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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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'

NATION

The
. Daily Sentinel
\

'

·PageA2

WoRLD

Thursday, July 21,

_ __•_•_•_ER_o_s•_•_c,_w_"_'r~'"--CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
- NASA will try to .launch
Discovery on the first shuttle
mission in more than two
years next Tuesday, after tracing last week's fuel ga uge
failure to, most likely, an electrical grounding problem
lurking inside the spacecraft.
Shuttle program manager
Bill Parsons said the only way
to thoroughly check the system is to fuel Discovery and
have all its equipment runmng.
"We believe the best way to
go through this is to do a
countdown," he said. "If the
sensors (gauges) work 'exactly
like we think they will. then
we'll launch on that day. If
anything goes not per the plan
that we've laid out in front of
us, then we' II have a scrub
and we'll have to talk about
it."

In what would be an· almost
certainly controver&gt;ia l move
in the wake of the 200.1
Columbia tragedy. NASA
may also proceed with the
liftoff if the fuel .gm1ge problem recurs but is cons idered
well understood. That would
mean revoking a lat11tch rule
requiring all four hydrogen
fuel gauges at the· bottom of
Discovery 's e&lt;tcrna l tank to
be working properly. and
instead relying on just three
out of four.
That looser threc-out'offour rule was thrown out after
the 1986 Ch:dlenger launch
ex'plosion.
The fuel gauges are intended to keep a shutt le's main
engines from sh utting down

Hurricane Emily
weakens, threatens
northern Mexico
With floOding

too early or. too Iat~ after
. liftoff. both potentially disa'trous situations. Only two of
the four .are needed to ensure
.safety. but ever .since the
Challenger accident. NASA
has required all four to he
operating.
Par~ons

sJiJ

th~rc

arl' con-

siderable "safety neh" to prptect against launching a seriously flawed spacecraft. if an
exception
to the fuel 0oaw'e
.
rule is made at the last minute .
"Riehl mlw. we think we
have eliminated all the common 'causes that we believe
could dn this and we've done
everything we possibly .-ould
on the vehicle." he told journalists at . an evening news

Losers rewarded for lost pounds
COOLVILLE- May Frost
was named weekly best
weight-loss
winner
at
Tuesday's meeting of TOPS
.(Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
Chapter OH 2013, Coolville.
There were 20 members present.
Judy Dicken reached her
goal weight and obtained
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Sensibly) status. Certificates
were awarded · to , Charlotte
Norton for a six week weight

loss and to Mrylle Alkire for
her first 15 lb . weight loss.
Sandee Wright was awarded a
charm for being the first to
complete her grapes in the
"Bunch of Grapes" contest.
Upcoming events include
th.e open house scheduled for
Sept. 13, which will have a
patriotic. theme, and the
Coolville Founder's Day
Parade on Aug. 6.
Leader Pat Snedden presented a program. " Don 't Fool

Me.'' regarding misleading
food advertisements.
Th~re will be no meeting on
Aug. 2 due to a special election
in the Federal Hocking School
District.
The gro up meets every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
'Church . Weigh-in is from 5: 15
to 6: 15 p.m. with a meeting at
6:30. For information. call Pat
Snedden at 662-2633 or attend
a free meeting.

.

DofA holds picnic ·

~

CHESTI;:R
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, held a picnic recently at the Masonic . hall in
Chester.
Thelma White presided at a
meeting following the picnic
· opening with pledges to the
Christian and American flags,
the Lord 's Prayer and the
singing of the National
Anthem . Officers' reports
were read and Erma Cleland
read the audit report.

omference.

Technicians plan to swap
some pins. and wiring near thC
electronics box that is associated with the four hydrogen
'fuel gauges. to heuer understand what happened last
week .
Discowry's wuntdown was
halted with · just two hours
remaining before liftoff last
Wednesday when one of the

fol1r fuel gauges malfunc- ,
tioned . It was the same type of
problem that marred a fueling
tes\ . of Discovery 'back in
April. with· a different external tank.
Despite a week of exhaustive scrutinv bv hundreds of
engineers. : NA.SA has been
unable to pinpoint .the preci'~
cause or location uf the fai lure, and an electrical grounding problem somewhe re in tl1c
aft fuselage is considered the
most likely cause. The space
agency is holding out hope
that the grounding problem
can be traceu to interference

BYTHEB'END

The Daily Sentinel

It was noted that Lora Helen Wolf, Thelma White,

Damewood is in the hospital·
and that Laura Mae 'Nice is
going to have eye surgery. A
report was given by Keith
Ashley on the reenactment at
Portland Park. Esther Smith
read about July 4th and what
the red, white and blue stands
for. Ashley told how the tlag
was made and originated .
Attending were Everett
Grant, Scottie Smith, Arden
Depoy, CharloLLe Grant.

For the Record
AP Photo

Kennedy Space Center worker Aaron Sl1ermim checks out wiring in the aft compartment ot' the orbiter Discovery in Cape
Canaveral. Fla. Wednesday. Discovery's launch· was scrubbed due to a fuel sensor problem. The earliest Dtscovery can launch
is July 26.
fr.om shutt le C&lt;juipment in the
n c~t few days. but w1ll aim
for a Tuesday launch even if
the mystery pcrsi,ts.
Among the m:111y shulllc
parts suspected of possibly
caus in g electromagnetic interference arc ne wly installed
heaters on the externa l fuel
tank . rhc heaters arc me:lnt to
prevent the k,ind of lethal

damage ,u ffered by Columbia morning launch.
at liftoff.
Discovery and its crew of
"We have a great amount of· seven will fly to the internawork in fro.nt of us to ge t us tiona! space station to drop off
throu gh this and get us ready.'' " .&gt;upplies and make repairs.
Parsons sa id. "But we've all and will ' test. inspection and
agreed that this work is patching techniques for the
doable and that it all takes us type of damage that doomed
to a launch on the 26th."
Col umbia. ·
A chunk of fuel-tank foam
Tile co untdown is set to
beg.in Saturday for a Tuesday iAsulation tore a hole in

Columbia's left wing at liftoff
and led to its catastrophic reentry on Feb. I, 2003. All
. seven astronauts were killed.
If Discovery isn't flying by
the beg' nning of August , the
flight will be bumped to
September to ensure a daylight launch and good survei llance photography throughout
the shuttle's ascent.

Sex scene-infused g~me gets adult rating

NPD Group. Xbox and PC verSAN FRANCISCO (AP) The video ga tne industry on sion s wer~ released last month .'.
The hot selling video
Wedne sday
changed
to
Take-Two said net sales
game, "Grand Theft
adults-on1y the ruling or
Auto: San Andreas,"
SAN
FERNANDO, "Grand Theft Auto: San could drop by more than $50
mil
lion
this
~uarte~. and lowon
PtayStation, left; is
Mexico CAP) - Hurricane Andreas," a best-se lling game
ered
its
financial
expectat
ions
seen on sale at the
Emily blasted northeast in which explicit sexual confor
the
year
to
set
aside
funds
Best Buy store in East
Mexico with powerful winds tent can be unlock.ed with an
for
return's
of
the
ga
mes.
Palo Alto, Calif ..
and rains Wednesday. demol - Internet download.
Guidance was reduced to $1.05
Wednesday.
The video
ishin.g homes. tri gge ring
The decision fo llowed
game industry on
floods and forcing evacua- intense pressure from politi- to $ 1. 12 per share on $1.26 biltions on both sides of the cians and media watch groups. lion to $1.3 1 billion in sales
Wednesday changed
from a prior estimate of $1.40
Mexican-U.S. border.
the rating of the game
and retailers reacted swiftly to $1.47 per share and sales Of
The week-old hurricane to adults-only because
Wai-Mart Stores Inc.,
packing windS of 125 mph Target Corp. and Best Bu~ Co. $1 J billion to $1.35 billion.
explicit sexual content
Shares of Take-Two rose L2
came ashore before dawn said they would immedtutely
can be unlocked with
near San Fernando. about 75 pull all copies from their store cents to close m $27.07 011 the
an Internet download.
Nasdaq,butluterdroppeJ$1.81, ·
miles south of the border, and shelves nationwide.
The decision followed
spread destruction even as it
Intense pressure from
The game's producer, or 6.7 percent, to $25.26 in aftersteadily weakened to tropical Rockstar Games, said it hours activity after falling more .
politicians and media
storm strength by late in the stopped making the current than II percent when the deciwatch groups.
sion was announced. The stock
rlay.
ver~ton and would provide
AP Photo
There were no immediate new labels to any retailer will- has tmded betwee.n $19.26 and
reports of deaths or injuries, ing to keep selling the games, $29.60 over the past year.
but thousands of residents which had been rated "M" for
and tourists were ordered to mature. The company also
evacuate homes and hotels will offer a downloadable
along the Gulf of Mexico. In patch to fix the sex issue in
southern Texas, about 4,000 PC versions, and is working
people fled to 14 shelters.
on a new, more secure verThe storm was closing. iii sion, to be rated "M ."
on Monterrey. the country:S
Rockstar's parent company.
third-largest city. and offi - New York-based Take Two
cials there set up shelters to Interactive Software Inc., also
prepare for flash floodin g.
admitted for the first time that
Wednesday night, Emily · the sex scenes had been hui It
had winds of 70 mph and was into the retail version of that
expected to slow to a tropical game - not just the PC version
depression by Wednesday but abo those written for X box
night. forecasters said.
and PlayStation2 consoles.
Near San Fernando. one of·
Company officiab had prethe hardest-hit areas was the vious ly suggested that a modfi shing v.i llage of Carbonera, ification createq by .outsiders
where manv of th ose who added the 'cenes.
had been evacuated returned
Take-Two 'pokesman Jim
homes Ank'ner acknowledged in an
to
find
their
destroyed. Lakes caused by Associated Press interview that
flood waters were every- · the questioned scenes were crewhere.
ated by Rockstar programmer,,
We'!'! deliver all the local happenings right to your home. Stop by our office
"The hurricane finished "The editing and tinillizatior. of
us," said Javier · Hernandez any game is a complicated task
and subscribe to the Daily Sentinel for 3 rrionths for only $30.19 and receive
Galvin, a 45-y~ar-old "fisher- and it's not uncommon for
man who, because of a short- unused and unfinished come'm
a FREE comic umbrella*!
age of clothing. was barefoot. to remain on the disc," he said.
If ) &lt;;u an.' a L UHl' ltl '&gt; llh..,LTiht.!l', )' \lUcan receive a free. umlucl la by ex tending ynur su11sr..:ription for 6 month s for only $~9. 15.
wearing on ly pink shorts and
In a statement. the president
1
"'
Pay
mL' Ill 1lui-.t he mad~ 111 pc r~~ lll at the Dail y Sentinel . Ill Court St. , Pomeroy. Ohio in order to receive your Free comi c um~rclla .
an old blueT-shirt.
-of the Entertainment Software
Quantities nrc lim ited.
Galvin said his home sur- Rating Board· )aid the sex
vived the sturm. but a shed scenes were progral)'lmed by
r----~---------~--------------,
where he stored his fishing Rockstar ''to be inaccessible
equipment and boat had been to the player."
reduced to scraps of wood.
But ESRB chict' Patricia
Eugenio Hernandez, gover- Vance also acknowledQed that
1
·:Yow Home tow'! Newsp,aper"
nor of Tamaulipas state . the "credibility and utility" of
J ll ntp tlu~ .•:nu p'''lllt'( in our \lffio..:o. · 011 Il l Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio with your payment and receive a FREE comiL' umhrt!llo.t.
which
includes
San the industry-run hoard\ ini -·
Fernando, &gt;aid officials were tial "M" rating had been ··\eri still accessing damage. He ousl y undermined."
.
I D I lt&lt;Hl' JHI\ I'L'L'Il. a ~uh~crihL'f in th e r a:-.1 JO d:l} .... Endo~d i~ m y pay men." of $30. 19 for 3 montils Of lht' Vllih St' ll /iJI(• /.
Many retailers sell ··M"
said some people fled their
.
'
'
homes Wednesday night rated games. which '·may he
because of a rain ~swollen suitable for per,on s ages 17
and older:: according to the ••
river.
••
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. Emily'.s
landf:ill Entertainment
Addl\'"" -----~--------------'---"--_:_------'----Wednesday markeu the sec- Rating Board. hut v,on't , ell ••·~
ond time in three day' the "AO"-Iabe lcd ~'ll l l C' :1t all.
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Auto:
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· storm hit Me xico. La't week ::
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killing four penple anQ wash- than 5. 1i;.1illinn c·opic~ in the ::
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homes.
1 .

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The Daily Sentinel'
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·

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Thursday, July 21, 2005

2005

NASA
- - · - -NASA aims for Thesday launch, believes fuel gauge failure related to grounding problem
Bv MARCIA QUNN

.PageA:J

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Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marria~e
licenses were issued m
Meigs County Probate Court
to Brian Robert Harper, 22,
Pomeroy. and Julia Beth
Kennedy, 22. Pomeroy ;
Joshua Daniel Will, 23,
Pomeroy, and Sara Elisabeth
lhle, 23. Rutland, Mark
Andrew
Brown, · 31 ,
Syracuse. and Jessica Rene
Scott, 22, Mansfield. and
Michael Keith Bradford. 23,

Sandy White. Mary Holter,
lnzy Newell, Barbara Sargent.
Ruth Smith. Esther Smith,
Kathryn Baul)'l, Janet Depoy,
Opal Hollon. Erl]la Cleland,
Jo Ann Ritchie. Doris
Grueser, Mary Barringer,
Nathan Biggs, Betty Biggs,
Marjorie Fetty. Julia Fleming.
Emma Ashley, Keith Ashley,
Goldie Fredrick, and Jean
Welsh , and visitors Mike
Fleming and Richard White.

'

Community Calendar
Public notices
Monday, July 25
POMEROY Veterans
Service Comniisso n. 9 a.m . .
11TMemorial Drive.
Meigs
. POMEROY
County Library Board regu la r
meeting will be held at 3 p.m.
at the Racine Library.

Clubs and
. organizations
. . Thursday july 21
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters cookput. noon, home
uf.Joan Corder. Food provided. Take lawn chairs. ·
RACIN E -· Ohio River
Producers FFA alumni meet at
7 p.m. in ihc Si1uthern Ag.
room.

.

Monday, July 25
POM EROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club meeting ~Jnd auction, Pomeroy Library. Coin
grading class, 6: 15 p.m. followed by 7 p.m. meeting.
Tuesday, july 26
RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organization will
meet at Star Mill Park at 6:30
n.m. for a potluck. New members are welcome.
'

'

Monday, July 25
POMEROY - Hy,cll Run
Community Church VBS. 118:30 p m.. through July 29.
992-7036 to register or for ·
information.
RACINE ·- St.
John
VBS.
Lutheran Church
",Construction Zone.'.' 6-8:30
p.m.. for pre-schoo'l through
grade 6. 992-2542 for information .
.
MIDDLEPORT
IV!iddleport Church of the
Nazarene VBS. 6 to 8:30p.m.
through July 29 . Theme
"Where Kids are Wild about
God." Bicydes will be given
away. Cookout at 7 p.m.
concludes.
Fridav .
ln fonilation at 992-3191 .
P0\1EROY VBS at
Zion Church of Christ, Ohio
143. 6:30 to 8:45 p.m ..
through July 29. Jerusalem
. Marketplace is theme , Craft s.
-Bible-time game, , snacks.
music. Program practice and
pina party Saturday morning
before closing program at 7
p.m. Information at 992-5195 .
REEDSVILLE - VFiS :n
Eden
United
Brethren
Church. Ohio 124 between
RecdsviHc and . Huckingp&lt;irt.
6 to 8:30 p.m. through July
29. "Kingdom of the Son" . is
theme .

Racine, and Erin Renee by Anita S~eppard, Syracuse.
Taylor, ·20, Pomeroy.
against Robert T. Sheppard.
Mineral Wells, W.Va.
·
.
DisSolution
A divorce .was granted to
POMEROY - A dissolu- Jodie C. Stines from Edward
tion was granted in Meigs "Woody" Stines.
Saturday, July 23
County Common Pleas Court
POMEROY - Gospel si ng
to Paula Wolfe and Anthony
Correction
to benefit Fall Harvest Gospel
T. Wolfe .
POMEROY - James A.
Will of Pomeroy was not Sing, 7 p.m .. Laurel Cliff Free
convicted of disorderly con- Methodist Church. Singers
Divorces
Spirit ' Led of Parkershurg, '
POMEROY -A divorce duct. in Meigs County Court. W.Va .. Mercy of New Haven,
action was filed in Meigs as was reported due 'to a W.Va.. Marty Short nf
County Common Pleas Court court error.
Reedsville, and Brian and
Family Connection s of Long
Bottom.

ChUrCh eventS

Brother left out offamily events doesn't know why
DEAR ABBY: I' m a single
man in my mid40s . My parents are gone. but seven of my
10 siblings ar~ still alive.
When I was 12, my appendix burst and I became deathly ill. The hospital visits took
their toll on my dad, who suffered a major heart attack two
weeks after I was· released.
Two weeks after that. my
father had another massive
heart attack that ended his
life .
I felt extremely guilty. I.
thought I had ki lied my dad,
sb I turned to our parish priest
for help. Instead. he chose to
molest me. He said I had
made him do it, and I walked
out of church feeling I was to
blame'- that I was evil . ·
From then on I trusted no
one. I kept people at a distance . I have never had a
close personal relationship or
a romance.
I have been seeing a wonderful counselor for seven
years. She has helped me a
lot, but I have resigned myself
to being alone the rest of my
life,
·
Abby, my siblings hate me
- I'm not sure . why. They
have birthday parties. graduation parties, backyard barbecues and many family-oriented gatherings to which I am
never invited. We live in the
same small town, so it's. not. a
matter of location. They go
camping as a family in the
summer, and· it's always kept
a secret from me. When I ask
why 1· wasn't' invited to the
celebrations, I' m told that
"there wasn't enough room.''
When I ask about the camping trips, I'm told, "We don' t
go camping as a family; we
go as friends , so I'm sure you
understand why you're not
invited."
1 really don't understand. I
think they get some kind of
kick out of knowing how
badly they hurt me. My counselor says I should walk away
from them and not look back
because w.hat they're doing is
deliberate. Blll how can I
walk away from the people
who are supposed to love me
unconditionally?
I keep hoping one of them
will realize how badly I am
hurting. have some compa~­
sion and ex tend a loving
embrace to me before I completely die on th~ inside.
Any adv ice would be
greatly appreciated. - . A
FAMILY OF ONE IN OHIO
DEAR FAMILY OF ONE:
Pledse listen to your therapist
and do as she advises. She has
your "best interests at heart.
.You were in no way to blame
for your father's death, bu\ on
some level yo u may have
been blamed for it by your
siblings. Whatever is going

Sunday, July 24
allow them to ride.
RACINE
- Mt. Moriah
Sonie of 1ny recent guests
have weighed more than 300 Church of God Sundav school .
pounds and think they should picnic, noon, Star Mill Park .
be able to ride a small mare. Covered .di sh. Baptizing in
How can I tactfully decline',' river. Take lawn chairs. No
Dear
evening chmch !-;ervice.
~ BEFUDDLED IN KEN PORTLAND - Spanish
Abby
TUCKY
.
Lan'
g uage Mass, 6 p.m.,
DEAR
BEFUDDLED:
Weight can be a touchy ,sub- Our Lady of Guadalupe
ject for some people, but you Mission Chapel. . Harris
are responsible for the wei- Farms , Ohio 124. Mini stry
on in their shriveled heart s, fare ofyour animals. Because of Sacred Heart Church in
you cannot fix it. You will not they &lt;:an't speak up for them- Pomeroy.
find compassion or empathy selves, you must. Say it this
where none exists. Your !?est way. 'T m sorry, but that
chance of linding acceptance horse is too small for you, so
and love is to stop seeking .it I can't accommodate you:'
from your family. move on, It's not impolite; it's the truth.
and · build a family of · your
Dear Abby is written by
own. Others h&amp;ve done it sue- . Abigail · Vall Buren, also
cessfully. and so can you.
klwwn as Jea11ne Phillips,
DEAR ABBY: I am a horse and was founded by her
owner who doesn't mind mother, Pauli11e Phillips.
allowing guests to ride gentle . Write
Dear Abby
at
saddle horses. However. some www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
of my guests are so obese that Box 69440, Los A11geles, CA
I cannot in good conscience 90069.

.

Saturday, .July 21
.
ENO - Gospel Hymn Sing
at Trinity Gospel Mission.
Ohio 554 between Eno and
Porter. 6 p.m. Singers include
S'tcphanic Snyder, Jodie Rife .
Danny John son, Henry and
Hester Eplin , Eulis, and
Leslie. Al len. Refreshments
available. Love ' offeri ng.
Spon.sored by church youth
for church improvement project.
Sunday, July 31
CA RPENTER
.
Homeco min g at Carpenter
Baptist Church witli morning
service at ICUO a.m. with
speaker Robert Sanders, and
singer, Bob Sider,. Dinner at
nat~n. and afternoon service
with the Builders Quartet and
Siders·. pre sentin g spec ial
mus1c . .
PORTER - Covered dish
dinner. I p.m. followed by
gospe l sing at 2 r.m. at Clark
Chapel Church. The event

will feature the Rou'n Famih .
Together-4-Christ.
Sandra
Wise . 388-8075 for information .

Reunions
Saturday.' July 23
ALBANY
·_ Annual
reunion uf descendants or
Joel "nd Lydia Steaneart.
noon. Lak'e Snowden Big Oak
shelter house. Take ricni c
lunch and lawn chair, . 992 '5502 f&lt;fr i nformali on.

Other events
Saturday, .July 30
CHESTER - Che,ter Bull
A&gt;Sociuton "s annual end-olse;"on annual party, ·II adll ..
Chester ball field hehind .
Baum Lumber. All adverti,er'
and team 'POihOrs invited ..
SHADE - Three-on-three
b:tsketba ll tournament. X
a.m.. sShade
Communi! )
Center. RSVP 696-08 11.
Thesday, july 26
PORTLAND - Outreach
health fair screening an d
imnlllni za tion clinic. 5-7
p.m. , Portland Communit y
Center, sponsored by Meig'
County Health Department.
Middleport -Pomeroy Rotary
Club . Health-Net helicopter
of Charle ston Arcu Medical
Center. available for tours.
TB office wi ll administer skin
tests. Bring shot record,,
medical· cards. Ch ildren must
he accompanied hy parent nr
legal guardian . $5 donation
uccepted but not required.
Refreshments provided b~
Rotary . .

·Visit us
online at
www.mydallysentlnel.com
'

Your online
source for
news

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EXTRA. EXTRA.
·Coming Friday, July 29, 2005

Charl~s

The

Daily Sentinel

The Daily · Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs 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 involved!

Son of
&amp;. April Roach

'1._

Gallipolis
1 •••

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

2005.

Visit our new ATM at 124 Exxon Mart

Complete the form below and enc lose a snapshot or i.·allct sited picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photog raph . If mo!·c than one child is in the pic lure.
please enclose an additional $2.00 per ch il d. Enclnsc payment with picture .
Send to:
\

(intersection of State Route 7 ani:! Route 124)

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Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (sl: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

City &amp; Stale: _ _ _ _ _~-----------------••• The uburc inrormution will be used in the ad: ***
Phone 1'iith1ber: -----~-'--- Submitted b): - - - - - - - - - -

_________________________ ________________ ,_ _____ ..

HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY JulY 22. 2005!

Callus today at (740) 992-2LB
\\" \\ .pcopksbancorp.com

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156

o

FAX (740) 992-2157

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

-

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom
of spe.ech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for"a redress of grievances. ·
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HIS-T ORY
Today " Thursd,1y. July 21. (he 202nd day of 2005
The1c are lfl ~ days left 111 the year
'
· Touay 's H1ghlighl m HIStory·
On July 21. 1925, the S(H'alled Monkey Trial enued in
D.l}ton , Tenn. wuh John T. ~~opes convicted of violating
state la w-I01 lcachmg Darwm s Theory ot Evolution. (The
conv~rtHHJ

was later overturned )

On thiS date
In 1831. Belg1um becdme mdependent as Leopold I was
procl•umcd Km g of the Belg1ans.
In I Hfll. the first Battle of Bull Run was fought at
M,lll,tss," Va , resultlrrg in a Confederate VICtory
In I X~9. author Ernest Hemmgway was bo1 n 111 Oak
Park. Il l.. poet Han Crane wo~ s born in Garrettsville, Ohio.
In 1955, dun ng the Geneva summ it. President
Eisenhower presented · hiS "open sk1es" proposal under
wh1d1 the U.S. and the Sov1et Un ion would trade mforma!lon on Cdch other's m1111ary tacihties.
In 1961. C 1ptain Virgd "Gus" Gnssom became the second American to rocket into a suborbital pattern around the
Earth, tly mg aboard the Libeny Bell 7.
Ten yea rs ago· At a 16-nation con terence . 111 London, t~e
Un ited States and NATO allies warned Bosnian Serbs that
furt her attacks oi1 U.N. sate havens would draw a "substantial and decisive response."
F1ve yems ago Special Counsel John C. Dantorth concluued "with I00 percent . certamty" that the federal government was mnocent of wrongdomo m the Siege that
kil led 80 members of the Branch o,,v:d.an compound near
Waco. Texas. m 1993. Group of 8 leaders met for an emnomtc summ1t on the Japanese island of Ok1nawa, where
Prestdent Clinton also sought to soothe long-simmering
tensions ove1 the huge American mtlitary presence.
One year ago. Prestdcnt Bush sketched out a secondterm dbmesuc agend&lt;1, telling campaign donors he wml)d
~hilt focus to 1mprovmg h1gh school eJucatwn and ex pandmg access to health care Acade my Award-winning composer Jerry Goldsm1lh d1cd in Beverly Hills, Calif. , at age
75. R1chard Bloch. co-founder of H&amp;R Block. the world's
largest tax preparer. d1ed 111 Kansas City, Mi ss, at age 78.
Today's Birthdays· Jazz musiCian -critic Billy Taylor ''
84. Smger Kay Starr is 83 Actor-comedmn Don Knotts 1s
81. Mov1e director Norman Jewtson is 79 Actor Paul
Burke is 79. Former Attorney General Jane t Reno is 67.
Actress Patricia Elliott is 63. Actor Davtd Dowmng IS 62.
Allor Edward H ernn&lt;~nn is 62. Actor Le1gh Lawson ts 60.
Actor Wendell Bunon " 58. Actor Art Hindle is 57. Singer
Yusuf Islam (fo rmerly C it Stevens) is 57. Comedian-aclor
Robm Williams IS 54 Comed i&lt;~n Jon Lov1tz " 48 Actor
Lince Guest is 45 Actot Matt Mulhern IS 45 Rock musiCI.tll Koen L1eckcns (K's Cho1re) " 39. Rock singer
Emerson Hart (llm1c ) " 36 Cou ntry singer Paul Brandt ts
33 Actor Josh Hartnett is 27 Country smger Brad Mates
-(Emerso n Drive) " 27. Actre" Vanessa Leno1es
·• ("Amencan Dreams") 1s 20. Actor Jam•e Way lett ("H~rry
Potter" films) is 16 . .
Thought for Today: "Happiness IS good health and ,, bad
memory." - lngnd Bergman, SwediSh-born al!rcss ( 19151982).
.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Lett en to the edam· arP H"&lt;'iu mre Tirn ,fwuld he /e.1s th&lt;m
300 word,\. All letter,\ are .lllh1ect to edumg, rmm be sig11eq,
and mclude addteH and,tt~!eplume numhe1: No wnrgm•d let·
. ters will he puhlt:'.lu•d LelflJt ' 'llou!d bt; ht good laMe.
:addte\\·mg i.~.Hlt!J . 1101 pel .\mwli1le\· Le1ren oj thank5 to m :~ a ­
:niza tlo!ls &lt;md indi•·1dual1 will not he accepted Jorpllblrf'allon

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PageA4

OPINION

•
Thursday, July :u,

Thursday, July

research should be vigorous ly pursued
If alternatives to embry~Jnlc research prove to h&lt;\Ve
grealer potential to produce
cures. they should - and
mevitably wtll - win out
in the race for scientif•c
back mg .
But as Frist himself said
ui 200 1. ''research using
the more versati le empry- ·
onic stem ce lls has 2reater
putcnttal than research limIted to adult stem cells and
can. un~er the proper conditions. be co nducted ethicall y"
"Adult" stem cd ls obtained from umbilical .
cord s. placen tas . sk 1n ·or
other ti ssue ~ l)ffer an
altetnat1ve lme of research,
one that is being act1vely
pushed hy the Bush admmIStration. It shou ld be hut not to the exclusion ot
embryonic
stem -ce ll
rcse,1rch
Some or the proposed
,d ternatives are more speculative. and some .of them
mvulve ethical difficulties
ol th e1 r own One of them.
f01 i1" 1ancc. c,tll s for
removing a 'fing le ce ll f1om

'a li ve embryo. potentially
altcnng ih 'nature should it
ever he tmplanted 111 a
wo man·s uterus
Another.
known
as
''a lte1 ed nuclear transfer,"
Invol ve..
creat ing
dn
embryo with a ge net ic
de fect that m,1kes 11 imposSi bl e to develop into a
hum&lt;~n. Tim techmque nuses the que ~ ! ton ot whether
stem cells so derived would
be human .
.Other techniques ha ve
been floated, but all are
theoreti ca l. whereas n's
clear tlldt ce ll lmes ran be
dcm ed now from leftover
emb1yos.
Tl1e stem-cell controver·
sy " only the late st ill
wh1c h Fnst has diSmayed
adnmers of h1s record as a
phySicia n. Bowing to the
n ght . he ret ied on old
videos ol brain-damaged
ferry SL'111avo to detenmnc
tt1&lt;1t ,_s he sho uld be kept

Deaths

,lf.vc

.

In Fnst's de fense, It
coulu be sa1d that, as the

•

Gene
Lyons

staff
"Scooter"
Li bby
"outed" a covert CIA agent
in an ·attempt to hut t her
husband,
Ambassador
Joseph 'Wilson, has dnven
True Believe rs to near-hysteria.
They sound l1ke the sheep
in Orwell's "Ammal Farm."
chanting mmdless slogan'
to drowrl out challenges to
the party lme. Explet1ves
deleted, here 's ·a typ•cal
example: "You are callin g
political hack Joe Wi Ison a
whistleblower. Joe Wil son 1s
a proven liar . His wife
arranged for him to go to
Niger to dnnk sweet te,L
Vice President D1ck Che11ny
(s1c) did ·not authorize the
t,np. Neither did (C IA director) Geo rge Tenet. Mr.
Wilson lied ahout those
facts ."
'The rest of the party line
goes like th1s : Rove and
' were
warning
Libby
reporters a g &lt;~inst l&lt;ilsc stnnes. Anyhow. Wil son's
wife. Valerie Plamc. wasn ' t
reall y a cov~n dgent w&lt;iJ king on WMDs. but a nohodv
bureaucrat Or if she w"' ;,
spy, Rove d1dn,'t :•ctually
say her name . Bc"de&gt;. the
Brits say Wilson was wrong .
There was plenty or evidence Iraq tn ed to buy
African uranium Anybody
who says differently IS 'j)IO·
terrorist. Pres1dent Bu sh
rules'
.
Why are the sheep ,agitated? Basically for the same

reasons White House operalives attacked Joe Wilson tu
begin w1th . They 'd concocted .t fake nuclear threat to
scare Amenca111 mto su pportmg a war agiunst Iraq
that, Bu sh's n~occmservauve
supportel s had long planned
for other reasons. and they
we1e afraid the public
would figure 11 ou t.
Blow the smoke away,
and it\ a wnplc, th erefore
politically
comb ustible
story tile Whne House
atlucked Wilson 's Wife to
puniSh him fo1 tellmg the
truth , revealing an American
agent 's 1dent1ty to h1de
fal se hoods that drove lhe
natwn to Wdl'. They did so in
200.1 to get PreSident Bush
elected as a stt ong wartime
leader: and they're doing it
now to h1de the1r own dlr!y
tricks.
To
hold
othe rwi se
requi1es what Orwell called
"dnublelhink"
believing
)oiinwl!anenLI'-'Iy 111 two co n-

The

Kevin L.Barr
GALLIPOLIS - Kevm L. Barr, 45, of the Evergreen
'Community d1cd unexpectedly on Weunesday, Jul y 20, 2005
at hts reSidence Arrangements wil be announced by
Cremeens l'u neral Chapel in Gallipolis
'

Community mourns
loss of.Jack Fruth _
BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
- Point Pleasant and surrounding commun111es are sti ll standing today, e'en ~s one of theu
pillars IS gone.
Jack E Fruth, 77, founder ot
the Fnllh Ph,trmacy cham and a
leading member of many comRlUnl!y orgamzations. died
Tuesday in St. Marys Medical
Centc1 m Hungtington . He
leaves behind a fo,in g family.
22 pharm&lt;1cy stores and a leg&lt;~·
cy ot service to hiS community
Unhke the stereotypical buSIness executive. Fruth wus a
man of the p~ople . Those
whose hves he touched were
gnevmg hiS loss Wednesday.
and Singing Ius pr.uses tor ,,II he
did.
I
"He w1ll be tmposstble w
replace.'' s,1id Point Pleasant
Mayo1 Jim Wilson. "!think the
commumty bas lost a gre,lt
leader who p•u1icipated in just
about every function to make
this a better place to live "
To list a few. Fruth was active
m
the Mason
County
Development Authomy, the
Route 35 Committee, Rotary
and
the
Chamber
of
Commerce. He was chmrman
of the board of Peoples Bank.
one of the onginal ttustees of
Pleasant Valley Hospital and "
member of the bo,tid of trustees
at the Umve1S1!} of R10 Grande.
"Mr. Fruth was a stron g pillar
of om community," said Mason
County Commtssioner Bob
Batrd. "He had Mason
County's best interest at heart. I
am extremely hurt over the loss
of Jack. He was a tine, tine
man.'l
In what will be a lasting tribute, the Mason County portion
of U.S. 35 'ts to be known as the
Fruth-Lanham Highway. State
Sen. Charles Lanham said
Wednesday he will be deeply
honored to have his name"astde
his colleague and banking competitor.
"Jack was an individual who
gave back to his community,"
Lanham said. "He. was a clear
thinker and qUite a compet•tor,
but always ,t professtonal."
It all stmied in November
1952, when Fruth opened hiS
tirst pharn1acy at 2119 Jackson
Ave. in Point Pleasant. The pre-

.

R1 ght now. thou gh, he
faces a choice: to do what
" right ,md to help millions
who m1ght benefit from
rese arch he knows " desirable. or to hold tt back in
the name of personal
advancement
I Morlan Kondracke I S
erewti•·e edrto r of Roll
Call, the ne•v'paper of
Cap1to/ Hi II.)

that Here's the relevant
passage from hi s original
whislle-blowmg article: "In
Febru&lt;~ry
2002. I was
informed by offictals at the
Ce nllal lntell1ge nce Agency
that V1ce President Dtck
Cheney 's office had questions about a particular
intelligence report .. The
agency officials asked if I
would travel to N1ger to
check out the story so· they
cou ld provtde a response to
the vice preSident's office."
Who sent him '? "Agency
officials."
Others sneer that Plame
wasn ' t undercover. as 1f
they had any way ot knowmg
D1d W1lson's w•fe "authonze" the tnp, as Rove told
reporters'? Nol that 11 matters. but no. Her bosses did.
"She was not 111 a pos11ion to
send Joe Wilson anywhere
except to bed wn hout his
supper." Larry Johnson, a·
former CIA colleague, told
the L A Tunes.
Sometimes even the most
brazen agitprop can' t stand
agamst reality. Under communist rule. Moscow had
twl'&gt; newspapers: The standard JOke was th at "There IS
no Pravda in Izvestia, and
there is no Izvestia in
Pravda.'' ("There is rH,&gt; truth
m New:-., and no news in
Truth ." )
Amencans aren'l there
yet, but the Wilson/Piame
affair is pushing them in
that direction .
.
(Arkm11as
DemocratGa~e/le cnl111rmi&lt;t Gene
Lyo11s " a twtwtwl maga:ine mrard H'imter and coaurhor of "Til&lt;' Huming of
tlu' Pre1ide111" (Sr. Mallin's

ll&lt;idlctory facts . That evidence lor S,tddam 's nukes
'~'" powerful, for ex ample.
.tlthough the Bush admm•stra tl on·s own Iraq Survey
Group. alt er searching
everywhere and uncrvlew ing arrested lr.1q 1 sc ientiSis.
concluded that no nuclear
we&lt;~pons program existed
there alt er 19&lt;) 1. therefore
no attempts t{) buy uranium.
· It 's tim si mple: Wilson
was nght. Pre&gt;~dcnl Bush
wa&gt; wron~
,
All tl1e" rest is rubbish.
GOP robo-pundits were
evc1yw herc last week saymg Wil son lied about Vice
Prestdent C heney authonzlng · hi" trip Newt
Gmgnch , Rush L•mbaugh
and the alleged ly thoughtful
New York Times co lumniSt Prn;, 2000) You ca11 eDavld Brooks
"""'
Lwml·
at
But Wilson never sa id gellelmlls@shcglnhal ~ret. )

•

DAYTON FACILITY

Daily Sentinel • Page As

sent location at 250 I Jackson
Ave. wa' butlt an opened in
November 1960.
Fruth opened his Point
Pleasant store one year atler
graduatmg trom the Ohio State
University School of Pharmacy,
where he mel his w1fe, Frances
"Babs" Rhodes, whom he married in December 1950. He got
the 1d~a f(Jr the Point Pleasant
pharmacy whtle serving as
assistant manager of the
Gallaher Drug Store in Xenia,
Ohio. Wtthm four years, the
new phannacy was, earning in
excess of $100,000 annually,
and from the 1970s onward the
Fruth Pharmacy chain began to
grow.
The first Huntington store
(there are three now) was
opened 111 1975. The location at
364 Jackson P1ke 111 Gallipolis
followed Ill
1976. and
M1ddlepon 111 1983
As hiS pharmacy chain grew,
so d1d Fruth's service to the
communny Lanham smd he
worked with Fruth in every smgle service organization to
wh1ch he belonged
Jack Fowler. director of the
Pomt Pleasant Rive1 Museum,
said working w1th Fruth caused
a man to take h1 s work -;erious-

ly
"From a personal reflectiOn.
he was a guy who, if you

worked wnh hun, }OU wamed
to do your best.'' Fowler s&lt;11d.

"You wallled to do as good as
you could, because that's the
way he did things. I had a great
respect fo'r him.''
Greg Hartley a~reed.
"He ulwuys d1d things 100
percenl," Hw'tley said. "He was
such an asset to Point Pleasant,
and. to me. such an honest man.
He was the kind of man who. if
he told you it was raininl!, you
d1dn 't have. to go to the wmdow
to look."
Fowler said Fruth had an
uncanny ability to bnng focus
to a meeting when everybody
else was going in dtfferent
dtrections.
''If you attended, a meeting
where everybody gave thm
mput, Jack could summ;mze it
to make 11 all make sense.''
Fowler satd . "He was the one
that you looked to for guidance.··
Hts obituary appe&lt;trs on page
A-3.

WEST VIRGINIA JOBS FOUNDATION
'

deficit of $35,984.5~ fm the
year to date. In July, 2004, the
coDnty col lected $95, I 02 .
Last week. the county collected a July payment f10m the
state of $94,736, and while
some months thiS year hdve
seen a slight increase in collections. the year-to-date loss
is in keeping with ,, five-year
I rend.
Last year, the county sut·
fered a $10,000 loss in sales
tax revenue when compared
to 2003, but the collection
rate has decreased significantly smce 2000, when the county collected $1.191,746 from
its one-percent tax. Last year,
the collection total was
$ 1.092,525.
Most county officials· see
the decrease as a d1rect reflection on the retail sales economy, and the loss of retail sales
to other communities, mcludmg Mason, W. Va, where
Wai-Man opened a store 111
1999.
The county relies heavily
on sales tax revenue tor oper·
ations and its monthly cash
llow The sales tax is pmd
directly mto the county 's gen.
eral fund, which pays for
courthouse operations and
employee salaries. '

_,
1II-

co.

SIDNEY,

AP Photo

R1ck McNeel, left, pres1dent and CEO of Lord Corp., JO ins Ohro Gov. Bob Taft, middle and Will
Hinkston , v1ce president of global operations for Lord, 1n breakmg ground Wednesday. 111
Dayton, for a $3.8 m1ll1on expans•on of the com pany's manufactunng facilrtyh . Taft on
Wednesday reversed course and agreed to release weekly reports from top off1c1als at the
embattled state Insurance fund for mjured workers. for the company's expans•on.

Taft relents, releases weekly
reports related to workers' comp

MCCI

BvANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

from PageA1

argued the reports were not
covered by the statfs open
records act because tliey olten
contam se nsitive matenal
regarding employees. strategy
lor passmg bills and prospects
!01 economic development
But "l;•tt dec1ded to release
the documents because of revelations Tuesday about the
bure,1u's mtern,il scrutiny of
,in vest ments. said spokesman
Mark R•rkel A consu lt,mt
rev1ewmg the bUteau·s investment policy " '"' the bureau
can't be ce1tain of the exact
amount of 1ts $14 billion panfolio
Taft said he'll contmue to
tight to keep other weekly
rep011s pnvate under executive pnvilegc
'
"Wh1le the Governor's
Office is wa1vir1g privilege tor
these spec1tic documents. tillS
waiver ' does not extend
beyond these report&gt; and

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

Meigs County duting various
canc'Cr awareness months.
Dunng October, which IS
breasl cancer awareness month,
MCCI attempts to-help residents
become more aware of when
and where to seek emly detection of cm1cer: how to proceed
when cm1ce1 is diagnosed; how
to naVIgate thn;ugh a complex
he,1lthcare system. where to
obtain community resources
and support flll· suniH&gt;rs.
MCCI also plans similar
educational events during
Colmectal Cancer and Skin
C:mcer Awareness months.
"Flowers are a mce, shot1·
tenn remembr,u)ce when someone passes," MCCI Chairperson
Counney Sim said. "Howe,er.
monies received m memory or
111 honor of someone who has
!ought •md I or lost tl1e1r battle
witl'i cm1cer will 1emain w1thrn
· Me1gs County to mcreasc
awareness\ provide educatton
and promote early detect1on and
prevention of cancer in Meigs
County."
Sim also expressed her
appreciation to the local funeml
homes who have teamed up
with MCC11 which include.
Acree
Funeral ·
Home.
Middleport; Anderson Funcrnl
Home, Mason, W.Va.; BtgonyJordan Funeml Home. Albany;
Birchfie ld Funeral Home.
Rutland; Cremeens Funeral
Horne, Racme; Ewmg Funer,;i
Home. Pomeroy ; Fisher Funeral
Homes 111 Pomeroy and
Middleport: Foglesong-Tucker
Funeral Home. Mason, W Va ;
Roush
Funeral
Home,
Ravenswood, W Ya.; Wh1te
Funeral Home. Coolville
Sim hopes that in the future
MCCI cw1 a"&gt;sist · local cancer
patiems 111 obtaming limited
necessary med1cat supplies a11d
other related services as tinmlcial resources penni!.
The next meeting of MCCIIS
,,t I 30 p m on Sept. 16 111 the
conference room of the Meigs
Senior Center. MCCI can ,1fso
be
reached
m
mcci4@yahoo.com

I:::A . . . .

LOI~I) CORPORATiON
'GUSON
""""

from PageA1

HARTFORD, W.Va - Belvo~ Dale (Young) frye, 72 . of
Harll urd, W Va , d1ed Monday. July Ig, 2005, at her residence.
She was born Aug. 13, 1932, 111 Kanawha Countv W.Va
daught~r of the late George W and Carnie Welch Yci~ng. . '
Serv1ces will be held at I I a.m. on Saturday, July 23, 2005,
at Fugelsong-Tucker Funeral Home m Mason. W.Va .. w1th'
Rev. Ri chard Nease and Pastor Randy Parsons oflic iatmg.
Burial will be in Umm\ Cemetery 111 Let&lt;~rt, W.Va.
Fnends may call from 6 to l) p.m. on Fnday at the tuneral
and
m,1y
e-mail
condolences
to
home
foge lsongtucke r@my wa y.com.

Propaganda machine encounters real(ty
For years, the Republican
media machine has dominated national politics.
Through a combination of
ideological certitude, mes. sage discipline and btillying,
the right often succeeds 111
defining issues its way.
Outfits like Fox News, the
Washmgton Time s, and
Wall Street Journal editorial
page, as well as Rush
Limbaugh and his cohorts,
serve as propaganda organs
of the Republican Natwnal
Committee.
Democrats have no equivalent apparatus. Indeed, one
of the GOP's most useful
fiction~ is "liberal bias,'' the
idea that big city new spapers and TV networks p1ck
on
poor,
beleaguered
Republica'ns. But nobody
touted iraq 's . 1magtnary
WMDs harder than The
New York Times and
Washing ton Post
Wnh Republicans controllmg the White House and
both houses of Congress,
GOF' a'gitprop (as Marxists
called 11) has grown increasingl;y brazen . As New York
Times columni st Paul
Krugman, puts it "we ' re l iv~
mg in a country in wh1ch
there IS no longer such a
thmg as nonpolitical truth.
.. (T)herc are now few, If
any, limits to what conservative po liti cians can get
away w1th. the fmthfu l will
follow the twists and turns
of the party line with a loyalty that would have pleased
the Comintern."
Krugman must be reading
my e-mail What's got the
faithful
upset
is the
Wlison/Piame leak s investigation . The reve l&lt;~llon that
the \Yhtte Htm se Ialsely
denied that Bush insider
Karl
Rove and . Vice
President Cheney's chief of

Taxes
_Belva Frye

Repu bl 1can leader, he has
an obligation to support
Bush. But should he do so
when it's clear 1hat Bush
policy tl1es in the face of
life-saving science?
Hi storica lly
speaking,
Frist dearly would not be
the first would-be president
to abandon principle in the
short run, believing he
could do greater good in
the long run.
Lyndon Johnson 1s the
model. He spent decades
toen1g th e segregationi st
even
Southern line oppOSing
unt1-lynching
laws - to ga m the power
that eventual ly allowed him
to pass CIVI l ri ght s laws ,
Ronald Reagan. though
no raCist, chose to launch
hiS 1980 presidential· campaign 111
Philadelphia,
Miss., scene of the mfamous 1964 murder of three ·
civil nghts workers, se nding a distinct message to
Southern voters.
Bill Chnton, to prove he
\\:as not soft on crime as he
ran for president 111 1992.
refused to halt the execution of a mentally relarded
Arkansan,
Ricky
Ray
Rector
Moreover, Frist may calcu lll!e that even if the
House stem-cel l bill passes
the Senate. Bush will surely veto it dnd the House
will not overndc the veto.
If so. standmg up to the
right 111 th iS case would be
,a waste of et'foll and politIcal cap1tal.
But this begs the question: When . 1f ever. will he
stand up? Prist has saved
thous,mds of lives as a
heart surgeo n He means to
:-.ave millions more as an
advocate for worldwide ·
disease prevention and

treatment

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

Will Prist save lives or please right wing in stem-cell fight?
The Senate's stem-ce ll
debate forces a moment of
truth upon MaJority Leader
Bill Frist, R-Tenn : Is he, at
bottom, a doctor and. scienttst dedicated to savi ng
Morton
lives; or just an ambnious
Kondracke
polillcmn ou1 to advance
hi s career~
At the moment, the evidence suggests the latter that he's working to peel
The current Senate fight
votes away from legislation pits those who want to
that would has ten stem-cell eliminate 'Bush's restrlcresearch, and in the process tions includin g most
give h1mself and hi s party scientiSts and d1sease advopolitical cover.
cacy groups who are eager
Polls consistently show for
robust
stem-cell
that as many as two-th1rds research - and the ideoof voters support, federal logues who are trying to
fundmg
of
med1cal retain them .
Pro-stem-cell forces. led
research using embryos left
over at in-vitro feniltzation by Sens. Arlen Specter. Rclimcs and otherwise des- Pa , Orrin Hatch. R-Utah,
tined for destruction . Even and Tom Hark1n, D-lowa,
many
evangelical are working to. win 60
Christians and Roman votes - or poss1bly 67.
Catholics
support
the enough to overnde a prcSI research.
dential veto - , for H.R .
But tl\e relig1ous right 810. wh1ch passed the
wing of the Republican Hou se 111 May by a vote of
part y and the nght-to-lite 238-194.
movement - which probaBut Frist IS work1ng to
bly have veto power over • fashion an altern.n1ve bill
GOP presidential nominees being drafted by Sen. M1kc
'strongly oppose the Enzi , R- Wyo. that would
research on the grounds retain the Bush lim1t s &lt;~nd ,
that the embryos constitute for political cover, buck
sacrosanct "human life"
. new techmqucs tor de n vTo the dismay of many ing stem cells without
who admire h1m , th1s destroying embryos
would not "be the first time
Those voting for the Enz•
Frist has allowed h1s ambi- measure could claun they
tion to trump his scientific support stem-cell research.
JUdgment and put him in however, abundant scientif·
league with the ideologues. ic testimony mdicates that
In July 200 I, after sen- the alternative method&gt;.
ous study and soul-search- wh1le promising m some
ing, he bucked the nght cases, would delay potenwing and endorsed federal tial discovery of treatment
funding of embryomc for such afflictions as
research Within proper ethi- Parkinson 's D1sease. JUVecal guidelines.
nile diabetes and sp1nal
But then in August 2001 , cord inJury (As reade iS
Fnst
saluted
when may know, I'm not obJecPresident Bush lumted the live on thi s subject. My
funding to stem cells w1fe , M1ll y, died of
obtained pnor to that time Parkinson's last year. :md I
and supported tlie Bush am on the board of the
claim that
re searchers Parkinson's
Act1on
would have as many as 60 Network and the M1chael ).
batches (or "Jin~s") ot: stem Fox
Foundation .
fQr
cells to work with.
Par)&lt;inson's Research. )
It turns out that only 22
At a recenl Senate press
lines are 'lValiable and all conference, Fox stated
are contaminated. making what most di sease advothem un suitable for use in cates firmly believe lhat
humans.
all avenues of stem -ce ll

21, 2005.

COLUMBUS - Gov. Bob
Taft on Wednesday reversed
course and agreed to release
weekly reports from top ol'ficials at the embattled state
insurance fund for injured
workers
ReleaSing the 1ep01ts from
January 1999 through August
of last year IS in the public's
mtercst hecausc ot ongmng

scruuny of the Bureau ot
Com pcnsation' s
Workers.'
In vestment polic1es. Taft smd
in " letter to slate Sen. Marc
Dann
Dann.
a
Youngstown
Democrat, sued lu Ioree Taft
to release weekly memos
between the governor's office
and the bureau from 1998 to
2004
Taft. a Republicdn. l1&lt;1d

shou ld be deemed as a wmver
of ,my othe• applicable pnvilegc." s&lt;11d Elizabeth Luper
Schuster. Taft's chtef lawyer.
The hundreds of pages of
reports from former BWC
ddminiStratOI James Conrad
cont:n n
largely
routine
descriptions of bureau actions.
The repons spend linle time
d1scussmg bureau investment
pohcy. now the locus of an
ongomg scandal that led io
Con1&lt;1d's ouste1 in May.
There's no hmt of the problems th,n erupted over the
investments. though m late
2004 Conrad defends a deciSion to have an outside consultant rev1ew mvestment
manage•; job performance.
"The deciston to mvolve our
extern al f•nanctal partners
more close ly should not be
v1ewed as an indictment of
our own team," Conmd wrote
m the Nm -l weekly repon.

"!think thiS ts great lor the
R1ver Ros e Obstctncs &amp;
Gynecology: and Earl L. expans1on of healthcare
Driggs. D.P.M.. podtatric options m Me1gs County,"
physic.an and surgeon.
Davenporl added. "We look at
from Page A1
· They will be jomed in the this as just the begmmng and
the O'Bieness Medical park fut ure by cardiologists from thank O'Bieness for all the
in Athens. arc currently sched- MidOhio Card iol ogy and work and effort they've
uling · appointments at the Vascular Consultants. A fu m•- invested to have a presence
Meigs Medical Ch mc. They ly pmcuce phySician is also here."
Appointmenls to see a
include Jane E. Broecker. unttcipated. '" well as a surM.D., Michael J. Clark, D.O. geon who w1ll offer office phySician can be made by
callmg 740-992-9158.
and Jack M. Ramey, D.O., of hours at the clime
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Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

:rhursday, July 21, 2oos

www.my!:failysentinel.com

Thursday, July 21, 2005

..

'Gigantour' The Inspirations·in concert tomg
: · ht Point's Iron
· ·

wraps up

·

POINT PLEASANT-The
Iron Gate at 60 I Main St. in
Point Pleasant is hosting
entertai nmen t on thei r patio
this summer.
Wednesdays are karaoke,
Thursdays are open microphone nigh ts,. Fridays feature
Jack
Cochran,
while
Saturdavs feature J .C., Greg
and Shawn.
The public is invited. and
the restaurant offers special s
·on· fo od and drinks during the
entertainment hours. For
more infoniHttion. please call
675 ~ 7030 or 675-2200.

·Depot Museum
goes fr~e with
'Preservation
Celebration'

DEN NISON Lookin g
for a family ad ven ture that
'won't cost an arm and .a leg'?
Hcau to Dennison. Ohio. ·
The Dennison Railrm\d
Depot M~1sr.~um !s goin g free
until the end of October.
Deluiison has JUst completThe Inspirations
ed the renovatiorl .of it s hisPOMEROY
The Southern Baptist Church of United States and Europe Coming Soon." "More to Go .toric district , and in honor or
"The its completiinn , The Dennison
Inspirations. · a Southern Pomeroy for its eighth annual spreading the g_ospel in song. to Heaven For."
They
have
had
dozens
of
gospel group, will present a "Shall We Gather at the
Wonder of Wonder" and "We Railroad Depot Museum will
concert in Pomeroy's river- River" concert series. There is songs including five number Need to Thank God," which celebrate with a "Prese rvation
front ·amphitheater at 7 p.m. no admission charge, but a one and six Songs of the Year.
Ceh!bration." otlering a wide
. Their repertoire includes was voted the 2002 -03 Gospel variety of visitor alnenities
love offering will be taken.
tonight. •
The group has traveled mil- such classics as "What a . Song of the Year by Singing from July 2 1 to Oct. 3 1.
The group has been brought
10 Meigs County by the First lion of miles across the Wonderful Time," ''Jesus is News subscribers .
Top of the list is free museum admission from Jul y 21
.
through Oct. :11, thanks to the
generous sponsorship of the
First National Bank
of
Dennison . .The list of gifts to
COLUMBUS (AP) - Here Show. Johnson-Humrickhouse Amphitl1eatre, New Philadelphia. Fame Museum . Yarmouth Dr., the communi ty also includes:
Through Aug. 28
Pickerington.
Free ~ uiued tout-s in the museis a list ofc!lrrent and upcom- Museum, N. Whitewoman St.,
Summer Floral Show,
Through March 2006
um T'Uesday through Friday at
iug Ohio jestimls and evems: Coshocton.
Krohn Con servatory, Eden
E.xhibit: ·Tommy: The II a. m. and 2 p.m., "Freebie
Through Aug. 6
· Through July 20
A. mazing Journey." The Rock Fridays" where visitors can not
. Hoffman Challenge Clothing' Exhibit: Ethnic Images and Park Dr., Eden Park .
Original An Work by Jenny and Roll Hall of Fame and only enjoy free museum admisShow, John )VIdntire Library, · Stereotypes, The King Arts
sian and guided tours. but free
N. Fifth St., Zanesville.
Complex, Mt. Vernon Ave ., Holzer, Decorative Arts Museum. Cleveland.
Center
of
Ohio,
E.
Main
St.
,
July
20-22
Friday night concerts from 7 to
Through July 23
Columbus.
Lancaster.
Art
In
The
Park. 9 p.m. and free soft dtinks in
Adams County Fair, West
Through Aug. 7
the Gigantour and other arena
Utiion.
Fenton
Art
Glass
Annual
Through
Aug.
30
Custenborder
Park,
off
state the museu m's new Trax Diner
even£.1·,
please
visit
County
Fair.
Tent
Event,
Caroline
Ave.,
(Wednesdays)
Route
47,
Sidney.
with the purchase of a meal.
Warren
www.bigsandyarena.com.
Wednesday Night Cruisejuly 21-30
The museum will extend its
Lebanon.
Williamstown, W.Va.
Ins, Lake Road Recreation
Lancaster Festival, OU hours on Friday eveni ngs to 7
Franklin County Fair,
Through Aug. 8' •
Hilliard.
Faculty Exhibit, The Fine Park, Geneva-on-the-Lake.
Lancaster, Granville Pike , p.m ., making it easier for
Crawford County Fair, Arts Association,
Main
Through Aug. 31
Lancaster.
families to have ti me to visit
Blue Jacket Outdoor Drama,
July 22
the mu seum .
Ave.,
Bucyrus.
Gallery.
Mentor
Caesar's Ford Amphitheatre,
Jackson
County
Fair, Winoughby.
CincyLatin\) "Salsa Cruise"
The depot is a beautifully
Wellston.
Through Aug. 14
S. Stringtown Rd., Xenia.
on
the
Ohio
River, restored 1873 Pennsylvaania
Through July 24
Exhibit: Vanishing Point,
Through Sept. 5
Celebrations!
Riverbom Railroad station. with exhibits
Carroll
County
Fair, Wexner Center Galleries at
Quilt National 05 , Dairy Steamboat Landing . Elm St.. thrQughout that tell of its rail'
Carrollton.
The Belmont Building, W. Barn. Dairy Lane. Athens. . .
L dl
K
road heyday anu World War I
POME~OY
- · David
Ottawa County Fair, .Oak Spring St., Columbus.
·Sculptures on the Square, uRh~~hm y. on the . River, and World War .II canteen that ·
Childers and the Modern Don Harbor.
Through Aug. 17
PublicSquare.downtownTroy. Riverside
Amphitheater, served 1.5 million soldiers and
Juans. a rock . and roll band,
Titanic:
The
Artifact Pomeroy.
was nicknamed "Dreamsville.
Perry
County
Fair,
New
.
National
Rifle
&amp;
Pistol
·
will be conflng to town Friday
Lexington
.
Matches,
Camp
Perry
Training
Exhibition,
COSI;
W.
Broad
Art
Walk,
.
downtown
USA"
by
the
troops.
.
to perform at 8 p.m. in the
County
Fair,
Site.
Port
Clinton.·
Loga
n
Lancaster.
Its location on a strategic
St., Columbus.
amphitheater in downtown
&amp;
Buttcrtlies,
nationa
l . defense railroad
Blooms
Bellefontaine.
Through
Aug.
19
Pomeroy.
~
July 22 •23
toutc made its ro le Juring the
Franklin Park Conservatory
Toledo
Area
Anist's
Show,
·
(Fridays)
·
Over the years, the band
Summer Concert Series, and Botanical Garden, E. A Jo~nnt Akpl~se~d ~"Yt· wars very 'ign ifi cant. In addihas performed with the likes Toledo Museum of Art,
PP e ree
ar · ·pp e tion to guided tours. scavdowniown
Lancaster, Broad St.. Columbus.
of John Hiatt. Scott Miller, t'he Monroe St., Toledo.
. Through Sept. 21
Cre~k.
enger hun" are ava ilable for
Through July 29
Bandstand.
Avett Brothers and Malcolm
lime
Dine:
The
Photographs
Shakin'
Down
the
Acornschildren a' we ll as a caboose
Women 's Art Guild of
Through Aug. 20
. Holcomb. They have toured
So
Far-Exhibition
.•
Coltnnbus
Old
Time
Mu
sic
Festival,
for .them to climb through.
Annual Student Exhibition,
the United States and the Central Ohio Exhibit, The Arts
In addition to the museum.
United Kingdom, and regular- Castle. W. . Winter St., Columbus College of Art &amp; .Museum of Art; E. Broad St., Whi spering Hill s RV Park.
Columhus.
state
Route
514.
Shreve.
.
othcrallractions
in or near the
Delaware.
Design
,
Canzani
Center,
E.
ly bring in full houses at variThro11gh
Sept.
25
Art
&amp;
Pottery
Festival.
Historic·
Di
strict
include: The
Through July 28
Gay St., Columbus.
ous hooky ton~s . baro and theSunken Ship's Bell Display, Roberts Convention Centre. Whistle Stop Railway Shop,
Festival
Exhibit
and
Through Aug, 24
aters.
The
Great Lakes Marine &amp; Gano Rd .. Wilmi.ngton .
Libert y Delites Gourmet
Competition,
.French.
·Art
An
International
Legacy:
Childers and the Don Juans
Guard
Memorial
· July 22~24
Food s and Gifts. Dreamsville
played
at
the
Celtic Colony, City Park. First Ave ., Selections from Carnegie Coast
Museum,
Walnut
·
Blvd.
Eastern
Woodlands
Ice
Cream &amp; Candy Shoppj!.
Gallipolis.
Muse
um
of
fl.rt,
.Columbus
Connections Festival in
Ashtabula.
Gathering,
state
Route
42.
5
Trax
Diner. Dennison Yard
Through
July
31
Museum
of
An,
E:
Broad
St
.,
Glasgow, Scot land. last .year
Through
Sept.
27
miles
south
of
Lexington.
Restaurant.
Pangrazio's
Alchemy lll -Art Exhibit, Columbus
and also s~w their recorclin g
(Tuesdays)
Jo~n sv ille.
Piua. 250 Antique mall and
Through Aug. 2~
"Room 23'' move to No. 2 for An Gallery, Snyder Bldg., UC
Conneaut
,
Lighthou
se
Sporbcard
and
Memorabilia
Uhric h Cemetery. featuring
Clermont,
Batavia.
(Thursdays)
two months on the EuroCruise-Ins.
Conneaut
Twp
..
Show.
Veterans
Memorial.
W.
special
Civil ·War monuments
Life of Lake. Erie Photo
Summer Music Festival ,
Americana Radio Chan.
and clay markers.
At 7 .p.m. in the mini-park Contest Display, The Great uptown parks, Main &amp; Hi gh Park, Lake Rd. &amp; Route 7, Broad St.. Columbus.
Conneaut.
Showtime
&amp;
Assoc.
Horse
For additio11al i•!fmmatiou.
Lakes
Marine
&amp;
Coast
Guard
streets.
Oxford.
·
on Coun Street, the Wailin '
Throqgh
DI'C.
31
Sl10w.
Delaware
·County
,·rmtacr
the Demrison Depot
Through Aug. ~7
.
Elroys of Athens will wrap up Memorial Museum. Walnut
Motocross Fairgrounds, Pennsylrania at
( '7-+0)
921-6776.
Trumpet in the Land Outdoor . Exhibit: ,
the Friday night Music in the Blvd., Ashtabula. .
c de/pt @tu.muret..
Pu shing the ·surface-Quilt Drama,
Schoenbrunn America, Motorcycl~ Hall of Ave. , Delaware.
' Park series.

·OHIO FESTIVALS AND EVENIS

Final Rhythm
on the River
series Friday

'
" Come on over to Bob's
.

.

the best tasting, freshest
produce in town... at
· reasonable prices,
satisfaction guaranteed!

AmErican Legion BasEball -

Gate hosts
entertainment
on the patio

tour Aug. 31
HUNTINGTON
The
Gigantour is a six: week festival trek co-headlined by
Megal'leth and Dream Theater;
who'll be accompanied by
Fear Factory, Dillinger Escape
Plan , Nevermore. Dry Kill
Logic, Symphony X, Life of
. Agony, and Point ,Pleasant,
W.Va., natives Bobaflex.
. The Gigantour will hit
Huntington's Big Sandy
Superstore Arena Wednesday,
, Aug. 31 at 5:30p.m.
Gigantour
follows
Megadeth's sold-out 2004
"Bl~ckmail The Universe" Tour
jn support of 2004's "The
System Has Failed"
Megadeth 's IOth studio album
-which debuted on the chans at
No. 18 and was critically hailed
as a brilliant return to fonn .
Bandmates Glen Drover
(guitar), James MacDonough
(bass) and Shawn Drover
(drums) will once again join
Dave Mustaine on the road.
Gigantour - whose name
wa' inspired by the classic 1960s
cartoon "Gigantor"- will crisscross North America. with stops
in amphitheatres and arenas in
. ' cities including Los Angel",
New York , Chicago. Detroit,
Toronto, Montreal. Washington.
Philadelphia, · Boston and
Minneapolis. among others.
Mustaine notes, "I think
people want an affordhble
altemati ve to the choices out
there - along the lines of a
.pure music festival - like
Monsters of Rock or C_lash of
the Titans." .
. Mustine handpicked the
bands for Gigantour. with a
focus.on musicianship.
"There are a few very successful tour&gt; out each summer
and in order to be significant, I
knew the first Gigantour had to
make an impact with top
bands.'' he said.
Tickets are set to go on sale
Saturday, July 23. at I 0 a.m. at
the Arena Box Office. all
Ticketmaster outlets, and online at www.ticketmaster.com .
For more infnrma.tion about

Bl

The·Daily Sentinel

INSIDE:
N8A news, Page 82
Tour de France, Page 86

Two COnvenient Locations:
114 Mile North Pomeroy/Mason Bridge Mason, WV
.
Phone (304) n3-5323
2400 Eastern Ave.
, (Across from KMart) Gallipolis,
(740) Mf&gt;-•171

Eighth District 1Clt!f',; .

Haislop, Post 128 shut out Logan
FBwill face
rival Athens
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMM@MYDAILYTRlBUNE.CDM

£;~t~ Otrtnot

ToarIfO./fftlf t
Sunday's results
1 ....,.. Feeney Benr1et1 det. Glouster, forfeit
2- Picke rington 16, Logan 1, 7 inn.
3- Atllens 11 , McArthur o. 7 inn·.
· Monday's results

4- Lancaster 8. Feeney Bannan 4
Tuesday's games
5- Pickerington 14, Atllens 2
6- Logan 9, McArthur 8, 11 inn.

7- Athen s del. Glouster, forteH
Wednesday 's games
A.T RA~ fiELD N ATHENS

8 - Feeney Benett 16, Logan 0
9 -lancaste r 12, Pickerington 11
Thursday's games
AT R,t.NNCW ftelO IN

ATHENS

10- Feeney Bennett vs. Atllens, 4:30
p.m .•

11 - Pickerington vs Winner Game
10, 7:30 p.m . ·

Friday's' championship game(s)
AT RAHNOW Fu::I.D N ATHENS
12 - Winner Game 9 vs. Winn er
Game 11 , 4:30p.m
13 - Winner Game 12 vs Loser
Game 12. 7:30p.m . (if necessary)

THE PLAINS
Luke
Haislop pitched a two-hit
shutout, and also added his
ninth home run of the season, as
Feeney Bennett Post 128 pounded
Logan
16-0
during
Wednesday's Eighth District
American Legion baseball tournament.

,

Logan was eliminated, while .
Post 128 earns a much-atlticipated rematch with Athens. The
two teams, which have already
had several peculiar meetings
this year, face-off again 4:30
p.m. today at Rannow Field.
Athens won a wild 18-17
decision in the most recent get.together; Post 21 owns four victories over Feeney Bennett and
is the on ly Eighth District team
that FB has not beaten this year.
As' for Wednesday, Post 128
used a seven-run fourth inning,
capped by Haislop's three-run
homer, to blow the game wide
open and break the spirit of a
Logan club that few expected to
still be around .
·
Post 78 entered the tournaJ' .
ment on a 23-game losing streak
·.&lt;. ,: t~
~•• ••
before upsetting McArthur on
.. , ...Tuesday; team purple ends its
. ..
rough campaign with a 2-27
.
·.
record.
FB ( 18-18) was held hitless
through the first three innings
•• • ,. " • • . "r4···
•:._
before the explosion in the
.fourth: five· more runs in the
fifth frame and two in the sixth
forced a mercy-rule ending after
.
.
Brad Sherman/photo
seven innings of play.
,
Matt Mooney singled twice Feeney Bennett's Chri ~ Myers slides safely int0 third base in front of Logan 's Jared Bunting (8) as the baseball approaches. Post 128 pounded Logan 16·0 to advance in the Eighth District tournament. FB continues its tourney run 4:30 p.m.
Please see Post 118. 86
today against Athens.

.

.

..~~~~):,~:~·:'.:~:~~~~. .&lt;:\: ·_
.· • oA

• - indicates el imination game

Sports BriEfs

MHS boosters
to meet today
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Hi gh School Aihletic
Boosters . will , meet
Wednesilay, July 20 at· 8:30
p.m. in the Memorial Field .
House at Mei gs High School..

MYL to host 3~on3 hoops tourney
MIDDLEPORT - A 3-on3 double elimination oasketball tournament will be held
on ·Saturday. August 13. at
General Hartinger Park .
Proceeds, from the tournament will go towards the
Middleport Youth League.
Check-in during the day of
the tournament is 9 a.m. and
the games will start at 10 a.m .
Regi stration forms are
available at Locker 2 19 in
Middleport. ' Middleport
Trophies and Tees or the
Recreation Center in Athens.
For more information, contact Britt Dodson at (740)
992 -11 n.

Maso~

County poised for W.Va. Legion tourney run

BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAlLYREGISTER.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - For the boys who
gave up their summers to
play the game they love, this
is what it is all about.
Playoff time is here for the
West Virginia American
Legion season with Mason

County ( 18-14, 4-0) heading
into its first round game
today against either Post 15
·or Post I 04 after earning a
flr&lt;t round bye .
The team' fini shed fohr
games above .500 but managed to sweep _its division
with a perfect 4-0 record,
earnmg them a tlrst round
bye.

Heading int o the Area
To.urnament in Parkersburg,
Mason Cmmty is bringin g
with them plenty of quality
pitching and an offense to
match on a team that con ~ ist s
of players from Wahama,
Point Pleasant. Ravenswood
and Ripley.
The pitching ~ taff cnnsi~ts
of top hi gh school hurlers and

•

Contact lnformatioQ
fll - 1·740-446·3008

l!·m•U - sports 0 mydailysentlnel.com
Sports SI1H

Brad SMrman, Sports Editor
(740) 44&amp;2342, ext. 33
bsherman 0 mydailytribune.com

Bryan 'walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446 -2342, ext 23
bwalters@mydallytribune.com

lany Crum, Sports Wrtter
(304J 875·1333. 8:&lt;1. 19
lc:rum~myda•lyregts,te r c~

three players who spent last
season pitching at the college
level.
At the tor of that li st is Josh
Whitlock (2-2). who saw 38
innings of action with a 4.91 ERA. -1 I strikeo uts. 423
.)trikes throw n and only giving up +4 hit s on the season.
Whitlock was also the top
hitler for I he team . having 46
hits with 3-1 RBi s and 6 home

run s and a .448 batting avertJge.

Just behind Whitlock was
Nate Adkins (3-3) who saw
37 innings and had a 5.27
ERA with 23 strikeouts and
giving up .:16 hits. Jon Ullom
(4-2) threw in 29 innings
throughout the season with

Please see Mason. B6

Ohio,State investigates
quarterback Smith for
possible rules violation
COLUMBUS (API - Ohio
Slate is iiwcstigaring whether
· tjUartcrhack Troy Smith hrokc

Smith also
was forced to
make restitution to a charity and sit out
the
team·~
2005 season
o p e n e r
a ga i n s t
M i a m .i
(Ohio) .

anorher· NCAA rule w hen he

attenueJ a football camp &gt;ptlt1\oreLI hy Tcnne:-.-..ec Titan~
qudncrback Steve McNatr this

Bengals sign fifthround draft pick
OTAdam Kieft
: CINCINNATI CAP)- The
Cincinnati
Bengals
on
Wedn esday sig ned fifthround draft pick Adam Kieft
of Central Michigan to a
Olree-year deal.
Kieft, an offensive tackle.
i5 .the . second 2005 pick to
sign with the Benga ls. The
oth'er is seve nth-rounder .
Jonathan Fanene, a defensive
end from Utah.

~ .

:-.ummcr.

Athletic
dcpallmcn t
&gt;pt.&gt;kesman Ste\:c Sn,tpp 'atd
on Wedncsdm that the school 's

· compliance ollice i:-.. im c ... li~al-

AP' photo

Reds' Adam Dunn hits a solo home run off Chicago Cubs pitcher Kerry Wood . ·
in the second inning Wednesday in Cincinnati.

Cincin~ati

Reds chop down Wood, Cubs
BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

---------~- ,

CINCINNATI - Kerry
Wood has &lt;I stiff shoulder.
The Chicago Cubs have a
-big problem .
Wood gave up solo
homers ttl Ken Griffey Jr.
and two others. then left
the ga me afier on ly three
i·nnings because pf more

shoulder woe$ Wednesday opment for a pitcher who
night, leaving the· Cub s has already tangled twice
with a much bleaker future with ,houlder prob lem&gt;
following their 9-3 loss to this .\ eawn. He wa' iimitthe Cincinnati Red,.
ed to three &gt;pring training
''The last thing we need starts because of hu"itis.
right now is for him to go and was on the di,abled
down." catcher Michael list from Mav 3 to June ~\1
Barrett said.
' " ·ith a strain~j shou lder.
Wood (3-3) couldn't ge t
In his fifth , tan sin ce
loose on a warm. muggy
Please see Reds, 86
tlight. an ominous devcl•

in" Sti1ith\ attendance at -the
ealnp. Snapp "ould not say if
Smith violated all) mlc .
NCAA mks a ll~)\\' p i a~ l!rs t0
attend educationa l or charitahlc
activities a' long as they don ·t
miss cia" and halt' \\Tilletl
· ·penniS&gt;ion from the sch&lt;Xll\

Smith

.Smit!i\ sta-

tt\s for the rest
of the up.:-oming &gt;cason ha, n' t
changed. Snapp said .
A mc's:-.af!C' \l?c king comment
"'" left wi'ih the NCAA .
Contacted by phone at her
Clc,·eland house. Smith's
mother. Tracy Smith. declined

Jthletic director.

· comment. •
The rub also tm)hibit playSmith's transgression with

crs from lending thetr names or the booster was one of nine
images tn commercial product&gt; charges le1·ied by the NCAA
that appear on promotional against Ohio State in May .
materials for these e1ents. and . Se1·en involved the men's basany money from these appear- ketball program.
ances must go to the educat1ott- · Another NCAA finding
. a! o~ chariwbic agency.
' involves an orthodontist
McNair hold' annual camps . accused of pr01·iding free and
in Nashvil le. . Tenn.. and di scounted services to · five
Alcorn. Mi"·· where he played women's basketball players.
college football at Aln&gt;m State.
Ohio.State has until Tuesday
It is not clear "hteh camp tn respond to the allegationsSmith attended .
ba,ically elaborating on quesLast year. Ohio State 'U&gt;- . tions unearthed durin&amp; the
pcnikd ·smnh from the .-\lamn lengthy NCAA irwestigat1on.
Bowl for accepting ah&lt;1lll S500
A hearing in front of the
fn1m a team holbtcr. After a NC AA infractions cnmmittee
length) NCAA inle,tigat inn,, i' " ·heduled for October.
·

.'

�'

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Thursday, July 21, 2005

-page B~ • The Daily Sentinel

Pistons hire Flip
Saunders ·as coach

NEW

YORK

W{ll"k

Flip Saunders
contende r.
He led the Timberwolves to
eight
stra ig ht
postseason
appearances. but that incl uded
seven tim-round exits before
the break.t hroug h to the
. Weste rn Confere nce final s
two seasons ago.
Last season, however, ttie
Timberwolves struggled over
the firs t three months o f the
season before Saunders was
tired, and they ended up missin g the pl ayoffs under rnte rim
coach Kev m McH ale :
Brown guided the Pistons to
the N BA cha mp ionship in
2004 and cmn e within one victory of repeati ng thi s year.
Throughout
the
seaso n.
Brow n - . who underwent h ip
. replacement su~ery that Jed to
a pro blem wuh nis b ladderm sisted he would return to the
Piqons if doctors deemed him
heal thy e noug h.
Bro\•n had three yea rs
re ma inrng on a live-year. $25
million contract. and a 'ource
with know l edg~ of the details
of th e severance package told
the AP that Brown .recc rved
about $7 m rllion.
Brown has already been
contacted bv New York
Knic ks
p res ide nt
lsiah
Thomas. who plan s to meet
with the Hall of Fame coach in
the commg days to gauge h rs

Brown d id not return calls
se~k in g comment Wedne sday.

Messages Jell for Prslons players C hauncey Brllups - who
p layed
for Sa t!nders at
Minnesota and Ri c hard
H ami lton were not immedrately returned Wednesday
night.
Team owner Bill Davidson,
a key player in the depa rture
o f Brow n , provided some
insight rnto his departure in an
inter view with WDI V- TV.
Brown had spoken during
the spring wi th the Cleveland
Cavali er s aboul possrbly
becomin g team president and
also told the New York Post in
the middle of last season that
coaching the Kni cks wou ld be
a "drcarn jnh ...
A sked w he ther Brown 's
~lctJo n s

ancered

h11n .

David son said:." J think a bet-

te r wonJ

i~

peeved. Ynu're cer-

tainly not happy when som e-'
thmg like th&lt;it happens."

Pa11ing ways w1 th Bro"'n
··wa ... kind or casv:· Davidson
saKI. ' There W&lt;ls too much

Larry Brown and not enough
Pistons l wasn't happy wi th

that. You · ve 1!01 tu understand
that \" hocvf=r coaches the
Pistnn s represents me. A nd
rm not go lllg to give ·(lhe
team and thei r fan s) some body

that \ not a good person."

AP Sport1 Write1

Lnrrr

Ult:t' 111 Detroit cmlfrllnflt'd to

thi~·

J'i.' f)Orf.

Larry

C.u,.. Cuunty, OH

decis 1o n

on

In One Week With Us .
.REA.CH OVE.R 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
\lrrthune
·l\.egtster
Sentinel
Your Adr (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
-C~a-·_I_I_To
__d~a__:_V..:.·_·_·_ __.:o:.:'...;F.;;a,;..;
x To (740) 446·3-ooF
· a;,.....---,.----=o~r~F=ax.:...T-=o-'&lt;7.:...4-=o.:....&gt;9:..:9.:c2·-=2~1s:..:7--.-

trying t ll persuade the 64-

ycar-old nomad 10 settle down
al Madison Square Garde n .
Knicks
pres id ent
lsiah
T homas spoke to Brown on ,the
telephone Tuesday r&gt;ight, just
Jiours after the Detroit Pistons
announced they were partrng
wavs• with the coach who led
thei11 to the N BA Fmals in each
of the past two seasons.
"They talked la st night and
agreed to meet in person rn the
next
few days," Kni c k s
spoke sman Joe Favorito sa id .
The New York Darly News
reported Wednesday that the
Knicks were prepared to offe r
B row n as muc h as $60 mi llion
over t1ve years·.
"It's too soon to have any
discussions along those lines.
'The ink hasn't even dried yet
(on hi s severance ~ack age
from the Pistons). ' sard
Brown's longtime agent, Joe
Glass. ''I'm hoping he'll take
advantage of the time o ff,
relax, refresh and revitalize."
The Knicks' ~ursuit o f
Brown will result 111 a longer
period of limbo tor interim
coach Herb Willi a m s, who
g uided the team over the frnal
43 games of the 2004-05 season aft er Le nny Wilkens was
ti red. William s' head coach in g
contract expires Jul y :l I ,
thoug h he remain s under contract to the Knicks as an a&lt;&gt; istant coach . for the upcom ing
season.
If Brown d ec rde s to 'turn
down the Knicks, o r il he
c hoo ses to wait a fe w momh s
betore d ec iding hi s next milVc,
all ind ication s point to the
Kni cks retaining Wilham s fo r
the upcoming season.
Williams, th ro ug h a team
spokes man, declined co m me n!. Brown did not immediate ly rcltlrn a call to his s um-

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
• Sbnt Your

Items
\\\01 \II \II \ I '

pie of months,"' Glass .•·mid. ··1

N .Y.
In the past, Brow n has publicly endorsed William s for the

think it'll be a cou ple of wee ks.
It certamly won' t be co uple of
days. "
·

Throug hout the season and
the plavoffs. Brown insisted he
wanted to return to the Pi ston s

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~allipolts ~ailp

American Leg1on Middle p o rt
Saturday, J u ly 2,3 at 6:30pm
Saturday Night playing Bingo
for FR!j:E
1s t &amp;2nd Pack FREE
All after 1st two packs
$5.00 each
Guaranteed $60.00 pe r game
Door Prize $750.00
Crank It Up $6,000 .00

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·----------- -' ------ --- ----------I

0\'t' l

.

.. •
••

•••
••
•
·'•
•
••

Mortgage

Ronald J . Chernek.
AHorney at Law
Attorney for Plaintiff·
Petitioner
P.O. box 968
Twinsburg, OH 44087

(330) 425-420t
(7) 14, 21 , 28, 18) 4, 11,
18
Real Estate

,Help Wanted

NOW
HIRING

•••
•
,,•

••

of any liens , and lhe
sale of said real
estate, and the proceeds of said sale
applied to the payment of Petitioner 's
Claim in the proper
order of its priority,
and lor such othei'
and further relief as is
lust and equitable.
The
Defendant(s)
named above ar~
required to answer on
or before the 15th Day
of September, 2005.
By: Reimer, Lorber
&amp;Arnovitz Co., L.P.A
Chase
Manhattan

Addition to Syracuse,
excepting six feet off
the north end of said

Help Wanted

l)leasant ll\.egt~ter
The Daily Sentinel
&amp;unbap :ar:tmes -~entinel
..• - - - - - -·- - - - - - ~ - - --------- -- -- ---•

Real Estate

Public Notice

(411 in Bridgeman 's

~otut

Name
•• Subscriber's
,.
'
'
•
Address
•

Public Notice

lot deeded by R.H.
Bridgeman to Issac
The Unknown Heirs,
Devisees, Legatees, Carleton as recorded
Administrators,
in Volume 43, Page
Exec..,tors
and
407. Deed Records of
Assigns of Mildred
Meigs County.
Hubbard aka Mildred The Pet1t1oner further
Mae
Hubbard, alleges that by reason
of defaull of the
Deceased, whose last
and whose present Defendant(&amp;) in the
place, of residence is
paymenl of a promisunknown will take
sory note, according
to ils tenor, the condinoticE lhat on April
t5, 2005 at 2:10p.m., tions of a concurrent
Chase
Manhatlan
morlgage deed given
to secure the payMortgage
Corporation filed its
ment of said note and
conveying the premcomplaint in Case No.
05-CV-038 in the ises described, have
been broken, and the
Court of Common
Pleas Meigs County, same has become
Ohio alteglng that the
absolute.
above-named The Petitioner prays
Delendant(s), have or that the Defendant(s)
claim lo have an Inter- named above be
est In the real estate required to an!!wer
d3scribed below:
· and set up their interSituated In lhe VIllage est In said real estate
of Syracuse, County or be forever barred
of Meigs and Stale of
Ohio, and bounded
and described as follows, to wit: Being Lot
numbered forty-one

'

Qtrtbune.

'

tyr male 1/2 Russell Temer
112 Pomeraman loves ktds
(304)882-3225
-2-m-,1-e_c_a_!S-,-,-,-..- old,
neutered &amp; declawed , very
friendly &amp; good with Chlldren (740)446 0392.

--'---'------

~~

700 Pon11011 \. A milabk

Now interviewing All Posit(ons
For Our Point Pleasant Location
· Open lnten·iews For .
Bartenders · Servers- Hosts- Cooks- Prep CooksDishwashers- Cleaning Crew

.
Please Apply@

JIVIDEN'S POWER EQUIPMENT
412 State Rt. 7 North ·
Gallipo l is, Ohio
7/21/2005 thru 7/23/2005
Between the Hours of 9am-12am &amp; lpm-Spm
Further Information Please Call (304)-786-03,11
Greal Food, Grea l People, Greai,,'ay
AC!vancemen! Opportun1t1es Available

Newly Constructed Home

3 BR., 2 Bath,
2800 Sq. Ft. Horrte
For Information Call :
7 40·441-0558
740-645·0838

Word Ads

Display Ads ·

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p . m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day'&amp; Paper
Sunday Jn - C~Iumn: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper '

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

74

POMEROY/MUliJLE

Trlbun.,..SIInt i n ei· R~:~wl•l•r

. any 1011 CM' expenM thai r .. ulla from the publication or om111lon olen advertleament Correcllon will be made In the lrrllavallable edition
ere alwaye conlldentlal •Curienl rale card applies. • All real aalate advartiaamente ant aublaft tu the Fed.,.al Fair Housing Acl u l 1i68.
I wanted ada
EOE standards We will not knowingly
advenlalng In vlola!lon ol the law

Days

10

lwright@lc.net

Attention!
Loca l company offerrng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
grams. tor you to buy your
home 1nstead of renting
·
. • 100°'o fmancrng
· Less than perlect credrl
accepted · '
· Payment could be the
same as rem
Mortgage
locators
(7 40)3,67 -0000

7/16 al !he Health

y

ARDSALE-

.Beautiful krttens to good L._ _.;G;::Allli'O:;:;:;~US:.:;;;_,.I
home. Afte r s·oo call 740~ ...,
992-7562
85 Arnold Dnve , Brdwell
Free to good home Bwk old (bnck house) Fnday.July 22.
Black Lab mix pupp1es 1 8-3 &amp; Saturday, July 23, 8female, 1 male (740)367· 12 Brand name adult &amp;
baby (0-24 months) cloth•ng.
0624
strollers, toys, diaper geannie, baby ttems, Boyd Bears,
LosT AND
food dehydrator, craftS, elecFOUND
trrc dartboard, old drill press,
· nems.
Iots ot m1sc.
$, 0.00 Reward
'

r

For arrest&amp;prosecut•on
rnformahon lead•ng ol
to - - - - - - - - the
the person who stole 18ft
tra1ler w/racks. grey canvas Amby lane Mu ll! tamlly
top w/treated outside furn1- E&gt;tercise equipment. looseball, baby and toddler g1rl,
og pen , clothing, much
Tumbling
are a
Call more. Sat. 9am
Gallipolis Poti(le Department
(740)446-1313. All lnlorma·
trOr1 IS confidenhal
Moyjng out of the CountrY
sale
Furniture. appliance .
Found In Middleport, Class
garden ,
nng. Call to ID 740-992- housewares,
linens, knick-knacks, Jewel3412
ry, books, etc. ~orne clothing
Lost at Kyger Creek Bay (small ladies) 60 Garfield
fie ld week ol July4tll Ave InSide &amp; Outside 7/22Redlblack baseba ll ,bat 7/23, B.OOam
Sentimental g1ft (740)3792633.
Lost. Sandhill Ad/Regency Yard sale 102 Debbte Onve ,
Apt area Orange/White Fri. 22nd &amp; Sat. 23th, BamTabby Cat. no co llar 5pm. M~ers &amp; tools
Answers to ~Abby" (304)675·
3502 Reward

-----d

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725·
Announcement ....................................... :.... 030
Antlqueo ....................................................... SJO
·Apartments for Rent ........ -...................: ...... 440
Auction and Flea Market. ............................. 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories· -·-······.. ·············· 760
Auto Repair,.,,,. ,,,,,,,,,,, ,.. ,., ... ,................. no
Autos for Sale .............................................. 71 0
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............... -............. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 5~0
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty ............ ..................... 210
Business Tralntng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks :......................................... 010
Chlldl£1derly Caro ............. , ........................ 190
ElectrlcaiiRelrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent. .................................... 480
Excavating .. ,................................................ 830
Farm Equlpment. .............................. :.......... 6t0
Farms for Rent ................ .. -.......................... 430
Farms for Sale ................................... _......... 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490

For Sale .. , ............................................-........ 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms .........................: .............. 450
General Haullng ...........................................850

l)of.l'l

You

JuS1 ~Vfii

YARDSALE·
PI~ PI..EA..ioiANr

· \

Sale Fn &amp; Sat JLily
22 nd &amp; 23rd 220 5th &amp;

CJ

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IU BU\'

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Silver and Gold Coms
Proofsets, Gold A1ngs, Prs1935
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Com Shop, 151 Second
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openmg
Warehouse Associate, qualIfiCatiOns mclude but not timlied to ab1hty to lift 501bs .
drive a standard sh1ft trans·
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Must be available to work
Monday thru Fnday Send
Resume to TSC 13 c/o Po1nt
Pleasant Aeg•ster
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200 Ma1n St
Pleasam WV 25550

The

ALLIANCE

Gal lrpohs Da1ly
•s accepting
resumes for a lull hme
ou1srde sales representa·
live to JOrn our sales team
and to manage an estab·
llshed account lrst wh1le
callrng on new accounls
The successfu l candrdate
w1ll be a diSClplrned. self·
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understands th e Importance of developrng
strong, rnuiUally beneficra( busrness relatiOnships w1th our accounts.
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TRAINING CENTERS
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Matenals proVu:led.
Free mformalion pkg 24Hr
80 1-428·4649
An Excellent way to earn
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Call Manlyn 304-882-2645

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STNA'S 0\IEirbrook cen1er ~=:Ot:;'l'l;ll:rn;JN:r:n:·~
rs currently acceptrng applications for full-time STNA"S
•NOTICE•
7A-7P, and 7P·7A, and 3A·
HIO VALL EY PUBLISH
3P··----·
shlfts are avarl· lNG CO. recommends til a
able.
If you are mterested
0 u do busme.:;s wr lh pea
.
please come rn and 1111 out
le you know, and NOT t
an application at 333 Page end money through th
Street. M•ddleport Please mall unlrl you have investl
No Phone calls. EOE
aled the otfenn .
Super a Gallipolis is currently acceptrng apphcat1ons for
HOUSE KEEP ING
No
Rhone cal ls, apply tn person
Qualified applrcants will be
contacted for an intervrew
ThiS IS a last paced pOSitiOn
w1th orgamzation and eye tor
deta•l a mus1

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Borrow Smart Contac
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Town of Harllord accept1ng
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resumes lor Water Off1ce
flairs BEFORE you reft
Clerk. must have General
ance your home o
Office Skrlls Computer
blarn a loan BEWAR
Sk1lls: Payroll. Please marl
f requests for any larg
Re sumes lo Town ol
dvance payments o
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lle Office ol Consume
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Ha•rs toll free at 1-866
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ortgage broker o
Heatmg &amp; Coolmg bus1ness
pro~rt
tS look•ng for Installers W1th ende r ' rs
1 year of hands on and a rcensed (ThiS IS a putll
erv1ce announcemen
lechnrcal of 1 year Salary
de pends on expenence , rom the Oh iO Valle
Send resume to HVAC P.O ~P;
ub:I;;,";"::C:o:m::a:o:)::~
Box 572, Kerr, OH 45643
A'

PRon-:swJNAL

Wanted · .Fronl desk clerk
Apply 111 person at Holiday
Inn- Gallipoli s No phone
ca l ~ please

The rdeat candrdate wrll
have sate experiEince For
confidential mtervtew.
please sind re~ume and Wueless Gallery now hrnng
cover let1er to Gall1polls lul l and part trme help Cell
Darly Tnbune Attn . Jrm phone experience helpful
Freeland. 825 Th1rd Ave , but not necessary For InterVIew , consideratiOn ,r;all
Gallipolis, Oh10 45631
(606)928·1608 or email
Paramedics &amp; EMT s wirelessgallary@ zoom1nter·
needed. Apply at 1354 net net or ma•l resume to PO
Box 6792 . Huntrngton WV
.Jackson P1ke G.allrpolrs
25773

AVQNI All Areas' To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears. 304Happy Ada ....................................................050 · 675-1429.
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640
Bookkeeper
wantedHelp Wanted ................................................. 110
linmed•ate opening. PartHome lmprovemants ................................. --810
lime-Hours and days off !lex
Homes for Sale ............... ............................. 310
1bte. Salary based on exper1 ·
Household Goods ....................................... 510
ance
Background
1n
Houses for Rent .................._ ....................... 410
accountrng &amp; Ou1ckbooks
In Memorlam .........:.•:............. -..................... 020
preferred Contact Jack RifeInsurance ........................ -.....:.:.................... 130
Treasurer- (740)446-4653 or
L.awn &amp; Gorden Equlpment ........................ 660
(740)446-9010 cell phOne , F.\ay &amp; Son·s Complete Car
Llveslock. ................................... ,,,,,,,,..... 630
(740)339-2450 .
Cleaning, Help Wanted
lost and Found ..... :...............................1•• 1... 060
-·
must have valid Drrvers
Lots &amp; Acreage ..........................,................. 350
License (304)675-7375
Mlscollaneouo:.............................................170
Emp!oyu Ngdad
Mlecellaneoua Merchandlu .......................540
REM Options In St. Albans1s ANILPN'S---Overbrook can·
Mobile Home Repotr, ..................................86~
currently accepting applica· ter •s currently accept1ng
Mobile Homes for Ront ............................... 420
tlons tor a Drrect Sen1rce appl fCatrons for LPN'S and
•
Mobile ljomoo for Sate......................... , .....320
Employment In the Pt. AN'S
7A·7P and 7P-7A
Money 10 Loan ............................................. 220
ShiltS
are available !I you
Pleasal"l area tor a yoUng
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeloro ..........................740
adul1 female with develop- are interested, please come·
Mualcollnstrumento ................................... 570
mental delay. Must be 1B 1n and fill out an app I.•cat•on
Poroonals ................................................,,, .005
years of age, hBve a valid at 333 PaQe Street.
Pota for Sale,, .. ,,,,,................................. 580
dnver's license. ' and be Middleport , or call and
·
H 11
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ....................................820
screei'M!d througn a cnm1nal speak
Wtth
o •e
Profooolonol Servl co1 ............., ........ ,, .. ,.... 230
background
check Bumgarner, LPN . Stall
Radio, 'IV &amp; CB Ropalr ........... , .................. 180
Weekday hOurs des1red Development EOE
Root Eotato Wonted ..................., ................. 380
Part-t1me pas1tlon avarlable
Schoololnotructlon .....................................150
with potentiallo become fiJII- AN'S/LPN'S needed for 100
SHd , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
tlme .
Contact Nancy bed sk1lled nursing facility
' Situations Wontod ....................................... 120
Gordon or Crista Hill tor wittl
excellent opportunrty lor
Spoco for Ront ..........:.......... ........... .... ,........460
more lnformatio~ (304)768challeng
ing and rewarding
Sporting Goodo ....................................... ,... 520
5575
expenence
Great start
SUV'o for Sale .............................................. 720
Full Trme Help Wanled At 35 rates and excellent regUlator
Trucks for Sole ............................................ 715
Adult Vtdeo &amp; Book Store . comp li ance
hrstory.
Upholstery ............,,,,,,,,.......................... 870
Evenmg shift &amp; M1dn1ght Do lnt~reSted
candtdates
Vono For Soto............................................... 730
Not Call Store
Call shOuld apply 10 Rocksprings
Wanted IO Buy ..........,,,.............................. 090
(304)549·5696
Road
Pomeroy. Ol'l•o
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllao ......,..,,,,... 620
.
eeded
45
769
EI1end1care
Wanted To Do .... ,,,, ......... ..............: .......... 180
1 Serv1ces. Inc Is an Health
Room a~endam n
equal
Wonted lo Rent.. .......................................... 470
housekeeprng. Applf rn per- ·opportunrty employer that
Yard Sola- Golllpollo..........,........................ 072
son a1 Holiday Inn 577 St encourages
workpla ce
Ya;d Sato-Pomoroy1Middlo ....................... :.974
AI 7N. G8II Ipo1 rs No phO""'
'"'" d1verslly MIF ON
Ya•d Sola-Pt. Ploasont ................................ 076
calls, please
Giveaway..................................~ ...................040

11'\\'\(1\1

110

·I L,• _H£L_·.r.w•••'N'•I•l:•n-'

OUT SIDE SALES
REPR ESE NTATIV E

' FINANCING A\l,ot,ILABlE
'jOB PLACEMENT •
' ENFIOLLING NOW

1

D

Need help lor Park1nson s
pahent rn Maryland Lrve m
mce couples home. All
expenses .paid , plus salary
Need dr1vers licenses Call
(740)286·0290, leave mes·
sage

LEARN
TO
DRIVE
' FULL TIME

~

~~__:·_:t=~' '1~~~==~~:::=::~,1----~J

Brown St. Mason.WV __
=.::::.::..:::.==.::.:.:.:....

r.u

11

;

0
0

MOVIng

l

1

0

::::.=-------,--

'"

\'

O

Garage Sale Thur 21 Frr 22
9 till ? At 2 Eckard Chapel
Road

~~;;;;;~~;,..--...,

/~

VJI/IIDovJS ~

3 112 m•les out Sandhill Ad .
top ol hrll past Oshei-Road,
tools.clothes .seve ral Child
car-sea,ts·Thur/Frl!Sat B-?

Yard Sale Sat July 23, 8·?
81 Hawthorne Ln bellmd
Natrona! Guard

/

t::UoAr-l

L.-----~:,.,J .

H OI\IES
IUR SALE

Dept Ye ll ow cal wtlh orang e

r1!;1!'""------.,
r

tJ it

All Display: 12 Noon 2

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARDSALE-

,_ VISA

•
1

POLICIES: Oh iO Valley Publllhlng reeervee the right to edit. re]11ct , or cam;;ela ny ad atony tlm1 . Errora mu tt be reported on the l1rel day
wltl be reepone1ble for no more lhan the colt or thft apace occupied by !he error and only lhrt llrat lnaertlon. We

Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Descriptton • Include A Price • Avo1d Abbreviation•
• Jndude Phone Numi:M'r And Address When Needed

• Adt Should Run 7

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT!

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads '
.1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid•

G1ganttC Movtng Sale July
21 22,23 from 9 OOam 1111
stripes 740·245 ~9740 , 441· 6::oopm. 1 Mile on 143 at
.Q53B, 740·2B98
Mary Layne on Delong.
Road
Ae fr~ga tor white
WICker furniture~ Home
YARD SALE
Interior Lots of toys-d1she s,
~~::;::::::~ pots &amp; pans. Lots of large
clolhtn Call 740-992-1439
Lost

I

LEGAL NOTICE

or older?

rI

rr.-------·
GIVEAWAY

,
.
AP photo
Det ro it Pistons coach Larry Brow n speaks to the medi a dunng
a news conference rn Auburn Hills, Mi ch.,in th is file photo.
'
'
Knicks' head coaching job, and if doctors deemed him hea lthy
in comme nts to New York enough. H e under went two
reporters o n Tuesday nigh t he major su rgica l procedure s dursou nded uneasx with the · ing the season . the n h ad a third
prospect of po ss rbly replacing proced.ure to address a. bladder
Wrlhams.
co ndr lron s hortl y alter the
But Thomas has a lread y Prsto n s lost to San A ntonio in
made it c lear who he wo uld G,rme 7 of the N BA F inals.
prefer to ha ve at the he lm. and
A ll along. Brown said he
rt 's a safe bet that the Knicks wouldn't want to lead another
would find a place in the o rga- NBA team from the sideli ne .''
nizati o n for Will iam s, one of But Bro wn also to ld the New
their most Joyal and longest York Post in the mi ddle o l: last
tenured employees.
season that Goac hin g the
" It 's early, an d there arc a Jut Knick s would be a "dream
of thin gs that can happen.' ' job."
Glass said . " A lol of people are
With hi s departure from
concentrating on lsiah and lhe D e troi t now fmalrzed. that
Knr cks, and I wouldn't want to d ream cou ld be a lot closer to
be in (Brow n' s) shoes. an swe r- becoming realit y. The next ste p
ing ' Where . are you goi ng will likely come a fter Thomas
nnw '"'
and Brown have lhe ir face- to· "Things take the ir natural face meetirig.
co urse. and we' ll see where
" l don't think it 'll be a co u-

mer home in East Hampton. this goes.''

1-

/}e-acllf;,e.f'

Oftfee-llowc-.f'

~HOP TI-t~

Are you 65

I

coamtt.. uke

h rs luture 111 the next couple of
wccb, a nd the New York
Kn r4s are already hard at

'

•

County Otl

No One "
ElaeCanl

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Mt~p

We Cove
Meigs, Gellle,
AnciMuon

he expects th e une mployed

coach to make a

Bill Blair m interest in repl'.H: ing interim
December 1995 and helped coac h He rb Wilhams .

.

CLASSIFIED

Brown\; agent said Wednesday

for

tum one of the NBA's most
lacklu ster franc hi ses mto a

\lrrthune - Sentinel- l\.e

BY CHRIS SHERIDAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

plans to announce the hiri ng ~it

over

2005

Knicks to meet face-to-face
with Brown in coriring days

Flip Saunders' new team is
Larry Brown's old one.
The Detroi t Pistons wasted
no time Wednesdav repla&lt;.:ing
th e ir deposed 64-yea r-o ld
bench leader. hiring the former
coach o f the Mi nnesuta
Timberwolves to a fou r-year
contract worth ahout $20 milli o n plus incenti ves.
The hiring of Saunders and
the tenns of his comract were
confirmed by th ree · league
sources w ho spoke on condrtion of anonym ity because o l
the sensiti vr ty of the ti nanci.rl
inform ation a nd the team's
a news con ference Thursday.
Following daylong talks
between Pi sto ns team presrdent · • Joe
Dumars
and
Saunders' agent, the deal
which includes more than $6
million in incentives - was
fin a lized earl y Wednesday
evening .
The deal cam e some 24
hours after the Pistons reached
a severance agree ment wuh
Brown, who Jed Detroi t to the
NBA Finals in each of the past
two seasons and is a lreadv
being courtecf by the 'lew
York Knic ks.
Saunders interviewed wrth
several team s during the plavoffs, ilearly all of whi ch tilh!d
their coaching vacancies with
oth~r candidates. He was due
to make more than $5 millio.n
in the upcoming seaso n fro m
the Timberwol ves, who tired
htm in February.
Saunders ha d the secondlongest tenure among NBA
coaches before he was tired,
second to Jerrv Sloan, who has
coached the U tah Jazz since
1988.
The Pistons al so were interested in hiring former Seattle
coach Nate McMillan , w ho
dec ided not to wait o ut the
protracted
proceedings
betw een Brown and the
l;'i stun s and c hose instead to
take the head coaching job
with the
Portland Tmil
Blaze rs.
In ' 9 1/2 seasons wi th
Mrnnesota, Saunders had a
record ol 411 -326. He took

Thursday, July 21,

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

C
C
l
GIl
a po 11• IOarnrTo H011mel
age
(c areers C se
Cal l Today'740·446·4367
1-soo- 214 -0452
www.gatllpoJ•scareercoliegecc;rm
Acc1edrted Member .1\celtii•t•nlil
Council lor ln(!ependenl C~lleg••
''!O
"'r"'::::""":':.:'~
";::
•a::,__ _...,
•~
170
1
I
MlliiCEIJAI\'EOUS
,
,

°

Ca1
Port for Sale
18Ft.X21Ft. enclosed, 8Ft
doors, $1500.00 304·7735390
DIRECTV
FREE Home
s Y, 1am
en1erIat·nm en1
,
1
FREE Equrpmen l'ln d 1ns19 11
" 145 chan up to tour rooms
nets 529.00 a month. Ask
how 10 gel FREE HBO
MAX. and STAAS 1-800·
~
52;;;3;,.-7;.;5;;5,;,
6;.;1;,.r
o ;.;d;;e,;;l•;,.•ls;;..__,

CHILiiELDERCARELV

~1\11

f!JO

I

°'

W11! care for elderly in therr
home, day-hme 110urs
(740)992·7818

Mosn .r: HoMt&gt;&lt;

All rent esl.e.te advertising
In this newspaper is
subJect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to
advertise'','any
preterence, llmllation or
diacriminallon based on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
orrg1n, or any rntent1on to
' make any suet!
preference, timJtatron or
discriminadon.~
This newspaper wil l not
knowingly accept
adverttsemenls lor real
estate wtlich is rn
vlolallon ol!he law Our
readers are hereby
Informed lhat all
dwellings advertised 1n
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.
For sale by owner Tra1ler &amp;
lot at 109 Cedar Slreet,
Gallrpoils at end of GAHS
football/reid Cal l (419)5334195 for delarls
Lovely ranch.slyle home on
2 1.'4 Seres ol land 3 baaroom . 1 5 batn large hv•ng
room with beaulrfut hand
parnted room w11t1 beautrful
hand parnted munat on wall
New
refrrgeratorlstove.
washer/dryer mcluded New
hot water healer rn basement Total electrrc home 36
years old A steal at
559,900 13922 St. At. t60
Vmtorl. Ohm Call Harold at
ERA Reallors (740)384
5177 .
No Down Payment Possrble.
1900 square fl house, 3
bedroom . 2 bath full basement new heat pufnp, sets
on 3 acres SA 7 Easlern
School Drstrrct (7.40)985·
4321

20

1990 14;.;70 3 bedroom tra•l·
er with CIA krtchen apphances mcluded Must be
moved (740)286-6851
97 Fleelwood 14)(70 total
electric Will help With dehvery Includes central arr Only
$10 995. Cal l (740)385·
9621

MORll .IC H0!\1&gt;:'

FOR Rt:NT

tOR SALt.

New 14x70 3 bedroom 2
bath Only $198 63 per
Capecod 1n the country 4 month . Call Elarne (740)385bedroom . 1 acre level lot· 2434
beautrful- ct1arrnrng- spaCIOUS Family room. formal New 3 BR Home Only
IIVmg room and more $189/mo Includes ale delivery and set up (740)385(7 40)379 9887
4367
o 1 e ome
LA. K1tchen
Deck&amp;Burldmgs. Au See a
76 Oshel Ad

8eaut1lul rrver v1ew m
){a nau ga Ideal for 1-2 pea
pie No pets. please
Apphcatrons bemg taken
Call (740~41·0181
Nrce 28R mobrle home tor
rent smm ~rom 1own
$375/mo 2 references &amp;
deposit requrred Call af181
Spm (740)446 9342.

14'10

APARniE~TI
FORRLW

1 and 2 bedroom apart•
ments furnrshed and JnturniShed . secunty deposrt
requued no pets. 740·9~n2218

1 bedroom apartment rn
Gallipolis near Wai·Mart
Ut1htres rncluded 1740)245·
5555

Trarler 1982 3 bedroom. 2 - - - - , - - - - bath, CIA stove ref . d1sh 1 bedroom· Apt
washer $7 500 (74(1)441· Pleasanl 1 bedroom !;-louse
8976 or (740)645-6734
Gallipolis. HUD (740)4462200 or (740)709-0062
,8l SINI-...""
1

2 bedroom apt newtY
remodeled, SR 160. JUSt
pasl . Holzer 8460/mo
Of11ce Burtdrng Wl2 apart- (740)441 -0194 or (740)441 ments on 2nd Ave, tn• 1057.
Ga llrpolis Avg rental of - - - - - - - - apartmenls St 200/month 2 bedroom apts Porter
Pnce $120,000 w1l l consrder $400 Water, trash &lt;'!. sewer
land contract w/money pd. Call (740)367-7746 or
(740)367-70 15
AN!l 8 UtLDIN(;S

2 bedroom 1 b&lt;llh water
pard, $350 monlh . $350
securrty depOSit
Call
For sale R1vertront acreage, (740)446-3481
around 6 acres on Rt 7. nrce
place for a new home Call 2 BR washer dryer 'hooKup.
(740)446-8595
after heat pump/AC
1 BA cabm heat pump also
900pm
storage bUIIdmg (740)286·
Land. 2 ac m/1 water &amp; sep· 2240 or (740144 1-0117
Ire Patrrol area (740)379· BEAUTIFUL
APART·
2540
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
RMI . E&lt;;lXll.
ESTATES . 52 Westwoou
WANTFJJ
Drrve lrom S344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; movres Call
I Buy Homes- Local person
Equa l
ouys homes Confrdentral. 740·446·2568
Housrng Oppor!unrly
Outek cash J1m 740-9926300 No calls after 9
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Kl \I \1 S
TownllOuse

HOl'SI•.' i

HJRRE\T

apartments

and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441-1 11 1
for apphCiltlon &amp; rnformatron

Furnrshed upslatrs 3 rooms
2 bedroom hou se on &amp; bath Clean. rei. &amp; dep
Ne1ghborhood
Road . requrred No pets [74014.46·
Gallipolis
,. S425 'mo 1519
(740)441-0194 or (740J44tGraCIOUS hvrng. 1 and 2 bed1057
room apartments a1 V1llage
Manor and
R1versrde
Apartments 1n Mrddleport
From $295·$44.4 Galt 740992·5064 Equal Housm g
Opportuntlrcs

New garage ap1 10 Crown
C1ty
Rrver
Vrew
Washerldryer ctrshwasher
garage disposal C A 3 Br
Garage not rncluded
(740)256-6BJ6

... 1\11

same as rent
Mortgage

Hmtrs
tuRSALE

Srn&lt;XlL~
~Uct10N

1190

SF:N\'lct:o&lt;

20

Locators

(7.!0 }3 ~&gt;7·00011

11 2 Pleasant Street 3·
Bedroom, 1 112 Bat hs.
Fam•ly Room. D1n1"g
36 en rII ICO tn e Ad
" Room,
Full Basement, Sto rane
Gall1potrs Oh1o
Bldg Garage, New Cenl"ral
ThOmas Estate
A1r Cond, New Wrndows
(740)446·0720
(3041675 _4034
- - - - -- - - - ' - --.,..----- - ~
l
140t Cedar St. 3 Bedroom. Spill evei House for Sale
1 t/2 Bath Corner lot. new 2913 Brook Orrve Pornl
Roof, move ·m condition Pleasant All E1ec1r1c 2000
new Carpet and f loon ng Sq Ft wfo. Stove 24 A.'G
S10rage BU1Id1ng. Fenced 1n Pool 70~~:1 t2 lc 1 579.900
Back Yard (304)675·7708
l304i~75·8993

---~-----

Avarlable Aug 1 2005 tO
m1nutes frvm town 28R
house No msr de pets
A 1
•6
h
pprcatron ° mont lease
m1n1mum requrred 5400
mo nth
5350 deposrt
(740)441·1489 betwee"
"
9pm-10pm
-,--,------Brand new 2 bedroom
house m Gaillpolr s C A
laundry 1oom. slovelrelflgerator furn rsl'leCI S55Q,mo
(740] 441 ·01 9~ or (740)44 t ·
t057

Pleasanl Valley Apartment
Are now taking Apphcatrons
for 28R 3BR &amp; 48R
Applrcat•ons( arlo taken
Monday thru Fnday !rom
900 AM _4 PM Offrce 15
Localed al 1151 Evergreen
Drrve Pornt Pleasant WV
Phor1e No rs (304 )6755806 E H 0

Tara
Town"ouse
''
Apartments Very Spacrous
2 Bedrooms C'A, 1 112
Bath Adult Pool &amp; Bal;ly
Pool PatiO. Start S3S5/Mo
Na. Pets Lease . Plus
Securrty Deposrl Rsqu1red
,74m44 6·348 1
: : - - : - - : - - - -21 Evans Heights 2 BA ful l www.orvb.com
Twrr\ Arvers Tower rs accepl·
basement Pnce negotiable
Home Listings
House lor rent 1n. Pomeroy rng sppiJCatron s •or wartrng
6 ·_:
68
~(7:_40
:::,::i2::5.:_
.:_4::6:__ _c:- Lrst your Mme b)' calling no pels 1740)992·5858
hsl tor Hud-subsrzed . 1· br
3 Bedroom, 1 Bath FtJII .
~740}446-3620
aoanme11 call 675-6679.
Pome roy 3 bedroom gas EH0
Basement, Garage, remod··
.
furnace 5450 deposrt $400 r.:~~------..,
eled m &amp; out Aac•ne Area
Vrew photos/mfo onime
""'r
month. 1740)698-6783
SP\,..r
740-949-t 372 SS7 000
~
· ~ o:.
Its a Steall• 4 bedroom 2
20 'IORil.E Ho~U·~
foON. RE.'\'T
3br. 2ba. pool garage stor·· bath 2 car garage New
FOR RJ.-;.'\T
OowntONI1 OffiCe Space· 5
age bldg. appliances, Ha,en WV Code 6505 or
roor'r sutle $650 mo 1 room
St30.000. 5 m11es from 33 call (3:04)882·3368
2 bedroom A. C ver'w' nrce otf ce- S225 mo 2 room
on At 681 (740)592-0426
no pets •n GaH1pOirs sw1e 5250 mo Secur1ty
l\ IOHU .E IIO,tE"''
Fo sale 2 bed oom ho 50
1740\446 2003
mR
u
.
1
aeposrt requrred You pay
r
r
u
smgle balt'l , wrthtn City llmrls
ut1lrtles All spaces very nrce
asking· S60.000
Call 5 Homes under s 1o 000 38r Trarler w relr1dg &amp; Eteva1or Call (7401446·3644
Slave washer &amp; drye r to1 aooomtmenl
(740)446-8595
all&amp;~&lt;
Wrll delrver (740)385 7671 rr,cluded 1304!576-2934
9 QOpm

i

s...

�•

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

t

l.r__FORi i i 'Ei ~ALEi isi o -

.:~

For Lease,: Office or retail
spaces In very good condition. Downtown Gallipolis.
Approx 1600 sq. tt. ear.h . 1
or 2 • baths. Lease pr!ce'
negollable to encourage
. .new
~usin ess.
Call
'(740)446-4425

or

1 I '

, , \ (, \ I

'I \

I

o

WOWII OOk Financing tor up

to 50 months oo Q!j8UtyinQ
1999 Dodge Ram tnK:k VB, 2001 Custom Panzer, 2000
blaCk &amp; sliver, 87,000 ~~etua l miles,
$13,800;
2003
miles has camper lop. Hundred Annv. Heritage.
(740)256-6505.
600 miles, $17,000: 2000
Dyna W ide Glid~ 16 ,000
200 1 Ford Explorer Sport miles.
$t 1.500:
2003
Trac 4x... 81 ,000 mlles. "'auto, Hundreti Annv. Road King ,
air,
PW,
AMIFM/CD, Gold Key pacl&lt;age w/$7000
while/black . Atter .5:00pm extra chrome, 300 mile&amp; ,
call (740)4~-3044 .
$17.900: (740)992-6S20.
-------~-- 740· 992· 2670
.
21!104 Ford F-150 Supercraw
4x4 . FX4 off road package, 2002 Yamaha 125 L, FMF
5.4 VB , 6-CD cha nger. run- exhuast pipe. St450.00
nlng bOards, po:wer. every- 740·992-27 52
ttring, "Tonneau CQVer, tow
2003 45:0 Foreman good
package 27 000 miles
condition, tots ol extras.
excellent condition. N.A.D.A.
(307)675·6370.
Book Value $30,375, sell IQr
$28.900. (740)446·8217.
I!O!I.ll&gt; &amp; MO'RIRS

(740)446-

:S936

Rabbits $5 each {7 4 o) 441 •
:Private mobile home space 09 18.
!mr--~-----,
.riO
ALTiffi
:in Centenary. Close to ---:----:-:---:-:-c:
~
G.ree n School. $140/mo. Schnauze rs, Miniature, AK C L---~ii~ll'"iioiiSAiiiiii.Eiiio-r
(740)446· 4053.
mates. Salt &amp; pepper. 2
shots, vet . ctwaked $300. 1960 Thunderbird
Black
\II IH II\ \lll'\1
(740)696·1085.
e~eterior w1th new paint. New
.black 7 wh ite in ten or.
~~&amp;
10
Ho~SEH! 11 JJ
Aech r6me bumpo:~rs . Engine
Vf:t:HAIILES
'
G!XIIJN
compartment de tailed . Wire
wheels . Fram e·up show car.
\
Hill's
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Cla rk H8tl-runners $ 1 00 lb. cab· Price $2S ,500.00 .
Ch,ape l Road, Porter, Ohio bage SOt por head. Call Automotive Classic Car
Re storation&amp; Parts, Inc .
(7 40)446· 7444 1-8 77-830- {740}645·050 1.
9 162 . Free Estimates . Easy
Phone :
740-949·2217 .
financing , 90 days same as T;;une blflckberlle&amp;. u-can - Website: www.hil lsresto.com
cas h. l/1sa/ Master Card pick any11me at Virgil's Berry
Drive- a- little s.ave alot.
Patch, 1 m1le east of 1965 Mustang Fastback
Rangoon Re):l e:.tarlor: btac~
Thompsons Appl ,1anc e &amp; Syracuse on ST . Rt. -124.
interior. 6 cycle , 3 speed, air
Repair-675-7388 . Fo r sa te .
cond1ti6n1r1g. radio, good
FoHSALE
re-conditioned automatic
d11ver. · Rust tree AZ car.
washers &amp; dryers. rel ngera·
Price: $19,000 ..00.
Hill's
tors, gas and electric
18 foot hard side swimmin\;1 Automo tive Cla ssic Ca r
ranges, air cond1t1oners . and
pool w1lfl sand l11ter. Never Restoration &amp; Parts, Inc.
wringer wa shers. Wilt do
Ba shan
Road .
used. $300.00 740·949- 29670
repairs on mater brands 1n
Racine, Ohio 4577 1. Phone
2346
shop or at your hOme.
740 -949·22 17,
Website:
I \In I "il 1'1'1 II"
www.llill sresto.com
Used Furniture Store, 130

.

owner
Leisa 's Antiq ues· boughtsold at Alligator ,lAcks Flea
Mar ket. Rt-7 . Pomeroy.,furnl ture, primitives. bollle s.
(740,1992-5086

Mlsci::I.IANHILJS

'""' Jeep ":"·'

Restored. $7.500 OBO.

Call (7401441 -0121 .

AERATION MOTORS
Plows- John Deere 3 bot·
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In toms. 3 pt hitch. $550 161t.
Stock. Gall Ron Evans, 1hydraulic Hog traile r, $1 .800.
800-537-9528
{740)44 1-0918

s,so.

e.

Dodge, under 20 ,000
1992 F1 50 4x4 360c 5 mites,
20 11
American
speed . runs good, $1 ,860. Crui ser body. tully · con(740)44 1-0918.
tained. eve rything power,
ve ry
good
condition .
1999 Blazer 4x4 LT. ori ginal S27,700. (740)368-7S6 1
owner. 76K, exc. cond,,
loaded. never in mud S9.500 1999 -·Trail lila Bantam
Flyer. Excellent condition .
1304)456-1002
Loaded
Must see 740·
1999 Chevy Suburban 4x4, 949-2709. £7,800
good cond1tion, loaded. new
2001 Jayco Designer Senes
tires .
Askin g
$1 1,000.
27AKS. 5th Wfleel . lots of
(740)441-0658 or (740)709·
541 .000
accesson es
1931.

9665

{740)446-24 12

JET

1995 Dutchman .Classic
ca mPer. 26 1ft .. 2 bedroom.
steeps
$5.90 0. Phone
(740)256 -1142

L,~::::,:o:,;i:j;;:,:;~iO;...I , t999

1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr.. 4
Jeep
L1berty
cyl .. 76,000 miles. $3.000 2003
R~neg ade. Lo aded , 4x4,
OBO. Call {740)441-0712
19.000 miles. $12,500, Ca ll
-2002 Ford Taurus V6 Sflarp (740)256-t618· or (740)256·
40.000
mites-$7995.00 . 6200.
t990 Old s Cutlass Supreme - - - - - - - - 4 Door- $ 1495.00 River v1ew '95 Toyota 4x4 PICkLlp ell!.
Mo tors 2 blocks above cab. 4 cyl.. 5 speed. cold
McDonalds. Pomeroy, Qtlio. ale. exc . condition, $5,500,
(7 40)992 -3427
O% Financing for up to 60 (7 40-992-3490)
mon th s on John Deere
Round Balers O"'o lor 48 95 Tracer. 4 cyl. 5 speed new 986 lsu!u Troope r. Mud
tires, runs good. $800 080.
monthS on John Deere t1res. AIC, axtJa clean
2002 Yamaha Raptor 660cc,
inside/out.
Nice
paint.
run
s
Mower Conditioners Wilt!
$3,800. Good condition .
John Deere Credit approval great. $t ,500 (740)669{740~46-1237
Carmichael Equipment Inc. 0302.

co ntroller. spse d control, 2
new batteries . (740)4 46- Ma ssey Ferguson flay .bind
9 toot cut . Call any time .
4561 .
Wo rk s good {740) 44,6-7595.

Residential · .Commercial
ENERGY EFFICIENT

.

r

VA"'~
F&lt;IH
SAIL~

L.~-----iiiiuO.
' -,.J

'
1988 Chev fo let Astro van .
one lamily owned. Good
cond ition . $1 ,475. Estate
sale . Call (740)44.6-8997
evemngs
t 994 Plymouth VovaQe new
1ires V6, OD. runs good,
$2.000 . (740)44 1·0918

Cl. 2WD w/cap and bedliner.
138,000 original
miles.Needs work. AS IS . Best
offer over $500. leave mas-

2001 Ford Windstar 40r. V6
loaded $7995.00. 1993
BlJ iCk Regal20r. 116 Auto Air
$1995.00. Riverview MOtors
2 blocks above McDonatds
Pomeroy, Ohio (740·992-

sage at (740)38a·1l35.

:3:::49;:;0;:.1~----~-,

(304)67S-2246

Coleman Ca mping Trailer
12FT. 2 King Beds. $4.995
ca ll lor Details {304)675·
1731
For sa te. Pop up camper.
steeps 4. gas stove and furnace. {740)245 -9183

BASEMENT

1996 Dodg.e 0akota ex t. ca
·b
M&lt;Yiot«..Ya..E'i/
4 \\'HEEI.£RS
4x4,V-6, 5 speed manual,
contractors rack, tool box .
reece hitch 66 ,000 mites 1993 Honda, 300EX ATV
New tires, .skid plates,
Yow ProSia rt Tra1101 Dealer. $3500. 304 ·675-7079
bumpers. K&amp;N . exhaust.
Carmichael Equipment Inc.
·1997 Dodge Dakota SLT VS. Run s good ; looks good
{740)44 6-2 412
ir~.:....;.;-------., Automatic. 2 Wheel , Drive, $1 .400 OBO or lrade.
72 .000 mii!"S(304)59 3-16t 4 . (740)4 46 - ~327
LIHNIUl'K

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION
Owner: Brian Durham
Phone: (740) 949·4011
Specializing in custom homes
f"':"::"::'=:-""":"=::":-1

WiiJ 'S ATV

Parts
Quality (;uatmnt(&gt;ed
ATV Parts &amp; A(C.
,hmu.-s A \\'ill Jr.
Owner
32119 \Vclshtown Rd.

l,mneroy. Ohiu
45769
174111992-24.12
Ema!!:jw!!l45769

£EWIS
CONCRETE
CONS7'RUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types or•·
Conerete Wotk.
25 Y1•ars Experience
David Lewis

740-992-6971

My e rs Tree
Service

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

work

.

lnsun:d
Fn·c Estinutlcs

1111

t' +

(~ore 6pm

"Insured"

·Call Gaiy Stanley
740-742-2193

Jon~s

SC#l'AM/ YOU r.NOvJ YOU'~E
/
IAil~~l&gt; F/lOM ~~lle
FOil t.lft,

·

(Cumrnerlldl dnd Residential),
Mowin$, Trimming. Tree Trimming, Aerat ion, Fertilization,
Spraymg ol fence lines, Leaf Rem?val, as well a~ small
landscaping jobs such as plantmg and mulchmg.
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

~

lrl;

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addillonl I
Remode ling
• New Garagea
• Electrical &amp; Ptum!Mng
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl. Siding • Painting
• Patio and Porch Deck•
We do It all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG 111
99.2-6215 wv 030725
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex rlence

G~OilGie­

POilGI~!

BARNEY ·
..JUGHAID, IF 'fOU HAVE
THREE COOKIES AN'
'fOU GIVE SAMANTH'f
..JANE TWO,
.
WHAT DO
'fOU END
UP WIF

'TWEEN 'fOU AN' ME,
MAR'f BETH'S
TH' JEAL.OUS

TYPE !!

?

THE BORN LOSER
P"mt. WI\Rt-1\f\G LIGI\T . -.--~-, ~BUT DOf\'1
I!-\ 'II'£ Cto.R Cp.J.I£ W

'NORR'L

H\\~· 1\\'\[!Zf\OOf\ I

P"

.

t J UST DRDIJE:

UI'-\TIL IT

we.mouT '

High and Dry

Storage
Phone

* Leave a message

(740) 992-5232
Sx I0. lOx 10.

~: '
,Rocky "RJ"

10., 15. 10x211,
10x311

·Hupp

Janel Jeffers

33795 II iland Road
Jlntneroy, Ohio

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Street

Middleport, OH

IOXIOXI0X20
992-3194
or 992-6635
SeH·Siorige•

ROBERT
BISSEll
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complele ·
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

Block, Orick . sewer pipes.
windows , lint~ls. etc . Claude
Win ters. R10 Grande. OH
can 740 245-5121

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS
93 Columbus Rd.
Athens
Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. R1.6S I Darwin . OH

740-992 -701 ~or 740-992-555:1
llrslnrl&lt;rn,q f.n It• .lforfl'[ Sa ha,qe
"nrl ;l.rlt•r· Mll rkt•! [:0, r/s
Sec- Brent nr Brian Whaley

M -Fri X:.111-'i :llll

PEANUTS
M GLAD

SWIMMING LESSONS START

T~E

IN FIVE MINUTES. SIR ..

Sal . X:10-Noon

USING
BUDD'r' S'r'STEM .. I
A LOT SAFER ...

17-17-1h

$265 i on (While Suppy Lasl)
·Mushroom Compost
Available
$35 ·- 1,000 lbs Approx. weight
18 spreader buggies available for use
Airway pasture renovators and seeders
available to rent.

licensed agronomist on staff available lor

A lHfU-·STAR

!W)RIJ 11.:6 " t\.l

consu lting.

SHAin: RIVER A(; SERVICE
35537 St Rl. 7 North
l'0111eroy, Ohio

HAD~

cur fHt:

BOB, WE'VE ONl-Y &amp;Of
:3 SECONDS· B!:F'ORE
fH€0 IWMB EXPl-OOEl:J!

R£:0 WIRE,
NO\ 1"HE
GREEN ONE!

ADVERTISE
. IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

Racme. Oh10

4577 1
740-949-2217

Sizes S'x10'
to 10'x30'
•

Hours ·
7:00AM · 8:00PM
1 14 1

Pas~

East

4

+

1\t~::.

Now Available At

BA l ii\J IX:\1 BEl{
Scorpion Tractors
"Takir~g

The Sti11g Out Of
- Hard Work!"
Mid-S iLe 4Wheel Dri ve Tractor
wi lh JUhp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

The honor split
is predictable

GRIZZWELL~

Fl9RA ~'15 1\\Ai J.Cf~'5
L051~ A\PI'
cf ~1(1"~
LA-.:EL'f

~~H

.

ACROSS

43 Privileged
person
46 Slx-ohooter
1 Type
o cheese 48 Apollo'•
6 Full of pep
prleltooa
11 Beol- 50 Like some
12 "So long!"
meats
13 Tropical
54 Name
fruHs
In watches
15 ()ponalellsr 55 Jungian
16 Close
lerm
at hand
56 Theme
18 Compass pl 57 Signs a laa$e
19 Bunion sire
21 Earth,
DOWN
in combos
22 Tusked
Spade
of whodunits 22 Cave

23 Serape
aftermath
25 Poelle
advefb
28 Impatient
30 Plato's H
31 Now I get it!

2 Ken.'""~~"""

l Fleming

24
of 007 novels 25
4 Cheek wrilers
5 Wild plum
26

6 Wacky
7 Badges
27
32 Casual wear 8 Dessert cart
33 Tummy
IIems
29
muscles,
9 rmy legumes
in the gym
10 Gift-giving 34
35 Speed-trap
time

14. Weakens
device
37 Almost .
15 WWII sea
grads
menace
38 Valvely planl
(hyph.)
40 Road
17 Alcoves

36

of~ pearl

source
39 Treats
fractures

19 Copier need 43

shoulder

41 IHy-bllly

20 Joyce

42 Pub order

45 Skip a tum
46 Gimmick
~ 47 Gen.
Sing
- eradley
in the Alps 49 KGB
Chicago
counterpart
airport
51 Reunion
Rule
crowd
of thumb
52 Paramedic
Orange
53 German
veggie
article
Hunting
knife
Molherdweller&amp;
PrQhibit

SoHo 7

44 KOOQh
relatives

Carol-

Pearl Buck wrote. "Every great mistake
has a halfway moment, a split Second
when' 11 can be recalled and perhaps
remed1ed ."

That is usually true in bridge . On to'day's
deal , the contract is live diamonds by
South, We st lea ds th e spade ace. East
signaling with the Queen . How should ihe
tncks flow if, both sides play to best advantage ? What do you think of the auction?
Over W~st's textbook takeo ut double,
North's jump to th ree d1amonds was preemptive, promising (usually) l ive or more
di8monds but fewer th8n nine or tO highcard po1n ts . East's to ur-diamond cue-bid
showed a major two-suiter. He knew that
game could be cold, and he insured getting his side mto the right strain. But when
South went on to five diam onds, both
West Snd East were dissuaded from bid ding higher because of the· unfavorable
vulnerability. (Note Ihat five of either major
double d would probably cost 200, but it
could be 500. declarer losmg one heart
and three. clubs .)
Under West's spa de-ace lead , East
played the queen to show that he also
held rhe jack HOwever. si nce E'asl rated
to be 5-5 1n the maJors. West shllted to a
heart
Dec larer won with his ace. played a trump
to dummy, ruffed a spade, returned Ia
gummy with a di amond. trumped the last
spade, and exi ted with his remain1ng
h€art
East won the trick and correctly shi lled to
th e club qu een, try1n g to look like someone wi)h the queen and jack. But si nce il
was mathematically more likely tnat the
cluO honors were split, South won with hi s
ace. then ran the club 10 throiJgh West.

AstroGraph
'liiur 'lllrthda,y:

Conditions in gene ral look promis ing
lor you in the year ahead. especially
career-wise an d socially. However.
yo u aren't ept to m ix the two and by
keeping thorn soparated yo u c~:m gi \la
each attention With ou t comprom ise.
C..,NCER [Jun e 2 1-July 22~ - ttlhere
aro co rta1n ac,tl\llties you had planned
to d o today whic h you riow !eel you
can 't a lford, don't think you have to go
, through with th em . Be prudent a nd
sc ra tch them o tt you r agenda
LE O (July 23-Au g . 22) - Be co n s id ~
erato ot those w 1th whom you are
sha rmg your t1me today ~nd don 't
insis t upo n the m doing everything
yOUI way. II o ther s uggestions a.e
offe red, take a vote and let th e ma)':Or i1y rule
VIRGO (Aug , 23·Sept. 22) - It col.lld
p rud u c~ some b1g f o mpli c;;~ tion s lor
you to day 1! you d1sregard you1
respon sibil ities o r duties S te p up to
lh o p'ato and do what nc o~ s d oing
inst ead o l p1etend•ng lhey're m slgniflcant.
LIORA (Sept . 23-0 ct . 23)- It IS bes t
not to. bank too h,ea\11ly o n Information
passed o nto you at a socml function
toda)l. It co uld be JU St a lot of colo1ful
eon\lersa hon des1gned to make the
person look know ledgea ble
SCO RPIO (Oc t. 24- No~,~ . 22 ) - You'll
be labonng under a fal se Illu sion
today 11 you b~ l ieve you ha\le 10
errlbellish your accomplishmen ts 1n
o rder to make 0tl1ers tlunk well o l you
Ju st be yourself.
S AG JTIARI US (N0\1. 23·D ec. ;,? 1) Flattery w11J pr ove to be a \lcry lnof tecttve too l lo r you tod ay il you II",' to
use 11 tn got another to thmk be tter of
you . Th 1s pe rson w111 see th rough you
and rcson1 you th1nk 1n g you ca ri snow
t11em

GARFIELD

29670 Ba•han Road

\._I:I:&gt;.Tilto.lb COOKIES:

High co81 of fertilizer got you

3907.

CKC Golden Retr iever puppies lor sale $250 Wormed
and
hrst
shOts.
Call
(740J3B8-8965.

SURE .. 11M DROWNING.
AND M'r' BUDD'r' IS

Sun. ftosctl

1 pair of lull · blooded
Beagles. Call (740) 44 6·

Hill's Self
Storage

Pass

),iorlh
:t +

Friday, July 22, 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol

female Pekingese AK C
reg1Stered . B wks old. very
tovmg! (740 )446-1000 .

6 mate reg1stered Golden
Retre1ver pupp1e$. f1rst shots
&amp; wormd, $300 each .
(740)416·2793

Dhl

G

BIG NATE

1'1·:1&gt;
1-llk SAI.f:

4FT. 2 1ncfl, Female Iguana
to"r site. Tame, can be hand
fe!1, Harness · Included &amp;
otM'r ac:cessoll9s
Heat
Rock &amp; Lamp, wi a 5 FT
. height. 5 FT IOf19. 2 FT wide
case $200 (304)882-3095

+

Wt-st

Openin g lead : A A

LAWN (ARE DIVISION

~,

128~4- - : : - - - - - : - ,

CKC regiStered Pomeraman
puppy, lernale, 2 5 pounds 9
weeks otd coa t IS light ginger. vet che&lt;:ked and all vac ·
Clnat1ons are current "$400
Call (740)441 -72 18

A 10 7

&lt;

• (Coml)'lerc1"l "nd Res1dentiel)
,
Mobil e Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks. Drivewa'!IS.
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing ·Qf
Equipment, Boats . CampC~. !Meter Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painhng o r sta1lllng of yout deck
ur log hom e, AluminlJm bright~ning .
.
Special rates to Trucking. and Dump Truckmg Compan1es.

.

• Affordable Rates
• Refe1ences
Available
• Free Estimates

.J

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Advertise
Let me do 1t for you'
in this
space
UNDA1 PAINTING
for
11401 985-4180
Aner 6pm · ~ ;, _,./ if:&lt;
$52 per
J!}; )
too" Me~~:
&gt;·~....
_:ur;.
month

CONSTIUCnON

AKC reg . Shth Tzu pupp1es
tor sale. Call (740)446- 1523
or (740)645·6029

NEA Crossword Puzzle

animal

Q ~ ~

t A Q I09 J ~ :l

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517·6885
PQWER WASHING

the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

Zephy r Tann1ng Bed . 24
Bulb, seldom used S 1,200
Hewlett Pack.ard Computer_
W1nd ows XP wi th desk .
e• cellent cond ltton S250
(304)675· 5754 or (304)593·

AKC Basset Hound pupp1es
Shots, ·wormed parents on
prem1se $300 each AKC
reg . 2 y1 old male Basset
Hound (7 40)256·68tl7

•

•
South

... 7
'I A ·I

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

Ta~e

Pole Barns Blowout
30x50x10Ft only $6.495
24ir:32x 10 $4.595,
40x£4x10 $11 .995
Free delivery,
Pa1nted Metal
(937}799-0293

St ri,,Jf:&lt;; .

· "' .I fi ·I J

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner. Ronnie

and additions.

L,.-oiiioiiiiiiiiiiii---"

2004 Honda VTX 1300C
low miles, $1 ,500 In extras.
b,lack , $8 ,300. {740)2887246.

A Q.l lf.lll 2
'I QIO 'iJ2

'I K J 9 6
t H

Tree Service

4pm

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lilelime guarantee. local reference s lurnished . Established 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 4460670, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

Jo:asl

A K !i :1

A

South

Older· Model Camper, nice
Interio r, no leaks. new Tires.
$600 (304)67 5-7340 alter

HOME
l lHPR.O\'F.J\tF.Nr.ot

KJ 7 ti~

Dealer: South

For sale: .Camper roof top .__ _;...._ _ _ ___.

10

012 1 o~

Vuln erabl e: F.ast West

" Middleport'• only

8111l.ll!N(;

\\'E'St

•

------,------,- "

1998 Chevy S·l O LS. 5
APHA Reg. Mare . 5 yrs old, speed , AJC. gOod 1ransNEW ANO. USED SlEEL. $1 ,000 1ncludes all tack. Call porlation , $3,i:,OO OBO. Call
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar (740)446!6689.
(740)24S-9502.
F01
Conc rete,
Angle ,
.Channe l. Flat Bar. Steel
Gratmg
For
Dra1ns
Or1veways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Opon Monday.
Tu esday. Wednesday &amp;
Fr1day, 8am-4:30p'm . Closed
Thursday,
Satur day
&amp;
Sunday. {740)446-7300

t

740-667·0700 1·888-HUPP234

@ yahotM'OIIl
air, steep 7 or B. good
shape. (740)379- 2540 or
{740)379-9887 .

'

... K 9 8

C.\MI'f.RS &amp;-

(74~)4 46 -8 124 .

1997 Honda C1vic 109,000
mi. Aller market acc~s­
sori es. 38.-. mpg. Clean .
black/black. Call (740)4 41 -

Chevy Blazer. 4x4. 2 B liter,
comp letely
rebtJ ill
John Deer.e 10 ft No Tit Drill V-6.
motor, 16,000 miles.Ca n
Ren t
Carmichael
2005 Master Tow car dolly, for
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Flat or Loyv Sloped Roof • Carports
Barns • Porches

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top $300 (304)675-5.453

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The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

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prop, ski's, excellent condition. s3aoo. Ph: 740-5 174x4
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FoR SALE

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Ant ique maple bedroom Limi ted
time
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suite. Numbered Cushman Ca rmicflael , Equ1pment Inc
Classic Crea tion . 2 twms, P49)4 46·24 12.
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'Thursday, July 21, 2005

Www.mydeilysentinel.com

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan . 19) Measure yOtJr expend1tur os care fully
today lo lm sur e each .d olla1 you
spend IS d01 ng liS f ull JOb. A1,101d SIIU&lt;l ·
11o ns where you don "! ge t \la lu e
rocalvcO lor w1luo g1von
AQUARIU S" (Jan . 20-Feb . 19)• Usually yoJ a re a very dCCISIVO and
du ect person . but tod:..y to r som o reason you could lOok lor aver~ues o f
least res1slanco ra ther l h.-.n meehng
1ssues head -o'' and have to deal whh
them later
PI SC ES (Feb . 20·M .;u ch 20)- There
'" "' roF&lt;;•holo ty that you mav be a b1t
self -ondulgent to day Tho s IS O K . as
long ns 11 doo~n·t hurt anyono olse
BYE- BYE,
and you look out to • the needs ot olhBOB ANO
ers as woll oas your owr~
ARI ES (March 21 -Apnl 1.9 ) Be
BERNICE
extra mm(tlul of your bohav101 and.
whal you say when engagong others
1n soc •al s•tual•on s toda,y Don 't d o
imyth•ng 1hal could cause tnends to
think you are behav1ng 1n poor taste
TAURU S (Apnt 20· May 20) - Don 't
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la \lomble 1mpross10n on o lhers . !hese
urgmgs arfi manulactured ,by your
eQo. they're n ot the real you ,
G EM IN I (May 21 -June 20)- A slick·
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.'

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July

www.mydallysentinel.com
.

.

21, 2005

Inspirations gospel
group perfonns, A3

Armstrong climbs another
rung in Tour de France history

i

I

Meigs library's
summer readingt
program goes out
with ~bounce, A3

.

REVEL, France (AP) - A
He keeps' some jerseys for guys in the break today was so
. leisurely ride through rolling himself, but says he gives oth- we can work less and come ·
'French hills, a bit of excite- ers to his teammate~. friends •out with another win,"
ment at the finish to get the and supporters, or auctions Hincapie
said.
heart ·racing, a win for a team- them for charity.
"Unbelievable."
mate and another rung
Savoldelli's victory in the
Savoldelli · finished in 5
climbed In cycling's history 17th stage was the third for hours 41 minutes 19 secbooks.
Armstrong's · Discovery oncts,'riding 'at avera'ge cif 26.1
In all, a pretty good day at . ·Channel team at thiS Tour.
mph to claim his tirst Tour
the Tour de France for Lance
George Hincapie won in the win.
Annstrong. .
Pyrenees and the squad also
"It 's been a very lucky year
Arnlstrorig donned his· 79th won . the tc~m . tt_n~e- ~~a.L for me," said the 32-year-o.ld.
yellow jersey- only .Belgian Armstrong. ~ ho h•.ts ~~- 3 ) s who also won hts second Gtro
great Eddy Merckx has more won at least o~e mdt vtdual d' ltalia this year overcoming
-· after holding hi s overall , stage m hts prevwus stx Tour . . . . .
.•
lead through the Tour's triumphs, has yet to do so this lllJU~tes and health P~?blems
longest
stage.
Paolo year ~ but is eyeing victory that .tlmost ended hts ".'treer., .
Savoldelli,
Armstrong's m the . tina! time trial on
He .JOmed Armstron~.s
Italian support rider, won the Saturday. .
squ~d trom the nval T-Mobtle
stage Wednesday,
.
Savoldelli was part of a ~mUtt -. and apiJears to be reiThe Texan remained 2 min- breakaway group that built up tshmg the expenence.
utes and 46 seconds ahead of a leaU of more than 24 min"There ts only one
his nearest challenger, Ivan utes over Armstrong's follow - Armstrong. , The more I see
Basso of Italy. and on course ing pack.
.
. htm the more I realtze that h~
for his seventh straight Tour
Because the nders ahead IS on another planet,
victory before retirement.
were no threat to his overall Savoldelli said.
"li just ·keeps getting bet- lead, Annstrong did not give
Armstrong finished in a
ter," Armstrong satd.
chase - settling instead for a small group 22:28 behind. He
He tied Bernard Hinault, the slow pedal past rolling hills. was still riding when
last Frenchman to win the picturesque villases and fresh- Savoldelli . crossed the line,
Tour in 1985, for the second- ly harvested ftelds . Rtders heanng the news from hts
most yellow jerseys ~ and chatted anu even JOked Wtth team director over his race
should overtake him as he television crews filining the radio.
closes in on a seventh straight race. .
•.
"It was surreal," Armstrong
race victory on Sunday.
Armstrong hammed. 11 up said. "We all looked at each
Armstrong came into this f?rTV viewers -a clear mdt- other and said: 'Did he just
Tour with 66 jerseys and. if he · c.ttton that the pressure on htm say that Paolo won the
holds the lead to Paris. will eased when he emerged from · stage')"'
retire with 83. Merckx won the last day in the high moun- · . · . .
.
.. . .
Ill in the 1960s and '70s. but tai ns on Tuesday with his
Ht.s Dtscovery. squ,ad ts _also
Armstrong has more Tour .:omfortable lead intact.
leadmg the Tour s tean,1 standtitles- a record six compmed
"George. . George," he mgs.
.
to five for Merckx. Hinault. shouted to Hincapie, urging
Armstrong s le;td over
Miguel Indurain and Jacques him to speak to the cameras.
Basso remamed unchanged,
AnquetiL
''I'm working. 1 can't and he mamtamed a. 3:09
While Armstrong likes the speak," Hincapie said as he advantage over Mtckael
company he's in. the mark pedaled.
Rasmussen of Denmark.
isn't something he's thought . Their average speed -over . Armstrong has JUSt two
much about.
the second and third hours of more stages and the last tune
" I have to be honest, [don't the 148.8-m ile trek across trial to negotiate before
keep count of those things." southern France from Pau to Sunday's ride into Paris.
Armstrong said this week. "I Revel was less than 25 mph While his victory appears
assured, the race for the rest of
don't know if I deserve to pass - slower than usual.
a guy like Hinault."
· "The only reason we sent the field is still on.

•

en
I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;n

l'ENTS. \ 'n1.

!) .... .

Nu. ::!:J...J.

BY BRIAN

• Post 128 continues
tourney run.
See Page 81

J.

REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Sheriff's
deputies will transport six
inmates from four jails across
Ohio in one day next week,
and the logistical problems
.such a day creates for Sheriff
Robert Beegle reinforces the
importance of re-opening the
Meigs County Jail, he told
County Commissioners on
Thursday.

Brad Sherman/photo

Feeney Bennett's Ken Amsbary awaits the .throw during a steal attempt at second base
Wednesday.

Post 128

FRIDAY, .JULY

.22,

Blackston and Eddy each
knocked in runs in the· fifth

Meeting
with
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
during their regular weekly
meeting, Beegle sa id two
prisoners now housed in the
Noble County Jail , two in the
Washington County Jail, one
in the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Jail in Nelsonville
and one jailed in Massilon
awaiting psychiatric evaluation - and all in county custody - · require transport 'to

cou rt . appea rances
on
Monday.
.
"lihis will tie· up three office rs for the day. and the
expe nse will he considerable." ·Beegle. sa id, adding
that he normally ·schedules
onl y two officers on a week day shift.
·
'
He said fi ve prisoners were
transported In and from Meigs
County to· outside jail facili -ties for Thursday Countv
Court appearances. He had it

4-H Clothing projects judged

inning, when five more runs

made it 14-0, then an· error
and Mooney run -scoring sin gle helped the winncr.s add
two final scores in the sixth.
The FB-Athens winner will
have to play a second game
today. against Pickerington.
which lost I 2- 11 to Lancaster
in the ni ghtcap Wednesday.
-Cham pionsh ip ·ga mes are set
for Friday.
000 000
100752

0 X

~

°

0 2 5
1610 0

Mason
rrom PageBl
24 strikeouts and a 3.72
ERA.
Also seeing pitching duty
was Dale Kestner (4-1 ). who
pitched in 32 innings, throwmg .a team leading 46 strikeouts with a 2.79 ERA and
only gave up 23 hits and 19
walks.
·
Point Pleasant's Ned Park
(.l-3) saw 26 innings and
threw 18 strikeouts on a 3.76
· ERA, while Wahama's
Kameron Sayn: (0-2) threw
in 17 innings with 17 strikeouts and a 7.27 ERA and
Brenton Clark (2-0) .with 15
innings and a 3.60 ERA on
lJ strikeout s.
•

Offensivly. Mason County
collectively bimed .228 with
313 hits and 200 RBis in the
32 'games this season.
Tyler Hem had 34 hits with
a .374 b~tting average and a
ieam leading 8 stolen bases
with five triples. · a homerun
and 22 RBls.
Dale Kestner mana'ged 32
hits with a .418 batting ,average with five homeruns and
18 RBis. Just behind him was
Caleb McCoy who had 31
hits with five homeruns and a
.463 batting average with 19
RBls.
Ned Park managed 26 hits
on the season with a .361 batting average with six doubles
and I HRBis. From Wahama.
Kameron -Sayre led in hitting
with 29 hits and• a .3 19 batting a.verage with 15 RBi s.
Brandon Fowler had 19 hils

and 10 RB Is with a .294 batting average and ·Brenton
Clark who had 19 hits with a
.276 batting average and II
RBls.
.
With the Mason County
pitching rotation and quality
hitting it should be an exciting tournament with hopes of
the s.tate tournament on the
line.
The following week, ·the
·state tournament will be held
in Beckly with 10 teams from
around the state attending.
the nine area winners and the
hqst team . So Mason County
will be fighting for a spot in
the siate American Legion
tournament against a collection of the best team s from
around the area.
Today\ game. will be held
at 6 p.m. in Parkersburg .

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Page AS
• Kevin L. Barr
• Naomi Nease Riley

INSIDE
• Pomeroy Court News.
See Page AS
• Church events.
See Page A2
• Community Calendar.
See Page A6
• Local stocks.
See Page A6

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2 SECI"IONS -

446-2282
•

12 PAGES

1'\3

..Ciassifieds

B3-4

'•

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Calendars

Faith• Values

1900 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS, Oil

BY BRIAN

INDEX '

Editorials

YOUR CAR &amp;TRUCK SUPERSTORE NEXT TO WAL ·MART

Real estate tax bills to be shipped

Space, scholarships .still available
for Rio Meigs Kids' College ·

Details on Page A6

Dear Abby

'11&gt;11 fn•e ·
1-877-116-2282

Numerous clothing projects
were judged Thursday afternoon as 4-H club members
paraded before judges, talked
about their sewing techniques
and presented books on what
they haye learned, all in preparation for the Meigs County
·
· Fair.
Popular this year were the
"Sewing for Othe~"· category
where 4-H members created
outfits for friends and relatives
as well as themselves.
Above, Tyler Lee, a member of
the Whiz Kidz Club wearing
jeans ~nd a western shirt he
had made for himself, presented the two-year-old Emma
Doczi of Middleport in a dress
he had made before seamstress Sally Stapleton of Gallia
County. Tyler has been taking
sewing projects for the past ,
three years.
Right, Nicole Moodispaugh of
Reedsville, a member of the
Lakeside Leaders made
matching outfits for herself and
her sister. Katelynn Chevalier.
The skirts of John Deere print
were worn with yellow shirts
and green vests. They wore
straw hats enhanced with print
·
bands.
Challeno Hoeftlch/pllotoo

Comics

~WJ ~rn~S01Jtcw)re~

SERGENT

'"What conclusions we can
take from the numbers is that
slowly the district will recovRACINE Declining er if costs are controlled,"
local tax revenue continues to Wolfe said.
be a thorn in the side of the
The commission com·
Southern
Local
School mended the efforts of the disDistrict 's attempt at financial trict for significantly keeping
recovery. ·
the lunch room costs down
At yesterday's meeting of last year. Most recen tly the
the Financial Planning and annual cost of operation .was
Supervision Cof!lmission for just over $8.000 and in years
the Southern Local School past tha t fi gure was over
Di strict, Ohio Department of $20.000.
JOducation Consultant Nancy
The meeting was then
Burbacher presented figures called into executive sess ion
that demonstrated a local his- to discuss "pend ing negotiatory of revenue. These figures tions ."
revealed that sinc e Fiscal
Wolfe reque sted members
Year 1999 the percentage of of the public and the two
change in local tax revenue Southern Local School Board
for the district was -1.25 per- members present. Susie
cent.
Grueser and Don Smith, leave
In the past seven years the the room.
district saw its highest local
Present for executive sestax revenue estimated at . sion were Cnmmis.~ion mem$1,558,009 in FY 1999, while bers Wolfe, Sandra Hawley,
the lowest estimate was for Susan
Oliver.
Shirley
$1,382,249 in FY 2003.
Johnson, and Kyle Gephart.
The good news is that local Also present were Southern
tax revenue estimates for FY Local Schools Superintendent '
2005 were up $876 from the Bob Gruescr, from the Ohio
previous year though it is still Attornev General's Office
short ($ 119,3 15 short) of the Rebecc&lt;i Alders and Julie
local tax revenue from just Miceli , from the Qhip
seven years ago in FY 1999. Department of · Education
the same year the district Thomas Gumpf and Roger
declared itself in fiscal emer- Hardin . and from the Auditor
gency.
of State's Office Robert
Another small bit of good Burlenski.
news was Bur~acher's figure
When the meeting was
of a 9.2 percent increase in called back into sessio n the
state revenue over the same commission did not di scuss
seven year period. Taking into the "pending- negotiations"
account the -1.25 percentage any further although Wolfe
of change for local ta·x rev- did ,say, "We (the commisenue, this actually shows sion) will not approve conovemll growth at eight per- tracts that will increase costs
·
to the sc hool district or
cent.
'The point is the district is increase the debt."
growing in revenue. mostly · The commission approved
on the state level but the local a contract for the Auditor of
revenue is also growing," Stale 10 prnvicie services to
Commission President Bill the commission for FY 2006
Wolfe said. "The new high- at no cost to the district or
way and power plant will commission in an amount not
help."
to exceed $6.000, funded
American Electric Power through the Ohio General
has not officially announced Assembly. .
that a new power plant will be
built in Meigs County.
Please see Southern, AS ·

Chris Scott, Jared Bunting (4). Rodney
Harding (5). Shane Scott (6) and Jake
McGuire . Luke Haistop and Terry Durst
WP - Luke Ha1slop. LP ~. Chris Scott
HR - FB : luke Ha1slop. tou rth mn1ng.
two on.

05 Pontiac Aztec

Declining local revenue for
Southern stunts recovery
BY BETH

Reds

out a complete game thi s a 6-0 lead. Griffey's homer
season.
was the first of hi s career
"Everything has to dick .off Wood and the 522nd of
rrom Page 81
to get a complete game," his career, breaking a tic for
Hantng sa id. "Your pitch 14th on the career li st with
returning, Wood never count has to be low, the Ted Williams and Willie
looked right.
defense has to play behind McCovey.
Javier Valentin , who
"It's a concern. but yo u You. and you need so me
do'o·'t want to jump 10 con- runs early so you can relax homered from both sides of
added a
elusionS yet,'' manager even more . I was able to the plate on Sundav,.
J,
throw
strikes
and
they
were
so
lo
shot
as
Cincinnati
Dusty Baker said. "We too k
him out more as a precau- swi nging at them."
pulled away off the Cubs'
tion than anything. Hi s
The Cubs lost for only the bullpen. Griffey had an RBI
veloCity was down .
seco nd time in 10 games, a single during a clinching
:·He warmed up great and surge that moved them back three-run rally in the eighth .
The four homers moved
didn't feel anything. That into contention for the NL
one inning he started to feel wild card. Wood' s latest the Reds back ahead of the
something, whatever it shoulder woes undercut the Cubs for the NL lead . with
..
renewed optimism.
125. one
more than
was.
w
d
1
00
gave up · so
Chicago. More homers have
Wood was scheduled for
an exam with Dr. Tim homers to Griffey, Felipe been hit at Great American
Kremchek on Thursday. The Lopez and Adam Dunn in Ball Park this season -than
Cubs then will decide three inni~gs._ A; assistan~ anyplace else in 'the majors.
whether to get medical tests tramer an pnc_ mg coac
Lee went 1-for-4 overall,
on Wood, who didn'i stay Larry . Roth schild VIS!led .. dropping his average a point
~ood after Gnffey hit ht s to .375, still the best in the
around to talk to reporters.
Wood also left a game ~lst homer 111 the thtrd . majors. He is 17-for- 34
April 30 against ,Houston mmng. makmg sure he was (.500) with eight homers
· ·
b
all n ght.
..
.
after t hree mnmgs ecause
Wood stayed in the game agamst the . R~ds thts seaof a sore shoulder, his pre- and retired the next two bat- Ason. ftve of them at Great
Iude to going on the dis. b d'd ,
f h
mencan.
N0 t . It
H· . · .
abled list.
ters, ut 1 n t return or t e
"It's kind of what he had fourth .
·
es.
was arang s
in spring training and what
"In the first inning. I second career. complete
we were , dealing with after thought he had pretty good g~me tn ?7 start~ . :he other
that Houston game," trainer stu ff," Barrett said. "He just was Aug. 26 a.ga mst St.
Mark O'Neal said .. "We needed to gel loose , get Lout s .... Gnffey has 1.508
don't want to let this devel - going. Power pitchers are RBis. one beh,tnd Mtckey
op into anything s ignifi - like that. Hi s last few starts Mantle tor 4.nd on the
cant."
he' s been like that. Today he career li st. ... Barrett had a
The Reds hit four homers just had trouble getting smgle and a sacn!ice tly.
in all, and Aaron Harang (6- loose."
ex tending his hitting streak
8) pitched a seven-hitter for
The Cubs need Wood and to seven games . ... 2B Todd
Cincinnati's first complete Mar~ Prior - who both Walker 's hitting streak
game of the season. Derrek ha ve been on the disabled e~ded at 12 games . :.. Dunn
Lee hit · his major league- list thts season - to stay has 25 homers t_ht s season.
leading 31st and Jerorny . heaJth ytfthey hopetomake ,three ol _th~m ott Wood ....
Burnitz followed with a a playott run.. Pnor ha s The Reds have gtven up 143
solo shot in the seven th . recovered from a broken homers. most m the maJors.
when Harang's shutout elbow. but· Wood 's shoulder ... RHP Greg Maddux needs
ended .
remains a major concern .
six strikeouts on Thursday
With Wood not quite to become the , 13th pi1d1er
Cincinna(i had gone a
club-record 94 games with- . right , the Reds rolled out to to reach 3,000.
-

total of 14 inmates in custody wear and tear on depanment
yesterday - most of them vehicle~. Howe ver. he said
hou sed in the Noble and . Thursday.·the ultimate authorWashington County faci lities, ity to re-open the jail rem
where he has beds reserved at with the state jail commts·
a negotiated rate.
: sion. not himself.
, Beegle has . set a goal of
He said minor · repairs.
Aug. ·1 to re-open the county including plumbing work and
jail , which was closed two the installation of lighting, are
years ago, hoping that making all that remain in his efforts to
the jail available for housing renovate the century-old jail.
inmates charged with minor
''We' re just waiting on the
offenses for the shan term
will ·save money, time and
Please see Inmates. AS ·

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Feeney Bennett 16, LJ?gan 0
Post78
Post128

\\\\\\ . IH~d •• ii_.. .. (' U(IIU.' i. ("O III

2005

Beegle:·Transporting inmates both.time consuming, expensive

SPORTS ·

Logan employed fvur
pitchers on the afternoon;,
Chris Scott started and took
the loss.
rrom Page Rl
Post 128 grabbed a I ·0 lead
and had three runs batted in after Mooney walked to lead
for Post 128, which logged. off he bottom of the first
10 hit s total. Jeremy inning, 'wiped two bases,
Blacksto n and Josh Eddy and later scored on a wild
had RBI singles. while pitch. Two innings later. FB
Austin King. Terry Durst, tacked on another score as
Tyler Clagg, Ross Well and Myers came armind on one of
Chris Myers all hit safely. five Logan errors.
The fourth inning saw two
Zach Haislop chipped in an
more
Post 78 miscues. which
RBI sacrifice .
led
to
the first two tallies of a
Gene Hartman and Jake
McGuire each singled for seven-run frame. The speedy
Logan. but \hose were the Well scored on a wild pitch
only hits off winning hurler and Mooney added an RBI
Luke Haislop , who struck single before Haislop's blast
put his dub up 9-0.
out II .

r

Bs
, AJ
A4
A2-3
'

As

B Section
A6

© 7005 Ohiu Valley Publishing Co.

MIQDLEPORT - ·It's not
.too late to register children for
a Kids' College day camp.
which begins Monday at the
University of Rio Grande
Meigs Center.
The enrichment day camp
for students aged 9-15 will
focus on the arts .and humaniti-es. and will include programs on contemporary art.
archaeology and ancient civililalions, culture contacts.
Adventures in History pirates, Vikings and explorers - and other subject matter.

Classes will begin at 9 a.m.
and continue until 3. througli
July 29. A cost of $100
includes the ·five-day program. materials. lunch and ·a
snack each day. and a Kids'
College T-shirt.
"The curriculum for the
Meigs Center Kids ' College is
designcd to encourage ereative and critical thinking
skills and promote an enthusiasm for learning." said Gina
Pines. director of the Meigs

on Friday. and stuuents in the
acting/theater program wi'll.be
hdd on July 29 at the Cente r.
located on Mill Street in
Middleport.
Tuition may be paid.the day
the program begins. but
advam;e
registration
IS
requestet! so adequate matcri als can he available . Pines
·said the cost should not deter
those .who are interested in
participating but who may not
be able to afford the tuition .

Center. '"The courses are flin 'Hnwe\'er, .'-~pace is limited to

and educational with an JO , tudents.
'
emphasis on at·tiv~ lcaming
"We don ' t wan I anyone to
and hands-on activity. '' ,
. be discouraged from partici A reception and ~xhibit of
&gt;tudcnt projects will be held
Please see College, AS

Brion J. Reed/ photo

Peggy Yost and Tabitha Campbell. deputies 111 the office. of
County Treasurer Howard Frank prepared some 15.000 bills
for the second-half real estate tax collection on Thursday.
The bills, along with hundreds of ma~ufactured home tax
bills, are due for payment on Aug. 25 , Frank said.

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