<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5461" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5461?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T01:09:16+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15391">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6fe59469786783424864014cefe4aeb9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e80904f6e052f8c79a82498c8249b1d7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="18501">
                  <text>•.

· Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, JuJy 21,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004 ·
•

.,

Poultry plant fires
11.workers over
abuse of chickens, A7

Major League Baseball
NoHonol League
EAST

33·12

25·22

30-15

2t-26

Atlanta
Ph~adljlj;t,lli

26·21

19·27

Strtt

Hom~

-

7·3

Wt

7

6-4

Wt

.4&amp;4

13'~

3-7

L1

50

.451

16'~

5·5

W2

S3

.430

1e·~

3· 1

l1

W

L

NY-

58

IIootOn

51

Tpmpl Bay

Pet.

01

34

.830

41

.554

45

48

41

40

P10

•••

17-30

24-21
20-25

26·22
28-17 .

L1

5·5
5·5

21-2t1

23-23

H-

W2

6·4

...,

20·26
~

Strk

,..
wur

A~

P10

IAIT

l

Pet

38

~82-

41
'44
57

.._.......

GB

.554
.527
.. 300

o.

Away

WEST

w

WI

29-13
31-14

24-25
20·27

L3.

25-22

24·22

Los Angeles
81'111 Franc1sco
San D1ago

L1

22-25

13·32

Co1oreido

54
53
51
38

Anzona

31

7·3
5·5
5·5
3·7

I'll

~

~:des

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

;

o

lOB-New York S, Tampa Bay 5. 28-

AAodrl~;~uez (15), EWilson (6) . HR-Sheffleld

(16). SB-Jeter (11), Crawford (40), Huff (4),
Gathright (4). SF-Crawford,
IP H AERBBSO
Contreras W.8-3

742123

GoO'doo

1
1

1
I

0
0

0
0

0
0

1
2

Zsrmbmno L.!l-6 5 2·3

5

3

3

3

7

TreM ~Ier

2·3
21-3

a o o o o
a 1 1 3 4

Seay

010000
0 0 0 0 0
Seav P•ctted to t battel in the 9th.
HBP--bv Zambrano (Posada), by Zambrano
(Je!er). WP--contraras, ZAmbrano. ·
t-3:10. A-27,613 (43.g(l9)
1-3

Harper

ab r hbl
PJesus cf 3 1 t 1
Grffnno 2b 4 0 1 0
,.fltisll! 3b t 0 t 0
l;1iSwy1b 3 01 1
Stairsrl
401 0
HaNSYdh 50 3 0
OBN.nlf 5010

BRbrts 2b 3 1 I ·o

llopet2b 2

bI

1

Newhrulh 5 1 1 0

Mont3b 411 0
Tetada sa 5 2 2 2
RP!mo 1b 5 1 2 1
I&lt;Gircact 52 2 5
HrstJrr! 2 .110
Matoec! 3 0 0 0

BPI

Berrous

3 11 0

DJctr.srus 1 o 1 o

Rlaloro 3b 5 , 1

5132

a

Mcnadoc 4221 ACstiHoc 5001
TtMII 43121112 TNII 39 31:2 3

laltlmotw

233
100

003
200

2 0 0 0

DOavrsp

Kschnk ph t a 0 0
Totlla
33 2 6 2

Milwaukee

020

tOO 000 -

f:2
3

0Davisl,9·6

7 10
1 0

Bu~

Pao;:f:

"-Chv

Gr-.ke

l.2·'t

120001
298802

0

0

1

Chicago

ab r h bi
TWaliu 2b 4 1 1 0
CPnsond 4 1 1 2
SSosar1
5000
A!ou H
4 ·1 2 1

PUJOislb

54 55

A:~len3b

3 1 1 0

EMindd

51 1 1

RSodtsr1

4 2 2 I
200 -t
t 0 0 0

Mll1eo~c

MAndn

1*1

1000

RERBBSO

0

ab rhbl
Wmado.2b 4 1 I 0
Antaria S5 4 1 1 0

lnktroph 0001
Talltla 37111411

..

2

St. Louie

Eldredp

583244
3. 2 0 0 1 3

0

Cardinals 11, Cubs 8

(11) , KGarc1a 2
(2), Bigbie (9 , MaChado (1). CS--tiarvey (1).

IP

6

DD8111s pi1Ci1ed 10 4 baners 111 !1)8 8th
HBP-----tly 00avl6 (WPena).
T-2:26. A- 25.388 (42,27t)

41 22
1 ooo
t ooo

........

6

7 5 2 2 2 4
1 1 o o o
1
100000

CIAu!WlW.I·O

Cedeno ph
Tg""' H
YMiilac
MorriSp

Gabrera w.s-3
Rodi ""'

2

Cincinnati

E-RPalmelfo (3). DP-8allimore t _ LOBBttltlmore Kansas City 15. 2B-BRobertl
{29), Um (19), APalmelro 2 (13), He.inton
J! j1 ..), Machado {3), DeJe1us (2), Stairs_(8),

""""""' (21. HR-TiiA£ia

ooo -

Milwaukee

1000

e.

000

000 110 2ZX 6
E-BCiark (2). BH0111 (8). Freel (8). DJ1menez
(5). OP~t-.Uwaukee 2 Clnc1nnau 1 LOBMijwaukee 7, Ctnclnnatl4. 28--JCastro (15),
Casey (28). LaRue (13 ). fiA-BHall (6 ),
Romano [1). SB-BCtark f5) S-DDav1s.
Claussen. SF-LaRue
'
IP H RERBBSO

Mabrylf

Konuet11y

3 1 2 1
Rmanod :l 1 2 3
Lark1n ss 1 0 0 a
Totals
31 610 6

Cincinnati

R~t;ng

Kanus City

ab r hbl

LaRue c

Jenkins pl1 t 0 0 0

TJones

Orioles 12, Royals 3

.........

d ' 532

s·-s

GB

PIO

9 i.

8·2
6·4

Home

Away
26·16.
31-t6 .,
26-16
22-26
27-20
22·24
25-20
22·25
23·24
. 22·24
22-23
21·25

""'
W3

W2

St. Louis

10 1 0

101

from Page Eh
play.
Grimm retired nine of I0
Meigs hitters during a
stretch · from the second
through fourth frames that
held the Athens lead solid at
&amp;-1 heading into the top of
the fifth.
Jeremy Blackston drew a
one-out walk in the top of
the fifth, followed by anoth·
er free pass to Ross Well to
give Meigs two runners on
wit~ the top qf the lineup
coming to the plate. .
Luke Haislop drilled a
double to center(ield that.
allowed Blackston to score.
Amsbary followed with a
,•;ingle that crossed home
Well to cut the deficit to 8-3
with runners at first and second and one away.
Mike Warren, who held
Athens scoreless over the
third and fourth innings on
the mound for Meigs, was
hit by a pitch to load the
bases for Dill.
Dill delivered a single to
right that allowed Hai slop to
score and cut the lead in half
at 8-4 with Andy Parsons
headed to the plate and the
bases still loaded.
After a brief visit to the
mound by Athens skipper
Gary Dicken to calm Grimm
and
discuss
strategy,
Parsons took the first pitch
from Grimm and deposired
it over the left field wall to
tie the contest at eight and
bring new life to the Meigs
squad.
.
However, Athens did not
panic and went back to work
at the plate in its half of the
fifth, scoring four times on
t}lree hits, a pair of walks
and one untimely error that
guided Meigs right back
into a trailing position at 12-

8.

Grimm regai ned his com·
posure and set the side down
in the top of the sixth, then
received four more runs of
insurance in the bouom of
the sixth
when
Ben

Moms
Eldred

Ktme

15

WI

• GB

PIO

St"

HOlM

Away

we

29-17

25·21

Gnzalez p 0 0 0 0

2

3•

9·1
7·3
5·5

W2
W2

24·.22
25·21

Totals

16 1_

~-5

L2

241.

19

L9

29·20
26-21
22-25
16-32

Srynes 3b 0 0 0 0
33 I t O 1 Totala
25 2.. 4 2

16-30.
1
15 ·32

Montreal
Pittsburgh

4d

l
Pel
38 ' .587
42
558
42
5ll8
55
J09
64
326

L3
L2
L2

Monday·• Retuhs
Monveal6 Pltlsourgh 2
Flonda 6, NY Mets S
Cinc1nnan6. Milwaukee 4

H

7.
1

'I

o o a
0

0

0

0 •0

1

0

0

0
0
'

0

Rusch

565516
Beltran
011120
Mercker
100001
Farnsworth
2 3 2 2 0 3
Hawkrns l ,2-2"
1 4 3 3 t
1
Rusch pitched to 3 batlers in the 6th, Bettran
prtched lo 3 batters rn the 61h ·
HBP-by Rusch {Rolent . WP-Morns
Ump1res--Home. Tim Tschrda: F11st. J~lf Nelso'1: Second, Marty Fost~r: Tn11d. Joe
Br111kman. T-3:29. A-39.371 (39.3451

Cnspc!

6441

Lawton If

4 1 2 1

Geru1rl

t OOO

VMrtnzc
Bake3b
Hainer dh
Merlon1 1b

5134
4 3 4 6

5 1 10
Lmle rt
502t
Vizquel ·ss 0 0 0 0
.JMcDid ss 5 t 1 1
Totals
44141914

Totals

304

Anaheim

000

Tallis

004

37 8t0 8

11 3 -

1t

10 0 0

400 0
2 t 1 0

2 0 () 0
41 21

Mnchnoph 1 0 a 0
OHudsn 2b ~ 0 1 0

6 0 3 1
3cutaro 2I:J 4 0 0 0

DM1~erc

45 0 3 0 Totals

2120
4 11 0
36 512 4

Oakland
KOISlly cf
Bvmesll

44 1 8 1

0

Gonza~z

T-3

Pvntoss
LFordll
Mrneau1b
THntar cf
JJonasrl

010 000 020
1 4
Atlanta
200 QOO 100 · 0 3
E-Furcat (14). Eddf'erez (2). DP- Philadol·
ph1a t . Atlanta 1 LOB- Philadelphia 9.
Atlanta 6. 2B-BAbiOU (25), Furcal ' (13),
JOrew (17) . 38--Furcal (3). HA - MGHes (5),
AJones IHi]. SB- Rolltns 117), 8Abreu (22).
S-Utley, DeRosa . SF-ThOme.
IP " H AERBBSO
Philadelphia
753312

Mitton

3

1

JSWright

0

Reitsma
Smaltz
Alfonseca l.5·4

o o

1

100000
' 1 0 0 0 1
1 2 0 0
1 0

11

~ ~ -~ ,b6

Hggnsnr1

3 010

4220
41 1 3

IRdryzc
DYongdh

51 1 0

4 0 1 0
31 1.2

CG•IIen ss
RoWhtett
CPena 1b
Monroe cf
lngec!

3 0
5o
5 1
4 1

4 12 0
0
1
1
2

0
2
0
2

1000
Munson 3b 4 0 0 0
Totals
39 410 4

013 000

·1 0 0 0 0 2
0 1 1 1 0 0,'
1·3 ,, 0 0 0 1

2·3

o6o"

1 ~
0 ......

5
4

Creda3b

300 0

Mathwsr1

TPerez~

10 0 0

BrillaSC

0 10 0

4 12 I
3110
3 1 1 2
4132
3011

Olk.Jcc1H
Manchll

SAimrc
2000
MOrOz ph 0 0 0 0
BDavisc 1000

· Totala

300 0

32 4 7 4

1 ·0 0 0
33 610 II

Totals

1

t

0

t

1

Chicago

BaHour W,4·1

·3

2

10

0. 0 t
000

3

NalhAn 8.26

Garland
MJackson
Marte l ,3·3

1·3

2

1

1

2

0

6 2-3
2 1·3
1-3
22·3

2

0

0

3

6

0

0

0

0

3

ab r hbl
ISuzuk1r1 5 1 4 0
WinnH
311 t
BBoona 2tr 5 1 3 0

3 20 0

Bl'hom 2b 5 0 1 I
3 1 1 4

EMrtnzoh 6 0 2 2

3 2 1 1
OCOO
5 120
4 1 t 2

Ni~on ri

0

1

Detro!!
Sonderman

6

Urb1na L3-4

200014
2 1 1
1
3 3

Van

5

4

4

3

5

HBP~by Yan {LeCroy]. PB---LaCroy.

Seanle

DOrtizr:ll
MAmrz H
Kapler!!
G1cprr ss

Mrbellic
51 2
Varrtekc
0 00
Mueller 3b 4 a 1
McCtytb 5 t 1
Totals
37 910
Boaton

Jcbsan 1b 5 0 0 0

Spivzid 3b 5 0 0 1
Ollvoc
4330

0
0

Bcchca

ct 3 0 1 0

lbane2H
2 0 2 1
BI!TK1is1 s~ 3 1 1 2

0
1

Hansanpn t 0 1 0Totala
43 7t8 7

9

000

010 -

BOO

9

Seattle
100
102
120 7
E-Bioomqutst 14). LOB-Boston 9. Seanle

16. 2B~Bellhom (20). Garciaparra (6).
Mirabelli (6). BBoone 2 (16). Olivo 2 (9). HA---DOrtiz (26), MAamir.ez (27). 58-ISuzul&lt;i 4
(25), O!tvo (6), BloomquiSt (7) 5-BBoone.
SF-DOr1it. W1nn.
IP H R EABBSO
Bot~ton

Dlcwe W,B-9

594422

120000
1

Tomlio
JoNelson
Embree

1-J

3
2

1
2

1
2

0
0

0
1

2·310010

1

1'

0

0

1

3

32-3

7

6

8

4

5

Foulke 5.15
Seattle

Pu1eiro L.5-1 1

16 1 15X -

Umptres-:--Home. Derry! Cousins. F~rst. Tony
RandaZZo : Second. Fieldr"l Culbreth: Third. Jm
Wolt.T-3:19. A- 23.227 (40,120).

New York

ab r h bi
Pierre

ab r h bl

ct

Awes 2b

5 3 4 0
LCstilk:r 2b 3 2 2 1

5 1 2 0
4 0 1 0

Matsui ss

Wlghmph 1 o o. o
Lcwell3b

Piazza 1b 1 o o o
Valent lb 3 1 1 I
~ggntn3b 31 2 1
Z:ele1b
2000
Spncer!*l 1 0 0 0
Fl~d If
4 2 1 0
Hlda'gorf 41 1 3

4 0 1 t

Cbterarl
Conrnelt

31 2 3
5110
Olor 1b
41 t 0
AGnzlzss 5 t 2 3
Rdmndc 50 0 0

101

010 -

9

New York
034
000
000 7
E-Choi (6). Redrflond (2). Treanor (2). W1g·
ginton (15]. DP-Fionda 2. LOn--Fiorida B.
New York 6. 2B-P1erre (13). Coo1ne (t9).
Floyd (14). W1gg1nton (21). HR-Cabrl!lra
(2 1), AGonzalez {131. H1dalgo (13), cameron
(161. SB-Reyes 2 (7), Matsut (13).. Wtggtnton 2 (6) . 5-LCasttllo.

IP

H REABBSO

Flor1da
Bump

21 ·3

5

6

6

0

1

BHowardW,H

22-3

2

1

1

1

3

1
2
1

1
1
1

a o 1 '!
0003
0 0 0 1

JManzaniiiO
Koch
Benitez 5.32
New Yorio;

Trachsel
JoFranco l.2-S

Feliztb

1
0
2

5031
5 00 0
5120
KOrean ss 4 2 3 2
Eatonp
3000
Longlf

Payton ct

Ojedec

0 00 0

Bchnan ph 0 0 0 0
Stonep
0000

lnbrnkp
Tot•ls

0 00 0
40 916 9
14:2

S•n Diego
CoiOfsdO

7

002
001

000 300 -

g

7
E-long (2). DP-San Diego 2. Colorado 2.
LOB-San Drego 7, Colorado 9. 2B-Bur·
roughs (15), Ojeda (2), Miles (11). Castilla
(31). Burnrtz '22). HR-Kiesko (4), KGreene
(5) , Burnltz (22). SB-I&lt;G1eene (4). S-JJennings. SF--Mile!i.
003

IP
San Otego
Eaton W.5·6
Bedo

52-3

H RERBBSO
9 . 4

4

4

2

1-3 0. Q 0 0 0
1-3 3 3 3 0 0
2-300000

Slo,.
Unebrlhk

1 1
1. 1

0
0

0
0

0
0

1
1

Colorado
JJemings L.8·8
Simpson

6 .\5

9

9

1

1

Har~kkal a

2

2

Cancer survivor receives ACS scholarship

SPORTS
• Cubs outlast Reds.
See Page Bl

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO M

child ren and their education
is some of the best money
spent," said Jo Ann Crisp
POM EROY - Jamilha who chairs lhe re lay in
Willford of Rull and has been Meigs County. "Kids who
selected as a recipient of one: have hope and a perspective
of I00 scholarships awarded of fighting to su rvive will
to youth survivors of cancer grow up to be people our
by the Ohio Division of the society needs," she added.
American Cancer Society.
Thi s yea r, lhe Ohio
The scholarship is made Divi sion received 2004
possi bl e throu gh proceeds applicatibns for the $1,000
from lhe Relay for· Life.
awards, and a hundred were
"Fi nancial SUP,port fo r awarded on the basis of 1heir

110003

o o

0

0

1

HBP----t)j Stmpson (Buchanan), by JJennings
(B.Qiles). PB-----Ofada.

Umpires-Home. MaNin Hudson; Flrt1t. Dane
DeMuth: Second. Jtm Joyce: Third, Kerwil'l
Danley. T-2:46. A-26.770 (50.449).

Dodgers 7, Aetros 5 .
Los Angeles

Houstori

abrhbl
OAbrtsH _.3 10 0
IZIUriSSS 52 3 0
LDucac 3223

Berife3b
Brdley d
ShGren tb
JEcrcnr1
Gora2b
Waa-.erp
Grbwsk ph
Saenzph
Vntura tb

Totals

abrhbl

413 3

BiggiOH

3 0 10

&amp;kmnrf
AE'Jittss
Lamb ph

4 1 0 0

3110
1. 0 0 0

ss

a

5 0 11
4 0 0 0
50 t a

JVZC110
1 0 0
CBahrnct 4 1 2 1

5010.

5122
Ensbrg3b 4121
Asmugc
3 0 0 0
OPimrOII 100 0

1000

scores. Of
those particip&lt;tling
in . the
application
pro c e s s,
pre ference
was given
to
fi rsl·
time appli ·
ca nts with
Wilford
89 qua!ify.
ing. The
re m&lt;tining I I sc ho(arships

were awarded to re-appli·
cants wi th the highesl scores.
Jamitha, 18-year-old daugh·
ler of. Ray and Kimberly
Willford , is a 2004 graduate of
Meigs Hi gh School. She plans
to illlend Ihe University of Rio
Grande where she will major
in medical lap technology.
The 1een was diagnosed
wi1h ovarian cancer in April,
2002. She was treated at
Holzer Medical Center and
then wenl 10 the James

t 0 0 a Munro p 3 0 1
39 712 7 Totals 37 5 9

Ohio offers
mini-grants
for Make a
Difference
Day projects.

a1
oil

5 S 7 7 3 3
2-3 0 I
1 2 0
1-3 1 0 0 0 1
23 1 1 0 1

Wheeler ·
BottafK::o
,
DeJean
ttOOOO
HBP-by BHoward (W1gginton) , b)' Bume

Houaton

Eyrep
Browerp
Tudl.er ph

Weathers L,G-5

GallO
Harv1lle

1-3

3

2

2

0

0

1-3 1 0 0 1 0
11 -3
1 2 o 0 0

4 0 2 0

DBtistarl - 4 0 2 1

LGnzlzH
4 0 0 0
HlntJ-n 1b 4 0 0 0
Cintron ss 4 0 2 0
Traty3b
3010
Brrtoc
30 1 0
AJhsonp 1 o o 0

PMunro pHched lo 2 bailers in the 71t1.
HBP--by Har~JIIIa (lo Duca). by PMunro
(DAober1s). WP-Ga!J1e.
Umpi~!-Homa, Larry venover: First, Sam
Holbrook: Second, Paul Nauert Third, Randy

Fenersp
oooo .
0 00 0
Aqutnop
McOmph 0000

Baseball Calefldar

A0 0 0
4 1 2 0
3100
4a 2 o

3aoo
oaoo
0000

Baarga ph 1 0 0 0

1a 1 o

Hergesp 0000
Chrstnsp 0000
Totllla

67332~

PMunro

35 3 9 2

San Franci1co 120

Totall
000

31 1 7 1
000

-

3

Arizona
000 000 010 ~ 1
E-JaWiiHams (2), Eyre (1 ]. LGonzalez (6).
OP-San Francisco 3. LOB-San Francisco
8, AriZOI\8 9. 2B-Feii2 (18). Bonds (14), Torrealba{!!). Tuel&lt;er ( t6). Cin!ron 2 {22), Brito
(-4). S--Brlto. SF-Oumam.
IPHREABB SO
S.n FllnCIKo

JeWill1an1t W,H
Eyre
Chnstiansen S.1

741042
1·3 , 0 0 0 0
2·300000
1·3 2 0 0
1 0
2·300000

Arbon•
RJohnsoo L.10·6

773216

Brower

Herg&amp;s

Bullinger

1

0

0

0

0

0

Marsh . T-3.00. A--34, 154 (4(),950)

.klly 25 -

Hall ol Fame inductions, Cooperstown, NY
Aug. 18-UI - Owner~ meeting, Philadelphia.
Oct. 5 - Playoft1 begin..
Oct. t2 - League champtonshi~ series begin.
Oct. 23 - World Series begins, city of Al

-·

OBITUARIES

BY

:.Page AS
;·• Carol A. Manuel
:·; Shirley Roush Mulford
:., Audrey Davenport
·' John H. Hetzer
; ; Virginia Will
:) Denver Lee Warner

••
,-

Free

agent filing

period. first 15 days after World Series 8111;1&amp;
Nov. 9-12: - General managers meetings. Key
Biscaynv. Fla.
Dec. T - last day lor leaml to ofler loJary

Lo'I'IERIES

arbitration 10 ltteir former players who bBcame
tree agern&amp;
Dec. tG-13 -WF!tet meetings. Anaheim, Cali!.
Oec. 19 - Last (ley lor tree agen1s offered
sale.ry artitration to accept or reject the offers.
Oec. 20 - Last day .tor teams to otter 2005
contracl8 to unsigned play8f'S.

bhio

It,•..•

Pick ~ ~: 24-8 (white ball)
Pick 4 day: 7-Q-8-3
Pick 3 night: 5-84 (whHe ball)
Pick 4 night: 1-2:.0.0
B~ 5: 17-19-20-27-31
~:

9-22-264446-49 (24)

Kicker: .9-4-2-7-3-1

WestVi
..
'
1l'gJIWl
~lly

3: 9-5-4
Dally 4: 9-8-74
Powerball: 3-31-384246 (2)
Power Play: 5

WEATHER

Details on Pace A7

INDEX
2 SI!C110NS- 16 PAGES

Calendars

tlassifieds

Once Again, The Daily Sentinel Will Have A
Special Meigs County Fair 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.
·. BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS
APART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION •••
CALL TODAY!

Comics

pear Abby

Bs-6
'

B7

Obituaries

A3
A4
As

Places to go

AB

Sports

BI

Weather

A7

EditorlaJs

CHARLENE HDEFUCH

H D~FLICH@MYDAI~YSENT 1 NEL.CO M

champion.
~TBA -

Ca11cer Cenler in· Columbus
where she underwenl surgery.
"I mi ssed lhree weeks of
school thro ugh it aiL" said
Jamitha -"a week when I
was sick. a week in the hospitaL and a week al home
recove ring."
She is optim istic. enthusiastic about li fe. and anxious
now to get on with her edu- ·
calion. The scholarship she
has received wi ll help this
cancer survivor do just lhat.

50 0 0

JKent2b
Bgw&amp;IIIO

2"000
t 1 t a

4011

© 1004 Ohio Volley PubliAhlng Co.

Questions are always raised and there are problems to be
solved in any group. The Meigs High School band has a new
peer-help council in place this year. Six seniors, from the
left, Randy Hart, Aaron lhle, Megan Mayes , Natasha Wise,
Jenny Bowles , and Andrew Henderson. have been elected to
serve in an advising rol!iL (Charlene Hoeflich)

Band camp is ali abo ut practicing and the flag corps mem·
bers are quick to admit that moving flags in a coord inated
fashion 'takes hours of practice. Putting in those hours· this
week are Madison King, Clare Sisson , Jilli Young·, Natasha
Wise, Chann ing Burge, Holl y Davis, Kelly Napper, Miranda
Young, Ashley Brown ing, Kei lah Jacks, Bethany King, Caitlin
Wil liamson , Kelsey Fife. Lacey Stobart. Glena Jarvis, Carrie
Michae l and Laura Fields. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Meigs High· Scho.ol Band ·Camp
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFl.ICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
POMEROY - The sun
was bealing down on their
heads and the humidity was
high, but the Meigs High
School marching band members didn 'l seen to mind.
Band camp was underway
and their hearts were into
whal they were learnin g: As
they playeq their instruments and moved in formation, lheir director Toney
Dingess offered s~e
praise, then added a bit of
construcli ve criticism.
The practice was taking_
· place on the large parking
lot of the Meigs High
School campus. Band camp
started Monday. It ends
tomorrow.
This is the first time in
Dingess' 17 years at Meigs
for an at-home band camp.
Before .the band has traveled
to Cedar Lakes at Ripley, W.
Va. and spent four nights
there at considerable cost.
This year by having the
camp on lhe local campus,
band members can stay at
home, report in every morning at 9 a.m. and practice
until 8:30 p.m., then go
home and fall into their ow.n
beds. And it cos1s less.
.A large 1ent is in place
near the practice area where
Vaughan s is catering two
meals each day lo the 70 or
so studenls and slaff.
The camp isn 'l a beginning of gett ing ready for the
new school year's marching
band program. It's an extension. Practices have been
going on since !ale June
when members geared up

POMI;:ROY - Mini-grants
of up lo $2.000 are available
to Meigs County organiza·
tions who parti cipate in Make
a Difference Day projects
this fall.
Funding for the projects has
been set aside by the
Governors
Office
of
Appalachia and is being
administered through Ohio's
Hill Country Heritage Area to
community groups in each of
lhe 29 Appalachian counties.
The grants will go to groups
planning volunteer activities
on Salurday. Oct. 23, to "pro·
teet, promole and restore the
region's heritage as part of the
slate 's Make a Difference Day
2004 initiali ve," said Deanna
Tribe of McArthur, president
of the Ohio's Hill Country
organization.

Neither heat nor humid ity deters the Meigs ~arauder Band from practicing. This is band
camp week on the Meigs High School campus. Here the percussion section prepares for
the coming marching season. (Charlene Hoeflich)
l(lfl participation in July 4
parades.
.
And after camp? Well the
pace . will be slower. 9 a.m.

to noon, but the practices of school.
wi II continue with Ihe
"It's all aboul gelling
exceplion of fair week righl .ready for anolher year of
up to Aug. 24. the firsl day band:· said Dingess.

Tribe described Ohio 's Hill
Country as a "lrea·sure trove
of hi stori ca ll y· significant
commun iti es. herilage sites
and cultural traditions that
rely upon grassroots efforts
for maintenance and restora·
lio n."'
The organization, she said, is
o~e of several aclive heritage
areas in the Buckeye Statt. thai
will be awarding mini grams of
up 10 $2,01J0 per county.
Tribe said 1hat the agency
is now accepting proposals
from governmental and nonprotit groups who will serve
as spon sors for voluntary
project s · on Make A
Difference Day that fall into
one of four largeted activity
. themes:
• preservation ·or clean up
of a historically significant
building. cemelery or site;
• ,interpretation of a herilage .site o·r slory via signage,
an exhibi l, or a publication;
• a public art installation
promoting heritage such as a
mutal or project to paim quilt
squares on a barn:
• or collection. archival
and/or appropriate slorage of
heritage documents or artifacts.
"Since only $2.000 is avail·
able per coumy. the organi za- ·

Please see Cir•nts, AS

Call
DAVE or BRENDA

Andy

at

Durst {8) Brad Gnmm, Ntek Bof1n l 8) and
Greg Poston W - Brad Gr~mm L - Mtke

1J¥and

4
0
2

abrhbt
ab rhtH
Drharn 2b 3 0 0 1 AAmr2b 4110
NPere2 ss 5 t t 0 -' SFinley d 3 0 0 0

Parsons (8) and Andy Parsons. Terry

Chleboun

4
0
2

i\rlzona

S.n Fran

16 16 6
22 18 2

Warren. HA - Andy Parwns (grand
slam), Metgs; Mike Warren , MetgS: luke
Harsklp. Metgs: Cnris Pms. Athens. Tony

s
0

-14 0 1 o
GastHia 3b 5 1 3 1
LWaiKrr1 50 1 0
PrWISI'1ct 52 3 1
Burnitz ~ 5 2 3 2
TGreanc 3 1 1 0
JJnngsp 1 0 0 0
MaSv.-yphOOOO
Smpaonp 0 0 0 0
CJhson ph 1 o a o
Hrkal11p
0000
Tot,ala
37 714 7

Hatton 1b

Klesko tb 5 1 2 3

~p

·en

Clayton ss 4 1 1 1

""'"'"

JeWrmp
500

RERBBSO

.brhbi
4 0 1 2

Miles2b

Brrghs 3b 5 2 3 1
Lorella 2b 5 1 2 1
BGi~srl , 321 -t

1
. loa Angeles
001
000 420 7
1
Houl ton
301
000 010 5
Polltie
o a o o o E-Cora
(4), AEverelt (B) . Bagwell (5).
Texaa
Harville (2). LOB-los Angeles 11, Houston
Wasdin
6-43325
10. 28-lzturis (16), Grabowski (5), CBeltran
Francisco
1 3 1 1 2 1
2 (4). 38-lzturis (4). HR--Beltre (25), BagAlmanzarW.7·1
1 0 0 0 0 1
FCorderu $.29
1 0 0 0 0 3 well ( 13). Ensberg (5). SB-Bradley (1 1). 5Wasctin pflched to-2 batte~ in the 7th, Francis- lo Duca.
IP H AERBBSO
co pitChed 10 3 oaners in the B1h.
Ange-l '
Umpires-Home, B1ian O"lllora : First , Phil
6 7 4 3 4 2
Cuzzi ; Sacond , lance Bark~dale: Third, Jerry WeawrW,1--9
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Thlartin
Crawford.
2·3 0 0 0 0 0
T-2:51. A-27,308 (49.115).
Mota
2·3 1 1 1 1 0
Gagne S,27
11-3 I 0 0 0 3
Giants 3, Diamondbacks 1

Bondsll
Bumpp
1000 Gmsrancf 4t12 . Al!onzo 3b
Bf-lwrdp
1 0 0 0 VW1isnc
3 0 1 0 Grs.sorn c!
Mohrrl '
Mrdcar ph 1 0 0 0 Trcnsel p 2 a 0 0
Total s
36 913 "8'1 Totala
36 710 7
Trralba c
Florida

6
1
. 2-3
1·3

H

Colorado

ab rhbl

a.:o.

Marlins 9, Mets 7
Florida

_ IP

M1ke Davts, M1ke Warren ( 1 ), Luke

Ben

MYongss 5010
Blalock 3b 3 o a o
ASrano2b 4 1 1 0

Ni~t;j

Padres 9, Rockies 7
S•n Dleto

Hoffmoo 8,25

abrhbl

Fllmerdh
CAllen dh
Txeira tb

.

T-2 :35 A--33.743 (49.033).

Otsuka

Romero

Ha1slop (5). Chris Brown (6)

Costanzo, Athvns,

t

Texas

,
ab r hbl
WHarrs2b 3 0 1 0
Vlenbnss 4 1 1 1
CaLoolf 4121
CEvi-tt dh 2 1 1 0
Knerko tb 4 1 1 2
Gloadr1
4010
Rwandc1 4 0 0 0

Athens 22, Meigs 16

;slam), Athens

t

574434

game to slam the door on Ihe
2004 sea;on for Meigs
Legion Post 128 (22- 14) . .
"We talked to the players
before the game and knew
we were going to have to
score a lot of runs toni ght to
have a chance to beat
Athens." said Meigs head
coach Jim McC lure. "The
kids played lheir he:rrts out
tonight and they never quit
fighting. I'm real proud of
them and lheir efforts lhis
season and they ha ve shown
a lot of heart. I think this
group is one of the best hit·
ting teams I have ever been
around ...
Ken Amsbary led lhe
offensive· assault for Meigs,
going 4-for-6 ut the plale.
driving in two runs and scor- ·
ing three times in lhe setback. ·
Luke Hai slop 1 followed
wi th three hits. resulling in
lhree runs scored and lhree
RB!s.
Mike Warren. Doug Dill
and Andy Parsons each had a
pair of hits in the loss for
Meigs 128.
Following
Chleboun's
notable 4-for-6 night for
Athens was Chris Hewitt
and Tony Costanzo. who
each added three hits on the
evening.
Grimm. who allowed 13
runs and 13 hils in picking
up the win, also helped his
own cause by scoring five
runs while collecling a pair
of hits and lhree walks in the
viclory. Greg Poslon &lt;tlso
added a pair of hits for
Athens.
Coach McClure wanted 10
thank the American Legion
Po~t 128 in Middleport, saying. "They have given us
every(h ing we have. needed
to run a great program and
they have been a really big
help to us'...
Metgs t 0 0 0 7 o
Altlens 530 044

o o o

Alfonseca pftched tO 2 batters 1n the 10th.
T-2:55. A-36.006 (50.091)

Chicago

JSmrth 2b

HBincoc 1 0 0 0
Cddyer 2b 3 o a o
Totals 34 5 6 5

Mcconnell
Gryboski _;

7 4
t
1 3 5
122010

Rangers 6, White Sox 4

3110

Minne1ota

Philadelphia

0

Detroit

5o
2 0 0 0

LeCra;c

36 4 6 4

Atlanta

oo

Kosk1El3b

ladea~10a0

Totals

Lohse
810036
110000
1 0000 1
12· 3 3 0 0 0 1
1 t -3 1 0 0 1

Oamoncl

4 0 0 0
3 a o o

1

0

BurreiiH 4 0 0 0
BAbreurt 4 1 2 1
Thomelb 2 0 0 t
OaBell 3b 4 1 2 1
Mchel&amp; cl 5 0 0 0
lbrthalc 4 0 0 0
Mi~Ofl P
3010

8

0

4120
MGil95 2b 4 1 1 2
JOrewrl
5010
CJones 3b 4 0 0 0
JEstdac 4 0 t 0
.AJones cf 4 1 2 1
JuFrco1b 4 .00, 0
4010
Mrrerot!
JSWrl'l1p 2000
NGraen ph 1 0 0 0
Totals
36 3 8 3
Furcslss

Toronto

ab r h bl

11b rhbi

ab r 1'1 bl

1

1

o

Reed
ab r hbl

Toronto
000 000 000 . 000 00 0
Oakland
000 000 000 000 01 1
One out when wulfllng tun scorW
1
OP-Toronto 1. LOB-Toronto 9. Oakland 12.
28--Rros (14) SB-OHudson (4). Cs-Gros·
by (3) 8--HAIIeberg, Scutaro
IP H RERBBSO

Boston

~

7
2-3

B

Meadows

o

Umpiru-Home, AIIOniO Marql.ltt; First. Ed
Rapuano: Second. Ted Barron; Thifd, Rick

Phlllleo 4, Bl'llveo 3, (1 O)
lbfhbl
Rotttnus 5 2 J 1'
Utley2b
4000

Fttttra
t10002
Aquino
1100 12
JeWillllma pllcMd tt!1 biUII' In tht 8th.

PB--TOJTNibe . Brito.

Eddinge: T-3:18. A-2!1,2i5 [57,4051.

Detroit
200 200 000
DP-Mmnesola 1, Detroit 1. LOB-M1nneso· Chicago
000
tOO
210 4
021
100
02x 6
ta 8. Detrort 10. 2B-LFord (22), THr.mter Texas
23) , JSm1th (4). HA-Morneau (4), JJones DP-Te~as 1. LOB-Ctu:ago 5, Te~as 7.
115), Monroe (4). SB-Aivas (8). CS-Inge · 29-Cal ee (26). ASorrano (17). Teixeire
(19) . Bara1as 3, (1 4). HA-Valentrn (20),
(3). SF-JJones.
IP H RERBBSO Calee (14), Konerko (24), Matthews (7).
Minnesota
CS-WHarr~ (3). S-Ni~

.,..,,.,-.,--,-::.,--,---;:--;:-~-1 Laskantc

Chleboun belied a grand
slam over the left field wall
to giye Athens a 16-8 edge
after six full innings.
Again, down but nol out,
Meigs would have to make
one more rally if they want,
ed their season to continue.
Warren belted a solo shot
in the top of the seventh to
cut the lead to 16-9, but
Grimm co unt e r~d 'the run
with a lead-off double in the
bottom of the seventh to reestablish the Athen s lead
back .to eight.
The n, in the top half of the
eigh1h . Dave
McClure
walked and Haislop hil the
sixth and final· home run of
the contest over the lefl field
wall to cut the Athens lead
to 17-11.
Amsbary and Warren followed with back- to-back
si ngles.
Dill and Parsons followed
by reac hing on back-to-back
errors that all owed Amsbary
and Warren to score and cui
the deficil 10 I 7· I 3.
A bloop single by Angelo
Hardy into ri gh1 loaded the
bases for first baseman
Colin Crabtree. who . delivered a single to right center
that plated Dill and Parsons
and pulled Meigs lo within
two runs at 17· I5 with one
away . .
Athens wcm to the bullpen
and called on Nick Bolin to
deliver the knockout blow
while lrying to stop the
Meigs rally.
Bolin managed to strikeout Josh Eddy for the second
out, then picked Hardy off at
5econd 10 end the scoring
threat.
.fthens responded wi1h
fiVe more runs in their half
of the eighth. capped by a
tri.pl·e
from
two-RBI
, Chleboun lhat produced a
cycle at the plale and seven
RB!s overall on the evening.
Meigs trailed 22-15 headed
imo the last inning.
Hai slop reached on a oneout single. stole second and
scored' on an RBI double by
Amsbary for the firial run of
the evening, a.~ Bolin recorded the final two outs of the

50 I 0
50 0 0

::;:--,=--:::-::-;----c:----1
Red Sox 9, Mariners 7

4 0 2 t
2 0 0 0

Athletics 1, Blue Jays 0, (14)
Jhnson If 6 0 0 o
Hmske3b 6 01 o

4 0 0 0
5120

0 0 0 1 0
lehrW,I·I
1 0 0 1 1
HBP-by Bush (Crosby). by Harden (Cash).
Umprres-Home. Jerry Meals: First Paul
Schneber; Second, Adam Dowdy; .Thrrd. Ed
Montague,
T-3·39 A-1B.BBS (43,662) .

300 0

Cleveland

Toront o

302 0

~

Crosbyss 4 0 0 0

Dotal
RRmcon

012 031 - 14
010
130 5
E-JMcDonald (4), F1ggins 111), Hallar (!0) ,
Washburn ( 11. DP--C ievetand 3, Anahe1m 2.
LOB--Cleveland 6, Anaha1m 4. 28,...Cosp
{15), Merloni {11). Ouinlaf) (71 . HR-Crisp
(6). VMartmvz 1111, THalner 3 117), JMcDon·
aid ( t ), DaVano n 5) SF- THalner.
IP H RERBBSO
Cle11etand

rvklmr

EChavz 3tJ
Dyerl
Hnberg1b
Durazodt!

a0

Spe1er L.2--6
Oakland
Harderi

40 2 2

Ournlan 11

BMoln!l[:
Paule
AKndy2b

6010
3 0 a0

Fmsor
Adams
Llgt&lt;mberg

ab r 1'1 bi
4 12 0

2

Mesa $.26
1 1 0 0 1 Q
Ump1res-Home, J1m Reynolds: Flf'St, K9Jin
KeUey: Secood. Tim Welkei Third. Gary Cederstrom

1

Eckatln s~
Ftgg1ns Jb
GA11dsn cf
JMolna tb
VGraro dh
Erstad t b
Halter 3b
0Vnonr1

4 1-00

R10srl
Cashc

Ghulk

Anaheim

4

2

.

lJmplrt~omt. Otn !...ogn1; Fire!, Jef1 Kl~
logg; Second, Chrie GuocW: Tl'llrd, Doug

CormiEr
Worrell W,3·3
BWegner S. 15

n

abrnbi
St1Siwr1 dh 5 0 0 0

4000

Bust!

Indians 14, Angels 5

0000

B

Plnsbl.trgh
SBumen W,4-2

·Minnesote

Zamdh

Totals

2
0

MdO'NS p

Twins 5, Tigers 4, (10)

5000

Gomezss 4 0

3
3

Hill2b
2000
Castillo 2b 1 0 0 0
TAivrzrl
.3000
Mesap
0001)
SBmettp 2 0 ~· w

· T-2 :14. A-18.075 (38,496).

COigdo tb 5 0 0 0

RERBBSO

3 0 2 0

000
100
000 1
200
000 CXh 2
OP-Montreal2. Pittsburgh 3. LOB- Monlreal9 28-JAI~era (13). Hf'1-MackOWiak (14) .
SB- EnCI1avez 114). CS-EnCha,iez (3).

Monh·eal
LHrndz l,6-10

Aftantl 4, Philadelphia 2

Wlells ct

TRdmncl

IP H REABBSO

St.Lou1s 5. Ch4cago CUbs 4
San D!Cgo 13. Colorado 6
· San FranciSCO 6. Ar12ona 1
Los Angeles 7, HOUS10f16

, o o a

Cleveland
ab r hbi
Bll•ard 2b 4 1 1 Q
Brssrd tb 1 1 1 0

CW1Isn tb 3 0 0 0
~H
3000

3·7
3·7
iH

1

1

JFiivrarf
4 0 10
WlkrsnH
3100
NJhnsn 1b 3 0 1 0
Schrldrc 40 31
HMat&amp;o pr o o o a
Carmll 2b 3 0 0 0
Sledge ph 1 0 0 0
LHrndzp 3 0 1 0
Cllway pr 0 0 0 0

14

3

l5rnghs S.24
Ch icago

JWilsn ss 3 0 0 0
Mckwk 3tl 3 1 1 2

55

,.

3

K1ng W.3-0

EChwzct 4 0 3 0
TBtsta 3b 3 0 t 0

OCbera

484
473

7

2

5o0 o

abrnbi
Kendall c
3 1 I 0

48

6

Calero

ab r hbl

37

1 2.-:i'
t -3

Pltteburgh

Montreal

(Floyd) WF-1lllc11M&lt;

Atlanta

10

Westbrook W.7·5
7 tO 5 5 0 4
Delee tb 4 1 1 2
AiWhrte
2 · 20002
ARmrz3b 4221 . Anaheim
Banett c
4 I 2 "2
Washbum l. tD-55 1-3 13 10 9 1 1
ASGzlz s.s . 4 0 0 0
Shrelds
2 2·3 4 3 3 0 0
Au!IChp
31t0
FAodnguez
1 2 1 1 0 1
Beltranp 0000
Westbrook ptlched to 4 betters in the 81h.
Frr~swrp
oooo
H8P---by S!Mids (Belltard).
Macias ph 1 a a o Umpues---Home, Rob Drake: Fn·st larry PonHWkinsp o o o o
Cil'\0, Second, Greg Gibson, Third, Bruce
Dreckman.
T-2:35. A-40.000 (45,030)

Chicago
071
000 000 a
l08-St LOUIS 6. Gh1cago 7 28-PujOIS
{27), Cedeno (4). TWalker ( 14), CPan8fSon
(17) , ARamlre.t (24 ) HA-Pujols 3 (27).

Meigs

IP

mvo. T-3:511 A--48,0:24 (47 ,447).
Pirates 2, Exf!Os1

527
51 t

ASanoers !161. Ti!guchr (2). Delee (1St
AAam1r ez (16). Barrett til) CS-Womack
(3). Rolan (2). S-Rentena SF-Lan~lord

St.louis•.

bitt.,•

44
45

C1ncrnnat1 (P.Wilson 9·2) at Ch1cago Cubs ( C~ment 7-9) . 2:20pm
Florida (A.J.Burnett 1-4) at Pt'uladelpl1ta tM1tlwood 7-5), 7·05 p.m.
Wontreal (Patterson 1-2) at N.Y Mets tSen 4-G). 7·10 p m
P1ttsborgh (Benson 7-7) at Atlanta (8~rd 2·2) , 7:35pm
Mr~aukee ,Santos 9·3) at St LoUis (WWtllrams 6·61. B·tO p.m
Houslon (Pe11itte 5-3) at Anzona (Wel±i 3·1 0), 9 35 p fT1
CblcrC~dc (Eites 9-41 at los Anyetes'(ishu 11·4), ·o tOp m
San-D1ago :Peavy 6·3) at San Francrsw {flueler 5-7), 10:15 pn1

o

JoSo&amp;a

Pet.
634

Awty

2e·2t
23-23
L1
Wt\7"" 26-22 _ -23·22
24·22
23-24
. W2
26-20
20-27
L2
~8-27
15-33
L1

73
5·5
55
3·7

3
16

Homt

'"'

Wedne•day"a G8m8fl

-\'or·

r.,.. Bay

L
34'

P10

2

Tuesday's Results
C1ncinnat1 6, Mllwaui&lt;ett 2
St. LouiS 11. ChiCago Cubs 6
Pmsbur!112 Mon11aa1 t
Florida 9. NY Mets 7
Pn, ,adelpnla 4, Atlanta 3, (tO]
Los Angeles 7. Houston 5
San D~ego 9, Colorado 1
San Franc1sco 3. An2ona 1

TarTtpa Bay
BukV!C h
1 0 0 0 0 2
ab r h bi
Gu.. inke prtched to 3 battets 1n the 3rd
.
ab r tt bi
Crwtrd
ltl
3
0
2
1
HBP-tlv
Rodnguez
(M1
SW!!efl. ey}. WP--CabrBWIImfctl 31 0 0
era 2. DReyes ~8-ACastrllo
Jeter as
2 1 1 0 JoCriJ2 rf 4 0 0 0
T-3:00 A-18.2251,40.7B5)
TCII:rll tb t 0 1 1 BaiOellicf 4 0 0 0
Shffield rl 5 1 1 3 Hulf3b
311 0
..Adrgz 3b 4 0 1 0 Lugo ss
3 2 o.:R
;ed=s:c6, ,.:B::rew
= · .:e::crs'-==2_,......,--JeGbi tb 4 0 0 0 TMrtnztb 4 0 0 0 . Mltw•ullee
Cincinnati
loltood 3010 Cantu2b 4 000
. ab rhbi
ab rhbi
Posadec 3000 THatl c
:3000
Pdsdnkc! 4000
Freet3b
4000
MftlsiJI If
3 0 0 0 Gthrghtlf 31 to
MgrOer~ 4 0 0
TJonesp o o o a
EWiM2b 31 to
BCiark rt
31 2 6 1
2 0 0 0
Clausen o 1 0 0 0
TotalS 31 4 II 4 Totatla
Ovrbay 1b 4 0 1 0 .Castro ss 4 2 2 0
Helm53b 4 1 "2 0 Casey lb 4 1 2 I
New York
100 002 001 4
4122
DunnH
4010
BHallss
T1mpa Bay
001 100 000 2
KGinlr2b 4 0 0 0 DJmnz2b 4 0 1 1
E-Posada (81 DP~-New YorK 1. Tampa Bay
Mor.llerc 3 0 t 0 WPar1a r! 3 1 0 0

MRivora S,J.ol

59'

LOUIS

"43

Toron1o 5. Osklould 3

Yankees 4, Devil Rays 2

-·...

St

PmstJurgtl

Balbmore (Bedard 3-4) at Boston (P.Mar1inez IQ-3\, 7:05pm
l&lt;epsas City (Uay 7-9) at Detroit (Maroth S-7), 70~ p m
Toronto (Hentgen 2-6) at N.Y Yanllees (Vazquez 10-S), 7:05pm
Chicago White Sox (Buehrla 9·31 at Cleveland (C.lae 10- t ], 7·05 pIT'
Anah8im (Escobar 5·6) at Texas (Drsse 5-5). 8.05 p.m
Tampa Bay (Halama 5·3) at Minnesota t:Aaclo.e 5-6). B. 10 p.m
Oallland (Zilo 5-7) at Sealtla (Blackley 1-2), 10:05 p,m:

2.

w

47

Batt1more 7, Kansas C1ty 4
Seam&amp; 6 Boston 4 . p t)
C~velantl 6, Anahe1m 5 (10\

~'IGamH

CENTRAL

Milwaukee

~nnesota :3, Oetrort I
Tampi Bay 9, NY Yank•s 7
Ch~~:ago Soll12. Ta:tes ,6

•'NY 't'ar~Me&amp; 4, Tampa Bay 2
Oakland 1. Toronto (14)
CleYoland 14. Anaheim 5
Boston g, Seatrle 7 .
~Me&amp;Ota 5. Detroit 4. (10]
T81183 6. ChJCaOO Sox 4

:lSS'

Houston

2j.23
22·27

Monday's Reauh1

Baltmore 12. Kansas City 3

495

12-30

L2

Strk

2'4
5
16'1,

47

GO

33

21-26

20-27

P10

• -

,, ""
,,50

26-20

.,

w

527
.527
505

4l

Flor1de.
NY Mets
M011trea!

GB

Po1.

L

44

C!nc1nne.t1
Cnrcago Cubs

W2
L2

,,,,w

$herrl~ ·
2 1·:3 1 0 0 1, 2
H1,.g1wa
211122
MM}Iera
110002
bLowt pit~ed to 2
n 11'\e 6th.
HBP-by JoNellon (WhYI). WP-Ol.ow.. PB-

Hawking.unveils
·new thinking on
black holes, A2

FO~

992-2155

MORE INFORMATION

The Daily Sentinel
J

.,----------------------------------------"-

.-~---~

..

�•
•

'

·I

•

l ,,

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel
''

· PageA2

·:Hawking 'unveils new~
thinking on black .holes

Thursday, July 22,

Democrats say Medicare law.could
eat into Social Security benefits

WASHINGTON (AP) Daschle of South Dakota
Medicare recipients whose said.
premiums for doctor visits
Daschle,
Hou se
DUBLIN, Ireland (A9) ·cannot
rise
'
more
than
the
Democratic
leader
Nancy
Famed
aSirophysicist
annual cost-of-living adjust- Pelosi of California and othStephen
Hawking
said
ments 111 their · Social ers arc iTltroducing legi.sla·
Wednesday that black holes,
Security
checks won 't enjoy tion tu c '
the mysterious massive vorprotection
that same pro,tection when it to drug insurance premiums.
texes formed from collapsed
tomes to their medicine.
stars, do not destroy everyIt wou ld also limit combined
thing they consume and
Democrats have found increases 111 premiums
instead can tire out matter
. that the Republican-written Medicare· Part B, for doctor
·and energy "in a mangled
prescription drug benefit, visits and other non-hospital
form."
signed into law last year and costs, .and Pan D, the new
Hawking;s radical new
scheduled to take effect in drug coverage, to 25 percent
thinking, presented in a paper
· 2006, has no premium caps of Social Security recipito the 17th International
tied to Social S~:curity ems' inflation adjusunents .
Conference on General
COLAs.
The legislati on would
Relativity and Gravitation in
"This is kind ·of a sneak. allow seniors to rctai n at
·Dublin, capped his threeattack on Social Security least 75 percent of their
decade struggle to·explain an
benefits," Rep. Fortney . COLA to cover jumps in
elemental paradox in sciemif"Pete"
Stark, D-Calif., said prices for food, utilities and
ic thinking: How can black ·
Wednesday
at a news con.
holes destroy all record of
ference.
housing . The ·Democrats 1t
consumed matter and energy,
The
annual
Social would cost $27 billion over
as Hawking long believed,
. d
I0 years.
. .
· Heaith
and
Human
·when subatomic theory says Professor Stephen Hawking presenting his findings on 'Black . Secunty mcreas.e tie to
. inflation is designed to pre·su.ch elements must survive Hole Theory' at GR17. the 17th International Conference on
vent the erosion of seniors' Services .
Det1artment
General Relativity and Gravitation at the Royal Dublin Society,
in some form''
spokesman
Bill
·
Pierce said'
Hawking's answer is that Ballsbridge Dublin Wednesday (AP Photo; John Cogill)
purchasing power. The pro- ·. "If not for the Medicare
tection in the Part B premithe black holes hold their been troubling me for nearly consumed, a view that conum is especially important. . modernization act , seniors
· contents for eons but them- 30 years. even though the flicts with subatomic theory
for
low-income seniors.
would continue to pay the
selves eventually deteriorate answer is· less exciti ng than and its view that matter can
"Seniors are exposed to highest prices for drugs with
and die. As the black hole the alternative I suggested."
never
be
completely
the
possibility that large no help in sight. This law
disintegrates, they send their
In a humorous .. aside, destroyed.
increase iri medical costs, offers real hope while
tranSformed contents back H~wking settled a 7-year-old
Hawking, a mathematics
out·into the infinite universal bet made with Caltech astro- . professor at Cambridge
only
offer
especially prescription drug Democrats
horizons from which they physicist John Preskill, who University, shot to internacosts, couid cat up a large rhetoric.
came.
"No longer will beneficiapiece of their Social Security
insisted in 1997 that matter tiona! fame with his best-sell· Previously, Hawking, 62, consumed by ·black holes ing book "A Brief Histol)i of
COLA and, for some, even ries without drug coverage
had held out the possibility cou ldn't be destroyed. He Time," which sought to
reduce the size of their go it alone in buying their
that disappearing matter trav- presented Preskl[.l a favored explain to a general audience
Spcial Security . check," prescriptions,." Pierce said.
els into a new parallel uni- reference
work
"Total the most complex aspects of
Democrats on Congress' "Medicare will be with them
verse within the black hole Baseball, The Ultimate how the universe works.
Joint Economic Committee helping to reduce tlieir costs
- the very stuff of most Baseball Encyclopedia" after
Despite being virtually parsaid in a new report.
- from hundreds and thou·visionary science fiction.
having it specially flown over · alyzed and forced to rely on a
The issue has added si~~ sands of dollars to nearly
"There is no baby universe from the United States.
wheelchair with amyotrophic
nificance because the new
branching off, as I once
"I had great difficulty in lateral sclerosis since hi s
law
ties the rise in drug
thou~ht. The information
finding one over here, so I mid-20s, Hawking travels the
insurance premiums to drug
remams firmly in· our uni- offered him ah encyclopedia world on speaking engageprice
inflation.
while
verse," Hawking said in a of cricket as an alternative," ments. He communicates by
increases in Social Security
, speech to about 800 physi- Hawking said, "but John using a hand-held device to
pegged to the overall
are
cists and other scientists from wouldn't be persuaded of the select words on his wheelrate of intlation.
50 countries.
superiority of cricket. "
chair's computer screen, then
Drug prices have risen far
"I'm sorry to (lisappoint . Later, Preskill said he was sending them to a speech
faster than the Consumer
science fiction fans, but if very pleased to have won the synthesizer.
Price
Index, the most closeinformation is preserved, bet, but added: "''ll be honThe .slow process of conly
watched
inflation meathere is no possibility of est, I didn't understand· the structing answers meant that,
sure.
using black holes to travel to talk." Like other scienti sts in the press· conference that
other universes," he said.
"Of the many . problems
there, he said he looked for- followed his paper, Hawking
"If you jump into a black ward to reading the detailed was able to .answer only two
with the Republican drug .
hole: your mass energy will paper that Hawking is questions in a half-hour. The
bill, this is one of the worst.
be returned to our universe, expected to publish next final questioner asked him
It's a backdoor scheme that
but in a mangled form, which month.
will decimate· the Social
what problem he intended to
contains the ·information
Security COLAs of millions
Hawking pioneered the tackle next, now that he had
about what you were Iike, but understanding of black ho·les so lved the paradox of the
of Americans," Senate
706 West Main
'in an unrecognizable state," in the mid- 1970s. He has pre- black hole.
Democratic leader Tom
he said with a smile, sparking viously insisted that the holes
"I don 't know," . Hawking
laughter from the audience.
emit radiMion but never quickly replied, bringing the
Hawking added, " It is great cough up any trace of matter house down with laughter.
to solve a problem that has

J

nothing for low-income
"'
seniors...
· As it stands now. most
Social . Security recipients
keep most ol their COLA.
committee Democrats said .
Only those who receive the
smallest monthly benefit
find that their entire adjustment is used to pay higher
Medicare premiums.
In 2004, the $7.90 rise in
monthly Medicare premium's for doctor visits and
other non-~ospital care consumed the entire COLA for
the estimated 1.4 million
peorle who receive no more
than $384 a month from
Social
Security,
the
Democrats' report said.
Social Sec!Jrity checks
increased by 2. I percent this
year, an extra $19 a month
for an average retiree.
Medicare premiums rose by
13.5 percent.
Next year's increase could
be the largest
ever,
Medicare 's trustee s reported
in March ., Monthly Part B
premiums could rise 17 percent in 2005. from $66.60 to
$78. 10.
The Democrats said
Medicare insurance premiums will take a growing
share of COLAs so that by
2014, nearly two-thirds of
Social Security recipients
will spend at le'!,St 25 p7rcent
of their COLA on premium
increases.

FREE INSPECTION

FRUTH PHARMACY
St. • Pomeroy

Arafat fac·ing tough position with
new defiance by .legislature
RAMALLAH, West Bank
(AP) - Yasser Arafat was in
.one of the toughest positions
·.of his long career Wednesday
..after a chaotic week of kidnappings. riots, resignations
and a legi slative vote
demanding that he form a
new government with real
.power.
• Arafat has stood firm
:against demands that he give
' the Palestinian Cabinet
~authority over the security
'forces, seen as a test of his
willingness to share power '
,and move toward democratic
reform of his autocratic rule .
: The pressure increased
: We(!nesday with a resolution
:by the Palestinian Legislative
:council - which has rarely
:raised its voice against Arafat
·- calling on him to accept
:the resignation of Prime
·Minister Ahmed Qureia and
:form a new Cabinet better
:equipped to deal with the
:internal turmoil.
Although Arafat's position
:as the undisputed Palestinian
·teader did not appear to be in
:jeopardy, it was unusual for
:political figures to defy his
iwill in such open terms, and
:reflected the dismay among
Palestinians over the breakdown of order in the
Palestinian ierritories.
i Unrest spread from the
iGaza Strip to the West Bank,
'with
the
abduction
·Wednesday of ;m official of
:the local government ·in the
:city of Nablus and the shoot; (ng 1\tesday night of a promiinent critic of Arafat in
' Ramallah.
Qureia, finding himself
powerless to deal with a
wave of demonstrations and
.Jddnappings in Gaza last
·week because of Arafat's
·monopoly of power, submit-

ted his resignation over the the pasi week while factions
weekend, but Arafat rejected of Arafat's Fatah movement ·
it. .
and his security forces sank
The two men remain Qead- deeper into violent rivalry.
locked, but Qureia has said
In Nablus, militants seized
IJe now sees himself only as a Fadel Alshouli, head of ttibal
caretaker.
affairs department at the local
Backing Qureia, parlia- government, and took him to
ment speaker Rauhi Fattouh the Balata Refugee Camp
said lawmakers were consid- outside the city, said the aide,
'
ering holding a monthlong Anan Ateen..
strike or a weeklong sit-in to
The governor, Mahmoud
protest Arafat's refusaL to Aloul, contacted the kidl]apgrant more authority to the pers and secured his release
after two' hours. It was not
Cabinet and parliament.
"Every one of us is respon- . clear if the kidnappers made
sible" for the failure to come any concrete demands, or
to grips with the security cri- whether the abduction was a
sis and the political instabili- form of protest by young milty, said Cabinet minister and 'rants against the Palestinian
lawmaker Qadoura Fares.
establishment.
"Arafat is the most respon- · The legislature's resolution
sible for the failure. President followed the shooting of
Arafat failed and the Nabil Amr, a former Cabinet
Palestinian
government minister and outspoken critic
failed, the Palestinian politi- of Arafat's management . of
cal factions failed," he told the Palestinian Authority.
The Associated Press.
Amr was hit by two bullets
In Washington, Secretary and seriously wounded by a
of State· Colin Powell joined gunman firing from the open
the chorus of criticism of balcony of his home in
Arafat for refusing to yield Ramallah, said his son Tareq.
any of his executive power.
The gunman escaped.
Describing the situ·arion in
During a heated parliament
Gaza as chaotic, Powell told debate. one legislator said the
reporters at the State shooting couldn't be the
Department: "All we can do work of a maverick gunman.
is to follow it and see how the
"I think that the person
Palestinians resolve this responsible ... is not a simple
problem."
.
· individual but rather a. b!g
The Syria-based head of and powerful man · w1thtn
the Hamas militant move- Fatah," said Azmi· Sheabi,
ment, Khaled, Mashaal, tele- referring to Arafat's political
phoned Arafat Wednesday to base.
urge him to restore calm.
---------~
Mashaal, whose organizalion has a wide following in
Gaza, called for "a wise leadership hand! ing to get out of ·
this turmoil and for resorting
to dialogue" to resolve
Palestinian dlfferences, said a
Subscribe today • 992-2155
Hamas statement.
!'lamas has sat quietly for

Public meetings

RUTLAND Rutland
Garden Club, 6 p.m. at the
home of Donna Jenkins.
Thursday, July 22
·
Potluck
picnic.
RUTLAND Rutland
Village Council will meet in
special session, 6:30 p.m. at
the Rutland Civic·Center.
Monday, July 26
•
POMEROY · Meigs
Saturday, July 24'
County Library regular board
ALBANY
-. The Staneart
meeting, 3 p.m. Monday at
family
reunion
.will be held at
the Pomeroy Library.
CHESTER - The TB Lake Snowden at the
Staff from the Meigs County Meadows Shelter · Hou se
Tuberculosis Office will be beginning at noon. Those
giving skintests at the fire attending are to take a picnic
depanment 4:30p.m.- 6 p.m. lunch and lawn chair.
Sunday, July 25
on Monday July 26. The TB
CARPENTER
'
Staff will make a return visit
from 4:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Homecoming will be held at
on July 28. Any questions the Mt. Union Baptist
can be directed to the Meigs Church. Services will begin ·
County Tuberculosis Office with Sunday School at 9:30
a.m. followed by a carry-in
at 1-740-992-3722.
dinner at noon and afternoon
services at I :30 p.m. The
Gabriel Quartet and Eternity,
along with local si ngers, will
be there. The Rev. Mark .
Morrow, pastor of the First
Thursday, July 22'
Baptist Church, Middleport,
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post 9053 w'ill meet at · will speak.
7 p.m. at the hall in Tuppers
REEDSVILLE The
Plains. There will be a spe- 68th annual Charles Wesley
and Elsie Florence Lucas
cia! drawing.
Buckley reunion will be held
POINT PLEASANT at Forked Run State Park,
Meigs-Gallia-Mason Marine south of Reedsville . A covCorps League, '7 p.m. erect dish dinner will be
Thursday at the Point served at 1 o'dock.
Pleasant Library.
Monday, July 26
RACINE
Southern
Band Boosters will meet at 7
p.m. at Southern High School
Wednesday, July 21
band room. Band supporters
RUTLAND - Vacation
are urged to attend.
Bible school will be held
· POMEROY - Oh-Kan from 6:30 tiY9 p.m. July 19Coin Club at 7 p.m. at the 23 at the ·Rutland Freewill
. Library. ·
Baptist Church. Classes will

Homecomings/
.:Reunions ·

·clubs and
organizations

Church services

-- ~·

..

be held for children, nursery
to teens. For rnore information call 742-2743.
POMEROY
Zion
Church of Christ Bible
school, 6:30 to 8:45 each
evening through July 25.
Monday, July 26
SYRACUSE
The
Asbury United Methodist
Church vacation Bible school
will be held 6 to 8 p.m. July
26-30 at the church. There
will be stories, crafts, games,
puppet shows, music and
refreshments. The closing
program will be held at II
a.m. on Sunday, Aug. I.
There will be classes for
preschool children to teens .
For more information contact
Rochelle Lamm, 992-0739.
RUTLAND - Vacation
Bible schqol will be held at
the
Rutland
Nazarene
Church, Main St., Rutland, by
Leon and Linda ·Armstrong
through July 30. Services will
be held from 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. Theme will be "God's
Word, Believe lt." There will
be games, crafts, and snacks
For transportation or more
information ca11992-7467.
, MIDDLEPORT
Vacation Bible school will be
held 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
through · July 30 at the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene. T.here wi II be
classes for children ages four
to 12. Art and Shirley
Kisbaugh will be conducting
the school which will include
stories, puppets, crafts and a
chest.
special
treasure
Refreshments will be served .
Allen Midcap is pastor.

Gardening road show offers
down home gardening
MARIETTA - The Master
Gardener Volunteers are continuing the highly successful
· Gardening Road Show Series
: with a motor ,coach .trip to
: west central Ohio.
On Aug. II the volunteers
will lead a. group throughOSU Extensions tnals of new
annual t:Jowe_rs, have lunch at
a datry farm m Spnngfteld, as
"Yell as learn about propaga: tton and enJOY dtsplay gar: dens Ill the afternoon.
.
, The first morntn~ stop with
. be the OSU ExtenswnAnnual
Research Tnals m Sprmgfield
, whe~e there will be a gu1ded
· tour by the Clark County
:Master Gardeners of the
trial
gardens.
: annual
: Gardeners will see how new
· plants in this year's trial s
• growing in a garden setting
, are doing. Many seed compa: nies from around the country
: send seed, which is grown

into plants at a local greenhouse there and then planted
at the OSU Extension office
to be evaluated during the
growing season.
Participants will enjoy a
wonderful lunch at the
Golden Jerse~ Inn Yellow
SJ?nngs. Youngs Jersey Datry
w1ll ho~t a down-home lunch.
a Deta1ls about the farm at on
the web at: www.youngsd a. I r Y · c 0 m
&lt;http.//www.youngsdalry.co
rnl&gt; ·
..
.
. .
The aftemoon w1ll begm at
Scarffs .
.
Nursery
( w w w. s c a r f f s . c o m
&lt;http://www.scarffs.com/&gt; )
in New Carlisle. A full-scale
production nursery to see how
trees and shrubs are grown
from seed and cuttings is
included along with some
hands on demonstrations on
propagation.
Returning through Newark,

~ ovcs teachers

the group will stop at
Wilson·' s Garden Center to
view what is described as
some of the best display gardens i'n the Midwest.
Gardeners will gain ideas on
how to design some of their
own garden space.
Participams will meet at the
Washington
County
Fairgrounds at 7 a.m. The fee
for the trip includes tours,
motor coach accommodations, and gardening information but not lunch. Master
Gardener Volunteers will host
h ·.
d .ll .
_
l e tnp an Wt an~wer ques
t1ons about gardemng.. The
fee IS $45.00 per person. . .
A tlyer and reg1stratwn
form can be ynnted from the
~ounty website at http://washmgton .osu.edu &lt;http://washington.osu.edul&gt; or by contacting Judy Waller or Peggy
Bolen at 740-.376-7431.

recognized

Once Again, The .Daily Sentinel Will Have A ..
Special Meigs County Fair Preview Edition. ·
This ·vear's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Ever!' Look For this Special .
Edition In Your Friday, August 13th Paper. "
BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS
A PART OF·THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION •• ;
CALL TODAY! .

.- .. . ,,.,

.
: Three teachers at the Ohio Valley 'christian School were presented service ·awards for the 2003c
: 04 school year by Dr. Fredrick w. Williams, administrator. Left to, right receiving her 25 year
:· award and $1,000 is Carolyn Cox, receiving her 10 years award and $500 1s Brenda McDamel,
:and receiving her five year award and $250 is Gina Tilli~ . Williams praised the teachers for
• their faithfulness and excellence .. Teachers at the school have an average school-wide tenure
: of 15.4 years.
'

.'
Call
DAVE or BRENDA

Proud to.be apart of
· your life. ·
......

BY THE BEND
Husband resents sharing
wife's time with her sons:
Thursday, July 22,

Community Calendar

SHIVER REPAIR

~CliNIC

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

2004

at

992-2155

•
•
•
•

Today in the Sentinel ...

..

"G_Pfaee: f&amp; ~ &amp; ~~ (&amp; JP&amp;"

FOR MORE INFORMATION
,

..

The Dail Sentinel

.
..:--·

.

•
•
•

...

DEAR ABBY: "Unwilling
in New Mexico"
told you she "can't stand"
her fiance 's 3-year-old
daughter and knows she wi II
be forced to ·care for the
Dear
child because the mother'
doesn't want her.
Abby
"Unwilling" should do all .
three of them. a huge favor
and end the relationship. I
married a man · two years
ago, when my sons were 19 adding the voice of experiand 21. He had no children ence. Read on:
of his own and assured me
DEAR ABBY: "Unwilling
he would accept mi.ne Stepmother" seems to be
unconditionally.
more like a child than an
Now I am constantly adult. When she became
berated for not "putting him serious with her fiance : how
first" or consulting him each could she not realize that his
and every time I want to little girl would be a big part
spend time with my sons or of her life'?
· help them . I'm heartsick that
"Unwilling" need .~ serious
I didn't see this before I fam ily counseling, or to get
married him . He has since out of there. She also seems .
told me that he "thought" he to have no clue about chi ld
could hand)e it, but I really development. Most 3-yearbelieve he thought he could. olds have a very self~ce~­
make me choose him over tered view of life. They must
my children.
be lovingly taught to
· If "U nwilling" has any become giving as they' grow.
doubts, she should not go
I married a 111an with two
through with the marria&amp;e I children eight years ago. As
am seriously contemplating part of our marriage vows. l
divorce because I see no promised to l·ove hi s chilother option. ·_ FOOLED dren as my own. It wasn't
IN TEXAS
easy, but today I am reaping
bEAR
FOOLED:
I the rewards of having two
·adv.ised "Unwilling" that wonderful stepchildren and
unless she can accept her o ne biological child. I
fiance and his daughter as a became very ill after the
package deal and learn to · bnby was born, and who do
love the little girl, that mar- you think was always there
riage would be a disservice to help'' Yes - both of my
tO all of them. Thank you for stepchildren. I love them as
Stepm~ther

2004

my own and coulp not imagine life witho•u them.
"Unwilling Stepmother"
is missing the best chm,lCe of
her life to really care and to
make a difference in that
child's life. - DISGUSTED
IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR DISGUSTED: You
have made so me excellent
points in your letter.
However. for famil y coun~e ling to work. all parties
have to be honest with eac h
other and willing to compromise. ''U nwill ing" would be
the little one's primary caregiver - and her mind.
seemed pretty we ll made up.
Her question was whether
she should level \\·ith her
fiance about he r feelin~s and
tell him she\ leaving' - or
wait for him 10 tigure out
how she felt nnd give her her
walking papers.
FROM MY COLLECTION OF LIMERICKS
There was a young girl
from St. Paul
Who wore a new spaper
dress to a ball. ·
The dress caught on lire
And burned her entire
Front page. sport s section
and all.
Dear Abbr is orritrm br
Abigail Vai1 Buren. als;,
ki!Ol!'ll as Jecume Phillif&gt;S.
and oras fuu nded by her
IIIOihfl: Pew/iii&lt;' Phillips.
Wrire
Deur Ah/J\
lll
\o·ww.DearAb/ncom
P.O.
Bux 69440. Lo.s Angeles. CA
')0069.

or

Immunizations offered at Reedsville
REEDSVILLE The
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OUCOM)
Childhood
Immunization
Program
(CHIP), a mobile health program,
is
coming
to
. Reedsville on Aug. 13 .
The unit will be at the
Meigs Library Eastern.
Branch on State route 7
which is located in the
school from I0:30- a.m. to
noon.
Immunizations will be
offered free for all area chi I-

dren from birth through 18
years or age. The service is
available to families of all
incomes - even those with
in surance coverage. To
receive immunizations, a
chi ld's previous shot records
are ~o be presented.
If 'a child has not had
chicken pox. the child can
come in for the chicken pox
' vaccine. Co mpli cat ion s
from chicken pox increase
ihe older the child is when,
he/she gets the disease. it
was reported.

The un it will also be at the
Cool Spot in Coolvil le, from
3 to 4 p.m. on Friday, Aug.
20.
The clinics are rrovideu by
OU-COM
Chi ldhood
Immunization
Program's
community mobile health
unit
&gt;i n'ct
the
Ohio
Department of Health in
cooperation with local health
departments. and site spon.sors. For more information
about the immunization program call toll free 1-800844-2654.

Maxey birth announced
REEDSVILLE - Amy and Sean Maxey of Reedsville announce the birth of a daughter.
Eleanor Rose Maxey, on July 9 at O'Bleness Memori al Hospital. Athens.

Second murder case suspect in custody
BY KEVtN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER. COM •

_;,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - The second suspect
in the death of a Letart man
last week is now in custody
and will be awaiting a hearing on setting 1:\ond in Mason
County Circuit Court.
Jeffrey A. Dorsey, 40,
Letart, .surrendered himself
late Wednesday morning to
sheriff's Sgt, Troy Stewan,
lead investigator in the case,
at the sheriff's office.
Dorsey then appeared
before Magistrate John S.
Reynolds oil a charge of
·first-degree murder.
Because· the magi strate
does not have the authority
set bend in murder cases,
Dorsey's attorney will file a
motion for bond with circuit
court and a hearing will be
scheduled later.
Dorsey told Reynolds he
will be ·represented by
Huntington
attorney
Herben Henderson.
' Dorsey was later transpo'rted to the Western
Regional
· Jail
at
Barboursville,
·where
Michael L. Neal Jr.. 24.
Letart, is also awaiting a
hearing on setting bond in
connection with the same
case.
Neal
was
arrested
Monday and charged with
first-degree murder, before
Reynolds. He and Dorsey
· are alleged to have had
roles in a·n incident that led
to the death of Francis
Leroy Pickens, 60, at
Pickens' Quincy Road residence ne!lf Letart.
Sheriff Scott Simms said
an altercation over what he
called "household propeny''
between the two suspects
and Pickens occurred July
i I. After the fight, Pickens
was able to , call 9-1-1 for
assistance . FoHowing an

initial transport to Pl easant
Valley Hospital by private
vehicle, he was taken by
HealthNet to to . Cabell
HUII\illgton Hospital , where
he died July 12.
The sheriff cou ld not elaborate further on thi! incident
or its cause.
'This concludes our effons

in finding those ' suspects
responsible and placing them
under arrest," Simms said in a
statement issued tu m·ea media.
Neal is being· represented
· by Point Pleasant attorney.s
Craig Tatterson and R.F,
Stein. who are also expected
to file a bond motion with
the court.

Q.UALITY PI&lt;£SCJ~tPTION
S£1&lt;VIC£
AT COl\/\P£TtTlV£ PI&lt;IC£S.
.We honor most third party
prescription plans. ·
Your Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacists, Chuck and ~en
are here to fill your
presc:ription needs.
,

------------------COUPON
~

: Up to $5.00 OFF :
:
t

•

•

an11 prescr1pt1on.

1

Limit 1 per customer, per prescription. :

: Swisher &amp;.Lohse Pharmac11
~,

I

expires 08-03-()4.

1
I

1

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

SWISHER • LOHSE

Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph .
Charles Riffle R. Ph ~
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS

Mon - Frl8om - 9pm
Sot. Sam - 5 pm

Sun. CLOSED

Open Weeknights 'Till9 • Frien.dly Service

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

(

•

�.

•

0

.•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
•

Thursday, July 22,

2004

Voters need wide debate on.foreign policy

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio ·

(740)

992-~156

• FAX (740) 992·2157

www.mydallyaentlnel.com ·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freela11d

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

Moderately Confused
Ht

,,

US'ED

VICEPRESIDENTIAL
LANGUAGE

0

0

i)oo
,.,oo
0
0 0

v()

IJ 0 0

Beyond the merits of
invading Iraq. this presi~en­
tial election ought to hinge
on some larger foreign policy questions. One is, hns
President Bush bitten otT
more than the United States .
can chew in trying to spread
democracy throughout the
Middle East?
Another is : Is Sen. John
Kerry, D-Mass .. so i1f!iicted
by post-Vietmim force,aversion that he'd be unable to
use military force to defend .
·u.s. interests?
Here are a few more major
questions: Can Bush regain
sufficient worldwide respect
that he can g~t cooperation
from other countries? Will
Kerry be so eager to rebuild
alliances that he gives foreigners a virtual veto over
U.S. policy 0
Want mOPe'! Will Bush's
second-term foreign-policy ·
team retain . a balance even a fractious one · between 'neo-conservative·
hawk idealists and prodiplomacy ·realists'? What
balance will Kerry strike
between pro-human-rights
idealism and hard U.S. iliterests?
How is each candidate
going to handle burgeoning
crises with North Korea and
Iran? As tied down as the
United States is in Iraq,
could Bush apply the doctrine of ' pre-emption' to
either of these if he had to?
Should he?
After Iraq, could Bush
ever convince the world that
one or the· other menace
requires military action?
Could Kerry' negotiate his
way through crises with
strength?
How will each dea:l with
t)le gro.wing power of China,
and its pressure on democratic Taiwan? And, should t,he
United States wink - · as

Morton
Kondracke

Bu sh does now at
Russian President Vladimir
Putin's increasing authoritarianism in order to sustain
cooperation on t~n·orism and
nuclear proliferation'/
These forward-looking
questions- many of which
arose at a recent sy mposium
sponsored by ttie New
America Foundation (NAF)
- have been largely over·
looked so far in the roughand-tumble of the 2004
debate,
At pre sent , Iraq ' is practically the -only focus of foreign-policy
exchanges
between the candidates, with
Democrats charging that
Bush deceived Congress and
the nation into war by exaggerating the threat ' posed by
weapons of mass destruction .
Bush responds - rightly
- that not only the Central
Intelligence Agency, but also
British and French' intelligence. the United Nations
and the Clinton administration all assumed that Iraq
possessed such weapons.
Bush goes on to assert
that, after the attacks of
Sept. I I. 200 I , he dared not
risk the poss ibility that
Saddam Hussein might pass
WMD to a terrorist group to
use against the United
States.
Now that it appears that
Hussein had no WMD and
had no ongoing coUabora- .
tion with AI Qaeda, the
question arises: If Bush
asserted- or if the CIA told

.,

carol A. Manuel

Kerry - that Iran o.r North ing U.S. alliances would be ,.
Korea was on the verge of one of his top priorities as
posing a nuclear menace, president.
Scheduling problems left
would anyone believe it?
As British journalist the NAF conference without
Martin Walker said at the a staunch Bush defender,
NAF symposium, 'One of who might tiave pointed out
the real tragedies of . that Bush has tried, unsuc·America's Iraq adventure is cessfully, to get NATO help
that I don't see much politi· in Iraq .
Such a participant might
cal will to take on Iran. It
looks to me as though we . also have- raised questions
will leave it to the Israelis,' about what price foreigners
who previously de stroyed - France, especially - ·
Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor might demand of Kerry for
better relations. A·Brazilian
in 1981.
Walker was one of several journalist did point out that
participants who charged Kerry might well adopt more
that Bush was exceeding protectionist trade policies
· America's capabilities by than Bush, confounding his
trying to spread democracy . efforts to rebuild alliances.
The major question about
through the . Middle East,
especially given the difficul- Kerry that I have - and it
ty of achieving stability in wasn't mentiooed at the conpost-war Iraq and anti-U.S. ference - concerns his willingness to use major military
feeling in the Mideast.
·we are the dominant force.
In 1991 , Kerry · voted
power in the world, but even
we htive limitations,' said against authorizing Bu sh's
Dimitri Simes, director of father to use force after
the Nixon Center. 'We can't Iraq's invasion of Kuwait,
impose democnicy even if which menaced the entire
uur purposes are benign. oil-rich region. Kerry argued
Hegemony never look s then , much as he does now,
that 'there is a rush to war. I
benign to olhers.
Americans generally don't do not know why,' and he
co~sider our country
a charged that President
'hegemon· (world-dominant George H.W. Bush lacked
power) or 'imperialistic,' but · sufficient domestic and
several foreign journalists international . support. Now
and U.S. participants said he applauds Bush's father's
that US. might and Bu sh's coalition-building.
Meantime, Bush will cerseeming disdain for the
views of other countries had tainly not say who will
raised· anti-Americanism to lead his second-term forrecord levels.
eign policy team, but he
Journali sts from France, ought to be asked whetlt,er
Germany and Brazil made ·it someone wi II be around to
clear that if foreigners had a take Secretary of State
vote for who shou ld be Colin Powell's place in
'leader· of the fr.ee worid,' challenging the hawkish
Kerry would win hands- influence of Vice President
down.
Cheney.
Kerry;· of course, is mak(Morton Kondracke is
ing U.S. 'respect in the executive editor of Roll Call,
world' a inajor campaign rhe newspaper of Capitol
issue, asserting that rebuild- Hill.)

The double-time march to war
~AHLtR· 7119
©2004 by NEA, Inc.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio .Valley P1;4blishing Co. 's
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

The -Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publlehlng Co.

Correctlort Polley
Published
el/8ry ' afternoon ,
Our main concem In all stories Is to be Mo.nday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. 1f you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio: Periodical
story. call the newsroom at (740) 992· postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the · Ohio ' Newspaper
· · Our main number le
(740) 992-2156.

Department extenalona 1re:

News
Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Repo(ter: Bnan 'Reed. Ext 14
Floporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext 13
Ed~or: Cha~ene

Advertising
Outllde SaiM: Dave Harris. ext. 15
c;luaJCirc.: Judy Clark, EJCt. 10

Circulation
Dletrlct lip.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

'
E·INIII:
news'Omydailysentinel.oom
'
www.mydallysenljnel.oom

Association.
· . PosllNister: Send address correc·
lions to Tha Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 .

Subscription Ratae
By carrier or motor route
One month ............'9.95
One yeaor ............'119.40
Deily ................. .!10'
. Senlar C~lan
One month ............'8.85
One yeaor .............'96.70

r-

Subs~rlbers

advance

should

remit

in

direct to The Daily
No subscription by maU

Sentinel .
permitted in areas where home

carrier service is available.

Mall SubKrlptlon
, ln11de Melga County·
13Weeks ..............'30.15
26 Weeks ........ : . ... .'60.00
52 Weeks .. ..... •.... '118.80

R8les Outakle

11eftP. County .

13 Weeks ............ '50.05
26Weeks ........... .'100.10
52 weeks . .......... .'200.20

One aspect of Michael
eluded were . nonexistent ·tive military action is necesMoore's documentary film,
links between fraq and AI ·sary.'
'Fahrenheit 9/1 I,' that you
Qaeda.
Among a dozen anony:
won't hear Republicans
The adrninis,tration had mous sources, they emphadenouncing is a 2001 video
stampeded Bush's war reso- . sized," 'no one who was
clip of Colin Powell calling
lution through Congress two interviewep disagreed.'
Gene
Saddam Hussein no threat.
months earlier. As the Senate
Meanwhile, an annex to
Lyons ·
· Audiences react with
report ·demonstrates to me, the Senate report reveals that
shocked murmurs. The film
the CIA had long since Pentagon civilian appointees
doesn't explain the context, a
cooked the books according secretly gave intelligence
Feb. 24, 200 I, diplomatic tary's low opinion· of Iraqi to the administration's 'counter-briefings' to White
meeting in Cairo. ·Pressed by martial prowess was obvious recipe. Assuming he actually House officials without the
Egyptian President Hosni · to anybO&lt;Iy with a modicum made
the
'slam-dunk' CIA director's knowledge.
· Mubarak about the Iraqi of the skepticism that's sup- remark, Bush must have Headed by Douglas Feith, a
people's suffering under U.S. posed to be a virtue among wanted them parboiled.
neo-conservative
hawk
economic sanctions, Powell journalists. As this column
·The Republican majority who'd advocated war witb
reminded his audience that noted. even as the Bush on the Senate Intelligence lr&lt;~q since long before 9111,
they exis\ed to check White House began its pre- Committee should be com- they evidently filled Bush's
Saddam's ambitions.
war . war sales campaign, mended for its patriotic dili- eager ears with tales of
'And frankly,' he added, U.S. forces mobilized open- gence in bringing its Saddam's' imaginary alliance
'they have worked. He has ly along the Iraqi border as if scathing report to public with Osama bin Laden.
not developed any signifi- Saddam's army had no attention shortly before the
Everybody who's ever
cant capability with respect capacity to defend itself. most crucial . presidential worked in a large orga!Jizato. weapons of mass destruc- Had . the Pentagon · truly election of our times. Its tion knows the difficulty of
tion. He is unable to project believed Iraq possessed attempts to shield Bush from moving unwelcome inforconventional power against nuclear weapons, its actions political consequences by mation up the chain of comhis neighbors.'
'
would have been the equiva- denying that White House mand inside hierarchical
Not only was Iraq no dan· lent of notifying Adolf Hitler pressure helped cause the bureaucracies.
Nobody's
ger to the United States, ·it in advance about the D-Day intelligence debacle, howev- eager to tell his boss' boss
had no capacity to menace lil.ndings. A nuclear bomb er, shouldn't fool an inquisi- something that person doessuch powerhouses as Jordan smuggled into the U.S. tive child.
n't want to hear..The stronger
and Kuwait. So why are we encampment could ·have
Not every American news the command structure, i.e.
reading· news accounts like caused an unimaginable cat- organization ignored the military and quasi-military
this in July 2004: 'Saddam's astrophe.
obvious. As early as Oct. 8, bureaucracies, the harder it
army posed little threat.
So no, I'm not buying the 2002, Warren P. Strobel and gets to push bad news to the
Senate panel says' and oft-repeated anecdote from Jonathan S. Landay of .the top. It's one big reason com'Panel describes long weak- Bob Woodward's book: . Knight·Ridder newspapers . munism never worked.
ening of Hussein army.'
The only, known antidote
'Plan of Attack,' in which a reponed that 'a. growing
Almost I ,000 American skeptical President Bush number of military officers, for . such organized folly is
and an estimated I 0,000 tells CIA director George intelligence professionals and democracy. And the question
Iraqi deaths and a strategic Tenet in December 2002 that diplomats in (Bush's) own i'S whether voters will punish
. nightmare , later, we have his 'slamdunk' case for Iraqi . government privately have our callow, cocksure presicome full circle. But WMDs wasn't good enough . deep misgivings about the dent for the tenible strategic
Michael Moore had to tell to sell 'Joe Public' on war. administration's double-time debacle into which he has
you. So how come nobody By that time, White House march toward war.... They led the country.·
important in what · The spokesmen, Bush emphatl- charge that the administration
(Arkansas
Democrat·
Nation columnist Eric cally among th~m . had been squelches dissenting views Gazette columnist Gene
Alterman calls (he 'so-called scaring Americans
for ~;~nd that intelligence analysts Lyons is a naJional magaliberal media' pressed the months with talk about are under intense pressure to zine award winner and co·
secretary of state to explain · 'mushroom clouds' (Condi produce reports · supporting autho; of 'The Hunting of
himself before the war, when Rke) and 'bulletproof' evi- the White House's argument. tile President' (St. Martin's
it might. have made some dence (Donald Rumsfeld) of that Saddam poses such an Press, 2000). You can Nnail
difference? Good question.
what both the Senate and the immediate threat to the Lyons at genelyons2@
Actually, the U.S. mili-. 9111 Commission have con- United States that pre-emp- cs.com.)

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www ·lllYdailysentinel.com, '

2004

Obituaries

\

The Daily Sentinel

..

Thursday, July 22,

PageA4

'

RACINE Carol A.
Manuel. 50. Racine, passed
away at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday,
July 20. 2004 at her Letart
Township residence.
: Born October 2 1. 1953 in
Point Pleasant, W.Va ., she
was the daughter of Margaret
. Lieving Brewer of Point
Pleasant and the late Howard
William Brewer Sr.
She was a former employee
of Robbins &amp; Myers Co. in
Gallipolis and later was· a
cook in the Southern Local
Schools in Racine. She
attended the Racine First
Baptist Church.
In addition to il&lt;:r mother
she is survived hy her husband. Lester Manuel; two
sons, Michael Manuel and
Zachary Manuel, both at
home; step-daughters. Katie
. Manuel Perry, Lascruces,
N.M.and Bernessa Phillips,
Pomeroy; and three stepsons, Gene Hood. Syracuse.
Mark Hood, Cheshire and
Phillip Hood, Clifton, W.Va.
Also surviving are two sisters, Diana (Stephen) Adams,
Vinton ,
and Martha
(Thomas) Roush, Gallipolis
Ferry, W Va . and a brother.
Howard William (Caro.lyn)
Brewer Jr., of Hartford,
W.Va. Several nieces and
nephews also survive.
She was preceded in death
by her father, Howard
William Brewer Sr.
Funeral services will be at
II a.i)1 Friday, July 23, 2004,
in the Racine First Baptist
Church. Officiating will be.
Rev. Rick Rule. Interment

will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call
fr'? m 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday at
the Cremeens Funeral Home.
Racine. The body will lie in
state at the church one hour
. prior to the funeral service.

was pan owner and operator
of the Marietta Transfer
Terminal of Marietta.
John attended the United
Brethren
Church
at
Reedsville and was a member
of their YMB (Youth Mission
Band.) He 'attended Ohio
. State University. Indiana
University and Rip Grande
College. Wildlife in the State
of Ohro . was a main focus
COLUMBUS - Shirley during his lifetime . He was
Irene Rou sh Mulford, 95 , recognized and active in the
longtime
res ident
of American Trap Shooting
Columbus. peacefully passed Ass6cia1ion and also an
active member. and past presaway on July 19. 2004.
Shirley was born on April ident of the Marietta Gun
20, 1909 in Hobson. Ohio. Club. He was an avid Harley·She was preceded in. death by Davidson owner and rider:
her loving parents, Owen H. He graduated in 1958 from
Roush and Hanna Lambert Eastern High SchooL
He is survived by his
Rou sh; four brothers, Dana,
grandmother.
Edith Erdman
Jonas, William . and Marvin
Rou sh·; and one sister, Neva of Belpre; Brian Todd Hetzer
of Marietta ; daughter, 1'iffany
Rou sh Sassles.
Gail
Hetzer Hoelscher and
She is survived by many
her husband, David, Maria
nieces and nephcw,s.
Stein,
Ohio; a sister, Janet
· Graveside l&gt;erv ices will be·
Hoffman
and her husband,
held at Gravel Hil l Cemetery
in Cheshire-at I p.m. on Aug. Terry of Pomeroy ; a niece,
Lisa Short and her hu sband,
3. AI Hartson will officiate.
Dan, of Pomeroy; a nephew
Brian HotTman of Auburn
Hills, Mich. ; beloved granddaughters, Marylou and
MARIETTA - John H. Samatha Hoelscher of Maria
Hetzer, 63, . of Miller Lane, Stein, Ohio; great niece and
Marietta, died Tuesday. July nephew, Meghan and Ethan:
20, 2004 at Grant Hospitt!I, Short of . Pomeroy; special
cousins, Patricia Boring
Columbus.
Burn on March. 26. 1941, at Martin and her · hu sband
Reedsville, he was the son of Hugh of Reedsville; and
John V. Hetzer and Phyllis Michael Boring and his wife,
Boring.
Laura, Winterset, Iowa; sevHe was retired from Cabot eral close family friends ,
Corporation. Waverly. W.Va. Marilyn ·
Strother
of
where he worked as a mainte - Lm1isville , Ky.; · Jennifer
nance superintendent . He Anderson, Vienna, W. Va.;

Shirtey Roush
MuHord

John H. Hetzer

For the record
Sheriff's Office
investigates
several ·
complaints

He was a lifelong farmer was a housewife and had
and former employee of been ill for about two years.
She is survived by a daughGoodrich-Gulf at In stitute,
W.Va. He was also a deputy ter and son-in- law. Clara
·auditor/appraiser for Meigs "Susie" and Ji1n Soulsby of
County and surrounding Pomeroy; a son and daugh·
counties in Ohio .
ter-in-law. Jed and Vicki Will .
He was preceded in death of Cummings. Ga.; a sister.
by hi s brother, Dale Dwight Betty Butcher of Pomeroy:
Warner.
·
five gra ndchi ldren. Susie
He is survived by his moth- . (Roger) Abbott of Pomeroy.
er and father, Roy and Lola Pat (Terri) Soubby of
Casto Warner of Eleano·r. Tuppers Plain&gt; . Jimm er
W.Va.; sons, Ronald L (Conme)
Soulsby · ot
Warner of Gallipolis, and Pomeroy; Cindy .(Steve)
Jeffery H. Warner of Vinton : Shull or Pomeroy. and Stacy
brothers. Wayne Warner of ( Kirt ) Lowther of Ball
Huntington, W Va ., and Gary Gound. Ga.: 12 great-grandWarner of Red Hou se. W.Va.; children. and one great-greatsister, Brenda McDavid. of grandchild.
Eleanor. W Va.. and grandBesides her parents. she .
children, McKenna Warner. was preceded in death by her
Aliza Warner and Emma hu sband. Jed. four brothers
Warner. ·
and three sisters. .
Services will be II a.m.
Funeral services will be held
Friday, July 23. 2004. at .the at I' p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Red House UBI Church, with Funeral Home. The Rev. Bob
Paul Arthur and Pastor Greg Robinson will officiate and
Blake officiating. Burial will burial will be in Beech Grove
be at the Emma Chapel Cemetery. Friends may call
Cemetery at Liberty, W.Va. from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday at
Friends may call at the the funeral home.
Raynes
Funeral Home in
Denver Lee Warner, 64. of
Buffalo.
W.Va.
, from 5 to 9
Vinton ,
p:m. Thursday, July 22, 2004,
Ohio, forand
from 10 to II a.m. Friday
merly of
at
the
church.
Putnam
..
County,
MIDDLEPORT - . Audrey
W.Va.,
· Davenport, Middleport, died
passed
July 20, 2004 at Hpller
a w a y
POMEROY -Virginia Medical Center. Gallipolis.
Tuesday,
Services wi II be held at II
Will, 92, of Pomeroy, died
July
20,
Tuesday, July 20. 2004 at the a.m on Saturday, July 24. at
2004,
at
Darst Adult Home in · Fisher Funeral Home in
Holzer
Pomeroy.
Middleport. Friend s may call
Medical
Warner
Born on Feb. 23. 1912 in 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday
Center
in
.
Pomeroy she was the daugh- at the funeral home.
Gallipolis, Ohio, following a. ter of Henry "String" Young
A full obituary will be pubshort illness.
and Clara Lehew Young. She lished Friday.

Janet Haught, Marietta ; Jay
Owens, Waterford; Judy
Reed, Charleston, W. Va. and
Pat
Farnsworth
of
Parkersburg, W. Va. along
with many others.
He was preceded in death
by his . parents. an aunt and
uncle , · Erika and Grant
Boring; grandparents Ira
Boring, John and Mamie
Hetzer;
step-grandfather.
· Harry Sovell; step-aunts and
uncles. Kenneth Sovell,
Helen Sovell Butcher and
Clifford SoveiL
. Memorials may be made to
Hospice or the State of Ohio
Wildlife Fund .
Funeral services will be
held at II a.m. Friday, July
23, 2004 at the Hadley
Funeral Home , Reno ChapeL
I021 Pike St., Marietta .
Friends will be received at
the Reno Chapel from 2 'to 4
and 6 to 8 Thursday, July 22.

1

•

a.

Denver
Wamer

Audrey

Davenport

Virginia Will

1

LiSt of Ohio casualties .i n Iraq
~

.

.

.

Cavalier from the home of
Here is a list oJ Ohio sol- injuries he suffered while try- not surface. Bates' body later when a rocket . propelled
Linda Pridemore of Pomeroy
diers killed in Iraq: .
ing to stop an attack on a was recovered and his status grenade round was fired
and two hreakings and entercheckpoint
changed to deceased. He was from a nearby house.
ings. one occurring at the
(AP)
Marine
Cpl.
Todd
Marine
Lance
Cpl.
assigned
to the I 35th
_ Army Pfc. Branden F.
home of Dawn Romine in
J Godwin, 21 , of Zanesville, Michael J. Smith Jr., 21, of Military Police Company, Oberleitner,
20 ,
o(
Pomeroy and the second at
~as
killed
when
a
bomb
Wintersville.
died
of
injuries
Army
National
Guard
in
Worthington
,
with
the
IQls~
the Rutland home of the
exploded near him during suffered from enemy action Brook Park.
Airborne Division. He was
grandmother of Carol Mahr.
POMEROY- Complaints A variety of items were taken
combat. He was assigned to in AI Anbar Province, Iraq.
-· Army Pfc. Kenneth C. killed in Falluj·ah, Iraq, after
the I st Battalion; 8th The government did not Souslin, 21, of Mansfield. He
of assaults, theft of a vehicle from the fwo residences,. it
Marines.
2nd
Marine release more details on how died of non-combat related his unit was fired upon by a
and several breakings and was reported.
he died.
mJUnes
at
Baghdad rifle-propelled grenade ..
Division.
enterings, are under investi·
Other incidents under
- . Army Spc. Joseph M.
-Army Spc. Allen "AJ.'' International Airport He was
-Army Lt. CoL Dominic
gation by the department of · investigation include vandal 20, .
of assigned to the 440th Signal R. Baragona, 42, of Niles.
Garmback Jr., 24. of Vandayburg,
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph ism on the property of
C,leveland,
was
killed
along
Mansfield,
was
killed
when
Company, 22nd
Signal with
19th Maintena~ce .
E. TrusselL
Debbie
Gallagher
in
with
four
members
of
his
his
1st
Infantry
Division
conBrigade,
V
Corps,
Battalion.
He was killed in a
Truss~ll reported that Keith
Pomeroy; theft of $50 worth
multi-vehicle traffic acciden~
unit during a mortar attack voy was.' attacked by insur- Darmstadt, Germany.
H&lt;~rris of Reedsville had of firewood from the resion Iraqi National Guard gents.
Army
National near Safwan, Iraq .
complained of an individual dence of Ruby Coughenour
headquarters in Baghdad. He
-Marine Cpl. Andrew D. Guardsman Staff Sgt. Aaron
C f
drawing a knife on him in his at Langsville ; removal of
was
assigned
to.
the
I
st
Brownfield,
24,
of
Akron.
Reese,
31,
of
Reynoldsburg.
Army
·
hie Warrant
driveway, while Matthew firearms from the home ' of
Battalion,
26th
Infantry
Brownfield,
assigned
to
the
He
died
after
falling
from
a
Officer
Brian
K
.. Van Dusen;
Burke of Belpre alleged that Kathy Sal ser, Middleport;
Regiment,
I st
Infantry Marine
Wing
Support patrol boat in)o the Tigris of Columb11s, -with the 571 st
he was assaulted while visit- and theft of tools from the
Division.
Schweinfurt,
Sqaudron
374,
Twentynine
River. He was the first Ohio Air Medical Company.
ing i,n "the county. · Alisha back of a truck owned by
Germany.
Palms,
Calif.,
died
of
injuries
Guardsman
to die in Iraq.
During the re sc ue of _a ,
Myers . of Rutland reported Roy Miller while parked at
Army Pfc. Samuel suffered in a mortar attack on
- Artny Sgt. Steven D. · wounded lraq1 child, hiS
that she had been harassed by Millies '
Restaurant
at
Bowen,
38.
of
Cleveland,
•
AI
Asad
Air
Base.
Conover,
21, of Wilmington. Black Hawk medical heliriders of four-wheelers and Bradbury.
-'
.
with
the
216th
..
Engineer
-Army
Staff
Sgt.
Richard
He
was
among
l6 Americans copter snagged a power \\'ire
that eggs had been thrown at
Trussell also noted that
Battalion from Brook Park, P. Ramey. 27, of Canton. k1lled m a m1Ss1le attack on a during takeoff and !lipped
ber home. The three inci- Charle s Curfman escaped
was
killed in Samarra, Iraq , Ramey, assigned to the 703rd helicopter near . Falluph , over into the ' Tigris River.
dents are being investigated, custody whi le waiting to be
when · a rocket-propelled Ordnance Company, Fort Iraq, as 1t earned. troops The child was in another
Trussell reported.
seen by Judge Steve Story in
Also under investigation · Meigs County Court on a · grenade exploded near his Knox, Ky., was killed when bound for two weeks· leave. helicopter.
vehicle.
. insurgents attacked Army
- . Army Spc. James E.
.
. are the theft of a 1987 Chevy felony charge .
-· Army Sgt. Michael convoys with explosives in Powell II 26 of Columbus.' Army Pfc. Marlm
Barkey, 22, of Canal Fulton, Mahmudiyah.
He was ' kiiJed when his Rockhold, 23, of Hamilton,
when
hi
s
vehicle
flipped
Army
Staff
Sgt.
Roger
Bradley
armored vehicle w!th . th e 3rd Infantry
died
over. He was a member of C. Turner Jr., 37, who grew struck a land mine near Beiji, DIVIsiOn. He was shot by a
the 1484th Transportation up in Pomeroy in Meigs ~0 miles north of Tikrit, sniper while directing traffic
Company based in Akron.
County. A vehicle mechanic Sad dam Hussein's home- at a bridge in Baghdad.
-Army Sgt.
Charles assigned to the lOth Cavalry town.
- Marine Pfc . Christian.
Kiser, 37, who grew up in Regiment, 4th Infantry · - JameS' C. Wright, 27, of Daniel Gurtner, 19, of Ohio
Meigs County Court House will be closed Friday due to the
Amelia, was killed outsi,de Division, Turner . died of Delhi Township in suburban City. with the 3rd Light··
death of Denver Lee Warner.
Mosul by a car bomb. Kiser injuries suffered in a mortar Cincinnati, with the Fourth Armored Reconnaissance
was with the 330th Military attack on his base near Infantry. He was killed in an Battalion. He was killed
ambush near Tikrit when his
Police Division. a reserve Balad.
unit based in Sheboygan,
- Anny Staff Sgt. Sean vehicle was hit .with rocket- when his gun accideotally
Wis .
Landrus. 3 I, of Thompson propelled ~renades.
went off.
- Mmy Pfc. Nicholaus E. Township in ·Geauga County.
- Army Spc . Brett T.
- Army Pvt. Brandon
Zimmer, 20. of Columbus; Assigned to the I st Engineer Christian of North Royalton , Sloan. 19. of Bedford
died in Kufa when his vehi- Battalion of the I st Infantry with the · 10 I st A:irborne Heights. with the 50 7th
cle was hit. by rocket pro- Division, Landrus was killed Division. He was killed in Maintenance Company. He
pellep grenades. He had bee!J when a roadside bomb . Mosul when ·his convoy was killed after Iraqi .forces
LOS ANGELES (AP) - · A north of Los Angeles. county
assigned to the 2.nd Battalion, expl9ded as he was driving a came under attack by rocket ambushed a supply convoy
third major wildfire burning fire Capt Anthony Penn said.
propelled grenades.. ·
near Nasiriyah .. Originally
37th Armored Regiment, 1st truck near Khalidiyah.
north of Los Angeles swelled · The fire, propelled by
winds
gusting
up
to
25
mph.
to more than 8,000 acres
Armored Division, Friedburg
- Army Staff Sgt. Lester
-Army Pfc . Kevm C. Ott, listed as missi ng until eight
Germany.
0. Kinney. II, 27, of 27, of Orient, with the 18th bodies were found in the resWednesday, threatening hun- was moving toward an area
- Army Spc. Charles E. Zan'esville. A paratrooper Field Artillery Regiment.
•
·
dreds of homes on the edge of scattered homes in three
Odums II, 22, of Sandusky, with the 2nd Battalion of the The bodies of Ott and anoth· cue of an American POW
desert communities.
of the Mojave Desert.
with Headquarters and 505th Infantry, Kinney -was er soldier were found 20
Army Master Sgt.
Firefighters were watching
It was the third large fire in
Headquaners
Company
of
killed
when
a
roadside
bomb
miles
northwest
of
B~hdad
Robert
J. Dowdy, 38, of
and around the Angeles the tlames closely because
the 1st Battalion, 8th Cavalry exploded west of Baghdad.
three days after they fa1led to Cleveland, with the 507th
National Forest and the latest the area is thick with thouRegiment;
I
st
Cavalry'
Army
Spc.
Todd
M.
respond to a radio check.
Maintenance Company. He
sands
of
dead
juni)ll!r
and
in a series of blazes that have
pine
trees
that
were
ravaged
Division at Fort Hood, Texas. Bates, 20, of Bellaire. He
- Army Pfc . Gav111 L. was killed in the same
raged across California
· by six years of drought and
He .was killed in Baghdad was on _uiver patrol on the •Neighbor. 20. of Somerset, ambush a&gt; Sloan.
unusually early in the year.
when a bomb exploded near Tigris , River south of with . the 82nd Airborne
"What we're experiencing an infestation of bark beetles.
"We
have
things
packed
the
patroL
Baghdad when his squad DIVISIOn . He was off work
here in Southern California is
SOURCE: U.S.
to
go,"
Kathy
and
ready
- Army Pfc. Jesse Buryj, ·leader felL overboard. Bates from guard duty m Baghdad
pretty much unprecedented,"
Depa rtment of Defeme •
2·1, of Canton, died of dived into the water and did and had been resting on a bus
said Jody Noiron, fore st Covington. whose home was
. supervisor for the Angeles in the path of the approaching .
flames, told KCAL-TV.
National Forest.
Three national forest roads
First Lady Hope Taft and Ohio State
Six hundred homes ·were
Difference Day 2004. Oct 23. .
evacuated, county Fire Chief , were closed indefinitely. includ·
Preparation activities can take place in football coac h. Jim Tressel are the
P. Michael Freeman said. ing a popular commuter route
advance of the d11te and be included in chairs of the Ohio effort. Ohio has led
Two homes and a bridge from the growing Antelope
project costs. Funds may ,be used for the . nation in Make A Difference Day
from PageA1
Valley to _Los,Angeles.
were destroyed Tuesday.
project materials and supplies. technical
The cause of the fire was
Officials said the fire was
·and volunteer recognition. activities for the la~t five years.
consultation
tion is urging groups to combine projust 20 percent contained unknown.
Organizations interested in receiving
jects into o~e county proposal wherev- Mini-grant applications are due to
Hot, dry weather has helped
after growin¥ to more than
er possible. $500, or 25% of the tqtaL Ohio's Hill Country Heritage Area pro- an application packet for participation
8,000 acres m less than 24 spread a series of Southern
in the program shou ld contact the Ohio .
grant in local cash match is required for gram by Aug 3 L
hours. At one point, it .California fires in the past
Make
A
Difference
Day
is
a
national
Hill CQuntry's Heritage office viJ eproposals," Tribe said.
appeared to cover I 0.000 week. Threatened communicalls
community
volunteers
event
that
The
activity
funded
by
the
mini
ties
have
so
far
avoided
the
mail at mdd@ohiohillcountry.org or by
acres. but authorities later
large-scale loss of homes that
grants should involve significant volull- into action across America with support writing to Ohio Hill Country Heritage
reduced that estimate.
teer participation and take place to as , and publicity for the event coming · Area, P.• 0. Bo~ . 328. Athens, Ohio
, More than 2,300 firefighters occurred during wildfires last
great extent as possible on Make A from USA Weekend magazine and The
battled the blaze in dry brush fall, but officials warned that
Points of Li~ht Foundation. Ohio's 45701.
the
fire
season
is
young.
and timber about 50 miles

Local Briefs

Court house will be closed

New wildfir~ expands
north of Los Angeles

Grants

�PageA6

REGION
Poultry plant fires 11 workers over abuse ·of chickens

;The Daily Sentinel

Thursdal(, July 22,

CHARLESTON,
W.Va. by an investigator with the
(AP) -A poultry processing People for the Ethical
plant fired II workers on Treatment of Animals.
Wednesday, a day after an
The group said its investi- ·
animal rights group released gator also obtained eyewita secretly shot video of work- ness · testimony
about
ers kicking, stomping and employees "ripping birds'
· smashing chickens against beaks off, spray-painting
' walls at the West Virginia their faces, twisting their
facility.
heads off. spitting tobacco
. Pilgrim's Pride, a supplier into their mouths and ·eyes,
'for KFC chicken restaurants, and breaking them in half ···said three of those fired at its all while the birds are still
plant in . Moorefield were alive.
managers and eight were
KFC President · Gregg
hourly workers.
Dedrick said the fast-food
"We will continue with this company will stop buying
investigation until we're con- from the Moorefield plant
fident that every employee- until Pilgrim's Pride can .
-:regardless of rank - _who ensure no future abuse will
had knowledge of these u1ci- occur. KFC also will place a
dents has been held account- . full -time inspector in the
able for their actions," presi- plant to watch for further
dent and chief operating offi- abUSfl.
cer 0. B. Goolsby said
PETA and the Humane
Wednesday evening.
Society of the United States
· The Pittsburg, Texas-based . want
Hardy
County
..company said it has put quai- Prosecutor . Lucas See to
:Hy assurance momtors on charge workers and managers
·both shifts at the plant, and with animal cruelty. See said
managers at itS 24 other • Wednesday he has not fin·North American plants were ished viewing the videotapes.
·told to educate workers about
Under state law, employees
.animal welfare policies.
found to have tortured the
• The grainy videotape, birds could be charged with
which was released over the felony animal cruelty, which
.Internet, was secretly record- carrie~ a prison sentence of
ed between October and May one to three years. ·
H

PETA spokesman Michael
McGraw said the group also
wants all KFC suppliers to
install cameras on slaughter
lines that he said move too
qu ic kl y and are staffed by
poorly paid workers and
uncaring managers. PETA
also wants the phase-in of
"cont~olled
atmosphere
killing." in which chickens
are gatl\ered by machines
instead of people.
'' In cases where workers
are paid so little - and they
really do have terrible jobs they tend to take out their
frustrations on the animals,"
McGraw said. "Modern tech- '
nology can actually be more
humane."
Pilgrim's Pride • is among
the largest poul!ry producers
in the United States and
Mexico, wiih more than
40,000 employees in 17states, Mexico and Puerto
Rico.
PETA has been pressuring
KFC since last year, when it
sued the company and called
for a boycott, demanding that
KFC require suppliers to treat
animals more humanely.
Separately, the Humane
Society's president, Wayne
Pacelle, demanded that
Congress hold hearings on

2004

Treatment of Animals
secretly filmed at the
Moorefield plant between
Octobe,r and May, then
.released the images this
wee~&lt;. on the Internet as part
of a campaign against KFC.
PETA
spokesman
Michael McGraw said the
group wants all KFC suppliers, including Pilgrim 's
Pride ; to install cameras on
slaughter lines that he said
move too quickly and are
staffed by poorly paid
workers and uncaring managers. PETA also wants the
phase-in of "controlled
atmosphere killing," in
which chickens are gathered by machines instead of
people.
"In cases where workers
are paid so little - and they
really do have terrible jobs
- they tend to take out
their frustrations on the animals,"
McGraw
said.
"Modern technology can
actually be more humane ."
McGraw said machines
are used widely in Europe,
and Pilgrim's Pride c.ould
move displaced workers
into
other . positions.
Pilgrim's Pride is the second largest poultry producer in the United States and
Mexico, with more than
40,000 employees at facilities in 17 states, Mexico
and Puerto Rico. ·
PETA and the Humane
Society want Hardy County
Prosecutor Lucas See to
charge 'workers and managers with animal cruelty,
but See said Wednesday he
has not finished viewing lhe
videotapes. Once he does,
he may ask local authorities
to begin an investigation.
See said he would not

-

1.' f

'

.

ACI - 32.60
AEP- 31 .30
Akzo - 34.80
Ashland Inc. - 51 .61
BBT -38.22
BLI- 12.76
Bob Evans- 27.00
BorgWarner - 44.40
City Holding - ;!8.95
Champio~ - 4.02
Charming 'Shops - 7.1;&lt;
Col - 34.62
DuPont - 42 .15 '
DG-19.11
federal Mog1,1l - .26

NewsChannel.

,

Gannett- 82 .29
General Electric- 32.60
GKNLY - 4.55
..
Harley Davidson - 60.68
Kmart- 74.26
Kroger - 16.56
ltd - 19.65
NSC - 26.11
Oak Hill Financial - 33.67
OVBC- 32 988
Peoples - 25 .01
Pepsico - 51.12
Premier - 9.89
Rocky Boots- 22.89
RD Shell - 51 .13

Rockwell - 36.05
Sears- 34.93
SBC -23.20
AT&amp;T -14.32
USB -27.77
Wendy's - 36.40
Wai-Mart - 53.12
Worthington - 20.26
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions ,
provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc . of Gallipolis.

Officers disciplined for.delay
in summoning ambulance
The office at the Pilgrim's Pride plant in Moorefield, W.Va. , is shown Wednesd&lt;;~y. Pilgrim's Pride, a
supplier for .Kentucky Fried Chicken, suspended a worker without pay and fs"investigating three oth'
ers after People for the Ethical Treatmen't of Animals, an animal rights group, released a secretly
recorded video of wor~.ers kicking, stomping and throwing birds against walls atthe plant. (AP)
the videotape and called for
Pilgrim' s
Pride . cooperate . with any gov.ernA
the ·expansion of federal laws · spoke sman , Ray Atkinson.
to protect poultry from abuse. said the company would ment investigation.

CINCINNATI (AP) rely solely on PETA's docuThree
consecutive years of
mentation .
a~ a deficit will
operating
Under state law, employreq11ire the Cincinnati
ees found to have tortured
Symphony
Orche stra to
the birds could be charged
look at major cost-cutting
_with 'felony animal cruelty,
despite
a $1.8 million gift
which carries a prison .senfrom an anonymous donor
tence of one to three years.
that will erase the deficits
Federal law, however,
for the 2003 and 2004 fis fail s to protect chicken and
cal years.
turkeys, which the Humane
Falling financial results
Society said account foc95
for the past two years, a
percent of all animals
loss of about $1.45 million
slaughtered for food in the
this year and investment
United States.
losses mean that the sym"These animals are more
_phony will have to look
than meat machines, and
for ways to stay in the
Congress must provide
black the · next couple of
some basic standards for
years.
their humane handling and
The symphony, which
care," Pacelle said.
starts negotiations with its
KFC President Gregg
99 musicians this month,
Dedrick said the fast-food
must cope with the dilem· company will stop buying
ma facing many arts orgafrom the' Moorefield plant
nizations - finding a way
until the company can .
to cut costs without cutensure no future abuse will
ting artistic quality.
occur. KFC buys about 15
"Great art doesn't come
percent of the chicken pro·c heap," board chairman
duced at the plant, which is
Dan Hoffheimer said.
one of 34 suppliers.
Symphony officials are
· KFC also has a full-time
reviewing several · possi inspector in Moorefield
bilities fo cut costs.
now to watch for further
'Sy mphony
president
abuse, Dedrick said.
Steven Monder said the
Still, PETA called foe the
annual holiday revue is in
resignation David Novak,
jeopardy after losing a
chief executive officer of
sponsor, and the symphoYum! Brands, KFC's parent
ny is not comll]itting to
company, saying he has not · staging the Jammin ' on
done enough to stop abuse'
Main music street festival
at .suppliers' facilities.·
again in 2005. The festi Calls to Yum! Brands · val lost about $200,000
were
not immediately
the past two years.
·returned Wednesday.
In addition, the program
· On the New York Stock
handbook for the season
of
Exchange, · shares
will not be printed. It will
Pilgrim 's Pride fell $1.0 I, . be offered only on the
or 3.4 percent, to close at
Internet.
$28.84 Wednesday, while
Efforts last year to' cut
Yum! Brands dropped 86
costs re sulted in eliminacents, or 2.2 percent, to
tion of the Bach &amp;
close at $38.39.

Beyond summer. concert
se ri es and an average
increase in ticket prices of
about
25
percent.
Hoffheimer said the symphony will consider another price inc rease next year.
So far, the symphony
ha s not had to reduce its
52-week season or its full
complement of musicians ,
but the musicians' contract
- rmlghly half of the
· symphony 's $31.9 million
budget -expires Sept. 4.
The symphony has been
unable to write a financial
plan for 2004-05 because
of the talk s With musicians
that started .ea rlier this
month . No offer is on the
.
table yeL
"We had the financial
picture presented to lis ,"
said Eugene frey, president of the Musician s
Union, Ci-ncinnati Local
No. I. ''It seems as though
every major orchestra ,
bigger and smaller, is in
the same position, arguing
about pension, health care
and the fact that )hey don ' t
have enough money."

Management has not
indicated any pos sible
contract cuts, but health
care is a major issue, Frey
said.
The Cincinnati symphony is not alone in the
fi-nancial challenges it
face s. More than half of
· the nation 's · sy mphonie s
have operating deficits ,
according to the American
Symphony .
Orchestra
League . Many are seeking
financial concessions from
mus1C1ans,
although
Hoffheimer and Mander
would not say whether the
Cincinnati orchest~a plans
to do that.
Higher ticket sales alone
probably won' t solve the
money problen\ . While
attendance for the sym. phony 's ju st-co mpleted
2004 season increased 2
percent, attendance for its
Cincinnati Pops operation
fell 9 percent.
The new season st~rts in
seven weeks, and the symphony says . subscription
Sale s are down from last
year.

Cable Rate Hikes Got You Down?

'

·~

_./' "' The Meigs County Grants Office
~
will be taking applications for the
--'"1'1
c:tHIP Down Payment Assistance Prog a
·
·
on:
]
August .31 ,' ·2004
September 1, 2004
September 2, 2004
The hours. of availability -are from
10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. ·

'

.........
.............

Itt 11111111Yfar tllelllilll IIMIIII's.., .....

"'....-,..•-•u....,.llll•••-...

the west turning from the
Overnight' (I a.m.-6 a.m.)
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
northwest as the afternoon
Temperatures wi II drop
It's going to be a humid and progresses.
from .76 to today's low of 70
cloudy morning. A few sprinEve11i11g (7 p.m:-Midnight) by 6:00am. Skies will be
kle s ·
are
poss ible .
It should remain humid. mostly clear with 5 to I 0
· Temperatures will fiold steady There could be some drizzle MPH winds from the north .
· around 77. Winds will be 5 to and fog from time to time.
Friday, July 23
I0 MPH from the southwest The rain is predicted to start
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
turning from the west as the near 7:00pm. The rain should
Temperatures wilt climb
morning progresses.
stop by 8:00pm with total from 71 to 81 by late this
· Aftemoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
accumulations for thi s event morning. Skie s will range
It's going to be a humid near
0.02
inche s. from mostly sunny to mostly
afternoon. There could be a Temperatures will diminish cloudy with I0 MPH winds
· sprinkle or two . Temperature s from 86 early this evening to from the north.
will lin ger at 86 with today's 78. Skies will be clear to · Aftemooll (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
hi gh -of 89 occmring around cloudy with 5 to I 0 MPH
It will be a cloudy after· 3:00pm. Skies will range winds from the ·northwe st noon . Temperatures will
from mostly sunny to cloudy turning from the north 'as the hover at 84. Winds will be I0
. with 5 to 10 MPH winds from evening progresses.
MPH from the north.
'

Akron Beacon Journal
employees approve contract
AKRON (AP) - Union cent in each of the final three New spaper Guild.
members at the Akron years. In additiop, a trust
"Both sides put a lot of
Beacon Journal approvec) a fund will be est,ablished to work into iL Both sides made
new, four-year contract administer a second health concessions," said company ..
Wedn~ sday that includes pay care plan .
spoke swoman Rit a Kelly
Reporters, photographers Madick. "We' re ready to
raises and an alternative
, health plan .
and ' artists participated in a .
The 60-10 vote caRJe after byline strike and conducted move forward."
'about a year of negotiations. informational pickets last
The union represents 130
Staff members had been month . Guild members had reporters,
photographers.
working without a contract authorized the union to copy editors, page designers,
· since their three-year contract . strike.
artists. librarians and secre"We are relieved to have a !aries at the Beacon Journal,
' expired in August.
1 . The agreement , reached
contract and get on with the which is owned by Knight
; July 8. includes pay increases job of doing great journal- Ridder and has a circulation
[ in the first year of 2.5 percent ism,"
said
Stephanie
' to 4.5 percent. depending on Warsmith, chair of the Akron of 143,000 daily and 185.000
: job classification, and 2 per- unit of the Northeast Ohio on Sundays.
-~--------------------------~----~

LONDON (AP) - Two immed iately s~ mmon an
guards at the London ambulance.
Correctional
In stitution
Warden
Deb
blamed for ·a 30-minute Timmerman-Cooper deciddelay in calling an ambu- ed th at Captain Dale
lance for a dying inmate Foster will work I0 days
have been disciplined by without pay for a loss of
requiring them to work $2,153 and con trol room
··without pay:
officer Garv Willis wi ll
The inmate, Kareem work two 'days without
. '
'8
BenJamm.
_ ,
o f pay. forfeiting $283.
Hamilton , died of an
The men could have lost
apparent heart attack on their jobs on charges they
Feb. 4 after commun ica- failed to fo llow stale
tion problems and unc lear prison policies and exerdirections from a shift cised poor judgment.
captain led to a failure to
A
Corrections

• IE 1111i11n Pi I I 1111111....

Benjamin was serving a

six- · to 30-year sentence
for fe lon ious assaul t. drug
and
we apons
abuse
charges .

Prison officials said they
have retlned procedures 'to
ensure there are no similar
delays in gettin g outside
medi ca l assistance for critically ill inmates.

.

AKRON (AP) - Health ·The Food and Drug
otlicials are investigating 13 Administration
reported
cases Of sa Imonella in additional
illnesses
in
Ohioans who say they ate at Maryland and West Virginia:
Sh'eetz conveni ence stores to · Sheetz, based in Altoona,
see if the illness is linked to Pa .. pulled all tomatoes and
an outbreak at the stores in . lettuce from its 300-plu s
Pennsylvania.
stores in Penn sy lvania ,
Ohio Department of Maryland, Ohi9. We st
Health
spokesman Virgmia, Virginia and North
Kri stopher Wei ss said Carolina atter the salmonel Wednesday that only two of la cases were first reported
the · 13 cases had the same last week. The stores sanibacterial strain, known as tized . their deli areas.,
javiana. that 's being investi- switched suppliers and
gated in Pennsylvania. More brought in new produce.
testing is being done to try to
Salmonella. . ge nerally
find out more informati on. spread through contaminatWeiss said.
ed food or water. ca uses
Four of Ohio 's cases are in diarrhea, fever and cramps
Stark County. three in for as many as three days.
Summit County, two in
"There is a lot of salmoMahoning County and one nella around," said Dr.
each in Medina. Cuyahoga, Marguerite Erme, head of
Lorain and Tuscarawas epidemiology at the Akron
counties.
Health Department. "Just
Pennsylvania health offi- because you 've ea ten at
cials said Monday that 130 Sheetz. that doe sn't mean
people were sickened in that that eating at Sheetz -caused
state after eating at Sheetz. the iII ness.''

The · local health departments are doing extensive
interview s with those who
were infected, as well as
with acquaintances who
may have eaten at Sheetz
without gett ing sick.
The interviews will be forwarded to the Pennsylvania
Department of Health and
the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention,
which are lrading the investigation into the ou !break.
Pennsylvania otTicials had
believed that tainted tomatoes or lettuce, or lJpth. were
to blame for the illnesses.
becau se tl1ose who got sic k
ate those foods and because
the y ingested a strain of salmonella usually found on
produce.
Wheeling, W. Va.-based
Coronet 'Foods. which supplied the tomatoes. sa id tests
turned up a ditlere nt strain
of salmonella than that idantifi ed in those who have
been sick.

Cleveland scientist leads·
study of Martian meteorit~
CLEVELAND (AP) - A studies should revea l infor- to NASA' s John so n Space
Cleveland professor is leading mation about the early envi- Center in Houston for .sterilresearch of a Martian mete~ ronment of Mars. Harvey ization and then to the
mite discovered in Antarctica said.
Smithsonian lnst it u tion in
that scientists hope will proAfter the rock and others Washington for fuithe r testing .
vide insights to early geologic were collected, they were sent
and atmospheric cond itions
on the red planet.
' The specimen, designated
MIL 03346, is a 715.2-gram
black rock that was collected by
, Subscribe today • 992-2 155
the U.S. Antarctic Search for
Meteorites program . last
December on an ice 1ield in the
Transantanic Mountains, about
465 miles from the South Pole. '"-1--1
Case Western . Reserve r
University geologist Ralph
Harvey hcl!d; the research team.
·The meteorite has been
classified as a crystallized
remn ant of Martian lava
flow that dates to nearly 1.3 t-"1'1
'billion years ago. Because
of the rock· s age. further

coal-burning plant is one of Southern Power Co. unit,
Ohio 's biggest sources of ~lso are pan owners of the
soot and sulfur dioxide poilu- Stuart plant..
lion that cause health probStuart is the third-largest
!ems and contribute to forma- electricity generating plant in
tion of acid rain. The plant is Ohio and is one of the 10
al so a chronic source of mer- biggest in the nation, Wright
cury emissions that can dain- said .
age the nervous systems of
The Sierra Club is pursui ng
complaints
in
children, pregnant wome.n similar
and fetuses, said Pat
Gallagher, the Sierra Club's · Columbus federal court
director of environmental law against American Electric
1'n San Franci'sco.
Power over emissions from
The plant's em1ssions two eastern Ohio coal-fired
exceed legal level s, the group generating plants, Cardinal
claims.
near
Brilliant
and
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co.. Muskingum Ri ver near
which operates the Stuart Beverly. Gallagher said. AEP
plant and is a part owner of it, is ~hallenging those claims.
believes the plant cqmplies
----------------,
with environmental laws and
Change Your Oil The••
will defend its performance,
said Amy Wright, DP~L's
director of environmental
management. Cinergy Corp ..
through its Cincinnati Gas &amp;
Electric Co. subsidiary, , and
American Electric Power.
Co., through its Columbus

Proud to be apart of your life.

E·ZWay

Laminated Oak
Double Pedestal Table
, w / 6 Plymouth Side Chairs.
42x60x72x84

lft9995
iJ

7 Piece Set
Only -

42x54x72 laml natecl Top

Butterfly Leaf
Oak Leg Table
w / 6 Colonial Wihdsor
Bowback Side Chairs
7 Ptece Set
Only

179915

No Appointment Necessary

Proud to be apartof your life.

740-992-6700
736 U2 E. Main Street
Pomeroy,OH

Subscribe today • 992-2155

-

.

.

•
'•
•

Department spokeswoman
said it isn't kn.o wn if the
delay in taking Benjamin
to a hospital contributed .
to his dea th .

Ohio health officials investigating
possible ·Sheetz salmonella cases

Quick Oil Change
1,----------------------------- $19.99 -·Sqts. ~Filter

' .... illlllllli -illlll

If·you have 41ny questi~ns please conta
office at:.740-992-7908 or 740-9
·Ask for Jean Trussef.i orliZ

·Thursday, July 22

' CINCINNATI (AP)- An
: environmental grour said
: Wednesday that it wil sue as
·soon as September to take
: over enforcement of air _pol: luti'on regulations at a power
' plant along the Ohio River
unless the owners and gov. emment regulators correct
. : alleged repeated violations
· th
: ~eprovision of the federal
· Clean Air Act allows non;· government group~ to see k t.o
take over momtonng power
plants' compliance with pol: lution laws if they can show
: the government has not done
:an adeq uate job.
The Sierra Club · on
: Wednesday mailed 60-day
; notices, as required under the
: law of its intention to file suit
· in U.S. District Court against
: the owners and operators of
: the J.M . Stuart Generating
: Station' near Aberdeen, said
: the \\ro up's lawyer, R,ktm.l'd
: Sahh.
·
: The group contends the

~

WOULI))(Ol) fiKE TO OWN ··
'
· '·Ytii:JR
OWN HOME?
/

Weather forecast.

[Sierra .Club threatens pollution suit .:against owners of Ohio power plant

..

•

Thursday, July 22, 2004

Local Stocks

·Humane society demands Cincinnati Symphony looks to cut costs despite $1.8 million gift
protection of chickens
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
•(·AP)
The national
&lt;H- umane
Society
on
Wedne sday
demanded
Congress hold hearings on
-c'harges that workers in a
·West Virginia poultry plant
'tortured birds before killing
"them, calling videotape of
1he mistreatment "undeni-·
able and unmistakable."
. · The group also argued the
federal Humane Methods of
.,Slaughter Act should be
"expanded to protect poultry
from abuse.
Pilgrim's Pride, a supplier
for KFC, fired 11 workers
at its Moorefield processing
plant Wednesday, a day
.after People for the Ethical
·Treatment of Animals
•released video of workers
kicking, stomp-ing and
throwing · birds against
walls. ·
Three of .those fired were
,'managers;
eight . were
hourly employees.
·· "We will continue with
this investigation until
·we're confident that every
employee - regardless of
rank- who had knowledge
of these incidents has been
held accountable for their
actions," President and
Chief Operating Officer 0 .
a. Goolsby said Wednesday
evening.
The Pittsburg, Texas -based company also has put
. quality assurance monitors
"on both sh[fts at the
''Moorefield
plant.
Meanwhile, managers at 24
other . plants have been,
ordered to take time to edu~ate workers about animal
welfare policies.
Pilgrim 's Pride is committed to humane treatment
and will ensure that all fac:'"tories follow. rules designed
; to "eliminate unnecessary
: harm
and
suffering,"
: Gaol sby said.
: : The Humane Society ear: Her in the day accused the
: company of allowing a cal; lous attitude toward chick; ens to exist.
: · "The grotesque video of
: these activities is an indica: tion of widespread misman: agement at this facility,"
: President Wayne Pacelle
. said. "Even if these were'
; only the acts of a few indi.
; viduals, one has to wonder
; where the supervisors were
• when this happened and
: why none . of the other
; workers stepped in to stop
i this abuse."
i Pilgrim'&amp;
Pride
: spokesman Ray Atkinson
: said company officials are
~ appalled by the violence
· taptured on tape.
"There's no justification
for that," he said; adding
•;that the company will coop::erate with any investigation
:fby government officials.
' People for the' Ethical

PageA7

0HO

' The Daily Sentinel

_ _,

(South end of Gheen Industrial I,luilding)

.

•

"'

-.....ji__..~_.:..·............_....._._.......__..._______:..·_ _ _____:..-:---·-~-----· --'----

- ----· ---

�Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Thursday, July 22, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com ·

The Daily Sentip.el

INSIDE
WaHace to retum to Detroit, Page 82
MLB atandlngs, Page 83
Shaq welcomed to Miami, Page B4

I

.Bl
'\

.r

~

•

1(9

\7

&gt; .

.'

1Ln

..

Thursday, July 22, 2004

Kyger Creek _Little· League tourney
resumes today
.
.

Huntington Museum of Art
r·

Museum information

..
,.
,•

Hours: The Huntington Mus&lt;um of
Art is open from 10 a.m. - '! p.m.
Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m ., Wednesday
through Saturday and noon to S p.m.
Sunday. The museum is closc•d w the
public Monday.
'
Add ress:
_~U"
·' -' M cl ."oy I'·wau,
Huntington, W.Va., 25711 1 (JlH) o2lJ2701 fax: (304) 529-7447 TD!l (304)
522-2243. HMA is ft~ll y acce&lt;Sihle.
Call (304) 529-DOI for more in'formarion or check out the Web site at
'
http:/ /~v, hm oa.org.

1

'I·

1: -~- l'll [) l
One becomes immediately fascinated by the contradistinction
between the artist Robert Hutton
and his work. Hutton, a soft-spoken, contemplative man lives quietly with his wife and daughters
in a house and studio he built on
4.'\ acres nestled into the hills an d
near the streams of Lawrence

Ohio River from Huntington,
Wes_t Virginia: Yet,. in his studio
each day, Hutton creates vibrant
and dramatically contrasted drawing;, painting; and sculptures, all
energetically executed, and all
captt~ring the untamed and passionate emotions that reside in the
· subconscious mind. His compositions are filled edge to edge with
raw, expressive figures and images.
Seeing his compulsive working
.method gives credence to his
confession that throughout his life
he has been .afflicted 'tVith an
"incurable compulsion to create."
H ufton was born and raised in
Pittsburgh; Pennsylvania, and
showed
eady interest in art. At
1p, he began a &lt;jisciplined selfstudy of art. After high school, he
worked full-time for commercial
art studio~. in addition to attending evening classes of art at
· .
: 1983 watercolor, collection ~ Carnegie-Mellon University. at
the age of 20, Hutton entered the
artist Robert P. Hutton

1

.'

-

.

. ..

=

Winslow Andenon collection of Haitian Art
1bis year fOllows the Bicentennial Haitian painters, Winslow Anderson
~nary of Haiti's independence. began making yearly visic; to Haiti.
Peters opened Le Ceptre d'Art in
The Haitian rewlution (1791-1803)
has become synonymous with free- 1944, as a teaching center and g;tllery.
dom of the oppressed, since it result- Soon Haitians fiom various back'
..
ed in the first black republic in the· grounds and area5 of the island began .
wodd, and the only nation born of a ·to portray their vi'iion&lt; of
successful slave revolt.
life. religious images and celebrations,
. Tpo ofie~: we glean ?ur know!- and vieWs of the Haitian countrySide,
edge ofHaia.fiom the rughtly neWs, and its people. ·
and the poliacal rurmoil that has
Painting; by many of the pioneerplagued the natiOn throughout tiS ·
·
· c1 d d · this ll
history. Haiti is so much more than a ~g arasc;laredi m u eksmby Gcobe~:d"-"ed li ·ca1
d . . . I non, me u ng wor
an
WJ
po tl S)"tem, an tt JS tune y Alix M'
An . Albern' d
.:"'-- .Lt
e1 bra H . .
, onta&lt;
tome,
1 an
and ~'II u.. we c e te aJl1 Cas
Baril Ri d Be . d
--"J.
exhiibi.:
f
·
rt:ant
tera
e,
~u
nott
an ··
WliU an
uOn 0 an llllpo
.
collection of 157 .works by Haiti~ many others. Anderson co~anued to
finest artists.
collect painting; into the lite 1990s.
• · The artist Winslow Arukrson first Aho in the colle&lt;:tion are marvelous
became aw.ue of Haitian painting in and important examples of metal ·
1948 after ieeing a book on Haitian cut-outs and carved wooden sculpari writl'en by Selden Rodman tided tures. Come and experience for
"Renamance in Haiti."
• yourselves the joy of Haitian art. An
With . a letter of introduction to illustrated catalogue will accompany
DeWitt Peters, who had begun Le the exhibll!ion.
Centre d'Art in Port-au-Prince, the
1bis exhibit will be open through
base for the beginning of most Sept. 19,2004.

everydaY

)

[ 1 () 11 ~

Robert P. Hutton Retrospective: Double Vision

~;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~ County, Ohio, just across th e

.·

~

Catholic Missionary order, S. V.D. •
(Society of the Divine Word), and
served as a lay brother lor five
years. During this time, he was
involved in many art-related project&lt; . such as liturgical furniture
design and construction, illustrating religious pam11hlets, and calendar design: While in the seminary in Illinois, he was given the
opportunity to attend painting
courses at Chicago Art Institute.
Hutton left the religious order,
and returned to Pittsburgh where
he received a merit scholarship
from
Carnegie-Mellon
University. In 1968,· he received
his B.F.A. degree in Painting, and
went on to Penn State University
as a graduate assistant, earning his
MFA degree in drawing and
sculpture in 1970:
'
After serving on the Fine Arts
Faculty at Marshall University for
29 years, fiom 1970 · to l9?9,
Hutton received th~ title of
F.aculty Emeritus, and continues
to work full time in his studio. His
work has been included in solo
and group shows, both regional
and national, and he has received
a variety o( awards for his art, and
grants . for . ~reative research and
innovative art processes.
'Thit' ·e'!diibi( ' tvur coi\tinue · •
through Aug. 8, 2004.

.........,

-..

GALLIPOLIS
Tickets are now on sale
at the Ariel for the
Children's Theatre production of Sleeping
Beauty.
There are three performances:
8 p.m.
Friday, July 23, and 2
and
8
p.m
p.m.
Saturday, July 24.
Tickets will cost $5 for
adults, $2.50 for students and Seniors and
children' under three
will be admitted free .
After the success of
'Alice's Adventures in
Wonderland,' the next
big thin~ for the Ariel
Children s Theatre will
be a performance Jim
Eiler's musical version
of 'Sleeping Beauty.'·
Director
Cheryl
Enyart said the musical
puts a twist on the classic fairytale.
"This isn't your average 'Sleeping .- Beauty"'
Enyart said. "It's the
same . bas.ic sto.ry, but
with some differences
and an ending you'd
never expect."
This is Enyart's first
attempt at directing, but
she has been involved

.
Donald Cosentino lecture

"Summer sounds"
1bis }"''I'S armual "Summer Sounds: Hey.
Mon!" e\ient is being planned in cof!iunction ·
with the showing of the Wtnslow Anderson
Haitian Collection. Summer Sounds takes
place fi:om 6 p.m.- nridnightAug. 14,2004.
From 6 to 7 p.m., HMA will be open 'to
Summer Sounds patrons so they may view
the exhibits.
·
Tickec; fur Summer Sounds are $35 in
advance and $40 at the door.
Bands !Or the evening include opening aCt
the Oakwood Road Beer Band an.d StratliS
of Chadeston.
For more inforrnatio~ or to .onler tickets in
advance, call Sandy Stone at (304) 529-2701;
Ext. 17.
.

Artists invited to exhibit
JACKSON - Artist reg- ed to enter - prpfessional
istration forms for the 23rd and amateur. Enrrants are
annual
F.oothills
Art limited [o four works per
Fes;ival are now available. c.&gt; tegory. Entry fees are $6
Scheduled to run from
Oct. 15 until Oct . .17 , the per pi ece ·or $20 for four
festival is a weekend full of pieces until the Sept. 5
visual arts , live music and de ad lin e, after which fees .
hands-on arts activities . will be slightly higher.
pre se nted free for the
$1,210 in cas h prizes · will
entire family .. The event be -awarded. Dozens of purtakes place in the Lodge at chase aw·a rd donors will
Canter's Cave 4-H cainp, select art'York during a
five mile s north west of
preview
reception
on
Jackson .
· Artist s are invit e d ' to Thursday evening, Oct. 14 ,
exhibit in the following to which all arttsts are
categories:
Oillacr.ylics, invited .
pastel/drawing, photogra- · Foothills Art Fest ival IS a
phy, prints, thre e-dime n- program of· the Southern
sional work and watercol- Hills Art Council. Call the .
ors. A few juried ·booth council at (7.40) 286-6355,
spaces are available to
VIa
at· ·
e-mail
·
or
exhibiting artists. Please
shac@zoomnet.net,
or
request a separate ent~y
writ e to Box 149 , Jackson,
form .
The show is professional- Ohio 45640 · for further
or
order
ly· judged but not juricd. information
\
Artists of all ages are invit- forms.

Two Convenient Locations: .
1/4. Mile North Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge
Mason, WV 25260
Phone (304) n3··5323~

Fresh Summer
Fruits arid Bright
Summer Flowers

2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446-1

AVAILABLE NOW!
•

'

.

•

High School
.',Football
Seasqn!!!

•

Chester punched its ticket
to the round of eight -with a
9-2 win over Rio Grande
·during the tourney 's open ing
day Monday . Later that
same eve ning, Rutland
flexed its offensive muscles
with a 20-2 win over
Gallipolis in round one .
The New Haven/Pomeroy

1

League Tournament

LEtcEsTER
Associated Press

L' ALPE D' HUEZ , France
- Mouth open. sil ve r chain
dan'gling
out
of
his
unzipped yellow jersey.
Lance Armstrong pedal ed
re lentle ssly through a sea of
fre nzied fan s crowding his
path in th e Alps.
On one of cy cling's mo st
famous peaks. Armstrong
shut out th e cheers and
taunts Wednesday to fo c us
on finishing olf his chief
rival and lockin g up a
re cord sixth straight Tour de
.
France title.
The Texan won th e rirst
time trial to. the L' Alpe
d' Huez ' ski station. surging
up the lege ndary 9.6-mile
climb to establish beyond
aily doubt that he is
unmatched on the mountains.
He finished hi s seco nd
consecutive stage victory in
39 minute s, 41 second s. hi s
legs whirrin,g ·.through 21
hairpin bend s lined with
hundreds of thousands of
spectators honkin g horns.
ringing
cowbells
and
yelling in a cacophony of
langL.Jages .
The performance was so

Tuesday's results
Green (2) 6, Mason 5
Palm Plaza 14, Green (1) 4
Wednesday's games
. No games scheduled
Thursday's games
·New Haven vs. Pomeroy, 6
p.m.
Chester vs. Rutland, 8 p.m.
Friday's games
··Green-2 vs. Syracuse, 5:30
p.m.
Palm Plaza vs. Syracuse, 7:30
p.m.
.
.
New Haven/Pomeroy winner
vs. Middleport, !1:30 p.m.
:
Saturday's games
:Semifinal game, 6 p.m.
_SemifinaJ 9ame, 8 p.m.
Sunday's games
-Home Run Derby, 3 p.m .
Consolation game, 5 p.m.
Championship game, 7 p.m.

'

Big Bend
football sign-ups
on the horizon

I

High School Fall
League returns
to Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande
announced that the Fall High
School Baseball League is
returning for 2004.
,-'- The Fall League is open to
~ny high school student in
grades 9-12. This league pro"
vides young pl·ayers the
Opportunity ta. continue to
llevelop their skills in a competitive program .
•.: Players will' be placed on
teams of equal competitive
!tbility and will play for seven
}lieeks ending with a tournament on. October 9 and 10.
:- The teams will be coached
bY members of the University
ot Rio Grande baseball
squad. Players will be issued
a t-shirt but must provide the
remainder of their uniform
fpants&gt;,hat, etc.). Players will
lie swinging wooden bats.
: The CQst to participate in
the Fall -League is $100 per
player. All Ohio High School
Athletic
Association
· (OHSAA) rules will applY..
Play begins August 28.
' For more information or to
register
contact
Brad
Warnimont, Head Coach
Univf.l'~ity of Rio Grande, at
(740)~S-7486 .
/
Mak!i''checks rayable to
University of Rto Grande
Baseball.·

Sem ifinal s games are
Saturday, then the tourna· men! championship. cansolation winner and home run,
hitting champion will be
decided Sunday.
All games are held at the
Kyger Creek Employees
Club baseball field in
Cheshire.

·av JoHN

Monday's rasu1ts ·
:Chester 9 , Rio Grande 2 ·
Rutland 2q, Gallipolis 2

MlQDJ...EPORT- The Big
~end Youth Football League
will hold sign-ups for the
2004 season on Saturday,
July 24 · at the Middleport
Football Stadium from 10
a.m. until I· p.m. and
Saturday, July 31 at those
same times.
: Players and cheerleaders
will be signed up. on these
dates. Team from Meigs,
Southern and Wahama will
be organized the same as last
year. Players should be -in
grades 3 and 4 and in grades
5 and 6.
For further information ,
call Jim at (740) 432-4073 or
Dave at 674-5178.

winner moves on to face the
Middleport Red Sox in the
final game of a triple header
Friday. Also on the slate for
Friday is a quarterfinal
game between Green-2 and
the Syracuse Reds at 5:30
p.m.. fol lowed by Palm
Pl aza verws the Syracuse
Braves .

Armstrong builds
lead with dominant
Tour de France ride

Cubs 5 Reds 4

Kyger Creek Little

Morri s
Prince5s:
Kristen
Cast:
Brandeberry.
The Faun: Raymond
Chorus:
Cousias ·
Ashley Bennett, Kas ey
Prince : Caleb Sanders
Eblin ,
Laura fpling.
Minerva: Cassi·e Rl:w des
Bergen Koch, -.. j-lannah
Sybil: Alyssa Stanley
Loveday, Abbey Loveday,
Philip: Eric .Hill
Loga'n
few,
· Kelsey
King: Shane Park s
llr.odke
Queen: Chelsea Lemley Pasquale,
Wendy Wade,
Th e
Herald :
Kegan Pasquale,
Heather Ca-ldwell and Gus '
Park s
Trollarina:
Audrey Graham.

n "''
......
._. ...~--

An illustrated discussion tided "A Wodd
Made by Magic" is presented at 2 p.m. July
25, 2004, by Donald Cosentino. professor of
fOlklore, literature, visual and material arts,
popular culture, African andAfio-Caribbean
Studies at the UCLA Department ofWorld
Nts and Cultures.
"['his illustrated lecture wiD focus on
Haitian art and life, covering both the secular
and the sacred arts, which often have .
ambiguous dividing lines in H~ti. Donald
Cosentino has done extensive fieldwork in
African and diasporic culiures in Nigel;a,
Sierra Leone, and l:-laiti.·
•
He is the editor and author of note of the
award-winning catalogue f~r "The Sacred
Arts of. Haitian Vodou" (1995), a traveling
exhibition he cprated for the UCLA F.ov.rler
M~.~S&lt;um of Cultural History.

Days Until

'Sleeping Beauty'

,..\" ' lfl... ,,..• '

{ ) r-_,

in theater for many
years.
"I have worked behind
the · scenes at around
45 productions," she
said. "And my -husband
was dire.ctor of thespians at the University of
Rio Grande.
"I've always loved t~e ~
ater," she said. "And my
kids grew up with it.
We're a theater family."
Enyart hopes to communicate her love for
the performing arts to
the children.
The crew consists of
Kim Vanco, stage manager; Charlene. Wade,
setting and props; Josh
McFarland, lighting and
sound; Sabrina Hurt,
music.
Tickets may be purchased from cast members, at the door or p~
calling the Ariel Theatre
box office at (7 40)-446ARTS.

BY BRAD SHERMAN
will take on the Pomeroy
bsherman@ mydailytribune.com Mets at 6 p.m . in the final
game of the first round. The
CHESHIRE - The 38th second game, scheduled to
Kyger Creek Littl e League get underw_ay around 8 p.m.,
· Tournament features' a quarterfinal
Baseball
between
the
re sumes today with two match-up
more games on the sc hedule Chester Reds and the
after an off-day Wednesday. defe nding
champion
The New Haven Vipers Rutland Reds .
..

"

~

91sl

TOUR DE FRANCE

fiVe steep peaks .
The mountain stage from Bourgd'Oisans to Le Grand-B.omand
has gradients up to 8 percent.
as the lour heads northeast.

Stage11

-

Thursday. July 22

o 100 mi
o 100km

Bourg d'Oisans

LeGrand-

2,376 teet

Bornand

3,062.4 .. '

!

'
1~ '.,
0

coldu
.

Col de Ia

Glandon
6,349.2

Madeleine
6,600

.

SOURCE;~

126.79
miles

Tour de France

AP

dominant that Armstrong
overtook his. last true challenger for the overall title,
Ivan Basso. even though the
Italian started two minutes
Please see Tour, Bl

Thieve~

steal signs
marking LeBron
James' hometown
Cincinnati Reds' John VanderWal throws his helmet after striking out with the bases loaded
to end the top of the seventh inning against the Chicago Cubs just as rai n forced a delay in
the game Wednesday in Chicago. (AP)

·Cubs outlast Reds
Bv JASON STRAIT

game losing streak.
_
Associated Press
Jeered by fans twice earlier after striking out with
CHICAGO
B d runners on base. Sosa hit his
. · - . ooe
18th homer of the year off
after a patr of stnkeout~. · Todd Van Poppe! (3-4). It
~am my Sosa dehvered an was only Chicago's fourth
Important home run a,nd a win in its last 13 games.
"He threw me .a high
much-needed wm to the
Cubs.
.
· . .
pitch, and I made my mind
Sosa htt the go-ahead up to go out there and
homertn the ~eventh mmng swi ng," sa id s·osa, who
foll~wmg a ratn delay, and homered during a light rain.
Chtcago overcam~ .a two- "We're not struggling. We
run d~ficu Wednesdd~ m a ju st lost a couple of games.
5-4 wm over the Cmcmnatt We are competitors. We
Reds that stopped a three·

come he re eve ry day and try
_to do our job. Sometimes
it's not go ing to he the way
you want it.''
Tlie crowd let Sosa hear it
when he struck out in the
first with a runner on first
base. The boos were even
louder in the fifth when
Sosa whiffed witlt a runner
on first.
" It 's not disappointing .
but it's something that surprised me .. It was like ,
Please see Reds, 84

AKRON (APl - LeBron
Jame s can add another stea l
to hi s resume, but this one
wasn't on the basketball
court.
Akron
officials
said
• Wednesday, that thieves look
two of the nine sig ns the city
put up in late June to mark
the Cleveland Cava liers
star's hometown .
::r ve been keeping an eye
out on eBay." said Tom
Bennett. traffi c operation'
supervisor.
The signs. which procl~im
Akron to be James· hometown in black lettering on a
reflective white background'.
are probably being sto len by
fan s, Bennett said.
·
Bennett said he noticed the
first sign missing on Jul y ·t .
The two si"gns. which cost

about $100
e a c h ,
marked
Copley Road
and North
Main Street
at the . city
limit s.
·
"They didn't ~ast very
long,"
he
said.
James
C i I )&lt;
spokes man Mark Williamson
said the sig ns will not be
repl aced. "We don't want to
put them back out ·just to
have someone take them
again:·
James. th e NBA rookie of
the year who turned professional right out of Akron's St.
Vincent -St.
Mary
High
Sehoul. averaged 1.65 steals
per game last season.

Thomas reclaims lead at Riverside golf leagu_
e
• r Golf leaGU
_e Standl"ng..:
Riverside SeniO
oe-

STAFF REPORT
sports@mydailytribune.com
MASON, W.Va. - Chet Thomas
of Patriot reclaimed the lead at the
Riverside Senior Men's Golf League
after a fir9l place finish Tuesday.
Thomas (158 points), who held the
lead early in the season, is now 1.5
points ahead of second placw Ralph
Sayre of New Haven, W.Va. Clark
Green is close behincJ with 155 total
points to date.
,The trio is trying to pull away from
the rest of the field with former NFL
coach Paul Lanham of Ripley, W.Va.
in fourth with 141 markers. The
weekly point average is around 15
points. so mathematically, the race
has several possible turns left.

- 158:2. Rolph Soyre, 156.5;3. Clark Greene, 155.0: 4. Paul Lanham, 141; 5. KAI~h Woods.
1. Chat Thomas,
138.5: 6. Eart Johnson. tse: 7. Don Wlloon 120.S; 8. Elmer Clici&lt;, 120.S; 9. Dewey Smlltl, 12\l: 10. Tom
Nunnory, 119; 11. Hervey Blain, 118; 12. Howard Parker 117; 13. Jim Cunningham, 114; 14. Mike Bnlgg
113.5: 15. Jack .fox, 1,3: 16. Claude Profitt, 11 2; 17. Chuck Yea;er. 110.5; 18. Bill Pe1h1el, 109: 18. FlOyd
Ghal)man,109:20.MickWinebranner, 108;21.0anaWinoorenner,1D7;22.KIInWhioed 108;22.RonPhain.
106;24.Don KAiy, 105;25. Bii!Yoho 103.5;26. Pat Williamson, 101.5:27.Dale Harrison. 100:28.Hortey Rico.
97.5;29. Bill Winobreoner, 97.5; 30. Mac McCarty.96; 31 .Jad&lt; Maloney, 94.5; 32. Jim Capehart, 92;33:Bob
Hysel. 91.~ 33. Russ Wood, 91 .5;35. Craig Barnes..91 :_ 36. Don Fields, 90.5: 36. Curtis tlrubbs, 90.5.

L------------.,-------------.J
Tuesday' s total number of players
was 53 to make II four-man teams
and three teams with three players
each . There was a tie for first place ·
with 14 points at slake.
The quartet of Thomas. Don
Wilson (Chester) , Willis Korb
(A thens). and Bob Hysell (Syracuse)
shot a 10-under 60. as did the ,four-'
some of Mike Bragg (Point Pleasant.
W.Va .), Harvey Blain (Point Pleasant,
'

v

W.Va .) . Haske! Jo nes !Charleston.
W.Va .l and Don Roush 1Racine ).
There was also a tic for third. as
two learn' were'just a shot back of the
winners.
Wes Peterson (Athens). Boh
Humphr~y (Camp Conley. W.Va.).
Dana Winebrenner (Snacuse) and
Ear.l John,on (Mason. W.Va.) tied
,with Gary Clark · (New Haven.
W.Va .), Terry Hupp (Mason . W.Va.) .

Floyd Chapman (Syracuse) and Paul
Lanham (Ripley. W.Va.).
The closest. to the pin winners were
Tom Nunnery on hole number seven,
and Phil BUrton on 14. . • .
.•
There are now Ill dtflerent players
to play at least one week in the
. lcagu' e. Dt' ck Dots.· on. w' ho t's spending the 'ummer in Mason to escape
the heat of the Florida ·Everglades,
and Kenny Greene of Hartford hav'e .
added to ihe season total that keeps
climbing to thi &gt; year's goal of 120
different pl&lt;l ye".
The season average is 58.7 per
wed with I0 week&gt; remaining
before the annual awards dinner and
party. The tina! round will be on
·September 24 with dinner to follow
in the banquet room.
...

�.,

. ?age B2 • The Daily Sentinel

wwW .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday,. July 22,

2004

Thursday, July 22,2004

Sources say Rasheed Wallace
agrees to return to Detroit
BY lARRY l.AOE
Associated Press

'

I

DETROIT
Rasheed
Wallace helped transform the
..__ Detroit Pistons from contenders to N BA champions
last month . Now, .he's coming
back for more.
The unrestricted free agent
forward has ~greed to a fiveyear contract worth $57 million, two sources told The
Associated
Press
on ,
Wednesday.
One of the league sources.
who spoke on the condition of
anonymity, ~xpected Wallace
to sign the deal on Thursday.
Wallace is to meet with
reporters at a news conference
Ffiday morning at The Palace
of Auburn Hills.
Wallace. who made . $17
. million last season. was
·acquired in a three-team deal
on Feb. 19 to put the Pistons
over the top.
And he did.
They were a good team
withou.t Wallace. ranking
among the top teams in the
Eastern Conference with a 3422 record. They were 20-6 in
the regular season and 16-7 in
,, ' the playoffs after adding him.

The Pistons beat the Los
Angeles Lakers in live games
for their third 'title, and lirst
since 1990.
Wallace's st&lt;itistics were not
always impressive - he averaged 13 points. 7.8 rebouhds
and two blocks in the playoffs
~ but his impact almost
always was.
The 6-foot-11. 230-pounder
made a stingy defense one ·of
the best in league history and
an average offense better.
Wallace. who turns 30 on
Sept. 17. averaged 16 points,
6.8 .rebounds. ~.3 assists and
1'.8 blocks last season. his
ninth in the NBA.
The Philadelphia, native
spent two years at North
Carol ina before being taken
by Washington with the fourth
overall pick in the 1995 NBA
draft.
Wallace was traded to
Portland following his rookie
year and spent the next sevenplus seasons with the ·Trail
Blazers. With an expiring contract, they traded Wallace to
Atlanta. where he stayed for
one game before he w:is dealt
to Detroit just .before the trading deadline .
Wallace helped Detroit beat
the Los Angeles Lakers in live

Major League Baseball

~ames

for its third title. and
!lrst since 1990.
He also kept his cool.
Wallace was·calle\1 for just
two· technicals in the postsea5011. a total that may have
shocked some who followed.
hi s career in Portland.
He •broke his own NBA
record with 41 t~chnical fouls
during the 2000-0 1· season,
and was once suspended for
seven games for threatening
an ofticial atier a game. That
was the league' s longest sus,
pension for something that
didn't involve physical contact or subSiance abuse.
Wallace dido 't have any
problems with the .Pistons.
In fact. few athletes tn
Michigan became popular as.
quickly as he' did.
Wallace almost instantly
became adored. a fact heard at
home games each time he
touched the ball as the crowd
shouted: "Sheeeeeed!''
"It feels good when they do
that," Wallace ·said during the
NBA Finals . .
Wallace will be one of five
returning starters for the NBA
champion Pistons. He will be
backed up by Antonio
McDyess, who was signed to
·replace Mehmet Okur.

Tour
from Page 81
•

,.

&lt;

-ear 1er.
1
: With four days left in the
:ihree-week
cycling
: marathon , . only disaster
· could prevent Armstrong
:from adding to his string of
;five consecutive titles..
"I'm real careful about
· counting to the number
six," Armstrong said. "I'll
do that 011 the final lap on
· the Champs-Elysees."
• Only three riders, including Armstrong's teammate
Jose Azevedo, finished
within two minutes of the
American. The others were
I 997 champion and fivetime overall runner-up Jan
Ullrich, 61 seconds back in
second place, and his teammate Andreas Kloden, I :4 I
behind in third.
Basso was eighth , 2:33
off Armstrong's pace.
While sti ll closest to
Armstrong, his total deficit
grew from I :25 to 3:48.
"I hoped to lose less
time," Basso said, .. but

Lance was superior!'
Armstrong caught Basso
and p~ssed him just after
riding over a red-whiteand-blue Texas state flag
drawn on the black pavement .. Basso glanced left at
Armstron[, who just looked
straight ahead .
"That is incredibly motivating for a rider when you
see .you're catching some-.
body," Armstrong said. "I
• have a ton ' of -respect for
Ivan. I think he's ' the
biggest threat in the race. 1
think he's the brightest
future for the Tour."
· Ullrich climbed from
fifth to fourth overall, but
his deficit grew to 7:55.
Kloden, lags by 5:03.
Azevedo
was
fourth

-

......
.

I

I

Wedi

34

51

42
49 .

634
.548
.479
457
.426

so
54

w

L

51

43

L

..,

54.

J8

51

42
45

&lt;19

"

l2

2-8

WJ
l2

5

WJ
W1

A-,

34·12
3().16
26-21

20-26

25-22
21·26
19-28
· 22·2.&amp;

23-23

......

17·31

27·22
28-.[7

LJ

24-23

W1

3'1.
6
18'1.

7·3

W2

30-13

5-S
5·5
4-6

L1

31-14

l&lt;l

25·22
23-25

W1

I y. ....Utts

is how much ex tra foreign security
to allow and how · freely to let it
operate. Greece would have bend
laws prohibiting armed sec uri~y
beyond diplomatic protection.
Greek officials also worry foreign guards might overreact to
such common occurrences as street
protests, small firebombs planted
by anarchists or motor scooters on
sidewalks to avoid traffic.
Some concessions apparently
have already been made.
Greek police sources told the AP
earlier this month that armed U.S.
agents would watch over athletes
during a pre-Olympic training
camp on the island of C.rete. The
United States plans to send nearly
200 personnel to Greece, including
diplomatic security and FBI
agents.
More American specialists could
operate under NATO, which has
agreed to provide air and sea
patrols and experts in biochemical
weapons.
Israel, which lost II athletes 'to
Palestinian terrorists at the 1972
Munich Games, will send armed
guards and is among a half-dozen

CASH?

EASE THE
UEEZE!

• 3 Sturdy Cardboard Garage/Yard
Sate Signs - 24" x 12"
• 3 Wooden Stakes
• 216 Pricing Labels
• Inventory She.et
• 4 Mini-signs to be posted on bulletin
boards at laundromats, markets, etc.
• 1 Seven-step instruction sheet, plus .
"Secrets of How to Increase Profits at
a Garage Sale"
• 3 Mounting Materials
• 6 Multi-colored Balloons
~ I Marker for Signs

1 Day Ad:

+

uhors·categorie," or unrated

1

~ Available only With purcna~&gt;fl of Garage
' Mus t hft PICked up ill (lu r Qf1ic"'

Sa!e .Adven•$8n,Mt

3 Day Ad:

$6.00 - 15 words or less
$6.00 Kit
Gets You·Great
Advertising!

+

$9.00 - 15 words or less
$6.00 Kit

$1 s· Gets
You Great
Advertisirg!

®alltpolts ilailp \!rrtbune
·t)otnt t)leasant .l\.egtster
'Fhe Daily Sentinel·

.500

3

351

1';\

5
15-4
4-6
4-6
4-6

Pet.

GB

P10

.638 '

-

8-2

45

.521

1

.500

3

A-,

CENTRAL

24·21
21·25

Stlouis

L
34

W
60

L.2
l1
WI
l2

Stnl
W4

13-32

lt

W
54
52

'.v.d!

l
39
42
43
55
65

53

39
31

15

.478

6-4

WP9na cf 3 1 1 1

ASG.zlzss 4 0 0 0

VnWalrt

4000

Clmentp

Potloelp

00 00

2000
Godwin ph t 0 0 0
Amlrl!Jrp 0 o 0 0
Wllmvrp
aaoo
Hwkins p 0 0 0 0
Totllll
30 5 6 5

L.aAuac
PWilsnp

4 1 1 1
3000
JCastro sa 1 0 0 0
TOIIII 38 4i0 4

.(
000 10• 5
Grudzialanak (1 r.' LOS-

Clndnnall

200
002

Ctt~c.go

200
002

E-L•rkin (3~.
Cincinnati 10. ChiC&amp;QO 6. 2B-Freel 111),
Caeay (29). HR-WPana (14), LaAua 11).
SSosa {18), Alou (22). Delee (16) . SB;CPanerson (11).

IP

H AERBBSO

Clnclmlti
FWil$011

•

4

5

6

I

I

0·

I

~· 4

4

2 ,· 7

~~3-4

'2

24

Clamant
Aamtlngar
WllmyrW,1{l
Hawi&lt;Jns S, t 3 ·
BalK--Clement.

'

2·3

I 1·3
1

0

~ ~ ~ ~

1

0

0

0

2

Umpires--Home. Brian Runge; First 8~1 Hohrt
Sacond, Gary Darling: Third, Mlli'k Cart!Kln.
T-2:56. A--38,761 (39,345).

'

Ttgera 4, Royals 2
K1na. . City

Oetroll

ab r hbl
OJesuscf 4130
Grffnno 2b 3 0 0 0
MISwydh 400a
Harvey1b 3a 1 a
RMateort 4 01 1
DJcksnpr 0000

ab rhbl
Infante 2b 4 0 1 0
Hgglsnrf 3 1 1 0
IRd'9ZC
3 12 1
IJ'r'ong1b 3
CGitlen ss 4 0
I
Rov.ohte dl:l 4 1 1 1
Thmestf . 4111
lnge3b
4010
07384cl
3 0 I 0

8arroa ss 4 0 1 0
R~ford

3b 3 1 1 1

Steirsj:tl

1 000
0000
4010

JB~stapr

OBrwn"

Buckc
Tot1ll

a o. o
a

3000
33 2 8 2

K•nn• City

000

32 4 8 4

TotliiiJ

000 -

01 t

2

o.trolt
011 110 00• 4
E-Barroa (14 ). OP-Kansas City 1. Detroit
t . LOB-Kansas Ctty 6, Detroit 7 . .2B-OeJe·
sua (3). 3B--tnga (3). HR-Aalaford (3), !Rodriguez (13), RoWhlte (13). Thames (3).
C8-DeJesus (1).
IP H RERBBSO

Kflnu1 City
Meyl,7· 10

-e

8

4

4

3

1

Yan
JfJa't.er S, 1

P10

.581
.563
.552
,415

GB
2'f.

.323

24'4

Pel

Stn

29-llt

2·r.

15'~

5-5

L1
W1

26-21
29-21
22·25

0-10

LIO

0

0

2
0

0

0

2
0

2

1

0

0
0

0
0

2
0

1

Balk~roth .

Bruce FroellYT1ing.
T-2:15. A-17,607 j40,120).

~

Pirates 4, Braves 3
Pithburgh

•brhbi
Furcalss 4 t 2 1
MG 1Ies 2b 4 0 1 0
JOrawrf
4 1 1 2
CJones 3:1 4 0 0 0

MckWk3b 4 1 2 1
CWUsn rt 4000
Bay~
3120
TAdmnc1 4 1 2 3
Simon1b 4 0 0 0
Stynes:J:t 0000
Castillo 2b 4 0 1 o
Bens(ll p 3 o o 0
Hillph
1000

Thmaslf
2100
Byrd p
1000
DeRosa ph 1 0 0 0
JuFrcoph 1 0 1 0

Totllill35484

Tollll

JEstda'c

lroche 1b

32 3 6 3

002
000

5
1

000 011 -

2
1

2
1

0
0

4

White Sox 14, Indiana 0

TPerazrf

2 0 1 1
433•
2000

4 1 1 1
4 1 31

4 1 2 1
'NHaJTS 2b 1 0 0 0
Uribe2b 3101

Burkac
Tat~~l•

5331
41141113

15-32

H A ER

9

2

0

0

0

4

4
2·3

9
4

7

7

2

4, 4 • 0

4
0

2 J.3

3

1

4

BuehrteW,t0-3
Clevll•nd
CILae L.1 0:2

·Robertson
Howry

as·SO

1

0

MHier
:232201
CtLae pWched to 2 batl&amp;rs In ttvt 5th.
HBP-by M iler (Valentin ), by MMier {Uribe), bv
Robertson {MOrdooaz), t7)' Cll.ee ICEwn~tt).
Umplrn--tioma, Mite DIMuro; First Darren
Spagnardl : Second, Joe West: Third, Paul
Emmel
T-2:31 A--21,922 (43,389)

lbrhbl

Edo:slln ss 4 0 0
Figgirs 3b 4 0 0
GAndsn cf 4 1 2
VGrerorf 4 0 1
JG1IIen H
Erstadtb
0\fnondh
BMolnac
AKndy2b
Tolall

ab rhbl

0 . MYongss 4021
0 Blalock. 3b 3 0 1 1
0 ASrano 2b 4 1 2 1
0

TIC&amp;ira tb
mnerdh

4 0 0 '1
2) 0 a
400a
3000

3 0 2 I
32 2 5 2

a0

Ni~d

0
4 0 0 0
3000

Mathwsrf
Brajasc
Qtluccllf
Menchlf

3 1 1 o
10 0 0
2000

Total•

3

2 10 0

21 3

e

3

Anahtlm
000 100 · 100 2
Tens
101 000 10x 3
OP-Anaheim I_ LOB-Anaheim 5, Te~~:as 5.
29-VGuarrero ~27), MYoung (21), Barajas
.( 15). HR- AS ofiano ( 19). 58---Manhaws. ~3) .
'
IPHAERBBSO
Anahalm
' KEscobarL,5·7 62·3 5 3 3 3
8
FAodriguez
1 1·3 1 0 0 0
2

Ttwu
5

2

2

2
1
2·300000
1·3 0 0 0 0
1

Maha~

Almanzar
FCordaro 5,30
1 0 0 0
1
WP-KEscobar, Orese .
Umpires--Home, Ed Rapuano; Ftrsl, T&amp;d Bar·
rett; Second, Ad&lt; Reed; Third, AHonso Mar·
quez.
T-2:32. A-37,210 (49 ,115). •

2 0 0 0

Lakerc'
lato
Biaka3b
3aO 0
Hafner dh 3 0 0 0
Merloni lb 3 0 0 0
30ao
Geru!t1
Crispct
2 0 0 0
Szmol'9cf 1000
Tot.!•
27 0 2 0

ChiCISIO

302
060
102 14
Clevel•nd
000
000
000 0
DP-ChiCilQO 2. Cleveland 2. LOB-Chicago

Florida
Pierre cl

ab r hbl
50 0 0

Easley 21l 4
4
Cbr&amp;re r1
4
Conine ~
4
Chol1b
3

"""'~"'

0 3 1
0 0 0

0
0
0
AGnzlz ss 3 0

Tranor c

10
I 0
0 0
10

2 1 1 0

Wt~mph

1 0 0 0

Burnett p

2 0 0 0

Phil•

ss

Rollins
Planoo :i!b
8Abreur1
Thome1b
DaBal~ 3b
Ladeelf
Worrellp
BWgnrp
Mchelscl
lbrthel c

•b r hbl
4 1 :2 a
4 0 2 1
4aOO
3010
3 0 0 0
31 1 1
0000
0000

looperp
Hidalgo rt

JoPltsn p

Cmerond 4 0 2 0

t 0 0 0
SKimp
0000
HMatoopn 1 1 1 o
T\.Qefp
0000
..FIMaph 1000
Horyanp 0000
Aya)ap
0000

Teals

37 413 4 lotala

5 1 1 3
~ 000
3010
3120
., 0 0 0

35 5 g •

000

010
300 4
NewYork
003
100
Olx 5
E-VJdro (5\ , OCabfera (8 ). NJOill'1son !4)
Of'--NewYortr. 3. L08---Montrea19, New Yon,;
12. 2&amp;-EnOtavez (9}. OCabr&amp;•a t 121 Seo
(1). HR-Wtlk&amp;rson ( 17), EnChavez (51
Hidalgo (14). SB--Cameron (12)
IPHRERBBSO
Mon.,..l

........,

T-

JoPatterson
SKim

4

5

4

21

'I

00

2-3

0

1

1-3

0

0

4
4

'

0

'

0
0
0

0

0

0
I
0

0
o

Phllldelphll

0111

000

100 - . 1
10x 2

3 1 1 o 2
Moreno W,l-1
2-3 a 0 0 0 D
looper 8.20
,, 2 0 {j' 0 0
Seo pitched to 2 batters in the 7th
WP-Ayala.
Umpire.......rlome, Jeff N9tson: F1rst. Many Foster, Sacond, Joe Bri&lt;lunan: Thrd. Ttm Tscnlda
T--3:03. A-30,227[57.405).

ab rhbi

m.

7

7

2·3
1 1·3

0
0

1

1
0

1

6

0 0 1
0 0 1 2
HBP~ MiltNood {Treanor). WP-Bumatt.
Umpires--Home. Sam Hotlroo~ Firsl, Paul
Neuart; Second, Randy Marsh; Third, L.e.rry
vaoover.
T-2 :41 . A-44,0n (43,500).

Yankeaa10, Blue Jays 3
New York

Toronto
llbrttbl

Jhnsonlf 5o 3 a
Ctlnol:to dh 4 1 3 1'

4 1 1 a

Berglf
1000
COigdo1b 3 0 0 0
JPhlps 1b' i 0 0 0
Zaunc
20a 1
Casl)c
2000
Hinske 3b 4 0 2 1
Riosrf
3110
Gomezss 3 0 1 0
OHudsn 2b 4
Total•
36 311 3

BWtmsct
Cairo2b
ShHield rt
AAdrgz3b

Po!iada c
Matsui If
Crosby It
Sierradh
TCtarl&lt; 1b
EWilsn ·ss

ab r hbl
5222

4 1 3 1

3
4
4
3

2 23
0 I 0
0 22

1 1· 0
1 0 0 0
5120

3 2 10
4 ,I 1 1

APimo lb 4 0 1 1

ve.r~ek

.M.opzc
KGarc:a rl

Yuk1I1S 3b

4 00 0
4 0 0 0
4 1 1 0

5 0 0 0 ' M1Iartb

3231

BigOeH

411 0

Ma1oscl'

2000

002
054

Tolal•

361at5 9

001

000 -

010

OOx -

3
10

1, New York 1. LOB-Toronto
12, New York 10. 29-Catalanotto [17),
VWells (21), Hinske (17), Cairo (12), Malsui
(161. HR-Shetfield (19), EWiison (6). SFHinske, Cairo.
IP H RERBBSO

Torontq
2 2·3 7 8 8 4 0
2 1·3 6 2 2
1 2
32a013

JVazquezW,11-6
6 9 3 3 2 4
Heredia
11Q001
Padilla
·
1·3 1 0 .0 .2
1
Ouani!UI
1 2·3 o a o a 1
HBP-by JValquez (CDelgado), by Hentgan
(81\ellield). WP-H&amp;nlgen.
Umpires-Home, Kevin Kelley; First, Tim
. Welke; Second, Gary Caderstrom ; Third, Jln
Reynolds.
T~:52. A-53.031 (57.478).

20 0 0

Mets 5, Expos 4

3 o o o·

Monlrlal

New York

c

Mueller 2b 4 1 1 0
3 1 1 3
Kaplerrf
N!Xonph
1011
Tot.ls
3.4 5 8 5

B•ltlmore
000 303 202 - '10
Bolton
000 301 001 5
OP--EiaMimore I. Boston 1. LOB-Ba!1 1mcre
8, Bos!on 5. 2B--Nawt1an (6], Mora 2 (21 ).
38-Te jada (2) . HA-N!I'Nh an (St. Millar (6) .
Kapler (4). SB-Oamon (12). Bellhorn j4)
s--t.letos. SF-RPatm'eiro. Jvlopet
IP H RERBBSO
Baltlmor.
Bedan:IW,.(·4
4
4 3 8
50 0 0 0 2
BAyen
1 1·3'
Gnmsley
2·3 0 0 0 0 •
1·3 3 I
I
Williams
0 0
Ju~o
2·3 0 0 0 0 0
Boston
PMartinez l.10·46 2·3 9 8 8
1 ·7
Mendoza
1·3 2 0 0 0 1
Malaska.
·~
0 0 0 1 1
JAnderson
1 4 2 2 a 0 '
Mendoza pHChed 10 2 batters m 1M 8th .
Umpires-Home. Jell Kelbgg, Frrst. Chns Guc·
cione; Second. Doug Eddings: Thtrd, Dan las·
sog1a. T-J.07 . A-35,023 (35,095).
'

Cardinals 1. Brewers 0
Milwaukee
1b
Pdsdnk c1 4
4
Cunsal!
Jtmkins ~ 1

ss

BCierk~

aa o

4 0 0 0
4 0 10
3000

Damoncf
BUhorn ss
DOmzdh
MAmrz H

38101510

St. louis
, abrhbi
Wmack2b 4· 000
Rnterie ss 2 0 1 1
PU!OIS1b 2 0 0 0
Aolen3b 3 0 0 0
Edmndcl 2 0 0 0
S,Sndrs'i 3 0 0 0
Kingp
0000
tsrngnsp 0000
Mthenyc
3000
TguchiH
3 a
WWimsp 212a
lflldrd 11
1 0 0 0

rhbl
0 2 0
a o
0 0 0

o

0 0 0 0

Ovrbay1 b 3.(100
Gnevert
400 0
BHait2b
4 a 1o
Hetms3b 4 0 1 0
GBnnlt c 3000
VSantsp 2 0 I 0
Mgrderph 1 a a o
Ade.msp a 0 0 0
lVzcno p 0 0 0 0
To1111 30 o s· o Totals

Mllw•ukae

000

oo

~5

000

1 3 1

000 -

Adams
LVizcaino

Itt rhbi
ShSMrt!f\5 1 2 1

CIWtrdH
4 1 I 1
GlhrgtllW 0000
Baldell• c1 :3. 0 0 0
Hul!3b
30a0
Blum3b
10aa
Lugos.s
4 0 0 0
Thfrtnzlb 313 0
JoCnurt 4 0 t 0
FOell
4 011
CiVItu2b 4 a20
Frdycec
4 000
Tot.l1
34 2 8 2

Tampa B•y
Minnesota

Bowent:11 0000
P1111o ss
5 0 1 1
LForcH
4322
Mrneault5131
THntertt 50 1 1
JJonesrl 5110

Cddyer3b 4 2 2 0
HBhco c 4233
AIYas2D
Tot.l•

110
001

DOO

42 .23

.(1121712

000 -

2

801
201 . · - 12
E-Momea u (21 DP--Mtnnesota 1 LOB-

Tampa Bay 7. Mtnn esota 7 2B-ShSlewart 2
~ 8 ). LFord l23). Morneau !3), J.Jon~ (14 )
HA-&lt;:rawfo(d (5 1. LFord (1 2\, HBianco !51 •
Atvas (6 ) SB-Cudd)ier (2) CS-Baldelh (4 ).
IPHRERBBSO
T•mpa B•w
•
Halama l.S-4
3 2·3 9 9 9 1 3
Seay
2 1·3 5
1 1 0 1
lCarler
132200
TreMtller
1 0 0 0 0 · 0

6

3

0

2 '2

J

1
:

c

0

0

:

2

1

F1rs1 Mam
Th rt1 Jerry

"'"'

.
T-2 49 A-34.343 1Sf,OOO

Padres 7,'Giants 1
S.O Diego

ss

KGreen
C11Ho 3b
LOfel'la 2tJ
BGlles rl
NtMr' 1b
longH
l&lt;.leskoH
Aunl1a }J

Payt011 c!

Oteda c

San Fum

4 1 1

o

Dmarr2tt

1 I 0

6 o3 1
5 1 .1 0

WFtio.ln!,i
He•gesp

4 2 2 1
0000

0000

00 0 0

FeiiZ Oh

5011

Bonds~

lOCO
4 000

4 1

Snowtb

4' 2 1

3,

4 0 1 .

A ~OfllO 30 3 0 ' 0
Przynsc
3 a20
DCn.. zss 2 0 0 0
TyWI&gt;&lt;r p
0..,0 0• 0
Mohrrl
1000
AJele•p
· 0 0 0
NPerezss 2 0 0 0
Total!!;
31 1 5 1

4 132

P9avyp

3 0 0 0

Naclyph
Neatp

1000
0 0 90

Totlls

ab .r h'b l
4 000
Tuekerr•
:'! 0 0 0
(irs.som ct 3 0 0 0

lib r hbi

41 7 16 7

S.n Diego
300 100 11 t 7
S.n Francisco 010 000
000 1
E- Tucker (3 1 DP-San Otego,_ San Franctsco I· LOB-San Otego 14 Sao FranCtSCO
5 2B-KGree ne !1 91 Cmtto 13). Aunlta 2 (21.
HA-0J6da 14). Snow 141 SF-At.lrJIIa
tP H RERBBSO

7 6 2 2 0 4
1a oooo
Fu~z
120 000
HBP--tty Leaner (LFord ). by ~adKe
(TMarT1119Z), by Radke (Baldelh)
Diego
T-2.36 A-21 .095 145,423).
·PaavyWl·3
8 4 1
2· 5 '
N8i!l
110002
S.n Franci1co
Rue1er L.S-6
5 '1 .: 4 1 1
Houston
Arizona
T,.Walker
1 2,3 2
1 1 3
1
•b r hbi
1b rhbl
WFra nkltn
1 1·3 ·S
1 0 1 0
8'9Q IO~
51 1 I
Hirs1on 2tJ 4 1 1
Herge's
1 3
1'00
AEvrnss 3 0 1 1 SF1n1ey ct 4 1 3 2
HBP--oy WFrankl11 tKGreene l WP--Herges
CBe~rn ct 4 1 1 I
OB!Jstart 4 000
Ump1res--Home. Chuck Mer1weltler F1r51.
Brkmnrl
31\0
Hinbm lb 4 0 I 0
Matt HoloweU : Second C 8 Bud&lt;nor Tht rd,
JK9rlt2b 4010
Fener5p
0 0 0 0
Enc~r
Bgwe~ 1 o 5120 . LCinZizN
3010
T-2:59 A---412.505 (41 .584 '
Ensbrg 3b 4 o 1 o Cintron ss 3 0 1 0
AadkeW.B-6
Aoa

s.n

Astros 5, O'backs 2

Asmusc 5122
Panmep 2000
JVzcnoph 1 0 0 0
l.Jdgep
ooao

Totllta

lii

510 5

6

3

1

0

1

3

1

0

0

0

1

1

1

0

0

0

0

1

Sl.loul•
wwunamsW,7·6
7 5 o 0 2 6
King
10a010
lsrnghs 5.25
1 0 o 0 0 2
HBP--by WWIItiams (BCI!lrk) ,
Umpires-Home, T~ Randazzo. Fr•st. Fteldin

Olson3b •2000
Vllfer1e p
0 0 0
Choatep 0 0 0 0
Ancllph p 0 0 0 0
Baerge. lb 1 0 0, 0
2000
Bntoc
Mayne ph 10 0 0
Webbp
1000
TracyBb
2000
Tolat•
31 2 7 2

a

Houaton
001
100
012 5
Ar!zon•
000 000 020 2
DP- Houslon 2. AriZona 1. LOB-Houslon
14, Artzone 7. 28--Hauslon (11). SFmtey
{15) HR-Biggio (15), CBsliran (8), SF 1nley
!23) SB-AEverett (9), JKanl (5) . S-Weob
IP H REABBSO

HOUIIOn
Pettitta W.6·3

Log• S,9

872227
100022

Arizona
We!Jbl.3· 11
7 6 2 2 5 5
Villafuefla
2·3 1 1 1 3 1
Choate
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Randolph
· 1·3 9 2 2 1 1
Fetters
6·3 0 a 0 0 0
HBP--try Webb (AEYBratt). WP- Webtl 2.
Ump~res-Home. Larry Porocrno. F1rs1. Greg
G bson: Second, Bruce Oreckman; Thnd. Reb
Drake.

T-2:55. A--26,907 (49,033).
Rockies 6, Dodgers 5
·
Color•do
ab r h bl
M1les2b
4 I I 1
Clayton ss 5 1 2 1
Halloo lb 3 0 0 0
Cas1111a 3b 5 1 1 1
LWatkrrt 3 0 0 I
PrWI$11 cf 3 1 2 1
SAeedp
Chaconp ·a a o o
Burnit2tf 4000
CJhson c 3 1 I 0
Eslesp
3110
HllidayH
I 000

aooo

o

St. lcui•
000
001
oox - 1
E-BHall (9) . Pujols (7). DP-Mi lwau ~ea 1,
St. lou is 2. LOB-Milwaukee 7. St. Louis 4.
28-VSantos (.1 ). SB- Podsednlk (37).
Counsell (10), Renteria (11 ). Edmonds (3) .
CS-Pode&amp;dnik {6). S-Renterta. SFRantaria
IP H RERBBSO

Mltw•uk•
VSantos L.9---4

lb rhbl

Wlll-5
31·3 7 6
S¥\C!iel
22~
0
0
TMartll'l
2·~
Q 0
Dr&amp;lfort
1·3 0 'J
Caln1r •
2
WP--Gnacon Saf'\CI'lez
Ump.;es-Home Paul ScMeoe•
Dowdy· Sec:c.nd Ed Mc:fit~ue

o

Bo•ton

Monl3b 4331
Tejadass 5 I 3 5

Totals

T-2 35 A- 37 104 150.3451

Mirw)IISObt

683331

1 1·3

4021

0.~ 1

Coo""

0000

W n~13t:l
VW1tsnc
Seap
5pnc9r H

BAbrts 2b 5 1 1 0

NtwYon

Phltlles 2, Marlins 1

N..tTm lb 4 0 2 0
Sc:trd' c 3 0 010

1 0 0 0
0000

Cu101etl1 . Secood Jllll Wotl Th.td

Twins 12, Devil Rays 2
a a o a l'.mPI Bay
Minneaota

StiUlton p

Newhndh 54 4 2

E--Eaaley (4). DP-Fiorida 2. LOB-Florida
9, Philadelphia 4. 28-AGonzslez (Z.1),
SB-Easlay (3).
Thome (22). HA-ledae
Rollins {18). C5-M ichaals (2). S-Bumen . .
IPHRERBBSO
Florido
Bumettl,1·5
7~
8 2 2 1 5
Pvrisho
1·3 0 0 0 0 1

Hentgen l,2·9
Filtit ·
Speier

Morenop
leila ptl

Sled9et1

()Q)ef8. ss

--

DP~Toronlo

7

Oresa W,6-5

4 0 2 0

TBista 3b

tb rttbl

000

Toronto
New York

W9!Jil1n lb 2 2 0 0
Flo&gt;,-o' M
'3 1 1 0

....,.....

000

VWetlsc!

4010
0 0· 0 0
5 0 2 ~0
4000

ss

Orloles10, Red Sox 5

Aork:lt

Millwood W,s-5
Worrell
8WagnerS,16

VICWo2b
Gao-roll pr

Stanton

Perisho p 0 0 0 0 MIIWod p .2 o 1 0
Mrdcai ph i 0 0 0
Gnvltle ct 1 0 t 0
Tot811 33 1 7 1 TOC.II 2t 2 8 2

..,_,.

MatSUJ

S&amp;o

San Francisco 3. Arizona 1

5 0 1 0
&lt;1 0 1 1

5221
EOwezcf 5133

~L.l-1

I San Oiego 9. Colorado 7

a

Cleveland
lb r hbt
Blliard 2b 3 0 0 f)
JMcOid 2b 0 0 0 0
VizQOO 68 3 0 1 0
Lawtonlf 3000

VMrtnzc

IP

Anane lm

Mesa S,27
0
Attanll
6 6 4 3 2 3
ByrdL,2-3
JuCruz
2 20000
Alfonseca
1 0 0 0 0
2
HSP....J:Jy Benson {Thomas)
Umpires--Home, John Hirschbecll;: First . Wally
BeH; Second, l.aZ Dial:; Third , Bill Walke.
T -2:24. A--30.131 (50,091)

Calaelt
Gloadtf
CEvrtt dh
Knerko1b
Cmda3b

1&amp;-33

4, Aljanta J. (tO\
los Angeles 7, HoU!Iton 5

Chlclgo

3a 1o

Atlan1a1 . LOB--Pmsbur9h 6, Allanta 3 . 2BKandaM (~6), Mackowiak {15). HA-TRed·
man (5) , JOrew (23). SB-Furcal (9), CSBay{J ).
IP H AERBBSO

ab r ttbl
Rwandcl 5131
Vkmtinss 51 1 2
MOrdzrt 2220

17·30

Ph tla~la

Konerll.o, Uribe.

Rangers 3, Angels 2

a oo

4
Atl•nt•
·3
E-Furcal {15). Byrd {1). DP-Ptttsbu rgh 1.

Chlctgo

25-21
26-21
24-22

I Ch:innati 6, Mtwaukee 2
St. louis t 1. Chicago cooo 8
I P~ 2, MonbMl I
A:trida ~ . NY Mats 7
.

4 0 0 0
4

AJonas c!

8
1

'

Aw.t

~'IRMullt

-·-

2
1·3
2·3

Benson W,B-7

· Hotne

L1

ud~· ·•

22·25

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

2

."""",...

22-27 ,

22·23

W3

I, Mitwauke8' 0
Hou81on 5, Arizona 2
San Oiego 7. San FranciSco 1
Color8do 6. los Angeles 5

6

200
100

31-16

6-4
7-3

St. louis

Umpi1'9&amp;--Home, Hunter Wendelstadt: FiF'SI,
Mike Winler.s: Sacond. Tm Timnions; Third,

Pitllburgh

Aw.y

29-111

8-2

RMOIU
OlicagO Cubs 5, Cltilnati 4
PittsbJrgh 4, Atlanta 3
Ph~2, Florida I
NY Met&gt; 5, Montr&amp;al4

6

•b r hbl
Kendall c 4 1 1 0
JWHsnss 4000

Home

28-18

W2

Cubs 5, Reds 4
4000

23·25
20-27
15·3'

46

44

8. 28-Rowand ( 19). Konen&lt;o (12/, Burke 2
(5). HR-Valentin (21 ), CaL&amp;fl 2 Hi). SF-

lbrhbl

23·23

24-22
27·20
18-27

PittSburgh

LosAn!leles
San OieQo
San FranciSCO
C&lt;Jiorado
Arizona.

24·25
20-28
24-23

o.tr"Qit

Grdzk12b

7 22
26-2::2

~~.~~~~
~2~~~~~t
LJ~~&amp;~~~~22~
-~
48
.489 14
3-7' =~
W1
23-~4
23-24

Mon1reat {Armas Jr. 1·3).&amp;1 N.Y. Mms (Giavi'le 7-8), 12:10 p.m
Pittsburgh (K.WeHs 4-6) at Atlanta (Au.Ortiz 1 Hl), t :05 p.m .
Ao!'ida (Pavano 9-4) at Philadelphia (Woll4·5) , 1:05 p.m.
•Cincr.nati (lldle 6-7} at Chicago Cuba (Maddwc 8-7), 2:20p.m.
Colonldo (Cook 4-4) at loa Angeles (Od.Pefez 4;-3), 3:10p.m.
San Diego (QWells 5-5) at Swl Franci&amp;to (Schmidt 12·2), 3:35p.m.
Hous1on (Cwtal 8-8) at Arizona (Ed.Gonzalaz 0-l), 6:05p.m.
MiM'aukse (Sheets 9-6) at St. loui!l (Marquis 9-4) , 8:10p.m

Chlc.go

A-r

~P~
:;;""";:,'
;clon::.- -?.4746

WEST

.
I

Maroth W.7·7
levine

ttorr.

~qc~
~~~~~~!=~·
~ii==~10IO'~It ==..5-5~==~w~1==j~~~i==i22~·2•
~0&lt;-&lt;nna~~~~
·~
==£.50 . 45 .526

NY Vriees 4, Tampa Bay 2
j 08ldand 1. Toromo a, {14)
c~ ,., Anaheim s
Boslon 9, Seattle 7
Mlnne60ta 5. Detroil4.(10)
Texas 6, Chk:ftgo Sox 4

Lin*\ ss 2 l 0 0 CP!tson ct o&amp; 0 2 0
HITII'I'Iel3b 0 0 0 0
SSosa rf 3 2 1• I
JtCruzph 1 D 0 0 Aloull
22 12
CaHY·1b .5 1 2 0
Delee 1b 3 I 1 2
Rmanopr 0000 . AArm30 4aao
Dunnll
5020
REMI:iz3b oooa
0Jmnz2b 5 02 2 Banettc 3010

countries con'trib uting sec urit y
expertise at Greece 's request.
In Israel , a security advis.er to
the Israeli Olympic team sa id it
was "correct and logical" for
Greek official s to permit foreign
guards and intelli gence agents.
;•1 think every team since
Munich was protected by the 'Shin
Bet (security services) and there is
nothing better than thi s." Assaf
Hafetz, a former police 'commissioner. told Israel Radio.
"Thi s is smart on the parr of the
Greeks and it's not clear to me
why they opposed this. After the
issues of honor were put aside , the
professional issues were considered," Hafe tz said. "Thi s is the
correct decision."
He added that he knew of no
direct threats aimed at the Athens
Olympics.
" But there are groups like
Hezbollah and al-Qaida that have
the willingness and the ability to
ilttack at the ga mes," Hafelz said.
"A nd thu s it makes this business
so critical. So you can't talle4 ust a
defensive position. you must act
on the offensive."

Strtc

PIO

TIKndoys ...,_
Baftinore (Lopez 7-6) at Boston (Ca.s1illo 0.0), 1.05 p.m.. 1st game
Toronto (Uiy 7·7) at N.Y.Yankees (Hatnandel 2·0), 1:05 p.m.
Kanaaa C~ (Gobble 5-1) at Detroit (Knotts 5-4), 1:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Bralallon 2-3) at Minnesota (Santana 8-6 ), 1:10 p.m .
AnliheW'n (Colon 7-8)at TIUIS&amp; {Ric. A~ 3.0). 2:05 p.m .
Ba!tirnof9 (Borl&lt;owsld 1·1) at Boston (Wakafield 5--6) , 7:05p.m., 2nd Qollme
Olic&amp;go Whle Sox (Garda 7-8) at C~ (Sabathia 6-4), 7:05p.m
Ol.ldand {AeOnan 6-7) at Seattle (RFran~n 3-8), 10:05 p.m.

Clnctnnd
aDrhbl
Frwl3b . 5020

Detroit Pistons Rasheed Wallace drives on Los Angeles Lakers Kobe Bryant in Game 4 of the
NBA Finals in Auburn Hills, Mich., in this June 13, 2004 photo. Wallace will return to the
Pistons next season, a source told The Associated Press Wednesday. The unrestricted free
agent forward has agreed to a five-year, $57 million contract. (AP File)

08

47
47
61

Baltimore 12, Kansas City 3

NY 'IWibes 10. Toronto 3
TIDWI 3, Anahem 2
Minnaacm 12, Taml)fl Bay 2
Seattle 6,- Qakland 5, (10)

Pel

~

I TUnda'{'l RMultl

S,llinore 10, 8oslon 5

L

~~~
· ~~-~--~~~-- ~~,~~it~i-~~~~~;w.~~~,~-~~"~~

A_,

Home

W

Atlanta

lib fhbi

Reyes2b

Wlu'snf

Flonde. 47
NY Mets
47
Montreal - - 33

21·26
12· l ,t

22~27

Strk .

P10

EAST

20-27

L1

16

G8

......

.
.
2&amp;21
...

......

.,
•

.587
.548
.521
387

57

L1

~7

P10

.489.
.479 '

.370

~5

...

19',1,

543
.538

58

W

8

....

W2

7·3

14'4
16'1,

Chicago Sole 14, Clewland a
o.n:it 4; Karas City 2

Tuesday by winning the
first stage · in the Alps,
Armstrong found energy for
a sprint finish.
"I didn't expect to gain so
much time on Ivan Basso,"
he said. "When I set out, I
didn't know how fast I was
going, how my form was.
But a spectator said, 'A
minute ahead:' l replied ,
'No, no, that's not possible."'
At times , crowds covered ·
the road, parting only at the
.Jast moment as riders
approached. Some fans ran
alongside the bicy,les ,
waving flags that came
close to catching handlebars or wheels. Others
forced riders to swerve.
It was the first time .t our
organizers held a time trial
on the legendary climb.
Armstrong said it was "a
bad idea," adding: "It's not
safe for anybody."
Some riders said fans
booed or offered beer.
Armstrong complained that
some German fans were
"horrible" but said crowd
animosity "motivates me
,more than anything."
"What I don't understand
is when I watch the television, they cheer for everybody. They don't spit on
them ," he said.
But he added: "This is
big-time span: People are
emotional and excited .... It
doesn't take away from my
desire to win. I think it puts
a little fuel on the fire ."
The ascent is classed as

1

59

••

...

P10

lib r hbi

Nllllonal Laague

.

on New York and Washington.
Among the added costs. said
Doukas, is more than $2.4 million
for a blimp outfitted with high-resolution cameras and chemical detection systems.
· On the ground, authorities are
struggling to overcome delays and
financial disputes to close gar.s in a
new communications-survetllance
network.
Greek ofticials also are seeking to
find agreement on the politically
sensitive issue of armed security
contingents planned by the United
States, Israel and possibly other
nations,
Public Order Minister Giorgos
Voulgarakis insisted athletes will be
under the exclusive protection of
Greek forces. But he noted that foreign leaders and other dignitaries
can use their own armed guards as
part of an established "security
protocol" that covers such visits .
Heads of state and .other prominent figures, including former
President Bush, are expected in
Athens and normally have a security entourage.
The issue facing Greek officials

- the hardest on cycling's
scale of difficulty: But
Armstrong still climl;&gt;ed at
an average speed of 14.5
mph.
"Lots of emotion, lots of
adrenaline," ' Arm strong
said. "I wanted it bad
because of the history
around this mountain and
the importance to the race ."

Pet.

42

Totals

34 6 ·a 5

Lo• Ange~es
ab r hbl
IZ1urts ss
4 1 1 0
JHrndz 2b 3 2 2 2
Cora2t
1000
Brdley c!
4 0 0 1
Ballre3b 30 0 1
Werth~
4000
ShGren 1b4121
JEcrcnrf
3 01 0
DAbrts pr 0 0, 0 0
Rosse
2000
Vnlura ph 1 0 0 0'
10~0
lshtip
Snchezp
0
Saenz ph 01 0 0
TMartnp 0000
Dnlorlp
0000
LDucaph 1 0 0 0
C;mar p
00 0 0
Tolals
31 5 6 5

o oo

Colorado
201
300 000 8
lol Angaill
000
103
001 5
E-Beltre (6'J. DP--co!orado 1, Los Angelas
1. lOB-Colorado 7, LoB An9atea
3 26-JHernanclez (5) HR-Gas111ta (17).
JHemeodez (6), ShGreen {13); SF-Bell•e
IP H R ER SB,·SO
Color• do
EstesW.10·4
6 1·3 5 4 4 2 5
12·3000 00
SAeed
I
1
1 1 1 0
Chacon S.21
Los Angal11

Mariners 6, Athlalics 5, (10)
Seattle
ab rhbi
ISuzuk1rf 514 o
'Ninnc!
30 2 1
BBoone 2b 4 2 1 1
lballez H 5 1 1 2
Jcbsen dh 4 1 1 1
JoCbra lb 4 0 1 C
OltVOC
3010
Leonto3b 400 0
Blmqt51 ss 4 1 1· 0

ab r hbi
Kolsay c1
ByrnesH

4. 1 2 1
5 0 0 0

ECh~z3b 3 1 2 0
Dyert
500 0
Karros 1b 3 0 1 0
Httoerg 1b 1 1 ; 2
K~eltydh
50 10

C10sby ss 4 1 2 1

DMit !arc 4 1 1 1
Scutaro 2b 4 0 0 0
38 5.10 S lolita
Total•

36. 612· 5

Oakllnd
110 ·100 020
0 5
Seattle
· 202 tOO 000
1 6
No ou1s when w1nning run scored
E- ZIIO t2l. leone (61. DP-Seattte 2 LOBOakland 7. Seattle 8 28-ISuzukr (11 ). Wmn
(24). HR-Kotsay (5). Hatteberg 11 I I, Cr06by
(131. DM1tter (8) , 8Boons (13 ', Ibanez (12),
Jacobse'1 [3). SB~Ko1say (6) . Crosby {6) .
CS- tSuzuk1 (71 S~Ha tt eberg SF-W1nn
IP H RERBB $0'
Oakland
ZIIO ·
595534

c

RA in ct~n

1

1

0

Bradford
Ochchr l.4·2

2

0

0000

I

2

1

1

1

0

0

2

Seattle
Blaclc.ley
553331
JMe1eo
210001
Putz
132200
Guardado
1 0 0 0 0 0
MadntschW,1·0
1 1 0 0 0 0
Ouchscherer p11Chad 10 1 l&gt;a!ler 1n the 1Ottl.
WP----Btackley. pg....:.QMi ler
UmpireS-Home. Phil Cuzzt: F rsl. La~e
Barksdale; Second, Jerry Crawlord. Ti1trd. Bn·
an O'Nora.
T- 3:26.A- 36.181 (47.447).

AL Leaders
BATTING
IAOCirlgooz , Detro~ . .361: Mora,
Baltimore, 349: MRam1rez. Boston . 337 ·
ISuzuk1, Seante. '333: VGuerrero. Anahe1m .
333; MYoung, Tex&lt;\s . .332: THatner. Cleveland
328.
HOME AUNS -.MRamtre.z, Bos1on. 27. DOrllz.
Boston, :26; Blalock, Te~as , 24, Konerko. Olcago,
·24: ARodnguaz. New 'roO(, 24;Te1Xf!lra Texas. 2:2:
VGuerr&amp;ro. Ana h~m . 21 :Valentin, Ch1ca~. 21

NLLeaders
BAnlNG Bords, S8n FrenciSCO, 362. Over·
bay, Mt.wukee, .341 . CaSI:I'J. Cincimah, 341 ,
Helton , Colore.OO. ,334; Rolen. St. LD~Jis. .332;
lorena, San Drago, .332 J'N1Isorl. Plllsburgn.

.325.

.

HOME RUNS - Thorne. Ph,l!iidelphla , :31 .
Pujols. S1.Lou1s. 27: Dunn Cmcinnati 26 : Bel
tre, l os Angeles. 25 ' Bonds. San Franc,sco. 24:
JDrew, Allan4a. 23. SF1nley. Arizona . 23

Buehrle
nearly perfect as White Sox down Indians
.
.

. ,

Wednesday, I :45 back, and
is fifth overall - remarkable for a rider who has
concentrated on helping hi s
team leader.
Armstrong now has three
individual stage victories
this Tour all in the
mountains,
taking
hi s
career 'total to 19. He
trained relentlessly on
climbs · before . the Tour,
repeatedly scaling L' Alpe
d'Huez.
Last year, Armstrong
wound up just 61 seconds
ahead of Ullrich in Paris.
The shak(ness of that view:
ry - by far his narrowest
winning margin si nce he
came back from cancer to
take his first Tour in 1999 ·
-spurred his preparations,
"This is n0t a final exam
you can cram for. This is
the Tour, and it requires a
yearlong commitment. You
come here in the month of
May when it's a ghost town,
and you simply ride up and
down
the
mountain,"
Armstrong said.
"These are things we do,
·have always done, and personall y love more than anything. The only people here
are those paving the roads
or working in the one or
two hotels that are open.
There's not a million people on the side of the road .
Just a· few people, and that
makes it beautiful and
makes
the
difference
between winning and losing."
As
overall
leader.
Armstrong had the advantage of being the last of the
157
riders
to ~ start
Wednesday's
individual
race against the clock. That
enabled him to measure
himself against his opponent'S - notably Basso.
Wearing black shoes,
black socks and hi s coveted
yellow jersey as overall
leader. 'which he reclaimed

L

.... ..
..

•

wou1d be under a NATO umbrella.
"The Greek.government has made
a request of NATO. NATO is evaluating that request," Myers said.
Greece's top law enforcement
official, meanwhile, said forei gn
leaders and ether dignitaries.can use
their own armed guards at the Aug.
13-29 games. but athletes · will be
under the exclusive · protection of
Greek forces.
lnter,national demands to boost
Olympic security have pushed costs,
already the highest in Olympic history, to at least $1.5 billion - 25
percent higher than previously estimated , Greek Deputy Finance
Minister Petros Doukas said. These
may include expanded roles for
NATO anti-terrorism units and
armed agents from the United States
and other nations.
.
"There are new bills coming up,'l
Doukas told The Associated Press,
adding that Greece did not want to
"risk the reaction" by denying foreign appeals for added security.
The United States has led
demands to expand anti-terrorism
measures for the first summer
Olympics since the Sept. II attacks

W

45
42
40

:Olympic security costs rise as Greece grapples with foreign demands
ATHENS, Greece (AP)
Responding to . a request from
, Greece, the United States committed
400 American special forces soldiers
to help protect the Olympics, a U.S.
Gounterterrorism official
said
Wednesday, as securi ty costs for the
games swelled to a record-breaking
$1.5 billion.
·
It was not yet decided where the
U.S. soldiers would be' based: in
. Athens, on the nearby island of
Crete or on alert .in Europe. where
the~ are based in Germany. The
Umted States is in the process of discussing with the .Greek government
where the soldiers will be po~i­
tioned, said the official, who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
The decision on where to send the
troops is mostly up to the Greek
government, but will be made joint. ly with Gen. James · Jones . .the top
NATO commander who also is commander of U.S. forces in Europe, the
ofticial said in Washington.
Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld am] Gen. Richard Myers,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
indicated in Washington that any
possible involvement of U.S. troops

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

8'1' TOM WITHERS
Associat~d Press

The Indians were as talkativl!, as Buehrle.
"Guys yelled about it on
CLEVELAND
Mark every at-bat to jinx him," third
baseman Casey Blake said.
· Buehrle was pretty close to "But he had his way with us."
perfect.
Carlos Lee homered twice
Buehrle pitched a tw 6-hit- and Valentin added a two-run
· ter, 'retiring the · first 19 shot for the White Sox, who
: straight and facing the mini- blew it open with a six-run
·. mum 27 batters to lead the fifth and finished with 19 hits.
· Chicago White Sox over the
· Cleveland . Indians
Chicago, which remained a
14_0
Wednesday night.
half-game behind AL CentralB h
(
·leading Minnesota, had lost
)
h
· . ue r1e ' . 10; 3 • we 1°hewALas nine of its previous 15. But
: miffed he didn 1 mak
. . like they've done all season,
: All-Star . te?m earlier thts the White Sox hit behind
: mo~th, didn ~ allow .a runner Buehrle, who is getting nine
. unt•l Omar VIzquel hned a 3- runs per game from his
: 2 pttch out of the r~ach of offense.
shortsto~ Jose Yalentm with
"Maybe they like him,"
one out m the seventh. .
manager Ozzie Guillen
"He faced the m1mmum, quipped .
: that .~oesn ' t hap~_en very
Buehrle doesn't know why
:often, Wh1te Sox first .?ase- his teammates come out
: m!ln Paul Konerko satd. Th~t swinging for him.
"It seems like if I go out
: team was as hot as ~yone 10
. the world,, so that s pretty there and put up zeroes, we
tmpress1ve.
score 10 or 15 runs," he said.
. Buehrle struck out four ar
The last time the Indians
, walked none for ,hts f• th were shut out so decisively
; career shutout and first com- was a 14-0 loss at Yankee
: plete game smce last Aug. 8: Stadium in 1992.
. He had ent~red JUSt 4-6 10
Cliff Lee (10-2) gave up
: 13 starts agamst Cleveland, seven runs and nine hits in
and _hts 5.38 career EI~.A com- four innings, losing for the
mg m agamst the lndtans was first time in nine starts since
: his highest agamst any oppo- June 3.
· nent. . , ·
"They put it to me pretty
.. That dtdn t matter. He dam- good," he said. "I wasn't that
.: mated fr~m the start, handl!ng bad, they wj!re that good.
:baseballs htghest-sc&lt;&gt;nng They hit any pitch in any
. te~,m wtth ease.
.
, .
count."
It was the most •mpresstv~
Buehrle wasn't intimidated
ou.tmg ~gamst us all year, by ari Indians' lineup that hit
: satd f1r~~ base~an Lou 23 homers in its previous
: Merlom. He . dtdn t have to eight games. He only went to
. make many pitches to get us three balls on one hitter
:out. He got an earl~ cush~on before the single by Yizquel.
: and the~ w~s throwmg stnke who was erased by a double
· after stnke.
play
: Buehrle was remarkably
Ti~ Laker led off the eighth
eftictent, thmwmg 67 of 90 with a single for Cleveland's
: pttches for stnkes. And . he other hit but he, too, was
: even tempted fa,te, breakmg erased by a double play.
:one of bas~ball s un~ntten
As usual, there was tension
. rules by ta!kmg about hts per- between the division rivals.
: feet game m the dugout whtle Indians pitchers hit four bat: 11 was sull mtac_t. , .
1ers, and Cleveland reliever
: "Gu~s V:,~~e hke~ ~hat w; Jeriome Roberston was eject: you c;lot~g · he sat d.. I dtdn 1 ed in the fifth inning after hit• care. It s not 1.hat btg of a ting Magglio Ordonez.

··~~
d

'

"! think the kid threw at
him," Guillen said. "No
doubt."
Carlos Lee hit a. two-run
shot in the third and added a
solo ~ot in the fifth as the
White Sox opened a 11-0
lead. Lee has · 10 homers in
July, four more than his total
for the season's first three
months.
The other big blow in the
inning was delivered by
Valentin, whose 21st homer
' leaves him four shy of joining
Cal Ripken Jr. and Alex
Rodriguez as the only shortstops to hit ' 25 or inore
homers in five straight seasons.
Notes: Lee moved into sole
.

possession of eighth place on
Chicago's career home run
list, two ahead of Minnie
Minoso ( 135). ... The White
Sox haven't had a perfect
· Charlie
game ' since
Robertson in 1922. Their last
a no-hitter was by Wilson
Alvarez in 1991. ... There has
not been a no~hitter at Jacobs
Field, which opened in 1994.
... The Indians haven 't been
no-hit since Jim Abbott of the
New York Yankees in 1993.
Cleveland OF Grady
Sizemore made his major
league debut. The club's
prized prospect entered as a
defensive replacement in the
ninth. He popped to second
for the final out.

Chicago White Sox's Mark Buehrle is all smiles as he high~
fives teammates after Chicago beat the Cleveland Indians 14-.·,
0 Wednesday in Cleveland. Buehrle was pitching a perfect
game until Omar Vizquel singled to center with one out in the
seventh innmg. (AP)

special advCrtisin g tCmu.rc

Major Rental Car Company
·Has Gone Bankrupt
Vehicles 50o/o - 70°/o Off Original M.S.R.P.+
$Millions in Inventory Now Available at Norris Northup Chrysler
Dodge Jeep for Immediate Disposal; Direct To The Public!
GALLIPOLIS, OH - Due to recent economic woes and
the nationwide decline in travel, a fl!llior rental car company has

recently gone out of business. Hundreds of late model cars.
trucks, vans and SUVs must be liquidated. The largest supply of
these vehicles are in the $8,000 tQ $15,000 price range. •

Fleet Liquidators of ADl&lt;rica has arranged forowr 214 re111al
liquidation '1 nd other used vehicles to be avai lable al NORRIS
NORTHUP CH RYSLER DODGE JEEP for this one-time-only
major dispo,al event All Vehicles will be clear!~· marked,
Offers may be below the posted settlemt:nt amoun1.

$59 Down* Then Start Making Payments • Payments As LowAs $79/mo**

WHEN: 5 DAYS ONLY- TIDS EVENT WILL NQT BE HELD OVER
WEDNESDAY
JULY21
9AM-7PM

THURSDAY
JULY22
9AM-7PM

FRIDAY
JULY23 "
9AM-7PM

SATURDAY
JULY24
9AM-7PM

--

SUNDAY
JULY25 '
IPM-SPM

NORRIS NORTHUP CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP ·
252 Upper River Rd. • Gallipolis • (740) 44~-0842
• All offers on approved cred1!. $59 down plus tax, lttie &amp;fees. ""Example: 1999 Ford Taurus, Sale Pnce $3731 . $79/mo for 48 mos.
@ 10.5% APR . $59 down payment plus tax. Total amount financed $3,672 plus tax. Subj~ct to credit approval. prior sale &amp;lenders
final approval. +A select few vehicles wit! be discounted 50· 70% off original MSRP. Copyright G&amp;A Marketing, Inc. 2003.

�,,

www .myqailysentinel.c~ni

Thursday, July·22, 2004

Thursday, July 22, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Grand entrance for Shaq-in Miami
MIAMI (AP) - Shaquille -Florida Marlins drew for last
O'Neal weighs 340 pounds, year's World Series, and he
anticipates the same kind of
and he's hungry.
He wants to show the NBA box-office boost from O'Neal.
that the Los Angeles Lakers · especially if he leads the Heat
kept the wron~ All-Star. And to their ftrst NBA title.
he plans to do 11 by leading the
"We have definitely been
blessed."
Riley
said.
Miami Heat tea IItle.
O'Neal made a grand "Somehow he found his way
entrance Tuesday at a rally down here to Miami - the
welcollling him to Miami. He most talented, most dominant
arrived in a semi-tractor trailer player in the world."
with the words "Diesel
The first game is still 3 1/2
Power" on the side, emerged months a'l&lt;'ay, but O'Neal
from the cab firing a plastic already is the most entenainwater cannon at the crowd of ing act in town, and he never
several thousand. then fol- went long without a quip.
· lowed a red carpet up the steps
-On buying a home in
South Florida: " I will be walkto the Heat's arena.
Once at the top, he pled~ed ing naked on the beach: lf you
that an even bigger celebration take pictures of me naked on
is in the future.
the.beach, don't sell them to
''!' m going to brio~ a cham- the Enquirer unless I get 15
pionship to Miami,· O'Neal' percent. '
.
told the fans. "1 promise."
-Dn being 32 years old :
At a news conference thac "I'm like toilet paper, toothfollowed, O'Neal spoke little paste and cenain amenitiesabout his differences with I'm proven to be good. I've
Kobe Bryant and Lakers man- still got five, si,'l. seven, eight,
agement that triggered the nine, 10 years left."
trade. But he said he appreci-Dn his weight: "!_play my
ates the way he has been best ball at 345. I need my
embraced in Miami.
(
meat, bec~use I'm going · to
"I told my w1fe when 1 was · take a beatmg. If you put a guy
rollin~ up, I felt like the presi- in kont of me who eats salad
dent,' he said. O'Neal then and cucumber and baked
hummed "Hail to the Chief." chicken all d;ly, I'll kill him."
The rally came six days after
O'Neal referred to himself
the Heat acquired the 11-time · as "the Millennium Goliath,"
All-Star in a trade that sent but even the world 's most
three staners to Los Angeles. dominant player will need
Such festivities might seem help tran ~forrning the Heat
premature to some cities, but into champions.
They'.ve lost the entire front
Miami loves celebrities- and
winners.
line from a team that went 42Heat president Pat Riley 40 last season and made an
remembers the sellout crowds improbable run to the second
the
attendance-challenged round of the playoffs.

Reds
from Page 81
'Wow. What have I done ?'"
Sosa said. "They want you to
come through. It's not going
to happen every time they
wish.'
.
Todd Welle meyer ( 1-0)
pitched I · 1-3 scoreless
mnings, and LaTroy Hawkins
pitched the ninth for his 13th
save in 17 chances.
Wellemeyer stranded the.
bases loaded in the seventh
when he threw a called third

strike past' John Vander Wal
in the pouring rain just before
a 54-minute delay.
Vander Wal had fouled off
· three straight 3-2 pitches,
then took a high fastball he .
was certain was a ball .
Vander Wal flipped his bat
toward the dugout and staned
trotting to first ·when 'umpire
Brian Runge called. him out
on strikes.
"It . was pretty difficult to
swallow when a ball is obviously a ball and everybody
knows it," Vander Wal said .
"It changed the outcome of
the game."
Chicago had lost back-to-

I'

i

I
1

CLASS I F -1ED

•

To Place
Register
m:rtbune·
Sentinel
Your Ad,
446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740)
Or Fax To (740) 446-3008
Or Fax To
992-2157
Or Fax To
675-5234
\ \ \11 \ \ (I \II \ h

Ir

rL--------,.1 :
I'ER&lt;;oNALS

KIT &amp; CARLYLE ·

GIVEAWAY

roRSAI..Ji

www.comlca.com

· -··GiiiA
iiiLiiil.liiol'OiiiUS-_.,1

plele our family... Fun
Oevoted Dad, Stay at' home
Mom, and 2 b1g sisters walting to share all our love with
another Angel. We Invite you
to theck out webs1te in

Shaquille O'Neal and his wife, Shaunie, talk during his official welcoming ceremonies Tuesday as he joins the Miami Heat bas·
ketball team in Miami. (AP)

back 'tight games to the firstplace St. Louis Cardinals and
had fallen into third place in
the N L Central.
"Hopefully it can be a turning point," Cubs st&lt;)rter Matt
Clement said. "You lose that
game, a.nd !?e negatives just
keep gomg.
.
Derrek Lee and Moi ses
Alou hit two-run homers for
Chicago, which is finally getting healthy . after months of
injury troubles .
Wily Mo Pena and Jason
LaRue hit solo homers for the
Reds, who ouihit the Cubs
·t0-6, and D'Angelo Jimenez
had two RBls.

Cincinnati 's Paul Wilson
worked out of a bases-loaded
jam in the first when Aramis
Rami rez flied out to the base
of the left-field wall . Wilson
wound up allowing four runs
and four hits in six innings
with six strikeouts.
Clement , 0-5 in eight sta1ts
since June 8. gave up four
runs and" seven hits in six
innings with seven strikeouts.
· Jimenez hit a two-run si ngle with two outs in the first,
but A lou 's 22nd home ,tied
the score in the third.
Pena homered in the
fo urth , his 14th of the season
and seventh in I 0 games,

and LaRue homered two batters later for a 4,2 lead. Lee
hit his 16th homer in the
sixth inning, hi s fourth in
seven games .
"Cert~ inl y, thi s is one of
the few days in a long time
that all three have really
come through," Cubs manager Du·sty Baker said.
"Hopefully, it will get us
back on a winning note."
Notes: Chic ago trade(j
INF Ricky Gutierrez to
Boston for a player tb o be
named or cash. The Cubs
recalled RHP Jon Leicester
from Triple-A Iowa and
opt ioned
RHP
Francis

Beltran to the minors. ·
Leicester" went 2-0 with a
2.63 ERA in 13 2'3 innings
with the Cubs earlier in the
season. .. . Jimenez extended ·
his hitting streak to 11 games .
with a first-inning single. It's
the longest hitting streak of
the season for the Reds....
Former Cubs · 1B Bill
Buckner, who won the 1980 ·
batting title with Chicago, .
was honored before the game .
and sang "Take Me Qut to the :
Ball Game" during the sev- ·
enth-inning stretch .. :. Reds
batters struck out 12 times....
Each starter threw exactly
I 00 pitches . .

··-···-···-···-···-··1

aeh ·3 Counties
,

.

I
i
i
•

·1:

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's

I

Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

•

I

i

·I
I·

I'
f.

t:
,.

I«!Pallipoli~ 1!latl!' 1Eribune The Daily Sentinel ~oint ,Jllea~ant Regi~ter
L
.
.
.{740~.
~6:.234~'
-··~··~··-·F40t
992:.215~.
"-···-·.. -;-·~304)..~.:~33~.-.. ~ ..J
•
------------------~----

hopes something will draw
us
toge ther
forever!!
http:llwww.wishing2adopt.h
omestead.com/ You can
reach us toll free 1-877-256·
8944
God ~less
Deb &amp; Greg
C-1 Beer Carry ·Out permit
for sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
of interest to : The Daily
Senti nel, PO BoK 729-20.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

In this newepttper It ·~
aubj.c1 to the FMer•l
Fair Housing Act or 1968
which makee It 111-uatl to
advertl.. " any
prwferenc:e, llmlttttlon or
dlecrlmtnetlon based on
rac:e, color, religion, nx
famllt.l eta1ua or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preferenci, llmltatlon or
dlacrlmlnatlon."

·-------,...1

~.,t.•-· •G•I•VEX-\•vA•v-,. .l r
19 104

074

YARD SALE-

.. PoMEROYiMniDLE

Fri. &amp; Sat. July 23-24, Co
Ad. 19 Peach Fork Rd. turn
YARDSALErJ 6 week old kittens . Just
left coming from Pomeroy,
GALLiroUS
p lus size clothing, baby
weened, m1tlel;l paws. Good
items, lots of toys and much
. home only. (74,0)44 1.0797.
3 fam.ily garage sale 2324
more.
Free adorable mixed pup- ·st. At 554. July 22·23-24.
ARO SALEpies. 4 weeks old, (740)992· BabY. kids, Jr. &amp; lg. clothes,
Pr.
PtEASM7
TV &amp; VCRs. kilchen &amp; misc.
4454
items 9-5.
Dow n Sizing Yard sale Fri &amp;
Free kittens to give away,
sa.t 9-5 346 Ma'm St leon.
(740)992-1510 leave mes- 5 1amily yard ,sa Ie Sat. 7-2 4,
8 :~5, 6 miles out 141 , from WV
sage.
Gallipolis. Furniture; fishing - - - - - - - - Pre-Movmg/going out of
Free puppies to give away. 5 gear, guns, bat1ery charger, bUSine SS sate New ave
mates and 2 females_ toys , household items, tools, Items.
Silverware,
(740)985-4 149
meat cutting ban saw.
Christmas. toys , collector
dolls, lots of househOld
items. from Wed 21st- Wed
10am
5pm
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725 ' 28th
oil
Ridgewood
Estates
of
Announcement ............................................ 030 ·
Sandhill 7th hOuse on le ft

n

r

76 Y
1
·--iioiioiiiiiiiiiiio_.l

CLASSIFIED INDEX

r

one acre mil . 3-112 miles
!rom Holzer 'Hospital.
620 Evergreen Fld., $19,500
560 Evergreen Ad -, $18,500
(740) 446·8840
or
Cal l

(740)6 45·4513.
IH \I \I..,

·(304 )675·0860. ext 1241125.
Monday thru Friday. from
6 :00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. LaKin
Hospital IS an EEO/AA
Employer

-----,----.,.-~
Diesel Mechanic/
TrallerTechnichlan
$300 Sign On Bonut

One of Ohio's leading motor
carriers has an immediate
opening In ou r ex tremely
active grow1ng shop for a ~a··
Service Mechanic. The successful applicant must pos·
seSs a high level or me&lt;:hanical aptitude and be able to
work with drivers . Three and
a half day work week, _paid
vaca ti on. persona l days,
health 1nsurance. paid holi·
days. ove rtime pay, 401 K
plan and uniforms a re
among lt)e many benefits of
working at Arctic Express.
ln c. This position is open
now and you can begin work
immed iately. Fax, emails or
in person applicants are welcome .

Nice one BA unfurnished
apartment Range &amp; refrig.
provided. Water &amp; garbage
paid. Deposit required .· Ca li
(740)446-4345 after 6pm.

Wanted : Experienced bass Very Nice House for sale 1n
player for country/rock band. New Have n, \NV 3 Bedroom.
Must have own bass Call 2 112 Baths Large Kitchen &amp;
Dining Room , Large Family
(740)379-9173
Room &amp; Livi ng Room.
Immediate PerflJanent part·
Double Car Garage, Ou!
time
AN
Position
In
Buildin gs and lnground Pool 3br in SyracuSe. Ohio No apartment , cail 675-6679
Physician 's Office send 1
~
L~UCTION
Pets, $500.00 a month ,;
E.,H,p
o_ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
(304)882·2857
resume to Box EB 14. ?00
Main St. Pt.Piaasant, WV
(304)675·5332
SPAt~:

Ll'.'o···H•EI--r•W•AN1ED---'~~~~o

...,
Certified
Nursing
Asalstant lor full 'time and
tempora ry ~90 day) work in a
114 Bed long Term Care
Stale Facility
Full-time
employment ofters an exten·
sive benefit package, including State civil service retirement, earn up to 15 days
vacation per year, 18 days
sick leave, and 12 plus paid
holidays : health/life insurance is available . Sa)ary is
cOmmensurate with expe ri ence. Must have CNA cer·
tHicatlon to work In West
VIrginia .
contact Kim
Billups or Vicky Berkley, at
Lakin Hospital .. WV
at

740·M6·4616

Pleasant Valley Apartment,
Are now taking Applications..
HOUSES
lor 2BR , 3BA &amp; 48A .;
Applications
are
taken ·
~URRENT
Monday thru Frida~. !rom
1 bedroom house in Bidwell 9:00 A.M.·4 P.M. Office Is.
Located a! 1151 Evergreen
$325 a month.
2 bedroom &amp; 2 bath trailer Or1ve Po1nt Pleasant, WV
on Mitchell Ad . $375 month. Phone No is (304)675-5806.
Deposit required on both E.H.O
rentals . (740)388-9241 .
Pomeroy- two 2 bedroom
3Bedroom
House.
Pt. apartments. &lt;A &amp; S fur·
Pleasant,
$375 -per nished ,
wfd
hook-up,
month+uti litles,
$350 Naylor's
Run
area,
deposit no Rats or $34.000 (740)992·6886
to buy (304)675· 5209
Twin R1vers Tower Is acc'ept381 hous e has stove &amp; ing applications lor waitrng
refridg . (304)576-2934
list lor Hud-SubSIZed, 1- br.

Thla newapaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlaemenll tor real
eatate whictllaln
violation of the law. Our
reader• are hereby
Informed that all •
dwelllnga ad11ertlaed In
thle newepaper are
available on an equal
opportunity belle.

Anllques ................................:...................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .......................... :.. 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......... -................ 760
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Absolu1e Top Dollar U.S.
Autos for Sale ..............................................71 0
Si.lver and Gold Coins.
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ... -......................... 750
Proolse1s, Gold Rings , U.S.
Building Supplles ............................ -........... 550 ' Currency.-M.T.S. Coin Shop.
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
15 1
Second
Avenue.
Business Opportunlty .................... -............210
G 11·•or 7 40 446 2842
Business Tralnlng ....................................... 140
I \11'1 0\ \II ' I
Campers &amp; Mot9r Homes ........................... 790
'I ll\ H I '
Camping Equipment .................. :................ 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectricaVRelrlgerallon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent.. ...................... -............ 480
Excavating ................................ ,.................. 830
Denver Fannin
An Excellent way to earn
Farm Equlpment ..........................................610
money. The New A&gt;Jofl .
Maintenance
Farms for Rent ...................... -......................430
Superintendeni
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
4277 Lyman Drive
Farms for Sale .... -........... -............................ 330
Are you looking for a
For Lease ................. :...... -........ :.................. .490
Hilliard, OH 43026
stal:&gt;le jOb?
Fax: 614-527-4114
FotSale ........ _...... -........................................ 585
Give
us a calli
Email : mfox@arctlcex,~
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
You could earn up to
muss com
Fruita &amp; Vegetabie0 ..................................... 580
S81hour plus bonus~s .
E.O.E./0rug tree workplace.
Furnished Rooma ........................................ 450
We also offer paid trainmg,
General Haullng ........................................... 850
EKperienced
·Plasterer
holidays and vacations .
Glveaway ........... _.......... -...... -............,...........040
needed to dO plaster repairs
Fl.1ll or Part time shifts
Happy Ada ....... :..:.........................................o50
(not dryw9il) In ·older hOme
available.
Hay I Graln.................................................. 640
· call (304)675--4220
Call Today
Help Wantld .......................................-......... 110
1-an~247 ext. 2457
Home lmprovamants ...................................810
Fa.mily Oxygen and Medical
www.lnroclelon.com
Homealor Sate ............ -............................... 310
Equipment Is accepting
Houoehold Goods .........__ ,., ......................... 510
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or apphcationSiresumes for ·a
Houl8slor Rant ..-.................. _.................... 410
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304· MedicS! Claims Biller. Must
In Memorlam ............................., ................, .. 020
be organized, de1alled and
675· 1429.
lnauranc:a .... _.................._........ -.................... t 30
self-motivated. Computer
Business 'Is booming, look: experience in Microaott
Lewn 1 Garden Equipment... ........ -........ -... 680
ing for e~eper1enced drywall Word and Excel preferred.
Uvntock-.....................................................830
and trim crew for modu_lar Apply 1n person at 70 Pine
Lbat and Found ;_ ...................-.......,_ .... , ..._.. OliO
and manufactured homes. Street. Gallipolis, Ohio.
Lola &amp; Acroage .......................................,.... 350
MIIC!IIIIneoua ....................-......................... 170 . Please 'lax resume or comHartley Trucking Compeny
pany information to 740·
Mlac:altaneoua Merchandl18.................:..... 540
Now Hiring
385-7671
.
Mobile Home Ropalr .............:..... _,.,.,.,,,., .... 860
ONner Opei'IIIONI
MObile Homes lor Rant ...... -........................ 420
Compeny drivers
Business 1s boom1ng. fool\·
TrucK and Trarler Mtdlan!Ct
MObile Homealor Sale ....................... -........ 320
1ng for part Ume SEJNice and
OwMJ ()perMOt
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
delivery help. Call 740·385·
fbeU?t!'l Q1yiajpn
Motorcyclea &amp; 4 WhHiera ........ _........ -........740
4367 or tax resume to 740..
70% (our trailer)
Musical lnatrumenta .... -..... :........................ 570
385-7671 .
80".11. (your tl'lliler)
Peraonala .................:................................... 005
• TerminAl Pay
Family
Oxygen
ancl
Medical
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 560
• Frequem horne time
Equipment Is looktng for a
• Maimenance program
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng.:_,................. --...........:.820
• PArt• program
Proleaslonal Servlc:aa .............:................... 230 . hiQhly motl\lated Serv1ca
· Fuel d1acount prooram
Technician . Moderate to
Radio, TV &amp; CB R.,.lr ............................... 160
c........,
heavy Uf1iilg and a good dnv·
Real Eatata want8d ............-........................ 380
Flatbed 34·38cpm
lng record required . Must be
Sehoola Jnatructlon ............................-........ 150
· • a.netit pMDoe &amp;willble
responsible and able to
Siad , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ..... -.......... _._ .. ._._..... 650
• Paid vacatiOn
oommunK:ete M~ll with sen~
• Frequent home ttme · ott.~
SHuatlona Wanted ............ ._......... ._._............ 120.
ior cit!zenl. Wages negO• 40tK avetlable
Spac:a for Rant ......_._ ......... -.......................... 460
tiable.
Resumelapplications
Sporttng Goods .......................... ._.._... ._ ....... 520 accepted in person 0 70 2 year mirumum expenencc~
SlJv'o for !iale ........ ._ ........ ._ ........._ ... :.. .-.... :... 720
requ1nJd. large port1011 of
Pine Street, Gallipolis.
Trucks lor Sale._.............. ._ ............_._.....-..... 715
h-e;g,t tn a 600 mile l'lldiUI
P~eau cali1 -8Q0.22s.-665! or
Upholatery ....... ._ ................... -.......... ._ .......... 870
3()4-27~351
Vans For Sale ................... .-.......................,.. 730
Ask lor Archlll or Jamie
ea rs expenence.
Wanted to Buy .............................. ._._ ........... 090
Al!lo vrsrt our website for an
ime wrth benefits Mus
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles .. ._-.... --....... 620
0t11toe eppllcatoo
Wanted To Do .. ._ ......... ._ ...... ._ ......... -............. 160
ave dean drtVIflQ record
www har11eytrucblg .com
y in person. 1-4pm
Wanted to Rent ......_ ...................._._,,_,,, .... 470
onday-F~•day. ThoiNI
Yard Sale- Galllpolla ........ ._ ............... ._ ......... D72
H Center, GallipOlis
Yard sale-Pomeroy1Middle ........_._... ._-........ rn4
hlo.
, Yard 8ale-PI. Plaaaent-.................._._ .......... r176
'I

Mobile home lot for rent. Nice large 2 bedroom unfur John sons Mobile Home
nished apt. a ll utilities paid ,
Park , (740)446-2003
$500 month . $500 deposit.:
Two homesites for sale. Both Day 740·446- 1637, evening

All real eslllle tldvertlslng

r

Set of car Keys found at Pt. Yard sale 1 mile out
Pleasant River Front Park Neighborhood Ad . Troy Built
call Register Office to identi - Tiller, clo!hes, etc. Friday &amp;
I Shannon Bumgardner will IY 304-675· 1333
Saturday 9am .
not be respoaible for any
other debts than my own as Small dog well-cared for. Yard Sale at Bonnie Steps.
of 7/19104 . 1 Michael Young-Ferhale. wllite w/rust Twin shee1s. k:i1chen items,
Bumgardner will not be spo ts. Found In the Salt clo1hes, throw rugs. Sat. 24,
respOsible for any other Creek: vicinity (304)675- Sun 25 9-5pm
debts than my own as or 2658

ACREAGE
22 acres on Hoback Road New Haven- I bedroom turoff Old State Route 124. In nisl1ed apartme'nt. has w/d;
East Racine, 1·949-770- no pets. depos1 t &amp; refer- '
4768, cett-1-949·433-1518
ances. (740)992-0165

Rescued : Grey female kit· _m_o_rec.·--- -- - ' - ten liter trained (304)675Gigantic Yard Sale- 110
3332
..,...._.,.._ _ _ __, Heatley. Road . Avon products. ·TUpperware products,
loo,.i ANO
paper
back: booKs and mis·
FOUND
cell aneous items to numerous to mention.
4 girls best friend. White - - - - - - - - Pekingese, 2 yrs. old.
Moving Yard Sale
Answers to · Gizmo. Lost, Furniture , Garden Tiller,
· vicinity of SA 218 &amp; Williams Mower, Plal10, mrsc. 175
Hollow Rd . Call (740)256· Campbell Ad . across from
1268 or (740)446-4704. Smith's Sawmill on Cherry
Reward .
Ridge Ad . Friday/ Saturday.
Ouilt1ng trame, fish-tank,
Found: Small black/tan
ceiling tile and grid, kitchen
puppy on . McCormick Ad .
tablelchairs, lots. more . 805
(740)446·6630.
Watson Rd . Sat. 7124, 9-4. ·

•

LOTs&amp;

HOMES

YARDSAJ.E-

blooded Lab puppies . .Friday/Salurday, July 23.rd ,
yellow
&amp;
black.
Cal l 24th, Big Yard Sale. 6748 St
..~ilil'inu-4-l..tJ\' ..
(740)379·2643.
At. 588 al Cora Mill intersecFind your Philippine Lady
lion.
for Love and Happiness
Male Au3tralian Shepherd
&lt;;JAAAGEIESTATE SALE
. of a Ufelime.
mix w/Boxer, very fr1endly, 1
1-800-497-84 14
year old, to home in country. 627 Bulaville Pike. Friday
and Saturday, July 23·24.
Fill ln84-Love.com
(740)949-2709
10:00·6:00. Antique kitchen
cu pboard with flour bin,
ANNoliNL'EMENI'S
)'!( Puppie's to good home.
sideboard, tables, sola's.
Mother is a Reg is tered m1crowave,
television,
ADOPTION ..
Loving Golden Retriever, Father is a gravely mower. air compres- '
Christian Family praying to Black Lab. (740)367-7708 sor, ladders, garden tools,
after Spm.
whee lbarrow and much
adopt onCe more to com-

I

I

- Sentinel - laegtster

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS -YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

r·-·. ---··---··-···-···-···-···---··-···-···-···-···-···--···-···
i.•

~rtbune

HELr WAN1ED

\51)

ScHOOLS

i

Gelllpolli Career College

25550

(Careers Close To Home)
Call ToOayl 740-446-4367,

LICENSED
PRACTICAL,NURSE

1-800-214-()452

WoHW.geJIIpoliseareercollege.com
• Aocredll &amp;d Member Accrediting
Scen ic Hills Nu rsi ng Center, Council ~~ lndependllnt Colleges
a Tandem Health care ard Schools 1274B.

Facility, is seeking a select
lew to join our outstanding
tea m. We currently seek a
full time LPN . Proper license
or certilication requi red. We
after extra shllt pickup
bc;mus , shift differenti al.
exce llent benefi ts, perfect
attendafice incentives and
much more!
Plea'se apply tr;&gt;:
Attn: Dianna Thompson,

HR
Scenic Hills Nursing
Center
311 BuCkridge Road
Bidwell, OH 45614
Ph: 74oi446-7150

Fu: 7401446-2438
Email: admln.thn'o
tandemhealthcare .com

1'80

WANIFJ)
To Do

•

wV.tw.orvb.com

8 19 Viand St, Pl. Pleasant, 2 -L _ _ _F'OIIiiRIIRiiiiENTiii.-_.1
br. full basement 5400.00 + -

Home Llttlnga.
Li st your heme by calling

Utll.. ref. &amp; dep. 304-6?:5- MinrStorage ror rent. 4x15 &amp;
8902
Sx 15 soaces. 800-322-2433 .

(740)446-3620

Financing available with HQ
DOWN PAYMeNT! Less

View photosJinfo online.

I

accepted!~

Weekly cleaning jobs. Can
provide· references. Call
(740)245-D448 leave message.

t

Bedroom. 2 Bath, 2 Car
arage, $2500 Carpet
ll owance. Jay Dnve,
allipolis. Code 52804 or
all (740)44fl.7231.

Will Pressure Wash house's,
mo6ile homes, metal build·
ings,. and gutt ers. Call
(740)446.0151 ask for Ron
or leave message.

SFIOFIEOE
HR Ot.ndemh..hhcllre.com

~

Ntce 2 bed room mob1le ~
home for rent . No pets
$300/month,
deposi1
Housmow
requ1red . (740)256-6202.

Gtxn~

1 &amp; 2 Or. Aparments for rent
in downtown Pt. Pleasant
dep reqwred 740-446-2200

566.
Mak'e 50% selt ihg Avon .
limit ed
time
ONLY Are U $$ motivated? 1OOX
(740)446·3358. First 5to call more powertul than MLM. IF
Serious -800·305~ 7949 .·
receives a gilt

Bedroom . 2 112 eath,
lose to Holzer Hospital
n Spring Valley. Code
,3 or call (740)446·

624.
Need a Heating·Cooli'ng'
Hlo'
VALLEY
PUBLISH
installer with at least 1 year
001 Mitsubish1 Montero
experience. Pay Oy experi- , NG GO. recommends tha
ou do business with peo
port Limited. 4K4, Low
ence . Call (740)441-1236.
le you know, and NOT 1
11eage. l oaded with
•Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
end inoney through th
xtras. Code At2 or call
needed. Apply . at 1354
ail until you have 1nvesti . 740)446 -3632 ·
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis .
ated the offerin
:;===::;;:==~
Part Time hel p . wanted
inquire at The Wallpaper
~~
1\'IOBIU.: HOMES
Outlet 420 Main St. Point ...._
SER\1CES
' . __
FOR SALE
Pleasant, 'No Calls Please

"'

i

""

bedroom unfurn1shed
upsta 1rs apartment. Arr.
range. refrigerator, d1spossl.
garage . Deposit. &amp; refer. ences reqwre d 136 F 1rs t

Ii

Honest, dependable women 1980 14x70 mobile home.
Will 00 residential or com- Everyth1ng ltke new. commercial .cleaning . (746)44,. pletely remodeled. Has new
$72K480K
9483 .
carpet. oak trim , stove top
and diShwasher $6,500
e are a well respected,
OBO. 740-645;0290
TURNED DOWN ON
thlcal, nattonal practic
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
aling wi1h geriatriCS. W
1984 65ft Schullz 2 bl!d·
No Fee Unless We Win!
Her a good starting salary
room . very good shape
1-888·582 ·3345
neflts which include liabll
$9800. Call after 5pm.
H I \I I ' I\ II
ty ana health lnsuranc
2004 Fleetwood. 3 bed, 2
'
nd a 401K. Weare inn
HOMES
bath, only $1199 oown and
f a licensed psychologist
only $197.47 per month, call
ou ,can work as few or
Karena , 740-385-7671
any hours as you want
our jOb is to see people
poa For sale or rent· 2 bedroom
ur ·job Is to bltl, collect a
lble on this 3 bedroom.
mobile homes starting at
$270 per month, Call 740lve 'yoU the support seN
ath, country &amp;ettlng, mod
e that you need. We are
992 2167
m home. N~ finiShed i
siness that never roue
001 .
Central·airlhea1 Make 2 pa,-ments, move in 4
lght ot the tact that
ump, baaemen1 on 1.
years on note (304)736·
ental health of our client
cres. Centrally located
3409
'
s our first concern . Cal '
inufel
from
Athens
sychologicat Transit ions
rnu. and Parkersburn New Oakwood mega store
~,
·•
77-134·2031
Ia
pproxlmetaly &amp;850.
featunng
Homf!&amp;
bV
onlhl)' pajmenL Car Oakwood, Fleetwood &amp;
hris
or
Robbie
a Giles. One stop shopping
740
7·3041
only at Oakwood Homes of
BarbourSVIlle VN (304)736l-3 ·sectrooms Foraclasad , .3409::=::,
·------HOmes, Buy from $199 month &lt;4% down. 30 yra. 0 Nice 89 Skylii'le 141t:70 3
8.5'4 APR, fer listing 1·900- bedroom, will help with
delivery, $1 1,495, call Nitdr;i
749-8106. 1709
7 40-385-99&lt;8.

~:::FOR~=S=ALE=~=

2 Br. 1 91. House in Down SAVE·SAVE-SA~E
Town Pt. Pleasant. Clole to StoQ( rnoct.ll at oiCI prices,
everything. Needs work. 2005 mode\1 arriving Now,
Prk:e 521.000 080 Phone Cole's MObile
Homes ,
(304)n:J.5040
15266 u .s . 50 East, Athens .
Ohio 45701 , (740)592·1 972 .
2br. Houle lot 50, 2brTt11i'-r "'\\'here You Get Your
Lot 51 Burdene ·Addition. Money's Worth"
Pt.Pieasant. ean after 5:00

Full s1ze bed . $150: Queen
s1ze box spr1ngs &amp; mattress,
$~50 , Dresser w1th mirror,
$60: 3 0 raw chest . $60: 5
Draw chest , $40; 2 TV
stands , $15 each: Couch,
59 5: Stack washer/dryer. like
new. $450 ."

1 arid 2 bedroom apartments, turmshed and unlur·
nished. secu rity depos11 1~ OH on •II Fumfture.
reqweO , no pets, 740-992SkoQO Appllonce
2218.
lfli 'VIne Street

PSYCHOLOGIST

VOlunteers
needed
for
Kerry/Edwards Campaign.
Meet1ng . 7·8:30. Bossard
Library. Mcintyre Room. Ju~
27 or call Rob Painter,

I

.'C

Bedroom Brick Home. 2
ath, 3 Car Brick
nattached,Garage. 2
tory outbuilding. Code
2704 or call ~740)446·

II "\ \ "\ 1 I \I

FoR LEASE

Mobil e home lor renl. Like Feb, 1 lth, 2005, Possible
hanna othe1 dates &amp;
new. Call (740)446·2903.
,.

Bedroom , 2 Bath, River
iew/ Access . Privata
a1 Dock in Gallipolis. 1
ere lot. Code 90303 or
II (7 40)446·053 1.

Will work Night Shift lull or
part time for Elderly EKp. &amp;
Ael. 304-675-7961

"--------,...1
WANTED
TO RENT

1han perfect credit
Own don't rent. local CO!Jl·
Wanted to rent small iot in or
pany. Mortgage · Locators,
near Gallipolis for storage ol
(740)992·7321
I.e roe boat . and trailer
Utilities
unnecessary,
MOBII.E HOMES
Security
important.
Call740FOR RENT
446-0098 or FAX 304-6757800.
3
bedroom ,
2
bath ,
· w/g~rage . $450Jmonth plus
deposit . 553 McClaskey Ad.,
Vir:-ton Showing Sat.ISun .
10·4. (740)983-1900.
4-Condo's in Orlando·, FL

Bedroom. 2 Ba th ,
O'x100', state approved
uilding. Bea utilul View.
ddison Township. Code
1404 or call (740)367·
465. .

Assisted living and extra
care tor your loved one In, my
home. Call (740)388-011 8.

t'f7U

Ave
Rear,
(740)4'46·2561 .

(1401«6-7391
---------,Good Used. Appliance's.
Racon d1t1oned
and
Guaranteed .
Washers .

Gallipolis

Dryers.
Ranges ,
and
Aelrrgerators. Some start at
S95. Skaggs Ap~hances . 76
1 bedroom. stove and refr1g- Vine St , (740)446-7398
era tor, furnished , ulil1t1es
included. S400 r:nonth plus Mollohan CarPet. 202 Clark
depostt . (740}245-5859
Chapel Road . Portar. Ohio:
2 . 2 bedroom apartments 1n (740)446 -7444 t-877-830· ~
Middleport. Call .( 740) 596 _ 9162. Free Est1mates, Easy
or
cell
phone flnanc1ng, 90 days same as
2198
cash Visa! MastEn Card_.
1740 )59 t _0649
:.:...:.:::::.:..:..:.:.:.::.,____ Orrve- a· little s~ve alot.
2 bedroom apar tment lor - - - - - - - - rent ;n Syracuse $200.00 Thompsons • Appl ;ance &amp;
deposit,
$330.00/month ) Repalr-675-7388. For sale,
rent includes water. sewage re-conditioned
automatic
and trash . Must have suf1i- washers &amp; dryers. refrrgera·
cient income to Quality. tors . gas and electric
(740)378·61t1
ranges, air conditioners , and
AppliCations being 1aken for
very clean t bedroom 1n
country sening yet close to
town . Washer, dryer, stove,
!ridge Included. Water and
garbage included. Total e lectrlc wrth AC Tenan t pay elec·
trk: . 5300 deposit, $375 per
inonth . No pelS. No smolc·
1ng. 740-446-2205 or 740.
446-9585 ask for V1rg1nia.
BEAUTIFUL

MENTS

AT

APART-

BUDGET
JACKSON

PRICES AT
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442
Walk to shop.&amp; movies Call
740-o4o46-2568
EQUAl
Housing Opportunrty.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·

ED • AFFORDABLE!

wringer
Will do
repa irs onwashtHs
· major .t;~raMs
in
shop or at ,-our home
--------Used Furniture Store 130
Dresser.
couches, mattresses. recliners. grave mon\Jments, 2001
Pontoon bOat muct1 more.
~7 40 ) 446 - 4782
Gaii1POirS,
OH Hrs. 11·3 M-F.

r

Buv
or sell
A1verin e
A nhQues. 1124 East Mam
on SA t24 E_Pomeroy, 740992·2526
Russ Moore.

owner.

r~l

Townhouse
apartment&amp;.
ancwor small hOuseS FOR 1995 'rovota Camery LE
RENT. Call {740)441·1111 $3.000.
Custom made
tor appliCation &amp; information. Krtchen Cabinet. Microwave

Stone! $300 (304)675-1661

GraCIOUS livtng 1 and 2 bed·
room &amp;.,artments at Village
20 h Tendem Allie LOWbO';'.
Manor
and
Riverslcte
With dove ta1\ . 74()..441-o941
(74012•5·945&lt; .
Bl.slmli
Apartrpenls 1n Mtddlepori
(30&lt;)675-6633
From $295-$444. Call 740· 740·645-5946
Wanted Someone
Pari
992·5064 EqUal Housmg
AND Bun.niNGs
Buy OVD players. TV'&amp; &amp;
Time , Clean Homes and Financing avt.llable with ..r!ir
Opportunilres
More ! ' Pollee
ae•zed
Bus1nesses. If Interested DQWN
PA'fMCNJ. 3 Bay shop office. "'
&amp;end resume to PQ Box 194 ' Martg8ge Locators. Local Henderton. wv. 800·322- Modern 1 bedroom apt Propenyl "" mora info-caM
BOC)-749-8107 e:rt P509
2&gt;133.
Phono (740)UIH&gt;390.
Henderson ,
25106
, company. 7-'0-992-7321

wv

r

1·

�Thursday, July 22, .2 004
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
f:;:ouch, bed frame, headboard, mattress/bo.l(sp.ings,
bed lrame, bookcase head·
• 'board matching dresser,
j:tlnene, Shywlnn Oyna Flow
•J&lt;ercise-blcycle (304)675'3423

1992 Ford MuStang convert·
ible. 70,000 actual miles.
Excellent condition , $4,500.
{740)446·4053.
-------1996 Ford Mustang, Red,
Tinted windows, CO player,
Sunroof,
V'6
Standard
J&gt;lnninQ Room Table, 4 side 147,000
miles
$3,800
chairs, 1 Captain chair &amp; (304)675-8878
jluftet Refinished must to ;...,~,..,...===,_...,
..~~J&gt;preclate Price on inspoc-, COOK MOTORS
)ion (304)675-1 765
oved to New Locatio
cross from Gal1ia Coun
For sale o\ler 400 Kerr jars air Grounds!
~. 20 cents each and canning
-;:rm•nt. call (740)742- 1997 Z24, $2,995; 199
ntrepid, $2,795; 198
amry, $1,495. 'Others i
0
U
ISCOUn
U B.
tack.
Grand Opening Sale
op quality, warranties
ilton , WV, Flea Marke
action
C.
Fridays
aturdays and Sundays.
606 326 _a777 .
2003 Chevy Sllverapo ti2
fon. Excellent Condition,
JET
Trailer Pkg .. Be·d Liner, &amp;
AERATION MOTORS
. Matching Cap, 24,000 miles.
. Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Assume
. PayiTlents
Stock. Call Ron evans, 1- $40511nonth. -Call (740)446-

t 6 foot flat bOttom atuminvm
boat. 3 &lt;!aptain seats. fish

ACR!)SS

Phillip
Alder

well ad trailer. $800.00 With
25 hp Johnson motor
$1 ,200.00 Runs greatl
(740)843-1166

-----'-----

r--------,
H

t995 15 Foot Sea-Doo Jet
Boa!, Twin Motors , 220 .
hours, good Cond. Many
extras $4,500 (304)882241 7

------:----:---- r
·

88f1.

,

'

I

1999 Marada 18ft Boat, 3.0

VANS &amp;
L.~--..ii4-litWDsiiiiilli'-ooJ··

liter motor with alpha 1 overdrive. Stainless steel prop,
...,
canopy..bow cover' and boat.
1992 Jeep Wrangler, 4x4. cover included. Excellent .
Good condi tion. Asking condition phone or leave '
$4,500 or best offer. Gall · message (304)675 -511 5
74o' 366 •6047 ·
VANS&amp;

Kenmore Air-Conditioner,
8000 BTU, 11 ONolts, $125,
Chrysler Air-Conditioner,
18,000-BTU
·220Nolts ,
:s2oo,Roper 17,800 BTU
•$200 (304)675-1937
'
:Kenmore Large Capacit,v

4-WDs

96 Kawas8ki Jet Ski ZXI
"
..., - - - - - - - · 1100 with Trailer $2.500
1974 Dodge 4K4 truck, naw (304)773-9198
parts, runs good, $800,
(740)949-1628

. EiecUic
Clothes
Dryer Door
$50,
136
in. Wood
Entrance
. $10.00. 1 0~ inch Della table
;saw exc. cond. $200.00.
~304)662-2715

:W£w

AND USED STEEL
.Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
:·For
Concrete,
Angle. ,
.Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
•Grating
For
Drains,
i Rrlveways &amp; Walkw8ys. L&amp;L
1Scrap Metals Open Monday,

,1989 Ford ran ger 4-Wheel
Drive lock out wheels
(304)675-5247
- -·- - - - - 1992 Ford · Aerostar Van,
runs good , new brake s,
good tires, etc. $, ,799

k
98 Pontoon Bolt Ex. Cond.
ne w Upholstery Stereo
System
$5,500
OBO
{740)698·7086

(304)675-4084
-------t996 Ford Wlndstar. Auns
good, good
condition.
ACIPW. 108,000 miles
•• Troybilt Chipper-Shedder
S3.5oo.oo oso (740)992• $300. Riding Mower $275, 0225
;Drawing
Board
$250,

-------99 Marda, 21 FT Cuddy, 5.0L l/0 , 220 H.P: , radar arch,
hustler-trailer, exc. cond.

·r

B·~
n~~
vU-Uil~

SuPI'Im

r

CAMPERS&amp;

MaroR HOMFS

r

~

. MoroRCYOES

I

with 200 miles. Garage kept,
FOR SALE
barely ridden. Helmet &amp; 4KEi
tilt trailer included. Asking
ABA Reg. American Bulldog $5,750. Call (740)386·6516.
pupp i e~
for sale. Call - _ _H_o-nd_a__ _E_X_pi-po-·
2003
400
_1:'40)366-0488.
• ne~ bara, rode very IIHJe,
A.KC Beagles 6 weeks, tri asking pay off call {740)74~cotor. Shots, wormed. Steve _6602
_ _ _ _ _ __

- - - -- - - AKC Reg. Basset Hound
pups. (740)379-2668.

sx6 trailer, 5x2 detachable
toolbox, diamond p!ated
deck, $500; 4 cyl. Wisconsin
engine, $350; (7 40)992·
2668
-------98 Honda Aecon, good con-

.

Last Thursday or
every monlh .
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon ·
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FREE

Financial Services,
· Box

189 • Middleport

740-843-5264

Rer:'ovations
740-949-1606
740-591-1053

wheels. 52,500 OBO. good
condition . (740)446-9650.

CONSTRUCTION
Roofing - Siding Painting- Gutters Decks - et(.
For Fast Courteous

Hit&lt;h
8l Dry :
5'l

Self Stor:u~e
"''!i
33795 Hiland Ad.
pomeroy Qh'10
,

u8 w IJ.rna
....
f'rury's Englnn

Looking for a
non profit

Fair. Please Call

.
Meigs County

740 - 985 - 4159 •

820

St. • Pomeroy
beside Larry 's Fruit Stand
East Main

Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

Warranty Service For Briggs &amp; Stratton. Kohler.
Roi-A ir Compressor~. Campbell &amp; Hausfeld,
Oregon Chainsaws &amp; All Equipment
Sales &amp; Service for The Genernc Srandb y Home
Generating 10,000 &amp; 12.000 wan, LPor natural gas
Rol-Air Air Compressor
Open 8:00.6:30 M·F:Sat. 8:00-3:00 992-1033
Pick·up and delivery service

Room Additions

Blown Insulation

.Pole Buildings
Garages
James Keesee II, Owner

74Q-992-l77l
74Q-74l -233l
740-416-1570

:::-------Sweet com, no order too

Electrical Services LLC
Residential
New Construction
Remodeling
Se[;urity Cameras

Motion Sensors
740-992-3452
740-742-1085

,arge or smarr.
)740)662-11850

Call

William C. Fink, et al.

Delend8nta

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS
. COUNTY, OHIO
In puraulll'tC8 of an
irour own containers.
order of Sale to me
directed from . .ld
I \In I ,J 1'1 I II"'
Court
In the above
\ I I\ I ... I ( II 1\
entitled action, I will
FARM
IXpoiB to .. ~a at pub]
F'.QuuoME'Ir . lie auction an the
~-oiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiO..oJ- front atepl of lhl
'
Melgi County Court
:1996 John Deer Baclchoo, HOUH
on
Friday
:ext. noe- 4X', -o-ooo ~~ou... Augull 13, 2004, at
~740)4-46-80«.
10:00 A .M ., of aald
day, the fallowing
iTractor pMts &amp; lei"Yiee, spe·
!clatizing
in
Massey dalcrlbad rill
The
fallowing
!ferguson . Foret. and
dMcrlbad rill ' !Belarus. (740)696 0358
In tho Village of
II (\'-' 1'1 11 I ' II• 1'.
Middleport, In thl
j,lll:--:--:"""'...,;-..-, ,County of lleigl and
lO
AIJJUil '
Slate of Ohio and
,,
FOR SUI:
.
!mown 11 1 part of Lot
~._ _ _ _. _ _ , No. Farty-lhrw (43);
U -pick canning tomatoes
acrOss from Racine Lock &amp;
'oam, from 9an&gt;-epm, brtng

f!,a

.

I

New- Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replac1ement
Windows • Roofing

BENNETT'S

HEATING U COOLING

RESIDENTIAL

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces.

FREE ESTIMATES

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per .
month

- ; lhenca Northerly - Twlnaburg,
· Ohio
Fifty (60) feel to thl
44087
North Line al llld Lot
(330) 425-4201
NO. 43; thence South
7115,22 &amp; 211,2004
73 deg. East 'TWentyseven
(27)
feet;
thence
SoutherlyPu~llc Notice
Fifty (50) to aurv.-, of uld . Village of
Middleport as surPUBLIC NOTICE
veyed and plaited by NOTICE: Ia hereby •
PhiiHp"-.
given
· that
on
Being the same
Saturday, July 24,
pnoparty conveyed to
2004,
10:00will
a .m .,ba
a ~;;;;;~;;;:;;;:~
R .L . Barnette and
publicat 1ale
Lorral,. H. Barnette, held at 211 W. Second
t,y· deod recorded
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
January 7, 1987, In
The Farmera Bank
~
VOlume 266, at page
and
, Savlnga
395, of the Melga
Company Ia aelllng
County,
Ohio,
lor ~aah In hand or
certified check tho
• Birthdays
Recordo.
CURRENT OWNER'S
following collateral:
• Weddings
NAME : William C. Fink • ~~2 Chevrolet 2500
• Any special
and Paula S. Fink
1 GCHK29U42E22162
occasion
P"R 0 P E R T Y
ADDRESS:
224
3
Place your order
The Farmers Bank ·
Walnut
StrHt,
and
savlngo
today
Middleport,
Ohio
45780 '
Company, Pomeroy,
(740) 985-3917 .
PERMANENT .PAROhio, reservea the
Lora Bing
- CEL NUMBER: 15right to bid II ·thla

Creative

Cakes ,
t:Jy Lora

00087

I

f

Honda's, Chevy'o an Ute North .of
Jeop's . etc Pl&gt;llce lmpoundo Walnut
Street
from
For liotiogo bltwaan Third and
1-800-749-8104 axt 3901
Fourth ~ In tha
Hid
Village
of
1987 Red BMW 325 C&lt;lupe_ Middleport,
Malga
6 cyt S-~. AJC, Sunroof. County, Ohio and
CD player.
and
AMIFM radio, r&amp;-furbiahed t' I I 1Ibid 81 followl;,
engine. 55.800. (140)446- · to wit:
-«74.
Beginning 11
o
point
Fifty
(50)
1WO
Buick
Loaabro

ea..

-~

-"'lol' -

rlorth 73 Deg. WMI of

the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmera Bank
and
Savlngo

$27,000.00

Company

caah
or
certlllad
check, balance on

conllnnatlon of aale.

·,~.'

·c

~

:'
··::&gt;&lt;:&gt; '_'!'·-···.

.,;K:l;;: i., '

For further lnfor-

a.

LORBER

Co., LP.A.
By:

Dennta

Reimer

Diane

....... L Mahler (Reg.

Randy Haya
2136.
(7) 21 , 22, 23

10075213)

(43); thence
lt1 Oldll 98 PS, PB. PW, 4 North 73 deg. W. .t
door 5edaft (304)87&amp;-1264 Twenty-ven
(27)

Attomeyolor P1alnllfl
2A50 Edleon Blvd.
P.O. Box e&amp;8

pn

•

appointment'
to
lnapect
collatarol,
prior to •le dlle contact Cyndle Gillilan.

(Reg. II00311011)

116,000 mites 52.800 tha oautMool _,_
(~)Tn-9507 cal 4 of ll!d 101 No. Forty-

.,

Builders
30 years experience

Rector

or

at 992•

n Mon-Frl9-5 Sat. 9-12

Sun .

,Q
1-

.. AND A
Mli5TARD,
THANK

Residential

*RHRIB

dOME

740-667-6080

UlmiiiCE
*SEAMlESS

,

ENGINE DR'S

1356 College Rd.
Syracu se, OH 45779

740-992-0122
Quality work for a fair
priu
All work gyaraoteed

Master Certi £icd
Mechanics Briggs &amp;
Stratton, Kohler,
Mumay, MID All
makes &amp; models $10.00
off any purchase of ·
$20.00 with this ad.

f1-t:l'\::&gt;t: ..

I THINK
HAVE THE .
•' PLOU61-1MAN'S

-z.

71,,

,-$

A 1-lUNK OF BREAD. A
SLAB OF CI-IEESE, A
PICKLED ONION,

SO W14AT DO I •
6ET? A 1-jQT DOG !

A TOMATO

ANDA LETTUCE LEAF ...

LUNCI-l''

IMPORTS
Athens

Dean Hill

1-/0WARD l.
WRITESEL

Free Estimates

!
j

: BETTY

South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271
0

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's iH

C hevy.

Pontiac.

Buick,

01ds

PROMISE .YOU

WON'T' ~lA"

YOURARMS

AGAIN

0?
W~_V

BmY.

WO't\E;N,

Nor ()I.J(.'I' IS

HAVE

IT ~iUAAL ,
IT'S ACi\JAI..l.Y

ARMPIT

QUIT~

!.IKE ffa4 1
HAIR

&amp; C u stom Van

AlTAAC.TIVE

SinER

*''"949-1405 .

Ellllttlllb

: GARFIELD
CATS AL.WAY'!J KNOW
WHE:N IT'S TIME FOR
DINNER

Sunset Home
Construction

We

MOUN'r MINIATURE

Cl-O&amp;ei7-CIRCUIT Vl17(;.0
CAMERAS IN THE ~1"TOM5
OF OUR F0017 DISHES

Bryan

Reeves
New ·Homes, ,

Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roola,

Whaley's Auto

Siding , Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall

Parts

FREE ESTIMATES!

&amp; Mora

740-742-341

Advertise in
this space
for S25
per month.
( tii!Jll£'.'

Advertise in this
Space
., for
$50 per month

C.Rd 30 • Racine,

New&amp;: Used

Commercial and

Closed

Open 7 days a weeki

7411-985·]564

•Roofs

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

FEMME FATALIT Y EScAPE
THE TOMBS OF EL- A1.R~
I MEAN . WE ALREADY
KNOW THAT T HERE~ A.
&amp; &lt;ANT GLARNOK JUST
W~tTIN&amp; FOR HER THE
MINUTE &gt;HE 't101&lt;PH S
THROUC,H THE BIO-PoD'

• AgLime

•Replacement Windows

SYRACUSE SMALL

EXT

ISSUE IS. How W!LL

Morning Star Road

''fJI/d

Big Bend Antique
and Furniture
Restoration
Rellnloh, Repair,
Restore
Keith Bailey
40 992-1956

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
.SERVICE
• Room • ddlU NOI I
Aema lilllng

•New a.....
'Eloc1ricot I l'lumlolnjJ
• .Roofing • Guttwl
'Vinyl Sd.. l ....lng
• Pltio lnd Potctl Ollckl

: LG-R~IZZ~W~E~LL~S~~~~

ROBERT
BISSELL
CIISTIImll
• New Homes
·Garages

·Complete

We do nall uo;opt

Remodeling

in Thppers Plains now
h., openinp on day

V.C. YOUNG Ill

and midnight shin.

J48-182-1&amp;11

992-6215

Stop &amp; Compare

( .il '"'

740-667-6319

'

furnace work

. P--.y,Otllo
22Y-I.oclt

Pass

Pass

Pass

~ ~ CA!o\t:&gt;~... 'ttE 11\1\-\K Kot'... ~E' f:c ~
f'---- - 7L~-·--:;:::;::-:-~ A Rl\tii~E -'

.

eighth coll~clio n of stories featuring the
monks of St. Titus _ "The Abbot's Great
Sacrifice" (Cassell, 2003) contains more
deals revolving around the pompous,
self-congratulatory Abbot. I find him an
irr itating character, but perhaps you will
be ~really amused al tlie various ways he
ends up lhe goat, and aU of the e:~~cuses
he produces.
The book cover states' lhat il ls tor intermediate players, but I feel tha,l although
the te:~~l , ~hich is written in a light style, is
appropriate for everyone . the deals are
on the advanced side. (Many of them
were supplied by Australian Ti m Bourke.)
On this deal from the book, you are
South, lhe declarer in silt spades. West.
who overcalled 1n clubs, leads the king of
that suit to your ace. How would you con·
linue?
North's lou r-spade raise was pre-amplive. bul lhe Abbot (South ) can hardly be
1aulted lor bidding the small slam.
The Abbot saw that he had to ·avoid a
club loser. So, he immediate ly took three
ro unds of diamond s, discarding du mmy's
remaining club. Now came the spade
queen, but West won with the ace and
led his last diamond , East ruffing with thE!
spade 10 to defeat the contract
The world's best player in his own eyes
hcid made another mislake. Did you. spot
it? AHer playing a d1amond to dummy's
king at trick two, the Abbot should have
. cashed the heart ace and discarded a
diamond honor. Then everything would .
have been under control.

G

• Dirt

•New Homes
•Log Homes
•Post Frame
•Complete Remodeling

740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Resklcldng Late ~~ Sah'llge
and Arter Market Parts

mallon, or fo r an

' TILT "7

T HE QUESTION Fol&lt;

HAULING:

~arnhart

or all blda aubmRtad.
The
above
deocrlbad collateral
will bl oold "aa lo-

Shorlll lleigl Cc!tJF!Iy,
Ohio.
-

~~~~~~~--~~~ 8 ~---~~--~--~

THE BORN LOSER

'Pomeroy, Ohio

• Limestone
• Sand

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH .

where Is". with no
axpraaaed or Implied
warranty given.

~

992-2975

Trucking_

liikitw.

Tuppers Plain

j

r

R.B.

-~~~1&lt;n&lt;i~·&gt;:

reserves
thl right to ,.jet! any

RALPH E. TRUSSELL,

REIMER

-V"'\-"l)

74D-992-7599

,,_;_:'. ... ~ _} ·~. -_ ·&gt;c &gt;. .;.;.:o~«l··

ule, and to withdraw

PRIOR DEED REFER·
ENCE: Volume 118,
Page 312
APPRAISED
AT:

epprallld value. 10%
on day of aale,

ssoo.

bo....-

.

TERMS OF SALE:.
Cannot bl .Old lor
leu than 2J3rds of tha

!ssoo!.

JOINED

GAL?!

COMMERCIAL and

OH WVO 102I 2
446-9416 r i-800-872-5967

--=

TI-l'
BAND

CLYDE !!YA
FINALLY
FOUND A

SMIF
II

SALES &amp; SERVICE

BUILDERS IDC.

• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen~,
.
• Free Estimates
-. . ·. ::)-'
• 5 &amp; I 0 yr Warrantie s
.
__-; ~,w·

NOTICES

-va- .

wHIPPOOfl~STvJI/,L

BARNEY

BISSEll

111'81111

----

Mot1gage

vJHIPPOOflE~vJI/,L

INHIPPOOflvJI/,L

'
! BIG NATE

Dis IIIII 1111'111
15%
111!1111'
11$21
. .·
. ..
IEIICI.... WIN lnllnl

• Vanguard Ventless Fireplaces

Carpclf8tlon dba UC
Landing Plalntlll

0

Lawn and Garden Equipment is our
· business, not our sideline

106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-6454

Decks

••

Pass

More stories

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Manning K. Roush
Owrier
0

2 "'

Eas'

• FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Snapper

204 Condor Street

••

31 Summer
cooler

1 Drink like
Rover
2 Keogh
relative
3 Dugout VIP
4 NYCdMslon
5 What ned
means
6 Competes
for
7 Business
abbr.

32 Common

8 Roman

abbr.
" -To Cl*tg"
Tornado
alert
Blonde
shlde
With ,
to Henri
Hoover
Dam lake
Plastic -

33
35
37
38
40
.
41

20 Gale fastener 49 Seine vista
22 nny jumper 51 Vote
24
25
26
27

Scale notes
against
Got along 52 - out
Biainstonns
a living
Tear one's 53 Skosh
.garments
·
in anguish
29 Depot Info
34 Stay away
from
36 Huge
39 LeeJ. 43 Tobaa:o wad
44 Reverse the·
effects of
45 Molecule part
46 Not as
expensive ·
47 Examine
visually

statesman

9 Oklahoma
town
10 Mail
14 Canned fish
is Maravich
and Seagar
17 Legal
· summons
19 Emulates a
butterfly

David Bird, arguably the world's leading
bridge humor writer, has put uut his

273-~321

Gravely

North

19 Virus
infection
21 Praline
ingradent
22 Gel tired
23 ~·.,..
25 Fragrant tree
28 Supple
30 r ... JnSSU(e

from the monks

Pomeroy .
. Shop ·

Replacement Windows

..., I I{ \ If I ""

29670 Bashan Road

t.awn Mowers, Lawn )'ractors, Weed Eaters,
Chainsaws, Blowers, Tillers, Generators

2000 Class·B Motor Home ' - - - - - - - - '
28,000 miles. loaded, sell.I,'U .
contained,
sleeps
4,
( ·.,n,t ruff ion
$30,000.
(740)709· 1852
leave message.
Vinyl Siding

----::-------,2002 Jaco Eagle trailer zr
couch &amp; dinette slide out, all
extras, very clean 304-6756028

Hill's Self
Storage

.nrl

West

DOWN

meas.

Opening lead: "' K

I DON'T HAFT A FRET
'BOUT FINDIN' A DATE
FER TH' DANCES NO
MORE,MIZ

(304)

South

6•

ll401 985-4180

• Bucket Truck

•

KQ. J63

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

liNDA'S PAINTING

Grinding

Gallipoli s.

;canning 1amatoas, 251 box
$5, 65002 State Route 124,
~eedsville. Oh.

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump

+984

.... 7 4

A Q J 6
... A 9 6 5

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

'l'J!FJ:.'!!l Gibson

r

•+

let me do it for youl

JOlES'

~~

• Huge Inventory
•

Electronic
Regletratlon
Systarn&amp;, Inc., as
noml.-lor Aegis

4

Tree Service

Ta~e

10 .1
QJJ0842

South

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

•

1· .

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

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

~~

K 6 5

7 3 2
. ... KQJI02

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

740-992-1189

. 4
.

+ 10

304-675-2457

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Cone rete Shop" ·

Registered ADBA Ptt Sull
puppies, $1 SO each. Call
(740)256-1316.

FRurrs &amp; ·
- VI!GETAIIWi
"---iiiiiiiiiiiiiil_.l

Fax

Free Estimates &amp;
Affordable Prices,
Call... Oennis Boyd

1740 )446 ' 4680 ·

For Sale: 2002 Harley Softail
AKC Ro~lstered Siberian Niglltrain, Lots of extras.
BASEMENT
Husky 9
months old $16,000.00 OBO (740)992WATERPROOANG
gray/white male with blue 7474
Unconditional lifetinie guareyas $160 (304)773-5730
. antee. Local references fur·
Harley Davidson Softall nlshed . Established 1975.
Full blooded Saint Bernard. .Standard, 2003 Anniv8rsary
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
•Very Iovabl e, $, 00
. 080 · Model tOOth E"1'tion,
687 . 0870, Aogers Basement
u
( 740)256-16.52.
miles Excellent Condition Waterproofing.
La r ~e
kennel,
$250, (304)675-7140
.(740)992-1510

cv

Cell Phon6'674·3311

4 A '
•

Free Estimates

admissiqn gates
at the 2004

AMrKVn,•.·~,,.lol'

SHERIFF'S SALE,
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER
03
137
Mortgage

87H4B7

SeNice

1998 Towlite/Hi!o 24 ft. ·
excellent condition. 3-wayfridge,
turnacp,
water
heater, satellite dish. Rare,
hard to find. $8.500 OBO.

18- man out

A 9 7 3
5

East

West

StateWide
Clll IIDured Walls

IT

..york one day· of

~---'-"-------

Keyboaro player needed for
· blessed &amp; talented Christian
rock band. Rest ol. band In
place. Jim 740-992-6300, no·
calls after 9pm please.

MONTY

.

_d71~tio~n-_._s_2_.2_oo___ (7-4o_,_•4_,_ •r:r.10!""".-._-:8::-~~--~--,

2 Accoroions for sale 5160
eacn, Oak Show case &amp;
But1et (740)388-9766

6:30

Rocky Hupp Insurance

. Houses, porches,
Garages, Pole
Barns, Roofs,

IJA_ ....
fVJII.'

"' 8 3

•

Henderson, WV

-30Yrs.Exp. •lns.owner:RonnleJones

PETs

Stapleton (740)446-4172
(740}256-1619. $100. ·
·
AKC German Shepherd
pups working dogs, parents
o·n premises Stud Servic8s
(!04)937-2310 or WWN.tris·
tatek/B.com

For a Free Quo~e or Appointmel'lt ~ .
· f;all:
I

organization to

Wint ers, Rio Grande, OH 1997 Yahama .PW'50, good
Call 740-245·5121 .
condition. Helmel and ' goggles, like new. $500.
New Shlpmentll New ~xterl· 1996 Goldwing ~L 1500.
or and interior doors, all Candy Apple Red. 23,245
siZes. Call after 5:00. 50% miles. Asking SB,OOO. carr
off. 6153 St. Rt. 180,3 miles 1740)388·S047.
north of Holzer hospital. Ph : - - - - - - -- (740)845·6157.
2002 , 4x4 Honda Foreman

can insure your valuables!+

07·2:.!-M

"' 98742

MYERS PAVING

I~==·===·
740 992 5232
==~ ~====~F;,re~e~~~~~===~

very clean, good condition. t 986 22 foot Air Stream
$9,600. (740)388-81 07.
Travel trailer. Air, duel

41i

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows. lintels, etc. Claude

r

$14,600
(304)675·4 t 32
(304)675-5914

Bed 99
Van,Chev.
sofa Astro
bed, Conversion
65K miles, __

I

1• 1ft''"'

.

· •.Tuesday, wednesday &amp;
:!f!iday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed
."rhursday,
Saturday
&amp;
::SUnday. (740)446-7300

.Guitars,
Captains
~ (304)675-4574

What would you lose if there was a fire?

&amp;
·commercial

SEAL

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

IF YOU RENT

Residential
"1995 Fleetwood Prowler 5th·
Wheel, used very-linle, 30
112 teet long, 16 leet slic!o
out. AC &amp; Heat. full kitchen
&amp;· bath, sleeps 6, excellent
shape, hitch included, w111
sell lor payoff (currently
$9,400) Matthew Kealer
(304)458-1083

+K

North

Contractor

'----==;.....-".

800"537"9528·

C
S INC.

1 They
branch out
6 Bad habits
11 Slang
12 Beyond
banal
13 Loud
squawker
15 Jelly
'
thickener
15 Major works

Band
.
42 RNa' boSMS
43 Sine-non
46 Reaponsiblle
48 Let loose
50 Baby wear
54 A'r tifacts
55 Port near
Kyoto
56 Curved roofs
57 Entered data

l_.:_:::::::::::::~::~~:.__j

AstroGraph
qoo,. 'lllrthdlt,y:

'
Ttlur•day, July 22, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol
Things will no t be handed to you on a silver . platter, but opportunities that come
your way in tha year at1ead which. could
turthtn your des1res will be plentiful. It witt
be up to you to recogniztt them an,d make
the most ot them.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) -This is an
excellent day to go shopping, especially
tor domesti c needs. Thos e bargains
you've been lookirfg lor should be quite
j:llentilul, and hard-to-lind items witt be
readily available.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Because overall
conditions tend to favor you today, thi s is
an excellent time to express your personal
desires and goals. It'll help you liberate
any ,pent-up energy that needs to be
re leased.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - You'll have
an excellent chance of avoiding interfering
people. because most will have their
minds on other th1ngs today. Your ship can
have ari easier time riding in on waveless
seas.
UBAA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Don't hold
back 1n promoti ng your latest interests
today, because those whom you'll be
associating with today hold you in great
esteem and will be .willing to show you
much consideration .
SCORPIO (0c1. 24-Nov. 2'2) - Someone
who is in a position to advance your interest$ .is likely to be doing exactly that for
you today. This person will prove tha t most
people do care about one another.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) .:__ You've
always been admired tor your philosophi cal points ol view and today. because of
your reputation, those who are seeking
counsel wHI all seem to be coming to you
for advice.
CAPRICORN (Dec .. 22-Jan. 19) Although you don't necessarily need or
W&lt;\nt partners to accomplish your goals.
today you may lind that teaming up with
another for a common cause -w1ll prove ·to
be QUite advantageous
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Your rea soning and deductive taculties are excep·
tlonally keen today. so if there are any ,
importanl matters that need to be studied
closely, now is the lime to do so. ·
PISCES (Fetl. 20-Mar,ch 20)- Things will
run s.o smoo thly for you today that you,'ll be
able to make ·far more progress than normal , so don't waste this day to r getting
ahead now in order to enjoy an early
weekend.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - It you are in
a sociable mood today. put your chores
aside lor the moment and lind a compatl ·
ble friend with whom you can share a lew
stolen hours. It'll do you a world of good .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It you want
to get an early start and be able to enJoy a
longer weekend. finish up now what you
have had on the drawing board for this
past week so thai you'll be able to break
away tomorrow.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - EverYone
seems to have their mmds on the upcom·
ing weekend. so if you want to gei 1n the
m1x before it's too tate . check out the plans
that are· be1og formula ted today by your
laYOrite pats.

SOUP TO NUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty C1pher CI'/PIDg lams are cr~ated from Q1.10tatms by tamous people past and present
E.~h lel!er 1n the Cipher slarn:ls lor anoth~r

Toddy's clue: i equals K

" G

LNJG_'U

JYJ. NP
XDX

RDTLJN

LJTJNGUDMT ,
ANGTI

VJ

DR

VMNT
VDTL

VBU

RDTG ·UNG
DT

VMNT

DT

HOP

OGYJ

UM

ZDTJ? "

ENMRVP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "life is a game - play to win ." - AI Neuharth
"Lile is not being lold a man has iust waxed the lloor ." - Ogden Nash

TIAT DAILT ~ f?l
'UZZLII \::)~

ORecmonat

lttttrs of
four tcrombltd WOfds

loW

10

lorm lour words

NI XF L

IDYS AL
l

I I 1· I

I
~
I l ~ I' I I' ~~~ .
I
It"-i,liii'TI"rj-rl-,1--1 ()
0 T TH0

_

_

_

_

.A colleague and I had a mi-

_

. ·-

K 0 CN U R .

nor disagreement "I think." he
announced , " that those who
don 't agree with me hav~ a

righ tlo lheir ----· --opinions .·
Compi1te the

~ hvclde

QVCtld

•
.
•
_
. ~
by f1lhng in the miu1ng word1
L-...1.-....JL-...L..-L-..L..:...J you develop from steg No . 3 be low .

t)

PRINt NUMBERED lETTERS I
IN lHfSf' SQUAifS

C ~~ic:~~~ER 'filERs 10 I
SCRAM-LETS

I I I I 'I

ANSWERS

7- 2 1-

J

I

o1

Hurrah· Giver- Limbo- Sodden . OLD ENOUGH
Shortly after summer was over my neighbor commented , ' School days can be lhe happ iest times of your
life if y our kids are OLD ENOUGH to go."
.

ARLO &amp; JANIS ·
VI~ HAVE. ACLIP Of OUI&lt; C.Utbl
I'OC.«~Y, t/JHib CuRW.JT ROC f.

OF WDWI6 ~~~ CA'f'

�•

..

•

,.

. ,\-,'·

'

.

.. ., .

.

Page B8 • The Dally Sentinel

Northeast Ohio
churches boi"row from
'American Idol' to lure
youngsters, As

Maddux, Cubs mow
down Reds, Bt
&lt;

•

at

t

LINCOLN

M'ERCURY ·.

A ..

E~ICA.N

.
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

LU)(UIIY

;;o CF:'I:TS • \ 'ol. :;-t. :\u. :.::.:•&gt;

NEW2004

N~\NTAURUS

$25

GRAND MARQUIS

Meigs County Commissioners delay gravel pit's decision

• Bolin throws no-hitter.
See Page B1

giving ·up a valuable asset if
the gra vel pit were sold.
"I th[rk it\ very poor bu siPOMEROY - The Meigs nes s to even consider it.''
County Commissioners will Brewer saicl. "The gravel pit
wail a week before deciding has been great for Meig s
whether or not to sell the Count y."
county"s gravel pit in Letart
Re sidents were invited to
Township .
call the courthouse as well as
The county has received an appear at the public hearing .
offer of $250.000 from While Brewer was . lhe only
Parkersburg , W.Va .- based resident lo appear Thursday.
Martin Marietta Aggregates. Commissioner Jim Sheets
whose gravel -mining opera- said 16 cal ls were received al
tion surrounds the county-. the courthou se on the subject.
He said 12 calls we re in favor
owned pit in Apple Grove.
County Engineer Eugene of ·the sale. and four were
Triplett ha s recommended againsl it.
the commissioners move
Commissioner
Jeff
ahead with the sale, but pub- Thornton said he wanted to
lic input has been mixed.
make sure the public underDuring a public hearing stood the terms of the sale and
Thursday, Harold Brewer of had a chance to comment
Long Bottom expressed con: · before il is finalized. Adding
cern that the county would be to his hesitancy is the fact that
BY TIM MALONEY .
STAFF REPORrER

TIRES FOR LIFE!

TIRES FOR LIFE!

\'1 ~\N .

•E0395

U0215

NEW2004

.FREESTAR ·

NEW2004
Save Up To

$15,888

$15,22

OBITUARIES

NAVIGATOR

SABLE

Starting At

s12,000 OFF.MSRP.

'"'"·"l\'l."l"''n ti~~t·l.u orn

!!OO-t

SPORTS

$18,995

OCr .

I· RID.\\'. ,Jl ' l,) :.:;t.

Page A5
· • Audrey Davenport, 79
: ~Bertha F. Bullard, 98
: ~Denver L. Warner, 64
: ~ Robert W. Lewis, 92

.

.

.

Meigs Coun ty has Josl out on
simil ar transaClions in the pas t.
" I'm nol saying thi s is a
raw deal." Thor111on sa id.
"'I'm just saying we need to
inform tile public . We' ye had
so man y raw deals in the past.
I just don 't feel comfortable
vot ing right

nov..: ,"~

The commissioners voted
unanimously to table the sa le
until nex t week's meetin g.
wl1i ch '~I I allow them tin1e
10 . finali Le lhe contrac ts and
sur veys. and give the public
that much more time to comment.
Representatives of Martin
Marietta on hand at the hearing Thursday said their offer
is very fair to the .:ou nt y. In
addition to lhe pu rchase pri ce
of $250.000. Martin Mari etta
will deed 1.2.1 acres at the
site to the county, enoLigh 10

swckpile 250.000 tom of
gravel. Triplett said current
·usage stands at only I O.OlX)
tons a year, and so the .stock pile cou ld last for more than
20 years .
"The gravel pit. a1 one
time. wa s th·e wav M ei~s
County went froni' ha vill£
mud roads to gravel roads."
Triplett .,aid. "It wa&gt; a 1·erv
· valuable asset at one time. ·
.:We've got an otTer on 1he
table from Martin Marie ua
that we wi ll never get agaili.
lll1ink you should accept it. "
Commissioner
Mic'k
.Davenport smd there are several good reasons to sell the gravel pit. not the least of which is
the preservation of IR jobs at
the Ma11in Marietta operation . ·
''Other deals in the past
have taken jobs out of the
cou my. and this is gciing 1o

F-150's

Rebates Up To

·, ·s4,500

.

2000 CH~OLET BLAZER ZJU

. Only 16,815 ~1les
.was-ttJ;99'~ '

$11
950
P'lf.Wi
Safe
·"

TOWN
CAR
Save Up To

I

s9,775 OFF MSRP

1

Sak $
p.;ai.

Only 28,000 ~iles
w~s~~.m

FORD EXPLORER 4X4

20~~RT

JNa!i .itu.~~5

sa~e

7J.uud

sg BSO
I

hu-.i lh&gt;·"

Rn~er
Hite of \1an ln
Marh~tta said the · COillfXUl\
needs I t' cnmpklc the pur-

~ ha sl.!

a~

. . oon

;;1:-.

po-. ... ihl~

wh ile ils dredging eyu1pmcn1
re-mains on "itc.
.. w e·n: bee11 Ura ~!.!ill:! 11l1r
feet on this fm mcHidi, llll\1."
Hile &gt;aid
John · Ha vs ot ~lani11
Marieua -..a CO 1he .. u1mpan)
could sc lllhe 2:iO.OtJO wns of
gravel it ha-; prom i"ed to
deed to the co um' tor $4 a
ton. and so the dc.al actuall )
is

co~tin~

[\1artin \fariett a

S 1.25 millitlll. He 'aid the
L'Ompan: hu:-. a lun~:-. t a nJ im.:
record of ethical bu sin cs,.
pract k:e .... anJ th at co n tracl~
will be in place 10 guarantee
all aspec ts of the sale .

Civil War museum a posibility for old Portland School
BY TIM MALONEY
STAFF REPORTER ,

Community Dewlopmenl
Block Grant funds 1o prepare
the site and · muke plan ,..
Thornton said .
"We believe 11·e ha 1·e
shown our local cnmmil ment. and it's lime fo r lhcn1
to fol lo w th rouQh on the
promise th ey n1auc to us
three years ago." he ,aid .
Joh1NHl said the lllU&gt;eun\
wi ll be both cntenai n in~ and
educational. Pl ans c·ali fo r
the classroom 10 be trans·

INSIDE

NEW2004

!.!OOJ

decisitin."

.

.

POMEROY - If Meigs
County Commissioners have
their way, a new Ci vii War
: • Museums, collectors
museum will be open in the
~ttle for Wright brothers
old Portland School by the
~emorabilia. See Page A7 first of next year.
·
'
. The commissioners on
Thursday . were shown the
. results of planning work done
by Falcon Design and
Marketing. Karen John son of
Falcon Design presented
them wilh the . details of the
work that will have lo be
done to transform a bare, old
classroom into a vivid portrayal of the only Civil War
battle site in the state of Ohio .
Awaiting the museum' s
opening are several large
photographs ready for dis·
play, including · one of
Confederate General John
Hunt Morgan . County residents responded generously
to a ca.ll for pholographs from
the Civil War era, several of
which have been included in Meigs County Commissioners Jtm Shee.t$. Mick Davenport and Jeff Thornton admtre a Civil War
a .handsome collage.
mural presented by Karen Johnson, right, and tl&gt;e staff at Falcon Destgn and Marketing in
" It turned out really nice so Pomeroy. The mura l wil l be displayed at a Civil War Museum planned for the old Portland
WEATHER
these will be hung up around School. (Tim Maloney)
·
the museum ," Johnson said.
Commissioner
Jeff follow through on a promise to · the project," Thornton
The prized item on display
of funding.
·
said.
Thornton
was
enthusiastic
to
the
commissioners
"We've applied tor a grant
Meigs C~ullly showed its
Thursday was a gianl mural about Falcon\ pre sen lation,
to be displayed al the muse- and said it's about time for of $36 ,000, and they asked us local commitment by spe ndthe Ohio Historical Society 10 to show a local commitment ing $20.000 in federal
um .

.

~E\N

keep jobs here." Dawnpmt
:-.aiJ. " I t\ a

form ed inro .an ou!Uour Ci\il

War sc'ene. There 11 ill he &gt;iX
educarional stati ons. o n~
each for the c'l otlllilg. entertainment:enca mpment. occupations, food. and yuilts and
crafts of the era. The re will
be a CD tour. a teJe, isi on
viewing area an d a memori al
listing the names of the hun- .
dreds of Meigs County resi· .,
dents who died in the Civil War.
''You do re&lt;dl" ~u ud work."
Thornton told iol1nson . " \Ve
appreciate I hat and the museum is going lO look gre.11:·

In other action. Tilllrn lon
called for all \kig' C&lt;llllll)
ser\'icc

organilation~ . l1'

con-

tribute to a ne\\' ClJmmum:v
Servic e Bonkkl which i·,
designed to be a ce nl ralil.elf
list of all serl'ices ,II :1i l:Jhle in
'
Please see Museum, AS

.

EMA begins planning 4-H Club 'Food Judging Day' held
for mitigation program
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYS ENTINEL.COM '

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1999 UNCOLN CONTINENTAL 1999 DODGE DAKOTA EXT. CAB
Only::~~~-miles Sates

-~_..,,.,

Puud

11 1 550

4X4.:_,__ ,_
.Wa!l·,ou,'IY5

Sate

?~ .

sgI 750

1998 FORD WINDSTAR
MiniVan

INDEX

Eddie Bauer

P~s5,850

2 SECilONS -

J'.'a: $12,'9'95

Calendars
Ctassifieds
•

1994 FORD TAURUS
63,009Miles
· Safe
JnJas $3,9~=»·
p.uud
1

XLT

Package

Wl!5i7,99:i -

Safe
p,u,ed

$3 450

$6 1950

A3
B3-6

Comi~

B7

~earAbby

A6

Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A4

.

1998 FORD EXPLORER 4X4

16 PAGES

A3

As
As
B1

AS

© :~oo4 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

~--·--.

.
'

RCURY-

POMEROY - The first
step toward creating an All·
Natural Hazards Mitigation
Plan was taken Wednesday
night at a planning meeting
of the Meigs County
Emergency
Management
Agency (EMA) with . representalives of townships and
villages and a professional
mitigation development planner.
Represented at that meet·
ing were Syracuse, Rutland,
and Racine villages, the
Township
Trustees
Association with Bill Spaun
and Joe Bolin, representatives; Ed Werry, flood plain

manager,
and
Martin
Broderick of the Leadin g
Creek Conservancy District.
Robert E. Byer as EMA
director is in charge of geltin~ the plan developed
belore Nov. I when federal
money cuts out until a miti~ation plan for the county is
· 111 place.
Byer stressed "the importance of having all govern·
mental agencies · involved
"because, everybody has to
sign on or do their own plan,
and federal dollars hinge on
gettin'g it all \ogether," he
said.
Evans,
Me chart ,
Hambleton and Tilton'. Inc .
Please see EMA. AS

POMEROY - 4-H club
members came. carrying baskets and boxes or prepared
foods for lhe annual food
judging day held at the Meigs
Coun ty Exten sion Office
Tue&gt;day.
They also had cham and
workbooks to use in demon·
strating for the judges the
nutrition knowled ge gained
over their summer's•partici·
pation in 4-H
While the goal was to
become the grand or reser-ve
champion in their respective
classes. the real objective was
to Jearn ubOLit cooking and
baking . After rhe j udging
everylhing 1urns to demon st ratioins and exhibiting at
.the Meigs County Junior fa ir

Hannah Arnold took reserve champion 111 her class. "Star Spangled
Foods" when projects were judgeq. Jantce Weber. a home economics teacher. judged Hannah's project. ([leth Sergent)
which OJle ns on Aug. 16.
E1·erything now is geared
to de rmonstrating and exhibit

at the Meig, Coun t1 Junior
Please see 4-H, AS

•
LI . NCOLN
.....
" . ......

740·44&amp;-9800
1·800·272·51 79
•

•

'

'

;

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="493">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9944">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="18503">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18502">
              <text>July 22, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4458">
      <name>davenport</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4201">
      <name>hetzer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="964">
      <name>manuel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1967">
      <name>mulford</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="182">
      <name>warner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="716">
      <name>will</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="109">
      <name>young</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
