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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel .

MLB Standings

•
National League
East Division
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New York
Phil adelph ia

Atlanta

Florida
Washtngton

53
40
40
38
38

36 .596
47 .460
49 .449
48 .442
52 .422

GB

St. Louis
. Cinci nnati

Milwaukee

Houston
Ch1cago
Pittsbu rgh

l

48 39
45 44
44 46
43 46
34 54
30 60

WL
48 40

53 33
50 36
49 39
.41 49
39 50

Boston
New York

Pet

GB

552
.506
489

4

Baltimore
Tarp pa Bay

5 •.

.483

6

386
333

, 4 ',
19 ',

GB

.523
.506
.506
.489

East Olwlslon
w L Pet

13 ',

Toronto

Pet
.545

46 42
45 44
44 43
43 45

2
3 ',
3 ',
5

Anl.l!rican League

15 ·,

Weat Division
San Otego

Los Angeles
San Franc1sco
Colorado
Arizona

12
13

Central Dlvlaton

w

www .mydailysentinel.com

GB

616
581
557

3
5

.456

14

438

15 ''

Central Dlvlalcn

Detro1t
Chicago
Mmnesota
Cleveland

Kansas C1ty

w

L

Pet

GB

59
57
47
40
31

29
31
39
47
56

.670
648
.547

2

.460

.356

11
18 ',
27 .1

Reds·

Earning the win after
· starter John Thomson succumbed to shoulder stiffness and left with one out in
fromPageBl
the third, Villarreal (8-1)
gave up three run s, four
Nothing was clicking."
hits, one walk lind struck
Cincinnati, which has lost out two in 2 1-3 innings.
seven of eight, plays
Atier McCann's RBI sinColorado to begin a I0- gle gave th e Braves a 1-0
game homestand Thursday. lead in the first, Atlanta
The Reds are just 20-22 at scored three runs off Arroyo
Great American Ball Park.
in the second. Thorman hit
"We have to go home and his second homer before
get regrouped," manager Giles' RBI single ami
Jerry Narron · said. ''We Andruw Jones' sacrifice fly.
should be able to play better
The Braves led 6-0 lead in
at home than we have."
the
fifth
followin g
Adam
Dunn's · 28th Francoeur's 17th horner and
homer, a three-run shot tHat Langerhans' RBI double off
went 450 feet to deep cen- Arroyo.. Andruw Jones
ter, chased Braves reliever homered off Todd Coffey in
Oscar Villarreal with no the sixth.
outs in the sixth.
Thomson, who allowed
Tyler Yates allowed two hits , one walk and
Austin Keams' broken-bat struck out two, is 0-4 with a
single and walked Brandon 9.39 ERA· in his last six
Phillips before Cox brought starts. The right-hander was
in
lcft-hander
Ma&lt;;ay on the disabled list from
McBride to face pinch-hit- June 16-July 3 with a blister
ter Ken Griffey Jr.
on his right middle finger.
. McBride
str,uck . out
Though he doesn't expect
· Griffey on a pitch that to miss a start, Thomson
bounced into the glove of indicated the biggest probcatcher Brian McCann to lem is finishing pitches.
end the threat.
'' It' s ti ght. so it' s not
" I thought they would allowing me to get out front
pitch to him ," Narron said. · when I throw, so I' til getting
"I was trying to find a spot a lot of · .pitches off,''
where we could have Junior Thomson said. 'That's why
come up with the tying run everything I threw today on base. Their left-handers all my fastballs looked like
wore us out."
cutters. In my head I always

w

L

BY JoE

45
45
43
43

43
43
45
46

Pet

GB

MtuciA

ASSOCIATED PRESS

.511

CLEVELAND - Corey
Patterson scored on a passed
.483
ball in the eighth inning and
the
Baltimore Orioles came
j Sunday's Resulte
back
to beat Cleveland 5-4
Baltimore 5, Cleveland 4
Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Yank6es 5
Sunday in a mistake-filled
Te~tas 5, Minnesota 2
game that .saw the Indians
Ch1c. White Soli: 6, Boston 5, 19 innings
blow a th ree-ru n lead.
Toronto 11 , Kansas C1ty 3
Patterson reached base on
Seattle 3 . De troit 2
a
two-out single in· th e
L.A. Angels 4, Oakland 2
Atlanta 8, Cincinnati 3
eighth . Cleveland first baseSan Diego 10. Washington 9
man Ben Broussard dove to
N.Y Mets 7, Flonda 6
his right to snag P~tttr,on's
Philadelphia 8. Pitt sburgh 3
sharp grounder but dove
Ch1cago Cubs 11 . Milwaukee 4
Arizona 8. Colorado 5
back to tag the bag just after
L.A. Dodgers 3, San Francisco 1
the speedy Ballimore center
,St. Louis 7, Houston 5, 121nnings
fielder got there .
Javy Lopez followed with
a
single and rookie Fausto
think if I keep my mechanCarmona
hit Kevin Millar to
ics right, I can go out and
change speeds and get guys load the bases. Victor
Martinez f(liled to handle
out."
the
first piich to Nick
Arroyo lost for the third
Markakis
and Pa11erson
time in four starts, a span
of 24 1.3 innings. The scored.
The Orioles tied the game
right-hander, who joined
on
two wild pitches an
Cincinnati in an offseaso n
trade with the Red Sox, had inning earlier.
Baltimore reliever Kurt
pitched at least five innings
Birkin
s (4-1) pitched twosince Sept. 28, when
thirds of inning. allo\ving a
Boston lost to Toronto.
" I had a bad one the last hit and striking out one.
Chris Ray "went I 2-3
time out," Arroyo said.
innings
for his 22nd save in
· " You don't want to have
bad ones back-to-hack. 23 chances.
Indians
starter
Jake
"Sometimes when you're
Westbrook
pitched
well.
rolling downhill , it's hard
retiring 12 of 18 on groundto stop." .
outs.
He went six innings,
Renteria has a 14-game
giving
up four runs on seven
hitting streak for Atlanta.
· Chipper Jones eXtended his hits, four strikeouts and a
streak to 13 games and costly walk to Millar.
Millar, the last batter
Giles pushed his to 12.
Westbrook
faced , advanced
"(John) Smoltz told me
to go to Florida and keep to second on Markakis '
swinging," said Chipper bunt, then scored on two
Jones, who took a cortisone wild pitches from Rafael
shot in his sore right foot Perez to make it 4-4 in the
. .
after the game. "Everybody seventh.
was pretty g~;eked up after
The Indians have their
worst record at · the break
the game today."
Notes: Reds · C David (40-47) since 2003 when
Ross, who mi ssed his sec- they were 36-50. ·
ond straight game, was
The crowd of 26,452 was
diagnosed with a~ lower so quiet in the middle
abdominal strain after inning s that a fan sitting in
undergoing an MRI exam the second row of the upper
in Cincinnati. The team' has · deck could be heard chantino immediate plans to ng "BOR-ING."
place Ross on the disabled
Carmona{l-3) went I 1-3
list.
innings, giving up two hits
.511

.489

2
2 ·,

:)0

AP photo

striking out one.
Baltimore starter Rodri go
Lopez allowed four runs.
two earned, on seven hits
and two walks in fiv e
innings. He struck out six.
Lopez, who allowed nine
runs .in less than three
innings a1ainst the Chicago
White Sox in his last •start,
had retired five straight to
start the game. He and th ~
Orioles ran into trouble in
the second.
'
After Broussard's two-out
double, Patterson mi splayed
Jhonny Peralta 's liner to
dead center.
Patterson charged in a few
steps then watched the ball
sail over his head. Peralta
was credited with a triple
and an RBI. Lopez walked
Joe Inglett and Aaron Boone
followed with an RBI double.
The inning continued
when second baseman Brian
Roberts committed an error
on Grady Sizemore's hard
grounder. Lopez then threw
. a wild pitch that allowed
Boone to score, making it4-

• Post 128 breaks losing
skid. See Page 81

I.

Westbrook gave up a single and a double to'start the
sixth. Jeff Conine made it 43 with a fielder's choice
RBI. But Westbrook got two
more' groundouts til get out
of the jam .
Javy Lopez hil his seventh
home run to make it 4-2 in
the fourth . Miguel Tejada's
RBI single in the,first gave
Baltimore a 1-0 lead.
Notes: The Orioles won
just their third road series
·and enter the All-Star break
at 41-49 .... Sizemore made
a leaping catch in the ninth
that knocked the Indians'
bullpen door open and
robbed Robert s of extra
bases.
Indians OF
Franklin Gutierrez was a
late scratch from the lineup
because of llu-like symptoms. Joe Ing lett started in
left field
and Jason
Mi chael s started hi s first
game in right field this season .... 2B Ronnie Belliard
extended a career-high 14game hittin g streak . .

AP pholo

Brittany Lincicome of Seminole, Fla. wipes her eyes after ·
beating Mic helle Wie on.the 15th hole during the quarterfinal of the LPGA Woroon's World Match Play Golf
Championships in Gladstone, N.J . on Saturday.

TliFSI&gt;t\Y, .JULY I I, :!OOb

WW\\.tn)d.til)"'"linl'l .&lt;·um

Protesters speak against alcohol served on.Pomeroy Parking Lot at festivals

Baltimore Orioles' Corey Patterson scores the go-ahead run
past Cleveland Indians pitcher Fausto Carmona on a
passed qall in the eighth inning of a baseball game Sunday
in Cleveland. The Orioles won 5-4.

YOUR AD INSID~A COMIC STRIP

over Mic)lele Redman,
overcoming a three-hole
deficit after nine holes. The
champion
then
beat
Bran die Burton (2 and I)
and Kyeong Bae (3 imd 2)
to set up her guarterfinal
match against Wte.
In
the
semifinals,
Lincicome beat Ochoa with
a 20-foot birdie putt on the
19th hole, the IOth because
the front-nine pin positions
had already been changed
for the title match .. The ,
eighth-seeded
Inkster,
coming off a !-up quarterfinal victory over top-seeded Annika Sorenstam, had
five straight birdies in her
win over Creamer.
Inkster was sixth laSt
week ·in the Women's
Open .
'Two very mentally
grinding weeks being in the
hunt ," said Inkster, the Hall
.of Farner won the Safeway
International in March for
her 3 I st tour .v ictory. ;'I'm
kind of more disappointed
this week than last because
I just didn ' t pl;iy well thi s
aflernoon.'' '
·

('I·NTS • \'ol. ;;:;, No. :!;In

SPORTS

fromPageBl

pretty good out there all
day. I just hit a couple · of
bad iron shots."
Lincicome won the par-4
eighth with another par, but
lost the par-S ninth when
Inkster got up and down for
a birdie from the · right
greenside bunker.
Lincicome then hit a
wedge to abou.t a foot on
the par-4 IOth - the hole
she birdied ,a couple of
hours earlier to beat Ochoa
- to push her lead back to
5-up . All Inkster coul d so
was call out "Great shot' "
"I thought it was going
in ," Lincicome said . "I hit it
exactly where I wanted to."
Ink ster won the par-3
12th with a par and took the
par-4 15th with a birdie to
cut her deficit to three holes
before Lincicome ended the
match with her par on 16.
"Thank God I was up by
a lot ," Lincicome said .
'T ve ·never dealt with that
. kind of pressure .... She was
going to have to make
birdie."
Lincicome started the
week with a 20;hole victory.

.W itnesses: Injured
· ·coaster riderS
bleeding, removed
on stretchers, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

LPGA
with a conceded par on the
par-4 16th.
"I'm so in shock,"
Lincicome said. "It's a huge
accomplishment. It's what
I've been trying to do since
I was a little girl - play on
the LPGA Tour and win a
tournament."
In the morning semifinals, Lincicome edged
· Ochoa with a 20-foot birdie
putt on the 19th hole, and
Inkster beat Solheim Cup
teammate Paula Creamer 5
and 4. The third-seeded
Ochoa beat the fifth -seeded
Creamer 3 and 2 in the
third-place match.
Lincicome, seeded 39th
after finishing seventh last
week in the U.S: Women's
Open, earned $500,000 for
her breakthrough victory.
She made $392,258 in 33
previous LPGA Tour starts
the last two seasons.
''I'm riot buying myself
anything," she said. 'T m
saving. I spent enough' last
year."
With her father carrying
her bag in hot afternoon
conditions on the hilly
Hamilton Farm course,
Lincicome took the lead on
the 533-yard, par-5 second
hole, reaching the front
edge of the green in two and
two-putting for a birdie.
"On this golf course,
length is huge. It's wide
open. so you can just bomb
it away," said Inkster. outdriven by 50-60 yards on
some holes.
"That was my stron g
point all week," Lincicome
. said. "I think if someone is
outdriving you by 60 yards
all day, it kind of wears on
you . I think that definitel y
wears on you. And ha ving
wedge into every green,
that's always a good thin g."
Lincicome won the par-3
third and par-4 fifth with
pars, halved the par-4 six th
with a birdie - holing out
from 18 feet after Inkster
made a 20-foote r - and
took a 4-up lead with a par
on the par-3 seventh.
· "I gave her some holes
early," Inkster said . "I made
three bogeys early and I
don 't think I made three
bogey s in _the previous
three matc hes total. ... I fel t

Iraqis turn to fake IDs
to protect themselves
from increasing
sectarian violence, A2

Orioles soar past Cleveland, 5-4
Weet Dlvlalon

Oakland
Texas
Los Angeles
Seattle

Monday, .July 10, 2006

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - It's been
said there are diiTerent
strokes for different fo lks,
meaning what is acceptable
for one is not for atiother.
and last ni ght folk&gt; who are
again st alcohol serveu at
events on the Pomeroy
Parking Lot showed up to
voice th eir opinion to
Pomeroy Village Council.
There are two festivab in
which . alcohol is legall y
served (by state permit) on
the Pomeroy Parking Lot ,

The Blues and Jazz Festival
and the Pomeroy Sternwheel
Festival. .
Local teacher and busi nesswoman
Brenda
Barnhart, wife of · Pomeroy
Coun cilman Pete Barnhart.
was the spokesperson for
aro und 20 people who visited council 's chambers about
the issue. ·
Mrs. 13arnhart said the
gathe ri ng of 20 represented u
larger population, includ ing
521 people who had signed a
petition gathered in the last
five days that supported
alcohol free eve nts on the

parking lot.
Mrs. Barnhart said the
group had nothing against
people who drink alcohol but
were interested in coming up
with an altern ati ve to serving
alcohol at the parking lot
events, includ ing if possible
flnding alternative funding to
the donations maqe by
Budweiser to the Sternwheel
Fe stival.
Mayor John Musser. who
is abo chairman of the
S1ernwh eel Festival, saiclthe
Sternwheel
Commi ttee
receives a $ 1.500 donation
from Budweiser and in addi -

tion makes between $4,000
to $5,000 it) beer sale profits
which helps cover expenses
such as the public address
system and entertainment.
The Sternwheel Festival
also makes a $1,500 donation to the Pomeroy Police
Department for added pol ice
protection.
Mu sser said although the
festivals are privately funded
they do cost the village extra
money in manpower but
pointed out it also provides
extra police protection on the
parking lot at alcohol free
events li ke the Gold Wings

Page AS
.
• Donald S. Guthrie
• Robert W. Pinkerton

INSIDE
• Comair president:
. Lack of latior deal
'threatens airline's future.
See Page A2
• Classic movie night
plans announced.
See Page A3
• Local woman ·
graduates from seminary
See Page A3
• Scouts enjoY. camp
outing. See Page A3
• Ariel schedules
auditions for production.
See PageA3
• Dinner honors
Dillingers.·See Page A3
· • Taft faces public
reprimand for ethic!)
violations See Page AS
• Police, statisticians
combine to forecast traffic
accidents. See Page AS
• Despite Internet,
billboards still used for
personal appeals.
See Page AS

Submttted photo
Charlene

Hoefllch/ photo

The Ohio State Ha rmon ica Championship contest is always a high light of the Chester·
Shade Day festivit ies. A highl ight which follows the competition is when all the contestants
and their accompanists play for an audience sing-along of the old songs. Th is photo was
taken at the 2005 contest.

The first Lady poses for a picture with Sue Clonch Larkin ,
Darlene Smitl1 Vanaman, and Carla Smith Wyant fo llowing a
tea at the White Hou se.
•

Local women enjoy
STATE HARMONICA CHAMPIONSHIP tea with the First Lady
tio n. not even their visits to
the many hi storic pl aces
&lt;~nd monuments, but rather
RUTLAND - The re are a tea at the White Hou se.
Chester Commons.
• t'itle and the cash prize . Even
They along with about
Contestants from across the more nre ex pected to view spec ial experiences in the
midwest are ex pected to fo r th e championship this li ves of most of Lt s tha L ~ 00
other
Republican
stand above all others and women we re guests for a
come to Chester for the con- . yea r.
test. and as in previou s years ' In the past contes tant s for two women from tea with the First Lady in
the courtroom is sure to be have traw led from various Rutland and another from the State Dining Room.
now
livin g
in
packed with enthusiasts, towns in Ol1io, Pennsylvania there
Followin~ th at the women
there to enjoy not only the and West Virginia, but this Lancaster, i·t was a re cent were t ak ~n through several
individual performances but year they are expected from trip to Washington D. C. .
Sue
Clonch
Larktn. motm uf the White House
the always- popular sin g- other areas in the Midwest.
along which tradit ionall y The state champi onship con- Darlene Smith Vanaman. and then 1n1 ired to be phofollows the competition.
test in Chester ts one ot only and Carla Smith Wyant tugrapheu with Laura Bu sh.
" It wa' all a wonderful
went to Washin gton t&lt;l
Last year's tleld of com- three in the country.
exp(rienc~.··
said Vnnaman.
the
National
petitors was the biggest ever
Conte stants are to report allend
and Aaron Anderson of to the Chester Cmrrthou se at Federation of Rep ublican . "but what made it so mem.Veto, compet,ing for the first 4JO p.m.. that's ~ 0 minutes Women . The hi ghligh t of orable was the tea with Mrs.
time in the state contest,
the four days they spent Bu,h. She wa.s such a Io,rewalked away with the 2005 Please see Harmonica, A5 . there w'" not the conve11- ly and grac ious hostess."

SEf FOR CHESTER-SHADE
By CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFL!CH@MYQAILYSENTINEL.COM
CHESTER· It just keeps
gettin g bigger and . better
every yea r - the Ohio State
Harmonica Championship
contest which is annually
held as a part of the &lt;tnnual
Chester-Shade Days festi val.
The contest will be held at
5 p.m . Saturday in the
1828 Chester
restored
Courthouse - the oldest
standing courthouse in the
state of Ohio - I·ocated on
the knoll overlooking the

Water leak
•
znsurance
offered in
Syracuse

this is gonna
be fun!

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFL!CH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'Who you gonna call?'

BY BETH SERGENT

2 SECfiO:'&lt;S-

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editbrials

The Daily Sentinel

.SYRACUSE - In the
past if a customer had a
water leak that W&lt;lS no fault
of the Syracuse Water
Department credi t was
given to that customer's bill
but now that arbitrary prat·
12 P AGES
tice ha' been ended though
A3 not withotlt offering the residents so me protection
B2-4 .aga inst an unforeseen water
leak.
Bs
Accompanying !----,;;_.- .
Syracuse's new water sysA:3 tem is volut)tary water leak. L....,..._ _;_________.:.____...._________../,j.._...,..;.;,...;:.:,__.J

Details on Page A2

INDEX

Obituaries
Sports
Weather
~j

A4
As
13 Section

A6

2006 Ohio Vallt!)' Publi~hin)o; Cu.

•

insurance offered by the vii!age to res idents in the event
that a major leak occurs.
The water leak insurance
prqgratil begin; on Sept. I ·
and .:nds Aug. 3 1. 2007.
The fcc. which can be
Please see Leak, AS

Swift reports
drug arrests ·in
Middleport
STAFF REPORT
NEWS©MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BSERGENT@MYD~ILYSENTINEL .COM

To place an ad please contact:
Dave or Brenda
at 992-2155

· Please see Alcohol, AS

OBITUARIES

WEATHER

sComin~:

unu Ribs Festival.
Mrs. Barnhart wlto is a
rc&gt;ident of Pomeroy respectfully ' tared that she felt in
thi s regard the village was
using her mone y as a taxpay·
er to have a. "part y" on the
parking lot during the eve nt s
where alcohol is served.
Otllcr residems in favor of
no alcohol on the parking lot
took
iss ue
with
the
Budweiser banner.s · and
inflatable beer bottles that
can be seen fro m the road
during the festi vals.

Beth Sergenl/photo

If you have a bru sh fire or a fuel spill , at least in Pomeroy, 'who you gonna call?' No. not
Ghostbusters but the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department wh ich kept busy yesterday
responding to a br~sh fire on State Route 681 and a fuel s pi ll in the Rite Aid Pharmacy
parking tot. The brush frre was small and contained but this fue l spill {caused by a hole in
a vehicle 's fuel tank) left behind around 10 gallons of gasoline which was around $30 .09
on the pavement as well a:; a potential fire hazard until the firefighters cleaned up the
scene. It's not a glamo rous job but when the call CSJt1'1es the firemen respond. Who else
you "gonna" cal l?

'

•

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Chief of Police
Bruce Swift reported that in
tile last I0 days his departm ~n t along · with personnel
from tile Meigs Count y
Sheriff's Ollicc have executed ~ ea rcb '"arrant.-; and
made the following arrests
in an effort fo eradicate the
vi llage,of dru gs.
Sw.ift report s that Mark
Gart in. Athens. was arrested
this past Sunuay and
charged with po"cssion of
approximately 10 gratm of
crack cocaine. The arrest
was _made by officers from
both the Middleport and
Mei gs CoLtnty Sheriff's
Offi ce.
In a ,.;paratc incident on
Ju l) 2. &lt;lllic ers of the
Police
Middleport
Departm ent and Mei gs
Please see Arrests, AS

�•

:The Daily ~tinel ,

PageA2

NATION • WORLD.

Tuesday, July 11,

IRAQIS· TURN TO FAKE IDS TO PROTECT
THEMSELVES FROM INCREASING SECTARIAN VIOLENCE
guished in lraq by tribe or
clan, or because they refer to
followers of Muhammad
BAGHDAD, _Iraq - A
who split over who should
m
eastern
bookstore
lead Islam after the prophet
Baghdad is getting more
died in the 7th century.
customers these days, but
Residential areas also can be
they aren't looking for
telling as they are increass6mething to read. The
ingly segregated, with resiowner sells fake IDs. a
dents fleeing sectarian
booming business as Iraqis
attacks.
· try to hide their identities in
~ Sunni names include Abu
· hopes of staying alive .
Bakr, Omar or Othman. who
it 's nearly
.
Although
are particularly reviled by
· impossible to distinguish
Shiite
extremists who perbetwe·en a Sunni and a Shiite
ceive them as having
. by . sight,. names can be
usurped power from Imam
telling. Surnames refer to
Ali,
the prophet 's cousin and
· tribe and clan, while first
the Shiites · most revered
· names are often chosen to
saint.
Typically Shiite names
honor historical figures
are
Abdul Zahra and
revered by one sect but
Moussawi.
. sometimes despised by the
Sufyan Mahmoud . a 36other.
year-old
Sunni
grocer
For about $35 , someone
Sufyan
_ the
named
for
Abu
with a common Sunni name
pre-Islamic
ruler
of
Mecca
· like Omar could become
· Abdui-Mahdi, a Shiite name
AP Photo whose descendants opposed
·that might provide safe pas- A local Iraqi displays two 10 cards he made for the same person; one with a Sunni name lmam Ali _ paid $30 for
sage through dangerous and one with a Shiite name, outside of his shop, Monday, in Baghdad, lr&lt;Jq. Rising sectar- false papers with the neutral
ar~~s. · · fak ID
d
ian violence 'in Iraq has led to a booming business in fake IDs as Sunnis ·and Shiites adopt Arabi~ name of Mohammed
Ahmed Mahmoud.
got t a
.lef f car thto new names to avoid being singled out for death.
I
pro ec myse
rom
e
.
Some Iraqis recall having
Most of his customers are false identification papers to
Shiite militias who are ' vice versa," he said. "It 's avoid attacks by Sunni-led
deploying , in Baghdad and illegal, but one can under- insurgents.
Shiite drivers and constru~- avoid persecution during
Just last month, masked tion workers planning to Saddam's rule, but the prachunt Sunms at fake check- stand why they do it"
points," said Omar Abdul
The problem was thrust gunmen stopped two mini- work in Sunni neighbor- tice was rare until recently
. Rahman, a 22-year-old um- into the spotlight Sunday vans .carrying students hoods, with prices ranging because the former regime
versity student. He refused when masked Shiite ~unmen northeast of Baghdad, from 5,000 - Iraq dinars kept tight control over its
to give the name on his fake ambushed Sunnis in ~estern ordered the passengers off, ($3.S0) for a card that looks subjects.
ID.
.
.
Baghdad, singling out those separated ShitJes from Sunni like one issued during
"Under Saddam it used to
The growmg u~c of take with names commonly used Arabs, and killed the 21 Saddam Hussein's regime to be shameful , but now everyIDs reflects the sp•ke m vto- by Sunnis to be killed .
Shiites "in the name of 50,000 Iraqi dinars ($35) for body's doing it," the booklence be)ween Sunms and
Wissam Mohammad al- lslam," a witness said.
a modem version.
seller said.
Shiites since the Feb. 22 Ani, a 27-year-old Sunni
Making fake IDs is relaShiite militiamen, who are
A newspaper commentator
bombing of a revered Shiite . calligrapher, said his false tively low-tech, and vendors widely blamed for much of
k' 1
d 1 ·
mosque in Samarra _ an identification card has a can be found in empty hous- the· sectarian violence, allow moe tng Y suggeste raqts
should turn .to the Bible
attack that triggered reprisal Shiite name and it saved his es and in alleys.
him to operate because he instead of Islam 10 find
killings of Sunnis and life when he was approac,Jed
The bookstore owner, agr~d 10 turn in any Sunnis names for their children.
pushed the country to the by gunmen.
whose shop is in a predomi- who wander into his store.
He said the !D business
"According to the present
brink of civil war. ·
"When they saw it, they nantly Shiite neighborhood
spiked
after
the
bombing
in
·
sectarian
concepts, fathers
Interior Ministry Maj. let me go," he said, adding and declined to give his
should choose 'neutral
Gen. Mahdi al-Gharawi said that two young men standing name for fear of reprisals, Samarra.
'N
bod
d'd
h
h
officials are aware fake IDs with him at a bus stop in the said he buys blank IDs from
' o
y 1 t e c ange names' such as Jesus, Adam.·
from
Shiite
to Sunni before or Abraham that have nothare common but have more Jihad neighborhood were print shops. He then fills in
important things to focus on seized.
the llesired information and that, when the real ·sectarian ing to do with the two sec,
tarian camps," Sabah al_such as stopping violence.
Shiites are the majority !n adds photos _ a process tension began," he said.
Sunni
and
Shiite
names
Lami
wrote in the indepen"They are Issuing Sunni Iraq, but ·some Shiites also known in the Baghdad street
often can easily be distin- dent al-Mashriq newspaper.
IDs in the Shiite areas and seek alternate identities to as "the change."

BY KIM GAMEL

China says Security Council has agreed to continue discussing North Korea resolution
BY EDITH M. LEDERER

members _ decided not to
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
press for·· a vote Monday
"while the diplomacy in
UNITED NATIONS . Pyongyang proceeds." .
Supporters . of a resolution
"We think it's important to
that would impose limited keep
the
focus
on
sanctions on North Korea Pyongyang, whiCh after all is
agreed to delay a vote in the the source of this problem,
·hope that China can pressure and to provide maximum
Pyongyang to return to six- support for, and leverage on
party talks on its nuclear pro- the Chil)ese mission to
. gram and halt missile tests, Pyongyang." he said.
U.S. Ambassador John
On July 5, North Korea
Bolton said Monday.
test-fired seven missiles,
Ambassadors from the five apparently' including a longveto-wielding nations on the range one that potentially
Security Council _ who are could reach the United
divided over sanctions _ met · States.
with' Japan, which spon sored· The United States wants
· the resolution, as a Chinese North Korea to return to the
delegation arrived in N01th moratorium on ballistic mis. Korea pledging friendship sile launches from the
Korean peninsula and to not
and deeper ties.
Bolton told reporters after only return to the six-party .
the meeting that the resolu- talks but implement the joint
lion's supporters _ including statement agreed to by the
the U.S., Britain, France and six parties in September, he
other European council said.

In that statement, North
Korea made a commitment
to abandon "all nuclear
weapons
and
existing
nuclear programs and returning at an early date" to the
Nui:lear Nonproliferation·
Treaty. The six parties _ the
two Koreas, the United
States, China, Japan and
Russia _ also reaffirmed that
the goal of the talks "is the
verifiable denuclearization of
the Korean Peninsula in a
peaceful manner."
According to a Japanese
news report,. Japan and the
United States suggested to
China that a vote on the
sanctions resolution could be
avoided if North Korea
renewed the moratorium on
missile testing and returned
to six-party talks.
Asked about the Kyodo
News agency report, which
cited unidentified Japanese
officials, Bolton replied,

"Well I think that's basically
what I've stated somewhat
differently. The point is, we
want to keep the spotlight on
Chinese
diplomacy
in .
Pyongyang, which is the
source of this problem."
But when pressed, he
refused to say whether the
United States would agree to
drop the sanctions resolution .
if North Korea returned to
talks, agreed to implement
the September agreement,
and reimposed the moratoriurn. He said there were "a lot
of ifs" and Washington. wants
to wait to see what comes out
of the Chinese meetings in
Pyongyang.
That's why the sponsors of
the resolution ''will reevaluate on a dt~!ly basis whether
to proceed wtth a vote on
the Japanese draft, Bolton
said.
.
.
The Chtnese delegatton.
which is led by Vice Premier

Hui Liangyu and includes
China's main nuclear negotiator, Vice Foreign Minister
Wu Dawei, arrived in
Pyongyang on a six-day visit
to celebrate the 45th anniversary of a friendship treaty
between the neighbors. A
North Korean delegation was
also expected in C::hina on
Tuesday to mark the treaty
anmversary.
China's U.N. Ambassador
Wang Guangya told reporters
after Monday morning's
meeting with envoys from
Russia, the United States ,
Britain, France and Japan
that "the members have different views so we agreed
that we will continue consultations about that."
China and Russia oppose
sanctions and have been
pressing for a weaker
Security Council presidential
statement, which is not legally binding.

BY VINNEE TONG
AP BUSINESS WRITER ·

WHITE PLAiNS, N.Y. Labor uncc11ainty is threatening the future of regional air1ine Comair. its president said
Monday as the Delta subsidiary sought bankruptcy
coutt permission to void its
contract with flight attendants.
Comair "inc ., based in
Erbnger. Ky.. a Cincinnilti
suburb. and its flight attendants have been negotiating
for more than six months
over the last unresolved contract among the bankrupt airline 's unions. Pilot ~ and
mechanics had reached
agreements, but the company
said those deals _ whtch cannot take effect until all unions
agree on terms _ may now
need to be renegotiated.
Those deals were contingent
on an overall restructuring
plan.
The company was in court
Monday to decide a , second
request to impose changes in
work duties and wage Cuts on
its 970 flight attendants. The
first such motion was r~jected
in April by U.S. Batlkruptcy
Judge Adlai Hardin, who said
the company had not bargaineu in good faitl1.
The hearing was to continue Tuesday.
"The inability to reach
agreetnent with the (union)
and achieve competitive cost
levels in the near-tetm is robbing Comair of the opportunity to C(&gt;mpete for new .flying:·
Prc&gt;ident
Don
Bomhorst said.
He said the "shrinking" air
carrier has lost chances to bid
for contracts with Northwest
Airlines
Corp.
and
Continental Airlines lnc.,
both of which cited Comair's
labor si.tuation as a weakness.
He said regional carriers as a .
group are suffering from
lower demand, and that
Comair has returned six
planes and so far this year
. had parked 10 others.
Bomhorst said it urgently
needed to reduce its operating '
costs and that its wages, even
after the ems, would be the
highest among flight attendants at rival regional caniers.
1

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Thursday, July 27

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BABIES! J'he Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Ill Courl Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline for submission, .
Friday, July 20

Simply send your baby's
photograph along with the coupon
to the left with your payment of
$8.00, and we'll do the rest.

The Daily
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111 Court St.

Community Calendar

.

Club and
organizations
Tuesday. July II
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Mu sic Boosters
monthly meeting changed
to 7 p.m. on July II. due to
Independence Day holiday.
High school band room .
SYRACUSE - ·Syracuse
Community Center Board
of Directors, 7 p.m. at the
community ~enter.
POMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce
Business
Minded Lun~hcon , noon,
Pomeroy Library, lunch by
Hometown Market.
Thursday, July 13
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
at the hall. Refreshments.
POMEROY - . Alpha
Iota Masters, picnic at noon
at the home of Joan Corder
with co-hostesses, Jane
Walton an Julia Proctor.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club,
luncheon meeting at the
home of Chris Chapman.
Guest speaker, Norma
Torres, R. N. on breast
health. Joy Bentley anu
Barbara Koker to talk on
conditioning t1owers.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 will meet
at 7 p.m. at the hall in

Tuppers Plains. Dinner will
be at 6:30 p.m.
Monday, July 17
ATHENS - Southea st
Oho Woodl~nd Intere st
Group 7 p.m. at the Athens
County extension Office,
with Dr. Mike Tatro, an
emergency room dtrau ma
physician
at
Marietta
Memorial Hospital to give
program on emergency
issues and first aid treatments in the woods. For
more information , call 5938555.

Birthdays
Tuesday, July 18
POMEROY
Bill
Matlack will pbserve hi s
90th birthday on July 18.
Cards may be sent to him at
34784 State Route 7,
Pomeroy, Ohio. 45769.

Reunions
Sunday, July 16
ALFRED - Arthur and
Nelson Watson family
reUJlion will be held at the
Jame s and Debbie Watson
home in Woodie Grove,
Alfred. Take ~overed dish
for the dinner at noon.
Sunday, july 22
ALBANY - A reunion
of the descendants of Joel

and Lydia Staneart will be
held at Lake Snowden in
the Big Oak shelter house,
Albany. at noon . Each family is to take a picnic lunch
and lawn chairs. For more
informatoin call 992-5502.

Wednesday, July 12
POMEROY ~ Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting , 5 p.m.,
Health
Meigs County
Department.
RACINE
The
Southern Local Board of
Education will meet at 7:30
p.m. for the purpose of discussing replacement o( a
board member and treasurer.

Church events
Monday, July 17
TUPPERS PLAINS
Vacation Bible school at St.
Paul United Methodist
Church, July 17-20, 6 to
8:30 p.m. Ages kindergarten and up. Parents and
grandparents invited to
anend. Theme is Treasure
island.

Scouts enjoy camp outing
REEDSVILLE Big
Bend . day camp was held
recently at the Forked Run
State Park with a variety of
activities being carried out.
Susan Buchanan was the
camp director. assisted 'by
Patti Dunn, and Tina Roush
as bus'iness manager.
Each day' of camp started
with the flag ceremony and
song along with announcements of the day.
On Thursday of camp,
each unit set up their tent,
table, clothesline, dishwashing and handwashing
station, and worked on their
skits/songs for family night.
Additionally, girls participated in tye dying their day
camp !-shirt, made their
unit nags, made clay necklaces and decorated their
water bottles and hats.
Archery was offered to_
the junior-cadette units with
Jeff Jones, along with the
help of his sons, teaching it.
_Fun games like water relay
and squirt gun games and
hiking were also enjoyed.
On the second day, sun
prints and wish sticks were
. made. The girls went hiking and arrow head hunting.
Necklaces were made from
the arrow heads that were
found on' the hunt. Also
enjoyed were a savenger
hunt, water games, singing
and outdoor cooking. · The
juniors on up were able to
stay overnight at the camp.
They prepared anp made
their own dinner and took a
three-hour night hike.
Saturday,
the
girls
enjoyed a weiner roast,
along with marshmallows
and banana ·boats. In the
afternoon, a traditional Ash
Ceremony followed by a
family day with skits and
songs by each unit. The
"Secret Snooper" inspected
the camp units and each
camper won a medal of
honor.
Units were as follows:
Boy Reptiles - Hrandi
Lyons,
unit
Leader,
Shannon Spaun. Bobbi Hill,

DEAR ABBY: You
advised the 16-year-old girl
who said she had been
"replaced" by her mother' s
dogs that you could guarantee that ·her mom loved her
and her brother more than
the dogs . Don 't be so sure!
When I first met my husband, one of the first things
he told me was that the only
family
member
that
received any attention from
his parent s w·as their dog. I
laughed , thinking it was
funny. but it proved to be
· true.
This was an extremely
dysfunctional family. Both
parents ignored my husband .
and his. ~rother and fawned
over the aug. They took the
dog for walks, special icc
cream treats everv week and
rides in the car. They didn't
even bothvr to allend my
hu sband's college graduation. Over the years, we 'd
receive detailed letters
about the dog's activities,
but never once did they call
to wish my husband "happy
birthday." Both brothers
needed years of psy&lt;.:hotherapy.
After 33 years of marriage; my mother-in -law
was tinally widowed. After
meeting the "love of her
life," she confessed she had
never loved her husband,
never wanted kids and neither had he, and announced
to her sons she would "no
longer require them"!
Millions of people own
dogs. and their children
don't feel unloved and want
to sit and cry. This young
girl senses her mother doesn't care for her. We had a
dog. and I KNEW my mom
loved us more because she

Public meetings .
Tuesday, July II
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village . Council . regular
meeting, 7 p.m., Rutland
Civic Center.

OH

GALI.JPOLIS - The
Ariel - Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre is
r.Ieased "' to
announce
'Classi c Movie Night",
featuring
the
classic
movie -musical ,
"The
Sound of Music", scheduled for Thursday, July
20, at 7 PM .
"The Sound of Music".
starring Julie Andrews, is
a favorite movie for millions of fans around the
world.
Originally produced at a cost of $8 .5
million , it was the first
movie to achieve ticket
· sales of more 1han $100
million.
Joseph Wright. · ex8cu-

2006

Sons come in distant second
to dog in parents' affection
.

dogs provide objects on
which to focus the love that '
she desperately wants to
shower on her children, but ·
is unable to because that
love is rebuffed. Obviou sly,
Dear
the dog s fill sorne kind of
Abby
void. MOM WHO' S
BEEN THERE
DEAR ABBY: Besides
owning three Labs, I am a
volunteer
parent
for
Labrador
rescue
here
in
told us every night and
spent time with us. This Florida. One puppy is a lot
mom must not be doing of work; two are practically
that. - WIFE lN SEAT- a full-time job. If only
" Replaced by Dogs" would
TLE
DEAR WIFE: Thank you pitch in, help with training,
for the wake-up call. I have walking , bathing, feeding
to confe ss that I was sur- and playing with the pupprised by some of the feed - pies. it would give her mom
back I received. ~egardin g extra time to spend with her
and her brother. She would
that leller. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: P~t s dol)'t also be spending quality
talk back, refuse to be help- time with her mom . ~ LAB
ful or ask for money. All . LOVER IN FLORIDA
DEAR ABBY: Several
they want is love and food.
They ·don't ask where years ago,. my boss wa s
you've been and they're called into the school counalways happy when you selor's otlice because her
come home. Their love is daughter had complained
unconditional.
PET that her mother showed
more love and attention to
LADY IN FLORIDA
DEAR ABBY: When my the dogs than to her.
son started getting older. "Shelly" promised 10 showsuddenly his mom became er both· her children with the
either invisible or an embar- same love she showed her
rassment to him. I heard dogs. Needless ·to say. it
from others what a charm- lasted only two days before
ing young man he had the children were tired of
become - so nice and being hugged. kissed, and
friendly ~ but you'd never told "I love you" all day
know it when he came long! PATRICIA IN
home. I barelv heard the CUMMINGS. GA.
sound of his voice unless he
Dear Abby is written by
wante&lt;.l me to iron a shirt Abigail 1-'an Buren, also
for him , or he needed gas known as ]ea11ne Phillips,
money. Then he would sud- and was founded by her
denly becoll)e very nice!
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Maybe Mom is using the Write . Dear Abby at
dogs to ·soothe · the hurt of www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
not being allowed into her Box 69440, Los Angele.~,
children 's lives. Mayhe the CA 90069.

Ariel schedules auditons Dinner honors
Dillingers
for production ·
Submitted photo
S~out camps open and close the day's activities with ftag
ceremonies. Here at day camp held at Forked Run State
Park, some of the girls conduct an opening ceremony.

Kim McVey, adult helpers,
Austin Arnold, Larry Dunn,
Logan Dunn, John Ginther,
Kaleb Hill, Brad Roush,
Christian Roush, Nick
Roush .
Dancing Daisies Dawna Arnold and Patricia
Cook, unit leaders; Rae
Baker,
Jessica
Cook,
Madison Council, Kimberly
Duncan, Madelyn Hill,
Kayla Lipscomb, Taylor
Swartz.
B'rownie Scarecrows Debi King and Deb Baker,
unit leader; Rachel Brooks,
Katelyn Edwards, Leia
Gilmore , Ariel Lawson,
Taylynn Rockhold, Justine
Smith, Kay lee Werry.
Brownie, The Wet and
Wild Green Gals - Brenda
Grady and Robyn Parker,
unit Leaders; Kari Arnold,
AsHley. Buchanan, Whitney
Council, Stephanie Grady.
Madison Kuhn , Taylor
Parker,
Kayla
Spaun,
Amber Sturgeon, Tiffany
Tripp.
Junior Wild Willows Dee ·Swartz and Susie
Pierce, unit leaders , Amy
Cremeans. adult helper;
Alyssa Cremeans , Kim
Deaver, . Lauren Dunn,
Katelynn Ginther, Katie
Hill, . Kayla Lee, Tess
Phelps, McKenzie Pierce.

Cassie Roush, Bethany
Spaun.
Junior Goof Troop Steve Grady, Linda Putman,
unit Leader.s , Terrie Houser,
adult
helper:
Willow
Adams. Abby Collins,
Kendra Haning, Abigail
Houser, Megan McGee,
Lindsey Putman , Hai'iey
Roush, Breahna Thompson,
Victoria Walker, Vai'erie
Wolfe .
Crazy Cool Cadelles ~
Dawn Romines and Jerrena
Ebersbach , unit leaders·;
.Ravenne Reed, Catherine
Grady. Ashley Romines.
and Joyce Romines. Hailey
Ebers bach assisted in several activities as well. Reed.
Grady, and Joyce Romines
earned 24 of iheir 25
required hours for their PA
patch. Ashley Romines
earned 24 ,of the 25 require&lt;.!
hours for her Contributing
to Girl Scouting Pin .
The Reedsville United
Methodist Church provided
storage and refrig~~ration for
supplies. Bill anh. Shirley
Cogar and Frank Bi se and
the Reedsville Christian
Bikers . provided. needed
wood, and Jeff Jone s shared
his archery skills , with the
scouts.

GALLIPOLIS The
. Ariel Jr. Theatre, one of
. the resident performing
groups housed in the Ariel
Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre.
has scheduled auditions for
it's upcoming production
of. "The Jungle Book ".
Auditions for this nonmusical production will be
Monday, July 17 and
Tuesday, July 18 from 6
to 8 p.m.. on stage.J in the
Morris
and
Dorthy
Haskins Ariel Theatre.
"The Jungle Book" , is
an imaginative play based
on "The Mowgli Stories",
Rudyard
Kipling.
by
Performances are scheduled for mid-Septmebcr.

A c.ast of approximately
·· 20 young actors, grades 212, is needed for this ·production.
No advance
preparation is needed, and
no experience is necessary
to audition.
"The Jungle Book": wil,l
be directed by Kim Vanco,
and produc~ct by Ariel
executive director, Joseph
Wright. .Audition dates
for all planned 2006-2007
productions can be found
on the all-new Ariel website; www.arieltheatre .org
&lt;http://www.arieltheatre.org
&gt; . Additional information
may also be ontained by
contacting the Ariel box
office at 740-446~ARTS
(2787).

SHADE - Lloyd and
Dorisd Dillinger were hon- ·.
ored
as
"l1ometown
Heroes" for their serviCe to
the tommuity at the appreciation dinner held recently
at the Shade Community
Center.
The award was cosponsored by Modern Woodmen
of America and the Shade
Community
Center
Association. The event celebrated the first anniversary
of the official opening of the
center. Brenda Ruth emceed
the program.
Steve Kane, president of
the association also recognized several SCCA members for outstanding contributions.to the s·uccess of the
initial year of operation and .
activity at the Center.

Local woman graduates PROUD TO BE A
. from seminary · PART OF YOUR LIFE.
I

POMEROY --,- Dorothy graduated from Meigs High
Leilheit of Pitsburgh, Pa .. School
m
1996 and
recent! v graduated from
Pttsburgh
Theological Marietta Colleg~ in 2000.
the
Seminary
of '
Presbyterian
Church
(U .S.A.).
She received the degree
of Master of Art and
Religious Studies. Her thesis

was

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailysentin'el.com
•

'·Pos..sibililies :

Thornton Wilder. Process
Thought and Our Town.
Dorothy is the dau ghter
of

Roger

and

Lenura

Leitheit of Pomeroy. She

Two killed in fire at
fat processing plant

ClNCINNATI (AP) - One
worker was killed in a fire at a
fat processing plant. and
anod1er employee died Ute foltive director of Tb e Ariel rently equipped to pre sent lowing day, the coroner said .
A
Ann Carson Dater film presen,tations .
The fire slatted about 12:30
Performing Art s Centre profes sional
technical p.m. Saturday at the six-story
says . "Classic
Mov-ie production company will manufacturing and warehu~se
Night is an · experimem pre sent the movie using a building owned by Minnesotafor us'. We have fo cused digital,
rear-projectiot • hased Origo. a cOmptmy that
on only live performance system. e4uipped with an urocesses fat for animal feed .
One worker was killed
since our rennovations adv.anced sound sy&gt;tem.
began in the late 1980's. to create a quality nHwie- Saturday, and the second died
However, many of our magic experience.
Sunday at University Hospital.
guests remember attendFuture Classic Movie Hamilton Cotmty Coroner
ing movie s in our facility. Ni ghts will be planned o· dell Owens said.
TI1e c01:oner declined to
when it operated as a
based
on
the
public
rel~ase
the victims' names.
movie
1\Vlouse.
The
response
.
Tickets
for
A tilird victim rema ined i"
Gallipoli&gt; 'rhcatre, years
ago . We are hoping our "Clas sic Movie Night ". &lt;.:titical condition at the ho&gt;pi
community will support are $5 per person. i For tal Sunday. The Cincinnati
this venture and take a more information please Enquirer ~ported. A nur;ing
step back in time · with ·{Contact The · Ariel box supervisor said Monday &gt;he
office at 740-446-ARTS couldn't discuss whether that
us."
person was a patient.
The Ariel is not cur- (2787) .

Cory...

Classic movie night plans announced

A Special supple~ent to highlight babies, ·
Your Baby's Name Here Ages newborn to four years old.
1 Baby's

Tuesday, July u,

2006

Comair president:
Lack of a labor
deal threatens
airli~e's future

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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.. The Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentine]

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OPINION

Tuesday, July u,

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
V{Ww.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publtsher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Edttor
.

Congress shall malu 110 law respecting an
establishmwt of rl'iigion, or prohibiting the
/ree exercise tilereo}; or abridginJ! the freedom of
speech, or of the l"'ess; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition tl1e
Governmemfilr a redress of grirvances.
-

The Ftrst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

•

TODAY IN HISTORY
Tod.ty "Tucsdd). luly II the 192nd d.ty of 2006 There
are 173 d.tys lett 111 the )e.u
Toddy's Htghltght tn Ht&gt;lllt)
On July II I~()~ Vtcc Ptestclent A,tron Bun mortall y
wounded !OtlllCI TtC.ISUI'&gt; Scctct.trv Alex.mder Hamilton
Ju11ng " pt&gt;tol duel tn Wec h.111 ken, N J
On th" d.tte
In 1533. Pope Clement VII cxu1mm untcated England's
Kmg Hent) VIII
In 1798. the US M,umc Cot tb w," fmm.1lly te-estabhshed
by ,t congtcsqon.tl ,tel th&lt;~t .tbu ue,ucd the US M,trll1e Band
In 1'!3t Prestdcnt h ,mklm Koosevclt became the first
chtef exet:ut 1ve to Ut~ ve1 thH1ugh the Pdnllm.t C,m,tl
In 1955 the US Atr l'otce Ac.tdcmy WdS dedtcated at tts
lem por,uy &lt;.JUdllCts. Lowty Au ~ orcc H.tsc 111 Colorado
In 1977. the Med.1l ol Ftccuom w.ts .m&lt;.tr&lt;.leu posthumously to the Revet end Manm I uther Kmg Jt
In I979. the .tbandoncu U S sp,tce stdtt on Sky lab made a
spect,tcu l.tr rclutn to E.utlt. bUIIllltg up 111 the .tlmosphere and
showenng deb11s met the Indt.m Oce.m .md Austr&lt;tlta
In 1980. Amenc.m host.tgc Rtchatu I Queen. freed by Iran
aflet etght mnnths ol c,!pltvtty bcl.tuse ol poor health, lett
Teht .tn lot Swttzerland
In 19'!5. the Umwd Stdtcs normaltzed telauon s Wtlh
V1eln.1111

Ten ) e.tts .tgo An Au I'm cc F- 16 Jel trymg to make an
emergency landmg sl,unmed tnto .t house 111 Pens,tCola. Fla,
settmg the home on t11e, ktllmg a 4-year-old boy and badly
burmng h" mother (The pilot ejected safely )
Ftvc yc,us .tgo The Democrauc -Jed Scn,lte voted to har
co.tlmtntng ami lHI ami gas Jnllmg on pmltnc tedcrally protec ted land tn the West dc.tltng .t ltcsh blow to Prestdenl
Bush s enctgy ptoduc·uon pJ,m,
One yew .tgo &lt;\Lop .ti -Qatd.t lteutcn.mt ,mJ three other tertor sus pects csc.1ped ltnn1 .t US mtln,uy l&lt;~tlut Alghamstan:
(TI1c tdcnttl) ol Om.u .tl -i".tt ouq tsn't ,tcknowledged unttl
Novembet 2005.)
Today\ Bn1hd.1ys Acu css Brell Some ts "82 Allor Tab
Huntct ts 75 Acuess Sus.tn Sc.tlnrth H.tyes ts 63 Stnger Jeff
H.um.t (N itty Gntty Dut B.tndlts 5Y. Actot Bruce McGtllts
56 Smge1 Bonme Pomlet " 5fJ Actot Stephen Lang IS 54.
Actress Mmdy Sterltng IS 53 Act te" Sela Ward ts 50.
Reg~ae stnget fvh ch.tel Kosc I Black Uhuru ) ts 49 Smger
Peter Murphy "49 Actot M,u k Lester ts 48 Jazz mustctan
Ktrk Whalum IS .JK Stnget Sut.mnc Vega ts 47 Rock gutlm tst RKhte Sambor.t (Bon Jo\ t)ts 47 Actress Lt sa Rinna ts
41 Rock mustct.tn Scoll Shn ncr IWcezcr) ts 41 Actress
Dchhe Dunmnp IS .JIJ Ac tot Justtn Ch,unbct s ts 36 Actor
Mtclldcl Roscnb.tumts 1.) Country stnger Scotty Emeuck ts
11 R.t~pct Ltl' Ktnl ts .1 I K.tppcr Ltl ' Zane ts 24. Pop-j3zZ
smgct- 111ti'ICtdll Petet Ctncotlt ts 23 Actor D.tvtd Henn ts 17.
Thou~ht lot Tod.t} You come tnlo the world alone and
you go out ol the'"" ld .tlonc yet 11 seems to me you are more
alo ne \1 lui ~ ltvtng th, m even gu mg ,md commg .. - Em1ly
Cm. Can.Jdtan at li st .!ltd .tuthot ( 187 I- 1'!45)

In the I970s, as a young
deputy shen tt 111 Kmg
County, Wa&gt;h, Rep Dave
Retchen (R) had hts throat
slashed whtle trytng to break
up a domestic dtspute
Retchert's attacker spent
time in a mental institutton,
then was released Later.
Shenff Reichert made an
efton to tinct out what happened to the man He found
he was teachmg school 111
Colorado.
Retchen recounted the tale
to fellow Republicans last
month as part of an effo11 to
get them to back a btll
enablmg school dtstrtcts to
tap into national cnmmal
databases before they lure
employees.
It turned out that the school
distncl that h~red Reichen's
anackcr
had
checked
Colorado d.ttabases, but had
no tdea about hts cnmmal
record m the Evergreen St;~te
The btll Retchen was
boostmg, the School Safely
AcqUtnng Faculty Excellence
Act. passed the House almost
unammmtsly 111 June - the
tirst legJSiatt ve success tor the
GOP's "Suburb.tn Agenda," a
set of btlls destgned to appeal
to the maJOnty ol Amencan
voters who li ve 111 the sub,
utbs.
The agenda ts the bt aJnchtld of Rep M.trk Ktrk, RIll., one of Congress' most
effecttve moderates, who Has
sold II to a growmg group ot
conservalt ves and the\,House
GOP leadershtp
Ktrk. who represent s
North-suburban Chtcago,
told me, " I noticed that the
Republican Pa~ty was led by
mostly Southern and rural

McLaughlin's pollmg inch- lltler 1h" month
cates that 70 percent to 80
Ponet's btll ret.uns the suppercent of voters say they'd pan ot Rep Mark Udall . Dbe more likely to ~ uppon a Colo And Rep Meltssa
Republican candtdate know- Bean. D-Ill is co-sponson ng
mg that he or she favors Items the Delct111g Onltne Predato"
Mot1Dtt
111 Ihe agen&lt;.la
Act sponsm ed by Rep
Kordcdle
"I suspect that mthe 36 dis- Mtchael Fttzp.ltnck. R-P.1
tricts where lhts eledton wtll He also ts eo-sp0nson ng her
be dectded. the suburban onhne-ptedator btll
agenda ts gomg \O be l.tlked
Retchcn. who g,n tled lame
about
a
lot,"
House
MaJOttty
101 c&lt;~ptun n g Washmgton 's
Members. starting wuh
(Speaker) Denny Hasten. R- Wh1p Roy Blunt. R-Mo. told "rlrecn Rl\ et ktllet .'' tS sponsor ot the ,mit-gang bill
Ill , from the cornfields of me
Even
some
Democrats
Tatgeted Kep Cldy Shaw. Rlllmots. And the Democr.tltc
P.trty is led hy Members rep- have stgneJ on to specttic F!.I "" ..,ponsonng the
rese ntmg the central urban btlls. not enurely to the11 "~OJ Ktds" htll. and Rep Jnn
cores
(House Mtnonty Jeadet shtp 's · likmg All the Gerldch. R-Pd. ts promoung
Leader) Nancy -Pelo&gt;t. D- btlls are lead-sponsored by a measu1e to hel p lwn1ers
on
Ihe preserve open sp.tCcs
C tltf , is tmm central San Republicans
Democrats'
2006
target
list,
Franctsco. The Amencan
Ktrk ts alrc.tdy wotkmg on
w1d top Democrats have tned .1 "second wave ' ol suburb,m
people lt~ e in between
"Washmgton may thmk to get the11 Members to avmd btl is, mcludmg one sponsored
thts is small-bore It's not the co-sponso11ng them
The school sdlety btJI, lor by Rep Deborah Pryce, Rwar on terrm. But thts ts an
Ohto thdl would allow workagenda that people care about example. was le,td-sponsnted ets who lose, theit JObs to
by Rep Jon Pot1Ct. R-Ncv..
111 thetr everyday lrves v.ho
lept esents subwb,m Lts keep thetr he,tlth msurance
thetr ktds' safety, health care .
Iot ltk. noljust 18 months. as
thetr abtlity to send thetr ktds Vegas In the Senate. K~rk pt o&gt;tded undet cut rent
told me the btll ts bcmg botto college •·
COB RA l.tw.
Bestdes the school-safety tled up hy Mmo111 y Le.1der
Another bt ll would give
measure, the agenda mcludes H.tn y Retd. D-Nev .. who's
a national "401 Ktds" savmgs liopmg tu see Pm1et defeated ledchers pemllsston to sc&lt;trch
dange tou s
Another measure that ong- students fot
account for college. a screen
weapons
wtthnut
ledr
of littto block predato,_ from con- mal Iy dill acted btparl tsan
tactmg chtldrcn at online chat support ts the He,tlth IT g~ltl o n.
i\1 one 111ne. I thought that
rooms and a btll settmg stan- Promotton Act. sponsot ed hy
dards tor computen ztng Rep. N,mcy John son. R- Ktrk's subutbdn .tgenda was
health records
Conn . whtch would set stan- sm,JII-bore and symbolic,
tormer
Ktrk got the tdea for a sufl.. dards tor computenzmg something ltkc
urbdn agend,t m early 2004, health
recmds,
wtdel) Ptestdenl Btl! Cltnton 's ddvomade a presentation on tt at deemed
necessary
for cacy of school umtomlS It
the party 's naltonal conven- unprovtng health qu&lt;~hly and won' t cute global v.m nung or
cdptul e Osamd b1n L,u.lcn,
uon m New York, formed " cost-sav1 ng
House GOP caucus around t1
However,
the
two but he's cotwtnced me tl's
and commtsstoned pollster Democrats on the btll. Reps htgger than th.tt And so has
John McLaughlin to test Shetla Jackson Lee (Texas) Democr,tttc hostthty
potential policy items.
(Mol/on Komlracke rs
and Anna Eshoo (Caltlomti!),
From an ongmal core of 22 abntptly dropped off ldst ner 11t11•e Nlttm oj Roll Call,
Members, the suburban cau- week as Johnson's btll was the nell'IJJ&lt;Jf'er of Capilol
cus has grown to 67 slated fot House flom actton H11!)

.

.

LOVE TR JANGLE I
THIEVERY PRO/YIOTED,
VIOLENCE ...

I.

FAIYIILY!

Bush alone decides what the law is

In a historic challenge to an
2002 as to alann our allies and
mcumbent
pres1dent,
the
cheer
our enemtes who use
LETTERS TO THE
Amencan Bar Association
these lawyers' definittons of
EDITOR
has created a task torce on
permisstble torture'" ways to
"Prestdenttal
S1gnmg
tecrutt
jthadtsls
Lette11 to the et/1101 ore "t'lc 0111&lt;' /li e\ ~ lwuld be le\S
Statements
and
the
Separdtion
Savage tound that Bush than WI! 11 o1&lt;/1 All !ttten w e \llh!f&lt;l tn echtm){, must l&gt;e
Nat
of
Powers
Doctrine."
To
more
by
h1s more than 750 stgnmg
"~"''" '""' "" tude add" 11 ancl teleplloue numl&gt;e1: No
Hentoff
than
750
bills
George
W.
statements evtsceratmg new
W\\l ~llecl /('/II'/ 1 11 11/ ''" pubi"J" tl Leite/ 1 1/wult! be m
laws - "has challenged mot e
(!,Orul rmtt w/du'\\111~ 1\Wn 1101 p e1 wmalme.\ . Letter.\ of Bush has stgned mto law, he
has
a4ded
a
"stgnmg
statetlulllb lo olgmu ::uflu/1 . . wuluulirtdllal\ \1 til not be tu.xeptlaws tl1an all pt ev tous admml'd fm tmhlu mum
ment" that ,he has the nght to
istr.ttisns comhined (that had
these
wholesale
ex
pansions
ol
tgnore
those
laws
1f,
among
challenged)
fewer than 600
~
~
presidential
powers
other reasons, the new statute
laws .. Moreover. · Bush 1s the
1
Savage notes: "The Bush- first prestdent stnce the I8U0s
contltcts wtth hts prestdential
1 authomy to protect nattonal -Cheney admuustratton has
who has ne ver vetoed ,1btll used
such
(stgnmg)
state(USPS
213-960)
secunty.
gtvmg
Congtes&gt; no chance to
Reader Servtces
Ohio Valley Publishing
Tlus pan1cular expans1on of ments to clatm for itsell t11e overnde hts ·Judgments' 111
Co.
prestdenttal powers - ovel- opuon of bypassmg a ban on the stgnmg statements ..
Correction Polley
Published every aflernoon Monday
ndmg
the 111ten1 and powers tonure (the McCam amend'I h1s prestdent 1s mdced
O ur mam c.a nGern 1n all stones IS to
th10ugh Fnday itt Court Street,
ment),
oversight
proviStons
111
ot Congress - ts, says the
unlljue among all lm predebe accural e It you know of an error
Second-class
Porneroy
Ohto
the
reviston
of
the
Patriot
Act
Amencan
Bar
Assoctatton,
cessol
s 111 Ius conviction tiMt.
1n a stor1 cull the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy
and
numerous
reqmrements
"of
great
consequence
to
our
as commandet 111 chte f
992 2156
Member· The Associated Press and
that
(the
admtmstr&lt;tllon)
proconstitultonal
system
of
govagamst the terronsls, he (conthe OhiO Newsp,F~per ASSOCia lton
vide
cenam
mfonnal
ton
to
emment,
and
its
delicate
sysPostm aster. Send address conec·
tmuall y bolstered by Cheney)
Our main number IS
!tons to The Dally Sentinel 111 Court
tem of checks and balances Congress"
ha.' the authonly to set dstde
(740) 992-2156
Also, '· in October · 2004, the separatton of powets
Streat Pomeroy Ohto 45769
and sepamtlon ot powers "
Department extensions are:
Agreemg. Arlen Specter, R- live months after the Abu when he sees fit
Subscription Rates
Pa , chamnan of the Senate Ghnub tonure scandal 111 lmq
The
Amencan
Bar
By earner or motor route
came
to
ltght,
Congress
Judtciary
Commttlee,
has
AssoCI.tlton 's lasktorce rcpon
News
1 10.27
One month
held a hearing on "stgnt ng p.ts~d a senes ol new rules on prest&lt;.lentt,tl stgntng st,tleEditor Charlere Hoefltch Ext 12
One year
' 123.24
and regulattons for mtlttary . menl s IS d11e 111 August. and I
statemems."
Datly
so•
Reporter Br•an Reed Ext 14
'
Semor
Ctttzen
rates
Th&lt;! ABA dectdeJ to call pnsons Bush stgned the pro- hope more reporters ,md edtReporter Beth Serget ~t Ext 13
.One month '
'9.24
publi c attcnJton to these u'm- vtstons mto law, then satd he tors other tlu n S&lt;~v.tge w1ll
One year
' 103.90
lateral dismpltons ol our rule could 1gnore them all "
P"Y attenuon to the lindmgs
Subscnbers sh ould remn 1n advance
Advertising
What
espectally
stuns
me
ts
ot
law
because
of
the
extraor&lt;tnd then get ' tcsponse:s
ciuect to the Da1ty Senttnel No sub·
Outside Sales Dave Hams E)(t 15
that
"One
provt
ston
m.tdc
dmanly
dtltgent
research
on
hom the prestdent .md newly
sc rtpl ton by matl permttled rn areato
, Outside Sales Bren da Davts Ext 16
wh43re home ea rner serv1ce tS ava tlBush's stgnmg statements by clear that mthl&lt;try lawyers can minted consututi(ln.tl scholars
Class /Ctrc • Judy Clark Ext 10
aOie
one repot1er. Ch&lt;trhe Savage give thetr commanders mde- Cheney .tnd Addtngton
wh.tl
ot the Boston Globe - evi- pendent advice on
Among the btparttsan I0Mail Subscription
would
conslltute.tonure
But
dence
that
a
lone
joumalist
mcmbct
ABA Task Force ts
General Manager
lnstde Meigs County
llush
declared
that
mtlttary
cUll
nse
above
the
qUtck;;and
Wtlltatn Sesstons. fOIII\CI
Chc~ r len"' Hoel llch Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32 26
at the 24-jJOur news cycle and Jav.yers could not contradtct lltrectot ol the FBI under
26 Weeks
'64 20
h1s .tdministi~Hton ·.., lawyer"'
52 Wee ks
s127 11
make a stgnt licant dtllcrcncc
Pt e . . ldents
Rccl!.!clll ' .md
l!:-ma\1
These are the Bush l.twye" Georg~ H W Busli Scsstuns.
In one ol hts ptobcs. Sav&lt;tge
Outstde Metgs County
revealed th,tl Vtce PtcStdent 111 the Justtce .md Defetbe WhO\\ .tS rli:"'O d fedcrdi CirCUit
1~ Wee ks
\53 55
Dtck Cheney .md hts chtel of departments who IMve so tudge. s.1ys "I thmk u\ very
Web
26 Weeks
' 107 10
staff. David Addington, are b,tdly ddvtsed the prestdent on mtpot1.1nt tm the people of
52 Weeks
'214 21
!
Nw&gt;A r~1y:larlysenlinel corr1
,_____ .
-- . ·-------~ Bu sh's duet &lt;~rcllttects for such p.,,ues LIS tur tw c smJ..:c tile Um tcJ Stutes 10 ll.! Ve tntst

r---------------- ---The Daily Sentinel

S'OMETHIN6
FOR THE
ENTIRE

OCCULT REFt;RENCES,

and tCi t,mcc that the ptestdent
IS nul gumg wound the law
The tlllp011dllCCot (IhiS ISSUe)
spe,lks t01 tlselt "
Ch,llr of the Task Fotce ts
Netl R Sonnett. ptesidentelect ol the Amencan
Judtc ulure Soctety. and ch.tll
ol such Hwaluable prevtuus
ABA Task Ft,tces "' those on
Domesltc Survetllance and
the Tt ea tment of Enemy
Combatants
Also on tile T.tsk F01 ce ts
con set vatt ve constttuttonal
scholm Bntce Fem. former
assoctate deputy .ttto111ey
ge neral under Prcstdent
J{c,Jgan- ,md P.Hricta Wald,
to11ncr chtct JUdge of the
mlluentt,tl DC Ctrcutt Coun
nt Appeals, whom I hdd long
hoped, to nu avail, v.ould s11
on tl1e Supreme Cow1.
\
Thts ts .ts deeply senous &lt;1n
mvesttg.ttton as tis subject
ments James Mad~son once
envtstoneJ tiM "Ow country,
If II does JUSIICC 10 ttsell , Will
be the workshop of Ltbct1y to
the Ct~ tlized World, .tnd do
more than :my &lt;lther lor the
unctvtlt zeJ"
But J,tmes M.t&lt;.l tson and the
!tamers could not h.tve toteseen a prestdelll of the United
St. ttes deltmng justt ce as
llled\1111~ he uectcJe, lor htmseJf wTuch laws l1c Wt ll
cntOtce
,
(Nat lfmtofl

h

11 11

llllflmwl-

1(:'1/0\\!led a11thmlf\

2006

The Da1ly Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

GOP
'Suburban
Agenda'
gains
traction
on
Hill
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Tuesday, July u,

wt

tht!

Fu 11 Anwml11tem mul the Rill
of R1~llf' mtd ci\1/I/CI/ ofmwn

hooh '·Ill&lt; ltul111g · The Wm 011
the Bill of Rt~hl\ wrd rl1e
Gmlwnn ~
Rn11tw" e'
(Set"" Stoun P"'f.' 2()(JJ J !

Obituaries

Local Briefs

For the Record

Donald 5. Guthrie

Schedule for biker event

Dissolutions

MIDDLEPORT - Donald S Guthne, 52, M1ddlepon, 1s
now rest!ng 111 peace He passed away on July 8, 2006, at
St Mary s Hospttal m Huntmgton , W Va
He was born on Sep\. 25, 1953, 111 Cleveland, son of
Al&gt;m Guthnc of Elyna .md the late Christme Munday
Guthrie He was a veteran ot the u· S Mannes mother, he
"'" preceded by a brother P.unc k Guthne.
·
He is survtved by hts wtle , Brenda Guthrie, Middleport;
dau ghters, Kellie (Ttm ) Helton, Mtddleport, and Shellte
Maurer and Adam Tillt s, Langsville, grandchildren,
Bradley Zachary Helton and Alletgha T1lli s; his father,
Alvin Guthne, Elyna; a brother, Thomas (Ruth ) Guthrie,
Hudson, Maine; ststers, Cindy Hoyt and Krystal (Bnan)
Ktrby, both of Elyna; and several meces and nephews.
A memori al service wtll be held at the convenience of the
famtly
Arrangements were handled by Fisher Funeral Home.
Memonal contnbuttons may be to Shelhe Maurer, P. 0.
Box 34 I, Rutland, Ohio 45775

COLUMBUS - The schedule for Btker Sunday to be
held m the Columbus area lhts weekend beg111s wtth
Saturday night church at 6 p m. at the Grove Ctty Nazarene
Church. Ben Pnesl, the founder of the Tnbe ot Judah
Motorcycle Mmtstry, will be the speaker.
Reg1stration for Sunday ac1tv11ies begms at 10 am at the
church At noon the btkers w1ll parade wtt h pollee escon
to Crew Statmm for afternoon setvtces Mtchael W. Smith
wtll be the speaker. There wtll be a $15 general admtssion
charge with $25 for reserved seating
B1ker Sunday IS a tundratser to beneftl Buckeye Ranch

POMEROY - Actwns
for dtssolution of mamage
were filed m Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Angela M Rhoades and
Bengy
J
Rhoade s,
Pomeroy ; Vtdlet L Rose.
Dexter, and Mauhew W
Rose, Mtddleport, Holhe M
Elhs, Middleport , and Caleb
Z Elhs. Pomeroy.
Dtssolutions were granted
to Jerry D. Schoolcraft and
Barbara J Schoolcraft

Robert W. Pinkerton
COOLVILLE - Raben W. Pmkerton, 59, of Coolvtlle
dted Sunday, July 9, 2006 at Camden-Clark Memonal
Hospttal, Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born May 23. 1947 111 Marietta, son of the late
Romeo Fred and Juamta Pmkenon Cunmngham He was a
truck driver and a member of the Fatth Chapel Commumly
Church.
·
He is surv1ved by Ius wtfe, Jeanette Pmkerton, two sons,
Brad Pmkerton and hi s fiancee', Teresa Barringer and
Ju slm and Teresa Pmkerton , a brother, Dave Cunnmgham;
a half brother, Harold Cunningham, two sisters, Betty
Cunnmgham and Cmda Johnston; two grandsons, Austtn
and Isaac Pinkerton, three step-grandchildren, Renee
(Mathew) Chnstopher, Shawn (Ashley) Barber and Joshua
Barber; two step-great-grandchildren , and se veral nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents
Servtces wtll be held I p.m., Tuesday, July II , 2006 at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, wtth Rev
Wtlbert Lowe offictatmg. Bunal will be 111 the Weatherby
Cemetery, Coolvtlle.
Fnends called at the funeral home Monday, from 6-8
pm

Taft faces public reprimand
for ethics violations
COLUMBl)S (AP) Gov. Bob Taft faces a public reprimand tor ethtcs violattons· under an agree ment
hi s attorney has reached
wtth the state ottrce that
momlors lawyers' behavwr
Taft, a Republican who
has been an attorney since
I976, pleaded no contest
last August to fathng to
report golf outmgs and
other g1fts wh1le m office
and was fined $4,000.
The Supreme Court's disciplinary counsel, Jonathan
Coughlan, filed a complaint
this April saying Taft's
actwns viOlated Oh1o 's
code of professional conduct for lawyers.
"I admit the violation ...
as outlined m thts agreement,'' Taft wrote in an affidavit attached to a copy of
the deal obtamed Friday by
The (Toledo) Blade.
The agt eemenl faces
approval by a dtsctphnary
board and the Ohio
Supreme Court
Coughlan satd he agreed
to the deal becau se Taft
admitted breakmg a part of
the code of conduct that
states a lawyer shall not
"engage m ,my other conduct that adversely reflects
on the lawyer's fitnes s to
practtce Ia w "
"He wasn't denying anythmg. Our assessment ts 11
ts a public reprimand case,
and he was admlltmg the
vwlauon," Coughlan sa td
The final dec1 s10n on
pum shmenl. whtch could
range from a repnmand to
suspendmg or taking away
the governor 's law ltcense,
l1es with the · Supreme
Court Before the deal
reaches the JU Sitce s. a
thtee-member panel of the
Boqrd of CotnmtSsiOners
on
Gnevances
and
Dtscipline Wtll deternune
whether to hold a public
hearin g &lt;lr accl!pt or reject
the agreement. satd Ruth
Bope Dangel, the board's
stall &lt;Htorney
The panel's recommenda-

tton will go to the full 28member board of mostly
lawyers and judges, whtch
reports to the Supreme
Court If the panel, the
board or the JUSttces reJeCt
the agreement , a heanng
will be held. Coughlan said
the Supreme Court m1ght
not rule until the spring of
2007, which would be after
Taft )las left offtce.
'The governor has been
upfront and has taken personal respons1btlity m these
matters and he continues to
do the same m thts matter,"
Taft spokesman
Mark
R1ckel said.
The mtsdemeanor ethtcs
charges agamst Taft and the
professional
complaint
stemmed from -the governor's failure to report gtfts
worth nearly $6,000 that he
recetved over four years.
The case had sp1raled off a
scandal over state losses
from mvestments 111 rare

Arrests

crack cocame.
In a third inctdent on
June 29. olltcers from
Mtddlepotl and the Metg s
County Shentt's Olftce
once agam exec uted .t
search warrant, thts time at
703 Hoburl Street. re sidence
of Cunis Allen Riffle Swtft
satd the searc h led to the
recovery of a quanttty of
ma rquana. drug paraphernalia and cash
. Rtffle was arrested and
charged wtth lt afft cktng tn
marijuana
Swtft prom tses more
news on the ongomg drug
mvesu gattons wt1h1 n the
l' tllage

from PageA1
'

County Sheriff's Othce
executed a search warrant at
296 Walnut Street , restdence of Prectous (Moore)
Rose. Sw1tl said the warrant
was obt,uned as the res ult of
an ongomg mvesttgation of
alleged drug ,actlvtty at the
re stdence.
As a re sult of the search.
Rme ts now 'facmg the
charge of penmlltng drug
abuse while Ronald Morns,
Mtddlcport, ts facing the
charge of pot&gt;se~s ton of
•
I

coilns
Taft, a great-grandson of
President and later Chtef
Justtce Wtlltam Howard
Taft, was the first Ohio
governor to be charged
wtth a crime whtle in
offtce. He never considered
r~stgning, but he forced out
several staff members m
the past for improperly
acceptmg gifts.
Taft 's law license has
been on inacttve status
smce 2002, meam ng he ts
not requtred to take 12
hours of contmumg educalton each year or pay the
$300 btenntal licen se fee.
Ohto lawyers on inactive
status are not permitted to
prac11ce law but can be
remstatcd by meetmg the
cohtmutng educatton and
tee requtremems.
Ohio Democratt c Party
Chatrman Chns Redfern
satd a public reprimand for
Tall ts probably appropnate.
·' My goal ts to re.torm the
system. not make a whtppmg boy out of the governor," he satd.

Meeting date changed
GALLIPOLIS - The July 17 meeting of the GalliaJackson-Metgs Board of Alcohol. Drug Addtctton and
Mental Health servtces has been cancelled The next meetmg ot the Board 1s Monday, Aug. 21 , at 7 p m. at the Board
office, 53 Shawnee Lane, Galhpohs.
The Board ts curently acceptmg membersh1p applications from all three count1e s for Commtsstoner appomtments and a family member of the consumer of alcohol and
drug serv1ce to be appointed by the Dtrecctor at the Oh10
Department of Alcohol and Drug A(iduton Services For
addttlonal mformatlon contact Ronald A Adkms, exec uitive dtrector, 740-446-3022

Police, statisticians combine
to forecast traffic accidents
COLUMBUS (AP) State Highway Patrol troopers and Oh10 State statistiCians have Jomed m a datacrunching effo11 to help predict when and where h1ghway
crashes are most likely to
occur
InformatiOn on I 9 m1lhon
accidents that caused mjury
or death from 200 I to 2005
have been plugged mto a
computer database, wtth
deta!ls such a~ time of day,
cause, weather conditions,
location and whether a truck
was involved.
Police staned usmg the system before th~ July Fourth
weekend, sa1d Lt. Col
Wilham Costas, the h1ghway
patrol 's assistant supenntendent.
Only Colorado has something similar, satd Rtchard
Pam ot the National Academy
of Science's Transpor1a110n
Research board.
"We're at a point now
where this model can actually
forecast the likelihood of
future serious injury and fatal
crdShes and narrow 1t down to
workable areas where we can
asstgn our people," Costas
said
M&lt;!ny crashes that happened over the holiday hap-

pened roughly when and
where they were expected, he
satd
Near Toledo, tor example,
pollee ha~e nouced a pattern
of motorcycle fatalittcs west
of tl1e ctty and have responded wtth educatton effons and
mcreased patrol s, satd Lt
Robm Schmutz, the htghway
patrol commander m Toledo
"Troopers
tradtltonally
have a good tdea where
crashes have occurred," sa1d
patrol spokesman Lt. R1ck
Zwayer "But thi s model flags
certam area,, times and even
days."
The patrol patd Ohto
State's staltstical consultmg
servtce $19,000 to develop
the system. H1ghways near
Columbus,
Cleveland,
C111cinnatt, Toledo and
Dayton were stud1ed
Crashes by commerctal
vehtcles on Friday afternoons
and drunken dnvmg ~cct­
dents before dawn are two
examples of previOusly
unknown patterns, said Ohio
State's Christopher Hollman,
architect of the database.
"Those
alcohol-related
crashes actually go much later
into the morrung than prevtousl y recogmzed," he said.

skill, d1fticulty of the mustc,
mastery of the mustc , and
stage presence.
Each category can receive
from PageA1
a max unum of 20 pomls for
before the contest begins a total maxtmum of I00
Dunng that ttme names wtll po111ts For more mformabe drawn for placement on tiOn, or to regi ster by
the program and final phone , contestants can call
mstructtons wtll be g~&gt;en on 1-877-Metgs -Co ot (740)
how the contest is conduct- 992-9822 or the chairman
of the event, Mary Powell at
ed
(740)992-2622
The pnzes th1 s year are
$300 for first, $I 00 fm sec- · As a means of pro molt ng
ond, and $50 for th1rd. harmontea playin g the
Contestants may play a dia- Chester-Shade Ht ston cal
tontc or chromattc harmont - Assoctation sponsors a harca. two numbers of thetr momca workshop for begmchotce each, from dtfferenl ners. It Will be held at 2
mu01cal genres- country, p m , with regiStration to
blues, folk, jaz z, gospel, begm at I 30 p m at the
rock. but no classtcal They Courtliou se There is a
can have only one ac~ompa­ workshop fee of $15 wht ch
mcludes a beginner's harmst on one mstrument
momca.
Each contestant ha s a
Powell satd that tt IS helpmaximum of five mmutes to
play tor a judgmg panel of ful tf those planmng to Sign
three protess wnal s The up for the workshop do so
judgmg ts based on meter by July 14 smce 1t allows
(ttmmg ), expresstons of the mstructor 10 come wtth
musi c and tone, clanty, an adequate su pply of hat quality of pttch, techntque, momcas

Leak

Harmonica
from PageA1
acce pted before Sept I. has
an annual premtum of $25
and customers can stgn up
anyltme dunn g. the year
though there will be no promung.
By paymg that $25 premtum res1den1s are protected aga msl water leaks that
total no more than $500
The p10gram wtll not pay
for the customer 's water
l111e repatrs.
Premiums are not refundable under any ctrc umstance and coverage ca nnot
be lran ~ferre d to a new
owner or occupant
If a custome r's water hne
spnngs a leak they are
asked to notify the water
department tmmedt ately
when the leak IS dtscovered
and notify the water department the day the leak ts

repatred When the· bill ts
calculated tor that time penad the leak was 111cun ed,
the customer will pay the
ave rage usage based on
thetr prevtous usage and the
leak msurance will pay the
balance up to $500
Clatms can be mulltple
but the total clatms for the
poh cy penod cannot exceed
$500
Leak insurance ts only
for a customer 's water lme
leaks and doe s not cover
tntenttonal or neglt ge nl
usage such as !tiling swlmmmg pool s, watenng of
lawns. watenng gardens or
other uses not constdered a
leak.
Again, the program is
voluntary and water leak
appltcatwns ha ve been
mailed out to customers of
the Syracuse Board of
Publtc Affatrs
If you dtd not recetve
your application and wtsh to
retam wate r leak msurance
call 992-7777

Divorces
POMEROY
Complamts for dtvorce were
ftled in Metgs County
Common Pleas Court by
Pamela J. Murphy, Racme,
agmnst Raben A Murphy.
Rac111e; Megan E Baer,
Racme, agamst Chnslopher
W Baer, Racme; Brittany
Powers, Langsvtlle, agamst
Anthony J R1ffle, Mason,
W Va , Angela K Hall,
Gallipohs, against Charles
K Hall, Pomeroy; Angte S.
Spangler, Albany, again st
Davtd R. Spangler, Martetta.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
license s were tssued tn
Meigs County Probate
Court to Roger A Ztegler,
54, and Sheme L Alktns,
49, Pomeroy , Patnck E
DeWees, 26, and Ktmberly
L. Reynolds, 19. Rutland,
Joseph B Dillon, 25, and
Minnda B. Davts. · 19,

Alcohol
from PageA1
"Thts ts what our community stands for, 15-foot
beer bollles?" Mrs Barhart
asked at one pmnt. explammg that she felt Pomeroy
needed to make a dectston
about what 1t stood for and
tiS drreclton for the future .
Musser sa1d he felt the
festivals were good for the
community
"You thtnk turnmg downtown mto a bar is ~ood for
the commumty?' Mrs
Barnhart asked.
"I don't thtnk we're turntng downtown into a bar,"
Musser rephed
Musser went . on to
acknowledge that there were
people who didn't care tor
alcohol served o~ the parkmg lot as well as those that
do. addtng that 1f alcohol
was taken away from the
two festivals tl may "ktll"
them, takmg with them the
free (alcohol free) Fnday
night concen series that the
Blues and Jazz Festtval
fin ances and the tounsts
who VISit the vtllage to shop
downtown during the festivals.
One of the prote sters
expressed hts concern that
downtown Pomeroy may
become hke Bourbon Street
in New Orleans, La , saymg
that when the government
there allowed the dnnkmg to
sp11l out ot the bars onto the
street this Jed to all son s of
problems mcludmg what he
c;tlled gtvmg a home to one
of the "btggest homosexual ·
and Jesbtan movement s 111
the country "
Tht s same ge ntl eman
stated he was a Sunday
school teacher and felt the
alcohol on the parkmg lot
was sending the wrong message to chtldren
"Str, I'm a Sunda} school
teac her also,..
Musser
rephed to the man
Mrs
Barnhart agatn
stressed that the gro up was
not there to judge people
who dnnk or to jud ge counci l but asked tf counCil may
constder commg to a cumpromise or ahernauve to the
tssue of dnnkm g on the
park111g lot · Mrs Barnhart
satd she realized 11 was too
late to do a!Jythmg abo ut
thts year's testtvals but
hoped tt was not too late to
start co ming up wuh that
alternative for next year
Counctl grants permt sslon to the festtvals to use
the parktng lot
In other counctl busmess
Counctl approved the vtllage's 2007 revenue slianng
budget Clerk Treasurer
Kath y Hyse ll estnnated that
m 2007 the vi llage's budget
wtll be nearl} $1.5 tmll to n

Racme, John R Sandtord.
46 , and Tnna S McCoy, 39,
Reedsvt lle. Odte B. Karr.
24. Brandy L Stanley, 24,
Rutland ; Davtd M Koemg.
30, Pomeroy, .tnd Ltsa A
Wtles. 29. Rac me. Anthony
A Mttchell. 19. Letart,
W Va , and Karen L Nove ll ,
20, Mason. W Va. Vtctor L
Boehler. 70, and Margaret
E. Howard. 64, Mo untam
Home, Idaho . Larry J
Barrett, Jr . 35, Wtlkesvtlle,
and Crystal D Gtbson, 29,
Ymton, Robert W Hayman,
2 1, and Lmdsey M Whtle,
18, Che ster, Terry L
Brewer. 60. and Tracy N.
Clark , 17, Portldnd

Pomeroy traffic
accidents
POMEROY - The fol fow mg tratftc acctdents
were recently mvestlgated
by the Pomero} Pol ice
Depart ment
Dana Bun ch, Pomeroy,
was ctted lor tmproper backing when a vehtcle he was
drtvtn g made cont act wnh a
vehicle drtven by Autumn
Re ed. Rc cdsvtlle . 111 the
parking lot of Save-A-Lot
on West Mam Street
Andrea
D.
Jesste.
Pomeroy. was traveling east
on West Mam Street near
Pomewy MuniCi pal Park
when a deer ran out 111 front
of her car Jess te was unable
to stop and struck the ant'll]al
wh1ch Wds put down by
tnve~tt ga l t n g
otttcer C
Brent Rose alter realiZing
the deer had tw o broken
legs.
Resolutt on 15.06 was
passed ratsmg the general
fund by $5,000
The thtrd readmg ot ordinance 709 v.-as appwved
and the ordmance passed to
offet full coverage l.tmtly
msurance to asststants tn the
police, street and water
departments.
CounCil gave Pomeroy
Asststant Ch1ef of Police
Alan Queen permtss ton to
proceed with arrangmg
donattons to purchase a K-9
drug dog w11h trammg for
use in the police department.
Councilwoman
Mary
McAngus asked tf the vtiJage would be placing a
port-a-potty at Pomeroy
Water Works Park? Mu sser
satd he would check on that
McAngu s al so asked
Pomeroy Ch1ef of Police
Mark E Proffm 1f ht s
department wa &gt; d1spatchmg
tor the enure county at mght
wh1ch he confmned Protftlt
and Queen added that thetr
di spatchers were domg thetr
best to kee p up w11h the
added lo.td but were overworked
Counctl agreed to mstall
"slow" stgns on Spnng
Avenue due to a complamt
of speedmg from res tdent
Ralph Day who satd the
speedmg problem has
become a hazard tor restdents, mcluding hi s daughter who ts hand1capped.
Hyse ll reported that she
would be .tllend111g a free
Bureau
of
Workers
Compensatton sc hool 111
Pt ckenn gton whtch wtll
save the vt ll age I0 percent
on tis ptemtums Councti
agreed to pay tor one
mght 's lodgmg tor Hysell
Hyse ll ts also ~ tt e ndm g a
contmumg educatton class
111 Athens wh1ch wtll cost
the vtllage $65
Mu sser reported that
Wmston-Saunders
of
Galltpolts mspected the old
Pom eroy
Jumor
Htgh
School last. Monday 111 order
to prepare an ~st1mate for
asbestos rem oval.
Absent from the meetmg
was Counc tl woman Ru th
Spaun ·

J\~tJI·
SNOW WHITE

and the
SEVEN DWARFS
presented by
The Ariel Jr. Theatre
JULY 15, I6, 22 &amp; 23
'

Visit Our Scholastic
Book Fair In The Ariel
Lohby July IS-23
Box Office · 428 2nd Ave
Galllpolt&amp;, OH (740) 446·ARTS

I

�The Daily Sentinel

Despite Internet, billboards
still used for personal appeals
Bv JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

out. For example, in one case
she thought the com mute
was too long.
"Do You Know Who
The earliest recorded leasKilled My Husband'"
ings of billboards occurred in
· Lisa Fickel asks that ques- the United Stutes in 1867. In
tion on highway billboards 1900. a standardized billaround Medina in northwest board structure was created.
New York. The billboards paving the w~y for a boon) in
offer a $25,000 reward and national billboard camshow a picture of her hus- paigns.
The
Highway
baod, Bill. relaxing at home Beautification Act of 1965
in an overstuffed chair with placed soine restric tions on
Bo ' the familv's
highway billboards, although
. black
.
Labrador, at his feet. The some environmentalists and
cable TV installer was anti-billboard groups want
gunned down Nov. 10 out- tougher measures.
side his home. '
"We definitely think there
"I tried to make it as per- are more billboards than
sonal as possible because I · ever, and we thin)( that's
wanted to tug at persons' bad," said Kevin Fry, presiheartstrings," said F1ckel, dent of the Washington D.C.who is trying to generate based Scenic America.
leads in her husband's slayHarold Raymund, a 46ing and keep his memory year-old
trucker
from
alive.
.
Omaha, Neb., spent about
Despite the wide reach of $1,000 to put up billboards in
the Internet and other high- the city last summer advertistech ways to deliver mes- ing for a wife.
sages, people are still using
"I tried lntemet dating , and
. billboards to make personal it just flat didn't work," he
appeals: to look for a job. said. "I couldn't seem to get
find a mate or say thanks for o the women to e-mail me
lifesaving assistance.
back and stick it out."
Technology also can m~ke ·
Raymond, who also has a
such a public outreach more wife-seeking Web site,. felt
effective, said Meredith that if he opened himself up
Hurt. spokeswoman for the in a very public way by rentOutdoor
Advert1smg ing a billboard, he might tind
Association of America. some takers. And by using a
People are spending more billboard, he felt he could
time away from home, and reach his target audience,
the proliferation of cell women who lived in the area.
phones. portable wireless
But only about half a
computers and text messag- do~en women from the area
in'g enable mot on sts to responded. One was fOo
immediately respond to such young, another wasn't his
messages.
type, and the rest were more
"One of the main things curious than seriously interoutdoor advertising does is it ested, he said.
has a call to action," Hurt
Anthony Pratkanis, professaid. "It's an immediate ouJ- sor of psychology at the
reach to somebody."
University of CaliforniaThe ad group, which repre· Santa Cruz, said renting billsents
1,100 · companies boards can be expensive but
around the country, doesn't effective.
'
track the number of noncom''I'm surprised more peomercial , personal appeals ple haven' t done it,"
and messages on billboards. Pratkanis said. "And it gives
Must billboards are rented a sense of legitimacy to their
for
commercial
use . efforts."
Companies spent $5.8 billion
Police agencies are using
in outdoor adverti~ing in the billboards to catch fugitives
United States in 2004, with or turn up leads in cold cases.
the travel and tourism indus- This spring, the Butler
try the top buyer.
·
County sheriff's office put up
Mary Witt, of Erie, Pa. , five
billboards
near
spent $600 to put her photo Hamilton, Ohio, offering a
and qualifications on a bill- reward for information· leadboard after she was laid off ing to the killer of Alana
from her job as a secretary at Gwinner, a 23-year-old
City Hall in December.
woman whose body was
"It got tough," said Witt, found in Kentucky eight
47. "I've always been a years ago.
·
worker. My husband could
"We got numerous calls on
tell I was kind of getting this," said Detective Frank
depressed."
Smith. · ·:we 're actually still
Her 10-by-22-foot resume sifting through all the leads."
went up April 10 off a wellRaymond is convinced a
traveled highway and stayed billboard can help him lind a
up for a month. Witt received wife and is thinking of
abo~t 20 serious inquiries
spending $3,000 · to rent
from potential employ~rs, space again this summer.
but none of the jobs panned Witt, likewise, has no regrets.

PageA6

OHIO

Tuesday, July u,

2006

Closing Stocks

MASON (APl- A wooden roller coaster that can top
speeds of 78 mph malfunctioned as the cars traveled
between a drop and a loop,
injuring wme riders who
were bleeding and hunched
over from the jolt. witnesses
said.
The accident Sunday on
the Son of Beast at
Paramount's Kings Island
near Cincinnati sent at least
27 people to three hospital s,
most with minor chest and
neck injuries, authorities
said. The ride is more thao
7,000 feet lung and featun;s a
118-foot tall loop, accordtng
to the park's Web site.
Two of 12 people taken to
fle thesda North' Hospital
were admitted and were in
fair condition
Monday,
Bethesda spokesman Joe
Kelley said. The rest were
treated then released, the hospitals and Kings Island said.
Inspectors from the Ohio
Department of Agriculture,
the U.S. Occupational Safety
and Health Administration
and industry experts arrived
at the park Monday to begin
their investigation. Kings
Is land spokesman Michael
Fillhardt said.
"They are in the early
stages of what will be a thorough investigation, and we
are not sure how long it will
take," said Fillhardt.
Riders felt a jolt after the
coaster came out of a deep
drop and was heading for a
loop, said Weldon Shaffer,
one of the riders.
"It felt like we hit something or jumped the track,"
said Shaffer, 34. "Everyone
was screaming before that.
Then it was complete silence
the rest of the ride."
Jake Cornett, 13, said he
and his friend were riding the
nearby Drop Zone when they
heard
the
ambulances,
looked down and "saw people being carried away on
stretchers." Others were
bleeding from their mouths
and hunched over tn pam,
said Troy O'Dell, 20.

DuPont 40. 78+.24
EKodak 23.16+.14
Eaton 73.02+.57
·•
EDS 23.66~5
ExxonMbl 63.04+.20
FMC Cp 64.54+.37
RrstEngy 54.25+.51.
FootLockr 27 .32+2.48
FortuneBr 72.37+. 74
GenCorp 15. 73_.09
GenDyn s 66.90+.38
GenEiec 33.45+.15
GenMIIIs 52.62+.65
GnMotr 29.38_.10
Goodrich 40.18+.26
Goodyear 10,61+.01
GtAtPc s 21.85_.32

.

l

Thesday, July 11, 2006
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule o/ upcormr.g co/l99&lt;1
and high school varsity sporting evenl! lnvol11ing
teams from Gallia, Meigs and Mason coonllss

Thursdav's games

American Legion Baseball
Feeney Bennett ar Athens Junior, S p.m .
Pickerington at Gallipolis. 6 p.m

Howard wins home run
derby with impressive finis~
BY

July 16:31

American Legion Baseball
Feeney
Bennett
at
District
Tournament. TBA

8

Wednesday July 26

American Legion Baseball
District AII·State Game at Lancaster, 7
p.m.
Augyst1 -5

American Legion Baseball
State Tournament. TBA

INSIDE .

28 homers at the All-S tar
break are the second must
among NL All-Stars.
PITTSBURGH The
Wright, with Mets catcher
Philadelphia Phil lies haven't Paul Lo Duca throwing to
been big winners for a long him . had a big edge after the
time. Thanks to' Ryan tirst round with 16, or six
Howard and Bobby Abreu. more than any other comthey're tough to beat in the petitor. But he had only six
in the next two rounds, and
Home Run Derby..
Howard made certain his Howard won the final with
first. trip to the All-Star game extra at-bats to spare.
would be a memorable one.
Wright's 16 homers were
beating out the Mets ' David the third most of any rounc.l
Wright to give the Phillies in the derby's 2 1-year histotheir second derby winner in ry, though he hit eight fewer
as many summers .
than Abreu's record-breaking 24 a year ago in Detroit.
And what a finish.
After homering into the Abreu went on to win the
Allegheny River earlier, the 2005 competition with 41,
2005 NL Rookie of the · or 14 more ' than any other
Year' s fifth and decisive winner. He wasn't. eligible
homer in the championship this year after not being choround banged off a "Hit It sen for the AII ~ Star game.
Here" sign above the rightPNC Park, with its .distant
field stands to give a lucky . fence s in left and left-center
fan 500 free round-trip air and short, 320-foot porch in
right field, favors left-handtickets.
"That'll give the fans in ed batters, but the nght ·
Philly something to cheer handed Wright repeatedly
about;" said Howard, whose reached the seats with ease .
ALAN ROBINSON - '
ASSOCIATED PRESS

But while Abreu's 24
homers did not carry ove r to
the. second round, ·a rules
. change enacted thi s year .
meant Wright's did. That
gave th e Mets third baseman
a six -homer advantage over
Boston's David Ortiz before .
any second-round homers
were hit , all but guaranteeing Wright a spot in the
finals even though he hit
only lWLl in the second.
round.
' Howard made a big push
to get into the tina! round,
hitting 10 humcrs in the secand round for a two-round
total of 18 to tie Wri ght and
bypass Ortiz and Florida's •
Miguel Cabrera. Cabrera
had nine .homers in the first
round and six in the second.
Ortiz hit I 0 in the first
round , down from his 17 of
a year ago - the second
most in any rounc.l since the
event began in 1985. Ortiz's
AP photo
31 homers at the break are Ph ilade lp hia Phillies Ryan Howard hits a ball during the s'econd round of the baseball All Star Game home run derby in
Please see Derby, B6
Pittsburgh Monday.

Post 128
takes late
season
victory

• NL hopes to end AL
domination at all-star game. ·
See Page B6 ·
AP Photo

The so'n of Beast roller coaster at Paramo~nt's Kings Island near Cincinnati is seen in this
May 22,, file photo. The wooden roll.er coaster which can top speeds of 78 mph malfunc·
tioned as the cars traveled between a drop and a loop, lnJunng some nders. Sunday. Wit·
nesses said.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Rio basketball to
host golf scramble

Bv lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

. RIO GRANDE - Both
University of Rio Grande
men's and women's basket.··
ball programs are
sponsoring a Golf
Scramble
to be held
A.ugust
12 at the
Cliffside
Golf Club in Gallipolis. The
shotgun start is at 8:30a.m.
The event is a four-person
scramble. Flight "A" will
consist of a total team handicap of 75 or below while
!light "B" will consist of a
total team handicap of more
than 75.
Tickets for the annual 300
club raftlc will also be
available for purchase.
For reservations or more
information contact Rio
Grande
Head
Men's
Basketball Coach
Ken
. French at (740) 245-7294.

Meigs cross.
country practice
The Meigs Cross Country
team will begin conditioning practice on Monday,
July
17 at 6:00 pm. All interested runners should meet at
that time at the
Memorial fielclhouse by
the hi gh schoo l parking lot.
Come dressed to run . The
cross cotmtry program is
open to all Meigs Local
boys and girls grade , 7- 12.
For more information.
contact
Coach
Mike
Kennedy at 740-357-2723
or
740-992-7512

.Beginning in July,
Holzer Clinic Meigs
Ne_w Urgent Care Hours
\

(AP)-5tock Last Chg
AMR 27.66+,88
AT&amp;T Inc 27.38_.36
Alcoa 33.41_.14
AJigEngy 38.03+.22
Altrla' 77 .34_.46
AEP 34.89+.20
BellSouth 35.85_.66
Boeing 80.35+.36
Chevron 64.27+.59
Cltlgrp 49:34+.26
CocaCI 43.63+.45
ConocPhll67.34+.15
CurtlsWrt s 29.59_.09
DPL 27.16_.04
DalmlrC 49.13+.03
DowChm 38.04+ .18

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
-·

Ohio rules Walker ineligible, Page B2
Ohio Amateur tees up for IOOth, Page 82
World Cup news, Page 86
·

'

Local Weather
1\.tesday ... Showers m.td winds 5 to 10 mph . Chance
thunderstorms
likely. of rain 50 percent.
Humid with highs in the - Thursday and Thur~day
mid 80s. South winds 10 to night ... Partly cloudy wtth a
· 15 mph. Chance of rain 70 chance of showers and
percent.
thunderstorms. ~ighs in the
1\.tesday night..: Showers mid 80s. Lows tn the lower
and thunders torms likely. 70s .. Chance of ram 30 perHumid with lows ardund cent.
70. South winds I0 to 15
Friday
through
mph with gusts up to 25 Saturday. night... Partly
mph. Chance of r.ain 70 per- cloudy. Htghs around 90.
cent.
,,
Lows around 70.
.
Wednesday ... Showers
Sunday ... Mostly sunny m
and thunders torms likely. the morning ... Then becomHumid with high s in the ing partly cloudy. H1gh s
lower 80s. Southwest winds around 90.
10 to 15 mph with gusts up
Sunday
nighL.Partly
to 25 mph. Chance of rain cloudy. Lows m the upper
70 percent.
60s.
W e d n e s d a y
Monday ... Partly cloudy.
night... Partly cloudy with a A slight chance of showers
chance of showers and and thunderstorms tn the
thunderstorms. Humid with afternoon. Highs around 90.
lows in the upper 60s. West Chance of rain 20 percent. ·

Inside

7 Days/Week
11am-9ptn Daily

HOLZER
CLINIC

740.992.0060

MEIGS
www.holzerclinic.com
j

'

.
Larry Crum/pholo

Feeney B~nnett's Jeremy Blackston throws a pitch during the fourth inning of Monday's 10·7 victory by Post 128 over
McA rthur Post ·303 in American Legion baseball action.

ROCK SPRINGS
Usi'ng the reliable power of
Terry Durst ai1d the solid
of
Clayton
hittin g
Blackston. Feeney. Bennett .
used a strong middle three
innings 10 pull away and
snap a five game losing
streak Monday eve ning ,
defeating McArthur 10-7 in
American Legion . baseba ll
action.
Dur.st and Blackston combined 10 go 1\-tbr-1 0 with
three RBi s and three douhles to he lp push st ruggling
Post 128 ( 12-19) out of a
late season slump as
McArthur Post 303 fell to 616 on the season.
Feeney Bennett ;llso took
advantage of numerou s
McArthur errors including a
rather costly mistake in the
sixth inning when a routine
lly ball from Durst: whi&lt;;h
would · have ended the
innin g without a score, fell
off tfie tip o( right fielder
Anthony Bentley's glove
anc.l alloweJ tltrcc runs to
cross hom e plate.
Post In also collected
rive hits and s ix runs during .
the middle three innings to
pull away from a one run
game and never looked
buck. despite a couple of
late charges by the visiting
McArthu r team. '
Please see Feeney, Bl

Tour de France has leading
American with a ruined hip
I

He said· the break completely seve re.c.l the blood
supply to the bone. Without
BORDEAUX , France
it, the ba)l of Landis' hip
After
seven
years
or
domijoint
has been gradually
CoNTACfUS
nation by a cancer survivor. dying and co llapsing, causthe Tour de France has now ing gnaw111g pam. sa1d h1~
OVP Scoreline (5 p.m.·1 a.m.)
discovered that one or the doctor, Brent Kav.
1-7 4.0-446-2342 ext. 33
favorites to succeed Lance , The bone d~1nage is "as
or 9'92·5287 (Meigs Co.)
Armstrong. former team- bad as it can get," Kay said.
mate Floyd Landis, is riding '·Everything is pretty much
Fax - 1·740·446·3008
with an arthritic hip so worn down."
E-mail- sports@mydallysentinel.com
painful he plans to replace it
The 30-year-old Landis
$p~rt s $1!Jt1
with a prosthetic after the also carried the injury for the
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor , tltree-wcek race.
Tours of' 2003 and 2004 (740) 446-2342, ext 33
Landis
,
second
overall
when
he
rode
on
bsherman@ mydailytribune com
wit h just 'under two weeks of Armstrong's squad - and in
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer racing left, said Monday on 2005, when he finished
(740) 446·2342 , ext 23
the Tour's first of two rest ninth riding tor his current
bwalters@mydailytribune.com •
c.lay,. thm he broke hi" .ri~ht team, Phonak.
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
hip in a crash on a trammg
"Using it doesn't in any
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
ride near his home in way increase the chance that
k:rum@ mydallyreg1ster.com
California in January 2003 .. it will be liiHtsable later. It is
BY JOHN LEICESTER •
ASSOCIATED PRESS

already ruin ed," Landis said.
"Whenever the pain gets too
bad I will ·ha ve it replaced.
probably sq,oner than later''
Phonak
team
doctor
Denise Demir said Landb
cou ld have surgery in
August, after the Tour finishes Ju ly 23, if they sett le
on a sui table choice of surgeons by then .
"He's tired of the pain."
she said. But he refuses to
take pain medication, she
added. "He doesn ' t wunt it.
He says it makes him
tough:·
Kay ;aid lundis' pain
threshold is " oil the chart. ..
But he also said the di&gt;eomfort keep' Landis from
•
Please see Tour. Bl

AP pholo

Floyd Landis of the US checks the clock as he crosses the
f1nish to place second in the 7th stage of the 93rd Tour de
France cycling race. a 52-kilometer (32 .3-mile ) individual
time trial between Saint·Gregoire and Rennes. western
France, Saturday:

�Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July

www.mydailysentinel.com

11, 2006

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

~rihune

Ohio rules prep star Walker ineligible for season
BY DAN SEWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI
Btll
Walker, one of the country's
best prep basketball play er:~.
had hts hopes dashed of
' wmning a thud stratght
state championshtp with
highly acchumed teammate
OJ. Mayo when state athletic officials ruled Monday
that Walker ts out of eltgtbility
• The Ohio Htgh School
Athie,ttc
Assoctatton 's
investigation found that
Walker played as a fresh man at Rose Htll Chnsttan
School tn Ashland . Ky .
before enrollmg at North
College Htll as an etghthgrader tn February 2003
Walker played three seaso ns

m North College Htll. neat
ClllCIIlnatl
" Based 011 the mtormd
11on we hm e tecetved. Btl i
has exhausted h" ehgtbtlit~
because he h.1s parttctp,ned
at the htgh school level fm
etght semesters, which IS
the maxtmum permitted
accord111g to our bylaws,"
Commtsstoner Dan Ross
s.ud
Ross sa td Walker could
appeal, but sa1d officials
have thoroughly documented the cdsc and have no
.tuthonty to wa1ve the rule.
He said Walker's mother
tndteated Monday the family was co nsidering an
appeal
Walker could not be
reached for comment on
Monday. There was no tele-

phone ltstmg fur htm
Mayo's
grandfathet,
Dwame Barnes, who has
served as a coach and a
spokesman for both players,
has not returned ca lls seekmg comment
"I think everybody feels
terrible abOUI thiS. but thiS
" one ol the bylaws tor
eqlllty and a leve l playtng
f teld that was put in many
years ago by member
sc hools," Ross satd
North
College
Hill
Pnnctpal Kelly Hughes satd
she hasn 't talked to Walker
about his plans He still is
enrolled. but she dechned to
dtscuss his academtc record
or credits needed to graduate.
"While we are sad and
disappOinted for Bill, his

teammdtes and our commumty, we have the utmost
respect for the OHSAA and
Commtsstoner Ross and
belteve the ruhng was made
accurately based on the
mformatlon they recetved."
Hughes smd
Walker's optwns mclude
rematning at North College
Hill and earnmg hi s dtploma w hde playmg for amateur te~ms. transfernng to a
p1 i V:ll~ "ftlth-yeat" prep
school or playing m a mmor
or overseas prote sstonal
league. Nattonal Basketball
Assoctation rules requtre
players to walt one year
after their class graduates
before seeking early entry
.mto the N BA draft.
However, Walker has satd
he wants to go to college,

Mayo." two-ttme wtnner ol
The Associated Press Mr
Basketball award in Ohw.
satd recently that the two
are tnterested 111 Southern
Cal, the Umvetslly ot
Flonda or Kans.ts State.
whete former Untverslty of
Cinctnnatt
coach
Bob
Huggtns IS hedd COdCh •
Ross said the ·'"octatton
first heard questions abo ut
Walker's status around the
tune of thiS year's postseason tournament
North
College Htll offictdls smd
they always beheved that
Walker had four seasons ol
ehgtbtltty when l)c enrolled
The 6-foot-6 Walke1 , .1
powerful rebounder who
can make spectacu lar dunks
and shoot II om the outstde,
averaged 2 I 7 points and

CLASSIFIED

I0 I 1ehoumls l.t" &gt;eason.
He scored 50 pomts and
had 2'i rebound' tn a 1006X VICtory 0\Cr Cov mgton
( K) 1 ll olmes "' North
College Htll 126-1) lost
only to Vngmta-based
perenmal power Oak Htll
Academy 111 a schedule th,lt
Inducted
game'.
111
C.dtlm ma , Kentucky and

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

West Vu g111 t ~l

Walker w.ts the Otllstandtng playet on the 2006
Associated Ptess Dtvtston
Ill all-tournament team,
scormg 45 pomts whtle httting 17-ot-2R shots from
the fteld in the TroJans' two
VICIOI ies m Columbus He
also had 2:l rebounds, mnc
asststs. three steals and
three blocked shots

MILLER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

It was 1954 when a chubby blond kid from Columbus
sheepishly stepped away
from hts bucket of balls on
'the dnvmg range to meet the
man hittin'g shots nearby
Jack Nicklaus and Arnold
Palmer would go on to make
a lot of golf htstory. It all
began at the Ohio AmateUJ,
on the practice range at leafy
Sylvania Country Club JUSt one snapshot from a
tournament that wtll be
played for the I OOth ttme
next week at Canterbury
Golf Club.
"He was the defendmg
champion. I was 14 years
old," satd Nicklaus, now 66
and a grandfather many
times over "I quahfied
there, then lost in the second
round to a guy named Dale
Bittner who beat me m t 9
holes."
Asked how he can remember one match after the thousands of rounds he's played
all over the world over the
last 60 years and N tcklaus
laughed.
"Sure I remember - I got
drummed," he said
Palmer won the Ohto
Amateur again that year.
Ntcklaus never won one.
Both went on to stoned
careers as professtonals wnh
Palmer winning 62 hmes on
the PGA Tour and Ntcklaus
73 times, includmg a record

18 maJor championshtps. '
Both have vtvtd memones
of the Ohto Amateur, constdered then as now one of
the premier championships
of tts kmd m the natwn.
Palmer
was
from
Pennsylvama but had been
stationed m Cleveland during a stint in the Coast
Guard After he came out of
the servJce, he contmued to
hve 111 Oh10, worked m sales
and honed hts game.
He's never forgotten the
crystal vases he recetved for
hts back-to-back vtctones.
"Oh, yes," he sa1d "I sttll
have them"
Frank Stranahan, hetr to a
spark-plug fortune, was one
of the world's top amateurs
m the 1940s. The Toledoan
won the Oluo Am m !941
and 1942 before playing as
an amateur for several years
against the greatest players
m the game
Now 1n hts 80s and h vmg
m Palm Spnngs, Fla ,
Stranahan has never forgotten that the Ohw Am was an
important stepping stone.
"I played m the Ohio
Amateur twice and I won tt
twtce,", he satd "The guy
that was coachmg me,
Henry Ptcard, he satd, 'Once
you've got a record like that,
you go on to bigger thmgs.
You have bigger goals "'
Stranahan
met
and
exceeded those goals. Whtle
still an amateur, he ued for

second at the Masters 111
1947 wtth Byron Nelson,
two strokes behtnd Jtmmy
Demaret He then went on to
a successful pro career.
Alter Stranahan and
Palmer, the two most 1ecent
back-to-back wmners also
have gone on to "b1gger
goals "
John Cook took the Ohio
Am m I 978 and 1979,
between them leading Ohio
State to a national championship He's won II times
on tour while amassmg more
than $12 mtlhon m carnmgs.
"I JUSt really enJoyed the
Ohio Am," said Cook, who
now hves m Flonda "It was
very competitive. You know,
Ohio is a great golf state.
Winning the state amateur
there a couple of limes was
big.''
Cook was ratsed m a golf
famtly - his father. Jtm,
was a longtime tournament
manager at the World Senes
of Golf at Akron Ftrestone.
But one wm in particular
made Cook reahze that perh&lt;JPS golf could be a vocation rather than a stdehght.
"The 1978 Ohw Amateur
wm kmd of springboarded
me to a decent summer and
the 1979 U.S. Amateur
title," Cook sa1d. "It kmd of
got me to that next level,
thmkmg maybe I could actually do this at some point m
ume for a living."
Despite a gllttenng col-

Your Ad,

Call -T oday...

KENNETT SQUARE, Pa.
(AP) - Barbaro's road to
recovery has been slqwed by
recent mfecttons, but hIS
owners rem3ln hopeful those
are only mmor setbacks for
the Kentucky Derby wmner.
After a relatively smooth
recovery, Barbaro underwent
three procedures m less than
a week, the latest for a new
mfecuon and ·'potenltally
serious" compltcattons to hts
tnjured nght hmd leg
"He was defimtely not
comfortable and they found
the source of the dtscomfon
and did somethmg about it,"
owner Gretchen Jackson satd
Monday "He was a lot more
comfortable yesterday and,
as I understand 1t, even better
today."
Barbaro . developed an
mfecttl!jD m the leg m whtch a
titamum plate and 27 screws
were mserted after he shattered three bones at the start
of the Preakness on May 20.
After Barbaro showed dtscomfort and had a "consistently" htgh fever, the plate
and scrt;ws were replaced

Tour

and the infection treated late
Saturday mght.
"It's one of those setbacks
that we've prepared ourselves for as best we can,"
Jackson satd. "Sure It's dlSappomt~ng, but we' ve been
warned . But a lot of bone
has healed, a lot There's a lot
of good stuff. And the horse
ts mcredtbly strong, Healthy
and we've got to keep the
fatth."
Surgery was performed by
Dr Dean Rtchardson at the
Umversity of Pennsylvanta's
New Bolton Center, where
Barbaro has been recovering
m the mtenStvc care umt.
In a statement released by
the
hospttal
Sunday,
Richardson emphastzed that
the compltcattons are "putenttally serious "
.
"Barbaro had developed
some dtscomfort and a conststently elevated temperature so we believed It was in
hts best interest to remove
the hardware and thoroughly
clean the s1te of the mfectton," Rtchardson said. "We
also applted a longer cast on

Landis recetved two cortisone lllJeCttons mto the htp
thts year to f1ght swelhng.
"They've been somewhat
from Page Bl
successful I can't say they
sleeping and that it has been take away the pam altohard to help htm "because gether and they don't really
help wtth the arthnttc pam
he rarely says very much."
but with the mflammatton,"
"I can't say that 11 has Landis satd
any effect on the way I
Armstrong, who retired
race," Landts said
last year, ftrst won the Tour
"It's not easy to gtve 11 a m 1999 after survtvmg tes·
number and say thts ts how ltcular cancer that had
much tt hurts ," he sa id spread to hts lungs and
"Whatever happens, I do bram and reqmred surgery
my best to try to focus on and rounds of debthtatJng
the race ttself rather than chemotherapy He tetlfed
my hip And the race, m a lrom cyc l111g after ht s sevway, IS therapy for my ht p enth wtn last year
because 11 consumes cveryLandt s had pins Inserted
for the fracture and has
tht.ng l thmk about " ,
The team doctor sa id stnce had two more surgi-

that leg for additiOnal support:"
Last Monday, Barbaro had
the cast on his injured leg
replaced and three new
On
screws
inserted
Wednesday, another new cast
was applted after the horse
showed dtscomtort Barbaro
is also bemg treated for a
small abscess on the sole of
his left hmd hoof, according
to the hospital.
Rtchardson said Barbaro's
mam fra.cture ts healing well,
but the pastem JOint- located above the hoof whtch was
shattered inte more than 20
pteces - contmues to be a
concern The joint, whtch
doctors are attemptmg to
fuse, was stabtlized Wtth
"new tmplants and a fresh
bone graft "
"Maybe we' ve been lucky
that we haven't had any big
problems," owner Roy
Jackson said "Then a little
problem ltke thts crops up.
The whole recovery is a difficult thmg."
Barbaro took longer to
recover from the anesthesta

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit
reject or cancel any
ad at any lime
&gt;Errors Must B
aported on the firs
ay ot pubUcallon an
he Trlbun•Santlnel
agister
will
b

Curt1s won m 1999 at
Morame Country Club, then
turned around and steamrolled the field by a record
18 shots the followmg year
at
Brookstde
near
Columbus
After turning pro, he
stunned the golf world by
winmng the Bnttsh Open in
2003 at Royal St George's
m his first appearance m a
majqr champtonshtp.
Just two weeks ago at the
Booz Allen Classtc, he won
agam
St11l , hts victories back in
hts home state still hold a
special place m hts heart
"The history of golf m the
state of Oh10 ts something,"
Curtis satd. "You've got the
best player who ever hved
(Nicklaus), and Arnold
Palmer also came through
here - a lot of great names
who played on the tour and
won lots of events Just to be
on that list wtth them is an
honor.''

cal procedures to try to but added that the condtrestore blood to the bone tmn has not dented hts conthe last in November 2004 fidence m the cychst's abtlwhtle sttll on Armstrong's ities. Demtr, the team docteam.
tor, said she knew last year,
Pattents are not meant to but that she and Landts
walk for six to eight weeks kept it secret
after such surgery, he satd,
"It wasn't my mtentton to
"but at that point I didn't cover somethtng up, tt's
have that amount of ltme, JUSt that there was so much
and so after a few days l g01ng on that I was overwent back to usmg 11 "
whelmed," Landts satd But
Landi s satd he kept hts he also sa td he had planned
condttton secret to all but to go pubhc at some pomt
about 10 Jleople before because "sooner or later 11
announcmg tt Monday and would be a story"
dtd not tell Phonak when he
Denm satd Landt s' nght
ftrst JOtned. "My mom leg ts nearly an mch shorte r
found out last week," he than hts left leg smce the
sa1d
crash , when the ball at the
Team manager John top ot the htp bone snapped
Leldngue satd he was told oft, affectmg the balance of
.tt the stall of thiS season hts muscular structure She

or Fax To (740) 446-3008

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

esponslble for n
ore than the cost o
he 1pace occuple
y the error and onl
he llrat Insertion W

hall not be ltabt fo
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
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ton of an advertla

ent. Corrections wll
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vallable edition

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lwaya confidential
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pplles
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Estat
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ubject to the Fedara
air Housing Act o
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ccepts

newapape
o11ly hal

anted ads meeun
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We will not knowing
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actver

lsement In vlolatlo
t the law

Larry Crum/photo

Feeney Bennett's Matt Mooney makes contact dunng the
fourth tnntng of Monday's 10-7 vtctory by Post 128 over
McArthur P0st 303 111 Amencan Legton baseball actton.

Feeney
from P1lge Bl
Along wtth Durst .md
Blackston ,
Jeremy
Blackston and Zach Hats lop
added a htt aptece and Joel
Lynch added a palf of htts
tor the Feeney offense
Jeremy Black ston also
worked the first stx tnnmgs
on the mound m the wm,
givmg way to Chns Myet s
m the seventh and closer
Luke Hatslop m the fmal
frame.
McArthur was paced by
Tyrus Coyan, who smashed
a solo home run 111 the th1rd
mmng as well as going the
distance on the mound 111
the loss Andy Gnllo added
a pait of htts, Justin Erwm
had two hits and two RB!s,
Evan Workman went 2-for2 from the plate and Derek
McManus, Matt Lockard,
John Rose and Andy Wasch
added a hit apiece.
smd LandiS cannot push the
nght pedal w11h the force
that he can wtth the left.
Landts said the pain 1s
worse 111 ttme 11 mls whtch forces htm to change
from a usual ndmg posmon
- and climbing steep hills
Those dtsctplmes are key
to wmning the "J:otlr, but he
has shown that even with
the IIIJury he can excel at
both
''I've proved that I can
wm some of the hardest
races, so whatever happen s
here wtll be an outcome of
the race .md nol based on
anythmg havmg to do with
my htp," he satd.
The
ra ce
res ume s
Tuesday with a tlat stage
from Bordeaux to Dax 111

•

Post 303 took the early
lead 111 the contest, gomg up
3-0 ott the bats of Coyan
and Et wm. but Feeney
Bennett qutckly answered
tn tts halt of the mmng to
bnng the game wtthm one.
Alter a scoreless second
11ming, ihe two tealns traded
run s tn the thtrd betorc
Feeney Bennett pawed on
the heat dtumg the mtddle
three frames to pull ahead
Even though McArthur
tned to answct, postmg tVvo
run s tn the seventh and
anothet m the ninth , Post
123 had butlt too strong a
lead and won by three runs
- whtch made the three run
CIIOI 111 the SIXth prove that
much more costly.
Feeney Bennett wtll now
return to actton 111 the
Dt stnct 8 toUI nament startmg July 16.
McArthur

30 1 000 201 -

FHney

201 123 01X- 10 10 1

Ty rus Coyan and Chrts Comer Jeremy

Blackston Chns Myers (7), Lu~e
Ha1slop (9) and Terry Durst WP Blackston LP- Coy an

southwest France. Landts is
currently
one
mtnute
behmd
leader
Serhty
Honchar
ot
Ukrame.
Wednesday brings the ftrst
steep climbs 111 the
Pyrenees
With a replacement htp
made of titanium, steel,
ceramtc 01 other matenals,
Landi s will venture tnto
uncha1 ted tern tory tor a
Tour cyclist But Kay satd
they have talked 10 leadmg
amateur cycltsts wtth ptosthettcs and they "are domg
very well ..
·
Landts satd he hopes ht s
career will not be ovet
'' I love ra cing my bicycle." he sa td. But he added:
"I' 111 p1 epa red for whatever
happens next."

•
•

7 1.2 4

'

r

rI

L.oo-r~D

~

GIVEAWAY

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Dally In-Column: 1 00 p.m.

All Display : 12 Nopn 2

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

• All ads

must be prepaid•

POLICIES Ohla Valle~ Publlal'llng reseNeatl'le right ta edit, reject or cancel any ad at any time Errort mull be reported on tl'le llrtt day ol pubhcatlon and
Trlbune-Sentlnai•Raglal~r wttl be reaponalbla for no more than tl'le coal of the apace oe&lt;:up1ed by the error and only thel1rat insertion We ahtil not be l•blolo1l
anw lou or expenaathat results from the publication or omleeion of an advertisement Coneclton will be made 1n the fintavallabia edtt)on • Box
are alwaya confidential • Currant rate card applies • All real a•tata advertlaemanta .,..
the Feder11l Fair Hauling Act ot 1958 • Thla ,,.,..,,,.,.
acceptt only help wanted edt meeting EOE atendarda We will not knowingly accept
1 1 1 1 of the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110

FOUND

wow! HAN~

Male Dog on
Ashton Upland Ad
Black
Bo)(er!Wemer Dog M1x pup· w/Gold like stn pes weanng
p1es to a good home 740 Pink collar (304)576 2273
985·3481
LOST White Male Poodle
Church Pew about 12FT \IICinlly ol Mason VFW
long blue 1n color (304)593 needs
med1 cat 1on
5221 or (304}675 5617
(304)674 1876

walch dog (740)446·3897

tlaD

2545 - - - - - , - - LOST Black male Cat
~~6~vllle Pika
Camp Conley area Fa1rv1ew
Road
Call anyt1me
Free K1ttens to good home (304,675· 4080
Female 7 weeks old - - - - - - - Lost
Black
Aottweller
(304)882·3719
approx 1201bs Last seen on
Large set of 8 custom made Smith Ridge Road In Long
bird breeding cages w1th 2 Bottom (Portland area)
lo\leb1rds Must take an FAMILY PET' REWARD
(740 l 446

AKC

r

$200 001 740·643 5437

black

Lab

(740)441-0405
Pupp1es1
Chocolate
Lab/Dalmahon M111, 2 l1ke
Lab 3 like Dalmatian Lots of
spots! (304)593·8581 days
(304)576 2881 e\lemngs

on

YARDSALE

~
~

YARDSALE·
GAu nnu~

I \11'1 1n \II\ I
"il It\ U I "i

Two Month Old K1ttens AU
colors males, and females
740 742 1404 FREE to
good homes

-------Large yard sale, 7/14/06·
7/16/06 8020 SR 554 6
m11es from SA 160 Pictures
hunt1ng 1tems g1rls clothes
srze 10 12 m1sc furniture
lawn mowers, tools, large
clown co llection baskets
lois of mlsC Items, also
12x60 Liberty mobile home
2 bedroom central air for

CLASSIFIED INDEX

sale

74

'tARO SALE·

POMI'ROY/M!Dnt E
2 Famrly Garage Sale 13th
And 14th Ram or Sh1ne
F1ndleys
Tanners Run
Road Racme 2 m 11es past
SHS turn ngllt or t /2 m11e off
33 turn left
Garage

Sale Dale Hartt 0 18 Yellowbush Road
Rac1ne Thursday June 13··
9 to 4 Console folding
chair lewn mower ceiling
fan d1shes Collectibles
pre lit Chnstmas tree bas
k.ets and lots of m1sc
Two Story house for rent 3
bedrooms 1 bath Fr1dge,
Stove Washe r mcluded
740·992 5200

76

"-------,..J

i10
lLw------,..J
"
HELP W ANTFJl

110

ISO
H EIJ' W\N'IIll

School

DISinct

Mason 3rd Street ·2 8R 1
ba great starter home or
mvestment
property
Prudent1al Bunch Realtors
Realtor
Bobby
Mun cy
(740)709 029'::1 or (304)525·
7761
Middleport, 4BA
2BA
Pnced below appra1saf
www orvb com lt6276 Call
(740)992·5961

d
New B1g,_ 4 Be room Walk
In Closets Fueplace Pantry
Blacktop Onve Pnvate 2acres
:1 mmutes from
Holzer town or · 35 Must
Sell Trade or Best Offer
(740)388 8228
NO DOWN PAYMENT even
w1th less than per1ect cred1t
IS available on this 3 bed

room

1 bath

home

111

Middleport Corner lot VInyl
Siding fireplace m lrvmg
room good carpel tile ~oor
111 kitchen, French doors
open to master bedroom
Jacuzzi tub off street park
1ng Payment around $550
per month 740 367·7129

740 992·3465 after 5 00 PM Priced lo sell I Very mce

Smoot.,

4BA 2ba on SR 279 tOO$
f1nanc1ng avarlable even w1th
less lhan perlecl cred1t
(740)742 2376

INSTRUCrtON

3BR bath ups1a1rs fu r· ,
n1shed 1BA apt downs1a1rs
furOIIure store 111 rear car lot
on Side All on 1/2 ac lot at
130 Bulav1lle P1ke Gall1pol1s
OH Call to see (740)446

Gallipolis Career College
Expenanced Fence Builders Oh1o Valley Home Hea lth
(Careers Close To Home)
needed for small farm Call Inc hmng for OccupatiOnal
-Call Today 1 740 446 4367
Therap1s1 and Speech
100 WORKERS NEE OED 1740)245·5595
4792
1·800 214 0452
Therapist
Compet1t1ve
Assemble crafts
Wages
and
Mileage
Apply
wWVI gall•pol•scareercollege cern
Recently remodeled two
FEDERAL
wood 1tems
at 1480 Jackson Pike 1\ccredtlea Memt&gt;er Accre&lt;ltl ng
StDfy home 111 Mercerville
CourJCII
lor
Independent
Co
leges
POSTAL
JOBS
To$480/wk
Walking distance of schools
"i::""~"~
"l.:
"l/.
8
Mater1als prov1ded
$15 67·$26 19/hr now h1r Gallipolis, or 2415 Jackson "'"~',i:
Public
huntmg
nearby
A'.lenue
Po1
nt
PJeasant
WV
~~100
\VANTED
Free 1nlormat10n pkg 24Hr lng For apphcat1on and free
or phone toll free t 866 441
To
Do
$68 900 Adjacent tncome
___
80~1_4_28_46_4_9_ _ governement jOb mfo call
1393
5 year old Colonial on 3 property ava1fabla priced
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1
acres approM 1 900 sq It 3 , sewately Immediate occu
An E)(cellent way to earn 913·599·8042, 24/hrs emp
G1\le P1ano Lessons 1n my
bdr 2 baths 2 car garage pfty (740)25 6 1965 or
money The New A\lon
serv
home
ro
begmners
master bdr IS 28x24 w1th a 1(661)331 6672
Can Manlyn 304·882·2645
advanced students and
Full lime laborer needed fm
1acuzz•
tub $125 ooo
E HOM&amp;&lt;;
Appalachian T1re IS acceptadults
Also leach trans·
the
Town
of
(740)446
7029
F1Jll
S·ltE
Ing applications for Sales
posmg and chordmg
II
Water/Sewer Department
Associate
&amp;
General
interested call 740 992· 5420 St AI 7 South 4
Must have a valid dn\ler s
SerVIce P1ck up applications
5403
bdrm 2 5 bath ha rdwood 14lC55· 97 Fleetwood MH
t1 cense Must possess or
@ 426 Vmnd St
Pt
floors new roo! 2 car 26R 1 bath elac heat/AC
Pleasant No phOne calls be w1ll1ng lo obta1n Yoater or
Mayu,;
Yeats
Day Care garage S 125 000 no land good condtiiOn $10 500 Call
waste water operators
please
Center Inc now has l1mited contracts (740)339·2108
(7 40)446·3644 lor appt
Salary based o1
' - - - - - - -- - l1cense
open1ngs lor ages 6 weeks
AVON 1 All Areasl To Buy or qual1hcat10ns and ellpen
Attention!
to 8 years (304)675 5847
14x65 Mobile Home 1n Great
Sell
Stmley Spea rs 304- ence Appt1cabons may be
Local company oHer1ng NO
Shape
Only
$7500
11\\\11\1
picked up a the Mason C1ty
675 1429
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
(740)256 1427 after dark
8u11d1ng ,
1601
Second
grams for you to buy your
Streel Monday Fnday 6 am
hOrne tnstead of rent1ng
2000 16JC80 Clayton Vrnyl
to 5pm
' 100% fmancln g
- S1dmg Shmgle Roof Heal
• Less than per1ect credit Pump New Carpet 6 ot her
"'ake a difference In
accepted
homes on Lot Call for
the world with your
•NOTICE•
• Payment cou ld be the Pncmg
1740)388 0000
new career!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· same as rent
days
(740)388 8017
Call on behalf of
lNG CO recommends
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
Mortgage
Locators evenmgs (740)794 0460·
orgamzat10ns you
• FUll TIME ClJISSES
that you do bUSineSS Wllh
(740)367 0000
call (740)645 6150--- call
'CU~ fi1AINING
believe 1n l1ke the
people
you know and
• FINANCING AJAilJ.BLE
National Rifle
2002 Redman Double W1de
• .OB PLACEMENT
NOT to send money
Er&lt;.ROUINO N(N.I
Association and the
28x70 S50 000 startmg
tr1rough the ma1l ur~t1l JOU
American
Pr1te
Call for mfo anyt1me
have lm.estrgated !hoc
Cancer Society
(304)882 3057
offenng

__.....,

fl20 Monn

ALLIANCE

TAACIDR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

r

Now offenng a $200
S1gn on Bonus! Earn
up to S81hour Both full·
t1me and par111me post
bons ava1labla Pa1d
tra~mng holidays and
vacations Full benefits
package and 401K

Thursday-July 13 &amp; Fnday
1-800-334-1203
July 14 52· UillverSIIy Lane
Sam to 3pm Ra1n
Pt PI
&amp;
Resident
ca ncelled that day to follow· CNA s
~~
lnter\llews Are
1n Da
Now Bemg Conducted For
WA~TFJ&gt;
Fmd out why we were
CNA &amp; Resident ASSIStant
\loted one ol the 2006
Pos1t1ons
If You Are A
"To Ten Beat Places to
Canng
EntHusrast1c
Work In Ohlo"l
Absolute Top Dollar U S Dependable Persoon Then
Silver and Gold Coins We Want You To Jom Our
Come On Over &amp;
CALL TODAY
Proofsets, Gold Amgs Pre Team
1935 ..,..1Hi
Curre rwy Check Us Out' You 11 Be
1877-463·6247
So11ta1re Diamonds M T S Glad You D1dl Competltrve
EXT 2455
CNA
Wages.
Pa1d ,__ _ _ _ _ _...
Co1n Sllop, 151 Second
Paid Meals
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446 Vacations
MI?:DI HOME HEALTH
Many
Other
Benehls
2842
AGENCY
Ravenswood Care Center,
Wash1ngton
St ,
Buy1ng Junk Cars &amp; Trucks 11 13
HAS OPENING FOR
(304)773 5343 (304 )773 Aa\lenswood WV(Across
A1tCh1a Bridge At 2 North
5033
"""PAN AN S"""
- - - -- - - - last Bus1ness On R1ghl)
Cash pa1d lor used dish net References Requ1red
$28 PER HOURI
work &amp; cell phones Call

•

CNC AND MANUAL
MACHINISTS
I buy Junk Cars (304)773 Jmmedlale Day and E'.lentng

$42 PER VISIT

! 866)860·0110

5004

shift poSition lor CNC and
Manual Machinists
Pay
I w111 bUy J!.!nk CArs Call based on e)(penence and
(740)388 9303
quallf1ca!IOns , Must ha\le
own hand fools We offer
Want lo buy Charles msuranca VacatiOn Paid
01ckens books 304·675 Holidays and Retirement
6499
Phone 1 304 743 1705
Desk clerk needed Person
w1lh good commun1ca11on
skill good ati1tude &amp; self
mot1vated Should apply at
Budget Inn: Jackson P1kE1
DREAMEA77 @IN BOX CO Gall1polls No phOne calls
ple ase
~ or phone (740)256 65 14

Overbrook Rehab Center
w1ll be hold1ng STNA class
es startmg on Tuesday July
18, 2006 App11call0ns tor
the class Will be accopled
unt1l Fr1day July 14 2006
Please stop by our front
off1ce and fill out an apphca
lion to ba cons1dered for the

wv

1393

Borr.ow Smart Contact
the OhiO DIVISIOn Of
Fmancml
lnst1lut10n's
Oft1ce
of
Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you ~el1·
nance your home or
oDta1n a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance paym~nts of
fees or 1nsurance Call the
ort 1ce of Cons1J11lCr
Atta1rs toll free a1 1 B6G·
278 0003 to learfl 11 the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
I&amp;
properly
licensed (ThiS IS a public
serv1ce announcernenf
tram the Oh1o Valley
PubliShing Company)

'=======~
I2Jif

Cllmcal Manager at
481 6334
-------Oh10 Valley Home Health
Inc hmng Full Time AN
Case Man8ger Must ha\le
OH &amp; WV RN licenses
Compet111ve Wages and
Benef1ts rnclud1ng l1ealth
1nsuranca Apply at 1480
Jackson P1ke Galhpol1s
OhiO or 2415 Jackson
,4.\lenue Pomt Pleasant,
Phone toll tree 1866 441

I

Parts Salesperson wanled
Computer e~penence a.nd

All real estate ed\lerilslng
In this newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fa1r Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertiae ·•eny
preference 11milallon or
discrimination baaed on
race , color, religion eex
familial statue or national
Ofig!n or any Intention to
make eny such
preference, limitation or
discrimination '
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
!ldvertrsements fo r real
e§tate whrch lain
VLOIA11on of the law Our
re11dBI!I are hereby
mfo( med lh&amp;t all

dwe111ngs advertlaed In
thrs newspaper are
avtllable on an equal
opportunity btlses.

2Bx64 double'v,;~de 38R
2bath remodeled 5 yrs ago
Owner W!ll pay to move

$24 900 (304)675 1178
86 Crestrlge 14x70 2BA/2
bath $6 995 Call (740)385
9948
86 Skyl1ne front k1tchen
Cash pr1ce $8 995 Will
deliver Call (740)385·9948
91 BreeZewood 14x70 3
bedroom 1 bath total elec
tnc Call (740)256 6687
Orand
new
16
wide
vlnyf lshulgle S18 11mo Call
(740)385 7671
Mobile Home to• sate 14 X
70 good cond1 lton W1il sell
on land comract 740 992

5858
N1ce 14x70 3 bedroom only
$10,995 Will help w1th dellv·
ery Call [740)385 96:2t

I'NOFESSIONAI

Gallipolis Ferry 3 BedrQ,QQl.
t 112 Bath 2·Car oaraga Very crean 14ll64 2 bed·
Wood lloors
Fireplace room Only $7 995 Call

SERVIC!'S

Maple KIIChBn (30 4)675· ~
17.,4;;0).;.385;...;·0.;.6;.;98.;.__ __,

classes
No phone calls I!
please E 0 E

Call Jud1e Reese AN C
(740)44 1-1779 or 1·800·

2

H~OTICEu

ro Bu\

Wanted your unwantod t11sh
recewer w1th card Will pay
cash lor some Also want
outs1de d1sh large or small
Ema11
to

EEO

201

Ho~IFS

IUR SAt.L

112 P le&lt;~SU it Stree t Pou)f
Pleasant WV
[304)675
4034 or \30 4)675 0418 3
bed room 1 1 2balh tam11y
room dm1ng room new w1n
dows new AC new water
tank fenced yard
_ _ __:._ _ __
Ouahl1ed appltcants wrll be 2 homes for sale close to
lown c1ty schools 1 3 bed
confacted for an tnlervmw
room ranch 2 baths newly
remodeled elec heat CIA
City water
Leadmg The Way 1· older 3 bedroom 1 112
R&amp;J Trucking now H1nng at bath large family room gas
heat &amp; cook 1ng
CtA
our New Haven WV
4
19 565
740 446 3907
Term1nal F01 Reg1onal
)
.
(
{
)
"
4137
Hauls-Dump 01\ 1 year
_:._______
OTR
3 BR 1 bath 1 1/2 story dry
\lenflable exp
basement
12x24 fam1ly
Colli BOO 462 9365 ask for
orda1mng room Heat pump
Kent •
&amp; propane furnace vmyl Si,d·
Information mg new w1ndows lg lront
VACANCY
Technology Instructor of porch back deck carporf ,
all on 1 acre 1 mile south of
Interactive
Media
Rio Grande 2656 Garners
Ce rt1hable as an lnformallon
Ford Ad Call lOJ appOint
Technology
o( ment (
74012 45 5811
Comprehensive Bus1ness
Instructor
CONTACT 4 bedroom 2 bath double
Gall1a Jackson V1nton garage
pool
2 acres

JVSD (740)245·5334 exl Eastern

July 12 13 14, 9·4 Girls
clothes 2 3T boys clothes ~~1-:
10:------'"'1
3·6 toddler bed, hOuseware
HELP \VANriD

4x4's For Sale.... . .. ........ ..................... 725
Announcement ........................................... 030
Antiques.. ........ .. . .... ... ..... . . ....... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market . ....... . ...... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......................... 760
Auto Repair .. ...
. ....... 770
Autos for Sola ......................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
................ 750
Building Supplies ...... ...................: ......... 550
Business and Buildings.
. ... .. . .... 340
Business Opportunity ............................. 210
Business Tralntng ..... .,
...... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................ 790
Camping Equipment.................
. .... 780
Cards of Thanks.......... .................... 010
Child/Elderly Care............ ............ .. ....... 190
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeration .........
840
Equipment lor Rent .................................. 480
Excavating ...... . .... ..
. .......
... .. 830
Farm Equipment .................................. 610
Farms for Rent. ...... ........ .
.430
Farms lor Sale ........................................... 330
For Lease . ....... .... . ........... . ....... 490
For Sale .. ......
.. ............................. 585
For Sale or Trade ......
....... 590
FruitS &amp; Vegetables... ............................. 580
Furnished Rooms...... ...... ... .
......... 450
General Hauling ....
........................... 850
Giveaway........ .......... ... ..... ..
....... . .040
Happy Ads....... .....
.. ........ ............. ... 050
Hay &amp; Grain...... ........ . ...... . .. ........ 640
Help Wanted . . ...
..... .. ............ ... 11 0
Home Improvements .......... ..
.810
Homes for Sale ........ ......................... 310
Household Goods....... ....... ... . .......... 51 0
Houses for Rent ...... ..................... 410
In Memoriam............... ............. .. .......... 020
Insurance ........ . .... . . ....................... 130
Lawn &amp; Gordan Equipment..... . . ........ 660
Llvastock..... . ........ .... .. . ......... . 6~0
Lost and Found ........................ .............. 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ......... ........... • .......... , .350
Miscellaneous..................... . . ........ . . .170
Miscellaneous Merchandise
540
Mobile Home Repair ........................... ...... 860
Mobile Homes for Rent .......... ........... 420
Moblla Homes for Sale.......................... 320
Monsy to Loan......... .....
. ..........
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Musical Instruments. . . ... .. . . ........ . 570
Personals ............................................... 005
Pels for Sale... ...... ..... . .
....... 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing............... ..... ........ . 820
Professional Services...... . .. ...... ..
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ........................... 160
Real Estate Wanted. ..... ,. .. ......... . 360
Schoolslnslrucllon .............................. 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlllzsr ..... . .......... . 650
SHuallono Wanted ............................... 120
Space for Rent................ . ... ......
.... 460
Sporting Goods.... . .. .... ..................... 520
SUV's for Sale................... . ........... .....720
Trucks for Sale ......
.. .......................... 715
Upholstary .......................... . . :........ 870
Vans For Sale....
.......
........................ 730
Wanted to Buy.................. .. . ...... . .... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ................ 620
Wanted To Oo .................................... 180
Wanted to Rent... ..........
.... .... .. ...... 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis ...............................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle . ......
.. .. 074
Yard Sai8'Pt. Pleasant........................... 076

www comlcs,com

2006 by NEA, Inc

To Good Home Male Golden
Aetne'.ler 9-months old
Great w!k1ds naeds room to
run (304)937 3348

Home lntenor crafts and
much more 6613 SA 218

SAil

R&amp;J TRUCKING

k1ttens

(740)245 5146

310

HOliES
HlR

Ponderosa Jack son area
restaurant seek1ng ass1stant
candidates
manager
Attractive bene ftts package
a\la1lable Please fax resurm!
1o {614)861 7318 Attn
Jackson Manager Pos1hon
for 1mmed1ate cons1derat10n

Vil*o 6NNo'7 c:oVt-()
WA'&gt;ifi NirJ~ /.l~t;&lt;;.
IIJ A l-\t!f2R'/.

6 month old m1xed breed FOUND

cute

310

liEu• 'Awm.t&gt;

kltncarlyle@comcast net

Found 1n Thurman Black
Lab·MIX puppy About 5
2 female kittens t long months old male black col
haired Calico l1tter tra1ned lar
(7 40)245 9740
1ns1de only (740)446 3897
(740)44 1 2896

Frea

Now you con have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
.{,~
""'
Borders $3.00/per ad
It!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

~-------"

Male

&gt;All

y

\\\nl \(I \II \l"i

675-5234

Oead'lfiru-

• Start Your Ads WHh A Keyword • InClude Complete
DescrlptiDn • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlallons
• lnclwde Phone Number And Addre&amp;s Wht~n Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

•POLICIES*

1\egister

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

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

mme.''

from Saturday's procedure
Richardson said the colt was
back m hts stall and recetvmg
pain medication, anttbiottcs
and "other supportt ve care.''
The Jacksons, who live m
nearby West Grove,· Pa , and
!ramer Michael Matz contmue to vtsit twtce datly, the
statement satd
\Doctors have said it could
be months before they know
tf the colt can survive what
has been called catastrophiC
lllJUnes that leave him vulnerable to mfectmn and other
ltte-threatenmg cnmphcattons.
Barbaro won the Kelltucky
Derby by 6 112 lengths, was
unbeaten m stx races and
expected to make a Tnple
Crown btd before hts misstep
early in the Preakness ended
hts racmg career. He was
taken to the New Bolton
Center hours after breakmg
down at Pimhco Race Course
and underwent live hours of
surgery the next day
At that time, Rtchardson
sa1d the chances of the
horse's survtvaJ were 50-50.

Sentinel

Word Ads

lege career, 11 was sttll vital
for Ben Curtts to measure
htmself agamst the best
amateur players avatlable
"More than anything, it
was a btg monkey off my
back," Curtis said wtth a
gnn "I had accomplished a
lot growmg up and tl would
have been tough tf I'd never
won that event the
btggest tournament in our
state That was a big goal of

Barbaro develops complications to injured leg

\lrribune

To Place

Ohio...Amateur tees it up for the tOOth time
BY RUSTY

- Sentinel - ]Register

TURNED DOWN ON •

knowledge of farm equ1p· SOCIAL SECpRITY JSSI?
No Fee Unless Wa W1n1
men!
preferred
Salary
1·888 582 3345
negOtiAble depend1ng on
expenence
Health
Ill \1 ISf\U
In sura nee pr ov1 dad Sond ;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
resume to CLA Box SY.£! clo 310
lit l\11,
Gallipolis Tnt&gt;unc PO Box
tOR S \I 1
469 GallrpOIIS OH 45631
"---~~. . . ._.1

2364
HANDYMAN SPECIAL

i

Lolli&amp;
ACREAGE

Foreolosed new 3 Bdrm
ranch w/2 bathrooms In dr) 49 5 acres by Tycoon Lake
wall staqe si ts on 2 beautiful Calll7 40l709·1166
CV1es (.; fy water at road
'~.bout lhl tJ ort"'eB51 from
;,th('ltlh~
S ·.t 5"'~Ll .. wne
,1 1110 l7" -HlQ '1\ 46
Need to sell your home?
House For Sale
In Late on p~yments divorce
116 S Park Dr 5br 2ba 2·
Syracuse two-bedroom with JOb transfer or a de8th? I
-------...,story, b1 level deck above
bath attBched garage and can buy your home All cash
Prep coo~ needed Apply 1n
ground pool call 304·675·
basement An estate sale and QUick ClOSing 740·416·
person J1mane111 s P1zza
7B08 afler/Spm
$70 000 Phone 992 3690
A1o Grande Oh
3130

�Tuesday, July 11, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com
HOl5ll!Oill
Goolli
Honeysuckle
Hills
Apartments, GatliPQI1s. now
accepting applications for 2
Bedroom Apartments, No
Rental Assistance available
at this time . Rent starts ar
$315fmo. Equal Hous1ng
Oppor1unity. (740)446-3344

Happy Ad

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepalr-675·7388 . For sate.
re -Conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, rBfrigerators, gas and electric
ranges, a1r conditioners, and
wnnger washers . Will do
repairs on ma1or brands 1n
shOp or at your nome.

$450,
5264

10

Horsf:'
2BR , large hvmgroom . wash
·--fiilli&gt;K;,;;R,;;E;;";.'-_..1 roo m porc h with awmng.
'
st01age buJicl1ng, NC . very
2 Bd.l l Bath Pomeroy. N1ce n1ce. no pt:ts In Gall1polls.
cond1hon. $450 00
7 40· {740 )446·2003 (7 40)4461409
843-5264 .
2 bedroom hOuse- 59
Garfield $450 rent
$350
deposit. Call 1740)441 ·0583.
(740)256·6718

3 Bd. anq 2 Bd Mobile
Homes, both 1 112 bath ,
Pomeroy Area. Call 740 243·58 11
- - - - - -- 2BR .house- Garf 1eld Ave 'For rent : N1ce 2 bedroom
$460 rent &amp; sec. dep 3BR- mob1le home 111 CoUntry
!louse- · LeGrande Blvd . 'Homes. S325 • deposit.
S600 rent &amp; sec. dep. You (740)385 -4019.

-

Phillip
Alder

r

references required.
pets. /740)992-0 165

;~~:~o;:~~~~;~110 ~ ) fr·

r

1690
'Ill« II \\111"1

HolliEI1oto
·Goo~
1

References .
reqUired.

DflpOSit BEAUTIFUL
APARTNo
Pets MENTS
AT
BUDGET
(304)576-4037
PRICES AT JACKSON
Appliance
House for rent on Lincoln. ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
W1tl be ava1labje July 15th
Warehouse
Newly renovated. nice qu1et Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Equ~l
neighborhood Can show on 740·446·2568 .
in Henderson, WV.
Pre.not1ce. The Tan Shak call Housing Opportunity.
owned
Appliances
sta
rting
(740)446-7425 for an appt.
Brand new 2 Bedroom
New 2 bedroom house in
Gallipo lis. Clean and comfortable Centra l rur. laundry
room. also New t Bedroom
t:fHouse , Call tor details
(740)44 1·0194 or (7&lt;10)441·
1184.

Apartments Washer /dryer
hookup,· stove/refrigerato r
Included
Also ava1labte units State
Route 160. Call 'tor details
(740)441 ·0194 or (740)441·
1184

at $75 &amp; up all under
Warranty, also have recondittoned Big Screen TV 's

by Ron's TV (304)6757999

New Sofa &amp; Loveseat. $400:
Sola &amp; Chair,
$350:
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATR,acine (in town) 4 Br., 2 full
Recliner, $200. Open 9ambathS. CIA. Waler. Garbage EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
apartments . 3pfn Sat. , Mollohan's, 202
mduded
$500 dep Townhouse
and/or
small
houses
FOR Clark Chapel Road, Porter,
$500 per Month. reler~nces
(740)388-01.73;
RENT Call (740)441 · 1111 Ohio.
740·949·2217
lor apphcat1on &amp; mlorma1ion . (740)446- 7444.
MoBILE Hmn"
Efi1C1ency apartment for Sell1ng out. F.lefrigerator 17
rent. $2 50 per month plus cu .tt . frost free was $175,
utilities.
m
Middleport, now $145: refrigerator frost
2 'bedroom 1n country. total 1.740 )99.2 -68119
free now $75: 10,000 and
electric. no mslde pets
12.000 BTU a•r conditioners
$350/month $350 deposit. Furn1sh ed apt , 3 rooms &amp; $95/each: dryer now $85,
bath,
upslaus.
clean.
no
(740)245-9491 please no
washer now $85. 76 Vine
pels. Ref/deposit requ1red.
calls after 9:00pm.
Street ,
9:00am·1 .00pm
(740)446-1 51 9.
(740)446-7100
or
by
2 bedroom waterltrdsh paid.
Gracious 11v1ng 1 and 2 bed- appointment (740)367-7886
near Por1er, NO PETS.
room apartments a1 Village
Refenmce. depos1t reqwred .
Manor
and
Riverside Three piece . burgundy sec·
$325/mo (740)388·1 100.
Apartm ents in M1ddlepor1 l1onal sleeper sofa. Middle
2br Tratl er fm Rent AI 87 From $295-$444 . Call 740· storage. $200 Burgundy
reclmer.
$75
$250 month plus depos1t 992· 5064 . Equal Hous1ng rocker

nmRn,·T

'!

(304}895-3561

(740)44 ' -0307

Oppor tu0!11es

r

VANS
FOR SAil:

Hill's Self
Storage

Auto &amp; Truck

29670 Bashar\ Road
Racine, Ohio

Repair

Au.u;
tuRSALE

$5495~

&amp; M&lt;YillRS

FOR SALE
21 ft. Gtasport boat &amp;
Tandem trailer. 305 Chevy
inboa r d / outboard
Mercruiser, 150 nours. Call

(740}384-2646 $6,000

CAMI'EIIS &amp;
MomR HOMJ&lt;JS

Slzei 5'x10'

to 1o·xao·

1/1 4/1 mo Pel

&amp; MEOilAL F.QCIPliENT
• ( Jl,t\ p

3528.

L..--~~JlJ~~R-SAiiiiLE;;,._~

am

I ~'

2748.

FAAAI
EQuiPMENT

1999 Pontiac Grand Am ,
red, AC , automatic, beautiful
car, 4,200.
2 horse trailer lor sale. good
1996 Camara red, Hops, 5
condition.
Roy
Phillips spead 3.900. (740)256-

6251 , (740)645- 1393
2000 Dodge Neon, 85,000
miles, Cold Air, Runs Great.
Really good on gas. $2400

OsO. (740}2S6- 1233 or
(740)256· 9031.

2002 Otds Alero teal gre en
'Awesome car"
Under
John Deere t O ft. No Til Drill 21 ,ooo miles V6- 3.4L
tor
rent.
Carmichael engine. Runs great! Asking
$7,000. Call after 6pm
Equipment {740)446·2412.

(740)446-2412

(7 40)992-1 090
2004 Chevy Cavalier LS.
fully loaded, 44,000 m11es.
gold in color, lraj:lion control
and security system, NADA
$t0,500 will sell for $9,100

FIRM

(740)992-2456 or
(740)992'4063
1

ON THIS PAGE FOR.
AS LOW AS

'

$27.00 PERMONTH!
The. Daily Sentinel

992-2155

92 DOdge Grand Caravan
Interior very good condl1ion.
engine ru ns well. needs
transmission work. Call
(740)446·6415 al1er 6pm.

97 9hevy 4 WD ext. cab
w/3rd door. Vortec 350 auto·
malic very rlice, runs good.
$6,200 OBO (217)316- 1829
or {304)576-2762
·

1994 · Chev Dully pickup
diesel. Must see to appreciate. (740)256-6574.
Chevy Dump Truck Super
Delwce Three . Quarter Ton
new Ti res. Battery. ,recent
Sticker $3,200 (30 4)675·
7961

r

4x4
FoR S\11:

1990 7.3 diesel 5 speed.
4~4 . 150,000 m11es $4.900

(740)388-8358
1999 Chevy Silverado 4WD
P/U. 85.000 m 1 le~ . 5. 3 VB .
all opt1ons, short bed wtlh
topper. Excellent Cond11ion:
$11 ,000 (740)645·0626

/1 P~OC~A5TINATQ~ wtiO LIVES Lift
TO Tt-le FULl-eST··· ~
He Ltves eAcH !~[
I&gt;AY AS If IT'S
~IS Ne&gt;CT~~l
TO-LAST!
§~~

m

Hardwood Cabinetry Alld FurnHure
www.u... ~&gt;on:roel&lt;oal&gt;innry.r:-om

BARNEY
TODAY WE
'
L'A~NED 'BOUT !

SOLAR POWER ~

HOME

I
i

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

ROBERT
BISSEll

&lt; 0\( 'KF II·
&lt;0\STRl C 110\
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
~ll'l)'pes ot

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages

c&amp;ncreteWorl\

• Complete
Remodeling

lusured
4/7,

E~tima le s

LOWEEZY?

L.....J~-.l.i:u..:;,:,:,J i
THE BORN LOSER

ot
'

lr '(OU'R.E

\

I

r- 'IOU T~t&gt;

r:o- 'i'OU
Tl\1-\
(~(t-\L'i ...

fishery
resource
Public .
Meeting enhancement projecls,
Scheduled to Review
and natUral resourceDraft Natural Resource based public awareRestoration Plan for ness projacts.
Leading Creek and The assessment area
Final
Acid
Mine under AIIernatlve B
Drainage Abatement &amp; includes the Leading
Trealmenl Plan
Creek adjacenl llood·
The U.S. Fish and plain and ecologically
Wildlife
Service associale
uplands,
announce the release sub-watershed
and
of the Draft Leading lributaries to Leading
Creek Stream System Creek, and supporting
Resloral!on Plan and ecosyslems in lhe
E n v i r o n m e n t a I leading
Creek
Assessmenl (APIEA). Watershed.
The purpose of the Any interested perDroll RP/EA is lo sons, agencies, ancllor
describe the types of groups who would like
projects,
and
lhe a copy of the Oral!
process for choosing RPlEA can contact
lhem, which will be Mary Knapp at U.S.
Implemented
using Fish
and
Wildlife
funds
from
lhe S e r v I c e :
Leading
Creek Mary_Knapp@fws.gov
Improvement Account , (614) 469-6923 ext 12.
The restoration proj- Acopy Is also available
ects will Improve the to view al the Pomeroy
aquatic life uses of the Library · and .Albany
Leading Creek Stream library. Written comSystem and/or acquire inents also can be
resources equivalent submllted . to Mary
to those affecled by Knapp al U.S. Fish and
the 1993 dewaterln~ of . Wildlife Service, 6950
Meigs Mine No. 31. Americana Parkway,
also Sullo H, Reynoldsburg,
This
RP/EA
serves as an updale to OH 43068 . through
previous plans and uti- September 8, 2006.
Ilzes currenl deta on The public meeting on
lhe sl&amp;tus Of the Augusl a II the
Leading Creek Slream Rutland Civic Center
Syslem.
will also Include a
A p~blic meeting to · presentation on the
dlscuis lhe RP/EA will recently · compleled
be held on Tuesday, Acid Mine Drainage
Augusl 8, 2006 et the Abatemenl
and
Rulland Ci.vlc Center. II Treslmenl
(AMDAT)
will begin al7 p.m. and Plan
for
Leading
end at 8:30 p.m. snd Creek. Slaff from lhe
will include a presents· Ohio Department of
tlon
aboul
the Natural
Resources,
Restoration Plan and Division of Mlne.ral
questiOns from the R e s 9 u r c e s
public. Comments will Manaaemenl and from
be acceplod at the lhe Meigs Soli and
public meeting or in Water Conservation
wrlllng alany time dur- Diatrlcl will be avail·
lng a 30 day review able to explain the plan
period.
a_n,d lo answer ques·
The three alt&amp;rnatives tlons. Anyone wh~ ~
being proposed sre:
would like a copy of
A. laking no aclion ; (a lhe AMDATPian can
requlr~d
Alternative visit the Meigs Soil
under the National and
Wat er
Environmental Policy Conservation District
AcljNEPA)) ;
al 33101 Hiland Rd ., in
9 . natural resource- Pomeroy, Ohio or call
based
resloration 740-992-4282.
within lhe Leading (7) I 1, 28
Creek
assessment

1

Rocky 'RJ'';
·Hupp

~

L...'-.._.../-==e=-~l._ ___J+_ ~ L

rllrwrltesel";

"' andSons •

I 4( .

i
Hi

All types of roofing:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspoul

fREE
ESTIMATES

~~-

.

JU:SI' FF.E.C.I&lt;LE!
v-

•

/

TN-11-\lf'.IG

J!

··· t
i

\,..lJ~l_l~..l---'-1

. ~s:n
__::'-l
_ ) .J
·---til"""""

IF 'r'OU COUNT ALL Tt1E
1.1JS.T MLLS, THE PE~ALT'j
STROKES, AND THE Tl ~ES

Advertise in
this space for
$27 per
month

NowRe•u
I·J Mini Storage

PEANUTS
HELLO? OH, IS THIS
YOU, 131~ BROTHER.?

992·8396
992-2212

'IOU'RE AT CAMP, AND 11MNOT 1

HA ~A J.IA J.IA f.IA!!

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
.MONTH
SUNSHINE CLUB

Cornerstone
Construction

\00

Rrsidt&gt;nlhtl • f'ommrrt•inl• (;t'llt'nt1 ConlrM·Iin~
Paiming • Duor'&gt; • W111dm1 ~ • O~d...
• Siding • R[lot'in!! • Ru~\111 Additi~m ~ • Rl:ll111Li eling
WI/ 038992
• 111umhing • Elcnm:al 7"0·367·0544
OH 38244
• Ao.:..:nu~IIO.: C.'o.: il111g
740-339·3412

·Economy Beef $8.25
-Shade R1ver Beef $8.75
·Whole/Shell Corn $7.25/Bag
·Cracked Gorn $8.25/Bag ·
·Soybean Meal 513.25/Bag
·Shade River Hog Feed $9.50

LDDI&lt;
\

GARFIELD
t'M GOING TO PUT

Shade River AG Service, Inc

SHIRT ON
r-.,._THIS
GARFie:L.D

35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769
740-985-3831

FOR RENT· MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
, 1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740·416·5547
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
MANLEY'S
SElF STORAGE RoomSERVICE
Additions &amp;
10x10x10x20

992·3194
or 992·6635
"Middleporl's only
Self-Storage"

Pass

Pass
Pass

Sometimes, when an opponent is lead·
iog a winner lhal you can rull, you would
do better to discard an Inevitable loser.
This is pat1icularly true if there is a likel~
hood of an overruff. But is that the case
tn this deal? How would you expect' t~e
play to go in four spades after West
leads lhe diamond jack and lhe delenders keep plugging away at lhal su11?
On lhe lhlrd round ot diamonds, declarer
could discard his apparently inevitable
heart loser. II he did, though, he would
be .banking e11erything on the club
llnesse winning. When lhal lailed. so
would his contract.
Much simpler is lo ruff high atlricl&lt; lhree,
draw trumps. and take the club finesse.
Allhough il loses, Soolh's ·heart loser
evapora~s on dummy's fourth club.
Well, 11 looks lha1 easy - e&lt;cepl lha!
you are sitting East. have strong nerves,
and can play your cards smoolhly. You
would duck the first two rounds of clubs!
On lhe third'round of lhe suil, lhe declarer could win with dummy's ace to guar·
an1ee 10 lr!cks via live spades, lwo
hearts and lhree clubs (and collect an
uneKpecled i l lh here). Bul he would
probably gel greedy and lake a lhlrd club
easy over1rick. But you would produce
lhe club king oul of your back pockel and
relurn a red-colored card. Now lhe conlracl would lail by one Irick, South losing
one hean, IWo diamonds and one club.
The principle: II declarer w1n repeal a
linesse !hallS losing, lhe dalender wilh
the winner should duck at least once.

,

...,

GRIZZWELLS
MY OHI.Y flll!&gt;TAI&lt;'.E WA'3 \.CI/1144 M'( Fo?.M£.~
6\~l&gt;R!Et\P ~ MUCH

1 Kind
of helmet
5 Mornings,

member'

briefly
8 Hungry -boar
11 M011n1aln
range near

51 A.frame
53 Very lasllel
54 Prolix for
"lrllllon"
55 Type of

AstroGraph
'!bur 'lllrthdoil':

microscope

12 Team cheer
13 Grassy
shoulder
15 Smell gull
16 Dice lhrow
17 Kind of sled
18 Thirsty
20 Lab monkey
22 lndlallnct
2S PTincess
Dl's ni"G!!
26 Freighter's
plaCll
27 Big bird
28 Gamoflah
31 Collect
33 Raps34 Regal
symbOls
J8 Boarded up
J9 Author
Anals40 PHs sandwich
41 Accommodated
44 Sigh of joy

57 "Fernando"
band
61 Rice wine
62 Tlkkansn of
hockey
63 Faclludger
10 Debate
64 Dlslanl
65 Have dinner 14 Oater back·
drop
66 Berra of
baseball
19 "E~
Hom !J'OUP
21 Shogun's
DOWN
yes
22 Plunging
t Buller
necklines
serving
2 Henri's
23 Bombay
nanny
Island
24 Expert
3 Pothole
IIIIer
25 Minor injury
4 Shive
29 Reliremenl
opllons
devotee
5 Highbrow
30 Eggy drink
32 UHimate
6 Gullet
degree
1 co..i
a Compelent 35 Meg or
9 Klddle·llt
Nolan
all thor
36 Show off

,

I AM NOT

nz't'l,

WHATE:Ve:R
THAT ME:AN5

by Luis Campos
Celeb!ity C1!)'ler ~ams are crealeO from qootalions ~ famoiJS people past and prssent.
·
Each ~llflr 111 lfle Cipher staros fer ar'iJthe!
.

Today's clue: J equals

" ... K T M L Y v· H M P E K V TL

w.
X Z M EBB F

J M V V B 0 B_E X G Y T L G M H H V J K Y K B P Y
KM!XGE
•

VB EB

GBLUMG

BPYFB8LZ ."

SBPZXGZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "F1Im IS a battleground : love. hale, ac1ion. ~rnence,
death. In a word : emotions."- (Director) Samuel Fuller.

'=~:~i~' S©~~lM-LGt~~GAM I
.d.. 4
CI.AY I . '0UAN - - - , . - - WOlD

~y

0 f011t
Rearrange tetttrs of tht
sc:rcmblod word1 bolo.. 10 form

four

'lmple wordt

SALUMV

w 0 L GR

_l

T I' I

A0 NYD f,
s

I I I' I

A middle aged woman exasperated
her driving instructor. Shaking his
head he sugges&lt;ed. ''lust drive the

i

I

r--;:~-;:;-~-;-:;::--, way you wishetl vour --· -· ... "

KUNNID

.,jr""11r-.,,-.8_,,..§...,.,-.,.,~ G) Co~ole~e
.

•

•

.

.

.

:ho ch,_
&lt;le ouo1od
by fdi1t'IQ in th~ mr~lt'IO wora1
you develop irom srep No. j belo......

l

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I' I' i' Ir

SCRAML!TI ANSweRS litO«
Metric -

Rebus - Capon- Influx- SPECIFIC

While visiling a famous garden I go1los1. I yeUed for

help and heard a voice behind the hedge sheepishly
ask, "Can you bt more SPECIFIC" ,

ARLO &amp; JANIS

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - It's
IITlportanl you strive to bf3 prudent and
log1cat in the management ol your
resources for the ne11t couple of days. If
you're indifferent or careless, you could
create prOblems lor yourself.
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19)- Should
11 seem like everything you want to do is
be1ng stymied by developments over
which you have no control, keep a cool
head and ba pa lient so you don't make
•
matters worse.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Be realIStic and resign yourself to the fact that
what you are· working for at present is
Qmng to take concerted etlort In order to
be successful. Don't look for any shortcuts or easy outs.
ARIES (March 2t ·April 19) - There IS a
good chance you could bo tapped by a
group or organization in which you're .
involved lor an assignment othe r members have been artfully dodging. Be prepared
TAURUS tApri120-May 20) - Objectives
that you consider to be Importan t for you
to achieve must be handled extremely
carefully. Do no! use tactics that could
lose the respect ot your colleagues.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- No maner
how excited you are about an Idea or
plan you have, don't bounce it off on an
individual who has only limited perspec tive. This .person could dull the edge ol
your enthusiasm.

SOUP TO NUTZ
.Is THe!e an\'mi..,

Remodeling
New Oarag..
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
V1nyt Siding &amp; Painting
Pa1lo and Porch Oeckt

IN \f'IS L\l~ THaT
C&lt;ln HORT US ?

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-621S
2~

Pomeroy m110
Vears locAl Expcnf'nCl'

-H,

"

37 Aroe
of London
42 · Unfold,
In verae
43 Rx givers
45 Faiselronta
46 Bundle of
grain
47 Jacket
50 Genoa'a
locale
52 Fox's home
53 Break
56 Buckeye at.
campus
58 Set class
59 Paper Item
60 "Exodus"
name

CELEBRITY CIPHER

er.

ll!f1L ;rro.

Why Drive Anywhere Else?

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

East

Wednetd•y, July 12, 2006
By Bernice Bede Osol
In !tie year ahead, il might 8ppear as if
you have to woril: a trlfte harder in order
to achiev9 your objeclives, but dOn't let
this disturb you. Just set your sights high,
and what you achieve along the way will
add up handsomely.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Someone
who is always turning to you lor things
· slhe needs might try to borrow an item
that you are reluctant to loan out. Don't
hesitate to say "no~ and mean II.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Perhaps the
reason you're not genlng the adequate
cooperation you need from associates Is
because you have riO! been providing the
example they need to comply. The ball is
in your court
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - II you have
not been feeling your best lately, 1! is
more than likely yo u haven't been giving
adequate e.nention to sensible health
habits. Start to !allow a wholesome pro·
gram
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - There's a
chance complications could develop
between close fnends w1th whom you
mil; socially. You may find yourself in an
uncOmtortable pos1 11on of haVing to take
s1des.
SCQRPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Problems
that could ar1se Within your immediate
household shoufd be reso lved solely by
the
family
members
lnvol\led.
Con tributions from outsiders could make
a bad s1iuation worse.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·be;c. 21)- Take
ca re you're not so Immersed 1n your own
ideas tha1 you tall to ,hear the construelive suggestions of another who is try1ng
to be helpful. Be an open·minded listen-

'lt&gt;U ILLEGALLY !~!'ROVED
YOUR LlE, THEN IT'S
A TWENTY· THREE.

' •

~£!?.L~~~~!'

North

Pass
Pass

Maybe one ruffs,
maybe one discards

•

BIG NATE

Columbus Rd.

•

1 __.

&amp;f'O~

/

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS
93
Athens
' I

2.

West

"iF '(OU'i&lt;E T\\t:. BQ(&lt;:N LO~, vOO' finesse, , 1hinking he ,was co!lecling an

,_, 1"0 BUiZ.t-1

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U~LUC.K.'(,

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ll~==zz::iJ:=:c::::::c=::!::;:C::::=::::!J

1F 'IOU'~

.........._

LUC.K~,

""""

740-992-6971
Frel'

F~OM

SUN, AUNT

t

David Lewis

Stop &amp; Compare

ENERGY
TH'

•

26 Years Experience

140·992·1671

DIDJA KNOW
WE CAN Gil

t
i.•.r

U\\ IS

AeStoratiM &amp; Pads, Inc. ,

loaded. Must sell $1.500
(740}645-3727
For
Sale:
Vine
Ripe OBO
Tomatoes
at
Yoder's (740}388-0528.
Greenhouse, 10mi. West of
1999 Buick LeSabre . V6 ,
G •
4dr, powe1 everything, AM·
I \ In\ &gt;., J 1'1'1 II&gt;.,
FM cassettS, new !ires, 78K,
,\11\l'\l~)(l\
clean, $4,900. (740)379·

'

E~NifS

Toll Free 877-669-0007

I~II'ROVEMfJ\lS

r

; ' &lt;

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• Hospilallletls
• Wheelchairs

'

Unconditional liletime guarantee. Local references furmshed. Established 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 4460670, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

7 2

Opening lead&lt;t J

'

3l&gt;~

H Is

"'K4 3

•

1996 Honda CBA 600 F3. foot shde·out. Very good
Runs e&gt;tcellent, very fast. condition. $9500. 740·949Must se ll $2,000 080. 26t5.

&gt;.,1

t AK84

"'QJ8

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
l..ocallv owued. Wt care abour wm .'

(740)256-6279.

7 6 4

.AKJ l05

Delivering Daily *One Stop Shop*

2002 Jayco Eagle 5th wheel ,
30': 2 slides; excellent condition.
(304)634-0044
or

•

• Q 10 7

'( A K 5

• Nebulizers

740·446·0007

East

South

.1999·25 loot Sandpiper 5th
wheel travel trailer with 12

area; and
C. natural resourcebased
restoration
within and beyond lhe
assessment area.
Alternative 8 is pro-·
posed as the preferred
alternative
and
includes aquatic habihome, 49916 Manuel lat quality improve·
MUSICAL
080 call (304167S-1379
Ref.,
Racine,
Ohio ment proj~cts, sediINSI'RUMENI'S
mentation reduction
1993 Honda Accord, Run s 45771 .
projects, acid mine
Bd of Trustees
Kimball Studio Piano, exc81- excetlerrt, S1200. (740)245·
Robert Morris, Chris drainage abatemenl
5672
lent condition, like new - - - - - - - - Wolfe, William Graham, and "' treatment proj$700. Chest freezer $150. 1995 Chevy Corvette- red , Clerk Joyce While
ects, welland and
good · co ndition . (740)245· price $14,000. Ph. (740)446· (7)11
associated
upland
a94!\i3~9:_:a:::«:::er~4:;::0i:;O:;_.~~-., _106c:_:2_.- - - - - habll
preservation,
FRuns &amp;
reestablishment, or
1996 Ford Windstar LX
Public
Notice
enhancement
projects,
L--.iViiEGI:':iEIII'AB:;LES,;
· ;i,_.l Runs/looks good, cold AJC,

ADVERTISE YOU·R
BUSINESS .

West
• 8 3
• J 9 6 2
• J 10 9 3
• .7 52

45 Viper
4a Deshrt
choice
49 Fab Four

China

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Bolh

'OXYGE?

949·1957:
Piclured
on
Pure bred Cocker Spaniel www thunderb1rdcenter, com ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
puppy $125. Call (74013881992 Chevy Camara AS The Board of Trustees
0401.
(25th Anniversa ry Series)
of Letart Twp, Meigs
'! Tea-Cup Yorki e, female , needs work $3,000 080: County will hold their
1991 VW Passatt new
12 weeks
Budget Hearing ror
•Tea-Cup Poodle. f(i!mate. engine, new hoses. needs year 2007. Budget will
12weeks. Registered , tiny work , $3,500 OBO: 1990 be ready for review
baby doll face. · (740)446- Ford Econollne Van S500 July 14, by appoint·
firm: 1975 Ford F-100 Truck ,
9428
ment only at Clerks
2 wheel drive for parts $250

Have some hauling to do?
Carmichael
Equipmentyour source for quality
g~senecks , dumps and uti I·
!ties. Your dealer for Preslar
and Load Trail trailers .

MONTY

(7.t» ·~~:I. •
• Portable Ox~gen
• Helios
• Homcfill

07-11-06

• Q 9 2
• 8 4 3
• Q 6 5
• A 10 9 6

Call Gary Stanley
740·742·2291
• Leave a message

7:00AM· 8:00PM

ln_teMr, . White v.inyl ~op.
N1ce dr1ver, 390cl eng1ne,
auto transmission, power
steering
po e
b ak
·
wr
r e.
power window, power seat.
Price $9 .soo.oo.
Hill's
Automotive Clhssic Car

Lab pups, Chocolate &amp; 29670
Bashan
Road ,
Black, shots &amp; worrn§d Racine, OhiO 4577 1: Phone:
(304)895·3274
740·949·2217: Fa~ :
740·

(740)256-135S

North

"lnSJJred"

Hours

(740)441·7632.

L,..;:o,;,;, •If~~~--~

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

740-949·2217

992-5682
BoATS

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMINCi &amp;
CiENERAL
CONTRACTING

45771

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

Luxury
Van ,
Chevy,
Excellent
condition,
mechanic owned, travel in 02 Wildcat 27ft. 5th Wheel,
, must see! $5,900 or slide out. Look and make
offer". Call (740)245·9109,

2002 Yamaha Vstar 1100
AKC Lab puppies. Yellow,
Classic, 5,500 mites, black,
choc ., 2 black, price $150.
AKC yellow (3 yrs old) 04 Ford Taurus , 4 dr., V-6, new condi tion, leather bags,
female Lab S200. Phone auto, air, loaded, $7495; 00 50mpg, ~5.000. (740)245·
(740) 446-1062.
Ford Escort ZX2, 2dr, auto, :_59l.j3~4~.--~·~~--,
air, sharp, $4495·, 01 ~
, - BoXIS &amp; MO'JlJRS
American Bull dog mate, all Plymouth Neon, 4dr. auto,
white, 1 yr old $200 best air, n1ce,
R1verview
offer. (740)256-60S7.
Motors 1 block above .
.
McDonalds, Pomeroy. Oh, 1993 16ft. Capehorn fiShing
CKC Miniature Pinscher. 740-992·3490
boat, 2000 model molar,
90hp, and Trailer. Lots of
Rea dy to Go Black/Tan ,
Redrran· &amp; CreamlTan. Call 19ti2 Thunderbird ; Blue Extra's (304)882·1148 after
(740)388-8788
Exterior,
Ivory
leather 3:00pm AsKing $6,500
Full blooded puppies, 6 wkcr
ld
p b k W
0 ' 2., ma 1e em ro e e1sh
Corgis $200 each. 5 Ja~k
R sell 1
1 4 1
1
us
s, ma e,
em~ ~
$100 ea. and 2 female mm1
Pinschers $2 50 · (740)446 ·
34 13.

ROGER HYSELL
GIIRIIGE

.
I

2059

No $650 (304)675-8089 .

Single Bedroom $300 month
Ad , 4 m1 from R10 Grande
c;c__:_:::.::._=._;_;__ _ , off 325 Deposllrequ1red . No + $300 deposit. 2 br Apt.
$350 a month $300 deposit
3 bedroom house. 1 balh. 10 pets. Free gas I Call tor more
Tracy's Apl . (304)675-2288
m1ns to town . np pets. ~nformal!on (740)245-5622 .
$400/mo
ptUs
depos1,t
Townhouse
Mobile home s1tes for up to Tara
(740}446-9430.
16x80 1n Country Homes Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
3-4 BF! home, Geo. Creek j740)385·4019
Rd.- Non Smoking rental- --'--~---- Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
57001mo. sec . pep. Call Mobile HOme s11es lor up to Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
(740)4•16-3644 .
161(80 1n Country Homes No Pets, Lease
Plus
(740)385·4019
Secunty Deposit Required,
4 bedroom hOuse in Tuppers
(740}367-7086 ..
AI~·\Hnll·: ~rs
Plains. Cal l Brenda at 740FON RENT
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
992·3034.
ing applications for waiting
48R house lor ren1 . $650
1 and 2 bedroom apart- list for Hud-subsized, 1-· br,
mo. plus dep. Call 1740 )446 · ments. furnished and unfur- apartment, call 675-6679
3644 lot 1nfo
n1shed , security deposit Equal Housing Opportunity
requ1red. no pets. 740·992AHention!
local companY, olfenng "NO 2218.
FoRLFASE
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- - - -- - - - grams for you tO buy your 2· bedroom· Apa11ment . No
home 1nstead of renting.
Pets. $350 month. $200 . 1500·2200 sq. ft. newly ren·
· 10oe, financ1ng
deposit.
2 10 1 Je1ferson ova ted ·prime business
· Less than pertecl credit Ave. Pt. Pleasant (30 4)8 95- space on busy downtown
accepted
:.1963
corner Gallipolis. (740)709·
pets
Accepting applications. relefer1ces required.
$550, ulllilles pa1d +deposit.
Ask lor
Hartford area. clean. 2 bed· 740·992-4119
room. 1 ~ath S325 month. :::M::•rc.eg::e_ _ _ _ __

Duffy?

(740)645·3727 (740)388 ·
N1ce,
clean
Efficiency
9 Miniature DachshundS first Wheat &amp; Barley Straw, lor
Apartment Ret &amp; Oep.req.
_os_2_8_
. ---'----shots &amp; wormed ready to go Sale &amp; De)iver y available
No Pets 304-675-5162
1999
Black Harley Dayidson
(304)576-2238
or
(304)59307-22-06 304 -593 ..3820
5431
Falb9Y.
Lots of chrome and
' North 3rd Ave., Middleport,
exlres 9,400 miles. Call
2 bedroom, · furnished, African Gray Parrot, Good
II{ \ \'""I'DH I \ 110\
(740}446-9954 or (740)339deposit &amp; prev1ous rental talker with large Steel Cage

4 0 44

2 Bedroom apartment. No

Lotdy, Lotdy,
look who'~ 4-0•••
It'~ ·~ailot Lori'
in all het gloty.
Don't be mad ot
get huffy •••
Payback!: aten't
fun, ate they

------

Rw

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

2 Reg. Pers1an mares
$1 ,200 each. Galt (740)388·
9747

Modern 1 bedroom apt. Beauty Equipment for Sale Piglets for Sale! Turn your
Phone: (740)446.0390.
call (304)675·1545
excess garden produce into
·pork. 740-982-7007
JET
NEW 2 Bedroom apartment
AERATION MOTORS
Quality horse and livestock
1n country set11ng. No pets.
Accepting applications. ref· Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In trailers now ava1lable at
erences required . $425 mo. Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- Carmichael Equipment. New
dealer for Valley and
+ utilities + deposit. 740· 800-537-9528.
Kieferbuill
Horse
and
992-4119- A~k for Marge.
livestock Trailers. Many
NEW Delux,e t Bed~oom NEW AND USED STEEL options available· steel. alu·
apartment in country seHing Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar minum, dressing rooms, liv·
Concrete.
Angle .
Washer/Dryer hooK-up. No For
inQ quariers. (740)446·2412 .
Pets. Acceptmg apphca· Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
FOr
Drains,
t1ons. references required . Grating
&amp;
$550, ut1li11es paid+ deposit, Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
GRA.JN
740·992-4119 - Ask for Scrap Meials Open Monday,
Marge
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Hay for sate 2nd cu ttin g
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Alfalfa Hay in shed you load
N1ce 1br, all electric, stove &amp; Thursday.
Saturday
&amp; $3.25 a bale (304)675·4308
relr1dg furnished
located Sunday. (740)446-7300
near
High
SchOol
Hay for Sale. 1000 Round
$325/month, plus deposit
PETS
Bales, mixed hay. 740-949(304)675·3 100
fOR SALE

pay utilities. Lease &amp; roter· Mobile Home on Cora Mill

' Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locator's
I, 740)367 ·0000

MISCI~UANEOUS

r

20 ~ h &gt;IIII .E HoME'&lt;
fiiR RE"T

IH \I \I"

r-

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

BRIDGE

rI

L,.-riMiiiiERiiirnANDiiiiiiiiiiiiSiiE-.,1.

. www.mydailysentinel.com

John Deere Min1 Excavator/
Tractor Loader Backhoe/
SKid Steers. Carmichael
Equipment/74,0)446-2412

New John Deere Compacts
and 5000 Series Utility trac·
tors 0 0% Fixed for 36
months
through
John
Deere Creait. Carmichael
Immaculate 2 b1tdroom
a11artmen1 1n the counlry Used Furniture Slore, 130 Equ1pment (740)446·2412
New carpet &amp; cabinets, Bu!av1ll9 Pike. Stop by
Quality John Deere Hay
freshly pamted &amp; decorated. (740)446-4782. Gallipolis,
Equipment for less-round
WID hookup. Beautiful coun·OH
·:;,;;.
·H
~r;;•·;.;'~'-.;;3,:(;;;·
M .;.F,;.I_....., balers, square balers &amp;
try setting . Must see to r!:!
mower conditioners 04.7%
appreciate
$400/.mo
FiKed for 48 months through
(614)595-7773 or 1-888John
Deere
Credit.
212-1208 . .
Carmichael
Equipment
Buy or sell. Riverine
(740)446-2412.
One
Bedroom Antiques, 1124 East Main
La rge
Apartment in Point Pleasant. on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
LIVISIOCK
$4951month Includes all 992·2526. ,Russ Moore,
U111lties (304)675·5819
owner.
Mlddleport--2 Bedroom Apt.
ptusl}hl1ties. 740·843-

\

Tuesday, July 11, 2006
ALLEY QOP
,

-'

�•

,_
'Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July u,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2006

'

•

National League hopes to end AL domination
BY MIKE FITZPATRICK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH The
numbers are so one-sided.
it's stanling.
The American League is 80-1 in the last nine All-Star
games. AL teams also swept
the past two World Series
and won an overwhelming
61 percent of interleague
games against the NL this
season.
David Ortiz, Vladimir
Guerrero and Ichiro Suzuki
at the plate. Johan Santana.
RQy Halladay and Mariano
Rivera on the mound.
Indeed, there's nothing
junior about the Junior
Circuit.
·
"It's a far superior league
right now." Alex Rodriguez
said Monday. "In the
American League. this is an
All-Star team among AllStar teams."
. Bold words from a bigname player.
And A-Rod will have
another chance to prove his
point Tuesday night when· he
stans at third base for the AL
in the 77th All-Star game at
picturesque PNC Park .
Stationed just to his left (as
usual) on media day was
Yankees shortstop Derek
Jeter. Wearing a smart-lookin,g suit. the New York captam was a little more, well,
diplomatic about the AL-NL
gulf.
"Alex said that? I didn't
say that," offered a smiling
Jeter, who often chooses his
words carefully. "l think it's
just one of those streaks, one
of those stretches that you
can't explain."
Maybe the American
League truly has more talent.
Maybe this sort of thing is
simply cyclical and the lop'

AP photo
From left Ozzie Guillen, manager of the American League All Siars, Brad Penny of the Los
Angeles Dodgers, and Kenny Rogers of the Detroit Tigers. smile during a news conference
in Pittsburgh Monday. Penny and Rogers are the scheduled starters in the Al l Star game on
Tuesday night.
"We certain ly want to win
Overall, the NL h'olds a 40sided numbers are a !luke.
Whatever the ·case, it's an the game, but I don't thin~ · 34-2edge. So what's the.reaundeniable run of dominance many guys are going to Jose son for the . Amencan
that many National Leaguers sleep over it if we don't," he League's astoundmg success
want to stop.
now?
said.
Now.
Of course, it wasn't always
"We've inherited a lot of
''I" d have to say the that way.
their
great
players,"
Anierican League is probaThe National League used Rodriguez said. "I think revbly taking it a Iittle more to own the AL. winning II enue sharing has helped
seriously right now," NL straight All-Star games and American League teams. It's
manager Phil Garner of the 19 of 20 , until Fred Lynn's just the way it has worked
Houston Astros said. "We are grand slam off Allee out.
tired of getting beat. To me, Hammaker at old Comiskey
"There 's probably 30 or 40
the task this year is, let's get Park in Chicago helped snap guys in the American League
that sense of pride back for the string in 1983.
·
that could be in the All-Star
the National League."
The explanation back then game that are not," said
And home-field advantage was this: With more black Rodriguez. making his I Oth
in. the World Series, too.
and Latin stars such as Willie' trip. "This is the hardest AllBut one of Garner's own Mays and Roberto Clemente, Star team that I've ever had
players, slugger Lance the NL played a superior to make ."
Berkman. still sounded pret- brand of ball - fast, enerTrying to reverse the NL's
ty cavalier.
fortunes, right-hander Brad
getic and determined.

Penny ( 10-2, 2.9 1 ERA) of
the Los Angeles Dodgers
will stan against 41-year-cld
Detroit lefty Kenny Rogers
(11-3, 3.85). scorned at last
year's su mmer showcase
after shoving a cqmeraman
earlier in the season.
" It's something that I've
always wanted to experience." Penny said. 'Tm sure
my nerves will be flowing."
Elected by fans to start at
shortstop. Jose Reyes won·' t
play for the NL because of a
cut on hi s left pinky that
required sti tches . Atlanta's
Edgar Renteria will take his
place in the lineup, and St.
Louis' David Eckstein was
added to the roster.
· Three of Reyes' New York
Mets teammates, third baseman David Wright, . center
fielder Carlos Beltran and
catcher Paul Lo Duca, will
be in the lineup. St. Louis
slugger
Albert
Pujols
anchors the offense from the
No. 3 spot.
.
·
"It'd be nice to win it so
we could talk about something else rather than losing
all the time," Padres closer
Trevor Hoffman said.
The NL ' already has one
feather in it~ cap after
Philadelphia's Ryan Howard
. won the Holl)e Run Derby by
beating Wright 5-4 in the
finals Monday ni~ht.
The World Se'nes champi·
n
0 Chicago White Sox have
six players on the AL squad
- plus outspoken manager
Ozzie Guillen - but no
starters. Jose Contreras, who
pitched six innings Sunday,
was· pulled in favor of
Minnesota rookie Francisco
Liriano.
Guillen chose Toronto's
Vernon Wells to start in .center field, replacing Boston
left fielder Manny Ramirez

(sore knee). Guerrero will be
In left and Suzuki in right.
"Even when I play
Nintendo against my kids I
want to beat 'em," said
Guillen. who already told
some AL AJI-Stars they
might not see the tleld. "It's
my job to win this game and I wiJJ.do anything.''
With 23 first-time AllStars, some of baseball's
biggest names will be missing, including Barry Bonds.
Roger Clemens. Ken Griffey
Jr. and Randy Johnson.
Btl! others arc back. suc h
as new Dodgers first baseman Nomar Garciaparra.
" It's great to see the young
guys out . here," Garciaparra
said. "I think_ it just shows
the way baseball evolves."
Perhaps the biggest star
this week will be 5-year-old
PNC Park and its breathtaking backdrop. ·
Sit hi gh in the doubledecked grandstand and the
view is absolutely spectacular. Just beyond the ~enter­
field fence lies the Roberto
Clemente bridge, painted a
soft gold. It spans the peaceful Allegheny River, pointing
toward downtown Pittsburgh
and its handso me skyline.
Quite a sight to see , especially on a warm summer
night. ,
Fan s of · the struggling
Pirates , with the worst record
in the majors at 30-60, will
have a couple of All-Stars to
·cheer in rhird baseman
Freddy Sanchez and outfielder Jason Bay, who will
bat cleanup for th e NL.
"We want to beat these
guys," Phillies reHever Tom
Gordon said. " Hopefully,
this will be the year for us to
do that and get the National
League going."

The Zidane mystery: what set him off at World Cup?
BY JEROME PUGMIRE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. BERLIN - Was it something he said?
With France and Italy tied
in extra time of Sunday's
World Cup 11nal, Zinedme
Zidane head"butted Marco
Materazzi in the chest and
was ejected. France went on
to lose on penalty kicks.
The day after, still no one
knew what the Italian defender might have said to the
French star.
"The Italians did everything they could do' to proVoke Zidane," France defender William Gallas said.
Seeonds before, Materazzi
had grabbed a handful of
Zidane 's jersey just as a
French attack on goal passed
AP photo
harmlessly by. The two
exchanged words as they In this image from ABC television, French soccer player
walked back up the field, well Zinedine Zidane head-butts Italy's Marco Materazzi. dunng
behind the play. Then, with- the Soccer World Cup Final Sunday in Berlin.
out warning, Zidane spun
"This is a disciplinary matZidane's agent, Alain
around, lowered his head and ter now. I can't give any state- Migliaccio, was quoted by
rammed Materazzi, knocking ments now.'' FIFA spokesman the BBC as saying the France
him to the ground.
Markus Siegler said.
captain told him the Italian
"said
something very serious
Matemzzi. meanwhi.Je, was
The Paris-based antiracism advocacy group SOS- quoted as denying the terror- to him, but he wouldn't tell
Racism
issued . a statement
me what."
..
.ist comment.
M on d ay quotmg
1
Whatever it was, it was
severa
"It is absolutely not true, I
verv well mformed sources
enough to infuriate Zidane.
frOin the world of football" as . didn't call him a terrorist, I
"Zizou is so meone who
saying Materazzi called don't know anything about reacts to things," said Aime
Zidane a "dirty terrorist." It that," the Italian news agency Jacquet, Zidane ·s coach at the
demanded that FfFA, soccer's . ANSA quoted Materazzi as 1998
World
Cup.
world governing body, inves- saying when he arrived with "Unfortunately he could not
tigate and take any appropri- his team at an Italian military control himself. It's terrible to
ate action.
airfield.
see him leave this way."
FIFA, which reviews all red
"What happened is what all
Even with the ejection,
cards at the World Cup, the world saw live on TV," Zidane still won the Golden
would not comment on ilie the Italian player said; refer- Ball as,the World Cup's best
specifics.
ring to the head-butting .
player.
Lo Duca threw to Wright
before Sunday's game ,
agai~st the Marlins , and
something
must
have
from PageBl
worked as Wright went on
to hit his 20th homer of the
t~e most ever by a Re.d Sox
season.
The two also had a
player.
batting
practice session
But after ·hitting ball after
ball into the Allegheny Monday morning .
As he stepped into the
River on the fly or bounce
batter
's box for the final
in the first round, Ortiz fell
off by hitting only three in round, Wright yelled to the
the second round - just as ' mound: "Come on, Dukey.
" .
he did in missing last year's Let's go."
Unlike last year, when the ·
final in Detroit.
Jason Bay failed to
Pirates'
Many derby hitters like to
homer
in
Comerica Park,
i:)ring a preferred batting
pract ice pitcher with them, each of the eight competibut Wright might have been tors homered. Troy Glaus of
the first to rely on a fellow Toronto fini shed with one,
All-Star. Lo Duca tried to but the other seven hit at
locate the ball where Wright least three.
likes it the mo'i, down and
Eliminated after the lirst
ln.
round were Jermaine Dye
"I was a pitcher in high (7) Miguel Tejada (3),
. school." Lo Duca said . · Lance Berkli1an .(3) and
"Now you see why I'm Glaus.
1101·."
Ortit.,
Berkman
and

Derby

Howard all found the
Allegheny River behind the
right-tield stands on the tly,
a feat accomplished only
once in regular season play:
Dary Je Ward did it for the
Astros in July 2002 with a .
drive estimated at 479 feet.
The fans at PNC Park
don ' t see as many homers
as they would like from the
last-place Pirates, so they
cheered every homer and
reacted loudly to any ball
that looked river-bound.
And .while Pittsburgh is an
NL city, the biggest cheers
and the brightest flashbulb
bursts were for Ortiz.
Not only was PNC Park
so ld out - the crowd of
38.702 has been topped
only once for a Pirates
game - hundreds of fans
lined
the
Roberto
Clemente Bridge behind
center fi eld for a free but
di slant view.

Zidane. who came out of · unfor&amp;ivable for its effect on
retirement to help France children watching the game.
'qualify forlhe World Cup and
'Thi s morning, Zinedine,
said he would quit soccer what do we tell our children,
completely after the touma- and all those for whom you
ment, got 2,012 points in the were the living role model for
vote by journalists covering all ti":lesT . French sports
the tournament. The three- da1Jy L Eqlllpe wrote.
time player of the year beat
Zidanc, whose parents emiFabio Cannavaro ('I ,977) and grated to France from
Andrea Pirlo (715), both of Algeria, became a proud
Italy.
symbol of a multicultural
Zidane's red card was any- France and is adored in
thing but unusual. He . was Algeria.
.
sent off 14times in his career
In the mountains where
at the club and international Zidane's parents grew up,
level.
Atmanne Chelouah carried
At the 1998 World Cup, he' off a life-size cardboard
stomped on a Saudi Arabian cutout of the player at "Cafe
opponent. Sitting, out a two- Zizou" after the red card.
match ban, he came back to
"We are very disappointscore two goals against Brazil ed," Chelouah said. "He
in the final
should have kept his cool."
Five years ago with
But lashing om is nothing
Juventus, he [lead-bulted an new to Zidane, who grew up
opponent in a Champions playing on concrete in an
League
match
against Impoverished
immigrant
Hambur~er SV after being neighborhood of Marseille,
tackled from behind.
where fouls and insults are
The reaction to Sunday's met with instant retribution. ·
outburst was mixed in
Perhaps he could never
France. President Jacques shake off that yoll-or-me
Chi rae called - Zidane "a mentality.
genius of world football," and
"You can take the man out
former Sports Minister of the rough neighborh,ood,
Marie-George Buffet said but you can't take the rough
Zidime 's aggressive act was neighborhood out of the

man," striker Thierry Henry
said Sunday.
At this year's World Cup.
where Zidane sat out one
match for getting two yellow
cards in the tlrst round. he
sent a message to his teammates. In a rare televi sion
interview. he said, "We die
together.''
They were ready to go as
far as they could for him, yet
he punished them.
"He'll carry that weight for
a long time," France coach
Raymond Domenech said of
Zidane's latest red card.
Zidane nearly won the
match with a late header after
giving France ail early lead
with a penalty, taking two
steps forward to slowly chip
the ball into the air while
goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon
dived to his right.
It was his third goal of the
toumament and sixth in the
last I0 major tournament
matches. He scored three at
the · 2004
European
Championship.
Zidane 's teammates had all
wanted to help him to one last
trophy. Failing that , they
refused to kick him when he
was down.
·

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Middleport·• Pomeroy, Ohio
:;ol'ENTS • \ 'nl. :;;;, Nn. 2:11

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Council hears residents' comments on ·drug problem

SPORTS
• AL rallies to beat NL.
See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

MIDDLEPORT - A lively
. discussion
on
Middleport's drug problem.
what the pol ice are doing
about it. and what· action
com munity re&gt;idents can
take to faci litate progress
toward alleviating it, higiTIighted · Monday night's
meeting of Middleport
Village co·uncil.
·
There was standing room
only in Council chambers

for citizens who turned out everything with a one-man involved in druus \Vho arc
to address the problem and shift,'' said Swift. '·We can't resident owncrs."bul lllL"tlv
to
question
whether keep up, we don't have all arc renwls. We're con·enough is being done by manpower on the street. we stantly seeing n~w pcopk
the police department to just ~an'! do it. "
-from Detroit. Cqlumbu s:
curb drug activity.
In response .to &lt;i comment. Dayton com ing in because
Middleport Chief of Swift acknowledged that they know there's a hi~
Police
Bruce
Swift's what one person de scribed market for drugs l1erc."
"
response was that "there 's as "s lum" hou sing and . Dr. Yvonne s~a lly called
no question we have a HUD rentals plays a role in for "making landlords
major drug problem in this · supporting the drt~g traffi c. accountable fo r the actions
town. and it's a priority for "Many people on public of the people in Iheir propus, but we need more help ," assistance are involved in erties." to which 1he room
Swift explained that there is drug use and trafl1cking," of residents burst into
only one officer on duty at said· Swift. "We have maybe applause. "What about the
any one time. "We can't do one or two residents landlords''" said Mary Wise_

"i1h Council member Jean
C r.;ti~ calling for "eliminating '"ihe ~n~ironm eill as a
way uf pani.ally sol\' ing the
problem ."
Craig contended that if
the vi llage's building code
. was bemg enforced by the
building inspector. Randall
Mnllins, 'ome of the problem, cou ld he eliminated.
"The &lt;'rdinancc is the law
of th is village," she said 'and
citl!d

renovat.ions in Low11

Please see Council, AS

Rio hopes for classes
to begin fall 2007 at
new Meigs Center
from driving to the mam
campus.
"We want to promote a
POMEROY
The campus atmosphere at the
University
of
Rio site," Bowman said of the
Grande/Rio
Grande building's
architecture
Community, College hopes which includes room to
for a ground breaking this grow.
fall for its new Meigs
Part of this growth is
Center that is ambitiously establishing and educating a
(and tentatively) scheduled core group of initial stuto launch in the fall of 2007. dents who may wish to
This launch will include move on to bachelor 's and
college classes offered in graduate level courses
the new facility for associ- which may be part of the
ate as well as bachelor 's Meigs Center's future,
degrees, distance learning · including a masters degree
and high sehoul I college program in teaching should
dual credit courses.
the demand present itself.
Luanne R. Bowman, vice
Bowman said a big part of
president for tinancial and the Meigs Center·'s focus
administrative affairs for the will be getting non-traditionUniversity of Rio Grande al students (adults) in the
spoke about Rio Grande in classroom, this focus would
Meigs County at yesterday's hopefully help educate the
Meigs County Chamber of workforce and strengthen ·
Commerce
Business the local economy.
Minded Luncheon .
Bowman presented the
Bowman spoke about the following statistics about
13,000 square-foot facility Meigs: Only 46 percent of
that is to be located at the the population have a high
Rocksprings campus near school degree , 27 percent
Meigs High School ·and · have no high school degree,
within close proximity for 13 percent have some col students of both Southern lege education, six percent
and Eastern School Districts have an associate's degree,
as well as Rio students from tlve percent have a bacheVinton County.
lor's degree, three percent
The new facility will have have graduate degrees.
eight classrooms each with
In other chamber busia capacity to seat 25 to 30 . ness, it was announced that
students. These classrooms Coffee , Commerce . and
will have removable walls Conversations at 8 a.m. on
to accommodate even more Fridays through July are
of a student population or sponsored by In surance
gathering.
Plus Agencies, Inc.
There will be distance
The Chamber Board of
learning classrooms where Directors Meeting will take
Meigs students will be able · place 8 a.m., July 25, chamto connect to the main canl- ber boardroom.
pus via tel evision, computThis month 's luncheon
ers and voice equipment
was catered by Hometown
A bookstore is al so Market of Middleport and
planned for the Meigs held at the P.omeroy
Cal)lpus to save students Library.
. BY BETH SERGENT BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Donald S. Guthrie, 52

INSIDE
• Senate approves plans
to allow prescription drug
imports from Canada.
See Page A2
• Concrete collapses
in Boston tunnel, killing 1
and prompting renewed
scrutiny of project.
See Page A2 .
• Cancer Center
recognizes donors.
See Pag" A3 ·
• Parkersburg police
warn Internet daters
about possible scams.
See Page A3
• OU's technology chief
. quits amid identity theft
problem. See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• Some offenders slip
through background
check process.
See Page A6

WEATHER

Dave Harris (740) 992-2155
Brenda DaviS (740) 992~2155

Pilot killed when
small plane crashes on
highway ramp, As

Charlene Hoefllctl/photo

Harry Davidson. ambassador for.the Scottish Rite Valle'y, Meigs unit, pres ents a community service ·plaque to Howard B. Mullen of Pomeroy at the lodge's annual dinner.

·SCOTIISH RITE AWARDS
COMMUNITY SERVICE PLAQUE
Bv

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HO EFLI CH@MYDA ILYSENTI NEL.COM

HARRISONVILLE Howard B.
Mullen, a member of Pom eroy's Fire
Department for 54 years, and active in
other seryice organizations of the community, has received special recognition from
the Meig s Unit of the Scottish Rite Valley
of Columbus.
Mullen was a guest at the group's annual
dinner held Saturday night at the
Harrisonville Masonic Lodge. There he was
presented a plaque in recognition of his dedication to community service by 32 Degree
Scottish Rite Ambassador Harry Davidso n.
Mullen, a retired bank auditor and exam.iner, is the oldest living member of th e ()ld
Th'iFd Ward Fire Comp:~ny and remains
active with Pomeroy's Fire Department as
well as the Meigs County Emergenc)'
Medical Service.
For many years he has been parade marshall for the Memoria l Day services of

Drew Weh,ler Po'i , American Legion.
,.aged in downtown Pomeroy. He has
been a member of that po st for many years
and al so hclongs · to the Di sa bled
American Veterans . .
In parades around the cowny he can be
seen driving his antique car marked with a
sheriff 's logo on the side. He is still a special depu ty with the Meigs County Sheriff's
Depa rtment.
Mullen spe nds his wimers. in Florida and
si nce 1990 has been .volunteering with the
Fire Di,trict ' of North Fort Myers. Earlier
this year he was presented an appreciation
plaque " in recognition of 17 years of dedi~ated .se rvi~e to the lire righters and citizens
of North Fort Myer, .··
II was in 195~ that Mullen joined the
Pomeroy Fire Department. It was a few
years before that when he began working
wit h Pomeroy&gt; emergency squad.
He is stil l responding to fires and emergency calls and ' till pursuing his hobby of
cullc~tlng miniature tire )rucks.

Three ·more arrested
Residents to vote on
. operating levy replacement on drug-related charges

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BY BETH SERGENT

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

PflAS£ SUPPORT THESE LOCAL
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•

,.

MIDDLEPORT - With
revenu e from a 3-mill gen. era! operating levy ending
on Dec. 31. Middleport
Village Council at Monday
night's meeting took act!on
to get a replacement live
year 3- mill levy on the ballot in November.
Council approved the
levy proposal hy a split
vote, four to two, with Steve
Houchins and Jeff Peckham
voting "no" to goin g for a
replacement in,stead · of a
renewal levy.
Prior to the vote. the village's fiscal officer· Susan
Bake r explain ed that a
renewal of th e current levy
would mean the amount of
money ge nerated would be
the same as . it is now with-

"

out any increase to property
owners. A replacement levy,
on the other hand, would
generate additional operating funds but would
increase property. taxes.
The amount of money
now coming in from the·
current levy is $23.221 a
year and a renewal levy
would generate a similar
amount.
However,
a
replacement levy. based on
more current property evaluations, would generate
$53.400. a~cording to
Baker.
ln a di'scussion on villalfe
finances last month . it was
report ed that the village
faces a $ 115.000 general
fund deficit next year.
Ferman Moore at Monda y
night's meeting described
the village as "going
.broke.'' That inform ation

was the basi s for the decision by Bob Robinson. Jean
.Craig, Sandy Brown and
Ferman Moore to vote
' "yes' for the replacement
levy. Houchin s contended
that "we shou ld use what
we get and stay within our

BSERG EN T@MY DAI LYSENTI N[L .C0 r-.1

POMEROY Three
more people were arrc,lcd
on 'dru g- related char~cs
over the weeke nd uccon.lim.!
to ihe Pomero} Pol i c~
Department .
Shortly after 2:30a.m . nn
·sunday night . Pomt''"' Y
P;~trohnan C. Brent RtN'
pulled over .a two- :-.cat(:l.
vehicle with three passenge rs in the ~ar on Scwnd
and Mechanic Streets.
Arriving as Ro,c·s backup was Pomeroy Assistant
Pol ice Chief Alan e&gt;uecn

believed to he cocaine was
foun d on Rov Jic~ Neff. 45.
Pomemy. ·
Nell was later arrested
charged with pus~e~­
'ion or a controlled sub-

;111d

'lancc. des Iruction of propcrl). intim idalion or a police
officer_ drug tra ffickin g.
mean s.''
]1\hSession or hypodermic
Budget approved
needles. assault on a police .
A budget of $1,37 1.6H H
officer. Netlwa' tran,portfor operational · expenses
ed to the Muskingum
was approved by CotrliciI.
Coumy Jail and appeared in
Baker said that a public
Meig, Cuuntv Courl on
meeting for review of the
Mn1;d"y thmigh details on
.figures was advertised but
any nond we re not available
nobody came. The budget
at pre!-~~ time.
has to be filed with the
Ahn arre,ted at the traffic
Meigs County auditor by who ~aid the trio wen; ill'ling S\~)p
were
JanK'
"suspiciously." Queen 'aid Fitchpalri~k, 21. Middleport
July 20.
the officers then asked tile
Paving project
&lt;lllLi V"leridvlc-,C' Iinto~k. 32.
Middlep ort
Co un cil trio tn step out ,,r the vchi~k · Shade . Qt1~en 'aid a re,idue
awarded a contract for 1&lt;1 which they complied.
ht:lie\cd h) he ·cocaine was
Queen reported 1hat hypopaving 22 streets · and
l'otllld Ol) ritd1patrid whn
dermic n~edlc"' a~ '"d I a~ a
Please see Levy, AS
_...,mall amount of what w.~~
Please see Arrest$. A5

•

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