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                  <text>Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Au~t 14. 2003

Large crowd at fair
hamess racing, Bt

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Brown to .sldp

tonight's game, Bt

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Summer Music

Alison Rose

.. Summer Salon Series,
6:30 p.m., Friday at the
French Art Colony, 530 First
Ave. in Gallipolis. Admission
$10. Music provided by members of the Ohio Valley
Symphony and local anists.
For information, call (740)
446-3834.

• Musician Alison Rose
will b~ 'in concert at 7 p.m.
today on the Hill Stage at the
County
Fair.
Meigs
Admission to the fair is $7.

ShhhBang
• ShhhBang will be in concert at 7 p.m. Saturday at the
Meigs Coumy Fair in
Rocks~rings. Admission to
the fair is $7.
The ladies who make. up
ShhhBang are natives of the
mid-Ohio Valley, and have
made numerous appearances
at fairs and festivals throughout the region.
Amanda DeBarr, Tara Null,
Angie
Burdette,
and
Savannah Edwards step up
the beat in their act with backup music and high-energy
choreography.ln addition to
winning the local Jimmy
Dean True Valley Country
Showdown in Greenbrier
County, W.Va., and being
named first runners up at .
"Starquest" at the Capital
Music Hall in Wheeling.
W.Va .. ShhhBang has also
performed at the West
Virginia State Fair.
The group has also opened
for Porter Wagoner, Aaron
Tippin, Rascal Flatts, Cl.edus
T. Judd and Trick Pony.

Pow-Wow
r

• The Harvest Moon PowWow will take place Saturday
and Sunday at the Gallia
County Faugrounds. The,re
will be drum ~rformances,
dancing, singmg, Native
foods, and crafts.
A collection of canned food
and school supplies will be
accepted and delivered to the
Cheyenne River Reservation
in South Dakota.
For information, call Larry
Roach at (740) 379-2873.

Kaleidoscope
• "Kaleidoscope," an an
exhibit featuring the works of
Ann Tiber, William Wrage
and Terry Ward, is on display
through the end of August at
the French Art Colony in
Gallipolis.
The. display is sponsored by
Ohio Valley Bank and Sears
Roebuckof Gallipolis.
The French Art Colony's
gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. Tuesday through Friday,
I to 5 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday. All FAC programming is offered through sur.port of the Ohio Arts Counc1l.

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Carnival
• A community carnival
will take place from 5 to 7
p.m., Friday at the corner of
Eighth and Viand streets.
Phil Luckeydoo will create
animal balloons for the children. There will also be
games for tile children and
prizes will be awarded.
Door prizes will be drawn at
6 p.m. and individuals must
be present to win.
Enjoy hot dogs, chips,
cookies, and pop at no charge.
The Pleasant Valley Hospital
Ladies Au~iliary will give
away popcorn.
There is no admission.
Everyone welcome.

Ribfest Ate-8
• Ribfest Ate-8, sponsored
by Miller Lite, WOWK-TV
13
and
Trivantage
Cpmmunity Federal Credit
Unio~. today through Sunday
at Harris Riverfront Park in
Huntington. Admission $2 for
adults, $1 for kids. Runs 5 to
II p.m. today; stans at II a.m . .
Friday through Sunday. For
info, www.hcarena.com.

J

,,( j ',j"-, • \t,l

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)

'

• Dance to music by
Cherry Ridge from 7 to I0
p.m., Saturday at the
Southside Community Center.

Electric
Barnyard
'

: ·• Electric Barnyard Tour
with Merle Haggard and
Marty Stuart, 7:30 p.m. ,
Saturday, Aug. 22 at the Big
S~ndy Arena in Huntington.
The show offers Haggard, the
owner of 29 number one hits,
six CMA Awards, and a
Orilmmy Award with his
counterpart, Marty Stuart,
bi!Jlself the proud recipient of
t.hree Grammys. Tickets are
S:n . for reserved seat tickets
on -the floor and $22 for gen&lt;;r~radmission tickets.

Patty Loveless

\

'

.

• Patty Loveless in concert,
8 p.m., Saturday, Paramount
Arts Center, Ashland, Ky.
Tickets $30, $25, $22, $20.
Her music ranges from
chart-topping songs like
"How Can I Help You To Say
Good-bye," "You Don't Even
Know Who I Am," and
"Blame It On Your Hean," to
more traditional ones like
"Soul of Constant Sorrow,"
and "Someone I Used To
Know."

0BITUARIFS

Page AS

WEAmER
&amp;b.W.rs, HI: 10, LAiw: 701

Dixie Sayre, portraying Aunt Rhody Knight, who led the
Union soldiers across the Shade River by the light of her
lantern. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Detallo on Pop A2

INDEX

Crow's Family Restaurant
Fetlturing Kentuclcy Fried Chicken
228 MainS!.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Drfvo.l!n W'Uidow

992-5432

Clteck All Fluids • CMdl Chassis

SmMoMyand
KMp Your F1111lly Sift

s17gs

On--·

PAGilS

A:3,6
84-6
B7

Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries

A:3
A4
A6

As
BS

As
81-4
A2

© 2003 Ohio VaHey Publishing Co.

4'4

448•0842
OIL CHANCE (4) TIRE

&amp; BALANCING

t6

Comi~

17
"'"'

...

RELAY
FOR LIFE•

$2295.

1/4 mile north
Pomeroy ·Meeon Bridge
M11on, Weet Virginia
Phone (304) 773-5721
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

2400 Eoatern Avenue
Gllllpotla, Ohio
Phone (740) 446-1711
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

r

Please see Voices, AS

.--------~~---------....:.-,

ganen children are e~pected progress should lead to more
to be able to read the1r first parent involvement . He said
name. name lower case letters: n, a, d, s, n; name upper- there will be no honor roll
case letters: N ADS and M.; for the kinderganen through
recognize the sound of n a d second grade students, but
s m; say the sound of n a d s there will be an achievement
and m; read high frequency
words: the, a, my, that; day to provide recognition.
At Monday's . night open
Identify rhyming words,
hold book right side up and house. 6 to 9 p.m. at the new
· read left to right. and identi- Meigs Elementary School,
fy beginning sounds of
Deem will be talking about
words n, a, s, d, m.
"lbe card," said Deem "was changes and how his staff
desi~ned to provide a compre- working with the children
hensive report of each child's
and their parents assist stuprogress to their parents.
The principal said that the dents in achieving the state's
new way of reporting student benchmark standards.

Mary Powell portraying the wife of Levi Stedman in disgust at
his idea of opening a tavern in Chester. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Despite fire, Southern High
School ready for classes
Bv J. MILES lAYTON
jlaylon@ mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY
The
Riverbarge
Excursions'
"RIB River E~plorer," the
only hotel barge traveling
America's rivers and inland
waterways, will be docking
at the Pomeroy levee
Tuesday.
John Musser, president of
the Pomeroy Merchants
Association, said that the
boat will be docking early
afternoon and remain until
·
7p.m.
It will have 80 passengers
on board who will disembark for shopping and tour'ing downtown Pomeroy.
Musser said that members
of the Association in period
costuming will be greeting
the passengers and taking
them on historic tours of the
village. Business owners
are being asked to stay open
until 7 p.m. for the convenience of the visitors.
Arrangements are alsebeing made to provide
some entertainment in · the

West Vuginia

252 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Ohio

POMEROY - A vignette
from "Voices of the Past" a
drama developed by the
Chester-Shade
Historical
Association to tell the story
of Chester, was presented as
a bicentennial feature of the
Meills County Fair Thursday.
Dt~ie Sayre portraying
Aunt Rhody Knight told the
story of how she helped the
Union soldiers get across
Shade River at Chester after
Gen. Morgan's troops burned
the bridge. She used her
lantern by night to show the
soldiers a shallow place in
the river where they could
pass without harm.
Mary Powell portrayed the
wife of Levi Stedman who
owned all of the land in what
is now Chester including that
on which the Chester
Courthouse was buill in
1823.
She told of how happy she
was as the wife of Stedman.

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

Dally 3: (}6-0
Dally 4: 1·1-2-2
Cash 25: 3-4-6-13-23-24

Sports

The new student report card
will : inform parents on
whether their children are proficiel)l, need improvement, or
are performing unsatisfactory
in the areas of reading, written
language and math.
In each one of those categories on the report card will
be listed specifics of what a
child is expected to know at
the end of each nine weeks
gradinf; period.
"Indicators for each nine
weeks are clearly stated."
said Deem, "and are
designed to meet the state
mandated benchmarks."
For e~ample, at the end of
first grading period kinder-

Hotel barge comin

Pick 3 day: 8-4-8
Pick 4 day: 1~9-6
Pick 3 night: (} 1-3
Pick 4 night: 3-2-5-8
Buckeye 5: 8-22-23-30-37

Calendars
I
Classifieds

1 \ 1 \ \ \ l l l \ d .J II \-.J II I I I I I I ! I I II I

.

' '

Bv CHARLENE HOEFliCH
hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com

• Wd jj)'Bjoulage tlls
Northern Olo. See Page AS
• God's compensation is
great! See Page A&amp;
• Meigs County fair. See

No.r ris Northup Dodge

Oil I Filter • Lube at.ssls

reports will
be
sent
home to
paren.ts
every mne
weeks.
. "Those
reports , "
said Deem
Deem
will show
parents
whether their children are
achieving at grade level or
below grade level. It will
show what their children are
able to do, what they have.
mastered, and what they
need to work on."

INSIDE

2 SllCfiONS-

! 1111 ' '

"Voice of the Past;' bicentennial presentation at fair

Page AS
• Andrew.Cart Knopp, 79

Weather

BEST DEAL IN TOWN

m e n I

POMEROY - Chane;es in
how parents receive mformation on the progess of
their children in kinderganen
through second grade will
take place at the new Meigs
Elementary School this year.
Tony Deem, principal, met
with members of the Mei11s
Local Board of Education this
week to re~rt on c!tanges
being planneO and their role
in increasing student achievement levels. He noted that
instead of regular report cards
with grades, comprehensive

Ohio

Dance with
Cherry Ridge

achieve-

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
hoellich@ mydailysentinel.com

• Lefty finally gets one
right. See Page 81
• Meigs finishes second in
TVC opener. See Page B1

8v CHARLENE HOEFliCH

. • Fifth Annual Roll In on
the River Classic Car Show,
Sunday at Ribfest Ate-8, at
Park.
Harris Riverfront
Re_gistration $10, includes 2
tic~ets to Ribfest Ate-8.

\1( . 1~11 • '

Deem reports changes plan~ed to increase student achievement

SPORTS

LoTIERIES

Car Show

IHIIl\'

••• ~•

R/8 River Explorer

amphitheater for those on
the boat just before it leaves
the levee, Musser said.
Open tours of the 730foot R/B River Explorer
will be offered to the public
between 3:30 and ·5 p.m.
There is no charge. At that
time the Barge Masters will
be on hand to answer questions and to give interviews.
The
RiverBarge

Excursion Lines, , Inc.'s
hotel barge is described as
being designed for adven'
ture. but with comfort and
safety in mind, allowing
guests to immerse themselves into the culture of
nearby towns and cities.
Pomeroy is a slop along
the vessel's "America's
Junction Tour.''

RACINE - The necessary
repairs and cleaning of
Southern High School fol lowing a fire three weeks ago
have been completed ·and
school will open as scheduled
on Aug. 21 .
On Thursday morning,
Southern
Local
Superintendent Bob Grueser
took the school board on a
tour through the high school
to show how much work has
been done by the repair and
cleaning crews.
"The building is 99.8 percent ready to · go," said
Southern High School principal Gordon Fisher. "This is a
major relief before school
starts."
After the fire trucks left on
July 27 , there was a fire
charred hallway. wiring
hanging down from a blackened ceiling and the smell of
smoke was everywhere .
The fluore scent lights in
the hall were cracked or bro-

ken from the intense heat.
Ceiling tiles near the closet
had burned away. Grueser
said he called Special Care
Cleaning who bee;an work
cleaning and repainng within
24 hours of the fire.
Gary
Barry.
owner,
described how much detail
his company put into cleaning the building. Floors were
scrubbed. Brass was polished. The trophy case in the
foyer appears almost brand
new because of how clean the
metal and the glass case look.
The hand-sink in the shop
clasroom, which was somewhat corroded from years of
use. is now so clean that all of
the individual jets shoot
water again . The gymnasium
floor got another wax job and
the gym curtains were dry
cleaned. New light fixtures in
the hall beam down a bright
tluorescent light .
The cause of the fire has
not yet been determined and
it is still under investigation,
according to the superinten-

. Ple•se -

Rudy, AS

Relay· is Tonight!
Holzer Medico! Center is a proud supporter al this yeor's Americon Cancer Society Relay for Life,

August 1·5 • 16 at the Gallipolis City Park - 4 PM • 10 AM

4:00 pm • 6:00 pm - Registration and Set-Up
5:00pm • 6:00 pm - Survivors' Registration
6:00 pm - SurvivoFs' Walk and Reception/Caregivers' Walk
9:00 .Pm - Luminary Ceremony
Activities throughout the night. Everyone is invited! .

.,

••

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Differ·ence

www.holzer.org

�•

,'

Co

MEIGS

The Daily Sentinel

Page ·A 2

FAIR

" Friday, August 15, _2003

Saturday, Aug.16

GUERNSEY. junior three
.year-old cow, Risen Son
farms . MILKING SHORTROCK SPRINGS_ Walk HORN , Rachel Elliott ;
Tall Farms of Shade showed · AYRSHIRES , Aged cow,
·
Chris Parker, Pomeroy,
the grand and reserve cham- Chris Parker; aged dry cow,
pion holsteins and grand Chris Parker; best three
champion jersey, R~sen Son females, Chris Parker, dam
Farm of Reeds~ 1lle the and daughter, Chris Parker.
reserve cham~1on Jersey and , JERSEY,
bull
calf.
grand champ~&lt;:m Guerns~y. ' Audrionna Pullins, Long
and Rachel Elhott of Racme Bottom, spring heifer calf.
the grand champron Ayrshire John Cook. p m
R's
t th M · c t f · •
• o eroy, 1 en
a e etgs . oun Y an s Son Farms· winter heifer
open .class datry show on calf, Laura' Pullins. Long
Monday.
Bottom; fall heifer · calf,
Results of the show, by Walk Tall farm; summer
class and m order from first yearling heifer Walk Tall
place, were : HOLSTEIN , Farm, Audrio~na Pullins;
spnng hetfer ca.lf, Walk Tall spring yearling heifer, Walk
Farm, Holter s Holstem Tall farm· winter yearling
farms, Pomeroy, and Walk
-~
'
If heuer, Walk Tall Farm;
. t h .,
TaII Farm; wm
er e11er ca •
·
- h ·c w lk
Walk Tall farm Cind
semor year1mg_ eller, a
· .
Y Tall Farm; Jumor two yearKoblentz, Pomeroy. fall old Rl·sen Son F
__ . .
' .
arms, JUniOr
het'f er. c·10 dY K0 bl entz, three
year-old, Audrionna
Pomeroy, an~ Tom Pullms, Pullins; four year-old cow,
Long B_ottom, summer year- Risen Son Farms, Walk Tall
hng he1fer, Walk Tall farm, Farm Job C k·
d
,
Danielle Colwell, Pomeroy; L 1 •d p nk ~ · age codryv..
spring yearling heifer, Ross
e an ar er, omeroy;
Holter Pomeroy Walk Tall cqw. Leland Parker; aged
.
dry cow, Leland Parker; best
'
. •
farm, Audnonna Pulhns, three fem ales. Walk Tall
Long Bottom; wmter year- F
R.
S
f
r h 1·f H 1 • H 1 ·
arm,
tsen on arm.
~~ms~ se:~io~ ~~os ye~r~~~~~ Leland Pa~ker; dam and
Walk Tall farm. Ross daughter, R1sen Son Farms.
w lk T 11 p. . Leland Parker; produce of
H0 It
er,
a
a
arm, dam, Walk Tall Farm. Walk
three year:old cow, Walk Tall Farm, Leland Parker:
Tall Farm, four year-old get of sire Walk Tall farm·
cow,
Kelsey
Holter, . .
'
'
· ]Untor best of three females.
Po meroy, HoIter •s Ho1stem
Walk Tall farm.
Farms; five year"old cow,
Walk Tall farm, Ross
Holter; aged dry cow, Walk
Tall
Farm,
Raymond
Colwell. Pomeroy; best
three female s, Walk Tall
Farm, Holter's Holstein
farm; dam and daughter,
Rachel Elliott showed the
Holter's Holstein farms.
grand champion Ayrshire
Walk. Tall farm, Walk Tall
and Kiki Osborne, reprefarm; produce of dam,
senting
Risen Son Farms
Holter's Holstein farms;
the grand champion
herd, four females , Walk.
Guernsey
at Monday's
Tall farm, Holter's Holstein
open
class
dairy show.
farm; junior best of three
Audrlonna Pullins, dairy
females, Walk Tall farm,
prin~ss, is also pictured.
Holter's Holstein farm.
{Brian J. Reed)

J. REED
. breed@mydailysentinel.com
BY BRIAN

( Monalleld '68"/8P

KY

I•

-

,··~~-W. VA.

02003A&lt;x:uWe-.lno.

.....
~"' ~~y . ...
.....
OIM""
·.. --~--··
. ...
Showers

Sunn~

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

f.storms

..,
Flurries

Rain

Snow

lee

Showers possible today
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Saturday
night ... Partly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the upper 60s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a slight chance of showers.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Sunday
night... Mostly
clear. Lows 60 to 65.
Monday... Partly cioudy.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid
60s. Highs in the mid 80s.

Today ... Patchy fog early.
Hazy and humid ... With a
chanc~ of showers and thunderstorms. Highs of 85 to 90.
Light winds. Chance of rain
40 percent.
Tonight.. Muggy with scattered showers and thunderstonns.
Lows near 70. Light winds.
Chance of rain 40 percent
·
Saturday ... Con .t inued
humid with scattered showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the mid 80s. West winds
around 10 mph. Chance of
rain 40 percent. ·

1
1
I

I

A DAY ON WALL STREET

I

Aug. 14, 2003

10.000

Dow Jones

I
I
I

lmlustrlals

"'

::.=.

I

JU~

9,310.56

I

I

7 000
•

AUG

Aug.14.2003

.
t

~=-.:....-;;;;;---~~-=-

1,700.34

i

'::

::.=...+0.81

(
(

Low
l,llt.l2

uoo

Mln:h10,2000
I ,QfO

Stlndanl A
Poor's 600

l

a
I
F

990.51

II

: : , :... +0.66

POMEROY - Before
the Meigs County fair
closes Saturday night, 28
youngsters will have
brand new bicycles as the
result of a giveaways at
the fair.
All children .under 12
entering the gate before
noon receive a ticket, a
portion of which they put
m a bucket on the hill
stage. Names are drawn
each day at noon for the
bicycles. four are being
given away each day with
the exception of kiddie
day when eight were
awarded.
The bicycles were provided by farmers Bank,
WaiMart, Big Bend farm
Antique Club, Dantax,
Bend Area Care, AEP line
crew of Pomeroy, Christy
Concessions,
Wooly
Don
Slaton
Acres,
Concessions, Ridenour
. Jim
Cane
Gas,
Concessions, Ridenour
Gas, Home National
Shade
River
Bank,
Coonhunters,
' Baum
Lumber and Hendricks
Heating and Cooling.

IIMonl hltft: 5.().18.12

Aug. 14. 2003

a

Bicycle
giv&amp;eNay

1,100

..

8150

MAY

118~.81

7150

JUN
Low

-high:

1180.38

1,1527.~

M..... 2A.2000

Local Stocks
•
ACI-20.51

AEP-28.20

GKN~Y-3.85

Sears-43.17

Hlllley Davidson- 49.31
Kmart - 2440

SBC-23.00

Bll-16.69

Kroger- 1828

Bcb Evans- 26.48
8agWarne&lt;- 67.87
City Holdng - 33.34

Ltd. - 17.07
NSC-18.98

USB-24.00
W&amp;M{s-28.49
Wai-Mart- 57.93
Wortllington -14.65
Daio/ stock reports al91!1e
4 p.m. closirg quote&amp; of
lf1e jlre\llous daYS transa&lt;llions, provided by Srnilh
Psrtners at Advesl Inc. of

~-3.929

5.90

Col-25.98

. DuFOOt- 43.n

00-19.33
Federal Mogul - 205

~

RDShel-46.11
Rod&lt;Wel- 26.37

Akzll- 31.25
Ashland Inc.- 3321
BBT-35.92

Charming SlllpS -

II

Gannelt- n.31J
Geneml Elec!rlc- 28.60

Oak HNI Financial - 29.10
Bank One- 39.55
OVB-24.00
Peoples- 27.00
Pepsico- 45.00
Premier- 8.84
ROO&lt;y Boots -10 75

AT&amp;T -21 .15

Gall~.

The Daily Sentinel

s
s

Reader Services

T
o·

Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories .is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story. calllhe newsroom at (740) 9922156.

si
G
C•
l)i

t,b

Our main number Is

$:

(740) 992-2156.

01

Department extensions are:

e1

News
Editor: Cha~ene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
· Reporter: B~an Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext. 13

-1!

Advertising

OU!alcte

ClaaaJCirc.:

Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation
Dlatrlct Mgr.: TBA. Ext. 17

Generai-Nianager
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12

E'lllllll: ·
newsOmydailysenllnol.com ·

Web:
www.mydailysenllnel.com

•

(USPs 213-960)

Walk Tall Farm , represented by Stace Robinson, right, and
Risen Son Farms, represented by Kara Osborne, showed the
grand and reserve champion jerseys, respectively, in
Monday's open class dairy show. Dairy Pnncess Audrionna
Pullins is also pictured. (Bnan J Reed)

every

Stace Robinson and Kelby Dotson of Walk Tall Farms are pictured with the Meigs County Fair's open class dairy show's
grand and reserve champion holsteins. (Brian J. Reed)

Association.

Keeping
Meigs

_

Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

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Holzer Medical Center

www.Jimsfermequlpment.com

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•

at 6:·30 p.m. Saturday at Faith Baptist
Church in Mason. W. Va.

Albert T. Roush Sr. will celebrate his 80th birthday Aug.
· 24 at a party from 2-4 p.m. in
·the Allen' Fellowship Hall of
:Graham United Methodist
New
Haven.
:Church,
· Everyone welcome. Gilts
unnecessary. Cards welcome. If not able to attend,
cards may be mailed to him
at Route. 3 Box 341, Letart
W.Va. 25253.

:Selby joins
the.Navy

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!

\

Kylle Sayre and Aaron Scott

'

The Super Shot

The Super Shot is 90 feet
tall, holds 12 people and
defies gravity several hundred times a oay at the
Meigs County Fair. (J. Miles
Layton)

Military news

afternoon,

Monday through' Friday, 111 Court
Stl9et ; Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper

Wednesday, Aug. 17
. POMEROY -· Noah's Ark
· outdoor drama will open for
: 7:30 p.m. nightly presents. lions through Aug. 17.
Presented by the Power in
the Blood Ministries and
Hillside Baptist Church. live
~ animals, free admission, take
: lawn chairs.
: MIDDLEPORT- A gospel
concert will be 6:30 p.m. at
·the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene. The Joyfulaires of
Winfield, W. Va. will be
· singing. Pastor Allen Midcap
invites
the
public.
: Refreshments will be served.
Saturday, Aug. 23
LONG BOTIOM- A hymn
sing will be held at 7 p.m. at
the Mt. Olive Church at Long
Bottom. The Golden Tones of
. Parkersburg will be there.

(

POMEROY - Jeremy S.
Selby, son of Dottie M. ~md
Tun A. ·Selby of Pomeroy,
recently enlisted in the U.S.
..Navy under the delayed entry
"program
at Columbus
•Military Entrance Processing
:station in Columbus.
: The program aqows
:recruits to enter the Navy
·and take up to one year to
:complete prior commitments such as high school.
Using recruiters as mentors,
the program helps recruits
ease into the transition from
• civilian to military life.
He will report for active
duty to undergo baslc training
at the Navy's Recruit Training
Center in Great Lakes, Ill.
Selby is completing his
senior year at Meigs High
School.

Hill returns to
Hawaii barracks
Army Sgt Eric I. HiD is one
of 250 soldiers assigned to the
2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry,
25th Infantry Division (Li~t)
who returned to Schofield

Court news
Meigs County
Court

Barracks, Oahu, Hawaii, after
bein$ deployed to support the
mission of Operation Iraqi
freedom and the global war
on terrorism.
While deployed, the soldiers served at various area
of responsibility locations
and were assigned to the 3rd
Infantry Division or the
JOist Airborne Division
(Air Assault). Some of the
soldiers received Combat
Inf&lt;mtryman Badges and
combat patches from their
adoptive units.
Operation Iraqi Freedom
is the official name given to
military operations involving U.S. and coalition forces
efforts to disarm and end the
current Iraqi regime. The
focus of the mission Is to
liberate the Iraqi people,
preserve Iraq as a unified
state, keep its territorial
inte~rity intact, and help the
Iraqt people begin the
process of economic and
political reconstruction.
Hill is an infantryman and
has been in the service for
five years. He is the son of
Ron B. Hill, Pomeroy, and
Connie Templeton
of
Kremmling, Colo.
He is a 1996 graduate of
Eastern High School.

and costs; James D. Hemsley,
Pomeroy, seatbelt. $30 and
costs; Larry M. Hendershot,
Marietta, speeding, $30 and

POMEROY
Cases costs;
resolved in the Meigs County
Sarah E. Hill , Long
Court of Judge Steve Story Bottom, se atbelt , $30 and
between July 18 and Aug. 4 costs; . Michael L. Hoffman,
are as follows:
Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and
Delani L.
Cummins,
costs; Pamela A. Hoppe.
Reedsville, seatbelt, $30 and
costs; Monica A. Darst, Huntington, W.Va. , speeding,
Marcon, speeding, $30 and $30 and costs; Darla L.
costs; Mark E. Deem, Humphl'ey, Pomeroy, speedMineral Wells, W.Va., speed- ing, $30 and costs; Charles.¥.
ing, $30 and costs; Jesse K. Jack, Racine. seatbelt. $30
Dillon, Athens, speeding, $30 and costs; Anessa L. Jackson,
and costs; Kerry L Dobbins. Columbus. speeding, $30 and
Mt. Liberty, speeding, $30 costs;
Brian R. Jividen. West
· and costs; Diana D. Duhl,
Portland. speeding, $30 and Columbia, W,Va., seatbelt.
costs; Randy B. Ebersbach, $30 and costs; Donald L.
Langsville, speeding, $30 Johnson, Latta, S.C .. scatbelt.
and costs;
$30 and costs. nut hut sticker,
Mary J. Francis, Pomeroy, $20 and costs; Steven
stop sign, $20 and costs; Kalinowski, Bidwell, seatCharlotte
M.
Gordon. belt, $90 and costs; Kevin
Gahanna, speeding, $30 and Kidd, Mullens. W.Va., seatcosts; Jeremv,A.
Goss, Canal belt, $30 and costs: Ryan K.
}{1'
Winchester, speeding, $30 Krauter, Langsvi lie . seatbelt,
and costs; Walter J. Haggy. $30 and costs;
Rutland, speeding, $50 and
William B. Krebs. Glen
costs; Terry L. Haines,
Allen. Va., speeding, $30 and
Rutand, · speeding, $30 and
, costs; Brian D. Haley, costs; Brian K. Lambert.
Jackson, speeding, $30 and ' Middlep011. seatbelt -passencosts·, seatbelt, $30 and costs; ger. $35 and costs; Joshua A.
Aaron
L.
, Harding, Marcum , Lon g Bottom,
Ravenswood, W.Va., speed- speeding, $30 and costs;
ing, $30 and costs; James M. Jason L. Martin, Barnesville,
Harmon, Racine, seatbelt, seatbelt-passenger. $20 and
their familiar setting as
$30 and costs; Shawn T. costs; Glenn D. May, New
much as possible. Most hosHarris , Washington Court Haven, W.Va., seatbelt. $30
pice care is at home, espeHouse ; speeding, $30 and and costs; Teresa D.
cially in rural communities.
costs; Diane A. Helmick, McGrath, Chester. speeding.
Hospice works with nursWheelersburg, speeding, $30 $30 and costs .
ing homes and hospitals to
accommodate those patients
unable to be at home.
CHRIST ACADEMY
Originally in the United
States, hospice was started
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS Pre-K-12
in the 1970's for cancer
patients. Bowers said they
are serving fewer cancer
~D When your children graduate
patients now. She said hosfrom high school, do you want
pice is seeing more and
~ c.... ·
~6'J them to be well-educated,
more stroke and Alzheimer's
patients.enter into their care.
Christ-honoring graduates?
The family is also includ•
ed. Throughout the patient's
care hospice nurses and
Prepare-your children for the future
social workers help the famiby sending them tb CHRIST ACADEMY
ly deal with bereavement
counseling and services are
•· A alrlstlan Sthool alternative.
.
1
available for 13 months after
the patient has died. In Meigs
Blenaing traditional and modern methods of education.
Count/', the group. meets at
Providing excellence in Christian education since 1976
Crow s KFC on the first
Pre-K-12, College Prep and General Studies
Thursday of every month.
Holzer Hospice
has
Individualized Instruction • Educational Field Trips
worked to help patients do
Varied Music Program • Extracurricular Activities
things they enJOY doing like
.
Non-Doctrinal - Nondiscriminatory
going to the farr, _gettiag baptizecf or go fishmg. Bowers
'
Cmwerrie11tly a,d
Admits &gt;ludenls ef any
said one patient was married
attracti"ely located in
race, color, creed,
while in hospice care.
Cl.ri.'il
Epi.&lt;;copa/ Churclr.
national or ethnic origin.
Hospice is covered under
Medicare, Medicaid · and
most insurances. For more
c u m s T r "A.cAoEMY
information about Holzer
Hospice in Gallia County
P.O. Box 224, 804 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV 25550
call 446-5074. In Meigs
304-675-1559
County, call 992-7 463.

Hospice programs help
families in difficult times
BY CARRIE ANN WOOD ·
cwood@ mydailytribunel.com

GALLIPOLIS - When
families have to face a tough
decision concerning a loved,
hospice is available to help.
It is not &lt;m easy subject for
most pedple, but when a
patient and family are faced
with the reality of a terminal
diagnosis it has to be discussed.
: Getting through a terminal
· diagnosis does not have to
be faced alone. Patients and
families do not have to trav;el that road alone.
: Hospice is a type ef care
:unlike any other in the med. ical field. The goal of hospice is not to prolong a
.patients life, but enhance 1t
;for as long as is possible.
· "Hospice doesn't hasten
:the process, it allows death
: to · happen
naturally.
:Sometimes t~chnology pro. longs the dymg! mst~d ?f
.enhancmg the liVIng, satd
;Sue Bowers, director of
· Holzer Hospice .
: Hospice is focuses on pal: Jiative care instead of cura"
:rive care. A patient is eligi~le
•·for hospice care when hfe
:expectancy is six months_or
'•less and has an attendmg
.::Physician willing to manage
·.care in the pro!lram.
: The purpose IS to make ~e
jlatient as comfortable m

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PageA3
Friday, August 15, 2003

Guest's vulgar
floor show ruins
tasteful reception

:Birthdays

Ohio Vall!ly Publishing Co.
Published

NEW·HAVEN- Mike and Rhonda Sayre
of New Haven, announce the Saturday wedding of their daughter, Kylie Michelle Sayre,
to Aaron Paul Scott, son of Jerry and Teresa
Scott of Washington, W. Va.
' The · bride-elect is a: 2003 graduate of
Wahama High School and plans to study
nuclear medicine this fall at the University
of Southern Illinois. Kylie is the grandaughter of Don and Shirley Kay of New Haven,
and Don and Betty Sayre of Middleport.
Her fiance is a 1999 graduate of Wahama
High School and is serving with the U. S.
Navy. He recently served inOperation Iraqi
Freedom. He is the grandson of Ray and
Barbara Waldron of McArthur, Hazel Scott
of Coalton, and Louie Scott of Wellston.
The open church wedding will take place

Shows

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

.

Sayre-Scott engagement

~Concerts,

""""'"""'
11,'122.88
Jlln. ,., 2000

+0.42

.

Community
.calendar

Ohio weather

BY THE BEND

.The Daily Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: My hus"
band and I were married
several weeks ago in a beautiful. reverent, Christian ceremony. Our reception, held
in an upscale restaurant, was
designed to be both fun and
tasteful. Everything from the
dance music so the cake-cutting was planned to represent the love and respect we
had for each other on our
first day of wedded life.
That spirit was shattered
by "Simone," my husband's
brother 's girlfriend. She
took over our reception. Her
shrill voice screamed at least
50 times for my husband and
me to kiss and smear cake in
each other's faces. She
drank champag ne straight
from the bottle. She showed
our guests X-rated photographs of her unmarried
daughter's natural childbirth. She • performed a
"striptease" by whipping her
skirt over her head and
gyrating against other guests
in a practically nonexistent
thong. We didn' t realize the
extent of her misbehavior
until we returned from our
honeymoon and saw the
video. The expression on the
faces of our guests is horrified, and . she dominates
every scene.
Simone will no doubt be a
permanent fixture in my
husband's family. I do not
want to cause a rift, but that
vulgar woman ruined my
wedding. I don 't know how
I' ll control my feelings the
next time Simone and I are
thrown together. How would
you handle this? - MORTIFIED BRIDE IN NEW
YORK
DEAR
MORTIFIED
BRIDE: I'd ]ceep .!Jppermost
in mind that Simone may
have a drinking problem that
causes her lapses in judgment once she's had a few.
I'd say this plainly to your
new brother-in"law as I
handed him a copy of the
video. Sometimes a picture
is worth a thousand words.
And this is one of them.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 23year-old single working
woman, ant! I'm in love with
an older married man in my
otfice. This has gone on for
about two years.
I have never acted on my
fee lings, and I never would.
I wouldn't do anything to
jeopardize his marriage and
have never told him how I
feel. However, a little inci-

Dear
Abby

dent recently made it pretty
clear he feel s the same way I
do.
No, il's not what you're
thinking. We simply shared a
"moment" (corny as it
sounds). It was like in the
movies when the mu sic
soars, the man and woman
suddenly lock eyes and
slowly move in for "the
kiss." In fact, that 's exactly
what happened -- but I
pulled away.
I don't know why I hesitated. I have fantasized
about that moment for the
longest time . But when it
finally happened. I couldn't
go through with it. ·
Now when I see him, 'I
ache inside . It 's a different
kind of pain than anything
I've ever experienced: I
desperately need your
help . l' m not even sure
what I'm asking . I' m
afraid if I'm ever again in a
position to ki ss him . I
might just do it. and I'm
afraid of where it would
lead. Any advice? - ·
ACHING AND ANXIOUS IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR ACHING AND
ANXIOUS: You appear to
be a sensible and honorable
woman. You and I both
know you and thi s man are
swimming in dange rous
waters. The wisest thing
you can do is to remove
yourself from any situation
that could tempt you both
and cause future pain ,
embarrassment or regret. If
that means a change of
employment , so be it.
(Dear A!Jb,· is wrirre11 br
Abigail Vwi Buren, also
krwwn as Jeaml e Phillips,
and was founded bv her

morher, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abbl' at
www.DearAbbr. co m. or ·
P.O. Box 6.9440, Los
A11geles. CA 90069.)

r--------:::-. ----,

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To

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at

Roult' J3 • Mason•W\i

304-773·5~54

Friday, August 15th
Prime Rib Dinner S ecial
Se!Ving from 5pm - 9pm

Entertainment by
Paul Doeffinger
Starting at 7:30p.m.

on the veranda. ·

me

Shoe Place·
992-5627

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�•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

Controller-interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General manager and news editor

NATIONAL VIEW

Cali
The home ifthe buzz again
Los Angeles Times in California recall:
Last summer it was the Gary Condit drama. For a while, it
looked as if this summer would be all about the Laci Peterson
murder triaL The national "news" buzz is still emanating from
California, but now it's about the drama (or debacle) of recalL
Part of the fascination is that, given California's reputation for
being first , people in other states wonder, "Can it happen here
tooT'
Probably not. This i$n't Proposition 13, the tax revolt wave
from California that splashed over the rest of the nation.
California's recall laws are more generous than most. Though
all of today's governors can be impeached, only 17 other
'states have voter recall laws and six justify a recall only when
·the governor has committed a crime.
· National politicians are strug~ling to divine the potential
lessons of the recall. Already It's become somethmg 'of a
proxy for the 2004 presidential race.
Former President Clinton is advising Gov. Gray Davis on
how to beat back Arnold Schwarzenegger; Clinton's advice,
or so the more fevered speculation in Democratic circles goes,
means that if Davis beats the recall and Sen. Hillary Rodham
Clinton. D-N.Y., decides on a surprise entrance into the presidential race, she will have a lock on the New York . and
California delegations.
Meanwhile, President Bush surprised his advisers by giving
a tentative nod to Schwarzenegger, who could hardly get further from Bush's conservative base and still be called a
Republican.
But for many, the recall may simply confirm strongly held
stereotypes about California zaniness. "Thank God I live in
Wisconsin," Gov: Jim Doyle declared about California's politics last Thursday. "It's a circus." The circus would no doubt
include the planned one-hour reality TV special, "Who Wants
to Be Governor of California? The Debating Game" on the
Game Show Network. And Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is joking
that he's glad he doesn't live in California because gomg up
against diminutive "Diffrent Strokes" actor Gary Coleman
would be tough. since he "probably symbolizes smaller government."
California, largely on the back of the "Arnold candidacy,"
has decisively captured the August spotlight. It's no accident
that Time and Newsweek have gone from featuring presidential candidate Howard Dean in the same week on their covers
to giving the same treatment to Schwarzenegger. The recall
has displaced the presidential race. Eventually, however, the
rest of the country will remember the adage, "Enough about
you, what about me?"

Friday, August.15,

2003

The Terminator is not the Gipper

I

Tbe.Daily Sentinel

.PageA4

A friend recently asked us
to
co mpare
Arnold
Schwarzenegger to Ronald
Reagan, who was governor
during the five years we lived
in California. It 's a useful
question, even if Arnold, a
naturalized citizen, can never
be president. Here's our
answer: The Terminator is not
the Gipper._
Reagan ,
whether
you
agreed with him or not, stood
for a core set of values that
made him the most popular
politician of his era. So far,
Schwarzenegger stands for
celebrity and ambition. but
little else. Voters have no idea
what his values really are.
There are certainly similarities between the twu men . The
Gipper was often derided for
being a "mere actor" by polit ical
writers,
and
the
Terminator is already getting
the same dismissive treatment But equating "actor"
with "lightweight" misses a
key lesson from Reagan's
career.
In fact, toward the end of
his presidency, Reagan was
asked what it was like to be an
actor in the White House.
After
eig ht
years,
he
answered that he wondered
how anyone could be president if ·they hadn't been an
actor.
Reagan's acting ski lis were
critical to his political success. He understood television, he always kept his cool,
and he had the uncanny abi lity to tell the same stories and

Steve
and
Cokie
Roberts

repeat the same lines without
losing his trademark twinkle.
He might have ,been an actor
playing: a governor, or a president. bu.t they were the best
roles of his career · and he
played them e11ceptionally
well.
Moreover,
Reagan' s
Hollywood day s made him
extremely disciplined . He was
a n actor, not a writer or director. He stood where he was
told and read what he was
given. And that made him one
of the most fru strating politicians e ither of us ever covered.
The first time Steve interviewed Reagan. in the state
house in Sacrame nto, he was
so unnerved by the governor's
ability to stay on message that
he dropped his tape recorder
on the marble floor of the
capitol, splintering it into a
dozen pieces.
Even Peggy Noonan, a
Reagan speechwriter who
idolizes her former boss ,
recalls that working for him
was like appearing in a daily
soap opera called " White
House." Every word, every

gesture. every entrance and
exit was sc ripted.
Schwarzenegger's handlers
are following the same · play book . They allowed TV cameras to trail him at a New York
charity event, but refused to
let re porters as k questions,
sayi ng it was not a campaign
stop. " Maybe my information
was ~rong," shouted one irate
radio reporter. "Isn' t he running
for
governor of
California?" It 's unclear
whether the reporter dropped
his tape recorder.
The Terminator will need
Gipper-like di sci pline. He 's
used to going on TV chat
shows and saying anything.
Now, every word will be
intensely scrutinized. It's not
a question of if he makes a
mistake. but of when and how
big it will be.
All good actors possess
anothe( enormous political
asset. They understand drama
and the arc of a story, and
many successful politicians
have a great story to tell. Jack
Kennedy was The Captain of
PT-109, Bill Clinton was The
Boy from Hope, George Bush
the Younger is The Sinner
Saved.. ·
Reagan had a slight prob!em in this regard: He often
confused his movie roles with
real life, and his most enduring nickname came from his
portrayal of the doomed football hero George Gipp. But,
hey, it was a hell of a story.
Arnold is already employ ing Reagan 's trick, slipping

into his "Terminator" character on the campaign trail and
tossi ng out his most famou s
line from tho se t1lms, "Hasta
Ia vista, baby."
·
But there ts one vast difference between Ronnie and
Arnold. When Reagan ran for
governor he was already a
political pro. He had headed
the Screen Actors' Guild ;
given a well-received speech
at tlte Republican convention
of 1964; campaigned for that
year's GOP nominee, Barry
Goldwater; delivered numerous radio commentaries; and
traveled tirelessly representing General Electric.
Those e11periences honed
his politica l style and, more
important, his political mes.sage. It was a simple message
that could be summarized in
six words : smaller government, lower talles , stronger ·
defense. Perhaps it was too
simple. but it was dear and
powerful and, ultimately,
unbeatable.
Schwarzenegger has no
message ellcept this one: Gov.
Gray Davi s is the villain, I'm
the hero, and in Hollywood
the hero always triumphs. In a
short campaign, backed by all
his money and celebrity, it
mi ght be enough to win.
But the Gipper convinced
voters that he had a good reason for wantin~ to be governor of California. The
Terminator has yet to do so.
(Sreve and Cokie Roberts
are 1•eteran news commenta·
tors and joumalists.)

I

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Andrew Carl
Knopp
NEWARK~ Andrew Carl
Knopp. 79, of Ne wark, died
Thursday, Aug. 14 at the
Autumn Health Care Ce nter

in Newark.
Funeral services wil l be
Born on March 12, 1924 at held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Mason, W Va. , he was the Fog lesong--Tucker Funeral
son of the late Carl Clarence
Home in Mason. Friends may
Knopp and Eva lrene Knopp.
call
one hour prior to the serHe was preceded n death
by tw o wives, Margaret vice. Burial wi ll . be in
Reynolds Knopp and Alma Suncrest Cemetery at Point
Pauline J(nopp.
· Pleasant, W. Va.

Local Briefs
Trustees to meet
LETART - Letart township trustees will meet at 5
p.m. Aug. 18 at the off~ce
building.
.

Shower planned
RACINE - · Friends and
neighbors of Janice Danner
who lost her home to fire on
July 27 and had no insurance
will be held at the PortlandRacine Branch of the
Community of Christ Church
on Love tt Road, 7 p.m.
Friday.

Raiders re-e nactm ent , Sept.
3-7, is invited to attend a
training
workshop
on
Sunday.
Registration starts at 8 a.m.
and the workshop starts at C)
a. m. and continues to 4 p.m.
There will be a .$1 0 registration fee. Women can pa.nicipate but must dress in men 's
apparel. Reside nts may co ntact Bob Van ce, commander,
614-477-9371 or Darrell
Markijohn , Morgan 's re"
enactment coordinator, 330492
7 107
(dmarkijhn@ew .net)
fo r
more information.

Giveaway
planned

Training
\workshop for
militia set

SYRACUSE - Lone Oak
. Farm Open House 12 until
. POMEROY - .Anyone finished on Aug. 20. There
interested in pa1ticipating as will ·be a give-a-way of a
a Union or Militia infantry- 2003 Ph illy at 2 p.m.
. man during the Morgans

Open house
planned
POMEROY
Meigs
Middle School will hold orientati on Monday frorp 6 to
7: IS p.m. for all incoming
sixth graders and new seventh and eighth grade stu -.
dent s for the sc hool year.
New students who are not
registered may do so at that
time . A birth certificate must
be presented . For more informati on call the office. 9923058.

Food giveaway
SYRAC USE - The First
. Church of God of Syracuse,
corner of Second and Apple
Streets, will have a food ,
clothing and school supply
gi ve -away from 10 to II a.m.
Saturday. For more informati on call 992-1734 and leave
a message.

For the Record
POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Shirley A. Johnson and
Roger D. Johnson. both of
. Racine.

A di ssolution has been
grante\1 to Mary E. Nitz and
Day R. Nitz, Sr. '

Divorces
POMEROY -A divorce
ac tion has been filed in
Meigs County Commo n
Pleas Co urt by Margo

Florian.
Tustin.
Calif..
against Bret E. Florian.
Divorces have been granted to Brenda A. Wolfe from
Chad Allen Wolfe, Melissa
Johnson from William A.
John so n, Patricia Reeves
from Rodney Reeves, and
Larry W. Parsons from
Cy nthia Dawn Parsons.

Judge rejects request to close
Peterson preliminary hearing to public

Have we forgotten the anger·in the eyes?
BY JAMES

l. LAROCCA

Los Angeles Times

Ordinarily,
our
boats
patrolled Vietnam's rivers. in
pairs. But on this night we had
several
teams
operating
together as we launched the
Pentagon's latest ingenious
scheme for winning the war in
the Mekong Delta.
The concept was simple
enough: instead of surprismg
people with conventional gunfire during raids, the boats
would first set the houses and
buildings on fire with bows
and arrows. The brass called
this early version of "shock
and awe" Operation Flaming
Arrow.
Of course, the flim sy huts
bumed like matchbooks, leaving the families homeless and
destitute. The next day. civil
action teams of soldiers would
arrive bearing sheets of corrugated tin for new roo f~ and
bags of rice to help the villagers get .st&lt;)rled again . There
would also be bars of soap and
clothing from church groups
i~ ~states .

I remember a particular time

when, with the fires still smoldering in the stultifying heat of
a Delta morning, the teams
di stributed boxes of heavy
sweaters
I'm sure the church folks
back home felt good about
their gifts. But we shared with
the vi llagers a sense of
absolute mystification at a policy that would burn down people's homes in· the middle of
the night, then give them tin

and soap and sweaters to
rebuild their lives.
Our government called it
"pacification." . We called it
madness. It all has come back
to me while watching the news
from lmq, where we should be
applying more of the lessons
so painfully learned in
Vietnam . Instead, we see m to
be repeating our mistakes.
What I remember most from
those nights are the faces - and
the eyes. The children would
be terrified. bi1t also oddly fascinated in that way that kids
have.
The mothers, beyond ordinary fear, would be wildly
a ngry, ofte n unleashing . a
flood of invective that, of
course, none of the Americans
could specificall y understand
because no one spoke the language.
The old widows - there
seemed to be one in every hut
- would look at you with the
cold, dead eyes of people who
had been violated forever and
seemed to expect always to
suffer.
But mostly I remember the
~en, who, if they hadn 't
slipped away when the mess
began, would be taken by the
American troops for interrogation.
Usually. several young soldiers would throw the man
down while yelling the few
Vietn amese phrases they
knew. At least one would hold
a rifle to his head. Another
might stand on his neck. His
hands wou ld be bound behind
his back. He would be

wrenched up into a kneeling
position. Many times he
woul d be blindfolded.
Eventually a "pacification"
team member would come
along and question the man in
Vietnamese. He would be
asked to show his papers documents which, more often
than not, had been lost in the
fire. He would be yelled at,
&lt;;,ursed at. and sometimes spit
on. Many times he would be
kicked and punched.
Those lucky enough to have
the right kind of documents
and otherwise convince the
Americans of their innocence
(of what?). would be released.
Then you would see it .. In
the eyes. The clean. white fury
of men who have been
reduced to abject humiliation
and powerlessness in front of
their families. The hatred in
their eyes wou ld be as pure as
any you wou ld ever see. It
would last forever. You would
never forget it.
I saw those eyes again the
other day on the evening
news. A group of young U.S.
soldiers. sent by their governmein to go hou se to house in a
sweltering Baghdad suburb,
had kicked in a door and roosted a family. The children were
terrified, crying. The mother
was furious , screaming. The
exes of the U.S. soldiers were
ftll ed with confus ion and
shame at what they were being
made to do by their government.
,
And the father, down on the
ground in front of his house
with a kid from Arkal)sas or

Detroit or California standing
on his neck, showed in his
eyes the kind of white-hot
hatred that will take a thousand years t{) extinguish.
President Bush, who spent
almost all of his military service out of uniform and
involved in political campaigns in the South, and Vice
President Dick Cheney, who
never served at all (he had, in
his words. "other priorities"),
would do well to consider the
lessons of Vietnam.
We did not win the heans
and minds of the Vietnamese
people because we occupied
their country while we burned
down their homes and killed
them and brutalized and '
abused them.
We will not win the hearts
and minds of the Iraqi people
by wrecking their towns and
cities, destroying their homes,
terrorizing their/families and
humiliating
their
men .
Incredibly. we have again
become an occupying army,
out of touch with the realities
of the lives and culture of the
people we are there to save.
Not surprisingly, the Iraqi people are striking back.
Recently, Lt. Gen. Ricardo
Sanchez, the chief commander
of all ied forces in Iraq, said
that "maybe our iro n-fisted
approach to the conduct of ops
is beginning to alienate
Iraqis." Perhaps today's Army
is remembering the eyes.
I Larocca. a professor of
public policy at Southampton
College, was a rwva/ officer in
Vie/llam during /.967-68) .

\

•

•
•

MODESTO, Cali!'. (AP) The judge in Scott Peterson's
double murder trial rejected a
defense request to close a preliminary hearing despite arguments that opening it to the public would "poison" the jury pooL
Defense
lawyers said
allowing public access to the
hearing, scheduled for Sept.
9, would the let the media
learn the identities of some
witnesses and perpetuate irresponsible speculation in the
intensely covered case.
Media lawyers .ugued that
no preliminary he.uings in
high-profile cases - including those for OJ . Simpson
and actor Robert Blake have been closed in almost
two decades. Preliminary
hearing s in California are like
minitrial s, with testimony
from witnesses. At the end, a

judge decides whether the
case goes to triaL
In ruling to keep the hearing open, Judge AI Girolami
said Thursday the Peterson
case " is not unlike other
high-profile cases."
Peterson, 30, has pleaded
innocent in the killing of his
pregnant wife. Laci Peterson,
who vanished on Christmas
Eve, and their unborn son. The
bodies washed ashore in April
along the San Francisco Bay.
Scott Peterson' s defense
attorney Mark Geragos said
an open discussion of the evidence would "poi so n" the
jury pool, adding that some
evidence prese nted at the preliminary hea ring may be
excl uded from the tria l.
"It's going to create wi ld
spec ulation ," Geragos told
the judge. "There's no way if

we have an open hearing to
rein in or control how that
information gets out."
Media attorney Roche lie
Wilcox , who represents several
national TV networks, argued
that an open hearing "is the
only way to assure that what
gets to the public is accurate."
After the ruling, Geragos
backed away from his initial
relucta nce to let cameras in
the courtroom. Prosecutors
also had filed a motion to
block television coverage.
"The accuracy of the information when it's not televised is always suspect,"
Geragos said.
The j udge said he probably
will decide within several days
whether to allow cameras.
The prosecution and defense
are next due in court Sept 2
for a discovery hearing.

Voice·s

men ne eded some place to
hang out so he built a tavern.
The Ches ter-Shade group
perf &gt;nns the play for groups
visill.•g the o ldest standing
courthuuse in the state of Ohio
and takes it into area schools.

Others who have roles in
"Voices" are Ron Eastman, the
bear hunter; Howard Parker,
Lish Water; Henry Barr as
Elza Osborne, the judge; and
Nellie Parker, Lucy Stedman.
daughter of Levi.

from Page A1
who built the first ~rist mill
in Chester, was the flfst postmaste r, was a county co mmissioner, and how disgusted
she was when he decided the
74 ·753·3400

MOVIES

1 0 "'"

Ml- II

'" """

Th e Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Death

Dissolutions

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Aug. 15, the 227th day of 2003. There are
138 clays left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: Aug. IS, 1945, was proclaimed "V-J Day" by the Allies, a day after Japan agreed to
surrender uoconditionally.
On this date: In 1769, Napoleon Bonapane was born on the
island of Corsica.
In 1935, humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post were
killed when their airp lane crashed near Point Barrow, Alaska.
In 1939, the MGM musical "The Wizard of Oz" premiered
at the Grauman 's Chinese Theater in Hollywood.
In 1944, during World War II, Allied forces landed in south. ern France .
In 1947. India became independent after some 200 years of
Britis.h rule.
In 1948, the Republic of Korea was proclaimed.
In 1961 , East German workers began building the Berlin
Wall.
In 1969, the Woodstock Music and Art Fair opened in
upstate New York.
In 1971, President Nixon announced a 90-day freeze on
wages, prices and rents.
In 1994, Jlich Ramirez Sanchez, the terrorist known as
"Carlos the Jackal," was jailed in France after being captured
in Sudan .
- Ten years ago: Pope John Paul II ended his four-day U.S.
-vi si t with a farewell address at Denver's Stapleton
Jnternational Airport in which he denounced the "culture of
:death" of abortion and euthanasia. An Egyptian surrendered
' 11eacefully after hijacking a Dutch jet to Germany to demand
the United States release Mu51im cleric Sheik Omar AbdelRahman.
Five years &lt;1go: Twenty-nine people were killed by a car
:!Jamb that tore apan the center of Omagh. Northern Ireland; a
~pl mter group calling itself the Real IRA claimed responsibii.Jty.
'
: One year ago: President Bush, using Mount Rushmore as a
tlramatic backdrop, pressed Congress to give him a flexible ,
fa st-moving homeland security depanment. Some 600 family
members of Sept. II victims filed a trillion-dollar federal lawsuit agai nst Saudi officials, banks and charities, charging
they'd financed Osama bin Laden's network and the attacks
:On New York and Washington.
: Today 's Birthdays: Civil rights activist Vernon Jordan is 68.
·Actor Jim Dale is 68. Actress Pat Priest is 67.-'Supreme Court
Justice ·Stephen Breyer is 65 . Musician Pete York (Spencer
Davis Group) is 61. Author-journalist Linda Ellerbee is 59.
Songwriter Jimmy Webb is 57. Britain's Princess Anne is 53 .
Actress Tess Harper is 53. Actor Larry Mathews is 48. Actor
2Ze ljko lvanek is 46. Rock singer-musician Matt Johnson (The
:rhe) is 42. Actress Debi Mazar is 39. Country singer Angela
:Rae {Wi ld Horses) is 37. Actress Debra Messi n~ is 35. Actor
Anthony Anderson is 33. Actor Ben Affleck ts 31. Singer
Michael Graham {Boyzone) is 31. Actress Natasha
Henstridge is 29.
Thought for Today: "Life has taught me. to think, but thinking has not taught me how to live," - Alexander Herzen,
Russian author ( 181 2- 1870).

Friday, August 15. 2003

Widespread power
outages hit northern Ohio
CLEVELAND (AP) -A
power outage threw homes
and businesses across northMillions of people were affected T hursday when lights, rAIIInhr,nAo l
ern Ohio into the dark
computers, traffic lights, and mass trannsit throughout the east
Thursday, canceling flights,
were disabled. The outage engulfed most of New York stale,
sendi ng police offi cers to the
of New England, and west to Ohio and Michigan. In Canada,
streets to direct rush-hour
were widespread outages in the capital Ottawa. Toronto and
traffic and kick- starting genfarther west in Ontario .
erators in pri sons and hospita ls.
CANA DA
Ohio ' s sole operating
nucle ar power plan! was
shuttered, mass transit was
halted and phone se rvice
was interrupted.
As ni ght fell. 1.5 million
people in Cleve land faced a
water crisis because there
was no electricity to pump
rie
water from Lake Erie. By I 0
PA.
p.m. , at least three eastern
OHIO
suburbs were out of water
-", UNlTE~ D STATES
and western suburbs had
two to four hours of water
In
left.
The blackout hit U.S. ISOIURC;E : Associated Press
c ities fro m New York to
Detroit and into Canada. is off." said nur se Olga failed. ~ell phone service cut
There was no evidence of Kropk o. "Our laboring in and out. and rides at Cedar
terrorism, said officials who moms are suffe ring."
Park Amusement Park in
pointed to a possible power
Campbell urged residents to Sandusky lost power. Some
transmi ssion problem from conserve wat er and said she riders were stranded on The
Canada to the United States. was concemed about repons Ma gnum roller coaster for
In northern Ohio, the that people ' were wasting 20 minutes before they coul d
power went out along a 145- water by opening up fire walk down .
mile stretch of the Lake Erie hydrants. The state sent trucks
In dow ntown Toledo,
coastline . .affecting hundreds carrying 7,650 gallons of eight people drinking beer
of thousands of customers in drinking water to Cleveland. as they sat in lawn chairs
every major city from but officials did not give outside their apartment
Toledo to Ashtabula.
details for how it would be bu ild ing let out a c heer as
To the south, thousands distributed Friday morning.
street lights fli ckered on and
more homes and bu si nesses
She also said the city was oftice buildings lit up about
In
Man sfield,
Marion, enforcing a curfew from dusk 9 p.m.
Massillon and Tiffin report- to dawn for anyone 18 and
;,It's been a lot of stress."
ed outages. Scattered out- under. She en~ouraged work- said Vickie Ware. holding
ages were reported in ers, shoppers and visitors to her sleeping !-year-o ld
Delaware County. about I 00 · stay out uf dow ntown umil at grand sun in her arms. " It ·,
miles to the so uth.
least noon Friday bu t said the OK now. God always mukes
About
880,000 C leveland Browns' night a way."
FirstEnergy Corp. customers game in the city was still on.
In Akron , callers flooded
were sti II without power at
"This is a tim e people police department phone
about I 0 p.m. Those includ- need to stay at home with lines seeking answers to the
ed 420,000 in Cleveland and their families ," she said blackout . In Mansfield. 60
outlying
suburbs
and from city hall. which had mile s south of Cleveland.
280,000 in Akron, Canton, electri city provided by a officers were sen.t out to
Lorain and Medina areas. backup ge nerator.
direct traffi c.
The Perry Nuclear Power
First Energy estimated restorShe said there we re no
ing electricity to everyone reports of looting and that all Plant in 1101t heast Ohio and
could take several days.
available fire and police · other elect ricity plants on
"When something like this officials were on duty.
the power grid operated by
Late Thursday. Gov. Bob FirstEnergy were shut down
happens and you have to
come down from the 37th Taft declared a state of emer· as a precaution. The state 's
floor it makes you wonder, gency in Cuyahoga County. other nuclear plant . nfar
was this terrorism or what?" The declaration allows the Toledo already was shut
said John Meehan after he state to provide everything down for repair;'.
The majority of homes
emerged from the BP Tower from generators to water to
in Cleveland ' s downtown manpower to the Cleveland and busi ness that lost power
are se rv ed by FirstEnergy
metropolitan area.
Public Square.
As th e blackout rolled Corp. Its 2 million cusEvette Burrucker walked
down from the 57-story Key across 14 northern Ohio tomers receive elec tricity
counties . Thursday after- from Ohio's two nuclear
Bank building.
All outbound flights at noon, gas station pumps plants and coal-fired plant s.
Cleveland
Hopkins
International Airport were
canceled as hundreds of paslocated in the other end of
sengers waited in hot termi the
building the fire damage
nals for air conditioning and
could
have been a lot worse,
other power to be restored.
said Grueser.
from Page A1
The airport did let inbound
However, 1.he commission
fli ghts land.
told
him that it will not proThe outage hit just as
dent. Preliminary reports
vide
addition al funding to
Cleveland's afternoon rush
indicate thut the fire ma y
replace the fire alarm syshour began. Cars jammed
have bee n ca used by an
tem
.
intersections where · traffic
electrical short in either the
signals were out. Buses conice machine or carbonated
tinued to run . But commuter
drink mac hine loca ted in the
closet where the blaze is
rai I trains we re halted in the
• Emily Goins was hired
midst of routes, forcing passaid to have started.
After the fire which as kindergarten teacher on a
sengers to get off the eleccaused damages exceeding one-year contract.
tric-po wered trains and walk
• Mick Winebrenner. who
$200,000 ,
Grueser
to the nearest depots.
retired
from
approached
the
Ohio recently
Hospitals lost power but
Facilities Co mmission for Southern Hi gh School after
co ntinued to operate on
fundin g to replace the anti- more than three decades of
back up
generators.
At
quated hand-activated fire teachin g. was approved as
University Hospitals in
alarm system located where golf coach. ·
Cleveland, doctors and nurs• Non-certified substit ute
the fire started with a smoke
es worked through the 87stall
hired were Virginia
activated
fire
alarm.
degree heat.
If it had not been for the Jenkins. Doug Jenkins and
,;Everyone is very hot
smoke activated lire alarm Belinda Adams.
because the air conditi oning

Ready

Other business

·Noah's _Ark

. "'~ utdoor

'

--...,

tlnly J •v••lags

,., ..... fills
.'

,

;•

. I.IVEI'

FREDDY VS JASON (R)
7:00 &amp; 9;30

7:00 &amp; 9:40
Saturday, Augusl t 6, 2003
Military Day - An}'one in uniform with militan ID· t\ dmiUt'd J.~l"ff
Sponsors 8aum Lu01ber.Co. and H~ndrix Heating and CoolinR

7:00 &amp; 9:20
FREAKY FRIDAY (PG)

7:10 &amp; 9:10
MATINEES 1:10 &amp; 3:10

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Gates Open

R:OO a.m.

4-H Horse Fun Show

9:0U ".m.
12:00 r.m.
3:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
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8:00p.m.

R:OOp.m.
I I :ClO p.m

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Hi ll Stage:

Pic Eating Contest Final:-. - Livc:stnd, Shuw Arena
4 -H Award s Ceremon y - Li vcstc""K.'k Show Arena

Church Group

Junior Fa ir Youth Night -· L1vcst(x:k S h l~W An: m1
Shhh BHng - GmndsmntiSpon!&lt;&gt;orcJ hy Summe r field'~ RcsJ:J uram
Oarr)' l Worley- Grand~; t an d

Junior Futr Dance - Ll\'1?:-.lod Show Arena
( IIHI'I

7:00 &amp; 9:20
MATINEES 1;00 &amp; 3;20

Prcny Bahy Cont est

Bicycle Dra wing · Hi ll Smgc

Gale~

haw .mnhanJ
Clost'

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\

�..

• VALUES

FAITH

The Daily Sentmel

PageA6
Friday, August 15,

Ron
Branch

Each of them burst out
laughing. Finally. one of them
said, "Well , here. Take thi s
back with you.'' They handed
me a Ravens nag.
I started laughing, too, and
replied. "I tell you what I'm going to take this back
home and give it to a dedicated Cleveland Browns fan who
attends my church."
When that brought more
laughter. the \me said, "Then,
take two!"
So many events in life
involve give and take. in
which benefits and advantages are taken and, at some
point. compensated. If you
re member, Indianapolis benefited when the owners of the
Baltimore Colts stole away to
Indiana. Baltimore has since
benetited when the Brown s
team was taken to Maryland.
Of course, Cleveland has
been rece ntly compensated
with a new NFL franchise.
But. it seems that one of the
more s\lbtle "schemes of life
involves the same type of
principle. The problem. h ow~
ever. is how many people
rather stayed focus on what
has been taken away than
being expectant of what good
may come by the hand of God
in the long run.
What I have found as a
believer in Jesus Christ is that

F!!llowship
Apostolic

rejects challenge to courthouse's
T~n Commandments plaque

the Lord provides great compensation. It is a certainty that
God is great about providing
compensation for the losses
we sustain in life.
He certainly promises compensation. The Scripture
states. "Behold the righteous
shall be recompensed in the
earth."
The experience of Job is a
significant example , too.
Ripped away from him in
short order were wealth, prestige, and family. But, ultimately, "the Lord blessed the
latter end of Job's (life) more
than his beginning ."
All of us sustain loss in one
way or another throughout
our lives. which evokes emotional and spiritual response
to varying degrees. Such is
certainly understandable in
the sight of God.
But God w'ants us to know
that. some how and in some
way, according to His will, He
will provide compensation.
It is our responsibility to be
people of faith who will
remain expectant and patient
for His gracious ~.!!nefits. .
Otherwise, ~s will set
in, and our souls wtll rot, ruining the great opportunity we
have to live life to the glory of
God.
I must admit, however, that
I am showing myself to be
somewhat of a hypocrite. I
don' t care for the Cleveland
Browns, past or present. Go
Steelers!
(Ron Branch is pastor of
Faith Baptist Church m
Mason, W Va.)

PHILADELPHIA (AP) A federal appeals court
refused to reconsider a ruling that allowed a decadesold Ten Commandments
plaque to remain on , the
facade of a suburban coul1house.
A three-judge panel of the
3rd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals panel had ruled in
June that the 1920 plaque
did not constitute an official
endorsement of religion and
could remain because county commissioners who
wanted to keep it were motivated by hi storic preservation.
The full
court on
Wednesday unanimously
refused to reconsider that
ruling.
.
The case was brought by
the American Civil Liberties
Union in Philadelphia on
behalf of Sally Flynn, an

atheist.
and
Margaret
Downey, president of the
Freethought . Society of
Greater Philadelphia, who
argued the plaque violated a
constitutional separation of
church and state.
A lower court in 2002
fo und in favor of the ACLU,
ruling the 50-inch plaque on
an outside wall near the
front door to be inherently a
religious state ment. Bu t the
three-judge appellate panel
disagreed.
Stefan Presser. legal director of the ACLU in
Philadelphi a. said he would
consult his clients before
deciding whether to appeal
to the U.S . Supreme Court .
Count y Co mmi ssioner
Andrew Dinniman said he
see
the
Ten
didn · t
Commandments as a threat
to the separation of government and religion.

r

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Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly of God
P.O. Bo:o; 467, D.udd ing Lane. Ma so n.
W.VA .. Pastor: Nei l T~ tmant , Sundtty

Baptist
HoJM' Bapllst Church (Sou thern)
St., Middleport. Pastor: Rc= ....
David Bryan. Sunday !~&lt;: h ool - 9:30 tun ..
Worship - I I tun . and 6 p.m., Wednesday
Ser.·ice - 7 p.m.
Rutland Flnl BaptiJt (buich
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worshi p 10:45 a.m.
~70 Grant

26 years In loc8l business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH
Atblld llftds al .... l
ODO, Hood ooUd complimt.'lll
por day. H ".an applo a day

od(..,,,..

before God and man."

Acts 24:16

hlmselfl 1\'ot really. The
beginning ofseJf'fltHID haP'

Worsh ip - 10:30 a .m ., 6:JO p.m.
Wednesduy Servkes- 6:30p.m.

or

Hkkory HU~ Chur&lt;h Cbrht
Evanaeli•t Mike Moore, Sunday School9 a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m .. 6:30 p.m,
Wedneaday Services- 7 p.m.

Pntor: Philip Sturm, Sunday SCihool: 9:30
a.m .. Wonhlp Service: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study. Wednclday. 6JO p.m.

Hltblde Boptlot Chur&lt;h
St. Rt. \43 jull off Rt . 1, Paator: Rev.
James R . Ac ree. Sr., Sunday Unified
Service , W~nh!p • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv ice' -1 p.m.

Po111or: Billl!llhelman, Sunday achool 9:30
a.m., Norman .Will, 11\lperlntcndcnl,
Sunday wmhlp - 10:30 11.m.

VIctory Baptist Independent

Church of Chrill
lntene\'l ion 1 and 124 "(, EY11naelist:
D enni ~ Surgtmt. Sunduy Bible Study 9:]0 11.111 . , Wo rMhlp: 10:30 a.m. und 6:30
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

~2.5

N. lml St Middlepon. Palitu r: JJtme11
E. KecliCe , Worlihip - IOu.m., 7 p.m.,
Wednc:iday Sorvices · 1 p.m.

uardrail, Fence &amp;

Cblldmtllffillohr.,r,
"Jiry )'OU dkla 8rtJII Job." 4
pal on lht l~tk, 1 "•..0

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P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Io..r from o!h•'1 hAw proud
Mom or Pop Is oflhem, huttheymay burt, hoplug to hru II with lhrlr o"·n
un. AndS&lt;&gt;bte panorsso to lhrir ~nes. proud u purhr1 ofthtlr rhll·
dn:n, but they one.r, "aald it.·
•Aword 8tly spobo Is lilr.e appiH of sold lo balds of siiV&lt;r"
J

(Prombs 25:11).

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Herbalife Independent
Distributor

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For a whole

Coy's VCR Repair

••

"If your VCR 's in !rouble
bring il to me the double"
34549 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

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(740). 992-4507

l

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"A Home Bank for

Home Cooked Meuls &amp; Daily Specials

740-992-7713

new you

ARCADIA NURS l NG C ENTER
"Old Fa~hion e d Co~passi o n - Modem Care"
Ne.!&gt;l led in a bea,M'tifu l country ~e lt ing (S R
5U/32 Ea&lt;itl and ~a, il y &lt;IC&lt; ess ib le from the 1
Ap palachian Uighwny.
Mu ~ ic and An Therapies
H o~p ice and Res pi te Care
740·1&gt;1&gt;1·3 156 Fox 740-667-0080
Ph y sil·:~l. Occ upational an d Speech Therapies,
We Act:e pt Mc:-d icarc. Medicaid, &amp; Insurance

.

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Jeanie Howell
33334 Hy•ell Run Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45 769
740-992 -7996

74Q-949-2217
Sizes available 5x10 to tOx 20

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPI

~

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh
(740) 992-2164
Purina
" Stuff" For Pets, Farm Animals &amp;
Tropical Flsho Full line of Purina
Ch ws • Garden
F ltlz r

"Let your light so shine belore
men, that they may see your
good works and glorify your
Father in heaven."
Manhew 5:16

www.herbsndiet.com

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_,._.

.~

Catholic

Home
~

212 Main St- P.O. BOK 188
Ru1land. OH 45175

your light so shine before
that 1hey may see
b&lt;&gt;od works and glorify
IF:Mh•.rin heaven."
Matthew 5:16

MIDJ&gt;LEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second Sl.

Midd leport, OH

740-~92·6128

Local source for trophies ,
n\anues !-shirts and more

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc .
Full line of
Insurance
·.
Products+
Financial
ENCIES Inc. Services

Carolina Antique
&amp; Craft Mall
312 6th St. Point Pleasant
675-1160
Vari ety of furnilurc . glass w ar~ . crafl s.
collec tiori of bottles &amp; primiti veOut side tlca murke 1 Apri l- Oct.

1

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212 E. Main Street
\

t::J

Pomeroy
992·3785

m:eaforb
l\.eal ~~tate

216 E. Second Pomeroy
74().992-3325
Marketing PI'Op4rty

DyeJYIIIe Community Church
Sund11y School • 9:30 a.m., Wonhlp 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Nazarene

Reed.nllle J&lt;ellowshlp

Church &lt;lf Jhc Nazarene, Pastor: Tcrc:~u
Waldec k. S unda ~ School - 9 :30 u.m,.
Worship - 10:45 11-m .. 7 p.m.. Wednesday
.Ser.·ices - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
Pasto r: Jan Lavender. Sunda y School 9:] 0 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednesd!ly Servkes - 7 p.m.
Chester Chun:h of the

...,_,
. _.....__.._ l.
:fllbtr :funeral jlfgme

.............
.........··'MHIH1fl

214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

p.m.

South Belhel Communll)' Chun:h
Silver Ridge - Pustor Linda IJame\\o\)(Jd.
Sunday Srhoul • 9 u.m., Worship Strvi..:e
!Oa.m.
Carteton h~tc-rd~nonlllllltional Churth
Kingsbury RunJ. Pa st11r: Rl•bcrt Vance,
Su nday School - 9:.\ 0 n.m.. Worship
Service 10:3U n.rn ., Evening Service 6
p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mission
Dnld Knnh, nn Co. Rd . J 1. PastOf: Re v.
Rugr.-r Willford, SunJuy Sd101.1l - 9:30a.m
Worship- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

s,,...,.. Firot Volted Prwbyterlon
Pallor: Roben Crow, Worahlp • II a.m.

Harrllon•ttlo P"'bytoli111 Chun:h
Pastor: Robert Crow, Wonhlp . 9a,m .

Mldtlltport Prwbytoliln
Wonhtr • 10 a.m.

Putor: Rober Crow..

Seventh-Day Adventist

s...nlh·Day AdvenUII
Mulberry Hu. Rd .. Pomemy, Plti!OI': Roy
Lawln•ky, Slturday Service• :. Sahblth School · 2 p.m., Wonhlp • J p.m.

United Brethren

· ··---·--- ··· ...,. --- ·- _____,...............

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In Chrt11 Churth
Tuaa Community 3ft4 11 Wick ham Rd,
Pastoi': Peter Martindale. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., WOI'IIIhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.• \\lednesday ' Services - 7:00p.m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7p.m.
Eden United B~lh ~ n In Chrt1t
Sta te Rout e 124 . Reeds., ille. Sunday
Sl·hool - 11 a.m.• Sunday Worship - 10:00
a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Strvkes 7:fHl p.rn .. Wednesday Youlh Service 7:00 p.m.

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville R ~ ad , Pastor: Rev. Phillip
Ridenour, Sunday School - ~ :3 0 a.m.,
Worship - lO:JOa .m.. Wednesday Servke
- 7p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS
ll'r'"'''c: Family Restaurant
REHABILITTION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
The care you deserve, close lo home

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

740.992-6606

992·2955

Shear Dlusions

- ·~-.,.._

A.,...w,

St. Rt. 124, R1cine, Pallor: William
Hoback, Sunday School - 10 a.m .•
Evenina - 7 p.m., Wednesday Services • 7

Na~ztu'tne

SWISHER &amp; "LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors' Prescriptions

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

Full Gospel Lla:hthouse
JJ045 Hiland Ro11d, Pomeroy. Pa~ tor : Roy
Hunter, Su nJ~&amp; y Sdtuol - 10 a.m., E\·ening
7:.~0 p.m.. Tursdu.y &amp; Thursday - 7:30

Chlclcen"

W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432
God so loved the world

Pomeroy

Meigs CounJy's Oldest Florist
352 East-Main
Pomeroy, Oh
•t..t ut t1nd yout thollghtt with Rpee!al etl'l•

74tl-992·2644 740-992-6298

&amp;.&amp;4 &amp;

tJ4f4.

93 Mill St. Middleport, OH

lho• an ,rto " S0/1 .. ,

"So I strive always to keep
~Ut~elf,a,t ';il~-.e
Beauty &amp; Nalfs Salon my conscience clear h;.1'n.,.J
T
293 Soulh Second Ave.
God and man."
174 Layne Street
Middleport, OH 45760
••••res•
New Haven, WV 25265
(740) 992-lSSO
Acts
24:16
James H.:Anderson 30.H82·821XliTrttdv Lyons (Owt!tr) Janice Grimm
Licensed Dlroctor Fax: 304-882-821

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Pentecostal

Mono Chopot Chu,.h
Sund•y achool - 10 1.m., Wonhip • II
a.m., Wednc•day Scl'\llce • 7 p.m.

MI. Olive Communll)' Church

Syr1cusc Churdl ol the Naurcnr
Pastor Mike Adk i n~ . Sunday Schuul - 9:30
a.m.. Worsh ip - 10:.'0 a.m.. b p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.rn .

Lona Bottom

I
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Sunday School 9:30 am. , Worship~():)
am • 7: lHl pm. W~dn~~y Service 7:00
pm

p.m,

Huel Community ChuK'h
OfT Rl. 124, Pastor: &amp;be l Hart, Sunday
School -9:30a.m., Wonh ip • 10:30 a.m.,
7:l0 p.m.

Pustor: Lawrence Bu~h. Sunday School 9:JO a.m.• Evc:nlna • 6:30p.m., Wcdneday
Servil-e· 1. p.m.

Middleport Chun:h or the NataR'ne
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunday Sl.·huul ·
9:JOa.m.. Wo~h ip - lO: JOa.m., 6:30 p.m..
Wednesday Serv ices - 7 p.m., Pa~t m:
Allen Mklcap
·

Sunday School - 9: JO a.m.. Wor ship 10::.\0 n.m.
RHdsville
Wor ship - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday Schnol 10:30 a.m.. First Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. service

Since 1971

Bill Quickel

White Funerai .Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio ·
740-667·3110 '

Lavawavs Available

K&amp; C JEWELERS

Lanp\'Uie Chridlan
urth
Gospel, Pu~tor : Robe ~~s"'r,

Ptnleco~tll

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse, Sunday
Schoo l - 10 a.m. EveninJ - 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Hoekloaport q.u,._

Melp Cooperatln Parish
North east Cluster, f\ lrred, Pastor: Jane
Beanie , Sun d,ay Sch~l - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - I I a.m.• 6:30p.m.

a. m.
Sunday Sch011l - 10:30 a.m.

Churdt of God of PmphMy
O.J . Whi te Rd . ofT St. RL 160, Pastor: P.J .
Chapman. Sunday Sch ool - 10 a.m.,
Wor~hip - 11 a.m .. Wednesday Services 7 p.m.

Our Carina WaYs HelP families

Restoration
!iC.ian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Roo
Athens. Pastor:'
Lllnnie Coats, SundaJ 'nrship Hl:OO am ,
WeOnr.-~du y: 7 pm

Syncue Milalon

Filth Gooptl Chur&lt;h

Torch Churrh
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wor.;hip - 10:.\0 a.m.

Joppa

740-742·2333

Fallh \'alley Tabernac:le Churda
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Rawson, Sund ay Ev~ n in,y; 7 p.m..
Thursday Service - 1 p.m.

Lona Bottom, Sundtty Sc hool - 9:30 11.m.,
Won hlp - 10 : 4~ un, , 7:30 p.m.,
Wednelday i :.\0 p.m.

Grund Street, Sunday School · 9:15a.m.,
Wo111hlp • 10:30 a. m., Pastor Phillip Dell

w~ 7 pm

Full

Bethel Church
Town1hlp Rd ., 468C, Sunday School • 9
a.m. Wouhlp_ - 10 a.m.. Wcdnesd{ay
Servkeli - 10 a.m.

Ch~tc:r

Syraruse First Cbun:h of God
APple and Second Sts .. Pastor: RC\', David
Russell , Sunday School and Wor.;hj p- 10
a.m.
Eve ni ng Service~ - 6:30 p.m., Wednesday
Se rvices - 6:30' p.m .

SAcred Hearl Catholic Church
\bl Mul hcn-y Ave .. Pomeroy. 992 - 5~98.
Pustor: Re .... Walter E. HeinJ:, Sal~ Con
4:45-5: l ~p. m. ; M'ass - 5:30 p.m., Sun .

Birchfield funeral

Cool\'llle t Jnlted Metbocllat Parllh
P111ur: Hel en Klint~. Cuolvlllc Churr.-h,
Main &amp; Fifth St .. Sunday Sl.'bool - 10
11.m., Wm'lihlp - Ya.m .~ 1\Jc11day Service• •
7 p.m.

Pastor: Bub Rundnlph. Worship • 9:30

Wednesday 7 plm.

Op!n 7 days a week

Racine

Pastor: Brian Harkncn. Sunday School 10 a.m., Wonh lp • I I :t.m., Wcdnellday 1
p.m.

Mt. Olive Unlled Methodllll
Off 124 behind Wilkt:!iVille, Pw;tor: Rev.
Ra lph Spires. Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m..
Worsh ip - 10:30 a .m .. 7 p.m.. Thu rsday

Pnstor: Jane Beattie, Worship - 9 a.m.,
Sunday School - 10 a.m. , Thur.iday
Servi L--e~ - 1 p.m.

Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Ron Heat h, Sunday Worsh ip- 10
a.m., 6 p. m.. WodnCsday Services - 7

Second Baplisl Churth
Ravenswood. WV, Sunday School 10 am . Morning worship II am Evening- 7 pm.

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

Hills Self Storage

~~~

,

hrard lb•lr parrnls prat.c
th•m lo lhdr fa«t. Oh, they

I

740-949-2210

!Mi[{ie 's tf(estaurant

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

Somr SODSlDd dauJh·
tef?. now grown. ban~ ntnr

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sign erection

' "l'n• proud of you; .aN beaudfill words to the tal'l and
•ll" ofthe rlllltl. ""&lt;thor lbe
rhUdbSorSO.

!

209 Third
Racine, OH

10 a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m.. Wednesday -1
p.m.

'

Mile Hil l Rd .• Racine. Pastor: J ame s
Satterfi eld, Sund ay School - 9:45 i .m .,
Evening - 6 p.m.. Wednesday Services - 7

p.m.

Eul Letart

Middleport Cotnmunity C bun:b
57~ Pearl St .. MidJI~pnrt . Pastor: Sam
Andt:rson, Sunda y Schuol 10 a.m.,
Evening - 7:30 p.m. . Wednesday Service 7:JOp.m.

Pu tor: Brian Harkneu, Sunday School -

.ces - 1 p.m.
Scrv1

MI. Moriah Churth of God

Rutland Free Will Bapllst
Snlem St. , Pa~tor: Jamie Fortn er, Sunday
School - I0 ll.nl ., Even in!! - 7 p. m..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Momiltl Sllr
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler, Sunday School ·
II a.m., W~rship- 10 a.m.

Harri.o;onvllle Community Chun-h
Pustor: Thcrnn Durhnm. Sundll)' - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.. Wctlnesday - 7 p.m.

Hobson Christl•n •"dlo,.·s hlp Church
PltSttlr: H ers~·hel Whit&lt;' , S unda~ ·school-·
10 am. Sunduy Church ser"kc - 6:.\0 pm

MI. Hennon Unlled Brethren

Church of God

p.m.

Carmel-Sutton

Groham United Me,.odllt

Services - 7:00 p.m.

AntJquily Baplisl
Su nday Sl·hool • 9:30 a .m.. Worship 10:4~ a.m., Sunda y Evenin'g - 6:00p.m. ,
Pastor: Mark McComa~

Lon~

Life Vktory Ctaltr

~ 773

Su n~a y

Curme l &amp; Bashan Rds . Ra cine. Ohio.
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler, Sunday School 9:30a.m., Wor~hip - 10:45 a.m .• Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Wouhip · 9:30a.m. (l si &amp; 2nd Sun). ,
7 :]0 p.m. lJrd &amp; 4th Sun),Wedneiday
Service - 7:30 p.m.

Hartford Chu~h of Chrl1t In
Chrt1dan Union
Hanrord. W.Va .. Pastor:David Greer.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worsh ir 10 :30 a. m., 7:00 p.m ., w~dne~day

122 E. Main St. Pmncroy. OH 45769

Hours

Sak-m l:ommunlty Chutth
Lie 1'i11g Rl'Lill. West Culuml&gt;ia. W.Va ..
Paswr: C'lydr.- Fr.-m.ll, Sunday School 9:JO
am. Sunday evening :i!:rvicl! fJ pm, ·
Wednr.-sday se rvice 7 pm

10 a.m .. Worshi p - '.l a.m.. Wednesday
Sen·ices - 10 lUll .

United Methodist

Christian Union

MI. Moriah B1pd1l
Fo urth &amp; Main St ., Middleport, Pilstor:
Re v. Gilbert Craig. Jr.• Sunday School 9:.' 0 a.m.. Worship- 10:45 a .m .

bam - 8pm

•·aith Full Gosptl Chur..·h
Bottom. Pustou: St l· ~· r.- Reed. SunJuy
Si."huo\ - Y:JO :1. 111, Worship - 9:J ll a.m.
110d 7 p.m.. Wcdnesdoy · 7 p.m .. Friduy l'ello wship servit r.- 7 p.m.

Brthany
Pastur : Dcwa yne Stuller, Sunday School -

u.m. PH~ tor: Jantcs P. Brudy

~ew

Rutland

Snowville

St. hul Lutheran Church
Comer Syc1uno ro &amp; Second St .. Pome roy,
Sunday School - 9 :4~ a .m., Wm'llhip - ll

p.m.

Full G~pel Chul"l'h of the Livlna:
Savior
RtJ .,t:. Antiquit y. Pastor: Jt:sst Morri~ .'
Serv ices : Suturd11y 2:0() p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m., Worsh ip - 9 u.m.

Walnut and Henry Stl., Ravenawood,
W.Va., Pa1tor: David Ru11ell , Sunday
School - I0;00 a.m .. Won hlp - I I a.m.

Cllf'lon Ta~rnade Churth
Clil'tun. W.Va.. Sunda)' Sch01.1l - 10 a.m.,
Worship - 7 p.m., W&lt;'dnesday Service - 7

Abund11nt GnK't' R.F. I.
923 S. Third St .. Mtddleport Pa:;tor Ten.-sa
Dni ~. Sundu y se n ·ic c.
I U a.m ..
Wedne~ay service. 7 p.m.

Our Se,lour Lutheran Churrlt

Dexllr Cho,.h or Chrhl

Rejoklnf: Ufe Claun:h
N. 2nd Ave., Middlepurt, Pllstur:
Mike Fo~man . Pastor: Emeritus
L.awreru:c: Foreman. Wonhip- UJ:CXI am
WedtR' ~a y Sc-rvin·s- 7 p.m.
~00

Sl·rvio:&lt;' - "1 :00 p.m.

School - 10:15 a.m.. Wurship - 9: 15a.m..
Hi hle Study: Monday HXJ pm

Pine Orove, Wonhlp • 9:00a.m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m . Pallor: Jamc1 P.
Brady

Sd"envtue Co•mualty Church
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewe ll. Sunda!.y Scrvicu
~ I0:00 a.m &amp; 7:/.X) p.m., Thursday - i:OO
p.m.

Rock Springs
Paswr: Keith ·Rader, Su nda}' School - 9:15
a.m., Wo rship - ltl :un .. Youth
Fellowship. Suntlay- 6 p,m

St. Joha Lutheran Church

Reodo•llle Chun:h of Chlid

Cal\'Mry Bible Chllttb
Pomerny ~lri.~ . C'o. Rd.. Pa:ttOI". Rev.
BIIJCkwuod, Sunday Sehoul - 9:30 a.m..
Wur.;tup 10:.\0 u.m.. 7:30
p.m.. ·
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rf•J BrOY&gt;'Cr. Worship - 9:30 cun ..
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

Salem Center

· Lutheran

Faith Fellowship Crusade for Cluilt
Pastor: Re\·. Franklin Dickens. Service:
Friday. 7 p.m.

Georg.r.-s Cre~k Rood. Gallipolis, OH
P~tstur : Di ll Staten. Sund11.y Sen· il·e~ · 10
.~t . m . &amp; 7 p.m
Wednesday • 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p. m.

Paswr: Wi lliam K . Mur shall.

The Church of Jesus
Christ ol Laner--Day Saints
St . Rt . 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486.
Sunday School I 0:20-11 a.m., Relief
Society/Priesthood II :0~- 12 :00 noon.
Sacrament Service 9-10 : 1~ a.m..
Homemak ing mectina:, ht Thurs. - 7 p.m.

hirvitw Bible Cbu.rdl
Lcun , W.Va . Rt I, Pastor: Brian May.
Sunday Sdkxd - 9:30a.m.. Worship - 7:00
p.m.. WtdMWy Bihle Study - 7:00 p._m.

AKilPl! Lifr Crnler
"Fltll-Gos pe:l Churdl ". Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade. btl.\ S&lt;' cnno.i Avr.- . Masor1. 773501 7. Sc:-r v i u~ tim..- Sunduy lO:JO a.tn ..
Wednesday 'I pm

Sun day S'.:h(]Ol - Y:JO a.m., Wors.hip IO:J() u.m., Thun;day Scr~ i~-e ~- 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Minister : Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill AmbcrJer, Sunday School- 9:30a. m.
Wonhip - 8:00 a.m.. 10:30 a.m.. 7:00 '
p.m.,Wodnesday Services ·7 :00p.m.

Faith Baptl11t Church
Railnmd St., Mu•on, Sunday S~huol - !0
a.m .. Wor11hlp - II a .m.. 6 p.m.
Wednellda~ Services - 7 p.m.

Warm Friendly
Atmo.\ pht' re

Pearl ChMprl
Sunduy School · 9 tun ., Worship - 10 a.m

L11uR'I Cliff Fm l\1elhodisl Church
Re v. L ~ ~ Strand! und Myra L. Strand!,
Sunda y School · 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.,Wedncsday Se rvice
-1:00 p.m.

Bradlonl Chun:h ol Chrllt

Old Betlltl Ffte WIU llaplllt Churdl
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport . Sunda y
St.:hool - 10 11.m., Even in11 - 7:00 p.m,,
Thuraday Service• - 7:00

Call: Judy. Brandi. or Jane Ann
992-3985 IPomeroy I 594·0660 (Athens)

Ash Slrttt Church
A.-h St. , MiJdk-pun - Sunday s~·hool - IJ:JO
a.m.. M u mi n~ Worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7
pm. Wedne~ay Scn·icr.- - 7: 00p.m .. Youth

and YllU th - 7 p.m.

Rutland Churdl of Christ
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m., Worship and
Commun ion - 10:30 a.m .• Bob J. Werry,
Minister

llttbfl Worship Cent•r

Road. Pastor: Charles
McKinzie. Sunday Sd10ol 9:30 a.m.,

a.rn .

Worship - 10:]0 a.m.

Communlly or Chrb;t
Ponllmd-Radnc Rd., Pa stor: Jerry Sinj!.er.
Sunday School - 9:JO a.m., Worship lO:.W a .m ., Wednesda)' Se n ·ices - 7:00
p.m.

Minl!n.,llle

H!isell Run Holiness Chul"l'h
Sunday Sl·hotll - 9:30 :tnl .• Worship 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m .• Thursday Bible Study

Bradbury Churth or Chrisl
Minister: Toril Runyon, )9558 Brndbury
Road, Middlepon. Sunday School - 9:30

Other Churches

Pa$1tu: Bob Robiu ~on , Sunday S..: hool - Q
a.m.. Worship- 10 U.m.

Weslrytm Blblt Hullnl'55 Chun:h
75 Pr.-url St .. Mh.ldl cpon. Pustor: Rev.
Oav1d Gitl-ocrt, Sunday School - 10 a.m,
Wurship - 10:45 p.m., Suml11 y E ...e . 7:110
p.m.. Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Tuppers Plain Chun-h ol Chrlsl
Instrumental , Worshi p Servi&lt;.:e - 9 a.m..
Communion - 10 a.m.. Sunday S..:h01:1l Ill: 15 a.m., Youth- 5:]0 pm Sunday, Rihle
Stud y Wedne!iduy 7 pm

Portland Flrsl Chun::h of tM NuaRnt
Pastor: Will iam Justi s. Sunday School 10:00 a.m.. Mommg Worship - lU:45 a.m..
Sunday Mrvict • 6:.\0 p.m.

Calvar)· Pil(lrim Ch&amp;ptl

Pine Gron Bible Holiness Chun:h
112 mile 1111' Rt. 3:.!5, Pustor: Rev. O' Dt-ll
Manley. Smto.iay School - IJ:30 a.m ..
Worship - IO:JO a.m.. 7:30 p.rw ..
Wednesd11y Sl! rvice - 7: .\0 p.m.

Zion Chun:b of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonv ill e Rd . tRt . l43).
Pastor: ltoger Watson. Sunda y School Y:JU a.m., Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m., H M.I
p.m., Wedrn::sduy Services- 7 p ,m

6 :30 p.m.. Wedntsda)' Ser.•tces - 7 p.m.

W~hip: 10 am, E\'c ni'ng ~orship : b pm.
Yooth group-6 pm. Wedn ~ Wa y : Power in
Prayer . and Bible Study - ] pm

Leadin g C!'C'ek Rd.. Rull and. Pastor: Re' '·
0e'ol.&lt;e y King . SunJuy school- 9:30 a .m ..
Sunday worship -7 p.m., WedneSI.Ia y
pruyl!r meeting - 7 p.m.

a.m.

Rulland Churt:h of the Nuarene
Pastor: R&lt;"V. louis S. Staubs. Su ndaJ
S ~; h Otll - 9:.\0 11.111 ., Wonohip - 10:30 a.m..

Pastor: Rod Brower. Sundll)' School - 9:30
a.m.. Worship - ll :Oila.m.

Worship - I I u.m.. 7:00 p.m.. Wednesduy
Servolcc - 7:1XI p.m.

Bearw1llow Rldat Chun:h of Chrisl
P11stor:Bruce Terry, Sunday S chool -9:30

~· OOol

• 9:30 a.m .. Worship • 11 a.m .• ta p.m..
Wet.!nesd• y Sef\'k es - 1 p.m

Chester Sc hool . P!lstor: Roh Barber.
Assistant Pastor: Karen D:~ v i s. Sunday

Rose of Sharon Holiness ChuM

Btlblehem Baptllt Churth
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine. OH,
Pastor : Daniel Mecca. Sunday School 9:30 a.m .• Sunday Wonhip - 10:30 a.m..
Wcdnnday Bible Study • 6:00 p.m.

Before you pay yuur nex t home or
auto premium. l'hcck out rates!

1-' ortSI Run
Pastor; Bub Rub inM,n, Sunday Sehoul - 10
a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m.

Danville HoUncss Churth
3 1057 State Rout e 325. l.anf!.s\·llc , Pastor·
Gary Jackson, SundAy sc htM.ll - 9:30 u.m..
Sunday wor.o hip - lO:W a. m. &amp;: 7 p.m.•
Wellnc!tday prayer ~ t ee - 7 p m.

Keno Church of Cbrlsl
Worship - 9:30 U'll .. Sun da)' School IU:JOa.m., Pastor-Jefl'rey Wallac~. h t and
~nl Sunday

MI. Union Baplkl
Paslor : David Wiseman. Sunday School9:45 a. m.; Evening - 6:30 p.m.,

WILLIAMS &amp; ASSOC.
INSURANCE

Home People"

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rompUm•nta day ,..111 ~·e
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ll"'NOII. tlowdoe• ublld
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106 Mulbe rry Ave. Pomeroy, OH
74D-992-2121
Fax 740-992-2122
Ben H. Ewing
Licensed Embalmer, Funeral Director
Licensed Pre-Need Insurance

740-992-6215

kftpsiJt.do&lt;loUWI)'; I

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith R11.dt.'r, Sunda}· Sdl01.1l - 10
a.m., Worship - 11 a.m.

Han-ismwilk

Pomeroy Flnl Baplisl
Pastor Jon Brockert. East Main St ..
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m., Worship 10: 30 11.m.

·r

uo

Cummunlty Ch un.-h
Pasto r: Ste\'C Tomek. Main Street,
Rutland , Sunday Won.hip-1 0:00 a.rn .,
Sunda y Sel'\·ice-7 p.m.

5th and Ma in. P9stnr: AI Hartson, Youth
Minish:r: Bill Frazier, Su nday Si." hool '-;l:JO ll-11!., Worship- 8:15. 10:30 a.m.. 7
p.m.. Wr.-dn~'Sday Services - 7 p.m.

Fore11 Run Baptist 1
Pastor : Arius Hurt, Sunday School • 10
a.m., Worshi p- II a.m.

Young's carpenter Service

Enterprist
Pastnr: A.rlnnd King , Sunday School - 10
u.m., Wu~hip - 9 a.m.. Bible Study Wc=d.

Holiness

Middleport Church ot Chrisl

Ser\·k es- IO:OO a.m. and 7 p.m.

Chapel Church, 6-8 p.m.,
Aug. 11 -15.
.MERCERVILLE
Macedonia Christian Church,
7-8:45 p.m., Aug. 11-15. Ages
three through youth .
GALLIPOUS - Church of
God of Prophecy, 6:30-8:45
p.m., Aug . 11-15. Chuch located at 380 White Road. Open
to ages 3 through adult.
KANAUGA - Fair Haven
Methodist Church, 6 p.m.,
Aug .
11 -15.
Preschool
through sixth grade, with
crafts and songs.

·r

Episcopal

Pomeroy WcsiSide Churc:h of Christ
D2Z6 Chil d ren '~ Home Rd ., Sunda y
School - 11 a.m., Wo~hip - IOa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
PI!Stur: John Swanson, Sunday School •
IOa.m.. Worship - lla.m .. 1:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services- 7:00 p.m.

·r

Central Clwlu
Asbury (Syracuse), P:tstor: Bob Robinson ,
Sunday S\·hool - 9:45 11.m.• Worship - ll
n.m.• W&lt;"dn&lt;'sday ~ n i .:c:s - 'L.\0 p.m.

10:2.'i a.m..

G..-e Episcop•d Chun;-h
326 E. Main St .. Pome roy. Rev. Jame s
Bc mt~eki . Re\·. Katharin Foster. Sunday

School - 9:30 a.m., Worship10:.\0·a.m.. fl p.m., Wcdnesddy Sen·ices 7p.m.

ll»clae Flr11t 811ptlst
Paswr: Ri Ck Rule , Sunday School - 9: ~0
a.m., Wor~ hip - 10:40 a .m.. 7: 00 p.m..
Wednesday Scr,·ices - 7:00 p.m.

·r

Noble, Wo rship

Suml»y School!J : IS a.m.

St:houl and Ho ly F.uc:hurist li :OOu.m.

Josh Ulm

·r

r

1

Jooathitll

S unUa~

Flnl Baptist Churth
Pastor: Mark Morrow, 6th and Palmer St..
Middleport Sunday School - 9 : 1 .~ n.m ..
Wors hip - 10:15 a.m.. 7:00 p.m..
Wednesda y Sel'\'ice- 7:00p.m.

Vacation Bible
Schools

Mini sttr. Larry Dro wn , Worship - 9:30
a.m.

Pomeroy Church of Cbrisl
21 2 W. Main St.. Minister: Anthon y

Emmanuel Aposlolk Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rulland.
Services: Sun 10:00 .a.m. &amp; 7: JO p.m..
Thurs. 7:00p.m.. Pastor Man y R. Hutton

MIDDLEPORT - }osh Ulm. a recent
graduate of Milligan College in Johnson
City, Tenn. has been employed as a youth
minister by the Middleport Church of
Christ.
He will be in charge of the Sunday and
Wednesday evening youth programs, work
with the Fellowship of Christian Students at
Meigs Middle and High School, and general direct youth programs at the Middleport
Church.

Regular
meetings

Hmaluck Grovt c•ristian Cbu~b

Cbun:b
St 1.:on.J &amp;. Lynn. Pomeroy. P'dstm: Rt\'.

7 p.m.

nr-st Southern Baplisl
4 1872 'Pomeroy Pike. Pas1or: E. Lamar
O'Bryanl. Sunday School - 9:JO a.m.,
Worship - 8:15a.m.. 9:45 mn &amp; 7:00p.m..
Wednesday Sef'\·ices - 7:00p.m.

10 a.m., preaching service, 6 Area Friends meeting, 4 p.m.
p.m. with Rick Barcus, Addispn each Sunday at New Life
Freewill Baptist Church .
Lutheran Church , located at
170 New Life Way. For infor. mation , call 245-9014.
GALLIPOLIS- Souled Out,
youth meeting , 7 p.m., each
Wednesday at First Baptist
Church,
1100 Fourth Avenue.
GALLIPOLIS· Gallia Area
Ministries Association meets
11 :30 a.m., first Wednesday
of each month at New Life
Lutheran Church , Jackson
Pike.
CROWN CITY - Kings
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis

11.m.. Wonhip - IUM.m., Tuesday Servicn
- 7:30 p.m.

Trinit~

Sunday Sc hool - 10:30 a.m.. Bible Slud)' -

Rlvu V•llry
Apostolic Worship Center, 87 .~ S..\rd
Ave ., Middlepon, Kevin Kont..le, Pastor,
5tmday, 11 a.m. Wednesday, 7:00 p.m.;
Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

Youth minister comes to
Middleport church

County Fairgrounds. Camping
available. Free admission. For
information, call446~4120 .
Saturday, Aug. 23
GALLIPOLIS- 13t(1 annual Gallia County Gospel Sing,
5 p.m. to midnight , Gallia
County Fairgrounds. Camping
available. Free admission. For
information, call 446-4120 .
Sunday, Aug. 24
GALLIPOLIS
Jimmy
McKnight will preach , 11 a.m.,
at the Church of God of
Phrophecy.
ADDISON- Sunday school.

Paslut : Jane Bu ttJt. Sunda y Sc OOol - 9

Congregational

Church of Christ

Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Pastor Jim
Lusher
will
show
a
PowerPoint presentation of
recent . 12-day trip to Greece
and Turkey, 6 p.m. at Faith
Baptist Church . For information, call 446-2661.
Wednesday, Aug. 20
ADDISON
Business
meeting and prayer meeting,
7 p.m., Addis_on Freewill
Baptist Church.
Friday, Aug. 22 GALLIPOLIS - 13th annual Gallia County Gospel Sing,
5 p.m. to midnight, Gallia

Tupprrs PlUns St. Paul

a.m.. Dailey Mass- 8:30 11..1'11.

Millc.r. Sunda y Sc hoo l - 10:30 a .m.,
Evening - 7:30p.m.

"What both the commissioners and , it seems to. me.
the coun are try ing to do is
to (di stinguish) the . real
threat from the mere shadows of a threat," he said. "I
always thought this was a
shadow."
The posting of the Ten
Commandments at government bu i!dings has fueled
legal battl es in several
st&amp;tes. and judges have ruled
in various ways. A fed~ral
judge iast week ordered
Alabama's Supreme Court
to
remove
a
Ten
Commandments monument
fro m that state 's Judicial
Building, while another federa l judge in January dismi ssed an ACLU lawsuit
over a Ten Commandments
copy displayed with other
hi storical document s at a
Kt:lllucky courthou se.

P11.51ur: Rev. Herben Gralt, Sunday

Con . -t!. :J ~-9 : IS a.m., Sun . Mass . 9 :30

Church of Jn:Wii Cllrts1 Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd .. Pa$1:or: James

Church Calendar
Saturday, Aug. 16
WILKESVILLE - Noodle
supper 4 p.m at Wilkesville
United Methodist Church . with
home-made beef noodles.
pies and ice cream.
BIDWELL - Michael Spina
will preach , 6 p.m. at Garden
of my Heart Holy Tabernacle.
Sunday, Aug.17
CROWN CITY - Mt. Zion
Baptist Church homecoming,
noon. Special singing by
Joyfulaires and The Prophets.
For information , call Shirley
Williams at 256-1351 .

A7

WORSHIP GOD THIS W.EEK

2003

God's compensation is great! Appeals court in Philadelphia
The Baltimore Ravens' season training camp takes place
at
Meade
College
in
Westminster. Md. I attended
the opening day session July
28 with a chip on my shoulder.
It is well known that the
present Ravens team is the
former Cleveland Browns
franchise that owner Art
Modell moved to Baltimore il
few years ago. Because of the
move, I couldn't care less
whether the Ravens win a
. game or even play. Many in
our area probably feel the
same way. even though
Cleveland has since gotten a
new franchise with the
Browns logo.
Nonetheless. I quickly discovered that the operative
words for me as I ·mingled
with the crowd were ,
Cleveland Browns. No one
seemed to get mad at me as I
griped openly abo ut why
Baltimore once again had a
NFL franchise at Cleveland's
expense. but I did have some
brisk conversation. On the
other hand. the man that had
on the Washington Redskins
jersey got a serious round of
boos and jeers as he soft-pedaled past the stands of Ravens
fans.
Later, while browsin g
through the tents. containing
Ra vens merchandi se and
memorabilia. some people at
a certain display asked me if I
would be interested in starting
a " Ravens Roost" fan club.
On their table were car window flag s with the Ravens
logo.
I chuckled and said.
"Certainly not! I live closer to
the Cleveland Browns area
than I do Baltimore ."

Sentinel•

The

John 3:16

6nouller'•
'~lrt &amp; 6afetp

·--,_.....

(740) 992·9513

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0~
992-6376

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.

�.. ... ... .. .

_,...

-.

The Daily Sentinel

MEIGS

CO

FAIR.

Page AS
Friday, August 15, 2003

Draft horse winners posted
BY

BRIAN

Inside .
Three of top 16 left In Cll'!clnnatl, Page 82
Indians down Twins, Page B3
Beds sneak past Snakes, Page B3
. Scioreboard, Page B4

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

J. REED

breed@mydailysenlinel.com

Friday, August IS, 2003
ROCK SPRINGS Results of the ' draft horse
contest held Wednesday
morning at the Meigs
County Fair are: log pull,
Rod Tuttle, first place,
Doug Carr, . second place;
wagon obstacle course,
Rod Tuttle, first place,
Doug Carr, second place;
feed run, Doug Carr, first
place, with Jessica Carr as
driver, and Rod Tuttle,
second place, with Doug
Carr as driver.

Browns' quarterback
derby in homestretch
BY TciM WITHERS
Associated Press

Doug Carr, driving his team of Bonnie and Bell , maneuvers the
obstacle course at the draft horse contest held at the Meigs
County Fair on Wednesday morning. (Brian J. Reed)

Days Until
High School

Football

Season!!!

Randy Beegle of Racine puts the pedal to the metal of his Massie Harris 44 tractor in the
Thursqay night tractor pull at the Meigs County Fair. Beegle competed in the 5,500 pound class
and werit a distance of 218 feet. (J. Miles Layton)

Meigs finishes
second in TVC
golf opener
POMEROY- Meigs hosted the first of ten Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Divison
matches on Wednesday at
Pine Hills in Pomeroy, but it
was Belpre that took the full
compliment of points.
The Eagles shot a 151,
seven strokes better than the
second place Marauders.
Wednesday's TVC opener
was basically a two horse
race as the third place
Vikings of Vinton County
finished 26 shots off the winning pace. Wellston was
fourth, AI exander fifth and
Nelsonville-York sixth.
Meigs' Jake Venoy shot a
35 and shared medalist honors with Rick Drain of Belpre
and Wellston's Jonathan
Staten.
Jeremy Banks was just two
shots back of his teammate,
Venoy, with a 37. Josh Ray
finished the course with a 40,
Cody Davidson shot a 46
while Dan Bookman and
Josh Venoy each shot 4 7.

Tryston Huxley of Long Bottom was a winner of one of four bicycles given away at the Meigs
County Fair Thursday. This week 2B bicycles donated by merchants and organizations will be
awarded in drawings to children attending the fair. (Charlene Hoeflich)

·~ading lambs around the fairgrounds Is a common sight during fair week. Here Michael Wright has
his lambs out for a walk on a very hot day. Helping him was Breana Hemsley. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Cincinnati
outfielder has .
surgery, set to
~gin rehab
:: CINCINNATI (AP)
Cincinnati Reds outfielder
AOstin Kearns had surgery
rhursday on his throwing
shoulder and will wear a .
sling for two weeks.
. Kearns injured his right
shoulder in a home plate collision with Atlanta catcher
Ray King on May 21 and will
began a rehab program
Friday. He is expected to
fully recover by spring trainmg .
He
had
arthroscopic
surgery to repair the posterior
and superior labrum, rotator
cuff and AC joint in his right
shoulder.
Keams has been on the di~
abled list since July 17. In 45
iames prior to the injury, he
llit .309 with 13 homers and
44 RBls. In 37 games after it,
he" batted .208 with two
homers and 14 RBis.

Reds complete
Mercker trade
CINCINNATI (AP) -The
Cincinnati Reds ;tcquired
righthander Matt Belisle on
Thursday to complete the
trade that sent lefthander
Kent Mercker to the Atlanta
;Braves.

.
The twister ride spins people around like a tornado reminding people that they are not in
Kansas anymore but at the Meigs County Fair. (J. Miles Layton)

II
.......,
.ftew Hol..iad
'.

..

Always a hit with youngsters at the Meigs County Fair is the kiddie tractor pull. Here Justin
Hills gives it his best shot as Brent Rose, coordinator, looks on. (Charlene Hoeflich)

..........., ...... SAVl

Bobcat219

Zero Radius

FERGUSON

Mower

2315

1500

Garvin leaves
Mountaineers
.MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP)- West Virginia wide
receiver Travis Garvin has
left the Mountaineers' fall
_camp for personal reasons .
: West Virginia coach Rich
Rodriguez would not say
Thursday whether Garvin,
a senior from Bradenton,
Fla. , was still on the team.
Garvin, who joined the
Mountaineers last year
after transferrin~ from
Missouri, caught JUSt two
passes for 24 yards last season.
Garvin lead Missouri in
receiving as a freshman in
1999, before leaving the
team the following season ..

Ryan Holton rode home Experience with the win in the first heat over Blackberry Jam ridden
by Walter Young as close fast action highlighted the harness racing at the Meigs County Fair.
(Scott Wolfe)
·

Large crowd turns out to
watch harness racing at fair
BY Scon WoLFE
Sports Correspondent
ROCK SPRINGS -The Southern Valley
Colt Circuit again produced a magnitude of
quality harness racing Thursday afternoon
on the half-mile Rock Springs track at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds. Close exciting
racing on the super fast oval highlighted the
day for the large crowd that braved the 90plus degree heat.
Ryan Holton rode home Experience with
the win in the first heat over Blackberry Jam
ridden by Walter Young. A Place To Kiss
with Robert McKim in the sulky claimed the
win in the second heat over Magic Mist of
Charlie Schoonover. Robert Ogg, Jr. aboard
Come Over Proxie took the third heat over
Ryan Holton and Addie.
The fourth heat brought a large round of
applause from the crowd as locally trained

horse My Good Sam, a previous winner at
lThe Rocki claimed a close win over JLis
Magic Trick of Olin Harness. My Good Sam
is trained by Brooks Sayre of Racine, ridden
by AI Jones, and owned by Wilma Styer of
Waterford. Ironically the heat was The Daily
Sentinel sponsored heat.
Jobys Shamrock with trainer Lloy(j Hawk
aboard won the fifth go-round, while Crown
Tim Tango claimed second place with AI
Jones at the helm.
Patis Choice with Jack Dailey in the saddle
won the sixth event over Be Minor with
Michael Sowers in the sulkey. In the final
event, Roll Me Over Two brought home Eric
Webb with the win ahead of Ryanfs Goddess
and AI Jones.
Racing continues Friday at I p.m. on the
fast Meigs County half mile oval at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds.

Please see Harness Results, Bl

Lefty finally gets one right
BY DOUG FERGUSON
Associated Press
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)- Maybe
the time is right for Lefty.
In a season of players winning their
first major, Phil Mickelson took a step
toward claiming his Thursday at the
PGA Championship with a 4-ullder 66
that gave h1m a share of the lead with
Rod Parnpling of Australia.
While tough Oak Hill gobbled up
Tiger Woods and a host of others,
Mickelson looked like a player intent
on finally shedding his label as the best
to have never won a major.
He was aggressive off the tee and
recovered on the rare occasion his
shots soared into the trees. Only a I0foot par putt that hung on the edge of
his final hole kept Mickelson Irom
matching his best score in a major.
Along the way; he was carried along
by cheers: "This is your week, Phil!"
· "It was a nice stan," Mickelson said.
"But it 's nothing more than that."
Woods gladly would have swapped
places.
TJ;Ying to avoid a Grand Slam
shutout for the first time since 1998,
Woods struggled off the tee no matter
what club was in his hands. He hit only
five fairways - a recipe for trouble at
Oak Hill and he resembled
Mickelson at the end by missing a 2foot par putt.
He fimshed at 4-over 74, the sixth
consecutive time in a major he has
failed to break par in the opening
round. That's not a good omen for
Woods, because he has never won any
tournament when he shoots over par in Phil Mickelson 'chips t-o the fourth green during the
first round of the 85th PGA Championship at Oak Hill
.Country Club In Rochester, N.Y. on Thursday. (AP)
Pluse- Lefty, B2

Brown will skip tonight's game
CLEVELAND (A P) - .
Courtney Brown's 2003
debut for the Cleveland
Browns has been delayed.
Brown, trying to come
back from off-season knee
surgery, will not play in
Friday night's exhibition
game against Green Bay,
coach Butch Davis said.
!he former No. I overall
draft pick participated in all
of Cleveland's practices this
week and was expected to
see some time against the
Packers.
But the defensive end told
the Browns on Thursday
that he ' d prefer another
week of work before testing

his knee in a game.
"Although Courtney is
meeting the timeline our
doctors have outlined and
has progressed each week
of training camp without
any setbacks, we feel it is
wise to follow a very conservative course," Davi s
said.
The Browns will play the

Detroit Lions next week.
Brown, laken first by the
Browns in the 2000 draft,
has missed 16 games the
past two seasons with a
variety of injuries. 'In
December, lje underwent
microfracture surgery on his
left knee, a procedure where
doctors drill holes into the
knee .
In three seasons with the
Brown s. Brown has II
sacks in 32 games .
Lasi month, the team
restructured Brown's $5 .5
million contract for 2003.
providing Cleveland with
nearly $2 million of relief
under the salary cap.
'

CLEVELAND- An ei~ht-month drama that has divided .
families, strained friendships and riveted this football-frenzied city has one final act.
The Cleveland Browns' quarterback controversy has nearly
reached its conclusion.
Tim Couch and Kelly Holcomb will get one last chance to
impress Browns coach Butch Davis in an exhibition game
Friday night against the Green Bay Packers.
"It's the last opportunity for both of them to play well, and
I think both of them will," Davis said.
Davis said following practice this week that he will name
his starting quarterback for the Sept. 7 regular-season opener
vs. Indianapolis on Sunday or Monday.
Davis' decision will end months of debate among Cleveland
fans, who have been torn over who should lead their team
since Holcomb passed for 429 yards in the playoffs against
Pittsburgh.
Holcomb will start with Couch relieving him after about 20
plays. Both QBs are expected to be done by halftime, giving
fans, players and coaches time to analyze what they've seen
and cast their own ballots.
However. only one vote counts and that belongs to Davis,
Who was asked Wednesday if he was still undecided .
"Absolutely," he said.
PIIIH see Browns, B:Z

Teaching assistant
says she won't .talk to
OSU committee
did not receive preferential
treatment in her class. She
said she has given oral exams
in other classes to students
COLUMBUS - The for- who are not athletes.
mer teaching assistant who
Ohio State created a comcharged that star Ohio State mittee to review McGill's
tailback Maurice Clarett allegations after they were
received preferential treat- reported last month in the
ment in the classroom said New York Times. The comThursday she won't talk to a mittee is sharing information
university committee investi- with the NCAA. which is
conducting a separate invesgating her ·anegations.
"They'll use information ligation
'into
Claren's
that's not true," Norma C . . finances.
McGill sa!d. "I don 't trust
McGill said that OSU
OSU with my information. committee member Matthew
I' II trust an NCAA investiga- Platz, a professor in Ohio
tor."
State's chemistry departMcGill has alleged that ment, has sent numerous eCiarett walked oul of a mails asking her to speak to
midterm
in
African- the committee. She has
American and African stud- declined.
ies. where she was a teaching
"I'm not going to contact
assistant, in the fall of 2002. the people from that panel,"
She said he was later given she said . "They should just
an oral exam, which she said stay away from me. 1 don't
was unusual. Clarett passed want them to have any
the course.
quotes from me that they
McGill said Clarett was the could paraphrase or take out
only student among 90 to of context or use against
receive an oral exam in that
class. But associate professor
Please see Clerett. Bl
Paulette Pierce said Clarett
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

UC gives former UK
player second chance
CINCINNATI (AP) - Almost two years after he was
charged with . arson for starting a tire in a University of
Kentucky dormitory, Brett Hamblen is getting a second
chance at his football career with the University of Cincinnati.
Hamblen is practicing with the Cincinnati Bearcats as a
walk-on player. He hasn't been promised a football scholarship but could eventually earn one, coach Rick Minter said.
"We'll play it one year at a time. I think he's a good addition to us," Minter said. "His pasl is behind him. We don't
want to revisit it." ·
Hamblen played last year at Pasadena (Calif.) City College,
the same school that producep wide receiver Hannibal
Thomas, now in his first year with Cincinnati.
Hamblen was a redshirt freshman at Kentucky when he was
charged with arson in December 200 I along with two other
Kentucky players in connection with the fire set in the dormitory. No one was injured in the fire, which destroyed a bulletin
board and caused smoke damage to the dorm's second hoor.
Hamblen was suspended from Kentucky 's football program
and then left the school. He was indicted in March 2002 and
pleaded innocent. He was sentenced in Favette County Circuit
Coun in Lexington, Ky. , to a year in a diversion program that
is an alternative to possible incarceration. Last month, the
court ended Hmnblen 's diversion sentence and expunged the
charge from his record.
Pasadena City coach Tom Maher said Hamblen was a model
citizen who made the most of his year at the California school.
"He lived about 30 miles from campus in the summertime
at a relative's house," Maher said. "I drove him home every
night. He was a quiet, respectful guy."
Hamblen has three years of eligibility remaining.
He told Cincinnati ofticials he doesn't want to be interviewed until he is fan her along in the team's training program.
He was a defensive back at Pasadena but .will be tried as a
wide receiver at Cincinnati .
He played both positions at Highlands High in northern
Kentucky, where he was a teammate of Gino Guidugli, now
Cincinnati's quanerback. Hamblen's older brother, Chris
Hamblen, played baseball for Cincinnati and is now playing in
the Texas Rangers' system, Cincinnati spokesman Tom
Hathaway said.

,

�••

Page 82 •

.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 15. 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

1

Lefty
from Page 81

R

Tl

a

the frrst round.
. Woods was so angry that he refused to
: speak to reP?rters.
"1 just didn't drive very well and put
mxself under a lot of pressure because of
· it, • Woods told a PGA Tour media official. "It didn't maner what club I hit off
the tee, 1 couldn't keep it in play."
Woods wasn't alone in his sbllggles.
Rich Beem made three double bogeys,
. no birdies and shot 82, the highest first: round score by a defending champion
· since the PGA Championship switched to
: stroke play in 1958.
Colin Montgomerie - the other "best
· player to have never won a major" -can
fC?rget about this one .. He also shot 82, as
: d1d- Brad Faxon. Dav1d Duval had an 80,
the third time this year he has failed to
. break 80 in a major.
Anything under par was something to
be treasured at Oak Hill.
Billy Andrade, an alternate when the
week started, birdied the 18th hole for a 3under 67 to finish one stroke. out of the
. lead.
: Masters champion Mike Weir chipped
in for birdie and closed with two stron_g
for a 68, tied with two-time U.S.
n champion Lee Janzen.
evin Sutherland, Fred Funk and
Aaron Baddeley were among those at 69.
''There are four weeks a year you can
· shoot even par and walk away happy, and
: those are tfie four majors," said Charles
Howell ill, who had an even-par 70 and

l
I

looked happy enough.
No one was more pleased than
Mickelson, a 20-time winner on the PGA
Tour, O-for-41 in the majorS since turning
pro in 1992.
.
Part of the problem is not giving himself enough chances. Mickelson has
played 157 rounds in the majors as a pro,
and this was only the fifth time he has
been in the lead.
"Maybe he can get the monkey off his
back this week," said David Toms, who
beat Mickelson in the 2001 PGA
Championship. "He's been ~ing good
golf for a long time and he n s to win a
major to erase the doubts."
Mickelson hasn't contended since he
. finished third in the Masters, although he
showed signs of turning it around last
week at the International . Plus, he has
been working on his swing, trying to
make it longer and more fluid.
"I could see things turning around· and
I'm starting to feel confident in certain
areas of my game, especially off the tee,"
Mickelson said.
He looked like Lefty on the course, but
was strangely distant after he signed his
card. Mickelson declined to go come into
the press center for an interview unheard of for a leader at a major championship.
One reason : He was hungry.
"!think it's more imponant that I maintain my physical strength, mental strength
and have a break than it is to accommodate everyone here," he said.
Indeed, it was a different Mickelson
who contended all week at Atlanta
Athletic Club two years ago. He talked
then about not wantmg to win one maJor,
but several: by not waming to lead the

I

·erowns
from PageB1
Neiiher quarterback has separated from the other during
training camp. At times, Holcomb has moved the offense
. more efficiently, but Couch has risen to the challenge and had
the best training camp of his career.
,
How will Davis choose?
''The deciding factor is, who is going to give us the best
chance to win right now?" Davis said. "It's a gut feeling and
performance and how is the team going to play against
· Indianapolis. We want to get off to a good start."
Couch has experienced extreme highs and lows during his
four seasons in Cleveland. On the eve of Davis' decision,
which could determine if Couch is with the Browns next year,
the embattled QB has been relaxed.
"I have a lot of confidence in myself right now," said
Couch, a target for booing Browns fans last year. "Every time
you tum on the TV, people are saying you're not the guy.
·Everything you read is you ' re not the guy, so you've got to
have a lot of self-confidence because when you doubt yourself, things really start going downhill."
. The Packers, meanwhile, will start at full strength for the
· first time in the preseason.
Offensive tackles Chad Clifton and Mark Tauscher, wide
receivers Donald Driver and Robert Ferguson and Pro Bowl
safety Darren Sharper will all make their exhibition debuts
after being sidelined for two games with injuries.
. Clifton's return is the most significant.
· He hasn't played in a game since Tampa Bay 's Warren Sapp
nearly ended his career with a vicious hit last November.
Clifton was running up field following an interception when
Sapp blindsided him, seriously injured the tackle's pelvis.

Clarett

with Goings. She left Ohio
State before the end of the
fall 2002 quarter and is now
living in Lexington, Ky.
from Page 81
The NCAA is investigating a police report filed by
me."
Clarett
that claimed stereo
Ohio State spokeswoman
equipment,
cash, clothing
Elizabeth Conlisk was asked
and
CDs
valued
at more than
if the committee had been
$10,000 were stolen from a
trying to reach McGill .
"The committee is looking car he had on loan from a
into everything. So, I would local dealership. Clarett later
imagine that at some point admitted he had exaggerated
they would" talk to McGill. the value of what was stolen.
NCAA officials attempted
Conlisk said. Platz declined
to
reach McGill Thursday.
comment.
Mark
Jones , director of
The committee is also
investigating allegations that enforcement, said associa· academic tutors sometimes tion bylaws prevented him
did homework for players from commenting on any
and athletes cheated on case under investigation.
The
Buckeyes
have
quizzes.
banned
Claret!
from
practice
· Kenneth Goings, chairman
of the African-American and and other team activities
African Studies Department, "until and unless" eligibility
dismissed McGill's claims questions are resolved.
. last month "because of her . · The 6-foot, 230-pound
erratic behavior and because tailback rushed for a freshof her history of psychiatric man school record I ,237
yards and scored 18 touchproblems."
downs
last season as unde. McGill said she underwent
feated
Ohio
State won its
an emotional crisis in April
first national title · in 34
· ~003 and was hospitalized
. for six weeks after a meeting years .

T
Jl

l

1

''

I

Blake trailed four games to two
in the second set and one of his
returns was ruled out of
bounds. he walked over to
chair umpire Norm Chryst and
asked about the cal l be fore
returning to the coun.
Blake told reporters later that
he still thought his shot was in
bounds and suggested that tennis should use "Spot Shot"
replay technology to trump
possible human eiTOr.
"Humans are fallible," Blake
said. "Spot Shot's supposed to
be accurate. Why not use itT'
Roddick dismissed Blak~'s
complaint. saying the disputed
shot was out.
The crowd gave both players
a standing ovation as the match
ended and Roddick and Blake
met at the net to shake hands.
The sixth-seeded Coria
needed just an hour and 15

I

minutes to beat Mikhail
Youzhny 6-2. 6-1.
Schuenler, the No. 8 seed,
outlasted Todd Manin 7-5. 3-6,
6-3. Martin hung on to push
Schuettler despite suffering
eight
doubfe-faulls
to
Scbuenler's three. Martin also
had 32 unforced eiTOrs to his
rival's eight.
Coria said he wasn't surprised by the elimination of so
many seeded players.
''Today, tennis is reallr,, really very competitive, • the
Argentine said through an
interpreter. "It's been happening the whole year. these
upsets."
The suburban Cincinnati
tournament has not had an
unseeded finalist since Chris
Lewis in 198 I, and he became
a straight-set loser to John
McEnroe. the No. I seed then ..

:Cleveland's victory over Twins

The fourth heat brought a large round of applause from the
crowd as locally trained horse My Good Sam, a previous win·
ner at iThe Rock! claimed a close win over JUs Magic Trick .
My Good Sam is trained by Brooks Sayre of Racine. and
owned by his late sister Wilma Styer of Waterford. Ironically
the heat was The DailY Sentinel sponsored heat. Dave Sayre ;
Racine, right, and his family represented the Styer family in
victory' lane. (Scott Wolfe )

PGA. but to lead it by several shots.
He was only cautiously optimistic this
time; happy about his round, unwilling to
speculate where it might lead.
"Everyone wants to get off to a good
sput," ~e said. "It's toug~ to play catch-up
at maJor champ1onsh1ps because the
courses seem to progressively get more
difficult as the week goes on.'
Pam piing dido ' t want to get ahead of
himself, either.
· The 33-year-old Aussie, who started in
golf as a greenskeeper, missed only two Ryan Holton rode home Experience with the win in the first
fairways on his way to a bogey-free 66.
heat over Blackberry Jam m the event sponsored by the local
The last time Pampling was in the lead
Eagles
Club Aerie 2171. (Scott Wolfe)
at a major came at the Ig99 British Open.
He shot 86 the next day at Camoustie and
missed the cut.
"You learn that nothing counts after
Day 1," he said. ''There 's still three days
to go."
from Page 81
No one is sure what will happen. especially with Mickelson.
·
H1s 66 was an excellent round, but it
The Summary: 8-14-03 Harneas
Lewisburg. WV. 5) Broadway Brad, Charlie
was not without a few hairy moments.
Racing Meigs County Fair
Schoonover. Charlie Schoonover. John
Posted by Horse Name . Driver, Tra1ner.
Kroner. and Roberl Gagle, Athens. Ohio.
From the deep rough on No. 12, he
6) Wonderful Art. AI Jones. Earl Owings.
hammered a 7-iron out of the thick grass. Race One: Owner. Hometown .
Esther Crownover. Me Arthu r, Ohio.··
clipped a br.mch and stopped the ball 4 1) E~tper i ence . Ryan Holton, Russell Time: 2:03:04
feet from the cup. On the 598-yard 13th. Britton. same, Newark, Oh10; 2)
Jam , Walter Young, Walter
Race Five:
Mickelson hit a 3-wood onto the hilly Blackberry
Young , same. Barnes11ille. Ohio: 3)
1) Jobys ShamroCk K1d , Uoyd Hawk.
rough right of the fairway and still made Maingate Logan liz, At Jones . Jeff Lloyd Hawk. Joseph Lanning, Zanesville.
Kirkbride, Norma H. Ko11aL--Time 2:15:03
Oh1o; 2) Crown Tim Tango. AI Jones. Earl
birdie.
Owings. Esther Crownover, McArthur.
Kenny Perry, the hottest player in golf Race TWo:
O nio: 3) K W Top Gun: Rick Williams. Jeff
with three victories since May, was just as
1) A Place to Kiss . Robert McK1m,
Kirkbr ide, K &amp; W R acmg, Woodsfield.
impressed as the gallery following their Robert McKim. Same. Johnstown. Ohio 2) O nio; 4) BaywoOd Barrisler. Jack Dailey.
Magic Mist. Charlie Schoonover. Charl ie
Ed Davis, David Seit. Waverly, Ohio:
group.
Schoonover. John Fairchild. Portsmouth.
Requires A crown , Ty Van RhOden. Ty Van
"He's just as good as Tiger." Perry said Ohio; 3) Noble Idea. Ty Van Rhoden , Guy Rhoden . Th oma s Stubbs , Alledonia, Ohio;
after his 75 . "That guy has got some Malone , Diana Lynn Malone. Waterford. 6) Bud Ross. Charlie Schoonover. Charlie
4) M1a Mary. A! Jones. William Jago.
Schoonover. Ross Bateman, Athens.
unbelievable shots around the green. Ohio:
William Jago. Amesville. Ohio; 5) · Samis
Ohio.-Even though I played lousy. I got to expe- Honey Bun. Ed Alder. Ed Alder. Sharon Time: 2:09:00
rience something that not a lot of people Fisher and David Mitchell Pa taskala ,
6) K W Maggie Jane. Ricky Williams.
Race Six:
get to experience."
· Ohio.
Jeff Kirkbride, K &amp; W Racing , Woodsfield .
t) Patis Choice, Jack Dailey. Ed Davis.

Harness results

Ohlo.-·T ime: 2:08:02

Clifton was hospitalized for sevenil days afterward.
Although Sapp 'shit was deemed legal by the NFL. it led to
a heated confrontation between Packers coach Mike Sherman
and Sapp following the game.
Clifton has been eager to get back on the field.
"I think it'll be mixed emotions," he said. "A little nervous,
a little anxious.''
This will be Clifton's first game action. but he has already
endured a scary moment in training camp when a teammate
rolled up on his legs from behind.
"That was extremely important because you know those
things are going to happen during the course of a game," he
said. "And you never know how you're going to react to it: ' Is
my knee going to go? Is my hip going to act up?' And when
that happened and I had no pain at all, it gave me confidence:"

Race Three:
1) Come Over Proxie Robert Ogg, Jr
Robert Ogg : Jr .. Robert Ogg. Jr..Tom
Johnson, Don Alley. Brenda Forker: 2)
Addia..Ryan Holton. Ryan Holton . Richard
Snell.ng. 3) Buckeye Ann1e. Charlie
Schoonover, Charlie Schoonover. Ross
Bateman, Alhens. Oh10 4) Message to Fly,
AI Jones, Ron Newhart. Atlyson. Hensler.
Wellston. Ohio 5) Super Btu . Ricky
Williams . Dean Flem ing II. Jackson
Wentz. V1ncent. Ohio--Time ~: 13:03

Race Four:
1) My Good Same. AI Jones. Brooks
Sayre. Wilma Styer. Waterford. Oh1o 2) J
lis Magic Tnck. O lin Harness. Olin
Harness. Turbulent Air lnc. Beaver. Ohio:
3) Y·City Connection, Ed R1der, Ed Alder,
Terry Newman and Edward Aider.
Zanesville. Ohio ; 4) Sold America n. AI
Jones. Ron Newharl. Joe B. Hayes.

Dav1d Self. Waverly. Ohio, 2) Be MinOr.
Michael Sowers. Michae l Sowers; Lloyd
Wolle. Mark Tliieroll. M ichael Sowers. 3)

Banana An na . Robert Ogg, Jr, Robert
Ogg, Jr.. Dav1d Rankin anc;l John And
Robe rt Melshe1mer 4) Park Free, AI

Jones .

Earl ·Owings.

Esthe r

M.

Crownover, McArthur, Ohio: 5) Fastlane
Baroness. Ty Van Rhoden. Guy Malone.
D•ana Ly nfj Malone. Waterford. OhiO. ··
Time: 2:10:00
Race Seven:
1) ROll Me Over Two. Enc Webb. Duane
Lowe . El1sa l owe. McConne lsville. Ohio:
2) Rumbl1ng Rose. Philip Swa tzel M1ke
Swatzel. Kathy Swatzel. LiMie Hocking,
Ot1io· 3) Ryans Goddess. AI Jones. Ron
Newha rt Allyson Hensler. Wellston , Ohio,
4 ) Macs Tax, AI JOf:!eS. Earl Owings.
Esther M . Crownover, McArthur. Ohio; 5)
lets Dash For Cash. Ty Van Rhoden , Ty
VAn Rhoden. Ellen Poulton, Johnstown ,
Ohio.·-Time : 2:20:00

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The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

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~Hafner hits for cycle

- :Three of 16 seeds left in quarterfinal field
. MASON, Ohio (AP) - ln a into the quarterfinals as the
week in which so many seeded only seeds still playing out of
. players at the Cindnnati the original 16. DeTending
Masters have fallen. No. 7 seed champion Carlos Moya was
Andy Roddick seems to be get- eliminated in the frrst round
ting stronger - as the U.S. Monday to start the week of
()pen draws closer.
upsets.
lie fended off a vi~rous
Roddick and Blake traded
challenge Thursday ni t by power serves and precise
unseeded James Blake, -6 (2), returns before the seventh6-2 to advance to the tourna- seeded Roddick wore down his
· ment's quarterfinal round, then opponent in the second set.
: disa.sueed when told his rivals Roddick has now won all
· say lie is the player to beat in · seven times they have played.
the Open, which begins qn
Blake said that in the year
Aug. !5. But. Roddick did say since they last played, Roddick
that his confidence is buildin~, has learned to cliange speeds
He
faces
Argentina s on his serves, alternating
Mariano Zabaleta on Friday between 140 mph and 120
' afternoon. Zabaleta advanced mph.
: on Thursday night by outduel-· The emotion of the match
· ing Flavio Saretta, 6-7 (5), 6-2, was evident, with Blake crying
· 6-4.
out and Roddick throwing up
Roddick, Guillenno Coria his hands when their shots
and Rainer Schuettler went went astray. At one point when

Frida~Auguat15,2003

1 Col. x 3" $24.60

2 Col. X 3"
$49.20

: M~NNEA~OLIS (AP) - When stocky
• ~oo!de Trav!s H~ner came up in the eighth
· mmng needmg h1s first triple of the season to
complete the seventh cycle in Cleveland history, the Indians were selecting spots in the
: stadium where he had to send the ball to get
: a three-base hit.
·
: He found one in rightccenter field.
· Hafner hit for the cycle in his first four at-bats and Brian Anderson came within two
outs of a shutout'Thursday afternoon to lead
Cleveland past the listless Minnesota Twins
8-3 .
"As soon as it left the bat, guys jumped off
· the bench and were rooting hard for him to
have enough gas to get there," Anderson
·
said.
: Hafner, a promising .prospect because of
' his power stroke- not his speed, was asked
. if his teammates had any good one~liners
-once he reached the dugout after scoring the
: Indians' eighth run.
: "I don't think I could hear any," he said. "1
: was breathing too hard."
Hafner's was the first cycle hit by a
Cleveland player since Andre Thornton did it
on April 22, 1978, against Boston . The des. ignated hitter homered in the first inning, hit
: a check-swing double in the fourth and
· reached on an infield single in the seventh
,against Twins starter Brad Radke.
The triple came off James Baldwin, when
he slid into third without a play and drove in
Ben Broussard to put the Indians up 7-0. It
was the second career triple and the first in
185 at-bats this year for Hafner, a 6-foot-3,
240-pounder who was acquired in an offseason trade with Texas. He's batting .254 with
eight homers and 28 RBis.
"!think they enjoyed watching me run the
bases and slide more than the actual cycle
itself," said Hafner, a native of Sykeston,
N.D. "It's a pretty neal thing, but I' m just
glad we came out and played well in the
game."
Twins manager Ron Gardenhire wished he
would' ve felt that way.
'That was embarrassing. Embarrassing for
our fans," Gardenhire said. "We have guys
with no clue. No clue what's going on out
there. I apologize for the way we played."
Anderson (9-9) allowed six hits, two walks
and a run in 8 1-3 innings while striking out
eight. The Twins ended their scoreless streak
at 22 1-3 innings when Matthew LeCroy

homered in the ninth and cost the Indians
their chance at back-to-back shutouts for the
first time since 1991.
The Twins, who begin a three-game series
in Kansas City on Friday. fell four games
back of the idle Royals in the AL Central.
"We need to go out everyday like it's our
last game," said Jacque Jones, who had one
of the· Twins' nine hits. "If we don't do that,
we should go home. If we do, we' ll win a lot
of games and we'll get back over the mountain.''
The Twins, their bullpen taxed by a 9-6
loss on Tuesday and a 5-0 defeat in 14
innings on Wednesday, badly needed a quality start from Radke that they didn't get.
Radke .(8-1 0) suffered his first loss in six
starts after the All-Star break, giving up nine
hits and five runs in 6 1-3 innings while
striking out three.
Anderson, who picked up his first win in
four starts, pitched seven shutout innings in a
no-decision Saturday against Anaheim. After
LeCroy's homer with one out in the ninth,
Anderson was relieved by David Cortes who gave up a sacrifice tly to Dustan Mohr
and an RBI single to Crist ian Guzman.
"Two days in a row not hitting the ball."
Gardenhire said. "It's embarrassing."
Casey Blake homered and drove . in three
runs and Jhonny Peralta hit a pair of doubles
for Cleveland, which won for the eighth time
in II games and improved to 8-3 against
Minnesota this year 6-2 at the
Metrodome.
The Indians left their clubhouse energized
after taking three of four from a pennant contender and witnessing Hafner's improbable
feat.
·
"-""
"You want your guys pulling for each
other," manager Eric Wedge said.
Notes: Minnesota's Denny Hocking started
at I B for Doug Mientkiewicz, who has a sore
wrist on his glove hand and is day-to-day ....
·Blake, who played briefly for the Twins in
2001 and 2002, is batting .294 with four
homers and 10 RBls against his old team this
year.... Milwaukee's Paul Molitor hit for the
cycle on May 15, 1991 -the last time the
feat occurred in the Metrodome and the last
one the Twins have given up .... The Twins
are 23-24 against the Central this year after
going 50-25last season .... Minnesota's clubworst scoreless innings streak is 30, set in
1964 and tied in 1978.

Reds sneak past Diamondbacks
CINCINNATI (AP) Dave
Interim
manager
Miley's decision to shake up
the batting order paid off
with a slump-snapping win
for the Cincinnati Reds.
~ Miley dropped D'Angelo
Jimenez from the leadoff
spot to No. 3, replacing him
Olmedo.
with
Rainer
Jimenez responded by driving in Olmedo, and Sean
:casey followed with an RBI
single as Cincinnati beat the
Arizona Diamondbacks 3-2
on Thursday night.
"We needed a shakeup,"
Casey.said. "It was good that
:Miley decided to shake it up
·a little bit."
: Aaron Harang and two
~relief pitchers made the three
runs stand up as the Reds
snapped a 16-game losing
streak to the Arizona
Diamondbacks .
: The Reds hadn't beaten
Arizona since May 21. 2001.
Eight of those 161osseswere
in Cincinnati, where the
Reds
last
beat
the
Diamondbacks on July · 23,
:2000.
. "It felt good to get those
:hits, and it fell good to beat
:Arizona," Casey said. "It's
been a long, long time."
Arizona manager Bob
Brenly was only sorry the
run didn'tlast a little longer.
· "That's one of those
:freaky, numerical things,"
:Brenly said. "There's no rea·son for it. You can't explain
it."
Harang is 2-0 as a starter
since Oakland traded him to
:the Reds on July 30 along
:with two other pitchers for
:outfielder Jose Guillen. He
- allowed three hits artd a season-high four walks in 6 1-3
innings, but
he
held

Arizona's 3-4-5 batters - . had scored a total of one run
Luis
Gonzalez,
Raul in its previous three games. Cleveland Indians' Angel Santos steals second under Minnesota Twins second baseman Chris
. Mondesi and Steve Finley- took a 3-1 lead.
Gomez after an errant throw from catcher Matthew LeCroy got by Gomez during the fourt~
hitless.
Arizona pulled within a inning Thursday in Minneapolis . LeCroy was charged with an error. The Indians won 8-3. (AP)
"That was probably the run in the fifth. Matt Kata hit
biggest key," Miley said. "If a two-out double, barely
you go through Gonzalez, avoiding being thrown out at
Mondesi and Finley - those second, and then scored on
Craig Counsell's single
are three pretty big hitter."
Added Harang, "That's down the left-field line. But
always a good feeling, but Adam Dunn snuffed out the
it's better that the team got rally, throwing out Counsell
the win .."
when he tried to stretch the
Gonzalez, Mondesi and hit into a double.
Finley were 1-for-12 for the
Defense saved the Reds
game.
again in the seventh. Junior
Chris Reitsma allowed Spivey was at second with
Mondesi's one-out single one out when Chad Moeller
while pitching the ninth to lined out on a diving catch
earn his first career save in by Olmedo. The rookie
five opportunities - all this shortstop then doubled up
. '
year.
Spivey, who couldn't hustle
n frn&gt;&lt;t ..-:: •
• •.,·
-·
~:::.
"That's the first opportuni- back to second in time .
''
ty I've had in the ninth with
"That play was huge ,"
a lead," Reitsma said. "It's a Miley said. "That was the
different feeling , coming in biggest play of the game. If
2003 ChevrOlet Ext. Cab 2003 GMC reg. cab
4x4, VB, Auto, Air, White
with the 3-4-5 hitters and a it gets through, it's a tie
4wd,
one-run lead. I love that feel- game. (Bench coach Mark)
$19,300 ·-··- ·
ing. and I'm thankful for the Berry moved him over a step
opponunity."
to hi s right just before the
Brandon Webb (7-6), who pitch, and he stretched out as
grew up about 150 miles east far as he could."
of Cincinnati in Ashland,
Notes: Cincinnati avoided
Ky., struggled with the its longest losing streak · to
humidity and a gametime one team since dropping 19
2002 Chevy' Cavaliers
temperature of 86 degrees. in a row to the Pittsburgh
$7,900 or $149/month
He allowed six hits and three Pirates 1in 1937-1938 ....
runs in five innings, walking Arizona
3B
Shea
Credit Problema?
two and hitting two batters. Hillenbrand, who's hitless in
He's now 0-4 in his last six his last 15 at bats, did not
Call the
starts.
play ... LaRue was hit by a
Credit Doctor 1 l~noftn
"I'm not used to this," pitch for the 17th time, three
Webb said of the weather. "It short of tying the club record
He may be able to help!
was really draining. My set by Frank Robinson in
Just ask for Doc
command was horrible. The 1956. ... Webb increased his .
first inning was · awesome. team-leading total of hit
Then I just lost it."
batsmen to 10 .... Gonzalez
He gave up a leadoff single went 0-for-4, snapping his
to Olmedo in the third, then streak of reaching base safeI !1!18 Ford Estott ••· ., - ·- • ·...., $.1,!175
lOIIJ Chell)' Sllvel'fldo lld.OI&amp; ~4 1111\II JJ7.too
hit Jason LaRue. Jimenez ly at 29 games .... Harang
2002 Chilli)' Prlzm ..,.,...,....,.,.,.... SIO,JOII 20112 Chell)' Asfra Vern ,.....,_,.....m7.too
and Casey followed with · also got his first major·
JJc»&amp;nulileDI!IrJ•-,.c..,.,.._....,SUSO 21102 Chell)' Expre11
rra.tool
their bac[&lt;:-to-back RBI siii- league hit, a two-out single
gles as Cincinnati, which to center field in the sixth.
llllll Pont/ere Grand Am • dDGr $41100
20110 CMC Jimmy
$14,11110

Don Tate Motors

2003

Model Closeout

t',_.""'..,.,

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Olllukki'GtlrAve.,_,_sl~

:elackout postpones sporting events
NEW YORK (AP)- The New York blackout forced the evacuation of Shea Stadium
and the postponement of Thursday night's
game between the Mets and the San Francisco
.Giants.
The game was called about an hour before
:the scheduled 7:10p.m. start. No makeup date
·has been announced.
'
The lights went out in the Mets clubhouse
shortly before 4 p.m.
After the game was called, the Giants waited outside the stadium for a bus. The team had
:not decided whether to drive to Montreal or

2 Col. x 2"
.$32.80

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go to Philadelphia and fly from there.
· Giants star Barry Bonds returned to the Bay
area Thursday to spend time with his ailing
father.
Former major leaguer Bobby Bopds has
been ill with lung cancer and other ailments .
Barry Bonds was officially placed on base·
ball's bereavement li st.
· Also Thursday. the WNBA games between
the New York Liberty and the Houston
Comets at Madison Square Garden, and
between the Cleveland Rockers and the
Connecticut Sun were postponed.

IIIH~•r-AWo4114N-At.IIOd

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2002 Bulcl&lt; Lesabre Wh#N, LDDded SIS,IIOO 20110 GMC Jlllrun DencrU • • .,_ 125,!100

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,

PageB4

SCOREBOARD

.The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 15, 2003

Friday, 'August 15, 2003

ijtribune - Sentinel - ~e

•
lndlanapolls at Denver, 8 p.m.

Football
National Football

League

PIHNIIGft

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Ellt
W L T Pet PF ""
Buffalo
1 0 0 1.00 20 19
New England

100100266

N.Y. Jelli

110 .500.243
0 1 0 .000 19 20

Miami

Jeckson'llllle

Tennessee
Houston
~d 1anapo i1S

Bait• more
C1nc1nnat1

Cleveland
Pmsburgh

WH1
WLTPetPFPA
DenVer

1 o o 1.00 20

12

K'nsas City

1 1 0 .500 15

24

bOktand
San Diego

t 1 0 500 17

20

0 1 0 .000 7

20

NA~ONALCONFERENCE

Eaot
W L T Pet

PF
I 0 0 1.00027
0 1 0 000 0
0100008
0 1 0 .()()() 0
SOuth
W L T Pet PF
2 0 0 1.000 50
I 0 0 100020
0 1 0 .000 21
0 1 0 .000 17

Philadelphia
Dallas
N.Y Giants
Washington
Tampa Bay
Carolina
Atlanta
New Orleans

North
W L T Pet PF
1 0 0 1.000 20
1 0 0 100026

t:h•cago
Detroit
Green Bay
Minnesota

""
17
13
26
20
PA
33
0
27
27
PA
18
13
30
16

1 0 0 1 000 13
I 0 0 1.00020
0 I 0 000 6

·7 8

Fl..t Rod Pampllng
Phil Mlcl&lt;olaon
Billy Andrade

34·32 34·33 -

Mike Weir

34·34 -

Lee Janzen

34·34 35-34 -

33-33 -

VIJIIY Singh
Aaron Baddeley
CM!I Campball
Fred Funk
Shaun Mlcheel
Kevin Sutherland

33-36 -

34·35 32·37 33-36 -

33-38 -

68
68

68
68

69
69
89
89
89
69

33-36 -

69

Tom Parnica Jr.
Charlto H"""ll
Robert (lamez

35·35 35·35 34·36 -

70
70
70

Jay Haas
Hank Kuehne
Loren Roberts

34·36 34·36 35·35 -

70
70
70

Robert Allenby
Todd Hamtnon
Duffy WaldOrt
Bob Estes
J.L. Lewis

35·35
34·36
35·35
38·33
37·34

-

70
70
70
7t
71

Toshimltsu lzawa
Angel Cabrera
Joe Durant

35-36
36·35
35·36
35·36

-

71
71
71

Geoff Ogi"Y
Ernie Els

36·35 -

71
71

Frank LM:kllter II

3&amp;-35 -

71

ATP Waltern &amp; Southern
Financial Group Maatera
Rtoullo
Mooon,Ohlo
Pu,..: $2.45 million (Mallo,.,
Su~ae1: H1~r

Thuraday'e Game
• San Francisco 14, Oakland 10
•
Friday's Games
Miam1 at Jacksonville, 7.30 p.m.
~ Houston at Dallas, 8 p m.
Seattle at lnd1anapol1s. 8 p.m.
Carolina at NY. Giants, a p m.
Green Bay at Cleveland, 8 p.m
Saturday's Game•
Detroit at Cincinna1t, 7:30p.m.
Phlladelphta at Pittsburgh, 7·30 p m
Buffalo at Tennessee. 8 p.m.
Baltimore at Atlanta, 8 p. m
New Orleans at N Y Jets, 8 p.m.
New England at Washington, 8 p.m.
Denver at Chtcago, 8:05 p.m.
M1nnesota at Kansas City, 8·30 p m.
Anzona at San Diego, 10 p.m
Monday'l Game
Tampa Bay at St Louis, 8 p.m.
Thur~day, Aug. 21
Dallas at P•ttsburgh, 8 p m
Friday, Aug. 22
New England at Philadelphia, 7.30 p.m.
Atlanta at M1am1, 8 p m
M1nnesota at Oakland, 9 p.m.
Ch1cagc at Arizona, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 23
St. LOUIS at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Cleveland at Detroit, 7.30 p.m
Tennessee at Cmcmnat1, 7·30 p m
NY Jets at N.Y. Giants, 8 p.m.
Carolina at Green Bay, 8 p.m.
Baltimore at Washington, 8 p.m.
Jacksonville at Tampa Bay, 8 p m.
San Diego at Houston, 8.30 p m.
New Orleans at San Franctsco, 9 p.m
Kansas City at Seattle, 10 p.m.

Monday, Aug. 25

.,

'

'· . 7 ·; 13 .S82 18\
•

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l'!W-

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,' 13~'

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111 ••~17 11 ~
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61. .. . . . 14
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27:;'

'a ca.m.

Cube,l, ~on· 4
· ' ~ta7, SanD!tgo1 ..

f ·

"MonbMI e, Colorado 5
·• F1oo;ld&amp; 2, \Jl• Angetee 1, 11 lnntnge
Plltfburgh e, St. LoUlo s
·
'1'1\ua~ta 1'1 , Mt!Wau'lcaa 4

dt.Y.'Mita II, San Francie&lt;X&gt; 2

! · A&lt;IJQna 3.. Clnolnnaff 1

Thllfl4ay'l Gail\tO .

..

~· l.ol!l• 4, Pl11sburgl1 3
Loo A~ 6, Florida 4

Chark&gt;tte
Cleveland
ConnectiCut
NewVorK
lnd1ana
Washington

Tllurodoy
At The A.TP Tennltl Clntl!r

· St. LOUII
1&gt;\ ~

· . wLPctGB
8&lt;1 57 .52Q_ ' 8&lt;1 57 .5211 - .
83 'fl' :526 ~
'• ,: f-.1 51' I 0;1 .~ fa
83 ffl' .442 10~

.

ChicagO Cubs 7, Houston 1
l'hllldotphla 4, MIIWllukae 3
san ~ Franc!..., at N.Y. Mota, ppd .,
.,Owerf&amp;Hu,. ·

Tennis

7
7

c:.n!lol-

67

Tim Herron

0

Frlclly'f G-1

WLPctGB
4:.1 .650··811 .. .!150 12
• 811 5S .54!1 121
81 80 .504 17)
. 150 68 .420 27~

Tllu.....,.

Slngloo
Third Round
Guillermo Coria (6). Argentina , def
Mikhail Youzhny, Russia, 6-2, 6- t .
Robby Glneprl, United States, def
Gaston Gaudio, Argentina, 6-1, 7·6 {4).
Max Mirny. , Belarus. del. Hlcham Araz1,

Morooco, 6-4, fH (7), 6~4 .
Rainer Schuettler {a), Germany, del
Todd Manin, United States, 7-5, 3-6, 6·3.
. Mardy F1sh, Umted States, del. Arnaud
Clement. France, 6-2, 6-2

Andy Roddick (7). United States. del.
James Blake, United States, 7-f3 (2}, 6·2
David Nalbandian, Argentina, def Juan
Ignacio Chela, Argentina , 6-4, 6-4.

DoUble I
Fl,.t Round
Jonas Bjorkman, Sweden , and Todd
Woodbridge (4), Australia, del Franhsek
Cermak and Leos Friedl, Czech RepubliC,
6·1, 1·6,&amp;2.
Mahesh Bhupathl, India, and Max Mlrnyl
(1}. Belarus, def. Vevgeny Kalelnikov,
Russia, and Gustavo Kuerten. Brazil , 6-3,

3-6, 6·1 . SOCOnd Round
Mark Knowles, Bahamas, and Dan1el
Nestor (3), Canada, def Chris Haggard,
South Africa, and Donald Johnson, UMed

States. 6·2, 6-4.

Basketball
Women's National
Basketball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
WL
Pet GB
x·Detrott
21 8
.724 -

16
14
14
13
13
9

552

13
14
15
15
16
21

soo

5
6 '1

.483

7

.464
.448

7 ~,

300

8
12'._

WESTERN CONFERENCE
WL
Pel GB
Houston
Los Angeles

19 9
20 10

679
667

Seattle

16 12

.571

3

Mmnesota
Sacramento
San Antonio
Phoenix

16 14
,5 14
11 19

.533
.517

4
4'-,

.367
.207

9
13',

6

23

x-cllnched playoff spot

Wednesday'&amp; Game
DetrOit 7B, Phoen1x 76
Thureday's Games
Connecticut at Cleveland, ppd
Washington 76. Charlotte 69
Houston at New York. ppd.
Los Angeles a7, Mmnesota 83
Friday 's Games
Detroit at Sacramento, 1o p.m
Seattle at Phoeni)(, 10 p.m
Saturday's Games
l os Angeles at Houston, 4 p m
Connecticut at New York. 4 p.m
Cleveland at Wa shtngton, 6 p.m.
Charlotte at lnd•ana, 8 p m
Minnesota at San Antonio. 8:30 p.m
Sacramento at PhoenD(, 10 p.m
Sunday's Games
New Yor~ at Cleveland 7 p m
Detroit at Seattle. 9 p.m

TH'E D .IAM:O .N D'.

Cincinnati 3. Arl&lt;ona 2
l\tian1a7, san'Diego 4

Nitloillll.elgull!

AI Ollk Hill Country Club
Rochelter, N.Y.
Pu!W: se million
Yardoge: 7,t34; Pori 70

I 1 0 .500 27
0 1 0 000 14
Welt
W L T Pet PF PA
San FranciSCO 2 0 0 1.00038 16

AriZOna
Seattle
St LOUIS

--

~

PQA Champlonahlp Score~

SOUth

W L T Pet PF ""
1 0 0 1 00 18 14
1 0 0 1.00 tO 6
0 1 0 .()()() 12 20
0 1 0 .000 18 20
North
WLTPetPFPA
0 1 0 .000 19 20
0 1 0 .000 13 28
0 1 0 .()()() 8
10
0 1 0 .000 13 28

.AROU.ND

'

Golf

'

~:

.

· w.dnudly•• Gllme
Chicago at New England. 8 p.m.

' lbs 'Angelet (Kida 0-01 a1 ChiCago
c~ (Prior 10.5), 3,20 p.m.
.
Mitlmlkae (KIMI)' ~-8) at Pittsburgh
(Figueroa t-0), 7,;05 p.m.
San Francl""" (ilermanoon 2·2) al
Montreal (l.Hernandez 12·7), 7:05
·p.m.
St. tout~ (W.WIIIIams 14·51 al
Philadelphia (Padilla 10-81, 7;05 p.m.
ColotadQ (Oliver tQ·71 at N .~. Mota .
(Sio'WI, 7:1 0p.m.
.
HOU91Dn (VH!l&gt;M 4-21 II. ClnciMitl
(Gra-.o ""18), 7:10p.m . .
Arl&gt;:ona (Johnoon 3-4) at AUanla
(f'layrioldo 0-8), 7;30 p.m.
San Diego iOI.Parez 4-51 at F.IOMda '
(Panny lll'9), 7:30 p.r,n.
Sllunlay'oQomu
Mllwaukila at Plnobu,;.. 12!30 p.m.
.Loa .Angelta at Chlcigo Cubo,··t ,15
p.m.
Houston at Ctnelnnltl, 1:20 p.m.
San Dlago at Florida, .8:05 p.m.
Arizona at Atianta, 7'05 p.m.
San Franclaco at Montreal. 7:05 p.m.
St. louis at Phlladotphla, 7;05 p.m.
ColoradQ at N.Y. Meta, 7:tO,p.m.

. - y'IOomH .
Arizona at Atlanta. ,1:05 , p.~.
San Franclaco at Montrtal, 1:05 p.m.
Colorado at N.Y. Mots, t ;10 p.m.
H9uotor at Cincinnati, 1:15 p.m.
San Diego 11 FIOMda, 1:35 p.m.
Milwaukee .11 Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m.
los Angelaa at Chicago Cubs: 2:20
p.m1

St. Louis at Philadelphia, 8:0&amp; p.m .
DETROIT TIGERS-Placed 3B Enc
Munson on the t 5-day d•sableel list
retroactive to Aug 12. Purchased the con·
tract of INF Danny Klassen fro m Toledo of
the ll.
MINNESOTA TWINS-Designated AHP
James 8aldwm for aSSignmen t. Recalled
RHP Grant Balfour from Rochester of the

IL
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Recalled RHP
Bnan Bowles Syracuse of !he IL OptiOned
AHP Corey Thurman to Syracuse.
National League

HOUSTON ASTROS-Signed RH P Rick
White Opt1oned RH P K1 rk Saarloos to New
Orleans of PCL
SAN DIEGO PADAES-S1gned AH P Ttm

StauHer

BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association

WASHINGTON WIZARDS-Named Mdt
Newton

d~rec t or

ol player personnel

FOOTBALL
Na11onal Football League

INDIANAPO LIS COLTS- Signed DB
Trav1 s Coleman

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES - Stgned WR
Carl Morns
SA N FRANCISCO 49EA5-Signed DE
Jace Sayler

WASHINGTON REDSKINS- Stgned P
David Leaverton. Released WR James
Johnson

HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CALGARY FLAMES-S1gned an atf1ha·
liOn agreement with ECHL:s Las Vegas
Wran glers.

EDMONTON OILER5-Signed F Ryan

Transactions

Smyth to a two-year contract
FLORIDA PANTHEAS-S1gned LW
Cra1g MacDonald and D Kent Husk1ns to
one-yea r con tracts.

BASEBAlL
American League

.!

CLASSIFIED

' '

'

Tempo B~Y, (~mbr11110 H)' at
EaotDMIIon
CltYellnll (-1D-71. 7;06 p.m: ·
w l ""' Gil &gt;J&gt; M - &lt;~·· HI at Kilnoat I
New )lld&lt;
•
41 805 - · ' City CGill&gt;llle 2-ill.JI:IIG, p;ry~J
' .'
lt'oioton
' 70 51
.3 . · •CIIICIGO ~Sa)\ (""lzli 'IS.i) at
!~
·'eo 61 488 ta' T0&gt;1~ ( l - 5-7),..,05 p.m.;f · '
.Jai!lmont
57 '83 ·47!1 15~
Botton (S~'n 0.1) at ...,..
~Bay
~48 7t :403 :1o4
(t.lafar,t5·,51, 10;06 p.m. ' .
.
c.nnJOMeiOn
Detroit {Cor!\010 !i-111 11 Anellelm
W L ·f'&lt;:l GB
(l«d&lt;oy 7·11), 10:05 p.m,
8&lt;1 55 .538 _
Toronto (Towara ' 1; 1f' at Oakland
Kanalla cny
83 • 811 .521 2
(HardOn 3-11,· 10:05 p.m. .
Chicago
61 150 .504 4
Balunlly'o ~
'~ln..-ta
53 69 .434 121.
Mlnntsoto at Ken~ C~ 1;20 p.m.
CitMoland
31 ae :28t 33'
Booton at seem., 4:05p.m,
'
Detroit
Toronto at Oatttand, 4;05 P.l"·
.•
w l Pet GB
N.Y. V,.koee atlllttmlo,., 7:05.p.m.
73 48 . 803 tampa Bay II CIMiand, 7;05 p.m.
69 52
•~
··~Chicago Whllll Sox at Teilai, 1:015
57 .. 8&lt;1 ~ .47t 1e
·p.m.
., .
54 '67 .446 19
D&lt;ltrolt at Anaholm, tl):05'p.m. . •
au~·•
I,
_,...,.,., (lamao '
Tompa ll,ey at Clfvoii1np, I~ p;m,, ., ,
Tampa Bay 8;; Baltli11Dfa 5, to Innings , N.Y. Van. ..atlanlmOit, 1:111 p.,.
CI8V81an&lt;J.5. Mtnnoeota a, 141nnlligl ·MinnuoiJo at Klrieaa City, 2!05 P.tll; ·
BoOton II Soa~. '4:Q5 p.111. .
•
TOJ&lt;aa o.tiolt3
·
D&lt;otrollat
Ana1]41m,
4:05p.m.
·
Ka~Ht City 11, N.Y. Yanlleea 0
ToroniO at QakJ~, ':O!i ;p.m. • '
Seattle 13, Toronto 6
~
Chicago l'(hlto Sox, at Texaa, 8:05 .
.Anabalm ~ Chicago Whlta Sox 1
p.m. , ,
~ ""'
,
~
.
Booton 7, Olkland 3
· Thuradl)''o Gamet
Cleveland a, Minnooola 3 .
Booton 4, Oakland 2, 1oInnings
N.Y. Yankees 8, BaHtmore 5

Amerlclill.tegull

72 ·

m

C•lll•(OUrii)'. OH

o.-

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. ·

Suspended linebacker
won't miss WVU game
MADISON , Wis. (AP) Susp e nded linebacker Darius
Jo ne s
won't
mi ss
the
U niver si ty of Wisconsin's
seaso n
o p en er
at
West
Virginia but will miss the
Badgers' Sep1: 6 home open er agai n st Akron .
" I co nsider ed a number of
different options in regard 10
a suspen sion ," coac h Barry
Alvarez said in a statem e nt
Thursday. " H e will miss our
home opener . which is an
important game 10 our players. especial! y tho se from
Wisconsin."
Jones is a juni or defensive
lin e m a n from Beloil.
Alvarez recently h a nded
Jone s a one-game suspens ion
for vio lating team rules over
the sum m er.
Alvarez ha s refused to
reveal the nature of ih al vmlalion, but a spokes man for

AD

Successful Ads
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To Help Get Response ...

r

ANNOLJNCEMENIS

I

r

c~ 1

Beer Carry Out perm1t
lor sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County send letters
of mte rest to· The Oatly
Senhnel, PO Boll 729·20.
Pomeroy, Oh•o 45769

the Village of Shorewood
Hill s Police D epartment sa id
Jone s w as accused of driving
drunk.
At medi a day I ast week ,
Jones. who was seco nd on
l he team lasl year with five
sacks and I 0 tackles for a
l oss, said h e h ad l et down hi s
teamm ates. the program and
hi s family.
"I ' m
disappointed
10
m yse lf," he sa id. " l&lt;' s jusl
imm aturit y . I believe I've
l earned m y l esson."

AN

HOW IQ WRITE

\ Y\111 '\I I \II '\ I 'I

GIVEAWAY
1 year-old lab. 1 year-old
mixed German-Shepard. go
together to a good home

740·379·2663
7 wk old Siamese m1Ked kit·
tens. (740)992·0437
Canmng jars. pmts &amp; quarts,

(740)742·2091
Free Young cats Have been
outside and InSide 4 months

old . (304)675·6563
Hotpo1nt Gas Dryer wilh all
attachments. (304)675·3035
Old

Upnght

~~

lltO

Coda, Sec.
Revised Coda,
2329.26
State of Ohio,
County
Banking &amp;

E. Collins, II,
cv 104
of Common
Meigs County,
pursuanoe of an
of Sele to me
liratcle•d from said
the above
l~_tllll~d action, I will
sale at public
luctlon, to be held
steps of

~:;u,rtiiouie
t•

county
on the
day
of

t:~~:~~:~k2003
at
a.m. the
deacrlbad
es11ote, alluata In
County of Meigs
State of Ohio, toRDt"'rt E. Colllna II

A.

part of a

more or
as trans·
to Robert E.
~oli~~inl:~land Beverly
~.
aa recordDeed Book 511,
255, Melga
Recorder••

a..,,

I

Public Notice
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JP Morgan Chaae
Bank lka The Chaoa
ManhaHan Bank, aa
Trustee of IMC Horne
Equity Loan Truat
1997-5 undar the
pooling and urvlclng

agreement datad as
of September I , 1997
c/o Fairbank• Capital
Corporation
Plelntiff
VI
Wltllem K. Cogar, at al
Defendants
Case No.: 03-cv-oss
Judge; Fred W. Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
Mary E. Cogar and
John Doe, unknown
apouoa of Bonnie s.
Freeman, Ill lima of
conveyance on June
5, 1990, whose 1a11
known aC:drau lor
Mary E. Cogar Ia P.O.
Box 303, Racine, OH
45771 and lor John
Doe,
unknown
apouu of Bonnie S.
Freeman, at time of
conveyance on June
5, 1990 Addrel8
Unknown, and the
unknown
heirs,
davlaeea, lagatMa,
executora, admlnl•·
trtllora, apoUHI and
aaalgna
and the
unknown guardian•
of
minor
and/or
Incompetent helra of
Mary E. Cogar and
John Doe, unknown
1pouse of Bonnie S.
Freeman, at lima of
conv-v-nc. on June
5, 1990, all of whose

re•ldencn

re

unknawn and cannot
be raaaonabla dlllgenC8

H

IICBf·

talnad,
will
taka
notlca thi1t on the
23rd day of M..,, 2003,
JPMorgan
Chaaa
Bank ftw The Chaae
ManhaHan Bank, ••
Truatea of IMC Home
Equity Loan Truat
1997-5 under the
pooling and servicing
agreement dated ••
of September 1, 1997

c/o Falrbenks Capital
Corporation filed Ita
complaint in the common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Ohio In
Case No. 03-cV-155,
on the docket of the
Court, and the object
end demand for relief
of which pleading Is
to foreclose the lien
of plaintiff's mortgaga recorded upon
the
following
described real estate
to wit:
Proparty Address:
42838 St. Rt. 124,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
and being more par·
llcularly described In
plaintiff's mortgage
recorded In Mortgage
Book 50, page 111, of
this
County
Recorder's Office.
All of the above .
named defendants
required
to
are
answer within twentyeight (28) days alter
last
publication,
which ahall be publilhed once a week
lor 1ix conaecutlve
-ka. or they might
be denied a hearing
In thlacaae.
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothluaa
AHorn..,a lor Plaintiff
P.O. box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 452015480
(5t3) 241 ·3100
(7) 25, (8), 1, 8, 15, 22,
29

educational policies,
admlaalona policies,
scholarship and loan
programs, and athletIc and other school
administered
programs.
Dated this 26 day of
June, 2003.
B. Rainey
Administrative
Assistant
Christ Academy, Ltd.
a
West
Virginia
Corporation

B/1 , t5
Public Notice
The Home National
Bank will auction the

following Items on
Saturday, August 16,
2003, et 10:00 a.m. at
Mike Hill's Storage
Lot altha Intersection
of 124 and Bashan
Road, Racine, Ohio:
1998 Dodge Stratus
1B3EJ56H9TN109112
1998 Chevy Cavalier
1G1 JC5246W7143939
The Home National
Bank reaerves the
right to re)ect any and
all bldl . For an
appointment to see,
call 949·2210, aak lor
Sheila.
(8) t3, 14, 15

Public Notice

come and bring a friend

Grueser
Howard E. Frank
Pet Story
Blt5103

CARETAKERS NEE[).
ED
The
Rural
Development Agency,
u.s.
Dept.
or
Agriculture Ia seek·
lng qualified caretakers to perform routine
maintenance tasks

NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS
OF CHRIST ACADE·
MY, LTD
Christ
Academy
lchool admlta atu-

boys &amp; girls clothes. m1sc Yard
Sale
8-15·8·16
FREE PUPPIES
Anllques &amp; mise 1 1/2 mile
2-tam11y. nlc&amp; toys, kidS on Jericho Ad.
books. b1kes, clothes . decor. Yard Sale Pleas ant Ridge
mise
Items/hOusewares. Ad Gallipolis Ferry. Fn/Sal
Sa turda~
9· 1. Graham g.?

_sc~
h_o_oi_R~d----~--~
3-Famlly-Movmg Sale, 21
Henkle Ave GaU1polis. Aug

16·17
Clay School ;;~rea a mile
South of Gallipolis on AI 7,
Fn 15th·Sat16th, 9am-?,
collec t ables-gir ls· adu It ·
clothing-'toys-some-c rafts

located In rural areaa

danta of any race,
color, national and

of Ohio. To receive a
bid package, aubmll a
. written requaat by
Auguat 28, 2003 IC):
Faderal
Building,
Room 507, Attention:
Contracting Officer,
North
High
200

---Garage Sale, Friday, 2545

ethnic origin to all the
rlghta, prlvllagea, program• and acllvltlea
generally accorded or
made available to studania altha school. II
doe1 not dlacrlmlnata
on the beala of race,
color, national and
ethnic
origin
In
admlnl1tratlon of Ita

Street,

Columbua,

Ohio 43215-2418.
August 15,, 18, 17

•

'

Phone·---~--------Mall or drop on lhls coupon along with a copy ol your photo 10 to

1
1
1

,.
I

1
I
I

Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Bot 4i9, Gallipolis, OH 45631
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

1

TO 8 UY

Absolute Top Dollar · U S
S1lver
Gold
Cmns.
Prootsets. Otamonds. Gold
Rmgs,
u s Currency.MTS Coin Shop, 151
Second Avenue. Gallipolis,
740-446·2842

A grow1ng company is now
Bulav11ie P1ke. shOp bench hlrlng heating and cooling
adult/ch•ldrens clothes, lots tachs. installers end helpers,
of Items 9·7
1·2 years exp. a must tn
mstalhng and tech work.
Moving Sate. Thurs·Fri~Sat. good hours and pay Send
1027 Davis Road. ra•nlshine resume. P.O Box 572, Kerr.
Moving Sale· 91 Carman Or OhiO 45643

••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name
·.
Mdress _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

A.~.~~.~.~..~

\V
..

tl'

'Onct you hovt signed up lor tile Senior Olmunt, your 11110WIII nollce will 1111tei your diiCOUnt.

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

r....

Garage Sale 1936 Bladen
Humcane Lamp sold lrom
Ad
Aug 16th- 17th. boys
Penny's catalog. WhlteJPmk
clothes 8-12,
womens
flowers Complete tamp or
clothes 3·5, TV Go-Kart
bottom only 740-388·8751
Garage Sale
Aug-t6·
I \ 11 '1
\II\ I
Saturday. 9am-4pm, 585
'\I 1{\ II l '\
Ann Drive. n1ce girl-clothes·
1nlant-to·6K. baby-bed , car·
seat. stroller-m1sc -•tems
Hu.PWAN1Hl

on abandoned governmant
financed .
homea. All homes are

(304 )675·1872

1478 Green Valley Onve Fri ·
ra•nfsh 1ne. many B1g Yard Sale Aug 15th &amp;
Sat
16th. Fn &amp; Sal. Behind the
estate ~~ms
Apple Grove Post Qff,ce
177 H1lda Dr
Friday· 9am·3pm . l ots of furniture &amp;
Saturday 9am·5pm, lots of mi SC.

fJ.allipoli-latlp 'rtbune
Joint {alta-ant legt-ttr
The Daily Sentinel
iunba~ ~tme' ·itntintl

Public Notice

Public Notice

r

Here's all you need to do...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

Courthouse.

Pr. Pl.t:ASAI«

t

Sen
Discount·
on your home delivered subscription!

Meigs County Budget
Commission
Nancy
Parker

LINrAND
FOUND

YARD SAI.E·

3 Fam •ly yard sale 159
Layne Sl. New Haven Fn·
Found· Five Pts.!Wipple Rd. Sat 8-4 . Bed spread. diSharea. large bl ack mixed es, drapes, clot htng tor lam•breed lemale dog , shor t ly MISC
hair/ears. can (740)992·
5 Family Yard Sale. FrVSat
2475
9-6pm 1st house past
School .
Vocational
CouchfCha1r, refridg . farm
house style table w/6 cha1rs
Lots of household items,
YARD SALE·
womens ctoth1ng s1ze 7-16
GAU.IPOIJS
g1rls 2· T-8 much more

If so, you qualify for a

PUBLIC NOTICE
In compliance with
Section 5705.27 ·of
the Ohio Revised
Code , the
Meigs
County
Budget
Commission will hold
public hearings on
the 2004 budgets of
all townships, corporations, and all other
political
subdlvl·
slons. The Budg~l
Commission
will
meet on August 25.
2003, beginning at
2:00 p.m. In the
Auditor's Office of the
Meigs
County

All Display: 12 Noon :Z
Buslne•• Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

For Sundays

Pap~r

just off Addison P1ke &amp; St
Rt. 7, Saturday only, 9am·
3pm, nice womens ctoth•ng,
boys Cloth1ng, kltchen~ware.
computer acCessories, and
much more

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

POUCIES: Ohio Vallev Publlthlng reHrVII the right to edit, retect. or cancel any ad at any lime. Errors muat be reported on the flrll da~ of
i
Trlbune-Senllnei-Reglater wilt be re1pons1ble tor no more than the COil of the apace occupied by the trrOf and only the fir1t in1ertlon. We shall not be
any loaJ or u:penuthat rtlulta from the publication or omlaalon of an ad'llrtiHment. Correction wlll be made In tM first available edition. • Boll.
are alw1y1 conUdsntlal. • Current rate card appllet. • All real estate Mlvertlaemenla are aubject to the Federal Fatr Hou11no Act or 1"8. • Thla n,./Oprtporl
accepts only help wanted
1
Jtandarda. We will nOI knowingly ecceplan~ advertltln; ln violation of the ln.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

10

Rece1ve $500-$ 1000 . Da11 y.
from home Un1que ca~h·
flow system Rack-It -1n, m1n·
1mum $599 Puts you m 81z1
1·800-242·0363 ext-2 196

I'RmHiSIONAL

D
D

A
Country
Craftsman
Furmlure
strlppmg.
Refm1shmg &amp;
repa1rs .
Uphol stery &amp; recammg
Back to School Spec1al ~ on,c
off WUabor August ~6 thru

Sept 30 (304)743·1100
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?

Foster parents needed- 11
you have an e11 tra bedroom
&amp; wtsh to help a ch1ld. you
can become a therapeutiC
foster parent for youth age
0·18. You wlll recerve re1m·
bursement, $30.$45 a day
www.comlcs.com
plus m1leage &amp; pa1d resp1te
We are lookmg lor homes
located · Southern Ohio
Count1e's Trammg begms
HllJ' WANnll
Sept 6th call for more lnlor..,I'
mahon or to se t up ln!lial
meehng Oasis TherapeutiC P a r t - I r m a
SCHOOL
Fos ter Care Network toll RecepiiO nist/ Me di e a I
FUNDRAtSING
free 1·877 ·325-1558
Area D11ector needed for
Assistant needed for phys1·
established co. lor local
cians
off•ce
m
Point
Full T1me poSitions, mostl y
aree Call on coaches.
Please send
days
Flexible schedule's, Pleasant
apply between 10am· 11am. resume With qual!f1call0ns PTAs &amp; Principals, S46K
613-783·2926
Man-Thur·Sat. McCtu res and salary reqwrements to
Restauranl 820 Jackson Doct ors Oft1ce P 0 . Box 45
Pike. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 Po1m Pleasant. VW 25550
,Speech Pathologist; Full
Full·hme receptmmst need 1
11me pos1t10n wrth compeh·
ed lor Dental Off1ce compul·
PT Direct Care Workers
live salary and exceptional
er eMpenence desired Send
Needed
tr inge benel1t package
resume to CLA-572. C/0 Prestera Center 1S looking B.eaulremen~Masl e rs
Gallipolis Daily Tribune P.O lor two hardworki ng. ma ture Degree from accredited
BoK 469 Gall1pol1 s Oh1o people to prov1de pan time Sc hool
ot
Speech
d11ect care serv1ces to a Pathology. Current Oh 10
45631
client in the Pt Pleasant License
m
Speech
Help wanted car~ng\tor the
area. Must have hs d•ploma Pathology. Demonstrate th e
elderly Darst Group Home. or GEO and valid dnver's
understan ding and use ol all
now pay1ng mm1mum wage. license E11penence working
d1agnost1c and therapeutic
new sllFfts 7am-3pm. 7amw1th emoti onally or behav- techniques/equipment relat·
5pm, 3pm·11 pm, 11 pm iorally cha llenged popu la- ed lo speech therapy.
7am. call 740-992-5023
hOilS helpful,
bul not
Sh1fts Wi ll be Please send resume' to
Little Ceasa rs IS hlr1ng expe- reqUired
Human
nenced md!VIcluals tor man · through the day, Out may Holzer Chn1c,
If you Rel ahons Department, 90
agement position
Above mclude weekends
average starting wa ges, would like the opportun1ty to Jackson Pike . Galllpohs.
concurrent Wilh expenence. have a poSitive effect on Ohio 45631 ·1562. fax to
Please stop by &amp; talk to someone·s 111e. prlnt an 740·446·5532
Michelle Edg CJ 101 more appliCB!Jon from our website Equal Opportumty Employer
details or fax resume to 740· at www oresta oro tax app
886-7425, atln
Scott or resume to 304·525· t 504.
Wa nted· someone over 21
or ma11to
Goodwin
yrs of age to help with OJ &amp;
PRESTERA CENTER
Men Interested In S1ng1ng
HA/JK PROJECT
ka raoke busmess . must
Barbershop muste. Call 304P.O Bo11 8069
have valid dnvers license.
wages neg., celt (740)742·
675·2454
Huntlnglon, WV 25705

No Fee Unless We W1n1
1·888·582-3345

1&lt;1111'1\11

S-t'i

~

C&gt; 2003 by NEA, Inc.

•to_HELI'_~-'"'•1\•NTE-~_.11'70

7709

Need 7 lad•es to sell Avon. EOE/AA
Call 740-446-3358
Need to earn Money? Lets
talk the t.t.EW Avon Call
Marilyn. 304-882-2645 to
lea'rn alt the ways 11 can work
lor you
Oh10 Valley Publ•shmg com·
pany has a part-lime open·
ing in the mallroom Please
apply 1n person Wed·Thur·
Fn, Bam-1 1am. 825 Third
Avenue. Gallipolis Ask tor
Tommy Long

Overbrook Rehab Center IS
Addressers wanted immed1· lookmg for a part-ume
atelyl No Experience neces- dietary aide and a parHtme
sary. Work at Home Call cook. an shlfts. come 1n and
405·447-6397
1111 oul an application at 333
Arby'• R"taur11nt Is cur- Pag~ Street. Middleport. Oh

rently accepllng applications Overbrook
Rehabil itatiOn
Moving Sale· ralnl sh •n'tt, tor all positions. Apply at the
Center Is currently accepting
men-women - chl jdren-c loth~ local Arbys
applications for a part-lime,
ing,
antlques·lurnlture(6 hours a week) AC1ivily
AnN
:
Point
Pleasant
glassware-dlshes. 2-mile
Assistant. ~pplications my
!rom River Valley on Little Postal pos1tions . Clerks/carbe picked up at 333 Page
riers/sorters
.
No
exp
Kyger Ad . Bam·?, Thurs·Fri·
reQuired. Benefits. For exam , Street, Middleport. Oh
Sat.
salary, and testing Informa- 45760.or phone M1ke Cntes.
Mult1·lamily garaQe sale tion ca ll (630)393-3032 Exl Activity 01r~c1or at (740f
992-6472 tor more •nlormarain/shine, 2154 Bulav•lle 782. 8am·Bpm 7 days.
tlon.
Pike, Thurs-Sal, 9am·5pm
Pomeroy Auto Parts accept·
YARD SALE
at Clay AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
ing applications for del1very
Township BwkMO Fri·Sat Sell . Sh~rl ey Spears. 304·
help.
675·1429
9am-? kkls clothe s. toys

S•liVICl:;

0

RESPIRATORY THERA·
PIST
NEEDED
FOR
NATIONAL HOME MED·
ICAL EQUIPMENT COMPA·
NV. INDIVIDUAL MUST BE
POSITIVE, ORGAN IZED.

Wanted
Flonst Designer.
experience 3 years or more.
send resumes to : CLA-573
GtO Gallipolis Dailey Tribune
PO BoK 469 . Gallipolis,

Ohio 45631

MISCUJANE( ll!S

25 Serious People Wanted
Who want to LOSE weight
We Pay You Cash tor the
poun;,s you LOSE I
Safe. Natural. No Drugs.

800.20 1·0632
Nic e large pat1o labte , 4
chairs. $125 Call 740-446·
1721 after 6pm

WAN'llll

To Do
All types of masoory bnck
block &amp; stone 20 yrs
Exper•ence free estimate.

1·304· 773·9550.
1007

304 ~ 593-

D&amp;J Picky Painters
Free Esl1mates lntenor an
extenor pam11ng G1ve your
home or garage a fresh
new took We paint hOmes.
garages mobile homes.
buildings. barns and roofs
Licenced and insured
(Ca ll M-S, S.B)

(3041895·3074

HoMES
FOR SALE
{3)F HA &amp; VA hOmes set up
tor 1mmed1ate possession all
w1th1n 15 m1n of downtown
GallipoliS ~ates as tow as

6% (740) 446 ~32 1 8

4 acres Eagle A1dge Rd
e11cavated , electnc. sepl•c
perm 1t &amp; water available .

(740)992·0031
BUCKEYE HILLS ROAD
All rulestate edvenlaing
In this newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makea It illegal to
advertise "any
preference, llmUatlon or
discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion, Sell
famlllel etatua or national
origin , or any Intention to
make any such
preference, l!mlletlon or
dlecrlmln&amp;tlon ''

Two lots lefll wooded and
county water Both Pnced at

Thls new•paper will not
knowingly accept
advertlaemente IOf rctal
estate which Is tn
violation of the law. Our
reader• are hereby
Informed I hat all
dwelllnge adVertised In
this newspaper are
8\lallable on 1111 eq:.aal
opportunity bases.

$t 5.600

600·213-8365

www countrytyme com
Commerc1al Lois lor sale
appro11 1 acre m s1ze
w!smatl 2br rental house

Call (304)550·0906
For sale by owners··50K190
11 levetlol. all utility hookups
on lol. out of flood plain. 760
Ht gh
St .
M1ddl epor t.
$25.000
Phone 740·992·

2762
Lot for sale m Rac1ne

(740)992·5658
N1ce mobtle home lois. qu1e1
country sett1ng $115 per
monlh , mcludes water.
sewer. lrash, 740·332·2167

SCENIC HilLS

Great homes1te w1lh added
bonus of huntmg out yout
Home tram $199fmonth
backdoor
38 acres onlY
toreclosure homes 4%
$43.000 . land contract avail'
down. 30 years at 8 5 % apr
able. Gallia Counly. t 5 min;
4 listings call 800·319·3323
utes from Holzer
Other
ext 1709
properties located m s~
House 4-sa le Jb r 2ba OhiO Call tor tree map s.
house
m
c1ty
hmlts 800·213·8365 www.coun·
trytyme.com
(304)675·1303

Ul \ I \I ..,

(740)992·3650

(3041882·2399

3 Br house and 2·acres, 4
m1les from Gallipolis on SA
218. 740-446· 1189 after
Spm.

2000 Clayton Mobile Home. Clean 2 br house n)
14K70, 3BR 26th great Pomeroy $400 mo . ptus
cond all up-grades. large deposit, (740)698-7244
back deck. $22 000 740·
Clean 2brffull basement,
379·2928
pamt,
new
carpet.
Cotes Mob1 le Homes an ref/de posit.
No
Pets.
assembled toam w1th over (304)675·5162
120 years ol housmg eKperl·
once Palnot Homes out· Country llvmg 10 m•nuteli
Gall1polis Large
standmg 1/5 yea• warranty from
all
appliances. d1n~
kitchen.
shingle s &amp; msulallOn by
Owens Cornmg. v1nyl s1d1ng Fng. hv1ng room. 2 bed•
by V1pco. James Hard1e s•d· rooms . bath , large fron t and
ing ava1lable, tow 'F the r· back porches , CfA no pet s.
mopane w1ndows by K1nro drug dealers or users need
$485 month .
carnage carpels &amp; tloonng not apply
740·446·
by Congoled. apphances by $400 depOSit
General Electnc. faucets by 4254 or 740·446-0205

H OL!W$
FOR RENT

3650

Monn.E Ho~ws
HIRSAt.f.

2 bedroom house 1n Pt PI
w•lt accept Hud
Call

(304)675·0072

Home
12x60
Mob1le
Located 1n Mason Pr1ced 233 Second Ave. 2-stor~
reasonably
Phone hOuse 2BA. 1112Bath. fur•
2 Story older. well mainmshed kitchen. WID hook·
(304)773·5341 anyt1me
ta ined 4br, 1-1f2 bath
up. oil sHeet park1ng . walk
Pomeroy Info rmation. pho· 14x76 Noms Mob1le Home 3 anywhere downtown , 12
los online www orvb com bdrm 2 ba th c8ntra l a1r. all months m1n $545 month,
80603
or
call electn c.
code
2
porches refJdep. no pels, 740-446·

3-4 bedroom. Po me roy
$375-$400 per month plus
depOSit. (740)992·0175
3br 5 acres. pond Kerr Ret
2-1/2 balh. lntorm allon. phO·
tos onlme www orvb com
81103
or
call
code
(740)446-7143

20 Years experience
4br 4ba house
loreclosure only $9,900
Georges Portable Sawmill. 1·800-719-3001 Ed F~44
don 1 haul your logs to the
99. 3 bedroom. 2 bath. on
m111 Ju st call 304-675-1957
314 acre new 12x 17 gable
rool porch. 24x24 attached
J1m's Carpentry and small
carporl, fireplace, brand new
landscapmg 20 yrs expen3 ton h1gh eff heat pump
ence
Free
est1mate
and air, s~y hghts, his and
(740)446·2506
her sinks 1n master bath.
Odd JobS $4 00 per hour cathedral ce•hngs, mce yard ,
only 5 m1n trom At 7 &amp; At
740..441·9761
33 in Pomeroy, motivated
asking $68.000.
W1ll pressure wash hOmes seller
trailers. decks. metal build· (740)992· 081 1
and references.

rngs and gutters Call (740) Brick &amp; vinyl 3br. full base·
446~0 1 5 1 ask lor Ron or ment. 2 car garage. over
WANTED: Full-time poslt1on leave a message
lookmg river Gas &amp; electnc
avai lable at a community
group home for people w1th Will set w1th elderly week (304)882·3624
mental retardation in the days day shlft, expenenced Nice pnvate country home ,
B1dwellarea. Hours. 1·9pm respons•ble non smoker 2600 square feet, 6 bed·
Sun. 3-10pm Mon·Thurs. Great references 304·895· rooms , 2 baths. walk·m
Requirements · High School 3299 or 740-446·3380
basement, propane gas fur·
Dlptoma/GED. valid driver's
nace wtcentral aJr, comes
llcanse and good driving Willing to sit with an elderly with equ1pped kitchen . 2
record. Excellent benefit person. 5 days a week. plus • acres . 24x24 barn
Salary : hOurs 7am-5pm. no week· pnce reauced to $80.000.
package.
45631 FAX- 740-441-3072 $7.00/hour. Sena resume ends, calll740)949-2722
(740)742·1a.9
to
Buckeye Community
!1'\"l\1
Newly femodeled Syr old
Serv1ces , P.O Bo~ 604 ,
AN/LPN (HOME HEALTHI Jackson .
house. 3 bedroom, 2 bath ,
OH
45640
Pari or Full lime. per vislt or Oea~;Hine : 8120103
w1th attached 2-car garage.
Equat
hourly.401k, cafeteria plan , Opportunity Employer
and above ground swim m1leage, uniform
ming pool Pnce reduced,
Bt.511\'l'Ni
allowances, CEU reim·
below appraisal value.
INO~CEt
bursement, Sam's club,
TRAININ&lt;o
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH · (304)682·3973 al1er 5pm
Health &amp; L1fe ms PTO
lNG CO. recommends lhal
Ranch style 2000sq n
wh1ch accumulates from
Getllpolle Career College you do bus1ness w1th people
3BA . 2 baths. Large Aec
t~rst wor1&lt; da~ Top pay 1n Tr1·
(Careers Close To Home)
you kliow. and NOT to send
Room, 2 porchas. &amp;
Stare Stgn on bonus B00Call Today! 740-446-4367 , money through the ma11until
anachecl carport On 1 acre
759-5383
1·600·214·0452
you have Investigated the
corner lot. Call 740·446EOE
.....ww.galllpoi16Career~::oll9ge com
offering

·'

)..on; &amp;
ActUAGE

House-4-Sate-·4 bedroom.
1 1/2 bath-gas·heat and a1 r
conditiOning 132 Bullernut
Avenue. Pomeroy (740)992·

ART , CAT , L PN . AN
OR ELIGIBLE REQUIRED
FT , M·F 6·30·5
NO
WEEKENDS PAID HOLt ·
DAYS EXCELLENT COM·
PENSATION
PACKAGE
INCLUDES.
MEDICAL,
DENTAL. VISION , AND
401 K. E.O.E MAIL OR FAX
RESUME TO BOWMANS
HOME MEDICAL. 70 PINE
STREET, GALLIPOLIS OH

, I•

r

109 Mabel1ne Dr · Ranch for
sale. 1394 sq lt With lm!Shed lull basement. 5
rooms. 3 bedrooms. heatIng/cooling gas. single-car
garage vmyl Siding extenor
with deck (pa\F o) attached
Gallipolis
C1ty
School
D1strict Pnced to sale by
owner Ce ll 740-446·055 1
for appointment

AND SELF MOTIVATED,

Reg •90·05·1274B.

HOMES
tllR SAL£

Btb'INFNi
0PI'OKilJNfi'Y

Drowning ln dept?
Starti ng a small bussmess'
Need a fresh stan?
We can help on an types ol
loans no up-front fees. last
and easy approvals. ca ll toll·
tree 1·866·803-9785

lwrlghtOic.nat

Ra1n can- home. after school Mon·Fn,
respons1b lefreliable. must ·
have references, 740-245·
Yard Sa le, Wed.·Thur·Fn, 0552, leave message
August13· 14·15, 3~3 Upper
Route 7. at S1\ver Bridge DRIVERS WANTED
Plaza hght turn towards little Caesars is now hmng
river. go stra1ght to last prop· Oehvery Dnvers Must be
arty on left Last day most over 1B and have a good
1tems Wi ll be hall puce dnv•ng record Can make up
swtcase, to $10 00 an hOut 'w111p s.&amp;
1tems oftared
shoes, chtna·se t. pots/pans. commiSSIOn
or
More!
d1shes. stemware glasses. Please apply at 861 2nd
reedmg matenal. lamps Ave Gall•polls Don·t wBII'
kitchen ute nsil s. flatware. Apply now•
plastic goods. sheets. cloth·
ing . lock·down-clothmg rack, Experienced lead carpentwo sta nds, lids, home- lers·r. us! be lam•har w1l h all
deem,
country
accent phases ol res1den t1a1 remod·
p1eces. towels/washclothes, ellng, valid dnvers license
well storage tank, VCR. t1sh· tools . tran sportatiOn. and
ing tackle, X-Mass •tems, references local work pay
on
expene nce
baKes mise . Pyre11 dishes, based
Applications
ava•lable
al
clock, plastiC ware and loads
Construction.
of odds and ends Terms· Chnstlans
Eastern
Ave ,
cas h, no checks. all sales t 403
!mal Everyone welcome. Gatl1potis 446-45 14

(304)675-6563

degreea 51 mlnutea
45 seconds Weal a
distance of 327.77
to a 5/8" Iron pin
oat; thence North 29
dag111t1t1 53 mlnutaa
10 aeconda Weal a
distance of 336.22
feel .to a 5/8" Iran pin
oat; thence North 60
daglMII 06 mlnutea
50 aeconda Eaat
paaalng through a
5/8" from pin oat In
the canterllna of a
ditch at a dletance of
324.90 feel and going
a total dlatance of
\l40.60 teet to a point
In the centerline of
Townahlp Road 1140;
thence with aald centerline the following
threa couraea; 1.
South 24 dagreea 09
mlnutea 28 aecndl
Eaat a dlatanca of
8.76 to a point; 2.
South 22 dagreea 46
minute• 15 aacond1
East a dlalance of
148.42 to a point;
3. South 24 dagreea
53 mnutea' 31 ••c·
onda Ealll a dlatence
of 329.00 feet to the
prlnclal
point
ol
beginning, containing
3.000 acree, more or
leaa, aubject to all
legal easements and
rlghll of w..,.
•
Said
Pramlaea
Located at 31451
Rosa Road, Ponland,
Ohio 45770
•
Said
Pramlaaa
AppraiMCI at $50,000
and cannot be 1old
lor •••• than twothlrda ol1hat amount.
Tarma of Sale: Tan
Percent (1 0%) down
at the time the bid Ia
accepted. Balance to
be paid within thirty
(30) daya. Any IUm
not paid whhln uld
thirty (30) daya ahall
bear lntarut at the
rata of tan parcent
(10.00%) par annum
from the date of ule.
Mark A. Polarill
Robert L.
Attorney
(81 a, 15,22

Display Ads

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

Eastern Avenue
eels

freeze. St1ll

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@ mydai lyregister.com

HEI.PWAI'mll

Yard Sale Frt·S81·Sun . 1280 Child Care needed In our

Yard Sale- Watson -Grove
Rd. Cheshire. Fri-Sat. back
Small 4yr old neutered to schOol items. and much
female dog Not Good w1th more
Chlldren Part Ch ihuahua

Are you 65 or older?

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Indude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

works good. (304)456·1757

r

~egister

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:
classified@
mydailysentinel .com
classified@ mydallytr·ibu1ne.co1m

Offtee !lowe-~

e, Oetrolt ·3

Toronto 5, Seattle 2
. .
Anaheim s. Chicago White So• t
Frld.Y'• damoo
N.Y. Yankees (Ciameno 11·71 ot
Baltimore (Johnson 10·51, 7:05 p.m.

l•ubll c Nnl:lces In Ne_.spnpcr ....
Yc.ur K l a h t l:.c:Jo Knu_.. l&gt;c llve•·ed RIMh t: t u VniUr I Jt••ur.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 95

www.mydailysentinel.com

7995

Glacier Bay &amp; Moen. hght
l1xtu res . ca b1net pulls &amp;
knobs direct lrom Home
Depot (easy to match just a
lew good reasons why your
next new home should be
!rom Cole's Mobile Homes.
15266 US 0 East, Athens ,
Ohio.
1·740·592-1972
"Whe re you gel your
money's worth'

4926

HOUSE FOR RENT· 2 BAS
Great m-town 1ocat1on•
$475 00 per month Depos1l
&amp; relerences requ1red Call
W•seman Real Estate·740·
446-3644
Modern 3BA. 2 bath large
11vmg room plus fam•ty room
wash room . dish washe r,
niCO yard. CIA, no pets, oj
1llegal drugs. very, ve1y mce;
m Galhpohs 740·446· 1409

Cole's Mobile Homes
US 50 Easl . Athens OhiO,
New Home 3BR 1Bath ,
45701 740-592· 1972
$500
month.
dep frel
Land Home Packages ava1l· requ1red 740·245·5 114
able In your area. (7 40)446·
Three Bedroom. 2 baths. l1v ·
3384
ing room w1th l1reptace F1v~
Must sell nice 2 bedroom m1les hom town on Route 2.
14)(70 Vinyl Siding and 2x6 Rent $650 plus deposit CaM
walls Call Karena 740-385· ERA Town &amp; Country Rea)
9948
Estate . Broker {304)675·
New 14 wide only $899 5548 fo r applteat1on
down and only $167 98 per
month Call Nikki 740·385 ·
767 1

4211 MOBDJ: HoMt::S

New 2003 Doubtew1de 3 BA
a 2 Bath Only $1 695 down
and &amp;.295Jmo 1·800·691 ·
6777

14x65 2BA ., near Vintort,
$300/rent . $300/deposlt, nQ
pets , call between Spm.•
9pm only 740·388·8260 ~

r

FOR

Llms&amp;

RENT

16x80 Mob1le Homa . Lg LA ,
2 BR. 2 Balh. CIA Garden
Tub B1dwe11. $400
614•
1 Acre Level lot . Sand H•ll, 595-7773
Sunsel Lane Ca ll 3fl4 ·675·
Traile r tor rent .740-256·

2620

ACRtAGE

6206

�P.age 86 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Friday, August 15, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, August IS, 2003

viww.JIIydallysentinel.com

The Dally Seallnel • P!p B7

OOP
BRIDGE

~ -1 ~94

Clayton Mobile Home For Lea&amp;e : One bedroom.
i-4&gt;70, 2 8R, 2 BA, new unfurnished, newly redeco' n8a1·pump,
2-decks rated, second floor Apt. ; at
corner ol Second and Pine.
;$15,000 74Q-245·9469
AIC; $300.00 per month·

2 Bedroom Mobile home 1n
water included. Security and
Middleport. $350 + Depos11. key deposit. Ott street park-

No

Pv~ .

(740)992·3194

~~
iYIUlLI'1IU'IUiiV.

8 Snoolt

I

ing. Reference• Requirwd.
Mobile Home, all elec· No pets. 74()..446-4425 or
4ft. Sliding door cooler, cred·
:ilt, Sprm g Vallev Area 446-3936
it card machine &amp; m8ny
'tl251mth .. $250/dep 74QGracious living. 1 and 2 bed- other items. priced upon
~1-fl954 or 304-675-2900
room apartments at Village inspection. 304--593· 1586 or
2 BA, perfect , air, porch, Manor
and
Riverside 304-675-4335
!~ry ntce. 740-446-2003 or Apartments in Middleport. - --LL-S-TE_E_L_B_L_DQ_S_.4
740-446-1409
From $278-$348. Ca11 740·
Up to 60% olf! 30x40,
Taking applications fo r 992·5064. Equal Housing 50x80, 7011150 Call Now!
mobile home located on Opportunities
1st come 1st seNe' Can
Ohio River. St. At. 338 Apple Modem 1 br. apt. (740)446- Deliver 1 Roy (800) 499·
Grove , Ohio, 3 bedroom.
2760
0390
$300 plus deposit &amp; references, (740)698·6002
Nice lBA. Apt .. Crown City
Clarinet:new.
$200 .00·
~Two Mob1le Homes, both (Village). S300. &amp; security Treadmill:like new.S150.QO-.
2BA. water/trash/sewage deposit, 740 "256" 1249
Oine"e set: seats 4 with leaf,
paid , n o pets.
5400 No-w Taking Applications- Sl50.00-dresser and night
re ntJ $ 40 0d e pos it. 35
West
2 BedroOm stand . new $150 .00. (740)
S285renVS285dep.
740· Townhouse
Apartments. 742· 2 t76 . Garden 11uer:like
368-9325
Includes Water Sewage. new $350.00 17 4 0)7 4 2-2489

r

APAR'ThDNIS
tUR RENT

.

I

Trash. S3501Mo.. 740-446· Cool . Downlt

'

:a

__

:~s. month. (304)675-3654

:lfiR.Apt. will be ready Aug .
t!sth, 740·367·7398 or740·

I·i&lt;m·7398.

.

:2 or 3 Bedroom Marshall
,Apart. Cenuat air. wall to
:wall carpet. ciOSfil to MU. ott
.street parking . (304)743-

•a715
3

BR ,
Schools.

bath , Green
wi1b 17 acres &amp;

barn $625. without $525

740·245·9020
Apa r tment Available Now.
RiverBend Pla ce. New
Haven. WV now accepting
applications for HUD-subsi·
dized , 1 bedroom apartment . Utilities included Call
(304)882-3121 Apartment
available tor qualified sen·
lOr/disabled person . EHO
Apartment lor rent in
Syracuse. $200 deposit.
$315 per month . must have
su fficient income t o qualify,

(740)378·6111
BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
!:STATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 to $383
W~lk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446 -2568 .
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Clean First Floor 2BR locat·
ed on Chillicothe Rd. $400.

·t

monthl y, $400d~os1 l

''and

secun Y
relerences

req uired. Utilities not included . No pets 740-441-1108
For Lease: Beautllul. 1600
Sq.Ft. restored . second
floor apar1ment in Historic
District, Ideal for profession·
al couple. all modern
amenities. 2 bedrooms:
spacious filling/dining: lots
otstorage. 1tl2 baths: rear
~eel&lt;:

HVAC. $600/month

~ I u s utilities. Security and
key deposit. No pets.
References required. 740·
446-4425 or 446·3936

Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applicationS lor waiting
list lor Hud-subsized. t · br,
apartment. call 675-6679

EHO
Help Wanted

740·367·0502 .

r

NEW AND USED STEEL

MilWAY TAVERN
Tuesday: EUCHRE
Tournament
Wed &amp; Fri: KARAOKE
Sat: Band- "BLUE JEANS"

I

One set ol two row CORN
CULTIVATORS, 323 One
row CORN PICKER, 146
John Deere Front END

~

1yr old 18.4 Cubic foot
Frigidaire Refrigerator $200 .
Or
rea sonable
oller.
(304)675-65 63
-------2 new oak top·ca.binets
$80., .Bassett sofa. like new,
navy/wine stripe. coa l/wood
cook-stove. $300. 740·44 1.

0596

1996 GMC Extended Cab

BUILDERS IDC.

1500, piCk-up, 67,000 miles, ,....,.-.....,....,... ....,

r

1998 Chevrolet S-1 0 Ex c.
cond .. 95.000 miles. new
9 year·oiO, Cinnamon, half· tires, fiberglass bed cover,
linger, great trail/starter $4,800 1-740-446·7668
horse. calm/gentle, all· - - - Fo_r_
d _f-.-- --. - X
_l_T

88

150 4 4

- - -- - - - - Full length running board for
GOATS FOR SI&lt;LE
F-150 Ford trl.ICk extent cab,
2 100% Boer Bucks, 5 electric red
io color,
months in age. Full registra- (740)985·3640
tion. papers. parents on
farm . 740-245 -0485 after
5pm.

high cube bo)(, e~~:cellenl
cond. 740-446-9416
1996 Windstar, loaded ,
11 OK. $3500.
1996 Aerostar, loaded, 107K
$4000.
1996Caviler 106K. $2500.

• The Ideal•candidate must enjoy working with the
fo1clerly, p&lt;&gt;•••••• goOd written and oral communication
and be self-motivated.

Poaltlon requires an A11oclate1 or Bachelor's
Degree in Program &amp;/or Clinical Dletetlca. O.T. Ia
reaponslble for the nutritional care of our realdenta
In conjunction with the Dietary and Nurelng Staff, aa
w.ll 11 management ot the Dietary Dept. In the
abHnce of the Dietary Manager Alllltl wllh the
development ot pollclea and procedurea, strategic
care planning and problem- solving, and monitors
nutrition ac:ttiwil surrounding realdenta to enaure
that nutritional needs are met. Monitors progra11 on
aurvey compliance when deficiencies are noted.
H you are Interested, please contact us at
(740) 446-5001 , or stop In at: 390 Colonial Dr.
Ohio 45614

'

RNNURSES
TELEMETRY, MEDICAL/SURGICAL
AND PEDIATRICS
Valley Hospital is currently acce pting
res umes for Full time· Registered Nurses in
Telemetry. Medical/Surgical and Pediatric s.
Applicant s mu st have a curfent West Virginia
license.
R exible schedulin g. excellen1 salary. holidays.
h ealth insurance single/famil y plan. dental
}llan. life insurance. vacation. long -term
disabi lity and retirement.
:Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospilal
clo Human Resou"'es ~
2520 Valley Drive, Poinl Pleasant. WV 25550
Pleasant

(304) 675-4340

AAffioE
www.pvalley.org

Rutland Post 467
Pay $60.00 or more
per game. Several
special games for
e xtra money.

MOJURCYUEi

BRING IN THIS AD
'O R ONLY S13 00 PER HUNDRED

'

1994 Suzuki RMX 250.
looks good, runs good,
$ 1200 _ 740 •379 •2757
- - - - - - - -1998 Kawasaki Vulcan

Classic 600. 3,700 miles,
excellent condi1ion, price

negotiable. (740)992 -6879
after 1 pm

I

1
1
I
I

cash

G t
E
•

T d
0

ay

tt

'!I'

Bring your
Last checking statement
•Last pay check stub
•Photo I.D. 'Phone Bill with name and address

116 Main St.

0~
740-:;;"~::YH
s~ 1 2741

I

I I "ill Hold / ·or 30

t

Camper great condition air
co nditioned, awning. (304·

773-5787

I

All pack you can
play for $20.00.
Starting time
6 :30p.m.
Starburs1 $1100.00

11-;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
r1o
H

.~

OME

11t1PROVF:MENTS ·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NG
Unco nditional liletime guarantee. Local refere nces fur·
nished. Established 1975.

2 or 3 $300
Luck Ball Games

98 Forcf Conture $2500.
00

Ford

Focus 5·speed

$2800.
92 Cavalier S1200.
96 Ford C01Uure $1600
87 Pontiac Grand Am $300.

EVERYONE
WELCOME . 8 &amp; o Auto Sa1esl:fiNY 160

~------------------------~ ~----'------~'N7~4~~5

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open ~ : 30
Early birds slurl

FROI&gt;IT \3Ut&lt;\\'C..R I

P~INGLOT!

*

949-14Q5

0870 , Rogers
Waterproofing .

Basement

8oA~S~UJOR51

/

rn;

1-&lt;0T. IT ·s
B01L1NG. HOT
HEAT STRESSES
HE OuT.

. SUT I

r---------T-K-V-...-~~ ~~~----~~~~

C~N ~LWAYS

GET Rtt&gt; OF' MY
STRESS l!&gt;Y H \TTING

THUN~
THVNIC.

M'I'SELF GEI'lTL'( ON
THE HEAD WITH AN
EMf'!"'( PLA5r1C BOITL£'

I
I

THVN \(.

..

THUNI&lt;.

'' INTRODUCTION TO CA~EER
DEVELOPMENT PLANNING AND
PERSONAL OR OCCUPATIONAL
ASSESSMENT TO DETERMINE
JOB ALTERNATIVES''

r

! DON T THINK 50 ..

NEVE~

S16N UP FOR A

ward today and help you to perform an
old, troubling task, which you have long
neglec ted. 11'.11 be great to get it out or the
wny .
SCO RPIO (O ct . 24-Nov . 22) - Don't
allow yourself to dwel l in doom and
gloom should you find them creeping into
your psyche today. A good friend could
be just what the doctor ordered to put you
in a fun· loving mood.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- PBy
heed to your inner voice IMay. especially

CARPENTER
SERVICE

11you're trying to 1igure out how to handle
a temperemen1al friend . 11'11 gi'e you both
the compassion and 1he insigh11o know
what 1o do.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan . 19) -

BETIY

• Roofing &amp; Gutters

• Vinyl Skiing &amp; Pointing
• Patio and Porch Decks

Depend skills
on your
and manegerlal
to organizational
get out ol a quandary
today . You can straighten out the mess
by maintaining control.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb . t9)- Rely on
you r first Impressions today re garding
someone with wh om you ha11e to discuss
a mB!Ier. Chances are that he or she wll1
be r:orrer:l.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) - It may not
come about th e way you en11ision it, but
your po slb ili s lor financial 01. material
acquisitlo • re within your reach today.
Go with the !tow and let events dictate

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

1heoutcome

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675·2457

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

The·
Daily

sentinel
•

.a-2155

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

'

740-992-5232

THE944
STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp; Cars
County Rd . #35
Racine, Ohio

(740) 517-9138
or
(740) 949-o020

WHICH

I'VE BEEN AL-L. OYER
'!'HE WORL.D!

Jf)

NO REAL.

BIG PEAL. ...

t C.AN eef. THE EPGE
OF IT FROM HERf.

.....__...._:% ~

97 Beech St.
IDiddleport, OH
(10'x10'610'x20']

ARIES (Marr:h 21 -Apri119) - Don't be
~ too obvious about what your Intentions or
~ desires are when dealing with a commer·
clal situation today . Once another ligures
~ ' out what you-want . the price n"(R)' reach a

i

~~'

Ill

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

'

I

ONLEVS

IIIII

2

1 1

rl

PHVPA

I I' I I

I

....

:;:C'

«&gt;

E

1'-1

UR0 G

'--'"--'---1-..L..-1.~

-

&amp;

THE GRIZZWELLS

'PUR l'llf'i 'NILI..

FbP, ~1-\'EH l6Ei MAAA.\'~.0,
!tt+l '+l\\..1.. I l&lt;}:c..v

ROBERT

BISSELL
(740) 992-3194
COISTRUGnOI
992-6635
--New Homes

1HfSE

G)

Coml)!etl the r:huckle quoted
by filling In th• missing word1

you develop from lttp No. 3 below.

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE UrTERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM·LttS ANSWEitS
Cobweb· Count- Grill- Nutmeg- f was WRONG
My younger sister had her first argument with her new
husband . She soon discovered that the hardest words
in any langl(age to say is "I was WRONG ."

·:::::-----------::=======:7
new height.
TAURUS (April 20· May 20)- Added
responsibilities may be asked ol yo u
today by a group affiliation you ' re
inval11ed ln. Take on tha tasks il you con·
slder lh is as an opportunity - ll you
don't, avoid being a patsy.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- Challenges
r:an either be a nuisance or a stimulant to
you today. Much will depend on your attltude toward the contest: whether It's fun
and 8)(CI11ng or simply a bore.

CANCER (Ju ne

21·Ju1y 221 -

ConstructiOJe crltlclgm can sometimes be
a bit har&amp;h, buill can also bl nceptldnal·
ly helpful today If you go to the right per·
son. They'll tell It like it le and not say
things aImply to be hurtful.

SOUP 1'0 NUTZ

~Tfl-1-\iLY

lr'!'M RtAI..lY

\.\t~m ~

IJOH

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

J40-982-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

'

on the right. ___ _-.

SQUA~fS

RSM\1-\'il '{o\J

.'

A new guy at work always got
what he wanted from the boss. He
says tha t knowledge gives you
power, i1 you know the right dope

PRINt NUMBERED lEITERS IN

iii

Advertise
in this
space far $25
per month .

I

1
L======~

suppon o1 you.
li8RA !Sept. 2a·0ct. 23) - Because you ,
do~ervo1.1 a w1111 ng ass1s1ant w1 11 step 1or-

CLASS W~OSE TITLE 15
LONGER T~AN TilE COU~SE ..

878-2487 oi 441-2112

Self-Storage

I

to make a judgment call on this person
Vou'll benefit In lhe tong run by his or her

Henderson, WV

High~_Dry

I

the benelil of the doubt when called upon

MYERS PAVING
~~~ ·

....., . .rthdl,y:

go wrong today if you give an associate

PEANUTS

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

D T C X T 'E P Z L

enlighten you as well.
F A ·L y E
V1RGO (Aug . 23·Sept. 221- You won·1 ~-.;.,.3 ;.:,.:...;.....::...--l

1

• New Garages
• Electrical I Plumbing

M

PREVIOUS SOLUT10N - "I've never enJoyed working wllh
'nyone so much in my whole life ." - Peler o·Toole, on
&lt;atharlne Hepburn

Valuable contacts can be established lrf
the yeat ahead lhrowh your lnvol.-e·
ments with frlend!l anti MSociates. You'll
do especially well with Individuals who
share your Interests.
LEO (July 2~-Aug . 22) - A Iunny thing
could happen on the way to helping a
friend sort out hls or her troubles today.
in your ellorts to solve yo ur pal's prob·
lams , you may discover It also ser11es to

THVNI&lt;.

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

• Room Addlllona &amp;
Remodeling

J

.

F•ldey, Aug. 15, 2003

YOUNG'S

Advertise
in this
'
space for $1 00
per month.

AstroGraph

BIG NATE

'

Lasl Thursday of
every month
All p~ck $5.00
Bring lhis coupon
Buy $5.1Hl
Bonanza G&lt;l
SFREE

*fill hllmllll*

C XL

G LTC X
With the loser count down tO three,
it is finally lime to play on trumps.
XLKUWEZ

\.&amp;,.........._..-'

6:30&gt;

. .

in hand, crosses to dummy·~ club
his heart loser on

and discnrds
the diamond king .

Rj:e,

Let me do 1t for y:&gt;J

Today•s clue: V equals W

Declarer is raced with a potential II v L I H L
NJOC
T
C EWNI
loser m each su'it. If a trump is played
immediately, West will win with the E L R T E D T u N L
TECPOC
nee and return n heart. condemmng
South to defeat. But if a diamond·is led
T
MPEOC-ETCL
NTGJ
before trumps are touched, the eon· T Z G
tract is sare. East wins with the ace
and plays back a heart, but declarer OPGZL1
KJPCPLE,
J z

(740) 843-5264

Dct)'S

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher Cl)1&gt;tograms are created from quotations by tamous
people, pest and present. Each leMer In the cipher stands lor another.

the play?

,..L(Fr"' Nl\'.&gt;1'1' OCNT IN. M.'( ~

•· · ~

24 Hrs. (740) 446·

2221

95 Ford Probe $1750.

f\.Uil\1\\C:R IN Tf\E.

Box 189 Middle.P(Irl

OOFJIIG
*R
' *HOI£ . .
AifiJEIIAJICI
111111
'
SEAMlESS
GmER
'I

dition . $8,900. 304·B82·

99 Ford Mustang $6500.
98 Toyore Ca.mry $4900 .
98 Pontiac Firebird ~ .
95 Olds Cut1ass 2dr. $2600.

BR~NIE:'N

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

I
I

. WRITfSfl

1997 Rockwood Pop·up

Call

I

1
1

M;:!~ I ~HOWARD l.

1999 TQ'Jola Camry 58 .000
miles. White, excellent con·

Good . $1,000. (304)675·
6480

50M£ 1()101 Bt\(.\&lt;'£.() It-ITO II\'{~

Don 'I leave the debt of
.:: ~, ·: ·1
burial
and nna~ .. penses
0
·,.-. _ _,....:.~."';_.
~ r
for }'our fum1ly and
___;,1.._.
I ed
', .~' -.J/
ov ones.
. •'
i!'· Let me show you how
. affordable and easy It Is to
get the co,·erage you need.

~~~INSTA-CA$H~II

740·446·1 244

87 Lincoln , Looks &amp; runs

...

THE BORN LOSER
. .

win~

$5.000, (740)992·3961

200 1
Sil11er
Mustang ,
30,000 miles. 740· 446-654 1
after 5pm

ln-4-+--

denying 10 support points.
Against four spades, West leads the
heart queen . How should South plan

"W.V's #I Chevy, Pontiac: Buick. Olds

Athens

For Sale
7~~:20 Delta 1996 Pontiac Grand Prix SE
Livestock trailer 740-256- 4
door-auto-power-A/C.
1352
121 ,000 miles $2950 . day740-446-1615, after 7pm

BINGO

values .
·
Others play that the two·n.o·trump
response sh9ws a limit raise, 10·12 sup·
port points. And a three·no·trump re·

1-800-822-0417

IMPORTS

1995 Grand Am , 76 ,000
miles.
2 dr.. hunter green,
Farm tractor Agri -power
9000, e~~:cellent condition. excellent condition, asking

AMERICAN
LEGION

ht-t-+,.-t-+-+--

bid inYented by Alan Truscott, the
bridl{c columnist for The New York
Time~ . Partner assumes·that you have
game-invitational values and bids ac·

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

w/equip. 740·256·1535

Announcements

J...-1--4--

cordingly. If he signs off in three of his lrr-1-+-

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

A~
1994 Dodge Adveng8r, 2.5
1953 Ford tractor, good con· V6 ,
good ·
condi·
dition, plows, brush hog, tion .$3,800.00 call740·245· 4· Alum . Outlaw rims,
blade, $3,500 OBO; one 0343 or (cell) 645-1598
15"x8". With 255x70 tires.
Yorkshire brood sow &amp; nine
exc. shape. $400. 740..379pigs, tour weeks old, $450 1994
Ultima. 9887
Nlssan
080, (.740)843·1053
autp,80,000 miles, S3500.
1999 Ford Contur, auto,
9 N Ford Tractor. rear tires 45,000 miles. $4900. 740like new, tor sale or trade tor
245·0372
12Hp walk behind gravely

$4.700. (740)742·0026

w~~~em

suit, you go an to game with sufficient

New&amp;: Used

Auro PAJ«S &amp;

pnce. 1304)675·3308

cl6~1hoW

Some pl•y that with tO·plus support 1
points, you respond two no-trump. a r.:

MIGHT'S WELL
TAKE

Dean Hill

97 Ford Ranger 4x4 $4600.
96 Ford Explorer 4x4 $4200.
B &amp; D Auto Sates HWY 160
N. 740-446·6865
~!111"'".;.....;.~.;...--~

r

31 Puthet

44J...-..

:"r.rtu.

Whichc\·er approach you and your

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance· Painting, vinyl
siding, carpentry, doors,
FARIII
windows, baths, mobile
[QuiPMENr
i 7ft. Slinger Bass Boat. H5 home repair and more. For
1994 Cullass Cierra , one hp. ready 1o go. $3,500. obo. free estimate call Chet, 740·
18 foot wide . brand new owner, good cond. 740-446- 304 674.Q698
992·6323 .
garage door &amp; opener 112 7432
t993 New Yorker, good work
car, 13,200 miles, $2,750
080 740-441 ·0643

ot bed

partner adopt. note that a JUmp· rai se
to 1hroc over a take out double is pre·
emptive, promising four trump s but

4~~:4,

"---iiiiioiiiiliiliilo-

Opport~Jnlty

==~~~:!.~~-------=!t~~~::.J

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

18 Ctlmb out

support partner on the second round.
But what do you do w.ith rour or more
cards in partner's major?
There nre two school~ of thought.

5·speed, $2600.

r

Employ.r
SEN IOR CARE CENTER
D1ETET1C TECHN1C1AN FOR
LONG· TERM HEALTHCARE FACILITY

Mt DOwN.

Free Estimates

$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.

95 Nissan Pathfinder

6 3 2
9 8 2
t A 10 53
... 10 8

sponse indicates !(arne-forcing values . . L.....J.-..1..-

200 1 Honda Shadow Spirit ,
couch and chair. black/tan. Call (304)882· 1989 Pontiac Sunbird . auto. VT1100C, $6.200 1·7401
dark blue. good cond . $100 . 3486 ask for Tommy.
well maintained, good work 446-7668
car
$750.
080,
740·367·
.
,
.
.
--740·245-5082
Jack Russell Terrier pups5041
2001
Kawasaki
ATV.
for
each .. atso
Jack
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark $ t 50
sale, call740-44-6·1683
Russeu
Beagle.
m i ~~:ed . $25.
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio.
1990 Buick Regal , good -----~--­
(740)446· 7444 1·877 ·830· 1st shots &amp; wormed. (740) cond. , 740-245-5165
2002 500 Buell Blast motor-cycle. low miles, 740·4469162 Free Estimates. Easy 698·7055
financing, oo days same as
FRum &amp;
1990 T·bird. ps, pb, pw, new 4923
front tires , new battery &amp; - - - - - - - - cash. VisaJ Master Ca rd .
VEGt..IABLI'S
clean , runs good, 2003 Suzuki Volusia 800
Dri11e· a· little save alot.
"--~~~--. . alternator,
$1800 oeo. (740)992·0587 motorcycle. 600 miles. snver
Thompsons Appliance &amp; Canning tomatoes &amp; pep &amp; white. $6000. (740)992·
Repair-675-7388. For sale, pers. across from Racine 1992 Camara RS, 350, auto, 2849
re-co nditioned automatic Lock &amp; Dam. Plants Rd .. A/C, T-tops , power wid, - - - - - - -- 76,000
miles.
asking 6x6 Rough Rider 69 mode!,
washers &amp; dryers. relr.igera·
' 1
needs a carburetor $300.
$4,[11)_ 740-446-1463
tors. gas and electric
6x6 ATV 71 model , new
ranges. air conditioners. and
1993 Grandam 2d $1,995 .. tires , rims. Runs good ,
wringer wash ers. Will do
1995 Firebird t-tops like new. needs brake clutch. $900 .
repairs on major brands in
1990 Chevy truc~·bed . 8-ft. SS,795., 1996 Cutlass ciera (304)576-3291
shop or at you r home.
S365, good-shape. Aiding $2.795. Others in Stock, We
Lawn -Mower, $350 740- take Trades. 1991 Dodge For Sale 1989 Kawasaki 220
256· 1102. ask tor Junior
Spir;t
$395.
COOK Bayou. $1350. (304)576·
Help Wanted
I \1 ~ \1 ..,, 1'1'1 II "MOTORS 740-446-0103
1':204=6~-~~--~

P~oplt

Tree Service

dlllt

17 2001,
58 Louie XIV,
In Did Rome
e.g.

card support and IO·plus high·card
points, yuu slarl with redouble, then

GRAIN

~~c~ ~~";dg~!~~:k~~~ F«&lt;

,\I"I "' IO~t..

..
,.

54 Destroy

deeply

Yeslerduy, I mentioned that if partner open!' one of a major, the next
player makes B takeout double. and
you, as responder, have exaclly three-

~tJNNING

JONES'

18 Aogrel

By l'hl111p Alder

740·446·2624

Matching

AnEqu.l

Berrer

'"'''i

°

--~
9'!'=

Easl State Street Phone 17•10)59,1-6,671
Alhens, Ohio

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

1995 Ford E·350 Van, 14 H.

.-:- M·l&gt;.'

51 Down delly
52 Dlxlo 11.

Thunnen

15 n..n&gt;t

What does responder
do with four trumps?

Of COtJ~SE ~ l'tfP
MYStLf At,L yiOtJNI&gt;
VP .... tVEilYONt .• ELSt IS StJSY

•

OOlT.... -A

740.992-7599

rack, (740)992·1385

Horses For Sale- 20 yearold, Black W/white socJts,
Ouarter· Mare, great 4-H
starter,well·mannered, weiiJ
trained ,
ring-quiet,
ails ho t s ! wor me d i sh oed

.
•'

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

shots-wormed-shoe d , lartet, great coftctition , new
$1000., serious calls. see
by appointment. 740 -44 1- tires. power windOws. ladder

1o13

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• Replacement

LJvN.TOCK

Hondas.
che11ys.
etc!
2 pc. livingroom suite. light 2 Nine week old AKC Black cars/trucks from $500. For
floraL very good condition , Labs, shots, wormed. dew listings 1·800-719·3001 ext
5375; black Futon wlmat· claws remo11e. $200. 740· 3901
Ires, good condition, $60, 441 ·0 130
1987 Ford Taurus GL, runs
(740)742·8907
AK C reg1st ered Chocolate good, 7,600 original miles,
-4-.5-y-e-ar-o-ld-W-hipo-ol
rlLabs. 1-male , 1-lemale.
0
Washe•. $ 100
H 1 . t rea dy to go. 740-446-9357
pom
$1800 OBO. (740)992·3278
Washer $65.,
Wh irp oo l
dryer $65
all are wnite. - - - -- - - 740-446-9066
For Sale- 2 registered 1987 Pontiac Fiero GT.
Border Collies . Full grown . Excellent Cdndition. Engine
Good Used Appliance s. Different breeding and can Rebuilt. New tires. body &amp;
Reconditioned
and be bred tor puppies, price interior Excellent Condition.
Guaranteed .
Washers , re duced, phone 740-256· $1500. obo. (304)458·2551
Dr yers,
Ranges,
and 1330, anytime.
Refrigerators, Some start at ~:.:.:.::::.:::.:.::.:.__ __
1988 Chevy Corsica, needs
Fu ll blooded German Shep.
a head. $150. call 740--446S95 Skaggs Appliances, 76
puppies, $200. each to good 4142
Vine St .. (7 4 o144 6_ 7398
home , solid white or

Caring

New Homes • Viny I
Siding • New Garages

1999 Ford, raised roof ,
Conversion yan , · many
Playpen, like new. $50,
extras, TV, VCR , etc., nice
~(7t:i40:0);;:94:;9:,.·;21;,;8;;;8_ _ __ Good second cutting of s
7 4 0·446-6865 ,
1 o,5oo.
BunniNG
orcl'!ard grass &amp; Timothy B&amp;O Auto Sales .
L---S~L~JI't'UI'S~=-• hay, square bales, 740..698· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
7244, 740-698-6809
1999
Jeep
Grande
Cherokee Laredo, auto,
Block , brick, sewer pipes,
11n
~~ ~ 1 u Itt \
leather-interior,
powerwindows, lintels, etc. Claude
seats,
windows
and
locks,
Winters, Rio Grande. OH
Al!IOS
CDJcassette, 49,000 miles,
Call 740.245-5121
IURSALE
~r;;..:.:::,:;:i:~~---~
exeellent cond., must sell,
PETs
$15,500 740-441-0955

~UR SAU:

a 1w.ater

59 Actreoo
- Beo\nger
20 Aoootrome 60 One-edgod
• J 9 ••
22 Reoteurant
oword
... Q J "
omptoyeo 81 MD
South
24 PriiNIIt
a11lotanlo
AKJ8 54
25 Vary long 82 Swleo peak
¥ A K 5
limo
63 Chopo
• 7
28 Droopy
,._ K 6 ~ 3
28 1V hookupo
DOWN
32 Mortlclo'o
Dealer: South
coualn·
1 Monastic
Vulnerable: Neither
IIIIo
33 Plumbing
w~st
North Eut
2 lnouranco
problem
Ob1. 2 NT
PI\SS
34 Kind ot gin
Pass
Pa ss
Pass
3 ~~bag
35 C..HIIII
tldbll
37 AAA oug•
Opening lead: ¥ Q
4 Spin
geotlono
'-----------~ 39 Comlc11rip 5 Be bold
enough
cavemen
8 Water,
40
~:
to Pierre
7 Shoddy
41
•
•

Q ,, 10 7

1989 Chevy Cheyenne C· '----~::.:.:::::..1::.1

LOADER. 74Q-992-7603

K Q 6

A

992-5479

BISSEll

6 4 3

t

... A 9 2

Cellular

mRSAIE

~1 .:t~2 nice. $3500. 740•

•

"''"'""'

East

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-9,49-2217

TRUCKS

..,r.1o-•F.Qu:PMoo•F•ARM--._,ll's

r

"--------,.1. r
HOlN-lfOLD

~.

Jeff Warner Ins.

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Small commercial storefront Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
for rent, Main St .. Pomeroy, Scrap Met~s Open Monday, $1400. 740·441·1013
ri11er. available now. Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Rou nd bales hay tor sales.
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed (740)742·0107
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300
HAY&amp;

SPACE
FORREN'I'

AQt0 97

Hil l's Sel f
Storage

. 000
__ 8_· - - -- c - - Cooling Systems. New and Used tift truck forks, $50.$75 83,000 miles. 2 wheel drive.
Lois of Extras $8,300.
Pleasant Valley Apartment Used. Installed. (740)446· per set 740.379-2757
(304)675·7946 Be1ore 9pm
1 and 2 bedroom apart· Are now taking Apphcal!Ons ~6:._30:.:8_______

for 2BR, 3BA &amp; 4BA .
JET
nished, security deposit Applications are taken
AERATION MOTORS
1'13quired , no pets. 740·992· Monday thru Friday. from Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt tn
;2218.
9·00 A.M.--4 P.M. Oflice is Stock. Call Ron Evans . 1·
Located at 11 51 Evergreen 800-537·9528 . .
r1 BR , stove and refrigerator Drive Point Pleasant, WV
~included. 740•245-5859
Phone No is (304)675·5806
Maytag portable-dishwash·
: t SR . apt. for rent. utilities EHO
er. Excellent Condition.
:included , no pets. $400.
Townhouse Used 11ef)l little. $200. Blue
jii4Q-446-2404 ,
ask
for Tara
Apartments.
Very
Spacious. lilt
chair
E~~:cellent
~~~phanie
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1 Condition . $250. (304)458; 1 BR., CIA, QUiet Location. 112 Bath, Newly Carpeted . 1757
:near Holzer. WID Hookup. Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
;$359.00 plus utillt1es. lease Patio. s ·tart $385/Mo. No Murray riding lawn mower
deposit required. no pets. Pets. Lease Plus Security 17hp, 46in cu t. Hydro~lat
drive IS OU1. $250 (740)446·
'740-446·2957
Deposit Req u 1re~ . Days
,, _:._:..::.:.:.._
~
6962
•1br All utiliti es included . 740·446-3481: Evenings:

47 Mokoa

~~~!'!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~
13 PINitd
llgh 50 lnvltetlon
;:
14
Mo.
toners

Central ~-..,---,--..,-:-:c::

ments, furnished a nd unfur-

45 Gutl 11

hub

a BA

~
____

42 Behind,
1 Arab veaool
on a ohlp
5 Winter mo. 43 Fizzy drink
11 Ntbl'..ko

o;;wn;;:e::;•·. ..,_ _ _ ___,

11

-

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

Buy or .sell . Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on S.R 124 E. Pomeroy, 74{}992·2526. Russ Moore,

r

NEA Crouword Puzzle

'

•

,. . ' ..'
Classltlet~s

~'~

, tier ,

�--- -

.......

...

_..- - - --··--~-- ~·

The Daily Sentinel

.

- .. .

~.

Friday, August 15, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

..,. If you have a queatlon or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia , NC 28053
WINSTON CUP S

RtES

•

own teammate, Kevin HarMarketpla~e 400
Whent: Michigan Internation- vick, en route to a victory at
al Speedway, Brooklyn (2
lnfineon Raceway. But on a
miles). 200 laps/ 400 miles
frenetic afternoon at watkins
Wilen: Green flag drops at 2 Glen International, Robby had
p.m . Sunday
practically the only cool hand
LMt yetlf.. wlnMI': Dale Jar· in the bunch . The pole win·
ner. Jeff Gordon. came back
rett
Q1111lltyln&amp; nteotd: Dale Earn- from being burted on the first
lap , when he never made it
hardt Jr.. Chevrolet, 191.149
through the first turn. But
mph, Aug. 18. 2000
Race record: Dale Jarrett, Gordon took a devastating hit
Ford, 173.997 mph, June • on the final lap when his
Chevyranoutofgasandwas
13,1999
Moot nteent I'IICO: Robby Gor· hit from behind, not once but
twice while feverishly trying
don's career has not been
without Its colorful moments. to make it back to the checkered flag. Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
In his first career victory, he
traded blows on the track
who finished third, was fast
with Jeff Gordon. Then , earli·
but unlucky, and the timing of
a caution flag kept him out of
er this season, Gordon (Robvictory lane.
·
by, not Jeff) clashed with his

Whtlt: GFS

·

RYAN NEWMAN,

··
WINSTON

CHAf'TSMAN TRUCII

BUSCH SERIES

What: Cabela's 250
Where: Michigan lnternational Speedway, Brooklyn (2
miles) . 125 laps/ 250 miles
Wilen: Green flag drops at 2
p.m. Saturday
laat year'• winner: Michael
W81trip
Track quallfyln&amp; record: Jim·
my Spencer, Chevrolet,
184.824 mph, Aug. 17 ,
2001
Race record: Mark Martin ,
Ford. 169.571 mph, Aug .
19, 1995
Moat recent race: Brian
Vickers, a 19-year-old driver
for Hendrick Motorsports ,
won for the first time Aug. 2
at Indianapolis Raceway
Park. He's 99 points back in
. fifth place in the standings.

What: O'Reilly 200
Whent: Bristol (Tenn .) Motor
Speedway, (.533 miles), 200
laps/ 106.6 miles
Wilen: 8:30 p.m. Aug. 20
l8lt year.. winner: No races
here since 1999, when Jack
Sprague won
Treck quallfyln&amp; ,.cord: Ron
Hornaday, Chevrolet, 121.213
mph, June 19. 1998
Race record: Rick Carelli,
Chevrolet, 83.992 mph ,
June 23, 1996
Moat recent race: Carl Ed·
wards, in a Ford, won for the
second week in a row Saturday at Nashville Super·
speedway. Ted Musgrave finished second ; followed by
Rick Crawford, David Starr
and Brenda~ Gaughan.

IN THE SPOTLIGHT
CuP

MIGHIHAN OATA

$HIS SMelllt Radio «JJ

June -15

Mldlllttt.fOO
~- Aug. 17 ..

FEUD OF THE WEEt&lt;

~

v
SERIES

•

E
R

Jeff
Gordon

NASCAR This Week'l Monte

Dutton iJvea hll teke: "Why did Harvick hit Gordon twice? The answer Is
probably that he was concerned with
Jimmie Johnson , who, in fact, passed
Harvick to finish fourth.
"He felt he couldn 't afford to get
out of the gas.
"And perhaps , as Dale Earnhardt
Jr. said. Gordon shouldn't have been
blocking in a car that was sputtering.
But it's hard not to feel some sympathy for Gordon. who had also been
hit from behind on the first turn of
the race. The first lap and the last
lap ruined what would have been a
great day for the four-time Winston
Cup champion ."

John Clark/
NASCAR This Week

Razor-sharp Newman leading NASCAR's new generation
NASCAR This Week •

3.Q37

, .1. Juon l!flter
' 4. Ron Hornaday

I. Brtan Ylc!sers

8. · Bobby Hamlltpn Jr.
Scott Wimmer ·
Joi!OfN .Sauter
i. Shane Hmiei

'·•;r.
'i
'

• 10. stecv Comoton
".CRAmMAN TMICil
· );. Brendlln GluCban
L.Travis KYap!l
3. Ted Muyraye
4. ' Penni• S!!tzer
I· Joo Wood
8. Rick Crawfprd

·7
·35
- 58

-99
-302

-334
-362
- 388

-452
2,315
-7
- 21
-105
- 133
- 139

7. Bobby HamiltOO

-152

9.

-258

-244
Carl Edwllrdl

10. Terry Cools

hose who label Ryan Newman
as lacking personality are missing the point.
First of all, the 2002 Raybestos
Rookie of the Year is engaging, if not
as expansive in his remarks as some
other NASCAR drivers. He doesn't insist on saying a paragraph when a
sentence will do. He ought to be lauded for his economy of language instead of derided for it.
Secondly, Newman is a significant
addition to NASCAR because he is the
voice of a new generation. Well educated- the 25-year-old from South
Bend, Ind., has an engineering degree
from Purdue University- Newman
will inevitably set the tone for other
bright young drivers who will also excel in the future.
He is an honest student of where the
sport is now and where it is headed.

T

l

-297

Asked last week at Watkins Glen International, where nearly half the
qualifiers bettered the track record, if
speeds were getting too high, Newman
said: "I don't think that's the case. The
speeds (in qualifying) were directly
related to the weather. I don't think the
speed is that big a difference because
of the technology from year to year. I
think the weather being cloudy and
overcast and not terribly hot lent itself·
to conditions for high speed.
"This is a team sport, and the team
has done an awesome job," Newman
added, referring to his own team and
crew chief Matt Borland. "All the
things we've done over the winter rebuilding our Fords and turning them
into Dodges, the engine program, having to get performance and reliability
out of a brand-new product all at the
same time- the guys did an awesome
job with that. ... We've had better reliability than we had last year.
"It's a teamwork thing. We've been

Kevin
Harvlck

After Jeff Gordon ran out of gas
on the final lap of Sunday's race at
Watkins Glen International. he and
Kevin Harvick tangled coming out of
the final turn. Gordon never made it
across the finish line ; Harvlck fin·
ished fifth.
The crash was devastating to Gor·
don, who lost 29 positions and fell
396 points behind season points
leader Matt Kenseth .
"I was trying to coast back to the
line, and (Harvick) thinks I'm racing
for position and just wrecked me :
Gordon said . "It stinks that 1 ran out
of fuel and the car stops . But all he
had to do is drive right by me . It 's
pretty simple."
"If you 're out of gas you shouldn't
be in the racing groove ," Harvlck
· countered.

Ryan Newman,
left, and crew
chief Matt
Borland have
a chemlstr.y
together at
Penske Racing
South that has
translated Into
five poles and
four victories
-both of
which lead the
Winston Cup
Series this
season.

By Monte Dutton

s
u
s

growing together and experiencing
different things together. It's turning
out we're not making the same mistake twice, and it's paying off."
Something's working. Newman
leads the Winston Cup Series in poles
(five) and victories (four). And
there's room for improvement.
"At this time last year, we had 10
more points than we do now (entering
Watkins Glen, where he finished
ninth)," Newman noted. "It's just that
(points leader) Matt Kenseth's had a
.runaway year. We've had our problems, no doubt, but we've overcome
those. We've had bigger problems in
the form of crashes, but we've had
bigger victories as far as the quantity
of wins. We're just going to go out and
do the best job we can and let the
points li~ where they lie. We can't
make points. We can just do our best
to get what we can."

· VOURTURN ·
· lffiERS FROM OUR READERS

122 commercials
'
n response
to the letter from Peg.
gy Wolfe of Heber Springs, Ark., on
Aug. 7 about commercials during
the races by NBC, I totally agree with
her that NBC does have too many. 1
understand that they help the net·
work pay the bills. but in the recent
Chicagoland Speedway race on July
13 , a 400-mlle race. I counted com·
mercials for that particular race and
counted 122 commercials they aired
during the race.
Ridiculous!

I

Robert Hendrix

Cheanee, S.C.
We sympathize with you and
agree. NASCAR recently sent out a release proclaiming that the commercial tim e is about the same now as
three years ago. We can 't help but
think there's some funny math there.
Perhaps they don't count the NASCAR
' house ads ' and promos for other
shows as part of their commercial totals. We don 't really know, but we sus·
pect something Is amiss. It's obvious
that less time is being devoted to the

Contact Monte Dutton
at hmd4858@peoplepc.com

actual coverage.

Valley

&amp; Sup·ply·
Co.
555 Park St • Mlddlepo_rt

992-6611

•aa••••,......

~JtJ••••a.

252 Upper River Rd.
106 North Second Ave. • Mlddfeport, OH

Gallipolis, OH

Main Street,

e

Rutland, Ohio

740-742-2289 or 1-800-837-8217
· Call for hours or to make an appointment

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