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Page 86 • The Daily Sentiilel

Cincinnati REds

-

National BaskEtball Association -

Casey not worried about lack of power
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
cover of the Cincinnati Reds
media ~uide show s Sean
Casey ra~ sing his arms to congratulate Ken Griffey Jr. after
one of his home runs.
When it come s to homers,
Casey has done a lot more
congratulating than circling
this season, a mystery that has
no explanation. The burly
first baseman has only four
homers despite playing in the
majors' most homer-friendly
ballpark.
"It's just the flukey part of
baseball, it really is," Casey
said Monday. "Every year.
there 's always some part of
your game that you can't
explain ."
This one is .mind-boggling .
With its close wall in right
tleld - only 325 feet down
the line - Great American
Ball Park is a haven for left handed power hitters. Adam
Dunn and Ken Griffev Jr.
have taken advantage of its
dimensions.
In fact, just about everyone
has - left-handed or ri ghthanded - except Casey.
whose home run numbers are
.
declining.
He hit 19 homers in 2003.
the ballpark's first season, and
24 last year - one shy of hi s
career high. Thi s year, he didn't get his first homer at Great
American until Sunday, a solo
shut that was his fourth overall thi s season. ·
He hasn' t hit them in
Cinc.innati , or anywhere else.
He went 32 games and 138 atbats between this third homer
- June 5 in Colorado- and
his fourth .
Casey said he feels fi ne and
hasn't made any changes in
his swing . He's hilling. the
ball often (a .310 average).
just not very far.
··1 expect to hit for some
more poVfer in the second
half," he said. "We'll see. I'm
not trying to hit home runs."

The liic k of homers by
Casey doesn't bother interim
manager Jerry Narron, who
inherited a team that hits a lot
of them but does a -poor job of
squeezing runs out of anything less.
"I really believe that over
t 62 games, everybody seeks
their level." Narron said.
"Casey's level is between 15
and 25 home runs. He 's still
one of the better hitters ··in
baseball. J-te puts the ball i.n
play. We' rc lucky to have him
in the middle of the order."
Casey thinks it \ premature
to.decide .he's falling short on
power. pointing out that he's
been known to hit homers in
bunches.
"I think it will be a mor
realistic conversation in
September." Casey said. "In
2000, I hit four in the first half
and 16 in the second, Last
year, I hit 15 in the first half
and nine in the second."
Still, the lack of even one at
Great American had started to
bother him . He was particularly happy to rou nd the bases
for the first time on Sunday.
"The fact that I didn ' t have
one at home - it was like,
'You're kidding me,"' Casey
said. " It was bugging me a lit- ·
tie bit. but it was going .to
come eventually.'.'

***

VALENTIN BACK TO
BENCH: Javier Valentin's bat
went into the Reds' Hall of
Fame nn Monday. Valentin
went back to the bench .
The reserve catcher wasn't
in the starting lineup Monday,
a day after he hit a gra nd slam
and a three-run homer in a 94 victory over Coloradn. The
switch-hitter became the first
Reds player to · homer from
both sides of the plate si nce
Pete Rose did it in 1967. ·
Narron wants Valentin to
play · on Wednesday and
Thursday. the final two games
of a series against the Cubs.

So, Jason LaRue was behind
the plate on Monday.
·
"He talked to me," Valentin
said. "He said · I'd probably
Wednesday
and
play
Thursday. He asked me how I
feel. I told him! feel good. I' II
just wail for Wednesday and
get ready."
.
.
Valentin said hi s father,
Jose. enjoyed the two-homer
game at least as much as he
did. His-father, 58. is visiting
from Puerto Rico for a few
weeks and was in the stands
Sunday. The two of them
went out · to eat on Sunday
night. and ~ol recognized by
fans.
"It was great f(&gt;r him ,"
Valentin said. ''He enjoyed
seeing a game like that, espe- .
cially when yo~ don' t P,lay
everyday. I told him (when he
arrived) that he 's probably
going to see tne play f'ive or
six g·ames. I know my job."
Valentin also talked to his
brother, Jose, an infielder for
the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Jose Valentin also switch-hits
and has homered from both
sides three times during his
career. most recently on Jul y
30, 2003. durin g a threehomer game .
·
Valentin played it low-key
when he reali zed that hi s
brother wasn't aware of what
had happened. He then handed the- phone to hi s father to
break the news. ·
''He didn 't even knpw."
Valentin said.'
WAITING FOR FREEL:
Narron is looking forward to
gelling utili ty player Ryan
Freel back. Freel is on a
minor league rehabilitation
stint . 'recovering from a sore
foot.
" It will be a chance to get
some rest li1r so me guy s."
Narron said . "He's going to
play second. third, and probably left. center and right.'' ,

Hurricane Emlly's
·, outer winds and
rain begin lashing
northeast Mexico, A2

SEATTLE · (AP) - The
Seattle is coming off a
SuperSonics hired Bob
52-w in season that ended
. Weiss as coach Monday.
with a dramatic six-game
promoting the . 11 -year
series loss to the' event ual
assistant who worked under
champion Spurs in the
former coa&lt;:hes . George
W~ ste rn Conference semifiKarl, Paul Westphal and
nals .
Nate McMillan.
'
By hiring Weiss, general
This will he the fourth
manager Rick Sund s~i d the
NBA he au coa&lt;:hing job for
front office can assurp some
. the 63 -ycar-old Wei ss. who
measure of continuity - a
agrceJ, Lo a three-year deal ,
factor in the deci sit,m.
11 huge
"Toda· y ,·s 111 ore of an
He ClJ,Jc he d t he San Weiss a.l so wi ll coac·'
.
.
19v6
Rashard All
Lewiss. who niaue
allllOtJnceme nt of a head
Spurs from
o 1
Antonio
88 (going 59-I 05) , th e hi s first
-. tar te-am ast coach, rather than an introseason
,
as
wel l as young
Atlanta Haw ks from 1990 L k dtlCI ·Ion,'' s·a,·d Su lld. who
93 ( 124-122) and th~ Los .sta ndouts
lik e
u e was the first personnel
,
Ridnour
and
Ni&lt;:k
Collison.
d•·rector ·, ,1 Dallas back ,·_n
· · 1 ··
Angeles Clippers in I99 _,_
94 (27-55).
"TillS IS tle
tJrstopportu- 1980 when Weiss was an
. nity I've had 10 work with as.· istant under Dick Motta.
"If was a simp le dec •- talent
!ike
Rav
and
·
sio n," Sonics chairman Rashard, all the lltlcleus,
Weiss was the 21st pick
Schultz said. Luke , Nick Cullison," in the 1965 NBA draft by
Howard
"What Bob demonstrated to Weiss sa1d.
·
.. Th ere ·.s 1h e the Philudelphia
d 12 NBA76ers. He
us privately was absolute caliber of people. the ci ty, playe
seaso ns
the friends we' ve already before starting his coac hing
unbridlea enthusiasm."
The jovial Weiss noted made here. All those things caree r as an assistant with
he's going into a much dif· are very, very spec·ial to the San Diego Clippers in
ferent situation this time.
1977 . •
me. "
1·
"We don't have any playAfter 19 ·years in the
While
some
o
ers· on a respirator," he Sonics organization as a McM illan 's influ ence will
joked. "The first couple of player, as sistam and he_ad carry over from last season ,
jobs I had were complete coach ; McMi ll an lett earlier Weiss said he hopes , lo
rebuilding jobs. In fact , this month to. coach· th e . install an even more highthey weren't even ·done Portland Trail Blazers. powered offense than the
· t.111g ye.t "
· 1an 1, one that averaged 96.6
de tenora
A not her top ass I'
Weiss led the Spurs to the · Dwane Casey. became points per ga me during .the
playoffs once and reached Minnesoui's head coach in regular season.
·
the postsea son in two of his .June.
On defense, Weiss plan s
Weiss · said he turned to simplify. say ing he' ll
three years with Atlanta.
He has been known to down McMillan's otTer to probably borrow from some
perform card tricks on continue working together of the systems used when
Seattle 's charter flights , in P&lt;Jrtland, hoping to Karl coached the Sonics
making him popular with become th e 13th head from 1992-9g- a span that
players . He was en&lt;)orsed coach in Seattle.
included Seallle 's last
last week for the top job by
" I' ve said thi s before:. appearance 111 the NBA
Sanies star Ray Allen, who Being an assistant i.s like Finals.
.
recently agreed to a five- being a spectator." Wei ss
" I know what our weakyear, $85 million contract. said. "You can contribute nes.;es are.'' Wei &gt;s said. "I
Though Seattle's , free so me, but when yo u're ll)e know t-he history of what's
agency situation currently head coach it' s almost like been llone ·and J. know
make s the roste r Fluid. being in ilte. game.''
where the hol es are."

I

ment.

Schnyder is scheduled to
face unranked wild-card entry
Carolina Wozniacki in the
f1rst round. ·
Local favorite Jessica
Kirkland. who grew up about
20 miles north of the tournament site, was overwhelmed

b.y Puerto ,Rico's Kristina
Brandi 6-3. 6- 1 in the first
night match.
Kirkland. who was given a
wild-canJ berth, won the first
game after " 13- minute rain
delay to take a 3-1 lead in the
first set, but Brandi won the
next eight games to win the
first set and take a 3-0 lead in
the second set.
"I think Kris'tina started the
match n·er•ous. but after the
rain delay, she came out and
played a lot . better,"- said
Kirkland, 17 . .·'She went oft
and did a good job of relaxing
herself. I came out a little
more tight."
In the other night match.
No. 125 Chanda Rubin· upseL
No. ·63 . Laura Granville 6-3,
6-4 1n a · matchup of
Americans.

c .

Relaxed
from

PageBl~

the heart s of the French
fans," said Armstrong. who
will quit the sport at the conclusion of the race in Paris
next Sunday.
The Tour took a day off on
Monday.
Arm strong has been more
open, less stressed. and hap. pier to share the limited time
remaining in . hi s stellar
career.
"He's definitely more
relaxed, the pressure's off
him a little bit.'' said teanl
director Johan Bruyneel, who
has worked with Armstrong
on every Tour win. ·
Armstrong' said a huge
weight had been lifted off his
shoulders when he won hiS
sixth Tour, eclipsing the
record shared by five-time
winners Jacques Anqu,etil,
Eddy Merckx , Bemard
Hinault and Miguellnduram .
Heading into · Tuesday's
112.2-mile. 16th stage from
Mourenx to Pau . Armstrong
leads Ivan Bassn ·by 2 minutes, 46 ,seconds. 1997 Tour
winner Jan Ullrich by 5:58
and Alexandre Vinokourov
by 9:38.
Armstrong has . one tough
mountain stage in the
Pyrenees left in addition to
two other modest climbing
stages. a flat stage and a time
trial.
"We have a decent lead
with a big time tr.ial to come,

wh'ere maybe we can take a
lilli e more advantage,''
Bruyneel said Monday. ''But
it doesn' t maller if it 's 30 seconds, all that matters is to
win .··

A:rmstrong's sometimes
brash dominance of the I02year-o\U race is one reason

why he has encountered hostility. In recent years. politics ·
ha ve abo played a part.
France and the United
States have had an uneasy
relationship si nce they disagreed pver the Iraq war tensions that have spilled
over on Armstrong.
''I'm a guy who almost
always defends tni s country
and these people in a time
when' there's not a lot of people defending this country of
France," Armstrong said.
france has not always
treated him kindly - be it in
· aggressive
newspaper
columns or in narrow mountain passes where fans stand
inches away from his face.
Armstrong endured one of
the most harrowing experi·
ei10es of hi s career last year.
in a time trial up the famed
L' Alpe 'd'Huez moun tain.
People spat on him. threw
beer in hi s face. yelled
insults. With his eyes staring
ahead. Armstrong ·powered'
through them all t9 win tl1e
'stage with a stunnmg (hsplay
of single-mindedness. He
admitted afterward that he
was deepl y upset.
. .
There have been other Incl.dents over the years - spectators screa ming doping
accu!'latinn~· at him . or draw-

in~ needle shapes and scrib:

July 8.
.
"This " a pure baseball
trade in the sense that we are
trading a player we Iike in
Jody Gcrut for a player that
we feet has a lot of offensive
potenti al and compl'imellls
our club well , both now and
in the future." Indian s gener-

Meigs assistant superintendent resigns to accept other position

• Rio Grande signings.
See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

I

Page AS
• Philip Scott Bryson
• Pearl L. Russell
• . • Naomi Nease Riley
• Jason Daniel Frash
• Belva Dale Frye

"The position presents a
different challenge, and a new
opportunity which fit into my
POMEROY -· Dr. Wendy life at this time when •neither
Carper 1-Jalar, assistant .super- of my children are livin~ at
intendent of the Meigs Local home . It. was an opportumty I
School District for the past couldn't let pass," said Halar.
seven years, has resigned to
"I've had wonderful experiaccept a position with the . ences here, and I've certainly
Piqua City School District in enjoyed working here, but lhe
Miami County.
opportunity came and it was
Announcement of Halar's time for me to look at. other
resignation effective . Aug. I experiences."
was made at Tuesday night's
The children of Halar and
meeting of the Meigs Local her husband Michael are
Board of Education .. Halar Marjorie Mora, now residing
said that her new P\lSIIIon as in Hillard and Jon a student
a~sistant superintendent in the - at 'o hio u'niversity. 'The famiP1qua Distnct will mvolve ly plans to move to Miami
rna~~ of the same jobs as her County.
positlOll here and w11l mclude
Halar the daughter of Mr.
having charge of hiring teach- and M;s . George Carper of
ers~ workmg wuh their certifi- Pomeroy, graduated from
cation, and handhng state and Meigs High School in 1969
federal programs.
and received her bachelor,

master and PhD degrees from
. Ohio University. ·Her back.
~round has been diverse havmg spent two years teaching
in Australia, before coming
back to Mei gs County to
teach in the Eastern Loca l
School District.
She came to the Meig s
Local School District in 1986,
and served as principal at
Salisbury and director of state
and federal programs before
being named administrative
assistant to the superinten ~
dent. She was named assistant
superintendent in March
1998.
,
·. Halar's resignation was
accepted by the Board ut
Charlene Hoefllch/photo
Education last night in the Roger Abbott on behalf of the Meigs Local School Board, left,
meeting which followed a with Superintendent William Buckley J ~ok ing on. presented .a
reception held in her honor. plaque inscribed "Thanks for Sharing the Load" to Dr. Wendy
Carper Halar who res igned as assistant supe rintendent to
'
Please see l:lalar, AS
accept a position in the Piqua City School District.

Bush.chooses appeal judge John
Roberts ]tjor Supreme _ Cou~t.
BY DEB RIECHMANN
what of a surprise since there
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
had been some expec tations
,
·that he would replace retiring
WASHING'TON
Justice
Sandra
Day
President Bush chose federal O'Connor with a woman or
appeals court judge John G. minorit y.
Roberts Jr. bn Tuesday as hi s
Roberts has been on the
first nominee' for the U.s. Court of Appeal s for the
Supreme Coun, selecting · a District of Colum bia Circuit
rock-soli.d conservative who since June 2003 after being
has won broad support from picked for that seat by Bush.
Advocacy grot~ps on the
both parties but still faces
what could be. a contentiou s ri'ght say that Roberts. a 50battle over the direction of year-old nmive of Buffalo.
the nation\ highest. court .
N.Y.. who attended Harvard
Bush offered the pos.ition to Law School. is a bright judge
Roberts m a telephone call at with strong conservative cre12:35 p.m. as he was hostmg .. dential s he burnished in the
a luncheon for the prime min- administrations of former
ister of Australia, John Presidents Bush and Reaga n.
Howard. He was to announce While he has been a federal
it later' with a flourish in a judge for just a lilli e more
nattOnall~ broadcast speech than two yeHrs. legal experts
to the nat1on.
Hi s se lection . was SOI.!IePlease see Roberts, AS

INSIDE
• International nuclear
talks with North Korea to
resume July 26.
See Page A2
·. • Free health care
services for Ohio residents.
See Page A3
• William Westmoreland,
commander of Vietnam
troops, dead at 91.
See Page AS
• Cleveland bishop says
he reassigned abusive
priest.
See Page AS
• Election official's pay
docked for forwarding
political donation:.
SeePage AS

al manager \'vlark Shapiro
said.
Genii batted . .275 in 44
games this . seaso n for
Cleveland. He spent the first
six weeks on the di sabled list
while recoverin g from major
knee surgery last September.
Gerut tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee
on SepL 17 while trying to
catch a ball in the right-field
corner at Jacobs Field.
Genii became somewhat
ex pendable with the emergence ·o f outfielders Grady
Sizemore and Coco Crisp.
In 2003, Gerut ball ed .2 79
with 22 homers and led the
Indians with 75 RBi s.

It's like ha · g your
own personal banker...

Brian J. Reed/photo

Roger Gaul prepares to drive his 1939 Allis-Chalmers R.C. around his Chester farm for the ben·efit of an Indiana .film crew. The tractor is to'. be featured in a 2006 .antique tractor calendar and.
""Classic Tractor Fever"

WEATHER

the barrier of a trans Iatur. ·
The presence of rocker
girlfriend Sheryl Crow has
·also .so ftened hi s image.
Every morning , Crow is
by the team bus . or milling
around talking to fans . She
oft en ki sses h(m or leaps
into his arms at the end ofa
stage. In previous years.
Armstrong's outward sign s
of affection were limited to
hi gh-fiving
teammates.
Now. he often gives Crow
the flow ers or the fluffy
lion that he gets each day
for being the race leader.
Crow even appeared at a

bllng obscenities on the
roads.
Armstrong doesn' t hold a
grudge.
"I can't say enough good
things about it (France). I
genuinely lo ve this country,
the culture, the history. I
don't know what else , I can
do," he said: ''Of course. four
or five people a day seem to
know it all and have a lot of
nasty things 16 say. But ultimately, I think we have a fine
relationship."
. His charm seems to be
working this year, and people
appear to ha•e warmed lip to . post-race news conference .
him more.
poking her head arou'n dthc
"You have to re spect him."
cycling fail Philippe Marsan dour, . eagerly absorbing
part
of her
said . "Look what .he has another
boyfriend's
world.
She also
achie ved and what he has
come back from. How caJJ'. sal by his side in another
people not be moved by that " lighthearted TV interview.
"I think it' s really cool
Yes. there are people who
he lets Sheryl hang out
that
dislike him. but I think a lot
witn him ,'' 22-year-old
of it is jealousy."
Armstrong wants to create Aurelie Langlois said.
as much of a feel-good factor "Cycli ng is a very macho
sport. but he doesn' t seem
as he can.
.
He has chatted and joked to be ."
Yet his struggle . to be a
with television· crews rnllirrg
along beside him. Barely an local favorite still goes on .
hour after one punishing It could be a fight he never
stage. Anmtrong sat down totally wins.
for a long television interOn Sunday's 15th stage
view. He smiled and laughed. from Lezat -s ur-Leze to
even crac·lcing a joke in Saint - Lary - Soulan .
French slang.
•
Armstrong regularly in sists Armstrong got off from the
on startin g i.nterviews in · team bu s to warm applause.
French'. His grasp of gram - Mements later. jeers and
mar is not perfect . but speak- boos rang out further down
ing the language enables him the road, and some in sults
to reach tl1e public. removing filled the air. '

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Peschke in first
Indians send Jody Gerut to Cubs
round of Cincinnati Women's Open
matches, Yoon Jeong Cho of
South Korea beat Alina
Jidkova of Russia 7-6 (5) , 63; )apan's Aiko Nakamura
eliminated Abigail Spears 6-7
(4). 6-0. 6-3; and Israel 's
Shahar Peer beat the
Ukraine's Yuliana Fedak 6-2,
6-3. Nakamura will most likely
face Switzerland's Patty
Schnyder. the tournament's
top seed and the tour's ! 2thrank ed player, in the second
round ·of the Tier III tounia-

Dayton, Columbus
military facilities added
to base-closing list, A6

ne

~Panova upsets
CINCINNATI (AP)
Russia's Tatiana Panova upset
eighth-seeded Kveta Peschke
6-4. 7-6 (6) in the first round
of the $170,000 Cincinnati
Women's Open on Monday . . ,
· Peschke. ranked No. 40 on
the WTA tour, was the only
seeded player in action
Monday. After losing the first
set, she came up With a Service break to forc e a secondset tiebreaker before hitting a
. forehand return lon g on
match point. The Czech committed 67 unforced errors.
"She always has a · lot of
unforced
errors,"
said
Panova. who is ranked No.
121. "You never know what
she's going to do. I played a
lot of points quickly. and I
think that surpriSed her."
In other early first-round

.

NEws

Sonics hire Weiss for fourth
NBA.head coaching job .

CLEVELAND (AP) Looking for a power-hitting
right·handed hitter, the
Cleveland Indians acquired
outfielder Jason Dubois on
Monday night from the
Chicago Cubs in exchange
fur outfie'lder Jndy Gerut.
The deal was announced
moments .after the Indians
beat the Kansas City Royal s
6-2 in a game shortened to
five innings by rain .
The Indians have -been in
the market for a right-handed slugger, and Dubois (pronounced du-Boyce ) could
help. The 6-foot-5. 220pounder hit 31 homers last
·season at Triple-A Iowa.
Dubois, 26, batted :239
with seven homers and 22
RBis in 52 ga mes this season fo' the Cubs hefnre
being optioned to Iowa 011

'

Tuesday, July 19,_2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

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Detatfs on Page A&amp;

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Dear Abby

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Editorials

A4

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ObituarG)J

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Sports

* Transfe1T1ng funds between accounts.
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Weather
.~ ,

•

.

.

Gaul's vzntage tractor chosen
for calendar, video project .
BY· BRIAN J. REED
BREED@M YDAILYS£NTI NEL.COM

Visit our new ATM at 124 Exxon Mart

.

B Section

A6

2005 Ohio V111llt!y Publishing Co.

neous All'is-Chalmers memorabilia, including signage,
apparel. a push mower and
CHESTER - A star is other collectibles .. His !raeabout tO be born on Sumner tors are ·hi s hobby. purchased
Road near Chester, but it's from all over the · United
not an aspiring actor about to States and lovingly restored
hit the big time, it's a vintage by ·him and friends in hi s
tractor.
·garage.
Roger ..Gaul's 1939 AllisGaul got invo[ved with
Chalmers R.C . has tieen restoring
Allis-Chalmers
selected for the 2006 Classic tractors after disco·vering the
Farm Tractor Calendar and · hobby thro~gh Dale and
the "Classic Tractor Fever" JoAnn Kautz of Chester,
video which accompanies it. who collect and exhibinracThe calendar and video are tors · of all make s. They
pro(lu'ced
by . Baxter accompanied
Gaul , to
Comm· un,·cations
of s·ssontln
S
D
where he
I. .
'
'
. .'
Indianapolis. Ind .. . and are .bought the R.C. now to be
sold online and in retail out- feat ured on the video .
lets. Two men from the firm
"I saw how much fun they
visited the picturesque Gaul were ha ving with the hobb y.
farm on Tuesday to photo- and that go t me interested in
graph and film the tractor. it,'' Gaul said.
witM Gaul behind the wheel.
His '39KC. is one of only
Gaul is a die-hard Allis- 5.000 made between 1939
Chalmers enthu•iasl , with · II and 1941. As he does with all
farm tractors, five garden of his new acquisitions, Gaul
tractors and a lot uf miscella- worked with Keith Collins of

Reedsvi lle and' Butch Wilcox
to restore the machine.
removing each piece, sandblasting it. sandin g it again
and pain.ting it with the di stinctive
"A lli s-Chalmers
Orange" paint, and then
piecing it all back together
agam.
The R.C. caught the atten -tion of a profess ional photographer at a tractor show in
Florida. who then put a picture in the hands of the
Indiana calendar publisher.
Most of Gaul's collection
comes from the 1930's,
inc ludin g
three
1938
n\achine s. Allis -Chalmers
stopped ma·king tractors in
1985. and Gaul's newest is a
1984 farm tractor. He plan s
to exhibit five from his collection at the Meigs County
Fair. It will be his first year
to sho w his collection there.
although he and his wife.
Paula. "have traveled around
the country to other shows .

.

Roaring 20's display at

Chester Courthouse

Charlene Hoeftlchj photo

While the Chautauqua has moved on. remn ants of the .Roaring
Twenties theiJle of .the historic ·portrayals remain at the
Chester Courthouse. The extensive museu'm exhibit pepicting
the life and times of that era will rema1n 1n place for public
viewing for several weeks . Ukel~les. sheet music. Twentiesstyle. hats and spats. pictures of locals w1th bobbed hair and
hiked shirts. home accessones. ~nd Clothing ga lore tell the
story of the h1gh l1fe lived by many during the Roaring
Twe nties. Here Jeanie Ridenour. a hostess at Ctiester-Shade
Days . admires the display.

Now is the tine to make a commitmertt to build new
schools lor our kt:1s. if we don't. we lose the 64% that tJ;Je
·· stole is w~ling to pay.

If you wanl to leolrl mOfie obotJt the Red Dot for II: ids
campaign pbn or if yov want to help ... dot'1't m1ss this evenfl

Call u s today at (740) 992-2133
'' -w\\. pc op lcs b ancorp. con1

Tuesday; July 26, 2005, 7:00PM
·Gallla Academy High Schoo.l Auditorium

•

At th is Rally\ve wil ;
Talk aboul tJ;Je campaign. plbn
. · Goth~ Su;Jgesflons and comments
Sigr. up to help &amp; assign spedlc tasks

'·

•

Red Dol for Ktls C&lt;:!mpaign, Doyid Sl'loffEl!. TteaSUIEll, EO. Box 32. Goi~IS. OH 4563}

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PageA2

RLD

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 20,

Bv JOHN RICE
LA PESCA , Mextco
Hurricane Emily grew in
strength as its outer winds
and rain lashed Mexico's
coastline Tuesday. forcing
thousands in northeastern
Mexico and southern Texas
to seek higher ground.
The hurricane swirled
across the Gulf of Mexico.
with the eye likely to come
as·hore early Wednes&lt;)ay near
this small fishing village popular with Mexican and U S.
tourists.
The storm has already
struck Mexico once. nppmg
roofs off resort hotels &lt;ntd
stranding
thousands
of
tourists al ong the Mayan
Riviera, which includes the
resort of Cancun.
Residents rushed to nai I
plywood boards over win dows and doors , while
Mexican army trucks roamed
the streets collecting evacuees laden with suitcases and
rolled-up blankets.
The town wus among at
least 20 low-lying, seasi de
· Mexican communities being
emptied of . residents before
the storm. which was expected to hit a sparsely populated
·.stretch of coastli~e jList south
of the Texas border.
In southern Texas , ~amrcrs
emptied beachfront parks on
South Padre Island. residents
piled sandbags to hold back
possible, fi&lt;Jodwaters and
schools were turned into
shelters. But for many there;
· the h·uge waves were just too
much to pas , up.

"It is amazing," said Mare
Lambert. a tourist from New
York who spent two hours
boogie-boarding before the
storm . "It is cool to sec what
Mother Nature can po ...
Some 150 miles south, in
La Pesca. the approaching
storm brought a ·steady wind
tharblew across the town and
breakers skillcrcd toward the
;'tbandoncJ be&lt;tch. Residents
boarded up windows .tnd tied
down tin roofs of their
homes.
Felipe Portillo. a 67-yearold fisllerman. helped his
sons h&lt;tul five small, fiberglass fishin~ boats off the
hearh ami up to the road.side.
av.ay from .the water. Then
they ph,nneq to head to a
sl1elter inland.
"Overconfidence
kills
men.'' Portillo said . "Running
is your best defense ."
Some residents were taken
to a naval base on a rebtivc-

ly high point on the edge of
town where excited children
raced giddily. about , sllrieking
and laughing .~~ their purents
settled in.
"Now that there is help, we
must accept it ... said Marta
Neri . a 30-yea r-old who
arrived with her three smull
children .
She said she hadn't gone
farther inland hccau .sc she
couldn ' t afford l!l pay a hus
or taxi .
Emily htt the Yucatan
Peninsula on Monday as a
lierce Category -+ .storm with
! ]5 mph winds. Lau-:ing mlllions of dollars in damage .
Hundreds of local re.,idents
wer.e left homeless. but no

deaths or major injuries were
reponed.
The storm weakened, but
once back out to sea it
strengthened to a Category 3
hurricane , with sustamed
".winds of 125 mph Tuesday
night.
Mexico and U.S. oil companies evacuated workers
from offshore oil installations
in the northern Gulf of
Mexico as Hurric:ine Emily
swept toward the U.S.Mexico border. Some 16,000
workers were told to return to
Mexican installations in the
southern Gulf on Wed nesday.
Emily didn't appear to
have caused any major damuge in the southern Gulf,
although state-run Petroleos
Mex icanos was still surveying the rigs.
.
.
Among those · leavmg tor
the second strike was Donald
Laray, . a 60-ycar-old Texan
who moved to Mexico I0
years ago. He was using a
pickup truck to haul a recreational vehicle out ol a
beachfrom lot whe·re he was
planning to build a hotel.
" It's been just about two
days without sleep." he said,
referring to rushed preparations for the storm .
Meanwhile in the Pacifi~ .
Tropical
Storm
Eugene
swirled about 300 mtles
. south of the peninsula city of
Cabo San Lucas. Eugene had '
maximum sustained winds.
near 70 mph . with higher
gusts.
the
M iami -hased
National Hurricane Center
AP Photo
said. The storm was expected
Residents of La Carbonera and other beach towns line-up for their meals at a shelter in San to weaken Tuesday night as it .
Fernando as Hurncane Emily approac.hes the Gulf of Mexico, Tuesday.
·
·
moved over cookr waters. ·

· decision to return to the talks
time that ' it had nuclear
and said it hopes the negotiaweapons , and it has stnce
tions will move forwarJ .
said it l1as made &lt;Jther moves
Russia "welcomes this
SEOUL. Souto Kore&lt;t
that would allow it to har vest
South Korea -said Tuesday weapons-grade
plutonium
deci sion and expresses the
that North Korea will resume fn\m its main nuclear reactor.
hope that the upcoming meetnuclear di sarmament talks on Experts believe the Nort h has
ing in Beijing will bring visiJuly 26 after a 13-month boy- enough plutonium to make at
ble
progress,"
Foreign
colt, with diplomats from live least a half-dozen bombs. but
spokesman
Mini stry
nations stepping up pressure it has never tested any
Alexander Yakovcnko was
on Pyongyang to scrap its weapons that would confi rm
quoted as say ing by Russian
nuclear weapons program.
ib ar~enal.
news agencies.
North Korea agreed earlier
Meanwhile. in .a move sure
South Korean Presidem
this month to return to the to raise concerns in North,
Roh Moo-hyun said Monday
talks after being assured by Korea. activists were to meet
the United States "has the
the top U.S. nuclear envoy Tuesday , at a Washington
final key" to a solution at the
that Washington recognized conference on North Korean
talks.
its sovereignty. South Korea's human· rights that is partially
South Korea revealed earliForeign Minisiry sa id the funded by the U.S. governer this rrtonth it has offered
talks would convene July 26. ment.
massive energy aide to the
No closing date was given. . President Bush has also
North as an incentive for it to
The previous three rounds. decided· to . appoint a speci'al
give up its nuclear weapons.
which started in 2003, lasted . envoy for North Korean
The United States has said it
for several days and Jailed to. human rights who was to
wouid
offer
diplomatic
AP Photo recognition and trade to
lead to any breakthroughs. appear at the conference, but
South Korea is pressing for the announcement is being South Korea's chief delegate . Moon Sung-Muk, second from left, shakes hands with his North North Korea only after interthis round of the six-nation delayed· and · his allendance Korean counterpart, Ryu Yong·Chul, before lnter·Korean working-level military talks at national inspectors verify it
talks to be more flexible and canceled out of concern over Panmunjom on Wednesday. South and North Korean militry officials to meet prepare (or high- has com.pletely dismantled its
last longer - po"ibly Lip to the delicate nuclear negotta- level military talks. Two other persons are unidentified.
nuclear program.
a month or more.
tions. a senior U.S. official
South Korea plans to "play said in Washington on condia progressive and active role tion of anonymity.
Japanese Prime Minister
in
making
substantial
Koizumi
said
progress at tl\is round of six- Junichiro
party talks for resolution of Tuesd~y that Tokyo is still .
the North Korean nuclear committed to -normalizing
problem•,"
the
Foreign diplomatic relations with
Pyongyang, despite anger
Ministry said.
China, Japan, Russia, South over the kidnapping of
Korea and the United States Japanese citizens by North
have sought to .convince the Korea in the 1970s and
North to abandon its nuclear 1980s.
weapons. The nuclear crisis
North Korea said Monday
began in late 2002 when U.S. that it and the United State s
offidals accused the North of should agree to coex ist and
running a secret uranium respect' each other at the
enrichment program.
renewed nuclear talk s.
In • February, the North
Russia's Foreign Ministry .
claimed publicly for the first applauded North Korea' s
Bv BURT HERMAN
ASSOCIATED

PR ~SS

WR ITER

Pakistan arrests militants with
possible links to London bombs
LONDOI\J (API - Police
ro~nded up Islamic n1ilitants
in raids across Paki stan to
the
determine
whether
London
bombing
plot
stretc hed to South Asia.
while Egypt said Tuesday
that. a ·detained chemist
wanted by Britain for questioning had no links to the
attacks or to ai-Qaida.
Three of the four suicide
bombers visitep Paki stan
last. year. and investigator&gt;
want to find out whether
they received training or
other
assistan ce
from
extremists in Pakistan.
The July 7 attacks aboard
three London subway trains
and a bus killed at least 56
people. injured ·700 and
spurred the British govc.rnment to announce plans for
·new anti-terrorism laws.
"We are holding a few
milital1ts who are suspected
of ha vmu li nks to the
London ,~uictde ho mbe" ...

We'll deliver all the local happenings right to your home. Stop by our office
sa1d Tariq · Saleem. pol ice
ch ief in . the cit y of Lahore .
Official&gt; want to determine •• and subscri be to the Daily Sentinel for 3 months for only $30.19 and receive
whether the ·'London bomb- :l a FREE comic umbrella*!
'
ings have any tentacles in ••••
, If ~~111 arc a cum•n1 ... ulhc11hcr. ~ou e m rcren~.: il fret..' umbrella hy cxtt..·nd ing your ~uh~c ription for 6 month~ for onl) S59 15.
Paki&lt;tan.
especially
i·n ••
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••••
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Quantitic ... arc lim ited .
Saleem ~id not name the ••••
suspect\ or say how many ••
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•••• •
were detained .
,
But other police officials. ••
speak in g· on ~ondnio n oJ; ••
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anonymity. said seven men ••
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President
Gen .
Pef\et
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••··~
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days: two . were &lt;:aught ••••
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: -

The D~ily

Se~tinel

· · · 1

1

~ .BY THE BEND

Co~munity Calendar

.

2005

Hurricane EIDny's outer winds and rain begin I3Shing northeast Mexico
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The Daily S~ntinel

1

·• ,Q"A:

1

~~----~------~---•------------~

Public meetings

Pomeroy Library. There will
be coin grading class at 6: 15
p.m. followed by a meeting. at
Thursday, July 21
7
p.m. Public is welcome.
, POMEROY- Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District will meet in regular
sess ion , II :30 a.m. at the
Saturday, July 23
Meigs SWCD office, 3310 I
POMEROY - A gospe l
Hiland Road.
·
to benefit the Fall Harvest
sing
TUPPERS PLAINS
Gospel
Sing_ will be held at the
Eastern Local lloard of
Education, regular meeting, Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
6:30 p.m., elementary library Church, 7 p.m. Singers will be
Spirit Led or Parkersburg,
~onference room.
Mercy of New Haven. Many
Short of Reedsville, and Brian
Monday, July 25
POMEROY' Veterans and Fauiily Connecti&lt;Jns of
Serv.ice Commisson will meet Long Botton1.
at 9 a.m. adt the&gt; oftice. 117
Sunday, July 24
Memorial Drive.
RACINE - Mt . Moriah
Church of God Sunday school
picnic at noon at Star Mill
Park. Covered dish. Baptizing
in river. Take lawn chairs . No
evening church service.
Thursday July 21
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Monday, .July 25
Masters will have a cookout at
POMEROY - Hysell ' Run
noon at the home of Joan Community Church Vacation
Corder. Food will be provid- Bible School. 6-8:30 p.m.,
ed. Take lawri cliairs.
through July 29. 992-7036 In
RACINE - Ohio River register or for information.
Producers FFA alumni will , RACINE - St.
John
meet at 7 p.m. in the Southern Lutheran Church Vacatioti
Ag. room.
Bible School, "Construction
Zone," 6-8:30 p.m .. for preMonday, July 25
school through grade 6. 992 POMEROY - The. Oh- 2542 for .information.
KAN Coin Club will have a
MIDDLEPORT ·- The
meeting and auction at the Middleport Church or the

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Nazarene will have vacation Bibl e sc hool, Monday
through July 29, 6 to 8:30.
each evening . There will
be cla sses where · children
will learn abou·t god, sing
so ng s, do crafts, and enjoy
snacks. Theme will be
"Where Kids are Wild
about God " Fern Grimm is
director. Two bicycles will
be given away. A parade at
I p.m . on Sunday will
kiaorf the Bible sc hool ,
and a cookout at 7 p.m . on
Friday will co nclude it.
For more information cal l
992-3191.
.
POMEROY - The ·Zion
Church of Christ, Route 143.
Pomeroy, will have Bibl e
school · classes from 6:30 to
8:45 p.m. July 25-029. The
theme . .will carry out a
Jerusalem Marketplace. There
will be crafts, Bible-ti me
games, snacks and music . A
program Jlractice and pizza
party will be on the Saturday
morning before the closing
program at 7 p.m. For more
informution call Kathrvn
·
Johnson, 992-5195.
REEDSVILLE - Vacation
Bible school will be held at
the Eden United Brethren
Church, Route 124 between
Reedsvi lle and Hocki1igport.
6 to 8:30 p.m. July 25-29 ..
Kingdom of the Son will be
the theme.
·

, Sunday, july 31
CARPENTER
will
be
Hotnecoming
obst:rved at the Carpenter
Baptist Church with morning
service at I0:30 a.m.' with
speaker Robert Sanders, .and
singer, Bob Siders. Dinner
will be held at noon , and there
will be an afternoon service
with the Builders Quartet and'
Siders presenting special
music. Floyd Ross is pastor.

Reunions
Saturday, July 23
ALBANY - The annual
Stanean
family
reunion .
descendants of Joel and Lydia
Steanean, noon at the Lake
Snowden, Big Oak shelte~
house, at Albany. Take picnic
lunch and lawn chairs. For more
infom1ation call 992-5502.

Other events
Saturday, July 30
CHESTER - The Chester
Ball Associuton will hold its
end or season annual party at
II a.m. at the Chester ball
field behind bawns. All &lt;idverti sers and team sponsors are
invited.
SHADE - Three-on-tllree
basketball tournament at ~
a.m. at the Shade Comnlllni!y
Center. RSVP740-696-0811.

Circle plans projects, elects officers
RACINE - New officers
were elected and numerous
projects were discussed at the
recent meeting of Sonshine
Circle held at the Dorcas
Bethany Church.
Officers elected were Judy
Gilmore, president; Evelyn
Foreman. vice president;
Jackie White, secretary; and
Julie Campbell, lreasurer.A contribution was made to
contribute $100 to Brady
Bissell toward his expenses as
un international ambassador
group this fall . Bissell was
nominated for the honor by
Eastern School and selected
after a trip tn Washington D.
C. earlier this year.
A $100 donation was also
made to . the Mulberry·
Community Center kitchen

- ..

project, and it was decided to
put the money made on the
noodle sale in the general
fund. The cookbooks prepared
by the group are expected to
be for sale in August. Orders
for the books are now being
taken
Blondena Rainer made a
motion. seconded by Judy
Gilmore, to dnnate $1 OQ.OO. to
the Mulberry Community
Center Kitchen
Project.
Motion carried.
Edie Hubbard, made a
motion, seconded by Jack1e
White, to put the money that
will be made next week making noodles, in the genera!
fund. Motion carried .
Cookbooks are being made
now, and should be available
the end of August. Orders can.

be placed with Kathryn Hart at
949-2656 or Lois Sterrett at
949-0032. Discussed at the
meeting were serv ices of the
Meigs
County
Health
Department.
Lois Sterrett conducted the
meeting opening with a reading of "A Street Vendor
Named Comentment" by Max
Lucado . Officers' reports were
given by Hart and Campbell.
Thank you notes were read
from the James Cunningham
family and Sandra Codner.
It was reported ·that there
was no tloat in the parade and
the group did not do a bake
sale for the July 4th celebration us was previously voted
on .
Secret sisters were revealed
and new ones drawn .

Betty Proffitt ·and Hart prcsented the program .. Proffitt
read ":fhe Day Roy Ro~ooers
Rode My Bus" and '' A
· Beautiful Prayer." Hart read
"Kids Say the Darndest
Things. " The two served
refre shment s
to
· Ruth
Simpsdn, Lillian Hayman .
Edie Hubbard, Blondena
Rainer. Evelyn Foreman.
Mabel Brace, Holly Stump.
.Martha Lou Beegle, Mallie
Beegle, Peggy · Boso. Ann
Boso, Jackie White, Letha
Proffitt. Sterrett, .Edna Knopp,
Judy Gilmore, and Campbell.
Next meeting will be on
Aug. II , at ?p.m. All area
women are in,ited to attend.
The program and re fresh ments will be dune by Sterrell
and Hart .

PageAJ
Wednesday, July 20,

Free health care services
for Ohio residents
COLUMBL!S - The Ohio
Nauonal Guard . tog~th e r
with the Ohio Department of
Health and the Washin~ton
County Health Depilftn~cnt.
will provide free health services in Wa.sllington County
durin~ two weekends in
August to ·Chio res ide nts.
through a 'cooperative program called GuardCate .
This year, GuardCarc . an
Ohio National Guard 'program that provide s free
health services ·'Yhile ~on- .
tributing to the Guard 's
rnelli cal !raining · readiness.
will be offered tile weekends
of Aug. 6-7 and Aug. 20-21
at the Washin gton County
Health · Department. 342
Mw.;kingum Drive. Mari erta .
GuardCare is hosted each
year in a different medically
underscrved Ohio communitY, Services are free to all
Ohio residents who attend.
regardless of income.
"We are very pleased to
be able to hrin~ medical .ser·
vices to thr..: ""n:sillr..:nts of
Washington County and
Ollio. " said Maj. Gen .
Gregory L. Wayt . . state adjutant general. "It is very
encouraging tn sec those
who work in professional
pati,~nt care donate 'tlleir
lime to serve their country

scrcenmg .,.
function

me

(heart
child -

hood and adult imtttuttiLations.. adull vision glaucoma
te., ting. cholesterol screenings . adldt heari ng ex:.tminations

· anLI

h loo d

sugar

screenJn!.!..,.

Sgt. Fi1q C ia" D:micl
Hall , of the Ohio N,ttiunal
Guard\ mctllt:al command.
said . ancndec s WO Uld be
able. to .pick and cht5ose
from the health l" dl"l" -.cr\ in'~
avai!ahk . "If ~o mcon~ wa nt ~
just dll inHn LU1ilation. th ey
can get just til at." Hall ~ Hid

··1r

-;orneon e wanh to

vi~it

all the medica l stati on,. the\
can do that. too."
·
Through GuardCarc. Oh io
'National Guard medical personnel support and ass is1
l&lt;~ cal hea lth care pro,idcr' .
they · do not replace the m.
The . 'upport mceb an q i, tin g

nccll

and

pnwiUc:-.

Wilkesville fish fry and car show set

WILKESVILJ..:E ' - The
49th annual fi sh fry and car
show of 'th e Wilkesv ille
Town ship
Volunteer
Fireman's Asspciation will he
hel d Saturday July 30 to I0
a.111 and I0 p.m.
The Joseph Freeman 4 76
of \he American Legion wi ll
he Lloin u· the tlag rai sinn t:cr"
~ i(•r I0" a.m.
emony scheduled
on the square.
"Co unt y Roads Band"
will play from 2 to 4 p.m ..
and "County Grass Band"
from 7 to 10 p.m. "S till
Standing" will also perform
in the evening~ Therl! will
·be square dancing on Main
Street with Lank Wears on
the fiddle and Delver
Ri chards as caller.
As for the car show, there
is a 56. registration fee per
entry. Regi stration will be
.
.
Berry, Shirley Simpson, Armstrong. Tim Owens, Greg Hall, Mickey Hill. Doug held from II a.m. to 2 p.m.
Gerald . Simpson, Charles Glenda
Owens.
Leroy B~aver, Tracy Beaver, Shandi with judging from 1 to 4 p.m.
Trophi es will h-e awarded
Cline, · Lois Cline. Leona Forester, Sandy Forester, Beayer, Carolyn Beaver, John once the judging ts completCline, Pat Collins. Freda James Carter, , Mary Forester, Beaver. ·Brian Brown, Cry stal ed. There will be two awards
Holsinger, Delores Donohue. Joey Forester, Robert Forester. Brown, Bobby Joe Wolfe. Roy in each class. The classes are
Kenda Armstrong. Alun Jackie Gloyd. Carol Cline, Gillilan,
Mary Gillilan. as follows:
Williams.
Jan
Armstrong, Dera Armstrong, Seva WeHs, Brayanna. Wells, Mildred
Car.s
- 7
classes
Derrick Armstrong. Joseph David R. Wells, Misty Brown. Hannon. Lee Cline and Krissy original/restored: 7 dasses of
modified/customized:
Armstrong,
Raymond Roberta Porter. Jon Porter, Cline.
Trucks - 2 classes of orig inal/restored and 2 da"es of
modified/customi zes:
Antique tractors - I l'ia&gt;S
with first ad second place.
included in the price.)
t~ e good ies to my neighbor. I
1990 and newer ,·chide'
DEAR ABBY: Is there a would say. ''I'm sure you 're can be 9isplayed but wil l not
tactful way to let a good probably not aware of this. but be judged ill any c ia~ -..
· neighbor know that her wine), your ·wind chimes clink day
chimes are driving u's crazy·' and nigh t - and ·they 're dri- Kennedy anniversary
This neighbor hung the · ving my husband and me to
Dear
chimes on the opposi te side distraction . Would you mind celebration Saturday
Abby
nf the hou se from their bed- hanging them .someplace
P0~1EROY - Carol and
room - ri!!hl next to our el~eT. If s he\.,asgoodaneigh ­ Ed Kennedv \\·iI cdehrate
·screened po;ch &lt;Hid bedroom bor as you say. I'm sure-she'll thetr 50th \\··eddin~ ·,mni\"~r­
wi~dow . I suspect that thcv accommodate you.
~ary· with an outJ(Hll" rec~p ­
Dear Abby is writ/ell by tton. 2 lo ~ p.m. S;. nurUa~ at
never hear them. yet we mu&gt;t
• Tum a deaf ear to anyone listen to them all day and all Abigail Va11 Burell, also till' home Of thei r JaugiHCf
who wants 10 pry or question night. - CRAV ING PEACE k11ow11 as }eamre Plri/lips, and s(m-in-la\1 . Cher\1 and
you .
AND QUIET. LEXINGTON . atrd was formded by lrer John Thom.". 2973 Tl1t rd St..
• Girls: A boy says 'it's KY.
motlier, . l'auli11e 1'/rillips. , Syra~use
over' when he stops cal ling.
DEAR CRAVING: Here's Write
Dear
Abby
at
Usually he gives no reason. how I' d handle 11. I'd bake a www.DearAbby.com or. P.O.
but he has them.. This means batch of cookie&gt; or a pie and Box 69440, Lm A11geles, CA
it's time to forget him .
take it next door. As I offered 9()()69.
• Boys: A girl will ge ncrall~
give you her reason. Accept it.
whatever it is. This means, for

Anyo ne irH er~~ t ed may ~ on­
tact Marcus Prater. 669-0300:
Don
Mcthen y.3RR- RI 09 :
John Collins. 665)-7000: or
Jimmy Gem~c. 66'!-3204.
A variety of drawings a.nd
game~ with pri1e" \\·ill be
lleld Juring the day. There
will craft displays . produce
for sale. snow cone:-. ~old tw
·the AnH.:ril:an Lcl!i on. anll
homemad!2 rutig~-- by the

Wilke,villc
Pre,hyterian
Church.
The pnres on the Urawn) g
this year will be $250 for
first. $150 fur sewttd , and
$50 for third. It is SUQQe"cd
that those auenJtn ~ '- take
liHvn chairs.
..
This ye ar ·s Fireman's
Association officers Me John
Wood.
pre ~ ident:
John
Collins, vice presiden1 : ;md
Don Newsom. ..,;c•crelarv· tre asurer. The uflicw.s uf the
Wilkesville Volun teer F1re
Department are Chid. John
Collins. ass1.stant chief Eddie
Cottrill. 'econd '"sistant
chief. DarreJI Puckell. captain: Jimmy George. and first
lieu'tenant John Wood.

Teen is brokenhearted over. her lost first love
DEAR ABBY: I am 15. Just
18 days before our three-month
anniversary of dating, my
boyfriend, "Brandon," broke up
with me. He was my first love
and I am heartbrokeh. Seeing
him having fun with someone
else. while I am aione and hurting. is awful. I want to be happy,
but I still love Brandon and
want him back.
.
My friends and my paren~
all tell
to get over him. I
don't want to get over Brdlldon.
I want to know how to get him
back. I miss everything we had
together. When I think about the
fun we had. l break down and
cry. What do I do, Abby? I'm
miserable without him. How do
I stop loving him·•- CRYING
IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR CRYING: Teenage
romances can be complicated
and painful, and you have my
sympathy. Your problem isn't
a new one: it 's been happening
ever since boys and girls started noticing each other. In my
booklet for teens there is a section titled "Breaking Up - or
What to Do With the Pieces."
In it. I say :
• Speak only .well of each
other - or not at all - after
the break. ·
• Attend parties and schbol
affairs, and de velop new interests. ·
• Keep busy. Avoid the 'old
reminders,' which tend to
make you moody and broody.
Put away or get rid of the pictures. photos and gifts ...
unle ss you enjoy _punishing
yqurself.

EKGs

screL~ning) ,

National Guard medical pe rsonnel · with valuable ancl
realistic tra i nin g.
The Ohio National Guaru
initiated the GuardCare program in 1995 after Congrcs:-.
authoritcd the use of mili tary personnel in mctlicall)
underse rved communitie" a-.
part of the Departmem of
Defense's ,
lnno.,ati' L'
Readine ss Training iiRT )
and
their
commun iti es pnlg.ram
throughout Ohio."
For more il{(ormmwn cmJ ·
Free services wil'l include- la c l
Dr
Kathleen
sports physicals. dental Meckstroth. N0-37-1.-2782.

Beaver Family has reunion
RACINE - The annual
Beaver FamiJy Reunimi was
held at Star Mill Park in
Racine recently with 47 family and friend&amp; attending.
Loretia Berry provided
music
accompanied
by
Glenda Owens.
Allending were Loretta

2005

Visit us
online at
www.mydallysentlnel .com

Your online
source for
news

-------Better Hearing

,,
·

~------

1

·Is Better living..... :

you. too, it's time to moVe on .

• Once it's over. all the notewriting, phoning or conniving
will not helpyourcause. Don ' t
ask-a mutual friend to help you
'get him (or her) back .· It v.ill
only make you look foolish .
• For all of you - chalk it up
to experience and a part of
growing up. There's no growth
without &lt;1 lillie pain : and it
only huns·.for a little while ."
There are do ~e ns of other
things I tell teens to ease them
through these difficult. tumultuous years. "What Every ·
Teen Should Know" ca n be
ordered by se nding a bu., iness-s ized. ,cJi-address~d
envelope plu&gt; c he.:k or mone~
order for $5 (U .S. funds) to:
Dear Abby - Teen Booklet.
P.O. Box 447. Mount Morri,,
IL 61054-0+17 . !Postage "

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~u_mmer Value :
Days
1
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.·any other discounl~
11r coupons.

Many Local Musicians Under the
Direction of Mr. Roger Williams

DILES PARK

Must Prcst•nt coupon.
Coupon C\ pires

Middleport, OH
Saturday, July 23rd 7:00PM

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Free Refreslrments
Ice Cream-Cookies-Lemonade
Ea•uyont Wrlcom.-.Rrlng _rour Famili~!&gt;.

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Frirnds, Clrildrrn, Ww.-n Chain. Rlonl:.tots and 1-."n}O.l' a
cunc~rt in fir~ parA along tlrr lll'aulijlll Oltio Ril"n

&lt;.."o-Sponson-d K~· : \nwrican L~ion Pn~l 12S
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AUDIOLOGY
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Athens, OH 45 70 I

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OPINION

.The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hdeflich

General Manager-Nevys Editor
~

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establ(shment of religion, or prohibiting the
. free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or tl1e right of tile
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Governmen t for a redress o.f.~rief'ances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

.

.TODAY IN HISTORY
Today,, Wednesdc~ y. July 20. th~ 20 I st day of' 2005 1There
.tre i64 d.1ys kit in the ycc~ r
Tnc.My\ Htghllght 111 H ts!O t }

· On Jul y 20. i%9 Apol lo II &lt;~sllon&lt;~ll t' Nerl Armstrong and
Edwtn "Butt" Aldrrn becc~rne the ltrst men to w.1lk on the
mnnn o~s they stepped out of their lun.n module.
O n thrs d.ne
In 18!0. Colom hioi decl.ucd independence !rom Spam.
In I Rri I. the Congress ol the Confederate St.lles began
hol d111g scs~1o n s 111 R1chmond. Va.
In IK7 i . Brr t!Sh Columh1a entered Confederatron &lt;IS .t
' C.:\nad lan prnvJHLC

In IHRI. Sroux lndr.m lcadc1 Sittrng Bull. a lugntve smce
the B.tttk. ol the Lillie Brg Horn. surrendered to federal
troops
In 1942. the frrst detach ment ol the Women's Army
Auxil rary c;orps - l,t!Cr known .ts WACs' _. began baSIC
tr.un ln !! dl Fmt De:-; Mo mes. lowd
In 1944 .•tn .tttempt by ,, group oi German offictals to assassrnate &lt;\doll Hrt lcr wrth a bomb t,u led as the explosiOn at
Hitl er s Rastenhur g heatlqu.trters only wounded the Nazi
leader
·
Ten ye.trs ,Jgo·· Lc.rders ot the Umversit y of Califorma
vo ted to drop .tllinn,ttive o!Cl!On poJ JCICS Oil adllltSS\OnS and
htnng B,JSeball Hall-oi-F.uners Duke Smder and \Ytllte
McCovey pleaded gu rlt y m New Ymk to tax e~as t O n.
F1ve ye.trs ,tgrr The Mtdeast summ11. resurrected only
hours alter rt;- repo rted denuse. moved forward with
Secreta! y of St.tte M.tdeletn e Albn ght steppmg 111 for
Pres1dent Cltnton. who had lett for an econom1c summ1t in
Japan
One year ago. Fat mer nauon.tl secunty advJScr Sandy
Berger quit as an mtorm.1l advtSer to Democrat John !(erry's
prestdcnual campaign after diSclosure of a cnmmal mvesti gatron tnto whether he' d rnt sh.mdled cidssified terrorrsm doc. urncms lraq1 mtlllants f1 ecd a Ftlrprno truck dn ver alter the
Phthpp111es government ga\e tn 10 thctr c.J em~md ~ to wtthdraw
troops from lr,ty T.he he.ld ol slam Ame n can hostage Paul M
Johnson Jr was lound tn .1 r.ud tn S.rudr Arabi,t. The United
. Nat1ons Ge neral Asscmhl) demanded that Israel tear down
, the b,Jrn er 11 was butldmg to seal oil the West Bank, Israel
·vowed to conunue construcuon
· Tod,ty's Blnhd,tys Act ress-s inger S.tlly Ann Howe&lt; IS 75
V1deo &lt;iriJSt Nam June P,uk " 73 Rockahill y smger Sleepy
La Beef 1S 70. Sen. Barbara A Mikulski . D-Md , IS 69 Actress
Dtana R1 gg rs 67 Rock mustcwn John Lodge (The Moody
. Blues)" ri2 Counrry smger T.G Shepherd ts 61 Smger K1m
. Carnes " 59 Rock music tan Ctrlos Santana ts 58 Rock
mustcto~n P,\UI Cook (The Sex PIStols ) " 49. Actress Donna
DJXOfl JS '18 Cou ntry smge1 Radney Foster ts 46 Actor Frank
Whaley " -+2 Rock smger Chns Corne ll JS 41 Rock musician Stone Gossard !Pearl Jam) rs 39 Ac tor Reed D1amond JS
3~ Actor Josh Holloway ("Lost") rs 36. Stnger Vnamm C ts
36 Ac tor Simon Rex JS 31 . Actress Judy Greer rs 30 Actor
. Charlie Korsmo is 27 Actor John Francts Daley ("Freak and
,Geeks") IS 20 Actress Brlh Bruno ("Accordmg to Jtm") 1s 9
Thought for Today "Aver} great part ol the miSc hiefs that
vex thi s world anses Irom words" - Edmund Burke. Bnttsh
statesman (1 729- 1797)

The news on July 7, 2005
-· when a series of bombings
in London killed scores of
mnocent train and bus commuters during morning rush
hour. ·- felt eerily famtlt ar
On the morning of Sept II ,
200 I, the World Trade
Center, Pentagon and another Wash1ngton, D.C., land,rnark (believed to have been
the U.S . Capitol bUtldmg or
the White Hou se) were the
targets of Islamic extremISm Nearly 3,000 died that
day. In London on July 7,
more than 50 people were
killed, with hundreds more
InJured But the carnage
wasn't the onl y horror those
two tragedies had 111 common.
The lethal stench of anll·
Semitism also clung to both
mghtmares, a type of hatred
that is, sadly, not all that
unusual.
As the confusing early
reports came in from
London OJI July 7, tt was
quickly reported that Israeli
fmance mim ster BenJamin
Netanyahu had been given a
head's up before the attacks.
warned not to go ahead wuh
the speech he was scheduled
to dehver because of seclll tty concerns That story was
bogus, and the Assoc iated
Pre" later JSsued a correction But Internet, radio and
TV outlets had alread y run
wtth tt, the bell coulu nol be
unnmg
On the mornmg of Sept
II, one po werful rumor
claimed that JewJSh people
who worked at the World
Trade Center were upped off
not to go to work that morn·
mg. Ulumately, the "news"
came from the same place as
the July 7 "blame-the-Jews"
scapegoaung retlex see med
to a hlston cally deep store
of anti-Sem1tism.
Make no mt stake, anti Semtt~&gt;m ts an undemable
part of the war lslamtc mtli-

· ~TAWER
Or'5Ml"H

=

OHIO

'

•

and 111clllde culdren and telephone numba No 1111\tgned let·
' ten wt/1 he publt1·hed Leu en 1/um/d he' 111 good ra5te,
-t,dllrn'illl,l!, !HUe\, not'peHmwhtln. Le!ten oj tlumks to orgam ~atto/1\ unci rndilldual&lt; 11 1ll1wt be {f(tepted}OI pub/teal/Oil
I

The Daily Sentinel
Our mam concern m all stones IS to be

accurate 1r you know of an error 1n a
story call the newsroom at (740) 992
2156

Our main number is
(740) 992·2156.

, Department extensions are:
News
Editor Charlene HoefliCh Ext 12
Reporter. Bnan Reed. Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent Ext 13

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publlst1ed every afternoon. ,Monday
thr ough Friday 11 1 Court Stroot
Pomeroy Oh10 Second-class postage
pa1d at Pomeroy
Member The ASSOCiated Press and the
OhiO Newspaper AsSOCIBIJOil

Postmaster. Send address correcbons
to The Da1ly Sentmel 111 Court Stroot
Pomeroy Oh10 45769

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Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Obituaries

After moving from the
ci ty to the country a few
years ago I thought I was
gettmg a handle on the way
thmgs worked
I learn.ed to wave at people as they went by m cars
whether 1 knew them or riot.
I learned that when somebody asks you. to bnng a '
"dish to pass" you're not
supposed 19 show up With an
empty plate. I learned that
you don't ask 1f somebody
needs help changtng a tile or
is' feeling poorl y, you JUSt
p1tch in. In other words, I've
learned to do a lot of thmgs .
that would have been considered poor taste in the cny.
But I sti ll haven't shed all
my city ways. It still upsets
my fantas y ptcture of country hving every trme I dn ve
pi:l~l VL1rdnn Frazier's saggmg old farmhou se w11h II &gt;'
sprawl of old tractors. car
patts and rustmg eqUtpment
on the lawn
Imagine how nice it wou ld
look tf that ratty old over· sn't on h1s
stuffed chmr~
lront porch An
at broken
as oo
exerctse btcycle
scat on rt What muscles do
you exerctsc w11h th,n '' Best
not to ask. Lcantng ~tga m s l
the btkc is a stack ol baldrng
111es from a car that hasn't
been made in 40 years The
'•

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Deaths

Jim
Mullen

porch is crammed wrth stutl
that ge ts larned on .tlld
snowed on. WIMt the sun
hasn't ljJe.tched 11 h."
peeled, what rt hasn't p~clcd
it has dned. There IS a box
with a few old telepho11es 111
it, a collectiOn ol old 1 V
chasSIS, broken chrldrcn's
toys, a croquet se t With &lt;&gt;IIC
mallet m1 ssmg .md an ,t\ o
cado-colored
~v,t s l11n g
machine.
If Vardon lr vcd m New
York ,md c.tlled hu11Scll .rn .
anist and thr,· prle ol JUnk
was m the corner of .t huge
empty whnc sa lon 1n ,,
famou s muse um people
from Manh,Jttan would t11p
all over lhcmsc h es to sl...'l..' 1l
first He wou ld be the to.tst
of the ar t world lor
"met,tphonca ll) 'h owrn~ us
wh.1t 1~ on the 111 '1 d ~ n l ll'
\ tru gg llllg to get out " H 1\
use ol lound llhld' to
express fut1lrty of our eXISten ce 1 ~ ~ay m g to us. 'Wh y

wo"X· rt 's .ill garbage."'
.
Or maybe not. It rs a pret·
ty ugly may of junk . I
"ou ld love to say. "Vardon.
why don't I ge t my tnJ&lt;k and
we'll load up all thts stu ll
ami l.tkc rt to the dump
Yuur hou&gt;c wil l look so
much bellcr and my property values wou ld go up "
But you can't say that For
th~ :-.amc reason you u.u1
ne ver c on g r~ltuldte .1 wonMn
~

protrullmg stomw..: h
ort her rmpcndmg hu pp1ne"
II you IC wrong she's dngry
wltil

and

yo u rc

l!mb,lrrds sed .

What rl only some of rt''
tunk ' I don't wmit to insult
hun
Then I had a brrlhant rde&lt;J.
The srx lrttle words lh&lt;il
ha ve c,Ju scd most ol the
wo1l d's prob lem'
I lo,rdcd our prckup w1th ,,

me It\ Wood stock all over
agam The1 c can be peace
and harmony 111 the world
Let the sun shrne 111. n 's the
dawnm g of Aquarius ThiS is
the way to ge t thmgs done. I
don't want to live in one of
those towns where they pass
J,,ws that te ll yo u what color
ynu can pa111t your house
and how

m ~tn y

cars xou can

h.tvc in the dnvcway and
whe n to mow the lawn
Two mrnutes l.!ler Vardon
comes out of hts house with
h1s "varmlt gun" and (I g nn
011 hi s face He SJd les 111 the
passe nger SJde, slams the
door dOd says, "I love to go
down there and shoot rats.
C 'mpn, man , goose Jt ."

"But tsn't there anythmg
you'd like to t.tke' Anythmg
old .md tatt ered you'd hkc to
lc\\ b.1gs ul our trash 111 11 ge t nd of'l" I qmzzed hnn as
.1nd drmc past Vardon's unsubtly as I cou ld
e1en tl)llugh 11 was m the
"Nah. I gut rrd or all the
wrong dlleCIJon from the trash yes terday If there's
dump. I stopped. He was out one thmg I can't stand it 's a
on h" porch.
messy hou se "
'Var don." I yelled. 'I'm
(}un Mullen 11 th e awho1 of
go ing to the l.mdlill wrth ,t
"It
7itke.\ A \11/age ldt ot. A
h,tll empty truck You W.l\11
Memmr of Life After the Cit\"
In come ,lion~ 1'
Yep. he . . dH:I. H,tng on a (S mum ""d Scllll&lt;li' l 2001)
Ht~ alw umt,1butn rep,u/wl\
lllllllllC "
' Ah. drploni.rC) Tim rs the lo Entellammem Week/.\
"ay thrl1 gs should work l m 11 here he Wfl he 1eac hed a!
helprng hrm he's helprng JIIH_mullen @ell' wm.)

Cleveland bishop says he
reassigned abusive priest

Philip Scott Bryson

Belva Dale Frye

Philip Scott Bryso n, 43, of Akron, passed away unexpectedly o n Su nday. Jul y 17, 2005, m the Akron Cily
Hos pttal.
He was born Oct 3 1, 1961, m East Lt ve rpoo l. Ohto, the
son of Rosemary P1ckens Crosten, who survtves and
restdes tn Akron
'
He was a draftsma n at Com unell €orp. m Akron.
He ts also survtv,ed by h1s stepfather, Leonard Croste n
Sr. of Akron ; a stster, Con nr~ (Kev in ) McManus of Bel la
Vtsta, Ark., a brother, Leonard (Roche lle) Crosten Jr of
Akron. hts materna l grandmother, Virgmta Cornell
Pt cke ns of Port land ; an aunt , Carol Pi ckens ot
Ra vcn ~wood. W Va.; an uncle , Dave (Terry) Ptckens ol
East Ltverpool; and meces, Jodi McM anus of Bella Vista
Ark ., and Nicole Crosten of Akron
'
He is a lso sur v1ved by coust ns, Johnny, Danny, Davtd,
Charlotte, Kelly, Sherry and Davtd Jr •
He was preceded ih death by ht s grandfather, John Ph11ip
P1ckens Sr. ; an uncle , John Phtltp Ptckens Jr .. and a niece,
Chnsttne P1ckens
Servtces Wtll be 2 p m. Thursday, July 2 1, 2005 , at the
Cremee~ s Funeral Home m Racu1e. Officiatmg will be the
Rev. Rt ck Rule. Interment wtll be in the Browning
Cemetery at Portland Fnends may call at the fun eral
home from 6 to 8 p. m Wednesday, Jul y 20, 2005

Belva Dale Young Frye, 72, Hanlprd, W Va , dted Monday.
July I g, 2005, at hyr restdence.
She. was the daughter of the late George W and Camte
Welch Young
Serv1ces wtll be II a.m. Saturday in the Fogle.ong-Tucker
Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va .• wtth the Rev Richard Nease
and Pastor Randy Parsons officiatmg. Bunal w1ll be m the
Unmn Cemetery, Lewrt, W Va Fnends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 9 p m Frrday

Pearl L. Russell
Pearl L. Ru sse ll , 85 , of Rdc rn e, passed aw.ty at 7 50 a.m.
on Tuesda&gt;, Jul y 19. 2005, dt O;erhrook Center 111
Middleport.
Bmn Jan 27, 1920. 111 Burltnghan1, she was the daugh·
ter of the late Emmett W. and Bess te Blac kwell Jones She
was ,l ho mern.tker. She was a me mbe r of the Amencan
Legton La ~ i es Auxiliary, Meigs County Senior Cit1zens
and was a forme r member of the Lad ies Bowhng Leag ue.
She "as ,, mem ber of the F1rst Southern Baptt sl Church.
Surviving are he r so n and dau ghter-to-law: Karl and
Ltnd&lt;i Ru sse ll of Pomero y, gr,mdchildre n Shelley Renee
Carter, K1mberl y N Stephens , Lrsa Ann Gage, MeliSsa
Lynn Mane ss . Enka L De.m. ,md Kenneth R. Russell ; 10
great grandchrldren. and two meces, Sharon Jones ot New
Mextco and Barbara Heg ler of South Ctrolina
Bes tde s her p&lt;~~ents, she was preceded 111 death by her
hu sband. Kenneth Russell , on Nm. 24, 1983 , whom she
marn ed on Oct 8. I 939, tn Athens; tw o daughters, Ke nda
Sheryl Chapm.tn and Aleta Lynn We ll s. a stster, Dorothy
DandakJS , a son , Max Ru ssell , a brother, Emerson Walter
Jones. and a spec 1a l nephew, Paul Parsons
Serv1ces wtll be held at II a m. on Thursday, cJuly 2 1,
2005, &lt;tt Burltngham Church wtth Rev. Lamar 0' Bry.mt
offic1atrng Inte rment will follow at Burlingham Cemetery
Fnends may ca ll from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wedne sda y at
Cre meens Fun eral Home in Ractne and an hour pnor to the
servtce at the church.

Local Briefs
Power outage
scheduled for
Pomeroy
postponed by
weather
POMEROY The fiv ehour pol'.er outage in
Pomeroy that was to begm at
mtdmght on Monday. July 18,
and last to approxunately 5
a. m on Tuesday. Jul y 19. dtd
not take pl&lt;~ce due to severe
weather. p.tssrn g through the
area Monday eve mng.

Bv BRUCE SMITH
ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRITER

Constttutton," the bnef said.
In h1s defense, Roberts told
senators during h1s 2003 conftrmatton heanng that he
would be gUtded by legal
precedent ''Roe v Wade ts
the settled law of the land
Th
·
h
ere ts not tng 111 m~ personal views that wo uld preve nt me from fully and fauhfully ap pl'ying that precedent."
· While he doesn't have
nattonal name recogmtton
Roberts is a Washingto~
' ms1der who has worked over
the years at the Wh1te House,
Ju st1ce Department and m
pnvate pracuce.
In the Reagan admmtstrauon, Roberts was spec tal
assistant to the anorney general and assoctate counsel to
the prestdcnt. Between 1989
and 1993. he was pnnctpal
deputy solt cnor ge neral, the
government's second h1ghest
lawyer, who arg ues · cases
before the U S Supreme
Court.
In the early 1980s. Roberts
was a clerk for Wtlltam H.
Rehnquist before Reagan elevated Rehn!JU!St to chief ju~-

tJCe in 1986.
.
It was Rehnqut st who
prestded over the sweanng-m
ceremony when Roberts took
his seat on the appeals court
lor the Dtstnct ol Columbia
It took a whtle for Roberts to
get on the bench. He was
nominated tor the court m
1992 by the first President
Bush and agatn by the preSIdent m 200 1 The nommaHons dted m the 'senate both
11mcs. He was renominated m
January 2003 and JOtned the
' court m June 2003
Roberts' nommallon to the
appellate court attracted support lrom both SJtes of the
1deologJcal spectrum . Some
126 members ot the Dt stnct
of Columbt,t Bar, mcludmg
officia ls of the Clinton
administrauon. s1gned a letter
urg'mg hts conli rm.tl!on, The
letter satd Roberts was one of
the "very best and most h Jghly
res pected
appellate
lawyers 111 the nation" and
tnat hts reput.tllon as a "bnl ltant wnter .md or.1l .tdvocatc" was well de sen ed
" He has been .t JUdge' tor
only two years alld authored

Naomt Nease Ril ey. 81. of Ma son, W Va .. dted Monday.
July 18. 2005 at her restde nce
She was preced ed 111 death by her husand, Marsh,!ll
"Doc" R !ley
Gravestde serv 1ces wtll be he ld at Graham Cemetery,
New Haven , at II am Frtday wrth Pastor Brian May ofliciating. Fnend s may call from 6 to 9 p.m Thursday at the
Foglesong-Tu cker Funeral Home.
E- Matl condolences to the family may be sent to
foglesongtucker @ myway.com

Roberts
. from Page A1
say that whatever expenence
he lacks on the bench JS offset
by hts many years argutng
cases before the Supreme
Court .
. Ltberal groups, ~owev~~·
s.ay Roberts has taken po ttOns tn cases tn~olvtn~ free
speech and rehgmus liberty
that ~ndanger those nghts
Abortton nghts groups allege
that Roberts, while deputy
sohcttor _general dunng former Prestdent Bush's admmtstra u o~. ts hosttle to
women s reproduc uve freedom and cue a bnef he cowrote tn 1990 that sugge$.ted
the Supreme Court overt~~
Roe v Wade. the landmar
1973 h1gh coun decJStOn that
legalized abo~JOn .
"Tile cou n s conclusJ{)JLlO
Roe that there ts a fundamental nght to an abortton ...
finds no suppon Ill the text.
structure or ht story of the

CLEVELAND - BIShop
Anthony M Ptlla tesulied
Tuesday in a def.tmauon c.tse
agarnst the Roman Cathohc
D1ocese of Cleveland that he
twtce reasSigned a pnest who
sexually assaulted a minor
Pilla sard the deciSIOn was
made after the priest, the Rev.
James Mulica, had been treated for an alcohol problem at a
AEP Ohio will reschedule treatment center tor Catholic
the planned mamtenance out- clergy
"I was told that the mental
age in approxtmately two
experts
at Guest House had
weeks
Customers who have ques- mdtcated that Hther MuJica
llons about tht ~ 1ssue may could be reasstgned to mmcontact AEP Ohm's Cu stomer istry Without any restnct1ons,"
Soluuons Center toll-free at Pilla sard
The statement came m a '4
1-800-277-2 177
112-hour deposnton m a
defamatiOn lawsu11 f1led
a~amst the dtocese by abuse
vtcllm Chmtopher Kodger
tmd hts parents. They accuse
CHESTER - The meeting the diocese ol fal sely statm g rn
to confer the Entered 2002 that the y suppo!led
Apprenttce degree scheduled Multca's reasSignment
by Shade Rtver Lodge 453 on
The te stimony mdrks the
Jul y 25 has been cance led
first tune Pilla has diScussed a
spec ttic case Ill whrch pnest
who commttted dbuse "as
reassigned
MuJica sexually assaul ted
Kodger m J9g I. acco rdtn g to
documents liled m the case m
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Coun A mmor at tl1e
ume, Kodger told hJS parents.
who called Pilld's home that
most emot1onal and proudest nrght
ex periences ol my hie"
No charges were hied
Wilham
Childs agamst Mulica. and the famtly
Westmoreland was born near agreed to a settlement ol
Spartanburg , S C , on March $45,000 on the cond1tron that
26, 1914, mto a b,mkmg and Mulica not be pernuued to
te xtile family
work near chtldren. satd
His love of uniformS&lt; began Kodger's attorney Wrlham
early
Crosby
l-Ie was,an Eagle Scout and
The dtocese sent Mulica to
attended The Citadel for a be treated for two years at the
year before transfernng to the treatment center. He then
· US . Mtlttary Academy at returned to the dtocese and
West Pomt. He graduated m was reasstgned to a pan sh With
1936 and, dunng hts semor a school
The nattonal sex abuse scanyear, held the hrghest command position in the cadet dal that erupted 111 2002 "as
sparked by revelations that
corps.
Westmoreland saw acllon m many bishops had moved
North Afri ca, Stelly and gUilty pnests among pansh
Europe dunng World War II
He attamed the rank of
colonel bv the time he was 30
As conimandet of the 34th
Fteld Antllery Battalion fightfrom PageA1
ing German F1eld Marshal
Erwin Rommel , he earned the
loyalty and respect of his
troops for JOtntng m the thtck She was presented wtth a troof battle rather than remaining phy bearmg the mscnptton
behmd the lines at a com- "Thanks for sharmg the load,
1986-2005"
by
Roger
mand post .
He was promoted to Abboll, Board preSident
Before the Board, Halar
brigadier general durin g the gave
a revtew of the responKorean War and later served
sibilities
of her position ,
m the Pentagon under Army
ng a plan for h1 gher
Chief of Staff Maxwell shan
achievement of students ,md
Taylor.
on fundrn g for state and
Westmoreland became the facts
federal programs and the
supertntendent ol West Pomt ways the money rs spent to
in 1960 and, by 1964, was a tmpro~e teacher quality, help
three-star general command- dtsadvantaged students, promg Amencan troops tn VIde enrichment and InnovaVietnam
tive programs. along wtth
After hi s !QUI-year tour in money lor technology
Vietnam. Westmoreland was
Sh~ also d1spl aye,d charts
promoted · to Army ch1ef of showmg how' students have
staff He rettred from acllve advanced over the past four
duty m 1972 but he continued years m subjects on the prof·
to lecture and parttctpate m ice nc y tests at the fourth,
veterans' acttvtttes
stxth and nmth grade levels
Westmoreland was marned
Personnel
to the former Kathenne
Several teac hi ng and
"Kitzy" Van Deusen and the coaching postttons were
couple had three ch1ldren
ftlled dunng the meetmg
A decade after hiS retire- The board h11ed Laure n
ment, Westmore land fo ught. Hardgrove as htgh school
another battle mvolving sctence teac her, Marjorie
Vietnam.
G1bbs as a first grade teacher,
and Damelle Dugan as a
about 40 opimons, only three Me1gs Middle School sc1ence
of whtch have drawn any dts- teacher.
Coachmg postttons ftlled
sent," sa1d Wendy Long. a
lawyer represenun g the con- mcluded Mana Drenner for
servauve
Judicial Middle School voile) ball
Network, coach, and Steven D
Con lrrmation
add mg that ht s record Cottenll fo r mamtenance and
appears to sun Bush's destre groundskeeper Approved as
to nommate a JUdge who will vo lunteer assttant coaches
apply the law, as wntten. and were Beatf!ce Morga n, cross
leave poltcy dec tswns to the country, and Eddie F1fe. Jr..
elected branches of govem- etghth grade football The
restgnatton or Vtcky Chancey
ment.

Lodge meeting
canceled

William Westmoreland,
commander of Vietnam
troops, dead at 91

Jaso n Damel Frash, 26, of K1ngs ton , Oh10, died
Sunday. July 17, 2005 , at h1 s restdence
He was born June 22 , 1979: 111 Pomt Pleasant , W Va ..
son of Kenn eth and Susan Roberts Fra sh of Gallipoli s.
He was marne d to Ktlloran Gordan Frash of Km gsto n
Jason was a ge ne ral laborer and a U.S . Navy veteran .
He IS survtved by hts wtle. Ktlloran Gordan Frash of
K1n gs ton ; hiS parents, Kenneth and Susan Frash of
Galltpoli s, a brother, K M1chael Frash of Ri chmond Dale,
Oh1o , ststers, Mtchelle Frash of Gallipolis, and Shantelle
Roush of Pomeroy; mece s, Bryanna Frash and Morga n
Roush; a nephew. Andrew Rou sh; hiS maternal grandparents, Eugene and Louie Vandine of Dale, Ohio , hi s paternal gra ndmother. Mabel Frash of Penn sv tll e, Ohto; several aunts and uncles; and a special fnend . Leland Hamilton.
He was ~receded m death by his maternal grandfather,
Lester Robert s~ a nd hi s paternal gran dfather, the Rev
Wtlford Frash
Services will be II a. m. Fnday, Jul y 22, 2005, · at the
Wtllt s Funeral Home, with Pa stor Paul Voss offictating.
Bunal will follow m the Gravel Htll Cemetery Frtends
ma y call at the W11lis funeral Home on Thursday Jul y 21,
2005 , from 6 unttl 8 p m
Please vJS it www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-matl
condolences

Naomi Nease Rirey

8v JOE MIUCIA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

a

CHARLESTON. S C. Gen.
Wtlltam
Reured
Westmore land. who commanded American troops m
V1etnam the nat ton 's
longest conthct and the only
war Amenca lost - dted
Monday mght He w,ts 91.
Westmoreland dred of natuta! causes at Bishop
Gadsden ret!feme nt home.
where he had ltved Wi th h1s
"'fe for several yedrs, Sdid hJS
so11 ,
James
R1pley
Westmoreland.
The silver-hatred. lUI-Jawed
orticer, who rose through the
ranks quickly m Europe during World War II and later
became supermtendent o f
West Poml , contended the
Umted States did not lose the
conllJct m Southeast Asta.
"It 's more accurate to say
our country did not fulfill !ls
commitment
to
South
Vtetnam," he srud "By vtrtue
of Vietnam, the US. held the
line for I0 years and stopped
the dominoes from falling."
He would later say he dtd
not know how history would
deal with him.
"Few people have a field
command as long as I dtd," he
satd "They put me over there
and they forgot about me. But
I was there seven days a
week, workmg 14 to 16 hours
a day
"I have no apologJes, no
regrets. I gave my very best
effons," he added "I' ve been
hung m effigy I've been spat
upon You JUSt have to Jet
those thmgs bounce off."
Later, after many of the
wounds caused by the dtvtsi~e confltct began to heal ,
Westmoreland led thousands
of hi s comrades in the
November, 1982, veteran s
march in Washington to dedicate the Vtetnam War
Memonal
He called tt "one of rhe

Jason Daniel Frash

Leave the porch light cfffor me

U·tten to the editor we nelumu' The\ 'ihfmld be lt' H rhan
300 1\'ol&lt;l\ All /etTen are \1/h}etf to edit111g. mu" be 11gned,

Correction Polley

rzed th.ll Israel's act1ons 111
debates of the day.
kmn
were "every b1t ,,,
That Jewtsh "neo-con"
hawks 111 the Bush admr ms- repellent" , as the Sept. II .
trdtton drov e us to War in dttacks 011 the Uni ted States
lr,Jq ts commonplace in The Jentn &lt;~trocity. however.'
IMppc ned.
even
Amerrcan . tore~gn-policy never
Kathryn
to
a
u
N
mvesllo
iCCOilhng
deb.ttes. tor ex.tmple, theu
Lopez
supposed du,Ji loyalt ies to gaunn l3ut pe?plc beheve
Israel undu ly rntluencmg the that It dtd to thiS d,ty -- the
damage h,1d already been
pr esident.
done.
An ti -Semrtrsm , 111 fact.
ln ste.tcl of betn g urucceptseems the rule r.tther
allen
tants dre currentl y wagmg
on mnocents the world over. th.tn the excepuon ot rnter. .tble -- .ts 11 should be -- .til
It's hard to p.rss ,, syn.t- national re lattons It was too oltcn .tntJ-Semitt sm ts
gogue in a big ci ty. where on ly days before the 200 I tolerated by ciVIhzed people
Jersey banicrs .md cop c.us attacks \\!he n the Unrted who shmrld be repulsed and
ou tr.tgcd by rt That II ts .1
'"e commnnpldce. 01 hedr N.rt rons held ,, shameful
murdered "W,JII
Streel wnleJeJKe rn Durh.tn , South CC:lliUI IC'· Oid h ill S otre n
makes n somci'. IMt ' dog
Journal" report er D,u11cl Atrrc.t.
lr or uc,dl y named the bites m.tn " ·- whr ch is .!lithe
Pearl berilg lor ccd to "con N.utons
World more 1e.t~on to condemn It
fes s" that hrs "f,llhct 's UIll ted
Jewish, my mother's Jewrsh. Cnnlct ente Aga tnst Racism, clearly and loudl y ,md olten
Ot sc nmmation. And 11 doesn't help the ca use
I'm JewiSh" und not re.tlt zc R~\.;;t~tl
how ferociously th iS hatred . Xenophob t.t. and Related of good versus c~ il "hen the
is fueled. As Gabnel ln to leJ.rnce. 11 let anti · prrme mrmster of Brrt.un
Schoenfeld wntcs in "The Scnut JSm .til hang out The speaks on the !loot of the
Returrt nl Antr-Sem itr sm " conl ctcncc tt sell conde mned House oi•Cnmmons dltet the
(Encount er Bonks, 2004) the Mrddlc E.tst 's only London bombmg , and. m
"the Umted St.ttcs IS ' now dc mocr.tcy. c.tlling l s~ae l a hstrn g n.mons th.ll hdve .tl so
locked rn a conflr ct wn h " I dU~t. apalt I1C I(I StdtC " ~- f,Jll en vrc tun to' isl,unrc lerll Ot surptlStn g 111 ~m dt mos- JOn:-;m. leaves out lswel
4td vcrs~mes fo1 whom hdtl ed
ot Jews lies at the tdcoh1g 1-' phete wl1erc Jel'.tsh nauon- (l'. hete bus bomhmgs have
.tli sm ibcll has long been long been " rc.tl rty, not a
cal core ol theu beliefs .'
While the use ol the te1111 L:onstdered d lorm ol l tiC t sm teat )
You don 1 have to be .uHrH ow~vcr enl tghtened we
anti·SemitJsm nMy seem
amorphous , lrke " med~o1 rn.ty believe we .trc, •gno- Se mrti c to be p.tn of the
bunword of the week . rt h,ts J.tncc .tnd hate tl ou nshes m problem Consc rously m
htstory and rs. to so me our d.t) As Phylli s Chesler. not. wl1oll ts not s,ud by ,,
,,ut hm of "The New Antt- prune 11\11\ ISter ,tnd Wh:JI IS
extent, quantJ fwt&gt;le.
Accordm g to the FBI. Sc rlllt!Sm " (Josscy-B.tss, crronenusly tepo rted by d
there ~'.ere 931 ,mtr-Jcwrsh 2001). IMs argued. "Many wrrc sc!Vlce arc ,ill sy mphate crimes in lhe Umted people still believe that the toms of d m,tlt gJMI11 souc1.1l
States rn 2002 (cnmp.ucd lcws ru n the mcdt.t. contr ol tumor
COR RECT ION In l,tst
Wtth
155
anti -Mu , Juu the h.rn ks, killed Chrt sl, seek
attack') Ac ross the pond. ;t wo tld UonHn,ltwn. ,md hd ve week's column . I hdd
2003 report noted thdt ~a 1 s cvct vw hcre " And RmMlll R e~tg. m nomltuung
"opmwn polls p1 nvc th.tt 111 todd)'. &amp;ld In (hdt ~~ glob,li Rob ert Bork to replace
reach -- whe re "Jew h,ttted W,m cn Burger to the
~nme EUJ opean co unli'I L!'i d
l.trge percentage or the pop- 1s be1ng mass-p roduced " Supreme Cour 1 He was to
ulati on harbors ant1-Scrnrtic WIJ ell that hate fmds tts way tepl.tce I cw is Powell An
1nto the !lld l ll sl!C,\ 111 con - upda ted mlumn w.ts JI11111CattttUdC"\ dlld VICWS '
But thiS hemnus se ntunen t sc iousness, It 1111 ght ~t s We ll rhately rese nt Strll. I .tpologi ze l or the crro1
goes beyond the wa1. be true
( Kathnn Li&gt;pe ~ 11 tlw edi In 2002. lor instdncc, II
domesuc acts ot "olencc.
to
l oj Natunwl Rel'tn\&gt;
Wds
widely
rcpo!led
th,n
and tgnorant personal pretuOn/me
(H H \1 twtwnalt e·
dtces. Antt-Sernn!Sm c.1n get ISJ.tci lMI perpctro~ted a 1\ldSmto the publrc hloodslr cdlll s,tcrc 111 " Pdlestlnian It t' \ ~ com) She l tlll In~ 'm l 'and tntlu ence the key rl'lugce c.:~m p 111 Jcnm The tw t£•£1 at klopa::@ ua ltmwlBnllsh "G u.trdian" cdttonal - ' n 'il'H &lt;..om )

~)]HE' (lll~

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

-.

,

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Terror-anxious climate fans anti-Semitism

The Daily Sentinel

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PageA4 ,

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Ravenswood
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· e 304=273-S32 t -mr
316 Washln

as a volley ball coach was
accepted
Oiher busmess
In other busmess the board
approved·
• an nvermght fi eld tnp
request for the Metgs High
School cheerleaders to attend
and perform at a major
league All-Star soccer game
m Columbus, Jul y 29 and 30;
• contmuat1on of the dls·
trt ct's membershtp tn the
CoalitJioll for Equity and
Adequacy ot school fundmg
at a cost ol 50 cents a student;
• adoptron of the student
handbook as presented at a
prev1ous meetin g.
• ,md repon showmg federal alld state grant awards to
. co me to the dts tnct this
school year
The Board then mo ved mto
execut1ve session to discuss
personne l Attendmg were
Supen ntendent
Wtlltam
Buckley. Treas u~er Mark
Rhonemus, and Board members. Vtctor Young, Ron
Loga n, Scott Walto n, and
Abbott

1\.kmt..:r .:J r\r'lk1'1CM Boord cl

• Sp.lrtli nJuncs
• M~I C:UC

assrgnments w1thout warnmg
parents or police
When the scandal broke out,
the diocese issued a statement
through spokesman Bob Tayek
that the Kodge r family was ·
consu lted on MuJica's reasSignment
"They accused us ot bemg
comphcil rn the transfer of
Father Mulrca." said Kodger's
father. Donald ''We had nothmg to do wr th Father MuJica's
tran sfer other than oppose it
every moment of our lives."
Tayek declined to comment
on the case
In Tu esday'~ deposttton ,
Crosby repeatedly asked Pilla
how nian y pnests he re asSigned
were
known
pedophiles Ptlla decltned to
answer on the adv1ce of hts
attnrney Robert Ducatman.
Ct osby played a 2002 televiston mterv tew m whtch Ptlla
answered "rt cou ld have happened" when asked by a
reporter whether prtests
accused ol abuse were moved
from paf!sh to parish m
Cleve land
"When I amved at the station , I was confronted w1th
thai 1111ervrew without any
preparatton, '&gt;'&lt;tthout any
knowledge of what 1 was
gomg to be asked about," Pilla
sard. "I answered that questton
at th at ume to the best of my
abthty "
Cmsby pressed Pilla and
asked hm1 whether he told ''the
whole truth " He then asked
Ptlla whether he felt harass&gt;d
yes,"
Pilla
"Honestly,
responded.
P1lla later testified that at the
time of the televiSion mterv1ew
he d1d not recall reass1gnmg
Mulica
' Pilla IS not a defendant ll1 the
case. wh1ch IS scheduled tor a
Jtrry tnaltn January The famtly IS askmg for damages of
more than $25.000.
Donald Kodger. of suburban
Brunswick, said hts son, who
now li ves m Alaska, was devastated b1 the dtocese's statements rn 2002
"He suffe red a Jot m 1981
and smce then,'' he sa1d

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Wednesday, July

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The Daily Sentinel .

INSifiE:
Cavaliers news, Page 82
8rowt) done in Detroit, Page 82

20, 2005

0

·Dayton, Columbus military facilities added to base-closing list
BY ERICA RYAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS ~-; A defense
finance office in Columbu s
with more than 2,000 workers
and an 80-year-old Air Force
graduate school near Dayton
were added Tuesday to the
Pentagon's list of proposed
closings and consolidations of
military.facilities.
The commission reviewing
ihe Pentago n's plan voted to
include the Air Force Institute
of Technology at WrightPatterson Air Force Base and.
the
Defense
Finance
Accounting Services operation in Coilfmbus , among
installations being considered
for possible closure or realignment.
Com mi ssion
Chairman
Anthony Principi sa id add ing
a base to the list "does notnecessariiy mean that the base wil l
be reali gned or dosed" bu t
will allow the panel to further
analyLe those base," LIScful -.
ness by visiting sites. collectAP Photo
ing data and holding hearin'gs. Two officers walk from the Air Force Institute of Technology at Wright·Patterson Air Force Base,
In May, the Pentagon not Tuesday in Dayto n. The graduate school at Wright-Patterson and a defense accounti ng opera·
only proposed Ill keep the tion in Columbus are amo ng Ohio facilities a government commission is considering add ing to
Columbu s finance .operation a list of proposed ctostngs or downsizings.
·
··
. ,
.
t&gt;pen. but to add hund.reds or
jobs from other DFAS oftices. an institu tion.
because how secure it is; how educational resources."
The Columbus operation cur·:It 's an opportunity for the modern it is," Tugend said.
The schoot traces· its hi story
rently has 2,067 cmpi&lt;)yccs, Dayton ·region. but being on
Over the past·80 years, more · to 1919,' as the Air School of
who make payments to mi li- the BRAC lisi certainly has than
266,000
Defense Application at McCook Field
tary contractors and vendors, consi derable riskS:" Gessel 'Departmept per&gt;onnel, includ- in Dayton. When Congress
provide accounting services said:
ing 30 astronauts, have attend- created the Air Corps in I 926,
The DFAS office is part of ed Air Force Institute of the school )Vas renamed the
for defense agencies and
process travel pay men ts for the Defense Supply Center in :rechnol ogy programs al Air Co rps Engineering School
Pentagon employees.
Col umbus and suburban Wright-Paiterson, whid1 has · and mo ved to Wright Field.
The Dayton institute, which Whitehall. The site has 6,400 about 22,000 military and The school became the Air
has 500 employees and more jobs overall.
.. civilian w·orkers.
Force Inst itute of Technology
than 900 studeniS. is the Air
In May, the Pentago n recComm iss ion
Chairman in 1947, When the Air Force
Force's graduate sc hoo l of om mended the Defense· Anthony Principi has asked became a separate service.
engineering and management. · Supply Center get 1.758 more ·whether the inst itute could be
Maj . Kurt Vogel, 38, of the
The schoo l also offers comi nu- jobs. Some of those jobs were moved to Monterey, Calif.. Dayton suburb of Bellbrook, is
ing-education courses for the to come from the Cleve land and merge with a Naval post- working on his doctorate in
miliiary and other fec:jera l DFAS · offi ce, which the graduate
school
there . astronautiealengineering at the
workers in spftware engi neer- Pentagon recommended be Pentagon officials have said institute" He also got his mas.
ing, data management, logis- sh uttered and its I ,000 jobs the si te cuuldn 't handle the · ters there in the same major.
tics and other disciplines.
sh ifted to other ci ties.
ii1flux of students that would
''Every time I've left AFIT
The commission voted 8-0
Steve Tugcnd, vice presi- need military health care and I've left better equipped to do
to add the in stitute to the list . dent l'f govern ment relations that the densely populated area my job and hit the ground runalong with the Naval for the Columbus Chamber of couldn 't accommodate the ning," Vogel said. 'That's our
Postgraduate School and the Cmntne rce, said movi ng the · new facilities that wuLLLd be bread and butter - keeping a
Defense Language Institute. Columbu s DFAS .operation needed.
sharp edge on our l.echnical
both in Monterey. Calif.
· wo uld be a double blow
Gessel sa id the institute is an skills. Our profession is more
Mich ae l Gessel, of th e because the installation would important part of engineering and more oriented to advanced
: Dayton
Development lose its current workers as well traming efforts in southwest technology."
.
· Coalition who attended the as the ones it would ha ve Ohio, working closely with the
Vogel said he likes that his
hearing, sa id the co mmi s- gai ned under th e Pentagon's University of Dayton and instructors are · all associated
sion disc ussed the possibili- proposal.
Wright State Uni ve rsity.
with the military and says he
ty of combini ng the three
Tugend said he is confident
"AFIT has been an inte- doesn't know what he would
instituti ons into a un iversity that the Co lum bu s.DPAS npcr- g ral part of the Dayton co m- do if AFIT didn ., exist.
of national defense studi es. ation will impress commi s- munity for most of the 20th
However, Gessel said the siuners if they visit.
cen tury,'· sa id Gesse l, who is
co mmi ss ion made it clear ."You·re not goin g to find a based in Wa shin gto n. " It
that it would keep all option s better installation for ,DFAS . wou ld be a sign ifi ca nt loss
open on where to lqcate suc h than
Colum bus · si mply to the com munity and its

'

BY

the left side fo r the Indi ans,
can actually throw with both
hands. He likely witt continRIO GRANDE _ There is ue to pitch from the left side
for the Redmen .
saying in baseball .that you
Hi s career numbers at
can never have enovgh jlitch- Valley are impressive: .14-4.
ing. That is, appare ntly, a 2.23 ERA, 146 strikeouts in ·
be lief of Rio Grande baseball t 21 J/3 innings and one save.
coach Brad Warni mont.
He was 6-4 this past season
Warnimont has worked over- with a 2.37 ERA. He was
time bringing in pitching dur- perfect on the hill as a junior,
ing this recruiting season. He posting a 7-0 mark with a
has signed another prep gem miniscule 1.09 ERA.
from . Scioto County in the
Dwyer was thankful for the
tigur" of Lucasville Valley · opportunity to play for Rio
standout Ryan Dwyer.
Grande. "I would like to
Dwyer. who pitched from thank God for giving me the
MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Wednesday, July 20

Temperatures will stay neur 72 ·
wi th today's low or 7I occur-

Moming (7 a. m. -Noon)

Expect '' humid and cloudy rin g arouml (,a .m. Skic~ will .
morning. There could be a few nc : t ~ar t&lt;i cloudy wit h 5 MPH
raindrops around the area. \Vind~ from the nmthwcsl
Temperatures wilt rise from 72 turning from the north a:-. tile
to 85 by late this morning. ovt! rn!ght progresses.
Winds will be ca lm turnin g
Thursday, July 21
from the northwest as the
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noon)
morn ing progresses.
It .&lt;houiJ be a humid morn Aftemoon ( 1-6 p.m.)

in!) . There mil!ht
he
~

0
'
It should be a huniid after- nun
aruund ' . the arca.
noon. Expect moderat e rain Tc111peratures .wil l increase
The rain is predicted to start !'ro m n to X6 by late this
near I p.m. The rainfall i.s JJHH Ht ng. Skil:s will range
expected to end around 4 p.m.
from ''"'ny 10 partly cloudy
\Vith total accumulation:-. for
witll
ralm turn ing from the
this event near0.38 inches. The rwrthwc~t
;ts the- morning pro~
high for today of H6 wilt nccnr
early afternoon as tet11pcraturcs ~res~cs.
drop to 8 I by 2 p.m. The temperature wilt then climh hack l&lt;l
'R4 later thi s afternoon. Sk ies
wi ll he partl y cloudy to cloudy
with 5 MPH winds from the
north turning from the sou th as
the afternoon progresses.

Eve11i11g (7p.m.-Midllight)
It witt contin ue to be humid.

Temperatu res wi ll fall from84
early this eyeni ng to 75. Skies

99

$

'

will range from dear to. partly

cloudy with c-alm turning from
the north as the evening progresses.

• No crt!dll card requ1redl
• 10 E-rndil Addr~sses

• FREE

Charles &amp;. April Roach
Gallipolis

6-

Logan 9, McArthur 8, 11 inn.
1- Alhens def. Glouster.
,. lor1eit

ATHENS

8 - Logan vs. Feeney Bennett. 4:30
p.m. :.
9 - Lanca ster vs. Pickerington, 7:30
p.m.

AT

RANN(M' F IElO IN All-lENS

NEWPORT, R.I. - · The Big East has three
new teams, two new coaches with NFL experience, and a healthier outlook heading into the
2005 football season.
"1\vo years ago people were 'telling us we
were going out of business." c'ommissio!'er
Mike Tranghese said Tuesday at Big East media
day. "We were losing our BCS bid, we were
going to ·Jose our television contract and we' re
u
d bo 1
going to Iose a our secon ary w games.
"I stand here be~ore you two years later and none of that is ''trite:"
What the Big East has lost is its luster..
Gone are the sc ho~l s that turned the B•g East

11 -loser Game 9 vs. Winner Game
t='riday's championship game( a)
AT

RANPtCJN f

iELO IN

ArnENS

12 - Win ner Game 9 vs. Wrnner
Game 11, 4:30 p m
.

6X Faster!

13 -

Winner Game 12 vs. loser

Game 12,7:30 p.m. (it necessary)

Sign Up 'Onlme! www.LocaiNet.com
Call Today &amp; S11~e •

·Sports BriEfs

(740)992·6260

Little League
all-star tourney
at Kyger Creek

Reliable Internet Ac cess Smce 1994

CHES HIR E - A Little
League ail -star tournament
wi ll be played at the Kyger
Creek Little League Field.
It wi ll run from July 29-3 1
and is open to players ages 912.
For more information , con-

tact Rick Smith at (304) 6743341 or (304) 576-2485.

I

~--------

Parent's Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ __c__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ~-----~-City.&amp; State:: _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ --'------..,.
*** The above information will be used in the ad.

MIDDLEPORT - A 3-on3 double etiminat.ion basketball tournament wi ll be held
on Saturday. August I 3. at
General Hartinger Park.
Proceeds from the tournament will gn towards the
Middleport Youth League.
Check-in during the day or
the tournament is 9 a.m. and
the gan1es will start at 10 a.m.
Registration form s · are
available at Locker 219 111
Middleport ,
Middleport ·
Trophies and Tees or the
Recreatio~ Center in Athens.
For more information. contact Britt Dodson al (740)
992-1122.
Contact Information
F~?~ -

1-740-446-3008

1

. I

E-mail- sportsOmydallysentinel.com
$_g~ID!!!J

***

Phone Number: - - - - - - - - - Suhmillcd h)': - - - - - - -

ROCK S.PR INGS . - The
Meigs High School Athletic
wi ll
meet
Boosters
Wednesdity. Julj 20 at 8:30
p.m. in the Memorial Field
H&lt;iuse at Meigs High School.

MYL to host 3-on3 hoops tourney

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
- - - - - ---- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --- .. -- .. - - - .. -.- -- - - - - -- - ..

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS

10 - Winner Game 8 vs. Athe('1s , 4:30
pm . •

odd EIR.rtstl

The DaUy ·sentinel
Child 's Name (s) &amp; Age (s): _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __

BY RALPH 0. Russo

10, 7:30p.m. ·

Complete the ·form belo\1{ and enclose,; snapshot or walte.t ,iLed picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture.
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child . EncJ o,e payment wi th picture.
·
Send to:

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(7401 446-2342 , ext. 33
~--

I

bshe rman@ mydai1ytrib1me. com

"

--~----------------------------- ---------- - ---- ~

HURRYU PICTURE DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY July 22• 2005!

Please see Baseball, 86

BIG EAST IS REBORN

Wednesday's games
AT RArflow fiELO IN

o!'fer ends 7131105

...

where i( s a tremendou'
accomplishment for the kid.
it\ a tremendous opportunity
for our program, for a kid to
go gel hi s college education
and playing baseball is the

Tuesday's games

Thursday's games

Pictures must be in..by Friday
July 22nd, 2005. Pictures can
tie picked up after August 1st,
2005.

~ ituation

il

5 - Piekenngtan 14. Athens 2

MHS boosters
to meet today

Son of

for Dwyer. "It\

Monday1s re.s ulls
4 - Lancaster 8, Fooney Sennott 4

Daily Sentinel

Tristan Roach

of Brandon

2- Prckerington 16, Logan 1, 7 rnn
3- Athens 1 t , McArthur 0, 7 inn.

ONE
.
FULL YEAR!

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is Jl Special Edition tilled
with photograph s of local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition .will
appear in the July 29th issue.Be sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is invol ved!

~ignings

Russe ll of Wheelersburg arid
Ryan Bloomfie ld of Green."
he said . ··And I wanted to be
a part of that frc&gt;hman etaS&gt;."
Valley head man Dean
Schu ler talked about what a
great acwmpli,hment this is

Su nday's resufta

• FREE Setup Softwarij

Srrpp0r1

recent,

1 - Feeney Bennett del. Glouster, lorfeit

Lr"""""' - - - ,---~
Surf up lo

Ovemight ( 1-6 a.m.)
It will remain humid. Light

rai n is forecasted . The rain
should start by J .r.m. The min fall witt fini sh around 5 a.m.
wi th tota l accumulations lor
tl1i s even t ncar 0 OC1 incllc.s.

loch~rC/\1

ning program through the

Tofffi(QIIfe4(t

hit of

l!

abi lity
to baseball staff tor their hard
pi"Y
thi s work and deaication for
game that I preparing me to play at the
I o v e . " next level," Dwyer added . '"I
·Dwyer said. wou ld also like I() thank
"·I want In · Coach Warnimont and (a"ISthank
my lani) Coach (Tom ) Sutton for
parents for . IJelieving in me and giving
love · me the opp011uni'ty to play
their
and support for the Uni versity of Rio
throughout Grande.'·
Dwyer
my life."
Dwyer be lieves the Rio
"I wou ld prograni has deve loped a
also like to take this time to winning tradition and he
express my deepest gratitude wanted to be a part of that.'
to Coach (Dean) Schu ler. "My. decis ion to choose RID
(pitching) Coach (Brian) Grande was tha t they ·are
Willi ams and all the Valley comm itted to contmue a wm-

E;,~ti Oitt!"/et

The

1

.

'

Coming Friday, July 29, 2005

I

'

Redmen baseball -adds another.standout hurler

EXTRA! EXTRA!

Election official's pay docked for
·forniarding political donation
COLUMB US (A P) - The of State Kenneth· Blackwell board have said that Franklin
director of the Franklin - was revealed as part of a Gou nt y Prosecutor Ron
County Board of Elections civil lawsuit by one of o· ~rien os investigating
· witt lose 30 days' pay fur · Diebold's
competitors; whether 'Damschroder or
forwarding a $I 0,000· check Election
Systems
and ·Gallina broke any laws. A
to the Republi can Party from Software.
message was left Tuesday
a voting-machi ne company's
ES&amp;S
charges . that seeking co mment
from
representative.
Blackwell
improperl y O'Brien.
Ohio law forbids publi c
Elections Director Matthew favored Diebold in selecting
Damsc hrode r used poor electronic voting machines ofli cials accepting anything
judgment when he accepted for use statewide.
of value meant to influence
the donation in Jan uary 20Q4
A spokesman for Blackwell their actions'. · and state elecand violated an agency rule has denied the claims.
, tions law prohi bits public
· against employees soliciting
Gallina wou ldn 't add ress emplo yees from soliciti ng
or accepting political con tri- qu~stions about any dona- campaign contributions, on
butions on the job, Chairman lions to Blackwell and said . the job.
William A. Anthony Jr. said. the contributi on to Franklin ·Diebold
spokesman
The biparti san elections Cou nty Rcpuhlicans was his Michael Jacobsen said the
board unanimously appro~ed own and not on behalf of compan y knew nothing of
the reprim and.
Diebold.
Galli na's donati'On to the
Damschrodq
makes
Damschroder said Monday Franklin County · GOP and
$97,240 a year.
tha) he '"mixed too much pol- does not want any made on
'"We cannot have the per- itie' with public. service" and its· behalf. The company forception. out there that you apo logized after the board mally barred employees from
can buy u' off," Anthony decided, his pun ishment.
making politica l donations in
said .
Members or the elections June 2P04.
Damschroder
acknow ledged last. week tha t a representative fo r North Cantonbased
Diebold Election
Systems came to hi s office
Sutton Town~hip Trustee:-. w.ill accept sealed hids (in
and offered $ 10,000 on a day
when the board was opening .. ·wntlm")'On the items li sted below. Each piece of Equipment
bids fo r new voter-regis t ra ~
II he sold (AS lSi and is l~cated at the Sutton Towmhip
tion software.
LJII' '"'"'"'on· Pleu~rmt View RJ.
Damschroder told Pasquale
All hids mu" he received hy Sullon Township by 5 ~M
"Pate' Gallina to make the
August I ) I h. ~005. Tru~ec:-. re:-.ervc the right to accept or
check out to the Franklin
reject any and al! hids.
County Republican Party as
No.I Ford Tractor (w ith Mower ;Jild bu tkcl)
a donation.
.
Diebold didn't get the soft - . . .. u .~ 1980 Chcv..1/-l -Ton Pickup Truck (Red)
ware
contract,
and
.1 North man No. 1-lOOA Dt:luxe Xft. Snow Hladc
Damschroder said he never
No.4 19H2 Chcv. Dump Truck (!Jiesel-27 500 GVW)
recommended the company.
No:5 1980 GMC Dump Truck (Scr. 7000--!27 V-8 (Red )
But Damschroder sa id he
.. (Ga.-.ol illc-----A ir Brakes)
should not have taken' the
Chc,. C65 Flat Bed Truck COrangc J
cneck.
No.7 19Xh Cir.idall ... Mml. Ci.1WIJ .. Scr. X5Dli8U
The encounter and
N9.8 c"lerpillar.. .:l 10 H.P. Dies~! Engine
Damschroder\ claim that
Addrc." for Bid" Sutton lfo~n,hip
Gallina later QOastcd or a
$50,000 donation to political
-ll~ 10 Dutch lawn Rd .. ~':_11!\C
groups that support Stcretary

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Bryan Walters. Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342 , ext 23
bwatters@.mydatly1nbune.eom
Larry Crum. Sports Wrlter
~304) 675-1333, e;::t. 1~
lcr u m~myda•tyreglste r com

•

St
BY

into a viable football conference when it was
born more than a decade ago. Miami and
Virginia Tech took up residence in th" Atlantic
Coast Conference last year and Boston College
will join those two powerhouses this season.
It was a messy divorce, espec1ally for Boston
College, which spent an uncomfortable 2004
season in the league; knowing it was on the way
out. Lawyers got involved and there we re some
real hard feelings.
Then there was Temple. The league's perenniat doormat was given the boot by the Big East
before the 2004 season and also played last year
as a lame duck.
· That's all behind the Big East now.
The new Big East football conference adds

Please- Reborn, 8&amp;

g Cubs abuse Reds .pitching Rio inks
Maple
Heights'
Dixon

JoE KAY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Ammis
Ramirez homered twice his third straight glime with
a homer - and drove in five
runs Tuesday night, powerin" the streaking Chicago
0
.
Cubs
to a 7- 3 vtctory
oyer
the Cincinnati Reds.
Derrek Lee had three hits,
including . a two-run double
in the fifth off Luke Hudson
(I :5) - the latest meltdown
by the NL's worst startmg
rotation. Todd Walker singled twice . .extending hi s.
hitting streak to I 2 games.
TheCubs have won eight
of nine on the strength of
their ro'tatio n. . whi ch has
all owed on ly 15 earned runs .
during the streak . Mark
Prior (7 -J) kept if going on
another.muggy evening that
sapped pitchers and helped
the ball fly.
Pri or,· making hi s fifth
start si nce recovering from a

Please see Reds, 86

BY

MARK WtLUAMS

SPECIAL lO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE -· The
Uni,crsity ,;r Rio Grande
truck and Jield prcigratil added
a third runner from Maple
Heights thi' recruiting season
with the ~igning of middle
distance runner Brittany
Dixon .
Di·xon
compete ~

in

both the 400meter and
800-meler
runs.

Her

. personal best
in the -+00
wu' clock ed

at 59 .3 and

photo
Chicago Cubs' Aramis Rameriz .is congratulated by Jeromy Buihitz (3) after Ramirez hit a threerun home run off Cincinnati Reds pitcher Luke Hudson tn the thtrd tnn111g, Tuesday tn Ctnctnnatt.
AP

~he

Dixon

regts~

tcred a heq
timL· of

2 : ~2

the ~00 &lt;l'hile at Maple
Heights.

111

Indians' recent woes continue against 'Royals
CLEVELAND (AP) Zack Grei nke pitched
seve n shutout · innings for
hi s second win since the
All-Star break and Emil
Brown
homered
off
unlucky Cleveland starter
Kevin Millwood, send ing
the Kansas City Royals to a
'4 -0 "victory over the
.Jndians oit Tuesday nigh t.
Greinke (3lll ) allowed ·
four hits whilt improving

to 2-0 in the season's unofficia l second half after
dragginoc into the , hrcak
with a I -I I mark . The
rioht-hander walked one
0
and
struck.out j'our.
'
Ambiorix Burgos worked
the eighth and . Mi\&lt;.c
MacDougal th~ ninth .
~

Brown hit a two-run
homer in the second inning
off Millwood (3-9), who
agai n didn 't get any run
support froni ' the Indians.
Cleveland ha s been shut
out seven times this season,
inc luding three times in the
past six. games.
The , Indians. who have
Jo ~t I 0 of 12 si nce July 5,
have scored just two runs
in Millwood 's four starts
this month . He came in
with the unfortunate distinction· of getting the least
run support of any pitcher
in the major&gt; with at kast
I 0 start s.
·
Clevclaml is averaging
2.53
run' · for
just
Millwood .

Dixon wa\ O\'t.~rwht'lmcd
with .her nn\ opportunity.

"Mv

thou~hb

('n ii. ' it\ just

sho~·kin2 ' and hrcathtaking
hccau'e ~ I didn't know thm

During the game. the Brown followed by ripping
Roya ls annou nced they had an 0-1 pitch over the lefttraded utilityman Tony field watt for his ' ninth
Graffanino to the Boston homer and a 2-0 lead .
Red Sox for minor league
Millwood kept it a twopitcher Juan Cedeno and run game until the seventh
outfielder Chip Ambres.
when the Royal s scored
Jason Dubois went 0-for- · two. Mark Teahen hit an
3 and stru ck out tw iCe in RBI single and John Buck
hi s debut for Cleveland. He reached on an error by
was acquired in a trade late third
baseman
Aaron
Monday from the Chicago · Boone
before
DaYid
Cubs for Jody Gerut.
, DeJesus hit an RBI douhle
Greinke on lv had to work to end another disappoint - .
out of trouble twi,·e as the ing resul~ for Milh1nn·ct.
Indians got JU St one runner who 'igned a one-year tree
to third ba'e against him.
agent contract with the
Millwood·s defen se let Indi ans .
him down in the second
He allowed two earncJ
whe,n left fielder Coco run' and 'ew n hih in h I -.1
Cri'sp dro.pped · a 'inking
liner hit hy :.1alt Stair,. Please see 'Indians, 86

running 11 ould take me this
far" she saiJ ."Fmjust blessed
to a get a scholarship to do,
you knnw. what I love: ·

· Dixon &gt;lated that she
enjoyed the friendliness displayed by all those she met at
Rio Grande. 'The ymthern
ho.spitality that the~· have,
down here... &gt;De 'aid.
"Evcrvhodv &lt;~'a' re aL real
nice ~imJ I ·fell v.e komc and

r m going to enjn~

it...

·

ThL: newc't Ri\l rec.-ruil rl!alite' that 'he &lt;~'ill not he alone
a\ lhl' tr~ll'k rro!! ram has

de\&lt;· lnpcd a pipeline In Maple
Heig li h anJ Diwn will hale

Please see Track. 86

'

•

�\

•

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Page ~2 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, July 20,

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

.\!Cribune - Sentinel - 1\e ster
CLASSIFIED
We Cove

I

/

Pistons let Brown go, reach
Ethnic community thrilled
with Cavs' Lithuanian roster settlement on remaining contract
1-

Meigs, Gallla,

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
small Balttc country could have
three players on the Cleveland
Cavalters' roster, and tht s ctty's
Ltthu,tm,m communtty couldn't be happter
Free ageot center Zydrun.1s
llgauskas, who stands 7-lnot-2
ts ex(l\!cted to re-stgn wtth the
Cavalters, getung a live yedr
deal Anu the Cav&lt;~ltets recently tr.tded tor 19 ye,tr old
Martynas
A.ndnuskevtctus
who also IS 7 toot 2
If the Ct\S tield 1" 111 B.tltlc
towers - Z and M.ut}n ·
(Mahr- TEEN) - CJe,el.tnd
would be the most Ltthu.mtan
team m the N,lt totMI B.lsketb.tll
Assocl(lllon

Further stokmg the lrenzv.
local Ltthu.mt,\11 Amertcm"
are keenh "" .tre nt the C tvs
reponed 'mterest m European
sensation Sa~ Ull.I S JaslkC\ IL: !Us

the guard who helped Ltthu&lt;tnt.t
upset Team USA mthe Athens
Olymptcs. ,md the best nMn .tt
Z s weddmg 1.\Sl summer
1llree Ltthuamans on d 14man NBA roster' &lt;\II !rom the
same ctty, Kaunas from one of
the smallest nations tn the
world? The posstbtltJtes can
leave an ethmc communny
thrilled
A portrait of Ltthuaman
Prestdent Y.tldas Ad&lt;~mkus
hangs prommently m lngnda
Bublys office, a tmy dtplomat
tc post behmd Our L.1dy ol
Perpetu,tl
Help Cuhohc
Church
m
Clc,el,\lld s
Collinwood netghborhood But
vJsJtots dlso see .t p1cture of

llgauskas. and nel'&gt;paper stones dbout h" .tccomphsh
ments
' Bublys IS the honor,1ry
Ltthudnt.tn consul general tor
Ohto The chpptngs arc het
way of tellmg Ltthu.tlll.m
tmmtgrants ' Welcome to
Cleveland '
''We all lo'e ltstemng to the
spons commentdtot s these
days;· Bublys s,rtd "All the
ttme they menuon Luhtt.uu.t
Ltthuanta, Ltthu,!lltd ami 11 IS
so great·
Ltthu,tntd entered Amenc,r's
basketball leXICOn cllter 1990
when tt broke t rom the gnp of
the former Sovtet Umon and
pla}ers
ltke
S.trun.ts
Marc1ultoms and Arvydas
Sabonts blazed a path trom
Baltic Sea towns to the NBA
Ltthuaman passtoA lor the

BY lARRY UGE
AS SOC ATED PRESS

Donyell Marshall .
headed to Cavaliers
CLEV ELAND (AP) Free .tgent 1orward Donycll
Marshall &lt;~greed to terms
Tuesd.ty on a tour ye.tr con
u act wuh the Cleveland
C tvalters, gmng the rebmlt
club ,mothet compltmentary
player tor LeBton James
Marshall, an 11 -year-vetcran "ho played for the
Toronto R.1ptors last season.
was courted by a handful of
teams before teachtng an
agreement
l~tth
the
Cav.tlrers, s,nd hts agent.
Andy M1ller
We look at thts .1s an
opportunlly to JOtn ,, team
that could wtn an NBA
champiOnshtp 1eal soon ·
Mtller satd
Mtller would not dtsclose
financtal parameters ot the
deal
Marshall " the thtrd stgmficant player stgned by the
Cavs thts summer and probably not the last The club,
whtch was $28 mtllton under
the salary cap ts expected to
offtct ally re-stgn All-Star
center Zydrunas llgauska~
and stgn guard Larry Hughes
on Fnday when the free
agent stgn mg penod begms
The Cavs ate also lookmg
tor a pomt guard and have

reporteuly talked witH the
agents tor M,trko Jane and
Damon Stoud,mme
Comtng ott the bench last
sc,ison , the 32-yeur-old
M,trshall .tver,tged II 5
potnts. 6 5 rebounds ,md shot
" c.treet-best 42 pe1cent on
3-pnmters lor the Raptors
The Ctvs ate desper,tte fo r
outs tde shoottng In otfset
tc&lt;~ms lrom coll apsmg on
ll g.tuskas or doubl e and
tnple-te,unrng Jdr.ncs
MMshall has d\t!'t..tged
12 4 pomts ,tnd 7 3 tebounds
over h1s 11 -ye.tr t.:ttrcer! and
despttc betng 6-toot-9. he
h.ts made 15 percent ot h1s 3
potnters
In 2003-04, Ma1sh&lt;1ll was
the only player 111 the NBA
to rank m the Top 25 111
rebounds (9 9), block s (I 5)
and 3-potnt percentage
( 403)
A star at Connecttcut,
Marshall Y&lt;as selected wah
the No 4 overall ptck m
1994 by Mmnesota, whtch
traded htm alter one season
to Golden State for Tom
Gugliotta
He pl.1yed stx seasons wtth
the Warnors belat e bemg
traded to Utab M.trsb,tll also
played 101 Cb tc.tgo

game b.ts become well known
You c,tn he,u .tbout 11 Ill tbe
Luhu,u11an Club m Cielcl,mLI
" here tlllllll gr,mt s lrom 40
years .tgo ,md trom last ye,tr
debate
sports
Algts
Penkauskas. ,, club membet.
keeps,, patr ot Z's shoes unuet
lock .tnd ke} to show oil trom

Elll ope
R.tymond
Butkus .t tel ned h.mkct who
c.tmc
to Cle\el.md
111
LnhLt.tllt,\ s post Wcu ld W.u II

It me lo tune

ct.tzed towns ltkc Kdunas

llllllll £ 1,1\1011 W.t\C

He

DETROIT- Lany Brown
IS out .1s co.tch ol the Detrott
,Ptstons
Btown ,md the Ptstons
rc.tched " settlement Tucsd&lt;~y
on the tin.tl tht ee }e,trs of hts
uJil!Jdl:l, Ptstons spokesman
M,llt Dobek s,ud He now "
fl~::e to COd(.: h dllOihl:l ICdlll
next se.ISOil !&gt;.. mJ Dobek , who
dec It neu to provtdc funher
det.uls
'\skcd tf the tC.\111 had tired
Brown Dobek rcplted ·Say
wh,tl you w.mt ·
The team chdn t w.mt the
H.tll of F.une co,tch b.tck ,md
had olfeted .t payott Brown 's
.tgc nl, Joe Gl.tss sdtd Tue,Jay
I t,tke umbt c~ge wllh the

st&lt;~t cmcnt 'We 11 tsh hnn the
best
and good health gomg
a buyout. Gl.tss s,ud Tuesd,1y

Pi stons , o~ -.outccs s,lymg tl's

mmnmg helotc the .mnnum:c- lor w~~rd '

Its pdmlu l

lt~l enmg

Two years ago, DetrOit
stgned Brown to a h\e ye,tr
comract worth about $25 mtlhon, plus mcenuve bonuses
He gutded the Ptstons to the
NBA champtOnshtp m 2004
,md came one VICtory away
from repeatmg thts year
Throughout the season,
Brown tnststed he would
retum tf doctors deemed ht m
healthy enough, and s,nd he
wouldn't lead another NBA
te,lm trom the stdehne Sull,
there have been repons that
the New York Kntcks would
not htre" new coach unttl they
knew tor sure Brown ts

ment · A buyout encompasses
a mutlhll ttg1eement1 and that 's
not wh,u ts h.tppenmg Lany
Bto'ln ts '"&gt;mg. I want to
co&lt;tch the Ptstons, and they
want to p.1y hun oft tor what
e ver reason "

Sa)S

Ltthu,u!l.tll&gt; pl.ty ,, 1101ld-class
br,m&lt;.l ot b,tsketball bee c~use
they pl.ty .til the t11nc, yc,tr·
tound espect.tlly 111 b.tsketb.tl l

llg.ntskds stgned e.~eh shoe
that ntght he c,une 111 tor cepeltn.tt (potato dumplings). soon
,\ltet .mtvmg rn Clevel,md Ill
19lJ6 to play center tor the
C.wahers
'He w.ts mobbed I J on t
thmk he hked that much ' s,uJ

Larry Brown

to peo-

ple sdy mu n.tmc-. st~H..l Vtd.ts
T,tt.u utt.ts prestdent of the
Ltthu,mr.m Athlettc Club But
he smiles dl the youths pounng
1lllo the club\ b.tsketb.tll pto
gr.tm
The} ,tlw,tys hc,uLI ahmtl
PenkdLJi\k,ts notmg thdt Z docs- how eood Lllhtr.tntall s .\IC • he
s,ud " Thts '' like te,tlny We
n t come .1rnund anym01e
We te the lndtan.t ol leell tke the mouse th.ttllkUe,l '

Before the Ptstons satd
Monday that they were negollaung a buyout. they had satd
they would welcome Brown
back t! he Wds wtllmg to
return
Unttl thts week I can't
rcmcmber a tunc th&lt;~t I read
Joe Dum,u s t&lt;at c,negoncally
slutc thdt Lm y Brown t!-i ou t
c&lt;J.tc h
G1.1ss s.uu " I he
Ptstons c.m 11 y to ch,mge the
l.llto; but you c.m't change

und\-t~lldble

The (J4-year-old Brown w.ts
hosptt,tltzed tor treatment ot a
mcdtcal problem that developed trom compltC&lt;tl!ans lollowmg htp surgery 111
November ,md perststed ,\Iter
,, second procedure 111 March
He checked mto the Mayo
Clime the mommg after l,tst
month s NBA draft. less than a
week .tfler Detrmt lost Game 7
ot the finals to the San Antonto
Spurs
'Hts medtcal condttton tsn t
I00 percent .md tl hasn't
tmproved much,' Glass satd
"'But we're trustmg God thdltl
"til ,md Lany h,ts represented
that he ts phystcally spmtually and emottOnall y able to
coach
· I uo not want myselt or
Larry to sound vmdtcttve
bec,mse thts "a free country,

htstllty

When dtd tim .til bre,tk
down I My best guess ''
momlls ago

Alter the .tnnnun cement
me~s Ltp.es seek111g comment
were lett wtth Btu\\ 11 Gl.tss
tc.tm prestdent ol b,i'ketb.tll
operc~ttons Joe DunMt:-i. and
Ptstons pl.tyers Rtchard
H.nntlton ,mu Chauncey
Btllups
In .t sL.J ICIIICill Dum,us s,ud
'the seatch f01 a ne" P·stons
he&lt;td coach hds .tlreauy
begun Brown ts expected to
be replaced by fotmer
Mmnesot.t
Tunberwol ves
co.tch Flip S,tunders
We .tpprectate the two
ttemenllous scdsoth the te,m1
enJoyed wnh LUTy ·" co.tch'
Dumars satd 111 an .tddtttonal

but at the same token, facts are
facts Some are saymg Lany ts
usmg hts health as an excuse,
but that's nof the truth because
he's more than wtlhng to come
back, even w!lh hts current
condttton "
Brown and Glass met wtth
Dumars and Ptstons owner
Btll Davtdson last week Other
than traveling to suburban
Detrott tor the meetmg,
Brown has been resung, on
doctor's orders at hts vacalton
home m New York
Dunng the regular season,
reports linked Brown to Jobs
m New York, Los Angeles and
Denver
The Cleveland Cavalters
talked Wtth Brown about
becommg thetr prestdent of
basketball operauons after
Detrotl gave them perm1ssmn
dunng the spnng Cleveland
htred Danny Ferry as general
manager last month, and he
has been assured that Brown
wtll not be hJS boss
Brown ts the only coach
wtth NBA and NCAA champ1onsh1ps, wmmng a t!lle wtth
the Ptstons last year and one
wtth Kansas m 1988
Hts longest tenure wtth any
team wa' stx seasons wtth
Phtladelphta He had two
years left on hts contract there
betore commg to Detrmt
Brown led the 76ers to the
playofts tor five &gt;tratght seasons mcludmg the 2001 NBA
Fmals and became the Erst
coach to take stx NBA teams
to the playofts when the Stxers
nt.~de tt 111 1999
He also coached Denver
(ft ve years), lndtana (four
ye,lfS). S~n Antomo (3 1/2
1ec~rs) New Jerse} (two
ye,rrs) C.troltn.l ot the ABA
(two yea") .md the Los
Angeles Cltppers ( 18 months)
Hts NCAA teams mcludc
UCLA and Kansas. where he
left .titer" mnmg the utle
When he was hued 111
Detrmt, Brown refused to set .1
umet.tbl e on le.1dmg the
Ptstons to then thud NBA
ch,unptonshtp, but promtsed
not to embar1 ass the te,\m
The wm over the Spurs m
Game 6thts year was Brown 's
lOUth m the postsea,on, movmg hrm past RedAuetbach for
thtrd pl.tce on the all-tnne hst
Brown hds more than I,000
NBA vtctones m the regular
season and pl.tyoffs

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{

••a_al-.11~

Shariff Sales
Case
Number
Probate 33129
Estate
of
Freda

Carpenter
Plamllft
vs
Defendants Court of
Common Pleas ,

Meigs County Ohoo
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from sa1d
court In the above
ent1tled action, l will
expose to sale at
Public Auct1on on the

front steps of the
Me1gs County Court
House on Frldav,
August 12, 2005 at
10·00 am of sa1d
day, the tollowmg
described real estate
EXHIBIT " A"
Parcel No 1 The following descr1bed real
estate sttuate In
range Eleven (11),
Town
Three
(3),
Section Thirteen (13)
ol
the
Ohio
Help Wanted

Company s Purchase,
being m theTownshtp
of Lebanon, County
of Metgs, State of
Ohto and known as
common lot Number
254 and descrtbed as
follows Commencing
at the Southeast corner
of
Sect1on
Nmeteen {19) an sa1d
Townshtp and coun
ty ,
thence
East
Twenty Silt (26) rods,
thence North on a
hne parallel w1th satd
Sect1on ltne to land
daeded to the county
Commess1oners
of
satd Me1gs County by
R C Mtddleswart for
road
purposes
thence west along
the line of satd land
to the East hne of
sa1d Sectton Ntneteen
(19) , thence South
along satd Sectton
lme to the place of
beglnmng, containing
twenty-lhree and onehalf (23 t 12) acres
Help Wanted

Bennett's Heating

acoonng

ts growrng aga rn we are look tng to
fill two postttons m the areas of
duct work &amp; equtpme nt
rnstallatton 'These are full tune
posttiOns wtth several benefits
Expenence ts helpful but not
requtred So tf you are a hard
working rndtvtdual thats not afratd
to work, and want to JOin the ateas
fastest growmg heattng &amp; coohng
company Stop by and fill oul an
apphcatton at
Bennett's Heattng &amp; Cooltng
Safford School Road
Galltpohs, OH
740-446-9416
Please no over the phone
mtervtews Apphcatton' &amp;
rntervtews wtll be only done on
Saturday July 23rd ttom 9A ~ to
~p M at our oltice

more or less
Reservmg to the sa1d
former Grantors, thetr
heirs and asstgns, all
nght, title and mterest tn the mtnerals
on, an and under sa1d
real estate, and the
nght to extract and
remove satd mtnerals
Reference
Deed
Volume 152, Page
357, Deed Records,
Metgs County Oh1o
Audttor's Parcel No
07.()()072 000
Can not be sold for
less than two thirds
(213) of appra1sed
value $24,000
Parcel No 2
The
lollowtng
descnbed parcel of
land
s1tuated
tn
Lebanon To)Nnshtp,
Me1gs County, Oho
and
more
tully
descnbed as follows
beginning n the East
hne of Sect1on 19,
Town 2 Range 11
Oh10
company s
Purchase, seven rods
South of the center of
the Portland and
Bashan ro11d. thence
m a Westerly dtrec·
hon twenty (20) rods
to near a p1ne tree 6
Inches 1n d1ameter on
the North s1de of sa1d
road , thence north
fourteen (14) rods
parallel w1th the east
lme of s atd Sec 19,
thence East twenty
(20) rods to the East
line ol said Sec 19
ttlence South twenty

(20) ro&lt;!s to the place
of beg1nnmg contammg two (2) acres,
be the same more or
Excepting
less
0 96~8 acres deeded
to Bruce Johnson m
Volume 114 Page 245
of the Me1gs County
Official
Records
Audttor s Parcel No
0Hl0075 000
The followtng real
estate sttuated tn I he
County of Me1gs, m
the State of Ohto, and
m the Township of
Lebanon, and bound
ed and descrtbed as
follows
Bemg tn
Sectton 19, Town
Three (3)
Range
Eleven (11) Oh1o
CompanY's Purchase,
begmmng one hun
drad and fifteen (t 15)
feet South of the
Por11and and Bashan
Aoad on the East line
of
sa1d
Seclton
Ntneteen (19), thence
West three hli11dred
lh1rty-e1ght (3381 feet
thence
North
Nmeteen and one
hall ( 19 1/21 degrees
West F1ve Hundred
N1nety-eoght
(598)
'eet
thence East
F1ve Hundred twenty
1ttght (528} feel to the
East hne of satd
Sectton 19 thence
South F•ve Hundred
and
Seventy·ftve
(575) feet Ia the place
of begtnnlng con
taintng five and three
fourths [5 314) acres
Excepting two (2)

l~a~laa

acres deeded to Eber
Carpenter prior to
th1s deed Exceptmg
2 6258 acres deeded
to Bruce Johnson
and recorded Volume
114 Page 245 of the
Me1gs County Offtctal
Records
Audttor s Parcel No
07-00073 000
Also, excepting the
coal, oil and gas mtneral and under sa1d
lands and the nght to
mtne and remove the
same without 1n1ury
to the surface and
should the surface be
InJured the same
must be paid for
Reference
Deed
Volume 126, Page
236, Volume 251,
Page 77 Volume 282.
Page 291 of the Me1gs
County
Deeds
Records
Cannot be sold for
less than two lhtrds
(213) of the appraised
value $10 000
Current
Owner
Estate
ol
Fred a
Carpenter
Property at 53060
~ald
Knob,
St1versvtlle Rd
Portland, Ohto

Parcel No 1
PPW OHl0072 000
Parcel 12

•••

......_••••- ...

PP 07-99975 000
01-00073.00
Appraised
at
$24,0001$10,000
Terms of Sale Cannot
be sold for less than
213rds
of
the
appratsed value 10%
down on day of sale,
cash
or certtfted
check balance due
on conftrmat1on of
sale
Parcels sold separately'
Robert E Beegle ,
Me1gs County Shenff
Attorney for the platotiff
Crow &amp; Crow
Attorney
110 W Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769
(740) 992-6059
(7) 6, 13 20
Pu bhc Nolice

Shenft Sales
Case N 04CV163
Mortgage Electronu:
Aegtstrat•on
Systems, Inc
Pla1nt•ff

Vs
Neale G Kntght, et al
aka Neale George
Kntght eta!
Defendants
Court ol Common

......., .........~~....., 1•-.o

1:.....,11'"'~• -~c l

P.leas Metgs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale d1rected
to me from sa1d court
tn the above entttled
act1on, I Will expose
to sale at public auction on the front
steps of the Metgs
County Courthouse
on Fnday, August 12,
2005, at 10 OOam of
said day, the follow·
mg descnbed rea I
estate Sttuate tn the
Vtllage of Middleport,
County of Me1gs and
State of Ohto, betng
lot number 51 tn
orig1nal plat of the
VIllage of Middleport.
seid lot being the
same prem1ses conveyed from Elizabeth
Ree, et al, by deed
recorded in Volume
93, Page 77 of the
Me1gs County Ohto
deed records
Propertt
Address
246 North Fourth
Avenue, Middleport,
OhiO 45760
Property
Owners :
Neale ,G Kmght and
Marcta J ~mght
Prtor
Deed
Reference Volume 9,
Page 645, PPU 15·
00434 and 15-oo435
Appraised
al
$32 ,500 00 Terms of
Sale Cannot be sold
for less than 2/3rds of
the appratsed value
10% down on day of
sale, cash or certified
check, balance due
on confirmation of
sale

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Ohio Valley bank IS now acceptmg
applications for a part time Superbunk
Teller at the PomerO\ Branch located

mside the SaH- \-Lot store
ne nffer o gem~ rous \ialan und bcm.·n!s
package. m fudtng ~OJ K Heurfment
and ca reer ad,anrt:mcnt upportuntlle'
Jntere:'&lt;lted per!ton m .u ohlam .t Jnh
applu:alton al am Oh1o \aile\ B.mk
LocatiOn Hr lrnmour \\Ch\iltf.
" \ \ \~ fl\

hl

FOI

(Hill

L---------------------------~ .

CLIFFSIDE GOLF COURSE
Dally Specials
MontJay &amp; Thursday 25% off

$21 00 18 w/cart
Tues &amp; Fn $25 all tJay w/cart
Wed · 7 am · 3 pm
S 1 00 per hole w/cart
Sat &amp; Sun After 12 00
S25 all you can play wlcart

Robert E Beegle
Meigs County SheriH
Reimer, Lortfer, •
Arnovltz
P.O Box 968
TWinsburg OH 44087
330-425-4201
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
(7) 6, 13, 20
Public Notice

SheriH Sales
Case No 04CV361
Bank One NA
Platnllff

Vs

•

a.lt:IJ.J!:.Iat

T'-IC......,si.»•••._...__~.-N_

tea.

'"""••--••-

Mtchael Willford, et at
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohto
In pursu&amp;nce of an
order of sale to me
dtrected from satd
court 10 the above
enttlled action, I wtll
expose to sale at
public auct1on on the
front steps of the
County
Meigs
Courthouse
on
Fnday. August 12,
2005 at 10 OOam, of
said day, the followIng descnbed real
eslate Stluated 10 the
County of Me1gs, tn
the Sate of OhiO, and
m the. Township of
Rutland and bounded
and descnbed II'S fol·
lows Betng 1n the
south east quarter of
Sect1on 8, Town 6,
and Range 14 of the
Ohio
Company's
Purchase Betng 2 82
land
acres
of
descrtbed m Volume
153 Page 621 of the
Me1gs County Deett
Records Save and
except lot sold and
descnbed m Volume
162, Page 454, .88
acres Also save and
except lot sold and
described 1n Volume
178, Page 339, 89
Save
and
acres
except o 48209 acre
sold and deacribed In
VOlume 256, page
681, Meigs County
Records Parcel No
11-()0635
Current
Owner
Michael Willford, ot at,
36790 St Rt 124,
Middleport, OH 45760
PPI 11-&lt;!0635
Prior
DHd
References· Volume
258, Page 681
Appreloed
at
517,500 00 Torma of
Sale Cannot be aold
lor leaa than 213rda of
the appraised value
10"4 down on day of
sale, cash or certllled
check balance due
on confirmation of
sale

Robert E Beegle
Meigs County Sheriff
Javllch
Block &amp;

l&gt;c.••••-

Rathbone
602 Main St , Suite
500
Cinctnnatt, OH 45202
513·744-9600
Attorney
for
the
Plamtlff
(7) 6, 13, 20
Pubhc Nollce
To Whom tt may
concern Th11 Is a
notice to Inform the
public of the compt.
lion of the ftnanc1al
reporl
for
the
Southern
Local
Board of Education
The report Is available at the offtce of
the
Treasurer
at
Southern
High
School
Sincerely,
Denme E Hill
lntenm Treasurer
7120

1\egister

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nng
Call to ID 740 992
tyr male 112 Ru ssell Terner 3412
t/2 Pomeraman aves k1ds
(304)882 3225
lost at Kyger Creek Bay
field week ot July4tl1
2 Female ln s1de Cats to
Red/black baseball bat
goo d home LIter tramed 1
Senhmenlal gtfl (740)379
declawed (740)245 9722
2633
Beauttlul ktllens to good
llama Alter 5 00 r::all 740 Lost Sandhill Ad/Regency
992 7562
Apt area
Orange/While
Tabby Cat
no collar
Free to good home Bwk old
Answers to ~Abby" (304)675
Black Lab m )( p1.1pples 1
3502 Reward
lemale 1 mare (740)367
0624
-l-os-,~7 ---.,-,-.-H-ea lth

Oeaa'lfirthS'

Monday-Friday for

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

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARD SAIF·

Cute Bmder Collie mtl( pup stnpes 740 ?46 9740 441
pe s 5 6 weeks old 6 0538 740 2896
female/ 1 male (740)256
t558
~ARD SALE

r

110

GALIJI'OIIS
Mpymg out pi ttle Counuy
Furn lure appliance
housewares
garden
linens kn ck knack s 1ewel
ry books etc some clo!h1ng
(small ladleS) 80 Garf1eld
Ave lns1de &amp; Outstde 7!22.
7/23 B OOam

Super 8 Gall poliS IS current
ly accepting appllcattons for
HOUSEKEEPING
No
phone ca lls apply tn person
Oualllted applicants wrll be
contacted lor an mlervtew
Th1s s a last paced post t1on
wtlh organ zat1on and e~e lor
data I a must

~

Yard sale 102 Dabb1e Dnve
Fn 22nd &amp; Sat 23th Bam
5pm. Mowers &amp; tools_:,_

YARD SAtE-

p14

PoMt:ROY/MIIMll
G1gant1c Movmg Sale

o:

Town ot Hartford accept1ng
resumes lor Water 011ce
Clerk must have General
0 11 ce Skt ll s Computer
Sk lis Payro 1 Please matl
Resumes
to
Town of
Hartford
PO 80)( 96
Harllord
WV
25247
Deadhne July 7 28 05

•

July

Mary

Layne

on

Del ong

Aoacl
Refrtgalor wtl te
WICker lurn~ture
Home
lnlenor Lots of toy s d1shes
pots &amp; pans Lots of large
clothln Gall 740-992:1439

rt..,-------,.1

4x4's For Sale
725
Announcement
• . .. . . ..• .
030
Antiques
530
Apartments lor Rent. .. . ..
440
Auc11on and Flea Market
080
Auto Par1s &amp; Accessories
•
7&amp;0
Auto Repair
. .. ... . . • •• no
Autos lor Sale
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
.• 750
Building Supplies .
550
Business and Buildings
340
Business Opportunity
210
Business Training • • . •
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .
790
Camping Equipment .
780
Cards of Thanks . . .. . .
010
Child/Elderly Care
190
Electrlcai/Refngeratlon. .
840
Equipment for Rent
.480
Excavating .
830
Farm Equipment
.610
Farms for Rent
. 430
Farms lor Sale
. . 330
For Lease. .
490
For Sate
.585
For Sate or Trade
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables. .
580
Furnished Rooms
450
General Hauling
850
Giveaway
.040
Happy Ads
050
Hay &amp; Grain.
• .. 640
Help Wanted
110
Home Improvements.
. . 810
Homes for Sale
.. 310
Household Goods .
.51 0
Houses for Rent .............................. 410
tn Memoriam .
. ... 020
lnaurance .. ... ... •• • . .. . . •• . .
. • 130
Lawn 1o Garden Equipment ....................... 660
Uvestock.... . .
. 630
t.ost and Found. • ............ . ... . . . 060
Lola lo Acreage. . . . • • . ............ 350
MtocellM*&gt;uS . . .. . . • • •
.. 170
Mlocellaneouo Mtrchandloa. ....
. . 540
Mobile Home Rop~lr.. • .
. 860
Mobile Homos for Ron!.. • . .
420
Mobile Homoolor Sale
320
Money to Loan.. ......... .
220
Motor~yclos &amp; 4 WhMiero ............... 740
Muolcollnatrumonto . .. •
. .
570
Peraonal• . . ..
.. . .... ....... •. . . . .
005
Polo lor Sale
.... 560
Plumbing &amp; Hooting.. .... . • •
820
Prolnolonal Sarvlceo ..
. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Ropalr. . . .•
. 180
. 380
Real Eotato wonted....... . .. • .
Schoolo lnotructlon • .
.. . • 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fortlllzer . • .. . .
. 850
SlluoUono Wonted. • . . . .. .... ..
120
Space lor Rent ....
•
480
Sporting Goods
. 520
SUV'o for Sale
. • 720
- Trucko for Sate. . ......
•
.
715
Upholstery
................ 870
Vans For Sale . .
• . 730
Wonted to Buy
.
090
Wonted to Buy· Form Supplies . .. ..... 620
Wanted To Do
.. .
•• •
180
Wanted to Ront .
. • 470
Yard Sale- Golllpollo .
072
Yard Sale-Pomoroy!Mtddle
• 074
Yard Sole-PI Pleuant
. . • . 076
1,&lt;

www com1cs com

HELP WAI{IID

~

HI~.!' "' \1\'I"F.Il

~~~~~~~~

LEARN

TO
DRIVE
NO EXPERIENCE N£CESSARY
FULL TIME Cl ASSES
COL TRA.IMNO
I'INANCING AVA.II.A6lE

J08 PL.ACEl•ENT
ENROI.LING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAilER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVIllE VA

1-800-334-1203
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cral1 s
wood Items
To $480/Wk
Matenals provided
Free nlormatlon pkg 24Hr
801 A28 A(&gt;4Q
An Ex cellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Martlyn 304 882 2645
AVON 1 All Areas 1To Buy or
Sell
Sh•rley Spears 304
675-1429
Background Screening 1nter
v1ewer Excellent commun1
catiOn and computer sk1Us
requ1nKI S10 00 per hour
no benefits Call Mark 1

1100-556-3583
AN SllPN S needed tor 100

bed skflled nurs•ng fac11tty
w1rt1 e~ecellem opportun•ly lor
c11all angmg and rewarcltng
Great starl
expenence
rates and excellent regulator
oomphance
htstory
Interested
candidates
should apply to Rocksp'rmgs
Road
Pomeroy
Oh1o
45769 Extenchcare Healltl
Servtees Inc •s an eqlJlll
OPJilOttuntty employer that
encourages
workplace
dtverslfy M.'F ON
Ray &amp; Sons Complete Car
Cleanmg
Help Wa nted
must have valid DriVers
LICense (304)675--7375

Certified
ASiistant

tor

:~~~~o~a~:ru~e~~ ~~ ~:~:

(304)675 0860 eKI 124/125

tiG;;a;;;lhp;.;o~ls-O~H--4.;.56;;;3~1--...

Monday
irom
DOam thru
4 00 Fnday
pm
Lak
tn
8
Hospttal ts an EEO/AA
Employer

OUTSIDE SALES

Direct Servtce
Emolovee Needed
REM OptionS n St A bans IS
currently accepltng apphca
liOns for a Dtrect Serv ce
Emp loyment m the Pt
Pleasanl area fm a young
adu lt female w1th develop
mun ta l cJelay MIJSI be t8
years of age have a valid
drtver s hcense and be
screened through a cnm1nal
background
check
Weekday hours destred
Pari hme posttton available
wtth potential to become lull
I me
Contact Nancy
Gordm1 or Cnsla Hrll lor
more mformatJon {304)768
5575
Full T1me Help Wanted Fl135
Adult V1deo &amp; BooK Store

~

2005 by NEA, Inc

Rela1l

110

110

1'

~

Nursing lmmedta!e
openmg
11.111 ttme and Warehouse AsSOCiate qual
temporary (90 day) work tn a ftcal1ons Include but nol lt m
I 14 Bed Long Term Care ted to abthty to 111 SOibs
State
Factlly
Full t1me dnve a standard shtft trans
emp loyment offers an exten mtsston and ab1hly to oper
siVe benefit package mclud ale a computer elftctently
1ng State CIVIl serv1ce ret tre Must be avatlable to work
Monday thru F11day Send
Stiver and Gold Cotns
Resume to TSC13 c/o Po1nt
Proolsets God Atngs Pre
Pleasant Reg1 ster
U
Currency
SICk
leave
and
12
plus
pa1CI
5
1935
Pomt '
Solita re 0 amonds M T 8 holidays
healtM1Ie 1nsur 200 Mam St
ance IS ava1labte Salary IS Pleasant WV 25550
Co tn Shop 151 Secvnd
commensurate w1th expen
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446 ence Must have CNA car Needed 1mmedtately expe
2842
tllicatlon to work In West nenced
flo01
r over ng
1'11'1(1\\11\1
Vlrgima
Contact K1m nstaller send resume to
.., I H\ HI..,
B1llups or V cky Berkley at CLA Box 571 c/o Galltpohs
laktn Hospital Lakin WV at Datly Trtbune PO Box 469

110

uNO riC I ••
Borrow Smar't Contac
he Ohto 01v1s on o
Fma 1Cta l
ln slttulton
If ce
of Consume
!!oms BEFORE you ret
nanca your home o
bta1n a loan BEWAR
I requests tor any larg
dvance payments o
ees or Insurance Ca
he Oft1ce ol Consu
!fairs toll free at 1 866
78 0003 to learn I th
ortgage
brO ker o
ender
IS
prope r!
tcensed (Thts •s a publt
ervr ce announcemen
rom tha Ohto Valle
Pubhshmg Company1

;~~~~~~~~

"]- 2-o

REPRESENTATIVE
The
Galhpohs
Da ly
Tnbune
IS
accepling
resumes lor a lull f1me
outs•de sales represents
t1ve to JOin our sales team
and to manage an estab
hshed account hsl whtle
calling on new accounts
The successful candidate
will be a dtsctphned sell
motiVed team player that
underslands lhe 1mpor
tance
of
devefoptng
strong mutually benet1
ctal bus ness rela tion
Ships Wllh our accountS
The rdeal candtdate Will
nave sa e expenence For
co nfidential
interview
please send resume and
cover etter to Gallipolis
Da tly Tnbune Alln Jtm
FreelaOO 825 Th1rd Ave

Evenmg sll111 &amp; M1dn1ght Do I.;;
G;;;•';;:
"po
;;;;
'";;.;;
o;;;n;;;";;;•;;;5;;;63;;;'- o l
Not Call Store
Call
&amp;
EMT s
{304)549-5696
ParamedtCS
neeoed App1r o.l 1354
Guard•ng Angels Chtld Care Jackson P1ke Galhpolls
Center IS now accepllng
apphcatJons lor a Teact\er s
Stop worry1ng abOut
A1de Th1s position IS a pari
where you ne)(t
t1mal temporary
pos1tron
payclleck 1s com• ng from
posstbly leadlflg to a pe rma
Start taming up to
nenl position Ttl rs pos1110n 1s
S&amp;lhourl
designed to ass st the Lead
We qfter week ly pay
Teach ers •n meet1ng the
+bonuses lull benel tts
needs of the chtldten
package pa1d trat~ung
ass •gned to tt1e1r areas It
patd vaca!IOn and
you are self mottvated
hohdays
dependable
and en,oy
Callloday!
workmg With cn11dren then
1-sn-463-6247
thts could De the pos ttiOn tor
1)11 2.56
vou You must be at least 18
years of aoe and have al RNILPN S Overbrook cen
least a t11gh schOOl d'tploma ter IS currently acceptmg
or cectlltCahon ol hrgh school appllcaltons for LPNS and
7A 1P and 7P 7A
&amp;qUI'IISiency (GEO) by tM RNS
state board of educat •on If Sh1fts are ave•lable II you
vou are 1nterested •n thiS are Interested please come
poSition
please contact lf1 and 1111 out an applicatiOn
333
Page
Street
Becky Hess or Oama at
or call and
Sct'lullz at (740)388 8454 for M•adteport
speak
wtth
Hollie
more mlormation
Bumgar ner
LPN
Staff
Need hltlp tor Park tnson s Development EOE
paltent 1n Maryland LIW 1n
n 1c e couples home All Room anendant ne eded to r
expenses pa1d plus salary housekeepmg Apply tn per
Need dnvers 1rcenses Ca ll son at Hottday IQn 517 St
(7.10)288-0290 leave mes At 7N Galhpolis No Phone
calfs plea~
sage

At Aldi A Great
Career ts In The
Bag!
'Full Time

Cashier(
Shift Manager
$9.50/Hr.
($3 50/Hr addthonal when
pertormtng sh1ft manager
dulles)

'Part Time
Cashiers
$9.501Hr
(Average less than 20
hr s/wk hm1 ted beneft ls)

Now Accepttng
Applications
for our
Galhpohs, OH
Store
Apply n person
Monday July 25th
7am 9am and 5pm 7pm
at ALOI Foods
176 Upper Rtver Ad
Gathpohs OH
US Full beneftls for full t me
post! ons that 1nclude MaJOr
Medtcal Dental One Week
Vacatton afte r 6 months
Short and Long Tetm
Dtsa blltty S1ck Days a nd
Personal Days and s•x
NatiOnal Holidays per yea•
Ret ~rement and a 401 K
Plan FleKtble schedule With
a ~c an
Do
atltlude'
ThOrough tra•nmg 1s prov •d
ed and career promot1on
poSStbtlltiSS are poSSible
YOU Outstandmg Customer
Servrce Moltvatlon and a
Commitment to Teamwo rk
and Performance Accurate
Cash Control ef11C1ent oper
atton of the cash regtsters
systems
c 1ean 1ng
and
stock ng merch and tse Must
be able to mrk between
Sam 10pm Mon Sat H gh
SchOol Diploma or GED
requtrl:ld Cand dales must
be t8 yrs or older to apply
No work on Sundays
Ald1 s an Equal Opportumty
Employer No TelephOne
Calls • Please/ App y
1n
Person

Under new management
Heatrng &amp; Cool ng bustne ss
rs looktng lor tnstallers Wrth
1 year ol tlands on and q Cakes by Kathy weddt!1Q &amp;
tachnrcal of 1 year Salary an occas•on also Karaoke
Oepends on exper ence call (740)992 0723 at\er
Send resume to HVAC PO 3pm
Box 572 Kerr OH 45643
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W n
Wanted Fron 1 desk clerk
1 888 582 3345
Apply tn person at Holiday
JH\IISI\ItInn Gallipolis No phone
calls please

10

UO:\IIS

FORS\11
Wifeless Gallery now htnng
lull and part ltme help Cell
phOne e)(per1ence tlelpfLJI
but not necessary For tnter
v1ew cons1derat on call
(606)928 1608 or ematl
wtrelessga lery@zoomtnter
net net or matl resume to PO
Box 6792 Hunt1ngton WV
25773

STNA S Overbrook Center
IS currsntly accept ng aoph
catiOns to r lull 11me STNA S
7A 7P and 7P 7A and 3A
3P
shtfts are ava11
able It you are nte~ested
please come 1n and frl l out
an apphcatron at 333 P.age
Street M od1eport P ease
No Phonfl calls EOE

All real estate adverttstng
mthts newspaper ts
subrec1 to the Federa
Farr Housmg Act of 196B
wh ich makes lltllegal to
advertiSe any
preference llmttallon or
dtscnmtnallon based on
race color rehgton sex
familial status or nallonat
ortgrn or any lntentton to
make any such
pr!!lerence ltmrt11llon or
dtscrtmtnallon

Thts newspaper wrll na.l
knowmgly accept
advertisements lor real
estate whtch rs 1n
vtolatton ol the law Our
readers are hereby
ntormed that all
dwellings advert sed rn
thts newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity beses

For sale 2 bedroom house
s ngle bath w•th1n ctty ltmJts
askmg
S60 000
Call
1740)446 8595
af te r
900pm
For sale by owner T a1ler &amp;
lo t at 109 Cedar Streel
Galhpol ts at end of GAHS
toolball '•eta Call {.:11 9)533
4195 lor deta Is

112 Pleasant Street 3
Bedroom
1 112 Baths
Famtly Room Dtnurg Roo n
No Oown Payment Posstble
Full Basem ent
Storage
1900 square It house ':i
Sldg Garage New Cenlra
bedroom 2 bath fu base
Air Cond New Wtndows
menl new heal oump set"(304 )675 4034
on 3 acres SA 7 Easterr;
1401 Cedar St 3 Bedroom Sctwol DtstrrCI (7 40)985
1 112 Ba th Corne lot new 43 21

Roof move rn cond lion
new Carpet and Flooltng Otde1
Home
Tota ly
Storage Bwld tng Fenced n Res o ed
4br lo t St2e
IN.\!THll( ~noN
40~100
P tee tn the 60s
Back Yard (304)675 7708
Gallipolis Career College 21 Evans He ghts 2 OR lull Phone 13041675 2722
(Careers Close To Home)
baseme 11 Pnce negotrable
Call Today! 740 446 4367
Pr1ce Reduced
(7 40 )25~ 6846
1 800 2 t 4 0452
Ontv S13 900
~gall po 'c.1ree&lt;col ege com
3 Bedroom 1 Balli Fu ll
Ad aa ted Member Accutdn ng Basemem Ga rage 1emod
Counc~ In• lnncpenoen! c~ ege s
e led Ill &amp; out Racrne Area
ar&gt;d Schools 1214B
740 949 1372 S5 7 000

150

170

Sou lOt.,

IVlist '1-:I.LI~EOl~

Car
Port
tor
Sa te
18FI X21Ft el"lclosetl 8Ft
door$ 5150000 304773

5390

3br 2ba poo garage stor
age
bldg
appiL?Inces
Sl30000 5 m1les from 33
on Rt 68t (740t592 0426

DIRECTV
FREE Home
enterta nment
System
FREE Equ1pment and Install
up 10 four rooms I 45 chan
nels 529 00 a month Ask
trow to get FREE HBO
MAX and STARS t 800
523-7556 lor deta tls.

Jl""

3 bfldroom 2 oath Ranch
sty le nouse newly remod
eled Brdwell a•ea S69 000
Ca I
~740)441 t528
or
(740)709 5952 after 4pm

OmtVEtll~Ril
\tu:

•, c

Home chtldcare state certr
fled and p .a•o pa, o::cccpt
ed Glean safe nome local
ed 3 112 mtles off route 33
on
Ktflgsbury
Road
Excellenl references ava I
able
Pertect local on tor
parents who work w1th n tile
Pomeroy and Athens area
Call 7 40·992 9066

Attent•on!
Local company ottenng NO
pro
DOWN PAYMENT
grams lor you to buv your
nome nstead ol rent ng
100 °~ flnanclflg
Less than perfect credtt
accepted
• Pavmen• could be the
same as 1ent
Mortgage
Locators
(740)367 0000
Capecoa rn me coun1ry 4
Dedroom t acre teve lot
bea ul•lul cha rm1ng spa
~"IOUS Famrtv roo/"1 formal
vtng

room

ana

mole

4

36 Chtll co the Ad
Galtpolls Ohro
Thomas Es1a1e
(7 40)446 0720

~20

'lotllt.F Hm ws
t-UH.S\ij.

t 990 t 11.:70 3 bedroorn Ira I
er wtth C A k lchen appl
ances 1ncluoed M ust :)£
moved 1740)285 6851
5 Homes under S10 000
W1ll d~hv'er (740)385 76 -t
97 Feetwood 14•70 total
electnc W111 help wtth del v
ery Includes central a r Only
S10 !)95 Ca I (740}385
9621
New 14x70 3 bedroo"ll :2

ci'__01~3-79_9B_B_7~---· bath

ranch style nome Of"l
2 3 4 acres ot and 3 oed
room 1 5 oatn. arge J "~!;;
oum wrl h oeaut ''- l'laid
pa nted room wrth beautrfu
Wil l care. for elderly m the tr hana panted mu ral or wall
re'r gerat or stove
home
day ltme hours Ne""
washer d ye r 11cluded New
(740)992 78t8
Mt water heater tn base
H\\'\tl\1
ment lotate lectnc nome 36
yea1s old
A stea
at
S59 900 t3922 St At tSO
Vtnto n Oh o Call Hatold at
ERA Realto s 281 \484
Get Pa1d to Hunt &amp; F sh
0265
Turn you r pass on mte a
Ca ll
J rn
bus ness
(3().415-6 2"'"07
Home ltsllngs
Lo~ely

-eo
-----ALDI

1-JO:\II·~'l
FORS\1~

10

MONE\
10 l..Oi\N

1wnght@1c net

To g1veaway 4 puppies 2 --female &amp; 2 male part
YARD SAtE·
German Shepherd &amp; Golden
7fi
y ARil SA! 1.·
Retnever &amp; 1 Border Coll1e
GAUJI'OUS
Pr. f'LMSAN"I
male to good home Call
(740)245 9722
85 Arnold Oqve Bidwell 3 t /2 m les out Sandh tll Rd
losTFotJNDAND
(bnck house) Friday July 22 top ol hill past Oshel Road
B 3 &amp; Saturday July 23 8 tools clottles several chtld
12 Brand name adult &amp; car seats Thur/Fn/Sa l 8 "
baby (Q-24 months) clothing
$1,000 Reward
strollers toys d1aper gean Garage Sale Thut 21 Fn 22
For tnlormat1on lead•ng to n1e baby Items Boyd Bears 9 till ? Rt 2 Eckard Chapel
the arrest&amp;prosecut1on ot food dehydrator cratts elec Road
the person who stole 1811 tnc dartboard old dnll press - - - ' - - - - - - tratler w/racks grey canvas lots of m1sc terns
Yard Sale Sat July 23 8 ?
81 Hawthorne Ln beh nd
top w/traated outside turm
Nat onal Guafd
ture 1ns1de from Wtll Power
Amby Lane Multt family FjF;;;,;~;;;.--~.,
Tumbling
area
Call E)(erclse eq1J1pment loose
\VAM'E.D
Gallipolis Pollee Department ball baby and toddler gtrl
IU RUY
(740)446 13t3 All mforma dog pen clothmg much .L_ _ _ _ _ _ __.I
liOn IS confldentta l
more Sat Sam
Absolute Top Dollar U S

r

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

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlahlng reaerveathe nght to edtl reJIICI or o; ancel any ad at eny lime Error• mual be repor\ed on the f 1rat day of
Tribune-Sanlmel Reglsler will be reaponalbla for no more than the coat olthe apar:a occupie d by the error and only the first •naertlon We shall not
any 1011 or llkpenaa thai I'IISultl from the pubH~:aUon or omuJaion or an advar1•aemenl Correction Will be made 1n the frat avatlable adtlton • Bo• "':,~':;:.~~: ~
are alway• conlidentlal '+ • Current rate cll rd appllea • All re11l estate adven tae mente are subJect to the Feder&amp;! Fair Houstng Act of 1968 • Thll!l n
accepte only help wanl.a ada meelmg EOE atani:Jarda We will not knowtngly accept anr advarttamg 1n v olatton of the law

- ------21 22 23 from 9 ooam ltll
G ve away to good homes Depl Yellow cal w1th orange 6 OOpm 1 Mtle on 143 at

CLASSIFIED INDEX
""'•••••

\!Gribune

To Place

Only S t98 63 per
month Call Elarne 1740)385
2434

New .3 SA HomE Only
S I 89 mo lncluoes a c dehv
ery 81"10 se1 lJP ~7 40 !385
ll367
'le
0 1 e ome
SR 28A LA K1tcher
ec~&lt;.&amp;B .... Id ngs A1r See a
76 Oshel R:t

·c:.c==="----.J
Tratle! 1982 3 bedroom 2
bath C A stove re1 d•sh
v.asl"ler S7 500 ~7 4 0.)441
8976 0 ~&lt;l0l645 6734

.

wwworvbcom

·•~Ol! Cf•
PHIO \~ .. LEY PUBliSH
NG CO ecommenos tha
OU dO OJS1ness V. th OeO
~le vou k 'lOW ana NOT t
eno money througll the
fr arl ul"lt 1you "'ave tn11est
ated the oflettnQ

L st your Mme oy ca11 no
(740)446 3620
v.. ew photos triO

O"~

1.,e

Its a Steal ~ bedroom ~
bath 2 car garage N@v.
Haven WV Code 6505 o•
call t304 l&amp;82 3)6e

Ill'"""'

f"'l

"11llUIJ!I";s

0' ce Buttd ng w 2 apart
Ave tn
oe"'tS on
G11 I pols Avg renla of
{lrartments St 200 monlh
P ce ;:. 120 000 w1 11 constde
and cont act
w money

z.,o

a~ ...

,

(';t &lt;~ OI7100cxr

'

�..

..

.'

It

Wednesday, July 20, 2005
ALLEY OOP

Al1IDl
1'011 SALE

For sale Riverfront acreage, One SA apartment In Spring Block, brick, sewer pipes, 1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr., 4
arounct 6 acres on At. 7, nice Valley. $290 per month plus windows, lintels, etc. Claude cyt. 76.000 mitts. s3,ooo
Sun
Valley Wtnlers, Rio Grande, · OH 080. Call (740)441-D712 .
-place lor a new home. Call deposit.
, (740)446·8595
aft&amp;r Apartments, no longer Call 741)-245---5121 .·
2002 Ford Taurus 116 Snarp
• 9: ~m
:;;_._ _ _ ___, floods. (740)388-0017 or
40,000
mlles-$7995.00.
(740)339.0362
REAI.&amp;TATE
1990 Okia Cutlass &amp;lpreme
W..\NITJl
4 Door·$1495.00 River view
Pleasant Valley ~partment
Are now laking Applications 1 pair of lull blooded Motors 2 blocks above
I Buy Homes- Local person 1or 2BR. ' 3B R &amp; 4BR., Beagles. C~tll (740) 446· McDonalds, Pomeroy, Ofllo.
(740·992·3490)
~buys hOnies Confidenhal, App lications are taken 3907.
''Ouic~ cash Jim, 740-992- Monday rn ru Friday. I rom ,
M erc~es B ~nz 260E 88.
:S3oo. No calls after 9.
g:oo A.M.-4 P.M. Ollice is 4 FT, 2 inch, Female Iguana
Engine rebuilt, too much
Located at 1151 Evergreen tor sale. Tame. can be hand
I{ I \I \I '
new to list. 25MPG. Nk:e
Drive Porn! Pleasant , WV led, Harness Included &amp;
other accessories
Heat ride. $3,950. (740)245-9142.
PhOne No is (304 )675- Rock &amp; Lamp. wla 5 FT
f!IO
5806 E.H.O
Sports Car, 1990 Mazda
Hous-.~
height , 5 FT long, 2 f1' wide

2001 Custom Panzer, 2000
milt&amp;.
$13.800:
2003
Hundred Annv. Heritage,
600 miles. 517 ,000; 2000
Oyna Wide Gtids, 16.000
miles.
$11 ,500: · 2003
Hundred Annv. Road Kirig;
Gold Key package w!$7000
extra chro ms, 300 miles.
$17,900: (740)992·6520,
740-992-2670

r·

IU R RENT

(740)416~2793

:Available Aug. 1, 2005. 10
·minute s trom town 28A
•"h ousu No rns1de pets.
.Application &amp; 6 month tease
"minimum requned· $400
. montn
$350
depOSit.
(740)441 - 14M
be tw een
9pm-10pm.
:srand new 2 bedroom
• house rn Ga'lhpolrs . C/A.
: laundry room. stove/refrrger$550/mo
•ator l urnisned
(740 1441-0194 or (740)441 1057

t-n~ RENT

otfice- $225/mo ; 2 room
swte $250/mo. ' s'ecurity
deposit reqUi red. You pay
utilrhes All spaces very nrce
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644
lor appointmont
-------~-

For lease: Oftrce or retail
spaces rn very good coneli·
tion Downtown Gallipo lis .
Appro~~: . 1600 sq . ft. each. 1
or 2 baths. Leas e pr 1ce
bl
nego 11a e 1o encou rage
new
busirTess.
Call
(740)446- 44 25 or (740)4463936
--------Private mobile nome space
in Centenary Close to
Green Schoof.
14o/mo.
!740)446-4053.

s

\II n111 \'\IU.,I

llot iSEHOLO

L.o-------_.1

$27.700. (740)388·7561.
1999-- Traq lite Banta m
Flyer. EJCcellent conditron .
Loaded. Must see. 740·
949-2709 . $7,800
'2-oo_o_ J_a_y-co_:D_es_ign_e_r_S_e_rie
-s
27RKS. Stn Wheel. Lots ol
accessories

MEROIAJ,'DISE
bedroom ' APt . Pofnt
--Pleasant. 1 bedroom House
, Gallipolis. HUD {740)446- 2005 Master Tow car dolly.
never used. straps, _manual.
2200 or (740)709·0062
$995.00. (740)992"2945
2 bedrooni apt, newly - - - - - ' - - - - remodeled. SA 160. JUSt ApprOllmatety 200 cannmg
past
Holzer
$460/mo Jars. 300 wine bottleS.
(740)441 -0194 or (740) 441- Bronco Spittrre wood/coat
1057.a.
stove, dressers &amp; mrsc. fu r·
n1ture. 740-742-2519
2 bedroom apts . Porter,
$400. Water. trash &amp; sewer
JET
pd . Call (740)367 -7746 or
AERATION MOTORS'
(740)367-70 15.
~sparred . New &amp; Reburllln
Stock. Call Ron E11ans, 12 be&lt;lroom. t b&lt;tth. water
B00-537-9528.
paid, $350 month, $350
security
deposit.
Call ---~----­
(740)446·3481 .
Moving Sat8 Wl1irlpool Gas
2 BR, washer dryer hookup,
·heat pumplAC.
t BR cabin, heat pump, also
storage burldlng. (7 40)2862240 or (740)441·0117.
APART·
BEA.UTIFUl
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACI:(SON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drrve from $344 to S442
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Equal
740-446-2568 .
Housing OpportUnity.

New 1 bedroom apartment
(740)446-3736
New ~a rage apt rn Crown
C•ty
Rrver
Vrew ·
Washer /dryer. drshwasller.
gara9e d1sposal. CIA, 3 Br
Garage
not
mctuded .
(740)2,56·6846

'

John Deere

Commerel1l
Workalte
Products
Compact Excavators!Skid
loader
Steers!Trac tor
Backhoe in stock, Check out
·our rental rates . Great
financing
available.
Garmicl1ael Eq uipment Inc.

STEEl BUILOINGSideal for
garag8s, boats, RV's worksnops. and more. Aepo's
Can'celled '
orders.
Damaged. F~ry S9CO')l;is
A11 Must Go! Call TODAY
to taka advantage. 1-800222-6335 e•t t558

L.o-------_.1

Aulomolioe ClasSic Car
Restoration &amp; Parts . Jnc.

29670

Bashan

Road.

Rac•ne, OntO 4577,1. Ptlone
740·949·2217.
Websioe:
wwwMisreslo com
1995 Cor11ette. E•cellent
condrtlqn (740)446·4255.

1996 Pontrac Grand Prrx.
$1 .500 (740) 441·8976 or
Zephyr Tannmg Bed 24 (7 40)645 -67 34
Bulb. seloom used S 1,200
H~lert Packard Computet 1997 H011da CIVIC 109.000
Wrndows XP With desk mr' After marl(.et acces excellent c-ondrtlon S25o sorres, 38-'- "mpg Clean .
(304)675·5754 or 1304)593- Ojack/btack Call (7401441 ·
1284
.
9865

\

, Ohio

call for Details (304167 5·

_1_7:.3'' - - - - - - - For sale. Pop up camper,
sleeps 4, gas stove and furnace. (740)245·9183.
Older Model Camper, nice
Interior, no leaks, new Trres.
$600 (304)675-7340 after
4pm

3490)

F464~~ I

Owner: Brian.Durham
Phone: (740) 949·4011
Specializing in custom homes
and additions.

__.,

Parts
Qt~ality

Guuruntct'd
&amp; ACC
James A Will Jr.

ATV

l,nrl.~

Ow'ner
J2119 Wclshtown Rd.

llomeroy, Ohio
45769
17411) 992·2432

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

6•

4 ~T

loaders. fini sh mowers, tillers

25 )'ears Experience
David Lewis

let me clo it for you'

liNDA'S PIINnNG
Gt•nt• ;\ nns/1)wncr-

•

ln.~ urcd - F• · ""

E&gt;tim•"'

• Senior Citit.tn
discount
741)..11'12·2621
tn Ye ~f\ bjiNil'nu•

TO wASt! Ttlf ,C.AM~Lf.

I

NOMA
WHAT
STYLE. ..

\

·~·.., Also

• farm Pro Tral·tors

~0

horse · 30 horse

BARNEY

NEW ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Turn

I'VE GOT A G~EAT IDEA FER
A BETIER MOUSETRAP, BUT
PAW WON ' T
WHY IN THUNDER
LET ME
NOT
BUILD IT!!

Radius Mower) 30 inch cutting width to 50
inch cutiing width .3 year warranty

I&amp;I! TRACfOR SALES II: EQUIPMENT
right in the heart of (.lwster

9854.184

The Parish Shop

YOUNG'S

Furnulrly ill 108
W. !\-·lnin l1omemy
IS NOW OPEN AI'
·rh e Mulherrr
Co mmunit~· Ct' nh•r
260 Mulberry A\:t.
11onwnl)'
Sam t' Cretll /.ow Pric~li
tmtl Smili11g
1-'ril'mlly J 'a () l')'.
.
OPEN
Mon·•'ri.
9am tu3pm
11 H: 992-41!0

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addltlona &amp;

Rl!rmodellng
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

• Rooting 1 Gunera ·
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pafntlng
• Pallo and Porch Decks
Wa do it all a:.:cept
furnace work

P"
UlOK M TI-\OR!&lt;Imu:. l~"'':&gt;t-1'\ 8\...\t-\Kt.t&gt;

V.C. YOUNG 111
992-:6215

W\1 036125

·= - ./

II'\ fiHE£1'\

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Loeal Ex rlillCt

f&gt;\lt-IUTC'l I

· High and Dry

Storaga
Phone
(740) 992·5232
SxlO, IOxiO,

. &gt;I

~"~'i"'·.~'s.e
lp

~-

'

..Rocky' ."RJ""

BIG NATE

. H.:ipp :

I 'M GCtNG

TO SAVoR
EVERY
MOMENT 1

EVERY
PAG, E ~
eVERY
PANEL ~

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

IOX10x10x20
992·3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only

Self-Storage"

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnOII
• New Homes
• Ga rages

140-992-1611

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• Reference~
Available
• Free Estimates
·•i nsured"

740-742-2293

• Leave a message

Hill's Self
Storage

Whaley's Auto

Stop &amp; Compare

ror all your horne
rtpair nreds, roofing,

. ,•. ~ 1O'll\0' ,

sid ing-. add ·ons .
~modeling

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
1/14{!

etc.,

rn..-t cstima les
mo

pd

High cost of

(7401992·2979
lea\:e messa

got you
17· 17· 1?.

$265 ton (While Suppy Last)
• Mushroom Compost
Available
$35 · I ,000 lbs Approx. weight

~

I

I

fl
bY

c....=='--'

18 spreader buggies available for use

Airway pasture renovator s and seeders
avarlable to rent
·
LicenSed agronomist on staff avai lable, for
cohsulring.
·
~

Restocking Ia tc• ,1/odt-1

]5537 St. Rt. 7 Norlh

"'

Pmn ero~·.

Ohio

-

PEANUTS

4rtl'r )larkRt l&gt;urt~
See Brent or Brian \Vhuley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sao. 8:30- Noon
arl&lt;f

I THINK YOU'RE VERY
BEAUTIFlJL, MISS MARCIE ..
WHEN YOU GROW UP, YOU
SHOULD BE A MODEL ..

T~ANK

'r'OU, CORMAC .. WHAT

ARE YOU GOING TO BE WHEN
YOU GROW UP'

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
per month.

ARc

t,&gt;OU

AWARE

OF 'rHA1''?

ADVERTISE.
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
Now Available AI

HAU!\1 Llfl\IHER
S~rpion

Tractors

"Taking '/Joe Sting Out.OJ
Hard Work !"
Mid-Size 4W hee i Drive Tractor
wi th 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota I on gi nes

BA UM· LUMBER

SHADE RI\'EK AG SJ;: RI'I('E

HERE -

1_,

740-992· 70 U or 740-992-5553

.,

8-thc10'

I

AK

'

St. Rt. 1'24 C hester ' 985-3301

____

- - -.---·--,....:...

Wcsl
Pass
Pa ss
Pa:ss
Pass

N(lrth
2 NT
4 t
j t
Pass

t:a ~l

Pass
l\HIS
Pass
Pass

GRIZZWELLS
rr~ fiE~

1\ltq

'fG:.'Rf Jtlt&lt;SEP

~ 1\-1~

FRIE\\~

~mPftu....n

For demonstration
purposes only

ACROSS

HE'5 GONNA
NEEPA
5MAL-I..ER
PITH HEL-MET

Morl&lt;et
money

1 In 1 weird

39 911

riopondlr

wey
6 Swlea
financial
hub
12 Go over

40 Famoue
Khan
41 Recipe amt.
42 Lyric poem
ogoln
43 SouR ...;
14 Sketcher's
Marie
need
44 !meres!
15 R&amp;duced
amt.
(2 wds.)
46 Back lalk
16 Browna, as 48 Cowboy
mushrooms
gear
17 Greenpoorrot 51 WrRer
' 18 RN forte
- Allende
19 Bashlul
55 Take a dive
9
21· Myrna
56 Helping out 10
of old
57 Chorus
11
movies'
member
23 Miss
58 Bulrush
13
Piggy's
19

DOWN

Word
26 Slnbad'a

Is. to Fritz 36 ~- Eorhort
Third latter 42 Furry
Ballgame · swimmer
stat
43 Garden
Merchant
Implement
Lame
45 Canary'a
excuse

bird

1 Galleon
cargo
girl &gt;
2 Bear's
28 Scale unit
refuge
30 Checkout
3 Ax givers
scan
4 Like some
31 Galena, a.g.
canoes
32 Selling point 5 Ivy League
33 Inner selves
member
35 Tie up the
6 Tangy
phone
7' Russian
37 Chow down
range
38 Common
8 Noisy
27 Cha"(lOI""'"'"'""'"'

aboGa

.

(hyph.)
47 Wile
20 Takes place
ol Oslrla
22 Yielded to 48 HI-ll
24 Beat an
records
incumbent 49 Frazier foe
25 Glacial time 50 Operate
(2 wds.)
52 Co1bw:t01 's
26 $tratagem
lkltn
27 Bloke's bed 53 MIT grad

28 Shade trees 54 Not sm . or
meet.
Woman's
lrlend
34 Pruning
29 Wonder

When you go into a store, you might see
a product labeled '1or demonslra tion pur~
poses only." Today's deal migt1t be given
the same labeL How would you plan the
play in six spades afte r West leads a dia·
mond? Also, what was th e purpose of
. North's fou r-diamond bid?

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

• Celeb,ity Cipher cr~p!CJ918mS a1e creal~ tram a\JO!al!on&amp; l)v lamous people, OIS1 and P~­
Eacn lellelll'l tie Clpt\el stands tor anl)tllef,

· TOOay's clue: G equ8IS P

" K.

B·K E WI

C FW

RZA

XKCH.

X WJHX S

C FHC

WCVWGC

THW

LZX

WUWX· RZM· W
RZAXIWBL. "

NXZJM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Happiness is no laughing mat1.er."
- A1ct1ard Whately
·
"Any1hing you 're good at contributes t~ llappiness" - Bertrand Russel!

WOII
~~~:~:~' . ~©ldilod
~'*1.~~
£~s·
lAIII
CU. Y I. IOIIAN _;__ _ __
~r

0

Rearrange fetTer, of
four Krornbled words
low to form fovr words.

-...~,

You'll have excellent chances ol being
al)te to advance your ambitions in lhe
year ahead. However, once you tiave
achieved some th ing it'll have to be
mainta ined by kee pin g up w ith any
new techniques that are developed _
'c ANC ER (June 21 ·July 22) A
commercial den I may not live up to be
all that it was promised to b e . ·sedly, in
order to extri cate yoursett today, yo u
might h11ve to taKe either a big toss o r
cough up some e,.;tra funds .
LEO (July 23·Aug, 22) - There i:&gt; a
good chance tha t someone will let
you down today, bu t shoul d that occur,
find out the reasons why be lore
exploding. tf the reason Is a good one,
it might make the situation tol erable.,
VIRGO (Au g . 23-Sept . 22) - II yo u
lind yoUrself nursing a fog gy head or
aching bones today, cha nces a re it
will be your own fault due to
ove rindulgi ng yesterday. Remember.
your body i s not a mact:l'lne, so give it
a break.
Be
LIBRA (Sept . ·23-{)ct. 23)· extrem ely ca reful what you say about
anybody today. Comments could easily be taken the wrong way or out ol
contellt and a jury ol your peers may
judge you as a gossip
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22} ' - A
was.telul morning may cost you a
· heavier prica that you had intended to
pay. You might lind yoUr self in a sweat
later whe n yo u realize responsrbi!ilies
assigned ta yo u weren' t taKen care o t :
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ec. 21) Although a plan of anack may have
worked well for you in the past . others
a re 'now prepared lor yow strategy
and chances are It ,won 't be as easy
lor you to p ull it off a second time
today.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19 ) For the love o l acquiring Some expen SIVe goodies, you may totally ignoru
the lisca l realitie s of life. Unless you
lace up to thin gs lor what they are,
you mtght grossly overspend today.
AQUARIUS (Jan . &lt;W·Feb. 19) - The
fru strations yot; teal toda.y might stem
!rom being stymied of not l;teing able
to · do what you wa nt. Ren1embar.
these co nditions wilt even tuall y pass.
so be patient until things change
again.
PISCES (Feb_ 20-March 201 I('IStaad of later finding out that you
miscalculated a numl:jer of elements
r.,.qulred to acc ompll5h n project. !eke
all the necessary time needed to size
th ings up. It'll save you lime in th e
long run .
ARIES (March 21 -Apri t 19) Someone who runs · a large organize·
. tlon rrtay try to get you to taKe on a
huge ta sk today using that q!d line
abou t what an honor it is to be asked .
Bologna' ThiS person Is just trying to
gel lrae labor
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- tt m1ght
take a lot more lortituc;l e than you are
wiltin., to expend to accomplish a
project today that had lo_oked so easy
on paper. It it Is important ro you , Uetter gear·up for a struggle.
QE~INI (May 21-June 20)- As tong
as no one Is in disagreement with 1you
today, you 'll be ,happy 115 1:1 !ark run·
nlng things your way. However, ahould
someone otlar an other view, It's
doubtful you' ll handle II t•ctfully.

C f.K M E

V Z M L z'X T K C R , K I

AstroGraph

By Bernice Bed111 Oaol

OUI A N D
RE Al&gt; IT

So. Ro.fiR I Darwin . OH

Racine, Ohio
4577 1

The Den ver.Lee Wamer Family i
2·24·1940" 7-20-2004
I

. NEA Cronword Puzzle

Thu,..day, July 21 , 2Q05

TO AAN G

Parts

Advertise
in this
space
' for
$52 per
month
· Call U.D. Const.

WELL, 'tOU I'!.E
WE LCOME

II

Sun . Closed

• Complete
Remodeling

Cali Gary Stanley

I would
like to thank all·
·
thOSe that made his paSSing
h
'{{/
a memory t at wz ast
a/lOfher generataiO/l,
Your cards, letters, and
visits will net•er be
•• forgot/en.

A KQ JIOI:I

•

G

... _.

33795 Hiland Ruad
Pomeroy, Ohio

a Son, Brother, Father,
Gran dll'.
t/
d F rze/!
' d.
~a zer a/! a

.

After Sol.l~t1 opened two clubs (strong,
artificial and forcing), Nortt1 responded
two no-trump to show a balanced hand
with at least eigt1t poirits. Then, after
Sol.ltn · named his long suit, NOrth 1'1ad
three choices: to reb id three no-trump if
t1e had only a doubleton sPade, to raise to
four spades with suppo rt and a minimum.
or to control- bid (cue-bid) in a suit at the
four-level to show eKtra valu es. So,
North's four diamonds in princi'ple prom ised the diam"Ond ace, denied lhe club ace
(a suit skipped}. and guaranteed interest
in a slam. (Usually, a two"club opening
opposite a positive response will produce
a slam if !he ra .is a Iii.)
Tl1 ere seem to be 12 easy tricks: six
spades, tt1re e hearts and tt1ree diamonds.
However, the t1eart su~ is blocked and tile
only entry to dummy has just been
remOve d. One option is lo win trick one,
cash the other two diamond winn erS, discardi ng clubs from hand , and call for a
club, hoping to guess tile su1t correctly. As
yolJ can see, tllat tine would fail here
It is better to demonstrate a purpose of ·
unblocking. You should take the th ree diamonds, discarding tt1e ace and king of
hearts! Then. yoU cash dumniy's 1t1ree
heart wmners, peeling off club losers.
FiliiJ!!y, you try to sneak a club to the king.

available****

Janel Jeffers

Advertise
in this
space
for
$52 per
month

~· tiAn "tlUMP"l&gt;AY!

starting al 27 horse - 57 horse
wilh shuttle tra nsmission
4-wd, remot(• hydraulic's 3 year warranty

lllx15, 10x2U,
10x30

One year ago to U1..lay• we lost

.

8 i' 4 2

88532
10 6

Opening !cad: t J

Concrete Work

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Myers Tree
Se-r-vice

-:::::~~~

.

3•

• 'l'ask Mastu Tractors 26 horse · 381,orse,
4wd ( 1 year warranty)

Insured

740-949-2217

'

Tree Service

and Replacement
.. 'An 'l'ype$ Qf ;

740-992-6971

29670 Bashan Road

.

South
2 "-

Naw Dealer 11r Montana Tractors

!:&amp;K SANITATION
.U:'i6 1 Baill~Y Kun Rtl. .
Pomcrll ·. OH

In Memory

•

.
.•

Deal er ; South
Vulnerabl e: Neilher

£EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal

• we~k !)' Trasl1 S&lt;.!rvke
4 yr'- nf Re li ;ihlc s~·rvice
{ K~l' P Ytl\ll' Mnnq · Lt11.·at1

1998 .Yamaha
Blaster,
$1 ,100. 1998 Kawasaki
KX250, dirt bike, $1,100.
(740}446·8138.

ft

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

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

Operator 740 -992-JI74

...THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

"' 8 5

South

IT'S w~I&gt;N~SI&gt;AY AGAIN··· TIMe

Ta~e

1993 Honda, 300EX ATV
New tires, skid plates.
bumpers, K&amp;N , exhaust.
Runs goOd , looks good.
$1 ,400 0 8 0 Or trade .
(740)446·1327.

In Memory

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION

IMPROVEMENTS

1986 Chevrolet As1ro van,
one family owned. Good
condition , $1 ,475. Estate
sate .' Can (740)446_-8997
evenings.

East

7 'l
• 9 I\ 5 :l
• J 10 9 7
... A Q 5

HOME

V.w;

•
.
•

. JONES'

Emall:jwlll45769
@yuhoo.com

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncon ditional lifetime guarantee. l ocal references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

¥

6 4 3
Q J IU
A K (.l
974:1

AK JB2

Coleman camping Trai ler
12 n 2 King Beds. S4.99s

1994 Plymouth Voyage new
(740)446·2~ 1 2 .
t1res V6. 0 0. runs good,
Massey Ferguson hay bind $2,000. (7 40)441 -0918.
9 inch cut. Call anytime.
Works gOOd (740)446-7595 _ 2001 Ford Windstar 40r. VB
Loaded $7995 .00. 1993
Plows- John Deere 3 bot- Buick Regal 2Dr. V6 Auto Air
toms. 3 pt 11itc'h. $550. 16ft. $1995.00. Riverview MotOfs
nydraullc Hog trai ler, $ t ,800. 2 blOCks above McOonalds
Pomeroy, Ohio {7 40-992(740)44 1·0918

1965 Mustang FattbiCk "
Rangoon Red e•terror; black
inlenor. 6 c~le.
,- 3 speed. air
condi tioning, radio, good
dnver Rust free ~ car.·
P"ce: $19,000.00 . Hill's

Home Creek ·Enterprises

$2 1 ,000 r-·w~-~.~,,~.~s-A_TV

L"'••tirF'iiORiiiiSiiALEiiiitiirrro-'

Your ProStart Trailer ~alar.
Carmichael E(luipment Inc.
Dryer
$150.
Whirlpool (740)446-fl4,12
Freezer $150, .·Whirlpool
Portable Dishwasher $ 150,
Black-Metai·Futon,
lull WOW tl 0% Financing for up
Manress on bottom. twin on 10 50 months on qualifying
px: &amp; X Series John Deere
top_$300 (304)675-5453
Lawn Tractors or No
NEW Arlll USED STEEL lnteres.t. No Payments until
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar January 1. 2007 on all new
For
Concrete.
AMgle. premil.lm lawn tractors with
Qhannel. Flat Bar, Steel John Deere Csedit approval
For
Drains. Carmichael Equipment Inc.
Grating
Drrveways A Walkways. L~L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday. .Wednesday &amp; .,,..;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Fnday. 88.m-4 :3Dpm. Closed
ALTTOS
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
FOR SAL£

:c oNVENIENTLY LOCAT·
.eo &amp; AFFORDABlE!
' Townhouse
apartments,
'and/or · small houses FOR Sunday. (740)446-7300
Pole Barna Blowout
RENT. Call (740)441 ·t1 t1
lor applic;atron &amp; mformation . 30~~:50~~:1 OFt only $6.495
24x32xt0 54 .595.
Furnrsned upstatrs. 3 rooms 40x64x10 $11 .995
&amp; bath Cl. 'n ,el &amp; dep
Free deh~ery,
·
" ·
'reqwred No pelS (7401446· Painoed Meoal
1519..
• (937)789~0293
GraciOus living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at VtJiage
Manor
and
Riverside
. Apartments rn Mrddleport
From $295·$444. Call 740·
992-5064 Equal Housrng
Opportunittes •

·r

ENERGY EFFICIENT

,&lt;3::04:..:...:16::7.:5_:·2=2-'
4'- - - , - -

r:

I

1

1999 Dodge, under 20,000
miles.
20ft.
American
Cruiser body, fully cOntain ed. everytning power.
very
good
co'nditi on,

~

r

Residential • Commercial

•

We11t

45763

• Carports
Barns • Porches

$8,300. (740)286·

95 · Kawasaki Jet Ski, very
1986 Dodge Rao'l SE. _283 low nours. Great Snape.
Cl, 2WD wlcap and bedhner. , Trailer included $2 500 ca ll
138 .000 origtnal miles.
'
'
Needs work. AS IS. Be st
offer over $500. Lea11e message at (740)388· 1135.

FRurrs&amp;

"

Flat or

07 · 211·0~

North

)

Plains, OH

Mobile Homes •
~ow Sloped Roof

l ow miles. $1,500 In extras.

I

41800 SR #7

'1ht Wlllld'l

2004 Honda VTX 1300C.

•

Go&lt;~
For Rent 3-bedroom. 1-bath
·F ull basemen!. COunty
92 Ford-Ranger XLT, V-6,
V•:c•:rABLFS
· Home, Board Ad. Letart. WV Antique maple bedroom
Auto, very-goocJ condition
Central-Air (304) 675,2484 suite. Numbered Cushman
(304)675-7302 can be seen
Classic Creation . 2 twin s,
or (304)593-1481 : ·
Tame blackberries, u-can· at 26 11 li11Coln Ave
dresser, desk. mirror, nigl11
pick anytime at Virgil's Berry
97 c nevy 1/2 ton V·8
House tor rent in Pomeroy stand, select comfor t mat·
Pa tch. 1 mile eas1 ol
Automatic , air, cruise. run s
no pets. (740)992·5858
tress . $1 ,200 (740)446 S racuse on St. At. 124.
and lOoks grea t. $4950.00.
8325
Pomeroy, 3 bedroom, gas
740-9S5,4180
furnace. $450 deposi t, 5400
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
99 Dodge Dakota Club -Cab
per month (740)698-6783
Chapel Road . Porter. Ohio.
SLT, 100.000/miles 4x4,
(740)446-74 44 1-877-830· 18 foot nard side swimming
20
318/Sspd, loaded. many
Momu:
9162. Free E~timates. Easy pool witn sand titter. Never ext ras, nrce Truck. $8,000
··nR RJ.""'
.:.'IT " "
financing, 90 days same as used. $300.00. 740·949(304)882·2845
cash. Visa/ Master Card . 2346
2 bedroom all electric. water Drive- a- little saVe alot.
I \H\1 \I 1'1'1 11"'
and trash included. $350
.'\II\1"-IIHh
mo. and deposrt
Call Thompsons ApplrancO &amp;
(740)44t-7033.
Aepa ir-675·7388. For sale.
re-conditioned au tomatic
2 bedroom. A/C, very nrce,
wasners &amp; dryers. refrigerano pets. in Gallipolis.
tors, gas and electric
(740)446·2003.
ranges, air conditioners. arld $500 Demonstration Boflus·
eep
3Br Tra iler wfrefridg &amp; wringer washers . 'will do Let us demo a John Deere Z
Restored. $7,!500 OBO.
Call 740 441·0121 .
·Stove.washer
&amp;
dryer repairs on major brands m Trak or X Series All-Wheel·
Steer on your lawn and l..iO:::O:o;.;;~;:,:;~i:;....l
shop or at your home.
included (304)576·2934
rEice1ve an B)(tra $500 off our 1992 F1 50 414 360c 5
Beautiful nver ' vrew rn Used Furniture Store, 130 already discounted prices. speed. runs good, $1,800.
Kanauga. lde'iil lor 1-2 peo- Bulavrlle Pike . Appliances, Lrmited
time
offer. (740)441 -0918.
ple
No pets, please mattresses.
dressers. Caimrchael Equipment Inc.
Appl ications being taken. couches, dinettes, recli~rs, (740}446·2412.
1999 Blazer 4x4 LT. original
Call (740)44 1-0 t 8 1.
grave monume nt!}, much
owner, 76K , axe. cond .,
more
(740)446-4782 O% Flnenclng for up to 36 loaded, never in mud $9,500
Nice 2BR mobile nome for Gallipolis. OH Hrs. 11·3 (M- months on John Deere (304)458·1002
rent . 5mi n. !rom tow n. S)
Compact and 5000 Series
$375fmo. -2 references &amp;
Tractors with John Deere 1999 Chevy Suburban 4x4,
dEposit requ1red . Call alte r
Credit approv!JI. Check them good conditloll, l~ aded , new
Ai'lfiQUIS
$11 ,000
Spm (740)446·9342.
out! Carmichael Equipment tires. Asking
(740)44Hl658
or
(140)709Inc. (740)446-2412 .
AI'ARl'MfNTS
1931.
Buy or sell. River ine
~
mRRI:Nr
Antiques. 1124 East Main 0% Financing for up to 60
2003
Jeep
Liberty
on SA 124 E. Pomero 740. . months On John Deere
Renegade. Loaded, 4x4,
1 and 2 bedroom apart- 992-25 26 , Russ ~-core: - Round · Balers. 0% for 48
months on John Deere 19.000 miles. $12,500. Call
ments, turn isned and unfu r- owner.
Mower
Conditioners witt1 (740)251&gt;-1618 or (740)256·
nished. security deposit
6200
requrmd , no pets .. 74Q-992Leisa's Antiques- bou gh t· ~oa~~~~=~~ ~qr~pi~a::rr:l
2218 .
sold at Alligator Jacks Flea
'95 Toyota 4x4 pickup ext.
0 l:_44
2_
4 .:.
1 2::.·_ _ _ _ cab. 4 cyl., 5 speed, cold
6 ~_:
Market. At 7. PomerOy. tw~n~- - :
l7_4:_
...:.
1 bedroom apartment in
ture , primrtives. bottles. John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill ale ,' exc. condition , $5,~00 .
Gallipolis neaf Wai-Mart.
(740)992·5088
for
Rent
Carmichael {740)992·3427
.
Utilities included. (740)245MISOl.J~ Equipment. (740) 448-2412 .
5555.

r

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

(307)675·6370.

Ir lloA~~ORS

AKC blk Lab fe mal~ $200.
Himalayan &amp; Siarhese, cats 1996 Dodge Dak01a ext. cab
and kittens 550-$ 100. Call 4•4,\i-6, 5 speed manual,
(740)446·1 062.
contractors rack, tool boll .
reece 11itch 66.000 miles
AKC rag. Shih Tzu puppies $3500. 304-675-7079
tor sale. Call (740)446·1523 ::.:.::.:..:::.:..::..:...:::..:.::.:..:.:___
or (740)6 45·6029.
1997 Dodge Dakota SLT V6,
Automatic, 2 Wheel Drive,
CKC Golden Retriever pup- 72,000 miles (304)593·1614
pies tor sale $250. Wormed
and
firs t sl1ots
Call t998 Chev y S- 10 LS. 5
(740)388-8965.
spee d, AJC, good trans·
portation. $3,700 080. Call
CKC registered Pomeranian (740)~ 4 5·9502
puppy. female. 2.5 pounds. 9
weeks old, emit is ligh t gin- 1999 Dodge Aam truck VB.
ger. vet checked and all vac- black &amp; silver, 87,000 actual
cihations are cu rrent. $400. miles nas camper top.
1740I2S6·6sos.
Call (740)44 1·721 8.
C'KC
Registered
Toy 2001 Ford Explorer Sport
Poodles puppies. $500.00 Tree 4x4 . 81,000 miles. auto.
arr,
PW,
AMIFM/C O,
74 0_992 . 7007
- - - - - - - - - white/black. Alte r 5:00pm
For Sale: Chocolate Lab call (740)446-3044.
Pups. 8 weeks ol d. $100.00
2004 Ford F-150 Supercrew
(740)992-6227
:__;__ _ _ _ _ __
4x4. FX4 ott road package.
Rabbits $5 eacn (740)441 - '5.4 VB . 6-CD changer, running boards, power every·
0918
thing, Tonneau cover, tow
Schnauzers, Miniature, AKC package, 27,000 miles
males . Salt &amp; pepper, 2 excellent condition. NAO.A.
shots. vet checked. $300. Book Value $30.375, sell for
(740)696-1085.
$28,900 . (740)446·82 17.

;J460;.,;..__S_I'A•(•:.·:--..,

10

~~

,

Shots, wormed, parents on
premise. $300 ea ch. AK C
reg . 2 yr old male Basset
Hound. (740~256-6887 .

l ocal cOmpany olfering "NO Downtown Ollrce Space- 5
DOWN PAYMENT"" pro· room surte $650tmo ; 1 room

~(74())367-0000

t·5

A,KC Basset Hound puppies.

AH ention!

grams tor you to buy yolll
. nome rn stead of renting
•• tOO% tinancing
a•
Less than pertect credi t
: accepted
• Payment • cou ld tie the
same as rent.
: Mortgage
Loccltors.

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Phillip
Alder

6 male registe red Golden _7,7,90
_ _.,.._ _ _ _..,

~··r:~~~pp~;o~r~· =~~:~

www.mydallysentinel.com
BRIDGE

2003 450 Foreman good
condition, tots of extras.

~:iqon~~~~~b(l~)6~~ ~~:e~

case $200 (304)882-3095

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, VleriJ Spacious,
2 bedroom house on 2 Bedrooms, C/A. 1 1/2
NeighbOrhoo d
_Roao, Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Gall 1polis. ·
5425/mo P.ool. Pall(), Start $385/Mo
(740)441·0194 or (740)441- No Pets. Lease Plus
1057
Security Depos1t Reqwred
(740)446-3481 .
2 BR neuse located in --------~,
Gallipolis, MOO monlll plus Twin Rivers Tower 1s atcePt-~
deposit. No pets. reference rng applic.itlons !or warting
requ ired. Call (740l 44 t· lis t lor Hud-subsized, 1- br,
0110 or (740)9925174 ask apartment, call 675-6679
Jar Jay.
EHO

2br house' in New Haven
$350 ,month (304)882 -2890

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

•www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel·

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PRINT NUMBERED

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A classic novel is something
everyone wants lc have read
and nobody - - ... to . - ••.

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1- 19-

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Chummy-Idiot. Venus -Pectin SUCCEED
Over the years I have noticed if I follow the advice
give others I usually SUCCEED.~

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ARLO &amp; JANIS
WHr AI&lt;!. YOU'WATCHIUU.
1H~ ,1\0VI!.IIJ FI1UJCH1

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•
P~tge B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Reds
(rom

PageBl

broken elbow, got hurt by the
only batter in the Reds lineup
who has any appreciable success against him . Jason
· LaRue doubled "home two
tuns in the second fnr a 2-0
lead.
. Prior gave up seven hits
and three runs in 6 .2-3
innings. Will Ohman retired
Ken Griffey Jr. on a grounder
with two. aboard to end the
seventh.
The Cubs have· piled up 16
runs and seven homers in the
first two games of the series,
taking advantage ·of the
majors' most" homer-friendly
ballpark. More homers have
been hit at · Great American
than any other.
Ramirez's 23rd homer in
the third inni-ng put the Cubs
ahead to stay 3-2. His tworun shot in the ninth off
David Weathers moved the
Cubs one ahead of the Reds
for the NL lead in "homers
with 122.
Rami-rez had one of the
Cubs' five homers in a 9-4
win on Monday night, and
ha.s homered in three straight
games for the secohd time
this season. It Was hi s second
multihomer game of the season.
Lee had two homers irf the ·
series OJ?ener, becoming the
first maJor leaguer to reach
30. He did the damage thi s
time with a two-run double
i:lown the third base line· in
· the fifth, ending Hudson 's

Reborn ·
· from Page 81
Louisville, Cincinnati and
South Florida, who all bolted
Conference USA to join a
league with · automatic entry
into the Bowl Championship
Series for the foreseeable
future .
The
hold&lt;wers
are
Syracuse,
Pinsburgh.
Rutgers, West Vfrginia and
Connecticut.
It's not the most imposing
lineup, but the long-te rm
prospects are at least encouraging.
"I think there are a number
of schools that could end up

Wednesday, July 20,

www.mydailysentinel.com

. ack
Tr

outing.
Lee went 3-for-5, ratsmg
hi s average to .376, by far the
best in the majors. Against
the Reds this season, Lee has
gone f6 -for-30 with seven
homers and 17 RBis.
Hudson hasn 't won since
June 9. The right-hander is 05 in his•last six · starts with a
10.72 ERA.
Cubs manager Dusty Baker
was ·curious to see how Prior
would react to his last outing.
He threw 116 pitches in eight
innings ·of a 5-1 victory over
Pinsburgh on Thursday. his
biggest test yet since he came
off the disab led li st for the
second t.ime this season.
Prior's best moment came
in the fifth, when Rich
Aurilia doubled to cut it to 53 and Sean Casey was hit by
a pitch. Prior went to a full
count on Griffev. then struck
him out swingil1g io end the
th reat. Prior momentaril v
raised his right arm in reac·- ·
tion, then patted his leg twice
as he walked off the mound.
· Notes: Prior threw I08
pitches. Since comin g off the
DL he is 3-1 with a 3.56
ERA.:· ... LaRue is 6-for- 16
career oiT Prior.... Weathers
left the game after giv mg up
the homer to Ramirez. He
sirained hi s lower back on the
pitch. ... OF Jod y Gerut,
acquired Monday night in a
trade with Cleveland. pinch
hit and reached on an etTor... .
Reds OF Jason Romano
refu sed a demotion to the
minors . becoming a free
agent. ... The Red ~ have
given up 141 homers, most in
the majors .

stepping up.'" South Florida
coach Jim Leavill said. '" Do
we need that juggernaut"' It
always helps just of because
nf the media perception. It
certainly doesn ' t hurt a conferen ce to have those things
happen. But what can also
help a. conference is to have
cverybods build up and
everybody be competitive."
South Florida , Jooatcd in
· TanJpa, giVes the league a
l!luch-needed presence in the
Suoshine Stale, with it&gt; endless stream of talented players.
Cincinnati ended litst season with a bowl victory. In
fact, Rutgers and USF are the .
only Big East teams t.hat didn't play in the postseason last
year.

from Page 81
plenty of friends frotil back
home on campus."lt'll feel
pretty good, you know, to
have somebody around that
you !\now,'" Dixon said.
Rio Grande assistant
coac h Juan McCabe has
worked very hard to toster
t~e relauonshtp between Rto
Grande and Maple ~e tghts.
Bec.aus_e of that effort he is
bcgmmng to reap some bencfit. Dixon is the third
member i1f the 2005 Maple
Heights track t ~am to sign
with Rio Grande. She joins
Shannon and Sasha CLarke
as the head li ners in this
yeai's recruit ing class.
'"We'.re really excited to

Baseball
from Page 81
extra additive."" Schuler said.
"Sonietime s, the baseball is
the incentive to get them
there, but it 's one of those
th ings where once they're
there they've got an opportunity to play baseball and get
an education.
·
"I th ink an ultimate goa l of
high school coaches is io try
to get kids io fu rther their
education," Schuler added.
"Our prog~am has been fortunate through the years
where we"ve had a lot of
And Louisville walks into
the league .as the overwhelming favorite to land that coveted BCS bid. ·
In a poll of media members,
the Cardinals (190 points )
were picked to fi nish first.
receiving 23 of 24 first-place
votes.
Coach Bobby Petrino will
hand over his . high-powered
offense to sophomore quarterback Brian Brohm, who
saw ample time play1ng
·behind s·tefan LeFors last
season. The Cardinals were
No. J in the nation in scoring
(49.8 ppg) and total offense
(539.0 ypg) in 2004, finished
Il-l and ranked sixth in the
final Associated Press poll.
'The cxpcctatirms from the
fans and media ha ve certainly

have Brittany come in,"
McCabe said. "I think she is
another great prospect from
Maple and I' m looking for
big things from her."
McCabe al so likes the
growing
relationship
between Rio Grande and
· h
,Maple Hetg Is. "'We have a
good tradition with Maple
l&gt;f getting athlet es down
here." McCabe added.
'"I'm real exc ited. can't wait
. 10 get (Di xo n) on the
track.··
In addition to the Clarke
twins. fanner Maple standouts Niesha Fuller and
Bra 1idon Bro.wn are also
members of the Rio Gra nde
track and field sy u,lll.
Dixon plans to major in
Communirat ions/Journali s
111.

Brittany is the daughter of
Tonyit Dixon.
kids that have had an opportunity to go on and furt her ·
their education and play
baseball as well ."
Schuler also talked about
Dwyer as a player. "Ryan
was immediately a part of
our program as a freshman
and it's kind of unique in the
fact that he throws both"
ways. but basically we' ve
left him on the left side for
hi s career,"· Schule r said.
"Each year, he just kept
improving, he kept getti ng
stronger, he developed good
work habits and from the
time he was a junior it was a
situation where he was·challenged to be as good as he
cou ld be and he made a
changed," Petrino said. ":[he
expectations from myself and
coaching staff have not.
changed. That 's what we've
been trying to expect· out of
our players. The expectations
of our players haven't
changed. Now we just have to
go do it."
~ Pill ( 164), with former
Dolphins
coach
Dave
Wannstedt now leading his
alma mater, was picked second in the confere nce.
The Panthers wein 8-4 and
earned the league's BCS bid

2005

ro\1 last Sept. 17-27 . ...
Graffanino was pursued by
the Red Sox when he was a
free agent after the 2003
from Page Bl
seaso n. ... Dubois also
innings, the 12th time he inherited Gerut"s No. 9 as
has gone at least six well as l1is locker stall ....
innings . The Indians are 2- lmlians (iM Mark Shapiro
dncsn"t yet know if he'll be
., 0 in those swrts.
Notes: DeJesus is bat - a huycr or seller itS the Ju ly
ting .459 (17- for-37) dur- J 1 tradill d~ ~H.IIin~ loom s. ''I
in g hi s 10-!!~llne l1itting hale to t: 1~1 pba sii.C the si'gn!fstreak. .... Indians Dll il'\tncc of anything that happen&gt; in a slto11 pt:riod of
Tra vi~ HHfncr rernotincd
time."
he said. ··But based on
side lined with dizt.iness
three days afte r being how we play. and how we
struck. in the face 'hy play alone. as the deadline
Chit:ago"s Mark Bu ehr le approache~. w( rc goi ng to
Hafner sa id he feels · fine have tl) make some deleruntil he begins to exercise minution' rega rding our
"tmd then gets woozy. ... team." .. . Ambres wil l jo in
The Royal s ha ve homered · the Royals if! Cleve land on
in a season-hi gh e ight Wedn esday. CcJ.eno wi ll
strai g ht
games,
their he optioned to Double-A
longest streak si nce 1.1 in a Wi chita.
\Varnimnnt said.
major impact in our pro- now,
·· w e·rc vcr)&lt; happy with
gram."
Warnim!Jnt. was happy to that. "
Warnimont · se t out to
add another .4mtlity playet:
from a qualit y program. improve the pitc hin g staff
"The biggest thing witll and all indicat ion' are he has
Ryan is that he comes from a succeeded in that mission.
quality
program."" ··we were a Iitt lc short on
Warnimont added. ·' He's a .pitching ·thi s •year and we·
fee l that these three boys can
pr,.oven wmncr.
"He's 14-4 in hi s high come in and ha ve a'n i"mpact
school career," Warn imont r:igiH away:· he said. ""They ·
kno\v how to wi n; now we
added.
Waroimom believes the ha ve so me. fine tu ninf!. and
Redmen have the top three t \V~a k i n g In do and a._ little
hurlers in stiu thcastcrn Ohio muscle to plrt .on them. but
with Dwy er. Ru sse ll and w~ k110w. tiley can win and
Bloomfield now sa fe ly in · win right away and that's
the fold. "'We feel that we · w wh at 'we ' re look ing for:·
Ryan is the son of Bruce
got the best three pitchers
out of southeast Ohio right · .anci"Kath y D"yer.
under coach Walt Harri s last
season. But ~htrri s' contract
w,as up and Pitt didn't seem
eager to give him a new deal.
so he jumped to Staoford.
Wannstedt,
born , 111
Baldwin. Pa ., hasn't i:oachcd
in college since he was ;m
assistant at Miami in 19RR.
··The bi ggest adjustmen t is
you don 't .have the time to
meet with (the players in college), you don".t have the ti me
to practice with th em ,"" he
said. "You really ha ve to ·
be smart on how you use

~

publle water distrlets listed below or private wells loc:atecl
within their boundaries, you may be eligible to take part in
t11e Community Health Projec:t. Pa.rticipation consists o1
completing a heaUh questionnaire and having your blood test~ . Your
privacy is ensuo&lt;id and testrng is strictly limrted to specrfic blood chemistries.
You will not be Jested for drugs HIV or sexually transmitted diseases,

To find out more about eligibility and to
complete the questionnaire online, please
visit http://www.cShealthproject.org,
or call 1-800-605-6850.
.

.

.

Water Districts involved in the C8 Community Health Project
• City of Belpre Water Department
• Lubeck Public Service District
•"Mason County Public Service District • Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
• Village of Pomeroy Water District
• Little Hocking Water Association

Once Again~ The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fair Preview Edition. '
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Ever! Look For this Speciai
Edition In Your Friday, August 12th Paper.
BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS
A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

eonctucted by

BROOKMAR, INC.
._W'111ld roe~.~~ ~ ~~""

•t.•maoor &lt;loi"J t:11o00 I!M"f

417 Grand Park Drive, Vienna, WV 26105 • 1-800-551-7658 .'Fax: 304-865-4208

•" « I \;I'-. • \ nl.

.)

Ill! 1"1
\""' I\\

I "\u · ' '• · ••

SPORTS
• Post 128 advances In
tourney.

See Page 81

OBITUARIES

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN EL .COM

Medical Clinic was just the
beginning of O' Bieness' per. manent presence in Meigs
County.
"We're honored to be here
and to be so warmly wei comed," Castrop said. "This is
~·t nt"ce s'la rt"
.
,,
Castrop then went " on to
dedicate the clinic"to the residents of Meigs Couot y and
Northern West Virginia.
"We ·hope they out grow ·
thi s . fac ility rea l soon,"
Davenport said about talks
with O'Bieness to expand further into the county. "This i.~
just a start of some of our
plans for the county."
Several physicians. who are
Beth Sergent/photo
based at the Castrop Center in Meigs County Commissioner Mick Davenport cuts the ribbon on the Meigs Medical Cli111c while
O'Bieness Healthcare Systems· Faci litie s Vice-president Larry Cooper and President Rtck
Please see Clinic. AS
Castrop look- on.
·
·

deficit may be
leveling

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH

8v BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

INSIDE

Charlene Hoeftlchfp hotos

Eleven year old Baylee Collins of Chester took grand champion in the ··1 Spy in the Kitchen "'
food and nutrition judging category. Here Diane Dunfee , horne economics teacher. rnterviews
Baylee about her creative vegetable tray. The Lakeside Leader 4-H Club member created'a·tropical island scene with veggies.
Rebecca Chadwell, gra nd
champion; Janne Boyles ,
reserve champion;· Brady
Bissell, reserve champ ion.
"The Global Gourmet'" Sarah Jenkins, grand champion ; Alyssa Baker, re se rve
champion ; Katlyn Sauvage,
honorable mention.
"The Outdoor Cher· Morgan Hall. grand cham pion;
Lind sey
Hou se r,
reserve champion: Michae l
Scyoc. honorable meniion.
"Star Spangled Foods"" Kimberly 1-\awthornc. grand
champion.
" Fa st · Break
for '
Andrea
Breakfa st'"
Buckley. grand champion .
"Sc ience Fun with Dairy Frrst ye ar 4-Her Tyler Barber"s used a snack tray with fresh
FOods "
·
Audri.onna fruit , dips, and cookies for his food judging project. The Alfred
you th look reserve champion rn the ··1Spy in the Kitchen ...
Pullin s, grand champion.
•...

An alternative for remembering loved ·ones
Bv Brot SERGENT

POMEROY - Revenue
from Meigs County's one-percent sales tax is nearly
$36.000 less than it was a year
ago,
but
County
Commissioner Jim SheeLs said
Monday the drops in collections appeai· to~ leveling off.
Meigs County Atrditor
Nancy Parker Grueser provided com mi"ioners wit h a
year-to-date repot1 outlining
the collection of sales tax revenue , by month. si nce
Jaouary, showing a collection .
Please see Taxes, AS
'

Me(qs superintendent
gets salary increase
POMEROY - A salary
increase of $~.500 a year
effective Aug. I .for the first
year of a five -year contract, ·
h&lt;t&gt; been awarded to William
Buckley. superintendent of
the Mei gs Local School"
Di stri ct.
Act ion for the pay .increase
was taken at Tuesday night 's
meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of. Education after .
reconvening into open session foll ~lw i~g an executive
·

,ses~inn .

The rai se takes the su perintende nt" ,
salary
from
5~2.500 !0 $85,000.
Other personnel mailers
were discussed during the
exl.!'~..:ll ti ve sess ion. but no
action \\ "-JS taken.

.Delta Queen

1

passe~

by

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINfl.COM

-·· •

l2

PAGI'.S

A3
B3-4

B5

Call

Dear· Abby

A3

DAVE or -BRENDA

Editorials

A4

Places to Go

A6

Obituaries

As

The Daily Sentinel

~"~" · '"\tl.uh ·~ •· lll tut·l . l#tfJI

Meigs County 4-H food and nutrition projects judged Tax collection

POMEROY - With the
Meig s County fa ir less than
a month away judging of 4• Belva Frye
H projects is well underway
by
Meigs
County
Extension Service personnel.
For 35 boys and girls with
food and nutrition projects ,
•·NASA aims for Tuesday it took place Tuesday with
grand and reserve champi lal.lflCI:l;.beli~ fuel gauge
ons being named in the
failurerel~ted .to grounding
respective food categories.
. Peggy Crane, Linda King,
problem. ·
and Diane Dunfee, talked to
See Page A2
the 4-Hers, reviewed their
work books and evaluated
the food they brought
along. Cindy Chadwell ,
Extension assistan t, was in
charge of the . · judging
which took place in the conference room of the Meigs
County Annex building.
Winners in their re spective categories of food project were:
"I Spy in the Kitchen " Baylee Collins , grand
champion ; Tyler Barber,
reserve . champion; 'Larissa
Riddle and Alex Amos.
honorable ,mention.
'"Let's
Bake
Quick
Breads'; - Haley Perda s,
• • Sex scene-infused
gra nd champion; Alyssa
Baker. reserve champion.
game gets adutt .rating.
"Mini Meal Magic" See Page A2
Garrell
Ritcjlie, grand
• Losers rewarded for lost , champion; Sarah Lant z,
reserve champion: Tosha
pounds.
Jones, honorable mention .
See Page A3
" You '"re the Chef' • Community mourns loss
Andrew Bissell , grand
champio n; Ryan Davi s,
of Jack Fruth.
rese rve champion: Heaven
Westfall and Alyssa Baker.
honorable mention .
"Meals in Minut es" WEATHER

Comics

FOR MORE INFORMATION

-

Page AS
• Kevin L. Barr

Classifieds

992-2155

I \ ·•
· 1. ·•
. h f l -)

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

Calendars

fit

· II

Meigs Medical Clinic officially opens
POMEROY
Mei"gs
County Commissioner Mick
Davenport officially cut · the
ribbon for the Meigs Medical
Clinic on Memorial Drive yesterday in front of a crowd of
0 ' Blenes·s
Healthcare
Sy stems' emp loyees, loca l
dignitaries and community
members wishing to get·a look
at the new facility now "open
for business. ·
The clinic is an af"lifiate of
Healthcare
O"Bieness
Systems.
During hi s · dedication
speech, O' Bieness Healthcare
Systems' President Rick
Castrop promised the crowd
that the openi ng of the Meigs

2 SI'.Cl'IONS -

CB HEALTH
. _.....
..,~. 1ieJ, ~ ~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

INDEX

I

l,llC)JI:CT

ne

Greg Robi nson is jn .

Roh inson was defensive
coonJinator at Texas last year.
ret urnin g to the college
. eoame
after 14 years in the NFL.
The Orange i ll +) were
picked fo urth , behind West
Virgini a (1.+5) in the preseason nmkings.
.
UConn (~OJ was firth followed by Rutgers (72). USF
(59) and Ci ncinnati (40).

'

\,..

you r lim e.
Syn!cu:-.c has a new cow.:h
for the first time in 15 yea rs.
Puul Pasqualnni is out · and

If You consumed water for at least one year from any of the

who complete 1t1e questionnaire proce~ will be paid $150..
Those who complete both 1t1e questionnaire and have their blood tested will be paid $400.

The Inspirations in
concert tonight, A6 .

1'

CS is a chemical used by DuPont Washington Works in the manufacture of
. · Teflon and other products. As a result of a recent lawsu~ settlement, the Wood .
County Circuit Court has ordered a Community Health Prpject be conducted
by an independent corporation.The goal of the Project is to gather hea~h
information from people who may have consumed CS in drinking water.
That information will be given to an independent panel of scientists who will
determine ~ CB is linked to human disease. DuPont and representatives of ·
the plaintiff's class fully support this Community Heanh Project and encourage
participation.
"
·

~ligible participants

Taft relents, releases
weekly reports
.related to
workers' oomp, As

·Indians

Sports

•
Weather

B Section
A6

. .

.

. Beth Sergent/ photo

Local funeral homes have JOt ned the Mergs County Cancer
lnitiative (MCCI) in the loca'l fight against cancer by placr ng
mer"Jorial donation boxes to MCCt in their funeral homes. tn
addition to or in · lieu of flowers . friends· may make tax·
deductible donations to MCCI in honor of the deceased with all
·funds going towards local cancer awareness efforts. MCCI
Chairperson Courtney Sim is pictured handing donation
envelopes to James Acree of Acree Funeral Hbme in
Middleport (left) and Bruce Fisher of Fisher Funeral Ho mes in
Middleport and Pomeroy.

POMEROY
Wh~n someone dies friends send ilmvers &lt;ir
food to ~how :-.ympath y ~mU
honor tor the decca.sed. Friends
can also make donations to '
organizatiOns .-..uch ~ls thC Meigs
Coimty Canco lnrtiative
( MCCI ) who have donation
boxes at several l&lt;x:al funeral
homes.
The donation OO.xcs ronlc
with cmdopcs th;tt arc .. u~r­
friend ly."" i).)nors complete contact irtl\tnnation about themselves 'Uld th~ honon.-e. A check
·or money order made payahk to
MCCI can he insened into the
box or mailed in the same selfaddrc,scd enl"elopc.
,A·
MCCI will i"uc an acknnwlcdgmcnt of the gift to the i:uni•
lv ur homm.'C on the donor's
tichalf. The organization i' .
50 ICJ. makin~ '~I donatiotb
Brlan J. Reed / photo
tax-&lt;.li'ductihlc t~• the donor.
The passi ng of t11e luxurrous excursion sternwl1eeler Delta
MCCI coordinates educa- Queen i"s a summer trad itron. and as always. attracted spec·
tiona! e'unpaigns 'pecitically in tators a long tl1e Ohio, River at Poi'ne roy on Wednesday after·
noon. as rts sternwheel splashed and its callrope played a rag·
Please see MCCI . AS
i trme favorrte.
•
•

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