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Kid Scoop, A8

~
~
,
TUESDAY, .•
MAY,27,
_.:., ,_. 2003
. •• . • .

CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 185

Southern
grad~ates

receive
diplomas
BY

J.

•

.

Pomeroy
hosts
Memorial Day service
alumni
at
annual
honors veterans . · ··
banquet, dance

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

News editor

Staff writer

.RACINE - The Southern
H1g~ School class of 2003
rece1v.ed their diplomas during
combmed baccalaureate and
commencement exercises held
Sunday in the Charles W.
Hayman Gymnasium.
Rev. Brian Harkness of
Racine
United
Methodist
Church gave the baccalaureate
a?dress following the procesSIOnal a,nd musical selectiOns by
the chmr under the direction of
Jeanette Oldaker, choir director.
The choir, some of whom were
graduating seniors .dressed in
caps and gowns, sang "Because
You Loved Me" and "The Time ·
of Your Life."
Principal Gordon Fisher recognized graduates with academ~~ and athletic achievement.
F1sher said the class of 2003
Ple..e see Southern, AS

Correction
The 27th Annual Antique Car
Show at Bob Evans Farm in Rio
Grande will take place on
Saturday, June 7, not Saturday,
May ~-'· as printed in the May
25 ed1t10n of the Sunday TimesSentinel.

Inside
• Sacrifice\ of military
personnel honored, See

·

: Genealogical society
d1scusses proposed Ohio
law, See page A3
• Chester Council
observes anniversary, See

page A3
• International trade
workshop teaches basics
for expanding, See page
A6

• Student working with
environmental
movement, See page A7
Rain, HI: 701, Low: SO.

Seleena Dowell, 4th ~fade,
Rutland Elementary

Index
:z Sections- 1.1 Pllps
Calendar
Classifieds
·Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

•

A3
85-7
BB
BB

~

I 9 3 I :

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor

MILES LAYTON

page Al

www.m dail sentinel. om

A4
AS
B1-3,5

A2

POMEROY
"Whenever our nation has
called, people from here
have answered," said Rep.
Jimmy
Stewart
(RAthens),
speaker at
Mo~day's Memorial Day
serv1ce on the stage in
downtown Pomeroy.
Stewart spoke of his
p~d~ in r~presenting the
d1stnct wh1ch has provid~d the highest percent of
Its p_opulation for military
serv1ce of any place in the
state.
"Families here have
given so much. Just look
at the cemeteries," he said.
"They're filled with Meigs
Countians who have
served their country. We
should never forget the
sacrifices they made for us
and we should' always be
thankful for the freedoms
we enjoy today because of
them."
. The speaker stressed the
Importance of the observance - remembering
and appreciating · those
who have served and those
now serving in places like
Iraq and Afghanistan. He
spo.ke of his pride in the
United
States,
the
strongest military force in
the world, and the fact that
we are out there "making a
difference." ·
A parade through town
led by the honor guard of
Drew Webster Post 39
American Legion, opened
the observance sponsored
by the post. Girl scouts,
clowns, the DARE car driven by Howard Mullen,
parade marshall, and fire
trucks and emergency
vehicles from Pomeroy,
Syracuse, Chester, Salem
Township, Tuppers Plains,
and Mason participated.
!he flag at the stage was
ra1sed by Legionnaire
John Weeks as bugler
Karen Griffith gave a call
to the colors before the
pledge of allegiance.
Prayer was by Harold
Blackston, post chaplain,
after a welcome from
Commander Jerry Rought.
Mayor Victor Young
spoke briefly on the meaning of Memorial Day. ·
A tribute in remembrance of those dead and
those now serving in the
military, was given by
Gla~ys Cumings, vice
pres~~ent of the Legion
. Aux1hary before reading
"Flanders Field." Karen
·Griffith played the national anthem.
Nathan Biggs of the
Meigs County Disabled
American Veterans and a
Purple Heart recipient,
presented information on
the proposed Purple Heart
Trail which will cross the
country to Stewart.
The program concluded
with Navy veterans,
George Nesselroad, John
Weeks
and · Harold
Blackston placing a
wreath pn the river in
memory of the war dead,
and a gun salute by Post
39's honor guard.

Navy veterans , John Weeks, George Nessel~oad, and
Harol~ Blackston, left to right, placed a wreath on the Ohio
R1ver m tnbute to the war dead as part of the Memorial Day
Serv1ce.m Pomeroy Monday. (Sharlene Hoeflich)

Mary Baerr
Roush,
Racine.
I 9 3 2 :
Virginia
S m i t h
Heilman,
Canton. ·
I 9 3 4
Rachael
Elberfeld
Do w.n i e,
Racine.
I 9 3 7 ,
Sy ·lvia
Heilman
Midkiff,
Charles
Sayre, and .
Margaret
1homas
Bailey, all of
Pomeroy.
I 9 3 8 :
( 6 5 t h
reunion)Don
Leifheit,
Springfield;
-Ruth Brown
T a t e ;
Hilliard;
Hazel Carl
Wilson,

POMEROY- More than
300 ~omeroy High School
alumm and guests from all
acr?ss the country r!!tumed to
Me1gs County Saturday night
for the annual Pomeroy
Alumm Assocatton banquet
and dance.
Thomas
Traveling the farthest to
make the event held at Meigs
High School was John Ratliff
of Cl~&gt;Verdale, Calif., making
the tnp for the 50th anniversary celebration of his 1953
class. He was recognized and
presented a gift along with
Kathleen Bailey Scott of
Pomeroy, the oldest graduate
class of 1925.
·
'
Also recognized were Cathy
Eb~in Deaver,
Keystone
Chancey
Heights, Fla., coming the farthest for the 35th anniversary
of her class of 1968, the last to
graduate from the old
Pomeroy High School and
Thelma Davis Jeffers ~f the
class of 1958, who remained
closest home.
Spe~ial . recognition
for
attendmg every alumni banMiddlepo~;
quet since they graduated in
Sarah Hawk
1943 .was given to Mary
Cullums,
Wiggins Bentz and Belva
M a r i e
Story
Young Glaze, celebrating their
Dorahs
60th reunion.
Curd, Iris
In the opening ceremony Joe
Bailey
. Struble, master of ceremonies,
Collins,
gave a special Memorial Day
G o I d a
tribute to the men and women
Heilman
serving in the armed forces.
Reed, all of
qeo;ge Dallas led in group
Pomeroy.
sigmng.
19408:
Awarded during the program
Mary Karr
were three $800 scholarshir.s
Bowen,
to the children and grandchilPomeroy;
dren of Pomeroy High School
Annabel!
graduates.
Soulsby
L e w i s
The recipients with 4. grade
Houdashelt,
averages were as follows:
Melinda J. Chancey, whose Gallipolis.
grandmothers,
Sharon
1941: Wanda Jacobs Eblin
Douglas Swindell and Mary and Don E. Mullen, Pomeroy.
~mberger ~hancey graduated
1942: Mary Sayre Rogers,
m 1960; Em1ly Story, daughter Danbury, Texas; Dana William
of Patrick Story of the class of . Arnold, Palmsville, Calif.
1968, and Robert Story grand1943: (60th reunion) Martha
father of the class of 1945· and Roedel . Hamm and Robert
Danielle Marie Tho~as, Hamm, Chillicothe; Cecil
granddaughers of Donald Brickles,
Vada Paulson
Thomas, class of 1951 and Brickes. Frances Dill Carleton
Carolyn Graves Thomas, class Homer Hysell, Nettie Sinclak
of 1954.
Bam~art, Belva Young Glaze,
Chancey, daughter of Rick Marvm Burt, Mary Wiggins
and Paula Chancey of Bentz, Mary Grueser Russell
Pomeroy, and Thomas, daugh- Addie Matson buck, all of
ter of Daniel and Fonda Pomeroy; Belva Young Glaze
Thomas of Wheelersburg, will Middleport; Jack Matson'
be attending Rio Grande to Columbus.
'
study nursing, and Story is · 1944: Joanne Raub Tatterson
enrolled in. the pre-med pro- and
~arold
Bl~ckst_on,
gram at Oh10 State UniverSity. Pomeroy, Nora Hams Rice,
The Charles s. Gibbs Middleport ..
Scholarship of $500 was
1945: B1ll Radford and
awarded to Shannon Soulsby, _E1,mic~ Hill Jones, Pomeroy;
granddaughter of James M. Eve.lyn Grueser
Hollon,
Soulsby, class of f941. She Racme.
will attending Rio Grande to
1946: Roy Holter, Howard
become a teacher.
Mullen and George Wright,
Alumni officers elected for Pomeroy; Mary, K. Foster
next year's r~union were Judy Yost, S~acus~.
·
We~rung S1sson, president;
!947. Fr~nk V~ughan,
Apnl Shasteen Smith first M1ldred Kapema Ph1lhps, Joe
vice presi~ent; William Young, Struble, Pomeroy; Richa;d
second v1ce president; and Rosenbaum, Groveland, Cal1f; .
Carol Strauss Kennedy, secre- Ho!'lon Thomas, Howard,
Oh10, and Betty Heilman
tary-treasurer.
George Hall provided music G1lkey, Westerville.
for the dance which followed
1948:
(55th
reunion)
the dinner.
Frances
Roush
Weber,
Columbus; William Knight
Point Pleasant, W. Va.: Neld~
A!umni At/ending
Alumnt and the class in Drenner Mockey, Fort Myers,
R1chard
Struble,
which they graduated are as Fla;
follows;
.
·
Lancaster: Gerald Custer
.
1925: Kathleen 'Bailey Scott
Racine.
' . Please see Pomeroy, A5'

I

.

'~"
j ,'

The. honor guard of Drew Webster Post 39, .American
Leg1on •. gave a gun salute at the levee to conclude the
Mem?nal Day service in downtown Pomeroy. (Ch.arlene
Hoeflich)

Rep. Jimmy Stewart called on his listeners to "never forget the sacrifices made by · ·so many" at Monday's
Mem?nal Day service in downtown Pomeroy. (Charlene
Hoeflich)
•
•

C&gt; 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Jt· .

'

.

Arthrltl• Foundation
~·

Rockin' Rolt·a·Thon
Sponsored locally by Holzer Medical Center

Thunclpy. ·Mpy. 29
1:00 - 4:00 pm • HMC French 500 Room
Proclamation Ceremony - 1:30 pm
Public encouraged to attend. Stop to rock for this
worthwhile cause! For more informa~on, call Vicki Nottingham at

(740) 446·9560

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the .Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org.

�•

Local News

,The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, May 28
AccuWeather.com lorecast for de
_[I

ime conditions low/hi h tam eratures

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Cleveland ]SO'fTO'
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Sunny Pt Cloody

Cloudy

Showers T-sknms

Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Cloudy, cooler and rain
Today ... Par)ly cloudy with
a chance of showers throu gh
·early afternoon.. .Then mostly cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hi ghs near 70. Northeast
winds 5 to I0 mph becoming
north wes t earl y this afternoon . Chance of rain 30 percent.
Toni ght ... Mostl y cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorm s until midnight... Then. partly cloudy
with a slight chance of
showers. Lows in ·the lower
50s. West winds 5 to 10
mph . Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday .. .Partly cloudy
with a sli ght chance of
showers·. Highs in the mid
70s . West winds 5 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Wednesday night .. .Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers
until midnight ... Then a·

•

·'

J.

Cloggers set to compete

MILES lAYTON

c.hance of showers and thu nderstorms. Lows in the mid
50s. Chance of rai n 40 percent.
Thursday ... Mo stly clollCly
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the mid 70s. C hance of rain
40 percent.
ni ght.. .Partly
Thursday
cloudy with a chance of
showers. Lows in the lower
50s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday ... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Saturday.. .P.artl y cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorm s. Lows in the
upper 50s and highs in the
upper 70s.
Sunday ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.
Monday .. .Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.

-

RACINE - The Southern
High School salutatorian and
valedictorians spoke of their
hopes and dreams for the class
of 2003 in the days ahead at
graduation exercises held
Sunday at 'the Charles W.
Hayman ·Gyn,nasium.
All the spee~hes held values
that resonated for each individtml , and echoed an optimistic
outlook for the future.
Thomas Michael Reed
Theiss. son of Clari nda Theiss
and Tom Theiss, gave the salututorian address. In a stirring
speech, Theiss discussed the
obstacles that he faced on his
road to building character.
'The last couple of years
have been my hardest," he
said. "When I decided to
become a cheerleader instead
of playing basketball I knew I
would be criticized. made fun
of, and I was. For all those people who made fun and criticized, thank you." You have
made me a better person in
understanding that l so NOT
want to be like you."
Theiss held the Jai-ge standing room only crowd at complete attention.
"Through my sacrifices I
have been told by others that I
inspired them to do things they
once thought were out of their
reach. When !leave here 1 will
know I will achieve great
th ings by being myself instead
of doing the norm ."
After quoting the great
thmker Ralph Waldo Emerson,
Theiss concluded his remarks
with a glimpse into the future
of the class of 2003.
"In conclusion, graduation is
the end of high school. It has
been only one of many chapters in our lives. Nothing,
except for the education we
rec~ived, will matter. If you
were the most popular person,
or the person that everyone
made fun of, none of those
labels will follow us. The slate

Sacrifices of mi Iitary
personnel honored ·

Hocking
College
recognizes
president's list

sacred monument," he said. '1'o
Asst. managing editor
visit the tomb and overlook
Arlington National Cemetery
· brings the reality of war and the
GALLIPOLIS ·
Gallia price that many have paid."
County residents gathered in
Stout closed his speech with a
Gallipolis City Park on Monday' quote from President John F.
to celebrate and reflect upon the Kennedy, which reads, "Any
Sacrifices of military men and man who may be asked in this
women down through the years century what he did to make his
at the annual Memorial Day cer_ life wonhwhile can respond, 'I
emony.
served in the United States miliPat Stout, a veteran of the Air tary."'
Force and director of instruction
Following Stout's speech, Jim
for the Gallia County Local Cozza, secretary of the Gallia
School District, was the speaker County Veterans Service
for this year's ceremony. He Commission, read the list of
served as principal at North names of Gallia County vetenms
Gallia and River Valley high . who have died since Memorial
schools prior to joining the dis- Day of 2002.
,
trict office staff. He is a member
Vetenms ~f Foreign Wars proof the American Legion.
vided a 21-gun salute and
"We come here today to Barbam Hill of the American
reflect on war and its eft'ects," Legion Auxiliary laid a memoriStout said. "We come here today al wreath at the foot of the
to say 'thank you.' We come Doughboy monument in honor
here today to celebrate freedom. of deceased service personnel.
And we come here today to
Korean War veterans were
mourn for our fallen comrades. honored on Sunday morning at
"On this Memorial Day, we First Baptist · Church in
come together to honor and Gallipolis during a service comremember all .those who have memorating the 50th annivertaken up arms in defense of our sary of the end of that conflict.
country."
· Army chaplain Lt. Col.
Stout reflected on Memorial Richard King, who was staDays past in Gallia County tioned in South Korea for two
when he and his family joined years, told Korean War vets in
with fellow residents to observe attendance that .their role in
the holiday and took time to rec- keeping South Korea f~ from
ognize veterans, active service communism has had a lasting
personnel and their families for spiritual value.
the sacrifices made in battle. .
"Even though that war never
"Memorial Day reminds us all ended in peace, just annistice,
that there is a price that we have I'm thoroughly convinced, after
already paid ·for freedom," he , living in Korea for two years,
said. "Our tribute today as we that the revi val that came to
stand here is to continue to carry South Korea after the Korean
the torch of freedom and hope War was caused by our military,
for future generations, and to by the Spirit of God moving
contmue to defend the ideals of upon that entire country," King
democracy and peace and tiber- said. "Let me tell you, South
ty ;~round this world. .
·
Korea t)as experi&lt;:m;ed spiritual
Amenca must contmue to be revival. The United States is
the land of promise and a coun- known as a Christian nation. Let
try that we can all be proud to me tell you, Korea is almost
say that we are the leaders of the more a Christian nation than the
~ wo rld."
United States is.
Stout said the most important
'Their relationship with the
memorial to rnilit:aJy personnel Lord Jesus Christ is so personin .the United States is the Tomb al."
of the Unkn~ wn Soldier at
Veterans in attendance at the
Arlington
&lt;;emetery
iri service were presented with serArlinsron. Va., JUSt a1rr0ss from · vice pins to commemorate the
W~hington, D.C.
oceasion and a ceremony was
The Tomb of tht; U~nown conducted pre~nting the flags
Sold1er is our nanon s most of the various military brancl~ s.

NELSONVILLE - Six
first-year students and 18
second-year
students
frorn. Hocking College
have been. named to the
President's List, the college 's most prestigious
honor.
The elite group repre- .
sents less than one-half of
one percent of the student
population and honorees
are chosen based on
scholastic achievement
and leadership ability.
Students must make
application for the honor
and will attend a banquet
hosted
by
Hocking
College President John
Light and attended by the
board of tru stees.
Named
to
the
President's List for the
second time are: Ryan
Burner of Alliance, Brian
McCombs of Radnor,
Jonathan Roberts of
Greenfield and Krista
Wagner
of
Other
Fredericktown .
second year students
include:
Michele
Bungard -and Rebecca
Hopstetter.
both
of
Logan ; Tina Bobo and
Andria Conaway, both of
Athens; Staci Thomas of
New Marshfield, Ronnie
Vance · of
Albany;
Shannon Whitaker of
Nelsonville;
Monica
Crook son of Barberton,
Ju stin·
Hamilton
of
Canton ,
Marg aret
Hampshire of Shawnee;
Morgan Mathews of
Pomeroy, Michael Kral of
Lexin~ton and Gerald
Strosmder of Pataska la.
First year students are:
Sarah
Bingham
of
Laurelville, Tarrah Leach
of,Logan , Michael Cox of
Mogadore, Christopher
Mathi as of Lancaster,
Charles
Rogers
of
Portsmouth and Joseph
Yinger of Glenfo~d . One
or more students from the
Pre sident's Li st will be
presented the Trustee s'
Award by Chairman
Carol Mackey during ·
commencement on . June
15 .

BY ANDREW CARTER

.

..

1

times the best thing to do is
throw up your arms and
scream your lungs out, remembering that even the hardest
. downfalls come the possibility
of the biggest and hest highs. If
each of you reaches even half
the potential that · you have
within yourse l ~s. the changes
that will take place in the
world will be revolut ionarv.··
Mariam EIDabaja. daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Sa leh
EIDabaja, gave the next valedictorian address and quoted
author Mark Twain and Hen ry
Davit! Thoreau.
"I want to say that the past
12 years have been a !cit of
fun," she said. "We have been
through so much together.
There have been good times
and bad. Learn from the bad
episodes, but keep the good
memories close to your heart."
Brandon Lee Smith, son of

Mr. and Mrs. Garry Smith,
gave the final v;1ledictorian
add ress. He discus,ed the real
world beyond the walls of the
school.
"How many of us have
heard or talked ahout the real
world." he said. "But what is
the real world? Is it·whatever
one does for a living'! Is it
whatever one moves on to or
does after hiQ h scnoo('J I
would like to thin k that the real
world is wh:u is here at home.
To me, famil y and friends. and
lo ved clo~ together in an area
wllere God resides is real.
What is more fun than that "
And our home is the world we
live in. As we venture out into
a broad horizon full of possibilities re membe r; that while
there is another world out
there, it is nice to know that
there is a real world we can
come back to.''

WEBSITE DIRECTORY
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Quality Window Systems, Inc. .

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INTERNET SERVICES

AUTOMOTIVE

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Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

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MEDICAL

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Holzer Medical Center

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BUSINESS TRAINING

Holzer Clinic
Gallipolis Career College

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Pleasant Valley Hospital

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COMMUNITY

· Yokeyes Birthwear
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

www.meigscountyohio.com

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Community Calendar ·
·Public meetings
Tuesday, May 27
MIDDLEPORT - Due. to
the holiday, Middleport Village
Council will meet at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday instead of Monday.

Clubs and
Organizations
Tuesday, May 27
MIDDLEPORT - Oh-Kan
Coin Club, 7 p.m . in the Trolley

House behind the Dairy p.m. at the home of Debbie
Queen in Middleport . Public Bullington.
invited.
Thursday, May 29
RACINE - The Racine
POMEROY - Wil dwood
Area
Community Garden Club, 1 p.m. Thursday
Organization will meet at
6:30 p.m. at the Racine at the home of Peggy Moore .
American Legion Hall. Ail Hal Kneen , Meigs County
scholarship winners and their Extension agent, to speak.
parents will be .guests at a
POMEORY - Alpha Iota
dinner.
Masters end-of-year picnic ,
RUTLAND - The Rutland 6:30p.m at the home of J6an
Garden Club will meei at 1 Corder. Take a covered dish.

Observed pastoral anniversary
SYRACUSE -. The Rev,
Mike Adkins and hi s wife,
Martha, recently celebrated
their fourth year of pa storing the Syracuse Nazarene
Church. The church began

a s a community Sunday
School in 1929 ·on Water
Street in Syracuse and severa] years ago moved into a
modern structure near the
eastern edge of the village .

In addition to pastoring the
church. the mini ster is a valunteer chaplain . Hi s wife is
fini shing a PhD at Ohio
University. The couple have
two children . •

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ENTERTAINMENT

Point Pleasant Register

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Charter Communications

Medical Exptorers post re-chartered
ATHENS - O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital recently
re-chartered the Medi cal
Explorers Post 5551 . The
Medical Explorers program
provide s exposure to careers
111 the medtcal field and is
affiliated with the Boy
Scouts of America.
The program is open to
young men and women who
are 14-20. Monthly meetings and activities are held

at the hospi'tal on the second
Wednesday evening of each
month .
The program offers medical career information, volunteer opportunities, and
learning experiences . In the
pa st year. student s have
toured surgical suite s. participated in a mock disaster
drill. participated in CPR
training. and met with a resident do ctor and pharmacist.

A Valentine service project
was al so planned for hospi tal patients and implemented by the post. Two members have become hospital
· volunteers.
Greg
Dietri ch
and
Deborah Shaffer, O' Blene ss
employees, are co-advisors
for the post. Information is
available by calling Shaffer
at 592-9494.

NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

EMPLOYMENT

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These Big Bend Cioggers wi ll travel to Hillsboro on May 31 to compete in a clogging contest. Mak~ng up the young adult grouip· are from the left. Erica Haning, Beth Gibbs, instructor Donne
May, arenna Shobe, and Sheena Morris .

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Genealogical society
di·scusses proposd Ohio law
POMEROY - A discussim\ l.l ll Hou'e Bi ll 95 in the
Oh i~l Legi,Ja turc concern ing
propo,ed changes in cmt&gt; of
copie s of vital reconJ1 and
government t.locuments wa s
held at I he recent meeting of
the The Me ip Cou nty
Genea logica l Soci ety. ·
The pro posed law wants to
initiate birth cert ificate s
. without listing pare nt !;'
names, wh ich wo uld make
then nearly useless in histo rica l resea rch, according to
Kei th Ashley, who presided
at the meeting held m the
Meigs Museum .
T he cost fo r certifi ed
copies is bei ng proposed to
be ra ised $5 to a new price of
$17. The law proposes to
eliminate non-cert ified photocopies of birt h. death. and
marriage records thu s pushing the cost from 25 cents to
the new amourit of $ 17. The
cost of photocopies wuuld no
longer be at the cost of the
copy itse lf but woul d be
raised to $ 1 a page when
copies cost less than 20 cent s

Southern High School seniors Rachel Chapm;m (left ) and Amy Lee walk to the stage in the
Charles W. Hayman Memorial gymnasium for the gradu ation cere mony. (J . Miles Layton)
is wiped clean. Once tonight is
over our real life begins. To
everyone here tonight: Always
be a first-rate version of yourself, instead of a second-rate
version of somebody else. To
my fellow classmates again
·and remember this, 'Don't live
down to expectations. Go out
there and do something
remarkable."'
When Theiss fini shed his
speech, the gymnasium was
quiet for a moment before the
crowd erupted into applause.
Crystal Dawn Cottrill,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Craig
Cottrill, gave the ftrst of three
valedictorian addresses. Her
·speech, which came with a reference to the movie "The
Breakfast Club," discussed the
"wild ride" in store for the
graduates ahead.
"Don't forget that life is just
a roller coaster ride - some-

Thesday, May 27, 2003

0

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Toledo 52'n3' j "S\
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BY

Page A3

Local News

The Daily Sentinel

StaHwriter

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1

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

Southern speeches echo opti_
mistism

Ohio weather
MICH.

PageA2

.

to make. it was pointed out.
society has vo ted to contact
The soci ety voted to make the Library of Congress to

the state representative and
state senator aware of the
damage House Bill 95 would
have on historical research in
Ohio and it effect on tourism
as a re sult of rese arch.
Ge nealogical research is one
or the to p two reasons for
tou rism in Meigs Count y
curre ntl y.
It was noted that the sod ety is stil l co llecting 5-generation pedi gree charts with
Meigs County roots for an
upcoming
publication.
Anyone may submit such a
chart as long, as Meig s
Count y ·roots are authenticated to Keith D. Ashley,
President, 34465 Crew Road
Pomeroy, OH 45769-97 15.
Chart s are available at the
Meigs County Mu seum.
. A 75 -yea r-old history of
· the Bradfield and allied fam'il ies of Meigs County was
obtained in unbound . manscr ipt fo rm . Thi s will be
added to the soc iety's collections after it is bound. The

Chester Council observes·
69th anniversary
CHESTER - The 69th
Anniversary of Chester
Coun cil #323 Daughters of
America was held at the hall
Tuesday May 20. with 31
members prese nt .
· A di r ner was served a1 6
p.m. by the Star Grange at
tables decorated in red.
white and blue. Tabl e favors
of pens and key chain s were
furn ished by Erma Cleland ,
counci l deput y. After the
welcome Esther Smi th gave

a brie f history of the Council.
Erma Cleland presented
Smith her 50-year membership pin .
Ruth Sm ith pre sided at the
meeting which opened in rituali stic form.
Attending the anniversary
ce lebration were ·Esther
Smith, Mary Holter, Laura
Mae Ni ce, Thelma White,
Delores Wolfe, Helen Wolf,
Kathry•i Baum, Gary Holter, ·
Janet Depoy, Arden Depoy,

Brewer first runner-up in
Sunburst Beauty Pageant
MIDDLEPORT
Jasmine Dian a Brewer fmished as fir st runne r- up
· ove ra ll in the Sunburst
Beauty Pagea nt he ld in
Athens and she will now
compete in th e stat e conte st.
She is the dau Qhter of
Stephanie and -Charli e
Brewer. Jr. and the granddaughte r of Lady and
Ronald Da vis and Diana
and Charlie Brewer. Sr.
If she is success ful in the
state contest, she wi ll
advance to national fin als
at Atlanta. Ga. in August.

Brewer

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·latest sports action,
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obtain a photocopy of an old
scarce manu scri pt on a
Rutland famil y. It also decided to consult with the historical soc iety in the publi shing
of an old, hi ~to ri c al issue of a
railroad magaz ine on Meigs
County history.
The society is preparing to
place an order in November
to a binding com pany to bind
softbound and unbound manuscripts in hard binding. Any
members needing old Bibles
of similar manu scripts bound
should contact the society to
arrange to ha ve thi s done .
The dimension s of the manuscripts will vary the cost of
binding.
.
Members are pla nning a
research tr ip to the West
Virignia Archives. Any
members interested in going
should contact the society for
the trip date. Several new
members were accepted into
membership. The next meeting will be July 8.

Goldie Fred erick, Julie
Curtis, Jean We lsh, Virginia
Lee, JoAnn Ritchie, Bob
Ritchie,Opal Hollon, Erma
Cleland, Mary Jo Barringer,
Scottie Smith, Bette Biggs,
Nathan
Biggs,
Esther,Harden.
Opal
Eichinger. Eve rett Grant,
Charlotte VanMeter, Marge
Fetty, Eva Ro bson, · Inzy
Newell. Ruth Smith and'
Sandy White.

Local briefs
Water
sampling at
Thomas Fork
POMEROY
The
Leading Creek Watershed
Committee will hold a
water quality sampling
demonstration at 6:30p.m.
Thursday in Thomas Fork ·
Creek.
The group will first meet
at
the
Ohio
State
University
Extension
Service
Offi ce
on
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy,
then convoy to the creek.
All are welcome and
refresliments
will
be
served.

Early dismissal·
at Eastern
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastem Local Schools will
dismiss at I p.m. on
Wednesday, due to the
girls' regional softball
tournament at Pickerington
High School.

�The Daily Sentinel

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•1n1on
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Page A
Thesday, May 27, 2003

WHAT's BLACK~ WH tTE &amp;RED ALL OVER ?

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydallysentlnel.com

..

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlene Hoeflich

General manager and news ,editor

REGIONAL VIEW

Waste
Pork is pork, except in
Columbus

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, May 27, the I47th day of 2!)()3, There are
218 days left in the year,
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 27, 1937, the newly completed Golden Gate Bridge
connecting San Francisco and Marin County, Calif., was
opened to the public. ·
On this date:
•·· In 1647, the first recorded American eltecution of a "witch"
took place in Massachusetts.
In 1896, 255 people were killed. when a tornado struck St
Louis, Mo., and East St. j..ouis, IlL
. In 1933, Walt Disney's Academy Award-winning animated
short "The Three Little Pigs" was first released.
In 1935, the Supreme Couri struck down' the National
lndustrial .J!ecovery Act
In 1936, the Cunard liner Queen Mary left England on its
maiden voyage.
In 1941 , amid rising world tensions, President Franklin
Roosevelt proclaimed an "unlimited national emergency:•
In 1941, the .British navy sank the German battleship
Bismarck off France, with a loss of 2,300 lives,
In 1964, independent India's first prime minister. Jawaharlal
Nehru, died,
In 1985, in Beijing, representatives of Britain and China
exchanged instruments of ratification on the pact returning
Hong Kong to the Chinese in 1997.
In 1994, Nobel Pri ze-winning author Alexander
Solzhenitsyn returned to Russia to ,the emotional cheers of
thousands after two decades in exile.
Ten years ago: The House of Representatives approved a
massive deficit-reduction, tax-increase bill by a vote of 219213, The Canadian House of Commons approved the North
American Free Trade Agreement. Five people were killed in a
bombing at the Uffizi museum of an in Florence, Italy ; some
three dozen paintings were ruined or damaged, ,
Five years ago: Michael Fortier, the government's star witness in the Oklahoma City bombing case, was sentenced to 12
years in prison after apologizing for not warning anyone about
the deadly plot
Today's Birthday s: Novelist Herman Wouk is 88. Actor
Christopher Lee is 81. Former Secretary of State Henry
. Kissinger is 80. Actress Lee Meriwether is 68. Musician
Ramsey Lewis is 68. Actor Louis Gossett Jr. is 67. Rhythmand-blues singer Ray mond Sanders (The Persuasions) is 64,
Country singer Don Williams is 64, Actor Bruc!&gt; Weitz is 60,
Singer Cilia Black is 60, Sen, Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., is
59. Singer Bruce Cockburn is 58. Actor Richard Schiff is 48.
Singer Siouxsie Sioux (The Creatures, Sio.u~s i e and the
Banshees) is 46. Rock musician Eddie Harsch (The Black
Crowes) is 46. Rock singer-musician Neil Finn (The Finn
Brothers) is 45, Actress Peri Gilpin is 42, Actress Cathy
Silvers is 42. Actor Todd Bridges is 38. Rock musician Sean
Kinney (Al ice In Chains) is 37. Actor Dondre Whitfield iS 34.
Actor Paul Bettany is 32, Rock singer-musician Brian
Desveault (Nine Days) is 32. Rapper Dre (Outkast) is 29,
Actor Ethan Dampf ("American Dreams") is 9.
Thought for Today: "If there is a possibility of several
_things going wrong, the one that will go wrong is the one that
will do the most damage,'' - Corollary to Murphy's Law,

'Speak Out!'
(740) 992-2156
extension 29

Obituaries
HUNTINGTON -

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

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Affirmative action discords

The SuEreme Coun will soon
rule on affinnative-action cases
at the Uni versity of Michigan,
Not cited in the oral arguments
before the Court·· and seldom
mentioned in the national
debate on racial and ethnic
preferences in college admis·
sions .. are two very peninent
factors: I ) If there's any hope
for aftirrnative action to be sueeessful, it should begin before
college. 2) The current
approach to affirmative action
often polarizes campuses
instead of creating harmonious
diversity.
TWo former college presidents,
William
Bowen
(Princeton) and Derek Bok
(Harvard) wrote the book 'The
Shape of the River" (Printeton
Press, 2000) that ha; often been
used by supponers .of afftrma·
tive action to emphasize their
principal argument for "diversity,'' They claim that having a
"critical mass" of blac k students on campus will enable
white students to deal much
better, after college. with our
increasingly multi-racial society.
This is also the Uni versity of
Michigan's primary justiflca·
lion for its racial and ethnic
preferences, However, very seldom 9uoted from the Bowen·
Bok findings is .. as Richard
Kahlenberg of the Century
Foundation pointed out in The
Washington Post last March -that "86 percent of black students at the 28 elite uni versities
they studied were from middleor upper-status families:·
Left behind were a· large
number of black studenL~ from
low-inconie
com munttres.
whose schools had failed to
educate them well enough for ·

es in which diverse groups had "Micl1igan's rJcial preference
the greatest oppor1unity ·ror SLIS· programs
's ti g~a tized'
tained contact"
African-Americans
and
Levine added. in The New 'increasingly polarized' the
York Time' in June 2000. that campus (and that) 'se ll~segre·
"diversity is the largc;t ~.:a use of gation ' was common. ...
Nat
'tu d~11t unrest on campu,. Diversity does not in itself. lead
Hentoff
accountin~ for .19 percent of to a more infonned, educated
student prlitests. according to population," AlSo, "diversity of
our 'ludv. Discourse i.; domi- skin color is not equivalent to
nated by ·two smalL but vocifer· diversity of ideas."
ous groups ·· one yel ling that
This past April 1, a
admission to any college, As diversity has edipsed all other Washington Post (story, entitled
Douglas Kmiec, dean of the aspects of college life and the
"At U-Michigan Minority
Catholic University of America other shouti ng I hat colleges Students Find Access __ and
School of Law in Washington. remain impervious to diversity, Sense of Isolation,'' indicated
notes, "aut hentic aftirmative Me~nwhile. the rest of the cam·
action begins years before stu· pus community tries to avoid that "the schoolyard debate on
dents apply (to college),"
the issue:·
how minhotity apphfi·can
dts are
Basic affirmative action -When I was active on the admitted• as rnagm te every
which should be available to all nationwide college lecture cir- ·perceived white insult, and the ,
children. regardless of race, cuit w1d duri ng a period when I hurt and anger that result"
who are from low-income fam- taught at Princeton University, I
Moreover. at some campusilies and are contined to poor found much of t11e same dis- es,'administrations increase the
schools .. requires much more cord on campuses,
isolation of both white and
effective principals, teachers
On May 6 of this year, Chetly black students by having (dorand curricula for what are Zarko told The Wall Street mitories) limited to black or
euphemistically called "disad- Journal how. through the other ethnic groups; and (by
vanwged" student,,
Freedom of Information Act, he holding) separate first-year onAs for the contention that obtained a copy of the ftrst entation sessions that further
having a "critical mass" of "executive summary" of the divide students,
largely middle· or upper-status Michigan Student Study ( 1990This does not preclude genminority students , on college . 94), which has been·· in courts uine ·friendships among stucampuses Will help reduce and legal briefs-- an imponw11 dents of diverse backgrounds,
mcial and ethnic tenstons iff the part of the University of but often , as an Asian student at
greater society, there is a lot of Michigan's case for racial wtd the University of Californiacontrary evidence that. actually. ethn ic preferences.
Berkley · complained: · "When
current affirn1ative-action pmc·
But according to Zarco. that you tirst get here ,, they really
tices often ha ve a di visive tirst executive summary contra· shove that (diversity talk) down
effect.
dieted later public claims by
In their book. '"When Hope (university ofticials) that cam- ?'~~r thmat ,. I really resented
and Fear Collide: A Ponrait of pus diversity has a "direct and rt
·''' - )&lt;
Today's College Students.. strong etlect on learning ;md
Whatever (he Suprenie.court
(Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1998) the way students conduct them- decides. 'let's. begin fairness at
A11hur Levine, president of the selves later in li fe, including kindergarten, including the
teac hers College, Columbia disrupting prevailing pattems· . resources for li fe- long educaUniversity, and Jeannette of racial segregation:· .
tion.
Cureton.
an
education
By comrast. on May 24,
(Nat HenrojJ is a nationally
researcher. reponed th;lt "stu· 1994. the tirst r-e,u lls of the renonned walwrity 0111he First
dents were most troubkd abo.ut Michigan Student Study. writes Am.-ndmel/1 ami tlu• Bill of
race relations on those campus· Zarco,
concluded
that f?iglrts, ) ·

Democrats, CEOs outpace Bush on health riform
As demonstrated by a
remarkable press conference on
Monday, it's
not j'ust
Democratic presidenti&lt;d cand'dates who are insisting that
America's health care crisi'
Morton
move to the top of the political
Kondrake
agenda.
The cao;e was made by CEOs
of Giant Food. the Kellogg Co,
SBC Communications and
Cinergy Corp,, an energy giant,
.
as well as the presidents of the · Medicare prescription drug benCommunications Workers of efit f.or seniors, although they
America and the California admit that they could fall behind
Public Employees' Rciircment if a Republican-dominated govSystem.
emment fail s to enact a benefit
The attendees didn't just into law this year or next.
complain about the surging
But on the burgeoning issues
ranks of the uninsured. They of health costs, coverage and
called ballooning insurance quality. some administration
costs "unsustainable."
officials admit they are well
The press evem, ,ponsored behind the curve and need to
py the nonpartisan National "turbo-ch,e" Bush's proposal
Coalition on Health Care, to provide 99 billion wm1h or
demonstrated that the health tax credit~ over 10 years to help
issue needs to be attended to not the uninsured buy health insuronly by Democmts, but the ance,·
...
Bush administration. too,
. Among the Dermcmuc canBefore 5he left Washington to · drdates. Rep. ~~~han.l Geph~rdt
return to Texas last year, col· (Mo,) got. oH the mark trr.-t.
leagues say, form~r White althoughhrs_plan has beenJUStiHouse communications director fiably cnttmed as ton ex penKaren Hughes advised that Stve - at. between $2 tnllron
Bush needed to "neutralize''the and $3 tn_lhon over 10 year;.
health
issue before the and lacking ,any COSI-contilln2004 election the way he did the ment mecharusm,
,
education issue in 2CXXJ.
Former Vermont Gov.
Administration
oflicials Howard Dean carne m ~ 1th a
claim they're staying even with more affordable and pGitUcally
,Democrats by advocating a feasrble plan - at $700 bll,hon

care

- but" it, too. is light on cost
controls.
So far, Sen, John Kerry
(Mass.) has the best combina·
tion of pmposals on cost con·
trol, coverdge hlr the unirhlllrd
and quality improvement.
although Sen. Joe Lieberman
(Conn.) promi'e'. to try to
m&lt;rlch hi m with a proposal thi s
summer.
On Wcdnesda) , Lieberman
un veiled one pioneering pro[XJsal not on any other candi·
date's ·agenda: an American
Center for Cure&gt;. a new feder,d
agency designed to cooperate
with private comp&lt;mies to tnutslate basic biomedical research
into actual remedies for diseh.-,cs.

Lieberman aides 'aid his
ovemll health proposal would
r-esemble the one recommended
in the 2000 campaign of
Democratic cw1didate AI Gore,
involving expansion of existing
msunmce progr.uns to cover the
uninsured.
.
1l1at's the fundamental basis
of the Dew1 and Kerry proposab as well, and it contra~ts with
revisions of the health system
such as Gephan:lt 's rmmdate that
all employer.; offer insunmce. a
mandate for &lt;dl individuals to
obtain insurance or a govemment-run single-payer system,
The National Co:llition on
Health C&lt;rre, a .consonium or
corporation&gt;. unions. health

pmviders_ pension funds and
church groups. prefers a •·comprehensive" overhaul of the
health system, but it ha' not yet
said what form tl1at should take,
As Simmons and the CEOs
said. health cost~ are rising at a
double-digit rate each year,
'11tis year·s hike in avemge
insur.mce , premiums. 12,7 percent. i, more tl1an five times the
increase in 1998 &lt;utd more than
double the increase back in
1993, when there was widespread agreement that the health
care system was in crisis,"
coalition president Simmons
s&lt;tid in a prepared statement.
SBC president Bill Daley said
tl1at despite cost-cutting in every
other area &lt;mel a reduct.ion of
25.000 employees over the past
four years. his company's health
care costs have increased 50
percent in the past three years.
Such reductions will be condemned by Democmts, unions
and health providers that argue
for Bush to stan educating the
publtc soon about his health ,
ideas.
More importantly, though, he·
has to take the field seriously
because Democrats are already
occupying it - w1d corpomte
CEOs are demanding action.
(Mm1o11 Kondmcke is execu- ·
tive editor of Roll Call. the
neii',IJHIJ&gt;t!r of Capitol Hill,}

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

www.mydailysentinel.com

Edith Mary
Neutzling Blatt

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

• The Cleveland rlain Dealer, on unnecessary spending:
Legislators lashed out at Gov. Bob Taft last February when
he delivered to the House his $~9 billion budget, which called
for new taxes, They vowed to strip it of waste and all unnecessary spending.
They did just that, or so they say, And then they proceeded
to lard it up with questionable spending proposals of their
own.
. Even as the state's higher-education budget faces its biggest
threat in decades, legislators have earmarked funding for a
new community college in Warren County. Are they kidding''
At a time when the governor's Ohio Reads program is wide·
ly ridiculed by legislators, the House budget contains no fewer
that six special ized reading programs, costing $4.5 million.
Can you say "redundant"?
Sorry, but Ohioan s should be laughing - derisively - at
these bold protectors of the public purse, But legislators who
pose as fiscal conservatives, then support programs like those
listed above, wear out their entertainment 1value quickly in
times like these,

Thesday, May 27, 2003

Edith
M a r y
Neutz l ing
Blatt, 93, of
German
R i d g e
R o a d ,
pas s e d
away May
25,2003, in
St. Mary's
Medical
Blatt
Center,
Funeral
litergy will be held at 10 a.m.
Wednesday at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. Huntington,
by Father Andrew Kanyc.
Burial will
follow
in
Springhill Cemetery.
Born Aug. 4. 1909, in
Ci ncinnat i, Edith later li ved
in Pomeroy, and in 1924
mo ved to Hunti ngton.
She was a member of the
first graduating class of St.
Jose ph Catholic High School
in 1928. ' She was a home·
maker and together with her
husband , Lewis. owned and
operated Jersey Herd Dairy
for 40 years.
She was a board member
oF the Lavalette Public
Service District from 1969·
1995 and ded icated over 30
years of service to the
Lavalette Communit y, She
was al sn a meml;&gt;er of the
Lavalette Woman's Club for
26 years.
She was preceded in death
by her father Lewi s
. Neutzling, mother, Barbara
Grayber
Neutzing
McG innis, hu sband Lewi s
A. Blatt and an infant son,
Thomas,
She is survived by four
children. Barb arra Ellen
Blatt with whom she made
her hom~. Mark Blatt,
Gregory Blatt and hi s wife ,
Linda, and Gabriel Blatt and
his wife, Rhonna.
Also survi ving are two
grandchilclren, Jenny Ellen
Blatt Bias and her husband ,
Gray, Lewis Scott Blatt and
his wife, Shaw nette, along
with four gre at grandchldren, Isaac Noah Bias,
Nicholas Elijah Bias, Emily
Ellen Blatt, and Lindsey Kay
Blatt
Edith al so considered as
members . of her family,
Russell and Pat Miner of
Toms River, N.J ., and special friend and neighbor
Yvonne Riddle .
The family would like to
express their thank s and
appreciation to caregiver
Hazel Ferguson. Friends
may call from 6 to 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the Reger Funeral
Home, 1242 Adams Ave.,
Hunt ington . A rosary will be
rec ited beginning at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday,

Grace Weber

she served as head teacher at
Riverview
Elementary
School in the Eastern Local
School Di strict , earning the
respec t and admiration of her
students and coll eagues,
Mrs. Weber was an advocate for persons with disabili'ties , havin g . worked dilli gently to help establi sh
Carleton School. and Meigs
Indu stries , where she has
been a dedi cated board member for several years,
She was a lifetime member
of the Reed sville United
Methodist Church and a
member of th e United
Methodist Women, In addition to holding several different offices in the church and
U,M,W, she served as a
church trustee,
A very involved community member. she was a member of the Ri verview Garden
Club and a past member of
the Community Builders
C lub. She · was an ac tive
member of the Retired
Teachers Association since
her retirement
Her late husband, Denver
and she together establi shed
the D.Y. Weber Construction
Co,, which is currentl y
owned and operated by their
son, David Weber.
Surviving are her sons,
David (Deborah) and Mark.
both of Reedsville : two
granddau ghters,
Morgan
Nicole and Erin Riley ; two
Gladys
(Bi ll )
sisters.
Mered ith of Beve rl y and
Maltine (Ernest) Whitehead
of Reedsville; two sisters-inlaw, Chloe Weber of Long
Bottom and Lillian Pickens·
of Reedsville. Nieces and
nephews
surv iving are
Charles and Roger Meredith ,
Jean Whitehead Frydman,
Jane Whitehead Meyer, Juli
Whitehead Hensc h, Mary
Sauer deLamerens and Joy
Sau.er Stew art and several
great nieces and great
nephews.
She was preceded in death
by her husband of 43 years,
Denver; a brother, Warren
Pickens; and two sisters, Fay
Sauer and Alice , who died in
infancy,
Services will be at II a, m,
.on Friday, May 30, 2003, at
Fisher Funeral Home, in
Pomeroy with Rev, John
Frank and Pastor Phil Sturm
officiating. Burial will follow
at Reedsville Cemetery,
Friends may call from 2 to
4 and 6 to 9 p,m, Thursday at
the funeral home ,
Memorial contributions
may be made to the Carleton
School/Meigs
Industries,
P,O, Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio
45779, or the Reedsville
United Methodi st Church,
P,O, Box 75, Reedsville,
Ohio 45772. ·
Friends may se nd condolences and register online 1at
www,fisherfuneralhomes.co
1

m,

•

RE~DSVILLE Grace
Pi ckens · Weber,
72,
Reedsvi ll e, passed away
Saturday, May 24, 2003, at
Mt. Carmel We st Hospital in .
Columbus, following a
lengthy illness,
Mrs, Weber was born in
Reedsville, daughter of the
late Ru th Henderson and
Harry Picke ns. She was a
graduate of Chester Hi gh
Schi,JOI and Ohio University,
with a degree in elementary
. education. ·
She was a long-term educator, who taught in Ro ss, 1
Wood , Washington and
Meigs County schools. She ·
was instrumental in the orga·
niz;ation of the first Head
Start Program in Meigs
County. For the la~t several
years of her 34-yea r career,

Naomi Smith
POMEROY

Naomi
Golden
Smith, 83.
was called
home to be
with
the
Lord
on
Sunday ,
May
25 .
2001
She was
born
on
Smith
February
21. 1920, to
Harley and Iva Johnson of
Wolf Pen Road, Naomi lived
for 72 years at Wol f Pen and
attended the Zion Church of
Christ. She graduated from

Pomeroy "Hi gh School in
1939. After graduation, she
worked at Massar Grocery in
Pomeroy for Norm and
Stella Kloes. After her mar~
riage on March 28, 1945, lQ
Charley D. Smith, Bunker
Hill , they purchased the grocery and gas station on
Route 143 at Wolf Pen Road.
Along wit h operatin g th,is
establi shment,
Naomi
enjoyed writing the Wolfpen
News column for The
(Pomeroy) Daily Sentinel
and Athens Messenger,
Naomi retired in 1983
after 37 years o'f service to
her community, ·to care for
her h.usband, She has made
het home fo r the past I0
years in Daniels, W.Va, with
her daughter and son- in-law,
Jo and Danny Worley, and
their children.
Naomi was preceded in
death by her husband ,
Charl ey D. Smith; her par·
ents, · Ha rley and Iva
Johnson·; and a sister, Mrs.
Howard (Evelyn) Thoma.
Naomf is survived by two
dau ght ers and their hu sbands, Jan and Doyle ·
Knapp. Langsville, and Jo
and Danny · Worley, of
Daniels, W,Va,; a granddaughter, Stacy, and her husband,. Chris Treadway, of
Dani els. W.Va.; five grandsons: Kail and wife, Amy
Knapp ,
Of
Coolville ,
Charles and wife, Michelle
Knapp, of Syracuse, Kevin ,
and wife Judy Knapp, of
Wolf Pen , Daniel Worley
and fiance, Contessa Lilly,
of Daniels, W.Va., and
Stephen Worley, of Daniel s,
W. Va ,; five great-granddaughters: Michelle, and
husband Jarrod Folmer, of
Rock springs , Amy, and husband Jeremy Allman , of
Albany, Ashley Knapp, of
Wolf Pen, Jordan Knapp, of
Coolville,
and
Angie
Seinable, of Syrac use; a
great-great granddaughte~.
Nikki
Folmer.
of
Rocksprings; a sister Ida
Murphy; and a brother,
Harley, and his wife ,
Kathryn Johnson, of Wolf
Pen: five sisters-in-law; a
brother-in-law; and several
nieces, nephews, relatives,
and friends.
Naomi was a wonderful
woman whose smi.le and
jovial manner touched the
hearts of many people in her
life . She was a loving wife ,
mother, grandmother, great
grandmother, and greatgreat grandmother, We were
deeply blessed to h a~e her
, in our live s and she will be
deepl y missed by all.
Funeral services will be at
4 p,m. on Thursday, May
29, 2003, at Fi sher Funeral
Home in Middleport with
Rev, Tommy C Treadway
officiating. Burial will follow at Carleton Cemetery
on Kings bury Road.
Friends and family . :may
call at Fi sher Funeral Home
in Middleport from 5 to 9
p,m, on Wednesday,
Pallbearers will be her
grandso ns. Kail Knapp ,
Charles Knapp , Kev in
Knapp. Chri s Treadway.
Daniel Worley and Siephen
Worley.

Pomeroy
from PageA1
Chardon; Jla Hayes Bowers,
Pataskala; Martha Karr
Rowe, Birmingham, Ala,;
June
Unroe
Adams,
Gallipoli s; Charles Slack,
Massillon; Everyn · Fick
Young, Helen Houd as helt
Brown, and Betty Pullins
Sayre, all of Middl eport ;
Dorothy Fischer Schwarz,
Mason, W, Va,; Ken neth
Harris, James F. Wi II, Ann
Smith
Rupe, . Philip
Ohlinger, Carol Evans
Ohlinger, and June Whaley
VanVranken,
all
of
Pomeroy,
1949 : Ann Foster Cottrill,
Lancaster; Bill Tubbs,
Syracuse ; Lois Smith,
Martha Terrell Sruble,
Pomeroy ; Rolland Daniels,
Palm Springs, Calif; Jack
Seelig, Starke, Fla,: George
Dallas, Agoura Hill , Calif
1950: Betty Genheimer
Knight , Point Pleasant; John
P. Boyd, Oak Hill ; Ernest M.
Bowers, Pataskala; Gene
Yeauger, · Enon;
John
Robinson, Mechanicsburg,
Va.;
Verna
Osborne
Snowden , Gallipolis; Robert
Burton
and
Margaret
•Thuener Lehew, Pomeroy;
Robert Barnitz, Maso n;
Eugene .
Hawkins,
Middleport, ani! Emmogene
Edwards
Hamilton,
Syracuse.
1951 : Howard Simpson,
Hunnel,
Stewart; Don
Pomeroy; Joanne Jone s
William s, Syracuse; Janet
Hill Theiss, Racine , and Lily
Girolami
Strickland,
Woodville .
1952: Sue Jean Raub,
Ronnie Smith, Phyllis Meier
May, all of Pomeroy ; Edna
Hatfield Starr, Willoughby
Hill s;
Ann
Piersall
Persinger, Mt Hope, W. Va,
1953: (50th reunion)
Kenneth Cole, Belleville;
Charles
Hamm,
Indianapolis, Ind.; Loui s
Osborne, Melbourne, Fla.;
William Roush, El Paso,
Teltas; John E. Ratliff,
Cloverdale, Calif; Nathan
Roush, Sryacuse; Marilyn
Vickers Graham, Columbus;
Sue
Struble
Tubbs,
Syracuse; Mary .Robinson
Dudek, Concord; Kenneth
King, Middleport; Sally
Bartels Ayers and Mildred
Stockton Bernard, Athens ;
Ted Scott, Westland, Mich. ;
Barbara Hatfield Scarberry.
~~;:
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Henderson, W Va,; Mary Neutzling, Parkersburg, W.
Holder Huddleston, Racine; Va.; Mike Werry, Belpre ;
and Shirley Radford Sisson, Alice
Casto
Hilton,
Dale Davi s, Ed Kennedy, Parkersburg. W. Va.
Marlene Moore Wilson,
J963': (40th reunion)
Frankie Evans Hunnel, Barbara Coates Chaney,
Shirley Smith Smith , James Albany: Hank Cleland.
Kitchen, Clarice Clifford Racine ; Doug 'Moore,
Kitchen, Phylli s Goeglein ,Sandra London Moore,
Clark, all of Pomeroy. Piketon : James Gilbert,
Special guests ML and Mrs. Springfield; Sandra Wells
Duke Barrett of Alliance,' McCallister, Cutler: Jerry
former teacher and coach at Shamblin, Madi son, Tenn.:;
Pomeroy Hi gh School.
Harold Eugene Smith,
1954: Ray Hines, Belpre; Mansfield ; George Korn ,
Don
Yeauger,
Canal Shade; William E, Murray.
Winchester; and Joanne Hili ard; Donald Brown,
Va4 ghan, Columbu s; Mary Douglas
Thornton
Pomeroy,
Daggett, Wilmington , Dela. ;
1955 : Nancy Jacobs Charlene Diehl Rutherford,
Hanold and William Hyse ll, .Lawrenceburg, lnd ,; George
Columbus; Roger Hines, Starcher, West Columbia,
Logan , Har,ley John son. W, Va.; Helen Brown
Carol Strauss Kennedy, Harrison, Pataskala; Phoebe
Pomeroy, and Stacie Arnold, , Harper Coates, Rick Crow,
Racine.
· Syracuse; Richard Well,
1956: Marcia Burn side Frederickstown; Romona
King, Mary Jane Scott Wise , Compton Jacobs, Sharon
Middleport; Tom Reuter, Mitch Michael s, Sharo n
Janice
Riffle
Reuter. Hyse ll
Manley,
Allen
Pomeroy ; Bob Hill , West Downie , Roger Young,
Jefferso n, and Carolyn Sharon Thoma Rou sh,
Charles, Syracuse.
Rosetta Lisle Redovian,
1957 : Lila Terrell Mitch, Judy Wehrung Sisson, all of ,
April Shasteen Smith, Dan Pomeroy.
E. Morr~s. all of Pomeroy ;
1964: Jennifer Crew
Rita Netuzling
Davis
and
S
. S
SC
o1omon, Ch ester, s. c ,;
Jerry Davts,
umteL . .; y
B 1 v ung Don
Janet Struble Willi amson,
vonne ea ''0
'
Rutl and ;. Mike Ohlinge r. Mayer, Pomeroyh; and
Karen
Mill er
Gilbert,
Albany : Bob Eastman , Springfield .
Gallipoli s; Tom · Goe tt,
Cramer
1965 :Faye
Cheshire.
1958: (45th reunion) Ann Isenhour, Claremont: N, C,,
Icenhour
Hoffman , Carl a Will Werry, Belpre;
William stown, w. Va.; Faye Linda Darnell Mayer and
Thomas DeWees, Grove Doinna
Hauck
Carr,
Margaret
Clark Pomeroy,
City;
Shreve, Cincinnati; Wilma
1966: Donald Naipper,
Ohlinger Accod; Hebron ; Pataskala.
Doris
Imboden
Ford ,
1967: Butch Lightfoot,
Cincinnati; Carolyn Philiips Pomeroy.
Surface, Robert P arker,
1968; (35th reunion)
Marietta; Rachel Rou sh Jennifer Mench ini Kirby,
Stourt,
Hilliard;
Tom Annapoli s, Md ,; Pamela
Garnes, Denver, Colo.; Crew Napper, Pataskala ;
Florence Bearhs Wood , Beverly Beaver Smith,
Coolville; Roger Hy se ll , Marcellus, Mi ch,; Cathy
Marcia Grueser Arnold . Eblin We aver, Keystone
Racine ; Mary Lou Smith Heights, Fla,; Becky Nease
Hawkins,
Middeport; Anderson, Jim Anderson ,
Thelma Davis Jeffers, Racine; Sandra B'ailey
Pomeroy.
Mathew s, Athens; Jane
1959:
Kenneth Well s
Mitchell,
McCullough, Jerry Roush, Ravenswood , W.
Va,;
.Pomeroy; Ruby Taylor William Charles Cook,
McMilion,
Middleport ; Middleport; Pamela Hayes
Sheila Strauss Eastman , Holcomb,
Lithopolis ; ·
Gallipolis.
Mauri sha Durst Nelson,
1960:
Ed
Bartel s, Middleport ; Carolyn Jones
Pomeroy.
Korn , Shade; David E Carr, .
1961: Mike Roberts, Janet St Clair Peavley,
Akron; Nancy · Hamm, Pauietta Hudson Harri son,
Columbus; Norman Price, ·. Becky Hawley Elli s, Janes
Ben Ewing, Bill Young, Quivey. Jack Mowery, Jerry
Pomeroy:
Well,
Bonnie
Banks
I 962:
Anita Russell Lightfoot, all of Pomeroy.

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Look for Middleport·Alumni cov$rage Wednesday.

Southern
from PageA1

Pickens.
The graduates were :
Justin Ray Allen, Rebecca
Ann Alley. Breeana Skye
Andrew, Dwight Ogle sby
Apperson
Ill ,
A,dam
Joseph Ball , Bridgette
Adrienne Barnes, Shane
Estelle Butl er, Sharlene
Marie Chapell , Meg an
Nicole Combs, Ju stin
Curtis
Connolly,
Christopher Linn Coppick,
Leastann Marie Dee m, ·
James Lee Eakins, l-!olly
Louise Marie Evans, Travis
Hart,
Bian ca
Tyler
Herrera , Jordan Kyle Hill ,

netted more than $122,000
in scholarships ,and boasted
a college acceptance rate of
over 75 percent.
Honorari ans were Rachel
Nicole Chapman, daughter
of Mr, and Mrs, CT
Chapman; Tony Curtis
Crouch, son and Mr. and
Mrs,
Tony
Crouch;
Brittany Noel Forrune.
daughter
of
Shelly
Fortune ; Jeri Michelle
Hill, daughter of Mr. and .--------~--~--------1
Mrs. Perry Hill'; Amy Beth
Lee , dau ghter of Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Bentz: and Tara
Kristin Pickens, daughter
Reader Services
cusPs 21a-gso)
of Mr. and Mrs. Jame s
Ohio Valley Publishing Co,

The Daily Sentinel

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accu rate. If you know of an error in a
story, 'call the newsroom at (740) 992-

2156.
Our main number Is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

TfiE 80 LIVE ffcrrobic:
Kic:kboxing is bGc:k in
M~igs Coontylll
t
1

SAT &amp; SUN ONLY

News

6:30PM

Join the areas only Billy Blanks CertHied
Tae Bo lnstrudor In the best workout you
· will ever have. New music every time,
no routines. self defense and fat buming
aerobic moves!

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Mi les Layton, Ext 13

Advertising
Outllldt Sa too: Dave,Harris, E&lt;t. 15
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7:a,9:45
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All I'IG I S UL TIMl':i

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Meiss County Library downstairs room
Mondays &amp; Wednesdays at 6:15 p.m.
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Starting June l for 9 weeks!
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Publ ished
every
afternqon,
Monday throug h Friday, 111 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Oh io. Periodical
postage pa id at Pomeroy.
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and
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Ohio
Newspaper
·Association.
Postmaster: SlClnd address correcti ons to The Daily Sentine l, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

I
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• 45769.

BOX OFFICE OPENS

~

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Keyes,
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PageA6

Business

The Daily Sentinel

I

.

busines,es understand ·the
fundamentals of international
trade and whether it is right
for ihem. I-BOSS will also
cover the initial steps neces•
sary to begin exporting.
Through prese nta tions and group discussions.
ex perts in international trade
will cover a wide array of
issues including:
·
• the advanlilges ami t!isad ..
vantages of exporting.
• ri1yths about exporting.
• basics of ex port market
plans,

• approaches to international trade. and
• tips on preparing products
for export.
Business owners who leave
the workshop interested in
exporting are also eligible for
ITAC' s free customized individual international trade
counseling through
the
llllernational ·
Trade
Assistance Center (ITAC) in
Athens.
ITAC programs provide
export counseling assistance
to and serve as the first point

I

of contact for information.
resources, referrals and counseling for new-to-export small
businesses in Appalachian
Ohio. ITAC is part of the
Ohio
Small
Business
Development Center (SBDC)
at
Ohio
University's
Voinovich
Center
for
Leadership and Public Affairs
and is a partnership between
the U.S. Department of
Cpmmerce's
Commercial
Service Department and the
Ohio
Department
'()f
Development.

U.S .. consumers asked to return
dog food from diseased cow
.

.

: WASHINGTON (AP) U.S ' consumers are being
asked to return dog food that
may ha ve come from a
Canadian cow that tested
positive for mad cow disease.
Pet Pantry International of
Carson City, Nev., which
issued the request ·Monday,
!aid customers should search
for ·
two
products:
''Maintenance Diet'' with a
~use by" date of " 17FEB04"
and "Beef with Barley" with

a date of "05MAR04.
If found, the food should
be held for pickup. The company 's products are purchased by phone or e-mail
and delivered by franchises
to consumers' homes .
There is no known risk to
dogs and no evidence that
dogs could transmit the disease to humans, the Food and
Drug Administration said.
The voluntary return is a precaution to prevent discarded

dog food from getting mixed
with feed for cattle, goats or
sheep.
Customers who purchased .
dog food since February
should check their supplies
and, if found, should call the
company at 1-800-381 -73 87.
Pet Pantry also is using sales
records to contact consumers.
· The suspect food, in ·50
pound bags, was produced in
Canada by Champion Pet

Food of Morinville , Alberta.
The Canadian government
already has prevented meat
from the single diseased cow
to . be processed for human
food.
Test results have cleared all
other cattle in the original
herd linked to North ·
America's first mad cow case
in a decade , Canadian officials said Sunday. ·
011
the
Net:
FDA
http://www.fda.gov

..

Offshore companies do $1 billion
~n business With U.S. government
BY JotATHAN D. SALANT
Associated Press
: WASHINGTON (AP) Companies that reduced their
U.S . tax bill by incorporating
overseas did $1 billion worth
of business with the federal
government last year, an
{\ssociated Press computer
'•nalysis
of federal contracts
y
showed.
' The Bermuda-based consuiting company Accehture
Ltd .. a spinoff of the former
Big Five accounting firm
.1\rthur Andersen, was the
biggest feceral customer. It
received $662 million in contracts between Oct. I. 200 I,
and Sept. 30. 2002. mostly
from the Transportation
$ecurity Administration.
· The engineering firm Foster
Wheeler Ltd. received $293.2,
tnillion. Ingersoll-Rand Co.
lAd., which boasts that its
equipment helped carve
Mount Rushmore, received
$7.6 million. .
' · During the federal fiscal
year that ended in September
200 I , companies w1th offshore headquarters received
$846 million in federal con·
.
tmcts, accordmg to the Hou~e
Ways and Means Committee s
Democratic staff.
"It's outrageous that we
would do busmess with these
folks," said Rep. Richard
Neal. D-Mass., who has intractuced legislation 10 continue
laxing companies that move
their headquarters overseas.
·

"They are shirking their citizenship."
The process is known as
corporate invers.ion: A company moves its headquarters sometimes nothing more than
a post office box - · to a low-.
tax enclave such as Bermuda
or the Cayman islands while
leaving its operations and
employees in the U n.ited
States.
The Senate twice has passed
legislation to prevent the new
Homeland
Security
Department from doing business with companies that relocate overseas, but both times
h
··
d
t e prOVISion . was remove
from the final bill by House
Republican leaders.
Jonathan
Grella,
a
spokesman
for
House
Majority Leader Tom DeLay,
R "'
· h ·
h ld
- .exas, said t e Issue s ou
be addressed as part of an
overhaul of the tax system.
Republicans have blamed
.
h1gh U.S. taxes for the probleC~rporations that have
moved overseas spent $S million to lobby Congress and the
~ d
e era! a~encies and ~onat~d
$1.2 mJihon to campru~ns Ill
200 I and 2002, accordmg to
· an AP anal . i 0 f data fr m
..
ys s
.
o
Poht1cal . Money Lme, , an
Internet sue. . .
.
. To fight h;~1siat1on restnctmg thw ab1hty to move offshore, the compame~ have
assembled an all-star team of
lobbyist~, mcludmg former
Sens. Slade Gorton, R: Wash ..
and Denms DeConcm1, D-

...

The cost is $10 for those
who preregister online by
May 30. or $15 at the door.
Students and seniors get a .
discount: $7 if registration is
made online by May 30. or
$10 at the door. Re·gistration
online is at http://www.xintric.com/itaao.

Roush retires after 35 years
&lt;

CHESHIRE - Harold C.
Roush, a maintenance supervisor at Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation's Kyger Creek
Plant, retired May I; with 35
years of service with the
company.
His
retirement
was
announced· by Ralph E.
Amburgey,· plant manager.
Roush joined the company
in 1967, and was promoted
to his current position in

Roush

1995
A native
of Letart,
W.Va., he
served in
the U.S.
A r m y
from 1965
to 1967.
He and his ·
wife, Sue
Ann, live
in Rutland.

MARIETTA - Graduates
from Washington State
Community College's associate's degree nursing progr~m
have recorded an outstanding
passing rate on the national
examination, with 16 graduates passing the exam to
become registered nurses.
"Graduates of nursing programs cannot legally practice
as registered nurses until they
have passed the exam," said
program director Joan C.
Hampton. "The graduates
and faculty deserve to be
extremely proud of their
tremendous
acc,omplish-

Birthday
Campbell
celebrates 4th
SYRACUSE - Cody
Bruce Campbell celebrated
his fourth birthday on Apri 1
19 with a party hosted by his
parents. Jeff and Tabitha
Campbell.
A Scooby-doo theme was
carried out and refreshments
including a birthday cake
were served. Special guests
at the party were his graridparents.
Wil son
and
Georgian
Whited
~,.
Virginia.
Others attending were
grandparents, gay and Jo
Ann Willford and Nancy
Grueser; great-grandmothers, Gloria Manuel and
Elizabeth Willford,. all uf
Racine ;' Alisa and Jeff
Caldwell of Jackson, Amy,
Timmy and Hailey Triplett
of Portland; Kay and AI
Graham of Syracuse. Nancy

Honaker birth
announced

Black birth
announced

BOTTOM
Amanda
ard Jeremy
Honaker of

RUTLAND - Wendy and·
Jason Black of Rutland
announce the birth of a son,
Jesse Robert, on May 17 at
L 0 II g O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
Bottom
announce
the binh of a
s e v e n

pound, six
o u n c e

daughter,
Honaker
Skylar
Isabelle ,
11om on April 24 at the o· Blenes
Memorial Hospital in Athens.
' 1be Honakers have two other
daughers, Selena and Shayla.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

E,xp_eri.ence .
the Outdoors.

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Prater of
Wellston:
Marsha
and Ted
Russell,
Aa ro n•
Erica and
Logan
Drummer,
Ron and
C
bell
NancY
amp
R u s s e II ,
Doug and
Cindy
Sands,
Leigh, .
Landen ,
Katelyn
and
Brittany Hill, Sally and Jim
Caldwell. Emma Hunter,
lenni, Riley and Augusta
Roush. all of Racine ; Katie
Woods, Renee and Emma
Powell, all of Syracuse, and
Michael, Julie and Alexa
Ru ssell of Long Bottom.
Sending
gifts
were
Trenton,
Colby
and
Andrew Roseberry, Nathan
and Mackenzie Redman.
Matthew Werry. and Peggy
Yost.

ments."

Marietta
Graduate
MARIETIA- Tricia Kay
Davis of Pomeroy. Brynn
Mitchell Moss of. Long
Bottom, and Julia Holter
Will of Pomeroy were among
those · graduating from
Marietta College during May
II commencement exercises.
Davis, the daughter of
Gregory and Janice Davis of
Pomeroy, graduated magna
cum laude with a degree in
marketing, and a minor in
advertising and public re[a,
tions. She also received a
McDonough
Leadership
Certificate. She is a graduate
of Meigs High School.

.Bnhanc., your property's
appeMIIIlCl' with many originai

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more space please feel free to attach a separate sheet.

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Kid Scoop page AS.

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If they are select~d, your ~
carrier will win dinner
for two at
lf!4l

Let your thumb• do lhe llll1clng.
A&amp;k lbout text m. .Mglng.

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REEDSVILLE - Judith
West of Reedsville was
named to the honor list at
Mountain State College in
Parkersburg, W.Va., earning
a grade point average of
between 3.0 and 3.5. She is a
student in the legal office
technology program.

"Carrier-of-the-Month"

••••• tax applw

Vfr1orl.a11 TMII,.,u wirll d"""''' '""/"• ·

On honor list

Nominate them for

(Reg: 48.H)

styles of quality laWll omarr:Je11ts,

planters and fumitun: available at
Qualit;y Fuzniture l'fUS.

Good

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3. How would you rat~: the Saturda'y Times-Sentinel?

Moss, the son of Jeanette
Grate, graduated cum laude
with a degree in petroleum
engineering. He is a graduate
of Ohio Valley Christian
School in Gallipolis.
Will received a master of
arts in education.

Your Sentinel

wtth a one- or lwo-year

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13. How w{)uld you rate coverage of local clubs and organization?

there's always something to talk about.

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l. How do you subscribe to The Daily Sentinel, Point Pleasant Register or Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
__ 7-D_ays ·_ _ 5-Days __ Weekend _ _ Sunday only
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Passing the exam were
Robin L. Carter, Angela L.
Davis, Connie J. Dillon, Beth
A. Eddy, Celenia R. Hulsey,
Alyson J. Johnson, Sarah S.
Kidwiler, Teresa A. Leister,
Lester M. Lubuguin, Dean
M. Ludwig, Stephanie D.
Martin, Regina M. · Mayle,
Lori A. McColl, Tony A.
Pritchard, Katherine R. .
Smith, and Shendra D.
Wentz.
The prograli!:S faculty
members are Regina Re.ed of
Reedsville, along with Joyce
Joy, Connie Oates, and Darla
Boone.

Unlimited night &amp; weekend minutes

~...

I

tion meetings througJ'tout
Michigan, in order to witness
first-hand the process of policy making.
Smiddie will be working at
the Institute under the auspices of Haverford College's
Center for Peace and Global
Citizenship. He is one of 12
students who received intern;
ship stipends from the
Cenrer. allowing them to
work .on projects in the U.S.
and abroad in areas related to
peace making and peace
building. as well as to social,
political and economic and
governmental challenges.
This summer's interns will
travel to South America,
Mexico, Bosnia, Bulgaria,
Chile, India and Pakistan, as
well as projects in Texas and
Nevada.
Founded by the Quakers in
1833, Haverford College has
a long tradition of public service and political acti:vism.

EducBtion Briefs

WITH

" lull.

~i 't ,'~~~j~

HAVERFORD, Pa . - A
Pomeroy student will be
heading to Michigan this
summer, intent on hel(l.ing the
policy making of a grass
roots environmental movement.
Kyle Smiddie, son of Bob
Smiddie and Beth Amoriya
of Pomeroy. a third-year student ~ t Haverford College ·in
Pennsylvania, will spend I0
weeks in . Beulah, Mich. ,
interning at the Michigan
Land Use Institute, one of the
largest state-based land use
and environmental advocacy
organizations in the country.
'This is important, because
Northern Michigan has a
beautiful environment worth
such aggressive protection
through
organizing,"
~middie said.
At the Institute, he will be
involved with editing and
writing alongside top journalists. In addition, he will have
the opportunity to accompany the Institute's staff to legislative hearings and coali-

College announces
nursing graduates

(400 Included &amp; 200 eddllionel Anytime Mlnutee)

Births
; LONG

Ariz.; former House Ways and companies sucli as his from
Means Committee Chairman seeking government contmcts
Bill Archer, R-Texas; and for- would hurt the company's
mer House Appropriations 26,000 U.S. workers.
Committee Chairman Bob
"They're not necessarily
Livingston, R-La., according hurting the company as much
to disclosure forms filed with
as they're hurting U.S.-based
the House and Senate.
employees,"
Dickard said.
Company officials 'said the
tax breaks that result from "That would be unfortunate."'
One of the Homeland
moving their headquarters
overseas keep them competi- Security Department's agentive.
cies, the Transportation
"We felt that American Security Administration, gave
companies. based upon the tax Accenture a contract of close
laws that are written .today, are to $515 million to handle
clearly put at an economic dis- human resources for the
a'dvantage to foreign compa- agency's employees, inclydnies,"
said ·
Victoria
Guennewig, a spokeswoman ing administering health
for Cooper Industries Ltd., a insurance, life insurance and
company that makes electrical retirement benefits.
Accenture, which began as
products and tools. It moved
from Houston to Bermuda in the consulting arm of
2002 and received $3.6 mil- Chicago-based
Andersen
lion in government contracts Worldwide, said the company
last year. .
shouldn't be included on a list
Lawmakers estimate corpo- of corporate expatriates
rations that have moved to because it never was a U.S.low-tax countries cost the
U.S. treasury $4 billion a year. based corporation.
But HouseT&gt;emocratic law·"People should be screaming to the rafters about the makers and others who want
hypocri$Y involved in corpo- to change the law disagree.
rations moving offshore and · "They are a spinoff of
then coming back to the tax- Arthur Andersen," said Robert
payers f-or a handout in the Borosage, co,chairman of the
form of government con- Campaign for America's
tracts," said Charlie Cray, Future, a liberal research and
director of the campaign. for·
corporate reform at C1tlzen advoc.acy group. "Their conWorks, an advocacy group tracting is significantly done
affiliated with consumer with American companies. If
they want to get contracts with
advocate Ralph Nader.
Ingersoll-Rand spokesman the federal government. they
Paul Dickard said preventing ought to pay taxes." .

no logy personnel, the 'latest
in XML or where to get an
IT educati on. The showcase
and conference is open to
the public.
"Bus inesses wanting to
upgrade their . technologies,
build an IT department or
increase competitiveness
through IT will find solutions at the TIGAR
Showcase and Conference · ·
invaluable," says the event's
organizer. Cindy Phelps.
"B~ut it also has plenty to
offer the general public ,
whether you are a techie or
not."

--·····················-····································-·······.

showcase

ATHENS - The second
annual Technology Alliance
of Appalachian Ohio showcase and conference will be
held 8 a.m. to 3 p:m. June 5
· at the new student center at
Hock ing
College.
Nelsonville .
Ideas for computers. the
Web, software, com munkations technologies. network
applications and other information technology (IT) will
be included in the progrmn .
The day will also feature
an expo of the region's IT
compan ies. robot and computer gaming demonstrations, info sessions. giveaways and the chance ro win
a Palm Pilot ZIRE.
In the info sessions for all
tevei&gt; of expertise. participants will learn about building a more effective Web
site.
wireless internet
access. tips for hiring tech-

Thesday, May 27,2003

Student·working
,A
Penny
For
Yo~r Thoughts ...
·with environmental·
How About $100 for your opinion? I?
movement

International Trade workshop Hocking College
.teaches basics for expanding scheduled
MARIETTA - Business
owners in southeast Ohio considering extending their products and services to international markets have the
chance to learn more about
this topic at the International
flasi s for a Successful Start (IBOSS).
· . A free workshop will be
held from 9 a.m . to noon June
:5 at Washington State
Community
College's
Administration
Building,
Room B I03, in Marietta. The
emphasis will be on helping

&amp;.-~Education

The Daily Sentinel

Thesday, May 27, 2003

PageA7

'

Name______________~--------------------------Address _ _ _ __.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __c__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
C i t Y - - - ' - - - - - - State_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Zip' Code _ _ __
Telephone_ _ _---:--------------~---------

Mail completed survey by May 31,2003 to:
Reader Survey, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH 45631
----· - -- ~---'----:------

'I
I

I

�•

,
WeeldJWr~

I lftlJDJir II YSCIIIIIII:tlliiiJ ...... Yllll PIIJII

Comer

This week: Skunks

by Vicki Whiting, Editor

Inside:

Tuesday, May 27,2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Meigs spring sports banquet, Page 82
U.S. to host World Cup; Page 82
Major League Baseball, Page 85
'

·

The Daily Sentinel
PageB~

Write On! _...

Jeff Schinkel,

Thesday, May 27, 2003

Magnificent Mammals

Skun

Tell . l!

Send rottr story 10 :

Diane Hill

f§allipoli« ilail!' m:ribune
825

We skunks are stiy and gentle
creatures. Yet the sight of a skunk
is a feariul si~ht .to many animals!

Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Please include your school and gl'llde.
Ty Somerville

SUN F•nn lnsur.nc•
Point Pleasant, WV
Sponsors of: Mrs. D o~i nger' 5 3rd grade class
North Point Elementery

That's because
skunks have a
powertul and
stinky weapon
right under our
tails - a VERY
stinky spray!

Point Pleasant. 'NV

I
I '

HOlM National Bank

R•cin,, OH
SpOilSOrs of : Mrs. McNickle's Jrd grade class
' Soutt\~ern Elementary

R4Qne, oH
Americu Eledric Power • Gavin Planl

'

'

'Cheshire, OH

Q; What :color Is the '!'~~~~~~~

We hiss and stamp our feet. If this
doesn't work, we raise our tail over
our head as threat.

,

Sponsors of: Ms. ( rum's 3rd grade class

sprity?·
.
A: Start at compass. GfJ
Tlienrgo 1 sq~W,"e'west. Next,
south.
i

Addaville Elementary
Addison. OH

n

Toler&amp;Toler
IMuranc~ Services

lr,

Cellipolis, OH
Sponsors of : Mrs. Perry's 3rd grade class

a

\

.Q: What Is another: name
skunk?
.·
.· ·~·
A:Start at qompass and· 8o~, s.t1uaJ~•:;~

north: !Vext,·go·J squqre'west:
2 squares north and th~rt 1 epst.

Pomeroy Elementary

Pomeroy, Ohio.

Buddye Rural Electric Co-op
Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Becky Woodyard's 3rd grade class
Southwestern Elementa'Y
Rio Grande, OH
Rio nr•
Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of : Phyllis Brandenberry's 3rd grade class
Washing1on Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

Holnr Clinic:
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of : Sheil11 Bevins' lrd grade dass
Middleport Elemerit11ry
Middleport, OH

illWlffi.nt~OOnD~cU!~n•Ugm~
There are three kinds of skunks. Do the math problems to match the name
of each kind of skunk with its description.

SPOftiD SKUNK

21 • 11

=

15. It has a broad, hairless muzzle, like
that of a pig. The back and tail are white.

Yellow

10. The smallest of all skunks, it has a dot

Green

in the middle of its forehead. The stripes
go in lots of different and wiggly directions.

23. The face .is black excep(for one white
that runs from the nose to the
HOG·NOSID SKUNK stripe
shoulders. At the shoulders, the stripe splits
7+6+2=
in two parts, one running down each side

Wolf
Kits

V•uchan'5 SuJMrm•rk•t
Middleport, OH
Sponsors of: Sandy Needs' 3rd grade class
Eastem Elementary
Middleport. OH

Under
its tail

15 feet

AdYinced He•rinl C•nter
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Sandrll Mock's 3rd grade class
Ohio Valley Christian. School
Gallipolis, OH

of the body.
Standerda Unk: Life Science: there is variation among individuals of one kind within a population.
,';_,_-:•.;r,

"_

,,-

___

;i

.,._

.(¥-'--

'

:

,:;

·

~',,

BIBck &amp; Whlte·and Read,An·over.

_. .

Or. &amp; Mn.. Gar•ld Shut.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Jerry Howell's 3rd grade class
Green Element11ry
Gallipolis, OH

Sel~· a pageoft:Jte news~~:"Firid all;~f~wo~ds yo~. can reruj, ;~·
, .. · and,if)ou~bdw,;wh~t'tlley.m~f~irCle ~enrin· re~. ~-, .·· .·' ;,.&lt;
" •

:dlilll Link: ~ CO.oipe:,...m: uee C'Onlext,lo underSII!nd meaning.:

Lots of animals have bodies that blend into the world
around them. This is called camouflage. But the bold
black and white markings on a skunk make them easy to
spot. They don't need to hide. Other animals know to
leave them' alone.
Find the differences between the two pictures.

Standarda Link: Investigation: Find similarities and differences in common objects.

B EY0 N0

\t:\

'

SKUNKS
SMELLY
STINKER
PUTRID
COMPASS
MUSTY
DISTANCE
WEAPON
SOUR
POLECAT
BLACK
MARKINGS
WHITE
WEST
STRIPES

Jtvlden's Power Equipment
G&lt;JIIipoli s, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Davenport's 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH
Edw•rd Jones Investments
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Sara Spurlock's 3rd grade class
Vinton Elementary
Vinton, OH

Find the words in the puzzle,
then in this week's Kid Scoop
stories and activities.
T A

c

s s

N 0

E L 0 p

ws s

p A E W K K

K ·R

N p

u

c u
N c

I

T L N K A K

u K

G E p U M S
I

y

T p

R E

s

L T

s

0.N

R T I E B

s s

T

s

K R R IL
0

A

s

I

DMWH I T E T

M y T S U MD E L

s

.
St1nderd1 Unk: Letter sequencing. Recognizing iden1ical
words . Skim and scan reading. Recall spelting patterns.

•

Delic wins
NCAA mens'
singles title
ATHENS, Ga. (AP)
Amer Delic of Illinois won the
NCAA men's singles championship, defeating Benedikt
Dorsch of Baylor 6-4, 6:3.
Delic is the first player from
Illinois to win the championship. The last Big Ten player to do so was Michigan's
Mike Leach in 1982.
Illinois, which wori the team
title last week, made it a sweep
when Brian Wilson and
Rajeev Ram beat San Diego
State's Oliver Maiberger and
Ryan Redondo, 6-4, 5-7, 6-1
to win the doubles title.
·

\

Women's Basketbllll Tum
University of Rio Grande

Rio Grande. OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Price 'S 3rd grade d1ss
Washington Elementary
~
Gallipolis, OH
Ohio Valley T.c:h. Prep
G!lllipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Saunders' 3rd grade dass
Bidwell Elementar,•
Bidwell, OH

OhkJ Yal ..y Tech Prep
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Short's 3rd grade dan
Addaville Elementary
Addaville, OH

Cincinnati Reds Adam Dunn ,(44), ce!ebrates his eleventh inning grand slam at home plate
with teammates Wily Mo Pena (26) and Felipe Lopez (12) after bringing them home on the
play. Monday in Atlanta. The Reds won 7-'3 in the, eleventh inn ing. (API
.

BOULDER, Colo. (AP) American Deena Drossin won
the Bolder Boulder for the
third straight year, pulling
away from Ethiopia's Asha
Gigi midway through the I 0kil.ometer road course and·
cruising to a 26-second victory.
Drossin, of Mammoth
Lakes,
Calif.,
joined
Portugal's Rosa Mo(ll ( 198486) as the only runners to win
the Bolder Boolder three consecutiv~ years.

Scao

Make a list of words that describe how things
smell - for example: odor, putrid, musty,
sour. Using one page of the newspaper, have
students find and circle the letters that spell
five of the smelly words.

INDlANAPOLIS (AP) Helio Castroneves took a few
steps on the long red carpet,
looked up and smiled as he
saw that the unlikely doorman was Gil de Ferran - his
teammate, countryman and
the Indianapolis 500 winner.
De Ferran, who arrived at
the Victory Dinner on
Monday night only minutes
before Castroneves, greeted
.the fellow Brazilian at the
door. Then they embraced,
each knowing exactly what
the other was feeling.
It was the time to celebraJe,
and to rei ax.
"It's been very, . very hectic," de Ferran said of the 24
hours after his first victory at
Indianapolis. "I had not much
time to reflect on the events
of yesterday.
De Ferran · reversed the
order of finish of the 200 I
race, when he was runner-up
to Castroneves.
De Ferran, a two-time

CART series champion, came
to the Indy Racing League
with Castroneves and Team
Pe~tske last year. He was lOth
a y'ear ago, when Castroneves
won his second straight Indy
500, then quietly went about
his business as his. more
flamboyant teammate garnered most of the attention in
his bid for a third straight victory.
It paid off with a first prize
of$1 ,353;265 from a record
purse of $I 0, 151,830 divvied
up at the Victory Dinner.
Castroneves, who fini shed
0.299 seconds behind de
Ferran, received $73&lt;),665 for
second place - a record
prize for a non-winner. . .
. Tony Kanaan, another
Brazilian driving for the new
Andretti Green Racing team,
was 1.2475 seconds behind
de Ferran - it was the closest 1-2-3 fini sh in Indy history - and received $486.465
for third place. Kanaan also

Slllndards Link: Vocabulary: Understand and explain synonyms,
Read in Com rehension ' Follow muni le ste direc1ions.

moved into the lead in IRL
series points, 137-123 over
Castroneves . Scott Sharp,
who came to Indy in lirst
place. dropped to third after
his 20th-place finish and
leads de Ferran 116- 108.
"It's the trophy. that's really the most important prize,"
de Ferran said. "Winning the
Indy 500, certainly it's nice to
have. the money, but the se?se
"of accomplishment you have
is really overwhelming.
"Certainly it's the biggest
prize in auto racing. For any
driver to claim he or she was
the Indy 500 winner is something that is unbelievable."
The total purse broke the
Indy record of $10,028,580
set
last
year,
when
Castroneves won a: record
$1.6 million . ·His runner-up
prize this year raised his total
to more than $3.6 million in
just three years, putting him
seventh in Indy career winnings.

The Victory Dinner includ- Takagi's teammate with Mo
ed a video tribute to Michael Nunn Racing; $206,315 to
Andretti, who is retiring as a . another rookie, seventh-place
driver to devote his full atten- Tony' Renna; $299,065 to
tion to running his new Greg Ray· for eighth;
Andretti
Green
team.
Andretti led 28 laps on $296,565 to two-time winner
Sunday before a bad throttle AI Unser Jr. for ninth; and
linkage dropped him to a $288 .815 to rookie Roger
27th-place fim sh, the second- Yasukawa for I Oth.
worst among his 14 starts at
Unser's winnings pushed
Indy.
his Indy career total to almost
His 426 career laps led are $5.4 million, second to
the most by a non-winner, Luyendyk 's record $6.1 miland his $259 ,415 prize lion.
pushed his Indy career total
The smallest prize was
to more than $3.1 million,
also a record for a driver who $139,065 to Billy Boat, who
has never won the race.
linished 32nd among the 33
Among the other prizes starters.
handed out Monday ni ght
Robby Gordon , who was
were checks for $448,415 to not at the Victory Dinner;
Tomas Scheckter for fourth competed in both the 500 and
place; $363,515 to fifth -place in NASCAR 's Coca-Cola .
Tora
Takagi ,
including
$25.000 as rookie of the year; 600 Sunday night. He won
$297,265 to sixth-place Alex $256,250 for finishing 22nd
Barron, a late substitute for at Indianapolis, and $104,087
injured Arie Luyendyk and for 17th at Concord, N.C.

_Eagles advance to regionals Tigers
BY ScoTT WoLFE

ROME -. Senior Sprinter
Brandon Werry received AllDistrict honors Friday night
a·nd will advance tothe
Reional track meet at
Lancaster this Friday night
after clinching the 200 meter
dash in the districts. Werry
clocked int with a time of
23.50
beating
out
Chesapeake ' s Cody Hunt
(23.80) and Wheelersburg's
John Dunham (23.90).
Werry will do double duty
as his time of 11 .56 in the
l 00 meter dash , and fourth
place finish qualified him for
a run in the regionals.
Werry will be joined in
Lancaster by sophomon.:

R o s s
Hiolter
w h 0
pu s hed
himself to a
persona],
best of 46
10.5
feet
inches in
the
shot
put. Holter
Werry
missed
· qualifying
in the discus by less than two
feet.
'
Both Werry and Holter
were also qualifiers in last
year's meet in the 100, ,200,
and 4x I 00 and Discus
respectively.
Also joining Werry and
Holter from the girls team
will be Jen Hayman and
Jennifer Chadwell. They

were able
to qualify
Thursday
night
at
Chillicothe
for
the
right
to
make it to
t
h
e
Regionals.
In the 400
Hayman .
meter dash,
J
e
n
Hayrimn turned in a time of
1.03, good enough for a third
place finish and Jennifer
Chadwell was able to hurdle
her way to a 4th place fni sh
in the 300 low hu rdles.
Friday's Regional meet at
Lancaster is the same time as
the Eastern Girls Regional
softball
game
at
Pickerington at 4 :30.

beat Tribe

DETROIT
(AP)
Brandon Inge was rewarded
for a good swing when it mattered most.
.
lnge hit a tiebreaking
homer with two outs in the
seventh inning, and the
Detroit Tigers beat the
Cleveland , Indians
6-5
Monday for only their fourth
victory at h'ome this season.
lnge hit the ball hard his
three previous at-bats - with
nothing to show for it.
Cleveland right fielder Jody
Gerut robbed him on a sliding
catch with the bases loaded
and two outs in the first, but
lnge sent a drive into the leftfield stands iil the seventh.
Dmitri Young also homered
and drove in four runs for the
'figers, who won for the

fourth time in !iive games
overall and improved to 4-17
at Comerica Park.
Steve. Avery (2-0) got the
win despite giving up a gametying , three-run homer to
Brandon Phillips with two
outs in the top of the seventh.
Detroit starter Jeremy
Bonderman allowed only a
two· run homer by Milton
Bradle,Y in the first, ahd gave
four h1ts in · six innings. .The ·
rookie retired his last 10 batters, struck out a career-high
seven and walked one. '
.
Sonderman's slider was
particularly effective.
Avery took over to start the
seventh and retired the tirst
two batters he faced . But he

Please see Tribe, B:S

• Thursday, June 5, 2003-Pleasant Valley Wellness Center

Gellipoli1, OH
Spon\Ors of: lou Ann Shawver's 3rd grade dass
Green Elementary
·

• 4p.m. -All middle and high school girls·

Gallipoli5, OH

Matp eo...oy Economk 0 . . . 1 - Ollke
Pomeroy, OH
Sponsors of: M&lt;1rge Gibbs' 3rd grade dasi

• 5:30p.m.to 7:30p.m. -All middle and high school boys

Salisbury Element11ry
Pomeroy, OH

Golllo RHds
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of:
Juila Veughan's 3rd srade
, Mindy Young's 3rd grade
Marge Gibbs' 3·rd grade
Plus 9 additional •
3rd grade dasses

ATLANTA
(AP)
ing off the top of the lith.
Lookinjl to give his team the Felipe Lopez bunted, and
lead wnh a simple sacrifice third baseman Vinny Castilla
fl,Y. pinch-hitter Adam Dunn tried to get Stinnett at second. ·
d1d much morl! than that .
The throw was low for an
Dunn came through with a error, allowing Stinnett to
grand slam in the lith inning, slide in safely.
leading the Cincinnati Reds
Rainer Olmedo sacrificed
past the Atlanta Braves 7-6 both runners up a base ' and
Monday to snap a four-game Aaron Boone, was intentionallosing streak.
ly walked, bringing up Dunn.
It was Dunn's 18th homer He hit a 1-1 pitch from
this season, most in the Roberto Hernandez (4' 2) into
majors.
the sea.ts m right.
"1 was just trying to get the
"Bases loaded, nowhere to
ball deep enough to score the - put him," Hernandez said.
run," Dunn said. "I don ' t go "The way this game was
up there trying to hit a home ·going. whoever made the first
run. In that situation, you just mistake was going to lose."
try to get a pitch you can drive
Last Tuesday. Jason LaRue
hit a two-run, go-ahead homer
to the outlield. "
. Helped by left fielder Jose off Hernandez in the eighth
Guillen's two-run error,· inning in Cincinnati. On
Atlanta got three in the II th Sunday against the Ne:w York
to cut the lead to 7-6. Chipper Mets, Hernandez gave up a
Jones drove in a run with an tying solo shot to Jeromy
infield . single, but Felix Burnitz in the eighth, but the
Heredia struck out Andruw Braves eventually won 3-1.
Jones with a runner on to end
Cincinnati has won three of
it.
four against the Braves .
"My heart was in my stornGabe White (2-0) got out of
ach ," Cincinnati manager Bob a bases-loaded jam in the
Boone said. "They made a lOth .
rally. They made it real
"I was going a million miles
close. "
an hour inside," White said.
John Smaltz struck out two "You alwavs want to make
in a hitless ninth, but .the good pitches. Th.ese are the
Braves lost a game in which best hitters in the world."
he appeared for the first time
The Braves rallied from a 3since May 29, 2002, a 4"3 0 deficit with three runs in the
defeat against Montreal. eighth off Chris Reitsma.
Atlanta had won 73 consecu- Rafael Furcal tripled ·and
tive games in which Smaltz scored on a groundout by
pitched. a major league Marcus Giles. After Gary
record.
Kelly Stinnett singled leadPlease see Reds, B2

Brazilians savor Indianapolis 500 victory

Sports correspondent

Crossin wins
third consecutive
Bolder Boulder

' R Morrison &amp; Assodates
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Fellun~' s 3rd grade class
H11nnan Trace Elementary
Mercervme, OH

Uttlrt Corporation
Gallipolis Ferry, wv
Sponsors of: A 3rd grade dass
Beale. Elementary
Callipolis Ferry, WV

· , ST. LOUIS (AP) -· The St.
Louis Cardinals placed second
baseman Fernando Vi na on the
15-day di sabled list with a
severely tom right hamstring,
an injury that will sideline him
for six-to-12 weeks.
It's a huge blow to the
defending NL Central champions, because Vina is also the
feam's only true leadoff hitter.
He has struggled much of the
year, but a six-game hitting
streak boosted his average to
;262 with a .316 on-base percentage.

Ohio Valley Todt Pnp

Stinky Words

•

Vaupan's Supermarket
Middleport, OH
Sponsors of : Mr5. Struble's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Mid~lepo rt, OH

Oan•ll Norris and Marshall Roush Greenhouses
Letart Falls, Ohio
Sponsors of: Ms. Holter's 3rd grade class
Southern Elementary
Middleport. OH

Cat

Vina goes on DL

. SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) Landon Donovan scored on a
penalty kick. and Eddie Lewis
~I so scored for the United '
~tales in a 2-0 victory over
Wales.
Goalie Nick Rimando
earned his first career shutout
as the Americans thoroughly
controlled play while improving to 3-0-1 in their la~t four
matches. Wales' I 0-match
unbeaten streak in international play, the country's longest,
was snapped at Spartan
Stadium.

Hol1e1 Clink
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of : Mrs. little's Jrd srade class
Central Elementary
Point Pleasant, WV

Dunn's slam lifts· Reds past Braves

The · Meigs Marauders
women's track, team will be
represented al the regional
track meet in Byesville
Wednesday. · Brook Bolin
qualified for the I00-meter
hurdles by capturing 4th place
in the di strict finals at Fairland
High School on Saturday. The
Meigs 4 X 200 relay team of
Bolin, Megan Garnes, Cassie
Lee and Shannon Soulsby
earned a trip to the. regionals
for the second straight year
' placing 4th with a time of
1:53.5. The 4 X 400 team of
Emily Story, Bolin, Garnes
and Soulsby won a trip to
Byesville by finishing 4th
with a time of 4:21.3 taking
eight seconds off their previous best time this year.

U.S. beats Wales

Halztr Clinic
G11llipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Ours' lrd grade class
Washington Elementary
Gal!ipolis, OH

25feet

'

,I
'

Rio Grande Elementary
Rio Gran de, OH

Skyline Lenes
Gallipolis , OH
Sponsqrs of: Sandra Walker's 3rd grade class

STRIPED SKUNK
17+4+2=

Lady Marauders
qualify for
• . regionals

Deadline: June 22, 2003
Published: Week of July 20, 2003

What if you could ask a skunk any question you wanted? What would you
ask? Kid Scoop spoke with skunk authority P.U. Stenchmuch to learn
about these smelly creatures from a sdfe distance.

However, we only
use this weapon
when threatened.
Even then, we do
everything
possible to avoid
sending the
final stinky spray.

I

Write a sentence.with all of the
words starting with the same letter.
For example : M any magnificent
mammals meet Mondays.

HYSICALS
I

eCostis $12/student
eFormore information call: (304) 675-7222
I ,

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
'

�'

· Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

•

e1 ss
Bv JtM SouLSBY

·

Sports correspondent

·' POM EROY Meigs
Marauder.flthletes in baseball,
~oftball, and track were honpred at the spring sports b~n ­
quet held last week at Metgs
f;Iigh School.
: Coach Nathan Hansen pre~ented members of the softball
team who tinished second in
the TVC Ohio division: Mindy
r.:::hancey, Katie Jeffers, Kayte
Davis, Amanda Fetty. Kristen
Napper, Alicia Werry, Jessica
!llaettnar, Nikki Butcher,
I •

Jaynee Davis, Chrissy Miller,
Erica Poole, Xanthe Smith.
Miranda Stewart, Renee
Bailey.. Samantha Cole and
Joey Hanning.
Special awards went to
Chancey AJI-TVC, first team
al) district. Jeffers AII-TVC,
honorable mention all district,
Butcher All-TVC. first team
all district, and Davi s AIITVC, honorable mention all
district.
Jenny Jones presented members of the 16-0 girl 's JV softball team, Jessica Howell,
Bobbi
Napper.
Holley

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

www.mydailysentlnel.com

orts
Williams, Ashley Baylor,
Samantha Pierce. Jenna Wilt,
Amanda Kin g, Natasha Wise,
Jennifer Cade, Jodi Donohue,
Angel Harter. Erin Cullums,
Jenny Bowles. Melia Whan
and Megan Leslie. .
Coach Dan Thomas introduced the Marauder baseball
squad who went 14- 10 on the
season winning the sectipnal
championship.
Team members included
Derrick
Fackler,
David
McClure, Brandon .Ramsburg,
Jimmy Smith, Dave Boyd,
Doug Dill, Jeremy Blackston,

Eric Burnem, Eric Cullum s.
Michael Davis and Brandon
Fackler.
Special awards went to
Fackler AII-TVC, first team all
district, highest batting average; Smith AII -TVC. first
team all district, best pitcher;
McClure, all di str[ct; Cullums
most RBis; Jeremy Blackston,
best
defensive
player;
Brandon Ramsburg, coach's
award and Joe Bush. I00 %
award.
Coach Jeremy Grimm introduced the I 4- I JV baseball
team, Kevin Butcher, Eddie

Fife, Brandon Grover. Curtis
Varian, Ross Well. Joe Bush.
Josh Kimes, Eric VanMeter
and Ty Wayland.
Coach Mike Kennedy pre"
sented members of the boys
track team, Grant Arnold.
Carlos Braz, Tyson George.
Zach Gibbs, Joe Howa rd,
Sebastian
Kaiser,
Andy
Kinnan, Corey Longstreth ,
Jereiny Manley, Gary Moore,
Josh Ray, Ryan Stobart and
Jeremy Roush.
.
Coach Kennedy aJso intmduced the girls track team .
Team members included

uet
Emily Ashley .. Megan Garnes
Cassie I.e,·. As hley SanMr
Ashley Sa,age. Brook Bolin
Andrea Burdette . Shannm
Soulsby ami Em il y Story
Special awards went to Bolin
Garnes Lee and Soul.sby •wh&lt;
all earned lirsl team Ali-TVC
awards.
Athleti c director
Riel
Blaetlnar presomed TVC al

acad e mic ·;~wards· to Kayt&lt;'

Davis. Jaynee ' Dav is, Mind~
Chancey, Dave Boyd. Brool
Bolin , Emily Story. Rym
Stobarl . .Erica Poole, Ren e&lt;
Bailey and Katie Jeffers.

(

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

French Open

All singles this
week for Agassi

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Philadelphia
Florida
New York

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17
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27 23

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29
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,
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L

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28
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22
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20
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6'•
16\ .

TUesday's Games

Women's World Cup
:returns to United States.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Women's World Cup is
corning back to t~e United
States this fall , four years
after captivating the country
with a championship team
that made household names
of Mia Hamm and Brandi
Chastain.
Soccer's governing body
awarded the tournameht to
the United States on Monday
three weeks after the showcase event was removed from
China because of the SARS
VIrUS.
But. unlike 1999. thi s
World Cup will be run on a
smaller scale and will face
logistical chal lenges as it
runs into the thick of the
sports schedule in the United
States.
"! don 't think it will be the
caliber that it was in '99,"
said Caria Overbeck, captain
of the 1999 U.S. team. "But
the United States is capable
of doing a Jot of great things
in terms of organizing tournaments."

FIFA selected the U.S. bid
over one from Sweden and
said the ;1007 World Cup will
be in China.

Reds
from Page 81
Sheffield struck out, Chipper
Jone s singled and moved to
third on a double by Andruw
jones.
Roben Fick brought them
both home with a single to
right. costing John Riedling
his first victory as a starter.
The right-hander held
Atlanta scoreless over 6 2-3
innings - the longest outing
of his career - and left with
a 3-0 lead. He gave up five
'

The deci sion by FIFA's vided the impetus for their
eight -member emergency own pro league and gave a
commillee
in
Z urich. big liti to all women's sports.
Switzerland, was widely Soccer jerseys with Hamm's
expected because the United name on the back became a
States \!&gt;'US considered best tixture for girls across the
eguipped to handle the 16- country.
team tournament on such
In 1999, however, the
short notice.
games were held in Jul)e and
The World Cup will take July, with little competition
place in about the same time from other sports. This fa ll ,
- Sept. 23-0ct. II - with the World Cup will be up
only minor schedule changes, against the NFL, college
FIFA said. The exact sched- football. the end of the baseole will be announced soon. ball season and the start of
The tournament will be the NHL season.
held in four to seven stadiUnlike the men's World
um s, and the sites will be Cup, which began in ·1930,
determined by FIFA and U.S. the women's event is fairly
organizers during the next new ane is not embrated with
few weeks.
the same global fervor as the
The last Women's World men 's tournament. The first
Cup was highlighted by a Women' s World Cup was
crowd of 90, 125 at the Rose held in China in 1991 , when
Bowl for the final as the the U.S. team won. Norway
Americans beat China in a was the 1995 winner, when
shootout.
Sweden was the host.
Chastain's winning kick The leading contenders to
and her exuberant celebration hold the U.S. games are RtK
in which she ripped off her Stadium in Washington,
shin - was perhaps the sig- D.C. ; Gillette Stadium in
nature moment of the tourna- Foxboro,
Mass.; . Crew
mem.
Stadium in Columbus, Ohio;
Th e World Cup put the and .Home Depot Stadium in
women on center stage. pro- . Carson, Calif., which open s

in June.
. Other cities interested
include East Rutherford.
N.J .; Atlanta; Philadelphia;
and Pasadena, Calif.
Swedi sh soccer authoritie s
said the~ were not surpri sed
by FlFA s decision. Only four
cities in Sweden have stadiums with more than 20.000
seats.

Montreal at Florida, 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mots al Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati ~Haynes 0·4) at Atlanta
(Reynoldo 4·1), 7:35p.m.
Pilteburgh 11 Chicago Cuba. 8:05p.m .
Houston et St. louie, 8:10 p.m.
Loa Angetee B1 Colorado, 9:05 p.m.
MUwauke at Sa~ Diego, 10:05 p.m.
Arizona at San FranciBCO, 10:1.5 p.m.
A~c:on

PARIS (AP) - The only
doubles in Andre Agassi's
immediate
future
will
invo lve fatherhood, not tennis .
Wife Stefti Graf is expectin g the co uple's second
child, dashin g any prospect
of her pJaying mixed d.ouble s with her husband this
week at the French Open.
So for Agassi at Roland
Garros, it' II be all singles se ven matches' worth , he
,hQpes. The 1999 champion
opened with a win Monday
over Karol Beck 6-2, 6-3, 63. .
Roger Federer, Paradorn
Sri chaph an
and
Alex
Corretja can testi fy to that.
All were upset on . the firs I
day.
In January, Agassi rai sed
the possibility of forming a
dream team with Graf at
Roland Garros. where she
won six singles. Graf has
shunned the spotlight since
. retiring in 1999, and Agassi

acknowledged in February
tha t he was having trouble
persuading her to be his doubles partner.
On Monday, Agassi sai d
they practiced together after
the Australian Open.
Agassi disclosed last week
that Graf was pregnan t. The
couple had a son in October
200 I. and Agassi said they
don ' t know whether their
next chi ld will be a boy p r
girl.
Seeking hi s ninth Grand
Slam ti tle at age 33, Agassi
is the oldest player amo ng
the 128 entrants in the men's
fie ld . But he's seeded second, physically fit and the
reigning champion of the
year's first major event at
Au stralia.
,
Agassi entered the French
Open II time s before win ning it . Federer is now 0-for5 at Roland Garros and has
yet to reach a Grand Slam
semifinal.

Tribe

the right-tleld wall.
Detroit tied it in the bot tom half on an RBI single by ·
Young and , a run-scoring
- double by Carlos Pena. The
Tigers had a chance to add
more but Kevin Witt popped
out with one out and runners
on second and third and.
after an intentional walk tu
Eric Munson, Inge llied to
right with the bases loaded
10 end the inning.
Young broke the tie in the
second when he lined
Westbrook's pitch over the
fence in le ft for a three-run
h · 0
1 t'
h
omer. mar n an te . w o
smgled,
and
Bobby
Htggrnson, who walked,;,
· scored ahead of Young.
The Ttgers loaded the
bases with two outs in the
fourth, but Wttt grounded to
second to end the inning.
The Indians' last hit
again~l Bond.errnan wa s
Burk s double wrth two out s
in the third . But Bradley
popped out to end the
inning.

Looguo

Eut
IV •., L

Pet.

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New York
Toron1o

31

19

.620

29
28

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24

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Baltlfr!Ore

23

26

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Tampa Bay
19
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29 20
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23 26

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8

Monday's Games
DetltlH 6, Clo\lt!land 5
Boston e, N.v:Yankeea 4
Toron1o 11, Chicago White Sox 5

·
Tuesday's Games
Anaheim at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Boston at N.Y. Yank&lt;ios, 7:05p.m.
Cleveland (Boreli-0) at De1rott (Cornejo 33). 7:05p.m.
Ctlic~go White Sox al Toronto, 7:05 p:tn.
TO&gt;&lt;as at Tampa Bay, 7:15p.m.
Ooi&lt;lan&lt;l at Minnesota , 8:05 p.m.
Saame a1 Kanoae City, 6:05 p.m.

*

In.

from Page 81

OB

WLPctGB

Mtnneeota
Kansas Clty
Chicago
Cleveland

Receiving basel:)all awards were, from left , Joe bush . Doug Gi ll ,
Jimmy Smith,Buzzy Fackler, Eric Cullums, and Jeremy
Blackston. Brandon .Ramsburg (not picture dO . and David
McClure (not pictured). (Jim Soulsby)

Ser~na

Eeat

W

rv1onday's Games

Receiving All-Academic TVC awards were. front ruw from left,
Receiving softball awards were, from left to right, Kayte Davis, Renee Bailey, Katie Jeffers, Mmdy Chancey, Emi ly Story. Back
Jaynee Davis, Nikki Butcher, Katie Jeffers, and Mindy Chancey · row, from left Ryan Stobart, Kayte Davis, Jay nee Davis , Erica
(Jim Soulsby)
Poole, Brook Bolin , not pictured David Boyd . (J im Soulsby)

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

Plllsburgh 10. Chlcai!O Cubs 0
Cincinnati 7. Atlanta 6, 11 Innings
Florida 5, Montreal1
COlorado 12, 'san Francisco 7
st. Louts 10. Houston 5
Arlzona .a, San Diego 4

Recei•liir1g all TVC honors in track were , from left to righ t, were
phannon Soulsby, Cass ie Lee, Megan Garnes, and Brook
polin. U!m Soulsby)

I

walked Ben Brou ssard, and
Casey Blake 's _single. sent
Broussard to third. Phtlhps
tied it at 5 with a three-run
shot over the left-field
fence.
.
.
lng~ put the Ttger~ nght
back m front, con~ectmg on
pttch~ron.llason Boyd
a
(0: I 1 for hts thtrd hom~ run
of the season: lnge IS hllttng
only · 145 this season wtth
etght RB!s.
Franklyn Gennan worked
a perfect ninth for his second save.
Jake Westbrook allowed
five runs and seven hits in
three-plus innings for the
Indians: He struck out two
and walked two.
Cleveland took a 2-0 lead
in the first on Bradley's twoout, two-run homer. which
followed a walk to Ellis
Bradley · drove
Burk s.
Bonaerman's 1-0 pitch over

2-!

opens up with easy win

PARIS &lt;AP) - Serena
Williams warmed up with sis,
ter Venu s on_center court at
the French Open , then barely
broke a sweal in her opening
malch
aga in st
Barbara
Rittner. ·
The younger. WilLiams
bega n her bid for a fi fth consecuti ve Grand Slam tit le by
beating Rittner 6-2, 6-1
Monday.
The victory was Williams ·
29th in a row al a major tournament. a streak she began at
Rol and GwTOs a year ago.
She's trying to become the
first player since Steff• Graf
in 198H-89 to win fiv e
st raight Grand Slam titles.
Andre Agassi. the 1999
champion, double-faulted
twice on match point before
finishin g off Karol Beck 6-2,
6-3,6-3.
There were . three early
upsets on the men' s side.
Eliminated were No. 5-seeded Roger Federer, No. I0
Paradorn Sri chap han and
two-time French Open runner-up Alex Corretja, seeded
16th.
. James Blake won a showdown of you ng Americans,
beating Taylor Dent 6-4: 6-3,
7-6(3).
Williams warmed up 90
minutes before her match
with Venus Williams on the
· same court where they played
last year's ti na!.
" It was really fun to be
back out where all the magic
began fo r me last year,"
Serena said.
Venus. who has lost the past
four major linals to Serena.
plays her opening match
Tue sday against Samantha
· R ~ves.
-·
Serenif William s looked
nervous early, eve n with the
stadium q1oslly empt y on a
.sunn y, 6&lt;)-degree morning. In
the first three games she overhit seve ral vol ley s ami commilled 10 unforced errors.
When she blew an easy
overhead in the next game,
Willi ams sl umped over with a
i·ueJ'ul smi le. She soon settled
down. won eight ga mes in a
row and closed the victory in
54 minute s.
" You always ha ve the feeling like she can put another
gear in. and then 'that 's it:·
Rillner said . "S he's very

Defending champion USA's Serena Williams returns a backhand to Germany's Barbara Rittner during their first round
match of the French Open Tennis tournament at Roland
Garros stadium in Paris Monday. (AP)
strong. It makes you feel like
Horna, the 1997 juniors .
you have no inlluence on the runner-up at Roland Garros,
gumc."
had never previously Won a
Other winners in women's Grand Slam match.
play included No. 4 Justine
Paradorn was eliminated by
Henin-Hardenne and No. 5
Dominik
Hrbaty 6-4, 3-6, 6Ame lie . Mauresmo. HeninHarden ne
beat
Patricia 0, 7-5. Corretja lost to fellow
Wanusch 6-3, 7-5. and Spaniard Galo Blanco 5-7, 6Mauresmo swept fellow 3, 6-0. 7-5.
Frenchwoman
Virginie
Carlos Moya, the 1998
Razza no 6-3 7-5 .
champion, beat Filippo
Mary Pierce, the 2000 Volandri 7-6 (7), 4-6, 6-2, 6champion, lost to C!arisa 3. American Vince Spadea
Fernandez 6-2. 6-3.
Federer was ousted in the outlasted Irakli Labadze 6-1 ,
opening round for the second 3-6, 5-7.6-4.6-1 .
Defending
champion
straight year, committing 82
unforced errors and losing to Albert Costa opens Tuesday
Peru 's Lui s Horna 7-6 (6) , 6-. against lucky loser Sergio
2, 7-f&gt; (3) .
Reitman.

'{\"\£.FIRST STEp ltv

1889, Eufaula native Jamie

BUILDING THIS

A!so included are the Couric-Smith

.

Rhodes was making plans to marry

house, the ancestral home of The

his girlfriend, Mamie Harwell. He

Today Show's Katie Couric, the historic
WASN'T DRAWING UP THE PLANS.

had taken iito account mo st of the

hits, struck out four and Mercker relieved and retired
walked two.
pinch-hitter Mark DeRosa.
Hampton nearly lost for the
Guillen went 3-for-6 for
the Reds, including a first- second time in five days to
inning homer off Mike the .Reds. Last week, he lastHampton , and Ryan Freel
.
added two hits.
ed just 3 2,3 innings and
Riedling moved out of the allowed six runs on five hits.
Cincinnati bu I! pen earlier He labored through six
thi s month arid has made five innings in this one, giving up
straight start~ after &amp;8 appear- three runs on six hits and
ances as a reliever. Hi s previ- throwing 119 pitches .
ous longest outing was six
He walked two and struck
innings, but for once, out nine, and hasn' t won in
Riedling didn ' t try to talk three starts.
Bob Boone out of removing
.
Furcal went 3-for-5 with a
hlm.
Riedling left with a runner · double ~nd a triple, but also
on in the seventh, but Kent made two errors at shortstop.

Shorter Mansion and the barbershop in

*

derails to make rhe event a specia l

the Bluff City Inn which dates back to

day. What he hadn't counted ort was

1885.

* Alaba~a's history is filled

· with unique tales that are both enter-

winning the New Orleans lottery. But

raining and enlightening. And one of . - /

that's exactly what he did . Wanting to.

the best ways to learn about things

. make the most of his good fortune,

-

Jamie used the money to build a

like the historic district in Huntsville

Victorian cottage in which the couple

or the Civil War legacy of Selma, is on

cou ld begin their new life together.

our free walking tours . More than 30

And he ended up with a place where

tours take place all acrpss the state ,

his lucky numbers made him feel like

·every Saturday at 10:00 a.m., from

* The

May 24 through July 5. For tour locations,

the luckiest man in .the world.

WWW.ALWALIIU NGl"OU RS.COM

Rhodes-Purcell home is sti ll standing
today. And tts story ts jUSt one of
hundreds .you can experience on an

Alb.rtvillt
Ashland
Auburn
Birmingham

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intimate wa lking tour of Eufaula.
PoR A f'ltU:

Dothan
Enterprise
Eufaula
Florala

foley
fort P'!Yne

!AiaL.na

Grten~boro

f7orenct

Hun rsvrlle

WalklnO
rou~

Grrenville

]aeksonville Optliko
Manon
Selma
Mentone
Sprmgville

directions and other information, go to

fuscumbio

TU&gt;ktgee
Union Sprinp
Monrorville Th'omasvilfe Volley
Monlevallo Tro/
Wetumpka
Montgomery

www.alwalkingtours.corn . Or call
1-800-ALABAMA and ask about
our walking tours.

VACATION GUIDE CALL 1· 800 - ALABAMA OR VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT WWW.TOUAALA.UMA.

800.949.4444 - 'ltii!IJII.rtiqolj: com

THE FREE
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*

TA.KE PLACE ALL ACROSS THE STATE, EVERY

$.af.ull.rf.mJ

AT

10:00 .Q.Jn.,· FRO~

'lrlmJ. 24 "9uLIJ 5.
,

'.
'

�•

&lt;\ •

. Tuesday, May 27, 2003
Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

lfhe Daily Sentinel • Page 85

.

.

Major League Baseball
Fogg comes off DL~ picks up first win in nearly

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel .com

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•,

r

•

. CH ICAGO (AP) - Josh
Fogg had j ust co me off the
di sabled l ist and hadn ' t
recorded a victory in nearly
two months.
All of that did n't matter
much once when he took the
mound Mo nday against the
Chicago Cubs.
'
Fogg shu t down the Cubs
over seve n in nings , ou tpitchin g Kerry Wood as the
Pirates won I 0-0. Fogg (22), activated Monday, held
the C ubs to three hits and
didn ' t allow a runner past
secpnd base. He struck out
five and wa lked three in
'
.
seven innings.
Fogg al so drew a walk in
the . Pirate s' nine- run eig hth

•TVC eking
Division Champions
• Sectional Champions
· .District Champions

llllllllg .

Wood (4- 3) gave up just
cone hit and one run in seven
innings, striking out 10. But
he was lifted after .throwing
113 pitches and it a ll fell
apart for the C ubs.
Wood wa s occasio nall y
wild a nd it hurt him. He
walked four. hit a batter and
threw two wild pitches . The
Pirates scored their only run
off him on a wild pitch.
Phil Norton , Juan Cruz
and Antonio Alfo nseca
combine d to give up s ix
hits, four walks and a hit
batter in the eighth. The
nine run s were the mo'st
scored' by the Pirate s in an
in nin g si nce Jun e 12, 200 1.
Julian Tavarez pitched
two innin gs to fini sh the
five- hitter, Pitt sburgh 's second shutout of the seaso n.
The Cub s
have been
blank ed four tim es.
It was Fogg's fir st win
since April 3 , th e third ga me
of th e season . He las t
pitched o n April 20 again st
the Cubs, when he was
removed with pain in his
left side and placed on the
DL. He had actually
. strain ed hi s oblique mu scle
while batting five day s earlier.
Jeff Rebo ulet and pinchhitter Randall Simon hit
two-run sing le s · in the
e ighth , and Cubs pitchers

Won20Lost2

GOOD LUCK IN
REGIONALS!

..
'

The District Champion Eastern Eagles · will take on Berne Union
Wednesday in Regional Softball action. Front row, from left, Jenny Armes,
Nikki Phillips, Brandy Bissell; Sara Barringer, Tiffeny Bissell, Megan Venoy,
Krista White and Casey Smith. Back row, from left, Becky Taylor, ·Sandy
Powell, Morgan Weber, .Hallie Brooks, Kass Lodwick, Katie Robertson,
Alyssa Holter and Krystal Baker.

U'~7~

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35537 St Rt 7 N

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985-3307

BlUM

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Chester 985-3301

Aim.High Eagles/

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. . 499 Richland Ave.
Athens, OH

290 N. Second
Middleport 992-3684

212 East Main
Pomeroy • 992-3785

Wesam

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740-594-6333

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DEPOY
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1000SR 7South
Coolville, Oh
740-667-0363

;

•

State Route 7 • Pomeroy
Middleport 992-6466

Funeral Home
Middleport
Pomeroy

992-5141
992-5444

We are proud of you, Girls!
Good Luck at Regionals!'
GO EAGLES!
Eastern Athletic Boosters
DOWNING (H.ILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE
Pomeroy

992-3381

Valley

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Co.

992-6611

Crow&amp;... Crow
Attorneys

a~

Law

11 0 W. Second Street
'Pomeroy 992-6059

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Pomeroy

992-6682

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Construction
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4

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•

Rockies 12, Giants 7
At
Denv er,
Charle s
Johnson· and Preston Wil son
each hit a three-run homer,
and Colorado rallied from
an ear ly five-r un deficit to
beat San Francisco .
Ronnie Belliard went 4 for-5 a nd sco red three runs
for Colorado, which took
three of four from the
defending NL champions.
Wil son had three ! of th e
Rockie s' 18 hits.
San Francisco ha s lost
two of thre e without aili ng
star Barry Bonds and 11 of
16 overal I. The Giants have
dropped th ree of their pa st
five se ries to fall into a tie
with Los Ange les in the NL
We st for the f irst time all
season .
Bonds ' sore knee 1s
expected to keep him out
until at least Wednesday,
hut the Giant s activated second bal;e man Ray Durham
from th e disabled list.

.l&gt;

PUBLIC NOTICE
The
following
applications and/or
verified complaints
were received and the
following draft, proposed,
or
final
actions ware laaued,
by
the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency
(OEPA) last week.
"Actions" Include the
adoption, modlllca·

SHOE PLACE
~

112 East ~a in Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

• t •
-'-0.1.0.

Pomeroy
Gallipolis
992-2J36
446-2265
Tuppers .Plalns 985-3161
Mason (304)773-6400

992-2155

Written comments,
requests lor public
meetings, and adjudication
hearing
requests must ·be
san! to: Hearing
Clerk,
Ohio
Environmental
Pr6tectlon Agency,
P.O.
Box
1049,
Columbus,
Ohio

4 32 1 6 - 1 0 4 9

Oh
Issue Date 6/112003
Receiving
Waters :
Ohio River
Facility Description:
Coal Washer •
Permit
No.
01 L00025.CD
This final action not
preceded by proposed action and Is
appealable to ERAC.
(5) 27

(Telephone: 614-644·
2129) .
"Final
tlon, or repeal of Actions••: ara actions
orders (other than of the Director which
Public Notice .
are effective upon
emergency orders);
IN THE COMMON
the Issuance, denial, Issuance oi' a stated
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
date.
modification or revo- effective
DIVISION
Cation of licenses, Pursuant to Ohio BATE
MEIGS
COUNTY,
Code
permits, leases, varl· Revised
ancea, or certificates; Section 3745.04, a OHIO
and the approval or final action may be IN THE MATIER OF
OF
to
tha SETTLEMENT
disapproval of plans appealed
ACCOUNTS,
PRO·
Environmental
and apeclllcatlona.
BATE COURT MEIGS
Appeala
"Craft Actlona" are Review
COUNTY, OHIO
written statement• of Commloalon (ERAC)
Accounts
and
the
Director
of (Formerly Known Aa
vouchero of the lol·
Environmental The Environmental
lowing named fiduciProtactlon'a Board Of Review) by
(Diractor'a)
Intent a person who wao a ary haa been flied In
with reapect to tho party to a prOCMdlng .the Probate Court,
Melge County, Ohio
before the Director by
leauance, denial, etc.
. of · 1 permh, llcenle, filing an appeel within for approval and oat·
ordar, etc. lntereated 30 deyo of noll~• of tloment.
ESTATENO. 30482final
action .
peraono moy aubmlt tho
wriHen commentl or Purouent to Ohio The Account for year
Code of 2001 by Bemard V.
requeat
a public Ravloed
Fultz
and
Mary
mMtlng
regarding Soctlon 3745.07, a
Arnold, Co·Truoteeo
draft
ectlono . llnel ectlon leoulng,
Comment• or public denying, modifying , . of the· rruat of
Elizabeth
.cutler,
mMtlng
requello revoking, or renewing
muot be oubmlttad 1 permit, licente, or Decoaood.
Unleea exceptlono
within 30 dayo of vartencewlllch 11 not
notice of thl draft preceded by o pro- aro flied thereto, uld
action.
"Propoaed pallid action, may be account will be oat lor
hearing before eald
Actlono" are written appealed to the EAAC
Court on the 27th day
by
filing
an
appeal
otetomento of lha
Olroctor'a Intent with within 30 deyo of of June, at whlc.h time
tald account will be
reapect
to
tho looU8nco of the final
conoldered
and con·
action
.
EAAC
eppealo
loluanca.
denial,
modification, revoca- muot be flied with : tlnuod from day to
tion, or renewal of a En vIr 0 1 n ,m ant a I day until finally dl~­
pooed of.
Appeala
permit, license, or Review
Any person Inter·
309
variance.
Written Comml ..lon,
eoted
may file wrlnen
South
Fourth
Streat,
commenll
and
222, exception to oald
requeato for 1 public Room
Ohio account or to manera
meatl1111 regarding a Columbua,
43215
..
A
copy
of
the pertaining to the exepropoaed Kllon may
muat
be cution of the trust,
be oubmlttod within appeal
on
the not Ieos than, five
30 daye of notice of ..rved
the proposed action. · Director within 3 days days prior to tho dote
An ad}udlcatlon hear· after filing tho appeal oetlor hearing.
J.S. Powell
lng may be held on a with tho ERAC.
Final leauance of Judge.
propolllld action If a
Pleas
of Common
hearing request or Ranewal
Court
,
Probate
NPOESPermlt
objection Ia received
Olvlalon
Coal
by the OEPA within 30 Waterloo
Melgo
County, Ohio
Company
Inc.
doya of losuance of
the propooed action. !~tate Rt 7 Cheshire, (5) 27

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Rime, R. Ph.'

41503 Sumner Rd
Chester OH 985-3813 ·

~

hi ghest total in more than
two yea rs. Still , Clemens
remained winless in hi s last
nine starts at Yankee
Stadium.
Clemens ' mother, Be ss.
traveled to Yankee Stadium
for the fi rst time since her
so n clinched th e l999
World Series . She sUffe rs
from ~mphysema and ha s
had a rece nt bout with jmeumonia, and wore a breathing
tube around her face.
Hi s kids sat in the front
row of the loge level, post'ing " K" card s to keep track
Red Sox 8 v.ankees 4 of their dad ' s strikeouts,
'
and Clemens fanned nine to
&gt;,'-II Roger Clemens caught · rai se his lifetime tot al to
with ht.s. ~ ew glove was 3 985 .
some cnt1 c1sm.
'
·.
Hoping for a ce lebra ti on,
Nolan Ry?n was. the la st
Clemens broke out a mitt p1tcher to wm 300, reach1n g
Monday that featured a big , the mark in 199P on his secs hiny " 300" logo on the and try.
back .
·
The 40-yea r-old C lemens
But the patch turned •out earned hi s 299th victory last
to be a bit premature . Wedne sday night at Fenway
Rathe r than recordi ng hi s Park , where he played from
300th career win, Clemens' 1984-96 for the Red Sox.
first bid at the milestone
Boston led J-0 in the third
victory became a bust when when Trot Nixon drew a
the Boston Red Sox banged bases-loaded wa lk o n a
.
htm arou nd and bear New
3-2
pllch.. and
York 8-4 , the Yan kee,~ • close
eighth straight home loss.
Cleme ns threw up h1 s arms
The s(art of the game was in di sbelief when Miller
delayed I hour,. 42 minutes ca lled 1t a balL Kev1n
by rain, and Clemens ' rou- Millar 's sacrifice fly made
tine was further disrupted it .3 -0.
right after hi s final warmup.
Walker 's RBI .gro under
That's when Red Sox man - and a wild pitch put the Red
age r Grady Little walked Sox ahead 5-0 in the fourth .
out to qu,e stion Clemens '
glove .
Blue Jays 11,
Plate umpire Bill Miller
agreed with Little that it White Sox 5
co uld
be
distracting .
Clemens had to to ss as ide
At
Toronto ,
Carlos
that glove while another one Delgado hit a two-run sin- :
was brought from the gle in a five-run sixth;
I
•
dugout.
inning and won it s fifth :.
In ' the only other AL st raight.
:
games,
Detroit
edged
Chri s Woodward and Josh.·
Cleveland 6-5 and Toronto
Phe lps homered for the
beat Chicago 11-5.
Clemens (6-3) desperately. Blue Jays, who returned :
wanted to win on this after- home from an 8-2 road trip ·
noon : Torre gave him plent y and hand ed struggling lefty ·
of opportunities , le tting his Mark Buehrle (2-8) his se v- :
·
ace throw .133 pitches - hi s enth consecutive loss.

{
I

J•uhllc Nor lees In

N~;;;~';a~:::::.~:

Vuur RIM,ht hJ Kno.n .v, l:&gt;ellvercd Righi tn Your

'

Congratulations
Eastern Eagles!

Pitts burgh Pirates starter Josh Fogg de livers against the
Chicago Cubs in the first inning Monclay in Chicago. Fogg
pitched seven scoreless innings in the Pirates' 10.0 win. (AP)

o nd seven·game winner in Marlins 5, Expos 1
th e National Leag.~e and
Scott Rolen was 3-for-3 · At Miami, Brian Banks
with three RBi s for St. and Juan ·Encarnacion eac h
Loui s.
hit a two-run homer, and
J.D. Drew hit a three-run Carl Pavano threw his sechomer, Mike Matheny was -and career co mplete game
3- for- 3 with . two runs as Florida won its fourth in
sco red and Tino Martine z · a row.
homered as part of a 14-hit ' Pavapo (4-5) gave up five
ou tbu rs t. The Cardinals hits, struck out five and
hav e won three of four and walked none in a game that
began a 14-game homes: took just 2 ho.urs , 3 minutes.
ta nd. the,ir lon gest of the
The game marked the
sea so n.
start of a 25-day, 22-game
Williams (7-0) won hi s trip away from Montr!!al for
1Oth consec uti ve deci sion, th e Expos, who will play a
dating to Aug. 29 last sea- six-ga me " hbmestand " in
so n at C inc innati. . He Puer)o Ric o during that
.allowed one run in six span .
'
inni~ gs, lowering hi s ERA
Diamondbacks 8,
to an NL-best 2. 19.
The Cardi nals placed sec- Padres 4
o nd basema n and leadoff
hitt er Fernando Vina on the
At
Phoenix ,
David
15 -day di sa bled list with a Dellucci homered and was
Cardinals 10, Astros 5 severely torn right ham- hit by a pitch from Jesse.
string that will sidel ine him Oro sco to force home the
go-ahead run in the seve nth .
At . St. Loui s, Woody for s ix- to- 12 week s.
Rookie Andrew Good ( 1William s became the sec-

Chester

The Daily
Sentinel

two months
.

I ) allowed' three runs over
seven innings for hi s· first
major league vi ctory, then
was sent to the minors to
make room for Byung- Hyun
Kim, who will co me off the
disabled . list to
sta rt
Tuesday' ni ght - . in · San
Francisco .
Luis Gonzalez homered
and drove in three run s, and
Dellucci had three hits.
The Padres ~ave lost II of
12. Adam Eaton ( 1-4) hit
hi s second homer of the season and doubled , but fell to
0 -3 in hi s last four starts .

walk ed in three run s.
Aramis Ramirez had an
RBI single, and Brian Giles
drove in tw o runs with a
b.ases -loaded walk and an
RBI s in gle th at capped the
o utburst.
Kenny Lofton. who singled and scored twice during the rally, extended hi s
hitting streak to 24 games
- lon gest in the NL thi s
season .
The Cubs jus t returned
from a 13 -g ame roadtrip
and Wood noticed a difference in the pitching mound.
It was the fourth time this
seaso n ' wood had doubledigit strikeout s, and he
leads the majors with 89.
Wood has ·lost t wice in a
row to Pi ltsburgh and is
winless in his last five
starts , dating to April 29 at
·San Francisco . He has been
stuck on 49 career wins .

985-3857

7ie

f"

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds1

Summerfields
Restaurant

48

cutti
Cellar

Best
Middleport

Congratulations Eastern
on a Job Well Done!

DVWeber

~ Ga~ ~ Construction
.Serv1ce

Eastern 20-2 vs. Berne Union 18-13
Wednesday, May 28, 4:30p.m.
Pickering High School
Regional Finals Saturday, 1:00 p.m.

Great Job Eagles!

'

1

'

.

must not exceed
$130,000.00 each and
shall be lor the period
PUBLIC NOTICE
, of July I, 2003
The annual report through June 30,
Form 990 PF for the 2004. Administrative
Kibble Foundation, cost may not exceed
Bernard V. Fultz, 1Oo/o of tho total conTrustee Is available tract award. In addilor public Inspection tion, 3Q% of the total
at Bernard V. Fultz contract award must
Law Office, 111 -112 be used to oerve outWest Second Street, of-school
youth .
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Propoaels
must
during regular busi- demonstrate
the
ness hours for a peri· capability to meet
ad ol180 days subse- performance
stanquent to publication dards and to quantify
of this notice.
program outcomes.
(5) 19, 20, 21 , 22, 23, For a copy of the
27, 28, 29, 30, (6) 2, 3, Meigs
County
4,
Wotkforce Plan, the
ten program ale·
manto, the performPublic Notice
ance otandarda, the
criteria used In IIYBiuREQUEST FOR PRO· atlng tho propoaala,
POSAL
and a Budget Format
·The Meigs County · Propoeel ,
contact
Department of Job &amp; Thereoa Lavender 11
Family Servlcoo Ia tho Malgo County
.aeekl1111 propoaalo to C.partmont of Job &amp;
provide a comprehan· Family S.rvlceo .(740)
' olve youth program to 882-21 I 7 ext. 127..
eligible youth. agee
Propooelo ehould
14·21 conelotont with be
oubmlttad to
Malgo
County'• Thareoo
Lovandar,
W o r k l o r c e · Malgo County Job &amp;
Development · Plan, Fomlly S.rvlcee, 175
provlolona of the lid- Race StrHt, P.O. Box
are!
Workforce 18 1, Mlddlepo('l, OH
lnveetment Act (WIA), 45780 no later then
and related federal Juna 5,2003 at 4:00
and alate ~egulatlona, p.m. All eubmleelone
In eatabllohlng youth muot be recelv.cl by
actlvltleo under WIA, moll or hand delivery
oorvlco provldore ara by tho ebove deta and
expected to link pro· time. No meterlelo
grama with local rocelvtd Iller tha
labor needs, provide date will be Included
a atrong connection In prevloua aubml1~
between academic elono nor be conaldand .. occupational ered. The department
learning, and ..tob- reoervao tha right to
llah programo which reject eny or all proprepare youth lor poaale. In occordonco
pool oocondary edu- wHh 28 CFR pert 31 ,
cation or unaubel- 32 Malga County
dlzed employment as Department of Job &amp;
approprteta . S.rvlceo Family Services 11
ahould Include: dolor· prohibited from diemining eligibility lor crimination on tha
WIA program1, pro· baala of race, color,
vldlng a comprehen- national origin, ux,
alve array of oorvlcea age, religion, political
to eligible youth and belief 01 dloablllty.
Incorporating tho tan (5) 20, 27 (6) 3 3TC
program
elements
under WIA. Two programt will be ewarded and program costa

Public Notice

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I

�27,2003

Tues~ay,

Auros

mrthune - Sentinel C L A S S I F I E .D

FORSAU
Office FumHure
New, scratch &amp; Dent.
Save 70%. 1·800·527-4662
Argonaut 519 Bridge Street,
GuyandotteJHuntington. WF

r

WtfCova
Melga, Gallla,
And MMOn ·
• Countlea Like

1994 Ford Thunderbird LX
V-8 , auto., leather, loadedNew Daytona GT, radial •
Block, brick, sewer pipes, tires. hceUent cond ition.
windows , tinters, etc . Claude 99,000 miles. $5000,00 obo
Winters, Rio Grande, OH 740-992-2784
Call740-245-5121 .
1995 Pontiac Grand Am
, PJm;
SE, V6; AC ; Cruise; tilt;
FOR SAlE
automatic; cassette; red
72,000k. $2500. 740-379Pomeranian Puppies, 2 2748
males. ready May 28th,
1998
Plymouth Grand
(740)992-3595
Voyager, 4dr, V-6, Auto, air,
Rotweiler puppies 101' sale tilt, buise, PN&gt;J, P/Locks.
mother and father on prem· $6,995. RivervieW Motors.
ises cal! 288-1636
(740)992-3490

NoOne

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In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
'
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
m:rthune
Sentinel

To

Place
Your

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@mydailytribune.com

Ad ...

Offtoe 11o~tf'
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD

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\ \ \ 01 \4 I \II \ I "

~~ II1 1':l.u~-HaP--W-ANTED
__...,I _

HaP WANrn&gt;

ReceplloniSI.

Disolay Ads

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

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

Monday- Friday for Insertion

Buslnes• Days Prior To

In Next Day's Paper
L:~t~r~d••v_ln -Column: 1:00 p . m .
Sundays Paper

eroy

t_

~::::

, Handlers,
Lift
Truck
Operators. Contact oHICe at
A
Metabolism (740)992-5965 from 6:30 to
Breakthrough!
1 lost 40 4:00 M-F or Send Resume
pounds in 2 months. to: PO Box 227, Middleport.
Ephedra Free. 1-888-546- Oh 45760 ..

:::ssers wan1ed immedi-

atelyl No e~~:perience necessary. Work at home. Call
t ton of river-rock, you must '--14_0_5)_44_ 7_-6_3_9_7____
·
baul it away 304-773-9566
AVON·! All Areas! To Buy or

1
0ProRnJNJTY

=~~-r~-~k-cl- -:a~:-: -I~-·~-.L-D- 1 ~-eq-mu-~~-~-te
excellent pay, experience
required. Earn up to $1,000.
par weak.Call 304-67 54 5

Absolute Goldmine!
60 vending machines with
exc. locations·alltor

Publication
Sundilly D isplay: 1:00 p . m.
Thursday for Sundays

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~10,995.800-234-6982

All re•leltate advertlllng
ln thla newSJ)IIper ie
aubjec:l to the Federal
F.. r Houa Ing Act 011968
which makn 11 fllegst to
advertise "tny
preference, limitation or
dl•crlmlnstlan b..ed on
race, color, religion, aex

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PR"Il NUMB fRED lE llERS IN
fH(Sf SQ IJARfS

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UN5CI-"M8lE ABOVE LEll!RS
10 GET ANSWER
•

Yesterday's

For Sale 1972 Diesel 135
Massie Ferguson with 2yr
old Bush hog. $5,500. FlAM.
882-2099 or after 1pm. 8622875

Reg. Angus bulls- Top performance bloodlines, Maine
Chi· Angus show bulls .
Slate Run Farm, Jackson.
OH. (740)286·5395

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Chap8J: (304)675·

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8707

3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths,

Cole's Mobile Homes
attachd garage, on 1 acre,
US 50 East, Athens, Ohio, St. At. 124, $450 month and
.$450 deposit, (740) 99245701 , 740-592 •1972
3911 , (740)992-3194
Land Home PacKages avail- 3 br. !louse in town now
able. in your area, (740)446- available unfurnislled w/ car3384.
pet $400. per month $400.
- - , - - - - - - - dep. t yr. lease contract 47
New 14 ..wide only $.799 SpruGe St.call (740)446down and only $157.93 per 0332 ask for Heatller.
month. Call Nikki 740·385·
7671 .
3br. House;, at Glenwood .
r------,--- Appliances
Included .
~ew 14 wide only $799 (304)576-9991
down and only $157 .93 per
3br. House newly remOdmonth. Call Nikki 740·385·
eled . . camp .Conley. $450.
7671.
per month . No Pets. 304New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BA 757-5208

2 br, apt . in Gall1polis Good Used Appliances.
$425.00 a men. (7 40)44 1- Recond itioned
and
1322
Guaranteed
Was hers,
Dryers,
Ra nges,
and
Apartment Available Now. Refrigerators, Some start at
River Bend
Place, New S95 . Skacgs Appliances, 76
Haven , WV now accepting Vine St ., (740)446-7398
applications for HUO-subsidized, 1 bedroom apart- Mollohan Carpel, 202 Clark
men! Utilities included Call Chapel Road . Porter. Oh1o.
(3 04 )882 -3 12 1 Apar1men 1 (740)446 -7444 1-877-830ava1!able tor qualified sen· 9162. Free Estimates, Easy
finanGing, 90 days same as
iorld1sabled person . EHO
cash. Visa/ Maste r Card.
APART- Drive· a- iiUie save alot.
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
BUD GET
Usad Furniture Store 130
PRICES AT JACKSON
Bulav-1/le Pike Gallipolis OH
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
446-4782. Good
buys.
Drive from $297 to $383
Check us out. Hrs 10.4
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Mon-Sat
740-446-2568
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Whirlpool washer $95 .00,

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$500 POLICE IM POUNDS.
Hondas .
chevys,
etc1
cars/trucks from $500. For
listings 1-800-7 19-3001 ext
3901
1985 Camara has 1979, 350
engine. Needs work. S4,000.
Firm. (304)773-5873

HouSEHou&gt;

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MERCHA.'~IJISE

In Memory

In Memory of

Carl Gorby
on his
83rd Birthday

I

May 26, 1920 Nov, 19, 200 I

.

BUR

·

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.&amp;...

SCRAM-LETS ANSWiRS

Hybrid - WIJile - Glint - Attack - THEY like IT
Overheard m therapist omce "Who said women
haven't a keen sense of humor? I believe the more you
humor them the better THEY like IT!"
-·

49 acres, ' Long Bottom , 3
br.. 2 batn !arm house, full
baseme nt .
garage,
2
stocked ponds , $104,900,
(740)843-1229
By Builder, attortable New
Brick 3 bedroom 2 1f2 bath,
2 car garage. Corner lot.
Great Location , Green &amp;
Ci1y Schools. (740)446·9966

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Fat ,
BLOCK
Cravings. and BOOST
Energy Uke
You Have
Never Experienced
WEIGHT· LOSS
REVOLUTION
Ne~
~· producllaunc"
'' Oclober
23, 2002 . Call Tracy at
(740)441-198 2

He is gone bu(
not forgotte n and
as dawns another
year, In our
lonely hours of
thinking thoughts
of him are always
near, days of
sadness will
co me o'er us.
friends may think
the wound is
healed. But they
little know the
sorrow that lies
within the hean
concea led.
Sadly mi ssed by
Wife - Pauline Gorby,
Son- Ron Gorby,
GrandsonChristopher Gorby

Cat or sma ll dog walk ,
portable. 31 " high by 10'
long, new Wl carrier bag,
$50. 740-645-0903 .
centra l Cooling Systems.
new &amp; used , as low as
$850.00
installed
May
Special I (740)448-8308

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock . Call Ron Evans, 1800·537-9528 .

NEW AND USEO SlEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Concrete,
Angle ,
For
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446--7300

r MoroRcr~ I

Where the cuslomer

comee fl'fllll

Under New

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Find whatever
you need
in the
Classifieds.

lttms A4tltd K-'tl'lrly

J6198 Pt11ch

740-992-1&amp;n

Ft~rlt

1-740-192-7007

~'R~
High 8l Dry

Spring ':'
':' Special ':'
THIUPEmC
MASSAGE

Hour. 10.S PM
CloMCI luiMf•v_•

&gt;:&lt;

Cet 2nd Free!

6 in. Perennial s $2.25.

Fry L.M.T.

Offer good thru .S· II.O.l

Also now au:tpting
mo~l

insurance

Septic Systems,
Footers and
Concrete,
Excavation, Utilities,
Back hoe and
Dozer, Ponds.

The
Sentinel
Classifieds
have a
Grand Slam
of
Bargains.

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.
992-7953
591·7002
591-4641

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New home· 4 'oedroom, 2
bath, livingroom, familyroom, din ing room den ,
modern kitchen , 2 car
garage, hp, all electric, with·
in walking distance Pomeroy
Golf Course, 3 acres,
$110,000 ,
cell
Susan
(740)985-4291 , work 740446-7267.

..

Tree Service

k

Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

We Make House Calla

Computers, Repairs,
Upgntdes,NehNorks

doc:::torOwv dr.com

Snapper

Dean Hill
New a: Used
4 75 South Church St.

88

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's # 1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds

CANCER CHECK
BUILDERS IOC.
New,Homes • Vinyl
1Sieling • New Gara1gesl
• Replacement

ENGINE REPAIR

You can find the perfect
pet in the Classifieds!

Ripley, WV 25271

Lawn and Garden Equipment is our
busi1ress, not our sideline

WE REP,AIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes
I--J-IM-,-- -M-A_L_L_!

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975

32119 Welshlown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-2432

740.992·7599DURO-LAST
ROOFING
Flat Roof
SpecialistsCommercial and
Resicjential
Saves on Cooling.
Metal and Mobile
home rools- No
Problem . 15-Year
Guarantee
992-7953
591-4641
591-7002

tor

"'IH\111 ..,

HOME

IMPROVEMIMS

Finally... Money paid 10 l11il when cancer

Every Thursday &amp;
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30 lsi Thursday
of every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this.coupon
Buy $5.00 Bonanza
GetS FREE

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670

Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio
45771

74Q-949-2217

strik es. You choose the amount up to $50,(X)()!

Pays in addition to other insurance.
You use the money however you like. ~

BASEMENT

HOWARDL.

WRITESEL

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting. vinyl
siding, carpentry, doors,
windows. ~ bathS. mobile
home repair and more. For
free estimate call Chet, 740992-6323.
1

*RIOFIIG .
*HOME
IIIITEIIIICE
*1EIIlUS
IIllER
•FniE-IIa*

·

Cancer will strike when you least expect it.
It will )eave you and your family financiaUy
Slrapped. CANCER CHECK will be .
the re when you need it.

Call now to reserve~ check.

ROCKY HUPP INSURANCE
&amp; FINANCIAL SERVICFS
BOX 189 MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760

740-843-5264
General
Contracting
New
Construction,
Remodeling,
Backhoe and
Dozer Work.
Roofing.
HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

31181fn

Ta~e

the PiiiN
out cf PAINTING
Let me Jc ;'

f •)l

v•:.u'

Ull1 PIIITII
•

992-7953

Sunset Home
Construction

WA1ERPROORNG
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur·
nished . Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4480870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;

More

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411
Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

Help Wanted

(304) 675-5236

JONES'

PC DOCTOR

(304) 675-5282

204 Condor Street

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

Old cars
sale. parts,
repair. restore. 3044581754 or 304-458·1831

AAIEOE

Closed Simda

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Budget Priced
Tranemlealons , ALL
types, 245-5677 or 6430814.

APPLY IN PERSON OR CALI,
Angela Cleland, DON

750 Eas1 S1ale Streel Phone (7410)!!93-66.7ij
Atbens, Ohio

GRAVELY TRACTOR

ACCENiDRIEli

rateS

Hofne from S199/month.
foreclosure
homes 4%
down. 30 years at 8.5 % apr
41istings caiiB00-319-3323
eX11709.

4 in. pots S I.OO - $1. 25

8 in &amp; 10 in . Clay pot s
&amp; combinalioni dn plant ~
crs $4.50 &amp; $7 .95
Open M on-Sa t 9-5

Gravely

AuroP.um&amp;

,,

&gt;

$1 1.95

www.wvpcdr.com

149-14115

wtanachments ,
·sweeper
new used twice, $50,
(740)64 5-0903

· 992-sn&amp;

Easter &amp; Mothers Day
Buy 1 Gift CE" rtificate,

740-992-5379

740-992-.5232

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
Syr.acuse Now Open
All Flats $6 .95
mix or march
I 0 in. Han gi ng baskets
$5 .95 &amp; S9 .95
12 in. Hanging Basket s

Hea1her A.

2000, 300 Honda 4 Track,
4x4, $4,000, 740 742-8612

Help Wanted _

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Rd.

Pomtroy, Ohio, 45761

Stop' &amp; Compare

I

Cellular

Manag~~gement
A variety of C&amp;l11ouflap
do!.hlne and hwul'!l
fljUipment
N~w

'

.AW'l

\lOll Sl IU'I .I S

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1.,~--··iiFOiiRiiliiSiiAU:iiii-,...1

89 KW T600 400 Cummins
w/Jake: 90 Ravens Magnum
45ft w/side Kit &amp; 3 boxes &amp;
eq uipment $20,000. 740709-0336

WILSON'

ROBERT
·BISSEll
CBISTRICTIOI

Self-Storage

TRUCKS

Pleasant Valley Nursi ng and Rehabilita1ion
Center is a dynamic Long-tenn care facility
thai provides in1ennedia1e and ski lled care
needs 1o residents. come join our heallh care
organizalion where we provide excellence in
care.
-•
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
LPN- FuU time and Part time
RATE WILL BE BASED ON
EXPERIENCE
Benefits include;'
• Fie• scheduling (including 12 hour shifls)
• Shifl differenlial
• Weekend positions
• Training program for new graduates
• Health Insurance single/family plan
• Experience pay and recent upgrade in pay

•

American Legion
Middleport

LIVELY'S AUTO SALES
20 Cars For Sale , from
$350.00 to $1 .800.00. Open
M-F 9 to 5, Sat. 9 to 3,
Closed Sun . Call : 388-9303.

Pleasant Valley Hospital

j

1st Pack $10.00
Then $5.00 alter that
Starburst $1550 .00
Start 6:30 p.m.
"Must be 16 years old to be
in hall or play"

1987 Dodge van , riding lawn
1984 Ford , ton truck, 15
mower call 256· 1102 ask for
foot lighted bok with roll up
Junior
door, V-B, automatic $2000
1987
Pontiac
Fiero, call 446-4254 or 446-0205
Burgandy, in good co nd.
$2000. OBO 304-458-2551
1988 $-10 2.5 4 cylinder 5
speed . New Outlaw 11 rims
1996 Camara Red. T-Tops,
with new Daytona GT radial
New tires , 101 ,000 miles,
tires. Sharp truck. $1500,00
Runs Greatl $5 ,900. 675·
obo. 740-992-2784
2029

Bu y or sell. Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SA t 24 E. Pomeroy. 74D992 -2526. Russ Moore,
owner

MISCtlJANEOUS

GOOd condition inside and
out 1988 Buick Le Sabre
Sport 4 door, rebuilt motor
$1400 080 388-8070

AliTOS

GE Dryer $95 .00, Frigidaire
Electric Range $95 .00,
Hotpoint
Refrigerato r
$95.00. Sunray Gas Range
$150.00 , Portable Washer
$125.00 , Washer &amp; Dryer
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedSets $300.00, Small Chest
room apartments at Village
Freezer $150.00 Skaggs
Marior
and
Aivers1de Appliances 446-7398
Apartments in Middleport.
From $279·$348 . Call 74o992-5064 . Equal Housing
Oppoqunities .

I
AND =INGS

84 Silverado, K-10, 8 n. bed,
lifted . new 33 ln. tires, btack,
auto, some accessories.
130k miles , 305 , runs
strong, 4wd $3000 3888506

liAr&amp;
GRAIN

FOR SAlE

Furnished Efficiency-3
rooms ahd bath, all utilities
paid. downstairs. $285.00
919 Second Ave. 446-3945

&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down 3br. Nice Brick home. 1'5
an d &amp;295/mo. 1·800-691· miles from Toyota Plant. 4 Now ·Taking Applicalion s~67:::71"7-~-----, miles from school. $500. 35 West 2 Bedroom
Townllouse
Apartments.
B
Monlh. (304)576-2217
4 Bedroom Home Point Includes Water Sewage ,
-Pleasant. (304)675-6633 Trash. S350/Mo .. 740·4460008 .
R. G
after s ·30 pm
oo
rande area, 2400 WDtJ MOBilE HO\,-.~
sq .H.. Office/ Commercial ~rr.L'i
Tara
Townhouse
Building for Rent/ Lease.
n..
Apartments, Very Spacious,
Plenty ott Parking . (740)245·
1-'0R ru::I'T
2 Bedrooms , 2 Floors . CA . 1
5747
112 8 I"11 N 1
1-"
t6x80 trailer in country, very ·
a ' ewy arpe o;ru,
LoiS &amp;
ni&lt;:&gt;e, no pets,
$400.00 Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
...__ _iiAiiCRFAiiiiiiGiiEii
._ r includes trash and water. Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
.
740-992 -2784
Pets, Lease Plus Secunty
o
· A
2 acres on Inn~:~a lis Ad . near
eposlt
equired, Days:
740
446
•
· 3481 ; Evenings:
2 BA trailer 14x70 on
218 Ca ll 245-o133
740 367 0502
Bulaville Pike. $375 + $375
·
3 acres Ready to build. deposit. Outside pets only. 6
!ease. 740·44.1- Twin Rivers To wer is acceplMason
$20 ·000 · mon ths
Co.
_
ing applications for waiting
1283
(304}458-1916
hst for Hud·subsized, 1- br,
Beautiful River View Ideal
apartment, call 675 ·6679
90 beautifu l ro lling acres For
1 Or 2 People, EHO
'
near Harrisonville. Highway References, Deposit, No
frontage on SA 143. Gas
well and stocked pond Pe ts, Foster Trailer Park ,"
Cash or terms. Call (740) 740-441-0161 .
742·3033
Mobile home tor rent , no
Trailer space for renl $125.
pelS, (740)992-5858
per/month At 2. 6 miles
Building lots close to Pl.
North of Point Pleasant.
'Pieasa~t at Meadow hillS off
FAR.J\t.'i
(304)8 95-3094
Sand hill Ad . (740)446-9340 ~~---FOiiR;;,;,RiiEiiii
NT--"
or 304-675-3000 .
Wanted to rent- Pasture In ·Trailer space for rent in
Lot )for _sale in Racine; Gallia Co. with nood
fences Middleport, (740)992·5858
..,
1740 992 5858
&amp; water supply. Phone : Jim
\II fH II\ \ 111" 1
Baughman (740)256-6535.
Nice mobile hOme lots, quiet
I"" • "'~-.·•=.
country setting, $115 per
tv;FO=R"
Goon;
month. includes water,
ru..r.'l
sewer, Irish, 74Q-332-2167
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Better Bends drop·ln wood
Property &amp; antiques for ments, furnished and unfur- burner stove, exc. condition
sale., Serious Calls Only. nished, security deposit w/ blower 446-0138
(304)576-9929
reqUired , no pets. 740-992For Sale : Reconditioned
2218.
1965 Travelo 2 Bedroom Rio Grande area . 3 to 3d
washers, dry~rs and refr igMobile Home. $6.500 Neg. acres lots, som~ restrictions,
2 bedroom. References &amp; erators .
Thompsons
Very Good Condilion. (740)
water &amp; electric. (740)245- Deposit. No Pets. (304)675- Appl iance. 3407 JacksOn
388-0578 .
5747
5162
Avenue, ~304)675-7388 .

73
Pontiac · Catalina,
4001400, many new parts,
73k, asking $1500 in \lery
good shape, 2 dr nard top
388-8506

95 Hyundai Scoop 5 speed
AJC, 73 ,000 miles, runs
Good quality straw. Volume good, $2500 OBO 441 -1083
discount &amp; delivery avail·
able. Heavy square bales. 95 Mazda MX3 halchbacl&lt;,
$2 .85 per bole. (304)675- 88,000 miles, riew lights &amp;
ti res, excellent condition,
'5724
$4750 call446-8222
I U \ \-.. l •t I I{ 1 \Ill 1"\

1

Tuesday, May 27th

66.GTO, 2 dr, hard top, auto.
no engine or tr&amp;n$mlssion,
many new parts, restoratiQn
started, needs finished,
$6,000 388-8506

Registered polled black lim·
ousin bull. Born 3131/99,
Apprmcimately 1500 lbs.
Very good natured . Call
after 1 2~ 00 noon or anytime
weekends 740-742-2457
92 Olds Cutlass Supreme, 4
Yearling Black Umousin bull, door, runs good, good inter!·
or and exterior, brand new
(740)992-7888
tires, $2000 firm 388-8506

4 br. 1 112 baths. brick and
frame. lull basement, 2 car
garage, New haven WV
(740)448-4274

5

:! 1\
~ • 1:

~~~:rd

4 Bedrooms 2 1/2 baths,
5.52 aore&amp;. Pt. Pleasant.
ir;formation!photos online
www.orvb.com code 5190 3
(304)675·5773

'---r.R_IT-'-ATF--'A'-T+O-r---ll ··

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, P1. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lyregister.com

HOUS'"'S
1980 12x65 Skyline 2 BR ,
1:..
storage building, 2 porches ,
nJR RENT
i'leat pUmp. Inside remodeted $7500 080 339· 1745 1-3 bedrooms foreclosures
home !rom $199 month 4%
2003 Clayton 16x80 3 BA 2 down 30 years at 8.5% APR
Bath, partially furnished, 2 for listing ca ll 1·800·319decks , 10x1 2 bulld1ng 245· 3323 ext.1709
51 00
3 bedroom. SSOO per mo.
'99 14x70 Cla"'on.
3 bdrm, 2 plus deposit , re ferences
,.
bath, all eleptrlc, central ale , requlred ,
no
pets,
new carpet, water lines &amp; Harrisonvme area. 74 0-742 underpinning. $16,000. 675- 7303, 740·347-4370.

ramltlat sta1ua or national
-=-Se:.:l:_l.'----=S-'-h-irl-ey-Spe_a_r•_
· -304-- 1140
BUSINE'iS
origin, or any ln..ntlan to
~75-1429 .
•
TRAINING
Pizza Franchise. Unique
mak• any auch
ttar1 Terrier small lo~able Concrete mixer drivers ...__ _ _ _ _ __ . rapidly growing Concept.
preference, limitation or
dog . 7yrs. old. To good needed at our Colt.:mbus Gallipolis c"a reer College 22 yr
"history.
dlacrlmlnatlon."
740 46 0306
home. 1 )4 ...,plant, Class B COL required,
(Careers Close To"Home)
Ti'lla newspaper will not
Lo!ITFOIJNIJANIJ
contact Arrow Concrete Call Today! 740-446-4367, 100+ Franchises in 2002
knowingly accept
740-446·1594
1-800-214-0452
alone! 1_888 _344 _2767 E•t
edvertlaementa for reel
:
www.gallipoliscareercollege.etlm
estate which 11 In
Cos~eto l_oglst
needed
Reg #90·0S· 12748 _
210. E~et. 210.
violation of the law. Our
~ · lull blooded labrador full/part t1me pd. vacation,
'PR.Oiil!SSIONAL
· reeders are hereby
retriever puppies, 1 yellow, 1 free CE hrs.Faniastlc Sams 1170 MKl:u.ANE:ous
SERVJC~
Informed thai all
1
black, lound on Gallia Rd. (740)446-7267 :
·- -~-•· -------· '-~-----~ _..... dweUinga advertised In
~
~
~~r~
i
o
~
l~37~9~-2~5~9~6--~__,
'
this newspaper are
,.
Help wanted caring for tl'le
Stanley and Son, Inc.
4-6tt.x20ft. corrugated steel
available on en equal
••
YARD SALE
e ld erIy, Darst Group Home. culverts $500.00 each L&amp;L
Auction . Real Estate,
1 now paying minimum wage.
opportunity bases.
Appraisal. Serving oou
"'"
Scrap Metals 446·7300
,
since 1960- 3 Generations.
new sh11 .s: 7am-3pm, ?am~
5pm, 3pm-11 pm , 11 pm - 8 hp Troybilt tiller. Homelite 1 ·888-BID-IT-UP. Henry M. Custom, all brick 3BR 21 /2
S
~G~ ~7am, call 74Q-992-5023.
weed eater, battery charger.
Stanley, IIICAI·AAAE
Bath, 3200 sq. ft . living area
Coeman
I
Iantern, stove and
on 51 12 acres with pond,
, _......~~ Help wanted-drivers. 18 or
TURNED DOWN ON
older. Call446-4200 or
heater, gard en cart, skill SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? 30x40 detached garage, 4
Welding equipment, we lder,
apply in person at Jumbo
saw, small electric motors,
No Fee Unless We Win!
miles past hospital on 160
~ and ace tanks, torch,
Italian Restaraunt
Homeiite 150 chainsaw 740_
_ .
_s2_7_9_.ooo
__
44_8_·2_9_27___
1 888 582 3345
4ril press, grincler, sand
448-4274
lll ~s ter, large tool box lull of Lost your Job? Need to
FORCLOSURE
Ul \ I I " I \ II
tJK!Is Kessel PrOduce &amp; Flea Work? Let's talk ... ihe new Full Size Mattress Set New
3 Bedroom home only
Market Spring Valley 28th- A¥on!
There
are in Plastic wrwarr. Sacrifice
10
HOMFS
$13,500 for listing call
30th 8-5
.. 25.ooo··customers in our $11 9, Cell Phone 304·412·
1-800-719·3001 Ext. F144
S
area needing service. Earn 18098 or 304-552-1424.
...___iiFOiiRiililiiAOilE--;.1·
4
YARDSAIEFrench City Mobile Homes
$1 ,000+ Monthly by selling - - - - - - - - •
l'oMllloriMIDDLE . $20. of Beauty Products to 6 King Size Pillow Top (3}FHA &amp; VA homes set up Open House May 30 thru
Bin
~eopie, 5 days a Week! Mattress set, New still in for immediate possession all June 14. Big Sa\linns,
1::1
·::~~
:11amlly, 5129-5130, 35670 Great for : Couples-Single Plastic, Sale $299, Cen within 15 min . of downtown Rebate. 446-9340
$R7, 9am-4pm, lots of misc. M am s-F am 1 1 i e. s- Phone 304-412-6098 or
Gallipolis. Rates as low as Home on pond. Five Poinls
tPo numerous 10 mention , Handicapped. Plans to Fit 304-552- 1424.
6 %'" (740 )446-3218 ·
area. Pomeroy 1.3 acres 3
rain cancels.
any Need. No Stock Ups. No
"
d.mmg
een Pillow Top Manress 160 Park Drive, 2 story, 3 br. , 1 1/2 b atrrs.
Door to Door. It will Work for
·
set, New in plastic w!Warr. bedrooms, family room-, din- room, 1am1"I y room. s1one 1treYo.u! $10.00 Star! up Fee.
I
has gas Iogs. base·
WIll accept $199, Cell phOne ·ing, full basement. $45.000. Pace
Call April, 304-882-3630 or 304-412-8098 or 304·552- 811 Wi llow Lane, 2 bed- ment .with l inished room .
1-888-748-3630.
1424.
rooms, large kltChen , tront Mid SO's (740) 992-3493
ol)bsolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver,
Gold
Coins. Overbrook Rehabilitation
;:JOrch,' double carport , lot
fDroofsets . Diamonds, Gold Center is currently accepting SONG OF THE SOUTH · size 93 x 138 , new siding . Must see, 3 bedroom, 2
~ings , ·
U.S. Currency,- applications for
part-time (Tales of l:Jncle Remus) full $35,000. Call Somerville bath, large patio on front '
( 304 ) 675 ~ 3030 beautiftit deck on back, on
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 (8 hours) Activity Assistant. length movie, VCR tape $29 Realty
(304)6 75 _3431
·
corner lot in Syracuse,
$econd Avenue . Gallipolis, Applications may be picked call 888-315-6004
• (740)992-3520
'
740-448-2842.
up at 333 Page Street,
· ~180
WANTED
3 Bedroom 2 Bath 1960 sq.
Middleport, Ohio 45760 or
.
To Do
ft. ranch on 12 acres~ 24x48 NEW HOUSE for SALE
phone. Mike Crites. Activity
...__ _ooiiiiitiiitii_ _,. barn. 16x18 building, close Debbie Drive $129,000.00
Director at (740) 992-6472
_ 2 ba th s..
)2 _
Odd Jobs, painting, mowing, to hospital , $180,0(1(), serl- (3 bedrooms,
wanted to buy-your extra for more In for mation.
740 45 9268
weedeating , call Bill or ~us inquiries only, 441-1334
qar, , minor repairs ok, all
Receptionist Needed for Dave. 882-34 19 or 773·6119
~tr ices ok 388-8228
Rlvtr Frontage 1112 acres
.
Medical Office. good organi- - , - , - - - - - - - - - - 3 Bedroom newly remod- more or less, 3BA 2 Bath,
zational skUis a must. typing Will pressure wash homes, eleci, In Middleport, call Tom master suite w/ jacuzzi, lull
skills required. 40 hours per trailers, decks, metal build· Anderson after 5 p.m.
basement, 2 decks w/ river
Wanted· 1·60 acres farm in week. send resume to Box ings and gutters. Call 992-3348
view, 2 docks , 1 floating 446Gail Ia County, a tea not picky 568 825 3rd Ave. Gallipolis (740)446~151 ask for Aon 3' BA 2 Bath Brick ranch , 2784
lajJ-8228'
.
OH 45631
or leave message.
anached
garage
In - - - - - - - - r
Reyno ld.! burg . •ora de 1or Rustic log home, 38R, 11
southern Ohio farm or land years old, country sening, 1
614-475-.2 126
acre, leave message 74(}lHAl DliLT
WOlD
.-. •
256-9301
PUUUl
3br. House on 3 314 acre. on ~~~~-~!"""-""!
- - - - - - - t d it•4 by ClAY . fOLLAH

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2002 Kia Spectra 23,000
miles tefl of factory warranty,
auto. air. plw, p/1 , AM·FM cd.
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Riverview Motora. 9923490

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Visit us at .111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lysentinel.com

1991 Bu~k Century auto;
AC; Cruise; Tilt; casseHe;
new tires . 87,000; very
clean . $2,000. 74o-379·
2748

• Room AddHioril I
•
•
•
•
•

Remodeling
New Garagea
Elactr!CIII 1: Plumbing
Roofing Guttere
VInyl Siding &amp; P1ln1ing
Petlo end Porch O.Ck1

a

· Free Eslimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill

..

992-6215
S/9-014

Pomertl)', 011lo
Yea

I

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

871-2487 or 441 2112
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

NELSONrSLAWN
CARE ·
Residential •
Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edging
• Fertilization • Leaf

Removal • Pruning
• Landscape
Mainlenance Spring
and Fall cleanup

(740) 985-9829
(740) 591·3891

FLEA MARKET
$7.50 per
space
at
Maplewood Lake
State Route 124
Between Racine &amp;
Syracuse, Ohio

June 6-7
Campsite available
with full hookups

Call 949-2734

Seamless Gutter
Services
• No Searm
• No-Lealu
• Free Eatimates
Owner•Operated.

• Driveways t Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads 1 Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

Ri' t'r" a'

97 Beech st.
middleport, OH

(Former/)' Wlritne)' S)

Under new ownership
and new management.

(lO'x-10' 610'x20'J
(140) 992-3194

COME JOIN US
7 Days A Week!
· Morning

( 'aft;
In Syracuse

992-6635

David Rhodts !1 Norma Rhodel

Office (740) 985-3511
Home

985-3622

'•

�'

"

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

www.mydallysentinel.com

I

'

'

support for wife whose
hubby,demands Sex
DEAR ABBY: While I
appreciated the irony of your
response'' to "Ready - and
Willing in New York," subtle, ty may have been lost on him.
He's the man who wants his
wife to guarantee that she'll
give him sex three times a
week.
That poor woman has ·my
sympathy. How could anyone
feel romantic - or ready and
willing -. with a partner who
made that kind of demand?
The fact that she wants to
move to Albany and have her
family help care for their four
children might be an indica·
tion that he's not.helping her
enough. Ask any mother: Not
getting the assistance or
appreciation that you need in
raising children is a surefire
libido killer.
NOT
READY OR WILLING TO
PUT UP WITH THAT IN
D.C.
DEAR D.C.: Many readers
had strong feelings about that
husband and his attitude.
Read on :
DEAR
ABBY:
Your
answer, "Why limit yourself
to three times a week?" was
weak. Why didn't you tell that
awful man what a jerk he is
for thinking sex with your
· spouse can be used as a bargaining tool? What kind of
pe.rson would demand that his

Dear

•

Abby
'
ADVICE

wife make love to him like it
was nothing more than a contract? Shame on him, and
shame on you for not calling
him on it' - FURIOUS IN
PHOENIX
DEAR FURIOUS: What
kind of husband would
demand sex as a. payoff? A·
turkey in the hay, of course.
DEAR ABBY: Your me.s·
sage to "Ready and Willing"
was right on. However, in all
seriousness, this man should
consider why his wife is not
"giving him" the sex he
wants. When a wife hears, "I
deserve it because it is my
marital right," she withdraws.
No one wants to be treated
that way. I have a hunch that
even if they move to Albany,
he won't be satisfied until he·
examines his behavior. MARJORIE IN LONG
BEACH, CALIF.
DEAR MARJORIE: Or
examines his approach, which

is about as romantic as an ice
bath.
DEAR ABBY: Get out the
wet noodle. Do the math. That
woman is caring for four kid s,
the oldest of which couldn't
be more than 10. She is tired!
Your reply was not appreciat·
ed by other tired woms - and
we are legion . - ALSO
TIRED IN K.C.
DEAR ALSO TIRED: I
meant no disrespect to tired
moms.
DEAR ABBY: I just want
to say'! loved your tongue' in•
cheek reply. - MOTHER
OF FOUR IN VIRGINIA
DEAR MOTHER: l ' m
afraid my answer was interpreted as more foot:in-mouth
than tongue-in-cheek.
DEAR ABBY: That wife
should counteroffer and tell
him his agreement is acceptable under the following
terms:
(I) If the toilet seat is left
up, subtract two sex days.
(2) If he nags or complains
when asked to help around the
house,
subtract
one
"encounter" for · each cornplaint.
.
(3) If he starts a project and
leaves it unfinished, subtract
one more.
Sex in marriage should not
be about power and control. It
should be about / intimacy,

1- ·
•

love, ;~nd feeling close to your
spouse. - VALERIE IN
BLOOMINGTON, IND.
DEAR VALERIE: You're
right. Many readers pointed
out that intimacy in marriage ,
is a result of cooperation, con·
sideration and respect in
every aspect of the partnership.
Dear Abby is wrirten bv
Abigail V{!ll Buren, also
known as Jeann e Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
· Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440. Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

The Newspaper
Has Class •••
Students can
learn a lot from
the newspaper about the
world
in which they live. And
now is the
perfect time·to bring
newspapers into the
cia r m.

Astrograph
Wednesday. May 28. 2003
BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

Life could take off in an entirely new direction in the
year ahead. You might be put
in the position from time to
time to try things you' ve al·
ways wanted to do but never
had the opportunity for previously.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Flashes of inspiration you
might get today could excite
you. but don't be too hasty
about implementing them.
Whm looks good in your head
now m)ght be a burned-out
bulb tomnrrow.
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- A breech in friendship
could occur today between
you and a pal over something
of a matenal nature if either
of yoi.J carries things too far

and allows it to develop into
an i~sue .

LEO (July 23-J\ug. 22) - ·
It" s good to be focused, but

cons1dcr the interests and cori·

ce'rns of companions, not just

your own. If you don' t. you
could come.off looking selfish and alter the way others

think of you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Know when 10 call it quits
when it comes to imposing

your ideas on unreceplive l.istencrs today. If you keep
pushing too hard, you will invite rebuttals that I guarantee
you won't like.
LIDRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- h behooves you to proceed
very cautiously toc!ay in your
business dealings . Neither
Lady Luck nor cohorts will be
around tu baiiJou out should
you make a ba call.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Normally, being cooperative is your best course of
action, but today if you be·
lieve you're bcine pressured
to do something that does not
serve your best interests,
you· d be wise to go your own
way.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21)- There's a strong
possibility that your mind
may not always be on what
you're d.oing today, so if
you're working with any tools
or mechanical devises. be ex·
tra .auenti ve to safety l!roce·
dures.

40 Bumpkin
41 Youngster
1 Party girl
42 - Marie
4 - 500 .
Saint
8 N~t good
44 Bassoon
11 Fix a
cousins
squeak
47 Where
12 .Close
Venice Is
13 Army outfit 51 Engage
J 15 Part of TNT 52 Large tanks
16 Camera
55 Debt letters
part
56 Complain
17 Writing
57 Green pod
fluids
- .58 Old space
18 Dark brown
station
20 Well·fed
59 Wily
21 Leather
60 Routes
.
punch
61 JFK arrival · 10 Lev" .
39 Existed
23 Tool set14 "My, myl" · 41 Ant·slzed
24 Grass
DOWN
19 Fleming,
43 Travel
27 TWA
et al.
papers
1 Specks
20 'Mom's girt ·44 German
guesses
29 Vet's offloe 2 Blarney
22 Dripped
. physicist
sound
Stone site 23 Martial art 45 Life stories
32 "Has 1001
3 Object on
24 Soothe
46 Ph.D. e•am
"
radar
25 Movie
48 Goals
33 Broadcast · 4 Wife's mom
terrier
49 "Dally
34 Hatchet
(hyph.)
26 Is a groom
Planet"
35 Soho co.
5 Born
28 Makes a
name
36 Large
6 Marino or
bow
SO Round tent
parrot
Rowan
29 Pageant
52 Promise
37 Novelist
7 Soph.
figures
53 Alias
James and jr.
30 Office VIP · 54 Sample .
38 Scale notes 8 Muscular
31 Time span
39 Into the
9 A Bronte ' 37 At the drop
. sunset
sister
of- -

I

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - Having a good
time and S;J ti sfying your ex -

travagant urges might be
tempting today . but guard

against tendencies to squan -

der your mental , physical, fi·

nancial or emotional resources.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- Plan your procedures
carefully and strive to be methodical with any task at hand
today . If you get off on the
wrong foot. you may have to
go back and retrace many of
your steps.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) '- Keep your frustrations
or temper under complete
control today, especially with

those with whom you' re emotionally involved. If you overreact, you'll trigger a similar
response from them.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - You can blame carelessness on your part if a financial arrangement you have
today does not work oiit as
well as you had hoped. Slay
on top of things and pay ·attention to details.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - Ambition will be high
in you and easily aroused today. but it 's qu~stionabl e
whether you' ll achieve your
objectives or not. Maintai n
patience if you hope to accomplish something.

Answer
to
previous

Word
3«1 DOWN

Scrimmag~ ·

. AVERAGE GAME 20()-210

JUDD'S TOTAL

. 1-fa-1)1

·

317

WAS Afi!OMENT DF

. ~ '{dJ'R£

WORD®©®CU@@@@®~

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0000000

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0

2°9Q9~

40h0-To" l

AVERAGE GAME 225-235

. ~~UEAJ,Yt'n~~~~ =

DIRECTIONS : Make a2- lo 7-18tter wcYd !rom lhfllstters on each yardline.

Add poi'lts 10 eaCh word or lenar USing sconng dlrecllons at ~11'11. S&amp;llen-\ene'
words get a 80·poinl boou! . All \'1'9f0s can be IOt.rld in Webstar's New Wol1d
College Dictionary

Meigs earning
high interest
o·n investment
BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor
: POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Elementary School building to
be abandoned by the Meigs
Local School District next
month as students move into a
new building will be sold at
public auction.
That was the decision arrived
at by the Board of Education at
a meeting Tuesday night after
hearing the Rev. Keith R,ader
report that the Meigs County
Cooperative Pari sh is not interested in leasing the buildin~, but
would be interested in buytng it
;tt auctmn .
· Rader emphasized that the
Pari sh still wants the building to
consolidate and expand the
many programs for youth and
adults which are now carried out
in several locations.
"But,'' he said, "we need a
clear title to the property
because we plan to invest
$200,000 and we don't want to
do that on a lease basis."
Rader said he had talked to an
attorney and been advised that
once the building is transferred
County
to
the
Meigs
Commissioners, they can not
just "give the property away,"

JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

n's MINE:.
tM Sl!lE

\WAT CAN 1 GET
fOil. YOJ, SIR~

CfiTI

"1:1JI'I.IIMGI~ATION?

CAlM OOJJ~,
AlEX! IT'S

S·O-L·E .

tr'SOIJ"TUE
MENUr

-v-

.

Of
~R

QF

CIITHtRINE
zrr ~ . :!ONE5...

I~

• Elephant, baby set to
make debut, See page
Al
• Family Medicine, See
page Al
• Rio professor honored, See page Al
• News, notes from
Meigs
County's 4-H
Clubs, See pa.g_e A4
• Soldiers, vets seam
targets, says group, See
page A7
·• Department serving
the health care needs of
Meigs Countians, See
page AS

Bv J. Mtw lAYTON
Staff writer
ROCKSPRlNGS
A
princess regains her crown
and teenagers will mock the
big people at 7 p.m. Thursday

~NO

DO 'IOU

'!?

11\E
HEA.111'1

OO!l'l
IMA6E

Katotyn Hill, 3rtl erode,
Southam Elementary

Index

~

Ul Plies
A4
BS-7

88
88
A4
AS

81-5
A2

2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~~

'
Please see Drama,
AS

.

.

MWDLEPORT
Recognition of reunion classes and awarding of II scholarships highlighted the annual
Middleport · Alumni
Association's annual reunion
held Saturday night at the
Meigs Middle School.
·
Ffllllces McClure introduced ·
Crow ·
Davis
the reunion classes, 1938, 1943,
1948, . 1953, 1958, 1963~ and
1968 following a welcome by
Paul Gerald, president, and the
invocation by Peter Walburn.
Susan
Park
Memorial
Scholarships presented by
Nancy Cale went to Carrie
Crow, Sheena Cunningham,
Kayte Davis, Laura Harrison,
Katie Jeffers, Seth T. Kettel,
Emily Story, and Allison
Williamson.
Jeffers
Kettel
Crow, daughter of James and
Pam Crow. and granddaugher of
Dorotha Wmebrenner Neutzling,
class of 1940, will anend The teacher. Jetlers. daughter of Rigoli, granddaugher of
Ohio State University where Desmond and Joni Jeffers and Eugene and Janet Harris, and
she will pursue a degree in nurs- granddaughter of Barbara Laura HarriSon. The Crawford·
ing. Cunnnginharn, dau~hter of Capetina Mora, c.lass of 1957, Gray-Lewis Scl)olarship was
Ron and Marilyn Cunrungham will go to Kentucky Christian awarded to Elizabeth Wilford:
and granddaugher of Lois •Col!e~e and 'J?lans a career in
Speaking on possible uses for
Cunningham, class of 1943, Christian servtce.
the Middleport schools to be
will be studying pre-med at
Seth T. Kettel, son of Keith turned over to Middleport vii·
Augustana College; Davis, and Ang~la Kettel ·and gnmd- !age by the Meigs Local School
daughter of Wayne and Debbie son of Wtlbr _Rowley, Jr. , cla.ss . District next month and the role
Davis and granddaugher of of . 195_8 wtll attend Ohio which the Alumni Association
Dorothy Davis, ~lass ~f 19~9. Umverstty and wtll be. takmg a will .take were Mayor S~dy
wtll attend Ohto Umverstty pre-med program. Wtltamson, lannarellt and Myron Dufheld.
where she will pursue a career dau~her of Robert and Donna
A dance in the gymnasium
m athlettc fll!~mg .
Willtamson and granddaugher followed the banquet.
'
Laura Hamso~, daughter. of of Donna McC~l Wtltamson,
Steve. and Jenmfer Harrison, class of 1955 will go to the
Alumni emending
·
an~ ,gmddaughter of Roscoe University of Rio Grande to
Alumni attending from their
Wtse, class-of 1951 , will go to study ~dtology.
resective classes are as follows:
Ohio University and plans a
Recuptents of the McCarn~1927:
Frances McClure
career as a secondary education Moore Scholarships were Ltsa Hoffman, Dunbar, W.Va.

WHAT

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics ·Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

by Valerie Carpenter, an
eighth-grade student at Meigs
Middle School, the princess
decides to reclaim her rightful
throne when she grows up.

News editor

ALL

· z Sections -

in the auditorium at the new
Meigs Middle School.
In "Kingdom Reclaimed"
an evil man usurps the throne
and kills the king, the queen
and sends .their baby, a
princess, into exile. Written

____ _

BY CHARLENE HOEFuCH .

,100ETME'R

H~VE

Drama makes a scen·e
at Meigs Middle School

POMEROY - · Attending
a state-mandated training
session, Meigs County
Treasurer Howard Frank
learned the county is earn ing the state's second-high est interest rate on public
funds invested long term.
The news is encouraging
to county officials, who are
grappling with a county
budget made complicated bv
d.windling revenue · and
increasing operating cost s
and state and federal mandates.
Interest on inactive public
funds deposited at Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. is
earning the county 4.3 percent interest, which is
directly deposited into the
county's general fund for
u,se in operating county government, Frank said.
"The county only operates
on 4.3 mills on real estate
and
personal
property
taxes," Frank said. "The balance of the operating funds
come from sales tax., which
is down by $26,000 so far
this year, and fees charged
by county offices and local
government revenue assis·
lance from the state, which

will be down $4,310 by
Jul y."
Frank said he expects to
pay $170,000 in interest on
inactive pub,lic funds by the
end of the year.
"This in-vestment program
has earned the county over 1
$14 million since I took
office in 1963," Frank said,
"saving county taxpayers
additional taxes."
"The investment of public
funds is t\ecessary to help
balance the county general
fund," Frank said . "Without ·
the investment of public
funds, taxpayers · will be
required to vote additional
taxes to operate the county
general fund."
Frank said Gallia County
is first in the state in terms
of return on the investment
of public funds, because all
funds -active and inactive
- have been placed in a
high-yield account at Ohio
Valley Bank.
Frank said the 4.3 percent
interest rate now being paid
on his three-year investment
program could increase. The
terms of the investment
allow him to upgrade ·the
interest rate if rates increase
on deposits.

Middleport welcomes alumni, awards
memorial scholarships to students

Cloudy, HI: 70., Low: I50o

v&gt;OIMNL'I
WRV£5

Meigs Middle School eighth-graders Eddie Neece, Nikkie Guinther and Samantha Shontz listen to direction by drama advisor Amy Perrin who hopes the show will open to a packed house
at 7 p.m. Thursday at the new Meigs Middle School auditorium. (J. Miles Layton)

====::;··~.........__e_

Inside

0

www.mydailysentinel .com

WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2003

Pomeroy
school ·
up for
:auction

;=:=-=·

41r"!OOWN

@@@@@@@ ~~OPo1n1s
by JUDD HAMBRICK

50 CENTS • Vol. 53, No. 186

Please see School, A5

0
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C' 2000 Unltd F•.. ur• $yrocll(:llt, Inc:,

'«&lt;J '1\tMirr 1\IA~ G&lt;.lY
Stu.lloiG fUN!liA~ I'\.OTS

Coming Thursday: Places to go, Things to do

ACROSS

Harrison .

Story

1932:
Harold
Lohse,
Pomeroy
1934: E. Maxine Coates
Gaskill, Middleport
1934: Elizabeth Lohse,
Pomeroy
.
1936: Clifford Cunningham,
Lima;
Eugene
Schaaf,
Columbus; Lois Diles Bush,
The Plains: Mary · Hennesy
Harris, Columbus; Robert King,
· Middlepor:t
1937: Howard Russell,
Middleport ·
· 1939: Dorothy Darst Davis,
Middleport
·
.
1940:.Bdty Roush Allensworth,
Groveport; Charles Entsminger,
South Charleston, W.Va.: Janet
Hecox Harris, Columbus;
Martha Robson Cunningham,

..

AHentlon Cancer Survivors! ·

FORUFE•

August I 5 and I 6

RELAY

Lima;
Mildred · Asbury
Moseley, St. Albans, W. Va..
1941 : !'I ill Diles, Athens;
Jean · ,Roush
Russell,
Worthington.
· 1942:
Barbara Hackett
Mullen, Pomeroy; Henry
Clatworthy. Middleport; John
Call, Lonb Bottom; Joseph
Young, Salesville; Kenneth
Mcelhinny, Middleport; Pauley
Kincaid Beaver, Middletown;
Robert Mitch, Wheeling, W.
Va.
.
1943: Charles Burk, Brook
Park ; Matjorie Diles Mitchell,
Atheos;
Mary
Mitch,
Wheeling, W. Va.; Patricia
Devol Kloes, Bidwell, Rowen!,!
Warren Young, Salesville; Ruth
Taylor Strain, Lancaster; and
William King, Middleport.
1944:
Dorothy Turner
Drenner, Costa Mesa, Calif.;
Jeanne Young Bradbury,
Syracuse: William Chlds,
Middleport.
1946: Alfred Scarberry,
Gallipolis; Martin Carson,
Richmond, Ind.: Richard
Bailey. Middleport.
1947 :
John
Fultz,
Middleport: John R. Kauff,
Point . Pleasant; Mildred
Ohlinger Bailey, llhigh, A a.;
Roy A. Evans, .Canal
Winchester; Carla Gilmore
Riley, Middeport.
1948: Bill Russell, Marietta·
Dorothy ' Cha~e Anthony:
Mtddleport; Dorothy Miller
Roach, Middeport; Helen Byer,
Baltimore; Marie . Greenlee
Allen, Spartansburg, s·. C.;
Marilyn
Knopp
Fultz~
Middleport; Mary Rollins
Scarbeery, Tuppers Plains;

Please see Alumni, AS

. And those inlerested in the fight against cancer•
The 2003 Galli a County Relciy for Life will be ·held
MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holza Difference

· at the Gallipolis .City Park
A cancer survivors' reception will take ploce before the opening lap.

All are invited to attend and join us in lhe fight against cancer!

www.holzer.org

For more information, please call Chairperson Bonnie McFarland at (740) 446-5679.

'

••

·•

·-

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