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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, July 12, 2004

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Source: Cavs make

.National League

Re~s

rally past Brewers

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MILWAUKEE (AP)- All
'"I guess h&lt; saved it all for
Jason LaRue wanted against the las\ day of the first half,"
one of the best relievers in manager Ned Yost said.
'.'Our bullpen has been good
baseball was a single. .
Instead, . he hit a 'two-run all year. That's a good offen·
homer that lifted the sive .team. They keep comCincinnati Reds to a come- ing at you...
from-behind . 9-6 victory . Pena went 4:for~5 with
over the Milwaukee Brewers three RBJs. playtng m place
on Sunday.
of the injured Ken Grif(ey
"I came up and was obvi- J,r.. who \lias placed on the
Dus ly just trying 10 get a sin- 15-day diSabled ltst before
gle and score . (Jacob) Cruz the game wnh a torn nght
.
.
and ended up getting a fast- hamst_n ng.
Gnttey. who wtll mtss the
ball out over the plate and it
ended up going out of the All-Sta~ game, ~as hurt
ballpark," LaRue said of hi ., Saturday ·ntght wh!le trym_g
. h . d ·h t
to run down Brady Clark s
goC-a e.t bs o .
.h .d
fourth-in.ning drive t,o right.
· he 1·ourt h mmng
· · o.t'
ruz · d att1blngd a ,.eah o1 cente.r 1n
L aR u e~ ou e \\ 11 one a 5-0 losst to
Milwaukee. An
MRI exam Sunday revealed
out oft Dan Ko.lb (0-l) ~he hrst · extra-b.ase hn the a partial tear of the muscle.
rehever allowed this season.
Pena's production was
LaRue then hn hts e1ghth · good news for manager
homer,· and Wti.y M~ Pena_ Dave Miley after losing his
followed wtth hts second ot hard-hmtng All-Star.
the game.
"Wily Mo. when he -gets a
Kolb, who. allowed three hold of it , he can put a
runs and four 'htts tn JUSt charge in it," Miley said.
Miley is. not sure, howevone-thtrd of an ·tnntng. was
phtlosophtcal afterward.
er. if Penit will keep filling
"Stuff like that happe ns," in for Griffey in center field.
Kolb sa.id. "It' s never auto- · "I think he 's more commalic. That's part of t he fortab le 'in right," Miley
baseball season. You have said.
·
After starter Jose Acevedo
bad outings."
Kolb is he aded to his first gave up five runs in the first,
All-Star game. and has been he pitched four scoreless
mostly solid this season as innings to keep the Red s in
the Brewers' closer.
the game.

"He settled down. got into
a rhythm and made adjust· ·
ments," Yost said. "It wasn't
like we weren't trying."
Todd Jones (7-2) got the
win after pitching two-thirds
of an 'inning . Danny Graves
pitched the ninth for his .·
33rd save m 40 chance~.
The Reds: who trailed 5-0,
•took thetr ftrst lead a\ 6-5 tn
the seventh on Pena s tworun h~mer tollowmg Adam
Dunn ' grotmd-rule double.
Lyle. Overbay tted tt at 6
wtth h1s IOth homer tn the
etghth otf Gabe Whne.
The Brewers JUmped to a
5-0 lead in the first inning
·
by Geo f t·
on RBI smgles
Jenkins and Keith Ginter. a
bases-loaded walk to Clark
and sacrifice tlie·s by Wes
Helms and Gary Bennett.
The Reds made it 5-l on
an RBI single by Brandon
. Larson in the second, .and
added another run in the
third on Cruz's, sing le.
Cincinnati got two more
.r.uns in the sixth when Matt
Kinney relieved · starter
Victor Santos and gave up
an RBI . single to Javier
Valentin and an RBI double ·
to ' D'Angelo Jimenez . to
make it 5-4.
'
Santos allowed four runs
and six hit s in 5 2-3 innings. Cincinnati Reds' Jason LaRue (23) is congratulated by teaml)'late Jacob Cruz (9) after LaRue hit
a two-run home run during the eighth inning against the Milwaukee · Brewers. Sunday in
Ace~edo gave up uve tuns
·Milwaukee.
The Reds woh the game 9-6.(AP)
tn five mmng s.

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SPORTS.
• Rio track signs Cromity.
SeePage 86

Cliff Lee leads Tribe past Oakland
'

CLEVELAND (AP) thiril time in eig ht games and
Though Kotsay had two wa ~ promptly picked off by
Cliff Lee is making a strong go into the. break at 42-45.
·singles in hi s first three times Zito , who stepped off the
case that he should be headBob Wickman worked the up against Lee, the left-han- rubber. ran at th e runner and
ed to. the All-Star game.
eighth 'and got out of a jam der pitched .to · him . Kotsay tagged Crisp.
fouled off six consecutive
Lee (9-1) outpitched Barry · with two on and no outs.
Crisp certainly would have
In the ninth, the A's put pitches ·and drew an It -pitch scored on either a singl e by
Zito, and Coco Crisp homered and drove in two runs to runners on first and' second walk to load the bases.
Martinez or double by Casey
lead the Cleveland Indians with two outs, but David
"I thought that last one was Blake - but both those runover the Oakland Athletics 4- Riske got Eric Chavez to fly a strike," Lee said. "He's so ners were stranded when
I on Sunday.
out for h.is fourth· save in 10 hot that walking him wasn't Travis Hafner struck out.
Blake then was caught
.
all that bad - but I had to
. "I don't think about my chances.
rounding second too far with
record, about the All-Star
Zito (4-7) gave up two run s get the next two guys."
game, or anyJhing except and six hits over seven
Lee did - retiring Bobby one out in the· eighth, trying
keeping the other team froth innings as Oakland lost its Kielty on an infield pop and to a'dvancc on a two-run sin·scoring runs," Lee said. "I fifth in six games.
getting Chavez to ground gle to center by Hafner that
would be honored to go, but
"Zi to was very good," out.
put Cleveland ahead 4-1.
, that's not happening . It's not Oakland
manager
Keri
"Cliff really pitched well ,"
my call."
Macha said. "He had a prob- Indians manager Eric Wedge
The left-hander gave up lem with one hitter (Cnsp) said. "He doesn't back ·down.
one run and six hits in seve n and that was it. Besides that, He goes the other way and
innings to improve to 6-0 in he was outstanding."
· turns it up a notch."
·
nine starts at Jacobs Field.
Still, the left-hander fell to
In the eighth, Wi ck man
He walked three, struck out 0-4 with tWo no.decisions in allowed two singles, but got
five and is 4-0 in seven starts his last six starts since beat· pinch-hitter Scott Hatteberg
ing Cincinnati on June 8.
to hit into a double play and
since June 3.
·"He's like an All-Star for
"I'm · frustrated
with struck out Bobby Crosby.
us, too," said catcher Victor myself," the 2002 AL Cy · Cleveland won despite
Martinez, one of five Indians Young winner said. "I've got making four baserunning
who will be in Houston for to get better. I've got to make mistakes. Jody Gerut, in ari
the All-Star game on better pitches."
0-for-19 slump, walked to
TuesqaY. night. "He pitched
Lee did his best pitching to open the .third, but was
today hke he has all season, escap\! a bases-loaded threat p1cked off by Zito. He
"!;mart and tough." ·
in the seventh.
·
walked again in the fifth, but
Eight of Lee's wins 1 have . Damian Miller drew a one- was thrown out trying to
come following a Cleveland out walk and took third on a advance on a ball that got a
loss .
·
double by Marco Scutaro. few feet away from catcher
· Crisp had three hits, Mark Kotsay then came to Miller.
Crisp
doubled
home ·
includmg his fifth homer and bat hitting .750 ( 15-for-20)
an RBI double, to help this
season
against Ronnie· Befliard with the goCleveland win for just the Clev.eland.
ahead run in the sixth. He

Athl~tics,

The A's took a 1-0 lead in
the third. Kotsay singled,
Kielty walked, and Chavez
poked a tly .ball down the
left-field line. Left fielder
Matt La.~ton appeared to
fight the sun and made a
lunge at the ball, · which
dropped inches fair and
bounced into the stands for a
run-scoring ground' rule dou ble.
Crisp tied it 1- 1 by hilling
his fifth homer to lead off the
fourth.
Notes: Zito is 2.1 with an

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\nr,s expires.
(owner) Micky Arison have
'It's very serious. I think it's created as a culture. This js the
very close to getting done," said type of pia~ that Shaquille
R
·
Grant's
agent. Mark Bartelstein. would love to !lnish his career."
RLANDO
O .
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a.
Greeled by reporter.; as he
lit Los Angeles, the formal
Sbaqutlle 0 Neal would be: was leaving a gym rx;ar his imnouncement
of
Rudy ·
happy to be.traded to the "':'13ffil Orlando mansion, O'Neal said Tomjanovich's hiring as the
Heat.
he had not yet met with Heat Lakers' new coach was partialThat ~ord , came Saturday president Pat Riley and ly overshadowed by the O'Neal
from 0 Nefl) s agent, Perry declined to comment on a pos- trade talk and Kobe Bryant's
free agency.
Rogers, who told the South sible trade
Fl~rida Su~-Senlinel '!!at
"I can't. say anything -aboUt
Bryant is free to sign with any
0 Neal has giVen his bl~mg that today," said O'Neal, flash- NBA team as of July 14, and
~ that would send hun to i~g a big smile.
.
.
re~ in Los Angeles have
'"'";
'd th
ld
But ESPN, the Sun-Sennnel SaJd he is giving serious considne ve SaJ .. at we wou and the Tunes reported that eralion to signing with the
agree to a trade, · Rogers .SiUd m · O'Neal joined his representa- Clippers. A thlde of O'Neal,
a story posted S:nurcta6 m$bt ~~ lives for a three-hour meeting combined with coach Phil
~ news~ s We stte. , I that included Riley and Heat Jaclcson's depanure, would
think that s gol!lg to .l?Ppef!. I ~ general manager Randy Pfu'nd. appear to indicate the Lakers
be v~. swpnsed if tt didn t
O'Neal's contract runs for . are doing all they can to placate
. two more seasons with a com- Bryant in the ho~Jhat he'll rehappen.
. The Los Angeles Tunes, ell- bined salary of almost $59 mil- sign.
.mg team and league ~· lion, and he was angered earlier
When O'Neal declared that
reported on Its Web site this season when the Lakcrs he wanted out of Los Angeles
SallJn!ay~t '!!at ~. Lakers refused to offer him ar1 exten- just days after the Lakers lost
have m
m pnnctple to sian.
·
the NBA finals to Detroi~ he
tr'dde 0' eal to the Heat . for
Rogers said the Heat had not listed Miami as one of his pre'. Lamar Odom, Caron Butler, discussed a new contract with ferred destinations.
, ·
Brian Grant and a first-round o· Neal.
Riley and Pfund did not
pick. The newspaper said the
"No extension was agreed attend the ~at's summer
Lakers declined to conunent on upon. That was· never a condi- league game iQ Orlando on
the tiade.
lion for Shaquille," Rogers said. Saturday as they had done all
A deal cannot be completed "He wanted to go to an environ· week. A Heat spokesman said
until W~y. when a ~(}- ment that was a team environ- the team could not commen~
week ~wtde motatonum ment We feel confident that because 0' Neal was under con. on trades arK! free agent stgn-"-that's what Pat Riley and tract with ~ Lakers.

Page AS
• Lillian Burt, 86

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• Ohio man.attempting
to become oldest person
to swim English Channel.
See Page A6

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Detallo on P811e A2

INDEX
2 SECllONS- 12 PAGES

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Dear Abby
Editoiials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

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FAIR EDITION •••
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.The Daily Sentinel

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Monkey Run area. Mili s asked council to ' do iion of some cuts in office supplies. the budget is
something about Some all but abandoned property the . same as it was last year and there were no
that has not had its gr.ass cut in two years. Mill s wage cuts. Clerk-treasttrer Kathy Hysell blames
told council that he has contacted the owners of the budget shortfall on a decrease in personal
the property who have &lt;.lone little to correct the · property ta x revenue distributed by the state.
probl em which he said is creating a health hazard During the past two years. Hysell said personal
property tax revenue shrank from $.14.000 in 2002 ·
in thc•immediate area.
·'
to $2J5 this year.
"It has been a total nightmare." said Mills.
- Speaking on behalf of local . pastor Eddie
May&lt;lr John Mussehaid steps are being taken to
Baer,
John Davis asked council to consider turnimprove the sittt:ltion such as the passage of this
ordinance. but there is only so much that can be ing over the old Pomeroy Junior High to Baer's
group so that it can be U&gt;ed for a variety of church
done with the resuu rces that are available .
· and commun·ity related function s. Musser sa id
before council could discuss any plans. the
Commu nity Investment ·Corporation sti ll has a
90-day option to purchase the property.
- Bill Kitchen, who lives on Riverview Drive,
- Council passed next year's budget e-rimated commended the street department tor some of the
to be $1.425.661. which is abou t $ 19.()()0 less than work it has done around town recentl y particular·
last year's budget at $ 1..444. 950. With the excep- ly patchin~ the road on which he lives.

MILES lAYTON

Other business

J.

fo r'afic ionados, it also could ·
BR EED@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM .
mean a great dea l of revenue
for · state transportation
""
.
POMEROY: - Owners of departments looking to cash
Mail Pouch barns in some in (ill the Federal Highway
rural communities like Beautification Act of I&lt;}61.
Meigs Cou.nty may have to which requires them to regupurchase advertising permit&gt; lat e roadside advertising."
if their barns are near a fed - Padgell said.
'The I 965 legislation. also
era! highway, but State
Senator Joy . Padgett . R- ,·alle'd the " Lady Bird Act"
Coshocton, says the barn s arter former First Lady Lady
are less a form of advertising E!ird Johnson , who camand more a slice of . rural paigned vigorously fo r its
passage. addressed bi II .'Americana.
. Bloch Brothers Tobacco . boards and other unsightly
Company began the tradition advertising along the federal
in I 925, by sendi ng six men highway system.
· "While ODOT's decision
across rural America to paint
advertisements for Mail to issue permits fo r the barns
Pouch on the sides of barns . is technicall y within the. red
There were once as many as letter of the law, it i's neither
20,000 of the barns in Ohio realistic nor practical."
and surrounding ' states. but ·. Padgett said.
'Padgett said ODOT now
that number has dwindled.
The Ohio Department of plans to work with the
Transportation has now noti- Federal
Hi'ghway
fied owners of Mail Pouch- Administration to have the
emblazoned barns ' they are barn signs designated as
required to purchase permits "landmark signs. "
for any advertiseme~t local- '. 'This ·way, ODOT can
ed within 660 feet of a feder- continue to is.s ue permits to
al highway.
barn owners in order to com"While that number of ply with the law, that requires
painted barns translates to -regulation of the content of
lots of road trips and photos roadside signs. bt1t can waive
Bv· BRIAN

INSIDE

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Once Again, The Daily Sep:t!nel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fai~ Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Everl look For this Special
· Edition In Your Friday, August 13th Paper.

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Mail PQuch barns ·may be subject·to permit fees

xxxxx, HI: xu, Low: xxa

BY MIKE BRANoM
l.'ssociated Pre5s

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W;EATHER

Shaq's agent says O'Neal··
·accepts trade to Miami Heat

,,,,,, _ mHI~IH~ ....·nliod nnu

Cut the grass in Pomeroy or expect a $100 fine
POMEROY . After much an"ticipation.
Pomeroy Village Coun cil unanimously passed the
noxious weed and high grass ordinance at
Monday's meeting.
· The ordinance must still be approved hy John
Ahderson . village adininistrator. but couneil members believe he will accept the additional lan gua~e
into the existing blight ordi nmice . .Grass or weeds
taller than 10 inches violate the ordinance .
Property owners or renters who are cited as being
in violation have five days to correct the problem
or be charged with a minor mi sdemeanor and if
convicted. receive $ 100 fine and pay an additional $40 in court costs.
·
This ordinance seeks to clean up some of tile
problems .the vi llage faces such as the overgrown
grass near where Sherman Mills lives in the

4-1·

0.88 ERA, and 32 strikeouts
in four C&lt;\reer starts against
Cleveland:• :.. Kotsay is hit·
ting .379 (}} c'for-87) in day
games .. .. Opponents are hitting on ly . 163 (7-for-43)
against Lee with runners in
scoring position and two
outs. ... Oakland leads the
AL in one-run games (29),
goi ng 16- 13 . ... Cleveland
·activated
RHP
Rafael
Betancourt (biceps) from tge
1disabled list and optio.ned '·
LHP Cliff Bartosh to Buffalo
before the game.

ll I ~I&gt;\' . .fl I ' t;c . :.?:oo:i

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

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Middleport •· Pomeroy; Ohio

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OBITUARIES

American
League
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Meigs clobbers Athens
Juniors, Bt

one-year .offer to Carlos
Boozer, Bt

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This Mail Pouch barn on Oh.i o 7 near Chester. owned by Paul Baer. is typical of those found
across Ohio and surroun ding states. but is not subject to the permit requirement proposed
byODOT because it is not located on a federal highway. (Brian J. Reed)
the
are
the
ing

permit lee for signs that
no ·Jonger maintained by
tobacco company, meanbarn owner&gt; wouldn't

have to pay for signs th-'Jt are
no longer actively being
used as advertiseme~ts by
Mail Pouch Tobacco.''

"These barns are a staple
in our local landscape that
have weathered the lest of
time." Padgen said. .

~

Sports physicals will ·be Accus~d car thief injured in
offered at health department fatal automobile accident
B¥ BRIAN J. REED
by contacting the hea lth department
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CGM
at 992-6626.
POMEROY - While most Me'igs
Little said that all students who
POMEROY - An Albany man
County schools have already .·con- take part in .school athletics are now
ducted sports physical clinics at requ"ired hy the state of Ohio ~o facing multiple theft, robbery and
sehoul facilities, the Meigs County obtain a spurts physiql from either a other charges in Meigs Cou nty was
Health Department wi II be holdG1g licensed physician. physician assis- injured in ;'t Jackson County auto
one for those who were unable to tant or nur&gt;e pwclitiuner. They must accident Saturday. which, killed a
attend earlier clini cs.
he completed before the athlete McAt1hur man and 'eriousfy injured
The clinic wi.IJ be held at the begins practicin g for the upcoming another.
Kelly Krebs, 24. was the driver of
·
Heal[h Department from 2 to 4 p.m. season.
"Many may remember ge tting ·a ve hicl e involved in a Smurday
on! Monday by Dr. Wilma 'Mansfield·
of the Holzer Clinic Meigs Branch, A sports phy sical s when it was a brief morning accident on Ohio 324.
donation of $5 to assist with the cost visit &gt;ince lhe on ly requirement&gt; which sent him and two others to
of the supplies used during the exam were a measurement of currenL Grant Medical Center ·.in Columbus .
wouiU 1./Je appreciated but is not height. weight and blood prc." ure Kre b ~•. Jos hua Daily and Kyle
required, said Connie Linle, R N., and an evaluation of the heart and Thrush were transp011ed by medical
the chi ld and family healt~ services lungs by listening with a stetho- helicopter to the Columhus facility.
project director for the age11cy. She scope. We would then be de clared wh.::re Thru sh, a passenger in Daily 's
reminded students \hat !he completed physically ti t to withstand the rigors car, died on Sunday.
Accordin2 to the Jackson Post of
Ohio
High . School
Athl eti c of any ath letic event." said Lillie.
the
Ohio -S tat e Hi ~ hway Patrol.
"However now:· she said "school
Association physical examinati'o n
form obtained from the school or officials and medical profe"ionals Kreb&gt; lust control of his Chevrolet
the- American Academy of pickup truck, striking Dai!y's Geo
coaching staff'· must be presented at such
Prism. Kreb' was ejected from his
the time of examination .'
vehicle .and trapped beneath Daily's .
Please see Physicals, As·
Appointments are to be scheduled
STAFF REPORT

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car. He. was removed by the Jaws of
Life, and is being treated, for two leg
fractures. a. broken arm and other
injuries. according to Deputy Adam
Smith of the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
Krebs faces I0 felony charges in
Meigs County Court relating to the
theft of several vehicles in Meigs
County. including a commercial tow
truck. He is charged in Meigs County
Court with four counts of theft. two
counts of vandalism . tamj)ering with
evidence. robbery. aggravated robbery and fleeing . all felonies.
Those charges. tiled in February, ·
accuse Kreb&gt; of stealing trucks
belonging to G&amp;M Fuel Supply.
Russell Wooten. and Eric Facemye~.
and a tow truck. owned by L~
Richard. u&gt;ed to haul one of those
trucks after Krebs allegedly wrecked
it.
Krebs is also accused of breaking
Please see Thief, A5

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NATION • WoRLn
·Illegal immigrants flown ho~e free to Mexico
"D"te Daily Sentinel

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Bv Al't'!ANDA LEE MYERS

"This is a well-coordinated,
crucial step that is . necessary
for both humanitarian and law
.PHOENIX - More than enforcement reasons." said
130 illegal immigrants were Asa Hutchin son. the underflown for free to the Mexican secretary for border and trans•
interior Monday on the lirst portation security. in a w.ritten
!light of a . U.S. government
1 temen.
· t
sa
,
program a1med at curbrng
"The deaths of so many in
repeat rmmrgrutron attempts. . the desert are a tragedy that
The tl1ghts are a volunury . must end," he said.
.,
·
alternative for, '.'legal r_num-.
Andy Adame. a spokesman
grants to the usual practrce of with the -Border Patrol's
bemg dnven back only to the Tucson Sector, said about 30
border, far from _the1r home- of Monday's passengers were
tOW AS.
'd d
h' h' . k
'
The first commercial airlin- cons l ere at 1g -rrs . ot
er carrying immigrants in the dyrng 111 ~h~rdesert It , _th~;'
test program left 'Tucson and attem(lted d second crossrne.
landed in Mexico City in the They :nduded srngle women
evening. Buses were waiting w1th chrld~en .md the e_lderly.
to take the immi orants to local
The dep,rrtment 1s tu ndmg
bus terminals for the trip back the pr~gram. ~hr~h _rs estrrnatto their home towns.
ed to cost $ 1_ mrllron to $ 13
"This is a 100 percent val- tmlhon at two tl1ghts per day. .Mexican migrants board a plane at the Tucson International airport for their free"flight to Mexico
uritary , program, · so the •eachcarryrng up to 150 rllegal from Tucson, Ariz .. On Monday, U.S. autho rities were to send their first flight of Mexicans who
Mexican government is just lll)nllgrants, Adame sa1d.
. ~nteered to be repatriated into the interior of Mexico. (AP Photo/Jo hn Mi ller)
carrying out what the · The p'.'ot program rs to e.nd
migrants . have requested," by Sept. 30. Then the depart- border, ports in Texas .
expensive. ineffective and this problem. It uses a pheThe · so-called lateral ·tepa- simply delayed migrants. ·
said Bosco Marti . of Mexico's ment and the Mex1can govnomenal amount of resources
Foreign
Relations ernment will evaluate it and triation program. which lasted
Robin Hoover. president of and ach ieves little results." he
Department. ,
de term me tuture plal1s.
. about
three
weeks
in Humane Borders, a group that said. ·
The
Department
of
The new program follows September, was designed to puts water in the desert for
He conceded the program
Home land Security's Interior a more controvers ial one in move the immigrants far from illegal crossers, said he has could benefi t some immiborder · officials their sm ugglers and reduce con~erns about the new pro- grants.
Repatri ation Program wi ll which
il)clude .about two fli ghts a · involun tari ly
ret urn ed their chances . of re-crossing gram.
"It may actui!lly_save a few
day to Mexico City and the .5.600 migrant s •·ar.~g ht in the border. Immigrants rig ht s
"Overall , I would say this is lives, and we have .to give
Ar izona to Me ~·ico thr, h g~o4pssaid the program was a ridiculous way to approach them credit for that," he said,
western cit~ of Guadalajara.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PageA2

Page-A3

The Daily Sentinel

. Tuesday, July 13, 2004

Tuesday, July 13, 2004

Community Calendar

NY law bans
mercury-powered
toys; Kellogg'S in
talks with state

Public meetings

cuss the 2005 ann'ual budget. The public is invited
to attend Followii1g that
· Tuesday, July 13
POMEROY
Meigs meetir1g. vil lage cou nci I
County Board of Elections will hold a regular meeting .
8:30 a.m. at the Board
Wednesday, July 14
office in the Meigs County
·
POMEROY
Meigs
Courthouse
Annex
on
County Board of Health 5
Mulberry Heights.
RACINE
Racine p.m. in the conferen,·e
Village will hold a public room of the Meigs Cou~ty
hearing on the 2005 budget Senior Citizens Center.
at 7 p.m. nt the Municipal
l,luilding. The budget will
be open for review from 9
a.~l. to .I p m. July 1-July
I
S
,,
19.
'
Tuesday, July 13
POMEROY -- Notice is
POMEROY
The
hereby given· 11 ,,11 between
6:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. a pub- Meigs County Genealogical
lic meeting on the budget Society will meet at 6 p.m.
he
Meigs
Countv
and revenue sharing for the at
Museum.
'
. year 2005 t(lr the village of
Pomeroy will be held at the
clerk-treasurer's oltice in village hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Regular
meeting
·of
Tuppers Plain s Regional
Sunday, July 18
Sewer Distri&lt;:t. 7, p.m., at
ALFRED •tr ' Fh~ .Arthu r
sewer -district office. Topics and
Nels'on · Watson
will be 2005 budget and rcu mon will be held at
second read ing on
no on
at
th e· Woodie
rate i·ncrease ·amel
nt.
Grove. home of Jim and
RACINE ~
here. ,will Debb ie Watson at Alfred.
be a meeting a 7 p.m. at Take a covered dish, dinRacine Village Hall ·w dis- nerware and drinks.

WHITE PLAINS. N.Y: .
Gov. Georg.e
(AP) - Pataki signed a :state ban
on mercury-powered novelty items Monday and said
he hopes it will persuade
Ke llogg Co. to remove
hundreds or thousands of
cereal boxes contalllmg
Spider-Man toys.
The ban does not start
until. next year. bin Pataki
said the Spider-Man promotion tle ri1anded attention.
Holdi1ig a box of Froste~
Flakes
and
a
plastic
"SpidL'Y Signal" that was
inside. Patak.i described the
mercury in the toy's battery
&lt;IS "a toxic chemi&lt;.:&lt;il that
can do enormous damage."
Kel logg's spokeswo.man
Celeste . Clark sai d the toys
do not compromise . the
safety or the quality of the
cereaL Shipments of the
cerea ls were . co ntinuing,
and a recal) was not made,
she said.
The
wristwatch-shaped
toys are inside the . boxes
of several Kellogg's cereals
in a proniotion for the fil m
"Spider-Man 2."
The toys are in a plastic
pouc]) isolated from the
cereal. and a consumer
notice warn s that the to¥
contain s
mercury.
and
.
shou
ld
be
disposed
of
1
properly. The batterie s are
1
~ i ''.
not replaceable.
"
'·· , Ea rl ier · this
month ,
MOUNT HOLLY, N.J. justi fi cation or excuse for it." Shamong Township in south - her husband and children in · beneficiary. .Mitnick said.
Kellogg's
agree.
d
to
stop
(AP) -. A woman acc used of - Neabo r. who said litt le ern New Jersey so she and any jeopardy because they
Mitni ck said Michael and
killing her brother-in-law by during the hearing, faces 30 her husband would have had no knowledge of thi s." Maryann Neabor have not sh~pm cnts .to Connecti cut
spik ing his smoolhi e with years to li fe in prison if con- access to hi s money to ease. he said.
. recovered financ iall y since . and :New . Hampshire and to
antifreeze pleaded not guilty victed ·of murder. She was tbeir financial troubles. She
Mitnick said a more appro- being gra nted bankruptcy ask 1~tailers to _return cereal . boxe'S. · Those states
to murder Monday.
being held on a $500.000 allegedly concocted a drink priate charge wou ld be reck- protection five years ago . .
'A defense attorney for bond .
that included pineapple jui ce. Jess manslaughter. .
Maryann Neabor taught · already &lt; had laws banning
they maraschino cherries and
Mitnick said his client_ has three conti nuing education the metlcury-pet\vered toys.
Maryann Neabor, 53, said
Prosecutors said
The law also bans mershe admitted putting chemi- planned to present their case antifreeze, state police said. threatened sui cide and has classes for a&lt;) ults this year,
cury
fever ·· thermometers
Mitnick said hi s cli en t severe depression and dia- including one on Tuesday,
cals in the drink but intended to a grand jury within three
only to make Jonathan months.
acted alone and without the betes. The judge ·gra nted a April 20. on keepin g homes and prohibits schools from
using .mercury in classNeabor sick enough so she
"This is in our view not knowledge of her husband . reyuest fo r psychiatric &lt;1111d safe.
·
could take control of his any type of an· accident. It and thei r sons, ages 17 . and medical evaluations.
"Wi th a little care. we can rooms.
money.
was a premeditated action," 22. She turned herself in to
Jonat han Neabor was a protect our' farnilie s from the
Research has shown that ·
"'Maryann Neabor is appar- said
cou nt y .prosec utor protect her family, he said.
retired p6stal worker with no leading causes' of death and excessive exposure to merel)tly mentally ill ," said Robert D. Bernardi.
, · · Her hu sba nd , Mi chae l famil y of hi s own. He had a injury in the home, like fa ll s, cury can cause se no~ s
Craig Mitnick after the hear- · Neabor allegedly· poisoned Neabor. has not been postal service pension and a fire and poisoning.'' accord" health problems, es pecial ly
ing. "She's made a horren- her
brother-in-law
on charged.
life insurance policy that ing to a Web site description in pregnant· women and
dous decision. There's no Wednesday
at
her
home
in
"S
he
did
not
want
to
place
names
hi s brother as the sole of the class.
children.
.
.
.

BYTHE BEND
Dieters
pray
for
strength
:
Church services
to lead healthy lifestyle

Clubs and
Organl·zat'on

Homecomings/
Reunions

•

Saturday, July 17
TUPPERS PLAINS
God in Motion, &lt;ill old fashioned camp meeting revival,
will be held. I to 9 p.m.
July 17 and 18 at the
Bobbie ·· and
Charlotte
Murphy residence on · Route
7 between Tuppers Plaiqs
ami Coolville . . Take lawn
chai rs, a favorite dish. dress
in old-fashioned outfits.
•
~
Monday, July 19 ·
RUTLAND - , Vacat
Bible school will be lield
from 6:30 to '-! p.m. July 19- ·
23 at the Rutland Freewill
Baptrst Church . Classes wrll
be held lor chrldten:_ nursery
10 teens. For .more rntonnalion call 742-2743.

DEAR ABBY: My cousin,
"Hazel," was recently told by
her doctor that she must lose
75 pounds. She tells me that
sticking to her diet is almost
impo_ssible. Years . ago; you
Dear
printed a prayer for dieters in
Abby
your column. It was based'
on the 23rd Psalm . I kept a
copy of it for years, but I lost
it. Would you please print it
againry- SYMPATHETIC IN
TAOS N.M.
. " . Spread with veggies and
DEAR SYMPAil-i'ETIC.: 1 low-fat protein;
couldn.'t locate · the prayer
Thou steameth my fish in
you requested, but the foil ,
premise intrigued me _ so 1
My resolve runneth over.
wrote one myse.lf. 1 hope it
Surelv. if I follow this livinspires your friend . . 1 ing plai1 all the_ days of my
empathize with her. By- the life.
way, she's not alone. I am
My, hips . will be slim forever.
told that · one-third of all
DEAR ABBY: A little over
Americans are overweight. a year ago. after reading
Thesday, July 13 ·
Read on:
your column abolJL. a l)lan
A childPOMEROY A DIETER'S PRAYER
who had experienct!'d te slicuhood immuni zation clinic
The Lord is my shepherd, I tar cancer. I was prompted to
wiII be held from 9 to II sha ll not want; ·
examine · myself. It was
a.m. and I to 3 p.m. at the
He maketh me to-lie down somethin g 1 had never
Meigs
Cunty
Health on vrnyl-covered gym mats. thou ght about unti l that day.'
Department.
Take
shot
He leadeth me to llavored , Not on~e had I ever co nsi d-records: . children mu st be calorie-free watc;;rs;' ·
erect the possibility that it·
accompanied by parent or
He restoreth my goals.
could actually happen to me .
legal guardian.
He d1 verteth . me from t~e . Sure enough, I found a
~ath of mrdnrght snackmg large lump that sent a cold
for my health's sake .
chill down my spin e. My
Yea, though I walk through general practitioner didn't
the alley of the Vendors of think it was anythinn to be
Pastry, I will fear no weeviL concerned about. But I was
for thou art with me ;
still worried, so I made an
My diet and exercises, they appointment for a second
comfort me.
.
opini on with a urologist. He
Thou . prepares! a table had a waiting list a month
before me
.long. but the morning after I

Other events

POMEROY
Bill on H.B. 467 dealin g with
Radford reported on work at reduction on real estate taxes
the springs at the entrance to on Grange halls.
th e
Rock
Springs
Several communications
Fairgrounds at -a recent meet- were read from the Ohio
ing of Hemlock Grange.
State Grange and _the
The area was cleaned and · National grange. Members.
shrubs and flowers were set discussed setup of the booth
·out. For maiiy yeas the at the Meigs County Fair. It
spri ngs ·areas has been taken . was reported that election of
care of by Grangers.
· officers will take place at the
Rosalie Story presided at August meeting.
the meeting with Murl
Reported ill were Sylvia
Bradford announcing the Midkiff. Margaret Haning,
contest items which will be Joann Kautz, and · Je ss ie
· judged at the August meet- Whi te.
·
ing. Roy Grueser· of the leg"
Romine used "July" as the
islati ve com mittee reported theme for the program not -

.Hunter education course to
be held at Pomeroy Gun c·lub

.,.
'

Once Again, The Daily Senti_
nel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fair Preview Edition . .·
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
"Biggest And Best Evert Look-,For this Special
Edition In Your Friday, August 13th Paper.
BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS
A PART OFTHIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CAJ.L TODAY!

.EMAIL BIRTHDAY, ENGAGEMENT, WEDDING OR
ANNlVERSARY ANNOUNCEMENTS AND PHOTOS TO:

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lhe Daily ~eritinel ·

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·r

ing that it is National Hot
Dog Month . baked hean , ten nis, ice cream. puzzle. and
cow month. Slie
said
Parent 's Day is the fourth
Sunday, th at it is also
National Blueberry month.
She.said blueberries are R~
percent water. high in antioxidants , 42 calorie s a half c.up.
and noted that the clirmite 'in
Ohio is very suitable for
growing them. She pa"e(l
out recipes and information
on the care of blueberries .
· The August meetin g wi ll
be preceded by a pork roast
dinner.

•'

.Chester Shade Days Parade

Arcadia ·Nu rsing Center's bell choir performed at an open house held recently at th~ Ce~te r.
Over 250 people attended this event which includes entertainment, garnes and refreshments.
Members of the be ll choir are, from the left. David Shutts, Ronnie Daughtery, He len Sprague,
CHESTEP, - The Chester_ Marjorie Davis,- Hazel Korzep, Leora Sigman, Hattie Mihlbach and Nancy Gandee. The be ll choir Shade Hi storical Association
is under the direction of music therapi~t Gay ·oazelt.
..
i,s ellj,louraging participation
in the parade of the ChesterShade Days Festival.
4-H groups, floats, walking
groups, ball teams, costumes

'

PROU.D TOIJfE- A PART OF
. :y()UR LIFE

Dear Abbr is IITille!l /l\·
Abigail Va;, Bure11. _alsi1 .
knoll'fl as Jewr11e Plrillips,
and •ras ./(m11 ded !Jy !rer
molire r; Pauli11 e Pili/lip s.
Wrile
Dear
Abbr
111
mrw.Dea rAbhr.mm ,;r PO ·
8(!x 69440, L(,_,. Allg&lt;'ies, CA
900fi9.

"'

.

Bernardino National Forest
scorched nearly I ,500 acres,
but had destroyed no homes
and it was 40 percent contained.
Also· Monday, in southeastern Arizona, about I0 residents were allowed to tour
charred areas of Mount
Graham - escorted by u.s:
Forest Service officials and'
sheriff' s deputies. The group
was to report their fi ndings to
the other homeowners.
Fire managers did not know
when all of the families
fo rced to !lee Turkey Flat's 74
cabins and Columbine's 15
cabin s would be allowed to
return for good. · Among the
concerns were the possibilities of falling trees, · !las h
floods in fire-damaged areas
and traffic interfering with
firefighting efforts.
Crews were able to protect
the communities and the $200 .
million
Mount Graham
Observatory
Internati onal
from ·a pair of wildfires that
eventually merged. The fires
were 65 percent contained
and had burned 29,200 acres
by Sunday night.
In .Colorado, tire officials
said a stubborn 300-acre
mountainside blaze in eastern
Delta County was expected to
be fully · contained by
Wednesday,

www.c~ncer.(~rg.

Grangers clean up the springs

Warmer weather recharges wildfires in Alaska's
Interior;
crews battle fires in Calif., Colo.
•
.
ANCHORAGE,
Alaska year-round residents.
(AP) -A wildfire near a viiAbout 200 firefighters have
lage of about 60 residents set up between 20 and 30
almost tripled in size Monday tents arou nd . the village.
as warm, dry weather gave Tourists for the most part
new life to it and dozens of were staying away, said Tyler
other fires m Alaska's Klaes, whose family owns the
Interior:
Bettles Lodge.
·
Conditions were drying out, . Firefighters condu cted a
heating up and taking a turn burnout operation Saturday
for the worse followin g sever- night, but the backbuq1s
at days of rain, officials ~aid. jumped the main lines, and
·"The h1.1midity has dropped. planes had to dump water on
The temperature is up, the advancing !lames.
wjnd has picked· up. Our
"We watched it all happen,"
r~spite is bver," said Gi l Klaes said. "If the wind was
~night,
of the Alaska blowing the other way we all
Interagency
Coordination would have been toast."
Genter.
Crews also were monitor:The 17 ,000-acre fire was ing wildfires that have burned
bpming about a mile from the 338,600 acres north of
village of Bettles. Fire offi- Fairbanks.
Fires
have
cials said the blaze was a top scorched more than 2.3 milpriority Monday- one of the' lion acres in Alaska so far.
"7 J fires already burning
In central California, hunslfltewide. .
dreds of firefighters contend:It was not known what ed wi th triple-digit· heat and
caused the tire, which was I0 st~p terrain Monday as they
p~rcent
contained
by_ tried to control two .tires that
threatened dozens· of homes
Monday. ·
:"our first priority is to nail in Fresno County. One home
any new fires that should was destroyed and two others
develop," Knight said.
were damaged, said Karen
•When the· fire started last Guillemin, a spokeswoman
vkek. crews built a fire- for the Califomi~ Department
break to proiect Bettles, of Forestry.
··
-iocated about 185 miles
Elsewhere in California,
northwest of Fairbanks. The firefighters battled a wildfire
vH!age, a tourist draw in the · near Palm Springs. The fire at
!ale summer, has about 60 the edge of the San
'

.;:onsulted him I found myself
in the hospital haYing Ill!
·first surgery.
• Now. one year later. after
two surgerie~ and six week'
of chemotherapy, I am l!9
.percent cured and feelir]g _
!lreat.
• Thank you. Abby. for rai'ing my awarene;s about thi'
seriou~ di.,.ea~e . I nm·t ~tre~...,,
strong ly enough the extreme
impottance of self-e.xamina ·
tion and early .detection.
Your colutnn Slll'ed my life.
- GRATEFUL GUY 11'\
MARYLAND
DEAR GRATEFUL: I'm
pleased tllal mv ·co lum n
helped you. The AmeriL·an
Cancer Society intilrms me
that when testicu lar cancer is
diagnosed early. it is highly,
curable. Testicular self-exam.
inations are quick and ea,y.
l\nd sho uld be performed
once a month. A si111ple way
to clo it i&gt; while taking a
shower. For more information. contact · the ·American
Cancer Society by call ing the
toll-free number t800) 2272345 or visiting .the Web site :

Arcadia Nursing Center•s bell
choir performes at open house

Woman pleads not guilty to murder but
. admits.spiking brothl!r-in-l~w's drink

'

Call
DAVE or BRENDA
i1t 992-2155 .
FOR MORE INFORMATION

·T he Daily Sentinel

POMEROY - An Ohil&gt;
Hunter Education · Classes
will be held beginning Aug.
30 at the Po~;tW.roy Gun
Club .
Sessions will be. held
Aug. 30-31, Sept. I from 69 P·ll'\· and Sept. 4, 9 a.m.
to noon. Student s must
attend all sessions to receive
credit for the course. Preregistration is . required and
class · size is limited to 50

students. ·To register contact
the Meigs Soi l and Water
Conservation District at
(740) 992-4282.
The
Ohio
Hunter
Education cour.'e includes
I0 hours of instruction in
hunter ethics and responsibility, fi rearms, archery, tirst
aid and wi ldlife mana ment
and biology. Classes are ·ree
and all materials ·and man
als are provided at -RO cost.

SUBSCRIBE TODAY • 992-2155 '
Vl.SIT US AT:
WWW.MYDAJL--ySENTINEL.COM

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DDWIIINB CBI£DS MU££111
MUSSEBIIISURAIICE
. would like to welcome

POMEROY George
Nesselroad is expected to
be
. disc harged
from
in
Riverside
Hospital
Columbus and transferred
to Arbors Rehabilitation
Center in Delaware later
thi s week. Cards may be
sent to him in care of his
son, Mike Nesselroad, 11 60
Road.
Delaware,
Penry
Ohio 43015.

Casey Ridenour

POMEROY Brooks
Grant Camp Sons of Union
Veterans
and t'he Major .
Daniel' McCook
Circle
Ladie' of the Grand Army
of the Republi'c have canceled their participation in
the
Buffington
Island
'!le'lial serv.ic~s.

.... _._

Ml fte Customers
· hom Williams and Associates Insurance!
, We £ook Foiward fo Serving You!

.!..
_ .,- ...
...

suv not
participating
... ..

..

awarded, she said.
Line up for the parade will
take place 12:30 p.m. behind
the old Chester school and
wi II move out at I p.m. traveling through the vi llage past
the old Chester Courthouse .

Keeping Meigs County informed
The Daily.Sentinel

All , first-time hunters
must successfully complete
a . hun ter education course
offered through the Ohio
Division of Wildlife before
purc hasing
a
hun tin g
license. In i!ddition, current
hunting license holders who
wi sh to purchase out-of·state
hunting licenses in other
states must often provide
proof of having ·completed a
hunter education course.

Ridenour is presented Hospitalized
with God and Me award
CHESTER
Casey
Ridenour was presented with
the God and Me award on
June 13, at Mt. Hermon
United Brethern Church.
The cub scout with Paclc
235 of Chester was presented
Y.Cith the ,award by Pastor
Peter Martendale.
The God and Me is a religious award program th at
required both Bible study and
service projects. Topics that
Casey learned and studied
under Roger Karr included:
six days of creation and day
of rest ; communication. God
wants to talk· to us and hear
"" from us regardless of our age;
how to pray, usi ng acronym
"PATH" .Praise, Apology .
Thanks, l;lelp us; the Lord's
Prayer; also Jesus died for us
willingly. to take our punishment for our sins so that we
can have eternal Iife . .
He is the son of floyd and
Jeanie Ridenour of Chester.

characters, jugglers, decorated fou r-~e l e rs or bicycles
are all welco)le, according to
Becky Grate who can be contact.ed abou t partic)pation at
992-765 1. The parade wi ll be
judged and prizes wil l be

€~

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS
LIFE • BON~S • MO'B ILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZATION
'

CIDII
196 EastSecond St. Pomero

OH • 992·3381

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•

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�-PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, July 13,

'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
. establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free e.'&lt;:ercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
pe.ople peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Govemme11t for a redress, of grievances.
-lhe First Amendment to the U:8. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
'lud,ty 1s 'lucsday. July 13. the I95th day of 2004. The1e are
17 I days Jell in the year.
Toda) ·s Highlight m Htstory
On July , I 1, 1793. French revolutionary wnter Jean Paul
M,mu was stabbed to death m hts bath by Charlotte Corday.
On thi s date:
· In I 787. Congress enacted an ordinance governmg the
Northwest Terntoty.
In 1863. deadly rioting ,lgamst the C1vil War mtlitary draft
erupted in New York City.
In liP~. the Treaty of Berlm amended the terms of the
Treaty ot San Stefano. wh1ch had ended the Russo-Turkish
Wa1 of I877-78.
In I 886, Fathe1 Edward Joseph Flanagan, the founder of
Boys Town, was born 111 Roscommon. Ireland.
In I'!60. John F. Kennedy won the Democratic pres1dentml
nommatton at h1s party's convention in Los Angeles.
In 19,67, race-related rioting that claimed 271ives broke out
I,n Newark, N J.
. In 1974. the Senate Watergate Committee proposed sweeping retorms in an etfort to prevent another Watergate scandal.
In I977. a blackout lasting 25 hours lht the New York City
area.
In 1978. Lee lacocca was tired as president of Ford Motor
·
Company by chairman Henry Ford II,
In 1979, a 45-hour s1ege by Palestmian guerri lla~ began at
t,he Egyptian Embassy in Ankara, Turkey
Ten years ago: President Chnton \ltSJted !III&gt;od-stricken
Geurgm, where he announced more than $60 milflon 111 atd for
Georgia, Alabama and Florida. Tonya Hardmg's ex-husband,
Jeff Gillooly: was sentenced in Portland, Ore., to two years in
prison for his role iiJ. the attack on Nancy Kerrigan (he ended
up serving six months).
Five years ago: Angel .,f\1aturino Resendiz, suspected of
be1ng the "Railroad Killer," surre.ndered in El Paso, Texas In
Tehran, pohce fired tear gas to disperse I0,000 demonstrators
on the sixtli day of protests agamst Iranian hard-liners. The
Amencan League won the All-Star Game for the third stra1ght
time. defeatmg the National League 4- 1 at Boston 's Fen way
Park.
.
, One year ago: With the blesstng of U.S. admmistril!ors,
Iraqis inaugurated a broadly representative governing council.
Cuban musician Compay Segundo dted m Havana at age 95.
Thought, for Today: "If I were to wis)l for anythmg, I should
not w1sh for wealth and power, but for the pass10nate sense of
the potential, fur the eye which, ever young and ardent, sees
~he possibl~. Pleasure disappoints, possibility never."
Soren Kierkegaard,.Danish philosopher (1813-1855).

•

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include addres!)
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing;ssues, not personalities. .
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio- Valley Publishing Co. 's
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.
.

The Daily Sentinel

Re~der

Services

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(usPs 213-9601
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

1Published

Correction Polley

every

afternoon

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Tuesday, July 13, 2004

2004

Obituaries '

Edwards, Kerry smile; Moore stokes (Bush hatred'
Sen. John Kerry's selec- •
tion of Sen. John Edwards as
hts running mate represents
the sunny s1de of the
Democratic
presidential
campaign. Unfortunately,
the1e's al&lt;o a dark side. represented by former Vice
PJes1dent AI Gore and tilmmaker Mi~:hael Moore ,
whose falsehood-laced film,
' F&lt;th ren hCit 9/11 ,' has been New. York fundraiser where
pra1sed by the cha1rman of movie
star
Whoopi
the Democratic NatiOnal Goldberg blasted Bush with
Committee and publicly sexual innuendoes aild other
repudtated by no top party performers called him a
official
'thug' and a 'killer.' In fact ,
1
,President Bush's campaign the New York Post reported
m,mager. Ken Mehlman, that Kerry thanked the pertold me that he thinks that formers for 'an extraordi' hate-fi lled' diatribes lrom nary even mg.'
what he calls 'the coalit1on
Quring the Plimary camof the wild-eyed' w1ll end up paign, both Kerry and
hurtin g the Democrab by · Edwards also came close to
turnmg oil moderate and " adopting the 'people versus
111dependent voters.
the powerful' populist line
·Jn 1992,' he said, 'Bill that Gore pursued in the
Clinton ga1ned a lot by 2000 campmgn Kerry wndenouncmg Sister SouiJah.' demned ' Benedict Arnold
the Afncan-Amencan rapper corporations' that sent jobs
who suggested that blach overseas.
kill whites. 'He separated
During the pnmanes,
h1mself from the extremists Edwards
combined an
111 his party.'
upbeat spmt with the overThi s year, he said, 'you -rated allegation that the
have (DNC Chairman) Terry country is divided into 'two
McAuliffe pictured at the Americas' - wealthy elites
open1ng of 'Fahrenheit' and the rest of the popula- ·
cheenng on Michael Moore. tion, who can't make ends
You've got AI Gore compar- meet or afford health insurmg Bush to the Brownshirts. ance.
You've got MoveOn .org
In fac t, the vast majority of
~:alhng Buso a liar. These
Americans are middle class,
people ,tre effectively surro- own their own homes and
gates for John Kerry and he's have health msurance, Many
not treatmg them like have 'Cadillac coverage '
Clinton dtd Stster SouiJah.'
negotia,ted by labor unions
Moore, Gore and MoveOn with large employers.
aren't ofticial surrogates for
In nammg Edwards, Kerry
the Kerry campaign, of said he would adopt the
course, but they certainly are North Carolinian's ·theme,
working toward the same but g1ve it a postllve twist goal: deteatmg Bush.
that he wanted to 'build one
Kerry and Edwards rai sed America for all Americans'
no objections at a recent - and that he would attempt

o close the gap between the
rich and the middle cl:iss
through the expans1on of
education and health programs.
But Demo~:rats are clearly
mollvatr d this year by more
than ·pusiti ve populism.'
From the beginning. ' Bush
hatred ' IMs been a 1111ght y
driving force that is shared
w1dely 111 the party.
It was ex pressed repeatedly in the primanes, as. ~e
candidates competed wtth
each other to denounce Busl1
as a ·right-wing extremist,' a
'lmr· and, a 'menace to 0111
CIVIl IJbertJeS.'
Now the theme is bemg
taken up in graph ic fashion
bv M1chael Moore - someo;,~ who never mentions
Kerry. but whose obvious .
purpose IS to oust Bush
MuLh of the cotlspuaton ,JI ""''• 'Il l of 'F,thi enhe it'
has b
exposed as traudu. lent RepubliL·a ns d1d not
steal the 20110 election i11
Floridd
A news paperfmanced recount ot ballots
showed tha t Bush won rmrrowl y. And thou sands of
voters went home in the
conservative Flonda panhandle when the telev iSion
networks called the state for
Gore before the polls had
closed.
Moore charges that Bush
allowed members of the bin
Laden fanuly to flee the
United States even as ott.ter
air traffic was grounded after
Sept. II , 200 I. And he
charges thai Bush ,md his
fam1 ly have been bought and
sold - for the exact tigure
of $1.4 billion - . by nch
Saudis, including rclattves
of Osama bin Laden.
But while there does seem
to be an excesstve affimty
between the Bushes and cer-

Loeal Briefs
CHESTER- The follow1 ng roads will be dosed in Chester
on Saturday from 8 a.m to I l p.m . Scout Camp Ro ad tram
the mtersection of State route 248 to the intersectiOn of Mill
Street. and Mill Street from tile interse&lt;:tton of Scout Camp
Road to the Intersection of Allen Street. Allen Street, how,ever. will be open.
'

POMEROY .- Llllian LoUJ ~e (Buck) Burt , 86. of Pomeroy.
Oh10 passed &lt;~way Sunday. Jul y I I, 2004 at the Ple,Jsant
Valley Hosp ital. Pomt Ple,lsant. W Va
''
She was b01n Dec 17. 1917. m Pomeroy, daughter of the
· late Frank Lester and Iva Mae (Hysell) Buck She was a
homemaker and member ot the Bradford Church of Chnst.
Poinerov.
She ;s surv1 ved by granddaug hter Lmda Chapman of
Pomeroy, grandson Christopher Chapman, Athens; and. two
great grandchildren Bes1des her parents. she was preceded m
death by ller hu sband Charles H. Burt ,' two sons, Harold E.
and Fredrick R. Burt; a d&lt;~u g ht er. MaJorie Chapman. and two
'
great grandchildren
Services will be at I I am Wedne sday, July 14, at the
Btrchfield Funeral Home. Rutland . Rev Doug SIMmblim will
be officiating. Buri al will follow at the Beech Grove
Cemetery 111 Pomeroy Friends may calf from 6 p m to 8 p.m
&lt;1t the funeral home .

N..-merous cases resolved
in Meigs ~ounty Court
POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Metgs County
Court of Judge Steve Story
betl~een June 18 and July I
are ds follows: Joshua F.
Althouse. Pomeroy, fmled to
yie ld 112 roadway. $20 and
costs. Sara A. Amstutz,
Dublin , speedm g, $30 and
costs; Abigall K. Arenstein,
Bexley, s-peeding, $30 and
CGlsts. Aaron E. Bc~bcock. ·
Delta . speeding . $30 and
costs: Timothy L. Ball. Long
·Bottom. seat bert-passe nger.
$20 and costs : Brent M.
Ban·ett. Lancaster, speeding,
$50 and costs:
Donni e W. Bdrnnger.
P01tland . t1 affi c co nt/dev
signs. $20 and costs: John C.
Binkiewtc z. Ptckenngton.'
speeding. $30 and costs;
Bogren,
Aaron .
R
Hunungton. W.Va., speeding,
$30 and costs, Ronmc D.
Bragg, Barnwell. S C, seatbelt. $30 and costs: Robert D
Brazeau, Punta Gorda. Fla.,
speedmg. $30 and costs:
Jamahl A Brown , Charlotte,
N.C , speeding, $35 and
costs , Candy S. Calaway.
Long Bottom, cnmmal ddnlaging/endangering; $50 and ,
costs; Steven W. Call.
Pomeroy, failure to control.
$20 ,md costs;
Milton
H.
Carnes.
Chadestun. W.Va .. seatbelt,
$30 and costs: Adam J
Carter, Middleport , theft
$100 and costs: Karen S
Circle , Racme . speeding. S30
and costs , Herman H Clark.
New Haven, W.Va., speedmg, $30 and costs; J&lt;~son W
Claypool, speedmg, $30 and
costs; Angela M. Coble,
Thornv11le, speed 1ng. $30
and costs ; Dav1d J Colnell ,
Columbus, seat belt, $30 and
cost s; Robert F. Cnckdrd,
Huntmgton. W.Va .. seatbehpa sse nge1, $20 and costs
Diana Sue Cross, Pomeroy.

For the record
Investigations
POMEROY - Me1gs&lt;County Sheriff Ralph Trussell reported deputies are investigating• a burgl,Jry at the Betty Holter
residence on Cherry Rtdge Road. Entry was made by breakmg a front window Items reported mi ssing mcluded jewelry.
The department ts also mvest1gaung the follow1ng complaints·
• Teresa Smith of Reedsville repmted the theft of her son\
Yamaha {OUJ wheeler from the family' s home.
• Chns Capehart of Pomeroy 1eported the theft of four t1res
and rims from his outbUJidmg
• Janet Gree n. Stover Road, re pol'led the breaking and enteJmg of her home . Entry w,ts made through a w111dow, and Items
missing mcluded a televJ sJon and· firearms
• Ronald Ginther of Wells Road reported vandalism to hiS
mailbox '
'

Arrests
POMEROY - Me;gs County Shentf Ralph Trussell repOited the lolluwmg arrests:
' Charles Simmons, 20, Guysville. on a charge of driving
under the mtluence. afte1 deput1es saw h1m dnvmg a dirt btk&gt;
on Gilkey Rid ge Ro,Jd on Saturday morning. He was also
cited for havmg no headlight s, no regtstratwn. dnvmg under
suspensiOn. and obstructmg offiCial business.
• Robe1t Rathburn. Rutland. on a bench warrant for faJiurc
to appear.
• Roy Eblin of Syracu se on a charge ol domestic &gt;Jolence
• M1chael Lucas. St. Clairsville, on charges of domestic violence and resisting an est

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marnage licenses have been 1ssued in Meigs
County Probate Court to B1adley Scott Ritte1 beck, 2 1, Langsville.
and Melissa Dawn Richmond, 20, Rutland; James Charles
McKay, 24, Long Bottom, and Melody Lmrdine Lawrence, 23,
Long Bottom; W1llard R. Lauderm11t, 46, Middleport. and Brenda
M. Haning, 35, Middleport: and Joseph Cameron Sands, 2 I,
Rae me, and Stacey Deann Milligan. 21, Racme

Dissolutions
POMEROY - An action tor dJ ssol utJon of mamage has
been tiled in Me1gs County Common Pleas Court by B1enda
Kay Neutzling, Vmton, -and Mtchael Neutzhng, Pomeroy.
A diSsolution action filed by Elisha Lacy Di~ken s and D1ena
Ann D1ckens has been dJsmJSsed

•

POMEFOY - A divorce action ha s been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas CoUJt by .Jenny Ju Thomas.
Middlepo1t, agamst JohnS. Thomas, M1ddleport.

Two years ago, the case of
Amencan ciuzen Yaser
Hamd1 - des1gnated an
'enemy combatl\jlt' by the
prestdent and held incommunicado without charges or
access to his lawyer in a
Navy brig on American soil
-came before U.S. District
Judge Robert G. Doumar in
Virginia. The judge, reading
the government lawyer's
two-page document JUStifying Hamdi's incarceration,
satd angnly: !So, the
Constitution' doesn't apply to
Mr. Hamdi~ '
On June 28, the U.S.
Supreme Court, in an 8-to-1
ruling,
resoundingly
answered that question in
Hamdi v. Ri.Jmsfeld. Writing
for the court. Justice Sandra
Day O'Connor told the Bush
admmi strauon : 'We have
long smce made clear that a
state of war is not a blank
check for the president when
it comes to the rights of the
nation'.s citizens '
She did agree that the
president has the authority to
have Hamd1 put away conceivably until the end of hostilities - which could take
many years. But, she ruled,
he ltas a constitutional right
to appear before a coUJ; or
some other ' neutral decision
maker' to contest the government's evidence against
him.
..
Egregiously missing from
the government's actions
against those it calls 'enemy
combatants,' said O'Connor,
is a recognition of 'the fun damental nature of a cit1zen's
right to be free from involuntary confinement by h1s
own government withoUt
due process of law.'
'

Nat
Hentoff

After Sept. II, the Bush
administration, understal!dably, focused intensely&lt; on
national security. The president has said: 'You need to
have a president who understands ~ou can't win this war
with legal papers.' But, as
O'Connor emphas1zed m her
decision, 'it would indeed be
ironic 1f. in the name of
national defense, we would
sanction the subversion of
one of those liberties (such
as ·due process and t~e right
of habeas corpus) which
makes the defense of the
natwn worthwhile.'And Justice Antonin
Scalia, dissenting in .part
because he believes the
Supreme Court has not gone
far enough to underline
Hamdi's right tt? rebut in
court the government's case
against him, wrote:
'Many think it not only .
inevitable but entirely proper
that liberty give way to secu~
rity in times of national crisis .... Whatever'the general
merits Of the view that war
silences law or modulates its
voice, that view has no place
in the interpretation and
application of a Constitution
designed precisely to confront war and, in a manner
that accords with democratic
principles, to accommodate
it.'
'

In addition to Hamdi v.
Rumsfeld, the Sl\preme.Court
also dec1ded Rasul et al v.
Bush - concemmg detamees
at quantanamo ,Bay, Cuba on June 28. The issue also
involved the demal of due
process, even to these noncitizens. The ruling was 6-to-3,
wtth Justice John Paul
Stevens wnting the decision,
which O'Connor JOined.
Wrote Stevens· '(these
detainees) have never been
afforded access to any tribunal , much le ss charged
w1th . and convicted , of
wrongddmg: and for more
than two years they have
been Imprisoned in territory ·
over which the United States
exerc1ses exclusive junsdJCt ~on and control. '
Bemg held under · an
American system of laws, the
prisoners at Guantanamo Bay,
the Supreme Court has ruled,
must each ha~e a hearing in
our eourt system or before a
neutral official body to have
the government demonstrate
that it has lawfully put them
- as legal briefs to th~ court
have mamtained - in a 'legal
black hole.' .
A third case that day,
Rumsfeld v. Padill a, was
not decided on its merits,
though it may w.ell wind up
before the Supreme Court
again. Unanimously. the
justices ruled that the
lawyers for American Citizen, and locked up 'enemy
combatant,' Jose Padilla
started the appeal procedure
in the wrong place. the
Second Circurt Court ~
Appeal s in Ne w York.
Padilla is impri soned ~n
South Carolina, and so · his
c ase has been remanded to

the federal courts in that
state.
The Padilla case aside, the
historic Hamdi de cision
raised, at least in my mind~
the question of why George
W. Bu sh, a man of decent
mstincts, failed to understand the need that, to be
safe, we also must remain
true to our values tllat the
terronsts would destiOy.
The tault is not entirely ·
hi s Bush was badly adv1sed
in these and some other cunsututlonal 1ssues by Wh1te
House counsel Alberto
Gon zales, attorney general
John Ashcroft, ' and a group
of Just1ce Depanment and
Defense Department lawyers
who, unhke the preSident.
studied constitutional law
but applied the1r traimng to.
try to trade certam libertieS:
for apparent security, until
our system of checks and
balances tripped them up
Now, 1f only due process
and the. Magna Cartaderived writ ot habeas corpus were taught more ofteJ\
and deeply in our schools,
mo~e of us would understand
why we are Americans
These two Supreme Coun.
decisions
have ' greatly.
strengthened
Americans'.
recognition of our consututional separation of' powers They
are also a stem warning to the
pres1dent that ours ts a govern ment of laws - not men.
(Nat Hemoff rs a natimrallv renowned atlthorttr on tire
Ftrst Amendment cmd the
B11/ of Rights (llld author of
;l!l'eral books, mcluding hi'
current •wrk.. 'The War on
the Bill o./ Riglrt&lt; and· the
Gathermg
Re.m tance'
(SeFen Stann Preu , 2003) '

Foreclosures
POMEROY - Foreclosure al'lions have been flied in
Me igs County Common Pleas Court by Home Natwnal
Bank, Racme. agmnst Herbert Eugene Whaley, Shade, and
others, all eg in g default on mortgage agreements in the
amounts of $9.25 1 27, and $ 130.330 8'3; and by ABN
Amra Mortage Group. Inc .. Jacksonville, Fla., against
Carroll J. John son, Portland, and others, alleg tn g default
in the amou nt of $ 135,893 36.

Thief

..

from Page A1
out a window from the tow
truck , and rui111ng the
hydraulic system and motor
while tleeing police.
Accordmg to the Jackson
OSP post, charges are pendmg against Krebs for h1s role
m Saturday's acc1dent

Accidents
POMEROY - Meigs County
Shenff's Depaltlllent irivesUgatfd
two traffic accidents
Robert Haley of Pomeroy
was northbound on Ohio 7
nem Ba s ~an Road when a
deer ran into the path of his
Ford Explorer, causing mmor
damage.
·
David D1llard of Pomeroy
was dnving a 1998 Pontiac
north on Ohio 143 when a deer
ran into the path ol IllS veh1cle,
causing heavy damage.

order to help detect poss1ble
nsks, Little explained.
The physical exam IS comprehensive
a,nd in~ ludes
from Page A1
assessment of the human
Pediatrics have decided that body functions. Height.
students who participate in weight, and blood pressure
sporting events should have a continue to be evaluated in
more comprehens1ve evalua-, add1t1on to a vision screention before bemg permuted mg. The parents or guardian
to engage m athletic actiVJ· and the student are also
~·
reqt~Jrcd to till out a questionues. "
A rev1sed sports phy s1cal naire that will alert the examform has been developed and mer to any h1 story of medi cal
approved by the Amencan problems. These are to be
Academy
of
Family signed by the )Jarent (or
Amencan guardi an) and Student before
Physic1ans,
Academy of Pediatrics. medical personnel can begin
American Med1ca l Soc1ety the phys1cal exam
"The
sport s physical
for
Sports
M edi c in ~,
r.rocess
has
become lengt hi er
American
Orthopaed&gt;c
due
to
the
addiuonal
reqUireSociety for Sports Mcdicme
Howe;er. these
and the American Academy ments
of Sports Medicine. Medical reqUirements should be
personnel are now required regarded as imprmements."
to use this form when con- concluded the ch ild and famductmg a sports phystcal m il y services director.

Physicals

•

- - -'

.

seatbelt. $30 and costs;
Belinda L. Dalton, Rutland ,
speedjn gs, costs only . Donna
B . Deaton. Broadview Hts,
speeding. $30 .and costs:
Michael L. Dent , Syracuse,
driv1ng
under
s uspensJon/revocatJ on, $200
and costs , fa1lure to wntrol,
$25 and costs; Howard G
Dotson. Cra1gsville, W.Va,
speed1n g. $30 and costs;
Terry L Dunfee, Goolvll le ,
brake reqUirement, $20 and
costs: Timothy L. Easterhng.
Picke11ngton, seatbe lt . $30
and costs; Katherine C
Edward s,
Ch1cago, Ill. ,
s peed1ng . $30 and costs.
Lany D Elli s, W1llowood ,
seatbel t, $30 and costs ,
Nathan Eskew, Rutland , seatbelt -passenger, S20 and
costs,
Gary E. Evans, "Rogers ,
dtv1dcd roadways. $20 and
costs, Rebecca A Eye, Shady
Spring, W Va. speeding, $30
and costs. Christopher T.
Fahner. Canlbndge, stop
sign. $20 and co&amp;ts , Ve1 non
S. Fell, Augusta, Kan .. sp~ed­
ing, $30 and costs;"Sunday A.
Franklin , Gallipolis, speeding. $30 and costs. Douglas
M. Freeman, Henryetta ,
Okla., speedmg, $30 and
costs, Delbert R Games,
Fre~ch Creek, W.Va , · faiiure/stop/public safety vehlcle, $20 and costs; A. M.
Greenfield. speedin g, $30
and costs ;
Ehss,J E. Gutt. Alexandria.
Va , speeding, $50 and costs;
M!ch,Jel
T.
Haggard,
Cov1ngton, Ky., speedmg 111 a
60 mph zone, $30 and costs:
seatheh, $30 and costs;
Chadwick L. Hall. speedmg,
Midland , M1ch., speeding,
$30 and costs: Kevin R Hall,
Peterstown, W.Va., speeding,
$30 and costs. Nl\:ole M.
Hanna, Ripley, W Ya., speeding. $30 and costs.

Teen event combines
fun with fellowship
·
.

Divorce

The Constitution trumps the president

TIME OU- T FOR TIPS

Roads closed

Lillian Burt

tain Saudi s, Newsweek
reporters Michael ISJkoff
and Mark Hosenball have
debunked the theory of masstvc fmancJal ucs. And the
natiOnal COJllnliSSJOn inveStigating 9!11 has cert ified that
no Saud1s ol Interest to the
FBI were · allowed to leave.
that departwes took place.
only when air traffic was
~esumed- and_tll&lt;It the person who auth01 ited the
departures was White Hou se
aide R1 chard Clarke. who ts
now a Je,td mg Bush C! IliC
What\ espec l,lll y odious
111 'Fahren heit' " 1ts dcpicc
uon ot l t.llj "' ,, pe,Jcclul_
r&lt;~r.td t se
·,, 11tlll011 thaf.
had nel c1 Hl'fe,ltened to'
attack the ' United Stales· belore Bush began bombmg,
lt.
There's nary a mcmJoll of
the homlk atroCities committed by S.tdd,un -- Hussem·
against hi s own people
lramans and Ku w:ut iS &lt;Ind
COJlstant ell01ts to shoot
down AmeiiCdn
planes
enforcing the Illl-lly zones
mandated by the Unned
N,ttions to p1 otctt Kurds and
Sh1ites fro m 1-lussem's forces
Moore's mov ie IS much
praised by Bush -haters and I
have to admit. 1t's" powerful
p1ece of propaga nda - until
Moore explOits the g11et of Q
mother who's lost her so n try
Iraq
It would be good for Kerry
and Edwards to repudiate
Mo01e, Sister Souljah-style.
And while they ,ue &lt;It it they
should dtstance themselves
from Gore. who. among
othe1 things, has charged
that Bush has 'bet! ayed the
Clluntry.'
,
(Morton Kondracke 1;
oecutit'&lt;' ed/101 o./ Roll Call:
th e ne&gt;rspapei of Capllo(
HJ!/.)
'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

BY BECKY BAER
ME IGS EXTENSION &gt;\l&gt;ENT

Summer is the ume for fun
m the sun and , fun m the
water What a great way to
enjoy t~ e beautiful outdoors'
But unfortunately thmgs can
happen that can put a damper
on the festivilles Be sure to
take appropriate precautions
so that your acti vmes stay
fun and don' t become trag1c .
FirSt, dress according to the
weather Wear lightweight,
J'Jght-colored clothtng that
\\ti ll allow for perspiration to
evaporate. W1&lt;;le-bnmmed
hats and umbrellas can also
help prevent the body from
overheating . Drink lots of
liqiuds, but stay away from
alcohol and ~:atfeme - they
can actu~lly cause dehydration . Eat smaller meals and
less protem foods because
they tend to make a person
hotter.
Relram trom v1gorous
physical acllvity that can lead
to heat-re lated illne sses.
Muscle cramps may be an
mdicat1on of too much heat.
Stretching and massagmg the
muscles and drmking ~ 1p s of
water can help relieve the
symptoms. Heat exhaustion
may be occurring if there is
dizziness, nausea. a headache
and the skm becomes mmst,
pdle and cool. Heatstroke JS
the most severe of the heatrelated tllne sses and may
Jesuit in brain damage or
even death. Its symptoms
mclude vomning. loss of
conSCJOUS!leSS. h1gh body
temperature, lack of sweat,
and a rapid , weak pulse and
shallow breathmg. If heat ·
exhau stion or heatstroke
develops, call for emergency
help. move the patient to a
cooler area. g1ve lluids (1!
COnSCIOUS) and try to minimtze shock.
To prevent a su nburn ,
damage from the sun's ultraviolet rays and possible skin
cancer. use sunscreen With a
sun protect Jon factor (SPF) of
at least I 5 Apply it 30 minutes before gomg out side .
Reapply every two hours or
after swimming or swealin g
To further protect your skin ,
av01d .d1rect sunltght between
I0:00 a.m and 4 00 .P m
when the sun's rays are the
most mtense. Sunglasses that
abs01 b at least 90% of ultra~ Jol et li ght should be worn to
ward oft damage to your eyesightBe ca ieful around water,
whether at a pool, river, lake
or ocean. The best form of
defense to prevent drowning
is to learn how to sw1m. If
you have a backyard pool,
completely surround 1t w1th
five-foot -high fences with
self-c losing and top selfJatchmg gates. Don't count
the house as one of the Sides
of the fence. Children can
open doors and wmdows to
get to the pool - undetected
and unsupervised.
•
Never allow anyone to
sw1m alone and always be
within arm's reach of small

children. Put away pool toys
afte• swnmmng so youngsters won't be tempted to go
near the water to get them.
Keep pool rescue equipment.
a portable phone, 'step-bystep CPR mstrucrions. emergency phone numbers and 91-1: information available by
the pool for emergencies.
When swimming in rivers,
lakes or streams avoid areas
of murky water. Dangerous
underwater objects could be
hidden from view or there
could be penlous drop-offs.
Know the depth of the water.
Don't d1ve head first into
areas that are too shallow.
Check to make sure no one is
111 the way before jumpmg off
a dock.
When you're at the ocean
sw1m only m designated
areas Find out the surf and
beach conditions before
gomg m the water. If you are
caught 111 ocean - currents,
swim across them; don't try
to go agamst them
Never drink alcohol when
swtinming
or
boating.
Reaction umes and judgequ1ckly
become
ments
1mpaired
Pay close attention to the weather. If a storm
1s commg. get out ol the
water now 1

Take boater safety courses.
G1ve your nmerary to someone before settmg sail, so
they will know where you
Will be going, who 1s with
you, and when you are
expected back
Check all
safety and operational equipment before launching .
Follow boat and jet sk1 regulations and no-wake and
speed zones. Always have on
Coast Guard-approved life
vests when out on the water
Is backpackmg, hiking or
campmg one of your summertime activities? In that
case, be sure you have the
necessary equipment and
sk tll s required to prevent
injury or illness Cons1der all
poss1ble emergency snuatJons before starting out.
'What might you need?
Things such as a cell phone,
flashlight. compass, first atd
kit, food . insect repellant,
pocket kmfe, water, and
water punf1cat1on tablets are
all important for your safety.
Have a surv1 val kit that
would mclude things that
would be reqUJred if you
unexpectedly had to stay outSide overmght. Never go
campmg or h1kmg alone. If
you are goi ng to very remote
areas, It is best to have several people along . If someone
IS Injured, one could stay
with the v1ctim ; the others
could go for help.
The mam way to keep safe
dunng the summer, whether
swimmmg, boaung, campmg
or h1kmg. ts to plan ahead.
Thmk about all possible
emergency Situations that
could occur Determine .how
you would prevent them from
happenm g, and how you
would handle them if they
did develop In other wordsbe prepared I

BY STEPHANIE JENKINS
ment wete selected through
SJENKIN&amp;@MYDAILYREGISTER COM an auditiOn by teenagers on
the Teens At Bethel commit-- POINT PLEASANT, W Va tee. They were chosen based
- Teenagers of Chnstwn on qual it y. but foremost, with
tanh Will have lfn oppo11unity a passion for a walk with
to worship in their own way. God.
wnh k1ds the1r age , ,md have
Tee ns at Bethel begin s with
tun wh1le grow closer to God. the opening ceremony at 7: 30
by attending Teens At Bethel p. m. Thursday Events wi ll
July 22-44
.
continue through Fnd.ty and
Teens At Bethel, a non- Saturday The Hussell tarm is
profit , nondenominational located on Bethel Road 111
orgamzauon. was Joundcd by Pomt Pleasant
Don Husse ll
of Point
The gates open at 2 p.m
Pleasant. a youth pastor at the Wednesday for those WIShing
Worldw1de Church of Golj; 111 to camp at the farm The
Huntmgton.
campgrounds do not have
After tra vehng to many electncity, but there IS a bath
youth events outside the area, ho use. Children who want to
Hussell smd that he saw a camp must be accompanied
need for teens to be able to by an adult, as there Will be
have events 111 the local area no adult supervision at the
'
where they could fully expe- campground.
PAINESVILLE. Oh1o (AP) ,- An amusement ride owner
Hu sse ll empmasizes that
rience God. Hussel,l has prepared h1s own farm for Teens Teens At Bethel JS open to all was sentenced to SIX months in jml in the death of an 8-yearAt Bethel He has installed a teenagers of Chnstian faith old boy shocked wh1le waiting to ride the bumper cars at a
stage, b&lt;1th houses, and a con- He &gt;~ e lc omes teens fro111 county ta1r.
cession stand·, with the help of OhiO and West Virgima.
Eugene Chaffee, 48 . ot Rivervtew, Fla., also was ordered
the Teens At Bethel staff
Ticket prices are $52 for a Monday by Lake County Common Pleas Judge Richard
Teens At Bethel will featt)re three-day pass; $ 15 for Collms to pay Greyson Yoe ·s famtly $13.000 for the boy's
mus1c by local Om st1an Thursday night only: or $25 funeral and med1cal expenses . Chaffee cannot own, operate or
bands Drowning Jonah, and for Fnday and Saturday ·
Heirs 2 The Throne . There
For more mformauon, vi-s 1t mstall any amusement ndes dunng hi s two years of probatton.
Wttnesses told mvestlgators that the boy was holding a
will be spec tal speakers the Web site at www teensatmetal
rail eJ\closmg the Scooter when he called out "Help me"
including M1chael Owens, a bethel.org. There are applicaformer Marshall . UniversJty tions for p-reregjstration as and dropped to the ground last Aug. 13 at the Lake County
football player. There will well as mfo rmatlon about the Fair. He never re gained consciousness and died Sept. 2.
"a lso be youth pastors and bands and events. or call the
Chaffee's lawyer. Emmett Moran. said h1 s client did not
coun selors on hand.
._,Teens At Bethel headquarters deserve a j,til sentence because he pleaded gu1lty to attempted
The speakers and entertain - at (304) 824-5955.
mvoluntary manslaughter and accepted responsibility.
Collins said he hoped other ride owners and operators will
learn from the case.
Coming ~ lhursday in the Register "The greatest tragedy IS that thi s could have been prevented.'' Collins said.
Assistant County Prosecutor Karen Kowall said the ride had
22 safety code vmlations and Chaffee used tin foil to patch an
electrical short.
" He was not concerned with safety but keepmg the ride runnin2 ,.. Kowall said
The nde., electnc1an. Nick Rock. ·g I. of Mentor, was sentenced last week to 30 days 111 jail and two years· probation
after bei-ng- convicted of reckless homJcJde and involuntary
Your guide to weekend etllet taillltlillt In the 'M-Stllte man,slaughter Prosecutors said Rock faded to properly
ground an electncal wtre to the nde

Ride owner sentenced
in boy's death at fair

GG~~flC~ r(J ~ f?
T/trmg~ f(9 JP(9"

'

'\\. - - --· --- -· ------ -·- - -

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

�•

I
D

tro

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Tuesd~,July13,2004
..,......

- ACI - 33.63
AEP - 31.39 ·
Akzo - 36.25
Ashland Inc. - 52.83
BBT- 37.38
BLI - 12.72
Bob Evans --: 27.22
BorgWarner - 42.43
City , Holding - 30.42
Champion - 4.06 ·
Charming , Shops - 8 .16
Col - 33.70 .
DuPont - 43 .24
DG -18.98
Federal Mogul - .265
Gannett - 81 .39
General Electric - 32.60
GKNLY- 4.50
Harley Davidson - 60.49
·Kmart - 77:80
Kroger- 17 .11
Ltd - · 19.74
NSC - . 25.80
Oak Hill Financial - 33.62
OVBC- 33.00
Peoples .:_ 24.82
Pepsico - 53.07
Premier 9.59
Rocky Boots - 22.57
RD Shell - 52.33
Rockwell - 36.02
Sears-- 35.32
TUesday, July 13
Eveni11g (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Moming (7 a.m. -Noon)
It should continue to be
It ~hould be a humid morn- · h.umid . · Tem peratures will
ing. There is a slight chance drop from 84 early thi s
of rain. Temperatures'will rise evening to 73. Skies will be
from 73 to 81 by late this clear to pa11ly cloudy wit h 5
morning. Skies will be partly MPH winds from the northcloudy to doudy with I0' west turning from the .southMPH winds from the north- west as tile evening progresswest.
es.
Afternoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
Ovemight ( 1 a.m.-6 a.m.)
. It will remain hum id.
It wil l continue to be humid.
Temperatures will stay near Mouerate rain is expected.
83 with today's high of 85 The rainlall is expected to
occurring around . 5:00pm . begin near 2:00am. The rain
Skies will range from sunny shoL1ld stop by 3:00am with
to p~rtly cloudy with 5 to I0 total accumulations· for this
MPH winds from the north- event near 0.16 inche.s.
west.
Temperatures will hold steady

around 72 with today's low of
70 occurring around 4:00am.
Skies will range from mostly
dew· to cloudy wi th 10 MPH
winds from the west turning
from the southwest as the
overnight progresses.
Wednesday, July 14
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Expect a humid morning.
. Expect nothing more th an a
passing shower. Temperatures
will climb from 73 to 80 by
late this morning . Skies w,ill
be ·mostly sunny to cloudy ·
with 5 to 10 MPH winds from
the southwest turning from
t·he northwest as the morning
progl'esses.

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
retired dentist has been swimming in the cold, choppy
wat'ers of Lake Erie. to prepare for his next goal:
Becoming the oldest man in
the world to swim the English
Channel at age 68 .
Since March. Joe Van Horn
of Canton has been working
out in Lake Erie in Cleveland
because of the rough current
and wat.e r temperature. He's
trying to build strength.
endurance and resistance to
c·old water, the things most
important for the 20-mile

Jul~2.

10 ,750

2004

uow

·.

Jonas

-·-- 9.750

+H.OO
10,238.22
Pel chlnge
from prevklua: +0.24

July 12. 2004

High

Low

10.? 57.10 10,162.18

Tuesday, July 13, 2004

9' 250

---c
AP:c:Rc--, ·--:-:
M-c:
I\Y-,----,
JU"'
N- - -J-:-:
U:l -

Record high: 11 ,722.9a
J•n. 14, 2000

Casey, Freel returning but Griffey is.out

..................................................................................................... 2,200

Nasdaa

composll
'-9.41
1,936.92
Pet change

frompmlouo: :o.48

1 ' 114.35
Pet. change
from previous: +0.14

High
1,941 .24

APR
'!ilgh
1,116.11

LOW
1,921 .40

MAY
Low

1.106.71

Record high : 5,048.62
March 10,2000

1

JUN
JUL
.OOO
Record hlgh: 1.527.46
March 24.2000

AP
.

.

SBC- 23.67
AT&amp;T - 15.23
USB - 28.17
Wendy's - 35.80
Wal-Mart - 52.23
Worthington - 19.86

Days Until .
High School
Football
Season!!!

Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transac:
lions , prQvided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

his fi1ther, Yang Jung, 68, a
chiropractor, and injuries to
his mother, Jemma lung,
61.
She was treated for minor
injuries and released after
Sunday night's incident.
·w Tasurnera saidsttuhdeenstuspecatt.
_
Stanforcj University and
might be headed . west
toward California. Police
issued a bulletin for the
1995
N iss an
Ma.xi ma

•

·'

-

'

H

.,,

Your Ticket To
Summer Fun!

SW IIll.

This week , he'll train in the
San.. Francisco Bay.
He aims for larger distam:e
records in Lake Erie, or swim
colder, rougher waters elsewhere in the world.
, "But when you say English
Channel, it's like saying
Kentucky Deroy for hooe rJCing.
It's been frunous ever since it was Joe Van Horn pauses during a training swim at Myers Lake in
first done in 1875," Van Hom Canton. Van Horn, 68, will attempt to swim the English Channel
later this year andwould become the oldest person to accomplish
said.
'
Currently, the oldest person the feat if successful. (AP Photo/The Plain Dealer, Scott shaw)
to. successfully make the
.swim across the English which require running, swi m- on a few pounds to make
Channel
was
Bertram ming and bicycling .
them .more buoyant.
Clifford Ball of Australia. He
"And in 1988, I happened
Vmi Horn said an English
was 67 years, 241 days old to qualify for. the lronman observer rides in the boat and
when he swam from Cap · Championship in Hawaii," he "watches every stroke," to
(}ris-Nez to Dover in 18 said. "So then I was pretty make , sure the rules are folhours and 37 mmutes 111 1987. much hooked on that; ·
lowed. The attempts may start
according to Kate White. a
Van Horn ·s intended course as early as midnight or 2 in
spokeswoman , for
the across the English Cll!lnl)el is the morning so swimmers are
Guinness Book of World from Dover to Calais, more or in darkness for hours, he said.
Records.
less the route that the
Once in the UK, he has to
Susan Fraenkel of South Germans 'expected the Allies pay about $3,000 to charter
Africa holds lhe world record to .use · when they invaded the chase boat, a small fishing
for oldest woman to swim the France .in 1944.
vessel that can take the chan·
Channel. At 46 years, 103
The channel swims are nel waters and provide some
days, she crossed the water in attempted only ·in July and shelter from the elements as it
12 hours, 5 minutes on July August. and maybe a week trolls alongside him. ·
Van Horn estimates that he
24, 19~4 . White said Monday. into September. he said, and
Van Horn was a varsity even then . the water is has spent about $15.000 since
. . swimmer in h~gh school and between 58 and o2 degrees. spring on preparations and
lettered at Ohio State.
Wetsuit' and notation devices may approach a iota! of
"I swam so much as a kid I are banned, and orye can get $20,000 by the time he
really didn't like to swim." he food and water from a chase ret urns home .
said.
boat, but cannot touch the
His girlfriend will among
those accompanying him on
To stay in shape, he took up vessel.
,running in the mid-1960s. and
For insulation. swimmers the trip.
staned entering the Boston are allowed to wear.a special . "She thinks I'm crazy, but
Marathon. By the early '80s, grease available in an English she's used to it." Van Hom
.' .
he was entering triathlons, drug store, and they can put

l

July 25 -

Don't let financial concerns ruin your vacation plansl The folks at Credit Xpress
can lend you the cash to consolidate bills, pay unexpected expenses, buy a car,
or anything else J'Ot! may need In a pinch. Yes...you CAN still enjoy a fun famjly
vacation this summer with no worries!

New England ·300, Loudon,

Aug. 1 - Pennsy.lvania 500, Long Pond.
Pa.
·
Aug. 8- Brickyard 400, Indianapolis
Aug.· 15 - Sirius at The Glen, Watkins
Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 22 - GFS Marketplace 400 ,
Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 28- Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn.
Sept. 5 - Pop Secret 500, Fontana ,
.
, Calif.·
Sapt.
Chevrplet Monte Carlo 400,
Richmond, Va.
,
Sept. .19 - Sylvania 300, Loudon, N.H.
Sept. 26 - MBNA Amer~a 400, Dover.
Del.
Oct 3- EA Sports 500, Talladega, Ala .
Oct. 10 - Banquet.400. Kansas City.
Kan.
Oct 16 - UAW-GM Oualrty 500,
Cot1cord, N.C.
Oct. 24 -Subway 500, Martinsville, Va. ,
Oct. 31 -Bass Pro Shops MBNA 400.

1, -

BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@ mydailytribune.com

Nov. 7 - Checker Auto Parts 500.
Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 14 - Southern 500, Dartington , SC.
Nov. 21 - Ford 400, HomesteaCI, Fla.
'

'

Lindenschmidt
takes medalist
honors at
Women's Am

•

518 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
•

740.992.1771

-

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

MILFORD (AP) - Kelsey
Lindenschmidt of West
Chester shot a 1-under 71
Monday to take medalist honors at the 81 st Ohio Women's
Amateur golf ~hampionship.
The
15-year-old
Lindenschmidt, who won 'the
Ohio Junia~ Girls golf championship last week, lwas the
o~1j!layer to finish under par
at the 5,874-yard Terrace Park
Countcy Club.
Lindenschmidt
finished
two shots ahead &lt;if Kara
Manis of Canton and Jill
Stupiansky of Lakewood.
The 32 players with the
lowest scores begin match
play Tuesday in the championship flight, which concludes Friday with 36 holes of
match play.

'

Well.

Casey is second in the National
League in batting with a .352 average.
His 15 home runs are third on the Reds
beh.ind Dunn's 25 and Griffey's 20.
Wil~ Mo Pena. filling in for Griffey,
goes mto the All-Star break batting
.270 with 10 home rs and 28 RBis in
15lJ at-buts.
"·
Cas~y and Freel. a valuable utility·
mun. me expected back in action after
the All-Star break, having recovered
Jmm injuries. ·
.
Vander Wol saw action . briefly
Sunuay and .could help the Reds off the
bench as a pinch hitter, backup outfielder and f1rst b;1seman in the second
halL
·

·

But there are also problems. Griffey
su!fered a panial te~r of his right hamstnng Saturday and the Reds placed
him on the . 15-day di sabled list
Sunday
A left ham string injury plagued
Griffey for all of 2001. and a right
hamstring injury put him out for
almost a month in 2002.
"I don't think it 's as bad as the last
time." said De Timothy Kremchek, the
·Reds- medical director,
·
Gritley will miss the All -Star game.
but will stmnehabi litation as soon as
possible. His condition will be
reassessed-in about 10 days. Kremchek
said.

and

C o I· i n

Crabtree
chipped in ·:· u
single apiece.
Chad we_! I
ha(l
hit , the
a lone
first

ROCKSPRINGS
Pitchers . Chris Brown and
Jeremy Blackston were much
be tter than they had to be. ·
The Meigs Post 128 duo
combined on a one-hit shutout
irming douMonday, and received plenty
blc.
for
of run suppon in an 18-0 whipAthe11s.
pin¥ of the visiting Athens
Amsbary
M e i g· s
Jumors during .American
jumped out to
Legion baseball action.
the 3-0 lead in the first inning.
Brown worked the first five · but done most of its damage by
. .
scoring seven times in the sccmnmgs to earn the vict01y.
After surrendering a first and.
inning double, he sat down the
Three straight walks to start
next 12 batters he faced. the inning loaded the bases for
Bl k
Amsbary. who floated an RBI
ac stan tossed two perfect single over the third baseman's
innings in relief.
Athens staner and loser Matt head. Warren followed with a
Demosky was rocked for nine two-run single through the
runs on seven hits and lasted middle of the infield, making
the score 6-0.
less than two innings. Ryan
A' fourth base-on-balls
Thomas and Tyler Chadwell
·
loade~ the bases again and set
also 'logged innings in the los- the stage for Parson's three-run
ing effort.
d b
Meigs imprqved to 18 _12 ou le. The Wellston product
ovemll while Athens fell 'to 10_ rounded out the frame's sear.
ing when he later came home ,
12.
on a on a wild pitch.
Four of Meigs' 17 total hits
Meigs scored in every inning
belonged to Ken Amsbary; who that follow ed until the mercy
went 4-for-4 with a pair of,dou- rule brought the game to a halt
bles and four runs batted in. after seven innings. It \vas
Andy Parsons added three hits
and fout RBis, three of which originally sc heduled to go
nine.
came on a bases-cleating douMei~ s
plays host to
ble in the.second inning.
Pickermgton
Post
104
Mike Warren tripled and sin- Wednesday at Meigs High
gled with. three RBi s.. Angelo SchooL .
Hardy knocked in a pair of
runs .on two hits, while Doug
Meigs 18, Athens Juniors 0
Dill singled and doubled a run Athens 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 0 1- 2
Meigs
372123~e-1817t
in.
Man Demosky, Ryan Thomas (2), Tyler
Jeremy Blackston doubled Chadwell (5) and .Cory Bean. Chris Brown, Meigs Post 128 pitcher Jeremy Blackston throws a .pitch during the !?xth inning of Monday's
drubbing of Athens Juniors. Blackston and teammate Chris Brown combined on a onewhile Luke Hai slop, Ross Jeremy Blackston (6) and Doug DilL W - 18-0
hitter.
(Brad .Sherman)
'
Chris Brown. L - Matt Demo sky

.,

1

Lawyer for woman
Source: Cavs make oneyear offer to Carlos Boozer suing OSU want$ to

depose formar assistant

BY ToM WITHERS

Associated Press

Hampton, Ga .

"~~c~ (€&gt; ·~ 0' t'ltBngJ, (€&gt; $&gt;€&gt;"
'

0 -7
0-7

20-23
18-12
5-21
0-13

.
Through July 11
1. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $4,334,631
2. Matt Kenselh, $3,980.703
3. Tony Stewart, $3,824.101
4 ..Jeff Gordon, $3,560,476
5. Jimmie Johnson, $3,105;659
6. Ellion Sadler, $2,732,918
7. Ryan Newman , $2 ,700,690
8. Kevin Harvick, $2 , 69~8
9. Kasey Kahne , $2,536,122
10. Bobby Labonte, $2,530,856
1 1. Dale Jarrett, $2,427.428
12. Rusty Wallace~ $2,415,948
13. Michael Waltrip, $2,334,650
14. Scott Wimmer, $2,235 ,080
15. Sterling Marlin, $2,175,763
16. Robby Gordon, $2,093,754
17. JeH Burton, $2,076,472
· 18. Terry Labonte, $2,041,062
19. Jeremy Mayfield, $2,034,681
20. Kurt Busch ,'$2,005,067

N.H.

'

.

4-6

NASCAR Nextel Cup Schedule

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel....

•

18-10

NASCAR Nextel
Money Leaders·

,,

Your online soUrce for news

6·2
6-2

5. Matt Kenseth, 2321
6. Bobby Labonle. 2278
7. Elliott Sadler. 2252
8 . Kevin Harvick, 2229
9 . Kurt Busch. 22 11 ·
' 10. Byan Newman, 2173
11 . Jeremy Mayfield, 2108
12. Dale Jarrett, 2083
13. Jamie McM.urray. 2068
14. Kasey Kahne, 2044
15 . Mark Martin, 2035
16. Casey Mears, 1998
17. Rusty Wallace, 1965
18. Michai!l Waltrip, 1960
19. Sterling Marlin, 1941
20. Brian Vickers, 1913

AM39HP

VISit 1lS online at·

ALL

8-o 28-12

1. Jimmie Johnson, 2720
2. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 26 15
3. Jeff Gordon, 2478
4 . Tony Stewart, 2418

License plate: Ohio

WWW.MYD· AILYSE. NTINEL~COM

Your pide tO Weekend entertainment in·the ni-State

Meigs' clobbers
Athens Juniors.

IDb

Through July 11

. ,.

~

American Legion Baseball

NASCAR Nextel
Point Leaders

the amount. No charge~
\\!ere filed.
-----------

Centml leader St. Louis with a 47-.:11
record , better· than many rans expected . .
Slmrtstop Barry Larkin - on the
disabled list three times last year aqd first baseman Casey are having
strong seasons in 2004. Statting pitcher Paul Wilson has a career-high ·nine
wins and closer Danny Graves~has 33
saves in 40 chances.
··
" h.Jdi v idually, we ' ve do lie some
great
things,"
Larkin
sa id .
"Collectively.. as a team, we· ve uonc
all right. All in all. it's been a 'sucte'-'. ful lirst half.
· "We're bet.tcr than wh&lt;\t peo ple
expected us.to be,'' Larkin said.

Meigs 18 ·I Athens Juniors 0

Pickerington
Athens
, .Lancaster
Meigs
Glouster
Logan

with Ohio licen se plate s.
The suspect ran away
from
his
suburban
Cleveland home in 1998
with
a
"considerable
amount" of his father 's
money, according to Tume·r,
who declined to disclose

CINCINNATI (AP) - Sean Casey
and Ryan Freel return from the
Cincinnati Reds' injured list on
Thursday.
.
Pinch-hitter/backup outfielder John
Vander Wal is finally available afier
·missing the lirst half- of the season
because of an off-season knee· injury
he suffered at home. But outfielders
Austill Keams and Ken GrifTey. Jr. are
out with injuries.
.
It seems like a terun of la.&gt;t )lear for
the Reds, when injuries cut short the
seasons of their.opening-day outtielcl
of Griffey, Kearns and Adam Dunn. ·.
At the All-Star break t.his vear,
Cincinnati is 7 1/2 games bebind NL

Legion Standings
~

Son wanted in car death of father :-

Ohio man attempting to become·oldest
person to swim English Channel

B1·

A DAY ON WALL STREH

8th District

WESTLAKE (AP)
Police issued an alert
Monday for a young man
suspected of running down
and killing his father and
hitting his mother in an
argument about using the
family car.
.
Police Capt. Guy Turner
said detectives were seeking
warrants for murde·r and
aggr;~vated vehicular assault
against Dm1iel lung, 22, of
Westlake, in the death of

The Daily Sentinel

Olympic qualifying, Page B2
Baaeball atandlngs, Page B6
Rio track.slgns athletes, Page B6

~

'

Local·Stocks

.

INSIDE

'

'

Making a last-ditch effon to retain Carlos
Boozer, the Cleveland Cavaliers have offered
him a one-yem contract w·onh about $5 million amid repons he will [l!ln ways with his
agent, The Associated Press has learned.
The power forn:ard's reputation has taken a
beatmg ,over the past week after he stunned
Cleveland by agreeing to a $68 million ofter
from the Utah Jazz. Days earlier, the Cavs'
declined to exerci~e a $695,()()() option on
Boozer's contrnct ~ thereby• making him a
free agent - in the belief he would accept a
6-year, $41 million deal to remain in
Cleveland.
But the move backfired when Boozer
reneged on a verbal understan,jjing with the
Cavs and decided to take $27 million more
from Utah.
. Boozer's decision has been heavily critici7.ed around the NBA. with agents and team
executives saying it has undermined the mutual trust many of them have for one another.
If Boozer ac.cepts th't; Cavs · new offer.
which wa.\ confinned to the AP by a source
close to the negotiations who spoke·on condi·
tion of anonymity_ he would put himself in
position to be eligible next summer for an
even larger contmct than ·the ones Utah and
Cleveland have offered.
Boozer and his agent, Rob Pelinka. Lliu not
return phone CIJ.IIS Monday.
Pelinka's bo~. Arn Tellem. did not ,retLirn a
call seeking comment on repon, that hi'
agency. SFX, has !lecided to part way' with
Boozer in the wake of the contract tim.co.

'

Cleveland Cavaliers' Carlos Boozer dunks
against the New Orleans . Hornets ,in the
fourtiJ Quarter in th1s Feb. 23, 2004,
photo. (AP File) ,

'

•

COLUMBUS (APJ -The credibility.
attorney for a woman suing
"When and if coach
two Ohio State boosters said Biancardi is subpoenaed, we
he plans to drop the lawsuit will examine and make sure .
and relile it to give him more it"s proper and properly
time ·to yuestion people. served. and -we ·will respond
·' ·
inc luding former assistant to the s\1bpoena."
coach Pa~l Biancardi . '
· ' Salyers sued last August in
Jeffrey Lucas said on Franklin County Common
Monday that the move is to Pleas Court. seeking nioney
extend the time he.can gather she says the boosters. Dan
.evidence. including addition- a~d Kim Roslovic , 0\Ve her
al depositions .
for taking care of former
He 'aiu Biancardi. now the player Boban Sav6vic. In her
Wright State coach. is one of deposition. Salyers · says
those he still wants to yues- Biancardi knew about the
tion . Ohio State athletic direc- arrangement and al-so was
tor Andy Geiger is not on the aware &gt;he got grades changeu
list. Luca' said.
to help keep Savovic eligible.
He declined to be more speSalyers· lawsuit contributed
cific about who else could be to head coach Jim O'Brien's
yue ~t ioned but sai d new firing and an NCAA invdtiinformation has come to light. gat ion of the basketball proBiancardi.
cited
.by gram. Qjlio State fired
Kathleen Salyers as. a main O'Brien on June 8 after he
contact for her dealing' with aumittep giving a recruit
Ohio State. has denied an v 56.000 in 1999.
wrongdoing.
· ' Luca' 'aid he haLl Jiled a
"Do you really think that n(l!ice of disrnissal but plans
Mr. Lucas for the first time to refile the case this week.
learned he wanted to take Mr. He c·alled it a ,typical proce·
.Biuncardi's depo&gt;ition ·!" 'aid dure designed to allow more
Biancardi '' attorney. Jim time-lo gather information.
Zevutek . ".1 find that as inter-, "The case will l:&gt;e the
esting as Mr. Lucas' client's sa~&gt;~e ... he said .

•

•

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.www.mydailysentinel.com

PageB2

OLYMPIC
Athenians finaHy getting excited a mo.nth before Olympics
rhe Daily Sentin~l
'

m:rihune .&gt;sentinel - 1\.e

Tuesday, July 13, 2004

•

•

'

C L A ·S S I F .1E D

BY RoB GLOSTER
Assocoated Press

had grown collecuvelv grumpy
in the buildup to the 61ymptes
In' fact. one poll earl ier th1s yedr
found Greece to be the world's
second-most
pessimostoc
nation, behmd Slovakia.
But the gloom seems to be
lifting. Another survey. pub·
hshed S1mday. found that 85
percent of Greeks now suppon ,
hOsting the Olympic Games wtth nearly one-tilth ot that
group .tdmotting they did not
suppon the 1d&lt;;a m the begin-

"People arc now saymg. ' It's
our year, thos is our chance to
show the world what we can
do."·
,
Of course. not qerything is
ready. And Greece ·s worst
blackO!Wj in more thah a decaue
hit Athells and southern Gre~ce
on Mend.ty. raismg conceim
abou t whether the lights woll go
out at the Olympocs
Roads are still being· paved.
seah are bemg mstalled in
Olympic venues and lanuscapmg has not beo un around the
butterfly-shaped Olymp1c stadium and other showpoeces of
the games.
And gaps remain in the $1 2
bolhon secun ty system. About
100 subcommand centers still
· have not been complete&lt;.!. apd
little time remains to test secunty networh at the mum stadium compl ex - where cp n-·
struction 1s stoll unuer way
A taxo drover proudly poin ts
to a treshly repaved ponwn of
Kitissias Avenue. the mam road

leadmg from downtown Athens
to the Olympoc stadium. only to
burst out laughmg a block ldter
.ot the sight of a road coew fixIll" a pothole
'-That\ the w.oy it's be~n. al l
lixcd one night and 1elixm~ 11
the next.'' he says "That's the
Greek way.. •
TI1ere 's ell so the we,other h
was I I0 uegrees on Sunday.
and the power outage cut off aor
condo toonong for up Ill fouo
hours as temperatures pl"hed
past I~. At one pomt. generators were pressed onto service at
Olympic venues
J Lily Is tr.ldlllo na ll y the
hottest mont h lll Greece, woth
htghs often toppmg I00. The
Goee k weat her seovoce s,ud
average h1ghs 111 Athen s dunng
the Olympics should be abou t
90
George Rou ssopoulos. an
ml ormatoon technology consul·
tant. quickl y acknowledges
Athens os not yet ready for the
Olymp1cs - · hut says the soc·

(er VIctory is giving Athen1ans
a chance to believe they tan
pull it otT
"No one thought Greece
wou ld w1 n the Euro and they
diu," he s,Jys, "so anything can
happen."
The soccer title ho g'h lighted
the stnkmg contrasts ol Athens.
a city that mo ~es classical wllh
modern in :1 way · perhaps
unmatched by any ot her place.
Gr~ek oo1hodox pnests wo th
long he.1rds &lt;~nd hedd-to-toe
bJ.ock , gowns Sit at SIUeW,lik
cafes &lt;jhdtting on cell phones. A
sleek new s1obway system and
one of the world's most ompresso ve airport' lead vosotors to
chaotic downtowoi streets
where Cclrs are pm ked on the
sodewalks.
An Athens baker. hewong ,,
Vlsl!or speakmg English to 'hos
tamol y. stao1 s CUl,mg 111 Goeek
about " Bush .ond Blair" and
how Amencans ate ruining the
world. Then he hands the ciuldren cookies and gives the vosi-

tor two free loa,es ot.brcad.
O n the ni ght after the July 4
soccer VlCtoo:y. vos1tors to the
Acropo los looked down at a sea
of Greek flags arou1'd the
ancient marble stadium that
hosted the 1896 O lympics
Fireworks proviued extra per-cussoon f•&gt;r an oochestla pl.tymg
Mahler's First Symphony 111 ~n
1,800-year-olu
outdoor
amphitheater
near
rhe
Parthenon
Vagel1s Constanti ne, who
sells gyros on the tounsty Plaka
dostrict below the Acropolts,
says the Athen s Olympocs wi ll
be in kcepin~ wnh tus nauen 's
style
.. It m1giH not be tile most perfectly ooganized Olympocs. but
perfect is sometimes bonng."
he says "It 's goong to be a
Greek OlympLcs - It's gomg
to be toh1lly unpredictable.
"Alte1 ,Ill it )1as cost us here, •
it betteo be spectacular. Greeks
cxr:ct nothmg less. we have
pmd through the nose "

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BY Roa GLOSTER
Assocoated Press

Jo nes never smol ed during Then he threatened to sue
her three jumps. She took off USA Track &amp; F1eld, cl aim well before the foul hoe on mg " bra s and dlscnmina each
of her attempts. but tion."
SACRAMENTO , Calif By failing to quahfy. th e
Marion Jones, her vu lnera- never see med to soar. As 111
bility seemmg 10 grow with the 100 two day s earlier. she fo ur acc used dopers saved
each event, finished a shock - see med to lack an extra gear. th e
U.S.
Ol y mpi c
Jones
walked
across
th
e
Co
mmittee
the
embarrassing se:venth but man aged to
advance to the final of the field after her three jumps, ment of havin g to (emove
·
Iong JUmp
at t he
. . wearing a whole cap and car- them from the team if arbo rymg a black and blue back- trators rule they are guilt y.
Olympic trials
·Jones, by far the best u.s. pack. She d1d not co me
Also failin g to qualify fo r
long jumper 111 a weak foeld, through th e " mixed zone " the final was world champl was among the 12 qualifiers where reporters awall ed her. on J ~ rom e Youn g, who faces
who advanced to Thufsday's
Jones' best jump came on the loss of hi s relay go ld
final But she failed by a .her openin g attempt.
medal
fr.om
the 2000
quarter-inc h 10 reach th e
The first co mpetit 01 in the Olympics becau se ot sterOid
automatiC qu ailtyong mark , first qualifying round, Jones use.
In other actiOn Mond ay
and got worse woth each of qUickly took oft her longher three jumps Monday sleeve whil e sh1rt and threw ni g ht . Jearl Miles-C lark
night.
her black sweat pants to th e ea rned a tnp to her f1 fth
Jon es,
who . won an side. She stepped up to the OlympiCS by Winning the
unprecedented five medals at end of the long jump runway. women's 800 met~Yrs - but
the 2000 Sydney Games,
She took a deep breath , her her sister-m- law got perhaps
fail ed Saturday no ght to cheeks puffing out as she an even bi gger prize after
make the U.S . squad in the inhaled Then she qui ckly flmshong third .
100 meters - an event in exhaled, lifted her head and
Mlle s-Ciark, 37, limshed
·
·
f d'
in I monute , 59 06 seconds
wh1ch she IS the de en ong started speedong toward the 10 hold off Nicole Teter and
Olympic champion.
sand y p11. She Iande&lt;.!, 20 stster-in-law Haze l Clark _
Her qualifica tion was vor- feet, II 3/4 inches from the
tually taken for granted 111 lone - just a quarter-inch whose foance proposed to
the long jump, on whoch she short of the qualifyong mark. her immediately after the
w·on a b ronze me d a I 111
Her next two jumps were race.
",Sydney and in which only shorter- 20-9 3/4 and 20-8
Hazel Clark appeared to
be in shock when she heard
one other American thi s year 112 .
has met the Olympic quali fyM
h'l
h
f h the proposal from Wenston
.
d d
eanw 1 e, t e 1ast 0 . 1 e Roley, who gave her a ring in
tog stan ar .
BALCO Four -.those ath- a very public spot JUSt off
Now, though she probably letes charged w1th sterood · the
track.
Riley
had
will make the team , it sud- ~se by USADA - ~as elom- informed reporters of ht s
denly 1s.not certain.
mated. at the Olympoc tnals, plans before the race.
. Under qualifyong rule s,
Alvm Hamson, one of four
"She asked me yesterday,
Janes provisionally can athletes who faces a lifetime
k h 01
·
'You're not going to propese
~a e t e. ymp1c team even ban if found g ujlty of usin g to me at thls meet, are
1f she f~ll s to place among stero1ds obtained from the
h
11 Th d
h
you?,"' said R1ley, who first
I e t?P t ree
urs ay mg t. · Bay Area Laboratory Co- met Clark when the two of
That s because only s he an'd Operative, failed to qualify them were stopped at a trafGrace
Upshaw
have for the final of the men 's 400 t" 1· h · G ·
II Fl
Olympic qualtfwm g marks
tc tg t tn amesv 1 e , a .,
1
meters .
four years ago.
tliis season.
Jonathan Johnson won the
' He j'oined fe llow accused
So, even if Jones fm1shes
iast among the 12 co mpeti - dopers Tim Mont gomery men's 800 in I 44.77 to earn
tors in Thursday' s final, and Chryste Games in fad - an Olympi c spot along with
slie' ll sttll be named to the ong to qualify for the U.S. Kh adevl s Ro binso n and
squad if no other JUmper has team for the Athens Games. Derr 1ck Pete rs o n. J am e s
r~ached the Olympic qualify - The fourth acc used doper, Parker won ~he men's hamMichelle Collins, pulled out mer throw. Aretha Hill won
f h
• 4("' 1 ·
ing mark. But the top two
fi · h
Th
d
. 11
ld o t e women s IU c aommg the women's di sc us. Shayne
;~~p e~ser f~~~ afh~tlte~~u lf a ham string injury.
C ulpepper won the women1's
they get a qualifying mark of
Hamson f1mshed. seve nth 5,000 To sha Waller won the
21 feet II 3/4 inc hes by . 10 ht s se mtftnal, fadmg after women's hi g h jump, but
Au 9 '
bemg among the leade rs failed m three attempts to
g. ·
until the final straoghtaway. break the U.S. recoru

•

Man 66 Seeks a Woman fo r
Romance PO Box 722 Poca
WV 25t 59

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- - , , _ ; ; . ; . . . . . ; . ; . . __

1030

nvalry was estab-

lished at last year 's world
champions hops,
where
Crocker set the world mark of
50 98 111 upsetting Phelps .
who had previously owned
the record.
"I'
11
· d"
·d
m rea Y exc1te • sa~
Phelp_s, who succeeded m
brcakmg the 52-second barn~r
m
the. sem1fonals.
Hopefully woth some good
rest, htm and I a~d the rest of
the ~eld woll have a good
race .
•
Phelps keeps a photo of
I

I

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,J

Manon Jones competes on the women's long JUmp at the U.S . Oiympoc track and field trials in
Sacramento, Calif , ·Monday. Over the weekend, Jones faoled to qualify on, the 100 meters. (AP)

for the first three laps. matching each other nearly stroke·
for-stroke. Then Peirsol came
off the final tum faster, and
Phelps said that cost him the
race.
"It 's goong to make me go
back to the drawing board and
try to change some thin gs,..
Phelps said. "lt gave me son
of a me~sage . I knew what
I'm trying to do isn't easy. No
one sa1d 1t was."
Phelp&gt; bounced back to win

the 200 ondovodual medley,
making
him
the
first
Amencan male to qualify for
fove ondovidual swommmg
events at an Olympics. It was
h1s third race of the ni ght , all
on JUSt over an hour.
At the Athens Games, he
wants to break Mark Spitz's
record of seven gold medals.
"If he gets five gold medal s,
I won't be the spoiler," Peirsol
said . " He sull would have
done somethon g special.··
Phelps won th e 200 IM in
I :56.7 1 - 0. 77 seconds off
hi s own world record Ryan
Lochte took the second
Olympic benh at 1:59.7 1
Amanda Beard 1s gomg to
her third Olympics, having
qualitied m three events. She
won the 200 breaststroke by
nearly 5 second s in a world
record time of 2:22.44. That
broke the mark of ·2:22 .96 set
by Australia\ Leise! Jane,,
who had taken the record
from Beard last week.
Caroline Bruce wa' the sur-

pnse runner-up, earnin g her
first tnp to the Olympics m
2·27.22 Former Olympoans
Kri sty Kowal (t hird), Megan
Quann h oxth) and Staciana
Stitts (eighth) failed to quali·
fy for Athens. Tara KirK.
alreauy
goong
to
the
Olympics 111 the I 00 breaststroke, tini shed tifth
There was another upset m
the 100 freestyle when Kara
Lynn Joyce held off Nataloe
Coughlin by four-hundreths
of a second.
, Joyce won with a time of
54.38. Co ughlin was second
in- 54.42 . They each qualifoed
for th e Olympocs Jenny
Thompson was fifth at 55.03,
but slle could sull land a spot
on the relay team.
Maruza Correoa fmished
founh and became the first
black woman to make the
·U.S. sw1mmong team. She'll
be elig oble for the relay.
"It'' a great honbr,.. Correoa
'aod. ·:.1 h(}f)e, I'm the first of
mn ny.
I

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Announcemeni .... ........ ,....................... ,....... 030

Michael Phelps
Crocker on hi s bedroom wall
as motivation He may need
to add one of Peirsol, who has
defeated him 111 their last
three meetings, including
twice at a meet in Santa Clara
m ~ay.
"I don 't ever want to lose
my race," said Peirsol, the si lver medalist in Sydney who
hasn 't lost the 200 back since
then. ''I love that thing.' '
Pe1rsol and Phelps were
both under world record pa~e

_ ._

..__ _.G•'•\1•-'•J•~•"•"·•s­
07115/04-07/16/04 24951
SR 7S tn Crown Ctly
Babtes Children s. bOys
men's plus stze malerntty
clothtng, household 1tems &amp;
toys
Huge Multt·Fam 11yyard sale
F
/S
rtd~y aturdayc 7116.7117
4Pm
9am•
ollecltbles,
cot hes 1urntture anttques &amp;
much, much more 1041 1 St
At 7S

K•Uens 9 weeks old Black or ~

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED L'1NE AD NOTICED

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

So\LE

duly maal L.n--y•,\•R•Il•S•.•\l•
.t·..• -

grey &amp; white Have had
worm m•te &amp; flea treatment

Oead'~ire.f'

110

YARD

675·5234

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

o

. ~

•~u,rm u-1- l .ml

baek, il will be anothe r match
race: Phelps vs. world record
holder la o Crocker.
Crocke r was the fas1est
semttinal quahtier in 5 1.25
seconds Phelps won hi s heat
in 51.89.
'' I love gomg fast. I love
surprising myself," Crocker
said. "That's my thnll. . I'm
real interested to see how fast
I can go. and I'm real interested to see where Michael is

at~~i'~·

lr

GIVE•\1\A\'

I Hobart haavy

Pl:RSON,lli;

Ftnd your Phtltpptne Lady
tor love and Happmess
of a ltlettme
, -800·497 -8414
Fthpma 4-love com

Challenges keep cominQ for PhelpS in the pool
LONG BEACH, Calif.
The challenges just keep
coming for Mic hae l Phelps.
The world's best swimmer
couldn ' t keep pace woth
Aaron Peirsol leaving the
final tum in the 200-meter
backstroke. and lost for the
first time at the U.S. Olympic
swim trials Monday ni ght.
Peirsol pulled away on the
final lap to win m a world
record 1 minute, 54.7 4 secon d s - b rea k ing his own
mark of I :55 15 set two years
ago. Phelps earned the other
Olympic berth, finishing second in 1:55.86.
" Having a loss like that will
definitely fuel me a little bot .
more," Phelps said. ''I don't
like to lose."
. His 'next challenge comes
Tuesday night in the 100 butterfly final, tbe'last of Phelps '
six individual races at 1he
eight-~ay trials. Like the 200

~

shcer Call (740)446 0115

us

BY BETH HARRIS
Assocoated Press

r

(740) 992-2157

Monday-Friday for Insertion

'

P:Jiarion Jones struggles into long_ jump final at Olympic trials
.
'

t.III' 'IP Co ...nly. OH

.

•
·ATHENS ,
Greece
Teenagers ran through the
streets waving Greek fl ags.
S¢ooters and . motorcycles
zi~zagged around them, honk·
mg horns m a raucous midmght
ct:lebration. · Firework smoke
o~scured the v1ew of the moon
from the Acropolis.
The Olympics are a month
away and Athenians tinally nin~ .
after years of self doubt. worldT1reu ot co nstant mtemationwlde criticism and clouds of nl doubts about Athens' read ocqnstruction dust- are ready rtess for the games and trustratt~party
ed with ,omLind-the-clock ro~d~e natoonw1de celebmt1on work. Greeks welcomed· the
!hill followed Greece's shock- - totally unexpected soccer title
mg IItle m the European soccer as a chance to ra1se a glass ot
champoonship earl ier tho s ouzo and toa~tthemsel ves
"Unto! the Euro 2004 won. 11
month may have serve&lt;.! as a
ta,~te of what's to come dunng didn't tee! like there was go ing
t~ Aug. 13-29 Summer to be an Olympocs here." says
Games
.
Jason . Kazanos. ·l Greek·
:But ot also seemed to hit the Austnohan who has been h'lll"
sgi nts of a city and nation th at in Athens smce late MaY.

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Wanted to buy· local faintly
seeks 20 50 acres lor pn
vate use, a vtew, water,
woods meadows, a plus
wtll be a good netghbor,
wnle P:O. Box 63
Mtddleport, Oh 45760 or call
614·236-4571
Rl ' I \I "1

Gractous hvtng 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Rtve rstde
Apartments 1n Mtddleport
From $295-$444 Call 740·
992-5064 Equal Houst ng
Opportllntttes
-------Modern 1 bedroom apt
PhoQe (740) 446-0390
New Haven- 1 bedroom turntshed apartment has w/d,
no pets depostt &amp; references. (74D)992-0165

LANEOll'i
MERCHANDL~E

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams Pipe Rebar
For Concrete Angle
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Gratmg
For Drams
Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
Tuesdav Wednesday &amp;
Fnday Sam 4 30pm Closed
Thursday Saturday &amp;
Sunday (740)446-7300

8

""...----ti-ILil-L~---,

SUPlUt:~

Pleasant Valley Apartment Block brtck, sewer ptpes
Are now taktng Applications wmdows ltntels etc Claude
FOR RENT
lor
2BA 3BR &amp; 4BR , Wtnte rs Rto Grande, OH
1180
WANTED
"---~;,;;::;:,;,:.,_.1 Apphcaltons are taken Cal1740-245·5121
To Do
Thlo ne-p•-r will not 2 bedroom house for rent tn Monday thru Frtday, from
•• •-accept
knowingly
Eureka $450 monthly $400 900 AM-4 PM Olltce IS
advertiHments
for
real
depostt
No pets (740 )441 _ located at 1151 Evergreen
Asststed hvtng and extra
estate which Is in
Drtve Pomt Pleasant WV
care
for
your
loved
one
tn
m
y
__8_3_·1_74_0_&gt;2_5_6_·6_40_8_ _ Phone No ts (304)675 5806 AKC Shel!les (Mmtaturc
Cal1800·652-2362
home Call 1740)388_011 8
violation of the law. Our 05
readers are ~ereby
Co!fles), 10 weeks old sable
2 bedroom house m EHO
MaKe SO% se lling Avon
1f
d th t 11
&amp; whtle beauttful &amp; smart
Ltmtled
ttme
ONLY Georges Portable Sawmtll, dwen111 orme
odl
No pets~ Twtn Atvers Tower IS accept- like Lasstel S350 Albany
a0 vert1' re n Galltpolts
(740)446-3358 First 5to call don't haul your logs to the
this nga
newspaper
11
:..17_,~:_0&gt;_37_9_·2_4_00____ mg appltcaltons for watltng (740)698·6049
receives a gtft _
mtl l JUSt call 304-675-1957
I!IVIIIIIIble on 11 n equal
2 bedroom house 1n Mason. hst for Hud su bstzed 1 br,
opportunity baMS
$350 month, $350 depostt apartment. call 675-6679
NOW HIRING- A. leadmg Wtll Pressure Wash hollse's,
no pets available Aug 1st EHO
provtder to tndtvtduals wtth mobtte homes, metal butld·
,...... Buu crnv
. K(lt. Bq,;
(304)773·5604
MR/00 IS looking for dtrect tngs and gutte rs Call
· FORECLOSURE!
WANTI-Jl
care stall tn Gallipolis No (740)446-0151 ask for Ron 3 bed only $8,000 lor list- 2·3 Bedroom House 2107
Vat ICt) of wlor' Phon ...
IUR£N"l
experience neces sary $6 35 or leave message
tngs call
il(l.l)675-5041
tncoln Ave Pt Pleasant
per hour Patel tratntng 11 you
1-800-749-8106 eX1 t144 L
No Pets, $400month, Dep &amp; Relocattng to Ga llipolis,
would liKe to JOin our team to
MOBilE HOMES
References (304)675-4844 Famtly wants to lease mce CKC Regtstered Jack
help tndtvtdu als achteve 10
home wtth at least 3 bed- Russell Pupptes $250
thetr tulles! potenltal you .,
BUSIN~
FOR SALE:
3 bedroom house tn
rooms wtth garage needed {740)24S.9301
may pllt your appltcatto'n m '"llii-Oiiiil'POoiiiRiiioii'UNiiiiriY;,;,•
Middleport. $425 a month tmmedmlely
Call Jackte
FRuiTS &amp;
..________,.J at Mtddleton Estates. 8204
1992 Southern Eltte 14X70, plus depostt no lnstde pets
740-707-7999
740-589·
VF.C.ETARLFS
Carla Dnve GallipOliS OH ABSOLUTE.GOLDMINEt 2-bedroom, 2-balh some (740)992-3194
Absolute Top Dollar U S 45631 {across from golf 60 vending machlneel appltances Call (740)949:r
5258\IIIH 11\"IISI
~-----·
Silver and Gold Cams, course) (no phone calls
excellanllocatlona
2011 after 5 00
3 bedroom Green Dtslrtcl
Blackbernes lor salo Sl3 00
Proofsets, Gold Rtngs, US please) Must apply 1n perall for $10,995
=-----~- close to town, no pets $400 ,..,.......;......_.;.;;.;.;;;;;;;;;;; a gal contact 304 895 391 1
Currency,-M T S Com ShOp, son
81)0-234-6982
plus depOSit (740)446-6890
HOINEHOIJ)
151 Second Avenue.
after 5 30pm
GooDS
Slackberrtes. yoll p1ck at
Gall ' I 740 446 2842
POSITION
o•on
VIrgil s berry patch on tilare
Are
U $$ mo11vated? 1OOX
Ftnanctng
avatlable
wtlh
NQ
I· 'IPI Cn \U'\ I
ANNOUNCEMENT
more powerful than MLM IF '
DOWN PAYMENT! Less Futon for sale all . Black, tn Route 124 JUS! south ol
3Br 12)(65 w!Addttton, CIA, - - - - - - - - - St·RIIti·S
Seriout-600-305-7949
$3.500 OBO must be moved than pertect credit accepted! brand new cond $90 00 Syracuse
PART·TIME CAMPUS
~
ee:
(304)675-7783 or 304-882- Own don I rent local com 080
tl
HOMEGR6\0m SWEET
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH 1108
pany Mortgage Locators 740-441-1296
POLICE
OFFICERS
Ht.l I' WANTI1l
CORN
lNG CO recommends tha
(740)992-732 1
S!artmg
July
1st Avatlable at
Good
Used
Af)pltances
ou do bustness wtlh peo 91 Sunshme 16~e80, 3 bedCHARLES
W. MCKEAN
Small
one
bedroom
hpuse
m Reconditione d
and
le
you
know
and
NOT
1
A leadtng provtder ol sup
room , 2 full baths, heal Mason $250 a montb $250
FARM
AND
WILLIAM
ANN
Washers
port servtces to tndtvtduals The Untverstty of Ato end money through th pump 1 yr old Needs depostl no pets (304)773- Guaranteed
MOTEL,
Gallipolis
,
OH
Dryers
Ranges
and
wtth MR!DD has a vacant Grande ts taktng appllca- at! unttl you have mvesh moved $13 900 (740)446- 5604
(740)446·9442
Refngerators Some start at
"Entry Level Mai'lagement !tons for part-campus pollee o:•~te~
d lh~e:o:ff':":n==~ 2923
$95 Skaggs Appltances 76 Peac he~:&gt; Ptck your own 5
Postlton· Prefer college offtcers Responstbthhes ~
fl20 MOBILE HOME";
Vtne St (740)446-7398
For sale or rent· 2 bedroom
degree plus 2 years experi- tnclude the proteCtiOn ol the
PROFI&lt;:s.\,ONAL
gallon contamer $8
FOR RENT
mobtle
homes
startmg
at
ence or 5 years e)(penence umverstty's lacthtles and
SERVICES
(740)446·4807
Mollohan
Carpet
202
Clark
IC F/MADO Factlity Must 1Je property and the enforce- ..___Oiiiiioiiiiii;;.,_.l $270 per month Call 740Chapel Road, Porter Ohto
992-2167
wtl!tng to relocate Mali men! of pubhshed Untverstty
(7 40)446-7 444 1-877-830- Sweet corn. no order too
Call
Resume to 8202 Carla regulattons and other state
9162 Free Esltmales Easy large or small
(740)682·6850
Drtve GalltpOhs OH 45631 and fede ral laws
No Fee Unless We W1n1 14X70 lncl u~ central atr
ftnancmg 90 days same as
or lax to 740 446 3987
Ntce ~ and 3 bedroom cash Vtsaf Master Card
1-$88·582·3345
l \Ril Stl'l'lll'
$
I
0
99
I
I
d
0
DO
1
5
"
·
Quahftcat~Qns tor the post·
nY
nc ll es rriobtle homOs lor rent Dnve a little save alot
,~tliiSIOt~
Add ressers wanted tmmedt- 110n tnciude a high school
delivery
Call
Ntkkt
~::;,.;;;;;~~;;;;;;p;;;;;;;,
(
0)385
9948
tnctudes
water,
sewer
&amp;
atelyl No Expenence neces·
or ,eQUI\Ialent
i
_7_4~-·----- trash no pels, starttng at Refng erator and EIeel rtc ~IO~;;;;;~F~o\;;lt;;l;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;
sary Work at Home Call educatiOn
Baste law enforcement tratn
l.u"nos~ALE,
Ntce 98 Fleetwood, 3 bed- $300 per month tn Shade Stove Movmg must sell Call
405·447·6397
EQUII'IIIt:'IT
mg IS reqwed OPOTA cert1room 2 bath, Wtlh central area .depostt reqUired [740)446·3053
ltcatton
necessary,
Must
be
atr,
thermal
pane
windows
,17
,
.,
4
,;.
0)
;
.;.
9.
;
.
9
2
;
.
·
2
;
.
1
.;
6_
7
___
_,
An Excellent way '1~ earn
Thompsons Applt ance &amp; Davts 20+4 TrenCher 4·
avatlable lor evemng, /tOll- 1-3 Bedrooms Foreclosed and 10x2o shed lmmedtate r.:
money Tile New A.ovn
Repatr-675-7388 For sale wheel dnve 4 way grater
Homes Buy from S199 occupancy
avatiable
APARTMFNfS
Call Mantyn 304 882-2645 day and weekend shtfts
re condttiOned automat1c blade Wtsconstc Engme
month 4o/co down, 30 yrs, 0 $14,995 00 Call Harold L~--•I•U·R-Ib:NJiiiiloio._.,J washers
&amp; dryers refl!gera- Run/works well $3 300 or
AVONI All Areast To Buy or All candtdates should submtl 8 5%APR, for hsttng 1·800· {740 )385-7671
tors
gas
and electrtc possible trade on tarftac- a
current
resume
and
copy
749-8106
ex
1709
Sell Shtrley Spears, 3041 and 2 bedroom apa rtranges
atr
condt110ners.
and tor (740)2~5-9692
of OPOTA cerllflcatton ~------'-- SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
675- 1429
ments lurntshed and llnfurbefore the deadlme of July 2· story bnck and cedar, 3 Stock models at old prtces ntshed secumy depostt wringer washers Wtll do - - - - - repatrs on maJOr brands tn Tractor parts &amp; servtce spe
Call for somethmg you
23, 2004 Information must bedrooms, 2·112 baths. lrv· 2005 models arrMng Now reqUired no pets 740-992· shop
or at your home
believe tn
ctallztng
m
Massey
be submttled to
mg roo m dmtng room Cole's
Mobile Homes 2218
and make greal money
Ford
ana
Ferguson
kitchen. family room, laun- 15266 US 50 East Athens. - - ' - - - - - - Used Furntture Store 130
domg ttl
Phyllts Mason SPHA
dry room. anached 2 car Ohto45701 (740)592-1972 1 bedrOOm, stove and refng Bulavtlte Ptke Dres&lt;:er Belarus (740)696-0358
Call on behalf of maJOr
Director of Human
garage, deck, storage butld· ·where. You Get Your erator. lurnts hed uhltltes COLIChes. mattresses reclmNon Proltl and Pohltcal
Resources
tnciLJded $400 month plus ers grave monllments 2001
mg, new heat pump, cenlral Money's Worth"
organtzaltons
Untversity of Rto Grande vacuum Green Townshtp - - - - - -- depOSit (740)245-5859
POntoon boat much more
At·n.o;
and earn up to $81hour
P0 Box 500 Ato Grande Call (740)446-6332 for Trailer for sale located at
(740)446-4782
Galltpolts
FOH
SAL[
plus bonuses We offer
Leon, wv {must be moved)
bedroom- complete OHHrs 11-3 M-F
OH 45674
appointment
patd tramtng, patd holtOOys Fa~e- 740-245-4909, ematl
1994 Commodore. 14~e60 kttchen- central
au
and paid vacattons
3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car 2-bedroom 1-bath utthty- References &amp; depostk--:-No
$5001 Honda s Chevy s
pmason@po ru!u
Full and Part ttme shtlts
altached garage, basemen! room mcludes stove. relng· .P"_'-'..:17_40...:..)44_6_·_0_
13_9__
M'llQliF.S
Jeeps etc Pollee Impounds
EEO/AA Employer
avarlable
Cars
from $500 For ltsllngs
1900
sq
It ltvtng space, 2 erator washer. extra ca b1 -1 Br Cottage $350 month all '
P SYC HOLOGIST outbutldtngs stls on 3 acres, nets. all underptnnmg, Iron! utthttes nciuded S150· secu- Buy or sell Atvenne ---~---1 aoo 749 8104 e)(t 3901
Call today to schedllle an
1
, tntervtewl
Eastern •School Dtstnct &amp; back porches wiawnmg rtty deposrt (304)675-3654 Anhques 1124 East Matn 01 Grand Pn)( GT bronze
1·Bn-463-6247e•t 2456
S72K-S80K
Chester Township on At 7 ' all block &amp; sidewalk steps
on SA 124 E PomcrCJ-,' 740leather tntenor sunwww lnloclslon com
(740)985-4321
heatpump, AJC Excellent 1 br upslatrs apt S275 + 992.2526 Rus.s Moore, mtst
root Onstar. BOSE stereo
e are a welt respected,
cond1t1on
. $13 aoo ut1l &amp; depoSit ref requtred owner
740·379·95 11
~~~------, wfcd headsup drsplay polthtcal. na11onal prac11c 3BR on 5 129 acres, Green (740)698·2613.
IShed alummum wheels.
Townshtp
close
to
school
l\fts&lt;.1lLLANtl!Ui
ealtng wtth genatncs W
Medt Home Health
43 ()(X) mtles excellent conBEAUTIFUL
APART·
1\lll&lt;atANlliSE
Asking
pnoo
$89,000
M
ore
ffer
a
good
starling
salary,
Agency, Inc seektng a
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
dtlton
(740)992·757.3
neltts whiCh mclude Habll tnto (740)446-7377
full-ltme RN Chmcal
PRICES AT JACKSON
Director for the Gathpoi!S, ty and health tnsu ranc 4 Acres with 14x80 Newer Retatl or oHtee space lor ESTATES, 52 Westwood S10 DOl TV s Computers l993 Geo Metro, 5 sp , 3 cyl
nd a 401K We areln n
and more 'Pollee Setzedt cld player. good body '.
Ohto
1 a licensed psychotogtst Mobile Home~ Surrounded lease tn Downtown Gallipolis Ortve from $344 to $442 From $10 00 Propertyt for
locatton
10 OOIJ acres for huntmg for more mto 1.740.379 _ Walk to shop &amp;..J.!lOVtes Call mOfe Into-call (800)749- ltres bad motor, $200
ou can woric: as few or a by
(740)992·7065
Call
(740)256·6476
740·446-2566
Equal 8107 BXI P509
9511
any hours as you want
Posttton Aeqwres OH
our JOb 15 tq see people -5y-r-ol_d_3_b_r.-2-b-.-.-:R
and WV AN licensure,
1997 Ford Escort ...4 door
:-a-'n-ch
&amp;__.,JI Hollsing Opportunity
ur Job IS to bill, coftect an
2003
Cub
Cadet
rldtng
mmJmllm two years of
~.-GE
.
Beautlllll
unlllrntshed
one
Automattc
atr loaded
A....
1ye yoll ll'le support serv Hol'ne &amp; 6 acres m leon
bedroom apt overiOoktng mower. 42" tnch cut. 17 HP excellent shape $2,500 00
home health nursmg
WV $125.000 (304)458·
Ctty Park references Used 3 ttmes ASktng S3 000 080 (7,t0)992 3342
e that you need We ara
expenence ma manage•-res In Loon Wtll sell reQutred no pets, secunty OBO
170 """
stness that never losse 1519
ment role, knowledge of
together or tn large sections depostt S400 per month Troybtlt ttller fess than 6 yrs 1998 Butck Century $5,600
tghl of the fact that th
Federal and State home
618
4th
St
New-Haven,
3br
St
,OOO per acre (304)458· Call (740)446·2325 or okl. $600 080 (740)441· (304)576·2971
ntal
health
of
our
chent
health regutattOn JCAHO
dry basement 1519
s our ltrst concern Cal (}arage.
8299
expenence preferred
(740)446-4~25
1!l98 Monte Carlo very good
sycholog1ca1 Tra.nstttons totally remolded Open
EOE
House 1·3 Sat 17th 22 acres on Hoback Road CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
JET
'conditiOn (304)675-5040
77·734·3.031 or f [304)882·2817
. '
off Old State Route 124 In ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
AERATION MOTORS"
Submit resume to {i8 \50 esume en-734-2030
East
Rae
me,
1-949·
770Repa(red.
New &amp; Rebuilt In 2002 Fprd Focus 5 speed
Townhouse
apartments
Bayberry Dr1ve,
Bank
Owned
Hortte,ln
The
Harold
Dtspaich
has
4768,
ceii·1·941&gt;-133-151B
'
Stock
Call
Ron Evans 1- AC, Moon-Root 6 dtSC!CD
and/or
small
hOuses
FOR
St. Claitsville, OH 43950 molar routes available lf Mason WV, $19,900 Mike
playet, ttlt. crutse power
800-537-9528
RENT.
Call
[741!)441·1111
Attn· Ka1rma Dunaway, 'tnterested call Andy, 1·800- Slack Old Colony GMAC Two home&amp;hes tor sale. Both lor appiiC8!tOn &amp; mtormatton
windows
(740)446-2~88
AN.
one acre mil 3-1/2 mtles
Reality (3041542·5888
888-2834
ext
807'
or
304Dtrector ot Nuram
Pomeroy-"two 2 bedroom Pole Barn 30x50x1 0 only 2003 Cava lier 4-dr 4cyl
526·2807
- - - - - - - - from Hot.zer Hospital
Flnancmg available with _mt 620 Evergreen Rd , $19,500 apartments R &amp; S fur- S5 295 tncludes pamted auto, 5000 mtles. loaded
aramedtcs &amp; I E~T s ·wanted Full nme, evemng DOWN
wfcl nook-up metal plans• how to build sunroof. cd player $7000
PAYMENT, 560 Evergreen Ad , $18,500 nlshed,
needed ~pply a 354 Cine Cook Apply m person Mortgage Locators Local Call (740)446-88410 or Naylor's
Run
area. book Fltder free delivery (740)441.0337 or (740)645·
Jackson Ptka, GallipoliS ~ Hohday lpn, Galltpolt~
(937)559·8341
6153
company 740-992-7321
[741!~-4613
, (741!)992·6886
'·
,.,.,.,,....-----~

r

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HOUSES

r

0

1!11

1!11

.

.-

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r

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r

i

Lw-------"
&amp;

1

r__.Lors.....
n&amp;:&amp;'1o

•

.

�r
•

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www:.mydailysentinel.com

Help Wanted

Card of Thanks

...

I
Tuesday, July 13, 2004

&lt;

Tuesday, July 13, 2004
ALLEY OOP

Help Wanted

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.my_dailysentinel.com

•

~ .AMIRICANe -

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

liiiiiLICJRIC ·
PO\VIR
www.aep.com

AMERICAN ELECTRIC POWER
COMPANY'S GENERAL JAMES M.
GAVIN PLANT, LOCATED IN
GALLIA COUNTY OHIO, IS
SEEKING PERSONNEL IN THE
OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT.
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS ARE .
AN ASSOCIATF/fECHNICAL
, AND/OR EQUIVALENT. REGULAR
FULL-TIME POSITIONS.
OVERTIME AND ROTATING SHIFT
SCHEDULE AS REQUIRED. ENTRY
LEVEL WAGE RATE OF PAY IS .
$14.18 PER HOUR. BENEFITS
INCLUDE MEDICAL, DENTAL,
VISION, 401K AND RETIREMENT.
INTERESTED CANDIDATES
SHOULD. CALL 1-800-300-1858
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER-M/F/D/V

nU!nt, "'""
-v1. '"'iifluall
~,.
&amp;'l&gt;r. Mansfie£4. !'1.

sptc.ilt(rfuzrik.you to
• ov.r6roo{'Jipr&gt;ing
Cttiter arttfstaff t11at

Cilred {or'!Ja1 aruf
(jramfpa tfun·ng fils
stay. ']'ourCilrt ani .
wnctm mzant afot tD

TR

~

tlie fami(y.
'llumfcj;ou again w

..

r·
I r«l
1.--·FO-Rilu~~~~liii!-.-J

1!1Jt:Iy0nt.

'Wi({ilzm :llart

I

. 10
Amo;
S
1:
~:;~;U~K;A;Lii" ~~

·

Limited . Excell ent condition,
73,000 miles. $9,600. 740-

c388:9649 oV
r 7ANS
40·38
&amp;8·0173.

Contractor
Residential &amp;
Commercial
Houses. porches,
Garages, Pole
Barns, Roofs.
Renovations
740-949-1606
740-591-1053 .

Cavalier, $3,895;
i996 Saturn, $2,495; 199E
~~I lass Cin:.a, $1,995.
1':-'thers in stock.
;
17401&lt;146-0103

Roofing · Siding - ·
Painling- Gutters Decks - etc.
For Fast Courteous
Service '
Free Estimates &amp;
Affordable Prices,
Call ... Dennis Boyd

I
MmURCYCLFS .
·

, L_

3067

1989 Chevy Silverado. 4
wheel drive, auto, runs
good. $1000 (740)379"2860
:..__ __:._:_ _ _
199() Chevy Ton 4-speecl
350 Good condlllon. 1986
Internati onal Log Truck sin91e a&gt;:le, .6.9 liter diesel.
17401441·0941 or 17401645·

Financial Servit:es,;~
Box 189 • Middleport

.740-843-5264'

Early birds slarl
6:30
Last Thursday of
· every month
All pack $5.00
Bring lhis coupon
' Buy $5.00
Bonanza Gel
SFREE

P.h one: 1-740-9.92- 9922

&amp; MmuR'I
S&lt;\LE
.__llllioiiiiiiliiii-r

·

~Clll•&lt;lll' i.n·· fuwbeo appolntfll&lt;!lt\.

C:J· '1,

Hour1: MtJit4rJy- S4iurUfJ4
llm:lfl.w"ttlt.J IINtltJblt.

R. Atm! St., Owten

--.,-----1974 Searay 22' Cuddy
cabin , runs great, 302
inboard. Trailer included.
S3900. 1740)256·61 72

. JONES'

Tree Service

VI

,

Rella K. Day, et al,
Delendanta
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In pursuance of an
Order ol Sale to me
directed lrom said
Court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose lo sale at pub. lie aucllon on the
front steps of the
· Meigs
County
Courthouse
on
Friday, July 30, 2040,
· at 10:30 a.m., of oald
day, the following
described real eatale:
SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF SUTTON, COUNTY OF
MEIGS AND STATE
OF OHIO:
PARCEL NO. 1,
BEGINNING AT A
.STAKE
ON
THE
NORTH LINE OF LOT
NO. 21, KNOWN A,S
tHE JOHN HAYDEN
t.OT,
NORTHEAST
¢ORNER OF SAID
lOT NO. 21, OF MINII!RSV!LLE.
OHIO,
BEARS NORTH 61
DEGREES EAST · 10
THENCE
LINKS; .
SOUTH 61 DEGREES
TIE.ST 9 RODS AND
13 LINKS TO THE
NOW ROAD; THENCE
MORTH 19 DEGREES
WEST 18 LINKS;
THENCE NORTH 61
DE!]REES EAST 4
ROO'S AND 13 LINKS;
THENCE NORTH 37
DEGREES WEST 1
ROD AND 11 LINKS;
THENCE NORTH 51
. I;IEGREES EAST · 3
liDOS AND 19 LINKS;
THENCE SOUTH 54
DEGREES EAST 3
RODS AND 2 LINKS
TO THE PLACE OF
BEGINNING. .
ALSO A STRIP OF
!,AND
OFF THE
NORTH PART OF THE
fiORTH ONE-HALF
OF LOT NO. 21,
BEING
9
FEET
FRONT AND 5 FEET
AT BACK END OF
SAID LOT NO. 21 OF
MINERSVILL-E, OHIO,
THE . TWO TRACTS
ADJOINING
EACH
OTHER.
DEED
REFERENCE: VOLUI\IE 22~
PAGE 287, MEIGI:I
COUNTY
DEED
RECORDS.
PARCEL NO. 2

..

1•

II"
M!!'ffiRCYCLEli . • - •.iliiiiliiiiliiii-.rl

non profit
organization tO

BASEMENT

work one day o· f

2001 Honda Shadow Spirit
WATERPROOFING
1 1·1' ,.
.,.
motorcycle, VT1100. excel· Uneond• •on~ I e ~~ guarlent
condition. ·$4,800. antee. Local references fur(740)446-7668.
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
97 Honda 750 Nite Haw ~ . 0870, Rogers Basem ent
low miles. looks &amp; runs like Waterproofing.
new, $2,7oo, 1740J2 4 H031 •

'1'8ny's Bnglna
820 East Main St. • Pomeroy
beside Larry's Fruit Stand

admi ssion gates

Lawn Mowers, Lawn Tractors, Weed Eaters,
Chainsaws, Blowers, Til lers, Generators

2004
Meigs Cotinty
Fair. Please Call

Warranty Service fo r Briggs &amp; Stratton. Ko hler,
Roi-Air Compressors, Campbell &amp; Hausfeld,
Oregon Chai nsaws &amp; All Equipment
Sales &amp; Service for The Generac Standby Home

allhe

29670 Bashan Road
, Racine , Ohio

45771
740-949-2217

BEING
THE Ohio
tlORTHERLY ONEREI~ER &amp; LORHALF OF LOT NO. 21
BER Co. , L.P.A
IN SAID VILLAGE OF By: Dennis Reimer
MINERSVILILE, THE (Rag '003119)
FRONT AND BACK Ronald J. Chamek
LINES OF SAID LOT (Rag #)
TO
BE
DIVIDED Attorneys lor Plaintiff
EQUALLY, EXCEPT A 245\Edlsan Blvd.
STRIP
ON
THE P.O. , ~ 968
NORTH SIDE OF SAID Twinsburg,
Qhlo
NORTH ONE•HALF 9 44087
FEET . WIDE ON THE (330) 425-4201
FRONT LINE AND 5 (6) 29 &amp; (7) 06,13 3T
FEET WIDE ON THE
BACK LINE.
DEED
REFERPublic Notice
ENCE: VOLUME 225,
PAGE 411, MEIGS PUBLIC NOTICE
COUNTY
DEED The Meigs Counly
RECORDS.
Commlsslcinars, hav- ·
PARCEL NO. 3: lng determined . the
BEING PART OF LOT following real estate
22 IN MINERSVILLE, _ In Letart Township no
BEGINNING AT THE longer neeesury for
SIDE
OF
STATE publl~ use, offar said
ROUTE 124 · AT THE real estate for sale lo
NORTHWEST COR- lhe hlghesl bidder.
NER OF A CERTAIN Se.aled blda will ba
TRACT OF I.AND j'ecelved at the office
CONVEYED
TO ol the Meigs County
BERTHA M. LIEVING Commissioners,
AND LEONA M. LIEV- Courl
House,
lNG
BY
CLARA Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
THOMAS, ADMINIS- until 1:00 p.m. July
TRATRIX OF THE 15, 2004 and opened
ESTATE OF DAVID J. al thai lime. The
THOMAS, BY DEED Com m Is slon era
RECORDED IN VOL- resarve lho rlghl lo
UME 224, PAGE 287, reject any and 1111
MEIGS
COUNTY bids.
DEED
RECORDS;
Being a part of 100
THENCE NORTH 61
Acre Lol No. 230,
DEGREES EAST 4 Range
11
West:
ROOS AND 13 LINKS Township I North In
FOLLOWING ALONG said Township and
SAID LIEVING LINE further bounded and
TO A CORNER OF ' described aa followa:
THE LIEVING PROP- Commencing al a
ERTY;
THENCE concrete . U.S.G.S.
NORTH 37 DEGREES monumenl at the ..
WEST · 42
FEET;
lnteraacllon of ' the
THENCE SOUTH 61
weot line of said Lor
DEGREES WEST TO 239 . wllh the north
STATE ROUTE 124; line of Slate Route
THENCE IN A SOUTH· .338; thence following
. EASTERLY DIREC- oald wesl line of Lot
TION
FOLLOWING 230 North 3' 00' easl a
THE EAST UNE OF distance of 2110 feet
STATE ROUTE 124, 42 to a concrele manuFEET, TO THE PLACE ment, this being lhe
OF BEGINNING.
true point of beginCURRENT, OWN- nlng of this described
·lfRS NAI\IE: Rella K. parcel of lend; thence
Day and Ralph J. Day, continuing ~long the
aka Ralph J. Day, Sr.
weal line of Lol 230
P R 0 P E R T Y north 3'
eeat for
ADDRESS:
43082 1024.2 foal· to a con·Stlte Route 124, · crete
· monumanli
RPacERineMA, NOhENioT457!AIR
l~ce northl 71 ' f3'
~,
- ea., pa. . ng a conCEL NUMBER: 18- crete monument al
00787, 111-00785, 18- 771.6 IHI, for a lotal
00788
dlata,_ of798.8 fHt
PRIOR DEED REF- to an lion pin In !he .
ERENCE:
Volume center of County
310; PIIgeeas
Roed28ancluld-l
APPRAISED
AT: line of Lot 230 10 en
125,11110.00
Iron pin; thence ooulh
' TERMS OF SALE: 64' 55' nOI paslng 1

oo·

Cannot be oold lor
leas lhen Zl3rde ollhl
_.IMCI ..IU., 10%
down on 1111 &lt;My of
olio, Cllh, certHiecl ·
check, bllanco on '
conftrrnllllon of ule.
Relph E. TruaHII,
Sheriff, Melgo County,

concrete monument
01 28.5 feel lor 1 toiJII
dlota,_ of 828.8 IHI
lo lhe pleco of beginnlng,
conlalnlng
16.40 acra, more or
leoa, anCI oubjoc:l to
all legal highways
eccordlng to a 1urvey

' ·~ .

THIS AIN'T
MY SHOPPIN'
LIST
!!

-

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE · .
Pomeroy, Ohio

THE BORN LOSER

992-2975

Manning K. Roush
' Owner
0

Pick-up and delivery service

l""f'\'1' WifE:~"-'&lt;~ i f'.€: REA~ON WE.""
: DON'T 1£1 "LONG I ~ I'f'\ TOO
1\~f/I.E.NiP-.\IIJE.I

STwp

106 Butternut Av.e.
Pomeroy, Ohio
.7 40-992-6454

roses, rllododenarons, a1111 azaleas.

BISSEll
New Homes • Vinyl
S\ding • New Garages

• Replacement

[ \l\1 t-IK ':&gt;'r\( M 'I' BC. i\
L\ liLt: E&gt;l"-::.tO 'N 1\\\ If\"-\
E:VI\LUI\\101'1 1

f""Of!.,

n Mon-Fri 9-5 Sat. 9-12

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals. perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, .fruit, ornamental trees,

~ ,,

'1 ·13

busilleS,'i, trot Our ~·ideli11 e

Generating 10,000 &amp; 12,000 wau, LP or natural gas
Roi-Air Air Comp ressor
Open 8:00·6:30 M-F;SaL 8:00-J:OO '192-IOJJ

..

· . WHE.RE IS THAT
STOP I\) . MUTT ,

You~

WALK!

·Open 7 days a weeki

Sf&gt;1T$Y!

Morning Star Road - C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH
TFN

Windows• Roofing
COMMERCIAl. and
RESIDENTIAL

Public Notice

coritacl:

Sharon

Buahorig,
F.CF
Coordinator at 740·
892-5288.
(7) 13
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual· financial
report of lhe Meigs
County Family and
Children First Council
for the calendar yeor
ending December 31,
2003 Is available lor
public Inspection In
lhe office of the
C o u n c I I ' s
Adlnlnlatrallve Agent
lhe Meigs CoUnty
Department of Job
end Family Services,
175 Rece Street,
Middleport,
Ohio,
45760 between the
hours ol 8:00. a.m.
IMnd d 5:00 th p. mh
.,
on ay
ro~g
Frt&lt;My. A copy of the
report can be provldeel upon requal. For
more
lnformallon
contact:
Sharon
Bushong,
FCF
Coordlnalor 11 740892-5288. ·
(7) 13

FREE ESTIMATES

See

740-992-7599

ROCky
·~"'
•

R.B.

Hupp

Trucking
~Limestone

Advertise
·
•
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

30 years experience
•New Homes
•log Homes
•Post Frame
•Complete Remodeling
•Replacement Windows
· •Roofs
Commercial an.d
Residential .

Free Estimates

740-667-6080
Tuppers Plain ,

SYRACUSE SMALL

· Creative

740·985-3564

HOWARDL.
WRITESfl
•ROiRIIIG

.a•E

MllmiiiiiCE

1356 College Rd.
Syracuse. &lt;;lH 45779

. byLora

'{OU CAN'T (;~'AT

AND 'THEN

C~EATINGA

WMCERING AAruND
&lt;»&gt;E CIIOOSING ONLY 'THE
TASTIEST AND ~"!;Sf
INGREDIENTS

OPEN·AIR I'MRK£1~

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's # 1 Chevy, Pontiac . Buick. Olds
&amp; Cu stom Van

I)ELICIO'JS

t::IJ€NING
MEAL

*lUIlESS

liTTER

., I

•frllhllllllllh

949-1405

740-99.2-0122

• Birthdays
•Weddings
• Any spec: Ia I
occasion
·Place your order

BETTY
t REALLY LOIJE

Quality wort for a fair
price
All work guaranteed p
Master Cenified

MCchanics Briggs &amp;
Sttanon, kohler,
Mumy, MTD All

today
(740) 985-3917

makes &amp; models $10.00

off any purchase or

Lora Bing

$20.00 wil h this ad.

WhaJav"Q
.Auto
v
flaftS
~

~

St. Rt.681 Darwin, 01:1

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Restocking late lthlel Sal ~e
nd • .,._ .,._ ·•-- n. 1
a
JV oer '""'r"""t
.-..rliJ

Bryan. Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More ·
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742•341

HERE: WE 5EE A TYPICAL.
t70G CHASINCi A 5GUIRREOL..

CARPENTER
SERVICE
•AoomAdd~lonol

Reu ods•ou
•New Ger. .

..--=====-..., r-•:Su:n:.:C:I:o:se:d===========~
(

!

1 ' { '.' h

' (

1.' I', J

( dft'

in Tuppers Plaim oow

hu openlng:s 0.. day
and midni&amp;ht •hill.
7-7-632~

ANI7 NOW "fHE' D0Gr HA5
THE OOUIRREL..

Big Bend Antique
and Furniture
Restoration
Refinish, Aepalr,
Restore
Keith Bailey
40 992-1956

YOUNG'S

See Brent or Brian Whaley
.
M-fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon

Advertise In,this
S~;&gt;ace for
$50 per month

GARFIELD

Sunset Home
t;onstruction

• E*trtcal I Plumbing
• Aootmg &amp; Guttert
• v~,, Siding • Poimlng
• Patio tnd Porch Oeckt:

We do 11111 except
fumace wortl

ROBERT
BISSEll
CDIISTIIICTIII

'

• Complete

Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

•
••

'lllrthds,y:

-r----'-------..,-, LINE

SO FAR
I
$011\fn.\tNG WIJ\-1
l'ORK SAUSAG€,
ZUcc.HINI, GOAT

eGG

SOUP TO NUTZ

:~ 'RI&lt;A\... ~ .

. ·Garages

992-6215
Porno&lt;oy,Ohlo
22Y-I.ocll

GRIZZWELLS
:tb'tl\.1 ~~ liPSE

• New Homes

V.C. YOUNG Ill

-

!

Dean Hill

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

AstroGraph

Wednesday, July 14, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Cf&lt;l fES
ThOse natura! leadership and execu tive
qualilies you possess will be more pronounced in the Yftil' ahead-than they may
have been in the past You could be
appointed to manag~ something of con·
siderable sig nilfcance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Your sense
of humor and subtlety are your most elfec·
rive tools today_ You 'll be ab le to use them
to your advantage, especially in situations
where you lind,yol,lfSelf operating at a dis - advantage.
~~_:::::'::':~~~~
..,j
..
LE O (July 23-Aug. 22) - A11end to yo ur
L
necessary obliga tions today, but tr y not to
make this an all:work·and-no-ptay day
Find some time for pleasant diversions
that refurbish your outlook
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Career goals
THOSE
DRIVES
'w ill not be denied you today so long as you
WILL KILL VOU
remain llexlble and are prepared to
change tactics when necessary. Sh1ft with
the tide &lt;ind let it carry you into port.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - Perk up your
ears when wiser heads speak today
Something is likely to be said in your presence that wilt tie wor th remembering and
put to work for you when a s1milar situation
calls lor it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Before get ·
ling involved in a new venture today, espe -'
cially 11 it requires an investment on you r
part spend some time today analyzing au
available pertinent inlormation.
SAGITIAR IUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - The
spirit of cooperation you display to .others
today enhances .your appeal and value to
~o:&gt;KS
those arour:Jd you who share your objectives. You ma~e partnership situations
work out welt tor at\.
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan.. 19) - You're
amply suited today for projects that require
CHEESE AND
both mental and physical deJ~terity. Your
NOODL.ES.. · imagination 6nd creativity needs endeav ors that keep your head and hands busy at
all times
·
,
AQUARIUS (Jan, 20-Feb. 19) - Instead of
going to your usual haunts tor entertain. ment or dining today, try someplace that is
new and different for a change _ A fresh
atmosphere will prove bOth stimulating
and invigorating.
PISCES (Fel:i . 20-March 20) Your
domain, whether ills at work or home, Will
be like a magnet today where others gather and meet to share what is on their
minds. Don 't be surprised bV unexpected
visitors.
ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19} - As the day
wears oo you'll resent be1ng tied down, so
be as lle~lb~ as possible when planmng
your time. You 're going to require a variety
of activ\ttes to ke'ep yoursell s~ttsfied.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - This is a
good day to devote some time to putting ·
your finances and records in order. You'll
be more keenly aware of details than
usual and Will be able to clear up a num ber of things.
GEMINI ~ May 2 t -J une.20~ - Your dynamIC personality w1ll generate an a1r of ex~lle ­
ment whereVer y~u go today, givtng those
you're With much laughter and reasons to
sm1le a tot. Keep spreading your sunshtne

8UT

• Sand
• Dirt
•Ag Lime

· ENGINE DR'S

cakes

TllOU 51-lALT NOT 5E AFRAID
OF TI-lE TERROR~'( NIGI-ll NOR
m: TI-lE PESTILENCE iHAT
WALKETH IN DARKNESS ... "

IMPORTS
Athens

HAULING:
Barnhart Builders

r
1
'

i'1l

heart trick , playing the ~ing ~9uld be
r ight. If West has queen -empty-fourth,
putting in the nine at trick one lets declarer win with the 10. He may then establish
a discard for his remaining low heart. But
that is unlikely. Here , going' up with the
hearl king - third hand high - gives
away the contract. Declarer wins with h1s
heart ace and in the fullneSs of time loses
on ly one spade. · One heart and one diamond.
However, if you pu t in the heart nine at
trick one, you establish lwo heart tricks to
go with the spade king and diamond ace
This is the rule: When dUmmy nas one
honor1 third hand holds a higher honor,
.ind dummy plays tow, (normally). third
hand saves lhis honor when he can insert
a nine or higher.

G

BIG NATE

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, l~imging Baskets,
ALL ON SALE NOW!!

Easl
All pass

\

48 ·- uponlhll
(JIIot lllo!"
1 Bombay
49 Stands up
nanny ·
51 Nol right
5 To and- 53 End up
8 Melhane or
ahead
neon
54 Majors and
II Woman
RemiGk
12 Expose
55 Grandson,
perhaps
t 3 Poker stake
15 Envelope
57 Sporty
part
trucks
16 Journal
61 Faaten
t7 Is sftuafed 62 House wing
18 Lamprey
63 Tidy the lawn
20 Striped
64 Corporal&amp;
slones
abbr22 Wild party 66 Adjust
10 Girder
37
25 Cable
a welch
material
· 42
channel
66 Higher-up
14 To be,
43
26 Pub order
45
· to Brutus
27 Broadloom
19 Handy abbr. 48
DOWN
28 Ariao(2wds.)
21 Lion's prey
31 Pickling
1 TV allen
22 Talk big
47
Ingredient
2 -de mar
23 Break
50
33 New Haven 3 Oklahoma
In the action 52
student
town
24 Malarial
53
34 Dove 's
4 Oversymptom
56
shelter
publicizes
25 Sheep
38 Mirth
5 Autumn ,
harder
56
6 Sugarloaf'· 29 Brass tacks 59
39 Matterhorn
40 London
locale
30 Laptops
dlstr)ct
32 "Mad Max" 60
1 rype
41 Fragrant
- Gibson -··
o cactus
flowers
(hyph.)
35 rllppreclallve
44 Chick's
8 .Fundralser,
sounds
mother
often
36 Quaker
45 Rake kin
9 Hill or Loos
• pronoun

Many yeers
Stlpulatlonl
Hindu Mr.
Nut ohell
Ryan or
Tatum
Bell out
Deaenshlze
Explohe&lt;l
Droop
Notre Dams
sight
Burden
Barely.make
ends meet
Jiffy

·

This week . we ar€ looking at finessing
against partner. {At trick one . third hand
plays a tower card than h1s highest .)
Yesterday, we had "a clear-cut example.
Toclay·s deal, th ough , might make you
think for a while_
•
Look only at the Nof\Q and. East hands .
You are sitling East, hovenng over that
dummy. Against tour spades, your part·
ner leads the hea-rt two. Alter- declarer
calls for dumrhy's five, which heart would
you play?
North's immediate raise to lour spades is
pre-emptive . He will usual ly have at least
five spades, but limited high-card power.
Wesi'S heart-two lead tell s you that South
piobably has ace-third. West wouldn't
undertead an ace at trick one ~gains ! a
suit contract. And assuming the two is
fourth -highest. South started with three
hearts.
t1 it transpires that you need only one

~~~~=~~~~~~~::;:;;;=:;:j .

Law11 and Garden Equipme111 is our

BUILDERS IOC.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual financial
report of lhe Meigs
County Family and
Children First Council
for lhe calendar year
ending December 31,
2002 I• available for
public! Inspection In
the office of the ·
Council's
Admlnlslrallva Agent,
the Meigs County
Depsrlmenl of Job
and Family Services,
175 Race Streell
Middleport,
Ohio,
45760 batwaen the
hours of 8:00 a.m.
and
5:00
p.m.,
Monday
through
Friday. A copy of lhe
report can be provided upon request For
lnlormallon
more

7-1~

BARNEY

Snapper

204 Condor Street

Nortb
~ A

Is
., it. time for
high or middle?

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Uie is len percent what happens 1o me and ninaly
percent how I react to it." - Football coach Lou Holtz

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H-iE SE SOUA~E S

·

LETTERS TO

Legume , Dally - Ozone- Balsam - SOMEBODY
My brother always learns from his mistakes . He learns
how to blame them on SOMEBODY else .

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�\ ' .

(.

I

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

.

•

.'

I.,

Tuesday, July'ta,

2004

-·

County can pursue lawsuit over Bengals stadium lease
Bv JoHN NoLAN
bsharman@ mydailytribune.com

CINCINNATI - . Hamilton
County can pursue a lawsuit
chall enging the Ctnc tnnau
Bengal s' lease, for the stadium
that county taxpayers · pa1d to
build, a federa l judge ruled
Mo.nclay.
U.S. District Ju dge S.
Arthur Spiege l ruled the CLHill ty can replace a tawuyer as
the plaintiff in the laws ui t.
which all eges the Bcngals'
·lease for the county-owned
Paul Brown S'tadium violates
antitrust law . . The iliwsu~ t
alleges that the Beng.:rls and
the National Footba ll League
used their monopo9' and rhe
Benga ls' threat to mo.ve to

another city to coerce construction of the 65,000-seat:
"stadium and to extract highly ,
favorable lease terms .
, The "5458 million stadium
opened in 2000._ It was built
with proceeds trom a haltcent sales tax increase· that
cou nt \' vote rs appwYcd in·
19%. ·
The Bcngals and the NFL
hci\C denic~l wmngd,,ing and
are fi )!htin g the lawsirit. The
team had no e·omn..,.nr on the
judge'\ ruling. spokesman P.J .
Cnmhs sa id . NF L 'POk~sman
Greg Aie llo alsn dec· lin~d
..:-ommcnt.

The
count{s
lawyer,
Stanley Chesley, said Mond.ay
he pl ans to seek fmanc1al
records from the .Bengals and
take statements from team
official s, • includin g .~~ne r
M1ke Brown. Ches ley sa1 d he
also wo~lld seek to take a
' tatem~nt
l'i'llm . Bob
Bcd'in~haus.
a
forme r
Hamilt.o n County L"Oillmis'io ncr 1~hn hacked the staLlium sa les tax increase and now
wqrks for th e Bengals after
losi ng a re -eleclion campaign
in ~000. .
Ches ley · said he hopes the
laws tlit (.'an go to lrial earl y

In

Fchruar\. LI.IC iud gc next year
r~jectcd a rc qr ic"r by t h~ NFL
County commi ss ioner Todd
and the· lkn~a l s to dr,mr" the Portu ne fi led the laws uit in
·
~
·
J.anua ry"'!003 as an in.dividual
Iaw~ull.

taxpayer, without the support
of fellow commissioners. That
complaint, which · named the
NFL and all its franchises as
defendant s, alleged fraud ,
civil conspiracy, antitrust violations and breach of contract.
When co nfli c{,of- interest
question s arose regarding
Po rtune's posi tion as a cou nt y
communi ty
comm iss ioner,
ac ti vis t Carrie Davis took his
place as lead plaintiff.
A iudge dismissed tl'Te case
in state "' urt, but Spiegel sa id
the case should he he&lt;trd in
federal court. The ,J:QU nty .will
repla ce Dav is as the plai ntiff.
Portune and fell ow co unty
com missioner . Phil Heimli ch
vo ted in Murch to have the
co unt y pursue the lawsuit.

Tho

.Rio track / cross
country adds Wagner
in ! ~40's . Oli ver wc11t o n to
coach
th e . legendary "·
sports@ mydailyt rib.une.com
C larence "Bevo" Franci s in
.
RIO GRANDE - The ear ly I 'I 50's..
Wh
y
did
he
choose·
Rio
University o f Ri o Grande
track and field and eros., Grand e a. . ·a co l l-ege hlml e?
ClJUntry programs co ntinued ·' I· li ked the co:1ch. l liked
their busy off-season with the campus &lt;tnd the fac1 that
the signing of Arlington my gra ndpa went th ere, rt
· High School ' s Kyle Wagne r. just all added up."
Wagner was a member of
who will parti cipat e in both
the
'h800-meter relay for
sports for the Redmen.
Arl
ing
to n thai advanced to
Wag ner. a nati ve of
Findlay, will run the 400 the Ohio State Meet. . The
and 800-meter races for the 4x800 team did not lo., e
track team and, will run until th e state meet. accordcross co untry for th e first ing, to Wagner. ·
time si nce his j uni or high
The 4 x 800. th e 4x400 ·
days. He sa id · he .ran cross teams th at Wagner ·was a
co untty in juni or hi gh part o f won th ose eve nt s at
because rhe school system the
Blanchard - Valley
did not have footba ll at that Conference Meet. He. also
Iev,el.
won the long jump for
· He has been running road Arlington, who was runnerrace s this sunimer to pre- up at the eve nt. ·
.
pare for the cross country
He also played defens ive
seaso n in the fall.
back and w1de recet,v €r \111
"It's exciting (running at · th~ f~&gt;o tball tea m a,nd . sm ~tll
Rio Grande) ," said Wagner. lotward on the bt~ s ketball
"My grandpa went the re and team at the prep level. . .·
its neat for my famil y.'' His
Wag ner plans to.maJor rn
grandfather ·... is
Gera ld Eleme.ntary Educat~on.
Wagner who played )lllth
He ts the son of Pat and
Newt Oliver at Rio Grande Barb Wagner.
STAFF REPORT

(If

·~

.. ..

11

I

,I

W

L

Pet.

~

31

.540

T010r110

48
42
39

38
. 45
49

.558
.483
,«J

Baltimore

37

48

.435

Tampa Bay

CENJRAL

W

I

LPcl.

46

38

·~

45

s'l!1

Detroit

~2
42

Kansas City

31

WEST

W

Texas

49
47
47
32

CiJK:ago So~t

6-4

17

3·7
S-5

1:.4
L3

17'1.

4-6

l1

P10

Stril

-

Oakland I 1
Ana he 1m
Seatt~

1

23-18

I

r,&lt;t.
l3

\

P10

37

. 570
547
540

- . I~ 5-5

·_WI _
l1

4-ti .

6-4 - -

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r- 54 -j-72- -17 ·- ,:g .....£- L9

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28·17 ~~·
26·22
21-18

Strk

, GB

"16·25

Away

25-12
!7-12
£3 -l_B _
19-22

24·25
20-27
24 ·22
13·32'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'

I Sundly'1 A•utb

Monday't RfiUit
No Games Scheduled

:;o \ 1 '\IS,\ ol. ;; ~ . '\o. :.::.:;;

CllM!IBnd 4. Oakland 1
NV Vartkees 10, Tampa Bay 3

I

KansatJ City 1 1, Baltimore 7
T&amp;li8S 6. Bo!ll:on 5
Detroit 2, Minnesota 0

SPORTS

4, Seattle 3

PR experts share advertising strategies
~.

.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

STAFF REPORT

. sports@ mydaitytribune.com

•
GRANDE

EAST

W

L

Pet.

46

41

.s2g

POM EROY -Expe rts in
the fie ld of publ ic rC!ations
and bu sine ss promotion
shared . the importance of
· advertising and the means of
doing so with members.of the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce on Tuesday.
Scott and Ka ri t) Johnson,
owners of Falcon Design and
Marketing. and one of their
Sarah
graphic
artists,
Householder. were guest speakers at the chamber 's · monthly
Business Minded Luncheon.
held at the Wild Horse Cafe .
Sarah Householder, a graphic designer with Falcon Design and
According to the Johnsons,
Marketing of Pomeroy, shared some advertising pointers with business
the
current style of advertisowners at the monthly Business Minded Lu ncheon of the Meigs County
ing in the media is "all
Charmer of Commerce. (Brian J. Reed)
·

45
42 - .5 17
45--· 43
.511

, - 4356

44

.506
~356

cENTRAL ,

RIO
The
University of Rio Grande . track
and tield squad conlinues to stockpi }e talent for the upcoming season and beyond. The most recent
signing is Amanda ·Cromity from
James Rhodes High School in
Clevel&lt;md.
Cromity is a sprinter and wi ll .
specialize in the I00-meter dash.
200-meter dash and the 4 x I00meter relay. Her best time was
12.00 in the I 00-meter dash. she
was a member of the 4 x I 00 team
that won a regiohal championship.
She also ran 26.9 in the 4 x 200meter relay. whic h helped her
squad to a district title. · .
''I'm very proud to be gm ng to
the University of Rio Grande,"
·
.
Cromity said.
Cromit y aclmitlecl that the schol-·
arship money wa&gt; the key Iactor m
choosing Ri o Grande as a college
home. ''Basically the money," she
said. "And the opportunity to be
at a small school, have more anention paid to me in the classroom,
to get the help I need."
Rio Grande Assistant Coac h
Juan McCabe, who was instrumental in ·lu ring Cromity to Rio
Grande, was pleased to have her
signed, sealed am! delivered. " I' m
real happy with having Amanda

All-Star game, chances are all out of our controL Honestly, I
Associated Pross
the attention will be on haven ' t really though t about it
Clemens and Piazza.
much and I don't think he has ,
Will Clemen s shake off either."
HOUSTON At least Piazza'.' Will he accidentall y
Others have, though. ·
Mike Piazza wil!'be wearing a bounce a split-fii1ger fastball?
"It is ironic ,'' Cincinnati
mask, shinguards and a chest wd! they ge t their signs short stop Barry Larkin said.
when ' Roger crossed"
protector
"B ut as ballplayers, those
Clemens throws at him
"Obvious ! ~. we' re going to things happen and you move
have to talk. · Piazza said .
Tuesday night.
on."
From the very first pitch,
Clemens said he'd take the
Like many fan s, Los
this All-Star game will pro- same approach he would with Ange les catcher Paul Lo
vid~ one of baseball's most any catcher. . _
Due&lt;! has seen umpteen
in trig~;~. ing scenarios: Clemens
'T 111 sure we' 11 ~ 0 over the rep lays of the Clemensand Ptazza, together agam. · first handful of httters,'" the Piaz zu shenanigans . Last
With their feud still seem- Houston ace said.
year, Lo Duca had a run-in
ingly unresolved from 2000
That might be the most with Milton Bradley, then
-Clemens beaned Pmzza Ill in vo lved di scussion they"ve with the Cleveland Indians.
the regular season , then threw had in a while.
Now, they're teammates and
the jagged bUUTe! of a broken
After hitting Piazza in the just fine together.
bat toward him in the World heln1et with a fas tball at
"We took care of that one
Series - they have no choice Yankee . Stadium. Clemens immediately and put it in the
but to work together. The tried to phone the New York past;: Lo Duca said. " But you
Rocket will start . for the Mets star. But Piazza did not play ag~inst a lot of guys yciu
National League , his nemesis take the ca ll , and the rift don 't like. I didn't like Jose
will catch.
began to grow.
Lim&lt;r when I played against
"I don't know if we' re going
Then in Game 2 of the him . and now he's on our
to be' playing golf any time WOrld Series, a trul y bizarre team and I love hl!J:l." Feuds
soon," Piazza said Monday. scene occurred ·when Piazza have long been a·part of base- ·
~ha ttered his bat and Clemens' ball.
"But we've got a job to do."
.Said Clem~ns: "~t \ not t~at ' fired a,.Eiece of it in his dire~In the early 190 , the
btg a deal. It s not an tssue.
tion . Cleme ns wa-. ftned fiuned double-pi· combinaBoth players tned to denect $50,000, and the pair have 1iot tion of Tinker-to-Evers"toauentton to other All-Star spoken since.
.
Chance had its prob)ems. Joe
Yet they have talked abou t Tinker and Johnny Evers
themes, .such a~ how the wmner gets home-he!~ advantage each other, albeit reluctantly. detested each other and didn' t
111 the World Senes and the
Clemens appeared to grow ·speak for years.
presence of 500-homer guys more agitated Monday. with
More recent Iy, Bonds and
Barry Bonds, Sammy Sosa Jeac h quesuon about Ptazza, fellow All-Star Jeff Kent had
and Rafael Palmmo.
and there were plenty. ·
trouble. Even in the last week,
Mtg_uel Te)ada outslugged ' Asked whether he · cou ld All-Star
pitcher
Randy
that tno to .wtn the Home Run understand why fans might Johnson and Arizona teamDerby o~ Monday mght. The find this such so interestiog, mate Luis GonLalez barked at ,
Balumo;e shortstop beat Clemens abruptl y re,ponded. each other.
,
Houston s Lance ~erkman m ''No. 1 don't." ·
Now, it"s Clemens and
the final ro.und, wHh both of
Tm pitching with him Piazza .
them launchmg ~hots co':l- now. we are on the same . ·;There's more to this game
plctely out of Mtnute Mmd team, so pretty much it's not a than those two," AL manager
Park and onto Crawfprd story," he ,aid. '"As far as Joe Torre of the' New York
Street.. .
.
Mike and I are concerned, Yankees said. "They under.' Earlier m the day, all 14 li y- I' ve said mariy times. I'm stand it. They ' re pros."
'
_mg members of the 500- looking forward to it. I'm
While NL manager Jack
'homer club gathered at the glad I get to throw it to him McKeon of · the Florida
b~llpark, once known as and I don -..ttave to face hi(ll Marlins picked Clemens to
Enron fteld . Standrng next to becau se 1 know what type of start in his hometown, Torre
Hank A:aron, Wt!lie Mays and hitter he is.'"
chose Mark Mulder of th'e
Mark McGw1re, commts"onPi att.a &gt;tared blankly ~hen Oakland Athle1ics.
er Bud Selig praJ&gt;ed the a'ked uhout the pairing.
The AL has a Six-game winpo":er. httters and !,maned,
"The i"ue ... 1 don't know . ning streak, not includi ng a
"Th1s ts ~ golde)l era,
. what the i'sue is," he said . tie. The NL leads the overall
But when lchtro Suzuki "Jt', out of my controL It 's series 40-32-2. ·
· steps in to lead off the 75th·

StLOUIS

-

Chi&lt;jago C_!Jbs _
Cincinnati.
· Milwaukee
Houston

'

Prttsburgh
WEST
Los~IS$

San Francisco
S9:n ~Djego
Colorado
Arizona
Mond.l~'•

Surttt.v'• Reeutu '

Reauh•

Montreal 2. Pmsbur~ 1
AUan1a 6, Philaclelphla"
Chcinnab 9, Mitwaukue 6
Aorida 5, NY Mels 2
San Diego 4, Colorado 2
San FranciSCO 9, A.rtZona 2
Los Angeles 7, Houston 4
Ch"'ago Cubs 8, St. Louis 4

No Games Schedul&amp;d

'

..

TUeldty'• Games

A fallen landmark

AII·StarGame a1 Houston. 8:35pm.

Amanda Cromlty

.

'

come down," McCabe said. ''She
was somebody we got on late,
matter of fact. one of our contacts
watched her run in Dayton and
contacted me and we were on her
immediately."
• "I went to watch her nun and am
very excited, she has great potential and ! .think,, she'll be an asset to
our program.
. .
.
Cromity plans to maJor 111 soctal
work.
'

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.

992-2156

.

AL Leaders

NLLeadera

SATTING-IRodrlguaz. Detroit .369: Mora.
Ba~imore. .347: VGuerrero. 1\nahalm. .3115:
MRam1rez, Boston . .344; MYoung. Texas,
.332; ' ASanchez, Detroi1, .325; CGuiNen,
Detroi1, .324
·

BATTING- Bonds, San FrancisCo, .365;
Casey, Cincinnati, .352: Halton, CoiOJado,
.346: Owrl:lay. Milwaukee, .344: Rolan, St.
Lour&amp;, .a:ie: JEstrada, Atlanta, .332: JWilaon,

Pitlsbvrgh, .332.
RUNS---Pujol&amp;', St. Louis, 72: BAbreu_.
Philadelphia, 71 ; Bonds, San Francisco,. 71;
Helton, Colorado. 66; JOrew, Atlanta, 65: Clay·
ton, Coloredo, 64 ; LGonzalez, Arizona, 61
RBt--Rolen~ St. Louis, SO : Castilra, Colorado,
71: Owrbay, Milwaukee, 62 : Burrell, Philadel·

RUNs-VGuerrero, Anaheim, 79; Damon,
Boston, 70; Lawton. CI.Wiand, 68; MYoung,
Texas, 64: CGuillen, 09troil, 64 ; Crawford,
Tampa Ba~, 63: Shetfield, NE!w York, 63.
RB\--OOrtiz. Boston. 78: VGuerrero. Ana·
hefn , 77: MRamlrez. Boston. n; Tejal:la. Ba~i ·
more. 75 : BlalOCk , Texas, 68; CGurll&amp;n, DelmH,
65: JGuillen, Anahei"n, 65.
HITB-MYoung, Te&amp;s, t27; !Suzuki, Sea1tle,
119; VGuerrero, Anaheim, ,119; IAodri~;~uez,
Delrolt, 115; Crawford , Tampa Bay, 110;
Damon, Basion, 109: MAamirez. Elosl:on, 108.
HOME RUNS-M Ram lrez, Boston. 26:

91eve·

Dunn. Cincinnati, 25: Bonds,

Sari

Franc~

23: Pujols, St. Louis. 22, Beltre, Los Angeles,
22: JDrew, Atlanta, 21: Edmonds. St. Loui6.
21 : SFinley, Arizona, 2i.
STOLEN BAS ES---Podsadnilc., Milwaukee,
34: ORoberts, Loa Angeles. 28: Pi&amp;ne, Florida,
21 ; BAbreu, Ph ila~ia, 19; Freel, Cilcinnati,
14; Rollins, Philadelphia, 14: Womack, St
Lou ~,

Lo'l"I'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 8-6-6
Pick 4 day: o-o-9-7
Pick 3 night: 4-2· 7
Pick 4 night: 1:7-1-3
Buckeye 5: 6-16-27-34-36

14.

PITCHING ~10 O.Cialon•t-MilSn, Ptuladel·
phla ,"l 1-2, .846, 4.72; Schmidt, San Francisoo, 11 ·2• .646. 2.5 1: PWtson, Clncinrlati. 9-2,
.618, 3.66: Clemen&amp;. Houston, 1Q-3. .769.

1.84,

2.62: vSantoS, Mllwa\.be. 8-3, .727. 4.08:
Lima, Los An~le5. 8-3, .727, 4.32: Ishii, Los
Ang&amp;leG, lQ-4, .714, 4.00.

11-ese teerlc€ers are \\Oil(jrg for a IMrg all surnrrer klrg as Pert of the Meg5
SLrnmer 'lOuth Ernl)icr)rrent ~· Each of these )OOfl! men. 1\fv ere

West VIrginia

· still in hilh sctrol, will 'Mlrk 3'1 ~of 200 hours this sumrer clealirg,
. paintirg 3'1d tolrl1 up places Ike the jury room in the Megs CoU1ty
Courtrouse. [L-R)COOy !.a'€. Kurtis Rollins, Chris Tucker 3'1d K)'ie McKeever
relre:J SP"UCB ~the courthouse this past v.eek. [J. Miles Layton) ·

Dally 3: D-2-6
Dally 4: 8-1-2-8
Cash 251: 7-6-9-13-15-23

CASH?

Summer jobs paying off
dividends for Meigs County

WEATHER
'

A week after it closed tor business, Crew's Family Restaurant is now gone. An auction was held tast week
to sell the contents of the building, and on MOQday, workers with Jeffers Excavating Co. began the process
of demolishing the restaurant. By yesterday morning, all the\ remained was the peaked KFC stgn .whteh
topped the restaurant's roof. The space created by demolishing the restaurant wrll serve as )larktng for
ttJe Crow family's new KFC/ Long John Silvers restaurant under constrUctron next door. (Bnan J. Reed)

EASE THE
SQUEEZE!

'

.

'

Asbestos removal slows progress in Pomeroy
Detello on Pa&amp;e A6
. ·BY J. MILES lAYTON
JlAYTON@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

INDEX
2 SECI10NS -

Each Kit Contains the Following:

Calendars

• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sale Signs - 24" x 12"
• 3 Wooden Stakes

Classifieds

• 2 t 6 Pricing Laliels

..

_._

---

-.-

-

iii!ii
.

·Available onty ~h purchase of Garage Sale Advertls;emenL
Must he pt~ed up al our athe~

$6.00 - 15 words or less
+$6.00 Kit
Gets You Great
Advertising!
,
I

B3-4

Bs

Dear Abby

Editorials

A3
A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

81

Weather

A6

0004 Ohio Volley Publlshlng Co.

$9.00 - 15 wordJ or less
+ $6.00 Kit
Gets You Great
.
Advertising!

$1·'.5··

I

v

®all~:pqU~ -~tp ijtribune
~oint

A:3

Comics

~

3 Day-Ad. ··

1 Day Ad: .

l2 PAGES

POMEROY
When
asbestos was di scovered in
the old Pomeroy Junior High,
Pomeroy Village C~uncil's
.plans for demoli shmg the
building and selling the property slowed to a crawl.
After a fire destroyed th.e
village garage located in the
school 's auditorium last year,
cou.ncil apr.roved demolishing the bUilding and sel ling
the land to the Commumty
Inve stment
Corporation
(CIC) for $75,000 last
December.
Whe~ asbestos was discovered, in ~c)m,e ofjihe ceilings bf
the fire damaged decaymg

building, May pr John1Musser
sa id it will cost at least
$ ! 00,000 to · remove the
asbestos . before the building
can be demolished. The bui lding was slated for demolition
earlier this .year by Jeffers
Excavation . for
about
$35,000, · which would have
paid out of an insurance .settlement provided to the vi!!age in the wake of the fi rc in
June 2003. ·
Since the village can't
afford to remove the asbestos.
it is stuck with a large uninslired building that is no
longer in use. Musser said the
· ClC offered ro ·purchase the
the
property,
remove
asbe stos, and demoli ·h ,the
building, but no price was di·s-

I

J_feaslint .~egtster

The :o kily Sentinel

.'

'•
'

.

"

~
• Inventory Sheet . ·
• 4 Mini-signs to be posl~d on b lletin
boards at laund romats, markets, c.
i • 1 Seven-step instruction sheet, plus
· "Secrets of How to Increase Profits at
a Garage Sale'·
• 3 Mounting Materials
• 6 Multi-colored Balloons
• 1 Marke~ for Signs

'

Louis, 103; HeHon, ColOrado. 102.
HOME llUN$-Thome, Philadelphia, 28;

Blalock, Te.aa. 23: OOniz. Boston, 23: Kon·

PITCHING (10 Decl-'ana)--CI Lee,
, lanl:l, 9·1 , .900, 3.77: Mulder, Oakland . 12·2,
.857, 3.21: Buehrle, Chicago, 9-2, .618, 4.03:
Rogers, Te~as, 12·3, .BOO, 4.21; PMartfnez,
Bo~ton, 9-3, .750, 3.67. Schilrng; Boston, 11 ·
.4, .733, 3.16; JAint:on, Minf'IB60ta, 8-3, .727,

Am eri can." but adven isit1g ensure prop·e~ reinforcement
re ta(l products dat e~ back to of the ·message the bu siness
1480. when an Englishman owner w~fnt s to: share.
adverti~ed a pie business. The
firs t newspaper adve 11i sement
Chamber Director Jenn y
wus printeu 111 !59 !.
Smith advised members of
. Scott Joh nson said mosi the upcoming go lf scramble,
businesses shou ld set aside to be held on July 22 at the
between six and 10 perce nt of . Riv ersid e Golf Course in
their tot al budget for advert is- Mason , W.Va . The scramble
in g · in va riou s medi a.
·
f
b
Business owners should con- Wll 1 be ope n to our-mem er
sidcr a number of fapors tea ms se lec ted in a sem iwhe n determin ing whenr and hi inc! .draw. wi th prizes for
how the adYertising budget is c loses t to the pin. longes t
spent. including their poten- dri ve and a hole-in-one . The
tial customers' income base.
price of S60 per pl ayer
John son also encouraged includes a boxed lunch, other
business owners to consider a ·
mix of advertising ro include food and heverages. Smith
new spaper, radio 6r television s&lt;rid. The deadline for regisand billboards, in order to ·tration is Sattird ay.

Page A5
• Lillian Burt, 86

Ciocrrmari, 80.
HffS-JWIIson, Pittsburgh, 116; Overbay, Mil·
waukee, 1\2; Loretta, San Diego, 112; Pierre.
Florida, 108; Bi~io. Hoos1on, 107: Rolen , St

erilo, Chicago, 22: Aflodriguez, New York . 22:
VGuerutro. Anaheim, 20; Tei•e1ra. Te•ea, 118;
Valentin, Chlcego, 18: Thomas. Chicago. 18.
STOLEN BASES--Crawford. Tampa Bay, 38:
BAoberts, BaMimore, 22; !Suzuki, Se~ttle, 21;
Figg!ns, Anaheim, 20; ASanct.rz, ~roit, 18;
AAodriguez, NewYorll, 18; Lawton, Cleveland,

"·

.

OBITuARIES

p11ia, 62: Thome: Philadelphia, 61; Pujols, St.
Lours. 60; BAbreu, Phrladelphia, 60: Gritley Jr.,

BY BEN WALKER

'

·,

• AL rocks All-Star game.
SeePage Bt

Pl}lledelphla
Atlanta
Florica
NYMets

" " " · ""dail~ -.·111i11d .•·•""

\\I ll'\1 Sll \) . . 11 ·1' q , :.!ooq

'

AnBheim 5. Toromo 2

Chicago b

·n e

at

21-19
-21·26
19-24 ~

HonH

Griffey treats f~
to All-Star game, Bt

Mountains ahead for
Armstrong,Bt
.
.

'

Home

---w,.- -

Pet,

... ft~ 01 .,.,...,co ... ,..dl~

17·22

WI ' - 2fi-2o

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22-1lil
18·23
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W3

15'/,

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2'/, .

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33-12

4.s '

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54 .

Str\
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Mionesota
Cleveland

,.,

08

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Nl.ln"o,IM 1&gt; Soon!·,.,.. nio

w...--v.. o.Jtt ••

American LMgue
EAST

ct

Naltonat League

Clemens, Piazza make
pitch .for All-Star·peace

..

ro~,~ -

~ """"" ~ -

n.. .... -

Major League Baseban

Tue&amp;dty't Game•
AII·Star Game at Houston, 8:35 p.rn.

•

.,.,

'11111111 ..... . .

- - ---'t. -------~-----------4~----~----

cussed or any definite plans
made. Council has ex tended
by 90 days the Cl,C's option to
purchase the property. ynder
this proposal, the village
would still be responsible for
demoli shing the build ing and
removing the asbestos.
Perry Varnadoe, Meigs
Economic
Developme!H
Director, said the C!C IS Still
1 considering its options, but
· has not ruled out purchasing
the property. He sa id a
prospective bu siness th at had
been interested in the site , has
decided to move to another
site in the county.
· i::ddie Saer. a local pastor,
has · expressed interest in ~e
site. His mintstry wants to
Please see Slows, AS

BY J. MtLES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY - School's
out and for man y teenagers in
Meigs County. it is time to"
earn a living with a summer
job ·
Since late May, 75 students
have answ.ered phones, paint..
ed, · repaired an d· cleaned
things as pat1 of the Meigs
County
Summer Youth
Employment
Program .
Funded by the Metgs
Departmen t of Job and
Famil y Services with a
$ 160,000 budget, the program seeks to instill a solid
work ethic in young people .
"' By fvnding this; the Meigs
c;ommi ssioners have made a
decision that teaching work
ethics is a good thing for
Meigs County kids,'' said
Tom Reed, Meig s/Gallia
Communit y Action .
Abby Stewart, !6, has to be
at work every morning at 8
a.m. at the Meigs Chamber of
Commerce
where
she
answers phones, types memos
and file s papers. Stewart said
· has learned how to use a com-

purer, take messages and how
to work with the public.
"( am enjoy ing my job and
I am learni ng a lot ,'' ·she said.
Stewart said she will be
spending the inoney she has
saved to purchase a new car.
poosibly in Tuppers Plam s:
Perry Varnadoe, director of
Meig s
Economic
Development .Office. S!lid a
large portion . of the money
paid out to students is spent
loc all y. Each student will
work approxi mately 200·
hour{ and earn an average of
SI ,200. He estimates that it is
"rolled over" at least six or
seven times by local stores
and bu sinesses.
"The direct impact of this
program is that it puts money
back into the economy,'" he
said . "The indirect impact is
that folks like Abby get real
world experience•in the workplace."
Several students have been
working hard this summer.
painting the M~igs Courthouse
or cleaning up the old Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Please see Jobs, AS

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