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GARDENING

.

49 dead in Comair plane
.crash during take off in
Kentucky; NfSB says
plane on short runway, A2

Sunday, August 27, 2006

'

Caterpillars are buttef/lies too
Bv DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

NEW MARKET, Va. ~
Butterfly gardens are a
wonderful way to bring new
colors into your yard but
they won ' t attain their
potential if the plants you
choose are appetizing only
to the adults. Caterpillars
are butterflies too. yet they
prefer an altogether different bill of fare.
Serve up sweet and colorful
nectar plants for the auults.
Offer an assortment of leafy
host plants tor their larvae. No
host plants, fewer butterflies.
·it 's as simple as that.
Cat&gt;rpillars hhve enormous appetites, consuming
many thousands of times
their own body weight in
order to live out their rela. tively short lives as aerialists. That 's part of the hospitality 1rade-off. Learn to tol -·
. erate a few defoliated plants
in exchange for raising a
vibrant nc\~ crop of "wildflowers with wings."
"You're going to notice
some nibbles out there but if
that bothers you, put your
caterpillar gardens in a corner of the yard or somewhere where you won't see
them every day," ·said Kris.
Wetherbee, from Oakland,
Ore., and author of

SPORTS

AP Photos

This new adult Luna moth has just emerged from a coccoon
and is' drying its wings prior to an initial nocturnal flight.
Moth s-pecies greatly outnumber butterflies and, despite
their drab reputations, many are JUSt as colorful.
ly, including fennel, dill and
Queen Anne's lace.
If it's the smaller whites
and sulphurs you want tlitting Caterpillars have voracious appetites and none more than this hairy Gypsy moth variety_
about your property, then These larvae in large numbers have oeen known to defoliate huge tracts of Eastern forest:
offer host plants from the Their more oenign outterfly or moth cousms, however, are Content to feed from a few host
mustard and cabbage frnnilies plants sitting in a colorful and protected corner of your garden.
~
· jewel tlowcrs and garden
she said. · "Have a water . terllies will linger.
ever they can find them so it
broc&lt;:oli, respectively.
• Feeders filled with soft would help to have a fe~
Larvae of the nocturnal source that is a safe place fruit.
Overripe citrus, water- shallow mud puddles around,
for
butterflies
and
other
Luna moth feed on the
melon
insects.
Have
a
variety
of
and bananas attract
Gardeners increasingly
leaves of sweet gum, alder
and . persimmon
trees, nectar plants there that will mobs of butterflies although are enjoying caterpillars
they often draw foraging simply for what they are. .
among others. Blue butter- feed the adults."
wasps,' too, · so be wary as
"Tiley arc just as colorful,
You also might provide:
fly caterpillar~ like flowery
interesting and diverse as
• A few tlat stones placed you approach.
clovers and lupines. Gulf
•
Weeds.
Successful
butadults."
Wetherbee said:
in
open
spots
of
the
yard
Fritillary and Zebra lang.pl'ant
terfly
gardeners
aren
't
"Some
have.
stripes. Some
wings have a teenage crush where the adults can "bask"
or get a solar recharge on . purists. They know butter- have touch-type hairs;
on passion flowers.
tlies have tastes that occa- Others have giant 'eyes' for
"If vou don' t have plants cool summer mornings.
• Shelter, primarily some sionally mean tolerating frightening predators.
specific · to cenain caterpil"It's quite entenaining to
lars, then adults won't lay nearby shrubs and trees, weeds around their property.·
High
on
the
weed-feed
find
a &lt;:aterpillar that will
the
adults
can
rest
at
where
their eggs there and you
list
are
clover,
nettles.
planturn
into a butterfly. Your
won't have butterflies as a night · or escape strong
tain
"
and
thistles.
family can be part of all the
result,':
Wetherbee winds and pelting rain.
•
Clubrooms.
Adult
butterstages that will occur by
•
A
season-long
series
of
said. Wetherbee
suggests
take
their
moisture
and
tlies
offering
caterpillars a.chance
offering a full-service butter- flowers with different
nutrients
wherever
and
whengrow)
in your garden."
(to
tly garden that satisfies the blooming times, heights and
needs of the entire family.
colors. The more diverse
"You. have to attract them and brilliant the nectar-rich
so they can lay those eggs," blooms. the longer your but-

'THAI« YOU

inside. (The Scots do have a. bacon. sausage. tomatoes
sense of humor.)
(and sometimes mushNearby, the Royal Yacht rooms), along with toast and
Britannia takes on visitors coffee. For later meals,
·from Page 01
at its berth at the port of there was Angus beef and
seafood. And "chips" with
But don't count on sun- Leith on the Firth of Forth.
as
all
ln
.
Edinburgh,
everything,
sometimes even
shine. Rain is generally a
through
Scotland,
from
the
with
meals
with
given in Scotland, especial- ubiquitous pubs to water- other potatoes served
or rice. ·
ly in the Western Highlands side restaurants, the ·dining
And, of course, haggis,
and the islands, the wettest was prime (a· pleasant surnational dish.
of alL It rains so much that prise to those who, have theDrink
is a national
it is no wonder that Scottish traveled elsewhere in resource . Regions compete
men are called . Mac (a Great Britain).
in producing their famed
national joke).
A "standard" Scottish single malt whisky, which
On to Inverness. in cen- breakfast included eggs, line the pub shelves overtral Scotland. with a stop at
Drumnadrochit. halfway up
Loch Ness . . Can't go to
,.
Scotland without paying
I,
..
'
respects to "Nessie," the
legendary sea monster that
THANK YOU
has made this town a
tourist mecca.
Of course, no visit to the
binhplace of golf would be
complete without time for
18 holes, accomplished, at
least by one of our traveling
Carter Parsons
companions. at a picFOR BUYIN~ MY 2006
turesque course on the
. Rio Hopefuls
Moray Firth near Inverness.
MAKIW STEER!
Golf course choices are
numerous, except in the
Court"ey
northern Highlands and
some islands. With some
Parsons
540 golf courses and about
5
million
residents.
Scotland may have the
highest. ratio of courses to'
people in the world.
Then, back down and
east to Scotland's capital
city of Edinburgh. Park the
car here. Walk the streets
~ certainly the Princes
Street shops- or hop on a
0'1-~~~1
tour bus or public bus and
get to Edinburgh Castle.
W:.:$
the historic symbol of this
historic citv.
Farmers Bank
"Such dusky grandeur
Adjustable Rate .
clothed the height.
"Where the huge castle
Mortgage Special
holds its state.
"And all the steep slope
down ,
"Whose ridgy
back
Interest Rate
heaves to the sky.
•
· "Piled deep and massy.
close and high,

Scotland

Thank You
Spurlock Fertilizer
&amp;..Ag Unefor
buying my 2006
Market Lamb!

.............,...
'

DR'S HADDAD,

GAINES, ST. ONGf
&amp;MUFFLEY

looking a variety of beers.
Time to return ,. we drove
back across the narrowest
part of the nation, some 60
miles from Edinburgh to
Glasgow~ with a last stop
on the way to see Stirling
Castle,
its
approach
flanked by statues of two
of the nation's historic
heroes. Robert the Bruce
and
William
("Btaveheart") Wallace.
In all, less than 700
miles in 12 days. Still, just
a tasting. ·

i'. /Ill
.''2' 7~ "f'
!f S.O.S.

'

-?.104

·

Holzer Clinic
for buying
my.2006
Market Steer
Lawrence Wedemeyer-Buckeye Sharp Shooters

Laurel ·Commons Apts
Located in Ravenswood at 14 North Ritchie St.

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Come for a visit...

stay forever

"'Bring !his adv~rtisemem in for a 'Free Application Processing

Buy It!'

town, ..
Sir Walter Scott knew
what he was writing about.
No wonder theY' created &lt;t :
monument for -h im in the
city. (A monument to a
writer'} And you can climb
its 278 steps for yet another
wondrom, vjew of the city
from on high.
All Edinburgh museums ·
are free,"' is a hus that will
take you to five of them . A
statue of a trio of cows
stands outside rile Art
Mu seum. Called :·Three
Grazers." it mimics the
sculpture of "Three Clraces"

·,I~

1

Farmers Bank '
Home ·Equity
Line of Credit

3~90°/o

, 3.90°/o

Interest Rate

Construction or Major Renovati.on
On Primary Residences

No Closing Costs!
No First-Year.Annual Fee!

1

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Farmers Bank
Construction Loan
Special

_'I .

3.92°/o

Annual Percentage Rate

Locked In For Three Years!

.

Annual Percentage Rate .,._ Interest Rate

·6.385°/o

romanti c

Discount tor 6 Months

Annual Percentage Rate ·&amp; Interest Rate
lor 6 Month Construction loan Period

On Primary Residences!
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Farmers
Bank
Savings Compariy

•••

• Owen sets. course
record at Early Bird Invite
See Page B1

e

Southern hits school year in high gear
· RACINE
Teachers program. Mark Miller, oew
often are noted for preparing superinten~ent, . said that the
their rooms and their lessons "district wanted to provide
long before the actual school quality training for the
year begins. but this year the teachers to expand their
days prior te the beginning horizons and open their eyes
of classes were used . for to the cutting edge strategies
training time.
used in education today, but
Southern was one, of sev- the teachers benet! ted and
era! \chools that chose to · the students should see the
incorporate' a three-day pre- benet1t.
lude to the school year, havSpeakers included Linda
Remediation
ing qualified for a grant Casto,
from the Perry-Hocking Specialist and Cenified
Educational Learning Center Inclusion Specialist from the
to help cover expenses.
West Virginia Department of
Inclusion,
embedcted Education.;
AI
Cote,
assessment, critical thinking Director of SEOCEMS and
skills, positive behaviior, education liaison with Ohio
bus safety, CPR raining and University;
Brigette
ESIS training were all Stevens ,
Certified PBS
included in the Southern Specialist from .SEOSERC;

and Sue Nichols, CoDirector of Project Access.
"We were fortunate to
have such a quality group of
presenters," said Miller. He
went on to note that David
Beavers, nationally reknown
mathematic s specialist is
going to work with the math
department in September.
Miller said that an $80,000
g~ant the school was able to
hue a math coach to supplement the math department in ·
an effort to bring up math
scores.
Administrative assistant
Sco~t Wolfe with the help of
school nurse Junie Maynard
and other staff members
assembled the three-day
training. "I thi1ik the teach-

ers ·all walked away with
some valuabl~ knowledge
that they can actually use in
the classroom. If there was
one theme we tried to stress .
it was "that we can't do the
same things that we did last
year. Our Math scores at the
elementary must come up-that is the bottom line. And
we also have goals in place
to improve our other areas of
academic content," said
Wolfe.
He stressed that critical
thinking skills are the driving force behind success on
the elementary achievement
tests and the graduation
tesr::.If a student is taught to
think on his own, a student
will succeed," said Wolfe.

Tricia Wolfe, the new
math coacl1. hired and funded by the grant monies,
informed teachers about'm\r.
program. · Southern was lhe
only school of 30 eligible
districts to qualify for the
program which has· operated"
in the Franklin County area
with much success for the
past two years. Grant monies
for the program tlow
through the Perry-Hocking
ESC. The goal. it was noted,
is to have math scores and
critical
thinking skills
improve dramatically by the
end of the prol!ram.
Sandy Clonch, representing the Meigs ESC,

Please see School. AS

Eastern
board
.approves
personnel

INSIDE
• Hezbollah leader says
he wouldn't have ordered
soldiers' capture knowing
it would lead to war.
See Page A2
• Hawk retires.
See Page A3

STAFF REPORT
NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS ~
The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved . classified and certified substitutes
at last week's regular monthly meeting.
Classified
substitutes
approved were: Paula Life,
custodian and cook; April
Lawrence,
secretary;
Darlene Grossnickle, secre- ·
tary and cook;
Kim
Sampson, cook; Jennifer .
Jackson , secretary; Amy
Smith. educational aide.
Certified
substitutes
approved were: Patrece
Beegle , lise Burns, Amy
Clark, William Downie,
Randall Fulks. Jeannette
• Students, teachers
Grate, Vicki L. Griffin, Mary
finding new ways to leam
E. Hill , Melissa Holman .
Li,le.
Chad
Autumn
geography.
Milliron. Cindy Parker. Gay
See Page A3
Perrin, Nathan Robinette.
• O'Bieness to offer
Kimberly Roush. Aaron
Charlene Hoeftlch/photo
diabetes education class.
Schaekel, Ryan Sleight.
Restoration continues on the Chester Academy building, shown here as it looked when built in the 1840s. The exterior Michelle Smith, Jody
SeePageA3
work with the exception of some st~ne work in the foundation will be completed this fall and the interior work will begin. Wam sley, · Janice Weber,
• Couple makes
Angela : Weeks , Craig
whirlwind trip on Cessna.
Wehrung,
Maxine
Whitehead.
Carrie
Wood,
SeePage AS
Woods,
Laura
Ellis
and
Mila
Bv CHARLE!IE HoEFUCH
Association
allowing
it
to
original floo;ing. and frame- take place until spring.
• A year's work:
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM access another $25',000 from work in preparation for the
Roxanne
Williams.
Several people have sandDelaware woman makes
The board approved
the federal "Save America 's inside work.
stones to donate for the founCHESTER
~ A $25,000 Treasures Grant awarded to
Conde as an educaMelissa
"Getting
this
grant
means
dation,
according
to
Powell,
100 quilts for charity.
grant from the Ohio Cultural the Association two years we can move ahead inside and the only cost will be in 'tional aide on a one-yeai·
SeePage AS
Facilities Commission will ago," said Mary Powell who now," said Powell, noting cutting the stones and doing contract for the 2006-07
allow restor&amp;tion work on is actively involved in that the money is designated the replacement. Because of school year. Becky Edwards
the three-story brick Chester financing the project.
for electrical work and heat- work on the building done was apprQved as lead menAcademy built in the 1840s
She said that as soon as the ing and cooling systems.
two years a~ when the tor.
to
continue
into
the
winter.
WEATHER
The board also :
tuck pointing on the exterior
She said the .exterior work restoration began the buildJust as the Chester-Shade brick of the building is com- underway ·now, the tuck ing is "good and solid," she
•Approved an agreement
Historical Association was pleted and the outside win- pointing and the window said, and the foundation with Ohio
University,
getting concerned about how dow framing · is in place, framing, should be complet- improvement' is just to School or Recreation arid
to fund additional work on work will begin on the mteri- ed in about two weeks: The restore its original look ..
Sport Sciences for athletic
the building's interior, the or of the Academy. Weeks only remaining exterior proPowell said one goal of tb~ trainer services at a cost of
grant was announced.
ago volunteer workers tore ject deals with replacing Association is to get the $9.160.
That money qualifies as a out layers of walls and took foundation stones and that,
•Approved
Becky
"match" for the Historical down panitions to get ro the she said, probably will not
Please see Project. AS
Edwards as Lead Mentor for
the 2006-07 school year.
•Awarded contracts for
supplies and materials to the
following
companies:
Details on Page. AS
Petroleum Products, BP Oil
BY BETH SERGENT
Bmfrd. The commission over, offices in Columbus and ing, those hopes were dashed Company; tires. Malone
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM sees all financial decisions in appear before an administra- when no such action was
Warehouse
Tire,
Inc ..
the district that has been in · live law judge which would taken. Ohlinger said at the breads. Earthgrains; dairy
RACINE ~ A proverbial fiscal emergency since 1999. set up what some are calling a August meeting the commisproducts, Broughton's Food
line in the sand has been
Ann Ohlinger, president of legally unprecedented show- sion members said it would Supplies, Gordon Foods.
drawn by the Southern Local the SLEA, said if the commis- down. What makes it unique need to see five years of posi2 SECflONS - 12 PAGEs
•Approved an · agreement
Education
Association sion fails to approve the rais- ·is a teacher's union bringing a tive financi&lt;tl growth to with
Rockspring s
Calendars
A3 (SLEA) with the state's es at its next meeting sched- .unfair labor practice com- approve the raises as opposed Rehabilitation · for Physi cal
Financial
Planning uled tor 10:30 a.m. on Sept. plaint against the ODE's to the two . predicted by Therapy Services, on an as
Commission
on 13. the organization's lawyer, commission with employees Interim Treasurer Richard · needed basis for the 2006-07
Supervision
Classifieds
B3-4
the other side of that line and Mike Hunter, an attorney from the ·ohio Attorney Koker.
. school year.
a
one percel)l' pay raise for from Hunter. Grant and General's Office on both
Ohlinger said Koker's two
Comics
• Approved membership
Bs
teachers caught in the middle. Schwab which was hired by sides of the aisle.
year financial forecast pre- with
the
Educational
in
the
sand
repreThat
line
Ohio
Education
After
.
the
hearing
the
the
.
an
unreserved
fund
dicted
Services of
Annie's Mailbox
A3 sents the SLEA's growing Association to represent the administrative law judge will balance in the black to the Technology
Ohio.
frustration with the Ohio SLEA. has already been issue a report which either tune of nearly' $230,000 for
• Approved an agreement
Editorials
A4 Oepartment of Education's instructed to place the case on ·side can appeal. If the process fiscal
year 2007 and a balance with
Gallia-Meigs
. (ODE) Financial Planning . the docket and into the hands goes to appeal a panel made of nearly $500.000 for FY-OR. Community Action Agency
Spmts
B Section Supervision Commission of mi Ohio State Employmept up, of three SERB members Ohlinger added that she for the · &lt;:on tinuation of
that has not approved a one Relations ~oard (SERB) would render a final decision. believed cuts in stalling for School To Work (JOGS) .proWeather
A6 percent pay raise fer teachers administrative law judge.
Cautiously optimistic the the 2006-07 sc hool year gram. District supp ort is
1
pre.viously approved by the
Thi.s means the two parties commission would approve
Please see Raise. AS
Please see Board, AS
Southern Local School would meet at the SERB the raises at its Aug. l6meet© aoo6 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

$25,000 to

project

'~~

A

own

County's jump in youth
domestic violence arrests
sparks concern, A6

en

They . begin as dot-sized
eggs. hatch into caterpillars.
and then pupate or rest for a
time in a mummy bagshaped chrysalis (called a
cocoon when pupa are
moths) before emerging
dramatically altered as welladorned winged adults.
The adu Its must be accommodating about where they
lay their eggs. They seek the
particular kind of forage
favored by their offspring.
That's why it's imponant to
have the right host plants
placed around your butterfly.
"Attracting
Birds, garden.
Butterflies &amp; Other Winged
Larvae of the well-travWonders to Your Backyard.'' eled Monarch family prefer
"You usuall'y have . to get milkweed. a !lowering plant
up close, like I 0 feet away, with thick, milky sap that
to see it (larvae-damaged not only provides leafy
foliage)," she said. "Flowers shelter and sustenance but
are ignored. Caterpillars eat also fuels them with a poijust the foliage, the leaves." son distasteful if not toxic to
Butterflies pass through many of their predators.
four distinct stages before
Caterpillars that eventualbecoming the frequent tly- ly . become the familiar
ers you see pausing to sip Black swallowtail dine on
nectar from your blooms.
plants from the carrot fami-

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.

Tuppers F'tains 667.3161

Gallipolis 446 .2265

~001' O~ nt Pleasant

674-8200

Southern teachers draw line in sand over pay raise ·

.,

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�•

PageA2

.NATION. WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 28,

2006

Community Calendar

·49 DEAD IN (OMAIR PLANE CRASH DURING TAKE OFF IN
CKY; .NTSB SAYS PLANE ON SHORT RUNWAY
Bv JEFFREY McMURRAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LEXINGTON, Ky. - A
commuter jet mistakenly trying to take off on a run way
that was too short crashed
into a field Sunday and burst
into flames, killing 49 people
and leaving the lone survivor
- a co-pilot - in critical
condition. federal investigators said.
Preliminary flight . data
from Cornair Flight 5191 's
black box rec·orders and the
damage at the scene indicate
the plane, a CRJ-1 00 regional jet, took offfrom the shortest runway at Lexington's
Blue Grass Airport, National
Transportation Safety Board
member Debbie Hersman
said.
The 3,500-foot-long strip,
unlit and barely half the
length of the airport's main
runway, is not intended for
commercial flights . The
twin-engine CRJ-1 00 would
have needed 5,000 feet to
fully get off the ground, avi. ation experts said.
It wasn't immediately
clear how the plane ended up
on the shorter runway in the
predawn darkness. There
was a light rain Sunday, .and
the strip veers off at a V from
the main runway, which had
just been repaved last week.
"We will be looking into
performance data, we ')'ill be
looking at the weight of the
aircraft, we will be looking at
speeds, we will pull all that
information off," Hersman
said.
The Atlanta-bound plane
plowed through a perimeter
fence and crashed in a field
less than mile from the end of
that runway at about· 6:07
a.m. Aerial images of the
crash site in the rolling hills
of Kentucky's horse country
showed trees damaged at the
. end of the short runway and
the nose of the plane almost
parallel to the small strip.

t

AP Photo

AOelta Connection flight passes the tower at Blue Grass Airport as it lands Sunday, in Lexington, Ky. AComair Flight 5191
commuter jet taking off for Atlanta crashed just past the runway and burst into flames, killing 49 people before dawn
Sunday and leaving the lone survivor in critical condition.
.

'

When rescuers reached it,
the plane was largely intact
but in !lames. A police ofticer burned his arms dragging
the only survivor from the
cracked cockpit.
.
. The !lames kept rescuers
from reaching anyone else
aboard - a newlywed coupie starting their honeymoon, a Florida man who
had caught an early !light
home to be with his children
and a University of
Kentucky official among
them. '
"They were taking off, so
I'm su,re they had a lot of fuel
on board," Fayette County
Coroner · Gary Ginn said.
"Most of the injuries are
going to be due to fire-related deaths."
. FAA spokeswoman Laura
Brown said the agency had

no indication that terrorism
was involved in any way in
what was the country's worst
domestic plane crasti in five
years.
It's rare for a plane to get
on the wrong runway, but
"sometimes with the intersecting .runways, pilots go
down the wrong one," said
Saint Louis University aerospace professor emeritus
Paul Czysz.
·
The worst such crash came
on Oct. 31, 2000, when a Los
Angeles-bound Singapore
Airlines jumbo jet mistakenly went down a runway at
Taiwan's Chiang Kai-Shek
International Airport that had
been closed for repairs
because of a recent typhoon.
The resulting collision with
construction
equipment
killed 83 people on board. .

Comair President Don
Bornhorst said maintenance
fo( the plane that crashed
Sunday was up to date and its
three-member flight crew
was experienced and had
been !lying that airplane for
some time.
. "We are absolutely, totally
committed to doing everything humanly possible to
determine the cause of this
accident," Bornhorst said.
:•one of the most damaging
things that can happen to an
investigation of thiS magnitude is for speculation or for
us to guess at what may be
happening."
Most of the passengers
aboard th~ flight had planned
to connect to other flights in
Atlanta and did not have
family waiting for them, said
the ~ev. Harold Boyce, a

volunteer
chaplain
at
Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson
airpon.
One woman was there
expecting her sister. The two
had planned to fly together to
catch an Alaskan cruise,
Boyce said.
"Naturally, she was very
sad," Boyce said. "She was
handling it. She was in
tears."
The only survivor of the
crash ·was identified as first
officer James M. Polehinke,
who was in critical condition
after surgery
at the
University of Kentucky haspitaL
The other crew members
were Capt. Jeffrey Clay, who
· was hired by Erlanger, Ky.based Comair in 1999, and
flight attendant Kelly
Heyer, hired in 2004.

Polehinke has been with
Comair since 2002.
The plane had undergone
routine maintenance as
recently as Saturday and
had 14.500 flight hours,
"co nsistent with aircraft of
that age," Bornhorst said.
Investigators from the
FAA and NTSB were at the
scene, and Bornhorst said
the airline was working to
contact relatives of the passengers.
White Hou se spokeswoman Dana Perino said
President Bush, who is
spending a long weekend at
his family's summer home
on the Maine coast, was
being briefed on the crash.
"The president was
deeply saddened by the
news of the plane crash in
Kentucky today," she said.
"His sympathies are with
the many families o'f the
victims of this tragedy."
Among those killed were
a newlywed couple starting
their honeymoon. Jon
Hooker, a former minorleague baseball player, had
just
married
Scarle.tt
Parlsey the ni~ht before the
crash in a fatry tale wedding ceremony complete
with a horse-drawn carriage and 300 friends.
"It's so tragic because he
was so happy last night,"
said Keith Madison. who
coached Hooker's baseball
team at the University of
Kentucky and attended the
wedding. "It's just an
incredible turn of events.
It's really pain.ful."
The crash marks the end
of what has been called the
"safest period in aviation
history" in the United
States. There has not been a
major crash since Nov. 12,
200 I, when American
. Airlines Flight 587 plunged
into a residential neighborhood in Queens, N.Y. ,
killipg 265 people, including five on the ground.

Hezbollah leader says he wouldn't. Fox News journalists freed by kidnappers
in
Gaza
after
two-week
ordeal
have ordered soldiers' capture ·
knowing it would lead to war
BY IBRAHIM BARZAK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Bv ZEINA KARAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BEIRUT, Lebanon Hezbollah leader Sheik
Hassan Nasrallah said in a
TV interview aired Sunday
that he would not have
ordered the capture of two
Israeli soldiers if he had
known it would lead to such
a war.
Guerrillas
from
the
Islamic militant group killed
three Israeli soldiers and
seized two more in a crossborder raid July 12, which
sparked 34 days of fighting
that ended with a cease-fire
on Aug. 14 . .
"We did not think, even I
percent, that the capture
would lead to a war at this
time and of this magnitude.
You ask me, if I had known
, on July II ... that the opera. lion would lead to such a
war, would I do it? I say no,
absolutely not," he said in
an interview with Lebanon's
New TV station.
· He also said Italy and the
United Nations had made
contacts to help mediate a
. . prisoner swap with .Israel.
· but did not specify whether
they . had
contacted
Hezbollah directly. He did
not say in what capacity
Italy had expressed interest
-on its own or on Israel's
behalf:
Nasrallah said Lebanese
Parliament Speaker Nabih
Berri was in charge of the
negotiations and the subject
would be dis&lt;:ussed during
U.N.
Secretary-General
Kofi Annan 's visit to Beirut
on Monday.
There had ·been "some
contacts" to arrange a meeting between him and Annan,
he said, but that was unlikely for security reasons.
"'(he Italians seem to be
getting close and are trying
to get into the subject. The
United Nation&gt; is interested," Nasrallah said. "The
Israeli s have acknowledged

..

that this (issue) is headed for Philip Toroller, an officer of
negotiations and a (prison- the French military mission
ers) exchange."
based ~~ the French
A senior Israeli govern- Embassy in Beirut. He said
ment official. declined to the troops would go frrst to
cpmment on such contacts,. Damour, a coastal town
saying only that Israel "does south of Beirut, where they
not negotiate with terrorists" would begin work before
and continues to demand the moving to other areas in
unconditional release of the south Lebanon.
two soldiers. The official . Israeli Prime Minister
spoke on condition of Ehud Olmert had received
anonymity because he was- assurances from Annan that
n't authorized to discuss the new peacekeepers would be
matter with the media.
on ihe ground in Lebanon
Earlier Sunday, Israeli · within a week, the prime
Vice Premier Shimon Peres minister's office said in a
said no negotiations were statement.
being held on a prisoner
The UNIHL force is paid
release.
for out of the budget of the
"Right now no, but I United Nations , which is
expect that concerning the made up of member states'
prisoners in the north, we annual contributions, and
shall have to wait until the the new expansion of the
Lebanese government will force will come out of the ·
take charge completely over same budget, said Timur
its land in accordance with
the U.N. resolution," he Goksel, a former l)ead of
UNIFIL.
said.
American civil rights
Israeli "mili.tary officials
the Rev. Jesse
leader
said earlier this month that
Jackson
said
he raised the
Israel is holding 13
Hezbollah prisoners and the issue ·of a prisoner swap in
bodies of dozens or guerril- talks with President Bashar
las that it could swap for the Assad during a visit, but he
two captive soldiers, but did not elaborate on the
would not include any Syrian leader's response.
Jackson was in Damascus
Palestinian prisoners in such
on the first leg of a tour that
a deal.
Also Sunday, 245 French also included stops in
soldiers arrived at Beirut's Lebanon and Israel. He said
airport to help the Lebanese he was there to gauge the
army
rebuild
bridges "views" of Syrian, Lebanese
destroyed or damaged by and Israeli officials, and to
appeal to them to stick to the
Israeli air strikes.
The troops were separate U.N.-brokered cease-fire.
Nasrallah, whose wherefrom a French contribution
abouts
· are unknown as he
of 2,000 soldiers to the U.N.
Interim Force in Lebanon , went into hiding on the first
known as UNIFIL, which day of the war, also said he
was being expanded to did riot believe a second
l 5,000 members under the bout of fighting would break
U.N. Security Council reso- out with Israel, eyen though
lution that ended the lsraci- he said more than half his
group's rocket arsenal was
Hezbollah war.
"Our job is to work joint- still left.
"The current Israeli situaly with the Lebanese army
and the available infortion,
in rebuilding bridges. The
French troops will be here mation (ells us that we are
lilr about one and a half not heading to another
months at least, " said Lt. round," he said.

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip
- '1\vo Fox News journalists
freed by militants Sunday
described a harrowing two
weeks of captivity during
which they were blindfolded,
tied in painful positions and
forced at gunpoint to say on a
video that they converted to
Islam.
After their release, the men
met with Palestinian Prime
Minister Ismail Haniyeh and
left Gaza, but first appealed at
a brief news conference for
foreign journalists not to be
deterred from covering the
plight of the Palestinians in the
volatile coastal strip.
"I hope that this never scares
a single journalist away from
coming to Gaza to cover the
story because the Palestinian
people are very beautiful and
kindhearted," said Steve
Centanni, a 60-year-old
American reponer who was
released along with canJeraman Olaf Wiig, 36, of New
Zealand. "The world needs to
know more about them."
In a phone call with Fox
News, Centanni . said they
were abducted Aug. 14 ·by
four masked gunmen on a side
street in Gaza City. He said the
assailants covered his head
with a black hood, and
crammed him and Wiig into a
small car.
Their · possessions were
taken, and their wrists ·were
bound behind their backs. "I
still have some sore wrists," he
said. "It was digging into my
wrists really badly."
In captivity, Centanni said,
he was laid face down in a
dark garage and tied up . in
painful positions.
"If we tried to get up and sit
up, which l did do a few times,
they would eventually just
force us back· down with
something stuck to my head,"
he said. "I donlt know if it was
·a.stick, a flashlight or. a gun or
what. We couldn't see. We
were forced to lay face down
again in the din with blindfolds on."
Before their release, a video

was released ;mowing Wrig
and Centanni dressed in beige
Arab-style robes. Wtig delivered an anti-Western speech,
his face expressionless and his
tone halting. The kidnappers
claimed both men had con-,
vetTed to Islam. .
"We were forced to convert
to Islam at gunpoint,"
Centanni told Fox. '.;Don't get
me wrong here. I have the
highest respect for Islam, and I
learned a lot of good things
about it, but it was something
we felt we had to do because
they had the guns, and we didn't know what the hell was
going on."
Wiig, who has covered
some of the world's most dangerous contlicts, including
Afghanistan and Iraq, said at

the news conference that he
also was worried the kidnapping might scare reponers
away from Gaza.
"My biggest concern really
is that as a result of what happened to us, foreign jo~malists
will be discouraged from coming to tell the story .and that'
would be a great tragedy for
the people of Palestine," Wiig
said. "You guys need us on the
streets, and you need people to
be aware of the story."
Israeli airstrikes in Gaza on
Sunday
killed
three
Palestinians and wounded two
television
cameramen,
Palestinian officials and residents said. They said lsmeli
sniper fire killed a fourth
Palestinian and critically
·wounded a 6-year-old boy.

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of $1,000 or less
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Public meetings

Athey birth
POMEROY - Matthew
A. and Julee G.. Athey of
Pomeroy announ&lt;:e the birth
of a daughter, Mattalyn
Charlote, on June 9, at the
Holzer Medical Center. She
weighed 8 pounds.
Paternal grandpiarents are
· Michael G. Athey · and
Deborah J. Athey of New
Haven, W. Va., Maternal
grandparents are Gene
Wolfe of New Castle, Pa.
and the late Charlotte Carr
of Pomeroy.

Church events

Monday, Aug. '28
POMEROY - OH-Kan
Coin Club, .7 p.m . Pomeroy
Library.
POMEROY Meigs
County Library Board, regular meeting, 3 p.m. at the
library.
POMEROY
- Meigs

O'Bleness
Memorial
Hospital to offer_
CPR Training

t

l
i

,..

t

;

t

ATHENS A cardiopulmonary. resuscitation (CPR) course will be
offered by O'B leness
Memorial Hospital in
Athens from 6:30 to 9:30
p.m. on Wednesday, Sept.
20, in O'Bleness' Lower
Level room 0 I 0.
This American Safety &amp;
Health Institute course
teaches participants the
skills needed to administer CPR to adults, chiland
infants.
dren
Participants also learn
how to recognize a lifethreatening emergency,
how to provide- basic life
support, ·and what to do
in the case of an airway
obstruction or choking.
Upqn successful completion of the course, participants receive a card to
confirm that they attended
and completed the course.
To register for the
course, visit O'Bleness'
community
relations
office. The course fee of
$15 per person is payable
with registration. The fee
is waived for anyone
unable to pay. For more
information,
call
o·Breness'
community
relations department at
(740) 592-9300.

SlibmHted photo

Ramona Hawk is joined by Beth Shaver, Council on Aging
director, for ·a picture at the retirment dinner honoring Hawk.

HAWK RETIRES
POMEROY - Ramona
Hawk retired on July 28
after more than 31 years of
working as a cook for the
Meigs County Council on
Aging.
While acknowledging that
she will miss her work she
plans to keep busy at her

home on Cook Road with
her husband, Robert. The
couple have four children,
Sheila Regan, Robin Gibbs,
Kelly and Tony and have
nine grandchildren.
The family hosted are irement dinner for Ramona at
the Wild Horse Cafe.

I

Students, teachers finding new
ways to learn geography
Through the program, CD player to power the
CLEVELAND (AP)
Gone are the days when teachers are given hand- global positioning device.
geography class was all held global positioning
"We '.;e !letting past the
about memorizing state devices and sent on a whole notion that geograscavenger hunt to find phy is memorizing state
capitals.
Students today
are items using longitudinal capitals," said Joseph
using infrared sensors and latitudinal coordi- Kerski, a geographer
and global positioning nates. They also learn with the U.S. Geological
systems to better under- about digital maps and Survey·. "Geography is
stand the earth, and Ohio online satellite mapping about population growth
managing
urban
educators are heading programs, as well as how and
back into the classroom to use the technologies to sprawl. It deals )'lith
every issue we're facing
themsel lies to learn about teach various courses.
When
they
complete
today."
the new technology and
Ohio View started in
ways to keep their stu- the se minar, teachers
dents eager to explore receive one hand-held 1996 and is the first state
global positioning device agency to promote the
the lay of the land.
and
an infrared ther- gathering of geographical
"It's the ideal. It 's true
their data. A national version
science,'' said Robert mometer · for
the
program,
Duesing, an earth science schools. In exchange, of
teacher at Cleveland's their classes measure AmericaView, includes
temperatures, 25 state chapters.
Lincoln- West
High ground
Worldwide, The Globe
often in school parking
School.
was
Duesing recently fin- lots or nearby parks, and Program, which
started
by
universtlles
send
re
su
lts
to
NASA
ished a four-day trai'ning
course at the RG Drage over the Internet. The and federal agencies in
Career Education Center goal is to help NASA 1994, has worked with
. in
Massillon,
which improve the accuracy of schools to gather such
ttain s at least 60 teachers satellite images and read- data.
"We used to see in the
a year through the advo- ing s.
Mike Hickey, an earth 1990s individual teachers
cacy group OhioView.
The center trains twice science teacher from using GPS (global posias many teachers now as Cleveland' s South High tioning system) units
their students,"
it did two years ago, said School , said . students with
course word inator Terri cheered when th.eir data Kerski said. "Now you
Benko, a senior research were sent to NASA, and are seeing whole states
project manager at . the one student donated bat- and whole countries comteries from his portable ing online."
University of Toledo.

The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155 •
www.mydailysenti nel.com

Our CLASSIFIEDS will WORK for YOU!!!
I

•
'

problems and rebuild our
relationship. Now l think
she is just waiting for me to
die. What should l do? D.S. in Whitesboro, N.Y.
Dear D.S.: We don't see
what you are getting out of
this relationship, and right
now, you need someone who
is supportive and lqving. We
assume your children are
,older and their growing up
"without a dad" is no longer
an issue. You deserve happiness, and you've been without it for much too long.
Divorce can be stressful and
can affect your health, but so
does your current situation.
If Callie won 't seek counseling, go on your own and
work through what you need
to in order to cut ljer loose
completely.
Dear Annie: My 80something
neighbor,
"Addie," is being kept in her
home and out of a nursing
facility by me. She's tough
but sweet. A lot of neighbors
used to take turns helping
out, but have dropped off.
If her children would split
the work, it wouldn't be too
difficult. Addie needs help
with cleaning, yardwork,
shopping, cooking nutritious
meals, minor home maintenance and trips to thtt doctor.
So how do I get her relatives
to take over? She's very particular, but she's spunky. Worn-Out Woman
Dear Worn Out: You
have a heart of gold. but this
is obviously too much for
you. You can't force Addie's
relatives to take over. but
you can suggest they pool
their resources and hire a
caregiver through
the
National Association of
Professional Geriatric Care
M a n a g e .r s
( c are m an age r. or g ) .

Information also is available
through the National Family
Caregivers
As~ociation
(nfcacares.org) at 1-800896-3650. or the Eldercare
Locator (eldercare.gov) at !800-677-1116.
Dear Annie: I had to
laugh at "Nonviolent in the
Midwest," who wa&gt; upset
that her children were playing with guns at a friend's
house. l, too, didn't like my
boys playing with guns and
didn't permit them in my
home .
My oldest son is now
starting his third year at the
.U.S. Military Academy at
West Point , . and my
youngest recently enlisted
and is at boot camp at Ft.
Benning.
. I am proud that my children are serving their country, but a part of me wonders
if l had let them play with
guns when they were children, maybe they would be
less eager to do so as adults.
Military Mom in
Georgia
Dear Mom: We suspect
allowing toy guns in the
house has wry little to do
with how boys turn out.
Congratulations on raising
two very patriotic young
. men.
Annie's Mailbox is writte11 by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the An11 Landers col"''"'· Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailhox@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 feature.~ by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators S;mdicale Web
page at www.creators.com.

O'Bleness to offer diabetes education class

Proud to be apart of your life.
Ad must be submitted'·on this coupon and
must be prepaid. Offer expires 8/31/06 .

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

School events

Clubs and
organizations

28, 2006

If nothing else works, ·then cut yourself loose

Dear Annie: My wife,
"Callie," and I have been
married for 33 years and
have not been intimate for
the last 12. The only reason
I've stayed so long is
because my father died
Thursday, Aug. 29
when l was 14 and I didn't
TUPPERS PLAINS -- want my children to grow up
" Pray for School 2006" without their dad.
Concert of Prayer, 7 p.m.,
I recently discovered that
Eastern
High
School. Callie, an operating room
Teachers, administrators, nurse, is havin!} an affair
school personnel, students with a doctor. It's a very ,nice
and parents invited.
set-up, smce she gets called
in after-hours for emergency
cases and then she and the
doc can meet at the hospital.
I confronted her and even
Monday, Aug. 28 .
have
a tape of her talking to
MIDDLEPORT
her
best
friend about the
Revival at the old Bethel
affair. Callie doesn't seem to
Freewill Baptist Church know what she wants to do
south of Middleport ar the about it. One day, she says
Route 7, Story's Run Road she wants a divorce, and the
intersection, through Sept. next day, claims she never
I. Pastor is Ralph Butcher.
said any such thing. l
offered to go for counseling,
and she waftlcs on that, too .
I have filed for divorce,
though that is really not
what I want. The last time
we talked about counseling,
she said she has to pass itby
her lawyer fir~t. That was
over three weeks ago.
Oh, by the way, I have
prostate cancer. I've been
taking chemo, and everything is going well. Of
course, Cal·lie has never
once asked me how rm
doing. Instead , she tells
everyone that I will be dead
in less than a year, despite
the fact that she has never
spoken to my doctors.
Callie seems to be dragging her feet on the divorce.
Several times I've told her l
ani. willing to forgive and
forget if we can wo(k on our

Thesday, Aug. 29
POMEROY - Special
meeting of Meigs County
Board of Elections, 8:30
a.m., to certify petitions and
issues for general elections,
board office in County
Annex. Regular meeting to
immediately follow.

Monday, August

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

County Right to Life, 7:30
p.m., Pomeroy Library.
RACINE Southern
Band Boosters, 7 p.m. in
the high school band room.
All band parents and supponers invited.

Monday, Aug. 28
POMEROY -Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m:, 117 Memorial Drive.

Mattalyn Charlotte Athey

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

ATHENS- For individuals newly diagnosed with
diabetes; or those who are
struggling with the disease,
O'Bleness ·
Memorial
Hospital offers diabetes self~
management training classes.
An individual assessment
prior to the classes is required
and is done by Barb
Nakanishi, R.D., L.D.,
C.D.E., O'Bleness' registered dietitianlcenified diabetes educator. The two class
sessions are scheduled for
Tuesday, Sept. i 9, and
Wednesday, Sept. 20, from I
p.m. unti14 p.m. Participants
should attend both sessions
of the classes. The class ses-

sions will be held in the haspital's Lower Level room
008.
The American Diabetes .
Association-reco~nized program assures h1gh-quahty
educatiOn. for pallent. selfcare. S~ss1ons are des1gned
to pro\ 1de ed~catwn . and
management sk1lls to 1nd•victuals with diabetes so they
can have full, healthy and
productive lives. The goal is
to offer information that will
help people with diabetes
make positive choices about
their lifestyle and diabetes
management. Nakanishi will
,be joined by Susan
Wakefield,
BSN ,
and
Rachael Adeyanju, BSN,

from O' Bleness' education
depanment, to lead the class
sessions. Resources and educational literature will be
available at the classes.
A physician's written referraJ
using
O'Bleness '
Diabetes Self- Management
Therapy referral form is
. d t .
d th
require 0 a11en
e program.
.
.
For .more mf?rmallon or
for assistance w1th the referral process, call Barb
Nakamsh1 at (740) 592-9205.
The d1abetes educatton classes are held quarterly.
Nakanishi can also provide.
information about the dates
and times of future classes.

Teen.gets probation for crashing car into library
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
teen who drove a stolen
Cadillac into a library wall
has been sentenced to probation over the objections of
the branch manager who was
injured in the crash.
Devon Sydnor, 13, apologized Friday in Frankli.n
County Juvenile Court.
Magistrate
Mary
Goodrich, following the recommendation in a pre-sentencing investigation, put
Sydnor on probation until
October 2008. She also
ordered him to perform l 20
hours of community service.
"I'm not happy," said
Shirley Freeman, the librarian who suffered a broken
arm and fractured ribs the
Feb. 6 crash. "But they follow the law, they follow the
system."
·Freeman said she would
have preferred to se~ Sydnor
spend some time in a detention center. ·
Sydnor was 12 at the time
of the crash . He was in the

car with two older boys who
pleaded guilty to stealing it.
Authorities said the boys
crashed the car into the
library after they had been
kicked out of the buiiding for
causing a disturbance.
"I cannot prove that driving the car through the

library. was intentional,"
Freeman told the court, "but I
can say Devon's decisions to
first get into a stolen vehicle,
then drive i) , even though he
had no license nor skill at driving, were intentional"
Freeman remains on
unpaid leave.

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•

The Daily Sentinel

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 larv respecti11g an
establishment of rel(~tion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereoj; or abridging tire freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govemmmt for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Mond~y. Aug . 28. the 240th day of 2006. There
are 125 days lett in t h ~ y~a r.
Today\ Htghligh t in Histot-y:
On Aug. 28. I \163. 200.000 pwple parttctpated in a
pe,tceful civil rights ra ll y in Wash ington. where Dr. Martin
, Luther Kin g Jr. uelivered hts " I Have a Dream" speech in
front of the Lincoln Memori,tl
On thts date.
In 1774, Mother Elt zabeth Ann Seton, the first
American-born saint, was born in New York Citv.
In 1916. lt dly's ded.tration ol war against Gerinany took
effect during World War I
In 1947. legenclary bullrt ~ htc t Manolete was mortally
wounded hy a hull during a It gill 111 Lllld res. Spain; he was
.10.
In 1955, Emmett Till, a bl ack teenager from Chicago,
was abducted trom Ius uncle's home 111 Money. Miss .. by
tv.o white men afte1 he had supposedly whistled at a white
woman : he was l(llmd brut a l!~ murdered three days later.
In 1968, police and anti -war demonstrators clashed in the
streets of Chicago as the Democratic national convention
nominated Hubert H. Humphrey fo r prestdent.
In 1973. more thdn 520 people died as an earthquake
shook central Mex 1co.
In 198 I. John W Hinckley Jr. . pleaded innocent to
charges ol attempting to kill President Reagan (he was later
acquitted hy reason of insanity).
In 1986. retired Navy warrant officer Jerry A. Whitworth,
convicteu for hts rule m a Soviet spy nng, was sentenced
by a federal JUdge in San Francisco to 365 years in prison.
In 1988. 70 people v.ere ktlled when three Italian stunt
planes collided during an air show at the U.S. Air Base in
Ramste111. West Germany.
Five years dgu Gate v.ay, the nation's No.4 manufacturer of personal computer'-" sa iu it was laying off 4,700
employees -- 25 pet cent of it s global work force - ·
because of an inc re,ts ingly hl eak market.
Today \ Birthdays Country singer Btlly Grammer is 81.
Actor Ben Gazz,tra is 76. At:tor Ken Jenkins is 66. Former
Defense Secretary Wtlltam S. Cohen IS 66. Actor David
Soul is 63 Baseball manager Lou Piniella 1s 63. Actress
Alice Playten is 5'1. Smger Wayne Osmond (The Osmonds)
is 55 Actot Daniel Stem is 49. Olymptc gold medal figure
skater Scott Hamilto n ts 4R. Actress Emma Samms is 46.
Country singer Shdnta Twain i' 41 . Actor Btlly Boyd ("The
Lord of the Rings") is 38. Actor Jack Black is 37 . Actor
Jason Pnest ley 1s 37. Olympic gold medal swimmer Janet
Evans is 35. Actor J .. August Richards "33. Rock singermusician Max Collins (Eve 6) IS 2R. Actress early Pope is
26. Country singer LeAnn Runes is 24. Actor Michael
77
GaIeota .1s --·
Thought for Today: 'The man who views the world at
fifty the same as he did at twenty has wasted thirty years of
hi s 'life."- Muhammad Alt. American boxing champion
( 1942- I

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

OPINION

Monday, August

(Last week in thts space, I
presented the fi rst half of
the speech President Bush
should give to re-direct the
war on terror. Here is the
second half.)
At home, the line of
defense IS clear. It is ou1
border. My new strategy
call s on us to think of out
border as more than just a
line on a map. We need to
see the border as a cu ltural
lme also, a defining line of
freedom against proponents
of sharia, which , I ca nnot
emphasize enough, poses a
direct threat to our foundi ng
principles of libert y and
eq uality. It is that simple.
There ts a crucial military
component to the antisharia defensive, which I
will outline · momentarily.
But without taking civil precautions at the border, even
a decisive, military victory
abroad could be nullified by
non-violent means at home.
_How ? Through largely
unregulated immigration of
peoples from "sharia states"
- those regions who&gt;e
governing tradllions derive,
wholly or in some important
part , from the edicts of
Islam . If such an influx continues, Islamic law will be
accommodated , adopted
and even legislated, at least
in some jurisdictions,
according to majority will.
We know this to be true
because such a "sharia
shift" is already transformmg what sociologists call
post-Christian Europe into
an increasingly Islamic

Diana
West

sphere. If we do not want to
see such changes here, we
must act. Accordi ngly, I am
asking Congress to amend
our laws tn bar further
· Islamic immigra tio n. beginning wtth immigration from
sharia states.
This, the most cruci al
domestic component of my
anti-sharia program, will
undoubtedly be regarded as
the most controversial
because it necessitates making a definitive judgment
against the laws promulgated by Islam, a religion. This
may appear to go against
our chenshed traditton of
religious tolerance, not to
mention good manners. But
if the laws promulgated by
Islam directly threaten freedom of conscience, freedom
of expression and religion,
women's rights and key
concepts of equality - and
they do - it ts a sign of
intellectual rigor mortis not
to say so. And I do say so,
but, again, not to launch a
transformative military or
cultural &lt;lffensive against
Islam, but to initiate the
mobilization of a defensive
movement to prevent the

Islamization of American
law and liberty.
And what about Iraq?
Thanks to American-led
coalition troops, a Ba'athist
dictatorship has been di smantled. and lra4 is a parliame ntary
democracy
under a new constitution. It
is a matter of increasing significance, however, that this
new constitution, ratified hy
the people of Iraq, enshrines
Islamic law above all. Thi '
means that when the new
Iraq joined the ranks of
demo~ratlc
nations,
11
simultaneously jomed the
ranks of sharia states. Thi s
may hel p explain wide·
spread Iraqi sympathy fo r
Hezbollah. for example. the
Iranian- supported Shi ' ite
terrorist group that not only
attacks American and Israeli
interests, but also seeks the
expansion of sharia. It also
begs the question about
long- term American sup·
po11: How. in the war on ter' Ollsm, Larl we uphold a
partner that fee ls solidarity
with t ~rro ri sts?
We can not ·_ certainly
not as a realistic war strategy to safeguard the liberty
of the Free World. Once, I
saw the war that began on
Sept. II , 200 I, as dividing
the world bet ween those
countries that -were with us,
and those that were against
us. I have now come to
define the crisis, both cui·
tural and military, as occur·
ring between the Free World
and the Sharia World. The
centrality of sharia in Islam

MORNING AFT£R PILL:
TAKE A.M. To REVERSE BAD DECISION.

is nol something Americans
can or shoulu try to change.
But it is not something we
can ignore. enher.
With this t:entta li ty in
mind. our goals in the
Middle East 'hould change
from, in eflec·t. promoting
shana-dcmucracy to prevent ing the"e xp&lt;HI of shana
and terrorism Jo all\ ance
sharia. A~t:ording l y. I hdve
dtrccled our military to for·
mulate a plan It&gt; reckploy
Am~rkan
troops from
Ira~ \ cities . where the y
have been uperatmg ,tt great
ri,k to attain stabtl ity ror the
lraqt government. to ba,es
in the north From tltere,
they ma y ass ist as needed ·in
our tmssion to nemrali 7.e the
terronsm- and shitriaexporting capab tlitt es of
freedom's enemies in the
region These would inc Jude
nuke-seeking Iran and
Syna. without whose support Hezbo llah would not
exist. and Saudi Arab ia.
from whose coffers comes
global jthad.
What we &lt;.:all the wai on
terro r now mo ves 1nto a
more focused phase. v.hich
better defines our mi ss ion
and makes n mo~e attain-·
able. The roau aheau is long
and diffic ult , but our next
steps are clear.
God bless th e Unned
States.
(Dwna We.11 is a 1 olumnisr
for 77u' Wtl.1hrngtcm Trmn.
She f'an bP col!lill ted \'ia

dimum est@\'eri::on.net.)

~Hl£R.

\liE Q)LVMBVS DIS PA'Kt-i.

2Cz:'l!? -

WONDER
IF I CAN
TAKE MORE
THAN
ONE?

-

Monday, August 28, ·2006

•

28, 2006

%at President Bush should say to us, .part 2

The paily Sentinel • Page A5

www .mydailysentinel.com
•

Penny candy sold from Suburban Cleveland residents Local Briefs .
36-year-old in-home shop
suing over court costs
Winners announced

may have been overcharged
bent her bocty, and old age
CLEVELAND (AP) POMEROY - The Meigs County Democratic Party
is beginning to slow her Drunken driving defendants since 1995.
"That would be devastat- announced the winners of $50 s~vi n gs bonds given away at
down. Now, she opens the who appeared in three subKENTON -- Her pig- store at 1 p.m. and waits urban municipal courts say ing," Berea Mayor Joseph the Meigs County Fair. Winne rs ahd sponsors. by day,
tai Is bobbed as she for customers until 9 p.m . they 've paid too high a Biddlecombe said. "We were: Monday, Joe Proffitt sponsor, Paul Caner, Albany;
stretched her neck , trying or dark, whichever comes price· for justice, and now would have to borrow some Tuesday, Joyce Quillen sponsor, Jud y Rockhold, Portland;
they're suing to be repaid of that money to pay it back, Wednesday, Mindy Hill sponsor, Melissa Stout, Long
very hard to get a peek at first.
the candy in the ancient
On a recent afternoon, court costs they cla1m they and that 's not fair to the tax- Bottom; Thursday, Debbie Phillips, sponsor, Lmda Gilkey,
payers ."
Langsville: Friday, John lhle, sponsor, Nola Proffitt,
display case.
Christina and her mom , were overcharged .
Officials
m
Panna
are
Pomeroy: Saturday, Mick Davenport, sponsor, William B.
But in the end , the 4- Ashley Whitaker, were the
They' re suing the state,
year-old simply wasn't tall day's first customers. claiming they were illegally scratching their heads over Downie , Jr., Racine: Saturday, Dorothy Sayre, sponsor,
•
enough . So Chri stina Whitaker 's school picture charged the costs for traffic their inclusion m the suit Frances Smith, Mason. W.Va.
because
Parma
doesn't
bill
Judy
Marshall
of
Long
Bottom
was
the
winner
of
the
Diego smu shed her face is among the hundreds that citations in the Berea,
American flag, drawn from the daily entries.
against
the counter 's hang on the wall .
Rocky Rtver and Parma more for multiple charges.
A hearing in the lawsuit is
scratched glass front and
Whitaker, 22, admitted municipal courts .
If they' re successful . their scheduled for a pretrial
watched as the much-prac- spending money that she
ticed hands of Ei leen shouldn' t have when she case could force 1nany cities hearing on Wednesday, and
Erwin. readied her penny came to Erwin's store as a to. rethink how they deter- trial is tentative! y set for
kid .
, mme comt fees and refund Sept. 13 .
candy.
Lawyers for Glick and the
"Five, pink candtes for a
" ! went home hungry a I thousands ol dollars to
other
defendants cite an
pretty little girl in pink," lot of days, because my 1·0h10ans.
. ..
opinion
written in 199! 'by
HURON (AP)
A the dark in Montana if the
Erwin satd as she bagged lunch money bought soda
In 2005, a .Plamllff m.the
the goodies. "I don't know and penny candy instead of lawsmt. Wilham Ghck, then-Attorney General Lee northern Ohio couple has hum1d1ty 1s right.
Barrow, Alaska, a city
of anything better than a mashed
potatoes
at reached ~ plea deal on a Fisher. The opinion reads been through Canada, to
"court
costs
...
are
to
be
that
the North Pole, across called the "Top of the
pink Tootsie Roll , do school ," she said. "That's traff1c vtolatiOn and was
you?"
what we all did. We JUSt conv1cted of recklesS opera- charged per case and not per Alaska and over Mount World ," was described by
Ru shmore.
Jan Sieg. 5 1, as one of the
And just like hundreds, if thought that's what lunch !ton. A separate charge offense.'
The
state
contends
that
it
And
they
did
it
all
from
most bea uttful places she 's
not thousands, of children money was for : to spend mvolvmg weavmg. was
$24
state
fee
once
assesses
a
here."
dropped
.
After
paymg
a
13 ,000 feet in a 1968 ever seen. But it wa s in
before her, Christina learns
At that, Erwin lets loose $450 fin~ . Glick was sur- per case, does not directly Cessna 182 propeller a1r· another Alaskan c ity .
a lesson about kindly shop
owners and penny candy at a school-girl giggle and p~sed to ge.t another $510 run municipal courts and plane that makes a com· Gustavus, where the coucovers her face with her btll, th1s lime for court would have no way to repay pact car look spacious.
ple encountered one of the
Kenney 's Grocery.
assess.
fees
the
courts
costs.
. Don and Jan Sieg began trip s' most exci ting ex p'C n Erwin has dispensed hands
soda, ice cream sandwich"! s~re got a lot of lunch
When he questioned why Mumcipal court officials planning tl;le
18-day, ences.
"As we began our decent
es and candy since July money , that 's tru e," she t~e court fees b1ll was so . say judges have the power 7 ,488-mile trip four years
to
set
fees
in
their
courts.
into Gustavus. the setting
ago.
1970 from the dimly lit said. "But 1 guess it didn't htgh, he dtscovered that the
The lawsmt is more about
"Flying IS a pos sible sun was changing Ill bril· front room of her house. hurt anybody, now did it?" Berea Mumc1pal Court
As Christina and her char~es defendants for each lawyers seeking a big pay- dream and there are air- liance like tl as hbulbs in
The walls are covered with
picture s 'drawn with love mom head out the door, the c1M1on, not JUSt once per day than righting a wrong, craft available for le ss our eyes. Th en. just as
by some of her youngest after-school rush begins . mc1dent. The . multiple 1m- ~ocky River Municipal than the cost of a motorcy- ever)thin g became uni Clerk
William cle ," said ' Don Sieg , 53, formly dark. the lig hts
customers, and with school No more ttme to sit down tt~l charges m~reased. h~s Court
Garreau.
who has an airplane pro- from the runway appeared
photos, wedding pictures now, as Erwin spends close btll . By cornpanson, a SimiIn
Berea,
losing
the
lawto
an
hour
handling
a
lar
matter
settled
m
Elyna
while we were 400 fee t
peller atop his garage.
and family portraits from
suit
would
eliminate
money
steady stream of kids and would only have been btlled
The couple started thetr above the gro und ," said
some of her oldest.
the city planned to use for a trip July 5, taking off from Don Sieg.
one $110 fee . .
.
With an elementary teens.
new
justice
center,
Most
are
'
friendly
.
Some
.
The
laws
utt
,
which
On
thJ'
landin
g
stnp
,
Griffing
Airport
in
school catty-cornered from
satd.
Biddlecombe
are
not
.
But
36
years
of
mvolves
misdemeanors,
Sandusky and making " we saw ihree little bear
her store, and Kenton High
111
A verdict against the state their way through Canada cubs walking across the
:;chool within shouting business, she 's only had to c~atms the practtce of
distance, the 87-year-old toss out two boys for bad b1lhng for each vtolatton ~s and the cities would "pretty before hitting Barrow, runw ay,'' he sa id "The '
has a ready-made customer behavmr. Maybe that's tllegal. If successful, tt much eliminate this whole Alaska, the state's north- angry mother bear fol·
becau se, until recently, she could force local govern- deal here," · Biddlecombe ernmost point.
lowed a few minutes
base.
On returning to the later."
The first week of school kept order with a sharp ments to repay thousands of said.
Glick argues that's not his United
Before returning to their
State s
from
has always been her stick and has been known people that were bt!led
concern.
to
pull
from
behind
the
court
co~ts
fo:
multtple
t
Huron
home on July 23.
Canada, they landed 111
favorite .
1
"They
got
me
good,"
he
the couple tned to take m
Cutbank, Mont.
"The kids come in and counter and wield it at a offenses m a smgle case.
"We saw hundred s of Mount
Ru shmore,
in
over the summer they 've mouthy teenager or iwo. Lawyers are askmg for said. "I want my money
back.''
for
defendants
who
Eventually,
her
son
made
refunds
South
Dakota,
from
the
crosses
glowing
all
over
grown tall. Some of the
boys' voices have changed , her put the thing away.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the country side. They air, but the sun made it difwere all connected by spi- ficult to appreciate from
and some of the girls have
She's only had one
der webs of glowing that high, Don Sieg said.
started carrying a purse," attempted robbery, and that
In logging the nearly
thread. As we got 100 feet
she said.
was years ago. A 10-yearoff the runway , we saw a 7,500 miles, the couple
"They're all grown up , old boy with a mask and a
dozen pairs of eyes off the used 900 gallons of gasobut they ' ll still take a BB gun came m.
Bv HOPE YEN
aftermath.
runway," said Don Sieg. line. The cost ranged from
minute to visit with an old
"I want all your money
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
storm "The eyes were those of $3.48 per gallon in
A
tropical
lady. That makes me feel and all your candy," he
expected to turn into a coyotes which ran out in Minnesota and Ohio to
good. So if they have a told her.
WASHINGTON
hurricane in the Gulf of
"Well," she told him. "I Their confidence shaken Mexico this week could front of the plane and $7.50 per gallon in
problem, they tell me and I
Canada .
can't give you either."
try to help."
by
Katrina ,
most provide an eeril'y timed alongside it as though they
"Life is too short to
She didn't call the Americans don't believe test of preparedness. were dogs.':
She and her late husThe glowing crosses, he spend complaining about
band, Dan, bought the police; she called his parthe nation is ready for Forecasters aren't pre- said, were power lines and your problems," Don Sieg
house in early 1970. An ents.
pared to say whether the
"That's the thing , you another major disaster, a storm named Ernesto will poles, which, another pilot said. "Focus· on the good
uncle of Dan Erwin's had
told the couple, glow in things and never stop."
lived there and was the see," she said. "They just new AP-Ipsos poll finds. hit the United States.
The
survey,
conducted
•
first
proprietor
of need a little tough love.''
devasone
year
after
the
Having raised her own
Kenney 's Grocery. When
About the " me too"
oversees the commission ,
Eileen Erwin opened her two children, ~nd now tating hurricane and with
clause.
SERB fact-finder
the complaint was also filed
candy store, she kept the · sharing the joys of six much of New Orlean s
against the Southern Local .Sarah Rudolph Cole said
II still in shambles,, found
.name and changed little grandchildren and
School
Board of Education last October, '"I did not con·
from PageA1
great -grandchildren, Erwin diminishing faith in the
el se.
sider rel evant that the school
with
SERB.
She used to open at 7 said she's been blessed to government's ability to
di
strict would have to pay
The board and the SLEA
a.m., and a lmc of school have two families : one that deal with emergencies. It saved
the
district have since come to a·settle- additional money to OAPSE
kids would already he God gave her, and one that also gave President Bush $175 ,538.5!, this figure ment regarding the ULP. employees if I found that
came to her by way of poor marks for his. han- takes into account not only The SLEA agreed to hold off SLEA employees were entiwaiting out front.
dling of the storm's salar1es but health care as on salary negotiations this tled to a wage mcrease."
A stroke 20 years ago penny candy.
well as retirement benefit past summer, reoP.ening
Ohlinge r and fe llow
Historical Association's match.''
them next year wh1le the SLEA member Carla Shuler
costs .
Powell said that the coun"The commission has board agreed to the one per- added that due to thi s delay
appreciation for the volunteers who have worked on ty has a community devel- always told us 'no,' and to cent raise retroactive to July no negotiations are happen ing , including negotiatin g
the project for many hours. opment block grant of show us the money wa&amp; I, 2005.
from PageA1
She said their work was $!7 ,400 for ' work on the there," Ohlinger said of the
In October of last year health care expenses that
valued at $10,000 which project, but that she said raises and the fact she SERB ruled in favor of the may eventually save the dismain floor ready so that ·the meant that much money looks the end of money to believes that money is avail- SLEA pay raise during a trict money.
The SLEA's 53 members
Daughters of America could be accessed from the access the ''match" in feder- able now, a position fact-finding hearing attendwhich called the old 'build- federal grant. There is still al funds until we get more Southern Superintendent ed by representatives from have been operating without
from
local Mark Miller also agrees the district and SLEA . The a contract smce Jul) I , 2005.
ing "home" since the mid- $150,000 set aside in feder- donations
Asked if the SLEA's right
sources.
al
funds
'
f
or
the
project
"We
really
need with. Ohlinger went on to board then approved the
!950s will be able to move
say,
"If
we
wait
for
five
tu
coll ectively barga in a
"which we can't receive contnbutions," she conraise only to have the comback in .
years by then we' II be so far mission deny them which contract with th e sc hool
"While the grant from the until we have the local cluded.
behind the cost of living lead to the ULP complaint.
board is go ne . Ohlinger
Facilities Commission is a
be
in
worse
shape
than
"At this time .
we'll
answered.
It
is
estimated
the
tremendous help in keeping
spoke of the challenge fac- we are now."
"
yes.
teacher's one percent pay
the project movmg, we still
ing Southern Elementary,
Southern
teachers
are
the
rai se would cost the district
need money." Without local
the tmprovements to be lowest paid in the state and if an additional $18,000 annumatching dollars, we can't
made and the stal'f's dedi- they receive the raise ally, though the total cost
from PageA1
access the "Save America's
cation to the task.
Ohlinger said that is still would be an increa se of
Treasures" money , Powell reviewed the state report
The importance of com- $1.500 less than the next $32,000 due to a "me too"
explained, so we need lots card with the teachmg staff. pleting federal reduced and
of contributions from local Southem High School was free lunch forms becau se · school distnct on the state 's clause in the contract with
people who are intere sted in rated as an effective school of the way it affects the pay scale for teachers enter- the district's other union the
French CihChorus· SWCf'l Adf'lines
mg the profession at step 0 Ohio Association of Public
Concert.SHturdll~, St-pt. 9 7:)11
seeing this hi storic building and met AYP standards set district's economic status.
with a bachelor's degree. School
Employees
l&lt;aH das...-s hrgin the \U'l'k of S('pl. 10
restored.
ES!S training was pre·
forth by the Federal
Rf'g isti.•r So" Rallrt.l\lodern. Ja zz.
Powell spoke of the Government and the No sented by SEOVEC for the The Southern Local School (OAPSE) which in cludes Ballroum , String, Al'ting. Stogr i\lakf'u p
District pays a base salary of non-certified personne I.
Puppk-try. Women's AenJbtcs
Child Left Behind bill . purpose of mstitutin g an $20,808 fo.r begmning
The " me too" clause says
Ca ll 74ti·-W6-ARTS
The elementary school , on-line grade book and teachers .
that in effect if another union
The Ariel-Dater Hall
however, is in "school ' attendance system at the
In January the SLEA filed in the district gets a raise, so
428 Sec. Av• . Gallipolis, OH
hi gh school. . Elementary the ULP against ODE which does the OAPSE .
improvement" status.
740-446-ARTS (2787)
. It was noted durin g the teachers will record grades
from PageA1
sessions that the building on -line this year, and next
goal
at
Southern year mcorporate the gradeElementary is to reach book and attendance por$15,000.
sc hool status , tion of the program ,
effective
• Approved the the com" • ,. +:.1
emphas1s on , Open houses were held
with
special
pensation and benefits packPresents a
at the two schools on the
age equivalent to the ELEA math and reading.
Princtpal Shawn Bush day before classes started.
for district administrators.
.C/lt(~wc
fLYqiJe'-.~·
• Approved the use of
•
buses for the Morgan's Raid
!fB.oc/ucLlt"HI
re-enactment events.
September 2, 7:00 P.M.
• Approved a ResolutiOn of
Thank
You
Commendation recognizing
September 3,
the recent accomplishments
Richard Hill of Hometown Market
2:00P.M. &amp; 7:00 P.M.
of the schools on the State
for. bL~yillR my 2006
Local Report Card· and the
Meig; Ekmeotary Scbool, SR 124, Rutland, OH
Grand C/wmpion Market Steer
federal No Child Left
.
www.ri~ert:ityplayersohio.org
&amp; supporting our fair.
Behind Annual Yearly
For moce information call Bri•o Howard at 746-992-1044
.
Progress.
The next regular meetmg
Indude: I If I were ARich Man • Sunrise Sunset
will be held at 6:30p.m. on
I
Matchmaker • And More!t
Sept. 20 .
BY HOLLY

ZACHARIAH
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Couple makes whirlwind
trip on Cessna

AP Poll: After Katrina, most Americans
say nation isn't ready for another disaster

Raise

''

Jstahl ~ r @ dispatch .co m

\r

Rumifeld sounds note of caution on reliability
of still-evolving missile difense shield
BY ROBERT BURNS

far-flung mi ss ile defense
system togethet and see
whether it would succeed in
Lettet .\ to th e edt tor tilt) \l'l' ll'ume. Th ev ~hou.ld be less
FOR,T GREELY, Alaska destroying a warheau m
than 3Vb ll'ord.l. All/ett en ore l'llhjecr to. editurg, must be - After hts tirst look in side flight.
.
sig111'd. and includt addre.\1 and telet&gt;lwru' rntmber. No the nerve center of the U.S.
'"That just hasn't hap11n .1i,~ 11 e d ft&gt;trel'l' 1&gt;'1// '"' flllblrshed. Le/ler; shmdd be in
missile · defense system. pened." he said, addin g that
good rasre, oddre•.1ing /,1.1 1/C'.I, not pa.IOIIalttics. Lertrr; of Defense Secretary Donald some elements of the misthank; to orgmti:wiom and individuals will nor he accept· H. Rumsfeld on Sunday sile defense system are yet
ed j(Jr publiu lltun
sounded a note of caution to come on line, including
about expectations that some of the radars and other
~--- --- -----interceptors poised 'in under- sensors used to track the targround stlos here would get missile.
.
work in the .event of a misHe declined to say when
Sile attack hy North Korea.
he thought the misst le
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
Riuns
fe
lu
climbed
down
a
defense system would reach
Ohio Valley Publishing
steel
ladder
into
one
of
10
the point of full reliability.
Co.
Correction Policy
stlos
that
house
single
54but stressed that his advi sOur mam concern in all stones IS to Pub•IShed every attern oon, Monday
foot-long
missile
intercepers,
includmg Lt. Gen.
Through Fnday · 111 Cou rt Stree t.
be accurote If you know of an error Pomeroy
OhiO
Seco nd -c lass
tors. If ordered by President Henry
the
Obering ,
m a story, ca ll the newsroom at (740) postage patd at Pomeroy
Bu sh, or a successor, one or Pentagon's missile defense
992-2156
Member: The Assocmted Press and
more of the rockets would chief, have told him they
the Ohto Newspaper ASSOCIRtiOil
bla't into the sky and race at believe it will work as
Poslmnsler· Send address correc·
more than I 8,000 mph to designed in the event of an
Our main number is
!tons to The Datly Senttnel, 111 Court
launch
H small "kill vehicle"
actual mi ssile attad.
(740) 99.2·2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
at
an
enemy
warhead
as
it
··1 have a lot of confidence
Department e xtensions are :
soared through space.
in ·these folk s, and I have a
Subscription Rates
An
II
th
111terceptor
is
to
lot
of confidence m the
By carrter or motor route
News
be
installed
at
Greely
on
work
that's bee n done."
One month
'10.27
Monday,
officials
said.
Editor. Charlene Hoeflich. E)(t 12
Rum sfeld satd.
One year
'123.24
Asked at a news conferLater.
111
nearby
Daily
so•
Reporter Bnan Reed , Ext 14
Senior
Cllizen
rates
ence
later
whether
he
Rumsfe
ld
met
Fairbanks,
Reporter Beth Scrnent , Fx t 13
One month
'9.24
believed the missile shield witti hi s Russian counterOne year
' 103.90
was rea(ly for use against a ' part ; Sergei Ivanov. They
Subscnbers should remit tn advance
Advertising
North Korean missile like discussed the situation m the
tirect to the Oatly Sentinel. N o subOutside Sales: Dave Harns. Ext 15
the one test-llred unsuccess- Middle
East and
in
scn ptton by mail permttted m areas
fully
on
July
4.
Rumsfeld
Outside Sales . Brenda Dav1 s Ext 16
Afghanistan
as
well
as
wl'lere home earner servtce ts avail·
said he would not be fully Russian concern about an
Class /Circ.: Judy Clark. Exl 10
able
persuaded until the multibil- announced U.S. plan to
lion dollar defense system remove nuclear warheads
Mail Subscription
General Manager
has undergone more com- from some Tndent long Inside Meigs County
Charlene Hoeflich Ext 12
13 Weeks
' 32 .26
plete and realistic testing .
range missiles aboa rd sub26 Weeks
'64 20
He alluded to hi s own marines and replace them·
52Weeks
' 127.11
E-mail ·
skeptical nature. "I want to with conventional warheads
see it happen," he said, "A for potential use on short
ne~s@mydntlysentm~l com
Outside Meigs County
full end-to-end" demonstra- notice agai nst terrorist tat 13 Weeks
'53 55
tion
is needed "where we gets.
Web·
26 Weeks
' 107 10
put all the pieces"
"I would like to stress th is
actually
www mydn tlysenttnel com
52 Weeks
'2 14 21
- - - - -- - ·
- -- - · - , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ j
of the highly complex and point: These ,tre prelimin,uy

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

AP MILITARY WRITER

(U.S.) plans and for sure
these plans raise Russtan
concern," "Ivanov said during a Joint news conference
with Rumsfeld at a lodgJ? on
the bank s of the Chcna
River. "There can be diffet ent solutton s" to the problem, such as using cn1ise
mi ssiles in th at role, he
added.
Patrick
Brig.
Gen.
O'Reilly, program director
for the ground-based interceptor
system,
told
Rumsfeld that on Thursday
an interceptor based at a
senllld launch site, at
Vandenberg Air Force Base,
Calif., is ,chcduled to be
tested against a target missile launched mto the
Pacific · from
Alaska's
Kodtak Island.
That will be the tlrst full up test of the latest vers1011
of the interceptor and its
"kill vehicle," a device
attached to the nose of the
mterceptor. Once it separates from the intercept01 's
three-stage booster. the "kill
vehicle" is ue signed to use
its own propulsion system
and optical sensors to lot:k
onto its target and, by ramming mto it at hi gh speed.
obi iterate the warhedd and
any payload it mi ght carry.
Thursday's test also will
be the llrst use of an earlywarning radar at Beale Air
Force Base, Calif.. to .provide the data required to put
the interceptor on a proper
path toward its target. The
interceptor will be controlled from a command
ce nter
near
Colorad o

Springs, Colo. Fort Greely
has a si milar wmmand &lt;.:enter.
Obcring said the ma111
objective of Thur-cl.1y\ test
will be to sec tf tMc optical
sensors on the " kill vducle"
aboard the interceptor work
as de signed. · Whether 11
actudlly i,n ter~e pt s the target
ts seconda ry, he 'aid. A turther test, now scheduled lo t
December. will try for an
tntetcept , Obering Stud.
At a news co nference.
Rumsfeld said that No rth
Korea's leaders showed, by
their test; launch of mu ltiple
missile s on Jul y +. a uetermination to "contllllle to
improve their capability and
to threaten and attempt to
blackmail other pt•oplc." He
said they also are a threat to
spread mi ssi le technology to
tcrronsts.
"I think the real threat that
North Korea poses in the
immediate future 1s more

one of proliferation th an a
danger to South Kot~a ." he
said. Asked to elaborate on
that potnt, Rum,kld smd
US. inte llige nce about the
llltenttons of No t'th Kore.tll
leaders is not wry good. but
he satd it is clear that the
over,tll condition nf the
North Korean tnilu.trv ha'
deteno rated. He nwniioneu
that North Korean atr force
pi lot s are able to lly fewe r
than 50 hours a year -- Jc,s
than nne-q u drtcl the lli.tllllll!l
done hy U.S pilots
'
"I uon ·t see them. frankly.
as an immediate military
threat 10 Sou th Korea." he
said.

.Project .

School

Board

IF' ul Farmers Bank
6i(y

Tradition •

7

�•

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily .S~ntinel

Monday, August 28, 2006

COUNTY'S JUMP IN YOliTH DOMESTIC
~

VIOlENCE ARRESTS SPARKS CONCERN
CLEVELAND '(AP)
Parents: judges and educators
are ·concerned
about the number of juveniles charge'd· with domes tic violence in Cuyahoga
County, which has ·nearly
doubled in the
past
decade.
The
cou nty,
which
includes Cleveland, the
number of teens charged
with domestic violence
went from 504 in 1996
and to 977 last year, and
so me wonder whether
many more cases aren't
being reported.
More kids sit in detention for abusing a household member than for robbery, assault or drug deal ing.
Some experts say parents have become more
willing to report their
children
as
abusers,
Others say authorities are
more apt to prosecute
teens, rather than send
them to counseling.
Whatever the explanation, most experts say
adolescent-to-parent
abuse remains ' underreported,
Researchers place the
instances
of children
abusing parents - physi cally, mentally or emotionally - as high as 18
percent in two-parent
homes and 30 percent in.
single-parent homes.
Lisa Elek, an only child,
was young when her parents divorced, and her
mother · remarried nine
years ago .. Shelly Court
cleans houses and is a student at Lorain County
Community College ,
"I just look at her sometimes and get annoyed,"
Elek, 14, said of her
mother. "We've had so
many fights,''
Court said her daughter
started slipping from her
control as a preteen by
smoking and ·staying out
past curfew. ·
·
After Elek struck · her
mother last fall, a juvenile
court magistrate placed
her on probation and
ordered Elek to observe a
strict curfew, submit to
random drug testing and
attend school every day.
"I see the same things
over and over again,"
Cuyahoga
County
Juvenile Court Magistrate
Peter Murray said. "These
kids simply don't want to
follow the rules set by
their parents."

AP Photo

Lisa Elek left argues with her mother, Shelly Court, at their Elyria, Thursday. They have had
many arguments in the past year about Lisa's rebellious attitude. One argument turned violent. Parents , judges and educators are concerned about the number of juveniles charged
with domestic violence in Cuyahoga County, which has jumped nearly 60 percent in the past
decade. The county, which includes Cleveland, the number of teens charged with domestic
violence went from 504 in 1996 and to 977 last year, and some wonder whether many
more cases aren't being reported.
Jerome Price , of the sents hundreds of juve Michigan Family Therapy niles charged with domesInstitute , allributcs the tic· violence, said experts
problem to a power shift might be overthinking the
between parents and chi!- problem.
dren..
Kids are often arrested.
"It sta'rted in the 1960s he said, because it's the
when people began to s implest
solution
for
view children as people police, even though most
with rights," Price said. fights are "mutual com"They should have rights, bat ." It's · against the law
but we went too far and for kids to hit their pargave them equal rights."
ents but it's not against
Complicating the issue, the law for parents to hi t
he said, is that corporal their kids, Amata said.
punishment fell out of
Amata doesn ' t think
favor but nothing .replaced society should be saddled
it as a tool for parents to with the blame. Tbe parcontrol tl\eir children.
· ents he meets on the job
Along with the imbal- often aren't ideal.
a nee of power came an
" They · are ·often overacceptance
of
"bad" worked, overwhelrned and
teenage behavior. said don 'I spertd mtlch 'time
Bethel
University with their kids." or have
researcher
Nancy theh1selves been abused
Eckstein. Parents often or banered in ·front· of
view these cases ''as a their children. "So when
temper
tantrum . gone they - parents - try and
awry" and hope their exert th e mselves , they get
teens will "grow out of this reaction," Amala said.
it."
,
Juvenile
prosecutor
These parents frequent - Carmen Naso agrees that
ly start with rules and the rea so ns behind the
guidelines, Eckstein saicj, violence may be more
"but the.y get tired and personal than societal.
worn down" and eventualIn the past, many of
ly give up.
these kids were labeled
. Juvenile public defender unruly and sent to counSalvatore Amata, whose seling. But these days if a
office every year repre- kid hits a parent, he won ' t .

Local weather
Forecast for MondJIY, Aug. 28

city/Region

High I Low temps

MtCH.
78' 164'

Mansfield •

n•tsso

· · Dayton•~

Youngstown •
77' 164°

~

'
SANDUSK
(AP) - Andy
Warner snapped a deformed
pickle in half with a weary
sigh. "See that? It's getting
hollow," he said.
Dry weather and disease
have combined to make it
tough on pickle farmers in
northern Ohio this summer.
After heavy rains in the
early summer, there has
been little moisture in the
last month .
Warner estimated ·that he
won't be able to sell about
30 percent his crop because
the pickles are hollow or too
crooked . That
doesn 't
include the ones that fell off
the vine and into the field
instead of the hopper on one
of six harvesting machines
he shares with other faimers .
· "We need some moisture,"
he said. "We could irrigate
pickles, but the people we
raise them for said it wouldn't b.e worthwhile."
Mildew ruined about 40
percent of Nate Liskai's
crop near Woodville. The
fields took on too much rain

early in the year. The plants
grow close to the ground
and are susceptible to too
much rain and get soft or
rotten.
.
"Mother n'ature 's been u
little brutal this year." he
said. " It 's a terrible year. It's
right up there with one of
the worst ones.''
,
Liskai said he sprayed
chemicals on to stop the
mildew, adding to his costs
this year. " It was just a
Band-Aid ," he said.
His tomato crop fared
even worse, estimating that
all but 20 percent is lost.
Adding to his woes \"as a
shortage of labor.
Over the last few years,
pickers have been in short
fewer
supply
because
migrant families have been
coming to northwest Ohio
for the harvest
Some migrant workers
aren't traveling to Ohio
because there is not enough
work in harvesting tomatoes, cucumbers and sugar
beets.

/

~

A year's work: ·Delaware
woman makes 100
qullts for charity
DELAWARE (AP)
When Edith Ireton was
looking for a way to keep
herself busy and do some
good, she decided to make
quilts for charity.'
Nearly one year and 100
quilts later, the 88-year-old
shows no signs of stoP.ping.
lre(on gave the qu1Its to
Ronald McDonald House
Charities of Central Ohio ,
which in turn distributed
them to families living in
the organization's apartment housing while their
sick children receive medical treatment.
"The news is so terrible
today all the . time and
there's not anything I can
do about it," she said. "I
knew I .c ould make a quilt,
so I decided I'd better get
busy."
Ireton isn't alone in her
quilt
making
quest.
Residents at her Delaware
retirement community, 30
miles north of Columbus,
donated the quilting materials and her friends help her
tie the yam.
Peter Jones, Volunteer
Director for Columbus'
Ronald McDonald House,
told Ireton that the charity

appreciated all of her hard
work and craftsmanship.
"These quilts she keeps
making for us are just like
artwork," Jones said. "They
.just lift people's spirits
every time we hand them
out."
·
Making the quilts was
something she's done for
the enjoyment, not recognition, for as long as she can
remember, Ireton said,
"It seems like - I have
been putting quilts together
my whole life ," she said. "I
can't remember a time
when I wasn't making a
quilt or helping someone
make a quilt."
· The Columbus Ronald
McDonald House serves
about I ,300 famil_ies a year,
and stays can range from a
few
days
to
several
months, Jones said. ·
Ireton said she hopes the
patients and families enjoy
using the quilts as much as
she enjoyed making them.
. She said the colorful patterns brighten her day and
that she enjoys having the
work to do_
"Making
quilts
also
keeps me out of trouble."
Ireton said.

2 Col. x 4"

Clnclnnllll

• 81 ' 168"

~ Pomrnouth •
~·

83'170•

1 Col.

KY
~

Cloudy ~
~
~
Portly o-....._ '''''
~.. d '(__) Show ers
\.rl\A.I y

X

2" -

0

Thunder·~

Flurrtes

Slom'lS

~

~

POMEAOV -A scheduJe of upcoming college
and hV!9Chool varsity sporting wents mvotvng
teams !1001 Gallll'l, Meigs and MaSO!l countiet&gt;

Todoy't aamn

Volleyball

Athens at Ri\o'er Valley, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Minford. 6 p.m.
Oak Hill at South Gallia. 5:30 p.m.
Belpre at Eastern, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Fairland, 5:30p.m .

Soccer
Ironton St. Joe at OVCS, 4:30p.m.
Gc~

Gal_tia Academy, River Valley, South
Gallla, Po1nt Pleasant at Cliffside 4:30
p.m.
'
.
TVC Ohio at Fairgreens, 4:30p.m.
luglday'l QOmtl !

.
M

Volleyball

Eastern at South Gallia, 5:30p.m.
GaMia Academy at Logsn, 5:tp p.m.
Eastern at South Gallia, 5:30p.m.
OVCS at Chesapeake. 5:30p.m.

Soccer

.

South Point at OVCS, 5:30p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Gh1a Soccer
Sissonville at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m..
GbH
Gallla Academy, River Valley at Cliffside,
4:30 p.m.
TVC Hocking at Waterford. 4:30p.m.
Women's College Soccer
Mount Vernon Nazarene at Rio Grande,
4p.m:
Wadntaday's qam11

Goll

Bonds, Giants bash Cincinnati, 8-0
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Barry Bonds and the
other San Francisco hitters
made it an easy afternoon
for rookie Matt Cain.
Cain pitched seven sharp
innings and the resurgent
Giants won. again •. beating
the slumpmg C~ncmnati
Reds 8-0 Sunday. Omar
Vizquel, Ray Durham and
Shea Hillenbrand each
drove in two 'runs as San
Francisco won for the II th
time in 14 games.
Bonds went 3-for-3 and
Giants pulled within 1wo
games of Cincinnati in the
wild-card race and kept up
1ts chase of Los Angeles in
the NL West.
Bonds also drew his IOOth
AP photo · walk of the season. He's batSan Franci~coGiants' Barry Bonds, right, drives in a run with a ting .251 with 17 home run s
Single as Clflclflnatl Reds catcher David Ross, left, looks on in and 55 RBls this year.
"He's getting hot again
the sixth inning of a baseball game on Sunday in San Francisco.

Ran

•

*

Snow

Monday ... Mostly cloudy
with scattered showers and
thunderstorms. Humid with
highs in the . upper 80s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph . Chance of rain 50
percent.
Monday night...Showers
and thunderstorms likely.
Humid with lows around
70. Southwest winds 5 to
10 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
1\Jesday,.,Mostly cloL1dy
with scattered showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the

BY lARRY CRUM

CLEVELAND (AP) Kenny Rogers knew the situation and stepped up. .
Rogers put on a pitching
performance that Detroit
desperately needed and the
Tigers backed him with four
home runs, beating the
Cleveland
Indians
7-1
Sunday and ending a fou!'game losing streak.
"I wanted to be the guy to
stop it," Rogers said.
"That's for sure."
Curtis Granderson led off
the game with a homer and
Marcus Thames, Carlos
Guillen and Ivan Rodriguez
later connected as the Tigers
averted a four-game sweep.
· They won for only the sixth
time in 19 games since Aug.
7 - when they held a 10game lead in the AL
Central.
'
Manager Jim Leyland
said that's no reason to alter
his patient approach,
"I told the team what they
saw today is why I haven't
been ranting and raving,"
L-eyland said. "We're not
going to panic. What's been
pappening to us is what
happens to every team in
baseball. It's noticed more
because we're in a pennant
race. We're not going to
have meetings or all this
urgency. It doesn't work
that way."
Cleveland had won four
in a row overall ami eight
straight at home.
Detroit, with the best
record in the majors, has a
five-game division lead
over Minnesota. After an
off-day, the Tigers start a
three-game series against
New York at Yankee
Stadium. Thlu doe sn't seem
to faze Leyland, either.
"Either
we're
good
enough or we're not," he
said . ."Yo'u have to keep
playing . If it's good enough,
·we ' II still be playing in
October. If not, we'll go
home . We'll find out."
Rogers ( 14-6) won his
third straight start, allowing
one run and · four hits in
seven innings.
"Every pitcher .knows
how much the games mean
when you go out there," he
said. "This took on added
importance with the way
we've been playing . I know
it's important, but it doesn't

CHESHIRE Facing
the largest field of runners
ever at the Early Bird
·Invitational cross country
race, Eastern's Michael
Owens stepped up to the
challenge and showed them
all up, blazing the course at
River Valley High School
and setting a riew course
record on his way to winning the varsity boys event
at Saturday's race.
Owens completed the
course in 13:55, a good bit
ahead .of second place finishing Jacob Ruggles of
Wheelersburg who finished
with a 14:20 time. Owens
mark was good enough to
set the new coutse record
and enough to give him the
individual crown at the first
cross country race of the
season.
Behind Ruggles was a
pack of Pirates as Ryan Bell
(14:37), Eli Gerlach (14:38)
and , Tervor Miller (14:43) ·
finished just behind, with
fellow Wheelersburg runner
Derek Massie ( 15: II) finishing seventh. Jackson 's
Bryce Wilson .( 14:57) finished sixth, but because
Eastern nor Jackson had
enough to field a team. all
the points went the way of .
the Pirates as Wheelersburg
took the boys team win with
a perfect score of 15.
Finishing just behind in
second was Ashland with 91
points and host team River
Valley with 96 points, while
(I 13 ), ·
Vinton
County
Alexander ( 117). Southern
( 133), Gallia Academy
( 165) and Meigs , (221)
rounded out the team finishes.
The Raiders managed to
finish third behind strong
running
from
Vince
Weatherstein who finished
.
.
· Larry Crum photo
eighth with a time of 15:17. Eastern senior Michael Owen makes his way to the finish line during Saturday's Early Bird
Invitational at River Valley High School in Cheshire. Owen set a eourse record of 13:55 in
Please see Owen. B2
the 2.5-mile tune up for the 2006 cross country season.

Bv

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fu- 1·740·446 -JDOB
..E·mall- sports@mydailysentinel.com
~ll!Ji!;tl!

Br.ad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342, eKI. 33
bsherman@mydailytribune.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342 , 911:1. 23
bwalters@ mydaily1nbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer

'

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DOUG FERGUSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

OVP Score line (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)

2 Col. x 2"

BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED

P~E SS

CINCINNATI The
fi rs1 time Carson Pal mer
jogs onto the field to call a
play. ttle comeback will be
complete.
The 64,000 fans at Paul
Brown Stadium will erupt
w h e n
Palmer with · a
bulky
k n e e

b r a ce

showing
through
his · tigerstriped pants and socks lines up to take the first snap
Monday night on the same
field where he tore up his
left knee seven months ago.
No more acting like a
patient. He's a player again_
And that means the Green
Bay Packers are going to hit
him a1 some point, maybe
even take a shot at his legs.
When that happens, the air
will 1i10mentarily go out of
the crowd, just as it did the
la&gt;t time he went down _
Can he handle it?
'Tm curious to see how
he's going to react. how he's
going
to
hold
up."
Cincinnati Bengals receiver
T.J. Houshmandzadeh .said.
·-rm just hoping he's going
to be all right. "
Palmer's return is the
biggest of several expected
on Monday night, when the
Packers and rhe Bengals
will gel a much better read
on where they swnd head ing into the regular season.
Running back · Ahman
Green, linebacker Brady
Puppinga
and
safety
Marquand Manuel are planning to make their first
appearances for Green Bay.
Green had put together four
consecutive I, I00-yard seasons before he tore a tendon
in his . right thigh midway
through last season.
Woods ended his round
Green is expected to start
Friday by hilling a 9-iron over and carry the ball about a '
the green, onto the clubhouse doLen limes, giving firstroof and down the other side. He year coach Mike McCarthy
followed that by making four an idea of what to expect
straight bogey s Saturday, his when the season begins.
longest such streak in nearly 10
'The game will dictate
years.
that." McCarthy sa id . " I
Under darkening clouds in the want to gel him in there and
final round, he went from a two- see how he feels after 15
shot deficit to a three-shot lead (plays). I want to be smart. I
in a span of four holes, then lost want to take the same
a three-shot lead over the tina! approach as we did with the
three holes 10 slip into a playoff. other guys in game one."
" I was very lucky to even be
The Benga ls are going to
in the playoff," Woods said .
be cautious with Palmer as
The result was familiar, espe- well, seei ng how he handles
cially at this event. Woods now his biggest lest yet.
has won five time s at Firestone,
Palmer tore ligaments and
the most of any golf course on dislocated hi s i'efl knee on
the PGA Tour. He has won four hi s tirst pass of a 3 1-17
times each at Augusta National playoff loss to Piusburgh in
and Torrey Pines_
January. He hopes to play in
His latest winning streak the &gt;euson opener· Sept. I0
required more than a lillie luck _ in Kansas City. exactly
Woods has won his last four eight months after the
starts, his longest winning injury.

Notebook

Woods celebrates 10-year
anniversary with a win

CoNTAcrUs

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•• •• •

lower 80s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 50 percent
Tuesday night...Partly
cloudy with scattered showers. Lows in the mid 60s.
North winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday
through
Thursday
night...Partly
cloudy. Highs in the upper
70s. Lows in the upper 50s.
Friday
through
Sunday ... Most ly
clear.
Highs around 80, Lows in
the mid 50s .

games for San Francisco,
and the ·first since Ryan
Jen sen in 2002_ Cain has
given up one run and 12 hits
over his last 19 1-3 innings.
;' He 's getting better every
outing," Giants manager
Felipe Alou said . "Every
time he throws a pitch Ire has
so me thought behind it,
some strategy."
The 3-4-5 hillers were a
combined 8-for-13 with five
RBi s. ·Hillenbrand, balling
third, had three hits.
Bonds had nine hits in his
last 20 at-bats on the homesland. including a home run,
and drove in five run s.
"He's not getting pitches
to hit for home runs but hi: is
gelling pitches to do what
he's doing now and we need
that," Alou said. " He looks

Owens sets course rec~ at Early Bird Invite Palmer's
Tigers claw
return one
Indians, 7-1
of many
Monday

~ ' \ . • ~ •. : .:: ~
~
~

and he's still one of the best
hitters in 'the game, regardless of what anybody says."
Hillenbrand said. "When
Bonds gets hot, the threehole hitter sees a lot more
strikes."
The Reds have lost four of
· five since climbing within
percentage points of NL
Central-leading St. Louis.
Cain ( 10-9) gave up four
hils, struck out nine and
walked two. He allowed
· only two runners past tirst
base.
"I wanted to establish the
zone early and I was able to
do that," he sa id . 'The
offense was awesome. It
takes pressure off when we
score early. I could concenIrate on getting my first two
pitches in the zone."
Cain became the ninth
rookie to win at least 10

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get a break, Naso said.
Mo st police departments
have stringent rules about
making an arrest if there
are signs of violence in
the home.
'Twenty or 25 years ago
the preferred course was
keeping the peace - not
making
an
arrest,"
Lakewood Pol ice Chief
Tim Malley said.
Court
officials
and
counselors say there must
be better approaches to
the problem.
Amata proposes a safe
place
where
children
could go to cool down and
be linked with counselors
instead of sent to court.
The court is also developing a program to work
...-ith families · before and
after a juvenile appears in
court, said Juvenile Court
Administrator
Ken
Lusnia .
"It's very important for
us to intervene quickly
with domestic violence,"
he said. "But unlike
offenses where the court
traditionally focuses on
the juvenile, with this we
really need to focus on the
whole family."

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

USA advances to round of 16, Pa~ 82

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Inside

AP photo

Tiger Woods looks down as he lifts the top of the Gary
Player Cup after his victory during the final round of the
Bridgestone Invitational World Goff Championships
Sunday in Akron . Woods won 'after four sudden-death
playoff holes against Stewart Cink.

AKRON -For three straight
holes in a playoff, Tiger Woods
could only stand to the side of
the green and watch someone
else control his fate Sunday at
the Bridgestone lnvitational.
Given a chance to win, he
wasn 't about to waste it 1 •
W9ods hit an 8-iron through· a
. driving rain into 8 feet on the
fourth extra hole, then made the
birdie putt to outlast Stewart
Cink at Firestone South for his
·fourth consecutive victory.
II came on the lOth anniversary of his turning pro, and it
gave Woods his 52nd career victory to match Byron Nel son for
tlfth all time_ ·
"Just end this thing now,"
Woods said he told himself on
the birdie pull at No. 17. "If I
make mine, it's over."
And it was, but not before a
roller-coaster round that capped
off a strange week.

Please see Woods, Bl

Please see Palmer, Bl

�•
J

Page B2 :The Daily Sentinel

Monda~August28,2006

~onday,August28,2oo6

www.mydailysentinel.com

m:rtbune- Sentinel -l\e

United.States advances to round of 16, beats Australia by 40
SAITAMA. Japan (AP) - outscored its last two opponents,
Senegal and Australia, by a comLook out, world.
The United States routed bined 216-131.
Of course, neith~1 Senegal nor
Australia 113-73 Sunday, sending an unmistakable message to Australia is in the .;arne hoops
the FIBA world championships. universe as Spain ,,. Argentina,
This isn 't the team that proved an which are mowing down the
embarrassment in recent interna- opposition on the other side of
the bracket.
tional competitions.
That's why Elton Brand said he
"We wanted to make a statement coming into the round of hopes his teammates aren't tak16," said ·forward Chris Bosh, ing anyone for granted. Brand
who grabbed a game-high nine played on· the 2002 U.S. world
championship team that finished
rebounds.
On a day that every American sixth in Indianapolis.
scored, Carmelo Anthony led the · "We're not going to be cocky
U.S. with 20 points while Joe about it," Brand said. "There are
Johnson added 18 and Dwyane some teams that can give us comWade 15.
petition."
Granted , the
Australians
Australia wasn't one of them,
weren't much of a test. They at least not for 40 minutes. The
went 2-3 in group play and have Aussies led 15-14 after five minfew weapons beside Milwaukee utes and trailed by only 27-23 at
Bucks center Andrew Bogut, who the end of the first period. But
then the U.S., which has been
scored 20 points.
. But the Americans made it look plagued by slow starts •'throughalmost too easy, turning a tight out the tourney, began to knock
game into a Iaugher by outscor- down shots on offense and crack
mg the Australians 32-6 in the down on defense.
The Americans outscored
second quarter.
Now the U.S. can look forward Australia 32-6 in the second
to its quarterfinal -up Wednesday quarter, and it wasn't that close.
"The second quarter, we kind
night against Germany. another
team with a star NBA center and of took off and had the game in
a mostly anonymous supporting 'hand from that point," Wade said.
"Today was the best we played
cast. Dirk Nowitzki of Dallas is
third in tournament scoring, as a unit , with everyone making
the extra pass, getting the guys
averaging 24.5 points.'
Given the way the U.S. is play- the best shot possible," Wade
ing, it might be more fair to make said. "When you do that, it
them face Bogut' and Nowitzki makes your team play that much
better because everyone feels
together.
"I think our biggest opponent is good, everyone's involved, one
ourselves right now," Johnson through 12. That's what we're
said. "We've just got to keep our looking for."
Offense hasn 't been an issue
intensity up:"
Asked if the U.S. is unbeatable f0r the Americans, the highestwhen it s shots are falling, scoring team in the tournament.
Johnson replied, "No doubt. But the defense was inconsistent
When our shots are falling· and during group play, and that's why
Sunday's game was so encouragwhen they're not falling."
If Johnson sounds confident ing.
The
U.S.
limited . the
it's because the U.S. has

fromPageBl
streak since he won six in a
row at the end of the 1999
season and the beginning of
2000.

That was Woods at his
peak, and he might be heading there again. He doesn 't
always win easily, but he
finds a way. .
"You don't know how
many chances you're going
to have to beat Tiger in a
· playoff in your career,"
Cink said.
Cink, who missed an 8foot par putt that would
have won on the third playoff hole, hit into the bunker ,
and blasted qut to 6 feet on
the 17th. Before he could
save par, ne wound up
shaking hands with Woods
and watching him collect

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· ts

and Keith Williams (68th,
22:51).
While Eastern's Owens
took overall first place,
other finishers (or the
Eagles included Aaron
Martindale (12th, 15:44)
and Keith Aeiker (40th,
18:26). Also finishing
Saturday's race was Steven
Call as the lone member of
the South Galli a cross country squad. Call rang in at
17:25, good enough for a
26th place finish.
In the girls race, Gallia
Academy got off to the
great start they were hoping

for with a first pla~e team
finish with 55 points.
Alexander was second with
79 points, followed by
Meigs (86), Wheelersburg
(89), Ashland (118), Vinton
County (142), River Valley
(148) and Jackson (163).
Leading the Blue Angels
in their big opening season
win was the always fast Lee
Ann Townsend. She finished third with a time of
16:46, with teammate Carol
Fahmy also finishing in the
top I 0 with an eighth place
at a time of 17:52.
Genna Baker (19:46) and

another
World
Golf
Championship.
"I didn't convert. and he
did," Cink said. 'That's
why he has the trophy."
· ,L\nd to think it was 10
years ago Sunday - Aug.
27, 1996 - that he introduced himself to the PGA
Tour by saying, "Hello,
world."
These 'days, he is saying
"goodbye" to the competition.
A week ago, he captured
the !'GA Championship for
his 12th career major, trailing only the 18 won by Jack
Nicklaus. He now has 52
victories, and only Arnold
Palmer (62), Ben Hogan
(64), Nicklaus (73) and
Sam Snead (82) have more.
Even so, Woods said he is
only worried about himself.
"It's always yourself," he
said. "You're always trying
to better what you've done
in the past - · always .

Hopefully, that's ·good
enough to beat the rest of
the guys."
Cink was looking for a
peculiar repeat.
Two years ago, he valldated Hal Sutton's decision
to. make him a captain's
pick for the Ryder Cup by
winning at Firestone. Tom
Lehman picked him on
Monday, and Cink nearly
delivered his first victory in
two years.
"There were a lot of highs
and lows today." Cink said.
"Unfortunately, I tinished
on a low."
Cink had a shot to win on
the first, three playoff holes
- a 20-foot chip that
grazed the lip at No. 18, an
18-foot putt that missed on
the high side at No. 17, and
an 8-foot par putt on the
18th again that missed to
the right. .
Woods was in trouble
most of the time. On the

first extra hole, .he pulled
his approach long and left
into the rough, but pitched
beautifully to 5 feet and
escaped with par. The second time playing the 18th in
the playoff, Woods found a
greenstde bunker 40 feet
from the flag, blasted out to
8 feet and left it inches
short.
.
Victory ·
seemed
inevitable for Woods, as it
often does at Firestone,
when he turned a two-shot
deficit · at the turn into a
three-shot lead with his 20foot birdie on the 13th. No
one else was making
birdies, and Woods wasn't
making 111istakes.
That changed on the 652yard I 6th hole, when
Woods hit into the trees
down the right side and had
to pitch out to the fairway,
leaving himself some 230
yards to the flag. He went
over the green, chipped to 4

fromPageBl

Woods

CLASSIFIED

••

Owen
The other River Valley finishers included Koby
Johnson (25th, 17:12),
Daniel Hill (28th, 17:45),
Brandon Kirby (32nd,
17:57), Tyler Young (34th,
18:02), David Householder
(35th, 18:04), James Porter
(67th, 22:28) and Jon Porter
(69th, 22:56).
The Tornadoes produced
a strong finish on the afternoon with Kraig Kleski
(17th, 16:40) and Kyle
Goode (18th, 16:42) leading
the way at the frqnt. Adding
to 'the Southern score was
Cody Patterson (44th,
18:42), Chris Burkhamer
18:57), . Colby
(47th,
Rosebury (48th, 18:57),
Drew Hoover (53rd, 20:20),
Kris Kleski (58th, 21 :00)
and Nathan Roush (70th,
23:0 I).
Gallia Academy ·did not
have as good a race as
hoped, as Shane Plantz
highlighted the Blue Devil
running squad with a 21st
place finish at a time of
16:49. Behind him was Seth
Amos (27th, 17:42), Dallas
Kraft
(41st,
18:29),
Brandon Welch (59th,
21 :03) and Tyler Counts
(62nd, 21 :35).
Meigs rounded out the
team scores in eighth, with
high finisher Andrew
o· B.ryant leading the points
with a 46th place finish at a
time of 18:56. Behind him
was Joey Morgan (49th,
19:02), Morgan Kennedy
(60th,
21: 16),
Darby
Gilmore (61 st, 21 :22), Ian
• Bullington . (63rd, 21 :40),
Jacob Riffle (66th, 22:21)

•

Australians to 41 percent shooting, including 24 percent from
beyond tlie 3-point arc. Australia
committed 24 turnovers. many
the result of pressure.
·•we know that if we play
defense, we'll . be pretty good,"
Bosh said. "We know we can
sc'ore the ball. We know we play .
with anybody offensively. But
we know it's our defense that's
going to help us out."
Defense may lielp the U.S. win
the championship. But the
Australians cou ldn't help but be
dazzled by the Americans ' attack.
Australian point guard C.J.
Bruton likened this team to
Dream Teams I and II.
"It's a squad compared to them
because they move the ball like
those teams did," Bruton said.
"The teams that have won the
gold medal for USA. definitely
move the ball as well as this
team."
They move it welt And on
Sunday they shot it even better.
The Americans shot 54 percent
from the floor. Ami after shooting 39 percent from beyond the
arc in group play, the U.S: made
14-of-27 (52 percent) Sunday.
Even Bosh and Brad Miller hit
their first international 3-point. ers. Three-point shooting was
supposed to be one of the
Americans' flaws. If the U.S.
starts knocking down long-range
shots, it will be difficult to beat.
The· U.S. has trailed after halftime· in one game, against Italy,
which it beat 94-85. Wade was
asked if the Americans were
tempted to look toward the finals
and a possible showdown with
Argentina or Spain, both also 60.
"You don't really think about
AP photo
it," Wade said. "You just win or
go home . We just need to get bet- USA's Carmela Anthony, (15). of NBA's Denver Nuggets dunks during a
match against Australia the World Basketball championships in Saitama,
ter as a team."
near Tokyo, Sunday. USA defeated Australia 113-?3.
Better? Look out, world.
Allia Saunders (19:59) finished in 19th and 20th
respectively, with Aarika
Stanley
(24th, 20:48)
rounding out the scorers.
Behind them was Andrea
Wiseman (26th, 21 :04),
Sara Elberfeld (32nd,
21 :57), Hannah Roush
(39th, 23:21 ), Jessica Willet
(48th, 24:38) and Daniell~
Sanders (65th, 29:42).
Meigs had a strong third
place finish at Saturday's·
meet, led by to 10 finisher
Kimi Swisher at 8th with a
time of 18:25. The other
scorers included Devan
Sou1sby (14th, · 19:22),
Jessica Holliday (23rd,
20: 18), Meghan Clelland
(25th, 21 :02), Emily Fields
(43rd, 23:55), Cecilia Core
(49th,
24:43 ),
Nicole
Andrus (54th, 25:57) and
Veronica Grimm (64th,
28:54). .
Host team River Valley
brought home a seventh
place finish at the meet led
by Ashley Fitch who finished ninth at a time of
18:39. Behind her was Tara
Workman (33rd, 22:03),
Carissa Gilmore (44th,
24:04), Kayla Smith (46th,
24:31), Elaine Householder
(57th, 26:47) and Brooke
Dean (66th, 29:58).
Of the
non-scoring
teams, Eastern led the way
with solid finishes from
Alyssa Newland (19:05)
and Kay lee Milan (19:13)
who finished in lith and
12th respectively. Beth
Hysell was the other finisher for the Lady Eagles at
6lst at a time of27:59. The
other non points scoring
runner was Alisha Sinclair
who brought home a 63rd
place finish at a time of
28:39 for Southern.

Larry Crum/photo

Eastern's Kaylee Milam, left, and Meigs· Kimi Swisher,
right, battle for position during Saturday's Early Bird
Invitational at River valley High School in Cheshire.
·

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Palmer
.
from Page Bl

How he does on Monday
will tell a lot.
· "Hopefully I can get
through a .number of different situations and overcome
those obstacles," Palmer
said.
The biggest test will come
the 'first time the surgically
rebuilt knee gets hit. Palmer
hasn't been tackled during
practice, so no one knows
for sure.
Will the knee swell up?
Will Palmer try to protect
it? Can he get that awful
memory out of his head'!
Until recently, he had
been looking at the pass
rush during practice, trying
to make sure no one hit the
leg. That's the worst thing a
quarterback can do.
"But the last week and a
half, I've felt ·great," Palmer
feet and missed the par putt.
Cink, who started the
final round with a one-shot
lead, holed a 1.5-foot birdie
on the I 6th hole, then made
a 20-foot birdie putt on the
17th hole to tie Woods atop
the leaderboard.
Woods (68) and Cink
(69) each had to make a
testy 3-footer for par on the
18th hole in regulation Woods after leaving his 20foot putt from the fringe
short, Cink after lagging
from 90 feet at the front of
the green,
Jim Furyk closed with a
68 to fmish one shot
behind, making a 10-foot.
par save on the 18th to give
himself a chance. Paul
Casey of England, among
four players atop the
leaderboard at one point in
the final round, stumbled
on the back nine and shot
71. He tied for fourth along
with Angel Cabrera (65),

said. "I haven't been looking at the rush, and I've
been staring at the defense. I
have been looking downfield and not at what's going
on around me."
Palmer's doctors believe
the knee is strong enough to
take a hit. Palmer knows he
needs to get hit to help with
the psychological part of his
comeback.
·
"If it happens a couple of
times, that's great," he said.
"My knee is strong enough
to withstand it, and I'll have
a knee brace on. I won't
know how it will react to
that until it happens."
Everyone will be watching to see how he reacts.
"I had a chance to be
around him a little bit when
he was at USC, and you root
for guys . like Carson
Palmer," McCarthy said.
"He's a talented young man
who has really hit hi s stride
these last two years. You ·
want a guy like that to come
back."
Lucas Glover (69) and
Davis Love Ill (7 1).
Woods, Cink and Furyk
headed to the Cleveland
airport to join tlie rest of
their U.S. Ryder Cup team
for a charter flight to
Ireland, where they plan to
spend' the next two days
practicing at The K Club.
Woods
and
Phil
Mickelson, · the top two
players in the world,
rearranged their schedule to
make the trip. Asked if that
sent a strong message to
their I0 teammates, captain
Tom Lehman replied, "It
sends a strong message to
the other team."
When the Americans
return . on Wednesday,
Woods will go for a fifth
straight victory when he
plays the Deutsche Bank
Championship
outside
Boston. He already has won
·six of his 13 starts on the
PGA Tour this year. .
I

Items

Oearllfirw

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

All Display: 12 Noon 2

Monday-friday for Insertion

Bu•ln••• Day• Prior To
"ubllcatlon
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thunday for Sundaya

ln Next D•v•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Frlolay For Sunday• Paper

• All ada must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ada With A IC~yword • Indude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
.. Adt Should Run 7 Days

POLICIES: Ollla Vtllty Publlatlln; reaervtatl'lt rlgl'ltto•.cltl, rtfiCI, or cancel tny ad at any time. Error~ mutl bt rtport.cl on ll'lt
TrlbuM-Stntlnei-Rt:VItttr will bt raapontlblt tor no m0r11 tntn tnt cott of tt'lt tptct oooupltd by the trrot and only lt'lt tlrat ln1trtlon.
not be
any loll or tllptnM tbll rttultllrom thtl publle~~tiOn or omltalon of en tdYertlttmtnt. Contctlon will bt mllda In the llr•l avalltblt tdlllon. • Bo~~:
,,.. alwayt conlldNitlal. • Currant rtlt Clrd applltt. • AK rNI ttltlt tdvtrUnrntntt art aubject to ltlt FQral Fair Houalng Act Of 19M • Thla oowop•1•rl
ecceptt only Mlp wanted ada muting EOE etanct.rdt. W. will not knowingly accept any advartlalng In violation of lht law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

\'\\Ill \ I I \ II \lo..,

the rlghlto edit,

ny lole ot 8Xpena
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omls
lon of an edvertll
ent. CorrecUons wll
made In the flra
valleble edition.
I

!

Box number ads a
!ways contldentlal.

Current rate car
pplloa.
All Real
Estat
dvertleementa a
ubject to the Feder•
air Houalng Act o

1968.·
Thla
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ada meetln
OE standards.

roups Individual· ArtiSts fo
pen Mike and Them
Night. Opening Soon Stat
1'1eater, Live Enterta1nmen
l&gt;leasant (304 )542

r

Found· M11c&amp;d Female Dog,
Approx. 1yr. old, Good
natured, triendly &amp; lovable.

r

:======~ (740)256·~ 1 ~ 1 to identify.
GIVEAWAY

I

r

YARD SALE

1 male Boston Temer/
YAIW SM.EPekmgese mi)(, small ins1de ""--oiGiiiAU.ll'OiiiliiiiiiliiiiLISiii._.l
dog. (740)379-2467.
~
,,--yr-o-ld-m-al-e-AK_C_B-Ia_ci&lt;_La_b Garage Sale· Rain or Shine.
3
miK. 4 yr old male Elhew 4466 SA 554, Thursday &amp;
Frlijay L1vlng room suite.
Point. (740 )441 •0405 ·
treadmill, mens, womens,
Free to good home, all vac· Ooys, girls &amp; baby clothes,
clnat1ons current many lnlant car seat, toys &amp; lots ol
sizes, many oolors of kittens. mise
(740)245-5t66
'-:-:.c:....:...:...;c:._ _,-- Yard/Moving Craft Business
Kittens free to good home. Sale. Friday/Saturday, 330
_c_all-'17_4_0)'-446-·3_5_10_._ _ Keeler Ad off Bulaville .Pike,
Tiny silver &amp; black kittens, Christmas crafts, Baby, tod·
male &amp; female, parents on dler, boy &amp; girl clothes and
premises, (740)416-4015
much more!

r

0
0
0

0
(J

I

WANTm

To good home black &amp; while
male &amp; lamale long haired ""---TOiiiioBiiUYiioio-u.,.Oslll'j'liio~-----.,
kittens (304)675·6195
~
•
HELPWA&gt;'IITID

~~=~~ut~n~op G~~~lar~otns, ~;;;;;;;~

0

l.,l'a__
o W.,;]:ili:=,;;Do
_ _.lr
1.,•-,.;FUioiHiii~ii~iiALEiiol-'

110

1

Ohio Volley
reJect or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Muat B
eported on the tire
of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
b
eglstar
will
eaponslble for n
ore than the cost o
he lpilce occuple
y the error and onl
he tlrat ln~ertion. W
hall not be liable io

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifledads
. (.~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SO¢ for small
·
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

PubUahlng reaervea

Enloe wins Pete Dye
Classic on playoff hole
BRIDGEPORT, W.Va . . victory.
(AP) - Jason ·Enloe won
Weekley lost a lead that
·the Pete pye Classic on he carried ·into the final
Sunday by beating Boo round for the third time this
Weekley .in a playoff.
season. He led Enloe by
Both players finished at four strokes with four holes
14-under-par 274. Enloe to play. Weekley bogeyed
dr~ined an 8-foot par putt the 16th and 18th holes,
on the first playoff hole to while Enloe birdied Nos.
win the $108,000 first-place 15. 16 and 18 to force the
check at the Pete Dye Golf tour's eighth playoff this
Club.
season.
Enloe shot 4-under 68 in
Weekley, who shot 2the final round and earned under .70 Sunday, earned
his first Nationwide Tour $64,800.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

lb.ll'WANTED

Overbrook RehabilitatiOn
Center is currently accepting
applications for STNAs. All
sh1fts, part·time. No Phone
Calls, Pleasfl. All intBiested
applicants snould pick up an
applicatiOn at 333 Page
Street, Middleport, OH For
further ln1ormatJon, please
contact Hollie at (740)992·
6472. EOE
- - - - - -- Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center IS currently accepting
app lications
for
Housekeeping &amp; Laundry
part·time pos1t1on. All Inter·
asted applicants should pick
up an appliCation at 333
Page Street. Middleport.
OH. For further inlormation,
please contact Linda at
{740)992·6472. E.O E

Housekeeping over 6 years
ell:p. Honest and reliable.
Call (740)379·2898.
---.,.-----::-::--::-Magic Years Day·Care-Pre·
School Inc , Openings avail·
able. now accepting Fall·
Enrollment. State Licensed
~pu ning
Children Firsr
(304)675·5847

Part ·Time
Teacher's
' Assistant. $6.70/hr. Send
resume to Early Education
Station 2122 Jefferson Ave.
Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550

1190

4 bedroom, 2 bath, double
garage, pOol , 2 acres.
Eastern School 01str1ct
740·992·3465 aher 5.00PM
------4 rental houses "For Sale"
GoOd income producing
properties. Great location!
Price(s) are Negotiable.
Motivated
Seller!
In
Gallipolis. Call Wayne
(404)456·3802.

----c-:----:-:-::
4od. 2 bath. Only S32 ,900!

I

FOREClOSURE 1 For list·
ings 800·391 ·5226 ell:t F254
Attention!
Local company offenng "NO

Cmt.a'ELOERLY
DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
•
C.&lt;\RE
• grarr'ls for you to btJy yotJr
.__ _ _ _ _ _,. home 1nstee.d of renting
Jenny's Home Ha1r Care l ' 100% fina ncing
For Disabled Shut In's. Call· • Less than perlect credit
740·376·6484 .
accep1ed
• Payment could be the
II\\ \C I\ I
same as rent
j;j;n;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;, Mortgage
Locators
1o
Busrmss
(740)367 -oooo
OPI'ORTIJSITY
'--liiioiliiiiliiiiOo.,.l Beaut1ftJI. 3BR home. wrap
For rent or sale: 17.600 sq.ft. around porch , dowmclwn
warehouse on A1 2 with 3 Gallipolis. C1ly Schools.
acres. fenced in &amp; gated $t18 ,000 Call 740·446·
blacktop
parking
lot. 996 1.

r

"ll!::to~-----.,,~l'l'll:l!o-u••-.. ..,-.-~~--,
.
HELP WANTED • .
our"~"~

Tree already cut down to
giveaway for firewood, need
cut up. (304)593-2759
Proofsets .. Gold Rings. Pre1935
U.S.
Currency,
Losr AND
Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S
}'OUNU
Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. 740·446·
2642
FOUND: Tri-Color Beagle,
·

Wanted to Do : Housing
Cleaning. (740)339~0537 ,
(740)339·0546.
------,-..,.Weight No More.. All
Natural Nutrition
Fast,
Easy Weight Loss. Doctor
Formulated
Individually
Coached Programs. 740742·2092 ask for David
Robmson.
Herbalite
Independent D1stnbutor.

3 bedroom . 1 story. 1 1/2
bath, gas heat, c/a, 2 car
garage. m Middleport,
$72,500, (740)992·6926

""c.~"ll''ll"'i""1~~il
Financial Institution· Mason rr
A New Point ol View
County based Fll seeks
Noi ..U.n.d with your
qualified manager who will
current job?
(304)937·4127.
FORGET what you
report to the Board a
We're looking for
Pleasant Valley Hospital
have
heard
about
Directors.
Applicants
should
dependable
employees
Is
currently
accepli[lg
We will not knowln
to work in the Gallipolis
telemarkellng
•NOTICh
resumes for Full t1me·
·
have a minimum of three
accept any adver
Our professional
areal
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Registered
Nurses.
w/bright
Collat
m
Leon.
years &amp;Kperience in financial
$
lsement In vlolatl
I Wlll buy JJ.uil&lt; CJ![s. Call
enwonment has
7.00.$9.25/hr
lNG CO. recommend s
Applicants must have a
(304)458- t510
Institution accounting and
fthe law.
(740)368·9303
.
enabled us tb becqme
that you do business w1lh
current
West
V1rg1n1a
operations. A proven record
All real estate advertising
Call for the nation's lead·
the leader in the
people you know. and
license Fle)(Jbla
Want to buy Junk Cars
in this newspaper is
ing
non-profit
organ~za­
NOT to se.f,1d money
schedulmg, eKcellent
Teleservices Industry
(304)773-5004
subject to the Federal
tions. We offer paid train·
through
lhe
mall
until
you
for over 20 years.
salary, holidays, health
degree of quality service
Fair Housing Act ol1968
4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
ing, holidays and vaca·
have investigated the
1nsurar'1ce S1ngle/lam11y
Zuspan Metal Salvage, Now
skills
is
required.
The
quail·
which makes It lllegsl to
Announcement ............................................ 030
lions.
Benefits Include:
off~r1ng.
plan, dental plan. life ·
buy1ng junk cars, buses,
advertise "11ny ·
tied Individual should also
Antlquos .......................................................530
Up to $6 hour, a
insurance, vacation,
pipe, 1-beam, tin, etc.
preference,
limitation or
have fa mihanty With regula·
Apply today by calling
Apartmento for Rent ............ :...................... 440
generous bonus plan,
long-term disability and
Mason WV 304-593·1904.
discrimination l:lasel:l on
tory
compliance
and
quar·
~?40)448-7
ext.
1901
MONI:Y
442
Auction and Flea Market.............................080
401·K, health benefits,
retirement.
race, color, religion, &amp;eM
terly financial reporting
Toll Free:
1 \I PJ!n\11 \1
TO LOAN
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 780
weekly pay, pa1d vaca·
familial etatus or nat!ana!
Send resumes to:
A
high
deoree
of
imtiatJV:e
1s
.en-46
-6247
O..,l l&lt;\11 I "'
1
3
Auto Repair...................... :...........................770
tlon, and paid holidays.
OJigln, or any intention to
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal
required to purse opportuni· 1"-~~~"-""""""';!1
make any such
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
cfo
Human
Resources
t1es in the Mason County Nurse
preference, limitation or
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate ............................. 750
We specialize in
2520
Valley
Onve
commumly. The candidate
dlscr1mlnabon ."
Building Supplles ........................................550
makmg calls tor the
Point Pleasant, WV
should be goal orientec;t to Are you Inspired to help the
Borrow · Smart Contact
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
NAA. Paid training is
25550
achieve the unlim1t~d oppor- elderly live life to the fullest?
This n'l!!wspaper will not
'
the Ohio D1vis1on ot
Business Opportun\ty.....:...........................210
provided, so no
(304) 675·4340
100 WORKERS NEEDED
tumty. We offer a competitive Put your skills to use and
knowingly acc&lt;i!!pl
F1nancial
Institution's
Buslnoas Tralnlng ....................................... 140
prev1ous e~~:perience is
Assemble cratts,
salary. Resumes shOuld be JOin HCA Manor Care for a
adv•rtisem•nts for real
Ot11ce
ot
Consumer
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ...
790
needed.
AA!EOE
wood ilems.
estate which Is in
forwarded to:
challenging and rewarding J!!...,...,._...,;;;;;;;;;;;;l!l Affairs BEFORE you refi·
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
To $480/wk
violation of the law. Our
Point Pleasant Registe·r career!
nance your home or
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Call1-877-41i3-6247
readers ar11 hereby
Materials provided.
Rt 35 Ad.ult Book Store need
EB23, 200 Main Street,
ob tain a loan. BEWARE
Child/Elderly Cere ....................................... 190
Informed that all
Free Information pkg. 24Hr.
ext. 2331to lind out
Midnight
Clerk
Full
hme
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
of requests for any large
Electrtcai/Relrlgeratlon ............................... 840
dweltlngs advertised In
MDS NURSE
601-426-4649
why our er'nployees
(304)937·4900 Drug Test
advance payments of
Equlpmen1 for Rent.. ................................... 480
this newspaper are
are sat1st18d
HOME HEALTH AIDES
COORDINATOR/
fees or insurance. Call the
available on an equal
Excavatlng ................................................... 830· A 9 year company IS looking
SIGN ON a'ONUS Home
. Scnom.s
opportunity bases.
Ot11ce of Consumer
Form Equlpment .......................................... 610
ADON
for a well motivated HVAC •
Health Care of SE Ohio is
JN-&lt;rrRUCJlON
Affairs
toll
free
at
1·866·
Farms 'for Rent .............................................430
installer
and
helper. AVON! AU Areas! To Buy or currently hiri ng home aides·
27 8·0003 10 learn If the NO DOWN PAYMENT even
Farms for Sole ............................................. 330
EKperlence IS preferred. Pay Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- compet itive wages
Call Qualifications mcluda a cur·
For Leaae ..................................................... 490
rent
RN
license
in
Ohio
2
Concealed
P1stol
Class
mortgage
broker or with less than perfect Ciedlt
is based on B)(perience. H 675-1429.
740·662· t222
years of long-term care Ohio, WV. Sept 9, 2006.. lender
is
properly is available on ihls 3 bed·
For Sate ........................................................ 585 ' mterested call (740)441·
12:36 and leave message . . - - - - - - - - - , HVAC POSitions Available
experience, MDS exp6ri· $75 .00 ·
9·00am. VFW liCensed (Th1s is a public room 1 bath home in
For Sale or Trade .........................................590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
with receptionist.
With A Well-Established ellce preferred Strong man· Mason WV. Ph. (740)643· service announcement Middleport Corner lot, VInyl
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
agement and communlca- 555S,
liom the Ohio Valley s1ding, fireplace 1n living
At~ens Area Contractor
A local fmancial institu1ion IS
General Hautlng ...........................................850
tion
skills
are
a
must!
Prior
-~----~P=u~
~=ISh~m:g:C:o:mp:•:ny=)=~ room, good carpel, lile floo r
Fall enrollment lor new
seeking a fu\Hime collector
Glveaway...................................................... 040
We Have Opemngs for a supervisory experience. We Piano students now open.
1n kitcl1en, French doors
This individual must pos·
Happy Ads ....................................................050
Service Techmclan and an offer competitive pay ad a Inquire
(
)
•
PM.Of'ISSlONAL
open to master bedroom.
446
2272
740
sass good verbel and written
Hoy &amp; Graln..................................................640
Installer. Must have 3 Vaars comprehensive
benefits Charles
A.
Murray,
SERvtm
jacuzzi tub, off street park·
communication
skills,
ability
o NO EXPEAIEI'K:E NECESSARY
Help Wantod ................................................. 11 0
E~~:perlence
and Clean package, Including 401(k) Gallipolis, Ohio.
.__ _iiiiiiiiiiiioo-,1 1ng. Pay.)11ent around S550
o FULL·W.!E CLASSES
to work w1til existing loan
Home tmprovemants ...................................81 0
Driving Recor.d 80% of with company match, tuition
per month. 740·367·7129.
o COL TRAINI~
off1cers
and
Ch1el
Lending
Galllpollt career College
TURNED DOWN ON
Work in Athens Area. BSSiiltance and morel
HomealorSate............................................ 310
• FINANC I~ AVAILABLE
Officer to develop an under·
'JOB P\J.CEMENT
Household Gooda ................. ,..................... 510
E)(cellent Wages Based on
(Careers Close To Hort~e)
SOCIAk SECURITY /SSI?
MOUFUI)£R'SHALEOMES
• ENROUING NOW
standing
of
ail
aspects
of
the
No Fee Unless We Win!
•
Houses tor Rant.. ........................................ 410
Experience. Send Cetall~d Please forward resume to: Call Today! 740·446·4367,
Collect10n
Department
1·600·214-0452
1·666·582·3345
tn Mamorlam ................................................ 020
Resume To:
Bonnie McCain NHA qr
Salary commensurate With
Ill \11'.1\11
lnaurance ......,.... o......................................... 130
Cheryl Bolen HA, Heartland VfflW gaRipollacareerrol~ .com
Clean well maintained 95
ALLIANCE
expenence. lnlerested indi·
Accredlled
Member
Accllldltlng
Clayton. 14)(70, all electric,
Lawn &amp; Gordon Equlpment ...............:........ 660
HVAC
Positions
·
of
JaCkson,
8668
SR
93,
TRACTOR· TRAILER
viduals send resume to
Council lor lndependenl Collegea
HOMll'
3 br 2 bath ' complete with
Ltvestoc:k......................................................630
PO Box 363
Jac+tson, Ohio 45640
TRAINING CENTERS
and School• 1274B.
WYTHEVILLE, VA
LOll and Found ........................................... 060 · Edwards W Stines. 211
The Plains, Oh 45780
FaK: 740·286·0295
FOR SALE
appliances, washer dryer.
West
Second
Street,
Loll &amp; Acroage ............................................ 350
Visit us online at:
curtainS, new blinds, heat
Pomeroy
Member FDIC
Local Electrical Distributor
Mlocellaneoua ..............................................170
1-800-334-1203
www.hcr-manorcare.com l
f\1Jst.'El.lAl'I'EOUS
2 bedroom home, beautiful pump w1th ce ntral. air, 2
and Equal Opportunity
s&amp;eklng a par1 time driver, EEO/Orug·Free Employer
Mltcellaneoul Merch'andtsa ....................... 540
site, 9.9 acres, near porches, new underpinmng
Employer.
must be 21 years old with a
Mobile Ho1110 Repalr:................................... 880
Waterloo, OH. $34.000 . 516,000 OMO ~30 4 )593·
"89"
Suzuki
Fat
Boy
muffler,
Valid drivers license. Contact
Mobile Home• for Rent.. ............................. 420
People. Strength,
6437 or (304)675-8668
Cosmetologist needed . Call
Soared out. many extras ~7 40 )532-7614 .
West VIrginia Electric 1885
Mobile Hqmeo for Sata ................................320
Commitment.
(7 40)446-7425.
$1 ,500. 740·965-4256 •go· Ill'!""""'""""-~;;;;;;~
Eastern Ave .. GallipOliS.
Money to Loan ,......... ;.................................. 220
- - - - - _ _ , - - ; : : - Ford ProBe TuBro Chager,
2 story home, 3 bed- Great used 3BR home only
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Whoelars..........................740
Looking for a trustworthy Ohio Valley Home Health, In take with head. 2.2(12
room. 2 bath, 2 car
$9,995 Will help wJ\1'1 deliv·
Muotc:at tnatruments ................ ................... 570
FEDERAL
individual for housecleaning. Inc. hlr.ing for F~ll Time ~N, ~alve)$1 ,000 (jO 740·985QBrage, 3 acres mi .. 5 ery. Call (7 40)385·7671
Portonati .............................., ...................... OOS
Appro~~: 1 day per week. Full Time ~nd Part, Tim&amp; 4258
•
.
I
G II I
POSTAL JOBS
CNA, STNA, CHHA, PCA
·
m1nutes 1om a 1po 1S
New 2006 Clayton sm·
Pats lor Sate ................................................ 560
$15.67-$26,19/hr.. now hlr· Relerenca
requlrad and Per Diem OT. ST. Lazy T Royal Chaparral
Photoflnlo
,on lme
glewldesstartlngat$19984
Plumbing &amp; Heattng .................................... 820
(740)441·9593.
www orvb com
Co ~e
h T d ·
1
Borrow $200
1ng. For applica11on and Irea - - -- - - - - Accepting applications for Family Resort Campground
per monl
ta e-1ns we ·
Professional Sarvlcea ................................. 2.30
·
·
'
nlo
call
LPN'
C
w
7188
or
Call
(7
40)446·
comes
'calli740)385-2434
l
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
Marketing Position tor local
s. ompe 1111ve
ages membership
for
sale.
Pay Back $203 governem'nl lob ·
70.,
2.,
9·..,..,..........;;;;;;1!1
Real Ellate Wanted ..................................... 360
American Assoc. of Labor 1- Medical
Equipment and Benefits includll)g (3Q4l372·6569
ll\o;
Lat &amp;
913·599·8042, 24/hrs. emp. Company. You must be health
msurance
and :=.::.=.:....:.:..:....-::---- =
-A,.R!Ac•·
Schools tns1ructlon ..................................... 150
Now Hiring
serv
Lw---~-,~-·;,..,.o
Sled, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
h1ghly motivated, expenence M11eage. APP 1y a1 1460 New lower Prices on
..,
Manager &amp;
lr
preferred.
Salarv
+ Jackson Pike, Gallipolis .or Limestone at Rodney Stone
SHuattona Wanted ....................................... l20
Assistant Manager
1 75 Acre Lot
We are now accepting
Commission, nego118ble .. 2415 Jackson Avenue, Point (740}245·5316, River Gravel
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
for
Gallipolis,
Ohio
Mason
Co. WV
applications
for
on
e
part
Send
resume
to·
Be~~:
55S,
Pleasant,
wv
phone
toll
&amp;
Sand
also
available.
01
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
Ell:cellent Pay &amp;
time 'Clerical openmg .
3 3
Rt 2 BoK 127.
SUV's lor Sate..............................................720
c/o Gallipolis Tnbune, PO tree 1·866·441-1 9 ·
Tri Axle load of firewood.
Applicants must havo
Bonus Program
leon. WV 25123
Tiuckl lor Sate ............................................. 715
computer experience
BQ.'IC 469, Gallipolis. OH
$350 A Load
740·949No
Experience
Necessary
ApprOM 500'
45631
.
Wanted:
D1
rect
Supervision
.
Uphotatory ................................................... 870
2195
W!ll
Train
Road
Frontage
and possess good typ·
Employees to oversee male
Vans For Sate...............................................730
2990 Sta te Route 124 ,
Fax Resume:
Util111es
Available
ing
sk~ls.
Needed,
Contract
labor
for
youth
In
a
staff
secura
reSI·
WA.'\'liD
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Syracuse, oul of flood pla1n.
(606)866·8906
$9.995
To apply, stop by the
local home 1mprovement dentlal etlvlronment. Musl
To Do
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .................. 620
OhiO R1ver v1ew, 6 room, 3
' Email Assume:
(30 4)295·9090
Gallipolis Dally
company. Some expetience pass a pt1ys1cal training
Wanted To Oo .............................................. 180
bedroom. 1 1/2 bath, 1 acre
Janice.kidd@ cashtn.com
Tribune,
would
be
beneficial
Pay
requirement.
Paid
benefits.
Wanted to Ront ............................................ 470
Hook·n·Go, Local trailer lot, garage (740)992·7866. Mobile Home lot for rent
625 Tliird Avenue.
based upon JOb and eKpen· Call between 9am-3pm moving. 25 m1le radius.
Yard Sate- Gatllpolla ....................................072
An Excellent way to ear.n
(740)992·5776, (74 0)339· , near Vinton . Call ~740)441 ·
Gtllllpolis. Ohio 4563t
ence. Please call (740)992· Mon-Frl to apply. (740)379·
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middto ......................... 074
money. The New Avon.
(740)388-1!228.
3363.
1111 .
,.n;.y=~ 5094 .
9063.
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleasant.. .............................. 076
Call Marilyn 304·662·2645 ~=A,.nn,:,.Ke,.vl,n,.Ke

RN NURSES

r

~~po~et'i;~~~~ts ~~hn a~~~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

0 . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . , . . . .

I'.;;;;;;;;:;;;;;.;;:

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ii'i!F-----,
rro
I

I

CASH

i){PRESS

i

=.;;_====;;;;;;;t

iiiiiF--::":':"............,
11M
L,.- - - - - - ·

.

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Page 84 • The IJaily Sentinel

l r:o

,_m_~_&amp;_·__

-

A CREAGE

•

Appro&gt;. 3 acres, 2 house
sites. Ul!lities K2. c1ty wator,
large solid 2 st01y barn.
approx 112 m1le our SR 218

~

HO!NfS

Senous

For rent or sale- country
home 7 acres. 3 be droom. 2

Mobrle Home Lot in Johnson
Mobile Home Park in
Gallipolis.
OH.
Pllone
(740).1146·2003 or (7401 4461409.

Nice 3 BR home in Spnng
Valley Nice yard, no pats, 1
yr lease. Taking apps. $600
mo Call Dave @ (740) 44 1_
0114
;;;,;,;;.,~-""!":--,

(740)'367-7762.
2 bedroom , 2 bath, new car pet &amp; vinyl, $375; 3 bed REAtEsnn:
room, 2 bath, garden tub,
WAN'Ilill
utility room. $47 5, deposi t
reqUired.
(740 )992- 768 0
Need to sell your home?
Syracuse
Late on payments, d1vorca.
job tranGier 01 a death? I 2 bedroom, all electric. A/C,
can buy your hOme. All cash porch &amp; awmng . Very. very
and quic ~ closing. 740-4 16· nice. no pets. In Gallipol is.
3130
(740)446-2003 or (740)4461409.
,.
ttl\ I \l '-i

10

HOUSI:'i
fUR Ru&lt;r

2BR home- V1nt on St $375
mo.+ sec. dep You pay ()!iiiti es. Gas heat. (7 40 )4463644 .
3 bedr oom in GallipoliS.
Great location l WID conn.
$309/month. ~1 00/deposit.
No pets.
1 bedr oom in Ga!lipo l1s.
Great lo bation! $ t 79/monlh,
$1 0Qid eposit. No pets, Call
WiJ.yne (404)456-3802

2bdrm ·2ba mobile home situa ted on a beatifulty sectuded appr o~ 1 ac lot With covered fro nt po rch , back
deck/u!tachcd shed. fruit
trees and much mora, localed in Ch ii!sh1re. Will rent for
$450. 00/mth+ S350/dep.,
(i nc. lol rent, water &amp; trash) ,
or sell for $45,000. Must
see. Serious inq. only. call
740,441.0775.(1f no answer,
teave message).
3 bedroom mobile home in
Middlepor1, all electric, Cia,
·
p
$425 .plus depos1t, 9 2 ear 1
St .. Middlepor-t . 740-416-

1354
3BR M me- SA 554 , Bidwell, - - - - - - - - $575/mo. sec. dep. all etec. For Rent- Nice 2 BR, 2 Bath
(740 }446 _3644 _
Mobile Home in Gallipoli s,
5 450 per month plus
3BR house- LeGrande Blvd.
$600 rent &amp; sec. dep. You
pay utilities. Lease &amp; references requi~ed. (74 0) 44 63644 tor application.
4-5 bedroom , 2 bath . 3.000
tt oo rs
sq.ft. Hardwood
through out
the
hous e.
Water/trash
paid.
Call

deposll. (740)645 -77 65
For rent Nice 2 bedroom
mobil e home 1n Country
Homes. $325 + deposit.
(740)385-4019.
'--'------large 2 bedrooms, stove,
ref., wasner &amp; dryer, no pels,
dep · Pa(rro1 · (740)379 -2540·

(740)446-7425
M obile Home sites for up to
- - - -- - - - , - · 16&gt;:80 1n Country Homes.
4bd HUD hOme! Buy for
$20. 900! For listings 800- ( 740 )385-4019·
391 · 5228 .111709

Nice 3BR , 2 Bat h, Storage

.

Bu ildrn g, Large Dec~ , Green
Sc hools, $485/mp. $485
(740)446-9116,
d epOSit.
_
17401 339 2541
;..,,;.;.;.;.;._ _ _ _ _.,

A" ent IOn 1
.
I mpan O"er 1
·n g ·NO
L
oca co
Y
OOW N PAYMENT" programs tor you to buy your
home mstead of renting .
• tOO % financing
• Less than perfect credit

1440

APAR'Il\-IEN'I'S
f'J" Rv"l'

L.--orrii'lii~;;,;,iiruliri'-_.1

accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators.
740 367
·0000
(
l
Clean. pre1ty, 3BR house for
rant . Downtown. $695 +
utilities. Call 740-446-9961
House for rent .
740-992 -5858

1 and 2 bedro om ap'artments. furnished and unfurni shed, secu rity deposit
reqUired, no pels. 740-9922218.
·--,---,-.,---2 Bad roo n
. 1 Ap1 Ce nIa naru1
Road
app( ;ances
'
'
waslrer/dr yer hookup, no
No Pets. pets. (740 )446-944 2 after
5. 00plll

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Business in Great shape.
2 years college preferred, good
attitude.
$30,000 Plus a year (1st year)
Paid Vacation, Experience not
necessary, will train.
Professional appearance, good
attitude.
Drive to make above average
income.
Call for interview

1-800-837-1094

992.:..2155
'
•'

r

AP
~

1

r

I

·-------'"
1 bedroom , upstairs unfurnished
apartment with
range, refr. disposal and
garage. 136 First A~Je . rear.
Deposit and reference .
(740)446·2561 .

HJR RENT

Ellm View
Apartments
2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
Sta'rting at $385 and up.
Central heat &amp; air, WID
hook-up, coin operated
laundry, owner pays water,
sOwer &amp; trash.

2 bedroom. 1 bath, water
paid, $ 350 month , $350
security
deposit.
Call
( 740)446 _3481 _
' - - - - -- - 2BA apt. downtown across
from park, newly reno~Jated .
central HI A, .Includes water,
sewer. garbage. (740)7091690.

, in Henderson, WV. Preowned Appliances starting
at $75 &amp; up all under
Warranty, also have reconditioned Big Screen TV's
by Ron's

TV (304)675·

i

RENr

'r"t•a-------....,I

floors, appliances including
washar/dryer
provided
HOLJ!ot'EHQU)
Ample storage available.
G~
Deposit
required
Call'
(740)446·7654.
Sale sofa &amp; chair S350. Sofa
&amp; 1. seat $400 . Recliner
Immaculate 2 bedroom $200. Mollohan Furn. Clark
apartment in the country.
Chapel Ad, Porter 0.
New carpet &amp; cabinet6, (740 )388 _0173 .
Open
freshly painted &amp; dacorated. Saturday only.
WID hookup. Beautiful counlry se1Hng. Mus( see lo
appreciate.
$399/mo

r---::;S::;H""Q"p----,

1-Soo-

Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp;
bath , upstairs. clean. no
pets. Ref/deposit requ1red
(740)446·1519.

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
. Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
Sc rap Me1als Open Monda",,
"'uesday Wednesday &amp;
'' .
•
Fnday. 8am-4:30pm .. Ciosed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Help Wanted

SIGN ON BONUS
Arcadia Nursing Center is now hiring

STNA's for ahernoon and night shifts.
Full and Part time
positions available

Purebred Golden Retriever
puppies vet cflecked. first
shots, parents &amp; previous
pup on premises. relerence
on previous litters, females
$200,
males
$ 150,
(740)662-0364

Angus

BUS TRIP FROM

PVH

'

Charleston,
South Carolina
September 29, 2006 to
October 2, 2006
Includes transportation,
lhoteJ, breakfasts &amp;
$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 SEAT~!

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

r

__

Cattle

labor Day Monday, Sept.
4th. Circle 8 Farm , LLC. Us
AI 35 Southside , WV
(304)675·6053

i

f'kuns &amp;

I

Middleport, OH

Call Gary Stanley

10x10x10x20
992-l194
or 992-6635

74G-742·2293

"Middleport's only

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furniiure

F~ANK

&amp; EARNEST

~ JUST lt~ALI:Z~P At..L COMIC
CMAitA,n~ts Alt~ TviO/
PIM~NSIONAL.

7-

~;;~~~~~~~=~:·:~:~~~~
lA59 St. Rt. 160 •

nP -- wf~tt

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

FoR SALE

1999
Dodge
Durango,
Excellent Condition. all
leatller, entertainment canApartment Building with 2 ter, remote start, all power
Apart,ments. 3 bedroom , (740)446-9395

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

BARNEY

MUM'S

FISH IN' o::DI'w"'
THAT N01BOI)Y
KNOWS
BUT ME

?!

Auto &amp; Truck

• New Homes

upstairs. 2 bedroom downstairs, Front lot included. 2000 Chrysler Sebring
$60,000 OBO (304)576- Convertible Limited. Cloth
top, leatller, Infinity sound
2040
system .
Garage
kept.
Commercial building "Fo r 30mpg. New tires. $7,500.
Sale~ 1600 square feet , ott (740)446-7484 or (740)441street parking. Great loca- 7411 .
tion! 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Price "Negotiable"
miles $4,300;
1999.
New roofl Motivated Sellerl 59.3
200295c avalier
4d. 5 speed
Call Wayne (404)456-3802. Taur us $3 ,700; 1998 Olds
lntngue $3,400. We have
I \1{\J "l l'l'l II S
Grand
Ams,
Sunfires.
,\11\1,1()(,
Neon.
S- 10.
Satur ns,
jir;:10~;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Nissans. Toyota , Blazer,
FARM
Vans. Stratus . 3 montlls,
·--EQu-iiwr.iiiilliN'i'iiil'-pl 3.000 mile warranty. Cook
Motora, 328 Jackson Pike,
[740)446-0103 .

Repair

• Garages

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

.• Complete

Remodeling

740-992-1611

THE BORN LOSER
I"'

TOt&gt;~\'(, I t--1&lt;\ TUI&lt;N\1'-\G
0\J£::..?.. ~ 1'-\EW LE.~f ...

'f-{&lt;OM. KOW CN, l'r&lt;\ C.OIKG&gt;~
TO UIJE..OOE. t&gt;fo..'( 1\T 1\ \1/1\E.!

992-5682

Stop &amp; Compare

.,..

i
i
~

.t

~·
0

BIG NATE
ME? NO. r

wo&gt;'I'T'
WHAT MAKES YOt:J

sAY

IMPORTS
Athens

i

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

A" types of roofing:

. 45771

740-949-2217

New or Rep air
Seamless Gutlcr
Downspout

FREE
ESTIMATES

$4 ,800 . (740)446-6323.

4x4
F1111 SALE

THAT'

Hill's Self
Storage

99 Chewolet ~uburban,
loaded with leather interior,
new tires, gOOd condition.

""''~·•m

949-1405

·A~Ifils 5'1(1 or

' ,to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

PEANUTS
I'VE ALWAYS
W~Y 1311~D5

FLY IN

YOU!i: MOM
TOLD '(OU
TO?

L I I (I

'' V" FORMATION ...

i

I (1

1/ 14.'1 mo pd

Cornerstone
Construction

2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee
limited . $10,500. Loan
vaiue $14,500. (740136777 62 or (740 )367-7272.

('omnu:rcial• (;cncral Cfmtra t• tin~
• Dou ~ • W illl l 11w~ • D l'..: b .

20 02 Chevy Blazer 4wd 2
door automati c trans. 55.000
f'f),!te s. AC , power locks,
power windows,
amlfm
radio, cd player. in great condition . S10.500. 74Q-6453601

-"" ':r;:;,:·,'~R:"':::1~m ALIUrti uns • l~..:rH11ddi ng
~
I
.
7-t0-367-054-4

81 Dodge 1/2ton. 4.114, 6 cyl.
tl speect, Runs good.
$1 .450 . (740)446·1655.

Tree Service

i

SUNSHINE CLUB

JONES'

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

VANS

Filii SALE

1- 1986 Chavy- 8 passenger
va n. 118 , PS , PB, AC.
740 441 ·2687 .

race- of this notice.

neutral and race..:on·
sclous measures. The
DBE · Goal Selling
Methodology docu menl will be available

....

flOW Mf&gt;.N'i D!&gt;,'iS 1\t--IJE. 'iOU
BED~ LIIJII'\' P..T ~ 111&lt;\E.., UP
TO t-\OW?

I

~f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~F~

41_1_·_ _ __ _ __
7
__

.., MaroMcY&lt;.'LEJO'

GORDON PROCTOR
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
(8) 28, (914

•

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

4 WHEEU:RS

. Free Estimates
04 Kawasaki 700 Prairie
4)(4 . Real tree hardwoods
camo. under warranty until
03108 $4,500. (740)446·
7t58

r

C~MI'EIIS &amp;

~ MaroRH~

I.

1978
Coachman
Leprechaun
motorhome,
21ft ., has good mo1or, Inside
needs work. Asking $2,000
0 90. II interested call
f740)441 -1236, if no answer
leave message, ask for .
Janie.
2005 28 tt . Dutchmen w/slide
out, bunk· and extras. Still
und er warranty. $14,500.
1740)3677755.

'I U\ l l I '-i
10

HOME
IMI'ROVEMFNrS
BASEMENT '
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee Local relerencas furnished.· Estab lished 1975.
Call
24 Ht s. {740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofmg.

GARFIELD
T•:d GARFIELD to 21842

Marksman Dog Food
$9.99 SOib Bag
Shade River Wood Shavings
3.3 cu. ft. $3.99/Bag
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

I

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N ~ Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3831

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutl•r•
VInyl Sieling &amp; Painting
Pat io and Porch Dacka

wv 036725

V.C . YOUNG Ill
99 2-621 5
Pomeroy Oh1o
25 'l' f'ars Lnc"!l bpe-nence

"'
·•

GRIZZWELLS

Advertise
in this
space
for

'54 per
month

West
I.

North
Dbl.

Pass

4•

Easl

Pass
All pass

to YoU ~~1&lt;\'eE~
'#JilEK ~IJ~\=l..'/01-1 ~
w~~

~lit:PAI!dl1

lbl.'IU~SAlU~\~

ft:r!'i

w~~~A
616. ew~s·
~~~~R OR
'3oM8'\.\\l-\6 ~

Dtma-

1 1'-.top.tc 48 Very cold
4 GrooV. an 48 Toqulla
plont
10 Go wrong 51 Slangy
11 Flxed
approval
a oqueak
(hyph.)
13 Cocknoy'o 53 Aleta's son
optlmlom? 54 Prevent
t4 "Shogun" 55 Llllerlllar pi
opparel
56 - tallonla
15 Longhorn 57 Damage
16 JFK pooling 58 Taro dish
17 Kisses
19 Glorify
DOWN
21 Pasture
sound
1 August sign
22 Send vto
2 Moon m
phone
111111, I n 23 Hermit
3 Neaten a
26 Royal furs
beard
30 lobiGQIWII pt 4 Spo&lt;~scaster
31 Gorllen
Mikeproduce
5 Monsieur's
32 Prior to
Islands
33 Long
6 OpposHe of
· aandwlch
haw
34 PC key
7 Sometwriler
35 German
8 .,.--speed
Industrial
9 Mallard
region
cousin
36 Bellell
t1 A Muppel
39 Hurt oullel 12 Reverie
40 Dutch
18 Aid and airline
20 Vlllrlpled
41 Econ. itat 22 Keg-party
42 -Lama
ane

An ower to Previous Puule

23 Elvis'
daughter
24 Dlsagotask
25 Robins'
beaks
26 Snaky llsll
27 Move

42 Watch's
lace
43 Ranch
measure
44 T""""-cal
45 Brit's
farewell
(hyph.)
toward
· 46 Furniture
28 Q.E .D. eart
protector
29 Immunity 41 NYC dlslricl
. shots
50 Topaz or
31 Coconut
amerald
bearer
52 Garden·
35 Alter lrosh
pond fish
37 FBI
acronym
38 Epic by
Homer
39 Tick on
41 COnlrlbutor

The winners were Bartlomlej lgla and
Artur Machno from Poland, ahead of
AndrzeJ Bernalowicz and Jan Betlay
from Poland , and Pierre Francesch&amp;ttl
and And rea Landry from France.
The champ rons did well on this deal. Tile
double by Machno (Norltl) Sh&lt;&gt;vo'ed at
least tour spades. SOuth's t'NQ-spade
rebid promised four-card suppon, but
warned of a minimum opening - no kid·
ding!
·
·

WORD

i'--------.J

K 863

45

Many b_
ridge organizations , from tile
Wol1d Bridge Federation down, are mak·
ing a determined effort to draw more
young people into the game. The first
World Schools Pairs Championship, lor
players born after Dec. 31, 1985, took
place from June 30 to July 2 In Piestany.
Slovakia.
·

www.tbnbot.......,.,k••blnetey.c:om

Canning Tomatoes . Picked 1994 Honda Civic $500.
or pick your own . 740-247- Pollee Impounds! For listings
4292 .
800-391 -5227·ext. C548.

• A J 10 H
Soulb
• K 10 6 4
• J 10

They get younger
and better

740 446

02 CheiJy Cavali er, 4 dr,
auto, air, CD, gOOd condi·

6 2

Opening lead: • 9

FOL~S/

VEGET~ . l(leave
ion . $4,250.
(740)446 -1663
Lw-oroi-iiiiliiiiiiiii-,.J
message)

OF AVAIL- . for lnspscllon during
TO THE PUB· normal
. business
LIC STATE OF OHIO hours et lhe ODOT
DEPARTMENT
OF Central Office, Office
TRANSPORTATION of Contracts lor 30
CO~UMBUS, OHIO
Days following the
The
Ohio dale of notice.
Department
of A public meeting will
Transportation (ODOT) take place al ODOT,
hereby notifies all Central
Office,
Interested
parsons Conference Room 1C
that tho propoaed FV on September 11,
2007 Statewide overall 200~, from 9:00 am to
goal
lor 11 :00 em where Inter·
Disadvantaged osled persona will be
Business Enterprise given lhe opportunity
(DBE) pai'llclpallon in to make comment
Deparlmenl
of Written
comments
Transportation (DOT) concerning the FY2007
asslslad contracts will Slalewlds overall goal
be available lor review for DBE partlclpallon
and comment at lhe In DOT asslaled com·
ODOTCenlral Office, menlo should be trans·
Office of Conlracls, mined to Ms. Deborah
1980 West
Broad James,
Manager,
Slreel,
Columbus, External Civil Rights,
Ohio (800-459·3778, Office of Contracts,
614·466·3778).
The 1980 Wast . Broad
document Includes lha Street,
Columbus,
calculations
and Ohio 43223.
analyals used lo pro)· ODOT will accepl comeel lhe portion of the menls on the goal lor
goal ODOT expects to 45 days from the dale
through

97 Beech Street

Auro;

2 female Boston Ten-iers, 4
John Deere Mini Excavator/
months old $100. (740)379·Tractor Loader Backhoe/
2467.
Skid Steers . CarmicMet
2
mate
Miniature Equipment (740)446-2412
Dachshund puppies ,
1
New John Deere Compacts
shorthair red &amp; 1 longhair
and 5000 Sentls Utility !rae black/tan, vet
checked
tors @O% Fixed for 36
1304)593-3820
months
th rough
John
AKC
Mini
Pinschers Deere Credit . Carmichael
Puppies~ Males blacfcJrust: Equipment (740)446-2412
vel. checked.
AKC Mini
Quality John Deere Hay
Schnauzer
Puppies.
Equipment for less-round
White/black,
salt/pepper,
bal ers, square balers &amp;
black/s ilver.
$400 each.
mower conditioners @4.7%
74(}-696-1085.
Fixed for 46 months througn
AKC Pomeranian Pups, 3 John
Deere
C redit.
Equipment
Mate, 3 Female , wormed, Carmichael
(740)446-2412.
$350. (740)388·8642.

meet

'·

' .JUST PLAN~

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Conn . Alto Saxophone. Cars/Trucks lrom $500! For
Have Beginner Books and listings 800-391-5227 x3901
New Reeds . Good Shape

$400.00 740-949-2453.

MINLEY'S
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FOR S~LE

INsi'KUMt:Nili

•

9 5

+ A 54

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MUSICAL

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Auction

• 98 53
• 9.7

Dealer: South
Vulnerable : East-West

"Insured"

2003 C hevrolet Trailblazer
EXT LT. 4WD. Third row
John Deere 10ft. No Tit Drill seal. Garage kept. Like naw
Car michael condition.
$16,500.
for
rent.
Eiquipment (740)446-241 2
{740)446-7.1184 or (740)441 -

Help Wanted

$ STNA'S $

~KIEFER BUILT *VALLEY
*BISON •HORSE &amp; LIVE·
STOCK TRAILERS *LOADMAX
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&amp;
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Equipment
(740)448·2412

NOTICE

•

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
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CONTRAOING

• 2
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•

Delivering Daily *One Stop Shop*
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Basset Hound Puppies, bolh
parents registered . 1 male.
1. female, $200 each. Has
1st
shots &amp; wormed
(304)675-4$10
- - - - -- - - Miniature Pinscher CKC red/mate
S350.
AKC .
blacklfemala $400 Tail,
cl aw,
shots, ·wormed.
(740)3BB-B7B8

ABI~ITY

Basket Bingo
August 31 sl 6 pm
Doo rs open at 5:00
Syracuse Communi1y Center
Advance tickets
992-3804
20 games $20.00. All proceeds to
Syracuse Commun11y ,Center

• Wheelchairs

• Q2
East

Wes1

• Nebulizers

7999

Pecan wOod dining room
Gracious living. l and 2 bed- table , four chairs, hutch
room apartments at Village $300; t 960's Walnut Danish
and
Riverside bookcase bed, matclling
Manor
Apartments in Middleport . dresser and chest of drawFrom $295-$444. Call 740- ers. $275; 1940's Four
3 bedroom . 1.000 sq. fl . apt. 992-5064. Equal Housing poster bed. matching dressGallipolis . OH ; located in Opportunities.
er and stool $275. (740)245·
town . $650/mo., relerence
'
'
:
_54_
8_B_be_lo_re__
10~pm_._ _--:
Hjlls
required . No pets. (740)441· Honeysuckle
Apartments, Gallipolis, now Thomps ons Appliance &amp;
0110 .or (740)992-5174.
accaptlng applications for 2 Aepair-675.-?388. For sate,
Apl.forrenl2or3Br.. No Bedroom Apartments. No re-conditioned
automatic
Rental Assistance available washers &amp; dryers, relrigeraPets.
BEAUTIFUL
APART- at this time. Rent starts at torS~ , gas and al ectric
MENTS
AT
BUDGET S315/mo. Equal Housing · ranges, a1r conditioners, and
PRICES AT JACKSON
d Opporlunity. (740)446-3344 wringer washars. Will cto
repairs on maJOr brands in
ESTATES, 52 Westwoo
Tw1n ·Rivers Tower is accept- shop or at your home.
Drive from $349 to $448.
tng applications for waiting ;::~:":"--------,
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call list tor Hud-subsized, 1- br,
~UJA~UXJS
740-446-2568.
Equal apartment, ca ll 675-6679
MERCHANDISE
Housing Opportunity.
Equal
Housing
Opportunity
•
-----_
B_ra_n_d_:_n.:.aw
. :__
2_ B'-a-dr_o_om
SPACE
~1 - Craftmatic XL twin bed: 1
Apartments Washer/dryer
FOR
set· Ludwig drums ; 1-4 ft.
hookup , stove/retrigerator
-metal brake to bend tin- with
induded.
stand. {740)441 -2667.
Also availabl e units State Commercial building "For
Rent"
1600
square
feel
,
ott
H
' b 1 S I 1304)675
Route 160. Call tor details
at ru or a e
(
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_
or ( o)
_ street parkinQ. Great loca- 1732
74 441
740 441 0194
.
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in
--lion!
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Third
1184
Galtipolis. Rent "Negotiable"
JET
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Call Wayne (404)456-3802
AERATION MOTORS
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
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Commercial Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1and/or small houses FOR Retail space tor Rent. $400/ 800· 537-9528.
Upstairs Office ----:~-:--:-::­
RENT Call (740)441·1111 month .
for application &amp; information. Suites lor Rent $125/ month Kenmore Radiant Free
you pay the Utili1ies Ca ll Standing Range with . seiiDowntown Apartment: 3
(703)528-06F
•leaning oven , $ 100 080.
(740)245 -061 0
bedrooms, 1 112 baths, cantrat air, carpetl hardwood
\IIIH 111\1&gt;1'1

MONTY

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Locall · ow11ed. We cart abour ou!

PUBLIC
NOTICES

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Over 1000 Items 50% Off
The Karat Patch
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Ask for Jane Casey

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Appliance

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NEEDED 3 SALES PEOPU~

North

~

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S400 deposrl . Galt (740)3677762. 1740)446-4060 or

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ACROSS

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MoBu: HOMI:&lt;;
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2 Bedroom Tra1tor. $400/mo,

BRIDGE

ASLOWAS
$27~00 PERMoNTHI

room_ 1 bath $350 month.
References.
OepoSII
Land lor sale_ Several 5 to required. (304)576-4037

sale. 4.745 acres SA 218
close to schools. Good
Sit e.
$ 16 OOC 2 Bedroom Tra1l er for .rent 14
home
(740)256- 1553. (740)339· X 60. Trailer l ot fo1 rent.
740-949-2.2 37.
9236

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

ON THIS PAGE FOR

t or call (740)408-2440

only $44K (740)4 41-?333

Mercerville bu1ldmg lot lor

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Monday, August 28, 2006
ALLEY COP

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Monda~August28,2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Against lour spades, West led the club
nine. East captured dummy's queen with
his ace and led back the club jack to
South's king. Declarer lad his heart jack,
West going in with the ace and returning
a low heart. Knowing that if West had
had the heart ace without tile queen, he
probably would have ducked initially,
declarer ran this lead to his heart 10.
Now came a club ruff on the board, lhe
spade ace and queen (getting the bad
news), the heart king ruffed and over·
ruffed , another club· ruff, and a diamond
10 South's ace.
tt was trick 11. South retained the spade
king and two lOw diamonds. Dummy had
the heart eight and diamond K-10. West
held the hean queen and diamond Q-J.
But what could West discard when
declarer drew East's remaining trump?
West was squeazed in the red suits. Plus
450 was worth 58 match points out of
66, j ust sufficient to gain the gold
medals .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~ ~ C!yplograms are eteated from ~alions by famous people, past and pres&amp;nt

Each lett.1 il1 the qtltr stand&amp; lor a1101htr.

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when

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Tuesdllf, Aug. 29, 2008

By Bernice S... Oeol
In the year ahead, there is a chance you
will become tnvotved with a strong-willed
person in 8n enterprise large in scope.
The possibilities for success took
encouraging, provided both of y'ou continue to stri\Je for the same goals.
VIRGO (Aug. 23· Sept. 22) - Owing to
impatience and by reacting poorly, you
could erase from th8 Slate something
good you had already gained. Go slow,
because haste could make waste.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-oCt. 23) - Basically
you're good-natured and even-tempered,
bul your reactions could be more negative than posi1 ive. Don't let a dark outlook
cause yoo to have a case of sudden
rudeness .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - It's best
not to make any important financial decisions without first consulting with those
who Would be affected. Someone might
know how, to generate more mileage
than you can.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - Be
cognizant and honest with yourself about
the odds against which you have to operate. Don't waste lime doing sometlltng
hard when you can be engaging In
something more realistic.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - You
may get away with thoughtless behavior
through much of the day, but it's not likely to last. Should imj;lul sivenass govem a
siluallon , you might leap smack into the
middle ot a fire .
.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Your
trlends want to keep things cotdial so
don't attempt to overpower !hem and
impose your views and positions on
them. !!they're not buying your opinions ,
drop the subfect or issue.
PISCES (Feb. 20·Merch 20) - Things
will ru n smoothly for you as long as all
goes well , but you're likely to have a
short fuse ove r insignif icant issues. Keep
everything in proper perspective , or you
could blow.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Unless
you have something complimentary to
say to co-workers . it's best lo keep your
mouth shut. If you speak your mind, a
completely nice day could quickly turn
Into a sour one.
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - 11 _you
become too po::;sessive, those very person s who have-been supportive and who
have tried to please you will turn on you
and do just the opposite ·of what you
want them to do.
GEMINI (May 21 -Juna 20) - Yo'u r
involvements with friends are likely to be
much mora harmonious and pleasant
!han they wnt b·e with !emily, because,
when it comes to the clan, you'll not hold
back on insults.
CAN CER (June 21 -Juty 22) - No matter
how well thlngs are going lor you . ltla still
Important you think before you speak. tf
you larl to guard yout comments, yoo
could say sortieth ing thafll be difficult to
retract.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You're pretty
good at giving advice~ and others will
appreciate this talent; but you may be
rather poor at going along with any aug~
gestloni from people, undoing all the
goodwill you had created .

letters o!

scromblod words bo·
'orm fovr sirnplt words.

MIDSOW
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PIIN1 NUM6!110
~ Lf!IUl IN IQU,ml

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SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 112l/C6
Fervor· Lusty - Envoy- Weakly -LEFTOVERS
"A large family has a big advanlage,"

I informed my sin&amp;lc
friend. "I never have to wull)' about what lo d9 wilh
LEtTO.VERS."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

&amp;0 fAR TODAY, I'vf. ACC~~D
"f.IIIIJU~~ ~OD 30!£COIJD6
Of WUTIOIJ TIM~ .

SOUP TO NUTZ
I: ~I ED To Crl!sH
.JW111E LONG'S

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HE:R DAD NOTICED

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"JI.Ie'f we"'

SeRVinG

Fl-uN€ ::ruice?

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I

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 28, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.coni

WithEmesto
threatening, Bush
visiting Katrina-ravaged
Gulf Coast, A2

Houston blasts Pittsburgh, 13-1.
PITTSBURGH (AP) Willy
Taveras has quite a streak going. Now
he'd like to see the defending NL
champion Houston Astros get on one,
too.
Taveras ran his hitting streak to 30
games during another excellent allaround game and Lance Berkman
drove in four runs, helping the Astros
rough up the Pittsburgh Pirates 13-1
Sunday for their third consecutive
victory.
Berkman, in a 5-for-45' slump
..
before getting six RBJs in the final
'
.
two games of the four-game series, hit
... 'i&gt; .J
a three-run homer in the fifth follow •
ing a run-scoring single in the first.
'
Taveras singled to start the game and
extend the longest hitting streak in
team history.
After the . Pirates won the series
opener Thursday, Berkman effectively
beat them in three consecutive games
to help get toe Astros out of a slide in
which they lost 10 of 13. Berkman
homered to support Roger Clemens'
5-1 victory Friday, then had a two-run
double to key a 7-4 victory Sa!unJay.
Berkman also could have easily had
another hit, but ~hortstop Freddy .
Sanchez was given an error for not
handling a sharply hit grounder up the
middle that scored Mike Lamb \luring
a three-run third.
"Usually when he drives in a bunch
of runs, we score a bunch of runs,"
manager Phil Garner said.
Taveras began each of the final
AP photo
three games of the series with hits Houston Astros' Lance Berkman, center, is greeted by teammates Chris Burke,
during the second longest hitting
left, and Mike Lamb after driving them in with a three-run homer against the
streak in the NL this season to Chase
Pittsburgh
Pirates in the fifth inning of a baseball game in Pittsburgh on Sunday.
Utley's 35-game run for the Phillies.
"It kind of blows me away a little
two-run double against reliever Britt
bit, but nothing is easy," Taveras said. completely got away. But this is an
aberration, with what we've been up Reames. Pirates starter Shawn
"The way the team is winning some
Chacon ( 1-2) was long gone by then
ball games , I'm real happy about that." to in the second half of the season.''
after giving up seven runs, five
Not
compared
to
the
Pirates'
history
Taveras reached base on hits or
earned.
in 4 1-3 innings.
walks 10 times in the series and stole since the early 1990s. it isn't. With
Jason Hirsh (2-2), a rookie rightfour bases. He is 45-of-129 (.349) one more loss; they will be two losing
hander making his fourth. career start,
seasons
away
from
tying
'the
Phillies'
during his hitting streak, getting Hits
major-league'record of 16 in a row bounced back from a 14-0 loss
in his first at-bat 14 times.
Tuesday to Cincinnati to pitch seven
from 1933-48.
"The pressure's off then. so I hope I
innings. He gave up one run and five
If
only
the
Astros
could
play
the
can get it every time in the first at·hits
in his second appearance in PNC
bat," he said. "''m not thinking that Pirates more often. They are I 0-3
Park in six weeks - he also started
much about it, it's hard to give a hit in against them and have managed their
the All-Star Futures Game on July 9.
only
two
modest
winning
'
streaks
·this
every game that you play. But now
Notes: Lamb had two hits, scored
month - one of four games, the other
I'm into it, I want to get a hit."
three
runs and drove in anoiher.
The Pirates assured themselves of a of three - mostly against the Pirates.
Chris Burke also scored three times.
14th consecutive non-winning season That four-game run Aug. 8- 11 includ- ... The Pirates fell below .500 since
. with their 81 st loss, looking exactly ed a three-game sweep of Pittsburgh the All-Star break at 20-21. They
like the last-place team they are with in Houston.
have losses of 14-1 and 13- I to
"We have to carry this home and Hou ston this month .... Pirates SS
one of their worst-played games of
the year. They had two errors, repeat- keep it going," Gamer .said as the Jack Wilson missed a third consecuedly made poor pitches in key situa- Astros finished up a 6-5 road trip. tive start because of a viral infectio!IS and let Taveras and Berkman "We've got a little something going tion .... The game was long since
generate runs nearly every time they for us right now."
decided, but CF Taveras made an
batted.
The Pirates decided to intentionally exceptional diving, face , in-the-turr ·
"Obviously. it wasn't a great day," walk Berkman during a four-run sev- cat.:h of Chris Duffy's fly ball into
manager Jim Tracy said. "We didn't enth but the damage was long since the left-center gap in the seventh ....
pitch well' early in the game ... and done, and Aubrey Huff followed with The start was delayed 62 minutes by
then the game got out of hand and an RBI single and Adam Everett had a light rain.

Indians

Brandon lnge doubled to reason we didn 'l is me,"
start the fifth and later _,.Lee said. "It's hard to win
scored on a sacrifice tly by ·when you're giving up a
Craig Monroe.
run almost every inning'."
Guillen hit his 15th
Notes: The Tigers have
homer in the sixth for a 5- hit 110 homers at Jacobs
I lead. The infielder is hit- Field, most by an oppoting .358 (34-for-95) with nent since the park opened
eight homers and 34 RBJs in 1994 .... Rogers is 16-16
with a 5.28 ERA in 55
in 26 games this month.
appearances,
Rodriguez hit a two-run career
homer, his . I Oth, off including 32 starts, against
Edward Mujica to make it Cleveland. He has pitched
7·1 in the eighth.
233 2-3 innings against the
· Lee fell to 0-4 this sea- lndiafJs .... Martinez has
son and 3-5 in his career hit .337, (29-for-86) with
against Detroit. The left- 14 RBI in 23 games in
hander allowed five runs August. .. , Hafner went land I 0 hits over 5 2-3 for-3 and is hitting .5()0 (9innings , striking out three for-18) \Vith two homers
without a walk. He is 1-4 and six RBis against
with 9.00 ERA over his . Rogers this year.... After
last eight starts, alltiwing the game, Detroit optioned
60 hits over 46 2-3 RHP Colby Lewis to
innings.
Triple-A Toledo and OF
."We had a chance to Brent Clevlen to Double-A
sweep the Tigers and the Erie.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vnl. 56, No. 15

.SPORTS
• Agassi extends career
by coming back to beat
Pavel. See Page 82
APphOIO .

Ochoa's 65 gives her 3shot victory at Wendy's
DUBLIN (AP)
If
Lorena Ochoa keeps this up,
soccer soon might be taking
a back seat to women's golf
in Mexico.
· Ochoa · oiltdueled Jee
Young Lee down the stretch,
pulling away with birdies at
the 13th and 14th holes, to
shoot a 7-under 65 and win
the Wendy's Championship
for Children by three shots
Sunday.
"In Mexico. soccer is
everything. Golf is, like, I
percent," the Guadalajara
native said with a laugh. "I
feel fortunate to have so
much support. It's oeen
great. I'm very proud to be
from Mexico. We're learning. ... It used to be soccer,
soccer, soccer. Now there's
also golf."
Ochoa and Lee , playing 'in
the same group, were tied at
22 under through 12 holes.
"It was like match play,"
Ochoa said. "It was a different feeling, to look at the
scoreboard and see everybody else three or four shots
behind." ·
But Ochoa hit an 8 iron to
6 feet and rolled in the birdie
putt at 13 and then spun a
wedge near the hole at 14
and made the IS-footer to
regain a two-shot lead. She
was never threatened again
as she parred out to finish at
24-under 264.
.
Only three players have
gone lower in a 72-hole
LPGA event in relation to
par. Two are Hall of Famers,
and the third almost certainAnnika
ly
will
be:
Sorenstam (27 under),
Karrie Webb (26) and Se Ri
Pak (25).
Lee, a rookie who began
the day two shots back of
Ochoa in second place, had
five birdies, an eagle and no
bogeys in her tirst 13 holes
- and still trailed:
·
"I don't think I lost
today," she said. "I enjoyed
playmg against a great player, a top player. .J didn't play
bad. She played better. I
learned a lot today."
The victory was the 24-

year-old Ochoa's third of the
season on the J,.PG A Tour.
She also has five seconds, a .
third, two fourths and . a
fifth-place finish in ·18
starts.
The $165.000 first-place
check raised Ochoa's earnings this year to $1,840,774,
moving her past Karrie
Webb and into first place on
the money list.
"That's the highest professional goal you can accomplish," Ochoa said. "But
right now it doesn't mean
anything. I have to go all the
way to November. That
would be a dream to accomplish."
. Ochoa, who leads the tour
in scoring average, has sh9t
66 or better 12 times this
season.
With earlier rounds of 67,
68 and 64, Ochoa had the
lowest 72-hole total on a
par-72 course this year By-....._
five strokes. She didn't have ' a bogey in the final two
rounds while going 15
under.
Lee closed with a 6-under
66 and shared second place
Stacy
at
267
with
Prammanasudh, who shot a

64.
.
"I played a ' great round of

golf - I didn't really make
any
mistakes,"
Prammanasudh said. "You
knew she (OI:hoa) · was
going to go out there and
play a great round, just
based on her career."
After rolling in an uphill
5-footer for par on the final
hole, Ochoa pumped her fist
and then ackn.owledged the
gallery surrounding the
green at Tartan Fields Golf
Club.
Ai Miyazato shot a 68 and
was. alone in fourth at 271 ,
with Diana D'Aiessio (67)
next at 273. Tied for sixth at
13-undcr 275 were Jeong
Jang (67), VVebb (69) and
Michele Redm.an (70).
Defending
champion .
Cristie Kerr closed with a 70
and was at 276 along with
Tina Barrett (68) and
Morgan Pressel (69).

Giants

had a two-run single in the
second and Durham ·had a
sacrifice tly in the third.
Pedro Feliz doubled
home a -run in the . fifth,
matching his career high
with 84 RBls. Bonds singled in a run in the sixth.
The Reds went 0-for-6
with runners in scoring
position. They were 2-for28. a11d hitless in their last
19 tries, during the series.
"They played a great
series against us," Reds
manager Jerry Narron said.
''In the last three games we
haven't done a whole lot.
We've b~e~ in this situation
before and we 'II see what

we ' re made of the next six in his second rehab start
games on the road."
with Triple-A Louisville.
Ryan Freel led off the . ... Reds I B Scott Hatteberg
eighth :with a single and went 1-for- 13 in the series.
reached second on Ken
Griffey Jr:'s one-out single,
but reliever Kevin Correia
THANK YOU .
got Edwin Encarnacion and
Adam Dunn on infield pop
Dr. Melanie
ups.
Griffey also doubled in
·Weese
extending his hitting streak
for buying my
to 12 games.
Notes: Bonds had at
2006 Market Hog
least two hits and scored
two runs in the same game
for. the first time since June
Jacob Pillow
14 in Arizona . .. . Reds
RHP
Gary
Majewski
pitcl)ed a scoreless inning

~~Iwoh~ iatlp lrt~nnr •The Daily Sentinel• ~oint ~lra~ant ~tRi~trr
cla·ssified@mydailytribune.com

4

t: Thank You t:
E Jim Rodgers E
t: Nationwide a
t: Insurance
t: for buying my ~
t: Grand Champion ~
t: Dairy Feeder at the ~
t: 2006 Meigs Co. Fair t:
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of Pomeroy -Village Council ments. The public chose
by Mayor John Musser.
these projects via surveys
Musser said the village that were circulated in late
hasn't received an official 2004 and 2005 of which
letter announcing the award nearly 900 were. completed.
but he was alerted of the
The project that came in
good news by Meigs at number one for the fundCounty
Grants ing, at least according to
Administrator Jean Trussell the residents, was street
who had filled out the repairs followed by demoliapplication.
.
tion of abandoned strucMusser said the village . tures, fire equipment and
couldn't spend any of the facilities, sidewalk repairs. .
money until Nov. I but
Eligible actiyities for the
Trussell advised him it may grant include public facilibe the spring of 2007 ties improvements such as
before the money begins to construction, reconstruction,
fund projects in the village. rehabilitation of infrastrucThe grant. money cannot ture in targeted areas of dis be spent downtown and is tress that do not fit within
meant solely for use in the criteria of other Ohio
neighborhoods for improve- Small Cities CDBG com-

·

petitive programs.
Pomeroy will have two
years to spend the money.
Clerk Treasurer Kathy
Hysell announced the vii!age is currently advertising
for demolition bids for the
Pomeroy
Junior
liigh
School with those bids set
to be opened on Sept. II.
Musser said if a bid is
approved
the
building
would probably be slated
for demolition in. late
October or. early November
to avoid conflict with the
Meigs High School football
season now underway.
In oth~r council business:
Council approved the
transfer of $8.0(.)0 from the

INSIDE
• Brutal Ugandan rebels
end their light, bringing
hope to beleaguered
central African nation.
See Page A2
• Hamilton birth.
See Page A3
• Southem hits school
year in high gear.
SeePageA3
~ Calendar of Events.
SeePageA3
• Authortties: Boy died
after being left in closet.
SeePageA3
• Law you can use:
Federal law restricts
activi)ies of debt
collectors. See Page AS
• Runway route changed
a week before crash in
Lexington, Ky.
See Page AS

WEATIIER

Details on Page A3

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- l2 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3·4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials
Sports

'

.

B Section

Weather
© 20o6 Ohio Valley l~blishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich/ photo

Ducky derby tickets went on sale this week. Here Betsy Nicodemus. Amanda Musser, and George Wright discuss plans
for prpmoting the event for the Pomeroy Merchants Association.

DUCKY DERBY TICKETS GO ON SALE
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY The . "adoption"
papers for rubber ducks to be entered
in the annual derby at the Sternwheel
Riverfest, Sept. 21-23, are ready and
the appropriate papers for "owning" a
numbered duck can now be purchased.
· The ducky d.erby, sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association, will
take place on the Saturday afternoon
of the festival with prizes to be awarded right after the race. Purchasers do
. '
not have to be present to win.

Candidates
named for Meigs
SWCD Board of
Supervisors

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oc

BY BETII SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

general to street fund , and
approv ed adjusting the
2006 annual appropriations
in the genenil fund to pay
hair or the village'&lt; Bureau
of Workers Compensation
premium
wh ich
was
$22,500.
Co unci I approved the
promotion of Ann Norton to
supervisor of the Pomeroy
Water Office. Norton does
not receive a/ aise in salary
but will be offered family
coverage health insurance.
All members of council
were. present for the meeting as were Pomeroy Chief
of Police Mark E. . Proffitt,
Street Supe,rintendent Jack
Krautter and resident Bill
Kitchen .

. BY BRIAN]. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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~~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~j

Pomeroy awarded $300,000 Distress Grant

Soldier with
Meigs .ties
killed in
Sunday attack

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ll ' LSII \\ . .\l '{:l 'ST :.!&lt;),:.!Oil(&gt;

POMEROY
Dilapidated
properties,
bumpy streets and disgraceful sidewalks of Pomeroy,
your days are numbered
thanks to the news that the
village was awarded a
$300,000
Community
Development Block Grant,
or "Distress Grant" to
improve neighborhoods.
Okay, so not all dilapidated properties, streets and
sidewalks will be see this
mone)" though a portion
chosen
by
community
members, not council, will . .
The announcement was
made at last night's meeting

Lorena Ochoa. of Mexico. poses with the trophy after win·
ning the LPGA Wendy's Championship for Children golf tour·
nament Sunday in Dublin.

•JXIIIIXXIIIIIIIIIIII;~

matched the total he had
given up in his other five
appearances since being
traded from · Minnesota to
_from Page B1
the Reds on July 31.
"The main thing before
pretty good there."
· I've been able to get ahead
Hillenbrand went 8-for- with my fastball and loca16 'with five RB!s against tion ," Lohse said. "That
the Reds , snapping an 0- didn't happen today. They
for-15 stretch.
jumped on a lot of first
"The way he's swinging, pitch fastballs. I threw a lot
we've see that before ," of bad strikes."
Alou said. "He could carr~
In his previous outing,
a team for weeks. I don t Lohse pitched eight shutout
. believe this team is going mnmgs agamst Houston.
to slow down."
The Giants scored in
Kyle Lohse Cl -.1) allowed each of the first three
five runs and 10 hits in five innings. Durham hit an RBI
innings. The five runs single in the first, Vizquel

Eastern opens
with easy win, B1

•

~

hitting only .132 (19-for-76)
in 23 games in August.
Consecutive one-out singles by Jason Michaels,
fromPageBl
Travis Hafner and Victor
Martinez in the bottom half
make me pitch good."
tied it at I. Rogers allowed
Rogers struck out three only one hit and three walks
atid walked three. The lefty over the next 6 2-3 innings.
has yielded only three runs
"I got into a groove after
·over 19 innings during his the first," Rogers said. "I
win streak. The 41-year-old don't think I made any
All-Star had been 0-3 with a adjustments. I just got into
6.37 ERA in six second-half my pitching."
starts before topping Texas
Granderson doubled to
on Aug. 17 and pitching open the third and one eut
seven scoreless innings in a later, Thames - hitting
win over the White Sox five only .171 (12-for-70) over
days later.
his previous 24 games The Tigers· are 20-7 over- hit a 418-foot shot to center
all in games started by for his 23rd homer and 3-1
Rogers this season.
lead.
Granderson hit the third . ''I have to figure a way to
pitch of the game from Cliff keep the ball in the ballLee (I 0-10) over the wall in park," said Lee. who has
right-center for his 13th yielded a. team-high 25
homer. The rookie came in homers in 162 innings.

11.

POMEROY- Three candidates, including two
incumbents, have been nominated fqr two Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District
Board
of
Supervisors terms commencing Jan. I, 2007.
The candidates are Joe
Bolin, , Rutland·. Marco
Jeffers, Albany, and Nita
Yost. Racine. Two of them
will be elected at the M~igs
SWCD Annual Meeting and
Banquet which will be held
Sept. 26, 7 p.m. at. Meigs
High School.
.Bolirt and his wife, Janet,
reside on a 120-acre farm in
Rutland Township. They

Please see SWCD. AS

.

First prize this year will be $1,000 in
Meigs ,County Chamber of Commerce
bucks, second prize a $500 savings
. bond, third place a $200 bond and
third place, a $75 bond ..There will also
be dozens of small prizes. The
· Chamber bucks can be spent at any
business which is a member of the
Chamber of Cbmmerce .
Amanda Musser, new chairman of
the event. will be assisted in arrange· ments and sales by George Wright who
has been involved for several yeurs
and Betsy Nicodemus. Their goal is to
sell 1,000 tickets. The cost of each one

.

is $5 when puchased from a downtown
merchant or at the Chamber office or
$4 when turning in a special c,oupon
which will be published in The D&lt;tily
Sentinel by the Merchants Association
The ducks will be dumped into the
Ohio River in the area around Powells,
and the first duck to cross the fini sh
line along the parking lot wall will be
the grand prize winner. The ducks will
be retrieved as they cross for the
sequence of prizes.
The money raised goes into
Association projects like downtown
beautification. '

LANGSVILLE An
American soldier who grew
up in· Meigs County was
southwest
killed
in
Baghdad,
Iraq Sunday
afternoon.
Gary Jones of Malloon's
Run Road, Langsville confirmed the death of his son,
Joshua Jone,, 24. He was
killed by a sniper in southwest Baghdad between 3
and 4 p.m. Sunday. Jones
said Monday· morning a
representative of the U.S.
Army vi sited his home yesterday to relay information
about his son's death.
Jones attended Southern
High School. but had
moved to Georgia before he
completed his studies here.
He completed U.S. Army
basic training in May, 2004.
at Fort Knox. Ky., and went
to Iraq on Dec . 6, 2005.
Jone' ·
wife. Tiffany
White. lives in Chester with
relati ves. His mother. Sandy
Miller, lives in Nebraska. ·
Gary Jones said he was
unable to provide additional
information about the return
of Jones' body or other
de.tails. Jones said the fami'ly has received no information about the circumstances surrounding his
son ·s death or any arrangement&gt;.
Jones is the second Meigs
Coumy man killed in the
war in Iraq. Army Staff Sgt.
Roger Clinton Turner, Jr., a
Meigs High School gradu'lte , was killed in Balad in
early 200-L

'

.RaHway offers experience of/train robbery
NELSONVILLE - Most
everyone has read about the
great train robberies of the
wild ; wild west, but the
Hocking Vall,ey Scenic
Railway . is offering the
experience on Sept. 23.
The train will depart from
the Nelsonville depot on its
journey toward Logan on 6
p.m. The drama builds as
the ride gets longer and passengers begin to wonder if
the robbery is ever going to
take place. ,
Then just when it is least
expected, the 9th Virginia
Cavalry of Van Wert
charges from out of
nowhere on horse back with
guns blazing , the train
comes to a screeching halt,
the robb~rs board the train,
remove the strong box and
approac.h the passengers
i~tent on bagging some

'
Hocking Valley Scenic Railway

ing and 'for groups tlf over
loot. But doA't despair they board the train .
Rcs~rvations are sugge stbecause play money will be
Please see Train, AS
handed out to everyone as e-d because ol' limited ~eal ·

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