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Sunday, June 13.2004

Pomeroy, Middleport. Gallipolis, OH

D6 • itunba!' i!i:imt!i -&amp;rnttntl

Public records, villages
denied more than
20 percent, A6

a

·Griffey homers,
Reds lose again, Bt

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

; o I I:\ IS • \ nl. :;~. :\o .

'lll'\ll \\ .. Jl '\I q. 20il~

:.!Ill

• Athens tackles Meigs.
SeePageB1

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
An
Athens-based organization
plans an open forum in
Pomeroy Thursday to discuss how wartime spending
by the U.S. govern ment is
hurting domestic programs.
The Appalachian Peace
and Ju sti ce Network will
presenl the forum at 7:30
at
p.m . · on Thursday
Carpenters Hall, immediately

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

Danish Pork
Style Pork
Spare Ribs

Western
Cantaloupe
OBITUARIES
Page AS

• Ruth H.Schultz

INSIDE
• Former President
George H.W. Bush marks
80th birthday with
parachute jump.
See Page A2

• Piano students
give recital.
See Page A3

Granula~d,~''i

BY J. MILES lAYTON

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12 PAGES

Calendars

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·Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Sports

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POMEROY - A groundbreaking ceremony for an
annex 10 1he Meigs Museum
to be called the Howard and
Geneva Nolan Annex was
held Sunday afternoon on an
adjace nt lot on Butternut
Avenue in Pomeroy.
The annex has been named
in honor of Howard Nolan.
benefactor of the project, and
his late wife, a 25-year Meigs
County Extension agent. Mr.
Nolan. 95. was a longtime
teacher at Ra cine High
School.
In addi1ion to a ;ign on the
front of the buirding. a bronze
plaque in tribute to Mr. and
Mrs . Nolan and their communitY contriht1ti 0ns will be
placed inside the 1200 sq uare
foot building .
Co-chairing the project for
the Meigs County Historical
Society ar~ tru stee s Robert
Wingett and Ferman Moore.
The building will be a brick
facade 30x40 foot structure
most ly of open space for
exhibits, but including an
office, kitchenette, and a rest
room, along with a storage
loft.
··Having the annex will

'•

"''

following the monthly meeting of the Meigs County
Democratic
Execu.tive
Commiuee at 7 p.m. The
public is invited to attend.
The Appalachian Peace
and Justice Network works
with local communities to
address the root causes· of
. violence and i~_iustice. using
networking. education. con·
tlict management and peer
mediation training in schools
and communities and other
activities to promote non-

violent. retlective solutions
to problems of eco·nomi c
and socia l injustice.
At the forum. "Liberating
Ourselves: Working to Bring
War Dollars Home," representati ves of the network
will discuss how increased
military spending, particularly the continued cost of the
occupation of Iraq) is resulting in decreased social and
domestic spe nding.
The spe nding in Iraq and
other areas wi ll be broken

down to illustrate lhe co;t'
of different aspecb of 1he
occupation and way' th o,e
funds could be redirecled
toward . domestic program&gt;.
said Christie Truly of the
APJN.
"Parlicipanh will aJ,o
learn valuable toob that will
help them join the effort to
direct military spending
towards domestic program, ...
Tru ly said. ··Everyone in the
community is encouraged to
attend and learn way' to

work towanl bri noin
b
eo our
tax dollars back home."
The network works with
re,idenls of Sou theastern
Ohio to atldres' the root
causes of violence and injus1ice. u~ing networJ...ing. education. conflict management

and peer mediation training
in schooh and communities
dnd other activitie' to promote non-violent. retlecti\·e
solutions to problems of

economic and social inju'tice.

allow us to bring out lots of
items not displayed before
becau se of space shortage,"
said Mar2aret Parker. museum director and president of
the Historical Society.
Rae Moore , second vice
president. extended a welcome to those attendi ng the
grounrlbreaking
including
Jeff T nornton of the Meigs
County Commission and the
Historical Society offi c~rs
and trustees.
Mrs . Moore described the
groundbreaking as "an occa-

sion of a long, long awaited
dream." She commented on
the museum use, noting that
hundred s of visitors caine
every year in search of information on their ancestors. She
described the library as "the
finest of any historical society
library around." Having the
extra space o( the annex will
further enhance the museum's
use, she said.
Co-chairmen Wingett and
Moore commented on the
long period of planning for
the
expa nsion
and
expressed appreciation to
Mr. Nolan for"the generous
contrib utimi which al lowed

Please see Annex. AS

Ground was broken for an annex to the Meigs County Museum Sunday afternoon. It will be built
on a Jot adjacent to the museum and wil l be named after Ho ward Nolan, t11e benefactor, and
his late wife, Geneva. He re Mr. Nolan and Margaret Parker, Hi3torical Society president . turn
the first shovel of dirt. Also pictured are Rev. William Midd le~wa rth . Ferman Moore. Karen
Werry, and Robert Wingett , left to right. (C har lene Hoefli ch) ·

Feud leaves Syracuse Fire Construction of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge not
Department burning hot
expected to cause significant traffic tie-ups

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Plan·· forum .on military spending

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SYRACUSE If an
agreement can't be reached
between Syrm:use Vitlage
Council and the village fire
departmenl, local fire service
will go up in smoke leaving
the vi ll age to rely on .mutual
;tid agreements from nearby
fire departments such as
Racine or Pomeroy.
The spark s slarted fiying in
March when a sign posted by
a fire fighter on the men "s
restroom at Syracu'e Village
Hall slarted a feud belween
Mayor Mtmy Wood. village
counCil alld Ebcr Pickens Sr..
fire chief. In il letter dated
March :11. Wood said I he sign
was "very inappropriate, and
warned Pickens that "if you
cannot take care of it, then I
wi ll get someone who will."
The sign was later rem&lt;\ved.
In May, Pickens was suspended as rire chief. Wood
said Pickens· men were
insubordinate and thi s result,
ed in a breakdown in the
chain of command at the fire
department. Pickens was to ld
.~-

.

Fou r cranes
have moved to
the Ohio COil ·
struct1on site of
the new
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge. where
work is about to
beg1n on the
bridge abutment
and Pier No. 7
on the Ohio
side which will

to improve the situation or he

wou ld he removed hy council
if necessary.
Pickens was reinstated, but
less than two weeks ago he
was terminated from his posi WithoLil
notifying
tion .
Pkkcns df their Intent to fire
him during the last cou ncil
meeting . council members
discussed his fale in a closed
door executi ve session and
voted four to one to remove
Pickens. who has served as
fire chief since Lyndon
Johnson was president.
Upon hearing the news, a .
fire storm erupted as the other
ofticers at the fire department
resigned including Pi ckens·
son, Eber Jr. , who was highly
regarded as assistant fire
chief. Bill Rou sh and Jack
Peterson were appointed as
co-chiefs over an angry fire
department of . at least 25
members who are· ·sti II very
loyal
to
Pickens
Sr.
According 10 some fire fighters, co un cil's deci,ion to ter·
mina te Picken's may have violated the due process of law .

serve as a

•

Please see Feud, AS ·

'toucildown .
pier for the .
cable stays on
the. bridge .
There wil l be
seven bndge
piers on the .
Ohio side. The
Ohio
Departm('nt of
Transportation
anticipates no
Significan t traffic tie-ups any
t1me soon as a
result of the
construction.
(Charlene
Hoeflich)

CiJMrr

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NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Page

• WORLD

Monday., June 14, 2004

.In baffling robbery Former President George H.W. Bush
case' a soldier finds marks BOth birthday with parachute jump
an unlikely friend
.

Bv MICHAEL GRACZYK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

: FORT CAMPBELL, Ky.
"(AP) - Seven hours from
·his Army post and thousands of miles from the
Iraq war he left behind.
Master
Sgt.
Kenneth
·Schweitzer confe,sed to
walking into an Iowa bank.
. firing shots into the ceiling
.and walking out with a bag
·of cash.
He drove straight to a
police station and turned
hirriself in, saying he didn't
need the money. he just
, wanted to live in an ~-by-~
foot cell , authorities said .
The case has baftled
·police and acquaintances of
Schweitzer. a 38-ycar-old
father and decorated soldier
who fought in Afghanistan
and Iraq with the 10 I st
. Airborne Division. He told
. police his war experience
was not related to the robbery. but some· say there
must be a connection.
Schweitzer
apparently
knew no one in Keokuk, a
'town of II ,000. before he
walked into the Keokuk
Savings Bank and demanded money. He found compassion from an unlikely
source -· the president of
the bank.
To Ed Johnstone, a Navy
veteran and the bank 's president. one thing is clear:
Schweitzer needed help.
Johnstone asked the local
prosecutor to tran sfer the
case to military courts,
where
he
believes
Schweitzer could get the
best counseling.
"Having served in the
military as a young man, I
understand the pressures
people
are
under:·
Johnstone said. "I have
great empathy for his feelings and what he was trying
to deal with."
Prosecutor Michael Short
agreed to transfer the case
to Army courts because he
agreed that they were best
equipped to handle it.
"It was an extremely
· unusual case," Short said.
: Schweitzer, who has been
in the Army 18 years, is
now in a confinement center at Fort Knox where the
Army says he is receiving
help. Charges against him
. could come later. Lt. CoL
· Trey Cate, a public affairs
officer for the 10 I st, said
Schweitzer's attorney would
. not comment.
10 I st
Airborne
: The
; Division is a rapid-deploy. ment unit trained to go any. when~ in the world in 36
hours. It is based at Fort
Campbell on the Ternessee
border, 480 mile s from
Keokuk.
Schweitzer deployed with
the division when it fought
. in Afghanistan after the
Sept. II terrorist attacks, and
he earned a Bronze Star.
He· also went to Iraq. The
20,000 soldiers of the I0 Ist
returned home earlier this
. spring after a yearlong
-deployment. Fifty-ei ght of
·its so ldiers were killed in

STATION.
COLLEGE
Texas
-,
Former
Pre, ident
the war.
Florida attorney Shawn George H:W. Bush .celebrated
Ri sen, who represented hi s ROth birthday with a
IJ.(J(lO-foot parachute jump
SchweitLer durin&lt;&gt; a 1999 over his presidential library
me."'
" g. was
bankrupt cy
filin
Sul)day. and said he felt the
Gorbachev gave Bush !lowshocked when he heard the same thrill of plior jumps even ers ai"KfiNxlttle of vodka.
news of Schweitzer's April though his hopes of skydiving · After Bush, who tumed 80
solo were dashed .
Saturday, jumped tandem early
arrest.
He
made
a
tandem
jump
Sunday moming in a practice
Schweiuer came across as
hamessed
to
a
member
of
an
run. otlicials decided weather
an honorabl e. · "admirable··
Army's Golden Knights para- conditions were too Jisky for a
man. Risen said.
chute te:u11 - after officials solo skydive.
··1 perceived him to be decided the wind conditions
··we were concerned the
one of the quinte"ential and lnw douds made it too president possibly could get
military . types that we're dangerous for the 4 1st presi- lost in a cloud and we don't
most proud of. like the con- . dent t0 jump alone; which he want him to do that,'' said Lt.
Col. David Standridge, comsummate soldier to me," he did when he tumed 75.
"This was a real thrill for mander of the Golden Knights.
said.
me:· said Bush, wearing a
" It was a different sensation.
Schwe itzer's wife. Karen. black-and-gold jumpsuit. "I felt but when you're in the arms of
declined 'to be interviewed, no fear ... for me to get a an expert parachutist, there's
as did his commanders in chance to jump with the far less concern." Bush said.
"The feeling is the same. It was
the
Inspector General 's Golden Knights is a dream."
Wi th St:11'f Sgt. Bryan incredible."
Office at Fort Campbell
Schnell on his back arid a
He. said he would like to try a
where he worked.
black-wid-gold parachute bal- solo jump again, but gave no
sa id looning above them, the fom1er timetable other than "soon."
Authorities
The jump; Bush's fifth.
Schweitzer
left
Fort president waved his mms to
earned
him parachutist's wings
Campbell the day of "the some 4.000 spectators as he
robbery. and his wife was neared the. drop zone -. a that were pinned on hi(ll after
trying to find him . Keokuk painted logo of "41 at 80" .in he landed. The wings include a
police aren't sure · why he the center of a football-tleld, small bronze star, indicating
sized area on the grounds of his he'd made a combat jump in a
ended up in their town.
presidential library at Texas hostile area.
Johnstone. the bank presi- A&amp;M University.
Bush made his first parddent, said his emplo yees
"It's been a great day," Bush chute jump as a 20-year-old
described the bank robber said after &gt;&lt;tiling to the ground. Navy pilot shot down over the
as businesslike and not at landing and scooting a ways on Pacific duling World War II. In
his bllfkside. "This was a day 1992, he bailed out over Yuma,
all nervous.
of
joy and a day of wonder for Ariz.. fulfilling a wartime
Schweitzer alleged ly told
the
Bush farilily. certainly for promise he made to himself
police he chose a one-story
the old guy.''
that some day he'd jump from
bank becau se he knew firThe crowd included his wife. a plane for fun.
ing shots into to the ceiling Barbara. hi s son Flolida Gov.
Bush said Sunday he hoped
could hurt people on the Jeb Bush and former Soviet his stunt sent a message to
president Mikhail Gorbachev people that ·.' at 80 years old,
second floor.
Police don't know why he
did it, but Schweitzer told
'·
them it was not in response
to his war experiences.
"We haven't figured out
700 West Main St., Pomeroy
yet. He definitely didn ' t
want to hurt anybody.'' said
police Capt. Kevin Church.
" It wasn't for money. He
said he was going to keep
the reasons to himself."
Rachel Yehuda, a psychiatry professor who directs
the post-traumatic stress disorder
program
at the
Veterans Affairs Medical
Center in New York City,
said the desire to withdraw
from society can be a reaction to traumatic events in
war.
War
·veterans
often
become emotionally isolated, Yehuda said, adding that
some returning Vi~tnam vets
chose to live in seclusion in
the woods because they felt
out of control and did not
want to hurt anybody.
"I think this kind of
behavior
sugges ts
that
something terrible did hap.
'
'
pen ," Yehuda said. "Given
the news ... no one should
be surprised that there are
terrible things happening in
war that are not always
talked about. "

•

Monday, .June 14
LONG BOTTOM
A
meeting of the
Meig s
County Repub licJn Party
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Monday at
&lt;he
Long
Bottom Commumty Center.
ROCKSPRINGS
A

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_,

Bubba Cola

Pringles

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4/$

boxes

•

2004. WE RESERVE

Birthdays
Thursday, June 17
MIDDLEPORT
Miidred E. Arnold will
observe her K5th birthday
on Thursda y, June 17. She
now resides at Overbrook
Center at 333 Page Street.
Middleport . Ohio 45760
·and cards may be sent to
her there.

Piano ~t udents of June Van Vranken presented a recital recently at · the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Participating in the recital with two or three solos were from the left, front,
Veronica Grimm, Jessica Stines , Samantha Spires, Haley Aanestad, Keisha Rowe, Olivia Cleek
and Han nah Cleek; second row, Lindsay Burrows, Maggie Satterfield, Jennifer Melton and Hope
Hajivand 1; and back row, Joe Satterfield, Andy Henderson, and Noah Hajivandi. The recital
included a trio doing "Deep Sea Diving" by Samantha Spires and Hope Hajivandi joined by Van
Vranken, and a duet, "Jazz Waltz" by Anderson Henderson and VanVranken.

UMW plan for church library
had the prayer after which
the members read the UMW
litany and purpose. A report
· was given on the bake sale
held at the Farmers Bank in
Tuppers Plains. Plans were
made for a new cookbook
and members were asked to
bring in recipes. It was also
decided to purchase a new
table for the church table
drive.

The July meeting was canceled becau se of Bible
School. Pastor Jane Beatty
presented a service of peace
pertaining to the current situation
in
Iraq.
Judy
Kennedy closed the meeting
witb
prayer.
Members
enjoyed re fres hments and
fellow ship. The next meeting will be on August 4 at
the church basement.

Losers recognized by TOPS club
'

,

.

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Costs low and prices
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1 lb.
PRICES GOOD THRU SAT. JUNE 1

Thesday, June 15
POMEROY
The
Meigs
County
Health
Department will conduct lt
chi ldhood
immunization
clinic from 9 to II a.m
and 1 to 3 p.m. at the
olficc on Memorial Drive.
Parents/guardians are to
. accompany child or chil dren , and take medical
cards if they have them.
Thursday, June 17
POMEROY
Open

RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

•

Monday, June

14, 2004

Young.dad's drinking takes
precedence over his family
DEAR ABBY: I have a 9month -old son and am
ex pecting another child in
three months. My husband .
"Matt." work s nighh. so
when I get home exhausted at
Dear
the end of my workday, I care
Abby
for our baby by myself.
Matt used to drink a lot. but
he slowed down , quite a hit
when we got married. I still
feel that alcohol rul es hi s life
because hi s idea of an of an alcoholk of anv aee.
evening out is gett ing drunk . · It 's import ant that you conIt he has a day otf. he spends tact AI- Anon . a 12-,tep fel11 dnnktng,, too:
low ship of people whose lives
On Matts btrthday, I took have been affected bv the
the baby and slept at my par- com pul sive drinking 'of a
ents' hou se so he could have a famil y member or frie nd. To
party w1th the guys and ge t locate a chapter in you r area.
drunk. Because of my preg- call I-88S-4ALAN0t\ 18S8nancy I can't drink - nor do 425-2666 ). or go to the Web
I want to - but I didn' t want site . which is www.althe baby_there with a bunch of anon.alateelr.org.
drunks. either.·
Your hu sband's behavior
Matt and I went to a sport- wo n't change until he rcalite'
ing event together not too he has a problem and \1 ants to
long ago. I was embarrassed do so mething about it.
becau se he left me sitting Whether you want to spend
alone while he kept goi ng off the rest of yo ur life this way is
to buy more beer. Seven beers a question onl y yuu can
into the event he was stum- answer. But pl ease rea lize thai
bling over the other spectators a tendency toward alcoholism
in our row.
·
can be inherited. aml be sure
I hate li ving like thi s. He your children understand that
says I'm overreacting. Am p tact a; the y grow older.
Is this normal for a 26-yearDEAR
ABBY:
\1y
old man'' If it is, our marriage boytnend and I have been
is doomed. -· FED UP IN daun g .'or almost two year&gt;.
RICHMOND. TEXAS
lnng-d1stance. We VISit whenDEAR FED UP: No. irs not ever poss1ble and plan to ll\e
normal for the aver~ge 26- together ~oon. My problem IS.
year- old man. But it is typical he doesn t trust me . Although

I ha1 e a"ured h1111 that I t'lll l
devoted to hnn and alw a1'
ha\e been. he continues ·to
accu'c me ol

-.L't'IIH!

other

guys. He 'a) s he ha'' a "gut
fee li ng" ahout it. He sa)' I
treat my friend-.. and even
strangers. better th:111 I do
him . T don't feel that wav.
I'm afra iU to an-.\\ ef the
phone or ha1c contact with
people for fear th at he will get
Jealous becau'&lt;;' he\ not the
center of attention. He ha'
read my e-mails more than
once. checking for e1ide nee. I
suspect he may have hacked
into Ill) computer. h there
any lmpe ·' - INNOCEt\T
AND FAITHFlJL IN LA
DEAR IN:-.JOCENT AND
FAITHFUL: No. If vou arc
smart. \OU will KEEP y1&gt;ur
reiation;,hip with tili ' you ng
man long-Ui \ tance. You have

descrihed a per."&gt;n who i'
potentiaJ.I) an abuser. Hi'
action:-. are ob ... e..,~i\e and controll ing. E1en if 1ou liVL'
together. you wi ll 'never be
able to fill the bottomless pit
of

hi ~ n eedi n e~~

and

in~ecuri ­

ty. My aJvice to you i' to end
the relationship.
Dl'ar Ahhr i .\ ,·rri.nt~ ll In
Ahigai / Vail B11ren. als&lt;&gt;
knr11111 as lt' U/1111'. Phillips.
(imJI(/cd hr ltl'r nwlli el: Paulin e Phillip .1. H'1·i1e

({ llll\ 1'0.\

A h!JI"

Dear

ur

IDI ' \I ·. DeurAhln.n~m or PO.

Bo.r ()C).J.I(), Los Ange/e.1. CA
90UM

Rio Honors List

TUPPERS ~LAINS Plans for starting a church
library were discussed when
the St. Paul Women met at
the Tuppers Plains United
Methodi st Church.
JoAnna Weaver and Teresa
Lemons will purchase two
new books and a new bookcase to start the library.
Judy Kennedy presided at
the meeting and Anna Rice

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forum.
"Li beratin g
Working
to
Ourselves:
Bring War Dollars Home."
7:30 p.m .. Carpenters Hall.
Spon ,ored by Appalachian
Peace &lt;md Justice Network.
Athens. Public invited .

. Former President George Bush parachutes to his landing after
·
f h us
a tandem jump with Sgt. Bryan Schnell, a member o t e ..
Army Golden Knights, Sunday at his presidential library in
College Station, Texas. The jump was part of h1s 80th birthday
celebration. (AP Photo/ David J. Phillip)
you've still got a life."
such as Denni s Miller and Pete
"For me, I like speed. I like Sampras. wished Bush a happy
the thrill of it.'' he said. But the birthday.
jump also "sets an example for
The weekend events were
older people, here and abroad, designed to raise money for the
that just because you're 80 George
Bush Forty-One
years old, it doesn ' t mean Endowment. which supports
you're out of it."
his library foundation, the
The skydivecapped two days Houston-based University of
of birthday festivities for Bush. Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer
On Saturday. a baseball park Center and Bush's Points of
full of abo ut 5,200 people , Light Foundation. Durin!? a
includin g his eldest son, pany Saturday night, it was
President Bush, former Britis~ announced that the endowment
Prime Minist~r John Major and had raised more than $55 milceleblities and sports tlgures lion in the last two years.

WE DELIVER WHERE IT COUNTS:

12 Pack

special meeting of the band
boosters called by Toney
Dingess will be held at 7
p.m. in the Meigs High
School bandroom.

-Piano students give recital

Food Store

shoulder, Am ormino said.
The shooting victims were
taken to a hospital , but
their conditions were not
immediately avai lab le:
The sniper fled the business, and deputies searched
for him for hours in the
area east of Irvine Lake in
eastern Orange County.
The gunman was spotted
by the helicopte r crew
around 4 p.m. and shot at
the deputie s, Amormin o
said . The woundetl pil ot
was identified as Dav id ·
Tilstra .
The gunman was killed
near a trailer park , but it
wasn ' t immediately clear
whether he was killed by
deputies on the grou nd or
in the air. authorities said.
. Deputies found a .22-caliber rifle near the body.
Amorm ino said deputies
hadn't determined a motive
for the attack .

Monday, June 14
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District Board, 7
p.m . at the district otice to
discuss a rate increase.

Clubs and
organizations

•

BIG BEND

Sniper killed by deputies
after shooting three in rural
·southern California
IRVINE. Calif. (AP) A sniper opened
fire
. Saturday
at
a
rural
.Southern California · recy'cling center, wounding a
worker and a deputy, then
fled before being killed
hours later in a shootout
after deputies spoucd him
from a helicopter.
The helicopter pilot was
wounded in the leg, but all
three victims were expected
to survive, Orange County
sheriff's spokesman Jim
Amormino said.
The sniper, a middle-aged
man wearing green. Armystyle fatigues, began firing
at employees at the Baker
Canyon . Green Recycling
Center about II: I0 a.m. ,
Amorrnino said.
One recycling worker
was shot in- the imn and a
responding ' deputy, identi fied as Jerry Larson, wm,
shOI in the arm and in the

- whom the fom1er president
had invited to jump with him.
"Afraid," Gorb&lt;IChev said
through an interpreter. explaining why he dic,ln 't accept the
offer. "Maybe on his 90th birthday .... For me. it would be a
first. At my age, that may kill

Community Calendar
Public meetings

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

COOLV ILLE At last
week's meeting of Tops OH
20 13 the weekly best loser
certificate and fruit basket
went to Joan Cole and the
traveling trophy for the top
monthly loser was given to
Amy Hendl"ix.
Pat Snedden read A thank

you · card from Cindy Hyde .
The group decided to participate in the Ohio River
Sweep to · be held June 19.
An open House was di scussed and was tabled until
after July. Doris Buchanan
read a Tqps program and
there was a discussion.

Tops meets every Tue sday
evcn1ng with weigh in
beg inning at 5: 15 p.m. and
the me eting beginning at
6:30 p.m. Anyone interested
should contact · Snedden at
662,2633 or attend a free
meeting . The recent yard
sale was reported a 'uccess.

Eastern honor roll ·
TUPPERS PLAINS These students were named
to the honor roll "at Eastern
High School for the fourth
quarter:
Grade 9: Brittany Bissell.
Tyler Lee, Alex McGrath ,
Cory Shatfer, Erin Weber,
all A's: Stephanie Baker,
Sarah Boston, Ryan D&lt;tvis,
· Sarah Martindale, Michael
:Owen,
Derek
Putman .
:Cheyenne Trussell.
' Grade
I0:
Brandon

Bartee, Taylor Russell, all
A's Chri s Davis , Lan ce
Grifin, Nick Kuhn, Shawn
Reed, Shana Snyder, Sara
Wiggins, Charles Wils,on.
Grade II: Derek Baum,
Chri s
Carroll,
Jennifer
Hayman. Jess ica Kehl. Sara
Pore , Jaime Reel , Casey
Smi th,
Morgan
Weber.
Krista White, all A's:
Brittany Barnett . Abbie
Chevalier, Cody Dill , Adam
Dillard. Carrie Elberfeld.

Coming nnusday in the Sentinel ...

Andy Francis. Ross Holter.
Lon g.
Darren
,Mich ael
Scarbrou gh. Che lsea Young.
Grade 12: Jessica Boyles,
Chrissie Gregory, Brittany
Hauber, Alyssa Holter; all
A's: Rac hel Elliott. Kass
Lodwick, Jon Owen, Sandy
Powell, Tia Pratt , Katie
Robertson, Andrea Warner.
Nick Weeks. Deni se West.
Will Woods.

RIO GRANDE - The fo llowing local students were
named to the honor list at the
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
. Grande
Community College for the
spri ng term:
James
D.
Barrett ,
Langsville; Emily R. 'Bass,
Langsville; Matthew Boyles,
Tuppers Plains ; Matthew P.
Caldwell,
Reed sville;
Melinda Chancey. Pomeroy;
Kri sten Chevalier, Chester;

Mariea Drenner. Pom eroy:
Kelly Drummer. Portland:
Candice Fetty. Pomeroy:
Jeannet\e
Grate.
Long
Bottom ; Jacob
Harden .
Syracu se.
Ni chol
Honaker.
Reedsville ; April D. Ki ser,
Pomeroy: Carrie Li ghtfoot.
Middleport: Amy Lorenzini ,
Rutland ; Ruth McGrath.
Racine :
Sand i . Miller,
Pomeroy:
Je ssica Pore.
Chester: · Kristy Puckett,

Wolfe recognized
as a United
States National
Honor Roll
award winner

Three scholarships awarded

POMEROY
Three
scholarships of $500 each
were awarded from the
Brandi Thomas Memorial
Scholarship at the recent '} ~j
Meigs High School awards
asse mbly.
MIDDLEPORT - Carl·
The winners were Ryan
Ryan Stobart
M. Wolfe of Middleport has Stobart of Long Bottom. Shannon
been recogclass of 2004: Shannon Soulsby
ni zed
for
Soulsby of Pomeroy. class of
academic
2003 .now . attending Rio Grande Col lege,
achievement
and Derek Johnson of Middleport. class of
as a United
2001, a student at Ohio University.
States
An y Me igs High School senior or gradu National
ate attending college. having pa11icipated in
Honor Roll
truck or cross-countrv a minimum of two
awan..l winyears
in hig h school "were eligible to appl~
Derek
ner.
for a scholarship for a maximum of two Johnson
According
years.
to a release Carl M. Wolfe
Recipient&gt; were selected on the basis nf charact er.
from
the
ex
tra-curricu lar activities. academic performance 'nnd other
United Stines Achievement
Academy, the name of accomplishment&gt; ensuring potenti:1l success 111 c·ollcge ·
Wolfe,, a student at Meigs and post-C(•llege life.
High SchooL will be included in the Academy's official
yearhook whi ch is puhlished
natiunall v.
"The . USAA Nati onal
Honor Roll Awards provide
hono r roll students with
many benefits and .; ervices
BERBERCARPE~SAXONYCARPE~
and is a great tribute to a
, tudent 's dedication, t&lt;ilent
TRACKlESSCARPE~SHAGCARPE~
and ability." said Dr. Geroge
Stevens. executive director.
Wolfe is the son of Carl
and
Della
Wolfe
of
Middl eport. Hi s grandparents are the late Carl and
Dol ly · Wolfe and Jerry
carpet.
John ,on of Apple Grove and
the late Dorothy Johnson.

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�Page ,.\..J

OPI

:The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting all
establishment of religion, or prohibiti11g the
free exercise thereof; or abridging tl1e freedom
of speeclt, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitiou
the Governmmt for a redress of grievatJces.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

.Moderately Confused
SOME.

THINK THAT
I'M A
CONTROL

FREAK ...

our L·urrent dt"~potic antago- speci fie all} cLlmm uni st -dri·
With the 60th anniversary
nist in a wav that the man ven manifc,tation' of the of D-Day and the nearly
himself wou-ld have found ·evil empire.· I li~e to thin~
coinciding death of Ronald
contemptible. Leaders and he would hal c id&lt;"ntified
Reagan. Americans have
pundits "mu,t cling to fond Islam's C\'il clement;, bee1l compelled to reflect on
tictions about Islam being a jihad and dhimmitude the past. seeing rocky.
Diana
religion of peace that has and provided a Je,·ei-he&lt;tded
bloodv eras fall into the
West
dean· arc of history that
been · hijacked by a tiny expl&lt;tnati,m of why dtiminaof extremists. They tion and repres,ion_ "hether
minority
appears only in a flash- of
thus pa" up the opportunity sen·in~ a secular totalitari~tn
hindsight.
to call for worldwide reform Slate Or a religiLlUS lOtalitariLooking back on Nazism
&lt;.111 movement. are forces
and communism. we see the as a holy shrine for sacred of Islam.'
In mher V:·ords_ ·rand tic- Amerita opplht:S.
seamless succession and relics_ nul a ghoulish mau A profound respect for
demise of totalitarian threat s soleum for a moldering tions · overwrite the urgent
once poi sed to rob the West corpse: Would the history of truth that Islam requires religiou~ freedtlm informs
of its liberties. In this sweep- the Cold War have been any moderating and n.1oderniLing our to rtured ,ilence ing hi~ttlry lesson , it different"' Would Ronald reform if ever it is to co-exist although ·holy' justitications
becomes clearer still that the Reagan have dared to define peacefully with Western ror terrt• r 'tat.,.'ks on civilians
rise of · lslamism or · a religious faith in commu- democracies. The reform offered
"'~ '
mainstream
blanric totalitarianism. or nism as the ev il that starts. Spencer explains. 'by Islamic ": ilhlrities surely
Islamic
radicalism.
or laun.:hed the empire?
idcmifying the elements of des~rvc· .1o 'uch respect. But
lslamofascism (we haven't
I ask this unanswerable hlam that ~i\C rise to \io- there\ a nut her angle to l"Oil- '
Ronald
Reagan
vet 'eulcd on a term) - has question having just read a ic iiL'C and ~xtremism.' "The sider.
i1m\' suc-ceeded these van- brief essay by Islam expert place to he~i n is with the believed the United States
4Uishcd foes . Whatever it is Robert Spencer. author of twin hlamic precepts of could transform communism
called. thi;. ideology is now 'lslai11 Unveiled' _(Encounter. jih:~d. or lwly 11 ar. :~nd dhim - through freedom's triumph.
the principle menace to free- 2003) and ·onward. Muslim miwdc. the institutionalized The transformation of Islam
doms treasured by 21 st-cen- Soldiers' (Regnery. 2003 )_ · inkt i-•· t\ of non-Muslims is- ne&lt;:essarily a Muslim in anU "u i1H~Il living under affair.
tury Western civilization_ a Wriling
This is all the more reason
secular society still rooted in frontpagemag.com. Spencer Muslim rule. Reform is
compares totalitarian foes doomeJ. however. if these not to llinch . rhetorically
Judea-Christian tradition.
Totalitarian blam. howev- immediately past and present ~lements
are
ignoreU. S]Jeaking. As Spencer writes.
er. is totalitarianism with a - communists and jihadists obscured and denied.
'By vilifying and attempting
difference. Unlike . both - to lament that our age
Alas. I can think of no to marginalize those who dare
Nazism and communism_ it lacks a calls-it-like: he-sees-il political leader. and precious tell the truth ahout blamic
is not godless_ I can't help leader such as Ronald few hi storian..; and commen- radicalism as Rea~an did
wondering what Ronald Reagan. someone to tlip the tators, who have made this about Commtlnism.- today's
Reagan would have done conventional wisdom that point . We hear 'terrorism· intelligentsia provides ample
had Marx and Engels been once denied the evils inher- and 'in urdc rous ideology· cover to radical ],Jamie terdeemed prophets of God_ ent in communism and now denounced. hut we never rori,r;,_ allowing them to
What would he have said denies the evils inherent in . hear 'tcrrori 1111: and ·mur- operate under the radar screen
h:~d
the
Communi't totalitarian Islam .
derm" ideology· defined. of met.lia ~crutiny and even
'Today's stilling · ortho- We hear nothin ;! about the t.t\\ " cnftlrcemcnt.:
Man ifesto heen regarded as
doxy
remains
largely religious root.s of jihad's
Thi' isn't only tcrritying:
" holv book'' Communists
-:~lway~s glowed with the zeal unchallenged.'
Spencer bloody 'iolence that must he it\ tra!.!iL·. It\ al."o downriuht
Llf religious fanatics_ but writes_ ·Not just liberal pub- exposed if they are e1·er to un-Reagane~que .
(Diana \\'est is &lt;1 coltt/1/Jtist
communism. of course. is lications and spokesmen. but wither. Ronald Reagan was
explicit ly opposed to reli- cunservali ves who claim to .never reluctant ·to defi nc the J(&gt;r Til&lt;' \-l'usltingl!ill 1imes.
~ion _ Still. imagine that
wear Reagan's mantle tem- 'tcrniri:-.m · and 'mun.Jcrous Slw can /}(' cmlfucted 1·ia
Lenin's tomb had been built porize and dissimulate about ideology· of his day as heing £1 iana H 't'SI@ 1·t• ri ;on. n (,1. l
L

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L

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www.my-Iailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Reagan's lessons for Islam ism

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

Monday, June 14, 2004

Monday, June 14, 2004

L

ALlYE!
ltsAL\V[!

Feud

Ruth Schultz
. REEDSVILLE - Ruth SchultL, 88, of Reedsville, Ohio,
dted Saturday. June 12. 2004 at her residence_
She ~as born June 7, 1916 in Leachtown, W.Va .. daughter
of the late Arch1e ,and Ruby Milhoan Camp. She was a homemaker.
_She is survived by a son_ Earl Schultz. of Reedsville ; three
SISters. Ellen Mays of Elizabeth. Evelyn Bush of Parkersburg
and Clance Meredtth of Kentucky: and several nieces and
·
nephews.
Besides her paren~s she was preceded in death by her husband , Dallas: two ststers. Mary Savel and Alice Mays; two
brothers, Jack and Floyd Camp.
Funeral servi~cs will be held Tuesday. June 15. 2004 at II
a.m. at the Wh1te Funeral Home in Coolville Ohio with the
Rev_ Eric __Ross ofliciating_ Burial will be 'in the Heiney
Cemetery tn Reedsville. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday.

For The Record
Dissolutions
POMEROY
Dissolutions have been
granted in Meigs County

Common Pleas Court to
Paula Jean Rainey and
Christopher Allen Rainey.
and to Kimberly Sue Hawley
and Randall Gene Hawley. Jr.

Annex

other large items we have.
and wiB give us an opportunity to move some things now
from Page A1
on display into the annex so
that the library can be moved
the Historical Society to
move forward on the pro-' from the second lloor to the
ject now. They also noted · ground lloor of the present ·
that the City lee and Fuel museum building,'' said .the
had donated fill dirt which Society president
was hauled in by Pullins
·'Today we thank those
Excavating at no cost.
Parker. Hi,storical Society early pioneers who had the
president since 1984. gave a in sight to preserve Meigs
history of the Society estab- County history, to those past
lished in 1876. the museum presidents and members who
founded by A. V. Howell in kept the idea alive, and to
the late 1950s in a room in
those board members of
the _ Meigs
County
Courthou&gt;e. 4nd the pur- today who placed their trust
chases of the former funera l in this president that a· new
home on Butternut Avenue annex was needed and could
in 1971 for the museum, and be achieved. The Meigs
the adjacent · lot in 1980 County Historical Society is
where the annex will be
a volunteer organization and
built_
"This new facility wili were it not Tor the dedication
allow us to display the stored of volu~teers. today's event
agricultural equipment and would not be taking place_''

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Council member;, "'ant to
··reconstruct" the lire department by making each fire
tighter officially re-apply. be
from PageA1
evaluated and apprm·ed b)
accorded to any fire chief like village council before being
allowed to join. Ordinarily. a
PiCkens.
Wood said the reason petential lire lighter ha;, lo
Pickens was terminated was apply through the department
that he was doing things. and be voted in by the membership if he or she meet&gt; the
such as putting new blue appropriate
qualifications_
striping oil the lire trucks_
"A true tire tighter is going
without council's approvaL to fill this application out.''
Also. council requested a Wood said_ "If they don- 1
look at the account books to wani to lill it out they are not
see if everything was in in it for the village:·
order. Wood said council's
Leading members of the
request had nothing do with Syracuse Fire ·Department
any impropriety. only that called this application ridicucouncil wanted to be advised lous and said that though they
as to anything that was'being would 1111 it out before the
purchased_ Since the fire Sunday deadline. they would
department is funded by pub- quit in a heartbeat if a
lic money and private dona- licensed member of the force
tions, this request did not were not allowed to return_
seem out of the ordinary.
Another niember claimed
Both Wood and co unci I have that if a licensed men1ber of
ordered that the account the force. such as perhaps
books be audited - the first Pickens. were not approved
tiine ever.
by council. then there might
"Look, we are just trying to be ·some legal - recourse
do what is right for the vil- against the village.
lage:· said Wood who reiterAIJ the application and
ated that this was not a per- - evaluation process seeks to
sonal thing against Pickens,
do. Wood said. is to provide a
The fire house that the better fire fighting departPickens family built is slowly ment for the village.
bu~ning down as Syracuse
''We are trying to bring
Village Council and the fire standards up to where they
department tight for control are supposed robe." he said.
over the department's future _
Wood said the number of

people who arc licen&gt;ed tirelighters is less than a third of
the 30 member department.
Also. the applications would
provide an official ro&gt;ter of
names of active lire fighters
able to show up for duty.
"We just want to get everything organized ;,o that we
know who will show up for
duty." he said.
Within days of Picken's
departure as lire chief. the
members of the fire department came together and
voted to split the department
between the fire fighting servke and the emergency
squad. which comes under
the county's mandate _
In interviews with two
leading members of the
Syracuse Fire Department.
they said the decision to split
the departmeiu makes sense
especially considering the
shaky future of the fire
department for three reasons_
First. qualified personnel
would still be covered by the
appropriate
insurance.
Second. the squad would still
be under the control of the
Meigs Emergency Medical
Service. Finally. the emergency squad would continue
to operate out of Syracuse
even if the fire department
turns into ashes.
Wood said all council
wanted \O- do wa.s upgrade
and modernize the fire

department. but instead the
issue over Pickem ha;, turned
ihis into a personal thing
!x:t ween the village and the
fire department.
·This has just turned into ·a
per&gt;onal vendetta against the
village for no reason;· he
said_ "Since somebody got
mad_ the village has to suffer."
Still a loyal volunteer,
Pickens was training one of
his ;,uccessor;, late last week
on how to use some of equipment on the fire trucks.
Several fire fighters said their
loyalties are divided between
;,eni&lt;:e to their community
and the their own sense of
loyalty to Pickens whom
many described as an experienced fire fighter and leader.
One firefighter said Pickens·
knowledge of . firefighting
-gives him confidence in
knowing whether or not it is
safe to go into a burning
building . Others fire fighter'
echoed the same conclusion
and ;,aid that despite the poli- tics_ Pickens always does
what needs to be done for the
village.
Wood is sticking to his
guns.

- "That decision wa.s one of
the hardest thinus I have ever
done as mayor~ but I feel it
was the right thing to do for
e\·eryone:· said Wood .

Rutland American ·Legion donates to causes
The American Legion in Rutland has had a generous
June by giving aw.ay $11.000 raised from bingo proceeds. Eugene Fink, post commander standing in front.
presented the checks to a wide variety of organizations
in Meigs County. April Burke. mayor of Rutland also in
front. said the village will use its $1.000 to purchase
a sign des1gnating the new p1cnic areas as the James
Vennari Memorial Park. The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department will use its $6.500 new firefighting equipment and turnout gear. Meigs Elementary Schoo l will
use its $1.000 to purchase picnic tables for the children to sit on during recess. Carleton School wi ll use
its $1,000 for travel expenses related to the special
olympics. Hysell Run Chuch will use its $500 for the
building fund. The Pomeroy Youth League wilt use .its
$500 for uniforms and sports equipment Middleport
Wesleyan Holiness Church wilt use it's $500 for travel
expenses related to the children's church. Fink sa1d ,
. the American Legion's is proud to help out the community in any way it can. (J_ Mites Layton)

, .................................................................... ,

14
© 2004 by NEA. Inc.
I
I

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Doctors also have right to choose

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be published. Letters should be iii good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column me !he
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.~­

:editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

The Daily Sentinel
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Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14

RepOrter; J. Miles Layton . Ext. 1.3

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Inside Meigs County
13Weeks _.
· .. ' 30 15
..... .'60.00
26 Weeks
52Weeks
_ ' 118 80
Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks .. _. __ . ____ . .'50.05
26Weeks .. _.. _. _. . . ' 100.10
52 Weeks .... _... _... '200.20

Women who choose to
three in West Virginia. There about figuring out how to
are only two in Mississippi _ respect the individual choichave abortions can have
them_
Indecd_ R5 percent of all es of doctors while carrying
Doctors who choose not to
U.S. counties have no doc- out the individual d10ices of
r.erform abortipns do not
tors who perform abortions. women_ It is about figuring
have to perform them.
according to th e - Nat ion a I out how, more than JO years
Joan
But at what point might
Abortion Federation. Even after Roe v. Wade. to keep
Ryan
the doctor's right to choose
in California, the number of reminding doctors of what
- providers
has
steadily life was- like before that
nullify a woman's right trl
choose'! Put another way, if
declined from 600 in 1989 to Supreme Court deci&lt;&gt;ion.
there are no doctors to perfewe r than 400 today.
As abortion providers who
form abbrtions, what is the abortion should be the hurd
Doctors often arrive at lived lhrougil that era retire.
va lue of a law that guaran- part , not ge tting access to it," their decision whether to sai d
UCSF
medical
tees ~ woman's right to have Melanic said this week after perform abortions much the Professor Felicia Stewart.·
one?
she returned home from the way women arrive at their young doctors don 't fed as
Melanie , a 42-year-old hn,pit :d.
decision whether to have obligated to step into their
book designer. e-mailed me
The issue for Kaiser was them. They wrestle with shoes_ Because abortion has
the other day_ She was 18 medical. not political. a their beliefs about life and always been legal in their
weeks pregnant when she spokeswoman said_
responsibility and freedom hfetimc. many new doctors
was told her fetus had Down
af)d
conscience_ And just as assume that if tl1ey don't per·It was a matter of refersy ndrome_ After several ring her to a physician with women who would never form abortions. somebody
wrenching days of tears and the most expertise." said Dr. choose an abortion for them- else will because somebody
counseling, she and her hu s- Ruth Shaber, director ·or selves can support unequivo- · else always has_ And hecaLtse
band decided to terminate women's health services for cally the legality of it, so too they never had to save the
the pregnancy.
pro-choi&lt;:e
doctors life of a woman dying from a
Kaiser
Pennanenle
ot do
. But the Kaiser Permanentc Northern California. But she choose never to perform orie. butchered back-alley aborhospital in Sacramento, added: 'At some hospital s,
'I'm Catholic enough to tion. the y don't necessarily
Calif., where the couple live, you have cases where (med- say I'm just not going to do see legal ubortiun as a criticould perform only an ical personnel) are not used th at," sa id · a Northern cally important public health
induction abortion: Melanie to being involved in the pro- California family physician issue.
would be induced into labor ced ure and might say. 'I real- who preferred that his n~mc
'That\ kind of been forand have to deliver the fetus. ly don'l want thi s happening n0t be mcd in commenting gotten." Stewart 'aiel.
She wanted a surgical abor- in my operating room_"
on abortion. •]· have to ask · So the number of
tion &lt;:ailed dilation and
Abortions in the second my;,elf. 'Is the fetus a per- provider&gt; conlim1cs lo dwinextraction. which hils fewer trime~tcr are relatively rare, 'on ·• Du~' it have rights•• On dle_ Women have to travel
health risks than induct ion so it is not unusual for a the other hand. history sug- farther for abortions. which
and is less traumatic for the woman to travel some dis- 'g~sts that when abortion is meuns they often delay the
patient. But Kaiser had no -lance to find a trained physi- illegal. they are still per- procedure until they have the
doctor on its hospital staff in cian. But Melanie's case formed and often botched. money and the transportaSacramento sui tabl y trained points to a trend much So people who do perform tion, putting their health at
in D&amp;E abortions. Melanic broader. than Kaiser or any them damn well beuer know greater risk_
askd about Kaiser in HMO: The number of abor- what they're doing.
Thus the terrible irony:
Oakland , Calif.
Nope. tion providers has been
' I pe"onally don't ever The furthe( away we get
Kai.1er in San Francisco? steadily dwindling ~round intend to perform one. But if from pre-Roe v. Wade
,'slope. There was one Kaiser the country.
the law give." a woman a America, the closer we seem
doL·tnr in Santa Rosa. Calif__
If a woman in North kgal right to have an ahclr- to returning to it.
Uoa11 ll m11 i1 u coifflllllist
1rained to do it, but he was
Dakota wants to end her tion and there i' no place for
nnt '" ailable.
pregnancy, there is not a sin- her to lime iL it really isn't a fill- the Scm Fnmcisco
C/mmide. Se11d comlffellts
Melanie ended up travel , gle doctor in ·her state who choice then. is iL'"
ing· to a Kaiser hospital in perform s the procedure.
Clearly. keeping abortion to her ill care oft/tis IIPII'Spa·
acces;,ible
i;, not ju;,t about per or &gt;ell&lt;/ her l'-IIWil CIT
San Jose, Calif.
There are just three abortion
it
legal. It is also joa11 ryw1@ .~fch rm1 icl e. COlli.)
keeping
'The decision to have the providers in Kentucky and
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The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

IDE

Monday, June 14, 2004

l.:iarcta wins Buick Classic, Page B2

Public records in cities, villages denied more than 20 percent

"Monday, June 14
Morning (7 a.m.-ll/o011)
It looks like a humid and
cloudy morning. There might
be a bit of rain around the
area. Temperatures will hold
steady around 73. Winds will
be 5 to 10 MPH from the
southwest:
Afternoon (I p.m&gt;6 p.m.)
Expect a humid afternoon .
Temperatures will linger at 80
with today's high of 83 occurring around 4:00pm. Skies
will range from sun ny to
cloudy with 5 to I 0 MPH
winds from the southwest. ·
Eveni11g (7 p.m.-Midnight)
lt. should continue to be
humid. We are predicting
moderate rain . The ra infall
should
begin
around
I O:OOpm. The rain is predi&lt;:t·
ed to end near midnight with
total accumulations for th is
event near 0.16 inches.
Temperatures will diminish
from 81 early this eveni ng to
73. Skies will be clear to
cloudy with I0 MPH winds
from the southwest.

Overnight (I a.m.-6 a.m.)
It 's going to be a humid and
clot1uy overnight. There is a
slight chance of rain .
Temperatures will hover at 72
with today's low of 72 o&lt;:curring around 6:00am. Winds
will be 5 to 10 MPH from,.the
south tu rl)ing from the scitth·
west as the overnight progresses.
Thesday, June IS
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It 's going to be a humid and
cloudy morning. There is a
slim chance that it could rain.
Temperatures will remain
around 73. Winds will be 5 to
I0 MPH from the so uthwest.
Aftemooll (I p.m.~6 p.m.)
It should remain humid and
cloudy. Ligh t rain is expected.
The rain is predicted to start
near 3:00pm. Anticipate rain
accumulations of 0.05 inches
for
thi s
afternoon.
Temperatures will stay near
XI. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the southwest turning
from the west as the afternoon
progresses.

( AP) - Kathy Thompson.
in
the
clerk-treasurer
McConnelsville. will provide
any requested public records:
budget sheets. personnel tiles.
payroll numbers.
Just don't stup by on
Mondays. Or Wednesdays. Or
on days that she takes vacation
time.
Thompson has those days off
- and the only key to the tile
cabinets that hold the records.
"Most people are willing to
work with me,'' she said.
If they come on a Monday,
the ·secretarie s tell them to
come back the next day,
Thompson said.
"That's still only 24 hours,"
she said. "Our solicitor .has
advised us that we h;~ve to provide the infonnation within a
reasonable period of time ...
Ohio law says a person
should be able to inspect pub'
lie
records
'·promptly."
· Photocopies of that record
should be made within a reasonable period of time.
Even with Thompson's days
off, McConnelsville still provides more access to public
records than many other Ohio
municipalities.
A recent audit of .public
agencies in Ohio's 88 counties
shows that people who
·requested public documents
from cities or villages deemed
the county ·s seat walked away
empty-handed more than 20
percent of the time where the
records existed.
Media representatives from
all over the state visited · the
offices during regular business
hours and asked to view public
documents.
They
were
insuucted to avoid giving their
names or places of employment because state law does
not require that information to
view a public document.
In the cities or villages, auditors sought expense reports for
the mayor or administrator and
the police chief's salary.
The auditors got the records
as quickly as they should 53
percent of the time for expense
records and 64 percent for the

Monday, June 14, 2004

Pistons push Lakers to brink of elimination
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

Associated Press
·

Days Until

· """'"'~'!!~!·~

Kathy Thompson sits at her McConnelsville office desk. Thompson, the city's clerk-treasurer, will
provide any requested public records: budget ·sheets, personnel files, payroll numbers. Thompson
has the only keys to the cabinet with the records and she's off Mondays, Wednesdays and takes
the keys when she's on vacation. (AP .Photo(The Repository, Bob Rossiter)
police chief salary. TwentySometimes auditors received
seven percent of the time audi- the records only after answertors were denied the executive ing a lot of questions.
expense report because of pro"Who are you?" was the
cedures or personnel were most common question asked
unavailable or too busy. by a secretary or clerk.
Records were denied about 20
"I'd rather not say,'' Eric
percent of the time for the Ayres from The (Martins
police chief's salary for the Ferry) Times Leader told the
same reasons.
mayor's
secretary
in
Youngstown 's
· Mayor WOodsfield.
George McKelvey demanded
"In that case. I'd rather not
to know who wanted the docu- help you.~· the clerk countered,
ments and where tl1e person according to the reporter.
was from and also taped the
Some clerks and secretaries
conversation.
cited social etiquette rather
"He reached across the desk than Ohio law in asking for
and turned on a portable tape people's names.
recorder," said Norman Leigh
Results from the public
from . The
(Youngstown) records audit also found that
access · to public records has
Vindicator.
"He said something to the nothing to do with the size or
effect that he wanted no confu- location of the city.
sion about what was being . Walking into the City Hall in
said."
Cincinnati was the same as
McKelvey said he taped the walking into the village buildconversation only after learn- ing in Paulding. Neither one of
ing the person was a reporter . . the auditors got to see the
He said he often tapes records right away.
When visiting Cleveland's
reporters' interviews to ensure
he's quoted accurately.
City Hall, an auditor was

directed to the mayor's office,
. finance department and law
department before leaming that
it would take a week before she
could ·see the information and
two to four weeks to get copies.
Barbara
Langhenry
of
Cleveland's law department
said city employees should
know better - that they are to
make
records
available
promptly and to make copies
within a reasonable amount of
time. The written request, she
said. is to "help us clarify what
people want. but we don·,
require it."
Jefferson County in north- .
· eastern Ohio and Wilmington
County in southern Ohio granted records promptly without
any questions.
. .
Wilmington's council clerk,
Linda Eichelberger. immediately pulled the public record
and cross-checked it to make
sure it was current.
She then excused herself to
make a copy of the record even
before one was requested, the
auditor said.

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Crew, Wizards
kick to 2-2 draw
COLUMBUS (A P) - Jeff
Cuni1ingham scored twice.
including a penalty kick in .
the second half that helped
the Columbus Crew to a 2-2
tie against the Kansas City
. Wizards on Saturday night.
Columbus .has not lost in
seven g·ames.
Cunningham tallied in the
18th minute when he brought
down a long pa'-' from forward Michael Ritch deep in
th e left corner, slipped
around Kansas City defender
Nick Garcia. and sent a shot
past goalkeeper Tony Meola
i1110 the upper-right corner of
the net.
"Norma lly, Tony doesn't
allow goals like that to go
in." Cunningham said.
The Wizards responded by
scoring two goals in a th reeminute span . Both came after
corner kicks by Chris Kl ein .
Klein's first corner found
defender Jimmy Conrad. who
headed the· ball past Crew
goalkeeper Jon Busch in the
21st minute for his first goal
of the season.
'
Moments later. Wizards
defender Shavar Thomas also
used his head for his fourth
goal of the year.
"We had a meeting this
morning where we talked
about needing to get more out
of our set pieces." Klein said.
" When you've got two
guys that are good in the air
like ·Jimmy and Shavar, all
you have to do is pick a spot
and hit a well-we1ghted ball
in there. They tlo a great job
of tracking the ball."
· Cunningham co nverted hi s"
penalty kick in the 63rd
minute after he was fouled in
the penalty urea by Garcia,
who appeared to grab
Cunningham's jersey as
Cunningham turned to shoot.
Arter playing five games in
14 days, including two midweek games, Klein sa id he
was happy to come away
with one point from the tie .
"We've had a tough couple
of weeks," Klein sai d.
"We're go in g to take that
(point). we're going to go
home and get a little bit of
rest, and finally we don' t play
until next weekend."

Richmond clips
Clippers, 6-2

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High School
Football
Season!!!

14
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COLUMBUS (AP)
James Jurries drove in three
runs with a two-run single
and a solo homer, and the
Richmond Braves beat the
Columbus Clippers 6-2
Sunday in the International
League.
Jurries' single came as part
·of five-run sixth inning for
the . Braves that included
seven hits and two Columbus
errors. All six runs charged to
'll.ndy Beal (3-5 ) in his six
innings were earned, however. Beal gave up I0 hits and
walked one while striking out
four.
Trey Hodges (4-2) went
seven innings for t11e Brave s,
allowing two runs on five
hits. He walked one and
struck out four.
Charles Thomas went 3for-5 for Richmond. Mike
Kelly acwunted for hoth
Clippers runs with a two-run
homer in the bottom of the
sixth inning.

AUBURN HILLS, Mich.- Poised
and primed for a title, the Detroit
Pistons took care of business while
the Lakers lost their tempers.
Building a lead early in the foUJth
quarter, holding it the rest of the way
and repelling every Los Angeles rally,
ihe Pi stons moved one victory closer
to their first championship in 14 years
with a convincing 88-80 victory
Sunday night in Game 4 of the NBA
'

Finals.
With a 3-1 lead, Detroit has made
one thing crystal clear: It is the better
of these two basketball teams, winning without egos and superstars and the problems that come with
them.
These were some of the scenes that
Pistons' fans will cherish: Chauncey
Billups making timely 3-pointers,
Rasheed Wallace backpedalling
downcourt with a minute left after
making a jumper that capped his best
game of the playoffs : Richard
Hamilton calmly knocking down free

throws.
As for the Lakers, the snapshots
were these: Kobe Bryant screaming at
the referees and picking up a late
techni cal foul: Shaquille O'Neal
. yelling at someone in the Lakers· hulldie. most likely Bryant. for failing to
get him the ball: Karl Malone staying
parked on the bench for the entire
fourth quarter, a nonfactor again.
It 's almost over for these Lakers.
their breakup possibly coming in the
next week.
Game 5 is Tuesday night, and the
Pistons could become the first team to

bring the title back to the Ea&gt;tern
Conference since Michael Jordan 's
Chicago Bull ' won it in llJ9g
Wallace scored 26. Billups hau 23
and Hamilton 17 to leatl the Pi 'ton.,,
who outscored the Lukers 32-2-1 in
t,he fourth 4uarter:
o· Neal had 36 and Bryant 20 f&lt;ir
the Lakers, whose dysfunctional twoman show isn ' t enough to keep up
wi th Detroit's ·depth and determination .
No team has e"er -come back from a

Please see Pistons, Bl

American Legion Baseball

Athens tackles Me·igs
BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@ mydai lytribu ne.com
RIO GRANDE - Athens
Post 21 used four run s in the
fourth inning to break a tie.
then four more in the seventh
to break the game open .
The visitors amassed 15
total hits on a rainy Saturday
en route to an 11 -5 league
victory over Meigs Post 1.28
during Ameri ca n Legion
baseball action at the
University of Rio Grande.
Atl1ens (4- 1) improved to 21 in the league. its lone loss
courtesy
of
Lancaster.
Meanwhile Meigs (5-2) fell
to 1-1.
The two clubs battled backand-fourth to ti 2-2 draw after
three innings, but the Athens
o ffen se flex ed its mu scles in
the fourth frame. when it
scored all the runs needed to
secu re the win.
A walk issued to desi gnatetl
hitter Tony Costanza followed by back-to-hack singles by Alex Abele and Greg
Poston gave Post 21 a 3-2
edge. A hit batsman then
loaded the bases for Chris
Hewitt . who brought everybody home .with a bases- .
clearing double.
Hewitt paced the offense
with three hits and four runs
batted in. while Poston added
two hits and four RB!s. Big
man Abele linished 3-for-3.
Athens added four insurance runs in the seventh and

one more 1n the ninth to
sec ure the victory. Inbetween. Mei gs staged a
small rally on the strength of
a pair of eighth inning RBI
sac rifice flie s by Dave
M&lt;:Ciure and Luke Haislop .
but it fell well short.
Four of Meigs ' 10 hits
belonged to former Gallia
Academy standout and current Rio · Grande Redman
Mike Warren. who singled
four times. Unfortunately for
Meigs. there were no men in
scoring position during three
of hi s successfu l at-bats.
Angelo Hardy. who was
struck in the head bv a baseba ll during an Athens warmup drill, shook off the minor
injLtry to log two hits including a seventh-inning so lo
home run . Doug Dill also had
a pair hits and an RBI.
Athens starting and winning pitcher Brad Grimm
threw a complete game while
surrendering four earned
runs.
Chris IJrown sufferetl the
loss after allowing six ru11s on
nine hits over his six innings
of service. Ken Amsbary
worked the tinalthree innings
in relief.
Meigs plays host to
Lancaster today.

.g-1\. \
.

.

Athens 11, Meigs 5
Athens 0 2 0 4 0 0 4 0 1

-

II 15 3

Meigs

-

5 10 2

1o 1 o a 1 0 2 0

• •.........

Brad Grimm and Greg Poston. Chris
Brown, Ken .Amsbary (7) and Andy
Parsons. WP -

Brad Grimm . LP -

Brown . HR -

Meigs (1) Angelo Hardy.

sixth, none on.

Ch ri s

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• ·
·•·
•

.r., .. ,....:..'lllf--'11 ~
~

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Meigs Post 128 catcher Andy Parsons slides safely into third base during the e1ghth inning
of Saturday's 11·5 loss to Athens Post 21. (Brad Sherman)

Jimmy Johnson nearly flawless during Pocono 500
BY DAN GELSTON

Associated Press
LONG POND , Pa . - Jimmie
Johnson used a near-flawless performance to overcome a NASCAR mi stake, drawing closer to the points
lead with a win under caution
Sunday at Pocono Raceway.
Johnson controlled most of the
Pocono 500 for his second win in
three weeks and third this year. He's

led 820 miles in the last three races
and has two more se&lt;:ands in his last
five.
Jeremy- Mayfield, who has two of
his three 'career victories at Pocono. ·
finished second. He pushed Johnson
hard in side and was about a carlength behind when another yellow
flag came out with three laps left.
Bobby Labonte, who won the 1999
Pocono 500 and the 1999 and 200 I
Pennsylvania 500, was third.
Johnson put aside a tl isappointing

32nd-place finish last week at Dover,
when he was one of the many causalities of a 19-car pileup that led to
several caution rules changes for this
race.
.
At Pocono. he was almost a victim
of NASCAR's ever-changing, and
often confusing, rules.
The pit road official opened the
service lane one lap too early during
a late caution period. As a result.
Johnson. the leader, was unable to pit
while most of the .cars behind him

I

did . He hatl to pit later, antl it cosl
him the front spot on the rc&gt;lart .
Johnson. thou2h. raced his wav
hac k to the front. then built on .h(s
lead on sever~! restarts on tilt' 2 1/2 mile triangular track. He took the
lead on lap 17-+.
"We were ju&gt;t doing \\hat we were
told in the drivers meeting:· Johnson
said . "The firs t time I came hv. the
pits were open allll it was a ·mistake

Please see Pocono, B1

Griffey homers, Reds lose again
ToM WITHERS
Associated. Press

BY

CLEVELAND - Ken Griffev Jr. didn't
make history, the bullpen co~ldn't protect a
.lead and the manager watched Sunday's final
innings on the clubhouse TV
The Cincinnati Reds didn' t have a pleasant
th~ee-day stay at Jacobs Field.
Griffey moved within one swing of history
with his 499th career homer, but the Reds'
losing streak reached a season-high six
ga~es with a I 0-8 loss to the Cleveland
lnd1ans.
.
· Matt Lawton hit a two-run homer in the
seventh inning as the Indians climbed back
from a 7-1 deficit to complete a three-!\ame
sweep with their third straight come- lrombehind victory over their in-state rivals.
The Reds have lost si.x straight- all on the
road - and look nothing like the leam that
led the NL Central for 20 straight days.
"We probably should have won all three
games." said first baseman Sean Casey.
" Instead, we got three losses. It was a really
tough weekend for us. "
The' Indians tmiled 7- 1 in the fourth. but
stormed back with five runs in the sixth and
three in the seventh- capped by Lawton's
shut off Mike Matthews.
Cleveland outscored Cincinnati I H-3 from
the sixth inning on in the series, aided by -the

Reds' floundering bullpen, which blew saves
in eac h game.
"It's ridiculous," closer Danny Graves said.
"We're major league ballplayers and if you
can't throw strikes, they'd better find someone who can."
Griffey hit No. 499 in the third inning, and
with his next homer he'll become the 20th
player to reach 500. He would've certainly
gotten there much earlier if not for a freakish
'
run of injurie s the past few seasons.
He nearly hit the milestone homer several
times during his weekend at the Jake. But
·
Iike the Reds, came up just short.
Griffey went 1-for-3 and walkc;d twice. He
came within a few feet of No. 500 in the
fo urth inning with a shot to right that was
caught just short of the wall.
.
"I hit it off the end." said Griffey, who feels
his pursuit of 500 homers is hurting the Reds.
"It's one of those things where guys don.,
want to mess up." he said. "Look at a no-hitter, it's the same thing. If I hit one (homer).
guys start pressing. It's natural."
Griffey gets his next shot at 500 on
Monday in Philadelphia.
After walking in the first, Griffey connected for his 18th homer - and IOth in 21
games - in the third, pulling a 1-1 pitch
from Clitf Lee over the wall in right.
Griffey paused to watch its llight as fans in

Please see Reds, Bl

I•
---~ -- --

Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr. hits a solo home run off
Cleveland Indians pitcher Cliff Lee in the third inning for
Griffey's 499th career home run Sunday in Cleveland . (AP)

�Monday, June 14, 2004
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

:Garcia wins Buick Classic
:in three-man playoff
0

Bv

JOHN NICHOLSON

Associated Press

HARRISON .
N.Y ' : Sergio Garcia won a threeman playoff for the second
time in five ' weeks Sunday,
: holing a 7-foot birdie putt to
;beat Rory Sabbatini on the
· third extra hole in the Buick
: classic .
Padraig Harrington was
· eliminated on the second
extra hole in the seventh
playoff in the last 12 years
: on the Westchester Country
: Club course.
• Garcia. who beat Dudley
: Hart and Robert Damron
last month on the first pl ayoff hole in the Byron Nelson
Champion~hip ,
earned
;$945,000 for his fifth PGA
;To ur victory and seco nd on
•the hilly, tree-lined course.
: The 24-year-old Spanish
· star set up his winning putt
on the par-5 I 8th hole with a
90-yard wedge shot, after
· Sabbatini left his 70-yard
third shot 2 I feet short of
: the hole. Sabbatini ' s pull
· finished 3 feet from the
hole. setting the stage for
Garcia in the final event
before the U.S. Open at
Shinnecock Hills.
Garcia had a 14 1/2-foot
• birdie putt for the victory on
·the second playoff hole the par-4 I 7th - but ran it 3
feet past. and settled for par.
Sabbatini hit his approach
s hot into the back fringe and
chipped to 2 1/2 feel to s et
up his par.
Harring ton. ail eight-time

Pistons
from Page B1
3-1

deficit in the fmals, and
the
Lakers
seemed
iiJequipped to become the tirst.
O'Neal took 21 shots and
made 16, and he might have
doubled those totals if his
teammates had gotten him the
ball more often. But Bryant
somehow found it necessary
to launch 14 attempts in the
frrst half and 25 overall, many
of which were both unwise
. and off-target.
No one else on the Lukers
had more than eight points,
and Los Angeles again was
outrebounded and plagued by
fouls.
Detroit made 29 field goals
and 28 foul shots and scored
2 I points on the fast break in
what was the closest game of
the series until the Pistons
broke it open with a 7-0 run

Sergio Garcia
winner on the European tour
who is winless on the PGA
Tour.- dropped out with u
bogey on the seconJ playoff
hole . The Irishman mis sed a
chance to win on the first
extra hol e - . the I Sth when hi s 7 I i2-foot birdie
putt s lid by the right side of
the cup.
All three players birdied
the 18th in regulation to finis h at I 2 - under 272, and top
a field that featured 25 of
the top 30 players on the
money list.
Garcia was the first to
reach 12 under, finishing off
his sec ond straight 4-under
67 with a 4 1/2-foot birdie
putt.
Harrington.
playing '
directly behind Garcia in the
second -to- last group, holed
a 16-foot birdie chip from
the right fringe for his
fourth 68. Sabbatini. in the
final threesome. followed
with a 7- foot putt for his
second con secutive 70.
Sabbatini. a 28-year-o ld
South African who played at
the University of Arizona,
was seeki ng his third PGA
Tour victory . He won the

Monday,June14,2004

Reds

:PGA Tour- Buick Classic

2000
Air
Canada
Championship and 2003
FBR Capital Op~n , and
teamed
with
Trevor
lmmelman to win the 2003
Worh.l Cup.
Fred Couples. Yijay Singh
and Tom Byrum tied for
fourth. two strokes ba~k .
Couples. the second-round
leader rebounded from a
third -round 74 with a 6H .
Singh. the first-round leader
after a 63, shot a 70. Byrum
had a 71.
Luk~ Donald (72) was
another stroke back . and
Fredrik Jacobson (69) followed at 8 under. Kenny
Perry had the best round of
the day . a 66 to top a fiveplayer group at 7 under. He
began the day in tied for
46th at 2 · under.

from Page B1
the lower tier of seats scrambled for the souvenir.
In his next at-bat . in the
fourth, Grilley nearly got
beaned by !he tJrst pitch from
Lee, who was immediately
ejected by plate umpire N1att
Hollowell.
Lee 's
fastball
whizzea
hehind Griffey's head. and
Hollowell tossed the Jeft-hander almost as quickly a s the
ball reached the backstop.
Ryan Freel scored .o n the
play.
Lee maintained he wasn't
trying to hit Griffey.
" [was trying to go in under
his hands, and it just got away
from me ," s aid Lee, who
walked live in 3 2-3 innings.
"He just hit a homer on ' my
last pitch. so it obviously

Pocono
'
from Page
B1

by

Divots: Garcia. also the
200 l winner. has 19 straight
rounds of par or better in
tournament. ... Garcia and
Harrington also were in
three-way playoff with Ian
Woosnam
in
the
1999
German Masters. Garcia
won on the second extra
hole .... Loren Roberts, the
third -rou nd leader after a
64, shot a 7R to tie for I 6th
at 5 under. He three-putted
three of the first e ight hol es.
... Ernie Els. the Memorial
winner last week. dosed
with a 70 to finish at 5
under. He has played five
s trai ght weeks .... Masters
champion Phil Mickelson
also finished a t 5 under.
shoot in g a. 73 .

a

for a 77-67 lead with 4:52
Though the Lukers botched
left. The Lakers got no closer their first couple of possesthan seven the rest of the way
sions , they quickly began getas the Pistons made shots ting the baiJ to O'Neal deep
\vhether from the field or the
in the low post. His first two
foul line - when they needed
s hots were dunks, his next
them.
two were 5-footers from
It was widely expected that either side of the ba sket, and
Jackson would change his
the fifth was an aiJey-oop
. starting lineup or rotations,
dunk. O'Neal went 5-for-5 in
especiaiJy after five · of the
a first quarter th a t ended with
Lakers' veterans O'Neal.
the Lakers a h ead 22-21.
Bryant, Rick Fox. Derek
After mrssrng a
shot.
O'Neal
hit
hi
s
n
ex
t
two
midFisher and Devean George had an off-day co nferenc e
way through the seco n!.l
with Jackson in a restroom at
quarter and yelled "Try to
The Palace, pleading with
s top thatl" to no one in parhim to put hi s trust in them
ticular with an animated
si n ce they know hi s triangle
express ion o n his face. The
offense best.
pace o f the quarter was slow
But Jackson went with his
thanks to I 6 fouls before
u sual startin g t'ive, turning to
Mike James took cor\trol and
Fox as his first substitution
ran two fast breaks by himafter George piCked up two
self, converti n g both times. t o
4uick fouls. Later, he went to
help Detroit to a 41-39 halfa small line up with Fisher and time lead.
Payton together in the backWaJJacc began to carry the
court and Bryant at small for- ' Pistons in the third quarter,
ward .
dominating his matchup with

the rlag man on pit road.
Luckily it cycled itself out,
but for a time I was ner-

vous."
After only three cautions
in the first 100 lap s, there
were eight in the last I 00.
The most notable came when
Rusty Wallace hit Michael
Walirip and sent him into the
wall. Both drivers were
knocked out and Waltrip was
furious.
" I am just amazed that
somebody could do something that stupid," Waltrip
said.
The race ended under caution because Dale Jarrett and
J e ff Burton blew engines.
The
II
caution
flags
eq ualed the I I last week at
Dover. NASCAR president

Slava
Medvede nko
after
Karl Malone left the game. A
late 6-0 run by the Lukers,
end ing with a steal and dunk
by Bryant , produced a 56-56
deadlock entering the final
period.
Hamilton hit two jumpers
to open the fourth quarter,
and Ben Wallace rebou nded
hi~ own missed free throw
and banked it in for a 65-60
lead , and a 3 by Billups

looked like I was throwing at
him, blll it just got away."
Several of the Reds came
storming up ihe dugout steps.
while Gritfey simply leaned
on his bat and offered a pu7 zled look to Lee.
Griffey was asked if he
thought Lee was aiming at
him.
''I'm not going to answer
that," he said .
Reds manager Dave Miley,
who got tossed by Hollowell
in the sixth for arguing balls
and strikes. was equally. non committal.
"I'd rather not comment."
he s aid . " Ask the home plate
umpire. He obviously thought
there was some intent."
Coco Crisp hit a three -run
homer in the sixth otf Reds
starter Cory Lidle. and Omar
Vizquel had a two-run s hot in
the inning off Brian Reith (22) as the Indians tied it 7 -7.
Brandon Larson's RBI in

the seventh put the Reds
bad. up. but Tim Laker
sn&lt;~pped an 0 - for-14 ,lump
with an RBI · double and
Lawton followed with his
lOth
homer.
gtvtng
Cleveland a I 0-~ lead .
Matt Miller ( 1-0) . who
bounced around the minors
until this season. pitched the
seventh for his first major
league win. Jose Jimenez
worked the ninth for his fifth
save in eil!ht trie&gt;.
Wily Mo Pena hit his first
career grand slam in the first
for Cincinnati. which built a
7-1 lead in the fourth after
Casey"s RBI double.
But the Indians didn't quit .
rallying as they did while
overcoming 5-2 and 5 - l
deficits . in the series· first
two games.
" It was huge for us ," said
Laker. "es pecially with the
crowds · we h;td. They were
really into the game."

Mike
Helton
promised
changes and explained severa l new rules to the drivers at
the pre,race meeting . There
was sti ll plenty of confusion,
both by the drivers and
NASCAR officials.
Only
Johnson .
Terry
Labonte
a nd
Jamie
McMurray stayed on the
track and followed the new
rule correctly during the pit
confusion.
Eventually, it paid off for
Johnson.
Johnson
now
seems
primed to make a serious run
at leading the points race
after the 26th race.
Series
leader
Dale
Earnhardt Jr. came into the
race with an ':18-point lead in
the standings. Earnhardt finished sixth and saw hi s lead
over Johnson cut to 5R:
Johnson is sudden ly look ing like the old J eff Gordon,
his mentor who co-ow n s the
No. 48 Chevrolet. They also

arc teammates at Hendrick
Motorsports .
Johnson's performance at
Dover was only hi s fourth
finish out of the top-10 this
year.
He
also
won
at
Darlington and had consecutive second-place finishes
leading up to his dominant
performance at the Coca
Cola 600 in Charlotte.
"The one it1 Charlotte was
pretty good, but this one was
right the[e with it," Johnson
sa id .
Mark Martin , who snapped
a 73-race winless s treak last
week, blew an engine and
finished out of the running.
Ryan Newman also challenged John son for most of
the second h a lf of the race
until Robby Gordon got
loose and smacked him flush
on the left side. Newman's
car limped to pit road. his l:ar

m:ribune - Sentinel - 1\e

smoking.
But it's Johmon who's the
hottest driver in NASCAR.

made it 70~ 64 with 6:20 left
After the Lukers got within
three, Billups hit another 3pointer to start the gamedeciding 7-0 run.
"1 told them how proud I
was," coach Larry Brown
said. "But no matter how you
look at it. you· ve got to win
four games in the series."'
Notes:
For the fourth
straight ga me , O'Neal was
called for a jump ball viola-

tion on th e opening tip.
Rasheed Wallace ~ot hi&gt; first
technical foul o( the series
and seco nd of the postseason
for jawing at Medvedenko
after fouling him in the third
quarter. Medvedei1ko also
got a tech on the play . . .
Recording artist Kid Rock

sang an a cappe ll a rendition
of America The Beautiful.
and yes. he did remove his
hat.

Coming Friday, July 16,2004
The

Daily Sentinel

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Complete the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus
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E)ttendicare
Heall/'1
Serv1ces. Inc. is an equal
opportumty employer t/lat
encourages
wor.kptac e
diverSity. M/F ON
The
, Athens-Meigs
Educational Serv1ce Center
has a poSition openmg as
Supervisor in Me1gs County.
ApPlicants should have
extensive e)tpenence in
implementing Curriculum
and
InstructiOn
and
ProfeSSIOnal Development
lmprovomer.t Plans. Th1s is a
12 month contract position .
salary will be based on certi·
lication and experrence
according to salary scale
Adm tnistrative certlltca!IOn
and "Experience preferred .
This position has Board
approved
benet1ts.
Applicants must prov1d_e
their own transportation .
Submit teller ot mterest.
r('sume. references and a
copy ot current certificate(s)
to
John
Costanzo.
Superintendent. AthensMeign Educational Serv1ce
Center,
507 Richland
A...enue. Suite #108. Athens.
Oh 45701 . Applicalion
Deadline: July 10. 2004 The
AMESC is an Equal
0 p p o r ..a u n j t y·
Employer/Provider.
The
Att1ens-Me igs
Educational Service Center
has e posl11on open1ng as
Severe
Behavior
Handicapped Teacher tor
the EO Cooperative Un it at
Southern LOca l School
District for the 2004·2005
School Year. A~p ll can1s
muat
have
Special
Education Llcenae or be willIng to get a Temborary
tntefvention
Specialist
Llcenae. Sa lary will be
baaed on vxperlence and
certification according to the
scale , and will have Board
approved benet!ts. Submit
letter of int&amp;rest to John 0 .
Costanzo. Superln1endent.
Athe na- MeiQi Educational
Servic e
Center.
507
Ric hland Ave nue . Suite
1108, Athena , Ohio 45701 .
Application Deadline July
10. 2004. The AMESC Is an
E(lual
Oppor!unl1y
Employer/Provider.
The Eastern Local School
District, 50008 State Route
7, Reedsville , Oh1o, Is seekIng applic•nts from que.l1l1ed
Individuals to WI the vacancy
of eastern H"lgh School
Principal. Applicants must
hold a 'w'Bild hi gh school pr~ncipal certlflcatelhcense or
prov~de prool ther can
obtain such a license.
Candidates may contact
Mrs. Usa M Ritchie, at (740)
667·3319 tor an appllca1ion
package and adctHronal
informet1on . Deadline to
submit appllcauon matencils
Is June 23 , 2004 The
Eastern Local School
District 1s an equal opportu·
nlty emp!oy&amp;r

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Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S 1.00 for large

-"P''P"I

• Include Phone Humber And Address When Needed
• Adt Should Run 7 Days

.

Or

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Pubtlthlnj reservetlhe right to edit, reject, or ·unul any ad lit any lime. Errore muet be reported on ttw first dlly of publleetlon end
Trlbun•Sentlnei·Regleter wll! be: reaponelble 101" no more then the cott of tl'\t IP*lt occupted by tnt error tnd or~ ly tht ttr~t in.. rtlon . We ahtll not be IIIIo blol'o•l
eny lo .. or expenu that r"uite from the publlcttion Of omi .. ton of an advertiMment. Corr.ctiOfl will b. mad. In tM Ural avallabll edition. • Bo•
ara alway• confidential. • Currflnt rate card appllea. • All real aatata advet"'laemantl ilrfl aubjec1 to the Federal Fa il Houaing Act of 1968. • Thla
accapta only hetp wantl&lt;ladt. mee1tng EOE ltanctarda. Wa wlU not llnowlngly accept any advenialng In violation olthalllw.

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•

L.-----_.l

Diesel Mechanic It

rL-------··,.1I
~i;r;.,;;;;.;...;...;...;._

Word Ads

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Il
.

Oead'liirM

• Start Your Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete

_ _WANIID
_ _ _,.ll110
.i.10_ HEl.P
.

-1110

Tristan Roach

~ter

~----~------~~------..-

EXTRA! EXTRA!

,,,

The DailySentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysel"tinel.com

~
Inc .

© 2004 by NEA,

www.c omic5.com
r:I~SO~-~S&lt;.-l-l!_)(_)_t.~-.- - ,

IH\11 .., 1\11

IN~TRl 1 CI'IO~

10

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446-4367 .
1-800-214·0452
,_ gallopolosc;uee•cohege com
Accrertoled Member Accred1l111g
Councol k&gt;t lndopenlltlnl Col~~

•

and Scnoo! 12748

170

MtSL'I] , 1 . \ NHIL~

s seen on 1v N~ snap
rw1th ShapeWorlo;s! Lose
~~1ght and shape-up.
FREE body analySIS . TraC'y
4Q-441·1982 Donna 740
~43·1172

110.\lt~

H•w. S,uJ..
2 bedroom. \bath. flat 3/4
acre
Newly remode led
1ns1de ln Galhpo~s Ferry,
across tracks rrom Beale
School Two nice outbulldfng . 549.500 00 1304)4581673

3 bedroom Brick. I 1/2 bath .
1 acre lot Close 10 town
~educed Phone (304)675·
1714
3 bedroom house Rutland

Nice. qwet neighborhood .
NOT in
flood
area!
Hardwood floors, Shade
180
WANTI-Jl
trees, Central a1r, Fami ly
room. Laundry
room~
To Do
Storage butldings. 1740)742·
All types of masonry Orick, 2824
block &amp; stone 20 yrs.
3 br. Cedar Cape Cod 2 1/2
E&gt;cperience lree estimate.
1·304-773-9550. 304-593- Ba ..2 car garage 2.67 acres
oi riverfront property for sale
1007
1n Mason call 304-675-0808
.,------::--:::Georges Portal;lle Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the 3BR on 5.129 acres. Green
mill just call 304-675-1957. Tow'nship c.Jose to school.
As~lng price 589 ,000. More
lntenor painting. Don van 1nlo (740)446-7377
Meter, (740 )985 •3951
5 bedroom, must sell as Is, 4
Nurse/House
Keeper acres .
S40.000 .
Call
Experienced Geriatric Care (740)388·8259 .
Giver will .care for your love
one In their ~ome Mon·Fri 8 room Ranch, lull base$7 h• (304)576-2787
ment. 3 bedroom. 2.5 baths.
2 5 acres, family room , covRoof ing. Decks, Hardwood ered deck, $99 ,900. No land
floor 1nstallaUon . remodel - contract. {~40)446·2 196 .
Ing, additions Top Notch
Building
Contractors
WV036667 , (304)675-5490
or (304)675·3042
Will Pressure Wasil house's,
mobile homes , metal build·
tngs. and gutter&amp;. Call
(740)446·01 51 ask lor Ron
or leave me"'ssge .
II'\ \ \~

All reel ..t•t• 1dvertielng
In lhlt newtpaper Ia
subject lo tM Feder1l
F1lr Houelng Act ot nee
which mlkea It llleg•l to
ttdvartl•• "•nv
prelerenoe, llmlt1tlon or
dlacrhillnltlon bued on
r1c1, color, retlglon , Mit
temlllel atatua or netlonll
origin, or eny Intention to
m1k1 env euch
preference, llmltlitlon or
dtacrlmlnetlon ."

1 \1

BUl&gt;1Nt$S

0Pt'OR1l1NIT'I'

'

ABSOLUTE GOLDMlNEI
60 vending mechlnetl
excellent location&amp;
•II far $10,995
800-234-8982

Thia new.paper will not
knowingly accept
adveriiMment• tor real
e1t1te which lain
vlotatlon ott he law. Our
r..dera are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• advertlaed In
thit newtpaper ere
available on an equal
oppof1unlty baeea.

l...HIO~vAL~E'Y""PuC:usH

t"'~o co. recommends tha
ou do business Wllh peo
pte you know, and NOT tc
end money through tl1
jmall until you have lnvesti
bated the offering

1230

I'RoFl=s'\101\AL
SER\ ICI'S

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY JSSi?
No Fee Unless We W1n 1
1·888·582-3345

':::::::::::::::=

Letart Falls, OH: 3 bedroom
house, 1 bath, detached
garage , new roof. s1dlng.
Windows, carpet, &amp; ~liChen,
$65 000 Oil t740)247-2000
-------Lower Mason 2BR . 2BA, 2
Car Garage, Fimshed basemen!, Heat pump, call lor
appointment (304)773-5338

I SHOP CLASSIFIEDS I

10

HoM~s

fllRSAtf~

20 MOIIIu: Ho\tEli

WA,lllJ

L.-.;FiiiUiiiRoiRiiiEiii'T;.._.l L.,--oiroiloiiRiiiE"iioctio·-pl
Tra1ler lor rent- 2 tiedroom
740-446-4234 or 740-2087861 . Washe r &amp; dryer•out·
butldtng Centrally located15 m1n to town-Power
Plants·hosp•1a l

AP,R1'\UXI'
For sate or rent- 2 bedroom
mRRtxr
mobile homes start1ng at
S270 per month . Call 740·
1 &amp;2 Or apl m downtown Pt
992·2167
Pleasant no pets &amp; sec oep
Great used 16x80, 3 br'2bth requ1red HUD eJC~epted
2x6 walls , upgrade w1ndows 740-446-2200
v1nyl sldmg. Will help w1tll
delivery. Call Karena . 740· 1 and 2 be-droom apart·
385·7671 .
ments. furn1sh ea and LJ'IIJrTra•le r tor sale Located at ntShed $E!CUf!IY depOSit
l.eon. WV (must be moved) reqUired. no pets 740·992·
1994 Commodore. 14x60 2218
2-t&gt;ed room. 1·bath . uhlityroom. mcludes s1ove. refr1g· 1
bedroom
dpt
erator. washer. eJCtra cab1· Washer dtyer hookup. 5290
nets. all unde1p1nning. front ren;. depOSit requtred No
&amp; bac~ porches w;awnmg. obts 740-441-1184 .
all block &amp; sidewalk steps
healpump. AtC. EJCcellent 1 bedroom stove and refngcondition
S 13.800 erator !urn1shed utilities
mcludej S400 month plus
1740)696-261 3
depOSit (740)245-5859
U_S ed double Wide .· good
COnd iiiOn,
3
od 2bth.
2
bedroom
apt
m
$17 .995 . can help set-up. Centenary e1ppl1anr.:es furCall Harold, (740)385·9948 ntshed. ·uttli\les pa•d. e)(Cept
electnc . clean-5350 month
l;m; &amp;
Calf (740t256-1135

ACRE.\G&gt;~
N1ce home on Ltncoln St..
Middleport . 3 br, l.r .. d.r.. Sitling room. gas f~replace. full 2 7110 acres, Welchtown
basement, fenced . back Road. wooded. not level
yard. garage. mid $60's. 52,500 Oil )660)563-3753
{740)992-3493
Mercer111lle Lots tor sale
shared entrance ol1 St. At
N1ce House to r sale 1n 219 . 3-13 acres. PhOn€
Rutland. must be moved. (740)256-1825. .
$12,000 (740)367-7881:?
Private
Carnpiny
on
Kanawha A111er with boat
At 2 Greer Ad . 3BR. 2Ba. docks call (304)675-5724
House. 5 1/2 acres land.
pond. bam. fenced ar.ea. all Twa hOmesttes lor sale Boltl
electric call 8:30 to 5 00 one acre nVI 3· 1/2 mtles
Hol7er Hasp tnl
(304)675·7386 8tter s·oo !·am
620 EvergreCn Rd 519 500
call (304)675·5631
or
560.Evergreen Ad ., S18 500
r(3•0,;4J. 59•3-·0•7•1•9----.
Call &lt;740 1446 .8840 or
(740 )645 "4513 ·

r

Re locatmg to Galt, polts
Fam1 ly wa nts to lease rtee
home w1th at least 3 bed·
rooms w1th garage needed
1mmedtately Call JJCk1e
740-707-7999
740·589·
5258
10

Hot SEIIUIJ)
G&lt;MM!i

Good Used App liances
Aecond 1lioned
and
Guaranteed
Wasl""e 's
Dryers
Aar.ges. 1 and
Reh tg€talots. Sam~: star1 at
595 Skaggs Appl1a~ces 76
Vtne St . ·17401446- ?398
Mol lo han 'carpet 202 Cta r~&lt;
Cl""aoel Road. Purter Oh1 0
(740 1.. 46- 7i:4&lt;l 1-877-830·
9162 Free Esltmates Easy
ltnanc1ng. 90 days same a~
cash. V1sa1 Master Car:~
Dr1ve- a- 11nle save atot
ThOmpsons App toance · &amp;
Repalr-675·7388 For sa1e
re-cohd1110ned automa ltr.:
washers &amp; dryers. retngera
tors. gas and etectr1c
ranges. &lt;W cond1ttone1s. and
wnnger v.ashers Wtl! do ,
repa 1rs 0n IT'aJOr ora·'ldS m
shop or at your home

2 bedr.aom . JUSt past Holzer.
5425 month Call (740)441 ·
11 84

Buy or sell. R1venne
AttractiVe, one bedroom apt. AntiQues. 1124 East Matn.
2nd floOr. corner Second on SA 124 E. Pomcrop;. 740
arid P1ne
No pets. 992-2526 Russ ·Moore
References
reqwred
Sec unty depos1 t. S300 per
month. water mcludod Call
{740)446-4425 .0' (740)446- ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,.
3936 .
1 coffee table plus 2 end
APART- tables. mosll~ wood w·rec ·
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT BUDGET tangle f'l.'Hble 11sets 3 pc
set 5100 t7JOiYJ:1·2-l81
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES , 52 Westwood
Drive frorn 5344 to $ 442 . 10 table SA \\ 580 New
Walk to shop &amp; movtes. Cali Smo~er grill Sttli tn bo)(
740-446·2568
Equal S50: K1rby sweepet : yr ol ::!
$700 Call (7 40!379·923 2
www.orvb.com
I( I ' I \I~
Housmg Opportuwty.
aslo. tor Lee or Bor~n1e att.; r
Home listings.
12_,_oo_ _ _ _ _ __
Beaut11ul
unlurntshed,
one
_
L1st your home by calling
10
(740)446-3620
bedroom apt over lockmg Craftsman rrdmg law":
HOL!iE.~
C1ty
Park, references mower 1 7hp. 42 ,ncn cu1
mR Rt:N'r
V1ew photos/into online.
required. no pets, security hardly used &amp;S599 00
$400 pe r month. (304)576-3364
2 bedroom. Bulavil le Pike. deposit,
Call (740)446 ·2325 or :___:..__ _ _ _ __
Bedroom. 2 112 Bath ,
Water &amp; trash pa 1d . No pets
"( 740)446·4425.
Cub Cadet ' 1620 44ni CUI
.22 acres , 3 Car Garage
$350 deposit, $350 month .
Autqmatic good com:I 1Mn
n SR ~5.4. Code 32904
(740)388·1100.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- $800 DO 1304)675'·2329
r call (740)367-7619.
2 Houses for Rent: 3 bed· EO &amp;: AFFORDABLE!
Cub Cads! 198S·10 HP· 34
Bedroom . 2 Bath, 2 Car room, 1 bath, $500 &amp; $650 Town house
apartments. cut. Lists lOt $550 New bat·
arage, $2500 Carpet
month
plus
deposit and/or small hOuses FOR tery- seat- complete ly
llowance. Jay Dnve,
(740)245-9020.
Rf:NT. Call (740 )44 1"1111 repatnted . Comes Wtlh tlag·
alii polls . Codt 52804 or
lor applicatiOn &amp; lf1lormat1on.
2 Small, 2 bedroom nomes
QEir set uo· T.S .C p_nce
&amp;11 '(740) 446· 7231 .
$348
99, will se ll set for
I
In Middleport. kitchen ur- Grac1ous 11v1ng 1 and 2 bed·
nished.
$400.00
plus room apartments at VI IIane $650 080
Bedroom, 2 BaTh : River
, up rental app 11- Manor
" 11 HP Bolens 36" cut comdopes It. Ptck
and
Rlver61de
lew/ Access. F&gt;rlvate
oletely repainted new seaL
I
0
0
cations
at
a
ry
ueen
or
Apartments
In
Middleport
Boat Dock In Gallipolis. 1
banery, lots ol neW parts
.
Vaug hn s
grocery
10 From $295-$444 . Cell 740·
ere lot. COde i0303 or
'ddl
1
Good strong eng1ne, every
M
l
epor
992·5064 . Equal Housing nut '&amp; bolt checked &amp; hghtall (740)446-053 1.
ened $350 080 latter
House for Aent 3br. with Opportunllles
Bedroom Brick Home. 2 garage 1n country $350/mo
6pm) (7 40)441 -1677
Bl:th. 3 Car Brick
rent+Deposlt+reference no New 1 bedroom apt Phone
Utiattached Gar.akja 2
For sate Fiberglass Topper
pels (304)862-~686
· (740)446·3736
tory outbuilding Code
- - - - - - lor Chevy S·10 PICk·Up
Pomeroy. 4 bedroom , $400 Newer 2 bedroom w1th (304)882·2612
2704 or call (740)446per month plus deposit, garage.
No
pets
566.
JET
1740)992-0 175
$4{,)0/mon!h plus depoSit &amp;
AERATION MOTORS
Bedroom, 2 Bath, 2 Car
references (740)446·2801
MOIUU: HOM&gt;:~
Repaired , New &amp; Rebutlt In
· arage. 1,9 acres on SR
Stock
. Call Ron E_vans. 1
FOR RENT
141 . Codt 33104 Qr call
Ta~a
TownM use
740)448· 7833
Apartments , Very Spac1ous , 800·537-9526
2 bath mobile home m 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
. ._ _ _ _ _ __ , Middleport. $250 rent. $250 · 112 Bath, Newly Carpeted L1tt cha1r, 2-way recline, IIQht
deposit , 1 yr lease. no pets. Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool , brown. used only 5 months.
I!J!li!"":M:":"O-B"'ILE.....O:H::"o•\IF.S~., no . calls
after 9pm . Pa11o. Start $385/Mo . No 1 e 11 cellent condition, $SOO
".E
(740)992·5039
Pets Leese Plus Secunty (740)949·248 1
FOR S
Lw-----~---"
ReQwted.
Days -~.-------.
2 bedroom mobile hOmes Oepostt
740·446·348
t . Evenings
NEW AND USED STEEL .
Water.
trash
ser\'tce
lur740-367-0502
Steel Beams ." P1pe Ret-a·
1984 Schultz. 141t70 w/6x24
For
Concrete.
Ang le
pull out , 3 bedroom. 2 bath n1shed. No Pets Call
Twlri A1vers Tower 1s accept - Channe Flat Bar Steel
ale.
good
cond lt1on , U40J44 t -4540
(740)992·7651
Fo r
Drams
2 bedroom tra1ler, $325 per 1ng applrca!IOns lor we1t1ng Grating
month
plus
deposit list lo r Hud·.subSIZBd , I· br, Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
apartment . call 675 -6679 Scrap Metals Open Mo nday
1998 14x70 Clayton, 2Br. (304)264·8643
EHO
Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
288 , Garden tub, walk tn Beaut1lul nve r v1ew, 1deat lor
Fndey 8Rm·4 30pm Closett
closet
BUill in China one or two people. No pets .
Thursday, Saturday &amp;
Upsta
1rs
turn
1
shed
apt
3
Cabln~t,
Central
Air, reler~nces (7 40)441·0181
rooms &amp; bath Clean no Sunday (740)446-7300
Appliances and some
pels
Relerences &amp; depostt Pole Barn 30JC50x10 only
Furniture. also underpinmng N1ce 2 and 3 bedroom
reqwed
(7 40)446-1519
$5 295. mcluaes patntect
&amp; 2 porches Included . mob1le homes for rent
mcludes
wate1,
sewer
&amp;
metal plans hOw to butld
$13,900
(304)576·3248
SI'A( l ;
book Fhder free dellverv
leave message 1f no answer trash. no pets. start1ng at
r-u u R•xr
$300 per month 1n Shade
(937)789-0309
area . depos1t requtred.
SQ
Footage lor rent Remodeling Showcases tor
2002 16lC80 Skyline home. (7 40)992·2 167
Approximately 2800 sq It sale call (740)446·3283
3Br. 2Ba. wrfh I acre of
ground, in Mason WV, on Pomeroy $275 00 a mo . OWner may remodel 10 su11
Ohio River, Puce Reduced $150 dep . no· pets . (304)675 -4260 (3041675· Tan toppe1 tor SN short bed
truck 304-675-4861
(740)667·3083 after 5pm
(304)773-5808
4975

�Page 84 • The' Daily' Sentinel

Monday, June 14,2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, June 14, 2004
ALLEYOOP

Out With The Old
G~rage

It's

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip

Sale Time!

1

Alder

5

8

IF YOU RENT
a fire?
~We can insure your valuables! •
What would you lose if there was

~

For a Free Quote or Appointment

Call:

Rocky Hupp Insurance
\and Financial Services;
Box

189 •

Middleport

740-843-5264

•/

Pomero)' Eagles
BINGO 2171
En') Thursday
&amp; Sunda)
Doors Open ~:30
F..arl)' birds stan

MYERS PAVING

6:30

Cell Phone 67 4-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

I .

v

• 2 . . mrJ ~ ·n!.lr:Jgc/ Ya rd S.1le ..; i ~n -..
·J ::!.h \ 19 i n~.: h L' " . 2 wr'IOl.1 en &lt;;faJ..e,
• 108 pri L"mg Ia~ I"

(866) 25-1-1559

. "Your Oue Swp l'oured
Solid Coucrete Shop"

I .

• 1-'cll t1p

3 Day Ad: ·
$9.00- 15 words or less
+$6.00 Kit
Gets You Great
Advertising!

$·12

~alhpohs

r

BLIIUli~G

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

UNDA'S PAIInNG
[1401 985-4180

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood , WV 26164

J&gt;t.~

r

J&gt;t.: n;
toK Su.1-:

PJ.:n;

_.J

•

and tails docked ." S100 each.
(740 )367 _7468 .

~:--....- - - . . ; ,
c:
~10
fAR\I

~'R~
High&amp; Dry

HIR SALE
1988 Ford F-150 XLT truck
for sate Standard cab. long
· Oed. average condit10n. V-B.
automa tic. AM- FM cassene .

, 19.000

miles.

Self-Storage ·

ask ing

S 1.800 ca ll (7 40)44 1-197 ~

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

EQt
..__..iiiiil.iioiiiilli._.l

AKC Labs, Black &amp; Vello ~ .
c1alrzmg
1n
Massey
femaie, 4 months. all shots. Pomeran1an p upp1es Toys Ferguson &amp; Ford . (740)696·
0358
Pa rents on prem1ses. hunt- AKC. CKC . Vet checked .
1ng stock. (740)388-95 15.
Blacks and Sables. $400.
Ln ThiOCK
(740 )643-017 1
__
AKC Pekingese pupptes lor
Sale. 3 male. 2 female . Call Rat
Temer
Pup pies 1 112 year old white laying
(740)992·0287.
(304)675~ 1506
hens lor sate. soc eaCh:
{740)9135-3956

r

(7 40)446·2398

' - - -- - - - - - - - - - - Chevy Ta Me z-7 1
Fully loaded, excellent cond111on. leather ml erior. Call
(740)446-6324 or (740) 446·
4167.
~c o o

79 Ford F250. Needs some
work . S300. Call (740)245-

- - - - - -- - - - - - - - 9~4~9~
8 --~--~~~
4 year old Appa loosa Stud ~~30
V.-\NS &amp;
Very tame. leads well . 5400

osO. I740!256· 1233.

BULLETIN BOARD

"---•"-•W;,;,;Ds-.·_ _..~

'-::======~

r

29670 Bashan Road

Sizes

l&gt;OvJN, ........._
YOV N~~l&gt;
TO F~fL

Hours
7 :00 AI'JI- 8:00 PM
1141mopd

Big Bend Antique
and Furniture
Restoration
Refinish , Repair,
· Restore
Keith Bailey
740 992·1956

R.B.
Trucking
HAULING:

• Limestone

Manning K. Rou sh
Owner
0

Tti~

Open MIC Night at the
.IRON GATE GRILL

10

\"1'0\~

n Mon -Frl 9-5 Sat. 9-12

A IJI'ON

tuKSAt.t:

Every Thursday

$5001.POLICE IMPOUNDS,

P"

'C.ot-~t w~'&lt; N)()VT /IMOl.D"l
.L --"'&lt;.,~

"l

'

l. LDOK. I'ORWI&gt;.!ZO tO H\E .
C.f\11-U£t&gt;.IC:£ OF

BE\W. 00\ 11-\\S
\.JEEK.,G'.\EF- t'LL
leNU:. H~ 1-\lr-\!

\1',';,1(\t-.\G

1

7pm

Chevys, Jeeps, etc 1
Hondas Cars from $500.
For !\slings 1· 800-749·
8104 ext 3901

on the pa110
(weather permitting)

"-------_.1

Bands , Musicians, Singers ,
&amp;Comedians
Limited PA Equipment &amp; Drums
provided

TRI -STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

1993 Chevy Camara Z28.
350 LT1 auto, loaded, CD,
nice car. Must sell, $3,500.

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Office: (740) 99l·lli04

Cell: (740)
POWER WASHING

(740)448·8507.
1995 Oldsmobile Aurora,
loaded , leather, CD changer,
power roof, V8. Must sell

(Commen:iel t nd Ruidcnti11)
Mobile Homes, HouseS, Log Homes, Decks, Oriveways,
1974

Winnebago

Brave,

$2,300. (740)388·&amp;473.

$3,000. (740)446·8507.

Prlvite
C a mping
on
~99 5 Saturn Sl, 4 dr., stan· Kanawha River with boat
da.rd , A"C, cassette , nveds docks call (304)675-5724

rings, $800 OBO, (740)992·

..,lin II I..,

0829 leave mesaage.

· OHIO DEPARTMENT
; OF INSURANCE
· NOTICE OF OPPOR·
: TUNITY FOR HEAR·
, lNG ·
According
to
recordl on file with
the Ohio Deparlmenl
of lneurance, each of
the Individuals listed
below currently holds
- an Insurance agent's
• license in the atala of
: Ohio and each has
· failed to meet the con. tlnulng
education
requirements
of
Section 3905.481 of
the Revised Code lor
the 2001·2002 campti·
· once parlod,
: Pursuant to Section
: 3905 .482(A)
. and
. Chapter 119 of the
· Revised Coda, each
Individual
listed
below Ia hereby noll·
fled
that
the
Superintendent
Intends to revoke his
or her Insurance
licenses. He or she
may request a hearing
purauant to Oh io
Revised
Code
Chapter 119, The
request must be made
on or before August
2,2004. Such request
should be addreasad
to : Sharon Green,

HOME
1998 Dodge Caravan, V-6, 4
IMPKOVI-:1\I!NIS .
dr, auto, air, tilt , cr uise,
$5795; 1996 Chevy Lum ina,
V-6, ai.Ji o, a1r, tilt , cru ise,
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
$3295 and many more to
choose from. Trade In's wei· Unconditional lifetim e guar·
come, Riverview Motors. antee. l ocal refmences furacross fro m Speedway, nished. Es ta blished 1975.
Can
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Pomeroy, Oh 45769.
0870 . Rogers Basement
2000 Chrysler. Cirrus, Waterp roofi ng .

Hearing
Admlnletrator, Ohio
Department
of
Insurance, 2100 Stella
Court,
Columbus,
Ohio 4321 $- 1067.
ACREE, JAMES R
DOB:
10117/1966 $4.495; 1988 Nissan Pickup,
35051 BALL RUN RD $1 ,695 ; 1995 Grand Am,
OH $2,195 . 20 UNITS In Slock,
POMEROY,
457690000
we lake \radas.
AI the hearing, I he
COOK MOTORS
lndlvld)Jal may appear
(7401446·0103.
In person , by his or · 97 Mustang Convertible Vher attorney, or by 6. Auto, Air, 'co, Green ~ith
such other represen~ Tan, 84 ,000 miles, $7,900
lallve as Is parmiHed 13041576 .238 3
to practice before tha
agency, or the lndlvld· 98 F-250 real good shape 4ual may present his or wheel drive $8,000.00 . 89
her position, argu- Crown Victor ia $2.750.00
ments or contentions OBO. 8 7 Jeep P1oneer
in writing and, at tha Wagon . real n1ce shape
hearing, he or she $2 ,500.00(740)992·5532
may present evidence Blue 2000 Ford Explo re r
and examine witness· XLT. 56,389 miles. Power
as appearing for and windows. seals &amp; m1rrors,
against him or har.
Keyless/ent ry.
leather,
II an Individual loaded
$~2 , 000
call
does
not
timely (304)576·2541
request a· hearing, no
hearing will be held
and an order revoking
his or her Insurance
license
shall
be 1980 Chevy 3/4-l on 4M4
Issued.
350. 4-speed 6-1nch ltl t,
Stephen C. Hombach good co ndition . S4 ,000
Staff Counsel
~992 Chevy S- 10 , 4x4, 4 3
Meigs.
auto air. $2,300 Goat for
(6) 14, 21 , 28
sale , 3 year old Wether. $40
(7401367-0166.

517·6883

Sidewalks, GM

Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment, Bo11ts, Campers, lfaitor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or !og home, Aluminu m briahtening.
Special rates to Trucking end Dump Trucking Companies,

LAWN CARE DIVISION

J lJST MADE A MIS-

TAKE , I GUESS . JUST
A '-11'1PLE MISTAKE .

Creative
~ Cakes
B. byLora
1

• Birthdays
• Waddings
• Any special
occasion
Place your order
today

(740) 985-3917
Lora Bing

Cars·Trucks·RV's
7.40-949-2910
MrJbile Service.'i

,*free EadmiiiBI*

949·1405

Advertise
in this
space for
$150 per
month.

475 South Church St.
Ripley, wv 25271

HOWARDL.
WRITESEl

LAKE

949-2734

1'0DAV, SIR ..

New&amp;: U8ed

State Route 124
Between Racine and
·Syracuse
Friday, June 4 &amp;
Saturday, June 5
Spaces available,
also Campsites
available with full
hookups

FLEA MARKET

SUMMER SCI-IOOL

Dean Hill

Available

AT MAPLEWOOD

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWE T PRICES

PEANUTS

Windshield Repair
RockChips
&amp; Cracks

dOOFINB
·*HOME
MAINnNANCE
. dEAMLESS
GlnER

(Cornmerci o!ll and Residel\tlal)
Mow in_g, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization;
Spreymg of fen ce lmes, l eaf Removal, is well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.

SETIY

i E'Jffi f\1&gt;-.t\DL(
S\t-l&amp;LE.-

Pass

For his opening bid , South has to -have
the heart ace and di amond ace-king . So,
a red -s uit tr ick looks impossi ble.

1

AstroGraph
-

37
38
39
41
43
44
46

49

36 Bruce Lee's 53 Distress
expertise
(2 wds.)

call

39 D\'IIW 0
bead on

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AROw;-

AND HESCOW

"W,V' s # t C h evy, Pontia c, Buic k , Olds

by Luis Campos
Celebmy C1phe1·:;rvtlTograms are crea1ed frO!!" auOia!IOOs DY fal!lOus P&amp;OP\e. past and presen1
Eactl ~ner 1n !he Cl~er stands for another

Todtly"s clue. A equals B

"JG
Z

MBEVRIF

XZBGGB

WBGZYGB
XEZXJ
YJG

PZILGR

HC

ZPZF

TEEYAZII

YE

TBE()
Z

XZIIHCW. "
RZKG

RGZYJ

()XWHDDHU ,

ET

MIY

EG

YHIIOZD

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The1e's no labo1 a man can do lhaf s undignnied
- if he does il right" - Bil l Cosby
WOlD
GAM I

'lll.r thda,y:

Tuesday, June 15, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Al thotJgh some necessary cha nges may
be in store fo r you in the year ahead.
adjust your plan of acllori to li t as each
change comes up_ There are rewarcts at
the end of the rolll9 by doing what ittal&lt;es
to reach your de stination.
GEMINI (~ay 21 -June 20) - Unless you
are open to all forms of thOught today, 'JOU
may _h ear only what you want to hear when,
discussi ng a sensitive issue and end up
doing· you rself a great inJustice.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) - Be patient
and tolera nt with yourself when work ing on
your lates t endeavor today. Take thmgs
one step at a time instead of trying to
-..-------~ · accompli sh everything in one gig antic
leap
LE O (July 23-Aug. 22) - In order for a
. partnership arrangement to work out successfully for you today, both you and the
other party must be in comp lete agreement. Even a slight amourit .of discord
could spell defeat.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sepl. 22) - It will hu rt a
project today if you display intoleranCe with
.,.po-workers wh o don't grasp ideas as
quickly as you do. They 'll end up be ing all
thumbs an d make even more m1 sla kes
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ..:.... Bo rrowihg
money today from fri ends may create
problems for you down the road If you'll
lind it difficult to repay tt1em in a t1me1y
fash1on . Wait unti l another day to get what
yol:l want.
S QORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 2.2) - Whe n it
H~'S
P,\..E.)~S comes to indecisiveness conce rn mg a
ll!&lt;EATHI~G
fam1ly situation today, don't take the easy
way out and settle for a sol ution tha t is
THAT's
doubtful just to be done with it. Wrong will
iO TilE TOUCH!
end up wrong .
SAG ITTA RIUS (N ov. 23-Dec 21) - Your
usual coope rat1ve spirit may not be m good
working order today and co- workers coul d
find you a bit diffic ult to get along with. If
there is trouble ~mong the ranks, check
out the mirror.
C APRI CORN (Dec. 22 -Jan. 19) - An
opportunity of profitable pOtential could
slip right through you r fingerS today if
yo u're impatient or self-serVing with oth ers. Treat serious matters with to lerance
and respect .
AQUARIU S (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Pros pects
who are considering what you have to offer
1&amp; 11' M~ IMAGINA'fiON, OR IS
Will wiggle off the hook once again today fl
1'H15 5'fRIP GEffiNG LONGER? you are not a good closer. Write up the
order at the llrst no d of approval
P ISCE S (Feb. 20-March 20) - Try to see
things lor what the'l are today. instead of
how you would like tnem to be. It's Important not to contuse poSI!Ive tl"' inkln Q that Ia
constructive with w llhfut thinking .

NOT

1-800-822-0417

I

LNY U HO

I

One mom to another. "When

a sma ll chli d puts .someU11ng
down '" black and white . it's apt
-- - • · ."

r-----------., to be a - - · ER O NN \1
I'

I T TF. T

L

__IL.L..J._.L....L...J

~ :::~;.~UM6ERED I'

0
you

Comole! eo tMe ~kuck ie ~::uoted
bl! fii!inQ in the mi1Mg words
dev•lop from srap No. J beiow.

I' I'

1• I' I' 1• 1• 1
111 11 111 I I
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS •-11- o"
•

1

Defile - Crush · World · Cygnet • YOURSEL F
Grandma wa s always giving me adv1ce when I was
a kid . She to ld me that happi .~ess was like perfume,
you couldn't give 11 away w1thout getting a l;ttle 0.1
YOURSELF

ARLO &amp; JANIS

NOI&lt;tML

?:

'

2 ~ 1TI
. :.~

SunsetHQme
Construction

GARFIELD

DODGE

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings , Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

• Gallipolis
55 Evenings

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

740-742-341

YOUNG'S

HCS, INC.
New Homes • New
Garages • Pole
Barns • Roofing
• Room Additions
• Rem odeling
• Vinyl Siding
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates

740-949-1606
1 mo

P'"'(OU CN-I't

G
I

IMPORTS
Athens

740-992-7599

Everyone's Welcome

Pa ss

Pass

Therefore , West shoUld lead his last club.
This promotes East's spade jack as the
setting trick and leaves declarer with wet
shoes.

ST()D'( l-IARD IN

FREE ESTIMATES

3•

that Wes t knows whelher a th 1rd club trick
is · cashing . Here, East plays the nine:
high from a rema ining doubleton.
So, West cashes his thi rd top club. But
what should he do at trick four?
·

BIG NATE

Rocl&lt;y "flJ"
Hupp ,

Window&lt;., • Konfing
COMM ERCIAL and
fjE SIDENTIAL

Pass
2 •

doubled 1wo diamonds. collecling 100 (il
Nonh passed). A~er his pass. \hough,

\~')1(\~GI

See

• R L· pi ;K Clll l' lll

P3SS

Obi.

34

better spade support West ran to one no·
trump. then redoubled to force his partner
to select the trump suit. Soutn migh t have

· THE BORN LOSER

6UILOERS InC.

MatUHCYCI.FS

Pass
Pass

North · East
Redbl. ·Pass

promised by the open ing lead. West con tinues with the club queen (or king) .
Which card should East drop?
East sh ould give count at Irick two, so

TFN

Ncow Home-. • .Vi ny l

West
Obi .
I NT
Redbl. .

29

North's jump to th ree spades showed
game-forcing values with exactly three ·
card suppori.
West starts with the club ace, East signaling attitude with the two to deny the
queen, the honor touching the ones

Morning Star Road- C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

.S idi ng • NL' \\ ( Jaragc. .

30

40 Pack
animals
41 Dragan
of puppetry
42 License 43 Dog toys
44 Contented
30 Slammer
murmurs
31 Aliens'
45 Lira
transport
successor
32 Physicist 's 47 Maui
particle
entertaln33 Casual
ment
wear
48 Noncoms
35 ManHoba
51 Bleacher
tribe
shout

A bridge declarer can be like that, except
the puddles are the defenders. On some
deals, if they find the best plays , decl arer
wil! fail : if not. he w ill succeed. This is ·a
good exart~ple. How should East arid
West ca rd to defeat tour spades?
No rth's redouble promised at least 10
high-c ard points and denied fo,ur-card or

Open 7 days a weeki

Good 85 Ford F - 150 , 4x4 , V·
8. 4 speed. C a!l lor details
(740 )256-6735

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North-South

24 Winter mo.
25 Dinghy's
need
26 Ms. Hagen
27 Prefix for
house
28 - and outs

in the road ,ft

Perennials, Annuals,

Flats, Hanging Baskets,
ALL ON SALE NOW!!

I \ IIU'\

27

=='-"

proverbially at lhe mercy ot the pu ddles

SVitN!

BISSEll
IR\

A K 5
J 10 7

~Cfi'l

Alexander Sm1th , a 19th-century Scottish

Meigs County' s Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
. roses, rhododendrons , ana azaleas.

• Sand
• Dirt

•

Roll up
52 CoHea
Gentle
holders
exercise
54 Top 40 song
Hanh cry 55 Caoplan
CookieS.. feeder
selling org. 56 DeepWading bfrd
voiced lady
Myth
57 Go aut with
Testing lite 58 Cries at a
Robins'
circus
beaks
59 Up, slangily
Similar
Bravo, In
DOWN
Barcelona
Closes
1 -and yang
Clannish
2 Osaka
Kennel
sashes
sound
3 Sarcastic
Old great
remark .
Extinguish
4 PI Jai*I)I'S
afire
Use a towel 5 Fastener
Munch
6 NASA
Woman's
thumbs-up
outfit
(hyph .)
Cheese
7 Legal order
companions 8 Classroom
Rival
fixture
Viking tenor 9 Kind of
Solo
buffet
Not closed 1D Explorer
Puppeteer
-Tasman
- Baird
13 Wholly
Assert
absorbed
Far East
19 False story
nannies
21 Puts in the
Dixie st.
cooter

poet, wrote. "A man gazing on the sta rs is

Pomcro) . Ohio .

bu.' litle.'\.\", not our .'\itll'line

740~985-3564

Sat. or Sunday

TO SLIM

23
24

•

Declarer takes
a back seat

UP TIGHT,
SHERIFF !!

Lawn and (;arden l:"qtlipment is our

to 10'x30'

.. 9 " 2

Opening lead: ,fo A

••

992-2975

5' x1 0'

Q3

Pass

Snapper

20-' Condor Strct'l

45771
740-949·2217

20
22

••

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Racine. Ohio

9 7 6 2

Pa~

GRAVELYTRACTOR

•Ag Lime

o8oo column inch weekdays
column inch

740-992-5232

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

Gravely

t8

•

Pa ss

(304) 273-5321

Hill's Self
Storage

J 7 ..

8 5 :J

South

L.OCK HIM

THI 'l'I\S

•

•

I.

BARNEY

Free Estimates

3

Q 10 9 4
Q J 10 4

¥ A

Dr. Kelly K . Jones

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

M- F days . 1740 )44 1-0816
ri1 ghts and wee ke nds
AKC Chocolale Labs 5 --------------~
~-------------male. 4 fP. ~ale. Re"dy to go Pit BUll puppieS lo t sale. 6
'II~I•:NT
1993 Chevy S- 10 Blazer. 4
July 5. S300. call (740 )d41 - weeks old. parents on prem WD. Fully loAded , Tow Pk.g.
093 1.
Good Cond1tion . Ask ing
1ses (740)379 -9079.
Tractor part s &amp; serv•cc. spe· S2 600 Ca ll afier Spm

Gel Your Message Across ·
. With A Daily Sentinel

Truck

$15

Block. brick. sewer pipes. AKC Schnauzer S350 each Vacat1ontng. long weekend"
wind o w~ . lintels, etc Claude 5 Wks old (304)895-3745
Lea\le Fluffy or F1do home
W inters. R io Grande. OH
Call PetSIIters . Aunt Bev"s
Call740-245-5 12 1'
~------------~ Crea tures. (740 )245-5 599 _
Full blood ed Rat Ter11er
pups 6 wee"s old . wormed

'15

Let me jo 1! for you!

Bucket

D&lt;ltlv U::nbunr • f;)oint ,f)lr,15&lt;111t i't!Jt!ltrr
The Dail y Se ntinel·

'--~Sl;;:'I'I'Ll.-;,;,Eli;.,._.l L,_ _;,;n,;;&gt;H;.,S;;;;A:;oLE;;,·-,.I1

00

Tree Service

JONES'

$6.00- 15 words or less
+$6.00Kit
Gets You Great
Advertising!

r

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

&lt;. hl~c r

1 Day Ad:

L._ _,;roR-~~S;;;:'"Iill;;,~_

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

m.tr ~l· r

• ln o;; m lctJOn a nd li p

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Free Estimates

11
12
14
15
16
17

East

. 1 0 9 8 6 52

Specializing In Pourt&gt;d Concrete
Foundations, Bast•menls, Floors &amp; Walls

Free:

B 3

South

StateWide
CIE PoUted Walls

Toll

•

·

•
•

,fo A K

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

5FREE

Advertise
in this
spacefor$100
per month. ·

! -~

MONTY

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

8U)' $5.00

A K Q

K J 7 G2

West

t

-t&gt;\ rry mont~

All pllrk $5.00
Bring litis coupon

•

•

ofo • ' &gt;

878-2457

Bonanza Get

Licensed in Ohio and WV

r-----=..---==..,
North
06-lf-04

Henderson, WV

Last Tho rsda.• or

;

so

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addi ti ons &amp;
Remodelin g
• New Garages
• Eleclrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutter s
• Vin yl Sidi ng &amp; Painting

• Patio and Porch Dec k•

We do it all except
furn act work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Po me.roy. Ohio

d

22 Years l oc al Ellperlence

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUcnON
• New Homes
· • Garages ·
• Comp lete
Re mode ling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

'!'HIS ~EAR I FEEL.
~OUNGER 'fHAN EVER!

I NO l.I'TTl.E BIRTI-lDAY 1&amp;
1GOING- 'fO Got::'f MIO 170WN,

I

NO 51R ...

I•

I

..--~----~1----.L,.~
GRIZZWELLS

1 JOOl' m
'tbU'~

WA~i~ i\\AT

OI.IM6
P.,&lt;;A fb5i!

AAIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - It mlghl bo
amart of you today to 1t11r clear or any
1h0p1 th at offer unlqu• or nov111y me,r·
chandltt . You could tnd up purcnu lng
g1dg1t1 tl"' at you may nev.r uu .
TAURUS (Apr il 20·May 20) - Know "Nhtn
to 111ve well enoug h alone loday an d don't
mak• unn eoea.. ry ohang11 on thlnglthat
1r1 running 1moothly. You could end up
snttoh lng dtf. .t from U\1 gr11p or victory.

SOUP TO NUTZ
I

Have a SUSf' lcp,
"YOU 3\.l!!l loJBIT 6 ~\a.J ~

Yo.•..J'L L G eT aLt.. -n-te !b...\ce '
C3R. R tDffi YtX-l LL W8NT

\"OR. FRee. I"Ol'Sar .

�·- .. -

.

Local financial
·counselor helps clients
find financial peace, A6

Phi11ies drench
Reds,Bt

EIFGGGdcE/i
All·Terrain .KORWL

BF·Goodrich
Momentum
•
P175/70R13 ••••••••••••••••••••• S53.1 :.Z
P175/65R 14••••••••••••••••••••• S55.61
P175/70R 14••••••••••••••• •••••• sss.:.zo
P185/65R14••••••••••••••••••••• S56.3:.Z
P185/70R 14••••••••••••••••••••• S56.95
P195/65R 14••••••••••••• ~ ••••••• $58.05
P195/70R14••••••••••••••••••••• S59.15
P:.Z05/70R 14••••••••••••••••••••• S58.94
P195/65R 15••••••••••••••••••••• S60.4:.Z
. P:Z05/65R15 ••••••••••••••••••••• S61.75
P:Z05/70R 15••••••••••••••••••••• $59. 1.5
P:Z 15/60R15......................S69.05

s .....................S&amp;3. 71

P~ 1

P:Z1
P:Z1

10• • .., •• .,,,, • •

.,.U

111'4UUI ..

FREEDOM
P185/70R14 ••••••••••••••••••••• S5:.Z.83
P 185/75R 14••••••••••••••••••••• $50.54
P 195/70R 14••••••••••••••••••••• S53.53
P195/75R14••••••••••••••••••••• s5:.z.o:z
P:.Z05/70R 14••••••••••••••••••••• S54.4:.Z
P:.Z05/75R 14••••••••••••••••••••• $53.91 .
P:.Z05/70R 1 3 ••••••••••••••••••••• S55.0 1
P:.Z05/75R 15••••••••••••••••••••• $56.17
P:.Z 15/70R 15••••••••••••••••••••• $59.43
P:.Z 15/75R 15••••••••••••••••••••• $57.68
P:.Z:.Z5/70R15 ••••••••••••••••••••• S61.05
P:.Z25/75R 15••••••••••••••••••••• $60.66
P:.Z35/75R 15••••••••••••••••••••• S66.57
P:.Z 15/&amp;0R 16•••••••••••••••••••••$60.42
P:.Z:.Z5/&amp;0R 1 e ••••••••••••••••••••• $6:.1.32

LT245/75R 16 ..................... $ 140.08
, 10Piy
LT:.Z65/75R 16••••••••••••••••••••• $ 146.55
&amp;Ply
·
LT28$/75R 16••••••••••••••••••••• $ 161.60
8Piy
Ln9S/75R 1s••••••••••••••••••••• 1&amp;9.&amp;1
8Piy
.
LT315/75R16 •••••••••••••••••••••S178.15
&amp;Ply
LT235/85R 16••••••••••••••••••••• $ 125.82
10Piy
.
LT3 15/70R 17••••••••••••~ ••••••••$ 1 35.34
&amp;Ply

s

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o l I '\ I S • \ ol. :; ~ . '\ 11 . :!II:!

Police probe theft of motorcycle, truck

SPORTS
• Couch.signs with
Packers. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

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POLISHED
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OBITUARIES.
Page A5
• David Brewer
• Martha Dudding

INSIDE

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• Fifth graders participate
in annual Yesteryear
program. See Page A2
• Supporting The Arts.
See Page A3
• Time Out Fo( Tips.
See Page A3

WEATHER

AR636

While supp lies last

15x7••••••.••.•••••••.••sa:s.oo
15x8•.••••..••..••••..• $86.00
.15x10••••••••••••••••• J93.00·
16xa•• ~ •••.•.•••••••.•• $93.00

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l6x1 o ••••••••••••••••• $93.00

1sx7••••••••••••••••••••s71.oo

14x&amp;•••••••••••••••• _•..,I1.00

Details on Page A6

15x7••••••••••••••••.••• $88.00

15x1 0 ...............•. $81.00

•

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P175/80R 13 ••••••••••••••••••••• $33.50
P185/80R 13 ••••••••••••••••••••• $34.50
P185/75R 14.....................$36.25
P115/75R 14•••••••••••••••••••.• $37.25
P205/75R 14••••••••••••••••••••• $38.75
P205/75R 15.....................$39. 75
P215/75R 15 •••••••••••••••••.••• $41.80
P225/75R15.....................$42.25
P235/75R15.....................$43.75
P195/70R 14•••••••••••••••••.... $42.50
P205/70R 14..................... $43.00
P205/60R 15•••••..••.•..•••••.•• $48.50
P195/65R 15.....................$46.50
P185/65R 14..................... $41. 75
P225/60R16.............•••••••.$61.95

MICKEY THOMPSON ET DRAG

MICHELIN TRUCK
11 R24.5xZA 1 •••••••••••••••••••••$334.00 ·
11 R:l:Z.5XZA 1 ••••••••••••••••••••• $303.00
295/75R22.5XZA 1 .••••••••••••$214.00
285/75R24.5XZA 1 ••••••••••••• $318.00
11 R24.5xDHT.............. ~ ....~.$358.00
11 R22.5xDHT..................... $345.00
215/75R22.5xDHT••••••••••••• $341.00
285/75R24.5xDHT.............S:J4S.OO

28.0/1 0.5-15 ••••••••••••••••••••• $157.00
28.0/ 11.5-15 ••••••••••••~•••••••• $178.00 .
29.5/ 10.5-15•..••••••••••••••••••$ 179.00

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)9.5/9.0-15 •••..•••••••••••••••••. $ 168.00
22/2.5-17••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $ 133.00
29/4.5-ls •••.••••••.•••••••••••••••• 121.oo

s

Hours:
,Monday- 2:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Tuesday - Friday ,9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Saturday - 9:00a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Closed Sunday
OWner: Mack Williams

Special "Sunshine
Awards" were given
to volunteers Mary
Alice Bise , left , and
Betty Reibel by
RSVP director,
Diana Coates. Bise
was recogni zed for
making quilts and
lap robes fo r
pat.ients at the
Rocksprings Rehab
and Overbrook
Centers , while
Reibel received
recognition for her
five-days·a·week volunteer work with
the Meigs
Cooperative Parish
in the clothing
shop. (Charlene
Hoeflich)

•

Classifieds

B3-4

·Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A:3

Editorials

A4
As

Weather

In recognition of volu nteer service through the RSVP program at the Senior Citizens Center. certificates and plaq ues were prese nted. to , left to right, seated, Rosy Niday, Mary Loudner and
Jackie Hi ldebrand, 20 years: and standing, Genevieve Burdette, Ruth Moore and Helen
Bodimer, 15 years: and Dorothy Anthon y, Joan Corder, and Elizabeth Fisher, 10 ·years.
(Charlene Hoeflich)

12 PAl~F.S

A:3

B1

A6

BY

J. MILES

lAYTON

Jl.AYTON@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - While a
man 's horne may be his castle, the grass is getti n{l high in
places and trash is piltng up in
some people's yards prompt·
ing the law to step in.
At Monday' s meeting .
Pomeroy Vi lla ge Council
discussed expanding the
ex isting "blight" ordinance
whic h will make it possible
for people to rece ive citation s and/or fine s for faili ng

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publish'ing Co.

to maintain their yards.
"We are doing this because
we want to clean up
Pomeroy,'' said Counci I
President George Wright.
Counci l has been working
on thi s ordinance for months
Wright said. The ordinance
must still be reviewed by
Chris Tenaglia, village solicitor, and by John Anderson,
village administrator. before
cou ncil, which firmly supports the measure. officially
votes on it.
Grass that is at least eight

inches tall or. tall er wou ld vio· ers. we are
late th e ordinance. Loose
trash is a violation . Violators
who fail to remedy the situation will be sent to Pomeroy
Mavor's Court to face the
con~'equences . The tines for
infractions vary depending on
the severi ty of the problem .
Wri ght said somet.ime s
r~nters leave and property
owners let their vacant prop·
erty overgrow with weeds and
trash until someone else renb
the property.
"In addition to homeown·

• Teehnfcally challenatng

Please see Ordinance, AS

Courses offered: Healthcare, Auto Service

11uc11tyt tfllll Glllta Academy leckta1 Oak Hill R1ver Vlllty South Glllta VInton County Welltton u.of Rio Grande and Information Technology

•••

••

this at

i.lll111ll g

rental property owners who
fai I to mow or maintain their
property," said Wrlght.
Pomeroy Poli ce Chief Mark
Proffitt said he will start issuing citations with fines unless
people start mowing grass and
cleaning up their property.
Mayor John Musser has
high praise for the ordinan..:e .
"I think thi s is a good idea.' ~
he said . '·our goa(is to clean
up Pomeroy and make it as

...

BY

J. MtLES

•

•

lAYTON

JLAYTO!\l@MYDAIL YSENT!NEL.COM

POMEROY
Thou sand s of 1·olunteers
are needed to participate in
the annual Ohio River
Sweep
schedu led
for .
Saturdav. June 19 · alon~
the shore s of the Ohio and·
several major tributaries.
Thi s is the 16th · vear for
the ewnt. which began in
1988 as a pi lot project in
the Greater Cinc innati and
Northern Kentucky area.
The · Ohio Ri1er Valley
Water
Sanitation
~tate

env iron-

mental agencic' and corpo·
rale industri es sponsor the
program.
" I enco urage everyone to
come out . and do this."
said Paula Wood: director
of Me igs Recycling and
Litter Pre1·ention Program.
" I thi nk it wi ll be a lot of
fun and we are doing
something that is going to
help our environment."
Like many other people.
Wood and her crew wake
up early on Saturday and
ge t to cleani·ng. In year&gt;
past they have found park·
in g meters. wooden trunks.
shopping cans. bou les. and
lot&gt; of fishin g eear. Wood
said volunteers -picked up
betwee n three to four tons
of tra' h and debri s la&gt;t
·year along . the river banks
of Pomeroy. Syracuse and
Middleport.
"If you don't pick trash
up oul of your yard. then
it is probably going into
the Ohio River.'' said
Wood.
The volun teers tilled a
dump tru ck bo rrowed
from the
village of
Pom eroy wi th between
350 to 3 75 trash baa s
last year durina tne
River Sweep said 'Wood.
In Pomeroy, mlunteers
wi ll gather at the parking lot next to the boat
levee ; the Racine site
wi ll be located at the
old ferry landmg: and in
Middl epot1 , the meeting
spot 11111 be the Dave
Diles Park. Al l meeting
times are sc heduled for
8:30 a.m.
Trash · hags and gloves
wi II be provided and
each vo lunt eer will get a
free T-shirt . folloll'ing
the
River
Sweep,
rcfreshm~o:nt s
will
be
avai lable to all who par·
ticipate.
Since Ri1·er Sweep has
been in operation . more
than 80 million tons of
trash and debri s have been
removed from the Ohio
River. Lm vear. more than
20.000 people gave up
their
normal
Saturday
morning pursllits to collect
more than 9.000 tons of
trash. which was recycled
or deposited in approved
landfills. according to the
Ohio Ri ver Vulley Water
Sanitation Commission .

Ohio Valley
Tech Prep

a

• Higher Academics • Hands on trafntna and experience • Seamless path to an Associates Degree or higher

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1

River Sweep
volunteers
gear up to
clean banks
of Ohio River

Commis~ i on.

Ordinance seeks cleaner Pomeroy or else

Calendars

Obituaries
Sports

POMEROY
Volunteerism and the vital
role it plays in making life a
little hetter for others was the
emphasi s of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program 's
an nu al recognition luncheon
at the Senior Citi ze ns Center.
"You are the sunshine of
my life," theme of the celebration. was used by Beth
Shaver, newly appointed
interim director, to describe
volunteerism. "That is what
it's all about - bringing a
little sunshine into the li ves
of others."
Shaver com mented on the
influence that volun teers of
communit y organi zati o ns
had on her life as a youngster,
and of the inter~enerational
re lation ships which are
developed
eve n
today
between the vo lunte~rs and
those they serve.
Diana Coates, RSVP director, recogn ized organizations
who benefit from volunteer
services through the age ncy.
Speak ing briefl y about their
participation were representatives from Ho sp ice, the
Meigs Extension Office, the
Meigs
Cnunly . Health
Department and Homeland
Securit y.
"'Vo lunteer' are carin g,
re liable people whose pay
comes in the form of a simple
'thank you· aml a good fee l·
ing of ha vi ng helped others,"
said Coates.
Donna Jean Smith wa&gt; recogni zed as the volunte.er who
had recru ited the most volunteers over the past year.
Recognized for yt;ars of
serv ice and presented certificates or plaques were
Dorothy Davis , 25 years;
Marabel Frecker. Jackie
Hil debrand, Marv Loudner,
Rosy Niday, "and Joan
Sorden. 20 years:
Genevieve Burdette, Ruth

Please see RSVP. AS

INDE4
2 SEcnoNs -

Low End

police department that he had
parked hi s 1989 Toyota pick·
up truck at hi s residence late
Sundav. and discovered it
missing early Monda y. Swift
said Morrison had left the
keys in the truck .
"There are no suspects in
either case. but both matters
remain under investigation."
Swift said Monday.

HOEFUCH@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

31 X 1 050R 1 5 •••••••••••••••••• ~$ 1 04.11
P:.Z45/75R 16••••••••••••••••••••• $99.00
P:.Z65/75R16••••••••••••••••••• .-.S 104.:.10
P:.Z65/70R 17••••••••••••••••••••• $ 1 07.00
RT:.Z35/85R 16••••••••••••••••••• $ 1 30.87

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reported the bike missing at
12:49 a.m. Monday. and it
was recovered · by Sgt. Mark
Bolin at I a.m. on the boat
launch ramp on First Avenue.
just I00 yards from the
apartment complex. The
motorcycle was undamag ed~
Swift said .
According t.o Swift. Brad
Morriso n reported to the

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

GOODYEAR WRANGLER RTIS

'I
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picku~ truck from a South
Sixth Avenue residence on
Friday or the theft of a
motorcycle from Riverside
Apartments on Front Street
early Monday. ·
Swift said the truck is still
mi ssing, but the motorcycle .
a 2002 Suzuki 250R, owned
by Tony Lee, was recovered
near his reside nce. Lee

RSVP holds annual recognition .luncheon

LT245/75R16 OWL 10 Ply.•• S147.75
LT:.Z65/75R16 OWL 6 Ply•.... S164.:ZO
LT265/75R16 OWL 10 Ply.•• S171.14

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REED

MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport
Police
Department is investigating
two vehi cle thefts that
occured Sunday and Monday.
According to Police Ch ief
Bruce Swift. there are no
suspects in the theft of a

P185/65R14••••••••••••••••••••• S61.88
P:.Z05/65R 15••••••••••••••••••••• $85.49
P:.Z 15/&amp;0R 16••••••••••••••••••• ~.$7:2.:56
P:.Z:.Z5/60R 16••••••••••••••••••••• S84.95

MICHELIN LTX

J.

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

GOODYEAR EAGLE
P:Z05/70R15 ••••••••••••••••••••• S93.59
P:Z 15/70R15 •••••••••••• ~ •••••• S 10:.1.43
P:Z:Z5I &amp;OR 16•••••••••••••••••••••$97.00
P195/65R 15."••••••••••••••••••• S95.:Z8
P:Z05/65R 15••••••••••••••••••••• S98.61
P195/60HR15 •••••••••••••••• S115.75
P:Z05/60HR15 •••••••••••••••• S13:.Z.47 .

'"'" . m~dail~ "'nlinl'i.&lt;11111

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Contact your high school coun!lelor today!

•

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