l'll'
u, ons
lull basement. central ale,
.
Moving oveJSeas am:tMUST turbo diesel 6 sp. 5" lift 38"
hardwood floors, plenly of
SELL! $350 080 Call 740- parnell! jones din grip
·
parking, $735 per month, Internet 1740')645-4846
794..()290
5" chrome stacks, edge
F- Eatlm-·a
(740)949·2303
' ·
comp bolt 7112/n DVD play·•-:-:--:---:::-:--:-- 2 BR, W/0 hookup, doaa to
MlscwANJ;oos
pioneer stereo system.
4 bedroom, 2 story house, college. 740..286-5789 or
800 wan sound system, ':=::;;,;;::=~
very spacious &amp; clean, new 44f-3702
·
chrome nerf bars , brush
carport, large bedroom, eat$ For Old Auto Batteries 1- guard, diamond plate too!
in kitchen w~h nhew cablnEQ, 2BQ. nea.:: Rio Grande,has 99 $2.soeB. 100+ $3.00ea, box wlbed rails. K&amp;N air fil$685 per mont • (740)949-, fridge, stove, WID, water, 250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT- 1er, AC, PW, PB, Tow pack·
2303
trash, sewer. 2BR In TEFIY TERMINAL 1-800- age w/elec btake, 3 pod
Seamless Gut1ers
Attention/
GallipOlis has fridge/stove. 796-6797
QBLIQBS, one owner asking RcJOfii rl!l,, Siding, Gutters
Quiel area~ No pets. Ref.
$20,000740~0969
lnsurod&amp; Bondsd
Local COI!'jlany offering ' NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- Aeq. 740-446-1271 or 709740-653-9657
1657
$500 Coupon
grams lor you to buy your - ' - - - - - - - HotThbOultetll
home instead of renting.
2BR aptsl 6 ml from Holzer. Top QualliyiWarranty Mitton 79 11on Cab &amp; Chassis, 82
• 100% financing
WalerArash/sewer
pold. Flea Mkl SIS 606·326·0m Chevy Pickup. 82 Chevy
• Less !han perfect credll $400/mo+dep.
740-682Van,
CaN
after
5pm
aocepled
9243 or 988-6130
8' weathered oak fence (740)446-3243, (740)446' Payme nl could be lhe - - - - - - - - boards. $1 &amp; $2 . 367-m7
4338
same as rent.
4RM &amp; Bath, stove ,fridge,
JET
l!jr-~SUV:::':::":"'S---, Pl'ro1npt and Quality
Mortgage
Locators. utilities paid, upstairs, 46
AERATION UOTORS
FOR
Work
74
_1_ 0_)_
36_7_
·oo_oo____ Olive
st. 446-3945
No
pets. Sl~
Repaired,
Rebuih In
$450/month.
GallNew
Ro &amp; E
For renl or for sale 2 BR
.........
n vans, 1• 199B Chevy Blazer, runs
Nice Remodeled Home in
800-537-9528.
good, lOOkS good, V-6, very

1In7-,
4_
0I_44ll
_ -7-:
425-:--:---:-::
2 tra iler lots tor rent near _
Pomeroy
House for renti3
Racine, $250 a mQnth,
Bd.,2 balh, newly remod740 992 2458
(
)
eled, t0181 electric. 740-843------3 acres 5 112 miles out C5FJ
264
1r"
. :':':~~~~:-1
Redmond Rfdge 304-593M~o~-~
3707
·~ .....,.,
- - - - - -- • -. .lliiiiiiiiiiio-,1
1
5 Acres MIL along Old
Covered Bric!Qe Ad. Located 2 Br • AJC, Vary nice,
in Ewing1on, Vinton Counly, Johnson Mobile Home Park.
OH. Call606·353·0990
740-446-2003 or 446-1409

MOBIURILESI_I~

depostt.

Syracuse. $500/month +
deposit No Pets. (304)675·
5332 weekends 740-591 0265

Musl
localedsell. Pholos/delails
online
at
WWW.o-~.com (code '7137)
'""
4
or call 304·675· 235 asking
$126,000

ground pool wtdeck, can
now won't last long,
(740)992·24'9

~~ for

Ill ....,......_

iirr~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Racine, $400 1

$400

1 &amp; 2 Bedi'OOfll A.partments
fof Rent, Meigs County, In

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

A
!Own, No Pols, RellO'Iated,
~--roiiiiiCREAiiiiiiiGEiiio-rl All new carpet, Call

schOO~&amp; Iown, largaabove

""" .....,.,,.,,..

:.:17.,;;40;;;)992
..-.·2-456~--""1

"C

ancl~lilies. 441·2707

3 miles !rom Poinl
Plee.sanl. Owner relocating,

· Sy ra cusebeautiful
4
bdrom, 2 balh house,
secluded, yet close lo

Gall Woyne (40&lt;4~-38Q2

NEA Crouword Puzzle
ACROSS

wananl)', Powor overyllllng.
$17000. Mewing MUST SELL!
Call 740794-0290

Stanley Tree-

(';"~7:8-2750

.__ _ _ _ _ __,
SPECIAL FHA .FINANCE
Program $0 Down, If you
own Land or use Family

acre~

2001 Toyola Molrlx 16000
mileS. Exc. Cond. Still under

Gallipolis. Rent 1325/rno.

ref. Prl- ........;.rei•'

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

BRIDGE

private drlw with parldng, men. :r14-578-1037
~ al ~ Plaza. COOK IIOTOftS
Cl\1645-2192.
51,100 per month., serious
~ (740) 94 9-2303
llallar for rent, 3 bedroom.,
328 JadclorT Pl&lt;s, ~~

3 Dd,coumry sening, 4 mi.
from Albany, Meigs local
Schc&gt;ms. $550/month plus
ut.Dep.req.740-698--1815 or
74()-416-1103.
· :-::-:---::---:·~-m House ·,n
13

Middleport-In town, out of New 3 Bed room homes rom
flood plane Brick Home $214 .36 per month , Includes
Excellent Location..6 Acre ·many upgracles, delivery &amp;
Apx 4000 sq 118Fims 3 Br 2 set-up. (740)385-2434 "'
112 Bth 2 fire Places 2· - --,:--:---,:---,:-Nice used 3 bedroom home
G rages L0 1 0 1 Sl
a
s
orage.

&amp;

~ l· l!ll:ro~-~:-~--.....,

COmmerctat building •For
Flent" 1800 !WJISra feet, oft
street parking. Great locallonl 749 Tlllni AYIDIHI In

$375.00 a

Tuesday, July 17, 2007
ALLEY OOP

Tuesday, July 17, 2007.

pel'lon clonty.

·

GEMINI
(May 21·June 20)
D isappointment wiM be In the of1ing if you
attempt to take on llOn)ethlng you know
It beyond your lim itations. Tackle only
!holt ob}ectl\ltla thai are within your
capiblllllea.

GRIZZWELLS
LAfT Hl6\-ll' I ~~~~~ A~
W&lt; wm ~~Dr---·
""' A\-1 I~A~P

YdN I

1lf-\j

~¥.,~1.~

Af\P IT W/&gt;.'7

SOUP TO NUTZ
ENeR'I

~Fjjti&lt;e

aN avali!NC\Ie
INNOC'e~Ce.

f'.:M'v\..'1

IN

f'Wl~

~I

Shop
Closslfleds!

-- - #·- ·- -·

--------·- ------------'----- ---:--

�.

. .

.

.. . - . ..

~

I

Page B6- The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

•

2007 SUmmer &amp;nior

Chester-Shade
Days,A6

Quarterly·i nside
todays Register

Gizmo
MEEEOOW...

..
'
,&lt;•

•" ' I \ '
0

~

When crackpot inventor

SPORTS

islation.
She explained that a workgroup
has been set up "to develop a unified
POMEROY - Expansion of ser- long-term care budget a,nd submit a
vices to the elderly through budget plan for implementation by June I,
increases and legislative initiatives 2008." She descri bed the work·was discussed by Mindy Cayton, group's responsibility as one where
Area Agency on Aging, Dtstrict 8, at a single plan and provider will give
Tuesday's meeting of the Board of continuity of care as the elderly
Tru stees for the Meigs County move from one level of health to
Council on Aging.
anotl)er. . ·
The expansion comes through . Among the other programs noted
additional funding included in th~ by Cayton was the expanded homestate bud~et signed,!nt? !aw by Gov. . stead exemption to everyone 65 and
Ted Stnckland. Gtvmg peQple over resulting in a decrease of propchoices" .was Cayton's description . erty ta11es, the increase in Passport
of some of the provlSions of the leg- slots to accommodate more who
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH&lt;!!&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

"e ·

IIZMOSIDS.COI

Always stand
well clear of device
while in use.

OstllrARIEs
1-- •

'

••

• • -,

PageA5 .
• Carol Grueser
• EdnaCoe

Emotions/Tired, Bored

INSIDE
• O'Bieness to offer
health, screenings. . ..
See Page AS
...Laser art ·coming to
Chester-Shade Days.
See. Page AS
• O'Bieness to offer
breastfeeding class.
See Page A6
• VFW Makes Donation
To Ariel Jr. Theatre.
See Pll{!e A6
·- .•

"git me
outta

here"

yawn

-~

'

.,l•

, ,,,

•

half closed eyes

A tired or bored face is very simuliar to a sad
face. It has the droopy eyelids, although I like to
keep them more level. It also has a open
frown that suggests a yawn

returns to

Portland widl
special presentation
"" Bmc SfM . ..
BSERGENTCMYDAII.Y~~.COM
PORTLAND- The Ohio·

BY BETH SERGENT

~GENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE A fire
River Producers (ORP) condestroyed a camper at the
sisting . of Racine Southern
Lazy T Royal Chaparral
FFA Alumni are 'planning to
Resort yesterday afternoon
relurn to the Portll!!.l'! Show
though no injuries were
Ring on Saturday tor th~ ·
reported.
group's latest bOI-se show
Sally J. of the Lazy T said
and a special tribute to one
a guest reported seeing
oftheir own with a freestyle
smoke coming from a
Dressage demonstration at
camper in the area where the
intennission.
lakes meet so she called the
The ORP will be honorChester Fire Department..
ing
'one of their own, the late
She said before ·the fire
Richard "Dick" Sterrett, who
department arrived, her son
·Tom Trent and brotlier Dn,,r-k
pa~se'd away earlier this year
Baldwin disconnected the ·
on May 5. As' part of the tribcamper's propane 'tanks and
ute to Sterrett, his daughterelectricity. They also empin-law Nancy Wesolektied out the camper's exteriSterrett will perform a
or cubby hole, pushed the
freestyle Dressage demongolf cart away from and
stration set to music during
lawn mower from under the
the horse show's intermiscamper.
sion.
The Chester and Bashan
ORI' member Leanna
Volunteer Fire Departments
Beegle said Sterrett W'!S
soon arrived on the scene
born and raised in Perry
but found the camper fully
County
but once he married
.
Brian J. RHCI/pholoo
engulfed, according to Larry Members of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club ~erved dinner to the hard-working cooks Lois Ann Knopp, daughter
Cleland, chief of the Chester and servers from the Heath United . Methodist Church Eleanor Circle, who have served of Otis and Edna Knopp of
Fire Department. ·
Racine, he considered Meigs
Rotarians Monday dinner for decades .
Cleland reported the
I County his home. In October
camper was around 29-feet
J996
retired as Vice
long and owned by Charles
President of Credit for Farm
and Joyce Jones of Marietta
Credit Services of St. Paul,
who were at their home in
Minn. In 1999 he ~nd Lois
Marietta at the time. Cleland
returned to Meigs County
said the fire appears to be
and her family farm. Dick
accidental and although no
was active in many organidefinite cause has been
zations
including Gideon's
BY BRIAN J. REED
International,
Meigs Camp,
BREEO@MYDAilYSENTINEL.COM
Please see Fire, A5
Meigs County Extension
Board and Meigs Soil &amp;
MIDDLEPORT - It all
Water
Conservation Board.
began in 1937, when flood
When
he first came to
waters entered the sanctu Meigs
County
he started the
ary of the Heath Methodist
Meigs County
Better
Church on South Third
Livestol
Club
and
served
Avenue.
as a 4-h advisor for 15
When the waters recedSTAFF REPORT
years.
ed , the ladi es of the church
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Beegle added agriculture
agreed to serve meals to
was always a part ~f Dick's
ATHENS - Residents in the Rotary Club in order to
life
and he was eager to join ., .
Meigs
and
western raise money for church
an
organization
that would
Washington counties will repairs. For 70 years, the
further
agriculture
education
have greater access to free women of the church 's
in the schools and encourage
Circl e United
medical services thanks to a Eleanor
our youth to pursue agriculMethodist Wome n have
grant received by OUture careers.
to serve dinner
COM's &lt;':ommun ity Health continued
As for the show, the arena
to the Rotarians every
Programs (CHP).
opens
at 10 a.m. at the
Monda y evening - until
The grant from the Sisters this week.
Portland Show Ring behind
of Saint Joseph Charitable
the Portland Community
Monday ni ght was th e
Fund will help expand the last
Center. The show begins at
meeting
the
service area of OU-COM's Middleport - Pome ro y Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Preside nt Brenda II a.m. There is a $2 entry
Free Medical Clinic, which Rotary Club will hold at Barnhart, left, presented a plaque in appreciation to the fee for each of the following
currently visits Stewart to the church, and to show Eleanor Circle United Methodist Women for their service to classes: Halter, showmandeliver medical services appreciation to the church the club. Cooks Nancy Cale and Billy Jo Krawsczyn accept- ship, lead-in (u nder 10),
such as exams, treatment ladies for decades of good ed the plaque for the UMW.
walk trot youth 18 and'
and referral free of charge to meals , the Rotarians served
under. walk trot (open),
uninsured residents.
western
pleasure, youth 19
many
decades.
them a catered dinner in the Wild Horse Cafe in the
"The expanded services the church basement.
Pomeroy. That , explained Accord in g to Cale, the and under, western pleasure
the clinic will be able to
Nancy Cale and Billy Jo Rotary Pres ident Brenda ladies have purchased new (open), four corners, trial
offer with the grant are very Krawsczyn have served as Barnhart , is more conve- app li ances
and
made class, ·mystery class, flag
encourag ing," said Sister cooks for the weekly din- nient to the busi ness men improvements
to
the race, down and back ( 12 and
Jane Harrington, director of ners in rece nt years. Those and women who belong to churc h kitchen, helped under), down and back (over
the Sisters of Sai nt Joseph serving the meals incl ude the t)rganization. and is wit h utility costs at the 12), speed and control , cones
Charitable Fund . Part of the Pauline
Horton,
Pat hoped to increase member- churc h parso nage, and and barrels, youth poles,
Sisters of Saint Joseph's Philson, Grace John son, ship.
donated money to organi- open poles, pee-wee barrels
mission is to help under- Jack
and .
Betty
"With life the way it is zations , including the ( 10 and under), youth barrels
served communities and Coughenour,
Ju li a now, evening meetings are Meig s Cooperative Parish ( 11 -18). Ribbons wi ll be
Hubbard , Mary and Mo ll y a hardship for many pco- and God 's Neighborhood awarded in these classes.
famili es become healthier.
Escape for Teens.
"We thou ght the program Hill. Jeimn e Bradbury, pie," Barnhart said.
There is a $5 entry fee for
"We'll hav e to go back to the following classes: Open
Although the tlood &lt;&gt;f
was pretty creative and Donna Byer, Margie Blake,
high ly collaborati ve," said Mary Pri ce and Judy 1937 is now a dista nt , hi&gt;- holding bazaars and sup- poles. opell barrel s, both
Mattea.
torical event. proceeds pers and ice cream socials with a 80 percent payback
Harrington .
Beginning
next
week
,
the
from the weekly Rotary in order to pay for a lot of for the first three places.
"We are very thankful for
Rotary Club will hold noon dinne_rs have continued to thing s we've been doin g.:·
Please see Clinic. AS
Please see Show, AS
meetings every Monday at . be neht the church through Cale said.

ROTARY SERVES FINAL DINNER
TO HEATH'S ElEANOR CIRCLE

WEATHER

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2 SECfiONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A6

Classifieds

B3-4

Comi~

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A6

Editorials

A4

Obi(uaries

As

Sports .

B Section

Weather

As

© 2007 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

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-

-

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·----- - . --

-

'" ..

Horse show

Free medical
clinic expanding
into Meigs County

.

,.

need ~sistance to stay in their own one. While the Meigs Senior Center
hOmes, and additional funding for already has a lending library of
Alzheimer's respite providing relie( materials to assisl caregivers,
for caregivers.
· · Cayton rioted that the Area Agency
She (llso discussed the Healthy-U also maintains such a library and
program which is geared toward mails books, video or cassettes to
helping seniors with chronic disease caregivers with postage prepaid
manage their illness. Emphasis of return envelopes.
the program ii self-management
New this year, she said, will be a
attainea through control of symp- "Choices E11po - Living Healthy,
'tems to avoid health complications. Wealthy and Wi se." It will be held at
The . caregivC!r . telephone support the Comfort Inn, Pike Street,
system was also explained by the Marietta, Nov. 6, 4 to 8 p.m. an4
Agency planner. It has been set up to Nov. 7, 8 .m. to I p.m. and ts open Yl
assist caregivers, especially those in all seniors in District 8. In conjunfrural areas; in thetr challenges of
Plean see Senten, AS
facing the. day ·t ·day care of some-

·Campground
fire destroys
camper.

We recommend "Piranha
Proof• chip-resistant dishes
be·us!ld with this
product.

• -&lt;&gt;•

_

Elderly ·to .enJoy expanded services

Make your dishes sparkle with the Piranha Clean
Dishwasher. Just dunk the dish rackQ)into
th~ water containment vessel@, and
watch those hungry fish whip up a frothy bath
· of cleaning excitement@.

o

IJ'\1 ..,II\\ .. Jl I\ 1H .!oo-

-

got fed Lip with her ordinary dishwasher,
she created something completely new.

ADVERtiSERS VISIT:

1\ I

•

Jane "Bubbles" FresHly

)~i

'\ 11 . :.- J ,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

--

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__ ,_·-------------- - -

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'·

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