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·PageD6

TRAVEL
Newport mansions offer speci~ed tours for. children, adults
iuuba, lim~ ·ienttnel

ing ways in the age of
the
1920sProhibition,
•
therned tour is decidedly an
NEWPORT, R.I.- As tour
adult affair, · according to
groups filter through The
Patrick GrimeS: who manages the tours.
Breakers, the opulent ocean"I wouldn 't recommend the
side mansion once used as
Twenties tour for the S-andthe Vanderbilt family's sumunder crowd, that's for sure,"
mer home, a guide brings a
he said . .Besides, Grimes
Connecticut family of four
said, children tend to be more
into a spacious and spectacucaptivated by the Victorian
lar room off the main
era and gorgeous dresses than
·entrance. ·
by the "gritty reality" of the
"" The Great Hall is a stunJazz Age.
ning sight, some 50 feet high
. At Rough Point this sumwith red-carpeted staircases
mer, visitors will get a more
and a gilded plaster frame
intimate
view of the late
that borders a bright blue sky
tobacco heiress. Doris Duke,
painted on' the ceiling.
whose stunning wardrobe is
Tour guide Nell Trainor
now on display in "Jet Set to
lets the Chan family take in
Jeans: The Wardrobe of Doris
the view, then turns to the
Duke," part of house tours .
youngest members of the
there.
group - Alissa, 9, and her
The collection of fashions
14-year-old sister, Queenie.
froni the 1920s to 1980s
"It wou ld probably take
includes work by designers
about 12 of vour friends (to
·- including Balenciaga. Yves
reach the top) if we had them
Saint Laurent, Halston and
stand on shoulders." Trainor
Christian Dior, and serves as
says . "
a sort of retrospective of
She peppers the rest of her
_{Qth-century
fashion. accordpresentation with joking !n' to Nancy Langello ot the
asides to the girls, asking
Newport •
Restoration
about their hobbies and perFoundation. which runs ·
sonal colle'ctions ·and sharing
Rough Point.
stories about the Vanderbilt
:c
,
.
AP Photo
, Belcourt Castle is hosting
kin who lived in the 70-room
Kortney
Walsh
,
11.
of
.Huntington
Beach,
Calif.,
does
a
cartwheel
on
the
lawn
at
The
Breakers
mansion
following
a
tour
June
21,
"Vegas
Night" on Aug. 20,
house .
in
Newport.
R.I.
The
Breakers,
a
1895
Italian
Rena
issance-style
mansion,
.
i
s
the
mos_t
popular
of
Newport's
eye-popping
palaces.
where guests are invited to
II 's all part of a family tour
Nme dressed as their favorite
that the Preservation Society
when one of the girls locked an hour or so, and groups are celebrity - such as Chcr,
typical kid.
of Newport County began the designer wardrobe of a
"I can be on a tour and kind . a group of adu lts inside a usual ly limited to I 0 to 12 Sammy Davis Jr., Elvis
offering last year at The wealthy socialite at Rough
of
see the kids' eyes glazing ·room during a temper people.
Point.
And
the
par1y
nowd
Presley or a Vegas showgirl.
Breakers. the 1895 Italian
The
Astors
'
Beechwood
over,"
Trainot
said.
tantrum.
can
check
out
''Vegas
Night"
The party also includes a
Renaissance-style mansion
a more comedy show, live music, DJ,
Mansion
aims
for
gets
the
child
thinking
''It
is.
why
she
starts
her
Which
at
.Belcourt
Castle
.
that is the most popular of
For houses like The family tour by stopping at the and imagining what it must mature crowd with "Roarin' cash bar and buffet.
· Newport's
eye-popping
The Elms now offers a
pall(ces. The tour, intended to Breakers, which has hosted children 's cottage house, a be like to live in an environ- Twenties" tours on Tuesdays
ment.
like
The
Breakers,"
said
and
Fridays.
Guests
at
the
tourists
for
several
decades,
smal
l
and
squat
building
with
midday "Lunch &amp; Garden
provide a more farl)ily friendmansion,
whose
tours
typiof
the
Janice
Wiseman
.
short
.
black
doors
near
the
the
newer
tours
offer
a
fresh
Tour"
with a catered-box
ly. educational experience, is
cally
focus
on
the
Victorian
Preservation
way
to
experience
Newport's
marn
mans10n.
Societ;Y.
lunch
·on
the terrace of the
one of several specialized
io
1925.
era,
are
taken
instead
The family tours are
She excludes some of the
Carriage House, along with a
visits deve loped at the .man- mansions, . which together
During
t.he
tour,
they
h1ight
Island
's
otlered
four
times
a
day
form
one
of
Rhode
historical
names
and
dates
tour of the sunken garden and
sions in recent years.
encounter
actors
portraying
gro.unds. An "After Hours"
Singles can enjoy dr:inks at most prized tourist destina- that might bore children , and twice in the morning and
Cole
Porter,
Ze
lda
Fitzgerald
the
twice
after
lunch
from
includes
details
'about
tour on Thursday and Friday
tions.
a 1920s Speakeasy at Astors'
A · typical tour at The antics of the Vanderbilt chil- May to September and are or other historical characters evenings featuring wine and
Beechwood Mansion. Ladies
canapes on the terrace ·
for
children in era-appropriate clothing.
Breakers
features t,alk of dren- saying they were per- .designed
who lunch can. dine on a terWith dialogue that cele- debuted at The Elms la st
at
The
Elms. · Gilded Age riches and marble mitted to slide down the stair- between 4 and II, Wiseman
race
brates
Newport's free-drink- year.
said.
Tours
typically
last
for
cases,
or
telling
of
a;;tirne
Fashionistas can check out fireplaces - a snoozer for a

Holzer Hospice
Celebrates National
Nursing Assistant
Wcck,A3

A mother searches for

Sunday, July 10, 2005

burial-site of her two
murdered children, A6

BY ERIC TUCKER ·

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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Middleport • Pomeroy,' Ohio

SPORTS
• Armst_rong yields Tour's
yellow jersey. ·

See Page 81

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Robert Sawyers

INSIDE
• Hurricane Dennis.
See Page A2
• Annual Gallia-Meigs
Regional Airport Fly-in .

See Page A3
• · Ho$pitals charge
bureau more to treat
workers, sludy finds.

25 Cu lll'r:-,!

c\ppointment.

THE BREAKERS: 44 Ochre Point Ave., Newport Family tours, daily at 10
a.m., 11 a.m., 2 p.m. and 3 p.m., through Labor Day. Adults $15, children $4,
· free for children 5 and under.

Tuesday, July 1211o • 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.

ASTORS' BEECHWOOD MANSION: 580 Bellevue Ave., Newport; www.astorsbeechwood.com or (401) 846-3772 to reserve tiCkets. ·
• "Roarin' Twenties Tours," Tuesdays and Fridays, every .half-hour from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m., through the fall. Adults $15, seniors $12, children $8, free for
children 5 and under.
·
• "Speakeasy/ Tuesdays, 7 p.m., July-September. Admission $30. Cash
bar.
ROUGH PQINT: 680 Bellevue Ave., Newport; (401) 845-9130 to reserve tickets. ·Jet Set to Jeans: The Wardrobe of Doris Duke," Tuesday-Saturday from
9 a.m. to 3:45 p.m., through Nov. 5. Adults $25, free for children under 12.
'

THE ELMS: 367 Bellevue Ave., Newport; (401) 847-0478 to reserve tickets.
• "Lunch &amp; Garden Tour.: daily every half-hour from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.,
·.through Sept. 5. Adults $15, children $10.
• "After Hours, Thursday and Friday, 5:30 p.m., 6 p.m., 6:20 p.m., 6:40
p.m., 7 p.m., through Sept 5 (excluding Aug. 12). Admission, $25.
BELCOURT CASTLE: 657 Bellevue Ave., Newport; www.belcourtcastle.com
or (401) 849-1566. "Vegas Night," Aug. 20, 8 p.m. to midnight, $55 in
advance, $75 at the door. Vegas-themed costume party with cash bar, come,dy show, music, buffet
, ,.
'
' - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - ·· __..___"'__
- -...
--- __ r

• Launch countdown
begins for NASA's return
to space. See Page A2

WEATHER

to

'

REED

CHESTER - When someone says a Chautauqua is coming to Meigs County this
week for five days of performance and workshops on The
Roaring Twenties, the· usual
question is . "What's a
Chautauqua''"
While unfamiliar to many
re sidents, . the
word
Chautauqua in the early 1900s
was as common to most
"e.veryone as county fair is here
today.
In 1910 the first Chautauqua
came · to Meigs County .as a
part of a circuit traveling
around the country. It was
staged in Bungalo~ Park in
the upper end of Middleport.
The troupe came ouwf a sum- ·
mer encampment on Lake
Chautauqua in Waxahachie,
N. Y which for several years ·
had been attracting thousands
every summer for it educa-,
tiona!, cultural, and art and,
recreation programs.
From the talents of those
assemblies started in 1900,
there developed a movement
to put Chautauquas on a traveling circuit Living history
performances featuring "dramatic, historically accurate
portrayals of some of the m0st
fascinating and important figures of history were presented
across the country over the
next 30 years.
While the Chautauqua
movement was founded in
1874 on the banks of Lake
Chautauqua with .the intent of
e(lifying rural teachers, it soon
became a place where fami lies gathere,d for day s of inspi ration, education and enjoyment People came from m il.es
around to hear speakers of
national renown, enjoy barlds
and plays. and engage in an
open forum on the great issues
of their day. .
From 1910 until 1922
Chautauquas
played
in
Middleport, according to

Cheshire
annexation
·now a reality

'

This is a better way to experience better hearing.
Listening to "beeps'· is no way to find out how ·your hearing instrument will sound. Yet
· that's all you can expect frorn most in-office hearing tests and fittings. Beltone has a better
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BY IAN McNEMAR
IMCNE MAR@MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

INDEX
2 S£CTIONS -

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·1312 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

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llnmfl~ ~ ,J

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Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

""',if*\"

: .•• .,.

www.mydaUy•cntinel.cum
., ,

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supplies. Six water districts in
the region have been affected,
includiog the Tuppers Plains
and Pomeroy systems in
Meigs County, Mason County,
W.Va., Little Hocking , Belpre
and Lubeck, W.Va.
A public meeting about the
issue will be held from 7 to 9
p.m. on July 15 at' Meigs High
School, and July 14 at Point
Pleasant, W.Va. Moose Lodge .
C8, used by DuPont to manufacture Teflon and other
products, has been at the Iieart

of a'n ongoing controversy
regarding its health risks to
humiurs .
While
the
Environmental
Protection
Agency has not set an ·acceptabk expoSLrre limit for the
chemical, DuPont denies any
risk to humans. As a result of
the class - ~ct i on slrit settled
earlier this year, the chemical
company has agreed to anumber of provisions including the
blood tests, water filtration
systems in affected water districts, botfled water supplies

for . ,those who choose them.
and the funding of ongoing
studies to ,determine the risb
to affected customers.
Project
testing
units.
designed to create a controlled.
environment to support the ·
blood co llection , will be
installed in the commu.nities
affected , and the C8 Health
Project expects to collect medical hi story and blood samples
from 60,000 people . Mei gs
County Commissioners have
agreed to make space available

near the Veterans Memorial
Hos pital building ror the local
tcstmg unit.
Each participant will be paid
$ 1SO to coi11plete a health
questi o nnaire . available online
at www.CH HeaftlrProject.org ,
or by calling (XOO) 551-7658.
An additional 5 250 will be
paid for a hlood sample. To
qualify. part ici pants must have
lived in one of the six affected
water di" ricts_ an d have con-

Please see Studies, AS

Local reaction
to the London
terrorist attacks

SolWENIR BUNGALOW PARK,

BY BETH SERGENT
BSE RG ENT@MYD AILYSENW JE L. COM

L

SYRACUSE On a
recent. warm Jul Y eve ning at
the Syracu&gt;e ball fi eld , the
pub I ic gathered io cheer on little league reams, enjoying the
relative ease of life in Meigs
Cnunty .. whil e across the
At lami c Londoners were
re c o v~r i th! ·rr() m a terrOri st
attack. '
" As b:td ; IS rhin gs are in the
world it ' "i nic e that vou can

sti ll come In the hall giune and
watch little kid s hir a basehall. " Cha rlie Hatfi eld of
Middleport said.
Hatfi eld was there to watch
his grandsnn Austin Pierce
· play for the Rutland Reds just
o.h he had done \\·hen he was a

Above: Chautauquas were

'

held at Bungalow Park in
Middleport from 1910 to
1922.

.

prooram of
•

&lt;tountl?
&lt;tbautauqua

~etgs
3-td~

30tb to 8U{]llSt Gtb
.mtbblcport, Obi"

of M eig:-. Co unty.

1922
Right: The .first time the
Chautauqua circuit performers cam~·to Meigs County
was in 1910. The apparent
last time a troupe was in
from the New York assembly
on L~ke Chautauqua to play
in Middleport was in 1922.

re.

1t. 11. llknn•n. P«•·
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1/tlH(It, l!i«!·
II)IOtttlll!! QIIMI(1, ~ •• l)tct. It. I. 1/olhbtrrn, lh&lt;n&amp;.

111. II. lktl'!.

m•n~q&lt;r

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........AT OLD TIME PRICES........
Pj.tH

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arouild ro end all thi s,"
St ewart said .
" I helin·e w,··re . clo ing the
th inQ

o \·e r "iea~ : ·

Janet

r.et away with thin gs _··

' Mrs. D o n o h~ e·s
son
Matthe11 current ly is se r1·ing
st;llesiJ e in the CS Navy and
her hu sban d Denni s is a

\l-It«~

WHALEY DENTAL ROOMs

............ ~ •. t». ..

and hope \ Omerhing comes

Dono hue ' of Rut la nd said
about LIS military deploym'e nts
in
Iraq
and
Afghani .st:tn . "You can ' t stand
back and let them (terrori sts) ·

.... ..

l)IJ'Iftf,l tol.'f

Su sie ' Stewart
of
Middlcpart was abo there to
support her grandson, Charlie
Barrett who is the catcher for
Rutl:tnd,
"We· II have ro kee p them
. (Londorlcrs) in our prayers

ri~ ht

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h.. ..,.. ~~ .. ·~ ,,, .. ,.. ..... ~
ti"1H f'I4 ...1.J...: IUl\i .. .~w ..,,

UU: AMY l 'A' tiAJ t -Y
OVUUf t.jt #tro t:,\ MtAN U I &lt;t AI:!

hoy.
"Jusr rememher this (the
London ;ttwd"l when someone of(ers yo u a io h outside of
Meig s Count ) ... Hatfield
added. " You hetter stay where
you're at."
Sc1wal of the h;beball fan s
agre ed wi th Harfield that the
teyrprisr att:tck s made them
appreciate the bid-back pace

••

Please see Reaction, AS

Malone

draws
STAFF REPORT

Details on Page A&amp;

'

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J.

Please see Chautauqua, AS

Listen today's most advanced hearing aids
in a real-world. sound environment. ·

Due topubstantial growth and
an .
improVilt! RN to patient ratio at
·
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BY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL. CO M

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

FREE
fir~l

2005

Cash offered in CB health studies

HO EFLIC H@MYDAI LYS ENTINEL COM

I ~Bellone '"Hearing Aid Center
l itni1t·tl to tht•

11,

Chautauqua, last here in .1922, ~eturning to Meigs

·See Page A6

NEWPORT MANSIONS: Preservation Society of Newport County (The
Breakers, The Elms, Marble House): www.newportmansions.com or (401)
847-1000. Newport Restoration Foundation and Rough Point: www.newportre_storation.com. or (401) 849-7300.

MON I&gt;AY, ,JLTI.Y

POMEROY - The C8
He.alth Project is offering cash
to residents in three local water
systems who agree to participate in a health survey and
blood sampling.
The C8 Health Project is a
result of a class-action lawsuit
filed against the DuPont chem'
ical company over the presence of the chemical perfluorooctanoic acid in local water

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50 CENTS • Vol. 54, No, 225

12 PAGES

A3
-B3-4

Bs
A:3
. A4
As
}31

A6

.f ; 005 6hio Vall e~ Publi.&lt;ihi.ng Co.

-CHESHIRE - It' s offi ciaL
Stated in the Che shire
Village Council meeting
Tuesday. Cheshire will annex
393.7 acres to the exi sting village, . more than tripling itS I
srze.
.
' The ·land being annexed
continues north on Ohio 7,,
across· parts of Roush Lane 1.0
Watson Grove Road and
around to Ohio 554 leading .
into
the
village.
Approximately II 0 residents
will be_added to the village,
boosting 'the village population up to 135 residents.
The annexation assume s the
village will keep going after
population loss. said 'Cheshire
Mayor Jim Rife.

Please see Cheshire, As

NEW S@MYDAI LYS~NTINEL .CO M

. POMEROY - When Bob
Malone took the stage in
Pomeroy's
Riverfront
amphilheater Friday night. the
crowd was there , relaxed ar\d
ready to be e11tertained by the
popular piani st/singer.
Malone was the second performer in the Friday night series
of free concerts sponsored by the
Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society.
Next week the popular Johnny
Rawls Revue. a blues band, will
be in town and wmpping up the
2005 concert series will be enterBob Malone
tainer David Childe~.
Malone who hai Is from Lo&gt;
An geles is always popular onl y did he play great rock and ' Li,tcncr&gt; ti ll ed much of the
with Bend are:r crowds having . roll but included uptown blues amphitheater &gt;eati ng. pcrc h ~d
been here several times . Thi&gt;. and ragtime in his perfonnance on the wall ovcr l ookin~ the
stage area. 'anU enjo) ('~l the
year was nn exception. Not to the delight of the crowd.

'

slwJe of the parking lot stage
on the .\\arm e 'enin~ . More
than a J01en "''"" pu'lled in to

Ji.., tcn tn the mu,ir .

�...,, -i"'- ...

. ...\

·.

'

PageA2

NATION

The Daily Sentinel

,

,

Monday, July u,

The Daily Sentin~l

I

Community Calendar
Public meetings ,

BRE~

Ivan, which also had top
winds of 120 mph. killed 29
;
people in the Panhandle and
PENSACOLA , Fla.
caused more ·than $7 billion
Hurricane Den nis roared damage in the Southeast.
quickly through the Florida Mindful of that experience,
Panhandle and Alabama coast more than I .8 million coastal
Sunday with a 120-mph blus- residents from Florida to
ter of blinding squalls and Mississippi were urged to
crashing wav es, but shell - evacuate in advance of Dennis,
"-'&gt;-_.....,~----------'"" .
shocked residents emerged to leaving streets ·in most beach
lind far les,·damage than when towns deserted.
Ivan took nearly the same path
-Even Mark Sigler of
I0 months ago.
Pcnsm:ola·Beach. who owns a
· The tightly -waund Dennis, dome-shaped. steel-reinforced
which had been a Category 4. house buill to withstand 200f
145-mph monster as it mph wind's. decided to evacumarched · up the Gulf .of ate.
Mexico. weakened just before
"The house is hurricaneit struck less than 50 mi.lcs cast._ resistant ."" he said. "'not hurriof where Ivan came ashore. cane-proof."
And despite downed power
But hours after Dennis" land(;0:i£:~t
lines and outages atlecting fall , Florida emergency opemnear!y half a million. early tionsoffici,_lis said they had no ·
reports indi~:a ted no deaths and reports of storm-re la ted
I
relatively modest structWi"l deaths. In Alabama. Gulf
damage.
Shores and Orange Beach ofli"We' re really happy it was cials saicl'they.had no repons of
compact and that. it lasted only si"nifi~ant dama~e .
so. lung." ·said Mike Decker,
scan of the 7lrea between .
who lost only some shingles Navarre Beach and Pensacola
and a priva~:y fence at his home Beach showed rel&lt;iti vely little
near where the storm came damage. with · th e expected
ashore. " It was mo re of a show ripped-apan gas ' station
awnings and overturned sheds
for the kids."
The storm indeed put on a bur few downed power lines
· show as it blew ashore at 3:~5 and trees.
p.m. EDT midway between the
The normally placid blue
AP Photo
western Panhandle towns or Gulf was still chui-ned into a The main road along Navarre Beach, Fla. is lined with downed wires and strewn debris after Hurricane Denn1s moved through
Pensacola Beach and Navarre tea-colored froth. but few the area Sunday.
Beach.
, .
homes. even along the shore,
White-capped
waves appeared to have sustained
along
with
coastal said crews were poi sed to
. flooding. said initial reports indicated three weeks or more.
spewed four-story geysers exte nsive
Another problem Sunday Alabama and Missi ss ippi. begin cleanup work as soon as
.. over sea walls. Sideways. Neighborhoods along the Gull' some broken windows, trees
was
around the low-lying fish - · By II p.m , Dennis had it was safe to be on the road.
blinding rain mixed with sea- showed only intermittent and power fines down. minor
water blew in sheets. toppling debri s. The only seriously flooding in the city' and a few ing village of St. Marks. about weakened to a tropical storm After all.·the hurricane season
· 20 miles south of Tallahassee. over southwest Alabama with still doesn' t begi n in e'arnest
roadside signs fur hotel s and compromised roofs along U.S . trees falling on houses.
"Because of where it went A tidal surge of I0 to 12 feet 65 mph winds. As it moved until next nionth .
gas stations. Waves offshore 98 had blue turps on them, and
""We' re not sure if we're in
in.
we missed a real close shot. caused extensive flooding and northward ; the hurricane' s
exceeded 30 fee.t. and in down- appeared. to be left over damtown Pensacola. the gulf age from last year's hu1Ticane It went into a rcl'ativcly unpop- knocked out about 40 miles of next-biggest threat - torna- phase two of Ivan cleanup or
ulated area." Whitehead said. coastal U.S- Highway 98 : does - took over. Tornado phase one of this cleanup,"
spilled over sidewalks eight Ivan.
blocks inland. Boats broke
Frank Larker happily waded "'If thqt thing had shifted 20. There was also widespread watches and warnings were Tuum1 said. ""The bottom line is
loose and bobbed like .tOys in . out to bis three-story gulf-front miles to. the west, we 'd have floodiQg in nearby. coastal posted as far north as Atlanta. between Dennis and Ivan, we'll
Forecasters also warned that get this place cleaned up''
the roiling o~:ean.
home in Navarre that was been in trouble. but we got real homes, butthere will 110t be a
full assess'ment of damage Dennis could dump up to 8
Associared Press l!'riters Bill
-But Dennis. which was flooded only in the ground- lucky."
inches
of
rain
as
it
travels
over
Kaczo
r in Pen.iacola. Mark
In Alabama's coastal Baldwin unti I Monday.
responsible for at least 20 floor garage and laundry room.
Denni s became the fifth ' the next few day s through Lung in Panama Citv, .Bob
deaths in the Caribbean. The living quarters above were County. which was ground zero
hurricane
to strike Florida Alabama,
Georgia, Joh11son in Robertsdale, Ala ..
for Ivan -last ye,ar, officials also
spared those to the north · unscathed .
in le ss than II months. and Mississippi and Tennessee into Garr\' Mitchell in Mobile ,
because of its relatively small · His was the only home in his breathed a sigh of relief.'
Bu sh
soon the Ohio Valley.
Ala .• and David Royse in Fort
"'We dodged a bullet," said President
size and fast pace. Hurricane - Navarre Shores neighborhood
Escambia
County Walton Beach comribured ·10
· management declared part s of the state a
force winds stretched only 40 that was habitable after Ivan. emergency
major
federal
disaster
Administrator
George
Touart this report.
miles from the center. com- He finished the· last of the director Leigh Anne Ryals.
whose pastor husband led a
pared with 105. miles for Ivan, repairs five weeks ago.
and Dennis tore through at
"I've lived here 23 i::ears. prayer . at a news conference
nearly 20 mph , slightly faster I've been through severaf-hur- hours before the storm.
The bigge st problem was
than Ivan.
·
ricanes and I just keep patchRainfall was measured at 8 ing up. I guess I'll patch it up power outages, which affectinches, rathe'r than the expect- again . It ' s sti ll worth living ed more than 236,700 homes
here." said the 65-year-old real and · busines ses in the
. ed foot.
· "With Ivan. the damage area estate developer."'] feel lucky. Panhandle, and 240 ,000 in
was probably more spread out I . was expecting to not even Alabamu. Gulf Power Co.,
the main power lllility for the
and wider. than it was for have a hou se."
Dennis." National Hurricane
In Escambia County. ''!hich western Panhandle, said cusPensacola. tomers should be prepared to
Center meteorologist Michelle includes
Maine IIi said,
Commissioner Mike Whitehead do without electricity for
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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Church events

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&lt;

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week~.

at Cassandra ·s

time~

or more and never b~

ack now\cd~ctl. "fhev make
spec ial dinners and li uy each
mher gifts. Tltc items nw wife.
recci"~' a~C m:n1y time~ what

BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS .
A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

we ca n afford. Wh~1~ thc v·rc

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on the phone 01: e-mailhtg.
dinners ha ve bee'n burned and
normal th in~s that should he
done around the house dnn"t
~c t do ne.
" Do vouthink there is somethin~ 1 should be concerned
atw[n here'' - ' WOKDER1:\G IN ILLI NOIS
OEAR
WONDER ING :
Ye,. ·I do. hecat~&gt;C you do not
appear 10 be first On yo ur
"ifc', Ji,t or priorities. You
and 'he - and probably her

.

· Call
QAVE or BRENDA .

at 992-2155
FOR MORE INFORMATION

The ·

~ir lfri cnJ - arc o\·erduc for a

Sentinel

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.......
Ian McNemar/photo

Paul and Becky Woodyard. of Gallipol is. tal k with pilot Denn1s Difilippo. of Charleston. W.Va ..
wh1le standing next to a 1942 Stearman Navy tra1n ing a1rplane. owned by Sta n Young. of
Charleston. Saturday during the annual Ga\l ia-Meigs Regional Airpor~ Fly,i n. Pi lots and spectators from around the area attended the event to. see mo re than a dozen qld and ne1" airplane s
and antique. cars_ Proceeds from the event benefited the airport.

Alkire tops losers ·Boer Goat Producer attends ABGA Nationals
COOLVILLE -Of the 17
· members attending
\a &gt;J
week's TOPS (Tah Off
Pounds Sensibly ) Chapter
20 13. Mvrtle Alk1re was honored for being the weekl y best
loser and received a charm fo r
her 15 pound weight loss.
Atheme was selected for the
upcoming ope!1 house to b held
in September. A program
called Snack Attack was pre -·
sented by to-leader Dottie
Bond who described four different types of "snackers" and
suggestions for healthy snacks.
The gro up meet s every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Church. Weigh-in is from
5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a meeting at 6:30p.m. For information; call Pat Snedden at 6622633 or attend a free meeting.

Holzer Hospice ce lebrated National Nursing Assistant Week. June 9-16, 'giving spec'ial recognition to its ~ome health aides who provide bedside care to terminally ill patients. A luncheon was
held in honpr of the five home health aides. left to right. front.. Amanda Smith and Laura Guthrie;
and back Angie Rose . Debbie Shaffer and Irene Hesson. "Dur hospice home health aides are
truly special people". said Sue Bowers. R.N .. di rector of Holzer Hospice. "They have the opportun ity to enhance someone's quality of life during a time wflen they are needed most", she
added. Holzer Hospice cares for patients with a life-limiting illness regardless of their ability to
pay.' and ·serves patients in Ga llia . Jackson . Meigs and surrounding counties. For more information on hospice services. please call (740) 446-5074 or to ll-free at 1-800-500-4850.

exj1e11Se. They. are planning a
trip to Ptkrto Rico next
month . .-\gain . Cassandra is
fo11ting the bill. They spent a
week toget her in LouiSI·i\le at
a dwrclt-s ponsored qctivity.
They gi1·e each other oil ma&gt;sages in our bed and muke freqt;;,n t bets with each other
wi th the. ma-..~agl:!s as the payoff.
Th ey spend as much as
three h&lt;'Jur&gt; a day com muni~ atin g. v.hcther it be ' 'ia
phone. e-mail or text-messag- .
in g. Thev ,ce each other il
mlnimun1 nl'once a week. pl~s
at ch urch. and we live 50
mi\c,apart .
.
Wheit tho1 · re together. I
l'an repeat ~; ques tTon four

Once Again, ihe Daily Sentinel Will .Have A
.Special Meigs County Fair Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Ever! Look For this Special
·Edition In Your Friday, August 12th Paper.

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Queen Acres of Cro wn
Citv. Oh10 . anended the
Anierican
Boe r
Goat
As soc iation
J IABGAI
Kati onal Sht&gt; W ~ind co mpeted
. for nati onal hono rs. The
show was held in LouiSI"i\k.
K1 .. at the Kentuc'kv Fair and
Expo Cemer on June 8-12.
2005. The four-da1 e1·en1
showcased the top Boer goat
genetics in the industry:
American Boer goat breeders from throughout the
United States conl·ene once "
y~ar 10 exhibit their genetics
on a national level. The
evell! is one of the Jarge st
shows held in the Un ited
~tate s.
Entries in the 2005
national show totaled I. 1-!9.
just short of the record set 111
2004 by ABGA of I .550

emrie&gt;. Quee n Acre~. along·
with 220 other Boer ~oat
prod ucers. ,-omp~ted in tltree
different 2enetic diY i, imK
Attendee s·durin2 'the e1·ent
also anendeu· industn ,emlliars_ trade shO\\ , 'ouip -shtl\1,
awards .progrcuns' and a genera\ men1bership me~ting to
AGBA .
The Ameri,·an Btler Goat
Ass~1ciat i o n. e&gt; tabl i&gt; hed in
llJlJ3 . is the \arge,t Boer ~.,.,t
re gistr&gt;· in the ' L'nited St~n~
and serws more than 6.000.
members . AcWitional infor·mation pn ABGA . including
a full Kati onal Show report.
is al'ailahle &lt;Jn the lmernet at
· www.abga .om.
ABGA is
headquartered' in San Angelo .
Texas. and can be reached at
325-486-22-!2.

Submitted photo •

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months ago. ·engineers added

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Birthdays
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Holzer Hospice Celebrates
National Nursing Assistant Week

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DEAR ABBY: My wife
&lt;pemb all her spare ti1ne with
a female friend I' II ca11
"'Ca"andra ... Las! August
tlll'y went tn Nicaragua fo r

Jonu anJ 1·ery fran k talk .
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Home Appliances ...
Best Value in Home Appliances.
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Hitsband is distant second in line for wife saffection

catastrophic during re-en\ry . .
All &gt;even astronauts were
killed.
NASA removed the responsible · section of foam and
installed heaters in its place to
prevent ice buildup from the
super-chilled fu el Just I 1/2
a heater.' ·in annthe·r ice-prone
spot on the tank: the work
delayed the launch from May
to hily. ·
Managers also added e,xtra
checks for fuel-tank icc during the !ina\ portion of the
CO).Jntdow n. Any significant
patches of i't:e - which could
be as lethal as !lying foamwi ll me ~ n a launch delay.
Engineers considered putting•
in frared lamps at the pad to
melt ice and covering vulnerable brackets with bags. but the
.ide;IS were scrapped, at least
for now.
. "" With all the moditicaticins,
with alllhe improvements and
changes and upgrades."'
Spau lding said. ""certainly we
can. without' lresitat.ion. say .
thi s will be the safest vehicle
that we "ve ever had to
launch."'
That doesn "t mean the ten sion level isn "t high.
.
""It's a ri , ky tusine;s so
we're all sort oL apprehensiw."' astronaut John Phillips
said- from the space station
\'ate l~"t "ed. . But he added_
.. , am full) confident that
we· l'e done what it takes to .
get this shuttle up here and
I'm very anxio[JS to 'ee ' them
come up here .'"

Clubs and
organizations

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Launch countdown begins for NASA's return
- to space, but hurricane could lnterl'ere ·
CAP.E CANAVERAL. Fla. to the noi·thwest. could be felt
(AP) - The countdowit for at the launch site Sunday as
NASA' s return to space began the sky was gray and solidly
Sunday amid sky-high antici- overcast.
pation , although Hurricane
Thunderstorms were foreDenni s threatened to inte(fere ca st throu ghout the week.
with the liftoff of the tirst However. a ridge of high presshuttle mission in more than sure offered hope that the
two years.
storms may stay away at
At preci se ly 6 p.m .. the lau nch time Wednesday aftermultitude of co untdown noon. Forecasters put the odds
clocks staned )!eking down to of accept&lt;!ble weather at 70
a Wedne&gt;day launch of p.e rce nt , with ·conditions
Discovery. The last time they expected to worsen as the
flashed the hours. minutes and· week wears on.
seconds remaining before a
Because of the hurricane.
blastoff . was in 200.1, for the mission 's seven astronauts
... Columbia's disastrous tlighi. flew in froin Houston .· Oil
Test· director Jeff Spaulding Saturday even ing. ada¥ early.
Discovery wi ll he making
said excitement had been
·"building and growing·· ever ib first flight in four years
since the space agency ,over- when it takes off for the intercame fuel-tank diffi c4ltie s national space station with
that prompted a launch delay a much -needed supplies and
few months ago.
replacement parts.
"It.'s only recently. I think.
Eve n before Columbi a
that it\ all come to fruition . broke up during re-e ntry on
where we can sec the Iight at Feb. I. 2003. Discovery had
the end o r the tunnel ," been ungergoing an extensive
Spauldi~g &gt;aid.
overhaul. The · catas'trophe
"There's seme excitC:ment prompted nearly 50 additional
for people to get back to modifications. · all of which
launchi'ng again aod also. I wil l be demonstrated for the
think. maybe a quiet reserve first time on thi s 12-day test
as well , just remembering . fli ght. Techniques for in&gt;pectwhere w.e·ve been. But -we all ing the shunl e\ thermal
do fee l confident that we ' ve shield and llxing any holes
done it right."' · .
also will be tested by the crew.
Added p~yload manage r
The bigge't change. by far.
Scott Higginhmham : " It sure is the redesigned external fue l
doe' feel goml to be back in tank.
.
the sadd le :~gain . It'' been too
Columhia\ fuel tank lost a
long :·
large chunk of foan1 ilbu la~
The effetts o f Hu rricane lion at liftoff. The debris
Denni ,. which roared a.shore slammed in to the left wing.
on the Florida Panhandle .orf smashing a ~ole that proved

2005 ·

Q
ther eventS

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Monday, July ti,

ANNuAL GAu.IA-MEIGS REGIONAL AIRPORT FLY-IN

Ch urch. Theme v. ill be
, '"Serengeti Trek." a safari with
:\londa\',)ulv II
Je, U\.
RACINE - ·Raci~e Village
Wednesday, July 15
Ct&gt;un c:i l will hold a 7 p.m. pubMonday, July 11
LA\'GSV ILLE Gen e
lie: hearin~ on the ~006 buduet
RUTLAND - The \1eig' and Trina William s of
in cmmcif L"ha mber' follo,:eu County Republican Party will Borbourwille ..W Va. to minat 7:30p. m. b~ the regular l'i l- meet at 7:30 p.m. at the ister and ; in~ at L an~sville
\a~e COUilL'i\ meetinu.
Ru tland . Firem en"; Park in Ful l Go &gt;pel Church. Ohio 12-l
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Tuesdav,Julv 12
Rutland for it~ ann ual pim ic •near Rutland . 7 p.m.
DARW IN · _ · Bed foru fol lowing a meeting.
Sundav, Juh· 17
T"" 11 , hip Tru,tep. pu blic
Tuesday,Jul}' 12
PORTLAND - -Spanish 0 MEROY - The Vlei!:!' language Mass at Our Lad)' of
p
meetin~ on 2006 bud~e1. · 7
"
- ,
"
County
Chamber
of
Guadalupe
Mi ssion. Harris
p.m.. town hall. Re_g ula r meetCommerce "busines&gt;-minded Farms on Ohio 124. Ministr_y
ing
1unc heon.. w1' II meet at noon at of Sacred Heart · Church.
- fu llow....
SYRACLSE - Svrae u'e the Wi ldh iJrse Cafe. The P(mterO)'.
Roard of Publ ic Affairs will &gt;peake
·
,., will be G eor~e
·
Monday, July 18
meet at 7 p.m. at the muni,·i pal Collin s and Stephame Ph ilson
RUTLAND · Vacation
buil ding.
with the Ohio Department of Bible school will be held at the
Wednesda,. , Julv. 13
Tran sponauon
· . Th e p omeroy- Rutland Freewill Bapti st
PO ~IEROY - The: Mei gs Mason Bridge will be dis- Chu rch.
Salem
Stree!.
Coun f_,., Board of Health will ' ·us·se· d·
Rutland. Jul y 18-22. Classes
meet -at 5 p.m. in the ,·onfer- ·
:rhursda)·,July U
for nursery age children to
ence room of the Meig,
CHESTER - Shade Ril'er teenagers will be held from 6
Ct&gt;".nt_l
H,·alth
D"
part
ltte·n't
.
Llld&lt;&gt;e
~
'
. ~ 45'-' · Che '·ter
. ~~' 1'II ho ld to 8:30 p.m. For more infor1\2 E. \k moria l Drive . 1ts monthly meeting at 7:30 mat ion call 742-2507.
Ptllncro\·..
p.m. Relre,hments will be ·rhursda,·, .)ulv 14
sen· ' d
SYRACUSE· - Sl'racusc . R~CINE - The S~
Village Council will nice! at 7 Circle will meet at 7 p.m . at
Monday, July II
p.m. at the munic1pal huilding . Bethany Church. New officers
POMEROYTB clinic. 9
Fridav, Julv IS
wi ll be de~:ted . Secret sisters
a.m.
to
I
p.m
..
Peoples
Bank m
SYRACLS E - · Sulto n wil l be re 1ealed and new
·
Tuwnship Trustees wi ll hold a names drawn . All area II' omen Pomeroy-. •
publi' hc~ring on the ~006 · invi ted.
butl ~ct 1·ca r at 6 p n) . at
S1Tac:use vil l a~e hall precedin!:.! the: re~ular meet inc.
Friday. July IS
LA~GSV \ LLE
s,i\em
PORTLA ND - Edna Price
Mondav. Jull' II
To" nslup Trustee ' will · hold
MIDDLEPOin - ·vaeation will. observe her 90th birthday
it' c006 b utl ~e t meet i n~ at 6 Bible School Will be held 6:30 on Jul y 15. Cards may be sem
p.m. a!the Salem Firdtn~Jse on to 8:~0 p.m. Jul y 11-15 at the 10 her at S.R . 57995. Portland.
State Route 1c-l.
Midulepon First Bapti st Ohio 45770.

Dennis pounds Alabama-Florida coa~t, knocks out power but cau·ses less damage than Ivan

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BYTHE .BEND

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2005

HURRICANE DENNIS
Bv ALLEN G.

Page'A3

Dear
Abby .

DEAR ABBY: ~ly husband
and I expect our tirst chi ld in
three months. Hi s mother is
already pressuring &lt;J Sto let her
babv -sit. and eventuallv ha\'e
the · child for stunmers and
l'acations. The problem i&gt;. her
negligence and.poor judgment
while rai sine her own children
leJ to them "both being phy sically and sexually abused. She
cominues to be friendly wi th
an yone who will be friendl y
w.ith her. including the family
members who abu,ed her children.
There is no ·wa y r II ewr let
her be alone with mv child.
My husband support s iny fct; lings .. But w'e don' t know how
to tell her that her service' arc
not needed or wanted without
causing hu11 fee lings. - SETTING LIMITS IN WISCONS(:--.1
DEAR SETTING LIMITS :
When she asks io baby-s it. tel)
her nice!) tha\ you already
ha,·e mad e other arr a n ~e­
ments. Ditto for ex te nded
vacations. Explain that she's
welcOme to 'i-..it when ir\
conl'eniem for all or you.
However. if ~ he in~ist~ on
kno"ing why &gt;he can't take
the baby. repeat e&lt;actl\' what
you have tt&gt; ld me . Yourchi\J·,

safety is more imponant than
your mother-in-law maintaining the' fantasy that her children' s upbringing was norl)lal.
DEAR ABBY: My husband
and I have been married for
three years. Hi s 27 -year-old
daughter. "'Jan:· wants him to
gin~· her a wedding reception
because at the time she 'was
marr.ied. two years ago. th ~y
were not on speaking terms .
(S he w~married by a justice
of the p-eace wi th no family
present. )
Jan now has two small children . I th ink at this late date. a
wedding reception would not
be. appropriate. I have sug gested 1w give her a generous cash
gil'! as a bdated wedding gift
.- and she can do wha! she
wants with the money. including throwing herself a party.·
My hu,band.dteams of gi ,·ing
her the memories of a reception with her dad. What do vou
think '.' - AGA INST IT. IN
ILLI NOIS
DEAR AGA INST IT:
Considering that Jan 11as not
nan speaking to her father at
the time of her marriage. it' s
presumptUt1US of her to be hit:
ling her fath er up for a reception now. A c·ash gift would be
more gc ncrou:,: 7mct a ··wedding rcc:eption"" under these
l:ircumstances would be a charade .
Dear Abby is written by
ABigail Va11 Burell, also
known as jeanne P·MIIips,
and was j01inded by l1er
mother, Pauli11 e Phillip.~ .
\Vrite
Dear · Abbv at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. ·
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Oh1o

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

Oh1o Valley Pubhshmg Co
J1m Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Ed1tor

-

Congress shaU make 110 law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibitmg the
free exerci£e tltereoji or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tlu press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Gm,erument for a redress of J~rievances.
-The F1rst Amendment to the U S. Const1tut1on

TODAY IN HISTORY
(AI')- Juday 11 'vlmrday, July II, the 19lttd day of 2005.
There ar~ 1 7l da;' left 111 tilt year
Toda~ 's H1ghhghl m H1slory
F1tty ye us II!" on July II 19SS the US A1r Force
Acddem) w ts dclllc,lled .tl 11s tempor uv qud lle" Lo'"Y Au
Force B tsc 111 ( olo1 tdo
On lh1s date
In 1511 Pope Ckrncnt \II exuJmmu nJcd!ed England s
Km g Henrv VIII
In 1767 Jol111 Qu1ncy Ad,um the s1xlh prestdent ot the
Untied Sidles w IS horn 111 Br 11111ree MISS
In 1 79~ the US M ume Cm ps w IS to• mall) re establtshed
by .t wngrcssron,li tll tlldl liso lie 1ttd the US Manne Band
In I K04 VIle Pres1den1 A uon Burr mort,llly wounded tor
mer Treasury Sellct,uy Alex mder Harn1lton dunng .1 p1stol
duel 111 Weeh 111 ken N I
In 1864 Conledu.tte l01ces led by Gene1al Jub.tl t;;arly
beg,m m ,1borllvc tnl ,lston ol W tshmgton DC turnmg ba&lt;:k
the next d •Y
In 191~ P1eS1ucnt Roose1elt became the l11 st ch1ef execu
t11e to 11 11el through the Panam.1 Can,ll
In 1977 the Medal of F1 eedom w,IS ,l\1 ,u ded po;t humously
to the Rev Mo~rt m Luther Kmg J1
In 1979 the db mdoned U S sp,1ce st,lllon Sky lab made a
spectacul,u return to E.1rth burnu10 up m the o~tmosphere ,md
showenng deb11s over tl1c lnd1,111 Ocean ,md Austraha
In 1980 Arnencan host 1ge R1ch ud I Queen freed by Iran
alter e1ght months ol cdpl1VIl) bteause ol poor hedlth left
Tehr,m lor S11 nzerl md
In 1985 Nolan R) an ol the Houston Astros became the hrst
pllchcr m MnJor Le.1gue Baseball to stnkc out 4 000 batters as
he tanned D,mny Hcep ol the New York Mets
Ten years ago: The U N des•gnated 'sate haven of
Srebren1c.1 tell to l:losman Serb lorces The Umtcd Stales nor
mall Led rcl.tllons v. llh V•etn,un
Fnc years ago A M1ddle E.1Sl sumnu t hosted by Pres1dent
Clinton opened at Camp D 1v1d hetween lsrae h Pnme
MuHste• Ehud Bwak and Palesllm,m le.1der Yasser Aratat
The Atncan Mcthodt&gt;l Ep"copal Church the nat1on's oldest
black church elec ted the Reverend V~sht1 McKenZie of
Baltunore Its l1rst lemale biShop Rubert Runc1e the forme r
archbiShop ol Cmterhur) dred 111 Hertlordsh1re England, at
age 78 The Amencan Lea,;ue ueleated the Nat1onal League
6 ' Ill the All Sto~r G,une
One year ago J.1pan s largest oppos1t1on party expenenced
strong gams 111 upper house elect •ons while Prune M1n1ster
Ju111cllllo Komtrn• and h1 s L1be1 11 Ocmocr,ltiC Plrt) led rul
mg bloc held on to ,, rn.qonty The InternatiOnal AIDS
Conlerence opened 111 B.mgkok Th,uldnd with U N ch1cf
Kol1 Ann 111 ch 1llengmg world le 1der' to do more to combat
the ld,;tn,; global ep1uem•c Joe Gold the launder ol the ong·
111 11 Gold ' Gvm 111 196) d1ed Ill los Angeles at age 82
Thought for Todav There .1re philosoph1b wh1ch are
unendurable no\ because men .1rc cowdrds but because they
1re men - I ud111g Le11 1sohn Gerrn,m-born Engli sh author
anu .trtiSI II S82 1955 J

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
hmnt Tht' ~hould bt It H than
WO 11 o1d1 All h Itt 11 we lllhJell 10 edt111t~ rmm be \/~ned
and 1111 /ud1 addrt 11 tmd 11 It plume 1111111iJ&lt;1 No 11/tlt~tted let
tell 11 r// !J&lt; f&gt;tlhilllud Lutu 1 1i10uld !Jt 111 !iOOd Wife
add1t 11 t1t ~ mui 1 1101 I" 1 1111"' Ill r, 1 L&lt; II t 1 1 of tlwnk 1 to 01 ~a
w alum' wul md11 rdrw/, 11 Ill nur he £1&lt; Ltptt.djm publrcatron
Ltllel' to the t d1101 a!(

11 t

•

The Daily Sentinel
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Monday, July u,

2005

tone down lhctr 1hetonc
And Senate Democratic
WASHINGTON - The Leader H,my Re1d sud he
p1e nonunat10n b&lt;1ttle over tl11nks Gonzales IS qu.1l1
who Pres1dent Bus'h should f1ed to Sit on the court
name to the Supreme Court
He s attorney Jenera! ot the
contams enough 1rony and Umted States ,1nd a lo1mer
mternal poht1cal warl,ue to Texas jud ge
Re1d of
course , \ oted
,,gamst
ft ll a rolstoy novel
lmt~o11ly the story leadmg Gonules to run the Ju stice
up to Bush s tirst nommat10n Department but appmen tl)
to that court wa~ expected to he now thinks the Supreme
be an all out war by hber 11 Coun IS d•tfe rcnt mallei Democrats who know th,\1 espec1dl ly .titer millions ol
the next Repubhcan appomt H1spd111c vo te" supported
ment IS gomg to push the Bush over Democrat John
nme JUdge p.mel 111 ,, dec1d
Kerry last ye.~r
edly conservatl\e u•re&lt;:t1on
But there \\.ts even more
Indeed, Ne\1, York Sen diVISIOn 01e r on the
Chuck Schumer was over Republic m Side where the
an Amtrak GOP s powedul soc1,tl con
heard on
Metrohner last week s,tvmg servauve &lt;1rm1es were up m
that he and hiS liberal ,1111es arms over the thought ol
were prepanng ' to go to Bush pulling Gonzales - hrs
war to block whomever longt1me l11end pohtiC&lt;II ,dl y
Bush chose
,md confld,m te - on the
Surpnsmgly
while h1ghest court Ill the lmd
Schumer and an ,u my ot
Gonzales 1s esse nll&lt;~lly "
angry acllviSts were beatmg very conserv&lt;lllve g uy He
the1r war drum s other ,md Bush are JOmed 11 the
DemocrdtiC liberals were h1p on theu Intense oppo"
urg1ng the1r party to hold t1on to Judges who ltke to
the1r lire until the) know legiSlate hom the hench lie
who the nommee w1ll be " as tough on ndtiOnal secu
Mm e su1 p11 smgly
the Ill) 1ssues as ll IS posstble to
Senate s No 1 Democrat be ,md proved thdt 111 IllS
seemed to be all but endors po't 9/11 memor,uldum' on
mg Attorney General Albe1 to how to deal w1th the te11onst
R Gonzales lor the open threat
seat
On socml 1ssues espeCI II
Pat11ck ly nght to hie 1ssues no
Vermont Sen
Leahy a leader of the Sen.\le pres1dent has been tougher
Democrats hberal bloc, who or more etfectrve m ldv ,mc
has been llght•ng Bush s 1n g the pro lif e agenda
jUdiCia) nominee s lor the Irom the partial birth abor
past 4 1/;1 ars was all ot a tron ban to hiS oppositiOn to
ello" hb cloned stem cell •ese,u cll
s to cool 1l for no" and Alberto Gonz,!les person,,,

ly opposes &lt;~bortlfln
l:lut soc ,,,1 conscrv dl 1ve'
tea• lhat Gonzales 1s ,, lllt lc
soft on 11ght lO l1l e ISsues
though thev c,m ' t po1nt to
an) Wll tlell JUUI CI&lt;Il deCISIOilS
to suggest tll&lt;lt he would
Olellllrn Roe v W.1de ,, rul
mg that IllS prcJecesso1 John
As hcrolt - ,t hero 111 rl1e
:-.oual co nst:ndtiVC move
mcnt - s,\ld w.ts settled
Ia\\
Howeve1 they do pmnt to
,, 2000 ,1bortron c ISe oprn1on
th,ll he Wl(llC when he was
on the Te• IS h1gl1 coull "
dellslon tiMl ove1 twned .1
!01\CI COUll lUling Ill Whllh d
teen tge gul sought 1 \hillel
Irom tht st.1te s p u enttl
notlfu.:,llton lil\1\

IIOniCdlly Gonzales b.tsed
hiS op1n1on m the case on hiS
bel 1el th.tt he could nlll
ICWrllC the )dW IO SUI[ hiS
own v1ews In hiS op11mm l1e
s uu to consl1ue the Patent II
Notrllcdlton Act so nanov.l)
ds to clllmnlle bypasses 01
ue.tte hu1dles th.tt snnpl) ue
not to he luund 111 the words
ol tl1e st tlllle would he .tn
uncorJsclllll 1ble act ot JUUI
Cldl

U.:ll\

I Sill

1 c 1nnot rewnte the
statute to llldke p.trent t1
nghl s dbsolute ot VIrtU lily
absolute pdrllcul,nly whe n
IS here the Leg•sl.llure has
elected not to do so he s,nd
\'lost bothersome tor
SOLI d

lOihcl\.lli \CS

W IS

G0111..dcs .msweJ to d ques
uon posed at .t consel\,llt\e
lorum la st }edr v.here he v."
asked 11 exiSllll, leg.t l•plece
dent would pr e1 a1l 111 recon

stdenng the 1971 J,mumat k
l.ISC tho~t cslo~bi!Shed ,,bortron
nghts lie s 11d yes
R1ght now Gonz,lies "on
Bush s short li st no doubt
about 1l 11 he ts "choscn he
would be the t1rst ~li sp tmc
JUI 1st to tile court

d move

tlMl
could
help
the
Republic 111s make e1 en
UCepet
11\ IOads
,1111011g
H!Sp 1111 c voters Bush won 1
llltk more llhln 40 pe1ccnt ol
then 1otc l,1st ye tr Karl
Rove thmks the GOP cun
push lh.tt numbe1 even htgh
u l1\ t L tCilt nJ nut lo thi s
hu c-t 111 I gHI\\'IIlg vottng
bloc 1\h tch IS OVeiWheJrn
mgly pro lite by the w.ty
But h.ls the rntense oppOSI
lion I rom ~m:JU I consetv 1
tt ves killed HI) tnd 1ll
ch,lllc&lt;S tlllt Bush will sti ll
nomn1.1tc tillS once dnt poo•
son ol MtXI(dll tmmtbrtnts J

lllllli C&lt;illy then oppoSition
may ha1 c sll en~the n ed
Gonz.des posHIOil til the
11101 c Bush sent th, tl Sibil II
l.tsl v.eek Al l ol 1 sudden
tim lcllo~&gt; who " 1 gouu
pctsun IS under ltr e I don t
like ll II Ill
HIS wbust ddense ol
Gunz.des h.ts pul m.uw rop
sOU l ] UHlseJV lii\CS 111 l \CI)

tough

pw.Jtlon \\

htre somt.:

111a) "' th1s one out I c m t
supp011 htl11 bec.tusc ol mv
umstttlll.:llL)

oppo"'t:

111111

,uul I c tnt
bt:c His~..: I (.; Ill t

hurt tim plcstdenl) soll.tl
llHlSCI V !li ve Je ld et p lUI
Weymh sllcl l iS!IIclk
St.1y lltm u

TUANKYOU,

eAITYOU DON'T
/

AAR"A YEL.t.

Robert ~awyers

'

MASON - Robert Saw;ycrs, 93 ot Mason , d1ed Sunday
July I 0, 2005 Al Pleasant Valley Numng/Rehabmatton
Center Arrangements will be &lt;~nno•unced by Foglesong
Tucker Funeral Home

Cheshire

Montgomery We re ve ry
hopeful that everythi ng "
bchmd them and we can work
from PageA1
together tor the better of the
cnmrnumty
An earher annexation
'We 'te very very happy
about 1t ' he s,ud I m happy attempt was made 111 Augu st
w1th all the cooperdtlon w1th 2004 but tmled due to lack of
the county commisSioners vahd stgn&lt;~tures .md uncom
pl•,mce of seveca l Ohw
and everyone ,,t the court
house anyone we ve had Rev1sed Codes Under those
codes tt 1s requ1red to have a
de.tlmgs WJih'
of s1gnatures w1thm
Gallla
County maJOnty
the annexatiOn areo~ and no
Comm•ss1one1S have acted as more than 500 acres could be
heanng olllcers tor the coun
annexed at one t1me both ol
c1l stncc the council s Apn128 wh1ch the v1llage council d1d
publtc meeung proposmg the not compl) The ong•n,JI
,mnex,tllon At that meetmg annexatiOn called fm addmg
the counCil subm1tted a pel!
close to 500 acres to the vtl
lion tor the annexation The ),,gc
petitiOn w.1s .1pproved on May
We thought we kne\1 1l
26
(Oh1o ReviSed Code) but v.e
Smce then the 30 d.•y pen
dtdn t know 11 well enough
od tor appe;JI h,IS p.1ssed
so11d Paul Stmson Chesh1re
Galha
County &lt;~gent lor the ,mnexallon We
ComnusSioners presented all made sure "e had plenty ol
documents and m&lt;tps ot the s1gn.ttures thiS lime a10und
annexation io the vill.1ge
We are really pleased w11h
counc1l Tuesdd) tot Its own people that have s1gned the
records &lt;1nd •n ,tccordance petitiOn md th e support
Wllh OhJo rev~&gt;ed code
they ve gtven liS
Chesh•re mu st ha1e the doc
In othe1 news the mnex.t
uments ,md n1.1ps m posses
t1on will not be lmahzed
Slon for 60 days pr 1or to pass
bet01e the elec tion 111
mg ,, resolution .tpprovmg the November ,mel elect1on ot
.tnrlCXdtiOn Another 10 d.1ys new olt1Ce1S to the Chesl111e
mu st be wa1ted belo1 e 11 Villdge CounCil will be post
becomes ulf•c•&lt;~l
poned The G,illld County
AEPwtll own .1pprox1mdtc
Board ot Elections has grant
lv 100 .1eres olthe annex hut cd the council the power to
through a land agreemem, 11 appo1nt new council members
wtll remam ,, part ol the 1tl
to repl.tce the lour that w1ll be
!age AEP current I) owns 90 le,,vmg on January 2006
percent ot the vrllage ol
The
v1llage
council
Chcsh1re !rom the 2001 buy- 1pp101ed the p1n chase ot two
out
ne\1, ures lor the Cheshire
rh e VIllage and AEP work Pollee cru1sers
together. tor m,Hntenance ,md
A v.eed e.ter w IS pur
cle.m up of the 1111,1ge
ch tsed to keep nMmten,mce
We re thankful for AEP
The Chesh1re Vill&lt;~ ge
Council
will meet ag::un dt
and the vtl l&lt;1ge coop&gt;rat10n
tor J,md use smd County 7 30 p m August I 111 the
CommiSston~r
Harold Cheshtrc Town H&lt;1ll

Reaction

:r. WASN'T"

from PageA1

TALKlM&amp;'TO

YOU

""Black c&lt;ffee

The padded envelope
.1mved Without warnmg ,,
blast trom my past that sent
me shunmymg to the CD
player to hear rock n roll
1mpresano AI Kooper s tirst
solo album m 39' yea1 s
L1stemng to a hve record
mg of Norweg.an fans gomg
wild over the old standard
Green Omons ,md bemg
knocked out hy Kooper s
new Com1n Back In A
Cad1llac I pmed lor the
glory days when I was
bnetly, AI s ta1onte b.1ckup
smger
Most ol us know ,AI
Kooper s mu s1c but 11e
don t know hun He s the
Forrest Gump ot the record
busmess o~lways around tor
every maJor event but ne\er
the star For ne,Jrly halt "
cemury he s worked w1th
JUSt about e1erybody 111 the
busmess, yet while hot tame
and platmum solo ,dbums
have eluded h1m
Now at li I Kooper ,,,ys
he s never cared that he s not
" household n.1me like man y
ol hts fnends and tellow per
lormer'
When I st.trted out I wa\
90 per&lt;:ent ,,tlibl\10n and I0
percent tal ent nn11 th,lt s
re ver,ed he sa•cf&lt;i.r ,, phone
mteF\Iew
Black Cllllec
has surpnscd a lot ol people
stan mg wu h me It came out
better than I thou£1H 1t
would All my 'k1lls have
Improved so I) ' 1 prtdelul
eft on
I made the best record I
could at tillS pomt 111 my
I ric

Black Colfce " pure
~old sd\edulcd fur release
July 12, 11 ' already been
descnbed
by
Peter
Applcbomc ol The New

Tad
Bart1mus

Konper dec1ded th.u he
wanted to p10duce .t seventh
solo album wuh some ol the
1~0 songs he d wrmen smce
he cl recorded IllS s1xth Act
L1ke Nothm,; s Wrong 111
1\175
Bl.tck C"ollec
p101es
th,ll ymt never get too old to
keep do an g - and pcrtecung

York T11nes ,IS a JOlt ol pn
mal sou l blues and R&amp;B
Nme of the 14 cuts were
wntten by Kooper over the
past three decades and at
least a couple of them pto
v1de v1brant proof that thiS
d1.1beuc p.lrllally hlmd nJ.ts
ter of the H.unmond B '
organ and gu itar

u~scncs

- wll.ll yo u lnve Koope•
t.lllght me th,ll v.hen m mv
~Os I lound mysell ,, tem
!ted but thnlled - b.1ckup
Singer lu a bunch ol lamoliS
wntcrs 111 .t band cdlled the
Rock Bottom Rem 11nders
I d 'llll,! Wi th 1lolk lno 1n
h1gl1 school ,md college ,md
occ,ISional ly ln1 a lllldlllght
suppc1 ~~ blues cluhs when I
'"'" 111 my 20s hut smcc
then I d on Iy 11 11 bkd Iinne
Ill the shower
Kooper s JOb v.as to turn,,
d!Sp.tr.Jtc bunch ol type A
loners (S tephen Ktng D t\ e
B 1rry Amy T,m B.1rbar.1
Km gsol1 er etc I w1th \MY

.mother shot at stardom
The ,libum s r.tnge ,liso
re,•ll~nns Koope1 s 1111luencc
on rock 11 h1ch beg.m when
he perlnrmed Short Shorts
With the Royal T~ens at .tge
14 and wrote Th10 Dmmond
Rmg bel ore he was 20
mg Llt!grecs ol mu~1cal ahli1
Kooper recorded w1th t) 11110 a cohcsl\e g~u~tg\:
such lege nds '" The Roll1n1, b md ~ood cnollgh to go 011
Stone' Ju,m B 1cz Snnon &amp; the 101~ to r.tiSe money lm
G.~rlunkel
,1nd
!11111 iltcrat y char!llc'
Hendn x .tsscmbled the _ W11hout &lt;VCI t 1k111g oil lm
ong11Ml Bloou Swc.tt ,md tr ldCn1dl k sungl•~~t:~ 0 1
Te.trs band
d1Sco1cred r,us111g h1~ -..ott ~po k en
Lynyrd Skynyrd produced 1mce Koopcr succeeded
R1ck Nelson Johnny Vun because 11e d1d everythmg
Zant Eddte &amp; The Hot he told us to do ,md he con
Rods r 111 lm own record 1liKed u' 1hat \1 c were bener
company composed mov 1c th,m we were
,md teJeVI!iiOn "OICS ,lfld
I v~~l\ h1~ touuhc~l &lt;.:a~e An
wrote books
oil key mer \~e•g ht out ol
In 1'&gt;197 Kooper mmed to brc,nh skeptic I was m n
Boston from N,"h\llle to vmced I could neve1 rcmcm
teach · at the Berl..lee School her the '"'rds to Cha1n ol
ol Mu~1 c but g,l\C up hh Fool; let ,done hll the h1gl1
professorship 111 21KII llhen notes 111 ftont ol 1 (){){lim'
he lo't l\\O thrrus ofh" s1~ht
Koop~.: 1 ... rdent Ie......
Itt '
,md .tbu sullereu a br~un try It ag,nn n.:ll~;,u ~ab and
tumor th,lt s,une year
h" conlldcncc th,u 1 could
Dunng h1..,
fclO\t~ry
&gt;nund l1kc P.11 Ben 11.1r 11 I d

JUst \1 mk h,lldCI lm,tll)
sedUlU.i me IIllO h~.:lJC\ IIH!
lor 1 te11 t1e ISUICd 1112ht;
th.1t I \\ 1s ~ood. t:llOLl~;i1 to
st~H!C

sh He IlK

\\ 11h hllll

Sure e nou ~ h 1~1 .1lto '" tred
Tdklllg 1 l1n 11 ho11 111 111)
D11111 Ross 1\IL leo pud
(prt:~Cilpllon)

. . unt-lt,..,c..,

md 111.11 1hou tnnP11 ed hi Ilk
lhlllon Ieddy I s 111 Kooptr
wmk It rne I 1e lm ed htnl
C'vCI SIJl L:C

Dunn,; the 90s whe n he
lt:tlrcU twm the n..:~.:ordiiH.!
busmt:s\ hec 1usc h1~ \\ 111...
dow h.tu closed he l11ed
oil ICSiduli s lrom commer
u tl usc ol h1s old sonp hut
~.:onttnutd tn perform h t\t:
tu11 111d not t.1kc hrmsell
"C' IIOU'. ,I)

I ne\CJ knov. 11 h tl s
~ o1n g to l1.1ppc11 ..,o I Tll.:\CT
t,tkc

dll) thm ..! !01 ,d. I mh..:d

Kemper s 11d

Two llllllllh'
c- ~t 1 rc 11
I} roucn troy tltyl chcck I
11) to keep my lin mces
hom nu\\ I ~.::ould

tog&lt;.:tht:l 111111) ..,CiliOJ yc 11..,

In

21~ )1

Kooper pl.t)cd to
ldtdt: UOVvlh Ill N ell \\ Jy tllll
~o ld

out

t

I I\ l" conu.:rt tOll I

ol Jup.111111 200\ v.IJciC he"
I 1mous He Sic- ned t r~;~.:onJ
mg umtr Ill ill" yc,u Wllh
~ llllam t St~vc V,11 'r.~vored
N.tllons Rewrds He " .tlso
tOllsH..Jcnllg \\ hct ht:l to
become rhc Ill! ISle ulrCLtor ol
a new flrn.Ju".J Y play rnu
pl.llls tn tour J.tp Ill ·~ 1111 111
Octnhc1
I 1~ sttll c.ll Ill) 1111r 1hnu
teddv &lt;\I l.tkc 111c 11 1th vou
( Lol:. 011 lu 11 11 11 1adhw
1111111' ( rm1 to f( wl clot!\ ( rm
\fill( {I (.II! UtNitill' (II lAD s
/JLO.(J

) u u nta\ aho u rift

to Tad , /o 7/r, Wcm" 11
\111drutt,. PO llo, !0/fi9
Coltllllhw Mo (J'!0'5)

ret1red 20 year veteran of US
Navy
What they need to do
world w1de ISlighte n up securuy like we have or 1t s never
gmng to stop Mr Donohue
smd I hate to see 1t hdppen
anywhere
The Donohue s were there
at the ball held that mghl to
see th e1r son Jonathan who
plays for Rutl.md catch a tl y
ballm centerf•eld
Descnbed as the proud
grandmas ot Rutland Red
Aaron Maxson both Becky
Elhs ,md Gene\a M.txson

agreed that the London
anacks were a somber
remmdcr ot the world s•nce
9/11
II makes you scared to
death Ellis smd
h's gomg to happen here '
Maxson added 'I m afrmd
they 11 hu one of these power
plants that have already had
secunty taken away
" 'I feel sorry tor them
(Londoners) 'Elhs sa1d
The proud grandmas 'and
proud mother
Wend y
Maxson then lllrned the•r
auenuon to Aaron playmg
th1rd base and the Red s ga me
w1 th RwGr,mde .md htegoes
on 111 Me1gs Count) JUSt '" rt
does 111 London JUSt as 1t
should be

by the Natmnal Endowment
for the Arts ,md pnvate dona
l1uns begdn pldnlllng for clll
tural e\ents wh1ch .could be
from Page A1
presemed across the state
An emph.ISi s of the state s
ne wspaper ad\ ertiSements en11chment progr.Hn w.IS to
old programs and photogr.tphs muoduc e live d.1y events
from that t1me penod
combm mg hvmg h1 story
stxth
.mm•ll muSic andentertamment edu
The
Chautauqua winch took place c.tt1on theater and audience
Aug Jl 20 al Bungalow P,trk mteractlon It would be called
featured Dr Edv.ard A Stemer !he Oh1o Ch,IUt.mqu.l
dcscnbed 111 one newspaper
Each yed[ smce 2000 the
advertisement as one of the Cou ncil has selected SIX com
Great B1g Men of the countf) munmes 111 d1fterent rcg1ons of
-one of the greatest tlunkers the stale to host ,, Chautauqua
of the age someone you can Th1s year one site selec1ed was
not aflord to miSs heann~ He the Chesler Commons wuh the
was the spe.1ker ,u the ~ p m Chester Sh,1de
Hlstonc,JI
programonAug 16 1916
as co sponsor
From those early years the Assou&lt;1t10n
Each
ye.trschol,rrs
are select
popul,mty ol the Chaut.IUqu,,
ed
lor
t
1rst
person
portrayals
ol
grew ,md grew and 111 lherr hey
day 21 troupes opemtlng on 91 famou' people ThiS ye.tr s
c1rcuus tr.11elcu the country players 111 costume will be pre
reachmg m1lhons ot people e.tch sentlng mdust1 hlhsl Henry
ye,uChaut.IUquas were Ford wnter Zor,, Ne,lie
flapper
Zel~a
aescnbed b) Teddy Roosevelt ,,s Hurston
the ~ most Amem:dn Lhmg 111 F•tzger,1ld sports legend B.tbe
Amenca
The G1e.tt Ruth md band1l John D1lhnger
PerlhnMnces w1ll be 111 ,,
Depress JOn of the 1910s hrought
w1th 11 the demiSe ot the b1g recJ and wh1le st11ped tent
Chautauqua c1rcmt perfor wh1ch sealS 500 pnched on the
Chester Commons 8 p m
maoces
A few ye,1rs ago The Oh•o Tuesda) through Saturday
Huma111t1es Counc1l funded l'here "no charge to attend

Chautauqua

Studies
from P.age A1
sumed e1ther mumCipal w,1ter
or well water 111 the UISlriCt tor
at least a year belore Dec 1
2004
Collected mformatlon will
be stnctly confidential and
rev1ewed by a court appomted mdpendent ''cence panel

The Daily Senhnel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

~s

A justice showdown is brewing
BY DONALD lAMBRO

'

Monday, July 11, 2005

made of up three ep1den11
olog•dsJs Blood will be tested
onl) for spec•f•c blood
chem"lnes and will not be
tested tor drugs HIV or other
sexuall transmllled diSeuses
Rc,lills ot the tests will he
• ma1led to part1upants
DuPont has come out Ill
support ol the prOJCCI and ns
•mdmgs as to 11 hether or not
exposure to C8 " hnked to
human dtsease

London p-olice arrest three as search for London
bombers looks abroad and at home
LONDON (A P) - Bntons
gathered m churches Sunday
and plied bouquets of flowers
,It an Underground stat1on to
mourn \ 1ctuns of last week s
bomb att,tcks on London s
transport system Pohce sorted
through hund1eds of t1ps 11om
the pubhc and sa 1d they arrest
ed three men Sunday at
Heathrow mrport unde r anti
terronsmlaws
Pohce d1sclosed the arrests
dunng a bnet mg on the1r
mvest1gat10n but cautioned
aga rnst hnkmg the dete ntions
to the Thursday explos10ns on
three subway trams and a dou
ble decker bus m wh1ch .tl
least 49 people were ktlled and
700 wounded S1xty VICtims
remamed m hospndls Sunday
I am to ld that n 1s mappro
pnate dnd pure speculation at
thts stage to be drawmg dny
d1rect linkages with the ,llt,lcks
111 London and ,It thiS st,tge 11e
are not 111" posnron to g1ve .my
furthe• •ntorm,ltl on
s,ud
Bnan Padd1ck deputy assiS
tant
COillllli SS IOner
of
Metropohtdn Pollee
Deep underground pollee
contmued the hot tilthy w01k
ot searchtng tor bodws !rom
the worst of the subway bomb
1ngs Twenty one bod1 es hdvc
been recmered so lu1 m the
tunnel between Russell Squ..re
and Km g s Cross station s sa1d
Andy Trotter ISSistant ch•el
const.tble ot B11ll sh Tr,mspon
Pohce !hose\ ICtlms o~re pan
ot the toto~ I de.1th count ot 49
Authont1es h.tve rout1nely
s,11d they expected the de.tth
toll to tncle.tse but It h,\S not
changed to• the P•"' two d.1ys
In an mter v1ew Wllh Fox
News Seuetary ol State
Condoleezzo~ Rile s,11d the
attucks bore an eene l,tmilldt
n y to the M.tdnd r,ulway
bombmgs th,n killed 191 peo
pic m M,uch 2004
And so 11e rc tl ymg to help
the Bnllsh many wo~y we can
R1ce sa1d Irom BeiJing
Reports 111 I ondon newsp,1
pers Sund.1y •dent1fled a poss1
ble suspect &lt;Ls Must Ill
Setmanan N.tsar - ,, Syn 111
suspected ot bemg .11 Q.11d 1 s
operatiOns ch1ef m Eu1 ope ,md
the alleged masterrnmd of last
year s bombmgs 111 Madnd
London pollee refused to
comme nt but a U S off1C1.1l
sa1d that both nat,ons were tr)
mg to locate Nasar
'We and the Bnt!Sh authon
t1es are workmg very hard
together to try and locate hun
and question h•m
Fran
Townsend PreSJdent Bush s
homeland secunt) adviSer
smd on F0x News Sunday
As police studted I 700 t1ps

The wreckage of
bus No 30 s1ts
behrnd a poltce
barrrer w1th rts
second level
open to the ele
ments after
Thursdays
bomb attack 111
Travrstock
Square London,
S!Jnday Pot1ce
began t heir
recovery opera
tons shor t after
mrdday removmg
surround ng cars
and debrrs from
the cnme scene
between Russell
Square and
Euston StatiOn
AP Photo

th It h.1ve tlnoded 111 hom the
public so t,tr they ll so pored
0\ersurveliluKec tme1 1record
mgs .rnd tppe.tled lor rnme help
Irom ,rnyone wnh dm tteu• vtdeo

or

Jllld t,cs

flom

t.unera

eqUipped celf phones 11ken 111 the
VICIIlllY ol the IOU I bi,l&gt;ls
I would .tsk people 1cross
London to th1n k ve r) cne lull)
1bout .wynne they know
whose beh,tvlor h,IS ch tnged
sudden I} Wh,lt h " ch,mged
could n be Slglllhctnt' Vv h rt
1bout the people they tssouue
wllh &gt;Tell us what you sec md
wh.tt you know md let us
dec1de 11 the mtornldtlon you
h,1ve " v&lt;~luable 01 not so11d
Deputy
AsSist.tnt
CommiSstOner Peter Cl.u ke
head ol the Metropoln.m s
Anti Te1ro11st Br,mch
A l01111 er London pollee
ch1et me,u111hde s nd the
bombe1s we1e ..llniostceJt,un
lv B11t"h subjects tlwu, h
rmesttg.ttOIS d1d not endo r&gt;e
the theory
1m alr,ud the1e s r sulll
Clelllnumbc• ol people 111 thrs
countly \1 tl1111~ tube lslanm
torronsls th tl the) uon t IM \e
to be d1altcd 111 Irom .tbro,lu
s,11u John Stevens who he.tded
London s Metropollt,m Pollee
lor l1 ve ve.tiS untrl • et 111n ~ Ill
Janua1 y
Padd1ck however s 11d
pollee had d1,1W11 no condu
SIOns about the natiOIMllty ot
the attackers
Ste1ens 11ntmg 111 the News
ot the World sa1d we ha\ e
aire 1dy conv •cted two Bnllsh
shoe bombers R1chard Re1d
and SaaJ•d Badat and there
"ere the two Bntt sh su1C1de
bombers Astl Ham f and Omar

Sho111t 11ho killed lhemselve'
m ls1.tel
Ho11111 w" •denu'•ed ts Ihe
SUICide hom her "ho killed
th1 ee people ,md 1n1ured 611 on
Ap• II 30 2004 11 M1ke s
Pl1ce " Tel A1 IV ntght,pot
whrl e Sh tnt 1llegedly !led
lrom the scene md "" luer
loundde 1d
Reid tned 10 u e tono~t e I
bomb hrdden 111 hiS shoe
.tbo uu 111 Am~r tc,m A1rhnes
Ili ght lrom Pa11s to Mr 11111 nn
Dec 22 200 I Hers now sen
mg ,, Ili e senlence B 1d.u h 1d
bought 1 trcket lor 1110ther
ll1ght but ch mged hiS 111111d
md took hiS humb horne to
westem Engi.ulll keepmg 1t1n•
hts bedroo m
It took poltLe ne,trl} two
ye.u s to tr.tck ll.tdat down He
pie 1deu guilty to , consptr,lly
c hu ~e m Fehtlt.IIY He IS no11

Brrkenhe 1d caused httle dam
12e the Assnc latlon ot Ch1ef
Polrc e Olllcers sa1d Sunday
There .tlso have been scattered
reports ol \erhal abuse and
1 mdtltsm
We encourage ever) one to
reporl thiS type ol obnoxwus
,uld ddn •erous beha\lor,'
,~ssO C IIIH~l preSident ChriS
Fox Sdld
Howe1er he added we are
encour.tged by the O\erall
c1lm commun1tv response
Joe 1fly ,md natrnn 1ll y to these
ler r1ble even~&lt;
At St Pancras Pansh
Chlllch (list steps Irom \\here
one ol the bomb' cui apart a
double cle,ker bus and killed
ll people the Re1 Paul
H IWkmsspoke nl the d11ers1ty
ol clilllllc tnd I nth 1111 ondon
ThiS 11 rll only make us
more de~crm•ned to lrve 111

sel\ 1ng d 11 yetH p11son sen

pc: H.:e tnd Jespcu etc h other

tence
Anothe• mtJOI te11n1 "m
t11.1l ended m Aptll w1th the
conVICliOJl ot .tn Al0e11.tn
K.tmel Bourg.tss lor consp1r
n1 g to pmson Londoners wnh
IICIIl ,,de Idl y toxin Bolng.lss
who ,lllegedly h,td lies to al
Q,ud.t was ,1lso co111 tcted ol
murdenn g " pollee olll cer
v.lule re"stmg a1 rest
Seven other Algen ms mel t
L•byan charged 111 that plot
v.ere either tou nd 1nnocent or
weren t prosecuted
Cl,ums ot res pon s•bllll) b~
two rad1cal lslmmc groups 01
s1mply the susp1cton thai
Muslims were responSible
apparently have sp,nvned
repnsals pollee satd
At son anackson mosques m
Leeds Bel vedere Tellord a_nd

md we c 111 rl l pl1v our panm
th 11 he s ucl
Hunu• eus ol people came to
,, G.udcn ol Pelle h rstrly ere
,1ted tl Kmg s Cross Statton
be,mn g Ilowers dncl cards
mmv tnlendlll~ sllnplv to
,how soildanty
We .1re all Londoners we
1re ,Ill umted even m gnef
s uu &lt;\de bow ale B.ldCJO 33
11ho broug ht h1s lund) w the
g&lt;~rden

Homeland
Securnx
M•ch,tel Che rt otf
sa1d the United States would
keep It s te1ror alert on h1gh for
mass transit while the US
rnomtors the Bntrsh unesttga
lion f01 rnlurmat1on .1bout who
was respon" ble ,md "hal
kmds ol t.1L!1cs 11e h,n e to
\\Oir) &lt;ibOlll
Secret&lt;~r)

Dairy industry skeptical about cloned cows
WASHINGTON (API - As
the
Food
.md
Dtug
AdmmiStratron
conSideiS
whether to htt a \olunt.try ban
on sellmg toad from cloned
,umnal 'i the t~genc) 1s g.etttn l!
some reststance I1om an
unusual source the da•ry
mdustll)'
Trade groups for f.mners md
compames that use d,ury prod
ucts me not enthuswst1c ,1bm11
mtroductrlg rmlk from cloned
cows mlo the marketplace
leanng consume" would be
leery ,tbolll the p1 oduch
Then.~ s .1 strung genenl
feeling among our mcmbc1 s

support nulk Irom cloned LO\\S
cntenng the llllll ketpl.tce urnll
FDA uete11111nes th.11 nHik
!10111 eJoned CO\\S IS the S.tme
dS milk from convention Ill)
bred ,unmals
Bec,tust: dunmg " &lt;.:ow ~~
expenstve 1bout S20 000 sell
mg meat from ,, clone would
n t be hnanc llli) v1o~ble The
rn.un cnrnme•c• •i beneln
wou ld be to sell mtlk lmrn the
done ot a pnzed cow 01 lor
b1 eedmg purposes
The dan-v ,!roups position IS
11 odds wnh the h10technolo.;y
muustf) dlld the srn.tll number
ot t~mner " \\lhO h 1\l" Jll\C".tt:J
111 donmg tO\\~
B.1rb Glenn d1rectnr nl 1111
mal biOttchnoln~y II the
B1ntec hnolo.;)
lndustr)
Orgamzat1on predicted 11111
clonm~ wtll benetn both con
sume1 ~ and produce•' Wnh
an) new tcchnolo~) ;n11 11

summ.tl) ol lis clr tit 11sk
o~ssessment 11h1Ch lounu th u
lood Irom cloned .m1111,11s 11 1s
p10bo~bly '" " I ~ .ts tint lrom
11on cloned tllllll.lls But 1t
1sked f 11mers to 1etram Irom
sel ling p1oducts 11om cloned
ammals until ,, t m.tl uetenlllnd •

G1cg Wiles t dn•n ltnner 111
H •.;erstm\ n Md h" made
[\\ 0 clone' lrom I proiJfiC
Holste Ill One 1s he 1hhy hut
tile othe1 su tlers 11om health
problems lh 11 Wtles dec hned

(lOll IS 11l.H.Je

thdn \\eknme to g~t lll\ bl~
01 ll...,..,u~.: . , unple.., \V1k~' ~ 11d

E.1rher thiS ye 1r ,, stud) b\
the Ccmer leu Rcgcneratl\e
B1ology .tl the Urme!Sil) ol
ConnectiCut lound th tl me 11
and m1lk lrom cloned mn1Mis
IS esscnt1.11 11 rdentrc,ll !(l th 11
ol non cloned ,m1m ti s
ASide from the he dth 1ssues
a1c queS110ns ,1bout ,mun II
"ell1re bcc.1use cloned "'"
nMis d1c m h1~hcr numhe"
dunng prcgnam.:) .md 1n.ht
11ter bn th
A N,H ion,li
Ac.tdetn) ol Suences p mel
lookm~ ,11 clonmg raNd the
Issue 111 ,, 20112 rqxm
The Hum,mc Soc•et\ nl the
IM\1! groups LOlltetnt:d 1bout Unncd St,lle' 111 ~ed the FDA Ill
keep the ban 111 -]'JI.~~:e In 1 kt
1l she s,lld
Bob Sch,IUI ,l d nry l1rmer tcr June ~~ P~eSidcnt WI) 11e
lrom Banun W1s 1bout lJO P,1celle 11 n&gt;te th ll lionm~
11ules ea't ol M11me.tpoils can ICS l&lt;~l hl-11 I W'l \lllh

that con,umers .tre not reccp
live to nulk from cloned
cows, smd Sus.tn R11l,md a
spokeswoman
lor
the
Internallon,li D,ury Foods
Assocmuon wh 1c h represents
food nMnul,lcturcr' that use
da1ry products
Clonmg Js the crcdllun ot tn
anmMIIrom the DNA ol ,, srn
gle p.trem to crt.:.nc an oil
spnng genetically 1dcnllt 11 to
the p.trcnt
Thrs seems to he one ol the t:loncd h1" p11ze \\lnnm ..;; ll!d..lrt.i to .lllllllll \UIItnng \d
thmg.;,; \\here tcchnolog\ sc~.:rn:.. Hobt~;:m ttbout four )~ar~ tt-o otters lntk lx11cl1t to hu111.111'
to drop somcthmg 111 Ihe l.1p ol m 1kmg lout ~.:opu..:' - one ot .111d .1111111 tis .1hke
the loocl comp 1n1c' Rulmd 11l11Lh d1eu lJCc,,usc ol comph
saJU Ill ,t H.:u:: lll lllh.:f\ lt:W

It s

t:dtJon~

wlnh.: t:tthm.; e.ulu.:1

not dmen bv the 1111r~c1 or my !IllS yco~r
Schaul called the b,m
benef1l IO the LUINIIllCI
nd1culous
It ' ,, phoh11 11101e
A ~002 G.dlup poll lound
that 66 pcrcenl ,,1 Amcnc 111 1han ,mythmg scrcnlllil We
consumer~ ~;,ud th 11 clonmg need to ~el FDA to l(llll&lt; 1lone
md 'IV II s Ime The) tc lS
ammals Wds mor~tll y \'wron..?.
norm.!
I ds Ill) oth~;r Llllllll II
A March suney b) the
lntern.tllono~l Food lnlomlllHlll Common scrhc ll.lS to t,tke
Council .tn 111dustr) tr.1de o\ ~.:1 ... oon
Bee tu'c the FDA hIs lS~eJ.
group reported lh.ll ol percent
ot consumers 1\0llld ilkel) nm lmncrs not to 'ell pm.tucts
buy lood hom cloned 1111111 lls lrnm tloncd mlrntls SchIll I
e1cn 11 the FDA dclermmcd leeds Ill &lt;! rm lk to ills l11111h
.ntd cmplo) ccs He s \IU he h 1s
the pJOdlKts "ere s 1fc
Last month the N.1t111n 11 o1hc1 cine LOlls th II l1c d h~e
Milk P1oducers Feder,I!Hlll tn clone but h 1s held ofl
represent mg. d~Hr)

I armcr'

appnncd d jJ&lt;)SI(IOn slJICillclll
th.lt 11 dlJ&lt;;S nnt at thiS tune

hec

1u~e

ol tlH.:

Ktl011
In ~IMI'

_o\CIIll1ltnt

the HJA tssllcd J

to "Pn ll\

I h,11 e satd the PDA IS more
1 1hmk 1t needs to be looked
LillO
"Wile s s,ud he ollcn thmk s
1hnut d1S1ecardmu the b,111 tnd
'e lltn~ rhc rndk i\llllh he no\\
polll s-d&lt;lllll the Jr,un I 1h111k
the FDA h ts t.lktn too long to
dt'll:Jlllllll! tl 11 "' .., 1k nr not
he s 11d
The FD \ declined 111 IIller
'1ev. Jt:qu..:...,t fot tht:-. ... tof\ ' 1\

th It ll \\ OU\J
be rrun tlllfl In JJ..,Lll" .our
iinlitn_.., n1 tn mtkl un lllltl
d~.:t~nl1111t!Hllh dut.: tn tht LOI11
pie"'' nl thl '"ue It tdded
thtttht:.l_tlll\ dlX:,I1lllh!\C l
lllllt.:fr IJll~ !OJ I f1111l Jlli'\JOn
IIH! 111 l '-l.tlt:Jlklll

Ohc &lt;•I the cuttrn clLe ,1111
m tl

L lnnnL

\\IS

'~'llt.: ..,lll.h 1 dn l"!lHl
t hJ J'll.i1.1 W i ltk

\ ! \\ \ \

~ijl~9),RR..*9f~R
e

1111es

~,;~.:.t,u.l up~.; I ttnllb Jt,t \ear
11l11k \\,tl!lll_ nr the FDA to

tlilr.. )l~el\y \K. l)~Aes
AutoAccrdems Worlwn'
Compensatron

Ullllp

lnll _crt ol Dd &lt;lll'sl

\ulf

I~

hH ,.f ill1 l \.,).:1\1\

\l 11lx r &gt;! \ mn wn li..ldrrl ci
l'r~

IW"l

11

' r \ \ J'-'tl

\l unhc -4

l..i l l.tl
Tb.:

\ n-..: n..;.~n &gt;\~m\

I \l rd1l II -\.~"1 ~)1Jfl(;111f\'

"f'll'1\ I jllnl

e ~t..-J .m.

• \t"" In ur

• &lt;\~ urun1 u rt:

• .., mnJ;

I'M."

·~~ '4

1avenswuud

... ltir'J'lr:lctic
\.C~tcr
•
:

304-273-5321

316 Washm ton St

t iS!

Ravenswood, WV

�----

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, July

11, 2005

Hospitals charge. A mother searches for burial site of her.two murdered·children PERSPECTIVE:
Dealers miffed by
bureau more to
repeal of exemption
treat work~rs,
ALONG
INTERSTATE
COLUMBUS (AP)-Tom
HIGHWAY 80 - Squinting
Noe continues to influence the
study finds
in the midday sun, Teri
state's rare-win business.

._

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Diamondbacks edge Reds, Page B2 '
.Yankees' offense too much for Cleveland, Page B2

•

West wins WNBA All-Star game, Page Bfi
Earnhardt wins Cbicagoland, Page B6

AP NATIONAL WRITER

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Knight scans the curtains of
Ohio Bureau of Workers' green fields that border this
Compensation has paid hos- 1\ighway in search of clues
pitals $544 million more 'than that could lead her 10 a terriit cost to treat injured work- , ble place: the grave site of her
children.·
~rs over the last
' seven years, murdered
She
'
believes
her son and
a unioi:t's study has found .
The . Service . Employees dau ghter arc buried out thete.
International Union District somewhere among tens of
found that the bureau· paid thousands of anonymous
hospitals about $1.6 billion acres. Maybe here in Illinois,
for treatments costing around m:tybc another state such as
$1.1 billion Since 19Y7. when Ohio. where she searched on
its current pay ment system ,Saturday and Sunday.
For two years, she has been
was enacted. according to the
by the same question :
haunted
study obtained by The
Where ?
.C olumbus Dispatch . The
On
a July day in 2003,
union anaiyzed millions of
Juthorities say. Kriight' s exbureau billing records .
Hospitals were paid 71 per- husband shot and killed their
..
AP Photo ·
cent more than thei r · actual dau ghter. Sat;ah. 14. and son,
Philip.
II
.
Manuel
Gehring
costs to · treat injured Ohio ·
Teri Knight left. goes over a map with helicopter pilot Drew Ferguson , prior to taking off fo r an
workers m 2003 and 59 per- told police in New Hampshire aerial search for the possible location of her ch ildren's graves in Sandusky. Two years after
cent · more last year. accord- he ~ra pped hi s chi ldren in her ex-husband killed their daughter and son, Knight is searching along the same route wher!!'
plasiic and placed duct-tape he Said he buried the children . She hopes this journey will re kindle inte rest in her plight arid
ing to the &gt;tudy.
help her bring her kids home.
·
.
"This one sl ice of health- crosses on their cht!sts.
Then . he said. he' dug a
care service i's _reafly being
gouged to bring a wholly dis- shallow ~ra ve for them some- allention and prouuce a tip 80 map and pieced together a · senior year. Her son. Philip.
proportionate . amount of where " ilo'ni! thi s co ncret e that wi ll ~il l ow her to bring her time! inc of her ex-husbund's who liked acting, would be
travels . based on credit card start ing high schooL
profit for nonprofit ho ~ pi­ artery til111l . ruils ''through , the .;hildren home.
"This is my chance," she receipts.·
Every time she looks ·at
tals," ~ aid Dave Regan. pres- h ~a rt of miudle America.
says.
"I
neeu
·
to
do
thi
s.
It's
She
has
listened,
too,
to
daug!)ters
Molly and Mallory,
Police
. drove Gehrin"
o alon&lt;&gt;
e
ident ' of the
union 'S .
Columbus-based . District 1-HO shortl y afler the murders nut like I feel like I'm doing Gehri ng's confession, sitting in "I think what would have
1199. which r~ presents to look for · th e L-s haped som~ thin g weird . ... What the New Hampshire attorney been like if Sarah and Phirip
27,000 health-care workm grave. But he couldn't find"it mother wouldn't want their general's office , her ear would have been i1ro und ?"
in Ohio. Kentucky and West Neither coulu law enforce- chi ldren buried near her or pressed against a tape-recorder. she says. •·one of my jokes.is
mem officers or dedicated wam to know their final rest- hearing him speak softly and Philip would have had a perVirginia.
volunteers
who searched \t ing place is? It 's JUSt what calml y about the disposal of feet girl magnet because these
Ohio
Hospital
The
her children's bodies.
baby twin sisters are absolurestretcil
from they deserve." ·
Association. which repre-· 650-mile
On
Day
2.
Kr\ight
stopped
in
"I
thought
I'd
walk
out
of
ly
beautifttL Every teenage
Pennsylvania
to
Ohio
.
to
.sents 170 institu tions. negotiated the payment deal with lndi&lt;Hta to Illinois to Iowa- Joliet, IlL . near a Citgo station. there knowing something that girl would lo'e to come over.
.the bureau . It questioned the the area where he's bel ieved where Gehring had purchased nobody else knew," ,she says. You know, that's part of the
to i1&lt;1ve buried the children . ..gas. Then a private investiga- Instead, she adds, "I was more whole process - realizing
union's analysis. ..
Last week - j ust a few tor drove her to a weed-strewn confused and more frus trated:·· that 's not what we have." ·
"Paym~nts
went
up
Gehring was last se~n with
The sun Is setting when
because , year by year. h(!Spi - days after the two-year ·dumping ground. where she
tal costs were gqing up," said anniversary of . her chi loren's wove through bushes. and his chi loren at a July 4th fire- Knight reaches her linal stop
Knight poked at garbage bags. But the works celebration in Concord, of the day - the Iowa City
Charles Cataline. the associa- disappearance
area was near .an electrical N.H. Witnesses say the ki ds . campgro und Gehring visited.
tion· s senior director·of h·ealth came to look for herself.
were crying as they climbed perhaps to clean otlin the lake .
tower and railroad tracks She
retraced
Geilring
's
pat
it
policy. "We tried to stay budKnight wonders how he
get-neutral and make sure the along 1 -~0. but the purpose of and that uidn't match into his minivan.
description.
'
Six
days
later.
Gehring
was
found
thi s place. There were
Gehring's
her
six-day
search
was
to
bureau wasn't paying more
Gehring had drawn a rough arrested in California. Blood. no signs on the highway and
raise public awareness. rather
than they had before."
sketch
of the burial site and bullet holes and human tissue he had never been in the
than
an
attempt
to
do
the
Nancy Kane , a professor at
saiu
it
was
off an 1-80 exit in were found in his Pontiac van. Midwest. Gehring. she says,
the Harvard School of Publ ic seem ingly undoable : find an
the Midwest amid tall· grass.
Authorities believe Gehring didn ' t even like to swim in
Health. said the methodology unmarked burial site.
"I· would love to say that I A 6-foot-high metal fence, an . buried the children after he - lakes.
of the union stu'dy is sound
h i~ a soft summer night
but said the difference could have some instinct and old water pump; a ·yellow or bought a pick ax, shovel,
tan
commercial
building.
firegloves,
duct
tape
and
garbage
with
boaters on the shimmer~
between cost and the we'd drive right to some place
bureau 's bill is not just profit. and find them," Knight says. wood. large slabs of concrete. bags on July 5. 2003. at a ing water and sw immers .
Bureau officials did not "But .I can't leave my hopes five or six · large trash-fi lled Wal-Marl in Grove City, Pa.. splashing about, but there's no
disagree with the study and there: I have to be realistic." cement construction cylin- and before he arrived the next peace for this mother. She rubs
So Kni ght and her second ders. a pile of white or gray day at a camp ground in Iowa her girlish face in weariness.
said some changes are
She recalls hearing ahout
hu sband. Jim. trailed by a rocks and willow-like trees City. Iowa.
already being made.
Some investigators say another child. whose remains
"We need to take a look at small group of reporters. were nearby.
Those general clues would pollen found in his van indi- were fou nd after 30 years.
it and bring. it down." said drove the rou te in a blue
Joel Donchess. the bureau ·s Chevy Suburban displaying be all he'd provide: Gehring, cates the murders occurred in "How can people go on that
head of injury-management thi s sign on the passe nger 44. committed sui.cide in jail Ohio or east of there. But long ?" she asks. "I don't
services. ''I'm not satistied side: "Help Us Find The Kids. in February 2004, wh ile G~:hring's confession, accord- know. What's it ooing to feel
phi lipandsarati .com.··
awaiting trial. At the time or ing to Knight, suggests he like i_n two ye~~rs and two
with the way it is...
They stopped at places the killings. Gehring had lost killed the kids I l/2to 2 hours months'' I don't know."
The hospital s have an
.
This day. she says. has left
arrangement where they basi- where Gehring had been. they his accountant's job and east of Iowa City.
Knight, 43. a nurse and her only with new questions.
ca lly set their own rates for · left fliers at convenience sta- apparently . feared he'd ,also
lose
custody
of
the
ktds
to
mother
of 19-month-old
"We're going to come up
tions,
they
scouted
fields
that
treatment. Hospital payments
increased 80 percent from fit the general description he Kmght . who had JUSt remar- twms, says the imp;tct of her with some of these answers,"
1997 to 2003 though the had provided police. And they ried. They had divorced in immeasurable loss changes as her husband, Jim , says reassuringly.
number. of injured workers wore plastic badges near their 200 I after a 16-year marriage. time passes.
In the past two years,
"You start to mi~s different
"If not us." she replies'.
dropped by nearly a third heart s. each with a photo of
Knight has studied satell ite things," she says · wistfully, "someone else will."
during the · same period . the two smiling children. ·
They walk off hand in hand,
according to the Di spatch
Kni g~ t hopes word of her and topography maps, pro- Her daughter, Sarah. a cheergrammed
her
laptop
search
will
pique
the
public's
with
an
1leader.
would
be
entering
her
with
many more miles to go.
report.

~----------~~~==~~

When Gov. Bob Taft sigried
intolawthe$51 billion budget
for the two years that began
July I. rare-coin buyers lost
their exemption to the st1te
snlcs tax . An exemption for
.the sale of go ld bullion also ·
was repealed.
The Ohio Senate put the
repeal into the budget after the
Toledo coin dealer 's management of an unusual state
investment in rare coins went
sour. The ensuing scandal
involving in vestments by the ·
Ohio Bureau ot Workers'
Compensati on . has made
·headlines for months. ,
"I think it's all related to
Noe and I ~ it's going to
hun .'' Ron Nelson. a
Cleveland coin show promot- ·
er. said Friday.
Senate . President Bill
Ashland
Harris. · an
Republican. uidn' t see it that
way. While ·the Senate made
changes in the bureau's investigati ve a·uthority because of
the scandal - the House has
yet to agree - tile tax exemption wa-_ un'netessary pnd Ia wmakers were looking for ways
to increase state reven ues
while restoring needed services, he said. .
· Ncls(\n said reservations for
his Ohio Coin Expo, scheduled for Aug . 19-2 1 in
Cleve land. are slow in coming
and he bl&lt;\mes it on the tax . In
Cuyahoga Count y. home to
the show. the .\ ales tax is 7 1/2
percent. including 2 percent
the county adds to the state's 5
1/2 percent share.
"I'm sure a lot &lt;if the out -oftown dealers may Or ma}' not
have heard about it. There are ·
lots of shows around the c;ountry. Those shows will boom.
Our shows will whither."
Nelson said.
Collectors seeking coins can
find them tax-free on the
Internet or in other stales.
Ne lson said. They also are
going to buy coins and gold
rrom brokerage houses that are
e.xempl from the tax. he said.
The Senate was looking for
ways to make up the money
lost when gasoline sales were
exempted from a new wx on
commercial activity and cuts
proposed to some health care
benefits for the poor were
restored. So it repealed the coin
and gold exemption. The new
reve nues should raise about $ 1
!nillion a year. according to
Legislature estimates.
Harris said new guide lines
in a, workers' compensation
reform bill hi s chamber
passed are designed to keep
the bureau , arc from fraud. a
detail uirectly att ributed to
Noe 's dealings.
.
"We ought to be more detlnitive in what they can do and
what they couldn' t do." said
Harri s, whose Senate bill is
pending in the House.

Lo,...tPrlc. . .

.1 I
•n•et..... sa a
of the season!

Monday, July 11
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
A
cloudy
morning.
. Temper~ture s will rise to K5
with .today·s low of 67
occurring -around· 6 a.m.
Winds will be 5 MPH from
the east turning from the
west as the morning pro, gresses. •
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.) .
It' s going to be a humid
afternoon .
Temperatu re s
will stay near 89 with
today's high of 91 occurring
around 4 p.m. Skies will be
partly cloudy to cloudy with
5 MPH wind.&gt; from the
, n o rthwe ~t turning from the
east as . the .afternoon pro,gresses. ·
Evening (7 p.m.~ Midnigllt)
It · will continue to be
humid . expected. The rainfall is Moderate rain i&gt;
expected to begin near II
p.m_. The rain fall should
reach 0.17 in~he&gt; by this
evening. Temperatures will
!J,rop frorn 90 early thi&gt;
e v~ ning to 76 . S~ie' wil l
range from part ly _cloudy ,
to cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the ea't ·wrn ing from the 'outhe:l't "'
th~ evening p.rngresses.
.\

I

I

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min . Anticipate, rain accumulations of 0.13 inche&gt; for this
overnight Tempemtures will
hold ' teady around 71 Winds
will ix' 5 1\.IPH fro m the 'oltlh.
Tuesdav, Julv 12
, Momii1g ria.m.- ;Voon) ·
· It will be a· humid and
cloudy morning . Expect
nothing nH)'rc thi.tn a pa~..,ing
&gt;howcr. Temperat~re &gt; will

•

climb fron1 72 to 84 by late
thi s morning .· Winds will be
5 MPH from the south turn·ing from the southwest as
the morning progresses.
Aftemooll (1-6 p.m.)
It &gt;hould cOt].linue to be ·
humid and cloud y. There is a
~ood
dl'aJlL'C
or rum .
'i'emperaturcs will . lin ge r at
~7. ' Winds will tic 5 MPH,
frc!m the &gt;OUthwest wrning
from the south a' the after' ,

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Mastln ousts Gallipolis en route to final
Green again gelling upper
hand .
Now, . with the Apaches
SYRACUSE
One taking down Gallipolis in
thing is for sure, ·Mason the . losers bracket. the
know s how 10 win but one rematch between Green and
team has stood in the way of . Mason wtll take place later
perfect season for the today 10 settle the tourna"
Apaches _. and they will ment once and for all. .
get another shot at that team
But to get to thts pomt.
today in the Bill Hubbard Mason had to. go through a
Memorial Little League to ugh · Galhpolts team
Tournament Championship. Sunday _wh? f?ught hard to
That's because Mason reach thiS farm th ~ toUinaeliminated Gallipolis 9-1 in ment. After losmg 111 rou~d
the lo se'r's .bracket finals one to Green, Galhpohts
Sunday to advance to the defeated Chester.. Rio
title game agai nst the team Grande and Syracuse _-m the
that sent them to the loser's double-eltmmatton format
round.
to find the Apaches waiting.
The championship game . In the. game, Mason
will pit Mason · against JUmped to a great start wnh
Green. the only team to beat pitcher William Zuspan sitthe Apaches this season. ting down the first three batGreen had beat Mason once ters and the offense scoring
before in the season and the first run of the game on
found themselves again an RBI fro m Jamin Branch.
Zuspan continued to permatched up in the winners
bracket tina! Saturday with form in the second inning
BY . 1./.RRY CRUM

LCRUM@MYOAILXREGISTER.COM

Eastern seeking
basketball coach
'

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School is
seeki ng . candidates for the
position of . Head Gjrls
Basketball Coach for the
2005-06 season. Interested
persons should contact Pam
Douthill. Athletics Director,
or Principal Jon Linder at
(740)
985 -332 9
br
Superintendent
Rick
Edwards at (740) 667-3978.
Re sumes and/or leiters of
interest can be faxed to
· Eastern High School at
(740) 985-3778 or Eastern
Local School District at
(740) 667:3978.

.

'

_ Brad Sherman/photo

a

with two strikeouts, no hits '
and no runs given up, while
the Mason squad posted tw()
more runs after Tyler
Kitchen reached on a single
and Tyler Roush reached on
a double with Zach Warth
driving in both runs.
· The Red Sox finally got
on the board in the third
with Caleb Craft reaching
on a single and Drew Young
driving in the run , but had to ·
face a determined Mason
team.
Three more ·runs were
added in the third with
Wyall Zuspan and Brice
Clark getting hits and
Branch driving in two more
runs while Kitchen drove in
one more.
.
Wyall Zuspan and Branch
had an outstanding ga me
behind the plate with
Zuspan hilling 3-for-3 with
two RBis and Branch driPiease see Ousts. 86

HOME RUN DERBY

Brad Sherman/photo

Syracuse's Zach Manuel takes a swing during the final round
of Sunday's home run derby. r'o'1anuel finished tied with Austin
Sfl:l ith of Gallipolis with six home rur.s, but lost a close hit-off
with eventual champion Smith.

Green ~eats Mason, advances to championship game

Contac~

Fax-

Information

1·740-446-3008

E-mail, -

sports@mydailysentme!.com

$Mr!J_Sli!l
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-~342 , ext 33 '
'
bsher man @ mydailylribune.com

Walter~, Spor1s.Wrller

23
,
bwalters@ mydailytribune com

IL...~w:lt~h:l•:m:ily~....~s~~~m:i~l•~·~::•t:h~o~f~::in~IP:l:••:••:n~lo:n~R:t~2~in~~=l~F:••:~~~IIC:i::::~~~==~.J

·-

Galltpolta Red Sox thtrd baseman Austin Smtth tags out Masons Wtlltam Zuspan, who was trytng to stretch a double into a triple Friday in Syracuse. Mason .
won '9-1 to advance to tonight's .championship of the Bill Hubbard Memorial Tournament.

~40) 446-2342 , ext

.

•.

Sports Briefs

larry Crum. Sports Writer

r..riiiiii"M!"J •

.. ...
* . . . . '"'
·- . ..

Saturday's game

f'Arvan

Layaway

' ._, -~ .

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Ritchie at Mason County. 2 p.m.

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Mason County at Fairmon t. 5 p.m.

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Wednesday's game

Be11erly at Feeney Bennett, 6 p.m.

Ohio Valley Publishing is
currently seekin'g stringers !O
heir cover high school footbal games thi s fa iL
Applicants must have a
strong understanding of football, the ability to keep accurate statistics and basic word
processing compljtcr skills.
Some travel may be necessary; willingness to cover a
variety of teams and previou~
writing
experience
are
plusses.
All those interested should
contact Brad Sherman. OVP
Sports Editor at (740) ·4462342 ext. 33. If there is no
. answer. leave a message along
· with your contact information.
Writing samples can be sent
to
bsherman@ mydai lytri bune.com; faxed to 1-740446-3()()8.

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Monday, July 11, 2005

(304) 675-1333. eKt. 19
Ierum @ rnydallyreglster.com

STAFF REPORT
SP9RTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE
Terry
St.,;ilh 's three-run home run
ga1·". Green a comfortable
early lead. and all the runs it
needed to defeat Mason 6-2
and advance to .the finals of
the BiU Hubbard Memorial

Linle ' League
Baseball
Tournament
· Smlih 's homer put Green
up 4-0 after the first inning ,
then teammate Jared ·Golden
piiched six innings of two-hit
baseball to secure the victory.
Green will face Mason
again 6 p.m. today m the
champi.onship game. as the

2005 BiH Hubbard, Memori al doubled. Green iumts,seu just inning s for the Apaches.
three hits off Mason pitch mg .
·II
·but benefited from several
Semifina ls
errors.
Green 19, Pomeroy 6
Brice -Cla rk doubled and
Green
exploded for eight
Apaches won the loser's Tyler Roush sint!led for
run~ in the fifth inni11g . a~ it
bracket on Sunday.
Mason 's only two htts.
claiineu
a . 19-6 win owr
Golden helped his own
Clark swrted and worked
cause with a run-scoring sin- the ftrst three inQings on the Pomeroy in wmncr ·s bracket
ole. also in the opening mound,
while
William
frame, and Russell Dennison Zuspan threw the tin:tl two · Please see Roundup. Bl

:t"ou·mey Roundup·

Wardrobe change: Armstrong yields Tour's yellow jersey
BY JOHN lEICEsTER
'ASSCOATED PRESS

MULHOUSE. France Lance Armstrong is content .
to let someone else wear the
yellow jersey· at the Tour de
Franre - for now.
11c surrendered the overall
lead in the · ninth stage
~unday. taking the pressure
off his team as the Alps aW&lt;Iit
and challenges with key
· .iivals coijld begin in eacnest,
Armstrong· s ultimate goal.
however.
- remains
unchanged:
a
seventh
straight title at t_he tinish in
Paris on July 24 before he
retires.
~.
"We don't need the yellow
jersey:' said Armstrong. who
is in third place. 2 11\inutes.
18 seconds behind the leader.
"We don't need to keep it in
the Alps. we need to have it
at the end ...
Germany's Jen s Voi gt

not a contender to win in
Paris - 'look the jersey by
finishing three minutes
ahead of the six-time champton.
Denmark's
Mickael
Rasmu sse n won the stage
with a gmsy solo ride. He
was first over the six climtls.
covering the I06.3- mile
route from Gerardmer 'to
Mulhouse 'in eastern France
in 4 hours. 8 minutes. 20 seconds.
Voigt tinished 3:04 later.
ju st
behind
France 's·
Christophe
Moreau . ·
Armstrong,- who had worn
yellow for five days. finished
in 28th place. crossing the
line comfortably in a pack
with his mai11;1ivals.
"I felt like today might be
the · da y when the jersey
would ·be given away and it
turned
out
it
was:·
Armstrong said.
The riders rest Monday
before the fir st of three

Alpine stages - · from
Grenoble to the ski station of
Courchevel. The route has
two major climbs.
Wednesday's stage is one
of the hardest thi.s year. with
three ascents ill qui~k &gt;UCcession peaking with the
monstrou s Col du Galibier.
the Tour' s highe st point at ·
8.677 feet.
,
The good new·s fo(
Armstrong is · !hat hi s
Di scovery Channel teammates appeared to have
recovered quickly from their
collapse on a climb Saturday.
when all eight abandoned
him. unable to m~u c h the
quick uphill pace . That left
Armstrong alone to feni:l otT
his rivals.
"We
were
beller::
Armstrong sa id.• "That's
good goin g into the rest day:
regroup and get ready for the
big climbs."
Please see Lance. Bl
•,

AP photo

Six-time Tour de France winner and Discovery Channel team'
teader Lance Armstrong of l',ustin. Tx .. right. strains.d~ring the
ctimb .of the Bailon d'Aisace pass in the-9th stage of t~e Tour
de France cycling race between Gerard mer and Muthouse,
eastern France. Sunday. July 10. 2005. Jens Vo1gt of Germany
took over the overall leader's yellow jersey. Left ·is Evgeni
Petrov of Russia .
·

,

�'•

.

Page 82 • The Daily Sefttinel

Yankees' offense
too
.
much for Cleveland
BY HOWIE RUMBERO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

\
· AP photo

Ctnctnnat• Reds' Sean Casey hits off Anzona Diamondbacks P•tcher Brandon Webb m th!l f1rst
1nn1ng Saturday at Bank One Ballpark 1n Phoenix

Diamondbacks edge Reds
BY MEL REISNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX -Tony Clark
came throu gh agatn for the
Anzona Diamondbacks
Clark. who has spent
much of the seaso n picking
up the Anzona offense ,
broke up a scoreless game
with a se~en th-111mn g home
ruo , and the Diamondbacks
beat the Cmcmnat1 Reds .2·0
Sunday
After Clark's two-out so lo
shot, Shawn Green · doub led
and ptnch-hnter Lu1s Terrero
lmed an RBI smg le mto
nght h eld
"To have Green1e tallow n
up with a double and then
Terrero come up w1th a b1g
hit to g1ve us two runs and a
little bit of breathing room
was all the more Important.
especially against that lineup." Clark' said
Th e rally ended what h.td
been a superb outmg for
Enc Mtlton , who had
allowed on ly a pa1r of singles by Alex Cmtron 111 6 23 1nn1ngs betore Clark
stepped to the plate
Milton (4- 10) gave up f1ve
htts and had a season-ht gh
eight stnkeouts He walked
none
"He pitched gre,tt, .. second
baseman Rtch Aunli.t sa1d
"If you ask him I th1nk· he' ll
tell you he mad~ one mtstake. and that was to Tony
Clark
lett the cha ngeup
1

up "

Lance
Corm1er.
who
bailed Diamondbacks starter
Mtchael Goslmg ou t ot ,,
Jam m the 'stxth and worked
the seventh. earned the v. m
Corm1er (5-I ), Armando
Almanza. Jose Valverde and
Bnan Bruney combmed tor
3· 1-3 httless 1n111ngs to tmtsh
Bruney struck ou t the side
m the mnth lor hts IOth save

Roundup
.from Page Bl
semtfmal action.
Green 's Tyler Shockey and
Terry Sm1th htt back-to-back
home runs 111 that tifth trame
Green 's Russe ll Penmson
was 2-for-2 111cludmg a double while Ben Robmson also
doubled Jared Golden smgled twice; Jose ph Fmmcum,
Ben Saunders . and Tyler
Davts chipped 111 h1t" as well
Anthony Bond h1t a home
run and doubled to pace the
Mets offense. Teammate
Austin King doubled twtce.
Cody Mattox added a smgle.
· Mason 4, Rio Grande 2
A pair of fourth-mn111g
scores proved to be the dliference as t~etason beat R1o
Grande 4-2 111 a w111ne r\
bracket sem1tlnal
' Wilham Zuspan had a llrstmnll1 ~ home ru·n fo r the Winners - Jo&gt;h Lewi; &lt;tddcd ,,
two-run double. while · T) lcr

m 13 cha11&lt;:es.
" I was prepared to go
earl y 1f Gas got m trouble,"
Anzon.t
m.tnager
Bob
Melv1n sd ld. "That's one of
the reasons we dtdn ' t use
Lance yes te1day _ we want
ed td give hun potentially
more than one (mn1ng),
Vaherde more than one.
Really, all 1 needed was four
from Gos and keep us 111 the
game
" But 5 2-3 and no mn s? It
was tough to take .hun out."
The Reds had t.Iken the
first two ga mes ol the senes
a1ded by l.ne home run s _
Ken Gnffey l1 h11 a tying
three-run shot on Fnday and
Adam D1111n hrt a gra nd slam
Satu rd ay
Thts time. Clatk . " parttime IHsl baseman, drove hts
13th mto the left-fteld seats
Ctntron
smg led • on
M1lton's first pitch. but the
lctt-hander, who v.on at San
Francisco on Tuesday for hi s
first victory m seve n starts
stnce May 23. muck out the
nex t two h111ers and ret1red
th e next 17.
Milton nloltched h1 s previous season htgh lor stnkcouts when he got detenstve
replacement
Quinton
McCracken sw mgm g tor the
second out of the SIXth
It ·was .1 b1g out . because
C1ntron
Singled
again.
Royce Clayton. the next batter, hll .1 dnbbler along the
f1r st base line . and the
111111ng ended when he was
ca ll ed ou t tor gomg too far
outstde the !me trymg to
dodge Scan Casey's tag
Gosl111g gave up a leadolf

h1 t tn four of the fu st frve
111nmgs, but also got two
outs on groundballs tn each
frame to keep 11 scoreless
In the IIfth. Wtly Mo Pena
s1ngled and Jason LaRue
walked wtth nobody out. but
Gosling f1eld ed Milton' s
bunt and forced Pena at
th1rd. Then Troy Glaus made
an una sststed fo rce at third
after a g10under by Felipe
Lop ez, and Rt ch Aunila
popped up to ce nte1 field.
"You're not going to wtn a
lot of games If you don't htt
the ball w1th guys 111 scoring
postt1on... Reds ma11&lt;1ge r
Jerry Narron sa1d
Gosl111g. who gave up ftv e
h1ts and four walks 111 5 2-3
1n111ngs, Jell alter Joe
Randa' s two-out double and
.1 walk to Dunn Corm1er
walked Pen&lt;~ to load the
b.tses, but LaRue !lied out
" I w.t s mad at myself f01
not flntshtng that stxth
tnntng," Gosling s.ud " I
hav~
made
shouldn't
Conmer come 1n there But.
he dtd and he dtd " great
JOb ...
Notes: The Dtamondb.tck s
tu rned double pl .tys to end
the ltrsl &lt;tnd second mnmgs
Casey grounded 11110 his
m&lt;IJOI leaguc- h1gh 21st w1th
a tapper h.Ick to Gosltng.
.md Pen.t hit 1nto a 6-4-3
Casey went 0-tor-3 to end a
f1ve -game h1t1in g streak
Milton's maJor .Jeague-htgh
29 homers &lt;~ilowed are the
most by a Reds •left-h&lt;tnder
s1nce Tom Browmng gave
up 32 in 1991. RHP Jose
Acevedo gave up a teamhigh 30 la&gt;t yea1
Gosltng
and K11nberly Sandler ol
San Dtego Wil l be marri ed
He
sa1d
on Tu esday
Bra'ndon Wehh. another
member of the rotatiOn, and
lutmet Anzona ptlcilers
Andrew Good .tnd Chns
C.tpuano .tre p .~rt of the weddll1g party.

Kitchen and Jam1n Branch Grande 11 -5 111 a loser's
eal:h smglcd
bracket quarterhnal
Caleb Warn11nont and
· Auslln Smllh homered and
Cody Lucy smgled for R1o ' ingled to .tdd to the potent
Galltpohs oll enstve .llt.tck ·
Grande
Pnchers Tyler Roush and . Ja~ob Brown doubled while
Zuspan combmed on a t wu- Ctleb Crall. Cory Haner and
httter for Mason
Bryant ,Bokovnz smgled
Ty W&lt;trntmont. J D Nelson
Loser's Bracket Semifinal
Nate Matthews all had a
and
Gallipolis 5, Syracuse 3
The Galhpolts Red Sox p.1ir of singles in the R1 o
setback.
Caleb
scored twtce 111 the bottom of Grande
the fifth mnmg to break a lie Warmmont. Cody Lucy ancf
and beat Syracuse 5-3 m a B11an Wtllia.m ch1pped 111
smgles
loser's bracket sem•tlnal.
Au stm Smnh had a patr of
Syracuse 2, Pomeroy 0
doubles for Galhpohs, while
Bryant Bokovttz had the only
bch Manuel ,md Colby
other hn for the wmncrs.
Roseberr) each hll f1 fthAndrew Roseberg doubled 1111llng doubles as Svracuse
and Zach Manuel-and· Dame! scored the on ly runs of a 2-0
Jcnkms smgled for Syracuse. wm U\&lt;Cr Pomeroy, 111 a
Galhpolts pncher Tyler lo,er's bracket quarterfinal
Pearson and Syracu;c hurler
Dante! lenk1ns. Ethan
Enc Buzzard surrendered just Martin and Enc Bullard
three hill ap1ece
added stngles for Syracu'e
He.nh Dettl'lller doubled
Loser's Bracket
and 'mgled whtle Cody
Quarterfinals
Gallipolis II, Rio Grande 5 M,utox added a double lor
Drew Youn~ h.1d th ree hns Pomcn)y- Attqm Kmg &lt;tnd
tor Gqlhpohs.' " h•sh bc.n R 10 ~nthon:- Bond ho~d 'mglc,.

•

I

4

NEW YORK - ' Randy
Johnson threw h1s hands up
111
d•sgust after Jose
Hernande z's easy liner
dropped tn lor a si ngle 111 the
mth mning. It was th~
Cleveland Indians' mnth h1t
ol the afternoon and the Btg
Umt was frustrated. Notht!Jg
he tned seemed to be workmg.
Johnson struggled through
six unremarkable mnmgs, but
a Yankees ' offonse led by
Jason G1amb1 and Ruben
Sierra ptcked htm up and
unpressed the1r demandmg
boss with a 9-4 victory over
Cleveland on Sunday
''It was just a, 'Thts IS how
the day is going.' gesture,"
sa1d c,ttcher John Flaherty,
who made a smular mot1on
With h1s hands
R1dm g the elevator after
the v1ctory, Yankees owner
George Stembrenner gave a
hmt ot a smile when asked 1f
hts team ts finally hvmg up to
hts expectattons
"Yes, the way we are playmg now," he satd.
Gtambt h1t a two-run
homer, and Sierra drove m
two runs with a bases-loaded
smllle to ltft the Yankees to
thetr seventh wm m etght
games. The thtrd-place
Yankees moved wuhm 2 1/2
games of AL East-leadmg
Boston _ the closest they 've
been to first smce Apnl 15,
when they were 4-6.
The Yankees 1mproved to a
season-htgh six games over
500 for the th1rd time behmd
Gtambi's lOth homer of the
season _ fifth in six games _
Gary Sheffield's late threerun homer, and Cleveland
starter Jake Westbrook' s
wtldness
"It was unportant _ after
losmg yesterday to come
back and wm ," manager Joe
Torre s;ud "Th1s IS somethmg v.e have not been able
to do"

The ' teams retum from the
All·S.tar break w1th lour
games agamst thetr respecttve dtvtston leaders, begmmng Thursday. The lndtan s
host the AL Central-lcadmg
Ch1cago White Sox , and the
Yankees head to Fenway
Pat k to play the Red Sox.
"This IS what we want."
Sheffteld smd "The way
w~ ' re playmg nght now, you
want to play the lirst-placc
team and take bd&lt;.:k the dtlilsJon ,.

Manana Rivera earned hts
tirst two-innmg save stnce
July II. 2003. at Toronto. It
was hiS 20th slratght save
atier blowing Ius first two
chances thiS year.
Wtth New York trmhng 2- 1
in the fourth. Gmmb1 homered deep mto the bleachers m
nght-center on Westbrook's
lirsl p1tch after Hideki MatsUI
reached on shmtstop Jhonny
Peralta\ tleldmg errm
Stembrenner was happy
w11h Gtambt 's turnaround
the fi rst baseman 1aised hiS
average to 278 atier battmg
JUSt 195 111 mtd -May _ but
1ssued a challenge
"He JUSt h.t~ to keep it

Lance
from Page Bl
'

R1vals said Discovery 's
blowout p!Ob.tbly was nothmg more than a temporary
bout of fat1gue after a fa st
lust week of racing. and
Annstrune remams the man
to beat 1
"Don't sell the bear's skm
before you've k11led the
bear:· Moreau smd.
"That
won't
happen
agatn," U.S. 11der Bobby
Ju!tch of Team CSC satu.
"You can maybe dtsappomt
Ltnce once. but 1t's better
not to disappomt him
tWICe

Di &gt;ro~e ry

Monday, July 11, 2005

Monday, July u , 2005

www.mydailyst;ntinel.com

rode hard
Sunday at the fro nt of the
mam . pack. strategtcall y
allowin,g Rasm ussen and
then V01°t and Moreau to
pedal off ahead. confide nt
they
cannQt ·challenge
Armstrong for the overall
T.our tllle
Armstrong
teammate
George Hmcapie. the only .
Dtscoven racer to have ndden with- t~e Amencan for
all of hi; stX ToUI win&gt;. satd
the squ.td has become a VIL11111 Of lis 0"11 'UCCCS&gt;
When 11 ~&gt;ms e1enh ltkc

Rasmussen won a stage
t.or the tlrst tune By bemg
f1rst over the day's SIX
as.ents. he also accumulaied
point&gt; lor the Tour's mountain -climbing compettlton
That conte't awards a polka
dot Jersey to the nder with
pomts. cun ently
most
Rasmussen
1
••(( , the only thtng I'm
good at, cltmbmg moun t.uns." Rasmussen said
.;\mong
the
ascents
Sunday - and "the hardest
of the race so far - was the
famed Bailon d'Ahace. first
t lnnbed on the Tqur 100
years ago. Rene Po111er
ascended first that day 111
!905. but later dropped out
of the race v.ith tendtmlts .
The Frenchman won the .
Tovr the next year.
Fm~ nders dropped out·
Sunday. including American
Dav1d Zabriskie of Team
CSC Zabriskie won the yel·
low jersey on the Tour 's tlrst
day but lost 11 to Arm strong
three days later when he fell
111 the team tune trial.
Zabnsk1e had struggled wtth
injurie, p1cked up ,tn the
crash.
·· It's been q real rollercoaster lor t;e.'' Zabriskie
&gt;a td

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

m:r bune - Sentinel - Register

Mason
County
Motocross

going," Stembrenner said.
July 8, 2008
The Indians lied it in the
Total entrln: 1':2
fifth on Travis Hafner's oneout sacntlee fly after Johnson
Unllmlltd AB
1 No 120 Doug Ftlnnet
allowed singles to Aaron
N~ 601
Dustin Blars
Boone ,md Grady Sizemore 32 No
633 James Romine
leading off.
In the bottom halt, the
Unlimited CD
Ba&lt;lkes
Yankees scored three t1mes 1 No 23 Michael
2 No 622 Steve Merry
with two outs. After retinng 3 No 359 Corey Ward
the ftrst two bailers,
Super Mini
Westbrook (6·11) walked
Joe Stewart
1 No 19
Sheffield
and
Alex
Greg Weed
2 No 7
Rodriguez. Matsui followed
3 No 174 Tyler Ward
wtth an RBI double, and
B
G1amb1 was walked mtenDustin 81ars
1 No 601
ttonally to load the bases.
2 No 633 James Romine
Sterra, a swttch-httter bat- 3 No 3
Dou9 011l
tmg left-handed, lined a 2-2
250C
pitch to the opposite tield to
Jameson Johnson
1 No 1
drive m two runs and make 11 2 No 23 M•cheal Backes
Cl'1ad Folmen
6-3.
I ~ No 19
"In the fifth innm ~ I set 11
Beginner 100 and Under
up for them again wah those 1 No. 14 Jeremiah Hollman
back·to-back
walks," 2 No 7
Greg Weed
3
No
07
B J Robinson
Westbrook said "I wasn't
very good m certam sttuaD
ttons and l basically lost the
1 No 903 Josh Sm1th
game If I cut down the 2 No 11 Rob Bryant
walks. the game's a lot d!lfcr- 3 No 999 B1lly Bennett
ent. You detimtely can't get
125C
the JOb done walkmg live
I No 622 Sle\le Merry
2 l-10 359 Corey Ward
guys"
Anthony Heaton
3 No 2
Hafner's th1rd RBI of the
game, a one-out smgle in the .
80 Jr
1 No 120 Zakkary Heaton
seventh off Wayne Frankhn
made tt 6-4. Sbeffield h1t hi s 2 No. 157 PI'1JIIIp Ma;lone
17th of the season off Bob
80 Sr
1 No 3
Garren Dye
Howry tn the etghth to close
2 No 14
Jerem1ah Hoffman
out the sconng.
3 No 033 Tyler Ward
Johnson allowed the leadoff batter to reach base m
Quad Schoolboy
N1ck Bare
1 No.4
each of the first five mnmgs.
Bryant Miller
27
But he used seven stnkeouts, 32 No
No 624 Bryan F1elds
two mce plays from third
Powder Puff {4 wheeler) •
baseman Rodnguez and a
9
Jess•cn Hollman
patr of runne~s caught steal- 21 No
No. 4
Ashley Vanmeter
mg by catcher Flaherty to 3 No 62 L~cey Shaulis
hmit the Indtans
50 Sr
In the first and third mmngs
1 No 300 Max Ward
with the mfield playmg m,
2 No 16
Brett Halslop
Rodnguez snared hard-hit, 3 No.2
Anthony Roe II
one-out grounders by Vtctor
50 Jr
Martmez to hold the runner at
1 No. 14
Bren H1vely
thtrd.
2 No 11
Samantha Moore
Flaherty batled Johnson out
50 PW
m the fourth. W1th runners on 1 No 7
Malt R1chardson
ftrst and second With mone 2 No. 194 Nick Taylor
out, Flaherty threw out 3 No 5X Jason Wamsley
Hernandez at thtrd after
Quad C
Peralta slruck out. Flaherty,
1 No 00
Joey Vales
who has become Johnson's 2 No 12- Michael Roush
3 No 5
Josh Shaulis
personal catcher. then threw
out Ronme Bel hard trymg to
Mini Trail with Clutch
swtpe second to end the
1 No 11X Jonathan Hoffman
mmng.
2 No 1
B J Robmson
3
No
85
Ryan H~!sson
Johnson was done alier stx
mnmgs. havmg thrown I09
Mini Trail without Clutch
pitches He allowed three
1 No 5
Adam Moore
runs and nme htts , and struck 2 No ?X Kalleb Sheets
3 No 34
D1llon Moore
out etght wh1le walkmg one
"I gave up a lot ol h1ts. but
60 Jr
not a lot ol runs," Johnson 1 No 03 Dalton Call
sa1d "They're a real aggre£Quad 350 and Under
stve team, a lot like Tex&lt;ts but
1 No 33
Josh Balm
w1th a little less power 1kmd 2 No 92 1 Brandon Sllupe
of kept the damage 10 a mint- 3 No 12 Jam1e Roush
mum"
Mini Quad (70, 80 and 90)
Rook1e Melky Cabrera had
I No 523
Brady Russell
trouble with another ball h1t 2 No 8 Brandon Russell
to str:ughtaway center tield _
Quad Mini so s
he misplayed two Saturday _ 1 No 39 1 Seth Fhnner
and 11 led to Cleveland's first 2 No 11 Jona1han Frye
n111 One out after S1zemore ~ No 5 Makayla Rose
doubled on the game's first
Quad Money
pttch, Hafner htt a !mer to 1 No 391 Doug Flinner
center that Cabrera got a late 2 No 77 Danny Danko
jump on The ball nicked off 3 No 421 Jeremy Cra1g
his outstretched glove and
QuadS
NICk Bare
tolled toward the wall as 1 No 4
2 No 11
OJ Johnson
Sizemore scmed.
3 No. 34
Ayan Roush
'Boone doubled m a run m
the second. In the bottom Next race· July 30, 2005 (Saturday,
half. Flaherty had a sacntice Race begins at 6.00pm
ups at 3·30pm
lly w1th the bases loaded to Sign
~racl1ce begins at 4•30pm
bring the Yankees to 2- 1.
the team ttme tnal. wh1ch 11
did agam thts year, "nobody
even says congratulauon~s
any more:· he satd.
Hmcaptc sa1d the only
news ts 1f the team has a bad
day.
··Then everybody loves
that." he smd.
,
··The Important thmg is
JUSt put tl behmd us:· he
added "By tune we get to
the Alps hopelully we'll be
back to normal "
Beyond the Alps come the
Pyren'tles. followed by a
' lime Ina! on the next-to-last
day ot the Tour - an event
at which Armstrong excels
In short. he has plenty ol
opportumttes to retake the
ye II ow Jersey.
Votgt of 'ream CSC does
not expect to keep the lead
"Today · was my very last
c hanc~ , to take the jersey."
he sa1d
Moreau •s second overall.
1·50 behmd Y01gt. Becau&gt;e
they fimshed together 1n a
group. the till)e' difference'
between Annstrong and hiS
mam n vals - Jan Ullnch.
Ivan Basso and Alexandre
rema1ned
Vmokourov unchaneed
Ulln ch finished 29th.
YIITokourov was 35th and
Ba»o 39th.

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Personals . .. .. .. .. ··~ .......................... 005
Pels for Sale . . ... .
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Professional Services.. . .. .. ................. 2~0
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Real Estate Wanted . .. ............ :.............. 360
Schools Instruction ............................ 150
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Sporting Goods . - .............................. 520
suv·s for Sale . .. .. .. ..........................720
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~ 32 1

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t740)367·0000
Bnck 3 tedrcom 1 1 12
baln 11 \nng room Qteat
room eat 1n l\1tchef' 2 11rf.'
place~ &amp; gat age plus s~eeC'
barn pastur e garaen soot
5550 ::~Ius ..Jtllitles Cal
(7031451 2591
EII1C1er1 28R Rei Dep N0
Pels Conven • e~'tiV tocatea

197-1 12x60 2 BR needs (304 1675 5162
moved has sk11t1ng and ~_:__:_::__:.::__ _ _
front porch 5840 !9 371 32 2 lmmacula 'e cabrn cottage
180 on 40 ac res ot woojs
10
H(Y.\U1'1
1719
CA
Sl!l ri'Q
rOCIT'
S400
mo'llll
61-l
\595
i 773
1980 W mches te1 14x.7 0
81 t 800-7 98 .t686
2tlr 2ba (Melson) Sunroom 3BR 1 t 2 bath e• cell ent
Verv mce 2BR horne 1'1 tht'
New Carpet Heat Pump, cond1t10n t7 J0)446 2948
Fu'hshed Bas ement Double 1991 t41155 SunshiPe 2b• country 1 bath n•ce law n
Garage ' &amp; Storage Bu1ld1ng 2ba C A New retrlgeratot no pets Ret and dep.:;rs 1
5400 per 'TlC t7 .t0) J.l6
(304)773·5338
covered trent porch and
2801
3 bedroom Ra ncll 2 car walk up back porch Clean ii::l:-~-~~-­
n good cond1t1on Must be
\1o1m r HO\U.'.-1
garage
•n·ground pool
moved
5tl
ooo
DBO
HJk Rf.xr
590
can (740 )256·
(740 )379·2484
1962
2 bedroom mob1le hor-re 1n
3 Bedroom 1 112 ..Saths 5 Homes under StO 000
MI Odlepo ~t"
S375
plus
W1ll
del1
ve
r
(740\385
7671
Corner lot m Meadowbrook
aepos1t no lflSide pels
Roof
La mmate
Wood
740 4t 0
8 used homes under St 000 1740)992 3194
FIOonng, and Carpel are 3 Will help w1th de livery t354
"ears old .Fe0ced 1n Back
1
(7 40)385·9621
2 bearoom A C ve ry nrce
Yard and Storage Bu •ld•ng
(304 )675·7708
Great 2000 Fleetwood 2 no pets
m Galllp ahs
-------beQroom w1th lull del•very (7'40)446 2003
3br 2Da pool, garage stor
sei·Up ana central a~r Call
age
bldg
appl 1ances
2 BR A 'C storage biCig 10
Russ (740)385 24:}4
5130000 5 miles !rom 33
m•n ir om town no sp11a &amp;
on AI 581 (740)592 0426
New 3 BR Home On ly power olams ~( 74 01 44 6
8 room house m Gallipolis St89Jmo tncluCiesac dehv 42-34 (740\208 1'86 1NeMs
work
$29 500 ery and set up (7401385 Bea ut ifu l ro ver v1ew tn
(740)441 1078 or (740 }446 4367
Ka .-,auga 10ea 1tor ·1 ·2 pee·
0974
pie
N c • nets
please
SAVE SAV(·SAVE
,
Attention•
Stock moaets at olo pr ces Apptrca1 ..: c. t1e 1ng taf..el'l
Loca l company offenng "NO 2005 models arnvmg N:&gt;w Caiii740•.. .J. • 018 1
~I

\1 1 ' I \ 11

33 "'-""""""j,jlllilRioliSiilliii.I..
. _.J

150

1"20

ooo

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740446 -4367
1·800·214 0452
~ gallop::llrscareercollege com
Accntd 1!itd Memo~:~ r Accred•hng
Counol bi Independent Colleges

'"iii'"'""""':O:::::::i:'.i;"~':l
'":...---,

1;11Q
I
l\'llscEl..IA!'It'EOl 'S
1.
.
DIRECTV

FREE Home
entertamment
Syslem
FREE Equtpment and Install
up to tour rooms 145 chan·
nels $29 00 a month Ask
how to get FREE HBO
MAX and STARS "1 BOO·
523 7556 for deta1ts
-------For Sale· top so11 I w1ll toad
your pickup S20 dump trail·
er S35.00 {304 )733·5099
lBO

\\\S"IH&gt;

"'-"""""".,;,TiioliDoliii--'

art applicatiOn at 333 Page
Street Middleport Please
Georges Portable Sawm1ll
No PRone calls EOE
don't haul yoUf logs to the
---~---­
Wanted
E.:penenced M 111 1ust can304 675•1957
T•ml&gt;er cuner and dolt!T
QPerator
Please
call - - - - - - - (740)256-6983 or (740)256· Handy Man Rern o de ~ ng
Pa1n11ng 36yrs Expenence
1321
ect
(304 \675 81 78
or

(304)773-613;1

.

DOWN PAYMENT" programs f01 you to buy your
nome •nstead ot rent1ng
• 1OO"o f1nanc1ng
• Less tha n perlect cred •t
accepled
• Payment could De the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(7401367-0000
- - -- ' - - - - - In PomerGy
house
7
rooms 1 1 2 bathS garage
basement elect •nc tua1ng
deed to 3 •ots on On~ R1ver
Bank Call to· appointme nt
a"'CI •nfounatton 74 0 992·
3424 7'.S 0·992 1949 u o.

742-&gt;007
R OOI1n~

Reodyour
newspaper and learn

For sale 2 bedroom house

new heat pump se ts
acres SA 7 Eastern
School 01strtcl (740)985-

No Fee Unless We Wrn '
1 886 582 3345

3

Tt')1s newspaper Wil l nol
Mnowmgly accept
adver11aem~nts for real
estate wh1ch 1s m
Y1olat1on of the law Our
readen are hereby
mformed that all
dwalllnga adven1aed In
th1e mrwapaper are
avallabl• on an equal
opportumty bases

~~~~~~=~
. on
ment
~
3

TURNED DOWN ON

Home ch1ldcare state cert1
l1ed and pn11ate pay accept
ed Clean safe home local
ed
112 m1les ott route
on
Kmgsbury
Road
E)( cellent references ava11
able
Perfect locaiiOn for
parents who work w1th1n the
Pomeroy and Athens area
Call 740·992 9066

All real estate ad~ert lsmg
in this newspaper Is
subteet to the Federal
Fair Hou&amp;lng A.ct of 1968
which ml'lket It Illegal to
adver11ae any
prell!lfenee limitation or
d1aerlmmat1on baaed on
race color religion sex
lamll18l status or national
ongm. or any Intention to
make any such
prefaram;::e, hmttat1 on or
discrimination

No Down Payment Poss1b!e
1900 square ft house 3
bedroom 2 bath full base

SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

r

For sale R1ver1ront acreage
around 6 acres on Rt 7 1'\ICe
place tor a ne ... Mme Call
("'40)446 8595
alter
9 QOpiT'

Ch1ldcare available near
Holzer
Charola1s Lake
Estates Anyt1 me Mon-Sat
12 yrs exp $3/hr S25/day

YARD SA.I [-

behalf of maJOr Non·
Prol11 and PQiltlcal
organrzatJonsl and earn up
to $8/hour plus bonuses
We offer pa1d tra1n1ng
pa1d holidays and pa •d
vacatiOns
Full and Part ume sh1fts

10

CARE

2 young pupp1es Lab 'Chow Found Large 1emale Black
Outreach,
m1x Needs roor1 to roam Lab 1n Henderson area wl
Call (740)446 3897
choker co llar and broke
275 State Street.
leash 304 675 7966
Bag sale $4.00
3 month old k1t1ens Ia i::l
good
home
Aheady : : - - - - - - - ' Monday-Friday
wor med (740}446 9279
F9und A nng found 1n PI
9am-2pm.
Pleasant
(304 )675·541 4
5 k•lten:; 2 gra~ 1 black 2 leave message
str1ped v.ea'1ed 740 985
3813 (7 40)985 3837
LOST Set ot Keys on Key Huge yard sale next thmg to
6 Rollwe1 ler m1xed pupp1es R1ng
w1th
Blue
Se! a Flea Market 5 fam•ly July
10 1112 9 00-5 00 closed
6 weeks old (304)773 5798 (304)675·5246
13 ,14 reopen 15 16 17
7 mon 1h old m1xed Red - - - - - - - - St Rt 279 1/ 2 m11e from
SibenaP Husk)o Blue Eyed
Centerville
Shirley
very lnendly (304 )675-6581
Arrowood (740)682 7163
All llque s small cast •roll
Free GerbilS lnendly act1ve
\ ( I
stove s~Hiets Oean pots
and plavful 12 to choose
man1cans 4 sets table &amp;
from (740)379 9~45
\
cha1rs taOnc lace sew1ng
Free oupp1es
Husky1Lab
mact1me cedar mantle 8.
I '
m•x 6 weeks old 3 male &amp; 2
shelf much more
fema le Some blacl\ some
silver
and
one
!an M1ss•ng While long ha•red
Jack Russe ll Terner w1th
Cau 74G 985·3852
light brown left ear &amp; green
Free 10 good horrc 3 harness StOO
Reward
110
110
neutered
female
cats Please Aeturnll No ques· Absolute Top Dollar U S ,
HEll' W-1~TIJJ
.
HELP
1
1
(304)675 5077
11ons asked l (740 )591 0056 Silver a ll d Gold Cams
Proofsels Gold R1ngs US
..
Table 8 3 Chairs (304)458 (740)593 6824
Class A COL Dnvers
Currency ·M T S Co1n Shop
t657
OUTSIDE SALES
Wellston Area
15t
Second
Avenue
Rockspnngs
Are a
FoK
R
JtP JHSENTATIVE
Openmg
Local
Immediate
To good home kittens 7
G II ol 740 446 2842
Terner Wh1te wlblack, head
Hauling
weeks 2 Cahco I black/
I \11'1 0\ HI \1
black spoVnght s1de 7 40
The
Gall•polis
Da1ly
wh11 e 1 black (7401446
...,11nH 1 ...,
949·262 1
Tnbune
IS
accept1ng
If
you
ha\le
Tanker
endorse
t 909
resumes tor a full t1me
ment w1th excellent dnv1ng
110
outs1de sales representa·
record tmm1mum 2 yrs
HU.!' WANIU)
t1ve to JOin our sa les team
e)(per1ence dr1v1ng Sem1 s)
4x4 s For Sale .
. 725
and to manage an eslab
And l1ke Work1ng Monda,.
Announcemenl
.. 030
thru Fr1day, some Saturdays llshed account list wh•le
Ant•ques
... . .. 530
calling on new accounts
Home n1ghtly· Pa1d by the
Apartments for Rent ..
. .. . 440
The successful candidate
hour (excellent wages)
will be a diSCiplined self
Auct1on and Flea Markel ..
.. ... 080
mot1ved team player 1hat
Call 800/548 8694 or ema11
AuiQ Parts &amp; Accessoroes
.. . . 760
to
under:stands the 1mpor·
Auto Repair...
.. .. .. .. . .. no
tance
ol
developmg
Autos lor Sale
. .. .. .. . .... .... 710
strong mutually benef1·
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale.. .. ... . . .. . 750
ngra
c•al busmess relahan
i..o E~P ERIE!'&lt;CE NECESSARY
.. .. .. .. 550
Buoldmg Supplies . .
FUL L t iME CLO.SSES
arge Co w1ll be accept
sh1ps w1th our accounts
Bus1ness and Buildings. .. ... .. . ..... 340
' COl TllAINING
ng applicat ions at Ill
' m~A.NC I"!G 4VAILA6lE
Busmess Opportunity ................... . 210
The 1deal candidate wtll
Dept tor Employmen
JOB PLACEMI:oNT
Busmess Tra101ng ................................... 140
• ENAO~LII\G NOW
erv•ces 1844 Carte
have sale expenence For
Campers &amp; Motor Homes.... ..... ... ... ... . 790
venue
Ashland
confide nt ial
1nterv1ew
Campmg Equ1pmen1. ............................ 780
entucky on 7/ 121200
please send resume and
Cards of Thanks ................. ..................... 010
ALLIANCE
hrough 7114/2005 fro
cover leiter to GaU1pohs
TRACTOR TRAILER
Child/Elderly Care ... .................................... t90
ooam 11113 O&lt;JMI.!J!US
Dally Tntnme Altn Jtm
TRAINING .CENTERS
Electncai/Refngeratton ................ .......... 840
AYE 2 y6ars ....,heav
Freeland 825 Th ird Ave
WYTHEIIILLE VA
Equ1pment for Renl ..
.. .... ........... .480
abor work e)(per•enc
GallipoliS Oh~ 45631
Exc.&amp;vating .• .
. ............. 830
1
e
tarm1ng
loggmg
con
1-800-334·1203 .
Farili Equ1pment
........ 610
truct1on etc) Generou
&amp;
EMT s
ParamediCS
Farms for Rent .
... 430
needed Apply at 1354
a1ly wage and excellen
Farms for Sale .
. ....... 330
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis
enef1l package EOE
For Lease
... .. ....... 490
Assemble cratts
IFN
ar 1me epnee
a
wood 11ems
For Sale..
.. . . ... 585
the
Gallipolis
Daily
To
S480Jwk
Desktop
Publisher
needed
For Sale or Trade
.. . .. . .. 59D
Tnbune Mus! ha. e
expenence 1n Ouai'K ,press
Matenals provided
Fru11s &amp;Vegelables .
.. . ........ 580
valid dnvers
Free mrormat•on p'kg 24 hr preferred Send resume to
Furn1shed Rooms . ..
.. ...... 450
license
M1n1mum wage
80
1
428
4649
TSC8
200
Mam
St
PI
General Hauling
... .... 850
aprox 30 hrs week
Pleasant
WV
25550
Giveaway ..,_.
.. ........... 040
Stop by the Tnbune
An Excellent way to earn - - ' - - - - - - Happy Ads.. . . .. ..
,. .. .... ..........050
Otf1ce located at 825
,. money The New Avon
Full T1me Help Wanted Rt 35
Hay &amp; Grain ............... .............. ... 640
Thtrd Ave to hii..Qut an
Call Mar 11yn 3~ 882 2645
Adult Vrdeo &amp; Book Store·
Help Wanted .. .. .. ... .. ... .. ....... .. ... 11 o
Evenmg shift &amp; M1dn1ght Do
a l.cat10n
Home Improvements . ....................810
Not Call Store
Call
ATIN
WORK
AT
HOME
AN/LPN S··.Qverbfook cen·
Homes for Sale. .. . . .... .. .... .. ............ 310
(304)549·5696
Earn $450 $1 500/month
Household Goods ............................... 510
ter 1S currently acceptmg
Around you schedule!
Local truckmg company applicatiOns for LPNS and
Houses for Renl. ......................... 410
www
home-based bus•·
seek1ng Class B COL dnvers RN S
In Memoriam ... . . ... ..... . .. . ........... 020
7A 7P and 7P-7A
ness com
w1th good MVA salary pay Sh1f1s are available If you
Insurance .... .. . .................................. 130
home
weekends
good
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. ..................... 660
AVON I All Areasl To Buy or eQuipment (740}388 0855 are mterestecl please come
111 and ftll out an appliCation
Livestock . . .. ................. ...................630
Sell
Shirley Spears 304 or (740)709· 1581
al
333
Page
Street
Lost and Found . .. .. . .................... 060
675 1429
Lots &amp; Acreage . ... ... .. ...........................: .. 350
McClure s Restaurant now Middleport or call and
With
Hollie
Miscellaneous..... . .. ..........................170 •
hiring all 1cx;,at1ons, full or speak
Call lor )id'meth•ng you
Bumgarner
LPN
Stall
Mtscellaneous Merchandise .................... 540
part t1me • p1ck up appilca
believe 1n and make great
Mobile Home Repair . ... .. .... ...... .. ... 860
money do1ng 111 Call on
t1on atloca110n &amp; bnng back Development EOE

MObile Homes lor Renl. ............................ 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale..... ... .. .................320
Money lo Loan .. ..
.. . .. ............... ...... 220
Motorcycles &amp;4 Wheelers .....................740

Now you can hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Bqrders $3.00/per ad
E!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

_s,;.

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lnc:lude Complete

To Help Get
11\NOI ' NC~o\11

Oeaci/Jir~

DeeM&gt; Hardwood
f'loor and Ceram1c Ti!e
.nstetlauon
New
Cor.~struc\ 10n
~;'ole Ba 1ns
Top
Notcll
Burldti)Q
C&lt;lntractors (304 )675 3042
WV036667

Ne'o\1y Remooeleo 2 3BA t
1 2 BA HardwOOd Cerarn c
Fk&gt;Ors lull Basement 1 Ca t
anached Garage De-ck .&amp;
La rge Fenced Backyard
S8B 500 (859 )797 9806 01
(304)67S 2036

Coles
Mob1le
Homes
15266 US 50 East Athe ns
Ohro 45 70 1 (740 )592 1,972
Wnere You Gel Your
Moneys Worth
I'Wl
r ·Rl'SI'\1-~
"- '\ll Bt linN;~
Bus1ness tor sale F1vf!·
Stat1on Hanr Salon and
Merl f' Norman Cosme1 rc
Stua 10 for sal'e 1n oo..... ntown.
Gall pOI 1s . Qn •o
Price
Aeduee&lt;j to Sale A.sk r"g
or~ce rncllJCieS t"a 1r procucts
cosnet,cs haroct'!•se Ca
7.S0 )245·9294

~.::;;:~-~-.,
Lors&amp;
A CRE:\C ,t

"'-------2 ac res at hat la na Of' SR
218 13 1'1"1 n 'rcr- towrr
Pr ced S1 2 600 17401256
1854

81d..,ell a rea C1ecw 1em
e•ed 2 bed •::~om
~.tOO
montl1 1nc1uaes v.ate r &amp;
sewer Rete•ence &amp; aepos 11
l eQUIIed No oets 130415 ~6
4037
"
Mob•le Horne lot only
Md•sc'l P ~e S 125 montn
callli40 1446 3644"!01 mme
1nlo
-------Tai, 1n ~ aool cat ,:m!O lor 2
Dedroo~"'&gt; ,.,o1:1 11e ~:~orne No
pers Sr5 rncn !'l nc vd es
water S200 depcs 11 Ca
\ 740 J.S.S 6-361 i

\ 1• \ Kl""\ IE.YI'S
mRIU~T
1 ana 2 bed,aon- apa rt
rnents lt~r&lt;'l s"~ed an~ un' ur
., S"~eo
secur 1tt .Jepos •
reaur•eo r'\.0 pets i4Q.-992
22 18

I

•

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

t

www.mydailysentinel.c9m .

~ l ...t_ANI1QllF.
__;s~

bedroom
aPt.
Washer/dryer hookup. Water
paid. Nice location·, no pets
plus
deposit.
$375/mo.

2 '

(740)446·9442.
-2-be--d-ro-om--.-,--b-a-th-.-w-a-te-r

Buy

or

sell.

ADVERTISE YQUR
. BUSINESS"

•,

Riverine

Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740·

992-2526.

Russ

Moore .

bedroom
..
. lurni shed
. apt. · ·util1t1es paid, prev1ous rental
releren ce. deposit. no pets
(740)9g2. 0165
·
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !
Townhouse
jlpartments.
and/or sma ll hou'ses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
lor application &amp; informa tion.
Furnrshed upstairs. 3· rooms
&amp; .bath. Clean. ret . &amp; dep.
required. No pets. (740}446·
1519.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at V1llage
Manor · and
River s1d.e
Apartm ents in Middleport
From $295·$444 . Call 740·
992·5064 . Equal Hous1ng
Opport.unities.
Large 2 l:ledroom apt unfllf- .
nished. all uttlities pa1d SSOO
month plus depos1t No oets .
must
have
references
(740)446 -1637 or (740) 44 6·
4615 after 5pm
North 3rd. M1ddleporr
1
bedroom furn1shed apt .. previou S mntal referei1Ce. dep ...
no pets. 740-992-0165

6345
Cardtogl1de
9:11ercise
machine
$50
080.

(740)245-5934 .
Cherry Lumber.

Has been

planed. Approx . 280 bel. tt
5400 .(304)675-2246
Computer desk. $50 OBO
K1ng s1ze bed 18 months
old, rnattress &amp; bol&lt; sprin gs
included . Paid $2,000. sell
$500 080. (740)245-5689
- - --.,-----JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock Cal l Ron Evans. 1·
800-537-9528.

Tw1n Rivers Tower IS acceptillg applica ti ons lor wailing
list for Hud-subsrzed. I· br.
apa rtme nt . call 67 5-6679
EHO
Valley Apartments in Mason.
WV
currently accepting
apphcat1ons. Apply at 501
Shawnee Tra1t in_ ~oint .
Pleasant.
Apphcahonsaccepted . on Tuesdays .
HUD asSISted
(304)6754900

i

~··ACE

_

I'OR

FOO

3936 .

Hol,;EIK)IJ)

Guu;

Help Wanted

ENEilCY EffiCIENT

Home Creek Enterprises

John Deere tO tt.-·No Til Drill 2004_ Old!i IQtrlgue 4 door.
for
Rent.
Carmichae l laattler, sunroof. lactory warEquipment. (740)446·241 '2. ranty. Like new $It ,500.'
(304)645·5211 or (7 40)4_46·
John Deere Commercial 7484.
Worksite Products In Stockil
CompaCt Excavator 27C ,
· 2dr 2001 Dodge Stratus.
35D. SOD/ Skid Steers 371. like hew. Pearl white, 3.0 V6,
320.
325,
328/Tractor 42,000mlles, $8400 080
loader Sackhoe 110TLB. Call (850)543·4079.
·.
Ch(!Ck out our rental rates .
Great Financing Available· 95 Mercury Sabl9 not run·
Equipment . nrng. Purchase for $2,700
Carmtchael
(740)446-2412 .'
will sell best offer. (304)6758159
New 5003f 5005, &amp; 5020
Series John Dee re Utility Mercedes Benz 260E 88.
Tractors @ Q",~ fixod/ 36 Engine rebuilt. tOG much
mon ths. Used Util1ly Tractors new to li st. 25MPG. Nice
@
4.9% VariaDtef 60 rid&amp; . $3,950. (740)245-9142 .
months.
Carmichael
15
Equipment . (740)446-2412

2001 Custom Panzer, 2000
miles ,
$13 .800;
2003
H,u ndred Annv. Heritage ,
600 miles, $17,000; 2000
Oyna Wide Glide. 16,000

94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Classic. 10,000 miles. blue,
excellent condition. $13.500.
740 949 22 17
(
)
"
ROAI~ &amp; 1\'IOilJRI.i
~UK SALE

...__ _ _ _ _ _ __.

2001
Johnson
8HP
Outboard motor, low hours.
New John De(lre Round
$700. 1211. aluminum boat
Balers @ 1.9% Filled Rate
with older traile r, 2 trOlling
Financing for 48 Months or 1991 Ford Ranger. body fair, motors and more $425 or
New Model 457 Stan'dard ru ns lair. $750 (304)675- $1,000 for all. (740)44 6·
Round Baler Only $13.250 8714
697~
0 -----cash . Makes 4X5 Bale.
1997
Dodge
Dakota
SLT
V6.
CAMitt~R."i &amp;
Carmichael
Equipment .
AutomatiC,
2
Wheel
Drive.
L-.OMiillalon~)R~H,::olo~,;;l~l
~~
(740)446-2412
72.000 m1les (304)593- 1614
2001 Jayco Des1gner Series
Special Purchase· ~John
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel 1998 Dodge Da~ota Sport 27AKS, 5th Wheel. Lots of
Rakesl John Deere Disk truck.. 5-speed. t36.000 accessories
$21,000
Mowers. C a11 ror prrce.
.
m•·•es.
$ 4 ,000 .
Call
(304)675-2246
Carmichael
Equipment. (740)388-0578 or (740)388( 7401446 ~ 2412 _
8707.
~;;:,:;;;;.::.;;;,;,:;_ _ __, - - - - - - - - - 30FT Camper, fairly good
condition (3040675-5077
2001 Dakota Club Cab
- J•.I\"Y""w'K
r...._, , ......_.
Spor t Plu s Heavy Duty, Co leman Camping Trailer
Motor Sport Series, 2WD. 12FT. 2 King Beds ~ $4,995
k.eytess
en try, ca ll fo r Detail5 (304)6752 miniature baby Donkeys. loaded,
Make n1ce pets., (740)446· red/black. )ik.e new, 34,000 1731
080.
miles.
$12,000
7787.
(.740)446·1637 or (740)446·
A sk about our AQHA 461e after Spm.
Member Discounts on new
John Deere Equipment.
CarrTiichael
Equipment

r ·

Truck Camper. AC. TV
Antenna . wired !or Cable.
like new $6,500 (304)6753353
'

Qualily G uaranleed
ATV ~art• &amp; ACC.

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
· Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Owner

. All :t)pes or

Will's ATV
Parts
.lames.A Will Jr.

Col!crt:~e Work

.U II9 Wclshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
(7411) 992-24~2
.E mail :jwi1145769
@yah&lt;HJ.rum

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
.1m. •·rtoe .Estimates

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Advertise
in this

Let me do it for youl

~pace

liNDA'S PAINTING

for
$52 per
month

[1401 985-4180

with shulllc transmission
n:mote hydra ulk:-;,3 )'ear warranty
*,***Also a"nilahlc****
• Task Master Tractors 26 horse· JX horse.
4wd (I nnr w;trrnnh' l
• Farm J»m Tnt~tors 2U horse'· 30 horse
lnadcrs, finish mowers. tillt•rs
NlcW ARRIVAL ZTK llixnniZerol\u:n
Rudius J\.1nwcr) ~~~inch t·nttin~ width to .SO
-inch t·uttin~ width ·' ycur warnmty
T&amp;U TRACTOR Si\LFS &amp; EQUIPMENT
ri~hl in the hl'art of Cht"Stl..!IX."-1.'114

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

(740)441 -0658 or (740)7091931 .

Year on Friday, July
old. $75-temale &amp; $50-male . m1. Alter market acces·
15th al 6 pm at
740-378-66 10
series; 38+ mpg. Clean, 2003
Jeep
l1berty Syracuse Village Hall.
btacklbtack. Call (740)44t - Renegade. Loaded , 4x4,
Full blooded Jack Russell
Meeting of township
9865.
19.000 mtles . $\2.500. Ca ll
pup p1 es. 5 wks bid SIOO
Trustees will follow.
each. {7.1i0]446- 34.t 3.
1998 PlymOuth van 4 cyl. (740)256·1618 or (740)2 56· (7) 10, 1,1

burgun~y ~61'1200
::-. --.,.,.---...,

IJJO

Vt.N.-;
Public Notice·

FoR SALE

1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr.. 4 92 Dodge Caravan gopd
cyl. 76 ,000 miles , $3,000 cond . good cass &amp; radio.
new tires . call ( 30 41675 _,
OBO. Call (740)441 -0712
3394 or (304) 593 _&amp;460
999 Ford Taurus V-6
engme . &lt;iulo malic. power
., M()lURO'lUN
Wrndows &amp; door locks. Very
4 WHUl.ERS
good condition. 74, 000
m1tes . $3 .800 (740)446 - 2004 Honda Shadow 600.

!

Q425

Chromed out $3.850 080
(740}446·3993.
~00 1 Hyunda1 Sonata .. 4 cyl.
2 4 h1er. automatic. NC . P/S.
PfW. crutse, CD player. sun·
root . KBB value 7.070. ask•ng S5.500. (740)446·7029.
Excellent condition .

PUBLIC NOTICE

The
.

A

2004

.

inspection

at

library

appoint·

by

ment.

the

Charmele

Spradling, Librarian
(7) 11

Advertise
in this
space
for
$52 per
month

992-3194
or 992-6635
" Middleport's only .

Sell-Storage" .

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCnON
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete Remodeling

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

W. Muin l•onH'rn~·
IS NO\\' &lt;WEN ,\T
The ,\ lulht•n·,\·
Community ( 't· nl n
260 MuHn•rry Me.
' ·. 11omcroy

HUMAN RESOURCES DEPT.

SEARS
'
GIANT TENT SALE
Saturday, July 9th tttru.
Friday, .tuly 15, 2005

0°/o APR financing until

• Roofing &amp; Gutters

wilh your Sears card alter mail· In
rebale on any home appliance

$399 with

your Sears 'card .

0°/o financing unlil Jan.
'06 on any Tractor over $969
with your Sears card.
2200 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis,

.·

' '

• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painti ng
• Patio and Porch Decks

We do It all except
furnace work

. p-I''/ C. CJ&gt;,LLC.\) N SICK. :':&gt;0 ""l

I"'I ''/E: U~£\) UP 1&gt;--LL M.'{ ::.lC.K."'l

Mf&gt;.N'I \IMC:.~ ...

V.C. YOUNG Ill

I"'I W\~I-\ I C.OULt&gt; JU~\ CI\L;::'l
li'l &amp;li&lt;:E:I:&gt; I

t&gt;t&gt;-'&lt;S ..

992-6215 WV03fi~25
Pomeroy. Ohio·
25 Years Local Ex rience

~::&gt;--4""

i

-~"' ~

g
E

34 Close call

~orth

2 ...

Pas"
Pass

2
Pass

+

(2 wds.)

·

Wynn
38 Ow !
39 Who gives

East
Pass

- -!
41 Banking

Pass

Rocky "RJ''

Hupp
IMPORTS
Athens

· OH 7,4D-446·1546 .

13

19
21

devices
43 So long!
44 Hanging
loosely

24

45

~lf~

members
47 Toledo's
m;~j .
mlll·eonia
lake
32 Tokyo,
Journey
low scores
to shoguns 48 Hamiel or
Ophelia
Freeze over 33 Summer
51 Highesl
hrs.
(2 wds-1
degree
Cit ·s
35 Easy win
53 -annum
36 Mummy
concern
Pul on a play
locale
Bond rating 39 Rand
Zip
'
of fiction
J
Checkers
40 Tested the
weigh! ·
piece·

'

.
•

BIG NATE
r
Hi\.VttK-. A. C P\T
IN THE H OUSE lS
FREAKtt'J G 1'\E
OUT.

KNOW SHE's T t-IERE.

¥1""TC.HIN G . t1E. . &lt;~TAlk. ·
lN G

TO

1'\E ...

PFi: ~P,.,R IN C,

POUNC.E!

CAT CLI'\WS

AstroGraph
'lOur &lt;Birthda,y:

Tuesday, July 12, 2005
By Be..-nl ce B.ede Osol
Several Interesting proposals may bf'l
pre sented 'to you in tti e year ahead .

.. Ki::ADYI NG H ER~·E LF
TO Sc 1NK HER !?VI I-

IN ro

MY FLE $H ! ~

Even il o n e or two

s ound hopeful.

befo re gelling involved remember !hal
their c han ces lor success will be
CANCER (Jun e 2 I -Ju l y 22 ) ~
Alttwugh yo ur mot ives may be quite

Whaley's Auto
Parts
Sr. Rr.6R I Darwin. OH
740-~Yc-70 (:lor N0-992-55:1.1

llo&lt;H !'.0 ln•.g&lt;·

Uu·l.d

10

30 Razor
· brand
31 College

lcl 2005 by NEA, Inc. 7-9

See

n nd 4ril'l'

8
·9

44 Casino

workers

Sell-procla im ed bad-card holder s arc
deludin g themse lves - the number ol
po1nls each playe r cs dealt averages out.
The key to success at Chicago or rubberbridge is sconng up a game when you r
side has 26 po1nts. South in this deal held
great cards, but he had reason to feel
aggrieved.
South's sequence shows a balanced 2527 poirits. II is th e worst start to an auc·
tion because the responder. with .a weak
hand including a five -c ard l\1ajor, doesn't
~now whe tller to pass out three no-trump
or io trans fer into his majQr. Eric Kokish
devtsed a solution . Over two diamonds.
ttie opener re"bids two hearts. This is
either 25-plus balanced. or natural show·
ing a strong two-b id In hearts . The
respon der relays w1th two spades. then
the opener bids a forcing two no-trump
when balanced, or anything else when
two hearts was natu ral. It isn't a panacea
for all ills, but it 1s better than notlling .
Here . though , system makes no jjifference .
by
Campos
Against tllree no-trump. West led his
Celebrity Cipher cryptog~ ams are created !fomQUOI.Jioons b~ l~us peopl!. p!lst and p!&amp;senl
Eecn ener 1n tne ctpMI s1anos !ol anothm
'
·· tourth· highest spade. Hoping that West
Today·s
clue:
L
eQuals
Y
had unde rled the king a~d queen of
spades. declare r called for dummy's jack,
K S V G. J N 0 W·S U
AI
GPS
but East covered with the queen. South
" V P 5. A ,V
ducked. won the second sPade. and
attacked clubs. but East took his aca. and
0 NN~
GPS
TNUDM
UAJPG
INT
return ed h1s remain1ng spade. Although
~o r th and South had 27 points, they went
MNIS.
AG ' V
TPOG
VPS'V
minus.
· Note that if declarer calls for dummy's
spade three at trick one. East -shOuld put . . ArBUSMAKDS ."
M0 Dl ,
NI
F N Pr
if'! his nine . When dummy has one hono r,
third hand holds a higher hanoi, and
OIIAHO
VNUSIVGOA
dummy -plays low. (normally) third hand
saves his honor when he ca n 1nsert a
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The cinema has become more and mor e like the
nine or higher.
thealre. It's all maulir1g alld muttering." - Shelagh Delaney

•

Reslorkit!tj In I&lt;•

7

37 Koch and

whiskers

28 Hoop.

race
S Brush off
Unser
30 Gave 1/rslaid 6 Many

29

Wt•sl

~

Hu·IH

laudable regarding the objectiVes you
hope to achi eve today.· you mu st be
care tul Hu ll y o u don't use tactics 1t1at
woJld end up being se ll-defeating
L EO (J'uly 23-Aug . 22) Be c areful
today th at yoL.J don '! s Ay a nyrhing out
o f anger t11 a t you would nevor say
when calm And coot. If you do. you
could have grea t di fficu lty r emov ing
your loot fro m your mouth
V IR GO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)- Be I.Joth
prudent an d guarded in rn ont~y 111at ·
tors today when yuu 'ra doing bu s i ll ess with. someone n ~ w or with a per·
so_n ill whom you dod' I have cornple te
la 1th. You could easily get stung
LIBRA (Sep t. 23-0ct 23) ~ SA me as
yesterday, your pride could bA your
Achilles' heel. B e a n guard that y o u
don't treat si tuati ons as a p ersonal
a tlr o nt Wh ere o thers o nly mild ly disa gree willl you
SCO RP IO (Oct 2 4 -N ov:- 22) - Yo u're
the type o.f p erso n who usually s h ow~;
an aagernos~ to be o t assistan ce to
thoso who ask tor l1elp. yet , today you
could turn yoLJr ba ck on the very per·
son s who llt&gt;€1 d aid th e mos t.

'·

PEANUTs ·
~ERE I 60. OFF TO CAMP

See Brent or Hrian Whakv
M-Fri X .10-'i:OO
.1·...-!1'"
Sal. X:.10-Noon

TAKING ALONG ONLY THE
NECESSITIES OF LIFE.

.. RA IN 6EAR. FLA SHLI61-ll.
FIRST AID KIT COMPASS ...

AND M'( ATTORNEV ..

Sun. Clo.&lt;cd

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

S AG ITTARIUS (Nov, 23· Dec: 2 t ) Beww1:.1 o f a tenden c y on your p Art
today to ~p lit hairs over t rivial is sues .
This I S especia lly tru e when .som athing or WJ!ue is a t stake becn usc It
c ou ld n eedle ss ly ca use seriou s corH-

'

SUNSHINE CLUB

HEll LISTEIJ ·
11)'1!-115.. .
~

SCM£ BIG 5t::l£l\XE.

.LAf!,

CLAIMS 11-\EY 5LJ((£SSFULLY
(IOOtD A MQ5GVITO

SEV~Ab,AS

A MATft:Xa'

pl•cot •ons.

FACT

':~i:~~~' S©1\~~-lrt.. ~~e
lllln~

0 four
Reorronoe lett11rJ of
JCrombl!d wordi

WOlD
UMI

l.y ClAY a. PCLLA.N

~..,....,

the

be-

:low to fDi m fovr words .

I (I~YVI
I

GOCIL

.r~,
_

I

5--.N,- 1--.~-~-.A,~/
5

_

_

_

.

~

Oveflleard in tine ·at

bank:

• ' "No matter where you go, you
' . ftnd thai ·inflation - ·• • there

.r~-7-~-N-~~R-1-v-~-r-_l.-'-,'-o -~;~~:~:; ~~~h~'~::;.~g ":~:~~ .
yov

dc-v!lop

lrcm stoep No 3 below.

PR rNl NUMBERED
tFTl(RS IN SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

7 - B-

c-s

Turba n - Mu1~ps- Cam1c -Knight" iMPORTANT
As a key nole speaker"' a conege commencement a
faMous author r1used ' Today's lrcubles are caused by
people want 1ng to be more IMI'ORTANT than 111ey are .·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

C A P RI COR N ( Doc. 22- Jan 19 ) In
Drd e r to b e oflecl ive t_oday in achievIng your goats. you must be smg lemlnd od . II you &lt;;~•o a 1tempting o ne

\

lhmg w't rile yo1J r th ought s are on
something e lse, you're asking l o r faii LHe .

AQUARIU S

Available
• Free Estimates

(~an

£0-Ff'lb.

19)

Sadly. you '1e not likel y to b e an e l11 ~
cien t worker today 1f y ou rwve someone ccnstn ntly Peering ovm y our
s houl(ler. Dcn ·t g1ve anyone &lt;.: &lt;:~u se to
1t11nk you n eed co ntinuou s s u~Je r vr ­
s ion
PtScEs (Feb. 20- March 20) ~ I:Je
patfent and pl ~::t&lt;.l~A nt 1n all your t1n i'ln ·
c la l a nd cOmmercial a ltairs to rlny,

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740-742·2291

NORTHUP DODGE

740·44"6-0842 • 949·115'5
800·446·0842

Evenings

fur a ll,yuu r home

rtpair needs. roolinJ:.
siding. add-lm.\.
n.·modelin~ t•tc.,

Hours

free estimates

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

17 ~1))

992-2979

leave·messa •e

111411 mo pd

~-L.-~\__~_,~
··

boomeran g

Call B.U. Cons!.

Slzee 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'

~~~

you !Ak O l lfHSh FICtiOn Ill
llope s ol spurring things up. il co uld
proVE! to · be m o r e d etnmental thnn
_holpt ul ,
_
AR I ES ( Murc h 2 ,1-April 10) - It llliQ~ll
b e d•lhcult lobe unbia sed when dual ing w1th persons o f whom you"•e not
too land . but it will be 1n y u u1 own
in terests to do so today. Sp•te lut
acti ons
or•
y'our
behal f
w•ll

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

"'- kt_1

bOCi:IUSiol If

GARFIELD

TAURUS !Apnl 20- M ay 20 )' - Don 't
tJe in so much ot i'l hurry tol1ay to
accomphsh o~ !A s k that you take 'On
help thai co c•ld enrl up p rov1ng inof lechve Jo"s you u sually handle ea.s•ly co uld Wllld up t;oing diii1CUI1
.GEM INI { M Ry 2 1-June 201 ~ Resos t
ru shi n g 10 p1ck. up &lt;t d 1ec k lo• some one today In !lopes ol unpressnl'g lh&lt;'l l
tnUi vid u al Firs t m Ake cert ai n th a t you

ADVERTISE
.
'

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

~M I7A\/~

7·11

. July.'06 artd fre'e delivery
over

P.O. Box 105 1
New Haven, WV 26265-1051
Deadline Date: July_24, 2005

\'YOUidn 't took fnvOi ous and wasCAiul if).

High

of fertilizer got you

Now Available AI

17·17· 1 ?,

BAUM LUMBER

$265 len (While Suppy Las t)

·Mushroom Compost

Available

Scor,pion Tracto.rs

,

$35 -.1,000 lbs App10x. we ight~~~~
1~ spreader buggies available for use
A1rway pasture renovators and see,ders
available to rent.
·
Licensed agronomist on staff available for
consulting.

SHAilE

KIVERAG

35537 St. Rt. 7 North

with .&gt;Ohp

&amp;-IOhp KuhDta E ngines

BAUM LUMBER

SER\'ICE
l-'umcrn~-.

"Taking The Sti1111 Out Of
Hard ll'r)rk!"
Mid -S it.e -I Wheel Dri\•c Tractor

Ohin

St. Rt. 124 Chester '.lllS-3301
,,

J

• Elec trical So Plumbing

mul Smifi11~
FrietlflfJ Faa\ .
OPEN

25 Dark brew 41 Leafy
recess
26 Cookie·
· selling erg. 42 Florida port
43 Like some
27 Big party

1 Rural elec.
provider
2 Flight prefi-x
3 Staircase
part
4 Downhill

Luis

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Ga rages

.\mri•• ( ir;•aJ I.ow l'riC'I!.I'

DOWN

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CARPENTER
SEBVIGE

ul ION

• Affordable Rates
• References

Hill's Self
·Storage

Interested candidates are to submit resumes to:

ROYAL FLUSH.!!

• Leave a message

Help Wanted

An Equill Opportunity Employer \

nnua

IOxiOxiOx20

I

fln~nCIBI Report of the
Me1gs County Law
Library Association is
completed and
is
available for public

INDUSTRIAL WORKERS

M/F/D/V

Beech Street
Middleport, OH

97

FORSAU:

Local Area Industry seeking temporary personnel. 40 Hour work week anticipated. Rotating
. shift work required. Two Year degree preferred.
Entry level wage rate approximately $10.00 per
hour with moderate benefit package being
offered.

YEP, FURST ONE EVER, WHEN
SOI'IIEONE ELSE WUZ
.
DEALIN' !!

CONGRACH'LATE
ME, MAW, TONIGHT
I HAD MY FURST

YOUNG'S

The Parish Shop
Forrnerl~·

BARNEY

Storage

1999 Chevy Subur'ban 4x4.
good condition . loaded, new
11res
Asking
$11,000

ext. cab . PW everything. AT hold 'a Public Hearing
weeks t997 Honda Civfc t 09 ,000 $15 ,500 080. (740)446· on lhe 2006 Budget
3993

Help wanted

27

pred•cated upon th e C'iilibe r o f tile per•sons involved .

-8-lu_e_H~ck_b_e_agl_e_p-up_s_S_h_OIS 0350.

0"0 F1wed Rate up to 36
months on New John Deere
Compact Tractors &amp; 1t 0 TLB
at Carm1ct1aet EQulpm'ent ,
(740)446-2412

24

South
1\ A 2
¥ A K Q
t &lt;I Q H

t\T

bearer

engine
Earthenware
pots
Succeed
(2 wds.)
Hard wood
Panl
Fluid rock
Raised cattle
Paclno and

Big hand leads
to small result

4-\~d.

33795 Hiland Road
Pomero)', Ohio

1999 Ford Expedition, V-8,
AWD,
78,000
miles,
1985 Pontiac Trans-Am . $t5.ooo. Ca ll r740)388· ___P
__
u_b_lic
__N_o_l_ic._e___
AKC Reg . Bo::; to n Terrier 5spd, 305 H.O .. only 55,000
0578.
mates $400 each. 740-378- m11es. viper blue, t-tops,
PUBLIC NOTICE
6610
ellcellent shape. (740)446- 2001 Chevrolet 1500 Z71 SuHon Township will

EQUI'\IEI'&lt;I'

23

Openin g lead: 1\ f.i

starting al 27 ho r.lit' · 57 horse

,Jane! ,Jeffers

FAR\1

22

... A fi .1

~Quth
=~

High and Dry

Mye &lt;s T&lt;ee
Se&lt;vice

IUR SAL.E

Stratus 4 cyl. automatrc.
98 ·000 miles. S2.SOO OBO.
(740)256-J233.

J 7 '

20

Q 9 '

"' ' K Q J I 0 9

New Dealer tor Montana Tractors

10x30

,$1 .800 OBO. 98

•

K I0 J

"' 7 '

Bucket Truck

M~1n··· .-i.

.

Auros

t

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

10xl5, 10x20,

Zero Turn Z-Trak Mowers
from John Deere available at
4 9% -fi)(ed
rate
fro
Carm1chae1 Equipment with
John Qeere Credit approval.
( 740)446 - 24 1 2
www careq com

9 7 fi 4

'

windows, lintels, etc. Claude
·winters. Rio Grande. OH
Cal l 740 _245 _5121 _

AKC BaSset Hound puppies
Sho ts . wormed . parents on
premise. $300 each. AKC
reg. 2 yr pld male Basset
Hound. (740)256-6887
--,-------AKC German Shepherds.
Pups &amp; Adults .
!-Black &amp; Tan Lltt~r
1-So hd Black Litter
vet-checked &amp; shots
(304)937·2310
www.tristalek -9.com

•

Dealer : Soulh
Vulnerable : Bolh

Owner: Brian Durham
,Phone: (740) 949-4011

miles.
$1 I ,500;
2003
Hundred Annv. Road King,
Gold Key package w/$7000
extra chroine . 300 mileS.
$17 ,900 ; (740)992·6520,
740-992·2670

18

Las~

•

56 one, In Bonn l*f)*iji
57 Mesozoic ,
e.g.
58 Diffident
59 Anller

17 Racelhe

F

Wt"st
t\ K!OBli 5
• 10 ,') 2

740-667-0700 1-888-HUPP2l4

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION

(740) 992,5232
SxiO, lOxiO,

10

' 45783
Home ' Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Roll overs • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • &lt;;ancer • Accident

Tree Service

Phone

~~~

I'

4 WHEELERS

mRSALE

Block, brick. sewer pipes.

Antrqu e oak dresser w1tt1
Golden Retelver puppieS
mirror. good cond1!1011 St 75
AKC i st shot &amp; wormed
·oBo. t74DJ24S-5934.
S200.00 P.O.P 304-6753526
MollOhan Carpe t. 202 Clark
Chapel AoaLI. Porter. Ol:lio Rabbits tor sale: $2 each.
(740)446- 7444 1-877 ·830· Oft Evergreen to Hemlock
9162 Free Estimate s. Ea sy Ad. (740)446-3732.
financing . 90 days same as
I \l~ \ 1 .._, 1 1'1'1 II"'
cash . Visa/ Master Car~ .
&amp; 11 \ 1 ... 1111 t\
Drive· a- little save alot
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388 For sale.
re-cond1troned
automat1c
washers &amp; dryers. re lr rgerators .· gas and electnc
ranges. arr cond1 t1 oners and
wringer washers W1ll do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

Residential • Commercial

I..;D1~T~u~ppers Plains, OH

14 Writer
Umberto 15 Vordllune
16 No fulure

07-1! -05

J 8 3
• 9 6 5 2
A R -t 3

MarORCYO.tN

(740)245-9142

RtiiLDING
SUPPLIES

started. wormed. 10

\II IU II\ \Ill" I

Roofs

Flat or Low.Sioped ·Roof • Carports
earns · ·Porches

"'---oiiiiiii.iiiiiiiio-.,1

RE.'&lt;r

For Lease : Office or relail
spaces in very good··condi!
·li on . Downtown Gallipolis.
Appro~ 1600 sq ft each . 1
or 2 baths . Lease price
negot1aOie to encourage
new
bus1nesc.
Call
(740)446-4425 .or (740 )446 -

L--~EQt·n:,::~:;::tE;;:'Nf
;:,:._.J

Atnu;

V1deo Camera. Cannon
Elura, 70 digital video camera. uses min1 DV TapeS (' 2
mclu ded). 360X
dig1tal
zoom. ISX optical zoom ,
8MB memQry. case. manual
(740)446-2412.
Paid $915. wa nts $700
J304)675·4132 days, (304} ~ygmY
goats.
Nubian.
675 · 59t4 evenings
Barbados. sheep $35 each.

li

Dowritown Office Space· 5
room suite $650/mo; 1 room
offi ce- $22 5/mo .. 2 room
SLute $250/ mo. Security
deposit required You pay
utillhes. All spaces very nice.
Elevator. Call (7401446-3644
for apporntment

(510

Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8am,4:3Dpm. Closed
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;.
Sunday. (740)446- 7300

1110

54 S1811

7 3

•

41800 SR #7

Pomeroy•.Ohio'

FARM

North

'4 J

and Financial Services

7953 • 740·416·1

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now takmg Applicat(or'IS ·
for 2B A . 3B A &amp; 4BR ,
ApplicahOns
are
taken
Monday thru Fnday. from NEW AND USED STEEL
9:00 AM -4 PM OffiC€ is
Steel Beams . Pipe Rebar
Located at 1151 Everg reen
For
Concrete.
Angle .
Or~ve Potnt Pleasant WV
Channe
l,
Flat
Bar,
Steel
Phone No. 1s (304)675·
Grating
For
Drains,
5806. E.H.O
Drrveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
Tara
Townhouse
Apartrnent s. Ve ry Spacious.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath . Adult PoOl &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio. S)art $385/Mo
No Pets. Lease Plus
Seci,.m ty Oepos11· ReqUired,
(7 40)446-3,48 1

Rocky Hupp Insurance

·992-2', 55:
riO

bau ·

12- d'oeuvre 55. Ancient tole

1740)379-2798.
42 in Brush -hog finish
mower
5500 .
Yamaha
acousti c gUitar GH-160
$250. (740)388-9645
---,--'--~---­
8 Grave Cemetery Lot
Graham Cemetery Con~act
(304)882·2 142 or (304)882·
3228
--,-------A fund has been started 'tor
Galloway/ White Cem~tery
at Star Ban~ . Proctorville. tt
you wish to comribute call
Betty White . at (740)886-

8 Quick !Urn
Ht"Ve1'11
11 Scaloppine 52 Ambush

Alder

The .oaily semtinel

. . .
' 4... PTO 1rngatmn
pump
SOOft 4., C 1 k h
.
·
am oc ose ra1n
gun . 2 reg Angus cows .

4&amp;-tn need
of a meal
49 Unlayo rival
50 Cofleo

5 Squtohy

Phillip

Mobile Hon\1!5 • Metal

23 .

ACROSS
t Pilcheo ·

,... WlilllfllllllhiDr'

4 Ne~&lt;tel · Cup tickets , 4
Busch t•ckets. Bristol Race ,
Aug . 26-27.
4 . Ne~&lt;lel
Cup tickets

Martinsville
Oci.
Beech Street, Middleport, 2.' (740)256-1304 .

BRIDGE

ASLOW AS
$26.00 PERMONTit!

PRICES AT JACKSON Drive (304)675-5077
ESTATES , 52 Westwood - - - - - - - - -

·

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.mydailysEmtineLcom

ON THIS PAGE FOR

~~~~~~~~~
"--oii

paid. $350 monlh, 5350
secu rity
deposit
can
12FT Above-Ground-Pool,
(740)446·348 1
Lawn Mower. Weed eater.
BEAUTIFUL
APART· Aototiller, &amp; Mise F.urniture ,
MENTS
AT
BUDGET Friday &amp; Sat 202 N Park

Drive hom $344 to $442 .
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446-2566.
Equal
HOusing Opportunity

Monday, July 11, 2005
ALLEYOOP

tt1r s\n::Hson 's oyes by d o jn g so

GRIZZWELLS
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Jia:ge B6 • The Daily Sentinel

..

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

West remains undefeated
in WNBA All-Star game ·
for the experienced players,"
Swoopes said.
Alw, her 8-year-old son,
UNCASVILLE. Conn.
Jordan, who joined his mom
Shery I Swoopes made ,sure at center court immediately
the West stayed a perfect o-0 after the game Jold her in the
in the highest scoring All- · morning she would win the
Star game in WNBA history MVP - the first one fl;r
on· Saturday.
· . Swoopes. one ot the league s
.
Swoopes, the game's MVP. toundon g p\a~ers. .
scored 15 points tq lead the
M111nesota s Kat1c Sn11th
West to a 122-99 shootout added 16 pmnts. hutmg .J -otwin over the East. It was the 6 J-pointers and Los
West's largest margin of vic-. Angel~s·
Chamiqtle
tory, and the most points the Holdsdaw added _1.:1 tor the
East has scored.
West. Sacramento s YolanJa
' With II Olympians in the Griffith had a team-high \.J
game; the high score was a rcbounch.
.
Nolan led the ~ast w1 th ~()
given, bur it was the
impromptu slam-dunk con- po11lts. lnd1ana s Tan11k_a
test in the .closi ng seqmds Catch1ngs and New .. York s
. that brought the se llout Bc.:ky Hammon lu11sh~d
· crowd of 9.168 ro their feet wnh I~ points ap1ece. ·
at the Mohegan Sun Arena.
. In all. I~ players finished ·
Detroit'.s Deanna Nolan, a Ill double ligures.
6-foot guard. made a couple
Cuchings go t the East oiT
runs i.ll a Junk, soaring lo thl~ and _run111n g early wuh lhrce
basket from a wiue-open lane str;ugh l
basket&gt;, . hut
and narrowlv missing both Swoopcs and Seattle s S~1e
shots
"
Bird quickly hrought the
'·
Wesl hack. each hitt ing a)It took 6-5 Lisa Les l1e. lhe
·
w· h 1
f · h
lirst woman to. Junk in the pomtcr. 11 P enl y 0 trcs
legs on the bench to spe ll
leag ue. to final! )(._ nail it 1he1i1. the slilrters on both
down. The Los Angeles ccn- sides had no intention of
ter's one-handed slam wir.h slowi ng down the pace .
17 .seconds remaining wae
In stead, there was plent y
the final points of the game . of run -a nd-gun rhe first 20 .
It was Swoopes' l'ifth All - minurcs ;mel the West went
Star game ·and the Houston into th e break wilh a 52-43
Comets star was out to show lead. punctuareJ by a 3she still has what it rakes.
pointer from
Phoenix's
'' I wanred to represenr not Diana Taurasi with I0 sec just for the old players hut onds left.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

from Page B1

1
(

.

ving in three runs and a double.
' '
While the Apaches continued 10 score runs. Gallipolis
continued to struggle with
William Zuspan continuing to
strike out batter. sittin~ down
I0 in the six innings pitched .
Mason added three more

2005

•

Death toll rises to 52,
BJair pledges 'intense'
manhunt for London's ·
·attaCkers, A2

Earnha·rdt gets back on track with
much needed win at Chicagoland

BY DONN~ TOMMELLEO

·Ousts

Monday, July 11,

Bv MtKE HARRIS

Shuttle's retum means
new experiment work f~r
·. NASA Glenn, A6

•

ASSOClAlED PRESS

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'itl t

1'\1 ""• \td .-1 . ~

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Prese~tation short-lived, Pomeroy

SPORTS .

residents oppose halfway house

BY BETH SERGENT

• Meigs County Probate and Juvenil e
· Judge Scott Powell then expressed his
concern about the halfway hou se
POMEROY - Last night's meet- · being located neflr the Meigs Senior
ing of Pomeroy Vil'lage Council had Center and the retirement-communit y
to be moved lt1lhe second floor of the at The Maples.
Pomeroy Municip~l Building to
Powell then asked Varney if a lease
accommodate a public that appeared agreement had been signed with the
overwhelmingly against a proposed Meigs County Commission in regards
halfway house in the former Veteran's to space at Veterans Memori&lt;~ Hospital.
Memorial Hospital building.
Varney said he had not signed a lease
William Varney of Gallipolis repre- agreement with the commission.
sented Varney House , Inc . · which
Powell asked .if Varney had experirefers to itself as a "21st century ence running a hal fway house to
Halfway House.''
which Varney replied he had not.
Varney began his presentation by stat- · Varney did s~y he had been a police
ing that he' would npt go against public officer for I0 years, a military police
opinion conceniing the halfway house . . officer. for six years and had. experi''If 50 percent of you in this room are ence in social work.
against the hou se. I won' t go against
thai." Varney said to the audience.
Please see Residents. AS

• Mason sweeps Green
to win Hubbard title.
See Page 81

William Varney of •
Varney House, Inc .
spoke to a packed
house at last
night's Pomeroy
Village Council
meeting. Varney
came to speak
about a proposed
halfway house at
Veteran's •
Memorial Hospital
but left 10 minutes into the
meeting due to
the crowd's op'position to the. operation.

~-ss_E_R_G_EN_T_®-:-M_Y-,DA_r_Lv_s_EN_T_r_
N E_L_
. c_oM
__

Beth Sorgonl/plloto

School America's pastime alive in Meigs County
sale still
delayed

runs in the fourth to seal the
'}-I victory off of hits from
Wyau Zuspan and Clark . .
As the Red Sox accepted
the third place trophy in the
tournament. Mason moved
on to the rematc h against
Green where the y lost 6-2
on Saturday and have
dropped th e only 1wo' losses
of the Apa.:he season.
The ga me is slated for 6
p.m. in Syr;(l:.flse for rh e
tournament championsh ip .

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

. OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Peyton R;;ty Roush ·
• Robert Sawyers, 92
MODEL LT 1042

• 19 ~pt Kohler• Courage~

engrne
• 42" twin-blade deck
INTRODUCTORY PAYMENT
Servicea~\e hydroslalic
SALE '1,599' • transmiSSion
Visit your local retailer today!

S29/month**

MODEL SLT 1554

SJ9/month**
INTRODUCTORY PAYMENT

SALE '2,599'

INSIDE

• 27 HP' Kohler• Command•
v,Twin OHV engine
• 54" triple-blade deck
• Heavy-duty bumper

Visit your local retailer today!

RZT 50 MOWER

SJ9/month**
INTRODUCTORY PAYMENT

SALE '2,999'

• 22 HP' Briggs &amp; Stratton•
lntek engine
• 50" semi-floating deck
• Zero:turn IIIClWer
N

Visit your local retailer today!
5252 COMPACT TRACTOR ·• 25 HP' Kohler• gasoline engine

SALE

'6,999*
O.Ck sold separal~y

• Standard 3-Point H~ch
with floal position
• Hydrostatic transmission

• The White House
issued denials on Rove's
_behalf. See Page A2
• Participates in
commemorative event.
See Page A3
• New cosmetology
program offered at
Buckeye Hills.
See Page A3
• Meigs County Court
News. See Page A3
• Jail donations continue.
-See Page A3
:. For the record.
See Page AS
• Local briefs.
·See Page A5
• New company expected
to create more than 100
jobs. See Page A6

Special Financing Available - Visit your local retailer today.

·WEATHER
Whether you're buying your first riding mower or your third, our Series 1000 tractors give you the most '
tractor for your money. Start with a premium Kohler• engine and cruise controL Add a rugged cast-iron front
axle _and a five-year limited warranty.••• Finish with the best lawn in the neighborhood.

'www .cubcadet.com

'·B EST FINANCING OF THE
YEAR!' ·.
.

.

Detalto on Page A6

ALLPOWER EQUIPI\IIENT ·
8880 UNITED LANE
'
ATHENS,
45701
. .OH
.
(740) 593-3279 / {800) 710-1-917 (TOLL FREE)

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER, OH 43130
(740) 653-2827 I (BOO) 710- 1921 -~TOLL FREE)

INDEX
2 SECTIONS - 12 'PAGES

Caie"ndars

A3

classifieds
' Prod,rt l"r"~
~. h,at ~•• 0' ' • · ~· ~ '"' ~; ·•~•'~' .,, : &lt;'dl ""' '•·~·. •·~ ~,,, •••· 1- ""'' 1 "~ ~ .-~.,~•&lt; "~, ~· .~., ~~·~ &amp;' ' " •f 't'' ~· •l'"•' '"o 1 ~ro lh ,;,.,.,N ~·i•l!tl~•'Y
'' 5L'IIIrRODl.o". I~V I ;wt,~u,r ''•I&lt; c4 t.IC14T•''• M '·· 'M· • 'iUJ .llj-~!_l (Jr.~-, ·04'&gt;1'~ -.1 "'•~ u&lt;ll•' IC11 Jl ·:-'- C" l ""'~' • ••~·I dtJ .,,, .~1 Oll•r ,, ,,,t. ~~ 11c ,, ~~&lt;1 ""P"'""' tl) C•( Mon ;yoEiaul Applo•~ 10 ptM~Htl ()I 5~00 ~~
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THE SCIENCE OF COMMON SENSE. ·

83-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As
B Section

Sports

A6

Weather

© 2005 Ohin Valley Publishing Co.
'•

'

MIDDLEPORT
- Bid
packets for the sale of the
Middleport High School
building are still not ready
for distribution . to pQtential
buyers.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
told members of Middleport ·
Village Council Monday
· evening the packets are in
the hands of Solicitor
Raberta Hill , and may be
ready prior to the next meeting. At the June 27 meeting,
lannare\li said cou ncil
should expect to act on commencing the sa le at last
night's meeting .
The sa le has been delayed
for month s while a title
search of the property and
properties surrounding it is
completed and bid packets
are pre pared.
Zoning changes will also
be required before a sale is
completed,
and
those .
'
J
changes will necessitate a
public hearing.
lannurelli
di st'ributed
copies of the retail und mar,
ket-based survey of downtown Middleport recently
BY BETH SERGENT
completed by the Institute for BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Local Government and Rural
Developrn~nt
which was
POMEROY
Ohio
released last month.
Chautauqua officially kicks
The study is one step in a off in Meigs County today
dowmown revitalization pro- with free activities at Chester
ject a group ·of merchants and Common s and free workresidents hope to continu e shops in Pomeroy focused on
with using state -and federal "The Roaring Twenties." .
·
grants.
Today's workshops 1n
Fiscal Officer Susan Pomeroy deal with the 'lives of
Baker sa!d the leadersh ip Zora Neale Hurston and
committee will seek council Langtson Hughes. famous
support of the rev itali 7.ation writers 1 of the 1920's Harlem
program at cou nci l's next Renaissiti1ce: the other workmeeting, after they hav e _shop deals with America's
revi ewed the study.
great·ball parks and ballllelds.
lannarelli
commended
"Zora &amp; Langston: Cluluren
organizers of the July 4 of the Renaissance.' ' by
pool party at the Middleport Chautauqua ·
performer
Pool
and
Geneeral Dorothy Mains Prince will .
Hartinger Park ·al)d village begin at I0:45, a.m. this· mornemployees who worked to ing at the Meigs Senior Center.
prepare ihe pool ·for the
The program wi II focus on
party. She said the even't the two most prominent writwas success ful and will be ers to emerge frum the 1920's
expanded next year.
and the movement known as
In other business:
the Harlem Renais~ ance . •
Village
Administratqr
·Bradford Anderson discussed Please see Workshops. AS
a right·of-way contract with
Norfolk-SC!uthern Railway
for water lines under
Norfolk-Southern tracks in
the vi II age.' The agreement
requires a one-time fee of
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
$8.100 to the vi llage, rather HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL
.COM
.
than an annual fee . Counci l
approved the agreement.
PORTLAND - The ofliStephen Houchins . prcsi· , cia! wreath-laying ceremony
dent of .;ouncil and finan}:e to. honor the participant\· at
committee chairman, re conv the Battle of Bullington
mended that police officers Island - Ohio's only Civi l
file reports with co uncil ·War battle -· will he held at

·

Both Sorgent/photoo

Although much has changed in the world and in Meigs
County, baseball has remained the same. Fans still bring
their lawn chairs to the ball field to cheer on little league
teams like those that play in Syracuse. Rutland Reds catcher Charlie Barrett looks on while -Reds teammate and pitch·
er Tyson Morri s is on deck in a game aga inst Rio Grande at
Syracuse. Austin Pierce of the · ~eds watches the action
from th~ dugout, waiting for his chance to lake the field and
be part of the Reds receni 6-game winning streak.
'

Chautauqua workshops on Harlem Renaissance ·Meigs included
in Sbawnee
and baseball today, Henry Fotd tomorrow
tribe lawsuit

-

.

OHIO CHAUTAUQUA·2005
1

•

"'·•

-~

,,/f);::'i·,

'IHJ#;:f/GHI(M/.
.
. f~U
.

-'

I

.

. Submitted photo

The Ohio Humanities' Ohio Chautauqhla begins in Meigs
County tod ay with activities at Chester Commons and workshops 111 Pom ~ roy. All events are free
.

.

Wreath-biying taking place at Portland pat:k Saturday
Cerem(Jny marks anniversary of Battle qf Buffington Island
at the battle park located
:lion~ Sw rc Rome 124 ar
PortEmd.
Mike Lawson. lieutenant
commander of the Ohio
Division Sons of Confcdcm tc
Veterans of·Columbu ' will be
.the featured .speaker at the
c.:mnnH:morative event which
II :10 a.m.. Saturday. Ju.ly 16. in the past 11l!s attrac·t.ed par-

.

Please see School, As-

•

ticipati&lt;ln fr(ml uwr 20 organization ~ ;1r~1und Ohio .

For · the " fir st time . the
nationirl president of the
Wnman· s Reiief Corps. aux II iary h&gt; t11~ GranJ Anll): of tl,lc
Republic . wiiH&gt;c attq1Jing . A
special mention will he made
.

.PleiSe see Portland.

AS

BY BRt~N J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY
Meigs
Cou nt y Commissioners are
among 36 boards of county
commi:&gt;sioners named in a
lawsu it filed last week by the
Eastern Shawnee Tribe of
Oklahoma.
demanding
restoration of property rights.
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport. president.. of the
Meig s County board , was
served with ;i complaint and
request for W&lt;liver of servi~e
in the case. liled in federal
coun fasl week . The suit seeks
declaratory relief and money
damages and rel'lamation of
the tribe's rights to lands it
alleges are wrongfully held by
rhe state . .16 Ohio counties
and priva te landowners .
.
The tribe ~ !aims title to
92.800 acres of former
Sl1awnec re&gt;ervatit&gt;n land's in
Ohio and - II. J 15 square
miles nf Ohio land subject to
the tribe's hunting. gathering
and fishi11g rights. Meigs ·
'County .lands - all in the .
~e,tern end of the county are incluJed in !hose hunt,
in g.. g:ll herin g "and fishing
areas . In making its claim,
the lrihc uses term s. in the
179.'i • Trea ry of Greenville
and other treatie s signed both
hcforc· and after Ohio ·
became :r state in I ~03.
Tl1c 17Y5 treaty ret·ognized
11\dian ownership of certain

Please see Lawsuit, AS

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