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~her turns up

Tennessee unveils
'driving cerl iiicates' for
illegal immigrants, As

thoUsands of Ohio .
ghost towns, Bt
u

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.

-

J

'

.

'

~ . SPORTS

Mappin·g system tracks public

• Carpenter hammers
Reds. See Pa51e 81

J.

Initiative, health department · County Health' Department,
workers can link informa- said hi s department is now
tion to maps, enabling them using the GIS program to
· POMEROY - A oew to see relationships and track causes of death in the
mapping · system now in trends that may not be county. ,A (,]IS-created -tnap
place in Gallia, Meigs and apparent by looking at sta- shows deaths by township
nine other southeastern Ohio tisti.cs alone.
aild their causes, in hopes
counties will help public
Reviewing spreadsheets l•1cai health officials and the
, health officials plan for flu documenting countywide Ohio Department Of Health
vaccines, track food vendor rabies incidents is not the might detect patterns.
inspections, and plot out- same as seeing a map that .
"We're comparing where
breaks of infectious dis- shows the known locations/ deaths are caused by heart
eases. ·
of rabid animals; for exam- disease and cancer, which
Nurses, sanitarians, public pie. A county health depart- allows us to see if a link can
health equ~ators, epidemiol- ment might be able to better be made to causes of death·
ogists and counter-bioterror- plan a mosquito-fogging ·in the community," Gorscak
ism staff members at local -· route 'by using a 111ap that said.
health departments are using shows the placement and
Other maps show Meigs
·Geographic
Information results of mosquito traps and County's population by race,
System technology to ana- where citizens .have filed based on 2000 census data,
lyze data and plan public mosquito nuisance reports.
and potential locations for
health' st~ategies.
·
Frank Gorscak, J)irector . remote immunization clinUnder the Southeast Ohio. of
Public ' Health
Please see Issues, AS
Heal!~
Department GIS lnfra&gt;tructure at the Meigs
BY BRIAN

hea~th

issues

REED

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

..

Frank Gorscak of the Meigs County Health Department demon. strates the capabilities of the department's new Geographic
Information System, used to track public health data and plan
public health services. (Brian J. Reed)

Credit Xpress relocates
OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Thomas Bowers, 69
• Danny Shain, 60
.• Doyle W. Knapp, 61

··W'I'l'ERIES

A

cutting ceremony marking the new location of Credit Xpress at .
518 East Main Street'in Pomeroy was held Friday. For the pasttv.Q years
the business has been located ctovvntown near Farmers Bank. The rew
location next to Dollar General offers greater space, ample parking, and
easy access to customers. Refreshments were served and prizes were
awarded durtng the day. Participatiug'in the rtbbon cutting were, from the
left, Jenny Smith, director of Meigs Chamber of Commerce; John Musser,

Ohio ·
Pick 3 .day: 2-8-8
Pick 4 day: 7·1-3-9
Pick 3 night: 7-5-2
Pick 4 night: 4-7-6-1 .
, Buckeye 5: 2-3-19-29-36

Pomeroy mayor; Paul Reed, president of Credit )(press. Trtsch .
Schoonover, mam~er; Stacy Cook, associate; Paul Kloes and .ferman
Moore directors; Carmel Sisson, Dollar General maf1C€er; and D&lt;M!
Hanis, Meigs Chamber of Commerce board membei. (J Miles Layton)

WestV~
Dally 3: 6-2-0
Dally 4: 8-7-9-4
Cash 25: 4-13-17-19-20.-23
'

't

'II

•

•

•

Vera Crow and Susie Knight, a 37-year employee of Craw's Family Restaurant in Pomeroy,
share a laugh with some loyal customers on the last day of the restaurant's operation on
Monday. The restaurant will be demolished soon to create a parking lot for the Crow fami·
ly's new KFC and Long John Silvers restaurant. (Brian J. Reed)

WEATIIER

'Goodbye' to Crows ,
J.

There were hugs, tears and
reminiscenses among faith ful customers and loyal
POMEROY- Lunch and employees Monday, as dindinnertime staples like the ers streamed into the restau, Tom Boy, Danny Boy and rant for one final meal ·- with
Katydid are now things of their friends and family at
the past with Monday· Craw's. The Pomeroy insti evening's closing of Crow' s tution, opened in 1957, will
(
Family Restaur.ant.
be demolished soon to make
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED®MYQAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on P-ce A8

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

-

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4.

Comics

Bs

DE!ar Abby

A3

Editorials""

A4

.
.
Obituaries

As

Spory:s

Bt

Weather

A6

way for parking for the
Crow family 's new enterprise, a combined KFC aqd
Long John Silyers restaurant
now under construction next
door.
Vera Crow of Pomeroy
and Bob and Katie Crow of
.
.
Please see Crows, AS

'

Warner elected Lindner named
to oseA "Board ·Eastern principal
. .

STAFF REPORt'

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

John Anderson. Pomeroy village administrator. points to the
new Pomeroy water treatment plant being built in Syracuse.
The plant, estimated to cost $2 million , will be finished in late
October or November and soften water for more than 3,000
customers who use Pomeroy water. (J. Miles Layton)

Water treatment plant
bubbles over with expe~tation

POMEROY -Attorney Linda R.
TUPPERS' PLAINS - Jon Lindner has
Warner of Pomeroy has 'be'en elected to
serve a three-year term as District 17 ' ·been hired as the .new principal at Eastern
BY J. MILES LAYTON
Representative on the Board of High School, following action by the Eastern JLAYTON®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Governors of the Ohio State Bar Local Board of Education on Thursday.
Association. •
Lindner is a math teacher at Vinton County
POMEROY - While the
District 17 includes 174 attorneys who ·High School and lives in McArthur. His new
water
may not taste like
reside or practice in Athens, Hocking, post at Eastern High Schqol will be his first
Evian spring water bottled in
PIHse see Wa~r, AS
Please see Unclner, AS
I France. the water quality will

dramatically improve when
the new Pomeroy water treatment plant is finished later
this year.
The new treatment plant

Please see Plant. AS

The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, July 11 from 2:00pm· 4:oopm in the !-fMC French 500 Room .
Jill Sf!auch, R.Ph.,.HMC Inpatient PhQtmoc:y, will be the speaker.
' j

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
July 19, 20 and 21 from 9:00am- 12 Noon in the Hospital's Education
·&amp;Conference Center Room C. Please bring a list of home medications to class.
-Please haw prMCriplion from your physician to aue.-.d. ,
"
For more infonnation on these FREE programs, or 1o nigisler, call (740) 446-5080 •

. ..

www.holzer.org

�..

.

TAT.E

The Daily Sentinel
'

R~searcher turns up

.

. PageA2
Tuesday, July 6, :mo4

.Community Calendar

thousands of Ohio ghost towns

"

Public meetings Clubs and
organizations
Thesday, July 6

PRESS WRITER

lbey were once colorful
cjJaracters on Ohio's landscape _ communities with
. names such as Henpeck,
Lickskillet, Worstville and
_even Pee Pee.
· ' Today. lhese ghost towns
lfve only on old maps,
erased by the passage of
time. · ·
Richard· Helwig, owner of
the Center of Ghost Town
~esearch in Ohio, said . he
lras uncovered about 6,000
such ghost towns and still is
looking.
.
: "ln Ohio, because of our
climate and population den•
sity, once a town is abandoned it quickly disap- The sign on State Route 37 te[ling motorists that they .are
pears," Helwig said.
entering Berkshire is seen Saturday. Richard Helwig, who is
- ; Helwig's father founded researching and cataloging Ohio's.ghost towns for use by his·
the research center, located tori'ans and genealogists. considers Berkshire, located in
n'ear Columbus ih Galena, in Delaware cd'l.lnty and founded in 1809, a·semi-ghost town 'hay1974.
. ing only a dozen residents and only one original busini'Ss
. .- He was teaching a class in structure standing. (AP Photo/Paul Vernon)
genealogy at a technical coll~ge when a student presented him with a letter from an
ancestor and couldn't find
the location of the Ohio
town. The elder Helwig ·
decided to start -a research
effort and compile a repository..
·
•' Since then, we have been
documenting and . trying to ·
find the !()cation ofjas many
towns as we can,' Richard .
Helwig said.
. Helwig said there are four
categories of ghost towns:
_ True ghost towns: a former town where there is
nothing left to show it ever
existed.
_ Semi-ghost
towns:
tewns that are only 10 percent or less than the size
they once were.
_ Old towns: ·places that -Richard Helwig, who is researching and cataloging Ohio's
have existed for -at least 100 ·ghost towns for use by historians and genealogists, poses
years but changed their with some of the oldest headstones in the Berkshire cemetery,
names -because they were Saturday. Berkshire, located in Delaware county and founded
swallowed up. by larger in 1809, is considered a semi-ghost town having only a dozen
cities or could not get a post resideAts and only one original business structure standing.
office name because another (AP ·Photo/Paul Vernon)
town had the same name. ·
_ Paper ghost towns: ing to preserve the heritage County . was named· when
Peter Patrick marked off the
places that were imagined of their areas.
and sometimes platted and
Brian Hackett, executive town by carving his initials
- recorded by land developers director of the Montgomery on four trees.
Teacup was named when a
but never came into being. County Historical Socli:ty in
woman
took over a tavern
Maps ·datirig back to the Dayton, said ghost lawns
1850s help Helwig spot provide a clearer picture of in the town and served
ghost towns. They may be _ the past and help people drinks in teacups.
Helwig does his research
ghost towns if they appear understand how much things
county
by county and so far
o.n one map, then vanish on have changed.
·
"A lot of these towns has CO!llpleted northwest
a later one. Helwig does his
research in libraries, local were at their time the whole Ohio and much of central
genealogy societies and even lives of some people," Ohio: He estimates it will
cpuntf courthouses.
Hackett 'said. "This ts where take him another 30 years to
• "1'1 go through thousands _they lived· and breathed and complete the state.
Until November, the cenf
Of· pages of . manuscript,~ worked and probably did
ter
was located in an old
l~okmg for tnformatton,
not travel 10 miles outside
Helwig said.
of that town in their lives." church building in nearby
• Helwig said his informa.
Helwig said one of the Sunbury, but the church was
tion is useful to historians fun things in doing his demolished to widen the
dbinll research, genealogists research is uncovering :-veird highway. Now, Helwig
keeps his maps and other
lookmg for ancestors, or town names.
!peal historical societies tryHe said Pee Pee in Ross documents at his home.

0

'

The driver of-the Oldsmobile Silhouette, Dudley Kyle, 77, of Savanna, Ga;, died Monday in a
two-car accident on Ohio 7, just north of Cheshire. According to law enforcement officials.
Kyle was "just passing through tbe area ' (Millissia Russell/photo).

Georgia man dies in Monday two-car
crash on .Ohio 7 _
Bv MtLLISStA RussELL

more than an hour Monday
.·evening following the two- - - - - - - - - - vehicle accident that hap:
GALLlPOLIS
A pened about 5 p.m.; on Ohio
Georgia man died Monduy 7 near ·the Meigs , County
in a car accident on Ohio 7 line in Cheshire.
north of Cheshire.
J.ust
Dudley Kyle, 77, of According to law enforce- ·
Savanna, Ga., was ,transport- ment officials, Kyle was
e!l by the Gallia County allegedly "just passing
Emergency Medical Service through the area."
to Holzer Medical Center Eric Blackburn, 34, of
where he was · pronounced Neighborhood
Road,
dead.
Gallipolis, was injured in the
Traffic was suspended for accident, and also transportMRUSSELL@MVOAILVTRIBUNE.COM

ed by EMS to HMC.
Troopers from the GalliaMeigs Post of the Ohio State'
High\\lay Patrol are conducting the if!vestigation, which
continues.
1
·
h
Offici a s
from
t e
Cheshire Police Department
and ~he Middleport Fire
Department responded to the
scene for assistance.
HealthNet medical helicopter was also called to the
scene, but was cancelled.

'

Sunday limes-Sentinel -

. 740-992-2155

in "

CIOSL

• ''I'm
one of 200 or so
4.
'
!i]ants in Illinois," said
!ltephen Kennedy, vice president of Rock Road Cos.,
which runs a plant in

.,

.

RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees will hold
their budget hearing at 5 p.m.
at the Rutland Fire Station.
The regular monthly meeting
will follow.
.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
will-hold a re-scheduled regular meeting at 5 p.m. on.
· Tuesday in Council chambers ..Council will take action
on all items on the agenda of
the regular meetinll scheduled
for June 28, at whtch no quorum was present. .
ALFRED - The Orange
T{)wnship Trustees will have
its budget meeting followed
by the regular meeting at 7:30
p.m at the home of Clerk Osie
Foil rod.
Monday, July t2 . .
RACINE - Racine Village
will hold a public hearing on
the 2005 Budget, at 7 p.m. at
the Municipal Building. The .
budget will be on view at the
Municipal Building from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m,fromJuly 1-July
19.
POMEROY - Notice is
hereby given that between
6:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. a public
meeting on the budget and
. revenue sharing for the year
2005 for the village of
Pomeroy will be held at the
clerk-treasurer's office in village hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS Regu Jar meeting Of Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer
District, 7 p.m., at sewer district office. Topics will be
2005 bu&lt;!g~t and second reading on sewer rate increase
amendment.

Program for troubled marriages;··
undertakes complete .overhaul

table of genealogy materials
· wiD be displayed. A silent auc·
tion wjll be held and those
attending are asked to take
something for the auction.
RACINE- Theiss reunion
will be held at 1:30 p.m. with
a potlu~k dinner at the Star
Mill Park in Racine. Those
attending are asked to take an
item for a 'pig in a poke': auction. -

DEAR
ABBY:
My kind and gentle hu'-"Distancing in Washington"
band of I 0 years sat m~
Thesday, July 6
wrote that after I 0 years of
down a week ago and told :
POMEROY Eagles
marriage and two daughters,
me he's addicted to pain .
Au,xiliary will meet at 6:30
she and her spouse are on the
. pills and has been for three :
p.m. for a potluck dinner. Meat
vet;ge of divorce. You recyears. (His doctor had pre ,
will be provided. A meeting
Dear
ommended
Marriage
scribed them · to control ·
will begin at 7:30p.m.
Encounter.
Abby
chronic back pain.) Her let-,
MIDDLEPORT - Reg·ular
Abby,
her difficulty
ter scared me because that is
meeting of Middleport Lodge
appears to be a bit beyond
how it all started in my' mar- ·
363, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m.
·the scope of Marriage
riage - with fights, loss or'
Encounter.
Marriage
MIDDLEPoRT
-·
affection and physical con- .
Middleport Lodge 363
Encounter ·is _for marriages program under the ·umbrella tact. My friendly, well-edu ~
'.
F&amp;AM 7:30p.m.
m
good shape looking to of the Catholic Church. cated, hardworking husband
Saturday, July 10
MIDDLEPORT The
1mprove.
_Catholic· theology is NOT slowly turned into a with, .
POINT PLEASANT - A
Middleport
Community "sing for missions" concen
I suggest she check into part of the program and a drawn , exhausted ~I range r.
Association will meet at 8:30 will be held at 6:30p.m: at the
Retrouvaille.org. This inter- couple's religion (or lack of who snapped at the kids.·
a.m. at Peoples Bank in 22nd Street Church of God in
ignored me and cou ldn.'t
national program was devel- religion) is never a factor' Middleport .
nor
is
anyone's
financial
stakeep
a job.Point Pleasant. Singing will be- oped in 1976 by Marria¥e
Encounter
couples
m tus.
I thought
ht&gt;
wa; ,
the Cadle FamJly, Two for
Quebec,
Canada,
for
the
purRead on:
depressed, tired, getting old .
Jesus, Ray and Delores
. pose of addressing serious
DEAR
ABBY: and no longer in lov.e with
Cundiff, and Randy Parsons.
marriage problems. Let me "Distancing in Washington" -me. Now· i find 'ihat he. has a ,., .•
give you an analogy: said that she is no longer· terrible addiction. Please .
Marriage Encounter is a attracted to her husband and urge "Distancing'' to seek ·
Saturday, July 10
''tune-up"
for marriages that her two beautiful daugh- · help now - before she is in
RACINE - The Charles
Thesday, July 6
NOT in crisis. Retrouvaille ters come first before any- my position. 1 am hanging .
W. and Fannie L. Wolfe
POMEROY . - Meigs
is an overhaul for marriages thing. Her problem may be on by my fingernail s hopi_ng :
Beaver reunion will be held..{lt
County Health Department
in danger of falling apart.
that her priorities are out of my wonderful husband wil.i
the Star Mill PMk in Racine.
will
conduct
a
childhood
Retrouvaille places strong . order. .
reappear out of the wreck:'
..POMEROY- The annual
Children should be a wei- age. - KNOWS BETTER, ,
emphasis on the communiBlake reunion will be held at immunization clinic from I to 7
,
cations techniques needed to come addition to the family NOW IN MAINE
12:30 p.m. at the Zion Church p.m. on Thesday. The child's
repair hurting marriages, - not the center of it. She
DEAR KNOWS BET-.
of Christ on Route 143 . shot records must be provided
including 12 post-weekend and her spouse need to make TER: Thank you lor th e
Relatives of Edllar and Addie and children must be accompasessions of about two hours a date once a weeR to focus reminder that changes in. ·
Reed Blake are tnvited. There nied by a parent or legal
guardian.
Medical
card
mitst
be
_
each. My wife and I have on each other and remember personali!y can indicate that
will be a potluck dinner, picbeen · involved in both pro- the reasons they married. something is medically .
tures will be taken, and pr!Jvided, as well, if applicable .
grams. (All the people Children eveniually leave wrong and should be
genealogy items will be dis- A $5 donatipn will be accepted
· involved
in · Marriage if you do your job right. but is not required 1for immuplayed.
brought to ti:J~ anent ion of ,
nizations. Parents or guardians
Encounter and Retrouvaille READER IN CORAOPO- one's physician. I'm keeping ;·
Sunday, July 1)
are volunteers.) The steps in LIS, PA.
·my tingers crossed for your
POMEROY - The annual of children entering kinderMarriage
Encounter
are
garten
who
need
TB
tests
DEAR
READER:
l
agree.
husband's recovery:
Lovett reunion will be held at I
romance,
disillusionment
p.m at hte Zion church of Christ, should plan to attend before 4
. DEAR ABBY: My blood
Dear Ahb\' is writrPn b\'
and joy. In Retrouvaille, the froze when I read •the letler Abigail Vai1 Buren. also
Route 143. Descendants of p.m., because the TB Clinic
steps are romance, disillu- from
Daniel and Phoebe Lovett and closes at that time.
"Distancing
in known as Jeanne Phillips,
sionment, misery and hope. Washington." She should run and was fotmded b\• her
_ Thursday, July 8
William and Mary Lovett are
- G.H. FROM ARIZONA
invited along with those having
TUPPERS PLAINS -The
with her husband to their morhet; Pwt!ine Phillips.
surnames of flacks, Bush, VFW Post #9053 will have a
DEAR G.H.: Thank you doctor und ask for a complete Wrire Dear Abhv ar
for . straightening me out. I physical exam with blood www.DearAbby.com
Boyd, Goldsberry and Riffle. meeting at 7 p.m. at the hall.
P0 .
would like to add that · work. If he won't go. she Bo.r69440. LOs Angeles. CA
There will be a potluck dinner, . There will be a meal at 6:30
icctures will be taken, and a · p.m.
although Retrouvaille is a should talk with his doctor.
90069.
.,

Church services

Homecomings/
.Reunions
.
-_Other events

or

The National Cancer Institute
and dark green leafy vegetables encourages people to eat lots of
squash, sweet potatoes, carrots,
fruits ·and vegetables to help
spinach).
ensure physical weU-bein~. The
* - Eat at least one that is
Institute has promoted this recrich in Vitamin C (Oranges,
ommendation through their prostrawberries, kiwifruit, citrus
gram "5 a Day - for Better
Becky
fruits).
Hea1th!
· •
Eat at least one that is
Baer
The Food Guide Pyramid sughigh in tiber (Oranges, broccoli,
gests three to five servings of
beans).
vegetables and two to four serv* Eat vegetable&amp; froin the
ings of fruits be eaten daily.
cabbage family several times a ''
Fruits and velletables help pro- homocysteine - a substance in week
(Cabbage, brussels
vide enough VItamins, minerals, the body that can cause heart dis- sprouts, brriccoli, cauliflower).
antioxidants, phytochemicals, ease. Fruits and vegetables pro- · It is easy to get the right
fiber and other nutrients that aid vide soluble fiber and slowly- jillliOUntsoffruitsand vegetabfes.
~e pre~ention of maj~ diS- absorbed carbohydrates that Incorporate them in the daily
help control diabetes. Eight to diet by having them at each meal
Even with the Pyramid as a . ten servings a day of produce and for snacks. Build meals
guideline, , only 20% of can lower high blood pressure. - around fruits and vegetables.
Americans consume the right
Obesity occurs less often in Put fresh berries, peaches or
amounts of produce. Women people who eat large amounts of bjmanas on cereal. Eat fresh
tend to eat more than men, but fruits and vegetables. This is due ' fruit as a quicJC pick-me-up. Add
they still usually don't eat because the amount of food can fruits, such · as choJ?ped apple,
enough. Sadly, the average per- · increase, while the number of grapes or orange slices, to green
son m our area consumes less calories can decrease. Since vegetable salads. . Use frutts as
than three servings a day.
fruits and vegetables are rich in garnishes. Eat fruit salad. Puree
Why is it so important to eat · magnesium, potassium and frozen fruit for juice bars or ice
several different fruits and veg- other dietary components, they cubes. Thp off frozen yogurt
etables daily? . It has been dis- can help preserve bone density, with cherries or berries.
covered that nine of the fifteen which reduces the threat of _ Spice up vegetables with nobest foods to combat some of osteoporosis. ConSuming these fat herbs and seasonings. Add
our most serious health prob- two food groups can also dimin- vegetables, such as lettuce,
lems are fruits or vegetables. ish the possipility of macular sprouts and tomatoes, to sandThese include avocadOs, blue- degeneration and significantly wiches. Put raw vegetables in
berries, broccoli,, butternut lower the likelihood of cataracts. lunch bags. Choose fresh vegsquash, kale, kiwifruit, onions,
The "5. a Day" program is an etables at the salad bar. Eat vegsoybeans and tomatoes.
easy renunder for us to get the etable soup. Add vegetables to a
Research shows that people amounts of fruits ana vegetableS main dish or to pasta salad.
who eat at least five fruits and that we need each day. The five
To increase fiber, leave peelvegetables per day have half the points it emphasizes are:
ings and skin on fruits ·and vegrisk of developmg cancer as
* Eat at least five serv- etables (potatoes1 cucumbers,
opposed to thoSe who on!)' eat ings of fruits and . veget$1es zu~hin,i, apples and peac~)­
one or -two servings. A diet high each day.
..
Add cooked ilry beans or jJeas to
in citrus fruits, legumes and daik · •
Eat at least one that-is - soups, _salads and casseroles:
pn leafy vegetables supplies rich in Vitamin -A (Da!k yellow Keep in niind that fresh tiult has
folic acid that can decrease
more fiber than juice.
·
11

probe ofasphalt industry widens
Rockford. "I'm wondering and
Chester
Bross
why I'm doing this and my ·Construction of Loraine, Ill.,
competitors are not."
the newspaper said. None
Bill Omohundro, a U.S. could be reached for comEPA spokesman, would not ment Monday.
comment' about the expandGary (lore, vice · presid.ent
ed investigation; the news- , of environment .and safety
paper said. Omohundro for the Natiomi~ Asphalt
could not be reached for Pavement Assoctattoil, called·
comment Monday, which the · letters unprecedented
was a federal . holiday. A and said his group would
message was left at his discuss them with the EPA.
Chicago office.
Fore saiq the industry has
The letters sought new air- worked for I 0 years " wi .
emission tests for soot, car- the · EPA on studies
t
bon . monoxide; nitrogen show asphalt plants ar . no
oxides, sulfur dioxide and major sources of poll ton.
volatile organic compounds.
Theresa Mills, dir ctor of
Companies must · provide · the Buckeye Enviro ental
information about modifiers Network,
and
Simona
put into liquid asphalt and Vaelavikova, a program
about the fuel burned to director for Ohio Citizen
keep asphalt from hardening. Actidll, say the tests migqt
Alvin Evans, chief operat- not cover all the hazardous
ing officer for J.H. Rudolph substances asphalt plants
&amp;
Company
Inc. in emit into the air.
.
Evansville, Ind., said he was
Both said neighbors began
asked to test for things the to complain about asphalt
state doesn't require. He plants in Ohio around 2000.
said Indiana requires esti- Mills suspects complaints
mates of volatile organic might · ~ linked to the used
chemicals, nitrogen . oxides oil some plants bum as fuel
and . sulfur emissions.
or new. modifters put in the
·''We've asked for an asphalt.
extension 'of the time period
The
industry-supponed
we've been given,'' Evans Asphalt Institute said asphalt
said.
is the environmental choice
The other companies fac- of highway builders because,
ing directives /rom the EPA in part, it can be colored to
were Central Specialties Inc. match the surrounding enviof Alexandria, Minn., Ajax ronment and, without seams
Materials Corp. of Warren, · like
. concrete sections can
Mich.,
Barrett
Paving be quieter amid heavy 'truck
Materials Inc. of Fairborn traffic. '
.

Tuesday, July 6, 2004

TlME OUT FO)t. TIPS

·Report:. Federal.pollution , ~ COLUMBUS (AP) - A
U.S. ·
Environmental
J:bytection Agency pollution
.illvestigation of asphalt 'com·
~nies, ·which mix crude oil
~ gravel to make roadltu'ilding " materials, has
~anded from Ohio to
()(her states.
·
~ The agency · has ordered
P:Jllution tests and company
r~cords from two asphalt
pj.ants
lliinois and one
each in Indiana, Michigan,
f'iinnesota and in Fairborn.
6~i.J, near Dayton,_ The
Columbus Dispatch·, reported
d}i Monday. Two Columbus
.pl\alt companies . got sim~­
let orders earlier in the year.
: While -the agency h~n' t
· tfiscussed the investigation
publicly, the EPA said earlier· that demands for internal
. reeords are the ftrst official
steps taken when it suspects
C:~an Air Act violations.
•Ohio has more than 300
a'iphalt plants. There are
rOore than I, l 00 asphalt
qimpanies nationwide, many
l,!ith, . several operating
Jilimts.
: Pl311t owners and the
i~dustry's trade association
sllid they didn't know the
~n ]9r the ~A direcl!ves and quesuonel) the

Page.A:J

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In the recent round .of college commencement addresses, one in particular sfiould be
read by rul high school guidance counselors (especially in
schools with students of low' ·
Nat
income families); '1111 'college
Hentoff
admission officers; and working-class and lower-income
parents.
'
At Amherst College in
Massachusetts, the speaker upoh entering high school,
was its president, Anthony the Jess wealthy among them
Marx. It was both refreshing (even if tliey do get into coland yet troubling to hear him lege) are two-and-a-halftimes
cut through the familia( argu- less likely ever to earn a bachments about race-based tdlir- elor's degree,' The cause is,
mati~e action. He underonce more, indifferent prepascored · a
fundamental ration in inferior high schools.
inequality in access to colForgotten entirely too often
leges that affects so many ur in academic and legislative
the young in all races and ~th­ reports on how to 'reform'
nic groups.
our educational system are .
'At our top colleges,' said those youngsters who may
Amherst's president, 'only have the skills but, Marx
one-tenth of our students are p&lt;1ints out, 'simply assume
drawn from the poorer half of they cannot afford college ,..
the population (and) only 3 Federal support that once
percent from the bottom quar- . covered almost all typical colter. Three-quarters of top col- lege 'costs now covers ilb.o,ll.t
lege students come from the half ' He quotes Business
wealthiest quarter of society.' Week: ' (our) economy is
The result, Marx empha- slowly stratifying along class
sized. is 'a wall of blocked lines.'
opportunity.' This wall begins
But the most unfortunate of
to take obstructive shape with children left ,behind are those
inferior preparation for col- who never think they have a
lege in many lower schools chance of getting higher eduwith large proportions of the cation. Not only do some high
poorer half of the population. school guidance counselors
And even . elementary discourage them, but, says
school kids who are bright, as Marx, 'Less-wealthy p11fents
I've seen while reporting on · of eighth graders expect their
schools, are blocked when children to go to college half
they move on. As Marx as often as the wealthy.'
..
noted, 'Among those students
To further illuminate the
who are academically s'trong class barriers to higher educa-

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Charlene Hoeflich

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· : Congress shall make tro law respecting an
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of speech, or of the-press; or tlze right of the
people peaceably to .assemblr, and· to petition
· the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, July 6,_ihc !88th day of 2004. There are
178 days left in the year.
· , Today's Highlight in History:
: One hundred and fifty years ago. on July 6. 1854, the first
official meeting .of the Republican Party took place in
Jackson, Mich.
·
. On this date:
. In 1535, Sir Thomas More ·~as execut~d in England for
(reason.
,.
In 1777. during tlie American Revolution, British forces
· captured Fort Ticonderoga.
In 1917, during World War I, Arab forces led by T.E.
Lawrence captured the port of Aqaba from the Turks.
In 1923, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was
formed.
In 1933, the first All-Star baseball game was played, at
Chicago's Comiskey Park: the American League defeated the
National League, 4,2.
In 1944, 169 people died in a fire that broke out in the main
ient of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum-and-Bailey Circus
in Hartford, Conn.
- In 1945, President Truman signed an executive order establishing the Medal ofFreedom.
In 1957·, Althea Gibson became the first black tennis player'
to win a Wimbledon singles title, defeating fellow American
Darlent Hard 6-3, 6-2.
·
. ln 1967, the Biafran War erupted . (The war, which lasted
two and a-half years, claimed ~orne 600,(){)(} lives.)
' In 1989, the U.S. Army destroyed its last Pershing 1-A mis~Hes· at an ammunition plant in Karnack, Texas, under terms
of the 1987 Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty.
' Ten years ago: Fourteen firefighters were killed while battling a several-days-old blaze on Storm King Mpuntairi in
Colorado. President Clinton stopped by Latvia, then traveled
!O Poland as part of a four-nation European tour.
. Five years ago: Ehud Barak took office as prime minister of
Israel, J?ledging to seek peace with neighboring Arab countries.
- One year ago: Liberian 1eader Charles Taylor accepted an
pffer of asylum in Nigeria. Roger Federer became the first
Swiss man to win a Grand Slam title, defeating Mark
Philippoussis 7-6 (5), 6-2, 7-6 (3) in the Wimbledon finaL
Actor Buddy Ebsen died in-Torrance, Calif., at age 95.
' 'Today's Birthdays: Former first lady Nancy Reagan is 83.
· Actor William Schallert is'82. Talk show host Merv Griffin is
19. Actress Janet Leigh is 77. Actor Donal Donnelly is 73.
Singer-actress Della Reese is 73. Actor Ned Beatty is 67.
$inger Gene Chandler is 67. Country singer Jeannie Seely is
'64. President Bush is 58. Actor-director Sylvester Stallone is
58. Actqr Fred Dryer is 58. Actor Burt Ward is 58. Actress
Nathalie Baye is 56. Actor Geoffrey Rush is 53. Rock musician John Bazz (The Blasters) is 52. Actress Shelley Hack is
52. Actor Grant Goodeve is 52. Country singer Nanci Griffith
is Sl. ActressAilyce Beasley is 50. Jazz musician Rick Braun .
is 49. Country· musician John Jorgenson is 48. Hockey player
Ron Duguay is 47. Rapper 50 Cent is 28 .. Actress Tamera
Mowry is 26. Actress Tia Mowry is 26. Actor Gregory Smith
is 21. Actor Jeremy Suarez.("Berqie Mac") is 14.
Thought for Today: :'Growing old is no more than a bad
llabit which a busy man has no time to form." - Andre
Maurois, French author ( 1885-1967).

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2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page As
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.,

Obituaries
Danny L Shain

~

tion, there is this telling fact · tions of their children in what
about the beneficiaries of Marx refers to as the 'boltof11
race-based affinnative action' quarter of soci!!'ty.' These
in 'The Shape of the River' include the poor. And from
(Princeton University Press, down there, more students
1998) by William Bowen and can become higher-achieving
Derek Bok. They note '86 if their teachers, their parents,
perce-nt of blacks who and they themselves, have
enrolled in the 28 .selective .1eason to ~lieve that the
universities (we studied) were doors to higher education are
middle or upper-class.'
·
open to them.
lbis often4Jverlooked fact is
But even economically dis.
cited in a definitive current advantaged students with the
. book on this increasingly perti- true grit to achieve are ofterl
nent
issue:
'America's blocked. Says Marx:· 'Today
Untapped Resource: Low- there remain . more than
Income Students in Higher 300,000 highly qualified high
Education' .
(Century school ,,.-niors who do not
Foundation Press, 2004). The even take the SATs to apply td
editor, a pioneer in this research, college. We rnust find those
is Richard Kahlenberg.
students who are capable of
Kahlenberg has cited the high academic achievement
above quote from two of the to broaden our base .. .'
strongest advocates of raceAs he emphasizes: 'The
based aftirmative action, passive approach to letting
Bowen and Bok, because talent rise is not working.' ·
they di&lt;l not hide the class- · Harvard
Univer~ity
based . all of blocked oppor- President Lawrence Summers
tunity in their widely read pointed out in a June 8 Waif
book.
Street Journal article: 'At ·a
And recently, William time when the disJ:ribution of
Bowen, now president of the income. and wealth is becornAndrew
W.
Mellon ing more and more unequal, it
Foundation, said: 'Allegiance appears the transmission of
to this country's ideals inequality may actually be
requires that American higher increasing ... and higher edu:
education do more than it is cation has u great deal to d0.
doing at present to support the with it.' ·
aspirations of high-achieving
(Nat Hellfojfis a rwriunal/y
young peqple from modest renowned autfluriiy on the
backgrounds who want to be First Amendment and the Bill
welcomed within the walls of of Rights and author ofseverwhat are still seen by many as a/ boaks, including his cur;
'bastions of privilege."
rent work.. 'The War on the
In many cases, ' modest Bill · of Rights and the
backgrounds' does not define · Gathering Resistance' (Seven
parents with lower expecta' Srories Press, 2003 ),

''

·

•
RACINE- Danny Lee Shain, 60, of Racine, passed away
tm Wednesday, June 30, 2004, at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
.
He was born on June 15, 1944, son of the late Harry and
Hazel Snyder Shain. He was an operator for Martin Marietta
and was a veteran of the U.S. Army. .
. Surviving are his wife, Dorothy Lawson Shain of Racine: two
o;hildren, William Parsons and Kelly (Jpdi) Parsons, both of Racine;
a special son, Danny (Randi) Gheen and their children; Kaleb and
Kylie Gheen; a brother, Charles Shain of Pomeroy, Ralph.Shain of
Aorida, Sam Shain of Racine, Harry Shain of West VIrginia and
Paul Shain of Bidwell; . three'Sisters: Ruth Johnson of Racine, Kathy
Searles of Rutland and Norma Clarlc of COlumbus; and grandson,
Cody Parsons of Racine, and several nieces and nephews.
·
. Besides his parents. l.te was preceded in death by a sister,
Susan Hayes, and an infant brother.
At Danny's request, a private memorial service will be oonducted.
Arrangements are · under the direction of Roush Funeral
Home in Ravenswood, W.Va.

Tennessee unveils 'driving · .
certificates~ for illegal immigrants

NASHVILLE, Tenn: (AP) process as citizens," she
- A new law that went into saig. "The change disturbs
effect last month means Dina me."
The purple driving certifiGuirguis, an Egyptian in the
Uqited States on a temporary cate, which looks different
student visa, can't .renew her ·from a regular license, reads,
Tennessee driver's license "For Driving Purposes Only,
when it expires in a few Not Valid for Identification."
years.
·.
. Gov. Phil Bredesen, whose
The law allows only U.S. · administration developed the
citizens or permanent legal law, said the change was
residents to get a Tennessee prompted by the threat of
driver's license. That rules terrorism after Sept. II,
· out illegal immigrants and 200 l.
temporary visitors such as
Savage said Brede sen's
reaction is typical. State
Guirguis.
" But Tennessee is offering·a leaders across the country
unique compromise ·- ~ ·a are taking a hard look at the
"certificate of driving" that risks of giving a driver's
illegal immigrants won't be license to anyone .who passes
able to use for official identi- a test - even when they
LANGSVILLE -Doyle W. Knapp, 61, of Langsville, died
Jication
but that will allow can't prove who they are·.
Monday, July ~· 2004 at his home.
, , ,
'them to drive. The certificate . "When it came out that so
Born on Apnl 21, 1943, he was the son of the late K31l C1vtl
guarantees the person knows ll)any of the terrorists had
Knap~ and Len·a MineFVa Butcher Knapp.
the rules of driving in acquired driver's licen ses,
He 1s survived by his wife, Jan Ann Smith Knapp; three
Tennessee, but can't use it to the trend now is to tighten
sons and d~ugh.ters-in-law, Kail and Amy Knapp of Coolville;
Charles and Mtchelle Knapp of Albany, and ·Kevm and Judy · buy a gun, rent a car or lxiard restrictions," she ..said. "It's
an airplane.
Knapp of Pomeroy; grandchildren, Michelle (Jarrod) Folmer
way beyond driving now,
Melissa Savage, a policy and 9-11 put that all into
of Pomeroy, Amy (Jeremy) Allman of Albany, Ashley Knapp
analyst with · the National focus."
of Pomeroy, Jordan Knapp and Haylee Knapp of Coolville,
and Angie Seidenabel of Pomeroy; a brother and &amp;ister-in-law,
Conference
of
State
About 40 states have laws
Ralph and Roberta Knapp of Columbus; nephews, Michael
. Legislatures, said the certifi- or regulat&lt;ions restricting dri(Debbie) Knapp of Delaware, and Tim Kn&lt;~pp: and a greatcate is the first of its kind, ver's licenses to'those with a
granddaughtef'1 Nikki Folmer of Pomeroy.
·
·
and other states will be "lawful presence" in the
He was preceded in death by his parents. ·
watching to see how it country, according to the
Funeral services will be held at II a:m. Thursday at the Acre.t!" works.
.National Immigration Law
Funeral Home in Middleport with the Rev.. Robert Fetty officiatThat's not much 'COmtbrt Center, an immigrant advo- ,
ing. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery at Rutland. Friends
to Guirguis, who will have to' cacy group.
may call from 4 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home.
start using her passport This year, legislatures in
written entirely in Arabic 25 states considered 49 bills
and French - as her prima- on whether illegal immiry identification in the grahts could hold driver's
United States.
licenses. Advocates say givOn the few occasions she ing illegal immigrants
used her passport as ID, the licenses will improve traftic
27 -year,old
Vanderbilt safety.
University Law School gradCalifornia Gov. Arnold ·
BIDWELL- Thomas Dale Bowers, 69, of Bidwell, died
uate
said
she
got
"perplexed
Schwarzenegger
repealed a
Sunday evening, July 4, 2004, at his home.
looks."
law
last
December
allowing
He was the husband of Jenetta Smith Bowers.
"One of the wonderful illegal ·1 immigrants to get
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, July 7, 2004,
things about this country is it licenses I after opponents
at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
has traditionally and histori- claimed it was a threat to
with burial following in Viney Cemetery, Bidwell, where
masonic rites will be conducted.
.
cally offered non-residents national security. In Florida,
Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home.
the same protection and d.ue a similar bill backed by Gov.

Doyle W. Knapp

Deaths

thomas Bowers

'

HOW LONG
DO I HAVE
TO BE All

'

ICAN BE?·

Pennsylvania lawmakers approve
···measure authorizing 61 ,000 slot machines
(

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)Pennsylvania niay one day be .
home to the . nation's second
largest number of slot machines
as lawmakers bet more gambling can ease tax strains.
Gov. Ed Rendell, WhO made
gambling-lf!anced rroperty tax
cuts a centerpiece o his election
campaign, was ,expected to sign

'

a bill Monday authorizing up to much of Ill: tmney Pennsylvanians
61 ,000 slot machines in the state ·fOE into slot ma:hires in neighlxr- more than any other state . mg·stales and tJ:Ip re~ve Ill: state's
except Nevada. A second bill i:xJt&gt;e rocing iixlustty.
would allow the gambling revMost of the 14 sites perrnitenues to finance $1 billion a year ted to have slots will be racein property-tax reductions for tracks. Rendell planned a bill
homeowners in Pennsylvania. . signing
ceremony
at
Proponents said Ill: slOO bill Philadelphia Park, the home of
would allow tre state to llDij1Ure famed racehorse Smarty Jones.

lawyers and the 4,000 legal the Ohio Departn;nt qf
assistants and law students Education.
· who are OSBA members.
Warner is an Ohio Stale
Warner earned ~cr bachelor . Bar Foundation Life Fellow
from PageA1
of science degree from Ohio and a member of the
Meigs, Morgan, Noble, and University in 1984 and her Foundation Class of 200 I
law degree from Capital
Washington counties.
and a member of the OSBA
Warner was elected to her University Law School in Courtcil of Delegates. She is
new post by area lawyers at 1988. Previously, she has also· the video CLE coordinaan OSBA district meeting. practiced with Fultz &amp;
several months ago. She suc- Warner and served as the tor for the Meigs County Bar
ceeds retiring District 17 rep- Meigs County Assistant Association.
re'sentative, Colleen E. Cook, Prosecuting Attorney, ~nd Warner r~ceived the Ohio
whose term conclu&lt;!ed June Solicitor for the Village of State Bar Foundation District
Middleport,
30.
'
17 and the overall State
Warner is now the Gallia Community Service Award
The 21-member Board of
Governors, meets monthly to County Domestic Rela~ions for lawyers 40 and und@r in
manage the -association's Magistrate ahd is affiltated
·.business affairs, set policy, with Little, Sheets &amp; Warner 2001'
review pending legislation . of Pomeroy. Warner is also . She and her husband, Jeff,
and conduct other business approved as an impartial due have two sons, Robert Jay
.on behalf of the 25,000 Ohio process hearing officer for and David.

Warner

l

No .clear winners among Kerry's' veep contenders
\

Bv

.

Tuesday, July 6, 2004

A wall. of blocked opportunity

•

'

. PageA4·

OPINION

-The Daily Sentinel

I

Brookings Institution and a
.staunch Kerry supporter.
· WASHINGTON- Former
'You could say he did Sort of
trial lawyer ' John Edwards a crash-course to learn nation- '
remainS on John Kerry's vice a! security issues quickly, but
presidential ~hort list, but there he gave meaty speeches about
are increasing concerns in the them,' OHanlon told me. '
Kerry campaign about the · Nevertheless,
even
. freshman senator's inexPefi- Edwards' home-state supportence, especially on national ers acknowledge that his backsecurity,
,
ground leaves something to be
No one in Kerry's high com- desired in a vice president, let
mand doubts that the North alone a potential president In
Carolina populist has the polit- their minds, his strengths lie
ical skills to energize the party. . elsewhere: 'Maybe he doesn't
But the Massachusetts liberal's have all these credentials, but
advisers, and Kerry himself, at least he's a fresh face, a
now wonder if the boyish- highly intelligent person and a
looking Edwards - wbose fast study for anything,' said
only government experience North Carolina Democratic
is his soon-to-expire six-year Chairman B~ Allen. This
term in the Senate - ·. is ready is hardly the ringing endorseto be a heartbeat away from ment that will convince Kerry
the presidency.
that Edwards has the right
Kerry has said that the prj- stuff to step into the highest .
t;11ary requirement for his vice office in the land
president will be his or her
But other Democratic state
qualifications to step into the chainnen I have talked to this
presidency shou ld
that past week say they . like
become necessary. This was Edwards because of his politithe issue that dogged Edwards cal talent$ and his Kennedy1\lroughout his quixotic, esque abiliry to excite the
unsuccessful run in the · party. 'Democrats here would
Democratic primaries. He was love to see Edwards on the
unknown, untested and clearly ticket,' Ohio party ·chairman .
unqualified to assume the Denny While told me. 'He'd
Oval Office and run the coun- be an asset this fall, particulartry. lbis is particularly ·true Iy in Ohio.'
because of his inexperience in
Surely no one among this ·
the one area that matters most year's presidential cootenders
in an age of terrorism: nation- has received more favorable
al security.
.- one might say fawning'Clearly, Edwards doesn't treatment from the news
have the longest resume on ' media But despite his envious
.national
security,'
said media exposure. .Edwards
Michael O'Hanlon, a defense won only one prinlary, in
adviser · at the prestigious South Carolina, plus his home

state's caucus. He came in second in 'more · thim a dozen
other primaries after most of
the other candidates had
dropped out, but also ~e in
a distant th1rd or fourth . in
many others.
Thus a second look at
Edwards suggests that he {,as.
n't that great a campaigner, nor
did he have a well-thoughtout, weighty agenda with big
ideas. His principal life's work
has been that of a trial lawyer
who sued big corporations and
made millions in the,process. ·
That.is why Kerry is looking
more closely at the other ,can- ·
didates on his .list, in~luding
former House Democratic
Leader Richard Gephardt of
Missouri, Sen. John B. Breaux
of Louisiana, Sen. Bob
Graham of. Aorida, former
Sen. Bob Kerrey of Nebraska,
and former Defense Secretary
William Cohen, a liberal
Republican,
But none of these men
excite the party's .liberal base
all that much. Breaux is a centrist who worlced closely with
the Bush White House on its ·
tax-cut plan, ll!ld voted for it.
Labor bosses like Gephardt,
but he was an abysmal failure
as acandidate il} the primaries.
Graham literally put people to
sleep when he' spoke. Kerrey,
whO called President Clinton
'an unusually good liar,' is
known in the pany as a 'loose
cannon.' And Cohen would go
over 'like a lead balloon,' one
Democratic official ~d me.
Kerry is said to be consideriog several governors, but

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DoNALD LAMBRO

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there is no really big gubema:
torial star that can give
ticket the p~ it so clearly
needs.
Despite his denials, Kerry .
was ready to offer the N0 . 2
spot to Sen. John McCain during a private meeting, but th~:
Arizona Republican flatly
turned it down and reiterated ·
his support ~or President Bush.
That Kerry seriously considered the 'GOP renegade
angered 'a lot of Democrats
up here,' said a chief aide to a
Senate Democratic leader. ·
Maybe . that's
why
Democrats were agaiii floating the idea last week that
Kerry could tap New Yorlc
Sen. Hillary" .Clinton. She
would certainly bring a lot of
sla[ power to the ticket, but
she suffers from the · sam!:
problem
that
plague~
Edwards: She is
freshmat)
with little hard experience in
national security issues. It't
addition, on domestic issues
she .is best known for a disas;
trous health care reform plan
considered so unworkal&gt;le by
House Democrats that they
refused tu bring it ' up for a
vote.
Hillary Clinton has repeat~
edly said that she would nOt
be a candidate for vice president, and I think she means
it. The word from party
insiders is that she and husband Bill believe that Kerry
will lose in November.
Better, they think:, to run for
president when the office ilr
open - something she fully
intends to do in 2008.

tfie

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approved Pam Douthitt as ·the district's athletic director and varsity softball coach, Ron
Lucas as assistant varsity football coach, and
Becky Cotterin as a business education
from Page A1
teacher, on a one-year contract.
, ,
.
,.
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.
The bmlrd approved a job description for a
adrmmstrattve posttton. He wtll assume hts full-time local districtor coordinator, Mary
ne"': jodb on Augusthl. d
R' k · Price, who will oversee Title and other fedLm ner was tre to rep 1ace
t~
era! programs.
,
· ·
E~"\ards, who was recently name~ the dtsAttending the special meeting were John
tnct s new supennte!Jdent. Supenntendent Rice, president; Shelia Taylor, Greg Bailey,
Deryl Well .w11l retire effe.cttve July. 31.
Howard Caldwell, Jr., Charles Weber,
Meettng 111 specml :&gt;essJOn, the board also Treasurer Lisa Ritchie, Edwards and Well.

Lindner

, Plant

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damage swimming pools·.
were to move here, we are in
"This is a huge step for • a position to expand capacity
Pomeroy," said Anderson. to meet its needs," he said.
"The . minerals. in the water
Anderson said he has been
from Page A,.1
have been a probleni for a working to make this plant a
will eliminate trace elements number of years."
.
reality since 1988 when he
of manganese and tiny
Special
purifying t1rst started working for the
amounts of iron from the machines, which are operat- village. Construction on the
water. This wiH soften the ed by computers, will filter plant began in early January
water eliminating the need the water that will be stored and should be tinished in late
for water filters that have in a 150,000 gallon under- October or November. The
become a way of 'life for ground storage tank.
plant, which · Anderson estimore than 3,000 Pomeroy
"This is the best tech nolo- mated to cost nearly $2 million
water customers.
gy available for what we are· when completed, was paid for
About 90 percent of the trying to do," Anderson said. primarily from state and federcomplaints . that
John
Anderson said the water al government loans and
Anderson, . village adminis- treatment plant can expand grants. Anderson srud he
trator, receives are from cus- to fill the needs of business approacfied U.S. Senator Mike
tomers complaining about or industry.
Dewine (R-Ohio) who secured
the hard water - so called
"For instance, if a General a substantial federal grant to
because it is harder to lather Motors fabrication plant help pay for the project.
·
with than soft water. He said .----__;_ _ _..;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
it also mak.es washing .
clothes difficult and can

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

-crows

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Tennessee Department of Safety Commissioner Fred Phillips
explains the new driving certificate during a news conference
in Nashville, Tenn .. Tuesday, June 29 , 2004. A new law lets
only u·. s. citizens or permanent legal residents get a
Tennessee driver's license. That rules out illegal immigrants. ·
But Tennessee is offering a unique compromise _ a ."certificate of driving" that illegal immigrants won't be able to use
for official Identification. but. will allow them to drive.(AP
Photo/ John Russell)'
Jeb Bush was abandoned could serve· as a preteKt for
after law enforcement ofti- investigating
further,"
cials raised security con- . Guirgui s said of carrying the
cerns.
driving certificate. "It's
National Immigration Law · indicative to the overall
Center policy , analyst Tyler trend since 9111 of chipping
Moran· said those decisions away of civU liberties.''
are knee-jerk reactions by
The Tennessee Immigrant
state leaders who have ·:got- and
Refugee
Rights
ten caught up.in policies that Coalition has set up a hot
make us feel good but don't line for people to call if they
make us safer."
Instead,' Moran said, the . think their civil rights have
focus should be on how to been violated over the drimake driver's licenses more ving certificate.
But Tom Moore, deputy
secure. That includes stiffer
for the state
commissioner
penalties for making fraudulent documents and better Safety Department, said
training to help workers rec- holders of driving certifiognize them, and a review of cates won't be unfairly tarthe types of documents geted by law enforq:menl.
''We do not enforce immiaccepted as proof of residengration laws. That's the job
cy, she said.
Immigrant
· advocates of the federal government,"
worry the change will mean . he said. "They wi,ll get treaied the same way anyone else
increased racial profiling.
"If I'm stopped by police would with any other docufor a minor traffic offense. it ment.''

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for the restaurant's most stal- drive-in, Crow's has been a with the Crow family busiwart workei, who was busy, regular stopping point in the ness is uncertain, since the
as on any other day, coo,king, bend area. A-group of women new restaurant will not offer
sweepi.n~.. ringi~g up sales, enjoying lunch there Monday · waitress service, but she said
from PageA1
and vtsttmg wtth the cus- remembered the carhop days the family has invited her to
stay on at the new restaur~!, .
Syracuse will remain owners tomers who have come to. of the 1950's and 1960 s, and and one gets the impressiOn
mean
so
much
to
her.
Gerald
Powell
of
Pomeroy
of the new fast-food estab"We have been so · busy said . the restaurant's regular the Crows couldn '.t do withJishment, Danny Crow will
her. ·
·continue to serve· as manager, today, and were yesterday, as clientelle have been touched outVera
Crow, · meanwhile,
people
came
in
for
one
last
by
the
Crow
family.
and Rob Crow will be assissaid
rumors
about her retire"It's
sad,
but
·
I
guess
it's
tant manager. But while the meal," Crow said Monday.
Crows remain in the restau- "Customers are crying, and pro~ress,'' Powell said. ment are untrue. She plans to
rant business, things will one man even came into the "Things are changing all the roll up her sleeves at the new
never be quite the same, in kitchen to give me a hug. He tim~, and 'I guess a~ I we. can KFC/Long John Silvers and
Pomeroy. For years, locals was crying, too. I wonder do ts hope for better thm~s, work just as hard as she. has
·and vtsitors alike hav.e where some of them will go but one thing is for certam: for 47 years at the "steakthe Crows have touched a lot house ."
enjoyed the re~taurant's now."
"The customers will defi"l think people liked com- of people through the years.''
,home-style cookmg a~d
nitely
· see me in the new
Susie
ing
here,
not
just
for
the
food,
Knight
of
Pomeroy,
a
. friendly atmosphere, and tls
place,"
Crow said yesterday.
closing will be difficult for but because they could come 37-year employee of the ·
many of the restaurant's reg- here and · visit with their restaurant, said Vera Crow "l wouldn't know what to do
with myseif.if I weren't busy.
friends. It .. was a 'common' has been a "great boss."
ulars.
You
get used to a certain
Vera Crow realizes that, environment · that everyone
''They're just like my farni·
ly," Knight said about the lifebecause she feels the same enj9yed.'' .
·
. style
, and, well, 'this is
way.lt was business as usual
Since its days as a 24-hour family of owners. Her future mme.
locations of sanitary sewer systems and
septic tanks throughout the county for
the use of the county sanitarians.
from PageA1
The Athens City/County Health
Departm~;nt and the Institute for Local
ics, and Gorscak said the department Government and., Rural Development at
plans to map the locations of food ven- Oh1o University's Voinovich Center for
dors for inspection purposes and the L&lt;;adership anti Public Affairs proposed

Issues

the CHS initiative, and ,the Osteopathic
Heritage Foundation in Nelsonville initially funded it for 10 health departlilents. The Appalachian New Economy
Partnershi'p also ·provided support.'
Health departments in Gallia and Pike
Counties and the City of Steubenville are
fu~ding their participation sep31·ately.

All •trle• of carpet are Included:
BERBER CARPET, IAXONT CARPET,
TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG CARPET,LEVIL
LOOP CARPET and ICULPTUJlED CARPET.

No utn cbar&amp;e for mo'flnl furnltan
· or removlq old carpet.

CaD us or st~p Ia.
We'D come to roar home and .• euure
for a free no obllpdoa t~uote.

'
Pomeroy,

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PageA6

OHIO

Ute Daily Sentinel ·

Tuesday,

MLB boxscores, standings, Page 82
.Indians f;ototebook, Page B&amp;

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va . - Michael Price,
owner of the Captain
Steamer carpet cleaner serving Gallia. Meigs, Jackson,
Mason · and surrounding
counties, has attended classes in water damage,, qualified in education and examination, and is certified in fire
·and smoke restoration by the
, Institute • of Inspection,
Cleaning and Restoration
Certification, Vancouvet~

"NewsChannel
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certifying ..and standard-setting organizatimi dedicated
to raising industry standards
through technical proficiency. By adminstering a strict
process of certification, the
HCRC provides a means bY
which consumers
cim
receive the highest quality of
service from trained, know I·
edgeable and. professional
·
technicians. '· .

Wash.
Price has been hailed by
Tom Hill, the HCRC's executive administrator, "as an
example of the type of individual who cares about consumers and their belongings,
as well as his industry.
"He has demonstrated the
desire to provide customers
with thorough, professional
and· caring service," Hill
added.
The HCRC is a· non-profit

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Local resident wins certification-.

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The
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. Daily Sentinel

' INSIDE

Jul~6, 2004

.

Tuesday, July 6, 2004

Former·UCLA .coach willin·g ·to
talk to OhifrState about job
Bv Rusrv MtLLER

Local theatrical group tours NYC

after tht 2002-0:1 sea&gt;im.
Born in t:"alil'ornj a; Lavin spe nt
three · years as an · assistant to
Purdue coach Gene Keady before
joining the &gt;tall at UCLA.
In the first yew of his Jhrec-year
contract with ESPN, , he covei·ed
many Big Ten games during the
2003-04 season.
" My start in coachiuK began in
the Bi g Ten," Lavin said. "That's
the irony. It 's oome ful'l circle. that

Associated Press

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!

Please see·coath, 86
l

Fasano, Phillips ·
power Clippers
to victory

The River City Players were on the :Today" show during their
recent trip to New York City.

around . 10 111ph in .' the
evening ... Becoming light and
Today... Partly cloudy and variable. ·
very warm with a 20 percent · Wednesday ... Mostly doudy
chance of showers and thun- with a 40 percent chance of
derstorms. Highs around 90: showet\ and ·thunderstorms.
Light
and
variable Highs in the mid XOs.
-winds ... Becoming southeast Southwest winds 10 to 15 mpl1.
around 10 mph in the afterWedne sday night..Partly
noon.
cloudy with a 40 percent
Tonjght...Partly cloudy with chance of showers and thuna 30 percent chance ofshow- derstonns. Lows ·in the mid
ers and thunde.rstorms. Lows 60s.
1
around 70. South winds
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
THE AssoctATED PREss

Highs in the lower 80s.
Thursd&lt;~y
night... Mostly
cleat. Lows around 60.
Friday ... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in t.he mid 80s.
Friday night...Mostly clear.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Saturday ... Mo stly sunny.
Highs in the upper 80s.
Saturday
nigbt.... Partly
cloudy. Low s in the upper
60s.
··
Sunday .•. Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the_upper 80s. .

"Stomp",
MIDDI::EPORT - The Millie'~ ,
' River City . Players Theatre "Hairspray" , "Phantom of
Group and several friends the Opera", .and "The
have returned from a motor Produ~ers."
trip to New Yotk City.
Making the trip were
, Highlights of their trip David and Evans Smalley,
included.a tour of the city, an J.ud:,: Porter, Ann Thomas,
appearance on the "Today" Demse .and Alame Arnold,
show including conversa- Dr. and Mrs. James
tions with Katie Couric and Witherell Jason Witherell
Matt Lauer who was pre- Maureen' Henessey, Suiy
sented an Ohio University Parker, Joan May, Joanne
Donna Karr
football by Emma ferrin and Williams
,
Dixie
s'ayr~.
Amy and
Evans S1nalley. .
Perrin
Cathy
Erwin
Emma
Members of the group
Th~mas,
Chad
attended Broadway shows, 'Kathy
1111ct
including
''Wicked", Dodson, · Jamitha
"Thoroughly
Modern Kimberly Wilford, Marie

· Emma Perrin poses for a picture with actress Mandy Moore .
at the Gershwin Theater.
·
Birchfield,
Charlotte
VanMeter, Sue and Majorie
Baker, Tom Dooley, Bntce
Ftsher, Charlene Lewts,
Terry Shain, Scott, Karin
· and Seth Johnson, Susie
· Karr, Marilyn Spencer and
Lmda Mullahand.

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Public release of $2 bill at face value continues
Ti,re is running out for public to getthem
By DANIE;L COTIRE;LL

vault reserve to the general public," White said.
UniVersal Media Syndicate
. The $2 Bills are highly sought after and
extremely popular to give as gifts for friends
(SYNDICATED) - Hoards of people are and family. They are the perfect gift for any
jamming National Hotline phones to get $2 occasion," he said.
bills for face value.
Many younger people ha ve never even
Some collectors are trying to snatch up ,;een one of thesehistorically sign ificant $2
all they can.
·
, bills that feature President Thomas Jefl'erThe crisp, uncirculated $2 bills are being son on the front. A historic engraving of the
banded in packs of five and sent directly to signing of the Declaration of Independence
their homes.
is 'on the back.
·
If parents and grandparents living in 1928'
These $2 bills are closely controlled by
would have kept a pack of five uncirculated ·the Treasury Department 's Bureau of En$2 bills they could be worth $2·,250,00 today. graving and Printing, makers of the nation_s
That's why people want them so badly.
. paper currency.
"Ourpri'l;ate vault reserves will soon be gone . .
The $2 bill makes up less thm1 I% of the $670
Those who want to get them should call now,"· billjon in genuine U.S. cutTency that circulates
said John Thomas White, Executive Director worldwide, according ·to the U.S. Department
of the United States Monetary Exchange.
· of Treasury under Secretary John W. Snow.
Originally issued in 1928, the Two Dollar
Dealers must submtt requests · in writi'ng
Bill has largely been locked away in dark U.S, for 10 or more banded packs of 5 bills. But,
Federai Reserve vaults, rarely distributed by the. general public getting less tlian I0 packs
banks and almost never se~n. in circulation.
can call the National Direct Hotline now at
r~at's why 'it is extremely rare to actually 1-800·242-8038 at1d ask for Dept. 08568.
find one of these historic Two Dollar Bins Limits will be strictly enforced, White said.
in your pocket change these days.
"When our stockpile is· gone collectors
will have to sort through moriey from the
bank .to get them," he said .
"The $1 00, $50, $20, $10 and $5 dollar bills
have all recently w1dergqne 1~ajor new design
changes. Now, it's feared that new legislation
may be . introduGed to discontinue ,tiie historic
designs of these Two Dollar bills. That's ~hy
we hav~ authorized the release of a limited • GIFT- The
Offirhll Cordm'"" Collector.\ IVai/err n·ith each Bill.
number of .the uncirculated $2 Bills fi'om our

I
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How to get them
· The U.S. Monetary .Exchange is releasing the popular $2 bills to th.e general public. Call the
.. National Direct Hotline 1-800-242..SOOS, .ask for Dept. 'DB568. The stimdard $9 processing
fee and shipping gets you a vault sealed uncirculated pack of five $2 bills at face valu.e.
Valuable: C~rr9ncy values always fluctuate. But. a pack of five uncirculated $2
bills from t 928 is now worth $2,250.00

Historic: Featuring a tribute to Founding
Father Thomas Jefferson painted by artist
Gilbert Stuart in the t BOO's.

Indians send
Ludwick, Bard
to Buffalo .

Natlonalll'eaauras: A
d,etailod engraving of
... John Trumball's f~mous
• 1820 painti(IQ "The
Signing of lhe Declaration of Independence."
The original hangs In the
National Portrait .Gallery
In Washington D.C.

THE UNITED SrATES MONETARY EXCHANGE IS A PRIVATE EXCHANGE NOT
AFFILIATED 'MTH THE U.S. GOVERNMENJ OR AI-N GOVERNMENT AGENCY
SOURCE: The United States

.

Monel&lt;~!)' b:ch&lt;vlge

.

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F!J.EE giveaway announcedfor pop·ular ·U.S. Mint
State Coins
.
.

. . The U. S. Min~ has announced the release 'state coins have already increased in value,
date of the newest ofthe Fifty State Quarters". some by up ·to 516&lt;,&lt;;.
For a limited time the general pubtic can
· This national effort · assures coins are
get the new Iowa Quarter Dollar FREE. The · available not only to Iowa residents, but to
coins are being given away FREE in Uncircu- all citizens outside the state.
lated. condition for orily three stamps to cover . To be at'f\Ong the first to get the FREE unyour order acknowledgement, shipping, han- circulated coins when released by the Mint
dling and the protective display capsule.
in late August , send 3 first clas&gt; stamps for
The coins ll!'e . special because they are the display capsule ,which preserves its
, . straight from the mint in brilliant uncircu- beautiful uncirculated condition.
'
lated condition. You can not find these coins
For delivery,' follow these instructions to
in your change. Only the Uncirculated coins get your FREE coin. Limit I per household:
have· increased in value. All of the earlier
I . Write your name and complete ad-

,

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·-··'·

MOOSIC, Pa. (AP)- Sai
Fasano and Andy Phillips
both homered and combined
to drive in seven runs, and
Orlando Hernandez looked
good in his third rehab start
as
Columbus
beat
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 13-3
Monday night in the
International League. . 'The bulk of the offense
came against Red Barons
starter Clay Condrey, who
was chased in the third after
· giving up nine earned run s.
The Clippers · got five of
(hei'r 15 hits in the first
inning, including a two-run
triple by Phillips, a two-run
home run by Felix Escalona
and .an RBI double by
Fasano to take a 6-0 lead,
·- A home run by Michael
Vento in the second made it
7-0.
Three singles loaded the
bases in the third before
Condrey hit Kevin Ree·se to
score a run and walked John
Rodriguez to. score anothei'.
After the walk he was
pulled for Seung Mak Lee,
who got out of the basesloaded jam with a double
play.
.
Hernandez pitched sev~ n
innings- his longest outing
J,Vith th&lt;; Clippers - and
gave Up two runs on five hits
while striking out five. "EI
Duque" is trying to rejoin
the · .Yahkees after shoulde'
surgery in May 2003.
Jim Rushford hit a tworun homer for the Red
Barons.
Fasano homered jn the
fifth and ninth innings.
Phillips · hit hi s second
homer in as . many days 111
the eighth.

dress neatly on a piece of' paper.
2. Enclose along with three first clj!ss
postage stamps. MONEY CAN NOT BE
ACCEPTED. Send the stamps loose inside
your envelope.
•
DO NOT staple, tape or affix them.
3. Mail to:
.Ff{EE Coin Processing,
Commer.clal Box ~678, Dept AI568
Akron, OH 44309-3678

,

•. .FREE - The. new Quarter Dollar /loll()ring
'

"'•''u••:•" ~ - l 2004 AUTHOfHeEO
M l.ffiED STATES IIIJNETAA)' EJ&lt;CIW;GE IS APFWAtE
..:JT,
E'J(()W{]C

AFR.IAlED \lllH THE U.S. oo,.m.t.ENl 00 Nlf GCMJN,t'NI' l&gt;l.'£1iCf

the Great Srare ofIowa.

.

•The United States Mint•· and •Fifty State Quarters••
are registered trademarks of the UniteCI States M_int•.

..

CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Indians activate!i
outfielder · Ryan
Ludwick an:d catcher Josh
Bard from . rehab assignments and optioned them to
Triple-A
Buffalo
.on
Monday.
To make room, the club
designate'd left-hander Scott
Stewart for assignment and
transferred pitcher · Joe
Dawley from the 15-day to
the 60-day disabled list.
·Ludwick is coming back
·from offseason knee sur/l.ery
and Could rejoin _the· Indians
by the end of July. Bard ~as
spent the season trying to
get back from a serious
groin inju.ry.
Stewart, signed in the .offseason
to
bol ster
Clevelimd's bullpen, was a
disastrous signing for gener- ·
al manager Mark Shapiro.
Stewart went 0-2 with a
7.24 ERA in 23 games
before the Indians sent him
to the minors on May 26. ·
Cleveland acquired him in
a ·.January trade with ·
Montreal for outfielder
Ryan Church and infielder
Maicer lzturis. Stewart
appeared 51 games for the
Expos in Montreal after
coming back from elbow
surgery.
"It just didn-'t work out (or
him or for us," Shapiro said.
"It's disappointing because
it's a deal that I feit good

about."

1

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Carpenter hammers·Reds
BY R.B.

FALLSTROM

Associated Press
ST. LOUIS -Chris Carpenter is
happy with hi s record, unconcerned
about being bypassed for the AllStar game.
.
'
Backed by his trio of All-Star
intielders, Chris Carpenter stmck
out eight and walked none in sevenplus innings Monday to l'ead the St.
Louis Cardinals over the Cincinnati
Reds 4-1.
Carpenter, .9-3 with a 3.50 ERA,
allowed one run and five hit s,

including an RBI single in the sixth
to Barry .Larkin.
'-'It 's an ho'nor to be where I'm at
right now, compared 'to where I
was-;--to even be considered," said
Carpenter, who missed most of the
last two years because of a shoulder
injury. "I'm just happy the way
things are goi ng and I' m going to
continue to work."
Edgar Renteria and Scott Rolen
drove in two runs each, and Albert
Pujols had ihree hits fur St. Louis.
'Larkin, also an All-Star, hit a
dr.ive ttp the middl e that barely
missed Carpenter's head.

''It didn't touch me but it brought
some memorie&gt; back," Carpenter.
said. "I got hit in Chicago one time
right on the side olthe face."
Carpenter, who had been 1-2 in
his previous four st;Hts, has pitched
. seven "or more innings in nine starts.
The Cardinals are 12-4 when he
· pitches.
After the All-Star selections were
revealed on Sunday, manager Tony
La Russa spe nt several minutes
talking to Carpenter at the player's
locker. A day later, both agreed

Please see Reds, 86

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SCRAPS

·Chances
.
..,· J
are, were
all- athletes
be a great athlete, just like all of

you.
Not only are you and I great athletes,
we a·re multi-sport at hletes as well.
How can I be so sure of this? Because ·'
· ESPN told me so·.
Mundane, everyday activities are now
being bi lied as sports on t·he network - .
eating, spelling, driving, playing cards
and?thess have .all graced the airwaves
of the "world wide ieader in sports."
Ju st today I drove to work. spe lled
sorne words (obviouslv because I'm
writing .th is column) . .·1 played some
chess on Yahoo' Games. I did not , ho\vever, have time to squeeze in a game of .
No-Limit Texas Hold' em.
.
But sti ll , I participated in three different sports today, and still had energy to
work. What an amazing atlilete I am . .
On late Sunday night (early Monday
morning) , I watched a hot dog eatin.g
contest. I was shocked as the color analyst tried to convince me that Tak~ru
Kobaya shi was the greatest athlete in .
any sport today.
.
.
Are you kidding me? A guy that can
eat a lot is a great athlete, and eating a
bunch of hot do~s is a sport?
·
The whole affair was referred to as
"competitive eating." That mime says it
all: it is a ,,ompe tition. not a sport .
Spelling Bees, the Worl(l Series of .
Poker, chess guru ·Gary Kasparov vs.
X3D Fritz; ETC. are either competitions
or games. Sports are a little different.
If you look up the definition of sport
in a dictionary. it is quite vague. That is
why I use three simple rules when deciding whether or not something is a sport.
1.) The person participating must be
an athlete. In mher words. some sort of
physical activ~' mu st be exerted by the
parti'cipant. Throwing down cards on a
table and occasionally lifting a cigar to
your mouth do~s not constitute physical
actiVIty.
As I previously stated, drivihg is a
everyda'y activity. Even though the competitor is sitting down the entire time, I
think there has to be an exception that
makes racing a sport. It has a rich tradi - · '
tion, p.lus sitting in the hot car over 500
miles is certainly physically challengmg;
2 ) There must be a way to win.
be sides having a judge decide. Some
people s ay that boxing is judged. but·
· Please see Scraps, 86

'

Coach ·K will Gambler Armstrong worries
about upcoming •.
stay at Duke deals
challenges ··
lnd.ians 8-Sioss
-·

',

.

Bv AAI!ON BEARD

Ass&lt;iciated Press

DURHAM, N.C. - Mike Krzyzewski is stayi ng
at Duke, ending talks with the Los Angeles Lakers
about becoming their coach . .
"Your heart has to be in whatever you lead,"
Krzyzewski said Monday. "It became apparent thin
this decision was somewhat easie(to make because
you have to follow your heart and lead with it and
Duke has always taken up my whole heart.'.' .
. Krzyz.ewski, who ht~s won three national titles at
Duke, said the timing of the Lakers' offer and their
prominence as . one of professional sports' most
famous franchises made the chance to coach them
tempring. "But he never got to the point of being
ready to leave.
.
"The decision has.alwaY.s been to stay at Duke. It
would have to be something changing (that)," he
said at a news conference on campus.
Krzyzewski said Lakers general manager Mitch
Kupchak first , made . his interest in hiring
Krzyzewski clear during conversations the two had
around the time of the NBA draft. Kupchak met
with Krzyzewski in North Carolina last Ttlilrsday to
discuss the job ...
Even Lakers star Kobe Bryant was reportedly
involved in trying to persuade Coach K ·to take the
job.
The Lakers had no immediate comment Monday
on the decision by Krzyzewski, who signed a life, time contract with Duke three yeaTs, ago.
Pluse -

Duke, B6

BY JOHI\I lEICESTER
Assoc1 ated Press

NAMUR, ~lgium - Lance Am1strong has no doubts about
the risks that lurfi in the next stage ot' the Tour de France: lfluck
·goes against hi1n, he says, his drive for a record sixth straight
Bv ToM WITHERS ·
win could be over almost before it '~ begun.
Associated Press
, One of the pbstacles for the five-time champion wi II be boneshaking cobblestone paths that some riders say shouldn't ev~tl
. CLEVELAND,£_ Kenn y Rogers
be part of cycling's showcase race.
"'
has the most win"s in baseball. and
The paths are.,l'lumpy, unsettling
he's hurting:
· and treacherous when wet - in
Pitching with a badly pulled right
. short, a recipe for crashes.
hamstring, Rogers became the. first
"Everybody is worried," the 3212-game winner in the major
year-old Texan said Monday. ''It's
leagues, and the Texas Rangers
always dangemus . You have to be
roughed up All -Star C.C Sabathia
in the tront. If you get stuck behind
in an 8-5 victory ov'er the
a crash or something like that then
Cleveland Indians on Monday
you could almost say that your Tour
night.
is finished.''.
Rogers (12-2) fought off pain
Ann strong is fourth overalL 18 seconds behind overall leader
· .with each delivery after injuring
Thor Hushovd of.Norway. He finished 85th in Monday's 122himself while shagging fly ball s in
mile secon(l stage from Charleroi to Nrunur in Belgium. with a
·the outfield two dan earlier. The . .small detour into neighboring France.
left-hander said his 19th start of the
So far. Armstrong seems pleased, saying his team "is maybe
· .seasori was a struggle from start to
the best one we've had." But tl1e competition is perhaps the
finish.
toughest he's faced.
·
.
"'The
field
is
full."
said
Armstrong,
who
won't
look
to
take
"It made it hard to throw a pitch," .
tl1e lead until later in the three-week race. "'The course is tough,
Rogers said. "I reai!y'clidn'Lhave a
but I think the co'mpetition will be deeper than other years."
clue of where the ball was going .
PleeH -

lndlens, 86

Pleese see Worries, B6

'

•'

'

Brad
Sherman

t ·mu~t

St. Louis Cardinals Jim Edmnonds is tagged out at the plate by the Cincinnati Reds catcher Javier Valentin in
the third Inning of their baseball game in St. Louis Monday. The Cardinals beat the Reds. 4-1. (AP) ·

.

'

•

•

�--

•

..

'

•

.. Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 6,

Tuesday, July 6, 2004

· www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

'www.mydallysentinel.com

•

:Major League Baseball
w

l

Pd.

P10

Gil

3'4
346

CIIHTliAL
Stlouo
Chlclgo Cubs

Clncin"""
Miwaukee
Housloo
W

l

Pet.

G8

P10

Mon.

Strk

AWl/If

'
~Oo~•~ordE:===1
"hd"t1'71t
5 _:__-f7~·3c..,~W~2--:37 12~ _1!-~
~46 g-o 34
575 ·-jL:js.~•t=w~21="~~--2.!.:2~
~-~=---'42
~_;39
~~·,
51~04'/
3-7
L2
23-18
1Q.21

Sfenta

.
.......,._

1

32

48

14

400

,.L3

3-7

• 1S.22

Sundlly'slrUrtlegul Re&amp;uiU

~ 4.1lwnpa eaY 2. (Gm t\

LOG Mgele6 6, Anaheim 2
Allanta 1o Boslon 4

r-.e.~~

NY Mets 6, NY Yank&amp;t! 5
Clnc1nnati 5 CleYeland 4 (11 )
Moot1eat 6, Toromo 4

BeJtmort 8, T.-npa Bay 2, (Gm21
Nr'tarilen 10, DetrOit 3

~ 9. Kanaes City 0

Philadelphi!l 5 Bellmore 2
I' Texas 18, Houston 3
1

St ~ours 2, Seanle 1

.......

SWtl. iMot"erG-4) at Toronto (BatiSta H) 105 pm
~(lib &lt;4-5) at Bostoo (Walwfield 4·5) 7 05 p m

T6cu (Bi&amp;rbr(d 1-0)at Cleveland (C.Lee 7 I ), 105 pm

IJ\boit (Johnson 5-7) 81 NY YanQes (Mussl'la 9·5), 7 05 p.m
Ti'roa Bay (Hen00ck5011 5-6) at Baltimore (Lopez 6·4) 7 05 p m
M~ (l.arJ&lt;.ey s-8) at CtWcago Vohtite Sox (Garcia 5-7) , 8 05 p.rn
Kf111181 City (G111111ka 1 5) at Minnesota ( S~ntaM 6-~). 8 10 p.m

••
Orioles 4, Devil Rays 2
Flm G8mt
Tfnpa. Bay
Beltlmort
tlbrhbl
abrhbl
c• rdH 4 0 0 0 BRbrts2b 4 01 ,0
uzrf 4000 Newhn3b 4010
l~cf 4 t I 0
TeJ8diiSS 4 0 0 0
dh • 4 o o a APtmo tb 4 a 1 o
rtnz.1b31t2 .M.opzc 3220
A laph 0000 BlgbieH 411 0
Fi ph
0000 H1stJrd'l 3021
A
3010 Matoscf 3111
B rA31l 3000 Ralnesrt 3021
2000

1\ttGrftpM 1000
B~nchz

TQta\e

2b 4

o1 o

32 2 .t 2 Tottll

To'mpo Boy

000

002

.32' 411 3
000 -

2

BaHimora
000 020 20x 4
E-8Robllrta (4) OP-Tampa Bay 3 LOBTampa Bay 7, Bahlmore 5 2B-RSanchez
M
114).
·~bJr
1 ), Hairston Jr 111).
(1"0), Matos (18),
Ra1nes
38-Lugo (3) HR-TMartlnez (13)
elne&amp; Jr (4)
•
•
IPHREfiBBSO
Ttmpa Bav
Brazelton L,2·1 6 2·3 a ' 4 4 0 5
ltJMillel'
1·3 1 0 0 0 0
Harper
120000

~

J,L,,..

:·"'·"·

BatdiTION
Gabrera

BRyan W,3-2

.11~

..

6 2·3

4

2

2

3

2

1 1·3

0

0

0
0

0
1

1
1

5,12

1

0 0
HBP--by Bruehon {..M.op.u:)

Umpite&amp;--Homa, Oerrv! Couslnl, First, Oar
ren Spagnardl. Second, Ed Montague, Third

~ ~A-31,438 t48.286)
Canllnala 4, Reds 1
Clnelnnan
St lou'ab r hbl
ab 1 hbl
Freelll
41 30 Wmack 2b 41 20
la!Kln st 4011 Rnfana ss 4 1 1 2
0Jmnt2b 4000 Pujols1b 4 1 3 0
Grt Jr. d' 3.000 Rolen3b 4022
Dunn 1b 3 0 0 0 Edmndcf 3 0 1 0
WPanert 401 o Ced&amp;nolf 3"0 1 0
vlentin c 3 0 0 0 Tguctnlf 1 a 0 0
JCutro 3b 3 0 0 0 RSndrarf 3000
Udlep
1000 lsrnghs p 0 0 0 0
LaAueP'I 1 o o o Mthanyc 4 1 1 0
AWgnrp 0000. Crpnter p 2 0 a 0

.&lt;'Lnldrd
"' p If

JI!ICI'UI ph 1 0 0 0
Rtdlng p 0000

oo a a
1 aao

Totll1

Tot.la31t51

000

C1nc1nno1l
St.'-oula

....

L
32
36

Pet.

42
42

38
"'

537
525

40

512

43

50

000

001

33 •1 t 4

000

oox -

04Q

1
4

ltrtt

6-2 •

.......

«&lt;

16

....,

25-16

·-

~ -20_

~20

ll

GB
P10
_______.___.___ 7-3
..
6-4

610
561

Home

l1

-=~'1 =:j'~"'
6-4t:::= WI
l1

...... 21 -20
24-17

26·15

2515~
~22 _1 t_ _20-!1 '

B

4-6

l2-

463

12

10.0

W10

18·22

1~21

"""""""'

37

l

Pd.

GB

P10

Strk

San Diego

45

37

549

• W4

Horne
24· 17

21·20

San F!!JlCisco
L03 At1RMs

45

38

""

.,

7·3
4-6

' l3

25-18

20-20-

24· 1-, -

19-21

1

2Q.21- -i22B

w

WEST

~lonldo

"'""""

43
32
00

• 37
..
53

.538
395
361

&amp;4
5-5
3-7

1

12&gt;
15'1.

wa

W4
' l1

Away

- , 6-26

14-27

~-~~R..ulta

~··AMub

Mdwaukae I, Chicago Cub! 0
St LouiS .a, Cnoonab 1
Colorado 7, San Franc1SCO 4
Pittsburgh 3 FIOI'ida 1
Atlanta 111Mootr&amp;al 4
Phdadelph111 5, NY Uets 5
Los Ange~ 6, Anlooa 5, (10)
San Diego 2 Houston 1

n;...,.,. a;;;;-

~

THaMc

13·26

w

3!5 5 I 5

Floydlf
4124
rtidelgo if 4 1 1 · 1
Spncercf 4 0 0 0

30t200'*1-8
.•.- 2od - au ooo - 5

Wggntn Jtl 4 0 0 0

Contlcl'
4010
Totlls 38 811 I

•

Notional l.aegue

WEST

~rtbttne

·,

'

Colorado 10, Dlil1roi18
""""
'' · TDmpa
Bay 3
Sal1 Diego
7 Kan&amp;U City 1
Oakland 9, San Fraoc1sco 6
Ani!OO&amp;I 4, Mme&amp;ota 1
ChiCEigO Cubs 2. ChiCago Sox 1
SUndly'l Nl RMUI
Pit!Sburgt'l 6, M1lwaukee 2

-~-- ~---,--,.­

Atlallta (Au OrtiZ 8-6) vs.. Montreai(Ds!!Nna Q-2) at San Juan. 7OS p m
Prttlllxn!Jl (Fogg 6-6) at Florida (WilliS 6-5), 7:05 p.m
NV Mats (letter 4·2) at Philadelphia (Wolf 3·3) 7 05 p m
ChiCago Cubs (Poor 2·1) at Milwaukee (Sai'JIOfi].-)J), B:OS pm
Clr.:innatl (Acevedo 4-1) at St Louis (Moms 8·6) 8 10 pm
Houston (Mumo 1·1) at San Diego (Valdez 6-5), 10 05-pm

TCleveland

C1111pcf

Totlll:

401 1

E-ASortano (14), Cnsp {3). DP-Taxas 1,
CleYeland 1 l08-TlllXU iS, Cle&gt;oleiNid B
~ (13), VlzQUel (14}, Merion! 2 (B).
HA-ASorlano (1 5). $9-THafrnu (3). C~
Conn (I)
IP H AEABBSO
tuoo
R19WaW,12·2 5 1·3 7 5 5 2 2
Almanz11
12·3 0 _,. 0 0 1 I
BShouH
110000
FCordero S,25
1 0 0 0 1 0
C1oYo1ond
Sabathle l 5-4
J.JirT181'1el

3

8

6

6

1. 4

4

3

2

0

1

"

2000a3
HBP-bv Etoger! (THatner) by Sabathla
tBialock),
Umplras-Home Msrvm Hudson F1rst Dana
DeMuth. Second. J1m ~e . 'Ttlird, Kerwin
Danley
'
T-2 48 -'-25,363 (43 ,369)
Howry

Pirates 3, Marlins 1
Florida
Plttabur9h
ab rh bi
abrhbl
Kendattc 3 1 1 a Pterrac1 302 0
LCSilllo 2b 4 0 1 0
JWilsn ss • 1 2 0
Mc*wtclf 4000 Lowell 3b 3 0 0 o
CWIIsnrl 4 0 1 1 Cbrerarf 2aao
TAIVIzrf 0000 Cornne" &lt;I 0 0 0
Hill3b
3010 Choi tb 4 1 1 o
SfVnes 3b 0 0 a 0 AGnzlz..ss &lt;1 0 2 1
Suoon lb 4 0 1 a Admndc 20ao
TAdmn cf 4 00 0 Tranorc 2000
Castillo 2b 3 1 1 1 Beckett p 1 0 0 0
KWellsp 3 0 00 BHwrdp 0000
ANunez pt\1 0 0 0 WilliS ph 0 0 0 0
Mesap
ooo o Bumpp 0000
LHarrspM 1 006
Kochp

TotJII

0000

Easley ph 1 0 0 0
31 1 6 t

33 3 7 .2 Totals

PIH1borgh
,~
000 000 3
Florida
000 000 001 1
E- AGonzalllz (8) DP-P1ttsburgh 1 L.OBColoradO (Stark 0-3) at Sao FranciSCO (Sctmldlt0-2}, 1015 p.m
Pmsburgh 6. Florida B 28-CW1Ison (22),
AGonzalez {17) HR-Cea11Mo (3) 88---JWil
Bahlmortl
son (6), Pierre i'91 Cs-Kendall (7)
DP-Cinc1nna11 1, 51 Louis 1 LOB--C1ncm Bumrtzlf 3 11 2 G~cl4 00 0
IP H RERBBSO
nat• 5 St Lows a 29--Freel (9) -Aentana CJhsoo c 4121 Tuckerr1 4 0 0 0 BortcowsluW,1.QB 1·3 6 2 2 1 6
3210 DeJean
Cookp
3110 MohrH
2·3 0 Q 0 0 1 Pltlow,.h
(20), PUJOIS (25) 8-Carpenter "
Tomkop
0000
WP-8orkow&amp;i.
•
I&lt;WeUs W.4·5
84 0 058
IP H RERBBSO Fsserop 0 0 0 0
Umpim--Home, Paul Schrieber, F11"5l, Ed Mesa 8.21
MaSwyph 1 0 0 0 Rnsomph 1 0 0 0
121100
ClnclnnaU
Montague,
Second,
Jarry
Meals,
Third,
Oar·
Chaconp
ooap
WFfkTip
0
0
0
0
F1oride
5 9 4 4 1 3
U&lt;te Ls-6
T
yWikrp
OOaO
ran
SpagnarcU
Beckett
L,4-5
4
53216
2 o a o o 1
RWa9ner
NPerez ph 1 0 1 0 T-2 21 A-26,727 (48,286)
1 1 0 0 0 1
6Howtud
1 2 0 0 1 ,
Rledlll"'g
Bump
Total• 3! 113 7 Total• 32 4 8 •
210003
St Loul•
200020
Braveo11,Expos4
Carpente..- W,9-3 7 1·3 5 I 1 0 8
510 000 OOt - 7 Atlantl
WP---KWeiiS
Klf\9
2 3 0 0 0 0 2 Colorado
Mornreal
S.n Fruw:laeo 003 100 000 - 4
Umpire&amp;--Home, Enc Cpoper, Fwst, ChtJdc:
lamghSS.l9
1 0 0 0 2 2
lb rhbl
ab rhbl Mtnwether; Third, C B Buckner
E-PrW1Ison (2) OP-Coloredo 1, San
Wp.....{;arpenter
Furcal
sa
3
3
1
0
EChvez
ct
5
1
1
0
Umpires-Home Brian Gorman Firat, Dale FriiOCitcO 1. l-OB-Colorado 5, San FranciS· NGreen 2b 1 1 1 1 OCberass 5 0 1 0 T-2:53 A-13,224 (36,331)
co 7. 28--Ciayton (241 , Hehon ~6) , BurniU JGarca2b4220 Vldro2b 3020
Scot! Second, Ron Kulpa, Th1rd B1ll U1ller
17), Snow (11 ) 3'8--Caslilla 2l. LWalker
T-237 A-41 ,852 ~ 50, 345 )
JDrew rf 5 1 2 0 Carroll 2b 1 0 1 1 Yanken 10, Tigers 3
11) C&amp;-Ciayton (31 S-M11ea omko 2
CJones3b 4 1 2 4 NJhnsn 1b 4 o o o Delre II
New York
PH
RERBBSO
Brewers 1, Cubs 0
DeRosa3b1 000 · f8tate3b 4210
ab r hbl
1b rhbi
Colorado
JE91dac
31
2
2
CEvrt111
41
2
1
ASnchzcl
4020
BWIIms
cf 3 3 2 3
UIIWIUkH
CHic1go
5 6 4 4 3 0
~W,3-3
EddPrzc
1000
Sledgert
4
021
lnfanle
2b
4
0
0
0
Jeler&amp;5
4000
ab r hbi
ab r hbl
3 1 0 0 0 2
TWallu2b 4 a 10 Pdsdnkcl 4 0 1 0 Chaoon S,18
1 1 a 0 0 1 L.roclit 1b 5 1 1 0 Schndr c 3 0 1 I ~~~ · ~ggg ShHIGid r1 3 2 1 1
AJonascf4 11 3 EOiaz c 1 000
Cros~rt
0000
Cunsellss 4 1 1 1 San fql'lciaco
REMt~3b 3 010
0000 0Vongcl"l4120 ARdrgz 3b 3 1 2. 3
SSosar! 3a10 Jen~ln s tf 4 0 1 0 Tomko L.3-5
6 10 6 6 3 1 ~erocl 1010 Oayp
Delee 1b 4 a o a OvrbaV 1b 3 0 0 0 WFI'Wlkhn
2 0 0 0 0 1 Thmaslt 5000 TUetcafp 1000 AoWhtelt 3 1 1 1 EWilan2b 1 0 0 0
300 0 AFoxph 1000 ThmeiiH 0000 JaGbidh 3 1 2 1
GP!Ison ct 4 o a o Gr~~W&amp;ff o o a o TvWabr
1 3 t 1 0 0 Byrdp
JuCruzp 0000 Blddlep 1000 Hggnsn tf 4 0 0 0 S1arradh 1 1 1 1
Blm:111C 4 0 t 0 LVzcnop a 0 a 0 HBP--by Cook (Pierzynski). WP-Tomko
SK1mp
oooo CPena 1b 3 I 1 1 Posadac 2000
0000 Umpire'!---Home. Bruce l='roemmlng: First
MaCias If 4 0 10 Kolbp
JRIYra ptt 1 0 0 0 Munson 3b 3 0 1 t MalswH 50 11
AOronz ss 3 0 I 0 KG1111r2b 3000 Hunter Wendalsl&amp;dl, Second, Mike Wnters,
Tobia 40111310 TObia
38 411 4 JSmlthat 3 0 0 0 TCituk lb 5 1 1 0
Clmentp 2000 Helms3b 3 0 0 0 Third, Tlrn TimmOfiS
Ce1ro2b 4 1 1 0
Godw.n ph 1 o a o Moallerc 2 0 0 0 T,--300 A-39971(41,584)
Atlanta
120 003 000 - 11
Totae.32373 Totala 34101t1D
Merckrp 0000 BShel!p 1 o o o
MontrNI
010 tOO 110 .4
BCiarkrf 1000 Orioles 8, Devil Rays 2
E--CJones (2), NJohniOfl (2), CEvvreU (3) Dltralt
000 000 300 3
Tollll• 32 o e o Total• 25 1 3 1
DP-Atlenta I, Montreal 1 LOB--Atlan1a 6. NawYorll
Second Glma
160 110 01x - 10
Battlmore
Montreal 7 28!-NGreen PO) JGarcJa (4), E-H~gmson (3) OP-Otlllolt 1, New York
Chicago
000 000 000 - 0 Tampa Bay
1brhbi
abrhbi CJones (8), JEttrada ~26), Marrero (91. 2 LOB-Delrol\4, New York 10 28-CPell&amp;
100 000 001 - 1
MilwlukH
4000 HrstJr 2b 5441 V~ro (17), TBat1tla (9) HR-AJooes (13 , {11 1, BWIIItams (13). Cairo (9) . HRDP -Ch~tago 1 LOB-Oneago 7, t.Uweu- Crwlfdlf
4 0 2 0 Newhn 3b 5 1 2 0
CEverett (2)
~Wil l lam &amp; {11) Sheffield (14), AAodr1guez
kae 6. 28-TWIIker (1 3), Barrett (14) HR- Fick lb
IP H RERBBSO {20), Sierra (8)
Col.ll'lsell (21 SB-Mac1111 \1), Podsedn1k lialdeiUcf 4 1 I 1 Tejada IS 3 1 3 2
Huff
3b
4
1
2
1
APimo
lb
4
0
1
2
Atlanta
IP H RER8BSO
(33), Jenkins (1) 5- AEMartmez
7103205
DoVol1
IP H RERBBSO JoCruztf 4 010 LLopez3b1000 BVrdW21
21 11 02 Robertson L.7 4 1 2-3 B 7 7 3 0
TMrtn:zdt'J 3 0 0 0 Jvlopzdh 4 1 1 0 JuGruz
Chlcogo
LUQ086 3000 Bigbiel! 4000
Montraal
Van
1 1-3 1 . 1 1 o 1
Clement L,7·7
7 3 1 I 6 10
11·3 8 6 8 1 t Levine
311131
Mercker
1 0 0 0 0 1 Frdyt:e c 3 0 0 0 Mattia If 0 0 0 0 Dayl,5·9
ASnchz2b3000 Matost:f 4000 Tuliler
2 2·3 1 0 0 1 2 Colyer
21113 1
lllwoukoo
Ralnesrf 41 3 1 B1ddle
43 33211
Haw York
BSheetsW8-5
7 4 0 0 1 12
Mchadoc 4 0 1 0 SKm
1 1 0 0 a a Ueber W,6-5 6 2·3 6 3 3 1 6
LVIZCaloo
1 2 0 0 0 3
1 t-3 1 0 0 0 1
KalbS,25
1 0 0 0 0 2 Tobia 32 2 11 2 Tote1a 38 815 e Umpires-Homd, Ed Rapuano, Flr&amp;l, Ted Bar· Heredia
relt,
Second,
RICk
Reed;
Third, Alfonso Mar· Prinz
10001a
Ump:re&amp;-Home Dave AI5Chwege, First, Briq\182
T-2
37
A-13,
122
(18,000).
van pilch&amp;d to 1 batter ~ !he 4tl'l
an O'Nora, Second Phil Cuw, Th1rd, Je~ T•mptllay
000 000 002 2
Crawford.
Bal'ltmore
321 10t OOx ~ I
HBP-w Colrer (Crosby} WP...,Robertaon,
T-236 A-45.016(41.900)
E-JoCruz (6), lt.Jgo \13), JeGonzalez (2) Rangers 8, Indiana 5
Colyer, Ueber 2
,
DP-Tampa Bay 2, Be.ttmora 1 LOB-Tam·
Umplra......ttome Mark. Wegner, Ftrst. LallY
c•eland
pa Bay 4, Baltimore B 28-IJoCruz (13),
VO\Jng, Second, Angel HemBndez: Third, Mike
Rockl•• 7 Glan18 4
ab rhbl Ewrti
ab r hbl
~~~~·~"!!!~~,---- ! Halrelon Jr 2 (12), Tejad• (18), J11l.opez
T-2·57 A-52,608 (57,478).
Billard
2b
5
0
0
0
E~lt
5110
Colorado
San Fran
Machtdo (2) HR-8aklalfl (7), Huff
MYongss 52 20 Vlzquel ss 3 2 2 0
ab r hbl
lb r hbi
t2 SF-Tejada.
Phlllles 6, Meta 5
Mlles2b 4 1 2 0 Dmam2b 41 1 1
IP H R ER Bll $0 ASrano2b 52 1 2 laWionll 5000
Tllllh. 1b 3 3 2 2 VMrtm: c 4 1 1 1
NtwYorll
Phi Ill
Cktjton ss ~ 0 3 1 OCrw: 5I 5 1 2 1
~ Bay
Menchdh 50 21 Blake 3b 4 01 1
ab r hbl
ab fhbl
Hellon 1b 4 o 1 1 Snow 1b 4 0 2 1 JeGOruatez (a.s a 14 a 6 o 2
Blekdc3b
3
0
1
2
Hafner
dh
2
1
1
1
Reyes2b 5010 ROI!nua 4 1 2 o
Ce.stilla 3b 4 1 1 1 Alfonzo 3b 3 0 1 0 L.C.rttr
1 0 0 0 0 0
Mathws
rf
4
0
1
1
MerJoo11b
4
1
2
1
Matii.IIU 4 210
Planco 2b 3 a 2 1
LWallc.rrf 31 1 0 ,PiZYf~IC 3001 1htMIIIer
t
t • O 010
Bra1asc 4 0 0 0 Gerutrf 4000 Pieua 1b 3 0 1 0 BAbreutf 32 1 1
PrWisn cf 4 1 1 1 Trratba c 0 0 0 0
ArllOrla (Foosum 2-6) atl06 Angeles (Uma 6-3). 10:10 p.m

,

"""'

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!'51.

JA'illp&amp; c

3 0 {I 0

emeron pn 1 o o 0
TGivin p

11 0 0
ZHph 1 0 0 0
TOIIM M 5 I I
,.._Yont

Phllact.lphla

300
2&gt;10

Thorne 1b 3 2 l 1
Burrell If

DaBell

4 0·2 2

3b A 021

Lbrihal c 4 0 0 0
McheiS cf " 0 1 0

sw"",'
Pl'.tbtt

Madlonp

ToWa
020
000

aoa a
2 I 0 0
1000

32 111

e

DOO DO• -

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6
OP-Ntw York

a

CBeltrru~f

30 0

4 0 10

BGIIIIs If

3 0 1 0

Klesko

3 1 1 1•

1b

--

- Sentinel - ·1\.egtst

"'"'

Wrfe-Count., OH

..

Oftfee lloar-~

~

Dally In-Column; 1:00 p.m.
Monday•Frlday for ln~rtlon
In Nexr Day•• Paper
Sunday J:n·Column: 1:00 p.m.
Frlld••Y For Sundays Paper

Monda~

thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW 12 WR1IE AM All
Ads

\\\(ll \ t I \ II \ I ..,

iir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Lr___

I'ERsoN.ill;
_____

_.ll

flliplna-4-lAI\'e

Fmd your Philippine Lady
lor love and Happ1ness
of a lifetime
t -800·497-6414
F1ll ina-4-loYe com

.

Items

• All ada must

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buslne•• Days Prior To

Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00
Thursday for Sundays Poopoor

be prepaid"

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlatlan•
e lnclud• Phone Number And AddresJ Whcln Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 D•v•

%~~

I

S

tc edit, re}ect, or cancel any ad at any lima Error• mu1t bt repon.ct on the tlr1t da'( of
will be respon1lbla tor no more tt'jan lht coat of the •Pic• occupied by the arror and only the fl,.llnaenlon We
I not
any toea ot e1pen1e
raaullt from the publlcallon or oml..lon of •n adverUHmlflt. Correction will bt made In the rlr1t available edltlon. • Box
llf'l alw.,_ confidential. • Current rate card apptla• • All real atlllte advartlaemanta are 1ubled to the Federal F•lr Hou1lng Act of 1968 • Th11
wantlld ad• mM1.1ng EOE atandardl. Wa will net knowingly •ceept 1ny
1
ln violation of tha lew

lwrlght@lc.neu

Absolute Top Dollar· U
Stiver,
Gold Cotns,
Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rings,
US Currency ~·
M.T S Com Shop, t5~
Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
740-446-2842

Home With 5 acres or le$S N1ce one BR unfurntshed :
All cash. Must not be l1sted apartment Range &amp; relng
wtlh a real e:state company, pr0\11ded Water &amp; garbage '
paid DepoSit reqwed CaH
(740)446-4345 alter 6pm

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Ia
aubject to the Federal
Fair Houalng Acl oi196B
which makes it Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrimlnatlon based on
race, color, religion, aex
familial atetua or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or

~-~
-. 1 In l i I "

0

r X~.~ IAd~

C·1 Beer Carry Out permtt
lor sale, Chester Townshtp,
Me1gs County, send letters
of mterest Ia. The Dally
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20,
Huge Yard Sale Wednesday
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
717104
thru
Saturday
7110104, 9am-6pm Lovers
GIVEAWAY
Lane off SR 78 Something
lor everyone!
2 kittens &amp; 1 female cat,
Yard Sale 7,8,9 Kntck
(740)992·1510
knacks, Nascars 1/64, eel
46 Burnett Ad KMauga
Calico-long hatred kttten,
also, grey kitt ens Call
(740)446·1542.

r

loo-

•

...... wan1ed lmmedt·
atelyl No expenence necessary Work at home Call loll
(405)44].6397

dlacrlmlnatlon ''

An Excellenl way to earn
money The New Aoyn
Call Marilyn 304-682·2645

Are you lookmg for a
stable JOb?
G1Ye us a calli
You could earn up to
$8/hour plus bonuses
We also offer paid training,
holtdays, and vacations.
Free
firewood,
call Wed· Thurs-Frl, Mens &amp;
Full or partltme shtfts
Womens Clothes , Vtdeos,
(740)992·6276 attar 5pm
aYallable
Watch Furntture &amp; NicKcan
today!
Nacks 44 Burdette Addition
1·877-483-6247 ext. 2455
Gtveaway to good home. 9-4
www.lnfoclalon.com
Cute lovable playful puppy
WANIID
Call (740)446·2904

Pa.aba• -c

Bide
will
be
,_lvad by 1he Ohio
Department
of
Administrative
llervlcea,
G-ral
Servlcea
Dlvlalon,
Office of 1he State
Ai'Chltac1,
4200
Surface
Road,
Columbus,
Ohio
43228o13t5 tor 1he
following Projec1: Projec1 No. 770-2003137
ODOT- Salt Storage

IJomee
Laurelville.
OH
(Hocking County)
Marletto,
OH
(.Wululngton County)
TUppors Plains, OH
(Meigs Coun1y)

;!'!~.;.o~u ~~

In accordance with
the Draortnga •nd
~peclflcatlons

pr~

pared by:

,\ '

S~ta

Archltect'a

Oiftce
4200SUrleceCOiumllua, 01143228
Bruce
llatakln,

Projec1Milnager
PhOne: 614+14-5913
Ftlx: 11,._7982
~Wuce.rllllklnOdes . llt

::.:f.':juebids will be
-'Yed lor, the lol-

luiWing v,cll:

I

CON'iRACT- General ··

I

ASSOCIATE'S COST

EST

,P&amp;O.ooo.oo
'

UNTIL
THURSDAY,
' ~ULY 22, 2004 0 . 2:00
P.M. LOCALTlME, and
will be opened and
u:Mil publicly Ill the
-.1
Servlcea
Dlvtolon, Office of the
1t11111 An:hllecllm.-

dllulely.........,.,

•

I

prMid m.llng will.
be held on July 8 ,
A

2004 ot 10:00 a.m. 111
TlMI Olito ctepau'bu•ut
o(
11-aneportatlon.
Dle1rlct
10

Haedq ...rta..,
MUIIdi!IUnl

"

338

Drive,

lelta,OH.

Bidding documents
be obtained from
. . Olllce of the

-r

s-

AielliiHt,
I&amp; 1 Cl

4200
Roed,

Cotumbua.

Ohio

43221-1315 ,

1'1~t-le.., ,..

a ... :l"le_...

~

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...,._
.E&gt;c:-.,.-.

:1:&gt;-•a......-e.-ed JECBght tc:. .,....c:._r

TOBIN

www comlcs.com

il:l2004 by NEA, Inc.

Home on A1Yer 2 bedroom,
2 bath, kitChen, dtnntng ,
laundry, L-shape living
room,
stone
ftreplace ,
28X32 garage on 78 acre
Georges Portable Sawmill. (740)992·2060
don't haul your logs to the
Lower Mason 2BR, 2BA, 2
mtU JUSt call 304·675·1957
C8r Garage, Ftnished baseJim's Carpentry &amp; small ment, Heat pump call tor
Landsca p1ng Call (740)446· appolnlmenl (304)773·5338

rno:::::=-1 ~ ~

l--=.:::;..J ~ ~

AVONI All Areas! To Buy or . Diesel Mechanic II Overbrook Center is currentGrveaway- white house cat,
ly accepting applications lor
Sell Shtrley Spears, 304·
PM Shill
htter tratned declawed, Chickens, small uWs'ual 675 ·1 4~9 .
the posttton ol a beautician
Aumpke is the leader In the
Sllktes,
etc.
lewes people &amp; children, call breeds.
Must have a Manager's
'"'mco1 u1roctor
waate lnduatry.
•
, license please CQme In and
(740)38a·9824
(740)949·2122
Posttion aaalatl Hnlor &amp; hll out an application at 333
Medt Home Health
experienced mechanics
Page Street, Middleport. 2506
Agency, Inc seeking a
wtth repalra 1: mainte- OH 45760 EOE
full-time AN Clinical
nance auch as lubrication,
Wll!
mow big yards,
Announcement ............................................ 030
Otrector for the Galltpolts, electrical and brake work.
(740)992·5594
Antiques ....................................................... 530
'
Ohio
Aequtres mechanical aptl- The
Athens-Meigs
Apartmenta lor Rent ................................... 440
locatton
tuda with basic knowledge Educattonal serYICe Center Will Pressure Wast1 house's,
Auction and Flea Markel.............................
of vehicle maintenance has a pos 1t1on opening as mobtle homes, metal bu1ld·
PoSIIton Aeqwes· OH
and repalr· "exp. with dtesel School Psychologist tor the mgs, and gutters · Call
Auto 1'11111 Accessories .......................... 760 ,
power vehtcle preferred .Meigs County Schools, for t740)446-{)15~ ask for Ron
and WV AN ltcensure.
Auto Repalr ..................................................770
minimum two years of
Must also have own tools, the 2004=2005 School Yt~ar or lea\16 message
Autos for Sale ............................. ,................ 710
home
health nurSing
familtanty wtth reparr manu· Applicants must t1old a cer·
Boals &amp; Motors for S81e ............................. 750
e:.:penence m a manage·
als
and a mmlmum of 1 year ttflcate or hcense that allows =~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Building Suppllea ........................................550
ment role, knowiedge of
performtng
Similar duties them to serve as a SChool
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Federal and State hOme
Must be able to ltft 751bs
Psychologist Salary Will be
OPPoirnJNm•
Bualneas Oppor1unlty ........ ......................... 210
health regulation, JCAHO Excellent compenaatlon &amp; based on experience and
Business Training ....................................... 140
expenence prefe~red ..
benefits with medical, certlltcatiorvllcense accOfd ~
Bankers Life and
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
EOE .
dental, 401k., vacation &amp; tng to salary schedule Tht s
•
CIIUIIty
COmpany
Camping Equipment ................................... 760
penelon. PleaN come In posttlon has Board approved
Submit resume to· 68150 and epply anytime Mon- benelits. Interested app!ICards of Thanka .......................................... 010
'Expanding Field Force•
Bayberry Onw,
Frt. Bam-Spm:
cants should submtt letter of
Electrlcai/Relrlgeradon ...............................840
·Tratntng•Leads'
51
Clatrsvtlle,
OH
43950.
T•k•
thft
while/
of
your
tnterest,
resume,
references
Equipment lor Renl.. ...........................,....... 480
Potential
$25-160K Vr •
Attn Katnna Dunaway,
Rumpkt Waate
and a copy ot current cer ttf!·
Excavlltlng ................................................... 830
Gall (304 )343-()400
AN.
28 AW Long Road
cate(s) to John Costanzo,
Farm Equlpment ................ ..........................610
Oirootor of Nurslna
Wellston~ OH 45692
Supenntendent, Athens·
Equal 0ppot1unity Company
Farms for Rent. ............................................430
Fu: 740-384-5472
Meigs Educattonal Servtce
MIFIH
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
Dance Instructor for fast No phone calls pleaseiEOE Center,
507
Rtchland
For Leaae ..................................................... 480
growmg Jackson County
Aven11e. Sutte #108, Athens.
Dance Studio. Ballet, Jazz &amp; Domino's now hiring safe Oh 45 701
Appllcatton
For Sale or Tnude ......................................... 590
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Fruita &amp; Vegah1ble8 ..................................... 580 Tap PreschOOl-adult Call for drlYers all poslltons, oeadlme. July 26, 2004. The
Furnished Rooms........................................450 Interview and audition 740- Galhpolls, Pomeroy, P1 AMESC ts an Equa l u do buSiness w1th peo
286-9763 1Oam-4pm
Pleasant, &amp; Eleanor call 0 p p 0 r t u n 1 1 '1
le you know, and NOT t
General Haullng ...........................................850
store
(304)675-58SB
lor
Employer!Provider.
end
money through th
Glveaway ......................................: ................040
Dtasel Mechanic
applicatiOns
1 until you have m\19sb
Happy Adl .................................., .................050
Hay &amp; Graln .............. :...................................640
One or Ohio's leadmg motor Reid Mowing Can bail crop The
Athens-Meigs ::•ed::lll::•:a:r:le:n:
n ::::::~
Help
1ad ................................................. 110 carriers has an tmmedlare for mowmg or let me know Educational Service Center
openmg in our extremely What you ch~rge for mowtng Is seeking a HEAD STAAT
~ONAL
Homelmprovamente..................................:810
aeti\19 growing shop for a "B• sevoralltelds Call (614)461 · AIDE Submit letter of Inter· L__...;SERiiliO.VIIiliCESiii.-.,..1
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
Service MechaniC. The sue- ·7536 after 5Pm Monday· est and resume to John E
Houoahold Gooda ................. :..................... 510
cesslul applicant must pos- Fnday. ask ior Etleen.
Costan~o,' Superintendent,
TURNED DOWN ON
HOUHIIor Ren1 .......................................... 410
sess a high IINei of mochan· GENERAL MAINTENANCE P.O Box 684, Pome•oy, Oh SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
In Memorlam .......................................,. ........ 020
1cal aptitude and be able to v1Uage or RtO Grande The 45769. Deadline. July 8 at
No Fee Unless We Win'
Insurance ..................................................... 130 work with drivers Three and posttton
requires general noon The AMESC Is an
1·Baa.582·3345
Llveatock......:...............................................830
a naif day work week, paid maintenance fnd vehicle Equal
Opportunity ·
I{ I \ I I .., I \ II
Loa1and Found ............................................
vacation, personal days, mechamcal skills. Good Employer/Pro'ltder.
•~
Loti &amp; Acrellge ............................., ..............
health msurance. pakJ hoi~ anendance a must Please
I
~
__F_a_rm
.
FOR SALE
Mlac:elllneoue ..............................................1 0 days, overttme pay, 401 K pick up an application at the -T-he-G'"a-11-,a--L-a-w-re_nce
plan and untforms are Municipal Building at 174 E.
Mlacelllneoua MerchlndiH....................: •• 540
f of
service Agency !S aocepbng
Cclloga 51 No phone calla. sppiiC8tiOns lor a full time 2 bedroom home tor sale,
llloblte Home Rep11lr....................................860 among iho miU1)' bene ~ 8
Mot.lle Homee lor Rent ..............................420 working at A.I'Ctie Expresa, Application deadline'. July permanent olltce potltlon needs repair, $25,000 289
This position " open ~ 4 EOE.
wtth beneftts. Appilcatlona TBJCas Ad. Call (740)256·
Mobile Homes for SelfJ................................320 Inc.
now and 100 can bejjln work ~==----­
Money to Loan ......•.•.........••.••••.•....•...........•• 220 immediately. Fax, emans or
Hair Stytl...
may be picked up at the 6702
Motorcyclel &amp; 4 WIIHierl .......................... 740
SerYice Agency
1n person applicants are Wei· FiESTA welcomes you to Farm
check out what we h~;~ve to OHtee, 11t Jackson Pika, 2-Bedroom, 1·Bath, livingMuelcallllllrUnllntl ................................... &amp;70
oome.
offer . . $300 hiring bonue, Room 1571, GalltpoMs, Ohio room. Dtmng-room, kilchen,
'-t0nlla ..................................................... 005
guaranteed. hourly wages 45831 or by caMtng the office ~asement . covered lent
oen-Fannln
..... for Slle ............................................... 580
,
plus
tipl, up 1o 45%aeMc:e au 740-4411-11687 All sppll· porch , General Hartinger
Malniononce
Plumbing Altlltklg ....................................820
500 00
commlllion, retail and tan- cations must be 1eturned by Parkway •
.
Supo~nio,'lden1
Profelllonal Servlcel ................................. 230
(740)992·3057
nlng
c:ommiNionl,
401(k).
4·30pm
Ju~
12.
20\)4.
' 4V7 Lymon Orw.
1
. ll8dlo, 1"t1 &amp; CB ~lr ............................... 110
paid vacation, health, vision,
Hlliani. OH43026
38R on 5 129 ac'res, Gr&amp;en
Alii Eatltl Wlntld ...................................... 380
Fox· 614-527-4114
dental and life Int., ' ' " Tomato pickers wanted, Township close to school
Schootl lnltr\ICtlorti..................................... 150
Email:~
Cldvanced o&lt;lucallon. lmme- .Roush Farms. (7~0)247· Allclng prlco $89,000 Mo..
Belcll ,................................................. 150
dloio ctlenialo and so mucl1 2165
lnlo (740)448-73n
Situation• Wlnttd ..........................:.. :.•.•..••• 120 E.O.E./Orug 11M worJcplooo. rt101tl Now hiring lor lUI •nd

rlO

w..

'

t.otlce

co...

o..n
u.c

•

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m

s.p.ce lor Rlnt............................................. 410

Sporllng Goodl............... -~......................... 520
Trucks for .........
720
u . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . ....... . . . . . . . . . . .

Upflalltll r ................................................... 170

VAlli I 4-WOI .............................................. 730
Wll'dld ta &amp;uy................ _. .......................... OIO
W..lld to Buy· Farm Supplle4 .................. 620
W••tlel To Do ......................................~...... 110
W•ti!ICI to Alrd ..........:................................. 47D
Y.cl Sit. GllllpOIII.....................- ...........072
Ylld 81l1 Pall'•oy/lllddla.........................074
Ylrd llle-PL ~ ................................ 071

~A~"~~~-;

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BUSINESS

..

mos,

-..ow

oao

a

fo1'1h In Deed Book
ment, 1hls being 1he
Al1en11an:
Ronn
Courthouse
on
NORTH
SIDE
OF less 1han 213rds of
the appralaed value. · 308,
Page
499, 1rue point ol beginKayo, 614·5016, ohlpFriday, July 30, 2040,
SAID NORTH ONE10% down on 1he day
Recorded 213188
ning ol1hls described
ping chlrgea collec1,
at 10:30 a.m ., of aold
HALF 9 FEET WIDE
Prior lns1rument refparcel of land; 1hence
by placing a deposl1 day, 1he following ON THE FRONT LINE of sale, cash, cer1lllad
check, balance on erences: Book 97, continuing along 1ha
In the amount of
described rsol Illata:
AND 5 FEET WIDE ON
Thirty Dollars ($30)
SITUATED IN THE
THE BACK LINE.
conllrmo11an of sale.
P~ga
914
Meigs
wa11 line of Lot 230
Ralph E. Truaoall,
County
Official
north 3' 00' east lor
por ael payable to
TOWNSHIP OF SUTDEED
REFER·
Recorda
1024.2 leal to a canTREASURER, STATE
TON, COUNTY OF
ENCE: VOLUME 225,
Shariff,
Malga
OF OHIO. No mora
MEIGS AND STATE
PAGE 411 , MEIGS
Couriiy, Ohio
Properly
address:
crete
monumenti
131 Sou1h 4th Street
thence north 71 " 13'
than three (3) sets
OF OHIO:
COUNTY
DEED
REIMER &amp; LORBER Co., L.P.A
eaa1 paoalng a conwill be provided on a •
PARCEL NO. 1,
RECORDS.
l/llddlapor1, OH 45,760
Appraised
at
refundable bsala 1o a
BEGINNING AT A
PARCEL NO. 3:
By: Dennis Raimer
crete monument at
Bidder. Plan rooms
STAKE
ON
THE
BEING PART OF LOT
(Reg 100311 8) .
$28,000.00
771.6 feel, tor a 10181
Terms of sale: Ceah
may acquire docuNORTH LINE OF LOT
22 IN MINERSVILLE,
Ronald J . Chernek
distance of 798.8 teet
(Reg t)
Ralph E. Tru01811
to an Iron pin In· the
menta
wl1hou1
a
NO. 21, KNOWN AS
BEGINNING AT THE
daposR.
THE JOHN HAYDEN
SIDE
OF
STATE
Al1omeyalor Plaintiff
Sheriff, Malga County
center of County
DOMESTIC
STEEL
LOT,
NORTHEAST
ROUTE 124 AT THE
2450 Edlaon Blvd.
Matthew I. McKeiVay
Road 28 and aald
USE
REQUIRECORNER OF SAID
NORTHWEST CORP.O. Box 968
Lern er, Sampson &amp;
Milt line ot Lot 230 to
Ro1hluas
MENTS, AS SPEC!·
LOT NO. 21, OF MINNER OF A CERTAIN
Twinsburg.
Ohio
an Iron pin; thence
FlED IN SECTION
ERSVILLE.
OHIO,
TRACT OF LAND
120 E. Fourth Stree1,
IOU1h 64 ' 55' W811
44087
8th Floor
153.011
OF · THE
BEARS NORTH 61 ' CONVEYED
TO
(330) 425-4201
pasalng a concrete
REVISED
CODE
DEGREES EAST 10
BERTHA M. LIEVING ' (&amp;) 29 •
Cincinnati,
Ohio
monumen1 a1 28.5
13 3T
APPLY TO THIS PRO!,.INKS;
THENCE
AND LEONA M. UEV46202
leal for a total disJECT, COPIES OF
SOUTH 61 DEGREES
lNG
BY
CLARA
(513) 241-3100
tance o1829.8 teet to·
SECTION
153.011
WEST 9 RODS AND
THOMAS, ADMINI5Public Notice
OH Sup Ct il0074762
the place of begin(6) 22, 29, (7) 6
CAN BE OBTAINED
13 LINKS 1 TO THE
TRATRIX OF THE
ning,
containing
FROM ANY OF THE
NOW ROAD; THENCE
ESTATE OF DAVID J.
SHER1FF'S SALE
16.41 acrea, 'more or
OFFICES OF THE
NORTH 29 DEGREEB
THOMAS, BY DEED
REAL ESTATE CASE
lela, end 111bject to
Public ·Notice
DEPARTMENT
OF
WEST 18 LINKS;
RECORD~D IN VOLNUI,IBER 03-CV-146
all legal highway•
ADMINISTRATIVE
THENCE NORTH 11
UME 224; PAGE 287,
LaSalle Blink, N.l..,
11CCC11111ngtoasurwy
SERVICES.
DEGREES EAST 4
MEIGS
COUNTY
lka LeSallt N1lltonel PUBLIC N011CE
of Septambar 20,
TlMI bidding docuRODS AND 13 UNKS; ' DEED
RECORDS;
TlMI Melga County
Blink, aa Truo!M
1t74, by W.aiiJ A.
menbl
may
be
THENCE NORTH 37
THENCE NORTH 61
Commlaalaneri, hav·
under the Pooling
Buehl,
Reglatered
tng determined tho
NVtewed during bull- DEGREES WEST 1 DEGREES • EAST 4 and
Servicing
Surveyor of Ohio ~o.
na11 hours 11 1he
ROD AND 11 UNKS;
RODS AND 13 UNKS
Agreement
dated
following real eatate
5965.'
Olllco of 1he Slota
THENCE NORTH 51
FOLLOWING ALONG
In Letart Township no
12101/1999,
Serlea
Deed
Reference:
Being pan of1he ,.,
Archl1ect, local F.W.
DEGREES EAST 3
SAID UEVING LINE
1!1&amp;-4
longer MCeaaary lor
Dodge and Builders
RODS AND 19 LINKS;
TO A CORNER OF Ploln1111
public usa, ollar said
estata described In
Exchange
Plan
THENCE SOUTH 54
THE LIEVING PROP..
real eeta111 for . .Ia to Volume 183, Page
vs.
Rooms.
.
DEGREES EAST 3
ERTV;
THENCE
the hlgheo1 bidder.
233, Meigs County
VhJIInlo ""'*-&gt;, ot
(8) 29, (7) 6, 12, 3
RODS AND 2 LINKS
NORTH 37 DEGREES II Oelendlinta
Sealed bide will be
Dead Records.
TO THE PLACE OF
WEST
42
FEET;
COURT of: COMMON
received ot the oflk:e (6) 23, 29 (7) 6, 13
BEGINNING.
THENCE SOUTH 61
of the llelga County
PLEAS MEI!l8 COUNPublle Nollce
ALSO A STRIP OF DEGREES WEST TO
Commlulonara,
TY, OHIO
LAND
OFF
THE
STl\TE ROUTE 124;
COI(rt
Houn,
Public:
Jn ·~of­
SHER1FPS
SALE,
NORTHPARTOFTHE THENCE
IN
A
Onler of .... to .... l'amanly, Ohio 45789
REAL ESTATE
NORTH ONE·HALF
SOUTHEASTERLY directed Iron! Hid
un111 1 :GO p.m. July
Melga
ty·a
CNuunber
OF LOT NO. 21,
DIRECTION
FOL15, 2004 and opened . 2006 fliCBI budget Ia
Court In 1M above
03CV136
BEING
9
FEET
LOWING THE EAST entitled action, I wtll
at 1ha1 time. Tile . , . _ lor lnspec·
1i'ee Servicing. FRONT ANQ 5 FEET LINE
OF
STATE expooa 1o ~ale at
Commissioner• lion by 1he public
AT BACK END OF
ROUTE 124, 42 FEET, public auction Ill 1111
beginning July 5th,
the right to
lka Conoaco Finance SAID LOT NO. 21 OF TO THE PLACE OF CourtllouM on July reject any and all 2004. TlMI budgllt lliiiY
Servicing
MINERSVILLE, OHIO,
BEGINNING.
blda.
23, 2004 ot 10:30 a.m.
· be. lnllfi'IC1ed In the
Corporotlan
THE TWO TRACTS
CURRENT
OWNBeing a par1 of 100
Auditor'•
Office,
of aald clay, 1hl follka
Green
Tree
ADJOINING
EACH
ERS NAME: Retta K.
lowing cteecribed . .1 Acre Lol No. 230, which II loc111ed on
Financial Servicing
OTHER.
Day and Rolph J. Day, estate:
1he oecand floor of
R!~!••P 11
Weal,
Corponudan. PlaiMiff
DEED
REFER·
aka Ralph J. Day, Sr.
1he Court House.
Sltuoted In 1he Vlllege
T - 1 Nor1h In
ENCE: VOLUME 224,
P R 0 P E R T Y of MlddletiOM. !llelge
uld Tow,..hlp and
-A public hearing
Ratts K. bay, ot II, PAGE 287, MEIGS ADDRESS:
43082 County, Olllo, 'N ing
turther bouncllcl and wtll be lilld Thundluy,
Dlf11 dli1ta
COUNTY
DEED
S - · R - ' 124, Lot No.l1 In .......
:"
• d a tole au: July 11111, 21104, on
COURT OF~
RECORDS.
Racine, Ohio 46771
Addition tD .wlftrlld, CoMnMnCing . 111 • 1111 ftecel 2006 buclg- .
PLEAS,
MEIGS
PARCEL NO, 2
PERMANENT PARU.S.G.S.
at. The hMrtng II oat
now lnccwpo;all:d In' cancreta
COUNTY, OHIO
monument at the for 1 :00 p.m. In the
BEING
THE
CEL NUMBER: 18o MiddlepOrt, Ohio. For
lnpui'I&lt;*IC8ofM
NORTHERLY
ONE·
00787, 18-00785, 18- further I
ulpiiOn of lnternctlon of the Commlnlonars'
Onler ot Sele to me •
laid lot. uaiii•IOI Ia •11n. of ..kl Lot
Ofllce.
OO:.:OR DEED REFdlreclld from aald
hwejJy ....... to 1111 230 wl1h the nonh (7)6
Court In 1he
MINERSVILILE, THE
ERENCE:
Volume
plot of . . . lot, - - line ot S11118 Route
. ••dllod action, I will FRONT AND BACK 310, ..... S85
- - Ia t.eueiiY ....... 331; llwlcelollowtng
expose to .... ot LINES OF SAID LOT
APPRAISED
AT:
to the plat of Mid
Nld Hne of Lot
230 Nor1h 3' 0 0 ' - a
BE
DIVIDED
$25,000.00
public auction on the TO
· town.
cllatance of 2110 lwl
front 11epo of the
EQUALLY, EXCEPT A
TERMS OF SALE:
Pan:el No.: 16-00672
llalga
County
STRIP
ON
THE
Cann'!t be sold lor And cumntly nt ' to a corocrot8 manu-

-

DJUVBIUII'IW PAY
8CA1&amp;

QLASS A COL NEEDED
.Earn blltuuean 45-501&lt;
• Min 1

Y'II""'P.

.Homew-.lt

.$500 olgn-oo bonua
• Stan at 36 cpn .
o85% No 1DuCh frtlght
.NO FORCED NYC

Col1-.et2-2382

•

Thla newspaper wm not
knowingly accept
advertlaemants for real
eatate which Ia In
vlolallon of the law Our
reader• are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertlaed In
thla naws~per are
available on an equal
opport"!nity bases.

~

t

-------------------.,

;,,;,;;,;,.,1

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I \11' 1 C))\ 11 '\ I

RBI-Rolen St LOUIS 80, Ca&amp;tilllll Colorado,
70, Owrbay, M~waukee 61 Berkman, Hous·
ton 59 Bunell Philadelphia' 58, Thome,
Ph1ladelph1a, 58, PUJOIS, St. louis 57
Hrrs--JW116on P11tsburgh, 113, Owrtav, M1l
waukee 103. Loratta San Diego 1a3. Casey
Clllclnnall 101 , P1er
re, Flor1da, 100, ARamlrez. Chicag o, 100 Brg·
glo, Houston , 100
IP H R ERBBSO
HOME RUN$-Thome Philadelphia 27
Arizona
Dunn, Clnc1nnat•, 2&lt;1, Boods San Francisco,
Webb
52·3 3 3 3 3 7
22 Pujols 51 Louis 21 Betve, los Angeles,
Randolph
'0 0 1 t I 0
21, Cabrera, Florida, 20 5 ar&amp;tted With 19
Service
1·3 1 1 1 0 0
STOLEN BASES-PodsednJI( M1lwaukee
0&amp;58008
1 1 0 0 0 0 33.
ORobens. Los Angeles, 25, P1arre, Fiori
Koplove
1 0 0 0 0 2
Villafuerte L,l).3 1 1·3 1 1 1 3 1 da, 16 BAbreu, Philadelphia 1,7 Freel,
Ctfoal&amp;
1·3 0 0 o 0 0 Clncllln&amp;ll, 14, Rolllrt_&amp;, Ph~adelph1s 14,Wotn·
ick. 51 lOUIS, 14
PITCHING (9 Oec la10 na)-MI~on Ptliladel
W.4Jwraz
6 5 3 J t 4
phi a 11·2, 846, 4 4S Schmidt, San Fra,ncrsMote
220001
Gagllf
132 201 · co 10-2. 833 2 61 Clemene Houston, 10 2,
833 2 63, PW1Ison ClnCIMftli, 8 2, 800
TMartin
1·3 0 0 d t 0
CarraraW,t-0
2·3 o o o o 1 3 63, Zambrano ChiCagO 9·3, 750, 2-4 l
Paveno, Florida, 9·3, 750 2 92, Carpenter
RandOlph plCched to 1 batter In the 6th
St l outs. 9 3, 750, 3 50
WP-Randolph
Umpires-Home, Mark Carlaon, First, Bnan SAVEs-Gra~es Cmc1nnat1, 31 .Ben1tez
Aunge Second, Bin Hohn, Third, Gary Car· Florida, 27, Kolb, Milwaukee, 25, Gagne, Los
Angeles 21 , Hergas. San Franclaco 21 . Hoff
i'&lt;)
T-3 06 A-32,929 (56,000)
man, San Otego 20, Mua, Pltl!blllgh, 20

Now you can have borders and graphics
.IL.-'
added to your classified ads
(.~_
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
. $1.00 for large

~.

~;;:::~~:~::~=~~~~·•::oo:rv~oo~1~ho~•~l9~h~1

• Start Your Ada With A keyword • lncluL~e Complete

r::=] r
KITTENS 8 weeks old black
&amp; white &amp; 1 calico Lmer
tramed, already haYe had
the1r flea , m1te &amp; worm treat·
ments-need thetr shots
These sweet babtes are
ready to go to your good
home. (740)367-0868

Oead!1ir~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

~&lt;;:.-.~-.

.

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

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
t&lt;Oo

'•

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
Regtster
Your Ad, {740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday••• · or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-aooe
or Fax To
992-2157

-

~lahll:

.

',

C•UW. Co11nty OH

E-mail us yo_ur local sports news:·spor:ts@mydai,lytribune.com

,..~._a.-

' ',,•

lb 2 0 0 0 Long If
3010
Ensbfg 3b 4 0 0 0 Payton cf 4 0 I 1
AEIIfll:sa 3010 Qlntaroc 2000
llmbph 1 o o o Greenesa 3000
Aamusc 3010 Lwrncep 1 00a
~

~~ {«1), CaBell (lA)
2, Phlladelptna 1 LOB-New Vor ~ 5, cmen. p 3 0 0 0 Hlfrnar.p 0 0 0 0
Ph1tadalphla 5. 28-Fiolllnl (20), Thoma Totala 31 1 5 t Total• 25 2 5 2
r;!O I. Burrell (14), DeBell (20) H~loyd
{12), H1dalg0 (12) Sf- Polanco
Hou11on
100 000 000 1
IP' H REABBSO
San Dt~teo
000 100 Olx 2
E-Enaberg (8), Klesko {3) DP-Hou!IM 1'
6,10 6 6 2 3 San otego 2 LOB-Houston 6 San Diego
:rGtavine L.7-6
2·3 0 . 0 00 1 7 29-Serkman (21) , AEverett (12) H~­
JoFranco
1'1·3 1 0 0 0 1 BIQQIO (12) S-loratta. l-awrence 2
IP H REABBSO
Philadelphia
...... 1on
PAbbott
A2-3 4 5 2 3 3
Cklmens
7 3
4 6
MadSon W6-2
2 2 0 0 0 2
1 2
1 0
C:Omuer
1-3 0 0 0 0 1 ~ CMicell l ,3-4
Worrell
10o ao2
Son DioGo
lwrnceW,19-5
8 5 1 1 3 3
BWa')'lSf s.13
1 0 0 0 0 2
Hottman S21
1 0 0 0 0 1
TGiaV1118 pitched 1o 1batter 111 the 11h
Umptres-HQ11e
Paul
Emmel First Terry
WP-Madson
Utnp1re5--Home, Jim Reynolds F1rst An~ Crall S&amp;cond Mil&lt;~~ DIMuro Third Jot Wes1.
Aetcher , Se&lt;:ond1 Ke&gt;r1n KeAey Third, Ga~ T-2'17 A-39,~14 2, 4451
Cedersllom T-2 59 A-41 ,571 (43,500)
AL Leaders
Twins 9, Royals 0
BAntNG-IRodrlguez, Detro11, 377, Mora,
Ba!timOle, 347 VGuerrero. Anahalm, 347
Minneaota
Kan..a City
1b r hbl ,
ab rhbl URarmrez, Bos1on 340 M¥oung , Tex.as
DJesuscf 3 0 I 0 CGzmnss 51 1 1 331 Harvey, Kansas C11\', 328, ASanchez,
Grflnno2b40 10 LFord~
4231
Detroit 326,
Harvey 1b 4 0 0 0 Mauer c 3 0 22
RUNs-VGuarrero. Anahe im, 59; Lawton
Sian dtt 3 0 0 0 KoskJe 3b 3 0 1 1 ClaYeland 62. Mora, S,.lllmora, SO, Crawfofd,
Berroass 3 0 0 0 n.!mer cf 3 1 1 0 Tampa Sa~. 59, MYoung, Texas 59 CGu11en
OBIWnl! 3010 Punto2b 42 2,2 Detroit, 59, Demon Boaton 59
RMeteo rf 3 o o o JJonesr1 4 I I 2 RBI--OOrhz, Boston, 7.6 VGuerrero, Ana·
Rlaford 3b 3 0 0 0 L.Croy dh 4 o o 0 he~m , 71 TeJada Bal11more. 69, MRamlrez,
ACst1llo c 3 0 1 0 Mnlkw lb 4 2 2 0 Boston 65 BlaKlek, Te ~t~~s 61 VMart1ne:z
Totala 29 0 4 0 Totals 34 913 9 Claveli;md 60, JGu1llen, Anahsim, 58
HITS--MYoung, Te•as 117. !Suzuki. Seerttle
KanNI Cltv 000 000 000 - 0 • 111 VGuerrero Anaheim 111 , 1Rodnguez
Mlnntaota
050 000 1:lx 9
Detroit 110 Crawlord, Tampa 6ay, 1a3
OP-Kansas Ctty 1 M~nnesota 2 LOBBlaloCk. Texas 102 Lewton. Cleveland. 102
'Kansas City 3 Minnesota 4 29--LFOfd 2 HOME RUNs-Bialock TeiCilS 22, 0011.!
(19), Mauer (7), Mlentki8WICZ (1 8) HABoslon, 22. MRam1raz, Boston, 22, Konerko
JJon&amp;s (14), Punta {1) SB-MiilnlliiiiWICl Chicago., 20 VGue~raro Anaheim, 20, ARo
(2) SF- Mauer
New York 19, Thon1BS, Ch1CB90 18
IPHRERBBSO dnguez
STOLEN BA$E$-C1awtord Tampa Bay, 38
Kana.. city
Balt1mor~ . 22 Flgg1
ns. An&amp;ne1m
Gobble L,4-6 41 ·3 9 6 6 1 2 BAobens,
ISuzukl Seattle, 20. ASancne:z, Detroit
Buk11k:h
123 o o 0 1 1 20
18 ARodnguez New York, 18
"
BnAnderson
2 4 3 3 0 1 PITCHING
(9 Declslonsi-Muk:ler, Oakland
Mlnntaota
AadktW,S.4
9 4 0 0 0 4 11·2 846 2 95, Rogers Texas, 11 ·2, 846
3 42, Buehrle, Ch iC ago 8·2 800, 4 15
HBP-9Y Radke (DeJesus)
Umplra&amp;-Homa Dan lassogna Rrst Jeff Sct111~ng Boston 11·4, 733, 3.07, JAincon
Kllllogg; Sec«KK, Ch11S Gucc100e;Thlrd,Char· Minnesota, 8·3, 727 1 94 PMertme:z
Bostoo, 8·3, 727 3 74 Robertson, ~roil 7lleRelilord T-217 A-16,191 (45,423)
3 700, 3 82: THudson Oakland 7·3, 700,
2 98
Dodgers 6, D'backs 5, (10)
SAYEs-MR1verJ'.I;Naw York 29, FCordero,
Lo1 Ange1ea
Arl~:ona
Texas 24 NB!11arl. M1nnesota 23, OBaez.
ab rhbl T!!mpa Ba~ . 16, Guardado Seattle 15
•b r hbl
DRbrtsll
51
2
a
RAimr 2b &lt;I 1 2 0
Foulke Boston, t3, Perc..,.al1 Anahern 13
SFinleycf &lt;I 1 1' 3 lzturls ss 4 0 0 0
DBMtarf 2000 Brdley ct 3 2 2 2 NL • Aaders
Hirston H 2 0 0 0 Beltre3b 4 0 0 o-t~~-~~~-,==.....,===
Hlnbrn 1b 5 1 2 0 ShG1en r! 3 1 0 1 BATIING-Casey Cu;c1nnall 352 Bonds
LGnztzn 1 11 1 vmura 1b 1 0 0 o San Franc1sco 352 Hel1on Colorado 351 ,
Cintron ss 2 0 1 0 Saenz 1b 2 1 1 3 Rolen St Louts 346. Overbay M1M&gt;aukse,
A 0 1a
340: JW1Ison P1nsburgh 339 JEstrada
McCknH 4000 Ross c
OliOil ss 1 0 0 0 Cora 2b 3 0 0 0 Atlanta, 328
Webbp 2000 WAI~rz p 1 1 0 0 RUNS- Pu1ols St Lou1s 71 , BAbreu,
Bmo c
411a Mota p
100 0
Philadelphia B6 Bonds San Francu~co 64
Tracy3b 4 0 2 1 Grbwsk ph 1 0 0 0 H&lt;iH&lt;YI Colorado 61 , JDrew Atlanta, 60
Totalt 35 510 5 TolahJ 32 6 6 6 AAamlrez, Chicago, 60 Clayton, Colorado,

Arlzone
003 000 002 0 - 5
Loa Angel•• ooa ooa 000 1 - s
Two ouls when w1nnmg run scored
E-Beltre (5) DP-los Angeles 2 LOBArizona 5, Los Angeles 6 28-LGonzale:z
(23). HA-SFinlay (20). Braaley (9) Saenz
(4) 58-Bradley t9) Cs-Cmtron (3)
Bradley (4) . 5-tlA.Iomar, SFtnley Cintron
lz1una S~hGree n

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

•

CLASSIFIED

Padres 2, Astroa 1
Hou1ton
San Diego
~ rhbl
lb rhb'
81Qaio I
4 1 2 I Srrgha 3b 4 1 1 o·,
J'iicM 2tl 4 o o a • Lorena 2b 2 o 0 o
Bfkmn rf

..

J

'
I

~ MODllJl HoMEN
t"OR SALE

2 Bedroom TratiEV call
{304)675·52 17 goo&lt;f 'condi·
tton
2000 16)180 Clayton mobile
home Fireplace dish wash·
er, walk·tn closet. total elec-''_1 &lt;~740_·_446
_·_95_9_9_ __
3Br 12:.:65 w/Addi!tOn, CIA,
$3,500 OBO must be moYed
(304)675·7783
For sale or rent· 2 bedroom
mobtle homes startmg at
$270 per month, Call 740992·2167
used 3 bedroom
14X70. Includes central atr
Only $t 0,99M)Q Includes
Good

delivery
cau
(740)385-9948

Ntkkl

NICe 98 Flee1wood 3 bed·
room, 2 bath , wtth central
atr, .thermal pane wtndows
and 1OX20 shed lmmed1ate
occupancy
avatlable
$14,995.00 Call Harold
(740)385·7871
SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
Stock models at ol d pnces,
2005 models arrrvtng Now,
Coles
Mobile Homes.
t5266 U S 50 East, Athens,
Ohto 4570 t , (740)592·1972,
·where You Get Ylilur
Money's Worth"
Trailer for sate Located at
Leon, WV (must be mo\led)
1994 Commodore, 14x60,
2·bedmom. Hath, utthiy·
room, tncludes stove, refngeralor. washer, extra Cabt·
nets, all underptnning, front
&amp; back porChes wlawntng,
all blocl&lt; &amp; sidewalk steps,
healpump, NC Excolloni
cond111on ,
$13,800
(740)698·2613

i

L01S &amp;
ACRFAGE

22 ac,... on Hoback Road
of1 Old suauo RO&lt;Jil 124 In
Eall Aoclnt, 1-949·770·
4768, ooll· t ·ll49-433·151B
~

~ Two

Recently redecorated one
bedroom apt utilities pa1d
depostt r9qutred, no pets
1740)446·1370
1-Bedroom.
2 Bedroom ,
houses, $275 +UI1ht1es, $350
+UIIhttes 2-Bedroom tra1ler
$200 +utlllt1es DepoSits
reqwed (740)446-4854

Twtn Awers Tower ts accet= t·
1ng app1tcations for Waillf'lg
hsl for Hud-subs1zed . 1· br,
apartment call 675 -667 tt
EHO

UPs taus furntshed apt :i ·
2Br House Fully Remolded
rooms &amp; bath Clean, no
m West Columbia, large
pets References &amp; depos , ,
deck $400 month $400
requtred {740)446·1519
depostt (304)773-9167
Ftnanctng ava1lable with N.O
~l ess

~

than perte~t credt! accepted I
Own don't rent Local com- Fam tly looking for 3
pany Mortgage Locators. Bedroom Rental Prope rty 10
(740)992-7321
Bend Area preferably m the
country Call (304)675·1904 ·

r

M~~OMEN

I

_?r_I3_0_4l_2_73_·6_2_62_ _~

Aelocatln9 to Gallipolis, ·
Famtly wants to 'l~ase mea
home With at least 3 bed·
rooms with garage, needed
tmmedtately Call Jackte
740·707·7999
740·58 9·
5258
2 bedroom all electrtc tra11er
tn
country,
no
pets.
\I IIH 11\'l l l' l
(740)742·2014

-1992 Southern Ehte 14X70.
~-bedroo m 2 -bath , soine
appliances Call (740)949·
2011 after 5:00

2Br Tratler for rent Centr~
A1r&amp;H eat Garbage&amp;Water
patd aii-Eiec1nc Jerrys Run
Ad $300/month. plus·dam- 3x5 kllchen table w/smokl!
age.ldeposit (304}576-2999 glass. black &amp; gold - legs2
chairs (4) EKcellenl condt~
3Br. Trailer with Washer and loon $50 OBO (7f0)379;
.Dryer $400 month plus one 9122
mon1h depostt (304)576- - - - - - - - - Good Used Appltances;
2934 o• (304)593-4496
Recondlttoned
and
Beautiful nver Ytew, tdeal for GuaranteedWashers
one or two people No pets, Dryers.
Ranges.
and
references (740)441-0181
Aefng erators Some start al
$95 Skaggs Appliances. 7e
Clean 3 bedroom tra1!er, 1n Vme Sl (740)446·7398
country tor rent Call
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
1740)256-6574
Chapel R.oad, Poner Oh10
Ntce 2 and 3 bedroom (740)446·7444 1·87].830;
mob1le homes tor rent 9162 Free Est1mates. Easy
mcludes water. sewer &amp; linanc1ng , 90 days same a~.
!rash, no pets startmg at cash V1sa/ Master Card.
$300 per month. m Shade DnYe- a· lt1tle salle alot
area
depos1t requtred.
,(7~4;,.;0.:;
)9;;;92
;.·.;;2.;,16
;;;7_ _ _ _., Thompsons Appliance it
Repa1t·675·7388 ' For sa~
~~
re-cond1ttoned aulomattC
~
FOR R£Nr
washers &amp; dryers relr1gera·
Loo--iiiiiiuOiiiiii,;,._.l tors gas and electrto
1 and 2 bedroom apart- ranges. atr ccndtttoners. ahfl
ments furnished and untur- wrmger washers Wtll do
nlshed secunty depos11 repatrs on maJOr brand s ·tn
· ·
requtred. no pets. 740.992· shop or at your home
2218
Twtn bed S75, IWtn mat ~

r!r

tresses. $25 each, Full s1ze ·
1
bedrobm
apt
bed. $150, lull s1ze bed.
Washe r/dryer hookup, $290
$125, table &amp; 4 cha trs, $75.:rent, depostt requtred No
lamps $10 each, p !Ctur ~
~4().44,., 1 B4
slarttng' at $7 Kenmor&amp;
1 heclroom. stO\Ie and relng- washerldryer set, $300;
erator, turn1shed, u1thttes Crosley retngerator, ltki
1ncluded S400 month plus new, $175, chest-of~raw­
ers, $40
~opo sl1 (740)245·5859
Skaggs Appliances
bedroomcomplete
76 Vtne Street
kllchencentral · atr
References &amp; depostt No
(74: : :
pots (740)446-0139.
~-~..:__ _ _ __
2 bedtoom, just past Holzer
$425 month. Call (740)44 1. Buy or sell, Alverl~e'
11
Anltques. 1124 East MaiD
- - - - - - - - - on SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740·
BEAUTIFUL
APART• 992·2526 Russ Moore;
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT· JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wosiwood
Drive lrom $344 1o $442.
Walk 10 sloop &amp; n10VI8S Call
740·4-46·2~ .
Equal $10 DOl TV's from $10 001·
Housing Opponunliy.
Pol~• Seized Propo•iyl lor ,
more Info call (800)749 ..
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· B1 07 axtP509
ED lo AI'PORDAILEI
Townnouat
apartments, EleCtric Rhetm
gallpP~
,and/or smal hoUits FOR wattr heater. Used 1 vr
RENT Call (740)441 ·1111 Aaklng $125. (740)~46,
"" application &amp; lnlormallon • 2101
•
G10Ciouollvong: 1 and 2 bed· Fo1 SOle; • ploil at ohiQ
room apartments a( Village Valley Mt"}:Ortal GardtnL
Manor
and
Riverside S350each.(7..0}4ot1·977~ .~
Apartments tn Middleport.
JET
F&lt;Om $295·$«4. Coli 740992·5064. Equal Housing • AERATION MOTORS •
AO!)oood. New &amp; Aebul~ Jn
Opportunities
Stock Call Ron · Evans, t ~
Modem 1 bedroom apt 800-537·9528
.•
1'11ooe!740)&lt;&lt;6 03110
'

r

.J

a.

~
~

so

par1·11me llytlotl
3Br. m New HaV'I!n, 1Ba
ls'llt loll. Pnce 10 Sell
m our aaJon in......_ call Wanted· Fun Tlme, evening
w/garage &amp; dry basement , Now. l'11ooe~
Cindy 0 1 - - - K Uno Cool&lt; Apply In pe1'1Cr1
$15,000 worth ol Updates
3010 lor more 1n1o and II&gt; Holiday Inn, Galhpolla.
Mercervill e Loti tor Hit
$83,000 1304)882·2Bt7
sharad enlrai'ICI off St Rt.
IChedWe II! lniiMiw
SaiOOUi
-4 Acres with 1•b:80 Newer 218 3·13 acrea Phone
Local owner - n g Caigo •
~
v•n driver. Must mHI '---iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiliuaupl Mobile Home Surrounded (740)256·1825
by 10.000 acres for hunting . ::l'oo.:::homo=:..:.
...::
. ea:::.lo-,-,.-,.-.Bo-lhPanther II requiremttnts. a.u1pono co- Collogo
Call (740)2se.&amp;478
one
acr•
mil. 3-112 miles
.,... drug and phyalcal. (CaN181S Clooe To Home)
80-40 apllt FOI more Info cell CaRTocjSYI 74o.44ll-4387, Co@llltty
AtM!Ihad ffOm Holzer Hospl1al
(T40)1~e eese.
1.so&lt;l-214o()452
J:1woL Great location, In 620 Evorg&lt;Hn R&lt;l , $19,500
Gol1lpolil Ohlcl, 3 bod1001t1S. 560 EW19f880 Rd., $18.500
&amp; . EMra
Panunedtca
2 lui boiill. Prlc$ ., Sell Call (740)448·8840 o• New 1 bedroom opu. Phone Wlnchoelor Model
nHdod Appiy 11 1354
(740)448·3738
$175.00 3()4.675-3168
Now. Phcne 010\W!:I!539 1740)645-4513
Pike, Gallpolla.

1'!10

..

30-36

_

,. ,

___

I ,

�•

•.

·.
Tuesday, July 6, 2004.

Niw

..

Tuesday, 'July 6, 2004
ALLEYOOP

·www.mydaltysentinel.com

ACROSS

$5,295, Include&amp; painted

at a High Profile Location
740~992..7100

metal, plans how to build

book. Fiider - free delivery.
(937)5 59-~1 .

r______,.

I \i-&lt;.\1"1 1'1'1 11 ...,
,\I 1\1"'1(1( h.

~

TRUCKS
n&gt;RSru

1·

Stratford Lounger camel in !1,;--~---., ~.,
ook&gt;r less than a year old rlO
FARM
1970 Ford F3,50. tOh. Grain
Pd. $450 . will take $250 L~--OIEQu.OIPMEIVI'iiiioiiiiii,;,_.l ·bed, low miles, many new
(304}576-2929
...,
'parts, new tires/wheels . '

CONSTRUCTION

baler, electric tie , used one

Roofing • Siding •
Painting· Gutters ·
Decks· etc.
For Fast Courteous

AU new exterior and interior _1ooe
__
· - - - - - - cab, air, loaded, 5 spE!ed.

new motor, $5,500. · 740~
Tractor parts &amp; ~ervice. spe- 645 _2365 . 740-446-9599.
cializing
in
Massey
Ferguson . Ford . and · - - - - - - - - ,
Belarus. (740)696·0358
1996 D.o dge Dakota Sport
TrUck , Extended Cab. 2WD.
I R \ \..., 1'01~ I \IIi 1\
1. Owner, 93;ooo miles,

I'

At.TI"a)

~all740-245-5121.

~--Foii'OiiiRiiSiiAI,Eiiii___,

L
SALE
1;,~--ooiill:liililiiilo-,.J

$500!.

*$BOZ:-...;..;;..;~P~E.;.IS,.,.._-.,

Honda 's, Chevyls

fUR

-8-6F-iM
_h_Ac_v_e n_u_e.-C-h-rys-le-r,
ril eg. AKC Basset Hound lots of new parts, and parts
ups. (7401256·6887.
car. Cold AIC (740)645-5373

COOK MOTORS .

•Rurrs &amp;
VEGETABIL'i
HOMEGROWN SWEET
CORN
1

!f~ru•,·in·..,f~w~t~~iW/1~1{

001

Cavalier,

$3,895;

Shadow.

· 30 Yrs. Exp. •

L.-llii-iiiiitiliitiiiio,..l
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

"::======~o.;:=======

UncOnditional lifetime guarreferences fur·
200t VT 1100 Honda nished. Established 1975.
Shadow Spirit motorcycle. Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
f;xc ellent c.onditlon, one 0870 , Rogers Base ment
owner, • asking
$5,000. Waterproofing. ·

.-......

~~~

· Looking for a
non profit

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

organization to
work one day of
,, ..

If,,.

admission gates

Hill's Self
Storage
29670

Bashan Road

204 Condor Street

at the 2004
Meigs County

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Fair. Please Call

740-992-5232

740-985-4159.

· Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-6454

........

1Ift Mllllll'lll
11%111 ......

UJCIIIIIIWin....-sl
.... 11 .....

E-.ch Kit Contains the Following:

HEATING fl COOUNG

Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
SalOl Signs - 24" x 1.2"
• 3 Wooden Stakes
• 216 Pricing Labels
• Inventory Sheet
• 4 Mini-signs to bQ posted on bulletin
boards at· laundromats, market$, et~.

·• 3

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency
• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; I0 yr Warranties
• Huge Inventory

• Vanguard Ventless Fireplaces

!:.."!'.?!'..!! OW~!'!!
: A... alhlbl~ unty wilJI PtJ«:hasa (If Gwuij'1 S~ltt A.tlvarti:itltn&amp;t1L
Must tMI pioKed tiP at ovr otl ~e.

&lt;l9allipolt~

WV010212

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month
'

$1 5 Advertising!
Gets You Great
.
.

Jlailp 1Eribune

~oint ~leasantl\egister

The Daily Sentinel

'

Creative
~ cakes ·

B.· .t:Jt Lora
• Birthdays .
•Weddings
• Any special
occaelon
Place your order
todily .
(740) 985-3917
Lors Bing

Barnhart Builders
30 years experience
•New Homes
•Log tjomes

•Post Frame
•Complete Remodeling
•Replacement Windows
•Roofs •·
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates ·

740-667-6080
Tuppers Pial

SYRACUSE SMALL

Meigs County's Largest selection Of
.an1111a1s, perennials, vegetables,
slffll/llltry, frllit, ornamental trees,
roses; rllollolfenotrons, anll azaleas.

·

BISSEll.
BUILDERS IRC.

Siding ·~New .Garages

ENGINE DR'S

/l~Pt..A(,E M~

vJITtl A

COMPUT~Il?

All work gnaranrrnd

Masier Certified
Mechanics Brigss &amp;
Stratton, Kohler,
·Mtttray, MTD All
mokcs &amp; models $10.00
off ony purchase of
$20.00 with this ad.,

:rHE BORN LOSER

. Pere~nials, Annuals, .
Flats, Hanging Baskets,
·~ ALL ON SALE NOW!!

..

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH .
740-992· 70'!3 or 740-992-5553 ,
fWtockbu lAte Mimi Salvage

ADd Alkr

Mtr~t

"'!)~QUTEL'I ('IE.\:.'{ ON.[

if\t.,.,_\(.~, L~\

Wl-\0 \~ ~'1'01-\E. WI&gt;S

1·- .,--;.,..,

1-\IGt\T...

.,.

(GAstro-

\~ ~!!?!,

.

By Bernice Bed• Oaol

IMPORTS
Athens

• Dirt

•AgLime
L_

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.

HOWARDL.

Ripley, WV 25271

WRITESEl

1-800-822-0417
"W.Vs #1 CiiCVf. Pontiac, Buick, Olds
. &amp; Custom Van Dealer" ,

UlmiiiCE

*RIMLESS
1111111

GARFIELD

· Sunset Hof!lt ·
Construction

'!JAVE ME! 11"'5 A
I#IANT MeATBALL

Bryan RMVH ' I
NeYfHOmel,
Room Addltlona,

FROM ()()'I'ER SPACE

Gars9N, Pole
Big hnd Antique
111.d Furniture

· R,..oretlon .

Rellnllh, Rep111r,
Rellore
J&lt;.Hh BII'-Y

I'REE EITIMATESI

740-742-341

. 40 1112·11H

·youNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

_
·-·a-.

21 Left Bank pal

46 8ecornM

24 Directed
25 Familiar

1 Harsh .
2 Minimal

23 Uproer
24 Cow's place
amount
27 Oz cre~tor
3 Catches

26 Country

29 Cove

28 British

t~lnt

48 Kid's

49 Wartll&lt;e ton

addrs.

4 AllUre

·

........ .

luth.

ofHoi'l

composer· 5o Luggage
32 Feed the.
5 With ~
52 BulfnHI
kill)'
&amp; Loop trains 29 Gambles
33 Botches up 7· Andy
30 Gorillas
53 ·~
34 MPG n10n1tor
Capp's wife 31 Bored
35 forelll rinal 8 Actilr
response 54 Mauna36 Pain
. Alan 36 flunHo I J
In the neck 9 Soothe
cake
37 Compos ·
37 Cook slowly 10 Sense
36 USN rank
14 - Plaines,
41
'
39 Iowa town
Ill.
40 Part of NBA 19 "CHizen- -43 Distorts,
•• data
41 Small shot 20
42 Tax-form ID. 22 S1leol
44 Na1ural .
elev.
44 News
(ltyph. '
~ervlces
. 23 Force
45 Fleaey ones

~'::::

Experiences and encounters In the year
ahead will serve as valuable lessons that
you'll be able to use wisely in your dealings with others. Becau s~ you'll bettttr
understand yourself, you'll better understand them.
CANCER (June 21..July ·22) - Seek cre.ative outlets today that would permit you
to use ·the full power of your imagination,
experience and capab ilitie s. Don 't put a·ny
restrictions on your object111es and abilities.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- We all can le;arn
by leaChing, and today th is will become
quite evident to you when you are called
upon to help someone sort out a problem.
It'll do as much lor you as it does for the
one you aid.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)- Strive to let
your compassion overrule your logic today
W~AT'S
wjlen It comes to your ne&amp;r and dear re laff,nships. · You 'll actually reach others
qui,cker· 'through emotions than through ·.
practical ity.
LIBRA (S ept. 23-0ct . 23) -~It won't be
necessary for the boss · to look over your
~
shoulder today In order to monitor whether
~
or not you're doing a good job. The pride
· ~§- · you take in your work w ill direct your per§
tormance.
'
'
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOv. 22) - If's pOssible that today you could end up being in
10\/e with love, but there 's nothirig ·wrong
_;;;;_....;;;;..._ _,_.__ _--..J 1.-.....;_ _ _ _ _ _....;._ _ _.J with that. There Is always plenty or rooni
and r~liet in this hostile ,world fOr a bit of
romanticism.
.
SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - You
could have a tendency to be a take-charge
person today, but others won't find th is
otlensive or overbearing. The loving care
you show for their needs Witt be most welcomed.
·
CAPRICORN (De c. 22-Jan: 19). .A
change of scenery '!'~~ill do you a world of
gqod today. so m~ke plans to go someplace different' so that you can refresh
__ ~ur _outlook. It doesn't have to be fa r~ only
pleasant and enjoyable.
·
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Your
instinct for spottl,ng items that would bring
hllppiness to both yourse lf and others
today Is keener than usual. It's a good d~y
to go shopping lor that !!lpecial gift yo u're
,
looking for. .
PISCES (Feb. 20·Martih 20) - Yes. you ,
can't help yourself from thinking about or
doing for other$, but today you need to
take a little . time out just fo r yourself and
your personal requirements. Indulge yourNeVeR FeAR I . \..,
. self a littl e.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - To vour
THE MEATBALLINA'IOR
credit, you'll be very responsive to anyone
15
who is in need of assistance , today.
Although it may take a little away from
your time , what you get back In satisfaction will be wo rll'l il.
..
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) - Dealing
with others toda)l In trying to furtiJer ~ur
wishes a nd desires wilt go well for vou
because of vo.,u r warm ability .to treat
everyone as a friend . They, in turn, will
respond in kind.
GEMINI (May 21~June 20) - With the
put couple of days placing ')'00 in a positive mood , suddenly those.objectives that
...._______·..;i!T=M=Iilli;.;~:,;';;...-,.;..",;;;6___, may have appeared diffic;uh to attain will
·now become easy tor you ,to achieve. Go
for it.

OKAV, ''NO 51-lOES::.
SO FVNNV?

.
I

Hf'REI

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

Celebrity Cipher crvptogarns are created !rom qu0tafuns by farrious people, put ftl present
Each letler in the d~ staoos for another

. Todsy's clue: U equals K

"~OTJL

SHORTNOJF

H P J, ~ T J L

V

liF

V

BIF

XIP

VJN

BTUO

Z0 G 0 F0 HX ;

X I P 'M 0

IW

PJNOH

SOISBO

JI~INX ' R

~TBB

TR

·

BTRFOJTJL . "

ZBTJFIJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Not bad for beln9torty yeats okf'
- Diamondback Randy Johnson, after pitchtng a perlect game

·
r~~;.:t;~v S©R~1A-~£~s· wou
GAMI
Edit1d lly CLAY I. I'OI.LAN - - - - - -

0 foi.Jr

!elte ts of the
scramb led wcrds be·

Rep rrcnge

lew

10

form iour word~

A .L L F Y T

\

I~ I I' I I I
T H N D. C , .

.,
3

I I I' .

.
·I

I~

·

I always feel bad after a
holiday, since I usually go way
.I
off my diet. I've concluded that
r--:-~:----...:....., a con$cience only bothers you
G A 0 J E G j after you've • - · your . • •. ·
M Y· P U J
5

I I.. I
-

1 · ,.1
.
,1

1. 1
. .

I I . 16

....!.
. -.L.-'-·- L.....:......:...J.

e

G)

Comp !ere the chuck le q110fed
by hiJin; in the ·rTmsinQ words

yci.J de.,.elap !rom•sre:p No. 3 belOw.

PRtN i NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

€) UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

FOR

·

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

7-s-o•

Duplex ·Awash· Vicar· Launch ; CHANCE

My n~ ighbor said she would lik(1 to give her boyfriend
.the 'boot'. "He's a nice guy, ·.1concluded , ' maybe the best
thjng to give him is another CHANCE.'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

ru. ocveR AAK~ FUIJ

Of VOIJR 1'0~ AG.AA.l.

~ ·

SOUP TO NUTZ

• ...
Aooln
'~-CI1·.
, Qftllll'll

......
•-

• New Homes
' • Garages

ll'llloMing

• Vlnyt Siding l Polnllng

i

~·

TI-IEN '&lt;011 .. RATS!
TI-IEN '(OU •.• RATS!

740-985-3564

·a

W.dn. . day, Juty 7, 2004

Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racln~,

• Limestone

Bridge is an eaSy·game! If you make sensible bids and logical plays, you wilt get
most deals correct Why, !hen, do players
like to produCe unnecessary flights ol
fancy? Boredom? A momentary rush of
blood to the feet? An atte~t to get into
the newspapers?
~maps in the case of H.C. Graversen
from Den mar~ . it was all three. For any·
one holding that Soutt1 hand, it is M~~t o ·
malic~ to bid one no·trump when partner
opens one diamond. One no-trump '
shows· 6- 10 poi nts, ·no four-card major,
and insufficient' diamond support to ra ise.
But tor some reason - he had a diamond in with hi s· hearts? ""':' Graversen .
responded one .heart. TMe_n, as the· at.ic·'
· lion unwound, it 'isn't clear why South
passed over tour heartS, rather than cor·
rect ·back to five clubs.
West 'led a low spade, taken by dummy;s
bare aCe. Declarer had no choice but to
~draw trumps,~ so he Played a heart to the
eight. West won with his jack and per~ ­
vered in spades. Declarer ruffed on tha
board, led a heart to his ace, and coniinued1~ith a heart to West's king, discarding a club from the dummy.
Now a club shift wOuld have defeated the
contrac t, but West {presumably thinking
that because declarer had ruffed the second spade on the board, East had to
hays the king) continued with
third
spadE!.
.
,
.
Gratefully, South won in han d (discardil1g
dummy 's remaining low club) , led the dia·
mond jack fqr a finesse, and continued
diamonds. When East ruffed, he 'had to
.. givO the lead back to the dummy.
So, four hearts was bid and made -'

:BIG NATE

Open 7 days a weeki

HAULING:

Sat. 8:30-Noon
Suf\. ClOsed.

Advertise In this -,
Space for
$50 per month_·

Tf\OR.W..,PPt.E.i

...

•

,

Trucking

DOWN

need

20 ·Creeks '

lhF

bridge is an easy gamel

R.B.

M-Fri 8:30-5:00

PGfl. . t t:&gt;IC&gt;~'T ~ YOJ '1"1-\t..R£7'

TI-\€U.!

740-992-7599

See Brent or Brian Whaley

...--....,

.

\1-\C. C..OAAUt-1\1'1

FREE ESTIMATES

Al.rt.

I

~[ "'rn~:.~oct:&gt; TI-\C:. &amp;Nc.m ir::Jil p-WI-\"'T "'- GM.to-.. "'-I'Fto.,~l(.l

Wiridows ·,. Roofi'ng
COI.!MERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Bulldlnge, Roota,
' Siding, Oackl,
Kitchens, Drywall
lMora

Ji

CAN'T
EVEN
MOVE
HIS JAW
YET !!

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

740-992-0122
QUIIllty wprlcfoTG/tllr
prlc•

I

~

• Replacement

*IIIFIII
*I.E .

HEAVENS
NO I! HE

Il

Syracuse, OH 45779

Parts

f

:--..0

1356 College Rd.

WOOley's Auto

!

N~Ve~

18 Burglars'

amusing copy

tl~ GOVLI&gt; ~;

busi11ess, llOI our sideli11e .
Manning K. Roush
Owner
0 n Mon,Frl9·5 Sat. 9·12

Pass

.

,?ass

A weird bid yields

SAil&gt; .

~Sand

3 Day Ad:
$9.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit
.

IDr&amp;L.

Pomeroy, Ohio .

l..aw11 a11d Garde11 Equipme11t is our

New Home$ • Vinyl

ross

TH' SHERIFF WUZ HERE ASKIN' 'BOUT
LAST NIGHT'S CARD
GAME !!
LUKEY DIN'T
TELL HIM
NOTHIN', DID HE ?!

"992-2975

106 Butternut Ave;

$12

rtt~

SALES &amp; SERVICE

45771
740·949·2217

3 41\

.I=RANK &amp; EARNEST

GRAVELYTRACTOR

Racine, Ohio

1.

East
Pas&amp;

Opening lead; • 4

Snapper

Gravely

.· ..5 1'

Gets You Great
Advertising!.

Pass!

(304) 273-5321

Pomero~

1 Day Ad: ·
$6.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit

3.

BARNEY

.I ns.

r

CASH?

• 1 Seven-step instruction. sheet, p\us
~Secr&amp;ts of How to Increase Profits at
a 13araga Sala"
• 3 Mounting Materials
• ,6 Multi-colored Balloons
•f 1 Marker for Signs

. 1.!

. 31 ~ Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly ·K •.Jones

owner: Ronnie
Free Estimates

·HOME
.·
IMPROVEMENTS

9 7 6 5

South · West

\ I R\ II I \

·

'

Dealer; North·

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

• · Bucket Truck

I

*"'· Vulnerable; Both

58,900.00 (740)949· t828

riO

QJ 3

•

I,,..,.;.;;..;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,

ri40. ,· MOTORCY&lt;..'lBJ

(740i448-7668.

UII'S PllmiG

1995 30-foot OutchmJ~,n
camPer/ lravel trailer
loaded. Excellent condition.

antee. Local

Starting July 1s.t. Available at·

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

•

41:..-coctk 55
I Politico
· oubj.
- LMdon 5&amp; Flc1lonel

.11 .._...,.
Cllplaln
12 Slope
57 Spouted,
13 Wlohed
as a wllllht
undone
58 Barrel
15 Addams
59 Fast jet
coualn
60 Cry of woe
16 lh ... 61 Hairpin
17 Swiss artist
curve

• J B2

Toll Free: (866j' 254-1559
"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Shop"

dillon. (740)256·1238.

9 7 3

:;rt_

• K' to' a
-¥ A 8 4

Free Estimates

Le 1 me de. ;t fer y:;ul

•

South

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

SIJ«ializing lit Poured Concrete
Foundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls

Tree Service

Q 9 ,7 3

... 10 •

'

1989 Citation Camper, 23
toot, sleeps 5-6. Good con·

Q 9 7

•

K

• Driveways t Tennis Courts ·
t Parking lots t Playgrounds
t Roads,.Streets

c•r

JONES'

•

J 5

•

t K t

Bonanza Get

Take :he PAIN
out of PAINTING!

. J 65432

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675·2457

Buy~.oo

,

CAMPERS&amp;

phone 740·985·4183.

CHARLES W. MCKEAN • 1996 Saturn, $2,495; 199
FARM AND WILLIAM ANN
utlass Clrea, $1,995 .
thers In stock.
MOTEL, · Gallipolis, . . OH
(740)446-9442.
740 446·0103

17H487

AU pack SS.OO
Bring Ibis coupon

A

'East

MONTY

Btai8Wide
"•red Walls

r ~OlORHOMFS

700cc,
shaft driven;
speed
with overdrive
plus5 extras,

oved to New Locatio
cross from Gallla Coun
Fair Grounds'

740-843-5264

•

• 10 6%
. ·.AQI06 5
"'A K 8!

Henderson, wv

740·992·1189

2003 Si lverado 1500 Ext.

Honda

-:, "o1nu Financial Servict!S.. ~
Box l89 • Middleport

MYERS

Free Estimates &amp;
Affordable Prices,
C~IL. Dennis Boyd

lion $4.8?0 (304)675·7545

1B86

Hupp Insurance

Service

match ing topper, includes
tonneau cover, great condi-

Jeep's , ate Police Impounds Cab 4x4 Z71 Off-Road PKg.
Cars from $500. For ii$ti ngs 34 ,000 mile,, Duel . Climate
Control, CO player, Power
AK C Chocolate Labs: 6 t -8·00·749-8104 eXI3901
~eeks old. 1st shots and - - - - - - - - Windows. Power locks,
wormed , $300 each. Call 1998 Chrysler Cirrus-V·6, POwer Mirrors. Auto 4 wheel
(740}.441·0931 .
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Page B6 •

'

0

•
•·

The Daily Sentinel

'•

Tuesday, July 6, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com
t .

}

.Indians Notebook

~craps

Indians stunned by All-Star nodS
BY TOM WITHERS

.

.

.

Like Lawton, Hafner was '&gt;Urprised that
The Indians, who entered Monday
four Indians were selected in player voting. night's game against Texas at 39-41,
Associated P!ess
After all, the White Sox and Minnesota haven't been,above .SOO since they were 2CLEVELAND _ Somehow. .Matt Twins, the two team-. C'lcH~Iand is rha;,ing l in April last season.
.
Lawton's wife knew how rmmy of his in the AL Cemral. got ju't 1'11&lt;: repre~enta- · They've gotten to .500 four times since
teammates were All-Stars before he did.
tive each.
June 21. but have dropped their next game
On Sunday in Cincinnati, Lawton was
Hafner '"'' the sekl:tion' mean more each time.
on his way to catch the team's charter bus th&lt;ul a thr~c --da) trip tn T..::-.as. &lt;fh.: choices
If the Indians can put together a winning
when his wife, Cazesta, told him he was validate ~omcthinl! el~c about the Indians. streak, DH Travis Hafner ~ays the division
going to next w~k's All-Star game in
"To me. that sh1'iw, that &gt;lther pl&lt;\ycrs on can be taken. .
.
Houston along with C.C. Sabathia. Victor · other team&gt; respe~,;t the way· \\'C play the
"We're within striking distance," he
Martinez and Ronnie Bel liard.
.
gar11e." Hafner -.aid. "They're rccugniLing said. ''We have &lt;L~ good a chaJ1ce as anyone
"I was shocked," he said. ···she told me that we're a team on the up.'.'
to win it. Guys are looking at it (.500) and
the guys that made it, and 1 was like 'Four
For general manager Mart.. %apiro. the how many games back we are a little more .
guys from our team?'"
four AII-St&lt;lr' repr~se111 a -,igniliL·ant step lately.
·
That used to be the norm for the Indians. lor a franchise closing in on comention &lt;Uld · "We believe now. but every day that
who hadn't, had. so ll]any All-Star sine!,': aching to get hack to Jominance i'n the AL goes by that we're close, we're more cer2000 when Roberio Alomar. Chuck Fin lev. Cemral.
tain."
T_ravis Fryman and Manny Ramire 7 we 1:e
"Thi&gt; is a .'tep ... Shapil'o ,aid. "Thi-; is a
• THI&lt;~ WICKMAN 'coMETH?:
ptcked.
·
big step for the mgani1.a1ion."
Closer Bob Wickman may rejoin the
Lm;t year, Sabathia was the club's lone
Shapiro 1va-. pm1icularly proud of the lndians this week.
All-Star.
All-Star nuds !xcau'~.: tilL')' 1\'Crt: the result
Wickman repot1ed no problems after
The Indians could ~eta lifth All-Star this of the player\ 1ole -- not a populm·ity pitching a scoreless inning on Saturday at
week. Travis Hafner ts one of five AL play- contest among fan&gt; n1· !-omc online e l ec~ Triple-A Buffalo, and is scheduled to
ers selected by manger Joe Torre to be lion.
"
throw two more in the minors 1\resday. '
picked via an Internet poll as the squad's
"Their JXL'rs arc !Ill' .·ones thai chose
However, there's a chance the right-hanfinal member:
·
them. that makes thi' an c1·cn greater der, who had ''Tommy John" surgery in
Hafner is on a ballot with Minnesota out- honor," he' 'aiel.
December 2002. could be activated in the
fielder Lew Ford. Ch!~ago tirst b&lt;f,eman
• JUST OFF THE l\1AI~K: Although nex.t few days.
Paul Konerk6, White Sox DH Frank the Indian&gt; hmel:ompleted a key 19-garne
GM Mark Sh~piro met with manager
Thomas and Yankees outtielder Hideki stretch - 16 road game' - that Mark Enc Wedge before Monday's. game to
Matsui.
.
.
Shapiro used 10 gauge hi-. team ·, progrc''· decide when to bring up Wickman. ·
"Vote ~ronk," Hafnerjoked. refetTirig· to the GM i'n ., quite read) to prnclaim his
Whenever Wickman arrives, the Indians
his nickname.
team a play&lt;ill contender.
&lt; · . will be careful with the 3S-year-old, who
Fans can vote on www.indians.com &lt;uld
"l wanted to ~ee w, s u ~tain a record h~sn't appe\lfed in a major league ganie
www.mlb.com.
above .500." 'aid Shapiro. ·'Not .SOO. but slhce Augusq002 ..
"I don't know if I've got a shot. I don't two or three games over1. Until we do that,
And, Wedge said he'll initially use
want to go on some campaign or any- it's impossible 10 say we'.re a contender. I Wickman in a sei..~ role, leaving the closthing," he said . . ·
, do think then; is enough talent h~ re ."
er's job to David Riske - for now.

can win via knockout
before going to the scorecards. Using opinions ,to
totally decide winners has
no place in sports.
3.) The sport must involve
an activity that is unique and
not something that the average
person does in everyday life.
For example, not everybody
can play football well; anybody can scarf down hot dogs.
But let's give credit where
it is due. Some of these new
"sports" programs are interesting, and ones that I and
many others enjoy watching.
But how can they p6ssibly
pass for sports programming? The answer is quite
simple, actually.
Commentators.
As long as you have one
guy describing- what is going
}I()U

.

Worries
· from Page 81
Armstrong's biggest rival,
1997 Tour winner Jan Ullrich.
is a mere IS seconds back. He
finished 38th in the second
stage, with the same · time as
Armstrong. He looks lean and
hungry - a fact Armstrong
played down.
"He always looks good at the

Tour,.. said Arms! ron~!. "The
way somebody look'' d&lt;x:,n·l
really mean much.
"Jan falls imo the trap of people always judging the way he
look,. ' Is he fat? Is he st..inny'!'
That 's what they alway' say."
The two cobblestone sections Tuesday come in the sec- .
ond half of the mostly llat 130. mile stage from Waterloo to .the
northern French town of
Wasquehal.
They are fueling worries
after two nervous days of

crashes and high-speed sprints.
The relatively llat early stages
.pro~ide a chance for glory fot
'pnntcrs who have no real
hope of winning the Tour title .
when it ends in Paris on July
25.
The speedsters include
Australia's Robbie McEwen, ·
who dashed to victory in a
mass sprint at the end of
Monday's stage.
.
In finishes like that,
Armstrong and the other .riders
who wait until the mountain

stages to make their ·move do
tht;\ir best just avoid any spills.
Armstrong summed up the
early stages succinctly: "Very
fa~t. very nervous, dangerous
tinishes."
"It's really stressful. In the
last 20 to 30 kilometers ( 15 to
20 miles) the pace rea!!~ picks
up and everybody tights," said
American Levi Leipheimer, '
who is 13th overall. "All etiqu,ette is out the door. You do
what you can - you scratch
and bite and do whatever."

Indians

offspeed
pitches
to
confound didn't bunt on me. l was limited.
Cleveland's hitters.
Hopefully, in five days it will be better."
"Rogers is an All-Star, when he makes
If it's not, Rogers said he would conhis
pitches,
he's
tough."
Indians
outfroin Page 81
sider skipping next week's All-Star
fielder Coco Crisp said.
game in Houston.
Rogers alloweo five runs and seven
"I'm not going to go do something
Not even close. l was lucky' to make it
hits
in
.S
1-3
innings.
and
set
a
career
that's going to hinder me in the second
through five (innings)."
high
by
winnitig
his
eighth
straight
deci
half of the season," Rogers said.
Other than dealing with his injury,
sion.
He
has
not
lost
since
May
9.
But
The l eft-h~mder never considered
Rogers didn't encounter much trouble
Rogers
wa-.n't
sure
what
he
had
when
he
missing the stlirt. In 16 seasons, he has
until the sixth, when the Indians closed
took
the
mound
.
only
been on the disabled list once.
to 8-5. Before that, the 39-year-oicl was
"
I
couldn't
everi
land
on
it,"
he
said
of
"He's
a rock for us," Rangers managin control, using his'Usual assortment of
his tender hamstring.
just glad they er Buck Showalter said. . ·

"''m

· Duke
from Page 81
Krzyzewski declined to rule out the possibility of ever coaching in the NBA.
,. .
"[ don't want to say never, but l also 'don't
want to lead anyone on .... l want to coac~ for
a long time," he said.
The ':-akers have been searching for a new
coach smce June 18. when coach Phil Jackson
stepped down three days after an NBA Finals
loss to Detroit.
Kenny Randolph, father of Duke forward
Shavlik Randolph, said Krzyzewski told him
in a phone call. late Monday morning that he
would stay with the Blue Devils.
"He just basically said !he thing sort of ballooned out of proportion and that he appreciated our friendship and confidence, and that he'd
remain at Duke," Randolph said. "And that's
all that had to be said.
"I told him, 'Gosh, coach. I've got chill
bumps.' And he said, ' l do, too."' ·
The 57-year-old Krzyzewski has a 621-181
record at Duke, leading the Blue Devils to
championships in 1991, 1992 and 200 l. Under
Krzyzewsk.i, the Blue Devils have I 0 Final
Four appearances, eight Atlantic Coast ·
Conference tournament championships and 10
conference regular-season titles.
His' Duke teams have been ranked No. I in
12 seasons, including each of the last seven. ·

With his team 's success on and off the court,
Krzyzewski - like John Wooden did at
UCLA and Dean Smith at North Carolina has become synmiymous with Duke basketball.
Current Tar Heels coach Roy Williams s"aid
he wasn 't surprised by Krzyzewski's decision.
"Mike has accomplished so much at Duke,
and his roots are so deep that l thought it would
be difficult for him to leave,'' Williams said.
"I'm sure he felt it was in the best interest for
hilil and his family. l know it is great for college basketball ."
Krzyzewsk i called hi s play.ers Monday
mommg to tell them He was staying.
"When l tirst heard about this situation, I
was pretty upset," guard Sean Dockery s~iid.
"Today, it was the best news when I heard he's
coming back to coach us."
David McClure, a Duke recruit from
Ridgefield, Conn., was also heartened io hear
the news.
" It was an incredible relief," McClure ·told
The Associa~ed Pre~s . "All l can say is I'm
speechless. I h1 so happy he's staying."
Gary 'Mefchionni , father of junior Lee
Melchionn,i· and a former Duke basketball
player, expressed relief that Krzyzewski will
try to add to his impressive Duke resume.
"That'~ great news," Melchionni said. "I just
want him to get back 10 work."
·
Krzyzewski has 'had ·several flirtations with
the NBA and has said he came close to leaving
Duke in 1990 to coach the Boston Celtics.

four games . .
"I think we'vebeen good
all year," LaRussa said. "And
right now we're really good."
from Page 81
Center
~ie lder
Jim
Carpenter could use the three- Edmonds and second ba~e­
day break.
man Tony Womack made div"It's not all bad," L~ Russa ing stops to back Carpenter
said. "Chris knows he got on Bob Otbson bobblehead
consideration, and that 's a - day. The Cardinab Hall of
heck of a step from wherj: he Famer threw out the first
was last year anil two years prtch and drew a standi ng
ago. And he'll ~ nice and ovatton. ·
,
fresh when he starts the secGnffey was 0-for-3 a day
ond half." ·
after his first All-Star selec. Jason Isringhausen got tion since 2000 and remained.
three outs for his 19th save in homerless in l 0 games since
23 chances, w'alking Ken he hit No. SOO on )u.Qe 20 at
Griffey Jr. and Adam Dunn St. Louis. Griffey, who jus!
before. striking out Wily Mo missed a home run . in the
Pena- to end the game.
. . ninth inning when his down
St. Louis, -an NL-best 50- · the line was called foul , is 532, is 4-0 on ll nine-game for-37' with one RBI since
homestand' and m9ved a sea- reaching SOO.
son-best 18 games above
Ryan Freel had three hits
.500. Cardinals pitchers have and scored a run for the Reds
allowed only five runs in the who have lost II of !'4 on th~

Reds

•

from Page 81 ·

(

road. He's 7-for-10 the last
tw,o games. ·
Cory Lidle (6-6) took a
shut?ut in !he fifth, then gave
up four runs and five hits.
Renteria hit a two-run double ·
on a full count and Rolen hit a
two-run single to give him a
maJor league-leading 80
RBh. Rolen had been l ~ for12 again~l Lidle.
"For the most part, they
were decent pitches," Lidle ·
~a id. "Th~y just did a good
JOb of htHmg them.''
Lidle had been dominant in
his two previous starts, allow"
ing two runs over IS innings
in a pair of vic1ories. Both of
those games were against the
New York Mets, and he
expected a tougher day from
the Cardinals.
,
"With
their
3-4c5
hittets
.
'
tt s hard to not let them
score.'' Lidle said, "They've
got a great lineup."

.

(

on, and an0ther ,pr6viding
insight and talking .strategy · ,
- virtually anythmg can
pass for a sport these days . .
For ages, we have bee~;~
conditioned to expect commentary while watching
sporting events. Televised
sports have always had playby-play and analysis.
Therefore, when we watch
the event wit~ voice overlay,
our mind registers "I must be
watching a sport."
What's next? Vid!!O games;
competitive television watching, paper airplane tlyjng?
Whatever turns out to be
the ·next craze, just stick
Dick Enberg and Luke
Jenson in a booth and lel
them talk about, and it'll
somehow find its way to our
living rooms.
(Brad Sherman is a sports
writer for the Point Pleasant
Register. He can be e-maileq
at bsherman@mydailytri•
bune.com)
··

(now the head coach at
Wright State) and playeragent Marc Cornstein.
Regardless of the problemli
from Page 81
with ~he program, Lavin said
he would be interested in the
now I'm covering the confer- job.
ence as a broadcaster. It's sort'
"I'm really enjoying my
of completing the loop."
work with ESPN but naturalLavin has spent the last .ly there are certain jobs that •
month traveling Europe and would deserve consideration
coaching the U.S. team to~ a . for a retufll to coaching," ·
second-place finish . in the Lavin said.
·
:
international under-19 tourHe said there were . many
nament. He has been in . positives about the position.
France, ltal y and Greece and
"It's just a natural," he said.
said he had not been contact- "It has the elements that go
ed by anyone from Ohio into making a successful proState.
·
gram. It's got the tradition,
Another name to surface as it's got the recruiting base,
a ·possible candidate, Duke it 's got the resources, the
associate head coach Johnny facilities, the fund-'l"aising,
Dawkins, said Monday that and the academics."
he has not spoken with anyLavin left Purdue to serve
one at Ohio State and he
as
assistant coach under
plans to stay with the Blue JimanHarrick
at UCLA. He
Devils .
was entering his sixth year on
Ohio Stl}te athletic director . the
Bruins staff - and his
Andy Geiger fired coach Jim second
as a full-time assis.
O'Brien on June 8 after
·O'Brien admitted he had tant and first as recruiting
- when Harrick
giv.en $6,000 to recruit coordinator
was
dismissed
amid allega~
Aleksandar Radojevic in
tions
of
numerous
NCAA
1999.
. ..
violations.
NCAA and Ohio State · The son of a legendary
investigators also are looking
into allegations that another high school coach in
Buckeyes piayer, Boban California, Lavin was selectSavovtc, had his grades ed as UCLA's interim coach
changed and received thou- at the age of 32. Late in the
sands of dollars from the following season, with
family he stayed with in UCLA at 13-7 and tied . for
Columbus. It is believed that first place in the Pac-1 0, the
the investigators are probing "interim" tag was droppeEI
.
Lies between O'Brien, assis- from his job title.
His
first
three
Bruins
teams
tant coach Paul Biancardi
went 24-8, 24-9 and 22-8.

Coach

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