<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7153" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/7153?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:46:48+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17560">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/f372facba07bb9ec10ae567b4181f991.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4ddcb5c8e33de6a1d9c33c8b0f3f59f7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23401">
                  <text>D8 • • ....., ~-•esdlnd

•

•

In

11

•

a1

iOIM'town

Mewa,.per

Whit's Inside

local

oard
ap'-roves
staff

CIIA~I Hom.tOM

Soo«olll 11@W% oolll:ll

Sentinel staR

POMUROV = A.ro\.'\'tll triult'\lll
In I'I'VJ'UI'llilmi t\w ttw Mtll'll"" ·~
Ruld RIX!ml~lnwt\1 \ ~lurh~ Ollin ·~
111~o'l!n11Hmlul y~llt' took IJ unl,
1\lfm\KI t"nnl\\\ll't'll\1' ~nltlil'l'il tll'\'1'
1h~ \llill~t I'\lUI\\ ol' tim plnmwtt tht"C\1•
th~~ rklli tht'IIUI.lh M\'ll.l~ l\IUilt)'.

Tlii'P ERS PLAINS
Ea,tcrn Local
Ooat·J 11t EJucat ion apprm cd 'ubstltute 1ca~hcr' and took nthcr pcr,onnel
uc·tlotl duHn)l it~ rrg.ular hn:nd meeting
la't week .
The

Serenity House
serves Victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800·942·9.577

MOLLOHAN CARPET
Quality at a low price
Berber starting at $5.95 yd
VInyl as tow as $4.95 yd
Ask about 90 days sams as cash
Weekdays 446-7444
Sundays 1-877-830-9162
or 388·0173

ANNOUNCING!
Patsy Campbell
will be relocating to:

Brenda's Kut &amp; Kurl
63 Pine Street
Gallipolis, Ohio

American Legion Post 23
Picnic Sunday,
August 25th
12pm till Spm
Food. fun. music &amp;Karaoke
At the Moose Shelter will
start food al1 PM

The Purple Turtle

REWARD/REWARD
2002 Yr. Date Planner Book

Color Brown!Burgandy and
Miscellaneous tile may be

In Green Canvas Bag

14

at the Gallla County Health

Department

August 28, 2002
6:00 p.m. to 7:00p.m.
Ask Queatlone

50%· 75% OFF

Get the facta

300 Second Avenue
Gallipolis
446·1998

Ton Ro..ono To Reglotor AI Tho An llohOQII

1. Slate of the an sprung dance lloor with
m!rrort.
It Olractor and owner haa oo11'11)1•1td a 6FA In

danQt t~~nd hal btin teaohlng tar lwtnly

Health Comm1111oner
Or. Gerald van.. and hlllth
department atall will be there
to anawer que1t1ona, dlaou11
pmentlon, and explain what
your htalth dap&amp;rtment Ia
doing to help

Rev. Samuel LeWis

yeare.

3 Family learr.rlng tn~ln:mmtnl.
11. Annual performance wrUten and produced
by Art Schoo! atudenta.
~- Canoe eupp!lea • 1h011, leotlmta, aklrtl
a~allable on ·iooatlon at the M tchool.
6. Studenta learn more than IIepa like
organluUon &amp;kUla, memory atdlla and
· ktndntll.
1. EJCtra worMahopa with proteulonal
. performing in&amp;lruotora available lor
adYanoed atudt~nl&amp; to atudy outald•
Galllpolla area.
8. Prl~ate olaaaaa available tor 11udente ot
._u •gea and •lzta upon requ..l,
8. l.ooal buttnaaa In Galllpotla tor over 1111.

Reunion
00 Mcintyre Park
Blue Bird Shelter
10:00AM Sept 1st

HOUSE FOR SALE

112 Ktnuon Drlvuln G!llllpalll
·· 2 BA. 1 BA, ~A. DA. Kit,

HOUSE FOR SALE

Fulll.laeemtnt, Fonotd Backyard,
New Rtnovltlon• and Addition•

Garago &amp; Ballmtnt

MUST SEE.
Call today at 446·4480
Asking $79.900

431

Drive • Rio Grande
2 BR. 1'/, Bath.

1O.ln aatoOianon w"h ProteaaiQ~I Danoe
Companlaa and SOhoola. .
Hope To See You on Auguat li!9, 2002
From 4·8 pm at 12'71 Ea1tern Avenue

To Re~ller For Pollet, Tap, JaJz, Polnl,
Modern l More, Caii441·1GHB.

GOOD NEWS
BIBLE BOOKSTORE
35 Court Street
441-9603
M-F 10·6: Sa11 0·3
Christian Books, Bibles, Etc.
We special order
books and music

A pre·tllt workahop Ia .
btlng held on 8127102
and 91'7102.
R'glatratlon Ia IImited.
Call 448·1 884 for
additional information.
ALL OOQS ARE ELIGIBLE.

Looking for
a better lntereat
rata on your

throug~out, . Nlot~ ~endiCIPid .

~ake

$45,000.00
245·9838

yean.

441·0583

TOWN' MEETING

LARGE SELECTION
OF SUMMER .
CLEARANCE

Ia your dog 1 good citizen?
The Gallla County Animal
Welfare League and the
Right Paw Tr~lnlng Center
will aponaor AKC Canine
Good C~lzen 1111 on
Sept. 14, 2002 In the
Qalllpolla City Park.

MISS PAULA'S DAY
CARE CENTER
Must be 18 yra. old
&amp; H.S. Graduate

of Sholapura, India
·cost: $10:00
Call 446·3834
'
to sign up

446·6224

322 Second Avenue
Galllpolil 1 Ohio

Bua Trip to Dresden

448·8235
1·800·447 ·82315

fall Into Local News, 8ports, rntertaln~:~~ent,

r .~. I .

. Hlah: llOi.~ Low: GOI
Dttada, AJ

~ rnur
u·nop~t·~ l'rom th ~
()ullln · Moi~M lloM
t nt' tha

Ohio Stule l11Jlhwuy Putrol

In tho

w~t·e t'll~ ngnf~~~~
lllllHlt't!~~nli MN Uilllt' ihil

till\
SheN n~wM, u monthly
n~wMiotlcl' from the Ohio
Do/lnrtmcnt of Public
Su ctr which rcpm'fM
N•

huhliUul

Very Large
Auction

Index
1 le•n• Calender

Cle11lfltd1

Comic•

'fme~ -~.enttn
I

l.or:at~d at

th1 auction r;~!J{Ir on
Rt. 33 In Ma1on, WY.
Will Ill 1111tng partial 111at11.

Boluliflll.olk llbit • 6 ehaln and 2 pilot
huwh. 2~ pi"'' boolwtM, btclroom
IUiiOI, LA-Z.BOY lOft, drtt!Nir, book-

Z.nllh Jrti'IO, Zfnllh colon• "1'\1
whh romoto, llbl• 1110

OIINII, Oar!,

lmtlUnl

of

OUt

Tjw. Terry Md! lrny
ut't'cNtc(ll,uncc Hernum, :IR,
I'm hiMtcnlh DU I ol'fenNo
on MR/02: Ttll', Rober!
Ju~kN
urroHtCY JOKil jlh
l}~nn1111 , 4H. fnr hiN ICillh .
DUI nl'l'enie on 611~/02 •
Tpr. JnHhuti RIHner tlri'C~tud
Eric KnoiiH, 32, f'nr hiM
Ki~l h DU I ol'l'enKc on
MH/02: ttnd Tpr. JorMl)'
s~huldt m·reNIOd Rlchurjj
i'!IIIH, 30, l'or hiMNl~th !lUI .
ul'fen~ll un (1111/02,
·

. \.

Classlfleds, Coupons, Comles, and ~ore... ~ ~y1i

WHther'

nl1'andot'H.

lllttWift,

DtlrAbby
Editorial•

Movie•

Obltuerltl

Sport•
Weather

WV, llnant, bedtpreltdt,
lflt, IIOVtrll 10011, 11Wt1
1andor drlllt, blttfry ohtrpr, oompr.,.
10r, Rtddy hetltr, Murray l1wn mowtr.

Brln1 li/TUf!d... 1111111tlon rln11
AllltltltHIJIItl'"l#ll ~11 ·

Rl#k Plfll'1on A.utlon Cq, Ill
Of 1111111 wiiii/IJ

or

Local
School
District

lltiiHgt~rncr. ll'c
Burri&gt; . Janie' D
Thli ~l· mlll' l'lllll \viii hll~ln In
t'iN~tck, Mari&lt;l n·.
Wllklisvlllll, ~1\ls~ Mllll!~ ( ounty
1-'t·c t•kcr,, Vidi ·
tmtl Qulmlnu\1! with" huttllli'llt!lltl~t·
tlt·il'fln.
111~111 In llushun wh~l'l'! It I~ f'ltl111tlltl
Catherine
I.
tlmt 11-ll~t·ul t"lll!t~ will s~t·w us th~
fUN vc I
Hat·I.
~1wmy lnt\mtt·y.
Mkh~llc Miller.
Thl! t'lllt.' Is 1.\lll}t.'Q\Qll to llmw
Willilll L. l'atkcr.
t'lllll1tl~hlt' flUI'\idtltll1tS lftllll Ohhl,
D
..hltiiiiC Petrel.
Vli'l!illlu. l\•1111sylvuulu. Nmth
1\itllbcrly kuyc
C'ui'lllhm. Smil h Clll'ollim, e1t!tlt'j!ltt,
Housh,
Pcg~y
Jllmktu, N11w ~ltlmps hlro, Wt·mmH THIIUGLIIt- Thl! lfNllli ijl'@ ei!lletllt'llttlffi thtt ilable lOt illl'llll!t by Hill
'ttllsscll,
Mlcolc
tll1ll1\1llt\S,
.
l'lu!ller fttlttl lhll Sl~lh Ohit~ '.\Jiuiill!llt Cav~ lty, (Ctlftttli.lutlltl)
D.
While.
At lhll l'lllil\11~11111!111 hmsNirnwn
L
liWI'CI1~C
A.
A~CIII\111 11! tn IJtll't'llll Mm·kllnhl1. MIWI!llll 'N RnldcrN ur who lh1Vc NlllSlljljlly tllld tll'lllilil'Y Wlij\\lllS ult\111!
WiicliXen
,
Tcrcsu
L. Willlui11S, Ca th~
Wl\h II hiii'NQ •tlftl\1111 ~U \111011 Will 1\i' Nlll'll~~l1 1111 11. _ 1h~ Sixth bhl11 ri~M pcrtilletn 1u the t.11J . ·
Smith. Jume~ Euton und Nathan
Vulti11lc~&gt;t' t'liVnlry u11d rrujccl N.~pt'llNCIIlllliV~s ur the Chc~tcr­
n tlut't ot' th~ ~VIllll. ·
i{nbltiCIIC .
~hllh'muu.
th~l'll
lm~
llt!Vct'
00~11
n
Shntlc
III
Ntttrl~ul
ANNUdutluu
urc
lnun UltMlpt 10 mnklllt l\8 hl stoi"
The l'ullowlt1g supplct.ncn tul conIQully lll.l~urmu us possible t'llt'tlWI'S l'l'!~mt~lin~l1t ul' thiMM~tlt'lil drum uny· tl~~cp tllll! thut lni\lrtlillllun. 1'hc
lrllcts wct·c npprnved : t.c"lcr S.tewart,
UIOI11! thl! t'OUti\ lll'll beii1Jl O~k\ltl to wht.'ro. IIi\ ~ultlll IM l!lltlli\QIIliMtlun nutttht!tM t11 tull urn 1)9:2·21\:!i or
IHI~ ~,1 -114,
eighth gntdc girls' buskctbu\1; Mkhuel
plum SI1CI1Iul Cl'l.lps l'ot· 11\o sollllllrs t'rom u~"lMM tim ~tl\111II'Y·
·'fhu
klemlf
fur
the
prneth:t
rltl~
'l'hl!
i\Yi\111
18
lll!lng
eoonllnated
tO 1\)l'ttl!ll, WOilllll1 1\1'1! l'll\llUI8t~d tO
f'r~HL 8i1Vcntli gradf giH~ basketballi
bukc P.los und pul on window with n t,tll!uey Ortlnt From lh~ Ohlu wuM holtlnl Wilkesville whcro lo~n l 1'1111 LJUU1t1, ~cVenth yrade boys basket•
ledge~ fnt• 1he so llllor~ to suml, ond 8leMtan11lol ~on1miMNiun. A tltWII• Nj'lll11Muti! lmMl~tl rt oonn tlhtrtcr. The
hull .
fumterM Ut'll 10 oxpcct to hnvll faod mt~nlnry IM llllhtl! 111ttmtl tlntl h~ul l'fliNM htli!Utl ihll ll'tlk tliJitl~~ Mdii,N
Puld ruotbull puslllons for Scott
tuuttly nn u ttrltltty llttlfl11111! wlih ' rhrtslll1ntl &lt;lild llrlun tJuwen· were deshlsiiii'Ywill Ill! liwlmlt~•l.
stolen l\1r the hnt'slls.
Ol'llllllil.t!fM Ut'll 11\tcrcNt~tJ In h~UI'• locu l I'C~hJcms jlt'tlvldlitl/. liltld till' lgllutcJ, fl·oth u previously -approved
Tho t'llll llil~ttn ~ llt hus bll~ll
111~
ll'om ln~ul t't'Miti~IHM wltll muy lluth the rttlcr.1 unJ their hul'scM, llsi.
tlescrlhlld us oolnp unltjllll OO~UIIStl
.
huvtl
hull t'ttmlly uwmhm who nlon~ wlih uvcrni~hl ~U illpit1~
II Is mnhllei'Uih ~r Ihun stmlonut·y us
Hick
l:ldwurus
wu
~
upproved
us
CIP
llliiM, ttlltl ~un~Jiutl~d till Suuduy.
lnttlt'n~it!li
with the IH'iglnul M
lllOSI Ul'll ,
Ct)IJrdlnult!t'. JoAnn Ctl lawuy us cle1\tclllill'y sc.crc t~t ry ouJ Llndu Hensley
us n substllu tc cook.
.·
rhc buurJ uppruvcu Chris Stewart OS
1gg
hi gh ~~ huul l:lngll~ h tcnc hcr. Tim
=======-===
lt•thctt~ us hi gh ~cl1l1ol utt~ tcucher.
1
1
Jucklc Wolfe u~ hi gh 1c hool buslncMs
Clillt&lt;llltiH tcuchcr und Dchnruh Ruy 118
'
•
.
.
.
.
hll!h ~dlltll l 81Jerlu l cuuculltlll tent'hcr,
11 1 1
Cowdery;
hUN urlvcr, UMd Jr1A11n Culuwuy,
·
·
rcliourcc l'lHI\11 mu111iur, were ucceplcd .
ol~' u vcur•hlnl! ob~crvu· ~crvc ihc rhut~ k ," ton lrui 1'hc bouru c~tended It~ ~on truct for
IY KIVIN KII.LY
lion o{St. Lm~N' hiM
tory. ulilicu,
Cuthy l':,twul'ds rot BM IS rcportlnl! ulld
OVP lliiWI 11dlt01
which bi.I.Mllllltl IH,, :l wltlt
C'unllllt Wll8 jolllcu by u~tlcs. tcluttllg te stutc rCj)Ur1s .
ihc llllf~ hUMll ol' lund Oil Sltrlllott, Mycr8' untlltttii'C '
rhc . ht~urd UfliHOVCU Belly Jo
OAI. I, IPOLIS ~ A
tlrttpo Str~Qt for th ~ thu11 u d111.c11 ttHclc- ·.- Hnlmun , Kuylu Sldc1·s, Mulcrlc S1Jcr8,
cc ntur)l•tWI ·u;lutll'
nf
, dHir~h . Thul ~ hut'd1 Willi brUI\11 lhlllt Cutlwl k
.luclu lt cnce Kirby tll1d Mlchucl Kirby.
Cuthorlc lli'CMI.l n~u In
tl~tJI~ulell lit 1H~H uud wus churcltc • ·in Ihe ureu , "' ojJCI1 -cllroll\11cnt stu~cnts for the
Oullln County wuN Q~ lo· ·
r~jllll~Cll with th~ ~llt'l'lltH lnclutllnl! Pulflur Wuhct' . up ~ot nl11 g ~dwn l yeu r,
hruted Sunlluy by mmc
bulltllug Ill th~ ~orn~:~r tJI' H cl 11 ~ ur l;tHIIcroy'~
Mcmbct'• up proved u :ti 12.000 supplc thun 200 11\CnthCt'H St.
Pourth
AVC!lllll
umt
Sttil~ Sucrcll Hctttl Church unu
lltctH to purtldp,t1c In Buckeye JOGS,
LuuiN C ntholl ~ C hur~h
Sttlll!lln 1110!1.
ttmhcr 1tc111~ S~hllck ul' ,luc "' ru1tlill1g cui• ut ihe •tu te level. ·.
durlnM u ~nttill'lcul MuMM
'rhll ~~luhrtt ltlt'y MttKN StWI'Ctl Hcurt lit tlulnt .
rhc f11)ltrd uiNII ;
nolinl! thQ chureh'8
mw.tc lltlle ul' St. Loub' lli~UMU III , W.Vu. ,
• Approv ed · u •ontruct with thll
unnlvorHnry uno the fouMI
hllrltui!C,
but
ul~tl
t'
u
~.:uHcll
Con
ltHl
•ultl
utter
the
U11iver•ltY
or kl&lt;l Orundc, ullowii11J
of the Hulnt fm· whom tho
till Nplrltuul ~uttccr11N liM Mu~M he wu• plcu•ctllhul
Mtuueht• In colnplelc. field cxpcrlcncl'l
tluriKh IN numod.
Co
nlon
tiiH~UHNCd
the
unc
tlf
hi•
ilr•l
tlullc~
uH
tu diNttkt ~chon!•: .
.
Tho tlvcnt, ftJIIowctl by
"nntl\"
ol'
"
till"
II
,.
IN
hiHhtlp
WUN
It!
cclcbtulc
A
.
W
l
the church'N unnuul
""
'
.., 1 v 11 "
St. Ltllllill' Ulmlv~rillttt)'.
I p~rovcd Nick
~ck• 1o assist
Mpugheul dlnller thut drew
iltlhop Delat Oonton thlllr ~onupunltyl ~11 It I~ "l'nt !!lull to huvll the with lc~htmlogy •el-upM,
numorouH ft•iond8 rrum
Nil~,~~~~~ to I lllflnf ill '
upputltiNily ltll!llltltJ UJ the
I Approved mljuNtln!l administrative
tho community, woN tho dlueawc'M fourth biNh·
. 011 wo, ~u~ WI! · 8 uuth~rn /'ortltlll ul' ihe
~upp l ci11cM tnl !ttltttlc ~ ttl rcflec1 current
wppcd on' with u vl81t by op on Aut!. t;,
-~~Jur~ tgh~~: 711" ~;hMu~~ ~~~~~eso," 111 ~\tltl.,"'t'hcMu ~llhlr~, ~chct.lub rot tit her cmplo~ccs.
lhe
Stoubonvltlo
WlUlO beutull'ul ccle· "WilU W0 ttf~, fundulll~lt• ~: hur~hlls don I icc! the
• Ac~C)Jtclithe t.lnnutlt111 oru scunllef
OloeeNc'H now biMhop, R. ·brdl un of our l'olth nntlu tully ura tiiH~Iplo~ of' ~utile ~ lu8ei1CMM wltlt the ttntl
"u lt wurc pudu~c ftom Oon
Dunlel ConiOtl.!, und hiM b uutlful HIQil ul' NUIIIJurl· JiJNu8. li 'N ilttM~ l'or UN Mit• biNhup ~~~ thllNi! llu In thll
l:leunctt
ftlr lhc Meigs County Dlmlct
prelleeo.uor, 1JIIhor1 I. ty," Nuld MonHII!tlUr tllll! In ehureh
flublt~ Librnry und sdwul llbn1ry..
,
011 u northum end, so I _wu8
Sheldon.
Wltllum R. MycrH, wlm
Suntluy
uJ'tornoun
Ill
UNO
httppy
(Of
this
UjljlUfiUHI•
1'11~
b11ttttl's
next
111cctl11~
will
b~
Sheldon, who hod hnH jmtored !it l.mtiN l'ur
ty...
.
held nt 7 p.111 , on Sep1. Ill.
reached mnndntory retire· thu pu~t 22 yeon. "h wu~ thutt1Nun unMW~r.
''Out
thllril
18
no
moril
I
would
udll
thut
St.
Attcnlllng were John Rice, Ore1
mcnl OliO thl~ yeor, ted tho un ltullcutlun ol' how gru·
lmportont
port
of
our
Luui8INI11e
unly
Cuthulk
IJttltey,
Howard Caldwell, Sheila
dhJeo11e for 10 yearN clou11 peopla cun bo to
ldontlfr,
thun
~Ina
bup·
tlhureh
In
0dltfn
Cuumyl
1'ny1or
und
Rick
Sanders,
bcrorc lurnlnli Mur the peoph: they know und ur
Superintendent IJcryl Well and·
rqlnH to Conlon, who wu11 hove not known befuro." tlzi!d ntl:l uur fnl!h und und llhiHk thd peuplu wll
orduln d Qnd inMtolled 118 The eelebrotlun eupjJOd ttn8werlnl! the eDII UJ IIIIIH IN Church, AI
1'r11u~ur~r Lt ~u Ritchie.

lOr·

bus

12 1111e•

AS

B3 ~ !1

B6

AS

A4
A3

A3
Bl·3
A2

II 2002 OhiO VIlli!)' Publl!hlnl Cll,

Church AIIIIVI-·rv

h
h
I
St
L
I
b
t
.
e
ps
OUIS
ce
e
ra
e
8Is Op
·n·
Cialll'a
County
150 Years l

ul!rl;~ ~c : 1~1~t~tl~::;':v~:u~.urry

or

11 1

"II

•

I. •

Wlljhll, Ill of Htrbtr
plut olhlr lllliqllf!_to~!::~.:;ji~
J 11llon ~lpper, ~·

l:lrlun M. Allen.
lllltrel'l' llccglc .
Lori
1\1

2002-03.
Eastern

SeeA.:J

'

Ohln

S&amp;tul'day, Oolobtr 28
Tour tht Market Bttklt Building
Call Frodda B7B·5503
Frankl• 1!75-BQ31
Pa ment Au uet 30

'

htllla, AS

CJAI..I.II 0I, IS

The Lynch Agency

h~al~ hcl·,·

routes

Rlch1rd Rowo, 114

lncul

Call or atop by for your free
packet of Information.
Flonnlt Lynch ·

'

64

1

prlnoipal?

August 29th, 6:30·8:00 pm
Instructor: Zarin Amalra

Holslnge~

MCOinlziCI

risking your

Taking applications.

Gr11ct

ltHc

d

Offlc•n

aavinga without

The French Art Colony
530 First Avenue
. "Yoga Workshop"

Deaths

h11ard

appi'OVCllthc l'uf ltiWill)l '" suh;tl -

'l'hll pt'll~lit'l! t'\d\l, Which ~ttU11lti' U\
Wllkl'~vlll\l uml lltltn:lutlt1tl til
llu~tum wh~N th\l huttl11 ~mt~t·
nwm I~ plmm~ll. w11~ tl\1111' to ~~tuh·
lish 11 thnlllinl' 1\n· thr;- IIPI)t\l~lmulc·
ly I~(l hm!illhll\'" ~nldh.lt'!l who wiH
liil pm11\:lpt1tln~ In thl' Sepl\lmllllt'
J()()3 I'Vl'lll,

BULLETIN BOARD

re~o~t

.

'

'

..._

. 1. : • . ._

U

:

I ' : •.

II

I l

~ l..' ..o~ .'

I. :

FREE ln·home progrom lor tho• with early to mlrl•1to~ ·
·Chronic Ohtlnictlve Pulmonary DlteaN, Pulmonary Flhrotll, or
EmphyNmo. Learn proper DrtQth/ngttchnlq~J~I, nutr/Hon, oni:J
modiFied ~Jt~rcl•• to lncl'tQNiung copoc/ty,

Phytlctan't O,.r Rtqulrtd to Partlclpatt
UMIIED TO 50 PARTICIPANTS. Call Today!
(740) ••••••••
r.

II

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer,Dif.ferenca

www.holzer.org
'
lr

�••

•

. .

•

•

Mondav. Auauat 26. 2002

h1o

J'lw Daily Sentinel

Thesday, Aug. 27

Toledo

....

.

•

[ Monotlold
INil

111'm::::J •

'1 lu,_•m.-•J
···

·-Dt.;.on

co

~00~

...

At:tuWeather, Inc.

~

••

"'"""•

McARTHUR (AP) - A judge i · cutor Timothy Gleeson's motion
allowing prosecutors to seek the death appealing the earlier decision. Gleeson
penalty against a mun accused of also hud asked Simmons to reconsider.
killing two 20-yeur-olds, reversing his "It appears he gave long and hurd
ear_lier _judgment that it would be too thought before the court of apgeals
expenstve.
issued its ruling," Gleeson said. 'I am
Vinton County Common Pleas Judge hopeful the issue the court raised con·
Jeffrey Simmons ruled earlier this . cerning financial difficulties small
month that financial considerations counties have in prosecutins these sort
could compromise the defendant 's of cases won't be forgotten. and the
due-process rights.
legislature will find a solution to allow
But in Friday's ruling. he dismissed counties to prosecute such cases."
those concerns.
Vinton County, Ohio's most sparsely
"The court finds that its concern. as to populated county, has about 12,800
financial impact wus based upon people. Its unemployment rate is usualprospective due-process considera· ly double the state average.
lions, rather than any actual depriva·
Simmons said in his earlier ruling
tion," Simmons wrote in a one-page that paying for McKnight's defense
ruling.
.
against the death penalty would
Simmons' ruling came nine minutes deplete the $2.7 million general fund
after an appeals court dismissed prose· budget of the small county in southern

Ill Ili E ASSOC IATED PRESS

lit v wcmhcr should lust till
·at kns t midwee k, the
· N11tional Weather Service
' ~:l id Monday.
Tuesday will be partly
duuuy. llighs will be nbout
-

Tcnqwraturcs will be
ll'lllalll seasonable - with
· higl1~ ranging from the upper
70s 1o the lower 80s mid lows
al•out W - lill· the rest of the
\\' lll'k

II'CC k.

file rccnnl high for Aug.
17 ul. lhc Ci&gt;lumhus weuther
't alin11 w11s YH degrees in
I'!·I-ll, and the record low wus
·17 degrees in 1945. Sunset
1v illlte nl (&gt;:54 nn Monday ut
the Culumbus weuther stat ion . and s unri.~ e Tuesday
wi ll he• 111 H:54.
WEArttER FoRECAST
1 lnday ... !'I nulls uml some

" ""hi m· Hi ghs around 80.
• N&lt; •1 thcast winds 5to 10 mph.
_IPIIi ~ ht ... Mostly
cloudy
wit h n d1nnce of showers.
1\ I sn' 1he chance for nn
:•·vt'llinl' thunderstorm. Lows
·in ll w 111itl 60s: Northeast
wtntl·. arutlnd 10 mph .
1 h:lll&lt;'c' ,,f rai11 30 percent.
FxrENOED FoRECAST

with u chance of showe.rs .
Also the chance for an after·
noon thunderstorm. Highs
around 80. Northeast winds
I 0 to 15 mph. Chance of ruin
40 percent.
Tuesday
night. .. Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of ruin . lows in the
mid 60s.
Wednesdny ... Mo s tly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chunce of ruin . Highs in the
upper 70s .
Wednesday night. .. Mostly
cloudy with . a 40 percent
chance of rain. lows in the
mid 60s.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy.
A chance of showers und
thunderstorms in the afternoon and evening.- Highs in
lhc lower 80s.
Friday ... Purtly cloudy. A
churice of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon
and evenin~ . Low~ in the mid
60s and htghs ih the lower
80s.
Saturday
- und
sunduy... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers und thun,
dcrstorms in the afternoon
und evening. lows in the mid
60s and highs in the tl]id 80s.

rnnday ... Mostly cloudy

School district fueled by
fdrrnland turned subdivisions
•

HI ' ) NO I.IJSIJURO (AP)
t Jm·e· just u few minutes
ap•11·1 "" u two-June country
IO:Ill. R~y 11oldsbur~ und
;l'lckc·IIII[!IOII huvc been high
sd""''
''" '''"'" rivals for the
p.t•.l 20 ycurs.
·1he lao I game of I hat rival·
1y '" " pl;tycd Friday. with the
H&lt; -y ll•ild, burg Raiders falling
;• I 7 111 the Pickerington
I i gc· ~; ,

. 'llll'
ncxl
time
;Jh-v 11olrhb urg meets Its
IH'I ~hbm on the gridiron, it
wil l he· - u~uin s t one of 'two
sc·l tou ls, 1'1ckcrington Central
_t&gt;t l'ic-kc rington North. The
'"'"'" 'ln wdcu di sfrict will
:"1'''" :1 second l1igh school
: m., l yea r.

I hal lwo lm1c 10utl is nnw a
11 all ll ··llokrJ hi ghway lined
"1tli ''I ip malls, and
J'idt'lington fnr the first time
:; , "'"·&gt;ut to overtake
'&lt; eyn&lt;• ld ~ burg in population.
· IJ:m• ll upkins moved to
Pilkcli ll)! lon in 1971 so he
could mise three children
Jlwuy from the city. Now he
JollY' lily life hu.1 come to him.
• "lucvcr expected this enor·
~11011 \i un lo Utlt of
H o p~"' ~ suiu while

growth/'

dressed ln
I igel purple und cheering
l1&lt;1111 lhc vi~ itor' s grandstand.
"My 'on used to go out in the
j'i'l'ld&lt; ur1 cl play in the woods,
Jllld ilow it is all housing
~Jt- Vl' II ljlllll'll (S,"
ll npktr" said he used to be
aide· to f!" lrJ the games, walk
111 the· town's one drug store
or tl1&lt;· Carnegie librttry, now
&lt;1 hi ~ tor icu l center, and know
l; vnyonc he pussed,
•.
· ,. I here are so many new
fuu•s at Kroger's nowadays
thnt till' town hu ~ lost some of
it s chm m, " he •aid.
; •\' a hu~ driver for
4'1• h·11ngton
sc hools,
~ l11phn' has seen housing
(kv.-lopiiiCIIIS " pop Up like
WC('d&lt; · and he believes more
Ull' (o llling.

" 1'1 1cy named the existing
hi gl1 sr hool Cenrrul und not

•

South. because they forecast
so much growth south of
town thut they will soon need
a third school called
Pickerington South," Hopkins
suid.
·•
Both communities about 15
miles cast of downtown
Columb_us have populations
of about 27,000, according to
the 2000 U.S. Census.
But the slightly more popu lous Reynoldsburg is land locked,
while
Violet
Township, which includes
Pickerington, has two-thirds
of its lund still undeveloped
us farms give way to subdivisions with $250,000 homes.
Census figures show
Pickerington added 7,661 residents since 1990 while
Reynoldsburg grew by 886
people.
With- Pickerington's population explosion came athletic
success, including appearances in the state football
playoffs In two of the past
three years. ·
The school also became
kno-.yn for the ·dominant
!urge-school girls basketball
team in Ohio and one of the
best in the nation, winnin~ six
state championships smce
Jll)85.
.Its teams have been able to
recruit from the thousands of
people moving to Violet
Township in search of a quiet
life in the' country and a good
school district.
"There were about 3,000
students in the district in
1980, and now we have about
9,000 students," said Chuck
Kemper. as he watched the ·
teams take the field.
Kemper will be principal at
the renamed Central after the
new Pickerington High
School North opens next year.
Enrollment this year is
2.400 in the school built in
199 J for 1,800 students. The
new- school also will have an
1,800-student capacity.·

•

Ohio.
The county's financial worries about
his defense could create an unaccept·
able risk to McKnight's right to due
process, he wrote in that decision.
-Joe Case, spokesman for the Ohio
attorney general's office, said
McKnight is receiving more than ade·
quate resources.
"I think the judge's action today indicates that there are resourtes available,
and I think he looked at the big picture," Case said Friday.
·
Vinton County Commissioner
Michael Bledsoe said the county will
find the money. "We'll do the best we
can, the way we have in the past."
One .of McK11ight's three court·
appointed lawyen. Robert Miller, said
the rulings would be an appeal issue if
McKnight is convicted.

Ohio Briefs
Contrador
aided tumpike
parties

Dry weather to continue -

Hll.

Monny, Auplt 2t. 2002

Judge reinstates possibility of death sentence

. Ohio weather

, \_
\1! - :)

PageAl

the leak and whether it be$un . building. maintenance shop
while the train was movmg and a wurehouse.
were under investigation in
this rural community 35 miles
southwest of Cleveland.

CLEVELAND (AP)
Contractors who do business
with the Ohio Turnpike puid
to attend at least four hohday
or. retirement parties, some
with more thun 500 people,
for the toll road's employees,
The Plain Denier reported.
Construction companies,
engineering firms und testing
laboratories received invitalions to buy hundreds of seats
at the parties, which took
lnce between 1998 and
anuary 200 I. the newspaper
reP.orted Monday.
'More contructors uttcnded
the events thun turnpike
employees," stute investiga·
tors wrote in notes from their
interview with a tumpikc sec·
rctary who dealt with the
lnvitations.
Ohio Inspector General
Tum Charles. who criticized
turnpike executives earlier
this month for accepting girts
und nieals from contractors,
said the parties troubled him .
"Jt,'s lnupproprlute that they
would solicit contructors for
uny kind of event," Charles
sa1d. "It goes to the very cui -.
ture we have been talking
about."
' ·

f

Police say
man killed '
one, stole a~r
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
man killed u person inside a
cur he sprayed with gunfire,
thc.n stole another car at gunpoint und led police on . a
high-speed chuse through
the city's south side, police
said.
As police closed in on him
Sunday, Dennis J. Stewart Jr.
jumped out of the stolen car
and tried to run before police
captured him. officers said.
Stewurt, 29, was charged
with murder, ag_gravuted
robbery und felonious
assault.
Minutcs earl icr, at about
noon, Stewurt shot at a car
with three people inside at
an intersection about two
blocks from his childhood
hoJ.lle, pol ice said.
The
driver, Melvin
Charles Tinsley, 26, was
killed. A wounded passenger, Kevin D. Spencer, 21,
grubbed the wheel and
steered the car away. The
name of the back-seat passen!ler, who police said was
not mjured, was unavailable.

Train
springs leak
SPENCER (AP)
Emer_gency crews continued
worktng Monday to stop the
leak of a corros1ve chemical
from a train's tanker car.
About 15 families were
evacuated as a precaution .
No injuries were reported
in the leak discovered
Sunday afternoon. The leaking tanker was isolated along
a stretch of track between
farm fields.
·
The 20,000-gallon tanker
car was leaking 2-cthylhexyl
chloroformate at the estimated rate of about two gallons
per hour.
The chemical, which is
used to make plastics, can
irritate the eyes and skin on
contact. Fumes, if inhaled;
can irritate the lungs.
. The cause and extent of

Women accuse
priest abuse

Residents
oppose plans
BOSTON HEIGHTS (AP)
- About 40 residents living
near the Cuyahoga Valley
National Park held a roadside
protest u~ainst plans to build
a $23 million, 22-acre Army
Reserve center in their com·
munity.
TIJe protesters chanted
"Army go uwuv"
, ·and "why
here" as motonsts drove by
Sunday in this community
between Cleveland and
Akron.
The Army has said that the
site neur the national park is
the best of five it has considcred in northeast Ohio to consolidatc 10 older reserve centcrs servi n~ I ,000 soldiers.
Army ofticiuls are ready to
S/Jcnd $990,000 to purchase
t 1c lund. project manager
Joseph Outes of the Army
Corps of Engineers said
Sunday night.
Tile Army said landscaping
would soften t_hc .impact of u
sllc thut wtll tncludc u twostory, 100,000-square-foot

TOLEDO (AP) - Internal
documents show the Toledo
Diocese removed a Roman
Catholic priest from active
ministry in 1994, short!~ after
u woman accused h1m of
fondling her in the 1960s, The
Blade reported on Saturday.
Other women have si nee
come forwlll'd with similar
allegations.
The case is among those to
be turned over to Lucas
County prosecutors, the Rev.
Michael Billian, chancellor
for the diocese, told the newspaper. Last Wednesday the
diocese said it would allow
prosecutors to review 40
abuse allegations covering 50
years.
The
Rev.
Thomas
Beauregard. 75, did not deny
the accusations when confronted in 1994, according to
a memo Bishop James
Hoffman wrote in June 1994.
"It was hoped that they (the
encounters) had been forgotten," the bishop wrote. "His
body language spoke of his
pain."

Child drowns In
Scioto River
COLUMBUS (AP) - . A
13-year-old girl drowned
while looking for turtles and
frogs along a bend in the
Scioto River, police said.
Columbus police divers
found Kristina Scott's body
about 8 p.m. friduy, five
houn after she slipped in one
of the riverbed's deep pockets.
Kristina was playing in the
water with her sister. Tiffany,
and thei't friend , Samantha
Raley, both II , on the city's
south side, police said. All
three are from Columbus.
Kristina's parents, Tina and
James Scott, said they were
surprised Kristina went in the
water, becuuse she didn't
know how to swim and usually didn't go near it.
"I told them they could go
but to just stay out of the
water," Tina Scott said as she
watched the search. "I didn't
think anything would happen."
The girls waded to an
island in the middle of the
river. After playing, they
headed back to the bunk when
Kristina slipped and went
under.

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

Put Your Special Greeting In Our

"Grandparents Are Special"
•

Edition

www.mvcfallyuntlnel.com

•1

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)- As the
son and ministerial heir · of the ·most
famous evangelist in the United States,
Franklin Graham is step{ling into one of
. the tallest pulpits.in Chnstianity.
· · His retent comments on Islam, how·
ever, show he won't be the ecumenical
bridge-builder that his father, Billy
Graham, often tried to be.
In a nationally televised service three
days after the Sept. II attacks. Billy
Graham preached a message of tolerance for Muslims. Two months later,
· Franklin Graham called Islam "a very
evil nnd wicked religion" during an
interview with "NBC Nightly News."
He said more of the same in a new
book and the recent P.rornotionaltour.
Some . in the Christian community
credit Graham with speaking uncom·
fortable truths, Others say he's painting
an unfairly monolithic picture of a
diverse faith.
Graham says he now wants 'to focus
on his mission of promoting
Christianity.
"I have declined dozens of interviews
on the subject of Islam recently, yet I continue to be portrayed as waging an ongoing attack on Islam. That is not the case,"
. Graham said in 11 statement late last week.
"My primary mission in life is to tell
everyone I possibly can about the per·
· son of Je&amp;us Christ."
· Graham's words carry added weight
. because he is the named successor to his
83-year-old father, who spoke of reli·
gious tolerance Sept. 14 at a National
Day of Prayer and Remembrance service

at Washington's National Cathedral.
"We come together today to affinn
our conviction that God cares for us,
whatever our ethnic, reli¥ious or political background may be,' Billy Graham
said. 'The Bible says that he is the God
of all comfort, who comforts us in all
our troubles."'
In November, as many, including
President Bush, urged tolerance,
Franklin Graham was criticized for his
remarks during the NBC interview. In a
subsequent Wall Street Journal column.
Graham wrote that he does not believe
Muslims "11re evil people because of
their faith. But I decry the evil that has
been done in the name of Islam, or~10y
other faith - including Christianity."
But he also wrote that "the persecucion or elimination of non·Muslims has
been a comentone .of Islam conquests
and rule for centuries."
This month, in a radio interview, he
said, "The silence of the (Islamic) cler·
ics around the world is frightening to
me. How come they haven 't come to
this country, how come they haven't
apologized to the American people.
how. come they haven't reassured the
American people that this is not true
Islam and that these people are not acting in the name of Allah, they're not
acting in the name of Islam?"
In his new book, "The Name,"
Graham writes that "Islam - unlike
Christianity - has among its basic .·
teachings a deep intolerance for those
who follow other faiths."
Graham declined several requests last

Distrid releases bus route schedule
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Schools
announce their bus route for
the 2002-2003 school year.
No significant changes
·have been made to the route
structure this year. Listed are
the bus drivers and the routes
they willtuke to pick up chil·
dren .
Lesa Sidwell (Bus 2) will
begin on Hayman Road and
continue .to Dewitt's Run,
Smith Ridge, Mount Olive,
and conclude at Bigley
Ridge. This route will end at
5
?:~~~~~~rnard
(Bus 10) ~il_ l
: begin on Lickskillet Ro~~:d
I0 a.m.
Cunts
:· about
Hollow7:Road
fromtake
Ohio
248
:sides. From there she will
: transport students on Success
. Road, Township Road
, Number 9, Joppa Road,
. Limberger Ridge, Pine Tree
· Drive,
Osborn
Road,
: Lickskillet, and East Shade
: Road .
: lee Swain (Bus 4) will
: begin his route about 7:10
· a.m.. the same as last year
with some minor changes.
This route will begin on
: Bridle Trail Drive, Number
: 9, Hudson Valley, Little

1x2 Without Photo

Reader Services

Grandpa &amp;
Grandma
Rodgers
I
You!

forest Road, 124 from about 7:05a.m. and travel to
Reedsville to Long Bottom, Route 7, 681 West of Route
248 from Long Bottom to 7, Kaylor Road and · to
Locust Grove Road (County · Calaway Ridge Road. Her
Road 28), from County Road route will be similar to last
28 to Eastern. This year Bus year, out she may have to
4 will make the loop around · make some minor changes in
the block in Reedsville the route as the days
instead of Glen Easterling progress.
The
(Bus 20). ·
parents should be aware of
Easterling · (Bus 20) will that times may change or
begin his route about 7:20 altered from day to day until
a.m. and continue the same she can figure out the best
as last year except he will not way to accommodate all the
be makin41 the loa~ qround passengers. All students in
the block m Reedsvtlle. Bus and around Tuppen Plains
4 will be makin~ the loop will ride her bus.
instead. Easterling's route
Bali White's (Bus 6), route
begins on Ohio·124 at or near will be the same as last year.
the junction of County Road He will be'in his route about
50 ' (Eden R'd
ttge Road) • an d 7:05 a.m. hose students J'IV·
proceed on 124 and 681 to ing in the Alfred Area, along
Tuppers Plains.
Summer Road, KceBaugh·
Ntta Jean Ritchie (Kay Fullrod Road. Skinner Run
Gillilan) (Bus 1), will begin Road, West Shade Road, and
her route about 7:10 il.m. on Silver Ridge will ride this
Rice Run Road and continue bus.
the same as last year. She Rhett Milhoan's (Bus 16)
will travel . from Rice Run route will be the same as last
Road, Lydia Road, County year' and begin ·about 7:05
Road ·44, County Road 50, a.m. He will start his route on
124 north of Eden Ridge Wickham Road and proceed
Road, Rye Road, and 681 to to follow Skintier Road,
T4ppers Plaills.
Rocksprings, Flatwoods, Old
Carolyn Ritchie (Bus 3), Forest Road, Lover's Lane,
will begin her route on Owl Texas Road, and Bailey
Hollow and Vineyard Road Road.

through Frldoy,

NIWI Dlpartments
The main number Ia 992·2156.
Department tllltntlont are:
Otnnl 11111nager

..' or

Nawa

Ext 12

"I love you Grandma
&amp; Grandpa Rodger1-"

Larger Ad Available
If Needed

2x3. 20
5

•

00

DEADLINE: Tuesday, September 3, 2002 .
1.-·---------------~------------------~--·-Send or brine your photo to:

The Daily S~ntinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
Child's N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Greeting ..,._--~----------------

-----------------

Court St.,

St. , Pomeroy, Ohio -e789.

Subscription ratu
ly oerrlor or molor roull

Dno-k
0111 month
0111 rur

52
$8.70
1104

Dolly

Ext. 14

Cll't'ler may rtmtl In'ad\Janoe direct to
Tilt Dtlly'Sentlnel. Cri&lt;IH will bt gtv.n
corrlor IICh - k. NO IUlliCrlpllon by
moll permltlld In orooa wlltrt home

Adverttatng

Ext. 3

Clraulattan

Ext. 4

corrlor oorvlco IIIYIIIoblo.

~-":~$27.30

13 Wotkt
2G Wotkt
ell-

On the Web

132Gell

www.mydallytemtnel.oom

!10 otnll

Subacrtblro nol dtolrlng to PlY tile

Cfllllflld Acle
Ext. 5
To nnd .. man
IIIWI Om)'diiiY"."Untl.oom

Must Be Prepaid • MC &amp; Visa Accepted

111

Ext. l3

Othar ltrYictl

Evan Bryce Rodgers

(UIPI'21 :1-1110)
.
Ohio Ytllly Publlohlng CO.
Publlahed ...ry ofternoon. Mondty

Corr1ctlon Polley
-oy. Ohio. Stcond-oloto pootoge
Our main concern In all atorlea 18 paid 11 Pomeroy.
to be accurata. lf you know of an Me-r. Tilt AtiOCIIII&lt;I Prell lnd
arror In a atory, call the neworoom ltloo Ohio Nowop- Auoclollon.
Poatmulor: Send tddroto oorrto·
at (740) 992-2158.
llonalo The Dolly Sentinel, II 1 Court.

Evan Bryce
Rodgers

week by The Associated Press for a
phone interview, instead issuing a statement through Samaritan's P\lne, his
B.oone-based relief agency.
Corwin Smidt, director of the Henry
Institute f9t the Study of Christianity,
and Politics at Michigan's Calvin
College. is among those concerned
about Gtilham's comments.
"Since we know·so little abOut Islam.
we need to be very careful about label·
ins it simply as one component," Smidt
sa1d. "We have to be careful about char·acterizing a divene group of people as
all being the same."
However, Richard Land, president of
the Southern Baptist Convention's
Ethics
and
Religiou s Libeny
Commission, said that even if Islam is
the "many-splintered thing" described
by Canadtan theologist James Beverle~.
Graham is simply pointing out1111 obv1·
ous reality.
"If you look at all the splinters. you
look at everywhere in the world where
you have a nation that is dominated br,
Islam, there is no freedom of religion,'
Land said.
Land believes Islam has a "medieval
mindset" and needs to undergo a refor·
mation similar to the one that split
Protestants from Catholics in the 16th
century before · freedom of conscience
can be widely accepted within the
Muslim faith.
He said the United States should do
all it can to assist moderate Islamic
regimes, including that of Pakistan's
President Gen. Pervez Musharraf.

· Eastern Local SChoolS

The Daily Sentinel

ssoo

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

:Graham's lslanlic criticisms:
Truth or intolerance?

Friday, September 6, 2002
1x3 With 'Photo

•

...... -

w-

Melt• ca..nty
r
12e.2e

S&amp;UII

11 011.12

Grace Holsinger
REEDSVIUE - Grace
Holsinger, 64, of Reedsville.
died Saturday, Aug. 24, 2002.
at The Ohio State University
Medical Center in Columbus.
She was born Jan. 20, 1938,
daughter of the late Russell
and Seva Bu. ver Cline.
She is survived by her hu sband, Alva Holsinger Jr.; four
sons and three daughters-inlaw: Paul and Brenda,
Charles and Staci, Jay and
Kate, and John; four grand·
children; seven brothers.
Carol,
Johrt,
Richard ,
Charles, James, David and
Carl; and a sister, Patricia
Collins.
Services will be held at II
a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 28.
2002, at White Funeral 'Home
in Coolville with Rev. Jim
Satterfield officiating. Burial
will follow at Eden Cemetery
in Reedsville.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m.
on Tuesday. ·
- Pa/dllorft

•

Richard Wayne
Rowe

Local Briefs
EMS answers

calls

SoothQrn drops '02 grid opQnQr
:&lt;J :,Ju ry

(RACO) meeting at Racine
American Legion Post 602
Hall on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
It will be a pot luck dinner.
Guests will be RACO volunteer Meigs County fair gate
workers .

Contest open
POMEROY - Contestants
can nominate the larsest Wild
B lac~ Cherry tree m Meigs
County and win a $50 savings
bond at Meigs Soil and Wl!ter
Conservation
District's
Annual Banquet on October
15. Entry form s can be picked
up at the SWCD office and
must be retured by Aug. 30.
The winning tree must be
located in Meigs County to be
nominated .
The tree does not need to be
located on contestant's prop·
erty, but landowne~:'s pennis·
sion is required before nomi·
paling a tree . If two nomina·
tions are received on the same
tree, the ftrst entry received
will be accepted,
Questions may be directed
to Education Coordinator
Vicki Morrow at 992-4282
Monday throuJ:h Friday during regular office hours. ·

meets

Church

~,1

Korean conflict and was a
farmer and manager of
Theron John•on Farms for 30
ye11n
Surviving are his wife. Ada
Bowers Rowe of Racine;
children and spouses, Gerald
Vickie Sellers of Sanford,
N.C.. Mary and Alvin Stover
of Racine. Edward and Sonny
Sellen of Parkersburg, W.Va ..
Arlene and Tony Frederick of
Racine . John Sellers of
Pomeroy, Steve and Cindy
Sellers of Racine , Jeffrey
"Butch" and Ruth Sellers of
Racine . Susan Lyons atid
Timothy Bishop of Rutland,
Deb and Chuck Craig of
Racine. and Ernie and Lisa
Sellers of Portland: two.
brothers and sisters-i n-law,
Paul and Rose Rowe of
Racine and Raymond and
Kay Rowe of Racine: four
sisters and brothers-i n-law:
Betty and John Wayne
VanMeter of Racine. Yvonne
and Jim l'ersinger of Racine.
Eunice and Benny Wil son of
Racine and Gertie Manuel of
Racine: 28 grandchildren, I I
great grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 2
~-m . on Tuesday. Aug. 27.
-002, at Roi1sh Funeral
Home. Ravenswood, W.Va.,
with Rev. Jim Satterfield offi·
elating. Burial will follow at
Letart Full s Cemetery, where
military graveside ntes will
be conducted by -Racine
American Legion Post 602
and Tuppers Plains VFW Post

. RACINE
Richard
Wayne Rowe, 64, of Racine's
East Letan community, died
Friday, Aug. 23, 2002. at the
Veterans
Administration
Medical
Center
in
Huntington. W.Va. . ·
He was born Aug. 19. 1938. 905l
in Racine, son of the late
Friends may call at the
Richard and Rowena Sayre funeral home from 2 to 4 and
Rowe. He was a veteran of 7 to 9 p.m. on Monday.
the U.S . Anny during the
- Paid notice

Ed Holter (Bus 2 J) will
besin his bus route about
7:20 a.m. on Sand Ridge
Road and proceed to follow
Pine Grove, Vinegar Street,
Ffatwoods, Whipple, Crow ·
POMEROY - Units of
Addition, and Pomeroy Pike.
Meigs Emergency Services
Keitha Whitlatch (Bus I 0),
answered the following calls
will begin her route about · for assistance Saturday:
7: IS a.m. at Bashan on
· CENTRAL DISPATCH
County Road 28. Students
I:54 a.m., with assistance
living on Route ~ from
from Syracuse, Eagle Ridge
Keno to Chester, Oak Hill
Rd., DOnald Stone, treated;
Road, Riebel Road, Chester,
2:20 a.m., South Third
and Route 7 will be transAve., Middleport, Terry
ported to Eastern High
Grogan, Holzer Medical
School.
Center;
Tom Pullins (Bus 9), will
2:58 a.m., Ann Street,
start his route about?: 10 a.m.
Pomeroy, Keith Day, treated;
and proceed on ,Long Run
8:38 a.m., Meigs Motel ,
Road, Rainbow Ridge, Horse
Donna Easter, treated ;
Cave; Eagle Ridge, Route 7
3:46p.m .. Fretker Rd ., Ida
from the skating rink · to
Roush, Holzer; ·
Chester, and pick up students
3:48 p.m., West Main St.,
on New Hope Road.
Pomeroy, Kate Jarrell , treatStudents arc to arrive at
ed;
_
each school buildinf by 8: 15
8:47 p.m., location unre·
a.m. and class wil start at
poned, Anthony Shamblin.
8:30 a.m. It is strongly
Holzer.
advised as a safety factor,
REEDSVILLE
when bringing and picking
2:08 p.m., Forked Run
up students to the rear
State Park, Cassandra Rice,
entr1111ce to the high and eletreated;
.
mentary school be used • 11:04 p.m .. location unrebecause of the great traffic
poned, SaFa Cammarata, St.
congestion in the morning
Joseph's Hospital.
and evening.
SYRACUSE ·
7:20 p.m., Casey Pickens,
Holzer.
in the immediate future , w
RACO
would only be even with th
RACINE - Racine Area
vacancies created by death o
Community
Organiza!ion
retirement,'~ he said.
from PapAl
Conlon, a Cincinnat'
native, is noting his 25th year
continue to be as loyal and in church service.
faithful as they have over the
He and the other celebrants
past 150 years," he added.
later minJied with the crowd
· Conlon said the 'largest attendinll the dinner, held
challenge the 13-county ilio- both in ti1C church fellowship
cese, founded in 1944, faces hall and on the patio area
is the utilization of priests it behind the rectory.
has in serving their c:ommu·
The faat the anniversary
nities. The decline in . the . and the feast day of St. Louis,
number of people entering who was king of France from
the priesthood in recent yean age 15 untilliis death at 70 in
has spread the ranks thin, a 1270, fell on the same day
situatton that can't continue. was considered a happy coinhe said.
cidence by Myen:
.
"We have 10 men in the
"It's akin to the f?lanets
seminary,·which is encourag· fallif!g into line," he satd with
ing, but if all were ordained a s011le. -

153.82

SIOII.&amp;e

Obituaries

011

I\ 1

SERYtNQ SARA
(P013)
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 11:20
_

SIMONE (PQ13)
1:10,3:30, 7:lo, &amp; 11:30

THE ADVENTURES OF
PLUTO NASH (PQ13)
1:10

BLUE CRUSH (P013)

1:10, 3:20, 7:10 • 11:20
XXX(PQ131
1:00, 3:20, '7:00 ' 11:00

SPY KIDI 2 (PQ)
1:15,3:111, 7:111l 11:111
StQNB (PQ13)
1:00, :1:00, 1:00 • 11:30

•

�--

Page 'A4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Th_e_o_~n_y_Se_nt_ine_I_ _ _ _B_f the

:__

MonMy, Auplt 21, 2002

111 Court Sti'Mt • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

TDday

~UTlON

www.mydtllytentlntl.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

DEAR ABBY: I have been
with my boyfriend, "Hoyt,"
for just under two years. I am
17 and he is 19. We have a
wonderful relationship. We
laugh, cry, .fight, and every
day seem to grow together as
a couple. We Jove each other
very much and want to be
together for the rest of our
lives. B'ut there's a problem:
We are at a point where we
need to focus on our futures.
Ideally for me, I'd spend four
years at an East Coast art
school. Hoyt needs to stay on
the West Coast and develop
his musical career. We want
to be together, but we also
know it's important for each
of us to develop our talents to
the fullest.
·
Hoyi wants me to ¥0 to art
school; and I want h1m to be
the professional musician he
dreams of being. However,
the thought of being. 3,000
miles. away from each other
for fot~r years scares and
depresses us both.
. Abby, do you think it is
possible for us to follow our
dreams without losing the
love we have for each other?
- FOUND TRUE LOVE
IN OREGON
DEAR FOUND TRUE
LOVE: I certainly do. With
your level of maturity and
toncern for each other's
futures, you can milke a longdistance romance work. You
· can communicate via e-mail,
·phone calls and letters, and
. see each other on vacations
and holidays. Sharing how
:you are each progressing
toward your dreams -.yill
cjraw yo1.1 closer. · ·
DEAR ABBY: My fiance's
·13-year-old
daughter,
'"Cameron," stays in our
home one night a week and
every other weekend. She has
decided to hang in her ,!Jedroom a huge framed picture
of her parents taken on their
-wedding day. (Her mother
·has since remarried.)
· · I suggested 'to my fiance
that perhaps Cameron could
put the picture up in her room
at her mother's, since seeing
:it every day is annoying for
me.
My fiance says I am out of
line even to su~gest such a
·thing - that its Cameron's
,bedroom, und what's the big
deal, anyway?
'
. No doubt her mother ·
wouldn't allow it being displayed in her home, as it
.would be disrespectful to her
current husband. Well, I don't
want it up in our horne,
'because
I consider
it disre-.
.
.

ANAL'll.bR

Den Dickerson
Publisher

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

~I$T~T .

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

/Q/ALUA10R

ullers ro tht ~diror are welcomr. Tiler should be Ins thmr

JOO wotrls. All /ellen· ""' subject ro ~ditirrg and must be

signtd and i11c/ude addfl'ss and trlcoplwne numbe.: No
rmsigntd /tilers will be Jlllblishtd., Lerters should IJe irr good
tastt, addrrming issues. 11111 per·sonalitit s.
The at&gt;i&gt;JiOIIS tXJJres.m l ill the 1'!1/umn below are tile rem- ·
strrsus of the Ohio \4Jl/ty Publishins Co. :, editorial /)()(Jtr/,
unless othnwist """'''·

•

NATIONAL VIEW

anks

rn~ NQN "AM~\CAN CO\.UtnoN· F~M CA~\/IN DbCUNb

Screening for· Ground Zero
workers least we can provide
• The (Middletown, N.Y.) Times Herald-Record, ""
' scremin_g !realth of rescue worku.r at Gmund Zero:
U.S. Sen. Hillury Rodhum Clinton hus urged the White
House to urprove release of some $90 million for medical
screening o thousands of rescue workers and volunteers who
put in thousunds of hours ut Grounl.l Zero. breathirlg in air thut
could best be des~ribed us not 11t to breathe.
The money was approved by Congress us purt of the World
Trade Center Worker and Volunteer Medicul Screening
Program. It wouli.l add nearly I0,000 more workers and volunteers to the 8,500 originitlly approved for federally funded
medical screening.
·
The tests. for respiratory and other medical problems.
would be done periodically over 20 years. That would allow
for detection of chronic ailmellts thltl would not show up in a
single ~creening.
.
The president should authorize release of these funds immediately. There is no way to adequutely describe the swirl of
unholy dust that volunteers rushed into in the wilke of the
attacks of Sept. II. The air was tilled with asbestos, insulation, PCBs, glass and cement as well as jet-fueled smoke. But
the primary concern of the rescue workers and volunteers was
not their own health, but finding the remains of the victims of
the attack. They did tltis for several months. .
·
For this, they deserve more than the thanks of u grateful
nation. They deserve medjcat screening and treatment for any
health problems theirselfless efforts may have brought about.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Aug. 26, the 238th day of 2002. There are
127 duys left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: ·
· On Aug. 26, 1920. the 19th amendment to the U.S.
Constitution, ~uaranteeing American women the right to vote,
was declared rn effect.
. On this date:
In 55 B.C .. Roman forces under Julius Caesar invaded
Britain.
In 1847, Liberia was proclaimed an independent republic.
In 1883, ·the island volcuno Krakatoa began erupting_with
increasingly large explosio~s. ·
In 1939, the first televised major league baseball games
were shown on experimental station W2XBS - u doubleheader between the Cincinnati Reds and the Brooklyn
Dodgers at Ebbets Field. (The Reds won the first game, 5-to2; the Dodgers won the second, 6-to-1.)
In 1957, the Soviet Union announced it had successfully
tested an intercontinental ballistic missile.
In 1961, the official .International Ho~key Hall of Fame
opened in Toronto.
.
·
In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson was nominated for a
ternt of office in his own right at the Democratic national convention in Atlantic City, N.J.
In 1972, the summer Olympics games opened in Munich,
West Germany.
,
· .
In 1974, Charles Lindbergh - the first man to fly solo, nonstop across the Atlantic - died at his home in Hawaii at age
72.

In 1978, Cardinal Albino .Luciani of Venice was elected the
264th pope of the Roman Catholic Church following the death
of Paul VI. The new pontiff took the name Pope John Paul I.
.Ten years ago: A federal jud~e declared a mistrial in the
Iran-Contra coverup trial of former CIA spy chief Clair
George. (George was convicted of perjury in a retrial, hut was
then pardoned by President George H.W. Bush). The Unrted
States. Britain and France imposed a "no-fl~ zone" over the
southern third of Iraq aimed at protectrng Iraqi Shiite
Muslims.
Five years ago: Former South African President F.W. de
Klerk, who shared the Nobel Peace Prize for helping to end
apartheid, resigned as the leader of the party that had ~reated
the practice.
.
One year ago: President Bush admitted he was worried
about the economy's "paltry" growth and, without making ·
promises, assured _steel company e~ecutrves a~d W?rk~rs that
protecting domestrc steel was a natrona! securrty prronty; The
Tokyo Kitasuna beat Apopka. Fla., 2-1 to win the Little
League championship in South Williamsport, Pu.
Today's Binhdays: Former Washington Post Executive
Editor Benjamin C. Br~dlee is 81. _Author Ben_J. Watten~rg
is 69. Former Democratrc vrce presrdentral nomrnee Geraldrne
Ferraro is 67. Singer Vic Dana is 60. Pop singer Bob Cowsill
is 53. Actor Michael Jeter is 50. Actor Brett Cullen is 46. Jazz
musician Branford Marsalis is 42. Country musician Jimmy
Olander (Diamond Rio) is 41 . Actor Chris Burke is 37. Rock
·musician Dan Vickery (Counting Crowes) is 36. Rock musi... cian Adrian Young (No Doubt) is 33. Actress Melissa
McCarthy ("Gilmore Girls") is 32. Actor Macaulay Culkin is
22.
, Thou,ht for Todat "That which is everybody's business is
nobody s business.' - lzaak Walton, English writer (15931683).
.

Mand.y. Auptt 21. 2002

. Couple worries that absence Community Calendar
:won't make hearts grow fonder Public Meetings Clubs

The Daily Sentinel
.

Bend

Page AS

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Circus Salaam Shalom qffers hope for generation
.

"Before a boisterous crowd of about
I00 at the City Museum," reported the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch on July 29, 17
Jewish and Muslim children from
Circus Salaam Shalom "somersaulted,
backflipped and.stilt walked to thunderous applause.''
These children, ages 5 to 14, have
been performing this summer under the
directton of the Circus Day Foundation ·
of which my daughter, Jessica, is execu---tive director. She's been a circus perCOLUMNIST
former for nearly 30 years and runs the
Everydaycircus m St. Louis,
"No matter who we are and where we
come from, we .can find a common · And their parents must trust that there
place; where our individual boundaries are educational benefits in this interfaith
touch. overlap - or better yet - disap- pyramid. Says Central Reform's Rabbi
pear in the face of what connects us," Susan Talve, "seeing the kids working
together, watching all of our parents
she says
smile
and so proud of the same thing In forming Circus Salaam Shalom
our
precious
children - gives hope for
. (meaning "peace" in both Hebrew and
Arable) she has gathered for circus the future."
·
One of the performances took place ut
classes children from the Central
the Clara Muhammad · School on
Reform Synagogue (which she and her Malcolm
X's 'birthday on May 19. The
children atteni.l) and from the black St. Louis newspaper, Jewish Light,
Muslim Clara Muhammad School.
reported - and as I've told Jessica _
The parents of these circus children my friend Malcolm x, on his way back
have also been conitectin~. "After the from Mecca about a year before he died,
first eight-week s~ring sessron," accord- sent me the following postcard: 'In my
ing to the St. Lours Post-Dispatch, "parents and children visited one another's recent travels into the African countries
houses of worship to ~ray for peace in and others, I was impressed by the
special services." Alicta Abdullah-Clay importance of having a working unity
said her son noted that he hild never amon~ all peoples, black as well as
before seen a white person at a mosque. white. '
A parent from the synagogue, w~tch"To make the circus formation," one
in11
her .two duug~ters on the 1-112-mchreporter pointed out, "children on the
top tier inust fully trust children on the wrile wrre-c~bl~, trghtrope, 27 feet above
bottom tier not to move or relax their !he floor, sard, I re";le~ber the old saymuscles. The children on the bottom mg frol!l the 1960s; '!htnk globally, act
must trust the children on the top not to !~ally .. We are ~utldrng ~e~ce between
jab or kick them as their flexed thighs farths .rrght here. An~ AIJ.cra Abd.ullah,
watchrng her son, .sard. The chtldren
become stairs to the top."

Nat
Hentoff

know there are . differences between
Muslims and Jews because they hear
their parents talk about di.fference~. But
if they are left alone. wrth nothmg lo
poison their minds, they get to know
·each other, play together."
:
' As the St. Louis Post-Dispatch note11.
"It's easier to understand someone once
you've stood on their;shoulders, leaped
through their arms or dangled from the.ir
'body."
Or, as my daughter, Jessica, adds, "By
clowning around, you learn to take youtself and others seriously."
.
There will be circus classes for the '
Circus Salaam Shalom Circus in the fall,
with the first new show in December.
But Jessica has a deeper vision of showing how circus skills can "teach the art
of life." She is planning the creation of. a
St Lou'is Children's Circus, composed
of kids from a wide range of socio-economic backgrounds in the city and surrounding county.
A virtue of circus arts, she told the
online STLtoday, is "there's room for
everyone to succeed, regardless of backgroun~. size or shape, grade-point average or any of the other categorizations
that may be barriers elsewhere." She's
tau'ght deaf children, adolescents with
Down syndrome and elderly people.
When Jessica was almost constantly
on the road, her letters to me would end
"Every day is a circus day!"
·For more information about the Circus
·Day Foundation, the Web site ts
www.circusday.org and the phone 1s
(314) 436-7676.
· ,·
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally recognized authority' on the First Amendment
and freedom of speech.)

·. \

'

'

ADVICE
spectful to me.
.
Am I out of line, Abby?
Please help settle this. TICKED OFF IN SPRINGFIELD, MASS.
DEAR TICKED-OFF: I
agree with your ·· ~iance .
Cameron's bedroom 1s her
private refuge, and us long us
tt's kept clean, it should be
the way she wants it. And that
includes the picture of both
ofher parents taken in happier days. I urge you to rethink
your stance on this, ahd to
develop 11 more loving and
tolerant relationship with
your fiance's daughter.
DEAR ABBY: I am an
older bachelor who recently
moved into a new home. I
invited my neighbors .- a
.young married couple over for a home-cooked
meal. They brought with
them a lovely bottle of wine.
I plan my dinners down to
the last detail - including
selectin~ just the right wine
to go wrth the meai.'To make
a long story short, I did !tot
serve the wine my guests
brought for our dinner.
· After thanking me for a
wonderful meal and a
delightful evening, they took
the bottle of wine they had
given me and went home! 1
didn't say anything, but am 1
wrong to be appalled by their
rude behavior? :- MR.
NICE GUY IN TULSA
DEAR MR. NICE GUY:
Give your neighbors the benefit of the doubt. Although
you were under no obligation
to serve their wine with the
meal you carefully planned,
they are a -young couple and
may have thou~ht you didn't
like their selectton.
Yes, they should have left
the bottle as a house gift but please don't let that ruin a
budding friendship. ·
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
k110wn as Jeanr~e Phillips,
and was jou11ded by her
mother, Paulir~e Phillips.
Wrile Dear Abby ar
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los A11geles, CA
90069.

Wtd~•d•Y· Auv. 21
POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County Board ot Health, 6 p.m .•
Mason County Heatrh Department.
Public welcome to attend.
POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County Tourism Commiltee. 8 l .m,.
at MOVC. Public invited.
Wedn•aday, Sept. 4
POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County Board ot Heatrh, 6 p.m .•
Mason Counly Health Department.
Public welcome to attend.
POINT PLEASANT - Maaon
County Tourism Commillee, 8 a.m.,
ar MOVC. PubliG invited.
TUeaday, Stpt; 10
' GALLIPOLISThe
Gallia
County District Library Board ol
.Trustees will meet at 5 p.m, ijl the
library.

Re.Un.IOnS
Frld1y. Aug . 30
NORTHUP - Descendants of
Henry· "Doe' and Angeline Tope
Cremeens will be held at 12 :30
p.m. w.ilh a basket lunch al tho
Northup Bapllsl Church shelter.
$unday, Sept. 1 .
POINT PLEASANT - The 53rd
Annual Greer Reunion,
Stephenson Grove, RR 2 (Greer
Road) . Dinner at 1 p.m. Please
bring all of your lamlly, friends. a
potluck style picnic lunch , lawn
chairs, old family photos and
genealogy lnlormatlon and Join us
lor lots ot tun , For driving dlreclions or more inlormation. contact
Lora Yank (Opal Greer's grand,
daughter), toll tree al 1-877·634·
8396.
Saturday, Sept. 14
GALLIPOLIS Montgomery
Reunion 10 a.m. till dark 0 .0 .
Mcintyre
Park , Shelter H6 ,
Cardinal.

RACINE -- The 44th annual reunion of the late George
and Vira Mae (Crawford)
Hayman family was recently
at Star Mill Park in Racine.
Waid Hayman had grace
before the dinner.
Attending were, Ph~llis
Youn'g, Bill and Gmny
Huffman, April, Brian and
Ben Case. Teresa, Bill, Ben,
Kaitlin and Emil&gt;." Lawver,
'Virgil, Delorse, Mrke, Eileen,
'Sam and Hannah Ours, Waid
Hayman; Cheryle Kni$ht.
Ruby, Rhonda, Jennrfer
Nautica and Jerrod Wolfe,

Kindra Moore, Vicki Osborn,
Nicky Dean, Kevin Watson;
Marge, David and Karen
Carpenter, Gladys, Loren-,
Sean; Chad and Eric
Richardson, Kathryn Reed,
Doris Reed, Doris Rogers,
Bryce,
Debbie,
Brian;
Angela, Bethany, Morsan,
Logan, Griffin, Dan, Donna,
Danny and Dena Sayre, Tim,
Julie, Mason and Landon
McGee, Dan and Faith
Hayman, April, Erin and
Mallory Roach, Kamry.n
Smith, Tamara and Eric
Tucker and Gerald Crawford.

Riv~r ·valley

Cheerleaden

cheerleadlng squad for Meigs· High School this y11ar are, left
to right, front, Hannah Woolard, ·Bridgett Balser, and
Heather Phalln; middle, Peggy Duff, Kadtle Reed, and Ashley
Cook, and blick, Nicole burnarn, Jerri Bentley and Lise
Gheen. (Contributed)

:I

..

College news

' ; CHESHIRE - Mesan B.
· ·Harrison, daughter of John
and Jennifer Harrison of
Cheshire. has enrolled in
•
"the College of Arts and
'$.ciencea at Ohio Northern
: j
~niversity for the 2002• ;f
~003 school year. She will
J,e a freshman majorins in
&gt; .
.~riminal jusiice.
Harrison in the grand·d.aughter of Roscoe and
Mary; Wise and the: great.granddaughter of Kathleen
Scott. .
•
••
• She is a member of Heath
'United Methodist Church,
Middleport. ·

..

;)

1ts

·Sui)(IOlrGroup,
lp.m , MaSOIIUIIi*l
Meli&gt;Odi$1 Churt/1. AM arM -

Card showers

Support Grou.ps

Seniors Groups

Festl'va Is

People in the news
Dlxle Chicks .

NEW YORK (AP) - The
Dhde Chicks' new single
takes some digs ut the same
radio stations they hope will
play 11 - but the band says
they ·weren't lookir.g for controversy.
Written b&gt;' Nashville
singer-songwrrter
Durrell
. Scott, "Lonu Time Gone,"
"' 1 r
·
suys country p uy rsts rgnore
country legends in fuvor of
son's with no soul.
· db h
· " hey sound ttre ut 1 ey
don't sound Huggard," goes
one line. "They got money but
they don 't got Cash."
Fiddle
player · Martie
·
Magurre says Ihe ban d wasn •1
trying to make "a · political
stutement" with "Long Time
Gone," or pust rdeuses,
including their song about ·u
woman who kills her abusive
husband .
"We've hud u lot of conlro' versy in our cureer, and it's
never been intentional," she
•told .The New York Times.
"We didn't release 'Goodbye
Eurl,' to get back nt wife. beut·ers. We're more lighthearted
than that. Everyone has their
own oplnlon about what
should be on the radio, and I
think there's room for all different people."
The ~roup's new album.
"Home, plays up the blue~rass sound thut characterized
rt before the rock-influencecl
albums "Wide Open Spaces,"
und "Fly."
•

he 's nfruii.l one nspect of
Amerlcun life is returning to
normal - a luck of emphasis
· on intemutionul reportin~.
"The public hu~ losl mtorest," ~ather told TV Guide for
its Aui. 31 is~ue. "Thay' d
much rather hear obout the
Robert Blake murder cose or
whut iN happening on Wall
Street. A feeling fs creeping
buck .in that if you lead for·
eign. you die:"
Ruther said there is more .
foreign coverage thun there
was before the attacks, but he
feurs the umount of It is slipping. He snid . journulists
shoulder some: of the blame
for not reporting enough on 1
past forergn development s
such us the rise of terrorism
.
nnd ul·Qutdu.

. The Gnlllpolls Dally
Tribune Is seeking a
clerk for Its editorial
department to assist with
community news Items
and other clarlcal tasks.
Must be computer literate, have excellent typIng, grammar, spelling
and organl~:atlonal skills.
Will be required to handle multiple tasks In a
fast-raced environment.
Mall resume to;
Bette Pearce
Managing editor
The Gallipolis Dally
Tribune
825 Third Ave.,
RADNOR, Pa. {APl Oalllpolla, OH, 45631 .
Nearly a year after Sept. II,
CBS anchor Dan Rather said No phone calls, please.

Dan Rather

..

•

~oc·r a i . EV(

ahorl ~llng .
MilSON - Communrty C.ncer

Thu,.day, Aq.at .
pttltntt
_ , ._ll\lllta. and ceregivel1
Tht lrwlltd
POINT PLEASANT Mason County • ·H All Sta rs picnic.
POtNT PLEIISANTAphalil
RIO GRANDE - The Galli&amp; 8:30p.m., W.st llirglnia Stale Farm atrolr.e aupporl group. ho&amp;IN by
Citnne Melnlyrt, t o,m., PIMMnl
Counlf Farm Bureau will hold their Muat um. B•lng • cov.r~ dlt h.
annue matting bGginning at6 p.m.
BADEN - Hel~~tra nHdtd IQ Vlllty Rehlb Ctn'·
POINT PLEIISIINT - ~
wtrh reglslralion and social. Dinner mlkt hOmemade i~t Ctllm tor
r.-r ot
and business meellng will begin ar Saturdata tee Cream Soclat. 8 · Anonymous. 12 noon,
Preslera Center.
6:30 p.m. RSVP al 1·800, 777• p.m., Badtn Community Center.
9226 .
'
31
s.turd•v.- Auo.
SOUTHSIDE
Oance 11
POINT PLEASANT - PPMS
Athletic Boosters, 6 p.m., PPMS Southaide Community Ctnltr. 7 to
Nellie Wat$00 witt celtbratt her
gymnasium. P.arenls ol seventh 10 p.rn. High Mounlam Dr inert will ttst blllhday ,\ug. 31 Cards m1y
bG atnt to Horror Senior Care, 3t0.
grade alhleles are encouraged to perform,
BADEN - Old lath lontd lc• Colonial Ot~vt , Bidwell , Ohio
attend. Booster memberships are
·
optional and cost $3 per per1on or cream social, 4 p.m.. Baden 4 ~614 .
Communily Center on AI. 87.
Ellis Thornton will celebrete lila
$5 per couple.
901h b~tlhday Sept. 2. Car•• can
Everyone invlltd.
TU11day, Aug. 27
bG sent to 1256 Wh ite Hollow RQ,.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
Rotary Club. 7 a,_m .. Hol~or
Patriot. Oh1o 4$6se.
Medical Center. Guest speaker Is
Gallla County Loca l Schools
Superintendent Charla Evans .
· TUe•day, Auv. I?
Today
POINT PLEASANT - Mason
LETARTHELP Dltt Clan,
HARR ISONIIILLE
County Chamber of Commerce Letart Community Centtr. Wtlgll-lnt H arrlson~llle Se nior Cltlltna. 11
luncheon, 12 noon. Riverside Golt from 5:00 to 6 p.m., tottcwtd bY a a .m., tlrehousa. Potluck di nner.
Club. Tim McClung, University of shell meeting.
· Blood pressures to be taken
MASON - Community Cancer
Today
. Charl&amp;lton
Entrepreneurship
HARRI SONVILLE
The
Center and Anay Zulaut. Adena Supporl Group, 7 p.m, MoODn Unilod
Ventures, will be co·spoakers. To Methodist Churoh. All area cancer Harrlaonville Senior Clll l - group
111a~e
reservations. call lhe pallenls, tamlllea. and caregivers will meet at t 1 a.m. Mondl)llt the
Chamber at 675· 1050.
tlrehouae There will bG a portuct&lt; din·
Invited. ·
TU11day, Sept. 3
.t.phaaia nor at noon and blood preasurtt w.ill
POINT PLEASANT, .
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic stroke support group, holltd by bG taken.
Retirees will meet at the Ohio Dianne Mclnt-rre, 1 p.m., Plea,anr
Route 160 Park and Ride. 11 :15 V.lley Rehab Canter,
Wedneeday, Aue. at
a.m., 10 carpool ro tho Colonial
POINT PLEASANT - Alcohollca GALLIPOL.IS - Senior Cltln n
Restaurant, Jackson.
Anonymous, 12 noon. rear ot Golf s~ra mble It tht Cllflaii;M Golf
Thul'lday, Sept. 5
Prnrera Cthter.
· Course. Open to an mali and
POINT PLEASANT Lions
tamale senior ~ili ~tna who enJoy
Thul1day. AUf!. 28
Club, 6 p.m,. main gazebo, Krodel
POINT PLEASANT - TOPS. . goll. Sign
Park ,
_
weil!h-ln 5 p.m.. meeting at 5:30p.m., up sheet in the Cllttatde Pro Shop.
POINT Pl.EASANT Point Trinity united Methodist Churoh, carr
Pleasant Chapter Sons ol the 675·3692 tor addhlonallntormatlon.
American Revolution. 7 p.m.. Fort
· MDnday, Sept. I
Sat relay Sept 7
Randolph Terrace.
POINT PLEASANT - Alcohollca
The Crow~ City IJoiuntaer Fll'l
POINT PLEASANT - Mason Anonyrnout. 7:30 p,m., 811 VIand St. Department · witt holt a flit talllvel
County Democratic Women. 7:30 Use aide entrllnc:e ot CatiY l.aw beginning at 10 a,m. at the flrt I II·
p.m., Mason Co. Library.
OHiee.
rion. An aucllon btglnt 114'; 30 p.m.

MEIGS VARSITY CHEERLEADERS - Making up the varsity

Forget stock options, loans.· Executives want cash:
2001 was $575,000, but he also received executives. Since options are a right to bUy
nearly $1.08 million in bonus. He also. a stock at a fixed price, employees only
exercised stock options that amounted to a benefit if they buy shares at a low price wid
gain of $17.3 million on paper and imme- then sell them when the company's stoek
diately sold three-quarters of it to lock in rises.
$12.6 million in cash.
Also driving the push for more cash 'is
Amazon.com's CEO Jeff Bezos took in the ban on personal loans to executive offi-.
only $81 ,850 in base salary in 200 I, but ·cers and directors, which is amo_ng the
cashed in 2.2 million shares valued at many corporate-reform directives laid out
about $27.2 million,
in the recently passed Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
But executives are now pushing for
Everything from home purchasing to
more guaranteed cash in their coffers. And life-insurance premiwns is included iq the
companies will likely comply to keep !heir ban, as are any advances that companies
leaders happy.
make to executives to buy stock.
Base salaries could easily top $1 million, Companies are also forbidden from maka threshold many companies have stayed ing any cbanges to existing loans, like forbelow because itnything above it isn't tax giving outstanding debt.
.
deductible. Many executives are also negoAmoog the most notable: WorldCom's
dating bigger performance-driven and fonnerCEOBemieEbbers, whobonowt",d
signing bonuses.
.a stunning $408 million from the company,
''Cush is tangible, and let's face it, that's including tens of millions of dollars to pay
what people want today," said Bill .back money he had·already bonowed ill
Coleman, senior vice president at the exec- buy WorldCom stock. And all this haputive compensation · consulting flll1l pened while the telecommunications
Salary.com in Wellesley, Mass.
giant's business was crumbling. .
The call for cash stems in part from the . Their new demands will initially ip1paCt
debate over stock options.
.
company earnings. Paying higher sidaries
The wave of corporate scandals over the up front means greater compersation
last year has put pressure on companies to expenses, which in tum depresses pe botrecord an expense on their fmancial state- tom line. But the upfroot costs may also
ments for the cost of stock options. help avoid swprise expenses down the
Investors say that would better reflect a road.
company's performance.
For investors, higher salaries provide·a
If expensing options is eventually. more accurate picture of executive comrequired, the result could mean a signifl- pensation, something shareholders have
cant decline in the number of options Called for amid all the business scandals of
granted to employees.
the last year.
option.~.
At the same time, the volatile stock mar(Rachel Beck iS a business writerfor The
At Intel, CEO Craig Barrett's salary in ket has made options .less attractive to Associated Press.)

Abby

school.

TUeoday, AUfl. 27
RACINE
Racine
Area
Community .Orgamullon IRACO)
meeting at Rac1ne Amerrca • I eglon
Po$1 602 Hail 6:30p.m
dm·
ner. Guts!$ will bG RA v u &gt;&lt;•unleer
Meigs Coonry fair gale workers.

Hayman reunion .held

BUSINESS MIRROR
BY RAcHEl. BEcK
NEW YORK - With stock options
under fire and personul loans banned, &lt;:arporate leaders are demanding one thing
when it comes to compensation: cash, and
lots of it.
All the corporate scandals and the stock
market collapse are driving many executives to insist their paychecks be padded
with cash, guaranteemg money in the bank
no matter what happens.
That means compahies will have to shell
out more money up front to pay their top
ofticers, which could initially hurt cash
flow and ~'limp profits, but also gives
investors a better picture of how much
executives are really getting paid.
'The company.can't be their piggy bank
anymore," said Stephen Mader. who heads
the executive recnuting firm of Christian &amp;
Timbers.in Boston. ''They want compensation up front They want bigger salaries, in
cash.'
Executive pay soared through the 1990s,
and &lt;:arnpames lavished their leaders with
lots of extras.
.
.
In fact, executives' salaries seemed
almost paltry compared with the big
money made through bonuses, huge lots of
stock options they cashed in and sweetbeart loans for everything from company
stocll. to new homes.
Look · at former Enron president and
CEO Jeffrey ·Ski::f, who received
$850,000 in guaran
salary in 2000, a
small amount given his $5.6 million bonus
and the millions more he made in stock

Dear

R.'ICINE - Southern Loo1l
BOIItd of Educeliol\, 7 p.m. 11 tht
high aeheol.
Today
RACINE - So&lt;ithern Local Board
of Education . 7 p.m. ar the high

TUe4dlly, . . ~
F'(JtNT · Pl.EASANJ - .........,_,
LtgrOn Awdllary Po4t 23. 7 p.m .
,.,..,.,rcan LtO'Qft
LETIIRTHELP !)ret Cllu.
Ltllrl Communoly C.nllt. ~
. from 530 to 6 ~ m , IQitQoofld bY I

Today
GII LLIPOLIS - Tho Knights of
Columbus w111 hold lheir monlhly
meeting al 6 30 p.m. at' the Down
Under Res1auran1.

JUNIOR VARSITY CHEERLEADERS - On the junior varsity
· cheerieadlrtll team at Meigs this year are, left to right, front ,
Casey manley and Mella Whan; middle, Jobeth F!odehaver,
Roseanne dillard, Megan Johnson, and Brittany Jacks; and
. back, Natasha Wise, Charissa Stanley, and Courtny Nltz,
(Contributed)
.,

'

Me,.n E. Harr11on

'I

Jeff Gordon finally wins one at Bristol, Bl

·MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992~2156 .

..
'

Kayte &amp;·aynee,

Love, Dad,
Mom&amp; Andy

�•

•

'

'

.

•

'

•

The llil ' ~tinel

Nation • World Briefs
reefs In serious
decline
NOISI.ES ( l'l Sdllllll~l~ Stl)' lhe 1'11'1'1 ~1\IN\I
l\\11'\'t')' (~f )1\Q ~~~~~ \If lht'
wwld's &lt;XUIII fllllfs shuws
lllvy ~ in se&gt;n\)(ls 11-:dint.
Wllh \Wel'l1~il\l W\\fl'lll\11~ U
crisis. shmlllon. ,
Sclenllsts 1.1nd vohmh.'&gt;~fl'
1\mnd 1111.11 twert'ishln~ hus
1.1ffec1ed 9~ t&gt;orc\'m 11f lhll
11\\'te lhun UQI l'\\f\11 IWI~
monitored slnQQ l\lll7. AI
ltust fo11r s~les of rt\'f tish.
1111111~1 tiS fll(l(l or 111 tKI\1fl1
l.OS

liQ\Illrhul1s. flll.'t ll~Hu~ll\111,

t\1rther threutllning lhil hiodi·
v~rslly of lhe mt1rlnc lll.'l\~ys·
tllms.
·Tht~ r~sults 11f lht' t'lvt'·Y\'Ur
'-llld)' ure pros('tlll\d In fellllft
hcinl) rth.'tiMXI Mund h lh~
lnslilule \If lhe Envll'lll1me&gt;nt's
R«-f Ch~k P"'lll'l.lm 11t tht
University tlf Ct~Ufomiu. Lo.~
Angell's. More&gt; lhun HlOO
sd~n1ls 1 s tmd volu111wrs In
llh\lul 60 Q0\1111 fillS C\111•
11'illu1ed t\1 lhe s\U'VIl)'. l"'~sl ·
l•ly thll 11\fll,~~~ lll:\ll\lllktll
sludy ~vur undc11uken.
"Whl\1 Wil huve seon is
~oml 1-ee t~ huv\l !leon \lmn·
lllll'll more in lhelust 20 )'\lUI'S
thun lhily huve in lhll lusl
l,(l()(l. Sutldenl~. the prllS·
~ ures uf twertlshmg nnd dum·
ttjlin~ typos of fi shln~ \lymm1itin!l th h und pm~11n·
in11 fish, purlkulllrly In
Southeast Asiu - haw 1nk11n
otl'," said Ore!l\lr H\ld!lsnn, u

rlt\Wi"Ofl.l , Th\ U&gt; \ :0.1 1\

Fannworkers
m•rch
SACRAMI' 1'0, t'tlht'.
( Pl - Tlh&gt;ll'""''"' 111' I'U\\11
11'\lf\..1'1"- \11111 \11\i\&gt;11 Sllt'lllllt\'1~
wulli.lll.l th\' timllll'!l 111' u I (I! ·
mllll, It ·till}' jmtnl\'r 111 Mill·
[11\!1 ot'" Nil th111 Sl'l'" 111 jjll'l'
ft1rm Wtll'~l'rs tlie&gt; ri!lht 1\1
hintlh~ m'tlllmtilll\,
._
Th~ !11111\'h 1'11\l\'\l Stm\111}
1111 1he smirs t&gt;t' lhl' t't111l1\\l,
wht~ro tl11'111110rl.t.'fl', 11\Htlll
l~n\l~rs 111111nt•lll· ist~ ~'tllllll.l 1\w
G1w. Grll}· l)lwi~ 111 ~~~~~ thr .
l&gt;ill.
.
l)ul'i~ '~'""' Sumlny iu
frt~~llll 1111Wilin~ t\1\ ll\hCI'Iis~\1\1'111 l'lllllllllij:n nillll'll nt
1111'1'\'11~1 1111
tll'mn uti
t\ '"
Cnlit'urni11 hmn 11m,h1~1'
D:tl is, 11 Dt&gt;lll•ll.'ntl. hn~ 11111
)'~I 11111~1~ tl tl~isl\111 "" tlw
11\l'USUI'il, which l&gt;its IW\1 nf
his hit~il.i.'SI Sll l)l)lll'l~fl\ tl)l.tlh\SI
l'nch l&gt;lher.
11urly S1tmlu • tnlll'nin)l..
\\IUI1.hly ~.Uil\1 pl'l.lplt.' ».uth·
l.'l'e\1 hl'fll l\1 CI.'Stll' rlllll'\'1
lllll'k, With Cl\IWdS of )lllllpl\'
\hiUI:i nll, ~)ltl\'11\j,i. 11\IISI\.' Ullll
linin!l ttl' tnti1kv l'i~tu1'ils lll'~l
to u shll\11.' 111' Unltt:d Fmm
W1wke1' ~\\· l\111 11\1"1' Cl'stll'
ChtiYN .
S~nu1~
Pr11 '1\lm John
Htu'l\111, 11 I i'I111W1'tll who
Wl\111' thl' llill. dm-e1l Dtwis 111
Si!lll th~ 11\I.'USUI'e 111'11\f tl\ lhl'
mul'l.'h so thnl "Rr1111hllcuns
\'lllllH\1 '"'\'\lSI' him ut' l'unln)l.
mun~y I~Cihr\l politk~ .'

Scm lxwt'tl, Pflgt 82
Pur~ wins NBC, Pagft 82
Mqjor uagut Bcrstbrrll, Pugt BJ

Lawyers tell Bush he does need Congress

Worlcfs coral

hitl'

llu11h hi' 1\ \lt\1\1 1\ll\ 1\llt\.ll.'\11\lll'llSSillmll
lllllll\1\'lll lo l\11\W~ St.~tktllm Husst"ll\ ·~
h~~.~ lllthtl\ljl.h """'~""" ill\.\' 1)\lhtklll
1.'\IIISMt1111li111\~ ~'lltlhlt'-'\IU\IIt thl' 1)1'\'Sl·
~cl&lt;.'l11 l\1, Si'l'~ II 111)11 fl'\1111 Ill\\ tntl~l'rs
lll\\'1\11}'.
'1\1 \I ~\'111\W \ltlmlnislrtlli\111 11l11 ·ill Is,
~11\'lll-.hlll 1111 1.'\11\tlhl\111 11f """" •ml~.
11;11\l Wh11il HtlliS\' l'\1\11\Sl'l I (\ll#llll'S
mh ISI'I.I Ut~sh l'tll'llt&gt;r this m11111h lhlll
lhl' t\mstltllllon tl,l\'t'~ thl' IWSI!I\11\t
llllth•Wlt}' h\ \IUJ!I' \\'llf \1 llhll\11 1'\lllit.'lt
1\lltiM'\t • l\'\1111 C\11~1\'\!1,
'
"A111 tllll:tslon lh~ lll'l'~itl\ll11 mny
mnkt• im t1 h)'lll\lhl.'tklll 1'\11~1'\lssll\lltll
1'\\tl' will lw 1111idl'l.l h ' 111\\1'1' tl\1111 11111'
ftlt'hw," snltl Whit\' llt~usl' 11l\\l~\'s111lm
(\1'1 Ftd'l.'hl'l\ Wh11 tl~l!hl\1'11 hi 1.'\\11111'111
1hut llush h11d l't\'l'il'l'l.l 1111 llllhlitm

MONDAY'S

..

------

HIGHLIGHIS.
. USA Wrutlln1
. boycotts
championships
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Ctllu. (AP) USA
Wl'l!$tlhll\ is btlyi..'llttll\j! the
world l'rllc~tyle Wfllsllll!&amp;
chmnplonships -In lrun nc:tt
1)\tlllth b\'l:uu~e or . possible
thrents t11 the Si!WII·tnem~r
t nm.
USA Wrestl111g president
Smn Dtle~;ltlc suld the tied·
sim1 w11s nmde StllldliY lhl·
lowhta u conteretlt-c cull with
111emoors or the 111'011p's exec·
utlve comu1htee.
USA Wfllstlhlll ulso usked
FILA. lhc rntCI'IIllllonul
WI'I:Stlhlll l'edcl'lltlon, lu move
the Sct~t . ~· 7 ch11mp1unshlps
. l!ont 'lbhl'l\11 111 u sulCI' 111~ll·
lion.
Otll!dt.k
snld
USA
WI'I!Stllnll received lntbrn1u·
ltun 1\'\lm the U.S . lJUVcrll·
mcnt ubnut pt~ssibk thflltltS.
The ll'lmltm 11uvcrnmcu1
~1111111 l!iVe the tClllll il\lliSSUr·
u11ccs nt' pnllcctlon, he suld.
The tel\111 wus scheduled to
lcuvc Munduy thr flnul truin·
1111!111 Clcmmny.
The chnmplonships were
moved lh1111 New York to
Oree~c nnd BullJurlnlnst yel\1'
followinllthl! SepL II lerrnr·
ist ntlucks.

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

Visa process could delay arrival of father of conjoined twins
ll1\II.1\ S ti\P\
Tht• t\11 h~1· Ill' I·
l'cm'-''''1 1\ll)'tltllm IWills ttwnh l n~ Slll"ltl·
iutitm st\1)1~1'\' •·nul\1 fn1'1l ddt~Vs m tnw·
t'lmt~ 111 t11~ ·lhlitl'tl Stntcs 11\'\.'tllt~c tit'
nt&gt;w immiJ!mlltm 1\tlt&gt;s hltll\\slll.l tlnlll'
St11ll· II , ntlkhtls sti.,V.
.
11wnhim MnhuuHIWtl lh1'nhh11 Is
sl'lwll\tl&lt;.'tl 111 llllf'l)• t\w tl 1•lsn whh 1h~
t l,S. Hmhns~y in t'11h\1 ~111 S~t'' · l. II'
llill'""'"\1, tlw vlsu wnul\1 11111'1111111)• 111\..e
1111 tl\ lhl'l'c ll'tt~s tn lw issut'\1.
·
lltll •mm11 tlwl!illll 111t'11 11111111111 It\
tnll•clltlth~ llnll\)\1SttllOs 11\IW must tl,\"t
thch' l'lsu llf'lllictUIIll\ uptmwvtl in
"i ushlnjltlln D.C. - &amp;ntl .'tl· ~tliNIItl
llwuhim t'ulls in lhlll tata».\11')'.
'l'lmt t'llllltl hold liP his urrlvul 1\lr u
lnu!l lilll\1, ~o ld Qffit:luls 11t the l)ltllns·
hnsvll Wmld Crtlniofncinl Fllltntlutlnn~

whkh brmll!,hl thll lwlns 111 th~ IJnlt\'tl
Stnt\'s,
Th~ lss\1\l I~ tll'csshiii i~Ctnusc tll~tlll'll
111 th~ Ntll'tli 't\\li.M Htls tlltnl I'm
C'hiltlrlln · wmt'l II'' llhcud with I he
Slll'll,~l'Y \In Mtlhnmtlll tmtl
hmcd
lhnmim \llltil lht&gt;~ nwl't lhl.' 1\llhcr In
11\'l'lltll\,
llwuhlm htiS sttitl he s\1/\il\\l'ts the
~111'\lt'f)'. IM ~11oclullsts l~d \)' fmmtlu·
titm 1\\UIItl~•· Rcl\111:\lh Stl}'lcr insist he
lw l\1ll:r ini\WI\I('d tlt' the risks hdm'l'
thry o~rlll~. sukl t\\\111\lntl\111 tllrcmll'
Sull tllllt:kwootl.
"h's vlt11l thut lh\' l\1thcr he hclt',"
liluckw\)1_)11 suitl. "Dr. Sulycr s11ld he
won' t dtlllnythhll!,Untll he 1:1111 s1wuk 1\l
thc 1\ttht!r ~yebnlltt\ t~)•~hull ."
Muhnmed und Ahuwd lhrnhlm wet'~!

-hlll'll June ~. :lOOt. by t'ttCS11l'CM sec· ·
lklll In u fllllltllc villt~c In 15~ypt . They
mt•lwtl hi Oullus 111 hmc.
1bts slll\11' 1hnt1he huys' tttmchmcnt
11t the Cl'\lWtl llf thcl1· hcu&lt;l~ Is cX Icllslvl'
umt incliltlcs the Clllmectlnn 111' lllutld
vc~sds. U.u~h hns ll"l't tJl' his t\Wtl bmh\
but sct1lll'llllnlj 1hem cou lll cuuNc 1!nc m
hlllh "' dic.
l(chllitlus l'onsl dcrullons In Jll'l'tlmnl·
nuntly1vluslim H~ypt llllldc the issut&gt;' of
SC[ltu'utl1111thc twins ctmtl,lVCI'lliul.
n\11 IIJ!Yllt's 1\\ll J!IIVt'l'nmclll·uppuint-t-tl ~ lcl'i ~ tl,liVC wl'lucu 111\lli'IWllllnr scptu·utitlll ns lon11 us dnciUI'S believed ut
lcust tine twin W\luld slll'vivc tmd the
SUI'Ilel'Y W11SII'I c~pcl'imcntnl.
t'tluutlntilln Is rnylnl! 1\lr th~
twlus' tl'ip uml ht~s pllnl stuy.

·n'"

WHILE
SUPPLIES
LAST .

NO
RAIN
CHECKS

'

Hints W1rcl
r.luslcl •Iter
•ppendectomy

U.S.D.A. Boneless

· PITTSilUROH (AP) -

Phtsburl!h Stoclers wide
Hhte~ WllJ'd hus Ill!en
rcleuslld l'rmn the huspitnl
nt\er hnvlna un uppendecto•
fll~cl ver

Beef E e of.
ound oast
.

my.
Wurcl

WU!I Iuken to lJ PMC·
Pre~byterlun on Frlduy nlt~ht,
ut\or llX.pt~rlcm:inll puln just

s1~91b.

u.s. tl

TRIPLE
COUPON

s229 10 lb. bag

'

Good For 5

U

ul\er ltrrlvlng ut Plltsburllh
lntcrnutlunul Airport thr the
Steolers' 11lllhtto Detmlt fur
Suturduy's pre!!cu~on I!Ume.
Wnrd's lii'Pe ndl~ wns
removed shortly ufter he
t1rrlved ut the hosplttil thut
11llJht, uml he wus ·rehlused
Suturdtl)' 111t!hl.
· "It wus u vllry good proce·
dUI'el" Stllehm ~uudi Bill
Cow ter suld . ." It wns not rup·
tureu . It wus very deun ."
Cowher is ~uullously uptl·
mistic Wnrd will pluy In the
l'el!ulnr-souson opener SepL 9
ut New Huilund. A Pro Buwl
receiver lust seuson, Wnrd
hltM pluylld In ull 64 regulur·
senson 11umcs und two pluy•
on' lllll'flll~ Mince the Steelers
drutTed him In 1991!, never
mlNNilll! u I!Uil1e due to Injury,
It' Wurd cttnnnt pluy In the
opener, rnokie Antwuun
Rnndle Hi is expecu~d to
mukc the sturt.

Borden 2% or
Broughton 10/0

Skim Mil
S169 Cial.

TO
sa~

Not Oood On Advertleed
lteme, See Store For Detelle

Anybody but
tht R•lilen

Post • Fa"!IIY Size: ~ _

Fru1~ ~sav~
140
Pebbles~ *
$229 17 oz.

PASADENA, Cullf. (APl
- Rflsc Bnwl lltllc iul~ ure
uespcrute lu Iure un NFL
hlttn1 til Pusuucnu, but they
huve lliUl condition: uny Leum
but the Ottklund Ruldc.~rs,

'

Owntn, pleytn
~n~klslow

an••

pro

NllW YORK (AP) - J11lur
doyNbefnrc lhe M
trlko dllud·
line, buNcbull pluyerM und
ownerMwere ttlklng tJny MtepM
lowurd eiiCh other.
· Aduy ul'ter ~rltlclzin11 pluy~
erM, ownen mutla o new eco·
numlc prllJXl8nl thut ·muved
towurd lhc union 1n un effort
tu heud off u Ntrike Iuter thiN
week.
dwner~ rulsed their thrc8h·
oldi! for u luKury tull untllow·
ered their propo8cd Lux rute8
Ontl Ul80 HlijlhtJ)' dCI.lfllUHCd .
the umounl of locul revenue
they wunt teurn8 to Nhure.
ThQy niHil mllde n new prupo8tll un teNting for Ntcrold
U8e, where the M
itlcNrernnln
upurt un dotulls.

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PAICI!81!F,ICTIVI! ~UNI 21 I 21, 2002
•

Page Bl .
Mond1y, Aupst 11. 2002

I h111'1' 1~1\ Wl'l' hll\ c h\lll Pl't~ltl\"111

Idaho
Potatoe

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

A&amp;

,,'I

•
'

Helsman hype retums to Huntington.
HUNTINGTON; W.Vu . (AP) - The Mid·Americun
Cont'erenctl hus ne~r produced u Hci snmn T\'ophy wintler,
SO llyl'l'!tl l.ei)With probably hliSUS 111ll ~ h II Chl\1\Ce of beL'I\111•
11\l!lhl.l t1rst us his bobblehend doll hus of lhruwlnguloUI'h·
down.
Four months und ll full seuson 11111il 1he uwurd is
unnounced, the~ Mlll'$hlllt quat1erbuck could cure less.
"Everybody has u Helsmtui'TTophy cundldule ri ~t11nnw in
August," Let\wkh suid. "If you re one of
those guys in lute November, then
yuu ·ve got u shot.
"Whnll'mnnlgolng to try to do
Is !til ou1 1here tmd nmkc sure I
don 't try to win the Heisnton
011 CVCI'YpUNS."
_
Maybe 11111 every ~oNs, but if
lust scnson wus any mdkutlon,
Let\wkh wlll11ive v01ers plenty
of hil!hlighls 1n1hlnk about. ·
The retumintl MAC Player of
the Ycur becnmc the tirsl pluy·
er in conference history to
. 1hrow for more thun 4,000
yards In 11 seuson, . tinishing
whh 4,132 yurds und 38
'·
.
tullchdowns. He nlso broke
leuguc records lhr completions (3 1S) 1111d lot at offense
(4,224).
.
He SUI'tlttssed 400 yurds pussing Ina ~tune four times In the
regular seuson .
,
·
He threw lust seven Interceptions.
With siml1ur numbers in 2002, Lcl\wlch could be hurd 10
111iss when lnvitallons ure hundeu out to New York In
Deccn1hcr.
Theil UlJUIIl, Murshullis tlccustomed lo lhut.
Sh 1~c it 1\ltumed lo Divisiun t.A five yeurs u~o, Murshall
has hud two Helsnum l1nulls1s - Rtuldy M11ss m 1997 und
Chud Pcnnlngtol\ in 1999. Other thnn Purdue's Drew Brees
In I\199 und 2000. no other Nchool hns hud more Ihun one
llnnllsl In 1h111 span.
·
Mlll'shllll couch Bob Pruett h11s been working · tu make
Lcl\wlch the third, using Lel\wkh'sjunlor seusonln 200 1tls
u wuy to beef up his nume 1ecognltion.
He believes Lel\\\;lch Is t'urther along thun Moss or
"Pcnnhtl!ttln becnuse, of. 1he school's n\ountln11 e~posure .
Every ycur, the knuck on Murshuil being 1'1'0111 u smnller con·
terence dWindles us the teum ~comes u thture in bowls and
the nllllunul pulls.
''Certulnly he hus n.:htutce, btu it's ull how we pluy," Pruett
snid. "It's going to be u teum uwurd becnuse we've 1101 to
piny well us u tcum, und·he hns to pluy well for our tenmlo
pluy well."
·
·
With two of l11s1 yeur's Heismun tlnullsts returnlnl! Florldu quurterback Relt Oross111lll\ ltnd.M luml quurterbuck
Ken Dorsey - some vuters muy huve ulreudy mude their
1ninds up bot'ore the seQSOh hus sturted. ·
Thl!n ugnln, Lllt\wlc:h mude his stutemllnt longngo . .
ln thll OMAC Buwl h1sl December, he brou11ht the Herd
buck 1\'\lm u 3().pnlnt hult\lme deficit with S76 yurds pussing
und thur touchdowns,)ndudlng un li·ylU'der to Josh Davis In
double-overtime to ~ut Eust Curollnu 64·61 .
Lel\wlch wns 41 -of· 70 pussing und scored ~n u 9-yurd run.
"He's thll best pluyer thut 's ever come thruush here. MARIHAU.'I FIRST HillMAN WINNER? - Marshall quarterback Byron Leftwich directs the
Thundering Herd offense during the 2001 game versus Ohio. Leftwich Is considered one of the
PIH~•IHHy .... l2
early lavorlle for the 2002 Helsman Trophy. {Bryan Long )

.Did Gus win job against b~ckups?
CINC INNATI (AP) Jon Kltnu wusi1' t very good.
The Clnclnnnli Benguis
huve w decide whether he
wu~ bud enllUilh Ill lose his
job,
Kltnu guve his wont per·
formtmce uf the preseuson ut
u plvotul moment, giving the
Benl!uls u reuson to go with
Ou11 Fremlle u11 the starting .
quurterbuck .
Kltnu hud une Jntert:~ptlon
ugulnst New Orl.:uns' sttlrt· ·
lnl! defense nnd flrerotte hnd
une touchdown puss ugulnst
the buck ups during u 3 t ·23
pre11euson tos11 on Suturt.luy
night.
Conch Dick LeBeau spent.
Sunduy wntchlng 111m und
cnnsu lllng his stuff ubtlut a
decl slun he hus been
extremely rclucturit to mukc,
"1 think It's g[)l ng to be
very cleur"unce 1 get ttl luuk
utlhls gume und glvt~ every·
one involved one more fulr
luok," LeBeuu suld,
Kltnfi hud the edge ut the WlNNIR IV DIFAULT? ..,.. Bengalll quarterback Gua Frerotte
sturt ()f trulnlng camp solely (12) looke downfleid under pres•ure from Seinta defender
Derrlul Monroe, left, In the third quarter Saturday _In
PI•IH 1M Gul, 12
Cinoinnatl, {AP)

~Jeff Gordon finally

Wl•ns one at an•stol
.

'
BRISTOL. Tenn. (APl - Jeff Gordon snapped hi s 31droughl SalUrday night, bumping his way past
Rusty Wulhtce wilh three laps logo to win
the Sharpie 500,
.
Gordon, the four-time and defending
)Vinston Cup champion, passed Wallace
by driving h1s Chevrolet up onto Wallace's
bumper and sliding pust in Turn 4 at
Bristol Molar Speedway.
Wnllace, riding a 50-ruce winless streuk,
tlnished second and wusn' t pleased with
Gordon's bump-and-run, claiming Gordon
wouldn't have got past hi s Ford him with·
Qordon
out a tap .
Gordon said he had lo do it to win his·
59th career victory, first since Sept. 30, 200 I. and fifth at
Brlslol, bullirstln the night race,
Dale Earnhardt Jr. tinished third in a Chevrolet, Kevin
Hurvick was fourth und Mutt Kenseth wus fifth .
Kurt Busch. who won here in Murch. linished sixth in a
Ford. Winston Cup points leader Sterling Murlin was seventh In u DcJdge, and Jimmy Spencer, his' team male at Chip
Ounussl Rucing, was eiljhth ,
·
.
Bobby Labonte wus ntnth in u Pontiac, followed by Mike
Walluce.
Marlin, who has retained the points lead despite engine
failures in two of the previous three races. was hil with bad
luck .in the pits that nearly doomed his night.
..___ ... G-....on, 12
r"""

ieme Union blows past Southem:
.

IV loon WOIII

Sentinel Corr11pondent
SliOAR OROV.E - it only
t1aure11 that tmuppunent, whl~h
IWlt yeur skinned Its opponent
by 30 polnl8 und hUA everyone
buck, Is tiOina to aet better.
91.lrne Union ( 1.0) proved
tho pulnt Sitturduy night,
dofellllna u young Southern
Mquud 70·0 bef'llN u ilplll'lll.l
m1wd ul Berne Union Hl11h
School Sutdium . .
One of the brtyht Hpol8 In the

Ttlrnudll cump cumc from downs and Casey Vulentlne
freshmun A.J. Simpson who rushed for two others lo lead
clUTied seven thneN fllr u •
the Rockets.
team-high 27 yurds
, Eng Iun d
and hod 11 47-yurd
hud 6S yards
klckotl' return.
on five carries
Southern, u teum In
amassed
more
the rebuilding swges nnd
than I!10 multi·
lucking deptn, bilcrune fur·
purpose ynrds on
ther deCimated when Hturting
punt und intertuckle Juke NeWill went down
ceptlon retu.ms to
on the third play of the game
account for more
with B noaging shoulder .
thun 200 yards in aJJ.
11\)ury. Nel!lle never returned.
Valentine
had
Rocket wlngbuck John •
• neurly 1 ~0 ,ynrds In
Eni!lunu rushed for three touch· • ·
• m u It Ip u r p o u

yurdu!!e Ull well scoring the
second und ·thi;d touchdowns
on a 38 yard-punt return und u
31·ynrd interception return,
respectively, That came after
the Rockets blusted off early
when, just 55 seconds into the
gwne, ~&amp;lund broke u49-yard
run off-tackle on the third play
to cap a 6!1-yard drive, The
cxtru point was blocked but
Berne 1Jnion !hen led 6.() und
21.0 after 1he Valentine scores.
Berne Union led 35.0 u1 the
end of the first quarter.
Southern hlld only one rii'St
'•

.

down in the ftrSt half und that :
came on n roughing the kipket
penalty, Southern's offense
sputtered, however, Coaclt
Dave Barr tulld he found !OITlCI
positives and indicated he ,
would continue to build on the •
··
how b hi8
poslt1Ve1i 8
n Y young
club.
•
At halftime, BU ted 56-0
before pulling the plug on ll10S(
of its stanin&amp; unit mthe second
half,
. Southern (~ 1) \'lays at
Symmes Valier on Fnday.

�•

•

'

www.m~UMI.com

Monday, Augu1t 28. 2002
www.mydailysentlnel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Wlntton Cup-S,_,..IOO AMulla
S.lurdly

-

T2 ea ee ee

0118 ,.,.

,

~~ Bnotol , . _ Spoodwoy
Brlttol, Twnn.

Lop hlnvlh; ,m .,....
.1. (11 JtW Go&lt;don.C-. 1500,
a. (41 Ru5ty W&amp;ilo&lt;:o.l'&lt;lnl. S00
3 (~I O•to Earnhardt J&lt;. CMwoltt. 1500.
' (231 KO'iin HINicl&lt;, Ch1Woitt, 1500,
6. (10) Man -.l'&lt;lnl. soo
e. (BI Kun llutoh. Fonl. soo
1 (21) St!llling !Arlin. Dodgt. 1500,
e. (111 Jlonmy ~. Doclgt,1500,
e. ('2lllottl&gt;y LabOttlt. f'l)n!loq, l500,
10. (331 Mike Wa ..... ~ 1500,
11 . (34) llottl&gt;y Hatrhtn, «:-.1500.
12 (SI JohMy flenaon. Pcnlllc,1500,
1:1. (361 Jtft llut!on, Ford, SOl),
14 (401 Keo ~.-. ••
15 1221i(ylo Potty. Dodgt. 488
!G. (71 ~Icky c-; Ford, 488

17. (51 IIIII E!llon. Dodge. 488, .•
18. (17) Coaoy A1w00d. Dodgt, 488,
19. (39) John Andrt11l. Dodgt. 488,
20. (301 Rottby - · ClleYI'Qiol, 4811,
21 (351 Je•ry Nadtlu, Dodge, 4118,
22. !31 Mlctlltl Wal!rlp. CheYI'Qiol. 4118.
23. (211 Mark Martin, Ford, 497 ·
24. (26) Tony Stawtrt, Ponllato. 497,
26. (131 Jooamy Mayflold, Doclgt, 497,

s'""' Patte, c -.•
27. (201 Joe Nemec'*&lt;.,CheYI'Qiol. 494,

:lfl. (421

Min,_

ee.~7.e8

Ri&lt;tl Belrn

074NNO
7447-4747
1W7*70

... """"
$1M L.oooory
Pltlll41 I

29. (161 Mlko Sklnne&lt;. Ch~Woitt, GS.

c-.

33. (37) OBYO Blof10'1, FOld, 4811
34. 132) Jimmie Johnoon.
462.

-

87-418-~71

t

-,71·71

Mlti!GoQII
eell8 ee 12
Do\011 l.o.IN ee.7M
Ctin'c&gt;Dtl AolloiO.....
-74-71
\1111 fii'Vh eeeu ee 12
-lljom -'12-70
lM't.• II~ -'12-70

DMI-

-11-11

.... ~,one~~~

~71·7N7

ErNe Ell
KJ.Chll

~~-

MloiWolr

m

m

-

2711

- 2711
2711

7147-47·74
7M'1·7M'I

2711
278

27e

m

m

110
110
- 110

!lobe..
71·71-4MI
Dlmt\CIItllot . .7.....12
-KlnrrJ IWr)'

2TS
274
2711
2711
2711

-

Mgo!Ciilllw 72-70--

-

ee.n-~71
17-71).~12

110
110

-- - 1112
- 1112

-l'S-72
00.~71·72

--.

Prep Footblll

........ ...

28. (191 Dale Jo'""', Ford. 494

30. (24) Torry Labonte, Chovtolot, 41111,
31 . (43) Lanoe Hooper, Ford,~.
32. (28) Breh Bodine, Ford, 473

- 2111
- 2T2
- m

-AIInby -71.e8
Fltd Fur*
ee ea ee ~

Tlglt~

-~.,.,

Sou1htm0000-0
8 unlo!l "' 21 7 7 70

Jllnlleu - JQttn England
.e run. lddllalled,
10:55

c..oy v..- "' ~ rwtum,
Jl. l' B) JeWGrH&lt;I, Chollrolot, 080,
Ethan 8trapo run, 8:35 ·
38 (14) Ryan Newman, Ford, 484.
37 (9) Wnrd Burt()r), Do&lt;lgo, &lt;101, cruh, 8U - CoNY Vlilllllno 3S INT fOIUm, ,
&amp;I '(411 Hut Strtctdln. Dodge, 344, erath, .Blady Go'""' kick, t:OO
39 (151 Rk:ky Rudd, Fold. 2 7 1 , - BU-Johrt England 8 111n, Btody,Gar!ott
lddl,5:4l
!ng
'
au.-

---

BU -John England 1 111n, Brody o-tt

&lt;0. '131) Scott Wimmer, Do&lt;lgo. 184,
crash,
41. 1291 Dorrtko COpe, Dodgo, 19.

Idol&lt;. I :211

CfaSh,

BU - Nlthln Spoetman 31 -

!:!

42. (:JBI Ellloh Sedler, FQ!d, 74, cruh,
43. 1251Todd Bodine, Ford, 21, erath,
Roce StoHollco
Time ol noce: 3 ltouro, 27 mlnulol, 24

seconds.

Margin ol Vlclo&lt;y: 0.502 -

Wlnnet'o Avtrogo Spttd: T7.0i7 mph.
C.utlon Flogo: 15 lor 11 B fll&gt;l,
LODd Chongoo: 10 among , _ dfl.
Vlf'l,

~

Lop LNdtro: J.Go!Oon o: Eomhardl Jr.
1·130: J.Gordon 131-2~1: Earn- Jr.
247-25U : J.Gondon 257-372; etnoor\
373-386: Buooh 38'9·433: Ktnatlh ~
· 443: Har~ok •44·481 ; R.Wal""o ot82·
497: J.Gor&lt;lon 498-500.
Potnl Slanctlngo: I. Marlin, 3,240. 2.
Marlkl, 3,146. --:J. J.Gol'don~ 3,120. 4.
Stewart. 3,101 . 5. Johnoon. 3,0115. 0.
A.WRIIOC&amp;, 3,078. 7. Rudd, 2, 872 . ••
Ellloh, 2,970. e: l&lt;enooth; 2,118. 10.
Jarroll, 2,884.

-

Wltaon. Brody -

lft&gt;m

lllolt, II :56

au - ~ OINo I ""'· Btody GamoH

lddl, 7:44

8U- . . _ - 1 ""'· Jcoh ~
tddc, 1:05

1111rd-

8U - Jullln Wright I Nn, Jcoh ~
Idol&lt;. 4:&lt;10
PourthOIIarllt
8U- Nlclc HUQhH 47 run, Joth S!ltOII
Idol&lt;. 0:26

'

IHI
I
37·18
0·1 ...
18.
38

w

740

!-27.1

2002

Craig Parry plays like a champion.

Scoreboard
NASCAR

Monda~Auguat28,

~
35-2110
1·1-0
31

'

SAMMAMISH,
Wash.
(AP)- Winless in 235 previ·
ous starts on the PGA Tour,
Craig Parry played like u
world champion Sunday to
win the NE~ Invitational.
The s!ocky Australian
birdied three straight holes
early in the final round at
Sahalee Country Club and
.never gave Tiger Woods.
Robert Allenby or anyone else
a chance in closing with a 6under 65 for a four-stroke vic·
tory.
"I'm just very lucky at the
moment,"
Patry
said.
"Hopefully. I'll have a liHie
more confidence wi!h my golf
~arne, knowing I can finish the
JOb off."
Parry finished at 16-under.
268, four strokes ahead of
Allenby (69) and Fred Funk
(68), and became the only
player besides Woods to cap·
ture the NEC Invitational.
Woods was trying to
become !he first player in 75
years to win the same !oumu·
ment four years in a row.
Starting the final round two
strokes behind, he couldn '(
keep pace with the Australian
and closed with a 68 to finish
fourth,
Woods ended a three-week
stretch with a victory at the
Buick Open, a second-place
finish
in
the
PGA
Championship and fourth at
Sahalee.
It wusn'( enough to stop
Rich Beem at Hazeltine, or
Parry, another unlikely winner.
The 5-foot-6 Australian with
powerful forearms - one of
his nicknames is ''Popeye" Parry became the second player this year to win his first
PGA Tour event at one of the
$5 million World Uolf
Championships.

Kevin Sutherland won his
first tour event at the Match
Play
Championship
in
February with a 1-up victory
at La Costa.
Only this final round wasn't
even close.
Parry. a 19-time winner
overseus, made sure of that
with birdies on three straight
holes, starting at No. 2, that
quickly gave him a threestroke advantage. He made
two crucial par saves before
rolling ina bending. 20-footer
for birdie on No. 9.
Parry was so dominant that
he didn'( make a bogey after
the siKth hole of his second ·
round Friday, playing the final
.48 holes at' Sahalee with pars
.or better.
Despite playing in the final
group, wtth the pressure of a
$1 million prize and finally
proving he can win against the
best, Parry matched the best
score of the day. David Duval
also had a 65.
Twelve players were sepa·
rated by four strokes gomg
into the final round, and
Allenby said it would take a WINNER - Golfer Craig Parry hits from the rough 11th hole
round of 5 under to win. He on his way to winning the NEC Invitational on Sunday at the
also figured Woods might be Sahalee Country Club In Sammamish, Wash. (AP)
among those poised to make a
charge.
Instead, lhe best play came 78 on Sunday · and tied for
Allenby ·tried to stay with
from the top.
13th. He ·had another good him, but made bogey on the
· Parry effectively ended the chance at the '95 Colonial, but IOth from the rough and took a
tournament with an IS-foot Tom Lehman birdied the lust double bogey on No. 14 when
birdie puU on No. 14, and the two holes.
he hit into the trees. Allenby
only other time he had to
finished
with four strnight
There was no stopping him
scramble was when he hit into Sunday on a gray, cool after· birdies, but they were of little
the bunker on No. 17. He noon at Salmlee, an Indian consolation.
blasted out to 6 fee( and holed word that means, "High.
Justin Rose, the 22-year-old
the pur puu, as u smile crept Heavenly Ground."
from England. closed with a
owr his fuce.
Parry was walkinll on 68 to finish fifth.
Rarry first showed his clouds when he ripped a 3·
The irony of Parry's victory
promise I0 years ago when he wood into the green on the is that Woods wus responsi61e
took a one-stroke lead over par-5 18th and tapped in for a for him even getting into the
Fred Couples imo the final birdie.
NEC Invitational.
round of the Musters. He shot

,..,.
......

W L M
II 4l' .IS

"'I
....
"""*
......

II

84

aItO

II .1500

II ..ae
If · •
.. ••

......

4

W L Pel
71 117 ,$51

It e1 .UI
M

LN.

.w

4f
•
.177

71 . . . .

11

•

11\

~t.Mtlllt
WLI'OI.CIIl
ItO

...

-

......

-

'
17l

A31 "'
3tl
" ' If
n .-

~

' 1'1
w . ..L

:u

,

""
81

•-

:: !!

~
.,. .....~
•W ''L m
•
I'll Clll

-" ....... -

1

ItO

.,

..,,

lT

II

Jllfl

"" ~I ~

an .

8Y THE ASSOC.._TED PIIESS

An ovc:q&gt;owerina fastball
carried Randy Johnson to his
19th victory. Now he just
hopes for a shot ar No. 2Q.
Johnson (19-4) struck out
16 for his third shutout of the
season as the Arizona
Diamondbacks beat the
ChiciiJo Cubs 7-0 Sunday.
The Big Unit is scheduled
to go for his 20th win qllinst
San Francisco on Friday. tho
· strike deadline set by players.
"I'm very optinust1c. The
alass is half-full." Johnson
said. '
If Sunday turns out to be his
final O!ltif~$ of the season, he
finished \\lith a flourish.
Johnson scattered six hits
and walked two to imJ?rDve to
II ' 0 in 12 starts agwnst the
Cubs, who were missing
Sammy Sosa because of a
sore neck;
..
The left-bander's win total
is second in the ml\.iors to
telllJlmate Cun Schilling's 21.
"Velocity alone, this was by
fv his best 1ume of the season." Arizona manager Bob
Brenly said. "We bad him at
I 02 mph on the strikeout
pitch to end the: seventh. He
hit 100 two other times. 99
two times and 98 seven
times."
Johnson ( t 9-4) reached
double-digit strikeouts for the
siKth stan in a row, 14th time
this seuson and I85th in his
career. second only to Nolan
Ryait's 213.
· The shutout was Johnson's
second in five starts and 33rd
of his career. The 16 strikeouts were one shon of his season hi~h.
Erubtel Durazo hit an RBI
tri pie off Caries Zambrano
(2·5) and Matt · Williams
drove in two runs for the:
Diamondbacks. who have
won 26 of 32 games.
Johnson added a tw~run
single in a five-run eighth.
In seven starts sim:c allow. ing eight runs In five inninas
in a loss at ·San Dieao.
Johnson is 6.0 with a 0.90
ERA and 87 strikeouts in .57
innings.
PtriLLIES S, CAI\DINALS 3
Placido Polanco beat his
fonner team with a go-ahead
single in the ninth, and
Philadelphia earned its first

sweep at Busch Stldium tbe founb lime in ll aames.. dro'\'e in root NM to lead AI
since 1990.
Their lead in the wild-cant Lriter ( 11· 10) and New '(Qf\
Marion Andenon and Pat race fell to 3 1/2 &amp;!I'M ova- 1.\~~tt Clllondo at Coon f'teld.
Burrell homered fllf tho San f'rlncisro.
Edjudo Alfouo &amp;I o
Phillies, who won their fif\h Dodacn· rookie Kazu.hisa hornertd and had three R81s
in a row to moV11 within one Ishii (13·9) Md his shol1nl for the Mc:ts. whQ hande&lt;J
game of ..500 for the first time outinc in 26 biJ leaJues.wts. Dnmy Neq~ (7-8) Ius 1\rst
since tho fu-st ~k Q( the sea- lhrowma 38 pllcbeS and aet· loss in silt $tllm ~w York
son.
tina only three outs.
has woo two in a row followThe
pitchina·stii'Ved
GWtTS I, ExPOS 4
iq a 12·pme los.\111 st.id.
Cardinals, who placed ace BarT)' Bonds dQubled tw~
PIMTIS 3.. luww 2
Man · Morris on ihe IS-day and scored two runs. and
Kris 1e11100 (6-6) pilthed
disabled list Saturday because Jason Sl·hmidt (9--6) Pitched oiJht solid inni~ and Rob
of a strained left hamstri11J, • San FWicisoo past Monnal Mld:owiak homered at
acquired left-bunded relicV11r &amp;I Pllcific Bell Park.
Miller Park as Pinsbu!Kh l!et~l
JetT Fassero from the Cubs
Benito Santi130 drove in Milwaukee for the lSih time
for two minor leaguers to be three runs and J.T. Snow this ~···
named and cast-.
knocked in two as the Giants.
The Pirates woo the s~on
BRAVIIS 7, Donc!IIS 5
avoi~ a series sweep by series IS-4. The .1.5 tosses to
Ch1pper Jones and Javy sconna 1001e than three runs
Lopez homered in a five-run for the first time si~ Aug. ·
11rst and Mark DcROI:lll went 13.
.
3-for-4 with a tw~run triple
Javier Vazquez (8·11) lost
as Atlanta beat Los Angeles to his fif\h consecutive stan.
avoid a tluee-game sweep at
Mns 7, ROCKIES 4
Dodger Stadium.
Raul Gonzalez hit his first
The Dodgen lost for just two major league homers and U..itiili
THI I'OLLOWINQ PIIOCII.DING
Al'PLICATIONI
a II' 0 Ill
THI
ANDIOII VllUI'tiD DIMCTOII IV I'II.JNQ
eotll'LAINTI Willi AN AIINAL WITHIN
IIICIIVIO, AND TMI ~ DA'fl 01' NG-nc.
PQLLOWING DI!An, 01' THI PINAL
1'1101'0110, 011 ACTION. JIUMUANT
l'INAL
ACTIONI lO OHIO IIIVIIIO
Willi IIIUIO. IY COOl IICTION
T HI
0 HI 0 3?41.0?. A PINAl.
IIMIIONIIINTAL
ACTION ISSUING.
PfiOTICTION
DmiYING,
AGINCY ( 0 I P A) MODirnNG.
LA8T
WIIK . IIIVOKINQ , 011
"ACTIOIII INCLUOI I'll NI WI N0
A
THI
ADOPTION. ~"UNIT. LICINII.
MODII'ICATIC!~l...-011 0 II
VAIIIANCt
lllll'IAL 01' - M WHICH II ' NOT
IOTHIIII
THAN l'IIICIOIO I~ A
IMJI!a.NC:V
l'IIOI'OIID ACTI()tlli
011011111); THI MAY 81 Al'I'IALID
IIIUA..CI, OINIAI., lO THI lilAC IY
MODII'ICATION 0111 PILING AN AJIII'IAI..
RIVOCATION 01' · WITtiiN $0 OAVI 01'
LICINIII, PIIIM!ft. IIIUANCI 01' THI
LU.III,
l'INAL ACTION. lilAC
VAIIIIANCII, 011 AltltiALI MUIT II
Cllmi'ICATII: ANO I' II. I 0
WIT H:
THI AI'I'IIIOVAL. 011 INVIROI&gt;IMt.NTAL
DIIAHIIIOVAL 01' IIIIYIIW API'IALI
It I. A Na
AND COMMIIIION, 131
tPICII'ICATIONI.
IAIT lOWN 11111111'1',
"DIIAI'T ACTIONI" II 0 0 M
30 0 ,
Alii
WIIITTIN COLUMIUI. OHIO
aTATIMINTI 01' 4UU. A COIIIV 01'
THI DIIIIClOII 01' THI API'IAL MUST
INVIRONMaNTAL
81 8111YID ON THI
PfiOTICTION'I
OIIIICTOII WITHIN a
(DIIIIIQTOII'I)
DAYI Antll PILING
INTINT
WITH THI Al'PIAL WITH
RIUtiCT TO THI TH1 U1AC.
IIIUANGI, HNIAL, lllfiOIIOIID
lTC. 01' A IIIIIIMIT, DIIIINKINO WATIR
LICIN81, 01101.11, IOUIICI
lTC. INTIIII8TIO OUIONATION
IIIIIIIONI
MAY OLD LOCK 14
BIG UNIT - Arizona ace Randy Johnson reacts to his 19th
IUIMIT
WIIIITTIN
CAMPQIIOUND
win of the season after pltchln&amp; a slx·hlt shotout against the COMMINTI 011 ...ae111114
Chicago Cubs on Sunday. (APl
IIIIQUUT A l'UIUC I'IACINI OH
.MimNG
API'I.ICATION NO(I)
IIIQAIIDINO DIIAn m1a11 .
ACTIONI.
DillGNAT I 0 N AI
COMMINTI Oil GIIIOUNO WATIII.
l'UII.IC MIITINGI

~ t*loQ('~

IT IS THEREFOIII!
ORDERED 11\at I'M"
l\laf\t Ill *llor\

~!)QM~ QIIN lilt~

coa..... Ohio..,....

- - llc:tnMI of tiCII
lncii~IIII..O
beand~y

below

...
Tt-4 r t -

••'lllk~
I!Qn atlloll ~ ~
S~1S,aoo2.

AND!IEWS. RAVMONO
~. DOl; 051141111
4Q39 STJ.TE ROUTt!
~OiilG

BOTTOM, OH

4~743

FQll,, RUTH ANN D0a;
07111l144 »aal$ F\Jil·

WOODS RO

RACINI, .

OH 4$171
I&lt;OUNS. EDNA L 001:

0Gitllll13 aox ~
MASON, OH 45CMQ
MU~~EN,

DON E DOl:
001241113 583 S SEC·

ONO AilE MIOOll!·
PORT, OH '8Je0
NAN&lt;;t! , ROliN L

ooa: 1~1/U

•e~?

EAST ~I!TART RD. PO

IIACINI!,

80)( :lOS

0H 45771

. PMII.IiV, I'IAUI. J 001:
WIW 1011 W MAIN

ST POMBAOY. ~
4S7e8

A.GOPy of IIIII Oldl!
may be oll41lnt!l flam
Stllllttfl C. llamblall,
Ohio Dtpar1mtnl of
lnaurtnee, 2100 Sltftl
Court Calumbua. OH
43215-1Qe7.

P.s rall.v11, extend maJ' ors' longest .:i:tn~M!"j; -(·~-·-----~a~:~~:.~~~·~ ~ ·
.winningJ streak this ye.ar to 12 ~=i:~:j.~~;;; . 0': 1~~':,"~-r,:NT ~~D:,"::I
01' THI OIIAI'T

•

·

throw home on Eckstein's bunt.
Down by five runs early. the Oakland
Red Sol! center fielder Johnny Damon
Athletics found themselves In an unfamiliar bro~e Ken Griff~y Jr.'s AL record of .576
spot. Not that it matte~d.
strwght errorless chances when he caught
The Alhletics rullied late 1111d elltcndcd.lhc Oarret Anderson's fly ball In the ci1hth.
· • Iongest w1nn ing streak thi s season to
majors
MARINERS 12, INDIANS
12 games, defeating the Detroit Tigers 10-7
Ben Davis hit a grand slam and a solo
Sunday
..
·
,
.,
•homer. as scatt1c be a1 Cleve1an d.
We knew we d ,get our shots, said Greg
Davu set a career high for RBis with his
Myers, whose pmch-hit homer started first multihomer game. His slam capped 11
9akla~d'~ fi~e-run ~mcbuck in the eighth. six-run burst in lhe third lnnlnJ.
We dtdn tJIIVC up.
.
Freddy Garcia pitched eight effective
The AL West leaders had trailed for a half· innings and won on the road for the first
inning during their previous II wins. E!ven time since June 19
after Randall Simon's grand slam and RBI
RANGERs 6,.YANKEES 2
single ga~e the Tig.ers a 7·2 lead in th,e
Rookie Joaquin Benoit shut out bas~ball's
fourth inmng, _Detroit knew its day wasn t top-scoring team until the seventh lnnins
done at Comenca Park. ·
and Tc11.as won at Yankee Stadium
The Athleti~s still trailed 7-3 in the eighth
Alex Rodriguez JOt his ml\lor le~sue·lead·
before they p1cked on a trio of Tigers reliev- Ina I 13th ~81, Herbert PelT)' homered and
ers. Myers led off with a home run and E!ric Raifael Palmc:lro had his 2 600th career hit
Chavez and pinch-hitter John Mabry had
The Rangers Improved 7·6 against Ne~
two-run -doubles as the A's took an 8·7 le~. York the past tw? seasons. Tlicy t11J1JCd
Jermalne Dye added a two-run homer tn Andy Pettltte for stx runs and nine hils in .5
the top of the ninth, then Billy Koch escaped 1-3 innings.
a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the bottom
ROYALS 4, TWINS.2
ha,lf t~ end it.
.
. Miguel Asencio pitched seven Impressive
'Tins w~s o~~ of our better wins o.f the . lnniniJS and Kansas City beat the AL Central
yev, defimtely, manager Art Howe satd.
leaders to end a sl11·garne home toiling
The Aihletics' winning streak is their streak.
·
longest since they set an Oakland record
Chuck Knoblauch hit a leadoff home run
·with a 14-game string in 1988.
.
and Michael Tucker and Raul Ibanez added
The A's start a three-game series Monday solo shots for the Royals.
night at Kansus City. Cory Lidlt:, who has a Cristian Guzman nterided his hitting
31-innin&amp; scoreless streak, starts the opener streak to 23 games, the longest by a
for Oakland.
Minnesota player since Marty Cordova's 23·
ANGELS 8, RED Sox 3
game string in 1996.
Pinch-runner Chone Figgins got off to a
BWE JAYS 5, ORIOLES 2
quick stiU]Iln his maJor league debut, scoring Josh Phelps homered and Toronto beat
the go-ahead run m the ninth on David Baltimore for the third slraight time at
Eckstein's suicide-squeeze bunt at Fenway Camden Yards.
.
Park.
Vernon Wells added three hits and two
Anaheim held its lead in the AL wild-card RBis for the Blue Jays. He went 8·for-171n
race while Boston fell 31/2 games behind. the aeries.
Figgins was leading the Pacific Coaat
Baltimore's Mike Bordlck broke Cal
League in stolen baaes, runs and triples Ripken'e ml\lor leaaue record for conaecu·
when he was called up from Triple-A Salt tive errorless c.hancea by a ahonatop with
Lake on Thursday to replace injured Tim 429. Burdick has played 81 atraight games
Salmon.
without an error.
.
After Scott Spiezio singled to start the
WJIITE SOx 8, DEVIL RAYS 3
ninth, Figgins ran for him. Fig,ins scamAaron Rowand . homered, leadlna Oary
pered to third on Shawn Wooten s single to Glover and Chlcaao to a win at Comiakey
.._._"":""_ _ _..._.....,_ __, left field, then beat pitcher Derek LOwo's Park.
·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Gordon

ro

Hype

Big Bend 1/t~ulh. 111116att
Sign-ups at Mason
Baseball Fields

100

I

••

14l

t

Gus

I

-

•

11

loBernmoml,_

\

•J

-" . .... ...,. ..

NEC lnvillltlonalllooiM

'

•

W

a

Glenn hopes to make Packers debut

·Notice
Middleport Residents

II

~~~

m

n

n
.170
a •" .-

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) !hing," Glenn said. "But it's He missed the team's first he may play this week.
Terry Glenn, who has a game-time decision."
two exhibition ganies.
"Now, whether he docs or
8yThtAIUC"'ted""'
.
8tAI1dty
'
lived up to the good and bud
Packers coach and general
Glenn is eager to prove not I don't think is that
AI
Counlry Clllll
aspects of his reputation. muna~er Mike Sherman himself to his new team· drastic. We still have anoth·
hopes to make his Green acqu1red Glenn from New mates and coaching staff- er week and Terry's been
Punt:N.Imlt...
Bay
debut ·
l'orctogo: O.MI; 1'1tr 71
En~land in the if not Monday night, then around. The experience part
Monday night
offseason hop· Friday against Tennessee in of it is there and he's ,11Iayed
when
the
ing ihe talent- the final exhibition. He and he wants to play.
Puckers
.
play
ed but troubled knows there are people Sure, they need to work
. ranked passer.
the
Cleveland
player could around the league who on their timing, Favre said,
He did one thing that
Browns.
revtve
his own questi'on his toughness but not at the risk losing
Frerotte can't - he ran a no·
The
wide
career as well because he's slow to heal Glenn for the regular seahuddle offense that led to a
from Page
receiver has
as the Packers' from injuries.
son.
·
field goal.
been sidelined
passing attack.
Favre
said,
however,
that
"What
we
'have
to
do
is
hecausc ·he knew the
Frerotte did a few things · by a sprainef;l
So
far, Glenn doesn't have any· keep him healthy," Favre
uffL'" '~· f'rerol!e, signed us a
left knee, but
Glenn shown thing to prove in the presea· said. "There's some players
that Kitna can't do, showing,
ft cc .agent, has a stronger off his arm on a IS-yard
he participated
terrific talent son.
you have to be careful and
. ann aud the advantage of
in
the
Packers'
at times but
"When he went down, to deal with them a certain
sideline
pass.
He
went
12·
· j.. i11i11g a team that loves to
Sunday
walk ~
hasn't been able be · honest with you, I way, not over'practice
of-18 for 157 yards with a
rhun!_(c pussers.
·
through.
He
also
ran
to
stay
on
the field to get thou~ht he was down for the them. Not that they're
The lknguls have opened touchdown, most of it
routes for several minutes comfortable with quarter- year,' Favre said. "It looked injury prone, but a lot like
against the Saints' backups
with rookie quarterback back Brett Favre.
c:t~h of the lust Four seasons
nasty. And I don't think Ahman Green: We want
in
the
second
half.
Craig
Nail throwing him ·Glenn, who hypereKtend· anyone
with a different quarterback, .
can
question Ahman in the games
Third-string quarterback
short passes.
ed his right knee the first whether or not he's hurt in because we know what he
it trc11d !hat bodes well for
"I did a lot of running week of camp, sprained his that situation, I'm surprised can do. We don't need him
Fretotic . They also have Akili Smith nearly pulled off
today, so we' II see tom or· left knee Aug. 7 when his he got up. And I'm sur· getting hurt in practice."
developed a habit of waiting a late comeback for the third
row if it swells up or any- leg buckled underneath him. prised but there's a chance
unlillht• very end of training straight preseason game. He
~""'I' to pick a starter - not
completed 14-of-28 for 137
I itt' hc~ l. way lo do it.
•
· yards with a touchdown, and
ing
race
champion,
had
his
thinking?" then angrily pass him to get back on the
"You c:m' t get frustrated led the Bengals to the 2-yard
night
ruined
when
he
slight·
slapped
·the side of the lead lap twice while racing
by il," Kitna said. "You've line before his last-second
ly
tapped
Jerry
Nadeau
ambulance. ·
to the caution, I;'etty bumped
ju'l got to deal with it. We puss was picked off.
under
·caution.
Stewart,
in
Hut
.Stricklin
sarcastically
him and nearly ran him UJ) .
fromPapB1
have been. As a quarterback
In all likelihood, none of it
ninth
before
the
contact,
had
app(auded
as
·
Jeremy
into .the wall coming out of
group, we've grown close." .
will matter in the decision.
to pit for repairs to his oil Ma~field passed him after Turn I under yellow.
Marlin
was
running
in
On Saturday, they finally
Petty's wife even made a
By delaying the decision
23rd when he pitted on lap line and went back onto the Mayfield's contact ended
separated themselves a little.
track
three
laps
down.
Stricklin's
night,
Ward
trip
down io Gordon's pit to
58 for a tire change. But he
: Kilna was 5-of-14 for 101 for so long. the Bengals have
He
finished
24th
and,
after
Burton
threw
his
heat
shields
eKpress her displeasure over
pulled away before the jack
yards and noated an inter· wasted the chance to let their
coming
into
the
race
fourth
from
his
shoes
at
Barnhardt
Gordon's refusal to let her
had
been
removed
from
n·ption against the Saints' starting quarterback work
in
the
standings
and
trailing
after
their
contact.
husband buck on the lead
under the car, dragging it.
starling defense - his worst with the .first-string offense.
Marlin
by
just
84
points,
left
Jimmie
Johnson
flipped
lap. But tempers prevailed
with him for a bit down pit
· pcrfonnancc of !he presea· Since none of them has
139
back.
his
middle
finger
at
Robby
- after Petty had threatened
road.
statistically,
· so11 . Kima threw 22 inter· emerged
As usual, the race· was Gordon after Gordon hit him over his radio to wreck
The
jack
eventually
came
ccptio11s last season, when LeBeau will have to go more
loose and rolled down the rough and marred by 15 cau- on a restart and sent him into Gordon - when Gordon's
he was the NFL's lowest· on personal preference.
tions, one short of the race · the wall.
·
spotter relayed the drivers'
road, coming to a stop record.
NASCAR
then
called
promise to help him.
almost under Craven's car,
Because
of
the
tisht
conRobby
Gordon
into
the
pits
But the gentleman's agree·
and NASCAR penalized the
. point without those two·guys,"
fines
on
the
.533·mlle
oval,
for
·
a
two-lap
penalty
for
ment
nearly backfired on the.
Ganassi Racing team for it.
Leftwich said. "Randy opened
bumping
and
banging
is
rough
driving,
and
the
next caution when Gordon
Marlin had to come buck
•·
the door. He kicked the door
common over .the course of Richard Childress Racing slowed in an attempt to let
into
the
pits
for
a
stop-and·
wide open. And Chad just made
·from Page Bl
go penalty and had fallen the 500-lup event. Add in the team complained the wreck Petty pass him but Wallace,
sure fhe door wus open.
back to 37th .place when he heat and humidity, and tern· wus Johnson's fault because running in second, tried to
"It's
our
job
us
players
now
to
pers are usually flaring he missed a shift on the take advantage . and pass
Will""'' a . doubt. Moss. keep it going so we can help out . got back out onto the track.
restart and Gordon couldn't Gordon himself. So Gordon '
But he had worked his before the halfway point.
l'l'nni11glun. TI1ey're all behind the younger $UYS so they have
Elliott
Sadler,
who
scored
help but hit'him.
had to speed up and Petty
way back up to lith at the
Byron," said MU!lihall offensive the opponunny to go through
his
only
career
win
here
in
Even
Jeff
Gordon
s~ghtly
failed
to pass him before the
halfway point of the race and
Iinc1h:m Steve Sciullo. a senior. some of the things we're going
the
spnng
of
2002,
blamed
lost
his
temper
when,
after
start-finish
line.
kept h1s points lead for the
"lie's l11e best. It's time peo- through."
Joe
Nemechek
for
ending
his
he
refused
to
let
Kyle
Petty
22nd straight rac.e. He now ·
ple tea lite ihat. Everyone talks
That doesn't mean putting
has a 95-point advantage night. Before Sadler got into
~ood allmtl him, but no one says
the ambulance for the
themselves on the national map
over Mark Martin.
· fie's the hcst that ever came as individuals. Leftwich spits
Gordon jumped from fifth mandatory trip to the care
: ~ t rough here. The faci is, he is." oul a list of team goals - win·
to third •and is Ill points center, he pointed to his head
: Sn111c analyst.~
believe ning all the home games, win·
as Nemechek went by as if
back.
•Lcll wi~h could be the first over· ning the conference, and going
Tony Stewart, the defend· to say "What . were you
·~II pkk ill next April's NFL to a bowl.
draft
·
None mention the Heisman.
• ll1at 111ay not be a surprise,
Oh, he loves the attention his
. ~on,iuerillg Leftwich's si:ze candidacy brings to Marshall.
· 6-fuot-6 and 240 pound~ - rum That's about it.
:su·cngth wtd statistics. fie fin·
'The Helsmati is way dowri
Sat~rday, August 24 • 1OAM·1 PM
· ishnl second in Division J. A on the ~s~" he said. '"To be
fourhdow n~ and yardage last
Players may also sign up at
bllthfully honest with you, I
, !-'car. 10 Fresno State's David could care less about it:
It is the responsibility of all Landlords who rent
Conditioning from August 26-29
l:mT. the Nu. ·1 over.dl pick in
"My job is to go out there and
; this year's dr.tfi.
lead this team to us many viclo'
pr9perty in the Village of Middleport to subinit an
from 7-8:30 PM at the Mason
: Ycl Leftwich credit~ Moss ries as possible. If I could do
up·to·date of their tenants to the Income Tax
; and Pennington for turning that and nobody's sayin~ any·
Ballfields
ltcads.
thing 1o me about the He1sman,
Administrator by September 30, 2002
·There's "" way 1.' d get !o this · I'm cool with that."

•-

11\

II Ml
.443
8474 ...
.- • .&amp;41

"

1.()

wu

MI~Melt

II f

2D1

+40

...

Major League Baseball
Randy Johnson strikes out 16 in 19th victory

-

...

ITATIIIIINTa 01'
I"• ICTO•'I
THI
0
"
INTINT
WITH
Rlll'ICT TO THI
IIIUANCI, OINIAI..
:::'=n,c'N~' 011
• IIINIWAL 011 A
l'lllltl'l:, I.ICINII,
o II
v AIIIANCI.
'!!,. 0IIITTIMMINNTI "•No
IIIQUIITI 1'0111 A
PUII.IC IIIIITINGI
IIIGAIIDtNGI . A

Public Notice

011llf mey be llktn by

lnauflnQe, A GCIPY of
NOTICI 01' OIIIDI.II lht nollot of ai!IIMI
01' 1111\IOCATtON ·•altltao
•- ft'-'
'"'I"
"''
...
..,...,,
thtiPPfQIIIiltt ooun of
~.::·:~~~of tl0111mo!\ plttt. sue~~
No~ot of Opportunity lor notlote of •PPHlllhetl
Httrtng to t1ah of the be "1td wflhln ftl*n
Individual• 11• 1•d below. 11D) lllya
fhtthlrd
Tht
No~Qe w" MM&lt;I dalt of l)llblloetlon of
on ..oh Individual pur· thl• notlot 1M Ordef
1uantto "olton• 118.07 Eaoh lndlvkluallltltd.
and/or
ollhe
Rtvlltd380UI(Cl
Codt. Mo~
. above may appttl to
than ltlirty (30) daYJ
lht oou~ ot oommon
ha&gt;'ettapltdlromlht llltltollhtoou~tym

'"If

=~~~~:8.~= ~h~~~~~ :.~e:, orru~~:. ~'"loh11hl,~~~~~=-~',·

WITtiiN ao OAVI Ol' tlon lncltlcn o lht
NOTICI Ol' THI lndlvldutlt 1t1ttd below
PIIOPOIIO ACTION. hll not ~u11ttd •

~~A~~r~u~f¢~~ ht1~ng.

HII.O
ON
A
PIIOttOIIO ACTION
.11' A HIAIItNG
~=~~JI"'~N o,:
IIICIIVIO IV THI
OIII'A WITHIN ao
OAVI 01' IIIUANCI
~~T1~~. "':,o,::~:~
colltiiiiNTI. ·
IIIQUIITI . 1'011
PUILIC MIITINOIN

~:'llt='~:':t:',..

MUIT 11 liNT TOt
HIARING CI.IIIK,
· OHtO
:=v:.~:...NTAL
AGINCV l'.O. 1011
ID4t, COLUMIUI
?r~to 4111f·104il

Arttr.rtvltwfng tht
recontel~ thtH 01" '
tht Superlnttndtnt nna•
lhat:
E oh f h
1

='

"""''""- ••
oounty In whloh t1e or
lhtll • rtllellnt. tr t1e

~!::: ~~

bullntt~ln Ohio, t1e or

lilt may lflPtllto tht

Cot.i!l of common"""

of Franklin county. Thl
notlot ot IPPMI tlhlll
l~dlvldutte t~ttdo~~~w "' lotlh lht ora"
leltoanetd 1 ~ thla at.at• 1 PPtlltd flam tnd '"'
•• an lnauranoe ngent ground• ot thtiiPPttl.
or • totlaitor,
Thll Ordtr It he~
tnltrtd In tilt .loumll of
2.
E•ch of lht lht Ohio Otpar1fntnl or
lncllvlduata tltltd below tnturanoa.
t1lltd to oomply wtlh lht'
oonUnulng tdUCIIIon
J. Lll COVINGTON N
~ulrtmenlt of ftlfmtf
lutMrinlendtnt ot
ttctlon 380U81 of the
Rtvtltd Codt lor lht
1890-1887. 1887-1tlil8, MtltJI
tndlor t8M-1eee oom- (I) 11,11, 21

'""'"""
.

u4 ~:fa1f.N~1111 :~~

ACTIo Nl:
Alii
ACTIONa · 01' THI
DIIIICTOII WHICH
0:8N 1:.'J'~~~~~~
A
1 T ATIO
II'~ICTIYI DATI.
=~~~~ANT TO OHIO ·

IICTIJ.DnJ:l~

l'INAL ACTION MAY
~ Al'PIALIO TO
~~MIHTAL.
I'IIVIIW Al'ltiiAL.I
COMMitiiONJ:IIAOl
~I'OIIMIIILY
OWN
~RON...,J'._tt I
IOAIID Ol' I'IIVIIWl
IV A 'IIIIOH WHO
WAI A PAm TO A

Advertise your
message
18.00 oolumn lnoh wetkdaya
$.10.00 oolumn .Inch S,unclav•

·-

'

�tll:rihunt - Sentinel ..
... tllecl ~~~-- .....

account will 1M Itt
IMtoro
ntcl Court on the
Uth
clay
ol

lor ""''"V

1M,.._ MAT'faft 01'
l.m.ININT
01' ACCOUN'fS,
PMI&amp;f.TI COURT
MIICia COUNTY,
OHIO

.

To Place
JOur Ad,

Sentinel
(740) 992·2156
0r ,.lt TO
....,17

Qtrihune

ca11 TUdav...

(740) 446·2342
Of,.. TO

44&amp;-.a

l\egt•tet

of,
Any .,.,.on Inter•
" ' " moy flll written

Mtlp County, Ohio

/)u.tllirw

_..,. 06it

FREE ESTIMATES!
740~742~341 · 1

DeaDHW

Factory Authori~
Cttso-IH Puns
Dealers
I000 St. Rr. TSQHth

Newt 11aed
475 South CbQI'(Ih St.
Ripley. WV :15271

Cwl•·ille. Olf 4.mJ

1·800-822-0417

740-667-0363
Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

·w .v ·s fl Chevy, Ponllu•'- Burck, Olds
&amp;

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP TIIK

Free Yard S le Slgnl
15 Words, J Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

ODD JOBS

me.
• Pelntlng, Po-

CL4SSIFIEDS!

• SUOf\ '~&lt;~•• ~"' Wii~ ~ ~·~-• • t•t~wo C&lt;lll\i!lott
-!&lt;·I""' ' I• l•llt A
~~~1'. .11"1"10
"""'~"
~" ~

..............

"

All Muesfucloi &amp;
Equipment Pans

IHVIalon

Bryan RHvea

.um Hii.J.J u

ltobtrll. luc-

(ellt. aooa

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

Self-Storage

N•w HCII"''HU, Room Addlllona,
Garages, Pale lulldln;., Roofl,
Siding, ~ks, Kitchens, Drywall
tMo,.

74(}..992-5232

Common
Pleu .
Court, Probete

I'PS-US4

Sunset Home
Construction

exception to uld
I«&lt;OInt or to molten
.....lining to the •••
outlon ol tho trutl,
not '"' than flvt
Cllye prior to the 811
Hlfwhltrlng.
Judgl

(304) 675·1333
Or hx TO

lepl•mMr. 1001, at

which lime uld
account will 1M conaldered anct contln·
uoc1 ll'om t11y to Clay
until IIMIIy dlapoaecl

11-~~
High 8l Dry

""t&lt;t
' ...... .. •• "'"til
........

Weehlng, Mowing,
Wlldeltlng

Business Services

YouNHdn

Oont.

w•., Do n

(740)a48-4021
or
(740) 5111·1238

lAMM'S

: AMI!RICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING I HIATING

CINITIICniN
Specializing In:
Roofing, Decks,
Remodeling, ·
Siding, and
Additions

• Strvlce 011 All lr1nd1

se.,...tt

• RHidtnlill I Light Commerol1l
• 10 yr. pent I LlbOr
·
• Hilling I Air Conditioning
www.emerlolnltlndlrdllr.aom

. Owner:
Terry L1mm
(740) 1192·07311

l'f tMcMII

• Helling
• Air Condltlonere

"SALES AND SERVICE"

B O Eust Siulc Str~~l l'hnn~ (740),Q).667l
Alhons, Ohio

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING

MANlEYS
SElF STORAGE

Roofing, Siding, ftdd· Ons, Electrical,
Plumbing, Decks, Remodeling,
D~woll, Painting

Haning's Construction

LocMI 843-Sl64

Medl~ll'l sucpltme~il Lilli fiiiUNnctl

I '

Burlal11nd F n11l Expenses; C11ncer &amp; ,
l)cnlal, Retll'llmenl,
J&gt;cnslon &amp; 401 K Rollov1•1'!1;
Mor1111111e; Mltjtor Ml'dll'MI
• Nundn11 Home

Foffffllln' Lnrry
Owntr:
740·367·0181
AOt1ald "Miok" H1nlng
ChrleUn• "Chrl1" Haning
74Q·1192·0780
Cell• 740·891·0918
Ctll: 8111-83e3

Rre you stressed7

._.lLtiL

Call now for yaur
appt.

mEIGS mASSAGE

Cellular

THERAPY .

213 n. Second llue. .
middleport, OH

Jeff Warner Ins.
992·5479

(7401992·1705
TonIa Reiber
Licensed

the Ohio

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

Tell,I' llw PAIN
Th&amp; CRAFTY,
c, ul c. I PAINTINGI BliND SPOT

l• •ln1•' ·I ' ti l• t Y•

ul

Q,JI Ca.rJ.r- &amp; Gravely
M1111y Ferguaon

(Ftolory Outlet)
,\II •frtio•l bllmb' Mr~·
IIIMd~

Perta &amp; Service

to order Ml

our lo~atloot

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

• Vorlloolo • Wnoo

. 43S8 St. Rt. 180
·Qelllpolla, OH 45831 1

• Mini• • 1\to

144 TIW Avt. Gtllpel:

(740) 446·1044

446·4995

Mondey·Frld•y a-SPM • Slturdey e-zpm

Under New
Management

~~

lUlCk Atgal, n1gn milt·
IOf, n1H dlmlllf, ilul "'''
dfp.ndoblo, good molnlo•
nlnot ••••
1304)878·

ra.

1118
03 Ford T1uru1 IIIIIOn
W~on, U100, 101,000
mil' 1, gootj oondtllon1 woll
mt nt.tlnlil, (7&lt;40)441•vl58
II Cnryollr Clrlll, 10,000
m1~} LXJ. CD OMinQt~
loow1 08u. ;7&lt;40)2a6·121•
(?&lt;40)211·1811

otl

auvoroda . lllondlld

C.b, ll.lla: 1lt1 MUI•
lin ' 11,10&amp;1 1010 l•10il

. 11 01: COgK MOTOR
~

«8.0103
~tit tntrtnt rod litO ~ora
PtObt CIT, '1\Jt!IO w.tlloutllwt
bodY, rune goCIG, 11 BOO
oao. catt ontrlv . •

In the
Classified
The
Gallipolis
Daily
Tribune

446-2342
The Daily
· Sentinel

.992-2155

• VenlviNor • Dull

s

CARPENTER

SE~ICE
•Room A70ne i
R-Ing

~~

\

.

• IIHitiOII I PloHIIIIIng

, • Rcottng • lllllloro

: • Yln~llldlna I Pointing
, • i!lllloond
mat11

&amp;[n•b !leah•

· ,, Fret iler
1

C. YOUNO Ill

llnl l'x1D'
to 10'1130'
Houre

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Y011r

PsTNITb t•~e•
Ev&amp;?~~~·:r::•r

111 11

Olcillt Cotltdlol, L

.·M
740-742-eots ·

C..tttohiolllllllllllftl
tm•JU.ll211
Call fttt-l•lltl rt.ollll/11110
W\'111111

lttl 1000 Muetong,
laadlld, IUIOmttiO,

1412 1740)•4t·2707

?•O·t41·2217

11112·821 5

tlotlltnt oonat1ton. 7,&amp;00
mll11, 1141800, 1740)W·

'

jShh1ld &amp; Fulll.lne
Othn A~~eo10rleo
I

l

I I

•

, 1I

1\ltf!t 1:30 1111·1 pm

CKIBRICK

Rtmodtllng
Stop A Compare
FREIISTIMATE8

• Fontcl1, W11ll1, S1ep1•

M 71111·12noan

I

\I" j, II I ' II ( 'I

( 1~0) 'l'l:' 'o lin

A=::-ra,

Plot Work,
Ke1tlucemon11, • W~lk•
and DriYaa • Ste11ell

1hVI·In1 Avllilb/1

Croto

740-882·1871

45771

(:104)818·01100

. bljal!

Storage
21010 Bllhen Rotd
Alolnt, OhiO

•HtwOirlllfl

v.

Hill'$ Self

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOJON

WE8T$HADI!
BARBER SHOP
•NewHomea
NewManaaer·
740·885-3848
• G11111t1
Gt1111e Korn
CONCRETEIBLO. • Comp1111
NlwHoutt

• 'ron neue Cover

. Sunny
Savings

P/B
CONTRACTORS
, INC.
R•olnt, Ohio 48771

,,

mo.

Doon Open 4:30
Early blrdt •tnrt
6:30

ht Thurllday of
every month
All pock $5.00 .
Drln1 lhl1 coupon
Buy SS.OO
Bonanza Ge,t.
5 FREE
....___,~~---

Sfll IT
CORSTRUCTIOR

UmfSTOOE

R.nnnna, Nldlna,
11adnlhJJ. Ounor1 , IJ•~k•

DeiiVII'Id 6 lpnlld

Free Eetlmateel
(740) i82•1118

JIIS tuCTftlt I

PLUIIBIIIO
~lm

AHorctablt Prloea

740·742·7037

BISSELL

Advertise

In this
space
fOr
•so per
RE6IDENTI~~
FREE ESTIMATES
740•882•75118
month
.______.15111 ._______,

IIU11'11

llealrle, P;lumblnl,

8p10111 8 ton
' ' 11311.00

1nd emell Heono
Molnttnenoe Jelll
(li..O ,,....,.

BUILDfRS 1nc.

Now Home• • Vinyl
Sldln11• Now OarnKc&amp;
• Rcploccmont
Wlndow1 • Roonna
COMMEACI~~ 1nd

IOUINI II ·
L"l DillON PRIMI II
, :
Llfl DillON YOUTH
1
NATURI Will "" LAYIR
:
t R/VIIf RUN PROfiiiiONAL DOG~·
1
I

OHIUIXIO_u_

1

UIIITIIAOII'tiiCIIIIOMIUriTHTHII~
I
N I- --,._
HOUHI!OI.O
• -O
- -...........
- - •I

I.... -

I

�,

•

•

'

•

Pitt coach Walt Harris respects Bobcats, 6

Monday, Auguat H, R002
UIOOI

... .

NIA Croaaword Punle

•

a1

M~lp

a. ..tltlt~R " '

~

'

... . .. .

••'4• •
~'•\\

•

'" "'"" • hu•,d.ov

llfHH ,
,\
~

... '

I lltln parllt

I lcto. 11\111!

, Con\putw

d&lt;lto ~~n

4 t'ttll toft
S~

-bert
a llotdmlp

Take control ·
Th~

'htlllll\.\1

tbbl.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Po~neroy. Ohio

21. IOU I • Vul H . Nu Ill

www mvd.ulp&lt;•nlnu·l ' .. ...

••ttil

., HOnanlble

1M

WhOd~ntt

Nmt
a&amp; Toumt•

a Hoo tQUnlj

ht'Ulldl:ll~lll

Council
airs odor

4t ,.._.

42 lk..lno
lump

43 Qlllleo't
IIOmt
IIVOtllt
U lplllt
H Howol'd ond 41 Do'lt't
mftlt

'tmtll
""IV

H lllontleur • u Ctklijnt .

mtt~ H Dlltt
1a
1 l'ltfl• 101
r.on 1111 ·

~1\1\111

wt\lltlurl\tl pl\1·
lll'ltllls, but cul'llcr this
)11.\111' It 11111.1 \HIC

11 ,llrlttlon
· It Chtn

lllolndtr

ao '"'"
Auttle
doubltl"
lllmptl
,, ihrlnk !rom II ltuppft CIY
$&amp; TV't

Htwkeyt
IOI•fl Crill
~~---

~ntltlcll

(I Will.)

"Lctlllll IUitl t&gt;tllll).cl'•
nus,"
.
lind pm'tnct's Ulld
~X~cJlcnt tltJiillllCI\ts
UI'C tiUII)lCI~IUS HI the
hrhll(l' tnhlc. 011cn,
th~t\! I~ t1&lt;lthln11, ytlu
cu11 dtl ullout liithcr.
but SI\1\IUtliii\!S Vllll
cun ~tllllrtl l th,\ ,\ut
~tHI\\1 ·· us In totluy 's

37

Smelly, leakin)!
tmcks a concem
for residents
•

Couch injured, I

d~ul.

· Yuu urc slttlnll
linst,
dcl'cndlnj!
n)lui nst l'ntll' sp,tdcs.
Ymtr ptll'tllllr, Wust.

Deaths
Jec~

lcmls 1he ll huutmd
kin)!. I low would you

If Tt41f Tt4f Wt40'-t Tt41NG,
0~ JVfT Tttf tLOOI'f~ ltffL7

Bv CHARLINI HOIIPLICH

Sentinel news odt1or

Finnicum, 76

Richerd Rowe, 64
Dtttlllla, AS

ph111 the dcl'cnsc'l
Nnt·th, by li.:tl'llll't'·

shl)l lii!I'CCIIICIII, tlllluC

u j!umc· l'mdnl! Sllttdc
t·ursc. With tmly 10
hillh·clll'tl points, you
ml».ht think this wus

CELEBRITY CIPHER
b~

Lula Campoa

Ollillrlty Oll&gt;htt CfYPIIIIIr•m• 111 Clllltd lnlm quollll0111 bV lamouo
btlllllt, peal and Plilllnl, huh 1111or 1~ lhl cipher lll~dllof I!IOihar.
l't!d.!y'.f clu.; P f!/Uiil K

llll,III'CSSIVIi, hutu hmtd
With i'IVU ll'li11111S, IWII
Ulltih!~hH\S, tl kill~!!
lll\d 1111 . tiCC · ttliOCII

"AOH

cunthinutlon Is stronj!
Clilllll!h, Of' thi s Wtntld

MOKWV

IIC'J

h~

t&lt;ltl rich for Y&lt;lll ,
I'CS,llltl\1 thrtl\I•UIIII•U•
ltttl ' s\md~sl)
Wh t: h rour trlek s
will ynur sltlc tukc'l
llop~l'ully two din·

MHIWV

OCLV

WT

ICICMJ
-

111n11tl~ nmlth~ ~tmllc
ll~c. bt•t whcr~ .IK

CTH

QCDPN

ZWIZW

IOK'-!J
ITJ

,.

VIIH

LNVCT

TWIIVL.

Weather

VC

· Hish: aos, Low : 60s

ZIQDWITC,"

VHOIMJ'V

Det•lla, A2

HJIWT

Traflcent
panned and
praised

KCKH
~RIVIOUS

numhrr 1\ml"/ Muybo
West hus the · hcurt
11~c. but thut Isn't
likely . lnstoud, huw

SOLUTION - "!think: thtrtlort I tm."

- OtiOII\11

"I think I think: thlrolort, I think 1am,"- AmbrottJIItrlll

11bout u club ruff'/

~mn''M\"''i''l"'"~., lluwcvcr' Ir yuu tUN.
cuuru11c with th~ diu·
111111111 two ut trl~k
one, will Wc~t find

~hlft'l
Here ,
thcru '~ no ~hun~o . l-Ie
will ~wltt:h to tho

th u

hcm'l ~uecn,

Don l lcuvc to purl•

ncr wh nt you cun do
yourKI.lli'. Ovurtukc
the lllumtuld kl11g
with yuur ucc und rc·
turn lhll club five,
'fh~n. will thll flt·st
KIHtdc pluy und put
l'urtncr onloutl with u
tllutnnnd. Ho should
l!ill the mcmti!C u d
Mttrl\ ll club for IC
t:ont ru~ t · kllllll rul'f.
II' hu tloustt' , your
put•tnur h ~- · t u nuw
slulldurd or hllhul
und dutii!Crous,
Arc uny crou turcs
lcthul but not tluu11ur·
uus'l I supposo theru
uro II' unc Is nowhere
ncur them.

ttl~ AN ll'l'!o!

~~ MAILMAN PtO IT
A6AIN! 1-1&amp; KEEPS LEAVI N&amp;
LITTERS AOORESSEO TO

\If

8ROLIINII CHAms~

I MONDAY

Ln

NE F

I I I I I ~ .I!
I

I~ I I I I I
G

u;c H o

N

I I ,~ I' I I~
oo vo r

LIDHI!S

I

I I" I I

Urlvtng can be very stresaM
Since cars already heve ~UIIt-ln •
directional signals, 1 think they
Qhou ld have another one that In dicates "••••••••• "

l

14 G

' i9 LFIT!A!
PRINT NUMb..P~fO I'

Compl111 1h1 ckvc&lt;lt Quoltd
by lllllng In tho tT11Uing wordl
you d•vtlop lrom olop No. 3 bolow.

1 I' Ia I' I' I' I' I' ]'
I I I I I I . I -I
1

1

ICUM.LiiTS ANIWIItl
Doubly · GourcJ • ~athe • Reoo/1 · 10 tiro BODY ·

Tha high achoo.l football ooach alwnya trl11d to en·
courage hit ptayara to keap up with their atudlei , He
poet thla etgn tn lhe locker room: "Reading 11 to tM
mind what axero11e Is TO the aoov "

a

oaar

'Birthday..
'i'II~ Klllly, All~ · 27,
In thu y~lll' u h~ud

2()02
you 111uy
wlltln~ t y wk~ '"' mort r~·
. !pllllitlllliii Ci &lt;ll' till tiC! Wh~t·~
. ynur Wlll'k m &lt;'ut'rur 11 ~"" "
~~m~d. Yuu 'll be tllo tlv111~~
hy the 1'11~1 !11111 the ruwuniK
111uy hu 'lillie Klt,uu~ l c 11ml will
~iv~ Ylllllt 1'1111cr puy~huek .
VIIHJO (Au~ , 23·SCIIL 22)
•• Oucc you'v~ lll!ulytuli tmu
IICCIII'IHCfy umKK\Ju your Jlfll•
~~ 111 l!l!llcllthll" hKiuy, th~ hill·
~u•l hu~ulJuu l'u~IIIJI yuu
I'll! Ihi he \JUIIIIIIUCcl Ktlf'•dllUhL
Thl11~ puMitlvu umtuut. '1'1·ytna
I11 t'IIICh Uti II IJrnkCII I'll•
The AMU'•J·(hurh ·
Mull'lllllllktr CUll hcl11 you Ull•
de••tnntl whm til u11 I&lt;J nlltkc
111~ rcluti&lt;Hllhlrt wmk . Mcitt
~2.1~ lu Millchutuk er, cltllhiM

1"'"'""'/

llcW'I"'/'"'•
1',0 , IJu~ 11!7,
Wlrk II c. 011 4·111'12 , .

I . IIII~A IS~IIt.l~ ·IM . 23) •
• Tu he l!utllc Kille Mltlc tuuuy,
ill' lll '"''Y with ~~'"""" with
Wh"'" Yllll'vc llfCYIOU!I·y
tlcuh 111111 ltud hiiY\1 MI\J~~;ol'yJ
l'l'M UII • ' Ill~ 11~J* ur~ ~rrut~r
lor
thllll tr YIIU u~ul
Willi l lr,lll~tl! ,
SI'CJHI'lO ( O~t. 24 ·Nuv.
~21 .. tlYrn tr Y&lt;JU.IIrt u •low
~ 1 111 ll'r 111\IU~, yl!llllfC ~UIIt ~~~·
j!Uhk Ill IJUk kly &gt; IIJIJI]II~ 111111
IIIII ~&lt;' I ll' l!l!ol lllilklllj,\ llic

"""U''

'' .

Pomerov
.

Whirs Inside

10 lltpl~ to lilt Sl Dollar
Ctpltln
II'ICII0111
n• IOgtliltf st cMtiiW
llllltt

7 Tllrow hlf 1
QuldfY
oppotllt
10011
17 Will II, 11\,11, aa Kilt _,..,.

l&gt;ls~:ov~t· y

mun)l~ly

Au~"''

County's

KtJUrk! II~ , It illl~htiJc hurtl~i',
hut you will uwku Uti f'ur lu•t

~fNic" lmvur&lt;l. IIIIVIUN II little 0
IUIIIIlOIIy, "111111~ liM )'1111 fir!! · ·
tim~.
luke ~~~~·c or th~ rc•l'"'l!lblll·
~MliT'I'i\lliiJS !Nov, 2J·
tlo! pluced K&lt;)lcly lu yuur
IJ~~ . lt) •• l'lunn lnM uh~utl
, ch,l\''liC· Work. thc11 \'luy.
\"Il l l1f yullr hCKI ully tutluy
I AUIWS (i\prl 20-Muy
lur br n~lu~ !&lt;!IIWthfl!j! ynu
201
•• ln•ccurlly cumc• rrom
Wlllll 111 frulllnn. You tnuy .•till
cllhct· punr ~IUIIIIIIIM ur muk•
huvu Ill \lUI Ill 11 '"' nf' lillie,
IIIH &lt;lllwurrulll ctl chUIIjCt to·
IJnt II w II mukc your work
du~ . Set 11 cuur.c t'ur yuur1etr
cu!lor In the tupw ruu,
u11il udhctc lu It .untl every.
tAI'IliC!ottN !l&gt;c~. 22·Jun.
thin~ lhut n~cdo tcndlu3 to 1!
tukctl cure of,
1\1) ·· There 1! 1111 '""""' for '
yuu Ill (eel tunny ubuut lukiHW
fiHMINI (Muy 21·Junc 2())
IIUVUntll~c nt' u •lluulhm 1hu1u
•• Due to hurd W&lt;trk und u lut
fl'icntl tff Y&lt;Hiri ht.:ko 1h~ tul ol' ""lllvutlnM un your pnrt,
onltn c!pilJII I"'JI'erly. li'K1111
•omctliiiH wnod m11y deveto~
t'tlr Mrub1 rur uuybutly 111 huvu,
l'ur ynu 111duy thut •hnulil
why IIIII YtlU'I ·
1~lcn•~
yuu con!l~crub ly .
,
t\QUAIIIUS (Jun , 211•11cb, . Shure yuur -¥"lid rui'IO nc with
191 •• To~uy could he the
lllhCrM .
ril!ht 1111~ IU l:irlll~ Ull ~~~~~~ Ull
CANt'IJH IJUilf 21·July 22)
t'ur lll•~u" "'"" lhut hu" btrn
.. l'ruvldetl ynu u~crutc alnn!t
clll'l l~ulltu llcul.with. II cun he
pructlcul , hurd llnto lttday, •
hurmunluu"IY IC!ulvcd If cv~ .
your puulhllttle• t'ur l'utntllny
r~hmly ~lvco Ill heir ull.
yuu ~IMh lllllhllluno luuk U • •
I'ISrJJS ( l'eh. 20·MIItch
tUpllunullr, guud. ~tuy on •
211) .. 'rhcre nrc no free rlch!l
cnuf!e onil ilun 't tuko uny '
hlliu·y, but II )'1111 WUNI •111nc•
luull•h K•mhlcN,
ihluM hutlly ciHJU~h ulicl urc
LIJO (July 23· AUM 22) ·•
will Itt~ to do whut II IUku 111
It'• lmportunt to 11111 do yuur
uchlc~c Y&lt;tllt o111l•. you're cu·
hurncwurk while t:llilllnuuuoly
~ublc l)l uuulnillg •ucccnful
kcCIIIIIJI yuur ubjcttln1 In
1·c~ul1• .
•l11h1. II' you luck knowled~c
·A itii \S I Murch 21·Aprlll9)
or I'IICUM, yuur llljenllun t&lt;Juld
.. 1'hurc I• "" rcUM&lt;I• why yuu
be OIYcrtc~ v.lt I IIUie fiiU•
l'un ' l direct IHttnc IJI' your en ~rcu helnu Illude,

WASHINOTON (AI')
Wushlnjltnn lnsld~rs .~ti ll
r11tc Jumcs A. Trulicunt us
unc of the Will's! dressed
unu funniest members or
Cmt11rcss - hut they cun 't
declllc whether thcy'll111iss
the
11111 verlck
Ohlu
Dcmocmt.
Truflcnnt. who lust mnlllh
wus
expelled
from
Congress 111td ~c ut to 11 feu·
crul prison for 11 conviction
on lll'lhcry u11t.l tux evuslon .
c hurgc~. tut·ncd llll flw
times In the Wushlnl!toniun
llllii!U7.Ine's un11uul "Ucst &amp;
Worst" survey, hosed on
votes frum I ,2(K) Cupltol
HIll stuffcrs.

ALL READY - Flve·year old Joseph Wtnes ts roady ror his tlrat year at Pomoroy Elementary
School. Wines .wttt bo In kindergarten this year. Schools In tM Meigs Local and Eastern Local
scl1oot districts stnrt today. Southern Locatbeilen school tost Wednesday. (Agnes Hapke)

waronoruus

.

Torch put to seized
••
manJuana crop
IY

MtLUIIIA RUIIILL

Lotteries

OVP staff writer

OHIO

GALLIPOLIS -· More
thun 4,400 ynun~ murijuunu
plunts met their lute Monduy
murn in~ when Oulliu County ,
shcri iT H Dch:ctlve Todd
Brudlcy uni.l Deputy Shuwn
1Jurto11 dcKiroyci.l them by

Pick :s: 1·4· 7
· Pick 4: 0·1·8·9
Buckeye 5: 5·6·16·20·21

Pick :J nl1ht: 3·7·5
Pick 4 nl1ht: 2·3· 1·6

W.VA.

Dilly 3: 3·8·7
D•lly 4: 9·4·2·2
c..li 25: 3-5-1 o- 13·21·25

Index
1 lectlon- 10 Pap•

Calender
Cluslfleds
Comics
Deer Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Spotts ·
Weather

5
7·9

10
5
4

3
3
6·7

2

e. 2001 Onto·VIIIty Publlohlnt t:o.

POMEROY - A writt~n
.:ompluin) ubuu1 the odor
and dripping~ front tru·· ~,
of the First Clus~ Tru'h
Service
operating
on
Mulhcl'l'y Avenue in11ppur·
cnt vio lutinn of tltc village
1.mting Ol:tlinuncc wus pre ·
sen ted to l'om croy Vi Ilu ge
C'mlllcil Monduy night·.
Ccllllldlmun nriun Shunk
presented the letter, whid1
Muym John lllucllnur ~uid
will he ~ iYcn to the vjllugc
admini, tralor lor runhcr
net ion .
It wt.- reported thut
· Pulice Chief Murk PmiTitt
hu~l ult·~IH.Iy been In con ·
IIICI with Murk N11r1111111.
UWJICI, lllHIUI finuing ll
lo~:utlon In un UI'Ca wnci.l
commcrdu l 10 llllrk the
trucks.
The
trucks
rcmuin
purkcJ 1111 the lot. whil'h i'
1n u · t•es idcnlinl urcu nnd
udjuccnt to the Pomeroy
Elcmcntnry Sch110 i pluy ·
gmLIIld. Counci l members
exprcsscl.l concern ubm11
th~ oi.lur us well us in&gt;cct~
thut might be uttrttclcd Ill
· the urcu where the chi ldren
piny .
·
131ucllnur reported thul
the rcpnir lll)cl puinting ur
the municipul huilding i'
neurly hulf ('omplctcd.
The $ 10,000 joh is being
hy
Brown
dnne
Contrncting. It includi!N
rcpuirin!l unu puinting
Window sa&gt;hc,, guucr'
uud trim on the huck unt.l
one side
the huili.ling.
Second rcui.ling was
gi vc:n w un umcndment w
the inconlc tux orditHtncc,
which provides u fine 11f
$2S for fuilure 1(1 file nr for
fllinl! lull!.
A discussion wuK held on
changes to the employees'
handbook uboul unuutho·
rl zed leuvc. After u le.nl!lhy
discussion. the. matter wus
referred huck to commit·
tee.
Among the Items dis·
cussed was lhc length llf
time off wnrk before un
employee loses insurance
or IK lcrmfnuled.
A report of the day-today activities from Jack
Krauner, street depurtmenl
supervisor. was given by
Councilman Vic Young. It
was. noted work beina
done including street
patchln11, curb cleaning

,,r

nrc.

Althuuilh mu~tof the plunts
hud not yet matured, one wus
ulmosl 9 feet lull, Bradley
sui d.
·The dcpurlmcnt WliH uided
by Hu rcuu nf Crhninul
lnvc stlgution ugentH und 11
hclicuptcr wu.1 donutcd by the
Murion County Shcril'f's
Dcpur! 111cn1.
Several townKhi/lK were
s~uurcd by uir, ncluding
Springfield, Green, Addison,
Clay und Rnccoun, hut 7~
percent nf the plonts were diK·
covcrcu within !1- 10 miles of
the uirport, Brudlcy suid.
·"We haven't hil every
tuwnHhip, but we've hit the

UP IN IMOKI - Deputy Shewn Burton helps burn more than
4,400 marijuana plants Monday mornlna. (MIIIIule Ruaaell)
mujorhy of them," he uddcd.
"And we plun on flying
ujluin."
According to BCI stutiKtic~.
ugent~ have fuJJnd more murljuunu In Oulllu County this
year than in uny other county
In the slute.
·
"They will· dcfinilcly be

concentrating their effons nn
Ouillu Co,unty more next
yeur.'' he' said.
· Must of lhe pluntK were
found through tips left at the
~heriff'K off'lce tip line,
Bradley Kuid, und 1111yone who
wunts .to leuve an anonymouK
tip cun cull 740-446·6S3S.

and grn" &lt;:utting .
Th~ nccJ fur rcpuinting
y.·llow .:urbs downtown,
rcrairhtg MJIIIe ~uuriJ rull·
tnj!. uni.l rcbuildinil druins
,Vtts noted. uftmg with u
L'lllnrtaint from
Mike
Bowie; of Plcu•unl Ridge
ltl-oLII u druinugc probl~m
on hi&gt; rroperty .
Ulucttnur •ttid he would
huvc th~ ~trcet department
~~ ~ an c'timutc on the cost
ol the 111king ~ure of the
druilllll!l' l'rnblcm .
The po"ihility tif udi.ling
,cv~rul new benches on
Muin und Sccm1d streets in
downtown Pnmcroy was
disn1•scd..
Councilma n
Georg~ Wright will c\intoct
the Pnmcmy Mcrchunl•
A;wdutilln 10 get itn 11pin·
ion utH.I possible purticipa·
linn in the &lt;:usl.
Yount,\ ~ uvc u report on a
'mull purcclof lund uppar· .
cntly owned by the village
on New Street uJjucllnt to ·
property owned by Chuck
Hitcbie.
He ho• a.1kcd permission
1u tear down un old build·
ing on the ~mull lot us a
'tcp toward ~leuning ' it up.
Council will u•k Chris
Tcnogliu. its uttorney. ·lo
wnfirm nwner,hip before
uutlwriting
anything.
Ritdti~ ul."1 rcl.jucstcd per·
mi"ion to erect u "wei·
.:ume to Pomeroy" sig n
there .
Other council buslncsN
included:
• approving the purch11se
llf fuur tires ut 11 cost uf
$290 fur u cruiser:
• directing lhal whoever
is i.lumping dirt ut Monkey
Run discontinue dumping
·uf the frnnl nf the lot;
• di ~c u• .1ing inswllotion
of hor~cshoe pits at the
WutcrworkN und Mechanic
Street PYrkM il' residents
eKpress lnter~m; and .
• ccmsidcring the need
for permi~sion und rule~ of
~uurt csy for users llf the
downtown parking lot and
levy.
James
Pancake
of
Nelsonville. candidate for
the house seat for the 92nd
District. spoke io council
preccdi ng the mectins. He
talked about hi~ uperi·
ence in government, his
program for bri naing more
jobs to southeastern Ohio,
and changes he would support in paying for service•
including education.
Auendi ng be1idu the
mayor and Clerk K!lthy
Hysell were counci lmen
Young. Wright, Shank,
Lurry Wehrung. Jackie
Welker und Todd .Norton.

When.you need reliable, compassionate,
high quality home health services, remember

MEDICAL CENTER

It's Your Health. It's Your Home. It's Your Choice.
Choose Holzer Home Care~
Call 1·888·225·1135
.. · ~ ·

··'

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="468">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9916">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23403">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23402">
              <text>August 26, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1725">
      <name>cline</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1024">
      <name>holsinger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1708">
      <name>rowe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
