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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Crew GM ·~eaving to take
job with NFL:s Falcons
of Crc11 Stadium. 11 ill
rt-.plan· Smith nn an intl'rim
b~1'i' . Untt l a permanent GM
is 'ckrteJ. playc·r-pcr&gt;lltlncl
deci,ion' 11 ill he nude· h'
coaL·h Ur~..·!.! Andru\1' in con--.
- ·
&gt;Uitation with the &lt;ll\ ncr,hirlr
grm•p led h: Lamar Hun t.
· The Hunt nwnc•r,hip g1\1up
'aid McCuller' \\lluld be
cntl\idcrl'd for the pcrma;!ent
position Pf rcplactng Smnh.
whie·h .II ill lll\hl like I\ he·
fflkd tn the end of thi; "'" "
'on.
Smith e·,unc to tlw Cre11

8v RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press
COLUMBUS
The
Columbus Crew &lt;lnn mmced
Tuesday that team prc,idclll
and general manager Jim
Smith is leaving to ta~e a
front-office position with the
NFL's Atlallla Falcons.
Smith, who joined the
Crew and Majnr ·League
Soccer in Janumv ~()(10. wil l
take over as the Falcon'' icl'
president of mar~eting on
July 9.

··tt doe.-.tl't ta!..e a gcniu.., tu from Ohio Slate \\lll're hc
market Michael Vick." Smith
said with a lauuh . reft:rrinu to
the franchis~ ·s slar quar..h.:r ~
back.
Mark
Me·Culler' .
the
Crew's executive 1·ice pre&gt;ident and the general manager

wa' &lt;In a,s.,c·ime ath letic
dircctnr fur mar~L·tin~ .tnd
L'lltlllllunicattlm.
He.• \\a-.
'ekctr.'d "' thr.' ~II .S cxccuti\'e nf the year 111 2001. a
year hdore the 'team 11011 the
. U.S . Open Cup titk.

He 'aid he rc~rened not
heing able to stay-through the
"L'a-.un to wat.:h rlw tran . . formcd Crew. whidt lo&gt;l se'cral I&lt;'P pla:er' in the pfl\ca'l'll hut ha.., rome hac!... from a
'low '"'n Ill get to-+--+-~.
Mln-ing up._ to \\orking for
an NFL team m&lt;~Je the deci ..,j~)Jl 1u ka\e an ~~~.-.i~r one.
Smith ,aid .
"It·, dearly the NP. I prok:-::-.innal ~port:-. kagu~ inLhis
countrv and could 1cry well
he the Nn. I prpfc,"onal
,pmb properl\' "'''rldwiue:·
Smith said.
~h: Cullcrs has been with
the Crew ,;nee December
1\llJ~ ami pla,ed an integral
pan in the Jc\clopmc m ami
con,truction of America's
flr,l . 'occcr-spec ifie staJium.
which opened in May 1999. ·

Contreras heads for reunion
with wife, two daughters
BY TIM REYNOLDS

Associated Press
MIAMI - l&lt;"e Contreras
planned to reuntte ,,·ith hi'
wife and two daughters
Tuesday night. one day after
his farnilv defected from
&lt;::uba aml.nearl) 21 month'
. after the New York Yankees
pitcher escaped the· isl;111d
nation.
Contreras
trawled
to
Florida from Baltimore to
meel his wife Miriam and
daughters Naylan. II. and
Naylenis. J.
"Of course I'm excited ...
he said after · arrivinf! al
Miami lmernational Airport.
accompanied
bs
Leo
Astacio. his int&lt;rprctcr on
the Yankees. "lt·, been two
years without 'eeing my
family. my wife and daughters."
Contreras then headed to
Miami Beach to meet his
family at a hotel.
"'I'm very . happy. I've
waited so very long:·
Miriam Contreras said earlier in the day at a refugee
center.
Contreras , a former star ·on
Cuba 's
national
team.
defe&lt;:ted in October 2002.
After he established residency in Nicaragua and hecame
a free agent. the Yankee'
signed him to a $32 million.
four-year contract.

" It 's spectacula r lh'II'S ...
Yankees mana~er Joe· Torre
said hdorc TLicsday night's
~ame at Baltimore.
• "Hi' family has been 'eparatcu for more than a year
and a haiL" 'aid Jaime
Torre,. Contrera,· age nt.
"Tht&gt; ;, their dream come
true.
Contrera,· familv was
among a grnup of~ !·Cubans
that left on a 31 -fnot boat
Suni..la,· ~,.•yenin~. U.S. Border
Patrol. ·,pokc;:man Robert
Montemavor said.
The gniu p wa' captured hy
L' .S. Border Patrol a~ent' off
Big Pine Kc v at s:1.~ a.m.
Monday. Moiuemayor 'aid.
then
transferred
into
lmnug rution and Custum'
Enforcement custodv early '
Tucsuay morning. ·
The famil y. looki ng tired
but otherwi,.e 'eemingly in
good health. was prc,cc ssed
and intel'l'icwed h) immigration agents . then examined
by · Mi;11ni-Dade County
medical officials hcl'ore
hein~.
rclca-&gt;e d into the
Tom~·,· custody awund 6:-+0
p.m.
"Thank\ I&lt;) God. thev are
free,·· TorrL'~ 'aid. ··w(.. are
\ery happy aml they can
have a reunion with their
family."
Nicari.ltlll&lt;l
twice c11 ranted
"
Comrcras' family vi""· hut
the
Cuban
~nvernm~nt
denied perm i\Sion for hi'

Wimbledon
from Page 81
'" I don't like to play on thi' surface. I
ca,nnot move there. Every time. I don't
know how it's going to bounce . It's re;lll) a
nightmare for me ," Sufin 'aid . "After a
while, I get bored. I lost completely motivation , and I give up .''
Talking about hi .s difficulties on ·g ra&gt;'.
where balls tend to 'kid. Sa fill added. ··r,
· cannot adjust to this. You have to be really
focused in your mind. but thi s is not my tnritory."
All Grand Slam tournaments are ~rinds.
but Wimbledon's rain can make it even
tougher. Andy Roddick ' lipped and fell on
wet turf while charging to the net behind a
serve on the last point played in hi' fiNround match against Wang Yeu-ttuoo .
They' II resume Wednescb1y at .J-2 in the
first set.
Play was halted at 5:15 p.m .. and wun
covers were remov ed then replaced twice.
before All England Club Chief ExeCLltive
Christopher Gorringe 's voice could be
heard at 7 p.m . over loud speaker' acr&lt;'s'
the grounds, conceding. "Play will be abandoned."
French Open runner-up Guillermo Coria
was two po111ts from victory against Wc&gt;lc~
Moodie in the fifth set of a match that swned Monday and is now headed for its tltird
day. Overall Tuesday, 43 ·&gt;eheduled matches were completed, 14 were suspended. and
31 never started.
With its ~rass, rain and strict rules ahout
proper att1re , the tournament formall)
known as The Luwn Tenni.s Championships
tends to elicit stron g feelings in players.
Andre Agassi thou ght little of the tOllrnament early in hi, career. 'kipping it three
straight years, then won it in I lJl)2 ami
changed his tune. Pete Sampras won seven
titles and compared Centre Court with
Mecca . Ivan Lendl's fr uitl ess pursuit of th e
title took on the feel of a Grce~ tra ~c&lt;h.
Former No. I players Arantx a s"anche;Vicario and Marcel o Rio~ derided the 'urface as being for cows . Three -tim~ French
Open champion Gu\lavo Kuerten ,taycd
away three of the past four 'eason,.
But the All England Cluh brin~' out the

-

Wednesday, June 23, 2004

www :mydailysentinel.com

rdati\'cS to leave the island.
In late 2002. Contreras· ramilv was informed that it
w-ould h;1ve . to wait five
years
for a document
required to leave .
·"Her actions show how
badly ,he wants to be here .''
Torre' sa id of Contreras·
wife.
While Contreras kept in
contact with his family, the
separation was often mentinned as a reason the ace
pitcher might have struggled
si nce reaching the majors.
Contrcr&lt;~s is 4-3 with a
p.l8 ERA in II starts this
year. and was sent back to
the minor' earlier in the season. He is expected to make
his ne\1 stan Saturday at
Yankee Stadium again'! the
New York Mets .
··we all need so much support in this game, and a lot of
comes from people outside
the park." Torre said. "He
had real ly his home and four
walls. so it\ tough to go
home and not think about
had things that have happcncd or good things that
may turn had .
"The fact that he has been
going home to that empty
mom. that empty apartment,
probably is one of the toughest things someone can do,"

Betts deals Clippers win over Syracuse
SYRACUSE. N.Y. (AP)Todd Betts homered, drove in
three runs and scored twice to
lead the Columbus Clippers
to an ~-3 win over the
Syracuse SkyChiefs in the
International League on
Tuesday night.
John Rodriguez tripled and

score'd on a single by. Andy
Phillips in the first inning for
Columbus. Rodriguez also
added two doubles.
Svnkusc tied it in the bottoni oft he ti rst on a home run
by Glenn Williams.
The SkyChiefs scored
twice in the fourth to close

Cavs
from Page 81
The Cuvs hated to sec Kapono go.
"Jason is someone we didn't want to lose."
general manager Jim Paxson said. "We tried
~ number of different avenues to keep that
from happening. We tried to work something
out. He did a nice job for us."
Bickerstaff said the Cavs offered Charlotte

Wilson
from Page 81
iL"
Braden Looper pitched the ninth for his
13th save in 15 opportunities. striking out
Griffey, Adam Dunn and Jason LaRue to
end it.
Griffev made casual comments after the
game, b"ut wouldn't discuss the game with
•
reporters.
"One of the big stories tonight was the
bullpen," Howe said. "Johnny brought a lit tie sanity out there. He put up spme zeros
tor us and we were able to score some runs
with him in there."
Piazza gave the Mets a 5-4 lead with one
out in the fifth when he hit a 2-2 pitch from
Paul Wilson into the picnic area in left field .
" I was just trying to not overswing.''
Piazza said. "I just kind of felt good that atbat and was able to stay back on it .'"
The Mets added another run in the sixth
on Eric Valent's sacrifice fly. Cameron. who
was 3-for-3, led off with a triple. and Valent
lifted a deep tly to center one out later to
make it 6-4.
·
The Mets added another run in the eighth
on pinch"hitter Joe McEwing's run -seol·ing
groundout.
" It' s just a sign of a good team start in g to
come together,'' Cameron said. "Pau I
Wilson was pretty good. but we were able to
get to him."
·
Wilson (7-1) allowed six runs and nine
hits in 6 2-3 innings. He struck out nine and

Still lots of interest in
OSU vacancy, Bt

the Columbus lead to one.
Simon Pond singled and
scored on a single by Gabe
GraS&gt;. while Julius Matos
singled and &gt;cored on a single
by Tim Whitt:1kcr.
Columbus added three runs
in tile eighth. including Betts'
"
homer.

-

e

"incentives" not to pick Kapono.
However. the expaminn club couldn't
resist Kapono's potential. versatility. range
or comract - just $620.000 next season.
"He's a guy Cleveland rea,Jiy didn't want
to lose," Bickerstaff said. " We like Jason's
ability to make ,hoh. He 's also able · to
stretch defenses. He's going to create spacing for us on offense. He knows how to play
the gam~. and he\ also 6-8. so he has the
abi}.ity to· play either forward or guard for

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
~

.' , , f

l

~

~

., J •. , · .• . . .. ~

'l....:

• Casey elevates Reds.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

_,., ..., -

...
.l t ' l

.

...--..-

·~ ·

-

'

~ ~

~

.

-~

~

. -

~

"''1' 1

husinc"~c"

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

walked one.
The right-hander was making his third
career start against the tea m that selected
him with the No. I pick in the 1994 draft.
His. career with the Mets was plagued by
injuries. including mbsing all or parts of
three seasons from 1997-99 with' operations
on hi s right shoulder.
"We did what we were supposed to. but I
just couldn't hold them," Wilson said. "We
scored early. and I let rhet11 into the game.
That's my job - to keep them down, and I
reall y didn't do it.''
The Reds got off to a good start · for
Wilson, taking a 1-0 lead in the second on
Dunn's team-leading "Oth homer over the
b~llpen in right field.
Floyd tied it in the Mets' half of the
inning. leading off by hitting a 1-1 pitch
from Wilson fnr his seventh homer.
Cincinnati scored three time' itt the third
to take a 4-1 lead against Ginter.
D'Angelo Jimenez hit a leadoff single.
Griffey singled one' out later and Dunn
drove in Jimenez with a ground-rule douhle.
.LaRue followed with u run-scoring single to
make it 3-1. and Jermaine I Clark's Jouble
drove in the Reds' fourth run.
The Mets tied it again with a three-run
fourth. Flovd and Richard Hidal~o hit consecutive singles to lead off the i~ming . and
Cameron doubled O\'er Griffey in center to
make it 4-2. One out later. Valent hit a runscoring grountlout and Shane Spencer hit a
pinch-hit &gt;ingle to left-cemer to tie it. "It
wasn't vint age Willie." .Reds manager Dave
Miley said. "They scratched some runs otT
him . He got us deep in the game. though.
But .still. they got some big hits off him."

~

llf l l•
. .....' l •\ "

•.•.. 1 .. 1

MIDDLEPORT - An apparent
upswing in the county'' retail economy may not be reaching: as far a:-.
Middleport. where a number nf
retailer-; han· announced plan:-. lu

move out of town. reduce operations.
or du:-.e lk)\\·n Ullllpll'tcly

Utll'

and tho . . ~..· :-.lnl!.!i.di rH.! to
&lt;lrt findi~l~ ~fe il''
Countv·~ larucst commu niry... a JifRcu Jt pf;tL~ to 'Conduct hu~in~..;.., .
Ac4uisitinns Fine Jcwclr~. a retailer on the "T" fur ,c,~ral \Car,. ha'
alreadv cJo...,ed ih Lloup,, ju:-.1 three
Jonr, ·Jol\ n. the Ri,erhend Antique
and Craft Mall. ""ned fur , ix vcar'
by Mike and Debbie Gerlach.' \\'ill·
cJn,e at the end or .illllc·.
The owners of Dan·s. the l'lothinu
and hoot ,hop that ha' hecn a down"town, Middlepon 'i;1plc for at least
30 .vcars. ha,·e llllnounccd the\. 1\'ill
11\0Vl' th~ "tore tu .tlll' f~lr!llL'r Dnllar
General location in dm1·ntown

Pomcn)\' in

to a

poor retail climate.
Cnmmunily ]e;_Jder:-. hupc a ·new

leader,hip training . program now
underway will help spark a revital i7at ion or ~ ·lidd kpm-t's downtown
:-.hopping climate. but in the meantime. both estuhl ish~d M idJkpon

AtH~u:-.t.

"\\'e i1npc th:, mm L'. tu Pumcruy

make a goud . . tarl

..... . .. 1

.
•.

··\\'~! \\ rre lo -.i 11!2 mnne\'. it·:-- .1 ... -..imple ·" that." Gerlach ,aid Thur,da\'.

ln

will bring more tralfil' imo the

"'ThcrL· ju . . t \\t:ren·t enou~h ~ale-.

...tore:· Jane Harri ....... aid \Vedne ... da\ .
Olht'r r~taikr:-; recent!\ lc,lvi·n~

' upprli1.thc '" erhead... "
Gerlal'll 'aid thllt 11 hik the ~encral
relail cconPI1l\ in 1\ki~~ Cnunl\ mav
he imrn)\ in~~ ir\ al lhe t\pe i1":- Of

downtown

:\liddlcpurt · include

Preciou' ~kmoril' .... a de&lt;.:urative

plate 'hop. Li1 in' Dolk a to lkctiblc
d&lt;rll 'hop. anJ the C'nmer Re"aurant
on South Third .\1 enue.
~1ike Gerl;1ch. · 11 hu alnn~ with hi'
11·ife. Dcbhic. 0\\ 11' the atltil)uc and
craft mall on the c&lt;)rllerof ~1ill Street
and South Third Alcnue. said tile
rca.,onthc 'lure" ill cl'"" thi' month
j..,

, jmpll':

tomel''

Th ~..-re

\'i .,itin~

aren·t

"mom and pop" -.tort'' lik.~..· hi ~ and
hi . . \\ ifl'· . . .
" It\ nnt 11~,- it Lhcd tn he." Gerlach
~aid. ··\'~,.'\\ hu ... inc:-. ... 1.?-. l\)min!..! into
lh~ l'\Hnmunil\ arc . mu ... th" \hain
. . lure-. llllJ fa ....t. ruuJ re-.raur~lnr:-.. and .
lhu-.e l)- jlC'- of hu-.llle..,-.e, tenJ to :-.tea[
trad~

l'lllHigh ~..:u~­

lr11111 inckpendent mere· han h."

Please see Merchants, AS

the &gt;hop.

Beating the heat
·--·-· . ' .........,.'
;~-..

\ ..

LoTIERIEs··
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 3-4-5
Pick 4 day: 4'5-9-6
Pick 3 night 4-9-6
Pick 4 night 1,9-4-9
Buckeye 5:3-4-7-19-32
Superlotto: 2-19-21-27-3547 (36)
Kicker: 8-8-9-8-6-4

West Virginia .
Daily 3: 3-4-3
·
Daily 4: 9-4-4-7
Powerball: 9-12-16-20-39 (1)
Power Play: 5

INSIDE
Gas 1s cheaper at remote ends of the county like Reedsvtlle or
Tuppe rs Plains than 11 is in Pomeroy wl1ere this p1cture was
taken. At Reeds Country Store in Reedsville. the pnce of a gal·
lon o.f unleaded gas 1s $1.89 whereas in Pomeioy that same
gal lon of gas costs $1.97 a gallon. The award for cheapest
.gas of the week, goes to Ctark·s ·Pump and Sl1op 1n Tuppers
Plains at $1.88 per gallon. (J. Miles Layton )

• New Haven pool out for
this summer. See Page
AS
• Utah engineer wins
over $500,000 on
.Jeopardy! See Page AS

hl.': said.
(A P Spm·rs Wrira Dm'id
Ginsburg in Balrinwre conrril&gt;rtted wtilis report.)

WEATHER

Ruth Ward and Jeri Hawk btcycle away in the air conditioning at the Me tgs Senior Center.
Joy Bentley, exercise coach and fitness center dire ctor at the Senior Citizens Center. programmed the computerized bikes for a perfect workout that blends h1 ll s wtth flats. Ward
said she comes to the exercise room at least four ltme·s a week and puts in more than 25
miles on the bike. Hawk exercises twice a week and logs over 20 miles Bentley sa1d exer·
ctse, especially in the cool confines of the exercise room. is safer than knocking amund in
the hot sun for most sen ior citizens or anyone else for that matter. iJ. Mtles Layton )

Racine sets July 3 for
Independence Day celebration

Details on Page A2

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Places to go

A6

Sports

B1 ·

Weather

A2

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE - "Freedom ,
Fa1i1ily and Fun" will he
theme or the Jul y 3
Independence Day celebration to be held in Racine
spon,ored by the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department
and Star Mill Park BoarJ.
A parade thrnugh dnwn town Racine at 10 a.m. "ill
kickoff the all-clay event.
Line-up will be at Southern
High School at 9:15 a.m .
and following: the ilag raising by American Legion

Post 602 at \):.:15. will begin
its move down Elm Street.
to Third. to Vine, to Fifth

Street, and then on Elm
back to tile high sclluul.
Marilyn Powell at 9-liJ26 76 Gill he contacted for
information on the pan.td~.
There will he monctarv
awards pro\'idcd by Home
National Bank and Racine
Volunteer Fire Dcpartt11~"'
of $100. $75. and $50 for
fi rst , ., econd c~nd th ird
place' re,pectively 111
lloat&gt;.
First ptace in the wal~­
ing unit will .hc Si20. 'ponsored by Wooly Acre'
Farm. The hicyck award'
of $15 k,1r fiN. $1 tJ for second. and $5 for third will he
.'ponsored hy Dr. Mel
Wee'e and Dr. Doug and

Tonja Hunter.
H.ur..,L' and rider:-. \\ill . he
judged in two di\ i~ions -

indi1 idual rider' ;111d uni".
Tnlphil':-. wil -l go to the rir . . t
and :-...-:cnnd plaL'L' wi nllL'r"
in c&lt;tch di,·i,ion. with mon Cidry ;ma rd " 1_-:oing 1\) th~
third place "inner,. The
event is 'POINlrcd by Lone
Oak Farm llf SHacu,e .
A\\:ards

f1H"

· the antique

car en t ri~..·, ''ill hl'" "'pon &gt;nrcd hv Star Mill Park
l:lllard --~ ·ith pri;e, of S25
for fir&gt;t place. SIS for 'Cl'ond. and S 10 for third
place
Antique tractor
tl\\:an.b \vi ii br ~pun"itr~d

Please see July l, AS

Gas prices remain
high in Meigs County
BY J. MtLES lAYTON
J LAY TO N @l MYO~IL YSENTI ~ EL .COM

POMEROY
though

ga:-.

Ewn
pnc~'

ha\"t'

dcc'l'cased for tile ra" four
wee~'· it i, stil l more expen,Jve buyin~ ga-. at ~1llllt? ·
place' in ~1eig' Count\ th;ln
in uth~rs.
Accordin~ to the AAA Fue·l
Ciall~e Rql&lt;li'l. · the nation -

~allon

's

in the la't

wee~

w

~ I.Y.l \. Thi' price ;, 12 . 1
behm the ;til -time hi~l1.
11HlilmWidc :.1\'t:ragl' pric~ ... of

ct.'IJh

S2.05-+ per galhHl read1cd (In
fVh11 26 of thi .&lt; 1 e·ar
R·ut take into' acwunt how
the

~

I.'JJ per gallon .;J\'er;tgt'

i:-, rurmulatcLI . A month auu
during the p~ak ~)1: ga:-. pri~·c ·
. hlh' ~. the hi~hc~l ga:-. prh:c~
in the cnuntn were in
Cdifmnia at $.1 .(15 per 1!"1 lun
Hlld tile' Ill\\~'' were prohabl:
in till' Carolin&lt;h at annmd
S I.SO per g•illon.
Sn l~t!...in!..! th~:-.~ t\\\)
t:\li"Cillt'' tngetl~er thl'n nr

....

.

.. .

,

.

lhlw re~ulh

in a

ag~ ga~ pric~.

hi~hcr a\L'rIHl 111.1th:r

13u1

hnw it i:-.

mca~urcd. L'ilL\tp~..·r

~a"

gond

j.., .
lll()tori:-. t ~

IlL'\\..,

for

"'cary of f1a)- ing
more than S2 per gall(1n in
lll~lil\ it rca:-. uf tht.? UHIIlll"\.
A~ of Thur,Jtl\ nwniin~.
~.t ... in Pomt"'roy \\-~h ;Jt :-.1.97
fllr a !.!alton ur llnkaded.
'' hidt i: ;.H !~a:-.! &lt;I dime mnrc
than 11 ;, in ,"\then'"' S I.S7 a

\\ ide a\ crag~ price nf . . ctf!.!alton . :\~..·cnrdim.! to the:
:-.en IL'C l"l'!..!Ular i.!a-.oiJn~..· ha~
l' ul'l G,ul~e Re'p(lrt, ~'"
dropped ti'car l)
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Merchants leaving Middleport in numbers

SPORTS

us.

hcsl in player' such as No. S Tim Henman.
a four -time semifina li st. He twice was a
point from tra iling hy lW(l se" before com. in g back to heat Ruben Ramirez Hidalgo of
Spain .J-6. 7-(l 161. 6-4. 6-~.
Or No. II M,ark Philippou"is. an unseeded ftnahst last yea r. He poundcJ 22 aces to
overcome II doublc-faulh and eliminate
Chri,tophe Rocbus of Belgium 6-J, 6-4. 62, hts first victo ry in individual tournamelll
play since January .
And it can bring out the worst. too.
French Open finalist Elena Dementieva had
II double- faults- givi ng her 78 over eight
matches- in •~ 6-4. 1-6. 6-4 loss to Sandra
Klcinova. who entered witl1 an 0-6 record at
Wimbletlun .
Other secLkd losers: No. 8 Svetlana
'Ku;netso,·a. No. 17 Chanda Ruhin. No. JO
Elcni Daniiliduu. Nn. 16 .liri Novak. No. 23
Max Mirnyi and No. 2H Ivan Ljubicic, beaten 5-7.7-6 (SJ. 7-5. 6-~ by Wayne Ferreira,
who· ., playing in a rcwrd 55t h 'traight
nWJill'.
''Player' have been congratulating me
and '&lt;tying that they think it 's a gre at thing. ·
A lot of them have though t abou.t how long
it would take them to get to this , anti they
·
laugh a llit," said Ferreira. 32.
"l;hey know how difficult it is to stay
healthy for this amount of time .''
Williams knows all about th at. too.
Three weeb after last year\ Wimbledon
final. she had left knee 'Lirgery and missed
e1ght months of her Jay job. There was time
fn r acting and clothes designing, however.
, She looked shuJ..y in her Slam return at
the French Open. losing to Jennifer Capriati
in the guarterfi na Is. B u 1 Wimbledon
ch&lt;tngc&gt; everything for William&gt;.
''When I'm on the set of ~ movie , it's
exrittng. I Ill\ cit. I love being there. When
J'mtbigning a dr~ss. an outfit. I'm really
into that." &gt;aid Williams. who\ ranked lOth
but 'ceded fiN . "Bu t it just doe~n't beat
walking out onto Centre Court at
Wimbledon ...
Safin cou ldn't di,agrcc more. He 's only
OllCl' hL:cn a quarlcrfinali!-.t. and olherwi~e i:-.
2--+ at Wimbledon. He won the U.S. Open,
rc&lt;t( hcd t'"' Australian Open finals. and
m&lt;~de the French Open semifinals .
" I h!-'~ tennis." he said. "I ju&gt;l don't like
gr~l..,

Broussard slams
ChiSox in eighth' B6

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" It mak~..·~ 1111..' mad tha t !..!d~
prict'' .1re higl1~r hne' ·in
f\:lei~' Cuum: rhan the~ cuT
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jLhl COJ'e'' II ith the hi~hcr
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Please see Gas. AS

�PageA2

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June

~4, 2004

Deaths of six renew calls·for
improving Lake Erie route

NewsChannel·

Tlrursday,

}u11e

24

range from ·mostly clear to
partly cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the southwest
turning from the south '" the
evenmg progresses.
Overnight • There is a slim
chance that it could rain.
Temperatures will fall from
7 I early overnight to 65.
Skies will be partly cloudy to
mostly cloudy with 5 MPH
wind s from the northwest
turning from the north as the
overnight progresses.
Friday, June 25
Morning: It will be a cloudy
morning . Temperatures will

Morning: Temperatures will
rise to 80 with today's low of
61 occurring around 6:00am.
Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from the south
ruming from the southwest as
the momipg progress~ s.
Afternoon: Temperatures
will hold steady around 83
with today's high of 84 occurdog around 5:00pm. Skies
will be ·sunny with 5 MPH
winds from the southwest.
Evening; Temperatures will
drop from 83 early this
evening to 73. Skies will

A DAY ON WALL STREET

climb from 67 to 80 by late
this morning. Winds wi ll be 5
MPH from the north.
Arternoon: It's goi ng to be
a humid and c loudy afternoon. Moderate rain is fore- ·
casted. The rain should start
by 3:00pm. Accumulations of
0.29 inches are predicted .
Temperatures will rise from
8 I early this afternoon to 83
by I :OOpm then drop down to
76 late afternoon. Winds will
be 5 MPH from · the north
turning from the northeast as
the afternoon progresses.

Market watch
June 23. 2oo4

Dow Jones
Industrials

--

10,479.57
+0.81
.

fn&gt;m pnwtoua:

10,486.87

APR
Low

compos e

MAY
JUN.
Record high: 11 ,722 9B

10,359.46

--

Russell

2 ,020 .98

trom .,.,.woua: + 1.35

June 23, 2oo4

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

MAR

High
2,023.23

. APR

Low
1.990.78

MAY

''\;;? "Gii'\;; ~
4

~~

·

Unchanged:
Volume:

1,100

HIQh

low
1, 131 .73

EXTRA! EXTRA!

N8W hlgha
174

New Iowa

148
31
1,784,975 .740

Coming Friday, July 16,2004
The

A.:.
dv:::•:::nc:::e d=:_.::
2:.::.0.::::60 New hltlll•
:.:
108 .
D:::e::.:C:::IIn:;:ed=:----'"1"'05,9 N8W Iowa
Unchanged:
370
32

·-

1,1 45.16

=1

Nasdaq diary

1 ""

--==----=----:-:-:::----cc::--, .ooo
MAR
APR
MAY
JUN

580. t5

Oecll
=="~-"'''---"'~·:..:

- - - - - - - - - - - 1,200

1.144.96
Pel Cf\anQ8

~

Record high : 1.527 46
March 24, 2000

Volume :

Ohio Highway Patrol Trooper Ryan Thomas looks at a partly
submerged truck which was part of a four veh icle accident on
Ohio 2 near Oak Harbor. early Tuesday. The accident occured
at 11:46 p.m. Monday night and caused six fatalities .
Highway Patrol officers believe the accident started when the
truck went left of center and struck an eastbound tractor·
trailer. (AP Photo/Daniel Miller)
driver, two of his daughters and took a blood sample from
;md his girlfriend, were riding the driver. the patrol said.
together in a Cadillac Escalade
In the past three years.
after spending the day at Cedar there haw b-:en 28 crashes
Point. Their SUV !lipped and on a 9-mile stretch of road
lru1ded in a creek atler it was between the Davis-Besse
struck by a tractor-trailer.
nuc.lear plant and Lucas
. Shannon Scott. 24. and County. according to authorAlexis Howard, 9. drowned. ities. At least four of those
said Ottawa County Coroner crashes were deadly.
Gilbert Bucholz. Darryl
The State Highway' Patrol
Scott, 44: Ariel Scott. I 2: in May began increasing
and Alecia Howard, 7 died patrols along three stretches
from injuries from the crash. of Route 2 after seeing a spike
Six-year-old
Amber in accidents in the last year.
Channey' s death was caused trooper Chris Capizzi said.
by drowning and head
The state began making some
injuries. the coroner said.
improvements to the route after
Brandi Scott. I 3. of $19 million in state and tedcr.tl
Sterling Heights, Mich .. was money was pledged to the pf(}the only survivor from the ject in the late I990s. New tw11
Escalade. She remained in l•m•'S have been added •md tl1ere
critical condition with spinal m-e plans for more.
But there are several ban·iinjuries Wednesday at St.
Vincent Mercy Medical ers to expanding the road
Ce11ter in Toledo.
from two lanes to four. most
The chain reaction acci- notably the federally prodent· began when a Blazer tected wetlands that are
went left of center and along the route .
struck a tractor-trailer, caus" In some cases. it\ almost
ing the sem i' to hit the imposs ible to build or widen
Escalade and another car. a road in a wet lands."
the patrol said.
Rutherford said.
Troopers have said they
It would also cost more to
have no reason to believe that design such a route and buy
truck driver crossed the ce n- the land. he said. And cost is
ter line before his semi was \me factor the state's
hit. No one has been charged . Transportation
Review
Authorities were investi- Advisory Counci I considers
gating whether the driver of when deciding what highthe Blazer had been drinking way projects to fund.

..a;!&amp; ,

~A~dv!!a~n~ced~:--'2~,!:.27~0

JUN

Record high : 5.048.62
Marct110, 2000

@' . . . .

m:.m ~ua: +0.85

~

NYSE diary ·

-..,--------:c---:-cc---:cc,-- 1.600

--~-------- 1 .050.

4-t

1,144.06

2000

• ;;;;o:

Pd.chongo

+l!.llli

2.200.

Nasdaq
composite
~

2.020.96

Standard &amp;
Poor's 5.00

Jan 14. 2000

June 23. 2004

"',+21..83

Nasclaa

-==---=---:-:=-~:-:-- 9.250

MAR
H6gh

-114.60
10,479.57

OAK HARBOR (AP) Big-truck traffic has nearly
doubled in the last decade on
a two-lane route where six
people were killed in an
accident while returning
home from an amusement
park . Crashes are up, too .
A sheriff said the state
route has gotten so dangerous that he won' t drive it
unless he's on patrol.
·•t won't take my family
out.'' Ottawa County sheriff
· Craig E1i1ahiser said. "It's
unfortunate that large numbers
of deaths have to bring the
attention back to the problem.··
The accident that left six
dead from the Detroit ·area
has spurred a lawmaker and
Jaw enforcement officers to
renew calls for improvements on state Route 2 - a
shortcut between Cedar
Point and Michigan.
The roadway follows the
Lake Erie shoreline and is a
direct path for many boaters.
ang lers and tourists who
visit the lake and its islands .
The stat~· s most recent
traffic survey shows that
about 10.000 vehicles each
day travel on the route near
the accident site. About one
of every three vehicles is a
commercial truck.
Ohio Department
of
Transportation spokesman
Joe Rutherford said that's
not much traffic when compared with other routes
around the state.
But Emahiser said the figure is misleading because
there is so much more traffic
in the summer.
"Come out · here on a
Friday or Saturday night and
it's packed." Emahiser said.
"It was never designed to
carry the amount of traffic
it's carrying."
Emahiser said the road needs
to be rerouted or widened.
Rep. Chris Redfern, a
Democrat from Port Clinton.
in a letter sent to the Ohio
Department of Transportation
said he wanted the department to support and fund a
widening of the route.
All of the people killed late
Monday night, including the

Daily Sentinel

AP

Local Stocks
ACt- 35.50
AEP -

3!.76

Akzo- 37 .35
Ashland Inc ..- 52 .44
BBT- 37.45
BLI- 14.72
Bob Evans - 26 .89
BorgWarner- 44.53
City Holding - 31 .82
Champion - 4 . 18
Charming Shops - 8.61
Col- 32.B3
DuPont- 44 .40 .

DG - 20.12

Federal Mogul - .29
Gannert - 85.97
General Electric- 33.42
GKNLY- 4.BO
Harley Davidson - 61 .51
Kmar1 - 70.37
Kroger - 17.98 '

Ltd -

1B.75

NSC - 25.94
Oak Hill Financial -

31 .30

Bank One - 49 .61
OVBC- 33.002
Peoples - 25.07
Pepsico - 55.49

Premier - 9.60
Rocky BOots - 20.1 9
RD Shell- 52.22
Rockwell ~ 35.57
Sears- 39.09
SBC- 24.25 ·
AT&amp;T - 16.41
USB - 28.44
Wend¥·s - 35.45
Wai·Mart - 53.58

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
closing quotes of the previous day·s
transactions. provided by Smith
Partners at Adve st Inc. of Gallipolis.

Tristan Roach
Son of
Charles &amp;. April Roach

Mental evaluation of Charles McCoy nearly finished
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
psychiatrist was about finished interviewing the man
. accused of being respon si ble
for a seri es of Columbusarea highway shootings that
left one person dead , an
attorney said.
Defense attorney Mark
Collins said Dr. Mark Mill s
of Columbia Uni ve rsity met
Tuesday and Wednesday with
Charles A. McCoy Jr. at the
Franklin County jail to determine if he is competent to
stand trial. Mi lis could opt to
continue
the
interview
Thursday, then plans to return
to Washington, D.C., to
review all the case records
and write his report.
Mills also i;. collecti ng
information on whether, if
conwetent, McCoy cou ld
plead innocent by reason of
insanity, Collins said.
Franklin County Common
Pleas
Judge
Charles
Schneider will rule whether
McCoy is compe te n ~ which

means he understand s the
charges against him and can
help defend himse lf.
The defense requested the
taxpayer-funded examination
because they say McCoy has
been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. The trial
is scheduled for January.
McCoy, 28. ha s pleaded
innocent to a 24-count indictment including the fatal
November shooting of a 62year-old woman . She was the
only person hit in the attacks,
which were mostly around
Interstate 270 on the ci ty' s
S9Uth side. He could face the
death penalty if convicted.
Schneider said he approved
paying up to $6.250 for a
p;.ychiatrist. at $250 per hour
for as many as 25 hours. He
previously approved spend·
ing $5 ,000 for a private ·
investigator for the defense.
" I didn't order any particular per&gt;on, and I wou ld not
al 19w the defense to pay trav·
el expense,," Schneider said

•

of the psychiatri st.
If th e .bill is higher,
Collins said , "we' ll have to
raise the fund s elsewhere."
McCoy' s family is paying
the attorneys.
Schneider
has
given
McCoy's attorneys until July
I6 to argue that their cJ ient is
not competent. They ha ve
until September to say
whether McCoy intends to
plead insan ity.
Nothing will be filed and
the trial wou Jd go forward if
Mill s says McCoy is compe·
tent . Collins and fellow attorney Mike Miller said.
McCoy's family visits him
twice weekly at the jail and
telephones him, Coil ins said.
McCoy, in hi s own cell with a
deputy stationed within 6
feet. was arrested in March .
Two times he has been on
suicide watches. when he is
monitored more closely and
must wear a special gown
that can't be torn or tied in
knots. Collins said.
•

•

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, June 24
TUPPERS PLAINS ·_
VFW Post 9053 will meet at
7 p.m. at the hall. There will
be a special drawing .
Monday, June 28
RUTLAND
-Rutland
Garden Club. I p.m ., at the
home of Mrs. Joy Combs.
RACINE - The Southern
Band Boosters will mee.t at 7
p.m. in the Southern High
School band room.
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Cluh , 7 p.m. at the

·Benefit planned
MIDDLEPORT - A Spa
Party benefit for Donnie
Spaun of Letart whose
injuries on a job have left him
partially paralyzed, will be
held from noon to 4 p.m. on
June 26 at the old Middleport
American Legion hall on
Fourth Street in Middleport.
Orders for spa treatments
will be accepted with all pro·
ceeds going to Spaun, as well
money and non-perishable
food donations.
Spaun and his wife are
reportedly in serious financial
need because of the extensive
medi.cal attention he requires
and the Jack of income .
For more information, contact Rachel Spaun, 992-9821
or Tracie Connolly, 9854477.

'

Reunion set

POMEROY - Mt. Hope
Praise Team from Beckley.
W.Va. will visit Flatwoods
United Methodist Church at 6
p.m. on Sunday, with special
singing, live mustc, youth
choir, short dramas and sign
language to music,
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Sunday, June ·27
HENDERSON, W.Va. _ ., Church of Christ, West Main
Descendants of Sam and Street, Pomeroy, community
Melvina Birchfield will hold potluck dinner. 5:30 to 7 p.m.
a rc;:union with a carry-in din· Everyone invited to attend
ner at noon at the Henderson the free dinner.
Community Building.

Homecomings/
Reunions

Other evenJs

Support groups

Thursday, June 24
POMEROY
- The Caring
Saturday, June 26
MIDDLEPORT - Free . and Sharing Support Group
dinner. Middleport Church of will meet at I p.m. at the Meigs
Christ Family Life Center. Multi-purpose Senior Center.
Alzheimer's Diagnosis will be
4:30 to 6:30p.m.
the topic. For m9re information
Sunday June 27
COOLVILLE - "Country contact Lenora Leifheit, Meigs
Style" open house at Arcadia Cooperative Parish nurse.
Nursing Center. I to 4 p.m.
Food, games, entertainment
by "Delivered." " Local
Girls" and "Double Shot &amp;
Sunday, June 27
Co.'' Free to the public.
POMEROY
- Leona
Machir. formerly of New
Haven, W.Va. ·and Point
Pleasant. W.Va ., will cele·
brate her 87th birthday on
Sunday, June 27
POMEROY - Brian Bear June '2.7. Cards may be sent to
of Evangelical Outreach in her in care of her daugher,
Ironton will be preaohing and with whom she now makes
singing along with Ray and her home. at 3976 I Sumner
Delores Cundiff at 2 p.m. at Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
the Poplar Ridge Free Will
Wednesday, June 30
POMEROY Former
Baptist Church on State
Route 554 on Poplar Ridge Bend area resident. Charles R.
Road. For more information Lyons will observe his 93rd
call 740-593-7390.
birthday on June 30. He now
lives at 142 Fourth Ave .,
CARPENTER
Dayspring of Athens at Mt. Crestview. Fla., 32539. Lyons
Union Baptist Church. 6:30 operated the Lyons Garage in
p.m. Information at 742-2568 . Mason until he retired

Birthdays

Church services

Bethany Amberger from the Kathryn Baum, Helen Wolf,
Ohio Daughters of America JoAnn Ritchie, Esther Smith,
was made at Tuesday night's Gary Holter, Doris Grueser,
lnzy Newell, Ruth Smith.
meeting of Chester Council.
Goldie Frederick conducted the meeting which opened
with pledges to the American
and Christian flags, scripture
CHESTER - Joey and
from Psalms 31, the Lord's Tish Coates of Chester
Prayer, and singing of the announce the birth of a
daughter, Tessa Nicole, born
National Anthem.
Reported ill were Arden on May 13
Depoy in Camden Clark at Holzer
Hospital, Erma Cleland, Medical
Charlotte Grant, scheduled Center in
for knee surgery, and Marcia · Gallipolis.
h e
Keller. Thank you notes were S
weighed 5
read from Chet and Helen pounds, 9·
Taylor, Jo Ann Ritchie, ounces.
Carolyn
Wise,
Doris
Maternal
Williams and Alberta Hilton. grandparPlans were made for a a ents
are L--c""'o'-a-te_s_ _,
·dinner at the M&amp;J Restaurant R i c k
in July followed by the meet- Metheney of
ing at 7 p.m. at the hall . A Salem Center and Vickie
card was read from Leota Metheney of Michigan .
Ferrell's daughter, Anna Maternal great-grandparents
Wolfe. Everett Grant and are Clarence and Je ss ie
Nathan Biggs were presented Might of Middleport and
and
Shirley
gifts in observance of Donald
Metheney
of
Vinton.
Father's Day.
Paternal gra ndparents
Quarterly
birthdays are Jane Baker of Ch'ester
observed included those of and Roger Coates of
. Everett Grant, Frederick, and · Pomeroy and paternal
Janice Zwilling. Others great-grandparents
are
attending were Jean Welsh, Victor Bahr and the late
Opal
Hollon, Charlotte WiJma Bahr and Alva and
Grant , Laura Mae Nice, Julie Mary Coates of Belpre.
Fleming,
Betty
Biggs,

Coates birth

POMEROY - A reunion
of descendants of Sam and
Melvina Birchfield will be
held June 27 at the
Community
Henderson
Building, in Henderson, W.
Va . There will . be a carry-in
dinner at noon.

Gallipolis
Pictures must be in by
Thursday July · 8th, · 2004.
Pictures can be picked up after
July 19th, 2004.

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
r---------- - -- --- ---- - -- ----- -·-- -.- ------- .;. -- - --- ,
I

'Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s): _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ __

I

'-----------------------------------------------------------

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

1
1

Parent's Name:- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - : - - - - - - : City &amp; State: ___________________________
***The above information will be used in the ad. •••

Tire Daily Sentinel
subscribe today. 992·2155
www.mydailysenrineLcom

. , . - - - - - - - - Submitted by: - - - , . - - - - - -

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

HURRYU PICTURE DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY JulY 9, 2004!

DEAR ABBY: I had a
problem similar to, the one
described by "Stre ;sed Out
by Mom." the ·College student whose mother calls to
unload her problems. A
Dear ·
therapist taught me a techAbby
nique that worked wonders.
When Mom called and
complain·ed, in stead of
sympathizing (which is
why she called in the first
place), I'd mirror her com- • er si nce childhood. Plea;e
plaint back to her so she tell "Stressed Out'' that she
didn't receive the positive must take immediate .steps
to set health y bounda rie,.
feedback she was seeking.
She should sc hedule an
When she said. "Your sis- appointment at the st udent
ter doesn 't know how to health center and talk to a
save money~" I' d reply, "So psychologist about her
what you're saying is my '
problem.
sister doesn 't know how to
I am the only family
sa ve money." However.
when she said something member still on speaki'ng
positive. like. "Isn't it a term s with ~1other. Her
lovely day?" I'd be sure to eight si blings. the folks at
give her all kinds of posi- th e ,ento l ce nter and people from her former church
tive feedback. '' It sure is
no
longer talk to her. I' m
I' Jl bet your marigolds arc
the
only one she has left to
really blooming now'"
la sh out at - and if I try to
. It worked like a charm
s~t boundaries now. the
and preserved my relation- breach it will create will
ship with my mother. She leave her with .no support
quickly lost intere st in the system at all. - WISH I'D
topics that didn' t bring pos- DONE IT . IN FREDER iti vc feedback. and we · d
ICKSBURG. VA.
end up talking about all
DEAR WISH : Perhaps
kinds of interesting thing s.
the suggestion offered hy
This method is tried-and - the next writer will be of
true. It 's based on behav- help to you.
ioral psychology , and it
DEAR ABBY: I have a
work s with spouses. kids. relative who is an alcoco- workers - the applicaholic. He calls to ramble.
tions are endless.
complain and generally
TRIED IT IN PORTLAND,
make me mi se rable . I
ORE.
relieve my stre ss by play DEAR TRIED IT: Thank ing computer game s. read you for the suggestion. I ing a magazine or watching
was unprepared for the del - TV while he's talking. The
. uge of mail I received from trick is to otherwise engage
readers who identified with your mind while uttering an
"Stressed's" problem. Read occasional response . It
on:
works. When he hangs up, I
DEAR ABBY: I'm a 57- have no 'idea what he said,
'year-old woman who has but he is happy and I'm not
had the same problems with stressed. He's never really
my now 76-year-bld moth1

This special section will publicize the
'
'
'
3rd Annual Big Bend Blues Bash and
The Rhythm on the River Concert Series
presented by
The Pomeroy Blues and Jazz Society
during the month of July.
•
. #-·-~
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::::,· . ,
• .... 1: ·~ · .,- 0
'
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.
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.
-·--)~·.~
· . ,. ,:. ·-J·
/
•
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.
•

.

~ ~. .....

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and Others ...

wanted at"we" - just
somebody to unload on. COPING II\ BLOOMINGTON. IND .
DEAR COPING : Not
e,·eryone has your level of
tolerance_ Read on :
DEAR ABBY : I made
. simi la r calls to my daughter. They would begin as
friendly· cal ls to chat and
no,edive frcim there _ I hope
that girl\ mother locates a
therapy gro up to allend .
Maybe she can find so me
hel p and comfort there. My
daug hter eventually made it
plain that if I continued to
cry when '" were on the
phone. she would not talk
to me. I know she screens
her ndls and often doesn ' t
pick up.
So now I talk to th e
women in the group about
my problems. Most of ·them
ha' e daughter&gt; they ' re
close to. When I see familie' with mothe rs. daughter;, and grandmothers .all
together I am happy for
them . but 'ome times I'm
jealott&lt;.. - SCREENED
OL'T IN SACRA\1ENTO
DEAR
SCREENED
OCT: I'm pleased you're
getting emotional support
from your therapy group. It
may be healthier for all
concerned. Many people
have confessed that they.
too. screen their calls
becau se they haven't the
courage to set boundaries .
Howe\er. no one ever
solved problems by dodg·
ing them.
Dear Abbr is \\Titren br
Abigail Vt~;t Buren, also
kn01rn as Jeanne Ph(llips,
and wa .\ founded br her
morhe1; Pauline Phillips . ,
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbbv.c01rl
ur
P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles. CA 90069.

lt

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CHESTER
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edition will also be printed and
handed out at all the concerts
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Blues and Jazz Society

DON'T MISS YOUR CHANCE TO
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DEADLINE .IS
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Applied psychology stops ::
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Complete the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture,
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Community briefs

. POMEROY - Bend area
residents interested in performing on the hill stage during the Meigs County Fair
are asked to contact Meigs
County Agricultural Society
members Brenda Johnson,
843-5240 or Janie Fitch, 9853828 this week.

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!

Worthington - 20.25

Thursday, June 24
SYRACUSE
139th
annual meeting of the board
of trustees of Carleton
College. 7 p.m .. Thursday at
the Syracu se Village council
chambers. All members are
urged to attend.
Fridav, June 25
POMEROY
State
Representative
Jimmy
Stewart (R- Athens) invites
the people of Meigs County
to attend free open door sessions to discuss state-related
matters and issue ' on the
minds of the cotNituents of
the 92nd Ohio House
· District. The meeting will be
conducted between 9 a.m. to
10 a.m . at the Meigs County
Courthou,e.
Monday, June 28
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commisson. 9 a.m.
at the office. I I7 Memorial
Drive , Pomeroy.

Performers
invited

1,785.276 ,957

AP

meetings

Thursday,June

•

Community Calendar
~ublic

PageA3

' BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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eatt ...

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�I'

Thursday, June

PageA4

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 respectin$ 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 of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Moderately Confused
BY THE

WAY,
I'M TAKING
OFF TH£

FIRST
TWO WEEKS

OF

AU0UST.

Morton
Kondracke

about Iraq:
There's little question that
tlle media systematically even gleefully - exaggerated
the Sept. II , 200 I, commission's report that there was no
'collabor4tive relationship'
between Saddrun Hussein and
AI Qaeda.
The New York Times ran the
story with a four-column frontpage headline, 'Panel Finds No
Qaeda-lraq Tie,' with the article below saying that the report
'sharply contradicted one of
President Bush's central justifications for the Iraq war.'
USA Today . went further,
headlining 'No AI-Qaeda 9/11
Link Found' and 'Commission
Disputes One Rationale for
War· - even though the
administration has never
claimed a role by Sadtlam
Hussein in the 9/11 attacks.
Sen. John Kerry, D-Ma'iS.,
seized on the report to declare '
that 'the adminisu-ation misled
America' and that 'they did not
tell the truth· - and his campaign sent out an e-mail that
cited CBS. NBC and ABC
accounts of the report under
the headline, ' Network News
Hammers Bush on Iraq
Assenions.'
The
next
day.
the
. Democmtic co-chairman of the
9/11 commission, former Rep.
Lee Hamilton of Indiana, told
reporters that 'there were con-

nections between AI Qaeda
and Saddam Hussein's government. So it seems to me the
sharp difference that the press
has drawn ... (is) not apparent
to me.' .
Hamilton's statement was
carried, to my knowledge, only
on Fox News (where I'm a
commentator). Bush and
Cheney vigorously reasserted
a long history of 'ties.' but
they've got to go further.
Cheney has repeatedly cited
The
Weekly
Standard's
Stephen Hayes as the best
source of data on 'the connection,' the title of Hayes' book
on the subject But the admin,
istration has let Hayes be practically the only source. and it
has refused to back up his
reporting in detail.
One compelling example
Haves cites is evidence - it
wa; even reported on CBS
News ;md in Newsweek that Abd ul Rahman Yasin, who
admitted mixing chemicals for
the 1993 World Trade Center
attack, went immediately to
Baghdad and was given sanctuary.
Still. instead of issuing blanket reassertions that there were
ties, and then having the
Pentagon and other agencies
dismiss them as 'raw intelligence,' the administration
should declassify what it can
&lt;md prove its case.
Similarly. the notion is
beginning to harden in the
press ihat mistreatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison
was the direct outgrowth of
policies ordered by Bush,
Attorney
General
John
Ashcroft
and
Defense
Secretary Donald Runisfeld.
The Washington Post, whose
editorials on lraq have been

consistently moderate and fair,
wrote about the Bush administration's 'Torture Policy.'
The media is treating the
prisoner-mistreatment story
as though it were Watergate
- as if violations of the
Geneva Convention in dealing with.terrorists in wartime
were a highest-order scandal
- so the administration had
best not 'stonewall.· to use a
Watergate term. if it has
nothing to hide.
Rumsfeld did acknowledge
keeping one high-ranking terrorist as a 'ghost prisoner,' but
the Pentag"n should issue a
full accou111 of that practice.
And Ashcroft should cooperate ·
with Congress in justifying a
Justice Department llnding
that prisoners could be treated
'harshly.'
It's also commonly believed
in the media and among
Democrats that Cheney, a former CEO of Halliburton,
directed lucr.ltive. no-bid cm\tracts in lrJq to the fmn and
that Halliburton has been systematically - if not criminally
- profiteering there . ln st~ad
of just denying the story, the .
administration should answer
every question posed.
On the economy. Bush is
making speeches and his campaign is taking out ads to tout
improvements. Eventually, if
trends continue. the word
should get out. On one other
topic, though- Medicare discount cards for seniors - the
talking-back strategy probably
won't work. 1l1e administration f~rst has to fix the prograni .
for real, and then get the word
out to seniors.
(Morton Kondracke is e.xecrttive editor of Roll Call, tire
newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

.

SALT LAKE CITY (APJ - A Utah
man is the new Jeopardy 1 king, having
pocketed more than a half-million dollars during a dominating 16-show run on
the quiz show.
Ken Jennings was seen on his 16th
straight ~copardy! episode Wednesday,
winning once again to bring his total
winnings to $512,959.
The 30-year-old software engineer
broke the Jeopardy' record early in his
run. Tom Walsh, of Washington, D.C.,
held the previous mark , earning
$184.900 in seven days on the show in
January.

'I

HOW WAS
YOUR DAY, RUMMY

DEAR?

GfAH(fR. 1110

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be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
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addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. :1·
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

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the $250.000 mark last week, Jennings
told The Salt Lake Tribune. "It's a little
bit like shock. like you can't believe
how fast it goes by. Thinking back, it's
all just a blur."
Two Jeopardy' rule changes over the
years have helped Jennings set the.
record.
Jeopardy ! recently dropped a restriction that limits champions to only five
days on the show. The value of the questions are also worth double . what they
used .to be.

rigged suits. But last year's
. Columbia disaster changed
everything.
The Russians have been
bailing out NASA with crew
and supply drop-offs ever
since the shuttle accident,
and are demanding compensation for Thursday's sixhour spacewa lk since it
.involves repairs to th'e U.S.
section . They threatened to
postpone the outing, but
ag.reed Tuesday to worry
about payment later.
·
The trouble in orbit began
in April. just hours after
Fincke and Padalka arrived
at the space station for a sixmonth stay.
A critica l circuit board
failed , cutting power to a
gyroscope, or spmnmg
wheel. The breakdown left
the . station with just ' two
functioning gyroscopes, the
bare minimum needed to
keep the complex stable and
pointed in ·the right direction.
Then last month, ·Padalka
could not get the water-cooling system of his U.S. spacesuit to work. The only option
was to send Padalka ·and
Fincke out in Russian spacesuits from the Russian side
. of the station, more than
doubling their travel distance over a landscape of
protruding metal parts. ·
The spacemen added
American helmet lights and
handcuff checklists to the
brand new Russian suits, for
extra safety.
Station operations manager Mike Suffredini said safe-

ty officials were in on the
debate and stressed that this
spacewalk "is one that we
can go do and should go do."
To put it off could jeopardize
two spacewalks planned by
the Russians later this summer for assembly chores. he
said.
But a retired agent in
NASA's inspector general
office, Jose ph Gutheinz,
wonders whether NASA and
the Russian Space Agency
are "sweeping any known
risks under the table in an
effort to keep the space sta·
tion program alive." He said
the agencies downplayed
risks at Russia's Mir station
during visits by U.S. astronauts in the 1990s.
Gutheinz also questions
whether it's safe to send an
entire crew out , with no one
to monitor systems inside.
The station has been empty
during a spaccwalk only
once before, in February.
Although the station ' s
U.S. pressure chamber was
dt;signed to accommodate
Russian spacesuils, the parts
needed for that arc on the
ground . So Fincke and
Padalka will have to leave
from the Russian hatch and
travel between 80 feet and
I 00 feet to · the repair site,
using a 50-foot crane to
swing themselves partway.
Exiting from the U.S.
hatch would have put them
30 feet from the fried circuit
breaker.
Because
Fincke
and
Padal ka will venture so far
from the Russian antenna.

GOP operatives up to their old dirty tricks
Everybody says American
politics were dramatically
changed by the 9/1 I attacks,
bringing an em of accountability and moral seriousness .
Sometimes I wonder · what
everybody's been smoking.
In my travels .to promote
'The Hunting of the President.'
the documentary film based
upon Joe Conason's and my
book of the srune nrune, people
ask the srune two 4uestions:
Did failing to remove
President Bill Clinton from
oftlce teach Republicans anything about the 'politics of personal destruction.' and how
should Democrats respond?
The short answer is that the
operatives who put together
the · most
successful
Republican dirty-tricks campaign ever don't think they
failed. Who ended up running
the country? If Clinton's
acquittal on impeachment
charges denied his antagonists
the joy of taking him down, it
spared the GOP nominee's
having to mn in 2000 against
an aroused electorate and an
incumbent President AI Gore.
Then there's the press.
Seemingly frustrated by their
inability to topple Clinton, the
same organizations that promoted Kenneth Starr's sham
Whitewater investigation spent
2000 publicizing nonsensical
tales about Gore, like the
ridiculous ·claim that he
bragged about 'inventing the
Internet' Candidate George W
Bush, meanwhile, received a
virtual free pim. His preposterous budget numbers, to cite
only one example, went largely unexamined.
Wh~t the GOP learned from

a 'windfall profits' tax on oil.

money to Bush and had been a
No increase. Seventy-one top aide to (House majority
times, Kerry voted for the leader) Tom DeLay.·
smaller of two tax cuts.
Then there's tlu~ lowest blow
'Thus,' notes Jackson, 'the of all: an outtlt called Swift
Bush
campaign counts some Boat Veterans for Truth.
Gene
votes for tax cuL5 as votes for Backed by Merrie Spaeth. a
Lyons
'higher taxes."
Texa5 political operative who,
The real question, of course, among other duties, helped
is how the government pays rehearse Starr for his Clinton
for its obligations- not some- impeachment testimony, its job · ·
the anti-Clinton crusade is that thing Bush wants voters think- is to discredit Kerry's Vietnam
given a compliant news media ing about.
War record. Private eyes have
and an easily distraCted public,
Then there's Kerry's suppos- · been trolling among his fonner
lowdown personal attacks· edly 'troubling' record on shipmates looking for dirt.
work. So far, Bush's campaign national defense, dramatized
Yesterday, 1 talked to Fred
against Democratic Sen. John by another bogus ad about Short of Little Rock, Ark., who
Kerry has consisted of little votes to limit weapons fund- served under Kerry in
else.
ing. So guess who sponsored Vietnant Short doesn't recogBush has already spent $85 the cuts Kerry backed'' nize the individuals now quesmillion on a series of TV ads· President George H.W. Bush, tioning his commander's valor.
attacking Kerry's character. An after the Soviet threat van- But he was there when Kerry
incumbent president going ished. Poppy's secretary of plunged their boat into a hail of
negative so early hints at des- defense was Dick Cheney. enemy fire and took shrapnel,
peration. But what's really According to The New York using his uninjured arm to haul
noteworthy about the GOP ads Times, in 1990, 'Cheney's first a wounded soldier aboard. 111e
is their contempt for the truth, budget canceled, among other action eruned Kerty one of his
not to mention for the gullible things, production of the M-1 three Purple Hearts and the
ma~ses in TV-land to whom
tank and the Bradley lighting Bronze Star for valor. (He also .
they're addressed .
vehicle, and made big cuts in earned the Silver Star.)
Bush approved the message the F-18 tighter' - the very
ShOrt recalls the boat deck
that Kerry voted for higher weapons Georg~ W Bush's ads slick with Kerry's blood, and
taxes more than 350 times. chide Kerry about.
resents bitterly those who
Bush's spokesmen repeat the
But just because the question his honor - less on
daim incessantly. It's pure Republicans are dealing off the Kerry's behalf than for 'some
hokum. OK, maybe Kerry bottom of the deck in broad very good tricnds of ours
takes exaggerated credit for his daylight doesn't mean they're whose names are on the
vote approving Clinton's bud- neglecting secretive smears. (Vtetnam Memorial) wall who
get-balancing 1993 tax bill. Remember Alexandra Polier, can't speak for themselves.·
(All 51 Senate votes were the Associate Press 'intern'
Short shows Democrats how
equally critical.) But for sheer falsely labeled Kerry's mistress it's done: Speak the .truth disingenuousness, the Bush ad in the 'Drudge Report'? hard.
takes the prize.
Writing in New York maga(Arknnsa.&lt;
Democrat·
to
Brooks zine, ·Polier said .the · rumor Gazette columnist Gene Lyons
According
Jackson of FactCheck.org, originated with 'a woman is a national magazine afmrd
among the 350 votes cited whom Drudge had called my winner and co·nuthor of 'The
were many in which Kerry 'clo~ friend' (who) worked for Huming of the Presidenr' (St.
merely voted against repealing a Republican lobbyist - Bill Martin's Press, 2000). Ymt can
existing taxes. In 1987, for Jarrell, who runs a fmn called e-mail Lyons at ge~~elyons2
example, he opposed dropping Washington Strategies, gives @cs.com.)
'
·......

for the first three place winners in two weight groups.
Libby Fisher is the sponsor.
The moon bounce will
open at 3 p.m. and during the
evening there will be games
for the kids.
Crafts,
~ miscellaneous
items, and food wi II be for
sale. Residents interested in
reserving a craft space are to
contact Maxine Rose at
Home National Bank, 9492210. The cost is $10 for a
I0-foot booth space and $15
for a 20-foot space from 3
p.m. to 10 p.m. The fee can
be paid at the bank.
A fireworks display at 10
p.m. by the Rac ine Fire
Department will conclude the
celebration. It is suggested
that those attending the July 3
activities take a lawn chair/

and community leaders have
begun LeadershipPienty, a 21 ·
hour
training
program
designed to strengthen local
leadership. promote cooperation in the community, and
teach conflict management.
strategic planning and media
relations. Once the program
has been completed ihe community will be entitled to a
$10,000 planning grant
through the Appalachian
Regional Commission. which
the village hopes to use to turn

attention to re-development of
the. downtown shopping district and development of the
river front and levee area.
The
Middleport
Community Association. a
civic organization made up of
both private residents and
business owners, dedicates
much of its energy to promoting Middleport as a shopping
destination, holding several
promotional event s each
year. The association also
recently spearheaded a tree-

'~

Merchants
from Page A1

'
'

they expect communication
blackouts , not only with
flight controllers but with
each other. To get messages
across, they've come up with
hand signals: crossing their
arms in front of their chests
indicates an emergency. jutting a fist up means. 'hey.
pay attention,' and a thumbup means everything is OK.
If all else fails , they will
hustle to a designated spot
with a clear line of sight to
the Russian antenna .
There 's also the fatigue ·
factor, and not just from all
the extra scampering around.
Ru ssian spacesuits are
more pressurized than U.S.
suits, and so it wiN be harder
and take longer for Fincke
and Padalka to undo
American
bolts,
using
American tools designed for
American gloves.
Over the past few weeks,
as the spacewalk has been
bumped and repeatedly
rescheduled, Fincke has kept
a sense of humor and emphasized the need for flexibility.
At least the repair itself
should be easy, says Fincke,
a newcomer to space.walk·
ing. He figures the tricky
part will be the long trip over
- 45 minutes , at least and the long trip back. But.
oh, the rewards.
Riding on the end of the
extendible boom will be
"something to write home
about.''
"And boy, I can't wait to
take a look at that view."

frog. Frogs will be returned
Elementary Star Search.
The Big Bend Cloggers to their natural habitat after
will perform at 4 o'clock, the the jump is over.
The rules state that participarade winners will be
from Page A1
are given three jumps
pants
announced at 4:45 p.m .. and
the II th annual frog jump . off the pad. There is no limit
bv Racine Area Community
CO ·11
Organization (RACO) with sponsored by RA
wt get to the number of frogs that
one can enter. Dale Bart at
underway at 5 p.m.
.
$50, $30, and $2 0 pnze
Dan Smith will be emcee 949-2656 can be contacted
awarus tor the three best for the frog jump where for more information on the
. . awards wi II be presented in jump.
enTtrhies. td
e 1re epar1men 1 WI 11
d. . .
· · (
Last Chanz Band will perhav e 't chicken barbecue two IVISIOns - JUillor ages
· '
·
h ..
1-15 years) and sentor (16 form on the stage st·arting at 5
startrng at II a.m. at t e 1tre- years and up). First place in p.m. and will play throu ghout
house.
h
· ·
d' · ·
'II the evening. Between the
At 3 p:m. activities will t e . JUntor
tvtston "t
· · th
k 'th a tu g rece1ve $40, second place, Band's shows. the Southern
beg111
1n e par w1 1
$25 . d h.11·d $IO
Elementary Star Search winpull by. the Big Bend Farm
· an t
' .
· ....
Antique Club, and a patnot 1c
In the . senror d1V1s10n , ners will perform. Singing at
program on stage. There will awards wtll be $100 tor ftrst. 8 p.m. will be Craig
:be guest speakers. Southern $75 for second . an~ $50 !or Harrison .
Brent Rose will have the
High School Band perfor- th1rtL Ent1y . tee for JUntor
kiddie
tractor pull at 6 p.m . or
mance. and presentations of dt ~· 1s1on 1s... $3 and $.5 for
the winners in the Southern semor dtvtston._ Rent-a-frog as soon as the frog jump is
w1ll al so be avatlablc lor $3 a over. There will be awards

July 3

© 2004 by NEA. Inc.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Then along came Jennings, who is no
stranger to the world of quick quiz. He
was a member of Brigham Young
University's successful College Bowl
team in the 1990s. Jennings also edits
literature and mythology questions for
the
National
Academic
Quiz
Tournament.
Jennings' Jeopardy! streak is over,
thoueh viewers may not realize it. The
Jeopardy! episodes featuring him were
taped in February, and Jennings is back
home in Utah , .though . he is refusing
·
comment for now.
After the show featured him passing

I

NASA taking more chances like Thursday's
spacewalk to keep station running
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP) - NASA is taking bigger chances and more of
th,em - even bending its
own safety rules - to keep
the international space station running with a two-man
crew and no shuttle visits.
On Thursday night, both
astronauts will take a· riskier
than usual spacewalk . wearing an odd mishmash of
.Russ ian and U.S. gear. cut
off at times from communications. and struggling with
tools in extra-stiff gloves
never intended for the
repairs they will make.
They'll be forced to alteriJately speak Russian and
English and communicate
with lwo different control
centers. They'll travel an
unprecedented distance over
dangerous terrain. about 45
minutes each way.
; Why? Because there's
been no space shuttle to
bring them the equi·pmcnt
they need. Russian space ~
craft are too small to carry
large replacement parts.
Despite the added risks,
astronaut Mike Fincke and
wsmonaut Gennady Padalka
,aid Wednesday they're
excited and ready.
"We ' re all in this together.'' Fincke told Mission
Contro L "This is going to be
fun.' '
Their task will be replacing a fizzled circuit breaker.
When . the space shuttles
were !lying ; managers never
would have considered a
spacewalk requiring occasional hand signals and jury,

Gerl ach said the store lost
80 percent of its business two
years ago, when the vtllage
closed the portion of Mtll
Street where Gerlach's and
·sevenil other "T" retai lers are
located in order to demolish
the old Mark V building. The
prime lot remains vacant in
the heart of downtown. but
busineS&gt; lost as a result of a
month 's worth of demolition
work was ne ver recovered .
· " It killed us," Gerlach said.
The Gerlachs' spacious
storefront on the "T" is now
for sale or lease.
Although there are encour·aging signs in Middleport.
·such as the expansion of the
Family Dollar discount sto~
and the opening of a new dehcatessen on the "T," some surviving merchants have reduced
their hours of operauon m an
.attempt to reduce overhead.
, Two merchanL~. Middleport
Department Store owner ·Tom
Dooley and Sue's Selectables
owner Sue Stone, have combined
··their businesses under one roof in

hopes they C"d11 both survive.
Pomeroy completed a
downtown revitalization program some I0 years ago, and
renovated building facades,
installed period lighting and
constructed a downtown river
front amphitheater stage in the
center ot the shopping district.
That music venue, combined
with a Victorian-style theme.
appears to have chan9ed the
face of the commumty s retail
community for the better.
While retailing in downtown Pomeroy may not be
easy, it has recently appeared
more promising to new business starts than its neighbor
next door. Specialty shops
have proven popular with
both local shoppers and
tourists. One such shop,
'Eloise Drenner's "Weaving
Stitches," relocated to a larger storefront earlier this year,
a
sign.
Economic
Development Director Perry
Varnadoe said. that specialty
stores can thrive here:
Meanwhile, surveys of
Middleport residents completed
for various grd11t programs show
downtown revitalization to be a
priority for resident~ there.
Elected
oftlcials,
Middleport business owners,
.

•

. -·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .myrlailysentinel.com

What is·a·record jackpot, Alex?- Utah
engineer wins more than $500,000 on Jeopardy!

Thursday,' June 24, 2004

Facts to fight -back ·on Iraq-Al Qaeda tie
The Bush administration is
geuing
clobbered
by
Democrats and the media
across a broad front. It has
begun fighting back on some
issues - but if the truth is on
Presidem Bush's side. he's got
to do a lot more to prove it.
Specitlcally. the administration should declassify all the
intelligence it can about ('ontacts between AI Qaeda and
Saddam Hussein, and it must
cooperate with Congressional
investigations on pri'SOn abuse
in Iraq.
It should disclose all contacts between Vice President
Cheney's office and the
Pentagon on Iraqi reconsuuction contracts granted to
Cheney's old tlrm.i-talliburton.
And Bush has to figure out
how to get word to the pub! ic
about one matter on which the
h1cts &lt;rre clearly on his side an improving economy.
. Is the media biased against
Bush' TI1e Pew Research
Center's poll earlier this month
certainly showed that 55 percent of national reporters and
editors think they are ' not critical enough· of BLish. Another
recent survey. by Media Tenor.
showed that the major TV networks have stopped covering
the economy as a news story
now that the news is good. And
polls show the public isn't buying the idea of a recovery yet,
despite robust job growth and
continued low intlation.
My hunch is that ed.itors &lt;md
TV news directors believe they
too-uncritically
accepted
administration claims about
the existence of weapons of
mass destruction in Iraq before
the 2003 war and are belatedly
trying to. make up for it by
pounding on the negative

24, 2004

........ .. ...... ··--..

-~

. ·-

... -

New Haven pool out
for this summer
BY STEPHANIE JENKINS
NEWS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

NEW HAVEN . W.Va. New Haven 's public ;wim·
ming pool will sit empty for
another year.
·
There are two public pools
in Mason County, and Wtt· h
New Haven's closed and
Middleport 's facility at
General Hartinger Park shut
down for the season. Bend
Area residents have the publie pool at Harmon Park in
Point Pleasant, W.Va. and
London Pool in Syracuse as
their only alternatives.
New Haven 's budget currently cannot afford to
replace the pool' s liner.
which has become separated
frum the concrete base. It
has been 25 years since the
liner was replaced.
Town Recorder Shirley
Hesson said the town plans
applying for a $50.000 grant

For the record
Marriage license
POMEROY - A marriage license has been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court io Keith Allen Barnhart, 27 .
and Virginia Ann Bottitta, 31. Albany.
· County as selling the cheapest gas. the price is $1.89
per gallon. In Middleport.
the price for a gallon of gas
from Page A1
is $1.97 at most service stations.
the trip.
Bev Collins buy s her gas
"I guess I just deal with it in Syracuse on her daily
like everyone else." she commute to and from
said.
Racine to the Meigs County
Linda Eastman commuies Courthnli.~e. The price for a
at least 25 miles a day from gallon of gas at TNT Pit
her home in Hemlock Gro~e Stop in Syracuse is a $1.97
near Darwin to her job at the per gallon, but hit the station
Meigs County Courthouse.' right on bargain' Tue sdays
She drives a 1986 Fifth and the price is better.
Avenue which she said gets
"I think Syracuse is
pretty good gas mileage at cheaper than most of the
about 26 miles to the gallon. other places. but onlv by a
"I use my salary to pay for couple of pennies,'' 'stie said.
the gas to get to work and 10 "But I was in Ravenswood
pay
insurance,"
said last weekend and gas was at
Eastman.
$1.87 a gallon."
On
the
weekends ,
The reasons for the
Eastman makes the trek to declining gasoline prices
her second job in Columbus include improving gasoline
as a proctor for standardized and crude oil inventories in
tests. She said gas prices the United States and a drop
shrink by more than 20 in the cost of crude oi l
cents between here and below $40 per barrel.
Columbus.
According to the AAA, the
"I wish I could find a way outlook for further price
to haul extra gas back," reductions is difficult to
Eastman said.
know, however, since the
Throughout ·
Meigs · start of the Fourth of Juiy
County, prices vary wildly. holiday weekend is drawing
The price of a gallon of near. Auto vacation travel
unleaded gas is $1.99 at the often
peaks
during
Sun Fun station in Racine. Independence Day and this
At Reed's Country Store in can put upward pressure on
Reedsville, the price of a gasoline prices.
·
gallon of gas is $1.89 per
The other event that may
gallon.
·
influence prices at the pump
" I wish gas prices would is the June 30 u . ~ . handgo down as fast as they go over of sovereignty to the
up," said Rita Walter. owner new ·. government in Iraq . .
of Reed's Country Store.
Terrorist incidents are
The price of gas at Clarks expected to remain frequent
Pump N Shop in Tuppers or intensify as the date
Plains is $1.88 per gallon approaches. and Iraqi and
making it the cheapest gas Saudi Arabian oil interests
in the county if only by a appear to be high-priority
few tenths of a cent. At the targets of those wanting to
Cool Spot in Coolville near disrupt [he American econothe Athens/Meigs county mv and the transfer of
Iine, which is long regarded power in Iraq. according to
by many peopl e in Meigs the AAA.

Gas

planting project in the shopping district, which made a

~·~;;;~~~ PAIR AND
~

-

i"::

SAVE
ANOTHER _

:;- sso.oo!!,s
i

.

1/ ' ''" ~~, . . ,

~ BOTH

~ FOR ONlY

~'578 _ t~. ·::..~
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SHIVER REPAIR

I

'"

706 West Main St. • Pomeroy
'

dramatic improvement in the
area\ appearance.

~ auvTHE

fc=~~~~~. /.

CLINIC

through the Governors
Community
Partnership
Grant program. Town workers were told the total cost of
repairing the pool would be
around $60.000.
"The pool has never been
a · money-maker,"
said
Hesson. "It's always operated at a deficit. But it has
always been there and so
people ·have just expected it
to be there. It's just to benefit the children and the surrounding area."
It is not likely the pool will
be opened this summer. but
town officials hope 10 open
it for the 2005 season . Once
reopened. there will be free
swimming for se nior citizen;. red uced rates for
under-privileged children. as
well as" a program for phy sically disabled children. official&gt; said .

= = ·

· El&lt;tralargecapac•ty ' ' ''"''""''"''
- 7 Cycles
- 4 Temperatures
· 2 Speeds

c

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•

�PageA6 •

Thursday, June 24, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Broussard, Indians slam ChiSox, Page B6
Mavs sending Jamison to Wizards, Page B6

Thursday, June 24, 2004

College Basketball

Still lots of interest in OSU vacancy

URG to host Cultura Pacis 2004
Outdoor dra111a
in 32nd scaso11,
still goin(~ srrong

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pr~..·-·d1ow butf~·t
"t.tg~..·

J

,nlll b.Jck -

tour.

Rll) CRANDE - The
Un11·ef'ity of Rio Gra nde·
will host Cultura l'acis.
Mond.JY. J une
:!H.
Wc·dnc&gt;dav. Jun e ·'11.
Htnllhng ·upon the toundation ,.,t.Jbli,hnl Juring
'lin· firsr Cultu r.l l'aci s

museum&gt; and galleries in
Norw.1y. DenmJrk .md New
York City.
Tom Hoerr
Tom Hoerr head of Ne&gt;~
City Sd10ol. St. Louis. Mi".
will speak at 1:.lll p.m.
Mondav. June 2'1. ·in 13ob

month o;;

I.H~..·r

under hi'

D\\

Gretchen Cryer
Gn:-t chcn
Cryer.
of
Amenc.m Gi rl. LLC, Ne\\·
York.
will
pn''&lt;'nt

.

He is the facilitJtor of th e
She holds .1 MAT def!ree
AS C D
" Multipl e trom harv.!l'll a1\d .Ill honInt elli ge nces"
N,·twork.
ora ry Joctlir of arts tfom
199~ present .llld has
Mich1~.ln
se rved as member / clu ir on E as r ~..·rn
numerous ISAC S sc hool U niversity. Prior to ~oing

shap e.· those practices and a·ccreditarion reri ms. o;; mce mto the tht"ater. Gretchl'll
t.lll g ht litL·rat urt· and dr~1m:1
exc hanges as t e:~c hers and 1986.

educato rs fo cus on reac..:hing

their studen ts' individual stren gths and needs.
Prcscn ter.o;; will include :
Maria
del
Carmen
Gonzalez
Maria
del
Carmen
Gonzalez will present a
workshop from 9 - 10:20
a.m. at Bob Evans F:~rm s
Hall room 118.
She is the coordinator of
international school programs, higher education and
special US projects at the
Mu se um of Modern Art.
Gonzalez is an adjunct
professor at the University
of Ri o Grande and has been
a fac ulty member of The
School of Vis ual Arts in
New York Ci ty. Sh e has
exhibited her artworks in

to

ro hi~h

Bruce Boguski

o;;dwol

studt" llt'i

.1nd

lloguski will ptt·se nt .1 li h L· curr~;.·n tl\' tt.' a(hl's lioln
.on Learm·d helpkss- pl'rforlllclllC(' in New York
ne ss o n at 12:.10 p.m . Ci ty. She: i' aho .1 gut'Sl
Wedn,·sday. June .'lith m pro li:so;or
,lt
Co lor.1do
Bob Evans Farms H.J II. room
Culkgc 111 rh t• I)ramd
11 ~.
Bruce llo guski, author. Dep.lftment.
Workshop
Graduate
motivationa l
s'peaker,
University
th
e
Credit
trom
columnist, and media personality, is well known· to r of l'llo Gr.mdr is available
his ability to inspire others for confer,· nce attendees .
There a·re two credit options
to "do the impossible" .
Bruce knows first hand :wailable.You can regi ster for
the attitude and ski lls your preferred option when
required to overcome physi- you register for th e confercal and mental challenges.
ence.
At age 18, Bru ce was parFor mo re in fo rmation on
tially paralyzed in an automobi le acci dent . Although the co_nference. prest.•n tt"rs
re~istratton.
vJr;;Jt
docto rs warned that he and
might never walk again, he http : // mi. rio. edu / cuI turaleft th e hospi tal' a lew paclS.

~e ech

L~cal happenings in brief
Fun in the
Park
POINT PLEASANT
· - Th e c hildren\ "Fun in
t he Park" .se ri es contin-

ue s
at
II
a.m.,
Wed ne sd ay, June 30 at
Tu -En di e- We i
State
Park . Storyteller Donna
Wil so n will ent ert ain the
kid s with her tall ta les.
Fun in the Pa rk 1s
sponsored by the Point
Plc .Jsant Arti st Se rie s.
If it rains, th e even t
will take place at the
library.

Performances unri!s'ept. 4, nighdy except Sunday.
,_',Overture begins at 7:25 p.m.
.:
.
,
.
· ·
'j# Cltrtain,is s·p; tn.. .
' Performance ends at approx imately 10:45 p.m.
· TICKET PRICES:

'· . Monday -Thursday;
/ 1\dlllr $16

;&gt;,

*Child ~g (10 &amp;. younger)

Friday &amp; Saturday:
Adult $18

'*'Cqlld .$9 (JO &amp; younger)

. ,1. Not recQmmeoded for children under age 6.

.

.. · Discounts for seniors every night. and groups Monday -Thursday.
Advance payment required for ALL performances. Refunds or exchanges must be
,made l;&gt;y 6 p.m. on ·the d;ty before your scheduled performance datt".
·
Fm reservatiom wtite co: P.O. Box 73. Chillicothe; Ohio, 45601, call toll free (866)
775-0700 or local (740) 775-0700.
·M.astefeard.Visa. Discover, a11d American Express accepted. Reserve tkkets online at
www.tecumsehdratna.com.

Elvis and
more at
community
center

food an d fellowship from
(,-&lt;) p.m ., Ill t h e F~r st
C hurch of the Nazarene ,
Family Li fe Center, ). ))II
First Ave., Gallipolis.
Sponsored by the True
Life Student Min ist·r ie&lt;
Youth Gro up, proceeds
SOUTHS ID E from this event wi ll benefit thl' g ro up \

mi ss1o n w i l l bt' seve ral ;l ctivH ie s

trip to Uu ffalo, New
Yor k thi s summer.
The cos ts
for t he
evening. which include
dinner, are as follows:
Adults - $n
C hildr en 1::?. years and
under - $3.
Groups sc h edu led to
perform
are:
Th e
Glorybound
Quartet;
Eart hen Vessels; Sisso n
fa1;1il y; Etern it y, The
C h erry Ridge Ban d;
Nazarenf Ch ur c h Ladi es'
Trio and th e Nazarene
C hurch Men's Trio.
A Gait her fanuly · sty le
GALLIPO LI S - Come finale is pl anned with all
enjoy a ni_ght of sin g in g, the above groups.

Singing,
food and
fellowship

There

at

the•

So uth side
Ct.· n ter

Co nlntllll ity

Satu rd ay. Jun e 26.
Ut:ginnin~ ;~t

1 p.m. i s

the Fourth of Jul y cclebrJtion in cluding games,
~•n

auction, horseshoe
p itc h in g. an d a yard sa lc·.
C rafts an d baked goods
w il l be for sale.
Dan ce t o mus1c by
Cou nt ry
bcg i nnin~

(;nod Ti m es
at 7 p.m., t'o l-

lowed by Elvis pnformed
by
R obert
Tri[1plett at
9
p.m.
Admission is $3 per person.

Two Convenient Locations:
1/4 Mile North
Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone (304) 773-5323

Fresh Summer
Fruits and Bright
Summer Flowers

AVAILABLE

NOW!

2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446-1711

Crow's Family Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken
228 Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

Days Until

High School
Football
Season!!!

COLUMBUS - NCAA imestigator~ are sntM:lping aroum.l campus. the
Buckcve' arc com in~ otT 'I dreadful &gt;ea- ·
'on and attendance ;;t Value Cit) Arena
is on a downward spiral.
·
Despite the potential for sanctions.
the losse&gt; and a 2eneral lack of intere&gt;l.
Ohio State's 1acam men's basketball
coaching po'ition is qill cnn,idered a
pn~e .

"It's a job you can get back

Rio Grande to
hold little league
tournament
RIO GRANDE - The third
annual lilt le league baseball
toumament sponsored by the
Universitv of Ri o Grande
women\ 'softball team will be
held Jul v 2~-A u ~. I at Stanley
E\ans Field.
'
·
The toumament i&gt; open 10
the fiN I0 tcanb that em cr.
For more infonnation. or 10
register. caonta\:t Da\'iJ Pyles
at 245-7490 or (~0-1)67 5 -7942 .

Texas advances
to CWS finals
OMAHA. Ncb. tAPJ Carson Kainer. the last re~ui&lt;u·
player in Tcx:~s· lineup without
a hit at the Co ll e~e World
Series. doubled in the go-ahead
run in the seventh innin~ and
Huston Street pi tched ~three
innings of one-run relief to help
Texas to a 7-(&gt; comeback victory over Georgia on Wednesday.
The Longhorns (58-I 3)
ad va nced to the best-nt~three
finals. Texas will be playi ng for
its sixth nati onal title and second in three years.
· Georgia (45-2.1) was eliminated. losing twice to top-seeded Texas.
The Longhoms' rally marked
the first time in I he CWS that a
team had come back from li ve
runs down to win since
Stanti1rd erased an eight-run
de licit to bear Tulane in 200 I.
Street t6-l) prevailed in a
matchup against another top
relie ver. Wi II Stmtup. Street
allowed four hits in . three
mn1ngs.
• South Carolina 5, Cal
State Fullerton 3 - Jason
Fletcher and Chad Blackwell
combined to hnld Fulletton hitless over the la&gt;t live innings.
Bryan T1iplett homered and
drove in the ~o-ah ead 1un for
South Carolin:1 (53-16). which
forc ed a rematch with the
Titans (44-22) on Thursday.
with the winner advancing lo
play Texas.
Fletcher (6- 1) went six
innings and allowed all ' ti ve
Fullerto n hits. Fletcher and
Blackwell combined to retire
16 or the last 17 batters after
Ronnie Prettyman\ bum single
in the ti)urth inning.
Blackwell earned hi' nationleading 20th save.
Mike Man inez (8-3) took the
loss aller allowing five runs
and I I llits in 6' • innings.

Menard gets
ride from DEl
MOORESVILLE.
N.C.
(AP) - Dale Earnhardt Inc.
will tield a second Bu sch series
car for Paul Menard beginning
Jul y 24 in Loudon. N.H.
Menard will drive a DEl
Chevrolet for the last 15 races
of the Busch season and will
run the full schedule in 2005,
DEl said Wednesday.
The new tean1 will be sponsored by Menards Super Home
Centers, the company owned
by John Menard, Paul's father
and a longtime team owner in
the Ind y Racing League.
DEl discontinued its Busch
operation to concentrate on
NASCAR's top series after
Dale Eamhardt Jr. won Busch
titles in 1998 and 1999.
Earnhardt, wh·o drives in
Nextel Cup for DEI , al'o coowns a Busch tc&lt;un. Chance 2
Motorsports, with stepmoth~r
Teresa Eamhw·dt. president and
CEO of DEl.

•

tali-in~ hask~thall in the sum- 1&lt;"1 h1 ~lctllual nati&lt;&gt;n.tl d1ampion
m.:r in~t.:aJ ofihl:' UJX"omin~ Ohio :'\tate ( ~t mnet:tll'llt
fmihali IC,hOn.
,
,. \,kd if Olnc• State ofllc tul' h.1J 'flO·
l 'ni' t:r~it~ ~•llil·ial~ are mun~ . Gcigr.:r J..en lll Gonfri~d . Gci~cr Jcclincd to
has C&lt;llbUited \\ ith ,e,·eral former Ohi&lt;l ; til'&gt;\\ cr. :-\1 hlctil' depa11ll1e nt ')"'I. 1J...e, mJ.n
Stall~ plct~t'r' hl ~ct thcjr thl)ltglll~ on the Stese Snapp &gt;aid later. "Wc)l,ll·c llllt
coach!IH! \acanl'\. hut ha~ ~noiJcJ offered the posililln to an~ boch ...
reponer~ and ha' &gt;t&lt;ll ed a11·a1 fmm
Snapp '"'s "'l-ed 1f Ge1ger had talked
making public ~tatcmein~ .
·
10 Goufricd anJ· 'aid. "The &lt;l!bwer
.-\labama cn&lt;tch \lark Gonfried's would be 11&lt;1. He h"' 11111 heen in contact
name wa~ m~ntioned a~ &lt;I cand idare 11 1th him ...
Wednesd'" · Goufried. ~0. I&gt; a Cre&gt;tlinc.
\1inne,ota coach Dan \1on&gt;on oat
Ohio. nat ii·e "hoi&gt; fre'h from ~uidin~ hio; job ti\t" ~ear~ · ag() under circu~11~
the Crims~m Tide 10 a 20-13 'rec:xd and
Please see Vacancy, Bl
a benh in the Elite Ei~ llt. where the\' .

of the in&lt;,untain thi, cJt\

MtUER
Associated Press

pm\er.

" l3ringing hi~tnry to lift·
throu~h Jr.lm ;t'' at 1:.'\(1 pm
Cont~·renct'
at
Trin ity Ev.1ns Farms H.t\1. room
on Wcd nl·"d.1y. Jutll' .'\0
111
Colk~,·
111 Carmarth c·n. l i S.
Bob
E\',1
11
!'
F.1r111
H.tll.
room
W.1ks. UK.. this conti:rIn
I 'IHS
Ne&gt;~ ·
CitY
t.'lll(? wtll promote g;lobal received
Jnqru nor I IH
Cr\'t'r j, mo"t well-known
intl'rnarional
l'Xc h a n ~L' Magaz in e\ A+ Award t("&gt;r
focu~;ing on is'\Ul'S of in rlu - bei;1~
;1 n
· ··cxempl.ir~: for \\Titing t h ~;.· bo ok .md
~inn am~ cu lrur.d Jiver'iity in school."
lyric" .1 ~ 1J -..t.t rrin~ in '' I"m
educ,ltlon.
Dr Hoc·rr ilJs ·a Ph.D. in g~· t t111C: Ill\" .let mg~..·rh tT .md
.. .
..
This confnence will be of · Educational l'l.mnin t( and L:1king it on th~;.· road." TilL'
p.trricubr
relt'\'.l n ce
to Policy D ~..· ,· clo ptn L'll t from
"ho\\'
h.H.l
prodtH_·rinns
r~;.·~tc hl·rs J nJ ed utato rs .lS it W.tshingron
Uni\·ers iry,
.lT&lt;m nJ the USA :m,l owr
will c~plorc tht• usc• of tech - 19H ~; a Master\ D q?;rl't' in
nology to t:u: ibiate ndturJI ,Educationa'l Admin i~tr.Hion 1tH I fon·1gn j)n1d union ....
t"xchan~t&gt;
herween
and fro m th e Uni\'er'iity of winning the Jolll'p h Jdlt·r.,.o_n
amons teac hers and students Missouri-St. Louis. IY7.' .1nd .m·.trd (nr Best Mu .. ic.d in
from .1round th e world.
a Bar hclor's Degree 111 Chicago wah Crt•tchcn tJk The goa l of the ronfer- Elem entary Edu c:u io n from J ll ~ lk ~t Actn.·:-.s. Th~..· (.t&lt;.;f·
enCL' '' to t~s r a bli s h an inter- Harrt s T1..·ac ht'n Colle~t'. .1lbum won a Cr.mmJ,- nnmnatiOnal co mmuntca tion ' 1Yh~.
in,ttion.

toru 1n
through
which
teachers and educator.s can
share both their cultures and
teac hing best practices.
Multiple
Intelligences
the ory will inform and

Bv RusTY

n·

to

the top

quickly." ESPi'
wllegc h&lt;hkcthall
anal\ st
Dic·k
Vttaic '
'aid
Wedn~sda\. ·
Ohin - State
~oach
Jim
O'Brien \I'll' tired on June Rafter athletic.Jirector Andy Geiger &gt;aid. o· Brien
admitted he had ~i,·en 56.000 to a
recruit in 1999. The ;uddenrie" or the firing o· Brien had alwav., been considered
atxJ\'e NC".A ,·iolaiions- has many in

-

.

Casey elevates Reds
BY MIKE fiTZPATRICK
Associated Press

NEW YORK Ca-...ey

know~

Sean

he\ a lung

from catching teammate Ken Griffev Jr. on the
career home run~c han.
Casey quick!) made up
WU)

Big East, ACC
makeovers lead to
turnover in C-USA,
WAC and MAC

some Qro und with a hig
game · \VeUne~da\· nighl.
thou~h .

·
The Cincinnati tirst ba,cman hit hi s -.ecnnd two-run
homer of the ~am&lt;? in the
12th inning anZI matched a
career hi~h with five hits.
scndin~ ihe Red' h l a 6-4
v ict or)~ over the New York
Mets.
"You unn 't want .lo play
umil II o'clock and wa lk
awav 11 ith a loss." Casey
~aiU. "V./e ·ha ve n., heeo
pl,tying ton we ll on th e
ro~~~· ~o

Bv RALPH 0. Russo
Associated Press .

BOSTON - When the Atlantic· Coa., t
Conference raided the Bi~ Ea~t Li.l become
a iootha JJ Jl&lt;'ll'.e rhot"e. il Staned :t 1\a\'e of
change ih'll ha&gt; left the nun-'BCS l ea~ uc &gt;
in a state or llu \'.
.
"
Like the Bi_g East. Conil:rence USA, the
Westcm Athletic Conference. the MidAmerican Coni'crcnce and the Sun Bell
Conrcreuee arc preparin g to play the
upwming season "ith selual lame duck

th is was huge for

u~ .

Griffey went 0-for-5 with
a \Valk ii1 hi .s second game
, ;nee hittin g his SOOt ll
homer. bu t C tsry carried
the offense . He homered
oil Jac Sco in the first
inning. th en ~cnt an 0- 1
pitch fro m John Franco
imo the right-licld bullpen
in the 12th fo r his IOOth
career homer.
·-rmon ly 400 behind. so
that 'II take me abmt l 'mother J5 year&gt;. One-hundred is
pretty good. ~o I gucs~ I
ca n tel l my ktd' ahnul
th at." Cascv said. " It\
take n me 6 1./2 years to get
to I 00. so yuu uu the
math."
Wil y Mo Pena and
D'Angelo Jimc n c~ also
connected fot: tile ReJs.
who snapped New York 's
season' hi~h winnin~ streak
at five gaines. They" blew a
4-0 lead but still mana ~cd
to win for only ihe second
time in 12 road ga m e~.
New York 's Mi ke Piana
doubled leading otT the
eig hth and scored on
Richard Hidalgo\ RBI single against Todd Jon es,
tying it at 4.
With two outs in th e
12th. Juan Castro doubled
off Franco ( 1-4 ), bri~1ging
Casey to the plate wtth an
open base and Griffey on
deck . Mets manager Art
Howe went out to th e
mound to tal k to Franco,
and they decided to "0 after

"'

Please see Casey, Bl

lllL'lllhcl''\.

So how do you le~d a league in limbo''
"Get through this year and look to '05
when the ne" · members join :· WAC commissioner Karl Benson .laid Tuesday durin~
a break in the Co lle~ial e
Ct; mmi ..,s ion~ r.., Assol' ialio n meetTng~ .
"The disadvantage here i.1 you lose a year
uf planning and there ·s confusion. In the
p&lt; t~t' it ha~n·t been all th ai Jama~in!2 .
We· vc got i(Hlr scl10ols that are play ing in
their linal \Car. It 's awkward. hut it\ nut
.unm~ma ~e~ih Ie.··
Team~ .,,\ itL·hi n~ confcrcnl\.':-. j, noth in!l

new. Siuce 1'!90.- thc Pac·- 10 i' lhe · on l ~
Di\·i. . inn 1-r\ fnothall contlTl'llL"t: that h1l-..

not L' han c~d llH!mh~rs.
But ll(';·cr lx-fl)r~ han:· :--.o manv .tcaJn-., in
so 111&lt;111\ lea!!U('.-. been ~hurtled· Ill .-...uch a

shon riinc. ()ver the next t\\o se&lt;bOJ".
ahou l 20 per~c nl of the 11 7 Di1·isicm 1-,-\
l'outha]] ~l·hoo b will ht- c h an~i ll U ki.i~ LIL':O..
The ACC knocked over the ti r't dt;mino
when it lured Miami ami Vir~inia Tech out
or the Big Ea&gt;t. Thuse schools joiu the
. ACC lh i, .&gt;CaSJliL Ne\ t seasPil. Boston
Cnl l e~e fPi ilm s.
Th,: Big East rcc·oupcd by adding IIH·
schools from Conference l 'SA. three that
play foothall. Loui" ilk. Citll'innati and
Silulil Florida jilin Big b"t io(&gt;tball in
2tXl'i. \1arquclte and DePaul :II\? also , hifti n~ from C- l 'SA ill the Bi~ Ea11.
C-l 'SA will s:t\ ~oodb\c Ill l\\o more
tl&gt;nth,tl l school&gt;. at\er tlic 2tXl4 'C.t10n
hack. to heim! ~ui independent atid Texas Chri&gt;ti:m .il~ad&gt; to the

\\ ht.::ll Armv

~ot:.'

~h&gt;unlain West Con!Crcnc·e after ju,tthrc~
lnothall "''tson&gt; in C-L'SA .
·
Th~

HomcJ FrnL!"- !.!arn.:r~d nati\mal
allc·ntion fur ihL'lllsc'iw~ and C-l'SA IN

Cincinnati Reds' Sean Casey hits a two-run home run against the New York
~ets during the 12th inning Wednesday at Shea Stadium in New York. (AP I

Please see Shuffle, Bl

NBA Draft

Cavaliers could deal out No. 10 draft pick
BY ToM WITHERS
Assoc1ated Press

CLEVELAND - Gund Arena was pat1y central
last year for the NBA draft.
.The Cleveland Cavaliers used the No. I overall pick
to select LeBron Jame,, 'wept ur. the bal loon' and
confetti and llung open the box-oflice windows.
There may not be much to celebrate this time.
Barring a trade. the Cavuliers wi ll enter nlllrsday's
draft with the Nu. IOovcrall pick. It 'sa position seemingly a little too far down in the ftrSt rnund to acquire
an immediate impact player in what many expcns
cnnstder to be a !up-heavy draft.
.
"We feel rcC~IIy good about eight players:· Cav&lt;tlicrs
ge neral manager Jim P&lt;tx&gt;un said Tuesday. "But we

· don't think any of them are going 10 get In 10."
Among the playe~s who co~ld still be on the board
for the Cavs are: Stanlord forw:u·d l&lt;bh Chtklress.
Saint Joseph\ point guard Jamecr Nelson and O,regon
guard Luke Jackson.'
However, with trade rumors running rampant frnm
Orlando to Los Angeles and many points in be111een.
Paxson was asked about the likelihood thai he'll keep
the club ·s tirst-round pick.
'·Ri ght now it\ 50-so:· he said.
. Cleveland has made eight draft-day trades in the
past 20 years. and with all the v.hecling :llld dealing
expected JJ\Cr the next li:" days. the Ca1alicrs could
join the run .
In recem day&gt;, nmwrs have surl'-'ceJ ahnut se1 era I
deals involving the Cavs. wlio dnn't have a second·
I

round pick.
The h&lt;lllest i&gt;. the one th'Jt has Cleveland sending
ccntcr/fonvard Tony Bailie and the No. I0 pick to
Indiana filr forward AI II:HTingtnn. Other 'peculation
ha~ the (a\alicr~ packag111g the lir~t - mund dmice.
g.uardDa.Juan Wagner and another player in a deallo
Minnesuta !())'Wall\ S!ocrbi""·
Paxson hasn't 111ied ou t anything.
"h\ a real\) inter~~ting Jran:· hL: -..aid. "'There\
youth. there\ strength in the wing JX&gt;Silion. nwre's
uncenainty "ith the European bigs . At the 'amc t1111c.
there arc sonic other player' 1\C like and 11c·re ,·s;ploring "'me J~ltenlial tracb that cwtld be til·J tnto the
draft or mm·
be 'lllllCLhim; a!'tl'r the Jr~1ft."'
.

-

Please see Cavs, Bl

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Vacancy

Ohio State has many selling poim,.. The
new coach will make more than $ 1 million
a year. hi&gt; team will play in a 19.000-.eat
arena that is on ly ' ix y.:ars o ld and the Big
Ten offers hig h visibility and prestige.
Dennis Hopson . the BrJckeyes' c;u-eer
:.coring leader. believes it is impemtivc that
Ohio State hire someone who is not an outsider.
''I would like to see somebody who has
tics with Ohio State get the job.'' he said.
" It's not like the history isn't there. like rhis

from Page 81
stances somewhat similar as those facing
the next Ohio State coach. He was hired in
midsummer following a m assive academic
scandal revolving around tired coach Clem
Haskins and his staff.
Monson said most coache&gt; tend to look
at the positives.
" You look at the job as a whole and not
the couple of years it\ going tn take you
through probation or whatever sane! imh
there are going to be.'' Monson sa id
Wednesday. " Ohio State will get a good
coach who sees the big picture. Certainly
there will be some roadblocks early but if
there weren' t aiob like that doesn't come

Thursday, June 24,

www.mydailysentinel.com

wins to pass North Carolina's Dean Smith
as the winnir1gest mJjor-college coach.
The volatile Knight won three national
championships during his 29 seasons at
Indiana. He was tired in 2000 for " detiant
and hostile' ' behavior. There i s little question that Knight would draw a lot of attention to Ohio State 's often overlooked bask etball progmm.
" We know about hi s temper battles; but
who does he really hurt except himself
there·.' The bottom l i ne is. he graduates
players. he does things with integrity (and)
it.'s h~' alma mate r.'' Vit ale said . "To me it's
a no-brainer, Can you imag ine the press
conf~rence to announce hi s hiring? It
would be unbelievable."
Vitale gulped for a brearh of air and
added. "You tell Andy Geiger I would do
that Ohio State-Indiana game in a moment
and I would donate my c heck for that day
to Andy Geiger's favorite charity.''
Monson said that if Knight i s hired by
Ohio State. the coach 's return to Indiana

is a program thllfs stal1ing from scratch.
. TI1i:. is a big-time universitv. It wou ld be a

open."
Similar to what Monson received at
Minnesota, Ohio State would m ost likely
have to offer a new coach a lengthy corltract. Monson \ original commct extended
tor live years after the school wem off
NCAA probation.

Shuffle

great job ... '

•

Vitale. as exp.:ded. wasn't sh y about
expressing his opinion on who should get
the job,
"There· s one guy for that job. man."
Vitale said. ··If they want a bu7Z. man. and
create some e.x citement for at least a live year period it would be an absolute winwin situation. His po sitives totally outweigh the negatives - 1\i make the call to
Roben Monigomery Knight .'.

"The league I think has

from Page 81
year by going 11-2 and reaching as high as
sixth in the Bowl Championship Series
standi"gs. the highest ranking ever for a
team from a non- BCS league.
TCU, Louisville and Cincinnati have
football programs that have blossomed
into consistent winners in recent vears.
and all three are expected to contend for
the C-USA title in 2004.
Next season they will be replaced b y
Marshall. Central Florida. UTEP. Ri ce.
SMU and Tulsa.
"It think it's a challenge for us because
we're changing so many of our members
that have strong identities," said C-USA
commi ssioner Britton Banowsky. whose
conference is also los ing non-football
members Charlotte and St. Louis to the
Atlantic I 0.

Casey

would certainly get his attention.
··1 know this," Monson said. "I want to
be a tly on the wall - if it ·were to come to
pass when they go to Bloomington .''

Knight. a 1962 graduate of Ohio State. is
currently the mach at Texas Tech. H e i s
832-323 over 37 years &lt;md needs just 48

a

Marshall and Central Florida. While
Marshall became an immediate league
power when it entered the MAC in 1997.
the rest of the league caught up to the
Thunde1ing Herd in the last ~ouple of

reputation as

being very strong in the spo11 of men's
baskethall. we have some very high profile
couches
in
men 's
basketball.
Sometimes that overshadows the quality
we have in football. I think we're iu;t
going to have to reposition the brand tmd

years.
Traditional members Miami of Ohio
and Bowling Green played in the league
title game last season. Northern Illinois
and Toledo, another longtime member.

promote in a balanced way all of our
asse ts. including football .'.
C-USA will be a two-divi sion 12-tcam
toorball league in 2005, with plans to play

al so played · prime roles in the MAC's
breakout 2003 season.
" What's been encouraging. for tis i s
there has been real momentum coming off
of last year," Chryst said. "Our core i s
intact As we go about the internal work of
launching ourselves in 'OS, I think we're

a leag ue championship game.
·
The reconstruction of C-USA left the
WAC looking for new m e mbers to replace
UTEP. SMU, Rice and Tulsa.
Benson found replacement s in misplaced Sun Belt Conference schools
Idaho. New Mexico State and Utah State.
The good news tor the WAC unlike
C-USA -

also looking at this year to really try to sustain the growth of the past couple of

years,"

is rhe league is not losing its

As tor the Sun Belt, it welcomes Troy

marquee football schools, Boise State,
Fresno State and Hawai i.
MAC commissioner Rick Chryst said
h is league has no plans now to replace

State this season and fledgling 1- A programs Florida Atlantic and Florida

Casey.
"I said I had decent success with him,"
Franco said. ''Last night l pitched and got
him out Tonight I just got it a little low. I
made a bad pitch ."
Casey tinished 5-for-6 with three singles, rai sing his batting average I 0 points
to .361.
"Unbelievable. You can't stop that
guy," Reds reliever Danny Graves said.
"I think he went two games without a hit.

ting it to 4-3.
Casey connected for a two-run homer
in the first, giving him
career RBis.
He had his sevenrh multihomer game ,
three this season.
·
"Oh yeah, this is a common occurrence
tor me," Casey joked. ' This is probably
one of the best nights I've ever had in my

500

be

had, but it slipped away from us ."
Griffey did make a key defensive play
to help Cincinnati.
He started
strong relay to cut dowh
Kaz Matsui at the plate in the fifth.
Matsui held up too long at second base

a

~ribune

TI1e Pacers have the 29th
pick but are desperate to move
up, possibly to get Jackson. a
left-hander with a soft shooting
stroke whom Pacers pre sident
Larry Bird has compared to
Chris Mullin.
Dealing
for
Harrington
makes sense for the Cavs. who

skipped wllege to enter the
19'.lll drah (lUt of high ,chool.
had a hrcakout sca,on in 2003-

given

that

on

Year

2004

CDBG

funding, provided the

Savings

village meets applicable program require·
ments. On June 7,
2004 at 11:00 a.m. in
the
Middleport
Council Room the
Village conducted Its
first public hearing to

Company ts selling

Inform citizens about

lor cash . in hand or

the CDBG program;
how it may be used,
what activities are ell·
glbla
and
other

Saturday, June 26,
2004, at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
held at 211 W. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank

and

certified check ttie
following collateral:
2002
Chevrolet
Trailblazer
1GNDT135022386123
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings

Company,

Pomeroy,

Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw

the above collateral
prior to sate. Further,
The Farmers Bank

· and
Company

Savings
reserves

the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.

The

above

described collateral
wilt be sold " as iswhere Is", with no
expressed or implied
warranty given.

For further informslion, or
lor
an
appointment

inspect

to

collateral,

prior to sate date con·
tact Cyndte Gillilan,
Diane
Rector
or
Randy Hays at 992·
2136.
(6) 23, 24, 25

Publ!c Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
Vttlaga ol Middleport,
Malga County, Ohio
The
VIllage - of
Middleport Inlands to
apply to the Ohio
Deportment
or
Development
lor
funding through the
Community
Development Block
Grant
(CDBG)
Water/Sewer
Small
Cltlea Program, a lad•
eratty funded program admlnlatared by
the alate. The village
Ia eligible lor a maxi·
mum
amount
ol
$500,000 of Ftacal

important
program
requirements.

Malp, GaHia,
And Mason

Bird he wanted to
he couldn't st&lt;U1.

he

Countl• Like
NoO,.

EIMC.n!

traded if

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

Sand large floor areas.
There 's no faster
or easier way to get
the rob d_one. Simple
to operate.

Produce repetitive cuts in
cinder block, brick or even
concrete. Fast and
accurate cutting is simple.

Per Day

Based on both clti- '
zens Input and local

officials'

assess-

ments or the Village
needs, the Village is
proposing to under·
take the following
CDBG activity for
Fiscat'Year 2004.
Activity: Water
&amp;
Sewer
Facility,
Installation ol Water
Treatment Plant and

To Place
mrtbune
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
Your Ad. (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675·1333
Call TOday... or Fax To 44&amp;-3ooe ·
or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Per Day

Word Ads

POWER MITER SAW
It's tough to beat fOr angled
cuts . Ideal for m rte r roints in
door frames , moldings or
picture f rames .

.
·'

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

Per Day

TRANSIT
Level over distances
accurately ... and
inexpensively with a transit.
Survey your construction
site with ease .

I

ROLLING TOWER
Don 't try navigating
between ladders . The
rolling tower is a safe,
easy way to work at a
h igher level.
R1238

!l

Transmission Main
CDBG
Funds:
$500,000
Other Funds: $1.5M
National Objective: To

benefit in excess of
51%LM1

A second public hearIng wilt be held July
12, 2004 at 2:00 p.m.
in the Gratis Council
Chambers to give citizens an opportunity
to review and comment on the village
proposed
CDBG
application, including
the proposed actlvt-

rental
Best
Thomas
center

llea

summarized

above, before · the
Village submits Ita
application to the
Ohio Department ol
Development.
Citizens
are

Public Notice

double winners! Advance ticket
d
992-4055 for mfo

'

Board of Trustees will
hold a budget hearing .
at their regular meet·
ing, July 2, 2004 at
7,oo p.m. at the fire
station.
Mary Brady
Clark
(6) 24

STYLE. ..

•

;\)

.

·'

•

VERA'S NATURAL
IMAGES
welcomes
Heather Hargraves.
Specializing in foiling
14 years experience
$5.00 off perms and
foiling.

Moving Sale· Rain or Shine.
June 26, 2004; 9am-?? 4629
SR. 850: 2 miles from 4Lane Hwy. m Bidwell.

r

l

IIELP WANIID
~.w-------~
,

LOST AND
FoUND

'ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS!'
Want to IOOk 1younger AND
earn Money? Let's talk the
NEW AVON call ·
Marilyn (304)882·2645,
. Joyce (304)675-8919,.
April t304)682·3630

LOST:
Black/White/Tan
Shellle dog · (Miniature
Collie) Mill Creek Rd .,
Gallipolis area . Children's
Applications will be taken for
pe1s. (740)446-4362.
bartender &amp; kitchen usia·
lo'lr'ing pet dog found tant. Saturday June 28th
Thursday (17th) Pt. Pl . area from 12:00 to 2:00 pm ,
must ldentlly correctly Eagles Club, 224 E Main St.,
(304)675-3359 after 6pm
Pomeroy. Oh.

Starbursts $1,600.00
Door Prize $850 .00

.

r
r

yARD S,u,E

~

'

THE

·1..:...DI..:.e..:.ae:..I..:.M_e_c_h_a_n_lc-1-1
.

•r•n•t only for

YARD SALE-

wooto lnduotry.

GAUJPOUS

Position tllltta eenlor •
experienced mechanlct
wtth repalra &amp; malntt·
nance euch eatubrlcat!on,
electrlc:at and brake work.
Requires mtchanlc:tl apt!·
tude with basic knowledge
of vehicle melnt•nance
and repair• exp. with dlesel
power Vehicle preferred.
Must also have own tools,

1636 Chatham Ave. 6/24·

buylna or aelllna

you c::•n ua•
thla W"ldely r••d
••ctlon to
ao1111eon• •

lte~n•~

6/26, e.00-5 :00 . Furniture,
Clothing, odds &amp; ends, misc.
Chest, table-chairs, tools,
lawn
furniture ,
men's
ctothes. much more. Thurs.·
Sat 108 Bulavillo Pike.

You .. •nd pl,flc• •n
Metno~'

o• • lov•-1 one.
For ntoore lnfa.rnaa-

tlon., c:onwc:t your
loc•l Ohio V•ll•y
Publlahlna ofllc..

®nUipoli• :ii!Onilp t:n::ribuno&gt;
(740) 446-2342

The Dally Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

iiRo&gt;ai•to&gt;r

(304) 675-1333

'!

PM Shift
Aurripke Is the Ieeder In the

__

'I

Tools. outdOOr equipment,
antrques, etc anything for
everyone. 2806 Morgan
Center Ad Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.

i:!lr~::.:::~W::,:AmED:::::::..--.,.~

lost BlacK male German
Shepherd. 10 years old.
Klichor Rd. (740)441·9774.

Crank It Up Tipboard $8,000 .00

~oint ~I.-a•nnt

June 26th.

Mother cat &amp; one baby kitten. Angora &amp; Persian
mixed, very good cats
(304)675·7980
2907 Maple Ave : Ju ne
25&amp;26 bQys&amp; girls plus size
Rabbits to give away, 740clothes, household rtems,
992·1002
lots of nlck·nacks
Recliner to give away,

5194

Happy Birthday..
provide • Thank

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

lo' il i pin !t-'1-l.t• ve
Find your Phi1ippme lady
lor love and Happiness
of a Lifetime.
1-8()().497-8414
Fili ina-4-Love.com

1..~---roilioBiliiUY,;._ _.,I.
Small lovable dog great with '
kids to giveaway to good Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
homo, (304)882·4021
Gold
Coins,
Silver,
Proofssts,
Diamonds.
Gold
To Giveaway i/2 German
Rings,
U.S.
Currency,·
Shepherd, 1/2 Australian
Shepherd dog, · 1 1/2 year M.T. S. Coin Shop. 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
old Female (304)675·7713
740·446·2642 .
Whlrlitzer Church Organ.
I \ ll'l t l\ \ 11 '\ I
Needs some work, It has 2
"' I 1{\ J( I '
keyboards and 2 toot ped· "li;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
dlos. Vory heavy. (740)843· lfiO

-••h

... THE

Saturday 24-26. Microwave,
weight bench, candle pottery, golf cart, small kids &amp;
adult clothes &amp; lots of misc.
797 Turkey Run
Ad.
Cheshire. Oh.

(7~0)992 ·5115

All Packs $5 .00 each

ad ... In

liFLP WANJID

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Days Prror To

Publlcittlon

_

Sunday Dl11play: 1:00 p . m.
Thursday for Sundays

ads must be prepaid•

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publlahlng reeervee lt'!e rl11ht to .clit, reject, or c•ncei any ad at any lim~. Errors muet be report.cl on the flrat day of
Trlbun•Sentinti·Aegiater will be reepanaible for no more then tl'le coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the first inaertton. We
any Iota or expenae th1t rteuHa from the publication or omiulon of an adver11Mment. Correction will be made In tht fir.:t available edllion.
' are el~ay• confldentlat. • Current rate card appl .. e. • All reel estate advertl ..ments are subject to the Federal Fair Hou1ing Act of 1968.
acoepts only help wanted acll meeting EOE atandarda. We will not knowingly accept any adverti1lng In violation of the law.

Friday &amp; Saturday 9-? Clay lamiliarity with repair manuTown House . f1ousehold als and a mlnimum of 1 year
items, adult &amp; kids clothes. performing similar duties.
Must be able to lift 761bs.
Garage
Sale
6/25/04 Exceilent compenaatlon &amp;
6/26/04 . New cook-top,
beneflla with medical,
lamps, bar signs, speakers,
dental , 401k, vacation I
double stroller. toys, misc.
penelon. Pltaae come In
items. 529 Galtia St . Crown
and apply anytime MonCity.
Frl. eom-Spm:
·
Yard s·ale, large 2 family, Jllg 11H1 whHI &lt;11 your
clothing, lawn equipment AumpkeWIItt
furniture , Ctlsnes, misc., toys. 2e AW Lang Rood
Frida~.
and Welleton, OH 45882
Thursday,
Saturday, June 24, 25, &amp; 27. Fox: 740-384-S-'72
No phone calls pleast/EOE .
741 Kevstone Rd. Vinton .

2-Bedroom. 1·Batl1, lrving·
room, Dining-room, kitchen.
basement. covered font
porch, G13r1eral Hartrnge r
Parkway.
$40,500.00.
(740)992·3057

WHE&gt;I".f: All£

1!-hO

t&gt;l~IAI&lt;'f
BIJS'/ I!&gt;Ot&gt;I~S

1/Jftf-N YoU REAt.t-y
N&amp;~D -rHE;;n?

prior e~~:penencesl Flexible
Scheduling! Free Meals!
Free
Uniforms!
Paid
Vacations! Profrt Sharing
Plan! Quarterly · Bonus
Program!
Health Care
Benefits lor those who qualrfy t Unlimited Promotion &amp;
Career
Advancement
Opportunities! A Promising
FUture!

OWNER
OPERATORS

Canton, Ohio reefer
company looking fo r
Owner Operators to
earn between 125·150K
.2 soutemen1 Oplions
paid weekly
oNO NYC
.Home Weekends
.$500 Sign On Bonus
.95% No touch freight
CALL 801l.e62-2382
Auto
Mechanic/Small
Engine Mechanic, must be
·experienced Shade Tree
Mechanics need not apply
(304)675·3eoo
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Soil. Shirley Spears, 304·
.875·1429.
Bartender need, experience
required.
Applications
accepted until 6/28/04 Send
10 P 0. Box 303, GeillpOIIs.
OH
OllniCII UlriC1Gr

Madl Home Heatlh
Agency, Inc. seeking a
lull·tl.me AN Clinical
Director lor the Gallipolis,
Ohio
location. ·
Position Requires: OH
and wv AN licensure,
minimum two years at
home health nursing
e)(perlence in a management role, knowledge of
Federal and State home
health regulation, JCAHO
experience preferred.
EOE
Submit resume to : 68150
Bayberry Drive,
St. Clairsville, OH 439~.
Ann : Katrina Dunaway,
AN.
·· ~Dl::
irec
~to::,ri:,of~N;::u::,rs:;:ln:il.a..l
Contract writer for short
business related articles.
Mail res ume to:
Community Chest
28 Lo&lt;:ust St.
Gallipolis. OH 45631
or lax to : 740-441-9820
--------Oomrno's now hiring sale
drivers
all
posit ions,
Gallipolis, Pomeroy, Pt.
Pleasant, &amp; Eleanor call
s10re (304)1175·5858 tor
applications

~

2004 by NEA, Inc .

www.comics .com

~--------. ~--------. r.'il~-~:----.,

1110
,

HELP W.wwn

Drivers Needed Pierceton
Trucktng . 1 yr experience
req uired. Class A with Tank
&amp; Hazmat. Call 1-800-4460355.

--------DRIVERS NEW PAY
SCALE
CLASS A COL NEEDED
• Earn between 45·50K
• Min . 1 year exp.
.Home Weekends
. $500 sign-on bonus
. start at·36 cpm
• 95% No touch freight
• NO FORCED NYC

MOBILE Ho~ t•-s

HOMES
FORSM.E

lwrtght@!c.net

Our current request rs for
team players ranging from
first time job seekers
through experienced gener·
at level management.

ATTENTION

Now you can have borders and graphics
.IL...l
added to your classified ads
(.~
lf'1'
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics soc for small
$1 .00 for large

CARLYLE

Arby's is currently seeking
quality rndlvlduals who are
interested
in
excellrng
upward and are hungry lor
opportunity.

ThOse who are interested in
Crew or Management posi·
June 25&amp;26. Racine. 826
GIVEAWAY
lions may complete an appli·
John's Rd. lawn aerator, calion at Arby's of Gallipolis,
gas lawn edger. many 1521 S.A. 7 South (in front
Free 9 week old beautiful . hOusehold rtems
of Wai·Mart).
clean, spoiled kinens. Shots,
wormed, litter trained. Yard ·sale Dale Hart
Those who would prefer to
(740)446·2296.
Yellowbush Ad ., Racine,
submit a' Management
June 24 &amp; 25, 9·4, computer
Free kinen s to give to away. desk, dishes, headboards. resume may Fax to 1·606836·9617 or E·mailto rear.:
(740)379-2159 .
large pictures, Chinese dish- teejr@carteeland com or
es,
games,
toys,
table
&amp;
Give away· 9 Lab/Aottweiler
Mail to Arby's, 201 Stewart
puppies.
Adv lt
male chairs &amp; lots of misc . AU Avenue. Worthrngton , KY
. donated
for
Rottweller, adult female Lab/ items
41183.
Bare
Rottweiler dog. (740)441- RACO/Edison
Memorial Scholarship Fund.
9220

'

.•
WHAT

11

Yard Sale-Saturday, June
26: 1086 Lincoln Pike Like
arid Michael
NEW
babyttoddler girl
clothes. NEW toys. pack·nC-1 Beer Carry Out permit play. NEW adult c1othes,
for sale. Chester Township, hardco\ler books &amp; much
Meigs County, send let1ers more
Everyone is welcome to
of 1nterest to: The Da1ly
apply! .
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20,

Lucky Ball $300.00

mente on the proposed CDBG appltca·
tton. Application to be
submitted aomeltma
In. tate July 2004 or
early Auguat.
The council cham·
bare are handicapped
acca11tbie. If a particIpant witt need auxll·
tary aida( Interpreter,
broiled or taped mate·

June 26 at 6:30pm
American Legion
Middleport

Township

encouraged to aHend
thta meeting on July
12, 2004 to expraaa
their vtowa and com-

BINGO

&amp;

r

June 24, Middleport Am. Legion
$20
Double baskets, double bears , ·

• All

110

Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

Something for everyoneinfants, big men's &amp; ladies,
.
Longaberger Baskets,
Home Interior
.

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for JnsCirtlon
In Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundaya Paper

Ga•age Sale 9·? Thursday· L,A•R•B•Y•'S•l,-N.ow-H•Ir•ln•a•t_.I

ness, financial security and
a great educat1on . Feel confident in knowing because of
your brave decision your
baby could look torward ·to a
bright and wondel1ul tuture .
Expenses paid. Cali toll free
1·866-731· 7825. Barbara

Serving You From 2 Locations.

Eagles 2171
"Rick Brumfield"
Friday, June 25th
8:00 to 12:00

~~

Display Ads

ADOPTION: A loving couple would like to adopt your Neighborhood Yard Sale
newborn. Will provide a Oak Drrve, Jackson Pik~ We otter Competttive wages
home lilled with toy, happi- behind Speedway. Saturday &amp; Salaries based on your

Per Day

Per Day

PERsoN-us

ANNOUNCEMENT'S

$30,

BEAR &amp; BASKET BINGO

NOMArrER

r

rI

OearltirtU'

• Start Your Ads With A Kerword • Include complete
Description • ln,lude A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• lndude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Dari
·

Su~~ssful Ads
Should In~lude These Items
To Help Get Response •••

rial, asslstive listening deVice, other) due
to a disablttty. Please
contact Mayor Sandy
tannarelti (740) 992·
2705 prior to July 12,
2004 in order to
ensure
that
your
needs witt be accom·
modeled.
(6) 24

Columbia

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

·.

Multi Family Yard Sale
Thurs ., June 24 &amp;
Fri. June 25
Syracuse Church of
Nazarene
Shelter House

Public Notice

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

'

DRUM SANDER

Per Day

WeCo¥·•""-_,

highs in points ( 13.3 ) . and
rebounds ( 6.-+) as one ot the
le ag ue 's
top
reserves.
Following the season. he told

BLOCK SAW

More power by the h6urt
Now you can get power
where and when you need
it . We have one to suit your
needs. R1090

i~ter

Harrington averaged career-

career."

Chester
Township
Board ol Trustees witt
hold
their
2005
Budget Hearing at the
regular meeting of the
board on July 13,
2004 at the Chester
Town Hall at 7:00 p.m.
(6) 24

- Sentinel - l\e

04.

Tho111as Do-it·ht•st Rental Center·

GENERATOR

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

CLASSIFIED

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby

www.mydallysentinel.com

would prefer adding exp.:ri-

A2060

wattmg to see if Griffey could catch
Piazza's shot off the center-field fence.
"With one out, unless you know he 's
going to catch the ball, you should go
halfway," How.e said.
Jose Reyes was left at second, and
Piazza wound up with a long single. Cliff
Floyd followed with an RBI single. cut-

Mike Matthews (2-1) pitched a hitless
II th, ana Graves got three outs for his
28th save in 35 chances. John Riedling
got out of a tirst-and-third, one-oUt jam in
the ninth.
"We had our opportunities to put them
away," Howe said. "It was our game to

Thursday, June 24, 2004

ence over taJ..in~ anoth er k1d.
The 24· year-ole( forward . who

from Page 81

lntemational in 2005.

so he was due to break out sometime
soon. When he's on , you can pre tty much
throw anything up there and you can't get
him out."

from Page 81

Cavs

2004

It 10
.

HE:I"PWANa:D

11180
. .

Medi Home Health Agency,
Inc.. seektng a lutl -t•me and
PAN AN's, and a PAN
Occupational Th erapist lor
the Gallipolis. Ohio area
Must be licensed both in
Ohio and West Virginia . We
otter a competitive salary.
beneftt package ior lull-trme,
and 401K. E.O.E. Please
send resu me to 352 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, OH 45631
Ann : Orana Ha'rtess, Clinical
Manager or call 1·800·481·
6334.

WAIV!Ul

To Do

All types of masonry brick.
block &amp; stone 20 yrs
Experience free estimate.
1-304-773·9550. 30 4-5931007
----~--­

Night Shift with Elderly, Exp,
&amp; Ael. (304)675-7961

Someone to tear down
house in exchange lor building material s and everything
in house (304)675-36 46

Will Pressure Wash bouse 's,
mobile homes, metal build·
--~------ ings, and gutters. Call
(740)446-015t ask for Ron
Need a JOb?
or leave message .
We are hiring!
You could earn up
11'\\"\( 1\1
10 $8/hour plus bonuses
Call aoo-652·2362
We also otter paid
BustNFSS
Expenenced auto mechanic,
training , holidays
OPI'ORil.INITY
good
driving
record
and vacations.
required . (740)388·6547.
Full or pert time
Bankert Lite and
shifts e.va.llabie
Experienced Roofers. Must
Casualty Company
Call1oday
have own loots &amp; lransporta·
tron . (740)379·9079 alter 1·877-463-6247 0111. 24S6
"Expanding Field Force•
www.lnfocleton.com
7pm.
·Training"Leads·
Potential $2S·160K Yr.· ·
Expenenced truck mechen · Opening New Retail Outlet
Call (304)343·0400
ic, good driving record Middleport. seek1ng full-time
required, COL a plus. manager, assistant manag·
Equal Opponunrty Company
(740)388·8547.
er,
part-time
MIF/H
cash ier/stock/production ,
Family Addrction Community only persons that are sell
Treatment Services- An starte rs, w/hinh enerny. pi "'
"'
· AI coho1an d Drug motivated, need• apply, sub·
•
HID VALLEY PUBLISH
0 utpat1ent
·
lNG CO. recommends tha
Counseling
agency
is mit resume to: The Dail"'
ou do busrness with pao
A
I
h
accepting esumes or t e sentinel, P.O. Box 729·"46,
Ia you know. and NOT t
following posilion:
Pomeroy Oh 45769
Prevention
Educator·
arid money through th
Seeking an energetic indi· Over the Road Truck mail until you have rnvesti
ated the offering.
vidual to work youth and Drivers. High mileage, good =~~~~~;::::::;
adult In Gallla and Jackson pay, cruise control, AJC Call
n..o~
.
ON'L
counties . Responsibilities (740)388·9162.
.-" c~• ....
Include, but not limited to. --~---~-SFRVICF.S
alcohol. tobacco and other Paramedtcs
&amp;
EMT's
drug education, classroom needed. Apply at 1354 Affordable
Computer
presentations,
trainings, Jackson Pike, Gallipol is.
Repair· Gal lie., Meigs , &amp; sur·
lairs, community events,
roundrng areas. (740)992development and lmplenta· Private Garden . Weeding, 7
9
0
3
lion ol grant projects, etc. A general maintenance etc. http:JJwww.geocltres.comltoil
mlnimum ol Bachelors Tel 740-208-79n.
er45620
Degree requ1red with knowl- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -edge of alcohol, tobacco Wanted: Receptionist/Office
TURNED DOWN ON
and other drugs. Send Assistant. Send resume to SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
resume by June 30 . 2004 to: CLA Box 555, c/O Gallipolis . No Fee Unless We Wlnl
FACTS, 45 . Olive Street , Tribune, 825 Third Ave,
1·888-582·3345
Gallipolrs, Ohio · 45631 or ~G;j;ajplllpo:;;;;;li;;s·.;O~H;.4,;,;5;;;6.;,31;.._ _,
Ill \I I .., I \II
FAX to : (740)446·80 14.
ScHoolS
I
EOE. MIFIH.
•
INs'IRUcnON
r10
HOMES
Mason City and New Haven
,.1 ~
FORSAIJ':
Public Libraries are seeking Qalllpolls Career College
a Part-time Library Clerk . (Careers Close To Home) 160 Par~ Drive· two Story, 3
The successful applicant Call Today! 740·446-4367, bedrooms, full basement,
must be lrlendly. familiar
1-800·214·0452
New
Furnace
&amp; Air
with computers, and able to
www.gattloot.scareercott&amp;ga.eom Condltton all new replace·
lift up to 25 · pounds. Accr•ditea Member .Accred1llng ment Windows, Price has
Interested applicants may Council tor rnoapandent corteges been
Reduced
Call
h~~~1~
27~··~----..., Somerville Realty (304)675pick up and returri an appli- 1••M~~~
~
cation to the Mason City 1170 MlscFJ..t.ANEOUS
_30_3_0_(_304_)6_7_5_·34_3_1...,--Publlc Library located at 8 ,
,
Brown Street, M8son City.
2 bedroom , 1bath, flat 3/4
EOE
8cre.
Newly remodeled
~s seen on TV! AEshap
inside. In Gallrpolis Ferry,
Part time or full time Sales ~ith ShapeWorksl Los
across tracks !rom Beale
help. EMcellent commission. ~eight and shape-up
li:Ree body analysis. Trac School. Two nice outbuildlocal calls· phone or in per40·441-1982 Donna 740 in~s . $4 9·500 ·00 (304)45S·
son . Experience Is less
43-1172.
1673
important than motivation .
3bedroom,
1story, white
Send resume to:
' ·nyl siding, fenced back
Community Chest
II
1111! yard, Pt. Pleasant. Groat
28 Locust St.
tI
11!,; starter hom•or·rental prop·
Gallipolis. OH 4S631
~.'Y (304)675·5209
or fax 740..441-9820

r

11!6
L.-.::;::::____

I

MOBILE HOME'&gt;
FOR RENT

I'ORSALE

For sale or rent- 2 bedroom 2 bedroom trarler, S325 per
mobtle homes starling at month
plus
deposit .
$270 per month , Call 740- (304 )264-8643
992-2 167
2000 Dutch 16x80 mob1le
Good used 3 bedroom home. 3 bedroom, 2 full
14X70 ln ct~ des central arr. baths. on large lot rn Pornt
On ly 510.995.00 In cludes Pleasant. in Old Town
delrvery.
Call
· Nrkkr. Mobile Home Park . across
(740)385·99 48
from' Porni Pleasan t High
C
N-ic-e'-- -F-Iee-tw_o_o_d_.- -b-e-d· School. available Aug 1.
3
98
$450 month with sso6
room 2 bath, with central
r
thermal
pane
windows
deposrt (304)675-8933
81

3 bedroom hOuse Rutland.
Nice , quie~ ne tghborhood
NOT
rn
flood
areal
Hardwood floors. Shade
trees. Central air Fam!ly
room ,
Laundry
room.
Storage buildings (740)742·
2824 .
and 10X20 shed. lmmedrate Beautiful river vtew, ideal for
occupancy
available one or tWo people No pets.
00
Ca
ll
Harold references . (740)441 -0181 .
S14.995
3 br Cedar Cape Cod 2 1/2
Ba .2 car garage 2.67 acres (740)385·7671
Ntce 2 and 3 bedroom
of riverfront property for sale
SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
moorle homes lor rent
rn Mason call 304-882-2623
Stock models at_.old prrces. rncludes water . sewer &amp;
2005 models arrrving Now,
3BA on 5. t29 acres-. Green Cole's
Mobile Homes. trash . no pets. startrng at
$300 per monlh 1n Shade
Township close to school.
15266 U.S 50 East Ath ens area. deDosit requued .
Asking price $89,000 More
Ohto 45701 , {740)592- 1972 . (7401992 .2 t 67
rn to (740)446·7377 . "Where You Gel Your ; , . . , . - - - - - - - . ,
8 room Ranch. 1ull base - _
M_o_ne_::y_'s_W_o_r_lh_
'· _ _ _ _ 1440
APARTMEY...'Th
ment 3 bedroom. 2 5 baths Trailer tor sale Located at
FUR RE~T
2.5 acres, family room. cov- Leon, wv (must be moved) .
ered deck. $99,900. No land 1994 Commodore, 14x60, 1 and 2 bed room apartcontract. (740)446-2196
2-bedroom. 1-bath. ut ility· ments. furnished and unfurnrshed. securrty depos rt
.
room. rnc Iuaes s ove reIrrgerator. washer, e~~:tra cabr- requ tred no pets. 740-992nets . all underprnning. front 2218.
&amp; back porcheS w/awnrng .
bedroom ·
apt
all block &amp; sidewalk steps.
Washer/dryer
hookup.
$290
heatpump, AJC. Excellent
513.800. rent. deposit requ rred No
All rea"l estate advertising con drtion,
pets. 740·44 1-1 184.
(740)696·26 t 3
in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal
340
bedroom unfurnished
J!LIStiW.'&gt;-&lt;;
Fair Housing Act of 1968
apartment. Air. range. refrrg·
ANI&gt;
Bnt.DI:-.11
;s
which makes it illegal to
erator. drsposal. garage
adliertise "any
Deposit
&amp;
references
preference, limitation" or
3 unit apt. bur lding potentral
required. t36 Ftrsl Ave
discrimination based on
gross Income of $13.050 Rear, Gall rpoHs (740)4 46 race, color, religion, sex
month. located rn downtown
2561 .
familial sta1ua or national
Gal lipolis. Price $t20 ,000 .
origin, or any Intention to
Call (740)7 10·0007.
1 bedroom, stove and ·re frrgmake any such
erator.
furnished . ulrlrtres
preference, limitation or
Lon; &amp;
rncluded $400 mof'lth plus
diecriminetion."
ACRK~GE
deposrt. (7 40)2 45·5859
This newspaper will not
1 mobtle hOme lol at 1 Br apartment S350 month
knowingly accept
Johnson s Mobrle Home all utrliues •ncl uded S150
advertisements for real
ParK at Gall1polrs. (740)446- securrty depos rt close to
estate which is in
2003.
violation of the law. Our
P~
Pleasant
. downtown
readen are hereby
(3041675·3654
2 Scenrc wooded lots Green
Informed that all
Two ECich tot 1• acres 1 Br House rn New Haver .
dwaliinga edve11lsed tn
$25.000 per lot. (740)441· Appliances &amp; partrally fur·
thl1 newapaper are
available on an equal
9516.
nished, no pets $250
opportunity bases .
deposit .
$275
month
Mercerville Lots lor sale
(304)882-3652
AI
shared entrance off St
For Sale By Owner : Ranch 218 . 3·13 acres. Phone
2 bedroom, just past Holze r
Style,
recently 17 40)256·1625
$425 month. Call (740 )441 painted/remodeled : 4 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, combined Two home sites for sale . Both 1 184.
dln rng room/kitChen , utility one acre mil. 3·112 mr les Attractive, one bedroor; apt .
room, deck, storage butld· from Holzer Hosprtal
2nd floo r. corner Second
ing , attached 2 car garage in 620 Evergreen Ad , $19.,500 and
Pine.
No
pels
qurel community 1 mile from 560 Evergreen Ad .. $18 .500 References
requrred
(740)446:8840 or
hospital. Call (740)446· Call
Securrty deposrt 5300 per
6822; 598 Jay Drive , viewrng (7 40)645·4513
month, water rncluded Call
by ~;~ppointment. $125.000
.(740)446·4425 o• 1740)446·

G:t

L

Fo r Sale·HoUse . one &amp;1 1/4
acres, 3000sqft. 3br. 2bh. lr.
dr, tvr, lsb (304)773·59S4or
593·3702

i!:lt
-,•

Ri o Grande , Spacrous

Log home, 5 acres, 3·4 bedroom. 2 bath , huge kitchen
w/oak cabinets &amp; island
cook top, finished basement
w/gas log fireplace + central
heattalr, 30x54 heated workshop $197 .000. (740)2459169.

I

~~==~======~
_39_3_6·
--~----~~
H~
BEAUTIFUL
APART·

r-:'10

r

MENTS
AT
8UDGET
PRICES · AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
1 bedroom hOuse located on Drive from $344 to S442.
3rd
Ave.,
Gallrpolis. Walk to shOp &amp; movres Call
$250/rryonth plus deposrt 740·446·2568
Equal
Renter
pays
utrllties. Housing Opportunity.
(7401256·666 t .
Beautiful unfurnished. one
2 bedfoom hOuse in country. bedroom apt ove"rlooktng
20 mtles E. of Jackson. 20 Crty
Park .
ref erMces
mrles W of Athens rn Vrnton requrred, no pets secu rity
county. 1 mile oH of St. At. deposit $400 per month .
32 .. $500 mtly. (740 )696- Call
(740)446·2325 o.
2804 not HUO approved
(7 40)446-4425.

,__ _I'OiliiR.iRfNriiiil--~

Letart Falls , OH ; 3 be9room
hOuse, 1 bath, detached
garage, new root, Sldinc.- 2 bedroom . BulavtUe Pike. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
windo ws. carpet, &amp; krtchen, Water &amp; trash paid. No pets. EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
$65 .000.00 (740)247·2000
$350 deposrt: $350 month Townhouse
apartmer11s .
(740)386·1 tOO.
and/or small houses FOR
lower Mason :i!BR. 2BA, 2
Car Garage . Finished base- 2 Small. 2 bedroom hOmes RENT. Call (740)441-111t
ment, Heat pump, call for· rn Mrddleport, krlchen fur· for application &amp; rnformatror
S400.00
plus
appointment (304)773-5338 nrshed .
deposrt. Prck up "rental applt- . Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed Nice House ior sale rn
cations at Dar ry Queen or room apanments at Vrllege
Manor
and
Awersrde
Rutland . mus1 De moved. Vaughn's
grocery
rn
Apartments
rn
Mrddlepon
$12 .000 (740 )367·7886
Mtddleport.
From S295-S444 Call "740rut' MOKIU:: HO~IES 3 bedroom . 2-1 /2 baths , 2 992-5064. Eq ual Housrng
I'OR S •J.E'
car garage Close to Holzer, Opportunrtres .
~
~
$750 month (740)441·0310
New 1 bedroom apt Phone
1996 Redman
Mtrage Immaculate Cabrn/Cottage (740)446-3736 .
14x70, 3 bedroom . 1 ba th . 1 bedroom on 40 acres of ;__ _ _ _ _ _ __
wid like new. other furnrture. woods .
Central
air New Apt One Bedroom lur3 yr old heat pump. all in $400/mon th . (614)595-7773 nrshed, all ut11i1tes Pd 5500
excellent condiliOn . plus 0&lt; (800)798-4666
month. 3 mrles to Hosprtal
covered porch . $15,000 ,
(304)67 4·0031 .
(740)667·3682 or 740·667· '120 MomLE HoMES
Nrce two· bedroom apa rt·
3301
FOR Jili'"T
ments Large rooms Fully
equiped kl1chen Central
87 Granvrlle 14)(65, very
2 bedroom trarler lor rent
neatrng 1 COolrng
clean, CfA. new applrances,
Tuppers Plarns area . porch
.Washer/dryer
hookup
good outburlding Ready to
$300 plus utrlttres &amp; deposrt
1304 )862-2523
move
rnto.
$9.500 (740)667-348 7
(740)386·0460

...........-....

�www.mydailysentlnel.com

Qr · satt RIOJerlne
SA 7 l-4 Bdrrn hOUM, I Buy
bolh, garage, bt.,. Voo pay Antlquea, 1124 East Main
all utilities. River access. on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740$6!50/mo • S650 HC. dep. 992-2528. Russ Moore ,
1121 2nd Avo-1 Bdrm owner.

hOUII, gas ht, AJC, garage,
you pay al1 ufll111oo. $475/mo
• $475180&lt;. dep.
728 Znd A,..·(3J 1 bedroom

For Sale or trade: WWII Nazi
Smm Rifle trade for 1889 lo
1891 Mauser Rifle that
shoot
765x53
rounds.
I \I,:\ I'' 1'1'1 II ...,
,\ 11\l ... llttl,

r~~~
~
"'r'"!d,.....--"'F_ARM
____,

$10.001 TV's lrom 510.001
EQUIPMENT
Police Seized ~ropertyl tor ~.--oi-""liiiiiiiiio_.l
required
on all.
Call
more Into call (800)749· 16 lt. Bison Cattle Trailer.
1740)446-3644 ror appllca·
6107 ex1P509
Good condition . S1 .800.
tiont.
(740)446·2601 .
Twin Rivers Tower Is accePt- 2 Troybilt Tillers. 1 electric
tng applications far waiting start 8 hp, excellent condi- 1968 4020 John Deere tracUst for Hud-subslzad, 1· br, tion, used very little, 5850. 1 tor With turbo $8,500 OBO
apartment , call 875·667 9 Tufty Tiller, excellent condi· 1991 Chevy Cavalier 4cyl
EHO
tlon , used only a few times, standard
$850
OBO
$650. (740 )44 1-8299.
1740)256-6676
Upstairs furnished ap1. 3 :..::.::.:....:......:.:..._:..:..:._ __
rooms &amp; bath. Cteari, no 2002 27'x4' used aprox . 2 2002 John Deere 990 4x4,
pets. Retereoces &amp; deposit dozen time Round pool. 40 Hp. 4Cyt, diesel. 175 hrs,
required. {740)446-1519.
$2,000 or
best offer matching 7 It finish mower.
$12,000 (30.0)773·5103
1740)386·6741

i

Sq.

Footage

for

rent

Appro~~:imately 2800 sq. ft.
Owner may remodel to suit

(30.0)675·4260

(304)675-

~49·7~5--~---------,
~
WAriiiD

r

L.·_ _.;TO:O:ORENT:;;:o.;,_ _.i
Individual wishes to rent
secluded hQuse or farm 1n
the country. Call (606)768·
6700.
Relocating to Gallipolis.
Family .wants to lease nice
home with at least 3 bedrooms with garage, needed
Immediately. Call Jackie
740-707-7999
740-589·
5258.

\ II HI II \'\DI...,I

Craftsman
42~
mower· New Holland 273 Hayliner
Ko t11er 15 HP engine. Priced square bailer, good Condition .
Stored
inside
right . (740)245-9378.
(740)742·2731
For Sale: 4 plots at Ohio
Valley Memorial Gardens, Tractor parts &amp; service, spe+
in
Massey
$350 each. (740)441 -9771 . cializin g
Ferguson , Ford, and
for Sale: Canning jars. 16 Belarus. {740)696-0358
dozen quart-wide mouth and
.standard. 6 dozen pints·
LIIDTOCI\
wide
moulh,
$30.00.
(740)245-912 7
.:.__::..:.:.__ __ _ _
1 1/2 year old white laying
JET
hens for sale. SOc each,
AERATION MOTORS
(7401985-3956
Repaired , New &amp; Aeb01lt In
StoCk. Call Ron Evans. 1- Syr old Black Ouar1er Horse.
600·537-9528
very gentle ride, road sate.
SI .OOO (304)773-5 103
- - -- - -- King Size Bed 5250 00 ,
Kitchen
Table
$250 .00.Kitchen Table &amp; ~ 10
AlTJ"OS
Chairs $250 Couch $50 L,~---H)~R-SALEiiilli
- -,..1
1_3_04_1_67_5_·2_3_49____
Lighted Solid Dark Pine $500 'Honda's , Chevy 's
Hutch/Chir1a Cabinet made Jeep's, etc Police ImpoundS

tO
I
rLw----·--"·
HOUSF1fOU)
~

,

r

..,
1800's Oak Love Seat.
Hoosier Oak kitchen cupboard/side board. Oak pie
safe/table
and
cha1rs.
(7401266·6522.

b'i singer. $2SO
two Solid oak Swivel Bar
Stools $100 for both
IBM Th1nkPad. Wi ndows 95,
DVD Player, Internet hookup
good cond1lion $200
10• Bos s Klash SubWoole
-

Good Used Appliances.
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed
Washers .
Dryers,
Ranges.
and
Relrigerators , Some start at
$9S. Skaggs Appliances , 7s
Yine St. , (7 40)446-7398

{500 Watts) W/Box Plus

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(·740)446-7444 1-8?7-830·
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
·
d
financ1ng. 90 ays same as
cash . Visa/ Master Card.
Drive- a· little save alot

ptnn in lhe !!.udden
death of David A.

Business Card ... $25.00/column inch per month

What would you lose if there was a fire?
~

For a Free Quote or Appointment ·

~

, and Financial Se1rvic:e~, :

J(yma Close,

·

Km11eth Brewer,
Ruby Donnan,
J/arilyn Beall

l!r

_,

BUIIJ)ING
S

L~---·UPPI-·JE'i--_.1

-

All new exterior and in terior
doors, all size.s. Call after
5:00. 50% off. 6153 St. At.
160, 3 miles north of Holzer

(740)446·7398.

11·3 M·F, 24.'x32' Pole Barn
1orrenl.

Block, brick, sewer pi(1es,
windows, lintels, etc. C laude
Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Call 740 _245 •5121 .
.

r.

' I'Jm;

L,---FORiiiii,OS:OAIILE:;;~.·-,.1

39718St. Rt. 143 • PoO"l!H"Oy,"()H 45169'''
Just: ofl' St. Rt. 7 \.·

parts. new !Ires/ wheels .
$1200 (7401245-0485.
1992 Chevy Kodiack . 20 tt
Roll Back Truck. One owner.
real sharp. 3000 Ford Diesel
Tractor. (740)286-6522.

!f

Oil'Q.JI'

2000 ChevY TahOe Z-71
Fu lly loaded. excellent con ditiOn . leather 1ntenor. Call
(7 40) 446-6324 or (740)446·
4167

VANS

&amp;

97 F-150, 4x:. automatic,
AIC , 4.6 liter. · i30K. $6,000
080. (740)379-9125.

SeH-Storage

98 Gran(j Cherokee .. 87,400

33795 H;land Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

I

Moving must sell $3,000 080, (304)773-5737 after
·
060 · 17401446•4241 ·
5pm. oc (304)773·5382
-19_9_7-:P-o-nt-'-lac-:F-:
ire-:b-ir,.-d.-:6-:la--:c, 1999 Yamaha Big Bear 350
wilh T· Tops, 103K miles, pre· 4&gt;4. a&gt;eellanl condilion
mium
sound
system. Asking $2.500 (740)446$4,500/080 great condition 4473 atter 5:00pm.
(304)675-8951
_:_:.~=~=~-2001 Honda Shadow Spirit
1997
Pontiac
Sunlire. motorcycle ,
VT
1100.
Mileage 90.192 . Good con- E~tcellent condition. one
dition $2,500 or trade lor owner, $5 ,000. (740)446Truck with same value. Call 766Bieave message.

740·992·5232

740-985-4159.

R8

,..
1"'\.IVer Way ( af'e

•

TrUCking
Limestone
Sand
Dl' rt
·A L'
•
g 1me
740 _985•3564

•
•

.

~

Daily

~s·x1o·

to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
1114/1 mo. pd

. Big 'Bend Antique
and Furniture
Restoration
Refinish, Repair,

.Restore
Keith Bailey

Specials

CAll-I~ ORD~R~

740 992-1956

W~lCOM~

New Hours ·
Monday 9am· lpm

lues- Fri &amp;am-apm

Corne ~QQ OUt llQW
~Urnrnet rnenu!

H

Residential &amp; Manufactured ousin_g
' Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces

•

Super HI. EffICiency
.
Equtpmen
,
..
Free Estimates
,,,~,,
5 &amp; 10 yr Warr
. anties ._,t ••. ,,;; ~ t!:~ ,.v•
H uge lnventory
-'· ·· · · .1 ~r~.r..,.
•• ' ·~
1

•
•
•
•
• Vanguard Yentle.s s Fireplaces "Ji~!, !",·&gt; '·
..::.PJ. .,..,~,,?£ ·-

...

l.·

TRPPRn
----

GlbSOh
=:.-c- -

lIIMIJLW.

204 Condor Street

Gallipblis , OH WVOI0212

992-2975
Law11 a11d Garde!! Equipmelll is o11r
business, no/ our sideliire

HOME

IMPROVEMENTS
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee . Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. 1740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

ump

on

SAVING$

• F'lt lip marker
•lnsmK·tion and tip shet!t

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

$12

3 Day Ad:
$9.00- 15 words or less

$15

~allipolis DaHr ll:ribunr •jl)o1nt ~lrasant 3Rr~i!ltrr

The

·cakes

by Lora
• Birthdays
• Weddings
• Any special
occasion
Place your order
today
(740) 985·3917

Lora Bing

Advertise
in this
space for

$150per

+$6.00 Kit
Gets You Great
Advertising!
Shop
Classlfleds!

A L....W.=~
THE BORN LOSER

~E.E.E&gt;LE.FE-STEJZ

~ 5\T OF
A_ ::.NOB, IS~ 'T f\t. "?
l:J

"'I

r- !&gt;-. \'&gt;1\

I'" 1-\E- U.)E::,

7

New Homes • Vinyl

WHOLE YEAR'S
WORTH OF WORK!

FULL YEAR
I

.:PEANUTS

Rocky "Ail"

• Replacement

Windows • Roofing

' HUpp

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENT1AL

IMPORTS
Athena

FREE ESTIMATES

740·99H599

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

~L

MARCIE .. I JV5i

GOT ~OME FROM SUMMER
SC~lOOL .. WJ.IAT'VE
'&lt;OU BEEN DO IN' 7

WELL, CHARLES AND I ~AVE SEEN SITTING
I-IERE MOST OF TJ.IE DA¥ JUST WATCIJING TV,
AND .... Cl-lARLE5! I CAN'T EAT POPCORN IF
YOU'RE J.IOLDING MV HAND! PLEASE,C"ARLE5!
•. AND WE ... CllARLES, PLEASE! AND WE ...

month.

BETTY
YOUR RECORD COI.IKiiON IS
YOU- SO Wln-i
'TI-\AT GIZMO YOU CAN ~ISTEt.JTO
IT ANYWH~E AN'ITI~
IMPORT~ TO

1-800-822-0417
· Chevy, Pontiac .
&amp;Custom Van

Buick,

Olds

*SEAMlESS

aunm

*Frea Elthllll*

949-1405

GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garagea, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Oecka,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; Mora
FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742-341

Flea
Market
Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
between Racine
and Syracuse
July 2·3

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions 6

R.moctellng
•NtwG•r••

• El«trtcal 6 Plumbing
• Aootln; I Gutter•
• VInyl Siding &amp; "Pa6ntlng
• Patio and Porch Deck•
We do IIIII exeopl
furnace work

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCDON
• New Homes
• Garages

GRIZZWELLS
':~U\\~~.
·t)') 'tbU

West

North

Pass

2 '-

Pass

2•

Pass

5•

V.C. YOUNG Ill

J40-B92-1m

992·6215

Stop &amp; Compare

740-949-2734

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 VeeTJ L.ocal Ell rllnct

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
All pass

7

Good players think;
top players do more

~KI-¥'W

Henry Oav1d Thoreau wrote. "The Success of great scholars and · thinkers is
commonly a courtter-ltke success. nOt
k1ngly. not manly."
Bndge is rarely played 10 a court or
palace. but the more manly or womanly
thinking about k1ngs and other cards that
you do, the better.
This deal occurred during a team event in
London. England. The only successful
declarer was Tony Forrester, who is considered by most to be that country·s best
player. If you were ·South in five diamo.nds. what would be your basic plan
after West leads a 1rump ?
North's two-heart rebid was fourth-suit
forcing . On the next round , he shOuld
have bid a forcing three diamonds. Out he
was an mexperienced player. (With
game-invitational values , North would
have ra1sed two diamonds imme&lt;:llately to
three diamonds.)
Forrester aimed to lose one spade and
one heart, but his communications were
lenuous. Spotting the best line, he won
tnck one in hand. then ruffed a spade on
the board with the diamond king . (Ruffing
low costs the contract.) Next. South ran
dummy's heart queen to West's king
Wifining the trump return in hand, declarer ruffed a spade wjth duf)'lmy's diamond
ace, played a heart to his 10. drew the
outstanding trump. cashed the spade
ace. and conceded a spade. Since his
hand was high, Forrester claimed .
Others played m five diamonds by North.
When East led a heart, ducked to West's
ki ng. none realized the necessity to
unblock the heart queen Then. every
West accurately shifted to a trump to kill
the contract.

Friday, June 25, 2004
By Bernice Bede Os.ol
The aspects will be helping you deal With
your feelings more honestly in the year
ahead. allow1ng you to reach insi de yourself and lind out what you really want .
Once you do. your Hie will take a turn 101
the better.
CANCER {June 21-July 22)- Those within the household m1ght be a bit crabby
today. 11 you·re smart, you'll yield on minor
points to avoid lock1ng horns with any
mE!mber of the family in order to keep the
peace.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)- Failing to speak
out on something that is bothering ·you
could put you in ·a cranky mood today.
Tactfully clear the air with 1he person
rather than take things out on others.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - Funds that
are earmarked for essential expenses
shOuld not be used lor frivolous purchases
today. If you're prudent, you'll like yourself
a whOle lot better later on in the day.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Keep a cool
head at all limes today. but be especially
careful in work-related situations. Your dig nity and reputation will suffer if you behave
badly around the wrong people
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Normally
you're the person who is more sensitive to
others' troubles than are your cornpanions.
but this may not be !rue today because of
a poor attitude. Don't be hard-hearted with
pals.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . .21) - You
could be wrongfully disappointed in someone you know socially if you expect thiS
person to ma~e business concessions to
you that he or she couldn't do lor anybody.
Be realistic .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - By
mak1ng assumptions involving a joml venture you have with an associate, it could
lead you to take actions that are contrary
lo the goals of the one with w11om you 're
affiliated and consequently cause problem s.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - In prOJ·
eels that require co-wor kers , do not Shirk
your part of the duties or select all the easy
jobs for yourself. Such tactics will invite
rebell1on by your co-Workers.
PISCES (f eb. 20-March 20) - Beware of
tendencies to be ca reless with the
resources or property entrusted to you by
others today. You"ll be held accountable for
damage or errors you make in handling
what's not yours.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Normally.
when you make an arrangement with a
pal , you are prepared to stand by your
prom•se. but today 1f something appears
more m1erest1ng, you"ll try to squirm out of
your comm1tment .
TAURUS fAprit 20-May 20)- Today m1ght
not be very productive for you because
chances .are you'll lind bener reasons to
postpone your chOres than for d01ng them .
11 worn make you look good.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - Be wary ol
taking ·speculative risks today, espec1ally if
you can't afford to lose. All gambles must
be based on logical possibilities for ga1n,
not on WIShful thinking

so

15 tel out
a skirt
17 Entails
19 Like city
real e.state

43 Tablets

20 Bizarre

~

22 Winemaking valley
2• Distress
sig.nal
25 Chatty pets
26 Travels
aimlessly
27 Swalch
of material
29 Orange root
34 Water lily
36 Make
a list of
39 Former
spouses

44 Sheriff

Andy's son
45 " En

47

49
51
52

53

garde"

weapon
Untidy
condition
Very soon
alter
British inc.
Crow's
sound
Speaker's
pauses
Moon's
place

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Luis

Campos

Celebnr( C1pher cryprograms are createo from qootanJils bv lalflOI.Is people j)aSI and preseo1
Eact11etltlr rn the opher stands lor anollle!

Today "s clue R ~ua!s N

"IHS
TS

MN

SPO

TGCOZSMBMZISMTR

BOOKMRD,

IRU

SPO

NLGCOZSMBMZISMTR
NLNIRRO

RISLHO .. "

TB

KIRDOH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Never conluse movemem w11h ac110n."
- Ernest Hemmgway
"Acl10ns lie louder thar.~ wordS." - Carolyn Wells

~~~~:t~~, sccr~J.llv\-~£.!fts·
Edi~ea'

WOlD
GAM I

,ol~l•~•:;.:;;;;;;:,::;:;;;;;:--

by

~eorrangt

0 lour

ll!ltterl of
scrcmb !td words
low ~o form four words.

I

CUPKRE

I

BEFAL

I

_,_:.,..:...;:....:.:.,.----11
M U S U H . •N~.--:
' 1 1
11..-..J.-.L-L-..J._.J
I I
,.

dummy ran 1ntc the paliceThe
station and yellec, "Sene- ·
one stole my carl I couldn 't see
who it was but we're i'n luck. I ·
r - - - - - - - - - , was able to wnte cown the tag
r-

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.

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chock!• c,,,.d

by iJII,n g •n the moH.nQ ... ,rd1
L....L-.l.......l.-..1....-l-..J yo~.; deve :op irom ~·ep No. J below

e

_

.

L!TlEIS IN

PQINl NUMB!IED

lHESE SQUAiES

UNSCiAMBLE ABOVE Lfl!EiS
10 GET ANSWEI

SCRAM·L£TS ANSWERS 6 -1l· a,

Throat. Stoke- Musty- Verbal· BEAT THEM
"I've always thought my k1ds would 1nherit my.
business " the ma n sighed to his lriend .. "New 1t
seems th~t the government has BEAT THEM to it1"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
OK LfAVt.iHO OL'DAD! H~
5TILL HA~ A F~W

TRICK~

UP HIS ~EkW

!

I

WOULD '(0\J C.UY!&gt;
LIKP !?~JACK~

OP&lt;,CH &lt;..D;?ef\

WI--lOS

ReaDY ~R MOF\.e RS:.X:Io:.Y
FbaD Of\! THeiR CPRN fU!i'reS f

\IMA\

~RCA'/M

: \??

G'

Orchard

SOUP TO NUTZ

·Complete
Rem?deling

Spaces available
$5.00

kl~er ~

produce
hurt-Cloves and
13 Dlsaertotion
ginger
15 Sponge up 5-4 Eats less
16 Gourmet
55 Ar1tansas
delicacies
range
18 Existed
56 Parakeet
19 Hippo' s
treats
home
57 Like some
21 Tunnel
letters
blaster
DOWN
22 Cat or vase
23 Holiday
lead-ins
1 Wine
25 Bride's new
container
2 Hearth
!Hie
28 Restless
residue
30 lncan
3 Luau
treasure
instrument
4 Pupil's
.31 Not hither
32 Part of mph
chores
5 One of a pair
33 Every one
6 Captures
35 Red 5e8'
7 Maybes
peninsula
37 Lemon
8 Show
pleasure
cooler
9 Jealous
38 Change
address
goddess
I 0 TypewrHer
40 Fill a ~ipe
41 Cowboy
keys
nickname ·14 More than
42 Feminine
fill

....... &lt;illrlhcloiY:
THIS IS

See

eetlmg
~ History
6 After sunset
warehouse

AstroGraph

TFN

I Sieling• New Gantgesl

BOHLE.t:&gt; r-J~TE:R. 10""'

~PRINKLE. r\\S L"-.WN I

BUILDERS InC.

MAINTENANCE

"lin It I"

~

Morning Star Road· C.Rd 30 • Racine,

*HOME

MUST SALEII!I1997 Jay co.
Popup camper, $3 1000 or
best offer. Call Jacque at
(740)388-9083.

Ir

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

WRITESEl

1989 Citation Camper, 23
toot, .sleeps 5-6. Good condition . (740)256·1238.

1

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

Creative

I

Meigs County's .Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery. fruit, ornamental. trees,
roses, r.hododendrons, and azaleas.

----.----...---.

THIS STUFF

DOWN!!

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0 n Mon·Fri 9·5 Sat. 9·12

HOWARDL.

1974 Winnebago Brave,
$2,300 . 1740)368-8473.

Pomeroy; Ohio

HOPE YOU BOYS ARE

~

?!

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1i WRITIN'

Open 7 days a weeki

*R80RNB

• HJK pricing la~b

JEST 'CUZ A FELLER'S
OLD DON'T MEAN
HE'S WISE !!

II

446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

It's Garage Sale Time!

• 2 ~urdy Garage/Yard Snit ~ign.~.
261 19 1n~hc~. 2 woo.len ~take~ ·

.BARNEY

GRAVELYTRACTOR

Out With The·Old

10

.

,

Snapper

Sail sun 7lm-4pm

.
HEATING f/ COOUNG

·I

BoA'IliroR&amp;S~~RS
.

for

BENNETT'S

acmg I e.
IS is a very
2003 Mon1e Carlo. 33.000 lasl bike . Asking $1.995 .
miles, $14.000 (304)675· Also have all new gear3613
orange &amp; black ''Tho(' (hel-·
B -----d met, boats, pents, Jersey,
91
on neville, runs ~ooo, chesl prolectoc, goggles.
looks good, $800 08 , gloves, nee~ roll , kidney
17401992·345 7
bah) $275 firm The gear has
91 Ford Tempo Topaz, runs been worn for les!l than 2
good , good · fire , bodies hours. For morelnlormetlon
good, 4 ely, good gae call (740)386·9994.
~

SAT~Lt,lfe P.~CONNAISSANC~ 6
P~OTO ANALYSIS I&gt;IVIfiON ~.

273-5321

Gravely

7 40-949-2217

740-992·2507
Call

Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio
45771

L:==:::;:;;;~~~~;:;;;;;:;::::~
r
'I

2000 Stratus 42K , $4,295 :
1996 Achieva 20 5 speed
94K, $2,195; 1989 Camry
LE 136K, $1 ,495; 20 in
slack. COOK MOTORS
(740)446-0103.
2R003 KTBMk50Tchc sx Pro Sr

r

29670

Syracuse, OH

•

HAU LING :

2002 Honda Shadow A.C. E
750cc, 3600 miles. Adult ridden.
$5,000.00
which
includes
51.500.00/
eKtras's. {740)949-113 1

ssso,

(~04)

30Yrs.Exp. •lns.Owner:RonnleJones

Vulnerable: Easi-West

:FRANK &amp; EARN.EST .

OF WISDOM

~~~
'High 8l Dry

"'Q 92

I.22..

FER US
TODAY

Looking for a
non profit
organization to .
work one day of
admission gates
at the 2004
Meigs County
Fair. Please Call

A J 10

Dealer: East

MORNIN', GRAMPY
ANY WORDS
.

Hill's Self
Storage

8 3 2

Opening lead: •

Or. Kelly K. Jones

~~=====F=r=e=e~~=::::=====~

J 6 • 2

•

Soutb

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

4-\VDs

miles (304)675-5375

Let me de· 1\ for youl

•

+

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Take the PAIN
Center
out of PAINTING!

Tree Service

K 9 8 5
9 7

I

"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Shop"

JONES'

A K 6 5

W A 10 7
• Q J 10 4

Toll Free: (866) 254·1559

H••m: MottJ.:~y- S#nmlat 1-6

Q 3

•

South
. A98753

Free Estimates

EdrlJ• prqar.11ion 4tr4ngtrfltnll aWJila61e.
R.Afl'tt Sr., Owtln

Owner ~tusr Sl'll!!
2002 Chevy Silverado LS
Z71·. Fully loaded, excellent
condition. 37.700 miles,
$23,000 (304)675-3127 or
(740)441·2748

~30

lll'-~ e&lt;"JlJlo.inlment
•wl&gt;t&lt;~fl' C:r

•

•

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304·675-2457

Specializing In Poured Concrete
Foundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls

Phone: 1-740-992-9922
1-866-410·0555

•

•

+

Cll l'llutell WaUs

1970 Ford F350, 1Ott. Grain

1 996 Jeep Grand Cherokee
1972 Ford/LTD, 429/eng 1ne. 129.000 m11es. very depend31 .OOO ong 1nal m 1tes . 4dr. able . runs great $4.500.
new AJC . good tires &amp; (740)245·9851
sno w/tires. very good cond18 k J
wranger
1
t1on,
1/owner
52 000 1997 lac
eep
(304)675 _3502
Sport 6cyl
auto. hard·
~.:.:..~.:.:..::____ toplbik1n1-IOp. good condi1990 Buick Lesabre, 4-Door. lion, many extras . Asking
1 owner. 111 ,000 ri"lileage 56.000. (740)367·0244 .
call (304)675·6894 May
leave message (Voice· Mall) 81 Jeep CJ7 , 350 4sp. Hard
&amp; Soft Top. needs work
1990 Cad1ll ac, runs _
good, $2,800. alter 5pm (304)576(304)675-7271
2458

washer &amp; electric dryer, A.D.B.A Registered Pit Bull
$250
Call
good condition, $300. Call puppies,
(740)245.0135
(7_4_01_44_1_·9_1_6_2._ _ _ _
AKC Pekingese puppies lor
sale. 3 male, 2 female. Call
7 40 99 2 02 87
:.&lt;_ :.:.).:.:.._·_ _ _ ·_ _ _ _
Old oolld oak office deak Full blooded Sl. Bernard,
w11n lift up 1ype wrller well ,
vary trlendly. s yeara old. mileage,
asking
(740)992·7751
$150. (740)258·1852.
(740)~43·1168

8711-2487

FOR S"LE

06-24-IW

+K87654 3
West
East
• K Q 10 4
• J 6 2

Statelfllle

bed. low miles. many new

hospllal. Ph: (740)645-6157. (740)446·3623

Used Furniture S1ore 130
Bulaville Pike. Dressers,
couches, manresses, reclin·
ers. grave monuments, 2000
Ponloon boat. (740)446·
4762 Gallipolis, OH HAS .

Nortb

MONTY

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

poet

1 Arc!*

11 Out of

•

Henderson, WV

TitUCI\S

Will

-O~B;O;;.,~17,;;40;:)6::;9;;;8:.;·2;;6;::0;:.9_

Box 189 • Middleport

740-843-5264

Pole. Barn 30x50x10 only 1993 Chevy S-10 Blazer, 4 ~40
MUIYJKCYCL~
$5,295, includes painted WD, Fully Loaded, Tow Pkg .
'
~
Good Condition. Asking
metal. plans how to build
.
$2.300. can after 5pm
book. Flider I ree de11very.
(740)446 -2398.
1980
Honda
CM480E;
(937)559·6341 .
Suzuki JA 50. like new Call
1993 Honda Del-Sol , hard (740)245-5 124 after 6pm.
wringer washers.
do Queen &amp; King size bedding top convertible, CD player,
repairs ori major. brands in set, Large A\Jgs &amp; House PW. cruise, 5-speed. 17" 1989 Honda Shadow 650, .
shop ot al your hOme.
hold ttems(304)675-2601
wheels . 130,000 miles . Runs &amp; looks good. $1,100

$125; lable &amp; 4 chairs. $75:
lamps $10 each; pictures
starting at $7; Kenmore
washer/dryer sat, $300;
Crosley refrigerator, like
new, $175; chest-of-drawers, $40.
·
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vine Street

6:30
Last Thursday of
e.very month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5FREE

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Harold Brewer,

Thomp!5ons Appliance &amp;
Aep ..·r-675-738 6 . For sale.
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerato rs, gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners, and

Twin bed, $75; twin mat· wooden baby crib &amp; match·
tresses. $25 each; Ful1 size ing chang1ng 1able wlmalbed, $150; lull size bed. 1ress &amp; all accessories. $200

'

ending
43 "The Bello"

12 Wouldn't

MYERS PAVING

Early birds start

Call: ·

Cars
irom $500. e~l
For3901
l1st1ngs
1-800-749-8104

SOOW/Amp (Lightning Boll)
$150 (304)882-2494
_ _::_::____ _ _
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angl,,
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 1992 Chevrolet Camara. V6.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; automatic, 95,000 mil es.
Good
Condition. • tilt ,
Friday, Bam-4:30pm ..Closed,
Thursda",
Saturda'-'
&amp; AMIFM/Cassette , $2.200
'
'
(740)446-4237
Sunday. (740)446-7300

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

•we can insure your valuables!+

Community Cli1b.

r

Eagles
BINGO 2171

IF YOU RENT

ltrten,jlnwers &amp;
food. A special
thanks to.Rev. Han,
Leland Close and
Long Bottom

$250·$300/mo. Sec. dep.

SPACE
FOR RINT

To place an -ad Call 992-2156

Phillip
Alder

Brewer, with cards,

ltlect.

studio apts. you pay

ACROSS

The brothers and
sisters wish to lhank
all of those who
helped to ease our

Pom•roy

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Business Services

Card of Thanks

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com .

Thursday, June 24, 2004
ALLEYOOP

Thursday, June 24, 2004

•

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June

www .mydailysentinel.com

Broussard slams ChiSox in eighth
CHICAGO (AP) - Ben Brnu"ard
waiteil so long for his second homer of
the season. a solo shot in ;t lop,itkd
game would have been OK with him.
Brou ssard hit a pinch·llit grand ,Jam in
the eighth inning and Ronnie Bclliard
homered in his third straight game t&lt;l
lead the CleYeland Indian' O\er the
Chicago White Sox ·9-5 \\'cdne,da!
ni ght.
"I knew everybody '"" bdtind me"'
it was just one of those thing' where I
knew I would get another hnme run une
of these davs ..."Brou"ard ,aiJ. "l'rn ju't
glad the monkey i' otlm) bad, no" ·..
Casey Blake and Lou Mcrhmi al'o hit
. home run' for the Indian'. \\ho ha\1,.
won 13 of 20 to pull mo came, behind
the White Sox for ,c,·ond pbce in the AL
Central.
·
Paul Konerko homered '" ia anJ
Aaron Rowand abo hit one for Chid~"·
which has lost ,ix ,,f eight
Cliff Lee. who i' cun~ntl! appealing"
six-game suspen,ion fur thfl"' ing
behind Ken Griffev Jr.' ' head on June
13, pitched ,;x solid innin~' · 'Lee t7-l 1.
gave up three runs and live hn'. He
struck out si.x and walked three.
"Cliff was good. Early on he thre\\ a
lot of fastballs and he started mixing 111
his changeup and his breaking ball. He
had a pretty good breaking ball t11night.
he was able to command it." Indian'
manager Eric Wedge said.
Whtte Sox starter Mark Buehrle ~ot
his first loss since April cO against ihe

New Yor~ Yankee,. a span of 12 stans.
Bvehrle g&lt;L\C LIP three 'traight 'ingles
to Victor ~laninct. Ca'n Blake. and
Travi' Hafner to 'tart the· eighth. Mike
Jacl"on reliewd. and on hi' lir't pit.: h.
gmc up the lwmcr to Brou,sard. who
"a' hitting ft'r !\krloni . h was
Brou,;an.J', "n,_·t career ,Jam and first
pttli:ll-hit hnmer. ma,ing it 9-4
Ck,ebnd.
"It '"" bt~ fm u,. it
bi~ for Ben .
He wl·nt up-there ready to hit ... Wedge
,aid. "W~ \\anted him to be more ac~re'·
,;,e. mnre a"ertive and stroncer"with
h" '" ing ami uti lite the power that he
h,h...
Ruchrlc (7 -~) pitched scYcn-plus
IIHUng,. gi,·ing up I0 hih and tied hi,
,ca"&gt;n high b! giving up eight ru1h he al"' ga,·e up eight in hi' lo" to New
Yu r". In hi, la't 'tan. Buehrle allowed
-e\cn ruth acain't ~luntreal but did not
~eta deci,ioll.
- Buehrle dnt·,n·t pl&lt;tn ,, pit~hing in the
...\11-Star canw tn Julv.
.. , tigurc I had to h;tw a couple of good
one' (starh). And the w&lt;ty I went out
there toda) if the! a'ked me to go I'd
aim&lt;''' turn around and sav no. I don.,
LbcrYe to ~o. I haven·t thrown the ball
the way I ,fiould ha,·e." Buehrle said.
Chica~o trailed 5-3 in the seventh
inning a'nd nearly tied it against Indians
relie"er Rafeal Betancourt.
With tw o outs. Frank Thomas reached
on a two-base error when left fielder
'-1att Lawton dropped Thomas' tly on the

'"h

track. Lawton knocked into
center i'ielder Coco Crisp, whq was also
in po,ition to catch the baiL
Carlos Lee followed with an RBI-single off the left-tield fence. Lee went into
l1i' home run trot and music began playing but he was tagged out at second.
··That's one of my 'rules, I want them to
run the bases hut everybody thought the
'"'Y he hit the ball the way the ball was
. .:arrying. c\'erybody thought it was a
home run. inc luding myself." White Sox
mana2er Ouie·Guillen said.
BeiTiard homered in hi~ third straight
game otT Buehrle in the third inning for
his fourth homer of the s.eason. It's the
tirst time in his career that he has homered in three cot.lsecuti ve games.
Buehrle walked Martinez leading off
the fourth inning and he scored on
Hafner's RBI single to give the Indians a
2-1 lead.
Belliard led off the fifth with a groundrule double to ce nter and scored on
Lawton 's broken bat si ngle.
Trailing 3- 1 in the fifth, Rowand hit an
opposite-tield solo home run to right for
Chicago...
·
The lndtans came back and scored two
more in the sixth. Casey Blake homered
leading off and one out later, Merloni
homered to left, giving the Indians a 5-2
· lead.
Konerko led off the sixth with his 16th
homer of the season off Lee . He also led .
of( the eighth with a homer off
Betancourt .

pht) ed for the Buckeyes. Salye rs was the
R'"''"·ic; babysitter and hou sekeeper.
13i;mcan.li has denied· the allegations
that he knew of the anangemenh to help
Sa1·m·ic. a membe'r of the Buckeyes'
199~-99 Fi nal Four team.
Salyers' lawsu it contributed to head
n&gt;a0h Jim O'Brien's firing and an NCAA
in,·esti gation of the basketball program.
Ohio Stale fired 0' Brien on June R after
he admitted giving a recruit $6.000 in
1999.
Sicrawski. wlw .said he '"" speaki ng
ahmll the lawsuit because his name has
heen mentioned in cout1 filin2s, said he
met Savovic at the airport whe"n the player arriH:.. U for a recruiting visit· on May 3. ·
199X. Sicrawski said he watHed to help
Sawl\'ic because of their ., hared Serbian
hcriwge.

TURNPI

Rauch stays,
\Vhite Sox win, Bt

warnin~

Man says he also helped Savovic
COLUMBUS lAP)- Another person
has come forward saying he helpeJ former Ohio State basketba ll player Bohan
Savovic with living expenses and that
then-a"istant coach Paul Biancardi knc"
about it.
Michael Sierawski, 51. to ld The
Columbus Dt spatc h for a stor;
Wednesday that Biancardi "knew that
Boban was being supported by 'umebody
at all times."
Biancardi's name sUtfaced in a deplbi·
ti on taken in a civil lawsuit Kathleen
Salyers filed last August see king
$510.000 in expe nses and damages lhm1
two Ohio State boosters.
Salyers contends Dan and Kim
Roslovic reneged on an agr~~ment to pay
her $1.000 a month plu' npen'e' in
exchanoe
for carino
wh ile
c
,c for Savo1·ic
'
. he

24, 2004

Sierawski said he took Savovic to a dinner at St. Stevan Serbian Orthodox
Church that Biancardi also attended.
.. I told Paul if there is anything I can do,
let me know:· Sierawski said. Biancardi
took Sierawski up on his offer, he said .
Sicrawski said he arranged for Savovic
to live with the Roslovics for that summer
and wrote a $500 check to Dan Roslovic.
When Ohio State's compliance ·oflice
learned of the check, they made Savovic
pay the money back, Sierawski said.
Sierawski believes that with Salyers'
frequent visits to campus. 0' Brien would
have known Savovic was receiving outside support.
"Kathy would take Boban to practice in
curlers. I think everybody on the team
wou ld see her drop him off at practices,"
Sierawski said.

~~DRAFTB

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o l I \ IS • \ ol. ;;~. '\o. :!09

SPORTS
• Sunny day for Reds. See.
Page 81
·

2002 SUZUKI XL7

Auto, V6

l.oaded

'"'" ·""''""' " '" 111 ,..1 .• "'"

·Commissioners seeking $435K in CDBG funds
BY BRIAN

J. REED

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioners will
$435.000
111
seek
Community Development
Block Grant fund &gt; from the
Ohio
Department
of
. Development next month.
including
SJOO.OOIJ
in
CDBG commu nity di\lre;s
funding for the Village of
Middleport. ·
At Thursday's regular
meeting of Meigs County
Commissioners. . County
Grants Administra1or Jean
Tntssell conducted a second
public hearing Thursday on
the county'' application for

2004 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE
#50450

I· Rill\), ,Jl ' !\11 ·. :!.). :!1104

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Loaded

4x4, V6, auto
t5027t

$ 153.000 in CDBG formula tion of the Middlepon
funds for various wunty pro- . Freight Sl&lt;!tion in Daw Dile,
jects and the coumy \ scnmd Park .· cmd S57.lJ00 for the
applica tion for a vi ll age· demolition of fi1e ahanwide improvement program doncd &lt;~nd co'nde1imcd hou'in Middleport.
An earlier llppl tc:.ttion tiled
Additiunal fundin g for
&lt;ln Middleport\ behalf wa, \1iddlcport\ sl twt paving
nut
approwd .
The project wi l·l come from the
Community Distress pru- Ohio
Public
W&lt;&gt;rks
. gram is a competi ti\'C ,Commiss1o1, Issue II prnstatewide grant program pro- i!ram.
Yidino0 fundinoC' for a varit't\'• .__. Commi..,~iunCrs
have
of projects under one appli- appr&lt;&gt;wd $20.000 from their
cation. Middleport will 'eek CDBG formula allocation
$47.700 towards a S226.~00 toward the demolition wo rk
street pJving progr&lt;-~m. to ~cn·t' as a match for the
$78.500 for the repl&lt;tcement Commun it y Oistres&gt; appliof curbs and sidewalk&gt;. cation. Other projec·t, to be
$12.700 for fire equipnlent. fu nded throu2h the formula
$83.500 for mterior· renova- program thi s year are:

• S20.000 for ball field and
park de' elopment at the
Ha rri,onYille School lot in
Sc ipio Township:
• $20.000 for pa1·ing 111
Letart Township:
· ~ 19.500 for paving 111
Col umbia Town.,hip:
• $18.000 fur interior renovat ion s or the mill in Star
Mil! Park in Racine:
• $22.300 for fire eq uipment for the Rutland Fire
Department.
The liN puhlic hea rin~ on
the form ula alloc;nion application was held in March.
Applications for both the
Cu1J1111~1nity Distress gram
and the annual formu la allocation are due on July 16.

J.

alleged kidnapper 's bond
was redu ced to a $10,000
ow n rec og nizance bond.
POMEROY - A man Ball said a cond ition of this
accused of kidnapping his agreement
was
that
forme r girlfriend had hi s Fitzgera ld have no contact
bond red uce d in June .
wi th the alleged vict im.
Shawn Fi tzgerald. 26. of
In
April.
Fitzgerald
Coolville was indicted last
allegedly broke into the
month in Meig s ·County
Co urt of Common Plea' for home ot Chester resident
Hul se's. where
kidnapping.
felo niou s Steven
Mayle wa' staying at the
as~ault. agg ravated burtime
. Fitzgera ld threatened
g]arv. and intimidatilH1 of
!he ·alleged crime victim. Hulse with a baseball bat,
according to Meigs County
Kimherlee Mayle.
reports. According
Sheriff's
He was being held in the
to
the
sheriff's
report, Hul se
Gallia Count y Jai l 1vith a
bond 'et at $200,000, w1th said Fi tzgerald hit him in
I0 percent paid before he the head with a baseball bat.
During the encounter,
would
be
re leased.
Fitzgerald
allegedly doused
According to court doc uments, upbn the agreement Mayle with lamp oil before
o f both the Meigs County allegedly kidnapping her. At
Prosecutor's office and the arraignment, Mayle said
Fitzgerald's attorney, Claire Fitzgerald threate ned to set
Ball Jr., of Athens, the her on fire if she resiste d.
BY

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYOA ILYSE NTIN El .COM

OBITUARIES

2004 FORD ESCAPE
Save a lot of cash

11so31o

Page AS
• Will iam Hart, 91
• Ethel Orr, 99

8 to t•hoost• 6't•o•n

.Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6·4·9
Pick 4 day: 0·8·4·8 ·
Pick 3 night: 6·3·3
Pick 4 night: 6·3·1· 7
Buckeye 5: 18-23-26-27·30

West Virginia

2004 CHEVROLET 1500

Dally 3: 6·7·8
Dally 4: 1-1·1 ·2
Cash 25: 6·7·8·17·20·23

Meigs Local improves
on proficiency tests

SC 4X4
#50310

WEAmER

BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYD.41LYSENTINEL.COM

While the sun may be fun for some people like Daniel Miller (be low ). London Pool lifeguard
Emily Hill is busy at work. (J. Miles Layton)

POMEROY Wh ile
proficiency test score; are
improvin g for st udent s in
the Meigs Local Schon !
District, the di , trict is still
below the state average in
man y s ubje ct

s7,995

tE03051

Saturday, June 26th, 2004
, Turnpike of Gallipolis
is hosting Commitment to Kids, a free Child Safety
event. Parents will receive a complimentary Digital
ID kit . Children's photos will be taken free of charge.
Come on in and bring the kids. Just to be safe.

June 26, 2004

INDEX
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith •Values

Diesel

10:00 a.m. • 3:00 p .m.

2003-20114 school year for
Chad Griffith, library media
specialist. Nancy Morrisey.
TUPPERS PLAINS elementary guidance counThe Eastern Local Board of &gt;,elor. and Sheryl Roush, high
Education approved supple- school guidance counselor.
mental contracts and hired
The board accepted the
personnd for the upcomi ng re~ignalions of Jenn ifer
school year during its Roush as talented and gi(ted
Wednesday meeting.
teac her. ami Judith Camden .
The foll owing supplemental hi gh school math teacher,
contracts for the 2004-2005 and hired Juli e Spaun as
school year were approved: Cris kindergarten teacher for the
Kuhn. high school band director 2004-2005 school year.
and choir/handbell choir direc- pending certificati on.
tor; Pat Newland, head varsity
The board approved a
football
coach;
Howie three-year contract with Rick
Caldwell, varsity volleyball ;md tdward;. who wi ll 'erve as
varsity boys basketball coach.
the district's superintendent
Twenty-day extended con- beginning on August I.
The board also:
tracts were .approved for the
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SECDONS -

\(td·

Eastern Board approves contracts

Details on Page A6

lJ\!\flORD EXPLORER

Gmmitment to

12 PAGES

A2

Movies

As

NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports

B6

Weather

As
B1
A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

195 Upper River Road.
Gallipolis. Ohio

• Accepted a bid from
We,am Cothlruction Co ..
Pomeroy. for the replacement
of the roof on the Tuppers
Plains Elementary building.
• Approved the disposal of
band instruments of ·no
\'Uluc to the district. and
accepted bid' for su rplu s
items for 'ale .
• Approved adverti;ing for
quote' for tires. tubes. petroleum products. diesel fuel.
fuel oil, bakery produ cts and
dairy produ cts for the 2004200.'\ school year.
• Approved James Russell
and Aaron Roush as open
enrollment students .

Please see Board, AS

becam.e there are several

after school programs that
attempt to help stude nts
who fall behind academically. He cited the read in g
al:ademv for kindenwrten
through. second grade or
"1pp!cmental prognum that
offer ind iYidual teacher

The Pediatric patients and staff at Holzer Medical Center would
like to thank the May sponsors of the Earl Neff Pediatric Fund:

.. "

fi

LINCOLN
'.

'

'.

740-446-9800
1-800-272-5179
•

Farmer's Bank

HOURS:

Gallipolis Branch

Mon- Fri 9·7; Sat. 9-5

740-446-9800

1-800-272-5179

www.turnpikeflm.com

Faye Coughenour, Trenton Tackett and
Lisa
our
Director

·.

..

area~.

Even though the test
result.s are only preliminary
and cou ld be subjc·ct to
change. grades fo ur. sixth
and nine made noticeable
gai n., in each of the subject
:m~as of math. sc ience. reading. writing anJ citizenship.
"We didn't impro ve as
much a; we wanted to. but
we still went up acros' the
board:· said Meigs Local
Superintendent
Bill
Buckley.
The reaso n the district has
im proved. Buckley said. is

French City Child Care
'

Comm issioners reviewed a
request fill' the transfer of a
carryou t liquor li cense fro m
Charlene
R..
Doczi.
Lm~&gt;· vi lle. doing 'b usine ss
a, Pick and ShoveL to
Jack lyn B. Be ckner, and
appro,·ed a request from the
count) exten;ion office for
the agency's third an·d final
appropriation for the year. in
the amount of $30.000.
Present
were
Cornmi»ioners Jim Sheets
and_ Mid Dave nport and
Clerk G loria Kloes.

London Pool a popular spot Alleged kidnapper

LOtTERIES

Turnplko of Galllp91i1

Other business

released on bond

Mavs to·
send
Jamison
to Wizards
DALLAS (AP J - The
Dallas Maverick&gt; agreed
Wednesday night to trade
Antawn Jamison to the
Washington WiLards for the
No. 5 pick in the draft, Jerry
Stackhouse and . Christian
Laettner, a source dose to the
deal told The Associated Pre"
on condition of anonymity.
The trade can' t be official
until the NBA offices open
Thursday. By then. Dallas may
be working toward other deab
in its pursuit of Shaquille
o·Neal.
While O'Nea l remains the
center of the Maverick s·
dreams, the hi gh pick also
gives them the chance to take
7-foot-5 Pavel Podkolzine. a
19-year-old Russian.
Podkolzine or the pick also
could be part of the package the
Mavericks wou ld offer the Los
Angeles Lukers for O' Neal.
Dallas did not previously
have a first -round pick in
Thursday night's draft , having
· traded it last summerto Boston
in the deal for Antoine Walker.
The Wizards had made it
clear thev wercn 't enamored
with any of their choices at th~
top ol the drall. Taking
Jamison. a proven scorer uver
his six-year career in DallcLS
and Golden State, is a much
safer move, even if he is owed
nearly $58 million over the
next four years.
For the Mavericks, all moves
for the immediate future will be
viewed as positioning for a
prospective trade for O'Neal.
Other
than .
the
pick!Podkolzine aspect, the
benefit of getting Laellner i;
that he's going into the last year
of his contract. like Walker.
That makes them commoditie'
because U1eir salaries - a wmbined $20.8 millior: - would
open huge cap room ne~t 'ummer.
Their combined salaric; put.'
Dallas much clo&gt;,er to the $23.5
million needed to get within the
league-mandated 15 percent or
O'Neal's $27.7 million prke
tag.

Howard, not Okafor,
No.1 pick, Bt

Debbie Fisher. Assistant Branch Maha(Jer
Shelia Wood . Branch M:.n:.,,,.,

&lt;Jitentio n to help student s
who may need as ststance.
Compared with las t year,
the percentage of Meigs
Local students who passed
the fourth grade proticiency
test went up in math and
reading. wen t "down in science and writing. and stayed
about the same in citize nshi p. The mo't notable
gai ns were in math which
went frum 35.3 percent of
student ., wl10 passed the test
in 2002-2003 to 43 percent
\\ ho made the grade in
200_1-~004. according to the
Ohio
Department
of
Education (ODE). The
number of students who
pas;ed the read in ~ .portion
of the test also nnproved
from 4 1.9 percent to 49.1
percent in the 2003-2004
itcademic year. ·
"Just bec;mse you move
up doesn't mean you are out
of the fire:· said Buckley.
Students who passed the
proficiency test in science
sl ipped about a percentage
pnint from 37.2 percent in
~002-0J to J6 percent last

Please see Tests, A5

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