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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

NASCAR -

,.

Monday, Ju.n e 27, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

NextEI Cup SeriEs

A

.Stewart wins another road _race
SONO MA. -Calif. (A I' ) caught and passed Wall m:e fur
Tony Stc\\arl fO lind hi &gt; way the lead on lap 8~. Stewart
hack to YiciL&gt;rv Lane wi th !he steadil y ' hoi toward the leadhelp of some rig ht- hand turns. ers. He moved into second
The for mer series champion pi&lt;Jce on lap -85. st ill traili ng
took over the lead when pole the leader by 2. 7 seconds - .
. wi nner and race favori te Jeff about. hal f the main stra ight•.
GurdiHl fa ltered with trans- _away.
mission tro uble and we nt on . It was on ly a matter of time.
tu win S u1l d e~v's NASC.&lt;\R though, as Stewart , whu had
Ncx rel Cup Dodge/Save Man tluec sccon il-pl acc fin ishes
.150 at l·nfi neon Racewav. his ·th is season bdorc l'i nall v
fi rst wiri ~ in l·c las t Augl1st at bre.akin g intn t!1e win columi1
Watk ins Glen Internatio nal. on Su nda\. L'io,cd i11. I lis No.
the onl y other. road circuit on 20 Joe' Girhs
Racing
the Cup sched ule.
Che1 1uk1 ;'in ally gut pas t
· It \.Y&lt;Is n'r a ro mp. th\) ugh.
Rudd's No. 2 1 Wood Brothers
Severa l cars. incl ud in g Ford with an inside move on
those driven by ve terans the final turn - ~ slow. hairRusty Wal lace and Ri cky pin right-hander - on lap
Rud ll. had pitted onl y a hand- · 100.
·
1
fu l of laps bef01'e and stayed
Rudd got one 1]10re shot at
on track when Stewart made th e leader when the caution
hi s fi nal stop under th e sev- fla g waved . on lap 103
enth of eight caut ion s in the because of debri s on the track . .
AP phqto race. Stewart restarted 14th But Stewart shot away on th e
Tony Stewart, right, ce lebrate s after winni ng the Dodge/Save . : on lnp 73 nf the II 0-lap event. restart on lap I0{;) aniJ werit on
Mart 350 NASCAR Nextel Cup at' lnfi neon Raceway in· Sonoma. . As Rtidd., whose lasi Cup 10 w_i n., by · 2. 266-sccond s.
Calif.. Sunday.
win came here in June 2002. about 2 0 .car-lengths.

League-less .youth baseball
team finds new opponents
'

'

'

. CANAL WIN CHESTER Di strict: pull ed .th e S1;1rs
(AP) - A bascball ' team of from th e k ag ue' and rewrned
II - and 12-year-old s .kicked their $ 150 entry fcc: He sugout of · a league in th is gested the Stars play in a
Columbus suburb is fieldin g tri1 vel leag ue against better
offers from all over to play. teams.
-The· Columbu s Stars were
Now th e Star s have
removed from their league re ceived offers from teams
last month becau se they all ove r central Ohio and in
were too good. In some of other stales. .
their last games, the . Stars . Clay Branch . .a parent in a
beat the Red Sox 18-0 . youth league in Atlanta. said ·
World Harve st 13-0. Sugar he offered to arrange for th e
Grove II 24-0 and Sugar team to pla y in Georgia.
Grove It 10: 2.
·
·
" l"d never beard or anyOther ·teams bega tl cum - thi"n g like that. and it blew
plaining - and canceling .
my mind. " he S&lt;\id. ··1 wi slr
Michael Mirones, board . we were cl oser."
.chairman . for · the Canal
The Stars &lt;llready ha ve a
Winchester Joint Recreation couple of games comin g up

again st te,uns i'n central
Ohio . ' They al so plan on
playing, in two tournaments
next month.
Georgian Heights. a team
from th e Columbu s area,
defeated th e Stars 5-4 last
week to give them their first
loss thi s. season. The Stars
had
ilcfearcd Georgian
Height s in two earlier meetings thi s yeao:.
. Stars
pitche r
Josh
Dameron. 12. said the team
learned from the loss.
"The mood of our team is .
the same. " he said. "We
don ' t care about tlie. loss.
The next time we play them,
we hope we win. "

Rudd barely held off reigning Cup c hampio n Kurt
Busc h for second be fore running o ut of -g as just past the
finis h line. W allace finished
fou rth. foll owed by Dale
Jarrett and E ll ion Sadler.
Th.: victory was the 20th of
Stcwart"s ca reer, his fo urth in
13 starb on road cou rses and
hi s second o n lnfineon 's piclllrrs que I .99-mile, 11 -t urn
ci rcui t. .

·

Trans missio n

problems

' ~o ile d the 'ctay for three of

th e
four
H e ndrick
Motorsr.ort' e ntries Sunday,
wi th
'Gor do n,
Jimmi e
Johnson. wh o started alongside Gordon in the front row,
and Brian Vi c kers all &gt;lowed
by linkage tro ubles.
, Johnson w o und up 36th in
the po ints and ~ combined with
Greg Bilne · s · 14th-pi ace finish. hi s had day cost him the
series lead thut he had held
since the fo urth nice of the
season at Atlanta. Bif'lle now

Texas

on the mo und, waiting, for
his teammates to start rush
out in celebration.
from Page 81
M cCulloc h l1e ld the
Gators hitless the first four
until . Brandon
. McCulloch ( 12-4 ), a 6-3 innings
McArthur
b
eat out a hopper
sophomore . ri ghf-hander;
to
d
eep
s.hort
to s tart the
threw ,;even' sliutout innings
tifth'
.
in the Longhorns' 5-0 win
Wheele s s , who· d hit a
over Tulane six days ago.
garne-win
n ing1.
homer
He struck out · eight
aga inst Baylor earlier in the
Sunday. walking one and series. con nec:ted on a &gt;olo
gi ving up fiv e hits, including . shot in the bottom of the
a two-run ·homer to Brian sixth to put the Longhorns
Lec lerc in ' the seventh. ahead 3-0 and drive out
Randy Boone got the third Florida·starter Bryan Ball.
out of the inning with two
Taylor Teagarden doubled
runners on .
r~l ie ver
Connor
off
Florida put runners at first Falkenbach and after a walk.
and third in the c i~hth off Maroul delivered a three-run
Boone befor~ . heavily used . homer to left center to put
· closer Cox - who appeared the Longhorns ahead 6-0. It
in all ·five of the Longhorn s' was Marou I' s second homer
games - got out of the jam . in as many days against t~e
Cox issued a walk in the Gators.
ninth but after a double play,
Florida finally got its
he · struck out Stephen offense going in the . seventh
Barton and fell to his knee when McArthur beat out

5252 COMPACT TRACTOR

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SALE '6,999'
0% tor 36

mantAs~·

Draft
NVOS

l~ads by 22 points heading
into ne-x t Saturday ni ght 's
race at Daytona.
Gordon. NASCAR 's Cflreer
leader on road · courses wi th
e ight victories. appeared on
the way to hi s tifth win at
lnfineo n, leading the tirst 32
laps before slow ing suddenl y
and ooivinoe up the top spot to .
S tewao1 .
,
The four-lime serie s champion had hoped getting 10 a
roacl course would end his
. recent problems that had seen
him fini sh 30th or worse in
four of th e last five races. but
the broken transmission relegated Gordon to 32nd pl ace
o n Sunday. ·
Stewart, who started seventh. had worked hi s way up
to second and was pushing
Gordon hard' before the leader
.slowed. From that p9int to.the
end. the ·2002 Cup champion
was easily the fastest car on
the track.

'361/month
SALE ' 12,999'
IMPLEMENTS SOlD SEPARATELY

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 54, Nn. 216

SPORTS
• Ferry accepts GM job
with Cavs. See Page 81

another infield si ngle and
Leclerc homered to left center 10 make it 6-2.
Ball (7- 6), pitching on
three days rest. escap"ed a
first-and -third .. jam with a
double-play grounder in the
first , but Texas used its
"small ball" approach to
manufacture a run in the
second with Maroul delivering a ·clutch two-out single
for a I -0 lead.
Wheeless singled, moved
to second on a sacrifice, to
third on a grounder and
scored
when
Maroul
bounced a single 10 left.
Texas got ·a · break in the
fourth when Gators left tielder Gavin Dickey, a backup
quarterback . on Florida's
football
team,
missed
Mm"O(J('s two-out liner for a
two-base error. That allowed
Teagarden, who had singled,
to score all the way from the
tirst and put the Longhorns
ahead 2-0.

M48-KW

'183/month
SAlE '6,599.
0% for 36

TANK~

months~·

'INSIDE
• In chilling fashion,
Wichita's BTK serial killer
. pleads guilty to 10
murders. See Page A2
• DofA councilors
name new officers.
See Page A3
• Ohio Dri'{er Training
announces field staff.
See Page A3
~ Frazee named Peoples
Bank office manager.
See Page A3
• Barbecue planned. ·
See Page AS
• U.S. Supreme Court
to review Ohio cases on
Ten Commandments.
See Page A6.

• 28 HP'Caterpiliar• diesel engine
• PosiTrak" On-Demand
four-wheel drive
• 725 lb. loader lift capacity

M60-KH

·s208/month
SALE '7,499'
0% lor 36

months ~·

WEA1HER

• 19 HP' Kawasaki• V·Twi~
OHV en-nt
• 48" Command Cut System~
• .Three-year limited warranty'"
reta~ler

INDEX

AVAILABL~

IN
.35' HP• OR 4.5 HP•
DIESEL ENGINES.

. 2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

A RATE THAT'S TOUGH
TO BEAT: OfMt 'FOR 36 IMONTitS**
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8880 UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH "45701
(740) 593-3279 / (800) 710-1917 (TOLL FREE)
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1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER, OH 43130
(740) 653-2827 / (800) 710-1921 (TOLL FREE)

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Ar~t,.,.~ In p..~.·t.1SPS ot S0:..500 J[ mor~ mar:e untr'O'T/Jl/20(') ~r IOU' Pow11r •&gt;ecot ·~drd Mot11mur·o !0% duwn ~avrnent rs
" t ·;·• •···' "'ci~··: a-r&gt;r:••"l.·i!r'C ~u f1rance rl&lt;!fges Nlll ~·~C"Jt' 01'1 p~rcr11ses . mlolthe e•pora'ICll'l ~a1 e cit ltle )fl·m~n•h ;:ro'T10't'nil, p~r,:&gt;d i15 maocau~c C"' /Out~:a·erneo t
t.: '"e e1 a--~'O"·~' · ~ SPE• 1 61ar "'I! "'Jr :a•:.'J". '· ,p~,' ar1 cr :~ 1 -~ouert Cu'S ' l!'t:·r~ talaroce ' f"lr~r~m 'T1ontr-ty paymerts are "01 oa,c 1 .-.r-e~ llue. a• s~ecar oro-.: "~at terms rray :1e 'P'rr,~attd S·andard
ac~~ur• ·e·:r lOCI, r.: ~)"·~· ,.,~. ' '-31;: ,•· ·a,r·s ~· • ~··~· -~(; :· r.;: • ef':5 ·~ 1 ~~· cr .rr'OI'Jr.a. ~ ... rc.na~es 1'.nr1..a1 ::Jercer'J'!.e Rate tor p&gt;.Jrcrases ~ IS&lt;f'l'~ ~~899~ 'T ~.,., ........ ,, ~~ 2/1105. ard ma 1 ~aryalter·l\at aa•t '
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r'll, tii"P

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

11, I.Uhf•l'

t'•·'

Ac1

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

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Sports
Weather

B Sectiqn
A6
•

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

www.rnydailysentiuel.com

'

'

BY BRIAN J. REEt:l
Mayor Sandy . lannarclli
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
said refreshments will be sold
. · and a program is planned at
MIDDLEPORT - . The · the pool. At 1'1!oliday's regular
of
Middleport
managers of Middleport Pool meeting
and volunteers plan a _July · 4 Village Council, lannarelli
sock hop and celebrallon, so said the event will begin at
those who have made a fami- noon and continue until 10
ly tradition of celebrating p.m. Proceeds will benefit the
Independence Day at home pool 's operation and future
will have a fun place to spend improvements. Games and
musi c are planned, and the
the day.

police department provided
two bicycl es to be given
· away, lannarelli said.
·
Jean Craig. one of the volunteer organizers. · invited
·council members to attend .
The Middleport Community
Association canceled its traditiona! July 4 festivities in
Dave Diles Park after village
council denied permi ssion ~o
'use Ri-.verview Cemetery for a

fireworks di splay, but h&lt;I S.
· assisted in the organizatio n of
and fundin g foo: the Jul y 4
pool party . .using funds contiibuted to the usual celebralion before it was canceled. .
Rae Moore, another volunteer, said lhe r•enU s a famil yfriendly event with acti vities
plan~ed for both adult s and
youngsters.
Council voted ·to advance

Please see Pool, AS

·Radne sets
Independence ..
Day celebration
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@ MYOAI LYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Tall grass
and high weeds at residences
and on village property was discussed at last night's Pomeroy
Yillage Council meeling.
.
Pomeroy resident Kenny
Klein addressed council about
what he considered high grass
and weeds in •the areas of
Mulberry and Butternut
Avenues, and ~1onkey Run.
Klein poinlr-ct out that some of
these residences are empty
with realty signs posted, while
some of the lots in question
are owned by the village.
Beth Sergent;photo
The village does have a tall
At
ttie
recent
Girl
Scout
Day
Camp
scmots
were
taught
sewing
techniques
·by
the Forest Run
grass and noxious weeds ordinance which Klein referred to Quitters. Each scout created four quilt squares that were then assembled with help from the
and said, "If you ' re · going to Forest Run Quitters who will sew the backing so that the quilt may be sold at the Meigs County
have an ordinance for people Fair. Scouts who participated in ma~ing the quilt were (from left) Kari Arnold ; Ashley Buchanon,
to have their grass cut, the vil- . Sierra Cleland, Kately~ Hil f{ Haley Hill. Cassie Roush , ~atie Gilkey. The scouts were joined by
lage should cut the grass on · Marcia Arnota from the Forest Run Quilters .
theJots they own."
"It's going to take awhile to
Sc~u
get caught up but we will,"
.
Councilman Jim Sisson told
BY
BETH
SERGENT
importance of recycling and Arnold then assisted the girl s
Klein in reference to the
8SERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
teaching
the girls to recog- in laying out the squares in a
recent hiring of part-time help
nize
their
Appalachian roots pal\ern. Arnold' and her felfor tile Street Department this .
SYR~USE
Last
week
and history of their county.
low quilters will thm put the
summer to keep up with the
at the Syracuse Community
Some of the girls touched backing onto the quilt for the
grass and weeds.
Mayor John Musser told Center 94 Daisies, Brownies base with their Appalachian girls who hope to display and
Klein that the village had and Girl Scouts from around heritage by making quilt then sell it · at the Meigs
been fining ·private property ihe county gathered to panic- squares 10 complete a badge. County Fair.
owners that are in violation of ipate in Camp Rose, a Girl The girls were assisted in creThe Forest Run Quilters
Seoul Day . Camp emphasiz- ating their squares by ladies also gave the girls a history in
Ple.Se see Pomeroy, AS
ing the environment.
from the Forest Run Quilters quilt making, reminding the
Camp CO-directors and from Forest Run United girls that the patterns of quilts
troop leaders, Debbie King Methodist Church who
often told family histories,
and .Dawna Arnold said that attended camp to help with
especially . in the African
Camp Rose's objectives were stitching techniques.
American community.
to .stress studying nature,
Forest Run Quilter and forconserv.ing resources and the mer Girl Seoul . Marcia
Please see Scouts. AS

.
I
Glr

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy and Middleport Fire
Depru;tments responded to !I
structure fire at II :53 p.m. on
Sunday at the residence of
Linda Zimmer located at 234
Lincoln Hill .
· Pomeroy Fire Chief Rick
Blaettnar reported that the fire
wa~ contained to one room in
the house which was the mas. ter bedroom on the second
floor. The room suffered hea"¥
heat and smoke damage while
the first 'floor suffered water
damage. He said Zimmer was
home at the time of the ftre but
reported no injuries.
B laettnar added that 'the
fire does not look suspicious
and remains under investigation. A total of 16 lirefighters
responded to the ,call. .

S5.000 in gc nerai fund money
to tlie operation of the pool,
panicul arly 10 cover start-up
expenses including chemicals.
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker said
the pool brought in $ 11 ,000 in
June, atid should be able torepay the ad va nce within the next
month based nn the · pool' s
tinancial performance to date.

RACINE "Freedom,
Family and Fun" will be
theme of , the July 4
Independence . Day celebration · to be held in Racine
sponsored by the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department
and Star Mill Park Board.
. A parade through downtown
Racine at IO ·a.m. will kickoff
the ali-day event. Line-up will
be at Southern High School at
9: 15 a.m. and following the
tlag rai sing by American
Legion Post 602 at 9:45, 'will
begin its move down Elm
Street, to Third, to Vine, to
Fifth 6trcct. and then on Elm
back to the high schooL
Marilyn Powell at949-2676
can be contacted for infonna:
tion 011 the parade·. There. will
be monetary awards provided
by Home National Bank and
Racille
Volunteer
Fire
Department of $ 100, $75, and
$50 f0r tirst, second and third
places· respectively in floats.
First place in the walking
unit will. be $20. sponsored
by Wooly Acres Farm. The
bicycle awards . of $15 for
first, $10 for second, and $5
for third will be sponsored by
Dr. Mel Weese and Dr. Doug
and Tonja Hunter.
Horse and riders will be
judged in· two divisions- i.ndividual riders and . units.

f 5 day camp foc_
d
.
.
,
use on enVIronment . .

Now
that's hot ·

Please see Radne, AS

Second ·
Ward trial
begins_today
BY BRIAN J, REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Jury selection begins today in Meigs
County_Common Pleas Court
in a second trial of Raymond
Ward of Rutland, charged
wilh five counts of unlawful
sexual conduct with a minor.
Ward, 33 , was found guilty
of six -'ounts of rape, and
acquitted on four other rape
charges and a charge of corrupting another with drugs in
a trial whi ch ended June 16.
Ward was convicted of ha~­
ing · sexuat intercourse with
his niece. who was 12 years;
old at the time of t.he alleged
offenses in 2000.

Now that's hot. In
Pomeroy at 4:30
p.m. Monday the
· thermometer on
The Farmers Bank
lawn in Pomeroy
stood at 104
degrees . A m&lt;tn
standing by commented that if the
humidity was any
higher we wouldn't
be able to stand it.
ChaHoeftlch/photo

Please ,see Trial, A5

.t. • ·

...,,r1or-\.'T ""C' ··.,pay"""'· ~r.dt te 1

--,~-,

Calendars

•

Middleport Pool to host July 4 party

STAFF REPORT ·
NEWS®MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

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TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2005

TaU._ grass
discussed
at Pomeroy
Council .

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The Daily .Sentinel

Tuesday,

In chilling fashion, Wichita's BTK serial
killer. pleads guilty to 10 -:nurders
8Y ROXANA HEGEMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

J~ne

Bv li'ETER PRENGAMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BY THE

The Daily Sentinel

28, 2005

Release of two in
U.S. teen case in
Aruba creates
questions about
investigation

radio. ·The way he described
the detai'Js - he&lt;u1less -· v.ith
no emotio~ at all."

"

PageA2
'

Community Calendar .
.

Vetcralls Services Offi ce, 117
·Memorial Dr.. Pomeroy.
Bring copy of discharge. .
POMEROY - In a contin'
POMEROY
- Juggler
Tom Sparough performs at 2 uine effort to provide Ohio\
'tuesday, June 28
RACINE - Radne Area p.m. at Pomeroy Library as drivers with the best educacommunity Organization will part of children 's summer tion before they get behind
the wheel, the ·state's driver
meet al 6:30p.m. at Star Mill reading program.
training office has increased
Park . New members wel its
oversight with the addition
come. Potluck .
,of sevet1 new field staff posi-

Birthdays .

...

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Ohio Qriver Training Local students awarded
announces field staff DofA scholarships

I

Clubs and
·organization

'

PageA3

tion~.

Other events ·

CHESTf:l~

•

owner~. traininl! mana!!~:!rs

Atmnunct' nH.' tlt

alid in;truclor; llm&gt;Ltgh ~O il ·
ference s.worbhu p;andsem·
inars.
Legisl ative allpropriatillltllf
fund s to cover Ihi ., additional
overs i0oht of lhc driver train ·
ing industry in Ohio we re
included in Sub;ti lule Hou se ·
Bill 68. \l'hith wa; ;igncd
into law by Go ve rnor Bob
Taft on March 30. 2005.
The Ohio .Driver Training

Tavlor. state c·ou ncilor. Next

that Emil v meet ing \\il l he pi cni c at the

A,hJey a11 J Darlene Fr~drick
had rccc il'ed .$ 1.11110 ,c holarship; lrom the Dau uhte r, ur
·
,..,\111 C rl·l" ;t WO.I ., 111&lt;.1 (1l' i.l'l ~ I J"l'L'l'llt
mectino ur Chc,lcr Cuunci l
,.,, I - .,
I \ I · · I II
·'- ·' &gt;c 1u at t lC . · asonrc 1a
in Chester.

hal l. ' l'atltcr; Da) was
ob,er,cu wit h 1\'athan Bi ggs.
Evcrc·t t Grant &lt;tni.l Keith
-' ,. 111··v
11e 1'110- ..'- ,c, 11 ·tc'(i 1'' til"',-,
'altar 1vherc die; v.crc present ,
c' ·J t·t·
l-.t·' ·'.ltl(l ·,1 Jl&lt;•"tll.
"th"'
~
'
Older You Get .. '"" read .
Quuner lv · hinhduv., fur
Grunt : f\; l{!cy. Erma ClelanJ
and B el t~· · Jack ;o n were
oh sened . Altendine the m~et­
itig be, ide; th o~e numed
\\.·e re Ardt:n Dcpl1y. Janet
Dcpoy. Emma Ashley. Ruth
Sm ith . Chur lotte Grant.
Ji:ve rctt Grant. Del oris Wulfe.
Thelma White. Op&lt;ii Hollon .
Bet ty .Biggs. Sa tidy White .
Duri s Grucser. Laura Nice .
Mary
Barringer,
Erma
Cle l&lt;md. and Esth er Hiirdcn .

Saturday, July 2
Thelma White cunduclcd
Among those employees is
REEDSVILLE - Faye
Steven Belyu s of Albany who
the t1Iccling whicl1 opcne;l
Wednesday, June 29
Watson will celebrate her
will be serving this area. The
with pl cdocs. re;~din~ llf
. POMEROY
- Meigs 82nd birthday on Saturday,
others are Christy Gehrisch of
scri pture rn~m p,;~ln1' 5.1:. and
County Veterans Service July 2. Cards may be se nt to ' Findlay, Dale LaRt)e or Lodi, Program ha~ regulat ory "in gin g of' th~ Nati ona l
Office will wnducl veteran her at 39672 Silver· Ridge
John
·Sawyer
of authority over ~.().1(:,
lt.cetlS''tl
' ' Anthem. It was rCJl&lt;ll'l ed t.h:11
health care enrollmet1t from 9 Road, Reedsville, Ohio
Hammond svi lle , John D. in structors . . .190 licensed Hel en
Wolf and Op11l
a.m. unlil . noon
the . 45772
Miller of West Jefferson, Jay ,train.ing manag t;rs.
310 Ei chinger were il l. Marv
Johnson of Hilliard, and licensed enterprises. as well Holter thank ed . ~ho;c wl1c1 ·
Ch&lt;Jrles
SanFill ipo
of as 35 public schools,. The pro- . participated in lh~' iM e muri;~l
Chardon ..
. gram also approves 500 Day p;~rad e.
·
.These regional posirions providers' for adult remedial
. Esther Smit h read a rc p,;n
will assist the state's driver co urse s. juvenile driver un the spring rail y from llek n
training manager in licensing improve ment
~ rog ram s.
·-~~~--~-~-~-~~~~--~--and renewing schoo ls. train- ·training for pe&lt;:Jple with dis·
ing managers and instructors. abilities. commercial vehi cle
as
well as investigating those licen,es and crash prevent ion ·
CHESTER -· Officers for noted that lnzy Newell I and
ALFRED "P raytng the UMW was 'tarted .. She ·
the next six months were Smith have new great-grand- who do not meet state stan- ' program s lor Ohioans 60
. .
years and older.
Women '' was th e th c mt:: .or al.. . n to ld of a ~ tory abo ut a
named al a recent meeting of daughters , Goldie Frederick dards.
Field staff personnel wi ll
Teal:hing drivers the ski ll s the program prc..;cJ1tc-d hy gir l rc·altl rcd in illl area
the Past Councilors Club ·of and ·Laura Mae Nice visited also
provide
assistance
to
drithey'llqced
lo stay sale while Janice Weber at a rec ent new,pape r who ha s been
Chester
Council
323, Margaret Amberger • and
ving schools through the on tile road may be one ol the meeting of th~ Alfred and i s returnin g on ;. rni:-, Daughters of America, at the Vance Spencer at Overbrook development
1
and revision uf mu5~ important endeavors
hall .
Center. Esther Smith and curricula, program policies Ohio undertakes .each year. . United Mellloclist Church ·&gt;i on ro Zimbabwe to help
Named were Laura Mac Opal Hollon gave otlicers' and procedures. The new staff For more 'infort'nation on held at the church.
with the babi es th'cre. Mary
Webe r used sc ri ptures
Nice. president Thelma reports.
will aJso alloo/ for the contin- Ohio Driwr Traini t)g, visit
Buckley . di &gt;cu&gt;scd the
White,
vice
presi.dcnt;
Refreshments were served uing education of school www.llrivcrtraining.\lhio.gov. from Esther. · I . Samuel. . Jo
po ss ibili ty . or th e .group
Charlotte Grant, secretary; by Nice and Smith, and
Phillippian s, and Mallh ew. ser\'in g· at th e Good Work s
Opal Hollon, treasurer; Erma games were conducted by
The gro up participated in in Athens.
reading prayer stori es and
Cleland, lluwer . committee; , Dorothy Myers and Erma
tradit ions
and
created
Thelma Hendetsnn gave
Dori s Grueser. sentinel , and Cleland. Next meeting will
prayer requ est cards. Each the mis sion report from the
Mary K. Holter, news be July 19 when members
member se lected a ca rd and Respo nse Magazine on
reporter.
.
will go th e Cool Spot at
will
have a wecklbng gi&lt;'1bal justi ce volunteers. II
Ruth Smit h opened the Coolville for a dinner and
prayer vigi l-o n beha lf of the was noted that they arc
meeting by reading Psalm 2&lt;J. then to the Masonic building
c
onc~rn that was on their young adul l s who choose to
The Lord's prayer and pledge for a meeting. ·
card.
The program ended go on a mission tri p. for
to the flag were given.
Doris Grueser won a door
with th e Lord's Prayer.
about · ! ~ weeks and are sent
Repurtl(d ill were Helen Wolf prize. Other· there were Inzy
Ruth Brooks .. vice. presi - aniund th e globe to such
and Jeanette 'Koenig, home Newell, Goldie Frederick.
from · the ho sphal. It was and a visitor, Sandra White.
dent. opened the meetin g places • as· Africa, Europe.
I I
with ·members read·ing the Asia. Larin Amer ica or the
ATHENS - Residents of
Members of the founda- purpo se of the UMW in Car ibbea n:
The ir lnti·pose is to mini sseven southeaster n Ohio tion are entitled to vole in unison. There · w~r~ 56
friend;hip
calls
·
reported
.
tcr
to ·people around the
counti es are invited · to the election for the ' fouridaOffic
e
r
's
reports
were
world, especially tho se
request membership in the · tion's board of tru stees.
gtven
and
Mar)'
Jo
· 1 ·
· Sheltering Arm s Hospital Foundation members will
.
engugeu. 1 1· n .socta
JU Sti ce
picked Ellen ministFies. She told of three
Foundation, Inc. , the corpo- be norHied or the founda - Barringer
Dizon for the prayer calenration
that
operates tion's annual meering and dar birthday card. She is ·a volunteers who had go ne to
O'Bieness
Memorial elect ion or trustees, which 'deaconess from Pinol e, Nicaragua and Hong Kong
GALLIPOLIS - Peoples
Hospital
in
Athens,
a branch will b.e held in Septemb~r.
Bank recently announced the
Calif. who works in eduea- and of th eir experiences
of
whic_
h
is
soon
to
open in
appointment of Kirk Frazee
Meigs County.
For ritore informarion or tion. All mcmhers' signed rhet'e.
to office manager of its
the c&lt;Itd.
Members
eniov ed
In order to become a to · request membership in
Gallipolis full-service office.
Ruth Brook s , read co rre- re.freshmenl s with Theima
member of the foundation th e foundation, contact spondence from Virginia Henderson giv in g the blessFrazee will be ~esponsible
for 2005 -2006, an individ- O'Blenes s' · Community Scott, an Athens di strict in g. Nex t meetin g will be
for employee development and
ual must be at least 18 years Rela!ions Departme nt at officer, pertaining to when July 12.
managing the individual finanold, a resident of Athens, (740) 59i-9300.
cial needs of business and personar clients through Peoples'
Hocking, Meigs, Morgan,
deposit and loan product lines,
Perry, Vinton or Washington
internet banking and bill-pay,
counties; and pay annual
investment services and a varimembership dues of $25 by
ety of insurance products,
June 30. Dues ll)ay be paid
''Kirk's focus is uncovering
with cash, check or credit
client needs . and providing
card. Membership dues
them with solutions that will
should be sent to the founenhance their total tinancial
Kirk Frazee
dation in care of O'Bieness
objectives,"
said
Mark ·
Hospital ,
Memorial
Trombley, vh;e president, industry, and joined Peoples Community
Relation s
regional manager for Peoples Bank in 2000. Prior to Department, 55 Hospital
'
Bank. "He is a great asset to · becoming office manager of Drive, Athens, Ohio 4570 I.
our· already strong Gallipolis the Gallipolis location, Frazee Checks should be made
team, and Kirk will continue to managed the Lowell, Ohio, payable to the Shehering
grow our personal and busi- oftice of Peoples Bank.
Arms Hospi tal Foundation.
ness relationships in the comHe resides in Little. · Inc . Membership dues are
'
. munity."
Hockin g with his wife, considered by the founda•r~.
Frazee has 10 years experi- Kimberly, and three children, tion to be a chari'table conence in the financial services Trey, Lindsey and 'Alexis. · tribution.
Pine~·
.

at

DofA councilors.
name new officers
~·

UMW program feature prayer

Membership drive
underway for
She.ltering Arms .
Hospital Foundation

·Frazee named Peoples
Bank office manager

The man who cal led himself
BTK - for his preferred
method, "Bind, Torture. Kill"
- cannot get the death penalty
because the killings occurred
before Kansas adopted capital
punishment, but he almost certainly will go to prison for the
rest of his life. Each 'courit carries up to life in prison. The
guilty pleas caine ori the day
that his trial was suppc~ed to
start. Sentencing is Aug. 17.
Those · who watched or listened to him in court on
Monday were stru&lt;;k by how
utterly ordinary he looked - a
balding figure in a tie and jacket, with a neatly trimmed goatee
and gold wire-rimmed glasses
- and by the air of detachment
with which he recounted his
grisly crimes.
·
"He was· so cold about it,"
said i 9-year-old Jared Noble of
Wichita, who listened on the

case.
"We are. still hoping to find
the truth," Jannsen said.
Dave Holloway, the missing
teen's father, said the release of
Paul van der Sloat was a "disappcintment."

Price of crude oil passes $60
·a barrel; gas prices also up
Bv GEORGE JAHN

exchange in 1983.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
· "There 's a Jot of speculative activity. It is a red-h'ot
market," said Shum.
VIENNA, Austria
Crude oil prices vaulted
Vienna's
PVM
. Oil
. over the $60 mark Monday Associates shared that view,
to trade at .record highs writing in its daily energy
amid concerns that supplies market report that "capacity
would not meet demand, tightnes s tn many sectors of
especially in the. United the indu stry means that any
States, the world 's largest serious glitches are bound
energy consumer.
to · inake prices shoot high- .
. Analysts said that amid er." PVM also noted that the
con,tinued concerns about election of a perceived
refining capacities. prices hard-liner as Iran 's presiappeared set to go even· . dent and market speculation
h1gher.
likely also were contributOil closed at $59.84 a bar- . ing to bullish sentiment.
Oil prices are' more than
rel Friday but broke through
the $60 barrier in heavy 60 percent higher compared
Asian and European trading to a year ago, but would still
Monday on the New York have to surpass $90 to
Mercantile Exchange . By breach the all-time, inflamidday in Europe , it wa.s lion-adjusted' high set 25
· years ago .
fetching $60.45.
Other petroleum products
Much of the worry surfollowed
crude's
rise . rounding crude is demandDespite a traditional season- . driven speculation, analysts ·
al lull. heating oil was up . say, and it primarily surnearly 3 ce nts at $1 .6781 a rounds how much supply
gallon. GasoJin·c surged to there is .currently and how
$1.6715 a ga llon.
much spare there is in the
''The psychology of the event of a production glitch .
Another reason for trepi market is that once $60 is
breached. then there is ten- dation amone traders is 1he
dency to test how · mltc~ limited refining capacity in
higher it can go, or how the United States, which is
long $60 can be sustained," increasin gly reliant on
said Victor Shum , petrole- import s of gasoline . Any
urn analyst at Texas-head- glitch in the U.S. refining
quartered energy con ~ ul- system puts more strain on
tants Purvin &amp; Gertz in' the giobal su pp ly chain .
Still. reco rd-setting pric~'
Singapore .
'
Nym.ex crud~ .had brielly ha ve y~t to coo l (.kmand for
touched the $60 mark on ga&gt;olint in the Uni ted
several occasions last week State,. where con,umption
before Friday 's settlement is up. in a time · when prices
price, · the highest .si nce are 40 percent _hig her COII) future s began trad1n g oh the pared ro a yea r ago.

•

.

•"'
;¥,:, · ..Ceventrv
.~ ·,. C•nnenball c-.pl,ate ·
'

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lnfoCision founder nets prestigious awards

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AKRON .
InfoClsion
Management Corp.. founder
and chairman of the board
Gary L. Taylor accepted two
prestigious awards for his dedica1ion · to the telemarketing
industry.
T;,~ylor was named a regional finalist in the Ernst &amp;
. Young Entrepreneur of the
: Year Award. Taylor accepted
lhe award in th&amp;Services category at a · banquet in
Cleveland.
,
Taylor said he was hon. oredjust to be named a fjnal·. ist for the northeast Ohio
: region a few weeks ago.
" I. am happy to accept this
award ." said Taylor. " I feel
privileged to be named
among such a distinguished
group of people."
The . rigerous competition
required all candidates to
supply information regarding
financial
performance,
growth, strategic direction
and innovation. The judges
also considered each nomi. nee's personal integrity and
· values. '
.
· Taylor started lnfoCision in
his home in 1982 after
obtaining business degrees
and working as a marketirg
director for Rex Humbard
·. Ministries. Taylor wanted to
: find a way to help similar
lorganizatiuns reach prospective' donors and volunt~ers
utilizing a more personal
touch . With no bank fmancing, he cashe~ in his re1ire-

·Queen Bedraom Suite

ment savings and began to
prospect for clients.
Since the company's incep-.
tion, Taylor has maintained
that he. doesn't care' if
lnfoCision ·is the biggest telemarketing company, only that
it's the best.
Taylor's entry is now
w.eighed against up to 30 of
the nation's other top entrepreneurs for the national title in
the . same category. Those
finalist s will be announced ·
later this year.
·
Taylor also accepted the
Direct Marketing Association's
Teles,ervices
Excellence
Gary L. Taylor
Award. ,
Among the highest honors . The · council w~ s alSo
in the industry, the award is tm~resse~ wtth Tar lor s ,ontn,
reserved for individuals who button of $3.5 mtlhon to the
have shown a commitment to · University of Akron to create
the teleservices industry, set !he Gary L. and . Karen S.
positive examples and show fay lor. Instttute for Dtrcct
quality standards.
· Marketmg . h1s the only faclh "It is overwhelming to be ty w1th ded1cateo staff and
recognized in su-=h a way by resources where students can
my peers," said Taylor. "I am earn degrees tn e-commerce
thankful to each ·and every and other segments of the
'one of the hard-working direct marketing industry..
employees that have helped
"I ha~e always loved _dtrect
build InfoCision one call at a markettng and specttically
time."
teleservices," said Taylor. "I
The DMA Teleservices am proud of the work we
Council considered Taylor'·s do::. . .
leadership alld dedication to . Int~Ciston Man,agem~nt
be exemplary. Under Taylor's Corp. , ' the world s th1rd
leadership, fnfoCision devel- largest pnvately-held teleseroped proprietary blended vtce . company, IS a Ieadmg
technology that, enables prov1der of mbound and out· InfoCision to deliver the bound marketmg tor non profhighest possible customer ser- it~ religious and pclitical orgavice levels.
ntzattons.
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'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
· www.mydailysentinel.com

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

•
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, .or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or ·o f the press; or the right of the
.people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN
I

HISTOR~

.

'

Today "Tuesddy. June 28. the. I 79th day of 2005. There are
) ~6 day&gt; left 111 the vear.
Today", Highlight'in History.
On June 28. 1914. Austnan Archduke Francis Ferdmand
and hts wtfe. Softa., were assassmated m Sarajevo by a Serb
nationalist -the event which triggered World War I.
OA th1s date
In 1491. England's Kins Henry VIII was born ·&lt;tt
Green"ich
In 1919. the Treaty of Versailles was signed in France, ending the Fit st World War.
In 1939. Pan Amencan Atrways began regular transAtlantu.: mr servtcc.
In 194.J. the Republican national convention in Chicago
nommated New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey for president
and Ohto Gov. John W Bricker for vtce president.
In 1950. North Korean forces captured Seoul, South Korea
In 1978. the Supreme Coun ordered the University of
Califorma at Davis Medical School to admit Allan Bakke. a
white man who had argued he was a victim of reverse racial
di scrimination .
In 1996. The Citadel voted to admtt 'women, ~nding a !53year-old men-only policy at the South Carolina military
school.
Ten years ago: The House oyerwheliningly approved a consmuuonal amendment to protect the American flag from desecration 1however. the amendment was defeated in the
Senate). Webster Hubbell, the former No. 3 official at the
Justice Depanment. was sentenced to 21 months in prison for
bilking cltcnls of the l4w ftrm where he and Htllary Rodham
Clinton were panners.
,
.
Ftve years ago: Seven mon\hs after he was cast adrift in the
Florida Straits. Elian Gonzalez was returned to his native
Cuba. The Supreme Coun struck down Nebraska's so-called
"partial-binh'" abortion law. The .Supreme Coun ruled the Boy
Scouts can bar homosexuals from servi ng as troop leaders.
One y~· ago. The U.S.-Ied coalition transferred sovereignty to th mtenm Iraqi government two days ahead of schedule. The &gt;opremc Coun ruled that the war on terrorism dtd not
gtve the g&lt;5vernment a '"blank check'" to hold a U.S. citizen
and fo?e'ign- born terror suspects in legal limbo. The United
States resumed direct diplomatic ties with Libya after .a 24year break.
Today 's Binhdays: Comedian-movie director Mel Brooks is
79. Actor Pat Morita ts 73. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) is 71.
Former White House chief of staff Leon Panetta is 67. Rock''
musician Dave Knight (Procul Harum) is 60. Actor Bruce
Davison ts 59. Actress Kathy Bates is 57. Actress Alice Krige
ts 51. Football Hall of Farner Johh Elway is 45. Record company chief executive Tony Mercedes is 43. Actress Jessica
Hecht ts 40. Rock musician Saul Davies (James) is 40. Actress
Mary Stuan Masterson is 39. Actor John Cusack is 39. Actor
Gi,l Bellows is 38. Actress-singer Danielle Brisebois ts 36.
Jazz mu sician Jimmy Sommers ts 36. Actor Alessandro
Nivo)a is 33.
. Thouglit for Today: '"Heresy ts what the minority believe; 11
rs the name gtven by rhe powerful to the doctrines of the
weak." - Raben G. Ingersoll , American lawyer and statesman ( 1833-1899).
,

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Lerrers ro rhe edJror are 1relcome. They should be less rhan
300 words. Alllerters are suhjecr ro ediring, must be signed,
and mclude address and telephone number. No unsigned letters "ill he published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing •ssues, not personalities. Leuers of thanks to organi;;ations and indil'iduals •rill not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
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(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Pot ley

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Tuesday, June

'Avian flu could become top '08 issue

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA4

. 1 53.55

26Weeks ......... .'107.10
52 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . .'21421

While Washington, D.C.,
ts consumed by tssues
ranging from the important
( Iraq) to the downright
petty (the recent apo logy
by lllino ts Democratic
Sen. Dick Durbin), there's
something huge lurktng
o.~t there to' really worry
about: mfectious diseases.
The journal Foreign
Affaus hi ghli ghts the
threat on the cover of its
summer issue , asking
whethe( we could be in for
"The Next Pandemic?"
The journal refers to the
avian flu strarn , H§N I ,
which has the potential to
be "far more dangerbus"
than the Spanish flu that
killed 50 million people
worldwide 111 1918 and
1919, including 675 ,000 in
the Umted Stales,
So far, avian flu has
kill&lt;id only 54 people in
Asia, along with I 00 mil -lion animals, mainly chickens. But that represents
more·than 50 percent of the
people who contracted it.
Spanish flu killed only 2
percent of patients.
According to Foreign
Affairs, "S ince it first
appeared in southern China
tn
1997 , the virus has
mutated, .becoming heartier
and deadlier and killing a
wider range ()f species.
"If
the
relentlessly
eva! ving vrrus becomes
capable of human-tohuman
transmission,
develops a power of contagion typical of human
influenzas and maintains
its extraordrnary virulence,
humanity could well face a
pandemic unlike any ever
witnessed." ·
The implication is that
the · death toll could be in
the hundreds of millions.
even a billion, given vul, nerabil·ities in the underdeveloped world. A pandemic could crush the
world economy.
And then, the article
adds: "Or nothing could

28, 2005

28, 2005

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Local Briefs

seriously

from Page A1
the noxmu~ \\cell-. orctmance
_ Kletn suggested thai the
tme go up wnh each citauon
m erder to "lower the boom
on them" as he put n .
..You·ve got ~ome good
put.nts," Councilman George
Wright said. explaimng that village, solicitor Chris Tenogha is
currently proofing the legalities
and powers of a rental p1 opert~ ·
mspector tor Pomeroy which
mtghl hiiJP wnh enforcino0 the
noxtnus weeds ordinance
"Your pOint JS we ll taken."
Musser said to Klein. "We'1e

SYRACUSE - The Consumer Confidence Report has been
deitl'ere&lt;.l 10 Syracuse Board of Public Affairs· customers.
Those who dtd no~ recei'e a repon can pick one up at the
Syracuse Water Of lice or call992· 7777 for more informatton

Barbecue planned
RACINE - A chtcken barbecue will be held by the Racine
Volunteer Ftre Department on July -1. The 1\uxihary will have
· deset1s and homemade tce cream.
·

Office closed
POMEROY - Metgs (,:ounry He;lth Departmeni' ~ill be
.dosed on Jul y 4
Normal busmess hours will resume at 8 a.m . on July 5.

gmng to work on

Correction
POMEROY - Everett . Cald well of Middleport w·as ' fined
$90 and court costs 111 Me1gs County Court for havmg in his
.. possessiOn a minnow 9eine exceeding 96 mches . The charge
· was mcorrectly reported due to a court error.

Fundraisers planned
SALEM CENTER - The 27th annual ice cream soctal of
the Salem Township Volunteer Fire Depanment will be held
011 July 15. Serving will be from II a.m. to 6 p.m. at the fire
house located on State Route 124 m Salem Center.
The Wilkesville Volunteer Firemen's Assocarion will hold
its annutal ftsh fry on Saturd'ay, July 30 with servince from II
a.m to 10 ·p.m. The event takes pilace on th,r square in
Wilkesville in Vinton County.

For the Record
Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriaee licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to James Vernon Henegar,
65 , Mosmee. Wise. , and Joan Louise Halstead , 66,
Mosinee , Wi se.; Luke Rodney Holman, 27, Syracuse, and
Tiffany Ann Patterson, 20, Syracuse; David Lee Mitchell ,
29. Langsville , and Mi sty Dawn Lane, 28, La(lgsv ille ;
Amos Alan Mills . 24. Racine. and Joanie Lea Scheib, 19,
Lake Wells. Fla.
Joey Lee Jarrell. 34. Racme , and Ashli Cecile Davts, 24,
'Racme ; James F Moss, 44, Syracuse, and Barbara Jean
'North. 40, Syracuse; Roy Lee Pierce , 34, Racine , and Amy
Beth Harrison, 27. Racine , Robert Jeromy Hill , 29.
Syracuse, and Misty Myriah Hoke, 27. Shade; and Joseph
Alan ~rown , 22. Reed sv ille, ancl Jennifer Lee Buckley, 21,
Pomeroy.

Beth Sergent/ photo

The Girl Scout Day Camp was VISited by a mob1ie uM of. the
Columbus Zoo that brought along th 1s bal l python amo ng other
an1mals. Here , scout Kat1e Gilkey asks Columbus Zoo aSSIStant Shawn B.rehob quest1ons about the python.

Scouts
from PageA1
Point Pleasant, W.Va. res1·
dent Molly Miller spoke to the
girls about herbs. their medic&lt;
ina! uses and their imponancc
i~ Appalachian culture.
The girls and communit}
were also treated to a visit
from the Columbus Zoo who
brought a clouded Jeopard. a
36-year old turtle , an
armadillo, a mongoose and a
ball python to name a few.
The Columbus Zoo handlers answered questions
· from the audience about the
environment of each animal
which cmnctded with Camp
ROSE (Raising Our Senses
Environmentally ).
Racine Poli ce Marshal
Cunis 1ones also vis!led the

Pool
&gt;

Divorce

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from Page A1

POMEROY -An action for divorce 'h'as been ftled in
Meigs Couqty Common Pleas Court by Kelly D. Carnahan.
Long Bott()m. against Donald P. Carnahan. Rutland.

"The pool is slowly making progtess. but 'at the
moment I have about ftve
thousand dollars in bills to be
pard and no mone y to pay
them" Baker said.
New traffic pattern
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage has
trafjlc hght at the inter-'
The
been filed in Meigs County Common Ple'\S Coun by Ronnie
section
of South Third Avenue
Eblin, Rutland, and Donna Eblin, Pomeroy.
and General Haninger Park
1
will be removed and replaced
by a four-way stop.
VIllage Administrator Brad
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle Anderson told council he and
reported that a stolen 2004 New Holland diesel 4-wheel Pomeroy Street Commrss10ner
drive tractor wa~ recently recovered with help from infor- Jack Krautter inspected the
mation obtained by Pomeroy Police Chief Mark E. non-functiOnin g traffic light
Proffitt .
·
only to discover it cannot be
Proffitt and Beegle went to a Rose Hill residence and locat- repaired, and said the cost of
ed the tractor. After checking the serial number officers· $3.950 mtght be better spent
learned that the tractor had been entered in National Crime elsewhere to make dnving in
Information Center as stolen Of\ April 16 from Columbus. The Middleport easier and safer.
Anderson suggested countractor was impounded.
The property owner of the Rose Hill residence , whose name cil consider a four-way stop
was withheld, gave the statement that Elisha Lacey Dickens sign rather than replacmg the
allegedly owned the tractor and had come to him asking if he light. He sa id the village
could park the tractor at the residence. The investigation is needs significant new stgnage
continuing and the propeny owner is not being charged, hov.· and patnt 111 high-traffic areas,
ever, Dickens:' currently in the South East Regronal Jail on which could be provided if
drug and ('eceiving charges, may be charged with recetving the cost of a new stop light ts
stolen propeny m regards to the tractor.

Dissolution

The president as head teacher
School principals used to
also be head msrructors ,
actually teaching one or
more courses: Now nearly
all are administrators and
delegators - obsessed with .
Nat
test resu Irs lest they be
Hentoff
charged with running "failing schools" under the No
Child Left Behind law. Our
presidents, however. are still
supposed to be our head edu- This rubber-stamping ts
cators on foreign, domestic merely a fig leaf for "judicial
and constitutional rssues, supervision."
On June 15, the House
using the "bully pulpit'" as
removed
library and bOOkFranklin Rqosevelt and
Ronald Reagan compelling- store records from Section
ly did.
' 215, but that can be restored
As our national principal. in' conference committee.
George W. Bush pledged the and all other kinds of records
day after the horrendous will still be subject to search
attacks on Sept. II: "We will anyway.
I would also direct the
not allow this enemy to win
the war by changing our way president's anenrion to a dra· of life or restricting our free- matic expansion of the
Patriot . Act passed in a
doms."
closed-door
session by the
Recently, the president has
Intelligence
been repeatedly urging Senate
Committee
on
June 6.
Congress to retain, intact,
by
Alberto
the Patriot Act, whicb soon Supported
the
head
of the
Gonzales,
followed Sept. II -· and the
Justice Department's pro- Justice Depanment, and the
posed expansion of that law. White House, this search
In a June 9 speech, · he provision gives the FBI
emphasized that the Patnot added authority to issue
Act, in "protecting our civil secret admi11istrative sub'
liberties," provides "the. poenas for personal records
judicial branch with a strong from banks, hotels, medical
oversight role." Searches offtces, gun dealers and
require "strict standards other businesses without
ftrst going to a judge ~ . not
within the Constitution."
There has been consider- even to the secret Foreign
able dispute, however, as to Intelligence Surveillance
whether the mosl·controver- Coun. Previous administrasial searches unoer the tive subpoenas in such areas
Patriot Act, and its addittons, as Medicare fraud have been
are indeed subject to strict far more limtted and spectJUdicial oversight. I,n Section fted.
The government says the
215, for example, searches
of a wi&lt;le range of business need for these instant subrecords. ' including medical . poenas, which the FBI will
records, libraries, Internet- write for and by itself. is to
' surfing and other sources, track suspected terrorists
ihe sole au~orizing court is before they can harm us. But
the
secret
Foreign in a previous open hearing of'
Intelligence Surveillance the Senate Intelligence
Coun, whrch has hardly ever Committee. Valerie Caproni.
' denied a government request the FBI's general c~.mnsel.
for records, jllcluding entire was asked for evidence that
databases of institutions. the delay in requiring a fed-

eral judge to permit a search over the FBI's practtces has ever injured national including whether they are
secunty.
witi)tn the bounds of the
She answered: "Can we Constitution- has the abilshow because of delays a ity to enact its own legislabomb went oft: No. But it tion concermng the Patnot
couid happen tomorrow. It Act, very much concerning
could. ·• However, under this thts abandonment of the
nation 's rule 9f law, the bul- Fourth Amendment by the ·
wark of our freedoms, revis- Senate
ltttelltgence
ing pan of our Bill of Rights Commitlee.
But
the
to bypass going to a JUdge· on Judtciary Committee better
the basis of what "could hap- do it very soon.
pen.. requires more of an
I admire the president's
explanation from our head vision of the Libeny Bell of
teacher than he has given.
democracy ringing in other
Sen.
Dianne lands. But when it comes to
Even
Feinstein (D-Calif.), who our own .civil liberties - to
has been a persistent defend- borrow a line from Raben
er of the Patriot Act, was Frost - he is "a hght ... to
taken aback at that ·hearing. no one but himself." With
This sounds, she said, Ji](e respect. I wtsh George W.
"cane blanche authority for Bush would familiarize him(an FBI) fishing expedition.'" self
with
why
the
And former Republican Constitution would not )lave
Congressman Bob Barr. now been ratified without the
a privacy expen for the addition of the Bi fl of
American
Conservative Rights, and why irs Fourth
Umo'n and the American Amendment ts urgentl y the
Civil Libenies Union, said most specifically detailed of
the proposed legislation all these I0 amendments.
"would essentially render
The founding Americans
the Founh Amendment pro: wanted to be certrun that the
tections against unreason- · British '"general' search warable searches and seizures rant'" would be forever bancompletely meaningl~ss ...
ished from this natton.
I agree. ·
,Instead. under this bilL } nu
As head teacher of our would nor even know your
constitutional libenies. has records had been subpoePresident Bush forgotten naed. The msritut10nal
that a precipitating cause of record-holder must keep the
the American Revolution search secret on pain of a
wru; the "general search war- year in jail or a fine of not
rant"• (writs of a~sistance). more than S I0.000. The
whereby British custnms record-holder could Lhalofficials wrote their own lenge the subpoena. hut
search warrants to enter the would have hardly an y
colonists' businesses and mcenttve to do so. and. m
homes and tum everything any case. can't tell you that
upside down. sometimes you· d been caught m a dm~­
including the colonists? net.
These raids were reported by ·
(Nat Hem off is anatiunol·
the
·Committees.
of ly ~er101med milhonn rill thr
Correspondence throughqut n;sr Amendmem wul rhe
the colonies. greatly. ~iltg Bill of Rights and CJitlhoJA__
to their determination to be :.e\'er.a/ hookl-1, llt clu.tmg
free of such abuses.
. The War Oil rite Bill oj
As of this writing, the R1ghrs an~/ the Cat he~ i11 g
Senate Judiciary Committee. ResJSiance (Sec·en Storie~,
whtch also has authority Press, 2003).}
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Sherrif's Office recovers tractor

Highway Patrol

'l

CHESTER- A Pomeroy man was injured in a one-vehicle
accident Saturday on Chester Township Road 112 (Bissell),
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reponed.
Joshua M. Broderick. 23. 34412 Ohio 7, was transponed to
'Holzer Medical Center by the Meigs EMS following the 6:35
p.m. accident, the patrol said.
.
Troopers said Broderick was-southbound, 2.5 rr.J!es south of
Ohto 248, when the Jeep he drove went off the left side of the
road, traveled over an embankment and struck a tres.
The .Jeep had disabling damage, the repon said. Broderick
was citM for operanng a vehicle while intoxicated and failure
to controL
· POMEROY- Arlene S. Parker, .43, 40401 Sumner Road.
·Pomeroy, was cited for failure to yield from a private driYe.way by the patrol following a two-car accident Friday on
Salisbury Township Road 636 (Wagner Lane) .
Troopers said Parker exited a private drive. one-tenth of a
mile south of Ohio 143, at 7 p.m. and collided with a southbound car driven by Jessica A. Laudermilt, 24, 659-1/2
·
Brownell Ave., Mtddlepon.
Both cars had funcuonal damage. according to the repon.

Trial
from·Page A1
The first five counts of the
indictment agfiinst' Ward
which gQ to trial tomorrow
date back even funher than
those which we('e tried earlier
' this month --home 10 13
years ago. The charges
involve two other aUeged
·.female victims. Those alleged
victims are now adults.

The Dailv Sentinel • Page A5

Pomeroy

Syracuse water report

"I speak of .substanll.tl
tion enacted this vear.
'' You have a f;sctnatin~ increases in support lor
conflauon of presidennal fundamental
research.
politics dnd serious sub · medtcal education. eme rstance at wo rk here,'' satd gency capacily and pLJb,lll'
Chuck Ludlam. who's health intrastructu re~ .. .
Morton
IQ)ndracke retiring this v.eek as a top unleashit1g the private secLieberman aide and former tor and unprecedented colbiotechnology lobbytst to labOI at ion between govjoin the Peace Corps .
ernment. industry and
"You have three presi- academta.'"
happen.".
dential candidates interestHe also proposed "u cThe combined threat of ed 111 thi s issue,'" he noted
at ion of s~cure sto1 ~S uf
infectious disease - the
Frist. Sen. Hill ary treatments and vac L.llh!S
avia11 flu is just one of sev- Rodham Clinton, D-NY.
eral menaces
plus and Sen . Sam Brownback. and 1·ast network s of disttibioterrorism presents a R-KS. a co-sponsor of the blltton. I spe ak of acli ou.
quandary for U.S . politi- Lieberman bi ll . "Whoever without c~cuse s . with uut
cians. Do they urgently ts out in front wt•ll look · exceptH)llS. with th e goal
pl tllec ting
every
prepare for the worst, pos- pretty good if the worst or
sibly
wasting
vast happens. Anyone who's . Amem:an and the capabiliresources, or cross their behind the curve will look ty to help protect the peofingers and hope that noth- like a dolt.
ple of the world."
·
ing happens ?
Frist declared that. "lor
"There will be 9111-style
In a remarkable June I comm issions all over the some years, this should he
speech
at
Harvard place and hundreds of the chief work of the
·Senate Richard Clarkes testifymg nation. for the good rec~son
University,
Majority Leader Bill Frist,
that they wa rned about that failing to make · ll ,o
R- TN - a physician and what was coming and hi gh- could risk the life of the
presidential candidate er-ups didn't li sten ," he nation and other natJotts
declared inCectiou s. dissaid. referring to the. for- the world over."
eases and bioterronsm "the
me r Whtte House counterAfter the 2001 amhrax
single greatest threat to our
safety and sec urity today " terrorism aide who charged attack. Congress p.tssr d
that the Bush administra- S10Shteld
leg tslatio n,
and said fighting them will
tion
'initiall
y
ignored
AI
funded
at
$)
.6
bi!L c&gt; n, to
be the overriding purpose
Qaeda.
hu ~ drtl~' t,,l ti :U'l
.. ~ l O ll S
of hi s political fu ture.
Fri
st.
clearl
y,
ts
nnl
ut ,.: .. ,cs frtst ackno" !At the same time , Frist is
ignoring
th
e
problem.
In
edged
that the legtslatil\n
being cmic·ized for not
his
lecture
at
Harvat
d.
he
leave s the country '"IHlCmoving
aggressively
said
that
national
leaders
fully
under-prepared.'"
enaugh
to
get
new
"will
nor
be
able
ro
look
Whether a disease ts
BioShield
legislatt on
be
away
fro
m
what
could
spread by nature or hy terpassed, notably by Sen. Joe
Lieberman , D-CT, who's coming soon - a front ot rorists. Lieberman says,
been driving the issue hard unchecked and vtrulent "we have essentially uone
eptdemtcs, the potential of
for years.
of the diagnostics, theraFr(st and Lieberman are which could n se above peuncs and vaccine s wr
backing rival bills that your every other concern." need to treat those who
"For what th e world
offer tax . · liability and
cou
ld soon face it did not might be exposed or infectother incentives to nowed.
reluctant biotech compa- see even in the great wars
" It we don "t have these
me s to begm producing of the la st century. '' he medicines, we are ltkely to
vaccines, dtagnostics and said. "The se eptdemics ... see qua&lt;antines and patll&lt;:s,
could
be
devastating
th~rapies and to guarantee
which will amplify the
a market if they produce beyond unagination."
damage
and disruption."
Frist satd, "I propose an
them.
Clearly, tht s tssue trauLieberman contends that unpre cede nted effort. a
sce nd &gt; Washmgton's datly
his bill is more comprehen- "Manhattan Project for the
sive, and hi s aides question 21st century' to defend poittlc.JI game&gt;.
destructi t&gt; Jt
(Morton Kondra de '"
whet'her Frist ts pu shmg against
e\enai
ve edaor of Roll
various Senate committees wreaked by infectiou ~ J tsand
biol og 1 ·al Call, th e 11ewspaper of
hard enough to get legtsla· - ~ase
weapons.
Capitu/ Hill.)

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Tuesday, June

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Gallia County Common
Pleas Coun Judge D. Dean
Evans will preside in the case
by assignment. Previous
charges against Ward. fi .led in,
Meigs County Court and later
tranSfered to Common Pleas
Coun, were dismissed in
August, 2002, because no
indictment was subsequently
ftled.
following his conviction
01i June t 7. Ward was
released on a bond set prior
to trial .

Racine
from PageA1
Trophies will go to the ftrst and
second place winners in each
division. with monetarv awards
gomg to the third place winners. ,The event is sponsored by
Lone Odk Fann of Syracuse.
Awards for !he anuque car
entries will be sponsored by
Star Mill Park Board with
prizes of $25 for ftrst place,
St 5 for second, and $10 for
third place . Annque tractor
awards will be sponsored by
Racine Area Community
Organization (RACO ) with
550. $30. and 520 prize awards
for the three best entries.The · ftre depanment will
have a chicken barbecue staning at It a.m. at the firehouse.
At 3 p.m. activities will
begin in the park with a tug
pull by the Big Bend Farm
Antique Club. and a patriotic
program on stage. There will
be guest speakers, Southern
High School Band performance. and presentations of
the winners in the Southern
Element\11)' Star Search.
The Big Bend Cloggers
wtll perform at.J. o'clock , the
. parade winners wtll be
announced at -1:45 p.m.. and
the · II th · annual frog jump
sponsored by RACO will get'
undeJ"fay at 5 p.m . ,
D-an Snuth wtll be emcee for

camp io teach the Repitle
Boys. which are the younger
brothers of the scouts and sons
of troop leaders. the unportance of law enforcement
Each Reptile Boy recetved a
remote controlled police car.
Kin g said that the girls are
creating a scrapbook of; tlle
week's activities to &gt;end to
Robet1 Wingett who opened
up the Syracu se Community
Center for events such as the
day ~:a mp .
"The girl s love Mr.
Wmgctr," Kmg added.
Girl ~cout Day Camp ended
on Saturday with a dance
where six generations of former and current Girl Scouts
capped off a week of camping,
community and living out the
Girl Scout Promise: "On my
honor. I will try. to do my duty
to God and my country, to help
other people at all ltmes. to
obey the Gtrl Scout Laws. "

11."

"That's all I'm asking ...
Kletn an5wered.
During open dJsCu&gt;Ston
Stsson and Councilwomen
Ruth Spaun and !VIarv
McAngu s complimented the
street depanment w01 kers for
the job they wete doing trying
to keep up With mowing during
the recent heat '''UI e Spaun.
stressed caution and breaks for
the street depanment employees during the heat.
Spaun reported logs in .1
dram on Locus Street and ra t&gt;
at a res1dence on Mulberry
Avenue wnh trash 111 the yard
"We're working on that."
Pom~roy Poltce Chtef Mark
E. Prottin sa td .
·
Stsson
reponed
what
appeared to be raw se"a2e
leakingc -from a rental house
behmd Sugar Run Mill. Proffitt
said he "jould mvestigate with
"Meigs C{)unty Environmental
Healih Specialist Keith Little:
McAngus reported high
weeds at a home at ti\e intersection of Mulberry and
Union Avenues that she telt
could cause a traffic accident
Wnght reported that the recem
visit by volunteer church workers was a success and that several ttems in the parking lot were
painted like electncal and JUnction boxes. tntsh cans and that
the sidewalh in the mint-park
were mostly re-laid but the heat
did not allow the workers to fin-

i'h entire!\ 1l1e '11la~e alloned
the '' ork crew a bu&lt;.l~et of S2~
in ,upphes l;lul ran- over S90
"hich ~.·ou n ctl agreed to pay.
'"I th1nk it '&gt; all v.onh
11 hi !e." ~1u"er s;11d about the
work party.
Wnght said .1 ne11 work pany
Will arri1e toda! tn the village
and he hoped to get the gazebo
m the lower end of the parking
I01 pamted and the posts and
chams along the mer front.
In other w uncil business:
Council agreed to purc'hase
t11 o nc" 11 ccd tnmmers at a
price o.t 55'50 each for the ·
street uepanment.
Resolution 20.05 w;L' passed,
transfemn~ 55.000 from the
general to -the street fund. and
adjusti1lg the 2005 appropriations in the Federal Emergency
Management Agency iFEMA)
Ill accoum "hich was increased
to 5:10.121 The FEMA money
was recently received lor the
January flooding.
Counci l appro1 ed entering
into a gmnt agreement with the
Appala~hian
Regional
Commission !ARC) in regards
to the January flooding. Under
this agreement. the ARC will
pay the village's 12.5 percent
match in reg;trds to FEMA funds
used tor repairing the parking lot
wall and State Street sli p.
The minutes from the June 13.
meeting were amended to
reflect that Spaun did not agree
with a statement that said
'"council'" thought the compliance check&gt; done at local bars
by Pomeroy Police Officers
might hurt downtown businesses Spaun satd she disagreed
with that statement and v/,ished
the record to retlect that. The
record was changed to say
"some members of council''
instead of ''council'' thought the
compliance checks might hun
downtown businesses. Wright
and Spaun voted yes. S1sson
and McAngus voted no with
Musser breaking the tie in favor
of amendment..
All fltembers of council
were present for the meeting
with the exceptions · of
Councilmert Todd Norton
and Jackie Welker.

saved. He said he Cf~sulred the hght may be replaced if a balance of S 19.951.
Anderson Norfolk-So'uthern
with Police Chief Bll:!c~ Swift I ftll!ds become readily available.
before making a recommen- ' , Council approved· a 2006 tax Railroad has proposed paydation about the intersection. budget, including provision for ment to the village of a tlat fee
He said regular motonsts 111 $474.336 in general fund of $8, 193 for nght-of-way
Middleport seem to have expenses lt will be re-consid- expenses. Village Attbrney
become accustomed to stop- erect and adopted in January Raberta H1ll "til be consu lted
and contract re1 tew ts planned
ping at the stop signs. and before mane~ can be spent.
said additional signage would
Council appro\ ed the ftnal before council a£rees to
alleviate their doubt as to reading on an ordinance retail 1accept the dlte-time pa) ment.
whether they should stop .
ownershtp of an alley (2021)
Councilman Roger Manley
Baker satd the funds saved between Lmcoln and Pearl noted that people are !11 mg in
could also be used for retire- Streets. in preparation for the motor homes and campers in
ment of the village's loan on sale of the high school prop- the village
clearing the Mark V building, erty, which could re&gt;ult in its
Clara Riley complained of
since she planned to ask being closed after the sale. damage to a fam il) gra\e in
council's permi sston to use The ordmance excludes the Rt verview Ccmeten and of
street department funds for alley from the sale.
poor water qualny. Anderson
that purpose
Other business
satd he "ill follow up
Council
Member Jeff
Rather than sitting in their
Council also:
• Appro,ed minutes as
Peckham said he supported usual roundtable formatioti.
the change. but said council council members sat Mhind appro1 ed b) Fiscal Officer
might also constder a two-way the conference table m a row. S.usan Baker. with Manley
"Everyone should be facing and Robinson abstainmg.
stop for motonsts on South
• Apprm ed an appropriaThird, and requiring no stop at everyone, ·without our backs
tion adjustment of S600 withall tor General Haninger to people.". lannarellt said.
Parkway. Councilman Roger
Council pproved a $8.000 ' In the police dqpartment budManley satd a hangmg stop payment from the general fund get. as Baker r~commended.
light might also be effective.
and street depanment fund on . • Approved payment of bills
Council authorized Anderson the counc·il's loan to Peoples m the amount of 14.745.46.
Pre sent were Council
to make a decision about the Bank. which was used for 2003
intersection's traffic signage. police depanment salaries and President Stephen Houc hins.
and he said the . Jight will be other operating expenses The Roger Manley. Kathy Scott,
removed and clear stop signals loan matures in October. The Robert Robin son. Shawn
installed. He said. however, that S53,000 anginal loan now has Rice. and Jeff Peckham.
the trog jump where awards
will be presented in two divi·
sions - junior (ages 1-15
years) and senior ( 16 years and
up). First place in the junior
diviswn will receive $40, second place, 525. and third. $1(}.
In the senior, division,
awards will be $100 for ftrSt,
$75 for second and $50 for
third Entry fee for junior
division is $3 and $5 for
senior division. Rent·a-frog
will also be available for 53 a
frog. Frogs· will be returned
to their natural habitat after
the jump is over.
The rules &gt;tate that panicipants are given three Jumps off
the pad. There ts no limu to the
' number of frogs 'that one can
enter. Dale Han ar 949-2656
can be contacted for more
information on the jump.'
Last Chanz Band will perform on the stage staning at 5
p.m. and will play throughout
the evening. Between the
Band's shows, the Southern
Elementary Star Search winners will perform. Singing at
8 p.m. will be Craig Harrison.
Brent Rose will have the
kiddie tractor pull at 6 p.m.
or as soon as the frog JUmp
is O\er. . There will be
awards for the ·ftrst three
place winners in two weight
groups. Libby Fisher is the
sponsor.
The moon bounce will open
at 3 p.m. an&lt;\ during the evening
there will be,games tar the kids
.,

..,

--·-

Crafts, mL'iCellaneous nems.
and food will be for sale
Residents interested in reserv:
ing a craft ·space are to contact
Maxme Rose at Home
National Bank. 949-2210. The
cost is SIO for a ](!-foot booth
space and $15 for a 20.foot

space from 3 p.m. to I0 p.m.
The fee can be paJd at the bank.
A fireworks dtsplay at ·10
p m:, by the -&amp;,tcme Ftre
Depai\ment ,wtll conclude the
celebration. It is ~u£gested
1
that those attending
the- July 3
ac ti vnies take a lawn chaJr.

TNT PIT STOP
Syracuse, OH • Store Only

JUNf 27TH - J(JLf 1ST 5P[CIAL5!

2 Liter 79¢
Pepsi Case 24 pk.

$4.99

Hot Dogs &amp;
Sausages
Deli Sandwiches
WEDNESDAY ONLY!

Daily Give Awaysl

10¢ OFF PER GALLON
ANY GRADE FUEL

Door Prize Drawing July 1st!!!
• Golf Clubs
• Dr. Pepper Bicycle
• DVD Player

�•
•

•

•
•

O HIO'

.The Daily Sentinel

Vietnam vet thanks
doctor for saving limbs
.

'

Marine Corps, 1 when a
THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER
grenade ripped aparl hiS left
arm and leg. '
"
CINCINNATI (AP)
He .was imn1ediately flown
Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Alvin· from Vietnam to Chelsea
Crawford considers himself a Naval Hospital, near Boston.
car(iemer for people..
Crawford, a lieutetlant com-··
John King needed a lot of mander in the Navy. · was
renovation.
··
doing his residency at the hosln 1967. the two men began pital when he met King in
a relationship that lasted about Ward 15.
·
six months anci involved more
':It's like I hit th~ lottery
than 20 surgen1 s.
'
with Dr. Crawford." . said
On Thursday. 38 years later. King. now 61 years old.
King 's limbs were bloody.
the two· men met again .
King, a Sarasota, Fla. resi- mangled messes. Entire
dent, was t,;tking his family on chunks were missi11g. The
a trip to Cedar . Point and open sores were ravaged with
intentionally stOpped at infection. Pieces of shrapnel
Cincinnati
Children's were lodged inside.
Hospital Medical Center,
Crawford's chief told him to
where Crawford is the direc- chop it. The · quicker the
tor of orthopedic surgery.
· amputation. the faster the ·
"I just wanted to see him . Marine would leave the hospionce in my life after all the·&lt; tal and make room for someinitial surgery," King said.
one else. But Crawford
His limbs, he said, ~ere refused, choosing to perform
only salvaged because of surgery. af!er surgery to sal. vage Kmg s hmbs.
Crawford's work. ·
. "It's
unbelievable," · "But you · had .a- vision .''
Crawford said\ "Y!i&gt;u go about ~...J:::ing said.
every day, trying to do the best ' " I didn't ~ave ·a vision,"
.job you can. It's just great to Crawford ~aid , "I was young
have anyone who remembers and Stl!bborn. And I've always
you,let alone says you made a gone for the-challenge."
difference in their life."
The numerous surgeries and
In 1967, King was serving the painful recovery were1difi11 Vietnam, a sergeant in the ficult. King said. ·
BY MAGGIE DOWI\jS

•

•.

"It was .g rueling. I lived on
pain shots," he said, 'There
were days when I thought I
couldn 't make it. B.ut Dr.
Crawford was severe. He told
me wh,at I had to do, and I did
it 1.,
.

Now, King is the faiher of
four and liveS' in Sarasota, Fla.
He's retired, but spends his
days tishing. biking 15 miles ·
dail y and playing golf.
S,ometi mes his body sti II spits .
out shrapnel - he recently
removed a pie.ce from his toe .
Crawford, an avid. tennis
player imd clarinet pert·ormer,
is ·a professor of orthopedic
surgery at the . University of
Cincinnati : The suburban
Cincinnati
resident
had
worked
·a t
• Harvard
University's . orthopedic program.
Because he always was
interested
in
research,
Crawford carefully documented all his patients in his early
days of surgery. On Thursday,
he surpri sed King and his
family by showing a slide
show · of King 's wounds,
before and after.
"What I'm doing today is
actually what I' wanted \o do
then," Crawford said. "And
that is to take on the most
challenging cases. To do what
people said couldn't be done."

.PageA6

•

Chester wins Big Bend Softball tourney; Page B2
Mayweather wants t(J be a star, Page Bl
·
Ohio Outdoors news, Page B2
Venus does what Serena couldn't, Page B6

U~S.

Supreme Court to review Ohio
cases on Ten Commandments
John Durkalski, spokesman
for the American Civil
Libert ies Union of Ohio .
which opposed the displays.
said the state ACLU had no .
comment lln the Monday rulings or th e ·pending Ohio
cases.
.
.
The' Supreme Co'urt, in two .
5-4 decision s. upheld the
constitutionality of di splaying the Ten Commandments
on gove rnment land, but .
drew the line on certain renderings inside courthouses.
The ju ~ tice s said the di s- .
plays are not inherently
uncon stitutional. But each
exhibit demands scrutiny to
determme whether it goes too
far in amounting to a governmental · promotion of re li gion ..

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
'Jt will be a humid and
cloudy morning. Some rain is
likely. Temperatures will hold
steady around 74. Winds will
be 5 to 10 MPH from the
south.

Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
humid
and
cloudy.
Temperatures will rise from
77 with today's high of 84
occurring aro und 4. p.m.
Winds will be 5 io 10 MPH
from the south turning froin
the southwest as the afternoon
progresses.

Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Humid evening. Light rain
is expected. The rain is predicted · to start near I0 p.m.
. Anticipate rain accumulations

of ·o.II inches for thi s
evening. Temperatures wil l
drop from 83 early this
evehing to 72 by I0 p.m. then
climb back up to 74 late
evening. Skies will range
fr(,)m partly cloudy to cloudy
with I0 MPH winds from the
southwest turning from the
south as the eveni ng p'rogress·
es.
Overnight ( 1-6 a.m.)
It will be a humid and
cloudy overnight. You will
see light rain. The rainfall is
expected to end around 3 a.m.
with total accumulations for
this event near 0.19 inches.
Temperatures will linger at 72
with today 's low of 69 occurring around 6 a.m . Winds will
be 5 to I 0 MPH from the
southwest.

\

Today's games
. Pe'rkersburg 104 al Mason Cou nty. 6
p.m .

•
Feeney ,Bennel1 at Athens Tourney,
.- TBA

.

Sun~Eiy's gaine .
Feeney Bennett aJ Athens To~rney,
TBA

Cliffside Women's
golf league results
GALLIPOLIS
The
Cliffside Women 's 'Golf
League comp leted another
week of play
'this past two
I
'l'eek. s.
·
. Wednesday, May 15, the
ladies .in the 18 hole ·1eage
played with lean Hank\ns
taking low gross honors, Joan
Folden ,scoring the low net
and Wanda Boxdorfer posting low putts on the day.
The following Wednesday,
May 22, Cindy Staley posted
the low gross, Diane Lewis
made low net and Boxdorfer
once again took low putts
honors. Jackie Knight also
managed a cli.ip;in for the
round.
On Thursday, May 23, the
ladies in the nine hole league
tooK the Cliffside course with ·
Staley and Robin Hudson
posting a tie for low gross
and Knight and Griffith manage.d the low putts on the
round.

/;'

•

MORGANtOWN , W.Va.
(AP) - The West Virginia
University women 's basketball coach has
hired a new
assi 'stant
coach.
,·
Ever 'e ·tt
~
"E.J."
,....
Jackson will
begin
..at
WVU on Thursday, coacti'
Mike Carey announced
Monday. He replaces Cindy
Martin.
Jackson is a native of
Rochester, Pa., and has been
an assistant coach at South'
Alabama for three seasons.
Before entering college
coaching, lie spent four years
at Deerfield Beach (Fla.j
High School as varsity girls
basketball head coach. . ·
Jackson· has a . bachelor's
degree in sjlecial education
· Rock
from
Slippery
University, where he was a
· student assistant with. the
women's basketball team.

Finance With
.
Farmers.
100 Years of Community Building

.,

EHS sets date for
volleyball camp .

Construction Loans
•• •••••• • •

3.99./o
4.0.9°/o
0

••
••
••
GetA$250 ••
Home Starter ••
•••
Gift
•
•
•
••
•
•• •

. I

Interest Rate

•

...

Annual Percentage Rate

Fa

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Sovlngs Company
Member FDIC

Pomeroy

Tuppers_P~ins

992.2136

667.3161

---

'

.

®

Mason
446.2265 ' 773.6400
Gallipolis

. TUPPERS PLAINS -The
first-ever Easte.rn Volleyball
Camp for girls entering
grades 6-8 will be held July
5-8.
..
Camp staff includes play'
ers and coaches from the
2005 Tri-Valley Conference
and sectional champion
Ea!itern Lady Eagles.. ·
Cost is $30 if pre-registered or $40 on the ftrSt day
of the camp. Included in the
cost is . a camp T-shirt and
volleybalL · .
Contact Howie Caldwell
for more information. ·

Contact Information

Adwrtised rille' and APR ~ during six month connrucrion loan period onty and
subject to change alter. Loans s1.1bject to credit approval.

"

.

.

•'

.

.

..

.

•·

Fu- 1 ·7~- 3008

E-moll- sj,or1SOmydally...ntlnel.com
SPOrts Staff

Btod 5'*-&gt;. 5po&lt;t. Editor
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
ballofman0mydally1ribune.com

Bryon-. Spoilo Writer
(740) 446-2342, ..1. 23
bwaltersOmydailytribune.com

Lorry Crum, 5po&lt;t. Wrtllor .
(304) 67S.1333. ext 19
. ICtumOmydailyregister.com

..

.'

. t .•

.

NEW YORK - Andrew
Bogut: the A'ustralian center
by way of Croatia e~pected
to be selected first in the
NBA dnif!, has made two
things crystal clear: He
wouldn't mind playing for
Milwaukee, and he doesn' t
w~ nt to be ·compared to Luc
Longley.
The 7-foot center plopped er with t·he chubby face ,
himself down at an interview shaggy hair and blue eyes
tabie Monday and kept some who played two seasons at
distance from the micro- Utah before opting to turn
·
phones placed in front of pro.
him. though he didn ' t .shy
''I know there's a lot of beer
away from di splaying the one and cheese there. and that
personality trait - outspo- suits me ," Bogut said of the
kenness - that has helped Wisconsin city where he ' ll
make him such a unique likely be making his home
commodity.
for the next (ive seasons.
The Milwaukee . Bucks · Bogut is better associated.
have the first pick, and · it with beer and cheese than the
would be a major surprise if · average 20-year-o!Cl, but ·only
.they did not select the 7-foot- because his customers used

.

David Stern
steps to the
podium at
M a di so n
Squar .~

'---------------------.....1

to order plenty of each when
he worked as a waiter in a
Salt Lake City sports-theilled
restaurant 10 help pay his rent
in college. He said he chose
that line 9f work so he could
better relate to the average
·
American.
Soon. it ' ll be, Americans
looking to get a better handle
on him .
.
Bogut's unique blend of
size, skilj s· and smarts wi ll
like Iy put him atop the pecking order when comrpissioner

Garden on
Tue s day
night for the
annual process ions of
pro s pect s
Bogut
wearin g
.
llushy suits
and million-dollar smile s.
Most American fans have
been expo·scd to " very few
Au stralian· players. with the
best-known commodity from
Down Under being Longley.
the center who won three
championships with' the
Chicago Bulls in the 1990s.
But. Longley was often
widely dismissed as a "stiff'
whose success was owed to
halving the good fortune of

Please see Draft, 86 ·

2005 NBA Draft Order
1. Mil.,.,aukee Bucks
2 . . Atlania Hawks
3. PotlanO Trail Blazers
4. New Orleans Horn8ts · \
5. · Chartone Bobcats
6. Ulah Jazz
7. Toronto Raptors . . .
· 8. New York Knicks
9. Golden State Warriors 1
10. Los Angeles Lakers , l·
11 ; Orlando Magic
12. Los Angeles Clippers
13. Charlotte Bobcats
14. Minnesota Timberwolves
"15 . New Jersey Nets
16. Toronto Raptors
17 .. Indiana Pacers
18. Boston Callies
19. Memphis Grizzlies
20. Denver Nuggets
21 . Phoeni)( Suns
22 Denver Nuggets
23 . Sacramento Kings
24 , Housion Rockers
25. Seattle Super Sanies
26 . Detroit Pistons
27. Utat&gt; Jazz
28 . · San Antonio Spurs
29 . Miami Heat
'i
30. New York Knicks
.. L

Marshall
having a.
• • ••
JOimng
Conference
USA party
5TA.FF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

w

·

.

. '

West Virginia
hires assistant
basketball coach

.

The Department of Job and
Family Servi~es said iwo years
ago it was eliminating that system, dubbed the smart card,
· because it was too expensive,
costing .up to four Urnes as
much as other programs.
About I million Ohio house. holds receive food stamps, up
. frQm 616,281 fi'!~ years ago.
In May, the state approved a
one-year, $29 million extension of the current contract
with JP Morgan Electronic
Ftnancial Services to keep the·
smart card running while the
new system is created.
The smart card is a plastic
card with a computer chip
capable of maintaining individual account information.
The state installed II ,000 .
machines to read the cards at
groceries and other stores
statewide.
Once 6hio's new system is
in place, it will .join .fl-8 other
states that use magnetic-strip
cards similar to bank or credit
cards swiped through readers
aln:ady ir) most retai I stores..

Tourney,

TBA

I ,

State hires
Dallas company
to revamp food
stamp system

lion a year.

Saturday's game

Fee~ ey Bennett at Ath ens

. .

ASSOCIATED PRE SS .

Mason Counly at Williamson. 4 _p.m.
Mcarther a\ Feeney Bennett, 6 p.m.

It wi ll be a hum.id and
cloudy morning. Light rain is
expected. The rainfall . is
expected !() begin near 10
a.m , The fain' fall ' should
reach · 0.07 inches by this
morning. Temperatures will
hover at 74. Winds will be 5
to I0 MPH from the south
turning
from the west as the
. '
mornmg progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It will continue to be humid
and cloudy. There could be a
few raindrops arou!)d the
area. Temperatures
will
i.ncrease from 78 to 85 by late
this afternoon. Winds "l(ill be ·
5 to I0 MPH from the southwest.

.I.

BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

Friday's game

eJ "•

2005 Draft

Bogut the likely--No. 1 pick in NBA draft

Wednesday's games

·

28, 2005

r

.

.'

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

COLUMBUS (AP)
Dallas-based
Affiliated
Computer Seniices Inc. was
hired on Montlay to replace the
state's current system for distributing food stamps in Ohio:
The company's eight,year
·conttact is worth about · $45
million, ()r 89 cents per case
per month once the system is
m place. Ohio is scrapping the
current system, which costs
$4.74 per case per month. for
an annual savings of $23 mil-

Bl

Daily Sentinel

National BaskEt/Jail Association ·-

. Wednesday, June 29
·

I

Tuesday, June

NewsChannel
Thesday, June 28

T~e

INSIDE

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

CINCINNATI (AP) - The ences in cases simi lar to ones
U.S. Supreme Coun, which in which justices make a rulsaid Monday it would take a ing. Ju~ tices were expected to
case-by-case approach to co·nsider the Ohio cases
determining the legality of dis- Monday afternoon. hours after
plays
of
. the
Ten their specitic rulings involving
Commandment ~ on public challenges from Texa s ' and
property. was · expected to . Kentucky.
review two Ohio challenges
In those, the court upheld tl1e .
before ending its current ses- constitutionality of displaying
sion. .
the Ten Con1mandments on
In one case, a Richland government land. but only in
County judge displayed the some circumstances. A ruling
commandments in his· court- . on the Ohio challenges could
room. ln the other. the com- be released Tuesday.
mandments were displayed in · · ."The most "'!e c~n hope for
front ·of Adams County school is they vacate those opinions
buildings.
and send them back to the 6th
The· 6th U.S. Circuit Court Circuit," said Frank Manion.
of Appeals in ' Cincinnati said the lawyer who represented the
both were illegal .
American Center for Law and
The Supreme Court some.- Jusiice in its support of the distimes holds pdvate confer- plays.

' '

AP photo

Danny•Ferry, left, jokes with Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert after Ferry was introduced as the team's new general
manager at a news conference in Cleveland on Monday.
·

·i -

-~

Done deal: 'Ferry accepts GM job with Cavs
BY ToM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - . The
Cleveland Cavaliers finally
· have their general manager.
and with not a moment to ·
spare.
Danny Ferry, who spent
the past two years in the
front office of the NBA
champion San Antonio

Spurs, has been hired as the
GM,
team
Cavaliers'
spokesman Tad Carper confirmed on Monday.
The Cavaliers have scheduled a news· conference for
M~nday afternoon 1r t Gund
Arena to introduce Ferry
who is already well known
to Cleveland fans . Before
becoming a league executive, Ferry played I0 seasons with the Cavaliers.

Ferry' won ' t have much
time -to settle into his new
role since his hiring comes
one day before the NBA
draft and just a few days
before free agency begins.
The Cavs have roughly $25
million to spend in·f.he market
As for the draft. the club
doesn' t currently don't have
a draft pick but have reportedly discussed trading for-

ward Jiri Welsch for a second-ro'und selection .· That
deal could be easier to make
now that the Cavs have
Ferry.
,
Cleveland o'wner Dan
Gilbert has been looking for
a GM since firing Jim
Paxson a day after the ·
Cavaliers· season ended
without a playoff berth.
\

Please see Fe"J; B6

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. WDGG 93.7-FM will host
'The DAWG Dazzle and The
HERD Inaugural Conference
. USA Bash" this
Saiurdqy, July
2, from 7-10
p.m. at Harris
Riverfrom Park
to
celebrate
Marshall
University-' s
move to its new home in CUSA.
.The Bash will include live
music provided by The Planet
92 . 7-FM. a pig roast courtesy
Of Buddy's and fireworks by
The
Dawg.
Marshall
University athletics staff,
2005 footb'all season ticket
hoiders and 2005-06 · Big'·
Green members will receive
postcard invitations in the
mail that will. serve as free
tickets to the event. therefore
these group!\-- must . bring· the
postcard wttH them 111 order to
gain co'mplimentary access to
the festivrties .
Entrance into the Bash for
the general public costs $5 at
the gate. Lawn chairs and
cooler~ will be permitted; but
a lcohol is prohibited ..
.
Marshall , Ri'ce, SMU,
Tulsa. UCF and UTEP are set
. ro join current Conference
USA members East Carolina,
Houst0n . Memphis, Southern
Mi ss, Tulane and UAB in the
12-member l.eague.

Indians blank.Boston in Beantown
BY JtMMY GOLEN
AssociATED PRess

first of his two doubles, then Mark Bell horn we in off the
he hit a solo homer in the secdnd baseman 's glove and
seventh , one out after Grady Hafne·r sc.ored when it trickBOSTON
Kevin Sizemore hit a two-run shot. 'led into center field.
Ben Brous sard advanced
Miliwood
pitched
six Bobby Howry . pitched two
to
perfect
innings
and
S.cott
· third on the error and
innings of three-hit ball and
Travi s Hafner had three Sauerbeck one to complete scored on a groundout to
the thre~ - hit shutout.
first to make it 3-0. Arroyo
extra-base hits on Monday · The Red So~ had won 12 hit · Red Sox nemesis Aaron
night to give the Cleveland of 13. including a 6-0 trip to Boone on the hand before
lnd'ians a 7-0 victory over Clevelantl and Philadelphia getting Jhonny Peralta to
the . R~d Sox and snap before returning to the ball- pop up t.o the shortstop and '
B.oston s seven -game Will - t park ·
where .
before end the inning.
mng streak .
.
Monda y's loss, their 22 - 10. Cleveland added another .
A week after the Red s ·o x home .record was the. best in run in the fifth when Coco
went to . Cleve! a~? .a nd . the AL But Bronson Arrpyo Cri sp singled' and scored on
stopped . the lndtans. mne- (6-4) gave up seven runs - · Hafner's double. but Hafner
game Will streak, Mrllwood live earned - on six hit~ . was thrown out. trying to go
(3-5) allowed three hits and .. and three walks and a hit to third ·a fier· the throw from
two walks al)d , struck out batter. striking out four, in· 6 left fielder Manny Ramirez
s1x. The lndrans nght-han- 2, 3 innings.
bounced around the ' infield.
der played a part in Boston's
Arroyo got into trouble in
In the seventh , Arroyo
three-game
sweep
in the fourth by following , walked Peralta with one out
Cleveland , allowing · five Hafner 's double with two arid then Sizemore hit a long
earned runs in six innings walks . to load the ba.ses. fly to right that went' off the
. AP pllolo
last Tuesday.
·
Ronnie Belliard hit a sharp tip of Trot Nixon 's glove Cle.-eland Indians starting ,pitcher Kevin Millwood delive~s
Hafner started a tlj_ree-run grounder to third base, but
.,.___
lla k.
to the Boston Red Sox during the sixth inning at Fe.nway
81
rally in ttie fou~h with the Bill Mueller's .throw to
.._see
n
Park in Boston Monday.
~ .
•....

'

�'

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Mayw~ather wants to
ATLANTIC CITY. N.J.
'(AP)- Floyd Ma}weather Jr.
wants to be a star.
He's got a chan ce now
because he seems to finally
understand that star&gt; aren't
supposed to beat up women.
or get in fi ghts in bars.
In boxing, stars sm·e the tr
violence for the nng. They
becmi1e stars by giving out
beatings
like
the
one
Mayweather gave Saturduy
night to human punching bag
Arturo Gatti , not by giving
them to the mother ol the tr
·· children,
Mayweath er didn' t alway s
understand that. wh ich is why
he 's spent a lot of his time
between fight s in court. He
didn ' t understand that people
see enouoh
thl!C'S
afUJ e.:uanuo
e
ban~ers every day that they
don t want to buy ti ckets to
see one in the ring
Mayweather says he's a
family man now. changed and
finally mature at the age of 28.
The•other duy,l he even apolo·
gized for being late to an
· appointment because he was
getting his sons some breakfast.
· ·
_ Never mind that it was I :30
in the afternoon. the kid s still
had-to cat.
" I just want a seco nd
chance." Mayweathe r said.
"Don· t judge me for niy pa&gt;t.
Juq~e me for how I treat ymi
all :'"
·

Tuesday, June

www.mydailysentinel.com

28, 2005

. Tuesday, June 28, 2005

CLASSIFIED

STAFF REPORT

RACINE - The Chester
Angels capt ured the 2005
Big Be-nd Minor
Girls Softball crown J
Saturday, June 18 , by
-defeating the New Haven
Orioles in .. the champi·
onship game.
The Angels. consisting of
Chelsey · Curtis.
Haley
Bissell, Hailei gh Bus h,
Laura Pullins, Cassidy
Cleland, Sabra Bailey.
Monique Dugan , Jenna
Burdette
and
Sarah
Lawrence, took top honors
from the 14 teams that com'peted for four places in the
.... ;· 'iannual even t hosted by the
Racine Youth League.
Runt)er' UP Ne~V Haven,_·
consisting ' of 'Kennedy
Thompson ,
Morgan
Harrison Amanda Gordon,
Molly
Fisher,
Janae
Cundiff. Devyn · Oliver,
• Darian .Weaver, Rachael
Gordon,
Emily
Casto.
Shalin Greer and Bailey
Hicks , finished ahead o f
Tuppers Plains Phd ~ and
the fourth place New Haven
Starlets. ·
Carla
Weaver,
Erica
Clark, Mike Gordon, Matt
Fisher and Matt Thompson
were the coaches of the
champion Chester Angels .

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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992-2155

Members of the· second place New Haven Orioles from left, in
front, are Kennedy Thompson, Morgan Harrtson; Amailda Gordon ,
Molly Asher, Janae Cundiff and Devyn Oliver. Stand1ng in the middle are Danan Weaver, Rach ael GordOn, Emily Casto. Shal1n Greer
and Bailey Hicks. Standing 1n back are .coaches Carla Weaver,
'
Erica Clark. Mike Gordon, Matt F1sher and Matt
Thompson.

.() It

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hi One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
~rtbunc

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~cgtstcr
Your Ad, (7-40) 446-2342 (740) _992-2156
(304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157
675-5234 .
To Place

Bryan Wallers/pholo
Boahns are also encouraged to keep an extra eye out for safety during thrs Fourth of July
holiday week. Here. are ~ome Ohio River enthus1asts 1n Pomeroy.
.,

Ohio State Parks visitors urg~d to
'SWIMSAFE!'this Fourth of July
COLUMBUS
When
packing up for the beach this
Foltrth of July weekead, Ohio
State Parks urges visitors to
kf):p close eye on children
and others in their group to
ensure a safe and enjoyable
day. According to the Ohio
Department
of
Natural
Resources, 'the Fourth of July
weekend is traditionally the
busiest time on its beaches.
"Safety is an important part
of a successful family outing
to our state parks this holiday
weekend or any time," said
Dan West, chief of Ohio State
Parks. "Our SwimSafe! program is a reminder that a high
level of awareness should ·be
brought along on any beach
outing.n

a

Each summer, Ohio State
Parks initiates its SwimSafe'
beach · safety
program,
reminding adult visitors to
.take responsibility for them·
selves and the children in their
care while visiting the beach.
To fully enjoy a sate outing
at a park beach, follow these
tips:
• Swim only in designated
areas at the beach or lake·, ·
• Use good sense and keep a
close watch on young children while they are in the
water;
• Use the buddy system and
designate one member of your
party to remain on the beach
to watch those who are swim·
ming;
· ExerCise caution since

lakes,'u nlike pools. may have
murky water making it diffi·
cult to see drop-oft's;
• Bring a cell phone to make
an emergency call if nec~s­
sary; Take regular, breaks and
relax on the beach;
• Leave alcoholic beverages
at home when you come to
the beach. Swimming and
'drinking do not, t;tiix.
Ohio State Parks offer 66
beaches on 47 inland lakes' in
addition to I0 beaches on
Lake Erie.
There are also 17 pools
within the state park system.
Last year, nearly 4 million
people visited state park
beaches and pools across
Ohio.

Ir

\\\01 '\(I \11 \l"'i

start the seventh before Andy
Phillips and Mike Vento sin·
gled, loading the bases with
none out.
Phillips went 3-for-4 with
an RBI, and Jones and Vento
bad two hils apiece. Jones
also had an RBI single in the
first.
Columbus' bullpen tossed
four scoreless innings after

Kri s Wilson allowed four
runs and eight hits. Eric
Schmitt ( 1·0) allowed only
one hit in ' three innings and
Sam Mars'onek worked the
ninth for hi s fout1h save.
Norfolk
starter
Neal·
Musser allowed three runs
on five hits in live innings.
- Benji Gil hit his seve nth
homer for the Tides.

BUFFALO, N. Y (AP)
Cleveland Indians minor
league pitcher Kyle Denney
remained
hospitalized
Monday with a frac(ured
skull sustained a day earlier
when he was hit by a ltne
drive.
Buffalo Bisons . athletic ·
trainer Todd Tomczyk said .
Denney was ex periencing
dizziness and nausea. Tests
revealed the Triple-A starter
had a ruptured ear drum and
a cerebral contusion, which
is more severe than a concussio n and is caused hy the
brain jarring against the
skull.
Denney was expected to be
released from Erie County
Medical Center on Tuesday
. and placed on the disabled
list. Tomczyk said it was too
early to determine when
Denney would be able to
pitch again.
Denney had no chance to
get out of the· way of a line

from PageBl
'
and over the short wall of
the
Indi ans'
bullpen.
Nixon . slammed hi s glove
against the fence in frus·
tration _,
·
,
One out later, Hafner hit
one 15 rows back in the
right-field stands. And that
was it for Arroyo.
Millwood
coasted,
allowing Just one baserunner to reach third when
Johnny Damon hit a bro·
ken -bat singl·e to lead off
the g,ame. stole second and
took third on ally ball.

drive hit bv
Durham ·~s
J o e y
Gathright, the'
first batter of
Sunday ' s
g, a m e .
Denney was
just completing his followthrough when the ball struck
him just behind his right ear.
He fell to the ground,
immediately clutching his
head and kicking his legs in
pain, but never lost consciousness.
Tomczyk , who treated
Denney on the tield, said the
injury could've been worse.
"Any time you sustain an
injury with that direct force
and trauma and to not lose
con~ciousness, he 's very for·
tunate," Tomczyk said. 1 .
Denney's parents traveled
to Buffalo 'on .Monday.
Denney. who appeared in
four games with the Indillns
last ' year, is no stranger to

unfortunate injuries.
He made national headlines in September when he
was hit in the right calf by a
bullet that came through the
side of Cleveland's bus in
Kan sas City as the team traveled to the airport.
The bullet caused only a
flesh
wound,
probably
because of the tough leather
of the kn11e·_high go-go boot
he was weann¥ as part of a
rookie hazing ntual.
Denney also was struck in
the knee by a thrown bat dur·
mg a spnng trammg game,
forcing him to mis~ this season's opener. He later spent
33 days on the disabled list
' for an elbow injury.
"Unfortunately,
things
have happened to Kyle, but
he 's not the type of guy to sit.
around and dwell on thq::e
kinds of things," Bisons
manager .Marty Brown said.
"He's a tough guy and he ' ll
be fine."
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Boston had three stolen Arroyo dispatched him in
bases - its most since last three pitches. He did get a
July II - but sustained its cheer later. but only
seco nd home shutout in because Arroyo plunked
three ·games after going him wit,h a pitch on the
hand .
' 116 in a row without one .
Notes: Reel Sox prospect
Boone played in Boston
for the first time since his Hanley Ramirez , a shorthomer off Tim Wakefield ,stop at Double-A Portland,
the
clubhouse
in Game 7 of the 2003 AL visited
championship series. His ·before the game .... LHP
II th-inning shot sent the David Well s reported po
New York Yankees 'o the problems, a day after lie
World Series after they ral· tweaked his right arch run·
lied from a three -run ning the bases ... . Damon'~
deficit with five outs to go si ngle in the first extended
when Boston manager hi s _h itting stre ak to 14
G.rady Little left a tiring games. He i~ the first play·
, Pedro Martinez in the er in th e AL to I 00 hits ....
game.
Sizemore was 2-for-5 and
Boone was booed loudly is hitting .432 in his last 22
at hi s fir st at-bat,. when games.

•

LarrANJ)

~~~~------, '
1

pto
GIVEAWAY
~klo
' _ _ _ _ _ _ _,..

FOUND

Lost

White

Word Ac:Js

Display Ads

Daily In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p .m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

Monday-Friday fot' In!lertlon

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW. IQ WRITE AN
AD
-Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Respo_nse ...

In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p .m .
Friday For Sundays Paper

Po~Y~LE

German Friday

CHARGE IT!
•

July

Now you can hove borders and graphics
{I~
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/per ad
'·
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large _

r-----~~------~~r---------------~
twright@1c net

MoNt:r

310 .

"Ill UHN

Ho\11·.'-i
H&gt;K

SAI.t,

and

1st

Shepherd w1tt1 a red Collar, Saturday, July 2nd 34660
6- church 1ext ceiling lights lost at Bellemead (304)675- Crew Road. Pomeroy. 112
300 wan . bulbs, alum 304- 4812· A Rewa rd
rhile , go through the under895-3548 0( 304-675·6487 -----,------ pass away from Me1gs H1gh
or 304-882-2648or 304-895School Every1htng Cheap!

N1ce teen size . clothing .
dresser, desk , ktichen 1tems,
bikes, much m1sc
Don't
miss this one

Yo\RJ)SALE

Free
k111ens.
Friendly
healthy, wormed. Good wtth
kids Free GerbilS, to good
Free to Gootl Home 2 males

6wks old 1/2 Boxer, •112
Black Lab. (304)773-5103

Free· A very

friendly

1 BG"~IfiVEi THAT
€A~ ~A~ t S~OULD
Bt:: fts:t&gt; AT ~1"1\';T
ON~ ,--,Me;: Fof2.

female

Australian Shepherd puppy
to good home 1n Country

n vo\RJ) SALE·

r
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GAU.II'OUS

***********

~/1&lt;-t-t

Garage Sale at Jeremy
Roses i/2 mile out county
road 28 from Aac1ne Juty.t-

l-1 F~.

·9:00-4:00 Clothes, Tommy,

Polo, A+E. Old Navy, A&amp;F.

0

little boys clothes, toys, furniture, lots of household
(Kmg Bedding, rooster
items) No junK

0

Gallia County
Qui reach,
275 Stale Street.
Bag sate $4.00

Monday-Friday
\ (740)208-0095
9am-lpm.
To good home.2 Labs, black
***********
ond chocolate, full bloOded.
no papers Call (740)446- Thurs , June 30th and
3677.
Fnday, July 1st, 9-5. 2 m11es
j _.ctn· ANil
out Route 21a up hill on
FOUND
right Wood sw1ngset lurm.
!ure, toys, books, tapes,
Lost- Male Black dog With clothes, misc.
.Two Family yard sale. Thru.,
June 30 one day only at
some white. Medium SIZed. '
the homes of Donald F1tch
AAswers to the name Lucky.,
&amp; Jerry Burke on Summer
Lost •n the Rt 588 area
Road
Home tnt ,
Ottenng $50 reward, please
microwave, dishes &amp; lots
call(740)441-1377
~-II!L.,._~~
morenicestuH.

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IIUII'MIII""'" llllpllll

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale ............................ ,................. 725
Announcemant ......................1..................... 030

Anllques·..........: ............................................ .S30
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
· Auction and Flea Market.. ... :....................... oao
Auto Parts 8o Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repalr .................................................. 770
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats 8o Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ___________ , ___ ............. 340
Business Opponunlty................................. 210
Business Tralnlng ....................................... l40
Campers 8o Motor Homes ....:...................... 790
Camping Equtpment ................................... .780
Cards ol Thanks:......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectrlcaVRetrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent .............. :...................... 480
Excavating ....................:.............................. 830
Farm Equlpmenl.. ................ ,....................... 610
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
Farms lor Sale .........................:................... 330
For l.ease ................................:.................... 490
For Sate ........................................................ 585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits 8o Vegetables .....................................SBO
Furnished Roonis ........................................450
General Haullng ........................................... BSO
Giveaway........ -.................... -----........ --....... -..040
Happy Ads ....................................................oso
Hay 6 Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanted ..............:.................................. 110
Home lmprovements................................... B10
Homes for Sala ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ......................................l"'...... 020
lnaumnce ..................:.................................. 130
Lawn &amp; Garden EqulpmenL..................... 660
Lfvestock.....................:................................630.
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots 8o Acreage'......................:..................... 350
Mlecellaneous ............. :.. ::............................ 170
Mtacellaneous Merchandlse .......................540
Mobtle Home Repair .................................... 860
Mobile Homes for RenL ............................ 4~0
Mobile Homes for Sale................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles 8o 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals ..................................................... OOS
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing 8o Heallng .................................... 820
Prolessloniol Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV 6 CB Repalr ...............................160
Real Estate Wanted .........:................... :....... 360
' Sc:~ool~ lnslrllC!Ion ..................................... 150
Seed ,'Plant&amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
SHuatlobs Wanted ....................................... 120
Space lor Rent ..........................................;.. 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
suv·a·ror Sate.............................................. no
Trucktt lor Sale ._..................................,...... 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Y!lnt For Sele............................................... 730
W1t1bld to Buy ...:......................................... D90
wanted to Buy· Form Supplies .................. 620
wanbld To Do ............................................. 180
W.nbld to Renl ............................................470
Yard Sale- Galllpolls....................................072
Yord sAie-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleasent ................................ 076

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Yard Sale- household items.
clothes, toys, treadmill, lots
of misc., 33467 Bashan Rd
across from Bashan F1re
Dept., 27-?
7

YARJ)SALE-

Pr. Pt .F.A£o\Nf

Party yard sale- Haven
Hgts., New Haven, Fri.-Sat.,
July
1-2, 9am-4pm,
anllques, hOusehold lurntture, baby lurmture, tg.
amount of tools. toys, stone
ars &amp; churns, much more
WANilD
3

roBUY

Absolute Top Dollar. U.S.
Sliver and Gold Coms,
Proofsets, Gold A1ngs US
Currency,-M TS Co1n Shop,
'151 Second Avenue.
G tr •o1 740 446 2842
I \lt'l II' \II \.I
... 1 1n 1' 1..,

110
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Hll.PWANIID

LEARN
.TO
DRIVE

1

• NO EXI'&gt;f:AIE"''CE NECESS.I.fl'l'
• FULL-TIME CLASSES

• COL TRAINING
•FINANCING AVAILABt.E
• .108 PLACEMENT
• ENRJUING NON

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE. VA

1-800·334·1203
tOO WORKERS NEEt;lEO
Assemble crafts;
wood items.
To S4801)Yk
Matenals provided,
Free informatiOn pkg. 24 hr
8(J 1-428-4649

·-

An bcellent way to earn
money. '!'be N6w Avan.
Catl Manlyn 304-882-2645
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
675- t429.
Cashtand- now hi ring a parttime teller for ttie1r Pomeroy
location, computer BJ:penence preferred, evening &amp;
weeklns required, great pay
send resume to 397 WMa1n
St., Pomeroy, Oh. 4S769 or
FBJC t740)992-9001

Borrow Smart Contac
he OhiO DI VISIOn 0
F•nanc1al lnstitut•on'
ff1cc of Consu me
ffa1rs BEFORE you reh
nance your home o
bta•n a loan BEWAR
I requests lor any larg
dvance payme!liS o
ees or msurance Cal
he Off1ce ol Consume

. ·-··---- ~ - ---

\lomu: 1-ic"n:s
HlH SALE

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
real estate advertising Stock models at old pr1ces.
In this newspap~r is
2005 moc::lels arnvmg Now.
subject to the Federal
Cole's Mobile Homes.
Fa1r Housmg Act ol 1968
15266 U.S 50 Easl Athens
which makes it Illegal to . Oh10
45701 . (740)592-1972
advertise ··any
'Where
You Gel Your
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on Moneys Worth'"
race, color, religiOn. selll
Lors &amp;
familial status or national 350
At:Kt~IGE
or1g1n, or any intention to
make any suCh
preference, hmll&amp;llonor 4 6 acres Walnut Creek
discnm1nahon.'
Onve
532.000
f1rm·
(304)675-4843
This newspaper Will not
knowingly ~ccept
One acre near Gallipolis
advertisements tor real 17401367-7886.
estate which 15 In
violation of the law. Our 360 Rtc\1, Fxtxn-:
f'kOFI-:s.WlNJ\1.
readers are hereby
Wwn-:D
informed that all
SEH\'ICI:'
dwellmgs advertised m
I Buy Homes: Local persOn .,
thiS newspaper are ·
buys homes Confiden tial
IIVIliiBble on an equal
Ou1clo: cash Jim, 740-992·
opponunity bases
6300 No calls afler 9
Duple)( each w1lh 3 BR LR
DR. K1tchen. Bath &amp; Porch
House 3 BR Lfl. K1tchen ~~::llt0\'""-"'!1-1~&lt;-l-liS-l·"'~'i---,
Bath
Both m. Pomt
Pleasanl. (304)675-2495 "--"""tiiXiiltli.iiRiiit,iN"ii or--"
after'? OOpm
'
2 Houses (1) 4 .bedroom.
No Down Payment even {'\·) 3 bedroom 5900 &amp; 5800
wtth less than perfect credit plus depos•t (740)256on thts 3 bedroom, 1 bath 8152
home 1n M1ddleporj Corner -----,-----::- lot. carport. wrap-around 3 bedroo'm. t Bath, house
108 Leg 1on Terrace porch, fencec::l myard, base- on V1nton Ave Gallipolis
Pomeroy Oh•o· Ranch-type ment. payment same as $475Jmonth. no calls atter
house. good shape, beaul•· rent 740-992-6300
8__Pm_I7_4_0_H_46_-_45_5_9_.__
lui river v1ew 2 bedroom -N-0 O--P--- P--bHouse for 1ent 1n Pomernu. 2
home w1th hardwood floors
own aymenl 0551 le,
"'
t900 square ft . house. 3 bearoom. kitChen &amp; c:llnette.
ce1ling tans. f1 reolace. built- bedroom, 2 bath. lull base- t balh. lull basement. 2 f•re·
,n eqUipped kitchen Wlltl merit new heat P•Jmp sels pl &lt;:~ces garage &amp; extra lot.
nook Full basement w1d on 3 acres SR 7: East.:-rn call coll ect !614)475-1459
hOokup, 1t2 bath and School D•str-ict . (7401985- Alter 5 pm.
garage 3-year-old root 4321
Pnce reduced $44 500
r'20 l\ lomu: Ho~ll·~
(740~992-5502
NO DOWN PAYMENT- 3 br ,
1-'0N RJ-:!\·r
2 112 baths, large 2 caf~ ..________.
2-br 2-ba 1 1 acre Eckard garage m MidOI,eporl 1-3 br 5'4-40 00 a mon ..
Chapel Roac::l Rt2 N 6 m1les Relocating Call !~f0) 992· S400 dep
from PI Pleasant 304-675- 9799 Leave messi!ge
1 2tir 5350 00 a mon +1797
$300 oo c::tep.
Rent@ Propert1es for sale
2br m New Haven tor Sale Of Tra 1ter and Garage Aot 304-882-1 107
Rent S27.000 to buy S375 to Mason on 4th Ave House on ' 2 bedroom. ArC very n1ce
rent (304)882 -2890 1
Madtson Ave . Pt Pleasant no pets. .n Gallipol iS
-------'----- · House Roush FeHell Lane 1740)446-2003
3 bedroom Ran ~h 2 car PI Pleasant Four Vacant - - - - - - - garage m-ground pool lots 10 ~ason County 3 bedroom mob•le home tor
$90,000 Call (740)256· (304)675 _1911 or (J04 \593. rent 1n Middleport, no pets
1962
:io96
(740)992-58o8
3 Bedroom. 1 Bath, Full Jr!~=:;:;=::::;:=:;~~==il Beau!lfuj nver view 1n
B a s em e n 11 o a r a g e .
www.orvo.com
Kanauga Ideal for 1·2 peoRemodeled in &amp; our
Home Listings.
ple No pets please
$57.000 Rac•ne Area. 740· LIS! your home by caH•ng Applications bemg taken.
949-1372 .
(740)446-3620
' call (~40J44t -O t8t
Ntce 2 bedroom t bath.
3-4 Bedroom. House 1 112 V•ew photbs,1nto on11ne
appliances excellent locaBath. Mayo Dr. •n New
l•on Secur1ty ctepos•l No
Haven Totally Remodeled
"'" Oown 13 bedroor •., I
pets S375 mo. (740)446$83,500 1304)882-3131
tJI4 bath UR. OtR FIR . ~ I .3994 or j740)446-2423
garage fenced m
3BR 1 BA Ranch slyle ar
ack yard t/2 acre
Very smau 2 BR tn B1ctweu
house located 6 m1les past
lose to town $132 sao Water trash sewer pa1d, no
Holzer hosp•tal on Rt 160
~ ode 4$05 or call
IJ13t&gt;. ·5325 Det:l S325/Rent ,
(740)388-9263
740)446-8325
(740)388-9325
Ail

Dental Hyg1enist needed,
Send Resume to PO Box 45
Pt Pleasant or tax resume
304-675-6553
- - - - - -- - The Gallipohs Da1ly
Tribune is acceDt1ng
o_riversNeeded:
COL Drivers willing to drive
resumes for a full 't1me
for local ready,-mix-concrete outs1de sales representacompany Expertence IS
tive to JOin our sales team
\\'ANTF.Tl
preferred but not necessary. and to manage an estabToDn
Dnver must be willing to do lished account hst while
pre-maintenance on trucks calli ng on new accounls.
&amp; equipment, yard work &amp;
The successful candidate All Types Masonry, Bnck,
other miscellaneOus chores. Will tle a diSCIPlined, self· BlocK, Stone, Free Est1mate,
Expenence operating eqUip- motived team player lhat t304 )773-9550 304-593ment &amp; extra skills such as untlerstands the Impor- 6421welding a plus.
tance of deveiOpihg
Call(304)937-3410
strong, mutually benefi- DHK
Cleaning
&amp;
cial
busmess
r el ation~
Powerwash1ng.
Can't
Keep
Keyboard Player for e~tSI1ng sh1ps with our ac~ounts
Up Your "To Do" list too 81g?
Band. Must be e~perienced
Let Us HELP You! We'll
&amp; versatile (304)675-1616
The ideal cand•date will Clean-A-Up &amp; Get-A-Done
do
All
Legal Secretary, Full·t1me .. have sale experience For We
Experience p re le~red but no confidential mterv1ew, Re s1dent 1a 1/ B us• ness
required. send Resume to please send resume and ln s1 de / Ou ts1de
TSC20 c/o Po1nt Pleasant cover letter to Gallipolis Datly/Weekly/Monthly 740Register 200 Ma1n.St..Po•nt Da•ty Tr1bune Attn Jtm 985-3639 or 740-416-1823
Freeland, 825 Thtrd Ave.,
Pleasant WV 25550
Gall ipolis, Oh1o 45631
Give Gu1tar &amp; Bass lessons
Looking for a new job?
Call Trav1s ,at (740)446If you are looking for a Paramed•cs &amp; EMT s 2709
bener career opponunlty. . needed. Apply at 1354
we may have a poSitton for Jackson P1ke. Gallipolis
lnterior/exten or pa1nt1ng
you. Full and Part ttme ·
reasonable
rates, raterar, 11me .e.p
a
schedules available.
ences,
expenenced,
tor tree
the Galli polis Da•ly
Weekly paychecKs plus
est•
mates
call
1740)742Tribune Must have
pa1d tra1mng, Pa1d
2013 or 645·263$
clean valid dr1ver"s
vacations and holidays
license Mm1mum wage,
L•ght Dump Truck Servtce
aprox 30 hrs ..week.
Call today to l1 nd out how
gravel. sand. d1rt
stone,
Stop
by
the
Tnbune
you can jom our team I
t740)949-4700
Off•ce. IQCated at 825
1-sn-463-6247 ext 2456
Th1rd Ave. to 1111 out an
LOW·MO!Siure
McClure's Restaurant now
appl1cat•on
Carpet·Cieaning
hmng ail locahoAs. full or
Brand New Method
part-t1me. pick up applica- STNA'S Overbrook Ce!Jter
Dry in 1 Hour
.
IS
currently
accepting
applltion at location &amp; bnng back
N
o
Steam-or-Shampoo
between 10 OOam ' &amp; cal•ons lor fuiH•me STNA'S
Free-Est1mates
11 :OOam: Mon,~ay th;u 7A-7P, and 7P-7A, and 3A... Clearly Clean• ..
Saturday
3P- ---~shifts are alia•l!ao4i675-0022
a~e
II you are 1nterested.
Needed:
Expenenced please come m and flit out W•ll-do BabySIItm,g \n my 3br, 2 112 ba. Appro~ . 2lg-2:-Car Garage &amp;
Keyboard player for ustab- an application at 333 Page home .. 1Oyrsrexperemce aC.res
B
arn,
Country
senmg aslo:•ng
llshed band Must be versa- Street, Middleport Please Lmk approved Loads of Fun
s
120.000
1
304)882-2890
tile, vocals a plus (740}446- No Phone calls. EOE
(304~7.73-5 1 37 ask for Kelly
0779 or (304)675·1616 after --,---,---:-::-Spm ·
Styhsts needed at FantastiC
II \ \\.( I\ I
Sams new .locatiOn 1n the
Now H1rcng Sale Dnvers Wai-Mart
Plaza Sign on
Appty mPerson at your local
Oom1no·s Must be over 18 bonus. Free CEU hoUrs.
pa1d vacat•on. full &amp; part
403 Spnng Ave Pomeroy · 12x50 1988 Pme A1dge
RNILPN'S.·-Overbrook cen· time help needed. Come &amp; For Sate: Neat. Clean Oh10 ' One tam•ly home for mob•le home Good condter 1is cu ~ r~ntty accepting work 1n our fr~endly tam•ly Thr1vmg Restaurant near 8() years Still like new 3 110n at ~ elect r1c 2 cedroorn
a'pphcations lor LPN'S and atmosphere Call (7 40)446- boomtng
Construct•on bedrooms i 112 baths. ;2 car t bath, ma1or a~p li ances
RN"$. 7A-7P end 7P-7A 7267 qr stop 1n.
Owners Jookmg to Retire ·garage, $50 000 740-992· Lnctuded, $7 300 Present lot
Shifts are ava1labt'e. II you 1150
SctiOot5
Call (304)882-2490
· 2426
avatlaole to rent S150
are mterested. please' come
monmly (740)446•2 796 or
INsrKLCilON
tn and till out an application •--ciioioiciimirrirrii
.......
•NOTtCEo
7
rooms.
1 '112 bath. garage. 1740)388-9687
at 333 Page Street,
HtO VALLEY PUBLISH base ment, deck, mcludlng 1993 doublewtde 3 bedMiddleport. N call and Galli!)911S Career College
NG CO recommends tha deed to nverbank for mlo room
speak
with
Hol lie (Careers Close To Home)
must be
740-992-3424, 740·992- moved,2S25bathS.
Bumgarner, LPN, Staff Call Today! 740-446-4367. ou dO bus1ness with peo call
000
(740)3881949
740-742-2007
.
1-B00-2 t4-0452
le yOu know, and NOT t
lJeoJeiopmenl. EOE
8978.
_ galhpolacariiHtf(:oi~ cOOl
nd money through th
Portamedtc, the nations Accredited M.,mbe r Ac:cr•dmng 811 until you have lrlYBStl Roush Lane Cheshae 2 BA tra.ler. god shape on
tead1ng paramediCal health CouOCII lot IOO&amp;p&amp;noarn Colleges ~a~led~lhe~o:ff:er~,n~.~~ Beautiful 3 be4room, lormal 314 acre ground. North
dlf1mg room, Oak kitchen Gall•a area. (740)446-1400
informatiOn
service
--"-"-R:=:;;~~-~~~
rry is seeking
Med compa·
Tachs. r""-d-"-"""'
Oak lloors. carpe!ed Sun
PhlebOtomies, EMTs and
room . ~ 2
113 baths 2000 2Bx80 Patrrot 4 bedLPNs to do 'Insurance
roc;m. exce lent cond•tiOI'\
5117 000.(740)367-7615
exams in the Gampolis &amp;
Askmg S48 000 N~eds
Meigs County area. Must
moved (?40)367-7245
have 1-year tllood draw
8iJsed homes under $1 .000
experience.
Contractor
W•ll help .w1th del1very.
Pcsit1on Ema11 Resume to
17 40)385-962 1
ph1&amp;120dm r 0~namedic . net
ne~Neu

20

Great 2000 Fleetwood 2
bedroom w1lh full delivery
set-up and central a11. Call
Russ. (740)385-2434

--

3431 1304-675-4514

VISA

POLICIES: Oh1o Valley Publishing reaervee the"tight to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at.any time. Errors must be reponed onthe l1rst day ol publicAtion and
Tribune-Sentinel-Register wiU be responsible lor no mora tl111n 111e coat ol the apace occupied by the error and only the lira\ insar11on We shall not be liable
any lou or expense that results from the publication or om1ssion of an advertiSement Correction will be m&amp;de In the l~rs t Available 6d1t1on • B o~t nu mber
are always confidential •Current rate card applies • All real estate advert1nmenta are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of'l968 • Th1s' "'"'P' P"I
accepts only
wanted &amp;ds meettng EOE standards We Will not know•11gly accept any advertising m violation of the law:

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARD SALE-

4

"I

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Dest:rlptlon • lnc:lude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• lndude Phone Numbet' And Addr.ess When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

I'

JUST SAY

GET YOUR.CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Offee lloaP-~
.'

Indians prosp~ct Denney
suffers fractured skull

Blank

Members of ·the third place Tuppers Plams Pride from left. in front.
.are Kiera Casto, Mallory Mcintyre, All ison Seers. Jordan Gillan and
Abby Collins. Standing rn the middle are Hannah Hawley, Shaye
Selbee, Erin Sivatzel . Molly Dunlap ; Madison . R1gsby and Jordan
Parker. Standing rn back are C'.laches Amy Swatzel. Tom Seers.
Wayne Du ~ l ap, Troy R1gsby. Randy Rawley and John Selbee.
Rachel Brooks was not present during the photo.
(
I
- '

We Cove

1•• 11.. &lt; ,.,,~:

COl.UMgUS (AP)
Mitch Jone~ hit a grand slam
in the seventh inning to give
·columbus the lead, and the
Clippers' bullpen preserved a
7-4 win over the Norfolk
Tides on Monday night.
Jones' slam off Blake
McGinley (3-4) was his 19th
homer this season and erased
a 4-3 deficit. McGinley
walked Felix Escalona to

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTI NEL CO M

·

Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No 'One
Else Can!

Columbus clips Norfolk, 7-4

Chester wins Big Bend softball crown

The Daily Sen tin e l • Page 83,

•

m:rthune - Sentinel - ~eglstcr

home orlly (740)379·9465

Sul,ml,tted photos
Members of the first place Chester Angels are in front; from left, Chelsey C.urtis, ·Hal.ey
Bissell, Haileigh Bush, Laura Pullins and Cassidy Cleland. In the middle are Sabra' Baile~.
Monrque Dugan , Jenna Burdette and Sarah . Lawrence. Standing in back are 'coaches John
Burdette , Howie Lawrence, Charley Cleland and Shawn Bush.

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

be a star

Mayweath er was tal ki ng to I w;mted to perform wel l.''
tl;te pres&gt; whell he saic!' that, Mayweather sard. " We 1vant·
the same press' Jhat drew hrs ed to put on il big tight. a big
wrath when it dutifully report- sh&lt;&gt;w, a 'tar-studded el'ent.''
ed his troubles " ith the law.
'llayweather did just that.
So, OK, Floyd. here's your though there were n' t mlmy
second chance.
stars around hecause, well ,
Do it right. beca use yuu1 stars )U q don 't tlnd it cool to
'kills are ~o uaulina and your hang .amunu 111 Atlanu c City.
smile so engaging tha t boxing Lik~ Ma) weat he r. th ey'd
d esp~ Ij.ttely nett.d' -someone n .Jthcr· he in Lts Vegas. _
'like you ri ght now_
Mavweat her had 10 come
You showed it at the east licL·a u 'c he's never sold '
Boardwalk H~ll. enemy turf t.ic kels anJ llfHl r been ll big
lilled wrth more · than 12.000 t ek11 ston tll lraclion tlespite
rabiu Gatti fans . lvhcre vou his trcmendou,s talenl. That\
gave their hero such a whql· partlv hecau;e of his check·
ping that his corner wau ldn't ~red li fe outside the ring. anti
let him ~o on after the sixth part ly because Mayweather is
round. ·
so ~lxKI rhat he can - and
You played the villain, even oftc'n Joes ~ win without
iJ( \ 1iting th e crowd·s boos by cv~ n trv in ~ to ~h~w off what
entering the arena held al1&gt;ft he\goi .....
like a Roman emperor by men
Thai c han ged Saturday
dreS'ed like Roman glad ia- night when· Mayweather came
lllrs. You fought in lront ol out dctermincu to put on a
Gtitti 's peop le bec,wse you " h o w Beating Gatti to win the
weren ' t afra rd to take a chai1ce \NBC I 'lO- pound title wasn't
and. be siue,, $3.5 milltcm enou~h. Mavweather wa'nted
puyd1rys Jon 't come along that l 0 m7rke a swtemem that he
often.
had f111dll y arrived.
•
And the 1 yotl w o n both the
It was the kmd of perfor·
~rudging -respect of Gatll's n1ancc that a legend can been
tans and tile admiration of the n1ade nt'. though the way bo x·
box ing world hy fi nallv show- ing is marketed these days it
ing alithe skills that make you was see n by far too few.
the most talented pound - tor- Mayweather's first pay-per·
pound li gh ter in the world_
view fi ght cost $44.95 to ·
It seemed so easy bet&gt;tlu "e 11 watch. and only some 250.000
"'as. That "s the kind of rare ,_hCiluseho lds 11kely bought jt.
ability you have .
i¥imtlv Gatti fans on the East
" I felt I v..~, tfililer press ure. Coast~

&lt;t

1

2 Peoroom apt 1n Aacme.
OhiO $325 00 a 'llOnth
$200 00 depos•t Includes
sewer water and trash
740-949-2025
2 bedroom newly renovated
Apts for rent Downtown
Gallipolis R1ver &amp; Park v1ew
S560Jmo Some utlht•es
paid No~ accepting applications. Call (740)709-1690
(local calt)
3 rooms &amp; oatn all ut1t1t1es
pa1d. Downs\a•rs 919
Second Ave sUitatMe for 1
S295/mo (740)446-3945
Alf Cond1t1ored Large
Upstalfs Apartment 2br.
fu rn•st'ted
Appliances
'oepos11
ReQuired.
53001mon1n (304)675-7783

•

�'
Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,June28,2005

www.mydailysentinel1com

.,

'

, Tuesday, June 28, 2005
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Qaily Serttinel• Page B5

•.--~------~~----~~-----

Memory

In

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Apt. tor rant. ·seech Street. Thompsons App liance &amp;
Middleport. 2 Bedroom fur- Repalr-675·7388 . For sate.
nished apt, lltJiil!eS pa1d , ·pre- re- conditioned
au tomaJ.ic
vi ous renta l refren ces . washers &amp; dryers .. refrigera depos1t, no pets. 992·0 165 tors. gas and electric
ranges, a1r condJ!Joners. an d
Available
Jmmed1ajely wringer washe rs. Will do

•

shop or at you r home

Used Furniture Store, 130
Bulavl lle Pike. Washers, dryers, refri gerators. ranges.
matt res~es, dresser. couch.,
es. dinenes. rec liners , grave
monuments, much more .
APART·
(740) 446·4782, Gallipolis,
BUCGET
OH H 'S. 11 -3 (M·S i.

JACKSON

ACROSS

.._t_A_NTIQU_~_·_I

ESTAiES, 52 Westwoo d
Drive from '5344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446-2568 .
'Eq ual
Buy or sell. Riverin e
Housing Op poftun~~y
Antiques, 11 24 East Main
on SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740CCNVENi~NTLV LOCAT992 -2526. Russ Moore;
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
owner. _
'•
apartments.
Townhou se
MJSCHLAN.:OUS
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)44 1-1 11 1
MERCHANDISE
tor applic'atlon &amp; inlorma rion .

f""'

1\"orth
• Q 8 3

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

hnhis 99th &amp;irrhday..

September'23, 2005 to
September 25, 2005
$160/per person
Harrah's Casino &amp; Resort
Private jet .out of
C liarleston. WV
Hosted by PVH Community
Relations
· timit!ld seats
. Call 675-4340, Ext. 1326 to
make reservations

/ttne 28. Hqppy'

Birthday, Little
Daddy. you're

~~~.~

Sloped Roof • Carpdrts

Flat or

alway.~ ;, nut hearts

and thoughts. · We

".

· miss a"d lo ve vou
.always. ·
Tom, Janer and Tom

~·
•

45783

4x4
FoR SAlE

itddilions.

AC.TIJAL~.Y. · ~

,
. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ro1nnle

Pree Estimates

YOu . l-OOICtP
I~TT~tt wiTtt
ATLANTIS.

~

HAD NO IDEA ,
THINGS WERE t
THAT
j

I

~---,--~--­

BA'D

·ARE IN TH' .
WASH !!

.

1
~

FER YA

j
~

Towntiouse
Apartments. VerY Spacious,
2 Bedroom s. C/A, 1 1!2
Bath. Adult ,Pool $. Baby
Pool. Patio. Start $385/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Plus
Security Deposit Requi red.
(740i446·3481 .

•

---L::::!::=:::~:L._j A

.

·THE BORN LOSER
. P"

'

P':

~
vvr· "'-• e.RUiU5!

1-\~\ \Z..!

f\1&gt;-IR! 1-\0W LOI*C.

~~----·-Y0!-1 WE.~

.'

'

EHO

.

. 5U\ t'I./E. N.."'-!,1-.'(~ Kf!.OWN
YOU W\Tfl. I\ ti.JLl fl.t.~t;:&gt; Of

I\ 'Nf&gt;..':&gt; (&gt;..

, . BN&lt;:t-lC&lt;,
'&lt;OUR

Twin Rivers To w~r is accepting applicati ons for wai ling
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
apartment , ca11 67 5-6679

'lOlJPEf.

....

P'\\

'N~ ~ OLO,.'li-1£ f-\1&gt;&lt;1\Z.. ~
\UIZt-.1\N.G G[Z..I'&gt;,'(
'

·II

!

I
g

SPACE

FOHRmr

1997
Buick · LeSabre
Limited. 75 thOusand miles.
lnt:,
Loaded,·
Leather
Garage Kept.
$5,995
(304i675·1731.
.

Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter. Oh10
(740i446·7444 1-877·830·
9162. ~ree Estimates. Easy
financing, 90 days s.ame as
cash _ .Visa/ Maste r Card
!;)rive· a- little save alot.

All Your Home
lmproverncnt' Needs
• Siding • Windows

2000 Ford Taurus, 70.000 94 l:tarley Da"Vidson ' Ultra
miles, $7,600, (740)742- Classic, 10,000 miles, blue,
eKc~lent c.Q{tl'dition, ·$13,500,
3405

..

"No Job To Smnll"
Racme,
.
OH ·

·I

2001 Mercury Sable LS 48K
OIDRS
miles, loaded, leather, excel- ___
~"U..L&lt;
•
lent
condition,
asking
$6,500. Gall (740:)446-1776. 2000 Bayliner 21 ft . cuddy wf
trailer, many extras, very
77 Monte .Carlo 305-2bbl
Dual exhaust , new tires,
$650. Call lor ln1o (304i675·
5979.

Financing lor 4a Months or
New Model. 457 Standard
Round Baler Only $13,250
AKC Basset Hound puppies. cash. Makes 4X5 Bale. 92 Plymouth Acclaim, Auto,
Equipment. AC, 51000 080 (304)675Shots, wormed, parents on Carmichael
(740i446
-2412
6628
prem 1se.
$300
each .
(740);256-6887.
1.!i
TRUCkS
Special 'Purchase- John
FOR SALE
.
AKG Chihuahuas $350. 1st Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel
L..--.iliiiiillilli--.,J.
shots &amp; t st worming. Call Rakes/ John Deere Disk
Mowers. Call tor price. 1983 Ford F250 400 Big
(740i446-4446.
Carmichael
Equipment. · S.ock Oana 60s, frOnt &amp; r8ar
AKC German Shepherds~
(740)446-241'2.
36• 'Super swampers, runs
Pups·&amp; AdUlts.
good.
solid body, $4,500
· 1 -Black &amp;, Tan Litter
~
OBO or v.il1 trade tor good 4
1-SoM Bt)3.ck utter
,
wheeler. (740)256·1768.
vet-checked &amp; shots
(304)937·2310
Ask about our AOHA 1989 350 Chevy pickup 112
www.tristatek-9.com
- - - - - -- - - Member Discounts 'on new ton, automatic, utility bed.
For. Sate; Chocolate Lab John Deere Equipment. good OOndilion $1,;!00 OBO
(304i377·
Equipmen~ (304)882-2196
Pups $200 .00. 740-992 - Carmichael
8266
6227
(740i446-2.12.

I

740-247-2162 or
740-416-3508

1999--Trail

Lite

Bantam

Flyer. E)leellem condition.
Loaded. ' Must. see. 740949-2709. $8800.00
Coleman Camping ·Trailer
12FT, 2 King Beds. $4,995
call for Details (304)675t731

Starcraft fold-up camper.
Aiflhear, sink. stoVe &amp; relri.geratot, steeps 4 . Was $4,995
reduced
to
$3,995.
(740)446-2282.

Truck Camper. Ac. TV
Antenna • .wired for Cal&gt;le.
like now $6,500 (304)675- .•
3353
'-I

$26.00.PER

I ~\

II I "

·BASEMENT
WATERPAOCJ F1NG .
Unoonditional litetime guar·
amee. Local references lurnlshed .. Established 1975,

Call

2• Hrs. (740i 446·
0870. Rogers Basement
Waterproot'.ng.

ADV All E
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE .
CLASSIFIED$
Public Notice

MANLEY'S
. SELF STORA.E

.""'1"'4"'y"'rs':'."'E"'x"'pe"'n'"'•..n..
ce.._
1

1999 Damon Camplit~ Popup Camper. Heat, air,
awning , relrigerator•. 3 burn·
er' stove, porta-pot, and all
accessories. Excellent condition.
$3,500:
Phone
(740)446-92&lt;C.

mo

HOWARDL
WRlTfSfl 6 SONS
ROOFING
All types of roofing:
Shingle, Flat. Metal ·

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
. Se"·Storace"

BUOGET HEARING
Bo.d o1 rr...w111
. IKitd lhelr 2001 Budget
hearing on July 19,
2005 at the Chester
Town H8JI at 7:00 p.m.
Jenel Lite, C1etll
(1)21

z

~

0

I0 7 6
A 10 !:1 7

•

2

rm

sOuth

14

West
Pass

•fill ""

....

949-1485

RIBERT
BISSEll

CIISTIICTIGI
• New Homes

• Garages ·

STAJtLEY TREE
TRIMMING .•
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
~ Prompt &amp; quality
_work
. · .
• Affordable Rates

• Complete
Remodeling

748-192~1811
Stop &amp; Compare

1·'•

Pass ' •I

D"D' l&gt;Al&gt;!
T HERE'S A

CAT

Wedri.;eday, June 29, 2005
By Bernice Bede O•ol

An old collective endeavor in wh ich
you were once involved equid be (es·
urrected an!=~ revitalized iii the year
ahead. You may have several associatas in this arrangament and aach w'i!l
be able to contribute to its success
CANCER (June 21 -Juty 22) ..:_ MaKe it
a point today to find a way to ·involve
yourself . with persons ·Who cttn
advance your career goals. Contacts
you establish now may be able to
open some Valuable doors tor you .
LEO ('July 23 -Aug. '22 ) - ·Challanges
tend to bring out your betier qualities
today whether they are of , a serious,
work-related nature Of &gt;friendly oom P.etjtive sports. with pals. TaKe them

IN

I&lt; ITCttEN ~

IMPORTS
Athens
Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
. 740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

PEANUTS

Res~ki"!J

l.ale Model Sftl"'!}e
and Arter Market Parts

See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Nooll'
Sun. 'Closed

on .

I-I ERE '(OU ARE, OLD
END ... SUPPERTIME '

I STUCK SOME CARROTS
ON TI-IERE 50 VOU WON'T

EAT SO FAST..

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

JUST WHAT I NEED ..
. SPEED 6UMP5!

~ SUNSHINE

CLUB
~S,

Ia- ':..TILL MOJE.

SO

1H£Y Aflf.,

LDVE.

WE.LL TOGf.THEii1 .
roJ'Ttai.
~?

I

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
140-742-2293

. t.:..._:_~===!:=::!::~__::.,l
-GARFIELD

a message

~-·2217

Hours·
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

OR L.f."f II ~l'f ...00 IN !Hi;
HEA17. .. THAI WORKS FOR
ME, 100!

IBRTHIP DODGE

252 Upper Ri.ver Road • ~lli~lis
l40-44'1Hl842 • 949-1155 Evemngs
800-44rHI842
.. '
.
Call B.D. ConsL
(or all your home
ftpair needs. moflng,
,ldlng, add-ons,
ftmodeling etc.,
free estimates

(740) 992-Z979

1/1A/1 mo. pd

leave

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

• Mushroom Compost
Availi!ble
18 spreader buggies availa~!e for use .

Airway pasture renovators and seedefs
available to rent
Licensed agronomist on staff available for

coo suiting.
SHJ\DE RIVER AG SERVICE

35537 SL RL 7 Nortb

Pomeroy, Ohio

Now Available At

B.-\l'\1 Ll'\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

43

44 Batter

Ingredients .
46 G~mmy

47 You,

formerly

48 Gesture
51 - .Kippur

Today 's clu e: U equals G

"' Y B W ·'

yz

VFB

w

EBWKKM

H. R

HGLZZER."

OWKABE

WKHSB

HR

"SZVVBB

BGUKHRF

THSGHS

GZY

RWDCBK

DM..

SCT

zv

U Z K L .0 M G

PREVIOUS SOLVTiON -''Winning is overemphasized The only lill)e il is
really. important is in surgery and war.· - Coach AI McGu1re
· (c) 2005 by NEA. Inc. 6,28

V IRGO {Aug . 23-Sept . 2 2 ) Something that you may feel could be
bstter than it already is can be .satisfactorily improved upon today. The
end result should benefit others who
are involved, as well as your~H.'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - An Issue
that may have caused sOfflewhat of a
challenge between you and your mate
can be amended today in a manner of
which you both approve. If you have
an idea. make the oiiOrtures.
SCORPIO (Od. 24 -Nov. 22 ) Be
open for new opport~nities or ways to
achieve flnancli3il 'Qains from other
fhan
your customary sources ..
Something may develo p . tod~y ­
through another who is in your same
tiek:t of endeavor.
SA.GtiTARIUS (Nov. 2"3-0ec. 21) E~eryone involvad will farv better
today if you assume the management
role Instead of leaving things up to the
same ·old person . Fresh thoughts and
ways of doing things can offer benefits.
CAPRICORN (Dec . ' 22-Jan. 19) Yo ur Intuitive faculties tend to be '
somewhat sharper than usual today.
So it you get -a strong hunch about
some thing , don't underestimate it and
do ·nothing Take the appropriate
action. ·
'
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20 7Feb. 19) - ·
There is a relationship among your
assocrates whose friendship is worth
developing further _and today you may,
get this very ,o pportunity. Take advantage of advandng a closer rapport.
PI SCES (Feb. 20·Mareh 20 ) - Yoi.Jr
flnanelal prospects cduld tak.e some
interastlng twists ·and turns today~ If
you find yourseU involved• in something that's in the m ill that could have
potEfntial, g;ve it your full attention.
ARIE S (March 21- -April 19) · Knowledgs and f')(perience are your
two mos't valuable aSSf¢'1 that can be
relied upon today. Co nduct your
important affairs along tamiliB!r lines
that ha'Je Proven to produce positi'Je
resulti!;.
,
TAURUS (Aprii20-May· 20) - Be alert
today because there·s a strong 'p ossibility that you may be able to take&lt;
ad'Jantage a nd benefit in some man- ·
ner where another has already done
mos.t or all of the spadeWori( required_
G EMINI (May 21-.June 20 ) - When

lallar1 ot
0 Reorronge
lour scrombltd words

low to form four Jirnple words.

I~ · NEGLTY

. EFING I
I. ll I I· I ..
I;,
C R U.C 0
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GA T T U H

Our ex-boss was very arroganJ. My colleague thi~ks
that some people take very
~a~~: ~~~trips with very lillie

I

If---rl'"·",,-.,,r.:-ri-.-'T,--1 0

C·omplete lhl! c.h ud :; le Quoted
b y MlmQ ir'l the rn issrng words
L...I.,-.L...JL...I....,--'--'. you de11elop from step No. J below.

7

.

.

ft PJINT NUMIEI£0 lET1US
11::1' 'IN 1H!SE SQUARES
1.

IJNSCIAMBI.! LETTERS TO
GfT ANSWU
.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 6-27-0 5
Nalure- Began - Women - Wildly- YOUNG
It will.be interesUng to hear the teenagers of today tell
their children wliat they had to do without when they
were YOUNG,

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ

\i 17"1 W , I~ II£

'*" a GIIEIITNESS

, _ WOtJll)

HE ON

scau: OF a£ To ~re

Hard Work! "

.·BAUM .L UMBER
St. Rt. 1-Z4 Chester 985-3301

•
-- ·-:--~-----------·---

--

UMI

the
be·

is to yo:.,.. If all are happy about the ,
program. you:u have a ,tJi'll.

~'Tel, f'-~1-l.l.. .

woao

141tttl liy ClAY I . 'OUAN

Mid-Size 4 Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp ~ 40hp Kubota Engines

.

·

Each letter mthe ~ltler s1ar.ds lor ano'll\er

today, bv

"Taking Th~ Sting Out Of

'

42

by Luis Campos

.to

V' TM

·

41

senslbl&amp;
Stretchid
to see
Be generoua
Japan's
highest
peak
Do a laund!y
chore

tAIJet;JII)' Cipher (;rfpt&gt;grams are creited tram QUOtat!OflS by faJD&lt;lUS people. past anti present

~~~~~~~~~~~=~~j
·makinQ
social
OA¥-:!7 it-Z&amp;
sure that
whatarrangemJtnts
' you Ptan is of equal
t3fM
Interest
9'/eryone else Involved cis It

-GRIZZWELLS
High cost of fertilizer got you
17-17-17,.
$265 ton (While Suppy Last)

39

CELEBRITY CIPHER

- - - - - , - -·-

•

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

rris week, we are studying ,the openi ~g
lead - lirst. what sho u ld~ led ;1ater, how
the card chosen can alf~ct third hand's ·
defense. So, look at West'S ·cards·and pick
a lead against lour hearts.
Over a one-club opening, some pa1rs will
skip a lonQer diamond suit to show a fourcard major, buphat style should be adopt~
ed,(if at all!) only with a weak responding
_hand, one ·not worth a game-invitational
or strgnger sequence. ·Here, North should
shOw his suits m the correct sequence,
starting with the longest. Over .South's
one-heart rebid, North is obvipusly worth
game. H-owever, if ttle partnership uses
splinter bids,' North · should rebid four
clubs, promising four-card heart support,
at leas! game values. and at most a sin·
gleton club. At 'first glance, it looks strange
to spt.irter in p'artner's suit.. but it can'not
cost. dere, South would beat a speedy
retreat to lour hearts.
This is how I assess Wesl's options: A
club is lousy (into declarer's first-bid suit);
the diamond jack could work, but I would·
n't select it, b'ecause North. bid the suit:
and a trump is potentially suicidal: That
leaves the spade two.
The fourth-highest spade two guarantees
at least one honor 1n the suit. so East
should put in his jack. If South wins with ,
file king, the defenders_must hope ·that
West get9 in early enough to push anoth·
er spade through &lt;;tummy's queen. Here,
thougti, East's jack holds. He cashes (he
·spade ace. plays a spade to his partner'S
king. and awaitS a trump trick to de'feat the
·contract.
After any other lead, declarer should win
12 tr,icks.

talkillli

38 Most

· sunrise ·

Jane-

coli.

36 SmQQ!h·

'.:!~~~~~:~' S©\\JU1A~l££~s·

Available
• Free Estimates

Hi ll's Self
Sto rage

¥

EaJSt
Pass
All pass

BIG NATE

• References

• Leave

:'llorth
1' +

IH---::::1

New nr Repair

Seamless Gutter Downspout - Siqing

$35 - 1,000 lbs Approx. weight
The CtMsW Town..,lp

.

Janet Jeffers
· 337?5Hiland Road
!Pomeroy, Ohio ·

Hardwood Flooring
. • Garages

• Room Add. • Roofing
• Kitclieris • B'aths

~

Phone
(740) 992-5232
5x10, lOxlO,
10xl5, 10x20,
IOx30 .

• ·Decks • Porches
• Ceramic Tile &amp;

-"""'::-=':'"'..,....,

r BoATSFOR&amp;S~. ~

· ~AS

Storage

1997 Chrysler Sebring ·JX
Convertible.
Extra Manual shift. Excellent
New tires,
clean&amp; nice $3000. 740- .Condition.
$4,200 OBO (304)882·2662 .
985·4274 .

IF
11

ON THIS

Se-rvice

_2_004_H-'o-nd_a_F_o-re-'m~a-n_4_50,

52,000 miles (304iS93·6979 _06 111"6::
.

i

High and D_ry

'I'll
Coastructlan

2001 Ford Excursiontimited ; , _ . . . : , - - - - - - 58 000 'le 6 (304)882 3711 Murray Go-cart Tecumseh
' Chevy
m' Blazer two' door 6.0 H",r. $500. Call (7•o
· )". 12000
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HOUSF.HOLD
Goc:~
·

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2002 Yamaha 660 Raptor
yellowtbtack
w/matching
KBC helmet.
Excellent
Condilton $3.700 (304)675·
1015

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•r:

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a lead again

.TttiNI'

rTJ~~~~~~~;f-~!!~~EEZV!!!~jw-~~;;;;-r~A~L~L~M~Y~A~P~R~O;N;S~--~~~~

F

South

It is time to pick

Bucket Truck

Tara

' to rent
Looking for ho ~se
locally. Mason or meigs· co.
cai1 .. 3Q4-77S-5600
' II I{( 11\'\DI'il

Q 46 .')

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

:BARNF.Y

New John Deere Round
Balers @ 1.9% Fixed Rate

•

Opening lead: '??

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Large 1 Bedroom Apartment
for
Rent
$425/month,
Utilities' inc luded, (304)6755819

98% Wolfe/S. Husky pupS.
Trailer lot, 2.5 mites out $75.00 . Female. red/white
Neighborhood Rd . Call mask. WolfiHu_sky. $50.00.
(740)446 -1685
Female white Wolf/S.Husky.
740·742-1121 or 742-3019

A. J 0
Q ,J 5

Deal er: South

JONES'

and

For 'Rent
32' ~&lt;44 ' Block
Garage · wit h
12'x44'
attached
block

•
•

Vulne!'able:·Both ·

Briim Durham
Phone: (740) 949~4011
Specializing in custom homes

ox1. 1558

East

.AKQI 0 9

7..0-667,0700 1-888-HOPP2l4

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION

HI00-222-633~

3

"" 7 li 3 2
•

Tree Service

Steel BUildings All Must John Deere 10ft. No Tit Drill
for · Rent.
Carmichael
Go.
Repos , Cancelled
Equipment, (740)446-2412.
orders. Damages, Factory
seconds.
Make offer.
Financing available. Cal!
TOday, Limited opportunities!

"' 4

2

4 2
J 10 0 8

"' .J a 5

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
. Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

O~ner:

Downtovvn Ofl1ce Space- 5
room suite $650/mo: 1 room
office- $225/mo.: 2 room
suite -. $250/mo.' Security
deposit required .' You pay
u1ilitles. All spaces very nice
Elevator_ Call (740)446-3644
tor appojntment.

+A K H

[!:e~ 5 ~

Tuppers Plains, OH

Mobile H6mes ,• Metal Roofs

06·28·05

·~8 6 1 3

,.

L

· 4180QSR#7 .

World's lest Boor

Furnished upslai.l s, 3 rooms
&amp; bath. Clean. ref. &amp;. dep.
req1,1ired . No p e t ~ . (740)4461519_

Pleasant Valley 'Apartment
Are n9w taki r'lg Applications
for 2BA , 3BR &amp; .4BR ..
Applications
are taken
Monday thru Friday, from
9:00 A.M_-4 P.M . Office is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Poin t Ple asant. WV
Phone No _ is (304)6755806. EHO

41 Hindu
honorlllc
1 Rock·band 42 Big party
booking ·
45 Riding
4 Zig oppoane
outflte
7 Sotto49 Encourage
11 Ms. Merkel
strongly
12 Aquarius'
50 Clancy hero
tole
Jock- ·
14 Not defy
52 Phi follower
15 HMO
53 Trots
·slaffers
54 Peeved
16 Cotton uni1 55 Small cask
17 Wedding·
56 Prof.
cake part
57 Kind
· 18 Theater
.
of student
· people
. 5ij Craving
20 Brie, for one
13 Clergy
22 Lah·di·DOWN
ote'l!lbers
23 Cigarette
19 Millay or
Ashram
Ferber
0
24
all brown
figure
21 Silver
birds
2 Bed·and·
Skatas boy
27 Diplomat
breakfasts 24 A Charles·
. 30 Flo's ·
3 Bad cut
.
ton ~ s st.
co·worker
4 Striped
25 Horse's
31 Canisters .
animals
brake
.
32 House site
5 Swamped
26 Whodunit
,34 Catch a bug 6 Toothpaste
oame
35 Teacup
choice
27 Mind
.
handles
7 Politician
28 Wrist bone
,36 Lions' prey
pickers
29 Harris and
37 Music
8 Drama
Pin leila
ca1egory
award
31 Spotted
· (2 wds.)
9 So-so .
cats
39 Embrace
grades
33 ·Recipe q1y:
40 Tqrre Haute ·10 Rochester's 35 Toward

Pt)i~l,p
· Alder

Joseph
Ellsworth
Bissell

repairs on major brands in

Beautiful, clean,· and spacious 3 bedroom town·
house . With storage /play·room. Downtown Gallipolis •
$610/month No utilities
paid. No pets. Ca ll (740)446·
9961.
BE..,UTJFUL
MENTS
AT
PRICES · AT

In Loving Mem ory
ofrhe Bes r Father
and Grandfather in
the world.

·---:--- -~

------..

�,,
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel ·

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

'www.mydailxsentinel.com

WimblEdon
\

No. 5 Svetlanta Kuznetsova. No. 8
Nadja Petro va and Np. 9 Anastasia
Myskina.
Sharapova didn't face a break point in
her 6-4, 6-2 victory over No. 16 Nathalie
Dechy. Myskina. meanwhile. trailed by a
set and two break&gt; against yet another
Russian, No. 6 Elena Demehtieva, whu
. eventually h'eld, two match points. But
Mysj&lt;ina· came all the' way back to .win
the rematch of the 2.004 French Open
final 1-6, 7-6 (9).7-5. .
,
U.S. Open . champion Kuznct&gt;ova'&gt;
ex planation for · her co untrywo men·,

BY HOWARD FENDRICH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WIMBLEDON. England - The second Monday at Wimbledon offers the
rare treat of all 16 men 's and women's
fourth-round matches, and nn this particular afternoon there was the even rarer
sight of Venus William s playing co ~fi dent, mistake-free tenni s.
.
Less than 48 hours after sitting with
chin on hand while watching her sister
Serena lose to. Jill Craybas, Williams
strode onto the same court against th.e
s ucce~s?
same opponent. mo~e concerned with
··.-Because nohoJy will give you n·othrighting her own ga,me . than re stonng
ing for free in Russia. " she said. "and
family pride . .
you have to do the work for it."'
She managed to do both. Williams
Kuznetsova plays Davenport next.
won the first six games and the last six to
Tuesday 's other women's quarterfinals:
overwhelm Craybas 6-0. 6-2. looking a
Sharapova vs : Petrova; and Myskina vs..
lot more like the player who won
No. 3 Amelie Mauresmo. ·
Wimbledon and the U.S. Open in 2000
The me1i 's quarterfi11als Wednesday :
and 200 l than one who hasn't reached a
No . .l Roger Federer vs. Gonzalez, No. 2
Grand Slam semifina l in two ·years.
Andy Roddick vs. No. 9 Sebastien
Asked · whether facing sorn~one who ·
Grosjean, No. 3 Hewitt vs. Lopez, and
. just beat Serena particularly pumps her
No. 12 Thomas Johansson vs. No. 18
up. Williams looked down and laughed ..
David Nalbandian.
"I definitely would like to do it a little
Two-,time defending champion Federer
bit for my sister," she said, then paused
beat Juan Carlos Ferrero 6-3. 6-4, 7-6
before adding thi s telling pnbse: "but
(6), while Roddick defeated Guillermo
mostly for me."
I
Coria 6-3, 7-6 ( l ), 6-4. Roddick and
Williams used her 6-foot-/1 frame to
Federer appear to be on course for a sectrack down Craybas ' shots t&lt;) the corners
ond consecutive .final.
and to win 13 of 14 points at the net. She
"It's in the back of my mind. It's obvilimited her unforced errors to four in the
AP photo ously something that I think about and
first set, and after falling behind 2-0 in ·venus Witfiams, of.the USA, waves after dream about ,'' Roddick said. "But ... I'm
the second, Williams broke back at love. defeating Jill Craybas·, of the USA. at not good eno ugh to overlook the next
"She was really fired up today."' Wimbledon Monday: Williams won 6-0, . two matches."
.
Craybas said. "S he definitely ha ~ a 6-2.
·
He was .being modest, but that last senchance to win the tournament. " .
tence cou ld very well have been spoken
First things first, though. starting with set of 2002 Wimbledon winner Lleyton by Williams recently.
a match Tuesday against No. 12 Mary Hewitt's 6--l. 6-4.6-7 (7). 6-3 victory.
It couldn't.have been easy to go from
Pierce, back in ttie Wimbledon quarterfiThere were instances of frustration, No. I in the world to No. 2 in her raminals after a nine-year absence. It's a such as over on cozier Cour~ 18, where ly, reaching Slam final ' after Slam final,
strong follow-up to reaching the French No. I 0 Mario Ancic. a semifi nal ist last only to lose to little sis. Add in the shoot. .
Open final.
. .
year. let out his anger after getting bro- ing death of her half-sister, plus assorted
. Williams last went that tar at a maJor ken by No. 26 Feliciano Lopez to start injuries, and there are plenty of explanaat Wimbledon in 2003, also the last time the second set. Ancic picked up a bottle tions for the elder Williams' slide to 16th
she made a Slam's final four. She won and chucked it, then 1ossed hi s racket , in the rankings.
only one title in the past 1·3 months. and which a ball bov fetched. Ancic finished
''I've always felt like she's just .a few
that was a lower-level eveni where she the jtJb by spiking and breaking the rack - matches away from gett~ng a lot cif condidn't faceanymie ranked. above 39th. et.
fidence back," said Davenport, who beat
,
So her apparent resurgence'was the most
Lopez won 6-4, 6-4, 6-2 to become the · Clijsters at a second straight major after
noteworthy development on a day fi lied first Spanish man in the Wimbledon losing their previous six matches. "The
with passing moments of interest for the · quarterfinals since 1972, while No. 21 last 12 or 14 months haven't gone the
record attendance of 41.386.
Fernando Gonzalez defeated No. 31 way her career began for her, and she 's
Some were .the sort of odd occurrences Mikhail Youzhnv 7"6 (3 }, 7-6 (5}, 6-3 to still out there battling.''
brought about by the pressure of playing give Chile its first man in the final eight
Williams' father, Richard, said Serena
on Centre Court, such as Kim Clijsters·. since 1985. ·
headed home to have a doctor check her
three double-faults in the final game of
If tennis' global · reach is expanding. injured left ankle. But their mother
her 6-3, 6-7 (4}, 6-3 loss to 1999 nothing comes close to ma.tching the watched Venus and Mark Knowles beat
. Wimbledon
champion
Lindsay impressive strides made by Russia 's Todd Perry and Els Callens in mixed
Davenport. · Or No. 24-seeded Taylor women. They won three Grand Slam doubles in the evening, another victory
·Dent simply watching a shot land at his titles last year and now have four quar- on a long day.
·
feet ·- clearly in __:;: to give away a terfinalists at a major for the first time : · "Venus is on a good trail right now,'' ·
break-point chance at 5-4 in the second defending · champion Maria Sharapova, Richard Williams said.

pate in fun games. and' will get a

Baseball

Justit·cs let stand
Ohio rulings ba~ng
Ten Con1mandn1ents
di~plays, 1 7

Big Bend 'B lues
Bash edition inside
today's Sentinel

Camps and Clinics

Vellus Williams does what Serena couldn't
.

- .· ..

'

camp basketball. refre shments and a
t·sl'llrt.

The cost is $30 or $40 arter June
21 .
.
Contact Jim Osborne 446·9284 for
more information.

Marietta College Ctmp ot
Champs
MARIETTA -The Mariella College
Baseball Camp ot Champs will" be

~.

Grade school open gym 11 GA.HS
GALLIPOLIS - Grade school open
gym 1S being held each Wednesday
from 1 0; 30 a.m. until noon a~ the
Game Academy High School gymnasium .
.
'
The open gym . supervised by coach

held over the course of the summer
at Pioneer Park.'
The Day Camps for grades .2-8 will
be held July 5-7, 12- 14 and 19-2L
while . the Residence/Commuter
Camp will be held tor grades 6-12 on
.July 24 ·28.
For a camp brochure, call the baseball ollice· at 1 (7 40)376·4517 or
(740)376-4673 or check the web at
www.mariella .edu .

at
)

Jim Osborne , is free and Boys and
girls m grades 1-6 are allowd to pa r~
ticipate. ·
·
The open gyms run through July 20.

·'

.Basketball

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

URG wo;:~: Basketball

511 C:ENTS • Vul. 5-l. Nu. :!t~

RIO GRANDE -The University of
Rio Grande will hold its women's

J

River Valley set' dates for

bllkelball camp
basketball camps beginni~g In June
CHESHIRE - River Valley High at 1he lyne Center.
.
.
School will have a basketball camp
The schedule tor the camps , with
for boys and girls entoring grades 4- fees are as follows:
e on Wednesday, July 6 through
- Varsifv and JV Shootout. July 9.
.Friday, July 8 at Bidwell-Porter . $215.
·
Elementary SchOol.
' · : 1Jnior High Individual Camp, July
The three-day camp will lake place 17 -~0. $22&amp;.
from 9 a.m. to 11 :30 a.m . and w ill
- Varsitv Qnd JV Team Camp .•July
locus on instructions in fundamental ~ 2 1F·23, $ 225 · .
contact
.
basketball .
o~ more 'f' 1orma 11on ,
The cost ol the canip Is $30 if you D_avld Smalley .at. 245·7491 or e-mail
are registered before July 4. with the h•m ~.t dsm~lley@rlo.edu.
cost moving up to $35 at!er ~!JIY 4 .

Conflicting accounts begin second Ward trial

SPORTS
• 2005 NBA Draft.
See Pl)ge 81

BY BRIAN J. REm
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - One of two
alleged victims in a .second
jury trial of Raymond Ward of
Rutl&lt;md on multiple counts of
unlawful sexual conduct with a
minor testi!ied Tuesday that
she engaged in mutual oral sex
with Ward whi le drinking at his
home in 1998.
A defense witness. meanwhile. testitied that he was at
the Ward home the night the

TraC k/R UnnlnJ:
•

Early registration is encourag•d .

and all participants will receive a
camp t·sh ir t.
For more information, or to sign-up,
contact AVHS boys basketball coach
Gene Layton at (740) 245-5753 or
c,all him at River Valley High School
at (740) 367-7377.
.

Citco to host camp It PPMS

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Mark

Mountain High Running Carilp
to be held In Bristol
BRISTOL,
The Mountain
High Running Camp wtll be held Julv
11 -16 and 18-23 in the mountains of
southwestern Virginia .
For more inlormatlon, call Scott
Simmons at 1·800-451-IVIC or go to

va. -

www. mouritainhighrunning.c~m .

Cisco will be conducting a basketball camp at Point Pleasant Middle
School from July 5 through July 7 .
The three day camp is designed to
Improve basketball skills with an
Eastern Volleyb•ll Camp
emphasis on correct shooting tech TUPPERS PLAINS- The flrst-evor
niques. Cisco and his staff Will incor- Eastern Vollevball · Camp lor girls
porate' drills to improve shooti11g, entering grades 6·8 will be held July .
passing, dribbling and defensive 5-8.
..
skiiis.
Camp stall includes players and
The camp will run from 11 a.m. to 2 coaches lrom the 2005 Tri·Valley
p.m. dally.
. Conference and sectional champion
Cisco has been teaching basketball
for nearly 20 years and presently ·eastern Lady Eagles.
Cost is $30 if pre-registered or $40
operates his own school in Kenova .
on the first dav of the camp. Included
He has also worked with several
in the cost is a camp T-shtrt and volNBA.
plavera,
inclljding
B .J.
leyball .
Armstrong , Anthony Tucker and
Contact Howie Caldwell for more
Korie Hlede, appmxlmatlv 50 college
information .
players and even Olympic basketball
· players.
The cost of the camp is' $60 which
includes a c~mp 1-shirt. There will be
dally shooting contests With. awards
given ~o the daily and weekly win0.0. Mcintyre Tennis Leeaons
ners.
.
. GAlliPOliS - The · 0 .0 . Mcintyre
Applications are available at the · Park District wlll offer adult and child
Dairy Queen in Point. Pleasant, at tennis lessons . The hour~ long
the Point baseball and softball fields, lessons wi!l be held 10 a.m . unt.ll11
the Gallpolis swi mming pool, Villi&amp;ge a.m., and also from 11 a.m . until 12
Pizza. local Subw&amp;yS, Bob's Market p.m . on Saturday mornings.
in Mason or bV ca!!ing Bill Buchanan
lnstruc11on. is set from June 18
at 675 -2675 or 593-0481.
·11 b e no
To ensUre correct Shirt size, applica- through July 16; there WI
tlons should {)e rece ived by July 1 .
lessons July 2 for the July 4 holiday.
The instructor will be Tom Hopkins
and class size Is limited 10 20 per•
Baby Blue Basketball Camp
GALLIPOLIS - Boys and girls who sons per hour lesson. Children ages
will be in grades 1-4 next vear can six and above are welcome . Cost is
attend the annual Baby Blue $10 pe~ person.
For more information , contact Mark
Basketball Camp at the Nazarene
Danner at 740·446·4612 ext. 255.
Church on July 5-7. ·
The camp w111 be held from 1 p.m.
(E-mail your camps, clinics or Jsague
until 2: 15 p.m. each day.• ·
.
Each parlk:ipant w ill receive ba~ ­ registrations lo sportstlmydaltytriketball instruction and wi ll partici· bune.com or fax them to 446-3008.)

alleged incident took place,
never left the Ward living
room. and witnessed no sexual
activity betwe.en Ward and the
yoyng woman .
.
Ward, 33, is on trial in Meigs
County Common Pleas ·cuurt
on four counts of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor, thirddegree felonies. and gross sexual imposition, a third-degree
felon y. There are two alleged
victims in the latest round of
charges against Ward, which ·
were included in the same

indictment chargii1g hiin with
rape and corrupting another
with drugs.
.
. In a trml earlier this month.
Ward was found guilty of six of
those rape charges and acquitted on four other rape charges ·
and a charge of corrupting
another with drugs. Ward was
convicted of havin~ sexual
intercourse with his mece, who
was 12 years old at the time of
the alleged offenses in 2000.
The charges in the latest trial
date back to as far as 13 years

Volleyball

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
• Lynette Randolph
• Oris G. Bumgarner
• Shirley A. Ingels
Williams
• Darrell Promis

RUTLA ND -Nashville
recording artist Nina Sharp
will · perform . at 7, p.m .
Saturday in Firemen's Park in
Rutland for the community's
annual Independence Day
celebration.
The
Rutland
· Fire
Department organizes the
annual event, which will also
include the department's traditional· ox roast. -a parade,
and games for all ages. The
theme for the I 0 a.m. parade
is "Salute Our American
Heroes," and Nathan Biggs
has been named grand marshal of the parade. It will
include walking units, .bicycles, fo~r-wheelers, float s,
vehicles, and other entries.
Winners will be announced
in seven parade categories:
religious. non-religious. bicycles. horses, walking units,
and vehicles and four-wheelers. Walking units. bicycles
and four-wheelers are to line

Chevali~r

• Lee Embleton G)bbs
• Ethel G. Shasteen

INSIDE
• Ohio military families
divided on Bush's Iraq
speech·, _.. •
See Page AB

.

•

mal news conference at a hotel
ballroom. Bogut was 4uickJy
dismissive.
"!' ve had a bener collegiate
fromPageBl
.career than anyone else !rom
Australia that came over
· playing . alongside Michael here," Bogut said. ''I'm not as
Jordan during the peak of his slow as Luc Longley, I'm
career.
·
· more athletic. lean shoot betOther Australians who made ter, I'm more competitive. So I
it to the NBA, including big think it's not even fair to bring
men Paul Rogers, Chris . that name up."
Anstey and Mark Bradtke and
If Bogut is picked No. l ,
guards Shane Heal and he'll be the tirst center to go
Andrew Gaze, 5;!W very little first overall since Yao Ming in
playing time before abandon- 2002. and the first player from
mg the notion of playing long- a U.S. college to be the No. l
term in the United States.
pick since Keny~n Manin in
Bogut, who described him- 2000 . .
self "proud" to be halfAtlanta chooses second.
Croatian, half-Australian, said with Portland, New Orleans
he wasn't even a fan of any · and Charlotte rounding out the
Australian players when he · top live. Bubcats general manwas growing up 'playing bas- ager Bernie Bickerstaff said
ketball, rugby, soccer and ten- Charlotte could move up to
nis, preferring Croatian guard No. 3 if it agreed ,to package
Drazen .Petrovic as his athletic the fifth and 13th picks in a
deal with the Trail Blazers.
idol.
"Portland has not made a
So when the inevitable
Longley comparisons . were move. and I don't think anythrown at him during an infor- thing gets resolved until

Draft

Ferry

son in Italy before the
Cavaliers acquired his rights
in a trade.
The club dealt rising star
from PageBl
Ron Harper for Ferry and
· Gilbert spoke with several waited an entire season until
finished his contract in
other candidates before he
Italy. Cleveland then · signed
deciding on Ferry, who has Ferry to. a l 0-year; $34 milbeen San Antonio's direcwr lion ciontract, a decision that
of basketball operations made it tough for them to get
under GM R.C. Buford; the other players.
.
past two years.
In Cleveland, Ferry will
The 38-year-old Ferry have some immediate chalplayed in' a club-record 723 lenges as he tries to rebuild
games for the Cavaliers from the Cavs. who faded down
1990-2000.
the stretch last season.
Back in Cleveland, he' ll be'•
When . free agency begins
reuni.ted with first-year on July l. the also have to
coac·h
Mike decide whether to re -sign AllCavaliers
Bro\\;n, who wa&gt; an assis!ant Star
center
Zydrunas
with the Spurs when Ferry llgauskas. who made S 14.6
spent his last three years as a million last season. Feriy and
· player in San Antonio. .
llgauskas are fomier team- ·
However. while Ferry · s IT\ates a·~d have remained
return will plea&gt;e Brown. i"t close 'friend&gt;.
will surely bring back bad
Ferry's top priority in
memories
for
some Cleveland will be building a
Cleveland fans .
team around All-Star forward
An All-American at Duke. LeBron James.
Ferry was ;elected with the
On Friday. Jame&gt; said he
No. 2 overall pick in 1989 by would like to have input into
the Los Angeles Clippers which players are &gt;igned by
But he held out in a contract the Cavalier&gt;. He · men(ioned
dispute ancl played one . sea- guards :'vlichael Redd, Ray

Portland makes · a ·move,"
· Bickerstaff said.
The Hawks are expected to
select North · Carolina fresh- ·
man Marvin Williams, ari athletic small forward who came
off the bench for the Tar Heels.
· "My verti~al (leap) is only
one mch less than Marvin
Williams'," Bogut said. "You
guys call him the 'superfreak'
athletic-wise, so l don't see
why I'm unathletic." ·
Bogut played for Australia
jn the 2004 Olympics, and his
familiarity with the international style of play - and its
emphasis on ball movement ·
over one-on-one moves - 1s
one of the skill sets that appeal
most to NBA pefsonnel directors.
Bogut also said that the
choice between himself and
Williams comes down ·to
experie~ce vs. potential, and
· his background of going up
against the likes of Yao and
Tim Duncan at last summer's
Olympics · has only added. to
his basketball JQ.

'
'
EXTRA. EXTRA.
.

.

Daily Sentinel

Nine-year-old D~rien Diddle is working towards raising $3,000 to cover her expenses to attend
the AAU J~n ior Olympic Games in. New Orleans, July 26 · Aug. 7. The g1rl has . set up varro~s
fundraisers including carniv&lt;;tl games and a bounce house 1n Star Mill park durrng Rac1ne s
.Fourth of July festivities. Diddle will also be selling her custom "flippers ... a cross between a
flip-flop and slipper which she is pictured assembling.

·wEA.mER

Son of
Charles &amp;. Aprjl Roach
Gallipolis

' .

2005.

Complete the fo~ below and.enclose a snapshot or walle.t sized picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photo'graph. If more than one child is in the picture,
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
Send to:

The Daily Sentinel

Treatments are usually done
in the early' morning or late
afternoon hours when weathPOMEROY
Meigs er conditions are ideal.
County is one of four target- . Pre-recorded updates on
ed counties in the state of treatment blocks are availOhio which is being treated able to citizens by calling
this month for gypsy moth in 614-0387-0907. The maps of
an effort to slow the spread treatment · blocks can be
o( the destructive insect by viewed at www.ohioagriculdisrupting mating
_ ture.gov by clicking on
The Ohio Department of "gypsy moth." ,
Bv Bt;TH SE.,GENT.
things aren ' t handed to her," different fabrics croc heted Agriculture announced this
LeeAnne Mizer, ODA
BSERGENT~MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM said · family
friend Bea onto the shoe. Danen Will week th at a total of I, 118 communications
officer,
Cornell, who is helping . have the games set up at . 1 acres in the New Haven described the gypsy moth as
RACINE - Nine-year-old Darien with fundraising p.m. on July 4 at Star M11l Block which includes areas a , "non-native , invasive
Darien Diddle , daughter of etTorts along with Darien 's Park.
in Sutton Township in Meigs species that has been advancDarien qualified to com- County were treated for the ing
Chris and Gina Diddle of mother; Gina, and grandinto
Ohio
from
Racine, is working her way mothers, Linda Diddle . and pete in three events rn New first time last week. Other Pennsylvania and Michigan
to the Amateur Athletic Sharon McClellan.
Orleans, the rod floor, dou- areas in the process of being over the last several years."
2 SECTIONS - 16 PAGES
Union
Junior
Olympic " So far through donations ble-mini and trampoline.
·are 237 acres in She said in its caterpillar
Calendars
A3 Games on July 26- Aug. 7 in and sandwich sales, Darien Trampoline is Darren's treated
Highland County, 34 acres in stage. it feeds on the leaves
New Orleans.
has raised around $l,OOO fav.orite event and g1ves her Fayette County, and 4.220 of trees and shrubs and is
B4-6
Classifieds
· acres in Delaware County.
First Darien worked her towards the $3 000 price tag an outlet for her energy.
especially fond of oak. "A
way into qualifying for the for her to journ~_Y to·!he AAU
"S he'.s. never ~t ill ." her
The
Meigs
County
area
.
healthy tree can usually
B7 ·games through compet1t1on Junior Olymptcs m New mother G1na sa1d. She loves
Comics
encompasses · State Route withstand only two year~ of
and now she is. financially Orleans.
to compete.:·
.
124 upri ver to Pme Grove defoliation before it is perDear Abby
A3 working her way to the
During Racine's Fol)rth of
. [n tact. rn the year smce Road.
Salser
Road, manently darnaged or dies,"
games in New Orleans July festivities in Star l\1tll Danen has taken up tumbling Bowman ·s Run, Morning she said. To date 43 of Ohio's
Editorials
A4 through fundraising .
Park. Darien will hav~ a at Will Power Tum.blrng rn Star, Oak Grove and ·sur- 88 counties have established
Although family members bounce house and carmval ~all1pohs, she has competed rounding fields. according to gypsy moth populations.
Obituaries
As could financially afford to games like the ring toss and 111 at least ten tumbhn~ coman ODA map.
Mizer said the agriculture
pay for Darien\ expenses, balloon bust to raise money. p~tition s from Flonda to
Each
treatment
involves
department
operates two proB
Sectic;m
Sports
she is working . to ra1se the Darien will also be sellrng Vtrgrnta. She came rn SIXth the use of a low flying air· grams aimed at managing the
AS money herself to be taught · her own creatiqn, a "flipper" place in the nation rn trampo- craft releasing small amount
Weather
responsibility.
shoe that is a cross between a
PI
Oly .
AS
of
pheromone
flakes .
· Please see Moth, AS
"This
is
how
she
learns
flip·
flop
and
a
slipper
w\th
.
ease see
mp1cs, ·
© 2005 Ohio VaHey Publishing Co.

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

""*'""

Child's Name. (s) &amp; Age (s)::·_- - - - - - . . , - - - - - . . . . . . _ ,_ _ _ __ _

At
Famttr tnaw..-, .. llnoW 111M ·- lddcl WIIO lllfow • bill- tMir llloulcler won't .ml
up In the big tMgUH, but tlleJ do lllllllm I ltw IMI-- Ulle
tO llllce ll,'ltdl- How to .ntch the
count. And hoW to owtng lor the IenoN. WMn rou plcly eportt, you don't lu.llllm '-to lie • bell..tl.it I INti« penon. And. I nelworlc of IOfllla dlcllc:lltMto IU liWOik 111Cfllldng _..of
· l*'f*, we're proud to aponeoratlllllll of IIIII!JN· no INIW&lt;wMtdrt.-....,lo 10:c •

I'

City &amp; State:_-:-_:_-----,----:--------~-­
••• The above information will be used in the ad. •• •

WE HUEVE IN THE POWER OF IPOfiT,

J.C.

- - - - - - - - SubmiUed b y : - - - - - - -- -

Inc.

1583 St Rt 160
Gallipolis. OH 456J 1
(740) 446·0214 '
gwoo 1@arrifam.com

'

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

HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
.FRIDAY JulY 22. 2005!
·~-----

1-

lth-.

I

-

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSE NTINELCOM

Some play for money. Some play for glory.
.Some play for the occasional trip to the Ice cream ehop.

-------------------------·---------------------~

- - --

Meigs acreage treated.
to contain gypsy moth

INDEX

Pictures must be In by Friday
July 22nd, 2005. Pictures ·can
be picked up after August 1st, ·

.

up at 9 a.m. at Depot Street,
and all other entries at 9 a.m.
at Meigs Middle School.
Foqq and game bOoths will
open j&lt;~t noon, and local entertainepi will perform from
noon ~ until 2 p.m. Bingo
begin. a~ l p.m: Children's
game , including a balloon
toss and egg race, orgamzed
by th~ Rutland Church of the
Naza'rene, w1l[ begm at 2
p.m. , and prizes will _be
awarded. Karaoke also begms
at 2 p.m. .
Non-food vendors are invited to set up at the park for a
$10 fee. The Big Bend Youth
League will operate a dunking booth, and a Junior Pony
baseball tournament will' be
underway all afternoon.
Sharp . will perform from 7
to II p.m., and a fireworks
display will begin at II and
conclude the day's events .
Questions about the celebration should be directed to
Danny Davis, at 742-2372,
Ray Wilford, 742-2103, or
Todd Kimes at 992-0062.

Racine girl working her
way to Jr. Olympics

The· Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of - local
children - ages newborn to (our
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 29th issue.
Be sure your child,' grandchild,
·or relative is involved!

Tristan Roach

•'

·-

Beth Sercent/ photo

The.

'

Allen and Larry Hughes and
center Eddy Curry as players
he would like to see in
Cleveland.
Ferry is following in the
foot$teps of his father, Bob,
who played l 0 seasons in the .
NBA and was general manager of the Washington
Bullets from 1973' 90. .
Ndw that the Cavaliers
have their new coach and
GM. it's still unclear how
their front office -will be
structured. Cleveland has had
preliminary
talks
with
Detroit coach Larry Brown
about · becoming the club's
president of basketball operations.
The . 64-year-old Brown
said before Game ·7 of the
NBA Finals that he will
check into the Mayo Clinic
on Wednesday. He'll be in
the hospital to- address.a medical problem. that developed
from complications following hip surgery in November
and hasn't improved . .
Brown has said if doctors
say he's healthy enough to
coach that he wants to be
with the Pistons next season.

.

Coming
Friday, July 29,2005
'

ago. Both, alleged victims are
The woman. who was 15 at
now adults. .
the time of the alleged incident
One of those victims testitied . and now a college graduate,
yesterday that she had met the · said Ward's wife and a family
defendant through his future frie nd, · identified as Richard
wife. a distant re lative of the Rathburn. had gone into anothalleged victim. She had stayed er room of the Ward's mobile
with the Wards once prior to home when Ward made his ·
the night in August, 1998. advance .. and that Rathburn
when Ward allegedly served walked back into the living
her strong rum and Pepsi and, room to find both her and Ward
she said. made &gt;exual advances nude from the waist down:.
that ultimately led to their havRathburn. an old schoolmate
ing oral ,sex on the floor of the
Please see 111•1. A5
Ward living room .

. Rutland plans Saturday
· july 4 celebrati9n

OBITUARIES

Tennis

.

·w~:: w\\w.myd~ilyscntincl ..-um

\VEIINI•.SD.\' , JUNE 29, :!0115

-• -

'

"

.

,

J.C.
Agency,
225 Broadway St.
Jackson, OH 45640
(740) 286-4:585
jwood@amfam.com
Mon. - Fri. 9:00
- 5:00

AMERICAN FAMILY-

•

" INSURANCE

All your protection under one root•
American Family Mutual Insurance Company and its
• Subsidiaries
Amer~can Standard Insurance Company of W•sconSm

Home Office- A!ad1son. W/53783
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American Standard Insurance Company ol Oh iO
Home Office - Columtlus, OH. 43240
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-- -•-- ---- ---

--r
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•

1

...

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