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..
·Page DB • &amp;unba!' 'Ql:imrl·&amp;rntintl

Pomeroy • Middleport~ Gallipolis, Qflio • Point Pleasant,

wv

Sunday, July 15,

SPORTS: Pomeroy teams advance at KC; Bl

2001

Monday

I

sol ution.
Those who are determined
to add value to their product
may start a vineyard and a
winery at the same location :
Next week, 40 Gallia, Brown,
and Lawrence counties' tobacco producers are due to visit a
Tennessee
tobacco farm
turned winery. The outcome
of that visit and the rest of the
value-added tour should be
available in the July 29 article.
Because the issue is economics, not production, actual growing information \Yas
not offered in this article. If
you' are interested in grape
production information, it is
readi 1y avai1ab le by calling the
Extension Office 446-7007 .

Bymes
homPageDl

Airline will retum to pre-strike service level~!
I

I

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - Still recovering from a ·three-month pilots' strike,
Comair plans to restore its flight service
fo pre-walkout levels by Janu~,ry.
Tbe regional airline expects to be flying I 08 aircraft to 97 cities and offer
766 dai)y flights by Jan. 5, management
said Thursday.
The 'company resumed most flights
July 2, after its pilots ratified a new fiveyear contract that provided pay increases and a company-funded retirement

program.
industry figures from 1999. More recent
Sc;rvice to Yeager Airport in figures e~nked the pre-strike Comair ~
Charleston, WVa., rs:sumed Thursday. the third-largest regional airline behind
Flights to the Harrison -Marion American Eagle and Continental
•
Regio'1al Airport in Bridgeport, WVa., • Express.
resumetl July 3.
Delta Air Lines bought Comair in
Before the strike begari in March, January 2000 for $1.8 billion.
;
Comair operated 119 aircraft to 96
Comair is based at Cincinnati/North~
cities with 8U flights per day.
ern Kentucky International Airport. I!
Comair had been the nation's second- also operates a flight hub in Orlanqo:
largest regional airline behind American Aa., and a pilot training school in San ~
Eagle, according to regional ·airline ford, Fla.

and financing for more than
10 years to handle the cash
llow requirements of establishing a new vineyard, which
will not be in full production
until the fourth year.
Over 20 years, the net average return· before taxes is
slightly less than 11 percent;
however, growers will have an
investment of over S15,000
I•
per acre. So once again, what
.' 'I
'
circumstances are you willing
to commit to overcoming,
long-term' '
.
·. Although a majoriry of
Ohio's current grape acreage
is devoted to processing for and requesting a copy of Bul.
.
•
.
.
..
. ..
. ' Ji
letin 815, "Grapes."
' wines, jellies and juice, Ohio's .
TRENTDN, N.J. (AP) only helps us accelerate our · 11,000 · employees m llli- . ow~ the ctlmpany fat
d
Ag news
·
population provi es a ready
The OSU
,
Lucent
Technologies
plans
restructuring, but also gives nois.
equipment filing fo'r ban)&gt;~
market for fresh grapes and
Master Garyet another round of job these employees a chance to' .. "We ar« grateful to · all ruptcy.
.
grape products. Such oppor- , deners are getting r!!ady for
As of the en·d of March;
tu"nities are, fairly traditional the_ . 2001 Galha County , .· cuts, chief exei:utive Henry leave with added benefits;". these ,employees ... for all '
Schacht
told
employees
.
Price
said.
·
their
hard
work,
dedication
Lucent
had cut o.rily 2,00Q
such as "pick your own," road- Jumor Fa1r, July 30-Aug. 4.
· Thursday as the struggling · He conceded there "will . and CO!J1mitmc;nt to Lucent ·o f the ~0,000 jobs. ta~gete4
side stands, local supermar- Members w~uld hke to
telecommunicat
. pa-.
· J
ro
1·
'
kets, and chain stores or bro- encourage all mterested gar- .
k d _ i~ns
1 equipd h · be some slight disruptions over the years," the rom
~
10 anuary 10t e tmination;
ment rna er tsc ose t at in operations" with so m~ny , ny· sajd in a prepared state" leaving it .about • l04,000
kers.
deners to stop by the Activim~re than 8,500 workers peopJe leaving at once, but ment.
.
. However, several new culti- ties Building and visit the
Investors were heartened · employees worldwide.·.
had accepted -an · early saio many of the remaining
-vars recently released have Master Gardener Booth to
retlfement
offer.
employees
are
still,.
"~nerby
the news, pushing up
But Price ~aid tho~.~
expanded the possibilities for learn more about the progra.;.
The number of workers gized 'around the turn 7 , . Lu~ent shares 81 cents to . reductions are proceeding
· fresh marketing of grapes in and pick up information on
targeted for the next round ·around"
close at $6 fi 6 · t d'
on " heduLe.
:l
Ohio.
current and ·fall gardening
of_
cuts,_
which
would
be
the
..
"We'~e
~aiuging
to
m"ake
Thu;sday
~
the
'~e~"y~~~
·.
''We'll
give
a
final
'
report'
A variety of processing tssues.
thlfd smce January,
sure our customers ·.. don't St oc k E xc,..1ange.
· ·. ·
on
· d ·shou!d
·
, those numbers, as well ai
_
Blue mold update: Its
possibilities are also popular,
b e.
d edterbnu'heh
dandf
feel
a?y
impact,"
Price
said.
.
Since
l;te
1999,
Lucent
the
(financial)
impact
of
:dl·
)&gt;uch as selling to commercial everywhere. Call the office if
announce.
yfi t e en
o
At 1eas t t wo st at es WI'th" -h as repeat edly. mlSSe
· d Its
·
~hese reductions, when v.re
.-·
L
wi.n eries or wine-making you want to discuss the appliSeptemb er a ter
ucent the
t
L
1
·
.·
repo_rt
out
earnings_
'
:
for
tlte
,'
.
supply stores. Regardless of cation of Actigard.
executives w~rk out "a
Imll"os . ucedncNempJ?yees ear~~ungs • targets .. as sa 1es
.
r d
d , mots an
ew ersey slumped and t ·lost busmess quarter ended June ' 30, ~l
aennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
th:e marke!ing scheme, it will
1 . • .- may feel the Joss of jobs, to comp~iicors1 that brought ~aid.
f,or~
stream
me
ko
e
',
• • . ,;
probably not come easy, but County's Extension agent for
orl)tpe· compd~ny, spa esman however. Those 'states had faster teleco;.municatio.ns
Lucent plans 'to releas~ ,
will be ideal for those are will- agrimlture and natural resources,
B1 nee sat .
h
1
·
·
'
·
h
. . t e argest ·number of buy- gear to market quic)&gt;er. The · t a~ earnings report on Julv
ing to commit to finding the Ohio State University.)
I n J anuary, M urray H 111 ,
out• acceptances: · a b out f:altering· economy has ·com- · 24 ' It reporte d a $3 .7. billion',
L ucent
.. - b ase d
·
NJ
announced it would ~limi- 2,5?0 ofthe 17,000 Lucent pounded Lucent's problems, loss on sales of $5.'1 biUiQ]?
Street by the Ohio River. The
nate_ 10,000 jobs and sell workers m New Jersey and with many steady customers . for the first thr~e months :of
tour series finishes up in
Mid~est factory operations about .2,000 of the roughly buying les~ and others who chis year.
.
. · ~!
Athens County on Oct. 7 at
' employing another 6,000
from PageDI
Dutch Creek Community
workers under a wideFarm, a diversified vegetable
ranging restructuring an·d .
· Profitability Tour Series. This farm.
cost-cutting program.
series of farm and farm- relatA brochure is available from
Last month, the company
ed tours is designed to assist our office listing each of the
offered buyouts to more
Ohio farm families improve 20 opportunities, dates, hours
than 10,000 U.S. employees
the profitability and sustain- and directions. Come on by to
- mostly midlevel man,ability of their farming opera- pick up thi~ listing. Sponsors
agers but also a small numtions.
of the tours are Ohio State
ber of nonunion clerical
More than 20 farms are fea- University Extension, Innovaworkers. They had until 5
t)~r~d , in this year's tour series.
p.m. Tuesday to decide
tive Farmers of Ohio, Ohio
~ch tour will demonsuate
whether to accept the offer,
Ecological Food &amp; Farm
~ow, some entrepreneurs. have
which allows maw to retire
Association, Organic Crop..
t¥:en advantage · of ne"f
with full benefits younger
Improvement
Association,
opportunities through alterplanned or with less
than
USDA Natural Resources
"rtive enterprises, different
years of. service with the
+P18MIOR13 PRI12
marke.ting methocls and alter- Conservatign Service and
1
AT&amp;T spinoff.
+P175190At3 I'M1Z
North
Central
Region
SusP175/IOA13 .............................131.00
' \ native production systems. All tainable Agri culture Re~earch
P115/75A14 .............................133.118
Friday will be the last day
4 FOI '101 -tP18~R14 PRI1Z
tours are free and do not
+P195175R14
P1116/75A14 ····-·········· ..... .-....... 136.111
•
of work for most of the
+P20$175R14
P20&amp;/75R15 ............................. 138.111
require pre-registration tb and Education (SARE).
4FOI '118
''
8,500 employees who cook
All TIRES WHITEWAll
(Hal
Kneen
is
Meigs
County~
attend.
OTHER SIZES AVAILABlE
the
offer.
The first of the series starts Extension agent for agriculture
"The voluntary offer not
flO July 21. Jefferson Farm, and natural resources, Ohio State
owned by Geoff and Sharon University.)
Integrity
Mavis . in . Bloomingbu~g
(Fayette County) is a 913-acre
farm transitioning .since 1995
P175/7DR13
into organic-certified producP1751115A14 ............................... f40.118
tion.
P186170R14-............................. Na.lll
P1116/70R14
•.:........................... 15Ut
· Another opportunity is to
P205/e&amp;R15 .............................. M1.111 '
P205170R15 .............................. M4.... .
visit the River City Farmers
LARGE IN STOCK SELCTION
Market in Marietta, a rejuve·. OTHER SIZES AVAILABlE
nated farmers market held
under the Williamstown
KELIY.TitEI
~ridg~ at the end o( Third
Regatta 2

Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy• Ohio

so cents· July 16. 2001 • Vol. 51, No. 228

· 1.com ;
www.myda1·1 ys~nt1ne

Local·sites

lucent says niore job cuts coming:

1n program
$1 0 million '
in reclamation
projects set ·
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY Min e
reclamation projects in
Pomeroy and Gallia County
are included in a record $to
million in abandoned mine
proje cts to be funded
through the Ohio E&gt;epartment of Natural Resources.
Gov. Bob Taft announced
Friday that 38 new abandoned mine landoprojects in
19 counties will. be subject
to repair to address environmental and public safety
issues. Taft made the
announcement during a
tour of an AML reclamation
site in Macksburg. whi ch is
already under way to
improve water quality,

0

,

0

Kneen

TOMAIIAWK AWAY -leslie McCombs of Meigs County, a member of the Mesami Indian group, practices throwing his toma·
hawk .at Fort Randolf.
·
·
•
.
'

LIVING HISTORY

Navigator Gold

photos
..Michele carter
.

P175/65R14 XNW

P185/70R14
P185/75R14
P205/70R15

down on

. • P1e5/7~R14

P195/65R15 ...:................S78.88 '
P201/65R15 ..•.................$82.DD
P2DsnOR1&amp; ......................oo
P225/8DR18 .................... $ll4.911
LARQE IN STOCK aELCTioN
OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE ;·

. au- tlzn av.llllbll.

authorizations

.

P215/7DR1s ....................see.oo·

Save 20-45% on theH

LOADING- John Casey•bf Point Pleasant loads his weapon
for a practice round of firing. Casey Is one of several reenac·
tors who participated in a living history weekend at Fort Randolph.

.

.

launches:
••

Investment
•

FROM STAFF REPORTS

'7200SAI.l

$4899 Sale

Network
cracks

..

iliitiative

•

'4&amp;•~w

All Lawn Tractors In
Stock Will Be Sold At
$1 00 Above Cost!
.
.

•

reduce funding and revjve
·
the economy.
· The mines . at issue are in
eas tern . and southeastern
Ohio, and three of the
largest projects are in Meigs
and Gallia counties. Some
S40,000 will be spent tO'
seal four mine openings and
correct acid mine drainage
on East Main Street ih
Pomeroy. In Gallia County,
\ SI million ~ill go toward
'he reclam~t10n of a strip
1p10e on Ntbert Road, and
$650,00 toward the recla~1ation of a strip mine and
unprovements ~n mine
dramage at that mme on the
Jones- Venoy property.
The Nibert mine site is
the second-largest project
in the $10 million overall
program.
"Pollution from long-·
abandori~d ·underground
PI~" see _
ODNR, A3

.

RETRIEVING _.. Justin Lee of Point Pleasant removes his and
Leslie McCI:)mbs' tomahawks from tl)e "targets.

ATHENS -A $32.5 million venture capit~ initiative
for southern Ohio will be
led by Adena Ventures with
support from .the U.S. Small
Business
Administration,
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland
said.
·" I am excited that Adena
Ventures received this financial"leverage~ which will spur
in
bold
investments
Appalachian Ohio," Strickland, D- Lucasville, said in a
joint announcement with
Oh io University.
"This represents ·a significant Investment in a. region
of the .coUlitry that to6 often
gets overlooked by business
and. industry," Strickland
said. "T his public/private
partnership will ultimately
result in new, good- paying
jobs in sou.thqn Ohio."

Adena Ventures is ~ venture capital group targeting
Appalachian businesses. I~
was formed to provide equity investments and related
services to small enterprises
operating in Appalachia. lb
addition. to southern Ohio, '
the group will provide capital assistance co businesses
throughou-t ·West Virginia,
and parts of Kentucky and
Maryland.
The region served by the
group has a population of
about 4.1 million residents,
with ' about 21,441 small
ousinesses . .
Adena raised S12.5 million
in private capital for invest- ·
ments, and $3.75 million for
operational assistance to
match die $16.25 million in
federal funds. The federal
dollars are part of the New
Please see Firm. AJ

Goodyear Tires ·.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
!Iospital network says it will .
hold up some diagnostic tests
for patients who .cannot offer
proof that their health care
insurers will pay the bill.
l 1riHealth operates
the
Bethesda North and Good
Samaritan hospitals:and a vari·ety of other medical services,
It faced more than $20 million
in payment denials last year
~m insurers who claimed
!hat TriHealth provided the
·services without the proper
referrals and pre- authorizapons, said Dr. Richard -Smith,
senior vice president of clinicjl[ development.
: £ventua1Jy, the hospital was
_a}:lle to collect about 75 percent ·of the initially denied
claims, Smith said. But the
hospital may end up eating·
about $5 million for unpaid

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• (2) Snappers 14 HP with 38 in.
Hydrostat
• Zero Turn 15 HP with 42 in.
Hydrostat
• Rear engine rider, 10 HP with
30 in cut ·
.
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Details, A2

P215/75R15 OWL

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P235/?5R15 OWL·
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40,000 Mile WM.nty

P215/60R18

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'$1695
011 up to 5 qta. •lnatall now oil nner

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re,::.:~~~~: Clllck
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He•;',\,. nm,·
wa.,llt•r ·
3wattr

Ieveii.

95:·

· 2 Section•- 12 P11ps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Objtuarjes
Sports
Weather

Walkway progress awaits funding

Low: It•

.

Lotteries

8Y TONY M. l£Aat

.

82·4 Pldll: 8-2-4; Pldl4: 8-9-3-6
85 5uplr l.oiiD: + 11-14-20-24-29
A4 ICidlr. +5-8-2-6:3
A3 W.VA.

Dally 3: 5·7' 7 Dally 4: 2-().7.()

A2

C 2001 Ohio V•lley Publishing Co.

ONLY
~329 95

Summerti111e Woes?

:\.C :,Tic•
Ht:~\')' l&gt;utr

Dryn
Autom1tic Oty
ConlrOI. •

If you hove health concerns or questions, call the Holzer

Health Hotline. A specially troined Holzer Medical
Center RN is ready to assist you when needed:

Gravely Tractor ·

TriHealth sent a letter in
June to area doctors stating
that it will slow down its
schedulip~ of mme medical
tests. It urged doctors to speed
up their end of the paperwork
flow.

, SENTlNEL NEWS STAFF

l.arKC'
(:apildt~·

bualne11, not a aide llnel

services.

works Park on ~1St Mairl Street.

million allotment distributed among 50.com-,
Park.benches, Water fountains and ligh~&gt; wiU munities and org;u1izations for a variety 0 £
POMEROY - Even though pfO!,rress be placed along ·the path for pedestrians co bicycle and pedestrian paths, as weU as historic
contimil\s on Pomeroy$ new "ri&gt;l:!rfiont w.Uk. . tal
. n
d will preservation and scenic beautification projectS.
w:ry; additional money is needed to cover the 'enJToy.h.e proJea
s to cost ts ""27 .893
. an
Th lim .
.
, .
e
ding._denved from ODQTs Surcosts df new land purchases and propert)l be funded through a $262,315 grant awarded .
last year by the Ohio Deparonent ofTrans- fuce Transportatlon Funds, IS used fOr proJecll;
appraisals.
The new blacktop walkway will be over 1.7 portation and local niatching funds in the that pTOVlde tr.msportation alternatives to
automobile use and to enhance transportamiles long and 10 feet wide: It wiU run from an1ot1m of$65,578.
Pizza Hut to the newly-constructed Water.Pl•sa 5H ~ndlnc. AJ
The awarded ~Jt money is part of a $15

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6:00 am - 2:00 am, seven days a week " '

Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor Street • Pomeroy, OH

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference.

'.

(800) 462·5255

(740) 992-2975
,(

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.

-~-

-~

-

~-

..

�•
10

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, July 17
AcctJWeath~

CINCINNATI (AP) - Black activists
and religious leaders have caLled for an
international boycott on downtown
businesses because they say the tiry has
not progressed on ra cial issues since the
April riots sparked by the fatal poliCe
shooting of an unarmed black man.
the Cincinnati Black United Front,
along with several other groups, on Saturday said they would ask tourists not to
visit Cincinnati, tell organizations to hold
their national conventions elsewhere, and
ask residents not to spend money downtown.
"We call for an immediate and total
withdrawal of travel and tourism business
from Cincinnati," said Juleana Frierson,
spokeswoman for ·the Cincinnati Black
United Front.

MICH.

I TOiodo

184"/IMI"

J

.•I •

1 u.natletd 163"183"

•IColumbus 1&amp;9"/85" I

,

__

...
0~---~-

Sun"V Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

Monday, July 16, 2001

Monday, July 16, 1001

Black leaders call for boycott of Cinc~nnati

·ohio weather

••

PageA2.

Showers T-Siorme

,, ,

Rain

....
Aunias

.Power pl~nt debate

~tiit!:~ " " "

Snow

.,

I

She said economic sanctions have been
the most effective nonviolent method to
achieve soci~ and economic change.
Frierson and $everal other speakers said
they believed they had no other options.
"We will no longer tolerate Cincinnati
apartheid," she told about 80 people
gathered outside New Prospect Baptist
Church for the boycott announcement.
Frierson said the Cincinnati Black
United Front has obtained a list of
groups that have conventions in Cincinnati through 2003 .and will ask them to
relocate.
She also read a list of demands Saturday
that inclu~~ - funding for neighborhood
development plans, amnesty for those
jailed during t~e April riots, and the
elimination of racial profiling in the city's

~··

lea

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sunny skies were expected
· again on Tuesday but relative ·
' ' humidities will be on the
increase as southerly winds
-bring more moiture into the
region.
Highs will be close to .90
degrees.
There ,will be a chance of a
· few scattered showers on Tues· day, with a strong possibiliry of
,rain on Wednesday.
·
Sunset tonight will be at

8:59 p.m. and sunrise on Tuesday at 6:17a.m.
Forecast
Today: Partly cloudy. High
86, low 64.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
84, low 69.
Wednesday: ThiJnderstorms.
High 86, low 50.
Thursday: Thunderstorms.
High 82, low 61.
Friday: Partly cloudy. High
84, low 63.

Jocelyn van Toor of St. Paul, Minn. holds her daughter
Suzanne, 2, while she talks to a crowd of people at Fountain
Square in Cincinnati during a clean air rally. van Toor says her
son Winston, 4, right being held by Sierra Club activist Glen
. ZANESVILLE (AP) - Work is nearing completion on a S3 . Brand, has asthma which is made worse by a coal-fired power
plant less than a mile from their home. An air pollution regu,nrillion renovation ~t Genesis Good Samaritan Hospital, where lation now under review is not being enforced well enough,
construction improvemenc. began last July.
environmentalists told federal regulators Tuesday.
Power
. ~ "Simply, ihe space we had was inadequat: to handle the amount industry officials complain that the regulation of new sources
. ofpatienc. we had," said Cheryl Hull, director of cardiovasc11lar ser- of air pollution are too restrictive on power plants and Increase
: vices.
maintenance time and costs. (AP Photo)

· Hospital gets room to grow

The old emergency department had 13 rooms with two trauma
.beds. '
'
, The new one will include 18 beds, a waiting area for patie,nc.,
. , 'two 'trauma rooms, an orthopedic injury room, a.sexual assault
: ·exam room and two rooms for cardiovascular patients.
The renovation means the emergency department has twice as
· much space as·before.
· "The rooms were so small you could hardly work in them," said
- Carla Weaver, manager of emergency services.
Nationally, emergency rooms have been experiencing over-.
crowding beca11se of an aging population, a lack of primary· care
phyJiciam and more uninsured patients.

Communltl11 compete
CLEVELAND (AP)- Rescued trom cities that tore up their
tnckl, Trolleyvill~ USA's vintage ametcan in the next few yean
will be ·uprooted again.
,
Several communi tie~ and private organizatiom are competing to
become the new home ofTrolleyville. Within Qve yean, the museum must leave the mobile-home complex it has occupied since
1954 in suburban Olmsted Township.
"We won't be homeless," said Trolleyville general manager Clif·
ford Perry. "We've had eight inquiries and one presentation sci far."
The Columbia Park trailer park was sold last month, and the
new owners issued the deadline to move its 30 vintage streetcars,
· tracks, overhead wires and.buildings.
•
· The move will cost about $1 nrillion and the museum needs at
.least 10 ~cres, Perry said. Offers of moving aid will matter in the
choice, he added. He declined to name the prospective sites.
The late Cer:il.d Brookins founded both 'the trailer park andTrolleyville, which·"is officially the Gerald E. Brookins Museum of
Electric Railway~ Inc.
-

Both have pleaded innocent and face trial next month in Fairfield
Counry Municipal Court.

Tall ships attendance sails
CLEVELAND (AP) -A quarter of a million adults and countless children crowded Cleveland's lakefiont over the weekend to
view 17 tall thips, doubling attendance predictions for the city's first
Harborfest.
'On today, the Wooden vessels were getting ready to set sail for
Detroit, where they will help the city celebrate its tricontennial.
This was the large1t gathering of the hiatorlc repllcas in Cleveland.
Buoyed in part by San Diego-like weather, event coordinaton ·
told 228,000 S7 to SlO ticket~ to tour the docked thlpt Fridiy
through Sunday. Children under 10 were admitted free.
· "You walk on these shiDI and it\ as if you've stepped back into
the 1BOOs on a pirate ship,h said Louann .Lauer of Cleveland, whose
only previous experience with sailing was Windjammer crultea in
the Caribbean,
.
At times during the four-day festival, the crush of people made
it seem as if every weekend boater and day sailor in northeast Ohio
had come to the harbor.

Police: Shootings gang related

Ride honors slain pollee offkers ·
CLEVELAND (AP) - Uniformed p.olii:e officers and riders in
jeans and leather jackec. were among nearly 500 motorcyclists who
rode into Cleveland oyer the weekend in a tribute to s~ officers.
Riders in the second annual Wayne Leon Police Memorial
Motorcycle Rally left fiom the Akron Pulice Department and
wound through Parma on Sunday. In Cleveland, .they passed the
police station where Leon worked and paused at the downtown
police memorial.
·
Quisi Bryan was sentenced to death in November for shoqting
Leon during a traffic stop in J~ne 2000. Participanc. honored all
northeast Ohio officers killed while on duty.
"We will never forget our fallen brothers and sisters," said Patrolman Paul Hlynsky, president of Akron's Fraternal Order of Police.
The even(, which ended at the Cuyahoga County Fairgrqun&amp;,
raised $800 for the Greater Cleveland Police Scholarship Fund.
The fund benefits the children of officers. This year's.recipient gets
$3,200.

· CINCINNATI (AP) - Turf battles among gangs and drug
dealers account for many of the recent shootings in ·a· blighted
neighborhood that was the scene of riots in April, police say.
· At least 77 people have been shot in 59 incidents' cirywide since
the ,riots, which were sparked by the shopting of an unarmed black
man by a white police officer.
·
·
'
· Saturday riight, five men standing on a street corner in Over-the.
Rhine were Wounded in a drive-by shooting.
"It's. all about gangs, drugs, money and power, who's going to
control what, who's going to con~ the neighbor~ood;' Cincinnati Detective Brett Gleckler said.
. · "! have never seen this much gunplay .without regard for .life,"
said Lt. Roger Wolf, a supervisor in the police Criminal InvestigaCOLUMBUS {AP) - A state senator fiom eastern Ohio has
been released from the Ohio State University Medical Center, the
tions Section.
hospital said Sunday.
·
: Some residents lock themselves in at night.
: ·~r wouldn't dare go out at night;' said Annie 9iglio, 92. ''I'd be 0n Thursday, Sen. James Carnes,' a Republican fiom St.
Clairsville, was admitted with chest .pains for observation. He was
~oo scared."
•

&gt;

CLEVELAND (AP) - By joining a natio?wide trend, a.tiny
Cleveland hospital that seemed on the brink of closing a decade
ago has found new life.
·
·
In 1995, Grace Hospital dedicated its 86 beds to long-term acute
care. Rather than succumbing to the consolidation that swept the
local market in the mid-1990s, it now counts on the larger hospitals for referrals.
The 91-year-old institution "would have been seen as the least
likely hospital to ~urvive the highly dynamic market changes,:'
Robert Range, Grace's president and chief executive officer, told
The Plain Dealer on Sunday.
..
So much for conventional ;wisdom. Much larger hospitajs were
bought, sold, merged or closed as Universiry. Hospitals Health System and the Cleveland Clinic Health System dominated the market.
Grace remained independent and grew by no longer competing .
for the same patients - thos~ who typically stay for fiye days.
!llStead, Cuyahoga County's first certified long-term acute-care
hospital focuses on patients whose special ne~ds require longt;r
stays - an average of 28 days.,

cand. . . promote dosure
CLEVELAND (AP) - Some Cleveland mayoral candidates
want the· city to follow Chicago's eX3!pl&gt;le by convertin'g a small
lakefiont airport to a park.
At le:ist five candidates want 54-year-old Burke Lak~fiont Airport to follow the fate of Chicago's Meigs Field, which doses next
year.
.
.
.
·
"Let's. connect the n~ighborhoods back to the lakefiont," said
\llldeclared candidate Joe Cimperman, a city councilman whose
downtown,ward includes the airport. ,
·
Over the past 20 years, several debates about Burke's future coneluded that closing it would take decades and require repayment of
nrillions of dollan in federal giantlo. But Meigs' closure shows that
federal rulet don't necmarily handculf cities that own airports.
The two airfields opened. a year apart. Both lose nrillions each

year.

Burke wu built on the city's former waterfront trash dump and
expancled on mud dreclpd &amp;om the lake bottom. It serves !light
tchooll,tome butlne~~jetl and heUcopten. Melli' wanomtructed
on a bull~up Wand in Lake Michipn and tervet mostly corporate
jell. Unlike Burke, It handln aome commcreial passenger !lights. ·

Hlte pOUpl thltve In Ohio
COLUMBUS (AP) - Hate groups are recruiting more young
people in Ohio through the Internet, direct mailings and music,
and 10me watchdog groups claim the state could become the new
natiohal headquarters for Aryan Nations.
The Ohio l~r of the Aryan Nations was arrested July 5 at his .
home in Delaware County.
'"It's kind of a wake-up call to people living in central Ohio that
these groups do. exist," Sheriff AI Myers told The Columbus Dispatch fo~ a story Sunday.
.
· Danny :William Kincaid was charged as a felon in possession of
firearms and a,pipe bomb. He pleaded innocent to firearms charges
Friday. His trial was set for Aug. 27.
·
The arrest followed a 13-month investigation of Kincaid, identified by the FBI as a leader in the national white-supremacist
group, whose headquarters are in Idaho. According to col!rt
records, Kincaid sold more than a dozen weapons, includin~ a
Russian SKS assault tifle, to a federal informant.
National hate-group watchdogs have id~ntified dozens of whitesupremacY o~zations frOm Clevelimd to Athens. ·
.

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POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered IS calls for assi!tance over the weekend. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 1:15 a.m., Beech
Street, Margaret Dunn, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
9:06
a.m .,
Mulberry
Avenue, Lisa Haggy, Holzer
Medical Center;'
3:30 p.m., Union Avenue,
Laura Hysel, HMC;
5:36 p.m., Lincoln Heights ,
Nancy Ziegler, HMC;
8:36 p.m., Ohio 248, Connie Abbott, St. Joseph's Hospital;
Sunday, 8:08 a.m ., Darst
Home, Imogene Knapp,
. HMC;
9:48 p.m., Dudding -Lane,
William Clark, · dead on
arrival;

Firm

MIDDLEPORT - Robert.Worley Davis, 75, Middleport, .
died Sunday, July 15,2001, at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
Born May 19, 1926, he was the son of the late Worley and
Gladys Thomas Davis and was a retired brakesman for the Conrail Railroad System, where he worked for 27 years.
He also was an Army veteran ofWorld Wa~ II and a member
of the Feeney-Bennett Post 128 in Middleport and Meigs DAV
No. 53.
Along with his parents, he was preceded in death by ·a brother, Kenneth·Davi!; a great-granddaughter, Casey Ann Hysell.
He is surVived by his wife, Beatrice Tracy Davis of Middle, port; two sons and one daughter-in-law, Bill and Irene Davis of
Heath, Glenn Davis of Middleport; four daughters and two

Markets Venture Capital Program created within the SBA.
The program is designed to
bring investment capital to
economically distressed urban
and rural areas.
Ohio University is the·
fund's largest individual
investor, providing $2.75 milli.on . The university has
pledged to help companies
develop business and marketing plans and provide financial guidance through its
Appalachian Regional Entrepreneurship
Initiative
(ARE!), which is part of the
Voinovich Center for Leadership and Public Affairs. .
"We believe this effort is
important for the region, and
thus we support it," OU Pres-

ident Robert Glidden said,
adding that the universiry: is
proud OU alumnus David
Wilhelm is leading the effort.
Wilhelm ahd his partners
began raising money for the
initiative in Appalachian Ohio
in Decemb~r 1999. They later
expanded the program to
include Appalachian areas in
sur.rounding states.
"As hard as we've worked
to get to this point, we )r~
committed ·to working even
harder to mak.e this a successful example for the nation,"
said Lynn Gellerman, president and chief operating officer of Adena Venrures .
"We are reminded every
day that we did not get here
alone, and we are thankful for
t~ vision and courage that
our investors and strategic
· partners have providea;:
Gellerman added.

ODNR

Funding

Shark bites Panhandle surfer
·near site of boy's attack

LOCAL STOCKS

Published fWery afternoon, Monday

through Friday,

111

Court Sl., •

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Member: The Associated Press and

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Postm11ter: Send addfeu correc·
11ons10 The Dal~ Sentinel, 111 Coun.
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mall permitted .in areas where home

AdVertialng

EMS log calls

6:45 p.m ., Ohio 143,
Melinda Laudermilt, HMQ;
9:49 p.m., Fourth Stre.et,,
. Ronnie Pickens, PVH;
11:49 p.m., Mulberry
Avenue, Danny Haggy, HMC.
POMEROY
Saturday, 9:!8 p.m., Counry
Road 7A, motor vehicle accident, Cindy Scott, refused
treatmeitt, Shaw"n Marcinco,
St. Mary's Hospital. .
RACINE
. .
Saturday, 2:05 p.m., Bald
Knob Road, brush fire, Burns
residence, no injuries.
SALEM TOWNSHIP
Sunday, Ohio 124, structure
fire, assisted by Pomeroy and ,
Rutland, no injuries.
RUTLAND
Saturday, 3:42 p.m., Dye
Road, Andrew Lambert.
HMC;
Sunday, 7:58 p.m., Beech
Grove, Kenny Reynolds,
HMC.
.

and Dena Davis, Tim,Tina and Tere5a Molden, Adam and Daryl
documents. Prosecutors say Walker, Carrie Smith, and Kristi La~bert; five great~~randchilTraficant took credit for dren and two stepgreat-grandchildren; several meces and
resolving the issue . after nephews.
,
,
.
Bucheit got his money . in
Funeral sernces ~111 be at 11 a.m..o~ Wed~esday at B1rch- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1993.
field. Funeral Home m. Rutland. Offic1atmg Will be Pastor Paul
federal agencies responsible .
. A few months later, Traficarit Taylo~.
,
,
.
for overseeing this work and ·
had Bucheit oversee and pay
B~nal will foil~~ at Me1gs Memory Garden 111 Pomeroy.
thanked the many local and ·
Fnends may V!Sit &lt;:Jn,Thesd!y _frqm 2~4 P·'!'· and 7-9 p.m. at
contractors for the addition 'tO
f1om PapAl
regional partners who assist
his farm but never repaid the funeral home.
Bucheit the 526,000 for the
and surface mines is the sin- in the effort. He also recog-'
project, according to prosecuof .
gle-most pressing water nized the commitment
.
added "Plus, we are still ln the quality issue in the region, • i
tors' documents.
Ohio's present-Qay miqe .
process oflJuying m~ property.'' while erosion and sedimenIn 1998, Traficant wrote to
"Musser said a starting time for tation, if unchecked, great operators, who work to meet .
then-Secretary
of
State
from Pllp AI . )he walkway's construction increaie the threat of flood- strict state and federal reguMadeleine Albright and several
lations, ensuring that errors
members of Congress when lion-related structum in com- depends on how long it takes to ing," Taft said.
Bucheit ran into financial munities throughout Ohio.
' raise the rmWning funds, perHe praised the' state and of the past are not repeated.
problems with a manufacturPomeroy .Councilman john form preliminary engineering
ing company in Gaza, which Musser said Friday ~ $3S.&lt;JO? work and go through the bidding
Traficant had asked Gore to of the $65,~78 matching funds IS process. HC~WeVet a spring of
support·four years earlier.
"dearly·in sight:' ~ should be 2002 date seems ~tic, he said.
"After nine months of collected som.etune m the n~
"The omlkw.ty is a gre.\t proinquiries and investigations on future fiom the Appalachian 'ect d .. ~· · still
~-J an ~-re
\\U,~'IS very
behalf of Bucheit, - I have R egJ'onal Council ·
hard getting everything final
received nothing but empty
However,.Musser said that after ,__,,on 'd M
"I ,
sl not have been damaged frdm
PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) promises and backpedaling further evaluation of the project, ._., 5a1 • .usser. . ts a . ~
On
the
same
day
doctors
blood loss after the attack.
from the U.S. State Depart- additional mi:mey other than the process, but ~~;IS definitely gammg
offered good news about the
Jessie sometimes appears 'to
ment and the Overseas Private matching funds will need to be momentuJn:
condition
of
the
8-year-old
boy
understand what's going on
In other matters, Musser said
Investment Corp.," Traficant secured to help finance certified
healing
after
a
shark
tore
off
his
around
him, according to. the
appr.Usals ofiand and to purchase progress on the new riverfront
wrote to Albright.
project on the Pomeroy I~ arm, a surfer some .siX miles medical team that reattached his
Traficant could argue that more right-of-ways.
some. of the documents in Fri"We ~ that an ex!la wJ1!ch includes ' the constru_,Plon from that attack felt a shark's jaw arm .after a 200 pourtd b~U
sharkattacked him, also takin~ a
day's filings should be barred $70,&lt;XX&gt; will be needed to pur- of a boat docking facility and an dose on his leg.
The 48-year-old surfer, large bite out of his thigh. because the Constitution says a chase more right-of-ways and to area where boaters Could pur"We're proceeding with the
legislator's "speech or debate" pay for certified appraisals of land chase bait, fuel refreshments and whose name was not released,
was
surfing
Sunday
afternoon
lovely words of cautious optiin Congress can't be used already acquired;: said Musser. other 511pplies is moving swifily
off Santa. Rosa Island when the mism. Everyday, we seem to
"For. a project like this, OD0 forward.
'
against him. · .
shark bit him on the leg, causBut prosecutors say the doc- requJres that an extenstve
"We've recendy filed our ing puncture wounds, said Lt. progress a little bit further,'' said
Dr. Ian Rogers, the boy's chief
_uments prove that Traficant appraisal of the properties be. application with · the Ohio
Bob
Clark
of
the
Escambia
'
surgeon, in an interview Sunday
made the statemenc. ouc.ide .of undertaken:'
Department
of
Natural Counry Sheriff's Office.
"The.
village
will
have
10
hire
a
morning on ·NBC's "Today"
his role in Congress and that
He was in good condition at
· they were made to people ·firm ·that can perform these Resources fot funding," said a local hospital. The surfer told show.
.
Musser.
"We
anticipate
hearing
a
appraisals'
10
ODOT's
specificaDr.Juliet DeCampos said the
"from whom he was seeking,
witnesses he had noticed small
response
fiom
them
widlin
the
tions,
and
that
will
probably
coSt
demanding, accepting and
fish and a large shadow below boy fiom Ocean Springs, Mi~ .•
around $15,000-S20,000;' he ·next 60 days:'
receiving·things of value:'
him, but didn 'i think anyrhing appears to be responding 'lo
was wrong until he was bitten. family and doctors after days of
The attack occurred about sii&lt; being in what w.ls described as
'
~,
miles from where young Jessie a light coma.
Arbogast was attacked earlier
this month. On Sunday, doctors
(USPS 213-9601'
.
Rockwell- 16
AEP- 47%
usa23\
treating Jessie said his brain may
Ohio Yllley Publishing co.
Rocky Boots - 4l.
Arch coal- 23~
Gannett- 67~

Dolly
50 cents
Subscnbors not deslnng to pay the
carrier may remit in advance direct to
Ext. 14, The Dal~ Sentinel. Credit wiN bo given
· ' canler each week. No ouboenpllon by

Other services

I

f1om Page AI

_.

- CLEVELAND (AP)
. Court dt&gt;cuments filed in the
bribery and racketeering case
against U.S. Rep. James A. Traficant Jr. say the congressman
pressured top government
leaders including Vice PresidentAl Gore into helping peeple who did free work for him.
Federal prosecutors filed
mo!"' than 100 pages of docu·ments Friday in U.S. District
Court in Cleveland.
Among them is a 1994 letter
to Gore, which asks him to
help a,Youngstown company's
venture in the Middle East.
- "Why not helP, imAmerican
. company carry out this bold
initiative?"Traficant wrote. ·
The letter was written on
behalf of developer Bernard
"Pete" Bucheit, whose compa.ny paid for a $26,000 addition
"to Traficant's horse farm in
·Poland, prosecutors say.
Traficant was indicted on
May on charges of bribery, tax
evasion, obstruction of justice
•and racketeering. He has
-pleaded ini)OCent to all charges
and denies any wrongdoing.
Messages seeking comment
left at Traficant's offices in
Youngstown and Washington
on Saturday were not returned.
No phone number is listed for
Bucheit.
In the early 1990s, Bucheit
was fighting to collect $11.6
million for a shopping mall he
built in Saudi Arabia. Traficant
·stepped in, lobbying with the
:state Department and Saudi
:officials, according to court

LOCAL BRIEFS

Robert Worley Davis

.Cou·rt.documents offer first . sons-in-law,
Linda DeCarlo of Cleveland, Dian Molden and
Paul McD.aniel of Langsville, Rita and Paul Walker of Dexter,
•
,
•
Cinda and pave Lambert of Pomeroy; a twin brother; Ronald
evidence a·g. alnst Traficant .r·~is...of1:5exter;
a brother, Clyde Da~is of Rutla.nd; a . sis~er,
Mary . Catheryne Holter of Bashan; mne grandchildren, Billy

Correction Polley

..
(

RACINE·- William H. "Bill" C!ark,84, of Racine, formerly of Hurricane, W.Va., died on Sunday, July 15, 2001, at the
home of his son in Racin~ .
He was born on Oct. 9, 1916, in Graham Station, W.Va., son
of the late William H. and Bertha Elizabeth Hoflinan Clark. He
was a retired storeroom supervisor for American Electric
Power.
He was a member of the Junior Order of United American
Mechanics 175 of New Haven, W.Va., Ancient Free and
Accepted Masons, Clifton Lodge 23, Order of Honorable KeilttJcky Colonels, and the National Geographic Society.
S11rviving are his son and daughter-in-law, Ronald L. and
Judy Clark of Racine; a granddaughter and her. husband,
Leanne S. and Shawn Cunningam of Pomeroy; a great-graqddaughter, Kali Morgan Cunningham and great-grandson, Brayden Nash Cunningham, both of Pomeroy; and a brother, Harry
Clark of Bear .Creek, Ala.
"
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife,
Waneta Ketder Clark, in 1987; five sisters: Eliza]. Roush, Helen
Grindstead, Theresa Ohlinger, Beatha Clark, and Margaret
Clark; five brothers: Carl T. Clark, Lawrence R. Clark, Hoyt
ClaTk, Leo Clark, and Franklin Clark.
Grave$ide services .will be at Valley View Memorial Park in
Hurricane on Wednesday, July 18, 2001, :it I p.m. with Pastor
Mike Adkins officiating.
,
Friends may call at the Fogelsong-Thcker Funeral Home in
Mason, W.Va., on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
·

Reader Services
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Regular Price $5,465

_POMEROY - William J. Flaisig, 38, of U.S. 33, Pomeroy, ·
.dted unexpectedly on Wednesday,July 11,2001, at his home.
He was born on Nov. 5, 1962, in Olympia, Wash., son of
Edward Flaisig of Olympia, Wash ., and Diana Dute Flaisig. He
was employed by Pamida as a storeroom clerk.
Besides his parents, he is su.rvived by. his brother, Edward
Flaisig, of Olympia, Wash.
He was preceded in death by his sister, Cathy, and his grand"
parents.
Graveside services will be Wednesday,July 18,2001, at 1 p.m.
·at Mt. Hennon Cemetery with Elder Juanita WeDs officiatinil.
. Friends may call ·at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy on
Wednesday from 9 to noon.
. The family will accept contributions toward funeral expens-.
es, c/o Ewing Funeral Home.

The.Daily Sentinel

•

·camp hit by.charges of abUse·
.: LANCASTER (AP) -Two southeast Ohio judges saiti they
!.Viii not sentence troubled youths to a military-style boot camp
iinril an investigation is completed into allegations that a worker
sexually assaulted two girls.
.,
. A 14-year-old Pickerington girl and a IS-year-old Canal Winchester girl filed the complaints earlier this month with the Fairfield County Sheriff's office. ·
·
.
: The JUMP boot camp, whose initials stand for Juveniles United
f'yl.akjng Progress, opened about a year ,ago in the "eommunity of
J3remen .
Earlier this year. two former workers at the privately run camp
were accused of mistreating a 13-year-old boy by dunking him in
a barfl'l of cold water because he kept falling asleep. .
: Jimmy·Monroe,31,ofLogan, was charged with child endangerment, and Todd Coleman, 29, of Bremen, was chargee! with complicity to c~rnmit child endangerment in the dunking incident.

William aark'

in

senator released from hospital
'

William Flaisig

COLUMBUS -Vera M. Price (Mills), 70, Columbus, died
Saturday, July 14,2001, at Riverside Methodist Ho~pital.
Daughter ofVera Hayman and the late Harry Hayman, she
was retired from the Ohio Department of Administrative Service and.a_member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Ladies Auxiliary, Reynoldsburg ·Post No. 9473, and the Moose and Eagles.
Along with her father, she was preceded death.by her husbands, Elza R. Mills and Gerald Price; a daughter, Terilee Mills;
a brother, Robert Hayman .
She is survived by her mother, Vera Hayman of Racine; a
daughter and son-in-law, Vicky and Steven Thorn of Huber
Heights; five' brothers and three sisters-in-law, Harry WiUiam
·Hayman of LanGaster, James Hayman of Albany, Sidney and
Carol' Hayman of Rutland, George and Teri Hayman of
Gahanna, Jerry and Cindy Hayman of Lancaster; four sisters
and brothers-in~law, Miriam and Andrew Hrivnak of Colum'bus, Judith and A. Robert Hrivnak of Heath, Donna and A.
William Nease of Racine, Cheryl and Carroll Knight of Hartford, W.Va.; several aunts and uncles, nieces and nephews. ·
Funeral services will be at II :30 a.m. Wednesday at
Sclioedinger East Chapel in Columbus. Graveside services will
be at 2:30 p.m. at Gilmore Cemetery in Pomeroy.
Friends may call on Tuesday from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral
home.
---------~------------

Ho9ftal makes comeback

Hot and muggy on the way

Obituaries

Vera.M. Price (Mills)

in fair condition throughout his stay, the hospital said.
Further information about Carnes' condition was to be released
today by the senator's office.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

·Deaths

D

police department.
.
" Maybe they will listen to the pocketbook if not to us," said the Rev. Stephen ·
Scott of the Coalition for Equality and
Justice. "
Cecil Thol)laS, executive director for
the city's human relations commission ,
attended the boycott announcement. He
said he hopes the black leaders urging the
boycott can resolve the situation by.
working with Cincinnati Co"'muniry
Action Now, the organization Mayor
Charlie Luken formed after the April
riots. ,
The group is spearheading efforts to
improve racial disparities berween blacks
and whites in such areas as education ,·
economic advancement and police relations.

Pomeroy, M!pfleport, Ohio

Akzo - 40),
AmTecnsac- 42
Ashland Inc.- 39),
AT&amp;T-20l•
Bani&lt; One~ 35), ·
Bob Evans -18~
BorgWamer- 51~
Chlll11piOn- 3
Channing Shope - 6~
City Holding -121'.
DuPont-45~

General EleCtric - 47\
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Kmart-11%

Kroger- 23\

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Oak Hill Financial- 14\
OVB - 25

B8T- 36

Peoples-19

Federal Mogul-1~

• Premier- 7\

Seall-44~
Shoney's-~

Wai-Mar1 - 521'.
Wendy's - 25\
Wor1hlng1Dn -13~
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the 4 p.m. ' closing
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�•
10

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, July 17
AcctJWeath~

CINCINNATI (AP) - Black activists
and religious leaders have caLled for an
international boycott on downtown
businesses because they say the tiry has
not progressed on ra cial issues since the
April riots sparked by the fatal poliCe
shooting of an unarmed black man.
the Cincinnati Black United Front,
along with several other groups, on Saturday said they would ask tourists not to
visit Cincinnati, tell organizations to hold
their national conventions elsewhere, and
ask residents not to spend money downtown.
"We call for an immediate and total
withdrawal of travel and tourism business
from Cincinnati," said Juleana Frierson,
spokeswoman for ·the Cincinnati Black
United Front.

MICH.

I TOiodo

184"/IMI"

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1 u.natletd 163"183"

•IColumbus 1&amp;9"/85" I

,

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...
0~---~-

Sun"V Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

Monday, July 16, 2001

Monday, July 16, 1001

Black leaders call for boycott of Cinc~nnati

·ohio weather

••

PageA2.

Showers T-Siorme

,, ,

Rain

....
Aunias

.Power pl~nt debate

~tiit!:~ " " "

Snow

.,

I

She said economic sanctions have been
the most effective nonviolent method to
achieve soci~ and economic change.
Frierson and $everal other speakers said
they believed they had no other options.
"We will no longer tolerate Cincinnati
apartheid," she told about 80 people
gathered outside New Prospect Baptist
Church for the boycott announcement.
Frierson said the Cincinnati Black
United Front has obtained a list of
groups that have conventions in Cincinnati through 2003 .and will ask them to
relocate.
She also read a list of demands Saturday
that inclu~~ - funding for neighborhood
development plans, amnesty for those
jailed during t~e April riots, and the
elimination of racial profiling in the city's

~··

lea

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sunny skies were expected
· again on Tuesday but relative ·
' ' humidities will be on the
increase as southerly winds
-bring more moiture into the
region.
Highs will be close to .90
degrees.
There ,will be a chance of a
· few scattered showers on Tues· day, with a strong possibiliry of
,rain on Wednesday.
·
Sunset tonight will be at

8:59 p.m. and sunrise on Tuesday at 6:17a.m.
Forecast
Today: Partly cloudy. High
86, low 64.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
84, low 69.
Wednesday: ThiJnderstorms.
High 86, low 50.
Thursday: Thunderstorms.
High 82, low 61.
Friday: Partly cloudy. High
84, low 63.

Jocelyn van Toor of St. Paul, Minn. holds her daughter
Suzanne, 2, while she talks to a crowd of people at Fountain
Square in Cincinnati during a clean air rally. van Toor says her
son Winston, 4, right being held by Sierra Club activist Glen
. ZANESVILLE (AP) - Work is nearing completion on a S3 . Brand, has asthma which is made worse by a coal-fired power
plant less than a mile from their home. An air pollution regu,nrillion renovation ~t Genesis Good Samaritan Hospital, where lation now under review is not being enforced well enough,
construction improvemenc. began last July.
environmentalists told federal regulators Tuesday.
Power
. ~ "Simply, ihe space we had was inadequat: to handle the amount industry officials complain that the regulation of new sources
. ofpatienc. we had," said Cheryl Hull, director of cardiovasc11lar ser- of air pollution are too restrictive on power plants and Increase
: vices.
maintenance time and costs. (AP Photo)

· Hospital gets room to grow

The old emergency department had 13 rooms with two trauma
.beds. '
'
, The new one will include 18 beds, a waiting area for patie,nc.,
. , 'two 'trauma rooms, an orthopedic injury room, a.sexual assault
: ·exam room and two rooms for cardiovascular patients.
The renovation means the emergency department has twice as
· much space as·before.
· "The rooms were so small you could hardly work in them," said
- Carla Weaver, manager of emergency services.
Nationally, emergency rooms have been experiencing over-.
crowding beca11se of an aging population, a lack of primary· care
phyJiciam and more uninsured patients.

Communltl11 compete
CLEVELAND (AP)- Rescued trom cities that tore up their
tnckl, Trolleyvill~ USA's vintage ametcan in the next few yean
will be ·uprooted again.
,
Several communi tie~ and private organizatiom are competing to
become the new home ofTrolleyville. Within Qve yean, the museum must leave the mobile-home complex it has occupied since
1954 in suburban Olmsted Township.
"We won't be homeless," said Trolleyville general manager Clif·
ford Perry. "We've had eight inquiries and one presentation sci far."
The Columbia Park trailer park was sold last month, and the
new owners issued the deadline to move its 30 vintage streetcars,
· tracks, overhead wires and.buildings.
•
· The move will cost about $1 nrillion and the museum needs at
.least 10 ~cres, Perry said. Offers of moving aid will matter in the
choice, he added. He declined to name the prospective sites.
The late Cer:il.d Brookins founded both 'the trailer park andTrolleyville, which·"is officially the Gerald E. Brookins Museum of
Electric Railway~ Inc.
-

Both have pleaded innocent and face trial next month in Fairfield
Counry Municipal Court.

Tall ships attendance sails
CLEVELAND (AP) -A quarter of a million adults and countless children crowded Cleveland's lakefiont over the weekend to
view 17 tall thips, doubling attendance predictions for the city's first
Harborfest.
'On today, the Wooden vessels were getting ready to set sail for
Detroit, where they will help the city celebrate its tricontennial.
This was the large1t gathering of the hiatorlc repllcas in Cleveland.
Buoyed in part by San Diego-like weather, event coordinaton ·
told 228,000 S7 to SlO ticket~ to tour the docked thlpt Fridiy
through Sunday. Children under 10 were admitted free.
· "You walk on these shiDI and it\ as if you've stepped back into
the 1BOOs on a pirate ship,h said Louann .Lauer of Cleveland, whose
only previous experience with sailing was Windjammer crultea in
the Caribbean,
.
At times during the four-day festival, the crush of people made
it seem as if every weekend boater and day sailor in northeast Ohio
had come to the harbor.

Police: Shootings gang related

Ride honors slain pollee offkers ·
CLEVELAND (AP) - Uniformed p.olii:e officers and riders in
jeans and leather jackec. were among nearly 500 motorcyclists who
rode into Cleveland oyer the weekend in a tribute to s~ officers.
Riders in the second annual Wayne Leon Police Memorial
Motorcycle Rally left fiom the Akron Pulice Department and
wound through Parma on Sunday. In Cleveland, .they passed the
police station where Leon worked and paused at the downtown
police memorial.
·
Quisi Bryan was sentenced to death in November for shoqting
Leon during a traffic stop in J~ne 2000. Participanc. honored all
northeast Ohio officers killed while on duty.
"We will never forget our fallen brothers and sisters," said Patrolman Paul Hlynsky, president of Akron's Fraternal Order of Police.
The even(, which ended at the Cuyahoga County Fairgrqun&amp;,
raised $800 for the Greater Cleveland Police Scholarship Fund.
The fund benefits the children of officers. This year's.recipient gets
$3,200.

· CINCINNATI (AP) - Turf battles among gangs and drug
dealers account for many of the recent shootings in ·a· blighted
neighborhood that was the scene of riots in April, police say.
· At least 77 people have been shot in 59 incidents' cirywide since
the ,riots, which were sparked by the shopting of an unarmed black
man by a white police officer.
·
·
'
· Saturday riight, five men standing on a street corner in Over-the.
Rhine were Wounded in a drive-by shooting.
"It's. all about gangs, drugs, money and power, who's going to
control what, who's going to con~ the neighbor~ood;' Cincinnati Detective Brett Gleckler said.
. · "! have never seen this much gunplay .without regard for .life,"
said Lt. Roger Wolf, a supervisor in the police Criminal InvestigaCOLUMBUS {AP) - A state senator fiom eastern Ohio has
been released from the Ohio State University Medical Center, the
tions Section.
hospital said Sunday.
·
: Some residents lock themselves in at night.
: ·~r wouldn't dare go out at night;' said Annie 9iglio, 92. ''I'd be 0n Thursday, Sen. James Carnes,' a Republican fiom St.
Clairsville, was admitted with chest .pains for observation. He was
~oo scared."
•

&gt;

CLEVELAND (AP) - By joining a natio?wide trend, a.tiny
Cleveland hospital that seemed on the brink of closing a decade
ago has found new life.
·
·
In 1995, Grace Hospital dedicated its 86 beds to long-term acute
care. Rather than succumbing to the consolidation that swept the
local market in the mid-1990s, it now counts on the larger hospitals for referrals.
The 91-year-old institution "would have been seen as the least
likely hospital to ~urvive the highly dynamic market changes,:'
Robert Range, Grace's president and chief executive officer, told
The Plain Dealer on Sunday.
..
So much for conventional ;wisdom. Much larger hospitajs were
bought, sold, merged or closed as Universiry. Hospitals Health System and the Cleveland Clinic Health System dominated the market.
Grace remained independent and grew by no longer competing .
for the same patients - thos~ who typically stay for fiye days.
!llStead, Cuyahoga County's first certified long-term acute-care
hospital focuses on patients whose special ne~ds require longt;r
stays - an average of 28 days.,

cand. . . promote dosure
CLEVELAND (AP) - Some Cleveland mayoral candidates
want the· city to follow Chicago's eX3!pl&gt;le by convertin'g a small
lakefiont airport to a park.
At le:ist five candidates want 54-year-old Burke Lak~fiont Airport to follow the fate of Chicago's Meigs Field, which doses next
year.
.
.
.
·
"Let's. connect the n~ighborhoods back to the lakefiont," said
\llldeclared candidate Joe Cimperman, a city councilman whose
downtown,ward includes the airport. ,
·
Over the past 20 years, several debates about Burke's future coneluded that closing it would take decades and require repayment of
nrillions of dollan in federal giantlo. But Meigs' closure shows that
federal rulet don't necmarily handculf cities that own airports.
The two airfields opened. a year apart. Both lose nrillions each

year.

Burke wu built on the city's former waterfront trash dump and
expancled on mud dreclpd &amp;om the lake bottom. It serves !light
tchooll,tome butlne~~jetl and heUcopten. Melli' wanomtructed
on a bull~up Wand in Lake Michipn and tervet mostly corporate
jell. Unlike Burke, It handln aome commcreial passenger !lights. ·

Hlte pOUpl thltve In Ohio
COLUMBUS (AP) - Hate groups are recruiting more young
people in Ohio through the Internet, direct mailings and music,
and 10me watchdog groups claim the state could become the new
natiohal headquarters for Aryan Nations.
The Ohio l~r of the Aryan Nations was arrested July 5 at his .
home in Delaware County.
'"It's kind of a wake-up call to people living in central Ohio that
these groups do. exist," Sheriff AI Myers told The Columbus Dispatch fo~ a story Sunday.
.
· Danny :William Kincaid was charged as a felon in possession of
firearms and a,pipe bomb. He pleaded innocent to firearms charges
Friday. His trial was set for Aug. 27.
·
The arrest followed a 13-month investigation of Kincaid, identified by the FBI as a leader in the national white-supremacist
group, whose headquarters are in Idaho. According to col!rt
records, Kincaid sold more than a dozen weapons, includin~ a
Russian SKS assault tifle, to a federal informant.
National hate-group watchdogs have id~ntified dozens of whitesupremacY o~zations frOm Clevelimd to Athens. ·
.

.

Our main concern In all stories is

..................
I 1 ••111111 •

to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a story, call the newsroom

at (740) 992-2156.

News Departments
. The main number. Is 992-2156.
Department extentions are:

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•

news Omydallysentinel.com

On the Web
www.mydallysentinel.com

POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered IS calls for assi!tance over the weekend. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 1:15 a.m., Beech
Street, Margaret Dunn, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
9:06
a.m .,
Mulberry
Avenue, Lisa Haggy, Holzer
Medical Center;'
3:30 p.m., Union Avenue,
Laura Hysel, HMC;
5:36 p.m., Lincoln Heights ,
Nancy Ziegler, HMC;
8:36 p.m., Ohio 248, Connie Abbott, St. Joseph's Hospital;
Sunday, 8:08 a.m ., Darst
Home, Imogene Knapp,
. HMC;
9:48 p.m., Dudding -Lane,
William Clark, · dead on
arrival;

Firm

MIDDLEPORT - Robert.Worley Davis, 75, Middleport, .
died Sunday, July 15,2001, at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
Born May 19, 1926, he was the son of the late Worley and
Gladys Thomas Davis and was a retired brakesman for the Conrail Railroad System, where he worked for 27 years.
He also was an Army veteran ofWorld Wa~ II and a member
of the Feeney-Bennett Post 128 in Middleport and Meigs DAV
No. 53.
Along with his parents, he was preceded in death by ·a brother, Kenneth·Davi!; a great-granddaughter, Casey Ann Hysell.
He is surVived by his wife, Beatrice Tracy Davis of Middle, port; two sons and one daughter-in-law, Bill and Irene Davis of
Heath, Glenn Davis of Middleport; four daughters and two

Markets Venture Capital Program created within the SBA.
The program is designed to
bring investment capital to
economically distressed urban
and rural areas.
Ohio University is the·
fund's largest individual
investor, providing $2.75 milli.on . The university has
pledged to help companies
develop business and marketing plans and provide financial guidance through its
Appalachian Regional Entrepreneurship
Initiative
(ARE!), which is part of the
Voinovich Center for Leadership and Public Affairs. .
"We believe this effort is
important for the region, and
thus we support it," OU Pres-

ident Robert Glidden said,
adding that the universiry: is
proud OU alumnus David
Wilhelm is leading the effort.
Wilhelm ahd his partners
began raising money for the
initiative in Appalachian Ohio
in Decemb~r 1999. They later
expanded the program to
include Appalachian areas in
sur.rounding states.
"As hard as we've worked
to get to this point, we )r~
committed ·to working even
harder to mak.e this a successful example for the nation,"
said Lynn Gellerman, president and chief operating officer of Adena Venrures .
"We are reminded every
day that we did not get here
alone, and we are thankful for
t~ vision and courage that
our investors and strategic
· partners have providea;:
Gellerman added.

ODNR

Funding

Shark bites Panhandle surfer
·near site of boy's attack

LOCAL STOCKS

Published fWery afternoon, Monday

through Friday,

111

Court Sl., •

Pomeroy,
Ol'llo.
Second-class
postage paid al Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and

the ONo N . _ r Aosoclalion.
.
Postm11ter: Send addfeu correc·
11ons10 The Dal~ Sentinel, 111 Coun.
Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Subscription ratea
B y - or motor route

OneOne month
Ono row

S2

$8.70
$104

mall permitted .in areas where home

AdVertialng

EMS log calls

6:45 p.m ., Ohio 143,
Melinda Laudermilt, HMQ;
9:49 p.m., Fourth Stre.et,,
. Ronnie Pickens, PVH;
11:49 p.m., Mulberry
Avenue, Danny Haggy, HMC.
POMEROY
Saturday, 9:!8 p.m., Counry
Road 7A, motor vehicle accident, Cindy Scott, refused
treatmeitt, Shaw"n Marcinco,
St. Mary's Hospital. .
RACINE
. .
Saturday, 2:05 p.m., Bald
Knob Road, brush fire, Burns
residence, no injuries.
SALEM TOWNSHIP
Sunday, Ohio 124, structure
fire, assisted by Pomeroy and ,
Rutland, no injuries.
RUTLAND
Saturday, 3:42 p.m., Dye
Road, Andrew Lambert.
HMC;
Sunday, 7:58 p.m., Beech
Grove, Kenny Reynolds,
HMC.
.

and Dena Davis, Tim,Tina and Tere5a Molden, Adam and Daryl
documents. Prosecutors say Walker, Carrie Smith, and Kristi La~bert; five great~~randchilTraficant took credit for dren and two stepgreat-grandchildren; several meces and
resolving the issue . after nephews.
,
,
.
Bucheit got his money . in
Funeral sernces ~111 be at 11 a.m..o~ Wed~esday at B1rch- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1993.
field. Funeral Home m. Rutland. Offic1atmg Will be Pastor Paul
federal agencies responsible .
. A few months later, Traficarit Taylo~.
,
,
.
for overseeing this work and ·
had Bucheit oversee and pay
B~nal will foil~~ at Me1gs Memory Garden 111 Pomeroy.
thanked the many local and ·
Fnends may V!Sit &lt;:Jn,Thesd!y _frqm 2~4 P·'!'· and 7-9 p.m. at
contractors for the addition 'tO
f1om PapAl
regional partners who assist
his farm but never repaid the funeral home.
Bucheit the 526,000 for the
and surface mines is the sin- in the effort. He also recog-'
project, according to prosecuof .
gle-most pressing water nized the commitment
.
added "Plus, we are still ln the quality issue in the region, • i
tors' documents.
Ohio's present-Qay miqe .
process oflJuying m~ property.'' while erosion and sedimenIn 1998, Traficant wrote to
"Musser said a starting time for tation, if unchecked, great operators, who work to meet .
then-Secretary
of
State
from Pllp AI . )he walkway's construction increaie the threat of flood- strict state and federal reguMadeleine Albright and several
lations, ensuring that errors
members of Congress when lion-related structum in com- depends on how long it takes to ing," Taft said.
Bucheit ran into financial munities throughout Ohio.
' raise the rmWning funds, perHe praised the' state and of the past are not repeated.
problems with a manufacturPomeroy .Councilman john form preliminary engineering
ing company in Gaza, which Musser said Friday ~ $3S.&lt;JO? work and go through the bidding
Traficant had asked Gore to of the $65,~78 matching funds IS process. HC~WeVet a spring of
support·four years earlier.
"dearly·in sight:' ~ should be 2002 date seems ~tic, he said.
"After nine months of collected som.etune m the n~
"The omlkw.ty is a gre.\t proinquiries and investigations on future fiom the Appalachian 'ect d .. ~· · still
~-J an ~-re
\\U,~'IS very
behalf of Bucheit, - I have R egJ'onal Council ·
hard getting everything final
received nothing but empty
However,.Musser said that after ,__,,on 'd M
"I ,
sl not have been damaged frdm
PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) promises and backpedaling further evaluation of the project, ._., 5a1 • .usser. . ts a . ~
On
the
same
day
doctors
blood loss after the attack.
from the U.S. State Depart- additional mi:mey other than the process, but ~~;IS definitely gammg
offered good news about the
Jessie sometimes appears 'to
ment and the Overseas Private matching funds will need to be momentuJn:
condition
of
the
8-year-old
boy
understand what's going on
In other matters, Musser said
Investment Corp.," Traficant secured to help finance certified
healing
after
a
shark
tore
off
his
around
him, according to. the
appr.Usals ofiand and to purchase progress on the new riverfront
wrote to Albright.
project on the Pomeroy I~ arm, a surfer some .siX miles medical team that reattached his
Traficant could argue that more right-of-ways.
some. of the documents in Fri"We ~ that an ex!la wJ1!ch includes ' the constru_,Plon from that attack felt a shark's jaw arm .after a 200 pourtd b~U
sharkattacked him, also takin~ a
day's filings should be barred $70,&lt;XX&gt; will be needed to pur- of a boat docking facility and an dose on his leg.
The 48-year-old surfer, large bite out of his thigh. because the Constitution says a chase more right-of-ways and to area where boaters Could pur"We're proceeding with the
legislator's "speech or debate" pay for certified appraisals of land chase bait, fuel refreshments and whose name was not released,
was
surfing
Sunday
afternoon
lovely words of cautious optiin Congress can't be used already acquired;: said Musser. other 511pplies is moving swifily
off Santa. Rosa Island when the mism. Everyday, we seem to
"For. a project like this, OD0 forward.
'
against him. · .
shark bit him on the leg, causBut prosecutors say the doc- requJres that an extenstve
"We've recendy filed our ing puncture wounds, said Lt. progress a little bit further,'' said
Dr. Ian Rogers, the boy's chief
_uments prove that Traficant appraisal of the properties be. application with · the Ohio
Bob
Clark
of
the
Escambia
'
surgeon, in an interview Sunday
made the statemenc. ouc.ide .of undertaken:'
Department
of
Natural Counry Sheriff's Office.
"The.
village
will
have
10
hire
a
morning on ·NBC's "Today"
his role in Congress and that
He was in good condition at
· they were made to people ·firm ·that can perform these Resources fot funding," said a local hospital. The surfer told show.
.
Musser.
"We
anticipate
hearing
a
appraisals'
10
ODOT's
specificaDr.Juliet DeCampos said the
"from whom he was seeking,
witnesses he had noticed small
response
fiom
them
widlin
the
tions,
and
that
will
probably
coSt
demanding, accepting and
fish and a large shadow below boy fiom Ocean Springs, Mi~ .•
around $15,000-S20,000;' he ·next 60 days:'
receiving·things of value:'
him, but didn 'i think anyrhing appears to be responding 'lo
was wrong until he was bitten. family and doctors after days of
The attack occurred about sii&lt; being in what w.ls described as
'
~,
miles from where young Jessie a light coma.
Arbogast was attacked earlier
this month. On Sunday, doctors
(USPS 213-9601'
.
Rockwell- 16
AEP- 47%
usa23\
treating Jessie said his brain may
Ohio Yllley Publishing co.
Rocky Boots - 4l.
Arch coal- 23~
Gannett- 67~

Dolly
50 cents
Subscnbors not deslnng to pay the
carrier may remit in advance direct to
Ext. 14, The Dal~ Sentinel. Credit wiN bo given
· ' canler each week. No ouboenpllon by

Other services

I

f1om Page AI

_.

- CLEVELAND (AP)
. Court dt&gt;cuments filed in the
bribery and racketeering case
against U.S. Rep. James A. Traficant Jr. say the congressman
pressured top government
leaders including Vice PresidentAl Gore into helping peeple who did free work for him.
Federal prosecutors filed
mo!"' than 100 pages of docu·ments Friday in U.S. District
Court in Cleveland.
Among them is a 1994 letter
to Gore, which asks him to
help a,Youngstown company's
venture in the Middle East.
- "Why not helP, imAmerican
. company carry out this bold
initiative?"Traficant wrote. ·
The letter was written on
behalf of developer Bernard
"Pete" Bucheit, whose compa.ny paid for a $26,000 addition
"to Traficant's horse farm in
·Poland, prosecutors say.
Traficant was indicted on
May on charges of bribery, tax
evasion, obstruction of justice
•and racketeering. He has
-pleaded ini)OCent to all charges
and denies any wrongdoing.
Messages seeking comment
left at Traficant's offices in
Youngstown and Washington
on Saturday were not returned.
No phone number is listed for
Bucheit.
In the early 1990s, Bucheit
was fighting to collect $11.6
million for a shopping mall he
built in Saudi Arabia. Traficant
·stepped in, lobbying with the
:state Department and Saudi
:officials, according to court

LOCAL BRIEFS

Robert Worley Davis

.Cou·rt.documents offer first . sons-in-law,
Linda DeCarlo of Cleveland, Dian Molden and
Paul McD.aniel of Langsville, Rita and Paul Walker of Dexter,
•
,
•
Cinda and pave Lambert of Pomeroy; a twin brother; Ronald
evidence a·g. alnst Traficant .r·~is...of1:5exter;
a brother, Clyde Da~is of Rutla.nd; a . sis~er,
Mary . Catheryne Holter of Bashan; mne grandchildren, Billy

Correction Polley

..
(

RACINE·- William H. "Bill" C!ark,84, of Racine, formerly of Hurricane, W.Va., died on Sunday, July 15, 2001, at the
home of his son in Racin~ .
He was born on Oct. 9, 1916, in Graham Station, W.Va., son
of the late William H. and Bertha Elizabeth Hoflinan Clark. He
was a retired storeroom supervisor for American Electric
Power.
He was a member of the Junior Order of United American
Mechanics 175 of New Haven, W.Va., Ancient Free and
Accepted Masons, Clifton Lodge 23, Order of Honorable KeilttJcky Colonels, and the National Geographic Society.
S11rviving are his son and daughter-in-law, Ronald L. and
Judy Clark of Racine; a granddaughter and her. husband,
Leanne S. and Shawn Cunningam of Pomeroy; a great-graqddaughter, Kali Morgan Cunningham and great-grandson, Brayden Nash Cunningham, both of Pomeroy; and a brother, Harry
Clark of Bear .Creek, Ala.
"
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife,
Waneta Ketder Clark, in 1987; five sisters: Eliza]. Roush, Helen
Grindstead, Theresa Ohlinger, Beatha Clark, and Margaret
Clark; five brothers: Carl T. Clark, Lawrence R. Clark, Hoyt
ClaTk, Leo Clark, and Franklin Clark.
Grave$ide services .will be at Valley View Memorial Park in
Hurricane on Wednesday, July 18, 2001, :it I p.m. with Pastor
Mike Adkins officiating.
,
Friends may call at the Fogelsong-Thcker Funeral Home in
Mason, W.Va., on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
·

Reader Services
- - m i T Ill ·

Regular Price $5,465

_POMEROY - William J. Flaisig, 38, of U.S. 33, Pomeroy, ·
.dted unexpectedly on Wednesday,July 11,2001, at his home.
He was born on Nov. 5, 1962, in Olympia, Wash., son of
Edward Flaisig of Olympia, Wash ., and Diana Dute Flaisig. He
was employed by Pamida as a storeroom clerk.
Besides his parents, he is su.rvived by. his brother, Edward
Flaisig, of Olympia, Wash.
He was preceded in death by his sister, Cathy, and his grand"
parents.
Graveside services will be Wednesday,July 18,2001, at 1 p.m.
·at Mt. Hennon Cemetery with Elder Juanita WeDs officiatinil.
. Friends may call ·at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy on
Wednesday from 9 to noon.
. The family will accept contributions toward funeral expens-.
es, c/o Ewing Funeral Home.

The.Daily Sentinel

•

·camp hit by.charges of abUse·
.: LANCASTER (AP) -Two southeast Ohio judges saiti they
!.Viii not sentence troubled youths to a military-style boot camp
iinril an investigation is completed into allegations that a worker
sexually assaulted two girls.
.,
. A 14-year-old Pickerington girl and a IS-year-old Canal Winchester girl filed the complaints earlier this month with the Fairfield County Sheriff's office. ·
·
.
: The JUMP boot camp, whose initials stand for Juveniles United
f'yl.akjng Progress, opened about a year ,ago in the "eommunity of
J3remen .
Earlier this year. two former workers at the privately run camp
were accused of mistreating a 13-year-old boy by dunking him in
a barfl'l of cold water because he kept falling asleep. .
: Jimmy·Monroe,31,ofLogan, was charged with child endangerment, and Todd Coleman, 29, of Bremen, was chargee! with complicity to c~rnmit child endangerment in the dunking incident.

William aark'

in

senator released from hospital
'

William Flaisig

COLUMBUS -Vera M. Price (Mills), 70, Columbus, died
Saturday, July 14,2001, at Riverside Methodist Ho~pital.
Daughter ofVera Hayman and the late Harry Hayman, she
was retired from the Ohio Department of Administrative Service and.a_member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Ladies Auxiliary, Reynoldsburg ·Post No. 9473, and the Moose and Eagles.
Along with her father, she was preceded death.by her husbands, Elza R. Mills and Gerald Price; a daughter, Terilee Mills;
a brother, Robert Hayman .
She is survived by her mother, Vera Hayman of Racine; a
daughter and son-in-law, Vicky and Steven Thorn of Huber
Heights; five' brothers and three sisters-in-law, Harry WiUiam
·Hayman of LanGaster, James Hayman of Albany, Sidney and
Carol' Hayman of Rutland, George and Teri Hayman of
Gahanna, Jerry and Cindy Hayman of Lancaster; four sisters
and brothers-in~law, Miriam and Andrew Hrivnak of Colum'bus, Judith and A. Robert Hrivnak of Heath, Donna and A.
William Nease of Racine, Cheryl and Carroll Knight of Hartford, W.Va.; several aunts and uncles, nieces and nephews. ·
Funeral services will be at II :30 a.m. Wednesday at
Sclioedinger East Chapel in Columbus. Graveside services will
be at 2:30 p.m. at Gilmore Cemetery in Pomeroy.
Friends may call on Tuesday from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral
home.
---------~------------

Ho9ftal makes comeback

Hot and muggy on the way

Obituaries

Vera.M. Price (Mills)

in fair condition throughout his stay, the hospital said.
Further information about Carnes' condition was to be released
today by the senator's office.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

·Deaths

D

police department.
.
" Maybe they will listen to the pocketbook if not to us," said the Rev. Stephen ·
Scott of the Coalition for Equality and
Justice. "
Cecil Thol)laS, executive director for
the city's human relations commission ,
attended the boycott announcement. He
said he hopes the black leaders urging the
boycott can resolve the situation by.
working with Cincinnati Co"'muniry
Action Now, the organization Mayor
Charlie Luken formed after the April
riots. ,
The group is spearheading efforts to
improve racial disparities berween blacks
and whites in such areas as education ,·
economic advancement and police relations.

Pomeroy, M!pfleport, Ohio

Akzo - 40),
AmTecnsac- 42
Ashland Inc.- 39),
AT&amp;T-20l•
Bani&lt; One~ 35), ·
Bob Evans -18~
BorgWamer- 51~
Chlll11piOn- 3
Channing Shope - 6~
City Holding -121'.
DuPont-45~

General EleCtric - 47\
GKNLY- 9~
. Harley DaVIdson- 51\
Kmart-11%

Kroger- 23\

Lllnds End- 4H
Ltd. -16'/.
Oak Hill Financial- 14\
OVB - 25

B8T- 36

Peoples-19

Federal Mogul-1~

• Premier- 7\

Seall-44~
Shoney's-~

Wai-Mar1 - 521'.
Wendy's - 25\
Wor1hlng1Dn -13~
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. ' closing
quotes of lhe previous

day'sttanucliona,prolllded by Smith Partners
a1 Advelllnc.

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•

AD Sl1ell- 56),

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY

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�'
•

I

-opinion

The Daily Sentinel

_Th_eo_rui_ys_en_tin_ei~--~~~Jthe :Bend

Page A4 Monday, July"1I, 1001

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

...

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

··.... :1
~

••
lilt

Utt~n to tit~ editor an w&lt;kom~. Th ~y sJwuJJ hr leu tho" 300 words. Alllntrn
sllbjtcr 10 edillng tlfrd must be rig11td and inrludt addrtss and teltphtmt number.

No 114111lgnt d l~lten will II# publlsheJ. l ..dlt&gt;rr should bt in grkJd tmlt• adilress•'ng
_
•
·

iuu.s, 11111 ptnoMiili,.
Tlu oplllioru upnutd in tht ('0/umn

b~low

arfl thr catutrmu·of thr Ohl'o \11/leJ

Publhhirrg Co. '$ tdilun'al boord, unlfl.ll)lhtrwist noted.

NATIONAL VIEWS
.'
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'

• The Seattle. Times, on contmcepti11e co;,erage: U.S. District
Court Judge Robert Lasriik has brought women closer to. gender equity by ruling Bartell Drugs must cover prescription
contracep tives in its employee-medical plan.
Lasnik oorrec tly calJs. Bartell's exclusio n o'fbirth control from· ·
its health-coverage plan a fonli of gender' discriminati0t(."The
family-owned drugstore chain covers almost all drug! and
devices used by men, yet excludes prescription contraceptives
in its coverage offered to female employees. That is patently
Ullfair.
.
: The issue has always been whether insurance plans that cover
prescriptions should include contraceptives. The answer is a
&lt;fefinite yes.
.
It is unfair to women of child- bearing age 'to have the pill
not covered by an insurance plan that covers other prescription
medicine. Such exclusion hits women where they already feel
inequit}' -· in their pocketbook. Without contraceptive cover. age, women end · up paying more of their .own money for
health care.
rhere is a cost savings as well. Avoiding unintended pregnancies is the most effective way to prevem abortions and the
1Jtt\&gt;lic com associated with giving birth to an unwanted child.
.., •

..

. When Congress.- passed the Pregnancy Discrimination Act
balming sex discrimination on the basis of "pregnancy, child. blrth or related medical conditions," it meant that in all areas 'o f
employment, including benefits. ... .
~.·
· • The Salt Lake Tribune, on Germany's mtclear sllutdow11:
Germany's agreememlast Monday to shut down the country's
1.9 nuclear plants is furth er evidence 'that Presidem Bush was
"£ise to ignore Europe's hypocritical hand-wringers and dump
t~e 1997 Kyoto treaty... .
Germany's 19 nuclear plants produce 35 percent of the
country's electricity with nary a hothouse fume. If they were to
shptdown, the engine of Europe's largest economy would stall,
urtless the facilities were replaced with plams that produce the
gases·. that Germany had agreed to reduce.
' Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who l1as led Europe's browb~ating of Bush, is vague about what Germany will do to
replace· its lost power, though he offers baseless assurances that
th~ solution will be "environmentally friendly."
It sounds wonderful , since no one likes smog, and so-called
"~oft path" energy sources, such as wind po.wer and solar cells,
dOn't produce any. But as Califorma fin ally has . realized after
&amp;cades of trying, the soft path can on ly take you so far. The
Golden State has dumped billions into developing renewable
·
energy in th e past 30 years. .. .
Even if Germany ca n match California's commitment to
renewable energy, a number oJ big coal-, oil-, and gas-burners
will have to be built to make up for 't he lost nuclear power .. ,
which is w hy Germany (and every other country that signed
the Kyoto accord) has failed to ratifY it..
Th e U.S. Senate voted 95-0 .last year against ratifYing the
tn!;lty and Bush decided this year to e1id the charade and d'!mp
11 ~!together. Germans have produced a lo t of hot air recently
with their Pccksniffian posturing over this great environmental
sl;ub, but their acti ons prove Bush was ri ght all along.
•
•
•

/

TODAY IN · HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, July 16, the 197th day of2001.There are 168
days left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
.
On July 16, 1945, the United States exploded its fim experimental atomic bomb, in the desert of Alamogordo, N.M :
On this date:
·
In 1790, the District of Columbia ·;.,a~ established as the seat of
the United States ·government.
'
)n 1862, David G. Farragut became the first rear admiral in thf!
l;lnited States Navy. .
.
~ In 1918, Russia's Czar Nichola' II , his empress and their five
.ch!ldren were executed by the Bolsheviks.
,. 11;11951, the novel "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D. Salinger
~- first published.
. ,
:1n 1964, in accepting the R epublican presidemial nomination in
san.Francisco, Barry M. Goldwater said "extremism in the defense
ofliberty is no vice'' and that "moderation in the pursuit ofj ustice

iS no vjrtue."
In 1969, Apollo 11 blasted off from Cape Kennedy on the first
manned mission to the surface of the moon.
In 1973, during the Senate Watergate hearings, former White
House aide Alexander P. Butterfield publicly revealed the existence
of President Nixon's secret taping system.
·
In 1980, former Californja Governor Ronald Reagan won the
Republiqn 1presidential numina.tion at the party's convention in
- Detroi t. '\; .
•
In 1981, singer H arry C hapin was killed when his car was st'tuck
by" a tractor-trailer on N~w York's Long Island Expressway.

,.

How ·Thomas jefferson ·saved the .FirstAmendment
On the Fourth of July, not only th e
Declaration of Independence, written by
Thomas Jeffer son, was celebrated. Also
honored, in various orations, was the Bill
of Rights. Ho~ many Americans know
that the Constitution was not ratified by
the individual states until those 10
amendments, tbe Bill of Rights, were
added? From the First Amendment -which guaranteed freedom of speech
and of the press -- all our other liberties
flow. Jefferson was a strong advocate of
the Bill of Rights.
But Thomas Jefferson's luster among
the Founders is dimming as some histo·
rians agree with David M cC ullough ,
and Pauline Maier, an expert on tile
Founding, that-· as she wrote in a New
• York Times review of McCullough's
· · besr-~elling book, "John Adams" '(Simon
&amp; Schuster, 2001): "On virtually all
points of comparison " between Adams
and Jefferson, "Jefferson conJes in sec-

ond."

Abby
ADVICE
'
tell "'e ')'hat you think? - WIFE
WHO CHANGED HER UFE! .
DEAR WIFE: Whatever was distracting :your husband h as co me to
an e nd. During his emotional
absence you wisely developed other
resources.
You and Buddy could benefit
from marriage counseling. It will get
you both back on the same track • if that's what you both really wam.
. DEAR ·ABBY: I recently began
experiencing anxiety attacks. Th~y

·Pomeroy, and t]:le grandson of
June and Harry VanVraken,
also of Pomeroy, and Mary
and Floyd Oxley of Athens.
Van Vraken is a 2000 graduate of the American Home
SchooL .

HENTOFF : s VIEW
.

Dear

MILITARY NEWS

Judges rnling brings women
closer to fair·coverage

· Chad·A. Wheeler

'

Nat
Hentoff

Thomas Jefferson disrespected Pres1·dent Adams imd.Congress by calling ihe
Alien and Sedition Acts an "unconstitutiona! reign of terror." But historian
Joseph Ellis tries to partially absolve John
Adams by sayin, g we. should.n_ot impose
"our modern notion of civil liberties or
freedom of the press. on an age that was
·
still groping toward a more expan sive

started so unexpectedly, I didn't realize what was happening · to me. I
would sweat profusely, become nauseated, and mY legs would feel weak
and shaky. I went to 'my family doctor ancl was clieckeo out, but he
found nothing physically wrong.
My ~h insurance _provider gave
me th \' phone number for a mental'
· health' hotline. I •called and was
immediately· put in tou ch with a
counselor. ] . have .been seeing the '
counselor for three weeks, and my
attacks are noticeably less severe.
Abby, please advise your readers
who suffer from this that they are
not alone. There is help out there.
Nobody should feel embarrassed
about asking for it. Seeing my life
through someone else's. eyes has
made m e unde rstand how difficult
and stressful this past year has been
without ·. my r~alizing it. ON
THE ROAD TO RECOVERY

· Andrew
VanVraken

we;e

. Maier omitted from her review, however, the fact that Jefferson saved the
First Amendment after our second president - the vety same John Adams and th e Federalist Congress, nearly
extinguished freedom of speech and
press. Only seve n years after the Constitution- including the Bill of Rights wa.s ratified, Adams signed the Al•'en and version of First Amendment protec.
,
Sedition Acts, which made the president tlons.
- any presidem _ and me.mbers of
Then how come Jefferson , Jam es
.
M
C ongress immune from criticism by
ad1son and other Americans immediate I'1 saw the danger of this suppression
" We the People of the United St~tes."
f fi
Even McCullough wrote that the 0 ree speec~ a~d press?
The first Vlcom of the Act was ConAlien and Sedition Acts "are rightfully
judged by history as the most reprehen- . gressman Matthew Lyon of Vermont,
sible acts of Adams's presidency."
. who had fought ip the Revolution . In a
The legislation punished by letter to the Vermont Journal , he had
imprisonment and fine - anyone who attacked the Adams administration for its
spoke, wrote or published anything that "unbounde!l thirst for ridicul ous pomp,
(Nat Hetttolf is a nationarty rcPJotlmeJ
· brought the President or Congress "into foolisn adulation and selfish avarice."
autlwrity 011 the First Amendmmt aud tire
. contempt or disrepute," or migh~ excite
Paraded under guard through the Bill of Rights.)

°

Sewing equipment manu facturers are coming up with
sewing tools and equipment
that can help people sew in a
more relaxing manner.
There are now ergonomi c
shears and rotary cutters that
have padded handles.and a different design that allows more
ADVICE
ease in cutting. They work
very well and are comfortable reduce back pain when sewing
to use.
or doing handwork. This
Rotary cutters can be operated by both left-handed and
right-handed pe,ople. They
· may release automhtically with
the blade retracting, making
cutting easy. Shears also may
have spring release handles,
·eliminating the extra hand
motion of bringing th e handles apart.
A harness is available to help

Becky
Baer

L

film

DROP US ALINE.

Third Avo., Golllpglla, Olllo
7-23'2

.

MONDAY
CARPENTER - Leading Creek
Watershed Associalion, 6:30
p.m., Monday, at Columbia
Township Firehouse. Open to all
residents to gather community
inpul on water quality issues.

Whil e stocks as a percentage of house - ·
IJold assets rose strungly in the 1990s, displacing real estate in some portfolios it
didn't . represent a new, aggressive b~ad
but because existing own ers decided to
stay on.
Several reasons other tha~ chan ges in
behavior were studied, leading to the
conclusion that demographic cha nge and
pension plans had some impact, but not
nearly so much as the remrn s available to
investors.
There is a lesson m these findings, a
pronHSmg one, say Tracy and Schneider.
They s_ee the torpidity, the slugg.1rdncss
of investors, as potentially a stabi lizin!J
force, good news for a volatile m.u ket. ·
One implication of their study's
r esults, they say, is that " the typi c d
household may behave in a siniilarly lau guid f.1s hion if market returns uwr th e
current decade drop below their histori~al average."

MIDDLEPORT- Revival ser- .
vices at Old Bethel Freewill Bap·
tist Church on Ohio 7 at Story's
Run Road, through Sunday, 7
p.m. with Evangelist Calvin Min·
nis. Special singing.
POMEROY ...:.. VBS at First
Southam Baptist Church In
Pomeroy through Friday, 5:30 to
8:30p.m.
POMEROY- Big Bend Com·
munity Band to perlorm at lhe
parking lot stage in Pomeroy at
6:30p.m.
. ·
POMEROY - Stale flap. John
Carey, A-Wellston, open door
session from 11 a .m. until noon
at the Meigs County Courthouse.
.,
GALLIPOLIS- VBS, •Fun in
the Son," July 16·21 from 6:30
to 8:45 p.m., Church ol God of
Prophecy in Gallipolis.

aolm Cttnll!ff is a lmsincss analyst j c&gt;r 111r
Ass()(iatcd Press.)

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740-912·21511

serger tilts toward the sewer,
relieving back and neck strain
due to hunching over the
work.
Sewers can make· their own
tilting table by putting two tri- ·
angular-shaped rubber
doorstops ·under the back of
the sewing machine, causing it
to tilt forward.

(Becky Baeris a Meigs Ccwr- :
ty Exte ..sion agmt.)

To Put Your Child Or Grandchild In The
Dally Sentinel
Feature On Friday, July 27, 20011
.
.
Baton
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~(

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U:''

l!x1mple:

~)-1

• Cheerieaders
• ~nastlcs
• Tumblir1 .·..
• Martial rts
Let the Ohio Valley see your

"Shining Star"
and how proud you are!

LOCAL HAPPENINGS

. TUESDAY
.

apparatus is like a wei'ghted
backpack. Adjustable straps
and removable weights modifY
the tension. It works by promoting the wearer to have
better posture.
Another piece of equipment
that also helps prevent back
strain is a table that tilts,
beca use the back legs are
longer than the ones in the
front. A sewing machine or

•

Sluggards are not Americas new type of investor

825

Dear Abby .is written by Pa uline
Phillips atJd daughterj emme Phillips.

"Shining Star"

New arrival·

BUS ,I NESS M'IRROR

thing. Over the decade of the 1990s, the
household sector's stock holdings soared
to $12.6 trillion from $2.6 trillion.
But the market rose not because of the
derring-do of a new breed, but mainly
because of its own independent work. ings, such as big corporate profits and lots
of new companies with innovative ideas .
This, authors Joseph Tracy and Henry
Schneider report, "is in clea r co ntrast to
the popular view of U.S. households as
aggressive l?.ortfolio managers." T he typical household, they says responds " quite
sluggishly."
Investors were not, as imagined, tracking market indexes, studying price-toearnings ratios and exchanging notes
with their brokers. The typical investor
wasn't calling from work to get in on the
party.
.
A more accurate descripti on, say Tracy
and Schneider, is that existing owners of
stocks bided their tim e rather than rushing to buy more, and that households
that held ' no stocks refrained . from
acquirin g them.

a

sensitive? - NO PRIVACY IN
PLANO, TEXAS
DEAR NO PRIVACY: Everyone is entitled to some privacy even teen-agers. 'However, until you
reach legal age, your parents are
responsible for your health, education and growth. Whether or not
your mother has "crossed the line"
depends upon the other aspects of
your relationship with her. She may
go through your things because you
don't communicate with her. If you
are secretive abo ut· what's going on
in your life, of co urse s h~ ~ill pry.
Be smart and earn your privacy
the easy way, by volunteering infor-.
mation , being absolute ly hones t,
talking abou t your fri ends, your
dates, where you're going and when
you expect to be home. Try it - it
works.

'

•

Bv JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK - . Having boosted the
stock market to an as tonishing 26 .3 percent annual return from 1996 to 1999,
investors during the great bull market
were viewed as a new, daredevil breed.
It was a time, some explained, when
baby boomers were coming of age, ereating bold id eas about the future and to!crating little respect for t~e past. They
would lead the market into a gold en era
of profits for aiL
·
lt was nonsense, as we i10w know, but
the rea) ,jhocker in this is that our picture
of the new investor as sort of a Ma rlboro
man was all wet. Soaking wet..
The typical invest.or, in fact, was like a
M ilquetoast.
"Passive" is how such investors were
described in a. rece nt Federal Reserve
Bank of New York study. "The typical
American inves tor was largely the P?Ssive
beneficiary of a bull market," not its ereator.
In short, if the 1990s investors were
heroes at all it was for recognizing a good

IN LAS VEGAS
DEAR ON THE ROAD: I have
always considere'd psychotherapy to
be attending the "University ofYou."
The course may be challenging, bur
it's always informative, and almost
ev~ryone 'can benefit from it.
DEAR ABBY: I am 16 and do
not get along we)l with my morher,
mostly because we are so much ·
alike. My problem may seem childish and immature, but my mother
goes through EVERYTHING of
mine. She routinely goes th rough
my dresser and desk drawers, my
·backpack and my ·purse. She gets
angry if she finds j ournal entry or
note to a friend con tainin g a remark
about her.
I say she sho uldn 't be searching
thro ugh my personal things in the
first place. Am I unreasonable to ask
for a little privacy? Has she crossed
the line, o r am I just being overly

Brad Renfro

years.
'
·-'
The U.S. Supreme Court did not
strike down th e Ali en and Sedition Acts
f 1798
'11964 (N v · kT '
unu
ew 10r unes vs.
S 11· ) J r· will·
B
u •van · us ICe
lam rennan wrote
th
" Th
k
·t
l'd· 1
·
en,
e attac on I s va I lty la' car· d th d · 1h
f h.
"
ne
e ay m .e court o • ~t ory.
'··
J fli
d 'd
· 0
d'
e erson I not walt. n succee mg
Ad
'd t h
rd
.•
d '
ams . as pres! en ' e pa oneu an
remitted the fines of the convi cted and
.
.
d
1mpnsone Americans.
These days·, when most American stud
all h
h
t e way t rough gradu&lt;Jte
ents -h I
h
b
sc oo ave not een taught muclt,
A
.
h'
mencan IStory, except in its multiwltural requirements, the lesson of the
Alien and Sedition Acts is a remind er
that our liberties are not set in stone.
And on this crucial point of compariso n
with John Adams, Mr. Jefferson cameo
out way ahead.
.·

POMEROY ~ Beginning yoga
classes continue at Meigs

200 Molin St., Point Pleounl, w. Va. ·
30W75-1333

,.

.M ·

-

..

N/w sewirtg equipment is easy oil back

"TUPPERS PLAINS Navy ' Petty Officer Third
Class Chad A. Wheeler recently visited Jebel Ali, United
Arab Emirates during a sixmonth deployment to the
Mediterranean Sea and Persian Gulf while assigned to the
guided missile destroyer U.S.S.
• ·'M'itscher, homeported in
POMEROY -'"- U.S . .,&lt;\ir Nplfolk,Va.
Force Airman Andrew Van- :• During the visit, Sailors
Vraken has reported to duty.at · fro.m Wheeler's ship had access
Minot Air Force Base in ·. to American fast-food stands,
North Dakota.
three-- swimming pools and an
Van Vraken began recruit ,Internet cafe ·equipped with
training for · the Air Force in lat ge-screen televisions and
January 2001 at Lackland A1r video games, all provided by
· force Base in Texas. He grad- the United Services Organiz;~~
FORT LAUDERJ;)A,LE,
uated, in . March and: began • tion. The sailors also · had the
Fla.
(AP) ·- Brad Renfro, who
trai ning· at the U.S. Air Force opportunity to shop, sightsee
Law
Enforcement . Tech and enjoy the local culture tried to steal a yacht in August,
missed the premiere ofhis new
School, 'also at Lackland Air , and cuisine.
Force Base, eventually Kradu~
Wheeler is the son of Gloria movie to return to court on
. "ating in June.
·
and Darrell Wheeler of Thp- . allegations he violated his pro. '1\ndrew is tile 1on of Scott pers Plains arid a 1997 gradu- bation. ·
The star of the t 994
and Sandie · VanVraken of ate of Eastern High School.
"The Client" appeared before
a judge in a brief hearing
'·
Thursday, the judge'• office
said. The hearing wil) resume
Thesday after Renfro has
undergone drug and al cohol
. REEDSVILLE - V.ktor
·testing,
the office said. •
and Tracey · Chevalier of
The 18-year- old actor was
Reedsville ' announce the birth
arrested
in May in Knoxville,
of a·daughter, Taylor Danielle
Tenn., and charged with
Chevalier, on May 14, 200t,in .
underage drinking.
Parkersburg, W.Va.
"It's about time for me to
She weighed seven pounds,
grow up and these people gave
three ounces; and was 18 112
me more than enough of a
inches long.
chance to grow up;' said RenThe CheValiers have two
fro, who missed tbe Thursday
older dau~hters, Nicole and
premiere
of"Bully" in CaliforKatelynn . · ·
nia.
Grandparents are Roger and
In January, Renfro w.as senSheila Westfall and Victor and
Taylor Danlelle Chevalier
to twO years' probation
tenced
Grace Chevalier, all of
· and ordered to pay restitution.
Reedsville.

, town of Vergennes, Vt., Lyon was
. marched into a 12-foot-by-16 foot cell.
_So much for the Declarati on of lndcpendence~
1
On hearing tbe news, Jefferson said, " I
know not which mortifies me most, that
I should fe ar to write what I think or
tbat my country bear such a state of
things.:' ·
·
Also imprisoned
the editors of
COLUMNIST
.
four of the 6've most i)11portant opposi· tion . newspallers. · .In Oedham, Mass., a
•
number o f nonjournali~ts had set up_a
aga inst them " the hatred of the good Liberty Pole \~ith the sig~: "N~ Stamp
people of the United States," thereby Act, No ·~ed1non, No· Ahen B1lls, No
stirring UJl' "sedition within the United Land Tax. Downfall to the Tyrants of
States."
America."
ilutionary War veterans and other
One' of those De~liam lawbreakers -·
indi
als cpqld be imprisoned under a conunon l;lborer and a rete ran of the
th
for .up to two years and fined up Revolunona~ Army -.~as c.pnvicted
to S ,OOO _ a princely .sum in those of creaun~ ~ rallr,mg pomt,?f l~surrec­
days.
twn and CIVIl war. He W:!sJiiled for two

'

I

D:EAR ABBY: I have been married to "Buddy" for 20 years. During
the past seven years, we went
through some big problems. I used
to plead with him to pay more
attention to me, but he never felt I
was important enough. It's taken me
years, but I have finally lea'rned to
live my life to the fullest without
him.
·
Well, now all of a sudden Buddy
has noticed that. I am no ' longer
"crying and clinging" to him. And
get this: NOW he wants to be the
perfect husband!·
Abby, I grew so accustomed tp
being without Buddy that now I
don't know what I want. I still love
him, but I do n't know if I want to
remain in this marriage. The tables
have turned, and I feel suffocated by
all his sudden attention -· which I
used to long for. I don't know what
lO .make of all this. Can you please

~·
, .

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Monday, July 16, 1001:

o/ife who was clinging vine has grown to rely on herself

The Daily Sentinel
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•

I

-opinion

The Daily Sentinel

_Th_eo_rui_ys_en_tin_ei~--~~~Jthe :Bend

Page A4 Monday, July"1I, 1001

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

...

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

··.... :1
~

••
lilt

Utt~n to tit~ editor an w&lt;kom~. Th ~y sJwuJJ hr leu tho" 300 words. Alllntrn
sllbjtcr 10 edillng tlfrd must be rig11td and inrludt addrtss and teltphtmt number.

No 114111lgnt d l~lten will II# publlsheJ. l ..dlt&gt;rr should bt in grkJd tmlt• adilress•'ng
_
•
·

iuu.s, 11111 ptnoMiili,.
Tlu oplllioru upnutd in tht ('0/umn

b~low

arfl thr catutrmu·of thr Ohl'o \11/leJ

Publhhirrg Co. '$ tdilun'al boord, unlfl.ll)lhtrwist noted.

NATIONAL VIEWS
.'
•

....
•

'

• The Seattle. Times, on contmcepti11e co;,erage: U.S. District
Court Judge Robert Lasriik has brought women closer to. gender equity by ruling Bartell Drugs must cover prescription
contracep tives in its employee-medical plan.
Lasnik oorrec tly calJs. Bartell's exclusio n o'fbirth control from· ·
its health-coverage plan a fonli of gender' discriminati0t(."The
family-owned drugstore chain covers almost all drug! and
devices used by men, yet excludes prescription contraceptives
in its coverage offered to female employees. That is patently
Ullfair.
.
: The issue has always been whether insurance plans that cover
prescriptions should include contraceptives. The answer is a
&lt;fefinite yes.
.
It is unfair to women of child- bearing age 'to have the pill
not covered by an insurance plan that covers other prescription
medicine. Such exclusion hits women where they already feel
inequit}' -· in their pocketbook. Without contraceptive cover. age, women end · up paying more of their .own money for
health care.
rhere is a cost savings as well. Avoiding unintended pregnancies is the most effective way to prevem abortions and the
1Jtt\&gt;lic com associated with giving birth to an unwanted child.
.., •

..

. When Congress.- passed the Pregnancy Discrimination Act
balming sex discrimination on the basis of "pregnancy, child. blrth or related medical conditions," it meant that in all areas 'o f
employment, including benefits. ... .
~.·
· • The Salt Lake Tribune, on Germany's mtclear sllutdow11:
Germany's agreememlast Monday to shut down the country's
1.9 nuclear plants is furth er evidence 'that Presidem Bush was
"£ise to ignore Europe's hypocritical hand-wringers and dump
t~e 1997 Kyoto treaty... .
Germany's 19 nuclear plants produce 35 percent of the
country's electricity with nary a hothouse fume. If they were to
shptdown, the engine of Europe's largest economy would stall,
urtless the facilities were replaced with plams that produce the
gases·. that Germany had agreed to reduce.
' Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who l1as led Europe's browb~ating of Bush, is vague about what Germany will do to
replace· its lost power, though he offers baseless assurances that
th~ solution will be "environmentally friendly."
It sounds wonderful , since no one likes smog, and so-called
"~oft path" energy sources, such as wind po.wer and solar cells,
dOn't produce any. But as Califorma fin ally has . realized after
&amp;cades of trying, the soft path can on ly take you so far. The
Golden State has dumped billions into developing renewable
·
energy in th e past 30 years. .. .
Even if Germany ca n match California's commitment to
renewable energy, a number oJ big coal-, oil-, and gas-burners
will have to be built to make up for 't he lost nuclear power .. ,
which is w hy Germany (and every other country that signed
the Kyoto accord) has failed to ratifY it..
Th e U.S. Senate voted 95-0 .last year against ratifYing the
tn!;lty and Bush decided this year to e1id the charade and d'!mp
11 ~!together. Germans have produced a lo t of hot air recently
with their Pccksniffian posturing over this great environmental
sl;ub, but their acti ons prove Bush was ri ght all along.
•
•
•

/

TODAY IN · HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, July 16, the 197th day of2001.There are 168
days left in the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
.
On July 16, 1945, the United States exploded its fim experimental atomic bomb, in the desert of Alamogordo, N.M :
On this date:
·
In 1790, the District of Columbia ·;.,a~ established as the seat of
the United States ·government.
'
)n 1862, David G. Farragut became the first rear admiral in thf!
l;lnited States Navy. .
.
~ In 1918, Russia's Czar Nichola' II , his empress and their five
.ch!ldren were executed by the Bolsheviks.
,. 11;11951, the novel "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D. Salinger
~- first published.
. ,
:1n 1964, in accepting the R epublican presidemial nomination in
san.Francisco, Barry M. Goldwater said "extremism in the defense
ofliberty is no vice'' and that "moderation in the pursuit ofj ustice

iS no vjrtue."
In 1969, Apollo 11 blasted off from Cape Kennedy on the first
manned mission to the surface of the moon.
In 1973, during the Senate Watergate hearings, former White
House aide Alexander P. Butterfield publicly revealed the existence
of President Nixon's secret taping system.
·
In 1980, former Californja Governor Ronald Reagan won the
Republiqn 1presidential numina.tion at the party's convention in
- Detroi t. '\; .
•
In 1981, singer H arry C hapin was killed when his car was st'tuck
by" a tractor-trailer on N~w York's Long Island Expressway.

,.

How ·Thomas jefferson ·saved the .FirstAmendment
On the Fourth of July, not only th e
Declaration of Independence, written by
Thomas Jeffer son, was celebrated. Also
honored, in various orations, was the Bill
of Rights. Ho~ many Americans know
that the Constitution was not ratified by
the individual states until those 10
amendments, tbe Bill of Rights, were
added? From the First Amendment -which guaranteed freedom of speech
and of the press -- all our other liberties
flow. Jefferson was a strong advocate of
the Bill of Rights.
But Thomas Jefferson's luster among
the Founders is dimming as some histo·
rians agree with David M cC ullough ,
and Pauline Maier, an expert on tile
Founding, that-· as she wrote in a New
• York Times review of McCullough's
· · besr-~elling book, "John Adams" '(Simon
&amp; Schuster, 2001): "On virtually all
points of comparison " between Adams
and Jefferson, "Jefferson conJes in sec-

ond."

Abby
ADVICE
'
tell "'e ')'hat you think? - WIFE
WHO CHANGED HER UFE! .
DEAR WIFE: Whatever was distracting :your husband h as co me to
an e nd. During his emotional
absence you wisely developed other
resources.
You and Buddy could benefit
from marriage counseling. It will get
you both back on the same track • if that's what you both really wam.
. DEAR ·ABBY: I recently began
experiencing anxiety attacks. Th~y

·Pomeroy, and t]:le grandson of
June and Harry VanVraken,
also of Pomeroy, and Mary
and Floyd Oxley of Athens.
Van Vraken is a 2000 graduate of the American Home
SchooL .

HENTOFF : s VIEW
.

Dear

MILITARY NEWS

Judges rnling brings women
closer to fair·coverage

· Chad·A. Wheeler

'

Nat
Hentoff

Thomas Jefferson disrespected Pres1·dent Adams imd.Congress by calling ihe
Alien and Sedition Acts an "unconstitutiona! reign of terror." But historian
Joseph Ellis tries to partially absolve John
Adams by sayin, g we. should.n_ot impose
"our modern notion of civil liberties or
freedom of the press. on an age that was
·
still groping toward a more expan sive

started so unexpectedly, I didn't realize what was happening · to me. I
would sweat profusely, become nauseated, and mY legs would feel weak
and shaky. I went to 'my family doctor ancl was clieckeo out, but he
found nothing physically wrong.
My ~h insurance _provider gave
me th \' phone number for a mental'
· health' hotline. I •called and was
immediately· put in tou ch with a
counselor. ] . have .been seeing the '
counselor for three weeks, and my
attacks are noticeably less severe.
Abby, please advise your readers
who suffer from this that they are
not alone. There is help out there.
Nobody should feel embarrassed
about asking for it. Seeing my life
through someone else's. eyes has
made m e unde rstand how difficult
and stressful this past year has been
without ·. my r~alizing it. ON
THE ROAD TO RECOVERY

· Andrew
VanVraken

we;e

. Maier omitted from her review, however, the fact that Jefferson saved the
First Amendment after our second president - the vety same John Adams and th e Federalist Congress, nearly
extinguished freedom of speech and
press. Only seve n years after the Constitution- including the Bill of Rights wa.s ratified, Adams signed the Al•'en and version of First Amendment protec.
,
Sedition Acts, which made the president tlons.
- any presidem _ and me.mbers of
Then how come Jefferson , Jam es
.
M
C ongress immune from criticism by
ad1son and other Americans immediate I'1 saw the danger of this suppression
" We the People of the United St~tes."
f fi
Even McCullough wrote that the 0 ree speec~ a~d press?
The first Vlcom of the Act was ConAlien and Sedition Acts "are rightfully
judged by history as the most reprehen- . gressman Matthew Lyon of Vermont,
sible acts of Adams's presidency."
. who had fought ip the Revolution . In a
The legislation punished by letter to the Vermont Journal , he had
imprisonment and fine - anyone who attacked the Adams administration for its
spoke, wrote or published anything that "unbounde!l thirst for ridicul ous pomp,
(Nat Hetttolf is a nationarty rcPJotlmeJ
· brought the President or Congress "into foolisn adulation and selfish avarice."
autlwrity 011 the First Amendmmt aud tire
. contempt or disrepute," or migh~ excite
Paraded under guard through the Bill of Rights.)

°

Sewing equipment manu facturers are coming up with
sewing tools and equipment
that can help people sew in a
more relaxing manner.
There are now ergonomi c
shears and rotary cutters that
have padded handles.and a different design that allows more
ADVICE
ease in cutting. They work
very well and are comfortable reduce back pain when sewing
to use.
or doing handwork. This
Rotary cutters can be operated by both left-handed and
right-handed pe,ople. They
· may release automhtically with
the blade retracting, making
cutting easy. Shears also may
have spring release handles,
·eliminating the extra hand
motion of bringing th e handles apart.
A harness is available to help

Becky
Baer

L

film

DROP US ALINE.

Third Avo., Golllpglla, Olllo
7-23'2

.

MONDAY
CARPENTER - Leading Creek
Watershed Associalion, 6:30
p.m., Monday, at Columbia
Township Firehouse. Open to all
residents to gather community
inpul on water quality issues.

Whil e stocks as a percentage of house - ·
IJold assets rose strungly in the 1990s, displacing real estate in some portfolios it
didn't . represent a new, aggressive b~ad
but because existing own ers decided to
stay on.
Several reasons other tha~ chan ges in
behavior were studied, leading to the
conclusion that demographic cha nge and
pension plans had some impact, but not
nearly so much as the remrn s available to
investors.
There is a lesson m these findings, a
pronHSmg one, say Tracy and Schneider.
They s_ee the torpidity, the slugg.1rdncss
of investors, as potentially a stabi lizin!J
force, good news for a volatile m.u ket. ·
One implication of their study's
r esults, they say, is that " the typi c d
household may behave in a siniilarly lau guid f.1s hion if market returns uwr th e
current decade drop below their histori~al average."

MIDDLEPORT- Revival ser- .
vices at Old Bethel Freewill Bap·
tist Church on Ohio 7 at Story's
Run Road, through Sunday, 7
p.m. with Evangelist Calvin Min·
nis. Special singing.
POMEROY ...:.. VBS at First
Southam Baptist Church In
Pomeroy through Friday, 5:30 to
8:30p.m.
POMEROY- Big Bend Com·
munity Band to perlorm at lhe
parking lot stage in Pomeroy at
6:30p.m.
. ·
POMEROY - Stale flap. John
Carey, A-Wellston, open door
session from 11 a .m. until noon
at the Meigs County Courthouse.
.,
GALLIPOLIS- VBS, •Fun in
the Son," July 16·21 from 6:30
to 8:45 p.m., Church ol God of
Prophecy in Gallipolis.

aolm Cttnll!ff is a lmsincss analyst j c&gt;r 111r
Ass()(iatcd Press.)

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740-912·21511

serger tilts toward the sewer,
relieving back and neck strain
due to hunching over the
work.
Sewers can make· their own
tilting table by putting two tri- ·
angular-shaped rubber
doorstops ·under the back of
the sewing machine, causing it
to tilt forward.

(Becky Baeris a Meigs Ccwr- :
ty Exte ..sion agmt.)

To Put Your Child Or Grandchild In The
Dally Sentinel
Feature On Friday, July 27, 20011
.
.
Baton
.
)
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.
,
.
,
.
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it' '
•
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~(

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U:''

l!x1mple:

~)-1

• Cheerieaders
• ~nastlcs
• Tumblir1 .·..
• Martial rts
Let the Ohio Valley see your

"Shining Star"
and how proud you are!

LOCAL HAPPENINGS

. TUESDAY
.

apparatus is like a wei'ghted
backpack. Adjustable straps
and removable weights modifY
the tension. It works by promoting the wearer to have
better posture.
Another piece of equipment
that also helps prevent back
strain is a table that tilts,
beca use the back legs are
longer than the ones in the
front. A sewing machine or

•

Sluggards are not Americas new type of investor

825

Dear Abby .is written by Pa uline
Phillips atJd daughterj emme Phillips.

"Shining Star"

New arrival·

BUS ,I NESS M'IRROR

thing. Over the decade of the 1990s, the
household sector's stock holdings soared
to $12.6 trillion from $2.6 trillion.
But the market rose not because of the
derring-do of a new breed, but mainly
because of its own independent work. ings, such as big corporate profits and lots
of new companies with innovative ideas .
This, authors Joseph Tracy and Henry
Schneider report, "is in clea r co ntrast to
the popular view of U.S. households as
aggressive l?.ortfolio managers." T he typical household, they says responds " quite
sluggishly."
Investors were not, as imagined, tracking market indexes, studying price-toearnings ratios and exchanging notes
with their brokers. The typical investor
wasn't calling from work to get in on the
party.
.
A more accurate descripti on, say Tracy
and Schneider, is that existing owners of
stocks bided their tim e rather than rushing to buy more, and that households
that held ' no stocks refrained . from
acquirin g them.

a

sensitive? - NO PRIVACY IN
PLANO, TEXAS
DEAR NO PRIVACY: Everyone is entitled to some privacy even teen-agers. 'However, until you
reach legal age, your parents are
responsible for your health, education and growth. Whether or not
your mother has "crossed the line"
depends upon the other aspects of
your relationship with her. She may
go through your things because you
don't communicate with her. If you
are secretive abo ut· what's going on
in your life, of co urse s h~ ~ill pry.
Be smart and earn your privacy
the easy way, by volunteering infor-.
mation , being absolute ly hones t,
talking abou t your fri ends, your
dates, where you're going and when
you expect to be home. Try it - it
works.

'

•

Bv JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK - . Having boosted the
stock market to an as tonishing 26 .3 percent annual return from 1996 to 1999,
investors during the great bull market
were viewed as a new, daredevil breed.
It was a time, some explained, when
baby boomers were coming of age, ereating bold id eas about the future and to!crating little respect for t~e past. They
would lead the market into a gold en era
of profits for aiL
·
lt was nonsense, as we i10w know, but
the rea) ,jhocker in this is that our picture
of the new investor as sort of a Ma rlboro
man was all wet. Soaking wet..
The typical invest.or, in fact, was like a
M ilquetoast.
"Passive" is how such investors were
described in a. rece nt Federal Reserve
Bank of New York study. "The typical
American inves tor was largely the P?Ssive
beneficiary of a bull market," not its ereator.
In short, if the 1990s investors were
heroes at all it was for recognizing a good

IN LAS VEGAS
DEAR ON THE ROAD: I have
always considere'd psychotherapy to
be attending the "University ofYou."
The course may be challenging, bur
it's always informative, and almost
ev~ryone 'can benefit from it.
DEAR ABBY: I am 16 and do
not get along we)l with my morher,
mostly because we are so much ·
alike. My problem may seem childish and immature, but my mother
goes through EVERYTHING of
mine. She routinely goes th rough
my dresser and desk drawers, my
·backpack and my ·purse. She gets
angry if she finds j ournal entry or
note to a friend con tainin g a remark
about her.
I say she sho uldn 't be searching
thro ugh my personal things in the
first place. Am I unreasonable to ask
for a little privacy? Has she crossed
the line, o r am I just being overly

Brad Renfro

years.
'
·-'
The U.S. Supreme Court did not
strike down th e Ali en and Sedition Acts
f 1798
'11964 (N v · kT '
unu
ew 10r unes vs.
S 11· ) J r· will·
B
u •van · us ICe
lam rennan wrote
th
" Th
k
·t
l'd· 1
·
en,
e attac on I s va I lty la' car· d th d · 1h
f h.
"
ne
e ay m .e court o • ~t ory.
'··
J fli
d 'd
· 0
d'
e erson I not walt. n succee mg
Ad
'd t h
rd
.•
d '
ams . as pres! en ' e pa oneu an
remitted the fines of the convi cted and
.
.
d
1mpnsone Americans.
These days·, when most American stud
all h
h
t e way t rough gradu&lt;Jte
ents -h I
h
b
sc oo ave not een taught muclt,
A
.
h'
mencan IStory, except in its multiwltural requirements, the lesson of the
Alien and Sedition Acts is a remind er
that our liberties are not set in stone.
And on this crucial point of compariso n
with John Adams, Mr. Jefferson cameo
out way ahead.
.·

POMEROY ~ Beginning yoga
classes continue at Meigs

200 Molin St., Point Pleounl, w. Va. ·
30W75-1333

,.

.M ·

-

..

N/w sewirtg equipment is easy oil back

"TUPPERS PLAINS Navy ' Petty Officer Third
Class Chad A. Wheeler recently visited Jebel Ali, United
Arab Emirates during a sixmonth deployment to the
Mediterranean Sea and Persian Gulf while assigned to the
guided missile destroyer U.S.S.
• ·'M'itscher, homeported in
POMEROY -'"- U.S . .,&lt;\ir Nplfolk,Va.
Force Airman Andrew Van- :• During the visit, Sailors
Vraken has reported to duty.at · fro.m Wheeler's ship had access
Minot Air Force Base in ·. to American fast-food stands,
North Dakota.
three-- swimming pools and an
Van Vraken began recruit ,Internet cafe ·equipped with
training for · the Air Force in lat ge-screen televisions and
January 2001 at Lackland A1r video games, all provided by
· force Base in Texas. He grad- the United Services Organiz;~~
FORT LAUDERJ;)A,LE,
uated, in . March and: began • tion. The sailors also · had the
Fla.
(AP) ·- Brad Renfro, who
trai ning· at the U.S. Air Force opportunity to shop, sightsee
Law
Enforcement . Tech and enjoy the local culture tried to steal a yacht in August,
missed the premiere ofhis new
School, 'also at Lackland Air , and cuisine.
Force Base, eventually Kradu~
Wheeler is the son of Gloria movie to return to court on
. "ating in June.
·
and Darrell Wheeler of Thp- . allegations he violated his pro. '1\ndrew is tile 1on of Scott pers Plains arid a 1997 gradu- bation. ·
The star of the t 994
and Sandie · VanVraken of ate of Eastern High School.
"The Client" appeared before
a judge in a brief hearing
'·
Thursday, the judge'• office
said. The hearing wil) resume
Thesday after Renfro has
undergone drug and al cohol
. REEDSVILLE - V.ktor
·testing,
the office said. •
and Tracey · Chevalier of
The 18-year- old actor was
Reedsville ' announce the birth
arrested
in May in Knoxville,
of a·daughter, Taylor Danielle
Tenn., and charged with
Chevalier, on May 14, 200t,in .
underage drinking.
Parkersburg, W.Va.
"It's about time for me to
She weighed seven pounds,
grow up and these people gave
three ounces; and was 18 112
me more than enough of a
inches long.
chance to grow up;' said RenThe CheValiers have two
fro, who missed tbe Thursday
older dau~hters, Nicole and
premiere
of"Bully" in CaliforKatelynn . · ·
nia.
Grandparents are Roger and
In January, Renfro w.as senSheila Westfall and Victor and
Taylor Danlelle Chevalier
to twO years' probation
tenced
Grace Chevalier, all of
· and ordered to pay restitution.
Reedsville.

, town of Vergennes, Vt., Lyon was
. marched into a 12-foot-by-16 foot cell.
_So much for the Declarati on of lndcpendence~
1
On hearing tbe news, Jefferson said, " I
know not which mortifies me most, that
I should fe ar to write what I think or
tbat my country bear such a state of
things.:' ·
·
Also imprisoned
the editors of
COLUMNIST
.
four of the 6've most i)11portant opposi· tion . newspallers. · .In Oedham, Mass., a
•
number o f nonjournali~ts had set up_a
aga inst them " the hatred of the good Liberty Pole \~ith the sig~: "N~ Stamp
people of the United States," thereby Act, No ·~ed1non, No· Ahen B1lls, No
stirring UJl' "sedition within the United Land Tax. Downfall to the Tyrants of
States."
America."
ilutionary War veterans and other
One' of those De~liam lawbreakers -·
indi
als cpqld be imprisoned under a conunon l;lborer and a rete ran of the
th
for .up to two years and fined up Revolunona~ Army -.~as c.pnvicted
to S ,OOO _ a princely .sum in those of creaun~ ~ rallr,mg pomt,?f l~surrec­
days.
twn and CIVIl war. He W:!sJiiled for two

'

I

D:EAR ABBY: I have been married to "Buddy" for 20 years. During
the past seven years, we went
through some big problems. I used
to plead with him to pay more
attention to me, but he never felt I
was important enough. It's taken me
years, but I have finally lea'rned to
live my life to the fullest without
him.
·
Well, now all of a sudden Buddy
has noticed that. I am no ' longer
"crying and clinging" to him. And
get this: NOW he wants to be the
perfect husband!·
Abby, I grew so accustomed tp
being without Buddy that now I
don't know what I want. I still love
him, but I do n't know if I want to
remain in this marriage. The tables
have turned, and I feel suffocated by
all his sudden attention -· which I
used to long for. I don't know what
lO .make of all this. Can you please

~·
, .

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Monday, July 16, 1001:

o/ife who was clinging vine has grown to rely on herself

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Page A_

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: The Daily Sentinel
''
•

Monday, July If, 2

Septuplets should survive
WASHINGTON (AI') - ·Septuplets born last week to a
cou ple frori1 Saudi Arabia have a 95 percent chance of sur- ·
viva!, their doctor said Monday.
"Last evening the mom was able to hold the babies for the
first time," Dr. Siva Subramanian, chief of neonatology at
Georgetown University Hospital, said on CUS' "The Early
Show." "Now that they are in the fourth day there is about a
.95 percent chance that, I think, they will make it."
The father, Fahad Qahtani, who lives in nearby Falls
C hurch, Va., said he and his. wife are joyful about the births
because they want a large fag1ily and have lost two other children in the last five yelts.
"God took two of them, and he gave l)S seve~;· Qahtani
said in an interview published ·M&lt;?nday in The Washington
Post. "We rhank him for it all the time."
The septuplets were born:rbursday night. Six are breathing ,
on their own . "They all need ~ little bit of oxygen ... (and )
are progressing along as expected for a 28-we,ek gestationrange baby," Subramanian said on · AllC's "Good Morning
America."
·
Doctors say the mother, whose name has no1t been released,
should be able to go home in the next few days. The -babies
likely will remain in the hospital for·two months or so.
.

Miss1ng intern wouldn't be lured by strange~
WASHINGTON (AP) - Chandra
Levy's family believes she disappeared
from her apartment With someone she
knew because she did not take her
purse, wallet, identification or credit
.cards and commonly left her ID
behind when she met lier "secret
lover,'' h.e r parents' lawyer says.
Before the 24-y~ar-old Levy disappeared, she told her family that her
boyfriend demanded she not carry
identification when they were togeth er, attorney Billy Martin said Sunday.
· "Chandra instructed friends and
family that when she met with · her
~ecret lover and her friend that that
was the procedure used .... He did not
want her to be identified," Martin said
on NBC's "Meet the Press."

I

Missile defense faces challenges
WASHINGTON (AP) - The missile defense shield championed by President Bush got a major boost with a successful weekend test, but the plan still must. overcome challenges
-scientific and political, at home and abroad- if it is to be
built by 2004.
The destruction of a mock warhead in space by a miss ile
.interceptor launched from Kwajalein Atoll in the Pacific was
an important step for the Pentagon's missile defense effort,
but must be followed by more successes ·in more frequent and
. :more realistic tests; officials said.
Russia, meanwhile, renewed its warning that the program
would harm global security rather than improve it.
-And one domestic skeptic, Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del.,
chairman of the Senate Foreign · Rel:)~ions Committee, ca u-'
tioned that ·"it's not a real-world test yet. And we havea long
way to go, and we should continue to p~rsue it."
· The success Saturday night followed two dramatic test failures during the Clinton ad111inistration.

..:

· He
&lt;aid
Levy
"appears to have
been lured, called or
brought out of the
apartment expecting
tO return " and said it
was sus pected that
she had no ID.
Washington Police
._c~:Ut:-""' Chief Charles Ram. sey said investigators
do not believe Levx would easily be
lured from her apartment by a
stranger. The former federal intern,
last seen April 30, was "a . pretty cautious woman and · just wasn't one to
just throw her door open to anybody
if there was a knock at the door and
things like that," he told CBS' "Face

Pomeroy
teams
advance
at KC

=

--

FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

MONDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

200c!!t•r

8

i

Supporters hopeful

at!!

:Katharine Graham injured in fall

Homicide susped

DEERE ·FoR

Page 81
Monday, July lfi, 1001

the Nation."
" I mean, it jmt doesn't fit that
would be a stranger or something li -;
that," Ramsey said.
::''':
Police have reported finding nit.
signs of foul play in her apartment. :;:
The missing perso n's case has gene~
ated national attention because Re~
Gary Condit, whose district includ~
Modesto, acknowledged to investig:
tors that he was having an affair wiOS::
Levy, a police source has said.
Condit, 53 and married, is not a su3
pect in Levy's disappearance, poli'!IC
have said. He has kept a public silenCC:
and only acknowledged the rotT!antSC
relationship on July 6, in his thifie
interview with police, the source sai&lt;C
..

WASHINGTON (AP) -About .onecfifth of the estima'ft
ed 191,000 inmates in .r.rte prisons who were identified !It
mentally ill were not getting therapy or counseling, the Ju&amp;:;
tice Department reported Sunday.
A study based on 2000 data also showed that only 70 pe~
cent of state prison facilities screen inmates for mental illn&lt;:
as a matter of policy.
."This'is a modest survey," said lead researcher Alan Beck
the department's Bureau of justice Statistics .
;:
"We didn't assess what rypes of mental illness inmates wet;·
suffering from. The numbers suppo~t that mental illness is:=
significant problem for state prisons. How inmates are dia~
nosed and how easily they can receive tr~atment is a subjeZ!C
. "h e sa1'd.
wort hy o f attention,
.
,·
.._
Mentally ill inmates account for 16 percent of the stalE
prison. population, and 79 percent of thos~ identified as me,;:
tally ill were receiving therapy or counseling, the report sai:=
Female inmates are treated for mental illness at a higher ra;;:
WASHINGTON (AP)- The House will eventually vote than male prisoners. One in four women gets therapy
on campaign finan ce legislation despite the roadblock last one in five takes medication for mental illness. Only 10 pee
·
.
week that stalled the bill indefinitely, supporters predicted cent of male inmates receive any treatment.
~
; WASHINGTON (AP)- Katharine Graham, chairman of Sunday.
._
ihe executive conuniftee of The Washington Post Company,
"We will have a vote, and I am confident of it," said Sen.
~ught
was in critical conqit10n at a hospital in Idaho after surgery John McCain, R-Ariz .
.
.·
.
""':
that followed a fall, the paper reported Sunday.
McCain was the co-sponsor of a similar bill that passed the
BELVIDERE,Vt. (AP) -A state trooper's videotaped traf".
· Graham, 84, went to Sun Valley last week to attend a busi- Senate in .A'pril, and has worked closely with House propo- . fie stop helped nab a man accused of shooting four people. ~!):
bess conference and fell Saturday afternoon on a walkway nents of campaign finance overhauL
their house, police said.
.~~:
outside a condominium there, the paper said on it's Intern et
The measure would ban soft money; the unregulated milDouglas Provost, 34, was scheduled to be arraigned Moik:
site, citing an unidentified spokesman for The Post company. lions pouring into political parties from corporations, unions day on four counts of first-degree murder.
:·
. Graham was taken first to St. Luke's hospital in the Sun Val- and individuals, and restrict certain political ads in the final
The victims were identified as Jessica Bishop, 18, her father
\ey area, and then by helicopter to the St. Alphonsus Region- days of an election.
Mitchell Bishop; 46, Derrick Davis, 23, and George Weather ''
a! Medical Center in Boise, where she underwent surgery, a
On Thursday, Rep. Christopher Shays, a sponsor of the wax, 19, who was a boyfriend of Jessica's.
:·
:Sr. Alphonsus spokeswoman told the paper.
House bill, and 18 other Republicans jojned Democrats in
All four lived in the home where they were found late Fri~
The spokeswoman said she was listed in critical condition, defeating rules for debate that they felt stackeil th'e deck day. Police s'aid several other' people also lived there and three
late Saturday in an intensive care unit.
.
.
•. ~gain,~.~ theil;Jt~gi~ ._..._ •. ..... - ,
.had esoat&gt;Jid ,during the shootin~.
,
..
..., ,·
According to the spokesman for The Post company, GraAfter the stalemate, opponents of the bill chided reformers
Provost was S\opped by a state trooper a short time after th~
ham left for the meeting from Washington and arrived in Sun for killing their own reform. House Speaker Dennis Hastert, shooting, but was let go. However, the t~ooper made a videfil"
Valley on Tuesday. The meeting, held by a Wall Street invest- R-Ill., made no promises about bringing the bill up again.
tape of the stop with the camera in his cruiser. When shown
ment banking firm, began Tuesday and ended Saturday night.
"We've got to cool this thing down, try to sit down togeth- the video, witnesses identified Provost as the gunman, poliee
er," McCain said on NBC'~" Meet the Press."
said.
'

A

Tropicana 400 results, Page BJ
Rijo not ready, Page BJ
Diamond Roundup, Page B6
Tribe falls to Houston, page 86

One-fifth of inmates mentally il .,..

WASHINGTON (AP) -Two teams of disabled children
from Virginia took to the T-ball field on the White House
South Lawn on Sunday, the third installment in President
Bush's summer series.
Sunday's game featured teams from the Little League Challenger division for mentally and physically disabled children.
The players came !'rom Springfield and Virginia Beach, some
of them in wheelchairs or walkers. A few players were carried
around the bases.
Bush played his customary role, planting the first ball on
the tee, dedaring "play ball!" and then watching from the
stands behind first base. Afterward, he dispensed autographed
baseballs and hugs .
The game was capped by insidecthe-park homers, one by
Matthew Taylor of the Virginia Beach Challengers, one by
Kyle Young of the Springfield Challenger Hawks.

The Daily Sentinel ·

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Disabled kids take the field

Inside:

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ALL SEAsoNs
c

LT133 Lawn Tractor

LX255 Lawn Tractor

•13-hp engine
• 38-inch mowing deck
• 5·speed shift-on·the·go transmission

•15-hp engine
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission

Tournament
81 Kyger CI'Mk Power Plant
ErnployoM Club Flold
Firat Round
So1uraoy, Jul~ 14
Bidwell I 4, Maaon Twins 1
Feda&lt;•l Hocldng 10. Mlddlepon Cardinals
0
Sundl.,, Juty 15
Pomeroy Redlegs 10, Green Radlegs 9 ·
Pomeroy Swlsher·Losha 17, Bldwllll II 8
Mondoy, Jul~ 11 ·

Pomeroy Shull vs. Green I, 6 p.m. -Racine TomA'"dos vs. Gallipolis Yankees,
8p.m.

·

111Mday,July17

New Haven Reds vs. Kyger Creek II, 6

p.m.
• Kygar Creek Bobcats vs. Rutland Reds, 8

p.m.

Socond Round
Tllurodlly July 19
Bidwell I vs. Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Pomeroy Redlegs vs. Pomeroy Swlsher-

Loshe, 8 p.m.

Maruyuma wins
PGAevent

TO THE PLATE- Brad Ramsburg of the Pomeroy Redlegs pitches during his team's 10.9 win over the Green Red legs.

Ramsburg struck out four of the five batters he faced in the game and had two hits on offense. (Dan Polcyn)

·no-hits Mason
Bidwell I and Federal
advance on.day on~ at .

CHESH IIl.tE - The sec. ond day of action at the 2001
Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament saw a pair Of
Pomeroy teams put up big
offensive
numbers
and
advance to the second round.
The Pomeroy Redlegs he!~
on to beat the Green R edlegs
10-9, whil e. Pomeroy Swisher-Los he put away Bidwell II
by a 17-8 tally in the nightcap.
The R edlegs and SwisherLoshe will face eac h other on
Thursday at 8 p.m. in t~e
quarterfinals.
In the first game, Pomeroy
scored six runs in the top of
the sixth to take a commanding 10-2 lead into the final
half inning. Green, however,
refused tq lay down and
sce&gt;red seven during their last
at-bat in a rally which ended
with the tying run standing
on second base.
In that rally, green second
baseman
Shane
Masters
recorded a two-run, two-out
double, his second base hit of
the game.
Pomeroy was forced to
bring on reliever Andy
McAngus to close out the
game and secure his squad's
advancement.
He struck out the last
Green batter to earn the save.
Brad Soulsby started for
~omeroy b~~ di,4 ,!\9t ea,n a
de cision.
Bradley Ramsburg had two
hits and recorded four strikeouts in facing five Green hitters to earn player of the game
honors for Pomeroy.
Masters was Green's playec
of the game.
Others getting hits for
Pomeroy
were
C layton
Blackston (solo home run)
and Caleb Davis (two singles).
Other hitters for Green
were Bryan White (a double)
and Dustin McCombs (a single).
Caleb Fooce took the loss
for Green. He gave up just
five hits and struc'.; out eight.

MILWAUKEE (AP)
Shigeki Maruyama became
the first Japanese player to )'lin
a PG A Tour ·event on the
mainland, beating Char\es
. BY IAN BECKER
ed that not having Aberts
ff in t h e
OVP SPORTS STAFf
. 'l bl
. 'l l
. fi l
HoweII Ill·1in aukpIayo
.
•·
ava•
~ e unt1 t 1e semi- na s
Greater MI wa ee 0 pen..
CHFS"'I~-The
20P.l
·
k
.
h
·--'-'
·
.
k
4 1 ~,..}; """ .. ._ . ;;,~.~t ... ,
. f• • , ~ .... •
was ns ~art WLJUng.
·M
aruy~ san · a . ·,, "''
"'kyger L.ree Lmle League . "When · I talked . to score
· foot bmiie putt on the first
Tournament began in splen- keeper, he said (Aberts) hadextra
hole
after
Howell
did
fashion
Saturday as Brad
·
· d 7J
c.
•
.
.
·n •t given
up , any h.tts. So I
rmsse a .ooter ,or par on
Aberu pttched ~ . no-hmer, decided to let him go for it,"
the 18th at Brown D~er Park.,
en route to guiding Bidwell! Nolan said. "It might hurt us
• The only other Japanese wmto a ~ 1 viqory against the down the road (in the tournet on the PGA Tour was lsao
Mason Twins. · , ,
&lt; nament) ." , ..
Aoki,
But he almost did not get
A m1'd st t h e· pressure
·
H
.. who
0 won the 1983
of
awauan pen·
.,
the chance.
knowing what was at ·stake,
Howell closed wttn a 7At the top of the fourth Aberts handled the tension
under 64 and Maruyama had
inning, Bidwell I head coach and struck-out the side in
a 66 to fimsh
at
IS-under
266
Kurt Nolan
. was tooling with th e top o ftl 1e c..ourth . H e h ad
. ·d d · dl
h
h
on a ot, urm an wm ~ss
the idea of taking Aberts off a bit of trouble in the fourth
day. J.P. Hayes (63) and Tun
the mound and leaving him inning, walking the first two
Herron (67) tied for third,
available for the second batters and allowing a run on
three strokes back.
round, because tourney rul~s two wild- pitches . But he
limit the use· of a pitcher to calmed himself to strike -out
six innings throu'gh each two five of the final six batters to
Dekke~
consecutive games, But after · solidicy the first no-hitter of ..,.,_ _......,
he learned Aberts' no-hitter
CAN YOU HIT THIS?
Pomeroy Swisher-Loshe pitcher J.R.
Please su Day Two, 83 i
was still in tact, Nolan decidPlene see DIW One, B3 · Greene picked up the win in Sunday's second game. (Dan Polcyn)
PONTARLIER, France
(AP) - Erik Dekker of the
Netherlands won the rainsoaked eighth stage of the
Tour de France, with Lance
Armstrong in the main pack
about 30 minutes behind. ,
Dekker, . who rides for
Rabobank, edged Spain's
Aitor .Gonzalez in the final
sprint.
CINCINNATI (AP) - The tip-off that
JOLIET, IlL (AI') - A week be(ore Dale Earnhardt
Bobby Higginson was about to become a
died in a crash at the Daytona 500, team ownerRich3)'11
father: his batting average.
Childress mtrodu ced th e driver he hoped ·would succe~!i
The closer he got to that due date, the ·hardEarnhardt to an old friend .
·:
er it 'became to get hits. When Breanna Leigh
"This guy is the real deal," Childress told the man. "He's
was· born last Tuesday, Higginson finally relaxed
got the kind of driving ability to be a big. success."
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)
and resumed swinging away.
..NoboJv. knew how soon Kevin Har- Congaree made a successThe proud papa is stocking up on hits
vick would have to prove Childress
ful return to racing, winning
instead of cigars.
right.
the Swaps Stakes in a leisurely
Higginson hit a two-out, three-run hom er
Now, f\Ve months and 1,7 races later;
pace to give trainer Bob Bafin the ninth inning Sunday, rallying the Detroit
·Harvick ·is proving his boss k'new what
fert back-to-back victories in
Tigers . to their biggest comeback wir,' of the
he was talking about.
the $500,000 race.
season, an 8-5 victory over the forlorn CincinA convincing victory on Sunda)l in
Making his first start since
nati Reds.
·
the inaugural Tropicana 400 was the sec~
finishing ,thUd in the Ken"Everybody · should have a baby," rrianager
ond of Harvick's budding Wmston Cup'
tucky Derby and third in the
Phil Garner suggested. "He's been swinging
career. He also is leading the Busch:
Preakness, Congare~ covered
the bat well since his baby was born."
Harvick
Series and appears well on his way to top'
1 1-8 miles in I :48 3-5 and
In the two games after his daughter's birth,
rookie honors in NASCAR's top stock
beat Until Sundown by four
Higginson went 6-for-9 with a two- run
car .series.
.
lengths at Hollywood Park.
homer. On Sunday, he got one of Detroit's
Harvi ck got off to a quick start after replacing Earn- '
biggest homers of the season, hitti'ng a fastball
hardt in the second race df the season. In just his third·
from Chris Nichting (0-3) for a 7-5 lead.
, Winston Cup start, the slim, engagmg 25-year-old earned
Robert Fick followed with a solo shot, his secan emotional victory in Atlanta, beating three-timeond homer of the game.
, champion Jeff Gordon in a breathtaking last-lap duel. · · ,
It's not a coincidence that Higginson is on a AnA BOY- Cincinnati's Aaron Boone Is con·
Since then, though, despite some good showings and a
gratulated by third base coach Ron Oester
roll.
POMEROY Anyone
spot
in the top 10 in the standings, there was talk that
'lOuring the pregnancy, it weighed on my after hitting a two-run homer Sunday. (AP)
interested in playing football
maybe that win was a little premature.
mind a little bit, hoping it would go as well as home team.
at Meigs High School can
"I think today answers any questions about his driving
possible," he said. "It did. That was a weight off Alex · Ochoa emerged from the deepest
attend a 10-day instructional
ability," Childress said Sunday after Harvick held off sur-·
my shoulders. I can relax now and go out and slump by a Reds hitter in 21 years, doubling in
period that begins on Monprising Robert Pressley for the win.
his first at-l:&gt;at to end an 0-for-31 slide. He also
play."
day,July 16. Players will meet
This win Was vindication for Hatvick and the rest of his
He was relaxed with 24,719 Reds fans stand- threw a runner out at home and made a nice
in the high school locker
R ic hard Childress Racing team.
ing and ~aming for ~im to n\ake the ·final running Catch to save some runs.
room at 5:30 p.m.
· After celebrating for the sellout crowd of 85,000 with
Ken- Griffey Jr. hi\ his fi rst homer of the
out Sunilay. finishing off what would 1have
For inore information, call
been a breakout game for the majors' worst month as the Reds rolled ahead S-0.
Pluse - Harvlck, 83
992-0064 or 992-2158 .

leads
Tour de France

Detroit roll~back from 5-0

Harvick wins
deficit to beat hapless Reds Tropicana 400

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to the customer. Stop in to your local John Deere dealer to see for yourself our ~me tested reliability.
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CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.

WAKEFIELD GARAGE

Jackson Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614

US #50 West, ~0. B~x #639

740-446 ~2412

740-593-3815

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players sought

'.JdHNDEERE .

DEERE

Athens; OH 45701

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w

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Page A_

-

: The Daily Sentinel
''
•

Monday, July If, 2

Septuplets should survive
WASHINGTON (AI') - ·Septuplets born last week to a
cou ple frori1 Saudi Arabia have a 95 percent chance of sur- ·
viva!, their doctor said Monday.
"Last evening the mom was able to hold the babies for the
first time," Dr. Siva Subramanian, chief of neonatology at
Georgetown University Hospital, said on CUS' "The Early
Show." "Now that they are in the fourth day there is about a
.95 percent chance that, I think, they will make it."
The father, Fahad Qahtani, who lives in nearby Falls
C hurch, Va., said he and his. wife are joyful about the births
because they want a large fag1ily and have lost two other children in the last five yelts.
"God took two of them, and he gave l)S seve~;· Qahtani
said in an interview published ·M&lt;?nday in The Washington
Post. "We rhank him for it all the time."
The septuplets were born:rbursday night. Six are breathing ,
on their own . "They all need ~ little bit of oxygen ... (and )
are progressing along as expected for a 28-we,ek gestationrange baby," Subramanian said on · AllC's "Good Morning
America."
·
Doctors say the mother, whose name has no1t been released,
should be able to go home in the next few days. The -babies
likely will remain in the hospital for·two months or so.
.

Miss1ng intern wouldn't be lured by strange~
WASHINGTON (AP) - Chandra
Levy's family believes she disappeared
from her apartment With someone she
knew because she did not take her
purse, wallet, identification or credit
.cards and commonly left her ID
behind when she met lier "secret
lover,'' h.e r parents' lawyer says.
Before the 24-y~ar-old Levy disappeared, she told her family that her
boyfriend demanded she not carry
identification when they were togeth er, attorney Billy Martin said Sunday.
· "Chandra instructed friends and
family that when she met with · her
~ecret lover and her friend that that
was the procedure used .... He did not
want her to be identified," Martin said
on NBC's "Meet the Press."

I

Missile defense faces challenges
WASHINGTON (AP) - The missile defense shield championed by President Bush got a major boost with a successful weekend test, but the plan still must. overcome challenges
-scientific and political, at home and abroad- if it is to be
built by 2004.
The destruction of a mock warhead in space by a miss ile
.interceptor launched from Kwajalein Atoll in the Pacific was
an important step for the Pentagon's missile defense effort,
but must be followed by more successes ·in more frequent and
. :more realistic tests; officials said.
Russia, meanwhile, renewed its warning that the program
would harm global security rather than improve it.
-And one domestic skeptic, Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del.,
chairman of the Senate Foreign · Rel:)~ions Committee, ca u-'
tioned that ·"it's not a real-world test yet. And we havea long
way to go, and we should continue to p~rsue it."
· The success Saturday night followed two dramatic test failures during the Clinton ad111inistration.

..:

· He
&lt;aid
Levy
"appears to have
been lured, called or
brought out of the
apartment expecting
tO return " and said it
was sus pected that
she had no ID.
Washington Police
._c~:Ut:-""' Chief Charles Ram. sey said investigators
do not believe Levx would easily be
lured from her apartment by a
stranger. The former federal intern,
last seen April 30, was "a . pretty cautious woman and · just wasn't one to
just throw her door open to anybody
if there was a knock at the door and
things like that," he told CBS' "Face

Pomeroy
teams
advance
at KC

=

--

FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

MONDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

200c!!t•r

8

i

Supporters hopeful

at!!

:Katharine Graham injured in fall

Homicide susped

DEERE ·FoR

Page 81
Monday, July lfi, 1001

the Nation."
" I mean, it jmt doesn't fit that
would be a stranger or something li -;
that," Ramsey said.
::''':
Police have reported finding nit.
signs of foul play in her apartment. :;:
The missing perso n's case has gene~
ated national attention because Re~
Gary Condit, whose district includ~
Modesto, acknowledged to investig:
tors that he was having an affair wiOS::
Levy, a police source has said.
Condit, 53 and married, is not a su3
pect in Levy's disappearance, poli'!IC
have said. He has kept a public silenCC:
and only acknowledged the rotT!antSC
relationship on July 6, in his thifie
interview with police, the source sai&lt;C
..

WASHINGTON (AP) -About .onecfifth of the estima'ft
ed 191,000 inmates in .r.rte prisons who were identified !It
mentally ill were not getting therapy or counseling, the Ju&amp;:;
tice Department reported Sunday.
A study based on 2000 data also showed that only 70 pe~
cent of state prison facilities screen inmates for mental illn&lt;:
as a matter of policy.
."This'is a modest survey," said lead researcher Alan Beck
the department's Bureau of justice Statistics .
;:
"We didn't assess what rypes of mental illness inmates wet;·
suffering from. The numbers suppo~t that mental illness is:=
significant problem for state prisons. How inmates are dia~
nosed and how easily they can receive tr~atment is a subjeZ!C
. "h e sa1'd.
wort hy o f attention,
.
,·
.._
Mentally ill inmates account for 16 percent of the stalE
prison. population, and 79 percent of thos~ identified as me,;:
tally ill were receiving therapy or counseling, the report sai:=
Female inmates are treated for mental illness at a higher ra;;:
WASHINGTON (AP)- The House will eventually vote than male prisoners. One in four women gets therapy
on campaign finan ce legislation despite the roadblock last one in five takes medication for mental illness. Only 10 pee
·
.
week that stalled the bill indefinitely, supporters predicted cent of male inmates receive any treatment.
~
; WASHINGTON (AP)- Katharine Graham, chairman of Sunday.
._
ihe executive conuniftee of The Washington Post Company,
"We will have a vote, and I am confident of it," said Sen.
~ught
was in critical conqit10n at a hospital in Idaho after surgery John McCain, R-Ariz .
.
.·
.
""':
that followed a fall, the paper reported Sunday.
McCain was the co-sponsor of a similar bill that passed the
BELVIDERE,Vt. (AP) -A state trooper's videotaped traf".
· Graham, 84, went to Sun Valley last week to attend a busi- Senate in .A'pril, and has worked closely with House propo- . fie stop helped nab a man accused of shooting four people. ~!):
bess conference and fell Saturday afternoon on a walkway nents of campaign finance overhauL
their house, police said.
.~~:
outside a condominium there, the paper said on it's Intern et
The measure would ban soft money; the unregulated milDouglas Provost, 34, was scheduled to be arraigned Moik:
site, citing an unidentified spokesman for The Post company. lions pouring into political parties from corporations, unions day on four counts of first-degree murder.
:·
. Graham was taken first to St. Luke's hospital in the Sun Val- and individuals, and restrict certain political ads in the final
The victims were identified as Jessica Bishop, 18, her father
\ey area, and then by helicopter to the St. Alphonsus Region- days of an election.
Mitchell Bishop; 46, Derrick Davis, 23, and George Weather ''
a! Medical Center in Boise, where she underwent surgery, a
On Thursday, Rep. Christopher Shays, a sponsor of the wax, 19, who was a boyfriend of Jessica's.
:·
:Sr. Alphonsus spokeswoman told the paper.
House bill, and 18 other Republicans jojned Democrats in
All four lived in the home where they were found late Fri~
The spokeswoman said she was listed in critical condition, defeating rules for debate that they felt stackeil th'e deck day. Police s'aid several other' people also lived there and three
late Saturday in an intensive care unit.
.
.
•. ~gain,~.~ theil;Jt~gi~ ._..._ •. ..... - ,
.had esoat&gt;Jid ,during the shootin~.
,
..
..., ,·
According to the spokesman for The Post company, GraAfter the stalemate, opponents of the bill chided reformers
Provost was S\opped by a state trooper a short time after th~
ham left for the meeting from Washington and arrived in Sun for killing their own reform. House Speaker Dennis Hastert, shooting, but was let go. However, the t~ooper made a videfil"
Valley on Tuesday. The meeting, held by a Wall Street invest- R-Ill., made no promises about bringing the bill up again.
tape of the stop with the camera in his cruiser. When shown
ment banking firm, began Tuesday and ended Saturday night.
"We've got to cool this thing down, try to sit down togeth- the video, witnesses identified Provost as the gunman, poliee
er," McCain said on NBC'~" Meet the Press."
said.
'

A

Tropicana 400 results, Page BJ
Rijo not ready, Page BJ
Diamond Roundup, Page B6
Tribe falls to Houston, page 86

One-fifth of inmates mentally il .,..

WASHINGTON (AP) -Two teams of disabled children
from Virginia took to the T-ball field on the White House
South Lawn on Sunday, the third installment in President
Bush's summer series.
Sunday's game featured teams from the Little League Challenger division for mentally and physically disabled children.
The players came !'rom Springfield and Virginia Beach, some
of them in wheelchairs or walkers. A few players were carried
around the bases.
Bush played his customary role, planting the first ball on
the tee, dedaring "play ball!" and then watching from the
stands behind first base. Afterward, he dispensed autographed
baseballs and hugs .
The game was capped by insidecthe-park homers, one by
Matthew Taylor of the Virginia Beach Challengers, one by
Kyle Young of the Springfield Challenger Hawks.

The Daily Sentinel ·

""'

=

Disabled kids take the field

Inside:

·=:

ALL SEAsoNs
c

LT133 Lawn Tractor

LX255 Lawn Tractor

•13-hp engine
• 38-inch mowing deck
• 5·speed shift-on·the·go transmission

•15-hp engine
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission

Tournament
81 Kyger CI'Mk Power Plant
ErnployoM Club Flold
Firat Round
So1uraoy, Jul~ 14
Bidwell I 4, Maaon Twins 1
Feda&lt;•l Hocldng 10. Mlddlepon Cardinals
0
Sundl.,, Juty 15
Pomeroy Redlegs 10, Green Radlegs 9 ·
Pomeroy Swlsher·Losha 17, Bldwllll II 8
Mondoy, Jul~ 11 ·

Pomeroy Shull vs. Green I, 6 p.m. -Racine TomA'"dos vs. Gallipolis Yankees,
8p.m.

·

111Mday,July17

New Haven Reds vs. Kyger Creek II, 6

p.m.
• Kygar Creek Bobcats vs. Rutland Reds, 8

p.m.

Socond Round
Tllurodlly July 19
Bidwell I vs. Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Pomeroy Redlegs vs. Pomeroy Swlsher-

Loshe, 8 p.m.

Maruyuma wins
PGAevent

TO THE PLATE- Brad Ramsburg of the Pomeroy Redlegs pitches during his team's 10.9 win over the Green Red legs.

Ramsburg struck out four of the five batters he faced in the game and had two hits on offense. (Dan Polcyn)

·no-hits Mason
Bidwell I and Federal
advance on.day on~ at .

CHESH IIl.tE - The sec. ond day of action at the 2001
Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament saw a pair Of
Pomeroy teams put up big
offensive
numbers
and
advance to the second round.
The Pomeroy Redlegs he!~
on to beat the Green R edlegs
10-9, whil e. Pomeroy Swisher-Los he put away Bidwell II
by a 17-8 tally in the nightcap.
The R edlegs and SwisherLoshe will face eac h other on
Thursday at 8 p.m. in t~e
quarterfinals.
In the first game, Pomeroy
scored six runs in the top of
the sixth to take a commanding 10-2 lead into the final
half inning. Green, however,
refused tq lay down and
sce&gt;red seven during their last
at-bat in a rally which ended
with the tying run standing
on second base.
In that rally, green second
baseman
Shane
Masters
recorded a two-run, two-out
double, his second base hit of
the game.
Pomeroy was forced to
bring on reliever Andy
McAngus to close out the
game and secure his squad's
advancement.
He struck out the last
Green batter to earn the save.
Brad Soulsby started for
~omeroy b~~ di,4 ,!\9t ea,n a
de cision.
Bradley Ramsburg had two
hits and recorded four strikeouts in facing five Green hitters to earn player of the game
honors for Pomeroy.
Masters was Green's playec
of the game.
Others getting hits for
Pomeroy
were
C layton
Blackston (solo home run)
and Caleb Davis (two singles).
Other hitters for Green
were Bryan White (a double)
and Dustin McCombs (a single).
Caleb Fooce took the loss
for Green. He gave up just
five hits and struc'.; out eight.

MILWAUKEE (AP)
Shigeki Maruyama became
the first Japanese player to )'lin
a PG A Tour ·event on the
mainland, beating Char\es
. BY IAN BECKER
ed that not having Aberts
ff in t h e
OVP SPORTS STAFf
. 'l bl
. 'l l
. fi l
HoweII Ill·1in aukpIayo
.
•·
ava•
~ e unt1 t 1e semi- na s
Greater MI wa ee 0 pen..
CHFS"'I~-The
20P.l
·
k
.
h
·--'-'
·
.
k
4 1 ~,..}; """ .. ._ . ;;,~.~t ... ,
. f• • , ~ .... •
was ns ~art WLJUng.
·M
aruy~ san · a . ·,, "''
"'kyger L.ree Lmle League . "When · I talked . to score
· foot bmiie putt on the first
Tournament began in splen- keeper, he said (Aberts) hadextra
hole
after
Howell
did
fashion
Saturday as Brad
·
· d 7J
c.
•
.
.
·n •t given
up , any h.tts. So I
rmsse a .ooter ,or par on
Aberu pttched ~ . no-hmer, decided to let him go for it,"
the 18th at Brown D~er Park.,
en route to guiding Bidwell! Nolan said. "It might hurt us
• The only other Japanese wmto a ~ 1 viqory against the down the road (in the tournet on the PGA Tour was lsao
Mason Twins. · , ,
&lt; nament) ." , ..
Aoki,
But he almost did not get
A m1'd st t h e· pressure
·
H
.. who
0 won the 1983
of
awauan pen·
.,
the chance.
knowing what was at ·stake,
Howell closed wttn a 7At the top of the fourth Aberts handled the tension
under 64 and Maruyama had
inning, Bidwell I head coach and struck-out the side in
a 66 to fimsh
at
IS-under
266
Kurt Nolan
. was tooling with th e top o ftl 1e c..ourth . H e h ad
. ·d d · dl
h
h
on a ot, urm an wm ~ss
the idea of taking Aberts off a bit of trouble in the fourth
day. J.P. Hayes (63) and Tun
the mound and leaving him inning, walking the first two
Herron (67) tied for third,
available for the second batters and allowing a run on
three strokes back.
round, because tourney rul~s two wild- pitches . But he
limit the use· of a pitcher to calmed himself to strike -out
six innings throu'gh each two five of the final six batters to
Dekke~
consecutive games, But after · solidicy the first no-hitter of ..,.,_ _......,
he learned Aberts' no-hitter
CAN YOU HIT THIS?
Pomeroy Swisher-Loshe pitcher J.R.
Please su Day Two, 83 i
was still in tact, Nolan decidPlene see DIW One, B3 · Greene picked up the win in Sunday's second game. (Dan Polcyn)
PONTARLIER, France
(AP) - Erik Dekker of the
Netherlands won the rainsoaked eighth stage of the
Tour de France, with Lance
Armstrong in the main pack
about 30 minutes behind. ,
Dekker, . who rides for
Rabobank, edged Spain's
Aitor .Gonzalez in the final
sprint.
CINCINNATI (AP) - The tip-off that
JOLIET, IlL (AI') - A week be(ore Dale Earnhardt
Bobby Higginson was about to become a
died in a crash at the Daytona 500, team ownerRich3)'11
father: his batting average.
Childress mtrodu ced th e driver he hoped ·would succe~!i
The closer he got to that due date, the ·hardEarnhardt to an old friend .
·:
er it 'became to get hits. When Breanna Leigh
"This guy is the real deal," Childress told the man. "He's
was· born last Tuesday, Higginson finally relaxed
got the kind of driving ability to be a big. success."
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)
and resumed swinging away.
..NoboJv. knew how soon Kevin Har- Congaree made a successThe proud papa is stocking up on hits
vick would have to prove Childress
ful return to racing, winning
instead of cigars.
right.
the Swaps Stakes in a leisurely
Higginson hit a two-out, three-run hom er
Now, f\Ve months and 1,7 races later;
pace to give trainer Bob Bafin the ninth inning Sunday, rallying the Detroit
·Harvick ·is proving his boss k'new what
fert back-to-back victories in
Tigers . to their biggest comeback wir,' of the
he was talking about.
the $500,000 race.
season, an 8-5 victory over the forlorn CincinA convincing victory on Sunda)l in
Making his first start since
nati Reds.
·
the inaugural Tropicana 400 was the sec~
finishing ,thUd in the Ken"Everybody · should have a baby," rrianager
ond of Harvick's budding Wmston Cup'
tucky Derby and third in the
Phil Garner suggested. "He's been swinging
career. He also is leading the Busch:
Preakness, Congare~ covered
the bat well since his baby was born."
Harvick
Series and appears well on his way to top'
1 1-8 miles in I :48 3-5 and
In the two games after his daughter's birth,
rookie honors in NASCAR's top stock
beat Until Sundown by four
Higginson went 6-for-9 with a two- run
car .series.
.
lengths at Hollywood Park.
homer. On Sunday, he got one of Detroit's
Harvi ck got off to a quick start after replacing Earn- '
biggest homers of the season, hitti'ng a fastball
hardt in the second race df the season. In just his third·
from Chris Nichting (0-3) for a 7-5 lead.
, Winston Cup start, the slim, engagmg 25-year-old earned
Robert Fick followed with a solo shot, his secan emotional victory in Atlanta, beating three-timeond homer of the game.
, champion Jeff Gordon in a breathtaking last-lap duel. · · ,
It's not a coincidence that Higginson is on a AnA BOY- Cincinnati's Aaron Boone Is con·
Since then, though, despite some good showings and a
gratulated by third base coach Ron Oester
roll.
POMEROY Anyone
spot
in the top 10 in the standings, there was talk that
'lOuring the pregnancy, it weighed on my after hitting a two-run homer Sunday. (AP)
interested in playing football
maybe that win was a little premature.
mind a little bit, hoping it would go as well as home team.
at Meigs High School can
"I think today answers any questions about his driving
possible," he said. "It did. That was a weight off Alex · Ochoa emerged from the deepest
attend a 10-day instructional
ability," Childress said Sunday after Harvick held off sur-·
my shoulders. I can relax now and go out and slump by a Reds hitter in 21 years, doubling in
period that begins on Monprising Robert Pressley for the win.
his first at-l:&gt;at to end an 0-for-31 slide. He also
play."
day,July 16. Players will meet
This win Was vindication for Hatvick and the rest of his
He was relaxed with 24,719 Reds fans stand- threw a runner out at home and made a nice
in the high school locker
R ic hard Childress Racing team.
ing and ~aming for ~im to n\ake the ·final running Catch to save some runs.
room at 5:30 p.m.
· After celebrating for the sellout crowd of 85,000 with
Ken- Griffey Jr. hi\ his fi rst homer of the
out Sunilay. finishing off what would 1have
For inore information, call
been a breakout game for the majors' worst month as the Reds rolled ahead S-0.
Pluse - Harvlck, 83
992-0064 or 992-2158 .

leads
Tour de France

Detroit roll~back from 5-0

Harvick wins
deficit to beat hapless Reds Tropicana 400

JS60 Walk·Behlnd Mower

Congaree
retums to racing

• 6.0-hp engine
• Durable die-cast aluminum dec~
·· • Seven cutting heights

.

·Tt DSC Line Trimmer/Brvshcutter
• 1.05-hp 119.8 cc) M-Series engine
•15·inch·cuning·swath
• Only 8.5 1bs
• 2-year consumer warranty

'

wwwJohnDeere com

SST1 BLawn Tractor
•18-hp, V-Twin engine • Two-pedal automatic transmission
• 48-inch mower d~ck • Zero-turn radius with power steering

For the past 163 years, John Deere has held the highest standards of honesty, quality, and commitment
to the customer. Stop in to your local John Deere dealer to see for yourself our ~me tested reliability.
You'll find that our standards haven't changed much over the years. Ask. about easy financing options ,
at your participating dealer today.
.
•

NOTHING

RUNS

LIKE

A

CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.

WAKEFIELD GARAGE

Jackson Pike - 2 mi West of Holzer Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614

US #50 West, ~0. B~x #639

740-446 ~2412

740-593-3815

Meigs football
players sought

'.JdHNDEERE .

DEERE

Athens; OH 45701

...•.

•,,
•

w

.

....

~

���-~--

-·

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

I

•
Monday, July 16,

onday,
July 16, 2001
-. .
..

200t

Pomer~y.

Mlddleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • P~- B~ BRIDGE

NEA Croaaword

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I PHILLIP
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wv 1103171l

Fumiture stripping
&amp; refinishing

I Senlng Oblo and W.V.

(under PomeroyMason Bridge) .

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT Or
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

!

'

BARBARA PAYNE,
EXECUTRIX OF THE
ESTATE OF LUCILLE
I
M.KINGAKA
LUCILLE KING,
DECEASED

____
-CONSTRUCTION

,......,....._

---~

PR,OJECT?
WE 'CAN HELP
GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

.
•:

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

PLAINTIFF
CASE NO.
01..CV·102

E. KING,
EXECUTOR'OF THE
ESTATE OF ROLAND
E. KING, DECEASED,
ETAL.
RA~DY

DEFENDANTS.
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

The laot publication
will be made an the
dey at July,
2001, and the twentyeight (28) dayo lor
anawer
wilt
commence on that
date. In tha ca.. of
your f•llure to answer

atherwloa reopand
raquaotad by tha
Rulita of Civil
by
be
rendered agalnlt you
and far the relief
demanded In the
Complaint.
·
Dated thla 6th dey
al June, 2001.

To: LluD.
Roblnaon aka Llaa D.
King, whose laot
known addreues
are Elberton,
Marlene Harrlaon,
Georgia, and 1053 Clerk of Courts
SR 588, Gallipolis, OH
45631, preaent
(7) 9, 16, 23, 30, 2001
addreaa unknown,
(8) 6, 13, 2001
and the unknown
holro, next ol kin,
devlaees, legate~"·
administrators,

...

INT

•

• HardWood Floorlnl

•Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Phone rl04J 614-61 oo

FREE ESTIMATES

• ·conaoleum
fREE ESTIMATES

LOcUli Street, Pt. PIUIInt
Just Paat K&amp;K
Mobile Home Park

AHI·U.~

!! AIR-CONDITION IN'!!
YOU SPOIL ME, .

740-992-1671

TATER!!
' KENSINGTON
WINDOWS .IIEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OIJT 99.5%
"Of DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

WINDOW
SYSTEMS

,
•

. remodeling,
drywall, room
additions, and
· plumbing.

Free Estimates

Terry~mm

992·6215

992-0739

v..lf\'( C.N.rTWe: 1-\1\VE. ""~

_,_

t... LN'TOP, UK.e:
E'IE~~~?

SETH'S
LAWN
SERVICE

9th!

• Truckl •

Trallera

• Boats • Mobile
• Drlv-ya
• Equlpmetrt clelned &amp; degreeaed

ELITE MECHANIC&amp;i.. CONTR.\CTORS
' ~

Cell 740•591•2782' . 740•591•0477
Home 740•985•4218
Lowest prices guarantaed

NOW OPEN
18- HOLE

MINIATURE GOLF
RACINE PIZZA EXPRESS
Vine Street 949-4900

f

IW..:LW'

Jeff' stethem

WE'LL START WITH
A HAMSTRING
5TRETCH 1
JASON ANt)

Ill HNd Th SropA 'llrJnt!'

. 1·304-675-7814

1-800-%50-9077

representatives,

apause, and assigns
ol Lisa D. Robinson
aka Lisa D. King,
whose
addresses are

TREE SERVICE
Top • Trllll• Removal

•••et

unknown.

Se1rv1~::e

7 40-:4"1-ti-2422
811CkbQ~

YOUR CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Drlv~ways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
•
I
25 years ex~rlence
Free Estimales
,,

74o-742·8015 or
1-877·353-7022

MILL END
FABRICS
Machine Quilling
EARNHART 113

pillow panel•
74G-992·aen
Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo
On Thuradayl .
At6:30 p.m.
Main Street
Pomeroy. Ohio
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
Starburst
Progressive top line

Lie. #00·50

HIll'• Self •
Stor1ge
29870 Belh'an Road
Raclna, Ohio
457'11

740.949-2217
Slzel.~' X 10' 11
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Pan
Pau
Pan
Plat ·

.,

. Cell#
614-747-1715

~~~
•
High&amp;Dry
Self-Storage

WITH NUTS IN IT OR A
COOKIE WITH RAISINS?

18 Mil. schoOl 37

1 Quell

3 In ICidRion
4Brlt.

31 Lllamby -

21 Pleeea of
paper
.
22 Read
23 Wotfllh
24 Lllovea out
apesch
IOUndl
25 Act Ilk. .

Neuter

(rn1111111rize)
~llh pari

36

.

pronoun

40 In disorder

41 Europeon
co plioI
nobllmon
42 lnftnnRieo
Nero'•
43 ClrcuR
lnatrument 5 Had I
IIIICk
45 Hockman or
34 "F.....u,
6 Bid conapy
Autry
Hanrl"
beiVII
7 Thick piece 26 Operoby
48 Wallet flllero
35 FMbla• Del
Vardl
47 Throw
mlnded
11111111ton
thlngolt
.·
27 W•ktnO.
g "Form"
wtcamlng 49 UnR of light · :
50 Dutch city
:
abbr.
37
1o~ve­ 28 River
52 Evan score .
-1eaver"
nymph
53 In what
mtnauver·
11 App~~~r
30 Yuno (Sp.)
woy?
lng
•

36=
sr.:;.u.

•

•''

J

•

'
'

..-+-+-11-+-1:

•
•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

-1.

by Luis Campos

Colebrlly Clp/ltr crypiOgfM\11 are CI'Ntad fmm quotation• by famcua :
people, pall and
Each letter In tho c:lpher otandiiOI' anolher. .

Today's clue: P aqUIJis U

8 '1 M 0

'T

' FHXTJL

wp

J

I I J L.

WI H

G 0,

uoos

FI

ATJ

F I

VR

H V 0 0.

.·

DIGSOFTFTIJ

FZO

VR

T' G

v
T F' R

LIT J L

' i

HTNTJL.'

SVWWTF
STJDVX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •women dress ·allke all over the
world; they draaa to be annoying to other women." - Elsa
SchlapareUI .
..

I•

I

IT I I! o

spade losers on the
U
W .,
jack- tO of diamonds.
1 1
(Similarly, you could
win trick one, cash
the heart queen, then 1-.,..V_,O_T...;E;;..;C;.,..~
do a winner-on-loser ·
I3 I I 14
play, pitching a: high '---'-.....&amp;.-L-..L-....1

NEITHER .. I

~~i:~~)orid

on a low
Which is your pick?
Both lines work
with this distribution.
Yet if you switch the
red suits, the first line
fails and the second
works . However, if
diamonds break very
badly, the first is alive
whereas ·the second is
probably dead. It 1s
very close.

PREFER PLAIN
COOKIES ...

Cassette Transcription
Numerous Business Support Services

, 25 years Secretarial Experience

740-667-3224 or 740-667.0038

· JONES'

U R I,. ,~'
16 1 1 ~

0 .T T

I

Is

I
.

.

.

RA

.

0

, Our elderly neighbor has a .
:great excuse for procrastinating.
He says that if he puts off certain
chores today he Will have something to do-- • -----

.

AAM

l

t-.....,:-,.,~r-r--,...-i
7

1.

18_ I_ .I .I

·

I." Comp lele. lhe ehuekl~ quooed

by filling In tho mi55lng words
L..-L-.1.--l........IL-...l.......t you· develop from stop No. 3 below.

8
A
V

.

V

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS
FOR ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS
' .

Bodily- Match - Knock • lnjeQt - MY JOB
.
The short order cook was falling behind his orders.· :
"Why don't you help him?" I asked the waiter. "Well." he · :
shrugged, "I already did MY JOB!"

Tree Service

AQUARIUS O•n.· 20-Feb.

Tuesday, July 17,2001
If you stri ve for you r objectives independent of others,
your possibilities for fulfilling
an old, secret ambition looks
very good for you in the year
ahead. Stand on your own
two feet.

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc. ·

.CAN CER Uunc 21-July
22) -- Thc[e's ;1n old axiom
which is familiar to every for-

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car ~ats, headliners, truck .tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

mer and pre~c nt G.L and that
is don ' t voluntee r. If you igno re this today, yo u'll get
stuck with burdem not of
your making. Trying to patch
up a broke n romance? The ·
An ro-Graph Matchmake r can
hel p you understand what to
do to make the rela tionship
work. Mail S2.75 to Matchr maker, c/ o th is newspaper ,

Mon-Frt 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1·888·521 ~ ........ .,

P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill

Sta tio n, ,New York,

NY

10156.
LEO Uul y 23-Aug. 22) -People you moet for the fint '

33795 Hilltul RJI.

'iij~fn;;;;;;t;;:j[C;k)g"~;y'~~;""js;~;:'lfpii"]iLiM'l~ITLM"'l~ltiM'liL;;-j I '
l·

PommiJ, Ohif

740-992-5232

DOWN

Small
whirlpool

,. fAIR UP!

lltypeso
Roofs,
Specialist
740-94~-1405

12

·2 Lodging

32 River In
All1al
33 Pilar

When mail arrives
from readers , it is usually to point out an
error. And normally
they are correct, but ·
not always. Yet earlier
this year I received an
unusual Jetter, from
· Nancy Seeley of Grass
Valley, Calif. It included this ·deal. Seeley thought the columnist had recommended the secondbest line of play.
Well, how would you
play in six hearts?
West leads the club
king, and trumps are

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

Call Bob

IPOI
25Amt._
28 Olen
armbene

the fir&amp;t tri'k with
dummy's club ace ,
ruff a club in hand,
cash the heart "'e,
,..,o,. .... fALt.. INTO
cross to the heart jack,
ruff the last club, and
fl.ltlONG
play
off the top diatiANI&gt;S.
monds. If West ruffs ·
the last of these, he is
endplayed. West must
either lead ' a spade
into your ace-queen
or play a club, which
yo·ll ruff in the
dummy while discarding a spade from
hand. And your second spade loser disappears on the diamond
jack.
The alternative is to
duck trick one .. You
ruff the next club,
draw two rounds 'o f
I':::J"'""VWV"'""''I\FJ\71:';-'1 trumps from hand.
unblock two top diamonds, ·cross to
·dummy with a trump,
discard your last diamond on ·the club
ace, and throw both

•·

WHICH DO 'f'OU WANT, A COOKIE

General/Specialized 'IYping
Temporary Office Assistance
MaiUng Labels/Envelopes

21 Small akin

Smalllll
number
(of things)

I

PEANUTS

Professional Work at
Affordable Rates

executort, personal

KEITH!

Residential COIIIIIIfrclal New Comlru&lt;llon
Sales Seni« llllllallallon .
· Spe&lt;ialiri"ll in Sheet Metal Ductwor~
"Tnne" S.IOII &amp; Senlce For
GaUio, M1.10n, o'nd Melp Counli"'
Lkensod and lltSUI'ed
WV 005176

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

57

Tttf

·'

fREE IN HOME ESllllATE8 • ~SEEING 18 BEUEVIHQ• • \tVit023477

• Ntw Otragee

landscaplnQ
Shoun Seth
(740)985-3563
(740) 541-3820

Phllltll

One line is to win

ttf5 l&gt;f"f&gt;fl&gt; TO GIVf TtltM
OPP05ABLt TtiVMB5
/
ANI&gt; JVH tiOPt
Ttlt Y f&gt;ON'T

1-BOD-291-5600 • Pomerov, OH

• Roam Addition• &amp;
Romodollng

London

55 Singer
Riehle
58 S..hlwlt

~-1.

'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

,___,....,..t

ripllllt

54 -of

18 2,000 lbe.
20 ""-!!-~
Hurt"

The letters
••

•NewHomas

Exclusive
l\:lohawk Dealer
· •Can&gt;et

. ..

Pan

a:.perty

51 Fruit

17 Comic

Openln&amp; lead: • K

OUALITY ·

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Full S.ervlce Dell• Rotlaaerie Chicken
Bread &amp; Milk available after

t 1 4 I

AKQ

•• .... .....

ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTioN

EXPRESS

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

(740) 992·5072

bitJ or small lobs;
small

KQII15
... J I H
SGulh
• "Q 7

5NT

~~

DELIVERY AVAII.ABLE

• Pallo and Porch Deoka

aucceaalve weeka.

.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both
Wnl Nonh !:•st
...
Pau
INT

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

• El«:trlcol &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; GU!Wa
.
• VInyl Sldlng &amp; Painting

PlalntiH be paid from
the proceedo of the
oole.
You are roqulred to
onowor the Complaint ·
within lwanty-alght
(28) daya after the
laol publication of
thlo Notice, which will
be publlohad once
each week far olx (6)

' • :1:

.. '
....••,.. ........... ••
...

Free Estimate!'

YOUNG'S

Public Nollcesia Ne.•si1llpetrs.
Your Rlllblto Know, Delivered Rilhtto Your JJOor.lfi:!

"

• J'

t

45

15c.
11 American
rival

u

K 10 5

+

740-992·7599

•

....
,,

•

9 AKIDI71

740117-GIII

Advertise
In this space
for $25 per
month

Chester, Ohio

...

1

14 C~~~~r 41 lnetlllll

• "I I

w...

Wh1dows • Room
Additions • RooiiDa
COMMERCIAl and IEIIOOOIAI.
FREE FSTIMATES

. I'

• ·11-M

•JIDtJ

• Replacem..l

· \I

....

.

~ '
QJ t

•

Now Homes • VInyl
Sldlna• Now Gorqos

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Caa/vllle, OH 45723

3t Soma
Mlddll
1 Tltt
Ealtanw8
7 ..TopGun" 41 co::,n~ 1.t
44 An
I
13 Crystalline

ACROSS

ALDER

~'"!·4 '

BUILDIU INC.

· 0..

"

--.• .

uzzle

Cellular

time very
todayimporunt
could end to
up you
being
later on, so it's important you
be receptive :md
friendly to all, no ma tter
whu or .what you think they

· Jeff Warner,Ins.

:arc.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Those you hold in high r&lt;:·
gard might find reasons today
to be disturbed by your con. duct, unless you let your no-

9~2-~479
I

bier qmlitin
prev:~il under aU conditions.
Preserve your image.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) •
- Sadly, yo u may' have not
profited fro m a previous experi ence and could repeat the
exact same mistake ~'agai n today. This time aroun d; analyze what happened and learn.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) --Before allowing anyone
to manage your financial affairs today, make absolutely
certain this penon undersu.nds
your wishe5 and
needs. He or ~ he could create problems for you . ·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) -- If you think that
people w hl) you will r. ~C ·in volved with today are going
to be overly enthused :~bout
doing everything your way,
}rou're...,adly mi~ taken . Leave
room for their inpu t.

CAPRI CORN (Dee. 22Jan. ·t9) -· Unfortunately,
your mind cu uld be ew:ry
. place but on wh;t you're do-

ing today. Should you find
younelf daydreaming, ltop ·
and tab
things llowly in order t9
pay attention to the tasks at

· hand.

19} - - You·ll only have your- · ·
self to blame today if you allow yourself to be jockeyed
into situations whe re you feel
you must c~m fonn to
peer pressure, th en end up
· with many regrets.

PISCES (Feb. 20-M.uch 20)
-- Should you have a rough
day, try to dismiss yo Llt experiences from your mind before
returning home . Othe rwise ,
you co uld rake things o ut on
your innocent fa mily·.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- To be on the safe side today, put all pertinent infonnlltion in writi ng so tha t you
won't get careless. ThcrC's a
chance you
could be too easily distracte d and forget needed deta il5.

·H

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Don't count o n anything yo u don't h:~vc 111 hand
today . Things o n which
you're banking on not be
taken for granted. They might
no.t come through for you as
you anticipate .

:
•
,.;

...

1

•

. ,

GEMINI (May 21-june 20)
-- To avoid the prospects of
someone else making decisions for you today, which
you'll find intolerable, stay on
top of your responsibilities, so
there'll be no need for such

,,,
,~1

anion.

~

'' 1

.. ~

,.

�-~--

-·

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

I

•
Monday, July 16,

onday,
July 16, 2001
-. .
..

200t

Pomer~y.

Mlddleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • P~- B~ BRIDGE

NEA Croaaword

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

I PHILLIP
~

~_j

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE
Free Estimates
&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,
Electrical, Plumbing
All Home Needs
740·9~9-1521
Owner:
Charlie Wolfe

"A

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264
Mr.dicarc Supplement; Life Insurancef
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Roll overs;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

WICK'S

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

CiJJ

c4

Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
'Bulldozer Services

(740) 992-3470

The One Man Corporation
Residential Pressure Washing, Single Wldee,
Double Wldea, Boat's Decks, AV'a, and
camper), awlmmlng pools and farm·oqulpment·
I've r&gt;rHSure washad things from filling station
parking lots, RV's and homes to a corporate
Lear-Jet.
I.alae- Degrease automobile and truck motor's
as wei! as diesel and industrial equipment
engines, such as bulldozer's, backhoes; and
endloadera. If I can help you call me after 5:00.
Jlml Scott 9112·3002
or email at: onemancorporatlon@frognet..net

Howardl.
Wrltesel

DEPOYIAO
·PARtS

Roofing • Home
Maintenance·
Gutters- Down
Spout

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorlud
Case-IH Parts
Dealen
.

FI'H Est1m1tes

949-1405
591·5011

WIH

BISSELL

P/B

URNPIKE i

LIN COLN
Mercury~

SPECIAL FINANCE DEPARTMENf
Bankruptcy? Credil Problems?

"We Can Help"!!

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle
1-800-272-5179 or 446-9800

CONTRAaORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771

74()..985-3948
CONCRElf/BLO(K/BRICK
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,
Repl11~ements,. • Walks
and Drives • Stencil

RIVERSIDE
STORAGE

JIM'S ·
WOODSHED

10' X10' 530.00
10' X20' 550.00

Crete Free Estimates

74D·S85•4282

wv 1103171l

Fumiture stripping
&amp; refinishing

I Senlng Oblo and W.V.

(under PomeroyMason Bridge) .

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT Or
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

!

'

BARBARA PAYNE,
EXECUTRIX OF THE
ESTATE OF LUCILLE
I
M.KINGAKA
LUCILLE KING,
DECEASED

____
-CONSTRUCTION

,......,....._

---~

PR,OJECT?
WE 'CAN HELP
GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

.
•:

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

PLAINTIFF
CASE NO.
01..CV·102

E. KING,
EXECUTOR'OF THE
ESTATE OF ROLAND
E. KING, DECEASED,
ETAL.
RA~DY

DEFENDANTS.
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

The laot publication
will be made an the
dey at July,
2001, and the twentyeight (28) dayo lor
anawer
wilt
commence on that
date. In tha ca.. of
your f•llure to answer

atherwloa reopand
raquaotad by tha
Rulita of Civil
by
be
rendered agalnlt you
and far the relief
demanded In the
Complaint.
·
Dated thla 6th dey
al June, 2001.

To: LluD.
Roblnaon aka Llaa D.
King, whose laot
known addreues
are Elberton,
Marlene Harrlaon,
Georgia, and 1053 Clerk of Courts
SR 588, Gallipolis, OH
45631, preaent
(7) 9, 16, 23, 30, 2001
addreaa unknown,
(8) 6, 13, 2001
and the unknown
holro, next ol kin,
devlaees, legate~"·
administrators,

...

INT

•

• HardWood Floorlnl

•Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Phone rl04J 614-61 oo

FREE ESTIMATES

• ·conaoleum
fREE ESTIMATES

LOcUli Street, Pt. PIUIInt
Just Paat K&amp;K
Mobile Home Park

AHI·U.~

!! AIR-CONDITION IN'!!
YOU SPOIL ME, .

740-992-1671

TATER!!
' KENSINGTON
WINDOWS .IIEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OIJT 99.5%
"Of DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

WINDOW
SYSTEMS

,
•

. remodeling,
drywall, room
additions, and
· plumbing.

Free Estimates

Terry~mm

992·6215

992-0739

v..lf\'( C.N.rTWe: 1-\1\VE. ""~

_,_

t... LN'TOP, UK.e:
E'IE~~~?

SETH'S
LAWN
SERVICE

9th!

• Truckl •

Trallera

• Boats • Mobile
• Drlv-ya
• Equlpmetrt clelned &amp; degreeaed

ELITE MECHANIC&amp;i.. CONTR.\CTORS
' ~

Cell 740•591•2782' . 740•591•0477
Home 740•985•4218
Lowest prices guarantaed

NOW OPEN
18- HOLE

MINIATURE GOLF
RACINE PIZZA EXPRESS
Vine Street 949-4900

f

IW..:LW'

Jeff' stethem

WE'LL START WITH
A HAMSTRING
5TRETCH 1
JASON ANt)

Ill HNd Th SropA 'llrJnt!'

. 1·304-675-7814

1-800-%50-9077

representatives,

apause, and assigns
ol Lisa D. Robinson
aka Lisa D. King,
whose
addresses are

TREE SERVICE
Top • Trllll• Removal

•••et

unknown.

Se1rv1~::e

7 40-:4"1-ti-2422
811CkbQ~

YOUR CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Drlv~ways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
•
I
25 years ex~rlence
Free Estimales
,,

74o-742·8015 or
1-877·353-7022

MILL END
FABRICS
Machine Quilling
EARNHART 113

pillow panel•
74G-992·aen
Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo
On Thuradayl .
At6:30 p.m.
Main Street
Pomeroy. Ohio
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
Starburst
Progressive top line

Lie. #00·50

HIll'• Self •
Stor1ge
29870 Belh'an Road
Raclna, Ohio
457'11

740.949-2217
Slzel.~' X 10' 11
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Pan
Pau
Pan
Plat ·

.,

. Cell#
614-747-1715

~~~
•
High&amp;Dry
Self-Storage

WITH NUTS IN IT OR A
COOKIE WITH RAISINS?

18 Mil. schoOl 37

1 Quell

3 In ICidRion
4Brlt.

31 Lllamby -

21 Pleeea of
paper
.
22 Read
23 Wotfllh
24 Lllovea out
apesch
IOUndl
25 Act Ilk. .

Neuter

(rn1111111rize)
~llh pari

36

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pronoun

40 In disorder

41 Europeon
co plioI
nobllmon
42 lnftnnRieo
Nero'•
43 ClrcuR
lnatrument 5 Had I
IIIICk
45 Hockman or
34 "F.....u,
6 Bid conapy
Autry
Hanrl"
beiVII
7 Thick piece 26 Operoby
48 Wallet flllero
35 FMbla• Del
Vardl
47 Throw
mlnded
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thlngolt
.·
27 W•ktnO.
g "Form"
wtcamlng 49 UnR of light · :
50 Dutch city
:
abbr.
37
1o~ve­ 28 River
52 Evan score .
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nymph
53 In what
mtnauver·
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30 Yuno (Sp.)
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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by Luis Campos

Colebrlly Clp/ltr crypiOgfM\11 are CI'Ntad fmm quotation• by famcua :
people, pall and
Each letter In tho c:lpher otandiiOI' anolher. .

Today's clue: P aqUIJis U

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wp

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STJDVX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •women dress ·allke all over the
world; they draaa to be annoying to other women." - Elsa
SchlapareUI .
..

I•

I

IT I I! o

spade losers on the
U
W .,
jack- tO of diamonds.
1 1
(Similarly, you could
win trick one, cash
the heart queen, then 1-.,..V_,O_T...;E;;..;C;.,..~
do a winner-on-loser ·
I3 I I 14
play, pitching a: high '---'-.....&amp;.-L-..L-....1

NEITHER .. I

~~i:~~)orid

on a low
Which is your pick?
Both lines work
with this distribution.
Yet if you switch the
red suits, the first line
fails and the second
works . However, if
diamonds break very
badly, the first is alive
whereas ·the second is
probably dead. It 1s
very close.

PREFER PLAIN
COOKIES ...

Cassette Transcription
Numerous Business Support Services

, 25 years Secretarial Experience

740-667-3224 or 740-667.0038

· JONES'

U R I,. ,~'
16 1 1 ~

0 .T T

I

Is

I
.

.

.

RA

.

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, Our elderly neighbor has a .
:great excuse for procrastinating.
He says that if he puts off certain
chores today he Will have something to do-- • -----

.

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t-.....,:-,.,~r-r--,...-i
7

1.

18_ I_ .I .I

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by filling In tho mi55lng words
L..-L-.1.--l........IL-...l.......t you· develop from stop No. 3 below.

8
A
V

.

V

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS
FOR ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS
' .

Bodily- Match - Knock • lnjeQt - MY JOB
.
The short order cook was falling behind his orders.· :
"Why don't you help him?" I asked the waiter. "Well." he · :
shrugged, "I already did MY JOB!"

Tree Service

AQUARIUS O•n.· 20-Feb.

Tuesday, July 17,2001
If you stri ve for you r objectives independent of others,
your possibilities for fulfilling
an old, secret ambition looks
very good for you in the year
ahead. Stand on your own
two feet.

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc. ·

.CAN CER Uunc 21-July
22) -- Thc[e's ;1n old axiom
which is familiar to every for-

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car ~ats, headliners, truck .tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

mer and pre~c nt G.L and that
is don ' t voluntee r. If you igno re this today, yo u'll get
stuck with burdem not of
your making. Trying to patch
up a broke n romance? The ·
An ro-Graph Matchmake r can
hel p you understand what to
do to make the rela tionship
work. Mail S2.75 to Matchr maker, c/ o th is newspaper ,

Mon-Frt 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1·888·521 ~ ........ .,

P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill

Sta tio n, ,New York,

NY

10156.
LEO Uul y 23-Aug. 22) -People you moet for the fint '

33795 Hilltul RJI.

'iij~fn;;;;;;t;;:j[C;k)g"~;y'~~;""js;~;:'lfpii"]iLiM'l~ITLM"'l~ltiM'liL;;-j I '
l·

PommiJ, Ohif

740-992-5232

DOWN

Small
whirlpool

,. fAIR UP!

lltypeso
Roofs,
Specialist
740-94~-1405

12

·2 Lodging

32 River In
All1al
33 Pilar

When mail arrives
from readers , it is usually to point out an
error. And normally
they are correct, but ·
not always. Yet earlier
this year I received an
unusual Jetter, from
· Nancy Seeley of Grass
Valley, Calif. It included this ·deal. Seeley thought the columnist had recommended the secondbest line of play.
Well, how would you
play in six hearts?
West leads the club
king, and trumps are

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

Call Bob

IPOI
25Amt._
28 Olen
armbene

the fir&amp;t tri'k with
dummy's club ace ,
ruff a club in hand,
cash the heart "'e,
,..,o,. .... fALt.. INTO
cross to the heart jack,
ruff the last club, and
fl.ltlONG
play
off the top diatiANI&gt;S.
monds. If West ruffs ·
the last of these, he is
endplayed. West must
either lead ' a spade
into your ace-queen
or play a club, which
yo·ll ruff in the
dummy while discarding a spade from
hand. And your second spade loser disappears on the diamond
jack.
The alternative is to
duck trick one .. You
ruff the next club,
draw two rounds 'o f
I':::J"'""VWV"'""''I\FJ\71:';-'1 trumps from hand.
unblock two top diamonds, ·cross to
·dummy with a trump,
discard your last diamond on ·the club
ace, and throw both

•·

WHICH DO 'f'OU WANT, A COOKIE

General/Specialized 'IYping
Temporary Office Assistance
MaiUng Labels/Envelopes

21 Small akin

Smalllll
number
(of things)

I

PEANUTS

Professional Work at
Affordable Rates

executort, personal

KEITH!

Residential COIIIIIIfrclal New Comlru&lt;llon
Sales Seni« llllllallallon .
· Spe&lt;ialiri"ll in Sheet Metal Ductwor~
"Tnne" S.IOII &amp; Senlce For
GaUio, M1.10n, o'nd Melp Counli"'
Lkensod and lltSUI'ed
WV 005176

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

57

Tttf

·'

fREE IN HOME ESllllATE8 • ~SEEING 18 BEUEVIHQ• • \tVit023477

• Ntw Otragee

landscaplnQ
Shoun Seth
(740)985-3563
(740) 541-3820

Phllltll

One line is to win

ttf5 l&gt;f"f&gt;fl&gt; TO GIVf TtltM
OPP05ABLt TtiVMB5
/
ANI&gt; JVH tiOPt
Ttlt Y f&gt;ON'T

1-BOD-291-5600 • Pomerov, OH

• Roam Addition• &amp;
Romodollng

London

55 Singer
Riehle
58 S..hlwlt

~-1.

'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

,___,....,..t

ripllllt

54 -of

18 2,000 lbe.
20 ""-!!-~
Hurt"

The letters
••

•NewHomas

Exclusive
l\:lohawk Dealer
· •Can&gt;et

. ..

Pan

a:.perty

51 Fruit

17 Comic

Openln&amp; lead: • K

OUALITY ·

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Full S.ervlce Dell• Rotlaaerie Chicken
Bread &amp; Milk available after

t 1 4 I

AKQ

•• .... .....

ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTioN

EXPRESS

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

(740) 992·5072

bitJ or small lobs;
small

KQII15
... J I H
SGulh
• "Q 7

5NT

~~

DELIVERY AVAII.ABLE

• Pallo and Porch Deoka

aucceaalve weeka.

.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both
Wnl Nonh !:•st
...
Pau
INT

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

• El«:trlcol &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; GU!Wa
.
• VInyl Sldlng &amp; Painting

PlalntiH be paid from
the proceedo of the
oole.
You are roqulred to
onowor the Complaint ·
within lwanty-alght
(28) daya after the
laol publication of
thlo Notice, which will
be publlohad once
each week far olx (6)

' • :1:

.. '
....••,.. ........... ••
...

Free Estimate!'

YOUNG'S

Public Nollcesia Ne.•si1llpetrs.
Your Rlllblto Know, Delivered Rilhtto Your JJOor.lfi:!

"

• J'

t

45

15c.
11 American
rival

u

K 10 5

+

740-992·7599

•

....
,,

•

9 AKIDI71

740117-GIII

Advertise
In this space
for $25 per
month

Chester, Ohio

...

1

14 C~~~~r 41 lnetlllll

• "I I

w...

Wh1dows • Room
Additions • RooiiDa
COMMERCIAl and IEIIOOOIAI.
FREE FSTIMATES

. I'

• ·11-M

•JIDtJ

• Replacem..l

· \I

....

.

~ '
QJ t

•

Now Homes • VInyl
Sldlna• Now Gorqos

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Caa/vllle, OH 45723

3t Soma
Mlddll
1 Tltt
Ealtanw8
7 ..TopGun" 41 co::,n~ 1.t
44 An
I
13 Crystalline

ACROSS

ALDER

~'"!·4 '

BUILDIU INC.

· 0..

"

--.• .

uzzle

Cellular

time very
todayimporunt
could end to
up you
being
later on, so it's important you
be receptive :md
friendly to all, no ma tter
whu or .what you think they

· Jeff Warner,Ins.

:arc.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Those you hold in high r&lt;:·
gard might find reasons today
to be disturbed by your con. duct, unless you let your no-

9~2-~479
I

bier qmlitin
prev:~il under aU conditions.
Preserve your image.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) •
- Sadly, yo u may' have not
profited fro m a previous experi ence and could repeat the
exact same mistake ~'agai n today. This time aroun d; analyze what happened and learn.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) --Before allowing anyone
to manage your financial affairs today, make absolutely
certain this penon undersu.nds
your wishe5 and
needs. He or ~ he could create problems for you . ·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) -- If you think that
people w hl) you will r. ~C ·in volved with today are going
to be overly enthused :~bout
doing everything your way,
}rou're...,adly mi~ taken . Leave
room for their inpu t.

CAPRI CORN (Dee. 22Jan. ·t9) -· Unfortunately,
your mind cu uld be ew:ry
. place but on wh;t you're do-

ing today. Should you find
younelf daydreaming, ltop ·
and tab
things llowly in order t9
pay attention to the tasks at

· hand.

19} - - You·ll only have your- · ·
self to blame today if you allow yourself to be jockeyed
into situations whe re you feel
you must c~m fonn to
peer pressure, th en end up
· with many regrets.

PISCES (Feb. 20-M.uch 20)
-- Should you have a rough
day, try to dismiss yo Llt experiences from your mind before
returning home . Othe rwise ,
you co uld rake things o ut on
your innocent fa mily·.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- To be on the safe side today, put all pertinent infonnlltion in writi ng so tha t you
won't get careless. ThcrC's a
chance you
could be too easily distracte d and forget needed deta il5.

·H

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Don't count o n anything yo u don't h:~vc 111 hand
today . Things o n which
you're banking on not be
taken for granted. They might
no.t come through for you as
you anticipate .

:
•
,.;

...

1

•

. ,

GEMINI (May 21-june 20)
-- To avoid the prospects of
someone else making decisions for you today, which
you'll find intolerable, stay on
top of your responsibilities, so
there'll be no need for such

,,,
,~1

anion.

~

'' 1

.. ~

,.

�sebal

The Daily Sentinel

Cubs can only watch
McGriff's·power show
~SSOCIATEO

PRESS

consecutive start for C hicago.
It was his first appearance
since .gtving up consec utive
home runs to Derek Jeter and
Magglio Ordonez in the AllStar game.

Mond.,~

National Lugue
East

Atlanta
Flonda

W
52

L
39

51
40
46 46
41
52
39 53
Centflll
W
L
53 37
50 40
45 45
43 47
35 55
34 57

Pel.

Eul

GB

New York

.571

.560
·~

Tampa Bay 9, Atlanta I
N.Y. Mels 6, Toronto 2
Dolrall I, ClnclnnoU 5
8 , Montreol5
Philode4pl1la 9, N.Y. Yankees 3
Chicago White sox 3, Milwaul&lt;ee 2

t
6 112
12

Boston
Toronto
BaltilllOfe
Tampa Ba~

w
53
53
44
41
29

L
37
38

ol8

Pet.
.589

G8

.582
112
.478
10
.451 12 1/2
.3t5
25

~~

6-'2)
dla 4-7), 10:05 p.m.

~t Oeldond (Hft:

lUoodoJ'• ..._

Chicago 'Mlite Sox (K.WOIII &amp;-5) at

St. Loulo 5, MI..- I

loill-

.

..

White Sox 3, :
Brewenl

Ph lilieS 9
k
'
.an ees 3

. R::sx,&amp;, .
hom~re~. \W!~e

Cardinals 5,

.Dusti~~!n!n
u_
~
,
9
~e
··lh elics 6

Marlins 7,
Orioles 1

Rockies 3

Mets 6,
Blue Jays 2

Padres .5,
. Angels 1

Giants 7,·6
. Rangen

,,_

·anti

.-

-

~~~~~~~

Houston bullpen slams Tribe
kind of offense. But our starters didn't go past
six innings, and the bullpen was really stretched
out all season long."
Recently, the Astroshave had strong pitching
from its young starters, including Redding,
who made the fourth start of his career. He
gave up three runs on four hits and struck Ol!t
four.
·
After a rocky first inning, Redding retired 13
of 15 batters, with runners reaching only on a
throwing error and a walk.
Redding said he developed a blister on his
middle finger throwing his breaking ball and
also cooled off too much in a long bottom of.
the fifth inning.
- Moises Alou extended his hitting streak to a
career-high 20 games with a home run in the
seventh inning.
•
The Indians have lost 10 of 16 and will be
glad to get away from interleague play, where
they are 6-10, after the Astros series ends.
The Indians' young starter, Jacob Westbrook
(2-1 ), made his third start of the year and fifth
of his career. He admitted he can't avoid .thinking about whether he will stay in the rotation.
He lasted just 4 1-3 innings, giving up four
runs on. five hits. He walked four and struck
out seven.

At Tl!rnpike*s
Service Dept.
QualitY.Q!!,~
r-----------------,
I WHEEL.ALIGNMENT ll

$2495_$4995

l
1
1

2.wheel '

II

4-wheel

1
1
11

,

Tl RES

Wewill~eeto~beatanycompe~itor's
advertised pnce on the some t1re.

We tealure el ma)&lt;lt brar.do: Goodyear, Firestone, Gene&lt;ol,
M&lt;helln, Bridgeslone, Conti~. UNIROYAL. BF Goodrich.

I

I

1 Check and ad]usl camber and toe. Additional pariS and I I
1
~--~~~~~~~ea~~~--~ L---~~~~~~~---~

·oodgers beat the Pirates, 4-2 $4995
I

PITTSBURGH (AP) serious as the Dodgers suspect,
This isn't the kind of loss the , he will almost certainly go on
Dodgers needed right now the DL again.
not a game, but star pitcher
Despite the injury; Brown
Kevin Brown .
- hitting 96 mph on the
Brown returned to Los radar gun - stayed in the
Angeles with a strained right game for a scoreless fifth
· elbow Sunday night after inning before asking to cdme
,
·
pitching five effective innings out.
in the Dodgers' 4-2 victory
Shawn Green, 0-for-7 in the
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
nearly five- hour game SanuBrown, on the. disabled list day, had a double, so\o Home
last month with a neck injury, run and two RBis off Jason
will be examined Monday ·by Schmidt (5-5) as five pitchers
Dr. Frank Jobe and probably . combined to shut down Pittswill have an MR! exam. burgh's offense. The Pirates
Unless the injury is not as have been held to 12 runs in

the last six games.
Brown (8-4) , a 13- 0 loser to
Seattle on July 6 in his last
start before the All-Star break,
·looked better than he had in
weeks b'C fore getting hurt,
manager Jim Tracy said.
Brown hasn't lasted past six
innings in any of five starts
since going on the disabled list
last month with th e neck
injury, which also has caused
him to lose some strength in
his pitching hand.
The Oodgers said . Sunday's
injury was not related to the
neck injury..

·.

I $1995

r-----------------,r-~---------------,
I
SPRING
I I
MOTORCRAFT 1
MAINTENANCE!
FAST LUBE I
1
·
PACKAGE · 1 t
I
I·S"""-"'"'q....,ot_,;_ _ '"""'' . 1 • Service Includes up 1o·5 quans of Motorcraft oil I
I """'',...-•tno • •""""' """·point-=
- 1n0o I 1Iand
new Motorcraft oil filler • Patlorm Muiii-Polnt 1
.,....,,
Ch""'
,
..."
"! luld&lt; Chock wldJuo1•• .,_. • "'"''
Vehicle lnspacllon • Check and fill necessary fluids 1
I-.......
oyottm;
Chocl """""'
.. hom,"'--· tum I I" All In 29 mInutes or less • 91esel vehicles may be 1
•1••.,..
hwnl •"""'"
'~~"''""""boll
one~_,"*"1
1 111
-

. . ._.;.:___

_ , """' hllf ohlllllf eqoppod) Chock l l l d - -"'~· .

~~~--~-~-~:'*~~

1 extra

·

www.mydailysentinel.com

''

Road dear for 33 proj
BY BRIAN

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

DARWIN No additional legal
obstacles are expected to stand in the way
of the Ohio Department of Transportation in building'· &gt;J;:he new highway
between Athens and l)arwin.
The appeal deadline for the Coalition
Against Superfluous Highways and Buckeye Forest CounciJ.;f: federal lawsuit last Thursday - has 'orne a!]d gone, with
no action filed, and ODOT officials do
not expect additional litigation. That
same day, ODOT awarded the bid for
construction of the new section of U.S.
33 to Smith &amp; Johnson Construction
Co., Columbus, for $33.3 lnillion.
CASH and BFC cited environmental
' ,r:.,
' •(

•''-•

.
I

~,•

, •

concerns in their opposition to the project, and, in April 2000, filed a lawsuit in
U.S. District Court seeking an injunction
to halt the project.
The plaintiffs alleged that ODOT
altered environmental dQcum ents to
minimize the appearance of environmental impacts relating ·to th e project, and
took issue with ODOT's issuance of an
Environmental Assessment docum ent as
.opposed to a more detailed Environmental Impact Statement when it made an
Finding of No Significant Impact.
Last month, Federal Judge Edmund
Sargus Jr. ruled in favor of ODOT and
the Federal Highway Administration,
allowing the project to proceed, and
CASH and the BFC did not appeal the

Fire at MHS

ruling.
OOOT District 10 Deputy Director
George Collins said construction o n the
first of two phases of the overall project
will likely begin in September, barring
unforeseen obj ections from th e U.S.
Army Corps of Engi neers, which must
issue a 404 permit before constru ction
can begin .
The co rps held a public hearing on
thepermit applicatio n last week, and
Collins said no opposition to the iss uan ce
of the permit has been expressed.
The public has until Friday to provide
written comment about the application.
"We don't anticipate any major probMembers of Pomeroy and Middleport fire departments
responded to a fire Monday evening at the Meigs High
School near u.s. 33. Pomeroy Are Chief Chris Shank said
the building sustained minor damage to its rooftop molding.
Cause of the fire has yet to be determined; (Bob Byer photo)

Piease see U.S. 33, A:S

•

,'i:' )&lt;.,~,'

'

Festival
unveils
Chester

Poolside

Noise ord
gets village
council's nod

. histoty ·
BY BRIAN

J.

SENTINEL NEWS ST~FF

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

CHESTER
A
regional romance writer, a
colorful storyteller, a pretty
baby contest, historical displays and an outdoor
drama are just a few of the
hi@:hlit~hts planned for SatChester-Shade Day
around
oldest
courthouse
in
Chester, and will pay tribute to the historical figures
who helped form the community.
Things get under way
Friday at 7 p.m., when the
Big Bend Community
Band performs at the courthouse.
Following the opening
ceremony at 10 a.m. Saturday, a pretty baby contest
will be held at the firehouse at 10:15 a.m. Outof-town judges will determine the winners in six
categories: birth to 12
months, 13 to 24 months,
and 25 to 36 months for
boys and girls.
Pam Buckley is the
chairwoman of the event,
but pre-registration .is not .
required. Children entered
in the contest are to be·
dressed in. casual play
clothes.
The festival's pie-baking

History, A3

Moms With tots, rowdy teenagers and plenty of in-betweens found the Middleport Pool the
coolest pJsce to be on Monday afternoon. As mid-summer's hot temperatures settle in, those
lucky enough to have the afternoon off could have found no bette'r place to s·pend the summer
afternoon than at the pool. The pool is a popular place not only for Middleport residents, but
for those from other areas l~klng for a quick cooling off. For Renee Colburn of Pomeroy, a
Meigs Middle School student, the dJvlng board is the place to show off. (Brian J. Reed photo)
'

Local screenings for lead poisoning under way
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY ' "Despi1e the
national decline in blood lead levels
over the past two decades, children in
Meigs County continue to be poisoned by lead in their homes," said

Hlp: eos

Sentinel
:z
5edlanl - u ......

Low: 101
Details, A2

'

12 months the local health department has completed 97 lead screens
on children under the age of six. Of
the screens completed, seven (or 7.2
percent) of the children have had ele-

PitiH see Lead, A3

'

FROM STAFF REPORTS

PORTLAND - Confederate force~
· .,and Union soldiers will take the field of
battle July 21- 22 as the only significant
Civil War battle fought on Ohio soil is
r~created, 1.38 years after the original
engagement took place.
The event, which recreates the July \9,
1863, struggle between C on(ederate cavalrymen under ~en. John Hunt Morgan

Jo&lt;Cai!lle~&amp;~n.ndwaL-r_ _ ___r:A!&gt;/_5 •OHIO
l&gt;&lt;CilllaO!iss;~.~~ifwiead~,;~s_ _ _.~~B~2=-4 Pick 3: s-o-3; Plck.4: 1-().4-5
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Bt:o!,5 ~ s: &amp;-11· 14-3&amp;37

Editorials

Margie Skidmore, R.N. , director of . bring their children in for screening.
nursing at the Meigs County Health
The department is now doing lead
Department.
probes the first Wednesday . of each
Since this we ek is Ohio Lead month during the Child and Family
•
Awareness Week, she said the agency H ealth Services Clinic.
is stressing the need for parents to
Skidmore said that during the past

·;Civil·War recreation set for Saturday

Lotteries

A4

~o!llb:uit,w.ualllrwie'"'s_ _ ___,A3Q,l W.VA.
,Spl'lo.u.rts.lil-_---"'-B.ul.&gt;~:.3-4::IU~.6 Daly J: 6-2·3 O.ily 4: 6-5·7-7
!W.~:e
50a~t11hJlear_____-E.Au.2 c 2001 ohio valley P\Jblishing co.

and purs!lin g Union armies, will be at I
.p.m. at th e Buffington Island park along
Ohio 124 in Portland .
Battle recreations, military camps and a,
tent city containing period merchants
and a blacksmith will be available for the
public to examin e during !he weekend of
festiviti es.
·
Saturday's hi ghlights include a military
drill at 9:30 a.m., two memorial services

at 11 a.m. and noon, and a discussion of
local history surrounding the original
battle. The discussion will begin at 1:30
p.m. and will be conducted by Meigs
County Historical Society.
At 3 p.m. , the battle of Corydon will
be recreated at a site north of the park.
Corydon was a Civil War battle that took
place in Indiana dQring Morgan's raid,

PleaH see Civil War, Al

Holzer Medical Center

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N-e urology Services
EEG and EMG testing offered to record electrical
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For more information,

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Call (740)·446-5176
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. I

public safety vehicle or on~
owned 1and operated by the
POMEROY - An ordi- village or a gas, electric, com~
nance aimed at reducing noise munications, or refuse compawithin villrge limits was ny, or a vehicle being used in
approved during Monday's authorized public activities;
meeting ·of the Pomeroy such as parades, fireworks ;
Council.
sports events, musical produc"
Council approved an ordi- tions and other activitie$
nance that would prohibit any which have the approval of
person or organization that · 'the.village,
•"'M":ri:&gt;rm;~nce
A resoluf\on ~ pasSed Dy · ··
or used any electni"iilc device council that would create a tin any manner so as to create mill tax levy for the purpose
a public . disturbance, or, to of generating·$18,532 toward
operate or permit the &lt;Jpera" maintenance costs at Beech
tion of any sound amplifica- Grove Cemetery. The new
tion system from within a resolution will now be filed
vehicle so that the sound is with the Meigs County Board
plainly audible at a distance of of Elections.
50 or more feet from the
In other matters, letters of
vehicle.
. complaint were read byI Clerk
Exceptions· that do not fall Kathy Hysell about parking
unde_r the ordinance include a problems tltroughout the vile •
sound systet)}. being operated !age. The letters said several
to request medical or vehicu- downtown businesses ~re :
Jar assistance or to warn of a concerned about specific
letting
the'ir
hazardous road condition, the businesses
vehicle emitting the amplified employees park alorig Second
sound is an emergency or
PIMH IH Noln, A3

Bv TONY M. LEAcH

REED

'JIIUy's

I
·I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50 cents· July 17, 2001 • Vol. 51, No. 229

PIHH -

r--------~~--- ----,

Hometow. Newspaper

Meip County's

waul&lt;oe (Haynoo 6-t1), 2:05p.m.
KMou City (&amp;J!&gt;pon 4-11) at Chlcego

k

HOUSTON (AP) - The Houston Astros
are 19 games better than their record at this
time last year. The bullpen might be the biggest
reason why.
The bullpen had four scoreless innings Sunday as the Astros .held on for a S-3 victory over
·
the Cleveland Indians.
Tim Redding (2-0) got credit for the vi c to~
ry, allowing all three runs in five-plus innings.
"Nelson Cruz did a great job of damage
con trol when he came in in the sixth," manager Larry Dierker said. "And then the other
guys just shut the door.
.·
"That's why we're I 0 games over .500 right
now. It's largely due to the bullpen."
Houston Is 50-40 and only three gatlles
behind Chicago in the Central Division . At
this time last year, the Astros were 31- 59 and
last in the division on the way to a 72-90 season .
A year ago, Billy Wagner was recovering
from major elbow surgery after stru ggling
through eight blown saves in the first half. Sunday, he got his 20th save in 21 tries. Cruz,
O ctavia DoteI and Mike Jackson also had one
scoreless inning apiece.
"There's no question abo ut it, the bullpen is
the difference betwe~n this year and last year,"
Jeff Bagwell said. "Last season, we had the same

Tuesday

Bl

Arizona (Batista 4-5) at Sealtle (Halama

0

Cubsl,
Royals 1

Racine advances at KC tourney,

July 11. 2001

.441
New Vorl&lt;
50
Shortly after watching his
Qhlcago Cube 2, Kon181 City I
l
Monfreal
.424 13 112
63
Cubo (Bere 6-&lt;1), 2:20 p.m.
llouali&gt;n 5, C-nd 3
team struggle to score, C hicaControl
oakland 6, Colorado 3
Colorado (Astaclo 6-10) ot Claldand (MulPet
GB
w L Pet GB Florida 7, Baltimore!
der 11)-6), 3:35p.m.
go Cubs manager Don Baylor
Chicago
.569
Minnesota
57 34 .626
San Diego 5, Anaheim 1
San _Diego (Jones 5-t2) at ~
heard the news from Turner
Houston
.556
3
Cleveland
51
38 .573
5
Saatllo 8, "rlzona o
(~ 7-8), 4:05p.m.
St. Louis
.500
8
Chicago
44 45 .494
12
San Francisco 7, Texas 6
Arizona (Anderson 2·5) at Saallle (Abboll
Field: Fred M c({riff had
Detroit
Milwaukee
.478
10
39 49 .443 16 112
7-2), 4:05p.m.
Todly'a Oomn
homered twi ce in Tampa
Pittsburgh
.389
18
Kansas City
35 56 .385
22
Boston (Ohka 2-4) at Mon1rea1 (Munoz 0Boston (Wakefield 6-3) el Montra&amp;l
Cincinnati
.374 19112
Wost
0), 7:05p.m.
(Mattu 2·t), 7:05p.m.
Bay's win over Atlanta.
West
w •L Pet oa o.trolt (PellyJonn 0.0) ot Clnclnnotl Dotrolt &lt;W-ver 8-8) ol Clnclnnoll
"It didn't help us. Good for
GB
Seattle
W L Pet
86 25 .725
(Rolllmo +1~ 7:05p.m•
(DoYIO 1•1), 7:05p.m.
Arizona
53 38 .582
Qakland
47 44 . .516
19
Baltimore (Mercedes 4-9) at Flortda
Baltimore (Ponson &amp;-5) al Florida (Burhim," Baylor said. " I hope it's
Los Angeles
50 42 .544 3 t/2
Anaheim
43 48 .472
23
·
nett 6-5), 7:05 p.m.
(Sanchez loQ), 7:05p.m.
aro und the corner. We could
san Francisco 48 44 .522 5 t/2
Texas
37 54 .407
29
N.Y. Yankees (Keisler 1-2) at Philadelphia
San Francisco (Rueler 8-8) al TSl&lt;U
San Diego
44 48 .478 9 tl2
(Rogers 5-6), 7:05 p.m. ·
- •
(Wolf 5-9), 7:05p.m.
use 'his offense, believe me."
Aaro n Sele pitched a
(:olorado
40 51 .440
13
Slturdlly'a Gamet
Torooto (Halladay Q.1l) at N.Y. Mels (TraN.Y. Yankees (Musolna 11-8) at Phila~
But there's no telling when career-best two- hitter and set
N.Y. Yankees 5, Florida 4, tO Innings
phia (Coggin Hl), 7:05 p.m.
chsel2·10), 7:10p.m.
Salurday's Game
N.Y. Mets 2, Boston 0
Toronto (Corponter 7-5) al N.Y. Moll
Tampa Bay (Rupe 4-11) al A11anta (Mar- or if- McG riff will waive down 22 straight batters as
San Diego 8, Houston 6
Clnclnn1tl6, Cleveland 5, 131nnlng•
(leiter 5-8), 7:10p.m.
r--:
quia 2-3), 7:35 p.m.
Sunday's Game
his no-trade clause and accept Seattle shut out Arizona at
Chicago White Sox 3, Chicago Cubs 1
Clenlond (Nogy 3-3) ot Houoton (Eio,.. Tampa Bay (Sturize 4-7) at Atlanla IMa&lt;!:
Los Angeles 4. Pittsburgh 2
Montreal tO, Tampa Bay 2
dux 11-5), 7:35p.m.
ton 4-8), 8:05 p.nL
.
a deal that would move him . Safeco Field.
Tod1y 's game
Kansas City 7, Pittsburgh 4
Clo..lond (Colon 7·7) ot Houoklo}
Kansas City (Relohert 7-7) at Chicago
Los Angeles (Gagne 1--4) at Pittsburgh St. louis 3, Detroit 2
·
from the last- place Devil
Mike Cameron and John
Cubs (Tapanl8-6), 8:05 p.m.
(Roynoldo 6-8),1!015 p.m.
.,
(Baimel4-4), 7:05p.m.
Seattle 3, San Francisco 2
Chicago
While
Sox
(Baldwin
5-5)
at
Mil·
Minnesota
(Lohse
3-0) at St LOtlls (KIIe
Rays to the NL Central lead- Olerud homered and Scott
Tuesday's Game
Los Angeles 5, Oakland 3, 15 Klnlngs
waukee (Suzuki 0-2), 8:05 p.m.
9-7), 8:10p.m.
los Angeles (Adams 4-3) at Pittsburgh Toronto 4, Philadelphia 2
ers.
Podsednik hit a bases-loaded
Minnesota (Johnoon Q.1l) at St. Louis
.I ..
(J.Andarson S-8), 7:05 p.m. ·
Colorado 11 , Texas 2
(Smith 1oQ), 8:10p.m.
"/h fa_r as l know, there is triple in his first major league ·
Baltimore 4, Atlanta 1·
san Francisco (Jensen 0.0) at Texas
MinneSota 5, Milwaukee 3
(Ball 2oQ), 8:35 p.m.
,
no deadline," Baylor said after at- bat. The Mariners moved a
Arizona 7, Anaheim 5
San Diego (Tollberg 3-2) at Anaheim
the Cubs b.eat Kansas City 2- season-best 41 games over
•
Sundey'e 01mea
(Rapp 3-9), 10:05 p.m.
•
I Sunday."[ know Freddy has .500.
put a July 31st on it, but I
Seattle DH Edgar Martinez
don't think that's realistic."
. strained his left quadriceps
his first ~areer complete game
Jeff Kent had three 'hits fqr .
The Cubs~lrave 'agreed to muscle on a hit- and-run play.
as San Diego beat Anaheim.
the Giants, and Calvin Murr:l)i
send two prospects to Tampa He is expected to miss at least
Lawrence (2-0) was promot- singled home the go-aheaf(l,
Bay for the 37-year-old first a few days.
ed from Triple-A Portland run in the sixth.
"'
baseman.
Sele (11-1) pitched his sevbecause Hitchcock had an
McGriff, however, is reluc- enth career sh utout in the
infected big toe on his left
tam to leave his wife, two matchup of West division
foot.
• •
children and hometown for a leaders.
Lawrence gave up seven hits,
Rocky Biddle won for tl~.: ·
. chance to maybe make • the .
walked none and struck out first .time in 15. starts, pitching.·
playoffs for the first time smce
'U
AL home run champion Troy Chicago to its third straig~~
1997.
Glaus three straight times.
victory.
;.: .
•jl ' m not answering any
Doug Glanville doubled
Biddle had been 0-5 since ·
Despite lhe strong effort, the
questions about Chicago," twice and drove in two runs
Padres · plan
to
option April 9. Sandy Alomar's ho~e
McGriff said after Tampa as Philadelphia beat New
Lawrence back the minors to run off All-Star Ben Sheef$
Bay's 9- 1 victory. "I've got a York before a sellout crowd of
make room for pitcher Brian broke a fifth-inning tie at Milnice little family I'm very 59,470, the largesr at Veterans
Tollberg, who's coming off the waukee.
happy."
Stadium since the 1993 opendisabled list.
In the National League, Los er.
Angeles beat Pittsburgh 4-2.
A lot ofYankees fans came
..
McGriff, who played with to watch the interleague
the Braves from 1993-97, matchup of East division
Chns Stynes
pttched
Mays, an&lt;!l .
drew ovations after his 17th leaders, and they saw catcher
and drove in four runs as"' St. Louis beat .vtsiting Minand I 8th homers of the sea- Jorge Posada have three
Boston won before thousands nesota.
•
son. He also hit an RBI sin- passed balls, Mark Wohlers
of Red Sox rooters at
The defending NL Centra,!
gle.
struggle in relief and shortOlymptc Stadmm.
champions made it . back t_~
Atlanta, too, is looking for a stop Derek Jeter make an
The crowd of 32,965, .500. The AL Central-leading
power- hitting first baseman . . error that set up the go-ahead
swelled by many fans who Twins lost for just the fou~YJ.GOOD-BYE MR. SPALDING John Olerud watches
"Talk to the GM," McGriff run .
"'his fifth-inning solo home run fly towarq right field Seattle Sun- drove up from New England, time in 19 r.mes.
said. " I don't know anything. I
was the largest for. a non- '
day. (AP)
just go out there and play."
op,ening day at Montreal since
ft
•
' · ~;::
.;r.
July t9, t997.
Kevin Millar, Charles Johnscoring game since June .17.
~ose Vid_ro, homered for the
Jason Giambi homered
son and Mike Lowell homeThe Blue Jays fell to 0-7 at thtrd. stratght game for the hit an RBI single to lead 0~..:.
Kansas Ctty set a major red to lead Florida past visitShea Stadium. .
Expos.
land to its 'si,lth victory in,·
league record with its 21st ing Baltimore.
seven games.
~
Mike Piazza homered, doustraight one-run loss on the
Cal Rip ken Jr. went 0-for-3
Luis
Vizcaino,
pro
mot.,;:
bled and' drove in three runs
road.
and ended his hitting streak at
~
from the minors earlier in t~
to
lead New York over ToronThe Royals broke the dubi- 15 games, his longest in nine
Ilnan Lawrence, called up
Ltvan Hernandez struggled day, struck out two for his fi.r'U:
to.
ous mark set by Pittsburgh, years.
from
.the
minors
to
pitch
in
through
seven innings at Texas, career save.
:;:
The Mets, who began the
which lost 20 in a roW on the
Larry Walker hit his 28~
day last in the majors with place of injured Sterling and San Francisco won with
road in 1985-86.
help from Felix homer.
:::
347 runs, had their highest- Hitchcock, responded with
Jon Lieber won his sixth

Mariners 8,
Diamondbacks

SPORI~:

AROUN'D THE DIAMOND
Philadefphia

BY THE

Page B&amp;

.,.;:;..._.
.~--~·---

_____

____,_

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