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•

Monday1 July 2t, 1002

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N&amp;A Cro••worcl Puaale

Kids College draws big n~mben, AJ

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Out of loop
I huve rol'u~ed hi
~c~ct n ~ell ·rhiiiiC. Lust
. SllllllllCI'I lhOUI!ht I
was we I tlut uf the
hl\lll wh~n I suw (WI\
homeless llll)ll·ln Now
York City u~htl!
them. But cul'llcr this
year, u lollger mn pust
111 • tuTkfng mt his
11hnnc. 1'hat ' ~~tiled It
•• cell phones nt\l out I
Now to the deul.
You ure slttilll! Eust,
lookhtl! ut yuur lmnd
and the dummy
(North·), Dlll'endlnl!

l&lt;'ltANK &amp; EARNEST
•
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'W~

OIJt'\'t "'I»NC.I!:'- It-~ ~~~~
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Camp with the Banaals, 11

Delths

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CELEBRITY.CIPHER
by Lull C1mpo1

br

OtllbHiy Olphtr DI'1PIOG~IIIII" o"'ltd tram quolallant tamoua
ptoplo, paal and P"lllfll, IIOh ltHtr In lhl Olphtr tltncfllo tnolhtr.

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Youth InJured

IIZHHJIHVKWJ

In wreck

HWA,WVXOTAW
'AIVtOUI IOI.UTION- 'When It oomtiiO eitlna. l~u 01n
IOmtllm11 help your11tt more by helping youreeH Itt ,
- Fllohard Armour
.

~W,VJIHW

'l'HVNI'o
T ~UN"'

loiOW A80U'T'
WHIN I WAS
A PUm,I\ND
1 VSIP TO
LICI( lfOV 0111
'!'~! !IDE OP

I
ICRAM·LITI ANIWIII
1=1/nty • Plss/1'· Unfit. JCIVIBI · SITUATION
Envy , If not eo destructive, would be a very comic

JULY 291

tin. It Ia u1ually baaed on a total ml•underetandlng ol
anothar pmon's SITUATION .

REEDSVILLE -, A
vohlclc·pcdestrlun uccldcnt
Monduy on Ohio Route
124 sent 11 Reedsville ynuth
to u Huntlnaton, W.Vu .,
hoRpltnL with lnjurle81 the
Clllll.la·MCIIIH PO$! or the'
State Hlahwoy Patrol
report.ed.
Hcuthcr N. Duuahcrty,
· 1~. 63~9~ Ohio Roue 124!
wus trunsported to Cubcl
Hunllnaton Hospltul from
the scene of the 2:5.5 p.m.
occident by MedFIIght, the
putrol reported.
1'rooJl'lrs suld DJWahcrty
wus wulklng custbound In
the westlmuml tune of 124
In Ollvei Thwnshlp when
she run hlttl the eastbound
tunc to uvold trofflc. She
wus then struck by on cust·
bound pickup truck driven
by Brlun M. Skeen. 32.
Purkersbura. W. Vu.
Dougherty wus trupped
under the truck, but wus
freed by Meigs EMS per·
~onnc l, the report suld.

Lotteries
PHIO

Pick J: 1·0·5
Pick •= 0·5·6·2
Buckeye J: 4-15·18·20·22
Pick J niPt: 9·0·4
pick • nljht: 8·0·6-5
•

'l'ucotluy, J~ly 311, 2tJU2
Jlor lhoJc Leu! whu huvc
tukc11 lhc time hJ Jlrcpurc
lhLHmclvc• J!fUI'CI'iy. In whlll·
ever llchl of cndcuwr lhcy
huvc cho!CII , lite ycur uhciutl
will lllrn uul Ill he 11 bunucr
unc. l'ur lho•c whu huvcu't,
it'~ 111itiOIIIUIC.
Lilt! Ouly 23·1\ull. 221•• 1\
111 cctln ~ wllh 1111 old friend ur
cunlncl you cttubll1hcd a
nuu1hcr ur Y.CIIf! 11110 cuuld
IJIICC 11~11111 bttOinC ~ll lllrl •
CUIII, '111t IWUOf YOU 1n111111

act llt¥ot¥cd In un lntero!tilltl
endcuvur. 1'rylna tCI ~utch up
II brukell f t11nUIICC7 J'hc A!•
lm· Oruph Mutchmuhr cun
helt' you und~r1tund whul UJ
tin In muku the rclutlli~~hlf'

work. Mull li2.75 tu Match·
· mukcr, c/u lltl! ncw~f!a~er
1'.0 .· 1Ji1K lf11, Wlckllrft, OJI
44m2.

•

VIK{iO (Aug. 23·5Ctlt. 221
•• 'Ihere I~ u lJUIHI chuncc I'm
M
ucce•• h•ouy, hut It 11 likely
Ill CUIIICah11111 fh!CIUMh U julnl
vcnHnc. Nclth~r you nm )'llllf
CUUIIIcrpurt CUll P,Uil thl! nlf
Wllhllllllhc hclp uf the ulher.
. LIJJKA (Sept. 23·0ct. 231 •
• Sl~t~u ld '"' unhuvpy friend
limnc 111 you ludur fur coun·
~e l , d,m'r ~oft reilul it. You
wun' l rcully be uble h• heir•

Torres: Movement of virns ·
into courzty this year is lf!5ly

20) .. Whut yuu·~u n tlu to!luy
thul other~ ~un ' l I~ to luke u
thi NJlcr!mt uniC!N yuu lcll ft
mur~l1111i cmnmcrclul or li·
like It 1!1 w11rtH tutd ult.
.· 111111clul ·!lluuthm und turn . l~
SC::OI&lt;I'IO (Ocr. 24·1\iuv.
lnln u wurklng force thai prn·
22) •• When you tukc un uJo"
du cc~ un lmDrc ~~tve yield.
hnluy, ynu'lltuke rrld.c In YU•
AKinS (MHrci121 ·Aprll19)
in111t rlghl; CYCII I II niCHil N II
.. Sumcllmc~ It -1 ~ wl~c to ICt
wfiole lut murc wurk for Yl!lL
our hcurt• rule our hcud1
The hl1h ! fumlurd~ you Net fur
wh~n deulln11 with our friend!
your!clf wilt puy uf'f hnmluntl fumlly, hut toduy 11 not
sorncly.
11110 of lh111c dny1. Only cold
loatk Cllll ~C 11f help IO IhemIll
SAC.UTJ'I\RJUS (NuY , 23·
thi•
time.
·
Dec. 21) •• The riMht lluiuncc
'I'AUKUS
(April
20-Muy
between treatln11 life und.
211) .. Chance• ore. you may
yuurlfeif Aertou-ly, und ~IIIY ·
run ucruu ~OJn c lhlniJ tudoiy
inJ thinJI~ like~ ~umc. cun he
lhlll rou thought you hod
rouHd lilduy. Oy d11in¥ !llr
lo ~m out. lnt ere~tl nMiy , II
,you'll rmHiuca mmc wlnnlnll
IM:llr~•llntn h1~ln11 one~.
· rnljjht be more valuable to
y1111, nnw thun when yuu flm
CAI'KICORN !De ~ . 22-Jun.
I!C!illlrcd
it.
I\I) •• Oy. drMwin» upun your
OBMJNJ (Muy 21·Jun'c 20J
l c nu~lty, c11uruse und will tn
win, there l~n't uny duubt lhut · •• Tcndin~ to u relullonthlp
wl1h un nl1l pal mily be the
)!flU will be *IICCCINfut t(J(Jay,
l'hl* lrllllc thrcul repre~cnt1 mu~t lmpt!rlant thing yuu du
tuduy. 'J'hc cemc111inll of thl~ .
lh~ clement• needed rur
rficnd~hlp will hl1vc lun11·
uchlcvcmenl.
AQUI\klUS (Jun. 20·Fel!, term beneflu you wouldn't
IVJ •• Yj1u arc utwuy1 ijll c•· mhcrwl•e enj(Jy,
CANC:IlK Clune 21-July 221
~e llen! ~mnmunlcu 1ur. but to·
day h will oo mure •ljnlflcanl •• Yollr reputation can bf con·
fur you. Whut y11u nrute '" ~lderobly enhanced today b~
put In wrltlnjl will lmprc•• heiplntl ntllen to fulfill the1r
mhen und u~hlevc &lt;kl~lred rc· um"itlflnJ and uchlevtr their
objective•. l'heH people will
~llftN , ·
I~ in your curner whc11 you'll
I•JSCHS tJich, 20-Murch
neell u rnM~t .

index
:

I ltCtlotl - 10 Pl&amp;.,ft

Calendar

Oassltledt
Comics
DearAbby

Editorial•

Movies

Obltuarlet
SportJ

Weather

MAIN ITRII'f ACCIDENT - Pomeroy firemen used
the Jaws of Life to remove the top of the vehicle In
which Wanda Sharp was trapped In a four:Oer acol·
dent on West Main Street, Pom$roy, Monday. (Dave
Harris)

street.
Pomeroy l'lremenused the Juw!f'of Life to remove
th~ top of the veh1~41'1l to I!Ct to Sh11rp.
.
l'rol1'1tt wus Cl)lltplimentury of the l'lremen In thelr
quick work.
.
"'rhcy did u srcut job with 'the extraction equip·
mentund quickly got Sharp out of that car," he suld.
Pomeroy polk~ were usslsted by Middleport offl·
cers.

.

l'roctor wus churged with l'ulluro to control and
Will uppeur In Pomeroy muyor's court.
•

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

High: 90s, Low: 60s
Dttllla, 2

TH

r&gt;Wtoil'o

I MONDAY

Weather

II

~H'N"'

'I'OUHACE?

'

Muht
Sll'llet Itt Pom~roy Monduy ut)crnoon resulted In
ltijurles to three pe1lph.1 und extensive dunmse to
four vehicles.
.
A-:ctlrdh\1! to Pomeroy Chief of Pollee Murk
Pl'lltl'ltt. Wlmdu Shurp of Lungsvlllc. who wus
.cntrup(ll)d In her ~llr, Is In stublc ~llllllltlon ut Holter
Medlcul Ccnt11r.
.
The other lnlured, Jeunetttt Hudson und Anncttu
Pldh:c of Mldtll11port, were treuted und rcleused. All
throe were tu.kon to Holzer by the M~lys County
B mergcn~y Mcdlcul Service.
. Prol'fltt suld thut the uc~ldcnt occu1't'Cd when
Denzil l.. l'roctor of Middleport, drlvlnt~ u 191!1!
l"ord pickup, wus coll\11)1! out of C11r Cure Doctors
on West Muln S'u-eet. He suld his uccclcrutor stuck
untl he shutout nnw the rmtd, hlttlny the Shuql cur
bruudslde unt111ipplny It over onto Its sl~e .
The truck then continued across the roud, hitting
und knockln11 down u sll!n untlullyht polu, und then
u. vehicle on the. Cur Cure Doctors lot ucross the
•

NOWA

TMIINI&lt;o

CHARLI57

Goldie Lightfoot, 83
DeUII1t AJ .

Todty'l olut: A tqUIII V

'f' I~IJN ~

'(OV, W,OWNII

hit Meigs

IY CHAiti.INI HOIII'UCH

IJl G NA'I'Jt:

~ASA!oWONI
IYI~I(IffiP

West (Nile
Virus hasn't

·Pomeroy
crash leaves
3 iiljured
MOEF't.ICHII&gt;MVOAILVS NTINEUlOM
POMEROY - A four-cur u~'l:ldent on West

~pud11s,

your jlurtncr h.luds the
~lub ttcc. How would
you call on purtnor' s
usslstuncc to dcfcut
the contruct'l
Nnrth · s thrcc-nu·
tnunp rospunsc Is by
lll!reemcul 11 gumc·
forcllll! spudc rulscJ
promlslnl! 13 · 1J
IHlints · und ut lcust
four u·mnps. ·
Pu11ncr should huvc
but h the ucc und kl 1111
of dubs I'm· hi s leud.
su you should drop
tho nine 111 trick one.
the hlyh curd encour·
Ul!illl! put•tncr to con·
tlnuc pluyhll! clubs.
West, ycttlny the
lnCSSUJ!C, CU5hCS thel
club klnJI, then con·
tlnucs w1th the club
&lt;1uecn . Whut would
you do 111 thiM trick'/
(You muy ti!Kume
purtner would luwe
bid with ucc·klnw ·

TilE DOUN
' J,m
""~oo.~. fo\Omt~. ~~u~ "" ,..YOU :!lt\OUI..D 1-\1\IJt. ~N Iltl::

Honattown HeWipllptr

5

7·9
10
5
4

3

3

6~7

2

• 200Z Ollkl ~tllfl' Mllll!lfll Co.

Fair
entries

due

this

·week
IV CHAIILINI HOII'I.IOH

MOEF't.ICMOMYDAI~YS ENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Whether
you' rc reglstllrlng your child
fur the prett.y buby con test, nr
u quilt l'or the domestic urts
c~hlbh ut the Meigs County
Fair, Aug. 12·.17, lt husto be
clone this week.
The sccrctury'H office on
the Rock Sprln11s Fairgrounds
will be open from 8 u.m. to 4
p.n1 . on both Friday und
Suturdny to ucccpt entries In
ull open cluss exhibiting cut·
egorlcs, us well us from par·
tlclpuniH In the Little MINier
und Mhs MeiM8 County ulld
the pretty buby contest.
The deudllne to reghter 18
4:30 p.m. Saturday.
While there IH no entry fee
to exhibit In most areuH, pur·
chuu of u seuon or member·
8hlp ticket h required jn
muny open cluH8 cateaorleH In
order to reliiHter to purtlcl ·
pntc , ThiH lnclude8 ha~ Nhow,
furm
·crops/horticulture,
flowers und plunt8, domeHtlc
urt8, amateur photo11ruphy
unci pulntlna, baking und can·
nina .
Camping 8puce8 or reHerved
parkln11 requesh are to · be
made In the secretary's office
on Saturday before the ·4 p.m.
deadline. ReAerved parking
1paces 11re $:25 for the week
11nd camplna •paceA are
available 111 $100 for the

DOG PROJICTI - Dale Ellll, left, plotured with 4-H 'judge Beth
MoLeed and his dog, Bueter, was named reterve champion, end Kare
Oaborne, arand champion durinl Friday'• 4-H dog show, held at the
Rookaprlnaa Fairgrounds .. (Brian J. Reed)
week which Include• electric·· Rutland; By the Wuy Country
lty and water. The camplns Store,
Lunisvllfe, . and
coHt doe8 not Include udml8· Landmark, Chester.
slon to the arouncl8.
The . tickets alve 11111e
Seuon tickeu remuln on udmll·slon to the fair, free
sale ut $14 euch at R&amp;O parklna all week lona. and
Feed,
Pomeroy;
Joe '8 entertainment and shows, but
Country Market, ·Rutland; not the amusement .rides.
Home
National
Bank, Member1hlp tl,clceu which
Racine ; Buum Lumber · Co., entitle holders to admission
Chester; Suaar Run Flour and votlna prlvlleae• ure $15
Mill, Pomeroy; Swisher and may be /urchascd from
Lohu Phurmucy, Pomeroy ; uny fair boar member or are
Little John 's Food Murt, on sale at the Suaar Run
Tuppeu Plains; Olo.eckner's Flour Mill In Pomeroy.
Restaurant,
Pomeroy; However, the tickets are only
Whaley's, Orocery, Durwin: available to Mela• County
Syracuse Country Milrket resldenll over 18. .
·
Syracuse; Dan'1, MlddlepOJ! i Dally admlu ion to the fair
Taz'• Marathon, Pomeroy ; h $6 Monday through
Reed'1 · Country
Store, Thursday, and $7 Friday ani!
Reedsville;
McDonald' s, Saturday, and Includes all
Pomeroy; Little John 's Food the entertainment and shows
Murt, Mlddtepor.t, und the &amp;8 well u the amu•ernent
Rutland Department Store, rldu.

BY BlltAN J. RIID
BAEEDeMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POM EROY - No truces of the West Nile
VIrus have been detected in Meigs County,
but according to Health Commissioner
Norma Torres. "it's only u matter of tilne."
· Traces qf the mosquil\)·borne virus have ·
been found in deud birds and In ll)osquito
pools In surrounding coun·
ties, und Torres ursed local
residents to be on the look·
out for bluejuys und crows
which might hove died sus·
plciously, and to advise the
local health department if
they suspect thut bl rds might
hove died from the virus. so
they can be tested.
~~-In · Guilla County, a dead
· TORRII · bluejuy recently tested posi·
tlve for the virus .. In Athens
County, u crow, two bluejuys und u mosquito
pool huve tested positive, und in Washington
County, three bluejuys have tested p\lsitive .
"The movement of the West Nile VIrus Into
Meias County this Jeur Is likely," Torres
said. "The lncreuse outdoor ac'tivity of
sporumen Increases the likelihood of some·
one spottins u dead crow or contracting the
West Nile Virus from 11 mosquito bite."
There huve been no confirmed cases in
humans In ' Ohio yet, but the spread of the .
virus this ~ummer - from positive tests lh
~ ...e Ohio eountle" las&amp; yenr tP, 68 qr 88
co~tntlu this year - Is rea·son enoUilt for
locHI re1ldents to take special precautlon1,
Torres sal d,
Torres suid the risk of human Infection can
be minimal if residents are uware of the rlsk1
and take necessary precautions.
"We live In a community where kids spend
time In the woods and In fields where mos·
quito Infestation might be more serious,"
Torres suld. "In days past, we were able to
send children out In the woods with shorts or
without shoes, but this Is a dl fferent tl me
.with different threats, and It's important to
be cautious, especially since this virus can
'cause serious and Irreversible ,brain dam·
age!'
·
. The virus Is primarily spread through mos·
quito bites, and ellmlnatins mosquito breed ·
lng grounds and avoiding mosquito bites,
whenever possible, are a good precaution,
Torres said.
Tile Ohio Department of .Health has Issued.
the followlna preventive measures:
:·
• Be sure that doors und windows have
tlght·flttlng screens.
• Remove all discarded tires from property.
• Dispose of all tin cans, plastic containers,
ceramic pots and other water-holding con·
talners.
• Make sure roof gutters drain properly.
• Clean and chlorinate twlmmlna pools,
outdoor taunu und hot tubs, and cover them
when not In use.
• Turn over plastic wadlna pools, wheel·
barrows and other Items which might collect
ua11nant water.
• Change water In bird baths at least once a
week.
• Ellmli1ate any pools of standlna wat~r on
· property and clean any dralnaae ditches of
obstructions so they drain properly.
• Check trees for cavities that hold water
and fill them with soli, gravel or sand.
The ODH aho recommends the use of an
Insect repellelil containing I0 percent or le11
DEET tor children and no more than 30 per·
cent for adults, DBET Ia effective for about
four houn and ahould be used sparingly to
cover exposed skin and clothing.
VItamin B, ultrasonic devices, Incense and
bui "zappers" have' not been shown effective
· In preventlna mosquito bites, the ODH .
reportJ.

11'8 Gallla Counly
'

.•••,,.....

''

I'

Loolc for lhf Holur M«&lt;icol C.,., 'W.I/rre11 Wagon"' during th. Fair,·

.luly 29 .......

a

'\

Free screenings and health information ~ill be p~ovided.
\
Schedules wil be posMd dally. .
For more information, CCIII
446·167••

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
www:ho~r.org

~----------------~~~--~---------------------A~------------~.

1

�"

1\l..day, July 30, 2002,

•

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Weclneeday, July 31
h

'

CHARLEY GILLESPIE

{&gt; 1[ Mono-

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112002 A&lt;:euW.olhor, Inc.

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11UM1 Pl. CloYd,

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.

Doctor's orders: Qon't worry. be
happy.
Keeping a positive uttitudc ahout
aging cun extend u person's life by
seven and hulf yeurs. which is longer
than ~ains made by not smoking und
exercrsing regularly, according to u
study by u Miami University resewcher.
"People's perception of aginM predict·
ed the length of their survival, suid Dr.
Suzunne Kunkel, director of the Scripps
Gerontology Center ut Miumi
University und co-uuthor of the study.
published Monday in the Journal of
Personality and Sociul Psychology.

~.

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4

.

ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITE!l

INO

TIMICIIJ, Jul'y :SO, 10Cl2

St~dy: Optimism could help you live longer

Ohio weather

•

Page AI

0 lo

The Daily Sentinel

ol

•

....

"It illus.trntes the mind-bully connec·
tion . Even if we cannot. control what .
huppens to us, we can control how we
define it."
.
The findings about attitude and sur·
vivul rutes were mude by unulyzinll und
mutclflng dntu collected ~ince 1975
ubout 660 people uge SO or older in
Oxford with data from the National
· JJeuth tndex.
·
_
Kunkel began the research in the
smull southwestern Ohio town us · u
gruduute student and has helped maintuin the database for more than two
decudes.
,
Re~earchers at Miami and Yale univcrsities looked ut how the 338 men nnd

•
r.
.
322 women responded to several questions about agm$ in 1975, and then
examined how thetr responses predicted
their survival up to 23 years later..
The study was funded by the Nauonal
Institute on Agins.
Researchers found respondents with
more positiv~ views on ug!ng live
longer, even after taking into account
factors such as age, gender, socio-eco·
nomic status, functional h.ealth, self·
re~rted health and loneliness.
•
'The. median survival of thos.e in tbe
more positive self perceptions of aging
group wns seven and a half years long,er
fhnn those in the more negative percep·
tions," Kunkel said.

·
·
·served 19 months. He is u 20-year veterun of the ugency, with ntives' home, ·zanesville police said.
u background in investigating whito-collur crime.
Michael Derwucter, of Blue Rock, was pronounced dead ~t
Good Smnuritun Hospital, police said. The shooting occurred
about7: 15 p.m. Sunday. .
.
•
Dcrwactcr wus visiting his uunt und uncle in this town ubo,ut
·
CLEVELAND (AP) - Neighborht1nd children liked to 55 miles eust of Columbus.
Police snid they hnve u suspect in custody ut the Znnesviile
come to Tlmyweli Henry's corner store. l-Ie set rules of bchuvCity Juil but no one has been charged.
,
~
A Licking County coroner's report Monday confirmed the
If you wunted to buy u soft drink or u bug of potato chips
inside his inner-city store. you hud better he wearing a sh1rt cause of death was 11 single gunshot wound to the head.
and not cuss.
Early Monduy. Henry bccume 11 victim of the rules of the

Neighborhood grocer slain

~~
.

Roln

,.,~-·:·
~.·.·
... _-,,'.~/:'.
Flurrltl

Snow

­

~

......~ ~
lot

Sunny, hot conqitions to remain
winds.
Storm (•louds have 'moved
Wcdnesday ... Patchy fog
, out of the area and things are early, otherwise mostly
· about to get buck to normal · sunny. HotJ but a bit less
.J- hot und sticky.
. humid. Highs near 90. Light
The showers and thunder- and variable winds.
storms won 1t be buck until
Wednesda~ night ... Mostly
Frlduy night, the National clear. Lows 111 the upper 60s.
Weuther Service suid.
Extended foretast
Mennwhile. high pressure
Thurs~ay ... Mostly sunny.
moving into the regton will Highs near 90. .
•provide sunny skies and temThursday night ... Mostly
·peratures around 90 on clear. Lows near 70.
Wednesday.
Friday... Partly cloudy. A
Overnight lows will be in chance of showers und !hunthe 60s.
derstorms during the night.
Sunset tonight will be at Highs in the lower 90s.
.
8:4 7, und sunrise on
Sutu rduy
.
throu~h
Wednesday is at 6:29 u.m.
Monduy... Partly cloudy with
Weather forecast
u chance of showers ·und
Tonisht ... Partly
cloudy thunder~orms. Lows in the
:with patchy fog developing. mid 60s and highs in the
'Lows in the upper 60s. Culm upper 80s.
••
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

. , Charges dropped in baby death

.

Senate confirms Gibbons

street

Man killed in intentional wreck

cameras·may aid study

~~~It

COMBINING POLICIES!

Baby left in car dies

New agent heads FBI office

Child dies in bike accident

~--------------------

•

~!Traficant argues one
:[ punishment i~ enough
•

. CLEVELAND (AP) - businessmen who were seeking
: Former U.S. Rep. James his help in Washington.
:- Traficunt is looking for uny
Although he's not a lawyer,
:. argument that mtght keep htm Traficunt defended . himself
:out of juil.
. . both before jurors and fellow
. • He P!anncd to argue at h1s lawmakers, insisting he wns
. • senteocmg Tuesday on federal innocent and the victim of a
; corruption charge~ that he can- government vendetta. Tralicant
, • not be sent to pnson bec~use hired Richard . Hackerd, a
:;the House of Representatives Cleveland lawyer, to represent
, ; already handed down hts pun- him for the sentencing
. ; ishment , when . lawmakers
He defended himself in 1983
,:expelled h1m la.,t week.
. when he won a rocketeering
·• Federal pros~cu!ors have case in which he wns accused
,; asked tr.S . . D1stnct Judge of taking mob money while,
.; l-esley Wells '? send Traficant, Mahoning County sheriff. He
; 61, to pnson for at lenst7 1/4 alsosaidhiseffortsinCongress
. , . A . to limit the powers of the IRS
• ye~. .
· Smee hts convtctton 111 pn 1, made him a target.
the Youngstown ~mocrat hns
Also Monday, the judge dis01
0
8
filed a nut;}' of ID ! ~ seekmg missed Tralicant's request for a
to have hts convrcuon overtrt'
lU cd
new a.1
Late. Monday, he filed court
L~st week~ Traficunt. filed
papers arguing aj'ail sentence mouon~ ~gum~ the tesum~ny
would be a secon punishment o~ Virg~ma busmess executrve
for the A8fi!C crimes, which vio- , Rtchard ~tore ~fore .the
late~ his constitutional procec- Hou~ ethics commrttee ratsed
tion against "double jeopardy." questions a~t the condttct of
After a raucous trial lasting prosecutors. .
about 2 1/2 month!l, he was
Detore. who IS accu~ b~ the
convicted April II of 10 count.s government offunnehng bnbe'
· of bribery tux evnsion und rock- from hts company to Tralicant,
'eteering. He wa~ found· guilty di.dn't testify duri"!! Tralican!'s
of requiring staff members ro tnal. Before the ethrcs commitdo personal chores for him and tee, he said government prosekick lYciCk a portion of their pay- cutoo tried to pressure him into
checks and o( accepting ca'h ,lying about TraliCllllt so they
bribes and variou~ favors from ; could con vier the congressman.

I

Obituaries

0

- Goldie ughtfoot

J. R!ED

BAEEDOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - 'A week of ambi·
'lious adventures in archaeology. cre·:ative writing and art history, ulong with
astudy of the people who muke up our
qwn communrty. attracted almost 30
'kids to Kids College at the University
·of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
·Community College's Meigs Center.
' Kids College has become a summer
tradition for the local college brunch
since it located on Mill Street severul
years ago.
But this year's Kids College was the
·first time all the summer offerings were
·offered in a day-long, one-week session. It's nlso the first summer the pro·~ram has been offered without tuition
1on, und that, according to Director
· Oina Pines, is one reason enrollment
.)VaS the highest ever.
' In fact, enrollment ut the Meigs
Center's Kids College .surpassed any
Kids Coll~ge enrollment on the muin
brunch - where young students paid us
much lis $SO for each class.
:J Each day of the Meigs Center's pro"grum wus divided into three scgmenls:
Time Travelers. in which students
~xamined archaeology and pre-history,
:Ancient Egypt, the Roman Empire,
'Medieval times, and the Americun Civil
War; The Artist's Wuy, with projects in
:· painting, creative writin~. polymer clay
'and collage; and, a umque class, Our
Community Alive, which used presen-

THAT'S M!NE, MOM- Jacob Bonecutter was quick to show his mom, Ailsa, and
classmate Alex Johnson. one of the art projects he completed for "The Artist's '
Way' class 'at Kids College last week. He was one of 2B students to complete the
week-long and free summer enrichment program. (Brian J. Reed) •

.

tutions by ·local professionuls. designed
to foster un uwurcncss of and un appreciation for. the local community and
those who live here.
Presentations included in the Iutter
course were "Life Along th~ River," by
Soil und Water Conservation's Jim
Freeman. un introduction to newspapers and journalism by The Daily
Sentinel's Brian l Reed , a fun session
about Meig s County's history und
landmarks. from tlte Tourism Oflice's
Mindy McDonald, u computer presentation from the Meigs Center's Robert
Taggert, and a , speci al visit from
Nicolu Moretti, uMeigs County native
who serves as the southeastern Ohio
coordinator for the Ohio Bicentennial.
''This week's Kids College at the
Meigs Center is more thun any Kid s

College program either here or at the
muin cutilpus," Pines said. "It's the
lirst time Rio Grande ha s offered the
Kids College expcrient"c to the student s."
·
"The most exciting thing about the'
decision to offer the program at no cost
is that it has opened the doors to an
curly uni versity expe rience to a lot of
kids who wouldn't be uble to participate only becuuse their fam ily couldn't
ufford to pay tuition." · .
All 28 students were presented certit1cutes and afforded the oppor,tunity
to show off thcir'l,tcw knowledge at un
open house Friday. Medieval shields,
col luges, P.olymcr sc ulptures,/aintings
and mobiles were cJisplaye for the
parents, grandparents and friends who
attended .

Ask us howl
DOWNING CHILDS MULL!N MUll!~
INIUAANC! AO!NCY

16 'W'ITI\.
,., &amp;I.E~E lllt.lotlotER I
1

MEIGS COUNTY
HEALTH DEPARTMENT .
PROPOSED FEES FOR NURSING SERVICES
Blood Pressure ... :............... ...................................... $3.00 •
Blood' Sugar .............. ,,;,,, ........ :...............................$15.00 ~.
Head Lice Screenlng ..................... ., ......................$15.00 ·
Hemoglobin (finger stlck) ........................................ $10;00
Hemoccult '(three alldea) ......................................... $25.00
Hemoccull (two slides) ........................................... $20.00 :
Hemoccult (one slidea) ........................................... $10.00 :
Flu Vacclne ................................................... .......... $15.00 :
Hepatitis B Vaccine ................................................. $40.00 .:
Prostate Screenlng.,. :........... :................................. $25.00 ,
Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) ............................. $25.00 ·
Urinalysis:
.
· :
2 teat only (sugar and acetone) .............................. $12.00:
10 test etrlp ..................................................... .-..... ... $25.00 :

: Southem board fills teaching, coaching slots.·
,• '

BY CHARLENE HOEFI.IC)H
,

HOEFLICHOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

. · RACINE - In preparation for the
·opening of school in the Southern Local
•·School District on Aug. 21: several
&lt;teaching, couching· and ancillary posi. lions were fi.lled by the Board of
Education at last week's meeting.
·, Amy Northrup wus hired us an LD
· ·teacher, filling 11 position vacuted by the
resignation of Mary Jo Buckley at the.
el~menttlry level.
Coaches hired were Ike Spencer. vurfily golf coach; Daniel J. Polcyn II. var·
111!);' assistant coach for football season,
:and' Brian Weaver as ihe boys' eighth
•grade basketball coach, both subject to
:ftaving valid CPR certificates and cur:rent sports medicine certificates.
;• Several coaching positions remain
·unfilled, it was reported. They include
:~eserve basketball, junior high sirls bus:j&lt;etball. seventh grade and varstty ussis·
:tant baseball.
::. Tim Thoren, already employed by the
tlistrict as the EMID coordinator, was
hired as the district's cafeteria supervi: sor at an annual salary of $9,000.
: Vicki Northup was hired ns u purent. resource coordinator to assist with the dis-'
: trict's special education program: Kimberly
: Romine as the CipiBaldridge Parity coo:1 dinntor, at a sulory of $5,200: Deborah
: Allen and Amie D. Buffington, us reuder
.;.!guides at the Carleton School as needed ut

·correction Polley
Our main oonoern In all ltorlel 11
to bt aco~rate. II you know ot an
orror In a otory, calllhe ntwaroom
at (7401992-2158.

· Newa Dapartmtnt•
Thl main number Ia 992·2156.
Department aiCientlont are:
Qanll'al m1noger

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALDI SANITATION FEE
INCREMES:

I'''"
jl,.,,,~~ ""'
.•
~~.

~ '

f,

Ext. 14

or

Other etrvlcta

AEP-30.87
Arch Coal- 16 34

. (US~S 21 J.HO)
Ohio Volley ~ubllohlng Co.
Publl l hecl I'Jery afternoon , Monday

through Friday. 111 Court Sl .. .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Seeond-cloll poetoge
p1ld 11 f:lorneroy,
,
Membor: The Aeoocloled Preoe and
the Ohio Newl papor Aoooelotion
Po1tm11•r: Send 1ddre11 correctlonolo The Oilly Senll~, 111 Court.
St .. Pomtrov. Ohio 4&amp;789. ·

Subacrlptlon rat11
By Clrrler or motor route
one-k
52
One month
18.70

~ctvll'll•lng

Clroullllon

Eld. 4

Cl111lltecl Ade

To ..nd•mal!
ntwl OmydallyaanUnol.oom

On the Web
www.mydaMyHIIIInel.com

Akzo -35.75
AmTooh/SSC - 26.21
Ashland Inc. - 36 46
AT&amp;T -9.74
Bank One- 37.36
BLI-17.23
BOC E'lnl- 27.58
BorgWarner - !5ei.84
ChamP,)on - 2.70
Chormlng Shopo - 1.60
City Holding - 24.04
COl- 24 87
• 00-18

OuPont - 43 95
Federal Mogul - 66

.Pepalco - 42.52

USB-2075

AOCI&lt;woll - 18.61
AOCkV BOOIO - 6
AD Shell- 44 .36
Seoro- 49.76
Wai·Marl - 49 .63
Wondy'o - 37 18
Worthington - !6.29
Dolly Oloel&lt; rti)OIII ore !he
4 p.m. c:lollng QUOIII of !he
prevloua day's tranaactlona, provided by Smith
Partnetl II A&lt;MIII Inc. of
Galli polio.

Gannett - 70.BO

General Electric - 30 "45 ·
GKNLV ~ 3.70
Harley Davidson - 48.69
Kmart- 69
Kroger - ,19 95
Lid. - 18.74
NSC-20.84
Oak H•ll Financial- 21 20
OVB-23.60

BBT -38 73
Peoploo - 26 28

f&gt;remler- 1.65

MIDDLEPORT - Goldie Fridley Lightfoot • .83. of
Middleport, died Sunday. July 28, 2002. at the -home of her
granddaughter in Kerr.
·
.
She was born January 18; 1919. in Pomeroy. daughter of tlie .
lute George and Lydia King Moore. She was u homemaker
und loving mother und grandmother.
Surviving are her sons and dau~hters-in-law. Charles
Fridley of Columbus. Larry and Joy Fnd le.y of Columbus, and
Delbert Fridley of Pomeroy: two daughters a·nd a son-in-law,
Nancy Hill of Bryan, and Loretta and Mark Severn of West
Mansfield : 10 grandchi ldren: Barbara and Norris Davis,
Cindy and Bill McKinley. iina and Steve Gibson. Charles
. Fridl~y. Michael Fridley. Chris and Mike Gray, Connie and
Put Boston. Keith Musser. Kim and Mike Reddick and Beth
and Shone Skeen: four great grandchildren, Suzanne Kellner,
Chaz Gibson, Kimberly Woodall and TarJ Bpston; a great·
great grandson . Skylur.Woodall: a special friend, Christopher
Tyree: und brothers and·sisters. Betty Archer of Columbus.
Leona and Avon Archer of Col umbus. George H. and Jean
Moore of Columbus, .William und Hazel Moor~~of Groveport,
Eva Johnson of Columbus. and Carroll and Jeann ie Moore of
McConnelsvi lie.
Be$ ides her purents, she was preceded in death by her first
husband. Charles Fridley: her second hu sband, Emmett
.
Lightfoot: and daughter-in-law. Wilma Fridley.
Services will be ~ld at I p.m. on Wednesday. July 31,2002,
at Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. with the Rev. Jim Snyder
und the Rev. Avon Archer officiating. Buriul will follow at
Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday. July 30,
2002. from 6-8 p.m. and from II a.m. until the time of service
on Wednesday, July 31, 2002.

••

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS runs

POMEROY ·- Units of
Meigs Emergency Services
answered the following calls
for assistance Monday:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
10:34 a.m.. Welchtown Hill
Road, Pomeroy, Wendy
Krautter, treated:
10:49 ' a.m., Bradbury
Road, Clarence Boyer,
Holzer Medical Center;
I: 17 · p.m.. John Street.
Leslie Eblin, Holzer:
2:03 p.m., West Main
Street, auto accident, Jeanetta
Hudson. Annette Pierce,
Holzer. Wanda Sharp. treated;
3:08 p.m., Ohio Route 124.
auto accident, Heather
Cabell
Daugherty.
Huntington · Hospital by
MedFiight 3.
4:26 p.m.,· Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, Evelyn
Gilland, Holzer:
5:49 p.m., Bigley Ridge
Road, Long Bottom, Mury
Stafford, treated;
7:45 p.m., BuldknobStiversville Road, Amy
Neville. Cabell Huntington
Hospital by HealthNet:
9:03 p.m., Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, Denise Smith,
treated;·
10:20 p.m.. Race Str~et,
Middlepon. David Milburn.
Holzer.
RUTLAND
9: 13 p.m., Ohio Route 124,
Kenneth Barnett, Holzer.

Advisory issued

Cirri« may remit In 1ctvance direct to
The Dolly Senllnel. Credit wUI be giVen
carrier each week. No tubtcrlptlon by
Clrtlet HfVIce II IWiillbll

13 Woll&lt;o
2e Woll&lt;o
52 WoOl&lt;.!

'$27 .30
$&amp;3.82
$10&amp;.158

' Molgo County
Aollo outolde
13 Wtll&lt;l
$29.26
211 Weeki
$!56.86
52 WoOl&lt;.!
S1 OH2

• ••rs II l"rlllu:
IIIIIIIJ - fltdQ

1:301&amp;·5--

Com lete Famil Healthcare For New Haven &amp; Surroundin Areas .

..

,(

· POMEROY .:... The Meiga
County Health Depanment
will provide free blood lead
screenings on Aug. 7 for chil.dren ages six months to six
years as part of a state-wide
effort to fight childhood lead
poisoning.
.
'
Fu~tding for the blood lead
screenings comes from the
Ohio Department of Health
Southeast Regional Resource
Center.
To schedule a child for a
fr~e blood lead level screen·
ing or to receive materials on
lead poisoning prevention,
resit;!ents 11'1ay call 992-6626. ·

812·1124

TIIIPhllll: 11041112-3114
New Haven. wv 21285
fll: 13041 H2·2801

••,_

Screening set

NOW ENROLLING

Mall
subiCI'IDtlon
lnolde Melgo CO'Iinty__ _

131 lain llrtet

112 E. Memorial Drive.. Pomeroy !
. 992-8828

POMEROY - A basement
sale will be held at the Sacred
Heart Chu,rch, Mulberry
.. Avenue. Pomeroy. Thursday.
Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. .Drinks. hot do~s,
and sloppy joes will be avatlable.

Pra-Sch 101./ K4

• Addren:

MEIGS COUNTY
HEALTH DEPARTMENT :

Basement sale

POMEROY - Tuppers
Plains Chester Water Dtstrict
has issued a boil advisory for
Rocksprings Road from the
intersection of Flatwoods
Road to the fairgrounds,
Flatwoods Road from the
intersection of Rocksprings

LTER E. D l, D
family Practice -Accepting New fatients
.......

'

Road to Old Forest Road,
Skinner Road, Wickham
Road, Burke Road and West
· Shade Road from the ·intersectio.n of Skinner Road to
Texas Road, and Spencer
Road.
Repairs were made to a
muin line.
Customers are asked to boil
their drinking and cooking
water for three minutes
before consuming it.
·

one year
$104
Dolly
50cemo
Subscrlbero not deolrlng lo PlY lhe

mall ptrmltted In areaa where hOme

Ext. 3

NO EXpOSUBEl .................. ,.n ........................... , ••• $50.00:

orme Torrw, AN, II'N, Mild, HNIIh Commll~

Ext. 12
Ext. 13

SEWAGE PROGRAM:
Site Evaluation (Required) ................. ,.. $ 50.00
Permit to lnatall. ................... ,................. $150.00.
,
TOTAL: ... $200.00·
·
Penalty fee for installation without permlt .............. $1 oo.oo:
Plus Parmlt fee ...................................... $200.00.
'
·
TOTAL .... $300.oo:
rOME LOAN INSpECTIONS SEWAQE
:
nttlal Jnapectlon ......................................................l75.00 ,
Relnapectlon If needed, per vlalt .............................. $2500 ·
IEWAQE SYSTEM INSTALLER: $50.00 .
. .
....................................... Plua $500.00 Performance bond ·
=EPTIC CLEANEBSIPUMPEB8l:
,
eglatratlon: .............................................. :......•..... $50.00 :
Per Truok ................................................... ,............ $25.00 :
Land Appllcallon Sites .......... :.................... $50.00 per elte •
REFUSE HAULERS:
·
;
Registration ............................................................ $50.00:
Per Truck ................................................................ $10.00:
WATER SAMPLES:
.
.
:
Bacterlotoglcal ........................................................ $30.00 :
. Other .....:...........................................$15.00 plue Lab Fee·
NON-EXEMPT BABIES TESTINQ (NON:;D!TINQ.
;
Effective date o be decided at 818102.

LOCAL STOCKS

The Daily Sentinel

Certified Birth Certlficates ....................................... $15.00
Certified Death Certlf)catea ..................................... $15.00
Non-certified copies Birth/Death Certlflcatea ............ $0.25

Hoc liner

$7 per hour for seven hours per duy.
Krupp Elevator Corp. for 11 period of
Substitutes hired were Teresu Miller · live years at $150 a month: and udopted
Alley, secretary/teacher's aide. and Jan · u public f~lease. notice for free and
Cleek, custodian and cook.
reduced prtce meals us rcqu1rcd under
It wus decided 3-2to accept the resig- the National School Lunch program ..
notion of Shirley Sti~re from the guidAlso approved was un agreement With
unce counselor positton.
Casto Techni~a i Service~ for muinteTwo resignations were ucce~ted by nunce of the utr cooled chtllcr at the ele'the board, one from Daniel 1~ R1ffie for mentnry school at u cost of $1 ,340 a year.
retirement purposes from the positions
A mission statement for South~m
of bus driver, trun sportutio~ supet'visor Elementary School was adopted ~unng
und assistan'i" bus mechumc: and the the meetmg, and changes und addttrons to
other from Cindy Winebrenner us secre- the handbooks for both the elementary
tory. Hired to fill the tronsportaiion and high school were approved.
supervisor's position was Gurry Smith Presented at the meeting by Kim Romine.
ut an annual salary of $3,SOO
· CIP coordinator, was the revised 2002.()3
Bids accepted for the school' ~eur continuous Improvement plan.
were from G&amp;M Fuel Co.. Inc .. diesel
It was noted thut a training CD-ROM
fuel, motor oil, transmission grease. and hus been purchased for use in helping
anti-freeze, the only bid; Broughton personnel become prepared for emerFoods Inc. milk, the low bid; und gencies such us acts of terror. and vioHeiner's Baker. Inc., bread, the only lence. The board discussed the need for
bid. Tubled wus a bid from Malone . a huving a person trained in the
Warehouse Tire for tires und tubes.
Heimlich Maneuver be present while
The bourd renewed memberships in students are serving food.
the Coalition for Equity and Adequacy
Presenti:ng reports at the meeting
ut a cost of SO cent per student the were Mtckey Kucsma, Southern
Coalition of Rural and Appalachian Elementary principal; Gordon Fisher.
Schools at an annual mcmbersJ¥p of Southern High School principal; and
$300, and in the Educational Tom Weaver, technology.
Technology Services of Ohio,
Ron Cammarata, board president.
It was voted to participate in the conducted the meeti'hg attended by
Coalition for Equity and Adequacy. The members. Don Smith, David Kucsma,
bourd approved an elevator mainte- Marty Morarity and Richard Hill, and
nunce agreement with the Thyssun treasurer Denme Hill.

'

Reader Services ·

rrc•

-

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

. Meigs Cente~ offers
free enrichment
•
BY BRIAN

__ ...

www.mydallysentlnel.com

:Kids College
=draws record , R
·atten_
dance ~1t

PROPOSED VITAL STATISTICS FEES

1•

•

~

OHSAA changes strudure

DAYTON (AP) - At the request of police. u judge dismissed c.hurges against u womun accused of killing her new·
born son.
Ruby Mdvin, 36 1 wu~ clmrged July 24 in the suffoeation
denth of the inf.11nt, who was found under toys und 'clothe~ in
Melvin's basement. She ulso wus charged with tampering with
evidence und gross ubuse of a corpse.
·
Montgomery County Municipal Court Judge Thomas Hugel
dismissed the churgcs Monday at the re~uest of Dayton police.
· Chief William P. McManus said pohce made the decision
after consulting. with p.rosecutors. He would not comment on
MEDINA (AP) - Police wont to see u baby's autopsy
the evidence but said the .investigation into the baby's death
before deciding whether to file charges in the 9;month·
results
will continue.
·
old boy's death when left in u cur for ubout three hours on u
hot duy.
Medina Police Chief Dennis Hanwell said u man, believed
CLEVELAND (AP) - Gerald Muck, un FBI administrator to be the baby's father, parked the car and reported to work
· in Los Angeles, will become the agency's third special agent Monduy about 7:50 u.m. ut The Muil Room, a packaging busines .~. Police withheld the man's name until the investigation is
' In charge in Cleveland in lcss.Lhun two years.
·
more
complete.
Muck will replace Murk S. Bullock, who hull been chosen to · About
three hours Iuter, another employee noticed the child
' ~ t~c dep~t~ assistant director of the FBI's criminal invesin
the
cur
in the parking lot and ~ot the mun to u~lock the cur.
uguuve diVISion.
.
When
the
baby was unresponstve, one of the two called 911
Bullock was in Cleveland for u little more thun a yeur. He
and
the
other
attempted the re.suscitate the baby, Hanw~ll suid.
; replaced Van Hurp, who is the assistant director of the
·: agency's Washington field ofl1ce. Hurp supervised the office
' for five yeurs before his move.
· Muck, 53, is the special ugent in charge for administrative
ZANESVILLE (AP) - A 9-ycur-old boy was shot in the
. ~ffairs in the bureau's office in Los Angeles. where he hus
head
and killed while riding his hi~y~le in un alley ncar his rei- .
'
,
.....

.

Police believe Henry. 54, wus killed by u robber who blud·
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate on Monda~ ununi·
gconc.d him with the butt of u 20-guuge shotgun.
,
mously approved U.S. District Judge Julia Gibbons for a s~at
. Joycelyn Henry is convinced thut her husband wus killed by on the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap~enls In Cincinnati.
·
someone from the neighbmh(){xt, someone who knew his rou- The Senate approved the nomination 95·0.
.
tine.
Gibbons, S I, hus been a district judge for the Western
District of Tennessee ~ince 1983 ond wus the first woman to ~it
on the federal bench m thnt state.
Before becoming a federal judge, Gibbons served as a stdte
BROOKVILLE (AP) - A mun di~d when he wrecked his judge und us legal adviser to former Tennessee Gov. LaJTjnr
·
cur on pur!Josc during u light wilh his girlfriend, police said. Alcxunder.
Brook vi le Police Chief Andrew Pnpunek said Eurl Lutz Jr.,
23, had been fighting with his girlfriend, Trucy Sturgeon. 18.
of West Currollton, when the wreck occurred on Monday.
.
Sturgeon, who wus injured in the wreck. told police that dur· . COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio High School Athletic
ing u particulurly heuted exchu~ge. Lutz floored the acceleru- Association's board of control said it has carried out all of a
tor, intentionully driving the cur into u purk. crushing into .a committee's recommendations for changes in its financial
tr~e.
·
· ·
structure.
Pupenck suid Lutz died nt the scene.
The changes include establish ins un independent annual
audit and empowering the association's commtssioner to mon·
itor expenses.
.
.All mcome from the association~s six district boards now
TOLEDO (AP) - High-tech cumerus uncJ sensors could be will be sent to the OHSAA's Columbus office. The boards·in
purt of a study thut could help families be sure their loved ones the past have been autonomous and not accountable to the
office of OHSAA Commissioner Cluir Muscuro.
:
ure sufe even when they ore hundreds of miles apart.
The new fiscul rules strengthen the commissioner's control
Researchers want to install the gadgets in the homes of 20
elderly parents in Toledo who need almost constant supervi- over dully operations und authority to approve or reject any .
sion.
OHSAA trips and to consolidate' money management.
Their homes would be equipped wiih cumerus in the kitchen
and ut entrances und would uutomnticully switch on when
,__ _ _ _ C.LY'O£. t
_ _ _ _,
someone enters u room.
.
A fumily member. neighbor or u curegiver would receive an
iiiE It&amp;T Vlt.Y Tl)
e-muil or a cull to u telephone. cell phone or pager when the
Beat HIGH INSURANCE .
IE#t.T 1t. &amp;LOT
camera is activuted. Thut person could then view whatever the
· premiums by ·
Mlt.C:IIINE •••
camera sees over the Internet.

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hands

U tter.&lt; w th~ editor Clrt' we/rome. Tlwy .&lt;hou/&lt;1 be less thm1
.IIXJ wo1t/s. All lftltr.&lt; 1//l' .&lt;11bject to e&lt;litin11 anti must be
.&lt;(~lied

cmcl itl&lt;'lmle adtlr&lt;.H urul 1elef1hone 1111111bt'r. No
1111.1i811ed lelln&lt; will be tm/1/isllftl. L~uers slwultl be ill 8&lt;&gt;()(/
tu .,·tt~, t.uMn·.,·.,·i'l.'&lt; i.'i,lilles. twt per.omtwUtit&gt;s.
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Tilt'

tht column below tiff tht' cm1·
.&lt;emil.&lt; of' rlw Ollio 1'&lt;1llev P11bli&gt;·hi11!1 Co. :,· ecJirorictl bt11mi.
unle.\'.\' oih~twise twtrcl. ·
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opinioll.l'

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NATIONAL VIEW
•&gt;

Pointless
Lindh plea agreement proves
legal system helps war on terror

,.

• Austin (Texu~) Amerlcun-Stutesmun. 011 Ameri''""
1l1/ihan: John Walker Lindh. son of 11ftlucnce. adva11111ge
•md privilege. will h11vc 20 ycurs 10 yonderJUSt why h.e
tumed his buck on the country thut uftorded htm th~ best 11
hud to otTer. Lindh. dubbed the Americun T111ibun. entered 11
surprise plea of guilty to ch11rges of aiding the theocruts
who once ruled At'gh11nistun . ... ·
By entering the plea, Lindh . ulso sitlestepped murder
churgcs filed in connection with \he death of 11 CIA 11gcnt
killed in a Nov. 25 prisoner uprising. Johnny .Michuel Spunn
. was shot timt killed during an uprising lll Muzur-e-Shuri(
ufter interviewing Lindh. who wus in.dicted on churges ot
consl)iring to kill Amct:icuns. Spann's death was cited us un
overt 11ct in the consptrucy. The pleu hurgum contmns no
references to Spunn . .. ,
Noting thut Lindh ulsougrccd to cooperate with American •
intelli_gcncc uuthorities, prosecutors were touting the agreement as a good tical. A prosecutor noted that the plea burgain was proof that the crimin11l justice system can be un
effective weapon in the witr on tcrrilr. ...
We urc left tn wonder what 11 jury might huve done.
Second -guessing the luwycrs inv51lved in u ~leu ugreement
is pointless now. It's dun~. Lindh .\loes to pnson to ponder
his life. and .thc war 011 terror in whtch he pluyed u role con-.
linucs .

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Touuy is Tuesday, July 30.' the 2 I Ith day of 2002. There ure
I54 days left in the year.
·
1ouay's Highlight in History:
"
· On July 30, 19~5. during World War II, the U.S.S.
lndianapol is \\'US torpedoed by a J11p~me.se submurine; only 316
out of 1.196 men survived the smkmg und shark-mfested
waters. (The. Nuvy recently exoncrutetl the lndiunatJ?Iis' cuplain. Charles Butler MrVay Ill. who wus court-mmttuled und
COJlvicted fllr failing tn evade the subnwriue thut sunk his ship.)
On this date: ·
·
In 172Y. the city of Baltimore wus founded.
· In -1792, the French .natinnal uuthcm "La Marseillaise," by
Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle, was first sung in P11ris.
In IH44, the New York Yucht Club was founded.
In IHM. during the Civil War. Union forces tried to take
Petersburg. Va., by explntling u mine under Confedcrute
defense lines. The attack failed .
In 1932. the Summer Olympk Gumes opened in Los
Angeles.
·
In 1942. Prc,idcm Franklin Rm1sevelt signed a bill creuting a
women's auxili;try agency in the Navy known us Women
AcccptC\1 for Volunteer Emcrgcn~y Servi~c - WAVES I(Jr
. short.
·
.
In ll)n5 . President Lyndon Johnson signed into law the
Medi,arc hill, whicll went into effect the following year.
In 1975. former Teamsters union prcsidcntJ immy Hoffa disappeared in suburban Detroit. Although he is presumed dead,
hts remains have never hcen found .
.
In 1975, representatives of 35 countries convened in Finland
for u cnnfcrcm:c on security and human rights that resulted in
the Helsinki a(;cords.
In 19HO. the Israeli Kncssct p;tssed a law reaffirming all of
Jerusotlem as the capital of the Jewish state.
Ten years ago: A TWA Lockheed L-1011 caught fire during
tukeoft from New York 's Kennedy Imcrnationul Airport; a11292
people uboard survived. At the Barcelona SUmmer Olympics,
Shannon Miller won the .•ilver medal in the women's all-uround
gymmtstics event.
·
Five years ago: 1\vo men homhcd Jerusalem's most crowded
outdoor 1ilarkct. killing themselves an~ 16 .oth~ E!ghteen
people, 111ciUd111g two Amencuns. were ktlled 111 a l!l'lldsltde thai
swept one ski lodge mHo another mthe Thredbo Alpine Village
in southeast Austmliu.
.
Onc ·ycar ago: .
Typhoon Toraji churned through Taiwan. killin~ 61 people
and leaving about 150 missing; Zimbabwean prestdent Robert
Mugabe\ ruling party won a special parliamentary election.
Tod&lt;ty's Binhd&lt;tys: Actor Dick Wilson ("Mr. Whipple") is 86.
Actor Richard Johnson is 75. A,tor Edd "Kookie" Byrnes is 69.
Bjucs musician Buddy Guy i' 66. Movie director Peter
Bogdunovich . is 63. Feminist activist Eleanor Smeal is 63.
Former U.S. Rep. Patricia S~hrocucr. u Colorado Democrat, is
62. Singer Paul Anka is nl. Jazz musici&lt;tn David Sanborn is 57.
Actor Armild Schwurzeneggcr is 55. Actor William Atllerton is
55 . Actor Jean Reno is 54. Actor Frank Stallone is 52. ·Actor
Ken Olin is 48. Actres.~ Delta Burke is 46. Singer-songwriter
Kate Bush is 44. A~tor Richard Burgi is 44. Actor Laurence
Fishburne is 41. Country 'inger Neal McCoy is"41. ~ctress Lisa
. Kudrow is 39. Country musician Dwayne O'Brien is 38.
. A~tress Vivi~a A. Fox i' 3H . Actor Tom Green is 31. Actress
Chri,tine T&lt;1ylor i~ 31. ActrCl&gt;s Hilljl)' Swank is 28. Actress
Jaime Pressly is 25.
Thought for Today: "An efficient bureaucracy is the greatest
threat.to liberty." - Former Sen. Eugene McCarthy."·

Kesterson blrlh

Abby

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KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Dow~

up-and-down nature·concerns mli party .

Bv MoRTON KONDRACKI
Mclnhtrtl' emphtl'ized und re-en1phuFor 21 yeurs, Republican PI• lister Bill si~ed in tUl interview thnt hi.' wns nnt PI\'Mclnlurtl' hus been tracking the linkuge dieting tmy vulcome . ..There tu-e two posbetween con~umer contidem:e. voter ntti- sible puths," he snid. "One is.thlll we nre
tudes nbout the ~:ountry 's direction. presi· at the stun of a new. negmive cyct~ where
uenlinlnpprovnl rmings and the outcome consumer 1-'0nfidenc-e keeps tullut!l, the
or elections,
right truck koeps getting worse Md lhe
· On this bnsis. he predicted that president's populnrity dl~,ps ."
President Bush's father. despite souring
If Bush's nppmval ruling tl1lls into the
upprovul mtings ufterthe 199 I Gulf Wtu·, 50s this fall. he suid. "we wuld lose
would ti1ce n tough re-election ruce. enough scnts· to put \.~llltrol of the House
which he ultimately lost.
in piny." Democmts need to pick up n net
Right now. Mclnturtl' cmphnticnlly is seven seuts totuke control.
not predicting the outcome of this year's
But. Mclnturtl' stressed, it's nlsv pos.~iCongressional elections, but he is tellin* ble thtll "since the ec1•nomy is fundumenclients and journalists that u "big chnnge tully strong. the stock mnrkct coulu bump
has occurre'd1in GOP prospects und not for buck 500 poinls nnd the tight-truck numthe better.
bcr could ~o buck to th~ mid-40s by
The University • of Michigun 's Lubor Duy.'
Consumer Sentiment Index hus fall~n
If Mcinturff is right about histl•rknl
from Y6.9 in May .to 86 ..5 curlier this trends. Bush's npprovul mtings would
month. Polls by Public Opinion · then be in the mid·60s un\l GOf'pi'&gt;Sfli.'Cls
Strutegies, MclnturtT's linn. show thut would be cunsiderubly hrighler.
within the past two weeks. the voter nuiTI1ere huvc been only three otT-yenr
tudes on the country's directiun have elections since World War II when presidropped precipitously.
dentiul upprovnl toppeclli(l percent - in
For most of June und eurly-July. 46 per- 1962, when John Kennedy s Dem.(lCntls
cent suid thut the country wus he11ded in lost only one House sent; 111 1986. when
the right direction und 45 percent thought Ronalot Rengun's Republicuns lost just
it was on the "Wrong truck.'' Recently, live; und in 199H. when Bill Clinton's
thou.\lh. those numbers fell to 37 pt;rcent Democrats uclltally picked up tbur seuts.
posittve and 52 ~rcent negative, bec11use . In lute Mny, when Mclnturll' unuly~.ed
of stock murkcl 'jitters."
consumer confidence, ·voter sentiment
Mcinturff is legend111y for his convic- and prosidcntlnl upprovnl. he judged thut
tion thut presidentiul uppruvul almost "we were looking ' at the list otT-yetu·
invlll'iubly stabilizes ut between 17 per- election climme in my cnrccr."
cent und 20 percent nbovc the right-truck
"Maybe we'll boutwe buck tu that. But
number. •
today we're in u very dillercnt climme.
Mclnturll' is convinced that this will Whm we're suying toduy is thm this could
. eventually occur for Bush as well, even be u chuructcristic ofJ~year election.''
though his approval ratings huve been
In the five oft~ycur elections since
nveruging 23 points above the right truck World Wtjr II, when the president's
since last full' und currently ure 28 points uppmvnl rating has lx.-en in the 50s ttbove, m65 percent.
.
19.54, 1958, 1970, I1178 uml 191)() - the
TI1e upshot is thm if ~.~msmner confi- averngc loss for his pm1y is 20 House
dence und "right truck" sentiment do not scats.
rebound. Bush's upprovul ratings will
The decline in GOPprospe&lt;:ts clearly is
eventually drop into the 50s, converting · the result of u plunging stock mllrket nnd
this otl'-year election to u "historically wony ubout the economy. Public Opinion
normut" une - that is, dicey tilr the pres- Strategies founu lust week thut two•thirtls
idcnt's party.
of voters had money invested in the stock

nwkettuld tWI&gt;-third~ reported looing 1111.
uvemge of 20 peK-ent of their money over
the pnst six months. ·
.
·
In Muy. 4\l p¢1\"eill ~f respondents ~d
the e&lt;.'Onomy was 1-'\•nung 0111of ~~~ton ··
nml31 pel\:ent ~aid it wus heuding deeper_
in. This nwnth, &lt;M pen:ent th1•ught the
re~;ession wus getting deeper.
·
Extruj)\llnting from current conditions, .
Democmts nre etwoumged to think that ,
they qm S\.'Ore hig gnins in November.
with House Miilority Lender Richtll'd
Geplmrdi (D· MI•.l even imugining 11 40sent pickup.
Rcpublicuns. thou~h. hope for unother
S\.'tlnttrio: u Rose Gurden ceremony in
which Bush signs u lou!Jh corponlle·.
refom1 hill. thereby nssuring the country ,
thut t\llure inst111Wes of wrruption will be .
· denlt with.
,
·.
White House uide;~ hope thut tho GOP
willulso get credit for the Secuntios lllld . ·
Exchunge Commission forcing the 1.000
biggest Clllll()mtions tu certify their enm· .
ings stmements by Aug. 14 - nnd thm no .·
Enron- ur WorldCom-sll.ed scnndllls tum .
up.
...
· "From 1111 election stund~inl," one
presidentiul uide said, 'everything ;
depends on lhe renl economy uml on .
where the stock market is in relntions lo · .
people's expectnlions."
Fuclorinll in GOP gains from renppor- ..
tionmelll, the fuclthlll there ure compur~~- ,
tively lew competitive ruces this your und ,
Rcpulllicuns' ubility to 11~hl "trench WIU'· ••
1\u'C," this uide is proJecting "modest ..
guins" li1r Republlcuns in the House.
Meantime, though, one Democrntlc .
House nide declured. "Investors nre now ·
Jlllpulists" nnd predicted thm dispirited •
Republicuns wouldn't turn out to vote,
pmducing a Democrmic victory. AHou:~e
GOP campuign nide ucknowledged thm,
"absolutely..there's some nervousness."
Bottom line: Wutch the murket.
•

(Morron Kondracke /.1' exet·utivf editor .
of'. Roll Call, the newwaper of Cfl{lltol .,
fltll.!

WASHINGTON TODAY

Hlhite House hopefuls heaping critidsm on Bush
BY WIU LESTER

WASHINGTON
Potential
Democratic candidates for president
may have been reluctunt to criticize
President Bush's war aguinst terrorism,
but they ' ve s.hown no soch hcsitalion to
criticize his cftbrts on the economy.
The president is far more vulnerable
on that subject, polls suggest
Veteran political analyst Charles
Jones sugge~1ed that "the economy is
the best source of criticizing any udmlnistrution" in turbulent financial times.
The steady streani of bad news of late
.- from the corporate accounting scandal.l to lhe roller coaster stock market
has emboldened Democrats.
They've attacked Bush on fo~cign poli·
cy occasionally, but it's tricky with his
approval rating for the war on terrorism
at 70 percent
But the stumbling economy has seen
two months of declines in stock prices.
And just over four in 10 people approve
of Bush's handling of the economy.
For Democrats to take aim at t~e
economy "isn't really risky.'' said Jones,
a presidential scholar rcured from the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, who
added: "If the economy improves, nothing will stop the BuJ!h administration."
· Democrats have been quick to criti cize.
AI Gore, the ZOOO Democratic nominee, said Thursday: '"We have abruptly
shifted in one year from open-ended
surpluses to open-ended deficits. That
did not · happC'n by accident nor was it
the resull of Sept. II. It is the natural
and predicted · result of the economic
polictcs of the Bush-Cheney administration ."
All the leading Democrats have been
taking their shots.
. ·

• Vermont Gnv. Unwnrd Dcun h11s
'They feel the only wny the~ can win · •.
culled current Bush policies "v&lt;iodoo is If the economy Is disrupted,' Rucicot
~conomics," stealing the phruse Bttsh:S said. "Shnme on them.''
·
father used to descrtbc Ronuld Reugun s
Five ot' the seven most frequently .
policies.
.
mentioned potentinl ,president lui cunui- .
• North Carolina Sen. John Edwards dutes travel 10 Nevi York lhis weekend
said "there is 11 gcncrul luck of conn- to uddress the centrist Democratic, .
dence" in this economic team.
Leadership Council, whlcti hus been
• Mussachuseus Sen. John Kerry key to Democratic presidential politics
culled the Bush teum un "oil industry for the lust decude. The two Democrats
administration.''
missing will be Gore, who hns other
• Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, business commitments, and Deun. who
one . of the most pro-business plans to be on the West Coast meeting :
Democrats, said "there is a large cloud purty pctivists.
··
hangi11g over the head" ·of Bush because
The others will make their best eco- :
of lingering questions ubout his hun- nomic pitch to the grou~ thut refers to .
dling of stock soles )II hen he wus 11n oil itself as "the New. Democrat.~." who, :
executive.
. advocute blending u pro-business view .
• Senate Majority Leader Tom ·with a trndilional party message that '
Daschlc recently referred to the Bush still uppeals to labor unions und other · :
·
economic philosophy 11s a ''laissez, core Democrats.
fuire" alii tude that helped create the cur- "The most specific problem ther, have .
rent climate.
is .that they're not Bill Clinton,' said '.
• House Democratic leader Dick Republican spokesman Jim Dyke,·
Gephardt said the president uffcrs explaining it lakes a very skilled politi· :
"harsh rhetoric" white "delaying and cian to blend the messages.
·
watering down whatever reforms come
These Democrats will give it their .·.
out of Congress."
best shot with DLC orficials like
All the Democrats will be wutching founder and chief e~ecutive AI From
closely to :~ec how I he Bush udministra- w~tching closely.
.
tion 'enforces legislation Congress sent
"We need to l'igure out how we deal · ,
him Thursday crcatittg stiff penalties for .with this corporate governance scandal ' ,
corporate . fraud . Gcphurdt prl!dicted· and we need to have a long-term eco- ',
recently that Democrats would make nomic strategy," said From, who said . ·
major gains in the House if current eco- the 1990s strategy of fiscal discipline, ;
nomic conditions persist.
expanded trade and investment in peo- :
Republican National Committee pie and,' technology seemed to work '
Chairman Marc Racicot said at the line.
·
.
RNC's summer meeting that Democrats
"In the lust year and a half, we've ,
"aren't. really interested in helping the seen that formula undermined," said ·
economy grow" by getting behind From, "and the ~onsequences have been · :
GOP·backed measures such as makii1g disu.~trous.''
·
''
the Bush Ia~ cut" permanent, expanuing · (WiU Le.rter covfr.r /olltlcs and · .
trade and passing an energy bill.
polling for The /t$9ocime Pre.1.1.)
'
I

Dt:AR ABBY: When 1 relld
the letter from ''No Doctor's
Playmate," whose doclor
reliC bed i111o her In when sbe
COllSUlted him "boot l;\11 01.\f
infectlou. 1 1:011ldn 't help but
symp!lthize. The same thing
hapJX'ned to me. My smgoon
walked into my hospital room
and f01ldled my breasts wben
he checked my llbdl)ll\imd
illCisioo. When my gastroen·
terologist came. I told her 1
wanted him removed from my .
case and explained why.
Abby. she defended him!
he said it WIIS JlfObl\bly II
routine.breast ilXam.·I toll) her
thut I'd hud more than 30
years' ·worth of breast lllC.I\tnS,
and this wus nothing like
them. I ulso told her it was not
nuthorizlld by me, tmd be' was
not my gynecologisl. She then
had tl\e nerve to imply that I
was dreaming or huving ll
drug-induced fanlusy. This
happened eight years ugo. I'm
still furious about h.
He still hus his shingle. So, ·
ladles. if your df&gt;ctOI' p~lls
. anything funny - repon htm!
- MAD IN OKI.AHOMA
CITY
Dt:AR MAD: Si11ce he .dill

lhis to you. he muy be sell.uully abusing other women
pntients. After complaining 10
lhe referring physician und
gelling no sutlsfuction, you
should hnve Iuken ~our complaint to the heud ot the hospitul and to the state medical
assaciution. It's nat too late to
do it now. Roud on:
DEAR ABBY: The same
thing happened to me when I
was 18. II huppened II 5CCOnd
time when I retumed for 11 follow-up visit. I was so upset I
told tho nurses I dldn 't want to
see thut · pntticulur doctor
uguin. (He was purt of a
group.) lwus too emburrussed
to expluin exactly why.
Two yours Iuter, I was called
by the Office of Professional
Medlcnl Conduct in New
York stute. Thlly were investigating the doctor. five women
wound up test ifylng agal"st
him. None of us knew ouch
other or heard euch other's
testimony,' but shnllaritles In
our stories proved the doctor .
wus guilty.
He took ud vantage of his
medical license and his
authority. The state eventually
revoked his license to practice
in New York. Talking ubout
what he did to me was dlfll·
cult. but it was also therapeutic. Doctors like 1hut need to
be stopped. I ho110 other vic·
tims will not be us scured as 1
wuR.IO speak out. My mistukc
was In not questioning when I
knew something was wrong.

WISER . NOW IN
OCEANSIDE, N.Y.
DEAR WISER NOW: I

hope other women will take
your ex (lerience to heun.
DEAlt ABBY: I consulted
a general surgeon about u
problem totally unroluted to
my breasts and the doctor did
'lhe same thing to me. I repon. ed him to the stale medical
licensing board, und he now
must have a nurse or staff
member present durinj
exams.
· He claimed he "always" did
breust e~tams on his pallents,
but I was uble to provide
names of two other women
who saw him for surgicul con·
sultations, and he did not
exumine their breasts.
I am close to SO and have
had many breusl exulllll. No
doctor ever, performed one
while 1 wus fully clothed .. I
join you in ur~ing "No
Doctor'J Playmate to repon
the Incident immediately. -

ONLY MY HUSBAND'S
PLAYMATE .IN KEN·
TUCKY

.

DEAR . HUSBAND'S
PLAYMATE: You handled

the 1ituation effectively. Good
for ~ou . And thank you for
shanng with my reuders how
you dealt with the frisky-fingered .physician.

RACOtowodt

falraates

Music Fest t
for Aua. 11

- ThQ s« '1111.1l\tlll\1
~~ R i'~''h\1' htl&lt;k l~•l '' "~ f1w Au~
" . l'l\\t11 1 l ~ Ill l\1 1 l' 11\, ~· tl~
~kAIUill l R

\' mh&gt;~l ( \1\1111\ &lt;\ lf1"-\1'1 . 'rlw tl:',tl\ 111
'' t\&gt; ~ ll:'l,nlt\".1\'jllllll~l 111\l~lc 11nJ till.'
1\"-'llllll.'ntl\jll" 111' Sl\\lllll.'lh.t\"m Ohl\\.
Th•' 1\lllt\" "' 1,1\llskiiii\S I" llCRt \11\1
at thi• ' ~'·\ J.l.hh.~ t"l' 'hi~~~· F ' t .

""~ ~~~ ""t.·nw\1~· 1\ Ill 1\111.'11 "ith

\ 'lnt'"' ( \ ,m\1\ ~ hill\'~ 'f\'Mll 1111
Rl\~~ nmry 1111~. l\lll\\\1\'11 b •llw IIIII·
•

Readlna up
In Britain
LONDON (AP) - The
number of British pllrenls
reudin11 to their chlldnm
hus m\ll'll than. doubl~ In
the .losl hvo yell!'$, owin~
to lhe success of books
such liS "Harry fi()Uer" lind
"The Lord 11f lhe Rin»S." n
survey said.
Ninety percenl of tho.'lll
' polled m~id they re~ulnrly
read to their son or dll\l~h­
ter. compllred whh 40 percent wh~n the same gu~s­
tlon wus asked in 2000. ·
The survey results were
published Friduy. .
·
The
etW'iY
firm
Powergen. which commissioned both surveys,
ottrlbyted thtl chuniO to
the 11ppeul such books
h11vo to children 11nd
adults.
This your's poll of 1.000
parents .with ono or more children under a~e 10
found that 94 percent of
mothers snld they rellulllrly read their younasters u
slory, compared whh 86
percent of fathers.

MEIGS
CALENDAR
Community Clltndtr 11 ·
publlthtd •• I frH llrYIGe
to non-profit groupe with·
tng to 1nnounoe mHIInga
and tpecltl eventa, Th1 Oil•
end1r It not dlllgntcl to
promot1 11111 or fund•r.la•
ere of 1ny type. 1t1m1 .,,
printed only 11 1p1oe permill 1nd cannot btl guera~·
IHd to btt prh1ttd I I(MIOIIIo
number of d1y1.
Tueadey, July 30

POMEROY - Childhood
lmmunlzollon ollnlo at lho
Mtlgl
County
Hoalth
Department, 1 lo 3 p.m. Tako ·
ohlldren't thot recorda.
Children mutt bl aOCiompa·
nlod by parenVtegal guardian.
· Donattona appreciated; not
required.
l1turd1y, Aug. 3

PORTLAND - Lubonan
Townthlp Truttttl. 7 p.m. al
tho townthlp building.
REEDSVILLE - The Wtil
family reunion, dtiOtndanlt
of John and '!.lure. Well, will
g•ther al Forked Run Stolt
Park. The family will moet at
tht lower thtlltr houte at
noon.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrttonvtllt J,.odgo, FloAM,
· 7:30 p.m. at lht hall.
Rtlrtthmtnlt.
REEDSVILLE - . Family
reunion lor dt-ndantt of
Samuel and Wille Smith, t
p.m. Forkld Run State Park.
Tallo eovtrod dtth.
lundty, Aug. •

.

SVRACUSf - Elohtngor
reunion, · t p.m. 11 C~rluton
SChoOl Byraov••·

PROUD TO BE
APART OF YOUR

UFE.
nw D&lt;tlls .\'l'l!«ll#
S'ttl»erihf Mt~~\' • ~;2, JI.~
WII~IJ. lll)'ililitlllt'llfif~W. t'MI

�•

•
I
TUead•~~an.22,2002

The Daily Sentinel

Tue•d•y. July :so,
1001
•

Wohlers picks up fii'st save in 8-6 win
lin• e

1\JtssDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

the Indians since he was acquired
from Montreal on June 27 in the deal
that senl Bartolo Colon to the Expos.
It was also his lirsl home run otl a
left-hander all season.
Stevens wasn ' t scheduled to start,
but designated hiller Ellis Bu.rks was
a late scra1d1 w11h a sore leh shoulder. He found out he was playmg during batting practice.
.
.
Mulholland ( 1-0) made h1s l11d1ans
debut at\er being lmded from Lo~
A~.gel es on Sunday. ,
, ·
lmtmduced myself &lt;tnd asked htm
about what he's been doing from a
pitching standpoint," Cleveland manager Joel Skinner s.lid. "His answer

LtalonAII·stlr
Game set for
V.lldn•sday

Rlvenld•
W.Vu

l~lvct•sldc Cinlt't'lub In Mnsuit
lmtltW\1u~cs tn t'C I!llt1 recent·

MASON . W.Vu. - The
Wuhu111u ~;~o lf lcunl will l'llll"
du~t un ot'gtutl t.u tlunul tuccl·
ltljj f!l'ldtty, Au!!• 2, nl I0 U,l\1 ,
nl ~lvc1's lu c (Jolt' Club In
Mu ~un .

l hyslcul ~ lips, sd tctlul ~ u11d
~ode of Clllttluct l'ut·m.~ will be
1

tll~u· lbutcd ,

ihc tcu111's llrsl fli'Ucllce IM
slttlctll'or Aug. 7.

Jamar Martin
outfor1111on

.

debut
not the
best

••corclldat

WahamaaoH
mHtln1 ·

Pl1111 ••• Seve, At

.

'IWoaces

ly.
.
Nkk Hunscn 111' Athctts.
Ohlu, ~nt\lcd the 17th u~c of
the l~l vcrslllc scuso11 tm the
I ~~ -ytu'd , · 12th hole. Hun11en
used 1111 ll·lrun lor his llrst
htllc·hl -tmc. Wlt11cssln!l the
fell! wctc fum Roush 1111d u
fmn·sttmc lhm1 Athens.
Lut't'Y Whnbrc~ u~cd the
114-yurd 7th hulc ushl!lll IJh~ll1. It Wns UI SI I his ill'S! ~lii'CCI'
hulc·ht·onc. Witnesses were
Mitch Rnu slt. '1\my Otl~llll
uml Mutt ihtHHilMtHt.

was: 'Just give me the bal.l."'
.
Eric Chavez and Jermame Dye htt
RBI singles in the first inning off
Cleveland starter Jaret Wright to give
the A's a 2-0 lead.
Wright got into trouble in the second, loading the bases with no outs.
Ray Durham hit an RB l groundout
and Miguel Tejada added a run-scoring single to make it 4-0.
Tejada extended his hilling streak
to a career-high 18 games. The last
Oakland player_ with an 18-game
string was Jason Giambi in 1999.
Ramon Hernandez added a two-out

Green's

LANCASillR
ihc
A.mct'l\:tm lc!!iun Oisui~t 8
AII·Stnt' tlttmc will be plnycd
111 1 p,m. Wcdttcstlay 111
UcttWt' \ -..1cltlln Lmt(ustcr.
1'ht'Cc . pluycrs !'rum the
Mcll!s Lcl!lun SIJllttd arc
s~ hruulc1.l tu pltty In the l!tmtc.
'rhc)' 111'C. Mlclmcl Wnrt-cn,
l)uslln tHhbs und J11sh ~ndl.
. Wttn~n llnlshctl the scustltl
with u .40 I buttlllll uvert'l!c,
t'tlllcctlnl! 4'1 hits. He led the
district tllld lcllln with I 0
humc ttms. ·
tllhhs hit J3:l with 11ve
htlll\c "'"s. He pustcd u ~.;)
rc~IIIU pltdtlnw,.
·
Ly11th hit J I.I wllh fmn·
htlntc 1\llts untl n tcum-hll!h
lbur lliples.
Wut'I'CII lllld tlibbs Wet'C
sc l e~:tcd 111 the l) lstrkt HAIIStttncm11 1n 2001.

MASON.

I'M NOT JOKING, THIIII MY JOB - !lengale quarterback Jon Kltna laughS neat the end of a mornln·g practle!! sea~ ton Monday at training camp In Georgetown, Ky. (At&gt;)

Westbrook out four weeks.
after falling, breaking wrist
OEiOROE\'roWN , K~. (AP) - Re~e lver Michael
Wcsthtllllk will need surgery un his broken right
wrist, si delining hlt\1 lhr the rest uf lhc Cincinnati
Blilljjllli&lt;' trulnlng ~ullljl .
ihe Bengul &lt; ufso leurued
Monduy thul offensive tuckle
John Juck sun pussed un
un~jl,lgl'ut\1 urtd will be ublc
lei t'csumc ll!lhl wurkuuts
thls Week.
.
Westbrook tell during
pru~tlcc . Sunduy und
broke u sn1ull bone at
the buMe uf the 1hUi1lb. He i'llllshed pructke but got
tesls lule Sunduy utlcr the wrlsl cotnlnued 10 bother
hl\11,
On Munduy he ~tiW u M
tJecluliMIwho rcwmmcnd~d sUtl!llry w li1 Nel'l iJ •crew lttlhc brtJken bone . He ' ll
huvc llie upcrtUit!tl rue.duy 11IOI'IIIi1g.
"You wish these thlll!l• 11cver happen. A wrist
,l t~ury Is w 111cwhul dcbllllutlt1!llo u wide 1·ecelver,"

SAN ANTONIO (AI1 ) '&lt;1'l:&gt;ttllus Cowboys fiKikl ~ 1\tll·
buck Jumur Murtlu. lhc lcum'"
t'uurth-rtlUIUJ 11kk l't•uttl Ohio
.Stule, Will 11\IKs thl ~ Kl!liMilll
utlct' lclil'ltt!l l illlllll~lll ~ Itt hi N
. .
rl~l\1 knee.
Mul'l ln mudc tl\1 lnt~re~•lvc
bluck 1111 llncbudcr Khitr~
Cullll!flcll dtll'lng tho lcum N
tlrNI MCKMiun wllh li ve w~kllng .
COL~ MI1U S (AI'J - The Ohio
1111 Mundu)'. AN lh~ pluy cun·
H.l!lh
Si:,huol Athlelk Assodulion's
tlnucd. umllhcr pluyllr l'dlon
board
ut ~lJIHriJI ~uld h hils curried
Mul'll n'N t•lghl cull' u11u IWINICu
out all of a·w nm11Hge's rccot11tl1enII IN lcll ·'
dulhJt1~ fur ~ hu ngeM In II~ 11nunclul
(\•whu)'M cou~ h l:)uvll
~truclurc. '
·
·
'
C.'llillllll suld Mur1l11 would
rltc c hungcs I11cIud· c cs tubll sII1 ng
hu vc Nurgcry "111 the ncur
ttll lndilpcniletH ahnuul utuJii and
future ,"
e ll1~t1Wcrl ng Ihe UMsocllllllll1 's ~om ·rh~ t'nwhi1yM druncd thd ·
'· tttlsMiuner In 11Hlltilor ex~11ses.
(out· II , 244-tJllllttd Mutllll lo
All ln~:omc l'roltl the U~HOclmlon 's
provide dc111h 111 full buck ,
MI~ di Ntrlct buurd" now will be Melli to
They uiNtt cK ilCtled him 10
Ihe OHSAA's Columbus ofl'lce. The
~UI11Jk le wit h Mulllltt Thtll11uN
board~ In the puNt hu vc hcen
ftlr lhe ~llltllllll Jub liN thil lcutJ
uutotlotttnus alltl nnl u~cnUI11i1ble lo
blu4:ker ror lfm111ll1 Smllh .
the ni'rli:c ·of 01-I ~AA t'm11 n11 &lt;Ninllet
whu IN juNI ~40 yur~ K M
hy ur
Clulr Muscuro.
bl:~on1ln~;~ lhc NFL K curcer
'rhe llew f'I ICU I ruleM mengtltell tile
ru8hllll! lcutJcr.
·
~mn ml ~s lollct's conlrol over dully

cuu~h Dick LeBeau said. ".Bul al least he can keep

hl.1 cundlllonlng und won'l ge! thai fur behind ."
The Benguls ure hopeful thai Westbrook will be
heuled In lime for the season opener Sept. K uguinsl
Sun Diego. He ' ll be sidelined for at least four weeks.
· h's the second time inlhree yeurs thai the Benguls
huve lost their most experienced receiver uurlng
!ruining camp.
·
·
'
Durnuy Scott broke his lower leg during u wmkout Itt 2000 and missed lhe entire season. Scoll
·returned lust yeur und had 57 catches for a leumlending M19 yards.
H hd 1
.
., .
e u to s I out llltn 1cu~P. In May becuuse.lhe leg
Wlls bothering him. then l,a~led lo show up lqr vul- .
unlury workouts und dldn I return lhe team 's IJhone
cuiiM. The Benguls released him this mont1 und
repluccd hl111 wit~ Westbt110k, .u tree ~gent who
cuughl ~7 pltsses lor 664 yards tor Wushmglon la~l
seusun.
IH Fllllna. AJ

PI••••

BEREA (AP) - William Green dropped
a pass, fumbled and didn't break off a run
longer than six yards.
As debuts go, Green's was rather forgettable.
"I was a lillie rusly," the Cleveland
Browns rookie running back
said Monday. "I need to
knock a little rust off."
Green
didn't
report to training
camp· until Sunday
following a con~~IW=tl tract holdout,
and was outshined
by
other - lessexpensive - running backs as the Browns
held their t1rst inlrasquad scrimmage on
Monday.
_
Green didn't start with the first unit, and
he didn' t do anything spectacular in the 13
plays he was on the field during the two~
hour scrimmage in front of 3,700 fans at the
Browns' suburban training co!Uplex.
He finished with seven carries for 16
yards, bul was outgained by Autry Denson,
James Jackson, Jamel White and Carl Fair
- none of whom signed a five-year, $7.85
million deal or is expected to be the
Browns' next I,000-yard rusher.
"It was good to gel out there," said Green,
who ·had only two practices before the
scrimma~e. "The speed was unbelievable."
Green JOined the starting offense for the
sixth play, and on the seventh, made his first
rushing attempt. ,
After taking the hunduff from quarterback
Tim Couch. Green tried to sweep the left
side but had nowhere to go cut back toward
the middle where he ran into linebacker
Dwayne Rudd.
- Green moved Rudd back a Jard on the
co lli sion, a shot that was notice by some o{
Cleveland's defensive players·.
"You like to see his ag~resslveness," said
linebacker Jamir Miller. • The back we need
is going to have to tote it 25 to 30 times a
game. He'll have to put his head down and
show he can be lhat guy." .
Green and Rudd got lo each other better
on the former Boston College stat's second
carry, u three-yard pickup.
On the next snap, Couch's short sideline
pass Was dropped by Green, who said he
look his eye off it. ,
·

OHSAA: Change~in financial structure corlJplete

•

•

•

Dispatch reported that it had obtained
u 15-puge reporl from ihc associatlort's auditors that suid some members of the· OHSAA's siK district
boards:
·
•Claimed they drove to out-of-stale
conl:erence.~ when they uctually flew,
pocketing the exlru truvcl money.
•Received ullowunces for attending
stale tourna111ent evenls without submlttlng expense reports or returning
unused lunds.
•Cur-pooled to tournaments but
turned In sepnrale mil eage reimbursemenls as If each hud driveu.
•Collected cash,advances for several nights or lodging during national
conventions. then left their hotel
early without returning money to the
'

.

•

=Tiger and the Bear win Bighorn
• PALM DESER-t Calif.
} (AP) Jack ~icklau s
knocked down a flag and
Tiger Woods took care of the
rest Monday nij!ht as the best
players of the1r generations
lived up to the billing in the
· Battle at Bighorn.· .
On a sweltering aftelll.oon
in the desert, Woods torched
Bighorn with the kind of performance he could have used
:: in the British Open. He made
·- nine birdies in 16 holes and
" carried Nicklaus lo a 3 and 2
victory over Sergio Garcia
· and Lee Trevino.
_
. Nicklaus made only a few
" contributions, but they were
memorable.
Despite an ailing back and TOP OF THE !)AME- Tiger Woods, right, is congratulated by
· 62-year-old legs, Nicklaus hit Sergio Garcia, left, as he gets a hug from teammate Jack
a 7-iron that kissed off the Nicklaus after Woods made par on the 16th hole to seal the
., flagstick for a tap-in birdie on victory during the Battle at Bighorn on Monday. (AP)
No. 9 as he and Woods won
" four straight holes in the llliddle of the match · and turned best-ball format .
"All you have to do is shul
this battle inio a breeze.
T~e only hole that someone up 'and listen," Woods said
The fourth annual made- didn't birdie was the last one. after the eighth hole.
·
.
for-TV exhibition pitted two Garcia had a 15-footer to
Woods spoke volumes with
of the best players from their extend the match, but it his club.
generations in ·a best-ball slipped by on the left.
With temperatures topping
th
Nicklaus had not played out at 107 degrees, Woods j!OI
' m~ey didn't disappOint.
with Woods sinee the first two off loa blazing start by hittmg
·• Woods was 9 under for his rounds of the 2000 PGA' his approach into 6 feet for
• mund when the match ended Championship at Valhalla, birdie on the first hole, then
under the Hghts on No. 16 where Woods went on to win .making a IS-footer for birdie
· 3e
s in a playoff for his third out of on No 2
wit h h•s -•Dot par putt. 0 four consecutive ma•ors.
"If he. keeps doing that,
~ominant was his perfor..
'
mance that he dion't even get
I know no~ that I have no there's no sense putting the
!I chance at two other birdie . busme&amp;s,pla~mg on th~ re~~- lights up," Trevino said to
putts inside 10 feet.
lar tour, Nicklaus ~a1d. If Garcia.
Trevino must have wanted
Nicklaus stole the show on you see the way, Ttger and
those two holes making his S~rgto play, there s no such to see those lights, because he
b' d.'
N !3 thmg as a par-5 anymore. My answered with birdie putts of
o~ly other tr •e on
partner was great. And I like !0 and 15 feet on lhe next two
Wtth a 12-foot putt.
t0 · "
holes to square the match, and
.. Trevino, th~ 62-ye.ar-old
;:does Woods, who came Garcia got in on the act with a
Merr&gt;: !vfex contnbuted out wilh a focus that belied 12-foot birdie putt on the parthree btrd.tes and most of the the hit-and-giggle event. 3 sjxth hole for a 1-up lead.
conversation. ~he only lime Garcia is the only player to
That was fleeting.
he S!Opped talkmg was when have beaten Woods in the
.Woods and Nicklaus won
he h1t the b~ll .
,
Battle at Bighorn, and Woods the next four holes, the turnAnd the mght wasn I a total seemed bent on gaining some ing point coming on No. 8
loss for Garc1a, the 22-year- revenge in the middle of a when all four plJiyers had the
old Spaniard known lately for team event.
. hole surrounded.
•the .countless waggl~s and
It allied to a far more comNicklaus went first, rifling a
· " regnps. Ntcklaus tned to pelling match than last year, 2-iron into 12 feet. Woods hit ·
counsel h.•m on t~e strange when hot blasts of desert 5-iron. and the ball stopped
·hab1t, telhn,g Garc1a that he, wind, ridiculously tough con- about I0 inches from going
too, was guilty of slow play. ditions and an alternate-shot into the hole. He (\au$ht
'• "Finaii;Y, I had a couple of format guaranteed a snoozer Nickl'aus looking at his cho1ce
I penalty t1me~ an~ I learned to in a mixed-team mqlch featur- of club and said, "I just took a
: P!ay faster, Ntcklaus told . ing Woods and Annika little off it."
.
Sorenstam against David
Trevino and Garcia both
,h1m. .
· I;&gt;espne
makmg
five . Duval and Karrie Webb.
pulled their 10-foot putts to ·
; birdies, Garcia got another
That wasn't the only differ- fall 1-down, then Nicklaus
: lesson that he knows all too ence.
· • finally contributed with a shot
' well.
The conversation was off that brought out the loudest
· "We had our chances, but the charts most o( it thanks to roar of the match .;,.... a 7-iron
. ·we missed too many putts ~n the MerrY Mex.
that hit the flag and stopped a
' !~e front , nine," . he s~td.
Trevino started gabbing foot away.
· When.you ~e plar,mg ~gatnst from the moment he arrived
"That was the highlight,"
·· a guy of th1s cahber, 1f you on the practice range and Woods said. "Lee called it. He
• don;t make. ~~e putts, you stopped only long eno~gh to said, 'Jack is going to hit this
can t afford 11.
hit the ball.
one stiff.'"
'' Birdies were a must in the

1

°·

OHSAA.
·
The report did not identify any
OHSAA members. The district
boards are made up of school adininistrators.
As u nonprofit organization, the
OHSAA - which has 819 member
high schools- pays no federal, state
or local luxes. Its nonprofit status also
means many of its records are confidential and exempt from financial
·review by the stale auditor.
Although 85 per~ent of its member
schools are public, the OHSAA is not
accountable to any go\!ernmental
a~ency or body for Its conduct, decistons regardi~g students or handling
of millions dollars in revenue.

.

Debut
fNm Pip A6
Browns coach ButcV
Davis wasn't surpriS'e&lt;tfo
see Green struggle.
"He's behind and he's
got to learn," h~ said. "He
needs the reps.''
Davi s expected Green to
have some jitters in his
first full-contact NFL
scrimmage.
Denson, who played
mostly spe.ciul teams for
the Chicago Bears last season, signed a one-year
contract by the Browns on
Friday· as insurance while
Green remained out.
But Denson had already
made an impression in his
first few days of camp
before gaining 58 yards on
t2 carries and scoring

from 8 yards on the scrimmage's linai play.
Denson. Notre Dame ~s
career rushing leader, has
also· had stops in Tampa
' Bay and Miami dur~ng his
four-year career. He shoping lo make Cleveland a
permanent one.
White, the third-year
back, who has added 10
pounds oh. muscle th1s
summer, had a 22-.yard run
and later turned 3' short
pass i·nto a 21-yard gain.
Earlier in camp, the 5foot-9 White flattened the
6-5 Miller on a block.
White started in seven
games last season. but
says he isn't worried about
where he is on the depth
chart right now.
"I'm not worried about
starti ng," he said. "I'm not
saying I don't want to
start, though."

AROUND
THE
DIAMOND
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~··-

CoiO&lt;ado (Chacon 5·7) 11 Plllal&gt;urgh
(Elelmel 1-5), 7:05 p.m.
Ariz- (Billota 5-7) at Montreal
('Jazquaz 8-8), 7:05p.m .
St. LOuio (Benol 0-3) ot Florida (Tojera
3), 7:05 p.m.

e.

Falling ·
from Page A6 .
Second-year receivers
Chad Johnson and T.J .
Houshmandzadeh are the
primary backups at the
position.
Jackson. 37, had an
angiogram Monday that
found nothing wrong with
his heart. He has a history
of heart problems in his
family and got slightly
abnormal results when he
took two stress tests last
Friday. promptins doctors

Save

from Page A&amp;
RBJ double in the third
innin~ to make it 5-0.
Wnght, making just his
second star! of the season
after recovering from
shoulder surgery, allowed
five runs on five hits in 2
2-l innings. He walked
seven, a season high fpr an
Indians pitcher.
Ricky Gutierrez, Einar
Diaz and Matt Lawton all
hit two-out RBI singles off

to schedule the angiogram.
The Bengals placed
safety Pig Prather on the
reserve/retired
Iist
Monday after he told the
club he no longer wanted
lo play irythe NFL. Prather
was an undrafted free
agent from Mississippi
State.
The club also ,fined
defensive end Jevon
LangfQrd, who s howe~ up
Monday after mi ssi ng
weekend ~ workouts.
Langford, a seven-year
veteran, told the club he
would miss the start of
camp for personal reasons.

San

Franclaco

11

8-8)

(Ruoler

Phllldetphla tMyora 1-&lt;)), 7:05 p.m.

Houston (Salrloos 2-2) II N.Y. Moto
(O'Amloo 5-8), 7:10p.m.

LeW AIIQIIH (lahll 12..) 11
(Dompow 11-11~ 7:10 P-"'-

anc-

Milwaukoe (QuevedO 8-7) 11 · Allanla

(Moss 6-4), 7:35 p.m.
San Diego (BJ.Jonel 7-5) II
Cull&amp; (Prior4-3), 8:05p.m.

CltlcoQO

A-1-MGU'
Eai1

Now York

Bostoo

W

L

86
61
.&gt;Ill

38
13

Toronto

...

S4
59

Tampa Bay

34

70

Balllmono

Pet.
.835
.587

Gl

.471 '

17

,127

21~

.527

32

5

Chicago

Cenlrll
WLPciGe
S4. 42 .1104
50 58 .472
••

,.

,olq

Detroit

...
'"'

61
54

..,9
.385

Anaheim
Saattle

WLPciGe
63 41
64 42 .1101
t10 o~~~
4

Minnesota

c
-KansasClty

-·

.eoe

A's starter Tim Hudson in
.see
Oaklar&lt;l
« 61 ,119 19\
Toxao
the fourth inning to cut it
-.,·. ato 5-3.
Tampa Bay 8, ·Ba111rrtCQ 1
Chavez added an RBI
N.Y. Yankeeo 9, T..os 2·
Kanoao Clly 4, Toronto 1
double in the fourth to put
Anohelm 5, Boolort 1
Oakland up 6-3.
Saalllel, Detroit 3
C-and I, O.kland 8
Hudson allowed five
~'IGIIrnM
runs and 12 hits in siK
Detroit (Maroll1 3-31 at Saalllt (Hatama 53), 8:35 p.m.
·
innings.
Baltimore
(St"""""'
G-01
ot Tampa Bay
· Gutierrez left after the
(Ker)nedy 5-6), 7:15P.m.
seventh with a bruised left
N.Y. Yankees (O.Wella 11-5) at T tMyetta D-2), 8:05 p.m.
· calf. He struck out swingWltlle S.. (Buehrle 13-7) al
ing in lhe second inning, · Chicago
Minnesota (Lon,. 1D-5), 8:05p.m.
Toronto (Walker 3-2) 11 K.lnau Cl1y
sending his bat flying into
1;\senclo 2-3), 8:05 p.m.
the .Oakland dugout. A's
Boston (P.Marllnttz 13·2) at Anaheim
manager Art Howe and
IOrllz 11-7). 10:05 p.m.
CleVotand (-1-1) It Ollcland (Lldlo
several players had to
:1-1~ 10:05 p.m.
jump to avoid it.

:Cowher not happy with late interception
··.' LATROBE, Pa. (AP) - It was the hottest
· day so far in the Pittsburgh Steelers' camp . and by the end of a 2 1/2-hour afternoon
wo;kout Monday, coach Bill Cowher was hot
, himself.
.
· Cowher wasn't happy that, during a prac. lice-ending goal-line drill, backup quarter1 back Tommy Maddox's pass was intercepted
. by reserve defensive back Eugene Clinton and
returned for a touchdown.
• On the third-down play, Maddox was sup:, posed to throw the ball a~ay, if necessary, to
_ preserve the chance to ktck. a field goal on
fourth down.
"We did one of the things we're not sup' posed .to do," Cowher said. "Hopefully, it's a
· lesson learned in Latrobe that will not be
repeated at Heinz Field.''
. . As the heat index on St. Vincent College's
,, practice fields reached I02 de$rees for the
.. second of the day's two practices, Cowher

was otherwise pleased with a session that
ended with the starting offense going against. ·
the starting defense.
"It was the No. I defense in the league last
year, and it's a challenge for us," running back
Jerome Bellis. "It was hot, but we're·going to
have some hot days in 'September, so we've
got to get ready for it now. The heat develops
a mental toughness.''
. Safety Mike I,.ogan left the afternoon workout early with hamstring tightness, but
Cowher said the injury appeared minor.
Cowher is hopeful that tight end Mark
Bruener (sprained foot) will rejoin drills later
this week. Bruener, who missed the second
half of last season with an injured shoulder,
hurt his foot the week before camp opened.
- The Steelers will practice only once
Tuesday, an afternoon workout that is open to
the public .

.~NBA approves use of in.stant
-replay for last-second shots ·

Ple111 IH Debut, A7

.

operations und uuthorhy lo approve
or reject any OHSAA trips and tn
consulldute money management.
'rhe buutd np,proved u sel of stundurdlt.ed pol lc es u1 u bourd meeting
ihur~day as the llnul step lo implemen II ng Ihc 14 recotllmen ded
changes,
"'I'!Je changes within the OHSAA
lhul Ihe bourd adopted this yeur will
reslillln an even ~lrutlgct ussociulion." said Leonard Jackson, oulgoing president of lhe OI·ISAA Bourd of
Co11trol.
·
.
In tlddilion , lhe bourd of control
recovered u smull umouhl of money
In J n11 rpruprhlle reimbursements to
district board members.
In Murch 2001 , fhe Co lumbu s

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

•

Page A&amp;

OAI\LAND, Calif. (All) - Mark · hit his first home run for the Indians,
W,lhlct'll had tl bad (asc 111' bullerllics. a three-run game winner, and Terry
Yet he picked up his Mulhollmld earned his first win with
1\n;t save sincr 199M, iwo inllhlgs of scoreless rel.lef.
getlillg the fiMI two
am the anenllon was on Woblcrs,
illlls of the C'lcvchmd who had reconstrucllvc elbi'&gt;w
lndltm~ ' ~~-~ vktot·y over the Oakhmd" surgery in 1999 and has struggled ·
Athletic~ on Monduy night.
since. He has 57 career saves, but hi s
"'Thnt'~ l)hlbably as net·vous as I've last one came Ju11e 3, 199M. while
been fllr IJllite some lime," Wol1lers with Atlanta.
~"kt "I lei the adreMII ne \\1111'k for
Trailing by three going into the
me."
seventh. Milton Bradley hit a two-nm
. , ntc A\ have dtupj&gt;ed five of six to s.inglc with I he bases loaded a~d
lull 1'11ut· games behilld Anaheim atid Stevens gave Clevclmtd the lead With
Sc11Hie ill the AL We11L
hi s home run off reliever Mike
'l\v11 lleW .tt&lt;.'qllisltlllns ttl so coli- Mag.nattle (0-2). :
·
u·lbtttcd tor Clevelan\1, Lee Stevens
II wits Ste.vens' firsl. home run with

' '

NEW YORK (AP) - The
NBA will make sure next season that last-second shots
really do beat the buzzer.
.
• The league on Monday
"approved the use of instant
replay beginning with .the
2002-2003 preseason, JUSt
•months after some controver' sial last-second calls in the
playoffs.
It comes too late for Baron
,Davis, but Reggie Miller and
benefited
,,Samaki Walker
'
from the watt.
' Offici11ls can also determine
If a player was fouled before
time exfired (but not whether
"the fou ~all was correct or
not) and if a 24-second shot
''Clock or eight-second back"court violation occurred
· libefore a shot. '
: Any last-second shot wou~d
"be reviewed and coaches Will
not be able to prompt them.

The league;s Competition between .the Hornets and the
Cpmmittee recommended the Orlando Magic, Charlotte's
move to the Board of · Davis banked in a shot that
Governors last week, and the clearly beat the buzzer after
board approved ·the measure the Hornets inbounded with
by an "overwhelming majori- 0. 7 seconds left and the score
ty" Monday. At least three- tied.
quarters, or 22 of 29 mem·
Referee Bernie Fryer
bers needed to vote in favor waved the shot off while it
of the rule for the league to was in the air, saying the offiadopt it.
ciating crew had discussed
Several last-second shots beforehand that no player
last season helped precipitate could catch, tum and shoot in
the move.
·
that amount of time.
"I don't think there's an;Y
The Hornets went on to beat
one event that drove this dec1- the Magic in overtime, but the
sion " Stu Jackson. the NBA's episode showed that the
vice' president for basketball lea$u.e needed _to adth-ess its
operations said. ''There have pohc1es regardmg ruhngs on
been a number of instances last-second shots.
where, quite fra111dy, for any
For any reviewable call to
human bein~ it would have · be overturned. officials will
been imposstble to determine need te have "clear and conwhether the shot got off in elusive" evidence. The league
time."
said the reviews will take two
In an April playoff game minutes or less.

•

Ulm how the Pur1fkltion

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NORJHWESI TOUR

15 OAY8- From $1819 pip dbl oc:e., .
pluo lax &amp; por1 charges Cruloe I Puii8QI wl1h Holloncl Amoricl &amp; 100r
lho Plldflc Northwoot Clll 800-922-

•

�•

....

•

.. . ....

·'

•

www.mydallpentlnel.com

•

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tn::ribune - ·sentinel - 1\.e ster

-: 1Uaaday, July 30, 2002

'

www.myclallyMntlnel.com

I

'The Dally Sentinel •

A8

SSIFIED
•

•

••

199S Ooclgt AdYo&lt;lgor •
Clood.Lootco
GtMI.(304)e?Heee

,: ueoo. ~una

:; 1001 Camtn&gt;, v.ry tow
.• mltoo. 1fltl2 Chovy Lumina.

•

•

••
••

In 0
With Us .
RE~CH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Dl$play Ads

Dally ln-CotUmnr 1:00 p.m.

All Dlaplay; 1. 2 Noon Z

Mondav·•rtday for lnaertlon
In Next Dav Pap•r

8ualneaa Daya Prior To

4

•

Sunday ln-Columnz 1100 p.m.
Por Sundaya P'aper

•

Deacrlptlon • Include A Prfoe • Avoid AbbNwlatlonl

Item•
\'\\Ill \.I I \II'\ 1._

• Atll Should Run 7 OIYI

• •".tll'.·
_W_AN'I_l_lD.. •·"·ELP·
' ·W-ANiti_lD_,

Rain or shine 4 family ga·
rage sale, 3202 ·syracuse,
31 + 1at formerly Jo's Gilt
Shop, cement blrc:t bath,
toys, dlahes. pots + pans,
children new &amp; used
clothes, hamper, aweeper,
play pen, ·stroller, all kind ol
things, to much to mention

Moonlight Escorts. Full
Mrvlce male and female es·
corts an(! dancers. Prompt
and Professional and Confl·
dentlal. We slso do Birth·
; ~. Private and Bachelor
Aartfas.
6pmeam.
(740)386·1799.

I

Yard Sale Aug 2 &amp; 3. 825
Main Street In Rutland
Hugel Closing or home.
Furniture, washer &amp; ctryer,
dilh81, Too numerous to
mention

lftihy walt? Start meeting
Ohio singles tonight, call toll
lrea 1·800·766·2823 ext
1821 '

r

l

r

Mason County Early care Garage Sale Augual 1&amp;2
and Education Center Is 2901 Brook Dr. (behind VII·
now accapllng enrollmonl laga Pizza) 8·5, brand name
lor full time and· part time clothing, books mlac.
. spaces. Wa serve children - - - ' - - - - - ages ·1·5. Hours ot opera· Huge yard sale, bealde
Uon ar~ 7:30am to 5:30pm. Brumfield's Garage, Aehlon.
We are also now altering a Aug. 1,2,3. Sam·? (weather
halt day preS(lhool program . permllllng)
Houra are 8:15to 12:15 with · c __
bruktast and lurlCh servvd. /-luge Yard Sale. At 2 South
Def,rood and experienced Across lrom Shell Plant. Au·
sta 1 will be working with gust 1st, 2nd, 3rd. Table &amp;
·
your chllc:t on pre· r~adlnass
heirs;
Lamps,
Baby
skills. Tuition Is b!!lsed on Things, Chitdrena Clothes &amp;
family lncomo. Link Ia also olhor lurnlturo, Homemade
accepted. Please contact appIs buttar &amp; I1IIY·

~~~:n ~~d(~)~~ 5'::~ts ~~;

La.rge 2 tam!!~ garage aaltl,
more Information
Hartford, W.V. Sliding Hill
Creek Road, 11•11 houaa on
hill loti of nice adult and
teen name brand clothes.
· GIVJt'AWAY
1.,- - - - - - - " · king a!ze sheets, curtaln1,
Iamp 1h ades, dIshes, pots &amp;
·
Free to good home, 3 Bes· pans, lola ol mise, to much
glea· Mother and 2· 4 month to list Aug 2·3
old pupa, (740)386·9438
1!1!11"'-~~....-....,

,r-_..,........---,

·-

I

,Givaaway: Uprlghl Plano
and Ping Pong Table· Mu8l
.taka all. E\lenlngs (740)446·
•1756.

·

r

WArfflt])

B

~._ _...,;lliiOiiiiUii\'-_.j
~

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Sliver, Gold Coins, Prool·
Diamonds,
Gold
sela,

&lt;Pair ol Klnena. Prefer same
home, Litter trained. Inside Rlnga,
U.S. Currency,·
only, (740)446·3697
M.T.S, Coin Shop, 151 Soc·

r

740

Losr
AND
FOUNn

~~g-~~:~~e,Galllpolta, ·

Farmero Bank &amp; Savings
co.. Pomeroy, Olilo lo seek·
lng a pari· lime colloclor (a
mo•lmum ot 35 hours per
waak) tor us Pomeroy of·
lice.
are looking lor
someone with collections
o•perlanco gocxt communi·
calion &amp; computer akllla .
Reoponolblllllao/dutloo In·

we

·

"
•
FOUND-In Kanauga area
~/19. Largetj brown ~~'::~
HELP.WAMl-D
c~;k~7 ~l~a ..(7~0)446: · - - - - - - ·
..., 666
,..
AITN : Polnl Pleasant
S
C
Postal poaltlont. Clerkslear·
oMiaelng Since unday. ol· rlars/sotlara. No axp. ro·
·lie &amp; Dalmatian on Bigelow qull'ed . Benellta. For eMam,
Road .
Raward,
Call
(7401245 •5999 .
salary, and testing lnforma·
"'"';;,;;."""'.;,;._ _ __, lion call (630)393·3032 Ext
•u
YMIII SALE
782. 6am·8pm. 7 daya.

1110

'Wr,t;

elude but not limited to mak· call Diana Harless: AN or
lng dally phone calla, prepa·
ratlonlmalllng ollorm CQIIec•
Uon !euera, preparation of
reports, ulllfzallon of com·
puler to raellitate dall~ ra·
sponalbllltles, personal contact with c::ustOmera, filing
small dalms, assllllng lull
lime colleclor. Send cover
letter and detallad resume
to Farmors Bani&lt;, A«n:Hu·
man Resources Director,
PO Box 626 Pomeroy
Ohio 45769. Formiro Bank
11 an Equal Housing Lander,
Mombor FDIC. and Equal
Opportunity Employer.

!:....C:.C:,:::,:::=,::....---

=---------

=ior

Tlllany Franklin 11 800-4SI·
8334 or (740)446 .4 148
·
Modi Home Health· Now
Hiring PCA'a, STNA'a &amp;
HHA'alor Private Care for a
growing aganc~. II Interestad, pleaao call Diana Har·
leas, RN or Tiffany Franklin
at
eoo-•&amp;1-633&lt;1
or
(740)448·4148.

Nuralng Aaolllanta nood to
provide In homo Sorv~o.lor
lhe aldarlyldlaebied In Ma·.
son.
Pulnam,
Cabell,
Wa~ne, Lincoln. ~8.60.
perlhr. Training Available.
-H.-r-dw-a-ro--S-al..--c,-o-rk. Calfl-888·453-4992
0nd Rasums to: CLA 557 Olllct Manager needed.
c/o Oalllpolla Dally Tribuna, Muot havo pa•roll knowl·
825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis, ed~t, advonced' compuler
Oh 45631
oklla. Monda"· Frida• g.
'
'
Home Heatth Agencv hiring Spm to atart Immediately.
FT AN'a .No home health No phone calli ~IHII. Mall
experienCe necasaary. New reaumea 10 1 621 State
Grads encoura~d to apply, Route 554 ' Bidwell ' OH
HII FT RN
M
45e14.
r ng
••• anog·
,
1
er, exper ence necenary. AN ar PARAMEDIC needCompetfllvo Solary with ed lmmaalaloly. Great at·
benellla. Apply at 3084 SA moophare, out·potlont com·
160 Gallipolis or phone toll ptementary treatment can·
lrae t-866-441-1393.
ter clinic with very high
Housekeeper
nalded do&lt;:umented success rate.
· V&amp;"f competltiYe pay. Send
Plaaae apply 11 Budget Inn, r11ume to· 398 Rfc::h\and
Jlck!J0!1 Pike, Galllpol\a. No Ave. Athenl, Oh 45701 or
Phone Calla Please .
' Fa.: to (740) 592·12-43. No
Looking tor extre lncome7 Phone calla please.
Receive cash Oallu. Free ~
Information Send 1' SASE .ruok Driver COL Clan A,
·
rllljulrOd, 3 yeara minimum
10.
· lil ld B! k hi
vtriUabla eKperlanc.t, clean
· ono an ona P
driving record. lmmedlale
761 Koebel Avo.
Columbus. Ohio 43207
P• n1nga. 94
• 13041675•
400
5
LPN &amp; MediCal Aaalstant
wflh experience. Familiar Help wanted caring lor lho
wtMedlcal Manager. Bring elderly, Darst Group Home,
resume Wed or Frida~
now paylr1g minimum wage,
Aflarnoon 1·30·5·00 pm now ahlfla: 7am·3pm, 7am·
3009 Jackto~ Avf. Flotni 5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm·
Plaaaanl ·
7am, call740·992·5023.

°

LPN poalllon al !.llddleton
Eataloa in ICFIMR laclllty.
Fun Tlma with benefits- 35
hra week· every other week·
end. 3:00pm·l1 :00pm shift.
Must be able to flex IChecl·
ulo ao needed lor remaining
hours. Please contact Doro·
thy Harper, RN at (740)446•
4814 or (740)44e-8145. ·
..;;..__;;;...:.;...;;:......:..;::_;.:;__

Tolomarkolora Needed 10
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or WOf'k from home .. Help
Sell. Shirley Speare, 304· quallly people lor dlocounl·
675 · 1429 .
I I
R"D an 1a110pica
od
on
YAiillSAt.F..plono .. Froe optlcafldenlaVrx
GAU.III()LIS
Case Management Posl · diecount plan for employ,1.
. . .--iiliiiiiiiiiiiOiO..rl Uon- An outpallenl alcohol ees. You mutt have com·
:- J •
and other drug eounaellng puler. printer, Internal ac·
•3 Family Yard Sale. Garden and pravonlk&gt;n agoncy lo· coat .. $59.00
dopoolt
or my hearl , Sheller Hou&amp;e, caled In Gallla and JackiOn required on hire to actl\late
4950 SA 650, Bidwell. Counly, Ia attklng a CaM ae&lt;Oit eodt lhal oendo
Thurlday and Friday, Au· Manager to work with ldulta tela . charges to ui .. For
and adolescents. Outlet 10 more Info call: Joy 304·875·
gust 1t1·2nd. 9·4.
lnclud•. but not limited to: 1077
'Oodles ot goodies. Slone acreenlng1, tvaluatlonl, In·
,Jarw, bfuo lrull iaro, muo~. lakes, ralorralo, and gonorat UNIQUE HEALTHCARE
•jewelry, collectiDiea. August c~u · managementnrvlcea.
OPPOATUNI'fiES
' I t&amp;2nd 9 m5pm 10256 MualhaYflknow1a&lt;l~fn1ht
•
• a ·
.
•·
Rockoprlnga Rthabllllatfon
,State Route 7S {acroet field or chemical dependen· center has exciting poal·
o~.. Bachelor's d~tH Ilona available lor health
,trom 16 mile marker)
·Yard Solo. 22&amp; Toxaa Road. and/or oxperlence. So ,.. care prolllolonala. Become
oumo bv Augult 6, 2002 to: a pert of iha loamtlmmedl·
·Thursday, Friday and Satur· FACTS, 45 Otlve Street, ate openings are available
'do)'. Tooto. Jewelry. Colla, Galllpoflo, Ohio 45831 or lor tholotklwlng·
;Other llama.
FAX (740)440·6014. EOE,
·
: Vard Sale. Augu81 t sl &amp; M/F/H.
· ·Aiolallnt Director ol Nuro·
· 2nd. 1.4 Amby Lane, Bid· Comrnarclal pallnlor woniOd lng SupetYioeo overall care
· well. All f'roceeds go to 2 plus yeart a1~parlence. defl~ry
· cancer.
Dependable with rellaDie ·Food Services Director
trantportatlon.
·
Call ·Temporary Recreation At4
YARD SAlE11740)245·5555
olttant AldothodiiiCiorln
J.loMEROY/MJDOIJl
managing rtlidtnta IC11Yfty
~
. EXPERIENCED CAAPEN· programo
TERS NEEDED· Must have -RN ·
•
3 Family Yard Salo August a drlvaro lfcenae &amp; llano- Manages dolly unfl opera·
' 1-2·3· Thursday and Frklay porlatlon,tools&amp;knowlodgo lion
·
=s~lla~dat~~d~alnu~;~ ol raatdantlal remodeling . -LPN
Oualiflec:t ·applicants can Provides realdenta with oul·
~~~= ~~~s~to=~~sc:~:: b~~~~~:n.:" a6g~~:'!~o~~ ~;~lng nuraln~ care
~ren's ' thlnos and elothel.
1403 Eastern Ave.• Galllpo· Provldel direct care to very
111.
Open
6·5
M·F. opaclallndlvldualo
4 family yard sale Rutland (740)446·4514
•
•
-:_ Amorlcen Legk&gt;n Aug 2nd &amp;
Thut prolonlont1 poal·
•• Srd 9 unl\17 ~ ment slze1, Mobile E111amfner1 Needed. tiona Include a tun benefltll
... f'aln Of Shine
Portamedlc, lhl natlona program and eompetiJiw
1-odlng peramodfcll corpcr lllla"f pecl&lt;ago. Call Metl•
~ 1·2, Brodbury Rd. noa• rauon, It curranlly IHklng ea Wamoloy ACmlnlotrator
:
lo etatfon rain or Jtllne
mobile examlnert In the. today lor a -~!d-Ial In·
~·
PI
-1o
~" _,
: Aug 1st 9·4p.m. Evt&lt;yihlng ~nl oll8nl ~· oroa. IOIY~ al 740·991!-eeo6
' cheep. 160 N. Main Rul· Wohavepert·lfmepotltlont
.
•• land
avafloblo. Oualllled Cllldf· Roek;,nngt RohabiiKalfon
dalea muat have verifiable
Center
Aug. 111 + 2nd behind blood drawing •xp, and 36759 Rocksprings Road
Blrchlleld Funeral Home, mull be abloio work al 8:00
PomerC~&lt; Ohio 45769
=~ lor ev· ~~a.:n~l~:,)~~~;:
EOEtMFO\I
or tax your rtournl 10
TELEMARKETING
(6 14)785-0565 attn: John
J.88HT4-JOBS

:r:=;;:;:==~
:

r

McCiure'a Ro81aurant now
hlr)ng all 3 locations, lull or
pari· lime, piCk up apptlca·
lion at_location &amp; bring back
belwoan
9:30am
&amp;
!O:ooam, Monday thru Sal·
urday.
.
M dl H
H llh N
Hl~lng ~~= p~· FT a~:
PRN 11 lnlorulid pteaao

s

_=c_____

r

Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00

ThuNiday for Sundaya

Slart Your Bualnooa To·
day... Prima Shopping Con·
tar Space Available At AI·
lordable Rate. 2 Nk:e E•oc·
utlvo Oltloos. Nowly At·
modeled. Spring Valley Pia·
za. Call (740)446-3481 .

·

. TURNED DOWN ON

1 11

1

"~oCHotom1 '8 e

~ic' 1,..~~.·c~a0 18

1

C
"
•
off Todayl740·448·4367,
1·800-214-0452,
R:p f9().()5-I 274 B.
1176

I
Mlscm.u.NEous

1888 Bobcot 453, 56500.
1097 Kubota.' KX41,, Mini·
E oa t
$11500 1997
x va or,
•
·
Upright 43' Boom. Lilt,
$9800. Call Huntington
(304)736·4800,
Blackberrlll.
Friendly
Rl&lt;tge.·
$12 • gallon.
(740)266·1145 Loava m...
aege

Iii)

WANTED
,...
10

Do

All MakH Lawn Moworo
and Outdoor Power Equipmont Repaired. Free PICI!up
and doiiYO"f available. Call
"1ke (740)448·7~.
Gtorget Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your toga to the
mill lutl call 304·675· 1957.
Houaehalptr
available:
Onct, occaolonol, regular.
Cleaning, cooklrfo,
moving. Whtltvor
I
d&lt;Hng,
Monttl, reliable.
(740,...,..760'

'"'='

r'O

BusiNEss
OrroR'ruNm

IS AT&amp;T Payphone Routes
SS Primo Local Sltto. Clroat
Rtlurn.
(800)800·3470
24/H.RS

12x24 II. ·Wood bullt2 room.

SOCIAL SECUAITY 1181? Add·A·Room. Sliding glasa
No Fae Unlou We Wlnl door. carpeted. Includes
1·888·582·3345
8X1 2
porch.
$6500.
(304)675·8714

rid

H

114x80 Mobile Home, 3 Bed·
room, 2 Bath. Excollonl
.:JN..r.
CoMitlon. Very reasonably
pr~ed Call(740)"" 8583
~ ·
~·
1990 Modular .on 2 112 1989 14K70 Fleelwood'
d
b
acres 01 1an on 1u11 tao· Houoo Ttaller Excollont
man!. 3 Bedrooma, ll\llng Condition
. $10 000
room, family room with lire• (740)250·6eo4
'
.
ptaot. dining room, utility
room, kitchen with new re· 1996 14x70 2 bedroom, 2
lrlgerator &amp; ,alova, 2 full bath, front and back decka,
balha, heal pump, double new heal pump, $16,500
car garage, 1 20'K20' addl· (740)949·4025 Leave mil·
Ilona! garage, above ground ugo.
30ft. pool with now doc:~
Eaatam School District on 2000 t6x80 Fortune Mobile
Flalwoodl Road, Pomeroy. Home 3 bedroom 2 bath,
740·992· 7129
with a 12~18 covered porch
,
Moko 1111 oiler. (304)773·
2 bedroom house In Pomar· S345 (304)e93·0219
O'Y will sell on land contract
d h
d
8
or' will rent with option to $3 000
" 18 WIII hom, 01 11 hudn 118'.
ep w
s v
buy, 740·698·7244
' c· 11 Nikki (7401 385 •
ery. 1
3 bedroom newly ramod- 9948
olod, In Middleport, call Tom 98 Cla)'lon 4br. tii&gt;&lt;SO on
Andersen
alter
6pm, ronled lolln Gallipolis Forru.
(740)992 3348
'
•
·
· . (304)675·3689
3 Bedroom with g.tuaga on Ooublewlde, 3 Bedroom, 2
approJCimataly 1 acre On Bath on .48 acre on Route 7
Route 2, Gallipolis Ferry. S. 145 ,000 . Call 17401256.
(304)675-5332
e264 or (740 )446.8340 .
A
38 · 2 8 ath Houae &amp; 4 Now 2003 14 wide. Only

FOR~".

~f::top ~~d ~~:~·~~:
Cit

.

USINilSS
......
•""INING

1 1 ·07

j

n.........

&amp;es

B

Lola lor Sale In Addlaon
l7:on:~~ ~ Acre Lois.

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommenda that Price .Reduced. Remode~
you do bualnasa wllh people .Homo. Three Bedrooms,
vou know, end NOT to aend Living . Room, Dining Room
mooey through tha mall Untll 6 Kitchen Combined, 1
you have lnvetllgatad the Balh, Two Car Clarago &amp;
olterlng.
Storage Building. 62 An~
DriV9. (740~48-~76
2lD
M
, H ·~ .
--· ~rKUt~IONAI. .
ODILE~. ~=
1
SEHVI~
FOR .;)1\U'..

Sch · 1 •
·
. 1er. Y
oo a, l"'pproK.
.
tO mlloo lrom Galllpollo.
URGENTLY
NEEDED· $45,000. (740)256·1410
plaema donora, earn $50-to Brick Ranch House on RT 2
$60 per week lor 2 or 3 N 3br 2ba 1 ear Attached
houro weokly. Call Blo Lifo . garagi, 1Sx32 lnground
Plasma Service, 740·592· pool. On 0.46 acres.
8851.
(30-4)675·8051 .
·
Work From Homo. Buolneaa Cobin with 2 Loll back of
Oppohortunlty.NCreahte Y0ur "lyeoon lake, Edoma Trail
own uro 1Hid alp 1m· Rd 17.") 6 1360
mec:tl 1 1
""'44 •
709 5201
www':,!,rerda;l4u.~om
•

u•li'l

Pricaa IO Sail Ownara Sacn·
llclng muol Seell Rt t Box
788 Slndy HelghiS. 3 bod·
room oplllltvol, 2baths. llre·
place, 2 car ge,.ge, above
ground pool, dead end
street. Country senlng ml·
nutos from town. Call lor
Appt. (3Q.4)675-1145

G:t

$799 do~n &amp; only $179.93
per monlh Call Harold
(740 ) 385 .7871

Now Doublowldl on 1 Aero.
Cloae to Town. 4 Bedroom/
2 Bath with Game Room.
(740)446·:138&lt;l.
No Credit I Government
Loant
Only
3 Loll
(740)448 3570
·
•
.
Preferred Loana with Inter·
R
eat atn as low as 8.75%
wllh
Homo Purchaao.
(740)446 3093.

La"?

1 -:1 Bedroomo Foreclosed
Homea From 1991Mo.. .4%
Down, 30 Years 11 8.5%
APR. For Listings, 800·319·
3323 Ext 1709.

s

. 1665

8

;
•
•

:r

1888 Marathon cabkl crule· ·
)r. 22ft. 4.3 V·8, dual ••le.
.Galvanized lraller, 2 burner
otove, leo boil, olnl&lt;, tollol,
wrap around couch makle
ofnto bed. table. depth IInder,
otalnltll IIIII BBQ Grill,
marine r,dlo. M1ny 1xtraa.
-Aoal nlco boat. $10,000.
: (30-4)682·3634

·-M~In-n""Ko-:-ta-=Tr-o""llln-g-.,M""or-o-r,
301b. $50. 1970
Boat,
$225.
401

I

.
2 Bedroom A"•rtmtnt on At
op
·'
rt or Stelnway Protetalonal Pia·
~
Sale. Equipment Rental, no. Ideal lor 1 oohool qr
180 just past Holzftf' Hoapi· Dozer, eackhoa, Bobcat church. Excellent Condltloq.
tal. $400/mo.. Depooll Ro· OCtapo&lt;, Ttactor Equlpmant. . Prlctd right. call 1740124•.
qulred. (740)441·1519.
(740)44.f-Get8
~
5208 , .

s

1

,

I

•·30p

..o'

FRUITS &amp;

V•!G-•a•
• • • ~~
.. ·

.76 WlldOrnoeo Camper, 22',
Air, Awning, Sltapa 8. Ex·
collonl Condfllon. (740)448·

....

1

Melont for Sale at Troyerl
WOOdCraft, 9 mfltt Weat. 01
Galllpotlo.
•
,\ 11\1 O, j(U h

lj:.ll"_..,.____ I
~

1,~-------~·
(2) IS monlh old golla,
$3MO ·each, (740)368·
9143

:----::':":'-:--:-:-:~~

Bl~~ktoe~r'~c,,'7:S~~~afl

17 40 288 1 2 33

:'-';;,l;:::..:·~=:....·--~

5 Yr old Rogloltrod Braed·
lng ttock gelding Cheltnut
lott of .e.~etrat ha1 ~»en ,
lhown. 13500 (740)8925419

C&amp;C Gantraf Homo Malnt..
,.,.. PalnUng, vinyl old·
lng, carpenf"f, doora, wtn·
.ttowt, bltlll, mobllt homo
'"f)llr and mort. For tree
oatlmatt ooll Chat, 740-1182•

A.Q.H.A. Sorrll Cltldlr!g
G11111fnt Doc and Zan Parr
r~~.;~2" S2.oob

e323.

vr.

Cuotom Building &amp; Rtmod·
allng. Ovtr 18 V..ra Expe·
Free Etllmatn.
rrence;
Fully lnoured. No Job To
'BigO&lt;Smoll. 740·991!·1118
'bf 740-441-8814 .

AOHA Rt(jeterld 2
\»d
.Red Dun Filly aut to watch
Joe Zan &amp; Double Go Sofa·

~-~~u~~~:rf'*S: ~

ovor $30,000 In cultlnn
S2.000. (304)&amp;7~ 137
•

JT't Roollr!g &amp; Conotructlon.
(740)532-e722 •
1740)378-2131. (740)378·
2871 .

e.2

\

•

F a-la R ~ Bu
orog,
Ul II 4
)'NIIotd. (304)&amp;7 1390 ·;

'

With Nm·&gt;f'11f&gt;n' f

'. ·---

.....

'

f.:
"'

~ .lptlng ....

Homo romodollng .,., ,..
palro, roofing, chain link
-.cullom wood dOCkl &amp;
tenon, lntu'anoe repalra.
our prloe llel,.
, JOU ttur. Ffto Elll,_
to4-t78-3733

c_.,

~~~;:-.;;;--;
•

NEWSPAPERS

cove&lt; All r,.

....

~iOf SUDitolll

•

DOtW
with a
Dally
Sentinel
classified
Ad!

992-2155
In Memory

0

.
Ple1unt Vllley HOIPIIII
Pleasant Valley Nursing and RehabiiRatlon
Center Is a dynamic Long-term care
facility that provides Intermediate and
skilled care needs to residents. Come join
our health care organization where we
provide excellence In care.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
RN· P1n tim• 1nd Per Dl•m
LPN • Full time, P1rt time 1nd P•r Diem
RATE WILL BE BASED ON
EXPERIENCE
!Jen.tltl Include:
• $2,000 sign on bonualor Full time
Licensed Nurses
• Flax scheduling (Including 12 hour shifts)
• Shift differential
• Weekend positions
• Training program lor new graduates
• Health Insurance single/family plan
• Experience pay and recent upgrade In
pay rates
Apply In pw1on or call
Angell Clel1nd, DON
(304) 875-5238 .
AAIEOE

Business Services
~·

~

On july 30,
1985, the world
received a most
precious gift.
Llnz, we
cherish ail our

Connie's'

ODD JOBS

Child CARE
has openings, 15 yr.
expertence, Certified
In Meigs, Athena and
Washington counties,
Open 24 hours.
7 Days per week.
St. Rt. 7 Tuppers
Plains, OH

me•

Painting, Power
W11hing, Mowing,
Weedtating

YouNeedlt
Done, We'll Do It
(740) 949-4028
or

CALL 667-6329

missyou ·
somuchi

flfft
mftRKET

-Mindy
&amp;. Paula

(740) 591·9329

ftre you stressed?

ceu now for your
appt.

Maplewood Lake
July 4-5•8
SpiCH Avell•ble

mEIGS mASSAGE
THERIIPY
m n. Secend Rue.

740·949·2734

(740)992-1705

space
Since you left -disbelief,

devMtaUon. and
srlef has gripped
· our hearts.

'

Terrylamm

(740) ltlt2·•0731t

~ ~

month

You brought to
our lives so much
joy and laughter.

We reap comfort
&amp;. strength In
knowing absence
from the body Is
presence with the
Lord and In
His "presence Is
fullness of joy.'

YOURCOIICR f
CARPENTER connECTIOn, LLC
(740) 742-8015
SERVICE
YOUNG'S

· • -

Addltlona A

·-01·RfmDdlllng

• E - 1 A Plumbing
• Roofing ' Gun.t
• VInyl Siding • 1'111nllng
• Patio ond Pvrch Doclca

Free Estimates

-Grandma
&amp;.Grandad

V. C. YOUNG 111
992·6215
POIT!tfOto, Ohio

Q..IHy Coacrele Work

DrlvBways, Patios,
Parking/play Are!IS,
Sidewalks, Floors
21 pare Ell*itiiCI
_Frll E'tlmiiH .
(IOU lree)

' 877·353·7022

&amp; .. ,,.•,

lfl:o...V....;:..J//Ji':o.,....tltn\..tr,o..
lJ[!~ !i [!l [i}ll IJi II tfjll .• ' II I' II

www.amarlcanatandarelalr.com

"SALES AND SERVICE"

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING

Roofing, Siding, ftdd -Ons, Electrlce~
Plumbing, Decks, Remodeling;
Drywall, Pelntlng

MANlEYS
SElf STORAGE

97 Beech St.'
·middleport, OH
(10'110' 6 10'1120')

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

Haning's Construction

Local 84J.S:ui4
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,

Foreman: Larry

Pension &amp; 401 K Rollovers;

Own.,:

740.367·0181

Mortaa11e; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

Ronald "Mick"

Haning

740·992·078'0
Cell: 591-8393

Christina "Chris' Haning
Calif 740·591-0919

•

FLEA
MARKET

.ALLtR

Maplewood Lake
Aug. 2·3
St. Rt. 124
between Racine
&amp; Syracuse
Spaces Available

Cellular

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

949-2734 .
Hot Dog Stand

0 an

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing • Home
Maintenance·
Gutters • Down
Spout
Free Estimates
949-1405

TJb; thr; PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

The CRAFTY,

L1:inH: ·.lo.

(Factory Outlet)
All verllcal hUndo are

11 k

1 ycul

liNDA1 Plllnl

BLIND SPOT

ourlocallon

446-4995

IShlt!ld a. Full Line

OlherA~a
'

I '

'!

c I•IO)

45771
7110-Mio2217

'
'l'l~

I

•,nn

Ill IT

CK/BRICK

Mon.Sat 111-4

• Footen, Wal11, Step• •

217 E. 2nd St •
P01111roy, OH

(740) 992·5908
ltd. 1 mo.

Houra
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Free E1tlmateel .
(7.40) H2·1118 .

Special 9 ton
$135.00

Affordable Prlcea .

740·742·7037

Pameroy fegles
BinGO 2171
Euerv 1lllrsdeg
6 SUndell
o.s llpel4:30
flrty birds start
6:30
Provrewue top line
Tllundays

BISSELL

Progressive
COIJtl'all on ~ndlp

• Replacemenl

Windows• Roofing
COMMERCI.t.land
· RESIOENTI.t.L
fREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

.

740.885~3848

Rest• CONCRETEIBLO

Dlllv-.lllpi'Hd

Homea• Vinyl
Siding • New Oaraaes

P/B
CONTRACTORS
, INC.

Houra:

~the

Roanna. Sldina,

BUILDERS IOC.

Monday.frldsy 8-SPM • Saturday 8-2pm

,.z;t Cut Above

LimESTonE

~ew

(740) 446·1044

Racine, Ohio 45771

COnSTRUCTIOn
P•lnt1n1: Ountn. Dtokl

'"""'mo.

4359 St. At. 160
Gelllpolla, OH 45631

144 Jliri lvL Galpll1

• Ventvllor • Bua

Racine, Ohio

LOWElL C. SHINN TRACTOR

Wood
• Mlnlt • Etc

Be'dllnen •Nerf Bar
. • Tonneue Cover

29670 Buhan Road

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

• Vertlcalo •

Pocket Knives
&amp; Collectibles

Hill's Self
Storage

·O t/,OrdeC&amp; Gravely

made to order at

MACK'S

for

•so per

&amp; Rubber Roofs"
Gurages., Pole Buildings., Concrete
Roofs &amp; Siding
· Comrnen.:iul &amp; Residential
1/Jr.\
(740) 992·3987
jl""
Owner &amp; Operotor, John Dcon TFN

H.,.tlng
Air Condlllonara
S~
Service On All Brenda
Raaldantlal&amp; Llghl Commercial
• 10 yr. parte &amp; Labor
• Healing &amp; Air Conditioning

Owner:

Campsites with
Tonla Reiber
weter, ~ewer &amp; 1 Ucnsed bg lhe Ohio
L-.....:IWil~-_. 1 .SIIIe medlcallloard

in this

~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
"Specializing In Log Homes

AutJeot(ec•

•
•
•
•

lllddleport, OH

Advertise

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING &amp; HEATING

Specializing ln·:
Rooting, Decks,
Remodeling,
Siding, and
Additions

Help Wanted

IAIIMENT "
WATIRPAOO"NG
'\JnoondWonal llfellmt guar·
«niH. Local rtterenc• fur·
~loha&lt;l. Eollbllthld 1875.
Colt 24 Hra. (740) 448·
0170, Flogora Blflmtnt
Woto'()IOOflng.

2 omall black and whlto pi;
t
1 $25
~{ ttae.
eaCh, 3 B

ti l" ti l" It!•( tit•! il{u :( ,u r(lu

•• nttc"''" '· ,.w,,,·,.e.

Gallipolis, Oiliu • (740) 446-2015
/SA Certifi~d Arborisl
• 66·4

ClllmiCDIII

.alaok Top Staling. Roof·
·dentlll· Commerorel. Free
Eotlmatoo. (740)742-4528·
740·681·8943.

•

~.-...,.,.N:o..V....M:\IJP..

Scott /. Swai11

$8.00 column Inch weekdays
$10.00 column Inch Sundays

e~ - ~

I \H\1 \ 1 1' 1'1 II...,

1n&amp;JUUIU\..ft.

"W.v's HI Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
Van

Advertise your
message

memories.
We love and

. :

IU'Ill111111. UICI . _ llii1IWI.

1·800·822-0417

.d-,'rr&lt;.., AthC'Ir'er. &amp; 0 ·. , •

1

tBoA~::~I

eo.

j

I000 St. Rt. 7 Sou tit
Coo/vi/It, OH 45 723

7..,..,,,,..,,

3001 V.mohl PW50. S9so:
· !740)2415-&amp;373
(day),
740)378-8270 (avonlng).

..,I

Fill Dl

Dealers

~

1888
Honda
Foreman
450S, Low Mlloo, Exoollont
Shape, Will Conaldor Tradt
•On
Crotoh
Rooket. ·
•(740)388·8240.
.

___

.. Soil

MoroRCVW8

1885 H.D. Low Rkttr 1340
·.EVO engine, o+a oarb, ,..
.. buill tran1, new paint, nat,
., drag pipet, forward con·
troll, man~ new crom parts.
$12,500 OBO 949·2203

Mlnla1U&gt;a Da!'hlhuna, 111
-• Sholl, $1
(740)258·
5pc Drum Set, Teleacope, 8750.
Portable Bar with atoola, ir·!IO~-M!"!"
Playatalfon &amp; Nlntendo with
i ..-~gamaa.(740)245-5017
II'IOIIWMIII"'l&gt;
A1 l

1U97 Ford E111plorer Sport
XLT, Black, 4WD, auto,
AIC, 84,000 mllot, $9,500. ·
(740)441-9882

VI ltUIU nooptr LS, 4
· wheel drive. $800. High
: Mlttilgo. (740)378-2706

I

MI!RCIIANDISI!

•

• 1992 F· ISO 4•4 $3300,
' 1889 ChiVy 1500 4x4
$4500, 1980 Chavv oxcab
4x4 $5499, t 990 toyc11 4
· Runnar S 3998, 1887 F·250
Dlaotl $2388
740·374·
• 8763

i

•\'

'

1990 Chavy Aotro van
grool'/allver. Call (30-4)675·

c

r

NewlUaed
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

'JIS.·~~
~ 1f1:o..
tJl.U
We Care For Yo.ur Trees'W

· 1888 .loop Cherokee, 4x4.
' Rebuilt Tfansmleslon, AI·
' built Front End. Naodo molor or rebUilt. $1500.
(740)44tJ.7928

31
., 4, 200
00 1 100
PSI $35.00 Per iOO: Alt
Brau Compre11lon Fltllnga
~os:ClVANI ENTERPRIS·
E.S Jt. k
Ohl0 t-800
c son,
•
·
637"9628

j

Summer Clearance
2br. Apartment lor rent In Band Saw, $150; CoHea Ta·
All lot modolo mull go, 2003 Polnl
Ploaoanl. $300. bl
e, 25 , 8 loyclu, $40 tor
.
modo 1t on lht way. Boal monlh. Depoalt required . both.(740)948·2
636
,limo to buy Ia now. Many (304)593·1994
.
All 11
dv 1 1
Commercial Drafting Table
home' VII to chooaa tram,
l~thl-::::,,•,.!'! ~ " 8 don't delay, we're moving Apt Available 811/02
wtth Aectttorlll, 5200. X•·
,....
them out.
TWin Rivera Tower EHO lor rox 2230 36• COlor Plotter,
ou11Jtc1 lollll F-81
Colli Mobile Homoo
alder~/ dlotbled.
StOOO. CX::E 7050 36" Prfnl
1111' Hou•lng Act C!f 1" '
15268
Now accepting Applications. Copier,
$3500.
Call
,.,,.~.!:.~.~alto
u.s. 50 Ellt Athtnl, Ohk&gt; lor 1 br, oil utliltlto paid !740)446·0058
(dayt),
Phone 740·592·1872
HUC .. allllttd, carpeted • 740)446-6830 (evenlngt)
prefttinoe, llmtt.ltlon or
apartment. rent Ia 30% of .
dtoortmlnetlaft IIMtcl.on Uoed Homu. Down Poy- your adfuoted Income call COOL DOWN, Centre! Air
reoe, OOior, l'lllgktn, ••
menta aa low at SQUO. 304·875·8879 between 8· Conditioner• and Heat
tamfltaltlltlll or ntltonot 1740)448·3218.
4:30pm wnkdlyo.
·Pumpo. II you don't call uo
orlgln,orenylnltntlonto Vlndale
mObile
hOm
we both lo11. Free 1111·
.,... a-ouch
o, Apt lor Rent, Downtown moioo (740""'"·6308 ll1d
..,
12x6G w/oxpendo, mootly Glllfpollo. (740)8&amp;8·7174
1,800;2•• 1,00r;:
preftrenoe,llmltaUon or
rurnllhed, very clean, ralln·
- ·
dltorlmlnltlon."
lthld throughout, mutt He ·II!AUTIFUL
APAAT~ Grubb'l Piano· Tuning &amp;
to approolate, (740)742· MENTI AT IUII'GET PAl· Ropalra. Problamo? Nood
Thil -•popor wMI not
2979
CEI AT JACKSON El• Tu ed? C
,..
knowlnglyHoept
TAT!I, 52 Wlltwood o;1va
n
au The PIJno Or.
ldvertltomOnlator ,..,
Wo htvo awroxlmatel)' 10 lrom $287 to $383. Walk to :740-'-·440....:..·4.:;8;:2:.5_ _~-ltwhtah lttn
uoed homoo tor undar tliop &amp; movlto. Call 740- Independent Horballlt Cia·
violation of till low. Our
$2,000, calfl-800·837·3236 448· 2566. Equal Houolng trfbulor, Call For Product Or
_,.,. IIIN!Iy
lor Into.
Opportunity.
Opportunlty. (740)44t-1882
Informed \hal ell
Lots &amp;
~llnga actvtrttlld In
Gracious living. 1 arid 2
JET
lhlt n.wapaptr.,. '
ACJtF.A.GE
• bedroom apartments at VII·
AERATION MOTORS
avot-ononoqual
lagt ~nor ll1d Rlveraldo Repaired, Now &amp; Rtbofllln
-nlly-.
l/2 acttlol on·'f'tcan Lllct, Apartmonto In Middleport. Stoc:k. CaU Ron E111J11, t·
w/ 12xeo Trollor SIS 500 From 12711-1348. Coli 74(). 800·537·9528.
Houoe In Galllpotlo. IO Bal· 247·IIOO
'
'
982·5064. Equal Houolng
monl Dnvt, 7 Roomo, 4BR,
Opportunltlu.
;:;NE::W::-A:-:N::D~U:=I:=ED::-":I~T:=E!~L
2 LR, 2 t/2 Batho, Full 14plullcroaloroalelnLt· NIWfy Atmodoled 1 Bed· Sleol Baarno, Pipe Aoblt
Basement.
Large
Lot. tart WV, cell Mikel ~-ft82 7 room. 5376/mo., Washer, For Concrete, Angle, Chan(740)446·1360
3468
·
Dryer,· Olahwalher, Water, net, Flat Bar, SIMI Grating
MUll See. 3BR, 2 Bath, Tile 2,3,&amp;5 acte+ Iota, water &amp; Trath,. Sewage. (740)441· For Oralna, Drlvawaya &amp;
Ftoort, Carpet. on 2 Acres power, green township, 8261, Leave a mt111ge.
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Met~
near Holzer on SR 160, Stale Route 141 fr0111.1ge. North Third Mldcjlaport 1 ~~Ope~~kt Tuo:'&gt;',
Reoldenllal br Commercial. (740)379·2630 aHor 5pm.
bedroom turnlohed apart·
no (!';
.;~· ro&lt;J""'
(740)441.0279.
. Brookvlow Subdivision o't mont, no peto, _dopoall &amp; rat· s'otu,.2'a·• 0'
s"undl~'.
erenoet r..,..., 11ect 17401892
ru ,
1111
,
•
• (740)440-7300
New hOme tor sate ;3 br. 2 Clntenary. 1 . 8~
acre 0
...""
ba. wl hoot pump on ap- Iota otartlng 11 12~.000. ::'-85-::-:-:--~~-- ':-::"__:....:..::.;.:.._ __
prox. 6 acroo ol land, IOCit· (740)448·0059
(dayo~. Now Taking Awllcatlono- ~DOl I'T. LAUDIII·
ld on Rt2 Greer Rd urlou1 (740)446-6030 (evenlngt)
• e nlghtl Ramada.
35 WHt 2 Bedroom Tf'U'"'· P
calla only 304-675-7385
~'" 11&lt;1 $599, Slit S199.
8:30·5pm 304-e 75-6663 01 L0110f Sale- Approx. 2 1/ll houao Aportmonlo, fncludu (814)888-2106.
51J3.071hHer•
ocrn, clurod &amp; ready lor Water
Sowoge, Tralh ,
~ prn ,
bulkllng, gravel driveway, $3150/Mo., 740-&lt;148·0008.
Single Story Houao IO lotr
Price reduced, 3 bedroom , waler &amp; electric avalla~. One bedroom •-nment I dOwn for lumber, bkd;, Hu
J beth, gas heat, central air, Porter
area.
Asking Upper end of pt'Pktalln~ ~ fur~. Only uaed 2
Klnoon Orlvo, (740)446- St3,995, Call (740)446· Vory nice and private. NO
ero. (-)882•36811
4514 from 8-5 or l740)440· Pall. Phone (30-4)&amp;75·1386 Sola rutt color. GOOd eondf·
2776
3248 a~tr Spm.
tlon. $75. (304)&amp;75·~604

j

01 , .OO..,...Por11,
PSI ..

' SINCE ltU
IACICHOE • DOZING ;, END LOADER •
TRUCKING • TRENCHING

DeiDIUll

7ue f!a,e s.~;acul'4i

88 Dodge Ram 1500 Pick·
up, 2WC, U, V8, PC, PL,
AJC, Exttndod Cob, Lola ot
Extraa,
$8000
OBO.
(7:4(1)441·0595 or (740)378·
213$.

0

IIWlOiwtl .....

740-667-0363

66113

Home for rant 3br. tba, all
•r--~~---. ...,
electric. Located 505 2nd
UILDING
1
St 1 PI PI (304)875
SUPI"'LI ..~
roo •
·
·
' · Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark "--...iiiiiiiiioiiiiii_...
5196
Chapel Road, Porlar, Ohio,
MOBILE HOM!iS 1(740)448·7444 t-877·830· ~~~~~~~~
Fil)R 0 ,__
9182. Frea Estlmalea, Eaay
JU.I'It
financing, 90 days same as
c::aah. VIsa/ Master Card.
2 bedroom, 1 112 bath, Dn90· a·ll«le aavo alot.
14x70 wi&amp;Mpando central
'
Scla (Modern) Balge Back
air, quiet communliy, $300 a
• ·--month, 992·2~87
ground with .small flower de· •
olgn 3 cushlona $75 Alao •Kc
0111 e PUPP 1e1• 2
'
'
·
~
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath with Small Arm·chair (Pink), $20. mataa, blackltanlwhlta, nor·
front and baok c:overed (740)245·5208
mel eytl, vet oheoked,
porchtt. No lnaldt ~~~~ In Uaed furniture atore now at 5380 each: AKC ·Shlltit
Country, $300 l month, 130 Bula"lile Pike. we sell pupplea, mit, aabllltrta, vet
0 ·c · P1ua uu"lltl ea. c aII aII ar mattrooaos,
•
·drooeore. c;:hecked, ahola, S350 each.
6 OOpm (740)266 6202
:
•
couches, appllancaa, much AKC Pomeranlana pu-let,
""'
2 bedroom Green Sehool more Grave monuments 2 matea, orangelaabte,
Dlotrici.(740)367.Q632
(740)446·4782 Galllpolla: $350 oaoh: (740)ellfl·t085
• Olilo
2 bedroom, near Airport,
·
AKC Reg. Female Yorklhlre
S2eS per month, new car· Whirlpool, Maytag, Ken- Terrier ~ 112yr old, tlouu
pet, water paid by owner, no - more Washer &amp; Dryer' Sets, trained bedding, tova. porta·
polo, Coll(740)367-7760
$150 each. Other Waahero, bit pen &amp; ca"ler. $400. So·
$65 eae~ . GE Dryer, $60. rloua
Inquires
only
2BR, Bidwell area, may All While. Call
afler (304)882·3922
consider land contract. 6:00pm, {740)446·9066.
waoht/
c
w 11
AKC Reg. malo Saint Bar·
r
ryer.
ar,
nard puppy, 8 wka old curlraah, sewer paid. S400 de·
A ..ntrr.~M:
poall, $400 rent . (740)388o.~ .. a{\f'Jr:S
1 rent with all lhota $250.
9325
• 304·875·1439 or 740·709·
~ 320.
AI'AR'I'MEN'IN
Buy or sell. RIYerlne Anti· -:-:--:-::--:-:-:-:--:n.-.
quoo, 1124 Eael Main on AtmoatNewChalnLinkDog
f'OR """I'
Kennel, 10xtOX8, $150. 2
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
C
992·2526. Russ Moore, Adult AK St. Bernard•.
1 and 2 bedroom apart· owner.
$100 each OBO. (740)388·
menta, lurn!ahed and unlur;.99:..:6:.:9-:-:'--:--:---:----:
nlahed, tecurity depoelt re· Sua's Selactab6e_.,on the "'r Female Pooctle 2yr. Spayed
qulred, no pela, 740.992· In Middleport. Colla, glass· &amp; Houto Broken, good wltll
2218.
ware, Aladdin mantelt, and otheranlmata&amp;lddt. Netda
more.(740)992·0288
f:ood
home.
StOO.
1 bedroom apartment In
304
Galllpollo, dtpooll &amp; relar·
Mls&lt;.u.v.NEou&lt;i
)773-5748
once
required .
Call
(7•0J4•6·2468
1 Bed o
A I
t
Sll'Ung ~~. S289/:~ w:~h~
ar/Oryar Hookup, Sto"Va and
Rolrlgorator
(740)441·
·
1619.

FREE ESTIMATES!
·740-742-3411

1995 ChiVy Rod S·IO, 4
cytlndtr. 5 opeed. Lota of
"""" $4,500. (304)875-

washera, dryers and ratrlg· 2078
-w-.-,.--nt-._--~-.- - - -

oratora. Thompaons Appfl·
anca. :M07 Jackson Ave·
nut (304)675 7388
'
" · ·
Good Used Appliances Re·
conctltlonad and Gulra~·
teed. Washers, Oryara.
Rangos, and Retrlgeratora,
Some start at S9S. Skaggs
Appliances, 76 Vlnt St.,
(740)448·7388

New Homes, Room Additions;
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roots,
Siding, Decks, Kllchens, DrywaH
lMore

• Buektt Truck

All Makes Trlctbr ~
Equipmcnt·Pw
Factory Authorized
CIISC·IH Puns

1W. Ford Aangor. GOOd
... Conctllfon. $2800. (740)2458007

We now have tO" Clravotess
aowo• pipe, 4' drain pipe.
aoptlo tonka: 500 Gal. $330.
1000 Clal. $445. Water Stor·
·~ and Hauling tanks. Also
8 , 12", 15" and• t8" Plastlo
Culvert. CIM lor Pricing. D•
livery available. Yauger
Farm Supply, Inc. Rt 35,
Southaldo, WI/ (304)675·

Bryan Reeves

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

740-992-5232

IW. ChtYrottt S·IO, 4.3
" Engine, Auto. Air, $3,000.
, . (74ll)44e-042S aftor rmn.

r

Tree Service

33?95 HilaJ RJ.
Po.,.., Dei··

t 887 ltuzu Pup, Topper.
4apd, Runs GOOd, GOOd
Gil
Mllotge,
$1200.
(740)441-1033.

ll'rjlll'b--=n~OOii!HO~~.J)~., ~~ I
GClQDs
I

Appllancn: Rocondllloned
Wt1Ch1CYWn Mlnoravllla, 2.7 W11hera, Dryora, Ranges,
a.,..11, woodod/olopod aroa, Rolrlgrstora, Up To 80 Doyo
$3,000, (660)563·3753
• Guaran11Hidl We Soli Now
Mlytag Appllanctt, French
Cliy Maytag. 740.«6-n95.
.
For Sale: Rocondllloned

992-2.155.

r

,,
,
::
••

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...r'.s...OI'I'oiiiiMINoliiliRTIJNiilllSS·rrv-,.. ..._ _ _ _ _pl

The
Daily Sentinel

96 Clldllac Concouro. Sun1001, Loaded, 8 CD Oloc
Changor, Exctllont Conctf·
tlon. $11.500. l740)446·
9278

,•
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\IIIH II \\1!1 -.. 1

Cunningham's In Syracuse.
ANNOUNCilMt:NI'S 1 Water St up rrom ballpark,
July 3111 .Aug 1, 1, 8. 4. Glrlo
newborn 4-T. Boys newbOrn
~;\:~~~r c~:~t~ro~~:,~~~~~ 12 mo. baby Jlems, mise
' M8I C
d I
ltomo.
gs ounty, sen ellars
•1
1 ot ln1ore01 10: Tho Dally
YAHII SALE1 Sentinel, PO Box 729·20,
' Pr.I'L~ASANT
: Pomeroy, Ohio 45769." •

•

,.

Sunset Home
Construction

10

Phone

94 COMfta Coupe, while
wfth rod ltltht&lt;. glau 10p,
IDidOd, COl caaaouo radio,
; : $13,500 OBO, (740)682·
•• 7512

Includes 'Free Yaw:d Sale Sign I
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
.O'II•er 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Publication

.

•· lnciYd• Phone NumH,. And Addrut When Needed

YARDSAU:.
PoMt:KOY/MIIlllLE

r

•

:
·-

POI.tCIIS: Otllo v.Mty Publlthklg,...,... tht right to tdlt. ~~.or cenoel an~ td 11 •nw tknl. Errore""''' ._~on 1M tnl dly
blbUM-Senllntf.AitiiW Will be ftiPG"IIblt fOI" no """thin tht cotl at the IPiat oecuptld by tht tn"'f tnd ontv the flrlt lnltftkwl. Wt
!lift~ lOti Of txptnH IMt rttullt fi'Oin the pubMC.IIiOft or omlatkM'I 01 1ft Hvef'l~l. Corrtetton Wlllbt midi tn 1M tlf'lliYIMibMI ldtUon. • lol
~rO~~'!! ~~!I&lt;M.~:t_~~~ Cur""t r~tt card tppl .... • AI JMI ..la.. advtrt'""*'lt ,,. tubfeel to lhl FHtrll hit HIM.IIIng ACII Of 1.... 'Thlt

• start Your Ada With A Keyword e Include COJnpl.te

Clvotlor,
27,880ml, Mttottlc Sl"'-&lt;.
Surwoot, CO. Aulo.. Ha110
s• .... Syatom, Opllonal.
$7500. (740)448-ol375.

••'•

Worcl Ads

per month!

2000 Chevy

•

/Jea.tl/1iru

•

•' $25.00

..'

l\egt~ter
To Place
m:rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 44.6-2342 (740) 992~21S6 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To
992·2157
675-5234

I

(7&lt;10)2~17

•

11-~
High&amp; Dey
Self·Storaje

your
business
on this
paoeforas

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUaJON "
•New Homes
•Gar1911
•Complttl
Remocltiing

Flat Work,

Stop &amp;Compare

ReplaccmentJ, • Welka
and Drivea • Stentil ·
Crete

FREE ESnMATES

..

740-992·1871
JliS flfCTIIIC 1i
PLUmiJIIG
Jim Auerle

lteatrto, c-tumbln••
•nd •m•ll Home
M•lnten•noe .ION

(340 773-1141 a

IIOEI11111M

Oo you w1nt to
• L.oM 10·20 lbl. per
month? (llld ltelp H
ofl)
Appttite

o.cr....

• lncr•N

Entrgy

• Lcwtr your Str111
• Look &amp; Feet Btl1tr

CALL:

Jeanie Howell

.................
74o-H2;7038

EQU/Nif1!1

Ll~
D!IHJN """"' 12
Lll'! DESIGN YOUTH
1
NATUII!f WISE " " LAYER
1
t RIVER RUN 1'1101'/fiUIIONAL DOG flOOD•
·O fiAII GOOD TH11UI
UMIT f IAGI 'l~ CU11011111 wtl'lt n t t l I
1
. - _. L 2"~~-'!.~~~~~o

••••• ! ,

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www.mydallysentlnel.~m

Page A 10 • The Dally Sentinel

ALLEYOOP

Chi(ago's ~~n Hampton heads for canton, 81

TUesday, July 30, 2002

ACROSS
I
4
1
11

40~

Snow 1100t 41 ol
'"IIIIDint
IIMIIOneal"" 42 _ .......

lllllalllrv
...,,
nCMI
44 Sewdl
It 8ho. on tho 47 Junk food,

. ...
•• •uc.

•

-Sydow

,. Shoo ~nne~

QJ

- 17 Try out
II Typeol

'
••nn

~nlolth

. aiMtlon

'

• KI
6 A Q

23 C~aoty

t;aal \\'(!ll

!l.11lh

\\tM

Nl'tllrl

••

l'n•
1'\\u

,.

4•

outillnl

South

\' uln~r•blf.

l'au

Melp County's

51 ·:-r:- .
52 a-.
55 Su: dod
!Mol
57 -1111'1
lollan

l'tl••
,..,_,

o,...n.lnallllld: • Q

lib griMY
10 ~

~

tide
28 Tornpo!Vf
gift
28 Oltw blcko

bor

olumnua

I LMgl7 1om ..
1 Type ol pool
I Some po-

~

BY DAN HEIIMES

=.,

drop

30 Spcllla
hol31 McKIIIIn

tma

lnCI Holm

10Tr•-··~~-~~-3~7-~Mr-~~~i

LAKIN, W.Va. - The
wife of-Ma$0n County Fuir.
Board President Kenneth
"Sonny" Fry dfed eurly
today as the result· of u
house fire off W.Vu. Route
62
north of Lakin
Hospital.
Judith K. Fry, 52. wus
found in the house,
according
to
Mason
County
Emergency
Medicul Services Director
Mutt Musgrave. The body
was sent .to the Stute
Medical Examiner's office
in Charleston. The cause
of deuth is pending.
Mason
County
Emeq1ency Services suid
the imtiul911 cull came ,in
at 2:45 a.m..
·
Assistant Stute Fire
Marshal Puul Ritchie suid
the fire .appears to be un
uccident.
"A ll indications are it
was un liCcidentnl fire that
started in the uttic,"
Ritchie said.
The Mason Volunteer
Fire Department );VUS the
initial . responder. while
departments from New
Haven und Point Pleasunt
cume in to· ussist.
"She's a very Iovin~.
curing lady," suid F111r
Board First Vice President
Brian Billings. "She was a
dedicated mother and
wife. She wus ulwuys ttl
the fair with Sonny and
she'll be sadly missed."

. Deaths
..-,BIG NATE
50 YOU'RE .S tTTIN(,

IT FEELS
GOOD . I1'5
II.~L.'\XI N c;,.

THAT DAILY

WOlD

~UULU

OAMi

Alice Brinker, 83
Charles Barley, 63
Paul Carpenter, 56
Sandra Thacker, 37

letter~ of tnt
four tcramblod•worda bo· ·
low to form 'four atm~lo worda.

PLASTIC ':&gt;OD,O. SOTT~E,

HAYCT

PEANUTS
LOOK ·WHAT I FOUND OVER.
IN THE REC ROOM, BROWNIE
CJ.IARLES ... A FOOTBALL!

I

~AVE

A 600D IDEA ..

14()LD TJ.IE 8Al.L,AHD I{()U COME
RUHNIH6 UP AND KICK IT•..

'I

I _If

P U MB Y

The supervisor had mistakenly
~
..,&lt;&gt;
dialed his own secretary. She an. . . .
1 swered the phone, held up the
,.. receiver and motioned to him. "Is
r--:T::-:-:W-:
. I:-::E-A:-"::R~..,~It for me?" he asked. "No," she
--r....,rr-r--r-..,--l
laughed, " •• Is •• -I"
.
t-

I TJ.liNK I NEED TO
._,.,,.,.A PNONE CALL

I I I

l

! I
e
I
~-'---'-..t-...1.-l.-..J
.

•

Complott tho chuckle quotod
by fllllnQ In tho mlulng worda
you dovolop from llop No. 3 bolow:

8 PR INT
NUMBERED' LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
.
t)

N£WSPAP£RS
C:OV..Ailhe
Major.....,_

UNSCRAM!II.E ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCIIA M-I. ITS ANSWIRS
Revo~e ·Acute· Stark· Cruise • CORRECTS •
Aman 1n my neighborhood was always busy on environmental commltteee and joining demonstrations. One
I told him that a true activist was not the one who
~~~~~: ~t~he problem but the ·one who CORRECTS the ·

1

Weather
High: XX, Low: XX
D1lell1, A2

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick J: 6·8·:3
Pick 4: 8· 2·0·6
Buckeye 5: 3·1 0·12·17·35
Mep Millions: 2-6-22·27-44

Mep Ball: 1

Plcll 3 night: 6·8·4
. Pkk 4 nl1ht: 1·7-7·3
W.VA.

Dally 3: 0·4·3
Dally 4: 5-4·9·6

Caslil5: 1-HI-14·18·21

..

Wcdnr&lt;duy. July 31,2002
Something rather grand
may trun&lt;pirc in the ycur
ahead involving armngements
between you ~nu anoth~r person with whom yuu have
strong emotional bonds. ·
Those who luve you will
bring you much happiness.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
Keep yo~r ~uard up today,
because 11 1s doubtful that
someone with whom you may
have dealings will be as sincer~. generous or comp:lssionate as you. Don't get burned.
Leo. treat yourself to a birthday gift. Send for your AstroGraph predict inns for theJear
ahead by mailing S2 an an
SASE to Amo-Graph, c/o
this new~papcr, P.O. Box 167
Wickliffe. OH 44092. Be sur~
lU state your zodiac sign.
VIRGO (Aug,. 23-Scpt. 22)
.. , Happiness 15 dependent
. upon your frame of mind, nut
your po.ckctbnnk. It could
P.rove to be a sheer waste of
t1me, energy or money to
.overind~lgc. m hopes of havln8 a good lime.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
· Lady Luck may not be as .
supp!'rtive.~f yoiJ as she usually IS, so II an ambitii&gt;us de·
sire is dcpcn&lt;lcnt upon her in·
tervent10n, 11 1s best you put it

off until another day.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nuv.
22) .. There i~ a possibility
that information that comes
your way tnday muy be
grossly eKaggeratcd. Don't
believe everything you hear
especia.lly rumon about you;
boss or compuny.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23,
De~. 21) .. ll)ou are hoping
!O ,11et somethmg for nothing.
tt IS a pretty good bet today
that Yo,u'll get the nothing
part. It 1~ not a very good day
for any mvolvements that are
of a spc~ulutive nature.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
19) .. If you make your ell.·
pcct.ations disproportionate to
reality. there 1s no doubt that
you will end up bein8 di!appmnteu ., Quard against tendencies today to expect more
than you should.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) .. II philosophy that may
suit a friend comfortably may
not ncccssilrily fit your needs.
lmituting another could bring
yuu unhappincu today. Be
your own person.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) ... Be mindful ~If your be·
havtor 111 your sue~al mvolve-.

"·

~ent~ today und
Cinu.~ nnd tolerant

be as graas possible.
A ronr d1spluy could leave a
lustmg impression that would
be difficult to .era.~e.
·
AHlES (March 2l•April 19)
.. Try not to do anything to·
day at the CKpense of another
or 1!1 way .~ thut would inconvclllencc anyone. Somehow
you'll be made to pay for it in

·~rcutcr

mcuNurc.

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) .. Using cKcessive flattery .
· !n urde,r to manipulate another
mto betng supponive of views
or.to !let him/her to do somethu!g for y.ou will backfire.
lnsmcerity will be perceived
and you'll be rejecteil.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
·• Thole ugly extravagant
whims you get from time to
time could be very much in
evidence today. Take extra
precautions not 10 5pend'excessively and not to make
foolish purchases.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
.. Just because you were up to
handling challenges the other
day doesn't mean you can
take on another without much
forethought. Don't underestimate the competition or be
cocky.
·

Index ·
2 section• - 12 1'111•

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·

RACINE - Wheti Bob
Grueser officially slitrts his
new job ns ' Somhern Loc11l
· supenntendent Thursduy. · it
muy seem mon.: like u homecoming.
Thut 's because Gruescr is u
product of the S.outhern Locul
School District.
Gruescr. who resides neur
Rucine. wus reured in the
community of Minersville.
son of the lute Doris and Curl
Grueser. He gruduuted frum
Southern High School In
1967 befon.: emborking on u
circuitous career puth thut
eventually led him buck to
Southern.
After gruduuting from high
school. Gruescr attended
: Glenville State College in
West Virginiu. II wus while ut
Glenville, Grueser suid, ,he
developed his passion for
teaching and couching.
After college, he taught i11

Crohksville utu.l Caldwell
sL:ho(•ls. becoming an assistant d.:mcntury school princiJul , before bein~ hired us u
tigh school princtpul in South
Charleston. Ohio, und Sidney
high schools.
He wus supcrintcm.lent of
Northwestern Local Schools
ncur Wooster before tuking
the superintendent job ut
ncurby Wurrcn Locul in 1998.
where he suid he spent four
wonderful yeurs, hefore retir!ng uml taking the Southern
JOb.
He ulso has two udull chi I·
drcn. Kimberly Bernard of
Boston. Muss.. und Todd
Grucs&lt;;r of Columbu~ . Both
urc gruduntes of Ohio State
University.
Grucser recently outlined
three prlifessionul go,(l]s he
would like 10 u&lt;:hieve ut
Southern:
Continue
to
improve profidency test
'~orcs. analyze und address
the financial resources of the

I

district. and creute pusitive
communication in ull directions.
On u personul level. he s01id
his gouls ure to get to know
district 's empluyees und community memhcrs. get to know
the district's programs. and
uddress school funding issues. ·
There is ulso u common
goal he shares with ull cduca·
tors. "the cduciuion of each
und every child.'~ he suid. He
expluincd his responsibility us
providing udmini,trutors und
teachers with the tools und
cducntion they need educute
the children.
He also brielly referred to
President George W. Bush's
theme, "Let no ~hild be left
behind.''
·•we're getting bett&lt;cr one
chilli ul u time." Grueser Cl:&gt;~n·
mentcd:
NEW SUPERINTENDENT - Bob Grueser officially starts his
He also stressed the impor• duties
as Southern Local superintendent on Thursday. He Is a
tance .or giving chi ldren ll' Minersville
native end 1967 graduate of Southern High
Plaase IH Grue1er, AJ
School. (Jim Freeman)

Protecting
•
untverse
focus of

5

bean dinner
preserves link
with .history

day camp
Girl Scouts
. recewe
'
(Bronze Award'

AS
B3·5
B6
AS
A4
A3
A3
B1·3
A2

2002 Ohio Valley Publlshlns Co.

'

BY KEVIN KIU..Y
KKELL YOMYOAILYTRISONE.COM

VINTON- A tradition reaching buck to the early postCivil War era wi ll be curried on Saturday when Vinton's
annual bean dinner is staged in the Community Purk.
The dinner will be fromt11:30 a.m. until 3 p.m.. precedeo by a parade through the
.
village that begins ut II
a.m. and ends at the purk.
Vinton resident John
Holcomb, who has made a
study of what he called
Civil War bean dinners 11 :30 a.m. to 3 p.m. ·
to distingui&gt;h them from
saturdiy ·.
the newer kinds of gather·
ing - said Vinton can Vinton Community Park
truce its tirst bean dinner
as a ·reunion of veterans
· who fought for the Union. The events were also known as
soldier's campfires or soldier's meals.
Holcomb's research finds the first printed references to
Vinton's dinners in the early 1880s, although it's believed the
tlrst veterans' reunions were held there' soon after the war ·
"At these g~therin~s. ~specially the reunions or ca~p- .
tlres. the pubhc was mvtted to heilr the old soldiers reminisce about Iheir warti~e experiences and partake of ,he
standard Army meal . of beans, pork, hardtack and coffee
prepared over a campfire and served in genuine soldier
style," said Holcomb.
Before the end of the 1880s, the events became known as
GAR bean dinners. and were plentiful in southern Ohio
well into the 1930s.
Today, only three othe.r ~inners are put on that can trace
thetr roots back to the Ct vtl War era - one at Rio Grande
started in 1870 and maintained by the Rio Grand~
Memorial Association, ~ew Castle in Coshocton County
. and Wilkesville.
. '
This ye1ir, Rio Grande's bean dinner is Saturday, Aug. 10
at the Bob Evans Farm Shelterhouse, and features a Civil
War Living History camp from 10 a.m. until S p.m. The
New Castle dinner is Sunday. Aug. 17, and Wilkesville's
dinner is Saturday, Sept. 7. ·
'
For infonnation about Vinton's parade, contact Mayor .
Donna DeWitt at 388-8327. lnfonnation on the dinner is
available from Holcomb at 388-8053.
The dinner has been sponsoced by Vinton American
Legion Post 161. of which Holcomb is the commander
since 1950. save for one year when the sponsor was th~
Vinton Grange.
.
Holcomb encouraged attendance at the dinner to maintain a link with the pust.
·
"Help preserve Ohio\ unique Civil War legacr by sup~rting or attenping one of the GAR dinners,' he said,
'Your support would encourage the sponsors to continue
having these dinners jind thus remember the soldiers who
preserved the Union."

BY BRIAN J, REED

RERROT

I II I

BY JIM FREEMAN

BAEEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detell1, AJ

O Rearrange

Southem grad takes sc:hool district's reins
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

DHERMES.MYDAILVREGISTER.COM

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REEDSVILLE
Protecting the universe was
the emphasis of Meigs
County
Girl
Scouts'
"Protecmrs of the Universe
Day Cump," held recently at
Forked R.un State Park.
Jerrena Ebersbuch wus the
director for the event. Vicki
Morrow of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservution District
presented classes on water
and soil conservation. and
Dee Kimes of Forked Run
State Park assisted in the
council's Gettie Outdoors WATER SLIDE- Girl Scout Hannah King enjoys a water slide
with ODEE program. by provlded by local fire departments as part of the scouts'
teaching the gtrls about an recent day camp at Forked Run...§late Park. (Contributed)
endangered frog in Ohio, the ly complete two' budges per- Kaitlyn Bumgardner, Jessi
Eastern Spade Foot Toad.
taining to their project. and Meadows. Hannah King,
The girls also made bird- se lected Earth Connections Larissa
Riddle,
Haley
houses, and memory books, and Eco-Action.
English, Cheyenne Beaver,
and enjoyed a water slide . The Bronze Award win· Makenzie Greene, Katie
compliments of the Olive 'ncrs, the first in Meigs Keller, Abby Collins, Ashley
Township and Tuppers Plains County, also completed com- Deem, Shawnclla Patterson,
volunteer fire departments, munity service projects at Ruchael Markworlh, Ally
took hikes and studied the Star Mill Park in Racine and Hendrix, Kendra Haning.
trees and plants in the park's . at Forked Run, and created Olivia
Cleek,
Shelby
wooded areas.
the "Captain Protector" char- Pitchpatrick,
Hannah
Campers and families acter who appeared at day Hawley, Abby
Houser,
enjoyed a picnic on Sunday, camp.
·
Juimee Little, Bnttany Cogar.
and an uppearunce by
Adult volunteers assisting Emma
Perrin.
Brooke
"Captain Protector,'' played at day camp were: Joyce Johnson, Maggie Smith,
by Ross Keller and Jaxon Romines, Dawn Romines, Nakayla Ratliff and Jessica
Meadows.
Shirle~
Co~·ar,
Brenda Sampson.
Ericka Cogar, Jo Petty, and Neutzling. Ltsa Meadows.
Juniors: Joyce Romines.
Kayla Fetty, all .of Troop Jenny
Keller,
Danyan Julia Lantz, Danielle Dalton,
1204, Lindsey Houser, 1290, ·Collins, Ann Collins. Cheryl Zari Roush, Hannah Cleek,
and Nikita Young, 1042, were King, Phyllis Deem, Amy Jord.an Anderson, BoDara
recognized for bridging from Markworth, April and Tom Powell, Stephanie Smith.
Juniors to Cadettes.
Smith, Pai~e Cleek, Amy Mary Ann Reed, Mariah Hill.
Cogar, JoAauna Fetty, Smith, Teme Houser, Tina.., Cayla Taylor, Hannah West,
Kar,la Petty, Young, and Sampson, Marty Smith, Carol Nikki Lawson, Chelsea Davis,
Hatley · Ebehbach were Fetty, Rob Romines. Harold Ashley Romines. Leanne
awarded their Bronze Award. Fetty. Tami Pillman, Shannon Tyree. Hailey Ebersbach.
The girls have been working Bumgardner, Tim Ebersbach, Whitney Putman, Lindsey
on their Bronze Award pro- Kim Fetty. Bill Cogar, Lori Houser, Ericka Cogar, Jo
· iect, '"Girl Scouts - Patterson
and
Larry Fetty and Niki Young.
.
Protecton of the Universe," Sampson,
Several of the Juniors and
'since January.
Scouts attending were:
Cadeue.s camped for, the
Each girl had to individualBrownies: Carly Taylor, weekend.

VInton lean ·
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