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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

..

www.mydllilysentinel.com

the IOth 111111ng anJ· Co~:o
Crisp had a two-run shot for
the Ind ians. who snapped a
four-game losing streak. one
day after fi ring hitling co&lt;Jl'h
Eddie Murray.
Tadahito Iguchi hit a tll·orun homn fo r the White So\
anJ Frunk Thonu" hit his
tirst homer of the -..ca:-.un in
the lOth inning to tic it-1-all.
David Ri ske r2-2l pitched
two scordess innings for the
victory.
Ronn ie Belliard added a
sacriticc lly ntr White Sox

Tribe
from Page Bl
was trying for his firs t sacrifice bum of the season.
It appeared Crede had a
good chance of catchi ng the
throw from Hermanson.' ·
" It was something we work
on just about everyday in
spring training,'' Hem1anson
said. " It was a bang-bang
play, what can you do·)" ·
Travis Hafner homered in

re liever Luis Vizcaino to
make it 6--+.
Hafner homered with two
outs on a 0-1 pitch off White
Sox rclic1·cr Damaso Marte
to take a .t-3 lead. in the lOth
11111tng .

But Cle,elancl closer Boh
Wickman g&lt;JIC up a leadoff
homer to Th omas in the hottom halL Thoma' came· on
the disah led list orr Ma y 30
after olhcason surgery on his
ldt ank le arrd homered for
the first time since June 22.
2tX)-l. against Cle veland: It

.

Top_
from PageBl

Monday, June 6,

was his 437th career home
run.
The Indians made it 3-1 in
the fifth. ·Aaron· Boone singled with two outs and then
stole second. Sizemore followed with a run-scori ng single to right.
Sabath ia we nt 6 . 2-3
innings. givi.ng up two runs
on·ti ve hits .
Bueh rle WCII I (1 1- '1
inning s. . He all owed three
rUIL&lt; on nine hit s. He st ru ck
out seve n and didn't give up a
walk . •
.

'

Cinc inriati hl1Cl 13 hit s amJ , fur his first career RB I to put
Casey hit hi s th ird homer. Colorado up 5-4.
but the Reds left I() run ner'
Clau ssen all owed five runs
on to lose their Hfth stra ight and eight hits , in 5 1-3

battled &lt;md ~o t '''llts when
needed to ... '
The Reds had pknt) " f
chances aft&lt;'r th;n_hll t could-

·anU 14th in I 7·ruad garne~.

n ' t co me rhrn ll ~'- 11 .

innin g~.

··rn baseball anythiitg can
"Leauoff guys got on a
They had 1h~- l""es lllildcu
at the. plate.
1
·
1
·
·
1
e ol tulles. so
was with no O,llls a~a
,
- inst Bobby
Bnan Fuentes, who came happen arrd we were mp111g c•Htp
pi1c hing in som&gt; jams." Se,·1y i11 the seve nth and
· for better on the road tr.ip in to face Casey. thep. struck that's a defi nite and it didn' t claltssc n said. "We. were mana~ed J· ust one run. Neal
out Ken Griffey Jr. to end the wor k· out. .. M'l
·d
· tte
1 JO
· b d·one. 1t' s a got Aust
" in Kearns to hit into
1 ev sm .
getttng
inning and pitched a perfect
Reds starter Brandon game where. one pitch can a doLi'ble :''play, tyin u the
ni~~!~~~~~~t~d~:J ·a solo Claussen was shaky early. make you or break you and ga me at 7. then struc'k out
giving up two runs in the . •today it broke me,"
Aurilia t.o end the inninu.
homer in . the eighth for fir st on consec utiw runRock ies sturter Jason .
Colorado, on its longest win- scoring doubl es by Preston · ,1ennings pitched just wel.l
Colorado went up 7-5 in
ning streak since taking four Wilson and Dustan Mohr.
enough 10 keep· the Rockies the bottom half on an RBI
straight last July 3-6 . It also
He seemed 10 sellle in over· in it.
.
·
single by Greene and Atkins'
was the Rockies'· first sweep the ne-xt four innings. scat- · He wl!l kcd in u ruri in the run-scor ing douhle . off
of Cincinnati since Aug. 6-8, tering fo Lir hits, before run - fi rst innin g and gave up Wagner. Greene tripped just
· 2002.
ning into trouble itl'lhe sixth . three more in the third on before reaching home plate
"We played well today and
Cl aussen walk ed Mohr, Casey's two-run hom er and , and · was replaced by J.D.
things are going well for us,'' then Gree ne hit hi s next Rich Aurilia's RB I single.
Closser after limping to the
said Helton, who was 3-for- pitch out to left for a two-run
Jennings allowed four runs du gout with a strained hamS for his tlrstlnulti-hit ga me · shot - hi s thi rd in fi ve - twice as many ~t s he had · string.
, ·
since May 14.
. games - to tie the game at in 14 innings the previous
Then· came Colorado's
Tpe Reds wish they could 4. Garrett Atkins fo llowed twn ' tarts - and nine hits. defensive ge ms rn the
say the same.
with a double off the base of He also walked three. push- eighth .
·
Cincinnati's chief opera! ~ th e wall in center ami ing hi s league-leading total · "They made six or seven
ing officer John Allen tlew Claussen wa.s li fted after to 45, but the Rcickies trailed ~ plays defensively that! don '.t
· to Denver before the game to Cory Sullivan 's sacrifi ce just 4-2 whe n he left in the · know if the right word is
talk with manager Dave bunt.
fifth inning.
phenomena.! or what. but
Eddy Garabitu then lined a
"It was. one of those days." every play they made were
Miley about the direction of
the struggling franchise .
single off Ryan Wagner i2- Jen nings said. " It's not big plays for them," Mil ey
It didn't help.
2) through a drawn-in infield always going to be preuy. 1 said.
whil e Ashle y Trimhle of
Columbus
Hamil to n
Township won for the th ird
straight year in the 100 hurdles and 300 hurdles .
Liberty-Benton's championship in the boys smallschool di visio11 was its thi rd,
to go with ti tles in 1995 and
2000.
Lordstow n se nior Tom
Andriku set state and tournament records by winning the

Repeat
from Page Bi
girl to win two events in four
consecutive years, fini shing
first in the 100 and 200.
Archbold's Rachel Sauder
did it first, winning the 1,600
and 3,200 from 1989-92.
Murray also won her sec·
ond straight long jump,

HOO in I :53 .33, and Dayton
Jefferson Township's 200re lay team won in a state and
tournament record time of
1:30.42 .
In girls Division Ill , Gates
Mills Gilmour won its tlrst
state championship with 54
poin ts. Bellaire St. John
Central Catholic and Collins
Western Reserv e tied for
seco nd with 32 points. Fourtime defending champion

Minster had just seven
points.
Catholi c
Steube nvi lle
Central senior Shatara ·
Wal ters defended her championship in the 100 hurdles
and Warren JFK senior
Angelene Cicero won her
second' straight 300 hurdles,
Delphos St. John' s junior ,
Alisha Anthony set a tournament record of 18 feet, 8.5
inches in the long jump.

.

'

2005

Biffie claims fourth
2~05 victory.at Dover
DOVER. DeL (AP) - others were saving time ' by
Greg Biffle 's surpri sing run to raking two.
the top of Nextel C up co mpe"I , aid , ' I want four tires,
titi a n got a boost Sunday ami 1 don 't ca re what hapfrom a sl!lllllin!;ly easy victo- pen&lt;" he expla ined . "1 was
ry in a crash-fill ed race on prepared to put four' on and
Thr Mon ster Mi le.
race for the win."
Birtle got his se ri es-leading
Biffle
sta rted
second
fourl'h win of the seasou tn hecausc rain prevented qualicln s ~ \vi th in 46 points -nf fyi ng Friday. forcin g the ~le ld
paceselter Jimmi e Johnson. to be set bv car-owner pomts.
The victory in the $5.5 mil- He bi'J·cd ·his time over the
li,,n MBNA 400 was '. Bifflc's first half of the race, then
first a1 Dover lmcrnatiorlid passed Elliott Saddler for the
Speedway and the seventh of lead on lap 24 1.
his career.
After that. the field became .
lri a race slowed seven strun g out. allowing Biffle an
tir\les for 3:1 or its 400 laps. open trac k with few traftic
Biftle won in part because he problems. He wound up leadavoided traffic problem&gt; thar in &lt;&gt; a race-hig)l 15.0. laps on
re sulted 111 hard cras he s. .th~ hi gh-banked c.oncrete
A.mong th ose taken from the oval: ·
I reid were lour-t1111e Dover · It was the fou rth straight
W!nncrs Jell . Gordo n and fini sh fo r Birtle in the top six,
RICk y Rlldd .. , and Ken including a victory last month
Schrader and ?,1vc Blanc) .. . at Darlington.
. _Btlrle dtd cra: h once: b,LIIIt
Roush had another magnifiwas after the t ac~ . As cre\v cent day. taking 'our of the
chtef Doug R1.~her\. w.rs · top nine .spots in fhe tield of
explarnrng th,rt
. . 11tc or.g.m1
. ·zat·1011 •s
.1. hBt. tle
h' drove
.. 1 43 . It w.ts
1
h
1
h
0
1
I e w ee '
t e mg, tte , · tl viet0· r in 11 races this
· winner smacked the wall hard · IX 1
Y
· :
durin o his burnout celebra- se·ason; the only real compell·
tion . "
uon tor Rm!sh th 1s year has
Unti l this year Birtl e was been Hendr.1ck Motorsports,
largely overl ooked &lt;imong whtc h h~s ftve wrns ~tween
dri vers · fo r Roush Rac ing, Gprd~n ~nd Johnson. ,
.
Brllle s Fo rd .beat the
which al so fi elds cars for
NASCAR great and four-time Chevrolet of . Kyle Bu sch b)'
Dover winner Mark Martin;. 4.28 1 seconds. Martm was
'series champion Kurt Bu sch; . thrrd , followed by Johnson t,n
former
champio'n
Matt a Chevy and Rusty Wallace s
Kenseth and exc iting yo ung- Dodge.
ster Carl Edwards.
The
winner averaged
But Biffle, 20th and 17th in 122 .626 mph. There were ·
the t'inal standings in his two nine lead changes among' five
.
years on the circuit, leads dnvers.
them all this season .
Brran V1ckers, Kenseth,
Biffle said the Roush orga- Ryan Newman, Kurt Busch
ni7.ation's .tightknit approach and Sl!dler compl eted .the top
is behind its success, He. said I 0.
•
hi s car wasn't so good leading
yordo n was spun out early
up to the race until Kenseth's in the race by Tony Stewart,
team prepared it with a new and Rudd crashed in the wake
shock pack age.
of thei rJ contact. Blaney hit
'That's what teamwork is the insi e wall on the backall about,"_he said.
stretch and was fortunate not
He did make one deci sion to be injured when he got
on hi s own - to take four sideways and a was clobbered
tires 011 hi s fina l· pit stop by trailing Schrader on the
under green wh ile most of the . !37th lap.

•

'

I

•

First of 2,000
radioactive waste
shipments leave
Ohio for Texas, A6

Apple to switch Macs to
·
Intel chips, A2

•

ne

•

·-

Middleport • Pomeroy; Ohio
1 tl tl'\l~•\rll
'

1 1 '\r1

"

lll~ll\\

.. 1\'\1

·. :oo,

H"''nn,l.llh ... ,· utu~t·J,,lll

Beegle: No new :d etails in probe of inissing cash

SPORTS

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BRE"ED®M¥DAILYSENTINEL.COM
.
·
POMEROY _ - Sheriff
Robert Beegle sa1d there IS no
~lmeta.ble . for. completmg an
mvesttgauon mto the apparent
theft last month of $20,000 in
cash evidence from his off.,;e,
and he knows nothing about
the status of the case.
The cash -evidence from
two pending drug case' was first discovered 'missing

•It's Pistons-Spurs in
finals.
SeePage 81
,

'

· •t•l

I

department and a locker in the Itinues the investigation, but 1 a Middleport inve stigation,
booking area, and will not be am not pw rrcrpatrng 111 any · Beeg le said last month.' He .
made aware of any informa- lway CJther than providing said he was unaware that a '
tion resulting from the BCI information as it is reque st- Middleport .officer had s tored
probe until it is completed. ed.''
·
cash evidence in an unsecured
Beegle said the investigator locker, designed for inmate
Therefore, he said, , he is
unable to comment on the sta-. ha s interviewed sheriff's personal effects, until after the
department employees and cash had been reported misstus of the investigation.
"1 told the BC! investigator Middleport police officers. mg.
I didn't want to know any- but is juggling the local invcsHe said he immediately
thing about the investigation ligation with other BCI cases. changed office policy for star- "'
until it is completed," Beegle One of th&gt; two cases from ing .evidence _after the cash
said. 'The investigato,r con: which the cash originated was came up mt ssmg.

on May 6. Beegle said last
month . An in vestigator from
the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
· Inve's tigation continues . ah
investigation of the case, but
Beegle has no role in that
.
. .
·.
mvest1gauon, hesatd on May
16.
Beegle said Monday he
knows nothing about any
progress in determining who
stole the cash from an evidcnce room at the slieriff's

Racine to receive additional
$57, 000 grant for well replacement
0

. Bv BElli SERGI;NT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
RACINE -The village of
Racine can now add another
$57,000 in grant money to go
along with the $100,000 they
were approved for last month
from the Appalachian Regional
Commission (ARC) for water
well replacement.
· The $157,000 in f11nds will

OBITUARIES
: Page AS

: • N6nga N. Roberts
: • David L. Woodall ·
· • Joriathan Morrison
: • Helen Kathleen .
. ~erkley

be derived from the ARC's new
Flood Recovery Application
Grant that was implemented
after the September 2004 flood.
The village must come up with
a 20 percent match ($40,000)
for the ARC grant.
_ Racine currently has three
wells from which their water is
derived. Twp of the wells were

Please see Gr•nt.

~5

Submitted photo

Rev. Fr. Paul Hrezo of Cambridge and Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz of Sacred Heart Parish in Pomeroy
talk with some of the migrant workers who attended the first Mass at Our Lady of Guadalupe
Mission Chapel in Portland on Sunday. Heinz and other parish priests from the area will cele-·
brate Mass atthe chapel, locatedin the old Harris Farms market. at 6 p.m. every Sunday
through the farming season. ·

INSIDE

www.cubcadet.com

•

•

Shown:

Local Catholic parish opens
mission for migrant workers
BY BRIAN J. REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
PORTLAND
- Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy has
established ' a new mission
coapel in Portland to serve
hundreds of migrant workers
- the vast majority of whom
are Roman Catholic.
Rev. Walter Heinz, Sacred
Heart pastor, celebrated the
first Mass at the chapel on
Sunday. As . the summer

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OFf LIST PRICE

• Bush promotes
democracy in hemisphere
of the Americas.
See Page A2
• Iraq War veteran raises
money for American
Cancer Society
See Page A3
• Police: 91-year-old
teaches purse snatcher a
lesson.
·
See Page A6

WEATHER . ·

f

moves along, other local
parish priests will take a turn
at celebrating Mass and
administering the· Blessed
Sacrament to the Spanishspeaking workers who are
helping local farmers in the
planting and harvesting of
tomatoes, sweet corn and
other Ohio River produce. . .
Rev. Heinz has named the
mission in honor of Our Lady
of Guadalupe, the patroness of
Mexico, who appeared to a

Catholic convert, Juan Diego,
in 1531.
"Other than the name of
Jesus, Our Lady of Guadalupe
is the most significant name
for a chapel for these Mexican
workers," Fr. Heinz said.
The chapel is located in the
former Harris Farms greenhouse · and market on Ohio
124, where the Appalachian
Food Network operates a hot

Beth S.rtent/photo

Members of the Meigs County Health Department (from left)
Courtney Sim, Leanne Cunningham and Andrew Brumfield gear
up for · Saturday's Meigs In Motion walking event on .the
· Pomeroy Parking Lot. Registration begins at 9 a.m. and the
actual walk begins at 10 a.m. Participants will receive a free
T-shirt and pedometer while supplies last. The event is free
and encourages residents to take an interest in their health by
beginning a walking habit

Meigs In Motion this Saturday
BY BETH SERGENT
at 10 a.m. on Saturday at the
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM Pomeroy Parking Lot end of
. the walking path. Participants ·
Thts will receive a free T.shirt and
POMEROY
Saturday the Meigs In Motion pedometer while supplies last. ·
walking event gives residents , '¥ater will also be available·. .
an excuse to get out of the . Meigs
Cou'nty
house and take a walk.
· Cardiovascular
Health
Registration begins . at 9
a.m. .and the free event starts
Ple•se see Motion, A5

Ple•se SH P•rlsh, AS

Gospel ·on the Levee coming Saturday
.
.

Shown:

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Details on Pace AS .

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·A NEW SPIN ON FATHER'S DAY!
GIVE DAD A ZE~O-TURN RIDER.

a SEcnoNs ;- J2 PAcES

FATHER'S DAY EVENT
GREAT PRICES NOW THROUGH JUNE 19TH

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Calendars

Obituaries

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~-

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BY CHARLENE HoEFliCH

SA\tff,:SOo s7.f 4·99**

8880 UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
(740) 593-3279
(BOO) 710-1917 (TOL~ FREE)

.

B Section

A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley.Publishing Co.

POMEROY - . "Gospel on
the Levee" with five smging
groups, refreshments, g~mes
and other youth activities will
be held on Pomeroy's riverfront amphitheater Saturday.
The event is sponsore~y
the Oh.io Valley Crusade for
Christ with · 17 Bend are-a
churches involved in presenting the outreach program. 'II
is a 9ooperative effort by tl:}!l
churches and other individuals to break down denomilll).•·
tiona! walls . and hare tiJ,e
gospel in Meigs, Gallia alid
Mason Couinies.
Everything offered as a part
Submlttoil photo
of the "Gospel on the Levee"
The
Glorybound
Quartet
will
kickoff
a
program
of
gospel music
is free , including refreshments. A climbing wall, a in the riverfront amphitheater at 3 p.m. Other groups perbounce house and an inflat- fomiing . will be the Grimmetts, the Glory Land Believers,
· Eternity, and Nicodemus and the C.O.R.E. drama team of the
Pluse see Gospel, As
·~
Bethel Worship Center.

n. 1-f.\C pr • 1

Beth Sertent/photo

The Meigs Co~nty. ~eriff: s Office is encouraging all motorists
to use their seat belt whether traveling 400 miles or just down
the "street. It .is noted' that between 1975 and 2000, safety
belts prevented 135,000 fatalities and 3.8 million injuries ,
saving $585. billion in medical and other costs. P.ictured (from
left) are Deputy Rick Smith and Sgt. Bill Gilkey from the Meigs
County Sheriff's Office.

•Hn: nr

will meit Mdrtl)&gt;, Jun. 12 J.a.r
, 200 pm • A:OO pm crt the JoK F~lld&gt; 5(X) Rotlm.
"

PI' ' 'hpwrri

t!!•w• -Jun.13, l4,olld 15

9;00 ~ • ll;OO Nocro • HMC m..ct. 500 Rocm
l'lllow ~li ~~~ ol..._. -'catll'cow 11&gt; cbro ottd hoot" po~,._
onfiM'IIm
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· THE SCIENCE OF COMMON SENSE.

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1lo8 l'llff JI4&gt;PIIIf group is rtJOI- eJ by;,., .WW/18 fiuvrdalla, oncl Hclzw Md:al Cenlot
1n I J, J - 14 • .5:30PM • 8:00 PM • 1-K £ij~ &amp; Con"'-:• c.m. Aocm AB
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Fir- ••ktrr4ia.., or
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."Healt hauT i tl ) fl ur·
Ow u Bw ln~.ncl"
www.holzer~org

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NATION

The Daily Sentinel
,.

Michael
Jackson jury
finishes first day
of deliberations

PageA2

.

Tuesday, June 7, 2005

Apple to switch Macs to Intel chips

, DEAR ,\BBY: l cui1 a refer-

~.~ rll'l' l.ihrari&lt;in at a large acad-

AP TECHNOLOGY WRITERS

SAN FRANCISCO - In a risky .
SANTA MARIA. Calif.
·move
that could further shrink its
(AP)- Jurors in the Michael
Jackson child molestation minuscule slice .of the PC market,
trial completed their first full Apple Computer Inc. announced
day of deliberations Monday plans Monday to · •.. switch its
Macinto.sh computers to the . same
without reaching a verdict.
Little more than an hour Intel &lt;;orp. chips used in systems
·
into the day the jurors sent that run Microsoft Windows.
Apple.
which
for
years
suggested
.
word to the judge that they
had a questi'on. but the query its users "Think Different," will join
and its resolution were not all other PC makers in using micropublicly disclosed. drawing a processors built on an architecture
protest from news media. · that took root in 1981 and eventualJackson. 46. is accused of ly .turned Apple into a niche player.
molesting a 13-year-old can- . By moving to Intel chips. Apple is
cer survivor in 2003, plying abandoning the so-called PowerPC
him with wine and conspiring architecture that it developed with
to hold his. family captive to . IBM Corp . and Motorola Inc. in the
ge't·them to rebut a damaging early .1990s.
Over the years. Apple touted
TV documentary about the
PowerPC
as more powerful _than the
singer. He could get several
years in prison if convicted · processors that run Windows PCs,
with Apple CEO Steve Jobs even
on the molestation counts.
comparing
some Macs to supercomThe jury got the case
Friday afternoon and deliber- puters.
On Monday. Jobs quickly changed
ated for about two hours.
his
tune.
Jackson fans waited out"Our goal is to provide our cusside the courthouse Monday tomers
with the best pers()nal comholding signs saying such
puters
in
the world. and · looking
things as "Only love . No
ahead Iritel has the strongest procescrime. He's innocent. Leave sor roadmap by far." he said. "It's
him alone," "We shall over~ been ten years since our transition
come" and "Peter Pan rules." to . the 'PowerPC , and we think
A woman held a sign show- Intel's, technology will help us creing Mahatma Gandhi, Nelson ate the best personal computers for
Mandela, Martin' Luther King the next ten years."
Jr.• and Jackson.
Jobs told a conference of software
.. But the fans were outnum- developers that Apple will begin
bered by an international offering Macs with Intel processors
throng of reporters, photogra- by June 2006 and will switch its
phers and TV crews. At one entire product line by the end of
point, Jackson's father, Joe 2007.
.
Jackson, arrived and was
The move was driven by the fact
AP Photo
mobbed by cameras.
thi!l the makers of PowerPC chips
On the issue of the jury
Motorola · spinoff Freescale l:l&lt;terior View of Apple Computers Inc. Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco. Apple CEO Steve Jobs
question, media pool coordi- Semiconductor Inc. and International announced it will discontinue using microprocessor chips made by IBM in fa.vor of Intel chips.
nator Peter Shaplen . said Business Machines Corj&gt;. - could
Judge Rodney S. l\1elville not keep up with Apple'-s expectaThe IBM-Apple deal was rocky
"I have a lot of trouble under- been known for fresh ideas and new
held a private meeting with tions.
almost from the start
standing why . they would do it," approaches. We look forward to prolawyers in cha)llbers to disWhen Motorola was the -primary
Jobs said Macs would lOp 3 giga- Brookwood said of the transition to viding advanced chip technologies,
cuss the question and how it supplier· of G4 chips for Macs, · hertz m processmg speed by the end lntei processors. "Unless there's and to collaborating on new initiawould be ilnswered. Shaplen Apple grew frustrated with the rate of . last year. but IBM could not something magical, I would have to tives, to help Apple continue to
said the judge did not.plan to of improvement. In 2002, it signed a . dehver. The IBM ch1ps also were believe it's not a good move. My deliver innovative products for years
reveal to the public what the deal with IBM to provide advanced scarce. for desktop computers and concern is that · every time Apple to tome."
jurors asked about.
chips for its high-end desktop com- nonextstent for notebooks. wh1ch by makes an architecture shift, many of
Although IBM suffers a setbac·k
The · procedure is unusual. puters the Power Mac G5.
some measures have now begun to its ·customers and development part- with the loss of Apple, its Mac chip
'
outsell PCs in the United States.
. ners say enough is enough." ·
Normally, questions from the
sales were just a fraction of its total
jury are a public record since
By wrestling away Apple's busi- semjconductor revenues. Recently,
They simply ran too hot and conthey are submitted in writing
sumed too much electricity for ness from IBM, Intel would ' tighten IBM has signed deals to provide .the
by the jury forepersoil.
its dominance of the PC processor chips for the next-generation video
portables.
An attorney for news orgaAnalysts were skeptical about business. The company holds more game machines of Microsoft Corp.,
Intel's revenue has grown.
Apple's latest move.
nizations including The
. In the past, major transitions 'have than an 80 percent share of the mar- Nintendo and Sony Corp.
Press
filed
Associated
steadily in recent yee~rs.
led to defections by customers and ket.
A ·new microprocessor that IBM
motions seeking a transcript
•Intel's
total
revenue
software
developers,
said
Nathan
"We
are
thrilled
to
have
the
co-developed
with Sony and Toshiba
. of Monday's closed proceedan
analyst
at
the
world's
most
innovative
personal
Corp.,
code-named
Cell and planned
Brookwood,
. ings, immediate access to any
• Intel's miaoprocessor !1MIIlue
finn
ln,sight
64.
computer
company
as
a
customer,"
for
Sony's
next
PlayStation
console,
research
questions from the jury, and
$30 billion . - . . --·- -···· ---·-·In the rnid-l980s, the Mac cap- said Paul Otellini, Intel's . CEO. is being touted as capable of delivto . any proceedings concern·
tured
as much as 10 percent of the "Apple hc;lped found the PC .indus- ering 10 times the performance of
ing those questions. ·
. 25 ---'-·-----...
overall
PC market, he
try and throughout the · years has tod1_1y's PC processors.
Jackson was treated at hossaid. When Apple :Z::Z::ZUI%:UUI:Z::Z:i%:r:l1XXZUXUI:U::U::U:z::J:UXZ:U:UUUU:UX:U:IUUXUIU
pital emergency room in the
20
switched · ·
from
town of Solvang on Sunday
and
rumors · repeatedly
8
15
swirled through the press
c.orps that he was returning
Mac's share dropped
there Monday. Jackson
to below ~ percent.
spokeswoman Raymone K.
the Mac's
When
Bain said he did not and was
system later
operating
0
· feeling fine.
changed
to
OS X, it
2002 .2003
Sunday's treatment was for
fell
·
to
below
3 per·
a recurrence of back trouble,
AP cent.
SOURCE: lnlel
Bain said.

Chipping away

1r·s THAT TIME AGAIN!

TIME TO CLEAN
OUT THE HOUSE
AND MAKE A
LlrTLE $$$

Bush promotes democracy in hemisphere of the Americas .
FORT
LAUDERDALE,
Fla. (AP) - President Bush
urged the nations of the
Western Hemisphere on
Monday to work together to
prevent governments in the
region from backsliding to
authoritarian rule.
· · ·
Venezuela's foreign minister said the U.S. seemed to be
aiming at his country.
Bush, iri a brief speech to
the Organizat)on 9f American
States, said that Cuba .was the
only countr~· in the hemisphere that was not democrauc. He pushed for expanded
tra.de and said . the nauons of
the AmeriCas needed to
choose . between two visions
for their future·: one of hope
or one of rolling · back "the
democratic progress of the
past two decades."
The president didn 't mention President Hugo Chavez
of Venezuela, who has acted
in ways the Bush administration has described as undemocratic.
However, the"United States
has s~bmitted a draft proposa! calling on the OAS secretary general to issue a report
outlining a "plan of action"
for strengthening .the democ.ratic charter so the organization can deal more effectively
with countries struggling with
threats to democratic rule.
Other countrits have submit-

library. While ' 1 ·; hart'
'ome of "\1arian the
Librarian·,.. concerns. 1
,·oulun· t· help but nqtice that
Iter pointer,, for library eti.quctlc were comprised almost
:~ ntirel v of "don'ts." ' I am
· .ofraid · her &lt;.liatnbe aeai nst
· :library patrons may 'cause .
''llll_l'

BY GREG SANDOVAL AND
MATIHEW FORDAHL

·' ~~J:;l~s chip: ~~~

At a news conference after
Bush 's speech, V~nezuel11n
Foreign
Minister
Ali
Rodriguez said that although
the U.S. proposal was . not
·explicit, "it seems aimed at
one country" - his own. ,
In a speech before Bush's
arrival, Rodriguez said the
OAS charter was clear in
demanding a policy of nonintervention in the internal
affairs of memli&gt;er states.
Earlier,
Venezuelan
Ambassador Jorge Valero
denounced the proposal, saying it was aimed at turning
the OAS into the policeman
of hemispheric democracies.
And in a weekly radio
address, Chavez - a foe of
Bush and friend of Cuban
President Fidel Castro- said
the proposal amounted to
U.S. meddling in the affair-s
of other nations. "The times
in which the OAS was an
instrument of the government
in Washington are gone,"
Chavez said.
Bush. in his speech, spoke
of two competing visions for
the hemisphere.
"One offers a vision of
hope. It is founded on representative government, integration into the world markets, and a faith in the transformative power of freedom
in individual lives," Bush
said.
·

for their own ·failures to pro·
vide for their people."
··
· U.S. officials want to see the
OAS monitor democratic
progress in the hemisphere,
checking the credibility of •
elections and the growth of ,4
.institutions that respond to 4
people's needs. At the meeting, 4
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza Rice singled out
Bolivia, Ecuador and Haiti as
countries that need. help in 4
overcoming chronic instabili~.
.
The U.S. proposal ts
·backed by officials from ·
some nations, especially ones
.whose governments are 11nder
siege from opposition groups
perceived to be sabotaging
·
' ·
democratic changes.
• 3 Bri1ht .11• X 14• All-weather sisns
The OAS holds foreign -.• Over 275 Pre- Prj(ino labels ·
ministers' meetlngs each year.
.,
This is the first held on u.s. 14 • Successful
fOr a •No Hassle• Sale
soil since 1974. In that year, ~· Pre-Sale Checklist
. • Sales Record
10 of the 23 members that 'l
.
attended the general assembly ~ Fonn
· ·
·
had elected democratic gov·
·
emments. Today, all34 mem· :
144
bers do:
"Only one country in this
$7.00 - 15 words or Jess
$1 0.00 - 15 words or less
hemisphere sits outside this . 14
$S.OO Kl"t
society of democratic nations, 14
$6.00Kit
and one ·day the tide of free·
-~'-"".;;...;;....;..,o...,;_ _ _ _ _ _ __
dom will reach Cuba's shores ll
Gets You Great
Gets You Great
as well," Bush said.
~4
A..l.-rti"s•"ng.l
·
Advertising!
He also called on Congress ~
"""voc:
to approve the Central
America
Ftee
Trade
Agreement. He said it would ~~
make about 80 percent of :

-~~ d~~~;;t:~ h~~~s:~;eea~~ th:!~l~r~i~e~~~~~e~~~~~~~ ~~~~~:" ~~po:: ~~~?~

a compromise iri time for the past two decades by playing to Republic duty-tree and open
C()nclusion of the conference 'fear, pitting neighbor agamst upllmarketofsome44million
on Tu~sday. ..
neighbor and blaming others consumers tQ US. wogygs._

l

LET US HELP
YOU HAUE
YOUR'" NEXT
GARAGE
or
.
YARD SALE!!

l

!J

+

$.13

4
4

•

.

; • Do . usc yo ur ·trip to the
. library as a learning experi : c·ncc. We have a say ing. "Find
the book for a man. and he'll
have the infor111ation for onlv
:a· day. Teach him to search the
:cat:rlog. :md he 'll have infor: mation for a lifetime."
. Althou gh, like '·_M~rian_ : ·
·l' m-tireu of the poor etiquefte
I see in my library. I'm equal_ly tired of the pervasive public
· 1mage of librarians as cranky.
:uptight and "shushing.'' As a
: librarian. rn y job is to help and
: ~ducat e . patrons. " Marian\"
· kttei· maue it seem as if I ibrar-

DEAR ABBY: I haven't
'ee n 'u.:h a vitriohc diatribe
'incc librarians were told to
'top pointing and get up off
their "dulls'' and go find the
Dear
book for the cu'storner! While
Abby
lihra rie, are free. taxpayers
are the one ' who suppon us.
and if we have profess ional s
·in the field 'Ltch as "Marian."
we . have only ourselve s to
ians are the behavior po lice. admoni sh when our tax dol ANTI-SHUSHER · IN . Iars arc. rc&lt;.luccd and our
MIAMI
librari es are closed.
DEAR ANTI -SHUSHER: SOUTH
BEN D.
lND:.
Your poim about casling 'thc LIBRARIAN
n1essage in positive. rathe r
DEAR SOUTH BEND: If
than negati ve. li.lngui.lge is libraries are closing becau se
we ll taken. And 1 agree that of lack of'support or patronlibrarians have been\yro'ngl y age·. it may be because people
stereotyped. However. if do more and more research
librarian~ are forced into· the online at home· than because
position of acting like "l i!!rary librcuians are overzealous in
police." it is bel·ause their enforcing rules of common
patrons· are acting in a way · courtesy. To quote a libn1rian
that is de structive or disrup- · from Beverly l:lill s. Calif.:
tive. Read on: ·
.
"There is now a dwindling
DEAR· ABBY: I wish I number of libra-rians due to
coulu nail a copy of that.letter retiren\elit.
downsizing.
to every tlat surface of our burnout and very low pay
library in the hope that our. compared to other profespatron s might read i,t and get a sions. That. coupled with a
clue. 11 has come to my atten- society that is becoming
tion that some librarians are increasingly uncivil and
unhappy that "Marian·· chose underappreciative of a truly
to air her grievances in a altrui stic profe ssion. makes
forum as public as your col- me fear that the library profesumn - and some have even siun is going the way of the
call ed for a letter-writing cam- dinosaur."
.
paign to criticize Marian for
Dear Abby is written by
telling the truth . I say, more Abigail Van Buren, also
power to herr - NEW JER· krwwn as Jeanne Phillips;
SEY LIBRARIJ\N ·
and was founded by her
DEAR NEW JERSEY: mother, Pauline Phillips.
Thanks fo r the warning. The Write
Dear Abby at
following is a letter that www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
expresse.&lt;. l su spect. their real Box 69440, Los Apgeles, CA .
90069.

Iraq War veteran raises money
for American·Cancer· Society

Submitted photo ·

Former Marine and Iraq War. veteran Aaron Frechette recently co mpleted his Journey for Life ·
Run .which ra ised money for the American Cancer Society. Frechette ran from Athens to
Parkersburg, W.Va ., a JO urney of 37 ·mrles after recovering from his own battle with cancer of
the knee. Members of the Meigs·Gallia-Mason Marine CorpS League sponsored Frechette:s·run ..
Presenting a check for Frechette's efforts were (from left) M-G·M members Sr. Vice
Commandant Jerry Bain , Commandant Chuck Cooper. Frechette representa tive Patti -Lie b. wife
of former Commandant Wayne Lieb. and Jr. Vice Commandant Dwight Taylor. Frechette cont1n·
ues to raise funds for the American Cancer Society and ca n be reached at 698·6505.

FIVE GENERATIONS

:Community
Calendar
.
.

Public meetings
Tuesday, June 7 .
ALFRED - The Board
nf
Orange ··: Township
rru &gt;tee&gt; will meet at 7:30
p m. at the home of Clerk
Osie h&gt;llrod .
RUTLAND
The
Rutlall(l Vi lla~e Council will
meet itl regUlar session. at
():JO .p.m. in council's chamber&gt; :rt the Rutland Civic
Center.
Wednesday. June 8
POrviFRCJY - The Meigs
Co unty Boaru of Health
nieeting will take place at 5
p.m. in the conference room
,Jf the Meigs County Health
Department.
_
Tuesday, June 14
SYRACUSE - A public
ll)eeting to discuss the fate
nf the London Pool will be
held at 7 p,)ll. at the
Sy racuse Fire Station.

Other events
Tuesday, June 7
POMEROY - The T. B.
Clinic office will be open
. until 6, p.m.
· POMEROY
The
: Mei gs
County
Health
:Department will · offer
:evenin g clini c hours 4 to
· 6 p.m. This will include
childhood
and
adult
bloo~
. immunizations ,
:pre ssure
measurements
:and blood , sugar assess• ments , WI C. prenatal ser: vices , head li ce screen : in gs. environment health.
and vital sta-tistics .

Clubs and
organizations Tuesday, June 7
POMEROY - The Meigs
County American Cancer
Society Taskforce meeting
will be held at 12 p.m. Ill
the basement conference
ro01i1 of the Pomeroy
Library. Lunch will be pro'
vided. Call Courtney Sim
for more information or to
RSVP, 992-6626.
. MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Lodge
363
F&amp;AM will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Temple .
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Community
Association, 8:30 a.m. ·at
Peoples· Bank.
CHESTER
Chester
Council, DofA will met at
7:30 p:m. m the Masonic
building. Auction will be held
and members are asked to
take or send items for the
·
good of the order committee
sale. Refreshments will be
served.
Thursday, June 9 ,
. CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453 will meet
at 7:30 p.m. ·Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW 9053 will meet at 7
p.m . at the Tuppers P.lains
hal17 There will be a meal
at ,6:30 p.m...
.
Friday, June 10 ·.
POMEROY - The annual heritage dinner . will be
held · at the Meigs County
Museum
at
7
p.m .
Reservations are to be made
by calling 992-3810.

MIDDLEPORT The .
Widows' Fellowship will meet
at noon at Ginos in Mason .

Church events

Ellen Arnott. 92 . fo rmerly of Rac ine. now
of New Matamoras. is
pictured holding her
great-great grandson .
Cameron Kelsey, in a
five ·generation photo.
Also pictured, t-r. are
Kenda Brown. the
baby's great grandmother, Tonya
Pelphrey of
Prestonsburg, Ky .. his
grandmother. and
Whitney Kelsey of
Staffordsville, Ky., his
mother.

Thursday, June 9
VINfON - Revival services
at Fairplay Chapel 9tf S~lle
Route -'~).
,~ - 7
p.m. thruugh
June 1o. Rev. Harry David
Russell preaching. Bluegrass
Beacons of Columbus to present gospel concert June 11 at
7 .p.m. More intonnation call
742-2271.
J&lt;' riday, June 10
LONG
BOTTOM
Praise and worship services
will be held at 7 p.m .
Friday and Saturday. anu
. 6:30 p.m. on Sunday at the
M 01·1
Ch h L
t.
ve
urc ' ong
· Bottom.
LONG BOTTOM _ The
King Family of Lancaster
will be in concert at 7 p.m.
at the Faith Full Gospel
Church.

~

Submitted photo

~·

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Qualllilie .., are limited .

POMEROY - Dawnya and Joshua Wilson of Pomeroy
. announce the birth of a daughter, Natalie Paige Wilson. on
:June 3. 2005, at O'Bieness Memorial Hospitalm Athens. ·

a

!l

·ti me.

l'PIKt:fn.

Wilson birth ·

'16

®allipohs J.lailp mribune
leo tnt ~Ieasant ~egister
The Dat"1 y Sen. t'IDe1

'·

' librarv at all. for fear of com-·
mitliti,g a faux p;_t~, and incurring a librarian \ wrath. ·
. How much better it would
· :have been had she compil,ed a
· ;l i&gt;t uf library "do's" in, tead ·of
:l ibrary "don' t&lt;' Example:
• Du teach ) uur children to
use and appreciate the lihrary.
: • Do .:heck ynur library's
:pol icy &lt;Jn food. drink and cell
·phones. tManv ;1llow drinks in
· · : l'Ovcrcu cr,Hit;iners. nnd cell
:phones set to silent· mode or in
-..pecific areas.)
• Do enlist the help of the
reference librarian . You tnight
he surprise&lt;.] \vhat we cari find
:for you In a short aniount of

POMEROY -Jasmine
· Diana Brewer, daughter of
Stephanie
and . Charlie
· Brewer. · Jr., Pomeroy, ·· cele- .
: brated her third birthday on
:Apri l 23 with a Pora the
: Explorer Party at her home:
·: Attending. besiUes her par. ents. were her brothers ,
· Jacob. Joshua and Jas(ah. and
her grandmother Diana
:Brewer. Grandparents Lady
: anu Ronald D:\v is sent gifts.

3 Qay Ad:

+

.· . . om~ of th l~ 'll not to use the

Tuesday, June 7, 2005

.

Celebrates birthday

nps

1 Day Ad:

.

lmpmving library etiquette requires .more positive 5pin

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·O PINION

The Daily Sentinel

....

Tuesday, June 7,

.. ..Tuesday, June 7, 2005 -

2005

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

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The ·Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.fTlydailyienllnel.com

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

•

Congress shall make no law respecting m~
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerci~e thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition •
the Goflernmettt for a redress ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

&gt;

Today is Tuesday, June 7, the I 58th day of 2005. There are
207 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History : On June 7, 1776, Richard
Henry Lee of Virginia proposed to'lhe Continent!ll Congress a
resolution calling for a Declaration of Independence.
On .this date: In 1753, Britain's King George II gave his
assent to an Act of Parliament establishing the British Museum.
In 1769. fro!)iiersman Daniel Boone first began to explore
the present, day Bluegrass State.
'
In 1848. French postimpressionist ·painter Paul Gauguin
was born in Paris.
·
In 1.864, Abraham Lincoln was nominated for another term
as president at his party's convent ion in Baltimore.
In 1919. the sovereign state of Vatican City came into existence as copies of the Lateran Treaty were e~_changed i" Rome.
In 1948. the Communists completed their takeo ver of
Czechoslovakia with the resignation of President Eduard Benes.
In 1967. author-critic Dorothy Parker, famed for her cimstic
wit. died in New York.
.
.
In 1971. the musical "Grease" opened on Broadway.
In 1981. Israeli military planes destroyed a nuclear power
plant in Iraq. a facility the Israeli s charged could have been
'useq to make nuclear weapons.
In) 998. i_n a crime that shocked the nation, James Byrd Jr.,
_a 49-yeitr-old black man. was drugged to his death behind a
pickup truck in Jasper, Texas. (Two white men were later sentenced to death for the dime; a third received life in prison.)
Ten years ago: President Clinton vetoed his first bill, striking down a Republican plan to cut $16.4 billion in spending.
Two buses carrying 108 U.N. peacekeepers freed by the
Bosnian Serbs crossed into Serbia.
Five years ago: U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield
Jackson ordered the breakup of Microsoft Corp., declaring the
software giant should be split into two because it hail"proved
untrustworthy in the past." Microsoft vowed to appeaL (An
appeals court later threw out the breakup order; the Justice ·
Department. under the Bush admi nistration, said it would no
longer seek a breakup of Microsoft.)
.
. One year ago: A steady, near-silent stream of people _circled
through the rotunda of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library-II..
in Simi V~l!ey. Calif.. where the body of the nation's 40th president lay in repose before traveling to Washington for a state
funeraL The Tampa Bay Lightning held off the Calgary Aames
2- i in Game Seven to win their first Stanley Cup.
Today's Binhdays: Movie director James Ivory is 77. Singer
Tom Jones is 65. Poet Nikki Giovanni is 62. Talk show host
Jenny Jones is 59. Actress Anne 1\vomey is 54. Actor Liam
Neeson is 53. Actor William Forsythe is 50. Record producer
LA Reid is 49. Singer-songwriter Prince is 47. Rapper Ecstacy
(Whodini) is 41. Rock musician Eric Kretz (Stone Temple
Pilots) is 39. Rock musician David Navarro is 38. Actress Helen
Baxendale is 35. Actress Larisa Oleyn_ik (oh-LAY'-nihk) is 24.
Tennis player Anna Koumikova is 24\ Actor Michael Cera is 17.
Thought for Today: "The slight that can be conveyed in a
glance, in a gracious smile, in a wave of the hand, is often .the
ne plus ultra of art. What insult is so keen or so keenly felt, as
the polite insult which it is impossible to resent?'' - Julia
Kavanagh, Irish novelist (1824-1877).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to tile editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

·

Correction FolleY

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awrier

I went to see the linal "Star
Wars" movie on the strength
of some reviews that raved
about its profundity. rather
than its special effects. But be
warned: It 's psychologically
vapid, theologically shallow
and politically offensive.
One of the best movie
reviewers in the business,
The Washington ·. Post's
Stephen Hunter, compared
. wri(er/i:ljrector. Oeorge Lucas
with Melville, Dostoevsky.
Goethe, Shakespeare and
Milton in ·confronting the
question : . What makes man
evil'&gt;
. "Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith" chronicles the transformation of
· Anakin · Skywalker. As
Hunter puts it, Sky-,valker,
"the righteous. pilgrim. so
handsome, so brave, so
noble, so committed, .loses
his way and becomes ·Ahab
or Macbeth or Raskolnikov
or Faust - a figure of power
and strength and charisma
and intellect, all of it invested
in madness and destruction.'.'
. l loved the first two "Star
Wars" movies, with their
specialthen-pioneering
effects space battle.s, their
interesting theology (the
"Force" as God in opposition to a "Dark Side" that is
seemingly as powerful) and
their epic depictions of the
capital E-Evil (but ultimlitely redeemed) Darth Vader,
not to mention the ultimatein-diversity "meanest bar in
the universe" and the fatslob ball of decadence.
Jabba the Hut. So after reading Hunter's review, I felt l
couldn't miss this one.
After all, what would
induce Anakin Skywalker, a
Jedi knight on his way
toward being the "Chosen
One," to go over to the
"Dark Side" and become
Darth Vader?

!Maide lleip COU&lt;!Iy
13 Weel&lt;s
.... '53.55
26 Weeks .......... .'107.10
52 Weel&lt;s
.. , . . . . . '214.21

Attorney General seeks notification.
POMEROY -N~=!~.~:D~~~~Junes. 2oosat for victims of DSW .sec,urity breach

Havucn Christensen , as trumps up a war wirh other
An;tkin. comes off as pasty bad guys. Gen'. Grievousand
and rallow - not in a million Count Dooku. aRd u'es 11 to
years a potential Jesus Christ. consolidate power.
And you could never imagine
F!ut when · those enemies
the Obi-Wan Kenobi, played are defeated and danger is
Morton
here by Ewan McGregor. presumably past. the Senate
Kondracke ever growing up to be Alec vote' h-im;dictatorial power1 .
Guinness, who played him in Padme. a senator. remarks.
· the original "Star Wars."
"This is how liberty die s Now for the theology. "The with thunderous applause."
Well, ·the answer turns out' Force" is · an interesting ..if It's the be st-writtet1 line in
to be a . pat het ·tc muu·'dl e. . : primiti.ve. alternative to _our the movie. but why it iuv'"
Partly. he has bad dreams Judea-Christian-Muslim God pe~s is a mys.tery.
that his wife. Padme. will die - the Creator of the universe.
What's not mysterious 'is
in chi ld birth. Partly. he 's the Author of goodness, truth Lucas-' disdain for Pre;;idctll
miffed that the Jedi don't and beauty, and perspnal .Bu&gt;h and the war on terror.
think he's ready for their top Redeemer of humans.'
On his way into the Dark.
CounciL P;trtl v. he 's seduced
Lucas · theology see ms · Skywalker says. "If you're ngt
by the evil Chancellor derived fro tl) that of the poet with me. you' re my ene.my," a
Pal patine. Ana partly. he Dylan Thomas: "The force direct echo of Bush's Sept. 2d.
gives in to a lust for power.
that through the green fuse 2001, line, "Either you are
Even this melange of drive s the !lower ... is mv withus or you are with the termotives ct:&gt;uld have been de stroyer.'' It 's· Nature: rorists." Where was Lucas on
brought off brilliantly. cis in although the . twist is that it Sept. II, anyway?
"The Godfather'' - the best has a ''Dark Side" that 's
We're meant to think thai
movie " poriruyal of the apparently equallr as power- Bush is going to use the "''If
descent from good to evil ful as the "goo9 stde,' which ,on terror to snuff out liber!y
that 1 can think of Michitel turiouslv has no name.
and convert our Republic
Cor leone goes from World
The problem is that this into an Empire . The last _I
War ][ hero to murdero!JS theology (or cosmology) looked, though , we still had
Mafia don initially out of isn't developed. We never elections. And, in just tliree
fear, then out of fami ly loy- learn how Lucas thinks the years, Bush will be out ofalty, then out of revenge and, universe was created. We do office, not Emperor.
finally. because killing is · know that Anakin is destined
Just so you understantl
what Mafia don s do.
(when James Earl Jones was . what Hollywood liberals
The descent of An'akin Vader' s voice, everybody really think about democra·doesn't work like that mostly .was Destined ) to be "the ; cy, remember this: · At the
because Lucas·. writing is so Chosen -One." 8ut. if he 'd end of the day, the only
stilted. You can sit in the · fulfilled that destiny, what group you can really trust to
movie and . predict what . pifference would it , have do right is the Jedi Knights
· Padme andAnakin will say to . made? We'll never know.
-an unelected, self· selecteach other before they say it.
Finally, there's the politics. · ed, elite band of wise creaShakespeare? Milton? There There are two sets here, one tures who always have . the
is no poetry here whatever.
confusing · :ind the other Force with them, can just let
For a movie that cost zil- deeply offensive. As Yoda their · feelings tell them
lions to produce, Lucas surely might say, confusing is the what's right and, just in cas.c:.
could have found himself a galaxy-far-away
politics. have mighty light sabers to
top-notch writer to assist him. Offensive is Lucas' contem- whack the bad guys.
,
Rumors that Tom Stoppard porary parallels between
Who are the Jedi? Tlj,e
had a hand in this can't be true. Palpatine and President Bush. U.S . Supreme Court' Or the
Then, too, the. chardcters
The bad guys are the Sith. liberal
cognoscenti?
are shallow, or get portrayed What their story is, tMifgh. Whoever they are, Lucas
as such. Ian McDiarmid is nev.er clear. Palpatine is doesn't trust ordinary voters . .
(Morton Kondracke is execdoesn't do badly as the the boss Sith disguised as a
Chancellor,
but senator of the democratic utive editol' of Roll Call, the
Mephistopheles he 's nqt. Republic. He evidently newspaper
. of Capitol Hill.) ,

Copley Health Center, Cople)'. following a lengthy decline.
She was born July 25. 1911 in Wellsburg. W.Va. to Ira G.
and Eva M. (Beaver) Fleming.
·
· Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband of 48 years, Robert "Bob" Roberts. brother Branch
Fleming and sister Noretha Fleming.
She .is survived by her sons Robert (Nancy) and Mike
(R~hbaron) Roberts ; · grandchi ldren Kathy (Mike) Wesner,
_De ec c)a (Paul) Dymond, Mike (Julie) Roberts and Diana ·
( ary 1 Harkin ; great-grar)dchi ldren Paul and Erin Wesner and
fwa Roberts. all.of the Akron area, and gran~daughter Laura
(Brian) Walsh and great-grandchildren James and Laina
Walsh of Vienna, Va.
'
·
Nonga was a 1927 graquate of Pomeroy High School and
earned Bachelor and. Master degrees from Ohio University.
She taught school many years in Pomeroy. Rutland and Salem
Center. She attended Trinity Church in Pomeroy: Nonga was
active as a Scout leader for many years and was a volunteer at
the Meigs County Humane Society Thrift Shop for 17 years.
She· was a member of several professional and social organi - .
zation~. She was also ·anacQomplished artist.
There will be no funeral services. Her cremain s will be
interred be'side her husband 's i.n Beech Grove Cemetery in
pomeroy. A mer1Jorial service will be announced in the future.
In lieu of flowers. donations may be made to the PHS Alumni .
Bob Roberts Scholarship fund . Remembrance's should be sent
to Pomeroy High School Alumni Association. Box 202,
Pomeroy. 45769.
Arrangement s by Ewing Funeral Home, Pon1eroy.

annour1eed the number of customers alleded was closer w
1.4 milli on.
Attempts io ctfl]lacl many of
the customers were slowed
because the company does not
·collect addresses at the point of
purchase. DSW notiticd banks
and major credit card compa. nies, but Pe~tro· said they have
not done enough to let custamers know about the theft .
Petro. a Republican candi-

State allocates
funding ·for .
Ohio University
Student Center

able obstacle course will be
available to the vouth attending along with- some game
booths.
The musical prograni' of
bluegrass and gospel will get
underway at 3 p.m. with ·the
Glorybound Quartet, followe'd by the Grimmetts at
5:3(} . the Glory Land
Believers at 6:45. and
Etemity at 8 p.m.
The CORE drama group
and the band. Nicodemus. of
·the Bethel Worship Center
,will b~ performing from I to
3 p.m. on the upper stage
gazebo.
Contemporary
Christian music w1ll be
played there by the band
named for the late Roger
•
Nicodemus, a member of the . The bounce house a( last year's Gospel on the Levee was popWorship Center and a guitar ular 'with the youth. It along with a climb ing all and inflatable
player.
obstac le course will be on the parking lot Saturday.

Deaths

David L. Woodall

Gos.pel
from Page A1

Racine 's patrol car be kept at generates just over 59.000.
the Public Service Building
Council approved paying
unless Hill is notitied of a spe- Spencer's membership dues to
cial circumstance. If the officer the Municipal Clerk's
who has the cruiser at the end Association in the amount of
of the shift does not place the $4().
patrol car back at the Public
Council agreed to reimService Building that officer is burse Holman for a battery
subject to three days -off with- charger for the village in the
out pay.
amount of 5·175.00.
During the rere'ssed meetCouncil approved Holman
ing of council on May 16. a to lead the Source Water
motion was passed to rescind Protection Plan Committee.
the provisions of the increased Councilman Garv Freeman
scheduled hour!; for Jones and was appointed to serve in the
Rose due to a violation of a committee with Holman and
stipu lation that Racine 's police Hill.
car be kept at the Public
Council approved a letter
of support for the proposed
Service 8uildi.ng .
Council also appro,ed con- American Electric Power
Plant in the Great Bend area.
tacting their state representatives to discuss the cut in
Councilman Ike Spencer
. funding for the Meigs County commended Holman and the
Recycling progtam from the
village street depar1ment
state which will result in more employees for keeping the viltrash for the village to dispose lage looking "outstanding."
of. ,
'
All member&gt; of council
''They're always messing
were present for the meeting
up a good thing,'' Bentz said · with the exception of
of the funding cuts at the state Wamsley and Councilman
Greg Taylor. ·
.
leveL
Street Commissioner I
A recessed meeting of the
Water Works Operator John
Racine Village Council will .
be held at 7 p.m. on June 20.
Holmari ~ed, adding that
the recyc ltng program produces significant savings to
the village.
Hill said that due to the
cuts, the program will more
than likely end in September.

Grant

Jonathan Morrison

from Page A1

constructed in 195 I and both
will be required to run simultaneously to keep. up with the
rate of usage from the new
water treatment plant. The
third well wa' constructed in
1995.
"This continues to drive
down the cost of what we need
to borrow for well replacement," Mayor J. Scott Hill
said.
The announcement of the
additional $57.000 was made
.at last night's Racine Village
Council mee,ting wher~ the
grant was not the on! y financial good news.
Clerk-Treasurer
Dave
S~ncer announced that the
vtllage's revenue was more
than
their expenses for the time
Ponerfield, 'will rotate cele- Caldwell earlier in the day.
bmting Mass every Sunday
Heinz hopes Meigs County ~~od, of Jan. I through May
evening through the summer Catholics
will
become
srencer said that the viland
·
fall
months.
Spanish
involved
in
the
mission
work,
from PageA1
lage
s total receipts during this
translators will assist the either by celebrating mass
· meal service. for the seasonal English-speaking priests in with their Spanish-speaking time period were $186,593.07,
expenses
lotaled
brothers lutd sisters, but also while
miJrant workers. It was a celebrating the Masses.
.
Rev.
Schlick
needs
no
by
assisting
in
various
min$162,727.43.
retired Lutheran pastor, Rev.
:,
translator.
A
Capuchin
friar,
istries
there
.
Several
members
"We're right on. track,"
Jim Couts of the Appal11Chian
he
spent
32
)'Can
in
mission-'
of
Sacred
Heart
speak
Spencer
said. "I ~nk we're in
Food Network, who first
ary
work
tn
Pueno
Rico,
Spanish,
he
said,
and
could
real good shape."
approached Fr. Heinz about
Spencer also read !he letter
the need for Spanish Mass for returning to the U.S. only serve as interpreters if needeight
y~
ago
to
W.e
over
ed.
the workers - 99 percent of
of
resignation
of
He also hopes the mission Councilwoman
whom, Heinz estimates, are the pastorate at the Mason
Charlotte
County parishes. Since will help ensure strong pas- Wamsley which stated her
of the Catholic faith.
Other business:
- Some 60 of the migrant returning to the states, Rev. toral leadership for the local thanks to council and the comTUPPER,S PLAINS Schlick
has
conducted
several
parish
in
the·
future
.
While
he
·
Speneer
infonned
cou_
n
cil
workers ·and members of the
Tuberculosi
s Office staff
.· munity as well as her intenSacml Hean Church attended ~panish-language masses in said he has no immediate tions to resign for "personal that ~ Ohio Department of
will be at Tuppers Plains Fire
the first mission mass on . Charleston. W.Va. and at plans to retire. Heinz is con- reasons.'' The resignation was Taxation had approved a prop- Depart merit from 4:30 10 6
University in ' cerned that an alanning proerty tax exemption request for p.m. on June 20 to administer
-sunday, but Heinz expects Marshall
Huntington.
W.Va.
jected shortage of parish · ,accepted by counci I with some village property for the
,TB skin test s.
thar number to increase expoAt Sunday's frrst mass at priests within the Diocese of Councilman Duke Bentz 1'01· fiscal year2003-04 in the
nentiallY. in the months ahead.
Many of the workers who Our Lady of Guadalupe. Fr. SteubenJille could result in mg no.
Council also passed two . amount of $2,258.80
were here earlier in the sum- Heinz had surprise help from the Pomeroy parish losing a
Council gave Spencer
new motions to restore Racine
mer have gone to other jobs. Fr. Paul Hrezo of St. resident priest in the future.
approval to contact Meigs
Parish
tn
'The diocese estimates that Police Officer Brett Rose· s
MIDDLEPORT -:Village
but are expected to return Benedict's
Auditor Narcy
County
worl;
hours
to
30
hours
per
pay
·.o
f
Middleport has mailed
Cambridge,
arid
Sister
in
five
years,
there
will
be
bere ooce the haiv·est season
Grueser to begin the process
Consumer
Confidence
Frantisca
Aquillon
of
the
·.
only
27
active
priests
where
period,
and
to
restore
Racine
be~ in earnest.
of
placing
a
renewal
of
a
two
and
leak
-insural)ce
Reports
Sc;_veral other local Catholic North American Union of. there are now 52. lbere are Marshal Curtis Jones' for three ' mil levy on this year 's 1'\ov. 8
form s. Those who did not.
parishes
in
the , hours of work per pay period.
priests, inclu-ding Father ·Sisters of Our Lady of 7.2
ballot.
The
levy
covers
the
vilrecei ,·e one should contact
·
Charity
of
Carrolton,
as
well
Steubenville
diocese
.
The hours were reinstated
Regis Schlick of Sacred Heart
lage';
operating
costs
and
the
warer office.
''To make any county in this with the stipul&lt;~tion that
Church in Point Pleasant. as a Catholic lay minister.
W.Va and St. John's Church Horacio Gonzales. all of ·diocese priestless would be
in Masen, W.Va., Rev. whom speak Spanish, and very notable, but if this min- .
William Myers of St. Louis decided to assist at Mass at , isuy ~ntinues, it would be .
Cliurch in Gallipoli s. and the mi.ssion after celebrating another reason til assure a resFather David Huffman of St. Mass at the Noble County ident pastor for the Sacred
Ambrose
Church
m Correctional Facility in Heart parish,.. Heinz said.

PARIS HILTON'S COMMERCIAL

WAS' PRETTY fFFECTIVE ...
SHE~

NOW ENGAGED.

.

Helen Kathleen Berkley

'

Parish

Warring against federal judges Embattled House Majority
Leader Tom DeLay and his
allies have been mounting a
blistering offensive against
federal judges. He has called
. for
House
Judiciary
Committee hearings on · the
Constitution's requirement,
he notes, "that judges can
serve as long as they serve
with good behavior. We
want to defiru; what good
behavior f11eans. That's
where you have to start."
But until' now, as conservative commentator Charles
Krauihammer points out, this
· condition for lifetime tenure
bas
"honesty and propriety." But what DeLay and
his allies apparently had in
mind by ~good be!tavior'' is
whether judges' constitutional opinions match their own.
Under that standard, defini. lions of judges' ''good behavior" ·could change depending
on which political party dominates
the
Judiciary
Committee and Congress.
Former Solicitor General
lbeodore Olson. whom no
one would accuse of being a
left-wing radical. wrote in the
April ~I Wall Street Journal:
~if a judge's decisions are
corrupt or tainted. there are
lawful ~es (prosecution
or impeachment}; bur congressioual interrt&gt;garions of
life-rmured judgfi, preswnably under oath. as to why a
paniallar lkcision was renda'ed, would constiblte interferert~:e with - and intimidation of .the judicial
process. And there is no logical stopping point once this
. power is exerci~ ...
DeLay's fury at eenain
fcder.al judges is apparently
boundless. In an April 14

" ''"""1"'·'"" -~-- -

. ._ ... _ ~

.....

. ...

Congressional laws repugnant courts.'' DeLay emphatically
to the Constihltion?
agrees: "We (the Congress) so\
· Without judicial reviews, up the courtS, (Anicle I.
would official segregation in Section 8, of the Constirution).
the public schools of certain We can unseat the courts.''
states have remained lawful ,
U.s.
Rep.
J l!me.s
Nat
and · constitutional, until Sens_enbrenner . (R- Wis.}.
Hentoff
Congress changed its mind? chairman of the House
With regard to the. right to ~udiciary Committee. howprivacy, I thought that the ever. reminded_ DeLay and
Fourth Amendment to the
Constitution - not some his fellow anti-courts wat. of the riors in an interview in The
interview with editors and vaporous "penumbra'"
reporters at The Washington Constitution - provided Washington Post (May 12l
Times. the House majority Americans with safeguards that "In the early days of the
leader, a commander in thi&gt; to prese..Ve that fundamental Republic, the precedent was
campaign, blamed Congress right. As a schoolboy. 1 was . set · that judges' are not
for not fulftJiing its constihl- much taken with what · impeached ~or unpopular
tional respoqsibility to exer- William Pitt said of the right opinions."
cise oversight of the courts . to fJ!lvacy so long ago in the
Sensenbrenner intend.S to
He charged: .
Bntish House of Commons: uphold that precedent, but he
"The reason the judiciary . '111e poorest man may, in also has in mind the estabhas beeo able to impose a his cottage, bid defiance to all lishment of an inspector genseparation of church and the foa:es of the crown. It eral for the federal judiciary, ·
state that's nowhere in the may · be frail; its roof may just as other agencies of ~
. Constirution is that Congres$: shake; the wind may blow executive branch, like the
didn't stop them. lbe re:l.son through; the storm may enter; Justice Department. ha~t; .
we had judicial review is but the King of EnglaDd may · lbe inspector general could
because COngress didn't stop not enter; all his force dares . be empowered to deal witjl
them. 1be reason we had a not cross the ~ of the complaints against judges.
right to privacy is because ruined tenement.
because says Sensenbrenner
Congress didn't stop · them
In this country. the FBI no br.W::h of the govemmen;
(from finding such a right)." may 1101 enter our tenements. ~should be given a blank
Would the majority leader · ~med or otherwtse. unless check without oversight on
consider it constitutional for n~ agents adhere to the their operations:·
the principal of a public requtrements of the. fourth
But w.ill judges' actual opinschool to mandate official · Amendment. 91' that s what ions in cases be entirely
prayer in classes? If so. the Constttutoon says. but excluded· from that official
prdyers of which n:ligioo. and pan s of the Patnot Act
. -ght of "~"'·'-·..., If
whose GQd?And would non- increasingly diminish this ov~
' ~~'1'-= ·
believing studeOts be allowed •·ital privacy amendment. ~ the ~ of pow~
to siL as pariahs, in silence or · Maybe the House majOrity will be untfmnined and the
be placed in tempor.uy exile leadrr could ask the courts to COIISbiUtJoD will be ovenuled
in the principal's off!&lt;%?
address that'esca!atilig viola(Nat Hentoff is a '!'ltionaJAs for judicial review, does tion of the ConstitutiOfl by l•·_rrnot&lt;71t'd authonf\· on r/uo
DeLay believe that Chief thi3 government"
F~rst A~mdmenr and the
Justice John Marshall -..as
Joining those at:tacking the Btl/ of Rights wtd author of
guilt} of "bad behavior- in hi&gt; federal
judiciary. sen!ral books. including
1803 ruling (Marbury ' · Congressman Sre•·e King IR- - "Th,. War 011 the Bill of
Madison 1 that the judicial Iowa) say;: "We have the con- ' Rights and the · Gathering
power of the United Stalo ~ stirutioRIJ autborily 10 elimi- ResistmtCrt " I Sewn Srorie.s
the authority to. strike down nate ·anv and all inferior Prru. 2003).

•

-.

date for gm·erm&gt;r in 2006 . said alfcct~d l11' the da t&lt;r theft.
, DSW shou ld be req uired under Infnrm;uimi w;rs pilfered from
Ohio's
Consumer Sab the cfataba'e through uut a
Practices Act to notify the thrcc- timmh period and includ700,000 Ohi o 0ustomcrs in ed ned it land debit card numwriting. Ohio is the tiN ,tate 10 bers, han' acmunt numbers.
.seek actiorl again st DSW.
and· dri1·cr's litense numbers.
Calls secking;:ommcnl from !\ames. sm:ial securitv num ,DSW and it s parent company. bers . addre"e s aniJ personal
Retail Ventures . were not identification numbers ·were
retun)cd Monday'afternoon. ' not ,,mor1g the data obtained.
DSW operates I go stores in ·accord ing to a rckase on
32 states. 108 -of which were DSW's Web site.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Attorney General Jim Petro
filed suit Monday against
Designer Shoe Warehouse ,
nearly three months' after credit and banking information for
1.4 million nf its customers
was stolen.
,
The lawsuit seeks to force
the Ohio-based retailer to contact all customers who were
affected by the breach .
.
In March the com pany discovered .that personal in formation for customers in 25 states
had beei1 stolen from its data'
base.
A , month later, DSW

COLUMBUS State
Repre sentative
Jimmy
Stewart
(R-Athens)
announced Monday the State
Controlling Board approved
funding for a new student
facility at Ohio University in
Alhens.
_.
The approximately $11.4
· million in state assistance
GALLIPOLIS - David L. Woodall, ss: Gallipolis, died will replace the existing
Sunday, June 5. 2005, at his residence.
Baker Student Center. con- ·
· He is survived by two sons, Colin David Nicholai structcd .in 1953, with a bigWoodall and . Kyle David Kristoffer Woodall, both of ger building. With the current
Gallipolis .
Ohio
population
at
· Services · will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Willis University nearing 20.000.
Funeral Home, Gallipolis, with the Rev. Ron Hammond the smaller facility accomofficiating. A burial is planned for Arlington National modating only 8.000 stuCemetery. Friends may call at the ·funeral home from 6 to dents. at most, is in desperate
8 p.m. today.
need of expansion.
"It is part of our responsibility as state legi slators to
help pres~rve the institutions
of higher education through- .
BELPRE - Jonathan Foster Morrison , '19. of Belpre , out our state- that include s
died Saturday, June 4, 2005. as the result of injuries helping colleges and uni yerreceived in an automobile accident.
sities maintain an atmos- .
Services will be held at I p.ni . on Wednesday, June ·8, phere that can support their
2005, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville · volume of students," said
with Evangelist Dan Plum officiating. Burial will follow Stewart.
at Coolville Cemetery.
Plans for 'the new center
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday. include a ballroom. dining
facility and theatre , along
with an additional 300-space
parking lot.. Departments previously housed in the student
center. such as ~ tudent gov" .
NEW HAVEN - Helen Kathleen Berkley, 58, of New ernment, student organizaHaven. died Sunday, June 5, 2005 at Pleasant Valley . tions and · administrative
HospitaL
·
.
·
areas .will remain in the renoFuneral services will tle held l I a.m. Thursday, June· 9, vated
building .
The
at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home. Friends may call University hopes to promote
at the funeral home from 6 to' 8 p.m. Wednesday. Pastor the new 183,000 square-foot
Ron Branch will officiate at the service. Burial will be in student center as a connector
Broad Run Cemetery.
between the upper and lower
E-mail condolences to foglesongtucker@myway.com
campus_areas .

.

meant

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

Obituaries

Shallow (Star rtars' doesn't deserve rave reviews··

Local Briefs

Offer skin tests

Mailed reports

/

t

day by walking to places that
are Jess than a mile from their
home like the post office or
the bank. by parking _the car
flom PageA1
further away ar the supennarket, by taking . the stairs
cise.
Physical
activity
also
'
Coordinator ' · • · Andrew
instead
of. the elevator and
Brumfield helped organize plays a role in both primary
tbe event with the purpose of and secondary prevention of walling after lunch.'
lbe Mai'gs In Motion e\ent
getting residents more physi- cardiovascular disease.
take place rain or shine
will
Physical
inactivity
is
.
a
~yactive.
and
Brumfield
hopes that it .
"We· n: eocooraging peo- major risk factor for heart disple til walk 30 minutes a day ease and stroke and is linked will tum into a walking club
that meets on a regular basis.
at least three times a week.." to cardiovascular mortality.
· -we are encouraging peoHeart
disease
rates
in
Brumfield said. "We want
them to take an iluerest in Meigs County on above the ple to begin walling clubs in
national a\'etage with nearly . their own communities,their own health.46
percenr of all dewhs being Brumf~eld said. '111en maybe ·
The Pomeroy Walling
later on we can meet for a
heart
disease related.
Path is 3 .l miles round-trip
People thai fed like they county-wide event at locaand all !bose panicjpating are
lioos like the walking path or
do
DO( have the time to begin
encouraged to walk it round- .
fairgrounds with prize incena
w~g
habit
can
still
trip to
the futisb line, or
incot:pooile walking into their tives."
to walk as far as they can.
•
-

Motion

cross .

-

-

The American Heart
· Association recommends regular aerobic physical activity
to increase a person's fimess
level and capacity for exer-

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·PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

The Scoreboard, Page B2
, Camps and Clinics, Page B6

Tuesday, June 7, 2005
.,

B1

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE:'

A

,

..

·fiRST OF 2,000 RADIOACTIVE WAsTE SHIPMENlS LEAVE OHIO FOR TExAs
BY

LISA CORNWELL

ASSOCIATED· PRESS WRITER

CINCINNATI - The tirst
of an expected 2,000 ship-.
ments of Cold-war · era
radioactive waste left a former
uranium-processin2 plant in
southwest Ohio for Texas ·on
Monday after neighbors
fought for years to get rid of
the waste and the goven1ment
struggled to find a place to
take it.
Two steel canisters, each
holding about 20,000 pounds
of a .mixture of radioactive
waste combined' with fly ash
and concrete were on the ti rst
truck bOund for the. storage
·site in Andrews, Texas, near
the Texas-New Mexico state
· line. The truck left the longclosed Fernald plant site about
20 . miles northwest of
Cincinnati around noon on its
1.300-mile journey.
"I'm glad it's going," said
Lisa Crawford; president of
the Fernald ·Residents for
Environmental Safety and
Health that has lobbied for 20
years to clean up the site. "But
wherever it goes. it needs to
stay there. W~ don't need to
be playing checkers w,ith it."
· The fernald plant processed

Shipments of the estimated
45 ,000 tons of waste should
be completed within nine or
I 0 months . About I5 truckloads a day will leave f'ernald
at the peak of the shipping
process . said Fluor Fernald
spokesman Jeff Wagner.
A company official is trav"
cling in a car along with the
first· truck to answer qLiestions
that officials of truck weigh
stations might h,ave.
Wagner
and
Dee
Markelonis. vice president of
the Oakridge. Tenn. -based
Visionary Solutions LLC
trucking and logistics company that i.s hauling the waste.
have said that both companies
have taken all necessary precautions.
·
"The 1naterial does not pose
a great risk to humans, and
there are things coming across
the interstates every day that
would be higher up on the
security radar screen than a
radioactive concrete block."
said Wagner.
·Markelonis said that the
trucks will be monitored with
global positioning satellites
and drivers have _constant
access to supervisors.
·•we are handling this as we
handle all radioactive and

ami purified uranium for use
in reactors to produce plutoni~m for 111.1clear weapons from
the 1950s until 1989. Eightyfive percent of the site's other
wastes are to be permanently
stored at Fernald. but the more .
ntdioactive silo wastes being
shiJtped to Tex;rs are part of
the 15 percent to be sent elsewhere under the ci&lt;.;&lt;inup plan.
OITkials
with
Fluor
F ernald. the U.S. Department
of Energy contractor cleaning
up the site. have said that the
waste will not come back to
Ohio. ·
,
Earlier plans to store the
radioactive material in other
states fail ed. Nevada officials
threatened a lawsuit. and resi dents ncar a private waste site
in Utah .also rejected the idea.
While ·environmentalists
have opposed storing the
waste in west Texas, Andrews
officials and residents are
hoping to reap economic benefits.
·
Dallas-based Waste Control
Specialists, which , won the
$7.5 million contract from
Fernald in late April to store
the waste, also has applied to
the Texas Department of State
Health Services for a license
to handle disposal.

Tuesday, June 7, 2005

AmErican LEgion BasEball --- Bth ·District LEg,ion LEaguE
Wednesd~y·s games
Charleston at Mason County, 5:30p.m.
Feeney Bennett at Lancaster JV. 7 p.m.
Thursday's game
Parkersburg ar Feeney Bennett. 6 p.m.
Saturday's gamea
Feeney Bennett at Marietta (2), 1 p.m.
Williamson a1 Mason County, 2 p.m.

·'

Photo
t~ this photo provided by Fluor Fernald. two steel canisters containing radioactiVe waste mixed
with fly ash and concrete, are shown outside Cincinnati, on the. first truck bound for the storage ·
site in Andrews, Texas, near the Texas-New Mexico state line Monday. The truck left the long·
closed Fernald plant s ite about '2 0 m1les northwest of Cincinnati around noon on its journey.
hazardous mate rials ,'' she
said. "Our drivers are trained
·to report things like a car following them .or someone asking lot of questions.''
· The route will run primarily
on interstates and will traveJ

a

DG-20.22
DuPont- 46.72
Federal Mogul-.. 81

USS-29.35 ·

Oak Hill Financial -

27.86
OVB-26.21
BBT-39.80
Peoples - 28.31
Pepsico - 55.77- -

.

MASON, W.Va. - John ·
Blankenship of Gallipolis
recorded the fourth hole-inone of 2005 at Riverside Golf
Club on Sunday. ·
Blankenship used a pitch:
ing wedge on the I 16-yard
No. I4 hole.
·
Thre ace was witnessed by
Mike Ralston of Middleport. ·

Police: 91-year-old teaches pu!'Se snatcher a lesson

Sk run/walk
back in Jackson
.JACKSON . - The Ninth
Annual Jackson County
Sports Festival 5K Run And
Walk will be held on 9 a.m.
Monday, July 4 at Manpower
Park on East Main Street in
Jackson.
The race will be ran throu~h
the business and residential
streets o{ Jackson, and ·the
entry fee will again be $12.
All participating runners will
rece1ve newly designed
Sports Festival T-shirt and all
proceeds from the event will
go toward the cost of putting
on the holiday's activities.
Plaques w1 II be grven to thetop three overall male and
female finishers arid medals to
the top three finishers not
winning plaques in each division for both male and female.
· No pre-registration is
required and registration may
be made the day of the race:
There will be a one-mile
"Fun Walk" starting simultaneously with the SK Run and
those participating in the walk
and wishing to purchase a Tshirt may do so for $10. There
is no cost for the walk and
there will be no awards for the
ivalk.
Those wishing more information on the 5K Run may
· call the Jackson . Area
Chamber Of Commerce at
740-286-2722,

Meigs Chamber
Golf Scramble
•
·1 X 3 GreellncJ

Premier__:_ 10.25
Rockwell- 51.12
Rocky Boots- 30.56
RD Shell ;..:_, 59.~
SBC ...... 23.30
· Wai-Mart- 47.73
Wendy's- 44.87
Worthington - 16.64
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m~ closing
quotes of the'previous
day's transactions, provlcted by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of

G~IHpol{s.'

MASON, W.Va. - The
annual
Meigs
County
Chamber of Commerce Golf
Scramble · will be held
Thursday, June 9 at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason. The
Cournament will feature a
new 'format - a bring you
own partner four- man scramble.
Teams will be paired based
on· two man entries, with a
semi-biind draw for the
remaining two players on the
!earn.
·
Price is $60 per players and
includes lunch, golf, dinner
and cart. Prizes will include
closest to the pin, longest
drive (men and women);
skins game, cash pot. door
prizes and split-the pot.
Registration, lunch, networking, contest begin at
noon, shotgun start at 1 p.m.
and dinner and prizes will
follow the tournament. ·
·
- For more information coniact Erin Roush at 740-9925005
or
e-mail
at

1

...

Only S10.00. ~
.,.,.)

f

Happy
Father's Day
'•

'

Happy
Father's Day

(Your Father's
(Your Father's
.Name)
Name)

Love
(Your Name)
'

Ltd.-21.24
NSC-32.07

records ace

TOLEDO (APJ -· A purse
"He just made me mad," '
a higher risk for suicide.
Nationally, the inmate sui- snatcher picked on the wrong Woodworth said. "! wasn't
really thinking. I just hit him."
"Losing all that which they cide rme is I 3 deaths for 91-year-old. police said.
Woodworth 's
· moves
Katherine Woodworth starthad earned becomes quite a every I00,000 pnsoners ,
ed swinging her purse at 'the impressed SgL Tim Hanus . .
devastation to them, and one Hayes said.
Another woman in the parkreaction to· that might be a
"It 's going to take at least man and hit him until he ran
.suicide attempt," said Hayes, a several-month period of away, police said. He had ing lot noticed the struggle
project director . of the time for all those corrective walked up to her in a depart- and took a description of the
Baltimore-based
National actions to be in place," ment store parking lot suspect's vehiCle and a license
Center on Institutions and Hayes said Monday. .
Saturday afternoon. and told plate nl)mber.
' Alternatives.
"They're not. meant to her that he was going to take
.Police arrested Matthew
· Of the four inmates who eli~inate ·inmate suicides," her purse.
Spradlin, 20, of Walbridge. He
committed suicide this · year, he said, "Every system will
"I didn 't have my hearing also was accused of stealing a
Owens was the only one in have inmate ·suicides, partie- · aid in, and I thought he said purse at a grocery store, where
segregation.
·• ularly a system as large as thaf be was going to take my employees accused him of
At Hayes' recommenda- the state of Ohio. The goal is pulse.,'' she said. "Then he said trying to take a woman's purse
tion, the state in April began ro strive to keep them as low it again that he was going to off her shopping cart. He was
screening all segregated as possible.''
take my purse and I said, ·No. charged with robbery, felony
inmates with previously
Prison officials and the you' re not"'
theft , assault, aggravat~d
identified mental . health . State Highway Patrol are
The small woman with gray menacing, .and possession of
problems, as well as mmates investigating Owens' death.
hair and glasses turned angry. drug paraphernalia.
in protective custody.
·
.
The latter are inmates who
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
fear some kind of harm in
prison. ·
Last month, an inmate at ·
the Correctional Reception
et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone
Center
near · Columbus
hanged himself with · a bed
Very Special With A Father's Day
sheet, and an inmate on
death row ' at the Mansfield
'"'--"
Thank You Tribute ...
Correctional
Institution
' '
hanged himself with a nylon
To
Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
belt that he tied around the
frame of his bunk bed.
On Friday, June 17th!
An inmate at the Warren
Correctional Institution near
Lebanon hanged himself in
February .

Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) . from the east turning from ihe ·
Expecr a humid evening. sduth as the overnight proDamp, with patcy drizzle and .gresses.
fog. The rain should stop by 8
Wednesday, .June 8
p.m. with total accumulations
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
for this event near 0.03 inches.
A humid and cloudy mornTemperatures will fall from 81 ing. Temperatures will climb
early this evening to 69.' Skies from 70 to 83 by late this
will -range from partly cloudy morning . Winds will be 5
to cloudy with 5, MPH winds MPH from the southeast t,umfrom the southeast turning ing fr9m the east as the mornfrom the northwest as . the ing progresses.
Afternoon (I -6 p.m.)
evening progresses·.
'Overnigh't(l-6 a.m.)
,
It 's going to be a humid
It will continue to be humid. afternoon. A few sprinkles are
Temperatures will stay near 67 · possible . Temperatures will
With today's low of 66 occur" hold steady around 85 . Skies
ring around 6 a,m. Skies will will range. from partly cloudy
be mostly clear to partly to ~loudy with S MPH winds
cloudy with 5 MPH winds from the east.

Gannett.....:. 74.15
General Electric 36.61
GKNLY-4.65
Harley Davidson 48.42
JPM-35.51
Kroger - 16.81

Blankenship.

highway bypasses ·around ' Markeloni s said that the
Indianapolis. St. Louis and first shipment could take three
Oklahoma City, The trucks to four days to reach Texas
will enter Texas on Interstate with only one truck driver. If
40 and pass through Amarillo two drivers are used in later
and Lubbock on the w;1y to . shipments that time could be
._ the storage site.
. , · cut to two days.

Local Stocks
. ACI-49.98
AEP-35.92
Akzo-39.65
Ast.l&lt;lnd Inc.;_ 68;29
AT&amp;.T -is.82
BU-12.92
Bob Evans- 23.83
BorgWamer- 52.62
Champion- 4.18
Channing 5tlops - .9
_city Holding- 33.50
. Col-48.96

Sports BriEfs
AP

NewsChannel
lilesday, June 7
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It's going to be a humid
. morning. Temperatures will
rise from 66 to 83 by late this
morning. Skies will be partly
cloudy with · 5 MPH winds
f~om the west.turning from the
east as the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
There could be a sprinkle or
, two. The rain s~ould start by 6
p.m. Temperatures will remain
. around 86 with today· s high of
88 occurring around 3 p.m.
Skies will be partly cloudy to
cloudy with calm turning from
·· the south as the afternoon progresses.

Sunday's games
Athen ~ at Feeney Bennett (DH), 1 p.m.
Barbousville at Mason Co., 2;30 p.m.

/

Prison system reports fourth inmate suicide of year
Owens, serving a IS yearsCOLUMBUS (AP)
Contrary to a· consultant's to-life sentence for murder.
recommendation for helping hanged himself with a bedto prevent suicides, the state . sheet attached to the cell
is screening some but not all door, · said Sgt. Stephanie
inmates entering segregation Norman of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol.
units.
He'd been in segregation
The prison system, which
had I ,507 'inmates in segre- because of a fight with
gation Monday, does · not ~nother inmate last thursday.
The . state placed two
have enough employees to
undertake such a · review, guards at .the prison on paid
officials said.
leave while . investigating
"It's going to be very fair- Owens· death. Dean said
ly staff intensive and we there was evidence the two
don't have the staff to 'be may not have been doing
able to do that," saiq Debbie their jobs. but she would not
Nixon-Hughes, chief of men- elaborate.
tal ,health services- for the Kyle Burdett, 21 , . was
Department of Rehabilitation . htredm ·October and W1lham
Riffle, 31, was . hired in
and Correction.
Four inmates have com- January 2004. Both earn
mitted suicide this year, $30,400. Messages were left
including an inmate in segre- seeking comment.
In a 34-page report
gation . who hanged himself
Saturday. That death, which released last November, conled to 'the suspension of two sultant Lindsay Hayes said
guards, was the latest in a the state has strong suicide
series that included a record prevention measures in place
but made some recommenda11 suicides last year.
Garry Q. Owens, 31, of tions for change. including
Lucas County, was found the screening of all inmates
dead in his segregation cell in segregation.
Hayes said inmates accusSaturday night . at the
Southe91 Ohio Correctional tamed to privileges in the
Facility in . Lucasville,. pris- regular prison population
ons spokeswoman Andrea often suffer a, shock when
disciplined, placing tbem at
. Dean said Monday.

••

Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ._.$10.00

Love
(Your Name)

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

B. 1X5 Greeting with Picture... S13.0Q

Father's Name'---__,•,.,_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

l

erin@meigscounrychamber.c
om

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· Phone·---~----­
Send Coupon and Payment to: The Daily Sen.tinel "Father's Day"
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Contact Information
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Sports Stan

lrMI Shtmteli, Spotta Editor
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'

Post 128 pounds McArthur in league opener
Haislop goe.s for-s,· drives in seve·n runs
4
.
-

BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ing a . threc-ru~ home run. and ·had
seven runs batted in for Post 128 (2-

McARTHUR - Feeney Bennett
Jed by a baker's dozen after three
innings, then kept on cooking during
an 18-1 American Legion baseball
win over McArthur Sunday.
Luke Haislop went 4-for-5, i.lc!ud-

I), which won its second straight. It
was the 8th District opener for FB.
.1 M
h
wh1e
cArt ur (2-1) fell to 1-1 in
the league,
· 1d d ·
FB ' S K en A ms bary ·tnp
e an Sillgled while t,eammate Matt Mooney
had a triple as welL Ross Wei I: Zach

BY BRAD SHERMAN

Haislop and Shaphen Robinson all
added doubles in the lopsided victocy.
McArthur's -lOne run came on a
Ryan &lt;:;ollins solo homer in the ;eyenth frame. The . Wellston product
also doubled. as did Matt Brozack.
Sh h R b'
ap en o I!)SI)n.surrenderedjust
five hits in earning the seventh
inning complete omne victory. The
· '
e;.
. · .. . .
Galha Academy ace was efllc1ent as
he threw just 89 ·pitches, struck out J2
and walked none. ·

Jesse Adams Started and took the .
loss for McArthur. ·
McArthur play host Logan 6 p.m.
Wednesday. Meanwhile, Post 128 is
at Lancaster JV 7 p.n~ .
' Feeney Bennett 18, McArthur 1
FeenoyBenneH . 454 005 o - t8120
McArthur
ooo ooo t - t 56
Shaphen Robinsonand Luke Haislop. Jesse Adams,
. AndyWasch(4), WadeColeman (6). ChnsComer(7)
and Matt Brozak, Ryan Collins 161. WP- Shaphon.
Rooinson. LP -':-Jesse Adams. HR --: FB: Luke
~~:W~:~~::!h~~n•ng two on:M:Ryan Collins, seventh

NBA Playoffs ~ €astErn ConfErf:ncE F inals

BY CHRIS SHERIDAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI _ Larry Brown
walked through !he front
door of the Detroit Pistons'
Packed locker room. scanning the celebration with his
eyes aglow and his smile
wide.
"Where are my guys?';
Brown asked before spotting
Lindsey Hunter and telling
him he loved him, then
working his waY to Tayshaun
Prince and reaching in for a
hand slap.
"That's what we're all
about,'' Brown said.
The pressure of Game 7
didn ' t faze the defending
champions _ not in the
. ht r·
sI)g es · ·
In a deciding game ' that
stayed cl.ose the entire 48
minutes, the Detroit Pistons
summoned their experience
and played with calmness
~od poise down the stretch to
defeat the Miami Heat 88-82
Monday n.ight in the final
game of . the· Eastern
Conference finals.
Now, it's back 10 the NBA
Finals for the te-am often dismissed as a fluke champion
- a disparaging label if
there ever was one, but ·one
the Pistons can shake with
four wins against the San
Antonio Spurs.
.' Dwyane Wade played for
·Miami after missing Game 6
because of ~ rib muscle
inJ·ury, but hg was only good
for brief stretches. He finished with 20 points but didn't score over the final 15
minutes.
"I couldn't be as athletic as
I wanted to be, but I did what
I could do," Wade said.
Richard Hamilton . scored
22 points, Rasheed Wallace
added 20 - including two
foul shots . that put . Detroit
ahead for good with I :26
remaining -' and the Pistons
closed the game with a 10-3
run to hand Miami yet another heartbreaking (lame 7 loss
on its home floor.
"That's wha·t we do'."
Hamilton yelled in a jubilant
locker room, repeating the
phrase over and over, ev~n

after he headed to the showers.
Detroit won for the 1Oth
straight time when needing ·
one ~ictor{to clinch a series.
the second longest such
streak behind the Lukers '
record I 2-game 'run that
ended in 2004 _ The Pistons
· also became the first Eastern
Conference team in 23 years .
to win a Game 7 on the road.
They open the finals
Thursday night at San
Antonio.
·. Shaquille O'Neal led
Mianii with 27 points, but .
the Heat faltered offensively
in the final two minutes with Wade the biggest culprit
when he forced up a 20-footer that missed badly with
1:131eft.
Wallace followed with a
k f ·
putbac o Pnnce's miss to
make it 82-79, and Detroit
went 6-for-6 from the foul
line - . pressure, what . pres~
sure? ~ the rest of the way.
"A lot of laughter and
· shouting," Antonio McDyess
said of the scene in the
Pistons' locker room .in the
·moments after they walked
triumphantly off the court. "I
~~~~sat back and sucked it all
Wade scored 12 points in
the third quarter, but he was
wincing in pain in the game's
final minutes : His basket
with 3:10 left in the third
quarter was his last of the
night.
·
.
Detroit's victory extended
Brown's coaching career for
at least four more games, pitting him against his good .
friend, Spurs coach Gregg
p
·
opovlch, and another dominant big man, Tim Duncan,
in the finals. The Pistons and
Spurs split their season .series
1-1.
"I'm thrilled. It's like a
dream come true. Coming
from where 1 come from,
Coatesville, Pennsylvania,
and now 10 'get the opportuni•ty to play for .my second·
championship at 27, it's a .
great · feeling,"
said
Hamilton, who has scored 20
or more points in ·16 of th.e

Please see

Fln~ls,

B6

!&gt;P photo
Detroit Pistons' Richard Hamilton (32) hugs teammate Lindsey Hunter as Chauncey Billups
(1) celebrates. at right after they defeated the Miami Heat rn game seven of the Eastern
·conierence finals in Miami Monday.

Major LeaguE BasEball- 2005 Draft

D'backs have tough choice with No. 1 pick

.

Upton and a trio of college
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Craig
right-handers
H~nsen
of St. John's,
,
Wichita State's ~ike Pelfrey
NEW YORK The and Luke Hochevar of
Anzona Diamondbacks are Tennessee .
"We get to pick who we
certain that their first No. l
draft pick' will be a major feel is the best player in the
success.
.whole country .and nobody
The Diamondbacks have can take him from us," Rizzo
narrowed their choices to said. "The pick is entirely up
four players, but the hard . to us."
part is deciding which one to
Upton. 'from Oreal Bridge
take to kick off the baseball High School in Virginia, is
draft Tu,esday. .
generally considered the top
"We feel that there is a overall prospect in the draft .
very short list :or guys that Regarded as a five-tool playare impact-quality players," er, Upton CO!Jld join his
scouting director Mike brother B.J., the No. 2 overRizzo said. "And since we all pick by Tampa Bay in
pil:k No. I, we plan on pkk- 2002, as the highest-drafted
set of siblings.
,
ing one of those players ."
The Diamondbacks have
"Justin Upion is a marAP photo
four enticing players to velous athlete and I think he
Justin Upton of Grea} Bridge High School in Chesapeake, VA., reaches for a grounder while ·choose from: Virginia. high
PleaH- DFIIft. H
school . shortstop Justi.ll
playing third base ggalnst Western Branch on ~onday.

.

BY DENNIS WASZAK, JR.

-·--

''

�•

.

.

.

Baseball

Oelro1t at LA Dodgers 1010 pm
Kansas City at San Francisco 10 15 p m

E..t Dl11lalon
WLPctGB

Tampa

Sa~

WLPct
GB
3 750
4 667
746361!

22
26
2B
28

BATTING-Oelee

614
544
51 7
491

4
5,
7

20 37 351
Centr•l Division
W l
Pet

332 Barmes Colorado 329
RUNS-Delee Ch1cago 45

GB

38 19 667
33 22 600
26 29 473
26 29 473
17 39 304
Wnt Division
W L Pet
Te)ij!S
32 23 582
Los Angeles
33 24 579

4
11
11
20 •
GB

:3eattle

24 31

436

a

Oakland

23

411

9

~
l

National League
East r.l1v1ston
v~
l
Pet
Wash•ngton
31 26 544
Atlanta
30 27 526
New York
30 27 526
FIOr~da
28 26 519
Phlladolph a
30 28 517
Central Dlv1slon
WLPct
St LoUIS
37 20 ij49
Ch•cago
30 26 536
Milwaukee
27 30 474
Pittsburgh
26 30 464
Houston
21 34 382
Cmcmnatt
21 35 375
We!lt D1v1sion
W L Pcl
San D•ego
34 23 596
Anzona
31 27 534
Los Angeles
30 27 526
San Franc•sco
24 31 436
Colorado
19 37 339

385

GB

1,
1,

GB
6,
10
10 ,
15
15 ~
GB
3,
4

9

BCtar~

Mi lWaukee 44 PUJOIS St LOUIS 42
BAbreu
Phlladelph a
42
Barmes
Colorado 40 BG1Ies San D ego 40
JKenf Los P,:ngeles 40
RBI-caLee Milwaukee 53 Delee
Chicago 52 JKent Los Angeles 48
PuJols St LOUIS 45 Burrell Phdadelph•a,
45 BAbreu Ph•tadetph a 42 Nev1n San
D1ego 42
HIT5-BCiark M•lwaukee 8 1 Delee
Ch1cago 80 lzh.ms Los Angeles 77
8armes CoiM!Ido 74 Putols St Lou•s
74
Catnera
Flor da
70
BAOreu
Philadelphia 69
DOUBLES-Wilkerson Washrngton 22
MG1Ies Atlanta 19 Counsell Ar zona 18
Calee Milwaukee 17 Delee Ch cago
F BG11es San D•ego 17 CDelgado
Flonda 17
TRIPLES-Reyes New York 7 Holliday
Colorado 4 JWdsan P1Hsburgh 4 P1erre
Flonda 4 Lamb Hauston 4 OAoberls
San D•ego 4
HOME RUNS-Oelee Chicago 17
Dunn Cine nnall 14 PuJOis St Louis 14
Ca~...ee
Milwaukee
14
BAbreu
Ph1ladelph1a 14 Floyd New York 14
Glaus Anzona t 3
PITCHING (6 Oeclslons)-:-Moms St
LOt.IIS 7 0 1 000 3 43 Eaton San Diego
B-1 8B9 3 48 PMart1nez New York 6 t
857 2 62 Rusch Ch•cago 5 1 833
1 96 Willis Flonda 9 2
818 i 85
LHernandez Wash•ngton 8 2 BOO 3 45
Webb Anzona 7 2 778 3 44

14 ,
AMERICA~

Mondays Games
Anzona 10 Philadelphia 8
Baltimore 4 P1Hsburgh 3
L A Angels 4 Atlanta 2
Toronto 4 Cl'lleago Cubs 1
Milwaukee 4 N Y Yankees 3
St LOUIS 7 Boston 1
Chicago White SOli: 9 Colorado 3
LA Dodger~ 5 Detrolt3

TUeadtty'l G8rne1
Oakland (Zito 2 8) at Washlngtot1 (Armas
1 3) 7 0! p m
Seattle (~ Franklin ~·7) at Flo tlda
(Mothler 2·3) 7 05 p m
Baltimore (Penn Q-0) at Pl"sburgh
(D Williams 55) 7 05 p m
Texas (Orese 4 5) at Philadelphia (L•eber
7 4) 7 05 p m
Houston {Oswalt 6-6) at N Y Mets
(?.Martinez 6·1) 710 p 1n
Tampa Bay (HendriCkson 2 3) at
Cincinnati (Ra OrtiZ 1-4) 710 p m
\;
LA Angels (B~rd 5 4) at Atlanta (Ramirez
3-4) 735pm
Toronto {Towers 5-4) at ChiCago CubS
(Rusch 5·1) 8 05 p m
N Y Yankees (Pavano 4 4) at Milwaukee
(Sheets 1 5) 8 05 p m
Boston (Clement 6 0) at St Lou1s
(Suppan 4 5) 6 10 p m
ChiCago White Sox (Contreras 2·2) at
Colorado (K1n1 4) 9 05 p m
Minnesota (Radke 54) at Ar1zona (Estes
4 4) 9 40 p m
Cleveland (Lee 6·3) at San D1ego
(Lawrence 3-6} 10 05 p m
Detroit (Robertson 2 3) at l A Dodgers
(Thompson O..Q) 10 10 p m
Kansas City (Carrasco 1 1) at San
FranCisco (Rueter 2 3) 10 15 p m
Wednesdays Games
Toronto at Chicago Cubs 2 20 p m
Seattle at Florida 7 OS p m
L A Angels at Atlanta 7 05 p m
Oakland at Washington 7 05 p m
Baltimore at P1ttsburgh 7 05 p m
Twcas at Ph1ladelph1a 7 05 p m
Houston at NY Mets 710 p m
Tampa Bay at C1nco•nnat1 7 10 p m
N Y Yankees at Milwaukee 8 05 p m
Boston at St Louis 8 1a p m
Ch~eago Wh1te Sox at Colorado 9 05 p m
Mmnesota at Anzona 9 40 p 111

o

Ch1cago

Cabrera Flodda 347 BCiark M !waukee
336 PUJOIS St lOUIS 333 NJohnson
Washington 333 BAbreu Philadelphia

15

Chteago
Minneso ta
Cleveland
Detro1t
Kansas City

33

TODAY S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE

LEAGUE

BATTING-BAoberts Bait• more 368
CGudlen Detroit 359 Damon B.,oston
348 Tejada B.,l11more 326 A~odnguez
New York 31 7 GAnderson Los Angeles
313 Logan Detroit 311
AUN&amp;-AR odnguez New York 45
ASorlano Te... aa 44 TeiXIJiril Tell:as 43
Damon Boe;ton 42 Tejada Bal1imore 41
BRoberta Baltimore 39 I Suzuki Seattle
39 MVoung Te•aa.. 39 Oelluccl Texas 39
II
RBI-Tejada Baltimore 49 AAodrlgueJ
New York 49 GAnderaon l..oe Angtlll
l 47 DOrtlz Boston 46 Sexson, SeCittlt
44 Teixeira Texas 43 MAamlrez Boston
43
HITs-Damon Boston 79 Tejada
Baltimore 76 BRoberts Baltimore 75
Mora Baltimore 71 ISuzuki Seattle 70
MYoung Texas 70 Teixeira Texas 69
DOUBLE&amp;-Tejada
Baltimore
~8
DOrtlZ Boston 17 !Rodriguez Detroit 17
Matsui New York 16 Blalock Texas 18
G1bbons
Baltimore
16
Bro ussard
Cleveland, 16 ASot•ano Texas, 16 W1nn,
seattle 16 MISweeney Kansas C1ty 16
TRIPLEs-ISuzukl Seattle 6 S1zemore
Cleveland 5 Alas Toronto 5 Figgms las
Angeles 5 BRoberts Bal11more 5 lf108
Detroll 5 DeJesus Kansas City 4
CGu1Uen Detroit 4
HOME RUNS-ARodr1guez New York
17 T91ada Baltimore 16 ASor•ano Texas
15 Konerko Ch1caga 15 Te1x e~ra Texas
14 VWells Toronto 13 Sexson Seattle
13' 00rt•z Boston 13
1 PITCHING (6 Declalona~tement
Boston 6-Q 1 000 317 Buehrle Ch1cago
7 i 675 3 15 OHernandez Ch1cago,6 1
957 4 15 Park Texas 6 1 857 5 09
Bedard Baltimore 5 1
833 2 08
Garland C h1ca go 9 2
818 3 4'b
Hallada~ Toronto 9 2 818 2 45

I

1

9
8

Kalamazoo
Rockford
River City
Gateway
W1ndy C•ty
Mld·MIS50Un

5

s

Chillicothe
Florence
Washmgton
Evansville
OhiO Valley
RIChmond

Weet Division

4
4
7~

Monday • Games
Mid MISSOUri 12 Gateway 7
A1ver City 10 Kalamazoo 5
OhiO Valley 16 Florence 8
R1chmond 6 Chillicothe 2
Rockford 4 Windy City 2 10 mnmgs
Evansv1lle 11 Wash1ngton 7
Tuesday' a Games
No games scheduled
Wednesday s Games
Chillicothe at OhiO Valley
F arence at Wash ngton
Mid MISSOUII at Kalamazoo
Rockford al Evansv1lle
Wmdy Crty at Gateway

South AtlantiC League
First Half
North Division
WLPctGB
Hagerstown (Me t s~
36 22 621 Lexmgton (Astros}
35 23 603 1
Lake County (tm:llans) 33 25 569 3
Greensboro (Marl ns) 27 29 482 8
Delmarva (Or•oles)
25 33 431 11
H•ckory (Pirates)
21 34 382 13 1
Lakewood (Phl lhes )
19 38 333 16 ,
West V•rg1ma (Brewers)t9 38 333 16 ,
South Division

W t

Charleston (Yanks)
39
Augusta (Giants)
33
Asheville (Rockies)
:31
Aor e.e (Braves)
31
Kannapolis (Wh1te Soll:)29
Greenvill e (Red Sox) 27
Savannah (Nationals) 27
Columbus (Dodge rs} 23

Pet GB

18
?2
25
26
29
29

684
600
554
544

500
482

30 474
34 404

5
7,
8
10 1
11 1
12
16

Mondays Games
Asheville at Columbus ppd ra1n
Augusta 5 Kannapolis 3
Charleston S C at Rome ppd ram
Lake County 16 Delmarva 7
Greensboro at Greenville ccd rain
lexmgton 7 Hagerstown 4
Savannah 7 HICkory 3
West V1rgima 7 Lakewood 7 11th mnlng
suspended rain
Th••d•y'• o.m. .
Asl'1avllle at Augusta
Columbus at Greensboro
Delmarva at Lakewood
Greenville at Hickory
Kannapolis at Charleston S C
lake County at Hagerstown
lexington at West VIrginia
Rome at Savannah
Wedneeday 1 Gamts
Asl'levllle at Augusta
Columbus at Greensboro
Delmarva at Lakewaac;t
Greenv1!1e at Hlclc;ory
Kannapolis at Charleston S C
Lake COunty at HagerstoWn
lexington at West Virg•n•a
Rome at Savannah

International League
North Divlelon

WLPctGB
35 22 614

Buffalo (Indians)
Pawtucl&lt;et (Red Sox) 31 26
Ottawa (Onoles)
29 26
Rochester (TwlflS)
30 28
S~racuse (Blue Jays) 25 32
SCranton WB (Ph1llles) 24 31
South Division

Norlolk (Mats)
Durham (DeVIl Rays)

544 4
527 5

517 5 t
439 10
436 10

WLPctGB
32 27 542
27 32 458 5
21 37 362 10 '
18 38 321 12 '

A1chmond (Braves)
Charlotte (White SOx)
Weet Olvltlon
lndiBnapohs (Pirates)

WLPctGB
7 5 583
7 5 583
7 5 583
6 6~ soo 1
5 7 417 2
4 8 333 3

417
417

110091

Frontier League
East Division

7
7

Toledo (Tigers)
Columbus (Yankees)
lOUISVIlle (Reds)

WLPctGB
35 22 :614
33235891 .
33 25 569 2 f~
27 31 466 8 ~1

Syracuse 9 lOUISVille 5
Pawtucket 3 Richmond 0
Norfolk 1 Rochester 0
ScrantonWIIkes Barre 10 Toledo 9
Tueldey'l G1mt1
Buffalo at Syracuse i st game
Buffalo at Syracuse 2nd game
Charlotte at Louisville
Durham al Norfolk
lnd•anapohs a1 Scran torrW1Ikes·8arre
Ottawa at Columbus
Pawtucket at Toledo
Rochester at A1chmand
Wednesday 1 Games
Buffalo at Syracuse
Charlot1e at Lou-.v•lle
Durham at Nortolk
Indianapolis at Scran tanW•Ikes Barre
Ottawa at Columbus
Pawtucket at Toledo
Rochester at RICh!T)ond

Tuesday, June 7,

WESTERN CONFERENCE

WLTP1sGFGA
New England
6 0 4 22
Ch•cago
6 5 1 19
Kansas City
4 2 5 17
MetroStars
4 3 4 16
DC Un1ted
3 4 3 12
Columbus
3 6 1 10
western Confarem:e

NBA PII!VOH Glance
jBeal-ol-7)

EASTERN CONFERENCE
M•am•
M1am1
M1am1
M1am1

IBest-ol-7)

Monday, May 23
Detroit 90 Mlamf81
Wednesday, PJjay 25
Miami 92 Oetro~t 86
Sunday, May 29
M~am• 113 Detroit 104
Tueedey, May 31
DetrOit 106 M1am1 96
Thuraday, June 2
Miami 8B Dett'Oit 16
Saturday, June 4
DetrOit 91 M1am1 66
Monday June 6
DetrOit 88 M1am1 82 DetrOit WinS senes 1

FIRSf ROUND
Miami 4 New Jtruy o
116 New :Jersey 98
104 New Jersey 87
lOB New Jersey 105 20T
110 New Jersey 97

[)atro!t 4 Philadelphia 1
Detroll 106 Phlladelphl8 65
Detro11 99 Philadelphia 84
Philadelphia i 15 DetrOit 104
Detroit 97 Ph1ladelph•a 92 OT
, Detroit 88 Ph1ladelp~•a 78

20 15
17 11
12 t~
7
17

G •llu C oun

7
6

3
3
2
1

3
6
7
9

5
2
2

2

14
11
8
5

14
8
11
12

14

17
18
29

Joachim

Burkett,

Deceaald
Plaintiff

v.

Frank L Cox, Jr., el al
Defendants
Notice by Publication
CueNo.33098
To: The Unknown
Hairs, Next of Kin,
Spouses, Devisees,
Legatees,
Administrators ~

Executors,
Succeuora
and
Aoslgns of Nicholas
Price,
Elizabeth
Jones Price, MlcM81
Prlca, Evan Price,
Maude Price, May

•

Price, Estella Price,

Daisy Price, Peter
Joachim, Elizabeth
Joachim,
Sauvage
Catherine Joachim,
Elmer W C Joachim,
Marg41ret
Emma
Joachim,

Emma

Margaret Bachman,
Marg41ra!
Emma
Morgan,
Emma
Margaret
Rose,
Charla a P: J Joachim,
Frank
Theodore
Joachim, John Philip
Joachim,

Kenneth

Bachman,
John
Bachman, Betty Jane
Bachman, Betty Jane
Wilkinson aka Batty
Jane Wllklna, Edllh
Morgan, Edith Cox
James
Douglas
Joachim,
John
Randolph Joachim,
Garrett C. Joachim ,
Ruth
Joachim
Gardner, Phyllla Mae
Joachhn, .!9hn Phillip
Joachim, Jr, whoM

nam•• and addreu·
" era unknown.
You are hafeby notl·
fleet thai you hava
liNn
named
Oefllndanta In lht
entitled Velma
llua, Admlnlatratrlx
Wlllt Will Annexld of
the
lbtata
of
lllulllth
Maude
Joaohlm
Burkalt,
Dtoalaed, Plalnlllt,
l'rank L. Cox, Jr., 11

.aon

I

al , Defendants This
hat bien
action
assigned Case No
33098, and Ia pending
In the Probale Court
of Meigs County,
Ohio Tha object of
the
Complaint
demands the Court to
delermlne who are
entitled by the laws of
the State of Ohio to
the next slate of
lnherltanca
and
delermlne the share
lo which each Ia entltlld according to the
statutea
In auch
Cities made and provided and for such
other relief as the
Court may determine.
You are required ta
answer the Complaint
within twanly-alght
(28) days alter the
last publication of lhe
Notice, which will be
published once each
w- lor six (6) aucceaslve weeks The
last publication will
be made on lh&amp; 14th
day of June, 2005,
and lhe lwenty-alght
(28) deys lor answer
will ' commence on
thai date. In the case
of your failure, to
anawer or otherwise
respond as requetted
by the Ohio Rules ol
Civil Procedura,judg·
ment by default will
be rendered against
you and lor the relief
demanded In the
Complalnl Dated this
2nd day of May, 2005
(5) 10,17, 24, 31, (6) 7,
14

orders);
tho Issuance, denial,
modification or revo·
cation of licenses,
permits, leases, varl·
ances, or certlflcatea;
and tho approval or
disapproval of plana
and spoclflcatlona
'DRAFT ACTIONS"
are written statements of lhe director

emergency

•

of

Environmental

Prolecllon ' a
(Director's) Intent
wllh respect to the
Issuance, delllal, ole.
of a permit, license,
order, ate lnterastld
persons may submit
wr•tten comments or
request a public
meeting regarding
Draft
Actions
Commenls or publlc
meellng
requests
must be submitted
within 30 days of
nollce of the Draft
Action "PROPOSED
ACTIONS" are written
statements of the
dlrector"s inion! with
lhe
respect
to

Tuesday May 24

Monday, May 30

I

Phoemx 1 11 San AntoniO 106
Wednesday June 1
San Anton•o 101 Phoenix 95
Antonio w1ns series 4 1

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

TranSactions
Monday's Sports Transactions

San

Issuance,

denial,

modification, revocation, or renewal of a
permit, license, or
Written
variance
comments
and
requests tor a public
meeting regarding a
proposed ectlon may
be submitted within
30 days of notice of
the Proposed Action
An sdjudlcallon hearIng may be held on a
proposed action If a
hearing requeat or
objection Ia received ,
by the OEPA wllhfn 30

MAJOR

Ra.duced the suspension of Tampa Ba~
RHP Lance Carter from live games to
(Boot-ol-7)
three Suspended minor league LHP Angel
Sen Antonlg Y' Pttm!t
Rocha of Arizona INF Marlo Delgado ol
Thurwday, June 8
Baltimore AHP Fellli Romero of Boston
Detroit at San Antonio 9 p m
and LHP David Smith ofToronto 15 games
Supdoy, Juno 12
for vlolallng the minor league drug preven·
Detroit at San Antonio 9 p m
tion and treatment program
Tu11d1y, June 14
Amerlcen Luaut
San Antonio at Oetroll 9 p m
TEXAS RANGER9-Purcfiased the con
Thurwd1y, June 11
1 tract of LHP Michael TeJera fro m Oklahoma
San Antonio at Detroit 9 p m
of IM PCL Opt1oned 11HP Nick Aegllio to
Sunday, June 18
Oklah oma lransferred RHP Carlos
San Antonio at Detroit 9 p m If neces
Almanzar h'om the 15 to the 6Q-day Dl
sary
National league
ru ..dly, June 21
ATLANTA BRAVES-Placed 3B Chipper
Detroit at San Antonio 9 p m 11 neces
Janes on the 15 day DL Called up 38
sary
Andy Marie from Richmond of tl'le IL
Thurwdey, June 23
COLORADO ROCKIES-Placed SS
Detroit at San Antonio 9 p m It neces
Clint Barmes on the 60 da~ DL and C Todd
sary
Greene on the 15·da~ DL Purchased the
WNBA
contracts of INF Ttm Olson and C Danny
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ardoin !rom Colorado Sprmgs at the PCL

Sen Antonio 4, Dtnytr 1
Denver 93 San Antonio 87
San Antonio 104 Denver 76
San AntoniO 86 Denver 76
San AntoniO 126 Denver 115 OT
San Antonio 99 Denver 89
S.lltlt 4. Sacnmento 1
Seattle 87 Sacramento 82
Seattle 105 Sacramento 93
Sacramento 116 Seanle 104
Seanle 115 Sacramento 102
Seattle 122 Sacramento 118

WLPct
GB
4 0 1 000 • -

DetrOit
Connscticut
Indiana
New York
Wash1ngton
Charlotte

Dallll 4 Houeton 3
Houston 98 Dallas 86
Houston 113 Dallas 111
Dallas 106 Houston 102
Dallas 97 Hcus1on 93
Dallas 103 Houston 100
Houston 101 Dallas 83
Dallas 11ti Houston 76

3
4

1
2

750
667
400

2 3
2 4
1

5

1
1

333

2 12
3

167

4

WLPct

4
4
4
3
2
1
I

Houston
Sacramento
Seattle
Los Angeles
M1nnesota
Phoemx
San Anton1o

(Boal-ol-7)

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Mjamj 4 WJahlngton g
Mram1105 Wasl11ng1on 86
Mlam1108 Washington 102
M1am1 102 Washmgton 95
M1am 99 Washmgton 95

f

800
800
800
500
400
167
143

1
I
3
3
5
6

\ '&lt;'Ol
030

PCL

1740)446 7595

.J

ARIZONA CARDINALs-Named Malik

I

Sunday's Game
New York 61 Was1'11ngton 58
Monday'• Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday a Gamea
Seattle at Connect•cut 8 p m
Washmgton at San Antonio B p m
Minnesota at Houston 8 30 p m

Boyd and Don Corzme college scouts
S1gned FB Harold Morrow to a one year
contract
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Named Randy
Mueller g"'neral manager

'

• NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-8igned S
Antuan Edwards

WASHINGTON

REDSKINS-Signed

WR Enc Dyson Promoted Enc Schaffer te
dlfector of football administration

daya of laauance of
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The
following
application• and/ or
verified complaint•
were recalvld, and
lhe following draft,
propoaect, or final
actlona wera latuect,
by
the
Ohio
Envlronmtnlll
Protection
Agancy
(OI!PA) lao! WHk
" AC1'10NI" lnoludt
the adopllon , modlfl·
cation, or rapeel of
ordtra (oyter than

the propoald action
Written commenta ,
roqu..ts lor public
mHtlnga, and adjudl·
cation
hearing
roqu..ta mual Ill
aent lo: Hearing
Clark, Ohio
l!nvlronmanlll
Protection Agencl,
lox
104 ,
PO
Columlllla, Ohio
43211-1041
(TalaphoM: 114-M4212t).
' "I'INAL ACTIONI"
art tctlont of lht
director which art

on your home delivered
't . subscription!

.. --------------- ---- ---. --------Subscriber's Name

Address

Wu--

Draft ,.rmH to lntlall·
Subject to ravltlon 1

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

•alltpolt• JBatlp Qtrtbune ·
~oint t)lea•ant B..egi~ter
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.

'
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- .
. C1ty/State/Zip

1-lcatlon No.· Ol-

Route 7.

.

Senior Discount*

Facility Deacrlptlon:

0773e
Thla final lctlon not
praoedtd by propolld lOtion and Ia
appMitble to IRAC.
Ontlte Waatewatar
Treatment and dlt·
poaal tyatam tor
lethal
Worthlp
Canter II H712 llate

..

If so, you qualify for a

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FOR YOU!!
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'

Phone
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Mall or drop
with a oopy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley P~bllehlng P.O. •ox 4811, Qalllpolla, OH 48831

••
I
1
I

·-- .--------~-------·-----------~'
-·-~

~

-

675·52,34

Oeaclt;,u-

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added tO")-our classified ads
{~
!r1'l
Borders $3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally In-Column 1 00 p m .
Monday- Friday for Insertion
Jn Next Day s Paper
Sunday In-Column 1 00 p m
Friday For Sundays Paper

All Display 12 Noon 2
Buslnll!!iss Days Prior To

Publication
Sunday Display 1 00 p m
Thursday fo r Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepatd'

1

P~,;:~:~~,~;;~ i~:ii;:~;,P;ubllsh1ng ruervl!!ls lhl!!l ngh t

to l!!ld t rej!!d or csncl!!ll 111ny 11d !!I any 11ma Errors must bl!!l r!!ported on the first day ot pubhcat1on and

T1
Will be respoF!elble lor no more than the cost of th e apace occupied bV the error and onlv lhe hr111 Insertion We shall no1 be llabl~
any \osa or expen se
res ults from the pubhcaUon gr omlsa1on of an adv•rtieement Correction w1ll be made m the f1rat available ad1t1on • Box number
are always confidential • Curr!!nl rate card appii!!S • AI! real eslale advertisements are s ubJect to th e Fl!!lde ra l Fa1r Hous ng Act of 1968 • nus
accepts only help wanted ada m&amp;etlng EOE standards We Will not knowingly accept any advert1smgln violat ion of the law

"""P''P" I

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

180

WAN'Illl

YARH S" EI'OMEROYIMIIllli.E

&amp; Rollins

4th
New Have n
Duncans Res June 8th &amp;
9th come &amp; check I out

-J&gt;-~~

~ISAS-;-~ouo;;

'Sif?.AW

J&lt;.EiSUL.-T5

Of'

Oh o Valley Eng1ne Repa1r
Lawn mowers small eng1ne
repalf Sales and serv1ces
281 Grate Road Patnot OH
45658

lwnght@1c net

S sters will clean your
House or watch the Elderly
PO box 722 Poca WV
25159

110

HEll' W.wrELl
Stand ng I mbe r Wanted to
cut G ve us a call (740)645
7203 leave a message

.

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cra fts
wood 1tems
To $480/wk
Matenals prov•ded
Free lnformatton pkg 24 hr
801 428 4649

II '\\'\( 1\1

10

1--

'

Expenence operating equ p
men! &amp; extra sk !Is such as
weldtng a pl us
Call (304)937 34 10

www com1cs

h8rd worker who IS able to
muJt task Fax resumes to
740 594 2270 by June 17
2005
Now Hmng O~rect Care
Stall Apphcat•ons w II be
taken from 8 00-4 OOp m at
Middleton Estates 8204
Carla Dnve Gall polls OH
45631 No Phone Calls
Please

Nursmg Ass•stant Classes
begmmng June 13th thr u
June 29th 11you enjoy eldfff
I~ people and
want to
become a member of our
health care team please
stop
by
Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center at
36759 Rockspnngs Road
Pomeroy Oh a 45769 and fil l
out an application for the
classes
Health
E xtend1care
Eniatt
Serv1ces Inc Is an equal
garcOdlrecway com
opportun ty employer that
EOE
encourages
workplacs
Help Wantad
dtvers1ty. MIF DfV
Waitress bartender lull or ;:.;.::.::;;:;.;;;.;..:;..;__ _...,
part time will tra•n Apply at
JencM Inn 304-675 4167

LPN
A tead1ng prov•der of sup
port serv1ces to 1nd•V•dua!s
w1th mental retaraanon and
developmental diS&amp;b!lltleS Is
laokmg tor a lull time and
part t1me LPN s m the
GallipoliS area An Equal
Opportunity
EmplOY!'
F!MIDN For more nforml
liOn call Dorotl1y Harper

(740)446 7148

•

~

lf1', Openmgs for 2 Par
ITtme Kennel Workers a

~~cal

Ammal
Shel~~~
lt"'lease call {304)675 64~
or mare 1nlorm~it~n
•

com

All real estate advert1srng
rn th1 s newspaper 111
subject to the Federal
Fair Housmg Act of ~968
wh•ch makes 1t riiegal to
advert•se any
preference l1m1tabon or
dlscrlmmat1on based on
race color religion sex
lam11ial status or nat1onal
or1gin or any 1ntentron to
make any such
prelerence hm1tat•on or
dlscrlmrnallon

IUUHN

~BOGRAM ~=;~~~;:;~

Paramed cs
&amp;
EMT s
needed Apply at 1354 VACANCIES
DIRECTOR and CLINI CAl
Jackson P1ke Gall poll s

DIRECTOR o! RESPIRATO

BY___CAB.f (Buckeye H•ls
Career Center &amp; A1o Grande
Commumty
College)
Reqwements RRT BS 1n
AT .or re lated field Current
L cense wrth Oh10 State
Board of Resp1ratory Care
Two yoars cl n cal expen
ence Send resume by June
15 Sharon Cantuchael
Buckeye
H1lls
Career
Center PO Box 157 A1o
Grande
OH
45674
(740)245 5334 EEO
Wanted Someone to Haul
awey old th1ngs to landfill

~

HI'IIO fl(;f, **

~}a )'OU worry.._abO ut the

h.Jiure of y-our job ?
Do you feel bke you are not
appreciated?

This newspaper w1ll not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which IS m
vlglat1on of the taw Our
readers are hereby
tnformed that all
dwellings advertrsed m
th1s newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity ba ses

0 VISIOn 0
lnS!IIUIIOn
ff1ce
of
Consume
ffa rs BEFORE you ref1
nance your home a
bta1n a loan BEWAR
f requests for any iarg
dvance payments o
ecs or 1nsurance Cal
he Offtce of Consume
ffa rs toil free at 1 866
7B 0003 to Jearn f lh
ortgage
broker
o
ender
IS
proper
IC ensed (ThiS IS a publ

Duple)( each w th 3 BR LR
DR K1tchon Bath &amp; Porch
House 3 BR LR Kitchen
Bath
Both rn Pont
P1oas anl
(304)675 2495
alter 7 OOpm

(304)675 2157
150

Smno1.~
(NS'l'HliCIION

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740 446-4367
1 800 214 0452
www gal 11)01 n:areercol oga com
Ace ed led Member Accred I ng
Co1.1n~1 lo
Independent Col ages
and Schools 1?746

W\i'fi'Fn

To no

J'ROH~WlN"

SEI!IIU$
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We W1nr

wwworv .com
Home Listings
Us! your home by cal1ng

(740)446 3620
V ew photoslmfp onl ne

o o Down 3 bedroom 1
/4 bath UR 0 /R FIR
ar garage fenced 1n
ack yard 1/2 ac re
lose to town S 132 500
ode 4505 or call
740 446 8325

320

Grea 1 H ouses at Great
Pnces• We have 2 homes n
the Gallrpol1s and Rutland
areas WE FINANCE' NO
CLOSING
COST
NO
POINTS'
Contact N1ck.
Huffman @
1 BOO 333
69 10

1997 14x65 Prem1er 2 bed
room 1 bath all Electr c
Exc Cond Lots of extras
$ 11 000 (304)675 758B or

(304)553 37 15

1997 16x80 Oakwoo d 3
BOA 2 bath vandalized
needs
'o'.Ork
(740)441 7641

$9 200

1998 t6x80 Skyline 3
Bedroom 2 Bath Sh•ngled
Roof
V nyt
S d ng
Appliances [304)675 7772
or (304)674 5575
2000
Fleetwood
front
k1tchen model w1th sk1rtmg
and centra a•r W II deh~er
Ve ry clean t BOO 837 3298
94 Clayton Norns t4 70
total eiectnc 2BR 2BA
v1n~l sk rt ng 2 decks heal
pump
$14 ooo
OBO
(740)388 8739
99 Holly Park Gienmoor 3
BR 2 bath v1nyl/ sh1ngle
R10 Grande already set up
or can be moved S11 1300

(304)633 6536
Handyman spec•ai 14~70
w/expando S 1 000 OBO
P40)446 7738
New 14x60 only $198 73
per rna Includes complete
set up and delivery 740
385 2434

t 868 582 3345

New 3 BD 2 Bath Home SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock models at old pnces
2005 mode s arnvmg Now
Coles
Mdb le
Homes
10
385 9948
Hn~w,'i
15266 US 50 East Athens
tuRSAL[
New 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Oh10 45701 (740 )592 1972
Get Your
·
Home on 1 1+ acres @ Where You
S59 000 New Haven 2 800 Leon
Stocked Pond C ty Money s Worth
sq II Log Cab1n as IS w/3 5 Water New Sept1c System
acres Call M ke (513)314 Ready to move m call !Qr
~754
appt (304)475 4429

Ill II I.S II H

Only 198/mo Includes ale
del•very and set up 740

L,--,j,iiiii.iiiiiiiiii-_.1

DHK
Cleanmg
&amp;
Powerwashmg Can I Keep
Up Your To Do 1sr too 81g?
let Us HELP You I We 11
EOE
~ Clean R Up &amp; Get A Dor,1e
--------~ We
d0
Ali
SECURITY &lt;:
Restdent1ai1Bus ness
PROFESSIONALS
t /2ba
Inside / Outside
23br Home
NatiOnal security llrm seeks Da1 yiWeeklyfMonthly 740 Hardwood Floors Totally
PART TIME employment rn 985 3639 or 740 416 1823
Remodeled (304)593 2532
the Apple Grove WV area
or {859)245 7454
Qualified appliCants mus t
Expenenced Home Health
be at least 21 years old HS Care g1ver W!ll Sit w1th 3 Bedmom
1 Bath
d1ploma/GED no cnrnmal
Elderly
Contact Knsllna Remodeled Full Basement
record &amp; pass drug test
Harbour (304)576 2495
Appliances
mcluded
WE OFFER
OutbUiidmg g 24FT Pool
Exterior
/
Pa mtlng 186 Park Drve (304)675
Excellent pay
Expenenced Reasonable 7460
FREE healthcare
ratt~s Refe rences For Free
Life Insurance
Est1mates call 740 645&lt;&gt; 3BA
Matching 401 (k)
1BA Ranch style
2638
Free un1forms
house ocated 6 m11es past
Tut10ns assistance
Georges Portable Sawmill Holzer hospital on At 160
Awards/bonuses
don t haul your logs to 1he (740)388 9263
Call t 866 325 4150
mill JU St call 304 675 1957
between 9AM &amp; 5PM M F
7 H omes under $14000
to schedule an Interviews
Wtll clel1ver 740 385 4367
HL Construction
EOE
Metal Aool ng &amp; Shmgles
Attention!
Concrete work
becks
Pam!lng lnteflor &amp; Extenor t.,ocal company otter•ng ~No
STABILITY! II
Pale
Ba rns
Garages DOWN PAYMENr pro

(304)895 3720

New 3 BR 2 Bath Sect•onai Mercerv11e area 47 acres
On y
249/mo barn 2B tt camp1ng tra•ler
Home
Includes AIC delivery ~ appro:.; 15 acres fenced
s_•.c•u.:p~7_4_0_3_8_5_7_6_7_1--,,--- great hunting area AdJOined
New 3 BA Home Only 10 000 acre Crown C•ry pub
~ 991 mo Includes ale del v l1c hunt1ng area Pnce
er~

and set up 740 385
4367

740 992-5805
We offer
•Up to 48/hr w ith no eliperl
ence

• Payment could be the •
same as rent
Mortgage
locators
(740 l 992 7321

- - - - - - -Owner relocating 0°o down
Must see th 1s mmacu tate

Call Todayl

Brand New Method
Dry In i Hour
No Steam-or Shampoo
Free Est1mates
...Clearly Clean• ..

~-877..a3-6247 ext 2457

304 75-0022

$74 900

Hood

~ealty

Company
Cali
Paul
(304)736 0710 or (304)522
No Down Payment even 6252 Jet! Hood Broker
wtlh less than perfect cred t
on lh•s 3 bedroom 1 bath P1oneer Farms•ead 4 bed
home 1n Middleport Corner room reconstructed hewed
tot carport wrap around Log House modern tacli1
2
hewed
log
porch lanced •n yard base t•es
Outbu
id•ngs
57
acre
ment pa~ment same as
Chnstmas
Tree
Farm
rent 740 992 6300
25 000 moretless trees 27
No Down Payment ts.poss
acr~s matLtre
hardwood
ble on this beautiful 3 be&lt;J tree mach1nery mmerals
room 2 bath home 2 car county wa1er 1/2 mr e pa~ed
S265 000
garage Deck overlookmg road lronta~e
beaut ful VIeW F1ve Po1nts (304 )675 4138
grams tor you to buy your :":.:'"::":.:1_:_7_:_40:cl.:99:.:2:_6:_6:.:6_:_7_ __ www landandfarm com

nome mstead ol renting
Ready to move m 3 SA
I w1tl care far your laved one
• 100% t nancmg '
Home •n country settmg only
1n my heme Call (740)388 • Less than per1ecl cred1t 198/mo w1th 10 01o dawn
0118
accepted
74o-385 4367

Wtry not begrn a career w th I Will clean houses or afllc~s
a stable employe r that
Aelerences available For
values the hard work
tho best tn cleanli ness call
you da"'
Malinda at 304 531 1794 or

Overbrook Center •s cUrrent
ly accept ng apphcat1ons for
•Med1CaV401(k)
LPN s Al l SHIFTS 11 It you
•P&amp;Id VaCQtiOnsfholrdays/
are mterested please--eome
tra1n1 ng
m and hll out an '\pphcallon
at
333
Page
Streef

Middleport Oh EOE

NG CO recommei'Kls tha
au do bus•ness wrth peo
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
a•l until you have mvesl•
ated the offerm

MONfY

a esperson nee e
Expenenced 1n sales an
ardware App y 1n person
hOmas Do It Center
all1 ol1s Oh•o

Hml b~
lOR SAil

1979 Homette 12X50
2
Bedrooml t Bath gas sell
coni ow cond t oner
Will
ren1 fo r $265 00 a month or
sel for $3 495 00 740 385
4019

110

McClure s Restaurant now
hmng all locat1ons lull or
Pill time piCk up apphca
lion at ocat1o11 &amp; brmg back
SECURITY
10 ooam
&amp;
Due to recent changes n between
PROFESSIONALS
Monday thru
coverage area Med! Home 1 1 OOam
N at anal secunty f1rm seeks
Health Agency IS seek1ng a Saturday,
PAR"f.TJME employment m
h ghly mot1va1ed mdepend
ant lull lime Reg ister ed N1ght Sh1fi Cook 35 40 hr the Apple Grove WV area
Nurs e to manage/serv1ce per wk 18 or older p1ck up Quai l1ed appl icants must be
cl1ents out ot our Gall polls application at Oa1ry Queen at least 21 years old HS
No
Phone d1ploma/GED no cnmmal
olf1ce Must be licensed 1n M1ddleport
record &amp; pass drug test
Calls
II
both Oh1o and West V1rg1ma
WE OFFER
We ofler a compet1t1ve
Elicellent pay
Not
your
average
med•cal
salary benefits package anti
401 K E 0 E Please send office JOb• Off•ce support FREE hea thcare
·Life Insurance
resume to 352 Second Avs personnel needed tor proMa.tch•ng 401(k)
gressive
Optometnc
pract
ce
Gallipolis OH 45631 or call
Free lJnlfarms
1 800 481 6334
Attn 1n Athens Learn the essen
Twt on assiStance
I
a
l;;
ot
pat1ent
care
wh
•le
Audrey Farley AN
Awardsfhonuses
us tng your computer know1
1 866 325 4150
Established Healing Cooling edge typing and phone et1 Call
Company m Galha County quette skills We are look ng between 9am &amp; Spm M F to
lookmg lor expenenced for a canng self mot•vated schedule an 1nterv•ew

Green Acres
Regional Center, lne
Has an Immediate
opening fOf Treatment
Instructor
Jab Aeqwements
H1gh School diploma or
GED 8QUIV81en1
Full time poSitions avaMaDie
Working w1th MRIDD adults
m Vaned settmgs
Send reauma or
Interest laHar to
Green Acrea Regional
Center Inc
Attention Pe ...onnel
PO Box 240
L•ng• wv 25537
Fax 304·782·2862

BUSINf.'&gt;S

Bnck Ranch B•dweiVPorter
Rt t60 near school gro
eery store and gas stat10n
3 bed rooms all electnc 2
1/2 ba lhs kitchen w th nook
pantry d1sposa m1crowave
great room w1th slone/gas
f1rep ace formal 01nmg room
wrth
bay
w ndow
study oHrce w th walk m
closet Master bedroom and
bath Wi th 2 walk n closets
Whirlpool tub shower and
dual s nks Enclosed back
porch 2 car garage 20x40
1n ground pool oak wood
work new roof landscaping
pius AJC heal Adtacent land
approx 4 5 acres ava1fable
$179900 Cal (740)446
93 12

•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH

PT F1scai Officer Income
Tax Admm1 strator Village of
A la Grande PICk up ap phca
Mn at V1llage Hall 174 E
College or fax resume w1th
rel erences to (740)245
1704 Applicat on deadline
noon June 14 Account1ng
exper ence reqwed

10

IUR S11 I

01'1'0R11.NITY

r

mstallers and techniCians lr
mterested send resume to
CLA Box 566 cJo Gallipolis
Tnbune PO Box 469
Galhpohs OH 45631

Ho"f-~

A

Stlo ~TA&lt;4€

Commun l y yard sa les June ------~-10th and 11 th 9AM 5PM An Excellent way to earn
Tuppers Pia1ns Oh10
money The New Avon
(304)675 4920
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
Hu.ge 3 Fam11y Sa te Adult
JJ)I;I \Nil
K1d &amp; Baby clothes stroller AVO N• All Areas. To Buy or
FoUNil
walker h•gh cha1r toys Sell
Sh rley Spears 304
etc
lurmlure gall clubs &amp; 675 1429
6 k1ttens io a good home bag Play Hut Sw1ng set
Cell (740)440 261 1
Play House &amp; much more Comm•ss•oners are taKmg
Ra1n or Shine•• 0 Bnens
resumes lor a full t1me Dog
FoL nd Class R1ng Call to 48040 Adams Road letart
Warden The JOb w II beg n
" 1D 740 ~92 3\12
Fal ls Oh o Thursd ay Jun e •mmed1ate v Anyone Inter
Managers Pes t•on
9 2005
ested may subm1t resume to
Found L1t1 e Beagle dog on
Oll1ce
lombieson Run Ad May Yard Sale June 8 9 Bes•de CommiSSIOners
A local Athens electncat diS
wh1
ch
IS
located
on
the
3rd
25th (304)895 3980
Me1gs H1gh School
lnbutor 1s looking lor an 1nd1
floor of the Me1gs County
Vidual who can sup erv se
Cour lhouse
and develop others prov•de
•
exceptional customer serv
Drivers Needed
: 4x4's For Sale .....
. ... 725
COL Dmrers willing to dnve 100 and be able to part1c1
Announcement .
030
for local ready·mll\ concrete pate 1n all aspects of running
a bus•ness Pre\lrous electnAnllques
530
com pan~ Experience s
Apartments lor Rent
. . 440
preferred but not necessary cal sales/managers expen
Auctton and Flea Market
080
Dnver must be w lltng to do ence a plus
resume
to
HA
Auto Parts &amp; Accessor~es
..... 760
pre maintenance on truckS Send
Department PO Box tj668
&amp; equipment yard work &amp;
Auto Repatr
770
other miscellaneous chores Huntmgto n WV 25773

Autos lor Sale
710
Boats &amp; Molars lor Sale
.... 750
Building Supplies ....
550
Business and Buildings
340
Business Opporlumty
.210
Bus1ness Training
.. ,
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camp1ng Equipment .
.. .780
Cards of Thanks. . ..... ......
010
Child/Elderly Care
..,,
190
Eleclrlcai/Ralrlgeratlon ...
.840
• Equtpment for Rent...... .....
480
- Excavattng
.
.
830
Farm Equipment
.610
Farms lor Rent
430
Farms lor Sale.. .
330
For Lease.. ...
490
For Sale
.585
• For Sale or Trade
590
• Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
: Furnished Rooms . .
...450
Generol Hauling ..
850
Giveaway
040
Happy Ads ..
. ...050
; Hay &amp; Grain ....
640
• Help Wanted
..... 1I 0
- Home lmprovemenls
....810
Homes tor Sale
.310
Household Goods
---. ..510
Houses lor Rent. . .... . . ...
. 410
In Memoriam . .
.020
Insurance
. .. 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ..... ....
.660
Livestock
. 630
Lost and Found
................... 060
• Lots &amp; Acreage
.. 350
• Miscellaneous .. ,
.
.
... 170
: Miscellaneous Merchandise... .
.... 540
• Mobile Home Repair .
... 860
• Mobile Homes lor Rent •.
.. . • ------ .... 420
Mobile Homos lor Sale........... __ ...... ...•. 320
Money to Loan
..
. . 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers...... ......... ----- .740
Musical Instruments
-570
• Personals
-- .005
: Pots lor Sale
.. 560
- Plumbing I Heating
. 820
: Prolenlonal Sanllces .
..... .. ---- .230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repelr...
160
Real Estate Wanted
.. 360
Schools Instruction ...
------- .... 150
_ Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer...
•... 650 .
- Situations Wanled
120
: Space lor Rent .
.... ·-------'"• ..... 460
• Sporting Goods·--- ..
.. 520
: SUV 's for Sale .
•..... 720
• Trucks lor Sale .
. . 715
• Upholslery ____
870
Vans For Sale .
... .........730
Wanled to Buy .. . ___________ ....
.... 090
Wanted 10 Buy- Farm Supplies
... 620
: Wanted To Do . .
.. . .. .... 180
• Wanl5d lo Rent ...
... . .....
-470
: Yard Sale- Galllpollt .... ...
, 072
• Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle..
074
: Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant----------·
076

310

ro no

CLASSIFIED INDEX

'

.

It

WAI'fi'ED
10 Buv

992-2157

Free Pupp1es 10 weeks old
par t Walker &amp; Bird Dog

National Football league

I

s

y ARH ALE

Free
k11ten
grey/black 6 Fam•ly yard S~le Rutland
Female tabby 9wks old Amencan Leg1on June 10th
and lith 800to400
(304)882 2519

FOOTBALL
1

r

74
GIVI:.\W\Y

3 Beagles pups 11 months
old lo good home Cali

ST LOUIS CARDINALS-Placed OF

1:.

ANNOUNn~IEi'frs

.

r

Roger Cedeno on the 15·day "'DL
Purchased the cantr(\Ct of OF Skip
~chumaker from Memph•s of the PCL

2

I \II ' I '

LHP Wilson Alvarez on the iS day DL
retroactive tq May 31 Call ed up RHP ...
Franquells Osona from las Vegas of tQe ..,

Are you 65
or older?

WHAT YOlJ~I
STYLE. ..

Or Fax To

o

MILWAUKEE BREWERS- Des gnated
RHP Gar~ Glover for assignment'
Purchased the contract of C Julia
Mosquera from Nashville of the PCL

GB

1\(

Absolute Top Dollar U S
fl72
YARn SAt FS•lver and Gold Cams
GAU II'OLL~
ADOPT A Happ1 y marred
Pro ol sets Gold R•ngs U S
cllLidless coupe longs to
Currency M T S Com Shop
ohare our ll~es W1lll your 576 Orcharcl H•ll Rd 617 6/8 151
Second
Avenue
baby Will prov1de a lilet1 me Bam 5pm .Baby clothes 2 Gallipolis 740 446 2842
- ot love happmess oppty &amp; treadm lis ant•que buffet
secur1ty We know that your un•form &amp; much more
Wanted to buy Bench press
dec•s•on Will be made out af - - - - - - - - - we ght
11tmg set
Call
pu re Jove lor your baby Thursday 9th Fnday 101h 4 (?40)36S 321
Expenses pd Please call lam•ly ant1ques d shes
I \11'1 Ill \IL\ I
M1ke &amp; Donna t 866 720 q Granetware cloth•ng too s
'Ill\ It I '
5099
2 m11es o uI 218

LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Placed

WESTIERN CONFERENCE

QUARTERFINALS

NOMArrER

446-3008

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

Items

BASEBALL
LEAGUE
BASEBALL-

NBA FINALS

pbQinlx 4 Memphla 0
Phoenhr. 114 Memphis 103
Phoen• ... 108 Memphis 103
PhoentJC 110 Memphis 90
PMenlx 123 Memphis 115

•

Or Fax To

Saturday, May 28
San Antonio 102 Phoemx 92

~egtster

{740) 446-2342 {740) 99.2-2156 (304) 675-1333
Word Ads

a

San Antomo 111 Phoemx 106

WESTERN CONFERENCE

(6) 7

Sentinel

c

Phoenix va. San Antonio
Sunday, May 22
San Anton •o 121 Phoen•x 114

Wuhln"lon 4, Chicago 2
Chicago 103 Washington 94
Chicago 11 3 Washmgton 103
Washington 117 Chicago 99
Washington 106 Chicago 99
Wash•ngtcn 112 Chicago 110
Washington 94 Chicago 91

City Ice and Fuel
(Pomeroy Convenient
Store) Stata Routa 7
and Stale Route 124
Salisbury Twp. OH
Action Date· 61712005
Receiving
Waters
Thomas
Fork to
Laadlng Creek
Facility Daacrlptlon:
Wastewater
ldenutlcatlon No 06·
7777
A nlldeg r adatlon
Projacl as defln~ by
OAC 3745-1·05j&gt; An
exclusion or waiver If
not
applicable
Roquata to be on the
Interested
parties
mailing list should be
submiHed within 30
days to Ohio EPA·
Division of surface
water, Attn: PPU, 122
S Front St , PO Box
1049, Columbus, Ohio
43216-1049

upon
Issuance or a statld
ettactlva
data
Pursuanl to Ohio
Revised
Code
Section 3745 04, a
llnal action may be
appealed
to
the
Environmental
Review Appeals
Commission (ERAC)
(formerly known as
the
Environmental
Board 01 Review) by
a person who was a
party to a proceeding
before the director by
filing an appeal within
30 daya of notice of
the Final Action
Pursuant to Ohio
reviMCI code aectlon
3745.07, a
Final
Action Issuing, denyIng, modifying, revokIng, or renewing a
permit, license, or
variance which Is not
preceded
by
a
Proposed
Action,
may be appealed to
the ERAC by filing an
appeal within 30 days
of ISiuance of the
final action ERAC
appeals must be tiled
with Epvlronmontal
Review
Appeals
309
Commission,
South Fourth
Street, Room 222,
Columbus,
Ohio
43215 a copy of lhe
appeal
must
be
served on the dirac•
tor within 3 days alter
tiling the appeal with
lhe ERAC
Final Issuance of
Permit to Install
Worship
Bathel
Canler
Orange Township, OH
Action
Dateeffective

..

ca~r;~::v

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

In the Probate Court
of Meigs County,
Ohio
Velma
Rue,
Admlnlatratrlx with
Annexld of the Estate
of Ellubeth Maude

\!Crtbune

To Place

Saturday s Games
Colorado at Columbus 4 p m
New England at Kansas C•ty 8 p m
Real Salt Lake at Los Angeles 10 pm
Sundays Games
DC Un ted at MetroStars 6 p m
FC Dallas at Ch1cago 7 p m
San Jose at CD Ch1vas USA 8 p m
Wednesday June 15
Ch1cago at D United 7 30 p m
Los Angeles at Co orado 9 30 p m
Saturday, June 18
Kansas C1ty at Ch1cago 4 p m
Col umbus at MetroStars 7 30 p m
New England at DC United 7 30 p m
Los Angeles at FC Dalla'S: 8 30 p m
Real Salt Lake at San Jose 1 p m
Colorado at CD Ch1vas USA 10 p m

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Oli

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
"
YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

T Pts GF ClA
3 24 22 10
2 2 20 18 12
1

NOTE Three pomts for viCtory one pomt
for t1e

43

Indiana 4 Boston 3
Boston 102 lnd~an a 62
lnd1ana 82 Boston 79
lndtana 99 Boston 76
Boston 110 lnd~ana 79
tnd1ana 90 Boston 85
Boston 92 lnd•ana 89 OT
Indiana 97 Bostoo 70

19 S
18 17

W l
FCDallas
Los Angeles
SanJose
AeaiSaltlake
Colorado
.....
CD Ch1vas USA

.EASTERN CONFERENCE
Miami n. Detroit

Pttron 4 Indiana 2
Detroit 96 Indiana 81
Indiana 92 Detro1t 63
lnd•-na 79 Detr01t 74

Monday 1 Games
Charlone 6 lnd•anapol•s 5
Columbus 6 Buffalo 4
Ottawa 5 Durham 4

l:aatern C'"onte,..nce

!)ONFERENCE FINALS

Pro Basketball

Mf' !P ( Olln l)' I lit

Malor League Soccer

Phoenix 4 Qell11 2
Phoen•x 127 Dallas 102
Dallas 100 Phoemx 106
Phoen1x 11 9 Dallas 102
Dallas t 19 Phoen JC 109
Phoemll: 114 Dallas 108
Phbemx 130 Dallas 126 OT

"'-

CLASSIFIED

Pro Soccer

Sen AntoniO 4. Stltfle 2
San Antonio 103 Seattle 61
San Antonio 108 Seattle 91
Seattle 92 San Antomo 91
Seat11e 101 San AntoniO 89
San AntoniO 103 Seanle 90
San AntoniO 98 Seattle 96

1•

\!Crtbune - Sentinel - ~egtster

~

.

2005

Indiana at Sacramento 10 p m
Wednesdays Games
Seattle at Detroit 7 3D p m
Ph oenix at Los Angeles 10 30 P.,m

Oelro•t 89 tnd1ana 76
DalrOII 86 Indiana 67
Detro1t 88 lnc:Jiana 79

The Daily Sentin~l • Page 83

ww,w.mydailysentinel.com

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

PageB2

SCOREBOARD

Cleveland at San 01ego tO 05 p m

American League
35
31
30
28

Tuesday, June 7, 2005

.

The Daily Sentinel

Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
New York.

.\

2000 SQ ft home w •th
remodeled kitcherv bUill •ns
Great ne1ghbo(hood close

lo town Call (74(1)446 8325
or v Sit www OAVB cpm
Code 4505 Pnced to sell at

$132 500

r---.S'""E"'L'l;----,
YOUR
HOME .
WI TH A

ClASSIFIED
f'
AD

r

BLSl"~

~Nl BlliLiliNGS

Bulldm g for lease Gall1pol•s
Ferry Area
Ideal for
Restauranli Etc (304)675

7538
Judy

Kav s
Restaurant
apartments 740
4161B08 740247 1100
w/ upsta~rs

�'

•
www.mydailysentinel.com
-APAI(IMEJI,"I'S

6271 cell

2 acres more or less. an utiliti-es, pavea road , 2 miles
!rom Chester. $16 ,000 .
(304}483-7550

; uesday, June 7, 2005 .
'ALLEY OOP . .

LIVJo:sTOCK

mil RE~&gt;T
1/2 Ac . lot Tycoon Lake on
Eagle Rd. Co. Water {not
lake
front)
$7.500 00
(740}24 7- 11 00 or (304)532-

Apt. tor rent 1,200 sq ft 22 Oak factory pa.dded
Trash &amp; water patd. 3 m1te s Church Pews, 11 ft. long,
!rom tOwn . , $4 25/mon th. good condition , $125 each.
40 new Hymnal Church
(74 0)441 -9616.
books, $360·. (7 40)3BaAvailable
tmmedlalely. 8965
Beauttlul . ctean , end spaJET
CIOUS 3 bedroom townAERATION MOTORS ,
house . W1th sto rage /play·
room .. Downtown Gallipolis. Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
$610/monlh
No utiltt fes Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1,
paid . No pets. Can {740)446- 800-537 -9~2B .
9961 .

8.5 acres Green Town~h1p ,
Arbuckle Ad over 1,000' of
Raccoon Creek frontage,
$29,000, (740)645-0286 .
BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
Looking filr . Private Large PRICES AT !JACKSON
lot. 200x300 lor my Mobile ESTATES. 52 ,. Westwood
Home . t4x65 , all Electric , Drive from $344 to $442 .
11yrs old gd od ·t&gt;hape, or 1 Walk 10 shop &amp; movies. c811
acre country setting. place .740 . 4 46-2568 .
Equal
for pets in Gallia Co., OH or Housing Opp~rtunity.
Mason Co., wlal l hookups
will pay $150/month . Reply CONVENfENTLY LOCAT·
to PO Box 61 1, Ripley, WV ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
25271
•Townhouse
apartments,
and/or s,mall houses FOR
REAL F.•;T,n:
RENT. Ca ll (740 )441 · 1111
WANTEIJ
lor application &amp; information.

Little Tikes Desk!Cnair,
True~ . Fisher Price Kitcll!in,
Turtle Sand Box (304}458
1875
·
-

--~------,- ·

Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap M~ta ls Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Cloaed
Tnursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

r

ACROSS

GRAIN

Alder

~40)446-7843.

I

\II" ,\

t. d~IO!

"

I

BISSEll

'II !I'

John Deere Riding Mowers
starting at 51 .399. Financing
available subject to John
Deere Credit approvaL Your
payments could be as low
as $39 month with $0 down.
Carmichae'l
Equipment
(740)446·2412

Roofing,

®
Inc.

BUILDERS InC.

-'1118 WIIWI Best RoDI"

, Mobile Homes • Me,tal Roofs
' Flat

or Low Sloped Roof • Carports

Home Creek
Enterprises
Pomeroy, Ohio
~

Call

Siding • New Garages

Tuppers Plains, OH

Window~

ENERGY IIFFICIENT

.Zero Turn Z-Trak M.owers
from John Deere available at

New Homes • Vinyl

41800SR#7

• ~cp!al:cmc nt

, Barns • Porches
Residential • Commercial

• 'Roofing

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENT,IAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
·per month.

for all your home

ftpair needs, rupling,

992-5682

--=------

rBoA'FORI,_,&amp;~~~

I

---,----=---

LEWIS
CONCRf:'I'E
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

' All Types ot "
~oric~~Woffi
.25 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
•'rt!'e Estimates

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me cJo 1\ for ycul

r

I

Clly. (7 40)446·1409
(740}446-2003,
3 bedroem Trailer lor rent
Private, .Country location,
just 1 mile from At 2 in
Gallipolis F~rry. Ga.rbage &amp;
Water · included. $350 per
month rent. $400 deposit
. (304) 576-2241

'I'D

Conatmctlen

--

AU! I

For Lease: Office or retail Homegrown Strawtterrtes .
spaces in very good condi· 74D-378-629~. Monclay thru
tion . Downtown Gallipolis. Saturday. 8:()().6:00. 65002
Approx. 1600 sq. ft. each. 1 State Rotrie 124, Reedsville.
or .2 baths. Lease price
I \It' I ' I I 'I 'I II ._,
negotiable to encourage '
,\ I I \ I ' I t 11 h.
new
business.
Call

~~446-4425 or 1740)446-

r

I'

i

r

r

r

MfROIANDISE
2BA apt. State Route 160
$400'month, StOV&amp;'refrigera·
2 I (1' Kk:Mr Stillwater subs
tor included, wUher/dryer
hookup. (74&lt;l)«1-Q194 or tor small trueks1 etc.
(740)44&amp;2616.
• (7-40)«1-1184

I

4x4 AaaiO, Has only 50 hours on

$3,195; 95 Dodge COQV. van
$2,000; 01 Suzuki Metro
$2,695; 96 Ford Aspire
$1 ,295; 97 Nissan Alti ma
$2,095: 97 Chry. Concorde
$2,29~- .
B &amp; D Auto Sales
Hwy 160 N.
(7 40)4&lt;16-61165

Will sale for
(304)773-5944

j

~

740-247-2162 or
740-416-3508
I 4 yrs. Experience

$13,000

I

CAMPERS &amp;

MUfOR HOMFS

1992~

.

.

29' Airstream E11.calla.
Very good condition,. twin
beds. Ph. (740)645-4454.

I

Baumer race car- Monte 1995
Gutrstream
24 ·
Carto; 60 model Stereo, floor Conquest Limited E~ilion
0% Fixed Aale up to 36 model. (740)643-0012:
Class C: motorhome. Li~e
months on New John Deere
new with only 7 ,600 mites.
c;;ompact Tractors &amp; 110 TLB Red Honda CMc with sun- Fully ·equipped with many
al Carmichael Equipment root. Good Condition , Stan- OXlraS. S2UXXl, (740}256(740)446-24t2
. dartl . 133,000 miles
Pay 1428. For pictures s_se:
olf-$5800.00
www.rvtrader.com/rvdetall ."p
Hay wagon 19 ft. StoHus
hp?id+.125806.
kicker wagon . Removab le
steel rac'ks. Uke · new tires
2000 Aerolite. 23-30', tully
and bed. (740)245-Q485.
eqpt., aU hitCh eqpt., like
1997 Ford F-~ 5d pk:kup. Ful! new, $8000, (74o)992·596iJ
John Deere 10 R. Nq Til Drill powei', air. VB, excellent conlor
Rent.
Carmichael dition.
Cap
included. 2004 Forrest River Pull
Equipment, (740)446-2412. (7.t0)446-9430, name. num- ~mper, 29' wlslkteot.Jt. used
very
little. .
$10,000,
John Deere Commercial ber.
(74&lt;l)949-0053
Wo~site Products in Stock!! 2001 · Dodge pickup shOrt - - .-"03-.-Ja-yoo--E-a_g_1e____ ·
34
1 12
Compact Excavator 27C,
350, 500/Skid Steers 371, bed Magnum V6. Like new slide OU1. LO!s of extras. Like
320,
325,
3281T1ac:tor condition, aalwge title. new. condihon . (740)339·
$5,!500. (7o40)«1-7641 .
0218.

loader Bac:khot 11 OTLB.
Check out our ·rental rates. Army 5 Ton Semi Truck, Apache 2000 SB folding
Great F'nar:cing Avaitablo&amp;- mufti-fuel, Kiser Jeep Corp. , 1nJr:k camper. Full equipped
Carmichael
Equipment. S6000.00,,Arrny 21 12 Ton
(740)446-2412 . •
Truck, Kiser Jeep Corp.,
Multi Fuel, $4000.00 '740New 5003, 5005, &amp; 5020
949-0020
Series John Deere Utility
Tractors 0 · 0% lixedl 36
· 4x4
montt'ls. Used l,ltility Tractors
~
F!lll
SAul
0 4.9% Variable! &amp;a
months.
Carmtctlael
Equipment. (740)446-2412
19!19 · N111er, full
power, AllOy wheels, neW
New Holl&amp;nd 630 round · tti'M.
$6,299
080.
baler. Musle Ferguson (740)645-2729. •
Rake. 2 round feed«s.
(740)«1-4288 .
$4,000. 95 Dodge 11\oc:tt. 4x4, autoMutt Sell!
matic.
S3.00Q.
Call
(740)386--00 11
New John Deere Round
Balers 0 nt% FIXed Rate
Financing lor 48 Mor1ths or
NeW ~ 457 . Standard
Round 8aJer Only $13,250 1995 GMC Con: Van, low
castl. Makes 4X5 Bale. miles, flllly loaded. 4ird1.
CarmiChael
Equipment. Cutback """" Saddle &amp;
(7o40)4-46-2412

"'rr----::-.'--.,

Spacial

~

John

Purchase-

Doere 702 8 &amp; 10 Rakoo/ John Doere Disk
Mowers. Call for prk:e. 2002 'IWnaha 610 Raplor
Carmichael
Equlpm«&gt;t. • ~lowwiiNitdling
(74&lt;l)«6-2412.
KBC Excell«lt
Condition S3,700 (304)&amp;75..._
LivEsTock
1015
'

j

200o1 Fat Boy, $18,000,
Ask

about

our

AQH.f, (7-40\949'3004

~ ~-""

-"""

John Deere Equlpt'tlent 94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Cluolc, 10,000 .. ...... blue,
Carmichael
Equipment
••
: llll:ll'c:o:lditloli, $13,500,
(7o40)«6-2412.
(740)114e-2217

•

w/ertras_ $5,000.'
(740)256-8171 .

Call

Coleman Camping Trailer
12FT. 2 King Beds. $5.500
call fer Delalts (304)6751131
Truck

Camper. AC, TV
Antenna, wired tor Cable,
like ·$6,500 (304)675- '

3353

mo

HOWARD l.
. WRITfSfl &amp; SONS
I

.

ROOFING
All

=:::::.!.

I

I

~

10

96 Dodge

"NQ Job To Snw.l/"
Rncin~ . OH

$3,900; 00 Dodge Durango Boat, Garage kept in winter.
$6,900: 98 Pont. GrAM GT Like New Paid over $18,000

, -

3 BA trailer for rent
$300lmon. S300/dep. Water
FOR LEASE
&amp;
trasf'
included .
•
References
needed.
(740)441-9291. (740)339Building for Lease Gallipolis
3260.
Ferry Area
Ideal tor
3br Jrailer in Gallipolis Ferry Restaurant/ Etc. (304)675area. No Pets, $375/month, 7538
\If Rt 11 \\llf'-.1
Deposit
&amp;
References
(304)674-4633
iO
Beautiful river view in
Kanauga. Ideal for 1-2 peo·
pie. No pets. please;.
Appltcalions being taken . 22 cu. ft . Kitchen Aid relngCall (740)441.()181.
era tor. White, ice maker,
- - - - - - -- - .excellent condi1ion. $275.
{740}992-1301 .
Mobile Home Lot onty
Addison Pike- $125/monthcall (740)446-3644 for more Furniture Sale : Mollohan's
Sofa and chair starting at
info.
$399. Call (7-40)446-7444,
Mobile Homes sites in the
Shade area. WarBr. Sewer, McHiohan Carpet, 202 Cttm
Trasn. included. $130.00 Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(740). . 6-7444 1-877-830·
per month. 740-385--4019
9162. Free Estimates. Easy
Trailer
lot
for
rent financing. 90 days same as
$175/month &amp; $100/dep. cash . Visa/· Maste.r Card
Trash &amp; water pd. references Drive- a· little Save aiCit.
needed.
(740)44 t -9291 .
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
(740)339-3260,
Repair-675-7388 . For sale.
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; Clryers. refrigera·
tors, gas and electric
1 &amp; :2 berJroom newly reno- ranges. air conditioners. and
vated
Apts
tor rent. wringer washers. Will do
Downtown Gallipolis. River repairs on major brands in
&amp; Parlt view. 5360-ssbwmo. 'shop or at your ~.
Some utilit1es pa•d Now
Used Furniture St0f8, ~30
accepting applicatiOns Can
Bulaville Pike, Washers. dry(740}709-1690 (local call)
ers, refrigera1ors , ranges,
dresser:o .
1 a.l ld 2 bedroom apart- mattresses.
ments, fur nished and unfur- couches. dinettes, recllnet$ ,
nisned. security depos1t grave monuments. much
(7,.0)446-~782
required. no pets, 740-992- more.
Gallipolis, OH Hrs. 11 ·3 (M2218.
S)
'
1br Apartment for rent,
Downstslrs tn 700-Block,
Viand
St.
Aeteren&lt;;es
required available May t
(304)675-3654
B\Jy or sell.
AMrine
Antiques 1124 East 1.ta1n
1BR Apt 1n Spnng Valley.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Clean &amp; affordable . W/0
9!12-2526. Russ Moore.
noo!cupS $290 ~r month+
owner
dep
1740) 3&amp;8·00 17
or
(7-40)339-0362
Mfia:IJANEoo&gt;

•

$3,395;

FOR SALE

•

A K J

•

AKQl0 9 7-i

A

A 8 4

• . K

Home. • Auto • Life • Retirement :
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med ~
Medica1e su·p. • Ca!Jcer • Accident

.

13

.t:asl

15
16

•
•

17

.

\\'pst
• 5 4

.MONTY

45783

06 01 OJ .

•

JII 6~ J Z

,fo K Q ,J :1

•

lO9 7 2
Q .' . J 0 7 5

.:.

18
· · 20

I (] 9 fi 5 2

South
•

••

•

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP2.l 4

Q II 6 J

21

AJ9 8 6432

23
·24
27
29

.... 7

Dealer: North
Vulnerable : Norl'h -Snuth

3 miles' west
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

Ij

1-.4=~~

I\ orth

B.D. Consl.

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair .

.

Rocky Hupp Insurance ·
and Financial Seniices

types

of rooling:

*""949-1415

Down•pout ·Siding

I

bfl , ....

TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp;quality

2 •
5 •

Tree Service

Pass
7•

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
FRA~K

law~!!~~:!~J1~.~,~~~h~~~rs ;
with shutlle transmission

1

· **"'*A lso B\'ailable*"'**
:
• Task Master Tractors 26 horse • 38 horse,1
.
4wd (l year:. warranty)
~
• Farm Pro Tractors 20 horse • 30 horse ! .
loaders, finisl;l mowers, tillers

~ ARRIV,\ L ZTR Di&lt;on (Zero Thrn ,

; BARNEY

Radius Mower) 30 inch culling width to SO':
inch cutting width ·3 }'ear warranty
,

YEP, I LARN'T
THAT SELFIMPROV'MENT
AIN'T EASY !!

IM! TRACTOR SAW &amp; EOUII'MENT ;
·•

9854.3114

Formerly ut 108
W. Main Pomeroy.
IS NOW OPEN AT
The Mulberry
Commurii1y Center
.160 Mulberry Ave.
Pomero)·
Same Gnat Low Prices

Mon·Fri.
9am to Jpm
PH: 9924183

CARPENTER.:
__..S...
ER_...Y..,.IC..,E_..
• Room Addition• I
Remodeling

• New Ge,..ges
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Aooflng &amp; GuHifl
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

• Patio •11d Porth Decks ~~
We doi It all except
furnace work
,

AN'

IS

'iMPROV'MENT

NEXTfl

IMPO&amp;SIBt.E !!

..c""" •••

,'

•

!' L __c;.;J~~~
: THE BORN LOSER
l""l ~ U"'E.'~,Pt:C.\~I&gt; Gl\lt-1~ ~
I~ '&lt;OUR. f'\.l\UR( !
.

V.C. YOUNG Ill
99M215 wv~ns
Pomeroy, onro
25 Ye•• Local EJ: rlence·

Pass

Tl bl

All pass

Pass

33

Pass

34
35

37

rlvS'i &amp;. GOl~G'""'
TO 1--\,.,_\1( :)UC.C.(':J:) Wll'f\ !'&lt;\'{
I1'1'J l~il t-\(.l'f\S ·1
.

I""R£1\LL'&lt; 1 t

singletons. As dealer, he passed! II wenl •

High and Dry

Storage

panher.
"Just ~hree bare aces."
Then Collings' parlner inquired, "What
did you have?'"
"Only ~ 0 points."
In lhis deal, Collings trusled his inexperi&amp;nced partner's seilen-diamond bid. But
when West greedily doubled , Collings
preferred to rely on. t1is own eight-card
heart su1t. Of course, when he saw the
dummy after West's club·kmg lead.
declarer lhoughtthat his lask ,was hopeless. But witt1out betraying any emotion,
he wOn in the dummy a~d called for the
diamond ace. East ruffed low: After over·
rutting, decta:rer went 10 dummy with a
spade and led lhe diamond king. Again
East ruffed low. Declarer overrutfed ,
crossed 10 dummy with· a spade, and

Phone

337~5 Hiland Road

I JUST W15.H THEY WHE
E.IVING OUT fl'liZES!
I DON 'T THIN" THERE'S
MVCH DOUBT .a...BOtJT \•JHO'D

Athens

Pomeroy, Ohio

10x10x10x20
992-1194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
5elf,storase·

GET Tt1E

BLUE RtSSON

1

Wbaleyts Auto
Parts
St R1.68l Darwin. OH
740-992· 70 13 or 740-992-5553

Restockiny late. Model- Salvage
and Arter Markel fhrts
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

15 T~JS T~E FLIGHT
TO I-lOLL'I'WOOD?

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISTIIC1111

140-192-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

work
·
• Affordable Rates
• References

SEPTIC TANK PIJMPING S95.00
· PORTABlE TO/lfT RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
992-325f OR 591-8757

-

Available

• Free Estimates
•Insured"
Call GaJY Stanley
74()-742-ll93
• Leave a message

...

Hil l·s Self
Storage

.-=GARFIELD
"fi.IIS 15 A
1'E5T...

29670 Bashan Road

ADVERTISE
IIASEIIENT

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 J&gt;M

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

e.

ADVERTISE

cost of fertilizer got you
17·17·17,.
$265 ton (While Suppy Last)
• Mushroom Compost

YOUR

lB spreader buggies available for use

High

Available
U5 · I ,000 lbs Approx. weight
renov~tors and seeders
available to rent
licen5ed agronomist on staff available tor

Airway pasture
consulting.

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE
35537 SL RL 7 North
Pomoruy, Ohio

Now Avllllable At

B \l\1 IX\IBER
Scorpion Tractors
"Taking Tlu Sting Out Of
Hard Work!"
M,id-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
wiih 30hp &amp; 4Php Kubota Engines

~AUM

LUMBER

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

Itches
Movie
Ms. Burstyn
Territories

44 Mel nalg1bor
45 Per

46 Succotash
bean
48 Carpentry
tool
49 Jagged
.rock

50 Injection
52 Compas9 pt
53 Road-map
org.
54 Fasl plana

'J,;,:-if-+-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetlpty Cipher cryptog(ams are create&lt;t !rom quotat.ons by tamoi.IS pellJie. pe st a!XI present.
'
E t~ell lett~ .n ·tne CJf!IW stand s lor af1Qt~e r

Today 's clue_. C equals S

"C N 0 G

UGNUPG

CAPGRKG

" WRMNPX

A C."

CWYYGH

PNWXGH

NMLGHC."'

I

.SPEAKING Of'

!

HOW

~ OPE.NI NGoS,

ABOUT

t :SHUTTING
THAT ~iG
ONE. IN THE
MIDDLE CF
'(OVR FACE'?'

l

irJHOA,
TEt&gt;DY,
WHOA
THAT'S THE
.,. t\OUNTA.IN

DEW''
"TALKING .

'•
•

_.............

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

: GRIZZWELLS

•
: ~ \1161\lAT
:.Atlllf'rl'lltii&lt;: . ~A

..

· :· ~\~ '

1'1-115 15 ClNLt,l

A

"T"E~T...

·

LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23) - Tl1ere are an
·abundance of opportunities around you
today, but there is also the probability that
you will take thmgs tor granted and do
nothing atx?ul takJng advantage ·of them
as you sh_
pUtd.
SCORPIO (Oct _ 24-Nov. 22) - Just
because you may have gotlen away With
something prov1ously doesn't mean yot.J
w1ll be as lucky this llfr". Rather !han take
a ch8fK:8, do not repe~t what you know
could be a mistake.
SAGtnAAtUS (~0\i. 23-0ec. 21) -You'd
be smart today to avoid involvemenls wttl'1
.lttends whO are able to spend more freely
than you 9:an . t1 you can 't · match thetr
extravagance, you 'll be both embarrassed
and broke.
CAPRICORN (Oec,. 22-Jan _.19) - !t you
fail to thin~ for yourself today, there 's a
posSibility that so,meone Wllh whom you 're
involved will happily rnake . deci sions for
you that -would only help him or her, not
you.
AQUARIUS \Jan . 20-Feb. 19)- Actions ,
not words, are the only things that wil l
count today. Unless 'YOU are certatn th f\t
you. can and wm follow tnrough on sorne- .
tiling . it's besl not to' announce y'our intentions to others.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20} - When you
wish to be, you can be a very conservallve
and practical individual. However, tOday
you're apt td tel your guarp down and
allow the drep mer within you to emer_
ge
and wasle your day.
·
.
AR IES /Marth 21 -Apfll 19) - Ne1ther you
nor your partner should make any impor tant decision loday without firs! consuhtng
wrth' one anO the r Chances are, he or she
will see sOmettung you completely · oYerloo ked .
TAURUS (April 20-May ?0) - Unless you
realty know what you're doing, you'd be
w1se to consult others as to how to do a
job that 's be8n asslgned to you
Something you'd never s uspect could
throw you off track .

De($ -

&amp;1tol't0 """'

toa1\JR&amp;u.'I lb '"obu ell ""
'lbu t~tM 11&gt; -a••T;&gt;

DHAKEOJR

CWYYGHAAF

CGPXNO

u.
are be ing killed on !he beaches.

S©"R(l}A-l£"E-tfSe ::!~

T..Tt.tiLY
PIZZI! I

Wedne~ey, June 8 , 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol
It you're !hlnk1ng about entenng into a
partnersnip in the year ahead. remember
that tho person doesn·l have to be a pal .
only a good person. Strong associalions
will be rewardmg ; weak ones c.ln cause
problems.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - There's a
strong 'p•obab•lity loday ·that you mtght be
tar too loose w1th your finances and blow
too muct1 money. The problems 'it would
cause you down the line won'! be easy to
take.
CANCER (June, 21·July 22)- Common
sen~e will work lor you today where your
rabbi! tool or 4-l~at ctov8r won't. Don't be
too tax or complacent abOut things and be
sensible about how' far you can push your
luck .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - ll's vital to your
intufests today that you try to see things
as they really are and' not merely how you
would like them to be. Be able to distinguiSh be tween op11m1sm and wishful !flinktng.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22) -'' Expensive
activities yoU can 't really afford .are likely
to be the very ones which turn out to be
the least amount at tun today. F1nd ways to
enjoy yourself without blowing your ent1re

SOUP TO NUTZ

MLJ R

ONHHAG

VHJREPAR

AA

Normandy

~~!!&gt;!,

budget

• New Homes

:Complete
Remodeling

www

36
37
41
43

Let's go inland and be ~ilted . " - Gen. Norman Cota, Omaha Beach.

~A-stro-

Janet ,k!tTers

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

meas.

39 Osprey kin
40 Reformers'
1arge1a
41 Cease
42 Karala level
44 011 sources
47 Arrlve at
river
51 Colorado
Actor
ski tQwn
- Montand 52 Soothe
Use , as oars 55 BOring
Ancient
56 Zenith
cosmetic
57 Shuttle
Rajah's
· dispatchers
spouse
58 Nuke
Attempt
59 "Star Wars"
9 A Karamazov
BaCkpackers'
rogue
10 Smell
gear
60 Has a meal
change
Speckle
. 61 'Narcissus' 14 Family ·
Container
flaw
nickname
19 Explains
Hawk
,
Tyr's lalher
DOWN
further •
Wall Street
20 Attitude
figure
Fully
22 Facing
Census ·
mature
23 Charged for
data
2
24 Fluctuate
Corduroy
addresses 25 Old-lime
rib
·
3 Harbors
oath
4 Godzjlla ' s
Festive
26 Earns as
• city .
nlghl
prolil
Hamelin
5 -Bravo
28 Nighl
6 Pale gray
past
follower
Ketch
7 Brooks or
29 Hollow
Gibson
cousin.
30 Cameo
Wearing
8 Glass
shape
clothes
cookware
31 Takes vows

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Genllemen , we

(740) 992-5232
Sx I 0, I Ox I0,
IOd5, IOx20,
10x30

MULEY'S
SElF STORAGE

38 Fabric

pass ... pass .. passl
"What did you have?" Collings asked his

played the diamond queen. For a third
time , East ruffed low and declarer over~
ruffed. Finally, South cashed the heart
ace . bringing down both tt1e king and
queen. $even hearts doubled and made!

45771
7-9-2217

BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

7 •

Dbl

32

.. A grand slam that
was thrown in

r----------------.-,'
HUSBAND

,.-.--1 !
•••'

YOUNG'S

The Parish Shop

Pass

Puzzle

· John CollingS, who died three months
ago, was born wi'th a congenital hear t
defect. His father and paternal grandfa ther died in their 30s. Collings also had a
major heart attack in that decade of his
life. but modern medicine permitted him
lo play bridge tor nearly 40 more years. _
He was an imaginative player, prone to
11ighls ollancy. For example, in • rubberbridge game lor high stakes in L?ndon,
he picked up 10 solid haarls and lhree

Racine, Ohio

WA1EIIPIIOOf1NG
UtiCOt ldtiot 1al Jifetime IJUarantee .· Local retarences turntsl'led . EstabliShed 1975.
Call
24 H... 17-40) . .
0870, Rogers Buemen!
Watarproofir&gt;g.

~......,""'"""".,.,

..

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

right in the heart of Chester

Eitst
Pas s
Pass

36

&amp; EARNEST

~-~·

4-wd, remote hydraulics 3 year warranty

West . North
· 2•
Pass
4 :-.IT

Open ing lead : tfio K

Bucket Truck

OPEN

·Garages

STANLEY TREE

'JONES'

and Smiling
,..riendly FaceJ.

Shingle.' Flat. Metal -

New or -Repair
Seamless Gutter -

South

Cr,ossword

1 Give a
masaage
4 Ore lruck
8 Snapshol
11 Rollover
subl.
12 Belgian

Tobacco Plants for sale. Call

ROGfR HYSELL
GARAGE

FORSP~'!...

NEA

Phillip

·eo

j

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

•

HAY&amp;

siding, u.dd-ons,
buys names. Confidential, apartments Spnng Valley
are3
.
References
and
~modeling etc.,
Quick cash . J1m, 740·99'2deposit
requi red .
Pn .
free estimates
6300. No calls after 9
1740)446-2957
(740) 992-2979
IU ' I \ I '
Je&amp;,·e messa e
FOR SALE ,
Furntshed apt. 2nd Ave .
Upstairs. all utilities paid . Shop smith, t·ots of i:lx1ras,
One . bedroom, no pets, iointer, table saw, drill press. 194B ·
Chev;olet
Five
Hous~ ·
Gallipolis.
(740)446·952~
.
$2,199
060,
.1999
Passanger
Co
upe,
WV
FOR RENT
Kawasaki.
Prairie 4x4, Slic~er, New Tires. Good
Furnished upstairs, 3 rooms excellent conditiOn, $2,500
~:~~ "~ h1arp" {304)5762 BDR- 2 1/2 baths. 2 car &amp; bath . Clean, ref. &amp; dep.
OBO (740)645·2729
garage- furnisned , close to · required No pets. (740)446Holzer hospital. (740)44-1 · 1519.
··
SPA FAUORY OUTlET
1952 Plymouth 4dr, for
0310,
Top- a ·uality, Warranty,
Restoration ,
no · Rust.
~-------- .Gracious living . 1 and 2 bed·
Wholesale, Financing,
Engine runs. Body Original,
2 bedroom house, no pets, room apartments at Village
Deliveries .
of
no Dent.s. 31 ,000/miles
refere.nce required , starting Manor
and
R1verside
2 locations
(304)576-2532
at $350/month . Call Jay Apartments in Middleport.
Milton Flea Market
(740)441-0t 10
From $295-$444. Call 740 &amp; Ashland Kentucky
1969 Corvette S1ingray, 350
992-5064. Equal Housing 'llo....li(E6060i
. 6-)1922-.-7;,;1;;;85,_...11 HP, 350 cuQic inch, 4-speed.
3
BR
Ranch
Home
Opportunities.
All numbers match, 74,000
w/attached Garage in Camp
Twin"Girls Clotning &amp; Shoes.
miles.
$18.000
Conley area ol Pt. Large Large Upstairs Apartment. Thru size-2. Baby Bed , actual
Serious
Inquires
only,
fe:nood yard in· great neigh· 2br, Appliances furnished. Stroller, 2 older High Chairs
• Accepting New
please. Call (304)675·6774
borhood. $675 mth, Deposit Deposit Requ1red. Central , (304)458•1875
Memhers
~40
'I
and Aaterences required. AJC $300/month (304}675- ·- - - - - - - - or (304)674-4668
• Henvy lluty
MOTORCYO..Jol;/
COmmen:ial
Calf 1-304-531-1 197 or 1- 7783
.Wolff Tanning Beds
1971 Torino, 4 dr., otlgl(1al
4 WHEFl...Eiti
t: quipnu~ nt
304·273·1112
Huge selection.
paint, runs great, $2100,
• Workout on )'OUr own
North
Third
Avenue.
Immediate Delivery.
(740)985·3327 or 740-416- Brand n!'IW Vance/Hines 2
hours 24n
Attention! ··~
Middleport . One Bedroom
Financing
·
4249
Serious
Inquiries Only
Local •company offering "NO furnished aPt.
into
1
Cnrome
Pipes.
Fit
No Pets.
1-800-894-6997
740·992-0955
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- Previous rental ref. 740·
2000
and
up
1992 Ford Mustang convert- Fatboy
(740)446·6579,
grams for you to buy your 992·0165
ible. Auto, air, c·ruise, tilt, (304)682-3218
home instead of renting .
81JllJliNG
70.000
actual
miles.
Qne Bedroom, No Pets,
• 100% financing
SlJI'I'LIK'i
Excellent
condition.
$3,750.
Paid . $400/mo.,
~ Less than pertect credit Ulilities
(740)..6-4053.
~
""""'
'
Deposit
&amp;
Reference
accepted
11 Homes
Block, briC~ . sewer pipes,
• Payment could be the Requ1red. (740)446-3667
lll Septic Systems
windows, lintels, etc. Claude 1995 Chevy Tahoe LT. 1999 _Aquatron , 19' boat 7
same as rent.
Excellent condition, emerald
.r Roofing
Winfers,
Rio
Grande,
OH
trailer.
4.3
liter
V-6
Mortgage
Locators . Pleasant Va,lley Apartment
gre'entsllver, leather interior,
.t~6ack t1oe
MercruiSfir. Less tnan 100
(740)992·732l
Are; now talc.lng Applications Call740.245-5121.
·t~ Si1e
lully , loaded.
$7,900.
- - - - - - - - (or 2BR, 3BA &amp; 4BR.,
hours, bought new in 2000,
•:- Preparation
Prn
(740}.. 1-7841.
Brand New 2 Bedroom ApPlications are
taken
InCludes s~is, tub:e. life jack11 Dozer
FOR SALE
House in town $475/mo Monday lhru Friday, from
Buick
LeSabre ets, etc
Sold new tor ·
1997
·l' .G arages
CI A, Washer/Dryer Hook-up, 9:00 A.M .-4 P.M. Office is
Limited, 75 thousand miles . . $16,500, askirig $8,000 'Call
'f Utilities
(304)6774
(304}67
Stove/Refrigerator InclUded. Located at 1151 Evergreen 2 year old miniature Golden Leather
·n Pole Barns
In I. ,
Loaded,
· or
44668
(740)44 1 · Q~94 or (740)441 - Drive Point Pleasant , WV Aelrlever, female. Has all
$5,995 - - - - -- - - Pomero,·, Ohio
1184
Phone No, is {304)6'75- shots and spayed. Outdoor . Garage Kept.
3041675• 173!
740-9'/f. 7'153
pet
(740)388·8655.
1
2000
Baytiner
21
ft
.
cuddy
w/
5006. E.H .O
In town location· 1·2 BR
740.416.2823
1998 .C hevy Malibu V6 , · trailer• .many e)(1ra's, very
7-10-5111-4641 (.
Ranch nome, nice yard, AC. Tara
Townhouse AKC Adorable Lab puppies. maroon, goOd condition, clean 304-6?5-5563
References
required . Apartments. Very Spacious, Choc. &amp; yellow. Vet checked.
22h
Sweetwater
$450/mo. rE!nt &amp; $450 Sec. 2 Bedrooms, CIA , 1 112 1st shots &amp; wormed. Parents run&amp; good. good gas 200}
mileage.'
$3,500.,
Call
Pontoon
boat.
40hp.
Myers Tree
premises.
$150
Oep. You pay aff utilities . Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby on
(740)446·2896.
Johnson
.motor.
power-trim,
(740)44EH062.
Service
Available
6115.
Call &amp;Pool. Patio. Start $385/Mo.
2002 Cadillac Deville. 'white Hoosier trailer w/ladder,
(740).446-3644.
No Pets. Lease
Plus
•ln.~ ured-F~e
Purepred Siberian Husky diamond, fully equipped, spare lire/braCket, AM/FM
Security , Deposit Required,
Estimates
puppies, 3 females, black &amp; fac tory warranty,
Small 2 bedroom house (740 )446 _3481 .
• Senior Citizen
22 ,900 ,stereo/CO, many e.11tras.
white, sable &amp; white, blue
$475 month. 1 mile from
$24 ,995 . Asking $10,995. (740}446 discount
ffil·1es. l'k
1 e. new.
town . Call (740)441-0194 or Twin ~ivers Tower is accept- eyes, masks, very nice!!! (740}256- 142 .
740-992·2621
2016 or (740)339-0324
8
{740)4 41-'1184.
.\U Ytilr• E\r-;ncnct&gt;
ing ·applications tor wailing Wormed . $160 . each, call
97 Yamaha 1-100 Wave
list lor 'Hud·subsized, 1- br, (740)992·5685
99 Chev. Z71 ex cab 4x4
Runner Jet Ski, 3 Sealer,
MOBILE HOMFS
apart.ment. call 675-6679
98 Ford Ranger sup.
Rabbits for sale. e~r set and $9,500;
b 4 4 $5 495 , 00 Ch S~ Trailer. lite Vests· ·asking
~
FOR RL""'lf
- .' EHO
ca X
•
·
ev
$3,000
call
evenings
- - - - - stool" (740)446-3732
10
Blazer $5,595: 97 Ply (740 )596-8038
All Your Home
2 bed.room mobile home in Valley Apartments in Mason, Toy Poodles for sale, $300 Voyag'r van $2.395: 00 , '-:--,,--:--,---:--1m
rr&lt;.&gt;VCillC n! ~Ced_ s 1
WV
currently
accepting
Middleport. $375 mo. plus
each. Colors Vary. (740)367- Ofds Alero $2,995: 99 Ford Year 2000, Pontoon Boat, 24
•
Sid1ng
· •· Wmdow~
deposit also 3 bedroom appl ications. Apply at 501 7095 or if no. answer ·call Taurus $2,995; 98 Jeep loot, Swoetwater, 50 HP
• Decks • Porches
Shawnee
Trail
in
Point
mobile home, all electric,
Cherokee $2,995; 98 Mere. Mercury. Power Trim. 4
(740)710-6471.
• Ceramic Tile &amp;
Applica11ons
central air. $425 mo. plus Pleasant.
Mountaineer $3,295; 98 Stroke Engine, Big Foot
Hardwood Flooring
deposit. no Inside pets, accepted on Tueselays .· Toy PoodleS'. Black 1 mate, Ford WindSiar van $2,595: Outdrive. Lounge Seats,
• Garages
HUD assisted. (304)675- aflel 1 female . $250. Call
(740)992·3194
• Room Add. • Roofing
97 .GMC Sonoma PU ' Privacy
Room, . Depth
4900
(740)256- 1101.
• Ki1chens • Bmhs
$2.395; 99 Chev . Tracker Flnd~r; Hour Meter, GOOd

~e~~~~ry"\~~~~:tr~;~colnr'

www.mydailysentinel.com

BRIDGE ·

4.9%
fixed
rate
fro
Carmichael Equipment with
Jonn Deere Credit approval..
(740)446-2412
Pole Barn 30x60x10FT · www careq com
$6795 . includes Painted
Metal, . FreS
Delivery
www.nationwideiJ()Iebarns.c
Al!f(l';
orrt (937}559-8385

r

••

'

Reg . Blac~ Angus Bull. 4
yearS old Gentle $1 100.0(}·
·740·965-3843

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
·For
Concrete,
Angle, Wizard Riding Lawn Mower
Channel. Flat Bar: Steel 14.5 HP, 42" cut. (304)773·
Grating
For
Drains, 5284 '

I Buy Homes- local person For rent: 1 and 2 Qedroom,

i

.

Tuesday, June 7, 2005

'

- - - - - - 1411.4 ~y ClAY L ~LLAN ----~­

loltt11 ol lht
four tcrombled words below ro form f011r word!.

. . .orronoo

I

POCRJT

R0 C

II

I. I I I I'

H 0 C U·V ...
11

l

~

Onecutietcianolher. "A suecessful person has more but·
tons on their phone than on

r--,E~L~s~E~,K--:-N,-,v"!"',--.,1 ;i~-~~~~- ~h~

L-..1.-.J.L......L.-.1.-.J.L...J

chuckle ooo&lt;ed

l:ly ltll.ng in the "'"ts•ng •ords
you develop lrom trep No. J belcwr.

r r I' r I' r I' I

:~~~~~E~mus
~~f\=~LUTUSIOII

•

.

Ill f II ·

SCIIAM.l(TS ANSWERS l·o·o s

Amount - Gorge - Novel - Valise • US MORE
If we think we know our friends, you"U find vacation-

ing with them will teachUS MORE.

ARLO&amp; JANIS
!!URF ~u~F WJ&lt;F
W~f '&gt;I.I~J

�•

.

.·•

'.
Page 86 • Tiu~ Daily Sentinel

www .mydailyse.n tinel.com

Point Pleasant wins . W.Va. Open Soccer Cup
Suarez added his goal on an
unassisted shot from 25 yards
out in the second half to gi,·e
BARBOURSVILLE. W.Va. POINT th~ t\VO goals it need- It's no longer called the ed. Great l,·ays Expre"
Chevy Cur.. but POINJ' soc- recorded · its lone goal a few
cer was still like a rock as it mim1tes lat~r. but it was not
rolled to its second straight enough as POINT claimed
championship over the week- back-to-back titles .
To get to the championship.
end.
how,eY·
er. POINT had to battle
The Mason Coumians domthrough
the heat and humidity
inated Saturday, · then split •a
day
one.
·
pair of games on Sunday en
In game one on Saturday. it
route to the Under 19 Silver
rolled
to a 6-2 victory over
Division crown at · the West
F.C.
United.
thanks it1 part m
Virginia Open Cup.
POINT defeated Great a hat trick from striker ·
· · Teays Express 2-1 ·on Sunday Stephen Walker. Hi .s three
to claim the cha(llpionship .. goals set the pace as Bruns.
thanks
to · goal~
from Suaress and . Jess Btbbee
Christoph Bruns and Marlon added a goal apiece. · ·
With a boost of contidence.
Suarez .
Bruns headed a ball into the POINT followed up its first
net off of Mitchell Johnson performance witli a 5-0
throw-in giving his club the shutout of Tsunami. Walker
lead in the 18th minute of the · added two more goa ls to his
first hal f,
tournament.
total.
with
BY lARRY CAUM

LCRUM@MYDAilYREGISTER .COM

or

a

Mitchell Johnson. Bruns and leading sixth goal of the tourBibbee adding one also.
namem.
Offense was not the onlv
The team did manage Ill
highlight of the first two rally spirits in its linal game,
games. as great defensive wanting desperately to bring
play allowed the offense to the Cup back to Point
work.·
Pleasant.
As
POINT
Dustin Taylor. Corey Lane. regrouped.
Great
Teays
John Hussell. Tracy Johnson Express could do nothing as
and Justin Sayre were among the team from M;tson County
the defensive stando uts for claimed the title.
the team with Josh Errett anc;l
To complement their title
Kenny Durham providing victory. POINT posteu an S-1
stando ut play' ;tt · mid field record durin~ the spring seaduring play on Saturday.
son in the Kanawha Valley
Heading . into
Sunday . . Soccer League with " a \cry
POINT fuund itself in first young· team .
place as no other teams had
The team inc lu,!eJ Bih.hee.
won more than. one game on Bnms.
Durham.
Errett.
Saturday.
Hussl'il. 1\1 .. .l ohnso11. T
But POINT did nut escape Johnson. Lane. Sayre. Suarei.
the weo;kend un sca thed as Tayler and \\(alker.
Wild River posted a 4- 1 victo,Also on the POINT team
ry to open tournament play on was Mile~ Bod!Jrskl, .Austm
Sundav. The lone goal for the Hannum. Rachel Hannum,
Mason (ounty players came Josh Hart . 'Kyle . Smith . and
from Wafker. scoring his team • Josh Turner.
' .

'

Town benefits from truck
re-routin~ through lower
turnpike tolls, A2

Tuesday, June 7. 2005

Camps ~d Clinics
Baseball

hOld tis annual Big Red Basketball
Camps in June at the Lyne Cente~.

Galllpolla youth baaeball camp
The schedule for the camps , whh
GALLIPOL!S- The Galhp(:llis,Youth fEles are as follows :
Baseball Camp will be held 9 a.m. until
- yarsity ' anci JV Shootout, June 9,
1 p.m. June ~3-16 at Memorial Field.
5130.
•
.Friday. June 17 w1ll ~ used as a
-Varsity Shootout. June 10, $130 .
make-up day in case of rain-out.
- JV Shootout, June ·11. $130.
The camp 1s tor boys and girls enter- JUOIOr High Team camp, June 12·
ing gmdes 3-8 .
14. $190.
Cost is S50 per camper or $40 for
. Varsity and JV Shootoul, June 15,
two or .more l rom the same family. Each S130.
.
,will rece1ve a camp T-shirt and da1ly
- Varsity and JV Team Camp, June
•wai ds w111 be given out.
16·16, $190,
.
.
tCamp(lrs should brmg a glove, bat
Individual Camp,-&lt;' .June 26-30,
fnd cleats ,! you have them.
. $250.
.
.. Contact R1ch Corvin at 441 -0543 or
The individual camp incfudes '"The
~5- 4 80 1 for more in!ormation or to reg- Triple", the nat1on's only triple elimination tournament
~Ier
For more Information, call.245-7294,
'
1-800-292-720~ (ext. 7294), or e-mail
Marietta College Camp of
Rio Grande assistant co·ach Ken French
Champs
MARIETTA - The Marietta College at klr.e"nch Orio:eUu.
Baseball Camp of Champs will be held
ewer the course of the summer at
URG Women's Basketball C.mp
Pioneer Park.
. RIO GRANDE - :rhe University of
The Day Camps for grad9s 2-8 will Rio Grande will hold its women's basbe: held July 5·7. 12t14 and 19-21 , while ketball camps beginning in June ~I.
the ResidenC$/Commuler Camp will be Lyne Center.
held for grades 6- 12 on July 24-28.
The schedule for the camps , with
For a camp brochure. call the base- . fees are' as f(lllows :
•ball ollice at (740)376-4517 or
- lrydivldual 'nd Varsity Team Camp."
{740)376-4673 or check · the web at" June 19·22, $225. .
· ..
www.mariena.edu
- Varsity and JV Shootout. June 25 ...

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
)tJll'\ 1...._•\ td.)-t

\ll

• AII-TVC teams
announced. See Page 81 .

•

- Varsity and J\1 Shootout, Juty 9, ~
$215.
~
- Jun•or High Individual Camp, Ju~
17-20, S225.
·
~
'
.: Varsity and JV Team Camp, July..
21-23. S225.
·
..
For more Information, contact ~avid
Smalley at 245-7491 or e-mail htm atdsmalleyctrio.edu.

LONDON tAP) Paris Olympic bid hist01y - but will' to the bid's success. was put The vote in Singapore. howevreml\ins the city to beat in the serve as a 2uide for the .ll7 eli- into further doubt when the er. will also hinge on geopolitirace tor the 2012 Olympics .. gible voting IOC members state Public Authorities Control cal issues and other factors.
while New York's chances took when they cast secret ballots in Board failed Monday to get the · "You do not dismiss any city
a hit when a powerful !\late Singapore on July 6.
unanimous vote required to on the basis of this report."
.
'Yes I Can' camp at
board rejected- funding for a
Pans has been considered the secure $300 million in state · London bid chairnmn Sebastian
Haldalber; College
TIFFIN - The 25th annual "Yes I
· ·
favorite since the stan of the money.
proposed stadium.
Coe ~id.
Can" basketball camp, featuring author
With a month to go betore campaign nearly two years a!i&gt;o.
The state board could reconBritish bOokmakers reacted
. and coach Stan Kelfner, will be held
the vote, the French cap(tal and Monday's report only rem- Sider the issue again later. But to the rcpon by keeping Paris as
June 26·30 at Heidelberg College.
1
solidified its front-runner status forced that status.
ThE! camp if for boys and girls in'
without the support of member the odds-on favorite, with
,grades 6-12.
Mo~day.. receiving a glowing · The . report's . · summar~ Sheldon Silver the state Ladbrokes listing the' French
For more information, call Bill
revtew m an International pratsed the 'vel)' h1gh q1,1ahty a·ssembly sreaker who came City
· at 1-6 and W'll
.
H'll
t 1&lt;m1
I
lmmler at (440)2.33-7551 or visit their
Olympic Committee report of the Paris and London bid out against e plan less than an making it a J-4 shot. London
web sile at www.yesiCansports.com.
evaluating the five cities bid- tiles. Madrid ;md New York hour before vote was taken- was second at 7-2 and 11-4.
Lll' Blue A'ngel Basketball camp
ding to host those games.
were cited lor "high yuality" the state funding cannot move
The IOC repoll praised Paris.
GALLIPOLJS - Girls in grades
London and Madrid also presentations.
kindergarten through 8th nexl year can 1
forward.
among' other thin.,us, for its
1
eamed high praise in the 123- · New York won positive · "This.r,lan is at best, premabe a part the Ul' Blue Angels Basketba!l
·
Southern Football +mp
"excellent
sports
concept.
Camp al the Nazarene Church on First I
RACINE - The South rn High
. page repon.
words for its legacy plans, pro- ture," Si ver said. indicating he accommodation," 'and "high
on June 13· ~ 5.
•
~
School AthletiC Department a
need
But reviews for New York motion of Olympic sports in was willing to continue talking capacity .and quality'· trans- Avenue
The camp will be held 4 p.m. to 6 that a football camp lor players g des 7·
were mixed, with. the IOC cit- America and strong potential about the issue.
p.m. each day.
.
12 w111 be held al Sou~hern High hool
Each participant will recleve baskel- June 14, 15 and 16. All are asKed to
However, the repoll also pollation.
ing a number of concerns. for local sponsorship and
ball instruction, get to participate in fuf"' , report from 6:30 until 9 .p .m., except on
·The report also noted that
incl!!ding uncertainty over a licensing revenues . . But the cited other issues for New
· games, receive 8 camp t·shirt, along J~n~ ~4 , when ~hose tn sevenlh anQ
v
k
·
h
1
k
f
d
d'
Paris
had
··fully
taken
into
propose~ Olympic stadium. IOC noted that "no guarantees
with a baskelball and refreshments.
I e•ghth report at 5.45 p.m.
.
.or • notmg t . at ac 0 e ,. account" the·· JOC's framework
.
.
· .
d
There Is .no fee for the camp, and 1t
The City s btd suffered a set- were provided" fpr the planned cated Olympic lat1es to ' some
' The cos,t •s $45 .!f pre~reglstere and : will emptlasize offensive and cfetBnsive
back when a powerful state $2 billion West Side stadium. venues ''may .make it difticult tor controlling the cost and size . $55 after June 1. Contact Duane E ~tep f damentals
·
·
board rejected critical pub.lic as well as an international to achieve the stated travel · of the Olympics - a . major at 304-824-5870. Chris Ellcessor at un
441-9838, Mike ·Brace at 245 -9677 .or
times."
point in IOC president Jacques Judy
funding for a $2 ·billion stadi- broadcasting center.
Portsmouth 7-on~7 Paaalng
at 446-3512 fc.&gt;i- more information. !
Caimp
The repoll was based on vis- R,ogg(s 'blueprint for fu ture
um.
"The IOC report has made
Gallipolis Area Basketball Camps t
POF3TSM?UTH -The 13th annual
Moscow. already a longshot, crystal clear that we· re in a · its to the five cities by the IOC gan1es.
GALLIPOLIS
_
The
annual I Ports~uth H•g.n School 7-·on~7 p,asslng
took criticism for its lack of great position to wi'n ... so ion~ evaluation commission, and
"We are really delighted
Gallipolis Area Basketball Camps will ·. ~~::u~~~ ~ Fnday, June ~9 at Spartan
detailed plans.
·
as the · stadium is approved, ' focuses on technical issues because our concept seems to
be . ~~ld a~ .the Nazarene Church '
Cost for the camp is $75. Qnly 16
The report · didn' t rank the New York bid leader Dan such as venue construction, be 1velcomed in the best way.''
Achvtties Butldm~ on June 6-~. and will I teams will compete. Teams are taken on
cities - the most competitive Doctoroff said.
transponation. hotel accommo- Paris ·bid . leader Philippe · feature two sess!ons. Those '" grades I a first-come, first·serve basis.
.
The stadium, which is crucial dations. financing and security. Baudillon said.
and . glamorous field in
4-6_ next year w!ll ~e held from noon r
To enter, contact Curt Clittord at

Football

OBITUARIES

Finals
"from PageBl
'·

Pistons'
17
postseawn
games.
Brown was elated as the
final seconds ticked down,
racing up the sideline to
embrace Wallace near midcourt and then sprinting
back to his bench to whoop
it up a little more.
The sentimental pangs that
Brown was experiencing
before Game 6 were diminished this time.
"Not so much as the last
game," Brown said. "I was
home, my family · was
around. Now, I'm just excit~d about the opportunity,
because these don ' t come
around very much."
Brown has been with the
Pistons for only two seasons.
one of the shortest sti nls

of

Draft
from Page Bl
could play just about any- .
wher~
on . the . field,"
Diamondbacks general manager Joe Garagiola said. "He
is just a whale of a baseball
player."
With the recent signing of
Stephen Drew. the team 's
top pick last year. the .
Diamondbacks have some
depth in their organization
at shortstop. They also have
Sergio Santos. the team' s
top selection three years
ago, and Corey Myers. their
previous highest draft . pick
who went No.4 in 1999.
"That would affect nothing," Garagiola said: "We're
going to take the player we
think is the best player on
the board when we have the
whole thing put together."
Even so. there's a chance
the Diamondbacb might go
for one of the pitchers who
could offer help at the major
league level quickly.'
{lansen is a 6-foot-6 closer with a 95 mph fastball
and a nasty slider. He set the
school and Big Ea t conference records for saves, and
might have raised his stO;Ck
over the weekend whe~ he

and that 's what they did
against O 'Neal and Wade.
too.
"There's so much work
ahead of us," Detroit center
Elden Campbell said. "It's a
relief to get past them. It was
a tough series."
Wade was noticeably slow
during the game's tirst few
minutes, laboring as \le ran
at half-speed and mi ssing his
first three shots. There was a
brief burst midway through
the first quarter when Wade
started to look more like
himself, sprinting downcourt
and feeding an alley.- oop
pass to O ' Neal, then hitting
a 3-pointer for a 17-9 lead.
Miami led 23-21 after one
quarter behind I 0 points
from 'O'Neal on 5-for-6
shooting, but the Pistons
went ahead early in the second quarter and stayed in
front for the rest of the half
Hamilton was the Pistons'
mam offensive weapon.

shootin~

8-for-1 0 for I 6
points, but the Heat pulled to
45-40 at halftime at'ter'Eddie
Jones hit a buzzer-beating 3pointer from midcourt.
Wade was noticeably looser early in the third quarter.
knocking down his first two
shots and looking to penetrate the lane. But as good as
hi s offense was, Detroit's
was just as efficient.
"Anybody in my situation
would do the same thing. try
to gut it out," said Wade.
who took a painkilling injec.
tion before the game. "It
came down to the end, them
making plays. And we did n't."
.
.
Notes:
Damon Jones
sprained ~ left ankle in the
first quarter but returned
before 'halftime. He . scored
only one point. .... This . was
the 91st Game 7 in NBA history. The home team has a
74-17 reco[d .... The Pistons
are 4-4 in Game 7s, while
Miami is 2-2.

started and won for St ~ five picks were pitchers, but the hQidouts of Drew and
John's in the NCAA region- this year I don 't see an over- recently signed pitcher Jered
als.
abundance of any one type Weaver. Boras is again repThe 6-7 Pelfrey is a two: ·of player. I would say it 's an resenting some of this year's
time
Mi sso uri
Valley average draft. talent-wise top
players
.i ncluding
Conference pitcher of the a,nd as far as depth is con- Hansen , Hochevar, Pelfrey,
year who throws a fastball cerned."
Utah high school lefty Mark
that sits in the mid-90s and
Kansas City will make its Pawelek and Georgia Tech
mixes it with a power curve highe st draft · selectipn at sho rtstop Tyler Greene.
and solid c hangeup.
No. 2. followed by Seattle.
"S ignability is always an
Hochevar is another hard - Washington and Milwaukee · issue, something you always
throwing righty who ts a to round out the top live. look at and that we'll conGolden Spikes finalist and Boston and St. Louis. both tinue to look at." said Bob
was the ace of Team USA's World Series teams last Fontaine, . Seattle's vice
gold medaFwinning staff year. have six picks in the president
of
scouting .
last summer.
first two ri&gt;unds, mostly a "Everybody has a budget."
Some of the other top result oflosing free ·agei:ns. ·
The draft lasts 50 rounds
players avai lable include
This year - the draft 's and is conducted through
Nebraska third baseman 40th anniversary - marks Wednesday. by conference
Alex
Gordon,
North the tirst time the selection calL San Diego selected ·
Carolina higli school out- order is based on the previ- California
hi gh
sc hoo l
fielder Cameron · Maybin, ous year's record from worst shortstop Matt Bush with
Long Beach State shortstop to best. regardless of league . the first pick last year.
T.roy
Tulowitzki
and In past years. the picks alter"Going into the draft, 1
Virginia third baseman Ryan nated between leagues.
don't think you have as
Zimmerman.
supposedly going to many star-qua lity players, as
·Also. back in the draft ~ do"It's
what it was meant to do
former Rice right-hander all .. along," Rizzo said . maybe over the last several
Wade Townsend. who was "We're happy the change years," Devil Rays general
taken by Baltimore with the was malie this year because manager Chuck LaM ar said.
No. 8 pick last year but we ge t the first pick instead " But with that said. there 's
turned down an offer and of the second pick."
going to be as many major
returned to ·"hool.
One of the major issues in leaguers come out of this
. "Last year, we thought the baseball draft is the abil- , draft."
there was good pitching· in ity of teams to actually sign
'the draft." said Tampa Bay the players they se lect.
AP Sports Writers Bob
director of player develop- Agent Scott Boras is notori- Bawn !II Ph oenix. Fred
ment and scouting Cam . ous for having drawn-out Goodall in Tampa wul Tim
Bonifay, whose team picks contract negotiations with Korte in Sea.ttle contributed
eighth. "Three of our first teams - as evidenced by ro' rhis report.

compete in contests for prizes.
•
The cost is $45 or $55 after June 1. ·1
Gontact Jim Osborne 446-9284 tor
more information.

Trac

k
' /R

•

Mountain High Running Camp
to be held In Bristol
BRISTOL. Va. - The MOuntain High
Running Camp will be held July 11 · 16
and 18·23 in !he mountains of south·
weslern Virginia.
·
·
For more i r ~r rrllation. Catl Scott
Slr'lmons at I ·8)0-451:1VIC or go to
www.mountalr.'llghr.mning.com.

I

. The _ ca~p will be hel~ in _two ses0.0. Mcintyre Tennl~ Leuona '
~ons. w1th 'k1ds between grades 6-8 l~k- .
GALLIPOLIS _ The 0.0. Mcintyre ·
1ng place from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m .
I p k 0 . t 1 'II II d " nd h;,.;,_
Participants between grades 3-5 will
ar . •s nc WI . o er a u.. a c ..J.,.

start at noon and end at 2 p.m.
I te:nms I~S$ons. The ho~r-h:1ng lessons
The cost ot the CE.~mp is $2S per w1U be h~ld 10 a.m. unt11. 11 a.m.t and
camPer ancf there .is a $15 charge lor also from t 1 a.m. · unttl _12 p.m. on
Saturday mornings.
h dd'ti n 1 'bl'
First group lnstructio'l is set from
eac 8 1 o a Sl tng.
Make chec:ks payable to Southern
Athletic BoOslers and registrations need May 21. thro!JQh J~ne 11.' The second
.
group Instruction 1s June 18 through
robe f•~led out.
.
.
July 16;' there will be no lessons Juty 2
Mail cl'u~ck and. regtstrat1o_ns to tor the July 4 holiday.
Southern H1gh School, c/o, Atehard 1 · The, instructor will be Tom Hopkins
Stephens, 920 Elm Street, Ractne, Ohio and class size Is limited to 20 persons
45711 .
.
. ·
per hour lesson. ChUdren ages six and
For more ~~formation , contact bas· abOve are welcome. Cost is $10 per
ketball coach ~teh~rd Stephens at 698- j person. .
.
6530, or athle11c. d~reotor Alan Crisp at
For more InfOrmation, contact Mark
949·2611 e:denstOn 2103.
Danner at 74()..44&amp;-4612 ext 255.

TIRED OF JUST HAVING
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A NEW CAREER?
Wonderful opportunities are available in Tom Peden
Count!)'. We afe expanding our staff and need more
salesmen and saleswomen. Np Experience is required,
only a willingness to learn, work as a team and have a
strong
. initiative.
• Potential Income 40-60k
• Work At The 11 Dealership

• 401 K Retirement Plan
• HeaHh Insurance

J.

Tom Peden Country
·.

-

'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

REED

POMEROY
. Meigs
Emergency
County
Page AS
Management Agency and the
MIDDLEPORT- An area
• Raymond Cassady,·64
·Emergency
Planning
near Riverview Cemetery is
Committee
(LEPC)
will test
the only suitable place to set
various
sections
of
the
counoff July 4 fireworks, and if
ty's Emergency Operations
the area cannot be used, there
Plan
(EOP) late Thursday
will likely be no July 4 celeafternoon
in . a simulated
bration in Middlepon at aiL
· • WHS alumni gather
exercise
at
Chester.
Tom Dooley, vice presidenl
.. According
for annual reunion.
of Middleport Community
to ·
Robert
Association, discussed plans
See Page A2
Charl..., Hoefttch/photoo
Byer.
EMA
to use an area alongside the Lisa Johnson of Racine. Fantasy L. Durham of Salem Center. and Jennifer Lambert of Racine,
· • Family Medicine.
director,
a
cemetery for the fireworks receive plaques for passing their GED·tests.
transpo, rt
See .Page A2
display, and clarified details
truck making
about the plans. in light of
• Brandi Thomas
deliveries
to
recent criticism from comvarious agriMemorial Scholarship
munity · members. Dooley
culture busi- ~;..;._ _::_-J
winners. See Page ·A3
tirst discussed the plans to
BY CHARLENE HDEFI.ICH
nesses will be
Byer
use the cemetel)' area at the · HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
• Eastern student
.
involved in an
most recent meeting of
accident spilling · containers
accepted at Otterbein
Middleport Village Council,
POMEROY - Plenty of
of a toxic weed killer which
College.
Page A3
explaining that the firm emotion with both joy and ·
res~lts in fumes bein~ admitwhich has contracted to pre- tears was expre·ssed at
• Meigs County land
ted into the air causmg per·
sent the fireworks display Monday night's Adult Basic
transfers posted,
sons in the area to have
will no longer agree- to do so Literacy !"ducation (ABLE)
'breathing difficulties and
See Page A5
!rom the Ohio River.
annual banquet ·as students
burning eyes.
Dooley said the area under were recogmzed for academ• For the Record . .
consideration at . Riverview ic achievement.
Please see Exercise. A5
See Page -As
For
eight
students
it
was
Cemetery is . not near any
graves, and said the cemetery graduation night, a time for
would be closed off to the . receiving theirGED diploma,
public during the display. The for I 5 others it was recogniriver site, meanwhile, is diffi- tion for persistence in movcult to secure, and some· ing forward, and for one it
property
damage
has was being recognized as. a
occurred in the past because member of the National
Adult Education Honor
of the location.
.
"Safety has long been .an Society.
Fantasy L. Durham of Fantasy Durham of Salem Center expresses her delight at
..issue with using the river
bank for the djsplay. Using Salem Center, who dropped qua lifying for membership. into. the National Adu lt Educational
STAFF REPORT
the area near the cemetery out of school to 'get married Honor Society to her ABLE instructor Pat Ne.ece, right. Jeff
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM.
will be much easier for the . when she was 16, was pre- Fantine , director of the Central/Southeast ABLE Resource
fireworks company and safer sented a plaque ,as qualifying Center. was there to present her 'with a plaque.
COOLVILLE -A public
for them and the general pub- for the NatiOnal Honor
meeting has been scheduled
lic," Dooley said. "It's not Society by Jeff Fantine, was nominated for the award Schaefer. Each one was pre- to discuss the pending
Detalt. on Pace A&amp;
of
the by Pat Neece and Susan King sented a plaque in recogni- · Hocking(JI,lll•area slip repair
disrespectful to those buried dire~or
Central/Southeast
·
ABLE
of the Bradbury ABLE tion of their achievement by projects . in eastern Athens
there."
Resource
Center.
Center
where she ·prepared the Middleport-Pomeroy County on June 14 at
. Dooley said the matter will
After
congratulating
over a three month period for Rotary Club which spon- Coolville Elementary School.
be discussed at Monday
Durham,
he
noted
that
she
the GED exam.
sors the ~vent and provides
evening's
meeting
of
Interested propeny o)l'ners
completed
the
primary
qualDurham
is
now
enrolled
at
the dinner.
Middleport Village Council,
2 SEcriONS - 12 PAGES
are
invited to speak with Ohio ·
ification by scoring 630 on the University of Ricr Grande
Attendance
certificates
but
said
·
the
Association
Depaqment of Transportation
Calendars
A3
should be prepared to cancel the GED test. He said that · preparing for a career in· were to Mary I; lien Lambert, representatives from I to 7
score put her into the top 20 nursing - "something I've
hours;
Ashley p.m. Other members of the.
Classifieds
82-4 the July 4 celebration in its percent in the state, also wanted to be since I was in 600
Spradling, 500 hours ; Jtidy public wi II be accommodated
entirety if the cemetery area
noting that she was among grade sc hool," . she said. Searles, 400 hours; Epihriam
is not made available.
Comics
the
top five percent in the "Nursing has . always been Herdman · II, 300 hours; between 4 and 7 . p.m. The
"My thinking is that if there
nation in adult learners .to my passion." As a part of Angel · Reeves. 200 hours; meeting will be held in an
are
Dear Abby
no
fireworks
,
there
is
no
open house format with repreA3
celebration," Dooley said. qua!ify for the Honor befng named to the National Leigha Bryant, Marie Ellis, sentatives available .t o answer
Honor · Society, . she now Michael Ellis, Ishi J}rimm, ·
Editorials
· A4 "We stand to have thousands Society.
questions.
Besides
achieving
a
high
qualifies for scholarships, John
of people in tqwn for the July
Harrison,
Letha
ODOT approached the
score, a varieiy of other fac- Fantine said.
O)&gt;ituaries
As 4 celebration, and the tire- tors
Laude~milt, Tasha Lester,
public
in late March with prewere considered in
Other GED graduates
works are the primary reason
Floyd McClellan. and Lois liminary alternat·ives to
attaining membership includ- include Bobbie· J. Chaffin,
B Section people will be there."
Sports
Pooler,
I 00 hours.
restoring the highway system
ing community' volunteer ser- Jonathan R. Dailey, Lisa D.
· MiddlepPrt's Independence
Dr.
John
Costanzo,
superin
the vicinity. Since that
Weather ·
A6 Day celebration is traditional~ vice. Durham, 28, married Deaver. Joshua M . King , intendent of the Athens- · time, public comment has
with two children, worked in Keith A. Rossiter, Gary J .
the Head Start program. She Scarberry, and Jennifer D.
Please see RNWGI'ks, A5
© •oos Ohio Valley Pubti.ohl"'l eo.
Piease see ABLE, A5
Please see ODor. A5
'

ODOTplans
public- meeting
on Coolville
.slip repairs

•

Bs

A simple reminder about Insurance discounts.
A Saturday morning ritual kind of remln~er.

•

You need to Insure both your auto and your home so why
not save money in the process? Call your American Family
• agent tod~ for a free ,no-ob.ll~tlon look at auto and horrye
discounts. so you can check 1t Off your list, and off your m1nd.
J.C.
Agency, Inc.
t58!St 1U t6G

Caii'To Schedule An lntervrew:

1-800-822-()417. 372-2844
475 South Church Street • Ripley, WV .25271

BY BRIAN

.

INDEX

I

•• Rio Grandt

celebration
will depend
·on fireworks
site approval

WEATHER

Tennis

echedu~

Simulated
disaster·.
exerciSe set
for·Thursday

see

j

RIO GRANDE -The liniwrsity of

within the same county can
According to Trussell,
beconie eligible, which elimi- Middleport has so far spent
nated Pomeroy from the $47,700 on street repair, while
process this year..
$12,700 has gone to. the
Trussell said she was aware Middleport Volunteer Fire
of that grant stipulation . Department.
.
beforehand and that she
Since last fall, h~arings ·.
believed she could have the. have taken place throughout
60 percent _expended by the Pomeroy- to meet the condideadhne Wtth the s tdew~lk . tion s , 0 f the CDBG, applicarepair bid. The CDBG prov1d- tion and 10 gauge where the
ed $89, I 00 for Sidewalk residents wished the $300,000
re()atr and tree removal for to go throughout the commuMtddleport. The JOb w1ll be
·
.
re-bid thi s summer.
Please see Grant. A5

'

Volleyball

(E-mail your. camps, clinics or
Jeagus registrations ro sportsOmydal·
lyfribun9.com or fax them to 446-3008.)

. Trussell said the bids were
advertiS(d through the newspapedor three weeks and that
individual letters were sent
out to contr&lt;Jctors.
The CDBG is a federal
grant offered through · the
Office of Hou sing and
Community Partneyship, a
divi sion
of
the
Ohio
Department of Development.
The CDBG has a stipulation
that 60 percent of an entire
award must be expended
before another community

ABLE students honored for achievement

unniDJ:

~·by Blue Basketball C~mp
. GAlliPOLIS~ Boys and Qtrls who
Will be in grades 1·4 next year can
attend the annual BabY, Blue easketball I
Camp at the Nazarene Chur9h on July
5-7,
.
The carrip will be h~ld from 1 p.m .
untll2:15 p.m. each day.
Each participant will receive basketball instruction and will participate 1n tun
Marietta College to hold summar
gcimes, and will get a camp basketball,
volleyball Clmp
refreshments and a l·shirt.
MARIETIA -The Marlet1a College
The cost is $30 or $40 after June
volleyball program will hold a summer
21.
1
Contact Jim Osborne 446-9284 lor camp lor girls grades 7-12:
. The camp will run fr(l'm 8:45 a.m. to
more mformation.
4 p.m. , June 13:16 wilh a registration..
southern High School .announcet fee of $100, which includes lunch.
~
date for hoops camp
For more information, call he~~
; coach Tom Symons at (740)376·4410 ot
.
RACINE _ Southern. High School e-mail him at symonst0mariet1a.edu. . __
will hold its summer boys basketball. I
•
.c.mp on June 13 through June 17 ., .
1
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium.

Bfg Red Booketbetl Compo

POMEROY Pomeroy
has been oeclared ineligible
for a $300,000 Community
'Development Block Grant
(CDBG). this year due to a
stipulation that Middleport
spe nd 60 percent of its CDBG
money by July 15.
Middleport was awarded a
CDBG last year but has not
yet expended the required 60
per&gt;eni of their $300,000,

thus disqualifying Po(lleroy
from applying for a grant
thi s year.
Meigs County
Grants
Administrator Jean Trussell
said that she recently adver,
tised a bid for Middlepn\1 tree
removal .and sidewalk repair
that would have expended
that 60 percent but received
no bids. Time has now run
out to re-bid the project and
to, contract the work our by
the July I 5 CDBG application deadline.

·INSIDE

740-355. 4416 or T&amp;d Newsome at 74Q'
82 1.2-422
·

refreshmenis and a t·shirl. and can I

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1

his nomadi c coaching career
- but easily the most successfuL
"It's turned out way
beyond my wildest dreams,"
Brown said.
Brown will·visit the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minn ..
soon after Detroit's season
ends to address a medical
problem that developed after
complications from . hip
surgery. If surgeons are not
able to correct it,, Brown
plans to retire from coaching . Speculation has been
rampant that if he ·leaves
Detroit, Brown may join the
Cleveland Cavaliers· front
office.
Detroit got 18 points from
Chauncey Billups and 13
from Prince, proving ag'!in
that a tea·m effprt can be
more than enough to defeat
two superstars. That's what
the ·· Pistons did agains t
O ~Neal and Kobe Bryant in
the NBA · Finals last year,

""'\.111\d , lih"'l' lltlllt."li.lllll

July Fourth

Basketball

unttl 2 p.m., while grades 7-9 will be
from 2 p.m.·4:15 p.m.
Each participant will receive basketball instruction , a camp bask:etbaH,

\\)ll'l~l)\l .. Jl'l X.:.!OCJ.)

.!IJ..!

No ~ommunity De~elopment Block Grant for Pomeroy, this year.

SPORTS

the

Reds Legends to hold 3~1V clln lc ·
MARIETTA - The Cincinna!l Reds
Legends w•11 be hold•ng a 3·day youth
baseball clinic for k"ids ages 5-19 on
June 22 -24 at VFW Baseball Field In
Marlena. Ohio.
The 3-daV event will focus on the
fundamentals of pitching, hitting and
fielding, and will include instruction from.
former Reds greats such as Ken Griffey.
Sr., Dave Parker. Lee May, Jack
Billingham. and others.
The cost of the clinic is $10Q It registralion is completed by June 15 and
the deadline ror registering is June 17.
For more information, please can 74Q373-3476.

Keisler lifts Reds over
Devil Rays, Bt

Rio Grande's men's basketball team will

$2IS.

Paris gets top review in IOC report oh 2012 bid cities
.

•

'

Gallipolis, OH 45631
(740) 4441-0114

BWOO I @al'!,{am~com

AMERICAN FAMILY
INSURANCE

All your protectiori under one roof•.

Agency,
225 BroiJdway St.
Jackson, OH 45640
(740) 286-4185
jwood@amfam.com

Mon.- Fri. 9:00 am - 5:00

-

Amerk:an Family Mutual Insurance Company and .its ·
Subsidia\ies
AmeriCan Standard Insurance Compal'1y of Wisconsin
Home Office - Madison. WI 53783
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lli!ltl Homo Offlce • Columbus. OH 43240 ,
~

·-.-

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001492 · 2.ai

•

..

•

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