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•

Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

0

Wednesday, June 9,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Indians' Notebook

Stanford plays waiting game ·
CLEVELAND (AP)- Ja,on Stanford
has no idea when he might be able to
pick up a baseball. let alone pitch again
for th e Cleveland Indian,.
··t don ' t know and I don't a,k." '"id
the rooki e left-handcr. who · ha&gt; been
&gt;idelined 'ince April 16 "ith a 'trained
forearm.
The wait is more painfu l than the
injury for the ~7-year-old who final!~
claimed a ~ pol in the ... tarting rot ~l tion
this season.
"'There's ·not a thing I can dn ;th&lt;&gt;Ul it .".
Stanford said. "Sure. that i' fru,tratin g. I
want to pi tch. But until the dnctms gi1e
me the go ahead. all I c·an dn t' wmc to
the ballpar~ . ·lift wei ghts and w;rtch
games.'"

Stanford pitched well in hi, 1\ltil tin)
all owing ~mly one run in II
(0.82 ERA) before ev..pcrictlL·ing
discomfort whik wanning Ltp fl&gt;r the
~ i xth inning of a !:!ame- again~! Kan-..a :-.
CityonApri115. "
'
"It"s :n an area of the foreann whc·rc
there isn 't &lt;Ill) thing yuu can do to help 11
except resr:· St;mfnrd said. ·· But I c·an
tell how mucl1 11 ha' imprmed ...
He can tell hc•causc 'hortlv after the
injury. he felt pain just lifting a glass llf
star t ~.
inning~

water.
'T m lifting \Veighls now and ha\ e no
pain. so that\ good." he said. "When I

· can pitch again. who k11ows·• I'll j t"t
have to wail and let the do,·tors te ll me ."

Over his last four outings at Buffalo,
• PITCHER PERFECT: The Indian,
completed the second day of the annual Tadano went 1-0 with a 1.06 ERA. The
amateur draft by taking more pitchers . 2~-ycar-old pitched in three games for
Cleveland made 50 pi&lt;.:k' overall and .&gt; I Cleveland after being called up to the
of them were pitchers. including first- maj9rs for the tlrst time April 24. He had
round ~ekction Jen:mv Sower" of no record with a 9.64 ERA over .t 2-3
innin~s and was sent back to Buffalo on
VanJerbi it.
.
"The draft was lopsided with pitchers. M;ty li.
Wedge said Dawley's . injury was not
hut we expected that." said John
Mirabelli, th~ lm.Jian~ · a~~oi!-.tant ~t·ncr;.ll serious. but woufd keep him frQm makmanaQ~r in char~e of ~coutin!..!. .. :--1 think ing his scheduled start Saturday against
e,·cry. . . tc~un i~ afway~ lookini for more Cincin nati . He did not name a starter, but
said veteran RHP Scott Elarton and
pit&lt;.: hing."
Among Ck1danJ·, later pi&lt;.:ks were rookie RHP Kyle Denney were candithe younger hmthers of twn players who dates to be called up then fmm Buffalo.
Elart011, who was released by
" ·,·re llrst-round picks by the Ind ian' a
Colonu.lu last month. pitched a four-hit
r~w year~ i.lf!,l.
Outllclder J'"on Denham wa, take~ in shutout Monday night for Buffalo.
• VETERANS ON THE MEND:
the 13th rnund . He is the I X- year-old
brother of ridH-hander Dan Denham. We.dge was pleased with the work of
11·h,1 "a' sck:·rcd with the 17th owm\1 RHP Je\f o·Amico in a three-innin~
simulated ga me and RHP 'soh Wi&lt;.:kman
pick in elK) I .
Ri~ht-hanJci Carlt on Smith. also 18. in a bttllpell workout.
"D'Amico said he felt good. but we'll
is th~· brother of third ba,eman Corey
Smith. who 11 as taken with the 26th pick wait until tomorrow and see how he feels
then," Wedge said of the right-hander,
of the first round in ~IK)().
• WELCOME BACK: Right-hander who has been on the disabled list since
Katuhito Tadano was recalled from May II with a strained lower back .
Wickman. the team "s closer who has
Tripk-A Buffalo when RHP Jne Dawley
been
sidelined since mid-March with a
was put on the 15-day disabled list
strained right elbow. also threw well,
Tuc,dav with a strained right elbow.
"We 'can '"" him in 1tli1g or middle Wedge said.
'"It was a good day for him." Wedge
n:licf. \VI1ich gives us sume versatilitV."
mana~er Eric \Ved~e said. "We want.to said. '"He threw pain-free. That is very
g,·t a·rlother look at 'Kaz ."
good."

Turns out that was just what
once so errat k he was :-o.een as
more ,,fa problem than a solu - th e Li ghtning needed to take
tion. thinks h.: knows what did on the never-take-a-shirt-off
Flames. who eliminated three
it: Dnin~ nothi·ng .
TAMPA . Fla. - For the last
Rather than ctfsmantlin~ the division champiuns and were
I0 -vears. there wa' no room team whe n they tlx&gt;k •ove(. within one goal in Game 6 of
for the little guys ill the Feaster and Tnn(&gt;rella made a taking out another.
Stanley Cup finals.
Now, the Flames must live
few ll1ll\'e~. such a.-. ac4uiri ng
The list of c:hampinns was a Rmlan Fedotenko in a much- with the unpleasant memory
trade
with of not winning the Cup even
familiar mix of big-budget and crlticiLed
top-talent teams : Detroit (tl1ree Philadelphia.
when it was a few feet from
times). New Jcrsev (three
them
in their ow11 building.
times). Colorado "( twice) . · Mostly. th ey waited for
"We
were literally one shot
lav_
ers
suc
h
as
Martin
St.
Dallas and the New York P
Louis. Vinc'ent· Lecavalier, away, one second away from
Rangers.
Fedotenko. Pavel Kubina. winning the Stanley Cup,"
There were plenty of stars Khabibulin and Brad Richards said Jarome lginla, the best
and . familiar sti&gt;ry lines. but 10 gain confidence and grow player in the series for Jive
not much unpredictahility. Can comfortable with unc another. games but a non-factor in the
the Devils win &lt;i~ain with the ir
trap·&gt; Is this Scotty Bowman·,
When they all arrived about llnal two.
What \ different now is the
Just Cup' Is Patrick Roy the tile same lime. the Lightning
Lightning's
reign may last
best goalie ever'' Brett Hull. Jtd, 100 ·
. ,
St. Louis was the re gular- more than one season if the
are you here agam'.
season scoring champion- aild anti cipated labor impasse
The newly minted champion wo n the pivotal
'
'Gan)e ·6 in shuts down the NHL for the
Tampa Bay Lightning changed
all that. and in an interesting Calgary with an overtime entire ' 2004-05 season. The
. ._ goal. Lecavalier made a dal- current contract expires Sept.
bit of liming. did so just '" the ~
.
other small- and miJmarket zling pass th at led to the sec- 15 .
the
llnals,
commisBefore
teams head into the NHL\ ond of Fedotenko's two goals
labor talks looking for a much jn Game 7. Richards. sioner Gary Bettman warned
better deal.
'Lecavalier's teammate since that medium- or small-market
Under general manager Jay they were 1~. won the Conn teams could compete only
· St til ree year' Smythe Award as the play'offs infrequently for the Cup
Feast
, .. er. JU
because they could not ecoremoved from running a MVP.
minor league team in Hershey.
" I think the most important nomically sustain themselves
Pa..
and
coach
John thing was that the core of the once they did.
Unless the new labor deal
Tortorella. who was passed players stayed the same," said
change
s that, the Lightning
over by bigger franchises. the Khabibulin. who finally lived
up to his nickname of the t\tay be ready to test
Lightning developed a plan to Bulin Wall with five playoff £lettman ·s theory.
compete and stayed with it.
The only surpri se was how shutouts. "A lot of the guys · The.ir $34 million payroll
fast it all came together. just a matured and became very nmked close to the league's
good players."'
·
bottom third until they picked
year after the Lig I1tt1ing won a playoff series for the first
The Lightning overeame a up Darryl Sydor's $3.5 miltime.
midseason slump In wi n the lion salary late in the season.
Eastern Conference rcnular- · Nnw. Lecavalier's salary is
"I' still can ' t figure it out.
e
h
· kl · h
·
season d~&lt;~m pion s hip , then due to go up $ 1.7 million and
11
appenctl lor quick ly
elim inated
the the team must decide whether
ow qutc Y
uS:' Tortorella said after a Islanders and Canad icn s Ill pick up Khabibulin 's $6.5
Cup-clinching 2- 1 victnry
over Calgary in Game 7 ·before the Flyers tnok them to million option. St. Louis ($1.5
....
~e\en gitllle~ in a testy and million). Kub ina ($2 .5 milMonday nig ht.
Goalie Nikolai Khabibu lin. pllysically demand ing confer- lion). forward Fredrik Modin
ence fjmds.
($ 1.S5 million) and Fedotenko

Tri-County Junior Golf Tour
begins Monday in Point Pleasant
,

STAFF ' REPORT

sports@ mydai lytribune .com'
·
Tile ·rrr·-Coutlt y J Lilli()!'
II'
To
d
.
Go
ur ge 1s un erway
Mo nday at Hidden Valle v in
J
Point Pleasant , W.Va.
Youth competion will be
held in age groups for boy'
and girls separately. The
elite elders are J5 - l 7 so
long as the player docs' not
·
th
become 18 pnor 1o
c
fourth regular Ollting. Then.
a es 13-14 form the next
~oup youth 11 - 12 ate in
g
h'
· · ·
·
anot er dt vtsto n•. wtth
.
• the
.
I 0 -an d-un dcr c I&lt;hS I orm111g
the final bracket.
Each week. the first place
scorer of each division

recc ives I0 points. second
ga rners eight. third place
brings six. fourth place ge ts
four and all other partit:ipan t' receive two. After all
four regular rounds. points
are totaled to determine
· nt
· winners and/or
pl aceme
..
pl ayoll ' ituation ' for the
final round of [llay.
Schedule for the 2004 sea'"n bcg llts Mtmday at
. H1dden V;i\lcv: the scw nd
1. . f 1. . -. J
1~ .
" 11 " 0 p ~·~ 1' llltC
dl
Rt.verstclc Ill Mason. W:Va.;
and on June ~H. competltton
be &lt;~I CI1IIS1de 111
c·wrll
1a 11 .IJ'O 1.IS .
AI'
I . I •J I
ter t1e. 1ourt 1 o 1 u y
week, the ftn al re.g ular ,easn n match '· ' met tor July 12
at Ptne Hill s 111 Pomeroy.

Then th e grand finale
roundup is set for July I 9 at
Hidden Valley.
Pla yers sho uld check-i n
each day at the schedu led
site of play by 8:30a.m., pay
fee s, he placed in groups.
and he ready for tee-off at 9
a.m. Then nine holes of
competi.tion
normally
around noon . Play will
begin. rain or shine. each
Jay. Only delay or cance llation would he lightnin g or if

'($950,000) also need new
contracts.
The runner-up Flames must
·decide how much they can
add to their $35 million payroll , especially with lginla
($7.5 million) and goalie
Miikka Kiprusotf ($800,000)
needing new contracts.
Until the cqrrent labor contract expires, the Lightning
will have a few months to celebrate.
"We're going to enjoy this
for as long as we can," Dan
Boyle said.
The rest or th e NHL can
only hope the Lightning still
aren't celebrating this championship a year from now.

l).S. not taki"ng
·Grenada lightly in
World Cup qualifying
COLUMBUS - When the United States hegins
World Cup qualifying Sunday. the eig hth-ranked
Americans will play the Caribbean island nation of
Grenada: a lowly !45th.
U.S. coach Bru~e Arena isn't thinking about th e game
as mismatch.
"We're really focused on having our team prepared in
the right way to play Grenada."' he said Tuesday. "We
don't take any ot our opponents lightly. We think this
&lt;.:ertainly h;rs the potential to have a very difficult game
on Sunday."
.
In March. a well -below-full -strength U.S. tcani needed a second-half injury time goal from Danny Califf to
gain a 1- 1 tie with lowly H&lt;!iti . ranked 86th.
"It was a le sson well learned and hope fully that will
not occur on Sunday," Arena said. "G renada will come
in here with the dream uf knocking oil what they per.
ceive as a powerhouse."
The United States. which advanced to the quarterfi- .
nals of the 2002 World Cup. had a bye in the first-round ·
of the Not'th and Central American reg ion , while
Grenada beat Guyana on X-I aggregate. The winner uf
the home-and-home. total -goal serie,. which concludes
June 20 in Grenada. advances to a semifinal group likely to mclude Jamaica, El Salvador and Panama.
"We ' ve become a team to beat no\v, doing so well in
the lasr World Cup." defender Frankie Hejdul; said. " But
we' ve got to go out and prove it wasn't a flt.l\e."
Arena said Grenada boasts otTensive threats in Jason
Roberts, who scored ·eight league goals la st season for
Wigan Athletic in the English first division. and Ricky
Charles. who had ·l8 goals and 16 assists la st year for the
University of South Carolina-Spartanburg.
"We'll give our opponent the proper respect and proper preparation. and we're hopeful that we'll be off to a
good start and be successful on Sunday. knowing that
the second leg in Grenada will be difficult," Arena said .
Kasey Keller, the American starter at the 1998 World
Cup and a backup at the 1990 and ~002 tottrnaments.
will be in goal on Sund;ty. Jonny Walker of the
MetroStars is Keller' s backup.
Forward Clint Mathis and goalkeeper Brad Friedel.
who started at the World Cup two years ago. will miss
the game because of injuries. and goalkeeper Tim
Howard is being given time off following his first season with Manchester United.

Reds put Kearns on DL
CINCINNATI (AP)
Outfielder Austin Kearns
went on the 15-day disabled
li st Tuesday with a sore
thumb, the second time thi s
season that ·the Cincinnati
Red ' outfielder has been
sidelined by injury.
The Reds called up lefthander Jung Keun Bong

from Triple-A Louisville to
start against Oakland on
Tuesday.
Kearns was out of the lineup for nine consecutive
games after developing a
sore on his ri~ht thumb . He
was placed Otl the 15 -day
di sabled list retroactive to
June~ .
•

EXTRA! EXTRA!
I

Coming Friday, July 16,2004
'

•

Middleport .• Pomeroy, Ohio

.SPORTS
• Lawsuit contends
O'Brien, assistant knew of
aid to player. See Page 81

Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 16th issue.
Be sure your child; grandchild,
or relative is involved!

Tristan Roach
Son of
Charles &amp;. April Roach
Gallipolis
Thursday

must

July

be

8th,

In

by

2004.

Pictures can be picked up alter

. July 19th, 2004.

·

Complete the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized pi cture plus
a $7.00 (;harge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture, ·
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child . Enclose payment with picture.
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The Daily Sentinel

Meeting next week to address ca contamination
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY Ohio's large&gt;!
environmental · organization. Ohio
Citizen Action, will host a public
int"ormation meeting about the water
contaminant CS next week at Meigs
Hign School.
Jane Houlihan. a natiunally-know n
e~pert on pertluorooctanoic acid. 01
CS. and its effects will be the speaker at the meeting , to be held at 6 p.m.
on June 17. Houlihan is vice president
for
research
at
the

Environmental Working Group. a
organization
in
·'watc hdo g"
Washington. D.C.
The meeting is open In the public
at no wst.
The chemical C8 is used at the
DuPont
chemi&lt;.:al
plant
at
Washington.
W.Va.,
near
Parkersbtrrg, in the manufacture or
fluoropolymer products, including
Tellon. It has been detected in the
Tuppers Plains-C hester. Po meroy
and Syracuse drinking water supplies , although water system oflicials
for all three communities have main-

tamed th e ex level s in the ln,·al 'Li Jl· mer plastiL·s ... sa1ll Debra Cuchran of
pile.; are \\ell below levels JecnteJ Pagl'\ilk' . nn~ · of th~ meeting\ orgaby. DuPunt to he , .. rc.
· niter' "Tiwrc are lwndreds of thou The En1·ironmc ntal Protection
Agency ha' not ,et f1lrth a safe CX S&lt;IIH.h or produels commonly manuleve l in . pub lic wate r suppli es. A factUI\:~d U"'irlg llunropt)Jymer pJa ?-

l..' l a:-.s action .l awsuit ·nov. · p e ndin~ in
Wood Cuunty. W. V;1. a l k~cs tlwt-the
chemical. is J:.1ngerou ... to"' hurnan~ at

any level.
"The purpose of next wee k·, meeting is to provide accurate and substantiated facts on the chemicaL "
by -product or the m anufa&lt;.:turin~
process used in making flunr(&gt;pul)~

tiL' " ·..

Th(: r~ginn~t! ,CX L·onLtmination i"- .
bclie1·e d In affect appw.&gt;.inw tel\
I(JO.OOO wa ter custnmers in eight
puh!ic drink ing \\·a1er sy\tem.., in
West Vi rgmia along the Ohio Ri1·er
and in fil e cmllttie' of Southeastern
Ohio.

Construction around Meigs County

Mayor April Burke spearheaded a campa1gn to bring th1s new p1cnic
shelter to the village. Located on Main Street. thts 24 foot by 40 foot
shelter was paid for by a $9,300 grant from the Ohio Department
of Resources ana was bu1lt by volunteers fromMelgs County.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Linda Morris

LoTI ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 1-5-7
Pick 4 day: 4-6·8-7
Pick 3 night: 7-8-6
Pick 4 night: 7·8-8-9
Buckeye 5: 5·7-12-16-33
Superlotto: 1-19-21-40-43-47(39)
Kicker: 5-Q-8-7 -5-0

West Vuginia
Dally 3: 5·1-7
Dally 4: 6-8·1-4
Powerball: 1-31-33-37-50 (40)
Power Play: 2

The

Pictures

Pistons try bl shake off
Bryant's shot as series
shifts for Game 3, B8

Associated Press

'

Associated Press

A's bats hot
•
•
agamagamst
cooling Reds, Bt

BY ANITA CHANG

Staying the course led to
Lightning's surprise Stanley Cup
BY ALAN ROBINSON

\

2004

WEATHER

Detail• on Page A 7

SEcrtoNs -

Two construction projects
at opposite ends of Meigs
County are signs of the
county's changing landscape. In Pomeroy, walls
began to go up Tuesday at
the West Main Street site
of a new KFC / Long John
Silver's
combination
restaurant under constructio n by the Crow family. The
new restaurant will replace
landma'rk Crew's
the
Family Restaurant. which
will be demolished later
this summer in favor of a
parking area for the new
fast foo d restaurant. In
Meigs County 's eas.t ern
end, Wesam Construction
Co. continues work on a
new branch office for
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. in Tuppers Plains. The
new office, to be Identical
In design to the bank 's
office 111 Mason, W.Va., will
be completed later this
summer, and will replace a
building constructed by
Pomeroy National Bank in
1973.
(Bria n
J. ·
Reed /Brenda Davis)

BY J. MILES lAYTON
JI.AYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL .CO M

RUTLAND -· When the
sun comes out, picnic -.;eason
begins especially now in
Rutland which ha s a new picnic shelter.
The shelter was made possible by a $9.300 grant from
Ohi o Department of Natural
Resources (Natureworks) and
Rutland Village. Located on
Main Street m Rutland . the
24 foot by 40 foot shelter
house is open to the public on
a first come first save basis.
The shelter will he dedicated later this yea r to James
Vennari . a form er principal at
both Rutland Elementary and
High
School.
Rutland

16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

classifieds

B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Places to go

A8

Sports

B1

Weather

A7

© 2004 Ohio ValJey Publishing Co.

BY J. MILES LAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

said VemJiJri

"a~ d

Please see Shelter, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

vide a suitable · exercise
space, lloor mats and taken
· out a loan for the e~ercise
RACINE
The equipment estimated to cost
Southern Local School- approximately $270,000.
Board was flirting with the The foundation would have
idea of pursuing a $270,000 provided the grant but only
grant for e~ercise equip- if the district pledged to
ment from the National make physical exercise a
School Fiiness Foundation bigger part of the educalate last year, bu.t caution tional experience .
prevented them from mak Except for a few rubbering what could have been a ized mats, this proposal
huge inistake.
would not have cost the disIn order to have qualifed trict anything. The founda. for the grant , the·school dis- tion would have reimbursed
trict would have had to pro- the district for the $270,000

it borrowed. but onl y it the
district sent in the result'
month after month for the
e~ercise regimen . At idst
100 schools in Ohio went
for something that so unded
just a little too good to be
true.
The Southern Local
School Board did not pursue the grant because ofthe
potetitial risk of what would
happen if the foundation
defaulted on the money it
promised to the district .

Please see Wise.

AS

RUTLAND
Before
se houl opens in August . four
new well -equipped playgrounds will he in place at
the new Meigs Local
El"mentary Schon!.
A repor1 on the prog n.~..,\ of

th e $160.000 playground
developmen t proJec t was
given by William Buckky.
s11perintendcnt ' at Tue sday
night's meeting of the Me igs
Local Board of Education.
SSOE i' the ard1i1 ect and
Quandel is the ,·onstruction
manager on the project.
Buckln said that a&lt;ile rt ising for ·biLb on the playground equiptilcnt will begin
'0011. Mnne~ to pa) for the
equipment will c&lt;\ine from a
$90.000 allowatll'C fr,&gt;m the

William Buckley
Ohio
Schn11l
Facilities
Cnmmi,ion. and 570.000
frqm Ml'igs Lt&gt;c'&lt;tl. "money
,el as ide front the 'ale of con-

Please see Meigs, AS

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
-----------------------------------------------~

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"

ren:red

cuad1. teac:her and aJmini'trator for decade&gt; 11 ho was an
inspiration to many. She said
she is proud to be dedicating
the she lter to him on behalf
of the village.
·'He truly is a wonderful
man," said Burke who was a
student while Vennari was
pnncipal
at ·
Rutland
Elementary.
Burke th an ked Damcon
Shipley. ODNR and also
Ralph Bales who negotiated
with the contractor and drew
up the plans and 11 n&gt;te · the
&gt;pees. along with keep ing a
writt en log complete with

..;;ever~ co nDitions exist.

No ·advance registration is
required.
For additional infu, call
675-9739 (Hidden Valley).
or the pro shop at any participating courses .

Bur~~

Rut la nd Mayor April

Meigs Elementary getting
four new playgrounds

Board's rejeCtion of grant money, a wise decision

INDEX
2

Rutland dedicates new picnic
shelter to leading educator

•

�.. . .

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

ty can be established and
built up."
But Chirac told reporters that.
while he is "very much open to
debate and discussion" of
Bush's proposal. "I have reservations about this initiative."
" I do not believe it is
NATO's purpose to intervene
, in lm4:· Chirac saiu. He said
any NATO role could only be
justified "if the sovereign
Iraqi government were to ask
for it."
Administration officia ls
sa id they were not discouraged ·by Chirac's c·omments .
and that there seemed to be
much fle xibility to find comnHm ground between no w
and '~hen Bush attenus a
NATO summit in Istanbul.
Turk~v. at montb ·send.
Sixt~en of the 26 NATO
members· alreitdy ha ve troops
in lr&lt;14 and NATO itself provides Jogis tkal help for a
Polisb-led division there.
The Bush admini stratio n
would like to have the
alliance take on additional
duties. ; uch as training Iraqi' s
new army. It would also like
NATO to send forces. hut
recognizes that i.&gt; unlikely
given stron g German and
Frcnch opposition to sending
troops.
·There are going to be
some constraints. obviously,'·
Bush said. "A lot of NATO
countries are not in a position
to commit any more troops
- we fully understand that.
But I do think NATO ought to
stay involved."
At NATO headquarters in
Belgium.
a
Bru ssels.
spokesman said any possible
role in Iraq would depend on
requests from the Iraqi government and decisi&lt;)ns made
by. all the allied countries.
"It is impossible now to
prejudge what role the
alliance could take." NATO
spokesman Jame s Appathurai
told
Associated
Press
Televi sio n News.
Attending the summit are
the leaders of the world's
seven wealthiest democracies
- the United States. Britain,
Canada. France, Germany,
Italy and Japan - plus Russia.

The morning session dealt
with the economy, and sum mit partners congratulated
each other on strong recoveries under way in most of their
countries.
But German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder also
raised concerns about high
oil prices. He said there
should be discussion about
how to n\ake oil markets
more transparent, and said he
expected G-S energy ministers to report back in six
months with suggestions.
In addition to the Iraqi.
Bush invited to the summit
lunch the leaders of four
other Arab nation s
Al~eria. Bahrain, Yemen and
Jot~dan - and the leaders of
Afghanistan and Turkey.
Bush. the host of the summit. pushed an initiative to
promote freedom, democracy
and
economic
growth
throughout the Middle East at
large . Blll it has stined suspicion in. the region and in
Ellrope of U.S . meddling.
France is "very attentive to
the fact that reforms cannot ·
be imposed, that we must
' persuade. talk and cooperate
all while re.specting the dive'rsity of people, their histories.
cultures and the problems
that they face," Chirac said in
remarks to the G-8 session.
The Bush administration said
the summit endorsed a scaleddown version of the U.S. plan
that supports grass roots groups
working toward
reform.
Turkey. Yemen and , Italy
agreed to sponsor later this year
· the first of regular conferences
· on politind refonn.
Among other initiatives the
Bush administration hoped
would be ·approved was a
joint effort to lower the costs
to immigrants who send
money back to relative s in
developing countries.
European leaders and Bush
disagreed on the issue of linding renewable forms of energy, with Bush expressing
skepticism in the sessions that
that is fea, ible, 'aid a uiplomat who spoke on condition
of anonymity. Europeans
want to push them actively.

NEWPORT, Ind. (AP) In a cavernous, pipe-fi lled
structure known simply as
the Utility Building, Army
contractors are getting ready
to destroy a Cold War-era
concoction so lethal it could
kill untold millions.
After years of controversy,
workers will begin chemically neutralizi ng I ,269 tons of
the ultra-deadly nerve agent
VX this summer as part of a
plan to eliminate the nation's
chemical weapons stockpile.
Residents
near
the
l'llewport Chemical Depot are
ready to see the VX go. So
are activists who keep tabs
on the nation' s cache of
weapons of mass destruction.
"One dr9p the size of
George Washington's eye on·
a quarter is enough to kill a
healthy, I RO-pound . male .
It 's the most Jethul chemical
on the planet," said Craig
Williams. director of the
Chemical Weapons Working
Group. a Kentucky -based
watchdog organization.
But a dispute over what will
become of the project's wastewater could leave the rural
community about 70 miles
west of Indianapolis sn.ick
with the nerve agent's legacy.
Opposition from Dayton ,
Ohio, residents scuttled the
Army 's plan to dispose of up
to 4 million gallons of nerve
agent
wastewater.
or
hydrolysate, at a plant there.
Now, plans to truck the
waste to Deepwater, N.J. ,
for treatment and disposal at
a DuPont Co. plant are in
doubt amid opposition in
New Jersey and Delaware.
The Army plans to heat the
VX, a liquid with the consistency of mineral oil, in chemical reactors to destroy its
structure. Army officials liken
the resulting hydrolysate to
liquid drain cleaner, and say it
will contain no delectable VX
at sampling levels of 20 parts
per billion.

Thursday, June to, 2004

Although VX was never chambers. with technician'
used by the American mili - outside the reinforced glass
tary in combat. there have usin¥ thick gloves to attach a
spectal pumping device . .
been human exposures The VX will then be transbut no deaths - in the
United States. Its lethal ferred to a steel reactor
potential was demonstrated where it will be neutralized
in 1968 when an aerial by · adding. it over a 36spray ing test of VX at mi.nute penod to a mtxturc
Utah's Dugway Proving of water and sodium·hydrox Grounds went awry, killing ide heated to about 195
degrees. Two sets of paddles
about 6,000 grazing sheep.
The VX stockpile was pro- will agitate the mixture to
duced at the 7,000-acre complete the reaction.
Workers will carry a VX
Newpon complex . between
1961 and 1968 as a dooms- antidote in case of an acci. day detenent. For years after dental release .
Neutralizing all the VX.
production ended, containers
of the nerve agent sat rusting should take about 2 J/2
in a field, apparently regard- years. But where . it will go
ed by the depot's workers as from there is unclear.
DuPont wants to dump
j~st pan of the lands~ape .
.
"They used to eat lunch on treated hydrolysate into the
top of the containers," said Delaware River. But fears
Lt. Col. Joseph Marquart, that the chemical could ruin
Newport's commander. ··we decades of river cleanup Jed
don't do that anymore."
Delaware Gov. Ruth Ann
The containers now sit in Minner and New Jersey Gov.
heavily guarded concrete James McGreevey to send
bunkers built after the Sept. the Army a letter of protest.
"There's too many quesII terrorist attacks.
tions,"
said Gregory Patterson.
Since President Nixon halted the manufacture of chemi- Minner's spokesman . .
DuPont spokesman Anthony
cal weapons in 1969. about
31.000 tons of VX, sarin and Farina said the company will
mustard nerve . agent have not accept an Army contract to
been stored at Newport and handle the hydrolysate until the
seven other chemical depo(s Centers for Disease Control
in· Alabama, Arkansas. and Prevention and the
Colorado,
Kentucky, Environmental
Protection
Agency complete studies of
Maryland. Oregon and Utah.
Destruction is under way DuPont's plans. ·
.at four of the eight in comBecause of the uncertainpliance with the internation- ties, the Army intends to buy
al
Chemical
Weapons · 50 5,000-gallon tanks that
Convention treaty.
will allow it to store at
At the Newport depot , NewpPrt about 240,000 galArmy contractors will open lons of hydrolysate - the
the first of I ,690 VX-filled amount expected to be pmsteel containers late this . duced in the first six months.
summer inside a building
Sara Morgan. a teacher who
from which no air escapes lives a few miles from the
without being heavily fil- depot. is ghid the neutralizatered. Security cameras keep tion will soon begin. She Jed a
watch, and air monitoring campaign that forced the
equipment scans for trouble . Anny to drop ils original plans
Inside. workers will drain to incinerate Newpon 's VX, a
the 6 1/2-by-3-foot contain- method some feared ·could
ers in airtight glov.ebox release toxins into the air.

et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone
Very Special With A ·Father's Day
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PageA2

Bush seeks wider NATO role Army to begin destroying deadly
in Iraq, Chirac unconvinced nerve agent at Indiana depot
SEA ISLAND. Ga. tAP)Seeking to build on rare harmony with Europe after a
U.N. vote, President Bush
proposed a wider but unspecIfied role for NATO m postoccupation Iraq . But French
Prestdem Jacques Chirac
immediately objected.
Apart from the dispute over
NATO's role, Bush found a
generally hig h degree of
allreement among the oncebtckering summit partners u
day after the U:N. Security
Council
unanimously
approved a . resolut,ion steering Iraq's new government
toward elections nex t year.
Bush also used the opportunity .to introduce Iraq's new
president. Ghazi a\- Yawer. at
the annual Group of Eight
economic summit.
"I really never thought I'd
be sitting next to an Iraqi president of a free country a year
and half ago." Bush said in a
picture-taking session with aiYawer after the two met privately. "And here you are."
For his part, the Iraqi leader
pledged to try to move his
country "toward democracy.
We are moving in steady
steps toward it:''
"We're determined to have
a free, democratic, federal
Iraq, a country that is a
source of stability to the
Middle East. which is very
important for the rest of the
world," a!- Yawer said.
Bush discussed the possible expanded role for the
North
Atlantic
Treaty
Organization during a breakfast meeting with British
Prime Minister Tony Blair.
his top Iraq war ally.
"We believe NATO ought
to be involved.'' Bush said
with Blair by hi s side. "We
will work with our NATO
friends to at' least continue
the role that now exists, and
hopefully expand it somewhat."
Blair agreed. and told
reporters, "The next step in
thts is going to be for the new
lmqi government to sit down
with a multinational forc e
and work out how. over time,
the Iraqi capability for securi-

..

· PageA3

.The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,Juneto,2004

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thursday, June 10
MIDDLEPORT The
·governing board of the
Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center will meet al 7
p.m.
at the
Brad bury
Learning Center located at
Bradbury Road.
. 39105
_Middlepon.
CHESTER - The Shade
River Lodge #453 F&amp;AM
regular meeting will be at
.7:30 p.m. at the lodge .
Refreshments will be served.

p.m., meeting at 7:30.
Friday, June 11
POMEROY
The
Widow's Fellowship will
meet at noon at the Wild
Horse Cafe.
Saturday, June 12
BURLINGHAM
Burlingham Camp, Modern
Woodmen , will meet at the
hall at 6 p.m. for a potluck
meal. Fathers will be recog·nized. The camp will furnish
meat. rolls. drinks and table
servtce.

POMEROY
-. Meigs
County
Fish
and
Game
· SYRACUSE
The
"Syracuse Volunteer Fire• Association · will hold its
annual Kids· Fishing Derby
Department basket bingo will from 8 a.m. until 2 p.m. on
be held at 6 p.m. at the Saturday. The derby will be
American Legion Hall tn held On West 'Shade Road, a
·Middleport.
mile west of Skinner Road.
and is op.en to children 15
Friday, June 11
and under. Free food and
NELSONVILLE
drink, prizes for winners and
Region
14
Workforce door prizes will be otlered.
Investment CEO consortium Derby rul es and other inforwill be held at 8 a.m. at the mation are available by calling 992-0026.
Ramada Inn, Nelsonville.
NELSONVILLE
A·
Region
14
Workforce
Investment board meeting
will be held at 9:30 a.m. at
the Ramada Inn, Nelsonville.

:Clubs and
·organizations
Thursday, June 10
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, meal at 6:30

DEXTER
Retu rn
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Daughters of the American
Revolution. will meet at noon
for a picnic at the Anna
Cleland farm on Dexter
Road. Mary K. Yost will give
the program on American
Heritage . Meat and table service will be provided for the
pot\uck ·picnic.
Monday, June 14
LONG BOTTOM -

BY THE BEND
Kids are innocent victims
of parent's verbal abuse

A

meeting of the Meig&gt; County
Republican Party will be held
at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Long Bottom Community
Center.

ROCKSPRINGS- A special meeting of the band
boosters cal led by Toney
Dingess will be held at 7 p.m.
in the Meigs High School
bandroom.

Church services
Sunday, June 13
MASON. W. Va -A
gospel concert for missions
will be held at the Christian
Brothers Church in Mason,
W. Va. beginning at 6 p.m.
Saturday.
Singers
will
include Ray and Delo~is
Cundiff,
Sandra
Wise,
Clal1dette Harbin, Together
for Christ. The King Kids.
Matt Scott. and Marty Short.
For more informaton call
304-773-5892.

Birthdays
Thursday, June 17
MIDDLEPORT · .
Mildred E. Arnold will
observe her 85th birthday on
Thursday, June 17 . Sne now
resides at Overbrook Center
at
.333
Page ' Street.
Miduleport. Oho 45760 and
cards may be se nt to her
there.

DEAR ABBY: After reading
the Jeuer from the 23-year- old
mother of three whose ~usband
is verbally abusive to her and
the children. I had to write. She
said she's ambivalent about
divorcing him: s~~ 'just wants
him to change.'' She signed her
letter "Craz~ in Tennessee."
You urged her to leave. I
absolutely agree. That letter
could have been written
about my own family.
I have been married 14
years. My husband was verbally abusive for manx of those
years. He said homb\e things
to me (including wishing I was
dead. etc.) in tront of our three
children. He also insti gated
arguments with the children ages 6. 9 and II -seemingly
just to make them cry. I tinally
tiled for divorce. whtch will be
final in a few months.
Our 9-year-o\d has become
nervous and sick to her stomach
recently. She gets particularly
upset when her father and I are
in the same room. I asked what
the problem is. She said: "It
scares me when you and Daddy
are together. He has been mad
at you for so long. and yelled so
much. I'm afraid that now that
you're getting the divorce,
when you strut fighting he
might have a gun or something." Imagine how heartbreaking it was to hear that I
Please tell ''Crazy in Tennessee"
her best bet is to get out while the
children are still too yotmg to have
sustained mudt drunage fium the
verbul abuse they've been
exposed to. I only v.ish I had done

·

Dear
Abby

it soorer. - ALMOST TOO
· LATE IN OHIO
DEAR ALMOST TOO
LATE: I'm pleased you had the
courage to take that important
step. Now. I hOJ?C you will waste
no tilne in taking another one.
Your children will stand a better
chance of healing if you '11 get
them into therapy right away.
although I am sad to say there
are no guarantees. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: My dad
was just like her hu sband .
For more than 20 years, literally hours on end, day in
and day out, I'd hear,
"You're ugly' No."girl in her
right mind woultl ever want
you!" As a result, I am
painfully
shy
around
female s. Counseling has
helped some, but there's
always that little voice in the
back of your mind that you
hear over and over for as
long as you· live.
When I looked for work,
Dad told me 1 was stupid .
and would never be hired or
amount
to
anything.
Because of it. I gave up
looking for a job. I' m working now, but only because

my mother encouraged me.
I hope for her children's
sak'e
that
"Crazv
m
Tennessee" will lind someone
who will treat them all better.
If she doesn 't, I have no doubt
that her children will wind up
like me.- BEEN THERE IN
ONTARIO. CANADA
DEAR BEEN THERE:
Thank vou for writing. Don ·r
sell yourself short. That you are ·
functioning at all is a tribute to
your inner strength. I' II repeat
pan of what I sa~d in my original answer: Cruel words erode
self-esteem like the ocean eats
away the shore. I hope "Crazy
in Tennessee" take&gt; to hean
your hard-earned wisdom.
because even children who
aren't picked on by the abuser
can emerge from that' lifestyle
with "survivor guilt" tor not
being able to inten'ene.
. I'll quote from a letter that
arrived from another ,un·ivor.
a woman in Wiscon,in: "Abby,
the one who will re&lt;:eive the
most damage from that relationship is the daughter. She
will grow up cravin~ the one
and only thing her lather will
never give her- his approval.
And she' II continue to try to get
it from other men who are as
cruel and withholding as he is.
because she thinks their beha'ior is norn1al .''
Dear Abhr is wrill&lt;'ll In
Abigail Van Buren. &lt;ilso /;;noH·i,
as Jeanne Phillips. and 11·as
jiJ1UJded by her mothe1: Pauline
Phillips. Wlite Dmr Abln at
""" :DearAbbumn1wPO Box
69440. Las An,~eles. CA 'XXXJ9.

Meigs County irl Scout Diary
POMEROY Several
·opportunities
for
Girl
··Scouting will be held
throughout the summer.
From 10 a.m. until I p.m. on
July 17, Girl Scouts between
five and 12 years old WI·1I be
able to explore the Summer
•Safari at Forked Run State
:Park. The fee for the event is
:$3. Please send registrations
:to Shirley Cogar, 43144 Ohio
:124. Racine, Ohio 45771 by
June 15 for all events. Bring
a water boule and ~ack lunch .
. The Safan contmues from
·6 to 8 p.m. on August 5 at the
:Pomeroy Library. For more
:information regarding the
:safari Summer Sizzle event,
contact Amy Markworth at
·667-0321
or
Jerrena
•Ebersbach.at992-7747.
: "Making Friends with
:Nature" is this . year's day
:camp theme. Day camp is
.scheduled at the Syracuse
·Community Center from June
·
.
.
;24 to 26. Gtrls wtlllearn how
;to set up a camp. sttc, make
;nature crafts. htkt~g, and
.much more. A spectal pro;g~m featuring the snake and
;btrds. of prey program by
Hockmg College statl and
•Students will take place as
:well.
: Brownies in grades I to 3
:may spend the night on
;Friday. Juniors and Seniors
·may
spend the night
Thursday and Friday night.
. There will be a dance spon:sored by the Cadeue Troop
; 1208 .o.n Friday night. For
·:more information regarding
'd .
contact Dawna
; ay . camp,
Arnold at 992-2486 or Brenda
Neutzlmg at 992-6679.

:DAISY TROOP
:5217

.

· Justine Smith and Madison
:Greene went to the "Daisy:Brownie Day at the Park" on
:May 15. They worked on
:The Animal Try-it for bridg:ing purposes, made a . craft,

S UTHERN
DAISY
TROOP 1292
On May I, the girl'
enjoyed , courtesy · of the
Chester-Shade
Hi storical
Association , an afternoon of
fun
at
the
Chester
Courthouse, decorating straw
hats, looking at antique dolls,
dancing around a beautiful
May pole. and tea. Nine girls
. auending were: Kari Arnold.
. Paige
Buckley.
Sierra
Cleland. Alli so n Gibeaut.
Lei a Gilmore. · Madison
Matthews, Brandy Porter.
Brittany
Powell ,
and
Elizabeth Wolfe.
A Mother's Day Picnic was
held May II , at Forest Run
United Methodist Church
shelter. ho~ se . Gtrls pa.~tct ­
pared tn spruct~g up by
plantmg flowers around the
church, followed by a hot dog
roast and homemade 1ce
cream. Girls pre sented mothers with decorated plates they
made.
Girls al so earned their last
petal , rose,· "to make the
world a better place." as well
as
a " Keep
America
Beautiful" patch.
May 25 began with Pledge of
Allegiance, Girl Scout Promise,
and Law. Girls then went outside. to see !ive fish and practice
castmg, wtth. the help of B1\l
Grueser.. Lmdsey Houser.
~adette from Troop I ~?8, read
The Browme Story.. Teme
and Lmdsey Houser dtd crafts
of 311 owl (from. sto~), and
B.rowme. beante h&lt;tts. '&gt;' tth, the
gtrls, 111 preparation for
Bridging (Daisy to Brownie)
next month. Daisy Ending
Certificates were ulso awarded.

MEIGS
BROWNIE
TROOP 1100

On May 15 , Savannah
Abshire attended the DaisyBrownie Day at the park. She
completed the Animal Try-it
with Daisy Girl Scouts
Justine
Smith and Madison
;Park. They also completed
as
part of their bridg- ·
Greene
:worked on the following
ing requirements. She helped
:petals: "Make the world a clean
the park, made s'mores,
:better place", and "Be a sister
and a craft. The lellder
:to every Girl Scout."
brought her pet rabbit and the
: The next meeting was held girls talked about taking care
'on May 29 at General of an animal and the safety
:Hartinger Park. Girls attend- tips of handling an animal
:ing were Brennan Bell and they didn't know. They also
:Madison Green. Brennan made their Pet Pledge .
:Bell completed all work for
The girls did a charade
:all her Dai sy Petals. he two game with the sounds that
;girls also earned the .lns.ect animals make and did some
·Try-it toward s bndgtng animal moves.
On May 29. Makenzie
:requirements for Brownies.
J'he next meeting will be Greene from Troop I 015
:held June 19 at General joined Brennan Bell, Madison
Greene, Kayla Lee. Courtney
Hartinger Park.

:~:~: ~~m~~~·e~~~ ~~~i~::r

· Holley. Stephanie and Raven
Grady and the troop did council own's Insect Try-it. The
girl s made a craft of a lady
hug hairpiece, played a lady bug goose game. and cleaned
the park while for insects. By
finding the insects, girls made
up their own picture and told
about their insect. The girls

On
May
8,
Hailey the Creative Cooking IPP, on Olive-Orange
Alumni
Ebersbach and Autumn May 28. the following girls Ban4uet
at
· Eastern
Ebersbach
with
Tim helped at the free dinner at Elementary School : Stacy
Ebersbach
and
Amber the Middleport Church of · Macomber.
Ha ile\•
Ebersbach attended Ohio Christ: Amber Hockman. Ebersbach. Ericka Cogar.
University's so ftball game Mariah
Hill,
Ashley Ashley ·Romine s. Lind&gt;ey
against Illinois. They had a Romines, Jo Fetty, Kayla Houser, Whitney Putman.
great time.
Darci Bissell . Tami Putman. ·
On May I0. the troop met Fetty, Kimi Swisher, Darci Shirley
Cogar.' Jerren&lt;~
at McDonald 's and took a Bissell and Whitney Putman. Ebersbach, Dawn Romines
Also to finish requirements with Jan and Rick Macomber.
made a treat of "ants on a tour of the facility and later
a
treat.
.
The
troop
.
enjoyed
for
the Creative Cooking and
The next meeting for the
Inc ." Afterwards. a court of
decided
on
various
trips
a.;ards was held. . Girls including Old Man's Cave to begin on their Community troop will be held on June 19
received their registration fo~ and whitewater rafting. We Service hours, on May 29, the at General Hartinger Park.
the next year as well as some discussed registrations for following girls helped at the
other important papers .
next year; county and state
The next meeting will be fair rules and exhibits, and
held on June 19 at General our service unit's day camp.
Hartinger Park.
On May 22. Ericka Cogar
and Hailey Eberspach helped
at the Community S~rvice
Day at Syracuse Community
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program with the Syracuse
Members were busy in the Garden Club.
month of May.
A court of awards and party
On May 2, Ericka Cogar, was held at the home of
Kayla
Fetty.
Ashley
and
Hailey
Romines, Hailey Ebersbach: Jerrena
All
patches,
IPP's
Ebersbach.
and Stacy Macomber with
leaders Shirley Cogar. Jan and cookie incentives were
Macomber. and Jerrena passed out. Attending were:
Stacy
Quillen.
Ebersbach attended the Alisha
Macomber.
Lindsey
Hou
ser.
Wildfife session at Hocking
Purdtilt ..... - Stctltllil
Cogar,
Amber
College. The girl s enjoyed Ericka
...................
lho
learning about nature and its Hockman, Ashley Romines,
SlllTOUildings and earned the and Autumn Ebersbach.
Wildlife IPP.
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OPINION

'

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

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

Moderately Confused
EVEN WITH
GAS PRICES THIS
HI0H, YOU'RE TAKING
ME AROUND
THE WORLD?!

\l \
~AH~.

PageA4
Thursday,Juneto,2o04

Media bias suppresses 'good' Iraq news
At his first appearan~e a&gt;
Iraq's new prime mini ster
last Tuesday. lyad Allawi
switched from Arabi&lt;: to
English to say. ·1 would like
to thank ihe coalition, led by
the United States. for the
sacrifices they have provided in the process of the liberation of Iraq.·
A pretty remarkable &gt;latement. is it not. in a country
where- to listen to the U.S.
media -. everybody hates
us 'l Unfortuniltely. given the
media coverage of the event.
you'd never know Allawi
said it.
Neither The Washington ·
Post's front -page story on
the appointment of Iraq's
new government, nor The
New York Times' story the
same day, made any mention
of Allawi 's thank you to
America. Nor did The Wall
Street Journal's story or the
Los Angeles Times'.
Of course, Fox News - a
network for whom I puqdi c
tize - ran Htpe of Allawi
making the statement. So did
ABC's ' Nightline. · No o(her
network did, although CNN
did mention it and CBS carried a clip of President Bush
calling attention to Allawi's
remarks.
There are two lessons lo
be drawn from this coverage. First. conservatives are
right to charge that the U.S.
media tilts left and is biased
against Bush's Iraq policy.
And second, the Bush
administration must do a
better job of getting Iraqi s
who support U.S, policy who, in fact, are ri sking their
lives to support U.S. policy
-to get on American television and state their. case.
Allawi added that ·after 35
years of a ruthless, tyranni cal regime, and after the liberation of Iraq by the coali-

Even thou)!h Son" i' a
maJOr player in the 2004
campaign.
pre,idential
funding anti-Bush actil'itics
with tens of million' of dol·
Morton
lar&gt;. hi s remarks got pracli ·
cally
no media attention Kondracke
except on Fox News - and
no one pointed out th at
World War 11 also claimed
tion forces under the leader- more innocent victims than
,hip Df the United State&gt;. we the number who died at
arc slarting our march Pearl Harbor.
toward sovereignty and
Major media coverage of
democracy.'
the lrag war is typified by
That statement was ~arried The Washington Post\
on AI-Jazeera - the often- repeated. almost formulaic
rabidly anti-U.S. Arabic front-page articles that open
news network - but not in with quotes from an Iraqi
the American media.
dissatisfied by a lack of elecTo
be
fair,
The tricity or security and then
Washi ngton Post dill quote launch imo the reporter's
Alluwi ·saying ·we need the negative evaluation of the
suppot1 of the multinational entire U.S. occupation.
forces to defeat the enemies
One of the latest. by Edward
of Iraq .' It dill so in the II th Cody. ran last Thursday under
paragraph of its story on the the headline 'To Many.
appointment of the interim Mission Not Accomplished. 'It
gOvernment.
carried the subhead ·Residents
USA Today carried the Say Occupation's Unkept
statement as well, in the Promises, Military Tactics
fourth paragraph of its story. Fuel Resistance."
It w:1s in the lOth paragraph
01\ May 19, as just one
ofThe New York Times story. other example. the Post carand in the 26th paragraph of riell a front-page story by
the L.A. Times story.
Robin Wright and Thomas
You think I am being too Ricks. headlined ·u.s. Faces
harsh in judging media cov- Growing Fears of Failure·
erage'' Just look at the front- among largely unnamed
page attention given to prac- U.S. lawmakers. Iraqi s and
tically every wrinkle of the administration officials.
Abu Ghraib prison scandal
Last Friday. on the other
story and the total hand. after Iraq's new govabsence of outrage at the ernment gained .the blessing
statement Thursday by of Shiite Grand Ayatollah
Bush-hater George Soros Ali Sistani. arguably the
that Abu Ghraib ' hit us the most influential person in
same way as the (Sept. II. Iraq, the Post carried the
200 I) attack itself."
story on page A 18.
At the liberaL 'Take Back
The New York Times
America ' conference 111 buried it on page A 15. in a
Washington. Soros also said box just above the news of
that the war on terrorism the statement hy Iraq's new
'has claimed mcire inrocent foreign minister. Ho·shyar
victims than the original Zebari, that ·any premature
attack itself."
departure of international

for,·es would lead to chaos
anll the real possibility of a
l'i\·il war.·
If the U.S. media are going
to consistently underplay
Iraqi testimonials of thanks
and of the need for U.S.
forces to stay. then the Bush
admini&gt;tration has to do a
better job of getting their
statements publicized.
The White House can urge
the Iraqis to appear on
Sundav talk shows - Allawi
ha s be~n asked to do so. but
has refused until he addresses the Iraqi people . Or
President Bu sh can hold
joint news conferences with
them.
Two weeks ago. the Pew
Research Center published
the latest studv• demonstrating that many more .national
news reporters identify
themselves as 'liberal' (34
percent) than ·conservative'
(7 percent) ,
While most (54 percent)
consider themselves 'moder.ale.' even the 'moderates·
demonstrated thai they had ·
liberal attitudes on religion.
gay rights and activist government.
It's unfortunate that Pew
did not ask journalists how
they feel about Iraq. I'd bet
such a poll would demonstrate that the defeatism conveyed in media coverage on
Iraq grows directly out of
reporters' political attitudes,
(The poll did find that 55
percent of national reporters
believe the media are ·not
critical enough' of Bush.)
America's hope for victory
in Iraq depends on Bush's
getting the good news on
Iraq directly to Americans.
The media won't help.
(Morton K01rdracke is
&lt;'.&lt;ecutive editor of Roll Call.
the m•••·spaper of Capitol
Hill.)

.

Ronald Reagan.· the affable enigma

© 2004 by NEA. Inc.

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.

Gene
Lyons

president in 1980. Vietnam
was behind. us, and so was
the stigma of avoiding military service - at least for
Republicans. A little mistyeyed flag-waving went a
long way.
A serene fantasist. Reagan
often confused movies with
reality. He told scripted tales
about pilots declaiming
patriotically as shot-up
bombers careened toward
the sea. He once claimed to
have been among American
soldiers
who
liberated
German death camps in
1945 , a life-changing horror
for those who were, a se lfaggrandizing fable to 'The
Great Communicator.·
Yet for all his charm,
Reagan's biographers found
him passionless and opaque.
His children thought him
distant and disengaged. He
once famously introduced
himself to hi&gt; own ·son.
whom he didn't recognize, at
the lad's high school graduation . Yet he was uxorious lo
a fault , a great lover of hi s
second wife Nuncy, she of
the $5.000 gowns and White
House astrologer. a gra&gt;ping
woman ennobled by love.
To the ext.ent that Reagan
was religious, hi&gt; was a rich
man's God. If he !lined with
creationism and 'end times'
humbug, it was pa1tly the
melodrama that pleased him,
partly political opponunism
and partly indifference. ·He

attended religious services
sporadically;
handsome,
healthy and lucky, he appeared
to approve of God insofar as
God approved of him.
By 1984, the Alzheimer's
disease that killed Reagan
was , in retrospecl. already
apparent to some of us .
Although he won a landslide victory, · he was
scarcely
coherent
in
debate s ·with Democrat
Walter Mondale. In his
book ' Firewall · (W.W.
Norton , 1998), the IranContra independent counsel, Lawrence Walsh , wrote
thqt while Reagan wasn't
blameless in the illegal.
madcap scheme to se ll missiles to Iranian hostage-takers and pass the profits to
·the Nicaraguan junta, he
was convinced that Reagan
had forgotten everything
he'd ever known about it.
So why did Reag an retain
popularity? Three reason s.
A TV professional. his onscreen persona hypnotized
millions . My parents became
lukewarm
Reagan
Democrats. A union member. my mother could never
bt persuaded that a regular
fellow like Reagan would do
damage to her interests.
Second, the same tycoonfunded, conservative commentariat that now seeks to
enshrine thi s amiable second-r&lt;tter
on
Mount
Rushmore was just then
emerging into prominence.
Mostly. however, Reagan
stayed popular because he
never enacted many of hi&gt;
Big Ideas , either in domestic
or foreign policy. There was
no ' Reagan revolution.' He
took office vowing to slash
the bureaucracy. But federal
'pending actuall y· grew by

· Obituaries

For the lecotd

almost 25 perc~nt during his
two terms; the federal civilian workforce increased
from 2.8 million to 3 million
(and shrank to 2.68 million
under Clinton).
Basically. Reagan created
a Keynesian .economic boom
through debt-financed government
make-work
schemes, mostly superfluous
nuclear weapons, redundant
ICBMs and make-believe
missile shields. The national .
debt tripled oil his watch,
even though the· Democratic
. Congress never once spent
quite as much as the White
House requested.
Vowing to slash entitlements, Reagan never seriously tried. Indeed, his 1983
So~ial Security commission
saved it for the foreseeable
future. Likewise in foreign
policy, he was mostly 'talk.
He briefly took sides in a
Lebanese civil war in 1982,
but hastily withdrew after
terrorists killed 241 Marines.
He invaded Grenada, a
Caribbean island not much
bigger than Di sneyland.
If Reagan deserves credit
for the Berlin Wall coming
down in 1989, it wasn't so
much his saber-rattling as
hi s 1987 nuclear weapons
treaty
with
Mikhail
Gorbachev, strengthening
the reformist leader's hand
and easing Stalinist paranoia
about U.S intentions, a masterstroke for which conservative ideologues give him no
credit.
(Arkm1sas
DemocrarGazeue columnist Gene Lyons
is a national magazine award
wimler a11d co-awhor of 'The
Huming uf the President' (St.
Martin's Press, 2000). You
can e-mail Lyons ar genelyons2 @cs.com.)

ATHENS- Linda D. Morris of Athens departed life unexpenctedly this past Memorial Day weekend, surrounded by
the thtngs she loved: her home. pets. and garden.
She is survived by her husband. George V. Morris. her parents, Richard Ann Ham; a sister. Carol Ann Ham; three step
children: George C. Morris. Stephanie Morris , and Ben
Morris: and two grandchildren, Lantz and Kia Morris. ·
In lieu of services or a memorial. it is requested that friends
and family plant a tree in memory of Linda.
Those of us whose lives and souls were touched by Linda
will forever be better.

local Briefs
Praise team coming
POMEROY - The Mt. Hope Praise Team from Beckley.
W.Va. will be singing at 6 p.m. on June 27. at the Flatwoods
United Methodist Church. There will be special singing by
Brian Bennett. Allan Kinsler. and Stephanie Rhodes. Live
mu sic. youth choir. short dramas and sign language to music
will be included. The program will include something for all
ages. according 10 Keith Rader. pastor. who welcomes . the
public.

Derby planned
POMEROY -Meigs County Fish and Game Association
will hold its annual Kids' Fishing Derby from 8 a.m . umil ~
p.m. on Saturday. The derby will be held on West Shade Road.
a mile west of Skinner Road, and is open to children 15 and
under.
Free food and drink. prizes for winners and door prizes will
be offered.
Derby ru les and other information are available by calling
992-0026.

Class plans reunion
POINT PLEASANT; W.Va. - Point Pleasant High School
Class of 1974 is planning its 30-year reunion for Saturday,
June 26 at the Marshall University Mid-Ohio Valley Center on
Sandhill Road.
Heavy hors d'oeuvres will be served and a DJ will provide
the music. The event 'begins at 6 p.m, and the cost is $20 per
person.
A mixer will be held at the Iron Gate Cafe on the evening of
Friday, June 25. The mixer is open to the public . and all
friends of the class of 1974 are encouraged to attend.
Entertainment will be provided. courtesy of the Iron Gate
Cafe.
A meeting to finalize details for the reunion will be 7 p.m.
Monday, June 14 at Pleasant Valley Hospital, next to the cafeteria . All interested classmate s are welcome.
Reservations are due immediately. For more information.
contact S~ybra Pearson at 773-5339 or e-mail Julia Myers at
JLM6456@aol.com

Wilcoxon to sing at park Friday
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Dr. Joey Wilcoxon, area chiropractor and singer, will be the guest performer at Friday's
Mayor's Music Night in the Park at Riverfront Park.
The event is set for 6 to 8 p.m. The city of Point Pleasant is
scheduling activities at the park every Friday night through
the summer.

Trustees to appoint clerk
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township Trustee s will have a special meeting at 7;30 p.m. Thursday at the off1ce building on
Joppa Road to review resumes for the clerk position and any
other business that may come before the board.
All clerk resumes must be in the hands of any t111stee or
- clerk before .4 p.m. Thursday.

POMEROY - Meig'
County Sheriff Ralph
Trussell ·said deputie' are
investigating a burglary at
the Sharon Denham re&gt;idence in Albany. Entry
was made by cutting a
screen and kicking a door.
Jewelry was reported
nHSSitlg.
Deputies also respo.nded
to a fight report on Bunker
Hill Road. and &lt;:har~es are
pending again~t two... men.
Trussel l reported the following complaints reported to his oftlce;
•
Kim
Mithcell.
Pomeroy. reported the
windows broken out of her
car while it was parked
outside of her reside rice.
• Deputies are investigating the theft of a Honda
Prelude from property on
VanZandt Road. The vehicle was re covered on
Hampton Hollow Road;
and c·hargcs arc penlling
against two men.
• Danny
Morgan.
Darwin. reported the windshield broken out of his car.
• Paul Smith of Albany
reported the theft of two
mowers from his property .
• Dou2las
Enoch.
Syracuse. reported the
storm door to his home
had been kicked in.
•
Leonarll Stotts.
Middleport. reported · the
\·;mdalism of his mailhox .
• Earl Morris. Kacine.
reported his mailbox had
been vandalized.
• Brian
Bailey.
Reedsvi lle. reported the
vandalism of his mailbox .

dCifS with.you!
Sunday Times-Sentinel
992-2155

Shelter
from Page A1
photos of the work in
progress for Natureworks .
She also had special thanks
for Jay Dewhurst who wrote
the grant.
" I would like to thank all
the volunteers who put thi s
all together," said Burke.

Jeffers Excavating loaned a
bulldozer for site preparation
which was operated by Dave
Davis. Don Pooler and Keith
Steele constructed the shelter
house and Dan Schatz loaned
a generator which was used
during constrliCtion.
·
"This was a real community effort and we are thankful
that everyone came together
for such a worthy project,"
Burke said.

Holzer Medical Center was recently awarded a grant of $F ,241 by t11e Ohio Tobacco Use
Prevention and Control Foundation to supplement their "Advancrng Tobacco Use P&gt;eve ntion
1n Gallia, Jackson and Meigs Counties" grant. The funds are earmarked for expansron of the
workplace smoke-free advocacy program, additional educational mater~als. carbon monoxidebreath testers. pharmaceutical aids for cessation class participants. and addrtional tcaining
needs. Pictured is Tracey O'Dell, program manager. Ohio Tobacco Use Preventron and
Control Foundation , who presents LaMar Wyse. President of Holzer Medical Center. with a
check for the supplemental grant funds. For more ..nformat1on about tobacco programs, contact the Tobacco Prevention Center at (740) 446-5940 or stop by the office located at 2881
State Route 160 in Gallipolis.

Computer contest winners

Arrested
POMEROY -Sheriff
Ralph Trussell reported
arrest of Thomas E. King. 33,
Pomeroy. with the burglary
of the Bryan Reeves residence on Homer Hill Road.
Trussell the following
additional arrests:
• Jimmie W. Deem ,
Ra~ine, on a charge of violating a civil protection
·
order.
. • Richard Kauff. Long
Bottom, .on a charge of
domestic violence.
• Jefrey Reitmire, Shade,
on a charge of domestic
violence.
• Steve
Donalllson.
Long Bottom, on a charge
of domestic 'iolence.
Dalton ,
• Danny
Pomeroy, on a charge of
domestic violence .

Meigs
from Page A1

·~celebrating spec:ial

Holzer receives supplemental tobacco grant

Complaints

Concert canceled
TUPPERS PLAINS -A concert with High Country scheduled to be held at the Tuppers Plains United Methodist Church
has been canceled due to illness ..

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

Uncia Molris

•

Like most successful
politicians, Ronald Reagan
was something of an enigma.
True, he was neveAo uni versally beloved a ftgure as
conservative eulogists and
bathos-peddling TV anchors
would have us believe.
During his second term, in
fact. his approval ratings
were consistently lower than
Bill Clinton's even after the
Monica Lewinsky fiasco .
The Iran-Contra scandal
('Mistakes were made') took
care of that. But he never
generated much personal vitriol, either.
Even for rivals, . Reagan
was hard
to dislike .
Democratic majority leader
Tip O'Neill found his ignorance of public pol icy flabbergasting , but privately
they got along fine . Reagan
opened his 1980 campaign
in Philadelphia. Mi ss., site
of notorious racist murders
during the civil rights era,
with remarks that made him
the White Man's Candidate.
Yet he harbored no personal
bigotry. As president, he
ignored the AIDS ep idemic,
yet, 1ike most actors. had gay
friends.
Reaga n played the role of
president like the dad in a '50
sitcom - an affable, optimistic fellow with a twinkle
in his eye and old-fashioned.
Midwestern rectitude. He
seemed a throwback to a
simpler America. When he
put on cowboy garb, he rode
horses, not golf carts. He
dyed his hair, yet was con·
sidered manly. He spent
World War 11 making B
movies and chasing starlets
in Hollywood, something for
which many contemporaries
resented even John Wayne.
Yet when Reagan ran for

Thursday; June 10,

tents of the buildings vacat·
~d 10 go into the new schools
last year,'' said Buckley.
The Sltperintendent said
that two of the playgrounds
will be in back of the building toward the intermediate
wing, while the other two
will be down nearthe primary wing. with one of them
being at the end or the building
toward
Rutland .
Equipment like swing sets
and jungle gym structures
will be erected on ground
covered with mulch. "That
will
mrnrm;ze
rn.Juries
should anyone fall," said
Around
the
Buckley.
mulched arc:t&gt; will be a
curbin g and asphalt areas on
which' to play games along
with basketball court s.
Before school let out IJst
month. the art teachers and
several students did some
painting on the asphalt.
Buckley said one area features a map of United States
while another on the kindergarten side has a dock and
alphabet letters.
Pt rsmmd
Several personnel matters
1

Lacey Kennedy took first place in computer graphics and Donny Mohler was first runner-up
in the categor.y in the recent Southern Ohio Teen Talent contest held in Columbus. They represented the Rutland Church of God in the event. In August Kennedy will compete in the rnternational talent contest to be held in San Antonio. Texas.
were handled durin g the ~5:
• ;1 contract with the
meeting. The resignation of
D~nise Arnold as an English
Southeastern Ohio Special
teacher and junior class Educational
Regiona l
advisor at Meigs Hi gh Resource Center to provide
School was accepted. She conslilting services for spehas accepted other employ- cial education and talented
ment. With that res ignation a and gifted programs at a cost
recall notice was given 10 a of $7.835 for the next schoo l
laid -off teacher, Abi~ail · year:
Cauthorn. who will fill that
• membership renewal in
position next year.
the Educational Technology
Hired as substitutes ii1 sev- Services of Ohio at a co&gt;t of
eral classifications were the · $1,187;
following people:
• un agreement to pro\·ide
Cooks - Tammy Jarvis. professional developme nt
Barbara Oliver, Ellora services
from
Ohio
Patterson. Melissa Whalev.
Fhonda Yoiung. Jackie
Hoover, Tana Kennedy. and
Rebecca Frechene. · ·
Robert
·custodians
Moore. Oliver Norris. William
Soulsby, Keith Taylor, David
Hysell, and JeffTilli s.
Bu s drivers: Dara
Boggs, Tanya Lavender.
Carlos McKnight. Linda
Morri s. John Tillis, Stacy
Gilmore. Oliver Norris,
Rh ett
David
Lambert,
Milhoan, and Rick Little.
Mechanic:
Ste ve n
Cotterill.
Other business
The Board in other action
approved:
· • an overnight field trip for
the MHS FFA to attend the
Ohio FFA Camp. June 21Serta Perfect Sleeper

finan cial trouble at the
moment anll the school board
and administration are vindicated for their caution. The
from Page A1
foundation can no longer
With the Financial Planning reimburse about 600 schools
and
Supervision in 20 states that bought $77.5
Commission, which is over- million worth of weight
seeing the financial recovery machines , treadmills and
of the district, watchmg other equipment according to
every dime. purchasing the Cameron J. Lewis of the
equipment did not seem a foundation.
Attorney
prudent investment consider- . Minnesota
General
Mike
Hatch
claims
mg the risks.
But as fate would have it. Lewis was operating a pyrathe foundation is in severe mid scheme by using money

Wise

from newly ~nlisted s~hools
- not grants or donations 10 mak e token reimbursements to schools that signed
up early to buy or lease the
equipment. according to an
article in the Columbus
Di&gt;patch .
More Southem wca/neu._,.
The &gt;lonns which struck
the area two weeks ago
caused ,o me damage to electrical systems and equipment
in the elementary school.
according to Bob Grueser,
superintendent.

Grueser said lightning
stru ck the school causing as
yet an undetermined amount
of damage to computers. the
new phone system and several other interrelated electronic systems.
The damage i&gt; still being
assessed at this time. but
Grueser said he expects some
of the equipment will need to
be replaced. No one was hun
and any structural damage to
the building was minimal. he
said .

,$sggoo,....

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�PageA6

STATE

f~he Daily Sentinel

Thursday,Junelo,2004

Bv JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Dan Palter started out in
farming nearly 30 years
ago with 40 acres of strawberries in northwest Ohio.
He still sells the berries.
But he also grows corn.
soybeans, popcorn, cabbage,
pumpkins, pickles, peppers
and watermelon on about
2,000 acres.
"It'd be nice if evervbody
Could make a living on 80
acres. but you can' 1 do that
anymore," he said.
Of all the farms spread
rhroughout Ohio. the largest
1,200 are producing 41 per~'ent of the state's agricultural sales, according to the
federal Census of Agriculture
·relea,ed last week.
It's another indicator that
the
consolidation
and
expansion of farms is pow-

Fair worker
convicted in
electrocution
death of
8-year-old
PAINESVILLE (AP) -A
ju'ry convicted a fair worker
of involuntary manslaughter
and reckless homicide in the
:death of an 8-year-old boy
who was electrocuted.
Nick Rock, 80. of Mentor,
'faces up to five years in
prison . but also could be
given probation.
Greyson Yoe of Madison
was shocked last Aug. 13
while waiting in line with
his father to ride a bumpercar ride at the Lake County
Fair. He never regained consciousness and died in
September.
Prosecutors liled · charges
against Rock and two Ohio
Department of Agriculture
inspectors, saying they failed
to ensure the ride's electrical
system was properly grounded. Rock, who worked at the
fair for 40 years, testified he
thought the ride was ground" ·
ed elsewhere.
"No one is going to say he
is a bad guy," assistant
Prosecutor Mark Bartolotta
said after the verdict
Tuesday. "He used bad judgment and the unfortunate
results were a tragedy."
Rock and his attorney
declined comment.
"This case should serve as
a wake-up call to amttsement park owners that they
have a greater responsibility
than selling tickets and setting up rides," said Karen
Kowall, another ass istant
prosecutor.

State's first charter
college would be
for future teachers
COLUMBUS (AP)
Twenty-nine education groups
have applied to create the
state's ftn;t charter college,
which would train teachers
for high-demand fields.
The Ohio Department of
Education eventually wants
to start two or three of the
colleges, · expanding the
effort that has created 179
charter elementary, middle
and high schools in Ohio.
Charter schools are publicly funded, but privately
run and operate free from
many state regulations.
Age ncy
officials
are
reviewing the proposals
from a variety of groups
including traditional colleges. city school ·districts
and virtual learning centers.
The
state
will
use
$800,000 to open the colleges. It's unclear how
soon they would begin
operating.
The colleges must produce teachers that . Ohio
schools
need
most.
Historically
hard-to-fi ll
teaching positions include
math, science,' special edu- ·
cation and forei~n language.
Students at charter colleges still would have to
Ohio's
li censing
meet
requirements. But the colleges could offer some new
courses to replace traditional ones with state approval.

ering Ohio's agriculture
i11dustry, and that mediumsize farms are losing .their
place in farming.
"As much as we new
agriculture as a lifestyle,
it's just as much a business,." said Joe Comely,
spokesman for the Ohio
Farm Bureau. ·'This is a
trend that's been going on
quite some time."
There are nearly 78.000
farms in Ohio. according to
the
U.S.
Agriculture
Department's . census. which
is done every five years.
The latest numbers cover
2002.
In Ohio. just 429 farms
had more than a $1 million
in yearly . sales. the census
found, yet those operations
that include egg farms.
dairies
and
nurseries
accounted for 29 percent o f
the overall sales.

June 9, 2004

Dow Jones
Industrials

Better technology also
makes for mqre efficient
farmers.
"All of these things drive
the trend to large r and larger - farms," he sa id, adding
that even most of the big
farms are still owned and
operuted by families.
"The
people
haven 't
changed." Comely said.
"The scope of their business has changed."
.Palter. who operates a
farm near Fremont along
with his wife and two sons,
said the changes in farming
are no diffe rent from w.hat
has happened with the corner grocery store. he said.
The downside of the ·
· growth is how it affects the
rural landscape .
· ''You lose. neighbors and
you lose community," he
said. "But it 's also an economic reality."

kets.
The electric deregulation
law that went into effect in
2001 requires the indu stry to
open up to competitors. by
2006. The Legislature envisioned competition driving
down prices, especially in
FirstEnergy's service territory, which stretches across
northern Ohio from Akron to
Toledo.
"We all know that has not
materialized as we have
hoped," PUCO Chairman
Alan Schriber said.
FirstEnergy's rates are
higher than other parts· of
Ohio, in part because the
commission has allowed the
company to charge customers for past investments,
including its nuclear power
plants. FirstEnergy's territory has seen the most competitors, mostly because
communities have banded to

buy electricity in bulk. ' But
competitors have not been
able to provide significantly
lower prices.
A commission-ordered rate
freeze
will
end
for
FirstEnergy customers at the
end of 2005. FirstEnergy
may reject the PUCO order,
but then it would have to
move to direct competition at
that time. Schriber would not
specvlat~ on the plan's etfect
on pr~.
"That's exactly what we
need to find out," he said.
FirstEnergy was reviewing
the plan and had no immediate comment. spokeswoman
Ellen Raines said.
"Fi rstEnergy will determine no earlier than its next
regularly scheduled board of
directors' meeting on June·
l s· its appropriate next
steps," the company said in a
statement.

Commissioner Clarence
Rogers, who cast the dissentingvvote, said the plan will do
nothing to ens ure lower costs
. for FirstEncrgy customers,
especially if the competition
dri ve fail s.
''The plan stabilizes rates
at too hi gh a cost." Rogers
said. ''Fi rstEnergy has placed
itself in a strong position and
basicall y said take it or leave
it. ..
The office of the Ohio
Consumers' Counsel. which
represents residential. customers in rate cases. said the
ori gi nal plan would have
allowed FirstEncrgy to reap
$1 billion from residential
CLtstomcrs alone with the fee
increase.
Consumers'
Counsel Janinc MigdenOstrander said the modified
plan will bring the com petition she has been promoting.
.·'We arc cautiously opti-

said Wednesday. A message becau se of criminal · &lt;lets
seeking cominent was left committed against them."
with the family.
Petro said he believes the
The Army said last month award is the first of its kind
it would review guidelines in the nation.
for communicating with the
In Texas , an Army
families of seriously wound ~ reservist injured in Iraq in
ed soldiers after Landrus' July has sued the state for
family complained that inac- denying his claim for a simicurate medical reports from lar grant.
military officials gave them
false hope he would survive.
That .
review
and
Wednesday's .announcement
have left Landrus' mother,
Betty, feeling that "something good is coming out of
· something very . terrible,"
said Tracy Jordan, the victim
advocate · for the Geauga
County sheriff's office.
The decision to award
Landrus' famHy compensalion means that families of
soldiers killed or injured in
Iraq are eligible to apply for
simtlar grants, although the
state would determine each
request on a case-by-case
basis, Petro said.
The fund applies to soldiers because the United
States is not at war in Iraq, he
said.
"Right now we are keeping
the peace," Petro sai d.
" Military personnel in active
service to our nation arc at
great risk and are in jeopardy

Staff Sgt. Ryan Kel ly is
seeking $ 150.000 in damages. Kelly contends he was
a terrorism victim on July
14. 2003. when a hidden
roadside artillery shell detomttetl near Baghdad and
blew off hi s ri ght leg below
the knee. Hi s kg was later
amputated.

MAR

10,368.44

10,368.44

::..~.

·061

Nasdaq

10,431 32

composite

1, 990.61

Standard &amp;

·10.N

Poor's 500

--wv

V\

. •
··~·

!'-~.......

Russell

2,000

trompnr;iouto• -1 .63

MAR

APR
Low
1.9£9 99

High
2.01G 22

568.58

NYSE diary

1.600

MAY

Advanced:

JUN
Rocord high• 5.046 62
Mardl 10. 2000

Declined:

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500
·10,11$
1,131 .33
Pet charlge
from previous• -0.95

Volume :

1 200

....

\;;\/~-

---

"'"""""
.APR

MAR
High

1.100

Advanced:
Declined :

1 000

JUN
Rocord htuh• 1.527 .46
MarCh 24 2000

1 114.76

86
New tows

181

16
1,601,443.340

Nasdaq diary

1,150

1 05lJ

MAY

Low

1,142.18

d

820 Now highs
2.410

Unchanged:

June 9, 2004

...33.

2000

42.82
1,990.6i
• Pctc11onge

1. 131.33

2.200

1,600

823 New hlgha
2280

Unchanged:
Volume:

62

Now tows

384

2!l

1,497.858,431

AP

AP

Local Stocks

mistic and we· re pleased the
com mi ssion has gone this
route." .Migde n-Ostrander
said. "This means there is an
opportunity lor customers to
save money and we're hoping it materializes."
One consumers group
remained opposed to the
plan . Citizen Power, a
Pitt sb urgh-based
energy
advocacy organization, said
the decision shows that
deregulation isn ' t working
and prices are not going to
go down .
"The public outcry over
FirstEnergy's RSP (ra te stabilization ph\n) has forced
the· PUCO to conditionally
approve it. but in the end,
customers will likely pay an
additional $ 1. 2 billion in socall ed rate stabilization
charges," David Hughes,
executive director of Citizen
Power. said in a statement .

Thursday, June 10

humid and cloudy. Expect
light rain. The rainfall will
finish around 8:00pm with
toial accumulations for this
event near 0.22 inches.
Temperatures will hover at
75. Winds will be 5 to l 0
MPH from the west.
Overnight (I a.m.-6 a.m.) ·
It should continue to be
humid and cloudy. There
might be a bit of rain around
the area. Temperatures will
remain around 72 with
today's low of 69 occurring
around li:OOam. Winds will
be 5 MPH from the west.

Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noon)
It looks like a humid and
cloudy morning. Some light
rain showers are predicted.
The rain will sta rt around
noon. Expect 0,07 inches of
rain by the end of this morning . Temperatures will hold
steady around 74. Winds will
be 5 to I 0 MPH from the
west.
Aftemnon (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
It should remain humid and
cloudy. Expect light rain. The
rain should reach 0.12 inches
by the end of this afternoon.
Temperatures will linger at
80 with today's high of 82
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
occurring around 3:00pm.
Expect a humid and cloudy
Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH
fro m the west 'turning from . morning. There could be a
the northwest as the after- few raindrops around the
area. Temperatures will rise
noon progresses.
Eve11ing (7 p.m.-Midnight) from 68 to 78 by late this
It should continue to be morning. Winds will be 5 to

Friday, June 11

Ohio 's 28-year-old fund
provides money to crime victims and their families for
lost wages, legal and medical
ex penses, funeral costs and
other financial losses. The
program. funded largely by
court costs, awarded $13.3
mill io.n last year.

10 MPH from the southwest.
Afternoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
It should remain humid and
cloudy. Expect rain, along
with locally heavy downpours. The rain is predicted to
stmt near 2:00pm .. The rain
could reach 0.43 inches by
the end of this afternoon in
some areas . Temperatures
will. stay near 80. Winds will
be 10 MPH from the southwest.

ACI - 31.53
AEP- 30.96
Akzo- 36.84
Ashland Inc.- 50.94
BBT - 37.05
BLI - 15.50
Bob Evans- 27.36
Borg Warner - 43 .13
City Holding - 29.98
Champion - 4.389
Charming Shops - 8.50
Col - 31.61
DuPont - 43 .79
DO -20.20
Federal Mogul - .29

Gannett- 87.09
,General Electric - 3 1. 18
GKNLY - 4.45
Harley Davidson - 60.17
Kmart - 66.04 ·
Kroger - 17.00
Ltd - 19.26
NSC - 24.77
Oak Hill Financial- 31.71
Bank One- 49.72
OVBC - 33.26
Peoples - 25.23
Pepsico - 54.60
Premier - I 0. II
Rocky Boots - 20.71

RD Shell- 50.16
Rockwe ll - 33.68
Sears - 40.05
SBC - 24.62
AT&amp;T- 16.56 .
US B - 27 .95
Wendy's- 36.04
Wal-Mart - 57.03
Worthingto n - 19.66
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions.
provided by Smith. Partners at
Advest Inc . of Gallipolis.

The Daily Sentinel ·
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• 2 sturdy Garage/Yard Sale signs, 26 x 19 inches
• 2 wooden stakes
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Industrials

APR
MAY
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June 9, 2004

Judge allows national security
wiretap evidence against imam
CLEVELAND (AP) not revealing them when he
Wiretap evidence gathered in applied for citizenship.
a Tampa, Fla., investigation
Gwin's ruling emphasized
of alleged terrorism may be that the forei,.gn intelligence
used at the trial of an Islamic court's work ts secret by law
cleric charged with conceal- and he was barred from proing alleged ties to terrorists, a viding detail s in his ruling.
judge ruled Wednesday.
The surveillance was used
·u.s. District Court Judge in the government's investiJames S. Gwin rejected a gation of Sami Al-Arian, a
defense request to bar use of former University of South
the evidence at Fawaz Damm's Florida professor who was
trial next week in Akron. Gwin the target of the probe.
also rejected a defense request
AI-Arian ' has been held
to disclose the government for 14 months at a federal
application to a secret foreign prison on charges he used
intelligence court seeking the an Islamic think tarik and a
wiretap authorization.
charity he founded to raise
Damra, leader of the money for the Palestinian
of Islamic Jihad. Al-Arian was
Islami c
Center
Cleveland. has pleaded charged in a 50-count rackin nocent to a charge of etcenng indictment. ·
obtaining U.S. citizenship
In the indictment against AIin 1994 by providing 'false Arian, prosecutors detailed a
information. He is accused series of meetings and converof having connections with sations between Al-Arian and
the Palestinian Islamic an unnamed unindicted coJihad and other groups and conspirator in Cleveland.

~v--~
-~
I'

June 9. 2004

10 750

-44.01

NewsChannel

State awards $4,500 in crime victims' funds to family of slain soldier
COLUMBUS (AP)- The
state has awarded $4,500
from a crime victims' compensation fund to the family
of an Ohio soldier killed in
Iraq.
Attorney General Jim
Petro said Staff Sgt. · Sean
Landrus qualified as a victim
of terrori sm.
"Clearly, a violent terrorist
act fits the definition of
crime,"
Petro
said
Wednesday.
Landrus, 31, of Thompson
Township in Geauga County,
was killed Jan . 29 when a
roadside bomb exploded as
he was driving a truck near
Khalidiyah.
Landru s,
assigned to the l st Engineer
Ballalion of the lst Infantry
Division, was married and
had three children.
The $4,575 grant will
reimburse tbe family for
plane fare to Fort Riley,
Kansas, for a memorial honoring Landrus and to bring
his remain s home·, sa id
Geauga County Sheriff
Daniel McClelland, who
helped the family apply for
the money.
·
"This family paid the ulti"
mate price - it just seemed
unfair that they should also
have to pay out of their own
pocket as well," McClelland

Market watch

9,750

Regulators try for competition for FirstEnergy
COLUMBUS (AP)
Coi1sumers who pay Ohio's
most expensive electric bills
would get a break if competition for their business takes
hold under a plan state regulators approved on Wednesd&lt;\y.
State. regulators authorized
power suppliers to bid to
provide
electricity
to
FirstEnergy Corp. customers. If competitors cannot beat FirstEnergy's price
by January, the company will
be allowed to freeze rates for
three years in exchange for a
customer fee. estimated at
$15 for an average monthly
bill.
The
Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio, in a 41 vote, said the plan will provide the best price for
FirstEnergy 's
customers ,
financial security for-the utility and further development
of competitive energy mar- ·

Thursday, June 10,2004

A DAY ON WALL STREET

A few big farms in Ohio producing majority of sales ·
"You have to become large
to become efficiellt." said
Lynn Fore&gt;tei. &lt;m agricultural
economist at Ohio State
University. "It takes - ·one
heck of an investment to be
a fanner. You have to constantly reinvest and grow."
Roger Crossgrove, a dairy
farmer from Archbold who
is vice president of the
Ohio Farmers Union, said
more fanners are becoming
'· hobby
fanners"
with
smal ler
operations
and
another job off the farm.
" It's something they do
because it's in their blood,
but it' s not something
where you can make ·a liv ing," he sa id .
Low prices for soybeans
Dan Polter stands just inside a barn to escape a short sum- and corn along with · the
mer shower on his Fremont farm. Wednesday afternoon. high cost of land and fmm
Palter's Berry Farm encompasses about 2,000 ·acres · and machinery mean farmers
even though it still produces berries; it mainly relies on corn must produce more to make
and soybeans to pay the bills. (AP Photo/ Daniel Mil ler)
a proli1. Comely said.

PageA7

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Thursday, June 10., 2004

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AS • The Daily Sentinel

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Indians flnd way to cat~har1ins, Page B2
Terwilliger, Butler Buc
for now, Page B3
• Pistons try to shake o~ ryant's shot, Page B8

- - '\_

•

Thursday, JWle to, 2004

Ohio State Basketball

Pops 2004: River Cities Symphony Orchestra
songs from Oklahoma. numc from
th e film Rocky. and wo rk s of
A.mrric.m and oth er composers.
AJv,lllCQ
re se rvation s
are
n·quin·d. Ticket' are available at
Pe oples News &lt;&gt;utlets. O'Bri.en's
Photo Cc·nrer and onilne at
www.rno.us or by c•ma il at
info (g: rcso.us or {all 304-375l R12. Tickc·ts arc $15 tor adults and
Si\ tor student s.

MARIETTA- The River Cities
Symphony Orchestra will prc·sent
its " Pops ' 2004" co ncert at H p.m.
Friday at the historic Lafavette
Hotd in Marietta.
R obert
Dire cto r
Music
Turizziani has selected a potpourri
of music· includmg show tunc•s,
light dassical selec tion s and dance
ntusic, a mix that is sun.' to ha ve the

.1ud ience humming along and toes
.tapping. Dancers will has·c the
opportunity to strut the ir st uff for
selected danc e

The corporate sponsor for this
concert is The Peoples Banking
. and TruSt Company and the
RCSO is funded in part by
Artsbridge , The Ohio Arts
Council, and the West Virginia
Commission on the Arts. The
Gianfagna Group has been the
media sponsor for this concert season.

number ~.

The River C itie s Symplwny
Orchestra's 50-pltl&lt; ourqanding
professional

htlvt"

musiCians

delighted audtences 111 the MidOhio Valley for the past seven
·years. ''Pops! 2004" marks a festive
close to a co ncert season that
included an- hi storic performance
of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony at
Marietta High School Auditorium
in February.
Mariett a
vocalist.
Jennifer
Simmons, will make her orchestral
debut at this concert with the
River Cities Symphony Orchestra.
She has performed locally in a
variety of production s including
The Top Hat H.eview and numerous John Walsh Benefit Concerts.
The concert program will also
feature solos by violinist and concert ma ster Jan Jessee and a short
Dach concerto for two violins with
Elise Chen and Charles Moray of
the West Virginia Youth Orchestra.
Other items on the program
• include a tribute to the 70's, selections from Si mon 'and Garfunkel
and the Carpenters. a medle y of

Jennifer Simmons

Washboard Music Festival
brings artisans to Hocking Hills
LOGAN . A one-of-a-kind
celebration ·
of
America's
Appalachian c,u lture and heritage
will take . place June 18-20 in.
southeast Ohio's Hocking Hills.
The 2004 Washboard Music
Festival is expected to draw nearly ·
10,000 visitors from throughout
the United States.
Held
in downtown Logan the festival
features more than a dozen folk
musicians , a classic car show,
parades and a sampling of local cui·sine.
The popular "Washer Women"
will be on hand to demonstrate
how washboards are used for lacrndry. Guests will also have · the
opporrunity to make their own
washboard. Regional bands and
performers from as far a\vay as

~cal
Senior adults dance
Clog,

POINT PLEASANT-

s1ow dance or square dan ce to music
by Rocky Mountain .Boys, 7-10 p.rh,

'
California will play everything
from jug- band music to jazz and ·
Dixieland , all featuring washboard
players. Local artists and musicians
will also display and sell a wide
variety of folk art and wash board~
inspired instruments and arts and
crafts. During the 2004 festival,
guests can also visit Bowen House,
which will feature an Appalachian
Artists exhibit.
'
Families will enjoy Children's
Fair. a unique kid-friendly area.
Special . acttvmes are ongorng
throughout ··rhe festival, including
amu seme nt rides, face painting,
petting zoo, arts and craft tables
and a train ride that circles the fesrivaL
Another major highlight of the
festival is the free tours of the 100c

year old Columbus Washboard
Company, the only washboard factory in ihe United States still proclueing washboards on' a daily basis. ·
Free tours of the factory are

$3 singles.

Jam session

Ce ltic .stival
'

.

and Bell Tower Green.
Workshops:
Irish for
Wdsh
fnr
Beginners;
Beginners; Genealogy; Welsh
dance; Who were the Celts'
On the field: Story teller;
Bobby Murray; Welsh sheepdog demo; Children's corner;
Welsh dancing.
Admission:
Adults - $5
Children - $3
Under. 2yrs ·_ free
The 2003 Tri-Valley Celtic
Festival was held on June 2
and 3.
The Wel&lt;h Cultural
Center
had
a Welshlovespoon and Welsh Miner's
lamp display and Welsh
goods tor sale; Rio Grande
Redmen Soccer players did a
work shop with 50 children:
the annual Highland Garnes
were popular as ever: and the

This year's Celtic Festival
will be held from 10 a.m. 10 p.m., June 19, 2004 at
Rio Grande. Bell-Tower
Green
The lineup is' as follows:
Clans: Clan McNeill, Clan
Kinkade, Clan Douglas,
Clan Macinnes, Clan Irwin
Vendors: Green Mantle
Studio, WelsiY Society of
Southern Ohio, Infamous
Welsh Cookie Company,
Barrie Jones, Gallia County
Historical Society, Cameron's
of Kearny, Corron Moody
Designs, Manas Media Celtic
Product. Gothic Edge, ·Kraft non-stop entertainment in
the mai n tent surpassed all
Jewelry
expectations;
the
Welsh
Schedule:
Langu·age workshop lead to a
10 a.m. Welcome &amp;
great deal of Wolsh being
BlessingCapital City Pipes
spoker on the field ·during
and Drums Hell Tower
the weekend and the &lt;lancing
Green.
workshops were a lot of tim.
10:30 -11 a.m . Capital
City Pipes and Drums at the
Fine Arts Building.
11-11:30
a.m.
International
Folklanders
Fine Arts Building.
11 :30
- noon Gospel
Bluegrass Boys. Fine Arts
Building. •
Noon - 12:30 Parade of
Tartans. Bell Tower Green.
12:30 - · 1:30 Silent Lion.
Fine Arts Building.
I :30-2:30 John Sherman.
Fine Arts Building.
2:30-3:15 Rock n Country
Cloggers. Fine Arts Building.
3:30 - · 4:15 Victoria .
Parks. Fine Arts Building.
4:30-5:00 Capital City Pipes
. and Drums. Fine Arts Building

just 'Ma

• • •

offered year 'round.
'
A wide variety of accommodations, from camping and cabins to
hotels and country inns, give
Hocking County visitors plenty of
truly affordable lodging options.
For additional information on
accommodations and the many
sites in Hocking County, consumers can call toll-free, .1-800HOCKING .

happenings in brief
vides concessions.
Admission is $1.
,

Local Dance

LETART- Th ere will be a Jam
SOUTHSIDE- Dance to music ·
Friday, June 11 at the Point Pleasant session 6:30-10 p.m. Friday, June 11
at the Letart Community Center.
by Jamin on th e Break, 7-10 p.m.
Senior Center/ Action Gro up.
Country, bluegrass and gospel . Saturday, June 12 at the Southside
Concessions available, cake walk,
music will be featured.
Community Center.
door prizes and 50/50 drawing.
.The Letart Pioneers 4-H Club proAdmission is $3 per person .
Admission ·is $5 per coup le,

Red men's
Williams·
signs with
Paints ·

Just Mayoe Baroershop Quartet and other groups will perform at 7:30p.m., Saturday at the Ariel Theatre, downtown
Gallipolis.
The groups will sing ~orne classic baroershop tunes such as
"If There's Anybody Here,' "Old Songs Medley," "Aura
Lee/Love Me Tender,' "Sweet, Sweet Spirit' and "Precius
Lord, Take My Hand.'
Just Maybe will oe joined oy other quartets, including
Gentlemen Four and Pandora's Box.
There will also oe a special performance by the Barons,
2003 International Seniors Champions.
Current and former SPEBSQA Inc . members are welcome on
stage to sing with the choruses nnd quartets.

'

Craw's Family Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken
228 Main St.
Drive-Thru Window

Days Until
High School
Football ·
Season!!!

Rio hurler inks contract
with Frontier League team
STAFF REPORT
sports@ myda11 ytnbu ne .com

Cavaliers hire
former Jazz
assistant
CLEVELAND (APl The Cleveland Cavaliers
named former Utah Jazz
assistant coach Kenny Natt to
their
coaching
staff
Wednesday.
Natt spent the last nine seasons as an 1 assistant with
Utah, where he worked with
fronttourt players and broke
down video of opponents.
"He is a veteran coach who
brings valuable experience.
He wants to get out on the
floor and coach and that's
what I'll al.low him to do."
Cavali.ers coach Paul Silas
said in a statement.
Natt previously worked as
a scout for the Jazz and was
an assistunt coach for
Youngstown State. He had a
three-ye~r NBA career with
the Pacers, Jazz and the
Kansas City Kings ,
Natt replaces assistant
coach Bob Donewald Jr.
whose contract was not
renewed.

Rochester runs
past Clippers
in eighth
'·

COLUMBUS (APl
Jason Kubel hit the tying
home run in the eighth inning
and an, RBI double in a fourrun ninth that gave Rochester
an 8-4 win over Columbus on
Wednesday , night in fhe
International League.
The Red Wings scored four
unearned runs in the ninth off
Clippers
closer
Sam
Marsonek (0-4), who committed nne of Columbus'
three errors in the inning.
Columbus committed six
errors in the game. Third
baseman Jeff Deardorff had
three errors. including two in
the ninth.
Brian Simmons reached on
an error by Deardortl to start
the ·inning , and Brandon
Marsters got to first when
Marsonek misplayed h[s sacrifice bunt. Both players
scored when Deardorff committed an error on a ball hit
by Augie Ojeda . ··Luis
Rodriguez and Kubelthen hit
RBI singles.
Rochester scored three
times in the fourth ·to tie it 33. Columbus took a 4-3 lead
on Andy Phillips ' RBI single
in the seventh.
Adam Johnson (3-1) got
the win, striking out two in
two hitless innings of relief.
Bubba Crosby hit a tworun homer for Columbus.

Texas Tech's
Knights signs
extension
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) Bob Knight agreed to a threeyear contract extension that
will keep the basketball coach
at Texas Tech until 2009.
Athletic director Gerald
Myers told The Associated
Press on Wednesday the agreement probably will be signed
next week. Knight's contract
pays him $250,000 a year and
runs through May 2006.
. Knight's name had been
mentioned in the wake of Ohio
State coach Jim O'B.rien 's firing Tuesday for giving a
recruit $6,000 live years ago.
Knight is an Ohio State graduate.

.,

Rick Boyages. interim coach of the Ohio State men's oasketoall team, addresses reporters Wednesday at
Value City Arena in Columbus. Sever:year Ohio State coach Jim O'Brien was fired Tuesday after he admit·
ted he gave $6,000 to a recruit in 1999. (AP)
.

Boyages says players
should stay the course
BY RusTY MILlER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS -· Ohio State bas.ketball captain Terence Dials said
coach Jim o·Brien offered no
apologies and no r~grets when he
told the team on Tuesday that he
was being fired for giving $6.000 to
a recruit five years earlier.
"He just told us the situation and
what was going to happen with him

and our program.'' . Dials said
Wednesday. ·'He let us know he
wanted us to keep going forward ...
That may be hard to do in the
aftem1ath of O' Brien's abrupt dismissal.
Recruits Matt Terwilliger and
Jamar Butler spent Tuesday auenuing freshman orientation at Ohio
State. They were on iheir way back
hO!Jle when they heard the news
that the man who brought them to
campus. would never be their coach .

"I was jt"t in shock:· · said
Terwilliger. a 6-toot-9 senior trnm
Troy who was second-team AllOhio last ~eason. "It just came out
of nowhere. He wa,; one of the hest
people I met. He "a' like a father
figure·...

Terwilliger was pa11 of a recruiting class that was ;,upposed to tum
things around atler the Buckeyes
fell into discoru and ;,cllish play last

RIO GRA:\DE- L'nis·er&gt;itv of Rio Gmnde
pitcher Jason Williams ha'. signed a contract
with the Chillicothe Paints professional ba&gt;eballteam.
Willianh_
a
6-5
righthander. &gt;pent three .easons on the Redmen .ba&lt;;eball
team. He posted a· 3- 1 record
\\·ith a 5.2.&lt; ERA in 2004 for
Rio Grande set\ ing as both
rcl k' cr and ,tarter- for head
coach Brad Warnimont. He
pitched ~I inning' in!-+
Jppear~~ nce . .

Williams

deli,cring: two
"a'c" \\bile "tnkmi! out 20

and \\alkine on!' nil1e.
.. Ja ... nn had a HT\ i!;,uu -' t&gt;iu."· ,aid
Wamimom. ·The thin~ ·I tl1ink thai the\ ·n 1the
Paints I tinJ out is that"his ann is fairh:tresh ...
"We starteu him out as a closer and th·en he
mos·ed into a startin~ rnk hc~lfwas thmu2h the
vear:· \V~u·nimunt. aJJeU. ·· So·he\ I.!Ot al1 am1
ihai basic ails has unJer .+0 imiin2;, li1 it. ..
''I'm just -,ery happ~ for him." It' s good for
Ri o Grande and it's good for Jason Williams ...
Warn imont 'aiel the tr\nut with the Painh
came about atkr \\'illiam·s had a workout with
the Cincinnati ReJ, . "Jason had a pre-tlr.tft
workout with the Red&gt; and 1he 1 wa' Yerv ner,
s·(lus and did not throw pa11icularly too· welL
did not haw th ~ veloci ts that the' \\ere looking
WarnimomsaiJ. 'Thai 'ame ,cout set
up a workout with the Paillls. becau'e he felt
he 1Williatm 1diu have potentiaL"

tor:·

. Please see Williams, 83

Please see Course, Bl

Meigs County
Lawsuit contends
players ·earn
O'Brien, assistant
top
TVC
honors
knew of' aid to player
STAFF REPORT

BY RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press

Ohio State coach Jim O'Brien, shown
Jan. 17 ,in Columbus was fired
Tuesday, June 8. 2004. for alleged
NCAA violations that involved him
trying to assist a young man who
wanted to attend the university. (AP)

COLUMBUS- A lawsuit that
led to the llring of Ohio State
men's ·basketball coach Jim
O' Srien alleges that O'Brien anu
an assistant knew that player
Bohan Savovic received regular
payments and classroom help. in
defiance of NCAA rules.
Kathleen Salyers. who said she
housed and fed the player fnr two
years. testified in a deposition in
April that she spent thousands of
dollars on phone bills, car insur·
ance and spending money for
Savovic , who was on the 199899 team that O'Brien Jed to the
Final Four. She said she often put
the money in Savovic\ medicine
cabinet.
She said Ohio State assi"ant
coach Paul Biancardi regularly
contacted her about Savovic and
often told her he was calling at
o· Brien's instruction.
"He (Biancardi) called and told
me when taxes were due, when
Bohan was flunking a dass, to go
and talk to the professor and have

sports @mydailylnbune.com
THE PLAINS - Se,eral Mei~ s Counts·
tn!'eball and softball pla~ns wc1:C honnrej
hs· hrin~ n;nneJ to the Tri-V;t!ks Conference

t ~am-. ;.~. . ~e lected h\ k&lt;t£lll' t:o~~L'11~..,
In the me;intime-. tln~c pla}ers and one
cuar h earnt'J tup honor ... in !heir rc ... peL·ti\·c'PDth

Paul Blancardl

his grade changed." Salyers .said.
"There were many. many cal ls
from Patti Biancarcli requesting
that I pay something for Boban."
Ohio State tired O'Brien nn
Tu.esday aticr he ;rdmined he ·
gave $6.000 in 199\l to
a
Aleksandar
RacloJe' ic.
Bu ckeyes recruit whP never
playe d for or allcndecl Ohin
State. Radoj evic wa;, ruled illcligible by the NCAA for accepting

Please see Lawsuit, Bl

Fnr the Mri~s '&lt;&gt;ftball team. "'ikki '
Butcher was naJ11eJ top ofkn'i'e player.
while Nathan Hansen 11 '" named coach of
the )Car in the Ohio Disision .
Meig;' Cassi Wh;m. a fre,hman . .JOined
Butcher &lt;.h a fiP.. t teamer.
Krista White. a pitcher for the Eastern
;,oftball team. wa' named Jcrensiw· most
ntluable player in the Hcwking Dis ision.
White. Sanuv Powell and Katie Robertson
v.r.t:•re Hocking.Di\ i-;ion fir~t teame r:-.. alonf!

wilh Southet~n·s Brooke Kiser and Katie

Sa\'re.

E:a,tcrn ·, baseball team snrs Jed hs· ollensive player of the )'Car K,:n Amsbary.- Joining
A1mbary '"" teamnwlc Ryan Smith and
Sou thern 's Wcs Burrow' and krcmy
Ye~HJ~cr.

DoLtg Dill was tile lnne fiN team player
for Mci~ .s on the Ohio Divi,ion baseball
squad. "
For complete li&gt;t of TVC team&gt; . .,ee B2 .

Source: Browns release
A's bats hot again
against cooling Reds quarterback Tim Couch
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Damian Miller hit a grand slam and
the Oakland Athletics had a seasonhigh 22 hits in a 17-8 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday
night.
Ken Griffey Jr. failed to homer
for the Reds and remains two shy of
becoming the 20th player to hit 500
for his career. He didn't homer as
the Reds were swept in the threegame series.
Oakland won its fifth straight and
moved into first place in the AL

West, a game ahead of Anaheim.
which lost to Milwaukee . The
Athletics improved to 16-0 against
the NL Central since interleague
play .began
6-0 versus
Cincinnati.
The A's had 51 hits and ~cored 40
runs in the three-game series.
Jose Acevedo (3-5) gave up I 0
hits and eight runs in the first three
innings, highlighted by Miller·,
fifth career grand slam in the thiru,

Please see Reds, Bl

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

on the condition of anonymity.
,
Only paperwork is tying Lip the
mo\ e. the ~ourcc ~aid .

Couc:h \\as the frunchi,e's fiN
CLEVELAND Quarterback
~election a~ an expansion team in
Tim Couch will be relea,ed after fi ve J\)99. hut his time with the Brown;,
stormy season;, with the Cleveland
wa" marked b) ntjune&gt;. lo~ing seaBrowns. a lcaQue source told The
-.nn~ and cnntro\'er~ y.
Associated PreS:~ on Wednesday.
Brown' 'Pnkcsm;lll Todu .Stewart
The Browm will cut the tornier No.
""d
the team \\OuiJ not h;ne any
I overall draft pick after a grics anee c:omment Wednesda\ . Coach Butch
Couch recently liled "ith the NFL ))avis will address ihe media when
Player' A~~ociatiun again~1 the team
is re,olved. the source 'aiel. '~akin g
Please see Couch, B:Z

7

'

�-'
Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday,Juneto,2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Indians ·finally find a way to catch Marlins
CLEVELAND (AP ) Jake Westbrook made sure
the
Cleveland
Indian s
bounced right back from a
tough loss.
We'stbrook pitched eight
impressive innings and Casey
Blake homered to help
Cleveland finallv defeat the
Florida
Mailim
8- 1
Wednesday night .
The Indians got past
Aorida for the first time since
the 1997
winning Game 6
World. Series. The Marlin s
won Game 7 in I I innings.
swept a three-game series at
home in 2002 and took the
opener of this 'three-game set
on two ninth-i nning homers
off the foul pole at Jacobs
Field.
''The resolve of these gu ys
is impressi ve : · Indians manager Eric Wedge said... They
have proven it all seasou:·
. So has Westbrook (5-2!.
who began the year as the
long man in · Cleveland 's
bullpen but is now -l-0 with a
2.85 ERA in seven outin!'. ' .
including five stans. at hon'ie .
"He was very tough. very
impressive: · Marlins manager Jack Me Keon said.
Westbrook got 16 groundouts.
The
right-hander
allowed one run and six hits
in his first appearance against
the Marlins. He struck out
four without a walk.
"I felt good. strong ...
Westbrook said . .. All my
pitches were working and I
threw strikes:·
Miguel Cabrera ruined
Westbrook's bid for his first
career shutout by hitting a
446-foot homer. his 15th. to
left-center leading off the
seventh.

of

Couch
from Page 81
me Browns complete their
quarterback
school
on
Thursday.
Couch. who filed his grievance against the Browns after
mey banned him from working out at !heir training facility.
was unavailable for comment.
. Messages also were left for
his agent. Tom Condon.
A few weeks ago, Davis said
he had no plans to cut the 26year-old Couch. who lost his
starting job when the club
signed free agent Jeff Garcia
in March.
However, the Browns have
decided to end their relationship with Couch a month
before training camp opened,
freeing him to sign with another NFL team.
Couch's $7.6 million salary
for 2004 made it impossible
for the Browns to keep him as

Cleveland Indians ·· Ja ~ e Westbrook pitches to the Florida
Marlins in the · second inning Wednesday in Cleveland.
Westbrook pitched eight innings and allowed one run and six
hits in his fi rst appearance againsl the Marlins. The Indians
won 8-1. (AP)
..To go ei'ght and only make
one mi stake. that 's pretty
good ... Westbrook said.
~ Wedge is pleased that
Westbrook is finally pitching
with consistency after three
seasons of bouncing between
the bullpen and starting rotation.
..Jake has pitched well in
short stretches like this. but
he' s learned a lot the last
couple of years: · Wedge
said. ..We liked him in the

bullpen. too. but as fate
would have it, he 's done the
job as a starter:·
Westbrook has worked ar
least six innings in seven of
his eight starts..
Lou Pote pilched a perfect
ninth for Cleveland.
Jody Gerut had three of
Cleveland's 13 hits off three
Marlins pitchers. but was
more
impre ssed
by
Westbrook.
"He' s a pleasure to watch

a backup. Davis. who once
predicted Couch would lead
Cleveland to the Super Bowl.
had been reluctant to release
the quarterback. fearin g he
might sign with AFC North
rival Baltimore.
Ravens
However. the
recently signed
Kardell
Stewart as a backup for Kyle
Boller.
Couch could soon land with
another team. Condon has had
ongoing talks for the past two
months with the Green Bay
Packers. about Couch joining
them to be Brett Favre's backup.
.
Couch has passed for 11.131
yards and 64 touchdowns in
59 starts since the Browns
tabbed the former Kentucky
star as the tlrst overall selection in 1999.
Following a 2003 season in
which he lost his starting job to
Kelly Holcomb in training ·
camp, won it back and lost it
again, Couch's future with the
Browns became uncertain.

The club talked with Couch
about restructuring his contract
- $15.6 million for 2004 and
2005 - but when he refused
to take a nearly 60 percent pay
cut. the Browns decided to go
·after Garcia, a three-time Pro
Bowler with San Francisco.
Be tore Garcia signed. Couch
had been working out at the
team ·s training facility in
Berea. Soon after, the Browns
told Couch he was no longer
welcome.
The Browns even cleaned
out Couch 's locker and
removed . his nameplate for
their minicamp ahhough he
was still on their roster.
Couch had his best season in
2002 when he threw a careerhigh 18 TDs in 14 games while
leading the Browns to the playoffs for the first time since
1994.
However, that season was
marked by an ugly incident in
a home game against
Baltimore when some Browns
t(ms cheered as Couch was

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
992-2155

OJ!U-

.r,,~~

$179
BOOO BTU

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

game.
"If fans don't like the way
I'm playing or the way we' re
playing. they have a right to
boo us or boo me," he said.
"Bul to cheer when I got hurt.
that's a whole other level with
me. I don ·.1 agree with that at
all."
Last season, Couch lost his
job to Holcomb but got it back
when Holcomb got hurt and
then struggled.
Couch evemually started
eight games. playing behind an
offensive line ravaged by
injuries. He couldn't spark the
Browns, who lost fl'l'e of their
tina! six games and tinished 511 .

The Browns went a combined 5-27 in Couch's tirst two
seasons under coach Chris
Palmer, who was fired after the
2000 season and replaced by
Davis.

~

-~

~109
5000 BTU

Second Team

Edward Lemaster. Alexander .....................OF ......................... Sr.
Eric Cutlums. Meigs .................................... OF .... ..................... Jr.
Jeremy Blackston. Meigs ............................ SS ................... ...... Jr.
Brandon Fackler. Meigs .............................. 3B. ......................... Jr.
Charlie Wend. Nelsonville-York .................. SS ......................... Jr.
Offensive MVP - Matt Brozak. Vinton County
Defensive MVP -Tom Wolle. Belpre
Coach of the Year- Tefl)l Mullen. Belpre
Hocking Division

.

· Ken Amsbary, Eastern ................................ 2B/P ................ ...... Jr.
Ryan Smith. Eastern ............ ...................... PISS ......................Jr_
Joel Gandee. Federal Hocking ................... 26. ......................... Sr.
Brad Grimm. Federal Hocking .. .................. PICF ...................... Sr.
Nick Springer. Federal Hocking .................. 3B. ......................... So.
Jordan Doup. Miller .......... ........ :................. PISS .............. ........ So.
Wes Burrows. Southern .................... .......... SS ................ :........ Jr.
Jeremy Yeauger. Southern .... ,.................... C ........................... Sr.
Matt Christman, Trimble .............................. PIOF ...................... So.
Bruce Fouts, Trimble ............. ....................... IB ..........................Jr.
Keith Theiman, Waterford ........................... SS ..... :................... Jr.
·

things around after the Buckeyes fell into
discord and selfish play last year while
going 14-16.
The gem of the class was Butler. Ohio\
AP Mr. Basketball. a 6-2 point guard from
Lima Shawnee.
Both are confused and confounded by ,
what has happened to O' Brien.
Butler's family met with assistant coach
Monte Mathis during oricntarion but didn ·1
with O'Brien and had no idea anything was
wrong.
.
.
Butler was planning 10 ;aart school this
summer.
· "Right now. he's still going to Ohio
State,.. said his father. Mel. '" He's pretty
tore up about it. It was like someone had
died around here yesterday:·
Terwilliger said he has no doubts about
his college choice.
'Tm still committed ... he said. "I'm not
having second thoughts...

MIUER

Associated Press

SecondTeam

Terry Durst. Eastern ................................... C ........................... So.
Brandon Barnhart. Federal Hocking ........... SSIOF ...................So.
Cole Brown. Southern................................. P/SS ............ _........ Jr.
Scott Brown. Trimbte ......... ...................... :...OFIP.......... ............ Sr.
Anthony Dixon, Trimble ........... ,................... P/3B ,'..................... So.
Matt Dixon. Trimble ......... .. .......................... CF ......... ... ............. Jr.
Offensive MVP - Ken Amsbary, Eastern
Defensive MVP - Brad Grimm. Federal Hocking
Coach of the Year - Rocky Brunty, Federal Hocking
Softball
Ohio Division

First Team
Sarah Kaufman. Alexander .............. ..........3B .............. ............ Sr.
Jami Miner, Alexander ...... ........ .................. P.. ..... ..... ... ............. Jr.
Jessi Adams, Belpre .................. ................ P .... .............. .......... Sr.
Aubree Miller. Belpre ................................ .. CF .......................... Jr.
Nikki Butcher, Meigs ................................... SS ......................... Sr.
Casst Whan. Metgs ............... .. ... .................C ........................... Fr.
Jessica Crawford,.Nelsonville·York ... ..........3B .. ........................ Sr.
Jeri Bentley, Vtnton County ......................... 2B ..................... ... .. Jr.
Kayla Jewett. Vinton County ...................... .SS ............... .. ........Sr.
Kim Cremeans, Wellston .......... .................. SS ......................... Sr.
. Hilary Patrick. Wellston ............................... t B.......... ................ Sr.
Second Team

Ashley Hudnall. Alexander .........................C ........... ...........~ ... ,Jr.
Ashley Hamilton. Belpre ..... .. ........ .. .. ... .......SS ......................... Jr.
Samantha Cole, Meigs ......... ...................... P.... :....................... So.
Jaynee Davis. Meigs ........ .. ......................... t B.......................... Sr.
Kayla Crace. Wellston ................................. P ................ .,.......... Sr.
Offensive MVP - Nikki Butcher, Meigs
Defensive MVP - Jessi Adams. Belpre
Coach of ·the Year - Nathan Hansen. Meigs
Hocking Qivision

First Team
Sandy Powell. Eastern ............................... SS ...................... :.. Sr.
Katie Robertson. Eastern ........................... P............................ Sr.
Krista Whiie. Eastern ........................ :......... P............................ Jr.
Terri Wolfe. Federal Hocking ............ ..... ...... P............................. Jr.
Malaria Altier, Miller .................................... P....... :......... .. ......... Jr.
Brooke Kiser. Southern ......... .............. ....... P... ... .......... ..... .......Jr.
Katie Sayre, Southern ................................ C ........................... Sr.
Alicia Andrews, Trimble:..............................C .................... ....... So.
Allory Hooper, Trimble ................................ P............................ Sr.
Carri Woodgerd. Trimble .............................OF .......... .. .... ... ......Fr.
Desiree Van Dyke. Watertord ..................... ,OF ......................... Sr.
Second Team
Kass Lodwick, Eastern .......... .....................C ........................... Sr.
Emile Bray, Miller ....... .. .. ... ... ..................... .. C ...... ..................... So.
Joanne Pickens. Southern ...... :................ :.. OF ............. ............ Jr.
Lindsay Hooper, Trimble ...... .......... .. ... ........OF ............. .... .. .. .... Sr.
Janelle Nichols, Trimble ... ............ ,..............SS ..... ................. .. .Jr.
Tiffan~ Wallace. Waterford .,........................ OF ......................... Fr.
Offensive MVP - Allory Hooper. Trimble
Defensive MVP- Krista White. Eastern
Coach of the Year- Tim Sikorski, Trimble

GALLIPOLIS, OH. Local Dealership has announced plans to liquidate their used vehicle inventory to the public by means of a '
SUPER PRICE SLASHER SALE this coming Saturday June 12th. During this 2 Hour event, every used vehicle will be sold for
thousands below its original price, including used cars for as low as $79i* "Why price them so low? For two very important reasons,'' explains Neal Peifer, Sales Manager of Norris Northup Dodge. "First of all, strong new car sales have created an-over abundance of quality pre-owned vehicles to sell. The recent economy has driven interesr rates down, allowing more and more people to
trade up to new vehicles; and with auto leasing at an all lime high, we are seeing more lease return vehicles than ever. The circum·
stances indicate that we have no other choice but to liquidate this inventory as fast as possiqle." Norris Northup Dodge has decided
lo offer these vehicles to the public for thousands below market value before they go to auction. "The local communities have shown
us great support and we' re very gratefuL We would rather give these great buys to the public than unload them at an auction. A huge
selection of over 200 pre-owned cars, trucks, vans attd sport utilities will be available for this event. "We must reduce our used inven·
tory at all costs, so customers can expect these vehicles to be sold for near or below wholesale," stated owner Mike Northup. Cars
that would normally sell for $3,000 to $12,000 could be thousands lower. There is truly a vehicle for every budget." All vehicles will
be on display in a special area. Customers are requesled to find a Nehicle that interests them and the rest is up 10 the PRICE
SLASHER. '!his will truly be a great opportunity, as our inventory must be reduced by at least half, and for that reason used cars
will be priced as low as $79." CUSTOMERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO ARRIVE BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 9AM AND
!0:45AM SATURDAY JUNE 12TH IN ORDER TO PRE-REGISTER AND CHECK ON FINANCING AND QUALIFICATION
PACKAGES . THE SPECIAL AREA WILL BE OPENED PROMPTLY AT I0:45AM Here is how the PRICE SLASHER SALE
works: AT 10:45 all vehicles will be opened so customers may inspect them. The retail price will be posted on the windshield of each
vehicle. When the $79 Sale begins at II :OOam the Price Slasher will cross out the retail price on each vehicle and replace it with the
neiv SUPER SLASHER SALE PRICE. Prices will be cut one time to the rock bottom price, including vehicles for only $79. This
Super Sale is for the public only-auto dealers and wholesalers are not eligible to participate. "It's just that simple,''said Neal Pei.fer, .
Choose the vehicle you're interested in. be the first one behind the wheel. and you get the first opportunity to purchase that vehicle at
the Super Slasher Sale Price." There will be special tinance and credit analysts on hand to get you prequalified before the sale. "We
will have some of the most liberal lender's in the area at this event, so even if you have had trouble obtaining auto financing in the
past, don' t count yourself out. If you bring a current payroll stub and your driver's license, chances are we can arrange financing for
you." Thi s $79 Super Price Slasher Sale this Saturday, June 12th, will be the Biggesl Used Car Sales Event that we have ever had
and I expect over I00 sati sfied customers lo leave with great cars at great prices,'' saip Mr. Northup. The $79 Super Price Slasher
Sale will be held at Norris Northup Dodge, Gallipolis, Oh. Remember be here no later than !0:45am this Saturday June 12th Come
early or call to prequalify and find out all the details of !his once in a lifelime event!! 800-446-0842 or 740-446-0842
.
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Prized recruits Matt

Terwil.liger and Jamar Butler spent Tuesday
attendmg freshman orientation at Ohio
State.
On their way back home. both heard the
news that the man who brought them to
campus had been fired.
Seven-year Ohio State coach Jim
O'Brien wa~ fired Tuesday after he admitted he gave $6JXJO to a recruit.
. "I was just in shock."Terwilhger said. "It
JUSt came out of nowhere. He was one of
the best people I met. He was like a father
figure."
.
.
TerwiUiger is a 6-foot-9 senior who was
second-teamAssociated Press All-Ohio last
year while averaging 18.1 points per game
at Troy High School. He was part of a
recruiling class that was supposed t() turn

'

Ohio State athletic director Andy Geiger
said after announcing 0 ' Brien\ tiring that
interim coach Rick Boyage!o would be contacting each of the Buckeyes signees to
answer their questions.
Terwilliger said he talked with O'Brien
on the phone Tuesday night.
"He told me thar even if he was not there.
Oh"10 state wa~ the pace
1 ,or
c me," he sa1·d .
The .other two members of the recruiting
class are Je'Kel Foster of Chipola College
in Rorida and Jermyl Jackson-Wil son of
Milwaukee.
Terwilliger said he is not worried about
playing for a different coach, that it will
probably be more of an adjustment for the
players who have already played for
0 ' Brien.
"It won't be as big of a problem for the
incoming freshmen,'' he said. ·we never
got the privilege for playing for Coach
o· Brien."

from Page 81
Warnimont. who was present at both workouls. said
Williams was · much more
comfortable at the Paints' session . "I think the environment,
the. setting, Jason was much
more relaxed and his velocity
was back where they were
looking: · he said. "He ropped
out at 89 (mph) that day and
that 's a mile an hour away
from 90. so they were pleased
with that and his off-speed
stuff was impressive enough
for them to keep him."
Williams has not yet
appeared in a game for the
Paints.
As a junior in 2003,
Williams went 1-3 on the
mound with an 8.12 ERA He

Jim o· Brien""'
ness.
She responded. ··1 aurho"Anyone who reads that
transcript
will walk away
ri zed my attorney to send
every letter that he sent."
with a lot of questions about
Biancardi. now head coach her credibility," he said ..
from Page 81
Zeszutek said the money to
at Wright State, denied the
. Radojevic was a loan, not a
allegations.
··( am di sappointed and gift, and
came
from
Oakland's Marco S,cutaro
frustrated over the situation O' Brien 's bank account.
doubled home two runs in a
that has evolved from a lawRadojevic ·s father had died three-run second and scored
suit in wh ich I am .not a party and his mother was ill and on a single by Billy
..Coach McMillon .
and have had no involve- couldn ' t work.
ment.'' he said in statement O'Brien decided re would
Jermaine Dye opened the
released Wednesday. "These help him out with a loan," A's third with a bloop single
statements .are not supported Zeszutek said. ..He figured thar fell between three Reds
by facts and are uncorrobo- Alek had already signed bur in shallow center field. Scott
rated ."
·
might not e:ver play because Hatteberg singled and one
0 ' Brien 's attorney. Jim of academic questions and out later Bobby Crosby
Zeszurek , on · Wednesday that the kid really needed walked on five pitche s,
questioned Salyers' truthful- some help ...
Miller then hit a full -count
pitch for his first slam since
June 2, 2002 , against San
Boy ages 'gave up the head said. ·Tm no1 having second the recruiring class arc Je' Kel Diego when he played for
Foster of Chipola College in Arizona .
coaching job at William &amp; thoughts ...
Terwilliger said he talked Florida and Jermyl JacksonMary to return to Ohio State a
Miller also drove in five
Wilson
of
Milwaukee.
with
o·
Brien
on
the
phone
year
ago.
Even
as
he
was
being
runs Tuesday with a pair of
from Page 81
..It's a difficult time;· doubles and now has 14
asked by 0 ' Brien to come Tuesday night.
.. He told me that even if he Boyages said. " I think I'm up RBis in the last four games .
back to Ohio State. where he
season while going 14-16.
had earlier served as an assis- was not there. Ohio State was to the task. The kids have been Seven of his last eight hits
The gem of the class is . tant for three years. o·Brien the place for me:· Terwilliger . fantastic. The reason for me to
have gone for extra base·s.
Butler, Ohio's Associated was aware thar his paymem to said.
be here is to say to everybody,
With the loss, the Reds
Press Mr. Basketball, a 6-2 the recruit might someday
The other two members of 'We'll be tine ... ,
dropped
into a first-place tie
point guard from Lima arise to bite him.
Shawnee. His family met with
Boyages said he did not feel ·
assistant coach Monte Mathis betrayed by what he called the
during orientation but didn't "thunderbolt .. rhat hit the ream
see 0' Brien and had no idea Tuesday.
anything was wrong.
"I have a varying amount of
Butler is planning to start opinions," he said. ''I need ·to
school this summer.
think about it. I'm not at all bit"Right now, he's still going ter."
·to Ohio State," his father. Mel.
Boyages has been told by
said Wednesday. "He's pretty Geiger that he will be considtore up about it.. It was like ered for the vacant head coachsomeone had died around here ing position. He wqsted no
yesterday."
time in separating himself
The players already on cam· from O'Brien's messy legacy.
pus felt the same way. After
"! had no knowledge of any
O' Brien told them he was of thi s." Boyages said.
· being dismissed, Dials said,
Dials said all of Ohio State's
''The room got real quiet."
current players said they would
Ohio State athletic director return to play for the new
Andy Geiger said interim coach. The Buckeves return
coach Rick Boyages would be live of !heir top six scorers.
eontactin~
each · of the
Terwilliger said he has no
Chevy 510 Crew Cab
Buckeyes players and recruits intention of looking elseto answer their questions. That · where.
$
may be difficulr, . since
"I'm still committed ," he
Boyages has a few of his own.

Lawsuit

$1 ,000 per month plus
expenses she had been
promised by Dan and Kim
Roslovic, Savovic's sponsors.
.from Page 81
Salyers sued the Ohio Srate
boosters, seeking $51·0.000 in
money to play for a profesexpenses and damages.
sional team in Yugoshvia.
She • also acknowledged
Ohio State athletic director
that
her attorney asked
Andy Geiger learned of the
O'Brien
mone y to keep
payment because it was men- her storyfor from
becoming
tioned in Salyers' statement in
public.
her lawsuit.
An anorney asked Salyers
NCAA rules prohibit stu- . in the deposition , .. Kath y.
dent athleres from receiving
any financial help from any- have you authorized your
anorney to send a lener to
one other than family mem- OSU in which your attorne y
bers.
offered to sell the book and
In the deposition, Salyers movie rights to Jim O'Brien
said she did not receive or to an entity controlled by

Reds

a

Course

pitched in 10 game' and ha9
one complete game. In 37·'
innings he fanned 30 and
walked 25.
The Fairfield. Calif. nati ve
and former Jack,on High
School standout came to the
Redmen in 2002 (Warnimom\
first season at the helm ) after
spending a year at Shawnee
State.
His first season with Rio. he
posted a 2:5 mark with an ll.62
ERA. l!, 18 game ~. he had one
complete game and ti ve saves.
He pirched 55 '' innings rhat
season with 30 strikeouts and
issued 33 walks.
. His three-year num bers for
the Redmen : 6-9 with a 7.62
ERA. 42 games. seve n ' aves.
124 innings, 80 suikeouts and
67 walks.
Willi ams was un available
for comment.
The Paints play in the independent Frontier League.
with St. Loui s. which beat .
the Chicago Cubs .
A's starter Rich Harden
(3-3 ) was staked to an 11·0
lead· in hi s fir st victory since
May 12 -. fi ve start s:
Harden gave up only three
hits until the sixth when the
Reds chased him by scoring
five runs. Jour unearned .
after hi s error on a play at
first base.
Adam Dunn hit hi s major
league-leading 18th homer. a
two-run shut in the seventh
inning off reliC\ er Jusrin
Duchscherer. One out later,
Jacob Cruz cut the lead to
11-8 wirh a so lo homer. hi s
second of the year.
But the !l:s scored six run s
off John Riedling in thei r
half of the se,·enth . capped
bv Eurbiel Durazo' s two-run
homer. his 1Oth.
Oakland scored three
times in the fourth off Phi I
Norton to go up 11-0. two on
an error by first baseman
Sean Casey.

HUGl
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helped off the field with a concussion.
Couch tearfully and profanely lashed out at fans after the

Terwilliger, Butler are still Buckeyes for now Williams

Baseball
Ohio Division

First Team
Alex Abele. Alexander ................................ ! B.......................... Sr.
Jake Hale. Alexander ................................. .P ............................ Jr.
Shane Colvin. Belpre .................................. 2B .......................... Jr.
Luke Nolan, Belpre ............................. -......OF ......................... Jr.
Tom Wolfe. Betpre................................ .. ..... P............................ Sr.
Doug Dill, Meigs .........................................2B ................... ....... Sr.
Matt Brozak, Vinton County ........................ C ............ :............ Sr.
Josh Ousley, Vinton County ........................ P............................ Jr.
Greg Powell, Vinton County ........................ SS ......................... Jr.
Ryan Collins. Wellston ................................ OF ....................... .. Jr.
Brant Derrow. Wellston ...............................26. ......................... Sr.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

USED CJlRS 'I'll BE SD£D f'D f'BB JIUB£11: FIIB
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- -----··--- -- ---

- poetry in motion ... Gerut
said . "He work s fasl and
makes il fun ro play defense
behind him. He was pretty
nasty tonight ."
The Indians took a 5-0 lead
in the third inning against
AJ . Burnett (0-2 ). Gerut had
an RBI single. Travi s Hafner
a two-run double and Blake a
two-run homer. hi&gt; eighth.
The Indians went 5-for-5
with runners in ~coring position in the inning.
.
Ben Broussard hil a tworun double and Ronnie
Belliard drove in another run
with a sacrifice fly in a threerun fifth for an 8-0 lead.
Burnell gave up ei~hr runs
and 12 hits in 4 1-3 mnings,
losing for the first lime in 10
interleague starts. He is 6-1
against AL teams, including
six shutout innings against
Cleveland in 2002 in his only
previous appearance againsl
!he Indians.
''Those guy s came our
swinging,'' Burnell said . "I
went after them and they
wen! after me.''
It was the most hits and
runs allowed in a game by
Burnell in his career. The
right-hander also walked two
· and struck out three in just
his second start since he had
elbow ltgament replacemenl
surgery in April 2003 .
"I'm healthy,'' he said.
··.My arm feels g'?od, but it is
lime to star! pu11mg up numbers."
.
McKeon satd that should
come with more work.
"Stuff-wise. he's fine. "
McKeon, said. · : velocil~wtse , he s there. Its JUSt hts
command. Thi s is like spring
training for him .''

Tri-Valley Conference
Basebaii/S,oflhall Teams

Thursday,Jurie1o,2oo4

·

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1/2 Mile South of the Silver Bridge, Gallipolis, Ohio
·

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Taking it off, we have the
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2002 Buick leSabre
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200.3 Cadillac Deville · Silver. ... $24,900
2003 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Beige .......................................... $12,850.00
2003 Chevrolet Impala Pewter ...............
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2001 Pontiac Aztek Black.............. $9999
2003 Oldsmobile Alero ................. $9900
2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GT · 4 door.
Maroon; Auto. Air, CD ................ $1 I ,900
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VALUE PRICED
USED CARS

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·1998 5·10 Pickup 4x4 .............. $9999.00
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t 99B Olds Bravada ................... $9999.00
2001 5·10 ZR2 Ext. Cab 4x4
low miles .......................:........... $17,650.00
2002 S-10 Ext Cab Red,
low miles .................................. $10,880.00
2002 ChevroletTrail Blazer.$19,900.00
2000 Ford F-150 XLT Ext Cab
VB, Auto, Air, Sharp ......................$14,250

None higher than $5,999.00
1999 Plymouth Breeze ............ $4650.00
2000 Ford Focus ........................$5950.00
1998 Cavalier .............................. $4850.00
2001 Chevrolet Lumina :......... $5975.00
1999 Chevrolet Metro - 4 door, Auto.
Air, 4 cyl Gas Mizer..................... .... $4,750

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Thursday, June to , 2004

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Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 10, 2004

www myda1lyser.t1nel com

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W8StbookW52

8

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4 1 1 0

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REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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1

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Pubhc Not1ce

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
HOME NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF
Case No 04CV02'
va
THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS NEXT OF KIN
SPOUSES
OEVISEES LEGA
TEES
ADMINISTRATORS
EXEcUTORS
SUCCESSORS AND
ASSIGNS OF TONY
L
WELCH AKA TONY
WELCH DECEASED
ET AL
DEFENDANTS
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To
T
h
e
Unknown Heirs Naxt
of Kin
Spouses
Oevlseea Legatees
Administrators
Executor s
Successors
and
Asslgna of Tony L
Welch
aka
Tony
Welch deceased
whose names and
addresses
are
unknown
You are hereby
notified lhat you have
bean
named
Defendants In the
action en11tled
Home National Bank
Plaintiff
va The
Unknown Hairs Next
of Ki n
Spouses
O.vlsees
L e gatees
Adm i n is trators
Exe c u 1 o r a
Succ assora
and
Assl!ln• of Tony L
Welch
aka
Tony
Welch deceased at
al Defendants Th is
action
haa
been
assigned Case No 04
CV 021 and Is pend
lng In the Court of
Common Pleas of
Meigs County Oh io
The object of the
Co'!1plalnt demands
judgment against tha
decedent Tony L
Welch
aka
Tony
Walch
and
1he
Defendant Gwenne

$4 10 per day from
January 22 2004 In
order to foreclose
upon a mortgage
estate
upon real
located at
29337
Slate Route 124
Langsville OH 45741
which Ia more fully
described 1n deed
recorded In Volume
25 Page 269 Meigs
County
Official
Records and at 341
Park
Stree1
Middleport
OH
45760 which Ia more
fully described In
deed recorded In
Volume 16 Page 811
Meigs County Olftclal
Recorda and upon a
1974 Cameron mobile
home, 1Dt0735768H
Ohio
Certificate of Title
•5300048762
and
coats of thla action
and attorney leas
that the mortgage be
foreclosed and that
the liens and/or Inter
eats In or on said
property II any be
marshalled and the
real estate title quiet•
ad and aald real and
personal
property
eold In the loreclo·
sure action and all
amounts due Plaintiff
be paid from the pro·
ceeda of the sale
You are required to
anewer the Complelnt
within twenty alght
(28) days altar the
loll
publlca11on of this
Notice which will be
publlehed once each
week lor six (8) sue
casslva weeks
The lae1 publication
will be made on 1he
17 day of June 2004
and 1he twenty..lght
(28) days lor answer
will commence on
that date In the case
of your failure to
answer or otherwise
respond aa request
ed by the Ohio Ruloa
of Civil Procedure
judgmen1 by default
will
be rendered
against you and lor
the relief demanded
In tho Complaint
Oa1ed thla 27 day of
April 2004
Marlene
Harri son
Clerk of Cour1a
5/13 20 27

0
Welch
aka Gwenne
Welch aka Gwenne
Grady, In the sum of
$13 002 30 plus mter
est at a rate of

I

Public Notice
613 10 17

Public Notice
SHERIFF S SALE
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 03
CV-Q62
Bank One
Plaintiff
vs
Swindell, Alan B II

al
Delondanta
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
directed from said
Court In the above
entitled action I will
expose to sale a1
public auction at tho
Courthouse on July
23,2004 at 10 00 am
of said day the lol
lowing described real
oat ate
The
following
doacrtbed real estate
altuated In Bedford
township
Malgs
County In the State
of Ohio In Section
1B Township 3N
Range 13 W of tha
Ohio
Company
Purchase and baing a
parcel created out of
real ellata owned by
Gloria
Mclntoah,
Rebecca L Hun1er
Philip Swindell and
Alan Swlnd,all aa
recorded In Volume
324 Page 605 of the
Meigs County Deed
Records oald new
parcel being bounded
and described aa lol
Iowa
Commencing a1 an
Iron pin aot by this
survey at the south
west corner of tho
raal estate described
In volume 324 Page
605 of the Melge
County
Deed
Records from which
an Iron pin set by this
survey at the north
west corner ol aid
real estate bears
north 03 deg 15 min
utee 00 seconds East
2412 58 feet and an
Iron pin set by th l~
survey at the south
east owner of said
real esta1a bears
South 86 deg 56
minutes 17 seconds

Public Not1ce

Public Not1ce

Public Not1ce

East 2848 26 feet and
thence runmng along
the west boundary of
said
real
ea1a1e
described In Volume
324 Page 605 or 1he
Meigs County Deed
Records North 03
deg 15 minutes 00
seconds East 422 00
feet to the center of
Swindell
Road
(County Road 23) and
the point of begin
nlng of the real esta1e
described
herein
thence along new
parcel boundary the
following lour cours
eo 1) along the center
or Swindell Road
South 44 deg 21
mlnutea 27 seconds
East 25 30 feet 2)
North 68 deg 20 min
utea 38 seconds East
217 89 feet to an Iron
pin set by thla survey
passing an Iron pin
set by this survey at
32 52 feet 3) North 10
deg 57 minutes 48
seconde East 156 27
feet to an Iron pin set
by this survey 4)
North 79 deg 19 min
utea 09 seconds West
239 29 feet to an Iron
pin set by this survey
on the west boundary
ol the real estate
described In Volume
324, Page 605 of the
Meigs County Deed
Record thence along
the weal boundary of
aald
real
estate
deacrlbed In Volume
324, Paga 605 of the
Melga County Deed
Records South 03
deg 15 minutes 00
aeconda West 260 51
feel to the point of
beginning pass ing
on Iron pin set by this
eurvey at 219 89 feet
containing
1135
ac res
Permanent
Parcel Number 01
00786
Prior Instrument ref
arences Volume 31
Page
675
Meigs
County
OHiclal
Recorda
Propert y
address
41 490 Swindell Road
Shade OH 45776
Appraised
at
$40 00000
Terms of Sale Cash
Ralph E Trus sell
Sherlff.,Me(gs County
Sera M Petersmann

Lerner
Sampson
&amp;Rothfuss
120 E Fourth Street
Bth Floor
Cincinnati
Oh1o
45202
(513) 241 3100
CH Sup Ct #0055402
(6) 3 10 17

bid
B1ds
shall
be
enclosed in a sealed
envelope marked on
the outstde With 1he
btdder s name an
address and marked
RFP
for
Meigs
County Probs1e and
Juvemle Courts
Any bid may be
Withdrawn prior to
the scheduled clos
lng time lor the
receipt of b1ds but no
t;lldder shall wl1hdraw
his bid within 60 days
aner 1he ac1ual bid
opemng
The
Board
of
County
Commissioners
reserves the right to
reject any an all bids
to waive any infor
malltles In the bids
received
and to
award the contract to
the lowest and best
bidder
(6) 3 10

i

__

----~----~----------------------- · -

Publtc Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bid propos
als will be received
by the Me1gs County
Board of County
Commissioners
100E Second Street
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Attn
Clerk
of
Commissioners
Date Thursday June
17 2004
T1me 1 00 pm
lor the acquisition of
a computer ayetem to
aulomate the actlvl
ties of the Meigs
County Probate and
Juvenile Courts Bids
will Include appllca
tlon software system
software hardware
Installation warranty
training maintenance
and support All ven
dors Interested In
submitting a bid
MUST aUend lhe
Vendor s Conference
at 1 DO PM Monday
June 7 2004 at 1ha
Meigs
County
Probate and Juvenile
Courts
tOO
E
Second
Street
Pomeroy Oh io 45769
A
Request lor
Proposal RFP may
be obtained by con
tactlng the Clerk of
the Commissio ners
at the Commission a
Office 100 E Second
Street Pomeroy Ohio
45769
In accordance with
ORC 307 88 each bid
mu st be accompa
nled by either a bond
with sat isfa ctory cor
porate aurety or by a
certified
check
cashiers check or
money order on a sol
vent bank or savings
&amp; loan In the emount
of not less than 1 0%
of the bid amo unt
conditional th at bid
der shall 1! bid IS
accepted execute a
contract in canformi
ty to the RFP and the

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
IN RE CHANGE OF
NAME OF Rebecca
Lynn
Avis
TO
Rebacce
Lynn
Cundiff
Case No 32100
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON CHANGE OF
NAME
Applicant hereby
gives notice to all
Interested persons
and to Jonathan Avis
thai the applicant has
flied an Application
lor Change of Name
In the Probate Court
of Meigs County
Ohio requesting the
change of name of
Rebecca Lynn Avi s to
Rebecca
Lynn
Cundiff
The hea ring on the
app li cation wi ll be
held on the 13th day
of July 2004 at 1 30
o clo ck p m 1n the
Pro bate Court of
Mei gs County local
ed at 1DO East
Second
Street
Courth ouse
2nd
Floor Pomeroy Ohio
45769
Leanna Little
620 Laurel S1reet Lot

A NNOUNOJ\1ThTS

Ie

~~s

NL Leaders
BATIING--Gas&amp;) C n~ nne
San F anc sco 376 Lo Duca los Ange es
360 Ro en St lou s 355 JEs rada A lanta
351 CW son Pttsbu gh 349 JWi!IOfl Pills
burgh 332
RUNs-Pu o :o S lou s 53 JD ew A anla
44 Casey C nc na1 44 BAb eu Ph ada
ph a 44 Cayton Coo ado 43 LGon1alez
A zona 43 Bonds San F anc sco 43
RB~ olen St lou s 53 Casl a Colo ado
48 G lley J C nc nna1 48 BerKman Hous
ton 47 Bumlll Colorado 46 Bu e Ph ade
ph a 44 A~am ez Chocago 43 Casey
C nc nne 43 Edmonds Sl ou s 43 JKent
Hous on 43
HtT5--Casey C nann at 85 JW lson Pittsburgh 76 Pf&amp;l' 8 Flo dA 75 Rolen Sl lo 9
75 CW son P nsbu gh 73 AAam a2 Ctu::a
go. 72 A ou Chago 72
HOME RUN s-Dum C ncrmB1 17 Pu101s
S Lous 7 Gt1teyJ Cncnna
7 Rolen
S lou s 6 Bu n~z Colo ado 6 Thorne
Ph dade ph a 6 SF nley A zona 6 Bonds
San F anc sco 6

Pr

c

Interest n helpmg couples
complete
the r
l am ly
l hrough sur ogacy? Your
eggs Wilt not be used For
nl or'mat on cat 1 888 342

Mo¥ ng!Yard Sate
Fr day6 11&amp;
Sa turday 6 12
9am?
3206 Georges Creek Ad
Adult &amp; ch fdrens c othes

oys

3678
R elax and earn free g fts n
t he comfort of your own
1'1 ome wh te you enjoy th e
fee l ng ot a modern spa
H old you very own Spa
Escape pa rty Fo data Is call
(304)675 300B leave mes

•

=.

r

Numerous sates set up
through town many nd v d
uals se ling by the Munlc pal
Bu d ng Ca wash &amp; con
cess on stand to benet t A o
Grande Vol F re Dept

sage

~

Beh nd Ame r can Leg on

GIVEAWAY

46 TV
All s ze clothes

1 yr old !em ate full blooded
B ussels G tlon puppy no
w k ds 8+ Homes Saturday 12 7?
pape rs
good
(304)675 66 5
Household tems foozeba I
tab le Longaberger Prom
5 m xed breed pupp es 6 dress toys baby tOddler
wee~s old
(740)367 7115 adu lt cloth ng and ttems col
leave message 1f no answer
actabl e doll s etc 160 I rst
ght past Haffelts
Free 5 beautfu l kittens m f
litter ra ned (740)742 1019 Yard Sale 1595 Adamsvtlle
after Spm
Road Saturday Sunday
June 12 13 9 3
F ee Alpaca Manure Low
N trogen &amp; Odo r H gh
Potass1um apply d eclly Down At 7 2 m les
w 1th no burn {304)882 20 17 Raccoon Ad Boys
name brands eJCCellent con
Give away to a good home dton Catescr bsbeddng
very small gray k tten and accessor es toys d sh
(304)875 4027
as candl es home nterlor
baskel s tread m J quIt
Kittens to good hOme Born
frame lad es 14 20
May 1st 1 temae 3 maes
Ya d Sa te F day Saturday
(740)379 2981
9 ? 61 1 Shoestnng A dge
Pome an an dog
male Someth ng lor everyone
ho use broken very good craNs m;crowava TV
w lh ch ld an (740)992 1833
74
YARD SALETo good home 7 months old
PoMEROY/MIDDLE
wh te lema e house cat
Declawed/shots {740)379
3 famtly cloth ng baby
2686 9 30 noon
terns ant ques turn ture off
SA 248 on Tay or Ad watch
for s gns {Fr day Only)
(740)985 4408

OhiO

Public Nottce
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
IN RE CHANGE OF
NAME OF Breanna
Irene
Avis
TO
Breanna
Irene
Cundiff
Case No 32100
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON
CHANGE OF
NAME
Applicant hereby
g1vas nohce to all
interested persons
and 10 Jonathan Avis
that lhe applicant has
Iliad an Application
lor Change of Name
In the Probate Court
of Meigs County
Ohio requesting 1he
change of name of
Breanna Irene Avi s to
Brean na
Irene
Cundiff
The hearing on 1he
application will be
held on lhe 13th day
of July 2004 at 1 30
o clock p m In the
Probate Cour1 of
Meigs County local
ed ar 100 East
Second
Street
Courthouse
2nd
Floor Pomeroy Ohio
45769
Leanna Little
620 Laurel Street Lot
1
Middleport
Ohio
45760
(6) 10

Black Cocker Spanle with
bl ue col ar Name Prec ous
Lost n Kanauga a ea
Reward cal (740)446 B125

Boat tral er t es outdoor
rug o ld co ns currency
glassware
m1 sc
37120
Rockspr ngs Road June

11&amp;12

..

Found
near Mt
H II
Cemetery
M l~ed
breed Cl fton WV June 8 11 eam
female dog black/whi te Very ? lawn mowers bicycle
lrlandly (740)446 8890
ch lderns &amp; adult clolhlng &amp;
Atplne da ry goat
brown w th black mark ngs Garage sa e Thursday 611'1
(Fa! projects) If found call Friday 7th take county road
30
e)Clt off new 33
(740)44 1 0899
Mornlngsl ar area welch lor
sgns

Lost

r

YARD SALE

YARD SALE·
G ALLIPOLIS

YARD SALE

•

...

1found

my

summer

•

job m the

'"'
•

class1fied s

...
..

~
~

1

•

--~--------

'-

10th 11th 12th 8 00 4 00
ldrQn s c oth ng toys
household
terns cook
books crafts plus s ze
women s cloth ng and more
Rain or Shme
Ch

3 br Ceda Cape Cod 2 1 2
Ba 2 ca gaage267aces
of r verlron1 pope ty o sale
n Mason can 304 675 0808

All rea esta te adv ert a ng
m this newspape s

'IH\1(1'

aubJe&lt;:l to !he Fe deral
Fau Housmg Act of 1968
which m a kes t dl ega to

110

HllPWANUD

a d vertse a n y

prefe ence f m 1a11on o
d scnmmat on b aaed o n

ANEW CLINIC AL
PEELS
Want to look younge AND
ea n Money? Le s talk the
NEW AVON cat
Ma tyn (304)882 2645
Joyce (304)675 69 19

race co lo ehg on se1
fam 1 al status o nat anal
orlg n or any ntenl o n to
make any such
p eference m tat10n o
dscrmn aton

110

110

MISCE I LANEOUS

ATTENTION OWNER
OPERATORS

Fam y Add ct on Commumty
Treatm en t Serv ces An oul
patent A cohol and D ug
Canton Oh o eefer
Counse ng
age ncy
s
company look ng to
accep1 ng Resumes for lhe
Owner Operators o
lot ow ng past on
earn between 125 150K
P revention
Educator
Seek ng an ene gel c ndl
. 2 Settlemen Opt ons
v dual o wo k youth an d
pad weeky
adult
s r Gal a a d Jackson
. NO NYC
co mt es
Respons b II es
• Home Weekends
nc ude but not m ted to
. $500 S gn On Bonus
atco of tobacco and othe
. 95"o No touch f eght
drug educat on c ass oom
p esentat ons
t an ng s
CALL BOQ-65 2 2362
Ia s commun ty events
Au o
Meehan c Smal deve opment and mpfemen
Eng ne Meehan c must be lat on ol gran p OJects etc
e per anced Shade T ee A mnmum ol a Bacheos
Meehan cs need not apply Deg ee equ e9 w th know
(304)675 3600
edge of alcoho tobacco
and othe
drugs Send
esume by Ju e 15 2004 to
FACTS 45 0 ve Street
Gall pols Oh o 4563 or

Dtesel Mechamc II
PM Sh1ft
Rumpke s lhe leader In the
waste Industry
Postt on assists semo r &amp;
experienc ed mechanics
wllh repairs &amp; malnte
nance such as lubrication
electrical and brake work
Aequ res mechanical apll
tude with basic knowledge
of veh icl e maintenanc e
and repair B)CP w th d ese l
powe vehic le preferred
Must also have own tools
faml arly w th epat ma nu
ats and a m n mum of 1 year
perfor m ng s m tar dut es
Musf be able tot tt 751bs
Excellent compen satio n &amp;
ben eftte wtth medical
dental 401k vacation &amp;
penalan Please came In
and apply anytime Man
Frl Bam 5pm

T•k• th• whHI of your
Rumpka Wa a te
28 AW Long Road

Welletan OH 45692
Fax 7411-384 5472
No phone calfs please/EOE

CLASS A CDL NEEDED

. $500 s gn on bonus
.start at 36 cpm
. 95% No toucn lrelght
. NO FOACED NVC
Call 8 0~52 2362

um&amp;
&gt;.CREAl E

Me e v e Lois o sa e
sni:l ed en ance off St Rt
218
Phone

Home L 1st m gs
home by ca ng

~our

1740 )446 3620

740 446 2842
I \IPI ()\ \ll-'\1

Apr I (304)882 3630

r

Hows
mRS•II

wwworvb com
Ls

Top Dollar US
Gold
Co ns
Proolsets Diamonds God
Rngs
US Cu BlCY
M TS Com Shop
151
Second Avenue Gal pol s

.
1

10

n&gt;RSA U

FAX

lo

(740)446 6014

EOE M F H

Heavy Equ1pment
Meehan c or Weld er
Knowledge n e ectr ca and
A cond on ng efe ed
Serv ce t uckJtools also
prefe abe
Compel t ve
wages Good benel ts Apply
at Sands H I Coal Company
3B701 Sta e Route 160
Hamden Oh o or call 740
384 42 11 o equest an
appl cat on form be ma led
Res umes can be ma1led
d rectly to PO Box 650
Hltmden Oh o 45634
lmmed ate open ng for an
accountant pos I on Fu
t me med um s ze company
E)(p requ red excellent ben
etts 401 K Pease send
esume to Accountant PO
Bo11 606 Wei stan Oh o
45692
Lunch Cook needed Appl y
w th n 300 Second Ave
Gall pol s
The MBtgs Local Schoo
D sir ct Is seek ng qua I ed
appl cants fo the pos1t on of
Tutor for a Seve e Behav or
Hand capped Student The
pos 1on pays $20 pe ho r
o no more than t ve hou s
per week Th e tu lo ng wd f
be fo lhe summer w lh the
poss b lly o go ng nto ne)(f
schoo year Ap p lcants must
have a cur ent eachmg ce
1 cate or I censure Plea;;e
contact the Super ntendenl s
Olhce at 740 992 2153
Dead lne for apph cat on s
June 16 2004

F esen us Med cal Ca e
global eader n d alys s ca e No Standing No Waiting
And No Cooking!
currently has open past ons
tor AN s and D1atys s Techs
Earn up to $8 h ptus
n our GaUpo sOH actty
5pm TV s det k fil e cabl
bonus
We
offer
compel I ve
net lamps appliances
Pad hot days vacat ons
sa lanes educat on elm
dlehn home decor toys
andtanngs
bursement 401 K and 11ealth
mlec 1760 SR 141
and dental nsurance If Cho ce ol schedu e opt ons
Go lllpo lla
B g Sale Fr &amp; Sat June 11th
nterested please contact
&amp; 12th Jefferson Ave Pt
Call today for an
2981 St At 588 2 9 miles Pleasant Ram or Sh ne lots Cf n cal Manage at 740
appotntmenl
441
9300
An
equat
oppo
oul from town on lefl Fr day
ot Stuff
1 877 463 6247 ext 2455
tunlty emp(oyer
&amp; Saturday 9 5

-- ---•- --

HO\IES

S lver

. Ea n between 45 50K

2 Fam ily Yard Sale Fr day &amp; Rutland Freew II Bapt st
Saturday 9 3 1044 Kraus Chu ch all week June 7
thru 12 many tams very
Beck Ad
cheap 1st Ad to left past
2 family June 11 &amp;am Foxs Pzza

10

3BR on 5 t29 aces G een
Townsh p c ose to school
Ask ng pr ce $89 000 Mo e
nfo [740)446 7377

Multi fam y

h 1 across t om Lead ng
C oak Road clothes c:oms
videos DVO s too ls base
ball cards many hOIJseho d
and m sc terns Saturday
June 12th 2004 Bam Sp m

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

moe

2 F8m ly Garage Sate 1165 Taylor s Dr ve M ddleport off . M1n 1 year exp
At 588 Thurs Fri Sal State At 7 by pass top ol .Home Weekend s

...

o•••••••P"I

Yard/Sa e June 11 12 1Sl
T a ler on r ght G ee Road
glassware M sc Avon and

DRIVERS NEW PAY
SCALE

sale

PO LIC ES Ohio Val ey Pu b is h ng reaerves 1 ~e ight to edit r•Jecl or can cel any ad al an ~ t m e E o &amp; mus1 be eportecl on the f rsl day of pub leal on and
Trtbun&amp;-Sent ne Register will be respona ble lor no more than the coat of the apace occup1ed by the er o and only the f s1 nsert on We sha not be I able
sny loss or •~ pen •• th at res u Is f om the p ub cal o n o om •• o n of • n advert1aem•nl Correction w I be made n the fi at ava table ed t on • Bo• number
11re al ways conf lllent1e
Cu ent rate card •ppliea
A I rea estale advert aementa are aubtec 1o lhe Federal Fa Ho s ng Act ol 1968
Th s

i'LEAsAN"I

Hartford June 11 12 CCCU
Fellowship Hatl Nb pus
tots of Items cho r span
sored Ratn or shtne
yard

All Dlspl ;:~ y 12 Noon 2
Busin ess Days P ri o r T o
Publlt:ation
Sunday Display 1 00 p m
Thurs d a y f o r S u nda y s Pa

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Adt Sh ou ld Run 1 Day s

Baby
household
l ems
c ells
books
I urn tu e
ADOPTIO N A lov ng cou cloth ng Saturday Bam 116
pie would I ke to adopt you r Aver St eet Kanauga
newborn
W II pro\/ de a
home htled w th JOY happ
ness t nanc a secu ty and
a great ed ucation Feel con
t den n knowmg because of
your b ave dec son you r
baby could look forwa d to a
bnghl and wonderftJ futu re
E)Cpenses pad Cal ton tree
1 866 731 7825
Ba baa
Lots ol V ntage toys a ns
slot cars co tectable g ass
ware and whatnots 11592
SA588 A o Grande

'

clas~ifieds!

rI

~1"'""-----.,
\\\01 '\(I \II\ I"

RUNs-Mo a Batt more 50 VGuerre o A11a
hem 47 Masu New YM 44 Be hon
Bas on 43 lawton Cfwe and 43 CGo len
De Oil 41 ARod 19uez New Vert: 40
RBI--DOrt z Boston SO VGue re o Anahe m
50 VMart naz C IIWiiind 45 Tetada Bah
mo e 44 Be~ an Kansas City 43 JGu len
Anaheim 43 Rod guaz Det ot 42
HIT8-lSuzuk Seattle 86 MYou ~g Te~as
80 Mo a Bah moe 79 VGuer a o Anahe m
78 Rod tguez De ort 74 ASanchez De Oil
73 MRam ez Boson 72
HOME RUNS-MRam ez 8os on 5 VGuer
eo Anah!m 14 Baocll: Te.xas 13
ECha ez Oall: and 3 K011a ko Ch cago 3
AAodnguez New Yorio. 3 ThomM Ch cago

Now you can have borders and graphtcs
?.~~
added to your classtfied ads
Borders $3 00/ per ad
~
Graph res 50¢. for small
$1 00 for Iorge

oisplav Ads

Daily In- Column 1 00 p m
M o nd a y Friday fo r Inse rtion
In NeKt Day s Paper
Sunda y In Co lumn 1 00 p m
Friday F o r Sundays P a p e r

VISA

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oead'tiru-

• Stut VDur Ad5 Wtth A KeywDrd • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid A bb reviation s
• Inc.lude Phone Number And Addr ess Whe n Needed

Items

PubliC Notrce
Middleport
45760
(6) 10

Word Ads

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

:

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel

l\egtster

Sentinel

PHREABBSO

'"

2

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Boston
LOB-San
0 ego 8 Bc.s on 9 28-lo etta ( 5) AaHe
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1

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BWagrllil

Thutsdly • lntlftNgut Gamet
Anzona (Fossum 0-41 al Battmore (Gabrera 3 1) 7 05 p m
San FranciSCO Rue1e 25 a Tlll'npaBay (VZambrano5-4 7 5pm
E'h le.dl!lphia (Myerf 4-3) a Ch,ocago White Sox Schoenewe s 5 31 8 05 p m
NY Met&amp; G n er 0 at M nnesola (loll 59 2-4 8 0 p m
M t.Yeukee (Obermuelle 3 2) at Anehe~m (Sele 4 0) 0 05 p m
Thurscllty a Nl GMw
St Lou s (Marqu s 5-4) al Ctucago Cubs C Zambl"8.no &amp;2) 2 20 p m

HC ark 2 SB--H nske (6 CS--- ztu s 4
IP H AEABBSO

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0
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"""
Thursday • nte eague Games
A liinla (Ru0rtz65 a De o (Maoh43) 105pm
Colo aoo Jenn ngs 5 5 a "' YYankns (Con llfi!S 2 2 1 05 p m
Montrea Day 4 6 andUnka 3 5 a Kansas Crr, (0 Reyes 2 0 and Gobble 3 3 2 0 p m
Pttsburgh 0 ~ ez 3 3 and Fogg 3-4 a Taxas (Bonott 2 2 and R099rs 8 2) 5 05 p.m
$;In 0J890 ( Tan~e s ey 0 2 a Boston Sch ling 7 3 7 05 p m
l06 Ange e5 Od Perttz 3 J a Toroolo (Towt~rs 1) 7 05 p m
Fiorda Pa11aoo52 a Ceveand(JaDIMS 3) 705pm

2

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PH R ER BB SO
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5 9 6 6
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0 0 0 0 1

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NY Yan~ees 2 COlorado
San F anciSCO 7 Tampa Bay 3
Pttsbu gh a f&amp;~jas ppd ran)

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321

559

29

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Wednesday • tnte league Results

C!NTRAL

'

26
27

30

W1

46

Atlanta _

NY Mats

526
500
483

46
46
55
55

33
30

,,

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55

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444

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National League
L

The D atly Sentmel • Page 85

~rtbune

Major League Baseball
EAST

• •

MARKETING MANAGEA
Ho ze
Mad cal
Cente
Ga pols OH Is seek ng a
fu I me Market ng Manage
Ths poston s espons be
lor market esea ch web
management and med a
buys Add t onal dut es w I
nc ude ass sl ng w th the
Hosp I at s market ng plan
and budget new e eases
graph c des gn and adve Is

ng
Aequ en ants lo the pos
1on Bache or s D eg ee n
Ma
ket
ng
Comn un cat ons
Pub! c
Ae a ons o Health ca e
Exce en
Adm n strat on
cus tome se v ce sk Us a e
essen! al E11per ence n
med a
ma ket resea en
buy ng g aph c des gn and
webs te
management
equ ed P ev ous heath
care e)(per ence p ete r ed
II nre ested please contact
Kenny Coughenour
Staff Rec u te

HOLZER MEDI CAL
CENTER
100 Jackson P ke
Gal pols OH 45631 1563
Phone (740)446 5205

Baby S rte lo 5 yr old &amp; 9
must
be
Ink
monlh
approved n th e Mason N ew
Haven a ea
oak ng o ent 3 B House
Tale o Apar ment n the
P P New Haven a ea must
be Hud approved or w Jl
accept Hud (304) 773-5310

180

w~~- m)

ro Do
AU types o nason y br ck
block &amp; s one 20 yrs
EJCper ence

Th s n ewspape will not
k n o wmg y accept
ad verti sements l o real
u late wh ch s n
v o atlo n o r the law Ou r
r eader s are hereby
nfo rm ed lh at all
dwe lings adve rti sed In
t hiS newA p a~r are
a¥all ab e o n an equ al
op p o rt un ty bases

Hous e
fo
sa e 20 t4
Jeflerson Ave
S40 000
OBO (304)675 5865 eave
message

304 593

1007

house
garage new rool s d ng
all w ndows ca pet &amp; k chen
ol you home mp ovemen $65 000 oo (740)247 2000
needs oofs dec~s s d ng
etc easonable pr ces I ee
est mates can (740)992
Lovely coun y se 1 ng Ia ly
2979
(40)-+ ac es w lh house
Ch Idea e n my home new (mode n K !chen) two ca
bo ns welcome ask o Pam ga age othe oul bu ld ngs
u a wale I u I t ees fee
(740)985 3437
gas stocked farm pond
Loca ed n Me gs Coun y
H gh potent al to deve op
me t
$ 12 5 000
Send
nqu res to Pomeroy Post
lnte o pant ng Don Van
Off ce PO Bo~ 53 Pome oy
Malar (740)985 395 1
Oh o 45769

Nurse House
Keepe
E)(per enced Gar at c Care
Gver wl ca e fo you ave Lower Mason 2BA 2BA 2
Car Ga age F n shed base
one n tle l ome MonF
ment Heat pump cal f~
$7 hr 1304)576 2787
appo ntmenl {304 )773 5338
Roo ng Decks Hardwood
lloo nstallat on emodel
Med Home Health Agency lng add 1 ons
Top Notch
Inc seek ng a ful me and Bu ld ng
Contractors cone ete dr veway ca po
PAN RN s and a PAN WV036667 (304)675 5490
549 000
East
Bethe
Occupal ona The ap Sl tor 0 (304)675 3042
Church Rd (740 )441 910B
the Galt pols 01'1 o a ea
Must be t censed both n W If Pressure Wash houses
Oh o and West VIrgin a We mob e homes me el bu td
and guuers
Ca NICe home on L ncoln St
offer a compel t ve salary ngs
Mddlep o t 3b
drs
(740)446
0151
ask
lo
Ron
benet• package fo fu ll t me
t ng oom gas f rep ace lui
and 401 K E 0 E Please or leave message
basement
enced back
send resume to 352 Second
11'\\\(1\1
ya
d
garage
m d $60s
A'&gt;~e
Gall pols O H 45631
Attn Dana Harless Cl niCa
Manager or call 1 BOO 481

8 USINISS
0 PI'OR1l1Nm

6334

1740)992 3493

N ce House Ia sale n
Rullaf'ld must be moved

$ 2 000 (740)357 7886
Pa ramed cs
&amp;
EMT s
needed App y at 1354
Jackscn Pike Gall pol s

Personal Ca re Aide
Someone needed lo s t w h
elderly Call (740)886 8527
o {740)256 1968 after 6pm

150

ou do bus ness w h peo
le you know and NOT I
end money th ough th
a unt I you have nvest
ated the offe n

r

TVA NE O OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI7
No Fee Unless We W nl

888 562 3345

ScHoot.s

IU \1 1'1\11

~'&gt;'I'RUCI10l'

10
Gallipolis Career College
(Ca eers Close To Home)
Ca !Today 740 446 4367

1 800 214 0452
www gB !pOt sea aa co ege com
Ace eo ea Mem oe Ace ed og
Cou t~ o ndependen Co Jeoes
and Schoo5 214B

I'ROO:&lt;lSIONAI
SERVICES

uo~m;
IUR SAi l

3 bedroom Buck. 1 112 bath
1 acre ot Close to town
Reduced Phone (304)675

714

11 -~

Rt.'d
10

a age $2500 Ca pe
lowance Jay D ~e
a t po s Code 52804 o
al (7&lt;10) 446 7231

IIOlSI'

101( lh'\1

bedroom tu

Ave
ew Access P va e
oat Dock n Gall po s 1
c e ot Code 90303 or
all (740)446 0531

basem e'lt
depos

3 Bed oom B ck Home 2
Bath 3 Ca B ck
Unattached Ga age 2
to y outbu d ng Code
2704 o cal 740 446

2Ba n 2Car
aage 1 9acesonSR
141 Code 33 104 oreal
740 446 7633

320 Mo11u t Hmtt s
tnR S l l t

pus
oepos

P cK up E::f1 a app
Oa y Queen o
g oce..,

3 bed oo m house No
pets Galpo s Fe y
Must
ha e
efe enc e!i
$500 non h S2 0 dep os
304 895 879;,

984 Schutz 4;..:70 w 6~&lt;24
pu I ou 3 bed oom 2 bath
good
cond ton
ac
(740)992 765 1

Po e oy 4 bed oom S400
pe monm olus depos

-,----~--,-----

1740)992-0 17,

1998

ee est mate

I 304 773 9550

Bed oor-; 2 1 2 8a
22 ac es 3 Ca Ga age
n SA 554 Code 32904
call 740 )367 7619

om Ho ze Has~ a
62 J c e g eenRd ~19500
:J6 Cl t:~ \:' g ten Rd ::.18 500
C ;~
40 4&lt;t f' 8 84 0
o

20 \lo1111 t l lo\IE'

HIK Kl" I
c osel
Bu 1 n Ch na
Cab net
Cenl al
A. r
ob e
omc
Appl ances
and
some ? bat h
Fu n 1 e a so u de p nn ng Mddero t S250 en ,) 50
&amp; 2 po ches nc uded depos 1 y ca e n pe s

$13 900

304 576 3248

' e

'"

moved
2928
Co es Mob le HomP.s 5266
US SO E A hens Oh o
45701 New summe hou s
M T W 8 AM o 7 PM T)l
F BAM to 5 PM Sa 9AM o

o e o tw o people No pel s

c e ences

(740)441 0181

N ce 2 and 3 bed oom
mob Je homes for
em
ncluaes water sewer &amp;
1 ash no peb star ng at
$300 pe mon h n S ade
a ea depos t requ CC'
Great used 14x80 3 o 2bth i740)992 2167
2x6 walls upgrade w Mows
vnyl sdng WI hep wth
delve y Calf Ka en a 740
385 767
Mob le home and lot fo
sale 14x80 Mob e home on
nee e¥e 1 2ace ot 3 bed
oom 2 lut oa h A electr c
centra l a good cond 1 on
10x12 u I ry hed O!J p ope r
ty Porter a ea $40 000
I
(740)446 4514 days and

ca

(740)446 3248 aha 5

PI P easanvsandh II Road
38 tBa 1600 sqtt Ranch on
6 ac e le¥el lot Oak floo s
lSI hOuse on A ghl past
Marst\al
Un ve sty
$t03 000
{740)949 1 3
alter 5 OOPM

Tale fo sa e located at
Leon WV (mus oe- moved )
1994 Commodore
4x6 0
2 bed oom 1 bath ul l ty
r~om ncludtl S stove el g
e ato washe oxt a cab
and 2 oed oorr apar
nets a 1 1..nae p nn ng fron t nen s u n she d 8M r u
&amp; bac~ po ches w awn ng n shed secu ty depas
a f block &amp; s dewa k sleps
eQ U ed no pets "'~' 40 992
hea pump A.. C E11 cellent 228
cond 1 on
$ 1 3 BOO

A 2 G eer Ad 3BR 2Ba

(740 )698 2613

House 5 1 2 ac es land
panel barn fenced a ea all
eecrc ca 830 to soo
(304)675 7386 afte 5 00
call
(304 )675 563 1
o

(304)593 07 g

Th ee bedroom

2 5 balh

hOme on 27 acres Jo sa e
n Eastern Schoo D st ct

i740 985 3715

bed

oon

a~

Washe d ~e hookup S29
Used doub e w oe good ent depos
f' Q red Nr
cond on
3
bd 2b th pets 740 J4 1 1184
.S17 995 can h elp ~e t u~
Ca ll Ha rold (740) 385-9948 1 bed oom stove anj e g
e ato f n shea u I t es
350
l.(ll' &amp;
nc udcd 5-400 noll h plus
At RE lladepos 1 40)245 58 59
2 7 10 acres We lch owr
Road wooded no le~e
S2 500 00 166D 563 3753

complete&gt;
Md oom
tc'len
cent a
a
Aefc e &lt;;e!". F. depos t No
r"ts
40 446 ot39
~

�•

•

•

Thursday, June 10, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 10, 2004
ALLEY OOP

~tive, one bedroom apt
~2nd ftoor, corner Second
oand
Ptne.
No
pets.
:References ,
required .
,Security deposit $300 per
·ri\pnlh, water included. Call
~ (7:40)446-4425 or (7401446-

&lt;J.ll36
·BEAUTIFUL
APART·
:MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to S442
Walk to shOp &amp; movies Call
~0·446·2568 .
EQual

Housing OpportiJmty.
Beaut•ful unlurn•shed, one
bedroom apt overlookmg
Citv
Par~ .
references
required , no pets. security
deposit, $400 per month
can
(740)446-: 325 or

(7 40)446-4425

ers.
bunlo:.beds
Grave
Monuments . 2002 Bass
Tracker
Ftsh1ng · Boat.
(740)446·4782. Gallipolis,
OH . Hrs. 11·3 M-F.

i

ANll(}Ut-:!'i

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

Please call (740)992·3779
for more informat1on.
Male German Shepherd,
Golden
male
Retr~ever/Chow m1x. lemale
Beagle female
Rabbit
Auss1e I Shepherd m1x male
Esk1mo
Sptlz.
while
.groOmed and house broken.

Buy or
sell.
Riverine
Anttques , 1124 East Matn

I \ll\1..,1 P\ ' 111'
.\II\ I ..,I PI~
on SA 124 E Pornero)'. 74(} =;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

992·2526 .
owner.

Russ

Moore. Iii

10

FAN.\1

EQliii'\IFJI-1"

r~~:~ l

12' John Deer dtsc. model
t10 ; round baler New
1 coffee table piUs 2 end Hollarid model640 net wrap ;
tables . mostly wood wlrec- hay bind New Holland model
tangle marble tnsets, 3 pc. 472: rake New Holland
set S100. (740)949-2481
model256: 806 ln1ernat10nal
tractor. 125hp. 740-74215 Ft . Kenmo re Freezer
7405
(Chest) like new (304)773-

5835

North

r

a fire?
. We can insure your valuables!•
For a Free Quote or Appointment
What would you lose if there was

VV!S &amp;
4-WDs

2000 Chrysler Town &amp;
Country Van limtted loaded.
Call day 740-446-2107.
nlgh\740-245-9164

Call:

2001
Grand
Cherokee
Exc .
Laredo.
Loaded .
Condilton.
one
Owner

,""'"u Financial Se1rvic:es.• .'

enr'' mon1 h

(304)675·2349

r

Buy $5.00

Bonanza Get
;; FREE

~

Jonn

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

PE:rs

I

96 Jeep Grand Cherokee
ltmited, loaded, 84.,000
miles. $8.300. (740)256·

I

(740)256·6735._ _ __,
~,;.:;;;;;;.;,;,;;;;;

[ 411

MaroRCYU..ES

....,

•

83 1100 G l Goldwing ,
56.000 m iles. Run/looks
good." new shocks. new batter . $2,000. 740 256·8 122.

BoATS

&amp;

MaroRS

1998 Kawasaki jet skt 1100
ZXI. "Less than 100 hours
use
W 1th 1999 traile r.
Serious
inquires
Only.
(740)44 1-828 5.

HAULING :

• Limestone
• Sand

AKC Lab s, Black &amp; Yellow,
female. 4 month s, all shots.
Parents on premises, hunt·
ing stock. (740)388-9515.

PRIC E AE DUC EOI 35 ft..

1980 Chevy 3/4-ton, 4x4, 5th wheel. Excellent shape,
350 , 4-SPE!ed 6 -inc h li ft , 8 ft . slide out. 55, 500 OBO.

good condition , $4 ,000. ·(740)6 45· 2729 ·
1992 Chevy S-tO, 4ll4 , 4 3
"I H\ U I..,
auto air, $2,300. Goat for ;,:;:::;;;;;;;~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Studio apartment for rent,
at University Commons, fully
furnished, all appliances,
central heating &amp; air. Reserved
parking, pool &amp; workout "'
facilities ,
call

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
Big Bend Antique
and Furniture
Restoration
Refinish, Repair,
Restore

Keith Bailey
7 40 992·1956

CALL-If.! ORD[R~
WfLCOMf

JIM'S SMALL

New Hours
Monday 9am-2pm

Corne ~ee our new
gurnrner rnenu!

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

THE BORN LOSER

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975

IT. MUS\ e£
(.00T1&gt;-G IOU:'&gt; ..

ENGINE REPAIR
~C II 'I \\,·1·111&lt;&gt;11 II J&lt;J
l1liiJk'lt1\. { )IJJI I

740·992·2432

BUILDERS InC.

II

\)!&gt;...'{ .

\

NOW, I'll\
£1JU\ 1-\1\IJ\t-IG
1\ \Y-.\:1 1-\1-..T

\

o

I Z.. . LET ·s

SEE HERE.

a Sll u,:II!Oil that has had you quite warned .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - If the l e IS
someth1ng quite impor tan t to you thai you
need to work out with another today. post·
pone a meeting unli l later You'll make out
better in the ahernoon than in the morn-

'(OUR STUPID 006 ~AS
M'f BLANKET AGAIN !

CI10COLATE C~IP OR PEANUT

110W CAN I GET
IT BACK WITHOUT
A 816

SUTTER .. NO COCONUT ..EACI-1
COOKIE DELIVERED DAILV
TO MV DOOR AT I=OIJR IN
TI-lE AFTERNOON •. NOT
NOT LATE!t

~1611T?

IMPORTS

Athens

Cars~ Tru ck s- R V's

• Birthdays
•Weddings
• Any special
occasion
Place your order
today
(740) 985-3917 .
Lora Bing

Fri- Sat- Sun
June 11 , 12 &amp; 13

LAKE

949-2734

.
I
II

I

HOWARDL
WRITfSfl
•ROOFING
•HOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMLESS

BETTY
FNtli ~Y

VIOED

I-lEY,
"TlliS

ISN'T
HALF
BAD!

1-800-822-0417
··w .v·s # I Chevy, Pon t tar. Buick. Olds
·
&amp; Custom Van

YEAH,
IT

~~·r,

~ r:::::===---~
~

~

s WATOi,
IT's EASY' TO
IT'S NOf
J roo 9UsY AND

IS IT! ,

IT ~EEPS IT$

SUBJECT
NICELY

~

~

a

~
YE'Afl

.. .AND YOU'RE
INIT WITH
YOUR.A'mo
IN A
S~\NG

FRAMeD

GITIER
I*free EsUmaiob
. I

GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction ·
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,

Room Add itions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks ,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

Fruit cooler
Victorian,
e.g.
ER staffers

drink
43 Cu~~o
Seattle hrs.
builder
24 Peer o! the 44 Energr
23

source

realm

by Luis Campos .
Eat:n1ene1 1n the C!Cher stanbs lor anolt\er

Taday ·s clue P equals 0

·' ALX
VY

YPGX
ALSA

SOA

A L SA

Z L VHL ,
AXKW~

JKOXYA ,

Y J VAY

OVYVK T

NERMAL., YOU'RE THE
NICEST CAT t KNOW

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE
2S2 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-446-0842 • 949· 1155 Evenings
800· 446-0842

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

APZSOW

YXOXK V AN ,"

SKWOX

TVWX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Knowledge is one toad ol 'tne soul .. - Plato
"I am not you ng enough to know everything ." - James M Barrie

~~~~:t~~T S©RJJ~\-~t~S®
-

-

New Homes • New
Garages • Pole
Barns • Roofing
• Room Addition s
• Remodeling
• Vinyl Siding
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates

Gall ia Cou nty Fairgrounds
Dealers Welcome

~~

740-367-0571

7 40-949-1606

YOUNG'S

leffer3 of th ~
wordJ be-

If-,--,-.:....,.,-:..,..:;_..,...-,C AL U A T

I

.

_

'-...L.

mg .

LEO (July

23~Aug. 22)

-

Busoness deal·

mgs about which you fee l good should
wor k ou t quite satisfactorily for you today.
so long as you sidestep any Dad VIbes tn
areas where your mtu ition is tryu1g to warn
yo u
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22} - You could
lind out today tha t sonleone who has been
treat1ng you coolly has been doing so ·
because thts person th inkS you don 't l1ke
him or her. Let your words and actio"hs dispel this fallacy
LIBRA , (Sept .
23-0cl.
23)
Deteimina11on' tempered w ith thoughtful ·
ness is your best line of allack today.
Toge ther they can be used to your advan tage 1n all your dealings. You'l l be able to
lame awn the meana"s1 lions.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - Today's
pe rsonal experiences, bolh good cind bad.
will be added to ·yow bank of krwwledgH
and play an important. positive rols stall·
lng Immediately and carry you well into the
J
future .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec. 21) Benefits are most likely today from a JOint
venture that has bee n in trouble lately.
especially If you or you r partner employs
diplomatic ta~tics . Diplo macy will get
things rolling once agatn.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - No
· mailer how tough your dealings are today,
don't be afraid to maKe compromises or
concesstons Being a nice guylgal won"t
weaken your pos1 t1on . but will strengthen

11•

I I I -j
•

•

.

.I........J.--'-....l-..J

r-r.V: -0-r-R
- rG
- .,E-;;---I!

li I I

13

.

.
.=

-r:L,_E,....a....,.v_,E_-11• :0~1

'/L.
r.

ll I I I

As a hobby I go to craft

shows and antique shoo. s to

fi nd old samole:-s. One of mv
favorite sayings said . "You can

I I I 16 I I I0
r--- - ---- -,
T RYL 0 P

l..-.I..-.l..-.J..-.J.._J

-

l...

f}

b d ·
1ert .• : •..:•mes
0

mar ~
L

b
you iMer

Comc 1ere th!!' ~"I.'C~ I e ovc:ted
by l;ll ;ng in ~he 'T1iS5 I"lQ wora~
yo 11 develop !rem 1 ~et= \lo 2 :1.e-1::w .

P! INT NUMBER ED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
U~SCI AMBtE

ABOVE lErTERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS AN ~ WERS ' ' e-; •

Torrid · Pious · Quirk · Foment · SP!TE' ci/T
My neighbor mustered up enough nerve to take·
skyd1v1ng lessons. Her instructor told her that courage
is not the absence ot tear but the ab1lity to carry on
w1th dignily in SPITE of IT.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

MA.I.J t HAVE A WORP
WITH YOU, NERMAl..?

NOeoPY'5 NIC.ER THAN I
AM, IF LJOU KNOW WHAT 'S
&lt;":lOOP FOR YOU

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - By ustng
dtscreet and artlut tac llcs. There 1sn"t any
reason why you can "t get that to whiCh
you ·re enttlled today Ask1n g tor rewards
you don't deserve. however. would be
another story.
·~
P ISCES (Feb 20-March 20) -The key to
success in your Involvements today. both
business and soc1al . 1s to treat everybody
as an equal. This lnCIL!des blQ shots as
well as those who are tn lower postttons
AR IES (March 21·Apnl 19) Even
though you may end up spending more
time managing or taking care olth1ngs tor
others than you do your own all Sirs today.
you'll still come out on the plus s1de of the
ledger.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) -:-You have a
pleasant aura about you today, so don"!
h ide your light under a bushel. Open up
and others will find the warmth you rad1ate
appealing and will go out of their way to be

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addltlona !It
Remodeling
• New Garage•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing, &amp; Gutlera
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decka

We do It all except
furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
gg2·62 15
Pomeroy, Ohio

SOUP TO NUTZ

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCDON
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare

22 Years Local ElCperlenee

•

~~~~
t.CE" C ~M Mt!N ~~ I
(aN fie ilEa

G·Ma:;J

I

740·992-1871

I

WORD

GAM.!
---

friendly.

HCS,INC.

CX

UOPC

.II .

949•1405

740-742-341

French 500
Flea Market

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used
4 75 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Cu~

Ceiflc.-,ty Clptltlr ~ryp1ogran1s ar~ e~e31ed from Quota~ o'l5 b)' tarrous oooOie paS1 aM oresent

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - Co nditions
m general will turn out far mo re pleasant
for yo u today than !hey may appear at f1rs1.
Chances are you will even reap gains from

.PEANUTS

A vtlilah/e

29
31
32

Frame
46
of mind
49
Fishtpil
51
Crooked
Car dealers' 52

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Friday, June 11 , 2004
By Bernice Bede Osa1
No matter how tough thtngs mtght appear
at ttmes 1n the year ahead. your friends
and assoc1ates will always be there tor you
and help smooth th1ngs out. ma ktng eve ry·

~~r~.nght agatn . You won"t need anything

THE ALAMO.

Are you in the market
anew car

740· 949-19 to
MobUe Sen •ices

28

stats

low 10 form !our simpl e word s.

Windshield R~ pa i r
Rock C hips
&amp; C racks

FLEA MARKET
AT MAPLEWOOD
State Roul e 124
Between Racine and
Sy racuse ·
Friday, J une 4 &amp;
Saturdny, june 5
Spaces available,
also Campsites
available with rull
hookups

Pass
Pass

JC~o .,bl!d

CO LLI"'B U :'&gt;.

TFN

740-992-7599

LAWN CARE DIVISION

Creative
~ Cakes
byLora

Pass

Baseball

47

9 Luge
extras
54 Unusually
10 XXI limes C 33 List onder
bright
11 Major city
37 Doctors' org.
12 - spumante 40 Natural
17 Spud st.
etevs.
20 Chest
41 Ivan's dollar
21 Innate
42 Peofume
22 Hot rum
bottle

0 four
Reom::ng"

CJ-lR I STo PHE ~

Morning Star Road· C.Rd 30 • Racine,

FREE ESTIMATES

Olfi(e: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883
POWER WASHING

FREE ESnMATES • (iUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

East
Pass

REI\1)'1' ? . . lbl.O .

• Rcpl.tccmt: nt
Wi m.low:-. • Ronfmg
COMMERCIAL and

. Owne r: Jeff Steth em

(Commerctal &lt;1nd Re!l'ident1al)
Mowing, Trin:tming, Tree Tr im m ing, Aeration, Fertil ization,
Sprayi ng of fence lines, l eaf Removal, as well as sma ll
land scapi ng jobs such as planting and m ulchmg.

North
2•

Cowboy's
shout

7 Root ar&lt;Uld
8 Fluency

34

BIG NATE

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

.
(Commerc1;sl dfld Residential)
Mobi le Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreas ing of
Equipment, Boats, campe~. Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, pain ting or staini ng of your deck
.
or log ho m~, Alyminum bnghtening.
Spec1al rat es to Tru ckmg and Dump Truckmg Companies.

actor
Garden
digger
35 Overeat
(2 wds.)
36 Pastemak
heroine
37 Dune buggy
kin
36 Winter mo.
39 More tasty
42 By way of
45 "- Te

25

topic
5 Strike caller
6 Aussle
jumper

32 .. Becket..

a

\)~.,'{ I

Open 7 days a weeki

RESIDENTIA L

·

30 Vast desert

Vulnerable: Neither

3.

3 Soap opera
4 Parson's

!di!o~ b1 Cl4Y R. ' Oll AN -

. Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,
ALL ON SALE NOW!!

•I • "I.

BISSELL

OlJ\ f\l&gt;o.IJ\ t-IG
l&gt;o.&amp;\D\\NR

"

Manning K. Roush
Owner
Open Mon-Fri 9· 5 Sat. 9 -12

Meigs Count y's largest selection of
annuals_. perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses_, rhododendrons~ ana azaleas.

l :'&gt;TP\R.tE.D

446-941 6 r 1-800-872-5967

Rt. 62 Hartford, WV
Shrllbs &amp; Perennial s for your
landscape , large selection at
reasonable prices.
Friday -Sunday
S pecials
All 4 inch pots $ 1 . 19
All 6 inc h pots $3. 19
1 Gal. Size Barberries, Rose
Glow, Lim e Glow, Crimson
Pigmy $10.99
Sand Cherry $9.99
Fl owering Almonds $9.99
Butterfly Bushes pink , ye llow,
purple &amp; whi(e $12.99 &amp; many
more to choose from.

,. .,..

YOUNG-UN!!

GRAVELY TRACTOR .

busin e.1s, 1101 our sideline

- ---

HOME
L'\oiPROVEMENTS

A TOUCH OF THYME

Going to O.U. this
Fall?

MY GRAMPY
TOLD ME THAT
WHEN I WUZ A

Snapper

Gravely

Lawn and Garden Equipment i!1· .o ur

'!!!~~.'!.!1 Gibson I~
.· · .IIC "·
.
Gallipolis, OH WV0102 12

1985 Chevy 3J4 ton 4x4, one
BASEMENT
Full blooded Rat Te rr ier ow ner, Al um slots. Due l
WATERPROOFING
pups. 6 wee ks old, wormed pipes, Good shape $2000
Unconditional lifetime guarand tails docked. S100 each. {304)773-6076
(740)367·7468.
:......:.._ _ _ _ __
antee . Local references fur1993 Chevy S-1 0 Blazer. 4 nished. Established 1975.
Vacationmg , tong weekend WO, Fully Loaded , Tow Pkg. Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446Leave Flulty or Fido home. Good Condit1on . Asking 0870, Rogers Basemen t
Call Petsitters, Aunt Bev's $2 ,600 . Call after 5p m Waterproofing .
(740)446·2396.
Creatures, (740)245-5599 .

on the patio
(weather permitting)
Eve ryone's Welcome
Bands, Musicians, Singers,
&amp; Comedians
Limited PA Equipment &amp; Drums
provided

45771 .
740· 949·2217

Ca ll for Daily Specials

740-985·3564

(740)992·0287

Open MIC Night at the
IRON GATE GRILL
Every Thursday
7 pm

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housin g
Air Conditioners. Heal Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi EtTicienc'y Equipmen_!;.
· • Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranl ies
, 6;..:.
• Huge Inventory
. . ,., . •···
• Vanguard Vcnol ess Fireplaces ., ,.. :!
··

TRUCKS

r10

Hill's Self
Storage

HEATING U COOLING

~i~:....~=-----,

AKC Pektngese puppies for sale. 3 year Old Wether. $40.
sale 3 male, 2 female. Call (740)367-0166.

BARNEY

(304) 273-5321

Syrac u se, OH

Tues - Fri 6am-8pm
Sat &amp; S~n 7am· 4pm

aisle

Dealer: South
W est
Pass
Pass
Pass

volcano

26 Ms. Hagen
27 Wlloopen -

Hands up. those ol you who play on
autopilot. not analyzmg or counting . only
following rules like second hand fow. If
you are gwlly. play slower. much slower.
You are South. tt)e declarer tn three notrump . How would you plan the play after
West leads- !he club queen?
North looks to have an awkward rebtd.
He cannot raise a second su1t WithOut
four-card support . He c'annot go into notrump wtthout a stopper m the unbtd swt.
Luckily. though. he knew abou t fourth -s uit
game-lorcmg . H ts three-diamond b1d
announced game values, but denied the
ability to make a descnptive call South:
wtth stoppers tn that unbid suit. said three
no-trump.
The re are seven top tricks · one spade,
two hearts, two ·d tamonds and two clubs.
The opening club lead makes it highl y
unlikely (Impossible!) that thcit suit IS
breaking 3-3. So. you should play on
spades.
Many would cash dummy 's spade ace.
!hen lead a spade foO the jack: third hand
high. Here. though. West wins with the
king and ex1ts with a card. Declarer can·
not recover:
If the spades break 3·3. all plays work If
West started with king-queen-fourth.
noth ing succeeds If East started wtth
king-queen-fourth . put11ng up lhe jack is
the only way to _get home. But 1f West
began with a doubleton . it IS more likely
- by to 6 - that 1
.1 is honor-doubleton
than two low ca rds .
•
So, the percentage play lor South on the
second round of spades is a low card. not
an hOnor. Here, the king fails ·"on a1r."
Later, declarer drives out East's spade
queen and cruises home .

IN ~OUNl&gt; !'iDLeS'! '

SEZ HERE TH' R ICH
IS GITTIN' RICHER
AN' TH '
IS
GITTIN '

BENNETT'S

XLT, 56,38 9 miles, Powe r - -- - - - - windows, seats &amp; mirrors. 1991
Nomad
campe r.
conditi on .
Keyless/entry,
leather, Excellent
Loade d
$12.000
ca ll $14,000 . Slid e out 5th
(304)576·2541
wheel. (740)256·6392 .

-

'' Your 011e Stop Poured
Solid Cu11crete Shop"

Advertise
in this ·
space ·
for
$50 per
month

• Dirt
•Ag Lime

Q J 10 2

5

Steadfast
Seat on the

. 19
23

A play that is
hard to resist

g~ot::~ ANOTtf~~ Plf&gt;P!
L~T'S FAC~ IT, You·~~ A
COUPL~ OF S'QUA~~ P~GS

YOU

Toll Free: (866 ) 254-1559

~::=====F=re=e=E~s~t~im::a:te=s=====-

740·992-2507

•

•

1 Cold leel
2 Long-active

1B Truck floor

Ching"

Free Estimates

liNDA'S PAINTING

Trucking

• Q9 8 7
• Q J 10 8

QJ I 09R

DOWN

16 Orchestra's
place

South
t\ JI0653
• A l 6 2
t A K
• 7 4

In Poured Concrete
Foundations. Basements. Floors &amp; Walls

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stomp Grinding

R.B.

14 Partner
15 Stuff .

Opening lead· • Q

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

River Way Cafe

AK632

.

3 NT

Let me do it for youl

740·992-5232

.

57 U.Omonks
58 Quiz

to Juan

East

South

Tree ·Service

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

87 5

9 5
9 6 43

,.••

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

~~~
High 8l Dry

•

•
•

• Driveways• Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

SeR-Storage

FOR SALE

~

~~--ooiiFOiiiRiioiiiSiiALEiiiiio-.,.1

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675·2457

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

r~:r:s ~:~ ~~r:;:. :a:;:~

labs. 5
male,
4
female
.
Ready
to go
Good Used Appliances .
July s. $300. call (7 40 )441 _
Re co nditioned
and
0931 .
Guaranteed.
Washers ,
Dryers,
Ranges ,
and AKC Dachshund puppies for
Refrigerators, Some start at sale 2-male. 2·female. 1st
$95. Skaggs Ap pliances, 76
shots, 1st worming, $350.
Vine St. , (740)446·7398
(740)446-4446.

875-2457

PORER !!

t.

Ch oco late

Henderson, WV

6346.

as

A 2
K 4 3

46

13 Tomorrow,

06-I~

4
•

Wes t
4 K 4

• .Bucket Truck

Good
Ford F-150. 4x4 , V·
B. 4 speed . Call for details

Big Dipper
bear
1 G-mer,
50 Yoong
5 Persuades
dOCior
10 Kilo
. 53 Caught
system
55 Oak
12 -good
products
nor bad
56 Join

S pecializ i n ~

JONES'

(740)256·6346.

MYERS PAVING

StateWide
CIE Pou11d Walls

(740)379·

PAIGE RE DUCED! 23 ft . VB
pets. Refere nces &amp; deposit 2 full blooded male Boxer choOse !rom . Trade m's wei- Sea Ray C uddy, $2.250
OBO. 304-675-6444 or 740required. (740}446· 15 19.
puppies. Parents AKC regis· come. Riverview Motors.
645·2729.
tared . $200 (740)388-8526 across from Speedway,
WANTED
Pomero~. Oh 45769.
CAMPERS&amp;
roRENr
AKC Australian Shepherd ,
MomRHOMEN
97 Mustang, Convertible, Vblack/while/tan ma rkings .
Rt91ocating to GallipOliS, male puppy, micro -chiped 6, Auto, Air, CD, G reen with
F'amily "'ants to leaSe nice $250 00 AKC Mmiature Tan, 84.000 miles, $7,900 1974 Wtnnebago Brave,
$2.300. (740)388·6473.
1
1
Schnauzers
pupp ies, (3041576·2383
saiUpepper $400 00 each. 98 F-250 real good shape 4·
irpm ed iately. Call Jackie All Vet checke d and have 1st wheel drive $8,000.00 89
'1.19·707·7999
74().589· shots .. 740·696·1085
Crown Victoria $2,750 .00 1990 Coleman Pop Up
080.
87 Jeep P1oneer Camp er, Good Co ndition ,
AI&lt;C Boston Terrier female
puppies. Shots, wormed &amp; Wagon , rea l nice shape Canvas like new $1 ,50 0
(304)675-4096
tails
docked,
$300. $2.500.00(740)992·5532
(740)367·7564.
Blue. 2000 Ford Explorer
AKC

Anpack ss.oo
BrinJ.: this coupon

~ \ Ltcensed in ohio and L--\IV

Black Angus 'Bull, 4 yrs . old, 9122.
Ktng S1ze Bed $250 .00. $ 1. 200 (740)245·5788.
Kttchen Table $250 .00.
Center Black Angus cow &amp; call.
Entertamment
98 F-150. 4x4 , V6 . 5 speed .
$75 .00 , Piano $350.00 S1200, (7401992·2070
AJC , 95.000 miles, $6.300.

i,

Thom p&amp;Cins Applian·ce &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
re-co ndllloned
automat tc
was hers &amp; dryers, refrigerators.
gas and electric
ranges , air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands 1n
shop or at your home.

'Last Thu rsda) or

1950

Lilt chair. 2·way recline, light
AtJT()i
hewer 2 bedroom with brown. used only 5 months.
FOR
SALE
j,e(age.
No
pets. e.~ecellent condition , $500,
(740)949·2461
J4001month plus deposit &amp;
NEW AND USED STEEL $500!.POLICE IMPOUNDS,
•eterences. { 740)446·2801
I
Chevys, Jeeps, etc I
Steel Beams. Pipe Reba r Hondas CarB from ssoo.
~ ice two bedroom apart· For
Concrete ,
Angle,
frients Large rooms Fu lly Channel. Flat B ar. Steel For listings 1·800· 749ftquiped kttchen Central
8104 ext 3901
For
Drains,
f1' i a t i n g I c o o I 1 n g Grating
DriVeways &amp; Walkways. L&amp; l 1987 Chevy S-10 Blazer,
~asher/ dryer
hookup
(304)682·2523
Scrap Metals
Open Monday,
96,000job.original
miles.
new
Tuesday,
Wednesday
&amp; paint
wmdows
1ust tmt..Friday, Bam~4 :30pm. Closed ed . new 11ea
" d omer.
·
S3 .200.
Saturday
&amp; E)(C.
condition.
call
Tara
TownhOuse Th urs day,
(304)675-1833 if no answer
Apartments. Very Spacious. Sunday. (740)446-7300
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA, t Pole Barn 30.~e50x 1 0 only leave p hone number and
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted ,. $5,295 , includ es painted mess~ge and I wtll return
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool , metal, plans how to build your call
Patio, Start $385/ Mo No book. Flider free delivery. c- _ _D_o_d_g_e_S_pi-ri_N_C_.-tilt.
199 3
1
Pets. Lease Plus Security
(937)789~0309.
cassette
player. $700 080.
Depostt ReqUifed. Days:
BUJWING
(740)256:1652
740-446-3481 : Even1flgs:
74()..367-0502.
Sui'PI..IES
1995 Saturn SL. 4 dr. . standard. AC, cassette, needs
Twtn Riv8rs Tower is acceptBlock, bricK, sewer pipes, rif"lgs, $800 080, (740)992·
ing applications for waiting
Windows, lifltels; etc. Claude 0829 leave·mcssage.
list for Hud,-sUbsized. 1• br,
Win ters. Rio Grande, OH
apart ment, call 675-6679 Ca
_
_
_
1998 Dodge Ca ravan. V-6. 4
11740 245 5121
iii~;.;;;.;;;;;;,;;;,;,;,;;....
_ _, dr, auto, M. ttlt. crwse .
EHO
55795: 1996 Chevy LUmina,
1.Jp'stairs furntshed apt. 3
~-..
. -ioFOiiiRiiiiSiiiALEiiiii-.rJ V-6 , auto, air, tilt. cruise.
r~oms &amp; bath . Clean, no ' S3295 and many moce to

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(740) 446-7444 1-877-830·
9162. Free Estimates. Easy
1111ancin g, 90 days same as
cash . Visa/ Master Card.
Drive· a· little save alol.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
740-843-5264

(304)862·2625

S500 0 80 .

":w I

6:30

Box 189 • Middleport

for

"'ew Furn1shed 1 Bedroom
~pa rlmen t. $500 month, all
~tlliMs pa1d 3 miles to
tiospital (304)674-0031

Pomero)· Eagles
BINGO 2171
El'er~' Thursda)'
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open ~ :30
Early birds start

IF YOU RENT

(304)675·7930

Ferguson !fac tor.
2002 Ford Explqrer, XLT. 4.0
CONVENIENTLY L OCAT· Dale Earnhardt s1gned auto· $1 000 060, can be seen at
atm. POL. PS 3rd row seal.
ED &amp; AFFORDAB LE!
graphed Nascar racing lire. Michael Farm on County Rd. rear a1r. cd and cassette
Townhouse
apartments. S 1 00. Phone (740)446- 25, (740)742-2101
player. runnmg boards . .
and/or small houses FOR 2316 '
Tractor parts &amp; serviCe. spe- 100.000 mile transferable
RENT Call (740144H111
great · shape.
in
Massey warranty,
cialiZing
application &amp; 1nformat•on For sale Fiberglass Topper
Asking
$19.500.
(740)3BBFerguson
&amp;
Ford
.
{740)696for Chevy S-"10 Pick-Up
9673
0356
j:lracious livmg 1 and 2 oed- (3041682-2612
~oo m apartments at V1tlage
· JET
~anor
and
Riverside
AER ATION MOTORS
~partmenh, '" Mtddleport
79 GMC 12pass 114 ton Van
)=rom $295-$444. Call 740- Aepa1red . New &amp; Rebuilt lri
350 motor, excellent shape,
Evans,
1
Stock.
Call
Rorl
.
Appaloosa Mare 12 yr old,
~92·5064 . EQual Housu"1g
motor needs. rebu 1lt. Asking
600·537·9526
. g911tle (304)937-228 1
~rtunities

r.w)1 bedroom apt. PhOne
a-1
"'~ ~ 446 - 37 36·

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

(740)446-6324 or (740}446·
4167

For Sale 2003. Chevrolet
Truck. 2500 HD LS. lots of
opt1ons. pnced below book.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

"""'

2 bedroom, just past Holzer. Used Furntture Store. 130 Why not adopt one of these 2000 Chevy TahOe Z-71
$425 montll. Call (740)441· Bulavtlle Pike. Mattresses, dogs from the Meigs Co Dog Fully loaded, excellent con, ~84.
dressers, couches. reclin- Pound. and save 11s lite' dition. leather tnter1or. Call

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

C"J.U'fll.. ~NS WHV N~
l) ~T *WE. ATTN:ke-0 MC0..

FOR

r·?

www.mydailyser.tinel.com

.f

I

Of'ER8\ION
Tul'f,-fRtJ\1"rY

�.Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June 10, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

NBA Finals

Pistons try to shake off Bryant's
shot as series shifts for Game 3
BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

Associated Press
AUBURN HILLS. Mich. - One shut
has drastically changed the dynamics of
the NBA Finals. The question now· fur
the Detroit Pistons is whether they'll let .
it affect them in Game 3 the way it did
in ·ovenime of Game 2.
Distraught and disgusted with themselves after their heartbreaking defeat. ,aid.
the Pistons boarded a plane and headed
"You know. we're cru,hcu ... Brown
home immediately after Tuesday night\ said . "I mean . shoot. th at wa, - we had ·
game.
winnable game. And everybody in that
But instead of returning to Motown alocker
room i, down. But we lost in
Madness with a 2-0 lead and a superb . triple O\ertime to New Jersey (in the
· chance to pull off one of the most stunsecond round) and had to go there and
ning upsets in league history. they're
win Games 6 and 7. We· 11 talk about
tied 1-1 and wondering how lhey let a tnat.
We 've just got to bounce back ."
six-point lead slip away in the final 40
Games 3. ~ and .5 wi ll be played at
second, .
The Palace before a sellout crowd that
The most pertinent, question was why has waited almost a decade and a half
the Pistons didn't foul someone before for 'irs team to make it to this stage.
Kobe Bryant hit a 3-pointer with 2. 1 Suffice to say the makeup of the crowd
seconds remaining to send the game to
will be quite different from the starovertim~ . A foul would have given the
studded audience at Staples Center that
Lakers two free throws when they needrelatively quiet until Bryant hit
ed three points to tie . and the Pistons · stayeu
hi s shot.
had plenty of opportunities to commit
In Game 6 of the Eastern Conference
one before Brya nt launched his shot.
ls. the rapper Uncle Kracker sang
"We don't foul in a situation like fina
the national anthem and Kid Rock raced
that," coach Larry Brown said. explainthe court during a timeout late in
ing that he feared a four-point play. "I around
the· fourth quarter waving a huge Pistons
thought about it. We talked about if they nag.
threw it inside. yeah, when Shaq gets it.
Game 3 i&gt; Thursday. Game 4 is
put him on the line. Bllt I don't want to Sunday
and Game 5 is Tuesday before
take a chance like that.''
Brown now has to live with the ·con,e- the &gt;eries returns to Los Angeles unless one of the team s wins all three
quences of that decision and hope it games. something :t home team has
doesn' t ultimatel y cos t him a chance for
his first championship as an NBA hcau never done since the NBA sw itched to a
2-.1-2 final s format in 1985.
coach.
Meanwhile. the Lakers are nursing
One series-altering shot can sap the
injuries
to a couple of key players.
life out of a team. a&gt; evidenced by what
happened to the San Antonio Spurs in Fisher is hobbling with a sore right knee
the second round: Derek Fisher 's Game and has trouble driving the lane or
ng the most athletic opponents.
5 buzzer-beater sw ung the momentum guardi
Karl Malone sprained the medial colthe Lakers' way, and they finished off
lateral
ligament in his ri ght knee early in
the Spurs in six games.
Game
2 but played 39 minutes . He
"We ' ll see,'' Bryant said. "The differwould
not
commit Wedne sday to playence there was we were coming home.
ing in Game 3, but Jackson said he
Now ~e ' re go ing on the road.',
expected
to have him in the lineupJudging by what the Pi stons had to say
perhaps
wearing
a knee brace .
· after Game ~ . the mental hurdle will be
"If
I
suit
Ltp,
I'm going to play,"
a sigr.ificant obstacle to overcome.
"It's devastating," Tay shaun Prince Malone said. " I wan t to do the sma11

Drug cases
affecting U.S.
track team
before trials-

!

~

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'

J • Jf J ' j J

150320

2003 PONTIAC SUNFIRE

,,j

• '

' , ,,

·~ • ll

IJ'JI) \\ , .Il ' f

,,\1\, ,, , . d ,.l

IJ ,:' fUJl

Middleport jail a money maker

SPORTS
• Pistons regain control.
see Page B1

BY BRtA.N J. REED
BREED® MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Housing prisoners for other
jurisdictions has become a
significan t source of revenue for the Village of
Middleport. and reven ue
from the jail is increa&gt;ing alf
'the time.
According to Police Chief
Bruce Swift. the village will
collect us mu ch by the end
of June as was co llected all

of lmt year in jail fee' from count: j~ail j, nO\\ clu)eU.
the county and other vil - Sherif( R,dph Tru"c ll LhC&gt;
lage s. Swift said the village the 1\liddlepmt jail'" a fir't
collected $16.900 through n:-~ort for huu . . ing prbuner"
· March.
and
collected on a 'hnrt term. Swift ,aid.
Doing ~u ..,a,c..;, T ru~'cll·...,
$19.700 last year.
· The jail. which hou'e' lilll lt cd ' taO: t1me on ·the
four male pri,nners. was full . ro ~tJ lran . . porting pri~oncr-..
Thursday. Swift 'aid.
from pi I to court. and ·'a'e'
The, village charge&gt; $5) thL' l'DUIJI\ lllOill'Y. \\ l'~tf and
· per day for housi ng pri .,on- k;11· ori \·e hiLie~ and fu ~l
ers other than its own. The l'OI\l~. at the ~amc time .
vi II .age's bigge ~l customer
Other \illage' in the
in housing pri '\n ne rs i-.. countv. Pomero\. Rac ine.
Meigs County. Became tile Rutlatid anu Syrirc'U&gt;C. abo

Syracuse
secures grant
to improve .
water system

u&gt;e the 1\liJuleport Ja il to
hoLhC pri ... oncr.... a... do other

cmint ie' and the Citv of
Gallipol i'.
·
The 'd li.t!.!e hOJ1t'"' to ..,j!.!~

-

'''''' " ' ' '' "'

'

nificantly in~:-r~ a -..e re,enue

BY

ith a larger ne11 jail. no11
111 tile plannin~ \ta~e,. The
jail \\ uu iJ he J1a rt l~f a Ill? \\
'ill age h.dl f:Icil11\ tn he
built .:It the Middleport
t.kmentan School buildin~
11

Jlil.'t

J.

r o~~ t: M"' D~ t L'tSE"HINEL

The 'il-

S: ri.tl'tl'-t'

]-., one ·-..te p

~..:to.., L":r td

pnl\ iding a beHer

Jrink. u1 \\ &lt;I IL'r for it... re ... i-

un· PL·:1rl

d~nh.
Th~

Ohi o Public' Worb
ha-. prnYided
~ 250 .000 lor imprm·cmenh

Visitors come in search of family history

2s

tu th e

The rundin~ repre~enh 37

percent of the c,timcrted total
l'{l-..[

2004 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

ONLY 10,100 MILES

MIDDLEPORT
A
descendant o f Samuel
Blaine Allen. the man wh·o
in 1902 built a hotel in
downtown
Middl eport ,
named it the Hotel Allen
and operated it under that
· name for many years. visited here Sunday with the
current owners. Donna and
John Tillis.
Dr.
John
All en of
Sacramento. Calif.. accompanied · by
hi s
sot;
Christopher,
came
to
' Middleport to see the struc ture built by his ancestor
Page AS
who was born a slave in
• Adah E. Taylor, 87
Virginia in 1842. took a
"French Furlough·· in 1861
• Roland Willard Wolfe, 63
and settled in southeastern
Ohio.
. Living in Middleport. he
worked on riverboats unt il
188 1 and then moved to
• Mason amends disprRendville . a prosperous
co mmunit y in Perry
mining
derly conduct action.
County. where he became
Page A5
proprietor of a hotel · ~l!ld
barber
shop.
• Pomeroy Police crack
In 1893. he opened anothdown results in arrests
er restaurant in Corning and
then in 1902 so ld that busiand convictions. See
ness and moved his wife.
. the former Rhoda Hogg of
Page A5
Cheshire. and their two chil dren back to Middlepon.
He operated a restaurant
bu sine ss in what is now the
People's Bank huilding unt il
construction of the Hotel
Allen was completed.
Mrs. Tillis in the tpidst of
compiling information on
the hi storic building, known
for many years as the
LaSalle Hotel , was using the·

Super Cab 4X4

OFF

WEATIIER

1999 FORD EXPLORER
2 Dr., 4X4, Leather, Moonroof

S10 9

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INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

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Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith•Values
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Obituaries
Sports
Weather

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16 PAGES

A3
Bs-6
B7

A3
A4
A6
BS

A5
B1

AS

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publishing Cn.

f{a ti ne
Svracuse
•
740-949-2210 .740-992-6333

Zane-.,~illc
''rotc the gra nt '' h t~..:h \\ iIt
pro~ tJ~ . ~L . Ill'\\ ''

at\.:'r

.'houiJ he n; placeu.
·· 1 thinl- thi' " ·ill he

'

MERCURY

HOURS:

~oou

S\ racthL', .. he 'l.tiJ ...... ,,· . ,
~om~ihitH.!. tl1at i;.. nc~...-c . . -.an
tu Ju to ~·untinue to opcrollf
nur \';ncr ...,\':'\ t&lt;.:m ."·
(or

·1

Rick Chan.:cy. the current
~tdm ini ...,tr&lt;ttur
fl) r
Syr~11.:u . . ~ ..... aiJ the l1C\\ · \\ a t~r
tO\\ er will he built -nem the
olJ \\';tt~r tan k "n R''' Jon ~&gt;
Ruad. He 'aid the ,,J;I ""t~r
tank j.. , :·...,JHn\ in~ . . . tl\~,...,
Clack...,· · and "'it j..., iu-..t &lt;1 mat ter or tim~ 'until the lilllk i&gt;
not u-..able ...
Win ~ctt ,;uJ the 'dlae~
qual i fie~ for S250.000 tm1r~
~ra nt

1

!.
Christopher Allen and his fath er, Dr. John Al len. disp lay a quilt they brought from Cal1fornia
made by their ancestors in 1887 while residing in Southeastern Ohio. The Aliens were in
Middleport seeking information on Samuel B. Allen. fQIJnder of the Hotel Allen now known
as the LaSalle Hotel. Pictured with the Aliens are Donna Tillis. left. who wtth her husband,
John, owns the hotel building, and Edwina Bell.
. internet to do research when
she came upoti the name of
Dr. Johh Alle n. He was also
on the internet searching for
information on Samuel B.
Allen and his early businesses.
Donna called Dr. Allen
and by the end of the conversation arrangement~ had
been made for the visit to
Middleport.
The information Donna
compiled tells the story of

the hotel founder, hi ' '""·
Edward All en. who ra n the
bu siness after hi' death, ancl
Edward\ son. Samuel C.
father of Dr. Allen. who left
Middleport anu the hntcl
husine" to hecome a jau
musi cia1 1 pia) mg piano "ith
the Teddy Hill Orchc,tr'L
Dur in~ the Allen' \'i,i t in
Middleport. Mr. ami Mr,.
Tillis took them on a tuur of
the o ld hotel where thev
gatheret..l infurmc.~tiun an~l

1n

took photographs. They also
met w.ith hi;(ory bull&gt;. Mike
and Dcbhie Gerlach. anu
\i,itcd the olJ Middleport
Hiii •Cemc ter) where their.
a rH:~o&gt;.LOr . . a r~ bu.ried.
Joining Donna and John
for ~~ ,.i~it with the Al iens
were their &gt;on. John ;urd hi'
family. and Edwina Bell
i.l'~~i~ted D'.llHla
locatin~ Lunilv r~cord~

whtl

in
on

file aiL the 1\iei~' Cnuntv
Health Dcpartmc7n.
·

STAFF REPORT
.
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

PO INT ROCK - Me ig1 County Shertff R:ll ph Tn•"ell
said a man died Thursday as the resul t of ;1 timbering
accident.
Trussell said Rubert Juchon. n.rmc ;rnd addre." unrc pon~J. was pronouced dead after lie '"'' 'tn~e· k on the
head with~ fall ing tree or ~ rcc li mh while cutt mg timber
nn North Run Road in Ct&gt;lumhia Town,hip. ncar the
Vinton Co unt y line .
A sq uad from1he \'ki g' Emergency Me.dit"al Sen ic~'·
Count y Coroner Duugf:b Hun ter :u1d Dcput' Danny
Lennard from Tru,eiJ' , offic~ \lc'r~ on the &gt;cenc .
Tnrs,cll said Jetail' on til~ uccidet\l arc not yet 1-mm 11.
Ju cbon\ 'hody 11a' rcka,cd Ill Birchfield Fu neral
Home .

I·
I

1

ll:rant

11l(l!lt.'\

J\ku.!~

Count'

Conlllli-.. . . ioncr'. we "ill bC

· apply1ng fur ~u.k.IJtinnal grant
fumk" Wingett ,;lid.
\\'inectt
"'id
State
i Rcpr~'~ntatiH'
Jinnn)
Str.:'\\ art "c~..., \·cry 'upportiYe
of til~ projc'Ct and '"'i'ted the
I , ·Ifla!.!c with !.!t:ttin!:! it on the
'[;IIC- il'\'el. State s:enatllr Joj
· P:1dgctt .mnmtnL·cd th e Jwa rd
Tue,da\ .
··or cour&gt;c thi&gt; is "clllckrful nc\\, for the penpl~ of
SHacu'e \\ lw will benefit
fr;mlthe imp roved water'!, _
t~lll 1l1ai 'LIJ.!plie' their home&gt;
dJH.i
hu:...ine-.,ses."
"aid
l'adg~tt . ·-rIll alway' pleased
to announl'e in-..tance.., in
11 hich team\\ nrk between
o..t;tiL' :mJ lncal gove rnment ...

rc~ult ... in, pr.ngrL'\.., f&lt;..lr r~.)m­

munitie .... ··

TilL' Smal l G&lt;n crnment
Ctpital
lmpnl\ emcnt
Curnmi ...... ion \\i ll relea..,e thl'
fundin~ fnr tile Svrac·u,c
'""ater . .~v . . lelll pro,iect In Jul:

Joan Kimmel, University of Rio Grande Arthritis Foundation Aquatic Leader. will be the speaker.

Diabetes Self-Management Program
June 28, 29 and 30 from 4:00 pm - 7:00 pm in the French 500 Room
Please bring a list of home medications to class.
Please have prescription from your physician to attend.
For more information on these FREE programs, or to register, call (740) 446·5080

111

Comm\mity Dewl opment
Blue Grant funding. He and
other leadin g ci ti1en, in '
S\'racu-.c an: ... v. orkin~ w·ith
tlie
M~ ig,
C"tlllntv
Commi\lioner&gt; to &gt;ec·ure thi:,
fundin g and more from the
AppalaL·hian
Regi{lflal
Council. Wingett "a-. qutck
to thank the count\ cPmmiv
-..inner-.. :.tnd colllit\ !.! ran t...,
aumini&gt;tratur Jean. T'~""'li
for the ir help in the proce".
·.· \\'i th the 'uppt&gt;rt ,,f the

America's Walk for Diabetes - Saturday, June 12 at1 0:00 am · Gallipolis City Park
Diabetes Support Group - Sunday, June 13 from 2:00pm-4:00pm · HMC French 500 Room

I
liNCOLN
.... ... .....

to\\ ~r.

lift -..Lttion Jnd \\&lt;ttl'r met~r ...
fnr the 'illa~l'. \\ tlh.!t'll -..diJ
thL· ";1ter t a n~o... '' h~c h v.l,,
hutlt 111 tile' mid .'ill, ·. i, 'hlmi n~ ... i~th of ''ear anJ tear and

June Diabetes Events

140-446-1800 .;
1-800-212·5171

Robert

l:::ngin~(Ttng · lil

publi c information office r.
The following detour i&gt;
posted ror area . n'lotomts:
U.S .
3.1
POMEROY - The Ohio the · . new
Department
of (Ravenswood Connector) to
Trimsport ation
(QDOT) .Ohioe 124 back to Ohio
District
I0 annou nced 338. Residents will continue
Thursday afternoon that to have &lt;ll'Cess to their pnipOhio 338. approximately erty, but the route i&gt; officialthree-quart ers of a mile ly closed while ODOT i'
northeast of the new U.S. monitoring and assesSing
33, has been closed as a the slip.
ODOT can not determine
result of a sl ip tha t has disat
thi s time when the road
placed pavement in the
will reopen.
vicini ty.
"Our highest priorit y i&gt; to
Pavement has shifted more
than 18 inches in places. maintain the s&lt;tfety of tho'e
according to a release traveling Ohio's roadway; ...
issued by Stefanie Phil son, said Filson.
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MTDAILYSENT INE L. COM

pruJec·t.

aJmlm-..tLttn r !or th.: 'l!ial!c.
;tnd Tim I.\ nn 1)r L\'iln

Slip.necessitates closing Man killed in
section of Ohio 338
timbering accident

Detallo on Page AS

th ~tn

murt

tht&gt;

\\'in!:..'.l't!. th.: former ~ rant-.

INSIDE

2002 FORD RANGER

ur

S661l.Oilll

OBITUARIES

see

s, ro.H.:u ...e '' ater "'' ~~~m

hic'h .:en e' ·more than 800
people .

11

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MORTGAGE

Home
National
Bank

COM

SYRA&lt;TSE la,gc t 11

SirL'el. r\ 11 arc h iteL~t
Please see Jail, A5

MILES 'LAYTON

Cumrni ....'-l iun

sports(rlmydailytribune.com

Home
rown

) ~

ONLY 10,000 MILE

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E-mail us your local sports news:

AS SOCIATED PRESS

While Marion Jones was not
among four athletes to receive
letters about possible drug violations, the U.S. Anti-Doping
Agency isn' t done with her
yet.
The sweeping drug scandal.
which already has taken down
four top athletes, now threatens to bar several more - and
the sport's biggest star, Jones,
remains under investigation.
So, when the U.S. track and
tield team for the Athens
Olympics is chosen in Jul y,
there's no telling who will be
allowed to show up.
Jones, who met with
. US ADA officials last month to
· discuss possible doping evidence against her, received a
letter from the agency Tuesday
asking follow-up questions.
" USADA asked us the same
questions they asked us during
our May 24 meeting with
them," said a representative
for Jones. who spoke to The
Associated Press on condition
of anonymity.
· USADA spokesman Rich.
Wanninger said Wednesday he
could not comment 011 the case
involving Jones. who won an
unprecedented five track
medals - three of them gold
- at the 2000 Olympics.
Jones' boyfriend, I00-meter
world record holder Tim
Montgomery, was among four
prospective Olympic medaltsts who received letters
Tuesday informing them that
the USADA is pursuing possible doping cases against them
that could result in bans from
the Athens Games.
Jones, who has a nearly !year-old
. son
with
Montgomery, issued a statement after placing third in the
long jump Tuesday at a track
meet in the Czech Republic,
"Tim Montgomery is a good
person, a great athlete and an
even better father,'' she said. "I
support him and believe in
him. and I have no doubt that
if a fair process is applied that
Tun wil be racing for gold in
Athens this August."

thing."
The things that worked for Los
Angeles in Game 2 - including a significant role for rookie Luke Walton should remain part of the game plan
agai nst an opponent that's giving the
Lukers far more trouble than many
anticipated.
. The first two games exposed the
Piston~· matchup advantages at point
guard and power for.ward with
Chauncey Billups and Rasheed Wallace
outplaying the Lakers' two former
superstars, Gary Payton and Malone.
"It's not a good feelin g for me," said
Payton. who was outscored 27-2 by
Billups in Game 2. "Right n.ow I don't
have a rhythm. I don't have my confide nee."
Walton, after sitting out all of Game 1, ·
had a team-high eight assists while playing 27 minutes off the bench- the most
of any Los Angeles reserve. Coach Phil
Jackson said Walton's role in Game 3
will depend in large part on how Devean
George is playing.
If O' Neal had the final say. Walton
would probably start.
"It amazes me how he can give me the
ball, and guys that have been playing
with me for four, five . six years can ' t get
me the ball ," said O'Neal. who scored
34 and 29 points in the first two games
to break Michael Jordan's .record of 20
consecutive finals games with at least
points.
Still, the Lukers have not been feeding
the ball to the Big Fella with as much
regularity as they did in past years even with the Pistons often defending
him with single-coverage from Ben
Wallace or Elden CampbelL
"We played kind of uptight the first
three, four quarters, but once we got the
opponunity to get another five minutes
then we looked more like ourselves,"
O'Neal said.
And unfortunately for the Pistons, the
Lakers are a much more dangerous
opponent once they get comfonable .
Unless the Pistons can get back to
showing the poise and precision they
had over the first 95 minutes &lt;111d 57.9
seconds of the series, Bryant 's shot
could represent the moment when the
series got away from them .

Watchdog says
savings will wait, A8

Marlins snap
Indians' line, Bt

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