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Sunday, July 27,2003

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Cube-form home features asymmetry and simplicity.
(AP} The Bauhaus was an
avant-garde art and design
schoo~ founded in Germany in
1919 by Walter Gropius. This
school began with l! utopian definition: 'The building of the
future was to combine all the
arts in ideal unity." This required
a new type of student, one who
would work in a collaborative
environment with other artists.
Handcrafting was stressed, with
alliances between artist and
applied arts. The Bauhaus
school dramatically influenced
art, architecture, design, interior
design and crafts. In 1933 the
school was closed by the staff
due to pressure from the
Gennan State Secret Police.
This modem cube-form house
was influenced by the Modem
Movement in architecture, which
was largely fueled by the
Bauhaus School in Gennany.
This Modem Movement spread
across the world in the f920s
through the 1970s and has affect·
ed almost every city in its wake.
fuJiures of this house, Plan
APWB-115, are simple geomet·
ric forms, creative use of glass and
wood, clean unomamented
details, simple rich materials, and
logical, functional space planning.

air conditioning Hardwood
floors Skylight at center stair
Sloped glass skylights

mttmacy and a connection
with the outdoors." - Doug
Wells, Wells Kastner Schipper

ESTIMATED COST
OF CONSTRUCTION
(exludes lot)

ARCHITECTURAL
GLOSSARY

Northeast $330,(XX) $360,(XX)
Southeast $280.000-$320,tXXJ
Midwest $290,tXXl-$330,000
Northwest $315,000-$345,000
. Southwest $300,000-$330,000

DESIGNER
COMMENTS

Skylight.
A window opening in the
roof of a house to allow for
external light. Some sky·
lights can be opened to allow
airflow. The plastic or glass
covering may be clear or
opaque.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

For a study plan of this
house, send $5 to House of
· the Week, Box 1562, New
York, NY 10116-1562. call
(877)-228-2954, or order at
APHouseoftheweek.com. Be
sure to include the plan number. For downloadable study
plans and construction blueprints of House of the Week
before April 2003, see house- This modern cube-form house was influenced by the Modern Movement in architecture, which
oftheweek.com.
was largely fueled by the Bauhaus School in Germany. This Modern Movement spread across
the world in the 1920s through the 1970s and has affected almost every city in its wake.

-Sports

ww~

MONDAY, JULY 28 , 2003

• Reds beat Mets. See
Page B2
• Five time! Five Time!
$ee Page B1

BY J. MtLES LAYTON

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
RACINE _A tire causing
an estimated $200,000 in
damage broke out Sunday
morning at Southern High
School in Racine .
Doors, windows, lights and
a myriad of other items were
damaged in the fire, according to Superintendent Bob
Grueser. He s.aid the damage
is cov.ered by insurance.
The fire started around 4:51

a.m. in a closet in the hallway
near the front entrance of the
building where an ice
machine and a vending
machine are located. There
were no injuries reported.
Due to the nature of the
concrete walls surrounding
the ice machine and the tire
doors that opened into the
. closet, the · fire was somewhat contained to the immediate area. Light fixtures
melted and nearby pictures
on the ~ails were damaged,

but the large trophy case near
the front entrance of the high
school was not damaged.
The Racine Volunteer Fire
Department
and
the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department responded to the
scene. Grueser said the large
amount of smoke made visibility difticult for tiretighters. He said they had to use a
special I thermal-imaging
camera to be able to find the
source of the blaze before
extinguishing it.

County
Fair tickets
gq on sale

"The fire departments did
a tremendous job of containing the fire and limiting the
amount of damage ," he said.
Grueser said that while
cause of the fire is still under
investigation. he believes it
may have been caused by an
electrical short in the ice
machine. While the fire was
contained to the closet.
Grueser said there was a lot
of smoke damage. Water
Ple•se see Fire, AS

BY CHARLENE HotruCH
hoeflich@ mydailysentineLcom

POMEROY - Season and
membership tickets for the
2003 Meigs County Fair.
Aug. 11-16. are now on sale
Season tickets may be purchased from Joe's Country
Market, Rutland; Home
National Bank, Racine; Hill's
Citgo, Racine; Baum Lumber
Companr., Chester: Sugar Run
Aour Mtll. Pomeroy; Swisher
Lohse Phar~nacy, Pomeroy;
Ltttle John s Food Mart,
Tuppers Plains; Gloeckner's
R~staurant ,
Pomeroy ;
Whaley's Grocery. Darwin;
Syracuse Country Market,
Symcuse; Dan's, Middleport;
Taz's Marathon, Route 7,
Pomeroy; Reed's ' Country
Store,
Reedsville;
McDonald's,
Pomeroy;
Farmers Bank, Pomeroy; Little
John's Food Mart, Middleport,
Rutland Department Store,
Rutland; By the Way Country
Store.
Langsville,
and
Landmnrk, Chester.
The price for season tickets
which are sold only to indi·
viduals and not to a company
or organization are $14. The
tickets give gate admission to
the fair, free parking all.week
long, and entertainment and
shows, but not the amusement rides.
Membership tickets which ·
entitle holders to admission
and voting privileges are $15
and may be purchased from

'All Aboard with Junior Fair'

Architectural style: Modem Bauhaus Revival Main Level:
1,552 sq. ft. finished Upper
Level: 1,093 sq. ft. finished
Lower Level: 31 2' sq: ft. finished Attached two-car garage:
624 sq. ft. Overall depth: 72 ft.
Overall width: 71 ft. Exterior
members: 2-x-6-ft., wood
frame Foundation walls: castin-place concrete Primary exterior material: cedar channel
rustic siding Wmdows: Low-E
insulated glass Roof material:
sloped rubber membrane roof
HVAC gas forced-air heat and

BY

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Hontt:
Tt)s

'

..

'

Page AS
• Paul
Moore, 82
'
• Patricia McCoy, 55
• Andrew Richard
Lambert. 22

.

. '-'

!

Inside
• More storms slam Ohio.
See Page A2 .• Community calendar
SeePageA3
• Dennehy's body found
SeePage AS

Tip 1
• Copper pots can be a
homemaker's worst enemy.
They look stunning when
they' re clean, but keeping
them that way can be a mghtmare, unless you know this
trick: First, sprinkle a thick
layer of ·common table salt
onto the copper. Next, use a
spray bottle to apply a small
amount of vinegar. The copper will brighten before your
eyes.
Getting rust stains out of
porcelain and chiria plumbing
fixtures is just about as easy.
You' II need a ·pumice stick
and a small container of turpentine. Not paint thinner turpentine. For gratifying
results, just dip the pumice
stick in the turpentine and rub
the rusty area.

Weather
Stolins, HI: 80s, Low: 601

POMEROY - In preparation for the !40th Meigs
County Senior and Junior
Fair, Aug. 11-16, dozens of 4H clothing projects were
judged and grand and reserve
champions selected .in the
various classes.
The judging was followed
by a style revue for parents
and friends of the 4-H'ers in
the community : room of the
Meigs County annex. Becky
Baer, extension agent, introduced the participants as they
modeled their garments. "All
Aboard with Junior Fair" was
the theme of decorations for
the revue. .
While many garments were
made by the ·club members,
others with clothing projects
demonstrated how they had
put together an outfit on a
bud~et, a class called frugal
4-H club members named grand champions in their respective clothing projects were from
fashton .
A second style revue will the left, Kimberly Caster, Katie Hayman, Alyssa Holter. Becky Taylor, Rachael Morris. Amanda
Windon, Kelsey Holter, and Tiffany McDonald whose dress was made by Lindsey Houser.
Lindsey was also named grand champion in two other clothing projects. (Charlene Hoeflich)
Pl•se •• Clothes, AS

BY

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Index
1 Sections - 11 1'111111

. ZJr '

-

......

~

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eaJATr.T Wireless
.

.

.

'

J. MtLES LAYTON

Calendars

.

A3

tlassifieds

83

tomics

86

Dear Abby

86

Editorials

.

A4

Movies
Obituaries

AS
AS

Sports

81

Weather

A2

REEDSVILLE - A truly
familiar face smiles from
behind a counter at Reed's
Country Store in the tiny town
along the banks of the Ohio
River in eastern Meigs County.
Melody Hauber, 46, has
worked at the store since
1998 and has been the manager for four years. In the
last few weeks, Reedsville
has been plagued with
numerous power outages.
When the lights go out, the .
store becomes very dark but
people still stop into say hi
to Hauber and to pick up a
quick snack. Knowing that
some customers may not
know the landmark store by
heart, Hauber is quick to
direc-t people in and out of
the aisles b y using a flashlight and a smile.
"I like working here
because the P.eople are
great," she said. 'They come
from all walks of life, rich or

0 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ASHLAND
817 Wl nctlesler Ave.
606 325-23SS

ATHENS
I 100 E. State St
740 594·4800

CHILLICDTIIE
981 N. Bridge St
740 775·5035

Also Available At
Participating locations Of

GALLIPOLIS
2145 Eastern Ave

740 446·2407

Please see F•lr, AS

·Explosion
rocks
Hauber keeps people out of dark in Reedsville Guyandotte
store

jlayton@mydailysentinel.com

Tip2

mydail y&gt;e ntmel &lt;o m

Fire damages Southern High School Meigs

DESIGN
DETAILS

• Where in the world do
you put the Worldwide Web?
This is a dilemma many families face in their homes. A
computer is a magnet for
family activity together, but
can also cause accumulation
of papers, disks and junk.
Placing the computer area
out of sight by tucking it into
its own room isn't the necessarily the answer because
keeping an eye on young
Web surfers is important to
parents. This new computer
center is a design option that
can be incorporated into new
homes or retrofitted into
existing ones.
Just find an open comer,
preferably near the kitchen or
family room. Add half-walls,
columns, ceiling beams,
countertops and an upper
cabinet and voila - the 1deal
spot. The area is large enough
for kids to pull up a couple of
kitchen chairs while surfing
or gaming together, but not
so , large as to take up the
entire room. (Photo/Mark
Englund)
www.lifestylehomedesign.com ' 1

A6

prompb

•
50 CENTS • VuL 53 , No . 226

''The ~ntry hall is a splendid
two-story space that terminates in a sky lit open stairway.
As you pass into the main li ving space, you are greeted
with abundant natural light
through two-story south-facing windows. A sloped-glass
projection at the end ot the
living-dining space provides

f1orida man's

Newman wins
Pennsylvania 500, a1

poor, it doesn't matter. They
can be poor as church mice
and it wouldn't matter.
Hauber, a 1975 graduate
Eastern High School, has
lived in Meigs County all her
life. She said marrying her
husband Paul in 1999 was
her greatest accomplishment.
"Getting married was a
big step for me," she said. " I
like married life. I love my
husband."
Hauber
has
recenily
beeome interested in Harry
Potter''novels. Hauber wants
to know why some C~stians
say the books glorify the
occult and magic, so she is
reading the books herself.
"I am reading Harry Potter
to see what everything is
about thai the churches are
against so I can make up my
own mind," she said.
When Hauber is not reading Harry Potter, she said
loves reading hi storical
romances and playing with
her 19 year old toy

Pl•se see H•uber. AS

GUYANDOTTE. W.Va.
(AP) - Firefighters worked
Monday morning to contain a
blaze which shattered windows and produced 150-foot
!lames at a Cabell County
electronics store .
·
Witnesses said an explosion
at about 3 a.m. Monday start·
ed the fire at York's TV and
Appliance in Guyandotte.
Most of the fire was extinguished by 6:30 a. m.. accord- ·
ing to broadcast reports.
State Route 2 was. closed
and traffic was rerouted
through town while firefight·
ers battled the blaze.
"All of a sudden, the building blew up,'' said Jeffrey Ash
of the Huntington Fire
Department. "One minute the
building was there, and the
next, it was gone."
No injuries were immedi·
atel y reported. and the cause
was not determined earl y
Monday.
The Huntington Police
Department is investigating.

Ill

Melody Hauber is one of the reasons many people stop in
at Reed's Country Store in Reedsville . (J. Miles Layton)

PDfiTSMDUTH
2335 Gallia St
74D 3SJ-BS83

SurgiGal weight loss with
a personal touch.

Target

hnportam Informa tion
C lOOJ AT&amp;T Wireless. All Rights Reserved. Requires activatlon•on a q ualified plan and a Next Generation devke. Not aval:able for purchase or usl! in all areas. Usage Is rounded up to the neiC:t full minute. Umlted

'

accen to data service automilltically Included. Data ser\llces re~uire additional charge . Credit/debit card or bank actount required for automatic recurrlns payment Amourits deposited Into your account are not
transferable or r.!fundable and expire after 30 days . Your ser'•ice will be wspended once your balance Is depleted. Sendln&amp;: teMt messa1es, roam1n1. and lonJ distance charges. surchar&amp;es . assessments, other
restrictions, ct'larces &lt;~nd taxes apply. A\lailability and rtliablllry of service are subject to transmissiOn limitations. Not available with other offers. Offen available for a limited time .You will be bound by the General
Terms and Conditions and rate pl.an materials. N ilht and Weekend Minutes: Available on plans $29 .99 and above for calls placed from the AT&amp;T Wireless Nnional NetWOrlt. Lona: dlnanCI char1es may ippt)'.
Ntcht and Wukend airtime Is from 9:00 pm - 5:59 am Mondq - Frlday. and FrKiay 9:00 pm - Mon~y 5:59 am. N•tlonwld• Lor~~ Distance and Roamlnlf No Wireless kHl&amp;: dittance or roamlnJ charse• apply to
domestic ulh: placed from the AT&amp;T V:ireleu Nadonal Net-.of'i(. Sc.a.ndard airtime chara:es ipply Half-In Rebate: Phone and serviCe must be active for )0 days when rebate is processed. AJiow 8 - 10 weeks for
rebate check. S;.les tax applies to oria:inal purchase price of $89.99. Mall ·ln rebate offer expires September ll . 2003 . See rebate form for full details.

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:The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July 28, 2003

Ohio weather
Tuesday, July 29
ratures

•i
l YoungiiOwn

PA.

[53'180'

f

0 "'"
'
1]

.......
··.·.·.· ·
0 ~--·----·
tft

.
Sunny Pt. Cloudy

..~~

Cloul:fw

Showers

T·storms

Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Showers &amp; thunderstorms
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today... Showers and thunderstorms likely. Highs near
80. West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Tonight...Showers
and
thunderstorms likely... Mainly
until midnight. Lows in the
lower 60s. West winds 5 to lO
mph becoming nonh. Chance
of rain 60 percent.
Tuesday... Panly cloudy with
a slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
lower 80s. Light nonh winds.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Tuesday
night...Mostly

clear. Lows near 60.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Wednesday night...Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 60s.
Thursday...Panly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms from early afternoon on. Highs in the mid 80s.
Friday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms until midnight.
Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.

·More storms slam
state, more flooding
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Heavy thunderstorms tore
through nonheast Ohio Sunday
evening, causing flash tltxxling
and forcing evacuations.
About I00 families in the
Canton area were evacuated
from their homes, .said Rick
Alatorre, disaster director for
the central Stark County chapter .o f the American Red Cross.
"For much of the area that
we served last week, we're
back to square zero- we're
not even at square one,''
Alatorre said.
The Red Cross set up two
shelters in churches ln Canton
and in Louisville.
The heaviest rain fell
between 4 and 7 p.m., with 3. 78
inches reponed in the
Akron/Canton area, said Martin
Thompson of the National
Weather Service in Cleveland.
Forty-three mph wind gusts
were recorded at Cleveland
Hopkins International Airport.
No damage estimates were
available immediately.
In Trumbull County, flood
waters forced several houses
off their foundations, and a
McDonald woman was evacuated when her home began
filling with water, said Sheila
Cullins, corrections officer
with the Trumbull County
Sheriff's department. All
vehicles were ordered off the
streets because of high water.

Shelters for flood victims
were set up at several schools
and public buildings in
Trumbull county, police and
fire official&amp; said.
The storm made it hard for
emergency officials to do
their jobs.
· "We are flash flooded - we
have water in our offices,''
said Tim Warstler, community
emergency coordinator with
the Stark County Emergency
Management Agency.
The
agency · received
repons of flooding throughout the county Sunday,
Warstler said.
Floodwaters also forced the
evacuation of a nursing home
in Liberty.
Residents of the Green Acres
apartments in Green were
forced to leave their homes for
the second time in a week.
The water in resident Cindy
Schlegel's first floor apanment came up to her waist,
she said.
"My stuff is just floating
my apartment,"
around
Schlegel said. "My refrigerator is floating around. I've
lost a lot of stuff."
Paul Christopher, whose business Allied Machining in
Cuyahoga Falls sustained
$20,000 in damage from last
week's floods, faced flOoding
problems once again on Sunday.

The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

Correction Polley

Published
every
afternoon ,
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story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- postage paid at Pomeroy.
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tions to The Dally Sentinel, 111
Department extan11on1 are:
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

News
Editor: CMrlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
Reporler: Brian Reed , Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext. 13

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Mall Subacrtptlon
lnalde Meigs County
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26 'l'{eeks ........... ..'60.00
52 Weeks . . .. . ...... .'118.80
Rates Outside Meigs County
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52 Weeks ...... . .... .'200.20

•

Study to determine if defibrillators
can save heart attack victims
AKRON, Ohio (AP) Defibrillators that can restart
a stopped hean are found in
ambulances, police cars and
even shopping malls.
Now, a nationwide trial sponsored by the National 1-!ean.
Lung, and Blood Institute. will
try to determine whether having the machines at home will
improve a bean attack victim's
chance of survival.
"We know the earlier a
patient is shocked, the
greater the chance of recovery," said registered nurse
Debra Hudock. director of
clinical research for Akron
General Medical Center's
heart center.
Between 40 and 60 patients
at the hospital will be among
7.000 patients at 140 hospitals nationwide to take pan in
the study.
Defibrillators are designed

to be simple to use. Electrodes
are stuck to a victim 's chest
and the device advises
whether a shock is needed.
Half of the volunteers will
be given defibrillators . After
four years, the trial will see
whether those with defibrillator&amp; were more likely to survive sudden cardiac arrest
than those who we.re not.
The men and women
involved in the study have had
hean attacks affecting the front
portion of the hean, the body's
main pumping chambers.
Hean attacks - caused by
clogged blood vessels - are
often survivable without
defibrillators, if victims recognize their symptoms and &amp;eek
prompt medical attention.
But 95 percent of those
who suffer sudden cardiac
arrest - where the heart
stops beating without warn-

ing - die before reaching
the hospital .
It is m those cases where
the effectiveness of defibrillators is a question, said Dr.
George Litman, Akron
General's chief of cardiology.
Litman suspects that having the machines in the house
could prove effective, as 70
percent of sudden cardiac
arrests occur at home.
However, the question arises as to whether having a
device, called automated
external· defibrillators, in the
borne will create a false sense
of security.
"Will some people think, 'I
can smoke and eat and drink
all I want because I have an
AED to save me ?'" said
Tagni
Osentowski.
an
American Hean Association
spokeswoman.
Also in question is the price

of the machines, which can run
between $2,000 and $3,000,
and who should qualify for one
at home since it's difficult to
predict who will need one.
Carle Wyler. 70. of
has
never
Tallmadge,
smoked, doesn't drink, eats
properly, exercises and has
.normal cholesterol levels.
But last September, Wyler
had had a hean attack while
shingling a roof at his family
farm in Coshocton and have to
had a triple bypass operation.
When Akron General
asked Carle Wyler to be pan
of the trial, he and his wife,
JoAnn , jumped at the chance.
'"We're at the point where
we want to reach out," she
said. "If they can learn something from it. then that's a
way we can give back."

Drug makers fighting referendum on prescription prices
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- Pharmaceutical makers.
whose protests kept a proposal for prescription drug discounts off this November's
statewide ballot, are fi~hting
county-by-county agamst a
petition drive aimin~ for the
2004 election.
·The .
Pharmaceutical
Research and Manufacturers
. of America is challenging
petition signatures in 41 of
Ohio's 88 counties - · based
on details such as penmanship
or leaving "township road" off
a street name in an address.
If a county elections boards
rule against the Albany, N.Y.based trade association, it
goes to court, The Columbus
Dispatch reponed Sunday
"We've never been r,rotested to this elttent, ' said
Johnda Perkins, director of
the Pickaway County Board
of Elections.

Off-duty
officer
hits, kills

The drive is sponsored by
the Coalition for Affordable
Prescription Drugs, which
includes unions, the Ohio
chapter of AARP, the Ohio
Council of Churches, the
Ohio Nurses' Association and
the League of Women Voters.
The group staned the ballot
drive because members are
unsatisfied with Gov. Bob
Taftls plan to peg prescription drug discounts with the
state·s Golden Buckeye card
for those 60 and older.
Under ihe propt!sal, the
state would have the authority to negotiate lower prescription prices with manufacturers and pass the savings
on to what backers say is an
estimated
2.2
million
Ohioans with inadequate
health insurance.
Challenges to petition signatures
submitted
last
December kept the issue off

the
November
ballot.
Backers are trying for
November 2004 but also
hope to persuade state lawmakers to enact a drug discount plan on their own. ·
Jenny Camper, spokeswoman for the drug companies, said about 40 drug companies represented by the
group don't oppose the petition drive in principl\i,__ but
worry that price collfrols
would hamper research on
new medicines . The group
has budgeted $15 .8 million
for Ohio, including the antipetition effort and promotion
of affordable drug plans.
Donald J. McTigue, who
represents the coalition, said
the pharmaceutical group has
a rotating team of lawyers
fighting the signatures.
"I've been involved with election law for 18 years, and there's
never been anything on this

scope in Ohio,'" Mc1igue said.
The coalition has filed
more than the legal minimum
of
96,878
signatures
required, but it also must
have signatures from a percentage of voters from each
of at least 44 counties.
About 17,200 signatures of
the more than 140,000 collected are still under protest.
The Sec retary of State's
otTice can't certify the issue
Jar the ballot as long as the
protests continue in enough
counties.
One signature was protested because the woman printed her name. The Ashland
County elections board ruled
it was her legal signature
because it matched her
voter's registration card. The
drug makers appealed in
coun and lost.
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AKRON (AP) - A
teenage bicyclist died after
an
colliding
with
unmarked patrol car driven by an off-duty Akron
police officer.
Learon Livingston. 17,
was crossing the street on
his bicycle early Sunday
when he was struck by the
officer's car. He was later
pronounced dead at Akron
City Hospital.
The officer was moonlighting as a security guard
for
the
Akron
Housing
Metropolitan
Authority at the time.
Akron police and the
AMHA wouldn't release
the officer 's name.
Tony O'Leary, AMHA's
executive director, said he
had few details of the incident, but didn 't anticipate
disciplinary action . .
The officer involved is a
two-year veteran of the
Akron Police Depanment
with no disciplinary action on
his reoord, swd Paul Hlynsky,
president of the Akron
Fraternal Order of Polioe. ·
O' Leary said AMHA
employs area police officers as pan-time security
at housing complexes. The
officers are paid . by
AMHA and drive an
unmarked car provided by
AMHA, but wear their
police uniforms, he said.

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Local faces

POMEROY Michael
A I I e n
Lawrence
celebra ted
his second
birthday
with
a
""Bob the ·
Builder"

being carried out.
Garrett
The party Lawrence
was held - at
the home .. of hi s parents,
Roben and Jessica Lawrence
and sister, Jocelyn.
Attending besides his parents were Wayne and Teresa
Shamp, Jim and Donna Rupe,
Alisa and Aaron Shamp,
George and Debbie Basin,
Terry and Amy Pierce, Holly
Lande s, Connie, James,
Dorothy, Jake, and Robert
Dalton, Bobby Dalton, Jenny
Reed , Amanda Reed, Stacey
Dillon, Pam Boles, Herman
Dalton, and Sylvia Causey.
Sending gifts were the honorees' great-grandparents,
Bonnie and David Cairns.

Eastern High
School passes
available
EAST MEIGS - Passes for
athletic events at Eastern High
School are·now available.

Prices are as follows:

'

Tops club meets
COOLVILLE -· Brenda
Cline was the weekly beset
loser and was presented a
certificate and .fruit basket at
a recent meeting of Tops #
20 13 held at the · Torch
Baptist Church.
There were 21 members
who weighed in. Founders
Day parade was discus sed
and plan s made to make
posters and a banner. Pat
Snedden presented the program on ways to get Inspired.
Recipes were passed out.
Next meeting will be
Tuesday at the Torch Baptist
Church. Call Pat Snedden at
662-2633 for information.

Ridgetop Music
Fest scheduled
for August

say s festival organizer Joy
Dickerson. She notes that the
festival's "five minutes of
fame" feature expands the
musical offerings. "Anyone
can sign up for ·five minutes
of stage time and go to it"
Dickerson says.
Food sales begin at 8 benetiling festival's co-sponsor, the
Vinton County Airport Pilot
and Boosters Association.
Music begins with a jam session at I0 and an official opening at II . Craft booths open at
l0:45. Two special demonstrations, beekeeping and quilting,
will be ongoing throughout the
day. Crafters include Glen
Maynard, award winning
woo.d carver and Dawn
Accord. the cornhusk doll lady.
Airplane rides will be
available all day. A now feature this year, an Airborne
Candy Drop, will take place a
5:30 on the main runway.
After a small plane flies ave~
and drops candy from the
sky, children will be permitted to swarm the runway ·and
collect as much as they can.
According to co-organizer
Nick Rupert, a special guest
from the North Pole will be
tlying the plane. "It's just too
hot for the reindeer in
August," says Rupen.
The main focus of the
event this year, says Rupert,
will be "music, music,
music." The lineup includes
gospel groups, Dickerson
doing folk and country, Paul
Waltz singing, Tim Bentley
presenting pure country,
Kendra Ward and Bob Bence,
hammered dulcimers, the
Sodbusten and One Rio One
Ranger doing bluegrass. The
highlight will come when all
of the musicians join together
at 5:45 for a finale musical
celebration.
Admission to the Ridgetop
Music Fest is free. There is a
$3 per car parking donation.
Activities begin at 10 a.m.
and conclude at 6 p.m. To
sign up for the "five minutes
of fame" performances, call
596-9811.

Public meetings

Wednesday, July 30
RACINE - OAPSE 453 of
Southern Local will meet at B
Monday, July 28
p.m. at the bus garage.
POMEROY - Veterans
Friday, Aug. 1
Service Commi.ssion will
POMEROY Meigs
meet at 9 a .m. at the 117 County PEAl 84 will meet at
Memorial Drive.
noon at the Senior Citizens
POMEROY Regular Center. .Representatives of
meeting of the Meigs County Aetna and Medical Mutual
Library Board to be held at 3 will speak on insurance.
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Mary Powell will talk on
Morgan's Raid.

Clubs and
Organizations

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.

COLUMBUS (AP)
While
state
lawmakers
.expressed some reluctance
:about complying with the new
federal education law, they had
little choice about it in the end.
''The fact of the matter is, it
. was the law and if we wanted
:to get any money, we had to
·go along with it," said Rep.
:william
Hartnett
of
.· Man sfi eld, the top-ranking
Democrat on the Hou se
Education Committee.
After threatening not to
vote on Ohio's legislation
;adopting the federal law until
·September, lawmakers agreed
:10 return from their summer
· break next month for one-day
sessions. The state would
have risked losing $400 mil. lion in federal funding with:out the vote .
: Their first attempt to pass the
·bill failed in June over an unre·lated proposal to change how
Ohio counts schoolchildren.
From drunken driving
. requirements to special edu:cati on funding. states are at
:the mercy of the federal gov·ernmenl when it comes to
:new regulation~. said political
·analyst Alan Rosenthal.
"lf they 're willing to pay
they can pretty much do what
:they want , but normally
:money trumps what they
:believe ,'" said Rosenthal, an
.·expert ·an state legislatures at
.

)

.
...

were operational problems to
be dealt with,'' Felton said.
Last
month,
New
Hampshire Gov. Craig Benson
.let his state's compliance plan
take effect without his signature. The state stood 'fo lose
·about $70 million in federal
education money if it did not
have its plan in· place by June.
Benson said the plan bothered
him, though not enough to veto it
Last month in Tennessee,
Gov. Phil Bredesen called the
federal law "a perfect exampte of what people call an
unfunded federal mandate."
In Alabama last month, the
state school board voted not to
send letters to parents when
their child's teacher does not
meet new standards rating
them "highly qualified,'' a
requirement of the federal law.
In addition to concerns over
increased federal control over
education, states are questioning whether the government
will provide the necessary
funding, Rosenthal said .
In addition, many groups,
from teachers to some business organizations, question
the benefits of the mandatory
high stakes testing the act
requires, Rosenthal sl}id.
"These three reasrntS can give
states pause but the likelihood is
when push comes to shove
they'll not pass up the federal
money that .exist~;· he said.

Other events

DAYTON (AP) - The
city's public school system
has filed .the most frequent
and severe workers' compensation claims of any public
employer in Ohio over the
past three years, racking up
about $6.3 million in claims.
Dayton school officials
blame poor risk management
and a failure to closely oversee claims.
"There was not sufficient
monitoring in the past,'' said
Dayton Public Schools
Treasurer Stan Lucas. "The
whole concept of risk has.not
been managed in the past."
Lucas said the district has
made changes that have

resu !ted in · a 25 percent
improvement in.lhe district 's
Ohio Bureau of Workers
Compensation rating from
last year.
Payments to injllred workers ·for wages and medical
bills in the .past three years
were the highest among
Ohio's eight largest urban
school di stricts, according to
worker's
compensation
bureau statistics.
School officials could not
explain why claims jumped
from 90 in 1998 to 213 the
next year for the district ,
which employs about 1,400
teachers and 200 bus drivers.
Since then claims have been

over 200 a year.
Dayton bus drivers have
tiled the most claims of any
group of employees Within
the district. Their grievances
have varied from back pain
to repetitive stress injuries.
To stem claims, the district
-Is now asking injured workers to take transitional jobs
like answering phones un'til
they can return to their regular jobs, Lucas said.
The district also hired a
consultant to help with
claims and plans to leach
more workplace safety, he
said.

•••coming Friday August Jst•••
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utlf$"·~~··. fOU•..
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Rut~ers University 's Eagleton
Institute of Politics.
For example, Ohio lawmakers put off for a! most two
years complying .with a 200 I
federal mandate to lower the
state's drunken driving
threshold to 0.08 percent for
blood alcohol· level.
They finally went along the
measure in March, unwilling
to lose $120 million in federat highway funds.
ln debating the education
bill, lawmakers also didn't
lose a chance to complain again - that the 1975 federal
special
education
law
promised to provide up to 40
percent of states ' special ed
costs but to date provide s
only about 18 percent.
The 2002 No Child Left
Behind Act, a cornerstone of
President Bush's 2000 campaign, requires states to adopt
plans to increase school testmg and improve teaching. .
The law created unusual problems for states because of the
need to work out it~ operationhow to test children, how to measure teacher quality - after it
passed, said Reggie Felton, director of federal relations tor the
Alexandria, Va-based National
School Boards Association.
"I'm not say in~ there
weren't states draggmg their
feet, but even when states
wanted to move forward, there

RACINE - Seventh and
eighth-grade boys interested
in playing football in
Southern Local are asked to
attend a meeting at 7:30
p.m. on Monday at the field .
Thursday, July 31
LONG BOTIOM - 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.
Monday, July 28
POMEROY
First
CHESTER -Tuberculosis
rehearsal
for
the
chorus
to
clinic will be at the Chester
Fire Department lrom 4:30 to sing on Sept. 6 at Pomeroy's
6 p.m. to give T.B. tests. observance of Morgan's Raid.
Reading will be done from a bicentennial event will be
4:30 to 5:30 on Wednesday. held at 7 p.m . at the Pomeroy
All food handlers must have United Methodist Church. All
the test.
singers invited to attend

Dayton schoo!s file most
workers' comp claims in state

PERSPECTIVE: States slowly
·ratify education plans with
eye on federal dollars

•

. ..,

For volleyball, adult passes
may be purchased for the
2003 volleyball season for
$30, good for all volleyball
matches, both junior high and
high school level.
For football adult passes
may be purchased for the Sean
for $15 with the pass good for
all football games, both junior
high ana high school.
Athletic prices for the
school year are $4 for adults
for high school and $2 for students; and for junior high $2
for adults, and $1 for students.
Passes may be purchased at
the Eastern ·High School
main office from 839 to 3
p.m. beginning Monday.
according to Pam Douithitt,
athletic director.

Senior citizens may purchase passes for the 20032004 school year for $10 for
football and volleyball; winMcARTHUR - The third
ter sports, boys and girls basketball, SlO; or $20 for both annual Ridgetop Music Fest
seasons. A golden Buckeye will be held at the Vinton
cards must be presented to County Airpon on Aug. 10
purchase a pass an the person with a full day of music,
making the purchase must be food, crafts, and airplane
a resident of Eastern Local rides being scheduled. .
School District. The pass will
"We're pleased to present
be good for junior high and so many home-grown musi high school sports.
cians and artists this year,"

· Proud to be apa~of,
~

Garrett

l h e m e

WEBSITE
DIRECTORY

Monday, July 28, 2003

Community calendar

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

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

VIEW

9 11
VVhere from here?
The Bush administtation responded to last week's release of the joint
congressional inquily's report on 9/11 intelligence failures with confident assertions that any problems have been taken care of. President
Bush stated ,thai "my administration has transfonned our government
to pursue terrorists and prevent terrorist attacks." And FBI Director
Raben S. Mueller IU said that while the bureau was still implementing
c!Janges recommended by the report, the commission's findings were
already out of dale: "While the report provides a snapshot of the FBI
at Seprember II, 2001, the picture of the FBI today shows a changed
organization."
The choice of tense in these statemeniS is~ si~canc 1be government has already been "transformed." the FBI already "changed." It is
true that the past two years have seen the biggest reorganization of
American government in dw!des, and Mr. Mueller luJs made significant changes at the bureau. Yet the show of confidence that deficiencies identified in this report are already a thing of the past seems premature. While America is unquestionably better positioned today than
before the attacks to confront terrorism, it is far from clear that
American counterterrorism is today functioning optimally.
In fact, the joint in&lt;juily report only begs the question of what a serious appraisal of the mtelligence community's progress would show.
The congressional investigation focused chiefly on what happened
before the attacks, far less on what has been done since. There is no
doubt that 9/11 prompted legal changes, resource commitments,
bureaucmtic shifts and-perllaps most important-a universal realization
that fighting terrorism had to be the central priority of those responsible for American security. Yet many things did not change. Most fundamentally, the structure of the American intelligence community
remains very much the modey group of agencies-a&gt;Uectively lacking
stron~ centralized authority-that it ever was. And many. observers
remaui skeptical that the FBI has been reborn from its Jaw enforcement
past as a first-rate intelli~ence and counterterrorism organization. It's
easy for the adminislrntlnn to declare that the infmnation-sharing
problems thiit have long plagued the intelligence world have been
fixed and that, as Mr. Mueller put i~ "the FBI and the CIA have
become integrated at virtually every level of our operations." But
Congress needs to satisfy itself thai the current arrangements really are
the best they can be.
Nobody designing an intelligence snucture from scratch to deal with
America's contempor.uy problems would conceive of the one this
country now has. Nobody thinking rationally, !OJ' example, would have
.placed fighting global terrorism alongside arresting pornographers
among the re~-ponsibilities of a federal Jaw enforcement agency, nor
would anyone have given the head of the CIA oversight of an intelligence operation whose agencies were spread out over several different
·Cabinet departments. The intelligence world is a patchwori&lt;: that devel~ over decades in response to changing needs, g~litical shifts,
pvil liberties concerns, bureaucratic turf warfare and sunple happen~- It may be that the COSIS associated with changing its fuixla~ntal design-rosts in effectiveness, in civil liberties and in money:
e;ceed the benefits. But after 9/11, these are not determinations thai
Should be made tluuugh inertia or bureaucratic commibnentfu maintaining a comfortable status quo. The costs of mediocrity are far too
high.
The next major study of 9111 will come from the National
Commission on Terrorist Anacks Upon the United States, heOOed by
fonner New Jersey Gov. Thomas H. Kean. The bipartisan commission
would do a great service if it addressed not merely the factors that Jed
to the anacks but the adequacy of the intelligence reform that has followed them.
The Washington Post

.

By AI Hartson

On July 24, the California
State Senate passed Assembly
Bill 196, the Transsexual
Employment Bill by a vote of
23 to II . All 23 votes in favor
were from liberal Democrats.
Eleven Republicans voted
against the bill.
The passage of AB 196 by
California
Assemblyman
Mark Leno of San Francisco,
an openly homosexual man
himself. by the State Senate
was the final legislative step
for the bill. It had passed the
State Assembly on April 21
with a 42 to 34 vote. The bill
now heads to Governor Gray
Davis' desk for a signature or
veto.
"By a mere 3 votes liberal
Democrats in the Senate have
passed yet another businesskilling, pro-homosexual bill,"
said Benjamin Lopez, lobbyist for Traditional Values
Coalition. "When California
is facing a deficit over $38
billion, Democrats think it
more important to add yet
another fine to business in the
amount of $150,000 that
doesn't hire transsexual crossdressers."
California has always been
looked upon for direction as
other states have sometimes

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a Christian bookstore, how
could I possibly follow this
law?" he asked the bill's
author, Assemblyman Leno.
Mountjoy added, "How
could I possibly have an
employee that's here today in
a dress, tomorrow may come
in a suit. and then stay in a
dress? How can I possibly
employ this employee and
still have the Christian bookstore and live by my faith?"
Leno did not answer
Assemblyman Mountjoy's
questions.
California
State
Assemblyman Ray Haynes. a
Republican from Temecula,
Calif.. also put AB 196 in
proper context.
. "You are telling people who
sincerely and strongly believe
in a faith that they cannot
exercise that faith without
being forced into bankruptcy
or not owning property or not
starting a business. You are
imposing your belief. on what
you think their faith ought to
say," Haynes said.
Such a bill is dangerous for
California and definitely the
whole country.
(AI Hartson resides in
Middlepon, is long1ime pastor
of the Middlep011 Church of
Christ and is actiVl' in numerous commtmity affairs.)

Local Briefs
Louisville, Ohio and a son,
Douglas McCoy of Newark, ·
Ohio; two granddaughters,
Hannah Leann Holmes and
Haven Nicole McCoy and a
grandson, Hunter Douglas
McCoy. ·
Also surviving are three
sisters, Wanda Sue (Bob)
Wood, Racine; Brenda Joy
Handley, Langsville, and
Kay (Bill) Roberts of Racine;
and two brothers, Ronald V.
(Mary) Jones, Racine, and
Roger Lee Jones, Racine; 24
nieces and nephews and 22
great-nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents
she was preceded in death by
a sister, Kimberly Lou Jones.
tvo brothers, Ayward Cunis
Jones and James Harvey
Jones and a nephew, Ronald
·
V. Jones II.
Funeral services will be II
a.m. Thursday, July 31, 2003,
in the Cremeens Funeral
Home at Racine. Officiating
will be Rev. Larry Jones.
Interment will follow on the
family plot in the Shady Dale
Cemetery in Harmony, W.Va.
Friends may call 2-4 and 6-8
p.m. Wednesday at the
Cremeens Fun&lt;!ral Home,
Racine.

RACINE
-· Paul S.
Moore, 82, of Pleasant View
Road, Racine,I!Jassed away at
10:25 p.m. fiiday. July 25.
2003, in the Overbrook
Center in Middleport.
Born December 22, 1920 in
Delaware, Ohio . he was the
son of the late Dana and
Catherine Smith Moore. Paul
was a retired Sutton
· Township clerk and a retired
Sutton Township dairy
farmer. He served in the U.S.
Anny during World War II
and was a member of Post
· 9053 of the Veterans of
Fo~eign . Wars,
Tuppers
Plams and Racme Post 602 of
the American Legion.
Paul was also a member of
the Carmel Sutton United
Methodist Church and a
membeF of the National
Ritleman's Association. Paul
was a lover of animals and
always stood ready to assist
pet owners In the community
whose pets became injured
or ill . Paul is survived by his
dog. Buddy,
Also surviving are · two
nieces, Paula Wolfe of
Louisiana and Jill Springer of
Virginia, and a nephew, Greg
Springer of Texas. Several
cousins and many friends
also survi ve.
In addition to his parents he
RUTLAND Andrew
was preceded in death by a
Richard Lambert, 22, went to
sister, Ruth Springer.
Funeral services wHI be II be with the Lord Sunday July
a.II]. Wednesday, July 30, 27, 2003.
He was born Aug. 12, 1980
2003, in the Carmel United
Church. in Gallipolis, Ohio. He is the
Methodist
Officiating will be Rev. son of Michael Lee and Mary
Dwayne Stutler. Interment Ellen (Smith) Lambert and
will follow on the family plot brother to Michael Paul
in the Carmel Cemetery. Lambert, all of Rutland.
He is survived by his paterFriends may call from 5 to 8
the nal grandparents Earnest and
p.m. . Tuesday at
Cremeens Funeral Home , Mary Lambe.rt of Rutland,
Racine.
his maternal grandfather Paul
Military graveside services Smith of Maryland, and some
will be conducted by Tuppers aunts and uncles; Robert and ·
Plains Post 9053 of the Sherry Gagne of Orange
V.F. W. and Racine Post 602 Park, Fla., Paul and Irene
Of the American Legion.
Lambert, and Glenn and
Debbie Brown, all of
Rutland, along with several
nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death
by his maternal grandmother
NEWARK - Patricia Ann Betty Smith.
Services will be at l p.m.
McCoy, 55, Newark, Ohio,
passed away at 10:52 a.m. July 30 at the Church of God
Saturday; July 26, 2003, in in Rutland with the Rev.
the Riverside Methodist Ronald Heath gfficiating.
Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. Burial will be at the Miles
Born April 25. 1947 in Cemetery in Rutland.
Friends may call from 2-4
Hannony. W : Va. she was the
daughter of the late Ayward p.m. and from 6-8 p.m.
Coolidge and Pansy Mae Tuesday July 29 at the
Jones. She was a homemaker. church.
Arrangements .
by
She is survived by a daugh'ter, Debra Holmes and her Birchfield Funeral Home in
husband, Jason, of Saint Rutland.

Andrew Richard
Lambert .

Berkeley divers want to
comb lakes for stolen goods

Parity funding for poorer school districts
Ensuring that no child is
left behind- that is the charge
given to states across the
nation by President George
W. Bush in reference to education funding and accountability measures. And I
would have agree with the
president. We simply cannot
put a price on the education
of Ohio's children. They are
our future, and each and
every child deserves the
same tools for success, the
same
opportunities
to
achieve.
That said, however, many
times it is more difficult for
schools in poorer school districts to provide the same
tools and opportunities as
their counterparts in large
cities and the suburbs.
- Children in these districts
enjoy the conveniences of
new computers and technology, larger and safer classrooms and the like while students in poorer districts must
share outdated textbooks and
learn in s.chools that ·have not
been updated or improved for
decades.
Recently, in response to the
federal to the federal "No
Child Left Behind" Act of
200 I, the state of Ohio has
identified standards that all
schools must meet - ensuring that all our children are

afforded a top-notch education, no matter where they
live.
Yet the task is not an easy
one, particularly because of
the lack of funding going to
the schools that need it most.
The state has asked for all
children to be on a par with
state standards, but, finding
funding for out children in
southern Ohio that is on a par
with other schools around the
state has been a constant
struggle. The Coalition for
Equal Funding has provided
much leadership in the quest
·for equal funding, but 'it has
met resistance by reactionary
forces who would rather balance the budget on the backs
of children in poor ,school
districts.
One too. that is currently
being used by the state legislature to narrow the gap is
known as Parity Aid. This
funding is part of the state
funding formula and it is
used specifically to help
poorer districts in Ohio. Most
of the schools in the 87th
house district - . in Gallia.
Jackson, Vinton and parts of
Ross and Lawrence Counties
- qualify for thi s funding.
As your state legislator, I
worked with my colleagues
in both the House and the
Senate to improve upon a
plan that increases parity
funding for poor school districts. 'For example, in 2002

the plan funded 20 percent of for students in our district.
its goal and each subsequent
During the negotiations in
year it has added an addition- the final moments before votal 20 percent. By the year ing on the budget, we were
2006, this plan will have set able to get parity aid funding
aside over $600 million for back up to 58 percent and 77
poorer school di stricts in percent over the next two
Ohio.
years - restoring approxiDuring the budget process mately $60 million to the
I fought diligently to p~otect schools who need it the most.
this essential funding . Yet; I
In southern Ohio we often
met with a number of forces feel that we are slighted
not only wanting to limit when it comes to education
party funding, but wanting to funding, but even in this buddecimate the public schools ger process. one of the worst
as they are known today. Ohio has seen in the past 50
Nearly every cut these years - I believe that the
groups were fighting for poor school districts in our
would come at the expe nse of part of the state received a
secondary and higher educa- better deal than many of the
tion. .
· more affluent districts. Total
As the budget cycle con tin- state aid for education was
ued, we received more grim increased by approximately
news from state analysis- we $3 13 million in this budget. ~
had an additional $ 1.1 billion The increased funding for
dollar deficit. At that point, parity aid makes up over 70
major cuts in education were percent of this increase. This
being proposed to mak~ up is a clear sign that Ohio is
tor the shortfall. Many of us beginning to get its priorities
were told that parity aid straight when it comes to
.funding would drop from 60 equal fundi ng for disadvan- .
percent to 52 percent in 2004 raged schools.
and from 80 percent to 7~ . (If you would like to Jeam
percent.
more about the state budget, or if
Thi s cut in essential fund- you have other state related mating was simply _unacceptable ters, wJu wmtld like io discuss,
and a number of my col• · feel free to contact me. I can be
leagues and I from rural areas ·reached at State Repre.,emative
of the state joined together to Clyde Evans, 77 S. High St.. lith
let everyone know that we floor, Colwnbus. Ohio 43215.
would not support that kind Or you ·may call me at my office
of a cut' in parity aid- fund- at(614)466-1366.1/ookforward
ing designed for specifically to hearing from you.)

MARTINSBURG, W.Va.
( AP) - Stolen cars, firearms,
jewelry and computers have
been found at the nadir of
water-tilled rock quarries in
the Eastern Panhandle, officials say.
The Berkeley County Dive
Team wants to comb the
floors of the quarry lakes for
other stolen merchandise,
team member Glen Stickel
. said. OffiCials are raising
$3,600 to purchase dry suits
and other diving equipment
for use in the exploration of
those lakes.
, A Frederick County, Va. ,
oive team di scovered presumably stolen antique coins and
a Rolex watch while training

Fair
from PageA1
any fair Board member or are ·
on sale at ·the Sugar Run
Flour Mill in Pomeroy.
However, the tickets are only
available to Meigs Coum~
residents over 18.
Daily admission to the fair
is $7 Monday through
Saturday. Children under 2
are admitted free. Those daily
admission tickets include all
entertainment and shows as
well as the amusement rides.
For those holding membership, season, or 4-H tickets,
there will be' an additional
charge for rides -· $5 a day
Monday through Thursday, and
$5 a day Friday and Saturday.
As in the past children under
two will be admitted to the
fairgrounds free. However, if
they want to ride, they must
purchase a ride pass.
..
As in previous years Semor

•

The

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
Paul S. Moore

,.,. I.

taken California's lead. Right bill also states that "an
now all eyes are on California employer shall allow an
given the ·recall election set employee to appear or dress
for October 7 which could consistently with the employoust Governor Gray Davis ee's gender identity."
from office.
Under AB I96's provisions
What !!II outrageous bill for school districts. child day care
the State of California!!! facilities, gender sensitive
With such bills ·being passed occupations. and businesses
by the legislature, no wonder • would be guilty of employwhy California finds itself in m~nt discrirnmation should
a recall mood. Gray Davis they refuse to hire men
sliould veto this bill or face it dressed as women, for exambeing used against him as just pie.
another justification to oust
This bill would make it an
him from office.
unfair ell)ployment practice
TVC sent out a press should a bu siness deny
release today (July 25) expos- employment based on one's
ing the action taken by the mere perception of another's
California State Senate. In it, gender. While the bill rightly
Lopez noted: "The question exempts religious institutions
now is; with Davis's days not organized for profi_l, relibeing numbered given the gious institutions that do
recall on October 7, will he operate for profit would be
side with reason and the subjected to AB I96's provimajority of Californians and sions. like hospitals or relibusinesses by vetoing AB gious bookstores. as they
196, or will he pander to the would be forced to im plement
liberal left of his party for broad "gender" non-discrimivotes by signing AB 196 and nation policies that would
have cross-dressing freaks run clearly. lie contrary to their
amuck in the state all in the beliefs.
name of "diversity"'"
California State Assemblyman
AB 196 ame!\ds current Dennis Moun\ioy, a Republican
provisions from Penal Code from Monrovia. Calif.. asked a
422.76 into the Government very important question about
Code preventing so-called the bill before the Assembly
discrimination on "one's per- vote that had taken place on
ceived gender identity." The April 21st. He said, "If I have

Monday, July 28, 2003

Patricia Ann
McCoy

By Clyde Evan•

Moderately Confused

Monday, Jnly 28, 2003

In the name of(diversiry'?

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

NATIONAL

PageA4

in a quarry lake in Bunker
Hill six years ago, Stickel
said.
''You wouldn 't believe
what's in those quarries, especially ones that haven't been
dove in in a number of years,"
Stickel said.
Thieves dump stolen goods
in the lakes to avoid prosecution, he said. Cars either are
stripped and dumped into the
lakes, or are driven into the
lakes so the owner may collect insurance payments.
Once the equipment is purchased, Stickel said team
members plan to dive in the
quarries periodically to check
for stolen goods.
Citizen's Day will be
observed on Thursday and tO'
be admitted to the fairgrounds
all seniors have to do is show
their Golden Buckeye Cards.
Kiddie Day wpl be
observed on Wednesday and
chil~ren 12 and u~der will be
admmed free unul noon and ,
can get a handstamp for $4 to ,
ride all day.
The rides will operate on a
schedule of Monday, Tuesday,
Thursday,
Friday
and
Saturday. 1 to 4:30 and 6 to II
p.m.; and on Wednesday,
noon to 5 and 6 to. 11 p.m. ·
Reserved parking in specified areas is being offered for
$25 for the week. The parking cost does not include
admission onto the grounds.
There are also camping
spaces available for the week
at $100 which includes electric and water. Spaces can be
reserved at the secretary's
office on the Rock Springs
fairgrounds on Saturday.
Aug. ~. but cannot be spotted

Daily Sentinel• Page AS

Grand finale

Civil War
choral practice

'A real success· was how
Jackie Weikel of the Pomeroy
Blues and Jau Society
described Saturday's third
annual Blues Bash . Welker
said that at the peak of the
noon-to-midnight col'cert.
more than 2,000 people
were on the parking lot to
hear the musicians. The
event culminated with headliner Joe Bonamassa, guitar
virtuoso, singer and songwriter. "This was absolutely
the best Bash yet and we're
looking for it to keep growIng," said Welker.

POMEROY - The first
rehear.;al for p chorus to sing
in ~ amJ?hith~r o~ Sept.
6 tn conJIIilCt!On wtth the
Morgan's Raid bicentennial
event will be held at 7 p.m.
Thursda_y at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
June VanVrankin will be
dinecting the chorus which
will sing authentic Civil War
songs. She invites anyone
intereSii:d to join the group
and extended a special invitation to members of the old
Voices of Liberty Singers.

New online music venture clothed in Napster ·brand
LOS1 ANGELES (AP) The lowest price available ·ume leaders, pressplay and likely drive interest in the new
which serv ice. but that may not be
Napster may be long dead. now for downloading a single BuyMusic.com.
but the name and the ;'kitty'' so n~ at other online music opened for bu.siness last week. enough for Roxio if the service
logo of the pioneer online retatlers is 79 cents. Some each say they currently ofter doesn't deliver. said Phil
music-swapping program services charge over a dollar more than 300,000 songs.
Leigh. an analyst · with
could return to cyberspace to download some songs,
The bulk of the addi tional Raymond J.unes &amp; Associates.
before the year is out.
while full album downloads songs on Napster 2.0 will
Leigh believes Apple's serSanta Clara-based Roxio can be found at under $8.
come from artists on indepen- YiL·e. with its liberal usage
Inc,, which owns the rights to
Gorog also declined to give dent labels. a-Napster spokes- rules. will likely be the stan,
details
on what usage rights woman said.
dard to which consumers will
the Napster name. plans to
shelve its current online customers will have to songs
The serv ice will also have l10ld the new Napster.
"If they do something short
. music service, pressplay. and downloaded from Napster 2.0. Internet radio, exclusive proroll out Napster 2.0 by
"We're working with the gramming and artist inter- of tha t. then they run the risk
Christmas, Chris Gorog, labels to liberali ze usage vicws. Gorog said.
of damaging the value of the
Roxio's chairman and chief rules and we believe that they
Nostalgia over Napster will brand." he said.
executive,
told
The will be much more liberal
AssoCiated Press.
that we have had in the past."
Gorog was scheduled to Gorog said.
Restrictions on what conannounce details of the venture Monday at the Jupiter sumers can do with music
Plug.IN Conference &amp; Expo they pay to download remain
from Page A1
from Page A1 in New York.
an obstacle for PC-based
Software maker Roxio online retailers. Only Apple
damage was mainly conacquired pressplay, a joint Computer Inc.' s iTunes Pomeranian, Punky.
tined to the main hallway
venture of Universal Music Music Store, which debutt!d
leading into the high school.
"I love my dog," she said.
Group and Sony Music in April, has so far enjoyed
Grueser said he expects
Hauber loves to cook and
Entertainment, in May, six usage deals with the record
the building to be cleaned
months after it bought the labels that give its customers her favorite food is lasagna.
up and necessary repairs
rights to Napster for about $5 freedom to bum the songs If she could do any job in
made in time for school to
million. The company hopes they buy to COs virtually
open on Aug. 19.
.
the world, Hauber said she
to generate interest and ·sales without restriction. Apple
"We
have
every
intentio11
off what is arguably the most users represent 3 percent of would have likell to become
of being open for school. bu.t
a lawyer. Yellow is her
recognizable brand name in the home computer mark,et.
it will be a long process," he
favorite color and she loves
Napster 2:0 will debut with
online music.
said. "There was hardly any
"Napster 2.0 has really a selection of about 500.000
fishing , mainly in ponds·
place that did not have some
been · designed with a deep tracks. The current song voi' · and not the Ohio Ri ver.
smoke damage."
respect for the characteristics
that made the original
Napster so · successful,"
Gorog said. "Consumer
choice is really the biggest
value that we have been able
from PageA1
to carry over."
The new service may carry
the Napster name, but it will take place at 2 p.m. on
have httle else in common Wednesday of fair week on the ·
with the original, which pro- hill stage. At that time 4-H'ers
vided a means for users to to serve on the 2004 Fashion
download music free of Board will be selected.
The grand and reserve
charge before it was forced to
shut down in 200 I after los- champions and those receiving court battles with the ing honorable mention in
·their respective clothing pro- .
music industry.
Unlike its predecessor, jects were:
Accessories fnr Teens:
Napster 2.0 will have the
Lindsey
Houser, grand
blessing of the five major
champion.
record companies and 111any
Ready Let's Sew: Breanna
independent labels. But users
will have to pay to download Taylor, grand champion
music files, and some of the Brenna Holter, reserve cham- Receiving reserve champion in the clothing judging were
song files will have restric- pion; Denise Hannum, hon- B1enna Holter, front, and back. from the left, Georgana
Koblenta, Tina Drake , Ashley Life, Jennifer Grady, Abbie
tions on a variety of usage orable mention.
Fun
with
Clothes:
Chevalier.
Rachel Elliott, and Nicole Jones who sewed a garrights, . such as how many
Cheyenne
Beaver
and
ment for Tosha Jones. Charlene Hoefl ich)
times they can be burned onto
COs or moved to a portable ' Hannah Hysell , co-grand
champions.
champion Rachel Elliott, grand champion.
digital music player, if at all.
JoyfuiJurnper:
Audrionna
Outer Layers: Alyssa
reserve champion.
Unlike pressplay and other
Pullins,
grand
champi'
o
n.
Holter,
grand champion.
Sew
for
Others:
Lindsey
PC-based online music retailTops
for
Tweens:
Katie
Frugal
Fashions:
Houser and Amanda Roush.
ers, which offer either a Ia
Hayman,
grand
champion:
co-grand champions; Nicole Amanda Windon, grand
carte music downloads or
Georgana
Koblentz,
reserve
champion Abbie Chevalier.
Jones, reserve champion.
require users to pay a monthchampion.
reserve champion; Kimberly
Clothes
for
Middle
ly 'subscription fee, Napster
Clothing
1:
It's
Time
for
Castor
and Rachel Elliott,
School:
Kelsey
Holter,
grand
2.0 will ·offer the option of
Castor,
grand
Kimberly
champion Tina Drake, honorable mention.
doing both.
champion
Ashley
Life,
for
Your
reserve champion: Katie · Clothing
"This. we think, is the most
reserve
champion.
Care.·
r:
Becky
Taylor.
Hayman
,
honorable
mertion
.
significant change with
It's Time for Clothing II: . Creative
Cost trnes: grand -hampion. Christina
what's currently out there,"
Lindsey
Houser,
grand
Jennifer Grady. r~serve Miller, r~serve champion.
Gorog said.
champion.
Gorog declined to specify champion.
It's
Time
for
Clothing
Lounging Clothes and
how much songs would cost,
III:
Rachael
Morris,
grand
.
Undergarments:
Tyler Lee,
but said prices would not be
out of line with what other
onlinemusicservicescharge.

Fire

Hauber

Clothes

before noon on Aug. 9.
All open class entries must
be registered at the secretary's office on Friday and
Saturday, Aug. 1. and 2. The
office will be open from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. both days. The
deadline for reg1stermg
entries is 4 p.m. on Aug. 2. ,
.

1 0 ".
MOVIES
740-753 ·3400

r

IAI~

1o1

m ~~ m~~'

r---------------------,
Public Health
Information Meeting
Where: Meigs County Library,
Pomeroy, OH

WED · SUN ONLY

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON· TUES a
12:30 PM WED - SUN
SPY KIDS
1 :00, 3:00, 7:00

216 West Main Street. Pomeroy. OH
(Large downstairs meeting room)

RAIDER: THE
,
(PG-13)
1:15,3:30,7:15 .. ti:30

When: Thursday. July 31,_2003
6:30-S:OOp,m.

28 DAYS LATER (R)
1:20, 3:30, 7:20 a 9:30

Publlc Health Topics to be addressed:
West Nile Virus
I
SARS
Monkeypox
Smallpox
Bioterrlsm
Questions &amp; Answer Session
REFRESHMENTS
DOOR PRIZES (Smoke Detector
and CO Detector)

BAD BOYS It (R}
1:00, 3:40, 7:00 .. 11:40
HOW TO DEAL (PG-1 3}
7:20&amp; 9:20
JOHNNY ENGLISH (PO}
1:10a3:10
LEAGUE OF
. EXTRAORDINARY
GENTLEMEN (PG-13)

r:1o a

9:~

PIRATES OF THE
CARIBBEAN (PG-13)
3:30, 7:00 9:30
1

ADMISSION IS FREE!!

:oo,

a

Presented by Fra11k Gorscak, BliRM. Meigs C01mty Health
Department, Public Health lnfrastructllre Coordi11ator,
a11d l'uhlic Ir~formatiml Officer.
All AGES AlL TIME S$400

·-

-·-~-·----~- - --·----···-

'

.. -....

�Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

Reds atop Mats, Page B2
Tribe goes extra to beat Twins, Page B2
Scoreboard, Page B3

Monday, July 28, 2003

Rumors of lynching prompt - Body identified as that of Baylor ·
investigation into black man's basketball player De~nehy
hanging death in .rural South
BELLE GLADE. Fla. (APJ
- Not long after the family
of Feraris "Ray" Golden
fou nd his dead body dangling
from a tree outside his grandmother's home, ugly suspicions began to surface.
Police concluded Golden
commiued suicide, hanging
himself with a work shin as a
noose. But relatives say that's
impossible; they claim the 32year-old. who .was black, was
found with his hands tied
. behind his back.
Rumors began swirling that
Ray Golden was lynched.
Friends say Golden was
dating a white policeman's
daughter in this rural farming
community of about 15,000,
divided almost equally
between black and white residents.
The uneasiness after his
death in May became so ram- .
pant that NAACP leaders
called for an inquest into the
lynching rumors.
"We're not saying it's a
homicide. We're not saying
it's a suicide. We just think
there are some questions that
need to be answered," said
Linda Johnson, the local president of the National
Association
for
the
Advancement of Colored
People.
The state attorney agreed to
hold an inquest Monday to
publicly air the community 's
concerns and the circumstances surroundin~ Gplden's
death. Police, medtcal examiners and others believed to A. blue and white ribbon is seen on a tree· Thursday, where
have knowledge of the death Feraris Golden's dead body was found dangling from a tree in
his grandmother's back yard in Belle Grade, Aa. But rumors in
are expected to testify.
A death by lynching hasn't the farming community said Golden's death was a lynching,
been documented for more and he had been found with his hands tied together. Police and
than t"&lt;O decades, according NAACP leaders made a public call for calm while the death was
to the Southern Poveny Law Investigated. (API
Center. But the heated reaction to Golden's death under- very careful if they assume Golden for the past 15 years.
scores the racial divide still lynching or even murder until "Somebody did that to htm."
Family members initially
present in Belle Glade and the facts are in."
Belle Glade police chief said they didn't be'lieve Golden
· many small communities in
Michael
Miller said the inves- took his own life, but they have
the Deep South, where accutigation
and
autopsy point to since refused to talk about the
sations of lynching occasionsuicide.
A
police
video shows case, saying they' II wait to hear
ally surface.
cuuing
down the facts at the mquest.
Three years ago, the Rev. officers
Police have said publicly
Jesse Jackson and the family Golden 's body with his hands
that
Golden was troubled and
at
his
sides.
of a black teena~er called for
told
family members he
"It's
a
small
town
and
when
repeated investigations into
the boy's hanging death in those things happert, rumors planned to kill himself.
Lynchings reached their
Kokomo, Miss. Investigators fly," Miller said.
But
investigators·
conclupeak
in the United States from
ultimately ruled out foul play.
the
end
of the Civil War until
flions
mean
little
to
a
black
com"We've seen a number of
1902,
numbering
more than
munity
that's
distrustful
of
the
these cases where claims have
been made and have not been police and reluctant to believe I 00 each year, according to the
Southern Poverty Law Center.
substantiated," said Mark Golden committed suicide.
"He
ain't
the
kind
to
do
that
The
numbers dropped to douPotok, editor of the Southern
to
himself.
He
wasn't
the
type
ble
digits
until 1935, when the
Poverty
Law
Center's
Intelligence Reports. "I would to let things bother him;" said average dropped again to a
simply caution people to be James Federick, 27. who knew few a year until the 1960s.

Fire battle looms, when
conditions are .right, officials say

,.

WEST GLACIER. Mont. increasing wind.
(AP) - Fire officials were
Some limited burnouts,
positioning manpower and many aimed at protecting
equipment to battle an buildings, were ignited Sunday.
approaching wildfire with
Incident commander Joe
fire, but hoped they won't be Starn said his team was proforced to light a 5,000-acre ceeding very deliberately
burnout sooner than planned with burnouts, which' could
because 'of changing weather take an unexpected tum and
in Glacier National Park. ·
do more harm than good.
Dangerous though it may be,
That concerns Apgar resithe strategy could pinch off the dent Monica Jungster.
threat to hundreds of houses, , ''I'm kind of cringing right
cabins and businesses. And now,". she told a community
there may be no other choice, meeting Sunday. "My quesftre commanders said Sunday. tion is, 'Is it dangerous to use
"When the weather condi- this (backfire)?"'
tions are right and we have
Starn told Jungster after the
the equipment and people and meeting that burnout planners
·resources to do the burn, are nationally renowned
that's what we'll do," said expens and every precaution
information officer Pete will be taken.
Buist. 'The exception .is if the
"It's not something we take
fire starts to move quickly. lightly," Starn said. "We're
Then we will have 10 do the sweating bullets when we say,
bum quickly."
'Go ahead and light." '
Officials said the burnout
The blaze was one of three
could be ignited a~ early as major blazes in and around
Monday but they hoped to the park that had blackened
wait until Tuesday.
44,500 acres by Sunday.
Only essential personnel
An even larger blaze had
remained at the part;'s head- burned 18,900 acres in the
quarters in West Glacier and • northwest comer of Glacier,
much.ofthewestem halfofthe just six miles south of the
park. where at least three sepa- Canadian border. The fire
rate fires were burning, is destroyed five dwellings,
closed during what normally is damaged another and burned
the heightofthetouristseason. 19 outbuildings. About 100
Late Sunday, finger fires homes and cabins were still
were flaring on the western threatened.
A third wildfire has burned
portion of a 9,300-acre ftre
and it was "watch out time," 16,300 acres inside the park
said Dawn LeFieur, a fire in a remote area north of
information officer.
Going-to-the-Sun Road.
She said forecasts call for
Large ftres were ~so bum-.
more hot weather Monday ing in other states, including
with a front moving south out Arizona, California, Colorddo,
of
Canada,
sugge$ting Idaho, New _Mexico, Oregon,

•

.

/"

South
Dakota.
Utah,
Washington and Wyoming, the
National Interagency Fire
Center reported.
Wildfires have turned dead- ·
ly in Arizona, where a helicopter crash Saturday killed
one firefighter and the pilot.
Another helicopter pilot died
Friday in Washington. In
Idaho, two firefighters were
killed earlier in the week.

WACO, Texas (AP) Combing through chest-high
weeds under the blazing sun,
authorities found evidence
they say helped identify the
body of Baylor University
basketball player Patrick
Dennehy, who had been missing for more than sill weeks.
Searching in the same
field where a decomposing
body had been found two
days before, investigators
found a head Sunday morning, McLennan County
Justice of the Peace Belinda
Summers said.
Later
Sunday
night,
McLennan County Sheriff
Larry Lynch announced that the
Dallas County medical examiner's office had detennined that
. the body was Dennehy's.
"With that evidence collected today. they were able
to make a posittve identification," Lynch said, without
specifying what evidence
was found. Authorities have
declined to say if a weapon
has been recovered.
Carlton Dotson, 2 I , was
arrested last week in his
home state of Maryland and
charged with murder in
Dennehy's death. Dot on ,
. who played · basketball at
Baylor last season and had
been living with Dennehy
since spring, remained jailed
without bond, awaiting
extradition to Texas.
Sunday's search took
place just north of gravel
pits where authorities looked
last week after Dotson's
arrest. Investigators used
farm equipment to cut down
weeds and grass up to 7 feet
tall in the rural area about
five miles south of Waco.
Authorities picked up
Dotson July 21 after he
called 911, saying he needed
help because he was hearing

v o i y c!"s ,
auth6ritll:s
s ~a i d .
Dot son
told RBI
agents 1 in
Mar~and
that · he ·
s h 0 t
Dennehy
after the
Dennehy
player
tried
to
shoot him, according to the
arrest warrant affidavit.
After his arrest, Dotson told
The Associated Press that he
"didn't confess to anything."
A message left for Dotson's
attorney, Grady Irvin, early
Monday at his Florida office
was
not
immediately
returned. Irvin said last week
after Dotson's arrest that he
wasn't sure how police had
reached the conclusion that
Dennehy was dead.
Dennehy 's family has
decid-,:d not to return to
Waco, the player's girlfriend
Jessica De La Rosa said
Sunday afternoon.
"Technically, there's. nothing we ~.an do out there," De
La Rosa said from her
Albuquerque home. Reached
hours later, after learning that
the body was Dennehy 's, she
sobbed and said she was
unable to comment.
Dennehy's mother and stepfather, Valone and Brian
Brabazon, and their teenage
daughter traveled to Waco from
their Carson City. Nev., borne
for the first time last week to
rettieve the player's belongings.
The family and. De La
Rosa left Waco about noon
Friday after a three-hour
meeting with police, and
said they believea Dennehy
could still be alive. The
Brabazons dropped off De
La Rosa in Albuquerque

early Saturday morning and
left for their home Sunday
before
learning
that
Dennehy was dead.
Dotson and Dennehy
·arrived last summer in
Waco, about I00 miles south
of Fort Worth. on basketball
scholarships.
Dotson was a transfer
from Paris Junior College in
East Texas and eligible to
play. Dennehy, because of
NCAA eligibility rules, had
to sit out a year after transferring from New Mexico, .
where he was kicked off the
team for losing his temper.
Dennehy 's family reponed
him missing June 19, seven
days after he was last seen
on campus. Dennehy's vehicle was found abandoned in
a Virginia Beach, Va., parking lot June 25.
An unnamed infonnant
told Delaware police that
Dotson told someone that he
shot Dennehy in the head as
the two argued while shooting guns in the Waco area,
according to court documents
filed in the ~ase June 23.
Baylor President Raben
B. Sloan Jr. notified faculty,
staff, students and alumni
Sunday night about the identification of the body, saying
in an e-mail that !'today our
worst fears were realized." ·
He asked Baylor employees to pray for Dennehy's
family and for Dotson.
Sloan said a campus-wide
memorial service would be
held for Dennehy in the fall
semester at Baylor, the
world's largest Baptist university with 14,000 students.
Richard Guinn, whose son
R.T. Guinn plays basketball
at Baylor, said Sunday night
that·he and his son were saddened by the news.

Kucinich wants 15 percent·
cut in ·Pentagon budget
OTTUMWA, Iowa (AP) parents bearing the high cost Democratic presidential contender to JOin Sen. Tom
- Rep. Dennis Kucinich ofllay care.
called for a $60 billion effort
"I intend to put forward a Harkin at a "Hear it from the
to
provide
universal plan for universal pre-kinder- Heartland" series of forums.
preschool and proposed pay- garten. a day care program The forums provide candimg for the plan with a 15 that would provide quality dates with a chance to speak
percent cut in Pentagon day care five days a week, to Democratic activists who
are committed to attending
spending.
year-round," he said. "
Jan.
19 precinct caucuses
"The Pentagon budget has
Kucinich linked the soarjust gone through the roof," ing Pentagon spending with that will launch the presidential nominating season.
Kucinich said at a forum on
Sunday. "We need a critical what he called President Harkin is urging all the cananalysis and a real effort to Bush's ·aggressive and large- didates to focus on bedrock
claim back money from the ly unilateral foreign policy economic issues .where he
and said defense spending says Bush is vulnerable.
Pentagon."
·
could
be trimmed if the U.S.
"This is the first president
The Democratic presidential candidate from Ohio did- adopted a more cooperative since Herbert Hoover to have
n't specify all the spending stance with other countries. a net loss in jobs," Harkin said.
Kucinich became the latest
cuts he would push, but did
single out a mtssile defense Plll!"lll!llll!llll!lll!l!llll!l"'!'llll!llll!l"!!lllll!llll!l!!lllll!l. .lll!l...lll!llll!llll!l..
program that would have a
dim future should he win the
White House. He promised
broad cuts.
"I'm not talking about
trimming around the edges
here," he said.
Kucinich,. who said he l~fl\~
would reverse that trend of
cutting funding for education, called for a new care
Nominate them for
progr.am for children 3 to 5
years old to help prepare
them for school. He said his
plan also would ease the
If they are selected, your ~
financial burden of working

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PageBl
Monday, July 28, 2003

•

KING LANCE

V

'

BY DAVE CAMPBELl.

Foolball
Season!!!

Associated Press
\

Jacobsen takes
Hartford title
· CROMWELL, Conn. (AP)
- Peter Jacobsen shot a 3under-par 67 on Sunday for a
two-stroke win at the Greater
Hartford Open, his first PGA
Tour title in eight years.
Jacobsen, who also won
the tournament in 1984, had
a share of the lead for all
four rounds and led by one
stroke after 54 holes. He'll
go down in the books as .the
final winner of the GHO,
which · becomes the Buick
Championship next year. ·
The 49-ye_ar-old Jacobsen
finished 14 under for the
tournament with a 266, two
strokes better than playing
partner Chris Riley.
Todd Fischer (65) finished
third with at II under. Craig
Barlow and Kenny Perry
both shot 69 to finish four
strokes back.

Watson wins Sr.
British Open
'
TURNBERRY, Scotland
(AP)- Tom Watson made a
par on the second playoff
hole to beat Carl Mason and
win the Senior British Open.
Watson, a five-time British
Open champion, shot a 6under-par 64 to rally from
three strokes off the lead .
Mason squandered a twostroke advantage on the par-4
18th with a double bogey 6,
finishing with a 67 and forcing a playoff with Watson.
Watson and Mason finished a tournament record
17-under 263, breaking Bob
Charles' 14-year-old mark of
11-under 269 , set on the
same Thmberry links.

Tracy grabs
Molson Indy flag
VANCOUVER,
British
Columbia (AP) Paul
Tracy won the Vancouver
Molson Indy on Sunday,
stretching his lead from 15
points to 20 over Bruno
Junqueira in Tracy's quest
for his first CART champic;mship.

.

U.S. swimmer
sets record
BARCELONA,
Spain
(AP) Michael Phelps
Claimed one of Mark Spitz's
records Sunday on the final
cjay of the World Swimming
Championships when he
broke his fifth individual
world mark for the 400meter individual inedley.
Spitz managed only four
records in individual events
fn the Olympics 31 years ago
as he won his legendary
seven gold medals.
Phelps was the centerpiece
of one of the fastest meets in
history; 13 world marks were
broken and one was tied. He
also upstaged his American
teammates, who led with II
golds in the pool and 28 .
overall - their best performance since the · Olympics
three years ago.

STANFORD, Calif. (AP) .
- Kim Clijsters came back
to beat Jennifer Capriatl 4-6,
6-4, 6-2 in' the final of the
·Bank of the West Classic for
her 15th career si ngles title.r
~

t

Chapman
getting his
chance
Former Marshall
back has shot to
be No. 1 forVikings

~ays Until
High School

Clijsters tops
Capriati

7

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

PageA6

Overall leader Lance Armstrong holds the winner's trophy Sunday on the podium after winning his fifth consecutive Tour de France cycling race on the Champs Elysees avenue in Paris after the 20th and final stage of the race
between Ville-d'Avray and Paris. (AP)

Armstrong captures fifth
straight Tour de France
BY JEROME PUGMIRE
Associated Press
PARIS - Just moments after
Lance Armstrong won his recordtying consecutive fifth Tour de
France title, he was already motivated to win another.
"The other years, I won by six,
seven minutes," Armstrong said. '!I
think it makes it more exciting and
sets up an attempt for No. 6. "
Triumphant over crashes, illnesses, hard-charging rivals and some
bad luck, Armstrong sipped champagne in the saddle Sunday as he
coasted to the Champs-Elysees in

Paris to get his winner's trophy.
But it was close. For Armstrong,
used to winning the Tour by comfortable margins, his 61-second victory
over Jan Ullrich· just wasn't good
enough.
"I love cycling, I love my job and I
will be back," Armstrong said. "In
many ways, I'm coming back to
hopefully return to a level that I had
for the first four because this year
was not acceptable."
Armstrong's problems almost
overwhelmed him. He had a stomach
flu that was so bad before the Tour, he
nearly didn ' t make the flight to
France. He was bruised in a crash in
the second day. He lost II pounds

through dehydration riding a time
trial in a heat wave and struggled up
the Tour's most daunting climb. the
8, 728 112-feet Col du Galibier. with a
faulty bac k brake rubbing against the
wheel.
"It takes a little bit out of you with
the brake on ," Armstrong said ..
"Those son of problems just kept
happening."
Hi s rivals took notice, sensing that
after four years, Armstrong - cancer survivor - was ready to fall.
Armstrong. however, was down but
not out.
His turning point came last
Ple•se see Tour, Bl

Newman puts
pedal' to metal to
.win at Pocono
and won at Chicagoland
Speedway.
This time, he needed
LONG POND, Pa. _ somehelp-plentyofitRyan Newman used the to complete the race.
oldest tactic in auto racing
Tlrat aid came in the
once his team assured him form of crashes involving
he had enough fuel to take rookie Casey Mears and
him the distance.
Bobby Labonte that
"I just put the pedal to .the slowed the field for a total
metal, and did the best job 1 of I 2 laps late in the
could, which was appar- Pennsylvania 500.
ently good enough," he
"Those cautions played
said.
to our favor for sure,"
Late caution flags helped Newman said. "I think in ·
Newman stretch his gas to hindsight we wouldn 't
the end, allowing him to have been able to make it if
barely hold off hard-charg- :we hadn't had those cauing Kurt Busch al1d win tions." .
Sunday
at
Pocono
While teammate Ru sty
Raceway.
Wallace.. who finished
Newmanwasaskedtogo lith, was beratmg h~s
the final 46 laps without crew•. Newman was prats.
stopping. Save gas, he was... 10?. hts.
It was a matt~r of gomg
told earlier, and do it without letting anybody pass. :~rda gutsy call, Newman
·
"Those two things are
,
d 'd d
contradictory, and hard to
~11ace _s t~am ect e
do " Newman sa· d
to bn?g ht.m.. m for a late
But Newma~ · has a st~p, mfunatmg the I ~89
.
.
.
· Wmston Cup champton
degreemengmeenng from whose 'career-worst losing ·
Purdue, and a knack for streak reached 82 races .
problems.
"We were so damn con- Ryan Newman holds the trophy aloft after winning the
solvmg •
NASCAR Pennsylvania 500 race Sunday at the Pocono
Newman also played the
fuel card two week~ earlier Plua see 'NASCAR. Bl Raceway ·in Long Pond, Pa. (AP)
BY DICK BR!NSTIR

Associated Press

W

MANKATO. Minn .
The
Minnesota Vikings would like Michael
Bennett. their young Pro Bowler, back
as soon as possjble. They believe
they· ve got enough running backs to
sustain such a big loss, though, and
Doug Chapman gets the first chance to
prove it.
·
. "Well. of course every running back
thinks he ·s the greatest thing." said
Chapmat( a third-round pick in 2000
out of Marshall, where he finished second in school history with 4,293 rushing yards.
.
"I think I have good balance and
good strength and good explosion
through the hole. I haven't been able to
show it yet. but I can break away and
break some long runs. Randy (Moss)
will tell you- I did it a lot in college~"
Chapman said.
The news that Bennett would miss at
least half the season with a slow-healing stress fracture in his foot was disappointing. but not devastating.
·
"Fortunate! y for us, running back is
one of our deeper positions," coach
Mik~ Tice said.
' Moss, a college teammate of
Chapman 's, supported Chapman's
ability to be the No. I back. But he
couldn't resist getting a zing in tirst.
" I was telling Doug that now that
Michael isn't going to be there ... that
instead of us blocking 10 yards downfield and letting Michael run the other
70, that we're going to have to block
the whole 70 for Doug.'' Moss said.
Bennett, like the franchise's all-time
leading rusher Robert Srnith before
him. has a gift of field-stretching speed
that few, including Chapman. possess.
Please see Vlkls, Bl

Browns sign
rookie to
five-year deal
BEREA (AP) - Long snapper
· Ryan Pontbriand. who was stunned
when the Cleveland Browns drafted
him in April, ended a holdout by
agreeing
to
terms on a fiveyear deal with
the
club
Sunday.
Terms were
not immediately .'f'l:'*~~~
available.
Pontbriand is
the first of Cleveland's seven 2003
draft picks to report to camp. Center
Jeff Faine, the Browns' first-round
pick who is expected to start this season, remains unsigned.
The Browns are attempting to sign
their late-round picks to five-year
deals, a new strategy that is being met
with resistance by agents for the players.
Typically, low-round picks sign for
three years, after which they are eligible for free agency.
Team president Carmen Policy said
the Browns are determined to make it
work.
" I don't know how long we 're
goi ng to stand by this philosophy, but
I would have to think it's this year at
least," Policy .said. " If we got a favorable four-year deal. I'm sure we'd
give it a second thought. We feel what
we're asking is not unreasonable."
Pontbriand was selected in the fifth
round by the Browns, who reeded a
long snapper after Rya n Kuehl left as
a free agent and signed· with the New
York Giants .
The
6-foot-2,
255-pounder "
appeared to anger the Browns with
hts five-day holdout.
On Friday. Policy was asked what ·
advice he would give Pontbriand.
" If he was my son, I would walk
him in here and tell him to thank the
Cleveland Browns for drafting him,"
Policy said. Notes: DT Gerard Warren
mi ssed his second straight day of
practice with a bruised knee. Warren
mjured his knee on Friday. An MRI
only showed a' bruise. and Warren is
being kept out as a precaution. team
spokesman Todd Stewart said .
...

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel
I

'

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Cincinnati 8, New York 5

Vikes
from Page B1

Adam Dunn of Cincinnati watches his 26th home run of the
season leave the ballpark Sunday at Shea Stadium in New
York. (AP)

doubled, David Weathers
relieved and Dunn hit a twoout, two-run homer.
"I still can't believe that
Castro hit that one out the
opposite way. That kind of
shocked me," Trachsel said.
''The home runs, I thought,
were pretty good pitches."
Roger Cedeno hit a two-run
homer in the seventh, his first
home run as a pinch hitter,
cutting the lead to 7-5.
Sean Casey added an RBI
single in the ninth off Pedro
Feliciano.
· Cincinnati had gone a:head
in the third when Guillen hit
an RBI single after an error by
first baseman Tony Clark,
who failed to handle a pickoff

Tour

"I delivered one of my best
races ever," Ullrich said.
"This time, I was very close
to Armstrong. The next time,
from Page B1
without Coast-chaos, I will
be even better prepared."
Monday on a mist-shrouded
The 29-year-old German
8.3-mile ascent to the has won just once, in 1997,
Pyrenean ski station of LuzArdiden, one of the Tour's and finished as the runner-up
·
hardest climbs. Typically for five times.
Perhaps the greatest damthis drama-packed Tour, age done was to Armstrong's
Armstrong fell when a spec" aura of invincibility. Next
tator's outstretched bag
hooked his handlebars. But year, to overcellne rivals who
saw him struggle, Amlstrong
he got back up and rode like
will need to prove that this
a man possessed to roar past Tour was just a blip and that
Ullrich, who in a gesture of·
he ' s back and better than
srortsmanship waited for ever.
him to get back on his bike.
Armstrong wouldn't say
"Atthe start of the climb, I
how
much longer he' d race
knew that that was where I
beyond
next year, when he' ll
needed to win the Tour,"
Armstrong said. "At the fin- be 32. But he hopes to quit
ish, I was confident that that undefeated.
"That's a dream," he said.
was enough."
"I
,hope I can just know the
Ullrich came into the Tour
from two knee operations, a moment when it's time to
ban for using recreational walk away. I've been here for
II or 12 years now, so my
drugs, and the collapse of his
time
is limited. I know that.
Team Coast. He's already
But I don 't plan. on doing a
thinking about next year.
farewell year, a farewell

NASCAR
from Page B1
servative on our pit calls," he
said. "We were basing every- ,
thing on the race going green
the rest of the way and we
wouldn't have enough fuel.
"Ryan said the heck with
that, we hope we have some
cautions and we hope we can
make it on fuel. They gambled
and it paid off. I love my ~uys,
but when I've got to hll pit
road, it scares me."
Newman said he wasn't
thinking entirely about fuel as
Busch made a determined bid
after the race went green for
the finall2 laps.
. "The 97 there at the end, I
had to do some stuff to keer,
his nose in the dirty air. '
Newman said. "Fuel mileage
and track position paid off."
Handling also had a role in
the victory.
·
"I had to line myself up to
get off the corners;" he
explained. "We didn 't have
great steam down the straight-

Late Laker wins it for Tribe
CLEVELAND (AP) Tim Laker was running late,
real late. and had no one to
blame but himself.
"I've got a plane to catch,"
Cleveland's weary catcher
said as he eyeballed a clock
on the Indians' clubhouse
wall. "I haven' t even packed
yet."
.
A few minutes earlier,
Laker sent the Minnesota
1\vins packing for home.
Laker, who popped up with
a chance to win it four
innings earlier, hit an RBI
single with two outs in the
14th Sunday to give the
Cleveland Indians a 3-2 win
over the Minnesota 1\vins.
Laker, who left the bases
loaded in the lOth off Juan
Rincon (2-4 ), came through
the second time against the
right-hander as Cleveland
won two of three in the
series.
Laker's single was espeCially satisfying for the
Indians, who have feuded
with the 1\vins the past two
seasons. Before the All-Star
break, the teams exchanged
shoves and brushback pitch-

aways."
Busch never let up in a battle between the biggest winners this season on the circuit.
"It was a great day," he said.
"But he was in position to
win."
Busch nearly provided the
first victory on the mountaintop for Roush Racing - now
a five-car unit - since, the
team entered Winston Cup
racing in 1988. But every time
he pulled within a car-length
or two, Newman got away.
Newman parlayed his ,
series-leading fifth pole of the
year into his. fourth victory of
the season and fifth overall.
He and Busch came in leading
the circuit with three wins
apiece . .
Nc;wrnan's Dodg! beat the
Ford of Busch by .307 seconds - about six car-lengths
- to take the $4.2 million
event. He led 88 of 200 laps in
just his.fourt)l Cup race on the
2 112-mile triangular track. ·
Newman also won here in
an ARCA series race in 2000.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. also COO·
served ftJel and lasted to ~

thrOw.
New York went a:head 2-1 in
the bottom half on Jason
Phillips' RBI groundout and
Timo Perez's run-scoring double, but Castro's two-out RBI
double tied the score in the
fourth.
Notes: Bob Murphy, a
Mets ' broadcaster since the
team began in 1962, received .
a lengthy standing ovation
from fans and players in the ·
middle of the sixth inning
when it was announced that
he intends to retire at the end
of the season .... The start was
the 300th of Trachsel's career.
... Reds won the weekend
series 2-1 but lost the season
series 4-2.

But that can be overcome.
"If the guys up front do our
jobs, it doesn't really matter
who they put back there,"
said left guard Chris
Liwienski. "Clearly we want
our 1,000-yard rusher, but
we' ll open stuff up for Doug
and Moe (Williams) just the
same."
Chapman, at 5-foot-10 and
213 pounds, is a powerful , .
close-to-the-turf runner who
averaged 7.4 yards on 12 carries last season until suffering a scary, season-ending
abdominal injury in October
that caused internal bleeding
and required hospitalization.
He's fully rc~overed now,
anxious for his first crack at
becoming a starter. '
"I know that I can be a
1,000-yard plus back in this
league," Chapman said. "I
just need the opportunity, and

es during a senes tn
Minneapolis.
Rafael Betancourt (1-1)
pitched the 14th for his first
major league win.
Casey Blake doubled with
one out in the 14th off
Rincon, who was pitching hia
fifth inning. Jody Gerut
moved Blake up with a
groundout,
and Milton
Bradley was intentionally
walked.
Zach Sorensen also walked
to load the bases, and Laker
lined Rincon's next pitch into
left.
Asked what he learned in
his previous at-bat against
Rincon, Laker said, "Not to
miss that pitch."
Rookie Jhonny Peralta
homered for the Indians, who
improved to just 3-8 since the
All-Star break and set a club
record with five sacrifice
bunts.
Minnesota dropped to 7-4
si nee the break and fell 6 112
games behind first-place
Kansas City in the AL
Central.
The Twins couldn't put it
away in the ninth as closer
the opponunity presented
itself, and I'm §Oing to take
advantage of it.
Said Moss: "I think Doug
is ready, and I think he is hungry. I think that all of our running backs are weapons, and
they can play anywherein the
league, I thmk that .it's time
for Dou~ to show his stuff."
The VIkings will use a tight
·end, especially the versatile
Jim Kleinsasser, as an Hback (offthe line, in the backfield) with some regularity
but rarely will they go with a
true two-back set.
Moe Williams is coming
off a brea.kout season with II
touchdowns and 414 yards as
the third-down and shortyardage back, and the coaches prefer that he remain in
that role . .
That leaves Chapman to
stave off recently signed
rookie Onterrio Smith for the
top spot, with the coaches
also high on Larry Ned - a
former San Diego State star
who spent a few weeks on the
practice squad last year -

Eddie Guardado made a
fielding . error that helped
Cleveland load the bases.
The Indians tied it on rookie
pinch-hitter
Victor
Martinez's sacrifice fly.
It was ·Minnesota's first
loss in 46 games when leading after eight innings.
" I didn 't do the job,"
Guardado said. "Things happen sometimes, but you can' t
let them. My bad."
.
Minnesota is still in the
race, but the Twins know
they ' ll soon be out of time.
" We've got to· win this
game," Torii Hunter said.
"That's all there is to it. We
can't take Cleveland lightly,
not that we did. It's tougher
this year. Everybody is gunning for us. We're the division champs and they want to
beat our behinds."
Indians second baseman
John McDonald made a dazzling defensive play with a
behind-the-back throw to get
a forceout at second .base in
the second inning.
" That's one of the best
plays I've ever seen," Laker
said.
and John Avery, who spent
time with Miami and Denver
before leading both the XFL
(2001) and CFL (2002) in
rushin~.

" We II see how it all shakes
out," running backs coach
Dean Dalton said Sunday.
"It's a long marathon, with
· heavy-duty collisi&lt;'ns. We
want quality guys from top to
bottom."
Bennett, who ' ll find out in
the next few weeks whether a
surgical procedure on his
foot worked well enough to
allow him to begin playing in
late October, rushed for nearly 1,300 yards last year. This
season. there's a good chance
a handful of backs will wind
up with between 500 and
1,000 yards.
"Whatever it takes to win,"
Dalton said. "As egotistical
and prima donna hs big-time
football players can be, we
have the right chemistry
where they're going to be
supportive of each other's
successes."

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Scoreboard
Pro baseball
National League
Eut

·w

Atlanta ......... ....... .

..68

Philadelphia .......

..57

Florida

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

MontreaL. .... ........ .... .54
New York ...................... 43

,,

L
36
46
49
51
61

.553
.533
.514
.413

10',1
12'"'
14'ir
25

L
48
50
52
55
58
63

Pet
.543
.519
.500
.461
.442
.394

GB

L
38

Pet
.638
.5:l3
.519
.509

Pet.

GB

.654

central

w

Houston ....... ... ............. 57
StLouis ...... ............... 54
Chicago .. .
. ........ 52
PiMsburgh
.. ...... 47
Cincinrnati ...... .. .... .
46
Milwaukee .................... 41
West

W
San Francisco .............. 67

2l.

4',
8',
10'2
15 ~

GB

Arizona .: ............. ....... 56
49
Los Angeles ......... .... .....54
50
Colorado ... .......... ......... 55
53
San Diego ........... .... .... 40
66
.3n
·
Seturday'a Games
Houston 3, Chicago Cubs 1
St. Louis 13, Pinsburgh 8
Arizona 1, LOs Angeles 0
Flori~ 10, Philadelphia 5
A11anta 15. Montreal4
Cincinnati 8, N.Y. Mats 3
Colorado 13, Milwaukee 8
San Diego 2. San Francisco 1
Sunday'l" Gamea
Monlreal 13, Atlanta 10
Cincinnati 8, N.Y.- Mets 5
Florida 7, Philadelphia 6
Chicago Cubs 5, Houston 3
St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 3
Colorado 6, Milwaukee 1
San Francisco 6, San Diego 2
Los Angeles 1, Arizona o
Monday's Gemea
Philadelphia (Wolf 11-5) at Cincinnati (Dempster
3-7). 12:35- p.m.
Pittsburgh (Suppan 9-7) at St. Louis (Tomko 6·6).
1:40 p.m
Atlanta (Hampton 6-5) at Montreal (Vazquez 8"6).
7:05p.m .
Ari.Zona (Batista 7-5) at Florida (Redman 8-4),
7 05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Rusch 1-12) at N.Y. Mats (Sea 5·7),
7: 10p.m
Tueaday'a Gamea
Arizona (Webb 7-3) at Florida (Penny 8·8). 7:05
p.m
San Diego (OI.Perez 4-4) at Pittsburgh (Benson 59). 7:05 p.m.
St. louis (Stephenson 4-10) at Montreal
(L.Hernandez t0-6). 7:05p.m.
Los AhQeies (Ishii 9-4) at Philadelphia (Padilla 9~
8), 7:05 p.m.
MilWaukee (Sheets 9·7) at .N.Y. Mets (Giavine 6·
11),7: 10p.m.
Colorado (Oliver 8·6) at Cincinnati (Haynes 2·10),
7:10p.m.
HouSton (Oswalt 6-5) at Atlanta (Ru.Ortiz 14-4),
7:35p.m
S9n Francisco (Moss 9·6} at Chicago Cubs
(Clement 7-9), 8:05 p.m.
1

National League Leaders
BATTING-Pujols, St. louis, .377 ; Hellon.
Colorado, .348: JGuillen, CincinnaU, .342: Renteria,
St . Louis, .335; Bonds. San Francisco, .331 ; Vidro,
Montreal , .328; Sheffield, Atlanta, .325.
RUNS- Helton. Colorado, 96; Pujols. St. louis,
94; Furcal, Allanta, 84; Sheffield, Atlanta, 83; Solids,
San Francisco, 78; AJOnes, Atlanta, 75; Berkman,
Houston, 71 .
RBI-PrWitson, Colorado, 101 ; Pujols, St. Louis,
97; lowell , Florida , 86: Helton, Colorado, 85;
Sheffield. Atlanta, 81 : Sexson. Milwaukee, 78;
Thome, Philadelphia, 78.
HITS- Pujols, St. Louis , 146; Helton, Colorado,
139; Pierre. Aorida, 133: Renteria, St. Louis, 133;
PrWilson, Colorado, 126; Grissom, San Francisco.
125: OCabrera, Montreal , 124: lGonzalez. Arizona,
124.
DOUBLES-Pujols, St. Louis, 37; Helton,
Colorado, 36; ShGreen , los Angeles~ 36;

•

LGonzalez, Arizona, 36; MGiles. Atlanta, 35;
PrWIIson, Colorado, 35; Grudzielanek, Chicago,.31 ;
Biggio, Houston, 31 .
TR!PLE5-Furcal, Atlanta. B: CPaHerson,
Chicago. 7; LW&amp;Iker. Colorado. 7: Wigginton, New
York, 6; Podsednlk, Milwaukee, 6; SFinley, Arizona,
.6: AGonzale.z, Florida, 5; JEnca.macion, Florida." 5;
Payton, Colorado, 5: Lofton. Chk:ago. 5.
HOME RUNs--Bonds, San Francisco, 33; Pujcls,
St. louis. 29: Lowell, FlOrida, 29; Edmonds. St.
louis, 29; Sexson, Milwaukee, 28; Jlopez, Atlanta.
28: Prwilson, Colorado, 27: Thome. Philadelphia,
27.
STOLEN BASE5-Pierre, Florida, 50; Renteria,
St. Louis, 25: DAoberts, Los Angeles, 24;
Podsednik, Milwaukee. 21 : EYoung, Milwaukee, 20:
Lofton, Chicago, 20: Goodwin, Chk:ago, 19.
. PITCHING (11 Declsions)-WWilltams, St. louis,
14-3, .824, 3.42: Willis, Florida. 9-2.. 8t8. 2.59:
AuOrtiz; Atlanta, 14-4 , .778, 3.55; HRamirez .
Atlanta, 8~3, .727, 4.14; Robertson , Houston, 1()..4,
.714, 4.74; Schmidt, San Francisco, 10.4, .714,
2.41: Ishii, Los Angeles, 9-.,., .692, 3.37.
STRIKEOUT5-Wood. Chicago, 173: JVazquez,
Montreal, 157: Prior, Chicago, 150; Schmidt, San
Francisco. 143; Noma, los Angeles. 135; Wall,
Philadelphia, 118; Millwood, Philadelphia, 117.
SAVES-Smoltz. "Atlanta, 37: Gagne, los
Angeles, 35; Wagner. Houston. 31; Biddle. Montreal,
25: MiWilliams, Philadelphia, 25; Worrell, San
Francisco, 23; Williamson, Cincinnati, 2t ; Benitez,
New York: 21 .

American League
Eeat
W
L
Pel.
GB
New Vork ............ ........... 63 . 40
.612
Boston ....... .:............... ..62
42
.596
1~·~
Toronto .. :..................... 54
51
.514
10
Baltimore .............. ... .....49
53
.480
13:'t
Tampa Bay .................... 37
66
.359
26
Central
W
LPctGB
Kansas City ...... ....... .. 57
46
.553
Chicago ........... ........ .... 54
51
.514
4
Minnesota ...... ., .......... .. 51
53
.490
6:1
Cleveland
........ 44
61
419
14
Detroit... ..
........... .28
75
.272
29
Weel
W
L
Pet · GB
Seattle. ...
........... .63
41
.606
Oakland ..
.... .60
44
.577
3
Anaheim .
. ... 51
52
.495
11 ~,
Texas ......
.............42
62
404
2t
Slturday'e Game•
Boston 5, N.Y. Yankees 4
Seanle 4, Texas o
Baltimore 7, Toronto 2
Oakland 8, Anaheim 1
Cleveland 9, Minnesota 2
Detroit 5, Kansas City 1
Tampa Bay 10, Chicago White Sole 6
Sunday's Games
Toronto 10, Baltimore 1
Cleyela"nd 3, Minnesota 2, 14 innings ·
Kansas City 5, Detroit 1
Chicago White Sox 9, Tampa Bay 1
Oakland 10, Anaheim 1
Texas 7, Seattle 3
Boston 6, N.Y. Yankees. 4
Monday's Games
Texas (Benoit 5·5) at Seattle (R.Frankiin 7-8),
10:05 p.m. ~
Oakland (Zilo 8·8) at Anaheim (Washburn 8-10),
10:05 p.m .
Tueaday'a Games
Tampa Bay (Gonzalez 4·4) at Toronto (Escobar 66). 7:05p.m.
Baltimore (Helling 6·7) at Minnesota (Santana 4·
3), 8:05 p.m.
Boston (Wakefield 7·5) at Tex;;~s (Dickey 4-5), 8:05
p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 8-10) at Kansas Cily
(May 5·4), 8:05 p.m.
Detroit {Roney 1·5) at Seattle (Meche 10-7), 10:05
p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 12-6) at Anaheim (Appier 76). 10:05 p.m
Cl!l'leland (B .Anderson 8-71 at Oakland (Mulder
13·7), 10:05 p.m.

American League Leaders
BATIING-ISuzuki,

Seanle.

.339:

Bradley.

Cleveland, .326; Mueller, Boston, .326; MR•mlrez,
Boston, .326; Mora, Baltimore, .325; MYoung, Tbo$9,
.323: NiMon. Boston •. 321; Garciapana, Boston,

.321 .
RUNS-WGIIs, Toronto, 84; Garcl&amp;parra, Boston,
83; CDelgado, Toronto, 82; MRamlraz. Boston, 62;
ASOr1ano. New York, 78; SBoone, Seattle, 74;
!Suzuki, seattle, 73.
RBI-cDetgado, Toronto, 105; Wolo, Toronto. 93;
GAnderson, Anaheim, 85; BBoone, Slaltle, 83;
JaGiambl. New York. 80; MRamiJez. Boston, 79;
Conine, Baltimore, 73.
HITs-tSuzukl, seattle. 148; Garclaparra, Boston,
139; ~ells, Toronto, 136; MYoung, Texas, ·135;
qAnderson, Anaheim, 130; ASOrlano, New York,
128: MRamirez, Boston, 125.
DOUBLEs-Huff, Tampa Bay, 36; GAnderson,
Anaheim, 35: Mueller, Boston, 34; Wells, Toronto,
32; Matsui. Now York. 31: Bredlay. Clwatand. 31 ;
MOrdonez, Chicago, 30; Garclaparra, Boston, 30.
TRIPLEs--Garciaparra, Boston, 12; CGuzman,
Minnesota, 9; Baldelli, Tampa Bay, 7; Byrnes,
Oakland, 7; MYoung, Texas•. 6: Rivas, Minnesota, 6;
OYoung , Detroit, 6.
HOME AUN5-CDelgado, Toronto, 30; JaGiambi,
New York, 29: Wells, Toronto, 28; BBoona, Seattle,
27; MRamirez. Boston, 25: Thomas, Chicago. 25:
ASorlano, New Vork, 24; ARodriguez, Texas, 24;
JGonzalez, Texas, 24.
STOLEN BASE5-Beltran, Kansas City, 30;
Crawford, Tampa Bay, 27; ASoriano, New Yortc:, 27;
!Suzuki, Seanle, 26: ASanchez, Detroit, 20; Damon,
Boston, 20; Baldelli, Tampa Bay, 16.
PITCHING (11 Declslons)-Halladay, Toronto, 152, .882. 3.29; DWells, New York. 12-3, .800, 3.80;
Penson , Baltimore, 14·5, .737, 3.64; Dlowe, Boston,
11 -4 •. 733, 4.84; Loaiza , Chicago. 13-5, .722. 2.19;
M0yer, Seattle. 13-5, .722. 3.4e: Pineiro, SaalUe, 12·
5. 706. 3.17.
STRIKEOUTs:-clemens, New York, 139;
Mussina, New York, 132; PMartlnez, Boston, 130;
Halladay, Toronto, 127; Loaiza, Chicago, 115;
Wakefield, Boston, n4; Colon, Chicago, 113;
PettiHe, New York, 113.
SAVE~Foulke, Oakland, 26: Urbina, Texas, 26;
MacDougal, Kansas City, 24: Guardado, Minnesota,
24; Julio, Baltimore, 23; OBaez, Cleveland, 22;
Percival, Anaheim, 22.

Auto racing
NASCAR Wlnaton Cup Series
Pennsylvania 500 results
LONG POND, Pa. - Results Sunda~ from the
Pennsylvania 500 race tor NASCAR's Winston Cup
series at Pocono Raceway, listing starting position in
Parentheses, driver, car, laps co~ieted with reason
out if not running at the finish, and maney won:
,1. (1) Ryan Newman. Dodge, 200. $180.575.
2. (13) Kurt Busch. Ford, 200, $152,695. ·
3. (18) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 200,
$131 ,037.
4. (17) Michael WaNrlp, Chevrolet, 200. S94,355.
5. (6) Terry Labonte, Chevrolet, 200,$100,581.
6. (19) Jaff Bur1on. Ford. 200, $97,t07.
7. (26) Joe Nemeehek. Chevrolet, 200. $65,190.
8. (23) Todd Bodine, Ford, 200, $76,390.
9. (22) Dave Blaney, Ford, 200. $79.390.
10.(20) Sterling Marlin. Dodge, 200.$97.790.
11. (7) Rusty Wallace, Dodge, 200, $88,107.
12. (31) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet. 200, $88,426.
13. (9) Matt Kenseth, Ford. 200. $66.590.
14. (3) EIIO&gt;N Sadler, Ford, 200, $85,240.
15. (2) Jimmie ·Johnson, Ch9\lrolet, 200, $67,840.
16. (30) Tony Raines. Chevrolet. 200. $47.490.
17. (II) Bill Elliott, Dodge, 200, $85, t23.
18 ..(37) Robby Gordon, Ch8\lrotet, 200,$74,977.
19 (38) Ward Bur1on, Dodge. 200. $81.896.
20 . (29) Johnny Benson, Pontiac, 200, $7B,265.
21 (8) Oale Jarrett, Ford, 200, $91.168.
22. (21) Jimmy Spencer, Dodge, 200,$61,690.
23. (40) Mike Wallace, Pontiac, 199, $59,765.
24. (36) Christian Fittlpaldl. Dodge. 199. $83.893.
25. (t6) Steve Park, Ch8Vrolet. 198.$56,240.
26(:34) Ken Schradsr, Dodge, 198, $47,590.
27 . (24) Greg Biffle. Ford. 197, $47,340.
28(12) Jamie McMurray, Dodge, 195, $47.t90.
29 . (43) Larry Foyt, Oodge, 188,$44,015.
30. (4) ·Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet, 180, engine,
$89.448.
31 . (39) Jeff Green, Chevrolet, 180,$71,402.
32. (28) Kenny Wallace, Dodge, 178, $51 ,954.

33. (5) John Andretti. Pontiac, 176, $44.265.
34. (35)Kyla Petty; Dodge. t70, $51 .165.
35. (10) Casey · Mears, Dodge, 164. crash.
$50,990.
36. (25) Jeff GordOn, Che11rolet. 155. crash ,
$90,168.
37. (33) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 153, engine,
$105.203.
38. (15) J8rarTri Maylald. Dodge. 123, auh, $60,500
39. (27) Rld&lt;y Rudd. Ford, 121 . engtne. $50.385.
4().1321Rlct&lt;y Cravon. Pontiac. 115. engine, $50.230.
41 . (14) Mark Martin, Fon:l , 74, crash, $75,923.
-o2.(41) IJerrb Cope, ChaVrotet,ll6. fuel~ $42,1XXl.
43.(42) Morven~. Forrl, 44. handing, $42.186.
Race atltlatlcl
A11erege speed: 127.705 mph.
Time of race: 3 hours, 54 minutes, 55 seconds.
Margin ol vtctory: .0.307 seconds
Caution ftags : 8 lor 36 laps.
Lead changes: 18 among 11 drivers.
Lap· leaders: A.Newman 1·31: AWallece 32·34:
M.Kenseth 35·3p; M.Wattrtp 37; R.Newman 38·50;
J.Benson 51 ; R.Wallace 52~9 ; J.Sper'lcer 70;
C.Meaf&amp; 71-78: R.Wallace 79-80; J.Burton 81 ·97;
T.Stewart 98·108; K.Busch t09: M.Wanrtp 110.116;
T.Stewart ,17·119; M.Waltrip 120.129; D.Earnhardt
Jr. 130-154;J.Spencer 155-156; A.Newman 157-200.
Unol11clal points leaders: 1, M.Kenseth 2,977. 2,
O. Earnh~trdt Jr. 2,745 . 3, J.Gt;:Hdon 2,669. 4,
J.Johnson 2.547. 5, B.Labonte 2,MS. 6. M.Waltrip
2,538. 7, K.Harvick 2,443. 8, K.Busch 2,418. 9,
R.Newman 2,363. 10, J.Burton 2,355.

Pro basketball
Women's National Basketball
Aasoclatlon
Eeatem Conference
W
L
Oetralt .......... :.... ............ 15
6
Charlotte
..... ... 13
10
lndlane. ..... ..................... 12
10
Connectlcut... .... ...... .... ..13
11
Cleveland
.... .... 11
12
NewYork ........... .......... ....9
11
Washington .....................5
18
Wtltem Co.nference
W
L
LosAngeles ................. 18
5
Houston ... .. .............. 13
8
Minnesota .............. ....... 13
10
SealUe ............ .. .......... 13
10
Sacramento ... ...... .... ...12
12
San Antonio ............... ..... 7
16
Phoeni:x ........................... 3
18
Saturday'&amp; Game
Cleveland 89, Washington 78
Houston 61, New York 53
·
C"onneclicut 74 , Charlone 70
Minnesota 70, Indiana 65
Sacramento 76, Seattle 63
Sunday's Games
Detroit 81, Washington 71
San Antonio 64, Cle\IBiand 55
TUesday's Gamea
Detroit at Cleveland, 7 p.m.
Indiana at Washington, 7 p.m.
Minnesota at Houston. 8 p.m
New York at Phoeni)li, 10 p.m.

Pet.
GB
.714
.565
3
.545
3',l
.542
3\
.478
5
.450
5\
.2 17 . 11
Pel.
.783
.619
.565
.565
.500
.304
.143

GB
4
5
.5
6\
11
14

Pro soccer
Major League Soccer
Eaatem Conference
W L T Pia GF GA
Chicago ....... ..... .... 8
4 4 28 29 20
MetroStars .................8
5 4 28 27 23
New England .............5
6 7 22 30 33
D.C. United .. .. .......... 5 6 6 21 24 22
Columbus ...... ........... .5
6 5 20 20 20
Western Conference
W L T Pta GF GA
San Jose .......... .. ...... 8
3 6 30 25 20
Kansas City ...... .... .... 7
4 6 27 32 25
Colorado .. ........ ..... 6
B 3 21 20 26
Los Angeles .............3
6 7 16 17 18
Dallas ... .. ............ . ..... 3 10 4 13 18 35
NOTE: Three pointe tor win, one Paint for ne.
Saturday'e GamH
Chicago 2, Kansas City 0
Colorado 1, MetroStars 0

Scln Jose 3, Dalla5 0
Sund8y'e G•me .
D.C. United 4. New England 2
Wedneed8y'a G•me
COlumbuS at los Ang6)es, 10:30 p.m.
Sundlly, Aug. 2
AII~Star Game" vs. Chh1as de Guadalajara at
Callion, Calif.• 3:30p.m.

Transactions
BASEBALL
Arn.rlcan League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES- Placed 18 David Segw
on the 15-day disabled list Recalled OF larry Bigbie
!rom OHawa ol the IL.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Recalled RHP Mall
Ginter hom Charlotte of the ll. Op1ione"d lHP Mike
Porzio to Chartone.
DETROIT TIGERS-Qptioned RHP Fernando
Rodney and lHP Stew Avery t9 Toledo of the IL
Recalled LHP Eric Eckenstahler from Toledo.
TEXAS AANGER~aced RHP lsmaal
on
tho 15-day dl!iBljed l~t. retroactive to July 23. Rocaied
AHP Colby Lewis from Oklahoma of the PCL..

Valdez

Notionol LNguo
CHICAGO CUBS-Recalled AHP Juan Cruz from
Iowa of 11'18 PCL. Optioned RHP Todd Wellemeyer to
Iowa
COLORADO ROCKIES- Optio ned OF Mark
Sweeney to.Colorado Springs of the ·peL.
LOS ANGELES DOOGER5-Activaled OF Dave
Roberts from the 15-day disabled list. Optioned OF
Wilkin Ruan to Las Vegas ot the PCL
MONTREAL EXPOS4clillated RHP Zach Oa~
from the 15-day disabled list. Sent RHP Tim Drew
outright to Edmonton of the PCL..
PITTSBURGH PIRATE5-Called up RHP Duaner
Sanchez from Nash11llle of the PCL.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Sent RHP RD..
Spiehs to San Diego to complete a earlier trade .
BASKETBALL
National Bnketball Aasoc:latlon
DETROIT PISTON5-Signed C Eldon Campbell
to a two-year contract.
· HOUSTON ROCKETS- Signed G Eric Piatkowski
to a· three-year contract.
FOOTBALL .
National Football league
NFL-Suspended Denve"r S Lee Flowers four
games without pay lor violating lhB league's banned
substances policy.
CAROLINA PANTHERS-Agreed to terms with
OT Jordan Oross on a lh1e:vear contract.
CHICAGO BEARS-Agreed to terms with DB
Charles Tillman on a fi11e-year contract.
CINCINNATI BENGAL5-Signed CB llennis
Weathe!st&gt;; and FE .......,. JotY1Son to IM!e-)'lllf coolr8cts.
CLEVELAND BROWN5-Agreed to terms with C
Ryan Pontbriand on a fi¥e-year contract
G~EEN BAY PACKERS- Signed TE Cory
Geason . Placed WR Devin Lewis on injured reserve .
MIAMI DOLPHIN5-Signed WR J.R. Tolver to a
lour-year contract. Agreed to terms with OT Wade
Smilh and G Taylor Whitley on lour~ yea r contracts.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Signed RB Onterrio
Smith.
NEW YORK· GIANTS- Waived OT Matt Mitrione
after he tailed h1s physical. Placed WR Ron Dixon.
OT Char-Ron Dorsey, and S Clarence leBlanc on
the acti11e physically unable to perform list.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Signed WR Fred
Coleman.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS- Agreed to terms
with OL Derrick Dockery. Released WA Justin
Skaggs. Ol Alex Sulfsted, ancl DE Ourra nd
Roundtree. Signed WR Taylor Jacobs
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ATLANTA
THRASHERS- Re-signed
F
Vyachestav Kozlov to a four-year contract.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Tour. I'd like to go out on
top, but I don't know when
that is."
·
"Every year it gets more
difficult, and he 'll face some
tough rivals," said' Miguel
lndurain, before Armstrong
the only rider to win tive
straight Tours.
Over the 23-day, 2,125mile event, his average speed
was 25.38 mph - breaking
his own record, set in 1999.
Besides Armstrong and
lndurain, just three other riders have won the Tour five
times, but not consecutively.
They are Belgium 's Eddy
Merckx , and Frenchmen
Jacques
Anquetil
and
Bernard
Hinault.
If
Armstrong doesn ' t win a
sixth title, the question of
who is the best will long be
debated.
"Armstrong's courljgeous,
a fighter. Somebody who perseveres until the end," said
Hinault, whose wins came in
1978-1979, 1981-1982 and
1985.

third in his Chevrolet, followed by teammate Michael
Waltrip and the Chevy of twotime Pocono winner Terry
Labonte.
Earnhardt moved into second in the standings, passing
Jeff Gordon, who was spun
out by Dave Bl~ney on the
!24th lap. four-time series
champion Gordon wound up
36th and fell to third in the
points.
Points leader Matt Kenseth,
among those who made late
gas stops, finished 13th. He
leads Earnhardt by 232 points
and Gordon by 308 after 20 of
36 races.
Jeff Bunon, Joe Nemechek,
Todd Bodine, Blaney and
Sterling Marlin completed the
top 10.
Tony Stewart, who won in
June, had the fastest car in the
field, moving to the lead from
33rd on the grid. But he blew
his engine on the !54th lap.
Stewart's Joe Gibbs Racing
teammate, three-time Pocono
winner Bobby Labonte, blew
his Chevy engine . before
crashing on lap 181.

Monday, July 28, 2003

-

Cleveland 3, Minnesota 2, 14 innings

Wilson, Reds rally
to beat Mets at Shea
NEW YORK (AP)
Winning at Shea Stadium
made Sunday extra special for
Paul Wilson.
Wilson defeated his former
team for the frrst time, and
Jose Guillen hit a tiebreaking
homer in the fifth inning to
lead the Cincinnati Reds over
the New York Mets 8-S.
"I'll always haye a special
place in my heart for New
York. This is where I first
pitched in the big leagues, and
I wish thin~s had worked out
differently,' Wilson said.
Wilson (6:-8) made his second start and third career
appearance against the team
that selected him with the first
pick of the 1994 amateur
draft. Traded by the Mets to
Tampa Bay in July 2000, he
signed with Cincinnati in
January.
Wilson allowed five runs
and eight hits in seven
innings, falling behind 2-1. in
the first.
"In that first inning, I felt
like I had to go out and get
loose again," Wilson said. "I
felt I got better."
Felix Heredia pitched the
eighth, and Scott Williamson
finished for his 21st save in 26
· chances.
Guillen had three RBis,
Aaron Boone had three hits for
the Reds and Adam Dunn hit
his 26th homer of the season.
Steve Trachsel (9-7) gave
up six runs - five earned and nine hits in 5 1-3 innings.
With the score 2-all, Guillen
.hit a two-run homer off
Trachsel, his 22nd of the season and second in three
games. Guillen had watched
Trachsel pitch for Tampa Bay
three years ago.
"He was a breaking-ball
pitcher then. He is a breaking.ball pitcher now, and I was
looking for it," Guillen said.
Trachsel had an RBI
grounder in the fifth that
closed the Mets to 4-3, but the
Reds added three runs the
sixth.
.
Juan Castro led off with a:
solo homer to right, Wilson

Monday, July 28, 2Clq3

NOTICES

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

Classlfleds!
Public Notice
VIllage
ol
Mlddtepori will hold e
public meeting on
August 28, 20.03 at
5:30 p:m. In Council
Chambers to review
Ordinance Number
0203 to adopt regula·
lor
mobile
Ilona
homes In the VIllage
of Middleport.
(7) 25, 28, 29

Call
DAVE or BRENDA
at - 992·2155

FOR MORE INFORMATION

The
I

'
J

MEIGS INDUSTRIES, · has set ·for public
INCORPORATED will hearing Case No. 02be accepting bids lor 221·GA·GCR,
to
the following two review the IPI• coal
recovery rates of ·
vehicles:
1) 1990 GMC Pick- ' Columbia Gas of
up truck cub cab Ohio, Inc., the opera·
Serial
No. lion ol Its Purchase
2GTEC19kGh1514774 Gas
AdJustmenf
, 350 engine (needs Clause, and related
engine work)
manert. Thlt hearing
2) 1977 Ford truck Is scheduled to begin
600 Sarles, Serial No. at 10:00 a.m. on
SN61EVY82267, Y.B 5 Tuesday, August 26,
speed. Has 4 new 900 2003, etlha onlces of
x 20 rear tires, 2 naw lha Commission, 180
900 x 200 sieerlng E. Broad Street, 11th
tires,
GKW23000. Floor,
Columbus,
Ohto. All Interested
(needs engine work)
Meigs Industries parties wilt be given
reservea the right to an opportunity to be
reject any and all.bids heard. Further lnlor·
be
may
or sell to the highest matlon
bidder Individually, or obtained by contactas a lot, whichever Ing the Commission.
brings the highest The Public Utilities
return
to
Meigs Commission ol Ohio
Industries,
Inc. By; Gary E. VIgorito,
Vahiclea will be sold Secretary
(7) 28
as Is condition.
To Inspect vehicles,
during normal busion
ness hours; call 1740-992-6681. Bids
SAVINGS
will be open on
August 8Ih, 2003 at
11:00 a.m. at Carleton
SchootlMelge
lndultrlee.
Send .aealed bide to
EnC1JIIva
Director
(BIDS)
Matgs tndualrtea,lnc.
P.O. Box 307-1310
Carleton Strati
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
~hop
(7) 21, 28

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LEGAL NOTICE
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10% ·Discount
on your home delivered subscription!
Here's all you need to do ...
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In Memory
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In Loufng ltf""""11
qf

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Ble•en
on hu JBth
BfrthdGJI
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Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ '·
Address _ _ _ _ ___;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
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~rtbune

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I -.I I '1'1 II '

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- Sentinel - Regtster

e=

Furnished efficiency, all utili· Buy or sell. Riverine
ties paid, down otal ... ~5. Antiques, 1124 East Main
919 2r1d Ave .. 740-446- on SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 7403945
992·2526. Russ Moore , 60 gallon air compressor.
bought , _ In Oct,
$349,
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
used 3 hours, $275 740room apartments at Village
256·61 15
Mana·r
and
Aiverskie
Apar1ments In Middleport.
75 Massev Ferguson 165
From $278-$348, CaH 740- 24ft.· pool , all accessories, diesel farm tractor. New
992·5064. Equal Housing solar/winter covers ,cheml· tires, runs perfect, sell with
Opportunities.
cals, ail $600. or sell seper· or without attachments.
ate, 740.388-9306
Modern 1 br. apt. (740)4468ft. Slide In Cattle racks.
0390
Adult size go-cart, gOOd (304)675-5906
New Haven- l br. furnished cond. phone 74G-245-5208
apt. alsv has wl.d. deposit &amp; or 740446-2311 , $600. firrll Ford 1520, hydrostat 4·
wheel drive tractor, 5 loot
re1erences, • no
pets.
Coot Down!!
Central blade,
belly mower with
(740)992-Q165
Cooling Systems, New and a ,..)(6' tip trailer/8 HP Troy
Now Taking Applications- Used . Installed . (740)446· built rototiller. 740-446.0208
after 5:00p.m.
35 West 2 Bedroom 6308
Townhouse
Apartments.
II ~\ \" i'( 11 ~ I \ I H 1\
Haywood sand filter and
Includes Water Sewage,
Haywood 1hsp pump, $275 .
Trash, $350/Mo .. 740.448Auros
morning· 740·441-1233 ,
0006.
after 6pm 74D-446·3231
'
IURSAul
Tara
Townhouse
JET
Apartments. Very Spacious,
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
AERATION
MOTCRS
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA, 1
Hondas,
chevys,
etc!
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted . Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In carsttrucks from $500. For
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool , Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- listings 1-8()0.719-3001 ext
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No 800·537-9528.
3901
Pets, Lease Plus Security
peposit ReQuired , Day;;:
NEW AND USED STEEL $500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
740·446-3481; Evenings Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar Hondas,
chevys,
etc!
740-367-Q502.
Angle, carsttll.ldc.s from $500. For
For
Concrete,
listings 1 -800·719--3001 ext
twin Rivers Tower is accept- Channel, Flat Bar, Steel 3901
For
Drains,
iflg applications for waiting Grating
list tor Hud-subslzed, 1· br, Driveways &amp; Walkwavs. L&amp;L 1989 bl~ck Ford Probe
·apartment, call 675-6679 Scrap Metals Open Monday, (turbo), ole, $700 OBO, call
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
EHO
(740)992-0664 after 6:30pm
Friday, Bam-4:30pm . Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; 1991 Astro Van $1 ,495.,
SPACE
SlWlday. (740)446-7300
1992 Cavalier SIW loaded
FOR RENT
51 ,795., t995 Grandam 20
Office FUrniture
$2,795., 1997 Hondi Civic
lnC'xpensive retail-commer- New. SCfatch &amp; Dent.
$4,795. We taka trades.
~'lat office space for rent.
Save 70%. 1-800-527-4662
Main St., Pomeroy, facing Argonaut 519 Bridge Street. CDOK MOTORS 74o-44
(lver, available now. call Guyandotte/Huntington. M/F 0103

CLASSIFIED

ror

Gallil CCMUtty. OH

so·-

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
Sentinel
'Orribune .,
·To

Place
Your

Offee llo~.r
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

3 family yard sale at Bing's
in Dorcas, SA 124, Racine,
August 1st, 9-4 and August
2nd. 9-11am, matern1ty,
baby,
children's
and
women·s cloth ing, car seats.
strollers. little Tike toys,
Maytag washer, entertainment center and lots of other
misc. items .

t

SAl..&amp;

y
ARD

WAMW
TO BUY

Mens softball tournament
0.0. Mcintyre Park SJ2-8/3
Absolute Top Dollar u .s
$80.00 Chris Howell 441Silver.
Gold
Coins.
1010 or 379-2485
Proofsets. Diamonds. Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency,·
PUBUC AUCTION. 24 Log M.T.S. Coin Shop, 1 5~
tiomes Packages to be Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
vltered Saturday, August
740-446-2842.
2nd, 11 :00 AM Charleston,
I \11 '11 1\\ 11 \I
Wv. Rogers Reality &amp;
.., I 1&lt;\ H I ..,
Auction Co, N.C. Lie_ #813
Free brochure, Buffalo Log
Homes, 1-888-562-2246 or
www auctjonloghomes com

r

GMAWAY
1 AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears. 3046t5-1429.
Black, tong haired female
cat. t ·year old. Liner trained. Experienced lead carpen·
(740) 367-7152 or (740) ters-must be familiar with all
339-Q707
phases of residential remod·
eling, valid drivers license,
Boxer mix puppies , 6 weeks tools, transportation, and
old. all female call 740-256- references. Local work, pay
based
on
experience .
1092
Applications available at
Christians
Construction.
lu.&lt;AND
1403
East~rn
Ave ..
Gallipolis. 446-4514
FOUND

t

Fast growing business
Found- Keys . on dad's keys
brass keychaln on State
full &amp; pan-tlnie bookkeeper,
Route 33. call to tO
(740)992-7558
full &amp; part-time cashiers,
Lost 2 German Short Hair Send resume to:
Pointer dogs, between 0 .0 .
Mcintyre and Rodney. 740- The Daily Sentinel
379-2361 or 740-446-3547
Lo.st 5 month kitten black on
t9p, white on bonom, white
patch on back. pink nose
w/black
spot.
Mt.
Vernon/Lincoln area. $25.
Reward. (304)675-3853 or
(304)593-3354

Full time secretary for law
office legal e)(perience preferred , but noi required .
Must "have good computer
and communication skills.
Send resume to EB 24 200
Main St Pt Pleasant Wv
25550.
- - - - - - - - -.Gallia·Meigs
Co":lmunlty
Actio~ is acceptmg appiications ftlr tobacco educator - ·
for Meigs County. Position
requires puOtic presentation
and speaking engagements
to various size groups. abiiity to work with persons of
all age groups and socio·
economic levels. Minimum
qualifications: High Schoof
Diploma-2 year college
degree preferred, experi·
ence working with a ·nonprofit computer skills. detail
oriented. interpersonal communication, organizational
skills, valid drivers license,
can work with m1nimat
supervision and be bondable. Experience providing
tobacco education pre·
ferred. Travel occasional
evening and weekend hours
required . Resumes and
applications wilt be accepted
at the Cheshire office until
4:00pm. Monday, August 4
2003. is an EOE ·

Medi Home Health Agency.
Inc. seeking a PRN Speech
Therapist for the Gallipolis.
PO Box 729-8
Ohio area. We offer a competitive salary, benefits
Pomeroy. Qh 45769
package, and 401K. E.O.E
Office experience, computer Please send resume to 430
skills, filing, accounts receiv- Second Avenue. Gallipolis,
able. apply wlth·in, 740· Oh 45631. Attn: Diana
446-6700
Harless. Clinical Manager

T I K E NT
I VLAD

I I I" I
,...,R;.;...;l:;,...:E:....,:C~K,.....-11. ~
5

Auto mechanic to customer, "It
~. isn't easy being an auto mechanic.
'-·__.__..~,__J._ _.__--1. ... It's disturbing to realize that evr--------~,ery car I see during the day is •••

11

~;-:E;-I..:D:..I"''--1'.O
•---'·' --'·--'·-..&amp;..___,__,_

·C·o::lete tho cllucklo quote:

:.:.N-r:l

by f.illlng In the rniulng word1
you dlt'tl•lap from Jtep No. 3 below.

-

PRINT NUMBERED

RarHi me position requires
transporting consumers to
and from medical appoint- ·
ments in the Mason County,
Wv area. Must be able to
maintain accurate reports,
and be able to assist consumers off and on van as
needed. Requires HS diploma . or GEO, safe driving
record and knowledge of
local routes . Apply in person
·
or mail to :
PRESTE~A CENTER
HR/Mason Van Driver
P.O. Box 8069
Huntington, Wv 25705
RN/LPN (HOME HEALTI1)
Part or Full time, per visit or
hourly,401k, cafeteria plan,
mileage, uniform
allowances. CEU reimbursement, Sam's club,
Health &amp; Lite ins. PTO
which accumulates from
first work day. Top ~ay in Tri·
State. Sign on bonus. 800759-5383
EOE

the
be·
low to form four slrnple words . .

lETTERS

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publishing reHI'\Iel the rignt to edh, reject, or canc.lany ed at any time. Errore muet be reported on the
Trlbune-Sentintl-Reglatef will be reaponaiblt fQf no .m0«1 than the cost of tht sp~ occupied by the error and only tht first in..rtlon.
any loss tllpenM that rflutts
thl publication omlasion an advertleement. COI"rtctlon will be made IM firlt awallable ediUon. • Box n~;~~;~~=·
are elwaya confidential. • Cunenl rate card appliea. • All realtllllt advenl~~menta art aubject.to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968. • Thi1 r
aceepti only help wanted ada mHting EOE atandarda. Wa will not knowingly accept any adwertlalng I~ vlol.tion of the law.

or

from

I'

Seeking MA, LPN, to work
part lime in e family practice
offi ce In JacJtson, Ohio.
Must know medical terms
and be familiar with back
office duties, please fil)(
resume to 740·288-4466·0r
mall to 3375 Mt. Zion Ad
Jackson, ohio 45640

. . UNSCRAMBlE FORI
V ANSWER
_

I I I I I I I II

Yesterday's SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

Coddle· Swamp· Taunt· Hotbed · THAWED OU7

"What should I take out of the freezer for dinner?'
the wife asked. Sighing her husband replied, "I don't know
but 1. remember when your meals were thought out, not
tHAWED OUT:

Wanted full time waitress.
apply in person . HolidaV Inn.
Gallipolis.

of

in

HoMES

WANrn&gt;
• ToDo

FOR SAul

Knights Excavating , sitedevelopments. ponds. we do
dirt. no job to small , all work
guaranteed, fully-insured
740-645740'682-3168
0639
LAWN CAREl
You tell me what you pay
ar1d we'll do it for less!
Same day service in most
cases. (304 )372-8634 leave
message. or (304)273-451 1
Will pressure wash homes.
trailers, decks. metal buildings and guners. Call (740)
446-0151 ask for Ron or
leave a message

11 \\'CI\1

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that
you do business with people
you know, and NOT to send
money through the mail until
you have investigated the
offering.

The Board offers a com·
petltlve salary with an
excellent benefits pack·
age.

It

real estate advertleing
In thia newspaper Ia
aublect to lha Federal
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
which makea It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
diacrlminalion baaed on
race, color, religion, ae•
familial status or national
origin. or any Intention tp
make any auch
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
All

Thla newapaper will not
knowingly accept
adver11sementa for real
estate which Is In
violation of the taw. Our
readers ara hereby
Informed that all
dwellings edvertiHCI In
thla newapaper are
available on an equal
oppor1unlty baaea.
Historic 3BR log home, 40
acres , Cole Valley _
Ad,
$175,000
Honeys
Associates . call 740-988·
1030 .

r
r

D&amp;J Picky Painters
Free Eslimates. Interior an
elrterior painting . Give your •
home or garage a fresh
new look. We paint homeli,
garages , mobile filomes,
buildings, bar,ns and roots .
licenced and insured .
(Call M·S, a.-6)
304 )89 5--3074
&lt;
20Years experience
ond retorenco.o.

FOR SALE

IE

Blue Lake Camp. 12x60
mobile home . 2 lots. block
garage, workshop, new
appliances, heat pump &amp;
AJC. porches/screened . on
Bear Run Rd. &amp; Blue Lake
Or. weeke1'1d or year round
$40,000
740-256 -8138
leave message

Home from $199/month.
foreclosure homes 4%
25 serious People Wanted down, 30 years at 8.5 % apr.
Who want to LOSE weight 4 listingS call 800-3 19-3323
We Pay You Cash for th~ axt 1709.
to:
pounds you LOSE! Safe,
Ronald A. Adkins,
Natural, No Drugs. 1·800· House for sale 6 rm 3 314
Executive ~rector
203-9604.
basement , 2 yr old gar
Gatlla-Jackaon-Melgs
28.-:32 on 3 acres Lieving
Board off Alcohol,
ABSOLUTE GOLDMtNE
Ad, West Columbia, wv.
Drug Addiction and
, 60 vending ma~hlne. a with (304)773·5343
Manta! Health Services
excellent locations
P.O. Box 514
aU lor $1 0,99&amp; S(H)-234- Letart Falls, OH; 3 bedroom
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
6982
house. 1 bath. detached
Application deadline Ia
garage, new roof, siding,.
Friday, August 8th. EOE
Need an extra $38,000 .00 a windows, carpet, &amp; kitchen,
year? Vending route for sale. $65.000.00 (740)247- 2000
Cost
$5000.00 Help lind
1'40
missing children . 1·800·853· NEW HOUSE Debbie Drive
7155
or
www.webde· 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
$129,000. 740-9268
Gallipolis Career Collega sign199.cQm
(Careers Close To Home)
PRoFESSIONAL
River Frontage n /2 acres
Call Today I 740-446-4367,
SERVIO:S
more or less, 3BR 2 Bath,
1·800·214-0452
master suite w~acuzzi, full
www.galllpoliscareercoll ttge.com
TURNED DOWN ON
basement, 2 decks W/river
Reg llf90·05·1274B.
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? view, 2 docks, 1 floating 74QNo Fee Unless We.Winl
446-0531 .
MISCELLANEOUS
1·888·582·3345
Ill \I I .., I \II
·BAD CREDIT???·
~ii:r;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
CALL 1•866-269-6331
10
HOMES
LoW ln'trest·varloua Loana
FOR SALE
~ 978 Windsor 12x70 -+- add
Newly approved program• t...--oiiiiiiliiiiii-_.1· on room 12x2 6 both In_exc.
cond. 3br, 2ba, new atr, all
doolgned lor YOU
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up wood. Must be moved
Call 1-866-269-6331 X1, 24
tor immediate possession all
$7,000. (740)388-8070
HRS
within 15 min. of downtown
Gallipolis. Rates as low as 1980 14x60 Mobile Home, 2
6%. (740)446·3218.
BR , cen tral heat and air. lots
25 Serloua People Wanted
of extras. $6.500 740-441 Who want to LOSE weight
3 bedroom house, 4 1/2
We Pay You Cash lor the acres, double garage, sever- 9259
pounds you LOSE I
al ·sheds. central ale,
1
Safe, Natural, No Drugs.
Eastern School District, TP- 1980 ·clean used mobile
1'
BOQ-201 ·0832
C water (740)985-4288
home, price to sell, 1-800837-3238
3 Bedroom newly remod·
eled. in Middleport, call Tom 1990 14x52 mobile home,
WANTFJJ
Anderson atfer 5 p.m.
will
help
wldelivery,
To Do
_
99_2_
-3_:&gt;~_8______ (740)385-2434

ro

MOBILE HoMES

91 Clayton Amhurst 141170
mobile home . central air.
2BR , 2BA, never smoked in.
Large 12)(50 L-shaped deck.
Must see to appreciate.
$1'3,500 74D-446·9370 or
740-446-4591

Resumes with three (3)
. letters at recommends·
lion must be submlned

Riverside
Golf
Course
Mason. WV (304)773·5354 .
Now aooepting applications
for lull time and part time
positions at Mary's Tee Time
Grill. Pled§e apply on-site

•

or

In home care for an elderly
person . Wanting 5 days a
week. Hours 7am -5pm. No
weekends. (740) 949-2722

Need to consolidate or start
POSmON ANNOUNCE·
a new business.
Call
MENT
National Bank toll lree 1- The Galila.Jackaon-Melgs
866-699 -3064. Good credit. Board of Alcohol, Drug
no credit. bankruptcy.
Addiction and Mental
Health Services Is CUf·
Need to earn Money? Lets rentty accepting appllca·
talk the MEW Avon . Call Uons for the position ot
Marilyn , 304-882-2645 to COMMUNITY EDUCATOR.
learn all the ways it can work This full-time posltton
for yo u:
includes shared duties
--~~----­ with the Board and the
Gallla County Family and
NORRIS NORTHUP
Children First Council.
DODGE
Responsibilities Include
Full Time Salea Person
the
development, ImpleLOCATION: 252 UPPER
mentation and assess· ·
RIVER RD
ment of an educational
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
program on behatf of the
UNLIMITED II'ICOME
Board, Its providers and
PRTENTIAL
the FCFC. Applicants
NO ExPERIENCE
should posses&amp; a mini·
REQUIRED
mum
of a Bachelor's
Must poses good people
skills, ambitious attitude, Degree in a related area
and the desire to succeed . with strong communica-tion ·and multimedia/proNow hiring recepionisV duction sklll!l- Related
cashier apply in person ask experience including program supervision Is prefor Katie McCoy Turnpike
ferred . Extensive travel Is
required wHh this posl·
OFFICE WORKER
To work in busy health Care tlon.

office. Experience With
office machines. supervision of employees, payroll,
billing and scheduling.
One year Health Care office
experience requested.
Benefits too numerous to
print. BOQ-.759-5383
Help wanted caring tor the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
Part·Time
Position
now pa)ling miniiT'KJm wage,
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am- Available. interested in mer·
5pm, 3pm-11pm,_ 11pm- cha ndising greeti r1g cards
and related products in local
7am. call 740·992·5023.
retail Stores. Pre1er mature
Live in'Caregiver needed for individuals. interested in
elderly lady who requires working up to 20 hours a
assistance /daily activities. week, training provided, no
Call
(304)675-2176
or experience necessary. Call
(304)675-5578
1-800·543· 41 10 ask tor
extension 1928, dUring regLocal Jobs
ular
business
hours.
1-888·974-JOBS
American Greetings, EOE
Maintenance Person need·
ed . part-time. Valley View
BOO State
Apartments.
Route 325, Thurman, Ohio.
Apply at office or submit
resume . 740-245·9170

r

Sundays Paper

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
~ • Ads Should 'Run 7 Days

O R:worrange
letters of
four Krambled words

8

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

Description • Include A Price • Avokl Abbre\llattont

TMAT DAILT
'UULU

~ 1 -I'
~--,lrF_,OI-:;-7

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

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

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

~.,r.io_HEJ_.•P•W•A•!\'ID)--' ~.,r.m_".ELP-•W•ANTID--,..~II'oo

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit ~~--Priti'iii'LEAsANritiiiiiitiito_.l
tor sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters Moving Sale on Camp
Conley Rd. 2nd house off of
~~ interest to: The Daily
Rt.
2 on left Aug . 1·2·3
Sentinel. PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy,'ohio 45769.

;

WOrd Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

\'\'\!11" I \ II \ I ..,

r

laegigter

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
mydailysentinel,com
classified@
classlfled@mydailytribune.com

Ad •••

Adoption: A loving couple
wou ld like to adopt your
newborn. Will provide a
home filled with joy , happl·
ness, financial security and
a great education Feel coniident in knowing because o1
your brave decision your
baby could look foMard to a
bright and wonderful future.
Expenses paid. Call toll free
1-866-731·7625. Barbara
and Michael.

r

io

Cole's Mobile Homes an
assembled ·team with over
120 years of hOusing experience .. Patriot Homes outstanding 1/5 year warranty,
shingles &amp; insulation by
Owens Corning , vinyl siding
by VifXO. James Hardie sid·
ing available. tow "E" thermopane wir1dows by Kinro
carriage carpets &amp; ltoonng
by Congoled , appliances by
General Electric, faucets by
Glacier Bay &amp; Moen, light
fl)(tures, cabinet pulls &amp;
knobs direct from Home
Depot (easy to match just a
few good reasons wh)' your
neKI new home should be
from: Cole's Mobile Homes,
15266 us o East. Athens,
Ohio ,
1·740-592-1972,
.~ where you get your
money's worth"

4 bedroom, 2 story house,
out of high water, gas heater
&amp; ale, (740)992·2 529 for
appointment to inspect .

Nice countru home, private ,
·'
nreat place to raise children ,
•
6 bedrooms, 2 baths ,
kitchen wtappliances, dining
room, living room , central air
&amp; ·gas rurnace , partial base- ment. 2+ acres. $89,000,
(740)742·1 049

.

1995 Clayton 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. heat pump;
loc ated in Clifton . WV
(304 )773-6074

Approx . 3 acres Clendenin
District approx. 1/2 mile off
RT2 $6500. 304-675-1636
For Sale 2 or 4 Cemetery
lots. Evergreen Cemetery. in
Letart. .For
info
Call
(3041743-0744
Racine,

Nice mobile home lots. quiet
country setting, $115 per
month . mcludes · water.
sewer, trash . 740-332-2 167
Ill ' I l l '

H ousES
FOR RENT
1-3 bedrooms foreclosures
home 1rom 5199 month 4%
down 30 years at 8.5% APR
for listing call 1-B00-319·
3323 ext .t 709
3 Bedroom House for rent
on Blaine Lan e Gallipolis
Ferry. $450 Rent $450.
Deposit.
(304)675-7155
attar 3 pm.
House tor rel'11, 3 room , 1
bedroom on 2003 Madison
Ave. Electric heat. window
air. (304)674-Q471

2 BR mobile home. Vinton
area·, $275/month, $275/
deposit. 740-388·001 1

2 BR, perfect, air, porch,
New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BR very r1ice . 740-446-2003 or
&amp; 2 Bath . Only $1695 down 740-44&amp;-1409
and &amp;295/mo. 1_800 _691 • Crc;r-~
APARTMENTS
6777

rI M~s~ Ir AND~~.
____

ACREAGE

HOUSE FOR ,AENT- 2 BAS
Great in-town location .
$475.00 per month . Deposit
&amp; references required . Call
Cole's Mobile Homes
Wiseman Real Estate-740US 50 East, Athens. Ohio, 446·3644
45701, 740.592·1972
- - - -- - - - - HOUSE FOR RENT· 2 BAS
Good
used
14)(70 Great in -town location.
Fleetwood , 2 bedroom, 1 $475.00 per month . Deposit
bath, ontv $9995, includes &amp; references required . ca~
delivery, Call Nikki 740·385- Wiseman Real Estate-74(}7671 .
446-3644
- -- - - -- - MOBILE HOMES ·
Land Home Packages available. tp your area. (740)446tl&gt;RRENT
3384.
New 14' wide only $899
down &amp; only $159.65 per
month, call Harold 740-3857671

. . . . . . . . -.,

FORRENT

JNGS

11 and 2 bedroom apart:
ments, furnished 'nd unfur::
Private club · tor sale all nished, security deposlt
stock. coolers, machines . required , no pets, 740-992·
land &amp; furnitu re included . 2218.
serious inquires only 304· -::=--::-::-::----1 BR., CIA, Quiet Locatiort;
882 _2099 or 304 _882•2875
Lars &amp;
nea• Hotze•, W/0 Hookup;
$359.00 plus utilities, !ease
ACREAGE
&amp; deposit required . no pets':
740-446 -2957

i

1/2 acre-lot Tycoon Lake on
Eagle Road . city water, no
septic. nice shade trees .
asking $8500, (740)24 71100
33 WOODEO ACRES
Great homesite with added
bonus of hunting out your
ba ck door Only $43.000.
la nd contract avai labl e.
Gallia County, 15 minutes
from Holzer. Other properties located in Meigs, Vinton,
Ath&amp;n s, Jackson, Monroe.
Belmont and Was hington
Counties. Call for free maps.
BD0-213·8365

200' "6x80 Skyli ne wlnear
' '
acre ground on Oho·o R1
·ver In
WV. 3br. 2ba , all upgrades·
4 Con:ui1ercial lots for
lhrou ghout. (304)773-5808
salel1 ease/rent. 1410 Lewis
St. Pt. Pl. all utility hookups.
4br 4ba house
foreclosure only $9,900.
Also 1 small house call after
t-800-719·3001 Ext F144
5pm. (304)550·0906

0
0
&gt;w

..J
..J

ct

Good Used Appliances ,
Reconditioned
and
Wa;;hers,
Guaranteed .
Dryers,
Ranges.
and
Refrigerators, Some start at
$95 . Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vine St.. (740)446 -7398
Grey Berber carpet. 80 sq .
fl., only one year old, origi·
nally cost $1680.00, will ~ell
1or $500.00 740-446-1964
Mid summer furniture sale.
couch &amp; cha ir $100. swivel
rocker $35. overstuffed chair
$20, 2 nice rocker recliners
$50, lull size bed $125. dining table/6 cha irs $95 ..
dresser/ matching night
stand $95 ,TV stands $15
each, Skaggs Appliances,
76 Vine St . 740·446·7398
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
(740)446-7444 1-677-6309162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. VIsa/ Master Card.
Drive- a- linle saVe alot

TRUCKS
FORSAU:

r
r

For sale· pygmy goats, $50:
pony $400 ; ferrets, $60;
guinea pfgs, $10; hamsters,
$3; (740)992·9475
Registered "Pug" pup, male,
8 months old, had all shots,
wlpapers, $~00 . (740)9922531

FRUITS &amp;

VF.GII&lt;ADLES

loaded, re-bultt 350, well
maintained , runs and looks
good $3,000 388-9789

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

BISSELL

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl

Siding • New Garages

2001 Ford Explorer Sport,
white with gr8y trim, leather
inl, sunroof. CD player,AIC,
exc.cond. 25,000 miles,
$16 ,500. (740)446-6783

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
•Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, ii2 Westwoo'q
Drive hom $297 to $383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Ca~
740- 446-2 56 8.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Clean 1 bedroom apt,,
Crown City (Village ). $300. t
secutity dep .
(740)2 56•
1249
•
Extra nice quiet, 2-3 bedroom apartment. Forced
heaVAC, kitchen appliancee
furn ished. deposit &amp; rete ~
ences req uired . (304)675&lt;7628
~

a#

750 East State Streel Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

740-992-7599

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
32t19 Welshtown Rd.

A Beuer

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

PC DOCTOR

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

Pomeroy, OH 45769

JONES'

Tree Service

a

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Srinding

Bucket TI'UCk

We Make House Calls

992·7953
591-7002
591-4641

740-992·2432
Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

Gravely

Snapper

GRAVELYTRACTOR

Early birds start

Dean HID
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

SALES &amp; SERVICE

6:30
Last Thursday of

204 Condor Street

every month

Pomeroy. Ohio

992-2975

All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

I

lAwn and Garden Equipment is our
business, 11111 bur sidelitte

1-800-822-0417

'
PonUac,
Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer·

·w.V's #I

SFREE

DURO-LAST
ROOFING

I181N(; IN THI3 AD
cOCI m, LY S1 l 00 PER HUNDRED

Flat Roof
SpecialistsCommercial and
Residential
Saves on Cooling.
Metal and Mobile
home roofs· No
Problem. 15-Year
Guarantee
992-7953
591·4641
591 -7002

2000 Ford Winstar, leather, For Sale 2003 Suzuki Z-400,
quads, loaded, exc. cond. $4,250. exc . cond. 740·379·
$14,900
NADA 9150 call after 4pm.
asking
$17,000 call740.446-6491

BoATS &amp; Mmow;

Windows • Rooting
COMMERClAL and
RESIDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

WE REPAIR

2001 Quad Cab Dakota, 4
WO, $16 ,000 080. 74().
256 -1539 or 740-258-1343

r

• Replacement

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

1997 Cadillac Sedan Deville
MmoRCYUE&gt;
72,000
miles.
$7,500.
(304)675-5818 or (304)674·
0598
1982 Suzuki 450 motorcy1997 Chrysler Concord LX cle , $550, call (740)992·
7789
exc. cond. 70,000 miles pwr.
window/locks, seats, tilt
1997 Horida Rebel 3.000
wheel. 740-441-0906
miles like new $2,200 OBO
1998 Ford .Taurus 4dr., 1992 Harley Low Alder teemoomoof. 6·disk cd play&amp;f. lory Candy Apple Red over
82,000 miles. E)(cellent $4,000· in eld:ras 20,000
Condition .. (304)675 -1437 miles $12,000 (740)448·
0213
after 4pm

SHOP
CLASSIFIED$

740-949-2217

Stop &amp; Compare

1996 Dodge Ram 1500, 4114
Club Cab. towing paclc.age,
exc. cond. $10,500 OBO,
74().388-8319
\

r«&lt;

Cellular

Racine , Ohio
45771

199t GMC Sierra 4x4, SLE,
pwr. window/locks, cruise/tilt
wheeVrunning boards. hitch
bed rails , exc cond. 65,000
actual miles, 740-441..()906

I

90 Cadilac Eldorado, runs
FOR S.U.E
great, AJC blows cold. all
power, real pretty car. 1983 18ft. Gala&gt;y 120-H~
$3,500 080, 740-446-9370 1/0, open valve, new interior,
or 740·446-4591
rur1s good, ready to go
$2,300. 388·9789

Apt. Building In Gallipolis. 4
rentals. Will take mobile
home on trade. 740-3877886

29670 Bashan Road

J40-19Z-1&amp;11

1990 Chevy-Stepside, auto,

r

CKC registered Boston
Terrier, brindle and white, 4
months old, $175. 740·44 1·
0182 after 5:30pm, leave
message

~LL1El

Storage

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

91 GMC Extended Cab 2
wheel drive, 350 5--speed,
cold air, tilt, cruise , ~eese
1992 Chevv Geo·Prism t 1 hitch. aluminum wheels.
Water softener outfit, salt owner, 4dr, 103,784 mYes, Very clear} dependable truck
tar1k 20 gal. water tank, com- asking $999. call 740-446- with bed liner. $5,000. obo.
puter control filler.
(304)773-5103
9709
.
Automatic transmission out
ol91 S-10 304-674-0698
1994 Oldsmobile Cuttass 92 Ford Ranger. 4 cyl, 5 sp,
Supreme, red, 2dr, 3.4. one owner, $1700 OBO,
motor AJC, moon root, (740)742·2357
leathe r loaded $3,000.00
96 Ford XLT super cab short
740-441-9317
bed . $7,500. 4-wheel drive.
Block, brick, sewer plp9s,
Mazda-MX-3
(304)982-3338
1995
windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, OH Excellent cond .. great on ·
VANS &amp;
Call740-245-5121.
gas, recent tune- up and
4-\\'Ds
body·work , AC , S·speed.
PETs
Must sell! call 740·446·
mRSAl.Il
8222
1995 Ford E-350 Van. 14ft.
high cube bo)( , excellent
Chocolate Male Lab pup- 1996 Pontiac Grand Prix SE cond. 740-446·9418
door-auto-power·AIC,
pies, seven weeks old, AKC 4
registered,
shots
and 121.000 miles $3295. day- 93 Dodge caravan, needs
wormed call 740-245-5585 740-446·1615, after 7pm . transmission ,
$500,
740·448-1244
(740)992-3317

New sage green couch,
$499 or will trade for new
complete
twin
bed,
(740)992 -0523
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675·7388. For sale,
re-condit ioned automatic
washers &amp; drvers. retrigerators. gas and electric
ranges . air conditioners. and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home

t

H111" s Se lf

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISIIIC1111

r

BoATS &amp; Momw;
IUKSALE

:~

1
1
I
I
I

~ 1:

Get Cash Today

Bring your
·
"Last checking statement
"Last pay check stub
"Photo 1.0. "Phone Bill with nalne end address
116 Main St.

Pomeroy OH
740.992-CASH (2274)

I

1998 Marada MX3·20ft. 5.0
liter 305. 64 hours, top
cover.
740-446-6857 or
740-446-6959
Larry
$10,900.00

IMPORTS
Athens

85 4-W inns 19ft. 4.3
Mercruiser engine . All new
interi or. must see to
appreciate. $6,000.
675-4891 or 674-2 134

ACCE'liORIDi

1989 Tovota Camrv 2.5 V6,
(wrecked) Good motor,
transmiss ion parts, etc .
$600. 304 675-2728

I HOWiiiiil.
; WRITfSfl
I

i

*ROOFING
*HOME
MllfiiTEIAfiiCE
dUM lESS
GmER
*Free Elllmllth

949-1405
1999 Viking pop-up excel lent condition. AJC, refrlg
microwave. 740-388-8128
after 6pm
2001 Keystone Camper,
Excellent Condition . $9 ,800.
Call (304)675·6436
Camper for sale, 1999 Terry
with slide-out, like new, no
pets, non-smoker, 740·446·
6223
"' 1&lt;\ l c 1 "

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional 111etlme guarantee. Local references furnished . Establ ished 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting. vinyl
siding , carpe_
ntry, doors. ·
windows, baths, mobile
home repair and mora. For
tree estimate ca ll Chet, 740·
992-6323.

burial and nnal expenses
·:"~r~'"'j.-;:, "' r for yourfamlly and
·.-. ~., -~~~· ·
loved ones.
·
·:
···
,
.
Let
me
show you how
II' I
li

affordable and easy II Is to
get the coverage you need.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
(740) 843-SZ64
the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me de· 1 ~ fc.r y:u

CARPENTER
SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411

• Room Addlllono l
Remodeling
• New Gantgel
• Eleclrlcel &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guttera
• Vln)ll Siding &amp; PalnH"g
· • Petro and Porch Dtckl'

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·62t5
519·814

Pomero y, Ohio

v •

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

871-2417 or 448-1111
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675·2457

NELSON'S LAWN
CARE
Residential •
Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edging
• Fe~ilization • Leaf
Removal • Pruning
• Landscape
Maintenance Spring
and Fall cleanup

(740) 985·9829
(740) 591·3891

THE 944
STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp; cars
County Rd. #35
Racine, Ohio

(740) 517·9138
or

(740) 949-0020

~~~

High&amp;Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992·5232

FLEA

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

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
mld,dleport,
. OH

(10'x10' 610'x20')

MARKET (740) 992-3194

RiHr\\ a\

&lt;·arlin Syracuse
(Fom1erh· Whitn t,·'.s)

Under neW ownefship
and new management.

COME JOIN US
7
A Week!

MlplllltDDd...U
•lt.Rt.1~4

bllwillllldtle

992-6635

HIIS,nCII•

Lup Splat S7.H
Aupit 16.2
Hot Dip .....

CU. lila

avllllbll
7!21-W.t

1

YOUNG'S

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

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month .

Ta~e

HOME CREEK
HIT., INC.
992-7953

Sunset Home
Construction

91 Yamaha waverunne r jet
sk i. Looks &amp; runs excellent
with trailer. $1500. abo.
(304)773·51 03

Auro PA!ITS &amp;

I
I
I
I

·~ Don't leave the debt or

General
Contracting
New
Construction,
Remodeling,
Backhoe and
Dozer Work.
Roofing.

1991 25 · 1 /2~ Wellscratt. 1992 Yamaha VRX -650
112·cabin, 454-motor. exc. Wave Runner, exc . cond ..
cond. $12,500. call 740·367low hours, double tra iler,
7272 after 6 740-44 1-1283
runs great. $1.800 388·9789

t

'

Ch~vy.

Box 189 Middlejll!rl

Jf -;I/ Ho&gt;ld For .10 Dol) '-'

Bass boat, 1986 Fisher
Marine, 70 horse Johnson
motor guide trolling motor,
depth finder &amp; galvanized
$3500
OBO,
trailer.
(740)992-370 1

-

i ) •, \

)t INSTA-CA$H Jll

I

4 rooms and bath, all utilitie$
paid, $400 month. 46 Oliva
Street. (740)446-3945
:

•

a.

e "~

Coleman heat-pump good
'Cond. $200., Englander pellet stove BJCC. cond. $500.
74().441-0908

I.A:m;&amp;

Lot for sale in
(740)992-5858

~

LtvELYS AIITO SALES
90-01ds Cutlass $upreme
$1600., 91 · Fort Escort
$700., 92- Ford Tempo
$900., 87- Mercury Grande
Marquis $500. 9J.Ford
~scon $1350., 89 Suzuki
GTI5-speed $999., 91 ·
F01d Escon Station Wagon
$950 .. 94- Dodge Spirit
$900., 94· Plymouth
Voyager $1110Q. , 95-Honda
Accent 5 speed $1600.,
Call 740-388-9303 about
more cars on loll Mon-Fri
9am-5prn, Sat 9am-3pm •
dosed Sun

''Tht Little rtstaUI'a(!l
wi1h the big 1as1e"

�royu ov • 1.111:1 uauy ::»em1ne1

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Monday, July 28, 2003

Marriage founders as wife
and husband ~rift apart
DEAR ABBY: I love mr,
husband very much. "Gary '
and I have been together for
II years. However, he seems
to :&gt;«: Jess and less interested
in me. We no longer spend
time alone together.
: Gary works long hours, so
it's rare when we share a meal
together. Every night before
he comes home from his shift,
he stops at the local diner and
sits with his friends for an
hour or so.
When we DO ~o out, Gary
insists we patromze this same
diner, so . his buddies can sit
and join us.
Recently, my husband had
surgery. It has temporarily
limited his physical activities.
He claims to be in too much
pain. to do anything - or go
anywhere - with me. But if
one of his diner buddies
invites him to go somewhere,
he's up and out of the house in
a heartbeat.
.
Abby, do I have a legitimate
beef' Or should I leave our
marriage "as is" and accept it'
- LONELY ON LONG
ISLAND
DEAR LONELY: You are
beintl isolated. A successful
marnage must tre worked on
by both parties. If you don't
speak up now, you and your
husband will continue to drift

our relationship?- GENER·
ATION X-ER IN CHICA·
.
GO
DEAR GEN-X-ER: I see
no reason for either of you to
be ashamed about how you
met. Many people meet via
the Internet these ·days and
form successful unions.
Granted, no one should make
a decision in haste, but the
Internet can be a useful tool in
getting to know someone.
DEAR ABBY: My mother
is struMling with melanoma.
Sadly. I have become
extremely familiar with the
warning signs, which include
moles that are unevenly
shaped, a mole that's a differ·
ent color than the others, or
spots that are inflamed or irri·
tated.
Abby, when I see a suspicious spot or mole on a
stranger. is, it appropriate for
me to suggest that he or she be
examined by a dermatologist?
A young woman sat next to
me at a baseball game recent·
ly. I wanted to say something
to her, but didn't want to
offend her or be intrusive.
The truth is, a simple checkup could save a life. What do
you think?
SKIN
SLEUTH IN DELAWARE
DEAR SKIN SLEUTH:
By all means say something

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
.further apart. So, sJieak up
and tell h1m that you are concerned about your lack of
communication, and offer him
the option of marriage counseling.
DEAR ABBY: I am a pro·
fessjonal in my mid-20s and
have met a great guy over the
Internet. I'll call him Randy.
Randy is in the military and
stationed in Japan. The two of
us have been e-mailing and
calling each other daily for
the past seven months.
Randy will return home
next month and we plan to
meet for the first time. Neither
of us knows what to tell our
parents about our Internet
romance . I know for a fact
that my mom and dad will not
approve of my meeting someone in this fashion. But how
else can Randy and I explain
the "sudden" seriousness of

ACROSS

39 Gt support

~ ·Salary limits 40 i~fisabbr.
5 Dog days

n&gt;a.
43 Stuck
8 Hog sound ~6 Fish organ
.J1 Ty.,.,
, 47 River
mullin
bottom
13 Boxer's stat 48 False
14 Grove unit
witness
15 Farm
50 Murray or
atructure
Rice
16
Stage
.51
Hall,
to a stranger if you think it 's
to Caesar
necessary. When you do, 17 scenery
Pulled apart 52 Whodunit
explain WHY you felt it was 18 Nulls
name
important to tell him or her. 20 Hourglass 53 Tiny sphere
contents
54 St ,000,000,
Suggest the person ~o for a
21
Rollover·
alanglly
checkup, but do it pnvately if
55
Burpee
buy
aubj.
possible.
22 Kitty's
I hope your mother is doing
comment
DOWN
well and has a good outcome. 23 Pat Sajak'a
(Dear Abby is wrinen by
co-host
1 Dan
Rather's
Abigail Van Buren, also 26 Place
29
Sleep
like
network
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
Phoenix's
was founded by her mother. 30 Trumpeler 2 st.
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
3 Without
AlAbby at www.DearAbby.cmn 31 --whim
a tan
or PO. Box 69440, Los 33 Attach
4 "Sawing
wood" ' •
34 Ma. Russo
Angeles, CA 90069.)
In "Tin Cup" 5 Taking a
35 Wynonna or
cruise
Naomi
(2 wds.)
36 Casual wear 6 Guitar
(hyph.)
cousins
38 flod.a prop 7 Obtained

'/

1he Sounds of Praise to

41 Llly·whlte

8 canada'e
capital
9 Vitamin
supplement
10 Teen
outcast
1I Author
-Follett
19 Mouths,
In biology
20 Cult
22 Hoarder's
cry
23 Large tub
24 Quit flying
25 Same votes
26 Fluff
27 Costello
and
Gossett
28 Purpases

~.....-

30 Villain's foe
32 Hubbub
34 Mount
35 Clangs
37 Pitched
38 British Inc.
40 Shape clay

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

41 Cone bearer

42 Arm bone

;,,l CENTS •

43 Strauss of

l.ol. 53 . No . 227

success.

LEO (July 23-Aug. . 22) This is llC( a day to rest oo yoor
laurels, but to get moving on
something new. 1b:: course yw
set fer yourself will prove to be
exceptiooal, and ooe you'll des~
tb follow foc some time to C\JIOO.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-&amp;pt. 22)Take advantage of a tmique cycle
you're entering today in which you
should be able to gain til: upper
hand in cin:UITIStl!lCeS you have
11()( creaiOO nor had direct cootrol
over. Have faith in your destiny.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Fndeavors, projects and ventures
that use updated principles or
methods can be successfully
launched today. 1b:: cycle favocs
progressive, forward-looking
1deas and promises success
. SCORPIO (Od. 24-NOv. 22)
.-· Glances are you'D get the

&lt;WJitllllity today to capitalize on
little details that your competitors
lr advmaries have overlooked. In
fact, it might give you a whole new
way of looking at things.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23Ik 21)- Someone you m:et
today could have an enormous
influence on yoor outlook and attitude toward life. This new &amp;.une
of mind can make life in geneml
much easier foc yw.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-JarL
19) - A venture in which you
enjoy a shared inlerest with anOiher could take off today in ways that
give you greater chances for suc·
cess. It may be just the beginning.
with much more to come.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- 1b::re are strong indications
that you could focm a new alliance
of some importance today.
Whatever it entails, it promises to
grant mutual gratificatioo for bah
you and your cohat
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mardt 1»)
- This might llC( just mark the
beginning of a new week, but of
some significant improvements
where your work oc career is coo-

GUHMR l G~'mE~!
-" A G~~AGE iWC\&lt;
d TIPPEP OfER ~
jis: 5\l\u.r.D SiUFF AL~

cemed. It could awaken ambitions
you had suppressed
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-Ifyoursociallifehasn~ been up
to its usual standards, today cwld
mark that turnaround you've
desired. New activities, new
fiiends and new places to go might
all be pan of the scenario.
TAURUS (April »-May 31)
- A positive shift in conditions
that could occur today is apt to
cause you to veer off in a new
direction that you hadn't previpUSly considered It'll take yot1 to
happy experiences.
GEMINI (May 21-June 31)
-Leave yoorself a lcr of space in
which to move around today.

republic
45 Wide valley
46 Chatter
47 "Pow!"
49 Lipstick
color

~~~~

Qui~k

.Sports
•'·

RACINE - Investigators
are still trying to determine
the cause of Sunday morning's fire at Southern High
School, Superintendent Bob
Grueser told members of the
Southern Local Board of
Education Monday night.
Grueser said the flre alarm
closest to the blaze did not
go off because it is an older
model that requires someone
to manually pull the lever to
set off the alarm. If the
newer smoke-activated flre
alarm in the far end of the
building had not been in
place to alert authorities,

..~

-

2nd00WN •

18

= 56

• 124
JUDD'S TOTAL

1'2&gt;

rJl

BY

~age AS

• Francis Eileen
~renner, 75
• Jacob Landis, 70

'

•

Inside
.

• Community calendar.
See Page A3 ,.
• Time Out for ,nps. See
PageA3
· • Local business wins
award. See Page A6
AVERAGE GAME 155-165

by JUDD HAMBRICK

FOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME UMIT: 20 MIN

=

DIRECTtoNS: Make a 2· to Hener word Irom me letters on eaCh .yardline.
Add poinls to each word or letter ustag scoring directions a1right Sllven·letter
woiels get a 60.poln1 bonus. All wordS can tl&amp; 10\..flelln Wetlsler's New World

JUDO'S SOLUT10N TO~ORROW

CoUege DICtionary.

219

Cl 2003 Unltld fell~• Syndlctlt, Inc: .

0

Weather
Pertly oloudy, HI: lOt, Low: 80t

l\\A1 A\Thlt , . - - - - - - ,

J.

be replaced. Grueser was
pleased to inform the board
that the new band uniforms
were undamaged and did not
smell like smoke.
Earlier this year, Grueser
had approached the . Ohio
Facilities Commission for
funding to replace the fire
alarm system in the high
school. The commission
denied the request, but
Grueser said it will probably
reconsider replacing the fire
alarm syslem now.
Despite the damage,
Grueser said school would
start on time Aug. 19.
"We are going to start
school one way or another,"
he said.

MILESl.AYTON

TUPPERS PLAINS Lessons about life and
death have been learned by
Morgan Lentes who fo.r the
past two years has been
raising gerbils for her 4-H
.'
project.
The seventh grader at
Meigs Middle School
demonstrated her knowledge of the animals when
she went for judging .
Friday at Eastern High
School.
"In my 4-H project work
I learned how friendly they
·,'
are," said Morgan, ''what
they like to eat, when they
sleep, and how they live."
She also acknowledged
that she learned alot about
the responsibility of being
a pet owner. She said one
time, "Popcorn," her soft
white male gerbil, got out
,,
of his cage and was running loose in the house Morgan Lentes, 12, holds up a poster demonstrating the knowledge she has learned white
raising her gerbil Popcorn. Hal Kneen, Meigs County Agricultural Extension Agent, judged the
Pl~o~se see Gerbils. AS
project and said the Lentes learned some valuable lessons raising the gerbil.

/7

BY J. MtLESLAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

~PA~!

1\IIO~G ()I~ W.i lO'JI\S LIK~ AN
AS!Ir.SWS F'ISOR 1.0~ 11-4

SMIJOOV' S LUNG CAVI1V...

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Cody Tucker

WILL
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COMPETE
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5UII\I"ER~

IN"IUXICA11NGGl~SIG :

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Index
25edlons-12PIIps

006
HARASSMENT!
006
1-lARASSMENT!

.
()liCJ 1, lfU,

myd•oiysenllnel com

BY BRIAN

J,

REED

breed@mydailysentinel.com
MIDDLEPORT - A grant
through the Community
Development Block Grant
program could allow the
Village of Middleport to
complete a number of projects at once.
Jean
Trussell,
Meigs
County Grants Administrator,
met with Middleport Village
Council on Monday evening
to discuss the benefits of. and
applic~tion process for, the
CDBG Community Distress
program,
which
offers
$300,000 grants to distressed
communities for multiple
community projects.
Trussell said the grant
funds can be used for curbs
and sidewalks, parks facili·
ties, water and sewer facilities, street improvements,
historic ~reservation and
other activ1ties.
Citizen participalion is a
major element in the arplication process, Trussel said,
and public hearings would be
requtred as part of the planning, to allow citizens to
determine what projects are
most needed in the community. The program is designed
specifically to assist distressed communities with a
low and moderate-income
population of at least 60 per:
. cent. (Middleport's LMI population is 60.5 percent,
according to the latest census
results.)

Please see Grant. A5

Workers begin to clear damage at Southern Hi h School

8OvtR i11E

0

The actual figure could be
much higher because the
company doing the clean-up
and repair work will not
make repairs to the smoke
detector system. Grueser
praised
Special
Care
Cleaning Service for their
hard work and detailed
attention to cleaning.
Items that were damaged
in the fire .include one ic.e
machine, one drink machine
which dispensed Pepsi products, two popcorn machines,
·two wooden cabinets, several cases of carbonated drinks
arid two video cameras val.ued at more than $2000
each. Nearby light fixtures
and ceiling tiles will need to

'''

'"'t:Yt
YOJII.
I

.

Grueser said the damage
could have been much
greater. Grueser and board
members said they were
grateful to the Syracuse and
Racine volunteer firemen for
their role in extinguishing
the blaze.
Board member Don Smith
said if the fire departments had
not responded as quickly as
they did then the ceiling could
have caught on frre spreading
the fire all over the building.
"Another five minutes
more and we could have
been in .real trouble," he said.
Preliminary damage estimates approach nearly
$200,000 which is based on
clean up and repair ~ costs.

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

\lORD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BV JUDD HAMBRICK
1stDOWN

www

Gerbils teach little girl about life, death

Glances are plans oc ideas could
pop up that yw11 want to be a pan
of. Being flexible will work 1o
ywr advanrage.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-This is the day to work oo ways
to strengthen your financial position, because there are a number of
areas opening up at this time
where you can eitrer make or save
money.
(Major .changes lllr! ahead for
Leo in tire coming year. Send for
your Astra-Graph predictions
today. Mail $2 to AsiiV-Graph. do
this newspaper, P.O. Box 167.
Wicldijfe, OH 441YJUJJ67. Wsit
www.bemice4u.com for more
advice.)

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrim·
mage ·

29 . 2003

response probably saved the day Grant
program
allows for
multiple
projects

BY J. MtLESl.AYTON
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com

. • Reds fire Boone,
Bowden, two others.
See Page 81
• Reds rally past
Phillies. See Page 81

No matter what
direction you turn
you can always find ,
It In the

Cl 2000 Unllld F . .!llfl ~ala . lnr;:.

TUESDAY . JULY

denim lame

44 Gael

~---------A_s_tr_o~gr_a~p~h_·--~----~~~~

BY Baa ICE BalE 0S0L
It behooves yw in til: year
ahead to take grealfr cootrol of
projects in which yw become
mvolved. Under yoor leadership,
you and everyone else involved
could experience an abmdance of

Champions,

AS

. or

......

.4-H Gran

r""

I 'M THROUC.+i

HANGIN(,
OlJT WlTH THOSE JE.I~.J(S~

I .M HAN(,INC, Our WITH
YOU NO\J. ARTUR.'

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries ·
Sports
Weather

A3
83
86
86

A4
AS
AS
81

A2

• C 2003 Ohio Volley l'ublishing Co.

RACINE - The distinct and
unmistakable smell of smoke
greeted workers Monday morning as they moved into
Southern High School to begin
the process of cleaning up and
clearing away damage caused
by Sunday morning's ftre.
.
Investigators are trying to
determine possible causes of
the tire. Though no firm conclusions have yet been made,
preliminary reports- indicate
that the flre may have cau~ed
by an electrical short in the
ice machine located in a closet by the main hall near the
building's front entrance.
The walls ·and ceiling
where the ice machine was
located were made of
cement. The closet doors
were built to withstand high
temperatures. When the fire
started, the heat had no place
to go and this created an
oven effect as temperatures
rose higher and "higher.
The immediate area in
front of the doors became so
hot that the glass on piCtures

displayed on the surrounding
walls in the hallway began to
melt. The tluorescent lights
in the hall cracked or broke
from the intense heat.
Ceiling tiles near the closet
burned away.
Smoke and heat escaped
through the closet doors and
flltered all through the building. The gymnasium and
nearby rooms got lhe worst
of the smoke damage.
After the fire wa.~ extinguished by Syracuse and
Racine volunteer tiremen,
school leaders and !lie community came together to assess the
damage. Pam Carter, Southern
Local district treasurer, was
immediately on the phone to
the school's insurance agent.
"I was in here at 6:30 a.m.
Sunday. My eyes were red
from all the ~ moke." she said.
Southern
Local
Superintendent Bob Grueser,
who was one the flrst people
to arrive, gave a preliminary
damage estimate at $200.000.
He said the school was lucky
to have avoided what could
have been a real catastrophe.
Ike Spencer, long time cus-

todian at the school, was
nearly finished with the summer maintenance necessary
for the school to open Aug.
19. Rooms were painted.
Floors were polished. The
gym was ready for fall
sports. Now, it is back to the
drawing board as custodians
and cleaning crew clean up
the damage.
"It makes me sick"
said
'
Spencer. "We are going to
have to do a lot of cleaning to
get the school ready."
Sooty ceiling tiles, ash,
smoke and water damage decorate a hall that had perfectly polished floors last week. Special
Care Cleaning Service from
Gallipolis was busy amassing a
small army of workers to clear
and clean the damage-.
·
Chris Parker, who was once
a student .· at Southern Higl)
School before graduating
Meigs High School, signed on
with Special Care early
Monday morning. Arriving
before 10 a.m.. Parker said he
expects to stay until after dark.
"I think I am contributing to
the community by helping out
with the cleanup," he said.

Chris Parker signed on early Monday morning with Special ·
Care Cleaning to help clean and clear the damage caused by
a fire Sunday at Southern High School. He expects to work
around the clock to get everything ready before the first day of
school, Aug. 19. (J. Miles Layton )

It's Gallia County
Fair Time!
Look for the Holzer Medicoi Center 'Wei/ness Wagon" during the Fair,

July 28 • August 2
Free screenings and health information will be provided.

Schedules will be posted daily.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

For more information, call (740t 446·5679.
'

J

•
' ft

· .h · ·· ··- . ·- --~- --

---· ·· ---.-----· --·~-----

·------"--~I'

--

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