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                  <text>Page B6 •

The Daily. Sentinel

www.mydaily'ientinel.com

Monday, June

19. 2006

Iraqi prosecu~ors
ask for death
•
penalty against
Saddam Hussein, A2

Ohio's .North.wallops South, 34-13 Crennel thinking.veteran if
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
North only had I0 first
downs. It easily had that
many big plays.
·
Ricky Stanzi threw three
BEREA (AP) -· Without
touchdown passes to lead the
speaking his name, Browns
North to a 34-13 victory over
coach Romeo Crennel indicatthe South on Saturday night
ed there's a player available
in the 6lst · animal Northwho can step in if Ken Dorsey
South high school all-star
can't fill the backup quarterfootball game. back role behind Charlie Frye.
: "Our big-play athletes
Here's a hint: hl' ' s 42 &lt;md
stood out," satd North coach
playetl forCJevefand a decade
Vic Whiting of Canal Fulton
ago.
·
Northwest. "We got plays
"I've got a guy in mind who
from everybody who got on
knows the system," Crenn_el
the field.~·
said Sunday. "He might be-a
: Stanzi. an Iowa-bound
little older than I am but he
q,uarterback from Mentor
can still line up." .
Lake Cl!tholic, hit Marc
Crennel said he hadn't conKrauss (from Hamler Patrick
tacted Vinny Testaverde, but
. Henry and headed for Ohio
added that it's a call the team
· University) on scoring throws
could make late in training
of 16 and 21 yards in the
camp if necessary. . .
fourth quarter to put the game
"If that were the name that I
out of reach. He also threw a
AP photo was thinking about, he could
72-yard scoring pass to run- North's Daven Jones, left, runs around the outside as South's coine in on Friday and boom
bing back Alex Kn1pp Tyler Moeller tries to tackle him during the first quarter of the -. he'd be good to go on
(Amherst Steele, Ball State). North-South All-Star football game Saturday in Columbus.
Sunday," Crennel said. .
"This went 'really smooth,
While Frye looked solid
based on the outcome," Stanzi Constant , a ·6-foot-4; 265- play ma 0-to-man the whole during minicainp and earned
said. "We did what we had to pound lineman_from Bedford game. I think we just wore praise from Crennel for taking
do."
who "will play this fall at them (the South) .down at the a leadership role and making
Stanzi finished · 8-of-12 Toledo. The ball squirted end. This is the best week of plays, Dorsey looked shaky,
passing for l78yards•and was loose again and eventually my life._It's been a lot ot' fun." getting one pass· blocked and
selected the game's · MVP. rolled into the end ;&gt;;one where
The South ·countered on a another intercepted by an
Krauss had four catches for · Constant fell on it.
29-yard TD pass from Davis undrafted rookie free agent
59 yards and was the North's , Midway through the second to Robinson to cut the lead to Sunday.
offensive MVP, with Ohio quarter on third and 10 at his 20-13.
Testaverde played in · six
Davis finished 21-of•47 games, starting four, last seaState recruit Robert Rose own 28, Stanz.i took the snap
~Cleve l a nd Glenville) captur- and avoided pressure by passing for 221 . yards with
ing defensive honors with a rolling to his right. He tos,ed two touchdowns and an intersack and several other tackles. a I0-yard pass to Knipp but a ception.
"I felt a little off since I defensive mix-up left him all
'I threw a lot of passes,"
hadn't f.layed in jl game since :ilone as he raced down the Davis said. "B ut we . were
· last fal ," Stanzi said. "It felt right sideline uri touched for down the whole game. ·We
from Page Bl
great just to be back on the the 72-yard touchdown.
had to get back in the game."
In the final ·minute of the
In the span of just over a
field."
The South's' top players half. Davis lofted a fa\le pat- minute, however; Stanzi pretty dumbfounded that that
were Armand Robinson tern to the right corner for 6-6 found Krauss on a 22-yard couldn't get relayed."
(Reynoldsburg, Miami of wide receiver Josh Chichester score and then backup quarCrew chief Joe Crawford,
Ohio) with eight catches for (Lakota West, Louisville). He terback
Rudy
Kirbus speaking for. the officials,
111 yards and a touchdown; caught . the 5-yard pass over (Cleveland St. Ignatius, John said: "Josh Howard goes to
and Alex Albright (Cincinnati the grasp of 6-1 defensive Carroll) hit Joe Morgan Joe DeRosa and. not only
St. Xavier, Boston College) back Mark Jackson (Canton (Canton McKinley, Illinois) once, but twice asks for
who had a sack.
.
McKinley, Toledo) for the on a touchdown pass that cov-. timeout. Forced to call it,
Late .in the opening quarter, touchdown..
ered 32 'yards.
simple as that."
After a scoreless third periSome of the · top college
The timeout took away
South quarterback Nate Davi s
(Bellaire, _Ball State) dropped od, the North pushed the lead recruits in Ohio did not play , .· Dallas' ability to in bounds
·back in shotgun formation but to 20·6 on Stanzi 's 16-yard in the game because they par- the ball at halfcourt, costing
ticipated in the annual Big 33 them 45 precious feet. Wade
the snap from center sailed scoring pass to KraOss. ·
over his head. He scrambled
"ln a game like this , the Pennsylvania-Ohio
high then knocked down his secafter the bouncing ball, arriv- defenses are put in a difficult 'school all-star game - held ond (ree throw, and when
ing the same time as North situation," Krauss said. at the same time in Hershey, Harris' shot was way off, this
:lefensive lineman Skylaar "They're almost forced to . Pa.
series had its latest contro-

Dorsey can't fill backup role

Heat

son for the New York Jets we'll be OK."
after season-ending injuries to
The Browns left minicamp
Chad Pennington and Jay feeling further along than they
Fiedler. He threw six intercep- were in Crennel's first season,
lions and one touchdown, safety Brian Russell said.
becoming the first player in
"We're so far beyond the
NFL history to throw at least stage we were last year,"
one touchdown pass in 19 Russell said. "We know the
straight seasons.
system. We know each other.
Testa verde
played
in We've been through a sea- '
Cleveland from 1993-1995, a son."
tum111tuous time for the tranCrennel is waiting until the
chise, in which l)e replaced the players are in pads to make
beloved Bernie Kosar and the any firm assessments about
team moved to Baltimore.
his team.
A veteran like Testaverde
"We're a better team on
would give the Browns some- · paper. But l tell everybody we
one to work with Frye, a third- have to be better on the field,"
round pick in 2005 who Crennel said. "Whether we're
quickly found himself in the better on the field only time
starting role.after Trent Dilter will telL"
·
became
unhappy
in
Notes:
WR
Braylon
Cleveland.
Edwards spent most of the
Crennel · is giving Dorsey three,day minicamp on a statime, though. The fourth-year tionary bike. The normally
player was acquired early last ta·lkative Edwards didn't
month in a trade with San speak to reporters, wanting .to
Francisco· for Dilfer.
wait until he is further into his
"At this lime, Ken is still recovery from a torn knee liglearning the system," Cren'nel ament. The Browns hope he
said. "We've got to get to can return by early October,
training camp to give him a but have not set a date .... The
shot to see what he looks like players · gathered around
there. He's improving and Crennel and sang "Happy
he's picking things up. If that Birthday" at the. end practice.
continues· in training camp, He turned 59 Sunday.

MODEL LT 1040
LAWN TRACTOR
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio.
!iO CENTS • Vol. 5.). N o . :! tb

hish·preu..,. doc:k

POMEROY - Officials
f.rom Meigs · Cot!t~ty will
attend
a meeung
In
Columbus next week ·to
review the selection process
for the proposed FutureGeri
experimental power project.
Next month, the Ohio task
force promoting two sites
will hold a public meeting
in Meigs County to talk
mote about the project and
the process of site election.
A site in southern Meigs
County is one of 12 final

. sites across the United States
now under consideration for
the research facility, expected to be ihe world's first
· coal-fueled, "zero emissions"
power plant. The commercial"scale plant, to be built
through a public/pri vale
partnership, is designed to
prove the technical and . eco~omic feasibility of producmg low-cost electricity and
hydrogen from coal while
nearly eliminating emissions.
The faciJ.ity will also support testing and commercialization
of technologies
focused on generating clean

power, capturing and perm a- sites at a me~ting Monday
nently stonng ·carbon diox- in Columbus, to include
ide underground, and pro: local government represcntaducing hydrogen. The Meigs · tives and state legislators.
County site was promoted as
The task force will hold a
a joint venture between publie meeting on July 17 in
Meigs and Athen s counties, Meig s County to talk more
combining an Ohio River about the project and · the
location and proximity to site · selection process. The
coa l research facilities at meeting, set for 7 to 9 p.m.,
Ohio· University.
is tentatively set for July 17
According
to
Meigs at Southern High School.
County
Economic
The
proposed
Meigs
Devell.)pment Director Perry County site . is oqe of two
Varnadoe,
the
Ohio potential Ohio sites. It is priFutureGen Task Force will . vately-owned and located in
discuss its criteria for select- Lebanon Township along the
ing the two preferred Ohio" Ohio River, in close proxim-

· • 50" hea,Y· duty lriple-btlde """""'• dock
• "-3 HP' Kohler" Cqurago" V·Twhi OHV onpne
• P.atenttd SmarUet1" hlgh~prtssurt dtck
.

MODEL GT 2542 HEAVY-DUTY
GARDEN TRACTOR ·

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ZERO-TURN RIDER

• Heavy.clJty sttaft drhf• W'ld c11t-iron transrniuton
• 42" hoovy.·!l~Jty twin·blodo "'9Winl dock

• :&gt;0" triplo·bllde 3-in-1 mowint deck

• 20 HP' Kohltr" comrno..r V·Twtn OHV o~i.no

• Z2 HP' Kawasaki" V-Twio OHV on&amp;ino
• Pivotlna: ~. artasabl.e front•I)CJt

ZERO
SALE *2,

ZERO
SALE .'2,999"

.Resident participation
BRINGS WllDll FE TO THE LIBRARY critical to next Pomeroy
distress grant meeting
. OBITUARIES

·av BETH SERGENT
dents via the survevs. street
: B,SERGENT@MYDAtLYSE NTtNEL.COM repairs were followed . by
demolition of abandoned
POMEROY. ~ · Resident structures, tire equipment and
participation can count for facilities, sidewalk repairs,
big points · in Pomeroy 's parks
and · · recreation,
$300,000
Community improved water faciliti es tied
Development Block 'Grant with storm drainage irnprove(CDBG) application accord- ments, improvedsewer facili- ·
ing to
Meigs Grants ti es, child care center, comAdministrator Jean Trussell munity center, street lighting,
whose office is preparing the street parking, senior center.
grant.
Eligible activities for the
Residents can parti cipate grant inclu~le public facilities
by attending the next CDBG improvements such as conor distres~ grant meeting at 7 struction,
recor)sttlictioh,
p.m., Tuesday, June 27 at rhe rehabilitation of infrastrucPomeroy Municipal Building.
in targeted area's of di sTh e more peop Ie wI10 attend ture
tress .that do not fit within the
the better for the highly competitive grant .application.
criteria of other Ohio Small
This meeting will define Cities CDBG competitive
wl1at projects the village has programs.
chosen and . gain any comThe grant has an applicaments from the residents as 10 tion deadline of July 14. The
the locations of the projects award date is Sept. I . If
and public opinion· about the Pomeroy is chosen for the
projects chosen.
competitiv.e grant it should
The grant money cannot see funding in late fall, possi- ·
be spem downtown and is blv November. and would
meant solely for use in nei gh- then have two years to spend
bOrhoods t(lr improvements. the money.
. The public chose these
Pomeroy was · declared
projects via surveys that were 'ineli·gible for the grant ·last
Circulated in late 2004 and June due to a stipulatign that
2005. Those surveys are still . Middleport spe nd 60 percent
valid and nellrly 900 were . of ti s CDBG money by July
· completed
15. 2005.
The proje'ct that came in at
Middleport was awarded ·a
number one for the funding , CDBG in 2004 but had not
at Je.ast according to the resi- expended 60 percent ()f their
dents, was street repairs.
· $300,000 when Pomeroy
ln descending order of originally wished to apply·for ..
import ance according to resi- the gram last year.

Page AS
• Faye Marie Leonar&lt;;l
• Denver 0. Curtis

INSIDE
• AI-Qaida-linked group
says it kidnapped two
missing u.s. soldiers. ,,

'

.

• 2 brokers indicted in
state investment scandal
case. See Page A6

WEATHER
',.

Chi ldren who participate
in the Meigs District
Public Library's Summer
Reading ,Program didn'.t
have to go far to get up
close and personal with
turtles, snakes and
toads when Nancy The
Turtle Lady recently
arrived for a visit. Here.
Bostic Eason peers at a
box turtle trying to
escape, while Brayden
Sanders takes a photo of ·
this gigantic turtle who
didn't seem to mind posing. The next special visitor to the library will be
storyteller Michael
O'Malley who will appear .
at 2 p.m. tomorrow at
the Pomeroy l:ibrary.
Enrollment in the summer
reading program is still
·
ongoing.

Sci-Fi channel expresses
interest in Point Pleasant
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fNIJ'IUf•c1o,;rt~ C:.U8132·Z1·60176--13

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ity to the site AEP hopes to
use as the location of a $1
billion IGCC clean-coal
power plant. The second
Ohio site is in Tuscarawas
County. West · Virginia has
proposed a location near
Lakin: W.Va. in Mason
County. Sites in Illinois,
· Kentucky, North . Dakota,
Wyoming arid Texas are also
under consideration.
The field of poteniial .sites
for' FutureGen is expected to
be narrowed to a "sh011 I ist"
later thi s summer, and a
final selection made by
September, 2007 .

SUMMER READING PROGRAM .

• Car1ejon Early,; ,
ChildhOod Award and
graduation ceremony.
SeePage AS
• Making the cut for
lacks of love.
See Page AS

ZERO
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.ZERO
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to outline criteria for FutureGen selection

. S~r ~~SJI*.:~:;;.:;;. ,

MODEL·LT 1050
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BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL COf¥1

' 'Canes win Cup.
SeePage 81

""''" · m~da il)-.•ntin.,l.t·om

Tl iJ-. SIMY • .JU :'&gt;ll ·: :! 0 , :! Ooh

Upcomi~g meetings

SPORTs

versy.
. three games, Wade was
On the way to the locker un stoppable in the fourth
room, Nowitzki kicked a sta- quarter, scoring 17 points on·
tionary bike and Cuban spent every shot in his persortal
18-foot · ·
another 10 minutes pleading playbook. His
to anyone who would listen. jumper gave' the Heat a 91The Heat, who finished I0- 89 lead with I :08 left, but
1 at home in these playoff, Nowitzki, w.ho ·had just
are now one win away from missed Dallas' first free
that victory parade down throw after 18 in a row,
Biscayne Boulevard that knocked down a 14-footer.
Shaquill~ O'Neal promised
The Mavericks had been
when he signed with the an extremely loose bunch
Heat.
·
before Games 3 and 4. But
O'Neal scored 18 points during the . open portion of ·
·morning
with 12 rebounds, but he was . Sunday's
just' 2-for-12 ·from the free- shootaround, their mood had
changed no.ticeably. There
throW line.
Jason Terry had 35 points were few smiles, even less
for the Mavericks. Howard chitci)at and -Dallas players
added 25 and Nowitzki had .acted almost robotic.
is
Notes:
Monday
20.
Nowitzki
's
28th
birthday.
For the .second time in

.

.

. Taft signs bill ·
targeting lenders, A6

Disaster medical facility to be on display
'

'

·INDEX

Bv

BE!H 5ERGENr

BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

2 SECllONS- 12 PAGES

SYRACUSE - . A state-ofthe-art mobile hospital will be
on display for tours from I0
Classifieds
83-4 a.m. to I p.m. this Thursday on
the grounds of· the Syracuse
· Comics
Bs .Community Genter.
Light refreshments will be
Dear Abby
A3 served and the regular meeting
the Meigs County Local
Editorials
A4 of
Emergency Planning Committee
follow after the tours.
Obituaries ·
As willThe
mo.bile hospital, also
Sports
B Section known · as a disaster medical
facility is mmlllfactured by BluA6 Med Response Systems.
Weather
The event is being. co-hosted
by Bob Byer with Meigs
© 2006 Oblo Valley'Publlshlng Co.

Calendars

A3

Emergency
Management
Agency and the Meigs County
Health Department represented
by Frank Gorschak, emergency
response coottlinator.
The Blu-Med facility can be
rapidly deployed in the event of
a variel)i of disa•ters from earthquakeci to bioterrorism incident~.
Of course. hopefully earthquakes are a scenano people in
Meigs County don't have to
worry about but on Thun;day
they will be able to see first
hand where an influx of tmuma
victims can be triaged and o-emed while out in the tield. ·
The hospital's mobility is a
crucial element thanks to it ability to take up the slack when the

.

existing he•~thcare infrastructure
may be disabled c\r CO!llpromised. Its mobility also allows
the facility to be set up near the
scene of a disa,ter.
Included within the fa.;ility is
equipment for medic•~ uiagc,
treatment and intensive care, w1d
addition bed and treatment
space. _
,
.
The tours will demonstrate
that in essence, ·an entire
(mobile) l10spital cm1 be ·delivered ·on a single Hat bed track
and he operational within 24
hours of a disaster.
The Blu-Med Response
Systcm.mobilc hosph&lt;~ has been
lield tested bv lhe United States
Air Force. ·
'•'

POINT PLEAS'ANT, W:Va.
- · Televi sion crews can 't get
enough of Mason County. ·
Fortunately. the area has
become a sort of hot spot for
thiS type of thing, and local
officials are becoming professionals ai catering to televi. sion and movie ex ecutives
who are eager to tell l\1ason
County's many storie s.
It is .the mysteriou s side of
the county that has lured in
the latest interested Grew : the
Sci-Fi Cliannel , . 1vhq Denny
Bellamv, chairman of the
Mason: County Convention
and Visitors Bureau. said wi ll
be in town next month.
Bell:uny said ·prod'uccrs
from the scien ce fiction based cable channel will visit
Point Pleasant in Ju ly to meet
with h·im and Jelr Wamsley,
local author and d.irector of
the Mothman Museum . to
de velop ideas for an upcoming movie . •a project about
· which Hcllah1y said he is very
excited .
'That 's NBC. That 's . the
· bi g-time .:able show. That' s
wh at everyone watches that 's

into that type of thing ," he ·
~aid, referrin g to the Sci-Fi
Channel's ohvious appeal to
paranormal seekers and mystery buffs.
.
Bellamy added that .having
a show on the Sci -Fi Channe-l
will only enhance Mason
County's pre,ence on the
·major cable.networks because
th e
Travel
Channel,
Di scovery Channel , Animal
Planet .and Hi stoi·y Channel
already have. vis ired and
taped specials and documentaries abo ut Mothman and
other local events: Plus. the
shows cont inue to air. sparkin g additional interest in the
area, so Mason County is getting valuable. exposure on
cable in exchange fur a few
day s of hospitality and friendliness shown to the production stan·s while they are in
town. ·
Last month, an independent
film crew fronl New York
City wrapped up filming on a·
direct-to-DVD documentary,
."Eye&gt; of · the Mothman ,"
which is a 90-minute project
about Point •Pieasant and all
the legend s, curses and di sas-.
Please see ·sc.I·Fl,

AS

�•

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday. June ao, aoo6

_ I~AQI PROSECUTORS ASK-FOR D.E.ATH
•

PENALTY AGAINST SADDAM H.USSEIN

•

Rice wams North
Kor'ea missile
trslin~

would be
pr·ovocative

BY BUSHRA JUHI

BY ANNE QEARAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP DIPLOMATIC WRITER

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The
prosecution demanded the
· de.ath penalty for Saddam
· Hussein in its closin~ arguments Monday, saymg he
showed "no mercy" in the
killings of women and children during a crackdown on
Shiite Muslims in the 1980s.
After a three- week recess;
. the defense gets to sum up
. its case, then a panel of
judges will begin weighing
the fate of the ousted leader
and his seven co-defendants.
A U.S. official close to the
court said the judges could
take around 60 days in their
deliberation, meaning · ver- ·
diets would ·likely be
announced
in
late
September or early October.
The official spoke on condition on anonymity because
he was not authorized to
speak for the court. ·
If Saddam is convicted
and sentenced to death by .
hanging, it could be months ·
more for the verdict to be
carried out. \The defendants
have the right of appeal and Saddam face s a second
trial, for a military campaign against Iraqi Kurds. in
the 1980s that killed · some
I00;000 people. .
No date for that trial has ·
been set, ·and Iraqi officials
AP Photo
have not said what would
Saddam
Hussein
and
Abdullah
Kazim
Ruwayyid,
left,
listen
as
the
prosecution
begins
giving
its
closing
arguments,
at
the
trial
happen if the appeals from
the first trial case - which of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and seven members of his regime in Baghdad, Iraq Monday. Saddam and the other
began last October - ran .defendants are on trial for charges of crimes against humanity in a crackdown against Shiites in the town of Dujail after a 1982
out while the second was assassination attempt on Saddam, and are accused of torturing women and chi ldren and wrongfully killing 148 Sh iites sen- ·
tenced to death for the attack on the former Iraqi leader.
still going on.
The courtroom was largely
silent
throughout ask be implemented."
Saddam and his cohorts exe- Iran.
not appear and had no
Monday' s tnree-hour ses"Well done," Saddam cuted in revenge for the
· The prosecutor questioned chance for defense," alsion as chief prosecutor muttered sarcastically. .
oppression of their commu- whether tire shooting was an Moussawi said. Among the
Jaafar al-Moussawi delivAI-Moussawi also sought nities by his Sunni Arab- assassination attempt - but 148 were some of those
ered his fin a]·arguments iri' a death sentence for Awad dominated regime.
said that even if it was, it already killed, and a number ·
the trial over the 1980s al-Bandar, former head of
But the perceived fairness consisted only of at most 15 of children, he said.
crackdown on the Shiite Saddam's
Rev.olutionary of the trial will be a key shots.that hurt no one.
The defense is to begin its
town of Dujail. Saddam, Court, which sentenced 148 question. Many Sunni Arabs
"The response to this sim- final arguments July 10.
dressed in a black suit, sat Shiites to death. He said al- see the court as a case of ple incident was a revenge First, a lawyer for each
calmly alongside his fellow Bandar's actions ••supported "victors' justice" C~P.T.ic;g out attack in which excessive defendant will sP.eak, then
defendants and occasionally the crimes" committed by by the Shutes arfd 'KUrds force was used ... a system- . each defendant will have the
the others and asked that he who have dominated Iraq's atic, wide-scale attack opportunity to make a final
took notes.
Al-Moussawi reviewed be sentenced under articles goVernment since Saddam's against the civilian popula• statement. The process will
tion," he said. "The events likely take until around July
the evidence against each of the .Iraqi criminal code fall in 2003.
for
premeditated
murder,
which took place. in Dujail 20, said the U.S. official
The
defendants
are
man, then concluded by asking for . the. death penalty · which calls for the death charged with crimes against were crimes against human- close to the court.
humanity for the crackdown ity."
Throughout the trial, the
against . Saddam, his half- penalty.
"Entire families were defense tried to argue that
The prosecutor asked for after a shooting attack on
brother . Barzan Ibrahim,
who was the head of the lenient sentences for three Saddam's motorcade as he imprisoned, including old the crackdown on Dujail
Abdullah visited Dujail in 1982. They men, women and children ... was justified, even while
Mukhabarat
intelligence defendants taken to denying the scope of the
agency at the time, and Taha Kazim Ruwayyid, his son allegedly arrested hundreds They were
Yassin Ramadan, a former Mizhar Ruwayyid and Ali of people, including wqmen Mukhabarat headquarters in sweep that the prosecution
Dayih - saying they com- and children, tortured some Baghdad, and they suffered portrayed.
senior regime member.
At one point, the . defense
"The prosecution asks for mitted their "acts til carry to death and killed 148 in from physical and . mentl\1
torture, including electrical pui witnesses on the stand
the harshest penalty against out orders issued by their all.
In his arguments, al- shocks," ai-Moussawi said.
contending that some of the
them, because they spread superiors."
Forty-six
people
died
He
urged
the
release
of
the
Moussawi
focused
on
coun148 were alive and that the
corruption on earth, they
showed no mercy even for final defendant, Mohammed tering the defense.'s argu- from torture or the harsh prosecution might have fabthe old, for women or for Azawi Ali, saying the evi- me.nt that the sweep in conditions of imprisonment, ricated parts of its case.
Chief judge Raouf Abdelchildren, and even the trees dence was not sufficient Dujail was a justified he said ..
to
what
the
defense
response
against
him.
The
Revolutionary
Court
Rahman squelched that
. were not safe from their
Many of . Iraq's Shiite called a.n attempt to kill then sentenced 148 people argument by arresting four
oppression," he said. "The
.majority
and
Kurdish Saddam by Shiite rebels to death after a "show trial defense witnesses and
law calls for the death
.
are
·
eager
to see backed by Iraq's enemy, in which the defendants did accusing them of perjury.
minority
penalty and this is what we

WASHINGTON
Sc.:rctary
of
State
Condolcena Rice warned
·N011h Koreit on Monday it
will tii('C .:onsequences if it ·
test-tires ;1 missile thought to
be poweat'ul enough to reach
the We ~t .Coast of the United
States.
"It would be a very serious
matter and, indeed. a provocative act should North Korea
decide to launch that missile,"
Rice said amid indications that
the North Koreans could
launch an intercontinental ballistic missile ai any moment.
The senior U.S: diplomat
said the United States would .
talk to other a!,11ions about
action should the North go
ahead, and "I can assure everyone that it would be taken with
utmost seriousness."
The United States, Japan,
Australia, South Korea and
other countries have urged
North Korea to abandon any
missile firing, but there was no
sign of backing down. U.S.
officials said Monday the missile was apparently fully
assembled and fueled, giving
the North a launch window of
about a month.
Unlike other preparatory
steps the United States has
tracked, the fueling process is
very difficult to reverse, and
most likely means the test will
go ahead, one senior administration official said.
The precise timing is
unclear, the ofticial said.
At U.N. headquarters in
New YorR, U.S. Ambassador
John Bolton said he WaS holding preliminary consultations
with Security Council mem'
bers on possible action if
North Korea ftres . the missile,
thought to be a three-stage
Taepodong-2 with a nonnuclear payload.
"But we don't really know
what the North Korean intentions are at this point, so I
think we need to wait for the
event," Bolton said.

The Daily Sentinel

Public meetings

Reunions

Monday, June 19
LETART
Letart
Town ship . Trustees will
meet at 5 p.m. at the office
building.
·
.

Saturday, June 17
MIDDLEPORT
Cunni ngham/1 mboden
reunion, 2 p.m., Hartinger
Park.

Thesday, June 20
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village, Counc.il , regular
session, 7 p.m ., Rutland
Civic Center.
Thursday, June 22
SYRACUSE - Carleton
College Board of Trustees
will have its !41 st annual
meeting , 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse
Community
Center.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, June 15
POMEROY
Meig s
County American Cancer
Society Task Force, regular
meeting, noon, Pomeroy
Library, lunch provided ,
call 992-6626, ext. 24 for
information and to RSVP.
. RACINE
- Sonshine
Circle picnic, 6 p.m. ,
Marvin McKelvey camp.
Bring lawn chair, covered
dish or dessert. Meats, buns,
iced tea, paper product s,
games provided by hosts.
RACINE - Ohio River
Producers, RaCine Southern
FFA Alumni, regular meeting, 7 p.m., Southern Vo-Ag
room .
Monday, June 19
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
· Eastern Star, will meet at
6:30: New officers· will be
elected. Potluck refresh ments.
Thesday, June 20
. POMEROY
Meigs
Eagles Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER • .

BAGHDAD, Iraq- An alQaida-linked group said
Monday it was holding captive two U.S. privates, one
from Texas and the other from
Oregon, and taunted the U.S.
military for failing to find the
soldiers despite a search
involving more than 8,000
Iraqi and A,merican troops.
The Mujahedeen Shura
..Council, an umbrella organization for a variety of insurgent factions led by al-Qaida
in Iraq, offered no video,
identification caids or other
evidence to prove •that they
have the Americans. The
g.roup had vowed to seek
revenge for the June 7 killing
of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the
leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, in a
U.S. airstrike.
The council alsO said it was
responsible for lhe Juoe 3 kidnapping of four Russian
Embassy workers. The two
separate postings could not be
authenticated,
but they
appeared on a Web site known
for publishing messages from
insurgent groups in Iraq.
Pentagon spokesman Bryan
Whitman, when asked about
. the claim by the Shura
-Council that it was holding
the soldiers, said: "We have
no independent confirmation
of that report."
Besides the troops, the U.S.
military ·said Monday it has
deployed fighter jets, heli-

.,

copters, unmanned drones,
boats and dive teams in the
hunt for the soldiers, who disappeared Friday in a region
·south of Baghdad known as
the "Triangle of Death."
Residents
said
the
Americans slapped a 3 p.m.to-6 a.m. curfew in the area
·and were conducting houseto-house r~ids, arresting any'
one found not to be a permanent resident. They said U.S.
and Iraqi soldiers were
demanding to see each familis food ration card, which
hsts the number of beneficiaries, so as to single out ou'tsiders.
Troops searching for the
soldiers killed three suspected
insurgents ·and detained 34 in
fighting that alSo left seven
U.S. servicemen wounded,
said military spokesman Maj.
Gen. William Caldwell.
The area is among the most
dangerous in Iraq for U.S.
.troops and mostly populated
by minority Sunni Arabs, the
backbone of Iraq's 3-year-old
insurgency. The two soldiers
were missing after-an attack
on their traffic checkpoint that
left one of their comrades
dead.
Ahmed Khalaf Falah, a
farmer, has told The
Associated Press that he witnessed seven masked gunmen
seize the soldiers near
Youssifiyah, about 12 miles
· south of Baghdad.
Iraqi Foreign Minister
Hoshyar Zebari said Sunday

that insurgents had taken the
soldiers prisoner. "Hopefully
they would be found and
released as soon as possible,"
he · said on CNN's "Late
Edition."
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza Rice said there
was "great concern" over the
missing soldiers.
"The American military has
made very clear that they are
going to do everything possible ... to try and find them,"'
she told reporters.
Kidnappings of U.S. service
members have been rare since
the 2003 U.S.-led invasion,
despite· the presence of about
130,000 forces.
U.S. troops patrol only in
convoys. Foot patrols, whi le
common in parts of Iraq during 2003 and 2004, have
become rare because of roadside bombs, snipers and
ambushes.
The last U.S . soldier to be
captured· was Sgt. Keith M.
Maupin of Batavia, Ohio,
who was taken on April 9,
2004
after
insurgents
ambushed his fuel convoy.
Two months later, a tape· on
AI' Jazeera purported to show
a captive U.S. soldier shot,
but the Army ruled it was
inconclusive.
Six soldiers, including Pvt.
Jessica Lynch, were captured
in an ambush in southern Iraq
in the eaily days of the warMarch 23, 2003. Lynch was
rescued April I, 2003, the others 12 days later.
.

(

BYTHEBEND
woman cuts ties ·to abusive
past by changing her name
'Tuesday, June

co·mmunity Calendar

Monday, June 19
POMEROY - Bradford
Church of Ghrist Bible
School, Monday through
9 to II :30 a.m.
Thursday,
Sunday, June 25
Theme
"Trading
Paces."
HENDERSON , W.VA. - For more information
call
Descend.antsdof Sam and 992-5844.
Melvina Birchfield annual
reunion, at the Henderson
Wednesday, June 21
Community
Building.
MIDDLEPORT
Basket luncheon at noon .
Revival services, 7 p.m ..
through June 25, at the
Hobson
Christian
Fellowship Church. Special
Monday, June 19
singing. John Elswick,
SYRACUSE - Syracuse evangelist.
Church of the Nazarene,
vacation Bible school, 6Saturday, June 24
8:30
p.m.,
Syracuse
CHESHIRE ·- Women's
Community Center, "The Retreat pt Cheshire Baptist
First Action 'Heroes" theme . Church, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Registration and continental
breakfast begins at 8 a.m.
Theme is "Growing in
God's
Love" Reservations
Sunday, .June 18
by
June 20.
due
POMEROY - Annual
COOLVILLE Faith
summer gospel meeting
Harvest
Church,
Coolville,
concluding at the church .of
Thorn,
Christ at Pomeroy. Services Drummond
to be held I 0:30 a.m. and Louisville, Ky., speaking 10
I :30 p.m. today. Paul a.m. and 7 p.m. Word of
Curless of Bradyville, Tenn. Prophecy.
guest speaker.
MIDDLEPORT - The
Bakers of Kentucky will be
singing at l 0:30 a.m. at the
Monday, June 19
Middleport Church of the
'TUPPERS PLAINS
Nazarene. A Father's Day TB Clinic staff at Tuppers
dinner will follow to honor Plains firehouse, 4:30-5:30
all fathers.
·p.m., to administer skin
MIDDLEPORT
tests, returning Wednesday
Revival services will be to read tests .
held at the Victory Baptist
Church, . 525 N. Second St.,
Middeport, Sunday through
Wedne sday.
Dr.
Jerry
Sunday, June 18
Cheney will have services
TUPPERS PLAINS
at 10 a.m. Sunday and 7
p.m. nightly. There will be · Ethel Carson, former of
special music. Pastor James Tuppers Plains, · itow residing at Arbors of Marietta,
Keesee invites the public.
POMEROY - Revival will be 92 Sunday. Cards
services at the Pomeroy may be sent to her at Arbors
Nazarene Church, June 18- of Marietta, 400 Seventh
Marietta,
Ohio
21, with Dr. Ray LaSalle of Street,
Bucyrus, evangelist, speak- 45750.

Youth events

Church events

Other events

Birthdays

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of the official certificate of
birth. The IRS will also need
to be notified, ditto for credit card issuers (if applicable).
Any lawyer who charges
more than $300 would not be
Dear
my first choice. It pays to
Abby
shop around. even in the
matter of lawyer fees . GOOD
SAMARITAN ,
TUPELO, MISS.
DEAR ABBY: My mother I·
him, I was saddled with hi s was ado'pted by an abuser
name, though not formally and carried his name for 40
adopted . When I was 13, my
Wh
h d'd r· 11
mom asked how I'd like for years.
en s e 1 ' ana y,
him to adopt me. 1 said, take' the steps to have hi s
"Hell, no!" She said she name officially · removed
understood, and not only told from her birth certificate, she
him he couldn't adopt me, found he would have to sign
but said I woulu no longer the document&amp; wa iving hi s ·
use his name. (I asked if it tights to her. She was apprecould be changed.)
hensive about any contact
My name was changed to with this man and worried he
her maiden name, and I can might refuse. ·
honestly say it has made all
Luckily, her attorney was
the difference in the world to able to serve papers without
me not to have been stuck them havi ng to speak. And to
with a name that would have move things quickly along,
brought back many horrible he informed her stepfather
images and memories. - that if he didn't sign, my
MICHELLE lN HASTINGS, mother would have the r\ghts
NEB.
to ar'i' inheritance from him .
DEAR ABBY: If the Needless to say, he signed
writer's identity was modi- immediately, and my mother
fled or completely changed · has never looked so relieved
by court decree, it would be as the day she had her birth
advisable to seek another
court decree-in resuming his father's name plated back on,
or her hereditary surname, her birth certificate. which can be the surname of MW. , RICHLAND, WASH.
either biological parent. It
Chuck 6/19/06
Dear
would be less troublesome, Abby is written by Abigail.
though, to resume the sur- Van Buren, also known as
name that appears on the Jeanne Phillips, and was
official birth certificate.
founded by her mother,
I( the decree is approved Pauline Phillips. :Write Dear
and duly ordered, a certified Abby at www.DearAbby.com
copy should be sent to the or P.O. Box 69440; Los
-state registrar having custody Angeles, CA 90069.

.,~J ,.'. &gt;;r#'i:;' e~~~tO,,~~~; g,part of.your life.

•

I

If

DEAR ABBY: "Confused
in South Carolina" wrote you
regarding· changing her name
from her abusive stepfather's
back to' · her biological
father's . That letter could
have been written by me . I
did change my name for the
same reasons she wants to.
. I, too; was adopted at ag~
4 and abused throughout my
adolescence by my stepfather. Changing my name didn't erase the painful mem.ories, but it did end the association made by others to the
monster who adopted me.
The process wasn't expensive or burdensome. After 1
married, I kept my father's
name and hyphenated it with
my husband's. I am proud of
my father' s name&gt;and maintain it to this day. DALEVILLE, IND., READER
DEAR READER: Thank
you for sharing your personal experience. I heard from
quite a few people who said
that by reclaiming their true
identity, they felt empowered. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I say yes,
she should do it. As a survivor of incest, I made the
decision .to legally (lx some. thing that had bothered me
for a long time. It was easy
and inexpensive, and l did it
without an attorney. It felt
good to take control. It was a
freeing experience. And I'm
sure the writer of that letter
will
agree.
K.C.,
AKRON, OHIO
DEAR ABBY: I was also
abused by my stepfather.
Because I was only 4 when
my mom met and married

h'

• FREI! 24rr TRhnlr;~~l lu,port

20,2006

ing . Services, 6 p.m.
Sunday, 7 p.m. Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday.

ac

nr: ;':.;

Al-Qaida-linked group says it kidnapped two missing US. soldiers
BY HAMZA HENDAWl

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

�'

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily -Sentinet

Tuesday, June 20,

Tuesday, June 20,2006

2006

Obituaries

•

Democrats
urge
disastrous
policy
Of
'ouC
ftom
Iraq
~ The Daily Sentinel

Democrats can ' t come up
Back America" convention voters support the position
with a formal unified stance
this
week
that
"the of Sen. John McCain , R ~
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
on Iraq, but it's all too clear
American people are under- Ari z., that the United States
www.mydellyeenllnel.com
standably confused and cer- needs to send more troops. ·
what most of the party's
A compelling case has
leaders want : out. And
tainly frustrated" by Bush's
Ohio Valley Publishing c.o.
been
made by some hawksoon. It would be a disaster
pledges to "stay the course"
for America if they preMolton
while U.S. military com- ish intellectuals, including
Jim Freeland
Kondlacke manders leak word of grad- Frederick Kagan of the
vailed.
1'\nterprise
American
Iraq has finally installed a
ual withdrawal plans.
Publisher
Reid called for "a plan · Institute, that the United
full government that is
fighting
to
establish
prder
·
that
provides our troops State s should temporarily
Charlene Hoeflich
against multiple homicidal
.
.
with an exit strategy from increase its forces for an
General Manager-News Editor
Murderous t~Uj~S Will fill · this seemingly endless con- offen sive to help Iraqi s
enemies. Millions of ordinary Iraqis have risked · th~ ,vacu~m : CIVIl war c~- flict. " Reid's policy, of clear and hold Baghdad and
death to vote - a testament tam Y Will ensue, an~ t e course would eliminate any nearby insurgent strong,
entue Gulf regiOn Will be ·
~
f
·
·
to their desire for democra- destabilized.
confu~10n or rustratwn m holds .
Congress shall make no law respecting an estab- cy. Yet De.rnocrats want to True, . &lt;IS Democrats the mmd of the enemy and
Maliki is launching such
lishment of religion, or pro hi biti 11g the free exer- pull the plug and abandon devoutly wish, Bush will go offer 1t a bluepnnt to plan an operation, but with only
75,000 mostly Iraqi military
down as a failed president, - Its counter-strategy.
cise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or them.
.
police
personneL
Retd and other . senators and
President Bu sh reported But America also will suffer
of the press; or the right of the people peaceably following his surprise visit a catastrophic strategic are contemplat1~~ an Kagan argues for adding
to assemble, and to petition the Government for with Iraqi Prime Minister defeat, probably resulting in amendment requmng a 22,000 U.S. troops for the
Nouri al-Maliki this week domination of tile region by reduction of U.S. force.s to effort, believing that the
a redress of grievances.
that Iraq's - leaders are . a nuclear-armed Iran. It's a . 100,000 from ·the prese~t Iraqis cannot handle il
"deeply concerned that the future no Democratic presi- 13.0,000 by the. end of th1s alone. He was one of four
- The First Amendment to the U.S. ConstHutlon stability provided by the dential prospect should year and full Withdrawal by outside experts who briefe4
Bush and his Cabinet 111
coalition forces will be- want to inherit.
the end of 2007.
,
removed and there'll be a
Yet Democratic leaders
To her credtt, the party s Camp David prior to the
vacuum. And they ' re con- are f~llfng . all over them- 2008 frontrunner, · Sen. president' s trip toBaghdad:
It would be wonderful if
cerned about what gets into selves to hasten the process. Hillary ~odharn Clinton, Dthe vacuum."
They
disagree
about N.Y., wilhstood boos and some Democratic presiden:
Bush said, " I assured whether to set a deadline for ' h1sses from the Take Back tial candidate would joil\
them that we will keep our withdrawal _ and ' if so lefties by saying it isn't McCain in pressing Bu sh to
commitment" but added, "I what the deadline should b~ "smart strategy" or "in ,the add troops to ensure a vict&lt;f..
also made it clear to them _ but the overwhelming best interests of our troops" ry in Iraq. Once upon ~
time, the Democratic Party
that in order for us to keejJ consensus is ·for withdraw- to set a "date certain."
our commitment and be a! not commitment to vic· On t)1e other hand, she had genuine hawks, incluct;
Pre sidents
Harry
successful, they themselves . to~y.
said it's also not "smart" for . ing
Truman,
John
Kennedy
and .
have to do · some hard
, Surely t~~ most irrespon- . "t~e p~esident to continue
Lyndon
Johnson.
and
Sens
.
· things. They themselves s1ble posutons are those w~th hts, open-e~ded comhave to set an agenda. They taken by House Minority mttment. . She dtd not say Paul Douglas, Illinois, and
Dear Editor,
.
Jackson ,
Henry
themselves
have to ·get Leader Nancy Pelosi, D- what, strategy she favors The week of June 15-22 has been designated National
Washington.
Nursing Assistants Week. This year's theme, Caring is our some things accomplished." Calif., and ex-hawk Rep. something a prospective
· Nowadays, the · remnan(l;
Clearly, if there's any John Murtha, D-Pa., who president ought to do.
Business, focu ses on the many ways nursing assistants make
want virtually immediate
Democratic leaders cer- of that wing , such as Sen.
hope for success in Iraq a difference in the lives of the people they care for.
Lieberman~
that
is,
the
establishment
of
withdrawal,
and
by
Sens.
tainly
are responding to the Joe
Each and every day the nursmg assistants who care for the .
Connecticut
,
and
Rep. Jane
stable,
pro-Western Russ Feingold, D-Wis., and party's rank-and-file. In the
residents at Arcadia Nursing Center are thoughtful, caring a
it depends John Kerry, D-Mass ., who · latest Gallup Poll, 24 per- Harman, California, a~
individuals who put their heart and soul into caring for the res- democracy idents whom they treat like their own family. The knowledge principally on the Iraqis' advocate a full departure by cent of Democrats (and 17 lambasted by colleagues
percent of the total elec- and risk the loss of their
they have of their jobs and the stability at the facility gives the ability to control sectarian the end of 2006.
If something like this sud- torate ). favor immediate seats or committee posts. •
residents a sense of security and put the family members mind strife, to cleanse the polite
Republicans plan. to brant
and
army
of
ethnic
militias,
denly
became U.S. ·policy, withdrawal, and 47 percent
at ease.
Democrats
as "the party ~
Nursing assistants are usually underpaid and ove,rworked to win the war against one could expect the Iraqi (and 32 percent of all votcut
and
run"
in the electioH
which does not detour them from seeking other job opportu- Saddarnist insurgents and government to collapse ers) want all U.S. troops out
this ' fall. but that's not whdi
as
the
South within 12 months.
nities that would pay them better, but choose to stay m the Islamic jihadists; and to much
health care field taking care of people, what they do best.
establish
an
effective, Vietnamese government did
In other worlls, 7·1 percent the party should fear thO
1975,
after of Democrats favor either most. Rather, it's thll
At Arcadia, nursing assistants will be honored through a nationally representative in · April
Congress rejected President the
Pelosi/Murtha
or prospect that the Unit e ~
variety of events throughout the week. The staff and adminis- government.
tration would like to take this opportunity to say thank you,
It's a gigantic order, and it Gerald Ford's appeal for Kerry/Feingold posllu)n . States will be defeated ill
and acknowledge our valuable nursing assistants and those in may prove impossible . Yet emergency funds amid Meanwhile; only 42 percent Iraq and a Democratic pre ~
the local hospitals, Home Health and Hospice agencies for all any prospect for success North
Vietnam ' ~
final of all voters, including 64 ident will have to deal witb
~
will vanish if Iraqis get the offensive.
percent" of Republicans and the consequences.
their hard work and dedication.
(Morton Kondracke ifi .
idea that the United States
Kathy McDaniel
Next in line are those. like 22 percent of Democrats,
ArcQdia
will withdraw its · fo~ces Senate Minority Leader S\lpport Bush's stance of executive editor · of Rorl
Call, the newspaper o}
from the country berore Harry Reid, D-Nev., who staying until Iraq is secure.
CoolviUe, Ohio
:
Iraqis can replace them.
told the left-wing · "Take
A minuscule 6 percent of Capitol Hill. )

VIE.W

Caring

The business ofnutsing assistants

Today is Tuesday, June 20, the 171st day.of 2006. There are
194 days left .in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 20, 1893, a jury in' New Bedford, Mass., found
Lizzie Borden innocent of the ax murders ofher father and
stepmother.
'
On this date:
In 1756, a group of British soldiers was imprisoned in India
in a suffocating cell that gained notoriety as the "Black Hole
of Calcutta"; most died. (The exact circumstances of this inci dent- such as the number of prisoners, originally put at 146
- are matter of historical dispute.)
Thought for Today: '"History,' Stephen said, 'is a nightmare
from which I am trying to awake."' - From "Ulysses," by
James Joyce, Irish poet ( 1882-1941 ).

a

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be-less than
300 words. All leiters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include addll!ss and telephone number. No unsigned letters wil( be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues,.not persoiUllities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be a~;cepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley

(USPS 213-960)
Ohlo Valley Publishing
Co.

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.. .. .... _...... .

Denver 0. Curtis
Denver Ollin Curti s, 84, Bidwell, died. Monday, June 19,
2006, at his residence.
·
· Services will be II a.m. Thursday at the Middleport Chapel
•of F1sher Funeral Home. Burial will be in Sandhill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral horne from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8
p.m. Wednesday.
A complete obituary will appear in Wednesday's Sentinel.

•

.•
~

~

The stain on Guantanamo

and us

guards during a. forced
The Pentagon has often
feeding:
"We can do what
taken pride that not a single
we want now because you
life has been lost among
can't go to court anymore."
the inmate1. in the 4-l/2
As for the president's .
years the Guantanamo Bay
of the dangerouswarning
prison has existed. The
Nat
ness
of
the, Guantanamo
press, using the governHentoff
inmates,
.
military
ment's euphemism, keeps
spokesman
at
the
Southern
calling them "detainees."
Command
in
Miami
But they are prisoners,
reminded
the
world
that
the
some for more than four
tors,
psychiatrists
and
psy.
"detainees"
are
th~
enemy
without charges
years and
they're
held
and in total isolation from chologists at Guantanamo
Bay
have
not
protested.
because
"They
have
their families .
(Note the immutable use expressed a commitment to
Now, three prisoners;
of
the milder-sounding kill Americans and our
using · nooses made · of
1
·
· friends if released. These
sheets and clothing, · have 'detainee. ") ·
The
president's
reaction
are not common criminals,
committed suicide in their
cells. An official at the to the suicides was: ~·we they are enemy combatants
prison said their deaths . would like to end the being detained because
were "an act warfare;" they Guantanamo," · but "there they have "{aged · war
wanted to be martyrs in the are some that, if put out on against our .nation .. ."
further service of the ter- the streets, would create · However, in an analysis
rorists to whom they owe grave harm to American of these inmates - called
their fealty. But, said the citizens and other citizens "the worst of the worst" by
military, their ~emains are of the world. And there- Defense Secretary Donald
nonetheless being treated fore, I believe they ought to Rumsfeld - law profes"with the utmost respect,'' be tried in courts here in sors ai the Seton Hall (New
Jersey) School of ·Law,
and a cultural adviser was ;_the United States."
But
this
is
ihe
president
have rebutted this charachelping the military so
Muslims around the world who signed into law the terization through profiles
Detainee Treatment Act of of 517 of the prisoners would not be offended.
2005.
that
strips based
entirely
on
The three dead men, like
many of their fellow pris- Guantanamo inmates of Department of Defense
oners, from time to time, any right to habeas c.orpus data " ... written determinato
American tions the government has
were on a hunger strike, petitions
courts
about
their
condi- produced for detainees it
having
recently . been
forcibly fed - locked into tions of confinement. This has designated as enemy
..
a metal chair while a tube law began as tlie cruel combatants."
invention
of
Sen
.
Lindsey
Ac-cording
to
this
Seton
was in serte d through the
nose into · the stomach. Graham. R-S.C., and it nul- Hall Law School "Report
Physicians
for Human lified - . so far as these on Guantanarno Detainee s"
Rights have vainly asked prisoners are · concerned - . (which I first cited' in .
that these " brutal and inhu- the amendment by Sen. March of thi s year), the
mane force -feeding tactics" John McCain, R- Ariz ., evidence on which the govwh!ch rl!,lh~r btzarrely IS tn ernment relied to hold
be stopped.
.
.. these prisoners indefinitely
as the same law.
And in March Presidential
candidate revealed that "55 percent
Reuters reported on June 6,
McCain has studwusly are not determined to have
short before the suicides "in the British medical remained silent on this committed any hostile acts
journal, the Lancet, 263 exdusion of Gua_ntanarno .against the United States or
doctors frQm seven coun- pnsoners frqm h1s much coalition allies (and) only 8
tries called on the Urlited celebr~ted effort to end percent ... were characterStates to stop force-feeding cruel, mhuman and de~rad- ized as AI Qaeda fighters."
Moreover, "Only 5 perdetainees
and
using tng tre~tment of our pnsoners.
Satd
Ot:Je
of
the
grateful
.
·
cent
of the detainees were
restraint chairs." The doc.. - . ...... .

./

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Sonshine
Circle picnics
at camp site

PORTLAND Mattie
Beegle and Hazel McKelvey
hosted the annual Sonshine
Circle picnic July 15 at the
Marvin McKelvey. Camp.
Kathyrn ' Brace and Julie
Campbell had charge of the
games. Mellissa Holman won
the door prize. Vernon Harrison
won for guessin~ the number
of colored rocks m a jar.
Attending were Martha Lou.
Bruce and Debbie Beegle; Tom
and Sheila Theiss, Letha
Proffitt, Carolyn Gorrell,
Blondena
Rainer,
Edie
Hubbard, Nondus Hendricks,
Vernon and Avis Harrison,
Mattie Bee~le, Kenneth and
Bernice The1ss, Otmer Knopp ,
Edna Knopp, Edith Grimm,
Dale and Katherine Hart, Julie
Campbell and Mother Julia,
Melanie Holman, Misty Cox,
Jim, Denise and Melissa
Holman, Betty Proffitt, Lillian
Haymljn, Ruth Simpson,
Marvin, Eleanor arid Hazel
McKelvey. A potluck dinner
was enjoyed by the group.

Hadley Grace Lynch

Birth

announced
WOODBRIDGE, VA. Josh and Jacynda ·Lynch of
Woodbidge, Va. announce the
birth of a daughter, Hadley
Grace, born June 7. She
weighed 6 pounds, 14
ounces.
· Grandparents are Christi
(Bob) Mash, Ed (Lynn)
. Lynch, Randy (M01dra)
McKamey, and Mary Sanner.
Great-grandparents are Art
and Jane Hess. Thomas and
Cathleen Lynch, Don and
Shirley
McKamey,
and
Richard
and
Verda
Hildebrecht.

"

.''

captured by United States
forces ... 86 percent ... were
arrested "by either Pakistan
or the Northern Alliance (in
Afghanistan)" and were
turned over to the United
States at a time at which
the United States offered
large bounties for capture
of suspected enemies t9
Afghanistan warlords."
. 'The Seton Hall exanllna·
tion of the government's
records ended with: "The
detainees have been afford'.
ed no meaningful opportu'n.i ties to test the · government' s evidence again$!
them" as the day~.
nights, months and years
mounted with no hope of
their ever having hope .
(The very small number &lt;if
prisoners
who
have ,
appeared before military
commi ssions there are mil
allowlld - . nor ar~ theil"
lawyers - to see the key
evidence against them.)
Would not even so stalwart a person as Rurnsfeld
not be desperate after being
caged year · after year in
what lawyers for these prl~
oners have calle d "a legal
black hole" ? . As for th e
three prisoners who fin\IIIY
succee~ed as many others have tried - to.comnii~
suicide, did they intend to
be martyrs? Or did they •
believe, instead, that thi~
was their only way \O get
out of Guantanamo before
dying there of · " natural

causes. "
(Nat Hentoff is a nation ·
ally renowned authority 011
tlze First Am endment an d
tlz e Bill of Rights am/
author of many boob ;
including " The War on the
Bill of Rights and tht•
Gatherill {(
R.esi.ftan ce :·
(Seven . Stories · P'resY,
2003).)

Carleton Early ~hildhood Award and Grad:uation Ceremon~

, POMEROY - Faye Marie
Leonard, 85, formerly of
Pomeroy, died Saturday, June
17, 2006 at the Arcadia
Nursing home, Coolville.
Born .on Oct. 15, 1928, she
was the daughter of Howard
and Nora Ball Hutchison
Rhodes. She was also precedt:d in death bY her husband ,
Oscar Leonard, and a brother,
l-loward Rhodes.
She is survived by two sis. ~ers, Dorothy Vandyke and
Tharon Hurst, both of The
.
Submitted photos
Plains; a daughter, Leah K .
Carleton School recently held its Carleton Early Childhood Award
South of Hocking port, and a L----'~~
and Graduation Ceremony. Preschoolers received a variety of
son
and
daughter-in-law
Faye Marie Leonard
awards including "Best Listener" and "Good Manners ." Of the 27
Nicklois and Eleanor Leonard
students participating in the ceremonies, 14 students graduated
of &lt;::hester; two sisters-in-law, Mary Lou Harrison of
from preschool. Pictured are students that were honored during
Gall!pohs, and Opal Griggs of Columbus.
the awards and graduation ceremony: First picture (above left),
, Also surviving are grandchildren, Nicklois Lee Leonard, Jr.
front row (from left) Noa~ Thacker, Nikkia Phipps, Lexa Hayes.
of the U. S. Navy in Norfolk, Va. , and Dannr Leonard, a
Ethan Roberts; back row (from left) teacher, Liz Arthur, Cody
deputy sheriff of Meigs County ; Keith "Butch' and Christy
Randol~h. Jackie Dailey, Billy Harmon , Brayden Mugrage, and
Young, Dave and Carol Willoughby, and Dr. Roland and Lisa
assistant Kelley Weddle. Not pictured is Wyatt Shope. Second
Barr. There are also eight great-grandchildren, Kiana N.
picture (above right), front row (from left) Isaac Wolfe, Jacob
.Leon,ard of Fort Worth; Texas; Brandon and Derek Young,
Noah Gross , John Ginther; back row (from left) assistant
Barrett,
Austm and Tyler Willoughby, and · Garrett. Harrison and
Sharon
Warner, Cale Ulbrich, Montana Martin, Ryan SteWart,
Weston Barr.
. Also surviving are step-grandsons and their wives and a assistant Sally Holman, Trenton DuVall, and teacher ~rista Baker.
Not pictured is David Stanley. Third picture (left). front row (from
special ~riend, David and Theresa South, Tom South, and
left) Dalton Ervin, Damen Payne, Conner Grady; back row (from
M~k South and Mich!!lle Wilson; and seven step great.-grandleft) assistant Tricia Jackson , Deven James, Andrew McClary,
ch1ldr.en, Teather Royce and John South, and Mike, DJ,
·Nick Roberts. Blake Cremeans, and teacher Tara Richardson. Not
Chnstopher, Mathew and Maverick South.
·
pictured are Destiny Ramsey and Is aiah Zahran.
_Graveside services will be held at I p.m. Wednesday at the
Vmton Memorial Cemetery in Vinton. Pastor LaMar
O'Bryant ·will officiate. At the request of Mrs. Leonard. there
will be no visitation. Arrangements are being handled by
);:wing Funeral Home.
·
.

''

TODAY IN HISTORY

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Faye Marie Leonard

11t Court SU..t • Pomeroy, Ohio

READER'S

www .mydailysentinel.com

Richard and Florence Spencer

SPENCERS CELEBRATE
50TH ANNIVERSARY

Hocking
dean's list

Submitted photo

After visiting the Locks of Love website Sarah Turner, 12, of
Racine decided to help children who have lost their hair due to
chemotherapy treatments. She was so moyed by the photos of
sick children Turner decided to donate 11 inches of her hair to
Locks of Love that provides wigs to those ill c hildren at no
cost. Susan Ash from The Cutting Crew in Syracuse helped
make Turner's wish happen. Turner is the daughter of Carla
and Tom Hopton of Racine. ·

For the
Record

NELSONVILLE - The
following
local . students
TUPPERS PLAINS Plant at Cheshire. Mrs ..
Richard
and
Florence Spencer is the daughter of were named to the dean's list
.
.
Spencer of Tuppers Plains Eleanor Boyles of Belpre and at Hocking College for the
spring
quarter:
Grant
Arnold,
will celebrate their 50th the late Dinsmore Boyles.
RACINE . - Charles E.
anniversary June 24 .
They have two sons, Tim Pomeroy ; Jennifer Baker,
Davis
Jr., 19. 237 S. Fifth
The couple were married and Dan (Sheila), and three Racine; Crystal Cottrill ,
Ave
..
Middleport.
was cited
June 24,1956 in the Chester grandchildren Kirt, Danielle Syracuse; Deborah Dingey.
for failure to control by the
United Methodist Church by and Tiffany of Tuppers Middleport; Shauna Elliott,
Gallia-Meigs
Post of the
Jessica Hill, Tara Hupp, , all
Rev. Ralph Grove. Mr. Plains.
State Highway Patrol early
Cards can be sent to 42830 of Racine; Scott Ktrne s.
Spencer is the son of the late
Sunday when his car, travelKirtley and Tressie Spencer. State . Route 7. Cool ville, Reedsville; Vinson Martin , • .
ing westbound on Ohio 124,
Pomeroy ; Nancy Phalen ,
He retired from Gavin Power Ohio 45723 .
drove off the ri ght side of the
New Haven, W.Va.
road , "struck a ditch, and came
Stephen Shepard II, Long
HEMLOCK GROVE 147.000
stay-at-ho me to rest in a gravel lot.
Bottom; James Smith and Lecturer Kim Romine pre- fa thers in 2004 . and 2. 3 milDavis suffered no injuries
Ryan Smith, Racine; Albert sented
a program on lion single fathe rs in 2005 .
'11id hi s car had di sabling
Stearns and Stephanie Story- National Rose Month and
Legislati ve C hairman Roy
Schwab, Middleport; Philip Father 's Day at the recent Grueser reported on g lobal dam.age.
Werry. Chester.
meeting of Hemlock Grange warmin g . Climate c h a n ge~
held at the Grange Hall. . have occ ured s ince 1970 . In
Rosalie Story conducted 2005, 40 perce nt of surface
RACINE - The Theiss reunion will be held at the .Star Mill
Park in Racine. Sunday, July 9. Those attending are to take a
the meeting. CWA Chairman water was di sappe arin ¥.
covered dish and an item for the pig in a poke sale. Dinner will
Roy Grueser discussed work C limato; affect s farm ani ma ls. When te mperat ure is
on con tests.
be at I p.m.
'
Romine opened' the pro- o ver ~0 degrees , milk program with a qui z about du ction in co ws drop.
POMEROY _ Renee D. "
roses. Opal G ruese r and
Grue se r reported th a t a . Bailey of Pomeroy has been
BOARDMAN (AP)
TUPPERS PLAINS - Chicken dinner will be served June Police shot and killed a man Barbara Fry won rose bushes mixture of che wing tobacco named to the dean 's list al
.
juice. di shwa shing soap. Whee ling Jes ui t Uni ve r.sity ·
25, starting at II :30 a.m. by the VFW Ladies Auxilary, Post who robbed a drug store and as prizes.
water for springquarter. Wheeling
mouthw as h
an d
Older
types
of
roses
are
took
a
hostage
whl1e
lleeing
9053 at Tuppers Plains. Co~t will be $6.50 for adults and
still popular, Romine said . s prayed o n garde ns will kee p Jesuit is til e only Catholic
the business, authorities said.
$3.50 for children .
The
masked
su·spect but the hybrid tea ro se is away deer, ra b.b its and o the r institution of hi gher learning
grabbed a bystander outside becoming more so . Roses animal s.
in West Virgin ia.
ne
ed
six
hours
of
sunli'ght.
The
charter
was
draped
in
.
the store when he saw the two
officers who had responded to The Peace Rose was brought memory of Leo ta Smith . An
LONG BOTTOM - Forked Run Sportsman's Club will
to the U.S. in 1945. Roses a ppeal fron1 Cl ark s burg
host a benefit for Shriners Children's Hospital at noon on a 911 call" Sunday morning.
should
be pruned in th e Grange was a n swered . Jim
The hostage managed to
Sunday, June 25 at Forked Run Sportsman's Club on Curtis
spring a nd trimmed to three Fry and Bill Rad ford have
Hollow Road. The price is' $2 a shot for slugs, $1 a shot for free himself before the sus- leaves o n a stem. Sevent y to been working o n the light at
pect
and
the
officers eighty percent of rose per- the springs. O pal Gr ueser
rimfire.
exchanged gunfire, said fume is made in Bulgari a.
planted · flow e rs at th e
Ballroom Dancing .,
Detective Sgt. Rick Alii.
The fir st Father 's Day cel- s prings and to ld mei11bers
. with Joe Li, PhD
days of ·filming and now are spokesman for th e police ebration was in 1910, in much is needed .
in
nearby Washington. It was federall y
in New York to edit and' tran- department
Patt y Dye r held inspecscribe the more than 50 hours Youngst0wn.
Ne\1-,: Session Begins
recogni zed in 1966. Father's tion. She reported favo rabl y
Sound
effects
and
The
suspect:"w
hose
name
of
footage
.
June 23
from PageA1
Dpy was,_ offi ciaJ ly ado pted on wo rk done by the Gra nge .
a mu sical score will complete hasn't been · released, was as -the thii'Ct"Slmday m June
The Ju ly mee ting will be
the doc ument ary, and he killed about I 0: I 0 a.m. The in 1972 . Seve nl y two per- preceded by a slo ppy joe
.
'
DUCKTONA!
ters .that have transpired in hopes to release the !tim later hostage wasn't hurt.
cent of fath ers rece ive neck- d in ne r with sal ads and
thi s year and hold a local preIt wasn't clear whether the ti es. as g ift s. There were dessert s.
the past 200 years .
Adopt Your Duck
Matthew J. Pellowski, a: miere.
· suspect was killed by the orti TODAY!
Inte res ted individuals can cer from Youngstown or the
New York-based author and
from
Boardman
director· ·with Red Line keep up with the status or the officer
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Studios, and his three-person . project by vi siting www.eye- Township, Alii said. The oftiGallipolis,
DH (740) 446-Af!TS
The Dally Sentinel • Subsc ribe today • 992-2155
crew in May wrapped up 20 softhemothman.com .
cers' names were not released .

Highway Patrol

Grange members her ·

about rose month

Local Briefs

Reunion planned

Chicken dinner planned

On Ulheeling
deans list

Robbecy suspect
killed in shootout
with police

Benefit shoot

Sci-Fi

Proud to be apart of your life.

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•

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PageA6

OHIO

The-Daily Sentitlel

.

Tuesday; June 20,2006

•

2 BROKERS INDICI'EII IN STATE
.INVFSTMENT SCANDAL CASE

'

Big Ben had no motorcycle license; B2
Steelers' Holmes charged with assault, B2
Reds double up Mets,. B6
Cubs roar past Cleveland, B6

of'committing mail and wire favorable treatment , from
~SOCIATED PRESS WRITER.
fraud to conceal their rela- Gasper regarding workers'
tionship with Gasper. Two comp investment b•tsiness,
CLEVELAND Two counts charge them with the indictment says.
investment brokers were lying to a federal agent about
Lewis and o· Neil both
indicted Monday on federal Gasper's -involvement with . worked for several_years at
char$es that they bribed a top the condo.
·
Roney &amp; Co., a Clevelandofficial at the Ohio Bureau of
Messages seeking · com- area firm that in 1997 was
Workers' Compensation with ment were left Monday at the subject o,f an internal
dte use of their Allrida Keys home phone numbers listed bureau investiglltion . over
condominium in exchange for Lewis : and 0' Neil 's allegations it was receiving a
addresses provided by the disproportionately high share
for state business.
A federal grand jury indict- government.
of workers' comp business.
ed Michael W. Lewis and
William Beyer, an attorney
Beginning in .1999, Lewis
Daniel P. O'Neil. who man- for O'Neil, · said ·he was and O'Neil worked for
aged stock investments for working to ha ve.O'Neil freed Raymond
James
&amp;
the $15 billion insurance on bond and said his client Associates after it merged
fund for injured workers, on would fight the charges.
with Roney &amp; Co.
,
four counts each. The -rwo
"Dan O' Neil is a goixl and
Raymond James earne(J
worked at firms th.at received decent man," Beyer .said.
more than $530,000 in comhundreds of thousands of
Lewis' attorneys , Roger missions while the two bro- ·
AP
dollars in commissions from Synenber!l and Dominic kers were there from
Gov.
Bob
Taft
signs
a
biU
outside
the
home
of
Martha
and
Larry
Clay
in
Columbus,
Monday.
The
the agency.
.
Caletta, did not Immediately September 1999 through
Both . pleaded not guil ty -return messages.
August 2000, according to Clays were victims of unscrupulous brokers who link consumers with bad credit or low-incomes
with high-interest lenders. Under the bill, higher-risk home buyers w·ill get more ~rotection from
Monday before U.S. District ' The indictment accuses bureau records.
·
Judge David D. Dowd Jr. in Gasper's then girlfriend of
The two joined Ferris, predatory lenders and mortgage brokers beginni)1g next year. From right are, state Sen. Dan
Akron, which is in the signing papers in November Baker Watts in August 2000, Stewart; Martha Clay; and Larry Clay.
Cleveland-based
federal 1998 saying she intended to a company that didn't have
coun dis.trict. ,
buy the lul!'ury condo and a previou s work with the
Terrence Gasper, · · the boat slip for $345,000.
bureau. The firm received
bureau's former chief finanGasper gave the real estate $ 180,000 in bureau business
cia! officer, pleaded guilty in agent a $500 personal check in the first two years the pair
COLUMBUS (AP)
tery ratings agencies could people who can 't qualify for
state and federal court earlier as a ·down payment, the worked there. In subsequent Higher-risk home buyers react poor~y to stricter regu- traditional mortgages. It&gt;
this month to accepting stays indictment states.
years .it annually received will get .more protection · lations and clamp .down on bans practices such as
at the condo, money for his
On Nov. 16, 1998, Lewis more than $345,QOO.
. from unscruplous lenders the sale of debt on the sec'- switching loan terms at the
son's tuition and other gifts and O'Neil .took over the
The brokers are the eighth and mongage brokers beginin exchange for doling out purchase, four days after the and ninth peo)'fle indicted m ning next year under · a bill ondary market .- - the chief las t minute or ·coercing
way that lenders make quick appraise~ to . falsely inflate .
investment business.
·
real estate agent was · the scandal that began with
that
Gov.
Bob
Taft
signed
on
on loans.
home values before making
profit
Proset;utors promised more ._ informed by Lewis that he rare-coin dealer Tom Noe, Monday.
·
would
in
turn
a
loan, which share ·the
Lenders
charges after Gasper became was Gasper 's partner.
who is accused of funneling
the
bill
at
the
Taft
signed
·pass . those · costs on, th\IS. blame for Ohio's high foreO'Neil · and Lewis each $25,000 to Gasper as a bribe
the first bureau official conhome
of
a
Columbus
coup!~
raising monthly mortgage closure rates.
victed in a yearlong political paid $35,000 toward the pur- in return for state business, .
who
were
victims
of
brokers
payments for borrowers,
For the first time, it allows
scandal that has shaken the chase before closing in
Noe, a prominent GOP
who
link
consumers
with
opponents say.
borrowers to sue lenders that
state's GOP-dominated gov- January 1999 for $345 ,000. contributor, pleaded guilty
bad
credit
or
low-incomes
The
law
will
not
take
aren
'·t covered by federal
and
given They later paid condo fees, May 31 to funneling about
emment
with
high-interest
lenders.
effect until 2007 to give regulations under Ohio con$45,000 to President Bush's
Democrats hope of regaining the indieiment states. ·
"The menace of predatory those ratings agencies such sumer protection law. .The
But Gasper and hi s girl- re-election campaign. He has
some seats, including governor. The scandal led .to his- friend stayed regularly at the pleaded not guilty to state lenders has been ravaging as Standard and Poors time attorney gene·ral can sue
roric no contest pleas by condo and treated it as their charges of stealing more than neighborhoods in our cities, to assess the bill and adjust . lend~rs to stop fraudulent
Gov. Bob Taft and four for- own. Gasper stayed there $1 million from a $50 mil- suburbs and rural communi- · without a drastic reaction. It practices.
mer aides for failing to report from
November · 1998 lion investment in rare coins ties, turning the American . also allows regulatory agenOther states have not seen
dream
of
·home
ownership
gifts such as golf outings and through October 2004, that he handled for the workcies time to prepare rules borrowers suddenly pushed
into a nightmare for far too artd gear up for enforcement. · out of .the market, said Bill
meals.
according to court docu- ers' comp bureau.
.
Gasper could be sentenced long," Taft said in a stateThe scandal forced the ments.
The bill polices"' sub-prime · Faith, executive director of
ouster of the longtime workOccasionally, Gasper made - to up to 20 years in prison ment. .
loans, which generally carry the
Coalition
on
ers' comp administrator, the what
the
indictment but is likely to get far less in
Opponents in the )ending interest rates higher than 8 Homelessness and Housing
firing of its chief investment described · as a token rental exchange for testifying industry .cautioned that jit- percent and are designed for in Ohio.
officer and an overhaul of payment to Lewis "in order against others involved in the
the fund 's investment opera- to make it appear that his scandal.
tio'!~ ·
stays at Unit E-21 were legitO'Neil and Lewis could
Lewis, 71, of Willoughby. imate ."
get ur. to 35 years in prison ,
and
O'Neil,
54, . of
In exchange for the condo, $1 mtllion in fines and three Bv JULIE CARR SMYTH Corp./Russell Real Estate executive director, was .
Chesterland, also are accused O' Neil and Lewis received years' probation if convicted. AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT Advisors and Salomon found guilty last fall of
' Smhh · Barney,
now .. improperly accepting gifts.
COLUMBUS - A for- Citicorp, while help ing
Representative s of ~both
mer board member of the oversee
pension fund firms have pledged full
State Teacher's Retirement investments. the companie s · cooperation with the invesPAINESVILLE (AP) - A were indicted Friday by a
Federal officials say the Systein
was
charged were handling, said Lara ligation begun in April
couple. accused of plotting to · Lake County grand jury on alleged plot was retaliation Monday with three counts Baker, chief counsel for 2005 after a referral from
bomb the homes of a judge, 14 state charges, including for a minor tax evasion case of conflict of interest Columbus City Attorney the
Ohio
Ethics
mayor and police chief had conspiracy to murder and involving small auto repair accusing him of taking Richard Pfeiffer Jr.'s crim- Commission. The probe is
busine ss the couple owned in gifts . f.rom
picked out a founh possible aggravated arson.
investment . ina! division .
continuing, Baker said.
target and did not care if the
Ttle couple, who remain in Nonh Perry, about 35 miles clients.
to
be
Legislators pas sed pertChapman ts
explosions killed children, federal
custody, .. were northeast of Cleveland.
Jack Chapman, who arraigned
Tuesday
in sion-fund ethics reforms
An informant to,ld authori- resigned in June 2004, was Franklin County Municipal after Dyer resigned in
according to allegations charged in May in · U.S.
Di strict Court in Cleveland
found in court documents.
charged with three counts Court.
Joseph Sands, 40, and his with possession of firearms ties that Sands and Holin of conflict". of interest
He declined comment 2003 amid criticism that
girlfriend . Dawn Hoi in, 34, and explosives.
. were out for street justice alleging he · took theater Monday, referring ques- the system was spending
and did not care if children
and sports tickets and a tions .to his lawyer, Ritchey Jilillions on bonuses, art
.were killed when their pipe round of golf from pension Hollenbaugh. A message . and travel even as assets .
bombs exploded, according fund clients. He 's the third · was· left Monday evening plunged. The new law
to affidavits filed in the case. representative of the retire- at Hollenbaugh's office.
requires all public pension
Federal officials say the ment system in less than a
Another
former
board
funds
to adopt strict ethics
ACI- 38.44
Kroger- 19.46
couple targeted Painesville year to be charged with member, elementary school and travel policies.
AEP -34.02
Ltd.- 25.65
Municipal Judge · Michael ethics violations.
t~acher
Hazel Sidaway,
The teachers' retirement
Akzo- 51.15
NSC -49.55
Perry
.
Cicconetti.
North
The
indictment
·
accuses
.
was
convicted
in
May
of
system
serves more than
Ashland Inc. - 64.64
Oak Hill Financial- 26.08
Chief
Denise
Mercsak
Police
of
taking
the
Chapman
410,000
active and retired
similar
ethics
violations
,
au -15.99
OVB- 25.24
and
North
Perry
Mayor
gifts
from
1998
to
2003
·
and
Herb
Dyer,
the
retireeducators
with assets of
Bob Evans - 27.82
BBT-41.92
from
Frank,
Rus se ll ment system's former . about $54 billion.
Thomas Williams.
Bor&amp;Wamer - 62.02
Peoples- 28.37
' CENX --: 32.13
Pept1lco - 59.~1
Champion - 8.92
Premier - 14.80
. Charmlne Sho111 - 10.92
Roekwell ,-·67.63
City Holding .,.... 35.11
Rocky Boots - 21.50 .Col-- 53.35
Sears - 151.71
DG-14.50
Wai,Mart - 48.27
DuPont - 40.27
Wendy'&amp; - 58.45
Federal Mogul - .43
Worthington -17.23

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

BY CONNIE MABIN

Taft signs bill targetfng lenders

Third person charged;in te,acher~ 'pepsionfund probe

More chargesfor couple accused ofplotting to _bomb &lt;fficials
a

Local stocks

usa -31:22
· Gannett - 54.78
General Electric ...,- 33.72
GKNLY- &amp;
. Harley Davidson .- 52.28
JPM- 39.95

Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Flnancl11l
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons in
'
. '
Gallipolis.

Farnters
Bank

Local weather
1\Jesday ... Partly . cloudy. percent.
Highs in the upper 80s. West · Thursday night through
. winds S to 10 mp~ .
~Friday night...Mostly cloudy
Thesday
mght... Part! y with scattered showers . and
cloudy. Lows in the lower thunderstorms. Lows in the .
60s. West wmds around 5 upper 60s. Highs in the mid
mph
In
.
the 80s. Chance of rain . 40 perevemng ... Becommg light and cent. ,
variable.
Saturday and Saturday
Wednesday .. .Partly cloudy · night... Mostly cloudy 'with
with ·scattered ·showers and scattered showers and thunthunderstonns. Highs _in the derstorms. Highs in the lower
upper 80s. Southwest winds 5 80s. Lows in the .lower 60s.
to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30
percent. .
Chance of rain 50-percent: .
Wednesday night...Partly
Sunday and Sunday
cloudy with scattered showers night... MosUy "Cloudy with ·
and thunderstorms. Lows in scattered showers and thunthe upper ·60s. Southwest derstorms. Highs around 80.
winds 5 to I0 mph. Chance of Lows in the upper 50$.
rain 40 percent.
·
Chance of rain' 40 percent.
. , Thursday ... Partly cloudy
Monday ... Partly cloudy.
with scattered showers and with ' scattered showers and
thu11derstorms. Highs in the thunderstorms. Highs around
upper 80s. Chance of rain 40 80. Chance of rai~ 30 percent-

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

999.99:
999.99:
999.99:

5.50%,15.64% app
5.25%,15.38% app
5. 15%/5.27% app
4.90%/5.01% app

STAFF REPORT

GALuPous - AsdJedule of upcoming college
·

~SChool

I f'eorn~nwge Y1eld" Substanticll per~llty f01 ei"trly with·

Rates. e.ccur.::tte tMrougn 7!01/2006. 1ubject to (t\1'tnge

www.fbsc.com

varsity spo rting events involVing

teams irom QfAIIia. Meigs and ~n counties.

Today'• P'Dll

American Legion Baseball
Gallipolis at Feeney Bennett, 6 p.m.

WQdijeedov'a game
·
AmerlcanJ,.eglon Baseball .
Feeney Bennett4ft McArthur 303, 6 p.m.
Frtday'e games

American Legion BaHball
Logan at Feeney Bennett, 6 p.m.
McArthur Juniors at Galllpotjs, 6 p.m.
Sotyrdoy'a qamu
Amerlc'an Legion Baseball
Parkersburg -15 at Feeney Bennett (DH),
1 p.m .

Meigs Juniors at Athens (DH), 1 p.m .
Sunday's gam11
American Legion Baseball
Lancaster 11 at Feeney B~ nnett (DH), 1
p.m.

,

&lt;

ROCK SPRlNGS - Joel
Lynch tossed a two-hitter and
helped his' own cause with the
'bat as Feeney 'Bennett pounded Athens 12-1 in an American ·
Legion baseball game on
Sunday.
-.
Feeney scored six runs in the
fourth · inning en route to . its
Lynch
VanMeter
first Eighth District Legion
League victory of the season,
The game was c_alled after a suspended Eighth District
seven innings via the mercy game on Saturday - . both won
by Athens. Ryan McCune
rule.
The two clubs also played a drove .in the game winner in
non-league game and finished the II thinning as Post 21 pre-

vailed 10-9 in the suspended Athens. An.thony Dixon took
game. Athens won the non -- the loss on tile mound.
league tilt 5-2.
Meigs' Luke Haislop had a
Meigs, after dropping two of ' home run and triple in the
the three. fell to 4-7 overall completion of the suspended
and 1-2 in the. league. Athens gar'nt; loss. VanMeter had two
is now 7-3 and 4-3 against the hits, including a. double, while
rest of t~e Eighth District.
Cory Shaffer sing led twice in
In the Meigs Count ian's vic- the setback.
tory, Lynch had three hits and
Post 128 h;id live hits in the
drove in four run s. Eric non-league affair, paced by
VanMeter had a double and Clayton Blackston's two sinsingle and Jeremy Blqckston gles and singles by Jeremy
added two safeties. Terry Blackston, Hai slop and Butch
Durst chipped in a double and Marnhout.
two RBis.
Feeney Bennett plays host to
· Phil Hewitt and Mike Gallipoli s Post 27 6 p.m.
Cassels had the only hits for today."

StanlEy Cup Finals- GamE' 7

Tuesday Jynt 27

American Legion Baseball
Feeney Benne.tl at Gallipolis, 6 p.m.
Wftdn@lday June 28
American Legion Baseball
Feeney Bennett at Ashley ·(Deleware,
OH), 2:30p.m.
Galllpoli,s a.l McArthur, 6 p.m.

Eastern fall sports .
packets now available
TUPPERS PLAINS Any Eastern student in
grades 7-12 who are interested in participating _in a
fall
sport
(football,
golf, volley..
ball, cross
country, cheerleading) must
have a parent or guardian fill
out a sports packet.
Packets are available irt the
high school office Monday
through Friday from 8:30
a.m. to 3 p.m.
.
If you have any questions,
please call (740) 985-3329 . .

Ohio State names
new members of
strength staff
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio S.tate has hired Eric
Lichter to director of football performance, coach
. Jim Tressel
announced
Monday.
Lichter,
31 , rep laces
A I I a n

AP photo
Carolina Hurr-icanes celebrate wi th ,the Stanley Cup after defeating the Edmonton Oilers 3·1 in Game 7 of the NHL Stanley Cup
hockey finals in Raleigh , N.C. on Monday. '

Carolina downs-Oilers, wins Stanley Cup
Bv P~UL

during the regular season and
had com pined for only four in
the playoffs.
RALEIGH , N.C. - This
Then there's the guy who
time, the Stanley Cup gets to · made sure two goal s were j1Jst
stay on Tobacco Road.
. ·enough. Cam Ward,the Conn
· A couple of low- sconng Smythe Trophy winner as the
Carolina defen semen put most valuable player in the
Edmonton's comeback on ice playoffs,
wa sn't ' even
and Cam Ward stopped nearly Carolina's No . I goalie at the
everything that came his way, beginning of the postseason,
giving · the Hurricane s their but the 22-year-old rookie got
first NHLchampionship with the call ·when Martin Gerber
a 3-1 victory over.the Oilers struggled .in a n opening round
on Monday night.
.
against Montreal.
·
Aaron Ward and Ffantisek
The young · star wound up
Kaberle. found the net for the winning more games in the
Hurri canes - a couple llf 'playoffs ( 15) than he .did
unlikely players to carry the backing up Gerber during the
offense, considering they regu Jar season ( 14). · ·
were each . six -goal scorers Justin Williams finished-off
NEWBER_RY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

the Oilers, scoring an Clpen- ..;We want the cup!'' they
net gpal with I :01 remaining chanted over and. over.
after Edmonton had cut the
They got it, bringing the
lead in half early in the thi rd trophy to territory best known
period.
for Atlantic Coast Conference
Edmonton
defe nseman . coll ege basketball.
Chris Pro nger, a sta)wart
The Hurri canes were born
througho ut the series, gave up in the old World Hockey
the puck in the Caroli na zone Association as the Boston and wound up making a help- based New England Whalers,
less dive to block Williams' and entered the NHL in 1979
playing out of Hartford. When
gimi)le into the goal.
Bret Hedican , among a con- tlieir demands for a new arena
tinge.nt of -3 0-something in Connecticut were turned
Carolina players who had aside, the team headed south
never won -the cup. leaped in in 1997.
·
the air· after Williams' shot
The . first two yea rs in
went in . The crowd of neariy Ca roli-na were a dismal expe19,000, which stood thrmigh- rience. the team forced to pl ay
out the g&lt;tme, went in to ;1
·
Please see Carolina, B&amp; ·
lrenzy:

·

Bv

·
.
FRANK CAPEHART

sPECIAL TO THE sENTINEL

POMEROY
Thre ate ning skies, rain falling early and weather
projections of more to come
faced the junior go lfers for
their second
round yesteri:lay ·at
Pine Hills in
Pomeroy.
But, th~
intr e pid
I inksters,
umbrella in
hand , were
paired up
and set out
to tee-off
and
they
were richly
rewarded as·
rain show ers
subsided, sunshine took
over and a
..._.........,beautiful
day made
for another
compet.mve round of golf
for the ~izab) e gro up on
hand.
The premier 15- 17 group
had only three swingers this
week in what has been a meager turnout so far in this older
group.
When the final hole ·was
compl eted, Will Garri son of
Point Pleasant edged pa st
Chri s Lon.g'to grab top honors with a 42, two strokes .
less . than Ieong . Kamal
Dayal of Gallipolis was ·
right behind with a 47.
In the 13-13 age bracket ,
Jordan Cornwell .and Corey
Hamilton of Gallipolis _
tou red the Pine Hill s layout"
until Cor nwell won the cov. eted Fruth first place trophy
at 45 - . one better than
Hamilton. Tightly-bunched
at 48 ca me Torry Wolfe of
Rave.nswood, plu s th e Point
or
Beau
three·some
Bell amy, Kylenn Cri ste and
Chri s McDermitt. Travis
Grimm and Brock McClung ·
each carded a 51.
The 11-12 bracket featured .a full doze n energe ti c
link sters
and
much
· imJ)rm'ement over the first
week scores. Opie Lu cas of ·
Point Pleasant made it "two
.in-a-row with another firstplace fini sh to win with s
solid 42. Anthony Darst
tui'ned iii a 48 to taker cunner-up
honors .
Close
behind cam_c Nick Sau ntlers

John so n.
who served as director of
strength and conditioning
before resigning in May.
• Lichter, who own s train,ing centers in Ohio , has
· worked with NFL and NBA
players
including
the
Cleveland
Cavaliers '
LeBron James, the Denver
Broncos'. Ron Dayne, the
Cleveland Browns' . Joe
Jurevicius and former Ohio
State football standouts
LeCharles Bentley and Nate
Clements.
Lichter holds a degree in
Please see Golf, Bl ·
lifestyle, management and
. exercise science . from
Weber State in Ogden,
Utah, where he played three
years on the football team,
two as a starting linebacker.
Ohio State also has _pro-··
moted Joe Rudolph · to
strength coordinator and
Butch Reynolds to speed
NBA Finals throws i·rom games. If Dalla s still hopes to
BY GREG BEACHAM
coordinator. Rudolph . is a
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wade. Dallas' ·· win its first championship, the
graduate assistant who has
flight
home Mavs mu st make it the first
worked with the offensive
DAI.,LAS ,
Th'e
was dour and finals with seven hOI])&amp;-!"am
line
for
two
years. Mavericks left home last
quiet - but wmners smce 195tf ~- or
Reynolds joined Ohio State week with two wins and a
the cheering, they ' ll . \Vatch Wade and
las_! year as speed coach.
Texas-s ized swagger.. They
flag-waving Shaquille O' Nea l ce leb rate
staggen!d back Monday
faithful awai t- the Heat's first titl e in Dall as.
morning atier three losses to.
versus
ing their plane
" I can taste it. smell it. see
the Miami Heat, teetering on
snapped the it," said Miami ce nter Alonzo
CoNTACfUS
the brink of eliminution from
Mavs out of a Mourning , who · persevered
the NBA finals:
funk. hopefully througl1 13 . seasons and kid - .
01/P Score line (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
· But a big bunch of irrejust in time for ney disease in search of his
1· 740-446·2342 ext. 33
'
pressible fans remil]ded the
"Game 6 on first championship ring. "It's
'
or 992·5287 (Meigs Co.)
Mavs that although· their
Tuesday night. . goi ng to take everybody
backs·
are
against
the
wall,
- Games
" "That was being: wt active participant tn
Fax - 1-740-446-3008
that
wall
is
deep
in
the
heart
Tuesday, 9 p.m
the
first smile J (!o it, but I really reel that 's
At Dallas, TX
E-mail- sports@mydailysentinel .com
.
. of Dallas - and in these Miami leads 3·2 had all night , going to happe n Tuesday."
SRQrts Staff
finals, the homecourt advanall morning,.. . If it di&gt;esn't. a . dec isive
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
tage has .been the only factor said Jason Terry. who scored Game 7 wi ll be played
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
more important than Dwyane 35 points in Game .5. "I saw . ThursLijtY
'·
bsherman.Dmydailytrlbune.c'om '
Wade.
the fans out there at the wrIn a se rie s betWeen firstBryan Walters, Sports Writer
The Mavericks' disastrous . port, and I knew it was home time finalist s, it isii' t psyc ho(740) 446-2342, ext 23
week
in South Florida culmi·- sweet home."
logkally surp rising to sec
bwa lt~ rs@ myda ilytribu ne. com
nated Sunday . ni ght in the
Terry speaks the truth about both team s leanin g heavily oi,l
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Heat's .inemnrable 101 - 100 these fif1als: For the first time home cooking and .crowd sur- Miam i Heat center Sl1aqu ille O'Nea l is foul'ed, front, by Da llas
(7 40) 446·2342, ext 33
Mavericks center DeSagana Diop in the th1rd quarter in Game
overtime win, featuring 43 in JO years, the home teams
Ierum@mydailyregister.corn
Pl!•se
st!e
Defend,
a:z
4
of the NBA ba sketball finals in Miami on Thurs(Jay.
points and two winning free are unbeaten in the first five
•
•

'

Ill

'

·Heat close to title,-but Mavs
ready to d:efend Big D

.

10.000 rnrrurnum depos!! required to open CD (".')nd main-

Feeney Bennett gets first league victory Juniors
co·mplete
se·cond
·goIf.week
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

~"'~SCHEDULE

·

�'

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

.

'

Roethlisberger
had ·no motorcycle
license at time of accident
.
.
BY DANIEl LoVERING
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITISB URGH
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger did
not have a valid motorcycle
hcense when he crashed mto a
woman's car last week, .and
tile dover- who wtll be c1ted
for failing to y1eld - has
received threatenmg phone
calls.
Roetllhsberger will be
issued $388 in fines and fees
for ndmg wittJout a hcense
and not wearing a helmet,
police Collision Investigator
Dan Connolly said Monday.
Only licensed motorcyclists
. are allowed to'nde bareheaded
m Pennsylvama, with cenam
restnct1ons
The Super 'Bowl champion
quarte rback rammed his
Suzuki Hayabusa into a
woman's Chrysler
New
Yorker on June 12 when she
was making a left turn m front
of him Both had tile green
light.
Roethhsberger underwent
seven hours of surgery to
repatr a broken Jaw and otller
facial bones. Tests showed no

bram IOJunes, although he had
a m1ld concussiOn, he also lost
two teeth and ch1pped several
others.
"I thmk because of Mr.
Roethhsberger's s1ze and hts
athletic ability and the fact
that he works out as a professional athlete had a huge part
10 the fact that he 's sun with
us," Conn oily said
The woman, who Will be
cited for falling to yield to
oncommg traffiC and f10ed
$106 50, has received threatemng phone call s s10ce the
accident,
Police
Ch1ef
Domm1c Costa said. She filed
a police rel?ort anp tile calls
were bemg mvestigated.
Roethllsberger was travelmg at the speed hm1t 10 a posted 35 mph zone, but he braked
and htt the car at a slower
speed, Costa sa1d. There were
no mechamcal problems With
e1ther veh1cle.
Both Roethlisberger and the
woman will be sent summary
c1tattons
T.o obtain a motorcycle
hcense in Pennsylvania, riders
must first get a learner 's permit, whtch reqmres a $10 fee,
a v1s1on screemng and a wnt-

ten test. The permit IS vahd for
one year, during whtch a road
test must be passed to obta10 a
full motorcycle hcense.
Only after two years of possessmg a vahd license Is ndmg wtthout a helmet allowed
That restnctlon ts wa1 ved 1f
the nder takes an approved
safety course
Pollee d1d not have any contact with Steelers officials during . the
mvestJgation,
Connolly sa1d
"Th1s was no different than
any other crash," Connolly
satd. "We fo und our determinations and determ med that
the parttes needed to be cited
and that's what we;re dotng "
In an 10terview with ESPN
radto Monday morning, coach
Bill Cowher said there IS no
way of knowmg what effect
Roethlisberger's
injunes
would have on his playing
abihty.
"That's the tll10g we have to
be very sensttive to and we
have to make sure that we
momtor- and we'll do that,"
Cowher smd "We' II work
with the doctors We' ll talk to
htm."
He d1d not cnhcize

Roethlisberger for not wearmg a heh'net, somethmg he
had done last year.
"I think it would be very
unf3Jf, and I think a's really
irrelevant, to be judgmental
about the accident Itself,"
Cowher satd.
"Sometimes
wtth
the
lessons of hfe. you have to get
knocked down before you get
back up," Cowher smd "He's
JUSt very fortunate. Thts was
one of those lessons tllat could
have been devastat10g. It
could have been a very tragic
story."
Roethh sberger was discharged Wednesday mght
fr om Mercy Ho s p1~al and
apologized to the team, his
fans and family in a statement.
He also said that he would
wear a helmet 1f he rode a
motorcycle agam
Police on Monday declined
to reveal the name of tile dnver of the car, ctlmg the
threats She has been tdenttAP photo
fied m published reports as
In
a
f1le
photo
Pittsburgh
Stealers
quarterback
Ben
Martha Fleishman, 62 , of
Plltsburgh. Her husband, Roethllsberger warms up before a team workout at the Pontiac
Martm Fleishman, has said S!lverdome Wednesday, Feb. 1, 1n Pontiac, Mich. Steelers
she felt temble about the acci- quarterback Ben Roethlisberger was mjured 1n a motorcycle
crash Monday morning, June 12, and taken to a hosp1tal.
dent.

WR Holmes charged with assault Rio's Basketball Camps for
·• Jone
ages 0 t 0 beg1ns

I

BY RusTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - Pittsburgh
Steelers receiver Santomo
Holmes pleaded not gmlty
Monday to charges of
assaulting a woman, his second arrest smce he was chosen m the first round of the
NFL draft
'Phe 22-year-old former
Ohio State star was arrested
at an apartment just after
midnight Monday on charges
of domestic violence and
simple assault, both m1sdemeanors, Sgt
LoucJOus
Hollis sa1d
Holmes was released from
tile Franklin County Jatl on
h1s own recogmzance later on
Monday after a bnef court
appearance. No trial date has
been set.
"He 's wron~ly accqsed of
domestic
violence
and
assault," said Holmes' attorney, Sam Shamansky. "I'm
conftdent as this case works
1ts way ·through the system
it'll be successfully resolved
He'll JUSt continue to do what

he does w1th
a
passion,
and
that 's
play
football"
P o I i c e
spokesman
Sgt M1chael
Woods sa1d
p o I i c e
received a
Holmes
call from a
woman who
said the father ot her child
had assaulted her While the
officers were makmg their
report at the apartment ,
Holmes returned and was
arrested without mcident.
Police would noi release
the woman's name or details
about what Holmes was
accused of domg Shamansky
also declined to g1ve the
woman's name but said she
was the mother of Holmes'
18-week-old daughter.
Before the draft, Holmes
said he was hopeful that he
would go h1gh in the draft so
he could support his three
ch1lllren.
The Steelers dtd not return

a message seeking comment.
Holmes, a nal!ve Of Belle
Glade, Fla., was arrested prev10usly m Miami Beach, Fla.,
on a charge of disorderly conduct dunng a Memorial Day
weekend crackdown by local
authonues.
Steelers coach Bill Cowher
cnllcized Holmes the following week, but said he wouldn't hold the incident agamst
the receJ ver.

1

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS®MYOAILYSENTINEL COM

RIO GRANDE - High
school, JUnior high and elementary school basketball
players from around the
region are commg to the
Umvers1ty
of
Rio
"Whatever he did wrong, I Grande/R10
Grande
don't think he handled it Community College campus
properly," Cowher said then. this summer for several
"I think he'll learn from it popular baske,tball camps .
and understand the scrutiny
R10 Grande offers camps
he's under. We have not and tournaments for teams
talked face to face about it. I and indlV!duals throughout
don't have any long-term the summer, some in oneconcerns "
day events and others in
Holmes, r.ed-sh1rted ~l a weeklong sessions.
freshman when Oh10 State
Thad Haines, assistant
won the nat10nal champimen's
basketball coach and
onship, led tile Buckeyes m
recetving last season w1th 53 co-director of the basketball
catches for 977 yards and II camps, explained that Rio
touchdowns. He gave up his Grande held several onefmal season of eligtbility to day, shoot-out tournaments
make himself avaJlablc for thts summer, each attracl!ng
around 25 teams
Rio
the draft
Grande also held its popular
Little Redmen Camp for
basketball players ages 6-9
earlier thi s summer and will
begin 1ts tndlvidual camp
'
seven mnings. He was comeback bid in the ninth as for students aged 10-15 on
,
,
,
- rewarded for h1s seven Bryce Cox struck out the last June 25
mmngs of work thts time
two batters with the tying
"We've got the only tnple
The Beavers scored on a run on thtrd base and the eltmination tournament 10
sacnf1ce fly and a safety potential wmmng run on the country," Hatnes sa1d,
OMAHA, Neb (AP) Jonah Nickerson pitched squeeze to lead 2-0 agamst f1rst
refernng to JUSt one of the
W1th the count 2-2, Jon Jay many umque Items that
'seven strong inmngs and Georgia starter Mtckey
Oregon State survived anx- Westphal (7-3). Wyatt home- checked h1s swing and plate make the R10 Grande camps
Raudy
Harvey special. "They love 11." At
Jous moments m the e1ghth red for Georg1a ( 47 -23) in umpire
and moth to ehmmate the third to get withm a run, appealed to third-base ump the weeklong Individual
Georgm from the College but fourth-mmng RBI sin- Joe Burleson, who said Jay camp, the student s· stay 10
World Senes wtth a 5-3 v1c- gles by Kunda and Darwin swung for strike three.
the res1dence halls , but play
tory on Monday.
Barney made It 4-1
Hurricanes coach Jim
late
Into the mghl dunng
Morns ran out of the dugout
Chris Kunda drove m two
Rice 3, Miami 2
to argue the call , and was one mght of the camp , even
runs for the Beavers (45-15),
OMAHA, Neb - Tyler eJected by Burleson shortly sleepmg in the gym after
who play Tuesday agamst
Henley led off the game wtth mto the dtscuss1on Then, their teams have finished .
Mmm1
At the md1vJdual camps,
The Beavers, makmg their a home run, closer Cole St wtth most of the crowd
at
Rosenblatt the students work with Rto
third CWS appearance, Cla1r pitched f1ve solid standmg
mnmgs
m
a
rare
start,
and
S tadJUm , Cox came nght Grande coaches and players,
bounced
back
from
Saturday 's 11 -1 loss to R1ce held on 1n the nmth to back and struck out Danny learning the fundamentals
of the game and also learnMmmi to wm for the fHst win
Valencm to end the game.
· ume m s1x CWS games.
St Clatr (7-2), one of the
The VICtory put the Owls
Georgta' s los s means the (57- 11 ) 1n the winners ' country's top closers, got the
Southeastern
Conference bracket, and they need to start against Miami and
was winless in the CWS for wm once more to advance to allowed one unearned run
the first time since 1994, the championship senes. and three hits before being
from PageBl
when Auburn and LSU went Rtce wtll take on the wmner replaced by Bobby Bell to
a combmed 0-4
of Tuesday 's ehmmat10n start the sixth after throwmg
Nickerson ( 12-4) was sohd game between Mtarni (42- 92 pitches. He struck out stx (50), Andrew Roseberry ,
in a 3-1 loss to Tulane in h1s 23) and Oregon State on and walked two.
(51), Enk Albnght (56) ,
CWS' start a year ago, allow- Wednesday night.
Danny GJI (4-3) took the Hunter Bellamy (57), Dav1d
ing two runs on seven hits in
Mtam1 fell short in its loss
Mtchael (59) and Brady

Beavers oust Georgia from CWS
Face Hurricanes in
ehmtnation game

.Golf

Defend
fromPageBl
port. Both coaches have been dismayed by tlle1r teams' tentative flay
on the road, but tile pressure o tile
finals can even send millionaire 7footers looking for comfort.
Though Wade needed plenty of
shots and nearly as many free
throws, he has made his first indelible .mark as a pro w1th 121 total
points in tile last three games. But
1\e knows the Heat will need even
more ftreJ?Ower to win in Dallas for
the flrst lime since 2002 - and to
beat an opponent that's lost just
nine home games all season.
"We knew we didn't play any
good games in Dallas," Wade smd.
"When you go on the road and you
don't play good games, then you
turn the ball over, 1t's hard to win .
It's going to be very tough, but

•

I

that's why we play th1s game - for haven't been elimmated yet, the1r
these moments."
fan s knew- and witll all of Dallas
While Wade got caught up m the at lheir throats, the Heat's fourth
moment, most Dallas fans m the victory should be thetr most dauntpopular West End's bars and 'restau- ing task yet.
rants couldn't believe what they
"'I know our fans are gmng to be
saw on their gtant televiSIOn screens really crazy," sa1d coach Avery
during Game 5. Surely these Johnson, who has endured just two
weren' t tile same Heat who wilted three-game losmg streaks smce takdunng the series' first two games, mg over the Mavs last season.
when O'Neal was a ploddmg "There 's no tomorrow, and I like
anchor on tile offense and Wade was that no-tomorrow feeling for our
more average than awesome.
'team"
In that bustling district near the
Johnson's best adJustment for
Mavs' home arena, those· fans Game 6 simply m1ght be his playbooed every call given to Wade, ers' change mto the1r home wh1tes.
who shot as many free throws (25) What's more, top reserve Jerry
as Dallas' entire roster - prompt- Stackhouse will be back on the
mg one soccer-loving fan to wonder Mavencks' bench after sltlmg out
if referee Joe DeRosa was Game 5 for h1 s aggresstve foul on
Uruguayan.
O'Neal three mghts ear!Jer
After the buzzer, some fans even
" Hopefully the energy of me
chuckled when D1rk Now1tzkl was bemg out the last few days can be
shown takmg out h1 s frustration on used (defens,~vely) on Dwyane,"
an mnocent exerctse b1ke m the Stackhouse satd after the Mavs '
. locker-room corndor. Tfie Mav s hghl shootaround Monday

15

25

ing lip s to help · them
Improve their sk1lls
At the shoot-out tournament s, the team s get the
opportunity to work with
each other, while also playing against other teams from
around the region. ·
Ken French , head coach
of the men's basketball team
and co-d1rector of the
camps, said that he and
Haines try to set up the tournament schedules so that the
teams don't play teams that
they play throughout the
year. •
The camps and games
allow the RIO Grande
coaches to Introduce the
basketball program and the
campus to the students, and
it also gives them a closer
look at many of the htgh
school players who one day
may be playmg for Rio
Grande. In addition, French,
Haines, and the other coaches at the camps just like
working with the campers
on their basketball sk1lls
and helping them learn.
French is tamijJar to many
in the area for his experience as the assistant coach
of the men's team, but he is
now the head coach and is
puttmg h1s own stamp on
the program French wants
to introduce hi s program to
as many players, coaches
and fans as poss1ble, and ts
proud to show off everything that Rio Grande has to
offer through the summer
camps
Several of the coaches
who bring their teams to the
camps are already familiar

with R10 Grande, though, as
many of them are alumm,
whtle others have their former players now playing for
Rto Grande.
Rob Beucler, head coach
at Eastern Brown High
School, brought his team to
one of the shoot-out events.
Beucler is very familiar
with Rio Grande since his
son, Brett, plays for the
Red men, and sa1d the shootouts are good expenences
for ht s players
, Gm ng to the camps and
tournaments helps his playe rs 1mprove the1r games, but
1t also helps wnh the team
butldmg , Beucler said. He
added that he likes the way
Rio Grande handles its
camps and shoot-outs, and
satd it is nice to have all of
these opportunities avatlable at R10 Grande .
Eric Ch1solm and Kyle
Deter, who both are from
Cedarvtlle and attended the
shool·out, satd that they
ltked betng able to play
agamst teams that they will
not normally see during the
regular season. They also
sa1d they were impressed
w1th the R10 Grande campus
and enJoyed bemg there for
the shoot-out.
For more mformallon on
the
basketball
camps
offered by RIO Grande , or
on the basketball program, ·
call Hames or French at 1800-282-7201 . For additional information on the basketball program or all of the
Qther athletiC programs
offered by RIO Gral)de , as
well as for information on
the w1de vanety of academIc and athleltc programs
offered by the mst1tution,
log onto www.rio.edu

Curry (59).
Only one 10-under lad
was on hand, so Wy att
Wamsley of Point Pleasant
earned the trophy with a 69.
Two gals participated in
the 10-under bracket. Tour
veteran Libby Leach of
Cheshire fashioned a strong

56 to wm followed by
Pomt's Shiloh Wamsley.
For th e 26 jumors on
hand, It was tndy a dandy
day of dueling and fun The
tour moves on to Cliffside
next week. Regi stratiOn IS
at 8:30 a.m. and play will
begm a half hour later

Redmen CR. .
Basketball- b

The Mavericks were about 6 minutes away from a 3-0 lead in the
series before Wade rallied the Heat
to win Game 3. Miami eventually
became just the second team to wm
all three m1ddle home games since
the NBA went to a 2-3-2 format in
the finals.
And with one more victory, the
Heat would jle just the third team
ever to rally from an 0-2 deficit to
win a champiOnship, joining Boston
in I 969 and Portland in 1977.
They would owe 11 to Wade, the
telegenic shooting guard w1th an atr
of greatness m hi s every lanky
stride He ts averagmg more points
per game than Michael Jordan dtd
m his first fmals, and the ball has
been 1n h1s hands on nearl y every
1mportant possessiOn -' parti cul arly 1n Game 5, when the Heat "d1d
not have a second opt10n," accordmg to coach Pat Rtley.
"He took over all facets of the
game, kmd of how li ke M1chael

•

Jordan did it back in '91 and '92,
when he really dommated the
final s," Antoine Walker sa1d "It's a
real treat to watc~ h1m and to b~ a
part of 11 Hopefully, he's got one
more in him. "
The finer pomts of Wade's final
pomts m Game 5 - two free throws
with 1.9 seconds left - might be
debated for years Was he really
fouled , or d1d he get star treatment?
D1d he comm1t a backcourt violation moments earlier? And dtd the
officials err when they said Josh
Howard called a timeout that essentially ruined Dallas' chances at a
good final shot in a phenomenal
game?
The Mavericks mostly avmded
comment Monday, though Howard
sa1d of Wade's fin al drive: "When
they're ant1 c1patmg 'the wh1stle,
sometimes that happens We' re not
ready for 1t to e nd now We've got
to go out there, light and take care
of busmess "

mrtbune - Sen

1''

&gt;

••

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
dance Longaberge r toys, dlmg expenence Is pre· nursmg taclllty the one place e)(perrence knowledge of -O-vec.rb_ro_o_k_ R_eh_a_b_C
-:ce-n-te r have mvestrgated
the
4x4'a For Sola . .
............................. 725 ciothlrlQ a~r condrt1oner cios- lerred Please forward your
marine repair helpful Will be holding STNA class- offenng
Announcement ............................................ 030 et doors, motorcycle tractor, resume or ptck up an appll· togrow a sat1sfy1ng career Experience
w1th burnrng lay es beginning on June
Antlquea ..................................................... 530 gM!Jio~•e:.l.:.;.74::;0~·7~42:;;·~62:;:;00~-., catiOn at Cashl end 131 2 We currently ha\le an out· out and metal
IIHing Med 26 2006 AppliCatiOns w1ll
Apartments lor Rent.. ................................. 440
MONEY
WANI'EO
Eastern
Ave
stand1ng
opportumly
for
s
an
d
Dental
Ins
• Holidays be accepted until Frrday
Auction and Flea Market. . . . . ..... ..... 080
BUY
Equal employment opportu proven team leader to over· and 401 K Apply at WV June 23.2006 If you are
mLoAN
10
Auto Parts &amp; Accessorles .... . ................ 760
Central arr full basement,
mty em~ oyer
see the eflorts ol our talent· Employment Service Office Interested please stop by
Auto Repair................ .
.. .......... 770
hardwood floors detached
ed Nursrng team Qualified 6th Street Point Pleasanr
and hll out an apphcat1on
Autos lor Sale........ ..... .. ..... .. . .......... 71 0 Absolute Top Dollar US
garage covered patro
candtdates
wttl
have
current
N
o
·
phone
calls
please
Boots &amp; Motors lor Sale . .... .. ................. 750 Silver and Gold Corns
fenced back yafd newly
RN Professional License Full t•me Certrlled Medical E0 E
Building Suppllea ........................................ 550 Proolsets Gold Rrngs, Pre·
3 or 4 bed
and
+
years'
eMperlence
as
Assrstant
needed
for
local
2
Borrow Smart Contact remodeled
Bualneaa and Buildings ............................. 340 1935 US Currency,
rooms
close
schools
a Director of Nursing In LTC Family Practrce Physlcran s
Pard Trarnrng
the OhiO DIVISion of Potnt Pleasa ntto $69
Business Opporlunlty................................ 21 0 Solitaire Dramonds· MTS
500
and/or
sub-acute
ca
re
A
oHice
Resumes
may
be
tndlvrduals
wr!lrng
to
train
for
Fnancral lnst1tut1on s (740\709·1382
Buslneaa Training .................................. 140 Corn Shop 151 Second
458
true dedrcatlon to patient· submitted to PO Box
clencal or drrv1ng positions Offrce of Consumer
Campers &amp; Motor Homos .......... ........ .790 ~venue , Gallipolis 740-446centered
outcome-onel'lted
rR;;ac~ln~e=O:::H:-:4!:5:::77:::1:-ll::::'-,
Must be AGE 55 OROVER Aflalrs BEFORE you refl ·
• NO EI!PEAIENCE NECESS"RV
Camping Equipment.... . .. .. . ........... 780 2642
care
and
dynallllc
employee
Holzer
Senior
are
and
meet el1g1b1hty requ1re· nance your home or
' FUL L TIME CLASSES
Carda of Thanks.........
... .. ..... 010
' CDl. TRAINING
relatiOns
skrlis
are
esA
en!laf
Center
ments
Add1tronal tra1nmg obtain a loan BEWARE
'FINANCING AVAILABLE
Child/Elderly Care...... .. ........ ............ 190 I buy Junk Cars {304)773
positrons
ava1lable Call the of requests tor any large
•
JOB
PLACEMENT
Electrical/Refrigeration .. .... ... .. ......840 5004
ENROLliNG NON
Semor Employment Center advance payments of
T
andem
provides
competl
If
y
ou
are
Interested
tn
Equipment lor Rent. ..... .... ....................... 480 1will buy Junk Cars &amp; Trucks
live salary and a supportive workmg In a nurs1ng fac1h~ (666)734·2301
tees or 1~surance Call the All real estate advertising
Excavatlng ........................... ........................ 830 • (304)773 5343
ty
who
foc
uses
on
team
atmosphere
"that
encour·
Offrce
ot Consumer
Farm Equlpment ................................. ......... 610
In thla newspaper ie
ALLIANCE
work and resident care Pari t1me posrtiOn toManege Affairs toll tree at 1 866-ages
growth
and
satrstacsubject
to the Federal
I
wrll
buy
J.wlil
Qw];
C
all
Forma lor Rent ........................................... 430
TRACTO R TRAILER
Country
Homes
rental
com
~
tlon Please apply online or we have bmited part Ume mun1ty In Shade Area ~ 276·0003 to learn 1f the Fair Housing
Act of 1968
TRAININGCENTERS
Farms lor Sale ............................. ........... 330 1740)386·9303
openings or Dietary
send your resume to
mortgage broker or
which
makes It Illegal to
WYTH EV ILLE VA
For Lease ............,.............. .. . ........ 490
Includes
a
house
to
five
I
n
I \!1'1 ll\ \II \ I
Aides
lender rs properly
advertise 'any
For Sale ...................................... :
.....585
Send resume to Country lrcensed
tandemhealtheere.com
" I R\ I ( I "•
(Th1s IS a public
preference, 11mltat1on or
1-800-334-1203
For Sale or Trade .......................,.... .. ....590
H
omes
PO
eo,.
1
033
Please stop by and see
sennce announcement d•scrlmmation bated on
W&lt;M
oom
Fruita &amp; Vegetables......................... ..........580
us at 380 Calomel Orrve, Logan, Oh1o 43138
SCenic
Hilla
NCiralng
from
the OhiO Valley race co! or, religion sex
Furnished Rooms.. . ................................ 450
Brdwell, Ohto or give
tamlllat'atatua or nat1onat
DallverTha
Center
General Hauling. . . .. ............................850
Parts Salesperson wanted ';Pu;b:lls~h;•n:g:C:om:p:a:ny:)=~ origin o r any tn1entlonto
Greta Plants, Dretary
Charleaton
Gazette
311
Buckrtdge
Road
Computer experience and I!!
Giveaway .. . .... .. . ................................040
make ony such
Manager a canal
InThe Town Of
Bldw&lt;oll, -oH 45814
100 WORKERS NEEDED
knowledge ot farm equ1p
PRon~"''lONA I
Happy Ads ...........................................050
preference limrtat1on or
(740)446·5001
.
Pomt
Pleasant
Ph.
(740)448-7150
'
Assemble crafts
ment preferred • Salary
SERVICES
Hay &amp; Grain ................................................. 640
diacrimlnal!on
Earn up to $900 monthly
Fox. (740)448-2438
negotiable dependmg on
wood 1tems
Help Wanted.......................... . ............... 110
before
expenses
expenence
Health
To $480/wk
Th1s nel:'!'spBper Will not
Home Improvement•. .. .....................810
.
ApprOxrmately
2
to
3
hours
TURNED DOWN ON
Insurance
prov•ded
Send
,
knowingly accept
M
aterials
provided
Homes for Sale ............................... ........... 310
T4NDEM
a day
advirtlsements
lor real
resume
to
CLA
Bo:.c ~c/o SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI•
tt...rlh f'UP'
Household Goode ...............,..................... 510 Free lnlormatlon pkg 24Hr
1
Dependable
vehicle
No
F
ee
Unless
We
Wm
estate
which
la in
G
alhpolrs
Tribune
PO
Bo)(
801-428·4649
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
1888 582 3345
a must
violation of the law Our
469
Gallipolis
O
H
45631
In Memoriam .. . . ................................... 020 An Excell ent way to earn CALL 1 800·WVMIEWS
SF/DF/EOE
reader• ere hereby
I~ I \I I '-. 1\ II
Insurance .............................................. 130 money The New Avon
HROtandMrlheaJ.thcere c:om
Equal Opportunity
E&gt;d
1709'
lnlormtd that all
TOWBOAT PILOT
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ......!..... .. .......... 660
Empio er
dwelling• Bdvertlaed In
WANTED
Call
Marrlyn
304-882·2645
HOlliES
Livestock...................... . ...... .. .............. 630
thll new1paperare
fUR SALE
Lost and Found ................,....................... 060 Atlenloon On\lers
R&amp;J Desk
clerk
needed
Person
Domino
s
P1zza
N
ow
H~ring
Home
Health
Aide
available on an equ1d
llh
d
comm
nlcallon
M
CGINNIS.
INC
A
p1oud
Lots &amp; Acreage, ................................ 350 Truckong rs iookmnt~ for wk11 goood atilt deu &amp; sell Sate Dnvers
Point
CIIIHI
opportunity bases
leader1n the Marine Industry 1996 Approx 1800 Sqft w/2
1 • go
Miscellaneous... ...... . ..
.. ............. 170 or1vers w/1 yr OTA, s otrvaled
u
·
Pleasant
G
allipolis
&amp;
Now accepting applications
apply at Pomeroy locatrons Apply In tor CHHA classes to bAnln Is seek1ng an experienced 112 acres 3brm 2 flbaths
Mlocellaneoua Mercha~dlse ....................... 540 E'p. , ence fo r Aenronal
md et 1 Should
• to B
-• Prlot for harbor work on the LAm FAm Form DAm Elilt
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... BBO H 1 M
40s
u g nn Jackson Pike Person
July 2006 Alao hiring
HANDYMAN
m~~s
50:reg~o~a:
e\lery
Gallipolis
No
phone
calls
-STNA'I,
CNA'I,
CHHA'I
&amp; Ohio River Applicants must •n ~ 1 tc hen Porch Deck 3
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................... 420
lease
EL
ECTRICIAN,
5
y1s
oxpe
have
U
SCG
License
and
SPECIAL
P
Mobile Homos lor Sale ............................... 320 Weekend call
Kent "PCA'1 Immediately Please have a solid na\11gat1onal car garage wished dog ken
- - - - - - - - nence knowledge and call
noi
lmmed
Poss
Loan
Brmg
the
f mshmg tools
Money to Lo&amp;Q ............. .......
. ......... 220 (600)462·9365
'
(740)441
·1377
for
m
ore
d
C
- • N-"od.
·
experience w1th rndustrlal inlot'matlon
racer
ompe1111
1111e b pay Assump!IOn 5 5% or 3bdrm Ranch wt2 baths 1n
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Whselero ..... . ..... ... 740
Drlv....
~
phase ---:---:--::---:=:- along w1lh exce ent ene $99 500 740 245 0125 or drywAll stagfil House never
Mualcallnslrumerita .............................. 570 AVON! All Areasl To Buy or CDL{Ciass B) Drivers will· settmg, 480 volt three
Sell Shirley Spears 304· 1ng to dr Ive Ior IocaI ready .erv'ce Med and Dental HOME HEALTH AIDES fits Ouahlled appliCants may 740 645·2249
11ved 1n S1ts on 2 beautiful
Personals ... .. &gt;;;.
.. • . • •........... 005
Ins, Holidays and 401 K
call 740-377·4391 extension
acres C1ty water ;;~ t road
Pets lor Sale . . ... ... ................................ 580 675 1429
m
ix-concrete
com
pany
Apply
at
WV
Emplnument
SIGN
ON
BONUS
Home•
57
tor
additional
Information
·
Plumbing &amp; Haatlng .................................. 820 Bags Pipes Ha\le pipes Experience Is preferred but
~,
Health Care of SE Ohio Is or send a resume to 2 Bedroom house 1n about 20 m1ns south ol
Proleaalonal Servlces ................................. 230 Need Instructions Gallr pot1s not necessary Med insur· Serv Ice Off! ce, 8th Sl'e.l currenlly hlnnn• home health ~-N~~~ PomerA..·
wrth beautiful nver Athens OH $74 500
~
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair......... ... ..... .. .. 160 area Call Pal11 (740)441 · ance &amp; olher benefits a\lall· Point Pteasant
aldes-com'nhtltlve
wages
vrew
$39
or reasonable Owner financing (740)489·
..,...
South Po1nt Oh10 45680 offer 992 000
9146
Rnl Estate Wanted.... ... .. ... ............ 360 9059
able after waiting period
Call74o.662·1222
5502
Driver must be willing tOdo Expanding home health - - - - - - - - attention Port Captain
School• lnltructlon..................... .. .........150
2912 Annrston Or Pt House 1n Camp Conley
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer . . .................. 660 Mason County Act1on pre·m~tintenance on trucks age ncy ha s ~ Immediate HVAC Complny Is looking
Sltu•tlona wanted ....... ............................... 120 Group Inc. 101 2nd Street, &amp; equipment, yard work &amp; opening for PT/FT home lor e)(perlenced Installer -W-a-nl-ed--G-u-11-ar_IS_t- a-nd Pleasant 3BA 2BA, LA 2000 sq II 3 br 2 ba
Space lor Rant. ............................................460 PI Pleasant WV, has an other miscellaneous chores health tillaidesb In litGalllak Coe Mus1have t or more years Vocalist for Rock Band FA Garage Nice ne1ghbor approx 1acre w/rental tra•l·
Asking $80 000
Sporting Qooda .......................................... 520 Immediate opening lor a Experience operating equip· compe ve ene 740
pee ag experience In residential (740)992 9904 740 416 -hood (304)675 3637 davs er
(304)593·3072 also welder
Pay on experience 1090
(304)675-2355
even1
ngs
SUV'alor S1ta................... ,....................,...720 part tlms driver Must have ment &amp; extra skill s such ss FaiC resume to (740)534
and other tools tor sale call
'
Truck• lor Sale....................... ... .. 715 . a current dr1ver's license, a
welding il plus
= ,or call Kim ( )534 " Technical a plus Cali for 11=1"""~~--~--,
3BD 2Ba, fireplace 40x60 for Items
Upholstery .................. ........ . ... ..... . 870 clean dnving record and be
Call Roberlsburg
- - - - - - -- application 1740)441 1236 i1""
SCHOO~
barn a flat acres Pleasant - - -Vena For Sale......... ............. ......... . ,......730 w11tlng to work flexible hours
(304)937·34 tO
Experienced COLdn\ler tor or tax resume to (740)441
L'JS1'RUCT10N
Valley Rd R1o Grande Jackson County '-'u :-tiP 7
Wanted to Buy............. .. ... ..
.. .......090 $6 15 per hour Please see or Lakln(304)773 5234 trash compan-y Knowledge 1266
'
Wanted to Bu~ · Farm Suppllas .. .. .......... 820 Ruth Rice Transportation Located in Mason Count-y of Gallla Co a Musl Pay -------~ Concealed P1stol Class $120 000 1740)709 1166 room,s 3 BR I : • l'&gt;aHlS
hardwood floors tuil baseWanted To Do .............. .... . ... . ............. 180 Manager To pick up an
near Buffalo WV
according 10 eMperlence Person to brush hog , 112 Ohio WV July 8 2006
ment
garage 2
For
Sale
House
2317
Mt
Wanted to Rant ............................................ 470 appltcatlon on Wednesday
(740)388 9686
acre field Tea rdown small 3 $75 oo
9 ooam VFW Vernon Ave newly remold barns,2 1/211 car
27
acres
Yard Sate- Galllpollo ................................... 072 June 21 , 2006 From 9am· Ray &amp; Sons Complete Car - - - - - - - - ·sided bulkllng· haul away Mason WV Ph (7 40)843
led con\len1ent location call $145 900 Cell (937)515·
Yard Sala-Pomaroy/Middle .........................074 3pm No phone calls please Cleaning Temporary work Harris Steak House Now Call (740)446~3209 after 5555
8670 Home (740)286-7212
(304)675·6672
Hiring (304)875·9728
5pm
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleasant ..............
.. . ..... 078 EOE M/F AJA
apply wllhm
agister will b
uponalble ror n
ore than the coat o
he space occuple
y the erro ~ and onl
he first lnaertlon W

(2) 1 1/2yr 1/2 Husky dogs.
shots (304)675·6639
Bo x a d o r
Pupp1es(Boxer/Lab) S1x
weeks old All black free to
good home 740·992·7201
Cats ol all colors tree to
good home Call (740)446·
4177
~------Good watch dog free to
good home Please call
:..(7_40.:.)_44_6_·4_17_7____
Krttens
Rabbrt
and
Dog(muc female spayed)
740
992 0219
--'...:..:..._______
Lookmg for a good home
Part. Pug/Chihuahua, while
Also cats &amp; kittens
(740)379·2641
Charlre,
Mary

NoBo[)'/ '5

ll'l!::o--~----, 4

L..------_.1
180

WANTlD

r

~~

r

r
~

.

r

r

alliancell'llclol1 ra~ar

1

·

�20, 2006

Tuesday, June

Tuesday, June 20, 2006
ALLEVOOP

•
•
www.mydatlysentlnel.com

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

can buy yoor home. All cash kll&lt;:l&gt;en. IMng room &amp; u1111y
NO DOWN PIIYMEHT ....., ond quick C!Oalng. 7 00-4111- room. Cherry WOOd "ooring,
.... than po11oc1 erodlt
no carper. lr'ltludes WID,
II ovoilablo on lhll 3 bodetove, refridg., kitchen table,
room 1 batf'l home in
SICS store!)&amp; bulkllng, CCN·
14•11o! crt. Corn« lot, vioyl
ered porc11 &amp; oounty water.
etdino,. tlreplece In living er"to,..._..,.Hol,...-~--'"""1 Accen to Raccoon Creek.
room; good COIPOI. tilo floor
o-No indoor pets. Reforenoeo
In kttchen, French dOOI'$ L---FORililli"""'iiiiiiiot'-rl &amp; deposit $200, rent $375,
open to master bedroom,
you pay electric . (740)256jacuzzi tub. oH struet part&lt;- (2) 3br Houses. 1-in New 11 06 _
ing, PayrTief11 around $550 Haven $400fmonth. 1-in ""1!111""~-----.,
per month. 74o-367-7129. Mason $425/month, S300
Ai'ARTMFMs

Deposit each. No

Priced to sell. Very nice (304)882·3652
38A, bath upstairs , fur·

~ets

r:r

FOR n~-

...,

8706 offer olpm.

4

8

Hill's Self

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Aebuitl In
Stock. can Ron Evans, 1800-537-9528.

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

Two a.droom

rentlutllhlea pekj. No Pets.

:e-992·5858.
~

Attertllon Construction wo~-

Stmr=lCJP-

3 miles west of
Pomeroy;OH
on State Rt. 124

ritshed 1BR apt. downstairs,
fumiture stor~;~ln 'rear. Car lot
on side. Atl on 112 ac. lot at
130
Bulaville
Pike,
Gallipolis, OH. Call to see
(7~)4-46-4782.

Hours

992-5682

For Sale: Two Appaloosas,
4YO stud $300 and 3YO
mare $400. Inquiries at 740-

Ranch Style. 3 Bedroom,
2 Bath, 2. Car Gara119. 9
mUea
from
Holzer

11
12

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
·Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"
call Gary Stanley

North
•

¥

+

·MONTY

West
• A 10
• J 10
• 10 9 7 5

5286 or call (740)388·

IF

David Lewis
740-992-6971

G~T

SwtAT~Il1

..

• •

lbi'OIH ca•lnei'J And FumHure

DON'T START, ..&gt;UGHAID--IT'S BEll•
TIME AN' THAT'S FINAL!!

www.uml»e.......,koabln_,•..,..,

740.446.9200

..&gt;UGHAID WENT TO BED
EARLY, MAW !!
HE'S ALREADY

l-459 St. Rt. 160 • GallipoUs

_ASLEEP!!

r

. Oren

2002 Yamaha Vstar 1100
Classic, 5,500 miles, black,
drag pipes , leather bags,

50mpg: $5,500. (740)2455934.

16'

I KNOW--I ..&gt;EST
LIKE TO WIN
THAT
ARGUMENT
ONCE IN
A WHILE

o·'Fling Pati

MoroRCY&lt;LE'!i
4WIIEELEHS

new

A

LtTitll

@1 . ••

NIW 11111111
1·1 Mlnlllrap

w~ G~ T . it-If

JOI, l&gt;O WE

·®
I
~-I

'882·2212

Deli &amp; Bakery
Bologna $3.05lb.
Colby $4.501b.
Fresh Mozzarella $6.59lb.
Hummus $5.59lb
Amish Potato Salad S3.45lb.
Pasta Salad $3.501b.
Cannoli $1.75
Breakfast Bales $1.75
Breakfast Toma&lt;los 21$2.00
Brownies .75(.

THE BORN LOSER
. P"Wf\f..\

W~ 'iOOR ~~~{l
~~

me:. ~'~"-V'I, PO\'. -:r

P" l

W...._~ /4.. t--\H&gt;SI-1.\PI'I\/4..~! ~

P"11-\(.'1'

t&gt;I.Dt-1'\ N-LOW YOU TO "' .

(,0,01'\ \1-\.E:. f&lt;.E.:)T OF Tl-\1::
~f\IP?'

•

(7~1385-7871.

IMPORTS .·

WILL you
Sd&amp;N

MY

'I'EAR&amp;oot&lt;-~

X!gJc!~4
wanted-

Chuck Wolfe
Owner

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

water, $450, (740)742·3109

land to lease for 2000 14x70 .Clayton. 3br,
2ba for Rent or Sale or land
Contract. (304)675·6619

YOU'RE UP NEXT, CI-IARLIE
BROWN .. YOU CAN !-liT Tl115
PITCI-IER! TI-lE LAST TIME
YOU FACED &gt;IER, YOU l-IlT
A I-lOME RUN!

(740) 992-0496
98 Ford Ranger Splash.
Super Cab 4X4. 4.0 V6, Air
Sharp $6495.00. 99 Chevy TraMer Camping site, near
810 Ext Cab 4X4, 4.3V6 - river ln Syracuse. Full hook-

(740)385-4019.
Help Wanted

$4,800 or trad_e (740)388- Air, $3695.00. Many More
Cars end Trucils to choose
8014. .

' ,.

r

1970 135 MF Hve power, 4 Auto, Nice $6995.00. 99 up. 740-992·5956.
'
·
new tires, OOks !ike new. GMC Sonoma 4 cyl. 5 spd.,

Help Wanted

Meigs Local School District, located
in Pomer?Y· Ohio, has an opening for
a Computer/Network Technician. This
is a 222 day per year position and
salary
is
~ommensurate
with
experience and training.
Please forward resume and letter of
••mtent to:
Meigs Local School District
Attn: William Buckley,
SuJ}erintendent
P.O. Box 272 Pomeroy, OH 45769
Must be received no later than June
22,2006
phon~ calls please

No

Help Wanted

•

WANTED: Part-time WEEKEND
position available to assist an
individual with mental
retardation in Chester (Meigs
County); Friday llpm thru Sam
Monday; sleep-over required.
Must have high school diploma or
GED, valid cfriver's license, three
years good driving experience md
adequate automobile insurance..
$7.25/hr. Send resumes to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
or email to beyecs'erv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 6/23/06.
Pre-employment drug testin~.
Equal Opportunity, Employer
•'

&amp;

I

from. Rivtkview Motors, 1
BOO Ford Gas farm tractor, 5 Block above ·. f..tcDonalds, 2002 pop-up 14', ROCkwood
speed. Uve pta. W/Freeman Pomeroy, 0~ . (740)992- Forrest River, new Condition .
Loader. $4,000.00 Call 992- 3490.
$4,500. (7401446-()()38.

2128.

CHICKEN DINNER
June 25, 2006
11:30 am
VFW Ladies Auxiliary
Post9053
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Adults $6.50
Children $3.50

-~~~~~~~

For sale 92 Nissan Sentra:
2006 Jayco 27' travel trailer.
For sare: D-9-G Cat dozer. 95 Mazda MX6: 90 Chevy
Used twice. Oueen/fuiVtwin
(740)643-2354.
4x4. (740)4414!036.
·
beds &amp; sofa, lg. shOwer, sur·
round sound. Was $18,000,
For sate: Old Farm All "M" j15
'flrucKs

tractor. · N~el $1,500 080.
can (740)379-9887 .

L---FORtliiiiiSw:itii
_ _,. Now $14,000. (740)446-

Have some hauling to do?
Carmichael
Equipmentyour source tor quality
goosen~s, dumps and uti!itles. Your dealer for Prostar
and Load Trail trailers.
(?40)«6-2412 ·

1990 Chev. 454 SS.
Excellent COndition. Black,
Keyless Entry, Lots ol
extras, Extra Sharp. Garage
kept. · $6500.00. · 740-742·

Friday, June 30, 20Q6 to
Sunday,July_2. 2006
$200/person
Price includes airfare and
two nights at
Himah's Casino &amp; Resort
Private jet from
Charleston, WV
Contact PVH Community
Relations (304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326 to make
reservations
LIMITED SEATS!
· Gladly accept c~edit cards, '
personal checks and cash

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Ohio Department
ol Natural Reaources,
Division ol FOreatry,
will host an Open
Houae from 4 to 7

p.m., June 21, 2006, at
the Athene Dlatrlct
Olllce. 360 Etlat State
str..t, Ath•~•. Ohio.
Thla will be an opportunity lor the public to
dlecuae and ask quea.Ilona
about
the
Division · ol Foreatry'a
program• In Hocking,
Zaleakl, Shade River,
GIHord, Blue Rock;
Perry and Sunllah
State Foreata. Call 1·
877-247-8733 lor more
lnlormetlon.
(6) 20

YOU'RE niE HERO T'I'PE!

'

Cornerstone
Construction
Residential • Commen:ial • Generul Ctmtructinv.
Painting • Doors • WindoWs • Decks

• Room Additions
1 ,.,;;·;;.;~~,·Rooting
• Plumbing • Electrical
• Accoustic

•

·

"JH'- e.IG 04L

(Q111ffi~lb-"&gt;
ARE- MAKIMG ~6FI'TS !IV
• 1flf: 611.UOOS, fR:f ~Dfl.

•
•

•'..

'

Prime River Lots tor RentBeautiful Beach··Ptenty of
Shade--For Info. Call 740.

992-5782.

2
___
404 · _R_ut_la_n_d,_O
_h_io_._ _ Scotty 1992 camper 22ft.

:GARFIELD

I
FORk ·r~•o~~""IMPRo-~"~~---...,1

f,~448-6588or

Public Notice

'(OU CAN DO IT -~

SUNSI:IINE CLUB

Very gOod condition. $4,000.
98 Chevrolet S-10 truck for (740)441-1489.
Hay todder 17',- 4 basket, $3800, (740)687-3655
" I U\ [( I "
Gelhre
$1 ,400.
Call i~
44
(7401645- .

Equipment (740)446-2412.

ATLANTIC CITY

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

2800

John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill 1990 7.3 diesel 5. sifeed,
for
rent.
Carmichael 4K4, 150,000 miles. $4,900.

Help Wanted

CAMPERS

MoroR HOMES

Unconditional lifetime guar1994 GMC Jimmy 4~~:4 , auto, antee. Loc,ar references furruns good. (740)256·8867.
nished. Established 1975.
1999 CheVy Silverado 4WD

Call

24 Hrs. (740) 446-

0870, Rogers
P/U, 85,000 miles, 5.3 VB,
Waterproofing.
all options, short bed with
topper. E~~:cellent Condition.

$11 ,000. (740)845-0626.

r·4~=rus/

19!Ml Honda CBR 000 F3.
Runs

e~~:cel l enl,

very last.

Must sell $2,000 080.
(740)645-3727 (740)3880528.
2000 HD-1200 Custom
Sportster, lots Chrome &amp;
Extras. Priced tor quick sell

(304)875-7059 leave mes·
sage
2001 Yamaha Grizzly 600
4K4 w/winch runs great .'

$2,800 call (304)593-6139

Basement

Handy Man. Home Servllfes

1

:~·----------------------~~~
~

~

~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

(740)388-8358.

and Repairs Call (740)8457524

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

..

It

0

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1-4 BR Houses &amp; ·Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-4
~111'.11 :l ~~··l~lf

YOUNG'S

MULEY'S
SELF STIRAGE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or9~l-6635
"Middlepott's only
Sell-Storage"

to •

4 2

Room Addhlone &amp;
Remodeling
New Gar1ge1
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Outt•rs
.Yinvl Siding &amp; P1lndng

Wesl

North
1 NT

2"
2•

Pass
Pass

2•
44

East
Pass
Pass
All pass

+ 10

Duck as the GIB
swings across ·
This week, we are looking at deals that
arose during sessions on Bridge Base
Onl ine (www.bridgebase.com) , a free
Internet service allowing-you to play with
humans wo rldwide, or against compUter
programs (for which th ere is a small
charge).
The program is called GIB, which was
developed by Matt Ginsberg, a math professor" who is now CEO of On Tline
Systems. Inc.
As an opponent, GIB has one annoying
trait: it never forgets a card. In this deal.
when the defense was not tipt op, GJB got
home in four spades without needing to
guess the clubs.
Note SOuth's two-spade rebid. If you use
an immedia te response of two no-trump
as coniJentional (perhaps as a transfer to
diamomisJ, you must rebid two spades
here to' show four spades and a gameinvitational hand. (To rebid two no-trump
over two hearts denies a tour-card
major.)
My partner led the diamond 10. Declarer
toot\ dummy's two top diamonds. then
played a spade to the queen and ace.
Now my partner does .best to shift to a
low club, _which puts the contract on the
Jine. But I had thoughtlessly signaled for
hearts (I sh9uld have looked more closely at dummy's heart spots), so she
switch ~d to the·heart jack.
GIB won with dummy's ace, played a
trump to its king, cashed the diamond
· queen, discard.ing a club from the board.
played a spade to the jack, and led a row
hear t. I went in with my king and returned
a heart to South's queen. But decla(er
ruffed the diamond eight on ·the board
and cashed lhe heart nine, discarding a
.club: plus 420.

AstroGraph
&lt;lbur 'lllrthdol,y :

OR THE GOAT T't'PE ..

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep t. 22) - Guard
against tendencies to blame others tor
mistakes that are of your making. no
matter how easy it might be. Owning up•
to errOl's . earns respect. understanding
and forgiveness.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Don 't let
down your guard lA any of· your c"ommer·
cial transactions, but be particu larly busi·
nesslike, especially if you are negotiating
a matter with a close friend, so nothing is
misinterpreted
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22) ~ II will be
i ndec is i ~ness that could lead to your
undoing if you lair prey to it. R ather than
throwing in the towel and doing nqthing
at all, try to take some small .. cautiOus
steps.
SAGIITAA IUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 21) StriVe to be self-reliant instead o f waiting
to see if others will do th1ngs for you . It
you get a bright idea to do something,
set an e~Camp!e of industriousness for
which you can be proud .
C APR!CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ~ A joint
venture will work out quite favorably. prci·
vidE!d you both are prepared. to share the
co54S CJS , well as the rew:ards. Keep
everyth1ng on an equal plane."
AQUARIUS (Jan .. 20-Feb
t 9) Domestic disruptions w111 be imposSible .
to deal with if you focus only on pomting
fingers ; instead, try lo find a way to have
"Peace in the household.
PISC ES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Although
you -may have plenty of good ideas,
there's a chance thai some of your co·
workers' ideas may be better. Rather
than debate the merits of each , keep an
open mind.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - Hurt feel·
lngs will result it you reward someone
new who does something nice lor you
while iQnoring a person who has helped
you numerous times before Use good
judgment.
TAU RU S (Aprit,20-May 201..:.. Others w1ll
be. cooperative and receptive to your
plans, provided you give them a chance
to make a decision concern ing them.
Attempting to Ioree accep!Rnce wilt earn
you rejection.
·
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - You could
be In lor a surprise when someone
you've been treating rather . shabb ily
goes oUt of his/her way to do something
nice lor you . It" II have an 1mpact on your

purchase

24 Fictional·
governess
Polnied an:h
DOWN
28 Cyberapace
Claim
lunk mall
Do.batlk
1 Polish
27 Blamey
Antarctic
2 -craft
Stone site
explorer
3 Period
28 Colonial
Homay ·
of time
dance
dessert ,
30 Slalom run
4 Nulls
Televises
5 Paradise
31 Ham on sturdy lock 6 Ms. Merkel 32 Rowboat's
"-we there 7 Customer
naed
yet?'! •
33 Large
come-on
Alphabet
8 Trot
number
enders
9 FMtOUSKhat 35 Nahuatl
Before,
10 Shed
40 ''Shogun"
to Blake
13 Stolecracker
apparel
Diner fare
18 Halt
41 Hedged
Mop up
20 Compost
43 Votes
Scaloppine 23 Singer
In lavor
base
- Brickell
45 Drill

artist

34
35
36
37
38

39

40
42
44

46 "Hesll ~I"
48 Slo11ona1
libations
49 Wall
climber
50 Kllly 'a
comment
51 Record
52 Mouths,
In biology
53 Identify,
· slangily
55 Sweeter
front

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C&amp;leboity Cipher CfYJ)!ograms areaeated from t'lootaiJOnS tly fanws people, past and prtsent.
Eactlllltter tn !he I'Jphef stards let IIW:llher

Today's cltJe: Kequals P

" UM • VJ

G KMJU

NGUOJN

UOGT

-

NM(JNU

VJ

OR

EMTXOUOMT

G KNMAJRRDMT."

LNGYJR

G LMMX

G

"TM

VGX

ZGT

EGT

V . KGR ,UJNTGI

KMJU . " -

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I'm one ol1he rare guys in lh1s count/y ihal can'1

get a second chance ." - Pete Reise

T~~i:~~T S©"RuillA-l&amp;£~~· WOlD
IAMI
lihoi ~T CIJ.Y I . 'CLIAH --~---0 Reatror1g• lenerJ of tht
.

· four sctombltd words bt·
lew ro form lour ,imple words.

r----------.

-~

R E WR [ T
-r--r--r.--r..:_-r.;--J

I I II I

J-·

.

.

.

•

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USM U H

I I" I,,..__.I1.--1.

1---,.,;;..;:,.:.:.:.,:::._:.;._~,
l

L-L--!..--.!..

afford.
L EO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Wher,~ it comes
to competitive involvemen ts. play it smart
and hold something in reserve. And even
then, don 't alterript to make your big
move until the finish line is in sigh I.

:PEANUTS

Licensed Home Builder

Mobile home sites for up to
16x80 In Country Homes.

•

By

NICoLE!

Athens

$10,000. (740)845-0440

Q 4 2

19 Energy u!llt

22
25
29
31

Wednesd&amp;y, June 21, 2006
Bernice Bode Oaol
You could develop some increased earn ings in the year ahead, if you're not afraid
to get involved in unique .ventures or
enterprises. You will have better ruck with
fresh appeals than you might with ~ommonplace oHerings.
CANCER (June 21-.July 22 ) - If yo u find
yourself travehng in th8 companY of
friends who are far bet1er olf financ.ally
than YOU•are. don't try to match them dol·
lar fo r dollar. Spend only what y ou can

HI THERE .

Vacant land on Jessie Creek 2 bedroom, 2 bath, kltldln ..
off 554 by Kyger. 5.064 Hvingroom, stove, refrigeraacre~ . Rite Farm Lot 118.. tor, w/d, private drive, free

•

South

G

wide

vinytllh!nglo $181/mo. Call
Nice , 4X70 3 bedroom only
$, 0,995. Will help with deliv·
ery. Call (740)385·!Ml2i.

21 "FIIIh Magic" 62 Tier

Opening lead:

26 Years Ext~&lt;ri•erle&lt;e; I

992-1111

• J 6 3
"'Q 9 2

9 4 3

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Neither

'
:FRANK
&amp; EARNEST

(740) 949-1405

¥ K 76 5

15
16
17

•

+Q•

256-1253 after 8 p.m.

FREE
ESTIMATES

14

AK
"'K J 7
East

4 K Q a·s

111411 mo.

01~.

13

South

740-742-2293

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

06-20-o6

J 7 6 2
A 9 8 3

.. A8653

HospltaVCUnk: . 1 acre
m/1, beautiful landsce.p-.
tng, screened-in back
deck with hOt tub, View
photQSiinfo
online
C&lt;. Je
www.orvb.com

Brand

47 Feminine
pMnclpte
Shuttle,
49 Clean a rug
maybe
51 Long easy
Muaeo' lather
stride
Cookie 54 Roman poet
Strike caller 56 OpposH&lt;&gt;
l.tillay
of haw
orFerber
57 Rowmlueoals
Berra
58 II may be
ol baseball
splloed
Hamlet's
59 Narcissus'
11aw
oath
Actual
60 Practical
By Jove!
joke
Bird of prey 61 Gardener's '

1

Alder

ROGfR HVSfll
GflRflGt

/

ACROSS

Phillip

Equipment (7~~2412

Twin Rivers Tower is accept- Grave PIOI 0 Pine Street New John Deere Compacts
ond 5000 Series Utility tracIng applicaliono for walling Cemetery. (740)245-5747.
tors 00% Fixed for 31
list lor Hud-subslzed, 1- br,
I'm looking for a Farm to
apartment, c;alt 875-6679
montht through John
Equal Houolng OpportunitY tNse fof Hunting prlvllages. Deere Credit. Carmichael
(6081739-8523 or (304)544· Equipment (740)446-2412
Apt. for 4211

Ij

"""';;!ii.'-,J

..__ _ _ _

Tracy'o Apt. (304)675-2288

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

3 -oom. 2 bolh, to HI your home? Be the ftrsl to ltYa In this fur- Singlol!adroom$30()monlh . CRF too '04 dirt bike. John Deere Mini Excavator/
brlctc home fo&lt; 111e ;, Rio l.ate on payments, divorce, nished, remodeled. 1 + $300 depoolt. 2 br Apt. $1 ,599, like new. 10x10x6 Tractor loader Backhoe/
Grande. Cell (7~)379-2815 job translar Of o -th1 I Bedroom, 1 · bath, with $350 • morith $300 deposit dog kennel. $150. (740)446- Skid Steers. Carmichael

'

I

Ll E C y N

a colleague exclaimed,
''that new guy is no\ too bright. I
saw correttion tape on the display
screen of his ----."

· "Wow,"

f---rl-T~-7-r,-e...:,l-.,/-l. Oby

L-l..-l.._J__J__..J___

'e

Compiele th; chuckle · ovo•ed .
ftlling in rhe mi.uing words
you dtvelop from ~tep No. 0 below.

- p~ I NT NUMBERED

lETTERS IN IQUIIR(S

.:\ UNSCRAMBlE LET_TERII
V FOR ANSWER

II II

I

I

I

I

SCRAML!TS ANSVRRS 8111/011
Keenly - Wtary - Usual- Occupy - LUCKY you ARE
The owner of our local nursery persuaded an elderly gent
not to buy a plant The owner leaned over and wl!ispered
to lhe plant. "You don't know now LUCKY you ARE!"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
HE/; Out: WCKY
~OIJ OF A GUIJ,

€.VE.RYfHIIJG. r:OR'/M
I !.CI:)~,

future behavior.

A ~~¥./i'
\-10 't-It..'&lt;.
t&gt;\.1\?10.'

SOUP TO NUTZ
•,

LOO k S lti&lt;;E '1bU

DoNT"

Kave MUCH iNVeNToRY..

Patio and Porch Dec:ke

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
CJ9L' -b? 1:..
1-'onwrnv Ohu,
;J~

Y{

r•~

lnc.ll

~

1p1 111'111

I'

�•
Pqe B6 • The Daily Sentinel

.

Tuesday, June

www.mydailysentinel.com

20,2006

Big Bend Blues Bash·
edition inside
todays Sentinel

Cinc.innati doubles up Mets, 4-2 Giants coaches contacted by
NEW YORK (AP) - Ken
Griffey Ir. tied Mike Schmidt
on the career home run chart
and Bronson Arroyo pitched a
complete game to lead the
BY JANIE McCAULEY
leader was Mitchell.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cincinnati Reds past the New
Selig has said he was
appointed in
York Mets 4-2 Monday night
March
by prompted .to launch an invesfor !heir eighth straight victoSAN FRANCISCO
commission- tigation in part by the spring
ry on lhe road.
Members of the
San
er Bud Selig release of the book "Game of
Griffey's 548th homer put
Francisco Giants' coaching
to head the Shadows," by two San
him in lllh place along with
staff have been contacted by
I e a g u e ' s Francisco Chronicle reporters
the Hall of Fame third baseformer Sen. George Mitchell
investigation who detailed Bonds' alleged
man and ruined a strong start
in his independent investigainto SJeroids use of steroids, insulin and
by New York's Orlando
tion of steroids in baseball. ·
in the sport. human growth hormone.
Hernandez.
.
" I understand some guys
'----" B o n d s •
There is no timetable for
Next up for Griffey is
were supposed to (talk to
Bonds
second on completing the investigation.
Reggie Jackson with 563.
him)," Giants manager Felipe
the career
Authors Lance Williams
Brandon Phillips added a
· AJou told The Associated home run list behind Hank and Mark Fainaru-Wada
Press on Monday. "That's alii Aaron, is among the players wrote that Bonds .started ·
two-run double and Arroyo
know. That is very personal. I being investigated.
threw a seven-hitter for the
·
Alou said he had not yet using steroids because he was
Reds, thrilled . to be on · the
don't ask these guys."
toad again. They just lost
Several people within been contacted by Mitchell, jealous of the attention paid to
Mark McGwire's home run
eight of nine to end their
Major League Baseball con- "but 1 probably will."
·· • ~P photo
Bench coach Ron Wotus, race with Sammy Sosa in
worst I0-game home stand (2finned that coaches on Alou's
Cincinnati Reds first baseman Scott Hatteberg, right, congratu- staff had heard from Mitchell. bullpen coach Mark Gardner, 1998 .
. 8) since 1950.
The 41-year-old Bonds,
: The NL East-leading Mets lates pitcher eronson Arroyo after beating the New York' Mets . They spoke on condition of hitting coach Joe Lefebvre
· also have looked more com- 4-2, during MLB baseball Monday at Shea Stadium in New York. anonymity after being asked and first base coach Luis · who passed Babe Ruth wtth
not to discus's the investiga- Pujois declined to comment his 715th car.eer home run last
fortable on the road recently. and nine hits in 5 2-3 innings onds.
They've dropped three of four of a 9-8 loss to Cincinnati on
Phillips finally tried a fake tion publicly. Harvey Shields, when asked if they had been · month, ha~ always dented
at Shea Stadium since 'win- May 7.
.
and break around plate one of Giants slugger Barcy contacted by Mitchell - as usmg sterotds of any other
ning eight in a row to close a
Leading off ·the sixth, umpire Dan . lassogna, and · Bonds' personal trainers, who did longtime equipment man- performance-enhancmg drugs .
9-1 road trip. ·
Griffey drove a 2-2 pitch from was called out for running works for the team, also was ager Mike Murphy. Hitting -insisting everything he has
assi stant Willie Upshaw said accomplished is a product of
Arroyo (9-3) gave up a run Hernandez an estimated 440 way outside the base line just being'sought by Mitchell.
Senate
majority
The
former
he had not heard from natural talent and hard work .
in · the, first · and Car!os . feet oft.-the lower portion of as Hernandez applied the tag.
Beltran s I 9th homer leadmg the scoreboard in right-center Hernandez flipped the ball to
off the moth. He struck out for hi s 12th homer this season Phillips, who tossed it into the
five and walked one in his ·and a 2-1 Cincinnati lead.
stands behind Cincinnati 's
third career complete game,
The Reds loaded the bases dugout.
second this season.
in the eighth against Pedro
Reyes · hit Arroyo's first
After David Wright's one- Feliciano,
and
Phillips pitch of the game for a double
CLEVELAND (AP) - Michael Barrett serves a 10- " In the third, Blanco singled
out sin.gle, Arroyo retired Jose blooped a two-run double to and scored on Beltran 's Henry Blanco tied a career game suspension that began and · Pierre followed with an
Valentm and Xavter Nady to right off Chad Bradford.
hi gh with four RBls and Juan . Monday.
. RBI triple down the first-base
end it on !tis !16th pitch.
Hernandez turned a color- groundout.
Pierre drove in three runs to
After opening the season 2- line. Pierre scored on a sacriNotes: Qriffey and his help the Chicago Cubs beat for-39 (.051 ), Blanco has bat- fice fly by Todd Walker to
The right-han'der, acquired ful, unassisted double/lay to
from B.oston on March 20 for end the second. Davi Ross' father, Ken Sr:, have com- the Cleveland Indians 12-8 ted .542 ( 13-for-24) during a make it 3-0.
outfielder Wily Mo Pena in a RBI single tied the score at 1 bined for 700 major leag ue Monday night.
seven-~ame hitti.ng strhk.
Cleveland tied it with two
trade that has worked out and left runners at the corners home runs .... Arroyo pitched
Rookie Sean Marshall (4-5) He's hming .436 (17-for-39) homers in lhe bottom half.
beautifully for the Reds, with one out. Arroyo then his first complete game for gave up four runs over five · in his career at Jacobs Field.
With two outs, Eduardo
. retired 10 straight before Jose popped up a suicide squeeze Pittsburgh at Shea Stadium on innings before a 73-minute
The Indians caught a break Perez hit his eighth of the
Reyes' bloop single in the and Hernandez lunged, to the Oct. 2, 2001. His other com- rain delay in the top of the just before Blanco delivered . season _ all off left-handers.
eighth.
·
ground to make the catch, plete game this season was a sixth. The left-hander earned With two on and one out, After Jhonny Peralta walked,
Makinghisftfthstartforthe trapping Phillips off third four-hitter in a 6-1 win over his first road win since April Freddie · B~num's sharp Travis Hafner launched a
St. Louis on Ma?' I .... Af!'OYO
Mets since being acquired base.
htt basemnner drive into the mezzanine secfrom Arizona on May 24,
Hernandez got up and sta- thr~w ~ career-htgh 127 pitch- 14.The Cubs, coming off an 0- grounder
Ronny Cedeno between first tion in right field that has
Hernandez (4-6) yielded two . tioned himself on the line es m hts previOus outtng, a 6- 6 homestand in which they and second. Bynum got cred- b
· k
d "P k ·11 "
runs and eight hits over seven between Phillips and ~QSS--to Milwauk.ee that were outscored 43-17, won it for a hit but Cedeno was · . eenmc name
ron vt e
innings. He struck out seven, waiting to make the "fag. But snapped his three-game win- their fourth straight on the out.
'
m hts honor.. The 461-foot
including Griffey the first two Phillips 'slowly sauntered in ning streak .... Nady returned road. Cleveland has lost four
Blanco then hir a 2-2 pitch ~nve was h~ s 19th of the seatimes up, and walked two. ,
the other direction - so El to the lineup in RF for the first in a row and 12 of 16 overall. over the wall in left for a 6,-3 son and maJor league-leadmg
With· the Diamondbacks, Duque simply folded his arms time since his appendectomy
Blanco, facing the Indians lead .
I Oth off a lefty.
Hernandez gave up eight runs and waited a couple of sec- on May 30 and went 0-for-4. for the first time since hitting
It was the eighth hoti-ter
Peralta· hit ~is s~venth
.396 ( 13-for-41) against them allowed by Johnson in his last ho"'!er on a 1-0 pttchwt!h one
while with Minnesota in six starts. The right-hander out _m the fifth to make t~ 6-4.
2004, snapped a 3-3 til! in the lost his fourth straight start
Pterre htt a two-run ~10gle
fourth with a three-run homer and is 1-7 with a 7.38 ERA in off Fernando Cabrera 10 the
off Jason Johnson (3-8).
II starts since April 18.
sixth and Phil Nevin added a
• from Page Bl
The veteran came in with a :Jacque Jones opened the two-run homer off Jeremy
.218 career average but a .320 Cubs' second by hitting an 0- Guthrie in the seventh to
'
mark against Cleveland. He I pitch the opposite .way to make it 1.0-4. It was Nevin's
80 miles away in Greensboro
is eJfpected to be the Cubs: left for his 13th homer and
fifth drive of the season and
While a new arena was built
primary
catcher
while
starter
1-0
lead.
the
200th of his career.
· in· Raleigh. Few fans turned
up in the bc;ginning and the
upper deck was curtained off,
the demand for tickets so
light.
.
· Now, the Hurricanes are
champions, capitalizing on
their second trip to lhe finals.
Four years ago, they were
beaten in five games by
Detroit
The biters have nothing to
be ashamed of, making it all
the way to the final game of
the season after barely getting
into the playoffs.
Fernando Pisani did it again
for .Edmonton, scoring his
playoff-leadin~ 14th goal just
over a minute mto the third to
make a game of it, and goalie
Iussi Markkanen had another
strong game with 25 saves.
The best-of-seven series
looked as if it would be a rout
AP photo
when Carolina rallied from a Carolina Hurricanes goalie Cam Ward holds up the Conn
three-goal deficit to win Smythe Trophy for most valuable player in the playojfs as he
Game I and blew out the celebrates his team's victory after winning Game 7 of the
Oilers 5-0 in Game 2. The Stanley Cup hockey finals ·over the Edmonton Oilers in Raleigh,
• I 8-81 HP
Oilers also had to .cope with
· the loss . of playoff star N.C., on Monday.
major service points
Dwayne Roloson, who had for Carolina. The defenseman gone in the second. Kaberle
played every minute of the delivered a slap shot that skid- fired a sial? shot over a diving
·are e asy to reach .
postseason 10 goal until he ded through a half~ dozen Jason Smtth, whose sweater
.went out with a knee injury in players scrumming in front ·of appeared to catch part of the
• Cab and boom lift foward
the opener.
.
the net and on through the puck and cause it 111 dip under
. But, led by Markkanen and \egs of Markkanen, Who Markkanen's left pad when he
and up for full access to
· Pisani, the Oilers rebounded appeared to be screened.
had his glove out to make the
from a 3-1 deficit. T~ey
It was the Hurricanes' 'first save.
engine or transmission
""ulled .out an overtime win in goal in 95:01, going back to
Pisani gave the Oilers hope
Carolina - with the cup the second period of Game 5. at I :03 in the lhird, crashing
somewhere in. the bowels of . Carolina . thought it had the net to knock in a loose
!he RBC Center, waitin~; to be another goal in the final sec- puck after Cam Ward had
handed out if the Humcanes ends of the period. Rod already made one save anQ
won.
Brind'Amour flipped a pass to tume~ aside a rebound try.
Edmonton returned home Craig Adams, who fanned on
Edmonton was the first
apd blew out Carolina 4-0 in his first shot but then back- eighth-seeded team to reach
Game6.
handed the
puck off the final s under the current
That's where the.comeback Markkanen's stick.
format, knocking off three
The
goalie
fell
facefirst
to
higher-ranked teams
ended.
Right from the start, the ice, the puck spinning over including
regular- season
Carolina seized the momen- ·him and toward the post. champ Detroit - . along the
tum wilh the sort of energy Defenseman Steve St 1ios way.
The Oilers were in the finals
and passion that had been dove into the net and stuck out
his right glove in an attempt to for the first time since 1990,
missing since Game 5.
when they won their fifth cup
Erik Cole delivered a big hit keep the puck out.
at center ice to force
It was hard to tell exactly in seven years. For most of the
Edmonton into a turnover, and · where the puck was on most '80s, Edmonton was the cenMatt Cullen took off the other of the replays, but one angle ter of the hockey world with
way with lhe puck. He swept appeared to show the puck . , star,studded teams led by
in on Markkanen, who made a sliding under Staios and just Wayne
Gretzky,
Mark
across th~ goal line. However, Messier, Jari Kurri. , Paul
.good save off his chest.
· The , Hurricanes didn't let the officta!s ruled that play Coffey and Grant Fuhr.
But spiraling salaries and
up. keeping Edmonton bottled was dead as soon as ,Staios
up in its own zone. Mark struck the puck with his hand changing economics sent the
Recchi got possession behind since a delayed penalty had Oilers irtto a tailspin, putting
lhe net and attempted a pass to been called on Edmonton 's their very future in doubt.
Andrew Ladd standing in Ethan Moreau - a· huge Now, in the first season of the
front, only to . have the rico- break for tlte Oilers with 4.1 new . salary cap-protected
NHL. they made a title run
chet back to Aaron Ward seconds left in the period.
Carolina finally made it 2-0 with a blue-collar team femurmoving in from the point. .
That worked out just fine with just over fouc minutes ing few big names.

Mitchell 'in steroids probe

,

.I

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~ ~~ ('Fl\'
.&gt;
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' • Vol • .~~
&gt;.l • Nu · -• &gt;t~

• Feeney Bennett blasts
Gallipolis. See Page 81

'

.

BY

Holzer Meigs Clinic about banking ·account numbers of
the scam.
· the callers.
"Holzer Clinic does not
Jeffers said she knew of
four residents· that had been call patients or the general
approach via telephone by public for donations," Jeffers
people claiming to be repre- said, urging anyone who gets
sentatives of Holzer Clinic ·a suspicion call to phone the
who then went on to ·ask for clinic at 992-0060 or the
charitable donation~;, for 'the Pomeroy Police Department
clinic. One phone call even at 992-6411.
said Holzer Clinic was sellJeffers added that the clining tickets for some kind of ic would not tie involved in
charity.
somethin~ that would cause
Proffitt said the goal of the the public harm and this
'call is to get credit card or scam sounds like it most

certainly would.
"Scams are on the rise
again," Proffitt warned, want-·
ing local merchants to also be
aware that his department had
recently confiscated a conn-·
terfeit $50 and $20-bill circulated in Pomeroy businesses.
· Another scam that has hit
some residents in Pomeroy
according to Proffitt are internet and mail scams. Proffitt
said scammers use the internet to get banking information from residents and then

send them an authentic looking cashiers check and/or
money order through some
profitable arri).ngement. When
residents go to cash the
cashier's check or mbney
order they find the serial
numbers don't match and it's
not authentic. Unfortunately
the victim is liable for any
money spent from the fraudulent documents.
"If it's too good to be true it
most generally is," Proffitt
reminds residents.

I

L

BRIAN J. ~EED

t
. ,:!

BREEOOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

I

•

POMEROY -A vehicle
stolen Friday from a Syracuse
women has been recovered
and two Athens County men
· have been charged with grand
theft auto.
. Meigs County Sheriff
Robert Beegle said Paul
McCoy of Athens and
George Eddy Stobart of
Nelsonville were arrested last
weekend af!d appeared
Monday before County Ceurt
Judge Steven L. Story. They
were released on their own
recognizance, Beegle said.
Page A5
The 1997 Mercury was
• Denver Olin Curtis, a4
stolen from the home of its
owner, Cynthia Bateman of
• Sandra McDaniel, 59
Syracuse, and Beegle said a
coincidence helped officers
·recover it.
According to Beegle,
Deputy Don Mohler had
questioned
McCoy and
• Ohio University
Stobart near Racme on
president apologizes
Friday, when their own car
had broken down. They
for hackers' theft.
advised
Mohler that help was
See Page A2
on the way. and their vehicle
• Law You Can Use.
was later found abandoned.
See Page A2 ·
Coincidentally, a friend of
Bateman
from
Athens
• Chester Council hears
County saw someone driving
report on Memorial Day.
a vehicle matching a descripSee Page A3 . .
tion of Bateman's Mercury
while the two women were
• WOUB wins two
on the ·telephone discussing
Associated Press of Ohio · the theft. .The car was recovAwiird. See Page A3
ered by Athens County.
deputies after Bateman's
• Robinson chosen as

0BITUARIFS

. .
,
·
Charlene Hoelllch/-Recognized for volunteer service were from the lflft, front,_P.olly Eicbinger, .Mary K. Roush, and-Kathleen Scott, over 90.11oliJtl;teers, and back, Mary Alice Blse and Frances Alkire. 20ylfa'r5; Editli S"son;•.Geraldlne Cleland, 15 years· and Maxlnetlftflr;
Eletty Longenette, Rosanna Manley. and Exa Mae Christian, 10 years. Severall'!ere unable to attend.

lor

INSIDE

New Holland Skid Steer

'

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:!OU6

Coincidence
helps solve
auto theft case

Work Without Limits

-

BY BETH SERGENT ·
BSERGENT®MYD~I LYSENTINEL . COM

POMEROY - Residents
of Meigs County are '\Sked to
be on alert for phone calls
from people claiming to represent Holzer Clinic where
the callers ask for donations
for the clinic, this according
to Pomeroy Chief of Police
Mark E. Proffitt.
.
Proffitt said he was contacted yesterday by Diana
Jeffers, clinic manager for

a

• All

'\'
1 ; "~' l·.' :!. I ,
" l',' llNI '·'Sll\\'
.
, •ll "'

Phone·scarn fal.sely claims to benefit Holzer Clinic

SPORTS

Carolina

I

restroom art gallery, A2
..

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Cubs roar past Cleveland, 12-8

I

Louvre in the loo?
Village opens

l.

finalist in Pre-Teen.Qhiq
Scholarship program.
See Page A3 .
• Transfers posted.
See Page A5
• For the Record.
See Page A5

Ple•se see Auto theft. AS

Holzer Clinic
profile airs
Saturday
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLYCI!&gt;MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

WEA1HER

Detallo on Po&amp;• o\6

INDEX
2 SECilONS- 12 PAGES

A3

Calendars
Classifieds

82-4

Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials

Bs
A3
A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
&gt;:
Weather

BSection
A6

© aoo6 Ohio Valley Pubtlshl"'l Co.

"

GALLil'OLIS - A segment of a cable television
program profiling Holzer
Clinic will be broadcast this
Saturday, clinic officials said.
"Inside Health" on The
Learning Chimnel will air the
segment at 7 a.m.
"For Holzer Clinic to be
recognized at a national level,
it is a t;eflection of our commitment to our patients and
to our serviae area," said J.R.
Sauer, marketing and physician· relations manager for
Holzer Clinic, who is among
the clinic officials interviewed for the program.
''This-honor is directly related to the physicians, Jeadershi p · and support staff of
HolzerCiinic," Sauer added. ·
Image Associates LLC, a
Charleston, W. Va.-based production company, was contacted by nationally-known
Broadcast News Corp. in
May .to tape the segment for
"In side Health ," which is
hosted by Peggy Fleming.
Interviewed along with
Sauer were Dr. Wayne
Munro, the clinic's president,
P'-•se see Holzer, AS

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
~OEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The 33rct annual
luncheon ·of the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program highlighted the
recognition of the nearly 175 volunteers w~o last year contributed
28,774 hours in community service
valued at $519,083.
Diana Coates, director, emceed the
event which include the presentation
of certificates and plaques to I0, 15 an
20 years volunteers, and gave special
reco~nition to five active volunteers
rangmg in age from 90 to 100.
The honorees included Frances Alkire
and Mary Alice Bise, 20 years;
Geraldine Cleland, Goldie Frederick,
Vinca Lee, Edith Sisson, Mary Bell
Warner. 15 years, an Exa Mae Christian,
Maxine Little, Betty Longenette and
Rosanne Manley, 10 years.
·
Spe~;Cial recognition wt;nt to Leona .
Cleland, 90, Polly Eic~inger, 92 ; Vinas
Lee, 91; Mary K. Roush, 94, and
Kathleen Scott, 100. Mrs. Roush and
Mrs. Scott bolh quilt every Thursday at
the Forest Run Church with proceeds
from quilting going to special projects
at the church.
Program for the affair f~atured the
Hula Hoops, Lawrence Eblm and Btl!
Little, and the Roush Family Singers
with gospel selections.
In c·onjunction with the Aloha theme,
an Hawaiian cosiume contest was held
with Eileen ·, Buck and Jack
Coughenour winning the contest.
The pfogram concluded with the
awarding 'of door prizes.
Here Lawrence Manley entertains the RSVP volunteers with his version of a Hula dancer.

·nag shelter receives
extreme makeover
ment during what was called
Habitat for Dogmanity. Three .
Just as people . need
ROCKSPRINGS - Now Habitat for HJnuinity, dogs
·there are no excuses not to require
Habitat ,
for
adopt your new best friend in Dogmanit y to provide some
a more user friendly environ- of th_e basics of living, such
ment at the Meigs County as adequate shelter.
Dog Shelter.
None of these basics or
After a recent marathon day improvements cost the . taxat the Meigs · County Dog payers of Meigs Couitty a
Shelter, volunteers from the dime , though unfortunately
Columbus
Dog Connection the same cannot be said for
Photo courtH• Columbllo DOC c-tlon
These volunteers from tne Columbus Dog Connection recently (CDC) and from Meigs' each dog that is euthanized at
installed wall kennels at the Meigs County Dog Shelter for County succeeded in making the shelter.
.small dogs and puppies. The small kennels were donjlted by the shelter both' a more dog
Ple•se see Shelter, AS
and people fri~ndly environthe Union County Humane Society.
· BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'"'

&gt;

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