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                  <text>Page 10 o The Dally Sentinel
·.

~

www.mydallysentlnel.com
.

- ·- .

Girllieeds help releasing
emotions pent-up inside
FROM ·
UNIVERSAL
PRESS SYNDICATE
\ RELEASE:
·FOR
WEONESDAY, JULY 23,
2003
DEAR ABBY by Abigail
Van Buren
GIRL
NEEDS
HELP
RELEASING EMOTIONS
PENT-UP INSIDE
DEAR ABBY: My recent
eighth-g rade
graduation
should have been a happy
night for me, but I spent most
of it in the bathroom with my
best friend, "Sandy." She was
crying her eyes out because
her father was there. She had. n't seen him for more than
two years. Sandy's mother
had an affair with him 14
years a~o. and he decided to
stay wnh his wife, leaving
Sandy and her mother alone.
Her father pays child support,
but. his absence has left an
emotional gap you could
drive a truck through.
Sandy's mother is a wonderful person, but :rou can't
ta~k to her about .tmr.ortant
thmgs. And Sandy tsn t open
about her feelings to many
-kople. They build up inside
her and she just explodes.
Seeing her father on graduation night was the straw that
broke the camel's back. He
seemed uncomfortable. He

ter, "Lea," went away to col·
lege last year. She was look·
ing forward not only to the
opportunity to learn, but also
to make new friends. She had
made o)lly a couple of friends
in high schooL During her
freshman year at college, Lea
made an effort to make
ADVICE
friends, but never made more
than one.
Lea is returning for her
.
sophomore year, resigned to
barely spoke to Sandy and being one of the less popular
didn't give her a hug or any· students. Have you any sug·
thing. 1 try to console my • gest10ns or a book~et of S?me
friend the best I can but I' m kmd to help her . Lea IS a
not sure what to say.' Abby, if bright, attractive
young
she starts to feel bad again, w?man who qeserves to have
what can 1say to help her heal fnends. What s her problem,
her pain?- CONCERNED Abby ? - SAD MOTHER
FRIEND IN WISCONSIN
IN SANDUSKY, OHIO ·
DEAR
CONCERNED
DEAR SAD MOTHER:
FRIEND: Continue to be the You haven ' t given me enough
caring and supportive friend informa.tion to determine
you have been. However, what has prevented Y~)Ur
rather than trying to heal her daughter
from
makmg
hurt; tell your mother what friends. However, I do have a
. you have observed and ask booklet that other people have
her to speak to Sandy's moth· found helpful; it's
titled
.· er. Sandy will need counsel· " How to Be Popular: You're
ing and a safe flace to express Never Too Young or Too
her feelings o hurt and aban· Old." To order, send a busidonment. If she sees someone ness-sized,
self-ad«;!ressed
now. it could save her years of envelope plus a check or
unhappiness and therapy later. money order for $5 (U.S.
Her feelings are valid and funds) to: Dear Abby must be addressed.
Popularity Booklet, P.O. Box
DEAR ABBY: Our daugh· 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-

Dear

Abby

..

Wednesday,
July 23, 2003
- -

·,

ACROSS
1 Intuition
6 Whlakey
measure
12 Hire
14 Cteepy
leelln3.
15 Gour •
shaped
ral11e
16 Removes
soap
17 Mo. unlt1
18 Slugger
Mel,19- Vegas
21 Knight's
address
23 Nonftylng
bird
26 Dawdle
27 Jiffy
28 Prom Ptoers
30 .Aston sh
31 Vein
contents
32 1950s
record
33 Chatty
starling
35 -Wieder·
sehan
37 Not waste
38 Peter,
In Spain
39 Eland
cousin

0447. (Postage is included in
the price.) Allow six to eight
weeks for delivery.
DEAR ABBY: My 38-yearold son was recently sentenced to 14 years in prison
for molesting his 10-year-old
stepdaughter. I am devastated.
Do you think I should seek
out the girl and tell her how
sorry I am? She and her mother live several hundred miles
away. I feel my son has ruined
this young girl's life. STEP-GRANDMA
. IN
ALABAMA
DEAR STEP-GRANDMA: By all means let the
child know you care about her
well-being ..Let her know that
you empathize with her pain
and are there for her. Right
now, the girl needs to know
that she is loved and that family members support her. You
can accomplish this by reaching out.
(Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeamre Phillips, and
was founded .by her mother, ,
p,lUiine Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0 . Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.)

•

40 Heir, often
41 C1111h Into
42 Poet'•
contraction
43 Calendar .
mo.
44 Median
(abbr.J
46- Cia re,
Wis.
48 Stayed
51 Greet
55 Track down
56 Camera

Ohio '

Carl Lee

deans up after

football camp, 11

A2

''leg"

57 Venom
58 Acts
worried

13 Aralat

19 Counselor

DOWN
1 Garment
edge
2 Actress

-Th~rman

3 PBS kin

4 Dog nails
5 Pawn
6 Coun
figure
7 Put one's
loot-8 Refined
9 Pum))fuel
10 Compass
dir.
11 Legal
matter

20 Schedule
22 Glacial
epoch
(2 wds.)
24 Snak•
haired
woman of
myth

25 ln(together)
26 Light
source
27 Where
Camaby
Street is
28 Meat
substitute
29 Caught. in
the act

34
36
42
43

War fleets
Turmoil
Utah city
Gourmet
cook
-Child
45 Kill, as a bill
41 Senior cl!.
group
48 Mont Blanc,
e.g.
49 Ghost's
hello
50 Her~, lor
monsieur
52 Mdse. bars
53 Digit
54 Newspaper
VIPs

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
',()

rtNl~.

Vol

!. . J . Nn

) 14

Sports
o

l~HII-l~lll\\

Jl l l ' ..' ·l

.'00 .\

\'HI\11!,.1 ..

Photos of Saddam's sons' corpses to be released
WASHINGTON (AP) The United States. trying to
prove to &amp;keptical Iraqis that
two of Saddam Hussein ' s
sons are dead, soon will
release photographs of their
bodies, Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld says.
Some Iraqis have called on
U.S. authorities to prove that
Odai and Qusai Hussein were
killed in a shootout with
American forces in the north·
ern Iraqi city of Mosul on
Tuesday. U.S. officials debat·
ed whether to release the photos, likely to be gruesome
because of the way the two
men were killed.

Armstrong still leads

Tour de France. See

Page 81
· o Trib~;; beats Tigers.
See Page 81
o Pirates beat Reds.
See Page 81

"The disbelief runs very
deep, and it goes 'to the level
almost of paranoia," Deputy
Def~nse
Secretary
Paul
Wolfowitz said Wednesday
on PBS' " NewsHour With
Jim Lehrer" program. "One
of the great effects of yester·
day for Iraqis is to demonstrate our seriousness."
Rumsfeld , speaking with
reporters on Capitol Hill after
briefing
members
of
Congress, said he had not
decided when the photos
would be released. But he
said it would be "soon."
Wolfowitz and other Bush
administration officials said the

that Saddam no longer has any
influence in Iraq, they said.
"Now more than ever all
Iraqis can know that the former
regime is gone and will not be
coming back;" President Bush
said Wednesday.
Saddam probably is help·
ing to coordinate those
attacks, Wolfowitz said.
"Lf he 's alive, I think he 's
contributing to it," he said
. , .
Earlier
Wednesday,
Wolfowitz said American
officials underestimated the
strength of resistance in lraq
by Saddam's supporters and
have .done other "stupid
things" there.

.

'

'

~·

detllhs probably would lessen,
but not eliminate, attacks
against U.S. troops in lraq.
Proving Odai and Qusai are
dead would help press the point

Astrograph
tion for your generosity cause
you to reverse your ways
today. Others will still
applaud your good character.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) - Restrict business dis·
cussions to business hours
today. Even if a friend brings
up work-related subjects 'in a
friendly conversation, change
the subject and just have a
good time.
·GEMINI (May 21-June
20) You will receive
acknowledgement for things
done in the past, while today's
deeds will go ignored. Don't
let it upset you.
CANCER (June 21-July

22) - An enterprise you're
involved in is sti ll rather
chancy, but it is much less of

alike
gamble
othersTrust
. would
you tothan
believe.
in

r=========~~~=======~

Obituaries

'"' llO&gt;'m

Inside
found dead near
OSU . See Page A2
• Charges dro~ed
against .9)C·Miam! coach
See P!lgeAS
o Time Out for Tips See
Page AS

AVERAGE GAME 180.170

by JUDD HAMBRICK

. ~:~.:m~r~ ~~~~~

=

DIRECTIONS: Make a 2- 10 Hatter worCI trom the 1eners on eaen vartlline.
Add points to each word or letter using scoring directions at rigl'lt. Seven-letter
woros get a 60-polm bonUs. ~~~ words can be IOI.nl In Webster's New World

mag~ ·

COllege Oictlona~.

Weather

JUDD'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

SUnny, HI: 701, Low: 50s

DOfrS !'
ALLOII) [)0(;5 1

6EACHEo 111AT ALlOW DO~S!

CAN FINAll'4

~

REAL VACAT \01.1

'

111e1~

DOtH

eros r

HMI:.
A

MU~UI!IS 1HAT ALLIIUl 00.6-5 ~

006.
~

"'

0
0

Chase Ghram
Southam Elementary

Index
2 Sections - 12 Pllps

LUCV, IF vov M155 ONE
MORE FLY 8ALL. YOU'VE
I-lAD IT!

IF I'D HAD IT, I
WOULDN'T HAVE MISSED IT !
i

1.-q:
iI

_, ,~

i

•
I
WE SHOUL DN ... HAVE.
A.C.C. U~ EI&gt; YO\) l \KE

VoWfL,f

W'E bit&gt;! COM~ dtJ
towN ~ I..ET~ M.a..RCH
IN THE PAAAOE,!

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Places to Go...
Sports
Weather

A3
83-S
86
B6

A4
AS
AS
A6
81·3
A2

c 2003 Ohio Valley Publishin8 Co,

... •.
,

HEY. MOM ei!NT ME

FUt.L

I t.05T THEM At..t. ON
THE 5AME t:&gt;AY, YOU KNOW -

OF MY

IIASY TEE'T'H '

~

,

I WONDER
WHAT'5 ON TV?

11::

{ Ki'IOW!
1-&lt;'1'1-fHNN-\,
1-&lt;iN-1·

Wri1

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REED

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council's
consideration of an ordinance
. tightening the regulation of
mobile homes will be delayed
until a public hearing can be
properly advertised.
A hearing on the proposed ordinance was scheduled for Tuesday,
but after it was discovered no
legal notice of the meeting had
been published in The Daily
Sentinel, the meeting was postponed. A new date ahd time will
be announced later , IJljs week,
Mayor Sandy lannarelli said.
The meeting date and time
were reported, however, in
numerous newspaper accounts
of the proposed regulations.
Councilman Roger Manley,
who owns rental mobile homes
in the village and who has
voiced opposition to the proposed tighter regulations, (&gt;laced
a display advertisement m the
newspaper earlier this week,
asking the public to attend the
hearing, and approximately 25
people did attend - some obviously in support of the proposed
ordinance, and others as obviously opposed.
The ordinance sets forth
stricter regulations for the place·
ment of mobile and manufactured homes in the village. It
prohibits residents from moving
home than five years of age into
the village, and sets forth miniurn size regulations for mobile
home lots.
The regulations proposed also
prohibits mobile homes as rental
units, and requires that all
mobile homes be owner-occupied . The proposal also would
give village council discretion
in refusing permission to anyone to park a mobile home or
manufactured home in the village if the home is considered
unfit for occupancy.
Mobile homes now located in
the village - and there are now
189- would be exempt from the
regulations contained m the pro·
posed new ordinance, althOI!~h
25 percent of those are located m
zoned areas where manufactured
homes are prohibited .
The Middleport Planning
Commission sees the proposal as
a means of increasing property
val ues in the village and increasing revenue through property
taxes on conventional homes.

Page A5
Paul Rickard, 80
Helen Decker, 87

0

J.

breed@mydailysentinel .com

o
o

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim-

. A BOX

Please see Corpses, AS

BY BRIAN

o Three

I WA~miiJklllCr
ol~OT OVIl S'T'IlCK
~10 .

"It was difficult to imagine
before the war that the criminal gang of sadists and gangsters who have run Iraq for 35
years would continue fight·
ing, fighting what has been
sometimes called a guerrilla
war," said Wolfowitz, the
second-ranking official at the
Pentagon.
Separately, the head of the
U .S.-led occupation force in
Iraq said he plans to have
electricity, water and health
care back to prewar levels in
two months.
L. Paul Bremer, the U.S .

Mobile home
action delayed

your own assessment of the
endeavor.
Leo, treat yourself 10 a
birthday gift. Send for your
Astro-Graph year-ahead pre·
dictions by mailing $2 to
Astra-Graph, c/o this newspa·
per. P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe,
OH 44092-0167. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.

~E5TAURAN1S

1,,,, ,,,I,,'

RELAY

FOR LIFE•

Ws Almost

U•e for Relay!

A community event of the American Cancer Society
..
The 2003 Gallia C-ourlly Relay for Life will be held
.

August 15 and 16 • 4 PM • 10 AM • Gallipolis City Pork
A cancer survivors' reception will ttrke ploce before the opening lap .
Luminary Ceremony· 9 PM
To purchase luminaries, please contact Joan Schmidt at 446·4728

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org

All are invited to aHend and join us in the fight against cancer!
For more information, please coli Chairperson Bonnie McFarland at (740) 446·5679.

.
'

·_.,

-----&gt;:•----------~--

'

�.. .

t.
~

Ohio

·The Daily Sentinel
Friday, July 25

01
~- I
. i

Ol

·

........._._·_-... _._ ..... .._
.] .. ........_._··_·]

~' ~
-. ~.

..·.-_

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_ _

_

_

_

_

0
'

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W.VA..

.....,...

Inc.

0 ~--~.
. ,.
Cloudy
Showers T-storms
Rain
Aurries

Sunny Pt ClcM.!dY

...
Ice

SrlOw

IIIII ANOCiar.t ,.,_

Slight chance of showers
Low~ in

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

the lower 60s.
Saturday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 80s.
Saturday
night ... Partly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
late. Lows in the upper 60s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid 80s .
Monday
through
Wednesday... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
mid 60s and highs in the
lower 80s.

Today...Partly sunny with a
slight chance of showers and
possibly a thunderstorm this
afternoon. Highs in the upper
70s. Northwest winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 20 per, cent.
Tonight...Mostly clear. Patchy
dense fog developing late. Lows
55 to 60. Calm winds.
Friday... Patchy dense fog
until mid-moming...Otherwise
mostly sunny. Highs in the
mid 80s. Light and variable
winds.
Friday night...Mostly clear.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
July 23, 2003

10,000

IbN'Jcn:s
W Ftrials

9,000

8,000

9,194.24

APR

:;:;,=.., +0.39

High
9,203 . 48

MAY

JUN

Low

7,000

JUL

Record high: 11,722.98

9,102. 28

Jan. 14, 2000

July 23, 2003

1,800

Nasdaq

1,600

Wlp:site
1,400

1,719.18

:;:;,=..,

APR
High

+0 77

MAY
Low

JUN

1,200

JUL

Record high: 5.048.62
March 10, 2000

1,720.04 1,695 . 20

July 23, 2003

1,050

st:arrlmi&amp;
R:x:lr' s 500

950
850

APR

:;:;,=.., +0.05

High

989.88

750

MAY
Low

JUN
JUL
Rocord high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

979.79

AP

Local Stocks
ACI-2225
AEP-27.26
Ak2ll '-- 29. 95
Ast'dand Inc. - 30.86

BBT-34.53

Bl.l-15.37

Bob Evans- 27.71
Borg\'larr&lt;lr - 66 . 54
Cily Holding - 31.ID
Champion- 3.57
Charming Shops - 5.52
Col-25.50
Dufl:lnl- 42.68
DG-18. 42
Fedelal Mo!JII- .22

Garoreft- 76 . 53
General Eleclric- 27.42

GKNLY-4.05
Harley DIMdson - 45.30
Kroger- 16..74

Rockwell- 26.47
Sears-40
SBC-23.97

AT&amp;T-19..53
USB-24.94

Ud.-16.96
Werd!S- 28.65
NSC-18.82
WaH.4art- 56.50
Oak Hll F1nanciaJ- 26 . 97
Wortl1ington -14.06
BMI&lt; One- 39. 11
Daily stod&lt; reports are 1l1e
OVB-24
4 p.m. closing quotes ol
Peoples- 26.23
1l1e J)feYioos day's bansacPepsico- 47.01
lions. prcMded t&gt;;

Premier- 9
Rocky Boots- 9.69
RD Stell- 48.05

Pal1ners

Smilh

at Adves1 Inc. of

Gallpols.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error In a
slory, call the newsroom a1 (740) 992·
2156.

Our m•ln number Ia
(740) 982·2156.

Deparlment extensions are:

cusPs 213·9&amp;DJ

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published

every

afternoon,

COLUMBUS (AP) - An
Ohio State University student,
her boyfriend and his roommate were bound and shot to
death in a rented house near
campus, police said.
The dead were identified as
Kayla Hurst, 21, an OSU
English major from Granville;
her boyfriend, Aaron Grexa,
22, of Greensburg, Pa.; and
Eric Hlass, 23, who had
moved here recently from
Russellville, Ark .
Police said they had no suspects or motive in the slayings.
Brandon Conners, another
roommate who had spent
Tuesday night at a friend's
house, discovered the bodies
in an upstairs bedroom when
he returned home about noon
Wednesday.
His friend, Arthur Smith,
called 911 from a gas station

News
EdHor: Charlene Hoeflicn, Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: J. Miles Laylon, Exl. 13

Advertising

Outalde SIIH: Dave H11J'ris, Ext . 15
Cllln.ICirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10

HUDSON (AP) - A beam
from Michael Flynn's flashlight
cut through the darkness of his
flooded medical office building, illuminating ruin~ equipment and upended furniture.
"This is a super mess," he
said Wednesday as cleaning
crews sifted through the
soaked debris, trying to find
anything salvageable.
Flynn and other residents
in this town 20 miles southeast of Cleveland have started . the arduous process of
cleaning up after a thirdstraight day of rain fell on
parts of northeast Ohio.
At least three people have
died in the storms since
Portage
and
Monday.
Summit counties
have
declared states of emergency,
making the counties eligible
for state money to offset
cleanup costs.
The National Weather Service
predicted a dry Thursday.
The. water left a mark o,n'
th~ bnck extenor of Flyi?n s
butldmg 4 feet. 2 mches htgh.
A boarded up wmdow bore
traces of ragged glass, after
the force of the water blew
it out Monday.
A paper restoration team
was taking care of thousands of patient records,
which will be freeze-dried
for preservation.
It will cost between
$150,000 and $300,000 to
get the building back in
shape, Flynn said.
Next
door at the
Versailles Condominiums,
where two people were
found dead Tuesday in rising water in an underground
parking garage, a small
memorial of flowers lay
outside the gates.
Police stationed outside
were allowing residents to
retrieve personal belongings. Officials said they
pumped out all the water1.5 million gallons in each
building - by Wednesday.
About I 00 people were
evacuated from the condos
and taken to temporary shelter at a high school. Hudson
officials said the condominiums are unsafe because of
toxic gases produced by car
gasoline and other ha2ardous
materials in the water.
Elsewhere in town, Cynthia
Medina's front and back
yards were completely flooded when a lake across the
street overflowed Monday.
"It's been a rough
spring," she said.
Medina . and her son,
Victor. haven't left their

Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Slreet, Pomeroy, O~lo . Periodical
poslage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associaled Press
and lhe Ohio Newspaper
Association.
Pootm11ter: Send address correclions Ia The Daily Senlinel, 111
Courl Slreel, Pomeroy, Ohio

Circulation ·
Dlolrlct Mp.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Exl. 12

E-moll:
newsOmydailysetllinel.com

Web:
www.myclallysenlinel.com

'

should

remit

came out on his porch after
hearing gunshots just before
midnight and saw two men
running from the back yard of
the· home. He also said he
reported the gunshots to police
and spoke to the officer who
came to the neighborhood.
"They came out and said
they didn't see nothing,''
Tammadge said.
A man who answered the
phone at Hurst's parents
home declined to comment
Wednesday night.
Hlass was a welder who
had come back to Columbus
after his family had returned
to its native Arkansas, said
his uncle. Steve Smith.
Grexa's mother, Toni Oien,
said her son had hoped to begin
work on a business degree at
Ohio State in January.

home for two days. They have
no water, no power and no
phone service, and their cars
ar.e water logged. Water that
firefighters told them could be
electrically charged reached
the lith step in the basement,
only one away from the first ·
floor.
,
"I'm glad it's not mine
anymore," said Medina, who
sold the house five months
ago to a couple who wants to
tum it into offices.
Waiting for the garbage
collectors outside many
homes were items such as
soggy carpets and filthy patio
furniture.
In Akron, workers on
Wednesday finished constructing a makeshift road to
reach 100 Timber Top
Apartments residents who
were stranded since Monday
when storms washed away
access bridges.
It could be as long as I0
days before residents can go
home, said Michael Moser, The entire yard around the home of Cynthia Medina remains
Akron's director of public flooded, a result of heavy rains over the last three days in
health.
Hudson, Ohio, Wednesday. (AP)

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
INTERNET SERVICES

AGRICULTURE
'

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

BlueStarr Network

www.bluestarr.net

AUTOMOTIVE
MEDICAL
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www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

.

Local Briefs

Community Calendar

Church supports
troops
POMEROY - Care packages are being prepared for
several servicemen by Lydia
Council of Bradford Church
of Christ and boxes for contributions have been placed at
the . front of the church for
those wanting to contribute.
. Plans for the project were
dlscussed at a recent meeting
of the group in the activity
building. It was noted that a
list of things suitable to be
sent to serv.icemen is being
printed in the church bulletin.
Things are to be taken to the
church by Sunday..
Sherry Shamblin opened the
meeting with prayer and a
time for praise. Officers'
repons were given, along with
reports on cards sent, 'sunshine
baskets delivered, and thank
you's extended for help at
vacation Bible school.
The church picnic was
announced for Aug. 3 at the
Darwin Camp . A shopping
trip was planned for July 29.
A report on the Women's
Fellowship held at the Zion
Church was given. The program featured a display on
weddings. It was noted that
snacks for Afterglow will be
provided and a skit will be
presented at the Ladies
Retreat to be held at Darwin
Camp in September.
Sherry Shamblin and Gerry
Lightfoot were hostesses for
the July meeting. Readings
titled "What Keeps You from
Christ" and "The Lord's
Love"
were
given.
Refreshments were served.

Grafters to
demonstrate at
Bob Evans craft
RIO
GRANDE
Traditional arts like scroll saw
woodworking, quilting, cross
stitching, crocheting, knitting
and decorative painting will
be featured during a series of
demonstrations offered in
August by the Bob Evans
Farm Craft Bam.
The "hands on" demonstrations are free to the public and
no advance pre-registration is
required. Workshops are he)d
from I 0 a.m. to 2 p.m. and
include:

Saturday, Aug. 9 - Scroll
saw woodworking with Hal
Stockman; book signing by
Justine Rutherford (author of
autobiography Rough Lumber)
Saturday, Aug. 16 - quilting with Rosalie Lakin; quilting and cross stitching with
Mary Dawson
. ~aturday, Aug . 23 - ·crocheting by Marie Riggs; knitting with Marjorie Pullin
Saturday. Aug. 30 - decorative painting by Gail Smith
For more information about
the Craft Bam demonstrations
or other Bob Evans Farm
events and activities, those
interested should call (740)
245-5305 or (800) 994-3276
or visit the Web site at
www.bobevans.com.
The Cmft Barn features a large
assortment of fme folk art and
one-of-a-kind items from more
than 50 cmfters and artisans. The
barn is currently open daily from
9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Fair flower show
plans discussed
SYRACUSE - Plans for
participating in the Meigs
County Fair flower show
were discussed when the
Wildwood garden club met
recently at the home of Joy
Bentley.
The show carrying the
theme "Images of Ohio's
Past" is co-chaired by Debbie
Jones who emphasized that
all members shou ld be at the
senior fair building at 6 p.m.
on Aug. 7 to set up the display
area. Members were also
reminded that they are
expected to assist with the
cleanup at I p.m. on the
Sunday after the fair closes.
She also noted that a copy of
the flower show schedule
should be sent to the judge
along with a floor plan drawn.
Bentley agreed to take care of
that.
The Gilmore Cemetery
planting project was discussed
with Evelyn Hollon to contact
trustees concerning the proposed planting project there.
Hollon gave devotions titled
"Wren Song."
Members
answered to roll call by naming
a favorite dried flower. Sarah
Roush reported that now is the
time to pinch back mums,
deadhead flowers, and mulch
flowerbeds. Nancy Neutzling
was welcomed as a guest.

Tammy Ries, Chris Chapman
and Linda Russell agreed to act
as judges for the Middleport
decorating contest.
Debbie Jones presented a
program on drying flowers.
She explained that most flowers could be hung upside
down in a darkened " room
with good air circulation,
allowing them to dry in about
two weeks. For faster drying.
flowers can be placed in silica
gel in microwave oven for a
few seconds. Once dried,
flowers should be stored in a
covered box . to keep them
dust free until ready to use.
Beautificatio)l chairperson
Bentley, reported that the
daylily bed had been constructed at Syracuse Park
using daylilies donated by
Eunice Jones and Janet
Theiss. Stella D'oro daylilies
were purchased and planted
around the outside perimeter
of the bed. She also noted
that hostas, astilbe, bleeding
heart, and pink impatiens had
been planted in the central
bed
at
the
Syracuse
Community Building.
The next meeting will be at
6:30 Thursday at the Syracuse
Community Building. Craig
Matheny will be demonstrating how to create traditional
flower arrangements appropriate for the fair flower
show.

a

Sideliners club
being organized
POMEROY - The Meigs
Marauders Sideliners Club is
now taking memberships for
the 2003 football season.
Membership levels range
from $25 to $100. Included in
the $25 level (white level) are
a t-shirt, sideliners newsletter,
membership card, name in
program, entrance to sidelin·
ers game day tent, invitation
to pre season cookout.
The· $50 (maroon level)
includes all the white membership perks plus a hat and
free admission to all home
games, while the $100 (gold
level) includes all the above
plus parking inside the fence
at home games.
Jimmer Soulsby 992-6728,
Jim Soulsby 992-2377, Mark
Werry 992-6118 or 590-2358
or Tony Hawk 992-9008, may
be contacted for further information.

Mall Subacrlptlon
lnelde Melgo County
13Weeks ..... . ... .. . ... .... '30.15
26 Weeks . .. ..... . . . . .. '60.00
52 Weeks ..... ... ......... '118 . 80

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

Concerts,
Shows

Thursday, July 24
POMEROY - Junior and
Rita White will present a
musical program at 11 a.m.,
before lunch, at the Meigs
Senior Center.
Sunday, July 27
MIDDLEPORT
-The
Riverbend Community Band
will per1orm at 2 p.m. on
Sunday at the Middleport
High School building.
POMEROY
HeavenBound Quartet will be
in concert at 6 p.m. Sunday at
the Laurel Cliff Free Methods!
Church. Free will offering will be
taken.

Other events
Saturday, July 26
SYRACUSE -Free food
and clothing give-away will
be held at the First Church
of God, S~cond and Apple
Streets, Syracuse, 11 a.m to
noon. Messages can be left
at 992-1734.
Sunday, July 27
SYRACUSE - Combined
worship service for ihe con·
gregations of Syracuse,
Forest Run and Minersville,
at 11 a.m. at the Syracuse
United Methodist Church.
The Rev. Jack Lethenstrom
of St. Cloud, Fla. tro preach.
He and his wife will also present a puppet show for the
youth. Communion will be
served by Lethenstrom and

Support groups
Thursday, July 24
POMEROY - The Caring
and Sharing support group
will meet at 1 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center. The
speaker will be Kristina
Kaniecki Watkins on mas·
sage therapy.

Homecomings/
Reunions

Saturday, July 26
ALBANY - Staneart family reunion. at Lake
Snowden. Route 50. Albany,
potluck dinner at noon. Take
a picnic lunch and lawn
chair.

www.turnpikeflm.com

Sunday, July 27
REEDSVILLE- The 67th,
annual Charles Wesley and
Elsie Florence Buckley
reunion will be held at the
Forked Run State Park,
south of Reedsville . A covered dish dinner will be
served at 1 p.m. A tree will
be planted to honor the
Buckley
descendants .
Family and friends welcome .
CARPENTER - Ali-day
homecoming starting with
Sunday School at 9:45 a.m .
will be held at the Mt Union
Baptist Church . Guest
singers will be Earthen
Vessel and The Gabriels .
Rev. Mark Morrow to speak.
Dinner at noon . Pastor David
Wiseman invites the public.
GALLIPOLIS
Descendants
of
Levi
Campbell and Nancy Rife
Jones will hold their 68th lam·
ily reunion at noon at thehome of Dick and Mary
Groves at 338 Debbie Drive,
Gallipolis.. Pot luck and auc-,
tion.

Clubs and
Organizations
Thursday, July 24
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW 9053 to meet at 7:30 .
p.m. at the Tuppers Plains
hall. Special drawing to be:
held.
Monday, July 28
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens·
will meet at 11 a.m. at the·
Harrisonville firehouse. All
seniors are invited. There
will be a potluck dinner and
blood pressures.. will be
taken.

Some of
tbe lowest
terms in the area!
CaU Now.

Take the
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Holzer Clinic

www.holzerclinic.com
Pleasant Valley Hospital

as low as ~

www.pvalley.org

ENTERTAINMENT
charter Communications

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NEWSPAPERS

GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

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Precious Memories

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Klalre Davis

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15months
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Sereno Davis-Racine
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Grandparents
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Syracuse, OM

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The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

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I

Thursday, July 24
ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury
Township
Trustees, 6:30 p.m. , township garage.

his brother-in-law, the Rev.
Bob Robinson, local pastor.
TUPPERS PLAINS Elvis Presley tribute artist
Dwight Icenhower will present gospel music at 2 p. m.
at the South Bethel
Community Church, located
on Silver Ridge Road ,
across Ohio 7 from Eastern
High School.. A freewill offering will be collected for
Icenhower. Refreshments
will be served.
Monday, July 28
MIDDLEPORT
Vacation Bible school at the
Middleport First Baptist
Church, Sixth and Palmer
Streets, Middleport. Theme
will be "Jesus To the
Rescue." Classes held 6 to
8:30 p. m. through Aug . 1 .
CHESTER - Tuberculosis
clinic will be at the Chester
Fire Department from 4:30 to
6 p.m . to give T.B. tests.
Reading will be done from
4:30 to 5:30 on Wednesday.
All food handlers must have
the test

www.holzer.org

WEBSITE
DIRECTORY

Sunday

Public meetings

Holzer Medical Center

Thke your business into the homes
of over 40,000 consumers in
Gallla, Mason, Meigs Counties
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your web address in our

•

Thursday, July 24, 2003
'

in

adv&amp;nce direct to The Daily
Sentinel. No subecripllon by mail
permltled In areas where horne
earner serviCe is available.

Roteo Outolde Melgo County
13 Weeks ...... . . ........'50.05
26 Weeks ....... . . ...... .'100 . 10
52 Weeks ....... . .. ....... .'200.20

Several neighbors reported
hearing gunshots between
midnight Tuesday and I a.m.
Wednesday, but police said
nothing was found.
Ray Lyons said he called
police late Tuesday when he
heard gunshots while outside
to smoke a cigarette.
"I barely got it lit, then poppop. Then there was a pause.
Then pop-pop," he said.
After hearing four gunshots, he said he saw two
men run down the alley
behind the house where the
bodies were found. He said
he never heard back from
police about the shots.
Police said they could
account for only one call
reporting gunshots in the area.
They said it came at II :46 p.m.
Tuesday and was anonymous.
William Tammadge said he

PageA3

Local News

The Daily Sentinel

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!

Sub•crlptlon Rates
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One month ............'9.95
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down the street.
"We have a real bad emergency," Smith told the dispatcher. "We just came home
and to my friend's apartment,
to his house. His roommate
and his roommate's girlfriend
and his other roomlnate they're tied up in their room
and I think they are dead."
Officers surrounded the
gray, vinyl-sided house 'about
12:15 p.m. and were still on
the scene late Wednesday
looking for clues.. Some
onlookers set up lawn chairs
in the afternoon before downpours scattered the crowd.
Friends filed past the house
all day, sometimes stopping
to cry and hug one another.
A window was broken in
the back of the house, but
police wouldn '( say if that
was connected to the crime.

Northeast Ohioans clean up after storms

45769 .

.

Thursday, July 24, 2003

Three found dead at house near OSU

Ohio weather

,I

PageA2

The date the win nl!lr$ o l this co nte st cAn ent er the ''Great G rab lor Cash " booth
w ill be pos ted at all Farmers Bank locations. All co ntestants musl be atleast 1B or older.
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•

I

�0

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlene Hoeflich
General manager and news editor

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, July 24. the 205th day of 2003. There
.are 160 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On July 24. 1969, the Apollo
II astronauts - among them the first men to set foot on the
moon- splashed down safely in the Pacific .
On this date: In 1783, Latin American revolutionary Simon
. Bolivar was born in Caracas, Venezuela.
In 1862, the eighth president of the United States, Martin
Van Buren, died in Kinderhook. N.Y.
·
In 1866, Tennessee became the first state to be readmitted to
the Union after the Civil War.
In 1923, the Treaty of Lausanne, which settled the boundaries of modern Turkey, was concluded in Switzerland.
In 1929, President Hoover proclaimed the Kellogg-Briand
Pact, which renounced war as an instrument of foreign policy.
In 1937, the state of Alabama dropped charges against five
black men accused of raping two white women in the
Scottsboro case.
In 1952, President Truman announced a settlement in a 53day steel strike.
In 1959, during a visit to the Soviet Union, Vice President
Richard M. Nixon engaged in a "kitchen debate" with Soviet
leader Nikita Khru shchev at a U.S. exhibition.
In 1974, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that
.President 'Nixon had to turn over subpoenaed White House
tape recordings to the Watergate special prosecutor.
In 1997, retired Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan
died in Arlington, Va., at age 91.
Ten years ago: The Russian government announced it
would invalidate billion s of pre- 1993 rubles. House Ways and
Means Chairman Dan Rostenkow ski denied allegations he'd
received embezzled funds, saying he had engaged in "no illegal or unethical conduct."
Five years ago: A gunman burst into the U.S. Capitol, opening fire and killing two police otficers before being shot and
captured . The accused shooter, Russell Eugene Weston Jr., is
being held in a federal mental facility.
One year ago : The House expelled Ohio Rep. James
Traficant, who had been convicted of bribery. racketeering
and tax evasion: it was only the second time a sitting member
had been banished since the Civil War. Nine coal miners were
trapped in a flooded mine in western Pennsylvania; the story
ended happily three days later with the rescue of all nine.
Today 's Birthdays: Movie director Peter Yates is 74. Actress
Jacqueline Brookes is 73. Political cartoonist Pat Oliphant is
68. Comedian Ruth Buzzi is 67. Actor Mark Goddard is 67.
Actor Dan Hedaya is 63 . Actor Chris Sarandon is 61. Actor
Robert Hays is 56. Republican National Committee Chairman
Marc Racicot is 55. Actor Michael Richard ~ is 54. Actress
Ly nda Carter is 52. Movie direcior Gus Van Sant is 51.
Country singer Pam Tillis is 46 . Actor Kadeem Hardison is
38. Actress Laura Leighton is 35. Actor John P. Navin Jr. is 35.
A'c tress-singer Kristin Chenoweth is 33. Actress-singer
Jennifer Lopez is 33. Actress Anna Paquin is 21. Actress Mara
Wilson is 16.
Thought for Today: " History repeats iti;elf; historians repeat
each other." - Attributed to Philip Guedalla, British writer
( 1889-1944).

PageA4

IRIOn

Thursday, July 24, 2003

~

Parallel universes

By Anne Applebaum
The Washington Post
Late last week Tony Blair
made
a
speech
in
Washington. Afterward various British journals of record
summed up their prime minister's performance. The
Daily Mirror found "something quite nauseating" about
the speech, in which Blair
once again "backed America
in what many now view as a
war based on lies." The Daily
Mail sneered at " Blair the
brilliant contortionist, trying
to have it both ways." The
Guardian,
meanwhile,
declared that the speech represented a ''significant softening" of the prime mini ster's
position on Iraqi weapons,
and described the event thi s
way: Blair "stood before
hundreds of members of
Congress to admit that he
may eventually be proved
wrong."
.
Is that what he was doing?
Funny, but if you'd been
reading the American press,
you'd have had quite a different impression. "Bush, Blair
Defend Motive s Behind
War," read the headline in
The Washington Post, which
failed to detect any "significant softening" in the prime
minister's words. The New
York Post-the closest thing
Americans have to the Daily
Mail-failed to see anything
remotely "contortionist" in
the speech either, writing that
"Bia1r's
address clearly
reflected a nuanced appreciation of America's role in the
. world." Far from sounding
"nauseating," Blair "heralded
the role the United States has
played in fighting the broader
war on terrorism," wrote the
Los Angeles Times. Not

$ince Mikhail Gorbachev
simultaneously became an
international superstar and
the most hated politician in
Russia has a political leader
enjoyed such disparate repu tations at home and abroad.
In part these remarkably
ditTerent descriptions of the
same speech reflect the
vagaries of domestic politics.
The issues that actually make
Blair unpopular in Britain ,
such as the travails of the
National Health Service, are
not issues here at all , and
some of what we see as his
better attributes are considered failings in Britain. Here
he's thought eloquent; there
he's thought slippery. Here
he's thought statesmanlike;
there he's thought to be too
interested in foreign countries, and not enough interested in his own.
But they also reflect a larger phenomenon that is not
much better understood .
America and Britain-along
with America and France,
America
and
Russia,
America and Botswana,
America and anywhere, really -live in parallel informational universes. By that I
mean that the media produced in different cultures
don't merely reflect different
opinions about the news, they
actually recount alternative
versions of reality.
Different countries have
always had differentferspective on the news, o course.
But in the world of globalized information, where just
about any newspaper or television program in any language is available at the click
of a mouse, this isn't supposed to happen anymore.
Nowadays we're all supposed
to know what everybody else

UI.J'M NOT Al?LG TO

COMG TO TI-t~ Pl.lONt;
RtGt.lT NOW"' IF YOU'LL
ltAVb; YOUR NAMt;;; and
NUMt?J:R, l'LL G~T E¥\C.K

is thinking, to have access to
the same images and information , and some of us do.
Peasants in rural India gather
around village television sets
to watch rerun s of "Dallas."
In different time zones,
Japanese
and
German
bankers watch the same
images on their Reuters
screens. It is often said now
that events are monitored
around the world irl "real
time," or that we all live in a
"global informational village," as if such a thing had
already come to pass.
.
During the Iraq war, a few
Americans and Europeans, at
least, began to notice how
tiny that village actually is. It
wasn 't hard to see that the
war as broadcast by the BBC
or Deutsche Welle was quite
different from the war as
broadcast by NBC or CNN.
Fewer understood that this is
not only a Euro-American
problem: A German friend
visited Poland during the war
and was surprised by how
much less blood seemed to
appear on toe Polish evening
news. And the differences
run much deeper than a di sagreement over Iraq, or portrayal s of a single event. It
isn't just that Europeans have
different opinions from
Americans about the IsraeliPalestinian conflict, for
example, they actually learn
different facts and read about
ditTerent events, and therefore they reach different conclusions. When George Tenet
fell on his sword earlier this
month over that now infamous piece of British intelligence that made it into the
president's State of the Union
speech, the story played here
as "White House Dumps on
CIA." In Britain, it played as

"White House Dumps on
Britain."
Strangest of all. the avail- .
ability of alternative points of·
view doesn't appear to have •
mellowed anyone's prejudices-quite the contrary.
Nowadays. we all live under
the illu sion that we are
receivin~ many different
types of mformation, but that ,
we select only the most piau- :
sible. In fact, as information •
multiplies, it grows ever easier to choose to read (or
watch) whatever best matches your particular bias,
whether natwnal or ideologi- .
cal. If you hate network tele- .
vision's right-wing bias , you '
can
click
onto,
say, ·
www.globalexchange .org or
www.moveon .org. If you
hate network television's leftwing bias, you can always
watch Fox. Having done so,
you'll labor under the illusion
that you've picked the most ·
truthful version of events-but .
how would you know? Have ,
you actually compared and
contrasted the arguments of
both sides and come to a judi- ·
cious conclusion?
What is true here is even ·
more true internationally. If ·
British newspaper readers
learned anything of Blair's
rapturous reception here last
week, they learned it from ,
British articles denouncing .
the slavish U.S. media. If
French television viewers :
about :
learned anything
American perceptions of the .
war in Iraq, they learned it
from French news items on ,
the jingoi stic U.S. media ...
The prophets of globali7..ation ,
once spoke of a seamless, ·
bonderless world, in which
national differences would
magically disappear. They
were wrong.

t T&amp;.UWk IT~
AUntt;NTIC

TO YA SOON. 11-\ANKtt&gt;"l

..

Moderately Confused

Finally, the Democrats refocus on Hispanics

I .SUGGEST WE
SUPERSIZE IT.

By Frank del Olmo
Los Angeles Times

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WI~ .
C 2000 by NEA, Inc .

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2156
www.mydailysentinel.com
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An important group of
Democrats has decided to put
extra time, money and etTort
into wooin~ the Hispanic vaters that therr party often takes
for granted. It's a smart move,
even if it has been too lOng in
coming.
Indeed, some Democrats
argue that the timing of the socalled Democratas Unidos project could not be better because
President Bush, the politician
most responsible tor the recent
defection of Hispanic voters to
the Republican side, is showing some vulnerability on
issues imponant to Hispanics.
That, at least, is the message
that me mbers of the New
Democrat Network, a political
.action committee associated
with the centrist Democratic
Leadership Councit, are drawin~ from a poll it recently commtssioned.
NON is taking the poll's
findings across the country to'
help local Democrats better
connect with what the Census
Bureau now says is the nation's
largest
minority
group.
Democratas Unidos also aims
to create a national agenda that
Democrats can use to remind
Hisfanic voters that there are
stil significant ditTerences

The Daily Sentinel• Page AS

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Thursday, July 24, 2oor

~~~~~~--------------------~~----..

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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•

between the two major parties ed promising to help schools,
on issues such as immigration then not adequately fund them
reform and education spend- once in office.
ing . . Not coincidentally, those
Bendixen
says
Bush's
are two topics identified as vul- wavering Hispanic support
nerabilities for Bush in a shows up as a 10 percent drop
national poll of 800 Latino reg- over one year in two polls his
istered voters conducted for company did for NON. In May
NON by
Bendixen &amp; 2002, · 44 percent of the
Associates, a Florida-based Hispanic voters Bendixen
Democratic polling company polled supported Bush, comthat · specializes in Hispanic pared with 46 percent who suppublic-opinion surveys.
ported Vice President AI Gore.
'The personal and emotional But in Bendixen's 2003 survey,
connectl~n that the president completed last month, only 34
worked so hard to develop percent of Hispanics supported
(with Hispanic voters) may be Bush, while 48 percent said
in jeopardy," said Sergio they would support an unspecBendixen. He cites poll find- ified "nominee of the
in~s that Bush has hurt his cred- Democratic Party."
ibtlity among Hispanics by
It is noteworthy that the
neglecting Latin America, most Democratas Unidos project
especially by not working with ' was first made public in
Mexican President Vicente ~ox . Washington last week at a
on an immigration agreement. meetin g of th~ Congressional
About 69 percent of poll Hispanic Caucus, whose 18
respondents believe that Bush members are all Democrats.
"broke his promise" to focu s on Last year the three Hispanic
Latin America.
Republicans in Congress
Also potentiall~ troubling for f.xmed their own GOPBush are the poll s findings that focused caucus.
60 percent of Hispanic voters
The fact that Hispanic
believe more spending on pub- Republicans no longer feel a
lie schools is the best way to n~ to affiliate with a larger,
improve education. Bendixen more visible caucus dominattxl
said that Bush needs to by Democrats shows how confiincrease education fun din g dent the GOP is that Bush's perdespite the deficit. Three-quar- sonal popularity with Hispanics
ters of Bendixen's respondents can ttansfer to his party.
said it would "offend them a
But it would be as big a mislot" for a candidate to get elect- take for Republicans to take

Hispanics for granted as it has
been for the Democrats. There
have been Republican presi- ·
dents in the recent past, such as
Richard Nixon and Ronald
Reagan , who got lots of
Hispanic votes. Yet whatever
loyalty they generated for the
GOP has long since been eroded by Republican support for
anti- unmi~t measures like
California s Proposition 187, or
by the Republican affiliation of
anti-irrurugrant politicians like
former GOP presidential candidate Pat Buchanan.
"We're trying to convince as
many Democrats as we can
that they can no longer assume
Latinos are part of the party's
voter base,'' NON Vice .
President Maria Cardona says.
'They are now swing voters,
and we have to work to appeaJ
to them."
Give the New Democrats
credit for trying. Nobody at the
Democratic
National
Committee has shown such
creativity lately, one big reason
Bush's appeals for Hispanic
support have proved so effective. The president is sincere,
but he's also operating i n a vacuum with no competition from
Democrats on the national
level. Maybe that will change.
if NDN can get its party's leaders to li sten.

IDel Olmd is associate edi-

tor of 71u! Times)

Obituaries
Helen L. Decker
Helen Lucille Decker, 87,
of West Columbia, West
Virginia, departed to be in her
Heavenly
home
on
July
23,
2003,
at
Pleasant
Valley ·
Hospital ,
P o i n t
Pleasant,
W e s t
Virginia.
B o r n
October 19,
Decker
1915, in West Columbia, she
was the daughter of the late
James Walter Bland and the
late ley M. (Bass) Bland.
Helen was a homemaker
and a member of ihe Salem
Community Church.
· In addition to her parents,
she was preceded in death by
her husband, Charles F.
Decker ; a son, Harry R.
Decker; grandsons Kevin
Bonecutter and J.D. Rickard;
a step-grandson, Richard
Mullins; a granddaughter,
Sandy Thachers; four brothers, John, Charles, Marvin
Oene, and Homer Bland; and
a dau ghter-in-law, Tweet
Decker.
Helen is survived by a son
and daughter-in-law, Sonny
and Carolyn Decker of West
Columbia; five daughters and
sons-in-law. Mildred and
John Zimmerman of Point
Pleasant, Pat and Russ
Carson of Middleport, Ohio,
Icy and Robert Rickard of
Clifton, West Virginia, Doris
and Will Neal of West
Columbia, and Opal and
Roger
Bonecutter
of
Gallipolis
Ferry,
West
Virginia; two sisters, Chloris
Marr of Letart, West Virginia,
and Opal Ohlinger of
Langsville, Ohio; two brothers, Norman Bland of
Buffalo, West Virginia, and
Harold Bland of Mason, West
Virginia; nine grandsons;
three granddaughters; two
step-granddaughters; several
great- grandchildren: several
great- great -j!randc h il dren;
and many meces. nephews,
and friends.
The funeral service will be
held at II a .m., Friday, July
25, 2003, at the Fogleson~­
Tucker Funeral Home tn
Mason, with Pastor Clyde
Ferrell officiating. Burial will
be in Graham Cemetery, New
Haven, immediately following the service. Friends may
call on the family from 6 to 9
p.m., Thursday, at the funeral
home.
·
Condolences may be emailed to the family be sending them to foglesongtucker@citynet.net.

Paul Rickard
PAINTED POST, N.Y. Paul Addison Rickard, 80,
Painted Post, N.Y., died
Tuesday, July 22, 2003, at
Bethany Manor Nursing
Facility, Horseheads, N.Y.,
where he had been a re sident
since October, 2002.
Born Dec .. 20, 1922, in
Kaylong/Maggie, W.Va., he
was the son of the late Adam
and Ada P. Morrison Rickard.
In 1944, he married Mary L.
Fry who passed away on Jan.
6, 1993.
Paul was a 1942 graduate
of Point Pleasant High

''.,

'.

School. Prior to graduation,
he began working fQr Home
Telephone Company, New
Haven , W.Va. as an in staller.
In 1946 he spent a year in
Germany as an Army
Communic"ation Specialist.
Upon returning to the states
in 1947, he continued working for the phone company
which was bought by
Continental Telephone. He
was transferred to Contel's
St. Mary's, W.Va., office in
1971 to work as a telephone
engineer, and in 1978 transferred to Selinsgrove, Pa. He
retired in 1983 after 43 years
of service.
In 1999, he relocated to
Pointed Post, N.Y. with his
daughter, Sharon .
He was a member of the
Shamokin
Dam
United
Methodist Church and very
active• in the administrative
boards of the locaJ church.
He was a volunteer. with The
Mustard Seed Thrift Shop
Program and Meals on
Wheels
Program
in
Selinsgrove, and also very
active with the Lions Club in
New Haven before moving
out of the area.
Paul is survived by two
daughters and sons-in-law.
Sharon F. Girton, and her
husband, Jeff of Painted Post, ·
and Debra K. Hungate, and
her husband, David, of
Vienna, W. Va; four grandchildren: Jennifer Girton of
Corning, N.Y., Jeremy Girton
of Pointed Post, Michelle
Atkinson, and her husband,
Eddie, of Soddy-Daisy,
Tenn., and Joseph Hungate,
and his wife, Amanda, of
Little Hocking; a greatgranddaughter,
Kristin
Nicole Atkinson of SoddyDaisy ; a sister and brother-inlaw, Mary R. and Gerald
Beers of Allendown, Pa; a
brother and sister-in-law,
Donald C. and Naomi
Rickard of Rising Sun; a sister-in-law, Betty Rickard of
West Columbia, W.Va.; and
many nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he wa~
preceded in death by an
infant daughter, Paula Louise
Rickard, in 1958, and four
brothers: Ralph Rickard in
1933, Roland Rickard in
1944, James Robert Rickard
in 1972, and Ronald Harold
Rickard in 200 I.
The funeral service will be
conducted at 11 a.m. on
Saturday, July 26, 2003, at
the
Foglesong-lucker
Funeral Home in Mason,
w. Va., with Pastor Mike
Lambert and Pastor Eddie
Atkinson officiating. Burial
with military honors will be
in Graham Cemetery, Now
Haven, immediately following the service.
Friends may call the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m. on
Friday.
Memorial contributions
may be made to a preferred
charity or to the Alzheimer's
Association,
225
N.
Michigan Avenue, Suite
1700, Chicago, IlL 606017633.

PROUD TO BEAPARTOFYOURtiFE.
The Dai;y Sentinel
•. ,
Subscribe to,fay • 99~-21 £~c ,
www. mydailysentinet:com, ' •

1

...,

Local Briefs

Time Out for Tips

Football 11 leeting

Protecting kids who surf the Net

RACINE Seventh
and eighth-grade boys
interested in playing football in Southern Local are
asked to attend a meeting
at 7:30p.m. on Monday at
the field.

Scout events
planned
POMEROY
·-Girl
Scout Sports Day will be
held from 10 a.m. until 2
p.m. on Saturday at the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds.
Registration is $3 for registered girl scouts and $10 for
non-registered girl scouts.
Information is available
from Tami Putman, at 3786422, Amy Markworth -at
669-1320, or
Jerrena
Eberesbach at 992-7747.
Fun in the Sun Day
Camp will be held Aug. 13 at Forked Run State Park.
Scouts will learn about
trees, wildflowers, map
reading, and insects as well
as crafts, hiking, other
activities. Information is
available from Ebersbach
·at 992-7747 or Shirley
Cogar at 992-2668.
"Art in the Park Summer
Sizzle" will be held from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Aug.
23, at the fairgrounds. The
fee is $3 for registered girl
scouts, and $10 for non
registered girl scouts.

Swearing-in
planned
LONG BOTTOM
Judy Peters will be sworn
in as Long Bottom
Postmaster on July 31, at a
reception to be held from
10:30 a .m. until 12:30
p.m. at the Long Bottom
Community
Building.
Light refreshments will be
served, and the public is
invited.

Serving in The
Middle East
RACINE Racine
native Stacy Warden in
servin~ in the U.S. Air
Force m the Middle East.
Letters can be sent to her
at 447 AEG/ELRS, APO
AE 09321.

Ohio brief
.Nurses banned
from ·long
fingernails at
Cincinnati
hospitals
CINCINNATI (AP) Due to health concerns,.
nurses at two Cincinnati
ho spitals will be barred
from having long fingernails or wearing artificial
ones startin~' Sept I.
The pohcy for Good
Samaritan and Bethesda
North hospitals stems from
updated mfection guidelines by the federal Centers
for Disease Control and
Prevention.
A national hy giene task
force found that artificial
nails pose a higher infection
risk than natural finger nails. In rare cases, the risk
can be fatal.
In 1997 and 1998, a .bacterial infection.killed 16 of 439
babies who were getting
intensive care at a hospital in
Oklahoma City, Okla. Two
nurses - one with artificial
nails, another with long natural nails - carried genetically identical bacteria.

I
Vacation
Bible School
Racine United
Methodist Church ·
7/28/0l - B/1/0J
6:00-9:00P.M.

•~

Millions of teenagers and
youngsters today are frequently on the Internet.
They may use it as a so urce
of information, like an encyclopedia, as a means to communicate with their family
and friend s, or as a way to
entertain themse lves with
video games a nd interacti ve
si te s.
Unfortunatel y, being on
the Internet can have negative aspects as well. Many
children run across offensive
material because of mi sspelling addre sses, opening
un solicited e-mail or checking out seemingly harmless
websites. The large majority
of these offenses are perpetrated by other youth .
However, there may be
predators who try to victimize children by sending them

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - A criminal charge
against a former Miami of
Ohio football coach accused
or striking a Marshall
University fan was dropped
Wednesday.
Cabell County Magistrate
Patty Verhage Spence dismissed the misdemeanor
battery charge against former defensive coordinator
Jon Wauford at the request
of prosecutors.
Cabell
County Assistant Prosecutor
Charles W. Peoples cited an
out-of-court settlement of
two related civil lawsuits in
his motion.
Wauford had pleaded
innocent to the ch1rrge. He
was accused of knocking
down Robert A. Flaugher of
Pickerington, Ohio, as he
and other Marshall fans eel -

Corpses

1 0 "',,

Curves~:

(Becky Baer is the Meigs
County Extension Agent,
Family and Consumer
Sciences/Community
Development)

was negli ge nt in training and
retaining
Wauford.
He
sought re stitution for pain
and suffering.
Telephone messages were
not immediately returned
Wednesday by Peoples or by
the lawye rs representing
Wauford and Flaugher.
On Tuesday, after Spence
postponed Wauford 's tria l
without a new date, Peoples
said the continuance was
issued because the parties
were negotiating to settle
their lawsuits out of court.
"We are waiting to see
what develops there before
we proceed further in court,"
Peoples told the Charleston
Daily Mail. "I'm not in a
pos ition to discuss much
more than that.

sible to tell yet how much
the U.S . share of the bill
would be. The World Bank is
assessing the situation and
will come up with a cost
estimate betore
international conference in October,
when countries will pledge
money to help in the reconstruction effort.
Bremer said his plans call
tor having a battalion of the
new Iraqi army trained at the
end of 60 days. He said he
hopes to have eight battalions of a new Iraqi civil
defense corps trained 'in two
months, as well as restoring
an Iraqi border guard,
reopening a police academy
and training judges for a new
criminal court system.
Elections could. be held in
Iraq as soon as next year, but
tl'lat timetable depends on
how quickly Iraqis can
decide on a new constitution,
Bremer said.

an

MATINEES
WED · SUN ONLY

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON-TUES &amp;
12:30 PM WED - SUN
BADBOYS 2 (R)
1:00, 3:40 , 7:00 &amp; 9:40
HOW TO DEAL (PG-13)
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
JOHNNY ENGLISH(PG)
1:10,3:10, 7:10 &amp; 9:10

,

0 Judy Kay's Restaurant

~
•

0 Middleport Flower Shop

iJi

0 Precious Memories

(?;

wl

0 Ingels Jewe lry

~

4J

Store
0 Office Service &amp; Supply;,

Ohio River Bear
Dairy Queen
Dan 's
Hearts Aglow
Candles &amp; Gifts
~ 0 Middleport Trophies
~
&amp;Tees
0 Mitch's

ebrated on the field after
Marshall defeated Miami
36-34 on Nov. 12.
Wauford was led otl the
field in handcuffs. He was
suspended by Miami and
later re signed. Flaugher was
hospitalized brielly after he
was knocked uncon·s cious
when his head hit the stadium 's artificial turf.
Wauford
later
sued
Flaugher and Marshall,
claiming Flaug her's action s
led to the confrontation and
the university contributed to
it by allowing fan s onto the
field. The former coach said
he suffered damage to his
reputation and phys ical
harm . His lawsuit sought
$25,000 in damages.
In turn , Flaugher sued
Wauford and Miami. claiming the Oxford, Ohio, school

nomenon that, if something
isn't happening, it must be
because the Americans don ' t
from PageA1
want it to happen, and they
begin to invent the most
administrator of Iraq, said elaborate reasons to explain
his plans also call for I ,000 it ,'' Wolfowitz said. "And the
Iraqi schools to be rehabili- fact is -you know it - we
tated by fall and millions of ' often just make mistakes.
textbooks to be stripped of We do stupid thing s."
· Bremer pre sented his
Saddam's Baath Party ideolplans to Bush and members
ogy.
The admission of mistakes of Congress earlier this week
by Wolfowitz was· a depar- and to reporters at the ·
ture from the Bush adminis- National Pre ss Club on
tration's efforts to put events Wednesday.
Rebuilding Iraq's econoin Iraq in a positive light.
"Some conditions were my will take at least three
worse than we anticipated, years and billions of dol Bre me r
said .
particularly in the security lars,
area," Wolfowitz, returned Enhancing Iraq 's electriciTuesday from a five -day tour ty and water systems to
of Iraq, told a Pentagon news meet its citizens ' ne eds
will cost an estimated $13
conference.
billion and $16 billion,
He named three:
- No Iraqi military units re spectively, Bremer said.
"That's obviously a lot ?f
"of significant size" defected
money,
even
111
to the American side during
Washington ," . Bremer said.
the war.
-"The police turned out "I do believe the American
to require a massive over- taxpayer will almost certainly be asked to send more
haul."
-"Third, and worst of money so we can consoliall," the resi stance was date the rebuilding of Iraq ."
Bremer said it was imposunderestimated.
Many Iraqis also expect
the impossible from the 740·753 ·3400
I MIM M
American s, Wolfowitz said. MOVIES
"'" " "'
"Sometimes it's nice to Schedule for
have the reputation for being
almost godlike, but, frankly,
I think it produces this phe-

~

0
' 0
• 0
• 0

unwanted sex ual material ,
haras sing them, or e ncourag·
in g them to rebel, do something dangerous. or . run
away.
What ca n be done to he lp
prevent thi s fro m happening'! Set specific r.ules about
what your children can and
cannot do wh e n on the
Internet. Monitor the sites
they are visiting. Install
software programs or co ntact your Internet se rve r to
block and filter unw anted

Charges dropped against
former Miami of Ohio coach

of Middleport
wouhllike to send our sincere thanks to the
~ following businesses fo,.their donations for
our Open House on July 19, 2003
•

Becky
Baer

mat erial. Find out if the
libraries, school s, and other
public places where your
childre n may get online also
use these programs.
Warn your children to
never give out personal
information to strangers
over the Internet.
Last
names, phone numbers,
addresses. and ho usehold
sc hedule s should be kept
secret.
If your c!)ildren
receive unsolicited matefials
or observe improper behavior, contact the Cybertipline
at 1-800-843-5678 or go to
www.Safekids.com.

LEAGUE OF
EXTRAORDINARY
GENTLMEN (PG_13)
1:10, 3:20, 7:10. 9:20
PIRATES OF THE
CARIBBEAN (PG-13)
1:00, 3:30 &amp; 7:00 &amp; 9:30
TERMINATOR 3(R)
RISE OF THE MACHINES

7:30 &amp; 9:30

0 Middleport Department •

tJ

I

·----'-·- ·------~ ---------'------

----~------·-----

. ·-·-·

.... _

--

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Thursday, July 24, 2003

www.mydallysen!lnel.com

NBA: Blockbuster deal, Page 82
Scoreboard, Page 83.

The Daily Sentinel
PageBl
Thursday, July 24, 2003

Football camp champs

•

Armstrong
still leads
Tour de
France
BV JEFF PUGMIRE

Associated Press

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!
Crew, Revs
battle to 1-1 tie
Meig!! C?unty's own .Mudf9rk
-Band lncorporptlrig C.hlcago ele-ctric -styllf!IIOes
a hyofid of original. f11~;~sic
and
favprltes
from
··
'Hovflin' Wolf. ' Ka,k,, o tayiQ,
r,
'
,,
.
.
and ofht,us will 'open ' SaturdaY's: Blues Bash .'
.and ·Laura Sheets·; his mothen
~
~.
Pomeroy attorney : Jennifer ·.S~eets. her · ·
Lohse, and a longtime musician
frleh!l. , MI~~ · Wer!•r•t mak~.'uR 'the popula(
·
·
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.

the .~ig Bend Blues Basn an

POmeroy pad&lt;inglat.
Seven bands will be featured
at the Bash which opens at,
· '12:30 p.m1and goes l.lntil
· ~t

'•

.

· The gates open at noon

. th~ js.a charge af$10 for .,Y~.
· over 13. ·
·
. Concert sclledule
. .12:30

ro·1:30 p.m:.-. .

· .ry~~ Blues

Band·

· 1:45 to 2:45 p.m. -

thethri)l
.
1
j ta 4:30 p.m:
Baotlet!gm l]nion
· 5 to 6:309 p.m -

&lt;
'

Maki!J! Its first
•

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,,

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at the Big:eeqd Blues
~

,

• • ··,·· ...

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will
,

beJ'he . . .
, ..
. .with guitars,. drur)s, bas11, brg~n·
and' vo~ais. The iir?I!P fotnied just a little over ·a yea~ a.go
.ptill~ frqm a 'f"l,d~ catalog of their own illl,d others rrllff1tC in
the blue• an~ jazz ~erire.
·
· '. , ·

..

$}VI!any Band
7 .to 8:30 p.m. -

Pa!f4;k:J
'

Albert.
'Fh'e '.Kid:."Casq.gtia··,.
9 to l0;30 p.m.-L'il'E&lt;lm~l
'the'Blues lplperials
.. \ u p,m. to 12:30~m. Smlda)r.l
, -:-)()(;'~a~ ·

I
'

, COLUMBUS (AP)
Rookie forward Pat Noonan
scared in the 54th minute as
the New England Revolution
and Columbus Crew played
to a 1-1 tie Wednesday night.
Noonan out-jumped Crew
defender Chad McCarty at
the near post and headed a
goal past goalkeeper Tom
Presthus. Taylor 1\vellman
set up Noonan by heading
Joe Franchino's free kick
from the left side into the
hox.
The ·crew's Jeff Matteo making his first career start
- opened the scoring in the
33rd minute with a left-footed shot from 12 yards.
Matteo intercepted a clear·
ance attempt and dribbled
around Daounda Kante into
the box for Columbus' first
goal in almost a month, a
span of 253 minutes.
The Crew's Edson Buddie
·had the best chance in overtime but sent an open shot
from the edge of the hox over
the goal.
Columbus had several
chances near the end.of regulation.
Brian Maisonneuve missed
by inches in the 90th minute.
The Crew couldn't get off a
shot on a 3-on-1 break in the
89th minute and six minutes
earlier Buddie lost control of
the ball on a breakaway.
New England (5-5-7), playing its fourth game in 11
days, snapped a twa-game
losing streak and remains two
points ahead of the Crew for
third place in ihe Eastern
Conference.
Columbus (5-6-5) has three
ties and two wins in its last
10 games.

Tigers quick
losers to Tribe

Norris Northup Dodge
252 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio

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7DAYSAWEEK

CLEVELAND (AP) The Detroit Tigers found yet
another way to lose: in record
time.
Brian Anderson pilched
sevoo
strong
mnmgs
Wednesd.ay night as the
Cleveland Indians did what
they normally do against
Detroit, beating the Tigers 41 to stop a seven-game losing
streak.
The 2-hour, 4-minute game
was the fastest in the history
of Jacobs Field, which
opened in 1994.
Anderson (8-7) , who may
be dealt to a playoff contender before the July 31
trading_ deadline, allowed one
run and five hits. The leftbander is 4-0 in five career
starts against the Tigers.
David Riske pitched a hitless eighth and Danys Baez a
perfect ninth far his 22nd
save.
Travis Hafner homered off
Matt Roney (1-5) as
Cleveland won for the first
time since the A11-Star break
and improved to 9-2 against
the Tigers this season.
Cleveland, .which has won
six straight over Detroit,
raised it~ record to· 50-18
against the Tigers at the Jake.
Detroit has lost ·six in a row
since the break. The Tigers
are on pace to lose 119
games.
The Tigers have had seven
losing streaks this season of
six games or mare.

•

•

•

Four participants from each age group in the Carl Lee football camp received awards far Outstanding Athlete (OA), Mr.
Hustle (MH), Leadership (L) and Most Athletic (MA). (6-8 age group) Noah Searls (OA), Josh Haddox (MH), Andrew
Williamson (L), Alex Summerville (MA). (9·12) Preston W,hitley (OA), Tyler Grant (MH), Jarrod Searls (L), Derek Mitchell (MA).
(13 and up) James Casto (OA); John Hypes (MH), Dusty Ba~er (l), Nathaniel Robb (MA) .

Carl Lee Football Camp wraps up
Elkins Lee Harris, Nate
King, Tony Roberts · and
trainer Vera Carrington.
POINT
PLEASANT
The 80 participants faced
W. V(l. You1,1g M!I§,Qfl,'."a Clljllp from 8 a.m. -. l p.m.
Couniy athletes got a taste of in~&gt;heat on Monday and
old fashioned discipline, Tuesday as coach Lee put
along with some expert foot· the players .through . thetr
ball instruction, during the paces. Participants ages
three day Carl Lee football ranged from 6-17. and every
camp at Point Pleasant High player came away exhausted
School on Monday Tuesday as Lee put them through
and Wednesday. '
drills and patterns in an old
Lee, with whistle in hand _style camp that emphasized
worked on fundamental~ action over instruction. "We
drawn from I 0 years playing do up-downs and things that
cornerback with the NFL's they're not used to doing but
~t's ju~t tiring enough and
Minnesota Vikings.
The current West Virginia JUS! difficult enough that
State head football coach they dread it," said Lee. "It's
also transplanted his 7-team an old fashioned. no frills
staff frdm Institute to help football camp and I actually
instruct · the youngsters. like doing it away from State
Former Point Pleasant foot- College."
ball standouts; and current
Friends and family were
W. V. State players, John also present at the workouts
Bonecutter and Mike Roach to see the results from the
were part of the staff as well camp firsthand, and also to
as Earl Monroe, Shawn give the players a little
BY ANDRE TIRADO

atiraclo@mydaiiyregister.com

friendly encouragement. "I
encourage the parents to
come out and be as close to
the camp as they can, and I
think they'll be surprised to
see how much their kids can
do and will do," said Lee.
The camp emphasised
basic football skills that will
help all of the participants,
no matter what system or
position they play. "What
we want to do is enhance
what they already know,"
said Lee. "We try to stay as
vague as we can but give
them good old fashioned
conditioning like, getting
tired, getting sore and asking
a lot of them."
For many high school
players, the camp was a
good way to get a jumpstart
on conditioning before practice begins on the football
team in August. "That's the
thing I tell my high school
guys . is that they have to
work hard and make sure

they're in good shape before
camp starts," said Lee.
Aftre a long day of running drills and up-downs,
the players received a lunch
provided by local area sponsors. On Wednesday, uncooperative weather forced the
camp inside, but the determined camp volunteers
Angie Cunningham, Alexis
Wilkins, Sheila Johnson,
Meagan Estep. Denise
Bonecutter,
Candice
Bonecutter, and Yvonnce
McCormick, still managed
to gri 11 outside and served
hot dogs and burgers. While
everyone got their fill ,
awards were passed out to
all participants and four
players from three age divisions were given awards for
Outstanding Athlete , Mr.
Hustle, Leadership, and
Most Athletic. The awards
were presented to the players wtth friends and family
present as the camp closed.

Pirates still kicking, beat Reds 6-5
Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press

CINCINNATI- No pennant for ·the Pirates.
They've decided to rally
around the white flag
instead.
Newcomer
Jose
Hernandez hit a tying
homer in the eighth, and
Matt Stairs had a solo shot
in the ninth as Pittsburgh
rebounded from a flurry of
raster-gutting trades by
beating the Cincinnati Reds
6-5 on Wednesday.
Hernandez, who came
from the Cubs in a deal for
Kenny Lofton and Aramis
Ramirez, expected an
unsettled clubhouse when
he arrived.
"Everybody knows about
ali those trades," Hernandez
said. "Guys are thinking
about all the trades a little
bit. But baseball has got to
continue. You can't think
ahout who's going to stay.
and who's going to go."
Randall Simon also
homered as the Pirates
overcame an early three-run
deficit and the fallout from
three painful deal s. They
traded their top two relievers and twa regulars. essentially giving up on the season .

When the Pirates showed
up
the
ballpark
on
Wednesday, guards checked
their names against an edited list. Several had been
crossed out and others
scrawled in at the bottom .
Players joked about the
revolving roster, but man-·
ager Lloyd McClendon
insisted before the game
thai they wouldn 't be downcast once they hit the field .
He was right.
"Seeing is believing,"
McClendon said. "My guys
have a unique knack far
putting themselves in the
bubble and staying focused.
We played a whale of a ballgame today."
The Reds played another
miserable. game as they fell
a season -high 12 games
under .500 and a seasonworst II I12 games out of
first in the NL Central.
They ' re in fifth place, two
games behind the Pirates,
but haven 't made any deals.
"You ' don 't think about
it," said Kent Mercker (02), who gave up Stairs'
homer. " If it happens, it
happens, there 's nothing
you can do about it."
The remaining Pirates
reckoned there's something
they can do about their
predicament - make the
best of it:

"We don't sit around here
and say, 'Man, we've lost
four guys and we're done,"'
said Stairs, who will get
more chances in a reconfigured lineup. "Guys are getling opportunities. Some
guys are pumped up about
the chance to play every
day."
Count Hernandez among
them.
He started at third base ·
and struck out in his first
two at-bats, pushing his
NL-leading total to I 23. He
then tied it at 5 in the eighth
inning by hitting the first
pitch from Chri s Reitsma
for his lith homer, a drive
that barely cleared the top
of the wall in center.
"M y first two at-bats. 1
was kind of excited, being
with a different team."
Hernandez said. "The last
at-bat was key. 1 hope that
everything will change
from today an and I'll start
getting better at the plate ."
He ' ll certainly get more
chances than he did with the
Cubs.
"It didn 't take him long to
adju st," McClendon said .
'T ve followed Jose for
quite some time, and I've
been very fond of him. 1
told him, ' You're going to
be out there. We're going to
get your mojo back. 1 wa,nt

you stepping with confidence with this group." ·
Jose Guillen, getting a
chance to play every day
with Ken Griffey Jr. out for
the season, had a pair of
run-scoring doubles to lead
the Reds, who seem to have
run aut of ninth-inning dramatics.
Brian Boehringer (5-2 )
escaped a threat in the
eighth, and Mike Lincoln
gave up a walk in the ninth
before fini shing it off for
his third save in :is many
chances.
It came dawn to Stairs'
homer off Mercker, who has
given up three solo shots in
his last two appearances.
'They should have traded
Stairs," h~ said.
Notes: Pirates C Jason
Kendall and Guillen had
appeals heard before the
game. Kendall is appealing
a three-game suspension for
a fight with Tampa Bay.
Guillen is appealing a twogame penalty for bumping
an umpire . No dec isiOn s
were announced . ... 2 B
D' Angelo Jimenez had
three hits. He has hit safely
in each of his.first 13 games
with the Reds, a career-high
hitting strea k.... SS Barry
Larkin 1efl the game in the
se venth because of cramps
in hi s right hamstring.

BAYONNE, France- For
once, Lance Armstrong was
happy to concede the spotlight.
Armstrong preserved his
overall lead in the Tour de
France while his former
teammate Tyler Hamilton,
riding with a double-fractured collarbone, won his
first ever stage in cycling's
premier race Wednesday.
"1 think this is the biggest
day of the Tour," Armstrong
said after the 16th stage.
"Incredible."
Armstrong, who is seeking
a record-tying fifth straight
title, finished 1 minute, 55
seconds behind to retain his
overall lead over Jan Ullrich
and was among the first to
congratulate his former teammate with a hug.
Just 17 days earlier, on the
second day of the three-week
slog
around
France,
Hamilton thought his Tour
was over. Caught in a crash
involving about 35 riders he
cracked his right collarb~ne
in two places - an injury he
and others thought would
make it impossible for him to
cope with the 2,016 miles of
bumpy roads and grueling
mountain climbs to come.
' 'To win a stage of the Tour
de France is fantastic. It's
• beyond my wildest dreams,"
said Hamilton, . who now
rides for the Danish CSC
team. "After today, I'll forget
about the disappointment."
Hamilton didn't have much
Iuck during the first 15 stages
of the race. He pinched a
nerve in his back, became
dehydrated and also gat
whacked on his collarbone by
a television camera the day
after he crashed.
Prior to Monday's 15th
stage, the third of the
Pyrenees climbs finishing at
Luz-Ardiden, Hamilton's bad
luck then took a near-farcical
turn far the worse.
"The day started with me
taking a hit from an elevator
door on the way out of the
hotel," Hamilton said. "1 got
clocked pretty good on my
collarbone. This was not a
good amen."
Armstrong, too, has had
bad omens thus far, in what
he recently called "a very
odd, crisis-filled Tour."
He has experienced two
crashes, one near miss, an
accidental trek across a
bumpy field, dehydration,
technical problems with his
bike and ill-fitting racing
shoes.
Yet. he leads Germany'~
Ullrich by 67 seconds with
just four stages left - the
most crucial being Saturday's
individual time trial.
"I've never lost the final
time trial in a Tour de France
and I don't plan on starting
this year," Armstrong said,
after fini shing 24th in
Wednesday's stage, in the
same time as 17th-placed
Ullrich - 1:55 behind the
winner.
With both unlikely to
attack m Thursday and
Friday's . flat
stages,
Saturday 's penultimate stage
will make or break the race.
On July 18, in the last time:
trial, Armstrong misjudged
his fluid intake and became
chronically
dehydrated .
Ullrich. a Tour winner in
1997 and a four-time runnerup. beat him by an astonishing 96 seconds.
"Ullrich will be difficult to
beat but I know the course,
I've dane the training and
I' ve got everything ready,"
Armstrong said.
"] can tell you that I sleep
better with a lead of a minute
and '7 seconds than 1 do with
only 15 seconds."
Hami Iton - a supfort rider
for Armstrong unti leaving
U.S. Postal in 2001 - won
the I 22 .5-mile trek from Pau
to Bayonne with an inspired
. solo breakaway.

�...
•
Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Thursday, July 24, 2003

Whaley's day at the Family removes missing
·player's
belongings
from
Greater Hartford
apartment in Texas
Open has arrived
CROMWELL, Conn. (AP)
- After months of interviews
and public appearances, Suzy
Whaley is ready to just play
golf
The 36-year-old teaching
pro, the first woman since
Babe Zaharias in 1945 to
qualify for a PGA Tour event,
will get her wish when she
tees off in the Greater
Hartford Open on Thursday
afternoon.
"The hardest part of this
week is gettin~ ready for it,"
Whaley said. 'Being here is
the enjoyable part."
Whaley, the pro at Blue Fox
Run in Avon, qualified by
winning the Connecticut PGA
section in September. She was
hitting from the shorter
women's tees.then, but when
she tees off in the last group
for the first round of lhe GHO
she will be playing the full
6,820-yard distance at the
TPC at River Highlands.
She is not expected to make
the cut - or even get a~ close
as Annika Sorenstam did in
May .when she accepted a
sponsor's exemption to . play
against the men in the
Colonial. Still, Whaley says
nothing can diminish the
experience.
"It's the opportunity of a
lifetime. I refuse to let it be
anything else but that," she
said.
Whaley's pro-am round,
shortened to nine holes
because of intermittent rain
on Wednesday, drew t11e
largest galleries of the day.
Fans wore green "Fore Suzy"
buttons, a fund-raiser for the

I

'

\'

March of Dimes, and Whaley
posed for photos and signed
autographs after several
holes.
Whaley, who will play with
Anthony Painter and Akio
Sadakata in the first two
rounds, has the support of a
number of pros ' including
two-time defending champion
Phil Mickelson.
"Let's just have fun with
it," Mickelson said. "I don't
think that we should worry
about how she plays, or what
her score is. I think that we
should just cherish the fact
that she qualified and enjoy
the fact that this is a unique
circumstance on tour."
While Whaley chases histo·
ry, Mickelson is looking for
his first win since last year's
GHO.
"It brings back some very
fond memories," Mickelson
said. "It also provides an
opportunity to get things
turned around for this year as
opposed to feeling pressure to
try to win a three-peat."
Mickelson is coming off a
tie for 59th at the British
Open. His best showing since
last year's victory was a third
place at the Masters in April
and he hasn't has a top 10 finish since.
"I really haven't put myself
in contention this year. I want
to just start playing better as
opposed to worrying about
the result," he said.
Mickelson faces some
tough competition from
Kenny Perry, who has won
three of his last live tournaments. Before 2002, Perry

had won a total of four in his
17 years on tour.
"I always knew I could win.
I felt very comfortable about
my golf game," Perry said.
"It's just why now all of a
sudden, I don't know."
British Open winner Ben
Curtis withdrew from the
tournament Tuesday, citing
fatigue and a need to spend
time with his family in Ohio.
The major was the tour rookie's first win.
"That's a life-altering experience for him," Perry said.
"It would have been difficult
to for him to come here and
be prepared mentally to play."
Whaley's appearance has
increased med13 interest in
the tournament, one of seven
on tour in need of a title sponsor.
Tournament officials managed to draw about $4 million
from state and local sponsors
to keep the 52-year-old tournament afloat for at least one
more year. A deal with a
major sponsor. is expected to
be announced Thursday at the
course
by
PGA
Commissioner Tim Finchem.
Whaley, the mother of two
young grrls, is no stranger to
the TPC at River Highlands.
Her husbapd, Bill Whaley, is
the course's general manager
and director of golf. That
familiarity could help Whaley
on Thursday morning when
she attempts to maintain her
daily routine.
'T 11 take it easy, get my
kids oil to camp," she said.
"The more normal things I
can do, the better it will be."

Six players move in four-team NBA deal
I

l

UNDATED (AP) - The
four-team NBA trade that bad
been rumored for 24 hours was
finally made Wednesday night.
Six playern were involved,
with Latrell Sprewell going to
Minnesota, Glenn Robinson
and
Marc
Jackson
to
Philadelphia, Keith Van Hom
to New York and Terrell
Brandon and Randy Holcomb
to Atlanta.
Two dnift picks were also
exchanged, and the deal could
have been even bigger.
Minnesota vice president
Kevin McHale said negotiations continued throughout the
day Wednesday and were complicated when a fifth team,
which he would not name, tried
to get involved. The process
accelerated when that team
dropped out Wednesday
evemng.
"I've found out one thing,
that five general managers
can't make a cake, but four
can," McHale said.
Minnesota received SprewelL
from New York and sent the
injured Brandon to Atlanta and
Jackson to Philadelphia.
Robinson went from Atlanta to
Philadelphia, which sent Van
Hom to New York.
"He's going to add size to our
frontcourt and give us a great
deal of versatility," Knicks
coach Don Chaney said of Van
Hom. "If (Antomo) McDyess
is .healthy, we should be a very
solid basketball team."
The 76ers also sent
Holcomb, a reserve, and a frrstround draft pick 10 Atlanta,
while they reacquired their own
2006 second-round pick from
the Hawks.
The deal ends Sprewell's
five-season tenure with the
Knicks which included a trip to
the 1999 NBA Finals. He averaged 16.4 points and shot only
a shade over 40 percent last
season - some of the lowest
numbern of his 11-year career.
"Latrell gives us a very athletic swing player, something
we have said since the end of
last season that we needed,"
McHale said. "He will give us
tremendous defensive effort
every time he steps on the
court. He has played in a num·
ber of bi~ games and has not
been afraid to take big shots
over his career."
Sprewell, who has averaged
19.1 points and 4.2 rebounds
for his career, will fill a hole at
shooting guard for the
Tunberwolves, giving them a
starting lineup of Troy Hudson
or Sam Cassell at pomt guard,

•

Wally Szczerbiak at small for- Robinson has averaged 2 1.1
ward, Kevin Garnett at power· points, 6.2 rebounds and is
forward and recently signed shooting 46 percent, including
free
agent
Michael 34 percent from 3-point range,
Olowokandi at center.
in his nine-year career.
Brandon, whose career is
The Sixers will have wait
likely over because of repeated until their fourth game to use
knee injuries, was attractive Robinson. He was suspended
because his $11 million-plus for three games without pay by
contract is due to come off the the NBA earlier this month
salary cap in February. Atlanta after being convicted of pushcould then use that space to ing and threatening his exhave extra maneuverability on fiancee .
the free agent market or in
Van Horn averaged 15.9
trades.
points and 7.1 rebounds in his
"He's seen oodles of doctors, : only season in Philadelphia
oodles of therapists and oodles after being acquired in a trade
of specialists. His injury is such that sent Dikembe Mutombo to
that he gets to a certain level New Jersey last summer. He
and starts to push really hard, disappeared often in the playhis knee starts to really swell offs and averaged just 7.8
up," McHale said. "Righi now, points in a second-round series
it's a definite. No way he's against Detroit, including only
doing to play basketball."
two points in an elimination
Robinson, a two-time All- .loss in Game 6.
Star, joins his third team in
The Knicks were attracted to
three years. He av~raged 20.8 Van Hom because of his size,
points and 6.6 rebounds in his giving them a 6-10 player they
only season in Atlanta after plan to use at both forward
being traded from Milwaukee positions. Sprewell, a natural
last offseason.
shooting guard, had been playSelected bX the Bucks with ing out of position at small forthe No. I overall pick in 1994, ward for New York.

Nominate them for

"Carrier-of-the-Month"
If they are selected, your ~
carrier will win dinner P/l~
for two at
~r

Pizza Hut
compliments of
Pizza Hut

WACO, Texas (AP) The family of missing
Baylor basketball player
Patrick Dennehy removed
his belongings from his
apartment Wednesday after
more than a month of waiting and hoping he was alive.
Authorities said they would
continue searching for his
body.
Dennehy's
stepfather,
Brian Brabazoil, said police
have told family members
that Carlton Dotson, a former teammate who has been
charged
with
killing
Dennehy, provided investi~
gators with three sites to
search for hi s body.
Gravel pits and a river
bank were searched Tuesday.
A search Wednesday moming was delayed by rain.
Brabazon said the family
planned to talk with police
and tour the Baylor campus
while in Waco.
"We appreciate your concern, but today we'd like to
do whal we have to do as a
family," he told news
reporters .
Also Wednesday, Baylor's
athletic department faced
questions about whether
coaches made improper payments to Dennehy.
While lamenting the timing of the allegations, athletic director Tom Stanton said
the university "has begun a
vigorous internal inquiry
independent of the athletic
department to determine the
facts in thi s situation."
"The investigation will be
thorough," Stanlon said . "We
tak!! these issues very seriously. We are hopeful questions about Patrick' s first
year at Baylor can be
resolved quickly."
Among the allegations is

that Dennehy emerged from
basketball
offices
last
November with between
$1,200 and $1 ,800 that he
told his girlfriend, Jessica De
La Rosa, came from a coach
and was to go toward the
purchase of a car.
The 6-foot-10 center 's
father, Patrick Dennehy Sr.,
said in publi shed reports that
De La Rosa, a track athlete at
the University of · New
Mexico, reported what she
saw to officials at New
Mexico and they reported it
to the NCAA.
The NCAA prohibits extra
benefits to athletes. It's the
organization's policy not to
confinn or deny whether a
school is under investigation.
De La Rosa, who was in
Waco on Wednesday with
Dennehy's mother and stepfather, confirmed she spoke
to New Mexico officials, but
declined to comment on
what she said.
Dennehy Sr. al so said a
member of Baylor's basketball staff paid a car service to
drive De La Rosa from Waco
to a Dallas airport last fall.
That allegation was investigated by New Mexico and
the NCAA, and De La Rosa
was declared ineligible to
run track next season. She
will likely be reinstated if
she repays the cost of the
trip, said Janice Ruggiero, a
New Mexico athletic official.
Dennehy 's father, who
lives in Tacoma, Wash. , had
been estranged from his son
until the last few years . He
said be was just now speaking up about the alleged
financial favors because be
was frustrated with Baylor
for not keeping
him
informed about the investigation into his son's disap-

pearance.
Dotson, 21 , was charged
Monday night with murder
after he told FBI agents in
Maryland that he shot his
teammate in the head after
Dennehy tried to shoot him,
according to the arrest warrant.
Dotson told the AP . after
his arrest that he "didn't con"
fess to anything."
An Aug. 19 extradition
hearing was scheduled for
Dotson in Chestertown, Md.
He remained jailed without
bond near his hometown of
Hurlock.
J)otson 's attorney urged
authorities to give information to him about his client's
psychological condition. He
said the jail told him results
from a routine mental health
screening were not available
yet because Dotson had not
signed release forms.
"We're trying to ascertain
the stability of mind of my
client over the past several
weeks," said Grady Irvin Jr.,
of St. Petersburg, Fla. He
said his client may not have
been in the proper mental
state to be questioned .
Dennehy, 21, was last seen
on campus June 12 ; his family reported him mi ssing
June 19. The n~xt day,
Delaware police told Waco
authorities that an informant
said Dotson told someone he
shot Dennehy in the head
after the two argued.
Dennehy's
Chevrolet
Tahoe was found abandoned,
without license plates, in a
Virginia Beach, Va., mall
parking lot June 25.
Dotson recently lost his
scholarship and was not
planning to return to Baylor
in the fall.

Thursday, July 24, 2003

Scoreboard
Pro baseball

Milwaukee, 20; EYoung, Milwaukee, 20; Goodwin,

National League

Chicago, 19; Lofton. Chicago, 18.
PITCHING (10 Dectsions)-Willis, Florida , 9·2,

Eaar

w

Atlanta ... .. ......... ......... 66
Phi ladelphia ....... ....... . .56
Fl orida ..... ........ ...... .53
Montreal .
........ 51
New Yo rk
.... :..... 42

~

Pet.

48

.660
566
.525

50
58

.420

L
45

.554

43

GB

.505

Central

w

Houston ..................... 56
St. LOuis ... ...... ...... .. .52
Chi cago
.50
Pittsburgh ... ............ . .4.5
Cincinnati ..
........ 44
Milwaukee ........... ..... .... 40
Weat

w

Pet

49
50

.515

53
56

.459

GB

.500

60

.440
.400

L

· Pet

.818. 2 .67: WWilliams, St . Louis , 13·3, .812, 3.24;

Robertso n, Houston , 10·3, .769, 4.56; RuOrtlz,
Atlanta . 13-4, .765, 3.58; HRamirez, Atlanta, 8-3,
.727, 4.17; Schmidt , San Francisco, 10-4, .714, 2.41;
Webb , Arizona , 7-3 , .700, 2. 45; Nathan , San
Francisco. 7- 3, .700, 3.60: Rueter. San Francisco, 7·
3, .700, 4.46
STAIKEOUT$-Wood, Ch icago, 164; JVazquez.
Montreal, 157; Prior, Ch icago, ~50 : Schmidt, San
Fra ncisco, 143; Noma, l os A ngeles, 131 ; Wolf,
Phi ladelp hia, 118; Millwood , Philade lphia, 116.
SAVES-Smoltz , Atlanta , 36; Gagne, Los
Angeles, 34: Wagner. Houston , 30: MiWilliams,
Phi ladelp hia, 25; Biddle, Montrea l, 23: Worrell , San
Fra ncisco. 23: Benitez, New York . 21 .

GB

San Francisco .... ...... ... 64
37
.634
Anzona ........ ......
. .. 54
47
.535
10
los Angel es ............. ... 52
. 48
.520
1 n~
Colo rado
...... ..... .. .. 52
52
13'1,
.500
San Diego
... .. 39
64
.379
26
Tueaday'l Games
N.Y. Mets 7 , Philadelphia 5
Florida 9 , Montreal!
Houston 2. Pirtsburgh 0
Milwaukee 6 . Cincinnati 4
Atlanta 8, Chicago Cubs 4
San Otego 3, St. Louts~
los Angeles 5. Colorado 2
San Francisco 3, Arizona 1
Wedneaday 'a Gamea
St. louis 8 . San Diego 4
Florida 5, Atlanta 4, 12 innings
Montreal 5, N.Y. Mats 2
Phllade.lphia 3, Chicago Cubs
Pittsburgh 6, Cincinnati 5
Hou ston 3, Milwaukee 2, 11 innings
Colorado 8. l os Angeles 3
San Francisco 7, Arizona I
Thureday'a Games
Pittsburgh (D'Amico 6--10) at Cinc innati (Haynes 2·
10), 12:35 p.m.
·
Florida (Penny 8·7) at Atlanta (Ru.Ortiz 13·4),
1:05 p.m .
Ph iladelphia (Padilla a-a) at Chi cago Cubs (Wood
10·6). 2 :20p.m .
Colorado (Chacon 11-5) \t Los Ang eles (K. Brown

o

10·5), 3:10p.m.
Arizona (Webb 7·3) at San Francisco (Zerbe 1· 1),

335 p.m.

N.Y.
Mets (Giavine 6·1 0)
at
Montreal
(l.Hernandez 9·6) . 7:05p.m.
Ho!J ston (Villone 2..0) at Milwaukee (Sheets 8·7).
8:05p.m . ,
Friday 's Games
Atlanta at Montreal, 7 :05p.m.
Cincinnati at N.Y. Mets. 7:10 p. m.
Philadelphia at Florida. 7:35p.m .
Ch icago Cubs .at Houston, 8:05p.m.
Pitlsburgh at St. l ou is, 8:10p.m .
Milwaukee at Colorado. 9:05p.m.
los Ange les at Arizona, 10:05 p.m.
San Diego at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.

National League Leaders
BATTING....:..Pujols. St. loui s, .373 : Helt on,
Colorado, .349; JGuill en, Cincinnati, .341 : Vidro,
Montreal , .333: Renteria. St. Loui s. .328: Hidalg o,
Hou ston, .327; Bonds, San ·Francisco, .327.
RUN5--Hellon, Colorado, 91 : Pujols, St. Louis,
90: Sheffield. Atlanta, 79: Bonds. San Fra ncisco. 76;
Furcal, Atlanta, 75; AJones . Atlanta, 73; Berkman,
Hou ston. 70.
RBI- P rWil son. Colorado. 95; Pujols, St. LOuis.
92 ; Helton, Co lorado, 83; Lowell, Florida, 8 1:
Sheff ield, Atlanta. 75; Sexson. Milwaukee, 74;
Thome, Philadelphia, 74
HITS-PUJOIS, St. Louis, 139 ; He.lton , Colorado,
134: Renteria, St. Louis, 126; .Pierre, Florida, 124 ;
PrWilson, Colorado, 121 , Grissom, San Francisco ,
121: LCasti llo, Florict a, 120.
DOUBLES- ShGreen, Los Angeles. 36; Helton.
Colo ra do , 35; Pujols, St. Louis, 34 : PrWilson.
Colorado. 34 : LG onzalez, Arizona. 34: MGIIes,
Atl anta , 30; Orudziela nek, Chicago, 30; Biggio,
Houston, 30.
TRIPLE S- Furcal,
Atlanta, 8; CPatterson.
Chicago, 7 ; LWalker, Colorado, 7; Wigginto n, New
York, 6; Pobsedni~. Milwaukee, 6: $Finley, Arizona ,
6; AGonzalez, Florida, 5; JEncarnacion, Florida, 5.
HOME RUNS-Bonds, San Francisco, 32: Pi.Jjol s,
St. louis, 29: Edmonds, St. louis. 29; lowell.
Florida, 28 ; Sexson, Milwaukee, 27; JLopez. Atlanta;
26 : ThOme , Philadelph ia, 26

ROGER HOOK AND
JANE
DOE,
UNKNOWN SPOUSE,
IF ANY, OF ROGER
HOOK whoae lilt
place of residence Ia
known aa 5 FISHER
STREET, POMEROY,
OH 45769 but whose
present place of rea~
dance Is unknown
will take notice that
on March 6, 2003 at
4:29 p.m. Deutsche
Bank National Trust
Company
lka
Bankers
Trust
Company
of
California, N. A., aa
Trustee lor Auet
Backed
Securities
Corporation
Long
Beach Home Equity
Loan Trust 20DO-.LBI
filed HScomplalnt In
Case No. 03·CV.029
in the Court of
Common
Pleas

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Specia' Meigs County Fair· Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Everl look For this Special
Edition In Your Friday·, August 8th Paper. •
BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS
A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

2.) lndllde )'Our curta's Mr!le. ~ roUte number

Mall your enbiee lo:

l'lill flllrker

OaiUpolle Dally Tribune
e:z, 11tlrct Avenue
Qalllpolla, OH 4!16.51

23.
STOLEN BASE&amp;-Beltran, Kansas City, 28 ;
!Suzuki. Seattle, 26; ASoriano, New York , 26 :
Crawford , Tampa Bay, 24; Damon, Boston, 19;
Baldelli, Tamp a Bay. 18: ASanchez , Detroit , 18.
PITCHING (10 Decislons)-Hall aday, To ronto, 14·
2 . .875, 3.43: DWells, New York, 12·3, .800, 3.83;
Dlowe , Boston. 11·4 , .733, 4.85 ; Ponson. Baltimore,
13-5, .722, 3.67; l:.aaiza, Chicago, 12·5, .706, 2.16;
Moyer, Seattle, 12·5, .706 , 3.24: Pineiro, Seattle, 11 -

American League
Ent

w

New York .. ....... .......... ... 62
Boston.. ....
.......... .60
To ronto ..... .. .. ............. 52
Baltimore .................... 47
Tampa Bay
............. 35
Central

w

Kansas City ................. 55
Chicago ...
. .......... 51
Minnesota.
. .......... 49
Cleveland ..
.......... .42
Detroit ......
...... .26

L

Pet.

37

.626

40

.600

49
51
64

.515

L

44
50
51

59

SeaHie ... .
Oakland ..... .
Anaheim ... .
Texas

w

Pet
.556
.505
.490
.416

.263

L

Pot

......... .61

39

610

44

560
505
410

49

STRIKEOUTS-clemens, N&amp;'fo' York , 136;
Musalna. New York, 126; Halladay. Toronto , 123;·
PMartinez, Boston, 120; Wakefield , Boston. 114;
Loaiza, Chicago, 113; Pettitte, New York. 113.
SAVE5-Urbina, Texas, 26; MacDougBI, Kansas
City, 24; Foulke , Oakland, 24; Guardado, Minnesota:
23: Julio, Baltimore. 22; OBaez, Cleveland, 22:
Percival, Anaheim , 21 .

.354

...........56

......50

GB

.480

73

Waal

5 , .687 , 3.38.

GB

Auto racing
The 2003 NASCAR W inston Cup schedule and
stand ings, with winners in pa renttlesas:
Feb. 16 - Daytona 500, Daytona Beach, Fla .
(Michael Waltrip)
Feb. 23 - Subway 400, Rockingham , N.C. (Dale
Jarrett)
March 2 - UAW·OaimlerChrysle r 400, Las Vegas.
( Matt Kenseth)
March 9 - Atlanta 500, Hampton, Ga. (Bobby

5

10'1;

............ 41
59
20
Tuesday's Games
Anahe im 3, Tampa Bay 1
Baltimore 12, Texas 6
Oakland 10, Kansas City 0
Chicago Wh ite Sox 5, Cleveland 2
Boston 7, Detroit 4
Toronto at N.Y. Yankees, ppd., rain
Seattle 10, Minnesota B
Wednesday 's Games
Boston 10. Tampa Bay 4
Cleveland 4, Detroit 1
Chicago White Sox 7, Toronto 6
N.Y. Yankees 4, Baltimore 2
Kansas City 8, Minnesota 3
Texas 12, Anaheim 9
Seattl e 6, Oakland o
Thursday's Games
Tampa Bay (Zambrano 6·5) at Boston (Men doza

2,472
5. Jimmie Johnson
... .2 .429
6. Michael Waltrip .... . ... . .. ....
.. .......... 2 ,373
7. Ke'v'in Harvick ..
. ..... 2 ,316
8. Kurt Busch...........
...................... 2.243
9. Tony Stewart ...
. ..... 2,226
10. Jeff Burton ............
. ........ 2 .200
11 . Rusty Wallace
.... ,2,198
12. Mark Martin ..
. ......... ........ ........ 2. 179
............. ......... 2, 178
13. Ryan Newman ..... ...
14. Robby Gordon ....
. ........ 2, 178
15. Ste rllng Marlin ...
........ .. ............. 2, 144
16. Terry Labonte
..... ........ .. . ..... ............. 2, 131
17. Ricky Craven .
. ....... .. 2,0 19
1a. Elliort Sadler ........
_ 1.993
19. Bill Elliot! ...
. ......... .................... 1,972
20. Greg Biffle ...... ......
. .......... 1,944

Pro basketball
Women's National Basketball
Association
Eutarn Conteranca

W

L

Detroit ............. . .... ... 14
5
Charlotte ........... ........ ... 12
9
lndjana ..
... ... 11
9
Connecticut.
. . .12
11
NewYork ........ .... ....... .. .... 9
9
Cleveland .............. .. 10
11
Washington ................ ....5
15
We1tern Conference

W

NASCAR Winston Cup Serlea
GB

4. Bobby Labonte .......... ,.. .

Labonle)
March 16 Caro lina Dodge Dealers 400,
Darlington, S.C. (Ricky Craven)
March 23 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn . (Kurt

Busch)

l

Pet.
.737
.571
.550
.522

GB

3
3'1
4

.500

4't

.476
.250

g',

Pet.

GB

los Angeles ...... ... ...... .. 17
5
.n3
Houston ............. .......... 12
8
.600
Seattle ........... ......... 12
9
.571
Minnesota ... ................. 11
10
.524
Sacramen to ................ . 10
12
.455
San Antonio ........ . ...... ... 6
15
.286
Phoenix... ............ ........ ... 3
16
.158
Wtdneaday '• Gamea
Seattle 75, New York 65
Connecti cut 84, Minnesota 70
Indiana 8 1, San Antonio 47

5

Kansas City (May 5·4) at Minnesota (Radke 6·9),
•
1:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Pens on 13-5) at N.Y. Yankees
(Clemens 9-6), 1:05 p.m.
Detroit (Cornejo 4-8} at Cleve land (Sabath ia 8·5) ,
7:05p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Garland 7·7) at Toronto
(Escobar 6-S), 7:05 p. m.
Anaheim {Appier 6·6) at Texas (Benoit 5·4) , 8:05
p.m .
Oakland (Mulder 12-7) at Seattle (Meche 10·6).
10:05 p.m.
Friday's Games
Baltimore at Toronto , 7:05 p.m .
N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 7:05p.m.
Minnesota at Cleveland, 7:05p.m
Kansas City at Oatroit. 7:05p.m.
Tam pa Bay at Ch icago While Sox , a:05 p.m.
Te)(as at Seattle, 10:05 p.m .
Oakland at Anaheim . 10:05 p.m.

American League teaders
BATIING - ISuzuki,
Seattle,
.339;
Mora,
Bal11more, .338; Mueller, Boston, .333; MAamirez,
Boston.. 326: MYoung , Texas, .323: Garciaparra,
Boston, .322; GAnderson, Anaheim , .322 .
RUN S-Wells , Toronto, 80; CDelgado, Toronto, SO;
Garciaparra, Boston. 79; MRamirez, Boston . 79;
ASorlano . New York, 78 ; I Suzuk i, Seattle, 71 ;
BBoone, Seattle, 71 .
.
RBI-CDelgado, Toronto, 99 ; Wells, Toronto, 89;
GAnderson, Anah eim, 85; JaG iambi , New York, 79;
BBoone. Seattl e, 78: MA am irez. Boslon. 75:
JGonzalez, Texas, 70.
HITS-ISuzuki , Seattle, 142; Garciaparra, Boston.
135; Wells, Toronto, 131; MYoung, Texas , 129;
GAnderson, An aheim, 128 : ASoriano, N ew York,
125: Matsui, New York. 121: MRamirez, Boston, 121 .

4',
5',

7

1a',

12',

Sepl. 14 - New Hampshire 300, Loudon.
Sepl. 21 -Dover 400, Dover, Del . ·
Sept. 28 - EA Sports 500, Talladega , Al a
Oct. 5 - Banquet 400, Kansas City, Kan .
Oct. 11 - UAW·GM Ouallly 500, Concord , N.C.
Oct. 19- Old Dom inion 500, Martinsville, \/a.
Oct. 26 - Georgia 500, Hampton.
Nov. 2 - Checker Auto Parts 500, Avonda le. Ariz .
Nov. 9 - Pop Secret Microwave Popcorn 400,
Rockingham, N.C.
Nov. 16 - Ford 400, Homestead. Fla.
Driver Standing•
1 Matt Kenseth ..... . ....... ........... . ..... .... 2,848
2 . Jeff Gordon ................... ...... ....... ,.......... .2.614
3. Dale Earnhardt Jr. ... ....... ............ ... ........ .. 2,575

Claxton.
IND IANA PACERS-Agreed to terms with G
Anthony Johnson on a two-year contract.
•
MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES-Signed G·F Jams&amp;
Posey to an offer sheet.
'
MILWAUKEE BUCKS--Signed G Damon Jones. :
NEW YORK KNICKS-5igned C Slavko Vranes.
ORLANDO MAGIC-Sig ned G Tyron n lue to a
two-year contract

FOOTBALL

Thursday's Games
Detroit at Charlotte, Noon
Phoenix at Los Angeles , 3:30p.m .
Indiana at Washington, a p.m.
New York at Sacramento. 10 p.m
Friday's Gamas
San Ant onio at Minnesota. 8 p.m .
Phoe nix at Seattle, 10 p.m .

March 30 Samsun{)'AadioShack 500, Fort
Worth . Texas . (Ryan Newman)
Ap ri l 6 - Aaron's 499, Talladega , Ala . (Dale
Earnhardt Jr.)
April13- Vi rginia 500. Martinsville. (Jef1 Gordon)
Apr il 27 - Auto Glub 500, Fontana, Calif. (Kurt
Busch)
May 3 - Pontiac Excitement 400, Ric hmond , Va .
Major League Soccer
(Joe Nemechek)
Eastern Confarunc:e
May 25 - Coca·Cola 600, Concord , N.C. (Jimmie
WLTPisGFGA
Johnson)
MetroStars ..
. ..8
4
4
28 27
22
June 1 - MBNA America 400, Dover, Del. (Ryan Chicago .. .. . , ... ......... 7
4
4
25 27
20
Newman)
New England ..... .... 5
5
7
22 28
29
June 8 - Pocono 500, long Pond, Pa. (Tony · Columbus .. . .. .. .. . .. 5
6
5
20 20
20
Stewart)
D.C. United . ....... ...... .4
6
6
18 20
20
June 15 - Sirius Satellite Radio 400 , Brooklyn ,
Western Conference
Mich. (Kurt Busch)
W L
T Pis GF GA
June 22 - Dodge-Save Mart 350, Sonoma, Calif. Kansas City ............... 7
3
6 27 32
23
(R obby Gordon)
San Jose ...
... . .. 7
3
6 27 22 20
July 5 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla. (Greg Colorado...
5
a
3
18 t9
26
Biffle)
losAngeles .............. 3
6 7
16 17
16
July 13 - Tropicana 400, Jol iet, Ill. (Ryan Dallas ......... ... ..... ...... 3
9
4
13 18
32
Newman)
NOTE: Three points tor win, one point for tie .
July 20 New England 300. loudon, N.H.
Wadnesday 's Game
(Jimmie Johnson)
New England 1, Columbus 1, tie
July 27- Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond.
Saturday's Games
.
Aug . 3 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
Kansas City at Chic ago. 8:30 p.m .
Aug. 10 - Sirius at The Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y.
MetroStars at Colorado. 9:30p.m
Aug . 17 - Michigan 400, Brooklyn .
Dallas at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Aug . 23- Sharpie 500. Bristo l, Tenn .
Sunday's Game
•
Aug . 31 - Southern 500. Darlington, S.C.
D.C." United at New England, 6·:30 p.m.
Sept. 6- Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400, R ichmond,

va.

National Leagua
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS - Activated OF
Danny Ba utista and C Rod BaraJaS tram the 15-&lt;tay
disabled list Optioned 1B lyle Overbay and c.B
Robby Hammock to Tucson of the PCL.
CHICAGO CUB$-P iaced OF Tom Goodwm on•
the 15-day disabled list. Recalled RHP Todd..
Wellemeyer from Iowa of the IL of the PCL. Option~
AHP Sergio Mitre to West Tenn of the Southam·
Leagu e.
PITISBUAGH PIRATES-Recalled RHP Sr1an
Meadows from Nashville of the IL.
ST LOUIS C ARDINALS-Signed RHP Stuart
Pomeranz l o a one-year &lt;;ontract and ass1gned him
to Johnson City ol the Appalachian league.
SAN DIEGO PADRE5-Activated INF·OF Phil
Nevin from the 60-&lt;fay disabled list. Claimed AHF'_"
Joe Aoa off waiver&amp; from Colorado.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball A11oclaUon
NBA-Ann~nced a fou r·tea m trade in which the
Minnesota T imberwolves acquired G l atrell.
Sprewell from the New York Knicks and sent G
Terrell Brandon to the Atlanta Hawks and C MarcJackson to the Philadelpt"lia 76ers. Philadelphia;
acquired F Glenn Robinson and a 2006 second··
rou nd draft pick from Atlanta lor F Randy Holcomb
and a 2004 flrst ~round draft pick, and sent F Ke1th'
Van Horn· to New York .

GOLDEN STATE WAAAIOA5-S igned G Speedy

4

Pr.o soccer

3·3), 1:05 p.m

Brad Voyles to Omaha of the PCL.
TEXAS RANGERS- Placed OF Juan Gonzalez
on the 15-day d isabled list. retroactive to July 2 1.
Purchased the con tract ol 1B Jason Jones troQl
Oklahoma of the PCL.

Transactions
BASEBALL

American League
ANAHEIM ANGEL5--Piaced 3B Troy Glaus on
15-day disabled list. retroactive to July 22. Act ivated
AHP Mickey CallaWay from the 15·day disabled li st.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Recalled LHP Eric
DuBose from Ottawa of th e ll.
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Named Charles Nagy
special assistant to the gen eral manager. Recalled
LHP Jason Stanford from Buffalo of the ll. Optioned
LHP Brian Tallet to Buffalo.
KANSAS C!TY ROYALS- Activated 3B Joe
Randa from the 15-day disabled list. Optioned RHP

Nation•l Football league
ATLANTA FALCON5-Signed DE Raggie Grimes
BALTIMORE RAVENS-Signed AS Musa Smith ,
FB Olvie Mughelll and OT Tony Pashas
BUFFALO BILLS- Agreed to terms with DE Chris
Kelsay, LB Angelo Crowell and CB Terrence McGee ..
CH ICAGO BEARS-Signed OT Tron LaFavor to afour·year contract
.
DENVER BRONCOS-5igned OT Nick Eason.
DE Bryant McNeal and C Ben Claxton
DETROIT LIONS-Signed WR Charles Rogers to
a six-year rcntract and LB Boss Bailey to a five-year
contract.
HOUSTON TEXAN$-Signed LB Antwan Pee k. ·
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS-Agreed to terms with'
DE Robert M at his and LB Cato J!Jne. Signed tree,
agent WR Brad Pyatt.
NEW
ENGLAND
PATRIOTS-Si gn ed
BiltBelich ick, coach, to a two· year contract extension .
through 2006 . Re· signed WR Kerry Watki ns.
Rel eased OL Corey Mitchell and Joe Schey.
SAN FRAN C ISCO 49EAS-Signed QB Ken
Dorsey to a three·year contract.
SEAITLE SEAHAWK5--Agreed to terms with P
Tom Rauen. Signed OT Wayne Hunter, FB Chris
Davis. LB Solomon Bates and QB Seneca Wallace.·
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS-Agreed to terms
with 0 Vitaly Vishnevski on a one·year contract, G
Eddie Ferhl on a two·year contract, and D Juha Alan
on a three ·year contract. Exercised a one·year
option on the contracl ot G Marlin Gerber.
BOSTON BRUIN5--Agreed to terms with D Hal.
Gill on a one·year contract.
FLORIDA PANTHERS- Named Bobby Jay dirac-·
tor of hockey operations for San Antonio ol the AHL.
MINNESOTA WI LD-Re-sig ned
LW Ant11
Laakso nen to a one·year contract. Named Doug
Risebrough pres ident and genera l manager
Promoted Matt Majka to senior vice presidenl ol
business operations

NEW YORK ISLANDERS- Signed F Sean·
Bergen heim and RW Gail Maclean .
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Signed 0 Pascaf
Trepanier.
COLLEGE
FRANCI S
MARiON-Named
Marty
Bea i ~
women's soccer coach.
.
GUILFORD- Named Stephanie Flaminl women's
basketball coach and Tom Palombo men's basket·
ball coach

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

1.) Send u. ,our lllinle, ...,..._and phone number.

,our carrier.

OOUBLES-GAnderson, Anahe im, 35; Mueller,
Boston, 33; Huff, Tampa Bay, 32; Matsui , New York,
31 : Wells, Toronto. 30 ; Brad ley, Cleveland, 29:
Catalanotto, Toronto. 29.
TRIPLE8--Garciapa"a, Boston, 12; CGuzman,
Minnesota, 9: Baldelli, Tampa Bay, 7 ; MYoung,
Texas , 6; Byrnes, Oakland, 6; Rivas, Minnesota , 6 ;
DYoung, Detroit, S.
HOME RUNS-JaGiambi, New York. 28 ;
CDelgado, Toronto, 28;·Wells . Toronto, 26; BBoone ,
Seattle, 25; ASorlano, New York, 24; JGonzalez ,
Texas , 24; GAnderson , Anaheim , 23; ARodriguez ,
Te)Cas , 23; MRamlrez, Boston, 23; Thomas, Chicago,

STOLEN BASES- Pierre. Florida, 46: DAoberts,

Los Angeles, 24; Renteria, St. Louis, 24 ; Podsednik,

the
premises
deacrl-. have been

broken, and the same
has
become
absolute.
The
Petitioner
prays that the delendant(s) named above

Call ·
DAVE or BRENDA
at 992-2155
FOR MORE INFORMATION

The D

Sentinel

REEDSVILLE, OH
MEIGS COUNTY
RELEASE 15300941 oNOOOOI
A remedial action
plan (RAP) dated
January 7, 2003. was
submitted by the

be required to answer

owner and/or opera-

end set up their Interest In said real estate
or be forever barred
from as,aertlng the
same, for foreclosure
of said d mortgage,
the marshaling of any
liens,
and
the
Petitioner's Claim In
the proper order ol Ha
priority, and lor such
other , and lurther
relief as Is just and
equitable.
The Delendant(a)
named above are
required to answer on
or before the 18th day
of September, 2003.
By:
Reimer
&amp;
Lorber Co., L.P.A
Ronald J. Charnek,
Attorney at Law
Attorney lor Plalntlft·
Petitioner
P.O. Box 968
Twinsburg, OH 44087
(330) 425-4201
Deutsche
Bank
Nitlonal Trust Co.
(7) 17, 24, 31 (8) 7, 14,
21

tor 61 the UST system(s) lor the review
and approval of the
Fire Marshal. Once
the Fire Marshal has
reviewed
and
approved the RAP,
the owner and/or
operator of the UST
system(s) will be
required to lmplementlhe RAP.
A copy of the RAP,
as well as other documentation relating to
this release and the
UST
· syatem(s)
Involved, is main·
talned by the Bureau
of
Underground
Storage
Tank
Regulations
(BUSTA), and are
available lor Inspection and copying by
the public. Please
make all requests lor
copies of the RAP or
lor Inspection of the
RAP and other related documentation In
writing to BUSTA,
Box
687,
P.O.
Reynoldsburg, Ohio
43066.
The
SFM
will
accept written com ments on this RAP
lor a period of 21
days from the date of
publication of this
notice. You may submit any comments
ragardlng this site
and the RAP,. in writ·
lng, at the above
address For further
Information, please
contact Chrlatopher
Kolbash at (614) 387·
7369. Please reference
release
t5300941 O· NOOOOI
when making all
Inquiries or com·
menta. ,
(7) 21, 22, 23

Common Pleas Meigs
County, Ohio alleging
that the Delenda~t(s),
ROGER HOOK and
JANEDOE ,
UNKNOWN SPOUSE,
IF ANY, OF ROGER
HOOK have or claim
to have an Interest In
the
real
estate
described balow:
Located In Meigs
County, Ohio: Being
as
Lot
platted
Number Nine (9) and
situated In
S.W.
Public Notice
Pomeroy's Division of
part of Lot Number
PUBLIC NOTICE
One (I) , Fraction
Eighteen
(18), Division of the State
Naylor's Run, said lot Fire Marshal
of
being One Hundred Bureau
(100) feet deep and Underground Storage
fronting One Hundred Tank Regulations
Pursuant to the
and Four (104) feet on
Fisher Street of aald rules governing the
Village, Parcel Two: remediation of releasSituated In
said es ol petroleum from
VIllage of Pomeroy, underground storage
and In Fraction 18, tank (UST) syatem(a),
Town 2, Range 13 of notice to the public Ia
the Ohio Company's required whenever
Purchase on Naylor's there Ia a confirmed
Run, Meigs County, to release of petroleum
wit: Being he North from an UST
Hall of Lot No. 100 of tem(a) that requlrea a
aald Tract on Naylor's remedial action plan
(See
Ohio
Run.
The Petitioner fur- Administrative Code
ther alleges that by 1301 : 7 · 9 - 13(K) .
reason of default of Notice Ia hereby
the Oelendant(s) In given that a conthe payment of a firmed release of
has
promlaaory
note, petroleum
according to Ha tenor. occurred from the
the conditions of a UST aystem(a) locatconcurrent mortgage ed at:
deed given to secure RIVER VIEW ELE MENTARY
the payment of said
note and conveying · ST. RT. 124

•v•·

or 111becrlber number.
.
.5.) In !10 wordl or lae. teD u. why we should chooee

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H/!lUSE FOR RENT- 2 BAS
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•.

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I

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p!Os $200 depostt, or buy for
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'

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newborn . W1ll prov1de a
home filled w1th Jov happiness, f1nanc1ai secunty and M1ss1ng Beegle, last seen on
a great education. Feel con- Mill-Creek Ad 11 found con·
fident m know1ng because of tact us 740-441-0546 or
your brave deCISion your 740-446·0 185
baby could look torwa rd to a
bright and wonderful future
Y S
Expenses paid Call toll tree
1-866 -731 -7825
Barbara
and M1chael

r

ARD ALE

~pn;:::::Y:ARD=S;A:L:E·=~

C· t Beer Carry Out perm1t
tor sale, Chester Township,
Me1gs County send let1ers
of. 1nterest to· The Da11y
Sent1nel. PO Box 729-20.
Pomeroy. Ohto 45769.

•

I

FREQUENT HEADACHES ?
You may qualify tor FREE
assessment Call 740-5931060 Study Sponsored by
Ohio UmverSIIy and the
Nat1onal Institutes of,Health .
Athens. Oh

GAUJPOLIS
lns1de
&amp;
out
1699
McCormick Ad 4 rooms full.
lots of everythmg, 10-?
Thursday &amp; Fr1day

Th urs-Fn -Sat
Bam-?,
Holcomb H1ll kids clothing ,
moped. bikes. and beante
bab1es
"76

YARD SUE·

WANTED
mBuv

CNA's
&amp;
Resident
Assistants Interviews Are
Now Be1ng Conducted For
CNA &amp; Resident Assistant
POSitiOns If You Are A
Canng,
EnthuSiastic
Dependable Person, Then
We Want You To Join Our
I \ !PI II' \ II \ I
Team Come On Over &amp;
"'i l tn u , ...,
Check Us Out! You'll Be
Glad You Didt CompellliVe
110
CNA
Wages
Pa1d
HEIJ&gt;
Vacations,
Paid
Meals
Many
1
Other Benef1ls. Ra\lenswood
Care
Center,
1113
Addressers wanted 1 mmedi~
Washmgton
St ..
atelyl No Expenence necesRavenswood, WV. (Across
sary. Wo r~ at Homa Call
RitChie Bndge, At 2 North,
405 -447-6397
last Bus1ness On A1ght)
References Requ1red
AVON I All. Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears. 304· Del1very1Warehouse person
675~1429 .
needed, furniture store, fu ll
11me 1mmed1ately openmg,
Fast grow1ng business
apply at Ltfe Style Furn1ture,
856 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis, no
full &amp; part-t1me bookkeeper. phone calls

WANlllO

full &amp; part-t1me cesh1e rs,

Pomeroy, Oh 45769

GIVEAWAY

'

Collectables. games. puzzles.chnstmas 1tems&amp; more.
4 ·adorable little lad1e s and tots of lreeb1es Fn &amp; Sat 8~?
mother m search of a good 1209 Ma1n St.
home. 740·256-1 092
Yard Sale July 25 &amp; 26 1418
Border Collie, mixed pup- Oh10 St 9·? Ra1n Cancel
pieS, call 256-1652
AucnoN AND

r

FLEA MARKET

Free to good home, 2 walker
pupp1es, 1 male, 1 female ,
24 log Home Packages to
740·245·5186
De offered at public auction,
August
2nd.
Insulated Dog house free for Saturday.
11 ooam. Hurricane. WV,
P•ckup (304 )675·5999
Rogers Really &amp; AuctiOn ,
LOOT ANil
Lie 613 , Free brochure.
FOUI\1l
Buffalo Log Homes 1·868·
562·2246 or www auctiOn·
lost 5 month ktnen black on
top, white on bottom. white
WANTED
patch on back. p1nk nose
mBuv
w/black
spot
Mt
Vernon/L1nco1n area $25
Reward (304)675 -3853 or 3 to 5 acres Within 50 m1les
of Gallipolis Flat or woods
(304)593-3354
no swamp No restncted

r

Lost wallet Maple Ave ,
Regency apartment parking
lot, or PV HospitAl parkmg
tot If found call (304)6752626

NOW HIRING
CASHIER
Apply m person

Mon-Fri
9am- Bam

Ask for
Katy McCoy

Upper River Road
GaH1polrs, Oh10

Seeking MA. LPN. to work
part ttme 1n a lamily practice
office 1n Jackson, Ohro.
Must know medtcal terms
and be familiar w1th baCk
area Karen Carman 608 office dulles. please tax
Sou th .washmgt?n Street. resume to 740-288-4466-or
' Greenfield , Oh10 45123 ma11 to 3375 Mt Z10n Ad
937 -981 · 3287
Jackson . oh1o 45640

TMAT DAILY
PUZZLII

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low

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tAM I

letten of
four scrambled words

R.arrange

'O

fcrm four simple

IROELO

L U S YK

I I I' I
A moti'vational speaker appeared before a group of civic
minded individuals. "If. taving faith
helps us move mountains." the
r----~---.;__ man told the group, "just think
r-r_K_Nr-0-.--D_Yr--E'T'I!"-!what a hard - - -:. - ••• will do.l'
1
Q Complete lho ehudclo quotod
'"·--'·--'-·--'--~.t-...1..-..J.
by filling In tho m•UJng words

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18

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you deYalap from step No.

~

below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

Yesterday's

SCil4M liT$ ANSWERS

7-23-o 1

Rebuke - Kneel· Quota - Unsure - BROKEN
An old timer attended a political session. Lengthy
debate over old and new ordinances prompted the old
genl to remark that there were already rnore laws on the
books than could be BROKEN.

HELP WANTED

Med1 Home Health Agency,
Inc seek1ng a PAN Speech
Therapist for the Gallipolis,
Oh1o area We offer a compet1t1ve salary, benefitS
package , and 401K E O.E
Please send resume to 430
Second Avenue, GallipOliS,
Oh 45631 Attn. 01ana
Harless, Clinical Manager
Need to earn Money? lets
talk the NEW Avon . Call
Manlyn, 304·882-2645 to
learn all the ways it can work
for you
NORRIS NORTHUP

DODGE
Full Time Salee Pereon
LOCATION 252 UPPER
RIVER AD
GALLIPOLIS OHIO

UNLIMITED INCOME
PRTENTIAL
NO EXPERIENCE

REQUIRED

Must poses good peopl e
EJC.perienced lead carpen- sk1lls. ambitious attitude,
te rs-must be familiar w1th all and the desire to succeed
phases ol residential remodeling , valid dnvers license, Now H1rmg Professional
tools, tranSportation , and Painters. Rates 'llanable
references. Local work , pay Send Resume &amp; references
based
on
expenence to. JR09, 200 Ma1n Street,
AppllceiiOns available at _PI_P_t._w_v_2_5_5_5o____
Chnst1ans
Construction, Now hiring recepionisU
Eastern
Ave , cashrer apply 1n person ask
1403
Gallipolis 446-4514
for Kalla McCoy Turnpike
Gall1a-Meigs
Communi ty
Action is acceptmg appllca·
t1ons for tobacco educator
for Me1gs County Positton
requires public presentaiiOn
and speaking engagements
to \larlous size groups, ability to work With persons of
all age groups and socioeconomic levels Min1mum
qualifications H1gh School
Diploma-2 year colle ge
degree preferred, experience working w1th a nonprofit computer sk1lls. detail
onented, interpersonal commumcatlon, organizational
ski lls val td drrvers license.
can work w1th rriin1ma1
superv1s1on and be bondab le Expenence prov1d1ng
tobacco education preferred
Travel occas1onal
evening and weekend hours
required .
Resumes and
applications wilt be accepted
at the Cheshire offtce until
4:00pm . Monday, August 4
2003 IS an EOE

~.,l.,.a_HELP_.w_ANIID
__,..II'M
In terest, resume and references to John D Costanzo,
Superintendent ,
AthensMeigS Educational Serv1ce
Center, PO Box 684, 320 1/2
E Mam St , Pomeroy, Oh
45769. Apphcahon deadl1ne ·
Until position 1s filled. The
AMESC is an equal opportu·
nity employer/provider.

1

Responsible female non
smoker, to care for elderly
lady part-lime, in her home,
(740)667·6235 leave message.
AN/LPN (HOME HEALTH)
Pert or Full t1me. per VISit or
hourly,401k, catetena plan,
m1leage, uniform
allowances, CEU reimbursement, Sam's club,
Health &amp; L1le ins. PTO
which accumulates from
fi rst work day. Top pay In TriState Sign on bonus. 600759-5383
EOE

fllll

l'ROFES'iiONAL
SFRVICI:S

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We W1n1
1-888-58 2-3345
HI \I I -... 1 \II

-BAD CREDIT?.??·
CALL HI66-26UI31
Low lntreat-varioue Loane
Newly app~ed programs
dealgned lor YOU
Call 1-8811-289-6331 X1. 24
HRS

25 Serloua People Wanted
Who want to LOSE we1ght
We Pay You Cash tor the
pounds you LOSE!
Safe, Natural, No Drugs.
800·201·0832
lincoln Arc-Wilder 16 horsepower engine, $1200. OBO
740-367-7893

LPN/FT, LPN Des1red EnJoy
Flexible Scheduling &amp; A
Reward 1ng Career In A
Homelike
Atmospf'lere,
Many Benef 1ts, competitive
Pay, Profess1onal Applica nts
May Apply Da11y, Mon .-Sun ,
9-4pm. Ravenswood Care
Cente r 11 13 Was hmgton ·
St .
Rave nswood.
{Across Ritchie Bridge, At 2
N., Last business on Right)
Come Join Our Team I You'll
Be Glad You 1dt

has a position open1ng for
an intervention Specialist
who Will serve elementary
students w1!h emotronal diS·
abilities at the Coopera tive
ED untt at Eastern Local
School 01str1Ct Applicants
must have cert1f1cation, or
be w1111ng to get a Temporary
Teachmg Certi11cale as
required for !~is pos r~i?n .
Th1s IS a full·t1me posttion
w1th benefits. Salary will be
based on training and experience Submit a lener ol

Say good bye to hrgh phone
bills! New local phone service With FREE unlimited
nat1on w1de long distance 1·
800·6~5-2908 or www freedommovle .com/1tpaysyou

reo

Free Estimates. lntenor an
extenor painting . Give your
home or garage a fresh
new look. We paint homes
garages, mobile homes.
buildings . barns and roofs.
(Colt M·S, B.fi)
(304)895 -3074
20 Veera experience
and references.

6

.r.'. -·FOR·"·a·~-ALE-- It
..

MOBILE HOM~

IURSALE

Good
used
14x70
Fleetwood , 2 t-edroom, 1
Oath, only $9995, Includes ·
delivery, Call Nikki 740·3857671.
All real eetate advertising
In tl'lls newapaper le
aubject to the Federal
Fair Houelng Act of 1968
. whicl"l makes It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination beeed on
rece, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation gr
discrimination."

Land Home Packages ava1l·
able. In your area, (740)4463384.
New 14' w1de only $899
down &amp; only $159.65 per
month, call Harold 740-3857671
New t 6x80 vmyl/ shingle,
2x6N walls, delivered , skirt· '
ed, footers Complete- only
$27,495. D &amp; W Homes
North
New 2003 Doublewide 3 BA
&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down .
an d &amp;295/mo 1-800 ·691~ ·
6777

Thle newapaper will not
knowingly accept
111dvertlsemenls for Jtal
estate which Ia In
violation of the law. Our
reader• are hereby
Informed that all
dwelllnga advertlaad In
thla newapaper ere
avatlable on an equal
opportunity bases.

L.,t_..AI tg:si i i F.Ai i~i iEO. .,If:

112 acre lot, Tycoon lake on
Eagle ROOd. city water. no .
septt c, mce shade trees,
ask1ng $8500, (740)247~
Letart Falls, OH, 3 bedroom 1100
house, 1 bath, detached
garaljle. new roof, siding, 33 WOODED ACRES
windows, carpet, &amp; kitchen , Great homesite w1th added .
bonus ot hunt1ng out your
$65.000.00 (740)247-2000
back door. Only $43 000,
NEW HOUSE Debbie Dnve land contract available
3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Gallta County, 15 m1nutes
$129.000. 740 -9268
from Holzer. Other proper·

.

Older 7 room house 10 be hes located in Meigs, Vinton,
torn down &amp; removed from Athens, Jackson , Monroe. ,
Be lmont and Washington
property.
You pay me
$ 3000. and haul it away Counties CaU for lree maps. ,
21:.3o.:8:.3:.:6:.:
5_ _ _ _~
740-446-1822 call early or :8:.oo-:.::
late.
·
4 acres Eagle A1dge Ad ,
excavated, electnc, septic
MORJLE HOMES
permit &amp; water available, 1
~
HJK SALE
• [740)992·0031
•

i

SUE

I

1 980 14x60 Mob1le Home, 2 4

r·O

I:

HousES

4

great place to ra1se ch ildren ,
6 bedrooms , 2 bath s,
kttchen w/appliances, d1n1ng
room, livmg room. central air
&amp; gas furnace. partial basement. 2+ acres. '$89,000 .
(740)742· 1049

j

FRUITS &amp;

~--•Vii&amp;&gt;iiiiF:I'AIIIRiiiiiiiiiiii-,J

I

r..,

few good reasons why your
next new home should be
from. Cole's Mobile Homes,
15266 US 0 East , Athens .
Ohio
1·740-592-1972,
-where you get your
money's worth~

FARM

r
I
~.w-----_..1 BoATSFOR&amp;"~~

House for rent, 3 room. 1 :
bedroom on 2003 Madison
Ave Electric heat. wmdOW:.
air (304)674 -0471
&lt;Co

HOUSE FOR RENT- 2 BAS.
Great m~town
1ocat1on ~
In home care fo r an elderly
$475 00 per month Depos1t..
person . Wanting 5 days a Forclosure 4br. 4ba. $9.900. Cole's Mobile Homes
&amp; references requi red. Call~
week. Hours 7am-5prri No for ltsting call . 800-719-3001 US so East , Athens, Oh1o, W1seman Real Est ate-740-:
weekends (740) 949-2722
Ex F144
45701 , 740-592-1972
446-3644
~

•

"

Need to consolidate or start
a new busmess · Call
National Bank toll free 1866-699·3064 Good cred1t,
no credit, bankruptcy

3rd A Sycamore· Otl1ce

space w1th 10,000 sq It
loading dock Spacious off.
street parking
call (740) 446·3994
9~5 Monday thru Friday

iiiifiiiiil
HOUSiliiOLD

Gooo;
A1r conditiOner, cools 4
rooms, S125 , new pool
pump/filter $75, garden IIIIer
$100, 4 guns. 740-446·1127
Good Used Appliances ,
and
ReconditiOned
Washers ,
Guaranteed .
Drye rs.
Ranges,
and
Refngerators. Some start at
S95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vrne St, (740)446-7398
Mid summer turn1ture sale
couch &amp; cha1r $100, swive l
rocker $35, overstuffed cha1r
S~O . 2 nice rocker recliners
$60, full SIZe bed $125, dlnmg tabtel6 cham; $95 ,
dresser! matching mght
sfand $95 .TV stands $15
each . Skaggs Apphances ,
76 Vine St 740·446-7396

t:JJU.L

•

1983 18ft. Galaxy 120-HP.

vo , open IIaJ\18, new .1n1er1or,

runs good, ready to go.
•
·
•

$2 300 388 9789

door-auto - power~AJC,

121 ,000 miles $3295. day·
740-446~1615, aher 7pm
740-446·1244

r

Looking for a new
house, pet or career?
Trying to sniff
ut the best buys
in the area?

Find them in the
111
assifi

• Complete

36198 Peach Forlt Rd.

741-192-l&amp;n

Pctmt..;,y, Ohio, 45769

Stop &amp; Compare

1·740-992-7007

SMALL
ENGINE
REPAIR

BISSELL

Hour• 1o.t pm
CloMCI luntlep

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemenl

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

Wmdows • Roofing
COMMERClAL and
RESIDENTIAL

1992 Yamaha VRX·650
Wave Runner. exc cond ,
low hours, double trailer,
runs great, $1 ,600 388-9789

• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters .
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

tM~~~~

• Chain Saws

JIM'S SMALL

ENGINE REPAIR
32119Welshtown Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769

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

PC DOCTOR

HOME CREEK
ENT. 1 1NC.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday

Tree Service

k

Top • RemoYGI • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

We Make House Calls

Gravely

Snapper

I

&amp; Sunday

GRAVELYTRACTOR

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday or
every month
All pack $5.00

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

992-2975
Lawn and Gardm Equipment is our
business, not our sideline

Bring this coupon

Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

1-800-822-0417
·wvs # 1 Chevy, Pontiac. Buick. Olds

SFREE

DURO-LAST
ROOFING

l3R ING IN TillS AD
FOn OW Y S I J 00 PER HUNDnED

Flat Root
Specialists·
Commercial and
Residential
Saves on Cooling .
MeTal and Mobtle
home roots· No

Problem. 15· Year
Guarantee

992-7953
591-4641
591·7002

Custom Van Dealer"

&amp;

•:.

1ll
1

Get Cash Today
Bring your

---~

ll\h1

J J 'i/1 Hold

Fi&gt; i'

•&lt;hj """-'

:~.·,,

for your family and
lond ones.

Let me show you how
affordable and easy It Is to
gel the coverage you need.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

I

Pomeroy OH
740.992 CASH 12274)

r

~

1

1
"Last checking llatement
I
'Laat pay chdck stub
1'Photo I.D. 'Phone Bitt with name and address 1
1
1
116 Main St.
I

~ " ~ Don't leave the debt of
• burial and final expenses

~1
:
X

\, , ... ~.,_;

I){ INSTA-CA$H ,J, I

Box 189 Middle_IM!rt

(740) 843-5264

30 IJJrys

Hill's Self
Storage

Ta~e

General
Contracting
New
Construction,
Remodeling,

29670 Bashan Road
Rac1ne. Ohto
45771

740·949·2217

ENT., INC.
992-7953

Sunset Home
Construction

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages,

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL

Help Wanted

dOIRNG
*HOlE
MllmNUCE
dUMlESS

amER

I

*FI'IIIIllll111181*

949-MD5

Buildings, Roofs,

More

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

Free Estimales

V. C. YOUNG Ill
519-814

992·6215
Olllo
22 Y ars al
Pomero~.

MYERS PAVIIG
Henderson, WV

671-2457 or 446-2112

~~~

t Driveways t Tennis Courts
t Parking Lots t Playgrounds

• Mulching • Edg1ng

High&amp; Dry

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

• Fertilization • Leaf
Removal • Pruning
• Landscape

SeD-Storage

NELSON'S LAWN
CARE
CommerCial Mowing

Maintenance Spring
and Fall cleanup

(740) 985-9829
(740) 591-3891

$15.00

Pole

Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;

• Room AddiUona &amp;
Remodeling .....,
• New Garag11
• Eloclrlcat &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; PolnUng
• Patio end Porch Decll:a

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675-2457

Resident ial •

Saturday, July 26
6:30pm

Let rr,e d:. 1' f·" y•JU'

HOME CREEK

IMPORTS
Athens

WANTED: Emersency Relief WOJtlers
(Substitutes) nHded to work with Individuals with menllll retllrdatlon In
Melp County. Hours are scheduled as
needed. Requirements: Hip school
dlploma/GED. valid driYer's llcenH.
three years cood drlvlnc experience
and adequate automobile Insurance
coverap. Sl.OO/hr. Send resume to:
Buckeye Commu1lty Ser¥1ces. P.O. Box
ID4. Jackson OH 45140. Deadline for
applicants: 7/15/DJ. Equal Opportu_nity
Employer.

the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

Backhoe and
Dozer Work.
Roofing.

THE944
STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp; Cars

t Roads t Streets

MANLEYS

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

SELF STORAGE

740-992-5232

97 Beech st.

l{i HT\\ a'.

carr

In Syracuse
( Fonnerly Whime,\' 5)

middleport, OH

Under new ownership
and new management

{10'K10' 610'K20')

COME JOIN US
7 Days A Weeki

[740) H2-3194
992-6635

County Rd. #35

Racine, Ohio

"Musl be 18 to play or to be in hall"

(740) 517-9138

American Legion Middleport

or
(740) 949-Q020

• I

JONES'

992·7953
591·7002
591-4641

740.992-2432

Hot Ball $1,200.00

•

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Ntw Items A4.1ed H-tekly

Remodeling

Starburst $2r000.00

•·

A Yariery o( (" •11o11R•ge
c lothing and hunling
equipment

• Garages

740-992-7599

Ba ss bOat, 1986 Fisher
Marina , 70 horse Johnson
·motor gu tde trolling motor,
depth Iinder &amp; gal\lan 1zed
trailer,
$3500
080,
(740)992-3701

Cellular

M'anagagement

• New Homes

All the packs you can play

Offica expenence computer
SkillS, filing, accounts rece1v·
able, apply WJih·1n. 740446-6700

romes lms~

UnderNaw

FREE ESTIMATES

1988 Ford Mallard Sprinter
1998 Neon 4dr. 130.000 27 ft. 47,000 miles loaded
miles , rune good, good exc. cond. pay off $11,000.
cond $1,800 OBO 740- 304-458-2566
At&lt;C lab pups. Vet checked , 256-1652
dews removed, 1st shots.
2001 Keystone Camper,
yeltow-$350 . black -$300 1999 Grand Am, red, auto, Excellent Condition. $9,800
2-door,
V6,
sunroof,
spotler,
740·441-0130
Call(304)675-6436
cruise, tilt, c-d , pw, pi , air,
For Sale 1/2 Blue Heeler, low miles. garage kept.
Camper tor sale, 1999 Terry
112 She1t1e pups. $35. each $8,200 74Q-388·8498
with slide-out, like new, no
740·379-2836
2000 Ford Winstar, leather, pets, non-smoker, 740·446·
Good homes for Meigs K-9 quads, loaded . exc cond. 6223
Rescue. Long-haired dase- asking
$14,900
NADA
.._,I I ~\ ll I "
hound. 1 year Elkhound , $17,000 call 740-446·6491
female, 1 year 4 tab m1x
pupp•es (740) 992-3779 Z·28 hood tor 80's $100.
Clown
face,
med1um, 1980 Cad . can be demo
female. male hound, choco- derby car or will sell 403
late lab, 9 months. Female engine &amp; trans . $200. 1984
BASEMENT
German Shephard. Spotted T-B1rd , SU itable for dragWATEIIPROOFING
bird dog. female [740)992- racer, $400 , have 357C Uncondittonal lifetime guar3354 Female Cann Terrier, Ford engine w/2x4 carbs &amp; antee. local references fur·
1 year, Corgi mix, spayed. 1 race ready $2200 1982 nished. Established t 975
year, Wnnlde laced, female , Ford Escort wagon, tor parts Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
6 month. White cocker, $75.. 1980 Camaro $300 .. 0870, Rogers Basement
male, neutered , 4 yea rs. 1989 1~ton GMC van, no Waterprootmg.
(740) 667·9712
title. $200.. several 400
Pontiac engines &amp; 400 a"uto
Pek1ngese pup fo r sale,
trans. 740-446-1822, early C&amp;C
General
Home
$150 .00 740 -379·2522
or late
Maintenance· Pa tntinQ. vinyl
Rat Terror pupp1e$ full
siding, carpentry, doors.
TRUCKS
blooded1 no papers, $75
windows , baths. mobile
FOR SALE
each. Parents on premises.
home repair and more For
304 -882-3340
free est1mate call Chat, 7401990 Chevy-Steps1de, auto. 992-6323
Reg1stered
Pomeran1an loaded , rebuilt 350, well
pups, 6·weeks -old, parents maintained , runs and looks
on site, 1st shots/wormed, good $3,000 3.!18-9789
Help Wsnted
reedy July 28 $300. 740441·0368
1991 F350 Dually extended

740~388 W1emaraner pupp1es 7 cab, axe cond
weeks Old shots, wormed , 1591 or 740-286-0211
ta11s docked $300 00 304·
2001 Ford E.11plorer Sport,
372·5656
white With gray lnm, leather
Mollohan Carpel, 202 Clark
tnt, sunr.cmf, CO player,AIC,
MUSICAL
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
exc cond. 25,000 miles,
INSilUJMFNIS
(740)446-7444 1-877-830·
$16,500 (740)446-6783
9162 Free Estimates, Easy
Wurli tzer piano for sale,
2001 Quad Cab Dakota, 4
ftnancmg , 90 Qays same as
condition.
excellent
WD. $16,000 OBO. 740cash V1sa/ Mas ter Card. (740)949-2518
256·1539 or 741&gt;256-1343
Onve~ a- l1ltle save alot

CGIImiCTIOII

WE REPAIR

Johnson 19ft, Tri haul, seats
9 wltrailer/ect. Has new outdrive plus original 0/D
$2,500 Jon boat wflraller
$300. See at lucas lane 1/4
1996 Pontiac Grand Prix SE m11e on nght (304)675·6236

4

Wl!ellt /he cuslomEN'"

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers

1994 17 112ft Dynasty
Runabout Jet Drive Boat,
w/Bim ini Top, oil Injected,
90HP. seats 6 Comfortably,
very clean, garage kept ,
winterized , comes wltrailer
1990 Toyota Cellca GT, 5
and many other accesspeed, needs bOdy work.
sories. Including Boat Cover
(304)675-5844
Asking $5,500 OBO. 740·
441-1461
1991 Astro Van $1 ,495.,
1992 Cavalier SfW loaded
4·Wmns
19ft
4.3
$1.795 .. 1995 Grandam 20 85
$2.795., 1997 Honda Cl\lic Mercru1ser eng1ne. All new
$4,795 We rake trades.
interior,
must
see
to
COOK MOTORS 740-446- appreciate. $6,000
0103
675-4891 or 674·2134

1995 Mazda·MX·3
Excellent cond., great on
gas, recent tune-up and
body-work, AC, 5-speed.
Must selll call 740-4468222

WILSON'
\1111\ snu•u s

ROBERT
BISSELL

1991 25-1/2" Wellscraft,
112-cabln, 454-motor, exc
cond. $12,500. catl740-367·
7272 after 6 740-441-1283

$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas,
chevys,
etcl
cars/trucks from $500. For
listings 1-800·719-3001 ext
3901

1994 Oldsmobile Cutlass
Supreme, red, 2dr, 3.4.
motor AJC, moon root,
leather loaded $3,000.00
740-441~9317

~---~~~--~

$1,300
74Q-742·234B
interest.firm
paid
$1 ,700, sell

Bh. Slide In Cattle racks . For Sale 2003 Suzuk1 Z--400,
~l!:22L---., $4,250. exc.,cond. 740-379ditioner $100, . Kmg size
9150call afler4pm
mattress &amp; box springs sso.
lJvmucK

24,000 BTU window a1r con-

t

47 Sycamgre • 11 .250 sq. ft
warehouse Formerly ~Th e
Feed Stop"

cond. 740-446-9416

s o.

ANnQUES

From $278·$348. Call 740- Moving~24x32 year old
!lQ2·.5064 Equal Ho using garage-$2,000 Urm, siding
~portun ities
on 60x30 hou se, bow winMOdern 1 br. apt (740)446· dow, garden w1ndow, atrium
door, coloma! storm door,
0390
venous sized Windows. hick·
New Ha-ven- 1 br. furnished ory kitchen cab1nets, carpet,
apt aiSQ has w/d, depos11 &amp; refngerator, electnc stove,
references,
no
pets, torm1ca cabinet top, warm
(740)992.0165
mornmg heater, 740·3677209
Now Taki ng Applicatlons35 West 2 Bedroom NEW AND USED STEEL
Townhouse
Apartments Steel Beam s, P1pe Rebar
Concrete,
Ang le:
Includes Water Sewage, For
Trash . $3501Mo , 740-446- Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Drams,
Gratmg
For
0008
Dr~veways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Tara
Townhouse Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Apartments. Very Spac1ous. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
2 9edrooms , 2 Floors, CA. 1 Friday, 8am-4 30pm. Closed
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted, Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Sunday.(740)446-7300
Pallo, Start S3851Mo. No
Office Fumlture
Pets, Lease Plus Security
New, scratch &amp; Dent.
D~p osi t Required, Days
740-446·3481 , Evenings · Save 70%. 1·800·527-4662
Argonaut 519 Bridge Street,
740-367-0502.
Guyando"e/Huntington. MIF
Twin Rivers Tower Is acceptmg applications for waiting
list lor Hud-subsized. 1· br,
apartment, call 675-6679
Block, briCk , sewer p1pes,
EHO
w1ndows , lintels. etc Claude
Wmte
rs, R1o Grande, OH
FoR LEASE

87 OUve: 6700 sq. ft. office
bUilding Dnve·thru parking
garage

1995 Ford E-350 Van, 14ft.
high cube box, excellent

Black Bernas,
Friend!~ 1998 Lincoln Navigator, red,
Ridge, $12.00 gallon, 256- 4x4, AWD, toacted, V-8, high
1145, please leave message miles, 7- passenger 740245-5970
Blackberries for sale 304'
895-3911
MoroRcvn&amp; 1
.
Country Produce Merker
Potatoes ,
Tomatoes. 1982 Suzuki 450 motorcyMelons, COm, etc 1n sea- cle , 55
call (74 0)99 2•
son Troyers Woodcraft 9 n89
m1les west of Gallipolis
along St R1141
2003 Yamaha
TTR-90.
Electric
start/automatic
clutch. 6 weeks old. Son lost

Adult Size go-cart, good --.
cond phone 740·245-5208 3 yr old Jersey CO'fl &amp; calf; 7
4 rooms and bath, all ut1lit1es
or 740-446-2311, $600. firm yr old mule (broke for buggy,
paid, $400 month . 46 Olive
(740)742-9217
Cool Down!!
Central
Street (740)446·3945
Coolinn Systems, New and
Mame-Anjou
B~AUTIFUL
APART· Used. v lnslalled (740)446- Reg1stered
bulls, black and polled , 1
AT
BUDGET
MENTS
yearhng, 1 proven bull, purPl'IICES AT JACKSON 6308
ESTATES, 52 WeSiwood GE upright freezer, 11 .6 cu. chased 111 South Dakota,
0)1~ from $297 10 $383 tt, excellentcond 1tion, $100, easy calving , very docile, all
offspring are black. 740-245Walk to shop &amp; mO'IIIes. Call (740)742·8907
9315,
email
740-446·2566
Equal
JET
walken::attleOyahoo.com
Hous1ng Opportunity.
AERATION MOTORS
qractous living. 1 and 2 bed- Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
room apartments at VIllage Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
Auros
Manor
and
RIVerstde 800·537-9528
FOR
SAlE
_Apartments m Middleport.

Commerc1al lots for •
BR , central heat and a1r, lots sale/lease/rent. 1410 Lewis
FOR
of extras, $6,500 740-441- St Pt PI all utility hookups.
Also 1 small hOuse call after
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up 9259
5pm (304)550·0906
for 1mmedlate possesSion all
w1th1n 15 m1n of downtown
Approx 3 acres Clendenin
Gallipolis Rates as low as 1980 clean used mobile D1strict approx 1/2 mtle ort
home, pnce to sell, 1·600·
6%. (740)446-3218 .
AT2 $6500 304-675-1636
837-3238
lot tor sale m Rac1ne,
3 Bedroom newly remod1990 14x52 mob1le hOme, (740)992-5858
. eled, m Middleport. call Tom
will
help
wldel1very,
Anderson attar 5 p.m
Nice mobile home lots, quiet
(740)385·2434
992·3348
country setting, $115 per ·
1995 Clayton 14x7D, 3 bed- month,
incl udes water,
3 br house, w/JBCUZZI on 25
room, 2 bath, heat pump, sewer, trash, 740·332-2167
acre M/l 36l!48, horse barn
located in 'Clifton, WV
740-388·1591 or 740-286Rl \ I \ I "
(304)773·6074
0211
2001 t6x80 Skyline w/near
4 bedroom, 2 story house,
ground on OhiO River in
acre
out of high water, gas heater
WV 3br 2ba, all upgrades
FOR RENT
&amp; ale. (740)992 ·2529 lor lhroughoul. [304)773-5808 ..__ _,iiiiiiiiii-_.1
appomtment to inspect.
Cotes Mob1le Homes an 1-3 bedrooms foreclosures
Brick Ranch 3bf 11/2bath .
assembled team w1th over home from $199 month 4%
un frn ish ad - basement ,
120 years of housin,9 experi- down 30 years at 8 .5% APR
attached 1-car garage 1
ence Patriot Homes out- tor listing call 1-800-319 acre 1230 Georges Creek
standing 11~. year warranty, 3323 ext.1709
$80,000 446-9769
shmgles &amp; msulallon by
3 BR house, free water &amp;
Pubhc Auction - 24 log Owens Cornt ng, v1nyl s1dmg sewer. no pets $450 month
by
V1pco,
James
Hard1e
Sid·
homes packages to be
$400-depoSII 740-245;5064
offered Saturday, Aug us t lng available, low ~E " thermopane
windows
by
Ktnro
3 br in Middleport $375 .00 ~
2nd, 11 ·00am , Humcane ,
WV. Rogers Realty &amp; carriage ca rpets &amp; floonng dep. no pets 740-992-3194 •
AuctiOn Co , N C lie #8 13 by Congoled. appliances by House and Mobile Home,·
Free brochure, Buffalo log General Electric, faucets by
both 2br, trashlwater pa1d , •
Homes,/1:88Ef-562-2246 or Gtac1er Bay &amp; Moen, light
very cl ean. nel!r Porter:
l1xtures,
cabmet
pulls
&amp;
www auctionloghomes com
knobs d1rect from Home $375/$400 , depos1Urefer·'•
N1ce cou ntry home , private , Depot (easy to match just a ences 740·388~1100

HOMFS

Wanted full t1me wartress.
apply 1n person, l'loliday Inn,
Care for the elderly in my
Gallipolis
country home 740-388-o118
The
. Athens-Meigs
Educat1onal Service Center
D&amp;:J Picky Palntere

Maintenance Person need·
ed, part -time , Valley V1ew
Apartments. 800 State
Route 325. Thurman. Ohio.
Apply at otftce or submit
resume . 740-245-9170

Kn1ghts Excavating, SilO·
developments, ponds, we do
d1rt. no JOb to small, all work
guaranteed, fu lly-ms ured
740-682·3168
740-6450639

BUSINF.'lS

Uva in Caregi'ller needed tor
elderly lady who reqwes
assistance /daily activities.
Call
(304)675-2178
or
(304)675·5578

o

To Do

lr.:l:"""--::------,

OFFICE WORKER
To work m busy health Care
,
'~'RAINING
othce. Experience with
office machines, ,supervi·
sion of employees, payroll, Galllpclle Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
billing and scheduling.
One year Health Care olflce Call Today! 740·446·4367,
1-800-214 -0452
experience reque sted .
www ga.llipoi!Scareercollege com
Benefits too numerous to
Rep #90-05-12748
print 800-759-5383

Homemakers needed to
provide 1n home serv1ces . m
the Rtpley &amp; Cottageville
areas, (304)295-0890

wv.

WANIID

LAWN CAREl
You tell me what you pay
and we'll do it for less I
Same day service m most
The
Athens·Me1gs cases (304)372-8634 lea\le
Educational Ser\llce Center message or (304)273·4511
has a poSition opening for
ar:~ Interve ntiOn Spec1a11st
who will serve h1gh school Wtll pressure wash homes,
trailers. decks metal buildstudents With emotional diS· Ings and guHers Call (740)
ablli!les at the Metgs County
446·0 151 ask for Ron or
Intervention
Sc hool leave a message
Applicants must have certifi·
I I "\\ "\( I \1
cation , or be w1ll1ng to get a
Temporary
Teac hing
10
Certificate as reqUired for
BustNES'i
this position Th1s IS a lull01'1'0R"IlJNriY
t1me pos1t1on Wllh benefits
Salary Will be based on
!NOTICE!
training and eJ&lt;perience. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHSubmtt a letter of Interest. ING CO recommends that
resume , and references to you do bus1ness with people
John
D
Costanzo, you know, and NOT to send
Su penntendent,
Athensmoney through the mail until
Me 1gs Educat1onal ServiCe
you have investtgated the
Center, PO Box 684, 320 1/2
offering.
'
E Matn Sl , Pomeroy, Oh
45769 Application deadline. Need an extra $36,000.00 a
Until pos1tion is fi lled. The year? Vending route tor sale.
AMESC rs an equal opportu· Cost $5000 00 Help fi nd
nity employerlprovlder
missing children. 1-800-8537155
or
www.webde1'10
sign 199.com

Wanted person or couple to
~ w/da ily routi ne on
modern dairy farm. Including
milkmg, feeding young stock
&amp; crops. Tractor expenence
necessary. Housing &amp; utilities posstble w/hourly wage
Respond with resume &amp; 3
references 1n letter form to
JR24, 200 Ma1n Street, PI
PI WV 25550

Help wanted canng tor the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paying mimmum wage,
new shifts. 7am-3pm, 7am5pm. 3pm-11pm, 11pm7am, ca ll 740-992-5023 .

1:aA, unfurn, AJC, WID, on
premises, ut1l pd., $350,
mo.. No pets, deposit/references required
740-4463i!57

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

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publlthln; reterv.. the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Errort mutt be reported on the flrtt day of publication and
Tribune-Sentlnei·Reglater will be reepgnalble for no more then the coat of the tpact occupied by the error and o~ the tl,.t lnnrtlon. We thall not bt liable
any loss or expense th1t rnultl from the publication or oml11lon of an advertisement. Correction will be made in the flret avalltblt edition. • Box number
art alway• contidentiaf. • Current rate card •ppU ... • All real est1te advertiMmente are sublect to the Fedtrsl Felr Housing Act ot 1968. • Tills "''"poperl
ecclpls only help wtnled eda rneetin; EOE llanderds. We will not knowingly accept any advertising In violation of I he law.

..,l,_o_HELP_.w_ANJED
__,..II• ,a

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Si lver.
Gold
Coins,
Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rmgs ,
US Currency. M TS Com Shop, 151
Second Avenue, GallipoliS,
740-446·2842

Send resume to
Pr. PLEASANT
Mens softball tournament
0.0 Mcintyre Park 812-8/3 6 Family Yard Sale- 86 The Da1ty Sentinel
$80 00 Chris Howell 441-. Burdette AdditiOn 9am-?
1010 or 379~2485
Friday 25th &amp; Saturday 26th. PO Box 729-8

I

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
;un,da•y In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
Sundays Paper

r

---

r

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
. Ads Must Be Prepaid ·
•

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

Used Furniture Store, 130
Bulav11le Pike , mattresses,
dressers, couches. bunk
beds,
bedroom
suites,
recliners. grave monuments
740-446-4782 , Gallipolis,
Oh. Hrs 1Q-4 Stop By

Wurlltzer piano Mahogany 1988 Ranger, V-6, goOd
fimsh $1500. neg. Town &amp; tran. &amp; engine, good !Ires.
Country Aeal Estate 304- (740)742-9217
675-5548
•.

ownerM&amp;:E!.IANrous.
MERJSC!ll~ r.10---~---_.J
F.Qu=Nr

~egt~ter

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

crec-pa---,.trs.,-o_n;_m_a_io_r_b_r_an_d_s_l_n
shop or at your home

Buy or sell. Riveri ne
Antques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740 _
1 and 2 bedroom apart- 992·2526. Russ Moore,
m8nts, furnished and unfurnished, security deposit •
r$,Quired, no pets, 740-9922218.

/

To

~PAKIMENTS
FOR RENT

Thompsons Appltance &amp;.
Repalr-675-7388. For sale,
re -conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators, gas and electric
ranges, a1r conditioners, and
wringer washers. Wit! do

''The Little restaunnt
with the btg taste"

�Page B&amp; • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, July 24, 2003

--

www.mydallysentinel.com _

(.

Contest .invite~ommunities
to improve disa~led access
.

DEAR ABBY: Somewhere
in this great country there's a
town or city th\11 will win
$25.000 and national recogni·
lion by entering the National
Organization on Disability's
2003 Accessible America
contest. Anyone who feels
that his or her community is a
model of accessibility - a
place where people with dis·
abilities can fully participate
just like anyone else should encourage the mayor
to enter the contest before the
Oct. 31, 2003, deadline.
When communities make
the commitment to improve
accessibility, all of their citi·
zens and visitors benefit. One·
fifth of all Americans have
some sort of disability. That's
why it is crucial that communitie ~ ensure a safe and welco ming environment. The
Accessible America contest
puts a spotlight on those cities
and towns that are leaders in
improving the quality of life
for people with disabilities.
As vice chairman of the
National Organization on
Disability (NOD), l urge may--brs in towns large and small to
place a priority on creating a
level playing field for all citizens by providing equal
access to their services and
facilities. I encourage them

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
not only to share their suc·
cesses by entering the contest,
but also to join NOD' s
Community
Partnership
Program on behalf of their
constituents. It's a great way
to learn how best to comply
with the Americans With
Disabilities Act and to get tips
on maximizing access and
opportunities. -CHRISTO·
PHERREEVE
DEAR CHRISTOPHER:
Count me among your many
fa ns. I'm pleased to publicize
such a worthwhile endeavor.
Readers ,
the
NOD
Community
Partnership
Program is sponsored by the
Alcoa Foundation, and the
Accessi ble America contest is
sponsored by UPS. l salute
both for their community
involvement.
To Jearn more about the
contest, call (202) 293-5960
or visit the NOD Web site:

www.nod.org. I' II put the
name of the winning entrant
in my column in Dece mber.
DEAR ABBY: I am 16 and
attending summer school. My
sister, "Maria," is a year older
than me. She's new to our
sc hool becau se she ju st
moved here to live with our
mom and me. (She was living
with Dad, but he kicked her
out.)
Since the day Maria set foot
on campus, every guy here is
after her -- and I know why.
She wears skimpy clothes and
has a big chest.
·
Now every boy I like ends
up liking Maria instead of me.
I'm sick of it. There's only so
much a person can take, and
I've reached my limit. Do you
hav e any advice for me,
Abby? - EXASPERATED
IN NEW MEXICO
DEAR EXASPERATED:
1')1 begin with some words for
your mother, because she is
the perso n who is · going to
have to deal with your sister.
There is a time and a place for
everything. Maria is crying
out· for attention. but she's
getting the wrong kind- and
unless there is intervention,
she'll wind up in trouble.
Your mother should make it
her business to find out what
is proper attire at your school

ACROSS

42 Freudian
topics
1 Office subs 43 Cabin
6 Traffic
46 In and ofIndicator
48 Squirrel ·
11 Unmoving ·
food
12 - Kea
50 list price
54 Relax
volcano
13 Shining
In the pool
15 Portray
55 - fatale
16 Brawl
56 Steamy
18 After
d.ance
deductions 57 Stumbles
19 Hot tub
21 "The King
DOWN
and I"
name
1 Aunt,
22 Thick slice
in Madrid
23 Norwegian 2 High school
monarch
sub].
25 Hostel
3 Director
28 Nanny
- Brooks
30 Engage
4 Inexpensive
In rivalry
housing
31 Sign before 5 Marshal's
VIrgo
badge
32 Qty.
6 Iowa
33 Casual
7 Kind
farewell
of she
35 Mandate
8 Breakdown
37 Some MDs 9 A single
38 Folksinger
time
-tves
10 Light bulb
40 Garden tool
measure
41 Country
14 Famous
addr.
clinic

I

and enforce the dress code .
· Now. some advice for you:
Sibling rivalry is normal the attention your sister is
attracting
is
transitory.
Concentrate on your grades
and on activities at which you
can excel. That way, you'll be
an outstanding individual in
your own right and not just
"somebody 's sister." Trust
me, it'll pay off in the end.
P.S . Please clip this column
and show it to your mom.

under lights, B1

•
15 Tibet'sLama
Rain
drains
Slouch .
Pieces
Hitch
Service
charge
Homer
opus
Bottle tops
Make
mention of
Recede
Mongol
dwellings
Hobo
Suggestive

17

19
20
22
24

!Y

(Dear Abby is wrillert by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne 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.)

Kishbaugh, her
art at vas, A2

OUtoopen

25

26
27

29
34
.

36
39

look
43 Knife handle
44 Pac·1 o team
45 Saturday
morning
fare
46 Gung·ho

about
47 Took off
49 Old cloth
51 Yvette 's
boyfriend
52 Bratty kid
53 "Miserables"

Sports
• Crocker among
unsigned . See Page 81
• Pirates beat Reds.
See Page 81

The
newspaper
is a valuable
learning tool
for students
~~ of all ages .
It connects
the principles
and facts they learn in the
classroom with stories
and events that are
happening here and
around the world.

Sentencing postponed in terrorism case
COLUMBUS (A P) - An
Ohio man who pleaded guilty
to helping the al-Qaida terrorist network ha s been placed
on a suicide watch and is on
medication for mental health
problems, hi s attorney says.
A judge has delayed the
scheduled sentencing of
lyman Faris while a mental
health evaluation is done.
Faris, 34, of Columbus, was
sc heduled to be sentenced
Aug. 1 in federal court in
Alexandria, Va .. on two counts

of providing aid to al-Qaida.
U.S. District Judge Leonie
Brinkema on Thursday granted Faris' request for a psychological or psyc hiatric
e valuation.
.
Faris has been placed on a
suicide
watch
at
the
Alexandria, Va., city jail and
is taking Prozac, · an antidepressant, to allow him to func tion within "normal" limits,
according to a motion filed by
Faris' attorney, Fred Sinclair.
in federal court Thursday.

There's plenty of room for
improvement in the year
ahead, so sort out what is
important to you. The changes
may come about slowly, but
with patience, things will
change.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -learn up with an associate if
you find you are in need of a
few
good
suggestions.
Anyone would be flattered to
be included in your plans.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- A major objective can be
accomplished today, but
you'll have a few rough spots
to clear up first. Success will
depend on your preparation.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Don't allow another to
speak for you. You're the one
who can make the best pre·
sentatioo. Sell it yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Your position will
actually be stronger than that
of yot!r counterpart, so don't
let the other guy or gal dictate
all the terms of the transac·
liiCI&lt;.~. A~ 'ltU EKm\HC:t

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tion.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -It is rarely wi se to
rush to judgment, and today is
no exception. If you want to
make smart decisions. take
time to consider all the angles
on all the issues.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19) - Be protective of
your career interests today.
Attention and prudence will
prevent any mishaps.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- Subdue your assertiveness today when dealing with
associ ate s on a one-to-one
basis . If you get pushy, you'll
not win their support.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - This can be a productive day for you, provided you
avoid false starts. Identify
your priorities and concentrate only on them.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) A plan you've had
doubts about is feasible today.
Get over your · fears. Any
kinks you encounter can easi·
be worked out.

TAURUS (April fO-May
20) - Your possibilities for
personal gain are very good,
even if early indicators appear
questionable. If you don't
throw in the towel, you can
realize a profit.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) - If you're not diligent,
the control ' of an important
matter will slip from your
grasp. Don't be indifferent to
indicators; you're the one who
can make things happen.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - Don't be so quick to
alter eve nts if you get a bit
doubtful. As the clock ticks
on, you'll see things begin-

Tryin g to patch up a broken
romance? Tile Astro.Grapil
Matchmaker wheel can help , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
you understand what to do to
~~~oRO@@@
make the relationship work.
f ,l '
S C R I M M ~ G E•
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker.
\!Y
P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
••ooWN
44092 -0167. Visit www.bernice4u.comfor more advice.

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AVERAGE GAME 160-170

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JUDD'S TOTAL

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AVERAGE GAME IIG-120

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Scrim-

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TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

College Oidiooary.

• Olevia Roush, 98
• Marcia Denison, 94

• Overcoming persistent
sadness . See Page A2
• Religion briefs See
PageA2
• Community calendar
SeePage AS

Volunteers needed to transport Confederate cavalry

=

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DIRECTIONS! Make a 2· to 7-letter word from lhfl letters on eadl yardlin&amp;.
Add points to sach word or tatter uSing sconng directiOns at right. Sewn-letter
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1'\'IJI\D SCRIMMAGE" SOlUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
f
C' 2003 Ul'lll.cl fiMUI'I S.,ntlll:.l . Inc.

T.

attempt. She said Thursday
he needs' such an evaluation.
"By the history I've had
Wi th him, I would say, yes. he
does," she said. The couple
divorced in 2000 after five
years of marriage.
Faris. a U.S . citi zen from
Pakistan, pleaded g uilty in
May to providing slee ping
bags, cell phones and cash to
al-Qaida. He faces up to 20'
years in prison and a
$500,000 fine.

POMEROY- For more
than a dozen years, Rita
and Junior White have
been entertai ning at the
Meigs County Sen ior
Citizens Center once or
twice a month.
They were there
Thurs day playing and
s inging the old songs like "Dream ", "Hey
Good Lookin " and
" Harbor Lights " - to
the delight of the
Center's lu ncheon
crowd.
The seniors sang along
with the Whites and
danced to their music
making it apparent that
this was a time of fun
for everyone .'
(P hotos by Charlene
Hoeflich)

ning to work themselves out.

i:

be co nfident he's able to
a'sist me in preparation of his
defense for se ntenc in g or
whatever lies ahead."
The government did not
oppose the request. The evalu·
ation is expected to delay sentencing by several weeks. No
date for the evaluation was set.
Faris' ex-wife. Geneva
Bowling, of Columbus, says
her former husband suffe red
from depression and was
treated at a Col umbus mental
hospital after a suic ide

Whites entertain at Senior Citizens Center

Astrograph.
BY BERNICE BEDE 0SDL

Sinclair said he's had. trouble co mmuni cating with
Faris about legal documents
presented for review.
Sinclair requested a medical eva lumion 10 determine
whether Faris is competent to
assi st in hi s defense.
In a phone interview. Sinclair
said Faris has pre-existing
mental problems that haven't
been properly addressed.
"He's presently of a state of
mind he needs some evaluat ion," Sinclair said. "I want to

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

JUDO'S SOLUT10N TOMORROW
e 2000 Unlit!! Future Syndltatt, Inc .

hoefl ich@ mydailysentinel.com

Sunny, HI: SO., Low: SO.

r=---.,

POMEROY - When the
Morgan 's Raid re-enactors
arrive in Wilkesville on Sept.
3 for the first night of their
encampment,
they
will
unload their horses and gear
and then move their vehicles
with trailers to Bashan for the
trip home after the 2 p.m.
Sunday skirmish there .
Since the Ohio Bicentennial
feature event starts from

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' LL lll E~E lliJTEL5 WRWIIIE
11)65 ON VACATIO~.

NO LEAPIN~ ON lliE SED W11!1
ITET.
NO 5LOS&amp;R1Nfr WIITER ALL !1/ER ThE tLOOR.

ELECTRA, AS LON~ A5 ~OU
USE 6A51C

MO

PLA~II'lfr 11i r&gt;&lt;r~

W\111 'lliE NICE llli!.IEL5.

NO EATIM6 "l\IE lfol· ROOM BROCHURES.
NO LEI\VIN 6 SU M~ RAWHIOE5 ON 111( tUR~ITUR L

NO tl05E ~INTo ON ThE WINDOW~ .
NO MlllUNo £ACH TINIE nERE'S Afol ANI NIAL ON 1'J.

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GJ\LL li4AT

Wtlkesville and the re-en&lt;K.'Iors '
vehicles will be parked at
Bashan, volunteers are needed to
drive
the
Confederate
Cavalrymen back to their campsite in Vinton County that
Wednesday evening.
It is approximately 30 miles
and will require numerous vehicles. The route back is County
Road 321 (Eagle Ridge Road)
to Ohio 7 to Ohio 124. The time
involved to make the trip is
about 45 minutes, according to
Gemld Powell , who is assisting
with making the tmnsportation

in participating as militia or a
Union infantryman are invited to attend a training worl}sho p which has been planned
for Aug. 17 on the Pickens
farm near Five Points.
Registration starts at 8 a.m.
and the workshop will be held
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There
will be a $ 10 registration fee.
For further informatio n
about the workshop, co ntac t
Darrell Markijohn , Morgan 's
Re-e nactment event coordinator, (330) 492-7107, eLocal indi vid uals interested mail eds harp@ad l. co m. or

arrangements.
Anyone willing to assist is
asked to register with Powell
at 992-2622, Jane Ann Burns
at 669-3915 o r David Stiffler
at 669-46 71.
The vehicles with tra ilers
making
the
trip
from
Wilkesville to Ba,han wiU be
escorted by the Goldwing Road
Riders, Chapter E3 of Pomeroy.

Be a re-enactor

call Bob Vance, commander.
(614) 477-937 1.
Participants must be at least
16 years old to serve as soldiers, use weapons, or be pre·
sen t at the battle area. They
must
also
demonstrate
knowledge of proper drill and
safety.
The militia participants are
to be dressed as the local civil·
ians. Garments worn by the
militia mu st be made by period pattern of materials closely
resembling those avai lable in
the late 1850s to 1860s.

A

' VACAitOt-1" 7 ~
0
0
Q

Carleton requests two-mill levy; 10 staff members laid off

Beau Diddle
Southern Elementary

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@ mydailysentinel.com

Index
l Slldlons - 12 Pages

AtiAl.•

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
.
pear Abby
Editorials
~Faith• Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports

A2
83·5
86
86
A4
A2

AS
A6

AS
81 ·3

0 2003 Ohio V11lley Publishing)Co.

SYRACUSE- The Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Di sabilities will
~gain seek a two-mill ievy in
November.
The levy request, made to the
Meigs Co unty Commissioners o n
Thursday, follows the layoff of I 0
employees earli~:r this week.
The MR/DD Board, which oversees the operation of .the Carleton
School and Meigs Industries adult
workshop, has tried to pass the levy
seven times since 1998.
"Those unsuccessful attempts have
re sulted in extre mely tight budgets
and caused the board to eli minate 13
positions through attrition, resulting
in a reduction of services," Executive

•

.

'.

''

'&lt;'"·: 1;,-.~lillillli.,~~~M•IIi~!Or'
~·

Director Steve Beha said Thursday.
The board 's financial difficulties
have forced the layoff of I0 employees, 'effective Aug. 3 1, Beha said.
Four veh icle assistants. two regi stered . adult services workers, a van
driver. a physical therapi st, a therapy
assistant and an adapti ve physical
. , education position have been eliminated , and will not be re-hired unless
the levy is approved.
The levy. if passed, would generate
$500,000 per year for opera tions,
enoug h to offset losses from state
budget cuts totaling $109,000 in
2003 and 2004, a projected defline in
local property tax proceeds of
$77.000 in 2003 , and increases in
em ployee insurance, vehicl e and liability insurance premiums of
$84,000 .
Beha said the board may be forced

to study the possibility of closing the
school and work shop on Ct. ~ain days
and ot her budget c uts between now
and Dec . 3 1.
"I cannot overstate how important
the passage of the Nov. 4 lcvy is to the
well-bei ng of the program, and to the
continuation and restoration of ser· '
vices next year for students and adults
with developmental disabilities,'' Beha
said.
The Rev. Walter Heinz, chairman of
the MRIDD. Board, said this eighth ,
last-ditch effort to pass the live-year
levy wi II likely seal the fate of many of
the school's programs.
''If this levy doesn't pass thi s time.
the program will no longer be recog·
nizable," Hein z said.

Area
Did you know that the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensalion is
offering grant monies for Transitional Work Programs?
'Did you know this program can reduce your workers' camp costs?
Call Holzer Work Link to see how this program can be provided at
;;:;;.._.__ _P'P"'!II......
no~ch!.!!a~r~ge to state funded employers.

MOM ~Nf ME
AN OI.D BLANKET

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

Call

Holler
Work l.~lnk

446·5733 or
toll •••• ·1 ~866-308·2266

www.holzer.org
,•

------0

"

'

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