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                  <text>·Page D6 • 6unbap «itnn~-6tntintl

Sunday,August6,2oo6

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Volunteer honored
for 25 years of
volunteer service, A3

GALLIA .· CouNTY FAIR ·ScENES
Does your present hearing aid:

Say Goodbye_
to that "Echo Chamber'' or
"Plugged Up" Sensation
~

• sound like you're in a barrel when
you speak?
• sound noisy when you chew?
• whistle when you talk on the phone? .

. ~ AOVANUO HEARING

We can help!
Call us and find out how!

Braves too strong
for Reds, Bt

0

•

CENTER

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

"'0 CENTS • Vol. ;;:1. No. :.q•J

1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH

SPORTS

Call (740) 441 -1971 or (800) 434-4194

• Landis backup test
positive. See Page BI

"" 11 . m)·tl:~ilvwnti•u·Lmm

MON I) A Y, A lJG UST 7, 2006

Color palette selected for downtown Middleport project
Bv BRIAN J. REED
palette is designed to create
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL COM · a unified appearance in the
downtown shopping district
MIDDLEPORT
and emphasize the historic
Middleport's design review value of the buildings in lhe
board has selected a co.lor area.
palette of Vi ctorian and hisLaurie
Reed,
a
toric colors to coordinate Middleport-based interior
improvements to buildings decorator and member of lhe
in downtown Middleport.
design review board, develMeeting Friday, the board' oped the color palette for the
adopted a selection of board:.S approvaL She said it
approved colors for building is ,designed to offer building
facade improvements. The owners a wide selection of
0

•

colors while ass uring th at all
building
improvements
made as a part of the project
complement each other.
She said all colors are
included in the palette, neutral base colors and varying
shades of yellow. blue ,
green. red , purple and other
trim and accent colors.
"If a building owner
wishes to include a particular color on hi s building . it
will be in cluded in lh e

palett e,"
Reed
said .
"However, there are specific shades of those colors
that will be approved for the
downtown district.':
Brenda Phalin . a member
of lhe review board . said she
was ple ased that · the
approved palette includes so
many choices.
"The palette is not
designed to limit anyone.
and there are so many colors
and shades included in it that

•

Racine woman wall&lt;.s 1,000
miles without leaving town
BY BETH SERGENT

OnnuARIES
Page AS
• Faye Brown
Harper Napper
• James E. Quails
• Delores WhitloCk

INSIDE
• BP shuts down the
nation's biggest oil field.
See Page AS
• Snedden top loser.
See

P.o~ge

A3

Katie Fisher is pictured here 11,1ith her Tennessee Cross Horse, "Storm." during
the Horse Costume Contest where they were named the Best Executed for their
nifty zebra disguise.

, Joy Kocmoudfphotos

These children are testing their teamwork skills during the Water flalloon Toss at the Kiwanis Youth
Program held on Thursday. Other contests included Bubble Blowing and Watermelon Eating.

AMtlltlmts lnsurat\Ce Jlacesen.l!r
agency can help you with all of your
home{l\vner insut.mt.:e needs. And
thrre ts one in y{mr hnmcwwn!

• Officials worried about
rule being tested in
special elections.
See Page A6

. I~S noll"ilSV to ram the Puc"~'lll'r
design:tlton. Agcms rtcccl to know
how \u cuslomiz:e vour hvmt''""""('f
insurant&lt; ""d'"'l~ickly. easli)'.
and exp&lt;ttly. Th&lt;n, they follow up
With tht best sef\'lCe m the mdustry
when you nc.;·d it tm.\ il

,F

Talk to a hll11lt?O\\llt' r in5ur;mrc

l

rxpcr1 m }'Our hllmelt)Wn l ndt~ y

Above: Lemonade is a refreshing, all-natural beverage that
cooled the crowd as temperatures hovered near one hundred degrees for most of fair week. Here, "Wolfman" grins
as he shakes sugar, lemon, and ice together in one of JJ's
Lemonade Stands, which · have been at the Galli a County
Junior Fair for the last 48 years.

And don) forget to •sk ab&lt;&gt;Ul
Mototlsts' l'ttmier Client ·Rewards.
This program could save you
up to 15 ptr~ent on your auto
insurance and Jj percent on your
homeowners insurance premium!

WEATHER
lnsuNnce

,

. 388-811,1

Real Eatllte
441-1111

Left: Jenzo the Clown smiles as he twists balloons into a
yellow flower for an anxious little girl. Jenzo and his partner,
Lucy are profess ronal clowns from Huntington , W. Va.
Details on Page A6

.

'

~MASSEY.
&lt;f::'\,...
~

~'

.

-~&lt;""

···~-""'

•

FERGUSD
' "'
.... ' ·t

t;; "

'-of

'·

'

. ', '

-

'

Buy, Sell or l'rade New &amp; Used Far•m &amp; Industrial Eq1ulp1mt~nt

Jim's Farm Equiplllant, Inc.

.................

2 - Ep*+a lnaae (IL It 7) • leDipoU., 01111

.(748)

• (740)

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox A3
· Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
... , Obituaries
As
Sports
B' Section
Weather
A6
·, © aoo6 Obi~ Valle)' Publlshing Co. ·

Pfease see. ProJect. AS

Bag of used
•
syringes
found in
Syracuse

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM
The ferris wheel is a staple of every fair. It provides a romantic ride for couples and a . unique perspective for fairgoers wishing to observe the bustling
commotion below.

nobody ·should feel restricted or limited by it," Phalin
said. "It will, though , give
some consi stency to the
area's appearance."
Both
King's
Ace
Hardware
and
Valley
Lumber stock the colors
selected for the palette, but
lhey can be color matched
anywhere. Reed said.
· The
Middleport

RACINE - We've all heard the saying "walk a mile in someone else's
shoes," well how about I ,000 miles in
the shoes of Betty Sayre, 82 ; of
Racine?
Sayre is proud of her age and grateful she can still walk two to five miles
a day, tive days a week at the Racine
First Baptist Church's Christian
Outreach Center with its indoor regulation size basketball court that doubles
as a walking track .
It has taken a little over a year but
Sayre has now walked I ,017 miles on
the track. That is only 275 miles short
of walking from Racine to Houston ,
Texas, and Ill miles past Dover,
Maine if you slaned in Racine.
Sayre says some people will s~y an
82-year old woman has no business . .
doing what she's dolng but she feels as .
long as she's able to stay active , she
will.
"I want to die feeling good." she
laughed. " I think walking is a big part
of why I feel good."
Sayre has no goals as far as how
many miles she wishes to reach, she
just takes it one l~p. one day at lime
and sometimes she'll even run a lap or
lwo round the track just to prove she
still can.
"On my birthday I ran two laps
around," she said , explaining that others at the Christian Oulreach Center
didn't believe she could .."They let on
like they didn't believe I could do it so
I had to prove it to them."
On the day of this inlerview she ran
another lap, proving to this reporter
that she puts her money where her
mouth is, and is a good sport about it. .
Sayre , who has been a widow for
Beth Sergenl/photo
the last 35 years says she also enjoys
Betty
Sayre,
82, of Racine has just wa lked 1,017 miles at the Racine firSt
the fellowship at the outreach center
which often follows her walking rou- Baptist Church's Christian Outreach Center. Sayre walks two to five miles a day,
five days a week and has even been known to run a lap or two around the centin~ every morning, as does a cup of
coffee and some cookies with friends. ter's walking track.
"I miss that if it doesn't happen," Racine Dru~ Store.
Thursdays . From 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. on
she explained.
·
The Chnstian Outreach .Center is Tuesdays the building is open for
Sayre is a graduate of Racine High open 7 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. , Monday young people lo play baskclball or
School and worked for several years at through Friday, 5:30p.m . to 7 p.m. on · many of the other games on the second
the Racine Department Store and Mondays, 5:3b p.m. to 7 p.m. on floor.

BY BETH SERGENT

BSEAGENT@MYOAILYSENTINE!-COf.l
SYRACUSE - A bag
with 18 used syringes,
spoons for cooking drugs
and two tourniquets was
recently found in Syracuse
along Ohio 124 in broad ·
daylight , perhaps a sign that
the county's drug problem
isn 't relegated lo the larger
villages.
A resident who was out
weedeating along Ohio 124
found the bag and like most
people opened it up. The
re sident
was
luckily
unharmed by the bag's contenls and phoned ·the
Syracuse
Police
Department.
·
.
Syracuse ,Chief of Police
Ryan Hill said the bag was
made of heavier malerial,
like that used for bank
deposits, so the needles diu
not penetrate through,
though il was obvious what
they had been used for with
the spoons turned black on
the bottom from cooking
drugs. ·
Hill said one of the more
troubling aspects of finding
such a package is that it was
left 50 to 75 yards from the
London Pool which is fre- .
quented by children and
teens. For this reason Hill
wants the public to be aware
of this new hazard and for
parents to inform their children ·of the. danger.
For Hill , getting a call
that 18 used syringes, cooking spoons and tourniquets
had been found in the village was a first, &lt;1nd one that
he said shows that the drug
problem is not confined to

Please see Syringes. AS

OSU students Middleport commission likely to approve downtown car lot
develop plan to
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
battle colon
MIDOLEPORT
- In
cancer in Meigs another
test of Middleport's
Bv BETH SERGENT
efforls to enforce zoning
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM . Ordinances and . revitalize .
the downtown shopping disPOMEROY
With trict.
the
Middleport
Meigs County's colorectal Planning Commission will
cancer diagnosis and mor- likely allow a used car lot w
tality rates higher than locate on North Second
statewide rates and no med- Avenue .
ical facility to provide
Roger
Manley
met
colonoscope s for preven- Thursday with lhe village's
tion, the Meig s County planning commission to disCancer lniliati ve (MCCI) cuss his purchase of a
turned to Ohio State vacant lot. adjacent to the
University for help in Citgo service slalion , for
reversing these slalistics .
use as a car lot. He will
OSU responded by send- meet with the commission
ing graduate students from agai~ Mond~y to present
its School of Public Health drawmgs of ht s plans for the
back in April to work within · lot, which incluct.e a manuthe county. including with factured mob1le off1ce .
MCCl , to develop a colon
Manley. a fot;mer Village
t;ancer screening program Counc1l member, earlier
for the community.
purchased a lot on South
Back in March , Mira Third Ave nue for hi s busiKatz, assistant professor ness, Econom y Auto Sales ,
with the OS U S.chool __of. lli!t was furced to re -sell it,
Public Heallh, said her slu- he said, becau se of opposi-

Piease see Cancer, AS

. Please see Car lot. AS

T

-

-

Brian Reed/photo

'· '

Roger Manley works on a lot in downtown Mi ddleport where he plans to locate a car lot if
he secures perm ission from the Middleport Planning Commission.
·

.,

•

•

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 7, 2006

/

resolution
lahto
BY

BY THE BEND

Public meetings ,

UP

I

Munday, Aug. 7
TUPPERS PLAI:&gt;IS
Tuppers Plains regional
sewer district will meet at 7
p.m. Thi &gt; is a change from
the regular meeting time.
SYRACUSE ' - Sutton
Town ship Trustees, regu lar
meeting , 7 p.m .. Syracuse
Village Hall.
.

ARON HELLER

Israel, Hezbollah
step up attacks
Israeli warplanes attacked
Beirut's southern suburbs and
northeastern Lebanon early
Monday, stepping up
bombardment of the Hezbollah
s\ronghold.
AIRSTRIKES • Hezbollah • Israel
(Not representative of total)

Tuesday, Aug. 8
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Board llf Elections,
8:30a.m., regular meeting .

Tram.portation ';, George
Collins . Stephanie Filson.
perforn1ance by River City
Players, noon. Pomeroy
Library. RSVP 992-5005.
Thursday, Aug. IO
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge 45:1 will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Refreshments .·
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club will
meet at 7 p.m. at the home
of Barbara Koker. Members
to take an arrangeme nt
related to this year's fair
schedule.

Church events
Monday, Aug. 7
MIDDLEPORT
Vacation Bible school wil
be held 6 to 8:30 p.m.
through Aug. II at the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene,
General
Ha11inger Parkway. Theme ,
"The Quest for God's Ten
Commandments." Call Sue
·Stewart for more infonnation , 9'12 -2892.

Other events

Youth events

• _....,..,,, . - •·· ·I lj- r ."- · ·'&lt; " &lt;·•

u.,·.,. ,.., '--~ "

Club and
organizations

Charlene Hoeftlchlphoto
Margaret Parker, president of the Me igs County Historical Society, presents a certificate
of recognition to the Rev. William Middleswarth ·in appreciatio n for his 25 years of volunteer service to the Society and the Meigs Museum.

Volunteer honored for 25
years of volunteer service

Snedden top loser

AP Photo

Israeli gunners prepare the next shell. after artillery pieces were fi[ed' towards Lebanon at an artillery position
near the border with Lebanon, in northern Israel, Monday. Israeli warplanes repeatedly bombed Beirut's southern suburbs early Monday after the deadliest Hezbollah rocket barrage on northern Israel killed 15 people,
among them 12 soldiers heading for battle In Lebanon.
of shielding launching sites behind
civilians.
Also, Israeli ground forces
destroyed seven long-rang_e rocket
launchers in the area of Tyre, the
military said. They encountered
Hezbollah guerrillas and. killed
three, There were n9 lsfaeli casualties.
·
Sunday's deaths brought to 93
the number of Israelis killed.
inclt1ding 45 soldiers, the 12
reservists and 36 civilians. Israel's
attacks on Lebanon have killed at
least 591 people, including 509
civilians, 29 . Lebanese soldiers
and at least 53 Hezbollah guerrillas.
. Israeli air strikes killed 14
Lebanese on Sunday, including 12
civilians, a Lebanese soldier and a
Palestinian . militant. In the southern town of Naqoura and ·several
villages near Tyre, residents called
rescue officials to report more
people trapped under the rubble of
crushed buildings, byt crews could
nol' retrieve the dead because of
continued bombardment.
.
E~plus1ons rang across BeJTut as
warplanes fired more than six missiles.into Hezbollah strongholds in
districts just south of the capital.
Hezbollah announced the deaths
of three of its fi ghters , but did not
say when they died . That would

bring Hezbollah 's total of fighters
killed to 53 .. But Israeli officials
said they have confirmed 165
dead guerrillas - and even have
their names - and estimated that
another 200 had been killed. Israel
said some 300 Hezbollah fighters
remained in the area J·srael was
occupying in south Lebanon.
One air strike hit south Beirut
just minutes after Arab League
Secretary-General Amr Moussa
touched down at a nearby airport.
Missiles also struck in that area as
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid
Moallem stood next to his
Lebanese counterpart and declared
Israel would never defeat the
hardened guerrilla force.
Arab League foreign ministers
were to meet in Beirut on Monday
for a hastily convened session.
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ahmed Aboul Gheit, speaking in
Cairo, said the gathering "is a
clear message to tlhe world to
show the Arab solidarity with the
Lebanese people and in support of
their demands."
Moallem said the ·cease-fire
draft. resolution "adopted Israel's
point of view only."
"As Syria's foreign minister I
hope to be a soldier in the resistance," said Moallem, the first top
Syrian official to visit Lebanon
since Damascus ended a 29-year
military presence in Lebanqn last
year.
Lebanon's parliament speaker
and Hezbollah's negotiator, Nabih
Berri , said the plan was unacceptable because it would leave Israeli
troops in Lebanon and does not
deal with Beirut's key demands a release of prisoners held by
Israel and moves to resolve a dispute over the Chebaa Farms border area.
·
"If Israel has not won the war
but still gets all this, what would
have happened had. they won?''
Berri said.
·
The Lebanese government on
Sunday asked the U.N. to revise
the draft, demanding that Israel
pull its forces out immediately
with the end of hostilities.
Arab leaders were also considering holding an emergency summit
on Lebanon in Saudi Arabia later
this week , two Lebanese media
outlets reported.

Cuba's vice president expects return of ailing Fidel Castro
within
weeks
•

HAVANA (AP) - Cuba's would not recover from the
:vice
president
and operation, Lage said.
· Venezuela's leader gave
Cubans were told most
·optimistic as~ssments of detail s'"of Castro's health
Ftdel Castro:Khealth, saying would be kept a state secret
the Cuban president was to prevent the island's enc'recovering quickly from mies from taking advantage
intestinal surgery and could of hi s condition. lndeed.otTi: be expected back at work cials have fai led to say what
:within a few weeks.
·
precisely is ailing Castro or
.Castro has been out of what surgical procedure he
sight since July 31, when his underwent.
secretary-announced he h!ld -. Lag.e earlier shot down
undergone surgery and was reports that Castro hadstomtemporarily ceding power to ach cancer.
"The operation that · he
his younger brother, Defense
underwent was successful
Minister RaurCastro.
"In a few weeks he ' ll be and he is recoverinl\. favor recovered and he 'll return to ably," he said JSUnday.
his duties," Vice President "Fide l's going to be around
Carlos Lage said Sunday for another 80 years."
Venezuelan
President
when asked by reporters
when Castro would be back Hueo Chavez said Castro ,
at work. Lage spoke in who turns 80 next Sunday.
Bolivia, where he attended was out of bed and talking
the Andean country's consti- following his surgery.
l!.!liQm!lconventio,n, _
_"How ar.c:: ~ou, Fidd?"
Castro's return would Chavez said during his we~k­
expose a U.S. policy of"lies" ly TV and radio program.
behind speculaqon that he suggestmg he believed the

Cuban leader was watching.
"We have reliable information ·of your quick and
notable recuperation."
·'Fidel Castro , a hug for
you. friend ahd comrade, and
I know you are getting better," he added'.
Speaking by phone with
Bolivian President Eva
Morales later during the program , Chavez said Castro
was bouncing back quickly.
"This morning I learned
that he ·s very well, that he is
already getting o~t of bed ,
he's talking more than he
should - because he talks a
·lot , you know. He has sent us
greetings," Chavez said . .
Morales, a leftist elected in
December as Bolivia's tirst
Indian president, said he was
glad to learn of Castro's
recovery and that "what's
left is for him to be incorporated into the battle of his
'countryn aga-in. Morales -said
Castro was like· an "older
brother."

.

,.

Get-well wishes poured in
from leftists across the hemisphere.
Former'
Nicaraguan
President and Sandinista revolution leader Daniel Ortega
arrived in Havana late
Saturday. "I am sure that we
will soon have Fidel resuming his functions and leading
his people," 011ega said .
Colombia's largest rebel
group also expressed its solidaritv with the Cuban leader.
"We-hope you' ll rccove.r in
the shortest time possible ,"
the Revolutionary Armed
Forces of.Colombia said in a
statement.
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza Ri ce said
Sunday the U11ited States
wanted to help Cubans prepare for democracy but was
not contemplating an· invasion of the island in tile wake
of Castro's illness.
-~The notion.that somehow
the United States is going to
invade Cuba. because there

Monday, August 7, 2006

a.m., Pine Hill s Golf Course.

Wednesday, Aug. 9
POMEROY Meigs
Thursday, Aug. 10
County Board of Health, 5
RACINE- Registrations
p.m. , conference room
Monday, Aug. 7
of children entering kinderMeigs
County
Healt~ .
RACINE - ·. Southern garten in the Southern Local
Department.
High school 'cleerleading School District are requesed
clinic , grades 9-12,9 a.m. to to be completed before Aug.
I p.m. Aug. 7, 8 and 9, I0 for scheduling purposes.
Southern Elementary gym. There will be kindergarten
Attendance mandatory to orientation for these stulearn tryout requiremr nts. dents and their parents at 6
l'uesda~· , Aug. 8
Call Jodie HMrison. 949- p.m. on Aug. Ill. All parents
POMEROY
Meigs 41 12.
of 2006-07 kindergarteners
County
Chamber
of
POMEROY - Ea,tcrn . need to plan to attend.
Commerce luncheon, Ohio High School golf team to Refreshri1ents wil be proDepartment
of meet and begin practice. 9 vided.

~---.,...,

territory.
struck hundreds of targets across
Some 10,000 Israeli soldiers are Lebanon.
· several
hundred
The attack on Kfar Giladi was
fighting
Hezbollah gunmen, in that area, "a direct hit on a vehicle where
trying to track and destroy rocket · there was a crowd. They were all
launchers. Israel says it won't wounded and scattered in every
leave until a multinational force direction, some of them were in
has been deployed.
very ' bad condition," said Eli
Israel has refused to comment Peretz, a medic. "It was a very,
on the draft. But Foreign Ministry very difficult scene. I have never
spokesman Mark Regev told seen anything like it." ·
Associated Press Television News,
Bloodied army boots were
"We have to make sure that what placed on a: stone wall. The rocket
will be negotiated at the United scorched two parked cars.
Hearing of the slain reservists,
Nations ensures that Hezbollah
will not be allowed to be resup- Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert told · a Cabinet . meeting,
plied by Iran or Syria."
The U .S.-French plan envisions "Lucky that we are dealing with
a second resolution in a week or Hezbollah today, and not in anothtwo that would authorize an inter- er two or three years," according
national military force and create to a participant.
Later Sunday, a rocket barrage
a buffer zone in south Lebanon.
. In Washington . U.S. Secretary hit the northern port city of Haifa,
of State Condoleezza Rice called killing three Civilian s, injuring
the measure "the first step, not the more than 40 and bringing down
only step."
two buildings. A crowded residenThe proposed resolution says ti;tl district took five or six hits.
the two Israeli soldiers held by
Three hours later. Israeli warHeibollah should be released planes attacked the Lebanese town
unconditionally. The soldiers' cap- of Qana and near the port of Tyre
ture July 12 triggered the war.
and de~troyed the launchers that
Hezbollah has fired more than tired rockets on Haifa , the army
3,000 rockets at Israel since the said. An Israeli attack on Qana last
fighting began and dozens hit on week had killed 29 civilians. At
Sunday, lsnieli officials sa id . the time ,' lsrael said the attack was
Meanwhile , Israeli warplanes have a mistake but accused Hezbollah

.,

Community Calendar

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

KFAR GILADI, Israel ' - A
· defiant Hezbollah pounded northem Israel with rockets Sunday
after rejecting ·a U.S .-French truce
propo~al , killing at least 15 people . Israel also struck hard, killing
at least I4 in Lebanon as both
sides tried to take advantage of the
days before a U.N. resolution is
put to a. vote.
In the deadliest attack on Israelis
in this war, a rocket landed
Sunday among reservists near the
entrance to the communal farm of
Kfar Giladi on the .Lebanese' border. It killed 12 soldiers heading
for battle in Lebanon and wounded five, hospital officials said.
Hezbollah rockets also.hit Haifa,
Israel's third-largest city, killing
three dvilians and wounding
dozens . Flames shot from damaged homes as firelighters tried to
rescue panicked residents .
In Lebanon , the dead included
five members of one family
crushed in their home by an ISraeli
air strike Sunday. Warplanes
attacked near Beirut and in the
south, where some villages were
bombed continually for a halfhour, security officials said.
At daybreak Monday, Israeli
warplanes pounded Beirut's south.em suburbs with eight airstrikes,
:stepping up bombardment of the
Hezbollah stronghold. It was not
immediately clear what was targeted.
A Hezbollah statement said four
Israeli troops, including an offic'cr,
were killed in heavy ground fight,
· ing when guerrillas attacked a
house on the edge of Houla where
the Israeli unit . was hiding. The
Israeli military said four soldiers
were slightly wounded.
Israeli warplanes also struck
deep in Lebanon early Monday,
targeting the northeastern Bekaa
Valley, a symbol of Hezbollah
. power. At least fot1r explosions
.were heard around the city of
Baalbek, witnesses said. There
was no immediate word on casualties .. Hezbollah has many bases in
the Baalbek region, 63 miles north
oflsrael's border.
In addition, five air raids hit the
southern market
town
of
Nabatiyeh. Two unleashed seven
missiles on an empty, seven-story
office building behind local government headquarters. One strike
destroyed a two-story building
housing one of the offices of
Shiite Muslim Grand Ayatollah
Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah
and· another struck a house.
The Israeli Haaretz daily, quoting an unnamed general, said
Monday Israel might hit Lebanese
infrastructure and symbols of government in response to the Haifa
barrage.
The fighting has intensified
since the U.S. and France proposed a cease-fire resolution on
Saturday which could soon be put
to a vote in the U.N. Security
Council. Both sides seem intent on
inflicting maximum d.amage on.
each other before the vote.
Hezbollah and its chief allies ,
·Iran and Syria, rejected the draft
·resolution because it does not call
for an immediate Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon and does not
address other Lebanese demands.
Mohammed Fneish, one of two
Hezbollah members of the
Lebanese Cabinet, said Saturday
the militant group would not abide
· . by a cease-fire resolution while
Israeli troops remain on Lebanese

Page A;}

are troubles in Cuba, is s.imply far-fetched," Rice told
NBC News . "The United
States wants to be a partner
and a friend to the Cuban
people as they move through
this period of difficulty and
as they move ahead. But
what Cuba should not have is

the replacement of one dicta- .
tor by another."
Cuban authorities have
beefed up security by mobilizing citizep defense militias, increasing street patrols
and ordering decominis;
sioned military officers to
check in daily.

The Me igs County Department of Job and · Family
Services (DJFS) is requesting proposals from a qualified
vendor to administer a training and work experience
program through the School To Work Program in the
Meigs County School System for the period of August
20, 2006 through June 30, 2007. The deadline for
submission of proposals is August 15, 2006 at 12:00
noon. For Program-information and guidelines contact
Jane Banks, Administrative Assistant at (740) 992-2117
ext. I06 or 175 Race Street, Middleport, OH 45760.
All submissions must be received by' mail or hand
delivered by the above date and time . No materials
'received after that date will be included in previous
submissions nor be considered. The department reserves
the righi to reject any or all proposals . The Meigs
County •DJFS is prohibited from discrimination on the
bas is of race, color, national origin, sex, age, ret'igion ,
political belief or disability.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

COOLVILLE - Pat S'nedden was named ":eekly best weight-loss winner at Tuesday's
meeting of TOPS (Take OtT Pounds Sensibly) Chapter #OH 2013, Coolville. There were
15 members present.
Cindy Hyde was recognized for six straight weeks of
weight-loss. The program presented was "A Vi sit to the Exchange System." There will
be no meeting on August 15 .
·
The group meets every Tuesday at Torch Haptist Church. Weigh-in is from 5:15 to 6:15
p.m . with a meeting at 6:30. For information, call Pat Snedden at 662-2633 or attend a
free meeting .

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYDAILYSENTlNEL COM

POMEROY - The Rev.
William Middleswarth, a
popular Lutheran minister
and volunteer at the Meig s
County Historical Society
and Meigs County Museum
for many years, was recognized at an appreciation
reception held Sunday at the
Museum .·
The occasion marked hi s
move from Meigs County,
where he has been confined
to the Rock Springs Rehab
Center for several months,
to the area in which he was a
native. His contributions to
Meigs County as a minister
and a volunteer contributing
to the community were recognized.
A native of Bellevue,
Middleswarth who began
pastoring
churches
in
Pendleton County, W.Va. in
1958 , came to Meigs County
in 1973 answering a call
from St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy and St.
John Lutheran Church in
Pine Grove .
After his .retirement in
1989 , he cosdt to stay in
meigs County. However, his
re,ent health concerns have
made it necessary to return
· to norther Oho to be near
reladtives. His addr~ ss is
Lutheran Memorial Home ,
Room 114: 495 Bardshar
Road, Sandusky, Ohio
44870.
For more than 25 years.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Daughters need to understand situation
'

can to maintain a relationship with them, even if that
includes a birthday dinner
Dear Annie: Ten years without your husband and
ago, just before otir 20th splitting holiday events. ·
anniversary. my husband And be sure to let your hussaid he wanted to "separate band know how much vou
for a while." Actually, he appreciate his cooperation
wanted a divorce and was and understanding .
not interested in doing anyDear Annie: As matronthing to save our m~m-iage . of-honor, I am planning a
He didn 't want to tell our wedding shower for a bride
teenage daughters until the who lives on the opposite
deed was done. Then he lost coast from her family.
his job, so we were stuck Approximately JO ladies
together for another two live in the town where we
years of mi sery. During this are located and will be invittime. he convinced our . ed to the shower. However,
daughters that they didn't the bride also wants me to
have to listen to anything I send invitations to 120 other
said, because I was "inllexi- friends and family members
ble :"
who live on the opposite
Finally, I moved out. coast - none of whom will
Now I think I shouldn't be able to attend.
I don't feel it is approprihave left the house, because
itlooked like I initiated the ate to send .invitations to
divorce. I thought .the girls these people , but the bride
would feel welcome in both insists they would be
homes , but it didn't work offended if they are not noliout that way. They stayed fied of the shower and given
with Dad . I remarried three the opportunity to send a
yeats ago, and my daughter&gt; gift.
did not attend the wedding.
If we don 't scnd .showcr
My girls are now grown invitations, am I ex pected to
adults , and their birthdays send another type- of
arc next week. Their father announcement? I , really
has invited me to join them want to do what is .coJTect.
for a birthday dinner. but my but thi s seems a bit much.
husband ·was not invited. - Anxious. .
Part of me thinks my' chi!..
Dear Anxiou s: A shower
dren should come first, but is intended to be an intimate
the other part says they 'i'e gathering. It is inappropriate
old enough to accept (ny to invite people who live
husband and allow us to eel- 2.000 miles away. It is OK
ebrate together. Every holi- to send an . invitatio n to
day, I've been torn between Mom
and
Grandma,
my husband and my daugh- because they would want to
ters . I'm beginning to hate know, but not 120 mi scd lathese events. What should I neous acquaintances . That
do? - Mom and Wife.
comes across as trolling !'or
: Dear Mom and Wife: Of gifts . and we hope you can
course your dat1 ghters are convince the bride not to do
old enough to· know better, it. (No annom\ccment of a
but they are still little chi!- shower is necessary.)
dren when it comes to their
Dear
Annie:
read
parents. Please do what you Unbelievable'
BY KATHY MITCHELL
ANO MARCY SUGAR

-

"Alpena's" story about her
new husband who was physically and verbally abusive
to her children. I am on staff
at a crisis center, and every
day, I see mothers who
choose
husbands.
boyfriends, girlfriends and
convenience over keeping
their children.
First, Alpena and her e~­
hLisband should r~ad' up on
child abuse law s. In 18
states, a~yone who knows
of, or suspects , child abuse
imd does not report it i's
breaking the law. Second,
Alpena needs to know that
abuse is all about control.
Now that she has removed
the kids from her husband's
grip, he will seek out something else to control, and I'll
bet Alpena will be visiting
an E.R. very soon.
She needs to get to the
nearest Crisis Center for
Domestic Violence and get
help. And she needs the
prayers of us all. - Roger
Pharr,
Director
of
Development, Crisis Center
of Anderson &amp; Cherokee
Counties,
Jacksonville ,
Texas.
. Dear Roger Pharr: We
hope that woman,,arid anyone else walking in similar
shoes, sees your letter and
takes action immediately.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to armiesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creator.~ Syndicate Web
pa~e at www.creatqrs.com.
'

T.B. Board, Meigs County
Extension Advisory Board.
was active in the Meigs
Countv
Ministerial
Association and took great
pride in his contributions to
th e Meigs County Lions
Club.
He was an avid photographer and for man y year&gt;
attended parades, fai rs and
county events, .recording
them in photographs . ·
"The
Meigs
County
Hi storical Societv owes a
debt of gratitude for the hundreds of pictures he has
taken throughout the years
that record a glimpse of
Meigs County history," said
Margaret Parker, Meigs
Countv Historical Societv
president.
A concern he voiced as he
prepared to leave Meig s
County was this would be
the first Meigs County Fair
he has missed since coming ·
to the county.

Sm ilftl !',low you ~an own the picture ol !hill unfOigEittllbffi
moment &lt;::aptur~td in tne newtpaper. Pho.1tt&gt;S baco11u~ ~rneJass
w hen lrumod or prrnted on 11 mug or rnou110 cad

Visit

www.mydallysentinel.com and c lick the blue ootton

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LEGAL NOTICE
The Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services (DJFS), is soliciting
proposa ls to provide a Pregnancy Prevention Program throughout the local
school districts of Meigs County. The program costs must not exceed $100,000.00
for the period of September I, 2006 through June 30, 2007. For a copy of the
Request for Proposal (R.FP) , contact Jane Uanks at the Meigs County
Department of job'&amp; Family Services (740) 992-2117 ext. 106.
Proposals should be submitted to jane Banks, Administrative Assistant, Meigs
County DJFS, P.e. ~ox I91, 175 Race Street, Middleport, OH 4.5760 Jio later
than August. 15, 2006 at 10:00 a.m. All submissions must be received by mail or
hand delh·ered by the above date and time. No materials received after that date
will be included in previous submissions nor be considered. The department
reserves the right to reject any or all proposals. In accordance with 29-C RF- part
3I, 32 Meigs County DJFS is prohibited from discrimination oil the basis of race,
color, national origin, sex, age, religiun, political belief ot disability.

Middleswm1h has served as
a trustee of the Meigs
County Historical Society.
He has ben a volunteer at the
Meigs County Museum for
the past 20 years.
He was instrumental in
assisting the Meigs County
Hi storical Society with the
publication of Meigs County
History Volume II and Ill.
"Thru the Years in Picture."
a pictorial history of the
countv
and
Portland
Pictorial Hi story, all published
by
Walsworth
Publishing Company. He
copied and put to gether
numerous
publications
extracted from county new spapers. He has served as
treasurer of the Association
the past I5 years and on various committees nf the society.
Throughout the years he
served on the Meigs County
Senior Citizen and RSVP
boards and committees, the

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co~
Jim Freeiand

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

Oeneral Manager-News Editor

Congress shall 111ake no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo. pie peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances. ·
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

Today i&gt; Monday, Aug. 7, the 219th day of2006. There are
146 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 7. 1942, U.S. force&gt; landed at Guadalcanal, marking.the staJ1 of the tirst major allied offensive in the Pacific during World War II.
On this date:
In 1782. George Washingwn created the Order of the Purple
He~u1, a decorat'ion to recognize merit in enlisted men and noncommissioned oftlcers.
In 1789, the U.S. War Department was established by
Congress.
In 1927, the Peace Bridge between the United States and
Canada was dedicated during ceremonies attended by the
Prince uf Wales and V1ce President Charles Dawes.
In 1934, the U.S. Court of Appeals upheld a lower cowt ruling striking down the government's attempt to ban the controversial Jan1es Joyce novel "Ulysses."
In 1947. the balsa wood raft Kon-Tiki, which had carried a
six-man crew 4,300 miles across the Pacific Ocean, crashed
into a reef in a Polynesian archipelago.
In 1959. the United States launched Explorer 6, which sent
back a picture of the Earth.
In 1964. Congress passed the Gulf ofTonkin resolution, giving President Johnson broad powers in dealing with reported
North Vietnamese attacks on U.S. forces.
·
In 1976, scientists in Pasadena, Calif., announced that the
Viking I spacecraft had found the strongest indications to date
of possible life on Mars.
In 1989, a plane carrying Congressman Mickey Leland, DTexas, and 15 others disappea1·ed over Ethiopia. (The wreckage
of the plane was found six days later; there were no survivors.)
In 1998. terrorist bombs at U.S. embassies in Kenya· and
Tal)zania killed 224 people, including 12 Americans.
Five years ago: Three researchers told a committee at the
National Academy of Sciences they were unswayed by arguments against human cloning and would soon try. to done
human beings. The Vatican denounced what it called a "slanderous campaign" against the Roman Catholic Church over the
Holocaust-era pope, Pius Xll. Harmonica virtuoso Lany Adler
·
died in London at age 87.
One year ago: ABC anchorman Peter Jennings died in New
York at age 67. Seven people in a Russian mini-submarine
trapped for nearly three days under the Pacific Ocean were rescued after a British remote-controlled vehicle cut away undersea cables that snarled their vessel. Israeli Finance Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu resigned from his post to protest an
upcoming withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and part of the West
Bank.
Thought for TodaY: ."You must learn day by day, year by
year, to broaden your horizon. The more things you love, the
more you are interested in, the more you enjoy, the more you
are indignant about - the more you have left when anything
happens." - Ethel BaJTymore, American actress (1879-1959).

Monday, August 7, 2006

Stop with the PC: Hezbollah sa terrorist group
Remember the "Coalition
of the Willing"? . Here's a
new force to sei the world
straight: The "Coalition of
Wi IIi ng
to Call
the
Hezbollah
a Terrorist
Group." Without effort, I
can think of a trio so
inclined (Australia, Israel
and the United States).
Throw in trusty Marshall
Islands, Micronesia and
Palau for good measure, and
it's a "multi"-national coalition.
·
Once - and it seems
bizarre to have to point this
out -. it was self-evident
that Hezbollah was civilization's foe. Indeed, it was an
unremarkable,
innate
expression of civilization
itself to think so. No more.
It is a measure of the moral
attrition of the West that this
"point of view" now
becomes openly contested,
a matter of nuance, degrees
and complexity, punctuated
by clinking water glasses at
conference tables the world
over.
All of which leaves the
so-called war on terror
exactly where? Muddled
beyond measure. For the
war on Hezbollah is,' if it is
anything, a crucial front of
the "terror" war. If the
Israelis lose'- and, by lose,
I mean if the Israelis allow
the crooked court of world
opinion to bar them from
crushing Hezbollah and its
ability to make war - we
all lose. That is, "we" all
lose who wish to triumph

Diana
West

bunnping up against the
clumsy imprecision of politically correct language that
fails to define the enemy as
adherents of the doctrine of
Islamic jihad. Such ·as
Hezbollah, for instance. In
addition to destroying
· Israel, the vicious Iranian
proxy also aims at imposing
an Iranian-style sharia state
in Lebanon. As just one
more contemporary manifestation of jihad doctrine,
Hezbollah, which has killed
more Americans than any
jihad group except AI
Qaeda, should easily make
the blacklist Of enemies in a
post-9111 world.
But no. Most of our traditional "allies" (or whatever
th.ey are) quiver at the
thought. "Given the sensi·tive situation, I don't think
we will be acting on this
now," said Finnish foreign
minister Erkki Tuomioja,
speaking for the 25 member
states of the European
Union, which this week
rebuffed a plea from 213
U.S. congressmen to brand
Hezbollah a terrorist group.
no traditional
Russia · ally, but oddly treated like
one - also balks at desigover uterror...
And here we go again, nating Hezbollah (or, for

The TALKS. .

that matter, Hamas) an out- sectarian lra4i parliament
law group. France, mean- has even come together in
while, goes so far as to call rare and unanimous solidarnuke-see'king. Jew-hating. ity to condemn the Jewish
Hezbollah'sponsoring Iran state. When Prin1e Minister
a "respected" country and Nuri al -Maliki addressed
"stabilizing" force in the the U.S. Congress last
month. he declared lra4 to
reg10n.
But even as our strategic be on "I he front 1i ne" of the
destiny diverges .from , war on terror. and proEurope's over the Middle claimed lraqb to be
·East - an epochal rift a America' s ''allies in the war
long time coming - there on terror. " But he also
is something else disquiet ~ pointedly failedto condem11
ing about the Hezbollah Hezpollah terrorism- or. it
question. And that concerns se e m~ saf~ to presume, to
the terror group's standing consider HczPollah a terrorin the region. In Lebanon. i&gt;t group . Like a Mel
credible reports attest to Gibson bend~r. thi' should
anti-Hezbollah sentiment make us think . Can the
among Southern l.,fbanon's United States and AI -Maliki
Christian populations. But really be talking about the
key parts of the Lebanese same "'teJTor" war?
Our elites never ask such
government - which the
United States hopes will a question. maybe because
·take over Hezbollah -con- it leads to another. Does
trolled areas - and the propping up in Iraq what
national army dearly favor amounts to a proto-sharia
Hezbollah . This shou ld state thai is reflexively antimake us wonder whether Israel if not rctlcxively prothe United States sending Hezbollah comtitute victory
the Lebanese army $10 mil- in the "war on terror"? Call
lion in emergency aid bene- me crazy. but I don't think
fits peace, or benefits so. We've already had our
victory in Iraq - overHezbollah.
Then. of course. there's throwing Saddam Hussein .
Iraq, a nation of warring We won't he a hie to win
Islamic tribes safeguarded again until we recognize
only and barely by the con- · that pur politically correct
tinued
presence
of but factually mistaken view
American forces. not to of the Islamic world is OLII
mention billions of taxpayer of focus. When we can't see
dollars. To date, Iraq's · victory on the other side of
prime minister, president. the cultural divide, we need
· two vice presidents, assort- to look elsewhere.
(Diana' West i.1· a columnist
ed imams and much of its
newly free media have pub- fur T11e Washington Ttmes. She
via
licly condemned or\e party can be colltacted
- IsraeL The fractiously dianawest@wri~ml.llt't.)

Utv\..,Lg'; TALK AgouT

\N~~ lH~ '' £~~PDlNG

OF BLOOD'' ~TARTt;D,
SAALL \NG?

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Correction Polley

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through Fnday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate , If you Know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio
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Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Staneart family gathers for reunion

· Faye Brown Harper Napper
. Faye Brown Harper Napper. 91, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
dted Aug. 5, 2006 at the Arbors Nursing Center in
Gallipolis.
Born on March 18, 1918, at Pine Knob, W.Va . she was
the. daughter of the late Prince Ellc Brown and Ruhamah
Peter Brown. She was a nurses aide and belonged to the
Wyoma Pentecostal -Church .
She was preceded in death by her first husband . Virgil
Harper, and her second husband, Clarence Napper. and a
son, Ted Harper. She i.s survived by daughters ancj sons-inlaw, Donita Starkey and Don Sexton of Galhpuli&gt; Ferry;
Ruth and Lee Hobb of Albany, Ohio Janet and Eddie Conn
of Huntington, Carmen Scott of Guyandotte and Zelia
(Tom) Patterson; and a son and daughter-in-law, Jerry and
Debbie Harper of Racine, Ohio.
Also surviving are a sister. Viv Turner, and a sistcr-111law. Vir~ie Brown, along with several grandchildren , greatgrandchlldren, and great-great-children.
Funeral services will be held at l p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 8,
at the Ewing Funeral Home with Pastor Joe Godwin officiatmg '-'!ith burial in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday.

POMEROY
Descendants of Joel and
Lydia Still Staneart held
their reunion on Saturday.
July 22. under the Big Oak
Shelter House at Lake
Snowden, Albany. A picnic
lunch began at noon with
Vera Richardson giving the
blessing.
A group picture was taken
lifter the meal &lt;ts well as
other pictures for the
Staneart Family album being
I assembled by Paula Jean
Staneart Pickens.
Conn ie Staneart Largent
read the minute' from bst
year's reuniou . The traditiona! mugs and caps were
given as gifts with a new
item being added this year, a
I Staneart · Reunion bag.
I Recognized and presented
'gifts were Wiley Colburn,
'I

Deaths
~ames

92, the oldest: Brad Luckett,
age 10, the youngest; -Pat
Mary
Staneart
and
Patterson,
Fort Wayne,
Indiana and Bill and Phyllis
Kirkendall from Wauseon,
Ohio, traveling the farthest;
Paula Jean Staneart Pickens
with nine family members,
having the most family
members present. . Keith
Staneart also received a mug
for being the only person
present bearing the Staneart
name.

Pat Patterson asked the
traditional Staneart family
trivia questions with Phyllis
Kirkendall, giving the most
correct answers. Connie
Staneart Largent created
another Staneart fami ly
guessing game, won by
Joyce Staneart Sheline and
JoAnne Aburto.

E. Qualls

James E. Qualls, 72. Middleport, died Sunday, Aug. 6.
2006. at his residence. ·
Arrangements ate incomplete and will be handled by
Fisher Funeral Home , Pomeroy.

field,

Several provisions in pension bill have specific targets
are among those singled out
for different treatment
under a massive pension
overhaul bill that Congress
could send to the White
House as early as this week.
The legislation, passed by
the House and the Senate,
has the lofty goal of reinforcing the employer-based
pension system that is the
retirement lifeblood of
some 44•million Americans.
But, as with any 900-page
piece of legislation crafted
over months . of negotiations, there are provisions
targeted to help specific
companies or industries.
Often the obtuse legislative
language does not name the
targeted benefactor, but to
the writers the inlent is
clear.
Here are a few:
·• Defense contractors that
do the bulk of their business
wilh the government and
generate more than $5 billion a year in sales to the
Pentagon are given a threeyear grace period before
new pension funding rules
kick in.
During that period the
Cost Accounting Standarils
Board, an independent, legislatively established panel
that determines accounting

practices for government
contracts, would set new
rules for recovering pension
costs from those contracts.
The rationale is that
defense contractors have
costs that are programmed
in over a long period of time
and don't have the flexibility. like other industries, to
cover a sudden spike in pension costs if their plans are
underfunded. Among the
companies likely to · be
affected are BAE Systems.
General Dynamics Corp. ,
Lockheed Martin. Northrop
Grumman
Corp.. and
Raytheon.
• Airlines in bankruptcy
proceedings that have
frozen their pension plans.
meaning participants get no
new benefits, get an extra
10 years to meet their funding obligations, above the
seven years given to other
p~nsion
managers. That
applies specifically to
Northwest Airlines Corp.
and Delta Air Lines.
although other airlines
could get the same break if
they freeze their plans.
• The two airlines with
active
defined-benefit
plans, American Airlines
and Continental Airlines
Inc., are also eligible for a
less generous break if they
choose not to freeze their
plans: they will get IO·years
after the new funding rules
. go into effect in 2008 to
meet their obligations.

• Gate Gourmet. a major
· airline caterer with a
defined-benefit plan, is also
eligible for the airline
exemptions.
• Greyhound Lines Inc.,
froze its plan in 1983, and
the vast majority of its
remaining participants are
'former drivers who are 1ww
retired
and
elderly.
Consequently. the bus line
succeeded in getting language allowiag it to use
mortality tables that its
act u'aries deem more appropriate to determine pension
obligations, at considerable
savings to the company.
' • Smithfield Foods, which
says it is the world's largest
pork processer and hog producer, won a reprieve in
restoring fiscal integrity to
the failing pension plans of
recently acquired companies ..The argument was that
Smithtield. in opting not to
dump ·those plans on the
government, should not be
penalized by having to
Immediately meet the bill's
requirements of increased
contributions for underfunded plans.
• The bill contains several
unrelated tax and tariff provisions. including a suspension of duties on liquid
cryswl device (LCD J panel
assemblies for tel evision'
and for certain fabrics made
from worsted wool. The
Congressional
Budget
Office
estimated
that

extending the authority of
the
Agriculture
and
Commerce departments ·to .
· provide grants to wool producers would increase federal spending by $ 14 million over the ·2008- I 0 I0
pe'riod
The legi,lation gives the
go-ahead to the $50 million
Going-To-The-Sun road in
Montana. The office of Sen.
· Max Baucus. D-Mont.. said
the project was approved in
the 2005 highway spending
bill. but that release or the
money had been held up by
a technicality.
• One proposal that dido 't
make it into the final bill
would have given companies emerging from bankruptcy, s'jJecifically the auto
parts gianl Delphi Corp ..
seven year&gt; to make up
funding deficiencies accumulated during bankruptcy.
The current law requires the
delinquenl payments to be
made up immediately.
Nineteen House members.
mostly
from
Midwestern states where
Delphi l&gt; located, wrote bill
negotiators that Delphi
face s a 52.7 billion 'funding
shortfall due upon merging
from bankruptcy. and that if
Delphi's cred itors don ' t
approve that payment the
company could be forced to
default it&gt; pen,, ion plan .

dents would be arriving in
the county to take a handson approach on laying ihe
ground work for the program.
The
hands-on
approach was crucial to the
students developing their
theory based not only on
abstract county cancer rates
but on what they personally
observe during their visits
to Meigs County. ·
Those two students, Liz
Stanley
and
Nicole
Sandiford, made their presentation last week to
MCCI members and LeAnn
Matvey and Darla Fickle of
the
Appalachian
Community
Cancer
Network. who also partiepaled in the students' program which was aptly titled ,
·"Get Behind Your Health."
Given budget constraints
and Meigs County's status
as
an
"economically
depressed area."' the stu dents devised a pl an to target residents over 50 about
the risk of colon cancer via
' a media campaign.
· This media campaign
would include public service announcements on
local radio·, newspaper articles, letters to the editor and
the construction o( a
brochure. The students recommended the brochure
feature the faces of local

Syringes
from Page A1
larger villages but can touch
the outlying, smaller villages like Syracuse.
Smaller villages across

Car lot
from Page A1
tion from residents in the
neighborhood. There are
also residents opposing his
plan to locate downtown,
and the manufactured building, built in 1990, could be
a sticky point, because of a
village ordinance prohibiting manufactured homes
over ·seven years old.
Manley asserts that the ordinance should not apply to

denied, but the development
group hopes to re-apply in
the spring. In the meantime.
DLZ and the revitalization
group will encourage building owners to move forward
on painting and otherwise ·
improving the exterior
appearance of their build~
ings. Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. has made $2
million available at a low
interest rate to assist building
owners with those improvements.

..

Beth SergenVphoto

Nicole Sandiford, standing at left, and Liz Stanley. graduate students in Ohio State
'
University's School of Public Health, present their colon cancer intervention plan for Meigs
County, "Get Behind Your Health ," to the Meigs County Cancer lnidative.
'

people who have been
affected by colon cancer
along with a li sting of local
doctors, their telephone
numbers and questions
patients should ask when
concerned about colon cancer, its treatment and pre,
vention. These brochures
would be placed at businesses and other publi~ locations
throughout Meigs County.
Stanley and Sandiford
estimated the entire cam-

paign would take place over
a 12-wcck period at a cost of
$1,088 .' After the campaign,
the two students said awareness. understanding the
threat of colon cancer and a
patient's willingness to talk
to their doctor would hopefully increase by 30 percent
compared to before the campaign. The students based
most of the their study on
the Health Belief Model
which encourages changing

behavior and its benefits.
Katz had said an added
benefit of. the study may be
"zeroing in" on what kind of
colon cancer screening grant
MCCI could appfy for.
Meigs County annuall y
has 16 new cases of colon
cancer with six deaths. with
both the incidence and mortality rates higher than the
state average. Cancer is the
&gt;econd leading cause of
death in Meigs County.

the county .have been struggling to maintain local
police
protection
and
Syracuse is certain ly not
alone in that respect. The
village government has
decided to place an additional levy on the November
ballot for police protection.
The two-year, two-mil

levy would bring in an estimated $15 ,142.3 1 at 100
percent collection. Muyor
Eric Cunningham said if
passed part of this money
would likely be used to hire
another part-time poli ce .
officer. Hill, who works 32
hours every two weeks. .
hopes,that another part time

officer could be hired to
help rotate shifts and work
30 hours every two weeks,
prqviding the village with
more localized protection.
The syringes were just
the latest wake up call about
the issues smaller village
are faced with , tight budgets
included.

his plan. because the building he has purchased for use
as an office was built for
that purpose.
However, the planning
commission expressed willingness
to
approve
Manley's plan. as long as
..the office unit was made a
permanent part of the lot
and is in good condition.
While the village zoning
ordinance relating to the
property allows a car showroom , it does not provide
for a used car lot.
Curb appeal, the planning
commission members said. ,

is their primary c'oncern
with Manley's lot. Manley.
in turn. said he plans to
Jnake the property into
•·something the town and I
can be proud of..''
He said his plan s call for
leveling the lot. ·placing
limestone on it. installing a·
fence along the back portion
of the property , and
installing his office unit. He
said he hopes to have a
blacktop surface on the lot
sometime next year.
The planning commission
also advised Manley of the
requirements of the Design

Review Board . which has
set forth a standard for signage. fix tures and - colors
used on a pusi ness facade.
For example. the. Design
Review Board, working
with the design firm bLZ ,
has set black as the preferred color for sign poles
and other metal fixtures.
"We're here to do everything we can to encourage
new businesses in the community, but our concern
with properties in downtown Middleport is curb
appeal." Michael Gerlach
said .

'

found losses in wall thickness of between 70 and 81
ANCHORAGE. Alaska percent. Repair or replace- Oil giant BP has iridefi- ment is required if there is
nitely shut down.the nation's over an 80 percent loss.
"The
results
were
biggest oilfield after findi~g
a pipeline leak , removing absolutely
unexpected."
about 8 percent of U.S. oil ' Marshall said.
production and stroking
BP officials said they did- .
fears that already high gas n 't know how long the
prices will shoot up further. Prudhoe Bay field would be
Steve Marshall, president off line."! don't even know
of BP Exploration Alaska. how long it's going to take
Inc. said Sunday night that to shut it down ," said Tom
the eastern side of Prudhoe Williams, BP's senior tax
Bay would be shut down and royalty counsel.
first, an operation anticipatBP America Chairman and
ed to take 24 to 36 hours. President Bob Malone said
J he company will then Prudhoe Bay will not
move to shut down the west resume operating until the
side, a move that could close company and government
more than I ,000 Prudhoe regulators are satisfied it can
Bay wells. .
nm safely without threatenOnce the field is shut ing the environment.
down, BP said oil produc"We regret that it is necestion will be reduced by sary to take this action and we
400,000 barrels a day. apologize to the nation and
That's close to 8 percent of the State of Alaska for the
U.S. oil production or about adverse impacts it will cause,"
2.6 percent of U.S. supply' Malone said in a statement.
The shutdown comes six
including ·imports , according to data from the U.S. months after the North
EneqlY
· Information Slope's biggest ever oil spill
Admmistration.
was discovered on a
The shutdown comes at an Prudhoe Bay transit line.
already worrisome time for Some 267,000 gallons of oil
the oil industry, with supply spilled.
While BP suspects corroconcerns stemming both from
the hurricane season . and sion in both damaged lines,
instability in the Middle East. they can't say for sure until
A 400,000-barrel per day further tests are complete.
reduction in output would . Workers also found a small
have a major impact on oil spill , estimated to be about 4
prices, said Tetsu Emori, 10 5 barrels, which has been
. chief commodities strategist contained and clean up efforts
at Mitsui Bussan Futures · in are under way. BP said.
BP, a unit of the LondonTokyo. A barrel contains 42
gallons of crude oil.
based company BP PLC,
"Oil prices could increase puts millions of gallons of
by as much as $10 per barrel corrosion inhibitor into the
given the current environ- Prudhoe Bay lines each year.
ment," Emori said. "But we It also examines pipes by
can't really say for sure how taking X-rays and ultrabig an effect this is going to sound images.
have until we have more
A prolonged Prudhoe Bay
exact figures about how shutdown would be a major
much production is going to blow to domestic oil producbe reduced."
But Victor Shum, an ener- tion, but even a short one
gy analyst with Purvin· &amp; could· be crippling to
Gertz in Singapore, said he Alaska's economy.
expected the impact 10 be
Alaska House Speaker
minimal since crude inven- John Harri s said it was
admirable that BP took
tories are hig-h.
· "So while this won't have immediate action, although
any immediate impact on it's sure to hurt state coffers.
U.S. supplies. the market is "This state cannot alford to
another
Exxon
have
in very high anxiety. So any Valdez.'' said Harris. Rsi\\nificant disruption,' traders Valdez.
w1ll take that into accou nt,
even though there is no threat
'
of a supply shortage."
Light, sweet crude for
September delivery was up
$1.23 to $75.99 a barrel in
mid-afternoon Asian electronic trading Monday on The Ariel Summer Theatre Presents
SHOWBOAT
the New York Mercantile
Aug. 25 &amp; 26 8 PM Nightly
Exchange.
Marshall said tests Friday
www.arieltheatre.org .
indicated that there were 16
anomalies in 12 areas in an
The Ariel-Dater Hall
42~
Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
oil iransit line on the eastern
740-446-ARTS. (2787)
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

CAN.

Development Group has
hired the design firm DLZ
to complete a streetscape
design plan for the down~
town shopping district. It is
expected to be completed
by mid-September.
A pre-application for Tier
II downtown revitalization
funds submitted in June was

Oil

Bv MARY PEMBERTON side of Prudhoe Bay. Tests

'· Delores Whitlock, 75, Syracuse, died Sunday, Aug. 6,
2006. at the home of her daughter, Lisa Noland, near
Shade.
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeims
Funeral Home, Racine.

from Page A1

explained that the building
was built by Glen Staneart in
1930 for an appliance store
close to
Beasley &amp;
Matthews in Athens. Glen
Staneart was a first cousin of
Henry Staneart (Keith's
father).
Twenty-four were in attendance. Keith Staneart, John .
and
Connie
Staneart
Largent, Bill and Phyllis
Kirkendall , Joe and Joyce
Staneart Sheline , JoAnne
Aburto. Angela . Allen,
Marilyn Staneart Allen.
Paula Jean Staneart Pickens,
Vera , Michael, Joshua and
Zachary
Richardson,
"Lucky", Jenny, Wesley and
Bradley Luckett , Albert and
Clara Mae Hutchison, Pat
and
Mary
Staneart
Patterson,
and
Wiley
Colburn.

gas

Ol

Delores Whitlock

Project

It was noted that Kathleen
Morris died June 5, 2005 at
age 82. Get-well cards were
signed for Howard and Ruth
Fisher, Scott and Maxine
Staneart Leeds and Wilbur
Colburn.
The next reunion will be
held at John and Connie
Staneart Largent's camp
ground near their home on
the fourth Saturday in July
2007.
Joyce
Staneart
Sheline , Paula Jean Staneart
Pickens, Connie Staneart
Largent and JoAnne Aburto
will plan next year's reunion
and Anglea Henry will be in
charge of gifts.
·
Keith Staneart told about
an article that appeared in
The Athens Messenger on
May 30. It was a close up of
structure in the area bearing
the Staneart name. He

BP

from PageA1

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
Bv JIM ABRAMS
than 300 words .. All leu en 11re subject 10 editing, musr be
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unsigned letters will he publisher}. Letters should be in
WASHINGTON
good rastt!, addressing issues, 110t personalities. Letters of
Defense
contractors, airthanks lo organizations and individuals will not be accept- ·
lines
and.
a food company
edfor publication.

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

wWw.mydailysentinel.com

Cancer

'

'

ww~. m ydai l yse nt i ne l

Page _A4

Monday, August 7, 2006

1\!!~,~

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

1\-. Kely K. Pies Hmkb
CHIROPRAOOR

C'hunpr&lt;KlOT ot the )e ~r
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PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
''

~onday,August7,2006

•

Otncials m

Inside
Woods wins 50th event, Page 82
Six seleded into Hall of Fame, Page 82
Tigers sweep Indians, Page 86

·The Daily Sentinel

Bl
. I

•

ID

Monday, August 7, 2006

test ·

Bv CONNIE MABIN

document showing the voters to show identification
voter's name and address.
before voting if thGy did ndt
Those who don't have $ow it when they . regisCLEVELAND - More identification will be permit- tered. .
than two dozen Ohio coun- ted to cast a ballot by giving
Ohio and 17 other states
ties are preparing for special the last four digits of their require all voters to show
elections Tuesday, the state's
first with a rule that requires
By The Associated Press
voters to show identification
before casting a ballot.
On Tuesday, 27 Ohio counties will
Among the 27 counties
have
special electiom in which voters for
with elections for various
the
fu-st
time will have to show identification:
local issues, mostly school
There are 48 issues on the ballots, including:
tax proposals, is Cuyahoga,
• 7 school bond issues
the state's most populous
•
37
tax
issues,
including 28 school tax issues.
county where the May pri•
3
proposed
tax changes
mary was disastrous even
• I charter amendment
without workers worrying
The
counties
with special elections are:
about checking ID.
Adams,
Ashland,
Butler,
Columbiana, Crawford ,
Results from the May 2
Cuyahoga,
Defiance,
Delaware.
Fairfield , Franklin,
primary were delayed six
Fulton, Hamilton, Huron, Licking , Lucas, Madison,
days when roughly 18,000
Medjna, Montgomery, Morrow, Port'dge,
absentee ballots had to be
Sandusky,
Seneca, Stark, Summit, Washington,
hand counted because they
Wayne and Wood.
were improperly formatted
for the new optical scan sysSource: Ohio Secretaoy of Slllto.
tem .
The county, and many others across the state, also nad s'ocial Security number if photo or lion-photo ID.
Indiana
and
problems at ·polling places their name is on a list at a Florida,
Missouri require voters
votin~ electronically for the polling station.
Otherwise, they will be show photo lD or sign an
first lime.
Many elections officials given a provisional ballot, affidavit before casting halanticipate the new machines, which must be evaluated by lots.
In Georgia, federal and
combined with the new ID the county elections board
state courts recently blocked
rule, could spell long lines, following the vote.
James Lee , a spokesman enforcement of its voter
frustrated ·voters and overfor
the Secretary of State, identification · law, saying it
worked poll workers in
November, when Ohioans said the office expects few discriminated against people
problems Tuesday because who don't have ·driver's
will pick a new governor.
Tuesday's · special elec- of information mailed to · licenses, passports or other
service government identification.
tions, which affect only a voters, · public
Last week, Missouri's ID
fraction of the state's 7.6 announcements and other
efforts.
He law was challenged in court
million registered voters, are education
stressed that provisional hal- for the second time by a
a dress rehearsal.
·lots
will ensure that no one group claiming it could dis"It's going to be interestin~ to say the least," said who wants to vote will be courage people from voting.
Ohio's law is also being
M1chael Vu, director of denied.
"It
is
not
as
if
voters
jlfe
challenged
in · court as
Cuyahoga County's election
to
be
turned
away
at
unc.
o
nstitutional.
Some
going
board.
.
The county gave poll the polls : Quite the opposite. believe it will disenfranchise
workers enhanced training , The new law provides an voters, particularly poor and
plans to dispatch extra tech- ailditional level of security minority voters who are
nicians and mailed informa- for poll workers to be able to more likely to have no ID.
Norman Robbins, a retired
tion about the new rule to the confirm the identity of votw.hile
still
providing
neuroscience
prpfessor from
ers
42,000 registered voters elito
voters
they
will
Cleveland
who
now spends
assurance
gible for the election.
be
able
to
cast
a
ballot
even
his
time
advocating
for
Supporters of the rule say
it's needed to reduce fraud. if they do ·not have proper voter's rights, said governIt requires voters to prove identification on Election ment guides that explain the
ID law are unclear and he's
their identity with one of the Day," Lee said.
According to the Election concerned that provisional
following: a driver's license,
Reform
Information Project, ballots won't be counted.
state photo ID, military ID,
"It kind of makes you feel
which
tracks
election laws,
utility bill, bank statement,
24
states
and
the
District
of
that
this ID business is really
paycheck,
government
check or other government Columbia require first-time punitive, that it's not really
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BY JEROME PUGMIRE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP Photo

' of memory cards, used to record the votes made on electromc votmg
A basket full
'

'

maohines, sits on a counter, while election workers, background, download the information
from the cards to count votes, at the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections in this May 3,
2006, file photo , 1n Cleveland. More than two dozen Ohio counties are preparing to have
special elections Tuesday, the state's first test with controversial new voting rules such as
checking voter Identification.
to go after fraud," he said.
"That's very upsetting."
Lee , of the secretary of
state's office , said Ohio is
experienced ~ith properly
counting provts1onals.
Steve Harsman, director of
the Montgomery County
Board of Elections. said he's
worried about delays caused
by voters who are unaware
of the new law.
"It's going to be somewhat
of a headache, and we do

expect to see some problems," he said.
Pamela Swafford, deputy
director of the Hamilton
County Board of Elections,
said the agency has done
everything it can to help voters be prepared · for the
change.
''There will always be
some concerns and there's
always some people who
don 't read the newspaper or
listen to radio or TV and

come unprepared," she said:

Associated Press writers
John Seweer in Toledo,
}ames Hannah in Dayton
and Lisa Cornwell in
Cinci1111ati contributed to
this report.
On the Net:
of
State:
Secretary
http: //www.sos.state.oh.us ·
Election
Reform
Information
Project:
http://www.electionline.org

Work Without Limits

Local Weather
Monday...Partly cloudy. A
slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the morning ...Then a chance of showers and thunderstorms in the
afternoon. Hot. Humid with
highs around 90. Southwest
winds 5 (o 10 mph. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
Monday night ...Partly
cloudy. Showers and thunderstorms likely in the
evening ...Then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
after midnight. Hurnid with
lows in the mid 60s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph ... ·
Becoming north after midnight. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Tuesday .. .Partly cloudy
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the mid 80s. North
winds around 5 mph .
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Tuesday . night .. .Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 60s .
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday night ...Mostly
clear. Highs in the upper
80s. Lows in the mid 60s.

Thursday ...Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 80s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Thursday night and

Friday.. .Mostly cloudy with
a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in ihe
upper 60s. Highs in the mid
80s. Chance of rain 30 percent.

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
ANNUAL2006 PLAN PUBLIC HEARING
MEIGS HOUSING AUTHORITY
The MeigsHousing Authority will conducl a Public Hearing
of the Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Plan on Wedrtesday, August 9,
2006 at 3:00 p.m. at the office of the Meigs Housing
Authority at 117 East Memorial Drive ,.Pomeroy, Ohio.
The purpose of !he public hearing is to gain public comment
and input on the Meigs Housing Authority 2006 Annual Plan.
The Plan addresses 1he projected needs of the Section 8
households served by the Meigs Housing Authorily and ·lhe
steps thai 1he MMHA will implement in the Section 8 Rental
Assistance program .

Copies of !he MMHA Annual Plan are available for public
review at the Meigs Housing Authority office al 117 East
Memorial Drive. Pomeroy, Ohio. between the business hours
of 9:00a.m. and 4:00p.m., Monday thru Friday. The MMHA
2006 Annual Plan is available at the Pomeroy Public Library.
the Meigs County Commissioners office. and the Meigs
Health Department.
Written comments on the Plan may be mailed or delivered
to the MMHA , 117 East Memorial Drive , Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 prior to 3:00p.m. on August 9. 2006.
Jean Trussell
,...

Exccuti've Director

Meigs Housing Authority

• IR-RI HP
• All majo~ sen icc points ,
arc easy to reach.
,
• ( ·a h atld hrH lll; 1i ft fo\\'ar~i
and up for full access to
. '
cngllle or transmi ss ion
'

Edwards
takes step
forward in
comeback
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEREA - Browns wide
receiver Braylon Edwards
cut sharply on the post pattern to the back corner and
faked . out an imaginary
defender.
·
As the ball soared high
above him, Edwards turned
and made a leaping catch
while 'falling back in the end
zone, coming down with
both feet just inside the
back line for what would
have been a touchdown.
Springing to his feet,
Edwards spiked the ball an exclamation point on
another big day.
· The comeback IS progressing nicely.
Edwards took part in
Cleveland's team drills
Sunday for the first time in
training camp, another
strong sign of his progress
since Jan. 3 knee surgery
and increasing the possibility . he'll be ready for the
Sept. I0 season opener
against New Orleans.
, "Possibly is detinitely the
word that l want to use," he
said. "It feel s good, we're
going to do a little more
every day and if the knee is
ready on Sept. 10. we're
going to go. The knee is
feelilig good, if it wasn't
they wouldn't let me practice ."
.
The former first-round
pick tore his right anterior
cruciate ligament on Dec. 4
against Jacksonville and
missed the final four games
of · his rookie season.
Following surgery, doctors
figured that Edwards would
need about nine months of
recovery time before he was
back on the field .
However, a quick healer
and hard worker, he needed
just seven months to get
back, and unless his knee
starts acting up, Edwards
feels there's a good chance
he' ll be able to play against
the Saints.
"Each day it feels better,"
he said. "It's not swelling, a

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Johnson kisses the bricks
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ASSOCIATED PRESS

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No extra charge for moving furniture or removing old carpet.

AP photo
NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson kisses the bricks at the start/finish line after winning the
the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard auto race at th~ Indianapolis Motor Speedway in
Indianapolis Sunday.

BY TOM WITHERS

Please see Browns, 86

BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET, TRACKLESS CARPET, SHA(J
CARPET, LEVEL LOOP CARPET, and SCULPTURED CARPET.

PARIS - . The Tour de
France no longer calls him
champion. Hi s cycling team
cut him loose.
About the ·
only chance
F I o v d
Landis ·has
of keeping
his prized
yellow jersey
will
no1v likely
be decided
by
· an
appeal s
Perelro
process that
could drag on for months.
Landis was di scredited
and disowned in short order
Saturday when elevated levels of testosterone showed
up in his '' B'' or second dopmg sample- as it did in the
initial "A" sampk released
last week.
The samples also contained sy nthe tic te&gt;to sterone. indicating that it
came fwm an outside
source .
If stripped of the title,
Landis would become the
first winner in the I 03-year
history of ~ycling 's premier
race to lose. hi s Tour crown
over doping allegations .
Landis again denied

FaK- 1·740·446·3005 ,
E-mail - sports@ mydailysentinel.com

s-tJ..:ilill!
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342 ,

••1. 33

bsherman@mydailytribune .com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
{740) 446·2342 , ext. 23

bwalters @mydailytrlbune .com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, 0)(1. 33 •
lcrum@mydailyregister.com

,

.

INDIANAPOLIS If
Jimmie John son wants to
finally capture his first
Nextel Cup championship,
winning at Indianapoli s
Motor Speed way was a step
in the right direction.
Johnson pulled off a gritty
win at the !'lrickyard on
Sunday, battling back from
an early tire problem to take
the lead, only to see it evaporate when.a.Iate debris caution bunched up the field. It
dropped him from tirst to
eighth and forced him to
slice his way to the front in
the final 14 laps .
But he did it with ease and
pulled away for his third
major victory of the season.
Johnson won the seasonopening Daytona 500 - the
only event that trumps
Indianapolis in prestige and also triumphed in
NASCAR 's All-Star race.

Driver

Pia.

1 . Jimmie Jolin son
2. Man Kenseth
3. Jeff Burton
4. Kevin Harvick
5. Kyle Busch
6. Mark Martin
7. Denny Hamlin
8. Jeff Gordon

3124

-107
-366
-391
-391
-412
-466
-497

9. Tony Stewart
-509
10. Dale Earnhardt Jr. -512

+1
·1

+1
+1
+1
+1

"Pucker up and get ready
to kiss those bricks!"
Johnson said in Victory
Lane.
Now he' ll have to see if he
can translate his Indy win
into a championship.
The · winner of the
Brickyard
automatically
becomes the favorite to win
the title, and five of the past
eight went on to do it.
Johnson will now give it a

try in his constant pursuit of
an elusive fir st champi onship.
The perpetual points
leader has never been able to
put together a full season,
and his swoon typically
begin s in Indy. He wrecked
here and lost his points lead
last season to race winner
Tony Stewart, who parlayed
the victory into his second
championship
while
Johnson faded all the way
back to fifth.
Matt Ken seth, who has
been sitting in second
behind Johnson the past nine
weeks, finished second and
is I07 points out of the lead.
Kevi'n Harvick was third and
Clint Bowyer, his rookie
teammate
at
Ri chard
Childress Racing.
was
fourth .
·
Mark Martin was fifth and
Dale Earnhardt Jr. stole a
sixth-place fini sh by not pit-

CINCINNATI (AP) Jeff Francoeur needed just
one at-bat to salvage a dismal road trip.
Francoeur hit a. two-run
triple in the eighth inning to
tie it and scored the goahead run on Adam
LaRoche 's sacrifice fly to
help the Atlanta Braves beat
the Cincinnati Reds 6-4
Sunday.
"It was a tough road trip
for me," sa id Francoeur,
who was 3-for-24 (. 125) on
the trip after grounding out
with the bases loaded to end
the Braves' sixth inning. "!
had a lot of opportunities to
win games for this ballclub.
I've done it in the past, but
it's been a while ."
·'He's had some success in
the past," manager Bobby
Cox said. "He's been one of
the best at getting key hits,
but it comes and goes.''
Andruw Jones and Matt
Diaz homered for the
Braves, who avoided a
three-game sweep and
snapped a three-game losing
streak to fini sh the trip with
a 3-3 record.
.
"We wanted to come in
and win the seri es," Jones
said. " We had two tough
games where we left a lot of
men on base and couldn't
get a key hit. (Francoeur)
finally got one."
Jones and Brian McCann
si ngled with no outs in the
eighth inning against Gary
Majewski (4-4). Francoeur,
who is hitting .295 (36-for1.22) with runners in scoring
position, .followed McCann
with a triple into the right-

Experts say the
isolope tests used
on Floyd Landis'
urine samples to

detect synthetic
testosterone is
highly accurate.
His team fired him
on Saturday for a

Floyd
LandIa

positive ~Er sample.

Testosterone to
epltestosterone
ratios
4 ,1

second

• World Anti·Doping Agency

'sample
AP

cheating.
" I have never taken any
banned substance, including
testosterone," he said in a
statement. " I was the
strongest man at the Tour de
France, and that is why I am
the champion.
.
"I will fight these charges
with tbe same determination
and intensity that I bring to
my training and racing. It is
now my goal to clear my
name and restore what I ·
worked so hard to achieve."
Please see Landis, 82

If,

·•

(J .l .~ J /
c}eM.!IAJe

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Please see Bricks, 86

Braves too strong for Reds

Testing 'foolproof

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f) __~~
4,,- /J(J(//411

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- Blood Press ure
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•Thursday (5 p.m. ro8 p.ul.):
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AP photo :
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Gary Majewsk i watches Atlanta •
Braves Matthew Diaz round the bases after Diaz hit a sol •
home run in the eighth inning during their baseball game :
•
Sunday in Cincinnati. The Braves won 6-4.
•
field corner, setting up keep grinding.''
•
LaRoche' s sacrifice tly.
Macay McBride (3-1) •
.Diaz then hit hi s fourth pitched a perfect 'eventh for :
homer to make it 6-4.
the win and Bob Wickmun •
"I was pretty down after worked the ninth fo r hi s fi fth •
my first three at-bats,'' save in five lric ~ since bei ng
Francoeur said. " I've always traded from Cleve land on
loved those situations. July 20.
You've got to love those sitPlease see Reds, 86
•
uations. I just told myself to

.. -saturday (5 1' m. to 8 p.m.!:
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&gt;
· Body Fat
- Pulse Oximetry
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A BIG "thank you " to the PVH A14iliary &amp;
tire Wellt1es$ '('ask Force /or their dediCation ! :
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'

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday,August7,2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monda~August7,2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Woods wins Buick Open for his 50th PGA Tour victory
BY

GRAND BLANC, Mich
- The red shtn was tamtl·
iar, and so was the resuIt
Ttger Woods won his 50th
PGA Tour IItle Sunday.
shootmg hts founh-stratght
6-under 66 for a three-stroke
victory over Jtm Furyk in
the Buick Open
Woods reached a seasonlow 24 under and made a
career-htgh 28 btrdtes tn the
tournament to hold off Furyk
- who closed wtth a 64 for his fourth win of the year
and a check of $864,000
Woods became the seventh member of the PGA
Tour's 50-wtn club after
tmprovmg to 21-for-21
when leading by more than
one stroke alter three
rounds. The 30-year-old
Woods beat Jack Nicklau s'
record pace to the mtlestone,
which Ntcklaus reached tn
1973' at the age of 33.
"That's pretty cool to get
to 50," Woods satd. "Never
tn my wtldest dreams dtd I
thtnk I'd get to 50 "
Woods. commg off his
emotional victory in the
Brittsh Open, wtll get a
chance to win hts 12th maJOr
in two weeks at the PGA
Championship in suburban
Chicago, where the superstar
hopes to close m on the
record he covets: Nicklaus'
18 maJor championshtps
Woods has won nearly a
fourth of 2 I 0 PGA Tour
events he has entered smce
turning pro in 1996 Thts
year, his four vtctones have

m:ribune - Sentinel - ~egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

Steinhauer wins third Women's
British Open by three strokes

lARRY l.AGE

ASSOCAITED PRESS

AP photo

Ttger Woods. second from nght, samples the tcmg off a cake dedtcated to hts Butck Open
vtctory and hts 50th PGA Tour tttle at Warwtck Htlls Golf &amp; Country Club tn Grand Blanc,
Mtch. Sunday. Woods ftntshed the tournament at 24-under.
hi s second BUtck Open vtc- Sean O'Hair (67) to tmprove
come m 11 events
thetr chances of earning
At Warwtck Htll s. Woods tory.
A.fter making a 7-foot par spots on the U.S Ryder Cup
likely ended any hopes hts
competitors had when he putt at 17, Woods took a team.
Vtjay Smgh had a chance
made four b11dtes on the two-shot lead into the final
front 111me to butld on the hole and was able to enJOY to become the ftrst player to
two-shot lead he had at the his latest victory stroll up the wm three stratght Butck
fatrway where an overflow Opens - and four overall
start of the tourth round
Woods bogeyed the 12th crowd cheered louder each - when he stat1ed the day
hole, allowmg Furyk to ue step that he got closer to the thtee shots back . But Stngh
hun bneOy. but took the lead green Ftttingly, he made a closed with a 70 to tie for
II th at 17 under
alone for good at 13 v. hen birdte at 18.
Joe Durant (67) fintshed
"I never got any momenhts approa~h from I05 ~ards
landed close enough for a four shots back, alone m tum gomg," he satd, "I drove
tap-m btrdte At 15, Woods' thtrd Vaughn Taylor (68) the ball beauttfully, but
btrdte gave him a two-shot and Scott Verplank (69) tted couldn't make anything"
After wmmng at Royal
lead and cssenttally clmchcd lor tourth at 19 under wtlh

LYTHAM ST. ANNES,
England (AP) - Whenever
Sherri Stemhauer mentioned to people she had
won the Women's Bntish
Open twice, they always
assumed the tournament
was a maJor.
Steinhauer never bothered
to correct them.
Now s~ doesn't have to.
The
43-year-old
American ·Shot.an even-par
72 Sunday at Royal Lytham
to win the Women's British
Open for the third time, and
the first since the tournament became a major in
2001.
St~=inhlluer finished at 7uprler ~ 1 for her second
major title, the first ~lng' at
the now discontinued ' Du
Maurier Classic in, Canada
in 1992.
She will defend the ti'tle
next year at St. Andrew's as
the Wopten's Sritish Open
goes to the venera~le course
for the fmt time. ·

Having been in a slump
during the past three years,
Steinhauer mastered lbe
Lytham
links
while
Michelle Wie and Annika
Sorenstam, two of the leadmg contenders coming into
the tournament, finished
way back.
Wie shot her third straight
2-over 74 to finish at 6-over
294. The 16-year-old from
Hawaii has failed to ~
par in her last seven rounds
at a major. Sorenstam, who
won last month's U.S. Open
for her 1Oth ~or victory,
shot a 44 on the back nioe
and finished with. a 7-over
79 fora 7-over 295. .
Second·rolffid leader JuU
Inkster (73) and Loren~
Ochoa (74) wete ( l\. shot
behind Kerr and Gustafson
at 3-under 285. .
Kerr came within a stroke
of Steinhauer after the I 5th
but saw her chaoce slip
away when her second shot
went past the gt'llCR at No.
16.

Ltverpool , Woods sobbed
uncontrollably tn the arms of
caddie Steve Willtams and
wife Elm because he won
for the ftrst time since his
lather's death m May.
The •. scene at Warwick
H11Is' 18th green was one the
world has become more
accustomed to over the last
decade. AIter makmg a I 0footer to match the score he

had tn the three prevtous
rounds, he pumped hts fist,
punched the air, upped hts
cap and smtled as he wtped
sweat - not tears - off his
face
"At thts course, the goal is
to shoot 66 every day,"
Wtlltams satd. "I guess we
accompltshed that, eh ?"

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person throughout ltfe "
Otten, the tans chanted
Reggie's name It didn 't
matter tf they were dressed
m Packers or Eagles green
- a collectton of current
Eagles, mcludmg Donovan
McNabb, sat m the crowd
wearmg Wh1te 's No 92 or even Cowboys. Gtants or
Otlers blue or Ratders black.
They all stood and
cheered tor the Mm1ster of
Defense , mcludtng Atkman ,
Dallas' three-ttme Super
Bowl champton quarterback.
"I too am saddened by the
absence ol Rcggtc Whttc. a
great player and a man who
left us too soon," Atkman
said "It's an honor to be a
member ot the Hall ot Fame
class that tncludes ftve men
I have so much admtratwn
and respect for. They played
the game the way tt should
be played, and John .Madden
coached the game the same
way"
Atkman 's vo1ce cracked
as he explamed hts emotions
"I was able to ltve ,,
dream I played protesstonal
football ,' he said "That I
was able to do so wtth so
many great players and
coaches and win three
champtonshtps and wmd up
here - it ts almost too
much to behe\e I am humbled to be welcomed t0 the
Pro Football Hall ot Fame "
Whtte was a two-ttme
defenstve player ol the year
\\lho made 13 straight Pro

Bowl s He was the career
sacks leader wtth J98 when
he rettred - Bruce Smtth
smce has passed .htm - and
won a Super Bowl wtth
Green Bay tn 1997 after
stat1tng hts tllustnous career
tn the USFL, then movmg to
Ph1ladelphta.
"It's not how we dte, tt's
how we live." Sara White
satd ··r encourage you to
live like Reggte lived Ht s
leg.tcy wtll ltve on through
you"
Atkman won 90 games 111
the I990s, the most by any
quarterback
111
one
decade. The top overall ptck
111 the 1989 draft, he gutded
the Cowboys to three Super
Bowl titles m four seasons
and made stx Pro Bowls.
He saved hts strongest
prmsc for hts teammates,
tncludmg NFL career rushtng leader Emmitt Smtth,
who was tn the audten~e and
certamly wtll be on the stage
tor hts own mduction someday.
''I dtd what was asked to
help the te.tm wm," he satd,
"and after a career of puttmg
team goals ftrst. tt 1s so
extremely gratifytng to
recetve the htghest tndtvtdual honor a player can

are not sanctioned before
you are found gutlty "
But the Tour ttself wastno ltme in dtstancmg
ed
fromPageBl
itself I rom the Amenc.tn
" It goes without s&lt;ty tng
The
International that for us Floyd Lmdts ts
. Cychng Umon , the sport's no longer the wmner of the
governing body, satd tl 2006 Tour de France." race
would ask USA Cyclmg to director
Cht tstt.tn
open disctphnary proceed- Prudhomme wid The
ings Documentation from Assoc tat eo Press
the posttlve 1ests wtll be
Prudhomme said runnerforwarded to tbe U S. Anti- up Oscar Peretro ltkely
Doping Agency, which will would be declared the new
turn tt over to a revtew wmner
panel USADA wtll ulti"We can't tmagtne a dttmately decide if a penalty ferent outcome," he satd.
-likely a two-year banReached m ht s home is appropnate. Landis can town of Vtgo, Spatn,
accept the dectsion or Pereuo saw tt shaping up
begin an appeals process. that way, too.
which can take up to stx
"Now I constder myself
months and involve the' the winner," he said, while
Court of Arbitration for acknowledgmg that the
Sport.
final decision was up to the
UCI lawyer Phtlippe UCI and subject to a legal
Verbiest satd Landts would challenge by Landis
officially remain Tour
Peretro satd he regretted
champion pending that not bemg able to celebrate
process. The ,dectston to properly- in Pans, wearstrip him of his title rests tng the wmner's yellow,
Jersey
with UCI.
"Until he 1s found gutlty
"I would have ltked to
or admits guilt, he will have ltved that day. Jt
keep the yellow Jersey," he would ha ve been the best
satd. "This is normal You day of my ltfe, as a sports-

ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

CANTON - The glory of
the newest Hall of Famers'
achtevements was punctualed by a steady stream of
tears and a singular chant
"REG-GIE, REG-GIE."
Though a fair share of the
crowd sported No. 8 jerseys
in tribute to Troy Atkman,
thetr passton Saturday was
reserved for the late Reggte
White.
The two JOined Warren
Moon,
John
Madden,
Rayfield Wnght and Harry
Carson as the newest
inductees in the Pro Football
Hall of Fame.
Nearly all of them choked
up or cned durmg the fourhour ceremony, even the
usually
unflappable
Atkman. Most potgnant was
the way While, also an
ordained preacher who died
in December 2004, was honored
Hts son, Jeremy, was
White's presenter, and his
widow. Sara, made the
acceptance speech Both
crytng, they shared a long
hug after unveiling Reggte's
bust before a rapt audtence
"Reggie was an honest,
humble, honorable, dedtcated, determtned, passiOnate
and caring man," Sara
Wht!e said "He ts tnducted
today not only because of
hts athlettc achtevements,
but because he was a great
player on the fteld m accordance wtth bemg a great

Landis

Moon became the ltrst
black quartet back. in the
Hall. The onlv one of the
induc1ees not to win an NFL
IItle, he captured ftve
stratght Grey Cups for the
Edmonton Esktmos after
bemg undrafted out of the

Umverstty of Washington
"I was not really invued to
the combtne and no coaches
~ame out to gtve me workouts," Moon satd. "It was a
foregone conclusiOn quarterback was not m my future
m the NFL, but ch3ngtng
poslltons was. I was gomg
to play qu.trterback and I
was lookmg for somebody
who would let me do that
"Thank you Canada."
Moon came back to the
Umted States as a free agent
111 1984 and spent 10 seasons tn the Houston Otlers'
run -and-shoot offense He
also played for Mmnesota,
Seattle and Kansas City in
17 NFL seasons and passed
for more than 70,000 yards
(over 42 mtles) before he
retired at age 44
"A lot has been sa1d about
me betng the ftrst AfricanAmencan quarterback m the
Hall of Fame," he said "It's
a subject I am uncomfortable wtth at tt1nes, because I
want to be JUdged only as a
quarterback
"But s1gntlicance does
come wtth that, I accept
that 1 remember all the guys
before me who blazed that
tratl to gtve me the msplratton I always had that extra
burden that I hat! the responstbtltty to play the game for
my people l cat ried that
burden proudly.''
It took nearly a quarter
century for Madden to make
tt to the Canton shrine
When the moment came
Saturday. he got "goofy."

"I started thinkmg about
tht s after I was voted to the
Hall of Fame, and now I
know," satd Madden, elected by the semor committee
for a 103-32- 7 coaching
record, no losmg seasons
and the 1977 Super Bowl
champtonshtp "At night,
when the fans and visitors
all leave, then the workers
start to leave, then JUSt one
person turns out the hght,
locks the door, and I beheve
the busts talk to each other
And I can't wall for that
conversatton
"We'll be there forever
and ever talkmg about whatever That's what I believe
wtll happen and no one ts
ever gotng to talk me out of
that "
Madden mtght be best
known now for h1s announcmg and his vtdeo game, but
Madden
was
36- I 6-2
against other coaches m the
Hall.
Carson became the ftrst
mstde linebacker from a 3-4
defense to make it to
Canton. It was a long-awatted honor - he retlfed m
1988 after 13 seasons, mne
Pro Bowls and a Super
Bowl tttle wtth the New
York Gtants - that Carson
recently had gtven up on.
Two years ago, after making the final 1:S candidates
for the sixth stratght year
but not being elected by a
panel ot sports wnters,
Carson asked to have hts
name withdrawn tram consideratton.

man," he satd
Peretro also telt badly
for Landts
"I co nstder him my
fri end, tt surpnsed me and
hurt me to hear what had
happened to htm," he satd
The results of the second
test come JU St two weeks
after Landts, a 30-year-old
former mountatn btker,
proudly stood atop the
wtnner 's podwm on the
Champs-Elysees, wavmg
to thousands who cheered
h1m on
Wtthtn 45 mmutes of the
"B" sample announcement,
the Swtss-based team
Phonak fired its captatn for
··vwlating the teams internal Code of Ethics "
Phonak stood by Tyler
Hamilton throughout his
blood-doping case two
years ago; Landis, however, is ~etting no support.
"Thts wtll be his personal affatr, and the Phonak
team wtll no longer be
tnvolved," a statement
satd
Testosterone. a male sex
hormone, helps butld muscle and tmprove stamma
The unne tests were done
July 20 after Landis' Stage

17 vtctory during a grueltng Alptnc leg, when he
tegamed nearly etght 111111 utes agamst then-leader
Peretro - and went on to
wtn the three-week race
Both of Landts ' "A" and
"B" samples turned up a
te s to s t e ro ne/ e pi te s tos terone Patto of II 1 - far
111 excess of the 4: l limtt.
Jacques De Ceaurnz, the
Chatenay-Malabray chief,
satd the synthettc testosterone was found in tsotope test mg.
"It's foolproof. Thts
analysis tells the difference
between endogenous and
exogenous," he told the
AP "No error ts possible in
isotopic readmgs."
Landis
spokesman
Michael Henson disputed
that, and the cychst's attorney, Spanish lawyer Jose
Mana Buxeda, said, "It
doesn't end here "
Landts and hts defense
team have offered vanous
explanattons for the htgh
testosterone reading
mcludtng corttsone shots
taken for pam m Landts'
degenerating htp, dnnking
beer and whtskey the night

before , thyr01d medtcatton, bhnds were drawn
and his natural metaboA man who satd he was a
lism.
fnend of the famtly, but
Another theory - dehy- dtdn' t want his name used,
dration - was rebuffed by answered the phone at the
anti-d&lt;;lptng experts.
Landis' house and con''It's 1ncredtbly disap- firmed the cyclist was
pomtmg," three-tune Tour there.
wmner Greg LeMond satd
Desptte the latest test
by phone from the starling resu Its, a sign at a nearby
line at the Pan Mass freeway
exit
said,
Challenge in Sturbridge, "Welcom~ Home Floyd
Mass "I don't thtnk he has Landis, 2006 Tour de
much chance at all to try to France Winner"
prove hts mnocence .
In Lancaster County, Pa.,
"When I heard it was where Landis was raised in
synthetic hormone, 11 ts a conservative Mennonite
almost imposstble to be home, netghbors vowed
caused by natural events their support.
It's kind of a downer," said
"All he has accomLeMond,
the
first plished, he has attained
American to wm the Tour. through hts hard work and
"I feel for Floyd's family. I discipline. We are very
hope Floyd wtll come confident he will prove his
clean on tt and help the innocence," said Tammy
sport. We need to figure
out how to clean the sport Martin, a longtime family
up, and we need the help of friend.
Paul and Arlene Landis,
Floyd."
who
have supported their
In Murneta, Cahf.,
the doping scanson
smce
where Landts lives, an AP
reporter was asked by dal began, were out of
poltce to leave the gated town on a previously
community when she scheduled vacation.
attempted -t'o approach his
A sign posted on theu
hou se Several cars were front yard said, "God
parked m front, and the Bless, Went Campmg."

rece1ve .,

Carson gave his presenter,
son Donald, a long hug
before
addressmg
the
crowd Donald Carson suffers from a rare blood disorder.
"Thts tsn't about me, thts
ts about my fam1ly," Carson
satd. "I am so thankful my
son presented me thts afternoon; he ts detimtely a man.
He's been through so much
m the last seven months,
more tlian I could ever have
gone through r never knew
needles could be so long."
Wright also played 13 seasons, and won two Super
Bowls. He retired in 1979
and was voted in by the
semors committee.
A former college basketball player expecung to play
tn the N.BA, Wright was a
light
end
who
was
"stonned" when coach Tom
Landry satd he was bem~
moved to tackle. "Btg Cat
went on to make stx consecutive Pro Bowls and help
the Cowboys wm 10 dtvtston titles.
Wright cited the poem
"The Road Not Taken" for
mspmng hts career.
"Throu~h this poem I discovered hfe would gtve me
choices It was recognizing
those chOices that proved to
be the greatest challenge,"
he satd m a teary speech.
"My mstinct was to always
take the easy road, but the
easy road never came my
way
"I'm privtleged to be in
such a stellar class."

{304) 675-1333

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*POLICIES*
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Pubhshtng reserves
the nght to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any ttme
Errors Must B
eported on the fitS
Wf of publlcatton an
he Trlbune·Sentlnel
RegiSter will b
esponstble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occupte
y the error and onl
he ftrst tnsertton W
half not be liable fo
ny loss or expens
hat results from lh
ubllcatlon or omls
ton of an advertis
ent. Corrections wtl
made m the ltrs
vallable edition.

l

(

lt.,ll•O-H•IL•P•\•VA•Im'D-_.1

an

ey,

r

lm ortan.t

GIVEAWAY

2yr old Cat 1/2 Stamese
declawed &amp; ltxed to good

Lost

Black/Tan German
4yrs old
Rd
West
Ne eds hean
Med1crne the 4th

Beauttful 8 week old female worm

r

kttly unusual multt·colored (304)593 2297
markmg

Litter

tramed

adorable Call {740)441·
0145
-Jo_h_n_D:-e_e_ce-;tr3_ct_o_r-m-o-de-1

Once

unwanted

n

YARil SALEG~U.li'Ol L~

110

and/or Huge Garage Sale Fn 1Sat

abandoned, rescued kittens 8/ 118/12 800am 200pm

men boys cloth1ng s1zes 6·

Approved 16(husky) Hewlett Packard

homes only Call441 1647

~---·

"Patches"

"Scooter" and "Leo have all
Run Rd, Pomero Oh10
been at the shelter tor over 1
WANTID
year Please rescue them
All 3 spayed and neutered
T08LY

(304)363 2461

EXP
OH and WV Coal
Mrn ers needed'
Send
resume to Davrd Stanley
Small brown Male dog good
Consultants Coal M1ner,
w ktds, w!collar (304)675- Absolute Top Dollar US
Si lver and Gold Corns, 152 Roush Crrcle Fatrmont
7629
Proofsets Gold Rrngs Pre WV 26554 or Fax to 304·
1935
US
Currency 534 3917 or go to DSC
Solrtarre Dramonds· M T S LLC com to apply Onlrne
Corn Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446
FEDERAL

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

2842

1

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale ... . . .

.. 725

Announcement .......................................030

Antiques
. .. . . .. .
. .. 530
Apartments lor Rent.. ............................... 440
Auction and Flea Market. .. . ... . ....080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones ...... .............

Auto Repair..... .
BUilding Supplies. . . ... ..
Business and Buildings ...

550
. ........... .. 340
. ... 210
... 140

Busllless Opportuntty ......
Business Tnlinlng .
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ..
. 790
Camp1ng Equipment .......... ......... .. ..... 780
Cards o!Thanks
,.,.
. .. 01 0
Child/Elderly Care.. ...... .... ........... , ..... 190
Electr~caURelrlgeratlon ....
840
Equipment tor Rent .......... .....
...... 480
Excavating .....
..... 830
Farm Equ1pmenl... . ................... ........ 610
Farms tor Rent
.. 430
Farms for 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; Gram

. . ......... .640

Help wanted
Home Improvements....... .... .

110
. .........

810

Homes tor Sale
.......... 310
Household Goods ........ ....
... . 51 0
Houses lor Rent
. . ........ ......... 410
In Memoriam..
.......... ... .
.. . 020
Insurance ...
. ............. , ............ 130
Lawn II Garden Equipment.... . ,.. ... .. 660
Livestock .
............. . .630
Lost and Found. . .. . ..
.... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage
350
Miscellaneous............
.
.170
Miscellaneous MerchandiSe .......... .....540

Mobile Home Repair
... 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent.........
420
Mobile Homes tor Sale ... . ........ .. ......320
Money to Loan......... . . ......
. 220
Motorcycles II 4 Wheelers
.................740
Musical Instruments ...... ...

lion (740)388 8229

0'

I \11' 1
\II"
...,I It\ II I .._

... 770
710
750

.c..ars

Call Sl 5 67 $26 19/hr now htr·
(740)388·9303
mg For applrca!lon and free
governemem JOb rnlo call
Want to .buy Junk Cars Amencan Assoc ol Labor 1·
(304}773·5004
913 599 8042 24/hrs emp
serv
w anted Carsr Any condr

760

Autos for Sale........ ........ ... ... . .
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ...

POSTAL JOBS

111 11 buy J.u.n_k

110
HELP

w..'ITEV

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cralts,
wood 11ems
To $480/wk
Mat errals prov1ded
l=ree rntormahon pkg 24Hr

901·426 4649

Holzer Asslst9d Living·
Gallipolis has Employment
Opportumtres lor Full tr me
Part time and as needed
Resrdent Assrstants Prater
eKpenenced STNA but not
reqwed Please apply rn
person or send resume to
attenlron Otane Camden

RN DON
EOE

A 9 yaar company rs lookrn g F~;:"'";;'::'::'~:::'"'il
for a well motwated HVAC
Holzer Senior Care
1ndrvrdual Must have a leasf
Center
1 year hands on expenence
Bllflng Clerk
rn rnstallalton Pay IS based
Opportunity
on cxperrence If tnterested
ca ll (740 )44f 1236 and
Holzer
Semor
Care
Center rs lookrng for a
leave message w1th recep·
full·hme brlltng clerk
t10n rst
E11pe rrence
wrth
An EKcellent way to earn
Medrcare and Med1card
money The New Avon
electroniC Orltrng rs pre
Call Marrlyn 304-882·2645
!erred Must be able to
wor!o: In a multr·task poSt·
Are you 55 or Older? Pard
uon
and have good com·
employment trarnrng fo r
mumcatron skills
rndrvrduals
rnteres ted
Clerrcal food serv1ce and
If 1ntarested please stop
drrv1ng posrt rons avarlable
by and see LoS at 380
Call the Senror Employment
Coloma! Drr ve Brdwell
Centec (866)734 ·~30 1
Oh1o or grve Teresa
Wr lson Bustness Ofi1C8
AVON I All Areas I To Buy or
Manager a call at
Sell
Shrrley Spears, 304
(7401446·5001
675 1429
Carpenler wanfed· only exp
pmson
need
appty
(7 40)446 7039

neuot

C:AU ~fit

Equal OpportumtY

570

Personals . .
.. .................. 005
Pets lor Sale.... ........... ..... . . .
560
Plumbing &amp; Heating
.... . ........ . , 820
Prolesslonal Services . ...
.. .230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ................ '
160
Real Estate Wanted..
..... 360
Schools instruction ,,,.,. ................... 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer ...
. ............ 650
Sltua11ons Wonted.
.................. . .... 120
Space lor Rent..
........460
Sporting Goods.
... 520
SUV's tor Sale . .
. ....... 720
Trucks tor Sale ...
715
Upholstery..........
, ..
. ................. 870
Vans For Ssle
.. ...... .. ...
. .. . 730
Wonted to Buy.
.. ........... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .
.. .. 620
Wanted To Do . ..
. .. .. ....... . ...... 180
Wanted to Rent .. ....... .... . ....
470
Yard Sate· Galtlpotlo.....
. ........... 072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle. ..
.. 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleesant ....
... .. . ......... 076

ASSI!fEO UVING
-GALLIPOliS-

1.

Em ploy er
b ....~~~==..ll

HOME HEALTH AIDES
• r;Q

(~ I&gt;EA•ENCE

NEt,f!&gt;f;AflY
I ULL 'TIME CW'.S5fS
CDL TR~IN NG
f NA~CI'IG "lA LABLf
" JOB f'l.ACE'-'EN t
' F.NRDLUNG NOW

1

lJEuoW.~

Early Head Start/ Head
Start Program accepttng tor
Posrtrons
Appllcaltons
ava1lable at 540 5th Ave
Huntrogton WV 25701 unltl
81506EOE

computer
system
ful ly
updated Many household
rtems, furnrture PlaystaliQn
two/Gamecube
games - - - - - - - much more 12 Vmton Eler.tllcrans
Avenue Ram/shine
lmmedrate Postlrons avatl·
able tor Journeymen &amp;
074
Y~ SALEApprentrce Must have cur·
Pot\ff HOVIJ\&gt;lmlli.F' rent Electrrcal lrcense
Compet1trve wages &amp; bene·
Fax
resume
to
4 Family yard sa le Aug 8 9 frts
(ptctured)
or
call
10 , 9am 4pm :)2714 Bmley (304 )366 5330

SIGN ON BONUS Home
Health Care of SE Ohro rs
currently hmny home a des
competrtrve wages
Cell
74C 662 1222
-----,------:
Jorn ttre A110n team Local
Corporate lrarnrng " Call
(740)379 9422 10 star! today
for onl~ S10

(7 401446·2359

Pleasant Valley Hosprtal
Prrvate Duty rs recrurt
rng LPN s for pnvate
duty home ca re cases
1n Me~g s County
Excellent pay flelttble
scheduling and e11cel
lent work enwonment
For more
tnlormatron call Trrna at

(304)675 7400 oc
t 800 746 0076

ANEOE

lir.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
lr1'o
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

t.,lll•O-H•ELP-W•Ai•~•TE•'ll-' ,_'o--l~iil~iOSiii~iiisiio.-rl
Rockspnngs RehaO rhtatron
Center prov1des res rdents
wrth outstandmg nursrng
care and rehab1lttatron serv
rces helprng them return to a
hie ot rndependence at
home We currently have
opportuntlles lor RN s and
LPN's at our facr hty located
In Pomeroy Oh ro

:i i~ioiSi io,~i~i i'o-rl

t.,r.1D_ _

2 or 3 bedroom house for House tor Sale 112 Pleasant
(304 )675 4034 oc
sale on land contract 1670 St
Lincoln Heights Pomeroy 1304)675·041 9

(740)992 5958
3 bedroom house for sa le on
land contract New carpet 1
m11 e from Holzer (740)388

6228

3 bedroom 2 balh with f1re·
place 40x60 barn Rro
We otfer a COMPETITIVE
Grande area On 8flat aces House 1m Sale In Syracuse
two-bedroom wtth bath
SALARY SCALE an &amp;KCel - !120 000 (740)709·1166
attached ga rage and base
lelll benelrt package and a
2 Baths ment An estale sate
support1ve work envrron 3 Bedroom
menf Interested candtdates Basement large deck dou $70 000 Phone (740)992
should
apply
to ble garage 306 Second 3690
Mrddloport
Rockspnngs Re habrlrtatron Ave
House for sale wrth large
Center 36759 Rockspnngs $63 000 00 740 992·2571
garage 187 Galha St
Ohro
Road,
Pomeroy,
3 BR 1 bath 1 t /2 story Crown Ctly (740)260·6686
45769 E11tendrcare He alth
~asement
heat or (740)439 4981
house
SerVIces Inc rs an equal
pump wrth propane furnace
opportunrty employer that
tg eat Ill krlchen wrth oak lovely starter or retirement
encourages
workplace
cat11net s
12JC24
drnmg home rn country Nrce nergh·
cJrvers1ty M/F DN
room large concrete Iron! borhood 2 Bedroom LA
porch , back deck vrnyl srd DR Krtchen 1 Balh 6 acre
St:H!JOLS
mg 2 car carport shade S58 000
1740)446 2601
INSfRUCTIO~
trees t acre tlatlawn 1 mtle for more tnfo
soulh ot R10 Grande
Gallipolis Career College S85 900 Phone (740t245 Mason Co Rebel Rrdge Ad
2 mrles from Hannan Hrgh
(Careers Close To Home) 5811
- - - - - - - - School 3 bed/ 2 bath 3 car
Call Today 1 740 446 4367
3BA House tor sale Pretty garage
Lrvmg
RM1
1·800-214 0452
Clean Cedar Street
FP Frrepla ce 2 ac land Lrv ed
,.,:C:a~:~po~':~~;cOI~:,c:;-ng Central heal/arr Furnrshed 1n 2 months $20 000 down
CounCil tor lndepandEnl CoHeges Krlchen C 1ty Schools Call Owner
wrll
F1nance
and Schools 12746
740 446 9961 $118 000
(30 4 )56.2·5 840 (304)552
1110
WA~~l])
4 bedroom 2 bath on SA 0756

oo

1'50

To Do

279 near Centerville 100°o
Newly remodeled home
frnancmg avatlable Prrce
3BR bath LR FA eat m
Asststed lrvrng or total care reduced (740)742 2376
k1tchen and uhlrty room
for your loved one Ill my
4 !)edroom 2 bath double Heat pump wrth central ai r
home Mary (740)388 0118
garage
pool
2 acres and
app lrances
Great
I'T.':o;;&lt;us;:;eTOatr...:'l'l';ar.'trT'aO.roeT&lt;o~ Eastern School Drstrrc1 sta rte r home 107 Graham
Orsabled Shut In s
Cuts 740·992 3465 after 5 00 PM Street Rodney Vrllage 2
PLEASANT VALLEY
askrng $76 900 i740)44t·
tyles-Manrcures
Serv
4 bedroom new home frre
HOSPITAL
9458
reas Belpre to Athens place large lrvrng room
tddteporl &amp; rn between Must sell 2 mrles lrom
NO DOWN PAYMENT even
all Jenny 740 378 6482 Holzer (740)388 8228
w1th less than perfect credtt
18
ears
ex
enence
PER DIEM
~""-"!-'-'~~~-_J
Attention!
1s available on thiS 3 bed
room 1 bath home rn
II\\\(
I
II
Local
company
otterrng
"NO
Weekend&amp; Only
10'::~-,-----, DOWN PAYMENT
pco Middleport Corner lol vmyl
s1drng fireplace rn llvmg
10
8USL~I-~
grams for you to buy your
Baccalaureate degree
room good carpet tr le floor
OPPORTli'fll
home
1nstead
of
rentrng
1n Medical Technology
tn krtchen French doors
or related lreld plus ell
open
to master bedroom
fr
nancrng
'1
· Less than pertect credrl
grbrhty for ASCP and/or
]ac uzzr tub off street park
•NOTI
Ch
accepted
Assoctates Degree tn
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
' Payment cou ld be the rng Payment around $550
applted scrence or relat
per month 740 367 7129
lNG CO recommends same as rent
ed freld plus ehgrbrlity
Looking For a
Mortgage
LocatGrs
that you do busrness wrth
lor certrlrcatron by
nrce
38R
bath
Very
peopl e you know alld (740)367-0000
New Career?
ASCP MICROBIOLOupstarrs furmshed 1BR apt
Gy EXpERIENCE
By owne r· appt on ly 3 acres downslarrs Furntture store
NOT to send money
lnfoCrsron has been
PREFERRED Must
on rrver 4BR 2b laundry m rear Car lot on srde All on
throu gh the marl unltl you
otferlng stable pos1ttans
have or be tmmed1ately
have rnvestrgated the
rm 1st II 2 kttchens fr &amp; 112 ac lot at 130 Bu lavrlle
rn the Gallipolis area lor
ellgrbie for. WV hcense
oHerrng
back porches patro 2 car Ptke
Gal lipOliS
OH
over 5 years'
gar All brrck 40 )(50 barn $135 000 (740)446 4762
Send resume to
18x24 work shop wb stove
MaNn
$8/hour + bonuses
M&lt;Mllt.£ Hm1t:S
Pleasant Valley Hosprtal
&amp;
elec &amp; wa Boat dock con
10 (.O\N
I'OR SAt t
Anenllon Rebecca
crete dr 6 mr so of Gallrpolls
Call for Conservatlye
Brownrng
on SA 7 (740)441 ·0596
Political Causes!
2520 Val ley Dnve
16x80 tratler 2bdrm 2ba
Secure your 2nd
Pmnt Pleasant WV
dream krtchen w/all apph
Amendment Right'
2Ss50
ances
12x16
covered
Borrow Sman Contact
(304)675 4340 ext
porch olus shed Rented
the Oh iO DIVISIOn of
We otfer
1379
rand near Green (740)339
Fmancral
lnsltlu\ron s
.rPald Trarntng
Fax (304)675·7966
3429
Ofl1ce
of
Consumer
./Pard Vacatror1s
411
real
eatate
advert1slng
Affatrs BEFORE you refi~ Patd Holtdays
www pvalley org
1998 Mobrle Horne 3 bed
In this newapaper Is
nance your home or
./Weekly pay
room 2 bath for sale wtth
subject to the Foder11!
obtarn a loar. BEWARE
./full beneftts
ANEOE
0 75 acre Gall1pohs Ferry
Fair Housing Act o11968
ol requests lor any large
.; Profess1onal
(30 4)593-2454
which makes lt Illegal to
advance payments of
envtronment
advertltae any
fees or tnsurance Call the
preference lirnitalton or
2000 16x80 Clayton Vrnyl
Call today
Leadmg The Way Offrce of Consumer
dlscrtmlnation based on
S1d1ng Shrngle Aool Hea t
Affarrs toll tree at 1·866
race color religion sex
1-877-463-6247
Pump New Carpal 6 other
A&amp;J Trucking now Hrnng at
278 0003 to learn rl the
familial status or national
homes on lol Call lor
our New Haven WV
ext 2301
mortgage
orok.er
or
origin or any intention to
Te rm rnal For Reg1onal
Pncrng
(7 401388 0000
www 1nfoc1ston com
make any such
rs
properly
lender
days
(7 40)388 8017
Hauls Dump D1v 1 year
pr•fsrence , hmttatlon or
licensed (Thrs 1s a publrc
evenrngs
[7
40)794 0460
OTR
Magrc Years Day Care
dlsc:nnllnation '
ser\ltce annou ncement
cell (740)645·6 t50 cell
ve11f1able e11p
Cenler ha s substrtute pos1
from the Ohro Valley
!ton opened Send Resume Call t-800·462·9365 ask for
Thla newspaper will not
Publtshrng Company)
2002 Redman Double Wrde
Kent
to 201
Hrgh
Sl
Pt
knowingly accept
28)(70 $50 000 starung
advertisements for real
Pleasant WV 25550
Prrce Cal! for rnfo any1rme
Res Care!Mrddlelon Estates
egtate which Is In
\304)992 3057
violation ol the law Our
Now Htrrng krtchen help all wtll be hmng a full· trm e
SERVICES
Admrnrstrahve
posrfron
Must
readers
are
hereby
evenrngs pa rt-time &amp; lull
2007 28K80 w, game room
Informed lhatall
time apply after 4pm, D&amp;M be prohetent rn Mrcrosott
On!y $59 995 lnc llldes free
Aegtstered Dentai-Hygentrst
dwellings advertiaed •n
Ellcet
Word
and
Pizza &amp; Sub S~racuse Oh
de1 1very &amp; set up Call
lookmg lor part ume work m
th la newspaper are
Closed Fa1r Week t1ll Frrday Apphcat1ons wtll be taken al
1111atlable on an equal
or Mergs
(740)385 2434
8204 Carla Dttve 8 00·4 00 Mason -Gall 1a
opportunity bases
County Contact at PO Bo11
Ohro Valley Home Health, M~
Great used 3BA home only
Inc htrrng tor Part Ttme and Res Care rs an Equal 56 Porn! Pleasant WV
For Sale
$9 995 Will help With dallv
Emp loyer - - - - - - , - Full Trme CNA STNA Opportunrty
ery Call (740)385·7671
TURNED DOWN ON
CHHA • PCA Compelltrve FIMION
SOCIAL
SECURITY
ISSI?
Wages and Benefits 1nclud
Lurs&amp;
Aocksprrngs Rehabrhtatlon
No Fee Unless We W1n1
rng heal1h rnsurance and
A&lt;
Rl_l(,l
Center IS looking for ded1cat
I 888 582·3345
Mrleage Apply at 1480
ed compassronate State
111\ll'illl
Jackson Prke GallipoliS or
1 75 Ac1e Lol
Tasted Nursrng ASSIStants
2415 Jackson Avenue Porn!
Masor. Co WV
Compellt1ve wages health
Plaasa!:ll W,V or phone toll
~10
HO~IE.';
Rt2Bo;o;1 27
and dental benefrts and
In Syracuse- 2 800 sq tt
free 1 866 441-1393
fUR
SAlE
Leon WV 25 23
40 t K ava•lable We take
qualrty burlt mu lti le~el brrck
Approx 500
Ohro Valley Hom e Health prrde 1n our facrlrty and rest·
home ma rntenance free
Road Fronlage
Inc htrrng lor Full Ttme AN dents and need gre81 team 1t6 S Park Dr Sbr 2oa 2 Nice quiet ne 1ghborhood 3
Ut1ht1es Ava table
Full T1me and Part Trme players to JOin us If you have story bHevel deck above 4 bedrooms 2 1/2 bath wrth
$9 995
CNA STNA, CHHA, PCA these quahhcatrons please ground pool call 304 675 hardwood trrm throughout
(3041295 9090
and Per Dtem OT ST apply
to
Rocksprrngs 7808 after/Spm
U·shaped k tchen wtth 40 ' of

Accepting apphcatrons for
LPN s Competlfrve Wages
and
Benefits
tncludrng
ALLIANCE
health
msurance
and
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
Mrleage Apply el toil80
WYTHEVILLE VA
Jackson P1ke Ga llipoliS or
Kawasaki Suzuk i Motor 24t5 Jackson Avenue Point
Sports 1n Gallrpolts tS look· Pleasant WV or phone toll
1n9 tor Cert•lred &amp; qu ahheo free 1 866 441 1393
MechaniCS Must lurnrsh
Oomrno s Przza Now ..Ytrmg
dnYer
needed
resumes &amp; references for Truck
Sale
Drrv ers
Pomt
consrde rai!On Other posr Henderson WV based COL
Pleasant
Gallrpohs
&amp;
!tons avarlable 4367 SR Lrcense &amp; 2 years experr·
Pomeroy locatiOns Apply rn
160 GalliPOliS OhiO 45631 ence MVR reqwred Call
Person
(304)675 7434

1·800-334·1203

HOSPITAL

C 2006 by NEA Inc

110

Hf.LI) \\'ANTF.I)

PLEASANT VALLEY

~~

YARn SAl F

and ad1.1!1 cats need lovmg Lots of name brand women

vacc+nated

,.1

www comlc:s com

212 Needs reparr (740)446·
7738

Current rate car
ppltes

&gt;We wtll not knowtng
accept any adver
lsement m vtolatio
lthe law.

fr"-;;;;®ii~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

a month old Wetmaraner full Shepherd
blooded no papers Call Sprllman
(740)742 2855
Columbia

Perenntal Cat Shelter

&gt;ThiS
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meettn
OE standards.

Jack Russell wrth leather
collar and tax tags Last
812106
near
seen on
Rac~ne/Leta rt area Famrly
pet please can 304-988·
9182

home (304)675 2308

humans Spay&amp;CI neutered

&gt;All Real Estat
dvertlsements ar
UbjeCt tO the Federa
atr Housing Act o
1968.

Pa.ns Salesperson wanted
Computer expenence and
knowledge ol farm equtp
men!
preferred
Sala ry
negotiable dependmg on
experrence
Health
In surance provrd ed Send
resume to CLA Box~ c/o
Galllpol1s Tnbune, PO ijox
469 Gallrpolrs OH 45631

AHAMA grad Ematl
realoncasl't@yahoo com

Box number ads ar
lways confidenttat.

I

•

~egi~ter

Oecu/~;,u-

Oftfee lloar-~

White, 5 others inducted into National Football League Hall of Fame
BY BARRY WiLNER

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

MLT/MT

·

~======~ tOO~o

r

R&amp;J TRUCKING

r

PRonssiO~Al.

~==:=:::::~~

r

Rehabrl llatron Center 36759
Rocksprrngs
Road
Pomeroy Ohto 45769
Extendrcere
Health
SerOJtces Inc IS an equal
opponumty employer thai
encourages
workplace
drva rsrty M/F ON

cabrnets Wood burmng lrre
place 2 t /2 car detached
garage Nrcely landscaped
60 acre lot Immaculate
co 11d1t1on
low lJ1thtres
Selling pr~ce $249 000 Call
740 44t·5171 Sh~wn by
appt only

- - - -- - - Approx 3 acres 2 house
sties Utrhtres x2 c1 ty water
large sol od 2 story barn
approx 112 m1le our SA 218
Beautiful lot c!ly or county
schools Se rrous buyers
only S47K (7401441 0013

4~37
Gallipolis Ferry 3 Bedroom
- - - - . , - , - - - - - 1 112 Balh 2-Car Garage
4bd FORECLOSURE ! Only Wood floors
Frreplace

Mercervr!le budd1ng lot for
sale 4 745 acres SR 218
close to schools Good
home
s1te
$16 000

2 hom es for sale close to
town crty schools 1· 3 bed
room ranch 2 bat hs newly
remodeled ete c heat C1A
city water
1· Older 3 bedroom t 112
bath large farn 1ly room gas
heat &amp; cookmg
CIA

(740)446·3907

(419)565·

l~~tff!~~/;[.J $20 900' For IIS!InQs 800
391 5228 ext F254

Maple
2364

Krtchen

(304)675

(7401256 1553
9236

(740)339

�Page 84 • The Uaily Sentinel
In Memory

www.mydailysentinel.com

In Memory

In Memory

Ramona E.
"Mona" Roush

Manfey

1

on her hiHhday

on her Birthday

Aug. 7th, /937·

817/33 • 1128105

Feb.11nd,2004

What a way to
celebrate! SiHing
at the feel of
jesus so·o dear.
Spending your ·
birthday there
this

If I could visil heaven and he with you
1 today, may he for u moment, the pain
would go away. I would put my arms
around you and whisper words so
true,lhatliving life without you is so
very hard to do.
Sadly missed
Manning and family

r•.-REAL•wlili. _r;li'li ~ji,:n;_.,l L,r.•o-oiroliiHii.~iil:riilii_.,
Need to sell your home? House for Rent In Pomeroy.
Late on payments, divorce,
lob transfe1 or a death? I
can buy your home. All cash
and quick closing. 740-416·
3130.
I~ I

"

\I \1 "'i

;;::=~====~

r

10
HousES
FOR Rf1-.T
·--iiiiii.iiiiii,;._,;
160 White Rd. 3 bedroom,
gas
heat.
Reference
required..
$550/mo.

(740)446-2158 or (746)446·
0603.

No Pets

Deposit and

References required. Phone
740-992-5989.
House for rant.
740-992-5858

No Pets.

r

AJ',\R'I'MfJVfS
ltiRR!Nr

Phillip
Alder

.I
.

House for rent. Will be available July 15th. Newly reno- 821 Second A.va, 2 bedroom
vated. nice quiet neighbor- apt $350/mo.
hood. Can show on notice. 821 1/2 Second Ave,
The Tan Shak call (740)446- upstairs, $325/mo. AJC &amp;
7425 for an appt
gas
heat.
References
required
(7 40)446-2158,
In Syracu se 4 Bd.-·1 Bath.
(740)446-0603.
Newly remodeled, all elec·
tric. Country setting with B i~ Apartment available now
yard/trees and shrubs. $650 Riverbend Apts. New Haven
Month. Call 740·843-5264. WV. Now accepting applica·
New 2 bedroom house in lions for Hud-Subsldized,
Gallipolis. Clean and com- or~e Bedroom Apts. Utilities
fortable Central air, laundry included. Based on 30% of
Call
room , also New I Bedrpom adjusted Income
(304)882-3121
available
for
House , Call tor details
Senior
arid
Disabled
People.
(740)441-0194 or 1740)441 ·
Equal Housing Oppor1unity
1164.

Mason County, WV
American Electric Power
40 Hours per week w I overtime
as required. Four Year degree.
Knowledge in OSHA
.
regulations a plus. Entry level
salary approx. $40,300/yr.
Benefit package.
Interested candidates are to
submit resumes by August 14
to:

I \ I!\ I " I 1'1 '111 ...,
,\ I I \ I " II tl 1,

l1tiiiOVW

-rAUN'SJ .,

Nor:!-~

Pomt·ru~·,

•

OH

MONTY

Ca ll Ahead For Dally Spf!clalll 992·6121
Try Our Drukfa•l
Breakl•"t Ham&amp;: C hees e Bales 51 .75
Bn•otkfa~t Tornadoes 2/$2.00
Silu11age Blsc:ult $1.7.5
Sot usage Blsc:ult w/Gr.wy $2.50
Donuts, Thmovers &amp; Lalllc•s
35t cup of coffet! 7·Ram·

David Lewis

IWhU~ !lui'~ lin

¥AKQ43
• 9 8 2
... 9 7

Dealer: North

LHil

Vulnerable: East-West

Free

10

.,(•-oiroliAR; ,ur'i iALEi i i -~
1994 Ford Tempo 4door tinted windows spoiler new tires
purple laney rims AC awesome stereo $2,000.00 256·
1020. (740)256·1020.

r

&amp; MEDICAl. F.QUIPMENT

• Ponable Oxygen
• Helios
• Homefill

4x4

• Nebulizers

FbRSAI.E

2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Limited. $10,500. loan
1999 Buick Regal GS. value $14,500. (740)367·
Loaded, Sunroof. 3.5 super 7762 or (740)367·7272.
charge engine. 77:600 actual miles. EKcellent condi. FOR SALE
lion.
DarK Green, grey
leather interior. $6,995 call
{304)675·5596
1995 Dodge Caravan V-6
Auto , Decent over ·all condi·
2000 Ford Taurus. Call after
tion. dependable. $895.00
lpm (740)446-0425.
080. 740-949·2693.
2002 Mercury Mountaineer.
Loaded witll only 48,000
miles.
2002 Ford Lighting F1 50
pick up 30,000 miles. Call
(740)256-1245
evenings
and weekends.
2002 Toyota Camry 4 cyl
$12,900
2002 Tovota Camry V6
$12.900
2003 Nissen Allima 2.5S
$13.69Q
2003
Honda
Accord
!lOaded) $17,900
2005 Ford Mustang V6
$16,900

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• CPAP
• Hospital Beds

W~ weff~ OlJi
&lt;:&gt;~--/.,

~

• Wheelchairs

Delivering Daily *One Stop Shop•
740·446·0007 Toll Free 177·-669·001171
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

40

I

2000 Su2uki street bike 250,
looks new, 500 miles.
$1 ,800.{740)446-6865.

2002 Yamaha Vstar 1100
Classic, 5,500 m1les, black,
· new condition. leather bags,
50mpg $5,000. (740)245·
5934.

5lJNSCfle~N{

BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinetry And FurniCure

ROBERT
BISSEll

TH' DAY WE
MOVED IN I!

Advertise
in this
space
for
$54 per

• New Homes

·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling ·

740-992·1671

THE BORN LOSER

r I-I"''~ E.~'' &amp;£.111

It&gt;l£ I'\\ f&gt;..LL !

month

1986 Coachmen Motor
Honie. AJC, Furnace. new
Genera.\Qr, new Paint and
Custom
Striping.
40.000/miles (304)675·4356
Reasonably Priced
1999·· 32 toot Salem
Camper with queen bed and
2.bunks.' Asking $9,000.00.
740-992-2209.

I-\OW TOW(&gt;.)(. \1-\f.. c~
!\I'll&gt; W"E.It£ '11-\t. FU:£5
WE.II:E. ~l&gt; WI-\ EN TO
T\-\E.. (f\1&gt;.,\&lt;:.C.Of&gt;..L?

BIG NATE
OoOH

~

A.

TUN/\ 1"\ELT

l&gt;HCAVENGER
HUNT'

WE'RE ·

I:I!:LI:J.!!..I:I.!!lS!LI:l!!l!:~~ 1::

Hill 's Self
Storage

H.l. wrhasel
IDdSIDS

~AI

29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio

PEANUTS

45771

All types of roofing:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

&lt;!-lOP

ON WHEI'IT,
Ct-IOP '·
ORANGE
TWIE'S- A oHODA.
WASTIN'!
~AR-B· t;lUE GOT ANY
CHIPSH... CASH ON
YOU?

NOW

TALl" IN''·

740·949-2217

'

FREE
ESTIMATES

(740) 949·1405

.. AND DON'T TELL ME
'(OU NEVE~ TI-l INK ABOUT IT..

s~n s•xto·L
·i

.

"to 10'x30'

,.

~

Hours

7:00AM ·8:00PM
1/ \411 mo. pd

~l:(l.:ti:IS!:u:i...I.'Ua.l!l!::'l!:L.~

Cornerstone
Construction

Beech Street, Middleport, 2
bedroom furnished apartClean. pretty, 3BR house lor ment, "utilities paid, no pets,
rent. Cedar Street. $750.,. deposit &amp; prev1ous rental
utilities. Call 740-446-9961. references, (740)992-0165

Residenlial • Comml'~ial • (;t&gt;neral Cuntnu:ting
P&lt;tinting. • Dmu~ • Winllows • Dc~k~
• Siding • Roofing • Rm:nn ALidition.o, • Rcmudeling
WV 038992
• Pltm11'oing • Elc..:lm.:al 740-387-0544
OH 38244
•1\cl·ou•ak Ceiling
7..0-339·3412
" I I{\ I( I \
1989 Chevy PiCk·up. 2
wheel drive, 2 sets of tires
HOME
and rims, $4,500.
080. ~·o
)MPR0vtl\IU&lt;1S
740·949·3088.

Ll

I

II

00 AUTO PARTS &amp;
A&lt;X.b.'ISORIIS

Locators.

. .---;:;ol-_.1

Brass bed, sewing rOCker,
old child's rocker, chairs.
mirrors. pldures, glasswafe.
Phone (740)446·4202.

Ashley WOOd Burning Stove Quality horse and livestock
$400 (304)n3-5589
trailers now available at
Carmichael Equipment. New
Corbeau Racing Seats fits dealer for Valley and
any make &amp; model come Kieferbuitt
Horse
and
2003 Tahoe- LT. 1o,ooo
BASEMENT
with tracks to fit a Toyota Livestock Trailers. Many
miles. Garage kept. All
WATERPROOFING
Tacoma great Shape call options available· steel, alu·
accessories • included. Unconditional lifetime tJuar·
(304)593-2423
minum. dressing rooms, liv·
Satellite Radio &amp; On Star antee. local references furDell
laptop
computer ing quarters. (740)44&amp;-24 12. Like New (304)675-3753
nished. Established 1975,
lnspiron 1100, CO burner. Registered Full Blood Boer 95 Ford F ISO. cotd K., Call 24 Hrs. {740) 446,_17_40_:.:1:_44_6:_-8::2::4_1._ _ _ _ Goats. Does &amp; Bucks 6cyl., 5 speed, runs good. 0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
JET
'{304)675·4316
{304)576·2299

NEW AND USED STEEL

$4, 2003
Yukon
Denali.
Sunroof, tinted Windows,
Oostar. ·$24,000.00. Call
I 1\1 \ ,\ ( ' I • I \ I I I II
740·992-2209.
DA Trimmer/Mower 5 HP
Briggs &amp; S1ranon Electric
start. Exctllant Condition.
As~ng $250.00. Call 740992-5720.

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
DrainS.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8am·4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300
,

LiYihg foom Set, Oak _hUtch,
oak dining table &amp; chairs.
oak grand father clock, patio
set, golf clubs, bedroom suit.
Call between 5pm-9pm
(740)446-4255.
Side by Side Refrigerator
$60, Kenmore Dyer $50,
New Sofa &amp; LQI/eseat, $400:
Sofa · &amp; Chair $100
Sofa &amp; Chair. $350;
(304)773-5356
Recliner. $200. Open 9am3pm, Sat. , Mollohan's, 202
PE:rs
Clark Chapel Road, Porter,
I'ORSALE
Ohio.
(740)388·0173;
(740)446·7444.
AKC &amp; CKC Miniature
Sale sofa &amp; chair $350. Sola Pinscher pups. POP. tails,
&amp; 1. seat $400. Reclln.et, docked &amp; dew claws. Shots,
$200. Mollohan Furn. Clark wormed. (7.. 0)388-8788.
Chapel Ad, ~orter 0
AKC Boston TerTier pups. 6
{740)388-0173.
Open
wks, first shots &amp; wormed.
Saturday only.
$225. (740)388-8743.
Used furniture store, 130
Pure bred Cocker Spaniel
Bulaville Pike. Electric gas
puppy, 9 weeks old.
ranges. bt.Jnk beds, chests,
1740)388.()4QJ.
dinettes, couches, used
mattresses.
Grave UAB Welsll Corgi P&lt;Jpplee.
Monuments. (740)446-4782 7wks old, tst shots &amp;
· Gallipolis. oH. Hrs 11·3 (M· wormed. 2 tamale, 1 male.
F)
$400 each. (740)256·6341 .

r

•
"llrmmmmmmll!li!Drmmmmmrilllffi

~ [)1'{\ t TE.LL 'IOU

'\t&gt;LE..:.t&lt;\E.? Wl-\'11

HONDA'S from $5001Police
Impounds, Tax Repo'sl For
listings 800-391-5227 ext.
C548

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. CaU Ron Evans, 1·

II ~\

'" l 'c

F16

~~ ~ I \

Ill t\

AU~U;
FOR SALE

"--------,;
$5001 Cars &amp; Trucks! Police
Impounds from $5001 For
listings 800-391·5227 x390 1
1991
Chevv
Caprice.
Excellent
~ Condition.
Mileage 59,000 Phone
(304)675-4624 7am to 7pm

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
•

SUNSHINE CLUB

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

30 Yrs.

Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
Free Estimates

GARFIELD
l-IZ AND 1 ARE' AC.fUAI..I..Y
GOINC# OU'T'... I DON'T THINK
IT'!I RE'Al-L.Y 5UNK IN YE:T

LOOking For,

I

•

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

YOUNG'S

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20
992·3194
or 992·6635

$6,900 .
2003 Kia Rio $6,900
2004 Ford Taurus $7,950
2004 Chev. Impala $9,995

"Middleport's only

Four Seasons Auto Sales
(740)441 -8585

==~=-----.:.._---~------

I
MANLEY'S
SElf STORAGE

1993 Honda Accord $2,985
1997 Honda Accord 54,995
1998 Ford Explorer 4x4
$3,995
1998 Toyota Camry $5,995
2000 Grand Am GT $5,995
2002
Hyundai
Accenl

Self.Storage"

--

1•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Nor1h
1t
2 ...
3•
Pass

l?.ast
Pass
Pass
Past~
Pass

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Guttert
Vinyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
Pallo and Porch De&lt;:kl
036725

wv

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-621;
Plll lll'roy OhiO
2J Yr,lfs local E ~rmncnct'
If

r,

t

I
&gt;-~'""" I

~~~~::j

GRIZZWEL.LS

George McGovern said,

~vou

coutln
57 llololllc:e

likll granny

58 24 hours
59 Polka -

17 Dlnny's

DOWN

rider

18

Cilfttlde

19 Sleet-

abode

1 Tum
20 TaiJIIUiin
aharriy
22 Calculator
2 Verd
readout
number
23 Randtzvous 3 C"izan
24 --cranay
ol Gdansk
27 Depot Info
4 Growls
29 Future fish ~Took an
30 Canadian
oath
!"'lice
6 " Ain't - 34 [lfy lllcka
Shame?"
37 Denver hrs. 7 Uncotegor·
38 Longings
39 Urban

stud loa
41 BeiiiOUnd
43 Main point

By a process
of elimination

54 SluKIIIrie
55 Bug
!Wp81lenl
56 Su"-n't

44 Plywood
layer

46 Spy

lzad (Abbr.)

8 Orchard

9 WWitaea

menace

coverad
21 Treetop
refuge
24 Couples·
only ship?
25 King,

Ioree

36 Fable
39 Haul along
40 Followed
ordert

41 River·

moutll

to monsieur
depostt
26 Countdown 42 Bay
atart
43 Abomlnebll
27 Billions
44 Far·ftung
of y""rs
45 Wept over
28 Harbor
47 Jules Verne

sight
30 Oppos"e
of max.

captain

48 Tease

51 Oolong or

31 Wortd

Chyph.)
10 Small barks 32
13 Madlclna
33
man
35

pek~

i&gt;llrtm1g org. 53 Almost

C'-la vlel ·

grads

Aves.

Unit .of

know,

sometimes, when they say· you're ahead
of your time, il's just a polite way of saying you have a real bad sense of tlming."
Today's deal requires good timing- the
sequence in which you play the suits is
vitaL You r~ach three no-trump, and
West leads a low spade. What woold be
your plan?
South's two-spade rebid was fourth suit
game-forcing. It was artificial, telling
North that at least a game would be bid
and that South was uncertain of the correct strain. On the ned round, South
went
the nine-trick game, but he was
lucky lhal North labled lhe spade ~lng. If
he had had the club King instead. mak·
ing five diamonds would have required
losing pnly one trump trick, but three. notrump would have been hopeless.
You have s~ven lop tricks: two spades,
three hearts and ttNO diamonds. Hoping
for a 3-3 heart split should be kept in
reserve. There isn't time to play on clubs
- the opponents would get three
spades and two Clubs. However, there is
time to tackle diamonds.
At trick two, cash dufT!my's diamond ace,
and when East drops the queen,
unblock your eight (or nine). Nelct; lead a
diamond to your nine (or eight). II West
. wins this trick, a ~amant later you will
finesse dummy's diamond seven and
cruise home with two spades, three
hearts and four diamonds. So let's
assume West gives you this Irick.
With no way to cash a fourth diamond,
now play a low heart from your hand.
When hearts are 4·2, you get two
spades, lour hearts and three diamonds.

tor

PAW WUZ L.UCI&lt;Y··
HE FOUND HIS

wwiw.tltnbercroekcolrino&amp;ry.oom

Stop &amp;Compare

2 bedroom apt. water.
sewer, lfash pd. $425.
{740)3446·4734

September 29, 2006 to
October 2, 2006
Includes transportation,
hotel, breakfasts &amp; tours
$320/person (double)
$31 0/person (triple)
$300/person (quad)
$450/person (single)
to make reservations
please contact PVH
Community Relations
(304) 675·4340•
Ext. 1326
LIMITED SEATS!

Of LITil..~ lJMifleLL.M,
SO ~ Al&gt;Del&gt;
A liT Of

VANS

r 4~=~am

West

Opening lead: 4 5

1990 7.3 diesel 5 speed,
4x4, 150,000 miles. $4,700.
(740)388·8358.

r

South

3 NT

Call Gary Stanley
740·742·2293
'Leave a

740-992-6971

4 A6 4 2

4 A 10 8

2•

2003 Wilderness 31 --G
Camper. Tow package 14ft.
slide, sleeps 6. Look and
make offer call ~740)-7422323.

~~n;~;;;;:;;4 800-537-9528.

7 6

South

"Insured"

Bo's Classic Cars
1988 24 Cavalier convertible;· 1993 AS Cavalier convertible; 1991 Ford Mustang
5.0, VB convertible 1997
Olds Cutlass. 200 1Suzuki
250 street bike, 750 actual
mies. Other to choose from.
John Deere Mini Excavator/
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The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
BRIDGE

WANTED: Full·time employment in
your own home as a Home Services
Worker with Buckeye Community
Services. We provide salary plus
benefits and a daily room and board
rate. You provide a home, guidance
and friendship in a family
atmosphere. Requires ability to teach
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In Memory of

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memoryof

Monday, August 7, 2006
- -AI.IL.Cl OOP

Monday, August 7, 2006

O

Astro-'
Graph
'bJr 'lllrthllllr:

Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2006
By Bernice BecM Oaol
In the year ahead, life could starno take
on new zest and meaning lor you when
major improYements begin to oocur.
However, take extra care not to squander
ltlese new resources.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - When it comes
to decision-making, be mindful of how
your judgment ca!ls might , affect other
persons who are also inYOIYed.
Indifference could create complications
for all.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Using flattery to win support ol your viewpoints
could result in the Opposite of what
you're hoping for. Should associates suspect manipulation, they'll rebel .
. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c\. 23) - In order to
impress others, you could be rather
wasteful where your resources are concerned. Sadly, your extravagance may
be looked upon as foolishness Instead of
nonchalance.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOY. 22) - Even
though you might feel it is your turn to be
first, aggressively putting yourself out in
front of everybody could be Interpreted
as too self-serving and selfish. Be more
laid·back .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Be
sure to fa ce up to your prob!ems as they
really exist. and stop daydreaming about
how you would like to solve them. If you
attempt to kid yourself, if will do you far
more harm in the long run .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. t9) - Be
extra cautious in joint ventures that might
require a cash outlay 011 your part.
Unfortunalely, some things that look like
winners on paper could be bummers in
practice.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. "19) Unfortunately, in your eyes lady ludl.
might look as if she is being supported,
when in reality she may not be. So when
it comeS to anything that hils elements of
chance. pass on the action.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Don't
beiJeye eYerythlng you hear, especially if
a few negative remarks come from
someone you ijnow !rom experience
tends to make much of little. Have mqre
1og1c than s/he.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) It
behooves you to be a bit more careful in
whom you place your trust. Even some·
one who has proven his/herself might
place you in a vulnerable position if han·
died poorly.
'
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - There Is
. always a strong possibility of suHering
disappointment when you're inclined to
count on someone more than you
~hould. Be real istic regarding your
expectations about others.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Don't meke
the mistake ofthlnk{ng a phii0&amp;9ph)' that
servae another comfortably I&amp; also tailOred to 111 your own requlrementa . lt may
be like lorclng a square peg Into a round
hole.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Bt graelou!l with twtl'\lbody In your aoclallnterlloCIIona, even those who rub you tht
wrong way. Sad manners or lhoughtlet•·
nest wilt reflect poorly on you, not tht
other guy/QIL

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Rusty- Hovel -

Clien1 -THIEVES

"I don'! wanllo be judged by my peer." the crook told
hi$ lawyer. "Wh~ no1 1 " the lawyer asked. "Well." he
grinned. "who wants 1o tried bv a bunch orTHI£VES?"

"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

.

�Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday,~ugust 7,

2006

.Stem's policy tilts.tdward China
8Y CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

,"-"CD

14
AP photo

Cleveland Indians first baseman Voctor Martinez. right, makes .a sliding tag of f1rst base to
get the force-out on Detroit Tigers' Placido Polanco, left , in the first Inning of a baseball
game Sunday in Detroit.

Tigers complete sweep of Indians
DETROIT
(AP)
Wilfreda Ledezma couldn't
have done much better in
place of Justin Verlander.
Ledezma struck out five in
5 2-3 innings, and the Detroit
Tigers took advantage of an
error by C.C. Sabathia to
beat the Cleveland Indians 1.0 Sunday and complete a
three-game sweep.
Making his first major
league start since June 4,
2005,
Ledezma
(2-1)
allowed six hits and two
walks.
"This year. I think I've got
more experience and more
concentration,"
said
Ledezma, who made 10
starts last season before
being sent · to Triple-A
Toledo. "Always prepared
for the first pitch, throwing a

strike."
He used a fa stball that
reached 95 miles per hour
and offspeed pitches to keep
Cleveland off balance.
· Detroit skipped Verlander
(14-4) to give his tired arm a
rest. He is scheduled to start
Friday against .the White
Sox.
Jason Grilli; Jamie Walker,
Fernando Rodney and Todd
Jones followed Ledezma,
with Jones getting three outs
for his 31st save in 34
chances.

Bricks
from PageBt
ting on the final caution to
salvage a 'honrible day and
reclaim the lOth spot in the
Chase for the championship
standings.
Kyle Busch was seventh,
followed by Carl Edwards,
Stewart and Kurt Busch.
Jeff Burton, who started
from the pole and led a racehigh 87 laps, finished a disappointing 12th after fading
late.
Jeff Gordon, looking to
race his way into the record
books, never got the chance.
He broke the sway bar on his
Chevrolet just eight laps into
the race and had to stop to
have the part replaced. The
repair work dropped him
three laps off the pace, and
even though he worked his
way back onto the lead lap he
wound up 16th.
,
Gordon sUI! had reason to
celebrate when his teatnmate
and protege pulled out the
victory.
It was no easy feat, espe-

With their major leagueleading 13th shutout of the
season, the Tigers completed
their 11th series sweep of the
year. Detroit, which was outhit 8-6, improved its major
league-best record to 75-36.
Cra~g Monroe hit a twoout RBI single in the fifth
inning off Sabathia (8-8).
who allowed an unearned
run and six hits in seven
innings, striking out six and
walking two.
"We beat one of the best
pitching performances I've
seen agamst us all year,"
Detroit
manager
Jim
Leyland said.
Brandon lnge led . off the
fifth with a bunt and reached
when Sabathia couldn't handle it.
" I just tried to pick it up
with my hand," said
Sabathia, who was charged
with an error. "[did the same
thing in Boston (in his previous start)."
lnge advanced on Brent
Clevlen 's sacrifice and
Placido · Polanco's groundout, then scored on Monroe's
single to left.
''Fastball down. I took a
good swing," Monroe said.
. Ledezrua was replaced by
Grilli after consecutive twoout singles by Jhonny Peralta
and Shin-Sao Chao in the

sixth . Following a wild
pitch, Grilli retired Kelly
Shoppach on a groundout.
Grilli walked No. 9 hitter
Andy Marte with one out in
the seventh, Grady Sizemore
followed with a ground-mle
double and Jason Michaels
walked on a 3-2 pitch, loading the bases.
Walker relieved, struck out
Travis Hafner and retired
Victor Martinez on a forceout.
"We had the two guys up
there we wanted with the
bases loaded," Cleveland
manager Eric Wedge said.
"Walker really stepped up."
Magglio Ordonez tripled
to lead off the 'sixth for
Detroit. But with one .out and
runners at the comers·, Vance
Wilson failed on an attempted squeeze bunt and
Ordonez was tagged out in a
mndown.
Notes: Cleveland 1B
Casey Blake is day to day
after spraining an ankle in ·
Saturday night's game ....
Detroit's Ivan Rodriguez
started at first base for the
fourth time this season and
in his career.... Monroe was
2-for-4 and is batting .412
(21-for-51) in a 13-gat)le hitting streak, the longest of his

cially when Johnson 's
Chevrolet got a flat ti~ust
39 laps into the race. It
forced him into the pits and
dropped him all the way back
to 38th.
But
the
Hendrick
Motorsports team showed its .
strength by giving Johnson a
car strong enough to slice his .
way to the front and into the
lead with about 100 miles to
go.
The win ap~ared to be
locked up, until the yellow
flag came out for debris on
the track with 19 laps left.'
Johnson was the first car
onto pit road, and crew chief
Chad Knaus decided to give
him four fresh tires.
Kenseth also took four, and
beat Johnson off pit road. But
they were both trumped by
Denny Hamlin and Bowyer,
who took only two tires to
beat them off pit road.
.They all had to settle in
behind four cars that didn't
pit at all including
Earnhardt, who was running
around 30th most of the day
and was desperate to salvage
a decent finish. The race
restarted with 14 to go and
Kenseth and Johnson were

off, quickly working their
way past Hamlin and
Bowyer and a handful of others.
Then Johnson knocked off
Kenseth, and had only Busch
and. Earnhardt in front of
him. Earnhardt passed Busch
to take a brief lead, but
Johnson took it away
moments later.
He was off from there, and .
no one had a chance to catch
him. But he wouldn' t count
the win until he crossed the
finish line, and even that
moment was almost ruined.
A three-car accident that collected Chase contenders
Kasey Kahne and Greg
Biffle on the final lap almost
sent the race into overtime.
But NASCAR didn' t call
the caution until after
Johnson crossed the line,'
giving him a win at the track
that had vexed him so many
times before.
Johnson carne to Indy as
the series leader the past two
years, but finished 36th in
2004 and 38tli last year to
cough up hi s points lead . .
''I'm JUs! speechless," he
said. "This track has given
me so many problems."

Reds
from PageBl
Ken Griffey Jr. hit a solo
homer and drove in two
runs for the Reds, who fell
back to .500 at home with a
Wild Card Glance
29-29 record.
American League
Kyle Lohse, who was
W
L
Pet
GB
acquired from Minnesota on Chicago
65
44 .596 ,
65
45 .591
"&gt;
July 31, struck out a season- Boston
Minnesola
65
45 .591
high seven in his tirst stan
National League
with Cincinnati and first
W
L
Pet
GB
smce he pitched 2 2-3 Crncrnnali 57
54 .514
56
54 .509
',
innings for the Twiris in a 7- Arizona·
4loss at Detroit on May 16. Los Angeles 56 55 .505 1
Lohse worked liv~ innings
against Atlanta, allowing ty good." ,
The Reds rallied with four
two runs and four hits.
Edgar Renteria hit a. two- runs in the first three
against · John
out single in the first and innings
Smaltz,
who
remained
scored on Jpnes' 26th
unbeaten in I0 starts ~ince
homer of the season.
"I made a bad pitch to the lo sing 4-1 at Florida on
'
wrong guy," Lohse said. June 13.
"After that, I settled in and
Griffey hit his 559th
worked the ball around pret- career home run with two
'

career.

outs in the first for his 23rd
of the season and the first of
his career against Smaltz.
Griffey now has homered
against 357 different pitchers, and he has I ,040 career
extra-base hits, one short of
tying Pete Rose for 20th
place on the career Iist.
Griffey singled in a run in
the third and scored on
Edwin Encarnacion's tworun
double
to
give
Cincinnati a 4-2 lead .
Smaltz, who's won his
last five decisions, yielded
four mns and six hits in six
innings. He struck out seven
and walked three.
Notes: Smaltz is 19, 12 in
44 career games, including
37 starts, against the Reds:
... Reds SS Royce Clayton
played in his 2,000th game.
... Cincinnati's pitching
staff issued four walks to
remain No. I in the NL in
fewest walks · allowed with
3 10.

GUANGZHOU, China How's this for a snapshot of
globalization?
Next season. about 100 of
the NBA's 450 players nearly one in four - . will be
from outside the United
States.
And even NBA commissioner David Stem, an architect of the league's push intu
intemational nuu-kt,ts. is startled at how fast the rest of the
world ha' come ;~ong.
''I'm stuprised at Ute number of cltlc athletes · from
around the world who are in
the NBA as of 2006," Stern
said Sunday during an interview in Guangzhou, China,
where the U.S. national team
is playing a series ·of wannup
games leading to this month s
world championships in
Japan.
The U.S. team includes
LeBron james of the
Cleveland Cavaliers, Carmela
Anthony of. the Denver
Nuggets and Dwyane Wade of
the Miami Heat .
Boosted by the popularity of
Chinese center Yao Ming of
the Hopston Rockets, the
NBA's Chinn business is
growing by 30 percent each
year, Stem said. The league's
China operations already
include three offices . with
about 50 staff and is destined
to grow.

Browns
from Page Bl
lot. It's not allowing me not
to practice every day. The
doctors are confident with
the progress."
Before Sunday's aftermxm
workout, Edwards had been
limited to individual drills.
He spent long stretches of
practice standing around and
wh atching, not exactly two of
is favorite hobbies.
He was thrilled to be back
facing a real cornerback not air- even if it was with
the Browns only wearing
helmets and shorts. The test
in pads will come soon,
enough, but probably not for
a while .
"We may add a little more
to his plate," said coach

"My guess is we'll double it
in ...-s~ze by the Beijing
Oly ics" in 2008, Stem
said. ' c China market i' our
most important and !ai~est
market outside the Umted
States.''
The rise of foreign talent has
diminished the dominance the
Americans held when their
top pros tirst started playing in
international competition. It's
it far Cl)' from the days when
the Dream Team surged
through the 1992 Barcelona
Olympics.
. That's· put the U.S. players
under new pressure. Stern
said.
Stem declined to give a dollar figure for the NBA's China
revenues. saying the league's
.total foreign business is tiny
compared with the U.S. oper·ations.
Stern said the NBA will
increase its marketing partners
in China, sell more merchandise and cxl'and its presence
online, posstbly oftering live
streaming of NBA games or
downloads of archived games.
He said he &lt;~ so expects the
number of Chinese TV siHtions showing NBA games to
double to 50 dUiing. the next
decade.
.The league is also working
closely
with ' Beijing's
Olympic organizers .to make
basketball a "very successful
part of the Beijing Olympics."
Stem said .
The NBA has long empha-

sized expansion in China.
where basketball is exploding
in popularity among the
younger generation. The NBA
launched a Chinese-language
edition of its official magazine
"Hoops" in 1999 and opened
its Beijing office three years
later.
In 2004, it played its first
exhibition games in China.
Stem said more games were
planned for China next year,
but it wasn 'I decided whether
they'd be preseason .games or
league games.
Stem said teams were scoutinll for more Chinese talent.
wtth 19-year-old Yi Jiannian.
a 7-foot-2 center on the
national team. generating the
most buzz.
Stern said the league will
continue pushing into new
markets abroad, with exhibition games planned this year
for a handful of nations from
Russia to Mexico, as well as
games between teanis from
the NBA and the European
leagues.
New initiatives are also
planned for tndia, Eastern and
Western
Europe, South
America and eventually
Africa, Stem said.
He said he· d dropped the
idea of setting up foreign
NBA fmnchises. sayi ng there
were different business pl~n s
for each region. He inststed.
however, the league would not
neglect its core Am~rican
business.

Romeo Crennel, who is any fear at all," he said. "As
pleased with what he's seen a receiver, it's hard to have
from Edwards.
an injury like this in tem1s of
The 23-year-o ld came off planting, cutting. jumping,
the field tired up about the changing direction , running.
next step in his retum.
So for me to be allowed to
"I told my teammates how do all these things is letting
proud I was to be back and me know the knee is close."
how good it felt to be Notes: Because he's thin on
amongst them as opposed to the offensive line, Crennel
watching
them ,"
said switched
DL Andrew
Edwards, who added that his Hoffman to otTensive guard.
right leg is now stronger ·'He looked good in the bud:
·than hi s left.
Edwards didn ' t need fang dle," Crennel cracked ... : OL
to shine. On an inside slant Todd Washington, who
pattern,. he grabbed a pass recently signed with the
that appeared to be tipped by club, retired .... LB Chaun
cornerback Leigh Bodden. Thompson was limited to
and with a quick burst pulled riding a stationary bike after
straining a calf muscle
away from defenders.
He later made a nice catch Friday.... Crennel said starton a comeback pattern. To ing quarterback Charlie
this point, he's making all Frye would play in "the
the plays without worry that neighborhood" of one quarter in Thursday 's exhibition
his knee won't hold up.
"I don't have any pain or opener against Philadelphia.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 1006
• MEIGS • US,ERN ·• SOUTHERN

. Lebanese prime
minister rejects Bush's
cease-fire plan, A6

McGinest gives
Browns an edge, B2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;u CI ·. N I'S • \ 'ul. ;;:;. Nu. :!;;u

TUESI&gt;A \', ,\lJ(;L JST X, :!Oil(&gt;

Commission recommends approval of Middleport car lot

SPORTS
• Buckeyes go through
first workout.
See Page B1

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - The
Planning
Middleport
·Commission approved plans
Monday for a used car lot' in
downtown Middleport and
will recommend that village
council allow Roger Manley
to open his new business on
Nohh Second Avenue.
Manley first met with the
planning commission last
week to defend his plans to
place a modular office unit
on the lot, and to seek the
commission's permission to

develop the lot.
Residents on South Third
Avenue thwarted Manley's
ongmal plans to locate
Econpmy Auto Sales on a lot
formerly . used as a car lot.
and . he subsequently purchased the downtown lot.
Some residents opposing his
plan have asserted that
Manley's mobile office uriit
is prohibited because of a
mobile home ordinance that
prohibits moving mobile
homes over eight years old
into the village .
The commission ruled
yesterday that the . mobile

office did not fall under the
mobile home re s triction ~.
Manley plans to remove the
tongue from his office unit,
but will leave the wheels on
the unit so it is not considered a permanent structure
for flood plain ord inance
consideration.
He will also place the
building on a block foundation, and agreed yesterday to
paint his office building
using colors from the palatte
approved by the Design
Review Board. He said his
plans call for a fence along
the back boundary of the lot,

Page AS
• Faye Brown Harper
Napper
• Richard Rawlings
• Ma~orie P. 'Marge'
Stewart
• James E. Quails
• Delores F. WhHiock

Please see Car, AS

Submitted photo

• Economists: Fed
action on rates will be
close call. See· Page A3
• OU recognized as
LGBT-friendly.
See Page A3
B~an J. Reed/photo
Standing
at
the
entrance
to
the
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
building
are
former
employees
• D of A drapes charter.
Glenna Riebel, Linda Hudson, Terry Laudermilt. June Kloes and Virginia Michael. The ladies
See Page A3
"
'
are planning the first-ever VMH employee reunion on Sept. 16.
• Johnson reunion held.
See PageA3
• Annie's Mailbox.
BY BRIAN J. REED
elsewhere. But a ,group of get word of the reunion to as
SeePage AS
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
ladies from the hospttal's hap- many of their former col• Uttrasound scans can
pier days have kept in touch, leagues as possible.
POMEROY -Employees and are plannin~ the tirst-ever
affect brain development.
The hospital opened in
of the old Vetemns Memorial reunion of hospttal staff.
1962,
and for many years proSeePage AS
Hospital remember when the
Glenna Riebel and June
facility was so busy, there
were patients recupemting in
die hallways.
Now, the building is vacant,
and the nurses, technicians,
oftice personnel and housekeepers are retired, or working

Kloes, retired registered .nurses, Virginia Michael and
Linda Hudson, former housekeepers,
and
Terry
Laudermilt, a nursing assistant
who worked at the hospital in
the later years, are hoping to

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 SECI'IONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

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and ' middle schools from
$1.75 to $2. The action also
increased adult lunch prices
POMEROY-The United in the same amounts at the
States
Department
of same times aslstudent lunch
Agriculture
recently
raised
·
Th at ra1ses
·
.
. 'b'l '
'd
pnces.
ad u1t
h
1
t e mcome e tg_!Otllty ,gui e- lunch prices from $2.50 to
lines for studeiits""'!'ecelVlng $2.75 for the coming school
both free and redttced lunch- year
es which reflects the rising ·
· .
,
.
cost or some consumer goods
Metgs even passed an
as does the rising prices pay- action to p~ovtde f?r future
ing students will incur' when mcreases. Last year s figures
eating lunch in all three for the schooll.unch program
showed a def1ct1 of nearly
school districts this year.
Back in June the Meigs $50,000,
Supennten~ent
Local
School
Board Wtlham Buckley sat d. 'The
i1~creased lunch prices by 25 increase is expected to
cents at Meigs High School mcrease revenue b~ $19,494
and Meigs Middle School which geg the deftcll go mg
an'd 15 cents at the Meigs m the nght dtrectton. The
Intermediate and Primary raise in price over the next
School. That takes lunches at three years will put the di sthe elementary school from trict near or at what the gov$1.60 to $1. 75, and the high ernment gives us for those on
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Bs
A3
A4
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B Section
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© 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

••

Pet therapy provides big
rewards in small packages
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSEromNELCOM

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Senior Center recently
received a visit from a miniature horse and donkey, proving thai big rewards come in
small packages when talking

about pet thempy.
Visiting the seniors were
Hannah (miniature horse) and
Moore Mini Farms Iris
(miniature donkey) which are
certified pet therapy animals
from High Point Arabians of
PleaSe see Therapy. AS

vided acute care, emergency
room services -even surgeries and baby deliveries - to
Meigs County residents. A
major addition was added to
the hospital in the early
Please see Reunion, AS

School lunch prices raise as do income
guidelines for free, reduced lunch

\!tbe 1!\ailp ~entinel

sion recognizes that there
are que,tionab le areas in
ordinam:es, but it is our
belief that I hi&gt; proposal adds
· more value to the village
than di&lt;russing whether or
not it fit&gt; an ordinance." said
Paul Reeu. who serves on
both the planning commissian anu us chairman of the
village 's revitalization team.
"It's not up to us to interpret ordinances ... Paul Reed
said. "lt's all about creating
value for Middleport and
this is a business that can do

Karen Stafford of Albany's High Point Arabians (standing at
left) shows off her miniature horse and donkey to Janet
Ward at the Meigs County Senior Center. The animals were
there as part of Coolville's Love On A Rope pet therapy program that visits not only senior centers but hospitals,
churches, preschools, etc.

INSIDE

WEATHER

Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
For More Information ·

.and paving it next year.
The planning commission
yesterday ruled that the
office unit does not meet the
definition of "mobile home"
in that it was not built and is
not intended for use as a res·
idential structure.
"The ordinance appears to
us to have been written
specifically for residential
mobile homes," Michael
Gerlach said. "The argument
is that (Manley) is placing a
mobile home in the business
district and we don't see that
as the case."
"The planning commis-

OBITUARIES

Hospital veterans plan first-ever reunion

ADVERTISING DEADLINE- Thursday, AUGUST 19,2006 ~5:00P.M.

"'"'"·nndailvst·ntind
. .
...., 111

free lunches."
In July the Eastern Local
School Board raised lunch
prices which will go rrom the
$1.50 they paid last year to
$1 .75 in the coming year. The
increase, according to school
spokesperson, was necessary
because of the deficit at
which the lunch program
operates.
As for the teachers and
other staff who take cafeteria
selection , each one will pay a
25 cent increase.
This month · the Southern
Local Schoo·! Board also
raised lunch prices, taking
the elementary school lunch
prices rrom $1.65 to $1.75.
and high school lunches from
$1.75 to $2.
"We have similar issues as
Please see Lunch, AS

Chao1ene Hoeftlch/photo

Cindy Koblentz was one of many Meigs Countians registering to exhibit at the Meigs County Fair. She and her family
have s1x cow and three hay entries. Assisting -her as she
completes the paper work is Rachael Clark, a .Fair Board
worker in the secretary's office.

Entries low, enthusiasm
high for fair opening day
I

for open class exhibitors
only two , beef cattle and
.
. .
•
the hay show were higher.
POMEROY - Through two.,r:&gt;t hers, sheep and
the years open class entnes grange. were the same as
of exhibitors have gone up last vear. and II were
and down. anu thi s year . down:
marks a down year for entry
The open class entries
numbers m the 143rd Me1gs represent only seni.o r fair
Coumy Fcm,Aug. 14-19..
participation and do not
A total of 2.3.45 entnes include the hundreus o f 4-H
were registered .Friday and club members, hoy and girl
Saturday. down from a scouts. junior grangers,
record hi gh of 33n in
2005. Of the 15 categories
Please see Fair, AS
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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